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1971-03-18 - Orange Coast Pilot
r Skinny dipping \ At .S.aJI Onofre Bea~h Barr_ed Auto Insurance Nixon Endorses 'No Fault' Plan WASlilNGTON (UPI) -The Nixo1t Administration loday endorsed the con- troversial no-fault auto insurance system, but cautioned against making any ''ir· reversible changes'' in the cu r re 11. t 5ystem. Testifying befnre the Senate Commerce Committee. 1'ransportarion Secretary John A. Volpe recom mended a prompt 1tate-by-state changeover as contained tn a report on lhe government's $2 mHlion, two-year study of the auto in- dustry. "We believe thal this can be done In such a way tha1 .,.,,e can reverse curselves, if the actual performance of lhe system. doc~n ·t meet our ex- pectations,'' he said. Ul'lder the no-fault sys1rm, accident victims are compensated for losses as they occur, and there is no wait to determine who was to blame. However, tbe plan1 usu111ly do not rule out court action to recover damages above a. <:erlain amount. Volpe said there was ··still no consensus ••aboul how far and how fast lhe pubhc wants or Is wil1'ng to go," in changing Oruge Coast Weather After you cut through Friday's early morning fog. you'll iind sunny skies, with gusty northeast wlndA helping lO blow the smog away. Temperatures should reach the high 70s. INSIDE TODAY Son Frnn<isco rr.~ide11ts hit the pt111ic button u:hen the11 re- c,.1vrd. dun11u1ri ·notice.'" oslong th.em to pay tlJ'l rrgltt 010011 or face /he con.sequences. See .~tor11, Page 5. M1lllllll & Ml"le" LI<~'" 11 "'"'"" 16-t? Mulftl ,II ... , II N•t••I Nt"" 4•1 Or ..... CeullfY !I '"''' U·1J ltKl< Mlrtltl\ 11.lt Ttltvlt'°"' 16 TMl!frt t••JI Wtllllltr 4 Wtm .. 'I NIWI 1•1' Wtl'lf NIWI 4-J lhe old system. but he 1aid it "need! change badly .and needs it now." A gradual changeover would show whether the system would work, he said. ··we simply cannot predict the ab!!iolute long-range financial impact of 1uch 1 fundamental change with 1ny rea!!iOnable precision," he .said. Volpe. recommended that 1Late11 begin immediately to adopt the no-fault con- cepts so they tan "spart themselves most of the uncertainty and greatly reduce the financial risk.s that would be involved in any llingle step!!, and perhaps irreversible change." Critics of the pre!!ent fault system claim it has jammed the courts with accident cases resulting in Jong delays and costing more than SI billion 1 year in legal feer; which in turn increase the cost of insurance. Skin1iydipping At San Onofre Beach Barred Stale parks oHiciahi drafting the ru\e11 for use of the new San Onofre State Park Beach ~uth of the Weslern White Hou!!ie hastily drafted 1 new one today -nudes are a no-no. The new morality notwith111tal'Kfing, th@ stale parks brass came up with the ruling hastily after receiving 1 requ est earlier this month from the Western Sunbathing Association out of San Diego. ' The skinnydippen wanted a section of the scenic beach lo provide acenery of their own. And WSA Director David P. PhUlips pressed the issue, apparenU y with the State Parks Qrass in Sacramentn. He !!illid his 3,500 member group didn't want to U!t the whole beach -just a small part. State Parks Division Six · Director Jame!! Whitehe11d 111id this morning, however, that the stlte has a convenient rule wh.ich applies: No section of any 11tate park can be set 1 aside for excluiiivt use by 1 specific group, he said (relieved), But the director related another f1cet nf the skinnydlp question. "They 11id they weren't re 11 11 y particu11r 11bout exclusive UM!. One man (See NUDF.s, P11e !) 1 ' -· CIAIL Y ,ILOT lllf ''"'le Begorroh Sure twas a wonderful sight to !ee the 1r1ission Viejo parade in honor of St. Patrick Wed· nesday. Here Bob Brennan typifies the wondrous event. Officer Charged In Bar Slaying Of County Man Manslaughter charge!! were f i I e d Wednesday against a Lo!!i Angeles police t1ff icer arrested Monday night after the 1hoolin_i; death ot ' Buena Park ,con· r;tructioO WOrker outside a Huntington Beach bar. The 1laying of f\1ark A. Rodgers, 29, police said. ended an argument that began inside the Swinger bar. 19'2()2 Beach BoulevaTd, over the oU-duty police officer's alleged attempt to I e e d a cigarette lo a dog. CliftOr J, Schusst, 26, or 5672 Roger1 Drive, Huntington Beach. a patrolman with the Lo!!i AngeJes P o l 1 c e Department's Harbor Division , was charged with voluntary m1nsl1ugbter in the 1booting. Hunlinkton Beach police IS.. SHOOTING, Page ti ') e e ·uce Nader (;hallenges~ Students at Coa·st To . Mobilize State fuadeqnate In Security, Says Sharp By L. PETER KRIEG 01 1M 01ll'r ,lltl Sti ff The former head of U.S. Naval opera- tions ln the Pacific charged Wedne!!id3Y that President Nixon's proposed l97Z budget "is inadequate for the security of our country.'' Retired Admiral L'.S. Grant Sharp, commander·in-chicf in the Pacific fn:im 1964 to 1968, made the contention at an Operation Alert planning session luncheon at the Stuft Shirl restaurant in Newport Beach. He lold the 40 guest!!, ''The Mbering question whi ch all of us mu!!it face ls what new levels of aggre!!ision and ruthlessness will be pursued by the Soviet Union when they feel secure 1n a posture of nuclear supremRcy." Admiral Sharp earlier had said the Uniled Slates will be in second place in lhe nuclear srms race within a year, if ii i.~ not already. Admirsl Sharp did not discuss specifie dollars he felt are needed to offset lhe Snviet threal , bul he pointed out the defense commitment by thi!!i country has fallen from 9. 7 percent of the groS!l national product in 1968 to seven percent th is year. . DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * THU~AY AFTERNOON, MARCH :ra. !1971 VOL. 64, NO."-I SICTIONI. a '.&011 Bouquet No-no Newport Beach police officer Dave Doum:examines a. bouquet of young marijuana plantS. The posey 'was alfegedly in·the possession ot a transient arrested this· mnrning at the intersection ot Jamboree ·Road and East Coast High\vay on suspicion of possessfon of marijuana. Orange Coast Studen~ Given Nader Chtillenge He said under Pre!!iident Nixon's pro- posed budget, it wouk! drop to 6.8 per· cent. And ciling the record rif lhe Coogresll In pruning defense spending. Admiral Sharp said. "it would be very serious for !he defense posture of the country if !his budget was reduced by the Congrrss. By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of 1M Olli~ f'Het 1!1lf Standing 'with tomOrrow's leaders jamming the .gym noor right up to his feet. ettorn<'y-crusader Ralph Nader challenged Orange· Coa!!it collegians con- cerned about ecology problem!! Wed- nesday to mobili1,e the entire state. student stri~·f~rce agJftmt poUuUon ud other problems of all ldnd,i!I would 10 directly info coui:t.,, the legislature, car.- "The Congress should increase it," he said. Admiral Sharp gaid the problem of being second in the nuclear age is "that it multiplies the chances not of peace, but of nuclear war. "Soviet or red Chinese overconfidence nr mi~atculatlon in the use of, or threat to use, their pov.•er may trigger such A v.•ar initdvertenlly, or may place th~ United Stale!! in a poSture from which there can be no retreat," he said. The group sponsnring Admiral Sharp'• talk. the Institute of American Strategy, is conducting 11 series of ''planning Mssions'' prior to .a four-day "cold war congress" it will sponsor in May It the Anaheim Convent.ion Center. A 1pokesman for the group 1aid Wednesday QperaUon Alert hopes to have artdresses by "a head of a foreign j!overnment, one of the joint chiefs of 1laff and rwo other men prominently mentioned a!!i candidates for the higheiit office in our land." He declined t.o name any o( them . He proposes to 1end aid from his Washington-based foundation to organize a statewide' student movement that would thrust more power at problem-solving than any other body In California. One campaign is operating successfully In Oregon and a aecond l!!i forming in Minnesota. Students are volunlarily asse!!Sed St to $J and CSlifornia's 800,000 cnmmunity college level students alone could marshal a huge war che!t. of funds. "This i!!i the first concrete proposal made before a community college lA the slate," .he emphastt.ed. ''California is ripe for this kind of action," Nader added, noting iC hu 93 community colleges. Student representatives on each cam- pus would help administer Uie system, that of a full-time action group retaining 1ttorneys and ecological engineer11. "Within 1 few month!!, you'll become one of the most powerful, if not the mo!!it powerful lobbies in the 1tate,'' Nil· clcr continued. Speciall11LI retained by the statewide . !See NADER, P.ag1 !l TV Showi11:g Not Profiwhle BOSTON (UPI) -Several of Arthur L. Grelfeld's friends called him this week to say they had seen him on television. . Wednesday he wa!!i artel!ted by ' F'BI agent.s and charged with rob- bing two Boston banks In the past eight days. The F'BT said autom11tic cam·eras took pictures of lhe rob- beries and th! photographs · of the bandit were used by newspa·pert and televiskln !\atlOO!. Grelfeld't friends called to let h1m know about the pictures when they wert made public, he told the FBI after his arrest. Greifeld is charged with robbln1 $.1,000 from the Liberty Bank and 'lhlst Co. March 9 and $811 from the Suffol~ Franklin S11vlng1 Bank two days later. -~ s Thursday, Mitt.h 18, 1971 Knight in Baggy Armor Offers Hope for Future By ARTlltJJt II.. VINSEL OI ... ~11 P'llM Sflff KNTGBTS IN lhiniftt annor doo't always blt town ln chain maU pant., riding in on a white staUMm to right our wrongs. Ralph Nader wears 1 ready-made suiL The ~rs are baggy and slightly wrinkled from a flight on a polluUon- spewing jetliner between campus tpeec.hes. ~stretch s<>ek Is ewn baqy. N1dtr the cru!ader i.a: u likely to mW the naUon'a 11 Bdt.°""'<d list as be la to be elected vice prtaldent of General Motors. The Pied Piper of Improvement ls not visually Im· preuive.. ONE MOMENT he b expected and the nut he Is out there on the Orange Coa.!lt College gym floor.ready to speak. Nobody noticed him arrive. He is thin and gaunt, but -like boxer Muhammad AU -when be opens hia l110Utb. Nader too can float like · a butterfly and lltng like a bee. Slinging indictments of river-ruining Jndustrie1; 1cld criticl.sma on food Items (Wonder Bread! You wonder what's in it) and corrective ideas poW' out. l1D a \IOlley of puoches. He delivers a hard bl()W to social hypocrisy. BE HAMMERS A WAY on a government that reward.!! corporate criml-= who ruin our lungs and poiaon our waters with IOCial invitatlon.s to the te Houae. Nader not only bitches, however, b.zt he fights back. And be makeJ ...,. to IDcreaslng nuoiben ol people, from the com- mon garden variety of ecology freak to aober, Hriowl student. of our ravaged world. He proposes chan&e.s in our lick system to put health and llfety en a priority above profit. NADER'S BRAND of law and order would imprisoo or fine responsible persons within corporationJ th1t violate our deteriorating environment as en· thusiastically a.!I it does long.baited Flag-bumen. He is militant about power to the people. "Who ls in the greatest position to utrtlse power to It.op pollution?" ht demands. The victims. Us. Who else? The gym i.!I jammed and in the front row is a student. 29, who ran for the C.OSta Mesa City Council on ecology issuu.. He hu long hair and wears strlped bib cveralls. He is a soul brother to the older man in the sober gray suit -and to the rest of us -because we breathe the same air and drink the same water. ONE CAN FEEL an excttlng electricity in the air -along with photo.. chemical smog -as Nader exhorts the young, ootllning a novel plan for ecological and 81lcia1 action. Jt ii invigorating and even catching. I got up Wednesday, one more day into that 3Clth year, facing another day or crime in the streets and conl.l.rninatlon all around. One more day er cholesterol, mercury, and 47 other lwmful ingredients assaulting my own flabby, metaOOlic bag along with deadline pressure, the Bomb and you name It. NO NEWSMAN know1 juat what hi.a day will bring in terma of asalgn· menta and mine of Wednesd1y, Nader's talk, was encouraging. He doesn't wring hit hands and shake his head, demanding that 10me- thing be done. He offers 1C!ulicrlS that aound surprisingly 1imple but require only energy and inlUaUve. For whatever it'1 worth, I'm one of those individuals who does oot choo!e to bring any children intc oor cvercrowded, polluted, war.threatened world. Some thing• can't be btlped. while other conditiona definlt.ely WI. Nader makes it IOUDd like there's still a chanct for your children. FroaP .. e l NADER AT COLLEGE ••• poraUons and other points of power. Lawsuit.s would be filed agalnat com- panies er individuals. A tremendously popular 1 p e a k er throughout the nation, Nader drew more than 3,000 li.!tener1 to Orange Cout College'• Basil H. Peterson Gymnutum. lfis simple, driving examples oI both polJUcal and environmental polluUon combined with hlimor and propoaltioM toward change drew frequent burstl of applause and laughter. Nader laid students are the logital onea to lead the movement against cor· ponUons and political situations that art damaging our world behind a amoiescreen oI public r e 1 a t i o n s platitudes. "A cacophcny of lips •.. " he charged. Not ooly esthetic aspecta of the pollu· tk>n problem, but such things aa In- dustrial safety, slums, potent i a 11 y dangerous or non-nutritive food additives and ethers must be dealt with. "PcliUcally, it is a matter of sheer OUMel COAST DAILY PILOT ·-----c...· .... · " ............ -~s.. Cl11 a ttc ORAMGI COAST l"UILISHING COMP'AH't l•\ert N. W•ff Pr•!""!' trM htll..,_. J.clc l . 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I power, which of course ii tile name of the game." MtnUoning the 1899 Rivers and Harbors Act qal111t knowingly polluUng waterways, Nader aaid It iJ remarkable thlt it wa1 never invoked for u!e until three years ago. He called for l1w1uitl agalnst 23,000 flrms allegedly involved in prosecutable contaminatim of the environment and alto criminal proeecuUOn cf corporate boo.!es r"!IO!llible. "There ii no better way to evade the Jaw with impunity than to wrap a corporatiOO _around youraell," he said. Nader mentioned years of tllegal off.shore oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico in ~hich no penon1l indiclment.s we.re banded clown. "You can smoi a city. wipe oot 1 river, poison the fi1h with mercury and put thousa1ds of fishermen out of work and you get invited to the White House for a social occuion," he jeered. Nader likened the sltuaUon to the Golden Rule : do unto others what you would have others do unto you. "The Golden Rule i.!I quile radical these days in industry," he said. accu.!ling General Motors of spending $250 million for new GM signs around the world, while causing 35 percent o( air pollution. And he said less than 1 percent cf all U.S. airporate profits wtre spenl io study or clean up polluUon. Nader used the analogy cf a man throwing household garbage from his l7-room home into the atreet for three weeks before aut.bor!Ues crack down on bis practice. . ••aut if you do tt on a Iarte enough tcale, it doesn't 1eem IO absUrd," h1 added. 42°lb. Woman Dead at 87 I.ONDON (\1Pl)-An 17.year.(lld woman weighed only 41 pwnd' when she died, an lnqu~t was told Wtdnt9day. A pathologist sJid she had never seen anyone IO thin. Or. Stephani' Wilson, the patholcglst, WIS unable Wednesday to give a definite cause of de•th of Mrs. Nellie Wlnnert. "It may ba.ve been staniation," the told the lnfluest. But Mrs. Kalhlttn Ktlly, who looked after the woman for 15 years, said: "She ate Uke a horse . She ate as mucll in one day 11 I ate in a week. She was always thin and wel1htd only 56 pounds when I fir1t met her." Nixon Asks SS Taxes Hiked Now WASlllNGTON (iwiJ -Presid"'t Nllon wants Congrts:s to increase Social Security lales right away, instead of next year, to pay for the new 10 percent increase in old age benefits. If Congreu goes along, the increase would take $468 instead of the present $405 out of tbe paychecks of those earning $9,000 or more. The $3.fi billion-a-year benefit increase Ni1on 1ign'<i Wednesday would delay lht h.igher taxes until nerl year. Nixon complained such a delay could aggravate the nation's still critical inflation pro- blems unless it is paid for immediately by increased revenue collections. "If these urgenUy needed Social Securi· ty increases are enacted but the means to pay for them currently are defaulted, SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 we are faced with the very real prospect cf Increased. inflaUon," Nixo• s a id in a statement issued following the signing. "For that reason, l urge the Congress to act prompUy on a Social Security revenue measurt so that the current cost of these increased benefits will be financed and the basic non-inflationary budget principle, which was embodied in the 1972 budget I submitted to the Congress, can be maintained," the Presi• dent uid. Jt appeared un1ikely that CongreM would go along with Nixon's request for added reveoue. Social Security tax increases are unpopular with the lawmakers but usually slide through on the popularity of benefit increases. Withoot higher benefits as part of the package, a tax boo!t would have little going for it. Jn addition, many economists think the benefit increase without a tax boost is just what the sluggish economy needs. There are few signs cf the strong business recovery which Nixon predicted lor tbls )'ear. Security Guard's Body Discovered In Ship's Tank ALAMEDA {AP) -Crewmen have discovered the body oI a dock security guard, reported missing in Hong Kong, in a huge shipboard tank of coconut oil. The victim was identified Wednesday as Lee Jack Huen, 25, after 30,000 gallons cf the cil wa.!I pumped from the tank of the ship Japan f\1aio. The ship left Hong Kong last month before word was received that Huen might be a stowaway on the ship, Capt. D. L. Adler told the FBI. 'Jbe captain said the discovery was not unexpected. The ship was first searched before she took on the oil in the Philippines. But the filled tank's heavy cover was missing and it was suspected both Huen and the cover were inside the tank. The ship is owned by the American Maio Line. Coconut oil ls used mostly for making soap. From Page 1 SHOOTING ... arrested him originally on suspicion of murder. Deputy District Attorney Richard J. Beacom said a second suspec~ in the case, James E. Jordon, 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-10, Huntington Beach, has been released. Charges against him were dismissed for lack cf evidence, Beacom said. Jordon also had been arrested en suspicion of murder. Schusse appeared before Judge Walter Charamza Wednesday afternoon In West Orange County District Court and waived his right to an immediate hearing. He is new in Orange County Jail in lieu oC $15,000 bail. He was crdered to appear in court again at 9 a.m. Friday. Police allege that Schusse felled Rogen with one shot from a .38-caliber revolver after first firing a bullet into the pave- ment. From Page 1 NUDES ... sa.id folks with bathing suits would be welcome as well. But the prospect or "clothies'' mingling with 3,500 nudies still doesn't sit right -particularly for cpening day early in April. Gov. Reagan is expected to be the guest cf honor • Cuba Sugar Harvest Said Behind Schedule MIAi\11 (UPI) -lfavana Radio reported Wednesday that the Cuban sugar harvt.!lt his reached three million ton! cf the seven·mlUion ton goal set by Premiet Fidel Castro for this sea&on. The broadcast. monitcred in Miami. uid the three-million ton mark bad been rtached "behind scbedul,." ) • UP'I Tt1$11G~ 'E'lr•t n11d Last' Tricia Nixon, at a \Vhite House press conference, discloses she has been secretly engaged to Edward Finch Cox for two years and that he is her "first and last love." But she didn't tell her parents until last Thanksgiving. Woman Arrested In Laguna Beacli On Drug Charge A 55-year--old Laguna Beach woman was arrested \Vednesday after allegedly selling cocaine to an u n d e r c o v e r narcotics agent for the going rate of $300 an ounce. Laguna Beach police and s t a t e narcotics agents culminated a month.long investigation with the arrest of Ruth Holden Marr, 5.5, and four other persons, Jnchlding two juveniles, at 2668 Victoria Drive. Officers alleged Mrs. Marr had made two ;ales of cocaine to state agents: last month and was in }X>Ssession cf two ounce.!! of the drug at the time ct her arrest. Also taken in the raid, they claim was a quantity of peyote and marijuana.' !'-state agent, accustcmed to dealing with the under.JO generation in narrotics cases, commented later, "It looks as if the senior citizens are beginning to get into the act." Arrested with Mr.!1. Marr at the Vic· toria Drive addreS.!I, authorities -said were Franklin D. Jordan. 27. who gav~ the addreSll as his residence: Michael Edward Arquilla, 20, of 18731 Via Palotino, lrvine: and two 17-ye.ar"(lld boys from Laguna Beach and South Laguna. The juveniles were turned over to their parents:. Mrs. Marr and the two men were booked into Orange County jail on 3Uspi· cion of possession of narcotics for sale. Actor Doing ·Better BIRMINGHAf.f. Ala. (UPI) -Doctors reported a slight improvement in the condition of 11ctor Milburn Stone Wed- nesday, but said he remained in serious condition from open heart surgery. - Brltag Reinforcements Copters Assist Viets • ID SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. helic09ters new through 1hetU: of Communist antiaircraJt fire today to take SOulh Vietnamese marine and ranger reinforcements into Laos to try to stem a North Vietnamese drive that has forced a 12-mile retreat by government forces. The helicopters also new out in· fant.rymen bloodied and battered from ·four days of fighting. laking 2,000 cf them to Khe Sanb from the jungles between suppert ~Brown and Lolo, an area 15 miles ide Laos wbere they suffered the aviest casualties today in a single battle in Laos. Ftrebase A Looi, 12 miles inside Laos en French colonial Route 9, axis of the government drive acros.s the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex, appeared doom· ed and the 160 men there were ordered to break out cf the position today. 'They were surrounded and under attack after losing 100 ck!ad and wounded. Support Base Brown, 6'2 miles east of abandoned Firebase Leto, still held out but South Vietnamese spokesmen said the CommunlsU were preparing an all out assault on the base. Officers at northern operational bases said 2,000 more infantrymen were still at the base, now the westemmO!t ARYN position in Laos. South Vietnamese spokesmen declined to say how many reinforcements were sent into Laos but said the task force in Laos remained at between 20,000 and 21,000 troops. The siu cf the force has ~n reported: previou,,ly up to 24,000 men. Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam. aimmander of South Vietnamese forces in Laos, said his troops had maintained a 10.l kill ratio over the Communil!Li since the drive into Laos began Feb. 8 and that these figures were "a \liolory .•. a fiign of winning." In Seattle Wednesday, Gen. William Westmoreland, army chief cf staff and former commander in Vietnam, said the incursion into Laos by the South Viet- namese had been a success. He said the current withdrawal was "not a retreat: it was planned." LL Col. Nguyen Xuan Loe, intelligence Over $1 Million In Penn Central Equipment Taken PlflLADELPHlA CAP) -More than $1 million worth cf Penn Central freight cars were stolen in the past year and routed onto the tracks of a small Illinois railroad, U.S. Attorney Louis C. Bechtle said Thursday. .Bechtle said records seized Wednesday night from the La Salle & Bureau County Railroad in Illinois by FBI agents showed that the :stolen freight cars were re- painted and their numbers changed. He said that so far this year, rn Penn Central freight cars disappeared after being routed onto LaSalle tracks. The FBI, armed with search warrants 'from U.S. District Court in Chicago, took records of the LaSalle line and the Carus Chemical Co. in Illinois. The court also autboriz.ed the FBI to inspect all LaSalle rolling stock. The Official Railroad Guide lists the line as having a total rolling stock of two locomotives and 523 freight cars. Bechtle said a federal grand jury in· vestigation would begin next Wednesday, Joeeph F. Cinotto Sr., 73, retired traffic manager for the LaSalle said by phone the freight cars did not belong to LaSalle but to a firm called Diversified Property. "We thought Diversified Property bought the cars someplace and brought them here to repair them," he said. "Diversified Property ls just using cur tracks and shops to work on them." Laos officer ror South Vietnam's 1st Infantry DiW!ion, said-his regiment-sized fMce of about 2,000 men at Brown "h1v1 stopped searching for Communist suppl~ dumps and are preparing for an attack. "'I think the NVA (North Vietn11meae) plan a major attack on Brown,'' be said. "l !eel we can bold Brown." Military sources said North Vietnamese troops pursued the Wantrymen fleeinf from the Lclo region, nine miles southeast of Se.pone and IS miles inside Laos, and fired heavy tank guns, mortars and rockets .intO tbe retreating forcu. The C.Ommunists would occasionally stop firing and, through loudspeakers. call on the South Vietnamese to •ur· render, the sources said. In Washingtcn, Pentagon spokesman. Jerry W. Fried.helm refused lo characterize the movements of the South Vietnamese to escape Communist attacks as a retreat. He said their primary function was to disrupt the Ho Chi Minh Trail and "they are not there to stand and fight against enemy treops for the next several months." At the same time, military 1pokesmen said the south Vietnamese took the.Ir heaviest acknowledged losses in a 1incJe batUe in Laos today -SO men killed and 80 wounded in a morning lone fight less than two miles ' from L<ilo. Lolo it.self is nine miles southeast of Se.pone. Dana Point Man Kil"led by Car; Nurse Arrested A 50-year--old private nur.!le froom South Laguna faces charges of felony hit-run and manslaughter today in the death of a Dana Point man struck Md killed instantly Wednesday night aloni a Laguna Niguel highway. Regina W. Smeck cf 32221 Vist.a de Catalina. South Laguna, was arrettf:d at a Da~a P01111t bar, authorities said, a few minutes after the deatil of Glenn M. McCutcheon, 20, of Dana Point. Highway patrolmen said McCutcheon an employe of Coast Catamaran Corp.' had been struck and killed instanuY as he walked along the shoulder cf Pacific Coast Highway with a friend. Both the dead man and his companion Craig M. Montalto, 22, lived at ~ Dana Strand Mot.el, room 17. The incident occurred at 11:50 p.m. about a quarter-mile south cf the in. tersection of Crown Valley Parkw1y with the highway. Palrol spokesmen quoted Montalto as saying the two men were walking south alongside the southbound lanes when Mccutcheon stopped to light a cigar. The ~tness told of 11eeing a pair of headlights from a weaving auto and ri:alired the vehicle wa.!I heading for him and McCutcheon, officers related. Montalto dove into a bank. he 1aid, and then turned to notict the car weaving away at about 40 miles per hour. "When he went back to find his com· panion, the man was gone," patrolmw said. McCutcheon's body was found 120 feet away. Later, officer.!! traced a trail cf clothing and belongings scattered hundreds cf feet along the roadside. The Smeck woman allegedly drove to a bar in Dana Point where a few moments later employes n o t If I e d authorities. Patrolmen claim the woman'.!! car bore a smashed grille, punctured radiator and dents in the bumper and hood. ~e w~s. booke,d and held at Orange County )ail. Ofhcer.!I said they would seek a district attorney's complaint charging felony hit-run driving end manslaughter against the woman. Y f<etnc4eling We have filled one of our showrooms with 3000 feet of furniture we must move at 1/2 off. Sofas, Chairs, Bedrooms, Dining Rooms, Game Sets~ Lamps, China Servers, Buffets, Tables, Curios, Book· cases, Head Boards, Mirrors, and many items too numerous to mention. · H.J. GARRETT · fURNITURE PROFESSIONA~ 2215 HAHOa II.YD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Moo., Tlour&. a. Fri. lvn. COSTA MW, CALIF. '4'-0275 ' 6.0276 I ' .• '. I Huntington Beaeh EOl~ION Today's Final N.Y. St.eeks voi.:. 1>4, NO. 66, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH ·1 a, 1971 TEN CENTS '-==-------------------------------------------------------- Have Courage,-Men-W omen Libs Tell Goal·s By TERRY COVILLE Of tM DellJ' 'll•t 11111 Cheer up, men. You don't have to be afraid of Women's Liberation anymore. They cart about you, too. .. Men 1houldn't be beut.a of burden either," Lorna Buck, a 23-year-<>ld Women'• Liberation leader from Co5ta Mes.a, told a group of HunUngt.on Valley Young Republicans Wedne1day niaht. "The underlyl.ng tbtme in women's lib b: the general liberation o! people . Higher atandards for all," she said. "Then why do you push the women 's liberation so much?" came a question from the audience . ''SeH Interest," she replied. Miss Buck and her partner, Mrs. Sally Hufbauer, 33, also of Costa Mesa, Jee· tured the Republicans Jrom Huntington Beach on the hardship of Qeing a "'oman. They concentrated 'bn g I v i n g bac.k&round to the women's liberation movemenl and stating its future goalJ. Or\f' of Women's Liberation's three natiollal goals IS abortion on demand. "That's murder," charged one Repubhcan woman "Open abortions will destroy the moral fibre of our country." "Not ntarly on the scale of Vietnam," replied Miss Buck. "You can't get around it. .a baby is a potential human being," t.trs. Huf- bauer added. "But when you think of pollution and population problems, it's a lesser evil. Any many women die: from illegal abortions." •·Jn the big picture it'• obviously the thing to do,·' she said, Both women agreed that birth control is much preferable to abortion . "But when it fails, abortion ll the answer," Mrs. Hufbauer contended. Another of the three national goals is equal pay for equal work. "In general, it's safe to say men tSee WOMEN, Page %) Death Charges Reduced Lawman Faces Manslaughter in Bar Slnying 'ABORTION LESSER EVIL' Hufbauer of Women's Lib Stem Drive DAILY l'ILOT Still P'llell l 'MAYBE WE'LL WIN' Women's Lib SpNktr Buck Copters F)y In Rangers To A id Retreating Viets SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. hclicopt.ers flew through sheets of Communist anliaircrafl fire today to take South Vietnamese marine and ranger reinforcements into Laos to try to stem a North Vietnamese drive that has forced a 12-mile retreat by government forces. The helicopters also flew out in· fantrymen bloodied and battered from Over $1 Million In Penn Central Equipment Taken PHILADELPHIA I AP) -11ore than St million worth of Penn Central freight cars were stolen in the past year and routed ontn the tracks of a small lllinois railroad . U.S. Attorney Louis C. Bechtle 1<1id Thursday. Bechlle said records seized Wednesday night from the La Salle & Bureau Count :-.r Railroad in Illinois by FBI agents showed that the stolen freight cars were re- painted and their numbers changed. He said that so far this year, 277 Penn Central freight cars disappeared after being routed onto LaSalle tracks. The FBI, armed with sea rch warrants from U.S. District Court in Chicag o. took records of the LaSalle line and the Carus Chemical Co. in Jllinois. The court also authorized the rBI lo inspect All LaSalle rolling stock. The Official Ra ilroad Gu ide lists the line as having a total rolling stoc k of t"'O locomotives and 523 freight cars. four days of fighting. taking 2,000 of them to Khe Sanh from the jungles between support bases Brown and U>lo. tin area 15 mi les inside Laos where they suffered thei r heaviest casualties today in a single baltle in Laos. Firebase A Loui, 12 miles inside Laos on French colonial Route 9, .axis of the government drive across the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex. appeared doom· ed and the 160 men there were ordered to break out of the position toda y. They were surrounded and under .attack .after losing 100 dead and wounded. Support Base Brown, 61h: miles east of abandoned Firebase U>lo, still held out but South Vietnamese spokesmen said the Communists were preparing an all out assault on the base. Officers at northern nperational bases said 2.000 more infantrymen were still at the base, now the v.·esternmost ARVN position tn Laos. South Vietnamese spokesmen declined lo say how many reinforcements were sent into Laos but said !he task force in Laos remained at between 20,000 and 21.000 troops. The size ol the force has been reported previously up to 24,000 men. Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of South Vietnamese forces in Laos, said his troops had maintained a 10--1 kill ralio over the Communista 1ince tht drive into Laos began Feb. 8 .and that these figures were "a victory .•. 1 sign of v.·inning." In Seattle Wednesday, Gen. William Westmoreland, army chief of staff and former commander in Vietnam, said the incursion tnto Laos by the South Viet· namese had been a success. He Pid (Stt INDOCHINA, Page 1) Manslaughter charges were f l 1 e d Wednesday again.st a Los Angeles pOlice C1fficer arre:sted Monday night after the shooting death of a Buena Park con· iitruction worker outside a Huntington Beach bar. The slaying of Mark A. Rodgers, 29, police said. ended an argument that began inside the Swinger bar. 19202 Beacb Boulevard, over the off-duty police Nixon Seeks Tax Boost Right Away W illl!liG'!!lN (UPI) -Pn1ld1nl Ni1on want. Col'l&Tesa to lncreaH Socl.al Securiti i.a1e:x right away, instead of Mrl year, t6 J)l1 for the n~w 10 percent increa11e in old .age benefit... If COngress goes: along, the increaae would' take $468 inst.tad cf the pres:ent $405 out of tht paychecks of those earning $9,000 or more. · The $3.6 blllion·a·ye:ar benefit Increase Nixon signed Wednesday would delay the. higher t.a1e1 until next year. Ni1on SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 complained such 1 delay could aggravate the nation '• 1Ull critical inflation pro- blems unless it is paid for Immediately by increased revenue Ct'.lllections. "If these urgently needed Social Securi· ly increases are e:nacled but the means to pay for them currently are defaulted, we are raced with the. very real pro!lpect of increased inflation,'' Ni101 said In .a statement issued following the signing . "For that reason, l µrge the Congress to act promptly on a Socia l Se:cur!ty revenue measure go that the current cost of these increased benefils will be financed and the basic non·inflatlonary budget principle:. which was embodied in the 1972 budget l submittl!d to the Congress, can be maintained," the Presi· dent said. It appeared unlikely that Congress would go along with Nixon'• request for added revenue. Social Security tax increases are unpopular v.·ith the lawmakers but usually sl!de throogh on the popularity of benefit incre:ases. Without higher benefits 1.!I part of the package, .a tu: boost would have little going for iL Teachers Fight Joh Cuts Huntington Educators Group Seeks Other Means By RUOI NJEDZIE~Kl Of lt'le.Otll' ~1)11 51111 Teachers of the Hunlington Beach Union High School District said Wl!d· ne.sday they are opposed lo "any staff cut!" this July. 1'he District Educators Association rDEA ), or£ic1 al represenl at tve of most of the rl1s1r1ct's SOO teachers, said it would •·see k alternative measures'' to ptrsonnel cuts proposed ~y the ad· m1ni11tra1Lon '4"he n a lax hike attempt fa ilf'd al the poll~ J\o1arch 9. "WP .are 1nsteAd looking for a possible rtduction 1n lexlbooks. supplies and transportation." explained DEA Vice Presi<lent f\;ly Coope:r. "Cutting b8ck on school b~sing could result In a signifi cant sa vings in an emergency situation. Whenever 1 la1 cul is fared by a school district, this i11 always one of the first suggestions that comes up," he added. Last week the district held a per800nel lottery for nearly 300 first, 1econd and third-~ar leacheni to dl!termJne lhtir senior ity in the event staff cull have to be made. Although lhe lollory lndud<d the name! of 111U probationary certificated employes. A 1 J i s t 1 n t Superintendent William Settle claims that only the fir'\ 2.5 na,mes drawn may be in real jeopardy. He has polnlerl nut that school .trustee' may reduce the number of periods a dity or iJ1crease the number of 1tudentJ prr cl.ass to offset cull. Cooper said the DEA exetutive board ha• taken lhe stand that none: of the leachers should be \aid off. "We are in opposition to any and alt cull in tht teacltinl t1laff,'' bt declared. Meanwhile, he uid the DEA has con· stituted a salary committee to atudy the budget for any other cuts. "About 40 percent of the budget is not taken up by teacher salaries .and th11t'1 what we:'ll be looking at," said Cooper . In addition, he eq::ilained that the DEA has. hired legal counsel to advise those teacher• who may be facing layoff. A newsletter sent to teachers by the DEA Tuesday also urged all inlltructors to forward any information they have concerning federal l¥.-1tata a11istance programs which could be used ~ the cria\s. r r officer's alleged attempt to f eed a cigarette to a dog. Clifton J. Schusse. 26. of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach. a patrolman with the Los Angeles Po 1 i ce Department's Harbor Division, was charged with voluntary manslaughter in tbe shooting. Huntington Beach police arrested him originally on suspicion of murder. Tliar She Blows Deputy District Attorney Richard J, Beacom said a second suspect in the case. James E. Jordnn, 31. of 6762 \Va.mer Ave.. Apt. K-10, Huntington Beach. has bee n released. Charges against him v.·ere dismissed for lack of evidence, Beacom said. Jordon also had been arrested on suspicion of murder. Schusse appeared before Judge Walter UPI T•l .. llo!O Veterinarians from San Diego's Sea \Vorld returned with only one gray whale in captivity Wednesday after snaring it with a hoop net 400 miles south of San Diego along the Baja California coast. The 18·foot baby whale will be displayed at the aquatic park and will be used for research because the species is endangered. Councilman Sues 1,000 Seeking to Recall Him Se.al Beach Councilman Conway J. Yuhrman has filed an $817,SOO libel and 1lander guit against more than 1.000 residents who are trying to recall him from office. His suit was filed Wednesday in a U>s Angeles Superior Court. It charges the recall effort w i th libel. malicious slander. conspiracy and damages. Last Nickel Phones May Be On Way Out ALBANY, N.Y. 1UPI ) -Tbe day of the nickel lelephone call may soon be gone forever. The last telephone company in the stale still charging 1 nickel on a call from 11 r>aY telephone booth today •gked the public 1t:rvlce commission to rai!e lb rate to a dime. • Anti-Fuhrman residents have forced the city to set a March 30 recall election in which they will try to oust the vetera n councilman from his post. The libel suit names two corporations, 24 individuals and up lo 1.000 Joh n Does. Primary target of it is the Good Gnvernmenl Group (GGG J, main backers of the recall effort. The !luit claimll that political foes have gone too far In defaming his name and character by accusing him of "b\aclimail and dixlortion." ruhrman has been part of the con- troversial lhree·man council majority - with t.1ayor Morton Baum and Coun· d lman Thomas Hogard -that fired Clly Manager Lee Risner. Fuhrman's attorney I! Russell W. Bledsoe. Bledsoe waa hired by Ule city several monlhs ago to Investigate the recall campaign. fuhrm~n·s libel suit. handled by Bledsoe. howev~r, b•s, no conn@Ctlob with the city and Bledsoe ii being pp.~d by Fuhrman and not the city. J Charamza Wednesday afte:rnoon ln West Orange County District Court and waived his right to an immediate bearing. He is now in Orange County Jail ln lieu of $15,000 bail . He was ord~red to appear in court again at 9 a.m. Friday. Police allege that Schusse felled Rogers wilb one shot from a .38-caliber revolver after first firing a bullet into the pave- ment. Huntington' Draws Park Panel Blank By ALAN DlllKlN ot 1M Otll' ,Utt Ii.It Westminster school trustees are again refusing lo appoint a Huntington Beacll re.sident to the: Hun tington Beach Recrea• tion and Pa rks Commission. Elementary school distrlcl.s which have campuses in Huntington Beach have representative!! on the recreation com· mission becau:1e of a joint use of playgrounds and parks. Action by the trustees of :.he elemen. tary school district this week continued the conflict between the board and the Huntington Beach city council. The city council recently passed a resolution that aJI members of all Hun· tington Beach commlsaions be city residents. The Westminster trustees refused to comply with a directive that all non· residents be phased out by July 1 and then at the March 1 council meeting the council rea ffirmed its policy on a &-I vote . The late.St .!ltep in the dispute came Tuesday when the trustees unanimously decided to write to the city to 1ay that the school district can best be served with a representalive from the district on the recreation commission. The dil!trict's pre.sent representative on the commission is Mrs. Neomi& Willmore. president of the board, but a resident of Westminster. "Someone who lives in Huntington Beach could be appointed. but we object when the city aays it must be a Hu n· tinglon Beach resident,'' commented Mrs. Ada Clegg, who chaired this week's meeting of the Westminster trustees. "We feel the district .can best be served from someone of our choice regardless or residence," Mrs. Cleg continued. Oruge Cout Weather Arter you cut through Friday•• early morning fog, you'll find sunny skies. with gusty northeast winds helping to blow the smog away. Temperatures should reach the high 70s. INSIDE TODAY Son F'roncisco rtside"nts hit thf'! panic butkln when the11 rt· ceived dunning noiic'' asking them to poJI up ria.llt awov or face the constq!U!nces. Stt sto ry, Page S. •• ,,.,, II l •11Jnt '9 Ctllfllltnlt I C!Off ... , Up t Cl1n1litol tf·l6 c.m1c1 ll C~u-11 tt O.tl~ Ht!l<•• 1t OIYW(M II ltl1'frl1I Pitt I •11Nrt1!111Mnl ,..,, l'ltltM:• 11·" Me~l(9H II Allll l.«HI"" l l Mt!LIM-t Mtl?llff lk1nwt 11 M...,ift ff.I, M~tull """' 11 H1llon1J II"" .. , Or111" cw""' 11 1-'1 rt-TJ 5!tcll M1rll1h 11·1" T1t11,.l11M t4 TllttN"' N-11 Wttt~er t W-R'' N-1~11 Wrlll H9WI •I ' 2 DAILY PILOT " ThwW1, Mar<h 18, 1'71 Knight in Baggy Armor Offers Hope for Future By ARTHuR R. VINSEL at ._ C»llY l'llM ll1H KNIGHTS JN . shining armor don 't always bit town In chain mail panl.i, riding in on a white stallion lo right our wrongs. Ralph Nader wears a ready.made suit. The trousers are baggy and slightly wrinkled from a flight on a pollutlon- spewing jetliner between campus speeches. One stretch sock ls even baggy. Nader the crusader is as likely lo make the nation 's 10 Best...Oressed list as he is to be elected vice president o( General Motors. The Pied Piper of Improvement is not visually im· pressive. ONE MOMENT he is expected and the next he is out there on the Orange Coast College gym floor ready to speak. Nobody noticed him arrive. He is thin and gaunt. but -like boxer Muhammad ~ Ali -when he opens his mouth, Nader too can float like a butterfly and sting like a bee. Slinging·-irntictments of river-ruining industries; acid criticisms on food JI.ems (Wonder Bread! You wonder what's in it) and corrective ideas pour out like a volley Of punches. He delivers a tiard blow to social hypocrisy. HE HAMMERS A WAY on a government that rewards corporate crimi· nal!I who ruln our lungs and poison our waters with social invitations to the White House. Nader not only bitches. however, but he fights back. And he makes sense to increasing numbers of people, from the com- mon garden variety of ecology freak to sober, seriou!I students of our ravaged world. He proposes changes in our sick system to put health and safety on a priority above profit. NADER'S BRAND or law and order would imprison or fine responsible persons within C{)rporations that violate our deteriorating environment as en- thusiastically as it does long-haired Flag-burners. He is militant about power to the people. "Who is in the greatest position to exercise power to atap pollution?" he demands. The victims. U!I. Who else? The gym is jammed and in the front row is a student, 29, who ran for the C.OSta Mesa City Council on ecology issues. He has long hair and wears striped bib overalls. He is a soul brother to the older man in the sober gray suit -and to the rest of us -because '"e breathe the same air and drink the same water. ONE CAN FEEL an exciting eleclrici!y in the air -along with photo- chemical smog -as Nader exhorts the young, outlining a novel plan for ecological and social action. It is inv igorating and even· catching. I got up \Vednesday. one more day into that 30th year, fa cing another da y of crime in the streets and contamination all around. One more day of cholesterol. mercury, and 47 other harmful ingredients a!lsaulting my own fl abby, metabolic bag along with deadline pressure, The Bomb and you name it. NO NEWSMAN knows just what his day will bring tn terms or a.ssign- ments and mine of Wednesday, Nader's talk, was encouraging. He doesn 't wring his hands and shake his head, demanding that aome- thing be done. He offers solutions that sound surpri!lingly simple but requlre only energy and initiative. For whatever il'!I worth. I'm one of those individuals who does not choose ta bring any children into our overcrowded, polluted, '."'ar-threatened world. Some things can't be helped . .,.,.bile other conditions delinitely can. Nader makes it sound like there's still a chance for your children. l'rolll·P .. e ~l INDOCHINA ..• the current withdrawal was "not a retreat; It was planned." Lt. Col. Nguyen Xuan Loe, lnlelligence cffictr for South Vietnam's 1st Infantry Divi!ion, said his regiment-sized force of about 2,000 men at Brown "have stopped searching for Communist supply dumpR and are preparing for an attack." "I think the NV A (North Vietnamese) plan 1 major attack on Brown," be said. "I feel we can hold Brown." Military sources said North Vietnamese troops pursued the infantrymen fleeing Bandits' Rule Works CHELTENHAM. England (UPI) - Four gunmen held 15 bank employes at gunpoint for two hours Wednesday and finally forced the branch manager to open the vault by falsely telling him his wife was being held hostage, police said. They got away with $67,200. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OltAIOIGE CO.UT l'UILISHIMO COMll'AMV ltMrt N. w •• , ,., ........... l'vbllMM' J•clr. IL Curl•'( Vk'I ,.,.llkinl .... ~· MIMllf' TI!tJJ111 K.,.,;f ...... Tli•,.•• A. Mur111lill1~ M-1119 EdlMor Al•t11 Dir~i"' W•t Or-C-ty ••1tw Allttri W, I•+•• .--:lllG E<lllw H"""9tN11.._lillOHlc• 11111 "•th l•u1'"''" M•lll111 A4tlrt11: r.o. ••• 1to, •2~•• .,.... °""" ~ a.Kfl: m f:•~t Avtnllt at• ~: u:i W..! .... Jlftott ~ l#dl: Im H-1 BtU:..01,., 11111 a-rt; as Htl'fll El t.an!N a.I 11hpl I •714J '41--4)21 Cl•lflM AAMfl ... '4J..N71 ~t. ''"· ~ C-lf ~ ~'f. Mt -·=-'"""'ltt ... ........ _,., ., .r...wrt1 ..... _., .. . ... ··-..... ,...,.. .,,.... ,... .,...., ..,,...._:....-. ...... ci.. ,.. ... "" 1t H ...... _..,. .... Qlt .. ~ C.11,.,.,... ~ .. (1ll?W st.a nriftl!11 .., -II 11.11 """"""'' fftHltarY Mt!IM,,.,._ JUI ....,._,.., (roqi the Lo1o region, nlne miles southeut of Sepone and 15 miles inside Laos, and fired heavy tank guru, mortars and rockets into the retreating forces. The Communists would occasionally istop firing and, through loudspeakers, call on the South Vietnamese to sur· render. the sources said. In Wa.shinJlon, Pentagon 1pokesm1n Jerry W. friedhelm refu!led to characterize the movemenl!I of the South Vietname!le to escape Communist attacks as a retreat. He said their primary function was to disrupt the Ho Chi li-finb Trail and "they are not there to stand and fight against enemy troops for the next several months." At the same time, military spokesmen said the south Vietnamese took their heaviest acknowledged lo83e:s in a single battle in Laos today -50 men kllled and 80 wounded in a morning long fight less than two miles from Lalo. Lolo itself is nine miles southeast of Sepone. Trustees Get Sound of M11sic The sound o( music will mix with the jargon of educators tonight when the Fountain Valley Sc.boot District Board <lf Trustees meets. Trustees will be treated to a few gamplings cf the songs learned by the all-district band. The meeting starts at 7:30 p.m. One of the key Hems on the trustees' agenda is discussion of the district'!! application for state funds to build a school for orthopedica\ly handicapped children. The district had reached a snag with the state over funds lo build the crippled children's school. but di slriCt officials are 'hoping special state legislation y,·ill bring about release of the money. Tram for Pier Too Expe11.sive A tram on the Huntington Beach pier: Councilman Mrs. Norma Gtbbs thinks It would be a good idea. but Harbors and Beaches Director Vince Moorhouse told her at this week's council meeting that was not feasible . He pointed out that the tram on the pier at Seal Beach loses Si2.000 a ye11r even thougb the oll companlca susidize II. ''We have a leAse lf anyone would JJke to go into the operation on our pjer," Moorbou!le said. "But several 1tudles have ~n m1de and they nave all found it unfeasible." UPI T1..,ht1t Catch This One State Sets 2 Actions On Freeway The Cllifornla Highway Commisslon took two actions Wednesday designed to clarify il.s position on the Newport Beach-Pacific Coast F r e e w a y con· lroveray. First, the commiuiop unanimously voted to order a review of the resull.$ . ol the Newport Beach traffic study if that study .shows a modification In lhe adopted coastal freeway rout.e I 1 cle!irable. Second, and even more 1ignillcant. it said it will abide by any new freeway agreement negotiated between Newport Beach and the State Public Works Departmenl The actlons pave the way for upected City C.Ouncil steps Monday night to ap- point a committee to meet with represen- tatives of State Public Works Dirtctor James A. Moe on renegotiation of the agreement on the J)Ol'.tion of lhe freeway: through Corona de! Mar. Key advisers to Moe have already eaid that representatives of Ule depart· ment,· in light of last week's lopsided anti-freeway vote, will be willing to at least sit down and talk about the problem with Newport city spokesmen. Tired? Italian furniture designers D'Urbino, De Pas and Lamazzi would like lo lend (or, more appropri• alely, .sell) you a hand. The five-fingered chair in soft leather is part of an exhibition of Italian furniture at a London department store. Isn't it gloverly? Newport residents overwhelmingly ek- ed the council to rescind the existing freeway route agreement, which covers the Corona de! Mar leg only, 1n a special election March 9. Civil Disorder Group 'Not Witch Hunting' From Page l WOMEN .•• and corporal.ions run the country," Mrs. Hulbauer said. "A woman gets paid zero for housework and hauli11g around 1 35-pound kid." Rather than act unilaterally, the coun- cil has indicated it will unanimously support a motion to establish the negotiating committee. The slate has warned a gal n 1 t unilateral action. ln an earlier motion Wednesday, the Highway Commission unanimously declared that ii the city attempts to void ttie contract without 8late concurrence, action should be taken to recover planning and engineering costs on the section of the route involved. State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) said Wednesday his new Senate Subcommittee on Civil Disorder will not become "a road show that tours the state on a i•witch hunt." In a statement released following his appointment as chairman of the !IUb- committee, Carpenter said it will be a "respectable and meaningful" body v.tiich . will strike at the roots of unrest and terrorism, not just issue reporls on the problems. "This subcommittee has been charged with the responsibility of establishing causes for. and developing legislative soh.Jtions to, the present problems of civil di~order." he said. Carpenter said "there may be some areas where we will overlap," wit.h the work of his committee's controversial predecessor, the Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee on Un -Ame ri can Activities. "I don 't cons ider us an investigative committee at all," the former FBI agent said. "Our purpose will be to develop legislation we hope will help solve the problem." Carpenter was appointed to the cha irmanship of the newly-created com- mittee by the Senate Rules Committee a!I it abolished the old Un-American Activities Committee. "The details of our operation are still pretty much up in the air," he said. "There are many things we have to have time to work out," such as financing and staff. Carpenter. an FBI agent from I9M to 1958, said ''I expect the FBI will cooperate with us in some wsy. or course, they'll use all due !lcruliny. They're not an information disseminating organization.'' The un-American activitieS committee last year complained the federal agency refused to aid its investigations. Mills and Carpenter said the new committee -as with the old -probably would hold no public hearings. "I think hearings are an opportunity for the radicals to put on medicine shows," said ~tills . Sen. Arlen Gregorio agreed : •·we can probably get a hell of a lot more done in that atmosphere than in the hoopla of open meetings, Certainly lhe disruptions a1 the House Un-American Aclivilies Committee showed that." Carpenter. elected in 1970, said he knows very litUe about the old committee and its files on 20.000 person!!. The files were moved this week from a Fresno warehouse to the state archives two blocks from the Capitol. "Somebody hes suggested burn the rec<>rds, bul 1'd want to take a look at them berore I would make a decision.'' he said. "They may ha\'e some intrinsic value." But even his committee will need R n1ajority vote in the Rules Committee to gel access lo the Jocked-up files. Miils engineered lhe abolition of the old committee after discovering it.Ii files Last Rites Set For Beach GI Requiem ~1ass for a Huntington Beach soldier killed in Vietnam will be celebrated 111 10 11. m.. Friday in Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Church. Full military honors y,•il\ be accorded Pfc. Joe Dalenta. son of ~tr, ind Mrs. William Dalenta, 18172 Caleda Lane . Hr was 21. 11e will be buried in the Good Shepherd Cemetery. Dalenta was a 1968 graduate of Foun- l11in Valley High School. Survivors includ~ the parents; a a\ster, Dii:ine; ind three brothers, John, Jeri')' and Ted. included reports on himself and about two dozen other legislators. Sen. H. L. Richardson, a 1970 member of the un·American activities committee and leader of the fight against its aboli- lion. said "it is doubtful the new com- mittee will receive the b r o ad capabilities" the old ()ne had. The Democrat-dominated Rules Com- mittee, headed by Senate President pro tern James Mills (0-San Diego), used "the contemporary politicll method of dodging a hot is!IUe," Richardson said. ''.A~point a new committee, give it hm1ted powe r!I, broad responsibilities and a weak staff." "So inst.ead of meeting a subject bead- on, yoll gum it to death,". uid the Arcadia Republican. "It's a typical cover-up. Mills tried to.. placate the con- servatives, the America• Legion and the anti-communists and at the aame time give a sop to his left-wing con- stituents among the Democrats." He also complained "there will no longer be reports or Un-Amer ica n &c· tivities released to the people." But Carpenter said "it's incumbent upon a comm ittee or thi!I kind to make reports." Carpenter noted his committee will provide "valuable info rma tion'' legislators can use to formulate laws, not books on the details or activities of individuals and groups as the aid committee's reports were. "I do believe there is proper legislative interest in the whole subject matter of riots, disorders and individuals with designs to undermine and destroy our society," he said. "But the main concern should be that these kinds ()f people seem to be able to recruit <lthers these days, either to join them or to take part in bombing or other violence on their own. "Our committee will mainly direct ourself to the reasons and possible cures for that," he said. "I'm mainly interested in establishing a respectable committee that can deal with the roots af civil unrest." "But she gets what the man breaks his back for, food, home, clothing," in- terjected a man. Mrs. Hufbauer countered with statistics from the Chase Manhattan Bank - "hardly a hotbed of support for Women's Liberation" -which indicated the average housewife 's work week is 99 hours. Another man pointed out that most of the nation's corporations are owned by women who hold lhe majority of stock:. , • "Old mlllionaire!I die off and their wives inherit the stock, because women live longer. A man worka him.self to death," tfte challenger said. "Maybe we 'll win then~' Miu Buck winked. Miss Buck told of her job hunting experience Jn New York as a college graduate. "I wa!I offered a lot ol secretarial jobs -that's a good classificaUon for paying a woman lower wage11 -and l can't even type." The third national goal <lf Women's Liberatioo is free, client<Ontrolled day care centers for working women. There was little discusaion on that point. Early in the eve11ing Miss Buck ex- plained about conscious ral!ling groups where women first meet in the liberation movement. "A woman hits three stages in this group," 1he e1pl1ined. "Flrst there is an awarene.ss. and a beginning to be angry when 1he learns her aspirations haven't been met becaUH she his to play the role of wife. ~ "Then her ambition is 1roused. With the support of tht group Ille feels 1he can do thing!I. "The last stage Is shock and self anger when she find!I that 1ociety 1till treats her as a aex object. "You find you can't make It al one so you band together with all your sisters and try to change lhe stereotype.'' The clarification moves came !ale Wednesday afternoon when the com- mission endorsed a letter sent by ils chairman, Fred C. Jennings, to Mayor Ed Hirth last month. In that Jetter, Jennings had said, ''It ls my understanding that the city of Newport Beach has undertaken a com- prehensive traffic study in conQection with the coastal freeway controversy. "I am interested in helping to find a solution to the problem and if the report, as submitted by your consultants. indicates the desirability or some modification in the adopted route, I will support a review of this study by the Division of Highwa vs to establish any area of concurrehce. '' In a statement issued this morning, Jenninga said be also told the commission that "some N'ewport Beach residents are not aware of the difference in lega l responsibilities assigned to the com- mission and the Department of Public Works so far as freeway planning is concerned." He pointed out that while Ute com- mission is solely responsible for deciding freewa y alignments, the department serves as the state's agent in the negotia- tion and execution of freeway agreements entered into with local governmenta. Mayor Reported In 'Fine' Shape Mayor Donald Shipley was in "fine" condition in the Pacific Hospital, Hun- Lington Beach, today, The mayor wu admitted Monday for • series of tesl.'J suggested by his doctor after complaining of feeling i!l. The nature of his illness has not been disclosed and no date had been set today for his release from the hospital. Hospital officials said he is undergoinJ a regular checkup. ~etnDt/eli#' W. liil:ua lllitl asii Of ..... -Ill ....... ..,. of'ha nlln we•-' RIOVe .,1y1 Sof•i;. Cliillft; leclrow; Dlsllnl Aoo~ G•tai:ai Setsj Lll111ps, China Servers; Buffets; Tillt ... ; cVrlos; Boek· cases, H •a cl Boards; Mlrro ... ; and 1111any items too nutaterous to mention. ' • Fight Pollution Nader Challenges Coast Students By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ..... 011!1 ,llM S!1ff St.anding with tonlorrow't J1:1dua Jamming the gym noor ri&hl Up to bu feet, attorney-crusader Ralph Nader challtnged Orange Cout colleglam con- cerned about ecology problems Wed- riesday to mobilize the entire state. He propoaes to send aid from his Washington-based foundation to orgMJte a statewide student movement that would thrust more power at prol:>lem-sol ving than any other body in California. One campaign Ui optratlng 11ucce11fully In Oregon and a second is fonninc in Minnesota. Students are voluntarilv assesstd $1 to $3 and California's 800,0oo community college level students alone could marshal a huge war chest of funds. "This ls the first concrete propoaal made before a community college in the state," he emphasized. "California is ripe for thiJ kJnd of action," Nader added, noting It has 98 community colleges. Sludent representatives on each cam- pus v.·ould help administer the sy1tem, that of a fWl·tlme action group retaining atlorneys and eeological engineers. "Within a few mo11th3, you'll become ane of the most powerful, if not the most powerful lobbies in the slate," Na- der continued. Specialists ret ained by the 1tatewide student strike force against pollution and other problems of all kinds wouJd g<> direcUy into courts, the legi.slature, cor- j>orations ind other points of powu. Law.1uil! would be filed againlt com- panies or individuals. A tremendou.1ly popular 1 p e a k e r throughout the nation, Nader drew more than 3,000 lislenua to Orange Coast College's Basil H. Peterson Gymna.1ium. His simple. driving examples of both political and environmental pollution combined with humor and propositions tov.·ard change drew frequent bursts of 1pplause and laughter. Nader said student! are the ·JogJcal ones to lead lhe movement agalnst cor- poration!! and political situations that are damagina: our world behind a smokffCl'eefl af public r e 1 a t l on 1 pl1Utude1. "A cacophony of lips ••. "he charaed. Nol only esthetlc aspect.! of the pollu- tion problem, but such things as in- dustrial safety, slums, potent I a 11 y dangm>U! or non-nutritive food additives and others muat be dealt with. "PollUe111ly, it ill a matter of sheer power, which of course is the name or the game." Mentlonlng the 1399 Rivers and Harbor• Act against knowingly polluting waterways, Nader said it U remarkable that it was never invoked for use until three years ago. , He called for 1awsuilll a1ainst 23,000 rirms allegedly involved In prosecutable contamination of the environment and alto criminal prosecution ol corporate bosses responsible. "There is no better way to evade the law with impunity than to wrap a corporation around your!l!lt," be said, Nader mentioned years of illegal offshore oil drilling in the Gulf or Mexico in which no personal indictment.!! were handed down. "You can smog a city, wipe out a river, poison the fish with mercury and put thousaads of fishermen out of work and you get invited to the White House for a social occasion," he jeered. Nader likened the situation to the Golden Rule: do unto others what you would havt others do unto you. "The Golden Rule ill quite radical these days in industry," he said. accusing Gtneral Motors of spending $250 million for new GM signs around the world, while causing 35 percent of alr pollution. And he said less than 1 percent of all U.S. corporate profits were spent to study or cle&n up pollution. Nader used the analogy of a man throwing household garbage fi:om his 17·room home into the street for three weeks before authorities crack down on bis prac~ce. "But if you do it on a large enough acale, it doesn't seem so absurd," he added. V.S. Security Budget Labeled 'Inadequate' By L. PETER KRIEG Ot IN Delly "lltl 111" The former head of U.S. Naval opera~ tions in the Pacific charged Wednesday that President Ni1on'1 proposed tm budget "is inadequate for the .security cif our countr}r." Retired Admiral U.S. Grant Sharp, commandtr·ln-chief in the PacUlc from 1964 to 19118, made the contention at an Ope.ration Alert planning ses!ion lunchean at the Stuft Shirt restaurant in Newport Beach. He told the 40 guests, "The sobering quesl ion which all of us must face i!I what new levels of aggression •nd ruthlessness wiU be pursued by the Soviet • 3 Gunmen Steal $5,000 in Cash, Ec1uipment in SA T11to owners of a commercial diving firm and their secretary were tied with telephone v.·ire and their heads covered while three armed robbers took almO!!!t $5.000 in cash and equipment from a Santa Ana apartment. Police said the robbers gained entrance to the apartment. 2302 S. Center St., early Wednesday morning on the preten!e of aruiwering a newspaper ad listing stereo equipment for 1ale. Once lnlide, the trio drew suns and forced Laurence J. Henry, 23 : John R. fink, 22, and Elda F. Wltlla.ms, 22. io lie face down on the noor. Telephones were ripped from tht wall and the wire used to tie the victims' hands behind their backs. Their heads were covered with pillow cases. The bandits then searched the apart- ment and took stereo equipment, radie1 and olher items plus $900 in cash. Union when they feel secure ln a posture cif nuclear supremacy." Admiral Sharp earlier had said the United Slates will be in second place in the nuclear arms race within • year, if It Is not already. Admiral Sharp did not di1cu.!S specifie dollars he felt are needed to offset the Soviel threat. but he poinltd ciut the defense commitment by this country has fallen from 9.7 percent of the gross national produd in 11168 to seven ptrcent this year. He said under President Nixon 's pro- po!ed bud1et, It would drop to 11.8 per- cent. And citing the record or the Congrell! In pruning defenM: apending, Admiral Sharp said, "It would be very serious for the defense posture or the country if this budget was reduced by the Congress. "The Congress should increase lt," he r;aid. Admlral Sharp said the problem of being second in the nuclear age is ''that it multiplies the chances not of peace, but of nuclear war. "Soviet or Red Chinese overconfidence or millcalculation in the use of, or threat to use, their power may trigger such a war Inadvertently. or may place the United States in a posture from which there can be no retreat,'' he said. The group sponsOring Admiral Sharp'• talk, the Institute of American Strategy, is conducting a series of "planning sessions'' prior to a four-day "cold war congress" it will sponsor in May al the Anaheim <?1venlion Center. A spokesman for the group said Wednesday Operation Alert hopes to have addresses by "a head of a foreign government, one or the jQint chiefs of staff and two other men prominently mentioned as candidates for the highest office In our land." He declined to name any of them. Skinnydips 011t. San Onofre Off Liniits to Nu.dies State parks officials drafting the rulea: for uu <Jf the new San Onofre State Park Beach south of the Weit.em White House hastily drafted a new one loday --nudes are a no-no. The new morality notwithstanding, the sta te parks brass came up with the ruling hastily •fter rectivin1 a requut earlier th is month from the Western Sunbathing Association out of San Die1ll. The skinnydippers wanted a section of the scmic beach to provide acenery of 11'lt.ir own. And WSA Director David P. Phillip.1 pressed the i~,ue. 1pp1renUy with the State Park1 brass In Sacramento. tie s1ld hi!! 3.500 member rroup didn 't -ant to ur.e the whole beach -juat 1 small part State Parks Division Six Olrttl/Jr Jame• Whitehead Mid this morning. however. that tl\e state has a convenient rule wh ich applies ; No section or any state park can be set aside lor exclu1lve u11 by a specific group, he lillid (relltved). But lhe director re:lated another facet of the sklnnydlp question. ''They 11aid they wertn't re a 11 y .1 particular about exclusive ust. One man uld folk111 with balhlna 1uU1 would be Wtlcome as well. But the prospect of "clothlu" mingling with .'J,500 nudie1 •till doesn't sit rtaht -par11cularly for openina: dly early 1n April. Gov. Rtagan Is expected to be the guest of honor Th11t¥1Y, Mit'l:h 18, 1971 H OAIL Y l'ILllY 3 New State Tax Eyed Revenue Would A id 'Low Wealth' Schools •• 'l'li!at and LG1t' Tr ia Nixon, at a 'Vhite House press c-0nference, discloses she has been secretly engaged to Edward Finch Cox for tv.•o years and that he is her ''first and last love." But she didn't tell her parents until last Thanksgiving. By GEORGE t.EffiAL Of IJlt IHH' "llel ll11t A propGSed $3.75 per $100 statewide property tax: would benefit most 1chool district! in Orange C<lunty but cause lnerea;ed property laxes ln Newporl- Mesa, Laguna Beach and C.pl.llfano Unified sc~~l di.strlclS. About 200 county school officials Wednesday night h~rd • presentation on the plan endorsed by the State Depart· ment of Education and being recom· mended to the legi!lature by the State Board of Education. lf adopted. the tax equalizing package would provide increased revenues to 20 of 34 school district.! in Orange County. An. additional 126,664,~ in school 'rev. enue would be provided to the county 's di.strlcts under the st.atewlde property tax collection syatem, Joseph Brook!, executive Secretary of the California School Board!: Aasoclatlon, said. Benefi~g most by the plan, would be the so-caiied "'low wealth" dl.strlcts. These are the di.!lricts which have large numbers of students and a low total assessed valuation or property. Such districts have less taxing capacity per student and are thus called "low wealth districts" The statewide property tax would taic all property in California at the same rate -$3.75 is propo.sed -and divide the re\·rr.ue on an established formula per pupil Thus, districts such as Newport.to,1esa Unified. which enjoys a relatively high assessed valuation would need to raise its present tu: rate -$5.13 in Costa COMMUN!TY EVENTS Th• For•nslc: Team of o.c. ·coneci- ARTIST OP: THI MONTH M•n:lrl 1 ltlrl tlrlroutlrl A,r11 14n lOUIH M. l"l,IM., IOcll •rtllt -..tto •!It tXlllt!I <>II 1>1•Mlt191, b<U\11 tNI Ink I nd ,.,,,. er ..... on d•awl"ll• 1!t1n9 wlll'I ptlftled dnltn• ""' WOOd pl1cciun. Ne•ds Your Support Co11t11c:t lcnb•r• l•rt-ltf Or•ltfl• c .. , Co11..-. Tlrll1 111ttlo11ollf r•11ke4 te-ci111 NH• help so rilot tMr 111-v Rtt11•111 the "S.,.•kl11t T•urNM*flt" .,.., 111•tttlrl ltt St, L•11h. Mlu••ri. • TM "lef hr•11'1" .,, •••'"' • .,_, '" M9rtlrl J6ril et tile Hel"''"' Cl•" H•-· Procffd1 ... , ~ be 11Mtl for • p11lllk.tt•• of tM hl1tary ef .. 1 .. tt.. •f o,_.. C••"'Y· Tlck9tl ,,. .. allllbl• ef CW• "'"' C1'10111Mr ef c-~·· Slit •Ktlvtd ln1lructlon HI d r f W ! 11 9, •II mo-di.II !KllnlQUtl .Ind c<>IO• ll'ltory II Nlll- 11 "" Ac1d1mv 111 W11Mn111t1n, O C., 1.,..:111 c1u1n 11 (•lfWlk uni ... tnllr ii> W11hlnt!on. O.C, ldull Mu<lllOft cl111 11 N~llwntt•ll Hlfll S<-1, (011-"••k. Mtryltlld 1NI prlv•I• clt11 IM.or.1 Ill drt wl!lo wl1!1 "''""' lll.llrl, W11M1111t.ro. 0 (. Att..,.im m' "' '""" .. In Ylrl<lvi; l rl .... 1. II Or11111 Cotti (Olllte. SJi.. Ms _,.,,lblttd WIH'I Ir! silo .... 11 I -Mr ol v1ri.us trl clllbt, l lllO t i Ortrlt<I COl.mty Alrporl 1nd A!rpor11r ln11. Mesa and $4.78 ln Newport Beach - by seven eenta per $100 to maJntaln the present level of educaUonal program. Laguna Beach would have to increase lls tu rate $1.42, to maintaln the 1ame level ot education. Capistrano Unltled would need an additional levy of 20 cenlll. Jn contrast. Ocean View Elementary School District t.upayers would receive a $1.33 reduction under tile plan. Yet that district would get an addlUonal $598 ,000 in revenue. Other Orange Coa~t districts would be affected similarly. San Joaquin Elementary district's rate v.·ould drop 19 cenls . Huntington Beach E I e m e n t a r y Di!tricl'a tax rate would decrease 12.5 cents. Huntington Beach Union High School District would get an additional St ml.Ilion for program improvement with a 14-cent tax reduction. Los Alamitos Elementary District would receive $894,000 more with a rate reduced by 31 cents. Community college districts generally would fare well under the program, except for Saddleback College Oi5trict which would need to raise its tax rate by 14 cents. Orange Coast Commun.ity College district would get an additional $878,lmO in revenue and could rop its rate 17 cents, Santa Ana College's parent district, Rancho Santiago, could lower ill! rate three cents and receive an additional $1.4 million In revenue. Districts needing to raise their t.a1 EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! levlr1 et1uld do 50 up to the level of their 196&-70 tax rata plut an ldjultmeot for inflaUon, Brooks a.id. The proponl abolishea 1 ~t of presently employed penniuive overrldu including those for employe , retlrement benefits, continuation s ch o o I 1 , m. terdistrict attendance, regional voca. Uonal educaUon ce.atera, junior college tuition and othera. Broob e:r:pla.ined that the coslll of these programs have been figured into the amount of the average diltrlcl's needs which determine the amount per pupil a district would aet from th• statewide tu. Override tulng4 thority for 01ber proirams, however. is recommended. These would include programs fur the physically handicapped, mentally gifted minors, transportation, capital outlay and the override re3torlng a dlstrid'a basic program level of expenditures to tbt inOatlon adjusted 1969-70 spending level. Under the plan, district& educating n percent of all student& ln Oranc• County would receive an increase of funds without a tax increase, Brook said. Di!tricl! getting a tax cut and a revenue increase, were the plan enacted, presently handle 85 percent of the coun· ty's student population. The slatewide levy of $3.75 per $100 would not pay the total cost of education for kindergarten lo 14th grade students, Brook! noted. The state must provide an additional $fOO million to meet the total school cosls. _,.a CAUFORNIA FEDERAL SAVIN OS .,.._...--- Certificate Accounts* 5.92% Annual Yield If all savings and interest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit. 1-year minimum term. Dally compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 5.253~~t~ual 90 Day Certificate Accounts • 5.39% Annual Ylold If all savings end interest remain a year. No minimum deposit. Dally com pounding. E1m from date of depo1lt. 53 current 0 1nnual rate Passbook Accounts 5.13% Annu•I Yleld ir 11! savings and Interest remain a y1H1r. No minimum depoaiL Dally compounding. Interest day·ln to day-out. "Wllhdrawals before maturity permlttld but 1Ubjeet to 1omt 1011 of lnlarest Cal!fom.l~OWE~4.£!!!!h,§~!,!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams• 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER Conventent Offlcn throughqut t~ An;elu, Orang a and Ventura Counlie1 "ooounlll.,. Inf ind up to :10.ooc Ulldlr iiro.i•IOlll of IM fld-1 antnp & Lo.rl IMUf.tf!O. Conior1t1on, I Ptl'l!ll'*ll IOOl'lt't of llo Ullltt>d --Cl""""l'lll"L ( ~ l 4 DAIL 'I PILOT 1 hllf'SdlJ, Mardi 18, 1 q11 . \ \ :Message From I The Master By THOMAS A. P.fURPHINE Of Tiie O.ltr ,11.r 1!1H IDIJTH COAST, WILD COAl)T' When city councils, toning boards or planning c:om.mi.ssions gather in session along our coasUine, most of the business transacted ls pretty duU aod routine. Things like aideyard setbacks, fence variances and the like. Well, the city people down at Del Mar got one of those routine requests the other day. Filed at city haU, it went like this: "To the Honorable Mayor and City Councll: .:, who am known to you as Jesus Chri!l have made known my needs to the one who must act for me and for the Great White Brotherhood of the Highest Realms as he was appointed by The Father as President or The While Lodge situated since l!H2 in Del Mar and governed by us from the Higher R~lms and by the llierarchy of Heaven from tbe Highest Realms of Being. "ALTHOUGH I, Master, have walked the streets of Det Mar, and served through minister and priest in your churches, I did not make my Return officially known until high noon of a Sunday Sept. %.0, 1970. Since that time 1 have called a few of those who know and love me together to prepare for my entrance into the life of Del )tar. 7o more easily accomplish this, the lovely old restaurant building at 1342 Camino Del Mar has been taken on lease and is now being prepared for my brief time among you. ·'Brlef, in person. but as always in &pirit where I am welcomed. "WITH TIIlS introduction to my Return to, in love and understanding. serve all people as the Father wishes, J ask Eloise, known to me as Light Bringer, to pre.sent my need to you. To prepare my worla-wide service it is necessary that there be complete seclusion and this can only be had if the large estale in the name of The White Lodge, with entrance at 1511 Forest Way, could have the alley·way 'vacated' so the lovely planned i;ix.foot legaJ fence may be star~ ··So J, to be known in this Era as 'Jesu' ask this Honorable Board to begin the legal process to vacate the unused alley -unused except by the Servers and friends of The White Lodge as an entrance way. for it is closed at the east end by a clirf arrllligement. "I await your word which will be conveyed to the one now acting as my secretary, Eloise Mellor. But this is in my own handwriting as in reality I am tbe principal in this tr<Waction." Signed, , Master I'LL BET those municipal folks down In Del Mar will 1 u re breathe a aigh of relief to gel the nei;t just plain old g~ ttation variance request. * POST IRISH: Back tn Oklahoma City, Pat Groves became a father for the 12\h time on St. Patrit::k·s Day. The Grove family live~ on Sl. Patrick Drive. Wonder if they ever consich!red moving? * ANO FINALLY. flower lovers. you should be made aware that California naturalists are al I in a tizzy this week. because they say the finest crop nf wildfloy.·ers in years has now started to bloom just south of Badwater and on the Jubilee and Salsberry passes. Those places are in Death Valley Na- tional Afonument, flower children. Feelings Straitted Mrs. Meir Rips U.S. Peace Plan By United Prej1 lntenaatfolllt The already 1trai11ed relaUona between lrael and the United States worsened today w1tb the firm rejection by Prtmlcr Golda Melr of Washington's latest Middle East peace platform. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan also criticized the propoaals put forward by U.S. Secretary Of State William P. Rogers aimed at breaking the dead1oclr: in the Middle East peace talks. Rogers had warned that failure to reach a settlement with the Arabs could set the stage for World War III. Egyptian political sources in Cairo said "Egypt cannot wait forever." They 3aid that unlen Israel agreed to withdraw from occupied Egyptian t e r r i t o r y "another military conflict i! inevitable.'' Israeli newspapers rallied to the defense or the Meir government. Typical was the editorial in lhC morning newspaper Ha 'Aretz which said: ''Rogers is demanding the impossible of Isrilel." 1'he Arab world media. on the other hand, hailed Rogers' support for com· plete withdrawal of Israeli troops from all occupied Egyptian territory. The right-wing newspaper Nida Al Watan in Beirut said Rogers' statement wa!I "an important change in U.S. policy." The French·language L'Orient said the Arab world is now pinning its hopes on \Vashington. Rogers said Tuesday Israel's security C<Ulld best be served by international guarantees rather than territorial ac· quisition. But Mrs. Meir said Wednesday night "we cannot trust what Rogers Nixon Proposes Transportation Funds' Sharing WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on proposed today that ,2.566 billion be given to the states to help solve their transportaton problems. Twenty percent of the funds would go toward strengthening the mass transit systems in the Tiation's cities. In a message to Congress on his special revenue sharing plan. Nixon pro- posed that.'2.041 billion during the first year be spent for the planning, con· at ruclion, acquisition, improvement, m>erati<ln . and rnalnten.alice of what he called the broad apeetrum or transporta· lion systems and services, including highway, aviation and mus transit. He &aid ~ remaining $525 million during the first ruil year would be u,,00 to provide what he described u fut relief for many of the nation's man transit systems "which now suffer from inacfequate equipment, all owing them to undertake the essential work of modernization wit.boot further delay." l\lodern Styles Fine But Not in Court NEWKIRK. Okla. (AP) - A v.·oman reporter was barred from covering a murder trial Wednesday because sh• was wearing a pant.ssu.iL Belh Liiiey or the Arkansas City, Kan .. Dally Traveler said she was shocked when told that she, could not enter Oi!il. Court Judge Lester R. Maris 's courtroom. The judge said, "Yt'e bave a rule in this courtroom that women wear dresses because we don't feel other attire meets the standards of dignity of this courtroom. We 're sorry if this rule of· fends anyone, but we made that rule before pantssuits came in." • offer& us, even if he does say it with the beet of inlflntklns." In New York, Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban was meeting with U.N. Secretary General 'Thant and U.N. Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring to discus• possible moves in light of Israel's re· jection of U.N. appeals to withdraw from occupied Arab territory. Acrording to government sources in Tel Aviv, Eban was to suggest that the matter cf lsraeli·Arab borders be: dropped for the moment and the ne.gotia· lions lake up lesser question."! such as the reopening of the Suez Canal, the Palestinian refugee situation and the con. trol of Arab guerrillas. Jn addition, Eban was urging the talia 6e moved away from the limelight or New York to a quieter venue -possibly Cyprus or Geneva. Another point he was expected to pass on to the U.N. officials was that Israel will comider leasing Sharm El Sheikh from Egypt all part of a territorial settlement. More Troops To Be Sent Into Ireland BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Guarded by police against a crowd of thousands howling for his political scalp, Premier James Chichester-Clark said to- day Britain i1 sending in 1,000 more · troops to stop this British province's Roman Catholic-Protestant stree t fighting in Northern Ireland. The leader <lf the Protestant majoiiTy government told fellow lawmakers the reinforcements would include a battalion of troops from British forces in West Germany. It would raise to 9,700 the number of British troops sent to Northern Ireland. Outside the capital, a crowd estimated by police at up to 4,000 ignored sleet and rain and howled, "Clark out!, Clark ool!, Clark out!, Clark out!" the crowd, i101e..nanLs from bowler-hatted merchants in dark suits to dockers in cloth caps. had marched from the city center to demand a stronger hand against the Roman Catholic minority in .thi!I British province. 1lle crowd varied its noise at times to boom, "Craig in!. Craig in!, Craig in!, William Craig leads the right wing of the Protestant poliUcal factions. He demands tougher action -including the internment without trial of troublemakers. Clark was caught between London's demands he usher in equal rights refonrui to lid the catboljc minority and the demands of rlght.-wlng Prottstants, like the crowd outside, to get tougher with the Calhollco. • Man Rehearsing For Play Slain rr-RIOGECREST <AP) -A man was shot to death during a rehearsal for a college play Wed,besday night. The Kem County sheriff's office said Wayne Carpenter, 37. v.·as taking part in rehearsal for a Bakersfield College. Desert Division production of "Oliver" when he was shot. Deputies said he died during a scene In the play when struck by a .38 caliber bullet fired by Wint Dillon. a Marine sergeant at the China Lake Naval Weapons Center, also an actor in the play. Investigators said the gun was sup- posed l<l contain blanks. Misery for Man, Beast Powerful Winds Join Forces With Heavy Snow Temperature• California I r UNITICI l"llll IHTllllH,t,TtCINAl I ' UNITIC» ,llSS INTllN,t,TICIN,t,L '°"'"' •• " C•l!lom•• Wll tnllSllY IU" "' IOdlV wlltl Mlrl'I• low clou& 1IOflt fM tNlt llMl 9U1!Y W1'1(11 111 !11~ mov1111l111 '"" d911rh. l.mo•<•lurt\ -. 1ll1n11v we•mt• 111 "'* .... ,,~ '"~ wnl PO•llOl'll. E••IY "'llfl\lnt IOI h•m· '91"~ lrl!!lt 111 CNllll lrflll. Tl'll lot Antl!H 1<11 Wll l"llOlllV 1un11v wllll "'""' low tlouotl tMl 1llthll'I' w1rmer •~oer1!urH. Tiit ,.,...,lettod Cl\olc c..,,., "ltl'I loOlv wn n t0m"'" """ w..:1 .... 1oe11v'• 11. TonltM01 low wtU bf .n. T"" W•t...,. flur11u .ot!M 1m1ll ~·" w1r111..,. lrom Pt1111 Conc"'tiO<I ,. fllt MUkll' llorlllf tor lo<:ll no<"fl'I· fftl W'h'lch 1J 10 U kl\Otl below ..,,. _., •• c.lllY-· Li.Ill lll'llllt Wt ,_,..,.,.,.. Ill ll'>Oll ., .. , ., llw ..&..• .......... '''"' ll!(fpl 111 fM illft l"lf""llt• V1Jln'. Mtlltmun> .,_ i. .... 11 *'" . 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Environment Panel R«ws Against DDT Ban 'CAN'T TRUST U.S.' Mrs. Gold• Meir WAS!UNGTON (\JP!) Tho Environmental Protection Aaency ruled today against an immedia~ ban on Ulf! cf the pesticide DOT and U>I weed killer 2,4,5-T. Instead, the agency promised to U · pedite review of the environmental hazards of the two products and rule within a year on whether they 1hould be banned. EPA Administrator William D. Ruckelshaus acknowledged his ruling wou1d permit, at least t.emporarlly, more use of DDT than he would like. He said he hoped Congress would pass 1 Jaw empowering EPA l<l preYent use of hazardous insecticides by everyone except farmers, foresters and others given special permits. Ruckelshaus said DDT is 5till va1ueble for malarial mosquito control and tbe Check the low prices in housewares & garden supply departments of your local ha rdware merchant with national chain buying power! • BIG 22 INCH (U-174) DUAL-BLADE ELECTRIC MOWER Flip switch to start instantly-no cords to pull! Dual blades in vnrtex pan with high-powered suction tor sheer, seamless cutting. High-velocity single ch1.1!e dis· charges away from operator and into grass catcher. Offset wheels give closer cut and grealer maneuvera· bitity. Fingertip cutting height adjustment. Free rot· proof grass catcher with mower purchase. SAVE OVER 528 -WHILE LIMITED SUPPLY LASTS! 76 96 WITH DELUXE GRASS CATCHER collon crop. Its environmental haiards have not been proven so overwhelming as to counterbalance ita value&, he added. ,;We don't btlie•e there's an Imminent hazard to the public that would juslif)" an immediate suspension," Ruckelshau.s told a news cortl'ererice. He emphasized that DDT, Aldrin and Dieldrin are not used for home gardening and their use bas sharply declined in rectnl years because of government restrictions and environmenlal concern . "The average homeowner needn 't get into a panic over this decision beeause these pesticides aren·t .generally for sale," he said. Today's announcement followed a Jan. 7 federal court order directi ng EPA to decide quickly whether DDT should be banned. Ruckelshaus said public hear• ings would be held in April on DDT'I hazards and benefits. (o~o) ggc WEED·B·GDN SPRAYER ~ SHOVEL/SPADE ass 60' GARDEN HOSE 4 lbs. sec Fast-Grow lawn Seed Quick grass cover! Crabgrass free. B!ends creeping fescue, domestu:: 11nd perennial ryes. Automatically measures, mixes & sprays. Makes up to 25 gal. ol Weed·B·Gon to kill weeds. Heavy-duty blade of higtK:ar· bon steel with smooth finish. Hard, splinter-free handle. Premium burst-strength nylo11· reinforced vinyl.%" l.D U~ Sate! RENT BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOO QT.1.98 ' ' -' -\. ELECTRIC RUG SHAMPOOER The fast. easy, economical way to clean your carpets! Remtlves dirt, helps restore original color, makes carpet fibers resilient again. UPHOLSTERY CLEANER Y2 GAL. 3.69 1 GAL. 5.98 Get professional results with this 3l·lb. model. Mounted on casters for easy use. 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HOURS: Monday-Friday 9 A.M.·9 P.M. Saturday 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Sunday 10 A.M. • 4 P.M • I I, I I I I ' I I I ' • Fountain Valley Today's Final N,Y. Steeks VOL 64, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH '18, 197[ TEN CENTS :tfave Courage, Men-Women Libs Tell Goals I 'ABORTION LESSER EVIL' Hufbauer of Women's Lib Stem Drive DAILY PILOT Sl•ff ll'llo!O• 'MAYBE WE'LL WIN' Women's Lib Speak er Buck Copters Ely In Rang.ers To Aid Retreating Viets SAIGON !UPI) -.U.S. helicopters flew through sheets of Communist anliaircrafL fire today to take South Vietnamese marine and ranger reinforcements into Laos to try to stem a North Vietnamese drive that has forced a 12-mile retreat by government forces. The helicopters also flew out in· fantrymen bloodied and battered from Over $1 Million In Penn Central Equipment Taken ]>HlLADELPHIA (AP) -1'-1ore than St million worth of Penn Central freight cars-were stolen in the past year and rolited onto the tracks of a small Illinois railroad, U.S. Attorney Louis C. Bechtle uid Thursday. Bechtle said records seized Wednesday night from the La Salle & Bureau County Railroad in tllinois by FBI agents showed that the stolen freight cars were re· painted and their numbers ~hanged. "He said that so far this year. m Penn Central freight cars disappeared 1fter being routed onto La Sa lie tracks. The FBI, armed \ldth search warrants from U.S. District Court in Chicago. took records of the LaSalle line and the Carus Chemical Co. in ll11nois. The court also autboriz.ed the FBI to inspect all LaSalle rollin!': stock. The Official Railroad Guide lists the line as having a total rolling stock of two locomotives and 523 fre ight cars. four days or fighting. taking 2,000 of them to Khe Sanh from the jungles between support bases Brown and Lolo. an area 15 miles inside Laos where they suffered their heaviest casualties today in a single battle in Laos. Firebase A Loui. 12 miles inside Laos on French colonial Route 9, axis of !he government drive across the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex, appeared doom· ed and the 160 men there were ordered to break out of the position today. They were surrounded and under attack after losing 100 dead and wounded. Support Base Brown. 6112 miles east of abandoned Firebase Lolo, still held out but South Vietnamese spokesmen said the Communists were preparing an all out assault on lhe base. Officers at northern opera1ional bases said 2.000 more infantryml'n were ~till at the base, now the westernmost ARVN position in Lao s. South Vietnamese spokesmen declined to say how many reinforcements were sent into Laos but said the t.ask force in Laos remained at between 20,000 and 21.000 troops. The size of the force has been reported previously up lo 24,000 men. Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam. commander of South Vietnamese forces in Laos. said his troops had maintained a 10-1 kill ratio over the Communists since the drive into Laos began Feb. 8 and that these figures were "a· victory .•. a sign of winning." In Seattle Wednesday, Gen. William Westmoreland, army chief of staff and former commander in Vietnam . said the incursion into Laos by the South Viet- namese had been a success. He said tSee INDOCIIlNA, Page 2) By TERRY COVILLE 01 if1it 01llY l'llot Still Cheer up. men. You don't have to be afraid of Women's Liber a tion anymore. They care about you, too. "Men shouldn't be beast& l'lf burden either," Lorna Buck, a 23-year~ld Women's Liberation leader from Costa Mesa, told a group of Huntington Valley Young Republicans Wednesday night. "The underlying theme in women'• lib is the general liberation of people, Higher standards for all," she said. "Then why do you push the women's liberation so much?" came a question from the aucjience. "Self interest," she replied. P.fiss Buck and her partner, Mrs . Sally Hufbauer, 33, also of Costa Mesa , lee· tured the Republicans from Huntington Beach on the hardship of being a woman. They concentrated on g iv i n g background to the women ·s liberation movement and stating its future goals. One of Women's Liberation's three national goals is abortion on demand. "That's murder."' charged o n e Republican woman. "Open abortions will destroy the moral fibre of our country." "Not nearly on the scale of Vietnam,'' replied Miss Buck. "You can't get around it, a baby is a potential human being," Mrs. Huf- bauer added. '"But "'hen you think of pollution and population problems, it's a lesser evil. Any many women die Irom illegal abortions." "In the big picture it's obviously the thing to do," she said. Both women agreed that birth control is much preferable to abortion. "But when it fails. abortion is the answer," Mrs. Hufbauer contended. Another of the three national goall is equal pay for equal work. "In general. it's safe to say men !Se< WOMEN, Page I) Death Charges Reduced Lawman Faces Manslaughter in Bar Slaying ~fanslaughLer charges were f i 1 e d Wednesday against a Los Angeles police {lfficer arrested Monday night after the shooting death of a Buena Park con- structiori worker ()Utside a Hunt ington Beach bar. The slaying of Mark A. ROOgers, 29, police said. ended an argument that began inside the Swi{,lger bar. 19202 Beach Boulevard, Gver t6e l'lff·duty JX>lice Nixon Seeks Tax Boost Right Away officer's alleged attempt to feed a cigarette to a dog. Cliftori J. Schusse. 26. of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach, a patrolman with the Los Angeles Po I l c e Department's Harbor Division, was cLl:lrged with voluntary manslaughter in the shooting. Huntington Beach police arrested him originally on suspicion of murder. WASHINGTON (UPI) , -President N~ wui.: Congre11-..... eaae lor,lal ~ ··' Security taxes right away, it1Stead ~t next year, to pay for the new 10 percf:nt increase ln old age btnefill. If Congress gOf!s along, the Increase •l'luld take 4468 instead of the present $405 ()Ut of the paychecks l'lf those earning $9,000 or more. The $3.6 billion-a-year benefit increase Nixon signed Wednesday would delay the higher taxes until next ye&r. Nixon SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 com plained such a delay coold aggravate the nation's still critical inflation pro- blems unless it is paid for immediately by increased revenue eollections. "If these urgently needed Social Securi· ty increases are enacted but the means to pay for them currently are defaulled, v.·e are faced with the very real prospect of increased inf!atlon," NixoA said in a statement issued following the signing. Thar She Blows Deputy District Attorney Richard J. Beacom said a second ·suspect in the case, James E. Jordon. 31, of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K·lO, Huntington Beach, has been released. Charges against him were dismissed for Jack of evidence, Beacom said. Jordon al so had been arrested ()O suspicion cf murder. Schusse appeared before Judge Walter "For that reason, I urge the Congress to act promptly on a Social Security revenue measure so that the current coot ()f these increased benefits will be financed and the basic non-inflationary budget principle, which was embodied in the 1972 budget I submitted to the Congress, can be: maintained," the Presi· dent said. It appeared unlikely that Congress would go along with Nixon's request for added revenue. Social Security t.a.x increases are unpopular \\'ith the lawmakers but usually &lide through on the popularity ()f benefit increases. Without higher benefits a! part ()f the package, a tu boo.st would have little gl'llng for iL Veterinarians from San Diego's Sea \Vorld returned with only one gray whale in captivity Wednesday after snaring it with a hoop net 400 miles south of San Diego along the Baja California coast. The 18·foot baby whale will be displayed .at the aquatic park and will be used for research because the species is endangered. Councilman Sues 1,000 Charamza Wednesday afternoon In West Orange County District C.Ourt and waived bis right to an immediate hearing. He is now in Orange County Jail in lie ll of $15.0CKl bail. He was ordered to appear i1J court again at 9 a.m. Friday. Police allege that Schusse felled Rogers with one shot from a .38-caliber revolver after firs t firing a bullet into the pave- ment. Huntington Draws Park Panel Blank • By ALAN DlRKIN Ot 1111 h llY r ti.t St1U \Vestminster school trustees are again refu1ing to appoint a Huntington Beach resident to the Huntington Beach Recrea· tion and Parks Commission. Elementary school districts which have campuses in Huntington Beach have representatives on the recreation com· mission because of a joint use of playgrounds and parks. Action by the trustees of the elemen· tary school district this week continued the conflict bet ween the board and the Huntington Beach city council. The city council recently passed a resolution that all members of all Hun· tington Beach commissions be city residents. The Westminster trustees refused tl'l comply with a directive that all non· residents be phased out by July J and then at the ~1arch 1 council meeting the council reaffirmed lts policy on a 6·1 vote . The latest step in the dispute came Tuesday when the trustees unanimously decided to write to the city to say that the school district can best be served with a representative from the district on the recreation commission. The district's present representative l'ln the commission is Mrs. Neomia Willmore, president of the hoard, but a resident of Westminster. "Someone who lives in Huntington Beach could be appointed, but we object when the city says it must be a Hun· ting ton Beach resident." commented Mrs. Ada Clegg, who chaired this week 's meeting of the We stminster trustees. "We feel the district can best be served from someone of our choice regardless of residence," Mrs. Clegg continued. Oruge Coast Teachers Fight Joh Cuts Seeking to Recall Him Se.al Beach Councilman Conway J. Fuhrman has filed an 1817.500 libel and slander sult against more ·than 1.000 residents who are trying to recall him from office. Anti-Fuhrman residents have forced the city to set a March 30 recall election Jn which they will try to oust the veteran councilman from his post. Weather After you cut through Friday's early morning fog, you'll find sunny skies, with gusty northeast winds helping to blow the smog away. Temperature3 should reach the high 70s. Huntington Educators Group Seeks Other Means By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 11141 D1Ut .. !lot 11111 Teachers of the Huntington Be11ch Union High School District said Wed- nesday they are opposed to "any staff cuts" <this July. The Distr!ct Educ11tors Associati on (DEA ). official represe ntal i\'e of most of the dist rict's 500 teachers. said It would "seek alternative mPasures'' to personnel culs proposed ~y the ad- ministration when a tax hike attempt failed at lhe polls ~1 arch 9. ··we are instead looking !or a PQSsible teduclion in textbook s, supp\les 11.nd tr8nsportalion," t'xplained DEA Vice President Ray Cooper· / "Cutting b{iCk on school busing . could rf'sult in 8 F.1gn1flcant savings 1n an emergency situation. Whenever a ta1 cut is factd by a school district, this is always one of the first suggestions that comes up," he added. Last week the district held a JleNIOnnel Jottery for nearly 300 first. second and third·year teachers to determine their seniority in the event staff cull have to be made. Although the lottery included the names of all probationary certificated employes. A s s i s t a n t Superintendent \Villlam Settle claims that only the first 2.5 names drawn may be in real jeopardy. He has PQinled out that school trustees may reduce the number of periods a day or i•crease the number of 1tuden1.!1 per clau to offset cuts. Cooper sald the DEA executive board . ) has ta.ken the stand that none of the teachers should be laid off. •·we are in opposltiM to any and all cuts in the teaching at.aff." he declared. Meanwhile, he said the DEA ha1 con· · stituted a salary committff to study the budget for any other cuts. "About 40 percent of the budget ia not taken up by teacher salaries and that's what we'll be looking at," said Cooper. In addition. he ekplained that the DEA has hired legal counsel to Jdvise th<>ae teachers who may be facing layoff. A newsletter sent to teacherli by the DEA Tuesday also urged •U instructors to forwa.rd any information they have concerning federal or state auistance programs which could be wed in the crisis. His suit was filed Wednesday in a Los Angeles Superior Court. It charges the recaU effort with libel, mallcious slander, coospiracy sod damases. Last Nickel Phones May Be On Way Out ALBANY, N.Y, <UPI) -The day ef the nick.el ~Jepbone call may soon be gone forever. The last telephone company in the slate still charging a nickel on a call from a pay telephone booth today asked \he public service commission to raise It! rate to a dime. The libel suit names two corporations. 24 individuals and up to hOOO J o h o Does. Primary target of It ls the Good Government Group (GGG ) •. main backers ()( the recall effort. The suit claims thft political foes have gone too far in defaming his name arid character by accusing· him of '1blackmail and distortion." Fuhrman has been part Of the con· troversial three-man council majority - with Mayor Morton Baum and Coun. cilman Thomas Hngard -that fired City Manager Lee Risner, Fuhrman's attorney is Russe.JI W. Bledsoe. Bledsoe was hired by the city several months ago to . Investigate the recall campaign. • Fuhrman'a llbel suit. handled by Bledsoe, however, has no connection with the city and Bledse'le is being paid by Fuhrman and not the city . INSIDE TODAY San Francisco rtsident.s hit the. panic button when thtll f't· ceived dunning notices askin g them to pay up right a1ooy ()r jace th e consequences. See story, Page 5. 11"~1 11 .... lllt ?" (1!!f1r"!• I C11t<•l11• VJ t Cl1ulf1" tt•H CefOIJc.I JI ( ... twt•f H 0.11~ H .. ktl II Ol~r<tl 11 l!dllerl1t l'•M 6 lllf'l.l'lll"-' 16>11 1"1111~· ,.1' Mel"tWeH U Allll Llll091"1 1J "ll•lM~ ' ll'tttlltt Lk1n\I\ 11 M!Wll l l'-'' M.111\111 'unf• 11 H1Htn1! lrt~I f.J nt1•1• cou111, 11 '"'" 21·11 s~~ i.ur1111\ ... ,, Ttl1¥l\lell ti T~tltl., M·J1 Wtlt!otr ( WtlMll'i litfWt 1J·t6 W1tkl Ntwi ... f DAil V PILOT H Knight in Baggy Armor Off e1·s Hope for Future By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ttle CMl!f f'lllll Sltlt KNIGHTS IN shining armor don't always hit town in chain mail panU, riding in on a while stallion t.o right our wrongs. Ralph Nader wears a ready-made suit. The trousers are baggy and slightly wrinkled Crom a fight on a polluUon- spewing jelliner between campus speeches. One stretc.b sock is even baggy. Nader the crusader is as likely to make the nation's IO Best-Dressed list as he is to be elected vice president or General Motors. The Pied Piper of Improvement is not visually im· pressive. ONE MoritENT he is expected and the next he is out there on the Orange Coast College gym floor ready to speak. Nobody noticed him arrive. He is thin and gaunt, but -like boxer Muhammad Ali -when he opens his mouth, Nader too can float like a butterfly and sting like a bee. Stinging Indictments of river-ruining industries; acid criticisms on food items (Wonder Bread! You wonder what's in it) and corrective ideas pour out like a volley of punches. He deli vers a hard blow to social hypocrisy. HE HAMJ\lERS A WAY on a govermnent that rewards corporate crimi- nals who ruin our lungs and poison our waters with 90Cial invilltions to the White House . Nader not only bitches, however. but he fights back. And he makes sense to increasing numbers of people , from the com· mon garden variety of ecQlogy freak to sober. serious students of our ravaged world. He proposes changes in our sick sys tem to put health and safety on a priority above profit. NADER'S BRAND of Jaw and order would imprison or fine responsible persons within corporations that violate our deteriorating environment as en- thusiastically as il does long-haired Flag-burners. He is militant about power to the people. ''Who i! in the greatest position to exercise power to stop pollution?" be demands. The victims. Us. Who else? The gym is jammed and in the front row i! a student, 29, who ran for the Cost.a Mesa City Council on ecology issues. He has long hair and wear1 striped bib overalls. He is a soul brother to the older man in the sober gray suit -and to the rest of us -because we breathe the same air and drink the same water. ONE CAN FEEL an exciting electricity in the air -along with photo- chemical smog -as Nader exhorts the young, outlining a novel plan for ecological anr:I social action. It is invigorating and even catching. I got up Wednesday. one more day into that 30th year, facing another day of crime in the streets and contamination all around. One more day of cholesterol, mercury, and 47 other harmful ingredients assaulting my own flabby, metabolic bag along with deadline pressure, The Bomb and you name it NO NEWSMAN knows just what his day will bring in terms or assign- ments and mine of Wednesday, Nader's talk, was encouraging. He doesn't wring hls hands and shake bis head, demanding that some- thing be done. He offers solutions that sound surprisingly simple but require only energy and initiative. For whatever It's worth, I'm one or those individuals who does not choose to bring any children into our overcrowded, polluted, war-threatened world. Some things can't be. helped. while ()ther conditions definitely can. Nader makes it sound like there's still a chance for your children. From P.,e..i INDOCHINA • • • the current withdrawal v.·as "not a retreat: it was planned." LL Col. Nguyen Xuan Loe, intelligence cifficer for South Vietnam's 1st Infantry Division, 15aid his regiment-sized force cif about 2,000 men at Brown "have stopped searching for Ccimmunist supply dumps and are preparing for an attack.." "I think the NVA <North Vietnamese) plan a major attack on Brown," be said. "J feel we can hold Brown." ftijlitary sources said North Vietnamese troops pursued the infantrymen fleeing Bandits' Rule Works CHELTENHAf\I, England (UPI) - Four gunmen held 15 bank employes at gunpoint for two hours Wednesday and finally forced the branch manager to open the vault by fal sely telling him his wife was being held hostage, police said. They got away with $67,WO. DAILY PILOT 011 .. HG! CO .. ST PU9LISH1MG COMl"AM:, Ra~trt N. w,,J p,,..ld•lf tNI Pllblllhtr J 1c\:: IL C11rft '( V\UI l'raldtflt •NI Geriwt l Ml l'lllf( l1riom•• ICtt•if Eolllor Tho11111 A. M11r,lii11e" #.trMflrotil EolllOt Al1 11 Dir\i11 W.t <Wi ngo COU!llt f:ollW • Albt rt W. l 1t11 M,.,.;ltlfl Edl"'r M•l'tlttm .._. Offk• 11a1s lt1ch l eult l'•nl M1llin9 Addr1u: P.O. l tt 7,0, •2641 Otfler Offk n l....,... ••di: 7r. ""' .. t ...... lie GDtta M•t: llll w .. 1 Ill' St....-t N-r1 a.di: JUJ Htwfl!lr1 hu:fl'tN a.n ClfnW!lt; JOS NDr11'1 El GllllW. 11.ttf T...,MM 171<t l 6<t2-4JJ1 Qeulftit4 ~-. "41·5671 c..py.if111, 1tn, Or..... CM~ ,ublltl'tlnt ~~.,. ... -•"""'· llknff•"""" fllll~I '°"'"'° ., """1lo-t1 ...... _., '°f roClftdut"toll wl!Mul NNCi.I ,.... ....... ~,.-. a.c... t,.11 -9 ... PIM I t .. ...,..,. hid! #If CO.It M .. , Ctll~lt. ~ ... .... (11,.,..,. ~-· -"'"'' .., """ .. ,. -1111w1 ""lfttrr •llflMtitllt.IUJ:I -*'IY· from the Lola region, nine miles southeast of Sepone and 15 miles inside Laos, and fired heavy tank guns. mortars aod rockets into the retreating fore.ea. The Communists wouJd occasionally stop firing and, through loudspeake rs, call on the South Vietnamese to sue· render, the sources said. Jn Washington, Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim refused to characteriz.e the movements cif the South Vietnamese to escape Communist attacks as a retreat. He said their primary function was to disrupt the Ho Chi r..!inh Trail and "they are not there to stand and fight against enemy troops for the next several months." At the same time, military spokesmen said the SOulh Vietnamese took their heaviest acknowledged losses in a single battle in Laos today -SO men killed and 80 wounded in a morning long fight Jess than two miles from Lolo. Lolo itself is nine miles southeast of Sepone. Trustees Get Sound of M'nsic The sound ol music will mix with the jargon of educators tonight when the Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees meets. Trustees will be treated to a few samplings of the songs learned by the all-district band. The meeting starts at 7:30 p.m. One of the key items on the trustees' agenda is discussion of tbe district's application for stale funds t.o build a ,school for orthopedically handicapped children. The district had reached a snag with the state over funds to build the crippled children 's school. but district officials are hoping special state legislation will bring about release of tbe money. Tram for Pier .Too Ex pensive A tram on the Huntington Beach pier! CoU[lcilman Mrs. Nonna Gibbs thinks It wolThl be a good idea. but Harbors and Beaches Director Vince Moorhouse told her at this week's counci l meeting that was not feasible . He pointed out that the tram on the pier at Seal Beach IOiCs $12,000 a ye~r e\•en though tbe oil companie.11 susidize ll "\Ve h11:ve a lease If anyone would like to go into the operation on our pier." Moorhouse said. "But several studier have been made and they have all found it unfeasible.•• Catch T11is One Tired? Italian furniture designers D'Urbino, De Pas and Lamazzi would like to lend (or, more appropri· ately, sell) you a hand. The five-fingered chair in soft leather is part or an exhibition of Italian furniture at a London department store. Isn't it gloverly7 Civil Disorder Group 'Not Witch Hunting' St.ate Senator Dennis Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) said Wednesday his new Senate Subcommittee on Civil Disorder will not become ''a road show that tours the state on a "witch hunt." In a statement released following his appointment as chairman of the sub- committee, Carpenter said it will be a "respectable and meaningful" body v..ti.ich will idrike at the roots of unrest and terrorism, not just issue reports on the problerrui:. "This subcClmmitt.ee bas been charged with the responsibility of establishing causes for, and developing legislative solutions to, the present problem& of civil disorder," he said. Carpenter said "there may be some areas v.11.ere we will overlap," with the work of hill committee's controversial predecessor, the Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities. ''I don't consider us an investigative committee at all," the former FBI agent said. "Our purpose will be k> develop legislation we hope will help solve U!e problem." Carpenter was appointed to the chaifma.n!hip ()f the newly-created COJn· mlttee by !he Senate Rules Committee as it abolished the old Un-American Activities Committee. "The details of our operation are still pretty much up in the air," he said. "There are many things we have to have time to work out,:' such as financing and staff. Carpenter. an FBI agent from 1954 to 1958, said "I expect the FBI will cooperate with us in some way. Of course, they'll use all due scrutiny. They're not an information disseminating ()rganization. '' The un-American activities committee last year complained the federal agency refused to aid its investigations. Mills and Carpenter said the new committee -as with the old -probably would hold no public hearings. "I think hearings are an opportunity for the radicals to put on medicine shows,'' said f\1ills. included reports on himself and about two dozen other legislators. Sen. H. L. Richardson, a 1970 member of the un·Amcrican activities committee and leader of the fight against its aboli· lion. said "it is doubtful the new com· mittee will receive the broa d capabilities" the old one bad. The Democrat~minated Rules Com- mittee, headed by Senate President pro tern James Milli (0-San Diego), used ''the contemporary political method of dodging a: bot issue." Richardson said. ..Appoint a new committee, give it limited powers, broad responsibilities and a weak stall." "So instead of meeting a subject head- on, you gum it to death," said the Arcadia J\Jpubliqp. "It's a typital cover-up. Milla tried to placate the con- .servative:'J, 'the-America• Legion and the anti-communists and at the same time give a sop lo bis left-wing con· stituent.s among the Democrats." He al so complained "there will no longtr be rep:irts of un-American ac- ;.ivities released to the people." But Carpenter said "it's incumbent upon a committee of this Rind to make reports." Carpenter noted his committee will provide "valuable jnf ormation•• legislators can use to formulate Jaws, not boolts on the details of activities of individuals and groups as tbe old committee's reports were. "I do believe there is proper legislative interest in the whole subject matter of riots, disorders and individuals with designs to undermine and destroy our society," he said. "But the main concern should be that these kinds of people seem to be able to recruit others these days. either to join them ()r to take part in bombing or other violence on their ()wn. ''Our committee will mainly direct ourself to the reasons and possible cures for that ." he said. "I'm mainly interested in establishing a respectable committee that can dea l with the roots of civil unrest." From P11ge l WOMEN ••• and corporatJons run the country," Mrs. Hutbauer said. "A woman gels paid zero for housework and bau.lliig around a ~pound kid." "But she gets what the man breaks his back for, food, home, clothing," in· terjected a man. Mrs. Hufbauer countered with statistics from the Chase Manhatlan Bank - "hardly a hotbed ol support for Women's Liberation" -which indicated the average housewife's work week is 99 hours. Another man pointed out that most of the nation's corporations are owned by women who hold the majority of 15tock. "Old millionaires die off and their ~ives inherit the stock, because women live longer. A man works himself to death," the challenger said. "Maybe we'll win then," Miss Buck winked. Miss Buck told ()f her job hunting experience in New York as a college graduate. "I was offered a lot of secretarial jobs -that's a good classifjcation for paying a woman lower wages -and J can't even type." The third national goal ()f Women's Liberation is free, client-controlled d1y care centers for working women. There was liUle discussion on that point. ~arly ~n the ev9ing Miss Buck ex· plained about conscious raising groups where women first meet in the liberation movement. "A woman hit.s three stages in this group," she e"lplained. ''First there is an awareness, and a beginning to be angry when she learns her aspirations haven't been met because she has t.o play the role of wife. "Then her ambition is aroused. With the aupport of the group ahe feels she can do things. "The last stage Is shock and self anger when she finds that 60ciety still treats her as a sex object. "You find you can't make It alone so you band together with 1111 your sisters and try to change the stereotype." State Sets 2 Actions On Freeway The California llighway Commi.s.sion took two actions Wednesday designed to clarify its position on the Newport Beach-Pacific Coast Freeway con· troversy. First, the commission unanimously voted to. order a review of the result.! of the Newport Beach traUic study if that study shows a modification in the adopted coastal freeway route I J deairable. Second, and even mort significant. it said it will abide by any new freeway agreement negotiated between Newport Beach and the Stale Public Works Department. Tbe actions pave the way for upect.ed City Council steps Monday night to ap- point a committee to meet with represen- tatives of State Public WorJu; Director James A. Moe on renegotiation of lhe agreement on the portion of the freeway, through Corona del Mar. Key advisers to Moe have already said that representatives of tbe depart.. ment, in light ()f last week's lopsided anti-freeway vote, will be willing to at least sit down and talk about the problem with Newport city spokesmen. Newport residents overwhelmingly ask- ed the council to rescind the existing freeway route agreement, which a1vers the Corona del Mar leg only, in a special election March 9. Rather than act unilaterally, tht coun- cil has indicated it will unanllnoualy support a motion to establish the negoUating committee. The state has wamed a g a 1n 1 t unilateral action. In an earlier motion Wednesday, the Highway C.Om.missioo unanimously declared that if the clty attempts to void the contract without state concurrence, action should be taken to reaiver planning and engineering costs on the section of the route involved. The clarification moves came late Wednesday afternoon when the com- mission endorsed a Jetter sent by its chairman, Fred C. Jennings, to Mayor Ed Hirth last month. In that letter, Jennings had said. "Jt is my understanding that the city of Newport Beach has undertaken a com· prehensive traffic {tudy in connection with the coastal freeway controversy. "l am interested in helping to find a soluti()D to the problem and if the report, as submitted by your consultants, indicates the desirability of some modification in the adopted roote. I will support a review ()f this study by tht Division of Highv.·avs to establish any area of concur.rence." ln a statement issued this morning, Jennings said he also told the commission that "some Newport Beach residenlll are rmt aware of lhe difference in legal · responsibilities assigned t.o the com~ mission and the Department of Public Works so far BS freeway planning iJ; concerned." He pointed out that while the cmn- mission is solely responsible for deciding freeway alignments, the department serves as the state's agent in the negotia- tion and execution of freeway agreements entered into with local governments. Mayor Reported In 'Fine' Shape Mayor Donald Shipley was in "fine.'' condition in the Pacific Hospita l, Hllil· tington Beach, today. The mayor was admitted Monday for a series of tests suggested by his doctor after complaining of feeling ill. The nature of his illness has not been disclosed and no date had been set today for his release from the hospll.81. Hospital officials said he is undergoin1 11 regular checkup. Sen. Arlen Gregorio agreed : "We caJI probably get a hell of a Jot more done in that atmosphere than in the hoopla or open meetings. Certalnly the disruptions at the I-louse Un-American Activities Committee showed that." Carpenter. elected in 1970, said he knows very little about the old committee Bnd ils files on 20,000 persons. The files were moved this week from a Fresno warehouse to the state archives tv.·o blocks from the Capitol. '/ ~etnN/eli1t, "Somebody has suggested bum the records. but l 'd want to take a look at them before I would make a decision ," he said. "They may have some intrinsic value." But even his committee will need a majority vote in the Rules Committee to get access to the locked-up files . Mills engineered the abolition of the old commitlee after discovering Its files Last Rites Set For Beach GI Requiem Mass for a HunUnglon Beach soldier killed in Vietnam will be celebrAted at 10 a.m .. Friday in Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Qiurch . Full military honors will be accorded Pre. Joe Dalenta, son or f\1r. and ~1rs. \Yilllam Dalenta, 18tn Galeda J.ane. He w115 21. He will be buried in the Cood Shepherd Cemetery. Delenta was a 1961 graduate of Foun· lain Valley High School. Survivors include the parents; a sis ter, Diant: and three broth~rs, John, Jerry and Ted. 'J9 ••• _ _.. 4lili Of .. ~ -, 9'lc:&Jllc1:U.,.,., .. ,.s:iae tll~!fa elf; H.J.GARRETT fURNf[URE PROFESSIONAr 2215 HAHO• II.VD. INTERIOR DES GN£RS COSTA MlSA, CALI~. . . . .. --'44-0275 646-0%7, • 1 " Ne t.-t --Beaeh EDITION . • -• -- Today'll Flflal N.Y. Stoeks VOL 64, NO. b6, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH ·19, ·1971 TEN CENTS ' Carpenter Explains Role of Watchdog Panel State Senator Dennis Carpenttr {R- Newport Beach ) said Wednesday his new Senate Subcommittee on Civil Disorder will not become '.'a road show that tours t~ state on a "witch hunl." In a statement released following his appointment as chairman of the sub- committee. Carpenter said it will be a ''respectable and meaningful" body which will strike at the roots or unrest and terrorism. not just issue reports on the problems. Top Lawyer ~ill Appeal Bay Trade A man described by other atromey1 1s California"s "finest appellate e1pert" will be hired by Orange County to eppea1 the Upper Newport Bay land exchange agreemeot ruling . ..Attorney Herman Selvin of Beverly Hills will be hired at the urging of Supervisor Ronald Caspers to appeal the ruling of Judge Claude M. Owerui last January which found the pact between the county and the I r v I n e Company valid. Selvin i.,, well known end expensive. Hi~ fee will be f75 an hour for him.self and $50 an hour for any assistant at- torneys he may need. Selvin will represent county Controller· Auditor Victor E. Heim who ha!: re-. fused to pay a dredging bill in the Upper Bey to t~st the constitutionality ot the a~nt. Juage Owens' January rulin$!; followed weekS of litigation In which the cou11ty pd the Irvine Company were alighed against Heim .11.nd sir Back Bay ret1i· anti MIO entered the ~ail as intervenors. Judge Owens: decided that the pact in· 1Y1lving the exchange of 150 acres of ~nty tldehtnds for SSO acret of Irvine dompany islands and uplands 1"'a5 a legal agreement· Officer Charged In Bar Slaying Of County Man >.1anslaughler charges were I i I e d Wednesday against a Los Angeles police officer arresled Monday night after the shooting death. of a Buena Park con- gtruction worker outside a Huntington Beach bar. The slaying of Mark A. Rodgers. 29. poH ce said. ended an argument that began inside the Svo'inger bar, 19202 Beech Boulevard, over the off-duty police officer's alleged attempt to feed a cigarette to a dog. Cliftor> J. Schusse. 26. of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach. a patrolman With the Los Angeles Po Ii c e Deparlmcnt's Harbor Division. Y1as charged with voluntary manslaughter in the shooting. Huntington Beach police .arnsted him originally on suspicion of murder. Deputy Distr ict AtlOrney Richard J. Beacom said a second suspect in the case, James E. Jordon. 31. of 6762 Warner Ave., Apt. K-10, Huntington Beach, has betn released. Charges against him were dismissed for Jack of evidence, Beacom said. Jordon also had been arrested on suspicion of murder. Schusse appeared before Jµdge Walter Charamza Wednesday afternoon in West Orange County District Court and waived his right lo an immediate hearing. He Is now in Orange County JaH in lieu of $15.000 bail. He was ordered to appea r in coort again at 9 11.m. Friday. Public Transit Pinn Presented WASffiNGTON f UPI l President Nixon sent Congress a $2,75 billion revenue sharing proposal today that would permit states and cilier to drop lhelr reliance on express- ways and dl:velop •ew public trans- portation systeml'i. In the fifth of .1 ~eries of six report.! to Congress detailing his special rt"Venue , sharing package, Niion g1d each' community should be allowed tn 1pend federal tran.s· portalio11 mnnty sis it sees fit for bu~es, subwayi;, 11lrporl.!i. highways Jnd nth~r ways of lravel. "Wt havt relied too much In our ci:ies on car., and on highway~:· N11on said. "We have given loo ht· tJe attenllon to other modes of travel." ' "This subcommittee bas been charged with the responsibility of establishing causes for, and developing legislative solutions to, 1.he present problems of civil disorder," he said. Carpenter &aid "there may be some areas where we will overlap," wilh the work of his committee's controversial predecessor, the Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee on ·Un-American Activities. "I doa 't coosider us an investigative committee al all," the former FBI agent said. ''()Ur purpose will be to develop ltgislation we hope will help solve the problem." Carpenter was appointed to the chairmanship of the newly-crested com· mittee by the Senate Rules Committee as it abolished ' the old Un-American Activities Committee. "The details of ouc ope.ration are still pretty much up in the air," he nid. '.'Thera are many things we have to have Ume to work out," such u financinc and staff. Carpenter, an FBI 11ent from l~t to 1158. aa.id "l nped the FBI will cooperate with us in some way. Of course. they'll use all due scrutiny. They're not an information disseminaUng organi:iation. '' The un·American activities committee last year complained the federal agency refused to aid 'iti inveatigati<U\I. Mills and Carpenter said the new committee -as with tht: old -probably would hold no public heartn1s. "I think hearings are an opportunity for the radicals to put on medicine shows." said Miiis. Sen. Arlen Gregorio agreed : "We caa probabl y gel a hell of a lot more done in that atmosphere than in the hoopla of open meetings. Certainly the diliruptions at the House Un -American Actlvltie:.s Committ.M showed that." Carpenter 1 elected in 1970, sald be knows vtry LltUe about the old commJtlM and its files on 20,000 peraoru. Thi files were moved this week from a Fresno warehouse to the state prchives two blocks from the capitol. "Somebody has suggested bum lhe rw:irrls, but I'd want to take a look at them before I would make a decision.'' he said. ''They may have aome lntrhlsic value." But even his committee wUl need a IS.. CARPENTER, Pace I) s. Viets on Run V.S. Flies in Viet Ranger Troops Pot Posey Newport Beach police officer Dave Daum examines a bouquet of young marijuana plants. ·The posey was allegedly in the possession of a transient arrested this morning at tbe intersection of Jamboree Road and East Coast Highway on suspicion of possession of marijuana. Newport Searching for 9 Employes, City Manager Along with starling a search for a new city manager, Newport Beach now is 5eeking people for nine other jobs, most or them in the new department ef community development. City Personnel Director Darlene Raat 1aid this morn ing her office is "actively recruiting" for a total of nine positions, eight of them in the new superagency. Aside frtlm the manager's posl soon to be vacated by Harvey L. Hurlburt, where indications are that the salary will be left open, the highest paying job is that of community development director. It carries 1 top salary &f li<.000. other departmental jobs range down to zoning enforcemen t officer, whicb car- ries a salary Just over $10,000. Mrs. Raat said there are a number of other city jobs open. including two on the police force, but recruitment for tbem is either closed or hasn 't started yet . All told. there are 581 jobs paid for by Nev•port Beach taipayers. at a total cost or $7 ,278,825. Of that figure, $6,357,885 is for salaries while the re- maining SI.I million covers fringe benefits, including pensions, workman 's compensation and health and life in· surance premiums. In a cost-saving proposal, a city counCil committee has suggested a manpower freeze that would bar any new posili<>M in the next budget and would also stipulate that any vacancies occurring not be filled during !he ye ar. During an average ye ar, Mrs. Raat said, there is an average turnover of more than 15 percent. Jr the council policy is adopted. she said. this 'A'ould leave the city with more than 85 open positions at the end of the 1971·72 fiscal year. SAIGON (UPI, -U.S. helicopters flew through sheets of Communist ll'Jtiaircraft fire today tc take South Vietnamese marine and ranger reinforcements into La'os to try to stem a North Vietnamese drive that has forced a J.2...mile retreat by government forces . The helicopters also new out in· fantrymen bloodied and battered from four days of fighting, taking 2,000 of them to Khe Sanh from the jungles between support bases Brown and Lolo, an area 15 miles Inside La<>.9 wbere Nixon Seeks Tax Boost Right A~~y .. -WASHINGTON IUPll -l'ruld81t Nii:on wantl Congreq to increaM: Social Security Uses right away, ln!tead of next ye.1r, to pay for the new 10 percent Increase in old .1ge benefits. If Congresa goes a.Jong, the increase would teJce f46I instead ~f the present $405 oqt of the paycheCk11 of those earning $9,000 or more. The $3 .6 billio11-a-year beoefit incre.ue Ni1on signed Wednesday would del.1y the higher taies until next year. Nixon SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 complained such a delay could a11rav1te the nation's still crilic.11 inflation pro- blems unless it is paid for immediately by increased revenue collections. "If these urgenUy needed Social Securi· ty increases are enacted but the mean• to pay for them currently ire defaulted, we are f.1ced with the very real prospect of increased inflation." Ni1011 11 id in a statement Issued foll owing the signing. "For that reason. I urge the Congres1 to act promptly on a Social Security revenue measure so that the current cost of these increased benefjts will be financed and the bAsic nori-inflationary budget principle. which was embodied in the 1972 budget I submitted to the Congress, can be maintalned ," the Presi- dent said. It appeared unlikely that Q>ngre1a would go along with Nixon's request for .1dded revenue. Social Security tax increases .1re unpopular y,·lth the lawmaker• but usually slide through on the popularity of benefit increase.a. Without higher benefits as part of the package, a tu boost would have litUe going for It. .Caspers Gives Appraisal , New Supervisor Tells 'Bad Guy' Row in Cost Cuts Predlctillg the Orange Coonty taxpayer will aoon get more for his money -in multlple: w1y1 -FUth District Super- visor Ronald W. Caspers reviewed hit tint 50 days in offi~ tod&y . "It's closer to 75 day s," he quipped during 11 breakfast meeting ol the Citi- 1.tns Harbor Area Res e a r ch Team (CHART) at the Cost.a Mesa. Golf and Country Club. He also took the group on a verbal tour. The trip ranged a1ong leafy bike tra1ht and tumultuous frHWays. past clean pub- Jlc beaches, unclult.ercd by offshore oil platforms, and under the shadow of high. rise skyscrapers. Caspers said ttiat while he ts still ' ' getting his bearings in county govern- ment. he has formed solid opinions about his posture on basic issues in days ahead. "I'd really like to be the spokesman for the masses who c11n't get off from work to come in person," said the New· port Beach savings and loan comp..<1ny ra~per!!i !liakt be and his administrative assistant try to get out and about e8ct"I Friday, tsilking to coostltuenl! ahout their views and studying the Fifth Dis. trict in minute deU1ll. "I personally thinlc we're goina to have to play the b8d guy," he 1.1ld of coat· cutting in county government. "We've also trted to streamline J'll'Oo cedures ,• he said of a new agenda cul· ting lt!e length of time for certain l:tis- cussions. ''We hlld 58 Items UM! other day and went tc 4:30," Caspers noted. 11ytng tht board wu exhaust!d by !he day's de- liberations. "That's wi1en you make big miltake1, whfon you're fatigued ," he added. Public recreation, mass rapid tranRt, feder.11 revenoe-sharlng, billboard con- trol. preservation of open 1peees, off. 11hore oil drtlling and other issues were broadly covered. "A• f.1r as open spaces. there aren't f!Oing to be 8ny if we rely on ~ A&rl· C1Jltural Pffilervet," C.1sper warned. -:!'J'd loVf. for the county to be able to IS.. CASPERS, P•I• %) they sufferl!d their heaviest casualties today in a slogle battle in Laos. Firebase A Looi, 12 miles Inside Laos 61 French colonial Route 9, axis of lfie government drive across the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex. appeared doom- ed and the 160 men there were ordered to break out ol the position tOOay. They were surrounded and under attack after losing 100 dead and wounded. Support Base Brown. gy, miles east of abandoned Firebase Lolo, still held out but Soulh Vietnamese spokesmen ~uto Insurance 5a1d lbe Communists weN preparing an all out 1ssault on the base. Officers at northern operational bases 11..id. 1,000 more infantrymeD were still at the base, now tbe westernmost ARVN position ht Laos. South Vietnamese spokesmen declined to say bow many reinforcements were 1ent into Laos but said the task force in LaO! remained at between 20,000 and 21 ,000 troops. The siie of the force (See INDOCIDNA, Pa1e Z) Nixon Forces Endorse N·o.fault Car Policy WAllHJNGTON IUPil -Tiie Nlllln AdminJltration today tndorsed the con- trove.rslal no.fault auto inauranct system, but c.uUoned .1g.1insl making any "ir· reversible changes" in the cur re 1 t system. Testifying before the Senate Commerce Welfare Clients Said Not Only Ones Who Cheat There are no more welfare clienl.! who cheat thal'l there are "ministers, bank· ers, lawyers, polilicians or doctors who cheat,'' the California Medical A8socia· tion was told today in Anaheim. Dr. &ger 0 . Egeberg, assist.ant sec- retary for Health and Scientific Alfair.!I in the department of Health. Education and Welfare, said few wellare recipients are lazy . "There are an awful lot (}( pt<>ple who have n't touched a poor person with 1 ltl- foot pole, who think the poor are litzy.'' Egeberg aaid. "They are not lazy ." The Nixon administration's top physi- cian said his rule of thumb for the num- ber of perlODs who cheat at anything is five perce11t. In his remarks tn the closing session of the medical society's convention , Egeberg defended Niion's health pack· age over the plan presented by Sen. Edward Kennedy ([)..Mass.). "The Kennfdy plan sounds tempt.Ing because It Js simplistic. but 11Jothini in government Is simplistlc If lt gets that blg," he said. The chief difference between the two pl.Ins is that Kennedy's would ht a single mt)f)()lithic program for the entire na· tion. Niion's would allow regions to work out a variety of approaches best suited to local Deeds, Egeberg conte•ded. Crossing Bridge Delayed at SF SACR~MENTO (UPI) -The Sen.1te; today overwhelmin1ly approved a bill blocking construction of the proposed aouthern crossing bridge over San Fran· cJsco B.1y until lawmakers decide the span ahould be bullt. The measure: by Assemblyman Robert W. Crown ([).Alameda ), was passed. 30-5, and returned to the Assembly for concurrenct in a minor amendment. It then would go to the governor. At hb news conference Tuesd.1y, Gov. Ronald Rtagan said he is keeping "my mind open" on whether the controversia l $300 milUon bridge ahould be builL The State Toll Bridf!e Authority in Febru.1ry cleared the last obstacle to COO!tructlon and ordertd the: go-ahead for the bridge, which has betn on the drawin& boards for nearly 20 year!. • Committee. Trwport.oUon Secntlr1 John A. Volpe recommended a pn>mp1 state-by.state changeover as contained in a report on the government'• $2 million, two-year study of the auto in· dustry. "We believe that this can be done In such a way that we can reverse ourselves, if the actual performance of the s}'!tem. doesn't meet our e1- peclatiol1ll," he said. Under the no-fault system, accident victims are compensated for losse1 u the:y occur, and there is no w a i t to determine who was to blame. However, the plans usually do not rule out court action to recover damages a b o v t I certain amount. Volpe said there w11s still no constnSUs ''about how far and how fast the public wants or is willing to go." in changing the old system. but he said It "needs change badly and needs it now." A gradual changeover would show whether the system would work, he said. "We simply cannot predict the absolute long-range financial impact of such .1 fundamental change with any reasonable precision," he said. Volpe recommended that stales begin Immediately to adopt the no-fault con- ttpts so they can "spare themselves most of the uncertainty .1nd greatly reduce the financial rU!k.11. that would be involved in any single steps, and perhaps irreve:rsible change." Critics of the present fault system claim it has jammed the courts with accident cases resulting in long delay1 and co!lting more than SI billion a year in legal fees which In tum increue the cost of insurance. Oruge Weat•er After YbU cut through Friday's early morning Cog, you'll find aunny skies, with gwty northeast winds hefping to blow the smog away. Temperatures should reach the hlgh 70s. INSIDE TODAY So11. rranci.sco rtsidtnts hit tht panic button when they rt· ctivtd dunning 'll0tict1 asking them to PGJ/ up right away or fact the con.stqutnce.s. Set story, Pagt 5. •1r1111 II ........ ,. CtU~lt I (11tcltlftt u, ' c11u1flt111 ,,.,. (lftllCt H Crtn-• 2• DHI~ Mtll<et ti D1.,.tt1t 1' ldltlrill PIM ' lftlwfl l-1 ,..t, PlllllMt l•H -" Anll L_..,. lJ Mtllbtt • "" .... '-.. L-.-. u """'"-~JP Mu"'•I ,111141, It IUlltfll l N.-.. W (lr1ftft Ctuftl7 II '"''' n.u lllcll M•rtth l•lt T1l..,ltlM U """"" "'" ·-. W-'I NIWI IJ.1• Wtrill M1W11 .. I • 1 11 I I '' '~ .. ·- " DAILY PILOT H -• Knight in Baggy Armo.r Offers Hope for Future By ARTl!UR R. VINSEL Ot tN Dtll1 f"tltt Sl1ff KNIGHTS JN shining armor don't always hit town in chain mail pants, ridlng in on a white stallion to right our wrongs. Ralph Nader wears a ready.made suit. 'I'be trousers are baggy and slighUy wrinkled from a flight on • polluUon· spewing jetliner between campus speeches. One stretch sock is even baggy. Nader the crusader is as likely to make the nation's 10 Best-Dressed list as he is to be elected vice presiderit of General Motors. The Pied Piper of Improvement ls not visually lm· presslve. ONE MOMENT he ls eipeCted and the neit he Is out there on the Orange Coast College gym floor ready to speak. Nobody noticed him arrive. He is thin and gaunt, but -like boxer Muhammad AU -when he opens bis mouth, Nader too can float like a butterfly and sting like a bee. Stinging indictments or river.ruining industries; acid criticisms on food items (Wonder Bread! You w(lnder what's in it) and corrective ideas pour out like a volley of punches. He delivers a hard blow to social hypocrisy. BE RAMM'ERS A WAY on a government that rewards corporate crJmi· nals who ruin our lungs and poison our waters with social invitations to the White House. Nader not only bitches. however, but he fights back. And he makes sense to increasing numbers of people, from the com· mon garden variety of ecology freak t.o sober, serious students or our ravaged world. He proposes changes in our sick system to put health and safety on a priority above profit. NADER'S BRAND of law and order would imprison or fine responsible persons within cor,>arations that violate our deteriorating environment as en· thusiastically as it does long.tiaired Flag·bumers. He is militant about power to the people. "Who is in the greatest position to eJ'.ercise power to !top pollution?'' he demands. The victims. Us. Who else? The gym is jammed and in the front row Is a student., 29, who ran for the Costa Mesa City Cowlcil on ecology iuues. He has long hair and wear1 striped bib overalls. He is a soul brother lo the older man in the sober gray suit -and to the rest or us -because we breathe the same· air and drink the same water. ONE CAN FEEL an exciting electricity in the air -along with photo- chemical smog -as Nader exhorts the young, outlining .a novel plan for ecological and social action. It is invigorating and even catching. J got up Wednesday, one more day into that 30th year, facing another · day of crime in the streets and contamination all around. One more day of cholesterol, mercury, and 47 other harmful ingredients assaulting my own flabby, meLabolic bag along with deadline pressure, The Bomb and you name lt. NO NEWSrtfAN know s just what his day wiJ1 bring In terms of assign.. menls and mine of Wednesday, Nader's talk, was encouraging. He doesn't wring his hands and shake his head, demanding that aome- thing be done. He offers solutions that sound surprisingly simple but require only energy and initiative. For whatever it's worth. l'm one or those individuals who does not choose to bring any children into our overcrowded, polluted, war·threatened world. Some things can't be helped. while other conditions definitely can. Nader makes it sound like there's still a chance for your children. Japanese Envo-y-Cites Trade Relations Plans Nobuhlko Ushiba, Japan's ambassador lo the United States, .said Tuesday in ~ewport Beach that free trade, not ~estraint er e1ports, is the way to im· prove trade relations between Japan and .he U.S. He made his itatemenl v•hile ad- lressing a meeting of the Council of ::alifornia Growers at the Newporter Inn. Ushiba said Japan is •·consciowly Norking to remove the remaining artificial barriers to exports to our coun- 1ry." Ushiba :.\so said he was not happy with President Nixon's call for legislation kl limit Japanese textile imports to the United States. But he said Japan had OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT 6RAMG! COAST l"VILISHIMG COMl'AH'f ••Dwt N, Wt.l l"res:OMI ilNI ~lll'lef J•c:~ a. c .. rr.., \'kt• Pm.IMll ...... G«wtll MMlllf' Tli11111t K'111rif t:dl!OI' n,,,.,., A. ,..,,pfll111 MIMl""ll EaflQI" L. P'iltr K1i19 H,_1 INdl C!ly fdltOI' ,._,.,, IMc.lt Offk• ))JJ Newport l oul1v1rd l•f•ilint Add ttu: r.O. ••• 1•1s. 9266) -·-Ceit• MH•: UI Wnt ll•Y St.-_. ~ ... etu m F-t ,,.,.,..,. flCMTlllOlt:'I '""'~ 1111$ ... "' lfloUl ..... lrl .,. .. CltfPla'llt: "'5 Hor1!1 El Clmlllo 11.ul , T .. ••111••• 1714) '41-4>11 Cl-.HW ............ M1·1671 Cerrr'ltllf, lfJI, Of'Mll9 C.tl hellttl!llf ~.. .... -• ...,... lllvltrelltrl .. tfJ~I ..,_n.,. ,,,. H\1"'1MIN'I'-~ _,-.. npref\Ulf Wm.it Hltdill .... "'"'"'" ., ~· --· ._,. cint ........ ,.,. -.·~ l..ctl W CO.II Mti.9, Cl,..... -...cri,t• IJJ u111tr u.21 Mlllfll'Y• w _., u .Jt "*"""'' l'lll!l••ry .. , .......... itJS ,...,,...,, no plan! to retaliate in kind. He said the President's decision ''makes poinUe.ss" further negotiations on a plan to voluntarily Limit such irn· ports. "As you know.'' he added, "we have been exercising voluntary restraint on the export of some 70 items in the case or export& to the U.S. We feel, however, that SCH:!.alled voluntary ar· rangements may not be asked lightly, because such restraint is contrary to the idea of free trade .•. " "Naturally, we're not happy over his decision," he said. "But it certainly will have no bearing on other products, including the importation of California citrus fruits.·• Last Thursday. Nixon said the agr~ ment worked out with the Japanese with the help of Chairman Wilbur D. Mills (0.Ark. ), or the House Way!J and Means Committee "falli; short of the te rms essential to the United States." Nixon then called for legislation to limit textile imports to the United St.ates. Milts responded that Nixon's action denied the voluntary plan "even a tr ial run.'' Ushiba toJd growers, "It Is too early for us to see the potential effect of your President's decision. 'vhich makes pointless any further negotiations." During hi! addre!!, Ushiba said the Japanese "are sincerely pursuing a pol· icy of marketing oor product!! i11 en or· derly way so that uMece~11ry frictioos may be avoided." Worluuan Injured At Apartn1cnt Si te A workman was Injured •hortly after noon today in a minor blar.e at an apart- ment under const.rucUon at 1129 E. BAJ. boa Blvd., Newport Beach. Taken to Hoae Memorial llosp.ltal was Andrew Russo. He suffered bum.c; when sparks from a compressor motor lgnJted lacqutr. Dedication Thwarted U>NOON (AP) -Margaret Thatcher, the Contervative govunment's secretary of education, .,,.as driven to cover while opening a new building at Enfield College of Technology. Forty students prottstlng !he building'• ~ forced Mrs. Thatcher to take refuge Jn a locked room until police dJsperttd them Wednuday. There were no arnsts. ' r' • siate Acts in Freeway Has ·sle • Highway Unit tO Review Results of N~port Study ' Tiie Ollllornla Jlllhwe1 Oommlssloo t&Uvea flt Stale f'.Ubllc Wo'k.s D1'ectot took two actions Wednesday dt.slaned J1ma A. Moe on renegoUaUon of the to clarlfy Jt.s pos.ltion on the Newport Jgreement on the portion of the freeway Beach-Pacific Coast F r e e w a y c:on. throu&h. Corona dtl Mar. troversy. Key adviaera to Moe have already First, the commission unanlmously said that repreaent.atlves of the depart· voted to order a review of the remUts ment, In light of last week's lopsided ot the Newport Beach traffic study if anU.!reeway vote, will be willing to at that study ihows a modification m the least sit down and talk about the problem .adopted coastal freeway route l a with Newport city spokesmen. desirable. Newport residents overwbelmingly uk- Serond, and even more significant, ed the council to rescind the existing It said it will abide by any new freeway freeway route agreement, which covtrs agreement negotiated between Newport the Corona de! Mar leg only, in a Beach and the State Public Worb special election March 11. Department. Rather than act unllat.erau,, the coun- The acliOl'IS pave the way for e1pected cil has indicated it will unanimously City Council steps Mond1y ni&hl to ap-support a motion to establish the point a cornmJttee to meet with repn:sen-nea:olia.Ung committee. The state has warned a g a Ins t unilateral action. tn an earlier molloo Wedneaday, the Highway Commi.s3ion unanimously declared th 11t if the city attempts to void the contract without state concurrence, action should be taken to recover planning and engineering cost& on the section of the route involved. The clarification moves came late Wednesday afternoon when the com- mission endor$eld a Jetter sent by ita chairman, Fred C. Je1111ings, to Mayer Ed Hirth last month. ln that letter, Jennings had said. "It is my understanding that the city of Newport Beach his undertaken a com. prebensive traffic study in connection with the coastal freeway controveny. ''I am interested in helpine to find a solution to the problem and if the From Pagel 'Attending Patient' CASPERS •.. buy the Starr Ranch and put it on ice for taxpayers' use, but where are we going to get $12 million? We may have. to go to \Vashington on this." He said Aliso Creek, south of Laguna Beach, will be kept as a scenic hiking area through easement.. in which land· owners a~ paid to leave it undeveloped. Certain other coastal creeks will be marked off as floodplain areas and left without drainage channels that h a v e brought development right to their edge in other areas. Caspers said be is doubtful President Nilon'a revenuHharing plan will pass C4lngres.s and likewise upect.s little in the way of a rapid transit program. "I would like to see Proposition 18 pass," he Wd of the enabling leglsta. tion defeated once beftort. "I think the people got a screwing on that." "The oil interest& bought that one. They were caught at it but they were successful." Caspers said legislation Is oomlng to outlaw further offshore oil drilling - even prior exploration -and he will pressure fellow board members to 10 along with iL He also said he doubts the recent New· port Beach anti-Coast Freeway elect.ion will do any more than delay tts con- &truction temporarily. He criticized the quick maneuv«ina: that led a San Diego !inn to beg1n a new high-rise apartment tower in the heart of the :scenic Lido Peninsula. ''l don't know how THAT got •pprov. W," said the Lido Isle resident. Relative to the attempted ousttr of County Admjnistrative Officer Robert 0 . Thomas, Caspers said he quadrupled his sWf in four years .and was makmg 2% times the salary of a supervisor. "11lere was nothing personal agalnst the CAO. I don't even know him person. ally. l just thought things got out of hand.'' Caspers explained. Newport to Give Boats Tickets, 'Deal or Not' For the three years now, the Schock Boat Company has been provtding free boats for the Newport Beac:h Recreation Department sailing program . It wasn't a purely philanthropic arrangement, however, because, in return, the company was .allowed to build a pier at 29th Street, on public property. Part of the contract stipulated that, for various rea~ons, the ci ty ordinance limiting docking lime to 20 minutes should not apply, but rather a twe>-OOur limit would be feasible. Ambulance ChiRf Says • Doctor Had Good Alibi By TOM BARLEY OI tM O.IPr Pliet. Stiff A Costa. Mesa ambulance service of. ficial today telf.ified that Dr. Ebbe Har· teliua of Corona del Mar was directing the hospitaliiaUon of a critic.ally ill pa· tient last March 31 at a time "When the prosecuUon cootends the physician was fakiag the theft of a car in Long Beach. General Manager Dan Wotsak told the jury Jn Oru,ge Q:Junty Superior Court Judge James F. Judge's courtroom that HarteUus called his office at .about 11 p.m. March 31 to arn.'cge the transfer of a dangerously ill woman from her New· port Beach home to Hoag Mtmorial Hos. pital. Testimony ()ffered in the pTCISeCution phase of the arson-fraud trial indicated that Hartellua, 5<1, was at that time driv· i11g to Loot Beach with Jim Blevens, his blonde mistress' brother, to bide a car that later became the subject of an in- surance claim. Wotsak's story appeared to be sup- ported today by the testimony ()f New· p>rt Beach patrolman Clayton Lyon wtlo said that Hartelius was seen by him about midnight at Hoag Hospital. 'I'ht ofricer terurlf!d be fol.lowed the ambula11ee to the Newport hospital and when he 1eft tht physician was attending his paUent in Hoag's emergency room. Wotaak and ()ffi~r Lyon were two of atlomey Matthew Kurilich's fint three witneaet as he opeAed his defense of the ICCU. pb!nician. His first witness, hOIJlltal administra· tor Darrell Reardon, today testified that Reba Vaughn -Dr. Hartelius• para· mour for more than four years -had a "'poor" reputation for trUthfulness. Reardon. who direcl.$ the operations of the Beverl y Ma.Jlor Convalescent Hospi· t.al tn Costa Mesa, said ''Reba couldn't be trusted et a11" and that .at least two of his nurses had made that observation. Mrs. Vaughn, 27, Of 687 W. Wi!!Ofl St.. Cost.a Meaa. was the prosecution's key witnes1 in its case against her former lover. She testilied that Hartelius directed Blevins lo set the fire April 9 at Har. telius' offices at 2.M5 E. Coast Highway, FASH(ON ISLAND SHOWING AUTOS An auto show displaying the 1971 Detroit models runs through Friday and Saturday at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. Flf Corona del Mar. She has (!()rltributed to testimony that Hartelius used her brother to help him arrange the repcrt.ed theft or the car allegedly abandoned by the doctor in Lang Beach. From Pagel INDOCHINA. •• has been reported previously up to 24,000 men. Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, commander of South Vietnamese forces in Laos. said his troops bad maintained .a 10.1 kill ratio over the Communist& since the drive into Laos began Feb. 8 and that tJ:iese figures were "a victory ... a sign of winning." In Se:.atUe Wednesday, Gen. William Westmoreland, army chief of staff and former commander in Vietnam, uid the incursion into Laos by the South Viel· namese had bttn a IUCCeSll. Ht said the curr,t~t withdr1wa1 wu .. not a retreat; ll was planned." Lt. Col. Nguye..n Xuan Loe, intelli&ence 13fficer for South Vietnam's 1.st lnf111try Division, said his regimenl·5iJed force flf about 2,000 men at Brown "have :stopped searching for Comm&milt rupply dumps and are preparing ror·an attack." "I think the NVA (North Vietnamese) plan a major attack on Brown," ht said. "I feel we can hold Brown." Military sources said North Vietnamese troops pursued the infantrymen fleeing from the 1..-0lo region, nine miles southeast of Sepone and 15 miles inside Laas, and fired heavy tank guns, mortars .and rockets into the retreating forces. The Communists would occasionally sto~ firing and, through loudspeakers, call on the South Vietnamese to :sur~ render. the sources said. In Washington, Pentagon spokesman J erry W. Friedheim refused to characterize the movements of the South Vietnamese to escape Communist attacks as a retreat. He said tbeir primary function was to disrupt the Ho Chi Minh Trail and "they are not there to stand and figbt against enemy troops for the next several months." At the same time, military spokesmen said the South Vietnamese took their heaviest acknowledged 1055es In a single battle in Laos today -50 men killed and 80 wounded In a morning Jong fight less than two miles from Lolo. Lolo ltself is nine miles southeast of Sepone. report. as submitted by your consultants, Indicates the • desltlblJJty of some modification in the adopted route, I wUI support a review of this study by the Division of Hlghwa.vs to establish an)' area ()f concurrence." In a statement issued this morning, Jennings said he .also told the commission that ''some Newport Beach residents are not aware of t.he difference in legal responsibilities assigned to the com· mission and the Department of Public Works so far as freeway planning ia concerned." He pointed out that while the com· mission is s<1lely responsible {or decidJn& freeway alignmenta, the departmen• serves as the state's agent in the: negot.la- tion and execution of freeway agreements entered into with local governmenta. From Page l CARPENTER ••• majority vote in the Rules Committee to get aecess to the locked·up files. l Mills engineered the abolition of the old committee after discovering its files included reports on himself and about two dozen other legislators. Sen. H. L, Richardson, a 1970 member or the un·American activities committel and leader of the fight against its aboli- tion. said "it is doubtful the new com· mittee will receive thl b r 1 .a d capabilities" the old one had The Democrat-dominated Jes Com· miltee, headed by Senate President pro tern James Mills (D-San Diego), used "the contemporary political method of dodging a bot issue," Richardson said. "Appoint a new committee, give it limited powers, broad responsibiliUes ind a weak stall." "So instead of meeting a subject head· on, you gum it to death," said the Arcadia Republican. "It's a typical cover-up. Mills tried to placate the con· servatives, the AmericaA Legion and the anti-communists and at the same time give a sop to his left.wing con• stitucnts among the Democrats." He also complained "there will n1 longer be reports of un·American ac· tivities released to the people." But Carpenter said "jt's incumbent upon a committee (lf this kind to make reports." Carpenter noted his committee will provide "valuable i n f o rm a t i o n ' ' legislators can use to formulate laws. not books ()n the details of activities ef Individuals and groups .as the old committee's reports were. Industries Form Irvine League ,To Aid New City A new organizati()n1 the Greater Irvine Industrial League , composed of indus· tries in the Irvine Industrial Complex. has been formed and is dedicated to in· corporation of the new city. William Baker. league hoe.rd member and communications director, said hir board and the Council of Communities of Irvine have formed joint committees to begin planning for the community. "The CX::I has offered to work with industry as full partners In planning the new citf," Baker said. "We must act on the offer." The CCI, the declared sponsors of Jr. vine cityhood, have filed a notice of in· tent to circula~ petitions for incorpor· ation among residents wJ!hin the 18,000.. acre proposed boundaries. The Local Agency Formation C<immis.. sion bas approved Lhe boundaries and, once adequate signatures are obtained on the petitions, the county Board or Supervisors must conduct a hearing then schedule an incorporation election. Deal or no deal, however, the Harbor Department has been going by the book. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt has learned that, despite the formal agree- ment, the Harbor Department hu recently been ticketing boals t o r ()vertime docking. A11d they're going to keep tt up until the city rewrites the ordinance. ~/ ~etnN/tlittf Hurlburt said the Harbor Department doesn't care what the time limit is, but "inasmuch as 20 minutes is the maximum time that a boat can tie up to any pier and float. then they n1usl enforce that ordinance." So, Hurlburt has proposed !hat the city C<1uncil amend section 17.28.010 of the MuniclpaJ Code. The city councU wiU conduct a public hearing on the proposed+ amendment to section 17.28.010 of the Municipal Code Mondsy at 7:30 p.m. in city hall. Police Search For Car Thief Newport Beach police art looking for suspects whil started a loca.I mldent's c11r on a brief. unmanned trip down Cliff Drive this morning, resultin( ln $400 worth of dam.age to the auto. The car. owned by Mathew Pobo1. was parked in the driveway of Pobog's home at 5<11 Cliff Drive until about 1:30 a.m. Polict said the suspecls apparently pwhed the car out of the driveway and started it rolling down Cliff Drive toward Dovl!T' Drive, where the car }eft the road ~nd turned over. I • ~ hiiu\'i ~IW. •iiS Of _•.•11xsss9 y•_ii1 . .00. of·fuwaAI ... we Md ... .,., •. ., :Ys .tf. -' ' ' ' 7 7 ... ---._, Costa Mesa Today's Final ED ITI ON N.Y. Stooks voe. ~. NO. 1>6, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA DFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH ·1a, ·197f TEN CENTS Carpenter Explains Role of Watchdog Panel State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R- N!wport Beach) said \\'ednesday his nl'w S!natf!: Subcommittee on Civil Disorder will not become "a road show that tours the stale on a "witch hunt." In a statement released following his appointment as chairman of the sutr committee. Carpenter said it will be a "respeetable and meaningful" body which will slrike at lhe roots of unr@st and terrorism, not just issue reports on tht problems. ' "This subcommittee bas been charged with the responsibility of f!:stablishing causes for , and developing legislative solulions lo. the present problenu of civil disorder,'' he said. Carpenter said "there may be some areas wtiere we will overlap," with the work of his commilttt's controversial predeees,,or, the Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities. ''l don't consider us an investigative committee at all," the former FBI agent said. "Our purpose will be to develop legislation we hope will help c(llve the problem.'' Carpenter ,was appointed to lhe chairmanship of the newly-created com· mittee by the Senate Rules Committee as it abolished the old Un-American Activities Committee. "The details of our operatiou are still pretty much up in the air." he said. "'!'he.re are many things we have lo DAILY PILOT fltft PMI• FBI AGENT ESCAPED EARLY MORNING-COST A MESA CRASH WITH ONLY A LUMP James Mahonay Surv1yi R1m1in1 of Overturned Car After Three-vehicle Accident 3-car Collision Injures 2, FBI Agent Unhurt A mother and son \\'ere injured and an FBI agent escaped unscathed this morning in a three-car Costa Ml'sa col- lision that flipped lhe Jay,·man 's sedan upside dO\\'n and flattened its roof. The crash occurred on Newport Boulevard at Fair Drive at 8:55 a.m., according to Patrolman Al Muir. Head in1uries and fractures left Mrs. Marlha Webb. 46. of 8002 Blackheath Circle. \Vestm inster, in serious C{Jndition at Costa ~lesa ~lemorial Hospital. Jeff \\'ebb, 5, \\'as listed in fair con- dition at noon , while st.ill being X-rayed to detarmine 1f he sustained broken bones in addition to abrasions. Police said ~1rs. Webb was eastbound l')n Fair Drive when her sports car collided with two vehicles southbound .,n the busy boulevard. James Mahoney, Santa Ana-based FBI agent, cra\\-·led out of his overturned car with only a knot on lhe head. Actor Doing Be tter BIRl\.1INGHA~I. Ala . (UPI) -Doctors reporled a slight improvement in the condition of aclor Milburn Stone Wed· nesday. but sa id he remained In serious condition from open heart surgery. Nixon's Advisers Endorse No Fault Auto Insurance WASffiNGTON (UPil -The t>.'ixon Administration today endorsed the con- troversial no-fault auto insurance system, but cautioned against making any "ir· reversible changes" in the cur re 11 t system. Testifying before the Senate Commerce Commitlee, Tran9porlation Secretary John A. Volpe recommended a prompt state-by·state changeover as contained in a report on the government's SZ million, tw o-year study of the auto in- dustry. "\\'e believe that this can be done in such a way that we can reverse ourselves, if the actual performance of Over $1 Million In Penn Central Equipment Taken PHILADELPffiA (AP) -More than Sl million worth of Penn Central freight car11 were stolen in the past year and routed onto the track11 of a small Illinois ra ilroad, U.S. AttorTll'y Louis C. Bechtle said Thursday. the syslem, doesn't rnl'et our ex· pectations," he said. Under lhe no-fault system, accident victims are compensated for los~s as they occur, and there is no wa i l !() determine who was l.o blame. However, the plans usually do not rule out court action to recover damages a b o v e a certain amount. Volpe said there was stilt no consensus ''about how far and how fast the public wants or i; willing to go," in changing the old syst.em, but he said it "needs change badly and needs it now.'' A gradual changeover would show whether the syst.em would work. he said. "We simply.cannot predict the absolute long.range financial impact or such a fundamental change with any reasonable preeision," he 1said. Volpe recommended that states begin immediately to adopt the no-fault con- cepts so they can "spare themselves m~t -of the uncertainty and greally reduce the financial risks that would be involved in any single steps, and perhaps irreversible change." Critics of the present fault system claim it has jammed the courts with accident caSl's resulting in long delays and costing more than $1 billion a yea r in legal fees which In turn increase the cost of insurance. have time to work out," such as financing and starr. Carpenter, an FBI agent from 1954 to 1958, said "l expect the FBI will cooperate with us in some way. Of course, they'll use all due scrutiny. They'rt no! an information disseminating organization.'' The un·American activities committtt last year complained thl' federal agency refused to aid its investigations. Mills and Carpenter said the new committee -as with the old -probably would hold no public hearings. "l thlnk hearings are an opportunity for the radicals to put on medicine shows," said Mills. Sen. Arlen Gregorio agreed : "We caA probably get 1 hell ol a lot more done in that atmosphere than in the hoopla of open meetings. Certainly the disruptions at the House Un-American Activities Comm llttt showed that.'' Carpenter, elected in 1970, said he knows very li!Ue about the o!d committee and its files on 20,000 pe.rson1. The files were moved th is week from a Fresno warehouse to the state arcllives two blocks from the Capitol. "Somebody has suggested bum the records, but l'd want to take a look at them before I would make a decision;• he said. "'!'hey may have some intrinsic value ." But everr his committee will need a !See CARPENTER, Pase II s. Viets on Run U.S. Flies in Viet Ranger Troops SAIGON (UPIJ -U.S. helicoplerr; flew through r;heets of Communist antiaircraft fire today to take South Vietnamese marine and ranger reinforcements into Laos to try to stem a North Vietnamese drive that has forced a 12-mile retreat by government forces. The helicopters also flew out in- fantrymen bloodied and battered from four days of fighting, taking 2.(XX) of them to Khe Sanh from the jungles betv.·een support bases Brown and Lolo, an area 15 miles insi de Laos where Nixon Seeks Tax Boost Right Away WASHINGTON !UPI) -Pre~dent Nixon wanti Congrth to Increase Social Security taxes right away, instead ot next year. lo pa y for the new 10 percent Increase In old Age benefits. If Congress goes along, the increase would take $468 instead of the present $405 out of the paychecks of those earning $9,000 or more. The $J .6 blllio n·•·year bentfit Increase Nixon signed Wednesday would delay the higher taxes until nc1t year. Nixon SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 complained such 1 delay could aggravate the ca tion 's still critical inflation pro- blems unless il is paid for immediately by increased revenue collections. "If these urgently jeeded Social Securi· ly increases are en'cicted but the mearu to pay for them currently are defaulted. we are faced with the very real prospect of increased inflation ," Nixo• !I a id in a statement issued following the signing. "For that reason, I urge the Congress to act promptly on a Social Security revenue measure 50 that the current cost of these increased benefits will be financed and the basic non-inflationary budget principle, which was embodied in the 1972 budget I submitted to the Congress, can be maintained," the Presi· dent said. It appeared unlikely that Congress would go along with Nixon's request for added revenue . Social Security tax increases are unpopular with the lawmakers but usually slide through on the popularity of benefit increases. Without higher benefits as part of the package, a tax boost would have little going for it. they suffered their heaviest casualties today in a single battle In Laos. Fireba5e A Loui. 12 miles ins ide Laos on French colonial Roule 9, axis of the government drive across the Ho Chi Mlnb Trail comp lex , appeared doom- ed and the 160 men there were ordered to break out of the pos ition today. They were surrounded and under attack after losing 100 dead and wounded. Support Base Brown. 61h miles east of abandoned Firebase Lolo , still held out but South Vietnamese spokesmen 1aid the Communists were preparing an all out assault on tbe base. Officers at northern operational bases u.id 2,000 more infantrymen were still at the base. now the westernmost ARYN position in Laos. South Vietnamese spokesmen declined to say how many reinforctments were unt into Laos hut said the task force in La.Oii remained at between 20,000 and 21,000 troops. The size of the force (See INDOCHINA, Pap I> Setback 'Surprising' House Refuses Funding For Ptoduction of SST WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tho HouM voted today to kill the Supersonic Transport ISSTl by refusing to give the controversial jetliner any more federal development funds. On two consscutive tests, members voted 218 lo 204 and 215 to 204 lo deny the project $134 millio n between now and June 30 for development of two prototype planes. Despite the surprising setback, the proposed 1,800 mile an hour craft could be rev ived lf the Senate voted to give it fund11 and the House agreed in com- promise negotiatioru; that followed . Bui last year, it was the Senate that refused to give any more federal money to the airplane and the House that backed It. The packed galleries whooped w1lh approval when the rei;ult of the first lest. a "teller vote" was announced on the amendment offered by Rl'p. Sidney Yates, (D-IIL), lo halt federal funds for the project. The announcement of the vote brought a whoop of pleasure from opponents of the SST. The galleries, both, press Baton Class Slated In Costa Mesa Lineup A brand·new course will be offered from March through May in the Costa Mesa Recreation Department's spring Aeries of classes. Baton.twirling will be orfered for children 5 years and older at $1 per lesson, Mondays at 3:45 and 4:30 p.m., with registration to be done March 29 at the first class· Instruction will be given in Costa Mesa Park. and publlc, were packed with onlookers for the vote. Prior to the Yote. the White Hou~ accused the mo.st vocal SST opponent in the Senate -which voted lut yl'ar to deny the plan~ any more money -of "a shocking attempt to create fear " about its possible threat to the environment. Crossing Bridge Delayed at SF SACRAMENTO fUPI) -The Senate today overwhelmingly 8pproved a bill blocking construction of the proposed southern crossing bridge over San Fran· cisco Bay until lawmakers decide the 1pan should be built. The measure by Assemblyman Robert W. Crow n ID-Alameda), was passed, SG--5. and rtturned to the Assembly for concurrence ln a minor amendment. It then would go to the governor. At his news conference Tuesday, Gcw. Ronald Reagan said he is keeping "my mind open" on whether the controversial $300 million bridge should be built. The St.ate Toll Bridge Authority In February cleared the last obstacle to consltuction Bnd ordered the go-ahead for the bridge , which has been on the drawing boards for nearly 20 years. Oruge Public Tran sit Plan Pr ese 1ited BechUe said records seiied Wednesday night from the La. Salll' & Bureau County Railroad in Illinois by FBI agents showed that the !lolen freight cars were re· painted and their numbers changed. Caspers Gives Appraisal Weather After you cut through friday'a early morning fog, you'll find sunny skies. with gu!ty northeast wind& helping to blow the arnog away. Temperatures should reach Ufe high 70s. I WA SHINGTON (UPI) Presidenl Nixon sent Congress a $2 75 billion revenue sharing proposal today that would permit states and cities to drop tbe ir rrhance on express· ways and develnp 11ew public lrans· portation systems. In !he fifth of a series of si1 repor!s to Congre!'S detailing his special revenue sharini;t package, N1~on .~aid each cnmmuni1.v should be allow erl 1n spend federal trans· portatlori mnnry as it sees flt for hu~es, subw::iys, airports. highway1 and other wav.~ of 1ravel. "We ha ve rf)Jed too Much in oor cities on cars and on highways,'' Nixon &aid. "We hin·e givrn too lit- tle attention to .,lher modes ti tr•vel.'' He said that so far this year, rn Penn Central freight cars disappeared after being routed onto LaSalle tracks. The FBI, armed with search warrant• from U.S. ~lrict Court In Chicago, took records of the LaSalle line and the Carua Chemical Co. in Illinois. The coort also authorized the FBI to ln!pect all LaSAlle rolling stock. The Official Railroad Guide lis!s the line as having a total rolling stock of two locomotives and 523 freight cars. BechtJe said a federal grand jury In· vest\galion would begin neit Wednesday. Jo.<!eph F. Cinotto Sr., 73. retired traffic manager for the LaSalle i;a\d by phont!! the freight cars did not belong tr.i LaSalle bu t to a firm called Diversified Property. "We thought Diversified Propertv bought the cars AOmeplace 11nd brought I.hem hell! to re1>1ir them," he .aid. "Diversified Property Is just using our tracks and 1hops to work on them ." Ne w Supervisor Tells 'Bad Guy' Role in Cost Cuts Predicting the Orange C.OOnty taxpayer will soon gel more for his money - in multiple ways -Filtb DisUict Super· visor Ronald W. Caspers rev iewed his first SO days in office today. "lt"s closer to 75 days." he quipped during a hreakfast meeting ol. the Citi· zens H;i rbor Area Res f' arch Tl'am fCHAHTl 1t the Costa ~fesa Golf and Country Club, He also took the group on a verbal tour. The trip ranged aking leafy bike trails and tumultuous freeways, past clean pub- lic beaches. uncluttered by offshore oil platforms, and undtr the shadow of high. rise .11kyscrapers. Caspers 1aid that-wbUe be 111 1till • getting his be'arin11:5 in county govern· men!, he has formed .llll!id opinions about hi s posture on basic issuea in day1 ahead . "I'd rea Hy like to be the spokesman for the masses wtlo can 't get off from work to come in person,'' said the New. port Beach savings and loan company executive. Caspers said ~ and hi1 adminislretlve assistant try to get out and about each Friday. talking to constituents: •bout I.heir vil'Ws and studying the Flfth Dia.- trlct Jn minute detail. '"I Pfr50nally think we're going to have to f)lay the bad gu y," he: 11eid .,, cO!:t· eutUng In county govtmment. "We 've al50 tried LI) !lreamllne pm- c:edurea," be &aid of a new agenda cut.. f ling the length o( time !or certain dis- cussions. "We had 58 items the other day and went to 4:30," Cas;peri noted, saying the board was exhausted by the day's de-- liberations. "That'! when you make big m\st.ake.11, when you're (allgued." he added. Public recreation, mass rapid transit, federal reYenue-sharing, biUboard con- trol. preservation of open spaces, off. short oil dril li ng and other issues were broadly covered. "A~ r1r as ()Pf'n spaces. there aren't going to be any lf we rely on the Agrl- C'Ultural Preserves ." Casper warned . "I'd love for the C()Unty lo be able to (See CASPERS, P11e ti INSWE TODAY Son Fra.nciscn rtjidents hit the panic button 1ohen they re- ceived dunning notices asking them to palf up right away or face the consequences. See storu , Page 5. ''''"' 11 ... tt... " c.rll9nllt • Cll«-Jotw U• • Clat1lli.d H·M C•mk-H c ... ,,_. t• 0..lfl Mt'llttt It Dlftl"ttl 11 11•1i.ri.r ,,.. ' l!Ml111l-f h ·J' ,llll llC• , .. ,. "--u 1.1111 l,..9!Hlen II M1t1,,.• t M1rri. .. Lktll!lff 11 M ... IH l~n Mwtti•I l'll!Oft It Mtl .... tl ,...,,. I·) o'''" Ctvft,., 1• S..ru H•U SllCll Mertlt'll u-n Ttll"lttilMI t' n....... Mo.11 WH*" 4 .__,, lfft'I IS.U w...w "'-.. • • ,. I 4 r , """-T PILOT c Thw1ci.IJ, M.wch 18, 1971 l{night in Bagg)r Armor Offers Hope for Future By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Cit lllf Dlllr l"ltlt $!1N KNIGHTS IN shining armor doo 'l always hit town In chain mall panLI, riding In on a white stallion to right our wrongs. Ralph Nader wears a ready.made suit. The trousers are baggy and slightly wrinkled from a !light on a pollullon· spewing jeUlner between campus speeches. One stretch sock I! even baggy. Nader the crusader is as likely to make the nation's 10 Best-Dressed list as be is to be elected vice president of General ,_iotors. · The Pied Piper of Improvement is not visually im- pressive. ONE rtfOMENT he is upected and the next he ls out there on the Orange ~st College gym floor ready to speak. Nobody noticed him arrive. He is thin and gaunt, but -like bo1er Muhammad ~ Ali -when he opens his mouth, Nader too can float like ' a butterfly and sting like a bee. Stinging indictments of river-ruining industries; acid criticisms on food Items (Wonder Bread! You wonder what's in it ) and corrective ideas pour out like a volley of punches. He delivers a hard blow to social hypocrisy. HE HAMMERS A WAY on a government that rewards corporate crimi- nals who ruin our lungs and poison our waters with social invitations to the White House. Nader not only bitches, however. but he fights back. And he makes sense to increasing numbers of people, rrom the com- mon garden variety of ecology freak to sober. serious students of our riv.aged wor ld. He proposes changes in our sick system to put health and safety on a priority above profit. NADER'S BRAND of law and order would imprison or fine responsible persons within corporalions that violate our deteriorating environment as en· thusiastically as it does long-haired Flag-burners. He is militant about power to the people. "Who is in the greatest prniitloo to exercise power to It.op poUuUon?" he ' demands. The victims. Us. Who else? The gym is jammed and in the front row is a student, 29, who ran for the Costa Mesa City Council on ecology islues. He has long hair and wears striped bib overalls. He is a soul brother to the older man in the sober gray suit -and to the rest of us -because we breathe the same air and drink the same water. ONE CAN FEEL an exciting electricity in the air -along with photo- chemical smog -as Nader exhorts the young, outlining a novel plan for ecological and social action. It is invigorating and even catching. I got up Wednesday, one more day into that 30th year, facing anoth er day of crime in the streets and contamination all around. One more day of cholesterol. mercury, and 47 other harmful ing~edients assaulting my own f1abby 1 metabolic bag along with deadline pressure, The Bomb and you name il NO NEWSr.tAN knows just what his day will bring in terms of assign- ments and mine of Wednesday, Nader's talk, was encouraging. He doesn 't wring his hands and shake his head, demanding that some- thing be done. He offers soluLions that sotmd surprisingly simple but require only energy and initiative. For whatever it's worth, I'm one of those individuals who does not choose to bring any children into our overcrowded, polluted, war-threatened world. Some things can't be helped. while other conditions definitely can. Nader makes it sound like there's aUll a chance for your d\ildren. 'Attending Patient' Ambu'Iance Chief Says Doctor Had Good Alibi By TOM BARLEY Of tlM 0.117 ,., .. , ll•ff A Costa ~1esa ambulance service of- ficial today testified that Or. Ebbe Har- lelius of Corona de! Mar was di recting the hospitalization of a crilically ill pa- tient last March 31 at a time when the prosecution contends the physician was fakillg the theft of a car in Long Beach. Gene ral Manager Dan Wotsak told the jury in OraPige County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge's courtroom that Hartelius called his office at about It p.m. March 31 to arrange the transfer of 8 dangerously ill woman Crom her New. ORANGE COAS1' DAILY PILOT 01.ANGE co•'T l"Ulll!MING COMPANY RoDtrt N. W11d Pru :dtnl t ncl P~ll•Plr Jtc~ R. C11rl1v \IU rrcikltnt 1!'4 C.CMt•I M111111lf' Thom•' K11vll Ed!lor Thom•• Ji.. M11rphin1 Mt ... 11111\1 E<1110t C1it• Mesa Offlcl' JlO w.11 ••v Str••t M•ili119 Aclidr1n : P.O. low 1560, 92626 OtMt OfflcK N..,..Wt ••1c1>: JJJ: N1w~I l ov't vt rd 1.IOllM 8tJlh, ?7". Fo1c:1 .... Vf~IK )lu~llntle• '"''"" 1111: ll•OC" aou11v1rd ,._,. Cl_,,": .)II~ Norr11 .£1 C1m!r>e Rt.II bAILV '°ILQT, -'th WPll~ I' combined , ... N~'°'UI. 11 ~l,lltd 011'¥ t•tt~ Swtlo lltY 1t1 MPl'11tt "'"llNll to< LeOun• &uc11. Nt-; t•r4'1, Cotll ~.. th1~Hno1an tuc11. FOVT!ffilll "••ltv. s.~ '""""'"' C1pl1trt r10 1rd $tdd1t~lc-. l lo"'I wol~ - .. tJiO•t l ldltioll. ll'rl~tllJI 11'"1~!• ... t>IUll Is 11 JJC WUI lfT l !tn .• Cll!<ll MHI. port Beach home to Hoag Memorial Hos- pital. Testimony offered in the prosecution phase of the arso n.fraud t&Ml indicaled that Hartelius, 50, was at tha t time driv- ing to Long Beach with Jim Blevens, his blonde mistress' brolller, to hide a car that later became the subject of an in- surance clalm. Wotsak's story appeared to be rup- ported today by the testimony of New- port Beach pat rolman Clayton Lyon wtio said that Hartelius was seen by him about midnight at Hoag Hospital. The officer testified he followed the ambulance to the Newport hospital and when he left the physician was attending his pa tienl in Hoag's emergency room. Wotsak and officer Lyon were two of attorney Matthew Kurilich's first three witnesses as he ope ned his defense of the accused physician. His first wiLness. hospital administ ra- tor Darrell Reardon. today testified that Reba Vaughn -Dr. Hartelius' para· mour for more than four years -had a "poor" reputation for truthfulness. Rea rdon, who directs the ope.rations of the Beverly Ma11or Convalescent Hospi· tal in Costa Mesa. said "Reba couldn't be trusted at all'' and that a! least two or his nurses had made that observation. Mrs. Vaughn. 'll. of 687 W. Wilson St.. Costa Mesa, was the prosecutlon·s key witness in its case against her forme·r Jover. She testifitd that Hartelius directed Blevins to set the rire Apr il 9 at Har. tclius' offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway, Coron a del Mar. She has contributed to testimony that Hartelius used her brother to help him arrange the reportt<I theft of lhe car allegedly abandoned by the doctor In Long Beach. F ASHTO N ISLAND SHO WING AUTOS An auto show displaying the 1971 Detroit model! runs through Friday and Saturday at Fashion Island Jn Newport Beach. Fl!ty autos provided by Harbor Area car dealers art on display along the malls of the center. The show is open to the pubUc without char1e. Women's 'Lihher·s Tell Goals1 ' ' .,. ''W:e Care A b~~t Men Too,' Say Mesans in Hunting ton Liberation is free, client-controlled day care centers for working women. Cb6er up, men. You don't have to be afraid of Women's Liberation anymore. They care about you, too. "Men shouldn't be beasts of burd en either," Lorna Buck. a 23·year-old Womeft's Liberation leader from Costa Mesa, told a lf'Oup of Huntington Valley Young Republicans Wednesday night. "The underlying theme in women's lib is the general liberation of people. Higher standards for all," she said. "Then why do you push the women's liberation so much?" came a question from the audience. "Self interest," she replied. Miss Buck and her partner. Mrs. Sally Hufbauer, 33, also of Costa Mesa , lee· tured the Republicans from Huntington Beet:h on the hardship of being a woman. They concentrated on g i v I n g background to the women's liberation n1ovement and stating its future goals. One of Women's Liberation's ~ F rom Pagel CASPERS ..• buy the Starr Ranch and pul it on ice for taxpayers' use, but where are we going to get $12 million? \\1e may have to go to \Va shington on this." l-le said Aliso Creek, south of Laguna Beach, will be kept as a scenic tiiking area through easements in which land- owners are pa.id to leave it undeveloped. Certain other coast.at creeks: will be marked off as floodplain areas and left without drainage channels that h a v e brought development right to their edge in other areas. Caspers said he is doubtful President Nixon's revenue-sharing plan will pass Congress and likewise expects litUe in the way of a rapid transit program. "J would like to see Proposition 18 pass," he said of the enabling legisla- tion defeated once before. "I think the people got a screwing on that." •·nie oil interests bought that one. They were caught at it but they were successful." Caspers said legislation is coming to ootlaw further offshcl'e oil drilling - even priot exploration -and he will pressure fellow board members to go along with It. He also said he doubts the recent New- port Belch anti~st Freeway election will do any more than delay its con- gtruction temporarily. He criticized the quick maneuvering tha t led a San Diego firm to begin a new high-rise apartment tower in the heart of the scenic Lido Peninsula. "I don't know how THAT got approv· ed ." ~aid the Lido Jsle resident. Relative to the attempted ouster of County Administrative Officer Robert 0 . Thomas, Caspers said he quadrupled his 5talf in four years and was making 21~ times the salary of a supervisor. "There was nothing personal against the CAO. I don't even know him person- ally. I just lhought things got out or 11and ," Caspers explained. State Highway Group Clarifies F reewa y Stance The California Highwa y Commission took two actions Wednesday designed to clarify its position on the Newport Beach·Pacllic Coast Fre ew ay con- troversy. First, the commission unanimously voted to order a review of the results of the Newport Beach traffic study if that study shows a modification in the adopted coastal freeway route I 1 de sirable. Second, and even more significant. It said-it will abide by any new freeway agreement negotiated between Newport Beach and the Slate PubUc Works Department. The act.ions pave the way for upected City Council steps Monday night to ap- point a committee to meet with represen- t.aUves of State Public Works Dlrector James A. Moe on renegotiation of the agreement on the portion or the freeway lhrough Corona de! Mar. Key advisers to Moc have al ready l!aid that representatives of the depart- ment. in light of last week's lopsided anti.freeway vote, will be willing to at least sit down and talk about the problem with Newport city spokesmen, Newport residents overwhelmingly ask· eel the council to rescind the existing freeway route agreement, which covers the Corona del Mar leg only, in a special election March 9. ruither than 11.ct unilaterally, the eoun- cl1 his indicated it will unanimously support a motion to establish the negotiating commlttet. The state has warned a g a Jn st unilateral action. In an earl~ mollon Wednesday. the IUghway Commission unanimously declared that if the city atttmpts to void the contract withcut state concurrence, action should bf taken to recover planning and engtnflf:rlng costs on the section of the route involved. The clarification movea came late Wednesday artemoon when the com- n1L111slon endor5ed a letter sent by iU!: chair man, Fred C. Jen.aiogs, to Mayor Ed Hirth Jul month. \ • Ol\IOllll coall II abattion on demand. '"That'• murder," charged o n e Republican woman. ''Open abortions wlll destroy the moral fibre of our country." "Not nearly on the scale or Vietnam1" nplled Miss Buck. '"You can't get around lt, a baby is a potential human being," Mrs. Huf· bauer added. "But when you think of pollution and population problems, it'a a lesser evil. And many women die from Illegal aborttons." "In the big picture It's obviously the thing to do." &he said. Both women agreed that birth control ls much prelerable to abortion. "But when it fails , abortion is the answer," Mrs. Hufbauer contended. Another of the three naUonal goals is equal pay for equal work. "ln general, it's safe to say men and corporations run the country," Mrs. Hutbauer said. "A woman get& paid zero tor housework and hauliq around a 35-pound kid." "But she gels what the man breab his back for, food, home, clothing," in· terjected a man. Mra. Hufbauer counl!red with statistics from ttie Chase Manhattan Bank - "hardly a hotbed of support for Women't Uberatioo" -which indicated the average housewife 's work week is 99 hours. AnoU1tr man pointed out that mo.!t of the n1Uon'1 corporations are owned by women who hold the majoritr of stock. "Old millionaires die elf and their wives inherit the stock, because women Jive longu. A man works himself to death." the challenger said. "Maybe we'll win then," Miss Buck ,..inked. Miss Buck told of her job bunting experience in New York as a college graduate. "l was offered a lot of secretarial jobs -that's a good classification for paying a woman lower wages -and I can't even type." The third national goal of Women'a Manslaughter Charges Filed Against Officer Manslaughter charges were f i l e d Wednesday agalnst a Los Angeles police officer arrested Monday night after the &booting death cf a Buena Park con· structlon worker outside a Huntington Beach bar. Tbe slaying of Mark A. Rodgers, 29, pofice aaid, ended an argument that began inside the Swinger bar, 19202 Beach Boulevard, over the off4uty poliCfl officer's alleged attempt to f eed a cigarette to a dog. CUftofl J . Schusse, 26. of 5672 Rogers Drive, Huntington Beach. a patrolman with the Los Angeles Po Ii c e Department's Harbor Division, was charged with voluntary manslaughter in the shooting. Huntington Beach police arrested him originally on suspicion of murder. Two Surrender On Travel Club Fraud Charges Two Oranie COast men want.ed Jn connection with an alleged travel fraud surrendered to Newport Beach police Wednesday. In custody are Gary Louis Colvin, 33. of 212 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, and Roy Nicholas, 33, of 8933 Lampson, Garden Grove. Both suspects were ·ought on· municipal court warrants cha ... ging the m with grand thert. District Attorney's Investigator Grant Bertolet said the pair are suspects in a $40,000 travel scheme that operated nationwide out of Newport Beach. The firm. Vagabond Steamship Com- pany, advertised a round the world cruise for Sl,488. Bertolet alleges that the travel pro- moters had no ship for the cruiSe. The case was broken after a Los Angeles resident claimed he was bilked by the travel agency. Through the efforts of the Newport Beach police, the Orange County District Attorney's office and the Los Angeles police. the ·warrants were obtained. In addition to Nicholas and Colvin, Bertolet said three other men -alleged tG have been partners in the scheme -are still being sought. They are Jerry Preston. also known al! Jerry Lundy ; Jerry Gordon Dye, and Henry Graham. also known as Henry Weinstein. Deputy District Attorney Richard J. Beecam said a second suspect in the case, James E. Jordon. 31, of 6762 Warner . Ave., Apl K-10, Huntington Beach, has bem released. Charges against him were dismls.std for lack of evidence, Beacom said. Jordon &!so bad been arrested on suspicion cf murder. Scbusse appeared before Judge Walter Charamza Wednesday afternoon in West Orange County District court and waived his right to an Immediate hearing. He is now in Orange County Jail In lieu of $15,000 bail. He was ordered to appear in court again at 9 a.m. Friday. Police allege that Schusse felled Rogers with one shot from a .33-caliber revolver after first firing • bullet into the pave- ment. Frem P .. e l CARPENTER. • • majority vote In the Rules Commlttet to get access to the locked-up files. Mills engineered the abolition of the old committee after discovering its files included reports on himself and about two dozen other legislators. Sen. •1. L. Richardson, a 1970 member of the un-American activities committee and leader of the fight against its aboli· tion. said ''it is doubtful the new com- mittee will rective the b r o a d capabilities" the old one had. The Democrat-dominated Rules Com- mittee, headed by Senate President pro tern James Mills (0-San Diego), used "the contemporary political method of dodging a hot issue," Richardson liaid. "Appoint a new committee. give it limited powers, broad responsibilities and a weak sta ff." "So instead of meeting a subject head- on, you gum it to death." said the Arcadia Republican. ''It's a typical cover·up. "-1ills tried to placate the con- servatives. the American Legion and the anti-communists and at the same time give a sop to his left-wing con- stituents among the Democrats." He also complained "there will ne longer be reports of un·American ac· tivities released to the people." But Carpenter said "it's incumbent upon a committee of this kind to make reports." Carpenter noted his committee will provide "valuable In ! or mat ion'' legislators can use to formulate laws, not books on the details o( activities of individuals and groups as the old committee's reports were. ~ n4• 1111.11 .-_., idlt:.r. . o1:1u: :atluiie .. we:•,.*•iiiu8fllit ~, . There was little discussion on that point.. Early in the evening Miss Buck ex• plained about conscious raising groupl!I where women first meet In the libera.t!Ofl movement. "A woman hits three stages in this group," she ex.pJalned. "First there is an awareness, and a beginning to be angry when she learns her aspirations haven't been mel because she hu to play the role of wife. "Then her ambition ls aroused . WiUi the support. of the group she feels shs can do things. "The last stage is shock and self anger when ahe finds that society still treats her as a sex object. "You find you can't make ll alone so you band together with all your sisters and try to change the stereotype." When the.it lecture ended t.he two Costa Mesa women handed out literature on Women's Liberation -to the women only. From Pagel INDOCHINA. • • has been reported pr~viously up to 24,000 men. Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan La m, commandtr of South Vietnamese forces in Laos, said his troops had maintained 1 10-1 kill ratio over the Communists since the drive into Laos began Feb. 8 and that these figures were "a victory ••. a sira of winning." In Seattie Wednesday, Gen. William Westmoreland, army chief of staff and former commander in Vietnam, said the incursion into Laos by the South Vlet- nameie had been a success. He said the current withdrawal was "net a retreat ; it was planned." Lt. Col. Nguyen Xuan Loe, intelligence officer for South Vietnam's 1st Infantry Division, said his regiment-sized force or about 2,000 men at Brown ''have .stopped searching for Communist supply dumps and are preparing for an attack." "I think the NVA (North Vietnamese) plan a major attack on Brown,'' ht said. ''I feel we can hold Bt'OWJI." Military sources said North Vietnamesa troops pursued !be Infantrymen fleeing from the Lolo region. nine miles BOUtheast of Sepone and 15 miles insid e Laos, and (ired heavy tank guns, mortar• and rockets into the retreating forces. The Communists wou1d occasionally stop firing and , through loudspeakers, call on the South Vietnamese to sur· render, the sources said. In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedhcim refused to characterize the moveQ"lents of the South Vietnamese to escape Communist attacks as a retreat. He said their primary function was lo disrupt the Ho Chi Minh Trail and .. they are not there to stand and fight against enemy troops for tht: next several months." Law Exting uishes Firehouse Flame A Cucamonga bottomless dancer cap. tivat.e.d audiences at Costa Mesa 's Firehouse bar until vice orficers caught her act and captivated her early today. Sandra J. Beard, 23. was arrested on suspicion of indecent exposurr and booked into Orange County Jail, prior to release on $625 bail. Officer Phil Donohue said Miss Beard was prancing fo r patrons in the bar at 17·7 E. 17th St., only inches from their faces at times, before he made the arrest. IOhu; Cliilfi; lidroo1111; DWali .. -.-._, · l:ils, ...... ps; China Servers; 1uffe1s;·J~1es;.C.•ilos; acHil(. cases, He• II Boarcls; Mirrors; and •any items too numerous to ntentlon. ~ H.J.GARREIT fURNll1JRE PROFESSIONAC 2l1 J.~IBOR .. vu. INTERIOR OESl6N!i!S COSJ.." MESA. CAI.I F. ~~,5 '46;427' ' Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stoeka VO ~. 64, NO. 66, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, M>:RCH ·11, 1971 I TEN CENTS Council Sticl{·s to Guns Over Fireworl{s Ban Fireworks CT1nfronted San Clemente's City Council again Wednesday night. but soon fiz.zled as a large contingent of YMCA Jndian Guides and adults Jogt a btd to lift the ci!y'F. freeze on any more sales of the independence Day items. Despite impassioned pleas by the adulr leaders of the youth activity, councilmen held fast to their ruling of two weeks ago restricling the permits for fireworks to thtt local groups. And on the first meeting following July 4, councllmen agreed, they would take up the matter of a blanket ban on the controversial merchandise. Councilmen agreed that their deci~ion Wednesday would not be popular o~ and found it difficult to separate what they agreed was 1 worthwhile group from an issue of public safety. William Hoversten of San Clemente, a leader in the South Coast YMCA annual fund drive, told the councU the ule thi! year had been planned for the new Grant's Plat.a shopping center far from any other fireworks stands in the city. The stand1 he added, would lie almost on the city.county boundary. The proceeds from the 11ale, several Y speakers said, could range up to Sl,000 or more and were tbe only hope for launching the program for young bovs -ma11y of them a fatherless. But City Councilman Thomas O'Keefe and Mayor Walter Evana both vocally supported the group 's efforts but stressed the city opposition to more sales permits. O'Keefe even promised to make a donation to the group, bul said Sl,000 in profits "would not offset a young child's life any way you look at it." "We had decided firml y to stop the whole thing at four pennils two week!! ago." added Evans, .. now if we approve ywrs where could we atop al all this year?" He suggested the youth group ltt.k. elsewhare for revenue this year. t "It'! ju!t a fact of economics that any new stands would just cut the profits for everyone Lrying to sell fireworks this year," he sa id. Until two years ago only tht local posts of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion received permits to sell the merchandise in the city. The reasoning behind that permission wa11 to grant the two groups means of recouping heavy expenditures from u e eac urne Hit·run Cluirged Nurse Arrested In Road Death A 50-year-old private nurse !room South Laguna faces charges of felony hit-run and manslaughter toda.v in the death of a Dana Point man struck and killed instanlly Wednesday night along a Laguna Niguel highway. Regina W. Smeck of 32221 Vista de Catalina. South Laguna, was arrested 1t a Dana Ponnt bar, authorities said, Council Ol{ays Apartments on Hospital Site A zone c.hange allowing the building of 216 garden apartments on [;:ind once destined to hold San Clemente's firs t hospital sailed past city councilmen Wednesday. By a unanimous vote, the panel disregarderl earlier denial by the plan· ning commission and approved the change from unclassified zoning to R-3-G, allowing a S3 million proposed apartment de velopment. ~ The land, 10 acres being sold by the ho spital developer C. T. DeCinces to Alfred E. Mann, lies direcll y coastward of the civic center. Its grading wa~ done several years ago to accommodate a San Clemente f\.1ed ical Center, ~·hich 11truggled for years lo get off the ground, then was .abandoned last year. Spokesmen for the buyer-in-e~crow told councilmen that the apartment complex -with strips or unit~ key!'d toward an ocean view, would be two stories or less. Because the development will have rnadways weaving through the property. councilmen agreed that before any stru~· ture.11 are buill a conditional use permit would be. necessary, thus allowing strict city control of height and other design fac.klrs. The heig ht -and asserted c~ti ng off views -was one of Lhe reasons ror the failure of the project to pass the planners. But the applicanl'i: aide~ told coun· tilmen the design of the buildings would assure no views would be cul. orr from existing dwellings above the Joi. DeCinccs, actin~ as the seller of the land. also addressed the council ~ed nesda y, explaining phases of the proiec.t. then stTessing !ittle other use of the parcel could ~ made In vie w of the abandon ment or the ho:oipital idea. "There's just no olher use for the tand,1' he 1;;11d, "unless you want to put cows on it." Exchange Chth Gives Donation to YMCAl ' San Clrmente's ExrhflngE" Cluh hfls donated $100 10 the Sou!h Coast YMCA -monry "·hic h "'ill srnd two local boys to ~ummrr camp. The fu nds "'i ii send th~ tv.'o boys- 11.s yet unselrcted-tll Camp Dluf{ Lake near Bil!, Bc<'lr. The donation ~·as made formally lo the Y's Campersh!p Fund which each year send~ youths with limited fin1111cial means to wilderne11s camps for one.week visits. a few minutes after I.hf: death or Glenn M. Mccutcheon , 20. of Dana Point. Highway patrolmen said Mccutcheon, an employe of Coast Catamaran Corp., had been struck and killed lruitanUy as he walked along the shoulder or Pacific Coast Highway with a friend. Both the dead ma• and his companion, Craig M. Montallo, 22, lived at the Dana Strand Motel, room 17. The incident occurred at 8:50 p.m. abou t a quarter-mile 1outh of the in. tersection of Crow11 Va.Hey Parkway with I.he highway. Patrol spokesmen quoted Monla.lto as saying the two men were walking south alongside the southbOund lane!'! when Mccutcheon stopped to light a cigar. The witness told of seeing 1 pair of headiights from a weaving auto and realized the vehicle was heading for him and Mccutcheon, officers re.lated . Montallo dove into a bank, he said, and then turned to notice the car weaving a\vay at about 40 miles per hour. ''When he went back to find his com· panion, the man was gone," patrolmen said. McCutcheon·s body was found 120 leet av.·ay. Later. officers traced a trail of clothing and belongings scattered hundreds ()f feet along the roadside. The Smeck woman allegedly dr ove to a bar in Dana Point whtte a few moments later employes not Ifie d authorities . Patrolmen claim lhe woman't car bare a smashed grille, punctured radiator and dents in the bumper and hood. She was booked and held at Orange County jail. Officers said they would seek a district attorney's complaint charging fe lony hit-run driving and manslaughter against the wo man. Three Marines Arres ted After Store Burglary A San Clemen~ patrolman's sighting of a man holding a blood v towel led lo the s"·ift arrest of three Camp Pendleton Marines on burglary charges early today. Police ~aid they arrested the trio st lhe Greyhould hus 5tatio n about a quarter-hour aft.er a woman reported someone smashing the window of Fred's Liquors at Ola Vista and Calle Victoria. The crime scene is a block away from the terminal. Ofricer!l arrived moments later to find the premises broken into and blood on a window and among tht liquor ra cM. But the thjeve11 had fled. A few minutes after the 1:42 11.m. break In patrolman noti ced thret men 1t the closed station. One of the three had wrapped hi11 hands in a bloody towel, police said. The men. all arresl.etl on charges or burglary, art Douglas Robert Lindsley. 19: David Da11iel Waegll, 19, and Don Anthony Wllll ams, 20. Williaimg w11s treated for L he 11evere fltind cut.II before being booked on the burglary chari;;e. The man received 12 stitches 11t South Coast Community Hosp it.Ill. Offieer1 sidd 11hout. 1 dot.en bottles of Uquor were recovrred tn the arresL"i. Begorrnh Sure twas a wonderful sight to see lhe Mission ViejD parade in honor of St. Patrick Wed· nesday. Here Bob Brennan typifies the wondrous event. ·Guard Tryouts Set in Clemente Extensiv~ tryoul!: for seve ral openings for sea~nal lifeguards for the City of San Clemente will be given the weekend of March 27 and 28 at the city beach. Applicants musl arrive at lifeguard headquarters by 8 a.m. eitt:er morning, bringing their own swimsuits, towels and warm clothing. Testing for the applicants will :~clud~ an 88~yard ocean swim : run-swim-rescue with 200 yards of swimming., towing and running : another run-swim-run ex· 'rcise of 1.200 yards and an oral in· terview. Requirements include A p p 1 i c a n I 5 reaching their 17th birthday by July l. 1971. Lifeguard service officials stress- ed th at au applicants begin to condition themselves early for th!'! test, which they describe as "strenuous." All applicant!'I must be available for week.long competitive training ar:d gruel- ing tests throu~h Easter Week, April S through JO from 9 1..m. to S p.m. each day. A · Sea of ,Green Cro wds View Viejo Irish Parade Shamrocks and shenanigans marked Missioo Viejo's rollicking St. Patrick"s Day Parade Wednesda y. Thousands lined the six-mile parade route along Marguerite Parkway I.cl view the second annual tvent in warm fiUnshine. Shamrocks blosaomed 011 Ooals, but· tons, bats and baby carriageg producing a sea of green through which bands, floats and marchers navigated. Floats w~re decorated with green and wbite crepe paper. Oowers, and symbols of Ireland. Three were decorated as J ri~h hats and one, provided by the Ml~on Viejo ~'n'; ~nd W~1 q4b~, bi<\ •'unlque 10llture. ·, ., . ~ the no.t . moved a.lone the .street a hand would appear from Ume to time from under the moving "hat" to place a cup of liquid refreshment on the pavement for "thirsty" marchers. ~~loat.s decorators displayed a great deal of ingenuity. The Mothers or Twins Club entered a huge sloping rainbow with a pot of gold al the end: the Mission Viejo Activities Committee pro-- duce d an immense "bottle " of lrish whisky which they labeled "The Irish Dream." Music was performed by marching bands from Mission Viejo and San Clemente High Schools and the United States t,farine Corps and a group of Saddlebac~ College studen~s an a float. · Af~r the . parade· .a"Yarda · ~ e 1'..e pretent«l td flaats: and eoStliiTitd marclierl. Teens danced lrf an otitdoor parking lot and adults dined on Irish cul&ine at the Mission Viejo Inn. * * * * * * Twins' Moms Capture Grand Prize in Parade The Saddleback Valley Mothers of Twins Club won the grand sweepstaku award for flnats for I.he second time 11L Mission Viejo's St. Patrick's Day parade \Vednesday. Other winners were John Pyefinch's dog cart. judges award; O'Neill School, rn ost original float : Mission Viejo Activities Committee. most humorous float. and Lion Country Safari, mo11l unique float. Marching awartl!'I were presented to the Leisure World Hikers, Camp Fire Girli1 Number 37 and the Linda Vista School Leprechauns . Equeslrian aw ards were given lo Bob Harritt, Tony Moiso and Sue Greco. Adult costume winners were Jo Jo Sc hool Board Hopefuls Talk Candidates for San Joaquin Elementary, Tustin High School and Saddleback College Trustee post/I will be guest speakers or the M i !'I s i o n Viejo-Saddleback VaUey Democratic Club tonigh t. The candidates will be allowed lo present their views on current sc hool issues at the 8 p,m. meeting in La Paz Intermediate School, '5151 Pradera, Mission Viejo. The public is invited. the Clown, Emmet Radcliff and The Tres Ow Gu ild, Children's Hospital. Children's costume winners we re the Chinook Indian Guides, Sad d I e ba c k Valley Chamber of Com mt r c e Leprechauns and the Ayudan tes Au;:i;. iliary of the Children 's Home Society. A special award was presented to the Mission Viejo area's oldest residenl born in Ireland. Mrs. Mabel McFadden, 82. Policemen 'Cite' Pilot Reporter The DAILY PILOT's San Clemente staff writer John Vallerza Tuesday Teceived the "Good Guy of the Month" award from the San Clemente Peace Officer's Associatio n. The a.ward -a large plaque signed on the back by all the association's members -was presented at a monthly luncheon at Omar's Restaurant. ihe accolade -the fi rst ever gi ven a reporter -was given for "continued in terest and moral 1upport and will· ingness to assist in any and every way his fellow citizens of the City of San Clemente." Va lterza has headed new s operation11 from the DAILY PILOT San Clemente Bureau since it was established more than a year ago. He is a resident ol Capbtrano Beach. San Cleme1ate High Newspaper Drive Booming With the month-long experimental proJ- ecl only half over San Clemente 's newspaper recycling project 1lready yielded 11 full van and tons of newsprint already on Its wa y to the factory. And spokesmen for the sponsorlng Back Y.\'lrd Ecology Groups said today a fresh van 11lready Is In place and in lilt past few days has been 11.ncked with two. tons more. The huge rovered trailer will stay the rest of the month ot March et th' Market Basket ptrking lot ne•r Sh0Tecliff11, · One aspect of the project, however. proved dismal for a tim,, untll spoMOrl round a solution. Ple1111 for Vl)lunteert to ht!lp stack papers fell on deaf tars. so the sponsor• have hired a teen11ge youth for Sl an afternoon to stack the donated bundles of newsprint. "We 1ii1ked for volunl.etrs to do the job." said tcology group member Uone.J Burt, "but nobody came forth.'• The new pa.Id volunteer arrives •l the v11n each afternoon and 1h.lftJ the bundles of newsprint from a small oul3ide receptacle to , the vu, which now ls kept locked. 'T'he first fllled v11n 3lready has been towed back to tht Garden St11te Paper Company In Pomon11. The large newsprint recla m11tion firm h8s donated thr pulp paper carrier! frtt of charge, ft reimbursu the. city U a ton for the collected paper. their treasuries for the annual pro- fessional fireworks display from tht munlcipal pier. "Even with those proceeds the pro- gram runs "at a Joss every year,'' Evans said, Two years ago officials from the Junior All America n Football League squeaked by a J.2 vote and won the addition of their name to the permit list. With a freeze already imm~nt lase spring local Optimist! were turned down in a aimilar request. own San Onofre Nixes Park Sl\:inny Dip Slate parks orticiala drafting the rules for use of the new San Onofre State Park Bt;ach soulh of the \Vest.em White House hastily drafted a new one today -nudes are a no-no. 'The new morality notwithstanding, the state parks brass came up with tha ruling hastily after receiving a request earlier this month from the West.e m Sunbathing Association out tif San Diego. The skinn ydippers: wanted a 11tttior1 of the scenic beach to provide scenery of their own. And WSA Director David P. Phillipt pressed the issue, apparently with the _ State Parks bra!'ls in Sacramen to. He said his 3,500 member group didn't want to use the whole beach -just a small part. State Parks Division Six Direct.or James Whitehead sa id this morning, however. that the state has a convenient rule wh ich applies: No section of any 11tate park ean be set aside for exclusive us• by a specific group, he said (relieved). But the director related another facet of the skinnydip question. "They said they weren't r e a.11 y particular about exclusive use. One man said folks with bathing suits would be welcome as we!!. But the prospect of "clot.hies'' mingling with 3,500 nudies !till doesn't sit right -particularly for opening day early in April. Gov. Reagan is expected to be the guest of honor. Bi g Ra ilroa d Merger Proposal Called Off CLEVELAND (UPI) -The plaMed merger of the Chesapeake & Ohio and the Norfolk & Western railroads hal been called off. it was announced today. C&O President Gregory S, Devine and N&W President John B. Fishwick, in a joint announrement. saJd they woul d recommend to their respective directors that the merge r proposaJ be dropped. The merger was first proposed in 1965. Oruge Coot Weather Alter you cut through Friday'1 early morning fog, you'll find sunny skies. with gusty northeast wlnda helping to blow the smog away. Temperatures should Teach the high 70s. INSWE TODAY San Francisco rtsidtnt.s hit the panic button 1ohen ill.tu rs- ccivtd dunnin11 notices asking them to pay up r111ht away or fnct t~ consequences. See story, Poge 5. •1n111 11 "41!1Mr :tO C•lll•ro•f I Clltf.klflt U• • c 1.,,111..i 1'·H (Oftll(I H Creu-• H 0..1~ N$!1(•• 11 Dlvtr<" ll 1!•116rlll l'I.. I 1111..,.i11-1 U·11 ...... ~(' "'" He_,.. .. AIU! Lllf!llllB IS " ' M1ltlMIJ1 • M1rrl1" Ur..,.,.. 11 MOO-I" J6•U M~tllll ""''" II N.ii.i>11 ttfW• t.J 0••~•• Cflllll'f 11 Swll tt·U llOCk Mllttl'I H·l• T11t~ltltll 11 T!lllillr1 H·2J W•'1-I W1-'• N-. 1 .. 11 WttW N-... I I ' ' - % OAll. Y PILOT New State Tax Eyed R evenue Would Aid 'Low Wealth' Schools By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tlM D•ll¥ Pllet ll•lf A proposed $3.75 per $100 statewide property tu would benefit most school dbtrlcU in Orange County but cause increased property taxes in Newporl- Mesa, Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified school dlstrlcts. About 200 county school officials Wednesday niCbt heard a presentation on the plan endoned by the State Depart.. ment of Educ1tion and being recom· mtnded to the legislature by the State Board ol Education. U adopted. the tu equali%ing package would pr<>vide lncrta1ed revenuea to 20 of 34 school districts in Orange County. An additional $26,634,220 in school rev- enue would be provided to the county's district! under the ltatewide property tax collect.Jon 1y1tem. Joseph Brooks. executive Secretary of the California School Boards Association, said. Benefiting moet by the plan. would be the so-called "low wealth" districts. These are the dislrlct.s which have large numbers of students and a low t-Otal assessed valuation or property. Such Demand Answers dillrict. have less tuln1 c1p1clty per studant and are thua called "low wealth district!!." The statewide property ta~ would t11: all property in California at the same rate -$3.75 is propoaed -.,. and divide the revenue on an established formula per pupil. ThUI, districts 1uch as Newport-Meaa Unified, which enjoya a relatively hl&h assessed valuation wouJd need to raise its present tax ral.e -$5.13 in Costa Mesa and $4.78 in Newport Beach - by seven cents per $100 lo maintain the present level Qf educational program. Lagwia Beach would have to increase Its tax rate $1.t2:, to maintain the same level of education. Capistral!.o Unified would neecl an · additional levy of 20 cents. In contrast, Ocean View Elementary SChool District taxpayers would receive a $1.33 reduction under the plan. Vet that district would get an additional '598,000 in revenue. Other Orange Coast dlatrlcts would be affected slmllarly. San Joaquin Elementary district's rate would drop II conll. HunUn&ton BeaclJ. E l t m e n t a r y District's tax rate would decrea!e 12.5 cents. HunUngton Beach Union High School Dlstrlcvwould get an additional $1 million for program improvement with a 14-cent tax reducticn. Los Alamitos Elementary District would receive $89f,OOO more with a rate reduced by 31 centJ;. Community college districts generally would fare well under the program, except for Saddleback College District which would need to raise its tax rate by 14 cent.s. Orange e3ast Community College district would get 'an additional $671,CMI> Jn revenue and could rop Its rate 17 cents. Santa Ana CoUege'• parent district. Rancho Santiago, cculd lower its rate three cents and receive an additional $1.4 million in revenue. Districts needing to raise their tax levies could do so up to the level or their 1969-70 tax rate plus an adjustment for inflation, Brooks said. Irvine School Parents The proposal cibOlishes a host of presently employed permissive overrides including those for employe retirement benefits, continuation s ch o o I s , in- terdistrict attendance, regional voca· tional education centers, junior college tuition and others. Brooks explained that the costs of these programs have been figured into the amount or the average district's needs v.·hich determine the amount per pupil a district would get from the statewide tax. Face District Trustees Override taxing authority for other programs, hoy,•ever, is recommended. These would include programs for the physically handicapped, mehtally gifted minors, transportation, capital outlay and the override restoring a district's basic program level of expenditures to the inflation adjusted 1969-70 spending level. By PAMELA HALLAN Of ~ 0.lly ,llllt Sti ll Parents concerned about the quality Df educatlcn at Irvine School demanded answers from the Trustees cf the San Joaquin Elementary School District Wednesday. Representing the large group which packed the meeting room to capacity was school board candidate Harry Roach. Roach asked the board when Irvine parents CiJ.n expect to have a new elementary facility , how the board determines the number of students to be hcuaed in Irvine School, the length Df the school's academic day, and what the district is going to do about low reading scores. Board chairman Gratian Bidart ex- plained that construction of a new facility wtll depend on two things -whether Dr not the district's 115 million bond issue passes and when the state will allocate funds for the project. "If bonds pass we will be bonded to capacity and eligible for state 1chool building Joans," said Bi dart Superintendent Ralph Gates added that the first three elementary schools to be built if the bonds pass will be 1n Lake Forest, Mission Viejo and Irvine. Plans for the Irvine area school are due to be completed in March cf 1972. Drug Rap Jails Rock Promoter A youthful Canadian visitor who iden- tified himself as a •·promoter of rock festivalJ and shows" was detoured toward court today by Laguna Beacb police. Shortly after midnight Wednesday of- ficer Robert Romain stopped a car driven by Robert James Menzie!, 23, of Toronto. Canada, who allegedly was navigating In an erratic manner in lhe area of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street. When inspection of the vehicle allegedly tnrned up a small quantity of hashish, the self-styled promoter was booked on suspicion of possession cf the drug and driving under the influence of same. • O .. AN•I c;OAlt DAILY PILOT Ollt.NGl! COAIT' l"U•LllHIMC> COM,AM"f Reltert N. We•• ,,..ldtrlt ....,, l"!illllW.O J .,~ R. C.ri-. Viet l",_kltnl Md C0-11 .... ,..... Th•M•t ke•¥il l1111W Tlie11111 ~ Mur.lii .. Mll'llfllrle EdlW Q1rl•1 H. loin IUcl.er• P. Hiii AHll!en1 #MNtllllli Et~ Let• ...... Offld 2l2 ,.," • .A.••1111• S..C ....... Offk. JO' Nori!. El C 1111i110 Reel .,_ ....... C.te "'-"! »O WO.• •• ,. ,.,... N•-9 IMcll: JW Ntw-' louleY• .. H1111t111111 .. IMdl1 11111 IMdl loulwll"' °'41LV l"l\.OT, ~ lllfllct! k ~ 1tMt N--~ It -'11Mt Hilt 111.Cf'PI 5-4-1' IJI ... ,. .... ,,...... tw ~ IMdl. fill...,...l a.di. C.h MIN, Hwltl111• f09dt. ,._,.Ill Vtlle'f, '"' ~ C:.1111~ .,., .,... .. ~ ....... wl9I ... ........ tiftttM. ,.,..lfKl.-1 ""'""' """" .., at •»I W.I .. ., SIN9:, C.t. Mele. Tll.,•1n1 f11"1 MJ" ... JJ1 Cl-'fW U 1ath ... "41·Mft S-C1 ; I ts All D., 1••"'1 11e.1• r ft 4t2M Jt ............ Al Dafa l I • I teli,..••• '"'"''""' ~t, lfU, °"'• CINI ~._..._ ~.. ,.. -...... """''"'"-' •••i.t _,.., rt .._........... ... .... _, 11o .......... .. ...... , .,_Ill J!fl• ""----~/-. locMf ,..._ iJ19itefll ,.. .. et N-: !"°' ..,.. C.tt Met•. C'"'"""""· -1~ .,.. ,.,,..,. ti.ts fM!lltlly1 .., -n 11 rs mentt11y1 mllll«r ._. .... ,...,A.»~·· { The school b tentatively to be placed on a site on the corner of Yale Avenue end Walnut Street between Culver and Jeffrey Roads. The district does not Dwn the site but it ls being reserved for purchase by developer Ray Presley. An intermediate school in Irvine will not depend on bond passage, however. Plans are complete and grading is about to begin for the school, located en the corner or Yale Avenue and Michaelson Street adjacent to the San Diego Freeway. "Assuming the bond Issue passes is 1972 the earliest for 'the elementary school?" asked Roach. "That's not satisfactory." "It's not satisfactory to us either," added Trustee Jim Nelson. "But that is the amount of time it takes to process plans through the 1tate." Gates told the parents that there are 550 children in Irvine School which has a capacity of 700. He predicted that before the additional school is built the Jrvine facility will reach its capacity. Reach suggested that the district send out a questionnaire to each dev eloper tc return to the office. The form would list the number and ages or school children who are to occupy newly sold homes. The board reacted favorably to the proposal and authorized t h e ad- ministration to prepare a card for this purpose. The third question about the length of school day which the parents believe to be shorter than other .schools was to be investigated hy Dr. Bill Stocks, assistant superlnlendent for instruction. He said to his kno)'t'ledge the in-clasa time varies only about ten minutes. Dr. Stocks answered the fourth ques· tion abcut lbe low reading scores. He JXlinled out that althouKh San Joa· qu in students may begin wit h lower scores, as they prog ress through school their comparative scores increase each year. He said some districts cOncentrate heavily on re ading in the first grade to the detriment of other subjects. San Joaquin provides a balanced program and tests show that by the sixth grade reading is exceptional. "\Ve were among rive districts out of 26 which were adva.icing every year. We think this is important," he sa id. "There is another variable, too. \Ve are growing fast and many of our studenl..5 are new to the dislrict this year and haven'l had previous instruction in our schools.·• He said reading is the single mosl lmpcrtant thing a child learns and the di!trict is working to improve it. Under the plan, districts educating 72 percent of all students in Orange County would receive an increase of funds without a tax increase, Brook said. Districts getting a tax cut and ll revenue increase, were the plan enacted, presenlly handle 85 percent or the coun- ty's student population. The statewide levy of $3.75 per $100 would not pay the total t'O.'lt of education for kindergarten to 14th grade studenti, Brooks noted. The state must prcvide an additional $400 million to meet the total school costs. Were the statewide property tax lo approximate the mythical '"historic" SG- 50, state-distrid sharing of school ex· penses the rate would be $2.18 cents and would require $1.8 billion In new state revenues. Brooks suggested sucl:l a recommendation w a s "politically unrealistic.'' f'or property owners to support K·14 education entirely, the rate would need to be set at $4.35, he noted. Jury Judges 196 Artists at Bowl A total of 196 artists and craftsmen submitted samples ol their work for judging by the Festival of Art.. jury In Irv ine Bowl Saturday. A seven-member artist jury scored the art works to establish a priority list for booth space in the 1971 Festival. Exact number of available spaces will not be known until 1970 exhibitors who are entitled lo booths confirm their in· tention to participate in this year's Festival. ln any case, it is not likely that more than about 30 of the new appUcants will be accommodated. There is room for approximately 180 artisl..5 on the grounds, with first spaces going to 1970 exhibitors who scored highest in grounds jurying last year. Scores posted in the Festival office following the Saturday jurying showed thal 25 artists scored 40 or more pcints out of a possible 70. Highest sccre was 58 and lowest was IO. Each cf the seven jurors can award up to 10 pointa to an artisl. Laguna's Drug Prevention Unit Voted Free Quarters Laguna Beach young people seeking help or information concerning a drug problem will have a plare to go some time in April. The City Council voted Wednesday night to provide lree quarters for the program. The Drug Prevention Committee cf the Coordinallnc Council had rtquested use of a• office at 12tl Ocean Ave. In a rmall ground floor room of the city. awned building. The space ha s been unoccupied 1ince .August of 1g70 and city officials had been unable to find a tenant willing to pay $240 a month ror the offiet. Mrs. Dcrothy Joyce, ch11rman cf the drug committee. said in a letter to Lbe oouncil that U Hie 1p11ce rental could not be w1ived, !!Orne meanJ of pll!yment by the non-profit group could ponibly be found. However, the council unanimou11ly ap- proved her request. allho!lih she w•~ tautloned a51ainst setting up a pt_rmanent operation as the bulldlng was to soon I be torn down for the development of Main Beach. "It will only be temporary," Mrs. Joyce assured the council, saying the only equipment to be installed would be a telephone. "Even ir we had to move. it would be a good place to start." Under terms Dl the occupancy, the drug t.'Ommttlee would be required to vacate the building, with 30 days notice, ir a paying tenant were found for the of fie& However. councilman Peter O!trander 11id he doubted e paying tenant '4'ou1d ever be found, describing lhe k>cation as a "not very desirable 1pace" in rtfertnce to Its run·dO"-TI condition. Mrs. Joyce said the center, which h•s yet to be given an official na1ne, will problbly be opened In April. depen· dlng on !'lecuring or IJablllty insurance covera~e. The center will provide counselinK and literature for persons aeekin& dru& 1d- vice. DAILY ,ILOT Si lt ,IMlte BAT HING BUGGIES FOR RIVER VENTURE Thur1ton Students Make Suds Fly Saturday Buggy Bath Set Laguna Students Hold Car Was h Suds will fly this Saturday in the Laguna Beach school district parking Jot on Park Avenue at Blumoot as 1tudent5 front Thurston Intermediate School put on a daylong Buggy Bath to raise fundii for their annual Cclorado River trip. For the nominal sum of $1, students will guarantee an A-1 wash ·job for any car brought k> the lot between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. (The suds, of course. will be biodegradable, students point out ). By way of an added bonus, there'll be a student-operated bake sale in pro- gress at the lot during the same hours -and fOr • the 1ame good cause. Both bey and girl bakers are creating cookies, cakes and pies for the event so every driver wW be able to take home scme fresh-baked goods in his shiny car. All proceeds of the dual event will be used to help defray the cost cf transportation, food and equipment for Thurston's now-famous "river float'' schedu led for the end of May. About 12.5 students are expected to participate in the adventure this year, floating down the Colorado on rafts made from rubber inner tubes, with overnight camp slops on the way. Faculty members and high school students, identified as j'river rats," supervise the expedition. T h u r s to n students must qualify for participation by earning service points ln the months preceding the river trip. The points are accumulated through service to the school in such areas as yard clean-up, appearing In plays, helping w i th assemblies and other extra-curricular duties. Fund-raising activities Hke the Buggy Bath and bake sate help build up the trip fund sc cost to the students is decreased. King, Queen Selected For Capo Mission Fest Steve Sancher and Linda May Dunn Jiave been selected this year's king and queen cf the traditional St. Joseph's Day pageant to be presented Friday at 2 p.m. on the grounds of Mission San Juan Capistrano. Each year the royalty is selected at the old mission 1chool from among eighth graders v.·ho have the longest local ancestry. The king and queen will be crowned during a pageant which is held each year on the day the swallows return to Capistrano. A procession will leave the school grounds and wend it!l way to lhe main mission grounds near the entrance at exacl\y 2 p.m. When the procession reaches the foot of the Father Junipero Serra statue, Bill Parsley and Randy Salas wil l carry a small statue of St. J oseph to a place of honor. Paul Arbiso will crown the king and queen and Anthony Salas will narate the legend of the swallows. While in front of the statue, the missi on banner will be presented to Mr!. Rita Lobo, the oldest member of the parish. According tc tradition, the banner was hidden away, during the years the mission was not in the hands of the church and in special times of danger. It would be brought out of safekeeping each St. Joseph's Day and delivered on horseback lo the oldest parishioner. Children will then move to a stage nearby and wilt perfonn several tradi· tiona1 dances and songs. A new song, "The Bells of Capistrano" written by ~1rs. Jack Schwarze of Costa Mesa will bt-sung a capella by the entire group. Honored guests will be introduced from Ole pl atform and the program will end with a benediction service in Serra Chapel during which the queen will place a bouquet of flowers at the foot of the St. Joseph's Statue. Arrangements for this year's pageant have been made by Mrs. Alan Rymer. Mrs. Butchie Porter has made nearly 100 costumes for the children from Ut• school. Nixon Asks SS Taxes Hiked Now WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Pre1id<nt Nlton wants Congre•s to increase Scci1l Security taxes right away, instead Df nut year, to pay for the new 10 percent lDcreue in old age benefitl. If Congress goes along, the lncreue would t.alte $-"8 instead of the present $405 out of the paycheclts of these earning $9,000 or more. The p .6 billion-a-year benefit tnerusa Nl1.on 1i&ned Wednesday wculd delay the bJabu taus until nert year. Nkon complained such a delay eould auravate the nation'• still critical tnnaticn proo blerns unless it i~ paid for tmmedlt.te!Y, by increased revenue collect\on1. ~ "lf these urgently 11eeded Scclal SecurI .. ty increases are enacted but the means to pay for them currently are defaulted. SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 we are raced with the very re1l prospect of increased jnflation," Nixo1 s aid in a statement Wued following the signing. "For that reason, l urge the Congress to act promptly on a Social Security revenue measure so that the current ccst of these increased benefit!: will be financed and the basic non-inflationary budget principle, which was embodied in the 1972 budget 1 1ubmitted to the Congress, can be maintained," the Presi- dent said. It appeared unlikely that Coogress would go along with Nixon's request for added revenue. Sccial Security tax increases are unpopular with the lawmakers· but usually slide through on the popularity or benefit increases. Without higher benefits as part of the package, a tax boost would have little going for it. Murder Charges Revived in Capo Patricide Case Murder charges have bttn revived in Orange County Superior Court against a Capistranc Beach man found insane live years ago after being accused of killing his father in a quarrel 1parked by the defendant's failure to find a job. Judge Byron K. McMiiian set April 13 as the trial date for Richard Glenn Gorman III, 27, of 35(136 Camino Capistrano. He accepted Gorman's plea cf not guilty and net guilty by reason er insanity and ordered a separate court hearing on the same day to determine the defendant's sanity at the tlm• Df the killing. Gorman, 22 at the time, was a1Tested Oct. 8, 1965, shortly after he allegedly stabbed his father Richard Glenn Gonnan Sr., 45, in the kitchen cf the Camino Capistrano residence. Mrs. Valerie Ann G1>rman, told sher· tff's investigators she fou.id her hus- band's body on her return from a ·mcp- ping trip. She later testified that her husband. a wealthy consulting engineer. had frequently squabbled wilh her son about the bey's refusal to 1i11d work. Three of six psychiatrists testified in the trial before Judge William Murray that G1>rman was psychotic. One doctor said the boy had been psychotic since the age of 15 and his mental condition had deteriorated since that time. Gonnan was committed to Atascadero State Hospital. He was released frnm there shortly before the Superior Court hearing. ~II/II Retnct/eliH9 We have fllletl 011e of our -.wroo1n1.wllla 3000 I.et of furniture we 11tust move at V:a off. -, Sofas, Chairs; Bedrooms; Dl11l111 Row; Gciiihe Seti; Lamps, China Servers; Buffets; Tales; Curios; look· cC1H1, Head Boards, Mlrron; and 11tany items too numerous to mention. H.J.GARRETT fU~Nll1J~E PROFESSIONA~ nu HARIOR ILYD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opot1 Mo•., Tlom. I. Fri. lrlL '4~~~ MISA, ~~~7, " v • f' • , . ·-.,, l. , . -. . .. --~-. ''\·---1: ... ~ \ ' \ ' f J I ) Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOt:. 64, NO. 66 1 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH '18, 197 1' JEN CENTS · High Rise Foes • Ill Lorr 'Rep.ort' By PA.TRICK BOYLE 01 lllt DIHY " .. ' SltH City councilman Erl Lorr lel the Laguna Beach hotel zo ne out of the council's bag Wednesday when he presented v.·hat he termed a ··Report fo Our Citit.ens" on the controversial i&sue. DesP.lle the contention of tv.'o other councilmen that his remarks were out of order, Lorr went on to attack loca l citizens' groups which have been working to lower the proposed SO-loot height limit on beachfront buildings. "The AnU·Hlgh Ri5e Initlalive Com· Man Killed By Auto; Nurse Held millet and the Civic League directors have been, u: the facts will bear out," he said, ''deliberately m.laleading our citizens with oulright distortions and hall· truths." He then attempted a rebuttal of what he called "the misleading statements made by those few Irresponsible in· dividuals promoting opposition" to the high rise issue. However, he had barely begun his remarks when councilman Charlton Boyd interrupled. saying the Issue should be handled as an agenda matter. The ordinance setting the height limit at t ; ~1 Laguna faces charges of felony hit-run , Z r A 50-year-old private nurse from Sooth ... 1nd manslaughter today in the death :• •_ of a Dana Point man struck and killed I Instantly Wednesday night along a .,p -, Laguna Niguel highway. Regina W. Smeck of 32221 Vista de • Catalina, South Laguna, was arrested at a Dana Ponnt bar, authorities said, 1 few minules after the death of Glenn M. McCutcheon , 20, of Dana Point. Highway patrolmen said Mccutcheon, an employe of Coast Catamaran Corp., had been struck and kill ed instantly as he walked along the ~oulder of Pacific Coast Highway with a friend. Both the dead man and his compan.ion, Craig M. Montalto, 22, lived at the Dana Strand Motel, room 17. The incident occurred at 1:50 p.m, about a quarter-mile south of the in- tersection of Crown Valley ParkY,.ay with tf'le: highway. Patrol spokesmen quoted ~1ontalto as u.ying the two men were walking south alongside the southbound lanes when Mccutcheon stopped to light a cigar. The witness told of seeing a pair (If headlights from a weaving auto and realized the vehicle was heading for him and McCutcheon, officers related. Montalto dove into a bank, he said, ed then turned to notice the car weaving away at about 40 miles per hour ... "When he went back to find his com· pinion, the man was gone," patrolmen u.id. McCutcheon's body was found 120 feet away. Later. officers traced a trail of clothing and belongings scatlered hundreds of feet along the roadside. The Smeck woman allegedly drove to a bar in Dana Point where a few moments later employes n o t if i e d •uthoritle5. Patrolmen claim the woman's car bore 1 smashed grille, punctured rad1aU>r and dents in the bumper and hood. She was booked and held at Orange County jail. Officers said they would 1etk a district attorney"s complaint charging felony hit-run driving and manslaughter against the woman. Bandits' Rule Works CHELTENHAM . England (UPll - Four gunmen held 15 bank employes at gunpoint for twn hours Wednesda y and finally for ced the branch manager to open the vault by fal sely telling him bii wife wasi being held hostage . police said. They got away with 167.200. Oruge Coast Weather Alter vnu cut through Friday's early nioming rog, you·n find aunny skies, with gusty northeast winds helping to blow the smog away. Temperatures lhould reach the high 70s. INSIDE TODAY San Francisco Tl!s1dtnts hit the panic button when they re· ct 1vect dunning not1cts OJking 01,.m to pay 11p righ t away or face th t co11stqti.tnces. Ste iitory, Pagi 5. •lr1111 II 9"11ftl H Ctlt .. nllt I CIM<-lfri U• • (IUJlllM tf-lt C.mle• JI CN~......... 21 °"'"' frHlk" ,. Dl .. n ... 11 •erttr111 ,... ' RlllerltlflmMI 1'·1' l"llllM• \t-1' Mel'MC... u b11 L*tn 11 M1llN• I '°''""19" Lkfll~ I I """'" ,.,, Mtl1w•I ,llflfl 11 N1t1t11tl N.wt .. I Orlft.. C:ewllfY 11 ,_It 1J•lJ llftt Mtrtl•lt ll·lf TtllV..... JI '""""' , .. u Wttlll"' I Wlmlft't MNI I)." Wtr~ Nowt 4·1 DAILY P'ILOT ilfl P'ltttt Begorrah Sure 'twas a wonderful sight to see the Mission Viejo parade in honor of St. Patrick Wed· nesday. Here Bob Brenaan tYpifieS the wondrous event. Nixon Backs No-fault Plan For Insurance WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The Nixon Administration tod ay endorsed the con· troversial no.fau lt auto insurance system, but caulloned against making any ''lr· reversible changes" in the cu r re 1 t system. Testifying before the Senate Commerce Committee. Transportation Secrel.ary John A. Volpe recommended a prompt 1tate.by-stalt changeover as contained in a report on the government's $2 million, two-year 1tudy of the auto in· dustry. ''We believe lhal this can be done in such a wa y that we can reverse ourselves. if the actual performance of the system . doesn't meet our ex· pectalions." he said. Under the ne>fault system , accident victims are compensated for losses as they occur, and there is no wa i t to determine who wa~ to blame. However, the plans usually do not rule out court action to recover damages a b o v e a certain amount. Volpe said there was still no consensus "about how far and how fast the public wants or is willing lo go." in changing the old system, but.·he 11aid lt ''need! change badly and needs it now." A gradual changeover would ahow whether the system would work, he said. "We simply cannot predict the absolute Jong·range fin1tncial impact of such a fundamental change with any reasonable precision," he said. Volpe recommended that elates begin lmmediately to 11dopt the no-fault con· cepls so they can "spare t.he1ru1elve1 most or the uncertainty and greatly rtduce the financl11I rlskit that would be involved in any single steps, and perhap.'1 Irreversible ch11nge." Critics of the present fault system cl8im it has jammed the courts with 11ccident casts resulting in long del8ys and ~ting more th11n SI billion a year In legel fees which ta turn tncruse the cost ol insurance. ,.. ' 50 feet tw been re-comme:nded for ap- proval by the Planning Commission and will come before the City Council some time in April. "This is not the time for 1 counc il member to make a unilate.-al report on an Item which wW be on the city 1genda,'' Boyd told Lorr, Lorr shot back that he was ·'simply presenting the facts" as • councilman and a citizen, but Boyd countered that the is.sue should be deferred will! a Ume ,"when all may participate." Councilman Roy Holm agreed with Boyd and said he "didn't appreciate" Lorr~ remark.!. "I don't like the idea of a councilman coming out with a personal point of view of such length when the issue is not before ua yet." Holm told the tighl- lipped Lorr. "We could not respond to him without organizing our thoughts.'' Lorr cowitered these arguments by saying *hat since the issue is before the public and is widely covered in the press that the council should respond. "We shouldn't sit mute like we have a mouj.hful of cement," Lorr said. "AH we have had Is a one-sided report so far ." Cowicilman Boyd persisted, saying It v.·ould ht "undercutllng the Planning Commission" to bring ilie maUer up now. Boyd then made a motion to defer Lorr's statement to a later date, which was defeated by a 4-1 vote. Although Holm seconded lhe motion, he said he voUd against It to guarantee Lorr the freedom of speech he was entitled to. "But I don't like these tactics one bit." he added following his vote, ad· monishing Lorr for bringing a con· * * • 1se • Lroversial ma tter before I.be council without warning as he dkl last aummer with the dog ordinance. Mayor Richard Goldberg agreed that Lorr should be given the right t.o make !Us remark.!, but suggested that Lorr could more ea1Uy reach "the citizens" to which his report was directed by some other means, such as the local newspapers. Despite the mayor's suggestion and the other councilmen's opposition. Lorr proceeded to read a three page statement rebutting Individual anti-high r l 1 e argumenta. • Ill ~OllllCI Skinnydips .011t San 01wfre Off Limits to N udi.es siai. pm• oHiciall ·dtafliag the ruloi for Ult ef tbe lltW' ""laft' Onolrt -ltltt' l>lftl!eadl _,. o11111.w .... .,.-.. -baltil1 .Rralled • ..., oni today -nudes are a no-nOI. The new morality notwithstanding, the Elate parks bran came up with the ruling hastily alter receiving a request earlier this' month from the Western Sunbathing Association out of San Diego. The skin11ydippers wanted a section of the scenic beach to provide acenery of their own. And WSA Director D!vid P. Phillips pressed the issue, apparently with the State Parka brass in Sacramento. He said his 3,500 member group didn 't want to use the whole beach -just a small part. Slalf ParQ. ,Pivilion Si& Pirutor Jamu ~a ¥i,aid tb1a JnOrninJ. how•v•r, tlu.t .Uit at.at.a bas a.coaveniec~ rule wftich appU1s: No section of any st.ate parl can bt set aside for exclusive use by a specific group, he said (relieved). But the director related another facet of the skinnydlp question . "They 11aid . they weren't really particular about exclusive use. One man sa id folks with bathing suits would be welcome as well. But the prospect of "clothies" mingling with 3,500 nudles still doesn 't sit right -particularly for opening day early in April. Gov. Reagan is e1pected to be the iuest of honor. U.S. Security Budget Labeled 'Inadequate' By L. PETER KRIEG Of IM Otl,., ,llof lttll The former hP..ad of U.S. Naval opera- tions in the Pacific charged Wednesday that President Nixon's proposed 1972 budget ''is inadequate for the security of our country." Retired Admiral U.S. Grant Sharp, commander-in-chief ln the Pacific from 1964 to 1968, made the contention at an Operation Alert planning seuion luncheon at the Stuft Shirt restaurant in Newport Beach. He told the 4-0 guest.'!, "The sobering question which an of us must face is what new levels of aggression and ruthlessness will be pursued by the Soviet Union when they feel secure in a posture of nuclear supremacy." Admiral Sharp earlier had said the United Statea will be In second plaCfl in the nuclear arms race within 1 year, if it ls not already. 42-lb. Woman . Dead at 87 Admiral Sharp did not discuss specific dollars he felt are need~ to offset the Soviet threat, but he pointed out the defense commitment by this country has fallen from 9.7 percent of the gross national product In 1968 to seven percent thi11 year. He said under President Nixon'!! prGo posed budget, it would drop to 6.8 per- cent. And citing the record of the Congress in pruning defense spending, Admiral Sharp said, "ii would be very &erious for the defense posture of the country if this budget was reduced by the Congress. "11\e Congress should increase lt, '' he said. Admiral Sharp said the problem of being second in the nuclear age Is "that it multiplies the chances not of peace, but of nuclear war. "Soviet or Red Chinese overconfidence nr miscalculation in the use of, or threat to use, their power may trigger such a war inadvertently, or may place the United Statfli in a posture from which there can be no retreat," he nid. Other Expenses Cited • Ill ' lncrtued Ott, ae.wa1• and fl'ff\Vay ff.Pl!lU'-wue i1111onc the reaaom offeitd Wednesday ni&bt both for and against high rise In the current contl'OV!ray being waged In Laguna Beach. City councilman Ed Lorr, jumping the gun by more than a monlh In bringing the betel zone lssue before the cowicil. contended lhe faci! had been distorted by high rise foes. And although only a few of Lorr's so-called ''irresponsible individuals'' were present at the meeti ng, councilman Roy Holm and resident Merritt Trease responded to Lorr'• allegations. Lorr 1aid the need for additional fire fighting equipment will not be generated by high rise buildings. but that such 1 need already exista In Laguna Beach. He said such additional equipment could be financed by imposing a tax on the buildings . Trease responded by denying the a•ti· high rise Civic League, of which he is a director. had ever said additional equipment would be required, but that high rise build ings fires require special equipment. To another argument , Lorr said high rise buildings would not generate a need for larger sewer lines and plant facilities. He said the city now needs a new sewer plan and that taxes on high rise hotels would help finance this new facill· ty. Councilman Holm countered that the federal government would fund most of the sewer plant if current legislation is passed. Holm cited the example of San Clemente paying two--lhirds of the cost of its new plant while, had the city waited two ye&rs, the federal government would have paid 80 percent of bill. Lorr said 11nolher expense the city goon will be facing Is building arterial roads from the city to the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway. "The stale and the county will not provide any aid for these arterial roads ," Lorr saaid. However. Holm responded that the city will probably not have to pay for any of the road construction c~ts. Holm said most of the arterials will be in county territory and those portionli within the city will be paid for by the state's Arterial Highway Fund. Joseph Sweany concurred with his statement. "The spectre. of enormous city ex· * * * Clash penditures in the offlni 111 htln1 tlsed to blackmail the. community Into cclnt high rile,'' Holm said. Lorr also stated that thi 1959 1ener1I plan had caUed for the provisloos of a hotel zone, as did the recent DMJM general plan. Resident Trease responded that the Civic League was not agalrlst a hotel zone. but questioned the wisdom nf building it all in the central business district. "There has come to be a realization of the detrimenlal effects of congested high rise zone," Trease said. "If a portion of the beach is aflowed ta 10 high rise, the entire beach property would beeome 110 valuable you couldn't go any other way." Trease said neither be nor the Civic League had ever intended to deceive anyone with high rise statements. "If you think we have been misleadinl people" be told Lorr. "I would suggest that you look at your own letter very carefully." Woman Arrested In Laguna Beach On Drug Charge A SS-year~Jd Laguna Beach woman was arrested Wednesday after allegedly selling cocaine lo an u n d e r c o v e r narcotics agent for the going rate of $800 an ounce. .Laguna Beach police and 1 t a t t narcotics agents culminated a moothlong investigation with the arrest of Ruth Holden Marr, 55, and four other persons including two juveniles, at 2668 Vlctori~ Drive. Officers 1Jleged Mrs. Marr had made two sales or cocaine to state agents last month and wu In ~se1Jsion of two ounces of the drug at the time of her arrest. Also taken in the raid, they claim . . was a quantity of peyote and marijuana. A state agent, accustomed to dealing with the under-30 generation In nattoUc.s cases, commented later, "It looks as if the senior cititena are beginning to get into the act." LONOON (UPl)-Aft 17.year-old woman weighed nnly U pounds when she died, an inquest was told Wednead17. A patbologlst said she had never 1een anyone ao thin. Hotel Hearing Gets Delay Arrested with Mrs. Marr 1t the Vic- toria Drive address, authorities u ld. were Franklin 0 . Jordan, 27, who gave the 1ddress es his residence : Michael Edwird Arqullla. 20, o( 18731 Via Palotlno, Irvine: and two 11.year-old boy1 Crom Laguna Beach and South J.,quna;. Or. Stepllanie Wilson, th t pathologist, was unable Wednesday to give I definlt. cauR of death of Mrs. Nellie Winnert. "It ma y have been 1tarvation," she told the inquest. But Mr5. Kathleen Kelly. who looked after lhe woman for 1& years. said: "She ate llkt a borMi. She ate as much in one day a1 I ale in 1 week. She was 1lway1 th in and weighed nnly 56 pound& when l first met her." • 1he pending public hearinc on Lagun1 Beach's proposed hotel zone, originally planned for April 21. was deferred Wednesday lo a later date at the request of 1 city councilman. The hearing, eitpected to draw hun· dreds of residents opposed to con· 11truct lng SG-foot buildings along the coastline , is for an ordinance establishing & commercial residential zone along the beech . E:lty councilman Roy Holm requested lh•l the h1aring bo postpon<d uqUI tho til!wly hired planning dltector couk1 .•· become familiar with lht proposal. The new dlrector, Wa)'M Moody, la ICheduled to report for work Arpll 1. City Manager Larry Rose agreed wilh Holm that three weeks was very little time. for Moody tn both learn his new duties and become faml\iar with the controver11ial amendment to 1 city ordinance. The council deferred I.hf: matter of scttlng a date for a public hearing until Aprll 21. Therefore the hearing will pr<>- bably not be. htld until aomeiimt ill May. ' The juveniles Wt'te turned over lo their parents. Mr5. Marr and the two men were booked into Orange County jail on su~i· clon of posseuion of nart'.'Ollcs for aalL Ac tor Doing Better BIRMINGHAM. Alo. (UPI) -Doctoro reported a slight Improvement In the condition o! actor Milburn SU>n. Wed- ntMlay , b.J~ 11a!d he r't!mained in wi.out condltlon from open heart surgery. -~... ... > • I DAJLV PILOT New State Tax Ey~d / R evenue Would Aid 'Low Wealth' Schools By GEORGE LEIDAL Of t1Wo Dallr ,lltt Sl•H A proposed $3 .7~ per $100 statewide property tu would benefil most school districts in Orange County but cause incrtased property taxes in Newport. fl.tesa , guna Beach and Capistrano Unifi hool districts. A t 200 county school oU1clals W y nJght heard a presentation on the plan endorsed by the State Depart· ment or Education and being recom· mended to lhe legislature by the State Board of Education. If adopted, the tax equalli.ing package would provide increased revenues to 20 of 3f school dl.stricts in Orange County. An additional '28.llM.220 in school rev. enue would be provided to the county's districts under the statewide property tas: collection l)'!tem. Joseph Brooks, executive Secretary of the California School Boards Association, said. Benefiting most by the plan, would be the so-called "low wealth" districts. These are the di.!trlcts which have large numbers of studenU and a low total assessed valuation of property. Such Demand Answers dlatricts hive leSI toxlna C1paclty 1>0r student and are thus called ''low wealth districts." The statewide property tax would lax all properly in California at the same rate -$3.75 is proposed -and divide the revenue on an established formula per pupil. Thus, districlll such as Newport-Mesa Unified, which enjoys a relatively high assessed valuatkm would need to raise its present tax rate -$5.13 In Costa Mesa and $4. 78 in Newport Beach - by seve n cents per $100 to maintain the present level of educational program. Laguna Beach would have to increase its tax rate $1.42, to maintain the same level of education. Capistrano Unified would need an additional ·levy of 20 cents. Jn contrast, Ocean View Elementary School District taxpayers would receive a $1.33 reduction under the plan. Yet that district would get an additional $598,000 in revenue. Other Orange Coast districts wou1d be affected similarly. San J oaquin Elementary district's rate would drop ft cento. HunUngton Beach E I e m e n t a r y District's tu rate would decrease 12.S cents. Huntington Beach Union High School District would get an additional $1 mllllon for program improvement with a 14-cent tax reduction. I.a Alamitos Elementary District would receive $894,000 more with a rate reduced by 31 cents. Community college districts generally would fare well under the program, except for Saddleback College District which would need to raise its tax rate by 14 cents. Orange Coast Community College district would get an additional $678,<»i> in revenue and could rop its rate 17 cents. Santa Ana College's parent district, Rancho Santiago, could lower its rate three centa and receive an additional $1.4 million in revenue. Districts needing to raise Uteir tax le vies could do so up to the level of their 1969-70 tax rate plus an adjustment for inflation. Brooks said. Irvine School Parents The proposal abolishes a ho.st of presently employed permissive overrides including those for employe retirement benefits, continuation 1 ch o o I s . in· terdi.strict attendance, regional voca· tional education centers, junior college tuition and others. Brooks explained that the costs of these programs have been figured int.o the amount of the average district's needs which determine the amount per pupil a district wou1d get from the statewide tax. Face District Trustees Override taxing authority for other programs, however. is recommended. These would include programs for the physically hand icapped. mentally gifted minors, transportation, capital outlay and the override restoring a district'• basic program level of expenditures to the inflation adju.sted 196~70 spending level. By PAMELA HALLAN Of .._ O.llJ Pll•I Sltll Parents concerned about the quality of education at Irvine School demanded answers from the Trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District Wednesday. Representing the large group which packed the meeting room to capacity was school board candidate Harry Roach. Roach asked the board when Irvine parents can expect to have a new elementary facility, how the board determines the number of students to be housed in Irvine School, the length of the school's academic day, and what the district is going to do about low reading scores. Board chairman Gratian Bida.rt tx4 plained that construction of a new facility will depend on two things -whether or not the district's Slfl million bond issue passes and when the state will allocate fund! for the project. ''If bonds pass we will be bonded to capacity and eligible for state school building loans," said Bidart Superintendent Ralph Gates added that the first tbree elementary schools to be built jf the bonds pass will be in Lake Forest, Mission Viejo and Inrine. Plans for the Irvine area school are due to be completed ln 'March of 1972. Drug Rap Jails Rock Promoter A youthful Canadian visit.or who iden. lilied himself as a "promoter of rock festivals and shows" was detoured toward court today by Laguna Beach police. Shortly after midnight Wednesday of- ficer Robert Romain stopped a car dr iven by Robert James Menzies, 23, of Toronto, Canada, who allegedly was navigating in an erratic manner in the area of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street. When inspection of the vehicle allegedly turned up a small quantity of hashish, the self-styled promoter was booked on ,;uspicion of possession of the drug and driving under the influence of same. O'ANSI COAST DAILY PILOT OUMG~ COAST PUaLllHIHO (0MPAl4't ••b•1t N. w,,d Pr.si.19111 tlld Pll!>lltftet' J1cl1 R. Curl1y \'k9 ~f .,... G.wll "'""'"' T11ot11•• tc.nll ...... Tli•"'•• A. M.,,11;,., IMnttlrlQ Ed!itr Ch•"'" H. L..•1 a;,._,,., r. HiA Aul$lt11> .M.8"'111111 Edi*' ...,_ ..... om... 112 For•1t A'l'•nu• s.. c ....... Offk• l05 Notik El Ctlftino A•.t Do\TlY f'l\..OT, """" wflldl 11 ~ "'9 ""-I"-., .. .-w... MllJ ac• S-•1 ... ...,.,.. •m.. .... ~ ..... ......_, ~ C-M Mftl, ~ ~ ....... ill V•llP/', $M C..,_IW' CHtt"-e!lll .,.,,.~ ...... wllll -,... ... *'"''" ~ ... , """""' -'tN • It .J» .,... Iott ,,,..:, Cat. ""-· , ... ,, ... 17141 '42-4111 Cf•lftM ....,,...,.. .. M :t-1671 S-C' 1r1 Al D.1,...m: Tilt .. • 4Q-44ZI "-lw ..... Al Dall llW•h: , ... , •••• 494-94'6 ~·· lf1\, Qr.,.. C...t """""'""' CMlf'lorlr. No -,,......, IU"''""""· ... """'' -""" ... .~,. ,....... _., .. ""'°'~ Wftflolll ..... ,... ,.,... ... ...,,...../ ..,..,. .__. ci.. ,.. .... ~w 111 ,...,... I-' .,.. cw • ..-. Ot ............. ...... 9' .,,... II.JI llN!llWYt w -" aJt "*""""'' OflflllltfT • .., ............ Rn llfllll!lfll¥. .... The school ts tentatively to be pla ced (In a site on the corner of Yale Avenue and Walnut Street between CUiver and Jeffrey Roads. The district does not own the site but it Js being reserved for purchase by developer Ray Presley. An intermediate school in lrvine will not depend on bond passage, however. Plans are complete and grading Is about lo begin for the school, located on the corner of Yale Avenue and Michaelson Street adjacent to the San Diego Freeway. "Assuming the bond Issue passes is 1972 the earliest for the elementary school?" asked Roach. ''That's not utisfactory." "It's not satisfactory to us either," added Trustee Jim Nelson. "Bul that is the amount of time 1t takes to proctss plans through the state." Gates told the parents that there are 550 children in Irvine School which has a capacity of 700. He predicted thal before the additional school Is built the ln'ine facility will reach Its capacity. Roach suggested that the distrjct send out a questionnaire to each developer tn return to the office. The form would list the number and ages of school children who are to occupy newl,y sold homes. The board reacted favorably to the proposal and authorized t h e ad- mlni!tration to prepare a card for this purpose. . The third question about the length or school dey which the parents believe to be shorter than other schools was to be investigated hy Dr. Bill Stocks, assistant superintendeiit for instruction. He said to his knowledge the in-class time varies only about ten minutes. . Dr. Stocks answered the fourth ques- tion about the low reading scores. He pointed out that although San Joa- quin studenlll may begin with lower scores, as they progress through school their comparative scores increase each year. He said some districts concentrate heavily on reading in the first grade to the detriment of other subjects. San Joaquin provides a balanced program and tests show that by the sixth grade reading is exceptional. "We were among five districts out of 26 ~·hich. w_er~ adva11cing every year. We think this 1s important.'' he said. "There is another variable. too. We are growing fast and many of our students are new to the district lhls year ~nd haven't ha d previous instruction in our schools." He said reading Is the single most Important thing a child learns and the district is working to improve it. Under the plan, district.! educating 72 percent of all students in Orange County would receive an increase of funds without a tax increase, Brook said. Districts getting a tax cut and a revenue increase, were the plan enacted, presently handle 8S percent of the coon· ty's student population. The statewide levy of $3.75 per $100 would not pay the total cost of education for kindergarten to 14Ut grade students, Brooks noted. The state must provide an additional $400 million to meet the total school costs. Were the statewide property tax to approximate the mythical "historic" 50- 50. state-district sharing of school ex· penses the rate would be $2.18 cents and would require $1.8 billion in new state revenues. Brooks suggested such a recommendation w a s "politically unrealistic.'' For property owners to support K-14 education entirely, the rate would need to be set at $4.35, he noted. Jury Judges 196 Artists at Bowl , A total of 196 artists and craftsmen submitted samples of their work for Judging by the Festival of Arls jury in Irvine Bowl Saturday. A seven-member artist jury scored the art v.·orks to establish a priority list for booth space in the 1971 Festival. Exact number of available spaces will not be known until 1970 exhibitors who are entitled to booths confirm their in· tention to participate in this year's Festival. Jn any case, it Js not likely that more than about 30 of the new applicants will be accommodated. There is room for approximately 180 arlisl3 on the grounds, with first spaces going to 1970 exhibitors who scored highest in grounds jurying last year. Scores posted in the Festival office following the Saturday jurying showed that 25 artists scored 40 or more points out of a possible 70. Highest score was fl8 and lowest was 10. Each of the seven jurors can award up to 10 points to an artist Laguna's Drug Preyention Unit Vot ed Free Quarters Laguna Beach young people seeking help or informal.ion concerning a drug problem will have. a place to go some time in April. The City Council voted Wednesday night to provide free quarters for the program. The Drug Prevention Committee of the Coordinating Council had requested use o( a• office at 120 Ocean Ave. in a small ground fl oor room of the city- owned build ing. The space has been unoccupied sinee August of 1970 and city oHlciAls had been un11ble to find a tenant wilting to pay $240 a month for the office. Mrs. Dorothy Jnyce. c:ha~an of the drug commlttee, said in ii Jetter lo the council that II the space rental could not be waived . some means of payment by the non.profit group could po:uibly be found. However. the council unanimously ap. proved I her request. although she wu uut.ioned .against eettlng up • permane.nt opel'ation as the building wn to soon be torn dawn for the development of ?..fain Beach. "It will only be temporary:• Mrs. Joy ce assured the council, saying the only equipment to be installed would be a lelephone. "Even if we had to move, it would be a good place lo start." Under terms o( the occupancy, the drug committee would be required to vacate the building, with 30 dsys noti~. U a paying tenant were found for the office. However, councilman Pet'r Ostrander s11.id he doubted a paying tenant would ever be found . describing the location as a "not very desirable ~pace" in rtfcrence to its run.down c:ondition. Mrs. Joyce said the ctnlcr. which has yet to be given an otflclal name, will probably be o~ned in April, depen- ding fln securing of liability in!llrance cove rage. The center will provide cou~llng antf llleralurt Jor persons tetklng drug ad- vice. OAlLY PILOT Si lt PMbl BATHING BUGGIES FOR RIVER VENTURE Thurston Students Mika Suds Fly Saturd1y Buggy Bath Set Laguna Students H oUl Car Wash. Suds will fly this Saturday in the Laguna Beach school district parking lot on Park Avenue at Blwnont as ztudents from Thurston Jntermediate School put on a daylong Buggy Bath to raise funds for their annual Colorado River trip. For the nominal sum of $1, students will guarantee an A-I wash job for any car brought to the lot between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. (The suds, of course, will be blodegradable, studeµts point out). By way of an added bonus, there'll be a student-operated bake sale in pro- gress at tho. Jot during the same hours -and for the same good cause. Both boy and girl bakers are creating cookies, cakes and pies for the event so every driver will be able to take home some fresh-baked goods in his shiny car. All p~ of the dual event will be used to help defray the cost of transportation, food and equipment for Thurston's now-famous "river float'' achedu1ed for the end of May. About 125 students are expected to participate in the adventure this year, floating down the Colorado on rafts made from rubber inner tubes, with overnight camp stops on the way. Faculty members and high school studenls, Identified as "river rats," supervise the expedition. T h u r s to n students must qualify for participation by earning service points in the months preceding the river trip. The points are accumulated through service to the school in such areas as yard clean-up, appearing in plays, helping w i th assemblie! and other ertra-<:urricular duties. Fund-raising activities like the Buggy Bath and bake ule help build up the trip fund so cost to the 1tudenl! is decreased. J(ing , Queen Select,ed For Capo Mission Fest Steve Sanchez and Llnda May Dunn have been selected this year's king and queen of the traditional St. Joseph 's Day pageant to be presented Friday at : p.m. on the grounds of Mission San Juan Capistrano. Each year the royalty is selected at the old mission school from among eighth graders who have the longest local ancestry. The king and queen will be crowned during a pageant which is held each year on the day the swallows return to capistrano. A procession will leave the school grounds and wend its way to the main mission grounds near the entrance at exactly 2 p.m. When the procession reaches the foot of the Father Junipero Serra statue, Bill Parsley and Randy Salas will carry a small statue of St. Joseph to a place of honor. Paul Arbiso will crown the king and queen and Anthony Salas will narate the legend of the swallows. While in front of the statue, the mission banner will be presented to Mrs. Rita L<>bo, the oldest member of the parish. According to tradition, the banner was hidden away, during the years the mission was not in the hands of the church and in special times of danger. Jt would be brought out of sa fekeeping each St. Joseph's Day and delivered on horseback to the oldest parishioner. Children will then move to a stage nearby and will perform several tradi- tiona1 dances Bnd songs. A new song, ''The Bell.'! of Ca pistrano" written by Mrs. Jack Schwarze of Costa Mesa will be sung a capella by the entire group. Honored guests will be introduced from the platform and the program will end with a benediction senrice in Serra Chapel during whicb the queen will place a bouquet of flotA'ers at the foot of the St. Jose'ph's Statue. Arrangements for this year's pageant have been made by Mrs. Alan Rymer. Mrs. Butch.ie Porter has made nearly 100 costumes for the children from the school. Nixon Asks SS Taxes Hiked No w WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Pre•ldent Nixon wants Congress to increase Social Security taxes right away, instead o! ae:ii:t year, to pay for the new 10 perce.nt o. Increase in old age benefits. If Congress it goes along, the increase would take $468 1 instead of the present $405 out or the 8 paychecks of those earning $9,000 or 1 more. The $.1.6 billion-a-year benefit increase f Nixon signed Wednesday would de.lay t the higher taxes until next year. Nixon J complained such a delay could aggravate t the nation's still cri tical inflation pro- blems unless it is paid for immediately by increased revenue collections. "lf these urgenUy needed Social Securi· ty increases are enacted but the means to pay for them currently are defau1ted, SOCIAL SECURITY DETAI LS ON PAGE 10 we are faced with the very real prospect of increased infiation," NixoR a aid tn a statement issued following the signing. "For that reason, J urge the Congress to act prompUy on a Social Security revenue measure so that the current cost of these increased benefits will be financed and the basic non-inOationary budget principle, which wu embodied in the 1972 budget I 1ubmitted to the Congress, can be maintained," the Presi- dent said. It appeared unlikely that Congress would go along with Nixon's request for added revenue. Social Security tax increases are unpopular with the lawmakers but usually slide through on the popularity of benefit increases. Without higher benefits as part of the package, a tax boost would havt little going for it. Murder Charges Revived in CaP.o Patricide Case Murder charges have been revived In Orange County Superior Court against a Capistrano Beach man found insane five years ago after being accused or killing his father in a quarrel sparked by the defendant's failure to find a job. Judge Byron K. McMillan set April 23 as the trial date for Richard Glenn Gonnan llI, 27, of 35036 Camino Capistrano. He accepted Gorman'• plea of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity and ordered a separate court hearing on the same day to determine the defendant's sanity at the time of the killing. Gorman, 22 al the time, was arrested Oct. 8, 1965, shortly after he allegedly stabbed his father Richard Glenn Gonnan Sr., 45, in the kitchen of the Camino Capistrano residence. Mrs. Valerie Ann Gorman. told sher· tff's investigators she found her hus- band's body on her return from a shop- ping trip. She later testified that her husband, a wealthy consulting engineer. had frequently squabbled with her son about the boy's refusal to fi11d work. Three of six psychiatrists testified in the trial before Judge William Murray that Gorman was: psychotic. One doctor said the boy had been psychotic since the age of 15 and his mental condition had deteriorated since that time. Gorman was committed to Atascadero State Hospital . J1e was released from there shortly before the Superior Court hearing. 'I ~e111«/el*6 -. llOwi,...... o•e..., o... ill•.IP'OfLiti•Sili aoo feei oftfu1Mllu1re'"we ••at 1110¥9 •""s ~ SOias; Chil~ lellrooans; Dl•l•j. llooi•,~ Sits, Lamps; China Servers; Buffets; Tables; Curios; IOok· cases, Heall Boards; Mirrors; and many lteMs too numerous to mention ~ L I I ' • ' I \' San Cle1nente Capistrano voe. 64, NO. 66, 3 SECTI ONS, 38 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoen THURSDAY, MARCH '18, 197f TEN CENTS Council Sticli·s to Guns Over Fireworlis Ban ,. Fireworks confronted San Clemente'! City Council again Wednesday night, but llOOn fizzled as a large contingent of YMCA Indian Guides and adults lost a bid to lift the city's freeze on any more sales of the independence Day items. Despite impassioned pleas by the adult. leaders of the youth activity, councilmen held fast to their ruling of two weeks 110 restricting the permits for fireworks to thee local groups. And on the first meeting following July 4, councilmen agreed, they would take up the matter of a blanket ban on the controversial merchandise. C.Ouncilmen agreed that their decision Wednesday would not be popular one and found it difficult to separate what they agreed was a worthwhile group from an issue of public safety, William Hoversten cf San Clemente, a leader in the South C.oast YMCA annual fund drive, told the council the sale this year had been planned for the new Grant's Plaza shopping center far from any other fireworks stands in the city. The stand, he added, would lie almost on the city-county boundary. The proceeds from the sale, several Y speakers sald, could range up to Sl.000 or more and were the only hope for launching the program for young boys -many ol them a fatherleS3. But City Councilman Thomas O'Keefe and Mayor Walter Evans beth vocally supported the group's efforts but strellsed lhe city opposition to more sales permits. O'Keefe even promised to make a donation to t.he group, but said $1,000 in profits "would not offset a young child's life any way you look at it." "We h~d decided firmly to stop the whole thing al four permits two weeks ago." added Evans, "now if we approve yours where could we stop at all this year'!" He suggested the youth aroup seek elsewhere for revenue this year. "It's Just a fact of economics that any new stands would just cut the profits for everyone trying to sell fireworks this year." he said. Until two years ago only the local posts of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion received permits 1-0 sell the merchandise in the city. The reasoning behind that permission was to grant the two groupa means of recouping heavy expenditures from u e _eac urne - Hit-run Cltarged Nurse Arrested In Road Death A 50-year-old private nurse froom South Laguna faces chargrs of felony hit·run and manslaughter today in the death of· a Dana Point man struck and killed ins tantly Wednesday night along a J.,aguna Niguel highway. Regina W. Smeck of 32221 Vista de Cata.Jina. South Laguna. was arrested at a Dana Ponnt .bar, authorities said, Counc.il Okays I Apart1nents on Hospital Site A zone change allowing the build ing of 216 garden apartments on land once destined to hold San Clemente's first hospital sailed past city councilmen Wednesday. By a unanimous vote, lhe panel disregarded earlier denial by the plan· ning commission and ap_proved the change from unclassified zoning to R·3·G, allowing a S3 million proposed apartment de velopment. The land. 10 acre~ being sold by thl': hospital de veloper C. T. DeCinces to Alfred E. Mann, lies directly coastward of the civic center. Jts grading ""'.as done several years ago to aC'commoclale_ a San Clemente Medical Center, wh1C'h struggled fQr years to get off the ground, then was abandoned last year. Spokesmen for the buyer-in~scrow told councilmen that the apartment complex -with strips of un its keyed 1.ow~d an ocean view, would be two stones or less. Becauiie the development will havt. roadways weaving through the property, councilmen 11greed that before any struc· tures are buiit a conditional use permit would be necessary, thus allowing strict city control of height and other design factors . The height -and asserted c1Yting off views -was one of the reasons for the failure of the project lo pass the planners. . But the appli cant's a1r\es told coun- cilmt:n the design of the buildings would assure no views would be cut off from existing riwellingl" above the lot. DeCinces acting as the i;clter of the tand, also 'arldressed the council ~ed nesday. explaining pha.i;es nf the project, then &tressing little other use of lhr. parcel could be made in view of the abandonment of the hospital idea. "There's just no other use for the !Md." he sairl, "unless you want to pul cows on it." Exchange Club Gives Donation lo YMCA S1tn Clemente'!! Exchan~e Club has doni.led SlOO tn the ~uth Cna~t YMCA ._ money v.'hich will send t"·o local boy~ to ~ummer camp. The fund~ "'ill send the two boy8- a~ yet un!'ltlrcted-to Camp Bluff U!ke near Big Bt~r. The donaU on was madr fnrmally in tllt> y·g Campe rshlp Fund which each year sends youth~ with limited financJal mean! lO wilderness camps for one-week visli.s. ..-- I a few minutes after the death of Glenn M. McCUtcheon, 20, of Ds.na Point. Highway patrolmen s11id Mccutcheon, an employe of Coast Catam11ra11 Corp., had been struck and killed instantly as he walked along the shoulder of Pacific Coast Highway with a friend. Both the dead man and his companlon, Craig M. Montalto, 22, lived at the Dana Strand Motel, room 17. The incident occurred at 1:50 p.m. about a quarter-milt south of thl': in. tersecUon of Crown Valley :Parkway with the highway, P3trol spokesmen quoted Montalto 111 15aying the two men wl':re walking south alongside the southbound lanes when Mccutcheon slopped to light 1 cigar. The witness told of seeing a pair of headlights from a weaving auto and realized the vehicle was heading for him and Mccutcheon, officers related . Montalto dove into a bank, he !aid, and then turned to notice: the car weaving away at about iO miles per hour. ''When he went back to find his com· panion, the man was gone," patrolmen said. McCutcheon's body was found 120 feet av.·ay. Later. offictrs traced 1 trail flf clothiJlg and belongings scattl':red hundred& of feet along the roadsidl':. The Smeck woman allegedly drove to a bar in Dana Point where a few moments later employl':s n o t if i e d authorities. Patrolmen claim the woman's ear bore a smashed grille, punctured radiator and dent.s in the bumper and hood. She was hooked and held at Orange County jail. Officers aald they 1f0uld seek a district attorney's complaint cha rging felony hit-run driving and manslaughter against the woman. Three "ft.farines Arrested Aft,er Store Burglary A San Cleml':nte patrolman's sighting of a man holding a bloody towel led ro the s"·ift arrest 0£ three Camp Pendleton Marines on burglary charges early today. Police said they arrested tJie trio al the Greyhould bus 1tation about a quarter·hour after a woman reported someone smashing the window of Fred'a Liquors at Ola Vista and Calle Victoria. The crime scent': Is a block aw1y from the terminal . Officers arrived moments later lo find lhe premises btflken into .8_nd blood on " window and among the liquor rack.!. But the thieves had fl ed. A few minutes after thl': 1:t2 11.m. bre11k ifl patrolman noticed Ulret men at the closed !latlon. One or thl': three had wr11pped hi! hands In a bloody lowel, police said. The men. all llrresled on charces of burglary, are Douglas Robl':rt Llndtley, 19: David Daaiel Waegli, JI, and Don Anthony Williams. 3>. WllU1m1 wa1 treated for l ht aevtre b;ind cut.a befflrft being booked 011 tM burglary chargl':. The man received 12 stitches at South Co1st Community Hospital . Qfficer1 aaid about I dozen bottles of liquor wtre ~vertd in I.he arreal.s.. • I ,I - CAILY P11.0T llff Jl'M!f Begorrah ' Sure twas a wonderful sight to see the M\ssion Viejo parade in honor of St. Patrick Wed· nesday.· Here Bob Brennan typifies the wondrous evenL Guard Tryouts Set in Clemente Extensive tryouts for several openings for seasonal Jifegoards for the City of San Clemente will be given the weekend of March 27 and 28 at the city beach. Applicanl.s must arrive at lifeguard headquarters by 8 a.m. either morning, bringing their own swimsuit.s, towe~ and warm clothing. Testing for I.he applicants will include an 880-yard ocean swim: run.swim·rescue with 200 yards of swimming, towing and running; another run-swim·run l':X· l!!rcise of 1,200 yards and an oral in· te rview. Requirement.~ include a pp 11 ca n t ~ reaching their 17th birthday by .July l , 1971. Lifeguard servicl': officials stres.~ ed that au applicants begin to condition themselves early for the test, which they describe as "strenuous.'' All applicants must be available for weeklong competitive training and gruel- ing tests through Easter Week. April l'i through IO from I a.m. to 5 p.m., each day . A Sea of Green Crowds View Viejo Irish, Parade Shamrocks and shenarUgans marked Mission Viejo's rollicking St. Patrick'1 Day Parade Wednesday. Thousands lined the six·mile parade route along Marguerite Parkway to view the second annual event in warm &unshine. Shamrocks blossomed o• floats, but. tons, hats and baby carriages producing a sea of green through which bands, floats and marchers navigated. Floats rere decorated with green and white crepe paper, flowers, and symbols of Ireland. Thret: were decoratl!d as. Irish hats and one. provided by thl': Mission Viejo Men's and Women's Clubs, had, a uniQ\Je ftt.Wre. 1,.., , • At tht-1 'float 1-th~d along-'tbe .street a band would appear from tirl'\t to time fro11J under the. moving "hat" to * * * place a cup of liquid refreshment en the pavement for "thirsty" marchers. floats decorators displayed a great deal of ingenuity. The Mothers of Twins Club entered a huge sloping rainbow with a pot of gold at the end; the Mis.sion Viejo Activities Committee pro- duced an Immense "bottle" of Irish whisky which they labeled "The Irish Dream." Music w;is performed by marching bands from Mission Viejo and San Clemente High Schools and the United States Marine Corps and a group o{ Saddleback College students on a floaL After the parade a""'.ards we r" pteaotf!d \o . 41oats •. ~ncs: eot'ttithtcl marchers. Teeaa danced. in an otttdoot parking lot ind adult. dined on Irish cuisine al I.be Mission Vltjo Jn.n. · * * * Twins' Moms Capture Grand Prize in Parade The Saddleback Valley Mothl':rs of Twins Club won the grand sweepstakes 8\\'ard for floats for the second time at Mission Viejo's St. Patrick's Day parade Wednesday. Other wiMers were John Pyefinch's dog cart, judges award; O'Neill School. most original float: Mission Vlejo Activities Committee. most humorous float , and Lion Country Safari, most unique float. Marching awards were presented to !hi': Leisure World Hikers, Camp fire Girls Number 37 and the Linda Vista School Leprechaun~. Equestrian awards Wl':re given to Bob Harritt. Tony Moiso and Sue Greco. Adult costume winners were Jo Jo School Board Hopefuls Talk Candidates for San Joaquin Elementary. Tustin High School and Saddleback College Trustee posts will he guest speakers flf the M i 8 s i o n Vlejo·Saddleback Valley Democratic Club tonight. The candi dates will be allowed to present their views on current tichool issue~ at the 8 p.m. meeting in La Pai Intermediate School, 25151 Pradera. Mission Viejo. The public is invited. the Clown. tmmet Radcliff and The Tres Osos Guild, Children's Hospital. Children's costume winners were the Chinook Jndian Guides. Sad d 1 e b a ck Valley Chamber of Com mer c e Leprechauns and the Ayudantes Aux· iliary of the Children'!! Home Society. A specia l award was presented to the Mission Viejo area's oldest resident born in Ireland, Mrs. Mabel McFaddl':n, 82. Policemen 'Ciw' Pilot Reporter The DAILY PlLOT's San Clemente staff writer John Valteria ~sday received the "Good Guy of the Month'' award from the San Clemente Peace Officer's Association. The awarri -a large plaque signed on the back by all the association '& members -was presented at a monthly luncheon at Omar's Restaurant. The accolade -the first ever given a. reporter -was given for "conlinued inlerest and moral support and will· ingness to assist in any and evuy way his fellow citizens of the City of San Clemente." Valterza has headed news operations from the DAILY PILOT San Clemente Bureau since it was established more than a year ago. He is a resident of Capistrano Beach. San Clemente High Newspaper Drive Booming With the monUl·long e1pertmentll proJ· eel only ha.If over San Clemente'.& new5paper recycling project already yirlded a full van and tons nf newsprint alre•dY on Its way to the factory. And spokesmen for the 5J10nsoring Back Yard Ecology Groups !aid today a fresh van Already Js in pl1ce 11.nd in thl': P•llt few days has been stacked with two ton~ more. The hugl': covered lraller will 11tay lhe rest of thl': month of March at -• tht Msrket Basket pMking Jet near Sh<lrec1Jfi1. One ' aspect C"Jf the projl':ct. howtver. proved di!mal for a timt, until spon!ors found a aolutlon. Pleas for voluntttr:s to help alack papers fell on deaf ear~. ao the aponaors. have hired a teenaf(e youth for St an afternoon to stack the dC"Jnated bundles of newsprint. "We asked for volunteer5 lo fin the job." said ecology group member Lionel Burt. "but nobody came rortb .. , \ . The new · pa.id volunteer~ arrivl':s at the van 1!ach 'afte:rnocln and 1hift.s the bundles or newgprint 'from a small out.side r~ptacle to Ut• van, which now is kept>-locked. · The first 'filled van alrudy bu *" lnwed back to the Gardin• State Paper Comp11ny in Pomona, The large newsprint reclamation firm h1.11 donated the pulp paper carriers !rtt of charae. It reimburse!! the clty _ $5 a ton for the collecled paper. their treasuries for the annual pro- fessional fireworks display from the municipal pier. "Even with those proceeds the pro. gram runs at a loM @very year," Evans said . Two years ago officials from the Jlllllor All American Football League squeaked by a 3-2 vote and won the addition of thl':ir name to the permit list. With a freeze already imminent last 1pring local Optimists were turned down in a aimilar request. own San Onofre Nixes Park Skinny Dip State parks officials drafting the rulet for ust: of ~ new San Onofre State Park Beach south of the Western White Housl': hastily drafted a new one today :-nudes are a no-no. The new morality notwithstanding, the 1tate park15 brass came up with the. ruling hMtily after rtceiving a requt!t earlier this month from the Westirn. Sunbathing Association out flf San Diego. The • skinnydippera wanted a 1ectk>1t pf the scenic beach to provide scenery of th~ir own. . And WSA Director David P. Phillips pressed the issue, apparently with the Stat!': Parks brass in Sacramento. HI': said his 3,500 mtm1'er group didn't want to use the whall': beach -just a small part. Stat!': Parks Division Six Director James Whitellead said this morning, however. that the state bas a convenient rule which applies: No section of any state park can he set aside for exclusive use by a specific group, he said (relieved ). But the director related another facet of the sklnnydip question. "They said they weren't really particular about exclusive use. One man Kaid folks with bathing suits would be welcome as weJI. But the prospect of ''clothies" mingling with !l,500 nudies still doesn 't sit right -particularly for opening day early in April. Gov. Reagan is expected to be the guest of honor. Big Railroad Merger ' Proposal Called Off . CLEVELAND (UPI) -The planned ) merger of tbe Chesapeake & Ohio an• the Norfolk & Western railroads brl been called off. it was ·announced todal't C&O President Gregory S. Devin!': atd N&W President John B. Fishwick, in a joint announcement, 11ald they would recommend to their respective directors that the merger proposal he dropped. The merger was fil'!t proposed in 1965. Oraage Weather After you cut through Friday's early morning fog, you11 find sunny skies, with gusty northeast winds helping to blow the smog away. Temperatures should reach I.he high 70s. INSIDE TODAY San. Francisco residen!.$ hit the panic button wh~ the11 re· teivtd dunning •noticer nsk ing them to Poll up iright t1.way ,,,. fact: the con.sequences, Se( stor11, Page 5. Ma!ll•• • ,,,,.,., .... Llt-11 """""' .U.21 """''"' ,Ullfl 11 N.tle!l•I ""' "I (I-COVftlJ II ·-" 1:2·t J Sliklt M•rlltll lt·lt T•r.vl'lfll tf '""'-" ""11 WH!fW • '#1-"t N"'1 lJ.11 Wtrlif ~.,... .. ' - Z DAILY PILOT SC -· Mardi 18, 1971 New State Tax Eyed Reven iie W ou"ld Aid 'Low Wealth' Schools. By GEORGE LEIDAL Cit tM O.Hy 1"11-1 Sltff A proposed $3.75 per $IOU statewide proptrty taJ. would benefit most school di.stricts in Orange County ... but cause Increased property taxes in Newport- Mesa, Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified school distrtcts_ About 200 county school officialJ: Wednesd&y night beard a presentation on the plan endorsed by the State Depart· ment of Education and being recom· mended to the legislature by the State Board or Education. U adopted. the tax equalizinl package would provide increased revenues to 20 of M school districts in Orange County. An additional $26,864,%20 in school rev- enue would be provided to the county's .districts under the statewide property tax collection system, Joseph Brooks, executive Secretary of the Calilornla School Boards Association. said. Benefiting mo.st by the plan. would be the so-called "low wealth'' districts. These are the districts which. have large numbers of students and a low total assessed valuation or property. Such D emand Answers dlstrlcls have lesr tulnc capacity per student and are thus called "low wealth districts.'' The stAtewlde property l..li: would tai: all property in California at the same rate -$3.7S Is proposed -and divide the revenue on an established formula per pupil. Thw, district& such as Newport-Mesa Unified, whi~Joys 1 rellltlvely high. assessed valuatio would need to raise its present tax r te -$5.13 in Costa Mesa and $4.78 in Newport Beach - by seven cent& per $100 Jo maintain the present level of educational program. Laguna Beach would have to increase Its tu: rate $1.42, to maintain the same level of education. Capistrai.o Unified would 11.eed an additional levy of 20 cents. In contrast, Ocean View Elementary School District taxpayers would receive a $1.33 reduction under the plan. Yet that district would gel an additional $598,000 in revenue. Other Orange Coast distric~ would be affected similarly. San Joaquin Elementary district's rate · would drop 11 cents. Huntington Btach E 1 em en tar y District's tax rate would decuase 12.S cents. HWltlngton Beach Union High School District would get an additional $1 million for program improvement with a 14<ent tax reduction. Los Alamitos Elemenlary District woold receive $894,0tXl more with a rate reduced by 31 cents. Community college districts generally would fare well under the program, except for Saddleback College District which would need to raise its tu: rate by 14 cents. Orange Coast Community College district would get an additiooal $678,CIU in revenue and could rop its rate J7 «:ntll. Santa Ana College's parent district. Rancho Santiago, oould lo¥ler its rate three cents and receive an additional $1.4 million in revenue. Districts needing to raise, their tax levies could do so up to the level of their 1969-70 tax rate plus an adjustment for inflation, Brooks said. Ir vine School Parents The proposal abolishes a host of presently employed permissive overrides in cluding those for employe retirement benefits. continuation s ch o o I s , in· terdistrict attendance, regional voca· tional education centers, junior college tuition and others. · Brooks explained that the costs of these programs have been figured Into the amount of the average district's needs which determine the amount per pupil a district would get from the statewide tax. Fac e Di-strict Trustees Override taxing authority for other programs. however, is recommended. These would include programs for the physically handicapped, mentally gifted minors. transportation, capital outlay and the override restoring a districl's basic program level of expenditures to the innation adjusted 1969-70 spending level. By PAMELA HALLAN OI tM OlllJ l'Ji.t lltH Parents concerned about the quality of education at Irvine School derpanded answers from the Trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District Wednesday. RepresenUng the large group which packed the meeting room to capacity wa s school board candidate Harry Roach. Roach asked the board when Irvine parents can expect to have a new elementary facility, how the board determines the number of students to be. ho'u!ed in Irvine School. the length of the school's academic day, and what the district is going to do about low reading scores. Board chairman Gratian Bidart \!:X· plained that construction of a new facility will depend on two things -whether or not the district's $1~ million bond lssue passes and when the 11late will allocate fund! for the project. "If bonds pass we wilt be bonded to capacity and eligible for state school building loans ," said Bi dart. Superintendent Ralph Gates added that the first three elementary schools to be built if the bonds pass will be in Lake Forest, Mission Viejo and Irvine. Plans for the Irvine area school are due to be completed. in March of 1912. Drug Rap Jails Rock Promoter A youlhful canadian visitor who iden. tilied himself as a "promoter o! rock festiva!Ji and shows" was detourtd toward court today by Laguna Beacb police. Shortly after midnight Wednesday of· ficer Robert Romain stopped a car driven by Robert James Menzies, 23, of Toronto, Canada. who allegedly was navigating in an erratic manner in the area of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street. When inspection of the vehicle allegedly turned up a small quantity of hashish, the self-styled promoter was booked on suspicion of possession of the drug and driving under the influence of same. DAllY PILOT OllANG:S COAST l'U9LllHINO GCMl"ANY lelt•rt N. w •• ~ 'ra'°'tll'll •1111 Pulllltl'ltf' J•c\: It Cfll.., Vice ~r..w.n1 •nd G..11 Ml,.... Tll•1t1•1 ic ••• it f.dJi.r lh•1t1•I A. M11r,1rii"' M•Mtlntl Edliof" C~1rl1t M. Le1u kid!•" P. t4il AHIOtn: /Mn.Q\tltl IEd"°"' l..t1H 1Mc1t Offke 222 For•tt Ayt nu• s..c1a .... o..... )Di Nertlt ll C1rni110 ftt•I Olflor OfftcM C-tt .Mftt ! »O wwr ••1' Sn.et .. .,....., ... ell: »» N.....,_. '°"'iwtrC HuntlnffOll IMCfl; ltt1$ 9Mdl hov......,. 04Jl'I" Pl\.OT, Wllfl ""'ldl 11 ~ ~ N-P.-.... IJ pultUi.llN ll•llJ """°" S.. "' Ill _.ni. 1111111.,. ,... ........ , a.a. ""1*'j a.pd!. C-Nt ..... • ......... . a-11. .._.... Vt ll9y, kfl 0..-W ~--"" '"'lfttdl., .... wftll - ....... ""'""'-'""'"' ... t """"""' .....,. .. et . U1 W.t a1f ...... I. C:.111 Mal. ,,.,,.,., 1n•l '42-4121 Cl...,.... A ... '1:1et '42·M11 s.. ca ...... Al •• , .. , .. ltll , •• , II 4ft.-442t "-ti• .... Al Da,a 1 ... 1 , ............. .... t.ePyftelll, ,,,,, ....... °"" , ........ C-.MY. !'ti -1191".... lllullnlftlM. "''"""' --., ,..,..,'-'-''' "-""" _, illf .... eCuUd -"'*tt ...... ...... m!ONW. llf ~I -· ....-: ci-....... "' .... ,......, ._. ~ CMI• -....... Oo~. W'!Z .... .,. urrltr a.,11 -"'IW't 11y fMll •·'' "*""''Y' "'""'" 111111Mtwa. ~ ....... ,. 'The school L! tentatively to be placed on a aite on the cornt;r of Yale Avenue and Walnut Street between Culver and Jeffrey Roads. The district does not own the site but it is being reserved for purchase by developer Ray Presley. An intermediate school in Irvine will not depend on bond passage, however. Plans are complete and grading is about to begin for the school, located on the mrner of Yale Avenue 8.nd Michaelson Street adjacent to the San Diego Freeway. "Assuming the bond Issue passes is 197l the earlie!t for the elementary school?" asked Roach. "That's not ialisfactory." "It's \)Ot satisfactory to us either," added-'frustee Jim Nelson. "But that is the amount ol time it takes to process plans through the state." Gates told the parents that t~re are 550 children in 1rvine School which has a capacity of 700. He predicted that before the additional school is built the Irvine facility will reach its capacity. Roach suggested that the di strict send out a questionnaire to each developer to return to the office. 'The fonn would list the number and ages of school children who are to occupy newly wtd homes. The board reacted favorably to the proposal and authorized t h e ad- ministration to prepare a card for this purpose. The third question about the length of school day which the parents believe to be short.er than other schools was to be investigated hy Dr. Bill Stocks, assistant superintendent for instruction. He said to his knowledge the Jn-class Ume varies only~about ten minutes. Dr. Stocks answered the fourth ques· tion about the low reading scores. He pointed out that although San Joa- quin students may begin with lower scores, as they progress through school their comparative scores increase each year. He said some districts concentrate heavily on reading in the first grade to the detriment of other subjects. San Joaquin provides ~a balanced program and tests show that by the sixth grade reading is exceptional. "We were among five districts out of 26 which were adva111cing every year. We think this is important.'' he said. "There is another variable, too. We ~re growing fast and many of our students are new to the district this year and haven't had previous instruction in our schools." He said reading is the single mo.st important thing a child learns and the district is working to Improve it. Under the plan, districts educating 72 percent of all students in Orange County would receive an increase or funds without a tax increase, Brook said. Districts getting a tax cut and a revenue increase, were the plan enacted. presently handle 85 percent or the coun· ty's student population. The statewide levy or $.1.75 per $100 would not pay the total cost of education for kindergarten to J4th grade students, Brooks noted. The state must provide an additional $400 million to meet the total school cost.s. Were the statewide property tax to 8')proximate the mythical "historic" SQ.. 50, slate-district sharing of school ex· penses the rate would be $2.18 cents and would require $1.8 billion in new state revenues . Brooks suggested such a recommendation was "politically unrealistic." For property owners to support K·I4 education entirely, the rate would need to be set at $4.35, he noted. Jury Judges 196 Artists at Bo,vl A total or 196 artists and craftsmen submitted samples of their work for judging by the Festival of Arts jury in Irvine Bowl Saturday. A seven·member artist jury scored the art v.·orks to establish a priority list for booth space in the 1971 Festival. Exact number of available spaces will not be known until 1970 exhibitors who are entitled to booths confirm their in· tention to parlicipale in this year'~ Festival. In any case, it is not likely that more than about 30 of the new applicants v.•ill be accommodated. There is room Ior approximately 180 artists on the grounds. with first spaces going to 1970 exhibitors who scored highest in grounds jurying last year. Scores posted in the Festival office following the Saturday jurying showed that 25 artists scored 40 or more points out of a possible 70. Highest score was ~ and lowest was JO, Each of the seven jurors can award up to 10 poinU to an artist. Laguna's Drug Prevention Unit Voted Free Quarters Laguna Beach young people seeking help or information concerning a drug problem will have a place to go some time in April. The City Council voted Wednesday night to provide frte quarters for the program. The Dru& Prevention Committee of tht CoordlnaUng Council had requested use Of 11 orflet at 120 Ocean Ave. in a msll ground noor room of the city· owoed building. The space has been unoccupied since August of 1970 and city officials had been unable to find a tenant willing to pay $240 a month for the office. Mrs. Oorolhy Joyce , chairman of the drug commftlee. said in a letter to the council that If the space re.nttll could not be waived, tome mearu of payment by tht non.profit group could poaslbly be found . However, the council unnnhnously ap. proved her request, although she wu cilutiontd ag1ln1t 1etUn1 up a permanent operation J.s the building WN to soon be torn down for the. development of Main Beach. "It will only be temporary,'' Mrs. Joyce assured the council. saying the only equipment to be installed would be a telephone. "Evea if we had lo move. il would be. a good place to st.art. .. Under terms of the occupancy, the drug committee would be requ ired to vacate the building, with 30 days nollce. If a paying tenant were found for the office. Howe ver. councilman Peter Ostrander said he doubted a paying tenant•would ever be found . desaibing lhe location as a "not very desirable space" in reference to lts run-down condition. Mn. Joyce said the center, which has yet to be given an oUiclal name, will probably be opened in April, depen· ding on securing of liability insurance coverage. The center will provide euunseling and llteratura for persons seeking drug •d· vice. , DAil'!' l'llOT $1!1 Pho!• BATHING BUGGIES FO R RIVER VENTURE Thur1ton Students Make Suds Fly Saturday Buggy Bath Set Lag una Students Hold Cur Wash Suds will fly this Saturday in the Lagun~ Beach school district parking lot on Park Avenue at Blumont as 1tudenta from Thurston Intermediate School put on a daylong Buggy Bath lo raise funds for their aMual Colorado River trip. For the nominal sum of $1 , students will guarantee an A·l wash job for any ear brought to the lot between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. (The suds, of course. will be biodegradable, students point out). By way of an added bonus, there'll be a student-operated bake sale in pr<>- gress at the lot during the same hours -and for the same good cause. Both boy and girl bakers are creating cookies, cakes and pies for the event so every ctriver will be able to take home some fresh-baked goods in bis shiny car. All proceeds of the dual event will be used to help defray the cost of transportation, food and equipment for Thurston's now·fan1ous "river float '' scheduled for the end of 1'.1ay. About 125 students are expected to participate in the adventure this year, floating dowa the Colorado on rafts made from rubber Inner tubes, with overnight camp stops on the \\'ay. faculty members and high school students, identified as ''river rats," supervise the expedition. Thurston students must qualify for participation by earning service points in the months preceding the river trip. The points are accumulated through service to the school in such areas as yard clean-up, appearing in plays. helping w i th assemblies and other extra-curricular duties. Fund-raising activities like the Buggy Bath and bake sale help build up the trip fund so cost to the students is decreased. King, Queen Selected For Capo Mi-ssion Fest Steve Sanchez and Linda May Dunn have beeo selected this year's king and queen of the traditional St. Joseph's Day pageant to be presented Friday at Z p.m. on the grounds of Mission San Juan Capistrano. Each year the royalty is selected at the old mission school from among eighth graders who have the longest local ancestry. The king and queen wHI be crowned during a pageant which is held each year on the day the swallows return to Capistrano. A procession will leave the school grounds and wend its v.'ay to the main mission grounds near the entrance at exactly 2 p.m. \Vhen the procession reaches the foot of the Father Junipero Serra statue, Bill Parsley and Randy Salas will carry a small 5tatue of SL Joseph to a place o! honor. Paul Arbiso will crown the king and queen and Anthony Salas will narate the legend of the swallOl\'S. While in fr ont of the statue, the mission banner will be presented to Mrs. Rita Lobo. the oldest member or the parish. According to tradition, the banner was hidden a"A·ay, during the years the mission was not in the hands of the church and in special times of danger. It v.·ould be brought out of safekeeping each St. Joseph's Day and delivered on horseback to the oldest parishioner. Children will then move lo a stage nearby and \Yill perform several tradi- tionat dances and songs. A new song, ''The Bells of Capistrano" written by Mrs. Jack Schwarze o! Costa 1'.1esa will be sung a capella by lhe entire group. Honored guests will be introduced from the platform and the program will end with a benediction service in Serra Chapel during which the queen will place a bouquet of flowers at the foot of the St. Joseph's Statue. Arrangements for this year's pageant have been made by r.1rs. Alan Rymer. Mrs. Butchie Porter has made nearly ]00 costumes for the children from the school. . Nix on Asks SS Taxe s Hiked No w WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon want.:i Congress to increase Social Security taxes right away, instead o! next year, to pay for the new 10 perctllt increase in old age beneCits. If Congress goes along, the increase would take $tM Instead of the present $405 out· of the paychecks of those earning $9,000 or more. The $.1.6 billion-a-year benefit Increase Nixon 6igned Wednesday would delay the higher taxes until next year. Nixon complained such a delay coold aggravate the nation's still critical innation pro- blems unless It is paid for immediately by increased revenue coUectioos. ''If these urgtnUy needed Social Securi· ty increases are enacted but the means to pay for them currently are defaulted, SOCIAL SECURITY DETAILS ON PAGE 10 we are faced with the v:ery real prospect of increased inflation.'' Nixoa 1a14 In a statement issued following the signing. "For that reason, I urge the Congress to act promptly on a Social Security revenue measure so that lhf!: currenl coot of these increased benefi~ will be financed and the basic non-inflationary budget principle. which was embodied in the 1972 budget I submitted to the Congress, can be maintained," the Presi· dent said. It appeared unlikely that Congress would go along with Nixoo'a request for added revenue. Social Security tax increases are unpopular with the lawmakers but usually slide through on the popularity of benefit increases. \Vithout higher benefits as part of the package, a tax boost would have little going tor it. Murder Charges Revived in Capo Patricide Case Murder charges have been revived In Orange County Superior Court against a Capistrano Beach man found insane five years ago after being accused of killing his father in a quarrel sparked by the defendant's failure to find a job. Judge Byron K. McMillan set April 23 as the trial date for Richard Glenn Gorman 111, 27, of 35036 Camino Capistrano. lie accepled Gorman's plea of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity and ordered a separate court hearing on the same day to determine the defendant 's sanity at the time of the killing. Gorman, 22 at the time, was arrested Oct. 8, 1965, shortly aft.er he allegedly stabbed his father Richard Glenn Gorman Sr., 45. in the kitchen of the Camino Capistrano residence. Mrs. Valerie Ann Gacman, told sher· lff's investigators she fou11d her hus· band's body on her return from a shop- pinlo': trip. She later testified that her husband. a wealthy consulting engineer. had frequently squabbled with her son about the boy's refusal to fii.d work. Three of six psychiatrists testified in th e trial before Judge William Murray that Gorman was psychotic. One doclor said the boy had been psychotic since the age of 15 and his mental condition had deteriorated since that time. Gonnan was committed to Atascadern State Hospital. He was released from there shortly before the Superior Court hearing. We have fllletl one of ow ....,,.,..~ 11-0w•li 3000 fHt of· fua 11lture we illUd move at V2 off~ J Sofas, Chairs; Bedrooms; Dining . Rooms, GUa1e Seti; Lamps; China Servers; Buffets; Taltles;· C•l!fos; ao·ok· cues, He a cl Boards~ Mirrors; and many items too numerous to mention ~ H.J .GARRtfT fURNll1JRE 2215 HAUOR ILYD. PROFESSIONA~ COSTA MESA CALIF INTUIO R DESIGNERS OpM Moo., Tllur" I kl. hn. • 644-0275 '64'~27& . ' . . ' t • • ,.,_ • -· -• """io" '1111-~t.M .. . . . I j • • Thuridu, Ma,ch l!, 1971 CAIL Y PILOT 17B ' Service V ruler Fire - J "Arti s.try in Moving" • ' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: West German Intelligence Isn't : • • • • • • • l • • BONN, Germany jAP I - West Germany's intelligt.nce service is again In thr cenltr of a public debate. and counter claims. ~ Thal tM service rellf'S for information and analysis more on lhe Swiss newspaper Neut Zuercher Zeitung th11n on it! own 11gents. their aecur1ty. I_ 494-1025 580 Broadway The controversy was i;e\ off when Der Spiegel charged that this country's equivalent of the Central lnletllgence Agen· cy has become an !neffici,..,l bureaucracy that Chancellor Willy Brandt doesn't trust. Sint-e ll c11me into being the Intelligence »rvlce'' role has been to collect Information about foreign countrir-~. Dur· Ing ·the cold war it con· centrilted on Ea~t Europe and enjoyed a high regard among other W e st e r n Intelligence agencies. -That an official In charEe or assigning a11ents regularly conault.a an a11trologer. -Thal Brandl'11 office h111 demanded and received the names and code names or all agents in East Europe, thus seriously endangering Der Spiegel said the ser,~ct r11\!ed to prediC't l • at December's troublt!I in Poland, 90 Brand had no w11rning that a leadership change there was imminent when he left for W1r111:w tn &!Jiln the Polish-German treaty on Dec. II. • : LINK SAUSAGE sac COl"Yl!Gl'TC "71 i..,. J.o.i,, ._lot. -AA l >t\lo --.1. OIO t IUlll-1 lL , ............. -••·••••••• STANDING RIB ROAST $JO~ YOUNG TOM TURKEYS 36~ llUll lllD-UIUT l°"Oft IUr ··········-·• lrltlfllOl ".l~ ................. __ , .......... •rPORTERHOUSE STEAK $J4! BONELESS HAM $]2! ~w Off-lUm 1011ott 110.-............. f.tllMI JOlll-fllU J tOOll t ., ... _ .......... ' The news m,agaiine's claims brought on a series of denials But in 1n examination of Its operatioM during the past two years De.r Spie11et uld: The former defenae and flnanet minister. Fraru; .Josef Strauss, 11ld the demand for Mfl. G1yle Mll~r ••• I" 1he checlt<OVt Ii.,. •I ' lUCKY DISCOUNT JM-..CIT kl ArtMll• .,....." w1 11ltM hlf' If 1h1 w•ulcl IJuy the 111d "'"' Jt11ttt ... COfl'IP9r.1l»le brmcl1 11 '"Y otMr rurk1t of Mt own 1h-lng MRS. MILLER SHOPPED AND COMPARED HER OWN LIST AT ANOTHER SUPERMARKEt . OF HER OWN CHOICE .• ·~'.! ~,", " . Sh• spwit $J7.M It LUCKY,,, The ••m• ,,,.,,int lltl at HI• otMir ,.,.,. li1 t '"'Mr $4J.23 ••• 1ml th• h1tl ti Cl'Oll OM f11m olt h1r 1111 ••• Th• oltlt r mtrk.i cllcl"'t shloclc It SHE REDUCED HER FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY TASTY LENTEN SUGGESTIONS I ' I TENDER RESH FRYERS BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST CENTER CUT ROUND STEAK STANDING RIB ROAST YOUNG HEN TURKEYS ~!~.~.~Y~.!~~S. ....... 73c HALIBUT STEAKS 93c ,..':\':'un 9 5 C '°""' lflf lb. ··~· 29 ··~' -::., c • Oil 111. ~~t:• sac llU lb. .. :::~ .. 39c '~,.. lb. ,,.':;\",,, 5 5 c IOllOlll lb l llf • . . . ' -.. :,.tit~~ BROCCOLI SPEARS :~::.\'.' .......... 32' VEGfT ABLES~~·::. ~'.'o'.~~~-~~.~:'.~~~: .... 46' PUDDINGS~~·.-:.~;~~~°.':.~ .<:':.1.~~ ......... 7 5' VEGO ABLEi ~:~'i~:~~~.' ................... 33' llUfl VU.O All.U w/ltTTll llllU, MIL'IUM PW •IMTTll SAV<f TATER TOTSl:l~: ............ ,, ___ 47•. flSHSTICKS r:r:::~.~ .................... 48' ... Kl{&;f.-...... FIDDLE FLAKES 25c IUl lYS 7·0 HUI" G. BREADED SHRIMP ~1::!:::~~ ........ 77' EEF STEAKS 1010 11111utn"o 73' ,. {1.) 1111. ,., ............. . EEF STfW !:i,~;~1; .......................... 36( RIDGFORD lilllll TIAlO+ll•ll 26' IOLU,1J01.•lt ............. .. EXICAN FOOD J~':;~~~ ............... 52' TACOI. 110 I 111111 UllU JUIJITDS NO 'S SNACK LOGS :::•·.,,,,, .. _85' RITZ FRUIT PIES ~,'.~: ........... 35' 'SECTION PICNIC PLATES -.: fir µIll 11 Jlc1lc: 1••1rus slrt fl11t1c tl•t• l1111trt1l 11 tn. .41IILIR STEAK PLATTER TM ftntl•ll"fhl 'tUJ ti 111\'I I 11111 1111•! b SlflU tlllfS. 'GIANT COOLERTUMBLER 11111111• 11 11. t111•11r lttfl n111 •1191 1111" •1ftltllS p!t,.tlJ c~ll1t. ~ ·hs1t11• it Ill LI, 33' ! PAPER PLATE HOLDER St.ts 1 ,_,., •lllt 1N stt11"~ II 111•1 33 C ._ WlllN l l•JJ .. WttJ.AullU4UltfL LADY LEE BACON SUCID 49c l ·l'OUND PKG, ... Kl{&;f.~ ..... GREEN BEANS 19c DOl(IEASON IO l•·OUNC( CAN •• O""' 409 CLEANER ~~~~~~L ••••••••••• '1 " COMET CLEANSER ~!:' ............... 18' .,... JIOWL CLEANER :~~:::: ....... 69' MR. CLEAN CLEANER :.•::',n. .... 99' ~CA LG ON .,.Jlfn ioni•r• 7S ' 'J'" -•• 01. 101 ................... . SAL VO TABLETS !::•: .................. 79 ' ~ALL LOW SUDS ~!~·,~~-:1 ....... •r 1 IVORY SOAP i~·::.'.O:l~.·.~~~~ ............ 88' LADY LEE LOW SUDS ~:l~~:~~~ ...... •J 4° CHEER D£TERGENT :;:•: ............. 88' ~ DELSEY TISSUE ;:;~.~C:~ ... 27' i>REFT DffiRGENT :::~ .............. 88' .. ~NAPKINS ~~~~~~~~.~~~~~-~~.1.~_ •• 9' CONFIDENTS ~:~~~~~~~.~~~~ ........... 831 MULTIPLE VITAMINS FOR THE ENTI RE FAMILY I A DAY'"·~· '2" "' "' IOTIU OI Ito •• , ..... ~ ••••• I A DAY WITM 110• s2u • • IOTTU Of !••••••••""'" CHOCKS .,,111..1 •1" IOllLll>'M ................ . CllOCKSWITM ll Oll $2 '2 l~IUOlf ................. .. CHOCKS :~~;~:,1tt ................ •2•1 CHOCKS Wt1~11011 SJ " IOTlllOl'l~ .............. ,. FLINTSTONES:~~ru·:, .......... 11 '' FL I NTST 0 NE S :~~~11•:,• •• ........ •211 RIGHT GUARD ANTl -PERSPIRANT SJtcl1J11frr111tl•tt•11'1ut1 •M1~·r 1111 h1 1111ur Jr111ctl11 111ift1t ''"'1r1t!11 1Hr 11• WllllHJ 1»11'111• 63 C 1•1w11 u s~1111r. l OUNCIU Z( TASSAWAY S's $ P11!tth '•ttu 011111,t11, •1r111• 134 ftrt1•11 U11 I h111,.1. TWICE AS NICE SHAIW'OO & 11e11 s•111,11, J!t1 c1Hlll111t'l "1t• $123 ••~11•• ••••1•1•llity u a1ir. •••tu, •fl If 1111. J mct 1lz1. o-4 CHIFFON TOWELS ::~:::: .. 31' JOY LIQUID ~~~',':.'" .. _ .................. 57' CAMAY SOAP::,':' ..................... 17' !4..::ilMIY. PRODU(t'l;lt• ~ IMPERIAL ~!:.~1:.~ •• -........... 39' REDDI WHIP ~~r~~::.~~~ ...... _ ....... 58' o-r' MARGARINE :-:'.':.1::;.~ ......... 43' '.t" VITA PAKT 0'"" 1i111<•1tiu 49' ', J!Ot.I H ••.••.. , .• , .... , ~ BLUE BONNET ~:'~,~~:~~~ .... 39' DRY MILK ~;~~·.-::.~.·.~~ ................ '1 '' LADY LEE ICE CREAM ~:.~: ...... 6S' ···K'atBu/f.--. • I I , '< /~ '11, ~ . ) k.°Jf> '•' BABY FOOD ''''11 nu1•1• 9, 4\'oOl.JAt .,,,,, ••• ,.,.,,,, •• , •••• ~HASH .. ,., flTCllll 45' ..,..--(OllllOlftl,1101.Ult .... , ... ,., JUNIOR FOOD~~·:~~.·~·-~ ............... 1 l c r SALAD DRESSINGS :.'~: ....... 35' WIWIOlll -OllllJI 11111(11, llillA .. fllOVtilll tlU. !TAJ.Ji ii IOU'. C&UIOl ll& 0111011 GERBER JUICE !~!1:'.'~ ................. 9< WESSON OIL ~':1~11L ..................... 87' o-4 SMUCKERS SYRUP :IW~\t.39' U.l.D.--FOODITIMP • COUPONS Gladly Accepted . IU<ll ..................... .,., .. ,, •. ~~l .~!~~~ ........ sac ~~~~.~~~~.~.~ ... 59c I , -.., ~~ ... ~'. :-/(#-.4, M • r , .... MJ.B, COFFE£~::~J8' O"" FOLGER'Stl':l'u1 ... 8l 1 FOLGER'S!::;.1 , .......... ".•241 YUIAN COFFEit::~ .... 90' ~ YUBAN ~:'::.'u• ...... !'24' ti""' COFFEE ~;~~~:.~'.'.'.~.83' .... COFFEE llUIWIU II.WI '2" tlOl.UI •. , .... MAXWELL HOUSE -'1" "'"'"' torn1 -1tt.,•• MAXWELL HOUSE -'!" lllllllT tOtJH~ 11•1. lAI .... MINCED CLAMS ::lr."w ..... 33' ... Kl{&;f.-......, MACARONI DINNER 19c llA'T 7\4-0UNCI P•li. SNOWDRIFT :;~~~:.~ ................... 89' O"" TOMATO JUICE :t:;~~l:~.~ .... 29' ~ PUDDINGS~:'rz.g~~~-· ............ 31 ' OIL WHl .. lllTTl•1HIYH 79' tOOlllll,UOl,ITL ........ , ......... , ........ . ... SEGO DIET FOOD r.'::~, ....... 21 ' BEETS OR CARIOTS !~:':.~~'•'.1,1.'.1.~17' f) a""' PEANUTS:1:.~~~'.~.·.~-~~~~.1.~S6' HORMEL SPAM ~;i:,~~~~~.' ........... 55' 'l-1 .... PEANUTS tUllTtn °1' 11'"1075' ' 1 IJOLJ.11 •••• .,, ••• , ••• VE GET ABLES :':,"m'...... .. . .. J 8' ,II.$, IOI.I (lfll. l •H• Ill•. n nt1t TOM.I TIU ~ NUTS !~~~:.·.~.~~~~.~~-~~-~-~ ...... 83< Our LOW E~r)'day Pr ice! GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 39c Tllf fS Wl lT rlNlt '46.0UHCI CAN NIB LETS CORN :;:~: ..................... 20' r BLACK PEPPER :~~~:~~~.~ ..... 3Sc FRUIT COCKTAIL ~~:W ............ 20' If' PEACHES M'"""'""' '"" 17' • , 1"-11,<&• •••..••••••••••••• DEL MONTE PEARS :~•:tw ........ 25' CHUNK TUNA ~e:::.r::: ................. 34c Prices ore Oi1covnt•d E-c•pl OI\ foir-Trod1d and GO¥ernm•nl Conlroll1d 1111111. TOP QUALI TY Dlll ITIMll ~S~~~~.!!.~1!~-~~~1~tna 73c ur LOW E1~ri0aii'Price! OSCAR MAYER WIENERS AUMIATORPUllllII 73c 1 l l . PkG. :ll~! MCWED 800Dl Jiil r CEREAL ;:!~<~•~,·:t~::'.~'.~ ......... 43' CHEEZ IT CRACKERSm\'~! ....... 59' ~BROWNIE M1x::w~~:.1 ........ 45' SALT :::;~~~=~~ ................................. 11 1 o-"" CHIPS::~~~~~~~~ ................. 42' MJ I RICE , ••• 11.111 24' • • 1101.111 ...................... . r WALNUrs :~::J.~~~-~ .......... 69' PIZZA' MIX (Ml!11T llOU•ll 56' O"" <MUii 1 '"DZ P~(, ··-· .READ(lllf(lWllOlllH:(lltlMIOWlllAT 37' llAIYll T t i T, I• 01. lOAI ••...•.••••• ,,, , ... LIPTON DINNERs ::~'..'.'. ....... 59' _.. MACARONJ '"'~o111 L1 r•t0MA 39' 'fT -lll O, JJ Ol, !«I .•.•..•• , PET FOODS~ ~·r. FRISKIES11••&uvnTOM10.1 23' ~ . 1401.(All ................... . CAT Fooo:;:~(~~'.1.~.~~~-~~~ ............... 15' o-4FRISKIE5 MIUOITDMIMO 63 ' ,., 1000-1 ll. .......... . KITIY QUEEN~·:~~f:~.'.~~ ............... 21 c PUSS·N·BOOTS~~!~~ ............... 17' ..... ,I t•AYT-U¥11 l f l •VT TOP QUALITY DISCOUNT PRICED PRODUCEI Bananas GOlOEH l lPI IUNCNIS 100% CHIQUITA l l AMO lfi Potatoes RUSSETS U.S. NO, 1 GRADE 1 O~. 'i 10 ·,::~38c Shop Any ~ , , • Save Every Doy ••• With Lucky Low Discount Pricing Policy. aeent.a' narne.s neulr•liaed the opuatir>n in E11!1l Europe • Strauiis heads the CtU'istlan Social UniDR. which Jorm11 the opposition w!Lh the Christian Democrala. The government oounlered w~th a denial that Brllldt's offic~ ever asked {or the agent!' names. G o v e rnment 1pakeirman Conrad Ahlers also denie<i 11 Spiegel claim that the West German 11ervlc1: has 10111 !he confklence of allif'd 1ervlces like the CIA and the British Secret Servlca. ··The e11el op- J>O$Jle ia true," he 11aid. The Bundtsnachrlchlend· iensl. or feder1J lntelliaence servict. Is no stranger to con- troversy . h. came to life 11 the Org1nization Gehlen Jn the 11ervice nf the United Slit.es v.•hile Germany w11s stilt un der occup11tinn. Lt,. Gen .. Re inh ard Gehlen chief of the German generai staff's military intelligence 011 the eastern front during World War 11 iiurrendered tn the United States in thr war's final months and started to work for his captors. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's fledghng \\1 e st German ,l{nvernmenl took over the service v.·hen the OC• cupation ended. Gehlen retired in 1968. His successor . Lt. Gen. Kurt Wessel, iii an associate from "'ortd War II. The service operates from a hea vily gu11rded cnmpound in Munich. Its bud,1et is not vo\ed by parliament and ii officially said to be more than 100 million m11rks of $21 million. In the rurrent debate no one has raised the point why We.st Germany, whlch ts not a world power, needs a CIA· like intelligence Rrvice. Poor Fish- No Justice Poor fish -there 's nt Justice. in the world for !hem. Just v.·htn the cat fish. th' ba.~s 11nd the blue Ifill werr growing rat and happy In Hun- tinglnn Lake. the city lowered !he boom on them -or at /e11st the fishing hooks. Huntington BeaC'h officials have now opened the J.1-Acre Huntington Lake to the hun- dreds of anglers who haVf been making life miserable for !he fish in Talbert Lake. Both lakes -de.s iened IF the focal points of the cen tral park -are now available tr fishermen. Ttilberl Lake h115 been fishable the past year. bu! poles and hooks were forbid- den at Huntingkln Lake . That restriction has been tifled. but vehicles mu.st still be kepl away from the lakt on tht west side of Golden West Street. NU.T:.~~E J7J SOUTH COAST HWY. LAGUNA l l ACH, ~ CALI'· f 2lS1 ~ (7141 497-lJSD Wf. SP£CIA~1Slf. \\'I NUT ut1Y cANO\f.S f~l\C~ llll.llll fll.\111S SEEDS • SIFT PACKAGES wt MAIL EVERYWHERE W'Ttll QI M'KE ,flltE lltEIN 65, PEANUT BUTIER NII ADOITIYlS FULL MO ,llSEJVATIVfS POUND COFFIE BEANS l11 j1y •••fir;, c.•ff... fref!I •r•1111• tit. w•rt• wltt. j111t • trllf' '' N11h'lll1, wllMe -,,, •• ,. lll•kll ,.,, ,.,, .. ......... Hawaiian Kana Jamaican Blue Mountain Colombia Supremo Guatemala Antirua Espresso Mocha· lava or 18 oth•r lnt•rn1tlon•I co ffee• • •• -. - I DAIL V PILOT SC Time, Money Saved Answering /Plwnes Popukir NEW YORK (U PI) -A psychi1lrist uses a telephone answering machine to leave soothing messages (or •nl:iety ridden patients. A legislator frees h 1 s secretary for more produchve \\ ork by lett1ng an answer1ng machine take calls from con stituents Business firms u~ them to take orders from salesmen after office hours Hospitals and life Insurance company med1cal departmenl" iiave hours with the ans"er1ng devices 1n gethng reports on medical examinations Ad! for cheap answering arn:l recording devices hll the vendor ad pages of Sundav ne"spapen: A company called RecDrd.0-Fone a leader 1n the industry, predicts that 1n another geoerat1on a Im D st every home v; 111 have some kind or an answering machine This company has one device LEGAL NOTICE IK TKlli !U,•lt10• COU I T Of THI ST .... TE Of CALlfOll.NIA l'Olt THI COUHTY Of' Oll ... NG I (tTY Of HUN"llNGTON BEACH mun!t!l'll corl>Orftlon l'l1ntlff vs M ... 1111! E ILAIR I wlc!OW l ... NIC OF AMElll(A NATIONAL TRUST ... NO SAYINGS ASSOCIATION I t11Uon11 !Ian~ l~J 1,ooc:Jt!IOll Tronl~e OANIEL C LEEDY Allmlnhlrl!Or of !ht E•l"t el WllH1m C Hu!)t,r FIOELITv' SALE! COMPANY 1 co-111rt ... rUllP 11 Trullc~ C R IE ... LEY 1n U""'t rrltd min ... llTALEE GAYLE Mill.Ell tlM> -nawn •I AllTALEE C.it.YLE POWELL ~TANo OAllO OIL COMPANY 1 CDrPO<lllon J.\MES L CROWTHER FRANIC 0 ltlNALDI SECURITY T t Tl E IN SUll.ANCE COMfl'ANY I c0<1><>rltlon called Tele Key that e:nables a business or a doclor to call his office from .anywhere and make the machine roll back the tape and read all the messages rt has taken down since his last call Naturally the rapid pro-- liferat1on of these and other ne\v ktnds of telephone cqu1p-- ment such a$ semi automatic s .... 1tchboards burglar alarms and t1e-1n devices for data transm1ss1on have created 1 large independent telephone equipment bosmess It has been some years now since I.be Bell System losl the power to insist on the use ol only Bell made or Bell approved eqwpment by its i:Ubscnbers Independent makers o f telephone eqwpmeat from ell -0ver the world have ru!!hed in to help supply the U S markel with a remarkable Trusltf Cll.ESENSI A NO S HE It N .a.NOE l 1 ..... 1.cll•~ l ... u. EN M 11;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; I HilNDLEY 1f'IO NONNA G HANDLEY 1'111 "It Al GONU.LES """ llOSIF GONZALES hh wlft SE CURITY Fllt\T N•TION ... L 11 ... NIC t <o r p ot &l lO " TruslH ELIZ ... flETH G LINDLEY • w Gow JOSEPH S FERM •nd JE ... NNE M FERM 11u1b.lnd •nd .. 11e 0 M C•LLl5 Jlt fnd LOUISE CALLIS Jiu" lbtnd •nd .... 11e Btn.,.lcl•rlll JIOBEJll J,1,MES WARNER arid JANIS E W,t,RNER hu1 b•NI 1nd wilt LOWELL .. SHLEY 11111 MARLENE ASHLEY 11u1 btnd •nd .. Ut HOWARD RICHEY • I MI• mfn ST .. TE OF C•LIFORNl,I, •LFREO ROBINSON TtuSltt JUDITH FREEM .... rl C .... LIFORNIA PETROLEUM CORPOJIAT10 N R W McCLELLAN JR t~d ELIZAflETH M .... RY ~CLEL t,t,N nu1b•nd 1nd w11• BESSIE L C,OTH .... JID DOES I lhtO<Wh 106 lnclu •IVI tnd t H Dt<Joon• un•nciwn cl1!m1n11 •nY !l!lt or ln!e•tll lo "'' or-•IY D,.. hn<11nh THE PEOPLE 01' THI': ST .... T¥. OF Ct.LIFORNl,t, SEND GREETINGS TO OEFENOANTS N .... M£0 1N T H E 1iF .... 01NG OF THIS PlllOCfEDING YOll t ro J\et!bY dltft!Pd ID IDl'tlf In , ID"'<.l•I P'"OC: .. dln• brou~ht !IV Int olt ntlH •11\1111 vw In •n• Sv1>ulor Court of I~• S!ll• DI Ct!\101111• In •nd for IM Count.. cf-Or1net lo c•...Cemn 10< "'' •urPoH ol • llbr&rv 1 It tnd public p&rk ourPDi.e• •nd ui.e1 t111:1c1en111 Ille"'" tll• tollowlnt de-..;rl~ ••II •rCIPe<1Y ,11v1red IYlfl• Ind bel"~ 111 lht (IN of Hu"t1ri<it1111 llt1Cl'I Countv 1t Orintt S11to> of C1llt0<11lt lo wl1 il'&.ICIJL I Lo1• 1 tnroU<ll> 111 hofl'I l111;luol~t 111 lllot• ,._ ol Troe! NI ,... II shown ., .... M•P ••<Ofll•O In lloolt U Pitt 1' of Mt ttn1..-... 111aios ffCOl"dl or Or1n10 Cou111~ c~HIMnl• ••RC.El l Tl>• ner!ll 1>.olf ot "'" .....,111 IWO-thltdl ol 111• ,.tll tlllM 1ouri111 ol IM no1111 1>•11 ot '"" 1...itllwnr •u••U • of SKtk>n 11 Townoll o 'I So<Jll'I "'"'' lt Wr'1 •••·fl~ In 1111 l1ncl>O L11 llolll! •nd ••rflv In IM R1nc:l'l<I ti llOIP Chit• 11 >IMIW!I en 1 Mfl> rKOfd.0 Ill lloDI< !I p19t lJ pl Ml1ctll•11f'OU• M11>0 rllCOrdl ol Or11111 Count.. Ctlllor11l1 01!d l&nG be!nt •Ito <101c•ll>- td 11 1111 c1nt 11 i>n• !~!rd •~l•ndlnt ••it 111!1 w•1! 01 I/It w111 lhr@• lourlh• ~! 1111 norln 11111 or Th• 1ou111w111 "'"'''"' ol 11ld :s.tttlon '' "&.RCIL ) Tiii! Porllan ol IM Pl>I 30 1c••1 o! 11!• .. r1t 60 1Cff1 .,, !hr 1oulll 1111• ol lht ''"""~" .,.,1,ttr ot St<:hon 1• Town 1111 ~ Seoutll 11.1n1t 11 W••I 11rtlY lfl 1111 ll1ncl>O LI 80111 Chic• ""' pot!ly In t111 R1ncho L•• 1101111 1• '"°"'" on 1 M1P rec1>rdrd 111 llook " ••VI 13 ot Ml,crlltnKKJt Mu•• ratofll\ 01 O••nt• C1>Untv Col torn\1 t..lna n1>rlho•IY of the llol>f Orf ni t • Ohlrlct bound•fY lint 11 0~1crlbfod In the 1,,.1rumen! rrc1>rdtd J11!1 17 n it In Book 1J "''" ]CJ of Mlltrll•n•l>U• Reco•d• Or•"'ll• Count.. C•IU0<n\t DENTAL HEAL TH WEEK IS ALL YEAR LONG "' Tllll' GU.NT, l n 1\fany function!! be1:111 In 1 he n1outh Certainly a child 1n hts ra1 ly stagP (Jf devel 01nnrnt 15 l rnlerl'd around his 1nouth a s thc starting po1n1 of hi~ cummun1cat1on In thl' aduh enJoyment nf food also begins 111 the mouth A h ealthy m o uth I!! m~t 1mrortent for 11 confl- dPnl s 1n1IP good appt'aranc r And of t"Oursl' as thr nri:an ror our hUITil'lrl ntlnbuli.' sr.lf'<'C"h 11nd langua,.,, """IJlnl!" 11 hPl'lilhy 1nouth 1-o; ba~rd on 1 on>1rrv11uon or lf'f'lh and U11• prt>ve11t1 nn QI d1scasrs o r t h• .i.:ums The ISUC{e~~ you havr 1~ ba11ed on propr1 person!l.11are end re:;ular v1s11~ Ir> your d<'n· list Winn hP ~ugi,:1 ~1s a dent31 hl'311h aid -we have ,, votr OR YOUR DOCTOR. CAN PH ON E US ''hen you nerd a d rhvery 'Ve 'vlll de lht'r pron1pUy \\Llhout cx- tra charge A j::I"e8l 1n11ny ~pie rely on 11s t or their health nt'eds. \Ve welcome rt'QUests for drl1vrry service and char:::-e accounts PA.RI LIDO PHARMACY 151 HMpl'.t leod New,_n IHC:h '4.z.1 stO ''" Dehtery ,. ' 1 000 .l Of OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISALf WAllHOUSf OPIN 10 lHI PUILIC 50°/o OFF TM .. ~111'11 l3t Oii f~I ol th•l 1 PO<llon o! "" •••' 30 terr• o' "'' ....,.11 tO 1tro:o of tho 1oulh hot! ot 1~, :i,ou1Jlwelt 11u1t1e< ol ~ct\on ~'~I':::::;~~~~~~~~~~:;~;;~;;:;;;;;~;~ ,_ ... ..,,. s 51>Ulh R1nt' 11 w,., ""''" In Tl'I ll•nc1'cl L•• lloh • CJ\tc• •nd 01•11• ln m• R•""""' t•• llol••• '" 1110Wn •n 1 MIO rocordM on l!loc-" PtPP n cl M!1<tll1flf'OU• Moo• recora1 ol O••n•t Ci>unt• C•I for1111 tvlno JOU•her1v ol "'" llOllo' Driln19• Ol••rlcl flavnd••Y lint 11 t!!Strlb!ll I~ ~ ln•ltull'tnl rKOtOM J 111, 11 n1• 1n flool! ll ••9• m "' M1oc1ller>eou• RttO<d• Dflnt• Cov1>- •• C1tlltrnl1 "ARCIL 4 Tht "'"' hill o! t~• ·~•! hlll of tho 1ournwo11 ~vr•t• ot l!I• Mrlht••I ou1rle of lht norrneo•I •u1ritr of S~<!lon l • Town1h!1> ~ South 1!1nat 11 W•1! 01rll• In th• R1"chO LI tlol•• ChltA •nd PA•U, In 1111 lltnchO Lt! 1!01101 a> >llOwn a~ 1 MtP .. cord"ll In Bock !l ••tt 13 al Mlst•I 1neou1 M•PI •Kord1 111 Or•~a• Coun!• C•lllornl• l",t,RCIL J Th• '°"'~"• 1d !•t1 111 '""' well hill of rnt nortnwe•I out rlrr of In~ Mr1hWH1 ou~rtt• n! I~ ...,,1hw•tl •u•tltr of SK11Gn l } 'l'OW!ltlll• ) Soul!I R•M• 11 Wt1I In lh• R•!ICho l•• !IOI"' M•• In ll011• 'l P~ll' 1l Mhtt ll•MOllt MtO• •t<:Ot!h. 01 Or•""~ Countv Ct lllornl1 "AJtteL I Tf\t w.,I 11111 ol I~• "°''h-$1 •u••tor of the ..,,rlllw••' tiutrltr of Ille no•"'wt ll •u•flt• o• StthOl'I U Town1Jl!D ' ~1>11111 Ill•""' ll w ... 1 1n ttw ll1ncll0 L•• !lol••• ., -en • MIP '""""'"'° In •oo\ Jl .... n ol Mhctll&n..,.., M•PI rtCQfCll of 0 rtn11t Cl>Un.., c1111.,....11 E•ceollllf In•••"""' •lit .out~r1v 1•' Itel ""RCll J '"" ""''~ ent-lh1"9 DI t ht """' th1ee fout1111 of 11't nor111 htll (If '""' sowtllw"'t •u•rt~• 11'1 $K!lcn ''-Tow,,.M• ! """''" Re119t 11 Wtll "'''"' In lh• ._.,>Cl>O L•• 8ofP J fncl ••ff!Y In R1"'h0 LI folJo Cl'llct •• ......... on • MtP •t<:l>f!IN In 9~ jl ""' 1l ct M!Ktllfn..,.,1 M••" •Kord• o! Or&Mf Counh Ctlllt•n 1 'tOU ANO E ACM OF YOU t •t htrnbv ftoflllfd IO ll>Ot•• .na 11>Qw t.OuH " t ftY YOU h•Yt ....... .,. "'' orOOeft.. llttcrlbeO 1rwtultl nvt bt c-tmntd •• ,,...,.I'd for In '"' Comol1!11! within '"" OGl dtYI •II~• lht \~tvlc• Ol'I 'l'OOI ol thl\ Sllmmor>I II MrV"d w t11ln ""' ("ounh of Or•nlt .,r w!tllln lnlf!y 01!1 Ot'fl. II '''Y•d tl1ewhAMI t lld YOU ... "'11111.0 lh•I unit)! you t(l •PHI• ..... 1n1w'1 •• •!IOYf f..:t~l•f'd Int 1111n11n wit! u •, IUC!lmtn! ~ '""' Cownp!llnl •1 111111" ~ (Gnl1•{1 .,,. """' •••llf to ll•t cowtt tor •~V -r ,,11., o..,.,.,..,..., 1n '"' c ..... 111\nt YOU M,.,Y SEEK THE ADVICE 0~ AN .... TTO!itNEY ON #.NY MATTfll CONNECTED WITH THE COMPLAINT Oil THIS SUMMONS 5UC1i .... TTOllNEY SHOULD llE CONSUL TEO WITM!N TM!: TIME LI/All IT,t,TED IN TM!\ 51/AA- fllONS FOR FILING " WlllTTEN f'LE .... Ot NG Ttl lM( COM•UtNT Glwn llfldtl' "'y MM I nd ierl .. '"" S..tll'flor (our! ... "" ~,.,. "' c 111to<n1• '" and to< '~ c°""'~ • °'•"" 11111 "" dtP of Jwlv 1,.. fOFFl(l&.L $Ult W E ST )OMN CwntY Cit"' 111111 C'•"-of ,,,.. ~ Courl of •ht $1•1t .. c..1"9ml1 ... tnd fer mt ~ of 0rlMC I V 1!11"11 E S.lerll !KllN " IOkl,A Cit.. AtNl'M'I' t.OU ,t,NN MA#tSHAt..L l nltl1lllCllT ... ......... CllY ol HWl!llfl .... t4ffll 1"111.offift ... "' Mw11tl11t .... lltCfl t.etff9t"n11 '1'111 1 OU\ 1-»-'JSl, 111 UJ ,._., .. ......,, 1W il'Ml#tltf fl""'l!i"9(1 Ot•"'' (OHi f!l•ll'I' l"llet I ••01 II 11 .... Aflrll I • "'' •• , n '/ * * HALLI DAY'S ANSWll THI l!AT Of A DIFFlRENT DllUMMEl il1\.LLlDA Y s oftrr~ ~ 11tr::ui;:ht lip Blucher \\IUl b1n:.s C)C!rls 1n" urT• ~alilr colo11ng or 1\ h1skl'y ( 1)1'fluv1111 Fully lt"alhl'r llned J.40. 11th l IJIVINE AV( NEWPORT l~C H WESTCLIFf PLAlA OVER THE COUNTER J; •r....c " J \ -. • SC Tliursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List " " "~ " ... " '" U \.t .. ~ fr' ,.. • " ' • " " ~1\~ "" "' ••• na " " • ~·· 1•~· " ... "· ., "' w . .., ••• )l'• ~· " '• "' IJ''l "' 11 1~ " " ~ "' , .. " ... ... " 59•, ... " 1J' .. " ' " " ,. .,. "" ' ••• "" " in•, 10'} '" 45•, i•nl ' "" ~~···~ti~ =~1 Hil' ~··!~ ~·). 18•1 <It W I l ... ,,,. tr • J ~ = .. 1~1.!:' ~ 1 -·1o i11 ~ -i u e = .. ~. '· ·1 ,1 \lmr.m . ,,.~ ,~ 10~~ ~ ~ ' J9 ~II 11 ~ -~~11· ti -I'" I I + .,, ~::: 0 f -·~ 111,....vl/' 1 1 +,,. :r~~.~o -American Stock Exchange List ,,,.. Jht (Mi I Ml1h Law CIOM Cht Sfl.. NII (IMIJ.J Mith 1..ew Cl4M Cllt DAILY mor ll • ~ .. . .. ... . . . .. 10 DAILY PILOT Thlll'Sday, Marth 19, 1971 BIG PRIZE -This is the Congfessional Cup, the prize 10 top sailing skippers are seeking as they begin competition in the 7th annual renewal of the Long Beach Yacht Club classic. Competition will continue through Saturday. Congressional Cup 7th Renewal Starts By ALMON LOCKABEY •Mllllll lidllor The 7th annual Congressional Cup match race yacht 1eries got under way today at Long Beach with three sets -0£ five matches. Tensi-0ns m -0 u n t e d Wed- nesday as 10 top sailing crews from throughout the country saw to last minute details of the Cal-40 sloops assigned by lot earlier in the week. But a' scheduled tuneup race ...-Vednesday was s c r u b b e d when fog obliterated the course minutes before the scheduled start. And when the fog lifted there was no wind. All hands powered back to the yacht club to continue last minute tuning and to have their pictures taken. The first race of the first 11eries was scheduled at 10:30 a.m. today. Wesler forecast was for brisk winds out of the northeasl Here was the lineup for today's races: SERIES No. 1 -(I) Henry Schofield, Alamitos Bay YC, versus Bobby Bunis, Califor- nia YC; (2) Bob Mosbacher, Houston YC versus Tom O'Neal, Lan::hmont YC : (3) Tom Pickard, Long Beach YC versus John Odenbach. Great Lakes Sailing Assn : (4) Hal ~fcCormack, San Francisco VC versus John Jenning (NAYRUl St. Petersburg, Fla. YC versus Greg Booth, Ha- waii Sailing Assn. SERIES No. % -O'Neal versus Pickard : (2) ?t1osbacher versus ~fcCormack : (3) Odenbach versus Booth; (4) Burns versus Morgan; (5) Sch<lfield versus Jennings. SERIES No. 3 -(1) Oden· bach versus McCormack; (2) O'Neal versus Booth ; (3) Schofield versus Morgan; (4) Burns versus Jennings; (5) Mosbacber versus Pickard. The schedule for Friday ls as follows: SERIES No. 4 -(1) O'Neal versus Morgan; (2) Odenbach versus Jennings; (3 ) Pickard versus Booth ; (4) Schofield versus Mosbacher; (5) Burns versus McCormack. SERIES No. 5 -(I) Pickard versus Jennings; (2 ) O'Neal versus Odenbach; (3) McCormack versus Morgan: ( 4) Bums versus Mosbacher; (5) Schofield versus Booth . SE~ No. 6 -(I) Mos- bacher versus Odenbach; (2) Jennings versus J\forgan: (3 ) Schofield versus O'Neal: (4) Burns versus Booth; (5) Pick- ard versus McCormack. Saturday's lineup: SERIES No. 7 -II) Mosbacher versus Booth; (2) Bums versus Odenbach; (3) Schofield versus McCormack; ( 4 J Pickard versus Morgan: (5) O'Neal versus Jennings. ~'ERIES No. 8 -(I) Schofield versus Odenbach: f2) Burns versus Pickard; (3 ) !11osbacher versus Morgan; (4) Jennings versus Booth; (5 ) O 'Neal versus 1i1cCo rmack. SERIES No. 9 -(!) ~1osbacher versus Jennings: 121 Schofield versus Pickard: 13) Bums versus O'Neal: (4) 1i1cCormack versus Booth; (SJ Odenbacb versus ~1organ. Sailing Wot•rior Newport's Al Cassel To Race to Montego Newport Beach skipper Al Cassels's Warrior is orie of 50 top ocean sailing yachts entered in the h1arch 19 Miami·Montego Bay Yacht Race. The sixth biennial classic Is an 800-mile race down the Bahamas a n d through the Windward ssage to Jamaica's north ast and this year takes on ed importance because ii & the final mandatory race for the first ocean racing world champk>nshlp. Leader ln the championship series -0f 19 internitional races ts Ted Turner's tZ·meter sloop, American Eagle. John Powell's 4 a.foot Oerecktor sloop, Salty Tiger, is running second in the series. For Stnnner A. (Huey) Long and b.i1 secood Ondlne, a 73-foot ketch, it will be another at· tempt to capture the race's tig Sliver Pineapple - Jamaka's Governor General's Cup -which goes lo the ow.rail winner. His f i r s t Ondine was Class A winner In 19'3. Young Mark Johnson facts 10 added challel18e aboard the n-root ketch, W I n d w a r d passage. with which hl1 late f&ther, Bob Johnson won Class A honors In tt69. Mr. Johnson 5enl« captured the Silver Plnt.!pplt In 1965 wllh lhe beauliful Ticonderoga. The 81l ·mile ocean race ls a beat, a reach and .11 run from Miami through the Bahamas and Crooked Island Passage followed by a big tum at the Windward Passage between Cuba and llaili for an exhilarating 251).300 mile spinnaker run into Montego Bay. This year's ~1iami·Montego comes at the end or the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit in Florida, one of the roughest series of sailing races in the world. The battle for the Silver Pineapple has been scheduled later than usual this year to allow competitors to participate in the Buenos Aires-Rio de Janeiro race. Air California Na1nes S_.\ Man The Air California Board of Directors has announced the appointment ·or Max P. Van Dordrecht, vice president and treasurer or Air Cal, to Its Board ol Directors. Prior to hill eleclion to the Board of Directors. V an Dordrecht had served lhe airllne as treasurer-controller, having joined the lntra-ii:t.ate airline In 1968 as controller. • l . ' I ' ~ r. l LI ii q '' \ I ' f 1 ( 1 I ' '1 " . J soft little body dressings ~ ·I ' • ,f i f· ' . body "1ir1s, stretchy or smooth ••• new from Van Raalte and Blue Swan Great body shirts! Pair them wilh skirls, pant s, shorty pants. Choose stretchy leotard tops, or slinky·smooth shirts. (Maybe you'll want , . . some of each!) They're all'<lf carefree nylon. 5-M-l. Find them at May Co now. a. Blue Swan, button front shiri, yellow, orange, red, navy 6.50 b. Blue S>t'an, zipper front ·Shirt, yeilow, orange, red, navy 6.50 c. Van Raalte, long sleeve shirt, black, nayy, camel, lemon 6.50 d. Van Raalte, short sleeve shirt, black, camel, navy, lemon 6.50 may co daytime lingerie 28- j • t ' \ i J may co south coast pla11, un dlego fwy. at bristol, c:osta mesa, 546-9321 lhop monday thru .. turd1y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p .m., •unday noon 'til S p.m. MAVCO , I /' ,. " • -- .. l •• • I I ' I • • A Day To Re111e111ber DAILY PILOTS.ff PIMo'9 A f'b1e Lfn• Linda Huber, Miss Mission Viejo, was a pretty treat dur· ing the parade along Margue- rite Parkway. She was appre- ciated by thousands. \ Beach Erosion Action Delayed Further action by the Board or Supervisors on the beach encroaahment problem in front of the Laguna Royale condominium apartments in Sout h Laguna has been delayed until April 27 ' Thur1day, Mil'th 18, 1971 S DAILY PtLO't !r M etnl Detector Request By County Judges Nixed Orange County supervisof'I have turned down a request by Superior Court judges to buy two metal scaMing devices to Laguna's Library Seeking Citizens' Help on 'Extras' Construction on the new Laguna Beach branch of the Orange County Library is scheduled to begin in May and the Friends of the Library are asking civic groups to consider helping equip t ~e facility with some "extras" that were deleted from the pla!lll for economy reasons. Friends president Joseph A. O'Sullivan has prepared a list of desirable library amenities to which groups are invit~ to contribule. They includt: Fountai n, $508 New book kiosk $600 Exterior benches $1,000 Amphitheater seating and enclosure 12.000 Special wood seating and shelving 13.000 Landscaping (trees, shrubbery, etc.) help spot persons trying to carry bombs or other weapons into courtrooms. The vote was 3-2, with Supervisor• David Baker of Garden Grove and William Phillips of Fullerton in the minority. The total price of the two scaMers wp'1~ted as $7,931.95. However. the j~~~-~s nierely proposed a transfer of exiSting funds to make the purchase. No new money was Involved . Supervisor Ronald Caspers or Newport Beach sald he knows two judges wbo carry firearms to work ... They wouldn't be able lo get Into their o w n courtrooms," he said during Tuesday's discussion. Supervisor Ralph Clark ()f Anaheim called the purchase unnecessary. "I am w!lling lo take my chances as a public office holder," he said. Supervisor Baker said it was the first step in the protection of a $14 million courthouse. "It would be money well spent." Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana joined Caspers and Clark in rejecting the proposed purchase. Making a Millionaire It \vas a time for the wearing 'o the green in 1t1is· sion Viejo during the second annual St. Patrick's Day Parade. Here youngsters from O'Neill School are right in the spirit of things as they tug their Shamrock float up a bit of a grade along the six mile route. Fiflh Di.'ltrict Supervisor Ron a I d Caspers aid the subject was now ''hopelessly snarled up between at· torneys." He said he hoped the county might be able to force the Laguna Royale owners to provide public restrooltlll on the beach. $3.000 Graphics $2,000 Exterior display c.l!e $1,000 Plaques, nameplates or other ap- propriate recognition will acknowledge rontribution.'I by groups or individuals, O'Sullivan u.id. TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -Edward Henry, a 40-year-old telephone company worker, is the first $1 million winner ln Lhe state's new lottery. His name was drawn Wednesday. Henry is married and the father of two, and hls wife, 20. expects to give birth to their third next month. Teachers' Chief Believes . Me1·it Pay Study Required Merit pay-it 5ounds good but will It v.·ork? Harry Bankston, president of the San Joaquin Elementary School District Teachers' Association isn't sure. The district has committed itself th formulating a non-automatic ~alary in· crease program to take effect at the end of lhi' 1971·72 school year. But Bankston believes it needs more litudy. "The first question a teacher ask.111 Is how is this going to affect the child.'' he sai<t. Bankston feels that when teachers are for~d to compete built-io problems for pupils emerge. "tl1ost teachers work very closely together. They borro\v record players and materials. They even share ideas. "But when forced to compete for that extra buck they become selfish with their ideas and supplies. Some could become downright petty. When com· petition creates jealousies a mo n g Film to Feature , Japa11 a11d Orient A film visit to "Japan and the Orient" \\"ill be featured at lhe Tuesday eveni"ng meeting of the Laguna Men"s Club. The travel program, which will include a floor exhibit of Japanese souvenirs and gifts. will be presented by \\'Orld lrave\er Warren Morgan, former Laguna Chamber of Commerce manager and City Councilman Charlton Boyd, who ()wns a local travel firm. Completing the entertainment \l'i \l be D;ivis Morgan, singer and Earl Brent, pianist and composer. The program begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Woman's Clubhouse, Gienneyre Street and St Ann's Drive. Ho spital Gets " ·Tentative OK • Tentath·e approval was given Tuesday t~ Saddleback Community Hospital in Laguna llills. The county planning commissioners said they would put their final stamp on the project after a ~1a.v 4 field trip to the site al Calle de la Louisa and Via Estrada . The proposed hospital will have 1a1 beds and will be a full service facility, It will be located ;idjacent to the Leisure ..r.World ~fedical Center. u u:1Completion date is set for the early rs.part of 1973. ·~ ... r • i:~an·y Di erker 'Rites on .,Friday Funeral services will be held at t 1 a.n1. Frida y in Waverly Church, Fa irhaven ~1cn1orial Park. Sant.a Ana, fnr fnr1ner Laguna Beach residen1 Harry F. Oierker, who died Tuesday at his home in Alhambra . He was 83. nr. Oallas R. Turner of the Commun ity Presbvter1an Church" in Laguna Beach \\'ill 0ff1c1ate at the services and en-- iombment in Fa irhaven Memorial Park. A formrr investment broker, Mr. Dierker is sur vi\·ed by his widow, Edith : 8 brother. Ben Dierker of Orange and i;everal nieces and nephews. ~1cm orial contributions may be made • to I.he Community Presbytcri~n Church. Shannon Funeral Service, 137 E. Maplt., Arange, directors. l teacht'rs it's very detrimental to the children," he said. Bankston said the attitudes or parents change as well. "How will the community react when parents find ihat their child isn't in the 'super' teacher's class? They will question why their child doesn't rate the very best, and rightly so. "When you start identifying people as better than others many problems arise. •·in business you deal with a product. Jl's different with human beings because the final product doesn't emerge until many years later. Bankston praised the board of trustees for their sincerity in attempting to iden· tify and reward outstanding teachers. But he feels that a more equatable way to do this would be to give them all a good pay raise every year and weed out those who don't rate as highly as the rest. "Teachers believe that if a person isn't doing a good job he has no place in the teaching profession," said Bankston. ..Treat him fairly but get rid of him i! he doesn't meel standards." Bankston said a merit pay system tends to condone mediocrity. Under the system proposed by the San Joaquin district, there are three salary levels and mo.'lt teachers will fall in the middle. "I think the program \\-'ill create hiring problems for the district, too," he said. 0·!\1ost teachers will steer clear of a district without automatic increases." Bankston said the thing that bothers him most is the idea that a merit pay system has to work somewhere. "Merit pay systems have come and gone for years and none have been retained. They look nice and they sound good. but when you put them into prac- tice, nobody has kept one." The biggest problem is the evaluation procedure. San Joaquin's has not yet been formulated. When it is, Bankston hopes it will contain a well-defined grievance policy in case problems arise out of personality conflicts. "Tht're is still a great deal of work lo be done on the program:' said Bankston. "J would like to see the time exlended so that alJ these policies will be: carefully spelled oul and perhaps jobs descriptions could even be v.-rillen.'' Although the plan won"t affecl anyone 's salary until they begin school in the fall of 1972. the program must be adopted by September of 1971 so that there will be a year's performance upon which to make evaluations. Bankston said another fear is a budgetary one. "\Vhat if one year 20 percent of the teachers fall into the 'super' category, yet the budget says only 10 percent can receive the highest increase ." The San Joaquin Teachers Association Is currenl\y preparing a questionnaire to be sent to all teachers about the merit pay program. "We also have many commitlees v.·ork· Ing,'' said Bankston . "We're willing t() spend time and money to work out a program. But if it fails let's admit ii and go back to the old system.'' Proxn1irc May Enter Race For Presidency \VAS~flNGTON (AP) -Sen. William Proxmire of Wlscof\tln uys he may make a serious run for the Democratic presidential nomination In 1972. "There has been some lAlk that I might run as a favorite son, and I v.·ant to say this : That under no circumstances. no clrcumsta.ncts, would I run as a favorite !IOn," he 38ld Jn 1 radio interview Wednesday. If he decid· f!d to enter the race, he said, "I wttld run C\"ery\\here ., COMMUNITY EVENTS The Forensic Team of O.C. Colleqe Needs Your Support Cefltac:t larbara l11rg.. ot Ota119• Co111t Coll.,-. Thi• 11otlo11olly ro11ked tNm 11MCl1 help 10 that they rf!Gf .tt.11d tlta ''Sptald119 To11r11alllfft" 11ert MOltlrl h1 St. Louis. Mbso1rt. • Thi "Atd hro11'1" ort ho•lnt • bcnlrl on Marth lith at the Ho1e<rnt Cl11b H111 ... Prot.-d1 art to bt •Md for o p11blketlo11 or the history of nla• tlori of Ore119a Co1111ry. Tlckefl 1ir1 oYollable of Caito Me1a CIH11111>tr af Comll'IHte. AITIST OP THI MONTH Mer'h 1 Stti ttiro119h April 14th Lculst M. F1,mk, Ioctl 1rtl1t Vtllo will ••l'llbll oil ptl<1!lrt0t, brusl! incl In-1nd contt C•IY· °" d11wlng1 1lor>g wl!l'I p.1 lntld dnlgn1 on WOOd pltcQun. Slit rKt l.-td ln11rvt1lor> In d r I w Ing, 111 medlt '"'°"""'"" Incl co~r !Mory ti Ntllon-tl Ari Academy In W11ll!110IM, 0.C,. 1pecl1I cl•Hn ti C1t11cllc Unl.-troll'f ln W11nln91or>, O.C .• tdull ..:llKtllcn cl111 11 Nwtllwn!tm HIQll Sctlocl, Coli.v• Ptrll, M1ryltnct ...... 0tlvtlt cl111 ln1cn1 In drtwlno w!lll Pltllrto L1n1rl. W11l!lng!cn. O.C. AttMdt<! m In Y (Ito ... In VlrlC ... I N mtdlt I I O•lr>!ll CDtJ/ Col!egt. 5111 l'ttl tllfl\bJted W\ttl t r1 t.hoWI ti I mll'll• bet ol v1rlcv1 ••1 club1, 1110 •I Or•~ CDUn!y Al•POr1 tnct A\rpClt1t r Inn, EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! Certificate Accounts* 5.92% Annual Yield If all savings and interest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit. 1·year minimum term. Daily compounding. Earn f tom data of deposit. 5.253:;,!"'1 . 53 current annual rate 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39% Annual Yield tr ell savings and interest remain 11 year. No minimum deposit. Cally compounding. Earn from date ol deposit. Passbook Accounts 5.13% Annual Yield lf all savings and Interest remain a year. No minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Interest day·ln to day-out. •withdrawals before maturity permltttd but aubJ1ct to 1ome lou ol lnteres1. Cal!f2!!!t~".!.~.~.~!!!.h1•§.~!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL 1·! l I COSTA MESA OFFICE: .,i 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams• 546-2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDOAF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER Convenient Offices throughout Lo•. Ang1le1, Orang• and Ventura Count!ea A~ntl 1r. fnwrad IJP to 120,000 11na11 PrO•••ION ol Ole Fadtrtl &Mnp A loin l111ur1110t Catpar11lo11, I Ptr1111111nl I OllfttY ol' lk l/ftn.d Ital" ~m111111t. n1lr CAUFORNIA FEDERAL SAVING~ ........ -... • ' • -l I ......... --~····~· .. \ , .f CAIL Y PILOT Tl'lursd.1y, M.vth 18, 1971 ' • ' I \ \ •' I ~ps Message Fro1n The Master By TH0~1AS A. rt1URPHINE Of lflt IHllf .. IW Sl•tl SOUTH COAST, WILD COAST: When city cooncils, zoning boards or planning commi~ions gather in session along our coastline, most of the business transacted is prelty dull and routine. Things like sideyard setbacks. fence variances and the like. \Ve!!. the city people down at Del Mar got one of those routine requesls the other day. Filed at city hall, it \vent. like this: "To the Honorable ~layor and City Council : '"I ~ho 3n1 kno\vn to you as Jesus Christ have made known my needs to the one who must act for me and for the Great White Brotherhood of the nighest Realms as he ·wa s appointed by The Flther as President of The \Vhtl~ Lodge situated since 1942 in Del Mar and governed by us from the Higher Realms and by lbe Hierarchy o( Heaven from the Jlighest Re alms of Being. ··ALTl-lOUGH 1, Master , ha~·e walked !he streets of Del rtlar, and served through minister and priest in your churches, I dkl not make my Return officially known until high noon of a Sunday SepL 20, 1970. Since that time J have called a fe\\" of those who know and love me together to prepare for my entrance into the life of Del Mar. To more easily accomplish this, the lovely old restaurant building at 134.2 Camino Del 11ar has been taken on lease and is now being prepared for my brief lime among you. "Brief. in person. but as always in 11pirit where I am welcomed. "'WITH THIS introdu ction lo my Return to. in love and under stand ing, serve all people as I.he Father wishes, J ask Eloise, know n to me as Light Bringer, to present my need to you. To prepare my -.·orld-wide service it is necessary that there be complete seclusion and this can only be had if the large est.ate in the name of The \Vbile Lodge, with entrance at 1511 ·Fore st Way, could have the alley.way 'vacated' so the lovely planned six.foot legal fence may be started. '"So J. to be known in this Era as 'Jesu ' ask this Jionorable Board to begin th e legal process to vacate the unused alley -unused ex cept by the Servers and friends of The White Lodge as an entrance v.·ay, ror it is closed at th e east end by a cliff arrangement. "'I await your word which will be conveyed to the one now acting as my secre tary. Eloise Mellor. But this is in my ov.•n handwriting as in reality I am the principal in this transaction." Signed, 1'1aster J"LL DET !hose municipal folks down In Del Mar will sure breathe a sigh of relief to get the next just plain old gas station variance request. . * POST IRISH: Bal.'k in Oklahoma City, Pal Gro\'es became a father for the 12th time on St. Patrick·s Day. The Gro\'e family hves on St. Patril.'k Dr ive. \\'onder if they ever considered mo\•ing? * Al\D Fl1'ALLY, flower lovers. you should be made aware that California naturalists are al 1 in a tiz.zy th is -.·eek. because they say the finest crop Feelings Strained Mrs. Meir Rips . U.S. Peace Plan ]J)' Unl~d PrtlS lnterpadq11l Tbe already strained relations between lrael and the United States worsened today with Uie firm rejection by Premier Golda Meir o( Washington's latest Middle East peace platform. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan also criticized the. proposals put forward by U.S. Secretary of Slate William P. Rogers aimed at breaking the deadlock. in the MiddJe East peace talks. Rog~rs had warned that failure to reach a settlement with the Arabs could set the stage for World War Ill. Egyptian political sources in Calro said ''Egypt cannot wait forever." They said that unless Israel agreed to withdraw from occupied Egyptian l e r r i t o r y ··another military conflict is inevitable.'' Israeli nel"spapers rallied to the defense of the Meir government. Typical was the editorial in the morning newspDper Ha 'Aretz which said: "Rogers is demanding the impossible o! Israel." The Arab world media , on the other hand, hailed Rogers' support for com· plele withdrawal of Israeli troops from all occupied Egyptian territory. The righl-\\'ing newspaper Nida Al Watan in Beirut said Rogers' statement wa:ii "an important change in U.S. policy." The French-language L 'Orient said the Arab \\'Or\d is now pinning its hOJ)(.S on Washington. Rogers said Tuesday Israel's security could besl be served by international guarantees rather th an territorial ac· quisiHon. But ~1rs. Meir said Wednesday night "we cannot trust what Rogers Nixon Proposes Transportation Fm1ds' Sl1aring \VASHINGTON (AP) -President !"ix· on proposed today that $2.566 billion be given to the states to help solve their transportaton problems. Twenty percent of the funds \\'OU]d go toward ' strengthening the mass transit systems in the nation's cities.. In a mess age to Congress on hi! special re\'enue sharing plan, Nixon pro- posed that $2.041 billion daring the first year be spent for the planning, con· s t ruction, acquisitio n, improvement, operation and maintenance of what he. called the broad spectrum o! transporla· tion systems and services, including highway, aviation and mass transit He said the remaining $525 million during the first full year would be used to provide what he described as fast relief for many of the nation's mass transit systems "which now suffer· from inadequate equipment , allowing them to undertake the essential work of modernization without further delay." Modern Styles Fine But No l iu Court T\EWKIRK. Okla. (AP) -A woman reporter -.·as barred from covering a murder trial \Vednesday because she \\"as v.·caring ll pantssuit. Beth Lilley of the Arkansas City, Kan.. Daily Travell'r said she -.·as shocked when told that she could not enter Dist. Court Judge Lester R. f\.1aris"s courtroom . .. offers us, even if he doea 11ay It with the best of intentions." Jn New York, Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban was metUng with U.N. Secretary General 'Thant and U.N. Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring to discuss pos.sible moves in light of Israel's re- jection of U.N. appeals to withdraw from occupied Arab territory. According to government sources in Tel Aviv, Eban was to suggest that the matter of Jsraell·Arab borders be dropped for the moment and the negolia· lions take up lesser questions such as the reopening of the Suez Canal. the Palestinian refugee situaUon and the con· trol of Arab guerrillas. In adcUUon, Eban was urging the talka be moved away from the limelight of New York to a quieter venue -possibly Cyprus or Geneva. Another point be was expected to pass on to the U.N. officials was that Israel will consider leasing Shann El Sheikh from Egypt as part of a territorial .settlement. More Troops To Be Sent Into Ireland BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Guarded by pol.ice again.st a crowd of thousands howling for his poliUcal scalp, l>remier James Chichester·Clark said lo- daX Britain ii sending in J,000 more troops to stop this British province's Roman Catholic·Protestanl .street fighting in Northern Ireland. The leader of the Protestant majorii)r government told fellow lawmakers the reinforcements would include a battalion of troops from British forces in West Germany. It would raise lo 9,700 the number of British troops sent to Northern Ireland. Outside the capital, a crowd estimated by police at up to 4.000 Ignored sleet and rain and howled, "Clark out ~. Clark out!, Clark out!, Clark out!" the crowd, Protestants from bow I er ~ hatted merchants in dark suits to dockers in cloth caps, had marched from the city center to demand a stronger ha nd against the Roman Catholic minority in th~ British province. 1 The crowd varied its ooise at times to boom, "Craig in!, Craig in!, Craig in!, William Craig lucb the right wing of lhe Protestant political factions. He demands tougher action -inclucUng the internment without trial of troublemakers. Clark was caught between London's demands he usher in equal rights reforms to aid the Catholic minority and the demands of rigbt·wing Protestants, like the crdwd out.side, to &et tougher with the Catholics. Man Rehearsing For Play Slain RlIXJECREST (AP) - A man was shot to death during a rehearsal for a college play Wednesday night. The Kern c.ounty sheriff's office said Wayne Carpenter, 37, was taking part in rehearsal for a Bakersfield College· Dese rt Division production of "OUver" when be was shot. " of v.·ildflowers in }'ears has now started to bloom just south of Badwaler and on the Jub ilee and Salsberry passes. The judge said, "\Ve have a rule in this courtroom that \\'omen w~ar dresse~ because \\'e don't feel other attire meets the standards of dignity of this courtroom, \Ve're sorry if this rule of· fends anyone, but we made that rule before pantssuits came in." Deputies said he died during a scene in t.he play when struck by a .38 caliber bullet fired by Wint Dillon, 111 Marine sergeant at the China Lake Naval Weapons Center. also .an actor in the play. Investigators said the gun was sup- posed to contain blanks. § Tho~e places are in Death Valley Na· tional f.l onument, flov.·er childi-en. Misery for Man, Beast ' Powerful Winds Join Forces With Heavy S1iow Cnllfnrnin I r llNITID .. II.ISi IHTf.RNAT IONAl :l<lut~e•n C•lll1>rftl• w•• m""ll' 11111- "Y tod•V Wl!ll 1omt IOw tlouO• 110119 the CO.II u>d 9UllY wind• I" th• moun11i11• '"" l'tt•edl. 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" n • lt tti JI H 'S '1 IS to It ,IJ .. " " " .. " • 'CAN'T TRUST U.S.' Mrs. Golda Meir ' BIG 22 INCH (U·174) V.S. Environment Panel ... - Rules Against DD.T Ban WASHINGTON (UPI) T ht Eqvlroamenlal Protection Agency ruled today against an JmmedJate ban on UM · of the pesticide DDT and the weed killer 2,4,~T. Instead, the agency promised to ex· pedlte review c;ir UM: environment.II hazards or the two products and . rule within 1 year on whether they should be banned. EPA Administrator William J>. Ruckelshaus acknowledged his ruling would permit, at least temporarily, more use of DDT than ~ would like. He said be hoped Congrus would pass 1 law empowering EP+ t4.. Prtvtnt ~ of hazardous insecUcidM b§' everyooe except farmers, foresteri and othen given special permits. Ruckelshaus said DDT is still valuable for malarial mosquito control and the ccitton crop. lts environmental hazards have not been prOytll so overwhelming u to counterbalance iU ·,values, he added. "We doa't 1-eliew lhert'.1 an imminent hazard to ·10ie PIJbl!c tbilt would jU!tlfy an lmmedi&itr-1su.speMion.'' Ruckelshaus told a nt"«J conlendce. He empt:iamed that DDT, Aldrin and Dieldrin art not ~ for home ga1"9enlng and theii• Ult bU ihar.J!IY declined in rtee.nl ylarJ bee~ ·of goveinment ratrlctions and cnvlrOntnenial concern. "The average bomcownt.I'. Deedn't get into a panic over this .decUiicfn because the!e pesticide! aren't generally for sale," he said. Today's announcement follo'l''ed a Jan. 7 federal court order directing EPA to decide quickly whether DDT should be banned. Ruckelshaus said public bear· ings would be held in Apr il on DIYI"I haz:ards and benefits. DUAL-BLADE ELECTRIC MOWER flip switch to start inst~ntly-no cords to pull! Dual blades in vmtex· pan with high-powered suct ion 1or sheer, seamless cutting. High.velocity single chu!e dis· charges away from operator and into grass catcher. Offset wheels give closer cut and greater maneuvera· bility. Fingertip cutting height adjustment. free rot· proof grass catcher with mower purchase. SAVE OVER $28 WHILE LIMITED SUPPLY LASTS! ~ SHOVEl/SPADE 888 60' GARDEN HOSE Automatically measures, mixes & sprays. Makes.up to 25 gal. of Weed-S..Gon-to kill weeds. H~uty blade of high<af· , Premium burst-strength nylon- bon steel with smooth finish. reinforced vinyl. ~ 1.0. Hard, 'l)linttr·tTee llandRt. • • 4 lbs. sec F~st·Grow Lawn Seed Quick grass cover! Crabgras.s free. Blends creeping fescue, domestic and perennial ryes. -'· , . rrIJITT;f iiJ ,.. RENT ELECTRIC RUG . SHAMPOOER Get prolessional results with this 31-lb. model. Mounted on casters for easy use. Bi' 12" floating brush adjusts to any length nap. lVz a:a1. tank. A DAY WITH PURCHASE Of BLUE~ LUSTRE CARPET SHAMPOO J99 rg..sw>~) 37c Flashlight w I Batteries 11·QUART PAIL 4·way switch: flash flock foff/ Generously sited lo han~le !he on. Heavy-duty triple-p!ated big jobs! Sturdy seamless p!as- steel case. 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Sunday lO A.M. • 4 P .M. • • II I I I ' •, I ' ' I I ' I ' I I I : • I QUEINIE · By Plin lnterlancll Church Withdraws Bob Hope's Award NEW YORK (API Preuure from a group of ac- tivist young clergymen baa forced the New York City Council of Churches to cancel plans to present it.! 1971 Fami· ly of Man Award to comedian Bob Hope. "There is nothing in Mr. Hope's record of public com- mitment to the three pressing isaues that confront the coun- cil -poYerty. racial justice and peace ," declared the Rev. Richard Neuh1w, leader of the group. "On the contrary," he told a tumultuous meeting of the council's general asstmbly, "Mr. Hope has uncritically SUJWOrted the m i J i t a r y establishment." "No dictation toda.y. I aw & movie lut night and I · h&-'t got all th&t blankety-blank dllJogue out of my mind yiet." The assembly directed in- stead that the a w a rd be pretenled Jmthumously to Whitney Young Jr., the ei· ecutlve director of the Na~ tional Urban League who died last Thuraday in L a g o s , Nlgerl1. Pay 876 or Else Hippies' Fake Bill Puts SF in ·Uproar Neuhaus. a Brooklyn Lutheran pastor and vocal o~ ponent of the Vietnam war. said hi& group also objected to what he turned Hope·s "un- contclonable mockinc of U»se in aoclety who are deeply committed lo social justice'' such as draft resisters an" hippies. SAN FRANCISCO t UPI) - The bill& looked real -Sam'• Colltttion agency wanted 1711.40 right away or "action will be taken." The 20,000 San Franciscans "'ho found them ln their mailboxes Wednesday wert und erstandably upset , so they called the •·for furthe r in· forma tion" phone numbers on the neatly printed dun11ing 11tatement!. And the awitchboards at a newspaper, bank and tWo televlaion st1tloru were swam- ped. Other callers kept police operators tied up for hours. ft was all an ei:pens.ive atld eJa}orate ho al apparently perpetuated by 1 th r e e • member "Hippie advertising firm'' in nearby Oakland. The three, who c a 11 e d themselves "Sam 's Cafe," Ask Priests Church Okay To Marry BALTIMORE (UPI ) -An • r & a n iz.ation representing 34.000 priest.I in the Uni ted Stales asked the Roman Catholic church Wednesday night to grant pr i e 11 t s permission to marry. The 209 delegates of the National Fede r ation of Catholic Priests C o u n c i 1 s . lara:est or1anization of priests in the United St.ates. recom - mended 1n end to mand1tory celibacy In a six p1ge "state- ment of renewal ." The document will be sent to the intemation1l synod of bishops for consideration when it meeili In Rome in Se~ tember. al.so mailed 1 press kit to local news outlets. describing the hou as 111 "art work" aimed at giving the world "a taste o! destruction'' through the mass med.la. The release 111id 20,(XXI bill.1 were sent to "middle income people Jn San Francisco." The phony forms were mailed Tuesday at a city pcist office. The bill11 were qeatly printed and authentic looking as were return payment envelope11. The ''balance owed " of S7ft .40 was handwritten in ink. ''If bill isn't promptly paid, action will be t.U:en,'' the 1tatement warned . The council's bOatd oI direc- tors had selected Hope for the award at a meeting in February and Hope agreed to accept ii a week ago. ac- cording to a council spokesm an. No public announcement of the choice was made but at Monday nlrhl's meeting the crrup of abou t 20 dissidents interrupted the agenda and in.!listed on a discussion of the. choice. "There was a long debate, and It finally was decided thtt even with all t h e em· Man, 74, Dl•owned Blue-blood Biddle Son Struck, Dies as Hobo CAMDEN, N.J, (UPI) -Winthrop L Biddle, bom aociety'a child, died a hobo Wednesday. Biddle, 74, a member of one ol Philadelphia 's most dis· tinguJshed families, wis hit by a car here while pushing a shopping cart full of his belonclngs on a main atreet. The elderly white-bearded man was a familiar sight in thi11 suburban Philadelphia area, riding his bicycle while at- tired in a red vest, striped shirt, wide lie and sports jacket. Police A.id Biddle was wearing three pairs or trousers and three pair of aoclu when hla body was 1potted by a taxi driver. ' His only ambition wa1 to complete a book ca.lied "The Biddies of Philadelphia" which he uld would expose hls: family and t,11 bow he lost his inheritance. A friend with whom Biddle frequently stayed lald ht never fi nished the book and secreted the manuacript away ''somewhere on tht Eut Coast." "He was a glorified hobo. lf he wanted to go to Key Weit or St. Thom11, ht just went," said the friend, Charles E. Quick.sill of nearby Lindenwold. Biddle lived on Social Security payments and his pen- sion as a former Navy commander. He sometimes 11lept on park benches. He liked lo strike up conver11tlon1 with people he met in diners or on the street, sometimes quoting poetry to them. "When he got his check. he would treat us all and buy nice things," Qulckalll said. "When he ran out of money. he would hock them." WEDDING CUP A thousand yHrs 1go, tho bride end groom always 111led their m1rri1ge by drinking the bridal toast from a common cup. We enthusi11tk:ally endorse the restoration of this touching and beautiful custom. For the oceaaton, we hive imported this memorable cup. ExcJusivtly our• in fine silverpl1te. $16.00. 5.99 reg. 11.00 barrassm~nl it mlght cause, the choice abould be withdrawn," 1aid the council's executive director, the Rev. Dr . Dan Potter. Navy Drugs 'Soar Out Of Control' WASIDN GTON !UPI) - Nayy Secretary John H . Cbafee says dn.11 abuse ui the Navy and Martnes 11 out of control, and racial tension is growing .. at an 1!1rming rate." "l would be JeSJ than candid were I to imply that we hevt .the (drug) problem fully under control." Charee 11ld Wed- nesday in testimony before the Sena~ Appropriations COm· mittee . He said efforts were being redoubled to 1ssure equal op- portunities for blacks, notlna: that the number of Nt&ro of- ficers has risen from 10 in 1949 lo over 500 in 1910. But Chafee said "in 1969. only eighl incidents with racial overtones were brought to my attention. La.1t year, the number of incidents brought to my attention lncreastd ten- fold ." He said at le1st 11 ,700 men were directly implic1ted with narcotics In the Navy and Marines In 1970. The Navy discharged S.000 men ind the Marines released I , 7 O O . Another 3.000 s1ilors were warned and 2.000 were punish· ed either by military or civilian authoritlta. U.S. Water Pollution Peril Cited ' ' WASIDNGTON !AP ) -The T r a1111portation Department aays the nation could be hit. any day now with a major water-pollutlon dis1ater, for ex1mple the shutdown of a big city's water supply. The department called for new federal 1ulborlty 1.0 restrict dischargea of hazardous iubstances In Io waterways; to co I I e c 1 unlimited co1t1 of cle1nln1 up dangerous spills; and to aee that spill liability Insurance Ui available. perhapa 11 a government program . President Nixon sent the department'a report to Conareu u required by J1w Tuesday, but without hi11 Im- m e d i a t e endorsement. Ad- ditional atudy, h!: said, might require chanaes in the recom- mendatWns. "Such modifications ," he added, "would be inC(lrporaUd in any legislation which Is developed to implement the recommend1tions nf th e rtport.'' liriee lndudm -..W. of oouPt'• fftt "'""' Ind wedclrlg dlt•. Top name boucle knit Clllf'll Mtl1llltl l!rtftM. ..--.. .. ,,..... ....... mwttt,.. ..,, Mffltr tMf'll. ,.., SLAVICK'S Jewele" Since 1917 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEA~H -644° I llO In D•cron® polyester ••• what elsel The ideal shirt for airy summer com- fort. Just toss in automatic to wash and dry. Mock turtle neck, 1hort sleeves; in solids, fancies .and trims . \\t11'1 ~porltwtar, 111 11int 1lorn Thursday, Ma~h 18. 1971 .. 1 , .... .. . ,. I ' r r I Open Men. and Fri., 10 e.m. fo t :)O p.m. ; ..... -. --•''"'-. l ! Newport .#.1 Fashion l•land Newport Center • ,;. 6+4-2200 • Mon ., Thurs., Fri. I 0:00 lill 9:3(); Other days I 0:00 till 5:30 ' I OAIL V PILOT J •·' '· •,' " •· DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Giving Lip Service? FAucators have attributed many o( the problems in an increasingly complex society in general and tn their institutions in particular to inadequate commun· !cations. And they are righL The comqiisslon approved at a meeting In Sacra· mento March l a 90-day extension of permit.a beld by Texaco Inc. and Union Oil Co. to con duct seismic .sur- veys in lhe tidelands, including lhe stretch Crom the Santa Ana River north to San Luis Obispo. These per· mits authorize the use of underwater explQ.!lves. Almost every top-flight educator has delivered him· sell of speeches or articles bemoaning the fact that our 11bilily to produce technological progress has too far outstripped our progress in communicating ideas and lnlormation about serious human problems. They have repeatedly -and correctly -expres- sed concern for better performance by the mass com- munications media, through better techniques for in· forming and educating people through newspapers, magazines, radio and television. The commission did not revoke these seismic per- miµ after the Santa Barbara oil spill, as It did with permits that allow test drilling, and is now picturing these extensions a.s normal procedure. And, indeed, if no drilling is authorized then there may be litUe cause for concern since 1 Department of Fish and Game representative is required to be on board when the seismic surveys are made. It is difficult, therefore, to reconcile a move by UCLA Chancellor Charles E. Young with this position. He has appointed a special committee to consider cur· tailing or eliminating the journalism departmen4 among others, in connection with proposed budget cuts. But the fear is that these seismic surve)'i may simp- ly be the first move in a predictable progression. U these tests are positive, then test drilling would be the next step and production the next. Right now, the situation is somewhat confusing. It would appear that Chancellor Young's priorities are out of order if he and bis fellow educators have not simply been giving lip service to better publiC under· standing through more skillful pUI"Yeyance of ideas and information. But it is expected that the picture will clear before April 30 when the permits expire. The commission will meet before then and no doubt some findings or a new request for an extension will be made. One of the reasons for the confusion is tbat citie1 are not informed of commission meetings. State legis· lators and county officials are. In view of this, the Hun· tington Beach City Council has wisely de<:ided to urge the commission to hold a public hearing in any city that would be affected by any drilling permit. New Concern About Oil Many Orange Coast residents are growing anxious about the possibility that the California Lands Com· mission may allow test drilling for offshore oil pools. There appears to be some cause for apprehension. It would be sound public relations for the com- mission to do this, and also to keep c::oasW cities fully informed of agenda items affecting them. Getting Into lndef ensible Position Israel Can't Say No to All WASHING TON -American Jews, with their underttandsbi< symp•thy . with th< 5late of Israel, ought to knOw that Premier Golda Meir's government is getUng itself into an indefensible poaition with its fr iends in the matter of a settlement in the Middle East. ln an over-simpU... fied fonn the Meir government cont~ ues to say no, no, no, no lo every phase of the settle- ment which both Russia and the United States, as well as Egypt, are willing to Under· write. The problem is made all the more difficult because in sa)'iDg no . to everything, Israel will not say , what r;he will agree to, although repeatedly importuned to do eo by Secretary of State Rogers. President Sadot or Egypt has unt a message to Rogers: "I say yes. yes, yes. . . and now what am l 5Upposed to do? Egypt has, in effect said yea to the basic proposals of Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring, the United Nations in- termediary. Russia bas said yes, the United States has said yes. Israel, so far as she haJ answered at all, says 00. THE JARRING PROPOSAi.'!. sup- ported by Russia and the United States, guarantee Jsrael'1 integrity and in- (' \ ) "} . I . I r .... · Riehard Wilaon . I ,,. . ' .. ...___ ....... ___. a!_/ plished .as faJ"-u the United States can make her go; and it would be nothing short of a miracle if a peace- keeping force. placed American and Russian forces side by side in un- derwriting demilitariz.ed zones. dependence:. They envtston a United Na· Moreover, an agreement Dow to go lions peace-keeping force wtth both alone with Secretary of State Rogers American and Russian troops, the crea-does not mean that the l.sraeli go,•em- tion of demilit.arir.ed zones on the Israel· mmt has committed jtseH blindl y to Arab border, freedom of navigation in final commitments on Sharm Et Sheik the Suez area. and the , demilitari.z.ed zones. It means, The rub, of Olurse, is that they also oo the contrary, that such questioru: provide for the w1U¥D"awaJ,!of ~X.-ael's would be made neg~tiable. lf Jgael forces from Uie captured areas ' tit the does not like a force-composed aolely Sinai desert, fruits of UlO 19117 victory, of U.N. troops in Sbarm El Shetk, why intluding the .Sharm EJ Sheik 'Bf~' ~~·t she propose that Israeli troops Shann El Sheik guards Israel's Odtlet abo be there? through the ~trait of Tiran to East The way is open, in fad., for all Africa .and Asia. The Jarring propodla kinds of compromises once the Meir provide for "practical :security ar· gove!mment has done as much as Sadat rangemenls" to guarantee freedom ol and agreed to the general thrust of navigation -~u~ the Str~l of. Tiran. the Jarring proposals. Egypt comnuts itself to 1nsur1ng the What is needed most in the Mideast freedom of navigation and the stationing is more time, and the way to get of a United Nations peace-keepi.ng force more time is not to say no with stubborn in Sharm El Sheik. repetition, but to show some desire to Now, undoubtedly the.re are loopholes move toward a settlement that will leave in all this and understandably the Meir lsrael safe and secure. govemment is worried about Sharm El Sheik and its sea access to the world. Giving up the Sinai, however secure it might be made for lsraet Is hard. Many questiona are left unr esolved. BUT, JN THE LONG RUN, how is Israel to become safe under the umbrella of the superpowers, if she does not show some flexibility? Egypt baJ been FROM A DETACHED point of view, and with no stake in the ancient hatred and fear in the Mideut, it would appear that Egypt has come a Jong way since President Nassar's day. It is not hard U> conclude that the Russians, for all their threatening attitude and military support have played • large part in this. Danger to School System The educational revolution that started -·hen the Russians orbited their first Sputnik on Oct. 4, 1957, appears to have run its course. Americans no longer seem vdlling to assume the financial burden of ever·increasing educational cost.s -and public school systems are being forced to cut back on sen•ices. The most visible sign of the problem has surfaced in New York. City. Faced with a $40 million deficit, :he Board of Education decreed that 6.500 school employes, mainly teachers:, were to be la.id off effective March 15. An immediate halt was also ordered in the hiring of 10,000 U> 11,000 substitute teacheri.. The action was taken immediately after officials declared they could not provide additional funds for the I.I million pupil syate.m. Tht National Education Association told Ed.itorial Research Reports that arlous flnanclal problems are al.51> threaten l n.g school systems in Pennsylvania. Ohio, Missouri and Wnhlngton Statt. among olhers. Jn callfomil, aome districts are not filling ---W- Thursday, Marcli 18. 1971 Tu «lilorial pope of the Daily Pilot 1ttkl to inform and •ti""' vloU uad.er1 bu prt1nting thU nc101pape:r'1 opinion.I and rom- mtnkJ'll an topics of lntert.tt cm4 1fgnt/icancc, bl/ providing a forum for tht e:rprtssion of our rtadtT1' opinton.t, and by prcstntinQ tht divtrst vltur pofntl of lnformtd ob1truer1 and 1poktnntn on topics of tht <1ov. R<!bert N. Weed, Publisher I Editorial R'esearch • ' ., teachers' positioru1 that art vacated because of retirement. THE GROWING F AJLURE of school tax and bond referendums to gain ap- proval is evidenct that "for the first time ln history it appears that the pro- found faith of the Amtrican people In their educational in.sUtuliona has been shaken." So states Roger A. Freeman, a former Special Assistant to the President. Ten statewide referendums for school spending were turned dov.·n by the voters In the November elections. The aame thing ha!' been happeninc on the local level. Explanations Include opposition to new fipending and tai:es during a recession, disillualorunent with st.udtnt disordtrt and anger over busing and integration, as in Arkansas. Florida and Alabam1, where badly needed funds were voted down by margins or u much •s 4·1. Washington State has cut per·P1.1pil aid by $6 because of increased real estate ta1 revenue. Illinois voters rejected more than half the tax hlkes proposed by local school diltrlcls. A major probltm in many dl!trltts ii; that school costs are rl!ilng fasttr than the value ef the proptrty on whlch ta1es are based. Jn some maiof c1Ues and rural mas, property valntJ 11re actually declining. A St. Louis IC'hool official pointf<I out that during tht last !fl years properly values remained lil<ible whtle the cost of educating each pupil ro.~ from $381 a year ltl $674. • 1'B COS1' OF OJ)erRUng school 1ysttm1 i~ 5011rin1 evtn t h o u g h enrollment.$ are increuin& o n l y modestly. The NEA reported only •n eight-tenths of one percent enrollment increase in elementary and. high schools: last faJI. Yet the cost of t:ducating each child increased by 8.5 percent, pushing average public school expenditures per pupil to an estimated $839 this 1ehool year as compared to $'1'13 In 1969-70. lncr'tasing cost! and cutbacks in finan- cing have had their effects orleducatlonal servjces. A report by the Missouri State Teachers Association purports to show the effect of the state's failure to In· crease state educational funds by $35 million. It stated that cla31 •iul bAve bt#n increased in 37 perunt of the 368 districts surveyed. Business course• and foreign language cluses have been curtailed and eliminated. So have pro- grams for handicapped children. Perhaps voter!! feel they've alre1dy gone the extra mile on behalf af bet:er public education. ln 1957, the year Sput· nik was launched. all leve\3 or govem· ment spent $1 3.6 bi!Uon for public elementary and secondary ac:hools. This 5Chool ytar the figure will reach a staggering $41., bWlon. without the challenge af a 19'1 equivalent of Sput.ruk, the taxpayers art demanding a pa~ Dear Gloomy Gus: Judging frnm arresta: and other data. there'a so much pot around it may have becorTie a ITltljor pol· Jutant. · E.S. 'f'lllt lulurt !'Tfltdl """°'' ....... _, ~.UU•tllY INN .. IN -•Hr. ltllC .._. ...t _.._ " • .._,,. • .,.. D•I" f'llA I TV Comics Tire of These Remarks Remark.I that • television comic 1ets tired of hearing: "Our aponsor'1 wife just nicked him for a million-buck court settlement. So let'a don't have any divorct jokes toni&bt, Slappy." "Row can he help losing weight? Tbe only . time Slappy evtr get.s a square meal iJ when someooe hits him in the face with a CUJta.rd pie." ''He's called stand-up comedian -you know, lhe kind that makes an a'udience want to lie down!' "It's a call from the Ed Sullivan af· nc., Slappy. They say one of the train- ed :seals on thJ1 week'• show is sick, if you can balance a rubber ha.l.l on your nose." 0 0UR SPONSOR mabs macaroni and spagbetti sauce, Slappy. So 1et·1 - just forget all those funny Italian jokes, okay?" "When Milton Berle finds a joke too old to UM! hlnuelf, he mails it free to Slappy." "You re.Uy want lo know what Bob Hope'• got lha.t you don't. Slappy? Well, I'll tell you two thinga that Bob Hope's got that you don't hav~ne is a hunnert million bucks, and the other ii steady work. ''The network censor says your script doesn't have any obscenity in it, but on the other hand, it doesn't have any humor in it either, u far as be can find." "I don't know whethu it's fair to blame Slappy for killing vaudeville, but you can probably give him credit for driving the lut nail in the coffin and buryina: it." "OUR SPONSOR b I top officer in the Friendly Sona of Sl Patrid: Society, Slappy. So .skip all those Pat and Mike · jokes." "We'd have had a real hit seriu, maybe, except that during the pilot show the automatic laugh machine broke dawn and started crying right in the middle of Slappy'• furmiest 1tene." "Maybe your trouble is that you're trying to be too original, Slappy. Aftu all , no comedian in history ever got rich telling father-in-law jokes." "None of the really big charity organtz.BUons want you, Slappy. but we've had two calls this mooth asking if you'll give a free show ftlr aome group that talls itseU The C'Micerned Committee to WiPt Out Diuaaed Ton- sils." "OUR SPONSOR is a dru& firm, Slap. py. Sa let'• not be too merry about doctors tonight, okay?" "It's your mother on the phone. Sht a1ys that the only jokei you tell lha.t get any rtal laughs arc thoM that poke fun at her, to she wants to know how about cutting her in Oil a piece of the: action." "You'll hive to fuid yourself another agent, Slappy. l've done the best I can with you, but 10 percent of nothin&: still adds up to nothing." "I hate to be UM Wt writer on your stan to quit, Slappy, but All the othen be~t me U> It." "Sponsor? We don't havt any IJ>Ons<n", Slappy. So tell any kind of joke you w1nt to. You're fret to be as fuMy u you un.." ' Threat: Zealot Who Lies to s ·elf The man who is most able to delude himself ls the man most able to persuade others. It is not the charlatan who sue· ceeds in winning power so much as the fanatic. This is why the most dan- gerous inen have always bttn those who believed their own lies, like Hit- ler. Human being~ have a deep.rDOted need for certainty: we are so tom and confused and fragmenled in our hopes, fears, beliefs a.nd opinions, that someone who ia cupreolely convinced that he bears the tfuth can make us follow hinl without qualma or reservJ\tions. This is the great psychological appeal of any ex- tremism. IN ms BOOK OF essays, "Physics and ~yond," "'erncr Heisenberg, the g:teat physicist, lel!s of playing poker orle night al a chalet in the Austrian Tyrol. Qne of the other players was Niels Bohr, an equally eminent physicist. All the contestants were shouting and bluffing oulrageoualy, because they ~re using "pla y money" and bet in lhe thou!llldS. Before the game, Bohr had suggested that persuasion of others "depends upon the intensity with which we can persuade ourselves of the force of our own im· agination." Soon a hand came up th~t gave confirmation of this theory. BOHR WAS INSISTING loudl y lhat he held four-0f·a ·kind. He kept raising, and by the time three cards had been turned up, the others threw in thei r hal'Jds. He won a large sum of play money. \Vhen the hand was over, and he proudly showed his closld card, it turned out that he had been mistaken a:-d had only three of a kind, having misseen a nine for a ten. 6ut because he himself was so con· \•inced that he held four tens, his force of imagination persuaded the others that he was not bluffing: no conscious bluff cou'd have been so effective, for It v.·ould not have come from the deeper wellsprings of the personality. HYPOCRfTES AND frauds in public !He do a lot of mischief, but not half as r.1uch as the people who convince lhemselv~ they hold four tens when th ey hold only three. All successfu l delusion begins w it h self-delusion, b::c:?use the sincerity and passion are genuine and manifest. It is not the s1rooih-lalking and slippery politician v.•ho represents a threat to the com· mcnweelth, but the zealot who lies to nobody bul him"4?l f. This psychological truth was un· derstood by lt1encius as long ago as th'! 4th Century B.C., when he wrote : "Ne\'er has there been one possessed or complete sincerity who did not move others: never has there been one who had not sincerity who was able to move others." Sincerity is a virtue only when nne i~ right; a terrible trap when one is y,·rong. 'Sheltered· Nature Nuts' To the Editor : J hale to mention it to the nature nut.a who are on the back! of farmers ,,.. trylog to kill 111' bug. that destroy their crops, but the county hlres quite a crew with equipment to abate pests. especially in tho!e drainage ditches such as ilior;e draining into the Upper Bay. If they had been raised near Fush Creek and Dixon pond in the west end of Llttle Rock, these nature nuts could appreciate their efforts. Why do you auppo&e that Orange County is not full of mosquitos and blow Oies? I can tell you that it is not by accident or by letting nature take its course. WHEN A KIO JS surrounded by mos· quitos, ticks 11nd chiggers, they ceuse hJm to itch. When he scratches, It causes running .110res and these cause kernels l.o form in hi• lymph glands. This can cause a pe.rson to really appreciate nature in the raw. God puts ma'n in a jungle and a 'ffildemeas, but he endows him with tht intelligence to make it an Eden. A lot of bad thing!J could be said about tht mosquito abatement crt\\'S by a bunch ol sheltered nature .nut~ who have: never betn exposed to nature In the raw, but I am thainkful for the comfort Md peact of mind that lhty afford by polslonlng 11-gnant "·atrr 1n the dltdla that y,·oold brttd mosquitos. I nl'I also understand the farrru:-r trying to kill the bugs that W<lUld destroy his <ropl. JIM DOLDtNG 1Uedl0 (;al Silence To the Editor: J h"''e just recently ltamtd thAt 1 Jl'T n who is not a clllien of the I Mailbox United States, is entitled lo \\'t'lfare and 1-lediCal by the state. Wh y? My mother (and we are citizens ) ha11 been waiting since October for Medi.Cal assistance for just this one operation and she has not heard a thing. I believ e an article in your paper would help inform pe<>ple lo where their tax money is going. It \'.'Ould cerlainly be appreciated by us citb'.ens. MRS. PHfLLtP E. WOODS 1---B11 George --~ Dear George: \\'h)' doesn'I my husband ever lake me along when he goe~ on a convention? Could they possibly be a.1 dull and boring a~ he says they are? SL:SPICIOL'S \\'JFE Dear Suspicious \\'Ire· Conventions "re terr1ble-work- peclrf!d and with one technical spetch after another. You would be bored to tears. Take your husband's ad vtct and stay home -he must bf a swell husbAnd tn keep you from having to p!ll up "'ilh tho~ llwful ronvenlions (So much for today's 11now Job. (!'h, fella s?) 1 ' ; r y d it n g • t ff it r ·c If e n I e e 0 ' e 0 • n e I j " ' f • ' ir y Tl!11rsday, Marci! 18, 1971 DAlLV PILOT 7 ., 747 Hig· Economic Headach,e The airlines in searching for an ariswer have turned in· creasingly to gimmicks, such as !":pping out seats in the rear compartment and replac· ing then1 with a standup bar for coach passengers. Classes Set l 1i Dancing 1·ou don 't need a green thumb to make wallOowers blossc.un, just a pair of feel v.·hether or not they seem to be left feet. PerSQ~~ Income Makes Tiny Advance; Bad New~ io· Nixon WASHINGTON (UPI) - The personal income of all An1ericans increased in February al a rate only about half as fast as the monthly average in sagging 1970, the Commerce De part men t reported Wednesday. It was another dose of bad news for Nixon Adm in i stra t ion economic strategists. The report showed that personal income -wages. salaries. individual business profits, rents. dividends, in- terest, welfart benefits and all other payments to in- dividuals -was at seasonally adjusted annual rate of $828.9 billion last month. The February figure was up $2.2 billion over January. During 1970, generally con- sidered . the worst year in a deeade for the 11,S. economy, Ult monthly average Aaio was abQul U billion. . cent in February, resuming a down\\'ard trend which held for most of the late 1969 and 1970 recessi~. · · • In a related reporl, the Con1merce Department said \Vednesday lhat home con- struction -counted" upon by the administration t& •give. • lift to the overall economy -increased only (ractiona~y in February alter a dip In January. Private housmg starts were at a seasonally adjusted an· nual rate of 1. 7 million uoils la~t mon~. only l .CMXI hlgher Lhln Janu~ and we.ll below the: 2 miU.,ion figure recorded "in Decem.ber. • The February figure was still well ·ahe111d ol the 1.3 mllilon rate· for the month a y~::r ago. The slow gain in personal income in Yebruary followed a sharp $9.2 billion advance recorded in January. San Jose ' Student Prober Sues Firrri ~1ARTINEZ (UP IJ -A San Jose State CQllege stude11t has filed suit against. the Fibreboard Corp.,· contending he was illegally seized and he \vas seized by company e[Jlployed. He sa1d in a scuffle with the empioyes, One or his bot- tles was broken and at that suffered injuries while in-time the Jiqu.ld got on his vestigating alleged pollution . hands and he had lo be treated The student. William G. Lindsay, 25, asked ,550,000 al Kaiser Hospital. .' • - Men in Service NllV)'man 0.-.1 M. Durlog, son of Mr. and Mrs. Merle C. Dearing of 21C Pacific Coast Highway, HunUngton Beach, was graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Center, San D~go. He attended Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa. ApprenUce Howard I .. McMlch1ttl, son of .Mr. and Mrs. Pa.ul C. McMichael of 42~A 12th St., Huuttngton Beach, is now serving aboard the--U.S. Coast Guard Culler Coofidenee, whkh seized a Russian fishing lrawler for .allegedly fishing In U . S . waters off the Alaskan coast, Feb. 10. Na''Y Fireman Apprentice David L. Schuelke, son of Mr. and Mrs. David ?t1. Schuelke of 8091 Taylor Ave.. Hun- tington Beach, is serving aboard the San Diego based attack aireraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk presently on an extended deployment to the Westem Pacific. Navy Seaman Apprentice John W. Flelcher Jr., husband .TODAY! ~·------- Personalized • StyUsh ~ .. INC.)! • Efficient Order For YourMlf or-a Friend M•'I' Ill ,...... on ...,.,.'°"" •• rlflu'fl edd•ns llllilh. Al,. •try ~y 11 ldfnllllct1-lf llill1 ..... mlt•Jnv ptr-1 II•"" weft '' llooko, reuwl1, ~lll. If!•. LMltls 11k:ll en !llfH -.... ., lie uocd IOt' ""rllW. Mll'lt ClflN4 """' lNml, Alt lllllflt .n IH'ln!l<I W!ftl ltylllh V09Uol ly,.. lfl f>NO ..... Illy ""'IN funl"*' .,._, ·r-------------------~--1 I'll!"' lft" <tu ..... ell,·~~ .... it wih ....... I I "II"" l"riftt,.. l •MI DI• •• l".O. t e• !Mt I I (t•I• Metll, C•lil. nu' I I I I I I I I I I I I : PILOT PRINTING 1 ' L -----------------------~ • FREE BONUS • With •v•ry Ordar of L•bel1 we will includ• fr•• set of P1ck•ge Mailing L•bels. ' ' Last week, American Airlines won permission to convert the back end of the plane inlD a 17-seat lounge with stand-up bar, for coach class passengers. First class passengers in the 747 have had exclusive use of an upper detk lounge all along. The Costa Mesa Recreation Department is offering begin· ning round dance instruction at Everett Rea Intermediate School on Thursdays in three series of classes. I~ was the seoond ·Slalistlcal setback in a 'f~k tor;"Presi· dent Nixon's prNi'1ion Jh<it 1g11 will be a "gGod year" for tbe economy leading to a prOl!perous election year in damages iri Contra Costa ~----------.! County Superiar Court. Qf the former ~1iss Anita R.I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.:!~~~~ Erskine of 2442 Vassar Place. Costa Mesa, is serving aboard the San Diego based attack aircraft carrif'r, USS Kitty Hawk presently on an ex· tended deploymenl to the Western Pacific. American said the 7 4 7 "faces a crisis in passenger appeal and must be made more atti'active." Registration begins at the first session, 11arch 25, with ~lickey aad Clara f.farshall instructing at $1.25 per nig.hUy lesson. . "'60 111QWYOUi.r'IUE llCMESTllATTALK.- 'MTH BELL. HOWEil. F1l.llOSOUNM HOMEI MOVIE SYSTEM , •• AlllD FOR JUST A ~I DOLLAllS MORE TKAN SllBIT EQUIPMENT. Of COUf9 you can t.i.y Bel 8t HOWllll F91fto- eotind 8 equipment .. piece at • --••• start w;th The Au'°'°8d Modlll442 wood grained .. c:mMl'll. equipped with new Focus-metic ..........,.. Nf19&- -, -olec1ric -Fn.9 ..... -3 to 1 JOOlll Mngl, elearic fitn.GM,. ........ Sig;. ..... and tlow "'°"°" speeds, b.ilt in bdMv tnter. foot· - 999 ClOUlltlM' In lhe ·de ftfAdet. S 159'5 Model 450 Fimosound R&COfder f&at"'81ii automeeef lnlT*8l racOlding v<:Mume COf*'OI. 8UCiio ks¥8I meter ond bo...., checl<e<, oolid state -,_., button operetion, rntaophone end ~ c.e ... ew1 bl used • a corwenlional '*'-lreooedal ._ ~ MMiafd eesMUe&. '99'5 Modol 458-P>ojeco> ---~ threldtng. ...,... 8 end MQUMr' 8 .. com- patibility, '9¥9'911 end .. u. picMe ~ mnllof, F/1.6 Mns. variable speed control, r!!pid nrMnd and can be U98d 81 I Silent film projector. $179'5 SAVE OYER $100.00 Sale s 00 1972. . The Federal' R e-s e ·r " e reported f.1on_day lhat in· dustrial production -a close- ly watcbed barometer ,pf the econ!>my -declined .0.4 per· Vv'ho Cares? Lindsay said last J\1arch 8 he went to the Fibreboard No :ih1r n1w1p1p1r in th• plant at "'ntioch and was w:orld . c•r•• ebout vour. comm.u-. . . nity 1,,, vour commun1tv "••Iv gathering. samples of hqu1d · newiptp•r ,j011• 11'1 lh• DAILY was1e bemg pumped through PILOT. a pipe into the river when '-----------'' Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ENJOY BEi IER LIVING WITH THUR., FRI., SAT., SUN. GRANTS ' MARCH 18-19-20-21 CREDIT NEW THINKING FROM BELL & HO 'N ELL the new. S'LIDE CUBE™ PROJECTOR ' ·• rwoliltionar,n~eoncept in <:olor...Ode proj«:tlon _...~-:i';ai'~':;;~··nil61idllatDM11• THE SLIDE CUBE- ~t, dust-pttiOf, tio4ds ~ eardtxierO- munted ~Kies ~ tOf Instant Sherwin(. PREYl£W£1l-'ets )OW.sit.and ~ "/(Sslidel beb9; 1~re ~ MOO'ERN STYLIN'l --biendS with 111)' deco<,_...,. on/y~x 9'xa"". 9770 Here's Befl & ~s -Slide Cube Projector! Bentilul styling is combined with inncMJtive de. sig"n and precision construction . TJie compact S1ide Cube Jl:eeps yoµr slides in exact order-and you a n store 640 stides in the same space as one bulky round tray, at just·-of the cost. lots of oU-.erad'V'anoed features i,.,_. elude • lonf·fife quartz:ii.logen lamp, slide recall, lel'IS elevllion, and easy-access slide char11ina: mechanism. Different rnodeJs are available, indudiilg OAeS ,,with AUTOMATIC FOCUSlllG. S· ci I e 13· Slide Cubes In A Delux,e Chest Sale $5?.,? VALUE • I IWmGIS ... the .•lete BRL B.HOWEll h•-illllv , IOvie ~ti ']l BEU I HOWELL LJ AuioLDAJi• SUPER 8 CAMERA Tl'!e Cl:IMf'I Im OlfWI morw COIW!'l'tnce tor your dol/1r. With .xtraordln11)' f9ltur•1 like puth·bulton FOCUS-MATJC•, zoorn ltN with lewr fOf wtdt angle or W11pholo 12.5 to 25 mm rvige, .toP110 ~ '"" die.lor, nm /lock control, new tllrnll ne lty._ Ing. Elsy drop-in wper I cartridge loe<llng. Much moJI. Cij) 5 SPECIAL EFFECTS LENSES {!:i far Hoilrftld ~I Select a lpedll EJeoN Lena Ind allp ii on 1hl ~ ..,,.Ufyfng 1!1101, 1t1r- b11rll.1, rnoirw •)'OU ahoot. Cji) 8 EXCITING ~ TITUNG CARDS "Happy Blnhday," "Mtrry Cl!riS1m11." "T~e Big · Day," etc. Tll•N colorful c1rdi wlU ldefltify your rncMH In Ille y11r1 to come and Md a proh1!lon1! 1parkl1 10 your ltdlniqu9. f;l 20-PAGE HANDY OAN~Y ~ MOVIE GUIDEBOOK MOOE' 374 THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A MOVIE KIT LIKE THIS BEFORE!. SEE IT TODAY!! Sale s 00 • GRANT PLAZA • • • HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST AT ADAMS • ( \ • ' • ' • l '· r I I ' I ' ---..... . . .. . 8 DAILY PILOT fl'lutMt.iy, M.il'th 18, 1971 Democrats Confront Reform To Coordinate State Effor t s -• Cliip-spiker Given Six Y ears to Life Anti-pollution Su peragency As k ed TORRANCE jLJPI ) -Donald J. Henry, 31, who 1d· mltted spiking polato chips with LSD at a singles gather- ing becau11e he wanted lo make it a "great" party. was sentenced to from six years to life in prison Wed nesday. F'ifly persons attending the affair at the South Bay Club singl es apartmenl complex became ill from the hallucinogenic drug, eight of them seriously enough l<> be hospilali?.ed . Henry v.as arrested April 4, four months after the party, and his trial ended last month \\'hen he pleaded ~uilty to severa l narrotics charges. He lO!d the rourt it was not his idea to spike the chips but that he thought it v.·ould make for a ''great" party. He also said that the day of the incident he had bten drinking champagnr, sniffing cocaine and had ta ken a he11vy dose of drugs. One or those affected by lhe drug. a former ''Playmate 1f the ~fonth" in Playboy ri.tagazine, testified al the trial rif ho "'' she began to shake 15 minutes aher she ~mpled the chips offered by Henry. She said everything became .ieformed to her and she saw brillia nt colors before she lost consciousness. Testimony at lhe trial indicated Henry bought the chips and a number of pa per ptales I.he day of the party a.nd ;prnt an hour lacing the m with LS D at the home of a friend . At the galherinp:. he passed them around, according lo \\'itnesses. saying. "have Mme chip~. tht y're good for you." Davis Lawyers Prepare To Make Bail Appeal s SA~ RAF'AEL. Calif. IU PI ) -Angela Davis' attorneys. expressing conrrrn that htr he a It h is deteriorating. prepared appeals for bail l!>- day ..... 11i1e the state sought a new judge lo hear her murder case. SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Assembly Democrai. have rewritten 1 m 1 j o r ad- minis tration blll In a move aimed 1t preventln1 Gov. Ro n1ld Re.1gan from unilaterally implementing his welfare revision program . SACRAMENTO (AP) -The chairman of the Assembly's conservation committee pro- posed today 1 that California turn it! uncoordi nated attack on all form s of pollution over to 1 superagency with some mll.!cle lo really protect the environment. Assembly Re pub I i c an Leader Robert T. Monagan disclosed he intends to put the bill on lee, 1t least ttrn- porully, an action that wou ld prevent a fl oor vote. Some Democratic leaders believe that if the legislature 'Family' Prosecutor Will Urge Death.Rap defeat5 &agan's m a ssive LOS ANGELES !UPll v.·elfare overhaul proj ram, the Deputy District Attorney Vin- governor couJd put-It into ef-cent Bugliosi says he is going feet anywa y merely by using to do his utmost to convince exi!tlng laws and ad-min istrative regulations. the jury it shouid send Charles Manson and th ree women to Over Re.publican opposition, the gas chamber for the Tate- l h e Dtmocratic-domtnated LaBianca murder•. Assembly Ways and Means The prosecutor was schedul· Comml~ttt Wednesday in-ed be · f I serled ll\lo an administration lo gin ina argument! bill an aJJiendment intended today. The four defense at · tn block st a t e w i d e el · lorneys will follow him and perlmental welfare projetts. the jury is expected to begin deliberati ons on th~ punish· Chief sponsor of the amend-ment nt:xt Tuesday . Atkins, Leslie Van Houten and Patricia Krenwinkel. Bugliosl told newsmen he would "very strongly" seek the death penally for all four. None of them has expressed the slightest remorse for the seven killi ngs and Manson's line has remained that he had nothing to do with them . Defense Lawyer P a u I Fitzgerald predicts th a t , should death sentences be pr!>- nounced, appeals through the State Supreme Coort and U.S. Supreme Court could take five years. Bugliosi estimates ii would be more like three ment w11 De m 0 c r a Ii c Tht: seven man, five woman C'h1irman Willie Brown Jr. of jury can bring In verd icts San Francisco. It WI! ap-either of death or life im· proved by 1 vote that broke prisonment for Manson, Susan along party lines. 'i"•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-."'11 _ Environntent : Student Sues A county judge abruptly halted pretrial he arings on ~1is! Davis' motions for dismissa l of charges agains t her \\'hen he disqualified himself Wednesday at the re- que~t of the forgotten defen- dant in the mu rder, kidnaping and conspiracy case. Judge Joh n P. McMurray, 62. w h o h11d complained earlier that •·one of tho se younger fellows" should hear the cast. upheld San Quentin convicl Ruche!I Magee'5 mo- tion that he be disquali fied for "cause." Eii1ti ng l1w and regu\ationsll allow the departmenl of social welfare to t on d u c t ex- perimental welfare projects for up to three years. Cc~ ceivably, if the Democrat ic· co ntrolled legislature killed the governor's program, he cou ld implement it as a "pilot" or "demonstration" project. Wood cutter, 57 Held in Death ' , > MARTINEZ /UPI ) -A col- lege sludent filed a superior coort suit Wednesday, saying he was illegally Seized and injured while attem pting to take samples of waste that an industrial plant 1,1· a s disdlarging into the San Joa- quin River . Willi am G. Lindsay. 25. a i;tudent or environmental : sciences at San .Jose State · College, asked $25.000 in general damages and medical ~ expense! and $.-';()(),000 in ,• punitive damages fr o m .• Fibreboard Corporation. Magee. 31, a shackled con- vict accused of killing a jud1e during a courthouse shootou t \\'hich left four dead in August. submitted a pen cil -printed petition whi ch 1ai d McMurr1y "is prtjudiced a1ain1t the In- terest of Magee, who believes he ca11not ha ve a fair and impa rtial hearing befo~ the judge ." ST. HELENA IUPl l - William Boyd Williams. known in Napa Cwnty u "Willie the Woodcutter," wlll go into municip1I court March 25 to answer 1 char1e that be murd ered 1 Pacltic Union College coed. Wil liams, 57. w111 arraigned Wednesday in the 1\1yl ng of Lynda Chriatine Kines. 20, whoH body wa.1 found March S In 1 1hal low grave near a rtmofe mountaJn road. silverwoods Grall W11lom Invitee "'" to UW>r the supreme com- fo rt, the give-and-recovery of ttiis double knit polyester jacket. For knits are made to move in. Other pluses are its complete washability; smart sc.alloped yoke fore and aft, metal rings, patch pockets with button-thru f laps. Navy blue color. 37.SO. SHOP SUNDAYS NOONTILLS:OO 45 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER .,. 4 DAYS ONLY! M•rch 11 thru March 21 MEN'S INSIDE· ZIP BOOT • 44 Sizes 1{·12 ·aa · Siz•s 4\·10 2221 HARBOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA Houri: W••kly & Sit. 11·9 Sund•y 11-l I Assemblyman Ed\\'\O L . Z'berg 10-Sacramentol, said, "Our public environmental policies an d governmental mechanisms ... arc no !onE(er capable -if indeed they evt'r \\'ere -of protecting the Iota] public lntercs1 In the l'n· vironmental decision·1T1a k1ng process." Z'berg. who chairs the .'\a- tional Reso urces and Conservation Comm111re . c:ill- ed a news conference wrth David Baker, chatrn1an of thr Environmental Quality Study Council, to outline what hr termed the Environmental Quality Act of 1971. Baker said the council in its two years of stud)ing had settled on two things that are needed before the state can effectively fight pollution in all its forms -governmental organization and the develop-I m e n t of administrative 1 mechanisms lo ro the job. Baker said I.he council "recognizes the !act th at organization alone will nnt resoh·e lhe s t a t e ' s en· vironmental problems," But )I he said getting the organiza· tion srt up and enacting ~ome laws ·'can SC'rve as the foun-! dalion"' for real action. z·bcrg·s proposed legisla-' lio n would crea1e a single I agency, the Sate Environmcn-I tal Quallty Board. and give 1t eight regional boards for various sections or the state. APPR AIS ALS So11!h Coe ii. Pi,,,. I Coit~ M e•~ 540.9011~ B61lol at the Sa" D .. 90 Fwy, AM E RI C A 'S L.ARGE S T FAM I LY CLOTHING CH .A I N · COSTA MESA-16 01 Newport Blvd. at 16th GARDEN GROVE-12372 Garden Grove Blvd. I SALE! SAVE UP ros1s !l r ' l ~··· I ... ••• ... ~ .... t=: .•. ::: ! .. ! I l l. " ) . .. CHECKING •UP• , Breakdowns Great Peril on Freeway By l . Jll· BOYD THE l\.tORE the \\'eather changes, the more cavities you get in your teeth. Such is the contention of a dental specialist. 1'xlth decay si°"'s down in summer, ht says. lJut wllen the rain and the 1U.n and the wind and the snow get all miz:ed up in winter, he insists, the cavity count rises. His claim appears to be backed up by statistical proof Iha~ citiiens who live in the more stable climates have the best teeth. ELEPHANTS walk Indian file. So do spiny lobsters. But do Indians? Don't believe so notoriow for their bad mar- riages, right"?" A. Hov• do you figure that? Only nine out of the itO of those surviving beauty 4:1ueens have been divorced . Q. "\Vbo y,·as Poker Alice"?" A. Alice Ivers Dufheld. An English woman. She worked the card tables six days a week years ago in Colorado mining towns. ~·. . .• TWENTY YEARS from ~: now, one out of every six ~ .-U.S. jobs will be in California, t Texas or Florida. That 's our IF YOUR CAR breaks down on the freeway. odds are you'll be hit from behind within 20 minutes. Even if you pull over onto the shoulder. turn on your flashers, light flares. raise the engine hood, tie a white cloth to the antenna, and wave like a maniac at the oncoming cars. That 's the statistical truth, sir. Disturbing notion. isn't it? The planners of the greatest construction project ever conceived by man -lhe interstate highway system - left something out of the plans, do believe. ' ~- . ·;: .. .. . · ·:- ; .. Chief Prognosticator's latest claim . . . AMONG THOSE who can recite the alphabet backwards, I find, are an unusually large number of former usherettes. "OON'T WHITE COLLAR workers outnumber blue coUar workers by this time?" in- 4:1uires a client. Thal they do. By 38 million to 2.8 million. in fact. But all the white collar workers I see anymore wear blue, red , yellow, pink, green or whalever collars. No doubt the blue collar workers soon all will wear, never mind, too wimSical. Anyhow. white collar workers used to make twice as much as blue collar workers. That's changed. Last year the blue averaged $130 a week. the white $105. CUSTOMER SERV ICE: Q. "Isn't it against the rules of the Bureau of Motor Carrier Safety for a truck. driver to v.·ear contact lenses?" A. Not anymore. As long as he's got an extra pair with him . . . Q. "Those Pt1i53 America v.·inners, they 're pre It y Pt1ARA WAS her name. A witch. Rode a broomstick.. And scared the Anglo Saxons white. A bad dream , they said, was a vision of the night's Mara . Out (lf that, rtports our Language man, we even- tually got the V.'()Ni nightmare •.. NO WONDER the Prince of \Vales is rich . He's also Duke of Cornwall. And when a man dies there without a will, his estate goes to the prince. The. royal persona ge picks up about 10-estates a year this way. OPEN QUESTION: If the girl is called the ba\le;·ina, \\'hat do you call the man? PU JTAUCS Your question$ and com· ment.! are welcomed and will be u&ed in CHECKING UP wherever po3sibie. Ad- dress letters to L. M. Boyd. P. O. Box 1875. Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. Here's How to Stop Cockroach Nuisance ::: BAKERSFIELD (UPI) '-or collects. The bottoms or • • · The household cockroach, one s i n k s , w· a sh e r s a n d ... ·: of the housewife's most persis-ref rigerators are favor i t e ;~: tent enemies, can be wiped targets. ~-out by simply cutting off its Keeping a home warm and ~~ I f:'-w:;h:~:p ~ackie, v e c to r ~~Y~:i;il~r=~ Mac~: ~.: ecologist with the San Diego said. r I ;. • County Health Department, Mackie was one o severa ~ ... · told a pest control conference vector tt0logists speak~g atr • here during the weeke!ld there the 2nd Annual Convenhon o ·!: · were several ways of con· the Society of V e c l o r c • trolling cockroaches through Ecologit.s here. ;;: changes in the environment. Howard R. Greenfield. :~: '. One of them was to keep manager of the North ~in as :•!· a house warm and dry. Valley Mosquito Abalemenl •;•. District, was named president : . .,.· ••. He said cockroaches I~ water at the rate of l~ percent1_o_f_the_g_ro_"_P_· _____ 1 !l ... :·~ ·. a day. If they are unable lo find damp areas they will die within a very few days. Roaches usually try to fil}d spots where v.·ater condense.s KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN ' No. ~I any tJ1ink that because Christian ~e~cc b_ri~gs about ph~ical heali ng without mcdicat~on , it is 3 form of pO&.ilive thinking or human willpower. But Christian Science is based on the Bible teaching that it is God, the divine Mind, th.at heals -not the human mind -and that this was the basis of Christ Jesus' martelous works. Today anyone can gain a greater measure or dominion over matter by endeavoring to follow Jesus' example. , You are wannly invited to hc;i.r our B1bli! L.::!>")On on "Matter" tills Sunday. CH RISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH SERV1C1S CMt• Miff -lltnt c•-· 9f Chritt, Sc.i..tht 2:110 M .. Y_. Dr., -11 •·IL Hi1ttl'"ft9ll hoc.II -flrtt C•.nll ef Cllrkt, Scl .. tht ltll •114 011 .. -t :Jl -411 •.•• •t fr4•w,.rt lffcll -•lrtt c••te• ef c11,bf, 1c.C11tht lJOJ YMI LJff -9i1 S •IMI 11 •·"'· H'"'''" IHlll -'9ce11111 Cti•~· ef Clwht. k1"tht JIOO Peclfk Y"• Di-,. c., ... ~ M• -11 •·"'· DAILYpYT 9 2 Scl1olars Get Honors 1:=:-=::=::::::::=::::::::=::::::::====:===:~~==-=========~ nastic 1ea1n and l!(!rvrs as r---::.;:;:::::::~-:==============::::::::::-:::::;-i Pauline t>.tarie Khun, 17, is t varsity cheerleader at f'oun- tain VaUey High School. Mart SchiJdhauer, 16, is junior class president at the same school. -------- Girl's League Hosp1U1lity1 Chairman. among olher club activities. I '/< , ~ L:'.::_:___. .. Both studenls have been honored by the Fountain Valley Exchange Club as lop scholars for February. Schitdhauer maintains a ~ 0 (pt"rfect Al grade average while serving with the student govefrnment. He pla}'3 tennis: and is aclive with severa.lj campus clubs. master ctia1gP Miss Kuhn is also an active member of the girl's gym- ., ~' -.. ; 1•flDl•K~lllCl•K<U1lm1•K4llll•K<Ulll•<UDl•R<UDl•ID!!lll•B•<Ul8•K<Ulll•K<Ulll!!f - --C;lebr;ti;.g -2 Ne;, St;~e; M1rk (. 11111111, Ch1lr111IR 11 lh1 811•• "Snti11Ji1ct io1J (,' 11a n111/rr•f' AZUSA-COYINA~!.~.~3~~;;;.~!~.; BUENA PARK-FULLERTON ' 1321 S. EUCLID St. (Corner of Euclid & Orangethorpe) 87~~~~0 /u_-~,~!I_ BLACKWALLS '1 WHITEWALLS FORD-PLY-CHEV SIZE: l.75x15 {FlBflS) j l~ 650113 (878/13) Bliekwall ••. Eltb . + S1 .65 fed. Er. Tu lack UBELESS YW's DATSUN • OPEL TOYOTA & Others 12 ~~ llack "' ,, BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY Belted or uN1RoY AL Whitewalls LAREDO UNIROYAL TUBELESS $295 Extra '14'5 ''"" CRAGAR Super Chrome Whee ls ... '·, 511 t<o11n 4) 1. 1s. 14(F711'1 4l 7 .3511 4(171(1 4) 7.7511 S(f 71f1 SJ s22's t .5$114 (N7lf141 1.SS1:lS CN71/1.5) OPEN 7 DAYS BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY 6.50113 (878/13J $26'5 .... ,.,, .. ll (l71{15) Daily 8:30-9 8.S5114 (H78(14J 8.55115 (H78/1 S) 9.00xl 5 (L78/1 SJ SUN. 9-6 4 :$88 3005 HARBOR BLVD. CORNER 01' BAKER AND HARBOR COSTA MESA. H:EWPORT BEACH AREA 557-8000 GARDEN GROVE -14040 Brookhurst-530.3200 ANAHEIM · BUENA PARK 6962 Lincoln Blvd. -826-5550 FULLERTON -1321 Eucnd St. -870·0100 ' . . . 8.8$115 (J78/1 SJ . I ) ~EfJ 04ll'f PILOT Pensio11 Cl1ecks Jm·ists Break Ice On Job s Facilities E9ed Ar1·ive in June \ Paralyzed Vet e r a 11 s or Eugene Tutt, vi~ president Ha11dicapped Hold Survey By JOANN!:: RE'll'NOLDS SANT A ANA -1Jit first check! to includt the IO ptr- ttnt Social Security increase vottd by Congres! thU ~·eek art> scheduled to reach 26 mlllinn beneficiaries on June 3. Supervisors Order Full Qullke Study SANTA Ar-;A -St t p s • to.,rard the completion of a comprehensive 11eologic map of Orange County showing unstable ureas, faull lines, and landslide areas will be taken by a committee named by county supervisors Wed- nesday. At the suggestion of Super\·1sor Ralph Clark. ht: and Supervisor H on a Id Caspers will join with representatives of building and safety, floc.d control, roads and the gt11eral planning prograrn to promote the geologic map to pinpoint areas subject to earthquake damage. The group will work with the state Division of ~1ines which. Clark said, has mapped a small portion of t he southeast part of the county. The move by supervisors followed a slide presentation or damage caused by the Feb. !I earthquake in the San f Prnando and Sylmar regions of Los Angeles County. Director of Building and Safety F'loyd r-.1cLellan nar- rated. He was on a team ~ the International Con- ference of Building Officials \(hich inspected the earth· qjiake hit area. • r-.tcLellan warned that what happened in Los Angeles could i,iippen here and urged t~e C9unly mapping to av?1d bpilding hospitals and hi~h r~ apart ment complexes in tUh risk areas. •' Jveed War ffearing Set > ~ANTA ANA -lt is the tipie of year when Orange ..(J9unty Fire \Varden Elmer Osterman declares v.·ar on v.·eeds. A public hearing has been !>el for 11arch 31 in the county ~ard of Supervisors hearing chambers. All those protesting ~terman·s notices of v.·eed al:iatement will be heard. \\leeds which will constilutt fl :~ire menace mu5t be remov- ed by the property owner or the cOUnty v.111 do the job aitd. bill the property owner. O~terman said. Architects - Contracted SANTA ANA -Huntington Stach architects Tom and Trusl<l~r have been named to al $30,000 contract to draw plans lor e i g h I new courtrooms on the third floor o{ lhl' tl1unicipal Court Wing o{ the Orange C:ounty Courthouse. The second floor on the Municip;il Court Wing is now overcrov.·ded \\.'it h one court uSing a jury assembly room on lhe first floor, supervisrs were told. The county hopes to call fc:ir bids in the fall on the nev.· courtrooms. f:xtensiou OK cl I , , On Floor Lease I , ::SANTA ANA -A tv.·irycar c~tenslon Oil the lease or lht' eiilire flrlh floor of the docker Citizens Bank h\iilding at Broadway and 10th street in Santa Ana h.es been approved by lhe Orana:e Coun- t)' Board of Supervisors. ·The Qilld Welfare Division of the county Welfare Depart- ment uses the space . Rent i~-$1,38li a month . o~·ners of t~ building are Roy K. and ~mlo Sakioka. ', , NO. 1 ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT ' \Vallace S. f'ord, manager of the Santa Ana office said today the Jwie 3 checks, which cover the btnefit3 for the month of May, will show the higher amount. He s a i d separate check.!! v.·h1ch will cover the increase for the month! of January through April y,•jJI probably reach beneficiaries later in June, F'ord emphasized that Social Security recipient,, do not need to contact the Social Security office to gel their checks. "The payments v.·iU be mailed automatically," he said. "It will take a little over a month lo refigure the benefit amounts for all beneticiaries, including the adjustment to take account of events that have affected their individual benefit payments for a particular month in t h e retroactive period. DAILY PILOT Sltll l"llolt SHOULDERS ROAD JOB N•wport's McConville McConville To Take To Road 01 !ho O&ll'f l"l .. 1 1t.H America. of the ""Easter Seal Society GARDEN GROVE -Think ·'Imagine you are in a and an architect, s a id SANTA ANA -County wheelchair," she said. California does have laws super\•isors Tuesday held fast to their hiring freeze ulti matwn but Wednesday foutid their policy had been of all the shopping centers, r "You approach an of ice "designed to insure that public- civic .. buildings, churches and building, but you can't enter facilities are accessible to the recreational facilities that you because there are steps at handicapped. visit and use everyday. the entrance. Or you do get ''The trouble is that many You don't have to climb into the building, but you can't persons responsible for des!gn-circumvented by Superior .. ~ .. t•· restroom •··ause the Court 1.udges. over a large barrier or ...-. uo; Lit;\; ing, constructing or approving squeeze through a narrow en-doors are too narrov.·. of public buildings are not F'<1ced with pleas rrom six !ranee to gel into them, do ·:or you can't get to an fully aware of these laws and department heads to unfreeze you? office on the second floor what they mean," he said. 6!1 jobs. the board members But if you're conflned to because there is no elevator. -------------- held fast and sent the subject a wheelchair, those are some "If you're hungry, you may l * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * to the county Administrative of the obstacles facing you not even be able to gel a MERCURY SAVINGS Office for study and report if you v.'ant to use these same meal because the only nearby l back in one week. buildings and facilities. restaurant has i,nterior steps But Wednesda they e e and level changes that prevent Y w ' So th1·s week, 50 members told by Supervl·sor Davi·d L you from getting to a table · of the California Paralyzed to be served." Baker lhat the judges had Veterans Association are con-authorized the county M.rs. Capson said the results marshal's ofHce to hire two ducting a survey of lhe!e of the survey will be tabulated rnen and •·we can't do places in Orange County to for presentation at a coun- see how they measure up to t ·d hit t I b · anything about il." yw1 e arc ec ura arr1ers state codes for accessibility conference April 'l7 1 n and loan association Aeling County Co u n s e I to wheelchairs. Anaheim. Clayto" Pa r k er Conf'-ed Open Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.4 p,m.; Fri. S a.m .. 6 p.m. '-.,; _ _.."' "'" Mrs. Juanita Capson or The conference, sponsored ~-- Baker's statement s 8 Ying Garden Grove is serving as by the Paralyzed Veterans and BUEN" PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., Valley View at Lincoln state law allows the judges Survey Coord1·nator. She 1·s th E t Se f So . I f to hire the marshals and the confined 10 a wheel chair. She o:angeas e~unt~. w~:f Y boe HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savings Bldg., Edinger at Beach county must pay them. also is the 1vife or the former directed at architects and TUSTIN Mercury Savings Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Ave. Tuesday's strongest plea national president of tbe building officials. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * \~as made by new county Tax lr••---:::;;:::::--::::::::::::::====================-~=====:-1 Collector Robert Citron \vholl said he needs :>6 people to "Over 2.5 million ad· justments are required in a lypical month for reasons such as the death of a beneficiary, the remarriage of a widov.', a child's attainment of age 18 or a change iu a recipient's earnings," Ford e1plained. The refiguring of benefits has bttn scheduled lo avoid any delay in the regular delivery of the April 3 and t.lay 3 checks, he said. Those checks v.·ill be for the. amounts received by beneficiaries before the increase w a s enacted. help out v.•ith the big rush SAr--'TA ANA -Lav.Tcnce of tax collections beginning ''Ted'' r.lcCon\'ille of Ne"•porl April 15. Beach, assist<tnt c-ounly ro;:id Citron said if the huge com1n1ssioner has hrc~ naincd amount or money coming in l acting commissioner begin-is not quickly processed the h t county would lose money ning April S "·hen 1 e Curren because interest could not be commissioner rel!res. collected on bank accounts ••• "Y"J" . master charge ...... ~ .. "U.h• '-'"~ . , i Al ~. Koch, county road _'QjllU"'ic:J<kl~y'..'e:'.n~oulJlgh~ .. ____ __I~~~~~~~~~...,;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ commissioner since Aug. I,,· Beach Man Says Guilty SANTA ANA -One of two men accused of the armed robbery of a Huntington Beach liquor store has pleaded guilty to the charges in Orange County Superior ~ou rt. Judge McMillan held sen- tencing o( Michael Henry Crowder, 23, of 1 6 7 ~ 2 Roosevelt S I . , Huntington Beach, pending investigation of the defendant's possible ad- diction to narcotics. Two doctors were appointed lo examine Crowder and they will report b.ack to Judge McMillan March 29, He will rule on that date. Crowder's c<Kfefendanl ls Calvin Richards, 24, of 6122 Bannock Road, Westminster. Both men were arrested lasl Nov. 2!1 after they allegedly took $240 al gunpoinl from the Mall liquor store, Bolsa Chica and Heil Avenues Plans Ot:dered For Drainage SANTA ANA -A master plan of drainage for th~ Santa Ana Canyon area has been ordered by the county Board of Superv isors. The project cost is not to exceed $16,000. It will be done by Boyle Engineering of Santa Ana. The area covered includes lhe canyon from the Riverside County line to Imp erial High'"'·ay. 1955, and an Orange County emp!oye for 25 years. is retir- ing . Koch is credited ""ilh originating the a r le r i a I highways prugrain in \\hich lhe county shares i::as tax money with the (·ities to im- prove streets throughout the county. The county Personnel Depart1nenl \1•ill start a statewide recruiting job im- mediately to choose a suc· cessor to Koch. Ron Kaut z. supl•rvi.~ur tJ[ recruiting for the department. said he t·xpected to receive 200 applications for the JOb. ON THE MALLAT FASHION ISLAND • l11 11R\PAY IRlllAY SATURDAY MtlRf,H 11! Jq . .'0 Mor• lhan j~•t 1 ol1e11 10 •ho~, .• FASHION j ISLAND ................. -. TRY THIS UNIQUE ISLAND DELICACY HICKORY FARMS OF OHIO~~:....~ BANANA CHIPS Tanl11lizt your ta11e bud1 wllh lhls lropic i~larnl 10n1ck food. Hickory Farm' of Ohio HANAN A CHIPS are proce111d in the Philipp ine lslonds. Th" n1tiwa fruit i1 ideal for this product .. , combineil with coconut oil, hon'y end 8ug1r to enhance thP h1n1na flal'Ot'. Try 1ome right out ol the ho" fnr bcltw1en meal tr11t1. or edd lo muffin s, pancakr,, cake mlxee, Ice c:re1m toppings 11nd cere!'ls for ;i ._ truly exotic t•ste, S.rv' at your parli'' to add a linla lsltnd etmo1pher1, 20¢ Off Reg. Price of 59¢ SPECIAL AT 39<: NEWPORT BEACH -Westcliff Plaza 17th & Irvin• • 642°0972 ORANGE Town & Country Center 543-8016 Opan l't•nll'ltl & S11n.t1y• AMEJUCA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES ' ' I [LJ}f?~JED,$J W~!J?] !J?],$J!IJJO,$J!L 40,000 mile tire we guara11lee it. .LIFESAVER RADIAL TREADWEAR GUARANTEE If you don·t get a full 40,000 miles of trettdwear from a Lifesaver Radial in nonnal 1.11e on your car, the retailer who sold it will give you the difference as a aedit •g1inst me going mdtJ.in price of 1 new Uf9SaV't'r Radial. plus 1 sman l4Wice charge.· Lifesaver Radials are priced from $42.95. size ER70-14 whitewall plus federal tax of $2.66 per tire w ith trade-in. 3 WAYS TO PAY -ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED !E§j = MOST CARS COSTA MESA: -ORANGE: JONES TIRE SERVICE JONES TIRE SERVICE WESTMINSTER: L. I. LITTLE BIG 0 TIRE 1H( UfUAVlR• IUDIALTIRI 2049 H•rbor Blvd. IAt B•yl 646-4421 540·4343 1100 Tustin Ave. !Across from new Post Office) 532·3383 7352 Westminster Ave. 993.5572 "°"' .BFG . f - I .Thund11, Mire.II le, 1971 DAILV PILOT Jl '.:Vital Statisti~s for the Oranjle ·coast -Area IOUTll COAST COMMIJNITY MO$PITA\. -· Mt. •nd ,,.,.._ Tro1 A. Hin, Jr., srm ..,..., Unl'f'flo Df11e 1"61nl, elrt ••rt11 I Mr. w . Jot.n 11r1;;;;·'M1 Tt<'• , l'fM °'.. 1u1on vi.r .. elf! Mf, ..W ~ G•rv L Cwl, lU .._,.,,., A t. Sen c~. bo't' • ~. llfld , llOdflfl\' L. 19!, JUJI • Mlr•r \I 1, Mlu!al Vl•lo. ~ Marth' Mr . ...i Mrs. lilt,.. lltmoll 123 w. ~lllt S.n Cltmtlllt. ~ l/ir. anll Mri. J1dd1 SChl r. 1310 N, El O mlno lt••I, san '-"'•· "" l/ir, .•nd #ri. Hutll~. ltrlltf, UJn MlttM, Ml11l0t1 V 1, 1lrl ' Mr. INll IM1 0 .. 1.. P, t onov1n, ' lSS w. MerlPG$1, &.In Cl•mtn!t err I M•rc-1 Mr. &nd Mrs. P1ul G,_.M, 133 W. Mt•~t San Clemfn~. bo'I Mr. 1nd Mt1 .. W. Otvld C•k· ~20 ,,. Vla11 ltOffl•, NewPGf't a..d! b(ly '> Mr. Ind ~1. C. J4mt& :./le, 13:111 ..... tiW1Jr 0 YI, L111urM1 Nr1v«. 9lrl .' Mr. and fl. Gor...,. A, Sk•••' -: JJJO'l E•IOon W•v, LHUn1 1-1111 .. •• •lrl •. • Mlrch t :: Mr. •l'ld Mn. 'l!W!Ovr1 MINI •• l ,• w. It•-· S.., Clt!Mtlh, t lf1 .' Mr. Ind M,., Jlff1rv A. Kt rr, nt P_!i.y0, S.n Cl•mtn1t, t lr! ....... Mr. and Mrs. Jim li1J1INu1r, 26132 l1He11 Circle, Mlul0!1 Vlt lo 111•1 !Mtch 11 Mr. al'ld Mr1. !tab.rt J, Stien, 151 l!m1r11d ltY. L1iun1 Beech, 1lrl Mr. •nd Mrs 1t1vmo,.., D. lthc:JtOI, 2'171 Vlt Otl $01, MIU!Oll Vll]o, ... Marriage Licenses Ll!NHAltt-PARICl!JI -Jtfln R., Ir, If 11112 ErMr•I•, Garlltn G•ov. •M ...... ,. J ., 17 If 421 7111 $1,..., Hu"tlntflll'I ltach. ,l!ITNl!Jl·WE8STEl-H1r,., F., ff tf' 21S l!1•t Fir '""'' Brtl •114 Dorelhy E., 5' ti' llllt lrttll~11r1t, F""nl11n Vtllt'f. IUTTON<.ANTltELl-Jth" J., ti ti' Ill 1'11'""11w, S.nt~ f:' tnd ,.,,1111, 70 of 2'11 Mt1'41 1 Orlv1, CMll Mt ... FL£TCHl!Jl.(iW,t,llTHIY-C:~rl J., 11 of 1131 St" ,\l!ftlt OrlYt., HllMlfltlti\ lttCh 1..C ·~IFM t.,,, lt If fl\I Ct!tlldul1r, WMl~lnlltr IANOERS·AtNIWOlllTH-W!!tll"' '., 3CI of ft '•Ir DI'!.,., Ce1!1 Mt11 •nd M1nl11 A .. ti. or '" ''"'I"" Co1!1 M&tt. ,,. 11 HAVEs-o'l.AVOHl.IH-.lth~ I .. tt ti Jl7 GOIQll,.,, Ctl'MI .. I Mer IMI M1 .... 1ret A,., tt .,, ns 1•111 ttree1. Hunlll'ltllen 1 .. c11. ,t,NTHOHY·WHfTl!-lt!th•l'1! M .• " of l2e2 Buena Vl1t1. San Cltmtnlt 111d Florelllla T. of 300 Ctmpbell, Sin Fr,fflCIKe. "''· ,, 1"EltltlN-WOOD--0111nl1 I .. 26 el 510 Wl110n, Cot.It M•• l'ld Lynn v .• 22 of :M5J ICnolCVllle AYf., Lent ...... O'IRIEN·GltU!IB5-G1r1td D .. .It of 1701'0 51n aru,,.,, F°""t11n Vtllrv tlld Jun L .. 1' of l"C1.1n!1ln Vt lh!Y. ~A!IL1i-5CIUTHW!CIC-l"r1t1Cl1 D,, 1t of 10231 Ht!twt Orlvt, Hunll .... IOl'I Btlch •nd Jac<111!11 D., 2~ of Hun- tl,,..1"" 811ch. llOWLEV-ANDEltSON-V1t1Ce w., 3$ ol 16431 f11rtlett, Hunll1111ton 8e1ch 11'1d Sh1ron J~ JI el Hunllll:fllln B••~-"-W1L$0f<l·SEVEltV, J1" l., :l'f, of 117J .Sl'>llrl"'IO" Pl1ce, N.-wPOr! Beach 11\11 !ofl11ron A. 2(, of NtwPOrt a.1ch. S ULL.AltD. WEATHl!!JIWAX. Thorn• M., It. ol 2ltt .Stromboll, Colli Mtu and Lindi D., It (If m F1_.r Sir .. !, CMll Me ... llACICS«M.t.LIGN!IN-llober1 T., 71 of 16762 !11rdon. H11n11,...1on 811ch 111>11 Chtrv! 5., lJ of Sn~ lm.erlel Hlohw1y, LI M(t1d1. JIEDOFF-DUTltD--Ch1r1" It., 4 ol 1415 16th Sir~, NtwPOr1 !11ch lf'ld Ellr1b,t1'1i M., '5 of 415 Pl11mer .St...et, CO'S!I M~I. TAOM.l.N-ARNS--D1vld IC., lt E11I ·8•v Sir .. !, New110rt and Debr1 L., 11 of 741 Grand, S1n!1 Ant. HALEV-WVATT-SlevPn K., 1• of 1.U E11t 81y, Cot!t M1 .. 1nd 51rNlr1 Death Notices A•MSTltONG Weir l"ewf1llln Arm1trn119. A11 U of :20J61 S.nl• AM Av1 ., S1n!a An•. D1!1 111! death, Mirth 1 T. liurvlvell hv son, Niii E. Arm1rro1111, Sin Jo1t; liluohtero, G1vfene P•ck1nh1m, S1r1l0!1, FIGrld11 Lture! E. lt0bln1on, ltodfl>, Ct!ll.; NDfl E. A•nntr-. Los Anrt+n ; lour 11r1nelch!ldr..,; one brother; thrtt sl•leri. $trvlce1, S1!ur<11v 11 AM, 8111• CorOl'lt dl1 Mir Ch1p1I. wflh Dr R.1ymcrH1 I. Br1h1m off1~!1tintt lnlermen!, P1clfk View Memorial P1rll;. 81!11 Ccr6N del Mi r Mortuery, Dlreclor~. O.t.L•NTA PFC JOSIPh 0111nt1. Ao• ,1. of tlln I G1!~1. Hunl!"ltlon 81ach. 01.-1 In Viti· ' n1m Ftbr111ry '1. S11rvlvtd bv 1111r1n!1, Mr. •nd Mrs. Willl1m Deltn"; brother1, John, Jerrv and Ted D11en1'1 1lllt<', ' D!I M D1lenl1. llt<111lem MIU, FrldtY , 11 A./11\ ti llmon • Jlllle Cllholtc C~llN~ lrtterl'l'\lrtl, G• Sh I P ht t d C1m11N-v. ~!ltl• M••t!J6,.,, Olrtc!or,, CIAVIS. . ~\lll ltY "l11'14tr" D•vl1. "'" .11, l>I 2'11 ' .,,, Ant AYI , N• I. Co111 Mett. ti• tf •41!h, M1rcll 17. lurvlve<I by "'ii., fl1rb1r61 Mn, Jlttrty; IM 11•\lfhlt•s. IC1Mbt•1Y 1n• !lltn11 moth•• Mrt. """" Divis, $1~11 A~•• bro1Mr, Jl~k Davis, S1nt1 "n•, Sl!•~l•t•· t•lvr-<!tv, 11 AM. Btll l fc•<llll•Y (htl•I. lnt1rm1nt. F1!rll1Y•n MerMr1tl P•rl. tell lr&adwlv Mort1111rv, Dlrtt!ors. HOLT l•ne Holt. 1:J.U Elllen Avt.. Aillt. t. Cotlt M•u. 011e of de1tll Mtrell 1i. $urvlvtd by d•uohler, M". JIM 1"1rld!1; brO!l>er. JC>9tfl~ *'1ol!tnd; titler, ' ltubv M11 Smith; two trandch!ldren. Strv1ce,, FrlJtv. 1 PM, Ppk F1ml1Y Colonl1I Fun1r11 Home llUTHEltFOJID Nellie I ltYlherlord. Aoe 67, etl 1111 N. Cots! Hlthw1y, l111vn~ S.tcll, Datt of dt1lh, Mirth 17. 5urvlvtd hv •l1ter, ltu!h A. 1e ... ne<1v. L1oun1 B11c11 1 nlPhew It. L. Ktnned'Y, Minion Vlelo. Prlvtle 1e,....lcts wire h•lcl todav, Tlwr~tY. ti McCormick L1111111 Belch Mortv•t'Y. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUA .. m E. 17th Sl, Costa Mesa ll&-4181 • BLA'!"l MORTUARIES Corona del Mar .. OR 3-9450 Costa Mes• . . . Ml '""14 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Meta LI S-3433 I t ) • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Lapna Canyon Rd. U4·Ml5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery J\tortuary • Cbapel 1500 Pfctnc View Drive Newport Beach, California ll<-!700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Boin Ave. We11Lmlnster 19W5t5 • SMITH'S MORTUARY '2'I Mala SL -Baattn,U.n Bea~ ...... WHITE FRONT ? '( • ? • • • WORRlm ABOUT NEW INCOME TAX LAWS? ••• WE GUARANTEE ACCURACY I Al IUIJCTlllf '[£ $ AS LOW AS • FIST coumsY SERVICE • CO"f!DENTIIL, COMPU· TITIONIL ICCUllCT . • CONvtlllOO, NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY • IOnt FEOEllL IHD STITE INCOMETAX!S . • ENJDY PEACE OF MIND ntlSTEAl ,, .. I 6J P11rl S!fMI, 8fltkvllll 11'111 OIN6 G,, " or W7 Stl'IN Aftl ,,, .. ,, Popular 'Leader' 24-lnch Vanity Shampoo And Bath Sprayer WellhershieW •, 1crr1n: U!lltll 11111 ·l'.t PUan Sturdy Unfinished Pine School Desk Handy 011 Fiiter Turning Wrench Cost• ~ll Glidden Weather-Shield Exterior Latex A truly tremendous buy! Thin~ing of doi ng a little e1t:terior pe inting7 Glid· den 's Weather.Shield letaK will p1,1t e smooth fini'h on wood or stucco. Buy ell you need to do the entire iob -easily , profession•Hy. Clos•· out -while q1,1•nfities last, ] 24'' x II'' Y•nity ii d11i9ned to l'l'lt •t ri9id r1quir1m1nh of Dud• 91t end 1pec1. H11 n111·drip rolled edge top. Veriety of colon. Ple nt- Smoot!. •P••Y wher1 e nd wh1n you went ii. Gr••• for b1thi"9 peh, t oo, Slip1 "" feuc1t, w.·n 1hcw you ~ow lo finr1h thi1 d11i,hllully tlyled end praclic1I . d11k. ld11I for din, child'1 roo,.,, ~i111 mod1I KS·l20. If you're • do·il-youn1lf1t ti.ii ,11 1+111 f ilte r wr•~clt w i!I cl l'llt ht mig hty li1 ndy, Famous Mclane Make Power Trimmer-Edger Top control1 for e11y li1nd!i119, Con~arh lo frimm1r in 11cond1, S.f.ty elutclt f1•lu111. E11y te 1t1rf. 0111, only44.88 • ,:;. Black & Decker 1f2" Compact Drill F11tur1t the improYed Durn·o~I proleclad motor. l i9htwer9ht, 111y to control. T11m1ndo111 twi.ti119 pow•r. Model 7205. 19.99 1tor•91 1p1c1. M1•1· 11111 24" I[ 14 " '11 ll". puU1. Model 59c alf Inch Conduit Electrical Pipe only Now you c•11 finish off 111 th1111 1l1chic• ljob1 with tonduit 1l1c• tric pip1. Gui ll whit? W1 h t~• lertd er., e!10. 10 .... 69C Handy Portable Drill Mate Organizer 1 /4" or ]/I" d1i!l1 ind 1cc•uor0 ie1. Spill.proof d tew1t1 •• , Iii· lmpacl pOl'f1fyr1ne, Modi! 01·270. 4.88 14.88 '>ftly 29C Heavy Duty Security Chain Lock E~1• popvl• 11cufily d111or lock effera 11f1ty from forcad 111try. l1tv te i111t 1U, H••~'f duty ch1i11. only 39C ' 2-Step Latex Antique Kit G;Y, your old f1vo•• 1111 • 'n1w' 1ntiqu1 fini1h. E11y to J o, 1:m. pl• in1t1wc+ion1 indud· "· Rt'J. 4.44 3.49 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATUDAY·SUNDAY 9 to l I ' 6 only 79.95 12-Guage TW Solid Electrical Wire I l ·91u9• 1olid 1l1clric1I ..,;,. '''"''' the pu•p••• fo1 many job1, Cho;,, of colori. 12 CJD. 14 90 • ft. ft. Clamp-On Table Vise j1w w;th doubl1 ter 9uide1. !luil+.;" pi,o• '>----P11<i1ion 3-l•di ., .. 2.99 . .. " )· J I I • I ~ J 2 DAil V PILOT FMllLY ClRCVS Thursday, Mll'th 18, 11J71 bl/ Bii Kea,.. ., "Al I the dishes are in the dishwa1her, so 1 'm eating my ice cream ovt of this ash troy. 11 Unknown Democrat Now Is Well Known TOPEKA, K;,n. 1APl -cnt1c1sm, poiJ1t1ng to a flood \\'hen Vern ~lillrr annnunred of favorable mail. He ignores as a candidate fnr aLtnrney gener11I of Kansas, few gave him a chance. First. he was a J)emncrat in a 1raditionally Republican i;tatf'. Second. he w<1s \'irtu;illy unknown octs1rle 1he \Vichita area. \\'here he had been sheriff of Sedgwick County ~ince 1964. Third. he had never prac- ticed law although he earned a law degree from Oklahoma Clty Uni\·ersity "'hile serving as sheriff. Fourth. his Republican op- pollent "'as scholarly , Harvard-educated Richard H. Seaton. member of a \\'l.'1!· known Kansas n e w s p..a p e r publishin~ family, nephew of former Secretary of th e Interior Fred Seaton. and an assistant a1torney general for seven years. UFJdaunted. La Verne A. 1'-1iller crisscrossed the state, wooing support with tough· sounding speeches on a la\\"- and--0rder theme . "rll be vour attorney general in ·the courts and in the ~treets." Miller promised. ··r!J leap inro the drug-rid· r!en hippie conimuncs of La\\•rence with both feet."' he said . This kind of talk struck a responsive chord wi!h \'oters. And Miller had a secret "·eapon -imm.eni;e popularity In Wichita, the state's largest city , "'here he had a rrputa- lion as a no-nonsense la""' rn· fnrcement officer. All.hou~h he Jost the rest of the ~ate by 19.000 votes, he took his home county by 44.000 -and became the first Democrat, elected altomey general in Kansas in 80 vears. Today, Vern f.1iller is a household name in Kansa s. On Feb. 26. six weeks after taking office. he led more than 150 officers into La\\Tence, home of the Uni\·ersity of Kansas. on the bi~gest drug raid in stale history. the threats, he said, because thry have become a way (If Jlfe in Jaw ~nforcement. The peppery ~1iller -42. a tightly muscled 5 feet IO. "·1th a receding blonde hair- line-denies any political mo- tivation in ttie La\\·rence raid. He alS-O denies he took along a dozen newsmeA for publicity purposes .. '"J"ve heard this ever since I \1·as a marshal in Wichita," he said. "Bul I have a philosophy: the people have a nght to know \\-'hat's going on. If the presence o( the press lets !he people see that we weren't using any Gest.apo tactics. I've always felt it's necessary to have the press around lo keep people in balance. The police have an obligatio11 to obey the law just as much as anybody else, and when the press is around they do." h1iller has been menlioned frrquently as a possible can- didate for governor, if Gov. Robert Docking, a fellow- DC'mocrat, does not seek a foL1rth term. "I could care less about bring gol'erinor," Miller says. "\\'hen people call me and tell 1ne J"m really bei11g politically foolish for en forcing the bingo \aw, It really makes me 1nad. My job i!l to enforce the la'WS. not bend them." Among the laws he has been enforcing are those against g<1mbling. Including bingo, \\'hich is prohibited by a e<>n- st1lutional ban on lotteries but has flourished in some areas. The attorney general, mar- ried and the father or two sons and a daughler, explains hi s zeal for law enforcement this way: "I am a law orficer. and I know onlv one "'av to en- force !he ·\av.·. Thai. is as criually Hnd as fairly as possi- hle . If the pe0plc do not like 1he law5, they should "'ork through their e 1 e ct e d represr-nta\ives to c h an g e lhem. 1 CXJY'CI nothing short nf com pl et e law en- fnrcement .'' The raid netted 30 young persons -11 of them universi· I\" !ludents -who 'vere. book· e'd on charges or sa!r or possessio n of narcotics. /\fillC'r called it a firsl S\C'p; said his narcotics agents \l'C're building ca~es ai:tainst dnig l ~---------,1 pushers and users 1n olher ClllC'S. Thr La.,.,·rence raid created headlines -and controversy. Un11"ersitv olfu:ials bristled bccase Millrr·s me11 invaded one school-owned dorn11roryl ::ind two pnl'ate!y operated ones ad1arcnt In the campus. Students and others accused l\filler of "Gestapo'' tsct1r.s.I l\fanv on the s I a t e 's newSpapcrs criticized him for l •·political grandst;ind1ng " I f.1illrr said he is disturbed ! bv neither his cril1ci; -nor bY rumored threats nn hisl life. He i;hrugs n!f 1he f f LET'S BE FRIENDLY It you have nr1v 11•·ii,:hbrir.i:: or kno\V of anyonf' moving to OLJT arra, 11l<·a~e trll us so 1hal \\"r, 1nay f'xh•nrl a friendly \\·..-lc1>me 11nd hr!11 thPl!l l•i b<--;ome 8('(}URiTI1l'd in lhl'lr new surroundings, So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 494-9361 Harbor Visitor . 646-0174 I See by Today's Want Ads e I A~l CANARY fY!'llo" )~ !9:iti Por~che C'Ollp!' 1600 N 11·11h chrnm P, .. nn Cf'nsor· gl11p nri.:!'si;11ry. e MAVI': \\'A~HER \\"ILL DEJ_,fVER, excpllent con· dltJOn, $-i!i . • L.l">l'l'ly rr~ll1f' for llTl iri- VIT lng flpf'll hf>11.rth: fLrt· ICrt"Pn 11nd fixlurrs. e A Joi or \"'llrl "ir from 1h1~ 11111>, . \u!om111l1' rlrfros1. ing f\'ORGt rf'frli.!t'111tnr, 141>, cubic 1001, good ronri. """ The Famous and Original ORT HO-PAK ~ Fieldcrest no-iron King or Queen size top sheet • Fieldcrest no-iron King or Queen size fitted bottom sheet • 2 King or Queen size bolste r pillows • 2 pillow cases • King or Queen size mattress pad •King or Queen size metal frame on easy-rolling casters. DOUBLE BONUS King or Queen : headboard plus quilted bed- spread. Twin or Full : plastic headboard and metal frame on easy-rolling casters. Conver-· tibia Sofa: genuine Shepherd• castera ~Prove t~e value .b·y ---comnar1ngves,Orthodarestoaskyo11to : r compare this mattress at-this price with other mattresses at the same price. Do and you 'll notice the difference. Ortho'a quality of fabric, sisal, cotton felt and other Insulation features is higher. Ortho's basic innerspring unit is sturdier. Ortho's construction is of higher standards than most. This Ortho mattress is simply the best value for the money every day of the week ... but look at the new low price right nowt B;;:r;;:;;.u;;nus$ 95 now only SUPER QUEEN SIZE '09·~!~$)QQ95 TWINonFULLSIZE•ea·~:·,: sgg95 lnclPdff Ortho-P•k A Doubft Bonus &nclttdet Special Double Bonus Save on this super Queen-size Convertible Sofa .. .. . eeeOrtho's Penthouse! You can only buy Ortho Mattresses at Ortho Stores The Nation's Largest Chain FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. !Next lo Zody's) Phone: 839'4570 ANAHEIM 1811 W. Lincoln Ave. jJu•I Eut of FedMertj Phone: n6-2590 Never before priced so low at your nearest Orthol Modern Tuxedo styling with deluxe construction fea- tures and a button-free Ortho super size inne·rspring mattress. Scuff-free, glove soft vinyl upholstery ii ·available in black, gold, olive, while or Jamon.Genuine Shepherd" casters for easy mobility, Includes Convertible Sofa Double Bonus Save'BO s,,~'.~ss24995 SUPER QUEEN of Mattress Specialists! LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewood Dr. In Candlewood Shops !Across from Lakewood Center) Phone: 634-4134 OPEN DAILY 10-9•SAT.10 -6•SUN. 12·6•1MMEDIATE DELIVERY•CREDIT TERMSAVAILABLE•BANKAMERICAR I •MASTER CHARGf f ,, • I ,.. "' I Fashion Opus Lilting strains of music will continue to echo for· all county children i.s the "sold out" sign goes up for Fashion Concerto, Opus 13, sponsored by ,the Orange County Philharmonic Society. One o( the county's major benefits funds a nlinimum or 10 youth conce rts offered free of charge to an estimated 15.000 children frQm .all p~blic, private and' parochial schools. The conce rts are played and narrated · by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, California Chamber Symphony and The Debut Orchestra. ..JJ Heading the countywide committee for the fashio n luncheon Wed- nesday, March 3 1, in the Newporter lnn are ~trs. J\.1iles Larson, Balboa, gen· eral chairman; Mrs. Richard O. Allen, Corona del 111ar, co~cbairman, and Mrs. John Wayne, honorary patroness chairman. Society patronesses, members and their guests will gather at 11 a.m. and followin g a noon luncheon Miss Genevieve Knowles. l Magnin fashion director who \viii fly from San Francisco for the lavish style spectacular, will present the sho\v. FABULOUS JEWELS . For the 13th year, I. Magnin 's opulent revie\v will be complemented by a $2 million parade of Laykin et Cie's fabulous jewels and there will be a gift of a Laykin je,vel and a gift fro m Magnin's for two of the lucky guests. Philharmonic members who \\•ill model the precious collection are the A1mes. MichaeJ BriCk, Edward Schumacher, James B. Keyes and Well· ington Bonner. · Top designers in the fa shion \Vorld, many of them exclusive with [, )1agnin on the Pacific Coast, 'viii include fabulous imported ready-to-wear from Courreges, Ungaro, Patou and Valentino. Advanced fashions from Norman Noren ansi exclusive designs from Gustave Tassell and Jean Louis wilf be promenaded. · ' Creations of young designers including Oscar .de la Renta. Chester Weinberg, Teal Traina and Marchesa di Gresy will be vi e\Ved, and Bill Tice, designer for Royal Robes, will be on hand to present one of his dynamic segments in the sho\v. Citing the movement to\vard a more individualized v.1ay of dressi ng today. he creates "at bome·going out" costumes that are imaginative, pretty, feminine, dramati c or mysterious. Philharmonic members \\1ho 'viii supplement the store's professional modeling staff '"ill include the Mm es. David Ne\\1bro, Ra)•mond Dosta , H. Donald Outmans, Jack Ross, A. Baya rd Dod Jr .. Raymond Bukaty, Robert Lee, M. Lyell Evans and Michael Goldstein. Harbor Area models are the Misses Linda Jones, Yvonne Hu ston, Wynn Marr, Pat Straight, Roberta Palasek and Valarie Jackson, juniors; Grego ry Jones and ~lexandra Kay, 6-year-olds, and Diana Traughber, PauJa Nerns and Pamela Siler, teens. (See FASHIONS, Page 141 ' • Seo -red fo.·r Viewers '· 6men SCALES BALANCED FOR.SUCCESS -Mrs. Miles Larson, Balboa, overall chairman of Fashion Concerto, Opus 13, gleefully notes that the scales indicate success for the 13th annual I. ~1agnin extravaganza sponsored by the Orange County Philharmonic Society . The opulent luncheon and show, one of the county's n1ajor fu nding even ts~ provides free yo uth concerts to all area chi\· dren. It features creations by internationally-kno\\"ll designers and a display of priceless je\vels by Laykin et Cie's. B£A ANDERSO':'!, Editor ....... FAVORING THE OLD COLLEGE TRY -Cheering for scbolarships are (left to right) Mr.s. Craig Combs. Mrs. Tim- othy Devine and Mrs. ~~rdon Morr~w, ":lembers of the Tow~ aid Go\~11 Junior Aux1lla.ry of Un1vers1ty of Southern Cal14 fornia. They "·ill be among Orange Coast supporters attend· ing the scholarship benefit dinner daOce taking place Sat- urday, March 20, in the Century Plaza Hotel. Proceeds will be contributed to scholarships and graduate· fellowships for \VOmen sc holars at USC. -------=- Dancing Shoes Fill Scholarship Funds ~lultitiered candelabra su rrounded by greenery and fresh f!o\vcr~ will center tables when more than 800 guests arrive at the Cenlury Plaza Jlotel fro1n all areas of Los Angeles and Orange Counties. The annual dinner dance sponsored by the Universily of Southern ('aliforn ia 1'0\Vn and GO\l'n Auxiliary ll'ill take place beginning at 7 p.m. Saturday, March 20 . A com bined effort of Los Angeles and Orange Cou nty chapters. the event will be ne fit the scholarship fun d which provides scholastic.: ::.~~; ~ "'C to deservi ng wo1nen students at the uni versity. Fund s raised al so are used for graduate fello\vship.~. \Velcoming members and guests \Vii i he chap ter president. i\lr.~. <;harles C. Reed . Los Angeles. and .l\1rs. Ed\1•ard C. Bru1nleu Jr .. Orange County. l)r. John R. Jl ubbard, ne\I' presiden t of the university. rnembers or th e board of trustees and th e staff of the athleti c department are expected to be present in support or this "·orthwhile cause. The Orange County Chapter, founded in 1969. cosponsors th e event with the parent chapte r. As a result of last year's benefit, £8,000 was con· tri buted to the university, providin g two full tuition and four partial tui tion scholarships. . Orange County committee members assisting Mrs. 1\1ichael Gibb, c:ha1rman, are the .l\1mes. James ~l ewitl, finan ce: Timothy A. Devine and Derek Lewis, prizes; Donald Clarke and Patrick Tyne. invitations; Dale Stinchfield and Bru ce Galey. patronesses: Richard Hunsaker, Mason Fen ltn and Gordon Morro,1·. program; Douglas Simpson and John Miller, rese rva· vations. and Bernard A. Leckie and Philip An shutz, publicity. Beach area residents attending in c I u de the Messrs. and Mmes. Anchutz, Richard Brownsberger, Brumleu, John Cashion. Clark. Craig Combs, Richard Cramer, Devine. Dirk Eastman, Franklin Fiorentino, Paul lladley, \Villiam C. l·Jaze\vinkel , Leckie and Lewis. Al so attending are the 'Messrs. and fl.1me s. Gordon Morrow, Ran· dolph Parker, Richard Ramella, David Roberson , Dougl as Simpson, James Ty,ler, James K. White, James Young and Brian Zenz and Dr. and Mrs. James McCunnif( from the I-larbor Area. . From 1-l untington Valley "'ill be the J\olcssrs. and Mmes . John Barbee. Edward Hall igan, Taylor Richardson, Robert S,mith and Oby Woods. . ' .· " . .. :~ .. Fools Should Stick to Rules When -Playing Dating Game :-. DEAR ANN LA NDERS: 1 just read ..-;i a heartbreaking story in the newspaper .... 11nd hope: you will do whal you can to warn people against computer dal 1ni: firms and various so-ca lled male match· ing agencies. ANN LANDERS it up. -REV. AND MRS. L.E.o .. ELBERFELD, IND • DEAR DAUGHTER: Congratulations on passing the test for your Operator's License. Your car keys were given to you with the understanding that you will behave as a responsible young adult. Your keys, like your Operator'• License, are probationary -youni so lont as they are used with cummo n sense and courtesy. But they will be taken rrom you if there is rea.son to believe you have abused lhc privilege. We realize n9yon• can have an acci den t but please drive defensively al all times. ~ to give you a car of your own but we promise to be cooperative and generous with the family car. We ask only that you let us know where you are going and who will he riding with you. LOVE , -f\IOTHER ANI) DAD 10 years tny jun ior. Am l being foolisl;~ -YOUNGER THAN SPRINGTIME • DEAR SPRING: Which JO yea rs (Pe you talking about? lf you are 68 aqd ~1r. Wonderful Is A, lhr. llght Is gr'fh. If you are 39 and be ;~ ?9 -1¥1 " take a de lour. A woman in Carteret, N.J .. said her «laughter who had a crippled spine sent $395 10 a·service which promised dates over a five·year period. She didn't gel even one. One man telephoned her bul he sounded so crude she hung up on him . When the girl asked for a refund , rom the company she was told. "Sorry ~ ~ \Ve don 'l give refunds.·• Another man spcl'lt $595 and was pro- mised a date every two v.'eeks for three years. Hr received fi\ r names from the ''service" and met only on\ gi rl Y.·ho was "not what he had hoped fo-4 " 1sn'l if pathetic that lonely people , r ~sperate for compan ionship, get bilked out of lheir hard-earned money by these crooks? J, myself, have seen their mail4 jogs. Some of them look very respecta ble. They carry endorsements of clergymen and doctor!! -pictures and all. Please, Ann, do what you can lo alert the readinR public lo these unscn1pul ons scoundrels. ll would be a real service. Thank you. -NEWARK NE\\' S READER DEAR N.N.: I have rcpealt ly printed wamlng1 a11tntl computer d a t I n g •ervlces and maf.e..mtlcblng operations and will continue lo do 10. I'm afraid, however, that Barnum wa1 rlgbl. Tbere 's a sucker born every minute. (And two Lo lake 'in:ll. DEAR ANN LANDERS' We lllougl\f you might like to kno\V aboul a fam ily thal. enjoy~ good teenager -parent rPla- tionshi p. We rdid it 1 by eslablishing J{Uirlelines 11~ well as-giving freedom within those lines. The ltUer below sums Yuur mother and I are \Yilling to pay for the extra ·1,1surance and gasoline so long 11s the tbove condiUons are followed. We reg'-t we cannot afford DEAR REV. AND ~1RS. l •. E.: Your lttter 11 right on ? Tbanks for sharin&· There Would be fewer hassles over the family chnriol If teenagers knew preclite· ly whllt> was expecltd of them. DEAR A"NN tANDERS : rm a grandmother whose divorce \\'ill be final in a few week s. An allractl\'e, fascinating man has made me feel like a woman again. llt ~!'Isn't n1enlioned marriage but he migtft. The big question : He's For lhe same pr1ce. here's some U'l•re advice: You're not even dlvorttd §fl Whal'• your hurry? , \\'hat awaits you on lhe other ~Sidt or the marriage veil? J~ow can *'' be iiure your marriage w\11 wark t Reil<t Ann Landers' bookl et "Marriage -WMt lo Expect." Stnd your request to Ml\ Landers In care of Ule DA TL Y PILOT cncloslns 50 cenls in coin ·1 n d a long, stamped, self·addrc!Sed eov J4 OAJLY PILOT Sparks Fly From White House Press Machinery sidered l ~f the ultimates in communicallons. I learn somethlna every day -which is what I like about It." ! • I U,I T•~- TONGUE SIZZLES Connie Stu1rt I I By HELEN TH0~1AS WASHINGTON !UPI ) Connlt: Stuart, the first lady's staff director, is becoming a! quotable as lively ~1artha Mitchell on tile Washington scene. But she has the familiar complai11t when she reads her siztling ~·ide a w i n g i n g statements. She was mis· quoted or her words 'A'ere taken out of context. She's suit telling White House ne~·swomen Olat she did nol call them '·leeches'' in a speech before a women·s club in Ridgewood, N.J. She insists that wherever she was reported 1s deriding Ole pre", she actually meant "polJli· ciaru" on Capitol Hill. That has not made the con- gressmen happy -especially at a lime v.·hen President Nix- on is attempting to pursue the high road of "bipartisanship'' to put his program across. The: redhai~ Mrs. Stuart came on like a ball of fire when she wa!l appointed in October, 1969. She was billed as a First Lady "image maker.'' But it does not seem likely that she was rerlecting Pat Nixon's sentiments wben she spoke !1st Saturday lo ! 1e:minar on careen in com· municaUons b e f or e the American Women in !Udio and Television, Inc. She v.·as quoted as telling job seeking women to "lie a liltl'e'' on their resumes. "I didn 't say 'lie'." said P.trs. Stuart when contacted later. ··t said they couJd stretch the truth a little.'' She a I s o recommended playing ' ' o n e prospective employer off against lhe other" and said; ··u you feel the ax coming, get out." · "I come from a practical. hard -working middle American family," she went on. "This implanted in me a deiire for hard work rev..·arded by hard cash.'' With such pract ic al philosophy, P.1rs. Stuart, at the age of 32, is the youngest First Lady press secretary i 1 history-and the highest paid, more than $30.000 a year, Her remarks are renUnfs- ttnt. of a previous White House administration and a press secretary who insisted that be never lied to reponers. "I Just shade the truth a bit," he explained . De!lpite the pitfalls of the credibilit y gap -suffered greaUy by the previous ad· mlnistr.11tion -Mrs. Stuart !ffms not to worry in advising Olhtrs to "stretch the truth'' From Page 13 Horoscope v.·hen they're looking for 3 ' Job. Does she practJce what !ihe. preaches? Mr5. Stuart rull!l a taut ship at ll'e White. House. Most of Ole time her staff i!l uptight. She refers to the press as "the enemy'' behind the scene!l and often Ja ys do'A'11 the law: "I am the hos!." And she has stated on several occasions that she is a job-hopper every two years. "I've had six lobs in 10 years -all in CQmmunications," she said 1n her speech. But she also &ays of press secretary White House "could the j"b at the be con· She tl50 has high praise for ~1rs. Nii::on. "I love my boas." &he said. "I've never worked for a woman before but Mrs .. Nixon is one ol the best employers I've ever had ." Mrs. Stuart and M r ! . f.fitchell have had a feud for sometime, and while they are both vivacious outspoken women, the wife of the At· tornty General calls them· as she sees them. Rarely does she tell reporters she has been misquoted. ... Fashion Taurus: Use Diplomacy The patroness list includes Uie Mmes. Alien, Johnson Bal· lard, Richard E. Barrett. Er· nest Bryant, Torrence Dodds, Clinton Eastman, P.1erel K. Gaede, Fred S. Hilpert, Lee \\'illiam Jenks, MelviUe Keim, Charles Kelly, Larson. Bon· ner La"'·renze, Bonner, Harry J . March and William Mason. Completing !he li.~t are 1he Mmes. Richard Mc CI u re,. William ~ead, Br ad for rl Miller, Adrian Pelletier, Paul J . Queyrel, William D. Red· f ield, Harr y Rinker, Schumacher, John Sparling and Charles Wheeler. Committee members taking tables include the ~1me~. John Donaldson, Harry H i g g er , John English, Doroth y Hit- chison, Warren Gibbons and David \\'all Lang. Others are the 'Imes. ,John Arens, William L. Stoenner, Charles Findlay, Richard ~1or· rison, Gilbert Thom p son, David Thurm, Al Herbold, Claude Patterson. Thomas Riley, \'lill iam Mc Cord. Thomas Risner .Jr., Richard McClure. Raymond Godber. Douglas \\'. Burgess. Les Van Dyke, Dana 8 . Lynch and Stanley Le Lif'rre. FRIDAY MARCH 19 By SYDJ\'EY O~iARR Financial position may not be solid. Know this and proceed vdth caution. S•GITTARIUS (Nov. 22· ARIES 1March 21-April 191: Accent on furthering educa· Dec. 21 ): What you regard lion . rieaa and ~·rite . Study as solid may be the opposite. special reports. Be resourceful. Take in- TAURUS I April 2ff.~fay 20 l: Jtiative . groups, special organizations concerned with c h a r I t y • AQ UARIUS I Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Best to entertain close to home base. Veering too far off course might be a mistake. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): Intuitive intellect is sharply honed. You are able to sense trends. Straighten out financial ques· CAPRICORN fDec . 22-Jan. lion ~·ith marriage or business 191: Look bthind scenes for partner. Diplomacy gains. vital answe~. Cooperate "'ilh G E,1 JN I I ~1 ay 21-J une 20 l : I }iiiiiiii-iiiiiilii-iiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiliii Some "·ho are close I y·· a.S-Ociated w>th perwnal ef·I (f \(. ,. ' forts may act 1n eccentric , Cl manner. I CA~CER /June 21-July 22 ): ~ e e Basic plans can be suc· c1 e s s Fu 11 y fdo rm ulatebd I ~~·1 · ~ O\'estments ten now to e successfu l I LEO /July ~1-Aug . 22 1: Finish rather than begln : get we!l-round'erl picture.' QUICK WEST INSTl'a: ILYD. co,~~~~ (t~~i.gn;.~~t. 221.1 ~1~ Home life, long-standing com· 'N' EASY ~. !z mitments come strongly into frame of reference. Ko time 1 to play games. I LIB RA !Sepl. 23-0cl. 221, LARGEST SELECTION OF Relafae.. nei~hbors may be l p AT TERNS argument a 1[\·e. Follow through on your own judg-AND ~000 TO EAT? -'Youngsters Joni \Vaters, 3, and ~aniel \\"il!iam ~. fl. demoni;trate ~·hat dangers can "\:".il.~rk in cupboards left untended by careless mothers. :-;;;1"'ational Poison Prevention \reek, A1arch 21·27, is being supporled by \\'omen's Auxiliary to the Orange County Pha.rmaceutical Association ~·ith the aim of having residents "poison-proof" their bomes. Comm inl'e chairmen are the 'Imes. Schumacher, Queyre l. m~n! SCORPIO !Oct. 23·:\nv. 21 1: F:d\\·ard Oln arez. Rerger. r---~~;.---;;;;;;;.-;.-;.-0 James Keyes, B. J. Lang, Al-cuiroM FITTEO lan Bro\\·ne, James CPA·en.1 FOAM D•lSS FO llMS STRETCH FABRIC S IN ORANGE COUNTY 153' WESTMINSTER ILVD., WESTMINSTER • 892-2665 ~Blight • · Blotted :.:. • Cos1a .\!esa Blue Birrls • most J?Ot more than they rga1ned fnr \1hcn they ~ked the city's Parks De· ~r1men t frir a crimmun ity :;,_Ulvnl\'Cment pr0;ect. ~-Aflcr a Fire rinli( and ral!v, Te \\'inkle Park. Satuf- ~ay, ~larch :?O. \\1th Coun· ;ti!man A. L. Ptnkle~· pre~ilf Jng. more than 4(1(1 ~iris \\'JI) :iour area parks picking up :utter. . ~ -~. i'.:. VFW Auxiliary . ' ;" Cnastll ni! Aux1harv to "~-eterans of Foreign. \\'ars. ~F o s t .1.'1.'lfi iiathers thf' first ~ th1rrl Frida ys IH 8 pm. ~ta .\1esa's /I, mer\ c an ~ion Hall l!l the meeting ~ne. Anti-poison Week Time to War on Toxics ls you r home poison proof yearly from accidental poison· cies for 1nqulsit1ve youngsters'.' ings that could ha\'e been Tht leaflet concern i n gl If )'OU ha\·e bee n alow to prevented with a little more poisonous plants lista the clean out those easy to reach care. many innocent looking garden! cupboards where small fingers Medicines not only should shrubs whose leaves or seeds1 ran find toxic cleansing agent~ be locked away securely, but can be fata l. They include the 1 and to Jock away a 11 all old prescription mtdicines oleander, poinsettia, mistlet~, mcrlicincs. now is the time should promptly ht di~posed lantana and aialea. to hasten the job. of "''hen there is no longer -~ ..,;;;;;..~,..-.,;;;: !\ational Poison Pre\'ention any need for them. 1,000·1 OP: Oil rAINTIN•l \\'eek \\'Ill be observed Sunday, The: Phannaceutical AUX· WHOLESALE WARIHOUll 'larch 21..Saturday, March 27, ihary next week is distnbuting Ol'IN TO THI ru1LIC and the \\'omen·s Auxiliary posters, Rntidote material and 50°/o OFF kl tn the o:ange c .o~nt .y poi!'.On plant infnrmallOO \01 1111E.£OIN011.JA NTAAHA ,~ Pharmaceutical Assoc1at1nn IS Orange County 1 j b r a r i e s , ,_ •lH* I jQi ning in efforts to educate nursery schools ~ ph11rma· .~..-~-:_ 0~'~'~'~'~";::;"~'"~'~'~'~""~~-~!I citizens on tht dangers -~ ---- present in Oieir own homes. Full•rton OfMn Sun., 12·5 p.m. , Of the. several hundred L . s • I thousands of poison cases arde 1ze..., '"""''d each year. more than e ., ha lf the victims are children less than five years old . There are approximately 1800 deaths • save $100 now on CORNING RANGE Rich girl, poor girl, nvr1e1 ond 1eoch1rt, Bank clerlc 1, city eniployes end wiv•s of preocher1- clt weor pant 1uit1. Why not you? Th• Most Revolutionary Adv1nc• In Cooking In 100 Ye1rs e NO BURNERS e NO COILS e NO ORIP PANS Juit e fi ef , white 1urfece, Compl•t• th•rmoitatic he•t control. SET OF 8 CORNING from $21 .00 COOKMATES INCLUDED I I s4999s I ~ WAS SSt9 t5 ~~ 1 SIZES 14Va-24~ 31 .. 6 I Effa. HA p' :..s · Nor 1s L · IZE SHOP I cl~,~5 .~~~!,O.~T .e~.~.o;, I 1-1 COSTA M6SA 411 E. 17th St. 46-1614 •• 11, ,., kf, , •• EL TORO L19un1 Hiiis Pl1 11 IMtrt tt l t ••OR) 1·1J,.JIJO 4ell, 1 0°6 M 'lJ t O·f 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTI N•TON llACH I Nttt tt IM9' I res. f•n1lr.,.1 .t.1M1 tH 014N01"111 M4LL '°ULL,lfON • l \\'iHiam Rush. David G. New-EX•cr DIJ PLtc.t.rE 0' VOUll JOIGUllE bro, Dosta, Charles Friedman, '" P.t.Nr11 Sparling. Robert Chapman, Ralph 1'.l ·Tandowsky and Michael Brick . IARIAa:A GAlllDNllll IJ9·S5l2 Exclusive, pat# ented. Aoller-matic Mechan ism is jet-slmple for maximum depend.11b ility • Ro ller-driv e ef imin ates gears that can wear. There's no oli 10 leek. There are fewer moving parls. Never needs lubrication. It's jet-reliable. Frigidaire! Jet Action 1-18 Washer rinses great! Tailored wuhlng actiM-1 pieee to 18 lbs. ••. Of any load In between. No attach· menta to 1dd Of 110fS. 2-posttlon I PMd Seleotor. ~tlon Water T~ peratvre Selector for Je4 Action Wllhno. Gentle, contro!lad water cunente dffp- llexlbUlty. 5-fe• N81'°"" c!ean clotl'leS. Permanent Pren Care plus -'uto- metic Soak eye re. wide Proltclloft P111n.1-yearW1rr1nty lor rep111lr cl any detect 11'1 tl'le entire product. plus a •-year P1otectlon Plan (parts ri~;;;;;,,.,,,,.~ only) IOI" furnishing replace.. ment !or any defective par1 In tl'le complete Tfins-- m!ssion (eacept belt), Drive Moler and Water Pumps. COSTA MESA Slft'IJll• Roll9'•m.tlc Mechtnllm Is patented. No gears to wear. No oU k> leak. EL TORO Laguna Hilla P laza 411 E. Sevent••nth St. W..f614 dolly 9-9 Sot. 9-6 I l11tn to lo .. ·011) 837-3830 daily 10.6 M/F 10.9 R Radio Dl1p1tched SERVICE TV & APPLIANCE Frigid aire e RCA Sylvenf1 • M1yt19 For D1pend1bl1. Friendly Service C1ll 54~3437 • Spring Stirs Appetites !11£i ... 0/<IL y PILOO PllOm by J1<11it Comb1 The arrlvaJ of ~pring, Sunday. ~1arch 21 , has al ready stirred the appetit~s of these three urchins, enjoying a quick lunch in Costa Mesa Park. T~e gourmel enthusiasts are (from left t o r ight) Teri Or tega, 1. Tracy C.arlyle, 18 months and Tina Ortega, 2. They were among 1nany I L I park visitors o!fering the season a \I/arm welcome. • •' r .. •• Qircling the Pacific Anong passengers aboard the_ President \\lilson fO! a 66-day Circle Pacific Crtuse arc former Los A~geles c1t.Y counc1!n1an George P. Cron k aryd ~1rs. Cronk of Laguna llills. Their pnrts of call_ 1nc_!ude P;;peete. Pago Pago. Aui.:k!and. Sydney. Bah. S1nga· pcte. hlani!a and l~onolu!u~. =========~II FINAL 3 DAYS OF OUR SALE i B D HOWES and SON fl;£ J E\\'[LERS FOR THREE GE~tRATIO.~S Nt~?ORT BE \Cn: :nz v;, Lico . &;;-21:1 Kid ; Like to Ask Andy Costa Mesans Attend Lutheran Convention i\1rs. Dwight r-.1. Boberts and J\lrs. t\arl \Vlkstrom o[ Prince or Peace Lulheran Church. <.:osta Mesa \\Ill be among delegates from ~2 churches "·hen the sixth annual con· vention of American Lutheran Church Women begins on Saturday. March 20. The day·s activities "'111 begi n at 9 a.m. in Fa1lh Lutheran Chruch of Anaheun. Principal speaker for the occasion 1s Dr. Joseph L. Knutson, president of Con· Chapter Looks At State Law An attorney's discussion or how the new California divorce law affects women "'Ill highlight the meeting of the Orange County Chapter of the Na11onal Organi1.a11on for \Vomen scheduled for lomorro11,· at 8 p.m. The meeting, which is upen lo bo!h men and won1en. will take place 1n the Republic Federal Savings and Loan Assoc1at1on building. Santa Ana. eord1a College. r-.·loorehead. tllinn. A Bible ~tudy "'ill be presented bv the Rev. Paul (' Johnson. former P.astor of Ghrist Lutheran Church in Oraoge and missionary to .Japan. now a staff membe.r of California Lutheran Bible School tl.1usic will be provided by a singing group knO\\'ll as Ladies of Song and by the Interpretive Choir of Gloria l)e1 Lutheran Church. Dana Point. and the W om e n 's Chorus of St. Mark'c; Lutheran Church. Haeienda Heights. Drycleaners Give Guide A guide used b~· Jrycleaners in setlling clai1ns gives these "life expectancies·· on men's garmen1 s· O\'ercoats f o u r y~a rs; the same for winter suits, "·ool and "'OOl·blencl slacks and sports coats: ~ .... ·eaters, wool and wool·blend summer suits. silk robe.s, three years : shirts and derwear, two year!:. No Extra Chor9e for Groups! BIG 8x10 LIVING COLOR PICTURE 95' PLUS TA X ONE 70 A FAM ILY . COA~T COLOR • sor HANDLING CHARGE Nol iu.t •" old .f81~ioned tinled or colo, .. d oicture bul "LIVING COLOR'." The ,ompfe11 Portrait com11 •li•t .,. t•plu1ed i11 •me1in9 Full.Colo, Re .. l•1m. THURS.· FRI .· SA TUR DAY MAR. 18-19-20 -HOURS 10 to 5 Younglond HARBOR CENTER 545-1440 2300 HARBOR BLVD. ., TllurM!ay, Marci! 18, 1q71 DAILY PILOT J 5 Does Amelia Earhart Still . Live? Secret Locked • Silence By JO O~ OI lfle Otltr 'llr Sl•fl If Joe Klaas is right, Amelia Earhart is alive 11nd well in New Jersey, living under the name of Irene Bolam. He claims he has discovered a secret well-guarded for 3J years by two major world governments that is filled with mystery, intrigue and an unlikely chain of events and prominent people. Klaas, author of the book "Amelia Earhart Lives," was the final speaker for the an· nual celebrity series book reviews sponsored by the South Coast Alumnae Chapter of Pi Beta Phi. "I've fallen in love \~1ilh a dead woman and had the won1an come lo life," KJaas said. He described the aviatrix as the "patron saint of the woman's lib movement" and said that she was a beautiful woman, at least 30 years ahead of her time. As "Lady Lindy'' she was decorated and welcomed after her 1928 flight with parades and honors. ~1YSTERY BEG INS The 1n~·stery and intrigue or her disappearance began "'hen she "'as asked by the While House to undertake an espionage mission to see if the Japanese were building naval bases in the Pacific. She "'as to switch planes around the "'orld an d photograph Truk Island, main· lining a radio silence during the mission. Her navigator, Fred Noonan. had been up almost the entire J night before the mission drink· nam, then her future husband: times the CQnllnements or ing and came aboard with "In our life logelher, I shall e\•en an attractive cage ... only 45 minutes of sleep. not hold you lo any medieval '"I mull t exact a cruel pro- "The second part of the code of (ailhfulness to me. mise. and that ls you will mission," Klaas said. "was nor shall l consider myself let me go in a year if we for her to deliberalely miss bound to you similarly. U \\'e find no happiness together.•• Howland Island and get lost can be honest I think the Joe Klass believes that for a couple of weeks to give difficulties which ar ise may Irene Bo\am , now 73, will· ad· the United States ~ chance best be avoided. mit that she is Amelia to look over the South Pacific. NO INTERFERENCE Earhart someday, and wa.its "There was a security leak, wi·;:1:i:e11~1~~r~s w':rtk i~~erp\',~~ every day for he admittance. however, and a Japanese . . If she doesn't he grins that aircraft carrier was in the nor let the world see our he plans to accept lhe Pulltzer area wailing for Ame I 1 a private joys or disagreements. prize for which his book has Earhart. She was intercepted In this connection I may have been nominated. at Hall Island, 157 degrees lo keep some place where And Mrs. Bolam has to, from Howland Island." I can go to be myself now iC he is right, because her and then, for I c a n n o t secret is out at last for the Amelia Earhart's last word guarantee to endure at all whole "'orld to read. "'as ' 0 \Vait. ., She crashed on''r----------------iiiiiiiiiiii..;;iiiiiiiOj Saipan and from there, Klaas ll says, she was taken to Japan by command of the emperor. OTH ER ALLEGATIOl'\S His other allegations are that President R o o s e v e l t couldn't admit Japan had her because it \\'OU!d have meant war. that the plans for the Japanese Zero fighter were handed lo them in exchange for the life of Amelia Earhart. that Amelia Earhart was Tokyo Rose and th1tl she \\'as l brought back to the United States in the guise of a nun. , Klaas fit s several other! personalities and business in· to the puzzle, i n c I u di n g l Howard Hughell. Lockheed Aircraft and Bernard Baruch. I The book includes letters. photographs of the aviatrix 1 and copies of the letters he sent in his investigations. 25 IS E. Co•sl Highw•y •• MacArthur 81Y tL Coron• d•1 M•r •73 -2990 PANTSUIT DAYS FRIDAY and SATURDAY 0 NL Y 10% OFF of f in • qu•lity pantsuits. Siz11 6 to I I Thal she was a fascinating woman is evidenced by 8 let· Your Charge Account W1lcom1 -Fr11 P•rklnt In ltNr' ter she wrote to George Put·~i.,-"""""'"""""'""'~M""'"~'~"..,c~h~·~··~·,_A.va~l~lo~b~I•""'""'""'""'""'""'~ ROBINSON 'S EASTER BUNNY BREAKFAST ' ' ' NEWPORT I I IN 'THI: LIDO BUFF ETT SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 9:4 5 A ,M, EASTER FRAGRANCE: HUNT IN YOUNG WORLD , 10:45 TO 11 :4 5 . TICKETS IN OUR YOUNG WORLD DEPARTMENT l.25, F AVORS , ENTERTA INMENT, PRIZES FOR ALL~ GRANO DOOR PRIZE: 100 .0 0 EDUCATIONAL. B:>ND S PONSORED 8 '( GOLDEN BOOKS • 2ND DOOR PRIZE: C:ASTER WA RDROBE F OR A SOY ANO GIRL. FROM YOUNG WORLD AND CAM PUS SHOPS, MOTHER1S PRIZE: COSMETIC WARDROBE F ROM EST EE LAUDER FATHER'S PRIZE: COSM ETIC W ARDROBE FROM A RA.M IS GENERAL PRIZE: S ET OF' GOLDEN BOOKS EAST ENTRANCE FACI NG EDWA RDS N EWPORT CI NEMA W ILL SE OPEN AT 9 :30 FOR THOSE ATT l:NO ING BREAKFAST• I ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAN D • I 644 .2800 ' ' ' • ~· ,, • r D.:.I!.'/ ~ILC.T 7. •r;J,;y, 1.::r 1 :" 1 l Zonta Honors Pinned on Senior Coeds Each month the ZOntu Club otNewpatt Harbor honors one 9Cnlor &Ir\ from each of the ,Newport-~tesa high schools as 'the ZonUI Girl-0f·l h!!·month. . The selection is based on • Jeadership, citizenship, :.'llcltolar'!hip and service to her school. At the end ol the ,...AChooJ year. the coeds choolle "the one llley feel most r-quall!ied to be named the Zof\o ·1.ta Girl-of-the-year for their mchool and the recipient of •• $50 savings bond. NEWPORT JIARBOR The Tee Tattler Betrothdl Revealed ~1r. and 1'1rs. Arthur R. Costello of Lido l!le have an- nounced the betrothal of their daugtiter, Carolyn Costello, to CE•llW'1 ~ot•: Ao eo1..,_, ot wom"''' George Deden, son of Mrs. !0p eolt OK"Drrs wlll appe1r ~•ch Dede f p I ..,.,. Jn'"" DAILY PILOT 1a r•PD•t Jetske no aramoun . -" 1or ''-wwtt. ,1r... m111 Relatives and close friends 111..-n to P.0 8oJo: 1.Mll CDlll Mu. Tiit~ mu•I 1111 rK•I-1r11 MonOl~.i of the palt raised champagne RANCHO SAN JCAOUIN. glasses in a toast in the LOW H•T -"' Fiith!, '"' MIMS, B Ibo B Cl b h the Ha..otd s..rw1, n1 Phllll1> Ho111, J 1.,,.1 a a ay u w en Keeler, 12; B F1111hl, Mto. Carvl ensagemenl Wi.S revealed at o·$k•a, 1J: C Ftlghf, 111t Mmet. Wiiliam Raunuurn, J•: J. It. dinner. BIP.-•. n; C•rl Seitrsen. 11J The brlde-el-J a•aduated O f ll11ht, Mr 1. RlCll•rcl L""twllor 11:\."1. "-' n. from Downey High School, THll'EE •LINO MICE -A Fl!1hl, ()o d ('•nded the LJnj. tt.. M,...., p.,.1 Ot&adl, 1-10111, GU1>1rt wney an a .,. tor. l': e F1111111, tr._ Mm•,. J. versity of Southern California, L. W•ltlrio.t, 4111 H1rrv con•m, J11 Her flance ~aduated from Miu Diane Payne, daughler of Mn. Laurtna E. Rldj[e of Newport B"ach, plans to atlmd either UCI or Orange Cout Coile1e. R.i(h.lrcl Lam1r, 51; 0"$1<11, Paul ""' WIH•th, s.i ; c F111h1 •'-' Mmu. Pius X High School. 'Ibey ELLO wooc1r-Laclifll!r 111 111""""'''· SJ; both •!tend '·m·•·· '·liege, CAROLYN COST ll:lcti.yd lits!~. s.t; 0 FlltM. "'9 VI' .._.., "-""' Mmtt. M1r1t s11et1¥, st. How•rd Norwalk. Engaged F1rw.IL 11.o.rt Tlltldler, Joi, -;:;;:;;;:;;::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;;:~::;::;::;~ l!L TOl:O t1 JIU IAU -"' FUghl, ,.,. MIMI. Th c ff Mill & s . DIANE PAYNE NH High home economics and yearbook publlcatons 1s ~1iss Heather Hibbard. daughter of ~tr. and ~1rs. Ralph Hibbard of Costa ~1esa. HEATHER HIBBARD Estancia her sophomore and junior years, the Bank of America homemaking a w a r d in January and the Gold E award this month. BECKY SOURS CdM High :\1iss Sours is listed in '·Who 's \\"ho in Students of America." is a member of the Senior Honor Society and is active in Girl Scouts. KAREN MYERS CM High :..'.~ t'r"~°"'w1r!n.1'».11aFi:;., ~~~ c o ee p1 ce1·y ::' N1';!7~'·F1~~ 1~001~~-I Bulk Coffees, Teas and Spices ~·.i111o Sl\ldo!, 11 rioi.i. 121 Ktnrtt111 From Around The \Vorld . the ' Eirls. 15, Fran! Hlfle; Jot W1tl1r1, and exploring wilderness "' &.ct Ni,., c F11111o1. 11,. MIN•. Beans or Ground Coffee in her spare time. '°"" ~11.;. 111ch1ro 11-1', 11 tiaJH; J. s. Rnm, l7, Fraf!t Nln•il Coffee Tast1·ng She sen:ed on the student K. w. F-1er, ». 8art Nine committee wilh accreditation LOW HE¥'~",." F~!~f1411w Mma 1 SOS A. North Tustin Ava., Santa officials and has been a l-.•c1 oreJel\111, $Im M1rb, Ml•• 10 A.M. fo 7 P.M.-Motdoy thr111 Scrh1rdoy G•ac!1 Jd!NOn, Mr 8 l"lkl~t. ltlt Ana She is a stmifinallst in the California State Scholarship competition. serves as presi· dent of L:shereltes. is a member of AF'S . Ecology Club. S1odent Te a ch r r Advisory Board and hall ~·ork· ed in the Ne\l·port Harbor Drug Seminar and t h e Interact Club F'ashion Shov.•. During her Junior year she \1·as a member of CSF and the Spanis h Club, was a Stu· dent Congress representative and participateid in gym· nasties and bad minton. Vice president of mr class, president of GAA and editor· in-chief of the yearbook. i\.liss Hibbard is a member of AFS ;ind Sk i Club and is i;econd- semester commissioner of stu- dent activities. CORONA DEL ~tAR "htlss Becky Sours, daughter of Mr. and ~1rs. John A. Sours of Newport Beach, serves as ASB secretary and is a member of AF'S. the "Sun- daze" staff and California Association of Student Coun· cils. She plans to attend the sum- mer session at the University of PerUgia in Perugia, Italy. to study humanities, then enroll at the University of Santa Clara to major in English and obtain a leaching credential. r2presentatlve to the Eduea-M ....... e:c11m M41Bll. "1 c .... r1,,..,1 Suffcrys 12 to 5 -n. 17141 I JS-41'1 l. al De I t r. ·1!1,,.'~·~··~·~· ~"~'~'~";•~•~"~'"'~'~"~'"":"~'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ton ve opmen """"'unc1 Wtinater, n. f<1r three years. During her -- freshman year she was class president and a member of flexible schedullng. ~1iss Payne also is a member of lhe Tri-Hi·Y group Hoa Himene and lhe Mormon Church and received the DAR Thimble Se111ing Award. ESTANCIA Planning lo attend OCC then a state college and major 1n During her Junior year she was class treasurer and mern- ber of the class council and during her sophomore year she was on the class council and a member of GAA and the yearbook staff. i\:IJss Hibbard also ~·on the Presidential Fitness Award in During her junior year she was class secretary, member of AFS. drill team and CASC, and durmg h!!r sophomore year she was a student con· gressman and AFS member. COSTA ~IESA 'ro.1iss Karen ~1yers, daughter of Mr. and ~1rs. Franklin 0 . t.-!yers of Costa ~ter;a , plans to attend Golden West College then the University of Colorado, majoring in v.•riting Mis! Myers has been active in the Orange Co un ty Philhannon.ic Society Juniors and the Sierra Club and was named winner of the E. I . Moore award during her junior year. She was her school's representative in the l 1971 competition for Youth Senate Week. Mother Bummed Out AAUW Features Home Economist Irish Fare In Gallev Drum By ER.\IA 80i\.18ECK For years. I have been tell· Ing myself that my son docs not do v.•ell in school be<:ausc he is marching to a different dnunmer. Now I have the feeling if he dctsn'l sh:ipe up. he's AT WIT 'S END going to gobsc step his v.·ay right into the unemployment office The ether morning. he !:'hur. ned into the kitchen and said, "I will be glad when I c.'.ln retire." "From 1vhat~" I asked. "From studying,'' he said. ''F'rankly," I grumbled. "your father and I are 111orricd about you. The only thing you've passed all year is your eye examination." "They don't teach mC' "'hat wanl to be," he said . '"I Concert Rings Out Newport ~ach Nigh\ 011'\s of the Hoot n' Holler Roosl will gather in a new locale. the social hall of Bethel Towers in Costa t.tesa. for a musical program at 2 p·m. Sunday. March 21. Featured will be lhe Peace Rineers. a group of teenagers performing \\•ilh Schulrnerich hand bells from P~nnsylvania. Mrs. \Vesley Marquart of Orang(' will be in charge of the program. Refreshments will be served during the social hour. Area Council Plons Meeting The bi·monthly meeling of ioui.bcrn California Council of Beta Sigma Phi will take place on Sunday, March 21, in the Beverly tiilton ltotel. Ap proximaltly 1200 members and guests are C'X· peeled to attend the breakfast session. with the business nit?eting scheduled for ID a.m. An election of 1971·71 ex· ecutive board officers \l'ill held the 1genda. Beats Heard v.•ant lo be a South An1crican "Eat your heart out. Col. basebal l catcher for Sanders." Baltimore." Now, r wasn't su re. "You'd The drums again. I heard better hustle." I said. "or thc1n v,rhen he was six. \Vhen you'll be late for school.'' he spe!M. hours in lhe bath-"Do I have to go today~" roo1n filling up his naval ~·i1h he asked. ··1 read where a \l'ater squeezed from a \\'ash-school in California gives }"OU cloth and announced at din· trading stamps if you shoy,· ner. '"It takes 14 drops to flll up for classes. Boy. wouldn't an average n.1vrl.'' I smiled to thlll bf' something•·· rnyself, ··My son the scien-. Its\."' "f guess it ~·ould be an incenlive," I said. \\'hen he was eight and took ··incentive, heck. You could the wheels off my sweeper, save slamps till you go! al!ached lhC'm to the {"]othes enough to redeen1 !hem for hamper and reeled it in to 3 car. Then you could blow.'· find his "lucky soc ks" -0n test The drums They 11i•ere clays. I smiled kno\Yingly , "My th . .. distillCl and clear nnv.•. They son. e_eng1neer . said, ··~1y son ... the bum." Al nine, he turned our _ _ __ hathroom into a sweating, tee1ning jungle for a horned toad that even1u:1lly bled through the eyes and died. And the drums chanled. ··My ~on. the vet ." The featured speaker for a sa lad luncheon on Saturda~. March 20, sponsored by the \\'estminsler-Fountain Valley Branch of the fl,merican Association of Univ e r s i I y \Vomen v.·ill be ~1rs. Dorothy \Venck . In charge of nrrangemen1s for the event. scheduled to begin at noon in Golden \\1e~t College. 1s Mrs. Richard Bushnell. She will be assil5ted by Mrs. Albert Rednton and Mrs. Hugh AlcC-Onahey. 1"he Career ~1other is fhr topic chosen by Mrs. Wenck, home advisor for the Universi. ty of California's agncultural extension service, 0 range County. , An Irish buffet in honor of I St. P.itrick"s Day JS on deck for me1nbers of the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Salur· day, March 20, in their newly dedicated clubhouse in Corona del ~1ar. Cocktails will be served at 7 and the buffet will begin al 8:30 p.m. Dancing to lhe music of John Gettle and his Bilge Pumpers will round out the evening. ) Chairmen are Mr. and ~trs. David Stone, and assisting are lhe James Emmis, Getlles and John Bullers. I STARS Svclney Om•rr i1 on1 of I~• world's 9r11t t tkolo91r1. Hi1 column i• o"• of t~. DAILY PILOrs 9r1•t f••+ur•1. At 14, 1,·hen hi~ boyfriends \\'ere taking girls to sock hops. he stayed home and listened to his tape recordings of belches recorded after a typical cafeteria lunch. Bcom boom. ··~1y son, thE> creati\'e producer ·· He bounct-d basketballs off 1he piano and I told myself. he \\'as destined tor a lonely life on the concert ~lage. He froze Jee cubes 1vith che\Yed bubble gum in the center and I imagined him as a chef with a TV sho\11 of his own. \Vhen he raised chickens in the carport I smiled and mumbled to anyone listening, WE'VE FLIPPED ON THE MALL AT FASHIO N ISLAND 11111k\IJf,1 +flll '1 :.111-p:.y ).~~r.lll ' ~ I Mor• 1~111 Ju1t a pl•e• lo allap ••• FASHION ,j ISLAND ·-··--- Over the 1971 styles and colors. So will you. Bring your decorator, husband, kids, mother-in-law or friends into the store. You'll all like our prices and our friendly staff. Free e1timates on all your floor covering need1, Carpet, Linoleum, Tile or whatever. Check These Brand Names ARMSTRONG, KENTILE, A MT I C 0, GAF, LURAN, WICK, CONGOLEUM, CALIFORNIA, BEATIIE, BAR. VIK- ING, TREND, CRITERIA, PATRICK, WESTERN, RHS, JORGES, LUDLOW, MONTICELLO, SEQUOYAH, WORLD, WALTERS, CENTURY, DOWNS, MON- ARCH, ROYALTY and HOLLYTEX. !PLUS A FEW MOREi If You Can't Come In Give Us A Call -We'll Come Out BLANKENSHIP DTERY FLOORS 2931 BRISTOL ST. AT VISTA PAINT CD. Q!fCllil!I f'flOIU'PClr For Wonaen and Cfaildren 225 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA 549.2 na COSTA MESA 540-7262 540-2025 Thur.-Fri.-Sat.-Sun. MARCH 18-19-20-21 ALBUM SPECIALS OF THE WEEK I LOVE STORY PARAMOUNT MUSIC FROM THE ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK Includes: Th<'n1c from Love Story, Snow fTollc, J\lolarl, r L!J\"C "You. Phil, The Christmu Trees, Search for Jf'nny, Bo7.o Barrett, Skating In Central Park, Th<' 'Long \Valk llome, J. S. Bach, Theme from Lovr Story $ 44 1 Ea.1 POCO EPIC DELIVERIN' Includes: I Guess You :lladr II , C'mon, }!ear That l\tusic, Kind \\'on1an, l-lard Luck, Child's Claim To Fam". Pickin' Ur The Pirtt'!'., You'd Better Think Twice, A !\Ian Llkr ~le, .lu!i t Jn Casr lt Jla111J('n~. Yes Indeed. Grand Junction, Consc<1ucnlly So Loni; ' List $5.98 -~j ELTON ' HURRY QUANTITIES TUMBLEWEED CONNECTION o~I\ .I 3 EMITT _ =:; LLIST~.91 ~ . .. ·.·-~·-:·: .. -:...-.-:...~.-:...:. Buy now and save 8 TRACK I STEREO TAPES TOP ARTISTS 8 TOP LABELS MANY TO CHOOSE FROM SALE Val. 6.95 * * TOP HIT SINGLES IROO~HURST AT ADAMS 45 RPM &a:. HUNTINGTON BEACH - Tttursdi~. Ma,ch 18, 1971 DAILY PILOT J 7 ANIMllogk .,...., Reality of Play Stuns Pueblo· Sailor WASHINGTON (UPI) -In those hours. ll'a what lnlelllge.oce and Ult eleclronlc the United States. varlaUon of an old hymn title to the Pueblo crtw. lf there who bowed tbtlr .bud& In The intelligence officer of I.be &0mebody bad called tbe loteWgence data," II arr Is "A.I with any lrs1ic U:· that alves a clue to Harri!' Is a vWaln In It, Hartla feel! prayer while eaUna; Che ullor USS Pueblo said it was "Uke loneliness or command." said. "The play renec.:ted what perlence, there ls always a devout faith. It 1s bureaucracy, starting at who fuhlooed a cnJdli Cn>N "The loyally he felt for his happened accurately -I did le~ to be learned, There He 'lpellt 11 yean in the lhe command situation aboard and hid ti am.ashed by UM! 1 living nightmare" wben he men came across In the play," not come out lhe bed guy:' wtn teveral detlciencles that service. Yet, as a ruult ol the Pueblo Uiielf and reaching North Koreans; the a aew saw a play enactlni the sh1p 's Harris said. ''It was so true.'' ''There was some tension came to ltabt -the horribly the Naval inquiry, he i.5 not beyond the Navy to tbe memben-every one ol them seiJure by the North Koreans. The Navy Court of Inquiry on ttie day of the capture," complu: eommaod atructure optimistic about future pro-hljhesl levels of government. who 'attended an u . Cmdr. Stephen fl.. llarris recomnlended general court-Harris aaid. "Orders flying' that prevailed at the time that motions. One thing the play doea not ecumenical 1 er v I c • of had nothing but praise for martial for Bucher on five back and forth. Conlus.ioo in dld not have the nexlbllity "There's nothing on record do. It does not rtfiect the thankaglving that Harris led counls and Harris on three. instructlorui, Tbe o or rn a I of quick reaction if the shp lhat should hinder my future," crl!iw'1 fallh. after the1r release. the stark reality of the pro-It said Harris had "failed to things that occur in situations was to be bailed out of that Harris said. 1"But we'll always Harris tells of lbe rellaJ.ous And Harrll hlmH:lf -a duction, "Pueblo," which is organb:e and lead the crew like this." situation." be plagued w 11 'h the erperlences that the crew man so aerene that the dliy having it.. world premiere at on the day of the se'b:ure." "Of course/' Harris said, llarrl.s, 32, ol Melrose, unanswered quesUon of what went through while Jn prisoa the North Korean1 told them the arena stage here. Navy Secretary John H • '·lbe incident will always be Mus., graduate of Harvard is in the minds of those tnak--the Protestant.I who kept they all would be uecuted .. 1 felt as if 1 were going Cbafee overruled the recom-a scar. It will never be forgot-wllb a major in English iog the promntions. What do watch at a peephole wbUe at dusk, he spoke a word mendation in 1969, saying: ten, Jt will never enhance the literature, has written a book they think of this incident?" the Roman Catholic crew about Chriat to his ceUmaWs, thrOU&h the entire ordeal "they have suffered enougb." image' of the Navy; it will about tl\e Incident, '' f\.1 y Tbe play Is an euentially members said tMir rosary and then lay down and took again," he said ... J felt a ctv.11 "I was respo~lble for the never enhance the image of Anchor Held." Its tlUe ls a human document, sympatheUc each day; the crew members a nap. Farm Crops Devastated B y Locusts when my counterpart on the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - A locust attack -so bad that curtains are being eaten off the windows of houses -has hit farmers ,with the worst plague in South African history. The brown locusts have mutilated crops and many other things that stood in their way jn two of the country's four province!, and moved in- to neighboring Botswana and South-West Africa. "lnfestatiOn occurs in patches over approximately J00,000 square miles," Deputy Agriculture fl.tinister Hendrik Schoeman told Parliament. Jiardest hit ha.s been an area known as the Karoo in central Cape Province between the communille of De Aar aod Middleburg. Several railway t r a i n s slithered to a stop because their driving v.·heels were spinning ineffectually o n masses of mailhed locus!.!. Farmers in one tiny hamlet \\'ere reported by the South African Pr e s s Association Monday as "unable to cope." First cajerpillars set back new grazing about two months ago. Theo came moths, followed by million1 of locusts. But· terflies arrived after the locust.s and the latest report i! that £Om crickel.'i have slitted swarming. Householders who neglected tG seal their premises were invaded in some districls by locusts nibbling. c u r t a i n s , linenB, clothing, flowers in vases and unrovered food. Some experts are convinced the plague i! O'.lmpletety out of control and that only the coming of the southern hemisphere winter will curb the torusts. About a do:r.en spray planes Uy dawn and dusk sorlies, striking at I a r g e con· centratioru of hoppers before they start their daily deslruc· tion, and again late in the artemoon when they settle for the night. Hundreds of trucks fitted "-'i th sprayers and thousands nf \\•orkers are flg1JUng big outbreak. 15 Students Get Honors For Studies Fifteen students from com· munilies along , the Orange Coast have been named to the dean's honor list at UC Riverside for the fall quarter 1970. The area students were among 1,300 named to the list for having maintained averages of "B" or better. They are: From Cotta ~te11: Kathryn J. Fillmore. From HunUngtaa Btaclli: ~ficbael M. Kutner. stage was nit over the head with a rine butt. It brought back some memories." The play was written by Stanley R. Greenberg, who says he relied heavily on the transcrip!J of the Naval in- quiry and the Congressional bearing. A!l a result, nearly every word uttertd is based on an actual statement. Tbe Puetlo, an aging cargo ship tha~ was converted into an electronic intelligence craft, was seized by North Korea about 16 miles off its coast in January, 1968. The crew of 82 surviving member&, of whom Harris was a senior officer, was released after 11 months imprisonment iD time lo be reunited wllb their families on Cbristmu. The play bas a remarkable set. The stage has deck plates similar to those In a ship's engine room, and there are catwalks overhead. In the background one nears the slow thump, thump of Cmdr-Lloyd M. Bucher's heartbeat, a sound also resembling the churning of marine engines. Bucher, the ship's captain, ls on stage during all of the play, ...which weaves together Huhbacks of the i n i t i a I receipt and scrutiny of the ill-equipped and p o o r I y prepared ship, the confusion on board when it was seized, the brutality of the North Koreans and finally, the in- vestigations. The Naval Court of Inquiry sits along one edge of the stage, the Congressional subcommittee along the other. "I recognized Commander Bucher," said Harri!, who is on asaignment here in the office of the chief of naval operations. "All of the anx· ielies, all of lhe emotions, all of the feelings he ex· perienced came across very well.'' Bucher is played by Shep- perd Strudwich. who bears a strilt.ine resemblance to the o~ficer. Tom K1unls plays Har- ris. At the end of the play, no acklrs return for recognition and the traditional applause. The audience is left with Bucher reading off the names. of his crew for special cita· tion, one by one, as first the naval officers, and then the congressional subcommittee, walk out. "I think what It symbolized v.·as a man standing alone, trying to defend his men," Harri& said. "It symbolized the loneliness he was feeling Youth Gets Fellowship A Newport Beach resident is among four students of Duke University who have been awarded Woodrow Wilson Nationa1 Fellowsbips for 1971·72. according to H. Ronald Rouse, national direc- tor of the foundation. From Irvtne: Carl Sandelin and Karen Johnson. Fnm 1..qua lkacb: Laura Schdenleser and Ste\'en R. McWllliams. From Newport Beach: Julia S. Banning, Laurene A, Gordon. Sharon K. Reineman, Joan L. Smith , Jane A. Ferguson and Christopher L. Powers. John S. Stolarek, a political science major of S33 Irvine Ave., was named in the an- nouncement. Woodrow Wllion F • Fellows are NPPOrted by the A · Woodrow Wilson Foundat\on for a year of study at a graduate school of t h e student's choice. Students are selected on the basis of academic achievement. From Stal Beacls : Karl P.t. Naglestad. From We1tmln1ter: 'christine A. Llffrein1 and Charles D. Stump Jr. Work Displayed By Art League Four members of the Hun- tington Beach Art League are currently showing their worlt at the Huntington Beach Dr La d f Public Library. . ngs or ni. paintings are by R I d Rlr.hard Titus. Loyce Legg. 1 e-e ecle Mildrtd Moore and Dolores Dr. William B. Lanpdorf Cline. all resident& of Hun- of Corona del Mar. vice tlngton Beach. They will be chancellor for Acadttnk M· on dirpley until Marth 31, falr1 of the Calilomla State f\.tonday lhrough Friday, 9 to Colleges, has been r!-lf"ecled • p.m.; Saturday. 9 to 6 p.m.; president of the Far Western -='"=d"S"u=nd=a=Y='·=t=l<l=S=p=.m=. ==;I Council on Accred itation. ... Dr. wa!dor! hu been vice STARS chancellor of the S t a t e S.,.fl'l•Y OM•"' 11 •l'I• •f tt.t toUeaes 1lnct Dec. 1, 1970. worl4''• 9,,,, ,,..,,1,9,,.., Hr, ~ prtvloa1ly served u foun-,,1.,,,, 11 '"' ef tllo DAILY Ing presldtlnt of <"fl State -='=JLO=r='='="='=' ="=''='="='·===I llerton. - ,,...,.., SUN AZALEA • nwtv11 In *''• ... •h•lfJ .,.. .. • hll9tllfilll)' fN1rtnt ~ fl•••...-,lck • celllf'I •0.11 ... ··-• ,.,..,w ·-~ -· 77' 0-11111 •••• 40 , ...... STllRMANUU • s-111 1wful llowt It retlly ... , IM 1•111. • Cotten teMI ,.ti _, ... ,. ..... •¥ ... 111. • G,..11, o111tl '*'.,."•"-. ... ._ ..• ,,, 33'... 1•ut H•fflff GARDIN TOOLS "Aft l-1•"1fo1t o4 Y'-Or••• 11tuM•I" • W•o•11 ho11lllo.__llo·l•·l .. 1 ,. .. , ,. ....... • 'Jovr cholc• •' rnwol, ti91Mpl•11fff, .... ,, c11lllv9'•,... "-comlrol11-.. 1,,..,. cultlwafor. .... a•c T•ur Chalte 27' 3''a:•~•Hw...t GARDIN IDGING "IC••I" Tavr Gani• WMra ff Outltt 1• hi" • c ... ,,.,. "'"''"' ·--• J" whlo • 10 ft. ... nt t•itttlfto ,.....,. ... """' ........ .. , ... o.- ...... LIQUID FERTIU:ZER "Wiiii ,, ..... ,.,.. • " '""" It-•'"' ~ ,..,.. •. lew1t1 •Ml 1hrutH. • 10% """ .. " ........ 1--fo, ho.Ith)" .... , .......... t.it r.11 .... II ... $1.I• ··~' 10 Ir. Wire IORDIRRNCI · UoJ• Tllo 1'/orif1 '41 •1td 1tt~ .,.,, .,,., o l• 01t1~" • fC1nU1 II\ tow.ii,,_ •"4 t""41, • C-,iot.ly ............ 1.-1-4 .. "• '• tO' ..... 11" "'•"- •••• $1.4• 99~-~ •tlll • " • • ) SUPER PLUSH ••A fot•I fertlllzer for Graaa And Dlcltondrar'' • Rich In mineral• and triple-action nitrogen for prolong•d, balanc•d, de•p fe•dlng. 5000 Sq. ft. lag R•ll· $5.95 '495 1 D,000 Sq. ft. Bag Reg. $10.95 '895 WEED·OUT ''f•rtlllzer And Weed Control far Blade Grassl'' • Pravld•1 balanced, llght feeding, with 3 prov•n •ffectlva broad leaf w••d killers, • l•clu1lvely for blade grass lowns-p•llethced. • • ... 5,000 Sq. ft. Bog R•g. $7.95 '695 1:e1it.tmJ PRl•P&.ANJ WEE DI LIZER ''for Preparing New Dlcltondro And Ground Coversl'' • Fertilizer with w•ed and ln••ct control. • Dust fra•, odarle11, easy to apply pelletl1ed fertlllz•r. 2,500 Sq. ft .••• Reg, $10.95 s995 ' ., . l!EJ,f1tml IUPIR 3·WAY' WEE DI LIZER "W••d And lnaect Control for fstablla#ted Dlchondral'' • Fe•ds whll• prev•ntlng oxall1, 32 w••d.t, paa annua and Insects. 1,250 Sq. Pt. lag Reg. $7.45 '645 2,500 Sq. Ft. leg Reg. $12.95 '1095 l:f],f,tmJ IUPIR 2·WAY PLUSH "fertlllz•r And ln•ect Control for Grass And Dlcltondral'' • Sup•r Plush plus •ffecttve protection from damaging fawn ln1ech. 5,000 Sq. Pt. Bog ••9· $7.95 '695 10,000 Sq, Ft. lag Reg. $14.95 '1295 fUll h--lt·TCtlfMll a.t6 "INSfAWNG WALL PANIU" WM., "'9r. 14, 7•1 ,M AMllefM fhwa.. M#.1S, 7-1"" '""99l1t Voll., .,.., ............... ,.,..,... •. .. , .. , .. SHOVILS • Sciuo,. '' r•u"ll ,.lfl, .....,.,... -•" Y•• lllt ttt •Woll ltoJ.~ with'''"~ .... l fffl lroladeL ••t• $1.H 'JOU• CHOICI •139 o •• o ••••• TAM JUNIPIR "Ora•it•t)' ro lllval 111• Jolly Ofattfl" • l•I)' tc1rw, Colllamlo '""'rtr ••. • # 1 '"'"'"""' ••• •«•llt ., 1rau11lll c•Y••· 'c •. ''· ... GARDENIARK • ····"·"' ,., ,.,.. .. ft-1to11.-.. , ... , ... ,. ''"" •nrwhora. e (OYOrl 12 1q. fl. •l'I'"'•· 1" thick. 109. ••c 66~ .. ••flfllln• GARDINIAS . "'"'' ....... ,,. Collfomlo woothor l•t· ttc 69' 4 ~·t••r•ell OSCILLATING SPRINKLER • Dlol for f1p1ll, Ilda, w ,.rtltol COY_,._ • Got• .,._ .,.. .. i...11 111 - ~It IWMP""""flUONrttOo4 OltO fu ll .,..., • •••• $-3 .... •2·' ~9 . . FRff (O~HO) Ortho's All New 1971 LAWN& GARDEN BOOK LIN·BROOK HARDWARE • FOUNTAIN VALLEY 11100 ~ OAOOKHUllS I 1700 'l'AMO~ SOUTH or WAANfAI PHONl 9bA J JI 1 I ) ' .• .. ' ' .. ' . Thursday, March 18, 1971 Where There's Stnoke You'll find the Huntington Beach Fire Department. Jn this case, the spectacular blaze was merely a training fire. Scene of the recent action \\'as an old house near \Varner Avenue and Sims Street. The fire served a dual purpose -to train firemen and to destroy an elderly building due for destruction anyway. The !ire also smoked up the area for a while. Marines to he Blue XEROX 2400 Corps to Provide Dress Vnifor1ns Free .. ...,., Thoft O.ifit>ol" J 5' SINGLE COPY 1 Oc Ouontity DiM:ount 1600 PER 100 !SAME ,AGE\ S ANCL~MENTE ECRETARIAL ERVl f.E-492·2332 1?0 Dfl MAR ACROSS ~OM 'OST Ofl"Kf WASHINGTON (AP) -The 1i1arine Corps hopes to deck all its men out in free dress blue uniforms within the next two vears, bul .. we are not abandoning the old Marine Corps," its commandant sai d today. "Al! of this dressing up has a purpose: To enhance our professional image "''i t hi n ourselves," said Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr. NUTRITION? QUALITY NOT PRICE WE STRIVE TO EXCEL IN WELSH'S NOT FOR EVERYONE • JUST THOSE DEMANDING THE BEST WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS 494-3S82 The dressing up includes his hopes of providing the. free dress blue uniform v.•hich Corps officials say .cost most Marines $50. The Marines are getting rid of summer khakis, which can be confused with those worn by other services. and chang- ing gradually to "distinctive Marine green s e r v i c e uniforms," Chapman said in a speech prepared for a Navy League symposium . And Marine officials are thinking of bringing back smart look ing leather belts for officers and enlisted men. Chapman came down on the side of change to suit .. a new breed of Marines." But he refused to jettison tradition. including the Corps' tough training . ·'\\'e are not going to charige anything just for the sake of change, because v.'e know that change does not always mean progress, and progress is what we are seeking," the top Marine said. ,; ..• We are not aban- doning the old Marine Corps. It's true. we are tradition min· ded ... "If our training is tradi· tionally tough. it"s because the application of our purpose is tough, in combat and in being constantly ready for combat. If our discipline is tradi· tionally exacting, it is because discipline is the key to winning and survi\'ing in battle." Chapman told the Navy group that the Corps is aiming "for an eventual tough, lean strength of 205,000 Marines after the 'Vietnam wind down. This is about 33,00) smaller than the present Corps and 112.000 below the top wartime strength---------. IN HUNTINGTON BEACH • 18582 BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING MEXICAN IMPORTS Glfti e Clothh•t e Jewelry LHrilfl Good• TODO DE MEXICO 968·1705 CUSTOM FRAMING 10~\. OFF WITH THIS AD IRIOAVI GALLERI 968·6241 SEE EUROPE I COUNT.Ill ll DAYS $548 TOWN & COUNTIT TUVEL ••1·2441 ' 0 " crJ ClllS AV( SHAG STYLING 200 /Q Dl>COUNT ON /C ANY SERVICE WITI+ Tl'llS ,t.O CASSA DE CURRIE IE.I.UTT SALON 96-8--4321 SKIING· TENNIS BACK PACKING PATS SKI & SPORTS SHOP 962·5S21 GIFT SHOP OllJfCT\ Of' AJIT IJllD•l 01,TS WALL D•COllA1"10HJ JERI'S FLORISTS ., WEDDING fLOWlltl N• Wt<ldl"t TOI l•rt4 ., T• Slltlll -fllEI" l!TIMATIS - 962.0013 SEWING CLASSES Meft' roRtJ, Ll..,.n., L.di.s C:.1MIS. Knit '11 f lt, Swl111ui1lh FOltMING NOW Lai Mode Fabrics 968·1200 FOR THE FINEST IN WALL TO WALL CARPETING And Custom Or1perles J. J. KNICKERBOCKER 962·3351 r Russ May Resurrect Joe Stalin MOSCOW (AP) -Stalin is back on Moscow's movie Find Interests New 'School' Set To Aw Teenagers screens, as rumors circulate An "Experimental College'' agreed it was worth trying," 1 that the Communist party's is being formed in Huntington Ribble said. "She thought it1 24th congress in two weeks ~ach to provide teenagers would bt useful to teen·agersl will grant him at least partial rehabilitation. with new interests. at a loss for something to A new film on a historical The college, which is being do. 1£ it is successful, we•ul theme features a small role sponsored by the Recreation expand it." for the young Stalin who and P~rks Department. will Ribble said that the college helped plan the 1917 Bolshevik offer tee,n-agers classes in · d · · will be a non-<'redited, non-Revoluflon. The only other organic gar en1ng, weaving, Soviet movie with a Stalin ptinting and guitar playing. profit, free lance school. The role since he was officially All the classes will be taught teachers hold no off i c i a II condemned in 1956 was by youths who have become degrees. I "Liberation," a World War JI proficient in a particular hob-"The philosophy behind it story. that is no longer being by, recreation supervisor Rip is to give e\'eryone the op-I shown in Moscow. The new Ribble explained today. portunity to learn what theyl film is "Messengers of Eterni· The new approach to teen-want to Jearn -sort of a ty." age communlcafion will begin chance to program their 0""" Its premiere was ac· April 4 with classes being con-thinking and learning," he ad· comp.anied by a n Un· ducted in the Junior Lifeguard ded. precedented advertisement in Headquarters n ear the The recreation department! a Moscow newspaper reveal-municipal pier. Classes will will provide a chaperone at ing that the movle contains be held Monday through the college. There will be no OU 'fH CORS'l' '"' ... .. t•C>LI ... •tAC>< ..... ,, OPEN NIGHTLY 6:41 r.M, __ SUNDAY AT 1:41 r.M. DAVID NIVEN VIRNI LISI "THE STATUE" COLO R -RATlD a CALL FOi OPENING AND STARTING TIMf -4~· PETER KASTNER JOANNA BARNES "B. S. I LOVE YOU" COLOR -RATED R a Stalin role. Vi'ednesday with the courses entrance fee. "To Russian eyes, this ad running from six to eight The first classes to be or.I~;;;;;;;;;;~ is a shock," one Muscovite weeks. tered are: introduction tol; The DAILY PILOT- T ops in Locol Sports observed as he read the Ribble credited 0 r a n g e weaving, organic gardening, newspaper. 'fhe movie opened Coast College student Cindy beginning guitar, water colorl to a packed house Tuesday Otis with the idea. "She workshop, crafts and oil pain· night. 1__'t~h~ou~g~h~t~it:__:a~l~I -'~u~l_'•~n~d_'w~e'_~ti~n!g·:_ ________ ...!':=========== As the handsome, mustachioed Alexei Kobaladze appeared on the .screen heavi- ly made up to resemble Stalin, there was a stir in the au- dience at the Rossiya Cinema. "There he is -Stalin." and "look -Stalin" could be heard in murmurs a n d whispers throughout t h e theater. During Stalin's lifetime and for three years afte r his death, Moscow movie theaters and bookshops were glutted with v.·orks glorifying him. But since Nikita S • Khrushchev delivered the con· demnation of Stalin's excesses at the 20th party congress in 1956, Stalin's name has been virtually banned from mass media in the Soviet Union. Only in the past three years have military historia ns been permitted to restore to some degree Stalin's wartime reputation as a supreme com· man der. The new movie is a timid step in a new direction. lt portrays Stalin as a close associate of Lenin in the crucial da ys before the Nov. 7 Communist takeover in Petrograd -now Leningrad . Stalin has only one line in the film and is mainly seen moving around in t h e background in three scenes, holding his pipe in his hand. His name is never pronounced. His face, however. familiar to the Russian masses after decades of the "personality cult," brought instant recogni· lion from the crowd. The movie deals w i t h Lenin's order to avoid damag- ing the priceless works of art in the Winter Palace during the Bolshevik attack that top- pled the provisional govern- ment tlf Alexander Kerensky. The Stalin role Y•as not Pssential to the sense or the film. and appeared to be ad· ded to the script for political reasons. Leon Trotsky, the key plan· ner in the storming of the Winter Palace. was not in· eluded in the script. EYES RIGHT ., DR. LOUIS J. HASILfELD >\ OpteMetrtst ••c•nt •dvlftCll ;,. the fi1!d of Optom1t•v k1ve 'liven 111 1om1 n1w d 11..,1li1 1pp101ck11 to tho pr obltm ol myopit !ne1r1i9l.t1dft111). lh111 ift· clud1 9ood t YI ••1rci111 whidt ti• 1<:i1ftfiftc1lly ''''"""'ftdtd ••• 1ftd tl.1 1111 of bifoc1\1 or ltft111 ••• of t•••f l•n111 mty l.1 11ftC· tiv t i" r1l1rdi"9 myepit ;,. chOldrtft. H you 11low •v• dt· l1cl1 lo 90 uncli1c~1d in chil· clr1n to •bout 9 y1111 of •9•, •ti• <1•11'1•9• i11 ll'l•nv <•••• 1111y 111v1r b1 retftfi.cl. II i1 10 •l•'f irrtporl•11t to h1•• •••rv thild checlt.•d for tu1pect1d 11tyopi1 •• , •ho for olh•• •v• cl1f1th t.i.ich rrt•V b1 •i•ift9 1i;,,. trou· ble, r11, ••• .,. check• 1liould 1f1ri1 1chool. 9i•i119 i.;,.. • btt· ter thlftC• for 1utct11 ift thi1 wotld where 9004 ¥i1!011 i1 10 j,,.porl1ftl. ef 111 you• p11lodic1lly, ''"' ,.,..,;, .. too! Stop i11 11 our oUict In 11 •u• offict in Fi•t Poifth C•ftle•. 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Why ur.e elbow11recne wt>eoi ltlis 9' 10 90ly? lorge 2·1b. (C.0.. ,lw·t9 W"~ llolld -900P i'>os added lonoli11 to proled slon; g•eo">e CNld gn.n.-h o~ qu1c~!y =cl ecsily. Ke-ep o toro o., hOPM:I ol oll 1~ Color-<oded. ~th~·p•ool. t:Hl·9re<1,..,._m o11Ture tel•l!On!; po11t1ve OC'l•O~ g'·~ I! h t::able. , __ , bcrnery charger .......• 6° glass cookie 1ar Wilh l/J ) 99 ' • I I . . • .. DAILY PILOT. J78 Service lJitder Flre - I "Ai·tistry in I\loving'' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: West German Intelligence Isn't 494-1025 580 Broadway • , LINK SAUSAGE 88< ''°""~D1tn ~l»dJ-l4-A11 1,...,. .. ,,._,,, ""5CAI MATll -1 ll. 111 ....................... STANDING RIB ROAST $1~~ YOUNG TOM TURKEYS 36~ SMAli lllD-lUC«Y IOllDID lllF •••. ,, .• , ... .,. lllOJ.,IAbl HJ."······ ....................... _ PORTERHOUSE STEAK $143 BONELESS HAM $12,! 1AIU Ofl-IUCIT 10"010 1111., •• ,,_., ..... .. fUMll .IOllll-fUHT (bOlll •• , ....... , .. ,.,,, BONN. Germany IAP) - \\'E'st Germany's intelllgenC'f' service is again in the center of a public debate. The controversy was set off when Der Sptegt>I charged that 1h1s country's equivalent of the Cenlral lntelllgrnce Agen- cy has geeome an inefficient bureaucracy that Chancellor Willy Brandt doesn't trust. ihe news magazine's claims brought on a series of denials aod c:ounter claims. Since it came lnto being the lnlelliAence servlcl''s ro1e has been to collfel Information about . foreign countries. Dur· 1ng the cold war il con· centrated on East Europt and enjoyed a high regard among othrr We. 1 t e r n intelligence agencies. But in an examination of its 'operalions during the past two years Der Spiegel said: -That the service relies for information and analysis more on the Swis!I newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeilung than on IL! own agents. -That an -Official in charge of assigning agents regularly oonsults an astrologer. -That Brandt'.s orf1('e has demanded and received the name.s and code names of all agents in East Europe, thus seriously endangering their security. Der Spiegel said the servjce failed to predict I a,-t December's troubles in Poland, so Brand had no warniog that a lcadcr!'ihip change there was imminent when he lefl for Warsaw to sign the Poll!h·Gcrman treaty on Dec. 6. The former defense and finance minister, frani Josef St rauss, said the demand for Mn. Gayle Miller WI• In lhe ch•ck-out line 11 e lUC KY DISCOUNT t.\Al;KfT In Arc1di• wh&n w• ••k•d h•r if the would b11y lh1 ell.Id 11m1 item• ar comp1r1ble br1nd1 11 1ny a1h1r m1rkt t of Mr own chocn.fng to cros1 on1 ll1m of!' her 1111.,, lhe olh&r rn1rk&t didn't tlotk it SHE REDUCED HER FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY TASTY lENTEN SUGGESTIONS! j TENDER . •• FRESH FRYERS BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST CENTER CUT ROUND STEAK STANDING RIB ROAST YOUNG HEN TURKEYS ~~!~.~,P.!~,!~~~ ....... 73c ~~~1.~~! .. ~!E.~~~ ..... 98< ..::t.~o'ot 2 9 C Clll(llllS I b. ro;:~~'" 5 5 C IOWbl D lb IU1 • TO'l:~~!rtT 9 5 c JOflDt~ 1111 lb. ~~Jt:• sac &Elf lb. .. :::~ .. 39c •ltw .. JU!Cl lb. GROUND BEEF ·fl(5H GROUND -LUCICl BONDlD fOI fl.AVOR .............. . 5'7c ' I 1•. I ; FULLY COOKED HAM 58~. 89~. fARMER JOHN -HOCK REMOVED ••••••••• FULL SHANK HAlf CROSS RIB ROAST IONlllSS -LUCKY TOP QUAUTJ BONDED Bllf ............ ,,. !,~~!!~" !!.~~.~ ................... ~~!\' $) ~~ LADY LEE BACON SllC IO 49c 1·POUN D ~.!:'::~~Yc~r!!.~.~.~ ..................... 33~. PRG. · c~ FROZBI FOODS '· ·. : ; BROCCOLI SPEARS~~·::.',',~ ...... ".32( VEGETABLES ~~·::.~':d.~'.~.·.~-~~'.~~~~ ..... 46< PU DD ING S ~~-::. ~~,.~~~~ .~ .~~.~~ ......... 7 S ( VE GET ABLES ~:~~~ :~!~ ................... 33 e 1111110 Vl'I rAltU .. ,.urnt'tAU<L "41.blUM , I u •itUTTlttlllU TATER TOTS ~~~~:., ...................... 47' flSHSTICKS ~':l.1;;:~.~ ..................... 48 ( ~·;~:E~2/ 5c BUI RYS 7·0UNCE PKG • BREADED SHRIMP ~1:J.1::~~.~ ........ 77' BEEF STEAKS IOlOllll IUTIUID 73< !I (l.l IJ 01. Pli<. ............ , BEEF STEW :°r:i~;~~ .......................... 36' BRIDGFORD IAU lllT•l10tW•ll 26' IOlU. ll 01. PIG,., •. , ... , ... ., MEXICAN FOOD ;e:~;~i~o .............. S2 ' IHI TACOS, llD I '"IN (lllU IUlll!Ot JENO'S SNACK LOGS :::.~ .•..... -.85' PET RITZ FRUIT PIES ::.'.': .......... 35' Stot-up n1• 111~11 tllr1· ll'*Jlitt ~,,. $) 26 uln 11 Super. IOX Of 40 ~ ... K8/8u;! \J GREEN BEANS 19 L DOllSfASON[D C 16-·0UNCI CAN . ·.HOUSEHOLD ITEMS ·~; ~ 409 CLEANER ~~~~~~~L ........... '1 2' COMET CLEANSER :::•: ............... 18' tr' BOWL CLEANER ~~~~!!~~ ....... 69 • MR. CLEAN ClEANER ~~,~~•n. ..... 99' ~ CALGON ::~:~.1::~.1.~'.~ •••••••••••••• 75 • SALVO TABLETS :::~: ................... 79 ' O""" ALL LOW suos ~;;~·,~~1101x ....... s2°• IVORY SOAP ~~·::\1~'~.1.~~.1.~'. ........•..• 88 • LADY LEE LOW SUDS ~::~~~~~~ ...... '140 CHEER :>ETERGENT :::•: ............. 88' orl DEL SEY TISSU£~:11~~t1.~~~ ••• 27' DREFT DETERGENT :::~: .............. 88' orl NAPKINS ~:~~~:~~~~.~~~~~.~~.'-~ .... 9' CONFIDENTS ~!~1,'.~~~~.~~~1~ ........... 83' MUl TIPlE VITAMINS FOR THE ENTIRE FAM ILY 1 A DAY U'ULA• s2n -• 10111101100 .............. . 1 A DAY Wlfll trOll '2" cHOcKs .::;:~~ ''}" .............. 11" 101111 01 Ml ................ . CHOCKSWllllllOll '2" 101111 01 ................. .. ~."l"-._r CHOCKS :~~~::~, iot ................ '2'' ;.;.':r CHOCKS ~~~1111::100 ................ s311 f LINTSTONES:~~~t::, .......... '1 11 -FLINTSTONES:~~~l·::r .......... s2i 1 .,SECTION PICNIC PLATES ,., 1ati1utic11t:1r~11111 tiH pl11\lc f ltll\fl IUttltfllitrl. RIGHT GUARD 33 c ANTl·PERSPIRANT • Sptd1llf ID rmt\1111 ti 11ttt • m1•s 111• hr 1rt1tu •r11ttlil• 1111~11 'tnJ!rlll11 SIZZLER STEAK PLATTER Tiie l l1nr-11Y111 way II sent 1 1rc1t "1111\! l111rtrf ctl1r1. 33 ( tltr ant 11't0UI; ll!b Iron 63 .... :;;;i" Jltfftl 111b1w1r. C . . l OUNCl Sil£ ~ GIANTCOOlERTUMBlEI l1stl1ltf 11 II. ''"'11f tttJ! Un• "'11111 c111" •111r111s lflJUIJ c.ill1l. l111rtt• celtri. 18 TASSAWAY B's $ c P1111ttt •cllN Ill• I UJk]I, •ur ,.. ) 34 hrt1•l1 0 11 I tlf!IJll. ·PAPER PLATE HOlOER . S1n1 a ,,,u •l1t11•1 str1s1n It rtrfl 33c 11ui.,111111111 ur111. As"ru' ''l"" TWICE AS lllCE SHAMPOO A 1111t 1•1m111, ,1., ttlllt1111r• &11fl $) 2l •••1'"'111111111•1111, t1 •1lr. •111111, •rJ If t!IJ.1 llllCt llll, -,-~-:.l!.l.~ .c0?. ~ ;ll!ltf ~ t1""" CHIFFON TOWELS ~;:~:.~~ .. 31 c JOY LIQUID ~~T.',~ ........ -·-·····57c CAMAY SOAP ~:',l!~.1.1 .................. 17' DAIRY PRODuets:-~t; ~ IMPERIAL ~.-::.ri':.~ ..... -......... 39' REDDI WHIP ~~~;:~.~'.~~ ............... 58' ~ MARGARINE \T'o11~1t::.":.1 ......... 43' '.t' VITA PAKT OlllHlllllCIM.1111 49' ', JJOl.ITL .............. . O""' BLUE BONNET ~~~r~t.·:~.~~ ... .39' DRY MILK tMAU1•,1110•rA1 SJ" 1111.101 ....................... .. LADY LEE ICE CREAM ~:.'.~ ....... 65' ···K«.1&/~- THE UNPOllUTER 79c DfT E•GENT 49-0UNCf IOX ! _' ·*•o·:_· •.. BABY FOOD :~·~~~n:~.1.~'.~ .................. 9' ~HASH M,•,•IT<MI• 45' ..,.. · co•11uo1111, 11or.w ...•.•..•.. JUNIOR FOOD~f!~~~.·~·.~ ............ M.13' '7"' SALAD DRESSINGS:~~: ....... 35' WltMIOWI -DUllV! tllM(M, ll'UU. fMOld.llrl till, 11.llllM IOU', OUIOlllll O•IOlr GERBER JUICE ~~!'~'ti •... -........... 9c WESSON OIL ~:~1~11L ..................... 87< o-< SMUCKERS SYRUP:\':.'','.t.39' U.S.D.I. FOOD STIMP m COUPONS Gladly Accepted · BEVERAllES • SPIRITS DIET RITE COLA 87< l l•ll.ICl 14 P.1.(1116 0011(.1 IDTTU, ~~~~1S,!!t~ ............... $]62 :~.\2, ~u~~~.~~~~ ... $366 ~.~~-~~!1.~ ~J~.E ......... $) 6' !~J!!~J ,!,~~~.~ ...... ~ s 8 c 22.~~~~.~.~~.~.~.~S 9c ... MJ.8. COfFEE:!:~18' ~ FOLGER'S ~!':lrwt ... 81 • FOLGER'S~"~l'u• ...... ,_ .. '24• YUBAN COFFEE :::'.: •..•. 90' ~ YU BAN '"'" '24' tto1.u1 .•....• ~COFFEE ~~".4'.~.1.~.83' __. COFf•E ... xw.u ... ,H ,2,, 'fT -I: ti OL UI .. ,..,. MAXWELL HOUSE -'1" l•HA•t CHI U-JOLJll MAXWELL HOUSE -'I" lnl.l•T toPfll -lflt.1'-I _.. MINCED CLAMS :::'l:'."' ......... 33' ... J:l;&f~- MACARONI DINNER 19c llA'T 71/,.0UNCl PKG. SNOWDRln !~:.i~~~·~··················· 89' ~TOMATO JUICE:t~l'~~.~ ..... 29 ( .,..., PUDDINGS:%~~~:~~~ ........... 31' 01 l WlllON lllTIHl fl.IYOI 79' (ObU.,, JJ 01. l lL •.••• .,, •• , •••••••• , •• ,.,.,, ~ SEGO DIET FOOD\101::~<.tw ..... 21' BEETS OR CARROTS :u~~~1.'.l!.<.1.~17' £) orl' PEANUTS :i:,~~~~1.~.~~.~~~~;.'.~56' HORMEL SPAM ~~':~:~~.~ .......... SS ' '.t' __. PEANUTS •lAlmtl Dl l 10.lll1D75' ' j 'IT • lJOLJ.1.1 ........... , .. VEGETABLES :':z~~~ ..................... 18' TIU, Ml.I (I ll, U.11111.l .. ITIWID 10..TOU. ~ NUTS :~~~:::.~~~~~-~.c.~~.~~~ ...... 83' Our LOW Evef)dayPrice! GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 39c llf(SWllT PINK 46·0UNC£CAN NIB LETS CORN :::~: ...................... 20' ,,,.,. BLACK PEPPER:!~~:!~~~~ ..... JS ' FRUIT COCKTAIL:~:,~~~~ ........... 20' f.t) PEACHES:~:~~~~'.~~.~~.~~-~~ ..... 17' DEL MONTE PEARS !~':: ............ 25 ' CHUNK TUNA l~·::.'~!: ................. 34' Price' are Oi1courit1d EJtc1p! ori fair.Traded ond Government Controlled hem1, TOP QUAUTY Dlll ITIMSI ~s.~~~~~.!~.~11!~.Lo.~,~~,u 73c -Our LOW Evcr)<fay Pr ice!v OSCAR MAYER WIENERS ALlMIATORPUR(lllf 73c 1 ll. PKG. ' PET FOODS . ! ~ FRISKIES\~'o~~<~:~~~.~.~~~ ...... 23' CAT FOOD!';~~,~~'.'.~.~~~~~.~~ .............. J 5c ""'FRI SKIES MIUblTOO' AMO 63' (A I 1 l»D -111. 11•., ••• "• KITTY QUEEN ~:~~«:~.·.~~~ ............... 21 c PUSS-N-BOOTS~t:;f.'<~• .............. 1 ~c •llMIT I l llYT -UYll I O•AYT ti~ TOP QUALITY DISCOUNT PRICED PRODUCE/ I I Bananas rv Potatoes GOLOIN Ill'[ IUNCNlS RUSSETS V~1 ·ioi·~i·o;39. Shop Any Day , •• Save Every Doy ••• With Lucky Low Discount Pricing Policy. agents' names neutrali?f!d the operation in Eallt Europe. Strausll head! the Christian &lcial Union . which forms the oppollillon with the Chrh;tian Ot>mocrats. The gnvernmenl COWll.ered with a denial that Brandt's office e\'er asked fot the agen!.S' names. G o v e rnment spokesman Conrad Ahlers also denied 11 Spiegel claim that the \Vest German service ha.! lost the confidence of allied services like the CIA and the Brilil'ih Secret Service. "The exact op- po~1te is true," he said. The Bundesnachrlchlend- ienst , or feder11l 1ntelUgence service. is no stranger to con- tro11ersy. ll came to life as !he Organization (:ehlen in the service or the United States v.·hi!e Germany v.·as still under occupation . Lt. {ien. Rf'lnhard (;eh!e11, chief of the Ccrman general staff's military intelHgenre on the ea !'itern front during World \Var 11 surrendered to the United States in the v.1ar·s final months and started to work for his captors. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's rledgling \\' e s t German go\·ernment took over the service when the oc· cupation ended. Gehlen re!ired in 1968. His !'iUCCl!S!'!or, LL Gen . Ku rt \\'esse!. is an associate from \Vorld \Var [f. The service operates from ~ hC';ivi_ly guard£'d compound 1n f\.1unich . It~ budget is not voted by parliament. and ill offlciall y said to be more than 100 million marks of $27 million. II) the eurrenl debate no one has raised the point why \\'est Ger.many, 11i•hich Is not a V.'Or!d power, needs a CIA· like intelligence service. Poor l<~ish No Justi ce Poor fish -there·~ n1 justice in the world ror them. Just when the cat fish. !ht bass and the blue g1!1 wert growing fat and happy in Hun- tington Lake. the city lowerec' the boom on thc1n -or at least lhe fishini{ hooks . llunlinglon Reach offirials have nnw opened the IS.acre. Hunt ington Lake to the bun· dreds of anglrrs who havt hl'en n1ak1ng hie miserable for the fish in Talbert Lake. Both lakes -designed a: the focal poin!s nf the central p11rk -are now available tr fishermen. Talbert Lake ha< bren fishabte !he p::is1 year. but poles and h()llk.~ werP forhid· den at Hunlingtnn Lake. That restriction has been lifted. but vehicles must ~11 !1 be kept away from the lake on thl' west side of Golden West Street. WATCH US MAKE '#ti~'S~N 65' BUTTER NO AODITIVlS fUll • • 110 PllESEllVlTIVfS POUND COFFIE BEANS l11jey 1retlc coffHS fro"' •rou11d the wtrld wit~ /~st • ttlf' fl Nuh'lll1, w"-"• w• trl11d I• ~ch y11ir c1ff .. 111olter. Hawaiian Kana Jamaican Blue Mountain Colombia Supremo Guatemala Antigua Espresso Mocha· lava or 18 other lnttrn1tlon1I coffMs 18 OAJLV PILOT S ~'---~~~~~~~~ Thur~y Marti! 16 p; I Time, ~loney Saved Answering· Pliones Populnr NEW YOllK IUPI) -A lalled Tele Key Iha! enables psychlatrlst u:ses a telephone a business 01 a doctor to answering n1achl11e to leave ..:all his offu .. -e lron1 anywhere soothing messages for anxiety· and niakc the 1nachn1e roll -ridden pal1ent,s llark !ht !ape and rtad All A let;Lslat or fr«s 11 1 s the messagt!s It has taktn secretary for rnore prciduct1ve do\\n s1nl~ his l<iS! <:all work by letting ;in answering t-.' 1turall1 the rJp1d pro- machine toike calls from con l1feret1on or thcst' and othrr st1tucnts Bus1ne~s flrnis u~c new kinds of telephone equiv· them to take ordtrs fr'()tn 111ent :surh as semi au1oni:1t1c salesmen altet office hours .sv. 1!chboards burglar alarms 11osp1tals and Ille insurance and tic in devices tor da\,1 conlpany medical departments trans1n1ss1on have crealed a save hours v. ilh the answering large Independent telephone devices 1n getting reporL~ on equ1pn1ent business medical examinations h has been some years now Ads for cheap ans" enng .since the Bell Systern lost the and recording devices [Ill the power to 1ns1St on the U!>e vendor ad pages of Sunda~ of only Bell made or B!ll newspapers A company called approved equipment by J~ necord-0 Fone a leader 1n the subscribers lnduslr} predicts 1hat in Independent n1ake1~ of another generation a J m 0 st lelephone eqwpment from all every home v.111 have some over the v;orld have rushed kind of an ansv.enng machint HI to help supply the US This companv has one dev 1,e _n1arket_!llh a remarkable -------LEGAL NOTICE -~ IN TNf. SU ,E•IO• c.ou•T 01< TN! ST .. TE o~ c•LtFo•N1 .. i<Olt THE COUNTT 0' O• ... NGf. (ITV 01' HUNH .. GTON BEICl-l m11ntch>•t CO•P0•81 Otl Plant fl M"lt!E E !IL ... IJI • w aow llllNI( OF .t.MEJll(ll N.t.TIONlll TRUST ANO SAVINGS ASSOCIATION a n••on•I twon- ln• •UOC Al O" lru1!er DANIEL ( LEEDY Adm1n111rato• ol llW E•tMe o> W 1h~m C Hubr• FtOELITY SllLES COMPA"IY a co pa•!M•l~l• ., lru\IH C JI 11£AtEY an ~-••ri•d m•n llltfALEE GAYLE MtlLE• 1110 ~nawn •1 AllTALEE Gll'LE POWELL ~TAN 0Alt0 Oil COMPAl'fY a cor~•lllOf' JAMES L CJIOWTHEll FR ... NI( 0 •1NAtOI SECUlllTY 1 IT LE IN SUJIAN(.[ (.OMP ... NY I <otD01al!M "Tru•lt e C RESENSl ... NO ~ HF.llNANOEZ !l•Mt cl•rl' L .. UPfN "I H"NDLEY and HONN" G HANDLEY Ir---------------,· tolt w I< "L GONlllLES aflll tn~10: GONZ ... LES ~11 wl!e SECURITY' FIR~T NATIONllL llANK • corPo•etlon lruttoe Ell lA8Ef"' G LINDLEY t widow JO,EPH S FERM a...i JEANNE M FERM hu1b1nd lnO w f• D M CALLIS Jll ~nd LOUISE CALLIS hv bon~ Ind wl!• ll•n•flclor ti llOllEPl JAMES WAllNER lnO J"NIS E WIRNER hu1b•...:I and wt~ LOWELL ASHLEY' a...:! MAllLENF "Sl'ILFY ~u• ba..a •nd wlf• HOW•RD RICtiEY' 1 1lnol• man ST ... TE OF CAl lFOQ"!IA ALFRED l!OBINSON l•u•"' JUOITl-1 FllEEM"N C"LIFOllNI ... PETl!(lLf.Ur~ CORPDl! ... l!ON II w M~CLELL•N I Jll •nO El.11 ... BETH lol"RY V CL(l LAN llv•fl•...:! ~"" ,.11. BESSIE ~ I GOTl'l"llO DOES 1 •n•ovoh ll:C lnt!u ''"" a...:I •II 1>or..on1 unl<Jw>wn tlflml..q •"" 11!\e or lnt••••1 !1> r~ oro111•i. O'"l lona~nl\ THE PEOPLE 0 0: 1H£ \lATE 0~1 ("LIFORN1A $ENO GREETINGS TO OFFFNOllNTS NA~FO IN 1 H £1 Hl'.loOING OF THIS PllOCEEDING You ••• htreflv dl••tt~ 10 •ll<>f'•r In t ,.,.. lal .,..0<1"!1 ne br~uollt D~ t"" t>laln1!1! •v• n<I VO~ Jn T~r S l>f"''' Ce.in of ltl<I Siii• o• Co!lo•n• 1" end tot 1,,. CounlY ol Ot•"'J" to n....a-n lot tl\f au,,•o•• o• • l!t1r••• • •• a..d 1>uDll< 1>1•k 1>u•1>0~1 •"" """" lntkltnt•I !11•tttO ·~· IOllOWIMI d•<(•ltlf<I •ttl O•O':>"''' \llU•'"" i.lna •nd D•l"G In "'' CltJ' o! Hun"""'"" llr•c~ Co..n1v el O••n~ Stal• of (•lllo•nl• lo w 1 '°"llCEL I Lot• 1 lh•OV<lft lll bolh lntl1nlv• ln llloek • t1I T trt NO l'M 11 tr.own on • M•a ••<O!O•d In Book u DIG• " of M •t•l••f>fOV• Mllts record• o• Orongr Cwnlr Calltorn!1 'AltCll!.t ) lll• norlll holl o• th• 1outll •-•M•di of lftr weit !hr•• twrtl\11 of !he "°"" h1l! o! I~• 1 wulhWetl .,..,.,,~, of SK!IC>•• )6 Town1h!1> S ~vt~ 1!1n<10 I• W••t Pt'11• !n tllt J11ncho L•• Bol>•• and II 1>•rllv In 111 .. R•ncho ta l!OI\~ (h ta •• 1Miwn "" I Mao rtto•dt<I (n l!ooli. !! Ol~t lJ ~f Ml"tl 'n"'"' 1 Meo• reco•d• of Or~ntt (oun!Y C61lfornl1 ••Id l•nd be no ~ 10 <lt•c•ID .a 1, ll'lt ctn1r1I one-!h rd e>1tn0 nt .. 111 a..a w•s! ct !fto wHI !II,. .. !nut!h! of the n0t!ti h&I! cl !he "'"'h"''" <1u1•!f• ol ••Id Stcllon l' ""llCIL l "l'h•f pofl on of I~• •ft•I JO IC'"\ of th• w .. t 60 •«" ftf l~t 1ovlh h•ll of 1ht ....,,n.,ut <>u1der o1 ~Clloo 16 Tcwn\h D I )Oulh Rtntt 11 Wt!I Pt•ll• "' lh• R1r>eho L• l!Oll• c~ ca and oMtl• In "'' l!•ncr.o LI• l!ol•a• •• no"'n "" • M11> rttordl'<I n lllK'• 31 01190 1' ol 1'11'1<'.•ll•nf'<IO' M&o\ .. cord• I cf 0•1ner Covnl• (alltornl1 I• AA -1""'''" ol !ht 110111 Or1ln1ve 0 \lrlct II bcundl<Y tint '' dt1t'1t>-ct n I~• ln•lrUmt<>I •eca•d..a Jul• 11 \flt n l!ooli l] DIVt :JO) ol Ml<t•Hlt>tO<IS llec1>•cts Ortn~e Counr.. C•llf0<n • lM we1terlv llli 00 '"" o! tftfl DENTAL HEALTH '\NEEK IS ALL YEAR LONCO by TlRRY GU.NT, l,. '011 or. 'l oun DOCTOR C\'.'l PJ-fO~F. US \11hen vou n<'('d a dcl1\('1y 'Vr \\Jll de- 11,cr p1omptlv ''11hou t <'X Ira rharcr ;\ l.'!Tl'fll nuiny TJ('nn!e rrlv fin 11.,; for thcir hf':'llth n,.rd-. \\e \\elcomc rNJUl'<,;1.,; f"r rlrh,,.rv service end char&e accounts PARK l lOO PHAI MACY lSI Ho1pltol Rood N•wport leoc:Jr 641·1110 Frff Oeh\'ery The v.ork they do includes laying cable, 1nstalhng and ma1nlan11ng 1 n d 1 v 1 du a I subscribers' e Q u 1pme11 t general engineering service!!. and even designing a n d superv1s1og lhe construction of telephone exchanges -work the phone companies \11cre able to do cntu eh for Lhe1nsclves a generation back -lion o1 "'' t•1I JO ecrft ol l~r wo.st '° "''"' ol the ,...,,h n111 of •ht ''""ll'lllMI <iu•rt• ot 5" ton 11 '':,,.---=====-=--:c:-c:".:::::~ "T°'"nlih o ~ South Ranve 11 Wu! l Ntll• In "'• li'ln('.ho L•• llol•• Ch c~ •nd pafHY In th• ll•nCho ltl !IOI>• 11 ,,,....n on a M•o roco d"l'I n l!oo• !1 l>IQf 11 o• MIKOi • .,...,. ' "'•<>I ,.<o•d• ol O•onc• (0<>•!• r 11 1orn 1 lyln• \Cu•Mt-• ~· !h• llP •• nr~ nav• o 1trlct l>Ovn<>••• I ne fl 1u.crlDO>d In •~e ln•t•w.,•~1 ••c01'dotf Julv II 1919 Jn llooli 1) <>•O• Xll Pl Mlw:11i•neov1 llt<:o•<I• Or• 190 Covn h CtlllO"nl1 "AllCl.L • lna w••! htll ~I •h• ••ti "'" cl '"" \OulhWl\I •vt•t•• <1J tl'lt nor1ht11! ""8'''' or l~t nodllt••' <1~~""' ol Ste• on J.I Tnwn•Mo I S6ulh •••Gt 11 w~,I <>••Tlv In 1111 •1ntl>o L• Bol•• Ch€~ tnd ""t!lv In !l'lt l!anclla lo• l!o $11 11 >llown on 1 MIP rrc0td.., In l!ocl< SI P•O• 1l of Mloc1llfn~ • M•OI •P<o•d• 01 o, • ...,. Count• C1lllo•nl1 ""ltCIL I The l<>Vlhfrlv Ill le~t c• tht "'"" hglf ot •l'lt nor"'w••1 <>u.,ttr ol ll'lt no•thwt!I avarler ol tn• "°"""'''' au1r11r 01 S•cHon JS "-"'"'" J South R•M• II Wu! In tto• •1nc1>o L•1 Botu1 M•P In l!ocl< S! P"'90 11 Mlictll•t•f•DI,>' MIP> '""""di ft/ Ora ... • CovnlY (alllo1n • '"RCEt 6 Tht "'''' 11111 of th• noMhwttl a uetl•• .,, '"• north,.HJ .,..,.,..,, ..r tn1 r,coth.,HI avt•ltr ol ~t•lftft 31 lown1tilp \ So<l!~ Rono• 11 Wt1t ln ll•t l!on<:ll<> lo• !loll•I •• '"°"'n on I M•• ••<O'd"ll In l!OOk SI Otllt 11 GI M \CflllOf<'U\ Mw1 •!'CO'OI o! O••••• Countv r.ollfornl• E•C•DI"" l•S •eet "AR:Cl.L ' Th• •cu•n ..... 11\Ud "' Th• we•T tnret tout1111 a;. 1111 noflh lltll of IM ""''",,.''' Q~••T•• ot ~11on 16 T-nthP S """'" 11109• !I WI\! 1>1rl1Y In tftr ll•n<MI l•• !ol>•I &llid Pt•llY +n ll•ncl>Q Lt 80!11 Chit~ .11 '"""'" on o Moo ro>Co•dOO I" l!oo~ 11 """" 1l n• M!.ct!l•ht<>V> Mto1 '"tO•dl o! 0••1111• COi.int• <"•lllo•nl• "OU "NO F A(H or vou •• h•toD• f>Otll!fll lo .... Q•M •n~ •llO>'j CIUlt 11 """ •itu h•"• ... ~. '"r 11•01>1 '~I d•«'•ID..i l~Q.Uld not C.. <11....,,,.,Md •• •••••d 10< In t~• Ci:-11101.i wnn" tt~ llO do•\ ail•• '"' •or•lc• o" I YOU <>! I~ I ~U"1ft'>e~• f '" ... , '" !h " l~r (oun•v ol O••nt• o " !~ " !ft"• 00) dlYI !1 •• ¥0d "'"''"'I'" •"d YOU l !f Miii HI !hot ~"''" """ \(I l tott• tnc! tn1w~• 'I ltliD•• ••Uul•Od h 1>lllnllf! wl ! t.•• h.><J•"'•M IOt '"' c-•• ft! •• •• • ~ 1aon con•••t' 11 .. 111 1111>1Y ill int ~°"" '"' •n• II-'fl!~ .,.. ... 1..aOd '" lh• (Of'IPll nf YOU MAY IEE.K Tt<f "OVICIE OF IM "TTOlt"IEY ON ...... 1\ ... 11£1 CO"INECTEO W11H 1111; COMPL"!"IT Oft THIS SUM.YONS $UCN 11111!'\l!NEY SHOU~O BE CON~UL 1£0 w Tt<IN 11<[ T1M[ LINIT ST•lEO !N TH\ 'UM MON$ 11011: rttlN( " ¥ lllTT[N 11~1. ... 01N-G 1'0 lHE COMllt••"IT I GlYf<I lrftdf• '"" hf-C •n~ •••' .,1 "'f •ullt'•lor (11\<<1 nf •~• C•htet .. 1• "' 11\d loot .... T' R. fll Or1~91 •~1• Tlh oa' pf J~ ' \ .... (0Ff!C1111L SE ... l l W E 11 JOHil COllf!IY ( l<trf and (l•n n! 11\o> S<IHrl,.. COu'1 OI fll< l"lt OI Ctl!lorftla n .end tor '"' COii"" ol Ci • ~· •• Eu .. ., t "''"' 00111 ' ION,.A (ff? .t.tfen><n' l..OV AHfol MAltlltllL At.i"111t Cll'I A!tMfltT (lrY "' """"""'''" ''"~ ""' Oflk• .,, '" "'"'l"'Hfl ... ,~ (11•1••~. T..t 0141 ltil_.ltl I•! 121 "lllllthtttll 0•1••1>' ~,..,t O•lt •<VI II, H Int -"••~ I, I i"I r,.......,., ,... """''"' * * HALLI DAY 'S ANSWER THI I EAT OF A DIFFERENT DRUMM ER TlALLIDA\'' 11fff1., ll. ~111\1..,111 11p UhJlh,..F 1111h 1"11>< r)\l•I~ !n" \•t• ~"I 1\1 I uJot IOJ: ' f \\ h1 ,k1 ) l•lt!IH\ U\ }ulb·' lr•lh•r hnt-d J4D, ]oll::N S THADITIOl\AL CLC1Tl!l:o\G ! 71~ A-!RVIN( AVI NEWl'0Rf llACH W(STCltFF PLAZA l'H ••S Ol•J • • OVER THE COUNTER ltt,,.•Wo11llll~1 1111t ... 1•1tr -lllle'lt ti ,,,._.lfMltll' 9 I "' !'91!1 NAIO '•le• .. .,.. Ille,_. r1uu., m•tlc~' mart-.., tt1111t1111i.. NASO L1shngs for Wednasd1y, March 17, 1971 . -, ..... •.. .......... .... '· • • .Complete-New York Stoek List~ ' , ! ~=· .... u.<=*91: !\I ... r- ft ~ R -'.- ' ' 1971 DAILY 'ILOT l •IM N.t ,,,.,.,,. ............................... ,,, (WI I Hltll ~ 0tM 0...11 :~ !1!; k1~ l~~~ Stock s Piel\: Up; ~, !~ ~ !~~~ Still Show Drop l!R1:ti .. ·"' ~ "" fi 1~ '' lev ~ta 1 " l4 l'::1.' ~· llO 1fi ~ J~ JE ! ll NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market finish-,:::~~:':: " • • ¥," jt-y, ed lower Wednesday. although well above eirly T.cht11(r. " in 11 ~ 1 1 -J l"-"Otl ~ ''' 1 '1"' • "' mornmg levels Trading was fairly heavy. •i=v;, iU• 1li 1~ 1!: ~~== After being down nearly 6 points at noon. the l=1.~f.so1, ,., "" ~ Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 1 58 at 913 06 Ttf\119(0 , 1 \)I ,.. 2'111 ... -... k l•nnc1 WI A ' ~ 1o "' ~ -., near the final bell Standard & Poor's 500 sloe ,~n~ f'!e50 J ~ '~ 'lh -"' mdex showed a pass of O 33 at 100 88 ,,.tf,,. 1 'J 4 , I~ t Tt•Gtsl 1SJ ,1 4111 /fl 43' -1" Of the 1,659 issues crossing the tape 762 pomt· ''~ G •11 so l!J II \ ~ 1~ + "-t1~ G !ul '6 •• H .. 1 1"'--.. ed lower while 604 gained '•••• .,..,, 10 in •''• •s"' 1,...,, te•ltfnll .IO 111 11 ''" ., -11 Clo5lng prices included AT&T 48~ off ~: r1co.c.1, l'<! tJl4 1'..,, !}I.I, -.-\o Tt•Pld ~ 101 11 ,,., ,..1.+1" Bethlehem Steel 22 off 1ti, DuPont 141% up 1%, '••u111191 • ~1, ll'• llW t1ir,011 oO 1•) •f.I• ""-~ Ford 6071A orr 1A, General Electric 110\-2 unchang-'''" P1ta1 I , U\o n· -' p f lt•lr 1111 .o ~ j1 , 21w ... -"' ed, General Motors 84~ up i.i Southern ac1 1c r~''*°' 10 ' ' l' u ff ,, T TJ\omlltt 1 61 1a ,,,. s" 1 ,,_. 41 off 1 Standard of Jeney 77~ o 7,, exaco T"O<!< 11'C! "° ,, JO\lo 5111, ..,, .0-\• fl'IOlr\JW .JS. • "'' ntt ,u1., -•:. 371,2 off ~. and U S Steel 331,1. up 1. n .. 111 er J(I 73 ,,. 11'1 110.-.. k d f rt f tba k Tl COi'• 1)0 ,. no., ""' ir .. -" Profit ta ing accounte or pa o se c TlatwttM ,0 llU ,,,, 11· 114 .. '• B •-1 d II I -~ t d TllM ·~( , " " '",., 1. •1\1 •1. ut some analysts ue 1eve se mg a so r~1ec e Un· r1m1,,.,.,1, so 10 1t l .., 1' t ~ h M ddl E d La d f h fl ... Ktn 1 llO 1ff ~U' ~, ~.~ ! ~! certainties tn t e t e ast an os, an res n1M11tw .l(lb • " • .,.... .. "" -,.,_ signs the predicted economic recovery will be slO\Y l="f~k1 : 111t11i.i. 'n~ 10.t. -... d re1..i1, , ~ 11J ~·~ ,J ~.,, ~l lfl getting Starte Tfl<ll ol w, 11 ~ JO• :io>. ~ , Gillette was among t.he days mol!it active as a 1••111! co "° l'9 •I"" 41~ "1\} *1 lr•n1 U 110 ts. is 130. 2s -' result or an early block of 3M,400 shares traded ~;:~ ... '% :t 1:i ~~= ~ ~~ • .-. at 49 off 1118 1n a cross·transact1on rrnwFin •M )1 lJ n v. 11 .i.1 Tr.1Mm•1 li 1u J~' ~~. ~ _, 1.,,.,, .. ..,,,,:::,.cs:ir:::o•M•••"'•••••••••m•"'\'''"Kon 10 ti 16 • 1~, ''"' + ''I' TrtnKll Inv 1f l'lo ll• '"" + • Tr11111lron )13 2H, 1111 11'~ -1, S.rl"flMlll • ,, 1 l•llo ''" lle<1 D JO!l.Jll J U 13 0 -1\' Tr1,..1r1 IO It 1'\.! t > Hl,i, •-·· D --•• >• tl• •• • ,. ....... IJ /«I 17J ue. HVJ lJ -1 lr1v11t1 pf J ' JI JI'• 31 -""'1'1 - -.. -""' wWI ., 2' 32 ~f l!'1 -Iii Tr1"1...0dot 1i s 1• " " .... ~It.to B 1 JO .,., '' 75 J~ ... 14 s::i:. \/;ti( ! !J u 2~ JJ"4 -... TrlCOl'I \,.. ,, ,~ 11 Jl~-'·"•ltvMI Ill) '3'1'1 ,,,. 1'V.-1.t51-w 190 ..... I.I'll .il1 -•~TrlCon plJ$4 26 :itt Jt :it -••l!l•tl'lcn lta n ''"" 4.1,. 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" Un {l"ID I • DAILY PILOT Thursday, Marth 18, 1q71 BIG PRIZE -This is the Congressional Cup., the prize 10 top sailing skippers are seeking as they begin competition in the 7th annual renewal of the Long Beach Yacht Club classic. Competition will continue through Saturday. Congressional Cup 7th Renewal Starts By ALMON LOCKABEY •Mll11t Edll•r The 7th annual Congressional Cup match race yacht series got under way today at Long Beach wiLh three sets of five matches. Tensions mounted Wed· nesday as 10 top sailing crews from throughout the country saw to last minute details of the Cal-40 sloops assigned by lot earlier in the week. But a scheduled tuneup race Wednesday was s c r u b b e d when fog obliterated the course minutes before the scheduied start. And when the fog lifted there was no wind. All hands po~·ercd back to the yacht club to continue last minute tuning and to have their pictures taken. The first race of the first series was scheduled 11t 10 :30 a.m. today. Wester forecast wu for brisk winds out of the northeast. Here was the lineup for today's races: SERIES No. l -(I) llenry Schofield, Alamitos Bay YC, ver:ms Bobby &nis, Califor. nia YC; (2) Bob Mosbacher, Houston YC versus Tom O'Neal, Larchmont YC : (3) Tom Pickard, Long Beach YC versus John Odenbach. Great Lakes Sailing Assn : 14) 11al McCormack, San Francisco YC versus John Jen11ing <NAYRU) St. Petersburg, Fla. YC versus Greg Booth, Ha- waii Sailing Assn. SERIES No. t -O'Neal versus Pickard : (2) ~1osbacher versus /lfcCormack; (3) Odenbach versus Booth: ( 4) Bums versus Morgan; (5) Schofield versus Jennings. SERIES No. 3 -( 1) Odcn- bach versus McCormack; (2) O'Neal versus Booth; (3) Schofield versus Morgan; ( 4) Burns versus Jennings; (5) Mosbacher versus Pickard. The schedule for Friday ls as follows : SERIES No. 4 -(1) O'Neal versus Morgan: (2) Odenbach versus Jennings; f3) Pickard versus Boolh; (4) Schofield versus Mosbachcr; (5) Burns versus McCormack. SERIES No. 5 -(1) Pickard versus Jennings; (2) O'Neal versus Odenbach; (3) ~1cCormack versus Morgan; (4) Bums versus Mosbacher; (5) Schofield versus Booth. SBRIES No. 6 -(1) Mos- bacher versus Odenbach; (2) Jennings versus Morgan; (3) Schofield versus O'Neal; (4) Burns versus Booth; (5) Pick- ard versus Ml'Cormack. Saturday's lineup: SERIES No. 1 -(I) ~1osbacher versus Booth: (2) Burns versus Odenbach; (3) Schofi~ld versus McCormack; 141 Pickard versus Morgan ; 151 O'Neal versus Jennings. ~'ERIES No. 8 -(1) Schofield versus Odenbach ; 12) Burns versus Pickard; (3) ~1osbacher versus :P.1organ; (41 Jennings versus Booth : t 5) O'Neal versus 1o1cCormack. SERIES No. 9 -(I) Mosbacber versus Jennings: (2) Schorield versus Pickard: (3) Burns versus O'Neal; (4) McCormack versus Booth; (5) Odenbach versus Morgan. Sailittg W 01.,.ior Newport's Al Cassel To Race to Montego Newport Beach skipper Al Caa&els's Warrior is Me of 50 top ocean sailing yachts entered in the ~1arch 19 Miami·Montego Bay Yacht Race. The sixth biennial classic is an 800-mile race down the Bahamas a n d through the Windward Passage to Jamaica's north cout and this year takes oo added jmportance bt>cause il is the final mandatory race for the first ocean racing world championship. Leader in the championship series of 19 internalional races i.s Ted Turner's 12·metcr sloop, American Eagle. John Powtll11 4 a • f o o t Derecktor sloop, Salty Tiger, is running second in the series. for Sumner A~ (Huey) Long and hi! ROOnd Ondine, • 73-loot ketch, il will be another at- tempt. to caplurt! the race·s big Sliver Pineapple - Jamaka'• Governor General's beautiful Ticonderoga. The Bll·mile ocean race Is a beat, a reach and a run from 1'1iami through the Bahamas and Crooked lsland Passage followed by a big tum at the Windward Passage between Cuba and llalli for an exhilarating 250-300 mile spinnaker rupt into Montego Bay. 'T'his year's :P.!iami-Montego comes at the end or the Southern ~an Racing Circuit in Florida, one or lhe roughest se ries or sailing races in the "'Orld. The baUle for the Silver Pineapple has been scheduled later than usual this year to allow competitors to participate in the Buenos Aires-Rio de Janeiro race. Air California Nantes SA Man Cup -which goes l«> the The Air California Board ot overaR winner. 11is f Ir It Directors has announced the Ondine was Class A winner appointment of Max P . Van tn t96S. Oordrecht, vice president and Young Mark Johnson f;ices treasurer of Air Cal, to its 1n added challenge aboard tht Board of Directors. n.t'oot ketch, WI n d w a rd Prior to hi~ election lo lhe Passage, with which his late BoJrd of Directors, V :l n father, Bob Johnson won Class Dordrccht had served the s In 1969. Mr. JohMO~ airline as lrea:;urer<nntroller, captured tho Sllv havJng Joined the Intra-Mate le 1n !965 with th alrll.ne· 1n 1968 as coalroller. • r I I soft little body dressings ' 1 • \ body shirts, stretchy or smooth ••• new from Van Raalle and Blue Swan Great body shirts! Pai r them with skirts, pants, shony pants. Choose strerchy leotard lops, or slinky-smooth shirts •. (Maybe you'll want some of each!) They're all of carefree nylon. S·M·L. Find them at May Co now. •· Blue Swan, b\ltton front shirt, yellow, ora nge, red, navy 6.50 b. Blue Swan, zipper front shirt, yellow, orange, red, navy 6.50 c. Van Raalle, long sleeve shirt, black, navy, came l, lemon 6.50 d. Van Raalle, short sleeve shirt, black, camel, navy, lemon 6.50 may co daytime t~ie 28- -. I . : . ._., ·y !. ' .• ' ~, /}:'' .(/", f,K m1y co south c•11t pl111, san diego fwy. at bri1tol, c.01t1 m111, 546-9321 thop monde,y thru 11turd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1unday noon 'Iii S p.m. . ' MAVCC> • ' ,, I • • • • •• • GUARANTEED THESC l'JIOOUCJS CAIHtY AH UNCOHDITIONA.L MOfl[Y-SACll GUAllAATCE . V t.'fl ACR'fUQ. S·J,PAltr ·. FOR BO'IH INSiDE 'li our . YINYL ACRYLIC CAN BE USED INSIDE WHERE. ' EXTREMELY DURABLE 1'AINT 1$ DESIREO. .. 30 MINUTES TO DRY •WASHABLE ·•¢LEAN..\JP WITltYfATER •A TOP QUAUTY, · ~iTERIO.R S.TUCCq,MASONRY PAINT ,. °'STS ~· iiiii! .8 RS ~"r:;~ PHIUPPINE MAHOCA~Y SHUTTERS MOVABIE HORIZORllU. LOUVER 6Vix13 IN 4g 71120 IN ............. 1.09 7l/2 x40 IN.-..... ..2;39 CDMI! lt[ll ll C 71124 IN ............... 1 .3~ 8x20 IN ...... ~., ..... 1.29 10 7~6 IN ............... 1.45 8x24 IN ............... l .!53· c 7x29 IN ............ 1.62 81126 IN .............. 1.65 7x32 IN ............. 1.79 8x:29 IN ............... 1.85 7x36 IN ....... l .99 8x32 IN, ............. 1.99 8x36 IN ............. 2.32 9x20 IN .............. 1.45 9x24 IN .............. 1.69 9x26 IN, ... _ ......... l .85 9x:29 IN ..•. -........ l.99 9x32 IN .............. 2.29 9Klf? IN ...... -...... 2.59 9x48 IN ........... 3.59 10x20 IN ... ., ..... 1.59 • MANY EXTRA YEARS OF SERVICE •DO-IT· YOURSELF AND SAVE •DECORATIVE PATTERNS OUR P.RICI 9e · . , .. htltf, • rn.1 • EXTREMELY DURABLE COMP.. AITAI\ l7C I --......-- E~ Him In Qur Storn C1rU!led bv our 811rlng L1bo111ory EVERYTHING SOLD WITH AN UNCONDITIOfiAL MONEY·IAC.K GUARANTt' ~ :.• ,;· J;I, Mm fli#. ~ ' ' WAllPAHlt ,~!Art'l-&:5 o COLORFUL PATTERNS PRlilPl'lllE FIT ANY DECOR 1IOD IJESICll .. lt SQlll • GIVE ANY ROOM AN 1s IN. x IO 11< .. ,.., .. , .... 11 .n ALL-NEW LOOK3es lllN.xlOIN ................ . • PRE-TRIMMED . 1llN.•89 IM~.,. ..... ~· tt.ff OUR PMCa Pl" ~. COM,, ftl TAIL 6.95 ".:,Ou_"· PIAsnc IAMINAtEll COUNTER . ·TOPPINC . '• ALCOHOL 'ANO WATERNIOO( •TOP, QUALITY •4 X a FT . -29c •NON·STAINING Mql:1 , SQ, • SA.NIT ARV fT. WHITE I. . COM,.llTAl\,SSc COLORS Vih'tl ... • "8 & 54 INCH WIDTHS °"" . .UPHO,lS1ER't • ANE QUALITY ,_ •EASY TO CUT, SEW, 59c TACK OR PASTE ";:' , COMP. IETAll 1.21 • MATERIAl r ', lA«"GE SELECTION OF PATTERNS AND ,COlDRS '1u.usmA'r10ti~ mu ONlY REINFORCED UP~OLSTERY MATERIAL ,0,::. sec " IWlllYO COMP. lnAll 1.11 ,.HICK CtOS'S IJ•lfRIORENl\MEl '.•~C/l!-!88~ FASTD~Y ·• FOii All INTERIOR USE " ·• EXTREMEl,Y·:,,-.399 DURABLE ··\!!lii!i . Willlf ' • OM. & COLORJ ~ f.f,I IN YOUR OWN ~UAL CONTAINER PIASllC • °"" _, PAllf 5.QUART 25c · H i PAil co••.•nu.4'° ART AND i . . 10 COLORS • J • • ~ ART ~~ SljPPUES WATER COLORS OUR PMCI: 16 COLO RS 30 CC TUBE 25~ •. COMP lfllll 400 STANDING EASfl STRONG & OUA gg STURDY l"AIC E 1 COMP lflAIL 1 .00 Ti'. READl'·MIXED CIAY 5 LB. GRA y OUlt NICC COMP llTAll 11• 59lA. ~ COMPlETE DtSCOUlil' ..• ART DEPARTMENl FOR B01H 1HE AMATEUR AND PROFESSIONAL ARTIST OILS 40 COLORS 20 CC TUBE CERAMiO MOSAiC TILE MARlllNC -. · 12 C PENS PlllCll ••· ,' COMll'. "ITAi\. 'ltO . . . SPRAY q;UN • '. PRE·MOUNTED ON GAUZE .eSTANDARD SIZE SHEETS .{APPROX, 12 X 12 IN.) . PLUS 65 CIAZED "I . SEMl·CIAZED PATTERNS OUll . ' COMPLETE !" . I ' WITHMOTOR~ .::.3915 QUART GUN • •-,-IA,. ~ I HOSE 3 SP£CIAl OUR - &IAZED PATTERllS 39~• '"'" cw. IEJAll.90• -49c TO 2"••• . IHllT Prit -P0,11R.d, WALLPAPER POPUlAR PATTERNS PRE·TRIMMED ~·-. 'ENA'dEl P~.2~Z.AEROSOl CAN IGH GLOSS FAST DRYING ERFECT FOR FURNITURE, TOYS, MACHINERY, ETC. XTREMELY TOUGH AND DURA BL FINISH -· ·-. - cow. 11ira11-43,d9 • o A RAINBOW OF COLORS ,,, ·. ' : .... .,J. •• -•1 • • ADDS ZEST TO ANY ROOM • SO EASY TO HANG - SO BEAUTIFUL TO HAVE WALLCOVE.AING SOLD 09UR9PRICE IN2 ROLL IOLTS C . ... COMP. AITAIL 2.25 M =· • • IATEX ACR'IUC EXTERIOR · SlUCCO-MASONRY PAlt.l ' it AN EXCEPTIONA,I., PAINT FOR ~ EXC~PTIDNAL PljlCE •1·HOUR ORYll'(G e GOOD HIDING • BRU$ft OR llOLL , . . . • CLEAN·UP WITH WATER ' C N ~L$0 IE USED FOR AN EXTREMELY DURABLE' .JNT~ JOB BRIGHT WHITE AND C.OLO!IS OUR PRIU .-1 !A~~ . I I ' .. U OAIL Y PILOT Thu~1y, Much 111, 1971 Bruins Face Challenge of Red-hot Cougars 'sALT ti.KE CITY, CAP) -'1'11r .. 1ona wtnnlng s!Jttks go on the lint ~t ln the NCAA Far Wot Regional ~ketbaU tournament, with~ spoUight on UCLA's bid to capture 1 record -fifth straight national championship. Surprlling Brigham Young University, IM, becomes the nen team· attempUng to derail the Bruin tJlll'tll, which bu brought a 1&-1 record this yffl', 24 ttraight NCAA tournament victories and the A&sodatfd Press No. 1 rankina. Ill Oii opooillf -· Cl! State <Lall ... dli), Which bu WOil 18 ltr.s&M pmes, mttt.a Pacific, wlllner ol tu )ast 11 games. Late-blooming BYU WIS • 4eclded underdog in its match with coach John Wooden's awesome Bruins. The UCLA team a r r i v e d in SaJt Lake Cit)' Wed· nesday aft.ernc:lGJ and held a abort work- out a few hours later. BYU. which WIS rated only sixth-best in the Western Athletic Conference, won nine of Us last 10 cames to capture a playoff 1pot. Thi )lte -Mle was led by Kr.-.. Qllk, an ~x f.11 center Lefty Says Angels Will Capture Flag PALM SPRINGS (Al') -M~ IOOllll*W -Mijo. w11o hid a dlfa .. IAny PllUllpa of Oii CallMla AQjolt polallill I'll ,..,, eoold be the eih<• ftatly pit4lcU hi• dllb WIU Win Iha ....... tlUt in tilt Amerleoa IAl&Ut 'a E&ll "We WW gO wllll t fivt pitcher rotau.n IHviJlon. wMn wt Mw ftvt aames in a row," 11111 l'llllltpa. "Whtft '" hi•• doy1 oll . "! am -t Ibis b the bell club In between, tht, f.Uowa doing the bell lo tht dl•lolon, .. he 1111 in whal might wlll ret u. Jobi." be -t ot • ~ allto-tn lllo bollpan , Phlilil>' ha 1 -· sl-he adds, "tt l,.)lon'I bellt'lt •• laiuckltboller Id f'tsher, Dl•t Ultocht, lo Jhem, yool t&n'I upool t111m to bolJOYO Ardlie Roi~ lrom the Cubl Bild "' them9e?Ya .. tht. vttvU Ntl Queen who came te 1n ...,., · mm the ls cunp without arm tnlwles. a mon tet :U cl:b than~ blare "At UUs time, we"re looking for another evtr btea. Acqu.istUon of outfiel~ catcher," aay1 Phillipa who counts .on 'hr1y OonJclion and Kon Berry and ·Jell Torborg f0< -I ol lhe work behind pitcher Jim Malonoy llll bolped. the plale. The wlnttr deals allo llrouOt vUU\y 1'ht tnneld •pptani set with Jim tnfteldw Syd O'lr1tn aM ~ Jeny SPMctr at ftrtt, Sandy Alomar at second, Moeies wbk:h should improve the teeeft-Jim f'ftl')!I at 1htl1.!top and Ken dary streftltll. MeMullen at third. For the first time since they came O'Brien is the fell ow e1pected to handle Into existence, the Angels , have the the utility infield jobs. 'rony Oanulq American Ltague batting champion -and Roger Repoz provide the outfield Alex Johnson who hlt .329. Berry in insurance and bench strength. center fidd provideJ the defen1ive speed "We bettered ourselvu 15 gam11 111\ MCel8lJ1 to countered J o b n 1 o n • 1 year wilh 86 victorie. 1nd if W'& can WeaJmesael in tht field ." better our1tlves 12 games thi1 Id.IOI\, :'Left.hander Clyde Wria:ht surprited a we'll be in prttty good 11\ape,11 theorllu yiar qo with 22 victories and this Phillips with full know}ed,ft Ultt Min• )".9tr Andy Meuersmlth a p pear 1 nesota won the division tJtlt With te pbysically well after allmenb hampered triumphs a year ago. him much of 1970. In the hurlinc departmtnt, the Anpl1 'Tom Murphy, winner of 16, and allO acquired Gene Brablnder who work· DODGERS SCORE 54 SPRING WIN POMPANO BEACH, Fl.i. -'Mle Los Angela Dodgera chipped away at Darold Knowles for four 1lft1lea in the eighth inning, includin& a 1ame-winnlng hit by Bob Darwin, as they defeated the Washington Stnators M in exhibition play Wedndday. Knowles, the hardluclt reliever of last year who had a 2·14 record but saved 27 games, was the victim of two unearn- ed run.s when Mike Epstetn dropped Richie Allen'• foul pop and Allen followed with the fir!lt of the four hits. Triples by Tom Haller and Bill Sudakis helped the Dodgers to three runs in Ult fifth off Jerry Jeneskt. ed for Milwaukee last year. Allhou1tt he was only 1-15 in 1970, the riChlobndw won 13 the previous sea10n. Ray Janlli. acquired from Boston, could help Jn the bullpen also. "Wllh our new acquisitions, wt'vt lm· proved ounelves 25 lo 30 pen;.itJ'lt," llfl PhlJlUps who doean 't mind 1olfta OUt on a limb. "I feel we have a club whlth ean BCOre more runs and we hi Vfl meN depth in pitching. With lerry in center field, we have helped ourselves up the middle. "And last September, wt w•r• <inly three gamea out of flr1\ pli.CI wl\h Messersmith and McMullin both hurt. So wu Spencer, and FregOli play•d even though he also was hurt. Phillips exudes confidence tnd tl\e •ord from other American Ltaaut camps in the West indicates he reiuld well be right. Carr Pwyer of Year; All-America Team Li-Sted NEW YORK (AP) -Austin Carr or Notre Dame, WhoMl 1hootln1 hand.eel na· ttonal champion UCLA ita only defeat or the rqular aeuon, was named today a1 the College Basketbsll Pla)'er of the Ytar for 1171 by The Associated Puss. Carr, 1 l ·fOOl ·l 11nlor from W11hinttcl\. O.C. won by a land1lldt over Sidnt)' Wlcb of th 1 top.ranked VCLA BrulN in the voting by 4fll sports •rller1 and broadca1ttrs. The v0Un1 was done in a separate category a1on1 with the ballotlna for the 19'1 All-American an nou n ct d Wednesday . 8ome ot the 479 who voted for tht All-American 1kipl)td n•mlt'I& 1 •layer of the year. , tarr, Who 1llll has a chance of btat1n1 out Johnny N•umann of MisalMlppl 11 the NalOQ1& top collegiate scorer, polled • vot.el to 83 for Wicks for Player ol tht Year . Far behind In lhird plaoe wu Neumann wllh II (Ollcr#td by Oun M1mln1'r o( Marquetlt wllh 18 and Jim McD111lel1 of Wt1llm Kentucky with 1t1ht. AUITIN CARR McDlnl1l1 Wirt cho!en for lht flnl lellft All·Amarlc111. ltoche , lloblach, Row1, NIUDSIM Wtrt named to tht -.! Item along wilh Paul WulphaC ol loulhem California. from Yugoalavia. CO.le, who admitted he had lrouble adjusting to the American a:amt after years of playinc under in· tern1Uonal rules; this week won honorable mention in the Assoclattd Prus AU-American !electlont. But UCLA has M Sidney Wick!, a powerful forward named to the first All-American team, and ~er-up to Notre Dame'1 Austin Cirr as AP'1 Player of the Year. The Pacific·Long Beach features the 49ers' tough defenf'. a91ln1t P~ellla'• rugtd rebounding. 1.ong BelC!h1 9*A1 has allowed an average of less than 8$ point& per game this year. Pacific 21-5, has grabbed 69.7 rebounds per game, tops lo the naUon. Sophomore guard Ed Ratleff leads the Ott TV Tonight ChamM!l 5 flit 8 Long Beach att.aclc and scored 31 points La.st Saturday against Weber State in a play-off game. Pacific bas ~10 John (Ji1r1elll, mo•' 11tuable .oplayer ln the Weit Coast AthleUc Conference. V er-r-r•fl lntere•ting BYU coa.ch Stan Watts will watch the game ~ television. He has been hospitalized since Mtrch 1 when he widerwent a 12~-hour operation for canctr. BYU players planned to visit wilh Watta today be.fore the game, lhe same u they vi.sited just before the Utah and Utah State games, bolh won by BYU over traditional rivals on the road. "We're not going to stop that procedure now.'' said 111lltant eoaeh Pete Witbeck, who ii handling tht ltlm In Walla' ' A coUlston course t1eem1 to be inevitable. However, it turn1 out that ' these chaps know what they are doinf as thar. turn and hoad for the starting gate at Naw York 1 Yonkers Raceway. • Kindly Bookie ' Sports In Brief Raps Verdict, Laver, Ralston Battw; Returns Money LONDON (AP) -This land of Ibo attln l\l'&nll, unusu11 and offbeat, came Rupp to Return in '72 up ltld•Y with 1 soft.hearted bookie. Nl:W YOJ\JIC -Rod Laver needs just Ph · two victori11 to complete hi!1 sweep Uip Laister. manaaer of • bll betting of the Tennis Ch1mpions classic. They shop near Birmingham, Engl1nd'11econd would brtn1 to 13 his triumphs and largest city, said he thoua:ht his $160,000 his total wlMin1s. tu1tomor1 iot gypped over a prize fl&ht Laver's opponent in the 1ami·fin1l ~eclslon and !lo he I& 1lvin1 the losers round toni&ht at Mad!IOI'!. Squirt Otrden their money back. Is Dtnni!I Jlllston, (If BJkersfiel~, who ha!I be1t1n The Rocket in two of four Soft-hearted Phil was burned up by matches In the past year. tht verdict which dethroned heavywei1ht Roy Emerson (If Newport Beach playl Henry Cooper and gave hia Briti1h, Eur-Tom Okker of The Netherlands In the pean and Brill•h Empire boxing tltl•• other semifinal with •1s.ooo going to to II-year-old Joe Bugner in London the winners and $5,000 to the losers. Tu"day nlthi. e Baron Back The controver1lal verdict wa1 by only '"' one-quarter of a point and l'TUlny rin~ide LEXINGTON, Ky. -Adolph Frederick obHrver1 were plainly aih••t. Jt upp isn't one to look further into .the ,, . . future than the soonest tipoff, but Just I get my. living out of sport . an~ this once he made an exception. I felt that this was a slur on boxing, "rm going (() be back next year; &aid Lai ster. "It will cost me a week's don·t worry about that." the 69-year-0ld pay and perhaps a start into the second Baron of Basketball said a!I his Kentucky week to refund the money to those Wildcats prepared for tonight's battle h bet H ,. in the NCAA Mideast Reg ional at Athen!I, w o on enry. Ga. How much that ii, he wouldn't say. A~ut that decision, Laister said that boxing fans (Jn the continent would have *'gone berserk." "I have talked to many people who were disgusted ," he added. e Laker• Upended section or the C8lifomia Interscholastic Federation, signed letter!! ot intent Wednesday niaht to attend the Unlver!lity (If Southtrn California. McKay's falher is head feotball coach lhtr•. Haden and McKay, both six-footers and about 175 pounds, led Bishop Amat High (If La Puente to the CIF 4-A tiUe last seuon. e Trolnlng Camp Set Thi Los Angeles Rams of the National Jl'Ootball League announctd Wednesday they would again hold their training camp at California State {Fullerton). The camp will open for rookies July 6, with vets coming in abo:.it a week later. a Ram1' 1pokuman eaid. Th• Rams have trained 1t Fullerton the past f(Jur year1 e E;r·plteher Dle• CINCINNATI -Mass of the l\e1ur- rection will be celebr1ted Saturday for Ralph Birkofer Sr., who pitched in tht major league!I for five years -four with the Pittaburgh Plratel and one with the old Bl'ooklyn Dod1er1. Birkhofer, q, died at hl1 hornt here Tuesday nigtiL absence along with Glenn P'otter, a defensive coach. "It gelS the adrenalin flowing. This is an emoUonal team, anyway, and Stan deserves to see the boys. They have great respect for him," Witbeck said. Among the BYU starters visiting Watts will be his nephew, Steve Kelly, a 6-3 guard wbo is the team's second·leading scorer. Asked when he thought Wooden would throw his famed zone press at BYU, Witbeck Joked, "Al IOOO u hi rets oil Ille plAJIO." Marquette Seeks 40th Win in Row ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -Second-ranked Marquette, with one starter on the doubUUl list, rllka it.a 3~i•mt wirudng atreak ton:lgbt wb:en tht Warriors tallgle with Ohio State in the opener of the NaUooal Collejiate AtbleUc AuociaUon ' Mideast region&) basketball tournament. Western Kentucky, ranked No. 7, bst- Ue! aou-state rival Kentucky, a four· time national cbamplon, in t.be second half of t.be power-p1cktd doubl6-header involving four teams ranted ln the Wt> 10. Coach Al MaOu lre of Marquette uid W•dn11day night forward Gary Breu may not 1tart becawe of a back Injury but could see limited duty. Brei!, averaging 13.8 points and nlne rebounds per game, and All-American Dean "The Dream" Me ming er are the ()nJy returning starters from Marquette's National Invitational Tournament Cham· pionship team of 1970. Memlnger averaged 21 polnll per galne In l11dln& the Warrior• to 27 Yktories thl1 year, Including a 12-fT ttlumpb over Miami or Ohio in the NCAA flnt round acUon lalt week. Ttlnl1ht'1 wlMers wlll meet for the champlon&hip Saturday seeking a berth In next week's NCAA finals at HOllJton. Ohio State, the No. JO team, won ltl list 10 1ame1 of the ye1r in posting a 19-5 rewrd following a 1\ow start in which Jt divided Ht first eight garrie.s. Coach Fred Taylor's Buckeyes have never lost in Mid-East play having won titles in 1960. 19111, 1982 and 1968. The Big Ten champions have three aophomores in t.he starting lineup, in· eluding leading scorer Allan Hornyak, averaging 22.8 per game. Adolph Rupp of Kentucky and Johnny Oldham of Western reported having players with 'sore throats. Oldham said his 7-foot All·Ameriea Jim McDaniels developed a strep throat Sunday while playing basketball on a dirt court with his brothers and neighbors. Oldham calls Kentucky "the gr11Wst llhoM.l111 teem in America." The Wildcats. ranked eighth , had eilht pl1Ytrl who hit over &O percent of their thot!I as Xentucky won its 28th Soulhe11tam Contet1nce UUe wlth a 22-4 record. Rupp 1ald McDanltla Is "possibly the lf'al.ul center 1n America and I don't care whit the paper 11ld that guy (Artis Ollmort ) at J1ckaonville 1ot." "So many people are not in a position to do anyhtlng about it. But I felt that I could. So I am paying back the stake money to the people who backed Henry .'' Cooper was 2 to 5 favorite to win , lu1nar I lo 1. Referee Harry Gibbs. who ra\,1d Bugner's hand in trium ph at the end ol tht IS.round flglll, defended hi> dtclllOtl 11 a just one. BOSTON -The Boston Celtics held Wilt Chamberlain to one point in the first half, posted a 19-point halftime lead and defeated the L<l! Angeles Lakers 11 2·104 in National Basketball A!lsociatlon action Wednesday night. John Havlicek paced Boston with rt points. Doo Nelson added 18 and Don Chaney 17. e SW Loul.dana Wins r1vored Southwest Louisiana notched a l IO·H victory over Assumption Thurs· day nl&ht to gain the semifinals of the NCAA College Division basketball playoffs. Penn (27-0), Gamecocks Clash in Eastern Playoffs 1•1 ICClt'ed the fight honestly as I always dtt,'' he sald at his home outtide London . "I made them dead levtl gotna Into the l111st round and Bugner won that. Thia ii the first Ume 1 have betn tn thll lfltt el rumpus but I shill hold my head htlh." , He 11 rtftrteing again next Monday et Ille Natlooal Sporting Club. In other quarterfinal tilt&, Old Domi· nlon nipped Puget Sound, 81-30, in overtime ; Kentucky Wesleyan tripped Cheyney State of Kentucky, 8*'-33 ; and EvansvUJe routed Hartwick , 10&-69. e Amat Duo to llSC WEST COVINA -Receiver John McKay Jr. and quarterback Pat Haden, eoplayers of the year in the 1outhem RALEIGH (AP) -Fordham (25-2) play!! Vlllanova (24-6) tonight in the opener of the NCAA Eastern Regional ba!lketball semifinals. but much 1ttentlon will be on the baltle between third-ranked Pennsylvania (fl.(l l and slxth·rated South Carolina (23-4), A capacity crowd of 12,400 is ei:peeted in Reynolds COiiseum. Penn, Ivy League champion, brings the most impruslve record into lhf tournament. 'rt rtralght victories w1theut a loss. Coach Dick Harter t1plalned Ule success of hla team by !laying, 0it•1 all a tetm effort. We have no star·" Penn's closest victory waa a 66-62 decision over Princeton b1ck In January. The Quakers defeated Duqueane. 'l0-15, Saturday night in an NCAA prtllminlry round . Artis GUmort of Jacktonvllle and Jehn Roche of South Carolina lied 11 five . rrtct Brown of Iowa had four and Ken Durrett of b.ISalle three. Tied f()T tot.h will\ two tlr'h, were Oavt Jloblleh oi Kanau, Cliff Meelf of Colorado and Charlie Davis of Wake forest. CUr1i1 Rowe of UCLA, JI,. Chon.. ~ Marquette, Dennis Layton of Southem catlfomla and Rich Yunkut of Georiia Ttcb aot one vote. each. Irish, Kansas Bid for Regional Wins South Caro Una's Oamecockl, Jed by John Roche, Tom Owens and Tom Rlbr, nipped North Carolina '2-!1 on a la•t·se- cond goal Saturday night to wln the Atl1nlic Coast Conference tournamenL Harter looks for South Carolina to -be more relaxed now that the pr~su.re Carr, Wicks, GtlJn(Jrt, Meminger and "'"' , .. "" Slkf, W\dli, UCLA, U , ""It' AV1lll1 C.fr, Mft,_ OI• • .,,, ,..,IDt Atflt OH-.. Jt<!l:-•lltt, l·t. ,..,!of, Jlt'll MCC.llltM. W•tef'll r,...,tiM:k,, 1.0. t#llOt'. ... II MM'lll\Mf, M•,..ti., •1, ,...,i.,, kffNll ,. .. I'll J ... •odw. let;lll ,.,..in., ........ . OI ... ·~ lt911U1, .. ,., -II•, Ci.wtll •-· UCO., .. 1, ""'°' JtftlnY H-nn, Mlftltl1fWlp(, •41~. wllhtmo11. "'"' w .. 1,,,.1, use, .,4, r11111or. Tl!IN TNlll lllc:I! 'rriut, G-ti. Tlltft, .. ,,..,. v~-o• ~ .. #tcGlnnl1, 11111 .. NI, 4'1, IOPl•mo•1 ~111 ,...,..., vui.."""'· u . a1111ot, Fr.C t..-, lew•, '-1. ""'"'· Cllf'I M"tv, Celw .... , U , !fftlor, I WICHITA, Kan . (AP ) -Notre Dame put.I All·Amuican A u st i n Carr on display tonlght when the lrlsh tangle wlUI Drake in the opening came of the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball playoll1. Kan&1s. with a gaudy Z. t record, aoe• a1ainlt t•th-ranked Houston In the nlghlclp. The winners will collide Saturth1y after· noon for a trip ta the NCAA i;emirinals at Houston starling Marrh 2.S. Both Notre Dame, ranked No. 12. anrl Dntkf!', 19th~ havt 20-7 record!. Both clubs havt had tournamrnt expcrienct. Carr, only the 1econd college player ever to score 1,000 poinl" eech In two seasons. eslllblished an NCAA record in Ole tou rnaments \a1t year with 158 points in three games. C.11rr started oft this year's NCAA tournament play by making 52 in Notrt Dame's 102-94 first·round victory over Texas Christian Saturday nigh t at Houston. Irish coach .Johnny Ot>e ~:'IY~ if 11 coach "had lwo Au~tin C;irr~ on hi~ tean1 , he ro11 ld co11ch rrclining on s lilt-back ea~y chair •· Drake got into the rrgional!' by whip. ping Louisville 86-71 in the Missouri Valley Conference playoff at Peoria, Ill, Saturday nlghl. The Bulldogs, whose i;ta.r ii; Jeff Ha!Jiburton, losl to New Mtxlro State 87·78 in last year's t\i!dwtst finals. Kansas, ranked No. 4 nationally, has won 19 consecutive games. two of the' last tour in ovrrtime and the otht'r !lvn in !he final 1ninutc. Co:ich Ted Ovu:~n~. (Jbviou5ly is con· cernerl Bbout KJtnsA111' poor shoo11ng ol latf'. He say!\ he U1ink1; the "pressurt of nn unbcattn s ason In the Big Eight Conference kept the tension goina. We've just been terribly tJght.'' Da ve Roblsch is Kansu' big man. Although his scoring average i11 below thal of a year ago, Roblsc h has come through In critical momentJJ and been 11 major factor in the Jayhawk surge. Roger Brown, Kansas: top rebounder, will be assigned to HoU11ton's &-foot·? Dwight Da vis jul'lt as he was in the .Tayhawks 89-73 December conqutst of the Texans. In that ~;unP Brown hf'ld Da vis tn eight points and scored his 111eason highs \l'i!J1 2.1 point.~ and 21 rebound~. • of the ACC tourney 11 over. ' Fordham. ranked ninth in th e Associated Press poll, has been a surprise under rookie coat'h Rich~rd Phelps. He h111 basicall) the !lame players who compiled a 1~15 reeord lasl R880n. Tht Rama defeated Furman, 1~74, In lht first round of the rep;ianal Satur- day, their fifth straight victory. Charlie Yelverton has been Fordham's scoring leader with 111 23·polnt A\',l"fl~t. Villanova h11s dttpend,.d m.iJnly on Howard Porter. &-8 ~,.1llnr. who has avrr11ged 2J pnlnl.~ Anrt Iii I rrt'W'!undil. "Hc'1 lhf' ht~I bill n1An I h"vt e\'et roached," ••Id t'O!lcil JAclt Krafl. • -· OAJLY PILOT 2:J NCAA Slvbnfest Ce ritos Baseball Coach • Anteaters Open Thinking About Retirement • Defense of Title Junior ccillcge baseball's most succes:1lul coach is thlnklng retirement. 19:-i3 v.•hen his all-freshman club notchtd a 14·14 season mark and finished fourth in th(' \Ve.stern Stales Conference. SPRINGFIELD, tt1ass. Coach Ed Newland's UC Irvine swimming tearn will begin defense of its NCAA college division chan1pionship today and Mike !i.1a rt in, distance frttstyle sptciahst. Recalling Top Stars In Classic By PHIL ROSS 01 tt11 n.uy "'-' s11tt The list reads almost like a Who's \Vho of track field. Paul Wilson !Warren), Bill Miller 1San Diego), Roy Kirkpatrick (El Ce n Ir o I, Dallas Long (North Phoenix) and Ed Moeller (San Diego) al! set national interscholastic records while perfonning in the Southern Counties meet al Huntington Beach High. \Vilson climbed 18""6~~ in the pole vault in 1985 ~·hen the meet temporarily shifted to \Vestmins!er. Miller accomplished 13·3 for 1. reeord in the same event al Southern Counties in 1929. Kirkpatrick flew 2J .4 for his national standard in :he 220 vard low hurdles in 1934 while Long 166-01'21 and Moeller (13i-5) set U.S. prep records ln the shot put and discus 11t the 1958 and 1927 Southern Counties clambakes. The f o rm er Huntinglon Beach sprint flash of the late 30s and early 40s -Eddie '!\-!orris -still co-holds the Orange County 100 yard dash record of 9.5. One-time world co-re«.ord holder in the 220 yard bar· ri~rs. ex-Santa Ana High and USC ace Norman Paul now lives in Costa Mesa. Charlie Dumas performed at the 1954 and '55 Southern C.Ounties affairs for Centennial and later became the fir st American lo scale 7-0 in the high jump. Long Beach Poly's Earl "P.fcCullouch is the current co- holder of the world 120 high hurdles mark at 13.1. Bob Seagren of 'Pomona \\'o n the pole vault for the U.S. In the '68 Olympics and is a former \Vor!d's record holder in that event at 17-93•. Other ex-Olympians Wh() performed at Southern C-Oun· ties but who set national prep records later in their prep careers include C.Ompton 440 swifty Ulis \Villiams ('00.'61) high jumper Reynaldo Brown of C.Ompton ("67-"69) and T?r: ranee miler Louie Zamperini ('34). Santa Ana Valley high C h d'1do'l Jumper Ed arul ers set any U.S. standards but he did go on to the '68 Olym • piad after having represent ed the Falcons al the 1962 and '63 Southern Counties rneets. Nine other forrner Southern Counties partici pants set s_ome sort of national records (either prep or American) in later labors after leaving the 11un- ting!on meet. They include sp r inters Roscoe Cook (San Diego). Mel Clipper (~1uir) and Forrest Beatv !Glendale Hoover ). hurdiers Bill Swisshelm (San- ta Ana ) and Steve Caminili (Crespi), milers Jerome Walters (Compton) and Dale Story (Orange). vaulter Ron Morris ~Burroughs. Burbank) and tong jumper Jerry Proc- tor (~1uirl. In add ition to the abovt- mentioned notables. literally hundreds of other top-rate marks have bee n ac- complished in the pa sl 50 years at South~rn Counties by 1 roster of sptke stars jus! too numerous to elaborate upon. And the beat goes on OCC Athletes Get Honori; Pirate (I{ the }'ear honors ror basketball and v;restl1ng at Orange Coasl C.Ollege wert awarded to StC\'C McLendon and Bob Curry 111 Wedne,day night's awards ri lnner. Other basketball aw1rds were : captain P • u I Holmes; coach's award Bob Adelson : most Improved -Larry Gorwi\ler: most In· 1pirationAl -Du~ne DIHle. Curry also was selected cap- t.in while Guy ~lorrlson was n1 mtd !he mos!. outitand!ng wrestler. ..:;· vd!l go after an unprecedented =-- fourth straight victory in the r,; ;•: 1 • 500-yard event to highlight ! ..,... first day action. • .. , The Anteaters are two-time defending champions and a title this year would make lhrm the firsl team in NCAA history to win three in a row. .\1artin will likewise be seek· ing several individual ac- complishments never before realized in the meet. He has \Ion live gold medals in each of the last two meets and a third sucl1 accomplishment this year would give him 16 1n four years of competition. In addition lo the 500 ..,. freestyle, Martin also sv.·ims the 200 free and the l.650 free. As a freshman he placed second in the 1,650 and third in the 200 belore winning both events the last two years. i\1artin has also been a mtmber of the win n i n g freestyle relay teams the past two years, along with team: mate Richard Eason. Mike Carnahan, a H\tterfly "lll...;"':,!'~~3~'i;~.,29'.t::;.S~ specialist. and junior college ~ lransfe r Jim Fergus complete RICH EASON, UCI, SWIMS 200 INDO TODAY IN NCAA MEET. lhe BOO-yard relay with Jack ____ ::::::..:..:::..::.:....::....::..::::....:_:..:_:_::_::_: _______________ _ Dickmann, a so phomo re, replacing Carnahan in the 4-0G- WaUy Kincaid, who has po!lt:d an almost unbelievable record of 396-96 180,5 ptrcent) ln hls 13 plus years al Cerritos Colltge. talk· ed briefly about retirement prior to the Fal- cons' game with Orange Coasl College Tues- day. ''Oh yes. I've U1oughl a great df'al about ii. I've got two boys lin their early teens ) who ask for advice but I can't give them very CRAIG SHEf'F much because I h11ven"t seen lhe1n play a great deal.·• Part of Klncaid "s success lies ln lhe fact Cerritos' opponents have been well scouted. He has complete scouting reports on all of h.is conference foes and usu;i!Jy knows \\'h:ll an opposing player can and cannot hi( 11!1 far as pitches are concerned. Thus much of his time during the baseball season (when Cerritos is nol playing or prac· licing) is taken up by scouting -and re· cruiting. Close observers feel lhal the former Do\.\'- S1nt·e then, Cerritos' lowest win total was in 1969 when the Falcons went 22·6. And lhey have never finished lower thsn second in a conference race since that first year. One other remarkable note about the Cer· ritos baseball program: \Vhen Fullerton's Alan Cox shut out the Falcons i~ the '71 conference opener, it was only the third blanking Cerritos had suffered in those 13 plus seasons. * * * Football in tbe South Ccast Conferenct In 'ii llgurts to be much stronger wltb tbe ad· dltlon of two promlntnt coache.1 -Mal Ealon at !\It, San Antonio and Ernie Jobn· aon at Cerritos. Orange Coast's head grid man l)lck Tuck· tr opines that th e !\1t. SAC program will be vastly lmpro\•ed now that Ealon bas replac· ed Don Greeley. The Mounties ba\'e nlwavs IH"en an a110- ran in football, but Tucker figure• tltat Eaton will upgrade the program tremen· dously, Tht form er \Vest Covina High coat.It wfls 'a llowed to bring in a couple of a11IJ· t11nts. an unprecedented move al !\11. San Antonio. Ctrritos has always had a successful llf'O- gra m under Smokey Ca les, thu s Tucker feels that upgrading the Cerritos prog:ran1 may be a tough cbo rt. * * * yard event. Other events tc be contested today include the 200-yard in- dividual medley, the 5()..yard free, one-meter diving and the 400-yard medley relay. Evru1s Doubles £01· Oile1's; ney High coach \\'Lil nol retire a loser In Vent.ura College will host the 1972 st.ale other words he 'd like to win lhe state .IC iunior college basketball playoffs and Long championship one more time -and lhis Beach City College figures to be just as loUJh may not be the year. as ll was in capturing the '71 state crown. Fergus joins Martin in the 500 free with Dickmann and Frank Gardner. anolher sophornore. competing in the 50. UCJ v.·111 be hurt with no entrants in either diving l'venl. Eason, second place finisher last season in the 200..yard individual medley in Irvine school record time of 2:02.38, will lead a three·man con- tingent in this event. Others inclLde Carnahan and l.iark J\e!s\:n. TOO.t.T'S EVENTS JOO.Vt•<! F .. t•IYle -Mlkt M•r1'" taetenai~ <hfm1>lonJ, Jlm Ft•Gu\. 100 Vlfd lndl•IGu•I M~l•Y -Roch Ea'°n Mike C•rn1h•11, Mlrk NtlWWI SO·Yltd F•tt>IYlf -Ft1"k G••dntr, J~<ll Olrllm•n" Ono Mt1f' o,./ng -Nont. 400-v•rd Mtdl"v l!el1v -Fr&nk Gardnt• (b1rkl, Jim C!lllPtr (brt•Sll. Ml~• C••nenan (fly). J•ck Oi"'m""" !!•tel. FR IO.LY EVEM"TS lCO.vor11 Bu!terllv -Mike C1rn1h&n '00.Ya•<I FrHslylf -Mlkt M1•!ln ldtf ch1mol.,.,), ll:l(h E•sllf'. Jlrn Ft,;u•. lOO·V&rd Bre10111rok1 -Jim (ocPer. Wad• .t.rons. 10!).Yft<I 8•ck1trolo.• -Fr 1 n It. Ga•d~~r. •OO·V&•d lnOivldu1I M!Oltv -M1rll N•l•on. IOO·•••d (••100) F<et!!vlt R•llV -Mlkt C••n•h~n, JI"' Fere u1. Ric~ E••""· Mikt Ma•Hn (def. ch•mPl~n•I S.t.TUllOAV EVE NTS 1.650·v1rd FretS1Vlt -M!kt M1r1ln ta••. t"•mAIOnl. Jim Fttgus. 10ll-Yord Fre11tvle -l!lcti £1so,,, J•ci< Oickm•nn, FtlMk G<1raf'fr 200-Vl•d Blckll,..,ke -Mltll Nll•O" 100-~••d !rt11!1!•olo.• -Jim COOPet, W•d• Artn1. 100.v1r<1 8utler1!• -M1~e C1rn1h1r. "Ttl•H Mttlt O!ving -Nont. @v1td 1••1001 Ft tnrvte ll:el1v -Jock Olrll.m1nn. Jlrn Ftrgu1, Miki Martin, l!lch E•WWI. Vault Ace In Oil City SpiJ{efest The absence of !he San Cle111ente Tritons and their 14-6-,, pole vaulter Tony Hoffman could tarnish the gold in Saturday's 50th a n nu a I Southern Counties track and field meet at Huntington Beach High. Hov.·e~·er. Rich Yates of Inglewood could make the rans redte1n their spirits in spite of Hoffman's nonpresence. Yates currently claims the Southland's top prep vaulting erfort of 1971 with a 14.tl mark which he accomplished in a recent dual meet against Redondo. In addition to his 14·8 best. Yates has also managed 14-5 on two other occasions. Inglewood coach Vern Chick says, "Richard has been pret- ty consistent over 14-0 and above l11tely. "He has unlimited poten!ial and should hit at !east 14· 10 or 15-0 before the season Is out.·· Yates' chief rompe1i1ion in the large schools vault at Southern Counties is Rick Schultz or Helix lfigh ill the easlern Sa11 Diego area. Schultz has already cleartd 14·6 this season and he made 14·7'"J last season en route to winning the San Die go St>c- tlon er r title and fifth place in the !ilate meet at Berkeley. Four other competitors are at 13-6, including Fountnln Valley's Terry Parkinson. Two vaulters in the sm11ll schools division -Santiago's Bruce Fandel 11 4-4) and ~ark \VllcJ.vnskl I I 4 ·I 12 l of ShenTI1n Onks' Notre Dame High -sholild battle for !Of) honllrs lhcre along v.'ilh Ji1n ('0Hi11s (ll·ll) of Valencia. l Although the Falcons have an l l-5 season LBCC's Rich Plante and Dave Frost wilt record, they are currently 2·2 in the South both be back. They v.·ere accorded all-lour· Coast Conference race following a ~3 loss nament honors at Santa Maria in the st1te to Orange Coast. playoffs. CdM, Tru's, Mesa B1·eeze Clay Beach school Evans of lligh sel standards Huntington a pair of in the 200 free (1 :52.5) and JOO breast (I :06.9), bul it went for naughl as the Oilers were shot dov.·n by host Anaheim. 70-24, in Sunse t League swim action. In other Sunset warfare Nei,1•porl Harbor b I i l z e d visiting Westminster. 70-15. white 1\1arina took care of host \Vestern. 66-29. Corona del ~·1ar continued unbeaten in Irvine League hostilities v.•ith a 70-20 romper over host Santa Ana Valley. Costa ttiesa beat "isiting; Los Alamitos. 69-25, and Fountain Valll'y nipped host Edison, 51· 44. to round out Irvine action. San Clemente upended in· vading Mission Viejo i n Crestview swimming, 68-27. v.·hite Laguna took il on the chin from visiting Sonora. 68- 17. in Orange loop play. v1r1llv Coren• dtl Mir 170! tlf) 51nl1 An• V1!11y ;>00 M•Ole• l!el1v-1. CorDn1 11et M•r 1;..,, 1 JJ.O 100 Frtt-1. Ot1o !Cl 1. Owv., ICI l l!oblson !1). ll"'t l :Ol.0 s~ FrH"-1. Be•~•'°" !C l 1 Ol111er fC ) l. Bi.ti.,., (SI Time· 74.l ?00 11lc:ll•ldull MPa11 .. -I K. " ICru..,Gh<>ll !01 1 MOfrl• /Sl Worch•st•r IS f Tlm•; 7·11.11 Olv1no-I. Gr•v ISi no •Ko"ll or IMrtl. "40 l>O!"''· 1ro F••-1 011(1 !CJ '· N1loon 151 no lh!ra. Tlmt. 59 6 100 F••t-1 Holv<11~t CCI 1 Ow yf' !Cl l Hv••rld /C l r;..,, 5' I 100 !1ck-t. W"ktr IC! 1 Holv~~• !C l J OeWlll j'f. Tlrnt J·Ol.1 •00 FrH-1. Berf,..<m IC! 1 1!11~'"'on IS! l . Conltt•• !S J Tl"'• 4 O• I. 100 B•t,.•1-1. Kr11..,ohol1 (Cl '· kv•on<I (Cl ) WorCllnler 151 . Ti"'e 1 Tl D 000 r .. t l!tl•v-1. Co•ont dtl r-J.t•. Tome J ll1 '"' Co,..,,n• Cit! Mlf l•I !D) SA V•lltV (l'ONoll) "" COM 01) 091 SA V•ll1v ?00 Mtlll•v R•lov-1. Sin!• .t.nt v,.11ev. Time; 1.08.1 )00 Frf'l'-1 e ll:•umPr>ol! IC \ 1. B•v,.n! (S) 3 ltwls (CJ. ll"'f 1 511 10 Fr,__! O'""l'Ont 'SJ l. C~•f !CJ J. G••Y 15!. r;..,,, a 1 100 lnalvldutl Mldl,v-l. G1tt1 fC1 1. Ctiolodlf"~<> !S) l. LDlf1 !CL Tl"'t 1:01., 50 Flv-1. B l<•umaholz (Cl 1 Cummln1 tS) l. W•lfh! !SJ. "Tl'"'t: 16.1 100 F•-1 Bau1h"V fCt 1. Ou..,(I<!! [Sl J. a•v•nl !JI. llmt: 1·00.7 50 B.ck-1. McClomtnl (51 I 5!o11m•n /Cl J. F10otn 1'1. Tl"'f "' 50 !ttl>l-1 Cl!llloatflkO (SJ 2 Wed- 111• CCI l. SPI N" tS). 11"'•· :W.O l'OO F•N RtlioY-1. Cll'l"Onl 01! Mir. Tl,,,t: 1·4J.S V1nllv C•1t• Mt1• IHI !Ul LH Al•mll .. JOO Mf<l ltv "•l•v -1. LOI #lltl'l'lllG•. Tlmt: J·11,! 100 FrH -1. Wll>on IL) 7. M.1"011 ((I J. Brll tCJ. Time· 1:5' 1 '° FrH -I. CtrHn!..-(Cl l. W•lltr> (C) l , $tr1nkow1kl CLI. Tlmt. 1•.S 100 tndlvldu11 M""I•• -T Mlslolek !Cl 1 Rl<titv !Cl l . YtrwllOCI IC!. Tlmt: l 01 0 Olvlno -I. Zoldln IC l J. Ro1c0t !Cl J. G•ll11ti"' IC). P<>lnll: O .l'll HIO FIY -I, Wlldellch (Cl '· 8011 !(I l . Vtllnot1lt !ll. Tl"'t: St.? 100 Fret -1. Slt•nk(>W•~I Ill 1 M•tron (Cl J. ll lchtv (Cl. Tl"'r '" 100 B•t~ -1 Cot~•n••• IC \ ) Wtlt•rl (Cl l . Ro1~mtle1 !LL Tlmt! 1·100 400 Frtf I, M•ll IC ) 1 lYnd !Cl 1 O'!•l•n 1c1. ""''" • 1, I 100 Brt11' -I M&o•• It! 1, ,,,.1,1e11\ ICl J. No third limo 1:111 400 F•tt lt•l•V -1 (oil• Me.1. "Tl"'" J:42.D ·~ Ctll• M""' Ill! 14') l" #lltl'!'lll .. 100 MMl•Y lltltv -I. (GUI Mr••· Tl"''' l:JJ.7 100 FrH -I. l'• ... l•rocl (l l 1. SPllf'•tle /Cl l. Giit• !Cl. Tl"'I: • •• JC FrH -I. WIJood Cl)' WM!mo•t (Cl l P•fd!1l• fl ). Tl"'I ll l UICI !fllll•l(fy1I M~llY -1 Jo~n•&n IL) 1 Flll"'<l'f (Cl J P•nlKo•I !C l l!""' I 03 1 100 Fly I JOh n•Ofl Ill ) Mc#lntnev !CJ] WMMto<t IC• Tl"'r •• 100 FfH -1 llott!\-•tf I~ 1 1 Tomp•I"' ICl 3 l~Mh n I T•""' '" 100 l•tl -1 w-(\1, ''''"'"'• tC I ' lllottnm•I .. IL> l lmt ! 01 l tOQ FrH -I FfHll,,.., II.I 1, G1lr• IC)] lluli.• ((I ""''· 4 119 I 100 B•tl\I -' ~Pon11l1 fCI 1 l'tntecol! ICI J, L•klM (I..), ""''· l:Ot J IOI! l'tH llltlff -I Lot Altml!<11 llmtlO• '"' CM!• M111 /4r) !II L•1 Altm!l11 c".m11J V•r111~ I"••~ !UI !!I I ll1wn11111 V1ll1y ,.'!'r',!.,':''r J:111v-1. l'ount1•~ If•!· t!fJ 'C'i~ 11F l.BT~~n;t 1rf1111 lio•" ~ Ftet-1 Stu1td [Fl 1 Wtsl !El J Ha•v•• !El. l ime: l!.• 100 1nd1•ldu11 Mt<l••y-1. B•1un re 1 1 auaris (El l. sne ion rFl. Tl'll t: 2. ll 1 Oivmo-1. 1-<111 (Fl 1 BllcKbu•n (E ll. Cr111v (F), Poln!I. !1.0 100 Flv-1 8Uk<1tt !El l. Sll•l!Cl"I !Ell. L1rnm1ri (F]. "Tlrn1,· 1·D2,0 100 Fttt-l. Wut1!•t ( ) 1. No1n (Fl J 111rvev !El. "Tlmt: !11 \00 lhck-1 , W••l••t"d (Fl 2. B••un (Fl J. Ruler (Fl. l1rnt: 1:05.7 000 Freo-1 Elcn jFl l. JOlln.On (I') l . lv'U.dl"'' (Fl. 1"'1: l:H.• 100 B,.1~!-t. B•<>wf'>t (F) 7. !11d•h (El J L1mrnt" IF). 11..,1: l :ot 1 .tOO . F•tt RtlAY-1. Edi.on. llmt l •I J "" ECli\0<1 1141 (~) l"ount•ln V1fl1v MO Mo<!••• l!tlov-1. F0<inl1ln Vllltv "T1mt. 1;019 200 F•-1. Wll1rn1n {Fl 7 . .t.boMl•1 IFI l . L1!t1rtv (l't. "Tlme: 7·111 }II Frtt-1. H<1JI IFJ 2. 0 Gr•/\1"' !E l l. Hic~tv (l"l. Tlmt: 7'.7 100 trl(li~idual M~l•v-1 J..:k1on (FI l. Llavd fF) l. ScolltlCI !El. Ttme :109J 100 Flv-1. Kulln IFI l . H0<>1on !E l l No 1n.,<:1. 11..,.-1:3' l 100 F•t-1. Hlc>;tv IF! E Gr1n1"' IEI J. #Itron (FJ. T1rne. ~.1io Bacl-1 JICklO" CF '· l1fl•r!y IF ) J. Sw1rdlr1ubl!r !El. ~lm1: 1;11 J .oo Freo-1. W•!tm1n (Fl 2 Suno~ \Ell. Kul\n (F). Timt: •:!1.0 100 Brt•.t-1 Brow" (l'l 1. McC•r!hv ff j J. #lrron (Fl. l"lrn•; !:19 8 .oo Frte ll:ol•V-1. FO<Jnl•ln Vell1v. "Tim.: •:05 1 '"' Edl•GnCll) Ut ) l'ou"lll" V1ll•• 100 "lo<llfV Rtlav-1. FoUnllln VII• ltv l imp: 2:Clol.O 200 F1ee-l. ll lCf (Fl 1 kon.., IE> J. M~rlin (F). nmt: 1·11.0 ~ Frtt-1. Mccown fEJ 1. Ziv !Fl l. Ml!\On (F). Tim•:,,. !00 ln<Hvl<lu•I Mt<ll•v-1 . Och•nor (Fl 1. T Wt>1 eel J. Brodell (F f. 11 ..... 1 .O'I 1 }II Flv-1. Ochl•lf• !F) J. Ziv !fl l Ford1E l.T1..,e:l0.t IOO F'f..-.!. WOO<lrulf (Fl 1 lt•Cf (F) J A1lc:lrew• (Ff. "Tl"'t: 1:01.J 50 Bar~-1. WO<>Clru!! \fr ! l Lultrfll IF I J Mercu"' (EL Time: 31 0 SO Br•a"-1. M<Cown IE ) l. E~l"t tFJ l. Brod.it IF"I. Tl..,t: MJ 100 Fr~ RtllV-1. FouM•ln V"l•V. "Time: J.52.f Te1mis Cei-ritos won state championships in 1966 Frost, the Metropolitan Conference player ( 40.fl) and last season ( 4~ l l and was rw1· of the year. is a 6-6, 205-pound center whil• in~~' f,:;,i'l.'e;,:;")~j~nf1~~1 1.~1 ;-ve-nerup in 1%1 133·10). Plante ·is a &-3, 190-pound forward. Plantt 50 B•ck-1. F1•rtll IMl l. Cri•t d t11· d t U •t •·o hono's 1w> 1 tt•rr1 .. m1M). r im"~·· season at Cerritos was earne 1r cam a ·!Yeu 1 · · 1~ f'~~~~;.!;.~f'M~~~1:.,"'!! i •. i"'"v••, ---------------- 100 FrH l!•l~v-1. M1•ln1 Tl"'t: l •9 0 "''""'' Hlrber flt) 11U W111..,1n11tr 100 M~llY RPl•V-1. N t WP O • I H••l>Or. l1mt: l,!l 7 100 F•te--1. F•'tor CNl 1 Gle1itf 0"1 J OoWf'IY (Wl, "Tl"'o: 1:02.J 50 F~•o-1. A1ht (M) 2. 1..11111 ~W I l Coble !NI. Tl..,r 1• I 100 lrntl~l<lu•I MNI~·-·· w.11 !N) 7 ll;tnvllf' !Nl ""lhlld Tl"'t l.lt.! Olvlng-1 Or1cup IW) 2. D••v (Nl l . 1-ioll•"" CWI. No llm• 100 Flv-1 w111 !NJ 1 l<erivon (Nl J 1<en111ottllv 4W!. Time: s' I 100 Frot-1 . #llh• INI 7. Farrer !NI J Hennino1tn (WJ. 11..,0: s•.S 100 Bick-I. Quin" (N) 1 M11rr1v ! .... t J. C•D't (NL Hrne. 1'.01 1 000 Frtt-1 Gl•llor tNI 1 Smilll (WI no lhlrd Tim• 4 lf.l 100 Br11•t-·1. Wlll1t !NI l. Sml!ll INI l . Lltli1 !WI. 11..,1· 1·100 .00 F•et l!tl••-1. Wtl!ml"sltt, No 11 ..... '"' w .. 1m1n1!1r (411 011) Ntwtl>t" 11orllot ~ Mt<!l•v R•l•v-l. Wn!..,ln•ltr. 11..,e · I:~ I 700 Fr1t-l. Voun1 (WI J . l<envon IN ) l H•bl!t (W). ll..,,; 7:03.0 SO Frte--1. Burgoyne (WI J. Afk lno (W I J. Stnde" (NL "Time· 7l.l 100 lrnllvldut! Mt<llPv-1. llllllno• IN ) 1. Phllll1>s tW) l. Kllng1rurnl1ll INI. "Time· 1 ·D~.! 100 Flv-1. Young IW; 7. Ftl!ch..,ann !N) J. Cam .. on !NJ. llm•: 1:1)1 O 100 Free-!. Trlnth•m (W/ 1, Vouno fN) J. AOln1 IW ) "T!mf. JI! 100 Back-1. ~ch,,,ldt (N I '· J, Phl!llP1 !WI J. W, Phillip\ (WJ. No !lmt .I!(! F•ie-1 K•"von IN> 1. Haber IW I J. 6tek 1"9'1 Tl"'e · l •J! 1 100 fl,.11•1-I Ttlnth•"' fWl 1 8•lllng• !NJ J. Sweet CW). Tim• I Ul 000 F•t• lfel1v-1. Ntllll>Otf Htrb<>r, No !Im~ '"' Jolt .. N•I H•rbOr 101 {11) WHlmllllllf 100 Mo<ll<• li•l1y-I. NtlllPGfl H•tbor r1.., •. 7 Jl 11 100 F•ee-1 W~ll IN) 1 Wyn1n IN I l. Juodtl IWl r1 .... , u 0 50 Fr-1 5"1rle11 IN) '. F•1nkl'lou11 rwJ J Ould1n !Nl Tl"'•· '" 100 lrldlvlC11111I M101t,.-l Rtg1n (Nl 1 !•rrtlt IN) l . H!ll !WI "Time I OI. 1 !O Ftv-1. l!"'t" !NI 1. lll•k•ltV IW J l Tho..,11 !NI "Tlmt · JC 1 100 F•te-1. w.11 IN! l. S•ul tWI l Wvn•" !NI fl!'l1t . l 00 I so llt<k-1 81"'" tNl T 'l l'tlnk~llll'• IW) J. Ole••• <Nl. Tlmo ". 'ill 1!•~11!-l. Ouldln (Nl 'l. S•ul tWl l . SPICtr !W' Tl"'•" 1:19 100 Fffe ll:rl~y-1. N1w""r1 H••bor Tim• 1·!41 v1 .. 11v S0Mr1 UI) 1111 L11vn1 a11ch 100 MtdlfV l!PllV -I $on<ir• l lm1 · 1 Sol • 100 ~.,. -•. Sutton 151 ? Bullfl (SI l . S!~1rn IS). T1"'e 1 0) • SC F•tr -1. Nor~bl'1 !Sl ? 0 Wlro (l) J. #1 . W1•0 !l) Tlmt • ,. ' 700 tna1vldu1t M""••v -1. ll:~h,1on /SI No ltU1nd Cl< lhl•O r1..,. ' 1! l Olvint -I. Miii•• !Lf l. 01v!d•llf' l~l l. C W•rt !LI. "olnfl• Hll.O 100 Fly -I. l!obln1"" fSJ 1 No SKoncl <>• 1hlt0. "Tlfnl· YI 100 ,,~ -I. Nordbl!r1 !S) ?. A Wife !LI J. 0 . W11r (L J. T!lf'f "' ioo !•ell. -I. Bl"'ow 1$1 1 WollP !SI J No lhl"'· Tl'l"lt" l·QSI •:.io F•N -1. sunon !Sl .1. Sl•••n !S) 1 N<> lhlrd. ""'' •·11.1 HID 8re1st -I OPllOO"o (5) 1 ProcW Ill l. Tl>O•Hn r<l. Tl'"1 ' .. •OD Fr•• Itel•• -1 Son0<1. r1..,,. l JI.I '"' ,_, Utt nll L11vu •••<~ 700 Mfdlrv l!tl1v -1 Sane•• ""''' 'l :U 4 100 Frre -l. l••lor (Sl 1. (1rl.on (L1 J. St..-1 (5). Jlmt · T 11 t SC FrH -I. Pl'lllf'I IL) ). Ntl•o" IS) J. Lt!l•nt (SI. Tl..,1. U.1 ltfO fn<llvldu•I Mtdl•v -l. ICr"ch !SI l. B~llov Ill J. HOWJtr ($). llmt 1'U3 100 Flv 1 ltYlor !!) 1. Nel~n !~I J. No !hl<d limo 1 01 t 100 F101 I """<>n• Ill ) Ho"'"' !S) S. MO"flll (L). llm•· 1 1 01 J 100 ll~ck -I Flvnn UI 2. NO 1<cond or lftird. llmt: 1·1); >. ,,,1 j(ll) Fre~ -l I(.,,,~ ($) " SKO<id e>< !~lrd. "Timi: 4•11.7 100 lltfltt -l. Mrrv !S) 7, !11•tv tLI J. Flv"" !SJ. Tlmt: 1 it.I 100 ,r~ l!1!1v -I. ll1un1 BflCh "Tfrne · 4·U t <~ L11vn• lt•c~ CUJ IMI hnw• )QI) MNll1y l!ol•v -I L1gun1 flo-c:h Tlmt· 1 O! I 100 F•H -I Cft .. d (\) 1 •fl'•on Cll l Surt&n 1$1. Tl,... 711' I SO Frt"' -I Amt<ltn !l I 1, Mum'"'• t!I J. Alltlll-. Ill. Tl"": lt • 1DO •"ll••ldu•t Mf<llrv -I. 1111o•n btut~ !SI 1 llobtt"I\ tll J. !t"OOtl (LI. Tl..,.. 1:65.f jO l'I" -I !!llltr fl) 1 ll1111on jLt l. Ho 1"1•11. llmt. ll.I \1111 ''" -I Jtn!.., IL! 1. Allcl'lllOll Ill!. S...tten fl). Tl-· !·".) Jll Btct -1 l1~1•• Il l 1 ll:tdWlll !LJ J. avtttt (I!. lli.. '" JC .,...,, -I lllobtrl• ft.l 1. 01vt1 !ll J. Mtlont (L). flmt • " ' "100 ~·•• ll:tr11 -1 L••un1 !q(h. HERBERT L. MILLER, Inc. CELEBRATES Its SOth ANNIVERSARY 'N,g~~~;e HERBERT L. MILLER PROVES a belted tire doesn't have to b TAKE YOUR CHOICE OF SIZES.- SAVE MORE IN SETS OF 4 E78-14 27.50 ea. 4 for $104 F78-14 or F78-15 29.00ea. 4for$110 G78-14crG78-IS 31 .SO&a. 4for$120 H78. / 4 or H78-1 5 34.00 11a. 4 for $130 ""'" 1'1111 l'.E.t. 2.11 It U.17 Only 24 50 C/114 ··-WM•TEWALL Plu•S11JP£f for the Seiberling 200 White Wall Compare tlla fe1lul'I!' ol 1hi' lirt •iU!ottitr btlltdi around toll/I\. 7h•n t0111p1re Ille p1Ke. Yo1llt wwit lhe S11btrlln1 200. 2 .f-1 Dyn.cor9 t.tyOll cord condrvc!Oi. U!liqut ch11n trt1d desi1n rnd law, w11k U>n\llUT. Set it f\QW j ( th<S low' pticlf, SPECIALS FOR EVERYONE PRICIES GOOD THRU MARCH MAG WHEELS ,AMOUS IRA.ND DISH TYPE 4 for 188°0 14r7-13r51/1 1'0110 -CHIVROLET -'l YMOUTH O#ITSUN -TOVOT.t. -¥1.t.t Etc. ANY SIZE QUALITY RETREADS 4 for 144°0 Plu1 50c: ••· ,.E.T. E•c:h1na• A~d Jvor u.oo '•• w~11tw11r " • .._ ... 111 .. MICKEY THOMPSON INDY'S (G70·1 S) YOUR CHOICE (L70·1S) (L70..14) 14488 ~-~' ..... t. RAISED WHITE LITTIRS JLIOH T 8Ll.MISNl1 SEE OR LARGE SELECTION OF JUMBO CAMPER TIRES Slr11 t .00 to 16.S thru 12.00 to 16.S t"ll & Wl\ttll Awlllt"ll Orttrl~gl l•lhr Motll!ly & Jfltlllty, Prntn!• W~11t l'ltM. e RADIALS : ::::~~1~"· AUTO & TRUCK We Feature • Dunlop e GLASS BELT:.~::':.. llnt e WHEELS : :::::,I". e SHILIY e SHOCKS : ~:~~.:'• LL•• e BAnERIES • wm .. , e BRAKE WORK e ALIGNMENT e HIGH SPEED BALANCING SINCE 1'21 HERBERT L. MILLER SINCE 1 '21 vu11t• TIRE CO., INC. ~Mil~~~;:" 111:~, 111 > 1~"'f.!!:,"' SANTA ANA-209 BUSH ST .••. 547·5685 llmt· I .. l ~~r.~~;~;f.! fZ~"1 1$~~,,!1 ~~",,,"'1 COSTA MESA 17St l u,•tl•r (17th & N•wp•rt) 642-3384 "'"'" -1. !brt1c1 l.t.f J. ,.umlll\rtv l IANKAMIRICARD-MASTEl CHAltdl IS.. SWIM, Pa1e ISi, L. ______ _;,...;.;;..,...;....;...;.. __ .;...;.., ________ ....I I I • ' . ·-. . . • f 1f DAILY PILOT Start Your E11~ines! L by Deke Hou/gate IC 'I' _-, __. • ~ ...,"':1 '"'."O ~ -1 This weekend 1s the occas1on of the annual trek to Las Veg<is for the reunion of ~lasochists Anony1nous It 1s called the ~ltnt 4o0 . Del \\I ebb DeSf'r'l Rall~. but ti sho~Jd really be called the Linament Grand Prix, Any motor- cychS1 or driver Y.'ho L11mes out of it without bruJ.~es. Jarred teeth. double v1s1on and ii cornpressed vertcbril or two has a stand· in. :\1ercifu\I\', the race isn't reallv 400 niile.~ bul only <ilJQut 345. due to . the uncer~ain length of the laps that are supposed to approx imate 50 miles api~e. It isn't 400 miles long. but if you're in it y(Hl'd s.,.,·ear this one rilce \Vas 400 years long The star this year is again ·Parnell! Jones. whu has by this lirne pro-.•ed to be a capable uff-road racer. Parnelli won the t-.fexican f>OO last June and was leading the !\lexican 1000 do11·n Uie Baja Calilomia peninsu\<1 in November v.•hen some mvster· ious trouble developed. The untold cause of thal trouble ·haS 1us1 come to light. "I had passed everybody on the road." Parnelli s<iid. "and there was onl y one checkpoint left to go. I guess I v.'aS about 150 miles oul of La Paz. "Suddenly this dune buggy cornes up behind me, and J thought, '\Vhere did he con1e from?' I started thrashing to ,i:et av.·ay from him. and l guess T ran Uie car too hard." His breakdown sol\'ed the mystery of where the dune buggy had come fro1n. \Vhen Jones stopped W n1ake repairs. the bugg:. dri\'er came alongside and stopped too. , He was a local 1'1exican who \1·asn'l e1·en in the racf. Alt he "'anted was an autograph. Ste1v11rt fJffers tJ11it1i1,11s Jackie Stt"'arl "'as in Lo~ Angele!\ to pun1p up the fiut<stor Grand rrix lo bt' held at Ontario !\·lolor Speedway l\larl'h 2H. and ht had thest> obsenialions about tht w·orld championship formula I racin,g !\cent>: :\lario Andretti's Jir~I win on lhe GP circuit : •·r ha\·e fell all alon.( that f.fario Andretti is an extremely talenled. naturally skilled driver. Actually, 1'1ario fell Cortunelt> to win at South Africa . Denn}' tHulme1 should bbve "·on . but lh e "'hole point of the thing is to be around al the end. and Mario was." New international drivers: "They're all good. Young drivers today are Roing to be heller than \\'e are. They come from a different sc hool , a more complete school. The boy \.l'ith the betit chanl'e lo su<:ceed is Clay Rej!azzoni. He is 31. but that's not old. "Em~rson Filtipaldi is quiet, a nict person and bas a good balan<:e. He is the best nf the · younger drivers. I should say. Of the others. F'rancoi!i Q>vert ha s the bt'sl advantage. because he Is driving for Ken Tyrrell. \\'ho is solid as a bloody rock. He'll learn it the right way. Cevert hes less racing lhan any or the new drivers. He 's doin~ all right for him self, you know. Dating Bri,:itte Bardot. ·• Stewart's new role as a tire tester: "It's fascinating but at the kamc time very demanding. You've got to di~e5t what th e tire i5 doing while you are racing around !he circuit. To bf ;.iblt: to explain it to the te:chnicien ic; absolutely esstntial. If they go and huild tires on my say-so and rm wrong. it's a tremt>ndous ~·aste not only of money but of people ·~ \•alu able time ." .'iebri119 f:xp«•ri111e11f Canadian John Cordts and Cnl 1Fom ian Don Pikt• \rill con- tinue an interesting experiment next Saturday in the Sebring. Fla . 12-hour c.nduranee race They will ;1tternpt to drive 1he cn - lire distance in a 7J C'amaro on s!rect tires. The im plication of racing nn slreet tires is immense in !he ruhber industrv. which ann ua!l\' spends millions of dnllar.~ C"'!- perimenting with compounds. Profiles. treads and structural desiRnS to come up \1•jth ever [a;i!er llres to race on safely. There is a great deal of ~pinoff from this research program that applies to high\\•av safety. But neilher Goodvear nor F'i rr- :r;tone. v.·hich conduct thi s C':..pensi\'C rr~earch in competition ·with each other. pretends th;-it race !ires relate directly to the tires the v sell for st reel use. B. F. C.oodrich. on the other hand. clauns it has a slrert lire that is compatib!C' v.1tl1 cert <1in types of r::icing. ft i.~ H radi;il s1 x·pl.v all·n~·lon t1rr l11at is !hr tn11 or it~ pf•rforn1anl'e line and se lls for a Ji11le niore than S60 ~µ1ect' By CQmparison. r;icing l!rcs are niuch n1orr exprnsi~e th~n thflL Even at the SIOO-plus price of most of them offered to competitor~. 1hr rompanic~ 1\hirh make and sell them cln im the\' lose monC'v due to 1he laninslle f'xpense of development ·The jur~· 1s st ill out 011 \\hether thts street tire V.'i ll be suc- ces~ful in rilc1niz , H v.·as fir~1 us£'d on Cordis' Trans·Atn sedan al ~losport. Ont. 1flst ra il The t1rl'' nn thr f':lr had 1111 fail ures. and Cordt.s finish· ed the race. He didn't v.·111 . hu l he \l':lsn't expected to win any- \1.'<l\' ·The seccnd time out. Cordts teamed with Pike in the 24·hour endurance race al Da v1on11. Th£' car dropped out of the race aft· er six hours. accordini:: to 11re Mn1p;:i ny spokei;rr:an . for rea- sons not related to lire:i. In th£' meantime. the tnr harl been 1.:;1ll<'tl in 18 minutes after !he start of !he race for a "n1;:indator~ ' p1L stop -it was ma11- r.a1ed by company t>nftineer~. v.ho wtintell to take the t1rr11 b:tl'k to the factory and stud y them Re«••· .4.,·le Ftrils Four hour~ intn the rac~ :i lt/t fronl tire had to ~ chan~cd. The only real !rouble \\"as wilh lhl' right rear. v.·hich ~bed some tread. a condition that led lo three changes. Tbt Ifft rear held up a~ long as tht car did . afler the l'ilrly l'hange of all fou r tirfS. Chunking or th e right rear tirt v.·a1' blamed on failurt in the rear axle I loss of pos itraction I and front suspen sion \a brok- en s"·ay bar I. Thest failures add ed to the tremendous G forces l'IOrli:in~ on lbe tirf on the high bank1'. \\'here speed~ got up lo 1'5 miles per hour. The Cordts·Pikl' crf'W ke pt trnck of pit slopi; made by thirtl place finishers ~1arli: Oonub11e and Oa\'id Hobh!i in thf Roge r Penske F'trrari. Thirty·tbret pit stops '4'tre count y. during w·hich 44 racing lires Wl're chan ged by the Penski' lTew. it "·as claimed. .-------1 "FREE" I Sailboating 1 FR(( YO URSELF OF TMESl COSTS; • l••<J• In~•''"'•"' e H•qh Moo,.n9 Cooh e R11)air. J M1 in !~n•n(• e Cl••flln9 Chor•• • j"\lll•nC • IE A PU TIOY! Yo11• F~milv or G 1rl ~.;.nil W;il ~"' Tht ld1• CALL LIDO SAILING CLUB 675-0827 Golf Notes \Veb Tlopkins or ;\1·wror1 Beach hec:imr th<' :-et1•11d pl<iy~r lo scon· ;; hole·\n·nnf' at S:_inta Ana Counl.rv Club this vtar l'l'hL•n hr aCrc! the seccin'd hole Sunduy. llopktns scored h1~ li r1'\·e\er holr·in·one on the 14/l-yurd wntrr h<:ilt> us1nj! a ~1x·v.·ottcl. lie w:is p!:1ying "''ith wile H:tr· riC'I and i\olr. ilOd /l.1rs ;\likt• i;Oll', President's t'UJ) cornpet1titln 1~ under way v.•ilh first round rn:ttchcs lo l)(' rompll'ted b1 ~larch 27, Mikt> Colr \1·;;<: medalist tn qualif)1ng v.ilh ri net score or 68 • Fi11al Prep 4 Ho111ers Put Vikes Over Mesa :\·larin.i lllgh baseball coach Rny Allen called on his beef· trust \Vedne.sday and the Vik- ings' power boys responded \Vllh an awesome display in · a 7-fl non-league baseball vic- tory over the host Costa t-.1esa t-.1uslang1:1. The 1vu111crs ( ~-4 1 rest 1,111111 Tuesday when they ho s t \Vestern in the Sunset League opener \Vhile coach J i in Hagey's ~1esa nine (3-3-1 I opens its Irvine loop sla te on the road Friday at Magnolia. The Vikings took advantage of both a prevailing wind and their nor1nal!y e:.:plosive of· fC>nslve capabilities in sinking Mesa 's hopes. ~1 ctrina hi1 safely only six limes bl.It four were hon1e runs and the other two 1vere doubles Bob \Vin pated the assault 1\·ith a pair of round-trippers over the left field fence 1vhile mates Tony Cresci and Brock Pemberton also swatted shots for the distance. The latter added a double to his array while Marina's Dflve Campbell got his side's ulher htt v.·ith a two-bagger. A 2·2 deadlock was broken wnh one out it! the top of the third inning when Wl1! slamn1cd his first circuit blast a 3iU-footer after Carnpbell had parked his dou- ble tn right field. The visitors had plated a pctir of runs in the second 011 Cresc1's homer wi th \Vitt aboard via an error. · ~1es;i managed to I i e things up in the boUon1 of the same frame on a double by Hnndy Embrey. J\11ke Al!en's !iingl e. ;in error and an 1111- tcrfercnee call against the Viking catcher and then push· ed across lhree runs in the firth. ~larina sewed the contest up with back·to-back home runs by Pemberton and Witt in the fi fth and added a seventh-inning insurance tally on a free pass issued to Campbell and Pemberton's 111·0-base blast. Mll"fl<l !/1 •• ' " 0 , Srow~. ?b W•llS, Dh C1mooe•I •· P~ll'l>erion Ill D EllP \on, J)c Woll. ' C•••« lo low••. " B••!t<e, D·l" ~;,a~1on 11~ w~~''"'. •f (&i~. "" Thor11~d. '' Toi&'• '"'M (I (,ot<1rn, l~ ~ub~.•• < S•mD>Q.,, I~)~ E'merev " Allen, I! er~.-... )~ Cnr vr•n 1h c.,1~""'" " .. (•"'·"' " Qu11•r.1>er"' • M•r!«1 .. 1, ,..,, ro1a11 • 0 ' • ' ' 0 ' ' ' " Mtl i Jll .. ' , ' • ' ' 0 " 0 " " • ' . ' • 0 ' ' ' ' , 0 ' 0 ' . 0 • ' . ' 0 ,. ' l nn•nt• ~ fb• 0 " " " ' 0 , , 0 " , ' ' , 0 " " 0 " . 0 • . " " . , " •b• . " 0 ' ' ' , ' 0 • • • • 0 • ' 0 ' 0 " • • " 0 , .t11gell11 Leogaw " ..... " iS MOntO>lla 66 Fo<'••nt O! l"'h1rtn .ll Ru.-w J7 Pi1t• )I :It Voro..m 0•• .56 Tl'o:.>llwr1cl Cit-• M Cll ... ilh 6f Mka COiia . ·-6S No•r• Dam" n Palv ' •, l..o•Ola SI. Ant"°"y 61 Suvl\e "• Mater Dtl ~!. P1ul •I Plul X ~I SI. AOlhOf'V IG S.rv!te ll ~l:•xO.I 62 St Paul 1S lt/Vf'51<!f' PO!V 4$ Pa1adt11;1 .. S1n1• An1 1J St. Jom 8~• •t VIC10r Vlllt'f 79 81ldwln P1rk ll l:IMMll •t Plu1 X n Rtl'r>Oflf l>I Trov 60 El Oor1du 60 S1n!1 ANI Vlllt'I' ., LOS Aiamllo1 Sl S.<l Cl-ntt Ill Wtl1et11 ll S;Jddlt b•ck 11 Unlue,..Uy 51 SttYllt' II Plu1 X ., fll1l>oc> ....... , 61 ST. ·Anlhotlv 5' SI, P1ul •I Serv+t~ •) Pie• X ll r1.·~uf"!'•1 41 $1. Aftll'IO•W s1...,;11 ,. v • lt flC11 < •l Huntlnoton 811Cl'I Ill L• O<ilnTt •6 L1;una Sttcn IO I Ran<"<> AllmJ!Ol 81 St F•1nc,1 OS L<M>•I Klt~lli M"''on V•t•ot 81 El OoralXI " .. " S' hh,n ~O<~n l / M•ttr Del '" 1•1 " ll P,u, ;, 61 SI An!hon• •l Maler Dt• I] Gl1hoo Amat 9~ ~1 Pa"I 5J S1 An•nonv •I P;u, X 8' l!~mnn• IS lloW~o Moll• 61 C:•e~••n•• Vall•• SI • .llnthOnf S• L<>"11 l!e•<h Jo,dt n ~O Lon11 Btlt h Wlnon l-8 Mt (~rmol \l Oomlngu•Z " •5 ~Oiiing Hill> '1 MIHl~an ~l Villa P4rl 41 O~n,,nvutl " " "6 6 "hoo Al'ill ·~ ST P1u! 6." Piv~ X Sl /Aal.r Oei •I S•rvde •• 0 i,hOO Am•> IO SI l'~ul ,~ "''" ,, 5• 5,,.,, .. 51 M•ler Oei a~rn•~" 00 L• H~b•• " 1' l• 5~•1• •• Fanion• lS Mon•o•I• 6! Boi.• G••nne 61 S&n•• F• " Bii" !if Bell Ga•oeo• Ml verw"' Ot• ·~ P,u, X JV •I ~&1eo1•n SS 50"0'1 41 P lu ~ 1i ~~r.':!C"'on• ., e. .. noo f·rn•• •• ~···r· o,, 6J p"" x -o s1 '"'1'>o~v " ~ ...... ~I Mllor Or' \I B«~on Amal ~I , •OY 31 Vt'°'"" 0•• p.,,. )( •9 ~·~ Born1rll><10 /4 Th<>u ... Od 0•~' !(! MAtor Oe• " " " " " " " " " " " " " " ~ " .. u li " 4 " .. " " " .. " " • " " n " " " " .. " " ~ '" " .. " " " " " ~ " " • ,, " ,, " " " " " .. • (et\ 71 " .. " ,, " " .. " . " " ,. st C:o11• MC~ '4 E•1ll...:11 a1 6olu Gr•Nk fol LOS Arn141!~ ~ L• Qv!ni. 15 G•.,.>llt " " .. l;Jtllnt•• Lo• AM.ttU!Ol Serv•le M Sunnv t<lll> JV Sf Lut"l"l'•n Sl Or1ngt j,O El MOCltl'I 4tt lu1tln ~ K1ltll1 .,. Sin (ltm•n'• "3 Vlllt P•rk 61 Foo1n111 R ~1"~~ ... .., Tu•!ln ~ ~rilz11~.,11. IO S<ln (ltmen+• SJ Fool~!ll 10 Costll M•u IO 0!11><1\0 Al•mi•O. St Trov 6." l 0.11 6S FOtJMf<n V•l~Y 1• Stv•nna II KtnnedY n Lo.J'• n Low•ll 11 Lf HAi><I • 51 Mlu;on Yleia ICI S•n Cleme<'llt M "11111 6S Vil• P1•-n ~?°~!!!en. 54 1 .... 11 .. 61 Ml'!lon V•e'o n ~~~.~~.,.,,Ull• n Villi P••k ,5 El MO<li!M IO F'oo!Mll SI Tustin 10 L••ut n S•fl Cltrntn!• ll J.nallfom ., • s~n•• Ano Oo"'i~9ue1 11 Ml Carm•1 j• Corene a.I M•r " Ma~fDir !l S~11<11e~~t~ Jl Lc1 A••m!101 " " " " " " ~ .. .. " ,, " " " " ., .. H<1nn~g1on 8e1t~ M~•er O•I ~.r><;~o Alarno!O• Viii• Po•~ Orono• "''""~ill Tv•lln ~~~lfi V••lo E'I MC>de~~ Viii• I'••< Orar<10 Foo ~,II l'u>t1n 1("!•11• MilSk>n V•e•o El MO<le~i " ~~ Tlnt+n 31 U llan<ho J.lamo!o1 "'1 68 San11 An• ~I •I C""ona d•I Mar I• JD i'l~WOQrl H~rCor •S 8C1 El Modena .ll 51 8••·· .,. 8' l~' v~~"" Wel l•'" \l 11 Vn•Y•"i:v Jj ~. S1nlid!IO "' 11 8U•<VO P•'~ '1 7'I El "'°"~'" ~: • •• IC•:e<ia '" '9 Minion V1•1o ~\ .~~ ~f~~C~e8";'t"t~ ~' !1 Foo1hjll " .. " " .. •O n '" " " " 'M " ,. •• .. " 1011 n ..• " .. " .. •• " " " .. " ,, \9 O••og• 10 fl Mo.den• It i<•To"• n ;~·~1~~~~~1.~ 10 ""°'~;11 ~I Vi la Par~ 6? O•~"°" U Uoland Vllio '"•ft 90 Munlonc•~n B'•t~ N La l••"" 88 C•I H•9'> M A'tbtl11 11 Co,,.,oton II Edi~<>n I~ Ca•oo• d•• M•1 114 51 An!hon~ IJ Mi•al•\te 6! L~!~n • p"'""'"''"' 61 5,>n Clem•or• 91 Fc.o1'>1!1 SI £1 MO<len• 6J o .. ...,. II T1·•l'n •6 Mln•on v,.,0 •1 ""'"''" 81 l•n (lem•n!f 81 Foo!'>;ll 6• El Mocren• 60 ("~•c• 5• Minion v,.,0 66 l'1•!Tn !i• IC&lella " ~ 1i 011 ZS " ~ " E .. " " " .. " ~ " " " ., " .. " r. .. " .. " " ., " ,, " " ,. " " " ., " ,, ,, " " " ~ " ~ " . " •' " " " " " " .. " " " " " " ., " .. " " " " " " " .. " IJ ol) I~ 11 o!I :l " '" " " •• " " .. .. " • " .. ,, .. ~ " ,, ,. " " .. .. •• " " " .. " " " .. " ., " " " " " " ., " ii~ ,, ., ,, ,. " " • ' ~11 020 1-/ MO OlO 11-S . ' . ' . ' 51 61•ntnr Am•I \I SI. John 6Q"O •I 11 .. no~ MOn•gomffV •6 Sale•••~ " ~ • " .. f'ree1t1ff!J Leag1re Ma ter Dei 111 13-10 \1 SI An!honv ?'I v .. wm D<I 1• lo•ol1 11 Calh!<l•~' .. P •••movn1 •I S1 P~ul Je Mf!e• 0" 46 SI, .ll~lho~• •l ~"'""" 11 6i1hoP Am•T •? S! P•ul 51 M•l•• O•> 61 ~! Ant~o~• •9 g ,,r.oo Arn•' •• ~··•,!• .. " " • ,, " .. " ., •• " ,. " .. Triu111ph Cr est vie•t' l__,ea911e ·~ P•t•!•<:• \1 Foun!•ln V•li•V Ray Salazar h;id <1 bis day >1 P·~"~". II (Ql!Q<\ fl! 1hc plate lo dnve In six ~1 R.-r"•~• i..o''" ru11s as he led the l\·1aler 11 G•'(v 0 . M 61 Tu<1111 e1 onarchs to a 13·10 \'ic-n B~•r• "~'' tory over host St. Paul &i. 1ui11n •• M111ion v ..,,o \\'edncsday afternoon 10 open-~t v111" Pa•~ ing Angelus League baseball ~~ ~~~~11!1 actio11 . !J ~!~~Terntnl• In other games \\'edncsday , ~; i..,~~~·i~n vie,~ Bishop A1nal openl'd defense B ~~~~.~··'~ of its title 111th a 4·3 win itt ~·.~~ over Plus X and SI. Anthony I• :..~ c11m•nt• • FH!'>oll top1>Cd Servile, 2--0. •l ~ .. Q,dou.:. Salazar had a lhree·run 111 s~~"~ ~,11, ho mer, a triple and a doublr ~ ~:0;"""1• wn)o" for Mater Dei wh1!e Chuc k ,~'~~ ei Do••-o ,., T r!>I' Adams belted a hon1er :ind 67 s.,,11$•<> a triple to drive in three runs 11 s.t••""" · h 51 La t<dlll~ 111 t e sl ugfest ss L111•t11 The game wa s tailed al\er Al ica••n• 11 \/Ill• P6r~ ~~~kn~~i~i~~~en ~~th~~e tea0~ ~~ ~~nM~~"1' ~ 01~~n~ C'OUld find :in cffertive 1>itC'her. ,", '~"·~ Mln<on v .. ,G StE>ve Frit1. opened on the ~: ~~1:;1·p~,1 n1ound for l\1<ilcr Oci. moved 19 San Cl•!">•"" 6' El Modfn• tn righ t fi<'l d in the fifth and 61 fu,11n 10 Or •no• t'il nie back to hurl the sixth 11 Ml~"on V>(,o I G Kll!elr1 ;1 \er .ary Sin1pson gave up ioJ V•••n•I• [1\r runs in the fifth. 11 Fu11rt1nn ~\ Ll'.>PI~ Be•t~ Po1v ~~ .U8t. II ·~·~-!. II Le->~~•O, •} McEIWll", )~ Kemmu.1, '11! (~!1&9~, lb ~:7.:~'r·1;\~ •r, \nfl(iO". ID Del l!l) .. ' ' ' 0 1 ( l(IVO~ ' I Ff01/, O·rl o 1 T01•1> ~ I) hoft ~· lnn1n•1 " tbi ~ ~ ' " ? • ' ? " 0 , ' ' " 0 0 ' . IV 1g . ". O•O Jll-11 !O 1 /00 111 I~ II S n Cl)l'inTo~ \S F'ot1"'•rn Va!lrY fl) Mft"n• 111 '-""""'~ 11 ""'''''' n G~'~en Gtov• OI "'"~"~'m H /,'1n~~i.a 7'I 5··~"· 61 ~ON11•ll n r~"I" IO Or~~ll• •• M 111;.on Vie • I• Fl Mod•n• U San Cltmtnlo ... ",. ft master ct1a1ge .......... , .. I " ; .. •• •1 .. .. ., ,. ., ,. " " " •• '" " " ., . ., .. " ,. • M " ,. " "' ~. " • " " .. .. ., " .. 56 eo .. , •• 11 L• 01tin11 61 S~n•·•~n II LI M"•~• U El MC>(ltnl 6S 6l•lf A1 Sin•• A~o VorltY •5 W••f,.,,n,ln 65 F'oun•aln V•ll•• " " Tu"in ~~••nn• ~· IC ff'tOt<!V II low•lf 5! l• >l•b•• 5' l•ov }l F ull'"~n J;,'I Sunny H1I!\ •• sa._.rn• 11 IC •<1nedY !.< LO"'•ll !ii La H•b'• ~I l'•n• 5f Full.,tno 6/ Sunn• >I.ti• l' oo .. n•v •• ~ l;al•ll3 P~rili(I f'u!ltnon " • lldncho Al11,..,1lo• " Un"'""• 6l M~rrn• 61 M1ll>~I~ 19 L•S•ll~ 5S La i.<10•1 " Low•ll 67 s~v•"nd <.II IC•~o-.Jv '' Sun~• Hiii• .SI 6~•n• P•r~ 10 Ito• Al l• Hobt• 1< LoW•ll 511 ~·~""' •• O:enne<:i'f }1 Sun~v H>ll• II flVtf!i P1rk 1' T'(f\I fl{}//) 1}219 " " " " " " " .. •• " ., ~ " " .. " .. " " " " .. " ., .... Baslietball Lo Paclhca Notwal~ o,an•t SI Wo\r•'" 3' ......... 1 ... ~ L.,.,. S6 S..nl •t<IO SO tJnlver>ll1 ~ Sunn~ Hill• so Due... P•r- 66 ~~~rer1on !; Lowell jl La Hll>rl ~ ~~~~n~lll1 ri ·~ Ptrk 50 Fullt•IOl'I 51 Lowffl 6? LJ Hab•a 10 S•1r1n,,. LI Mltltl 60 (lll ti•9ft ll ~·· 6~ Sr. P•ul 11 Sooor,, IJ M0'11t Vl1tl1 SI Sunny Hiii• Ir? El R•ncr>o IO E'111ncl1 6' Foolnlli • " • Or1nGI Ful•trton Trov " Sunnv Hiii' 11 llll*nl P1rk n S•••nn• n Ken-9! Lowell 82 Fulltt!on 60 lrov 61 Sunn• Hiii• 111 8uen.o Par10: II Savannll I\ Ke,.ned• 6l Low'll ~ M llllkAll J) Brt• 11 Slur• ts Sooor• 11 G1nr 5t L• Seti\I n El Ra...:M 11 Sunnv Hllll &I G•rOen Grov• 71 Of1n~ is Foo!~•ll " u " •• ,, " " " " " " .. " • Trov Fvlle•lo<' Autro F'••> Sunnv ,H;11, IC•nnedy 5avaMI L• Hibta l•OV F'ull•rlo~ Buena Par~ Svn"v HTll• ~~nnedv ~avarond La Habr• &< Lo Q~inla &t Sonort 11 Garden Gl"ov• 61 Orin~~ ~t M~gnollo ~ An~~eim 66 F0<>t~1ll • " " " " ,, " " " • ;, " " " .. E<11nc•a 8u•M ·P~r~ Sunnv Hill• Fune,ton lrov L• H•~rt Lo,,,•11 ~""nl'<l1 Bvend Pork Sunny Hill• Fulle,ton T•ov L• H3~'• Lmv•I! Ktnn!O• Su~ny Hill! l' L~•~w'IClO '° ArPe~•4 M l'lun!"•olon 6fd(~ 1'I Ca! Hlon 51 L• Hooro :I>& Lower1 •I C:•n"'nni•I •D Mllhl'•n 50 K•nnedv '9 S..v1nn1 m L1 Habra Ml lo,,,•11 10 Fvlle•+on 61 Trev 11 8u~n• Park So\ ICe~ne<!v 6l S1v1nn1 5• L• H,br• 61 LOWPl1 '9 Fullerton 61 lroy 6~ l!ven• P•r~ U Pl"' X 18 El Oora<10 70 OrJnot 6'\ Foolh<H II M•!tr O•J 50 Foo!Mll .. B••• " s~n·~ Ant v.u~. !i9 L•• V•~41 Wnl~tn ~ !llafr 11 Law•M l>b L• Hab•• 70 """"·~~ n S•••~n• M Buena P••k M Sunny Hi111 M F'vllfrlon l>I Low•ll 01 L~ Hatl'• 10 l(•nn"dv 16 s"'"~"" I~ Su•n• ~a'> lo ~un~v H;1i. 91 Fullf''O<I 61 llolhng Hrllo G111•de11 Grove l,eague " • • " • " • • " • .. • r. " " " " ~ .. ,, " " .. .. " • • ,. " " " " " " ,, " ,, " 1l " " • ., " " ,. " " " • u " .. " " " " " ~ .. " " .. ,. ,, " " " " '· • .. " " " " •• " .. " " " " " " ~ " " " " " " " " .. " " " .. .. " .. " " " • " •• " " " " " Fullerton B•ea Sano'• Kennedv l(al•ll• Fcun1a1n Vt lllV G1ne,n1 Uoland Sanllioo l • Quinl• L~ A"'l901 G"dtn C.rGVt 11a,.,no Alam<lm So••• G•ande San!la90 La Ou1nta Los Amlvo• G~•den G•ov• ll•ntho Alaml!o1 lloha C.ranoe Mognolia Rtnd1t .111tmi!H I& Orana• 'b D<e•n1lo1 ~~ i~li'~~'"" ~ ~e.'c"rli~ 96 s •• ,.. 79 Newoo•• H•tt>o• 11 Lona Bt•clr Wil!On n M~"Cll!I 19 We1tern 6' San C:lomtn•o 10 Lo• Am ico• 67 C.lrden G1ov• ~J La OuTn•• 81 Bol'a Grando 61 Sanli1go 66 P...:illta 90 Los Ami90• 9f Gardtn G•o•e 1' L• ou;nt& !I l!ol>a C•andt llO S•n!javo ~ ~~~~i'i1~. 6l L11uen , i1111!191 SS Weslmin\!et u " " " ll " " " " '• l! " " n ·i} " " .. " n ., .. " " u u " " " " " " " " " " • " " • .. ., " " ,. • ., ,. • " " .. " " • .. " 4 " '~ ~i " .. '" ., " " " ., .. " .. " • '" ,, .. ~~ .. " " .. " " .. " <> .. " • .. " " • " .. tt '" " " M " " " " .. " " " " ., " " " " " .. ,. " ., " r. lrv i11e Lengue C1111 MIN 61 Or1r1111 56 Min ion Vit ia Jo L•• Vt<>I• Val .. v ~~ w:m .. C.orm1n 81 Lano Bt•tn w11san 69 lll• Vt<>ls Cl1rk IJ Vi t !QI' Valley n Oc'•n11ae II Magnall• 61 Esllnt!a '\? L°' Al.tm i1os ·~ F'ou')l•ln ValltV 11 Coron• dtl Mir Bt f.:dison iiO S1n!a Anl Vllllev St M1orn1111 U f1~·i~~1mHo' ~ ~g~;,::1'd,Y',;J.~~ 11 Ellbon 1~ S1nr1 Ana vatlO'V ElllSOll tf t~~'A~\~~. 8eatn ~ ~~',~ Gr•ndt ·11 Lano Beach WlliOll 5? w arren M Villa Ptrk •I W~•ttrn 6l M1onolia I! Gtrd'n Grov• •6 1i'1tanclo JJ C0<on• del M•• 51 S•nt• 4n.o Vall!Y •I l os Al•ml1o• 61 MIQr>Olia 76 Cos!lt M~• 61 E;larttla •• Coron• d~I M•r 51 Sinla 4na Va11ev ~ ~cia~l~~lto• 1J CO•la M''" 66 f oun11in Vallev E.i1nc!• ~Q N•wocr1 H•rDOr 51 Mi.,lcn Vl•io 5' l •ounl 6•1(11 '1 Mi\sjoo Vl•lo Si Sin C1ern..,,1e •6 Lat v ... as We~l••n 61 Sanl1 An• Vi lle• 51 L• Htbrl S• 5•Y•nnll 67 Gard•n Grove •I EdlJ-On n Cos•• M .. 1 ~ ~.~~;o~~. va11 .... •I Lo\ Alami!o; ~i tg~;!!;"11eY·~~~ 61 fdisan 69 Cost• M•~• 60 Mao;onoli• SS S•nla 11.na Val~• •'i Lo·, Alam110, 55 Foun!aln V111'"v SI Coron• del /Aar J'eun111w V•ll 'v l j Plone('• S4 El Modena fl fJj:,•t,;,11~t1.~or!n so 1Ca1en1 61 LO' A11mllo• 1' Orano• 6) GMaen G•ove •I Paotic~ n 6ol•a Gronde 87 hu•nl Par~ •5 San•iao~ •S Lo• Alami1o• ~9 Maonoli• •O Co•onl d•I Mllr !~ Co"• M-.a 51 S•n!1 An• V•llev 70 EU•nci• 31 LO> Alam;10, ~1 Maa~oll• 311 Conln• <!el M•' 7D Co•ta Mel a hl San!d An• Vl lltv Sl E1t•nti1 i.i. Edi'"" ~: ~~~~~a~i· :~ ~~~ri~"rt ~1 61 vai.nc11 .. .. 8' LI Ouint• 5• 1Jolan<! Lo1 Allmiloo 1n wei!rnln1•t• 62 llY~•<IOU~ ~: tt ,~:hill " ~ so ~ ~~.~~y -a 69 Fountain Val•rv .. ., ~l Warr•n !See LOG. Page 2Sl "'~~~-" I ,. ,, " " ,, •• " " • ~ .. " " " .. " " " :~ " " " " " " " " " " .. .. " ----SKI MART ___ ... Y2 OFF ON ALL SKI CLOTHING UP. TO 40% OFF ON ALL SKIS & BOOTS Thursday & Friday LOOK!~ BACK PACKING & TECHNICAL MOUNTAINEERING EQUIPMENT e PllO~ESSIONAL ADVICr e TOUll:S e INSTllUCTION IN CLASSIS e llENTAU e SLIDE SHOWl I I I I I I ARRIVING DAILY I I I I I I GREAT SELECTION OF NEW SUMMER WEAR. HANG.TEtl BI KINIS, SUMME R DRESSES I I I I I I a I I I I I I I I I I I I 2805 WIST COAST HIGHWAY 64Z-433S ALSO IN llLMONT SHORI • ,, '" " • ~ .. '" .. " " " < " " " ,, " ., ,. .. ,, ~ • " " !• ' " .. ., \1 ,. .. " " " " " •• " '" ' " '" " " .. " " " " ~ .. " ., ' •• " •• " " " " ,, .. •• " " " " •• " " " ,. " .. ,. ,, '• " ' .. " " " ,. " ~ ~ " " " " .. ,, ' " .. " ,. .. ,. ' " " " ,. " .. ., " " M " .. " " " i-.. J J I I ' , .. • ' < > ' • ,. New Rule Harmful Or Good? Js it conservation when bar- ra cuda under ZS.inches in length are put back in the oecan to die more often tha11 they live? That question is of grave concern to Don l·lansen, lan- ding manager at San Clemente Sportlishing as he prepares to move his operation to become the Dana Wharf Sportfishing landing in the new Dana Point Harbor about April 15. New sportfishing regulations lhal v.·ent into effecl i\larch I says no barracuda under 28 inches in length may be kept. for several seasons lhe short barracuda has made up the bulk of the catch for the Southland party boat fleet. They musL now be released, theoretlcally lo live .and grow larger. The only pl'oblem is, when a barracuda is handled and the slimy skin is touched, they usually die according to Jfansen. Thi s poinl v.'as driven home Sunday on the boat Clemente, when passengers hooked near· ly 100 scooters. Skipper Gary Cale reporled that only three berries were legal size. It appeared that every one of the 90-plus that was releas- ed "·as dying when retumed to the water. Similar reports that barracuda wiU not live after being touched have come from other landings recently. The subject is of deep con- cern to landing operators all along the coast and it isn't 11 maner of bucking con- servalion. either. The managers. generally speaking. are in accord v.•ith rules and regulations that aid conserva tion but !he bar- racuda situation is one they don't think will help. Hansen had originally plan- ned lo move to the Dana Point Harbor about April l but facilities are not quite ready and must be approved by the county before a move- in date can be established. "We will move as soo n as \\'e get the clearance," Hansen says. Top JC Swi1n1ners TN SovlftlAIMI JC:: Swim Mlrlcl M)(I M•dllY rtl•Y-1. Ful111•10fl. J·•l.l· 1. L-!Ot•ch );$11.'1 /· p'111~1, 1:J1.11 • chr1,11, ~:g, i J S1n!I Monlct , ):S-0.0. Too ·N.,..• Time: Fool!'l!U, ).SI.• 1 ooo ,,., ... 1 Pu1n1m (I.-8t1ctil. t·sii ,, 7. 0Nl•Cawicl'I lPIWdt111), 1il.OO.O; J. Su!llvl n !P1wdtl\4IJ. 10·21.1. • Wil1on !LA VllltYt. to Xl.l . s. J•c.ob111n tP1uden•/· 10:l2 I •. Tor, No(al time: Ktnvo<0 Am.rlt•n ANi!r • lO:ll t. 190 fr"-1 Sulllv•~ /P•1•.,,.,..l. 1·41 · l NlfCOWICI\ P111<1enlj• :n: ; J. · .t..~oe11 1 Pa~adt:111 1. LSO • t Reldl nbau<ill fFulltrlonl, 1:51.t: S. McMullen (LONI Sttthl I S1 l Too NoCll 11m1; Ktn"DS' (Amt•lcln Alver), I :lti o. ~ tr ..... 1 lllomt i !LACC). ,2.S; l Powert {Clltull. n 1. J. wac~oo s1~er11ie101. rw•••O \,\,0 1110 8t1tft), 7l.l l 5 MUM< "ul , Grout (Sanll AntL N1r cowlcn (P•l•di!n1\, 71 t TOO NoCal 1.m1. Wl!lll lFODtftlll]. 27.S 100 !n(I, me-d -1 A1 tt1 tnbl OQ ft lfullenonl , 2:05.01 1. N1rcowlcll P•s•lltlllll. 2:08.2. J. !;v1n1 11..oM 6KCl'l), l:ot.7; I, f(Q\/t:<OI IFulltrl0~1· l 100· M~~lth (51n!• Monica, 2010"2'. oi;i No C•I llmt~ Car!<lll lfQ(llhilll. 2;01.1. !00 buller!ly-1. Flcu"c' fFullPdonl. 7 1.7; 2. Too•• (6a•o•sfleo1. 1 01.1; l. McMutltn 11..ono Bttch\· 2'0!·!• • Gemmon !Or•noe Cot1I . 1 h•. • 5· Rosttd 1LA \1111eri 2:10,1. Too NoC•! II""': GrltYW Ol1blc v1ll1v l, l ·Ol.I. 100 lr-1 AIMii IPl~&(Mn~\. SO.l; J Thom•' (L"CC.l. S0,4' j· G1mmo11 !brll'lllt Cot>!I, Sulll•ln P111den11, ··~" !9•11. ... sllt ld), L!DOQllll IGOl""n w,51 • 50.S. Too NcC•I llm" Wlllll IF Mii!, ll I ?00b•c-1ho~e--t R:t!!lenb1uoft !Fullerton). l•OS.\; J Lloooldt IGD'dHI w,1u, ,1.01 I. Ft\ntierQ Go10-.n Wt•tl. :10 ]: '-Woodmtn lfl Cimino\, l 11.S; I C~tM ICvcre••· 1·12 o TO!> NoC1l time: 8.....-t'n !Faot~lltl. 1 ot.l . SGO /tte--1. N•rcowocft IP~l•ottn1l, j •SJ 6: '· Puln•m (LOM ll•K"I· • ,. .. , l Sulllv1n \"\•Mn1). S 01.•, I W!!u>n tlA V• l~v , S:Ol,l: I J1cc!H.on U'•IMllnl l. s·110 loo NoCI! 11-. K'nvon (Am~r1r1n P!v1rl, l "•1 f lOO t>•Pfll>trcl<e--1. Mtollu!1 !S1nl1 """"Tt •). 7 n.t. ' Giffie• !GrO:l\-~·1· '·'' ,, ]. Mcln!YfP fGt)ldtn w"''· 1l1 . • N••co ••cft 1P151dtn1J, 1.l'9.J<... J. ~I u n r • C•c•H \. ' ~I. lOtl N 11 '""'' tit~1nt1 CAmtr<c1n Alvtr . ? :Ill! IOI' lrH ttl8Y-I L-llttr~. l :tcl; l P11-1. 1:11.S• J. Gflia.n We.I, . :n t : I . Cit.YI. J }, 61 I LA V11l1v, )·)j,I . Teo NoC•I ti-~ FoolMll, l :JJ.1, Estancia's Orgill MVP Gary Orgill. Estancia High'::; rirst team All-Irvine Leagu(' basketball player. was named most v11lu11ble playt:r on the Eagles' quintet \Vcdnesda)' night at !he school's sporu awards banqucl. \'arsity Captain : Curt T h n m a s : P.1 \'-P: Gary Or.Rill r-.-1ost Improvt~· Hank. ~1oort Junior Var1ily Captain · Tom McGrtgor; MVP : Jeff For!!; ~10 .!i l Improved : Dave Ronquillo. Sophomcirt Captain : Todd Co ll ln11 ~1VP: Scott De Vrlts. t'rtshmrn Caplain · Roy Butttling: P..l\'P-Jeff Kl'thn; l\fost Improvtcl Jell Sankl'~ T Basketball Log len~o• Boll• Grlr>d• Va1end1 a rt• $addlebtd! '"""' El De•..S. V1ltnc:l1 Bre• ~.odletr.ck • '°""'' so El Oor111c 5Hd!Mtotll 31 Let Am!-Jt 5•nl1 A,._ V•lltv Jl S1nt1 ..,_,.. s• Sa"ta ..,,.. Vt lle'f !l Lo.ira !! SM1 Clemente S1 Palm s..,.;nn 3' App!p Vllle'f 11 Universl!Y St Dami"" d M11.,. Oef 41 S1n1la10 !! fl Dorado ll V1l1nCll SI l11yn1 Stich .i 6rt1 •1 Sonor• Nl fl 00<1<io l1 V1lencl1 6S La1vn1 8t1r;t. 41 ereo •1 $0nor1 " • •M " " " ~ " " " n • ~ " " ,. ~ .. .. " ~ • " • " " " II " " " " n u " ~ • " .. " .. " .. " .. " ll u ,, " •• " .. " •• i~ •• " " •• " .. " .. ., " .. " " " " .. .. " .. " " • " " ., " " .. H " .. .. " " .. ., " " " II ~ " .. r. n " " .. " .. " " " " • "' • " " • ~ " •• " ~ .. " " ,. " n • " ll M .. " Sunset League AMl'lelm Si $1" (1..,,1n11 ll 11.•mo,.. lt L_,1 lt•dl Wl!ldll 31 (11rD111 1191 M•r ll 51. A"1"°"r ,, HIWllllll"fll 10 Fontt"f ~ $ton Go•1o<0le ll ltlvt~ldl Flit S6 N•WllCH'I H1rllor 11 Lot•I Ml•ll\I Huntlnplon ltt<h M LO.Ori u Mt •llll Wntml.,.ttr 51nl1 ,t.111 IO Huntln11on le•ch .i W111trn Hwftt111n.11 l11cll 1' S.f'll1t ,, l!dllOll n 11 Sunn1 Hlllf 101 Sltrr• 711 P'•c!l!t 51 MOnrovll S1 Comp!"" •2 S•n Cltmtn!t 11 Lot Al•mllOI n M•1not!1 " Lot•• 6t W11!1rn 61 J111!1 Al\I 1J W11tmlMllf' 12 Anthelm Sol Mtrl ... 11 Wtl"'" H ~:.~' H1rDDf '' We.tmln111r 51 Slnt1 AM 41 M1rin• 1°' A119helm tt ~:wc.-z. M1rMt' 'J1 MNnoll• Sl L• OulnT• !ll' 5Mld~tk U Edi-., o ..... ~ ll Jtnlitf 50 KtnnfllY 4l Ore,,.. LNrl SJ G••dtn Grlt\lt SS Hun!lnDllln lucti 5' Antl'lth'll 15 WttTt•n s• Nrwpot1 H•teot :i M1ron1 SI 'Z~!~';l~1ter JI Stnlt Ant 41 Huntlnt1•&11 ltle11 ~ ~':'::-; H1•bot .u w11rm1111ltr it n~·l~·~"I M1rlN JI Lo ... lltKll Wllto" S5 Mllll~1n 61 C•lll Hltll M !!. Jc/1n !CICO S6 ,,,.,..,,,,r.r ~1 lDI Allmllo• 11 K1lllll 67 Full u1on 1t R:o11m111I 711 Art1dl• SO M"""111l1 T• Htll• 61 E <111 twtlOll 61 W•l!trl'• 11 $1nt1 Ane 57 Ne-r H•rtl<I' It An1helm 71 LN r t '6 Western JO HunllntlOfl l ltt.'o Hole-in-one " ~ N " " " " " • • " " " u " " " • " • " n N .. .. " .. " .. " " ~ .. .. " " " .. • " ~ ~ " " .. " " " " • " " u N " u n " " " " .. " " .. " " " " " ~ " ,, .. " " .. .. ~ .. .. .. .. " " ., " .. ~ " .. " Frank Welsh cf Huntington Beach scortd a hole-in-one an the stventh q<ile at Meadowlark Country CI u b recently using a four-wood to travel the 156 yards • W1t1ml110tr •O l1flli .. o '2 LOf Alomllcl I! S1"ta f l 1' 1"<11.>n1•ln Vtll.., •1 Compton 61 W1,.1n st Ootl'llnl'Jtl S5 L1ktWOOd u 8u•n1 P1rl< 70 80151 Gr•Pld• •J IC~n""'Y tj 51011 A"• 51 N1w110rl Horbor '2 .Afllhtlm ll Huntln<ito" lu'h ~ ~:;:" al Ntwoort H•rber 10 MeriP'>I n ~~flt~..!i'i! INCh t• An11>elm 71 Lotrt U Wt•!1r1' St M1rln1 111dependent S! Glent1 •1 S.ntl- Sl 8~ln1~ $) $t. G_...1,,.. 15 Httll11t •s LMllO• SS Fullorto" " Sovt 11. ... uOU< •I L•IUlll 111 .. th .. Stckll-cll .. Tu1Un 4l ICMM<11 •1 AtnblUlll« lS G1rir SI M1l1r Oti •1 Nell ~ ~,i:i,::~ •t itr!INd :,; L~ll_t;;f~,,. l l\mbtl••dor a • " • .. • • " .. .. .. " " " .. " " " • " H ~ .. .. " " " • " " " " l! .. " " .. • tt " .. .. • .. " " ~ " • " H n " " " " .. ti " tt CIF Lists Bests For Track, Field Newport Harbor's dynamic \\'eight duo cf P.lark Stevens and Terry Albritton head the Orange Coast are11 entrants on the latest CIF Southern Sectian list of 1971 prep track and field bests. Stevens has nung the 12- prund ~t@el ball 60-4~~ to trail only Crespl's Randy Cross (81· 21'•) on the sectionRI list Junior teammate Albritton, meanwhile, is fifth on the CIF rost~r with a seasonal best cf~. f ountain Valley's Ra y Har- ria Is ti!d with Tony Brown cf Long Beach Paly for the secUon'1 top, non-wind--aided long jump effort al 23-<I, A 14-6'!1 achievemr:nt has eamtd San Clemente's Tony Hoffman the third 1pol on the CIF pole vault list behind Inglewood's Rich Yates (14-8) and Tlm Curran (14-7 ) of Crespi. Sttve Pickford or llun· tington Beach is masstd in 1 four-way deadlock for fifth In the 120 high hurdles with a 14.8 clocking. ,. lr•h•"· ~..,dltlllltk J1ca111. c"'" ... 1 15111111, ""'P1r1. c..,.111on Jtckton. CtnfllWlltl H11lt..r! $1. M1111!t1 aro-, (omcll:rol r:111t111r, Muir "' J1c~ton. C1f111f111!1I .. u '·' " .. ••• ... ll,, ,,, IN LH Jtck-. LlllTIP<K McQVffl\, An1nti"' Colllllrl, C•"'"'"l1i MtM11'1on, ,,., .. 1 l1y1cr, C1ffltdr1I L111~bv, Gordtn c;,..,, 411 ltl!LAY Ct11lrnn111 C::omp1on Muir L.a. P'61Y F011t1"1 Mill" •l!UY ConiPto<0 c .... 1tnnl1t M1>1"nl11etlc1 L II. Pclv l..•~tl.-00!! SHOT P'UT Cro11, C•11pl ~ltvtns, Nt'Nl>Cr! Ht rDo• McC111, C""!tnnlt l Minn, 51vtn111 Albrlt!Oll, N _ _, H1'11cr MICH JUMI' Stonn Gl•l'ld111 Mllft, l .I . P'olY l'ul~~. :S.nlt Ft Z-l>lo, Crno! 1Cot1nt1t.. Mllllk111 H•ll, IJIUIT O•nll>v. lnmPOC LOMG. JUMI' Bro•m. L 8. P'cl\I Htrrl•, Founl1I" V1llty J•tlct011. t.om1111: Wllc1v11\kl, Holt• D•mt Wlt1, Hunli"'lotl 111<~ l'OLI! VAULT Y1!t1 lnt!IWOllll Curri n, C•tYl H"'1mt~, "n Clt""""l't Leet, Att1di1 c ....... Crt1DI Sll'lllOYtl, W11I ( ..... 1111 S!Oflt• ltl!llow1r Whll1, Comh111u11 Dtl(US co11,...,.,., Monl1 v1111 J1e~1. Monlt Vbr1 Mct...1111, L .. t, Glrovv, Mir• c"" EUo~•d Lot Al•mll'OS ... .. , I+.') 11·1 ... ... , .. , .. ••• '"' UO·f'" :it Girls Track Summaries Baron Netters Tl'loma1, ComctOI\ .,_,,, c..,...iqn ,_ ,.., ....... kddl•betll '" " . In Tout·ney Fountain Valley High's lcn- ni11 tE"am will be battling for tht IE'llm title in the CIF' tournament at Santa Ana Saturday with thret player~ 111 tht' quarterfinals, 1lon1 with 11 doubles team. Jn the B quarterfinals ls Joe Shaw while Mark Pe.ndal and Mark SChildh111uer have made the:lr way to the C quarlen. In double.•. a team of Steve Chemow Bnd Jeff Paul hM ali;o reached the quarler final round. Three malchts r f ma In Saturday before champions are cro"ned. ""'""' C-~IM C';;t1"90.-,, (Ulvlf' City ... Mlll'llrt, Cenlf'""11I 3h1w. ,,...,.,,,..,ld, Hlllll..i. Olllldor1 ""'lif1,f M9nll111tldt Mlfel'llH, C.....1'9n .. IC.ft!I,,., Mor,,1,...i., Stvkfllv, C•Ultl H1l,,1t11, Gltndor1 wr..teoll, lu•~~k H1!UI, LI C111M11 Mtt,• ''ftw,ltJt r, •w~ M1r.,..tl, ltOOndo kllllltne, C•r""" Gr..,. GrMr, L•k--.f 1!11rbr•Y. No'1ll T.,r.,lf~ TWO MILi kllw•U1n t u-ti."" 1(-JI. Jolln loKO KrluH , l¥11wtlOll Wlll1tm1, LOITll!Dt ICtotlnD, MOf"l,,.11dt 1• HM Colbtrl, Ct11ttn11!t ! M<O~""'"· "Nhof1m Kot!l!lll;, M!!ll•111 (fltMlo, Ocr\ l'111!C!IK Ho11!11t, P'1u10tn1 M•dlvncl, \111!1 P'orlr: Wht~ Ctnt ... ~11! l'l(k!oro IHunll1111on 111('111 '" '1.6 ••• •• ., ., ••• '"' '"·' .. ,, .. 1 S7.f 1 111 • 71.J . ~· ••• . ". . "' ' ,,,., t .M.1 ••• . "' •·nA 11.t 14.1 U .1 ,., 1•,I ,,, ". ". Thut)d•Y, Maf'(h 18 1971 DAILY PILOT 2:; SWIM ... (eo.ilDDed frem Pair. !3) l I J ., ' . .. ... ,., ...... ' ..... "' ' . ·. ' . ff DAIL V PILOT :Valenti Believes So Movies Getting Healthier?. BJ llOB THOMAS :: UOU.YWOOD (AP) What's the state of tht movie .io<Nstry? ' GtWnc bott.r, says Jacit ~ii.nu, pr .. 1dent or the Mo- ~on Picture Aasoclation. ~~· bu.t aol everyone r James Aubrey, president or MGM, say1, for instantt: "I don't share Valtnti's op- tlml!m. I think the industry bin poor shape. and it's liable to a:et worse befor! lt g!:ls better." Va1enti's views were ex· pressed in his 1970 annuaJ rtport. He claim'<I evidence lhat theater attendance was ·tlsbtg and the industry WU recapturini its mass audlenct. Domestic theater revenue fOie 10.4 percent in 1970 to a total ol $1,'29,200,000, Valen- ti reported, without naming his sources. 'Ibe total was quesUoned by Daily Variety, which cited the U.S. Depart· ment or Commerce £igure of $1.l billion. Valenti declared that "1970 was not entirely a good year. but one with an upward swing and wilh artistic and tt0nomic barometer pointing to fairer weather in 1971 and beyond." His view was not supported by Hollywood labor unions and guilds, some of which are suf- fering mott th.a.a 50 percent unemployment. Nor by some of the film cmmpanies which have been languishing in red iak . lllll tOG 1 Thursdciy There are some hopeful signs, however. 1'.fCA, parent company or Univl!:raal Studios aJJd Decca Records. recently reported 1970 earnlnp of $13.3 million, five times the total for 1969. Last week Gulf and W'estem, parent ol Paramount, also reported a jump in profits for its second quarter. While there was no breakdown or income within t h e con- glomerate. Paramount un- doubtedly added greatly to the total because ol its immeDR hit with "Love Story." Llkewise the MCA advance was due i11 large part to 1he huge~ from "Airport." Other companies have not fared u well. Despite record income r r om "1'-1-A-S-H," "Patton," "Hell o. Dolly" aad "Butch Cassidy and the Sun- daace Kld," 20th Century·Fox announced last week it ex- pected a 1970 loss o( 165 million. Columbia in its half. year Sho\l'ed profits Of Jes.~ lhan $1 million . a third of 1,11lat it made the previous year. MGM posted an $8,2 million .. .. Shoulder to Shoulder Russell Arms and Beverly Anderson head a dis· tinguished cast in the original musical revue "The Good Old USA," playing Friday through Sunday in the Clubhouse Three theater at Laguna Hills Lei- sure World. Evening IJ @(l)IE~ ''Money HtPPJ RltU<ns.~ Wiie• Dlrrin !Inds 1 IOt fll montY, ht thinks Samanthl tr htl' mothtr is respontiblt, the" Is hlmSMd b7 tht r1npt1n who loss in 1970. United Artists ----------------------- MAllCH II uo e 111 "-llrTJ Dun,hr. GDK ._ T• SnrH. D n. u.. .... C..ts trdlldt m cm, Nor. Cmbf, Kmkln ....... ~..,.. o,. ....... _ <IOJ .,., ,,..... (drllllol) '51 -IUcAlrd VftdlnNt Dlfl.t Andi'.,.., C111 Mff· rill, All lllldtrnttt Otrnolitlon Tt1m, MNlll bf " 1111,..,ar OHlllTlll>d· i"' olr-*, It •flll kl .-tow IP • lllblnlriM ..... • .. of the Jepnm llOIM ill1Rdl. CJ lld: ,. "" mn.- 111 llZ (}) .... , .. fD MR' 1 • "'Commnltr Htlpen #1." Qlj (I) __ ,_ IB,_,..., ""~ QI l»lid frtlt Sllow Cuuts are 1in1111 KtnnJ Rortn & Tht Fifst Edition. TV produw Gtorlt Sdllil· l•t, imprtnlonist Rich uttlt, si""'" mcnlc Rolf Harris, film aitit Johll ShnM. Lift marlli111 nwil rl'riew· 11 R!dl1rd SdHcbl, Cha)Tll'ltn cl tllt Mtw York C1tJ kt~ of Cor· !'Ktlons Wll~lfll van dtn HtUYt!, and twe mtmbn of ttl• Fortune SodttJ MIM• Riw1s ' Danny ...... m--ED "[1' ~ "MMcil Ado About. Mothin1." Parl II kldtm1 aw1 rd-winnet M11(i1 Smith, Rob. tit Stephttis, C.rvllne John. Frank fi11!a1. and En(land's fhliontl Th1ttr1 ComP•llY rt1r In Frtnt"O Zlff111Ur1 1955 vtnlon of this Sll1kt'IP111ru11 c::omedr abolst • •u•mllOlllt ,eutll couple, Beltrlc.t Ill ...... M ind Btntdlct. mt.......... ! m,.n.,. t.r l.Jrisr IE) LI Mn ,...., CM C..11• t:OD 0 9 (I) CIS 'fhrldly Mwlt: ID llfn Jl111 Hl'WttlorM. (C) (Z hi) '11lt Shutttrtll l oo•" 1;1$ SI Alt M111t (fll)'lltf)') '67 -Git Youn1, Carol 'LJ!!lry, 01i¥tf Reed, Flori Ro~. An Amttitl11 coupl1 c::omt to • linllter·loolin1 \'lllart aillld Dlln- wlch to look fNfl thllt intltritance. O @(})El)MIM ... flt CruddHdJ "MDllUrntfll for Undt TODOOll.'" DlnllJ'I Unclt Tonoos• btliM didltin1 !Iii 1utobiofraph1 tl'ld t1Us up 35 papa for ltlt fltrt k1I CJ CeMW c-. mn. f'7lla •• lll CIJ ... __ ID""--SCIJ CIS- Ill) S-... n./MBkllt • apoears to ha ve lost $18 million In 1970. compared to a $16 million profit in 1969. Of the major companies only Disney co nt inues with unabated prosperity : the com- pany's stock soared to over S200 a share last week for the first time. Many top executi\'es . like 1'.1GM's Aubrey, fear that con- ditions are not likely to im· prove in the near future. Management and labor have joined in an effort lo seek, government help, and they have hired for m e r Sen. Thomas Kuchel to plead their cause in Washington. Gov. Ronald Reagan, no stranger to film industry pro- blems. Jast month urged President Nixon to help in securing a 2{I pe rcent tax ex- emption on gross income from domestic fe ature production. Rea~an said he believed it was lhe first time the fi lm induslry had ever sought government help . J ones Added HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Character actor Henry Jones wu added to the cast of "Skin Game " at Warner Bros. m--mi......, l!lUC-two week9 of Ills lite. J~~;:~--;~~··11 G-.. II m Lii ...,, .. PtrJfyll\o 7•8 ca .._. Wilt• CfOl'IW. D m lllC "'-o..w 1r1n'1rr. Q ...... "" IJlt1 m l!ll rn 11 .... "" 11111 (1)-m &llln wi-. .. .. ... llf1 ,u6dhlsnl •Ml Qltbtllnlb'.• QfJ ()) Trd • C.• .. 11c. m"""''"'"""-tmMI "-,.-TI CIDSlll!lll•nti:Marie EDM.Mll• ••ca (().. ...... ·1111111r : SNwutl." FNturM ire tM vultd 111 .. ti "flllW all: 1111111ben Ftlnti: SUttoi!, Jlonnlt Sdllll ll.lrt11 lllonow, Thi Mtbofl IOds. 111d tM l'"Y Met*ftt• dtl'ltt~ll doin1 II;)•-' 11<0ID IllCll 111- 0 QI (I) l?J -Olll-0 .... : "'Slllrtd ......... •114 ttie ............. (lllJlttrJ) '45 4tllil R1tttboM. MlttJ 8rvtL ID"'*= -...rt W1'8rt" (drtm•l '45--flltlit ~ fra11tMt Tont. ID...._: "'Qlap Ctilt!Mti.r (dra1111) '57-8rl111 Ktitlt. l!ll (}) ""' - diary of a mad hou-wlfe a frank perry fim - 'ROBERT AEDFO~D 'TELL KATHARINE AO THEM ROBERT BLAKf WILLIE SUSAN CLARK s~:~:. A UNIV(ASAt PICTURE 11Po Cit llllWPOIT I U.Cll -• .. , ........ _ •• '•""'-u<1. 1o1. -o•. ,_,J,. EXCLUSIVE tLLIOTT GOUl.D DON SUTHIALAND MAICIA IODD "THE LITTLE MURDERS" AL!O JACQUILIN ~ l lSSrT '" ''THE GRASSHOPPER" IOTH I U.TED :. tilllr rnualcll • c:omtdJ 111111&. 11:301) 9 CJ) I., l rilftt. ., , .... llsbtW .... ""' o Q) Cll m ,.ft_, em. ~~~~~~~~~~I • T1 Tel .. Trd Garr, M00t• 0 m Did: CMtt AIP Klrrn, I: holb.. sllf of Detroit LJ,c,..s, ruan. •• ....,. .... le .... Ill"'""' .,_ Friday MYTIME llOYIES ....... -.. -(-..,, '4S -1tlt Mflll', Jttl M!Cno. -t.11(' (""'llYl ~I -Mu111 ... 111M11f. lk:tr•" , .... ..... lC) .... -.. o ..... (~)11-J11tl!Wl. ,,.... bfttrb. i I 12.• l!ll (}) ........ 1 :oo o Morie: ""' at• .. u.r (music:IJ) 'U-frM Altlirt, oo-m "'""'1r11t Sllew: "'bthtt:H ... '-""" ...... .......,.. .~ "Sm ...,~· D "Tlle Uttlt IC& e: 1 ·r (dra· ma) '$4~11CM1 MdM. ~ 6ort (lib!. m .... w..-(wtat1111> ·57 -«attll lal'Mll. J111 Oft 1:«1 m ~ w <Mwtit"") 15 -DMd "hwl, If• Camrl, Martin l1!1tm. Z.110 0 '111111 ...... (tnpttry) '?it -Al1n U.., c.r.1)'11 JoM&. 4:.JO 8 (C) .... lAli I TWlf" (adwtl• 111. ) 'i7 -KM11t• WJM, KlttOll Moort, lllfl Btli... ALSO "SUDDEN TER ROR" R 'Candide' Revival Set By Leonard Bernstein NEW YORK (UPI) Leonard Bernstein w i 11 supervise a long·awaited revival of the opera-musical comedy "Candide," which will be introduced on the West Coast and thel'l be one or the first productions staged this fall "'hen Washington's Kennedy Center for t h e Performing Arts operu;_ The laureate conductor of the New York Philhp.rmonic Orchestra will take charge of rehearsals for the show, originally staged on Broadway 12 years ago. He will probably conduct on opening nights whea the productioa tours San Cast Sought For Comedy • Open readings for Leslie Stevens' popular comedy "The Marriage Go Rcund" will be held Sunday and Monday at the San Clemente Community Theater. Director Tony Brandt has announced that tbe tryouts will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. and Moaday .at a p.m. at the-Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenlda Cab r illo , San Clemente. The show requires two men and two women. The play revolves arcund a happily married college pro- fessor and his reluctan t en- tanglemeat with a stunning Swedish beauty. It is schedul- ed to open late in April \Vashingtoo, D.C. and finally New York. Although there has been no public announcement cf the re\•ival. and a Bernstein spokesman has denied his participation, sources close to the show said today rehearsals will begin in late May or early June at the Dorothy Chand ler Pavilion in Los Angeles. Jt will star Mary Costa and Frank Poretta and is: scheduled to open Ju1y 6 in San Francisco, moving back to Los Angeles Aug. 24. Music for the original show v.·as written by Bernstein and has become a minor cl as.sir, but critics 12 years ago were not as happy with the book, adapted from Voltaire 's original v.·ork, by Li 11 i a n Hellman. and the show folded after a short run. Author Sheldon Paten.kin has: done a new adaptation from Miss Hellman's book for the production, which i! being co- produced by Edwin Lester, founder of the Los Angeles: Civic Light Opera, and Oliver Smith. a well-known s e t designer in New York v.•ho has the rights to produce the work on the East Coasl. Smith, who will also do the scenic desl1ns for the show, said it would open at Kennedy Center Oct. 25 with Bernstein conducting. It is scheduled to move to New York on Dec. s. Bernstei n could not be reached for comment, but his secretary denied that he was associated with the revival. ..................................... All C•lw ,,..,.,,. o ...... c. k9l'I "r.11noN~ cer1 plvt . Jell~ Wl~llMt: thllll- "THIE UNDlll'llATID" t•l ·················~··················· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ... H!,.,~ • ., .. ,, ,,~ WARNER 01.:l"I IN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . . . . ... British Provide Much Public TV By JERRY BUCK NEW YORK (AP) -Since the incept.loo ol p u b I i c television in this country Jn ~ early l!r.A>'s at least a quarter of the programming has had a distinctly British acce nt. Tbe British Broadcasting Corp. has provided a nucleus of programming flnt for Na· tional Educational Tel!vision, when It was the public television nei.work, aM now for the Public Broadcas\J:-g Service. Ptfore significa ntly, BBC has provided a nuge sha~ of the programs and serie:; which have had the greaUst impact and drawn the biggest au- diences to public television. PTV's all ·tim.? smash hit, "Sesame Street" Is, cf cour se. an American pnxJuct. Ih:t outside of that and Julia Child, the TV cook, the oaly t.its have been the BBC-produced ''Civilisation" and the current "Masterpieee Thealer." Susan Hampshire cf "The Forsyte Saga" won an Emmy last year as the beit actress in a dramatic sP.ries. She is !tarriag this year in "The First Churchills," part of "1'.lasterpiece Theater." J1artford Gunn, president of PBS, said, "The most obvious thing has been that BBC. a substantial audience to public television. " 'Ses:ime Street' and Julia Child do as well or better, but BBS does pro. vide a standard of cellence." BBC has been a means by which American pub I i c televisiol'l has obtained a first- rate product at a low cost. But it also serves to em· phasize the financial pro- blems that continue to plague public television. The entire PTV network programming !'Judget is only about $20 n1illion, or about what commercial television spends i• pri me-time pro- Wa gner Stars HOLLYWOOD (U PI) Robert Wagner will star in "City by Night," a Cinema Center 100 rootioa picture for television. gramming in two wetka. Basil Thornton, director ol the international dlvisior: or NET, said, "Let's fact it. v.·e don't have the money to pro- duce 26 dramas w it h American authJrs. \\.'e have to look else1'fhere. BBC ob- viou.sly isn't do;ng American drama, so it's the American auUlors who get s h o r t · changed." A protest v.·as sparked in Hollywood when the Mobil Oil Co. announced in October that it would put up $490,000 for the 3 9 ·pa:' t '·?>.fasterpiece Theale"'. ' The craft unions said it w.is unfair to spend the mriney on productioa in England ac a iime when the Hollywood movie economy was depressed and so many craft members v.•ere out of work. The !\fotion Picture Pension threatened to sell its 21.000 s!tares of Mobil stock. But Ptiobil pointed ou~ that it 1vas not paying for new production. but wos buyin~ shows previO'Jsly aired on BBC. TAINMENT 'Web ' Pla y Nee ds More A second casting call has been issued by dire c ter Richard Dow for the Agatha Christie comedy-mystery ''The Spider's Web." ""1fhich will open April 20 at the Laguna t>.1oulton Playhouse. This time, to round out his cast, Dow requires f o u r mature character men in the 40 and up age bracket and four younger men in the 25-35 age range. All should enjoy English comedy and have some pro- ficiency with English dialect. Interviews will be Saturday and Sunday at l p.m. at the playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Anyone unable to make the scheduled time should call 494-8021. •• IMPORTANT •• MAJOR STUDIO SNEAK PREVIEW -FRIDAY, MARCH The lov• coupl1 of th• ••v1ntiff .. • •nd th• l1ugh riot of th• yur -R1tld (G) From Paramount Pictures STARRING -WALTER MATTHAU I ELAINE MAY e FRIDAY, MARCH 19 SCHEDUl.E ONLY e DOORS OPEN AT 6:30 'love Story' 7:15-Previtw 9:00-'Love Story' 10:45 1 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS /l;ciua111t; BEST PICTURE ltst Ac .. r·Ryon O'Nto1 lest Aetre11 • A.Ii MocGrow - ACADEMY AWARD NOMINll • llST SUPPORTING ACTOR · ch;ef Don Geonie ~ #:! .z;;j ·3 TH•AT .. R .....-00 .. -(Olla ... "' -.... ,,. --·-·---·---Abo Inn Hlnhly " "THI IAIY MAlll" (I) IN MISSION Vll!JO E DWARDS CINEMA VIEJO A'-"• •• J ·~ H " . . ' DUSTIN HOffMMi'• "UlTlf 816 MAN" Pawvitiorl•lK:tiliiccb• ~ CHIEF DAN GEOllGE • FAYI DUNAWAY :'O!O ~t..,ro•-THRILLIN" HIG-HLIGHTS •l..,tlOl'""""•"''"'n-... ... The Great White Hope Stunni: J1rMS Eirl .klrln. J1ne A~. ,_..,1_ .... , ......... 0-1..i.., ...... .... ~-·· .. -$>(1111 to,.. ....... flt/ -~ ... ~-· -----~· .... rfilil~ :-;::---~~-...-...ii I ·--·'""!~·~-·-· "McKENZI E BREAK" (GP) 21d Hit et VIEJO BARBARA H'(RSHEY • • . 3" :::, ..... ,,, • .:·suDDEN TERROR': ... At IUBAN -SAM SH/ .. c•·· '=-..• ...._ • • Orange Coast Colle ge Grueling Dance Contes·t,s Explored in 'Marathon 33' By TOM TITUS 01 !llt Da!l1 PUot Sltfl T~lke a throwback to the Roman Colosse um, the dusty, dimly lighted gymnasium of a sn1all flili rldle \Vestcrn !o\1•n is trans/onned into an aren;i, a battleground where only the srrongcsl of sinew will walk off under their own poy,·er. The lime is 1933 and an enlire nation is reeling the i:na .... •ing, des perate pangs of hunger. Th is is the SE'lt in,: for ''Marathon 33," one of the "MAR.t.THON Jl"' A oltv bv Juno fl1voc, alrrc•"<l bv J~~~ l'•'ltCC~ ... ! ""'''1" 1n'1 (<!"· •Jruc!lon bv 811(1 (Ol'k, ~t <1tl<1!ln<1 bY Ht•old w~,, llon!l~o riv P•t• Sct 'n•llo. <n•tumt~ bv 1..0"' B•l•l•v. mu•k Dv Tom Kun,, 1no '"' M•INh ,,."~'"· "'"''"''~ nv "'"Or~""" Co~•t Coll~"" "''"'" Ofo~r!mtn! ronloM tnrovon S•+u•!l•v I" T~• Q C c 1u!ll!orlul'l'I T1'1l Cf.ST Jun• . . . . • .• .. . L1nn1 W~''"'r•1 P1t1v IC•n S:-1l1enu D1nllfe Ernie Ptlt•~n E11f f.amonJi<I •• .•.. J1!1!Tt1 B•ll R:uddv Mitn•tl Brown lultv Hy!cl'l(nM>n Cl•r-B1"""'' Sutl • H!PI Jonn1on Ch•is!.n• ~(httl~ Stotlv ~hwl•!I . Oouv'•• Mclt~n ' ' . .. ENTEJITAINWMt -- other action around lhe arena, yet a!J blends remarkably into the overall picture with decep· t111e ease. of the marathon, taking young June (o r Jean, as !ihe ls in· expllcably called) under hi! wing. His outlook is the com- plete opposite of his partner'• -1 flip, hardened personality to whom there'll always. be the marathon and the future i.s nonexistent. Together they form a Atrange mixture; the idealist and the rea list competing on the same grounds and each striving for philosophic dominance in a contest where physical sta mina is the determining !actor. It is a classlc confrontation and one which is depended on very heavily lo carry the play. Of.ll't' "ILOT Stttl ,.,._It •You Can't Do That' Among the enormous sup· Stan Bell (left) and Paul Steele argue over \.l'hether to sho"' or not to shO\\' a porting cast, ensemb'le playing nude actor on stage in a scene from the Lido Isle Players' comedy "You is the order ol the day, yet Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running," playing through Saturday. a handful of memorable in· ------------------------''----'---'--''-----''-------'--- ,. Reru11 Season Opens on TV • T1tund1f, March 18. Jq71 Actor's . Role C11l By Death After a long and varied ca reer, Howard Malick "discovered " communit y theater la te Jn life. He had performed for some 20 years in various relig1ou~ fraternal theatrics b (' r 0 re enrolling in a class in drama at Orange Coast College . He decided to try his h11nd at little theater. Local audiences first sa w him as Dr. Fleisher in "The Impossible Years" at lhf' Costa Mesa Cn·ic Playhru se last fall. A few months lat!'r he played the pivotal role of Sigurd Jungquist in the Irvine Community Theater's "N'ight of January 16th " Recently be won his th ird role, also with the Irvine j!:roup. as the lawyer. Alfieri, in Arthur l\.111lcr 's "A View From the Bridge,'' v.•hich open~ Sa t urda y night However. the show '•l'ill open wllhrut Howard Malick, V.'ho rlierl lasl week of a heart l llA ck. Mr. Malick, a resident of MESA ACTOR DEAD Howard Mallek Costa ~esa. wa s, among othe· things. an active Mason, ha\ 1ng 1ust earned his 32ni dei.:ree. He worked as ; s~rv1ce manager at t h' :'-1arine Corps Exchangr in E Tnro at the lime of his death. He also harl wnrkcd as ~ coal minf'r , a mechanic, ;• mail carrier, an auto factor; v•orker and owner of an autc. body shop. He is survived by his widow. Alice, who also Is active wit! the Irvi ne Community..Theater and appeared in its last pro- duction of "Shortstuff." ' .. • Pttr\ 5t1'Wl'1l , .. ~1ncv 1(1irn 'cl'lnDlr Wlll<ln •• lh<>m•• F1•••lt "'" WllJ.(WI . Conn•e P•••e>o Bo.lo 811"" . • lom A•nr'd It is traditionally difficul t for actors , particularly col· legiate actors. to function im· press1vely ag~inst s u c h awesome backdrops, but the OCC cast takes this bit in its teeth and strains col· lectively tn .in admirable degree of effectiveness. Lines are lost and characters cloud· ed. to be sure, but the end product is immensely satisfac- tory. dlvldual pe r for m ances emerge. Among them are Michael Brown as the a;enlal emcee. Ernie Peterson as the Bamumesque dance manager, Joetta Bell as the sympathetic marathon worker, Tom Arnold as the clowning dance r : Jamila Mynderse, Kathy Ladd, Christy Dwyer and particularly Pamela Hall as the clawlng contest.ants in the never-ending marathon. By CYNTHI A LOWRY tn an end, canceled by CBS NEW YORK IAP ) -It Is after ;~; first season, but it spring practice time f o r ls still using new material. is almost over, but some ln·lll ____ N_A_T_IO_N_A_L _G_E_N_E_R_A_L_T_H_E_A_T_R_E_s ___ _. teresting specials are coming Mtltn 81100 ,,, Cn••llv Ow•or F l~ M1•c••no , ... Jlm•IA Mvnn .. 1• Al N1rcl•no C•rv Sltln!Urn•r A"" O"B•len . Jann p,,.,,...110 .. Tne M•c k" 1(~1n, tn<Sd Rl!t M1rlmlMI f'1mt l• Hill ,,,.. B1ck1H·Jon~ M1•t 1ttl MOO•• ~Iba Mtrvf l . • 81rD>1r1 Btll'ldorl .\I•. Jl"nt' . Dtnnls Clune M• llu'"• · ... o~""'' 1!1<••'•cm Btt !Y llancrolt lluO 5t1nrnt.e'! B~rt• .. L•!ro •b"on M11·on •• JuOv C•,tcn~w Pr"'tolu!e1 .. .• .. l1u•1 H•n~lhl<1, PllTY O'Ltl10 most unu sual and exci ting pro- ductions to znount the st;ige of Orange Cnast Coll ege .. June Havoc's palnful accounl of lhe endu rance danre mad11css of the early 1930s hr1ngs. through its excellent a ce staging. a clearer underslanding of the mood of those tortured times. It is ensemble presentation at its ultim ate. filling the reaches of the \"aSl college stage and shrinking them 1n :scopr. And it is a technical a chie ve m en t nf high magnitude. bnth in Bud Coo k·s overpov.·eringly ret11istic scl and Pete Scaq>ello's drab, depressing lighting . setting an unmistakable mood. Director John Ferzacca has taken the largest cast seen on a single stage in Orange County this season and has woven it into a unit or asto"ishing precision. Actio.n transpires independently of Most nolabie in this regard Is Linda Y.'hitmore in the cen- tral role of the post·"Gypsy" June Havoc. past the Dainty ,June stage but stilt very yo ung and vulnerable without Mama Rose to guide her steps. Miss Whitmore takes her character into the marathon as a reluc· tant novice. and toughens her \Vit h lip-biting determination v.·it houl sac r i f i c i n g her ever.present optimism th a t belier umes are coming. Ken Falsetto. who requires more aeclimatizati9n to his assignment , is the hotshot star Tableau staging is employed to freeze the action in the spotlighted scenes with great effect. And the ca.st as a whole generates the gr a du a I weariness and desperation of a decreasing gi'Oup holding on for dear life as the hours tick into the thousands. "Marathon 33" may leave lhe audience as limp and ex- tended as i~ actors. The play continues tonight th r o u g h Saturday in !he O C C auditorium In Co!ta Mesa . British Garner Most Of Tony No1ninations NE\Y YORK IUPI ) -Three of the four drams in the best play category of the nomina- tions for the .B.roadway theater's annual Tony awards announced Tuesday a r e Rrilish in origin. But the Americans are all alone in !he musical comedy bracket. The plays : "Home" by Da vid Storye, "Sleuth" by Anthony Shaffer, • ' The Phllanthrop l 1t '' by Christopher Hampton lall British) and "Story Theater" by Paul Sll!s. The mu!icals : "Company," "The Me Nobody Knows" and ''The Rothschilds." The nominating committ ee of nine joumaUsts and others connected wi th the theater came up with 19 categories a5 aga insl 16 in recent years. Eligible we re productions from , April II, 1970 through March 15, 11171. Approximately 450 persons connttled in some way with the st.age will choose the win· ners, who will be revealed between 9 aad 11 p.m. Sunda y, March 28 on a Jive colorcast from the Palace Theater over the ABC Network. r:r.:.t•:t•t.!1 television viewers . The idea is to develop one's skill in The story Wednesday had a duckin11: reruns. promising start: A young woman was trying lo persuade Only five regular series her ailing grandfathe r to le ave showed repeats Wednesday a quack's sanitarium. The night, ISO only beginner"s skill charlatan was murdered - was required lo avoid them. but then the story went dO\l.'n But as the weeks roll on, hill reruns will take over almost fast with a sorry imitation of a "Perry Mason" -type completely and the viewer will courtroom denouement be hard put to find satisfac· NBC's "Music Hall" also is tory entertainment. still among the living. Steve Most television series con· Lawrence and Eydie Gorme 1ist (lf episodes thal lo~e were the principals in sket,. enchantment the second time ches presumin g to show the aroWld . The easy wa y would horrors of suburban life. Sid setm to be a summer-time Caesar and Barbara Eden switch of allegiance to a pro-were a couple of rude, cele- gram on aoother network in brily·mad ne ighbors in a the same time period . thing that went on much too It just doesn't work that 10011:: Anne Meara was a slat- way , "Men from Shiloh" fans tern of a aggeraled far be- obviously are not going to yond humor. Ah. we ll , it "'"":is up during the ntxl month. George C. Scott will star in an NBC production of "Jane Eyre" on J\olarch 24 . The ''Hall of Fame" Easter show, on NBC March 26, will be an adaptat i on of Paddy Chayefsky's •·c;ideon," with Peter Ustinov. CBS has a new "Charlie Brown·• cartoon ar· riving March 28. Diahann Carroll, whose •·Julia'' is dropped, appears in her fir sl musical special (ln NBC Apr il 5. On Aprll 7. al so on NBC. is a "Royal Gala,'' taped in L-Ondon with Queen Elizabeth II in the 11udience. l!s stars include Bob Hope. Glen Cam pbell and Petula Cl ark. J a n Re tnrns buckle down happily with nice when Steve and Evdie HOLLYWOOD (C PI ) -.Jan "Thr Courtship of Eddie's were singing, wh ich was · not Sterling returns lo tclC\'1Sion Father.'' f.faybe "To Rome often enough. with a fitUesl appearance on with Love" viewers will find Maybe the current seasnn MGM 's "Med ical Center'', happine&.s with Henry Fonda/jiO_;;;;;i ______ .., ... __ .;..,io;;i;oi;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;; .. ..,:_•j and "The Smith Family." "Men at Ul\I.'" i1 coming ~· Exclusive Showin51 ......... Jazz Band ~ ::.!~~~~:.. EN ~~~~E~ENT In UCI Date Tickets are now on sale for a performance by r h e Preservation Hall Jatz Band al UC Irvine next month. The band, last original New Orleans jazz band. will play in Crawford Hall at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, April 17. Admission is $3.50. TickelS are available at all Ticketron outlets and at the Vil!a11:e Fine Arts Bo:t Office, Universi ty <>f Cali forn ia, I r v i n e , Califomia 92664. For in· formation citll 833-6617. -IA.LIDA PININSUU.- IALIO.& ILYD. AT MAIN OPIN 6:41 e '7J-4041 "Something for Everyone" THE BATTLE OF THE BUTT! THE CHALLENGE: _r;"..._;-.,,__ Every man, woman, and child to quit smoking for 30 days ..• ._!or your country, for your honor, L '>~ for S25,000,000! " l ~-----lU.MUllQI _ DICK VAN DYKE :COlD TURKt'i' ffPt.°1xm llllfU!Ol f°""'°noo!IOITOl-d .. -.f .. 8()8N{WtWU ;.w;~ --u 'IOlllJt -,. IOllWI LUii -""'., l(lll.WI ti.Ml ... wi.11ui RIO f!r JI. Fatl1e1•ly A d v ice "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" -.,-,.JO!lll~UAR ~0 COUlll ~D!l..ite' i-...lr'ftlfl ALSO PLAYING --- 2nd BIG COMEDY HIT Dirk ·rayior (right) and Noel ~ledaille are father and !'Io n fortune hunters in the \Vestmin.•ler Com· munity Theater comedy "A Thieves' Carnival," giv· 1ng c!osin.1:: rerfomances F'riday and Saturday at Finley Schon. \\'e!i>lminstcr. l .. """"" CU>IUS Lf~t.IAA COLOR i!!]G> Peter Sellers "THE PARTY" BEGINNING MARCH 24th A ONE WEEK LIMITED ENGAGEMENT SPECIAL STUDENT & GROUP RATES AVAI LABL E CONTACT MANAGER NOW FOR GROUP INFORMATION ...._.,,.~~~· Jullus Caesar ......... Charlton Heston Jason Robards. John Glelpd @• "l .S. I Le" Ye~~ '" "Tiie loll od ~·· ...... . ' ' EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT "Tora, Tora, Tora" VALDEZ IS COMING BAWDY COMEDY-BITING SATIRE FRI -SAT I WED -T HUR • lolie ""'n;ng yo.,•;-e 1Nft "-LA, TIM£~ Mo liere's "THE IMAGINARY INVALID" ••~• • JnY!ul. l1vr1v, •~lt•t•lnl"t ,., c~n •~Arm yOu DUI ol v0ur -! " -LA TIMES NEW m us i c~! revue "MOTHER EARTH" I OX OFFICE: 646·116) OR ALL AGENCIES ORANG! COUNTY'S PROFllSIONAL THEATll : I l • I ' .. -.. ... ..,....... .. .. .. .. ~:·. .. .. . • •• • .. ... ~ OA!L~ PILOT DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS ly Chtstet: Go11ld I fiWREt\J.. Ll!T,.!_M C.l:T SICKANO~~EACM ~ER ! TJ.UNGS GO TOO FAR • 'GO AHEAD, YOU GUYS, SfA~E ! &AWK ! !JUI l'ON'f LAUGH !..YOU LAUGH AN' l'LL Ill.OW M'{ Sf.ACK! By Tom K. Ryaa ON 1H£ CONfRARY. ..•. M01HERHOOD i f>J.WAVS SORTA INSPIRES A Ff£LIN6' OF REVEREl\K:E IN MEJ... MUTI AND JEFF WAKEUP! GO GET AJOB! JUDGE PARKER l SUllE C;iOTTA COMMENP THIS J.tllllNE'. IT'S GOT f"l.IE MOST .!E"UTIFUL STEW· ARPBSES I EVE!:? PIP see: PLAIN JANE ACROS S 1 Sig" 1 5 Cap1lil of Italia ''Htadofa m!lf11Strr;· l• Moldinq 15 T1mr ptriods lfi Sword 17 Table CO¥tr- in;: 2 words 1• Hut . 10 Under any c ire i.nst1nce: 2 WOldS 21 Cltavr 23 Monttary un i! 24 Withdra•S officially 27 Drtr1li:ard: Sling 21 Audil100 J l Proc lanu1I: iim J5 African "antelope 37 G1ttk island .. J'i Night sound .o&Q Know lrdgt .,l Pertain11i9 to Insanity \i .,4 Join\ of \ht Irr; 45 Prophetic · s f11ns !14 Onr who is in drbt ~F i1rda rattan chair S' Drtlarr pos1t1vrly &2 Part of "to br'' &4 Moritrral's Forum, r .g. t.5 Forrmosl b7 Turning .around and arou nd . J WOfdS 70 Goosr genus 71 Broad-topped hill 7? Attract1vr 7 J Ha~111g a C~ftl 10 ton1I quali ty 74 Booty 7S Nr,,. r,s1;1111ent "''' OO'U'-1 I Grindu1g 1ooth 2 Tyor s•:r 3 Toot ag1.1n 4 Ruby-----: Canadian born YOU COULD HAVE WAl~ED UNTIL THE COMMERCIAL! ~HEN YOU GET EVEl?YTHIN6 ON !OJ.llP ~l-llPSHAPE. YOU COME &ACI:"')'--' AND LET ME SIW6 A. 50N6 I 'M WE 60NNA COMPOSE JUST SUl?E ro1i: YOU'. .. ME"R? PERKINS AAAAAAGH! By Al Smith I'M GOIN' BACK FOR THE PREVIEW OF WHAT'S COMIN' NEXT WEEK.1 .• ·'- 10 CPA's !~vo1 1t! writing fluid- J I B 71 3b City of Atasta MISS PEACH 2 wards 11 -···-Ruth lZ God of wisdom 1) Item of outdoor 11t ar 18 Pottrr's malt!' 1als 22 "Tait of--·-" 25 Kind of soil 26 Slngv Vm~ ---·-- 28 Publlc notices· lnfor111al JD Kind of 38 H 1ndu ouitar .o&I Sanct+ontd <43 Wax <46 Mak t clothes .o&8 A summ+ng up: lnlormil 51 Moisture 53 Boa! basin 55 Group of stoc t s. 51 Make •nlo ... 58 Val ley~ S'i From~ d is tancr &O Noted Hollywood strret . ... ... U'L AINEI - SALLY BANANAS GOllDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS ~-e·:i::.,..• !l!I; By MeU '47 Ont who quotri ;iinothtt •9 That which produces . Sulfi• rnttrt1iner 5 Eltctrical un it t. Geld : Sp. 7 School subject; Inform ii medic in t JZ 01 the same gtnus 33 tanadi.an balsam, bl Pr1tain in9 to tht lrlsh &J Wlnttr 11round covrr STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Overgard I, I I 50 Kind or bl iss 5Z lent, in F11nct • • I Ruins from burn ing '811it facts . , " " . . " " for on' 34 Obsrrvrd JS Shine brfQhtly . , ···;. .. .. " . .. ~n • -~ Mi J.ttemp! t.8 Ceremonia l '"' f,'i Droop ll " • ~ • • ul• ' " )0.) $Ef, DOll"'. I LtARl<IED THAT MEMSEll<j OF THE 5WEEPSTAKES MOB WERE .V:TER: 50ME JN(RIM!l<JATIWG Pl-10705 ROPER HA..0.1· ·50 l WAS r f ;. t~M'-'"l.~- 5ENDIN6 MV ;F\ --.,'If 'i BOY5 TO GET I 'ti.."'-,. " THE' P~INTS. -~ ( ";, \ ··At..10 PUT - THEM AWAY F01iZ ~AFE· KEEPIMG / PEANUTS "l U40\lll'HAT ~ lll(f ME, AND fl Ml( ~ la.WI' j 00 ~. lJO, &IJT_ (' THE .SWff P.GIJMlil lllERE OH niElll WAY TO Tl-IE 'MOJ.llTOQ'"OFFICE.1 I TRIED "'OPHONE lia'.)PER: THERE- BUT lri()8()0'( AllSWERE'O.' I r . ..... -- MR.MUM _s: ~ -- By Al Col!Jt ' By Chartts 8-ttl • • • By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen ~ CQMf:~.Ler OG 11£ASO!l 1:1~fHf:I'- -= • l d;-j- ,, DENNIS THE MENACE ' ' I , • \ ,, I r .. I .. ...... - Buy a • Bargain Border to Border Evory classified want ad in the DAILY ~LOT appf ars in every edition every day. That moans your ad will be seen in 'papers delivered to homes and sold f rom newsracks from border to border en elong the Oronge Coast •.. all the way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All ••• ,• Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaeh . Laguna Beaeh Saddlebaek San CleDJente Capistrano <Plus the daily newsrac:k edition) For One Price I • " With A • Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 l • -~ ~...,,_ . • Thur!oday, M.i.rch 18, 1971 ·DAILY PILOT WANT .ADS ' THE BIGGEST SINGLE MARKmLACE ON THE ORANGE COAST-PHONE DIRECT 642-5678 l@._-_·-__,I~ ~I -......... ~l~~e r ·;+;~s.io I~ .Gonorel Gonorel Gone~•! I~ .__I -_ ...... _!~[ • I~ I -----.. --- Gener•I Gener el Gentr•I l!COLOGY ENTREE fresh air, ~u.nshJne •nd green JTUa a.re all yours. Almost 1-' acre youngster's pla.Yiround protected by sturdy block \\'8lls. Escape * * * * * TAYLOR CO. ;;:;;;:=:;:;;::::;;;::;:;;;;;::;:;;;;; ~~ ...... --..... ~--· * FREE.DOM HARBOR VIII# HILLS PANO~ VIEW 'ef: New. port Hatbor, Blue Padflc, cfinJa Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SPECIAL c ... u.,. bland anti ....... borinr dUes. Evenina Uatm &rt! like a million shlnlnz st.an:. Adult OCC\q>1ed, split 10 the solifUde of thi& .se-72 Linda Isle Drive eluded cul-dr-sac bordered Traditional 6 BR., 5lh ba. home on lagoon, with a gentle lorl'!l of w/dock. Furnished, decorated & lndscpd. 2 shrubbery. MO\'~ in 11.nd tum on the lights, this o10.·n-master bdrm. suites ............ $200,000 er made all lmprovemenrs For Complete information on •II homes&. for you. New antique gold lots, ple1se c•ll: shag carpe1 and fresh de- cor thru~llf. Come & be BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR cliarmed. Three bt'drooms 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. '42...0iO DOYER SHORES-$105,000 Beautiful NEW 4 & den home built just !or you! Spectacular living nn & lge formal DR. ''Our 26th Ye1r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., R~ltors 2111 Sen Joequln Hiiia Roe~ NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 Gener•i Gener•I + Dinin&: Room. 1"4 Baths.1 !!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!""""""""""""""""!! VErERANS SUB~1IT; NO -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 00\\'N 7% interest ONLY General G•ntr•I • • $29,950. Evenii'igs Call &12.-7438 HARBOR HIGHLANDS A delightful 3 bedroom home and separatt: den . l~ b4ths .i fireplace. Kitchen bu bltn range &. oven, di!:hwasher, BBQ. an in 1lainl!ss at!el. BALBOA ISLAND Close to the bay cute 3 bedroom Apt. bUilt over the garage leaving plenty of foam to add on! R-2 1.o9e !153,000 REAL'lllRS SINCE 1'14 673-4400 \\.'alk to 1'1ariners 1chool, I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! library, park and \VestcliU GUEST HOUSE?? Plaza sbopping. Best for th~ Finally, a home with a guest money at $34,950. Ca 11 hoUse that everyone can af. 545-8424. lord. Spotless Jev.·e1 1-rilh Corona· del Mar Income Ur.In Dandy duplex with room for expansion. Lo c a t e d in Orange County'• moat desir- e-cl area. Jdeal se1 up fur home plua Income or a good investmt"nt." Come lff the numerous possibilities these uni ta off£"r. Property in this area l11 hard to f.,.d- don't delay. can 66-0303. IORl.S I I. Ol 'O\ " -P~A t TOP ' 2'l99 HARBOR, COSTA MESA Immaculate Newport Heights TAX REFUNDERS DANDY DUPLE)( 2 Bedroom each unit 10% Down $2f,950 SHARP SHARP 2 Units on Costa Mesa St. $31 ,950 TERRIFIC TRIPLE)( Presenl l ncome $420 mo!. FHA appra.laal & sales prict $39,500 FANCY FOURPLE)( 4. Studio apts. 1 ll; BA each $41,000 Newport •• F•irview Vacant·lmmediate POSSESSION Ownrr says It'll lhia 3 bt'd· rm Westaide beauty, Drive by 94 Grove Plac1, then call for appointment to 1tt. Prtced at •...• $23,500 VA Repot.session 3 Bedroom, 1'4 baths. closed p.tllo. nev.·ly dea:irated, Men d~I ~tar. S1600 down. $31 ,950 JUST LIKE NEW 3 Bedtm, 2 bath Condomln- lmum. completely rrdec Including new carpel.I. Im· lllt'd. occupancy. Price<! be- lcrw market at .. , . , $20,500 •, ~ Bir corner lot with a 4 b!d· room. 2 bath farni.J,y home. Bi& 6" % asauma.ble Joan 1.t $165 a mon th for every- 1hirl1. $24,750 Now port •• ~•irvlew 6'1Ulll (anytime) COZY FOR A COUPLE Only l yrs old fltA/V A ok. An impoUibl~ find ln the Costa Mesa area. A two year old home with large bdrm~. condHion for $23.!fl(), "''il h modern kitchen in spotless rnA-VA terms. You 've rot ro see to belie\·e. Dial 645-0303 rORl.\l [ OISO\ " REAlfORS • 2299 Harbor, Costa Mesa Macnab-Irvine \outh , Coa st large kitchen", dining room, and living room. Lovely, , rich deep . pile. carpeting thru out. Two huge bed. rooms. 'And il'I back a 1 bed- room guest home. Great Eastside Costa Mesa. Call before ll's gone. home. 2 large bedrooms ptus a massive 18x~ family room '>l"l!h built.in BRICK FffiEPl.ACE &: BBQ. A quaint brick patlo ind min- imum yard maintenance all adds up to the finest buy available in the popular Heights area. IBA/VA f!n. ancing available. 646-8111 R~arty Company ':::::E~RCN 7 .71 .... ~.-..-.~ ..... . - NORTH COSTA MESA HALECREST See t,h.i1 4 bedrooms. 3 bath pride of ownership home and become enchanted by ifs care and main1enance . lt"s had that te.nde r loving care yoti"ve be£'n looking for. Beautiful covered pa- tio, neat manicured yards. You'IJ be surprised for only $28,500 546-2313 '-O THEREAL '~ESTATERS ' r. ' ' Walker ·& Lee 2790 Harbor BJ\·d. at Adams 5-1.5.(1.116 Open 'Iii 9 Pt.f SHEER LUXURY 4 Bedrooms + maids" room in this Baycttst home with Jarge family room & formal dining room. Island range Ir. tabJe space in gourmet kitchen. Designed for pri· vacy & loaded with e¥tra:J, Appointment only. Arnold & Freud 388 E. 17th St .. Costa Mrsa 646-n55 Walker & Lee '204..1 \Ve1lclitf Drive 64&-T711 Open 'fil 9 PM B/B Z2 YEARS or REAL ESTATE SERVICE JN THE HARBOR AREA B•yfront Lov•ly ( ) BRING ••• onytimo 642·1nl Anytime YOUR CHILDREN """"'""""""''"""""""" :::::l:Z::Z:Z:Z:~:Z::Z::Z:t I to ~ this cpatlding comlor- WestcJiff Area ASSUME 6% LOAN 1'bl• 1""'11Y -· ., a quiet cul-de---61C. 4 BR, Fam· -28,950-Uy room, formal dining l«'aled in Harbor Hi1h area. and have payment& like nnt, room. Everything for hap· 3 ]aJ"it bdnns -completely with total of only $150 per py childrrn and carelrtt mtecon.ted -new carpel· mo lncludlng taxes and ln-family living, Double brick Ing -drapes, Room for sur~. Lovely 3 bedrm, 2 1\replact, sunken Roman boa.I or trailer. Outdoor ]iv. bath home with dble garage, ba1h and delightM child· in&: on brick patio. Financ-b!tns, and massive ttone ren's play yard. ing very []~xible. Ovi.11er fireplaCf!! Total price tif v.•il consider lease-option -only $73,995. fast posseS'!iion -beu~r i3J CO~ TS hurry. Call 645-0303 .. ' WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (Qp•n Evenings) I ORIS! [ 01,0\ ,,, llE A trOf.'~ Macnab-Irvine A real boat 11ratcher1 delight with a ~at 1·111-'imming beach? This curt. home .:an easily be: Jncreased to S 2""~,!H~.,~-~~·C.:°"~~'•.:M~':'"~. J '"""i:;;';:'~ii;;i;;:::;;""""~ CHILDREN WANTED • 4 bdnn -2 bath-tam rm • 2 story-lge fenced yard. Cul de 111.c for safety. No tralfic • owner anxious. AGENT 675-4930 =~· i:;''"wr";; "" ,,,. CUTE EAST-SIDE Posh Palace 675·3000 DUPLEX Westcliff :? ~ from shopping & / ~:Z::Z:Z~Z:Z:Z:Z:~ ~·Spotless 3 BR, 2 BA home, Extra lge \iv rm & r•uy. dble frpl r..>e. King size kitchen. Plush crptg & ·-.,., Patio. Obit' ga.r~e, shake roof. $42.r:AXI. Lachenmyer Re ,1ltor lall Newport Blvd., CM CAIL 646-3928 Des: 642-2237 Vacant $18,990 3 Bedrm. TOTt'llbouse in eX· C<'lient area. Ooae: ro every. thing. 2 Bath areas. w/,v cpts & dl'Pfl, bltn range oven + refrig. Outdoor JiY· ing, shuffle boaid, tennis, pool, BBQ. It's ready lot you! Fu![ price Slll.990. Sub- mit yo~r rerm~. Cal! 1147·1221 17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch Open 'ti! 9 p.m. $22,900 3 BEDROOMS, 1.1;, BATHS Only 7 yeai'J old. it ha1 a bulll-1n kitchen forced air heat. Can be occupied im· medialrly. Hurry on this one.~ Macnab-Irvine New eondition. Tv.'O, one bed· room units with attached ga. Really Con1pany rages. Owner built, quality LOT constl-u.:tion. $300 per mo. m1u\· ,\ llli.ll'll' llE.UT\' 1:\1'. Prime Cos1a r.fesa R·1, 1nrome. See today • Won't ~!IT l~19 67) J~"J . ' 60'x137'. Close to shopping I ----------i Jut. $"16,500 $34,900 Terms 646-7171 Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 675-3210 * 6 UNITS * Neer Btech-$156,000 Good location, condition & p::irking. Income $20.C:OO +, Call 673-3Ei63 642-22SJ Eves associated BR OKERS-REAL TOA$ JOJS W Balboa 67l·J66l -a-cusTOM BUILT ·-o THl:REAL 1 ,~ ESTATERS Near CliH Drive & neat view I-=="":::::=:::::=== from tron1 yard. * A-FRAME * ~ . ·. . . * 3 bedroom1 & den 2-Sty. beach home xlnt cond. + 2 baths 3 BR. 1~ ba. l car gar. 1r 51,; years old. Bltns. New cpl$. $33,900 * Room '°'BOAT or * LEASE/OPTION * TRAILER Im mac. 4 Br., steps to ocean. * Newport Heights 211, Ba. Only $300 l"'tl" mo. * $35,$0 w/$500 option money. Call now ID ~ this value CAYWOOD REAL TY priced home! 675-49~(; 6306 W. Coast Hwy., NB 548·1290 $24,950 ·~::1 2 STORY 4 Bdr. & Den --------: 4 Bdrm. l Fomily Rm. Park like ya:rd with large $24,950 swim pool. Beautiful home. Mesa de) M:ir Prime location! Prestige large rooms throughOut, JUST LISTED • AblloJutely home area, owner desper· central floor plan. Luxur-immaculate 4 bedroot pool ate. Price reduced to $24,960. ious kitch<'n. No down ho ""th • k -· terms! O""n ti! 9 P~1. m~ .. , 51•a ~ ' ma.n1. Huge f&mlly rm, entry hall, .. ~ cured grounds, aauna bath, bll-in range . oven • dish· Cle11ific•tion S00.510 !i4(1.l720 huge rec room. and extra washer. ~·l11.0 * 5 BEDROOMS * TARBELL 2955 Harbor storagP. area. Sure to sell TARBELL 2955 Harbor Be&ut. Harbor V~w Homes I~ DOVER SHORES--this week!! Listed at $35,950 EMERALD B'Y res. v.·/w~t bar, lovely P1rsen111 A. U"" · , .. _ for tasl acbon. SH JI to be-"" carp.: fleU-cleaning ovens; '-------.. er con~trUCUOn see u"'" lieve it! Fantutk: white water view ready to rmve into. $59,500 Cl111ific•fion 525-535 plan& at l0331tlarinen Drive, from thiJ: immac. 4 bdrm. le.v~l 'Thrte Bdnnl". T w o bath, Fam. Rm. Dinina: Rm. Eltt. Kit. hoTM. Bnt OOt buy at Only 1'52.950 with librttal terms. Evenings Call &K-7tl03 BUILDERS REPOSSESSION HURRY! HtmJtY!CloteOUt at $27,950. l~iat. JIM" seuion. 3 Bedroom 6:: fun· Uy room, newly carpeted. fir~ace. shake rool " more. Available with nfA/ VA t~rms. Call M0-1151 iopen eves.) TOTAL LMNG 3 blocks to the beach, 1 bloclc I ·to shopplnJ", 1 block to the pool and tenn~ eourti. En· joy 1hl1 3 bedroom 2 bath home w\lh Swediih ~ place, ntw paint and lots ef shag carpt!ttn1. Co S t'!' $29,950. &tG-nn \0 THE REAL ~I:pTATERS e DUPLEX - l Bdrm&. up, 2 bdnns. dawn. $47,500 Marshall Realty 675-49l'.l Coron• d•I M•r YOUR FIRST liOME 7 Then you are fortun.t• In- deed, for we have for you "a little honeymoon cotta1e" in Corona d~J M•r. A one bedroom home plus IN· a:>'-IE on a well located R-2 lot Only '32,900. C a 11 .,,.,,,, 1-0' THE REAL I~ ESTA1TRS . " Dover .. Shores. b4 t 5 Bed-' famUy rm. home. Com-Inclcudlo"•R'"'a'an1dN. • L°'t and Fcxm: Jlril rms, & S atn~. select munlty pooli, tennis ell., . L::iJ )'()Ur own colors & custom prlv. beach; priv. patrolN 1-========o=1 details. All with outstanding street.I ft1r your security. M·ARTIN Cle11ificetion 550-555 * Decor•tor's Delight -Farr~W- 3i'29 Jtarbor. C.M. * MESA VERDE * Lo\"e\y, immac. homt'. ]st orf~ring. Beaut. grounds. Cov. palio. Nf'w copp('r plumb'g. Blk to goll course. $311,500. Georg• Wiiiiamson REALTOR 613"350 645-1564 EVF'..S. View~. Roy J, \Vard Rltr. Shown by app'L only. $9J,OOO I~ Le-t your dreams 1'U1I wild on 646-1;,;JO, Open Daily.' lntl111ct10n ~ this &plit-level 2 BR. 2 B&. CANYON SITE DoLency RHI Est••• REAL TORS 644-7662 '------ho..,.. ao,. .... view ol ""' $29,950 2828 E. COMt Hwy., CdM cD;c:;:R.;E:cA:...M=C::,O~T~T,,:Ac:G.;..;E:.:: Clessific•tion 575-580 ~an .i till!• from both With ~9-...i ,cxean view, 2. 644 mo Prime location. 4 Bdrms, ~"--~==~·='==~-1 o l•••I• H•• htd • Olt'd Bednn & dett, 2 bath + arllng 2 BR home In aCC1tnt I I~ · · .. · 11v.·im pool, entry hall, huge DOVER SHORES 1 H God 1 ;w •--·"··,~·-·,. pool, Could be )QJt ham beautiful faft)ily room (17x A ... 1 co ors of arvest 1 , V _. ... ..._ ,... family rm. xt.ra baths, na· V'il!W home. U43 Mmiaao Dr. home! 37) \\ri th naplonf! fireplace, Crpt, louvr'd I h U t I et I, tural brick firt'place, built-Be!!: buy. 11pac. s BR. 4 b.a. kl' 111 1 1 c10,,;11·,,11·0 • 600·699 MORGAN REALTY iipecial pe.nelllo.. irmoked 1par ing e, g eam ng " ins. 540-l'ral Adaptable floor plan tor I b kf ba 67J.6642 67J..64St 5 H .,.1a~s v.·ind.,..1, -.'ISO. pant, co:ty r 11 r, con-l[ll] TARBELL 29 5 1rbor ,.. ....., couple orlge. family. Nt'wly ·b A 1 •· f Roy McCa,rd. lo, Re1llor veni le ga.l11i~-II on ra: , __ ~_mp1o_1_n_•_11 _ _, TOWN & COUNTRY i;: decorated. By app't $91,000. E/1idt' Jot Only $22 500 . c J lk TRANSFER lSIO Nc;:;,;w .. CM. Bill Grundy, Reeltor Brok~r. 646.ms. ' . Classification 700-710 t~un~~.;~~f~~· y~~:'' 6: 6l/4 •/o INTEltEST YOUR PROBLEM &33 "°""' 0.., N.B, ~ n.., .... 2·2 Bdnn. hom .. to SPECIALISTS CORONA DEL MAR $23,500 ' ______ II"" I + 3 nic. lnrom• unit" blc ~~~ ~~· ~. ~;';: Property Man•gement COUNTRY ClUI 3 BR. 1i den. Beach pnvU. $151 A Month _ Mlfd'landlN . V lot aelleJur: flnancL ale ~· eo. Jn &side Reil Est1 t• VIEW-$23,000 You own tht land. 3 Bd. &. Den c1.1sific•tion 800-836 University Re•lty Co•t& Mesa., i .. !.T .... E!HEN~ & .. ~~ sP&cious 2 Bedroom home on Xlnt tmns.' $42.500 Low monthly P~~n11. Enll. I ll ~I 3001 E. C.at. H"''>'· 673~10 PRICE "" •LJY i-=~===-·u-Hom• Show Rultori try IWI, """ qu&tty bu t. r.to ... -PROV. CllAllM-SO n.,,. j l\s.H 1-rge R-l Lot owrJook\nr .. ArmcM.lr HoUllebuntina:" Im. picture windows . .Lilfi' 17t6 Oranie AW .• Cotta A1eM Santa Ana . Country C"lub. oov~ttd patlo O tll 9 BR-2BA-2Fpls, Ji-1. Lrs- 541-1209 RENT BEATER Many tnrtt ttte11--1.lriv• !hru mi E. ,r;;:,~rsvf1·· 001 P~t ~.1121 · pen Cl•i•ificetion 850-858 op beam ltv nn, cmry....tyM ganige tor boat or tniiler. TARBELL 2955 Herbor ram rm kit, dbl rar stn'd REPOSSESSIONS refr only S17.ioo ·'"'"mod· $23,000 546-2313 NEWPORT HEIGHTS l . _.,,. JI• :I! l tor""''""· <12 c.rn.iJoo • Spit.rkllna clean hornet, IOllle ern 3 bedroom. 2 bath Ii OPEN FRIDAY 1_5 ENTERTAINING-. lllMW~ _ le. $44.500. Op l..f.daily. &a-!ta!I nrwly painted I carpeted, 2, lam1ly room. Obie gaJ'"lie. 2500 Holly L•ne minded? ExctUenr Nev."POrt Cl•isific•tion ,00 _912 3, 4 &: 5 bd.l.·ms. Some with bltns, FA beat, ca.rpell &a Charmlnt 3 BR home Jots Beacti JocaUon. Larre JJOOiil JM'.IOll:. nIA.VA conv. lenns, drapes. Tohll monthly of of p&neUJnr. trplc, lat Jot. ne"'ly crptd, mdoor/outdoor I l[i] trom $20.0CWJ to $40,000, n&l Jlll.)'S evttythirt(. Sub-1 -~--~-~--Xlnt bQy at $28,50()? kil'Ctlfn, Spacious 3 Bit, din Trantp0rtatlon Ill Collins A Watta Inc. mil on low down Pft..YTYlent exchang•? JEAN SMITH, RLT R. rm + den/office. Complete . BMJ Adami Ave. 962-.'i523 and m.ov" lntD this charm~r. leese-optiOn? A"" E ... lt'Cllrlly 1ysrem. "'9.~. Cl•ssiflcLtion 9 IS .. i4; Cl.It fl:f6·58f!O l~n tv~s.I ,..._1-. W••lcllll 3 BR, ;,m ""VII • luh St., CM 646-JZ.S.i Pete Barrett Re•lty 1; ACRE-POOL-HORSE~ '-"'"1 "' 3 br. !·1. bl!, coonll')'-Sl)'lf'I r4·~,f>~-~;jiiiiiGi]I rm, 3-. c•r g11r11ce. Pool. LIKE To trade'!' Our 642-5200 horn<' n€'ar new park. g~ •,t I· --.. HOJTAGf Tl'll"f' dMvn for Income or 1 Tr~e-r·a Pal'*dlM: coulmn ta OlA.L direct ilki6'ii. n.a-.. • •• .,. """ fl It ·-•· 10111. 1'-fsy e x c h an g e .• :;;;;;;~· ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.· ort nce mccu• r r. tor )'('II.I! S Lines, 5 Dl)'l for YoUf ad, ltlf:n alt back &rid Ow~r/Agt M8-94n 642-1199 anytime $5. Call today .. -~· U.ttn to tbe phone MC! ---------- Cott• Mesa BY ownrr. E-S!de 3 Bit, t BA, crpts, drps, f\repl. t.rr k>t, 1prinkJus., On a U sh.apt() stttet. Well kept. 125.000. &IU263 MESA del Mar 4 br, 2 ba, tam rm. bltn&, new crpt1 A dtt0n.ti111. CloR to 1ehoot $32,5001 87 owner 567-889 \ • . . .. ,, . .. 30 DAil. Y PILOT • '.. •1 Everyone Hes Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CL·ASSIFIED ADS · ·~ ..... You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade II With a Want Ad ·The Biggest MarkE!tplace on the Orange .Co~st -·D,ial 642-5678 for Fast Results MoreRe..i Ettnte on Preceding P"f/fl Cott11 Mt1a Pure A Plush -$21,500 Thia m&&nifictnt little m.&n· lion on the north aide of Coata Meu. Walk to 1c:hool1 and ahoppifl&. A little cuh will usume thiJ FHA Joa.n wUh 61A.'l'Eo annual percent· qe intertst or no down to GJ'a. New on the market. Won't lllt • CALL! Walker & Lee East aluff • EXC1.US1'VI: AG!:NTS e SALES • LEA.ml 1414 Vista Del Oro N~ Beach 644-1133 NOT A CONDOMINIUM No monWy mairn. tee1. Frt rcw Say view home-w/wrt fron courtyard, erys, chaJl. dellen frrn Spain. Shaa crpta, J Bd, 3 Ba. 2 fr1>lc"1, Realtors Pool-tabJe.1il:ed rec rm, 1790 Harbor Blvd. at Adami Mstr Nile open& to pvt deck 5f5.949'1 Open 'ti! 9 PM A. vitw of Back Bay, bird• y6u·u. Love this bll!aulitul Ii &Icy. 2939 Catalpa St, Cambridae Hlchlandl hO~ Owner 644-1450 on quiet cul-de.sac in Col· Fountain Valley lep Park. 3 lute bed· rooms -2 of them 1hut· EXECUTIVES tered, 2 baths. family room, Live amid IUXUly. Loweat 2 fireplaces. new Ju1h ahar price Jn pen:tlae are•. a.re ca.rptta, electrlc built-ln1. value irow. homes priced Lovely backyard v.1th patio, to ~.000. Walk to IChooll. near ac.hool1 and shoppinf. Owner tr&nlfen'ed, mus1 $33,(]00 with a 5 14 % a.uum.able loan call 540-7413 seU! Steal !hi.a one at $34,500! Meu. deJ Mar, owner, well Elll ... Schrader, Rltr1, ftpt 3 BR, 2 BA, f'rplc, 192-6606 on owr 10,000 1q, ft. cul-de· aac lot. Prat. Indscpd & Bl.DR'S Sac:rltlce-Span. style decoratl!:d. Hrdwd raised nu cu1an 4 Br. $32,:500. floor, luxury crptd. F1{A -.S00 dll. Loaded W/ Xtru. 5'4'70. $33,900. 546-5391 Shakes. Frpl. Ctpt thruout. 1~===p"1°"c.;.AL~°'P~A~!lAD="1s=E,-1 Spmkln, lnd1cpd, t ncc. 10223 Pheasant Ave. Fish, &b?ams, \\·atrrW.Js. 53?--0380 Gnonh!H!, prden w/J BR. + 2 Ba . frplc, dbl praae. WOWI $30,5001 Qu iet cul-de-sac. Auurne low VA/FHA Terms 6% FHA Joan. App t only, 4 Bedroom1J lg• Deni 548-7"2'3, m8 Catherine Pl. Crpll~ ·1 •··1' , rp1, won -• TRANSFERR!:D new 4 hr ~ me ktw int Joan! home cmplt c1tm cab •Tk, lilAJ' DAL r-.R_E 1 A, 1:.,T.'f.~ S.b&r. xtra la fam rm, wide ~ i;.."" .ru......., lot, dicondr&. Sehl'• cloae. H ti ton B h Nr S. Coaat Plua. 11% VA un ng etc ~. ~,.;;w """"""" 4 Br. • 34' Fami~ Rm. VACANT 3 Br + fam rm, ' ... b'""· """'""" 40' Pool -frplc, Iri yd, 2 Yn old. Good location. Take o~r '" ~ VA$215 .... mo. tolal. On~ $25,250 Own"'/Att 636-4470. MESA Verde by OWJlf'r. Im· mae 3 BR, 2 ba, Obi trp!c, sparkli,.-pool, A-1 cond, Bltn S~l'f'O, Cr])t!, Dtpl, lo main~na.nce yard work. Must tee to bel~ve. 546-6447 Owner 63A% VA Lo.n $4000 cuh -4 BR, 2 BA, 2)00 aq . f t. $13,300. WO mo. P.LT.I. Imm. Poas. Noqual- ifyln&'. 537-65.36. 548-0588. $22."'ll .•. NO QUAIJFY!NG! 10% dn w/2nd m. Exist. F1iA. 3 BR, fregh)y pai11ted. Alt-6T:>-8989/675-4930 CA5k for ANN COATS> * BY OWNER $28,!a'.> 3 BR, 2 b&, Din'f rm, Fam L rm, FOl"C'ed air, Lee pool, Small @'Tl. 548-823) THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME &: you'll believe it when ~u ~ thiJI 4 bdrm family home w/h.ntutic vu ol val- ley&. aome ocean. 1700 1q ', lie brick patio, pi~ 1ree1, frplc. On quiet cul-de-111c, I mi. from harbor. '32.000. ASSUME VA LOAN SW.~ POINT REAL TY 34156 Ct>a1t H\\'Y, Dana. Point <n-'J 496-5.123 Dover Shores * UNEXCELLED VIEW Pictlll'!sque European 11Yle but contemporary I: conven. lent, tor fam ily &: enterrain- iti&. 5 baths. 4-car pra1e + m&ny xtra teatW'l!s. $169,500 $4~7249 East Bluff BWFFS CONOO O.PLAN Locatfd on JUJh irttnbelt, Nr Bay, 3 br/2i, b a, crpt/drpg. By 0 w n e r : ......,,., UNHEARD OF·but we found It. Unbellevablr:! You can't mia Modern convenience1. 4 qUflll!n·•lied BR"1. 2 bathl. DelUXe built·in kitchen wtth bar, Muslve 34' FA.Mll..Y RM. l..o&-hUlT\ing fireplace. Full siu yard with 40' FUN" FllJ..ED POOL. Near beach. E·Z temu. Nttd I HY more. Corne ln and see for your- aeH. Hurry-won't Jut! Call <nti 96J..BS. I 01!1 \I I Ol \O\ p •' • ' ... ' - 5V•% VA AAumr $17.700 Joan 3 bed· room 2 bath. 60x.109 pool fenced lot, Douzhboy pool included. 15 X 20 Patio, modem bUn kitchen over· sized dble aa.rqe. ' Gf'tat nei,trbothood. See today, l' '62-4471 I :::: J 546-llOJ $100 MOVES YOU IN GI C.001 pool, 4 BR. % BA home. Crpts, drps, newly pa.inted, bltns, fireplace, HURl\Y? ! Collins & Watts 962·5523 GI.NO DOWN $SG TOTAL COST 4 Bedrm, 2 ht.th, bltns. n~w. Jy paint ed thruout, Cll>tl, drps. Vacant, Move tn !! Collins & Watts 962-5523 Why 1tore II i11 the attic "°hen you can turn It Into money thrOuih a DAILY PILOT Want M. Huntl09ton lluch Rancho la Questa Spanish·Beam Ceilings You like SPANISH DECOR? Wii! have It. Double-door Spani•h tiled entry. Lush aha&: carpet1. Waill of 1la11 to patio area. PEAKED HEAVY BEAM CEILINGS. Cozy adObt ti.ttplace. 4 Jrinf·1iir 8R'1, Sparltlinf ki!Chen. Hurr family rm. Red tile roof. Boat aatr: with siab. Beach Uvina. Va. cant! Priced to ~ tut. You n&mt the tll!rms. Info- eall rn•i 982-!61fi I 01!1 \'I I. Ol.\O\ . " !.' f 4 t r OP • 19131 Brook:burst Ave. Huntina10n Beach IUILDER'S CLOSE·OUT MODEL Reduced ~ under f'HA Appraisal. 4 bedroom!!", 2 bl!:autitul baths. Modern Calitomia indoor • outdoor Jritdlt'n. Depnt briclr flrr:- pLace in family room. If Lovely l Br/2 Ila. Condo L•guna Beach Hom• IDEAL tor year round com· fort .r. cracioia relaxed Uv· il'll. All exterior malntai11. ance ettrnded. T e n n i 1 C'OW'tl, only 100 1tep1 to pri- vate beach, aJgo overlooks 1lamourou1 heated pool. All elec kit, lnd: ntrlc, ran1e. di.&bwuber a: di.spoil.I . C.Om- pletely ClflM!ted wall to wall thruOut. Lower level laun- dry ha.s wshr/dryer, stor· age room &. doUble CILJ"l)brl This i& a corner unit In beaut Jndacpd, patrolcd area. Close to ma.rkll!t &: shp'n1. Avail turn or unturn. Priced under markr:t tor di· rec1 sale. Phone : 837·0791. * MINT CONDinON * 2 Bdrm. OYO apt. Patio area, pool. Cl0&e to 1hop- pina & beach. Hurry on th.iJ Ont at $17,900. * VlEW HOME * Acrot;I the 5tr~I f r 0 m ocuntront. 4 Bdnn1., J baths. 2 Frplc1. Lre . ttettAIJOn rm. CU!tom bit. w/many extn.~. P r I c e rr:ducrd to $61,5'.'X). ~~ ~IOt.IT>I ~"""" you want a good buy. rhi1 * 4~2800 • is it. It'1 all brand new tor I ---~~~~--- only 135.750. 842-2535 $29,950 O TIICRCAL "\. l:STAT C RS ' . ' .. " I~ ;;;I _....__.1 ~!~~! _, .. ..,. I~! ,_,,,.,_. l~ Newport ltech Condominiums Buslnfla Houas Unfurn. 205 Hou ... Unfurn. 305 for Hie 160 Opportunity 2oo l•G,---,.1-----1 VIEW UNLIMITED . -;:~;:;~~:-;;;;:;1::•:M:r•:_ _____ Fountain Vellty l Br, 3 Bi, 25' nc nn, 1 COZY CONDO lirl&Je 1tory TO BUY OR l Hure bedrooms. 2 lnvrly ron lse, imn1ac 3 BR. l 1~ ftplc'1. Shaa ~· Le tuft. 2 bedrrn, 2h•ih,1ormaJ. din-SELL A BUSINESS baths, large kitchen with ba, ne~· shag cpts &r drps, dedl: 0~ mitr •Wle. Walk to in& room, air cond .. luxury Se• gas built ins. Carpets and frplr. b!tns. $240 m o , CdM Hi or new elem idl..l. crpts, drps, vaca n1. Only HOLLAND BUS. SALES ci rapt:1 lhnl out. Hatdwq>d !lfi&.9543 or 713 /Ul·l.588. Good flnanclna. 2939 Ca.ta!· Sl.450 down nu. or no down "The Bro\c'tr with Empathy'' floors, brick fireplace. dou· • h pa.St, Owner 6#-1450. GI. 1n6 Orang" Ave., C.M. blr i uair, and te~ Hunt1t1gtan Baec RUSTIC modern 2 BR beach 64&4170; 540,0603 an.ytime yard. Rr:~t At $210 monthly, NR bf'A h z BR condo hou&e, ~ blk to «.ll!an. 7 DUTCH CLEAN, custom cu· A b11ri:a1 n. Call Brokt>r 1 c · d 1 yrs old Rl lot. Mu.&t .rll pets .i drps, private encl WANTED : Oranie Cnty 545-0465 .... /r!sh .... ·sr, .... 1w crpt, b 133 ~ 0 · ga1·ai:(' f.: pa!io, S 1 7 S ,....., or oUrr. n r, patio, 3 bed.rm, 2% be, 2 aeneral on air liquor ONE month"• rent .... yes. 5.16-JS02 H B. 64~ carga.r.TAke over 6~Govt l !cen1e. 'Bona I Ide leu than one month's ff'nl . 64' WATERlRONi. Dock, loan, uk:ini $24.,a.-iQ, fAll re11&uran1. Cub. CourteJy ls your total down payment 3 BR. Crp1s. eltoc .. bll·ms. boat incm, 3 BR, lo pri~ poutuiOa. IQ brokers, '114/&.n-6770 on many firie l or 4 bedrm dbl. g11r. foret'd a.U' hr:1.t, by ownr for 'quick sale. ASSOC. with $100,000 to help homt'!! C11ll 1H1 to st>t if Sl9J/mo. l it. & lait mo! ~1900. ' ' ._ -·. XVEJtYTHING SHIP-SHAPE form leuing company. Ter· YCl'J qualify. !;; E Y MOU R +-$100 clean g dep. 962-8047 D cb 8 f bhnbunkbedsindoWNtain ritic profit pntent l 1l . REALTY, call M7-l221 . CLEAN 3 brl2 ba. S200/mo. ovtr,,._or•a.. 4yront ~ ~-.'-om•-··;n•-·•· ed G -·I~ 1 't Aki '' o" BEST BL'Y. lttOUCED tor Dl!Qml ,. --...u ..... stcur . rear op...,, ... n v· RENTAL 3 Br & dining rm s•"' 'ISi:. s or ' r. . Qu • ter' bedrm lc bath suite + Mr. Dave TI4:M.7-946l. +-2 bath S250 per mo \st rf'au: 96Z.i566or ~trs. Clark: n-~~~'!JIQl,2~·Den. pestroom.Dbleaaragehas FOOD TOGO: MOM le POP And !Ml+-$100 dep. Dia l ~8.4Jl9. DOU"· r..,.r . ._ p. , • bl b "· "· h 1-~-'~--~--ol 548-1936 'or s«'.4f!M tn ca lneta, wo, ........ nc CAFE LSE OR SELL. 645--031.'.l.l r orest E. Ql.90n, l BR, patlo. pool, na tural and elec door opener. Btsl ** 642-780lli •* Inc. Rr:a.!tor&, 2299 Harbor, beam ceihngs. Nr hospibl.l Newport Heights value at $23.~. anxiolll! Butin••• W•ntad 210 Costa t-.lesa Avail Aprtl ~-$165 util pd . BIG VALUE owner. $120, util pd. Cozy 1 Br. col· 17676 Camrmn, 841-5192. larwln Realty, Inc. WANTED: Ora.nae C n I y tage. E/a1dr:. Av! now. \\'ALK to beach. c le an '4 large J bdrm, tam.Uy rm, 11.',ig2 Brookhuni, H.B. aenera..t on 1ale !i~uor Blue Beecon * 645.0111 bdrm., cptJ, drps, ff'fri&. d,.lnl..,.~1;mi'.n,',,,'lt,~ ~~.""2 , __ 546-__ 54~1_1_An_~yt_l_m_•__ I I ee n 1 e , Bon 11r 1 doe SPACIOUS • 2 Br bltn~ $165 mo. lrase. 968-1;,98 ...,.... I p rty 1l1. restauram. Cuh. Courtll!1y · d 1 .. Al trplcs. Gara~ on alley. ncom• rope -t b k 714/8Js-6TIO ctp/drps, tncd yd, gar. 2 BR. A u ts. 1~0 pets. Fine Helrhts atta. '35.000 C S <1 ro en. S140. heach. s1ro. Refer!'nces. $60 < UTE EAST· IDE M-y to Loen 240 ALA "'""'' • 64 >3900 ''"'"ii. 536--0317 CALL ·~· ".,... DUPLEX ' ' "· I}~~ 1 TD l $135 • Huge I Br. w/frplc. TNHSE·CPI, 111. rt • ~•ru ··-·"•"L"TIY·· New condition. Two. one bed· st oan gar, '2 blks to ocean. dryr , rn g. pool, 2 Br, $165 room units with attached Blue Beacon * 645-0111 3 Br S185. 548-1405, 96&-942.."i Nt1r Nt•pert P11t Offlft &arqes. Owner built, qual· 6'47it JNTEREsr SPREADING room . l Br. SALE or !rase, 1.4e 2 BR, SECLUDED 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, 11;y· OONltructlon. $3()0 JIU 2nd TD Loan huge yd, CJD, dbl gar. $195. 11, b11 con<io. frplc. BltNi. re-modeled kit, lie p.atlo, mo. lnoome. ~ today -Al.Jo. Rentals e 64.>3900 Pool. 01P.'1lrr, 499-3464 eves. elec 1ar, extensive &a.rden. Won't luL T• "··~ -·II 3 B , , o o m rms .,.acu on ~ .. -y. $135 . Separalf' 2 Br. Duplex. r. rumpu • Nt 1eh11 le church. tl'leal $34,900 Terms ~7171 '42 2171 545-0611 t /ri nclosed yard far family. S39.500. Prln-• Stv/retri1 1ar child ok. crp 5 rps " · clpa.IA only. 6'5--:764 aft 9 am Sl!tvina: Harbor area 21 yrs. Blue 8ea~on * 645-0111 Avail 411 847-1886 S11ttler Morta••• Co. LUXURY L" . 3 B 2 Irvin• e 4 BR . Ii den! Jc. loL 336 E 17th S!rttt 1v1n1 · r. 1c:.;;:...;;:... _____ _ Cliff Dr. \\'aJk IO hi lchl. ' Ba, POOL. Child & pe-!1. NEW 3 BR, '2 BA, crpts. HOBBY HOUSE NEW VA 2 Bedrooms, tin bath& I: den. Excellent ocean view. Under con1cruction . timll! 10 select tntertor colon & st:yles. C&1.I - ~fa.nhall Realty 615-4600 c h F I S200. drp~. hid comm. pool & COSTA MESA as ast . ALA Rt>ntals • 64;l.3900 rf>C incl.\ Prrfer fa mily. Newport Shor•• · DUPLEX oo· on cane.I front 11t & 2nd Trust Deeds cpl!, drps, childrtn ok . i..::=::....:'c:."c.'~-~---·I ~O lllflll"I,, 3 Br. up, 3 Br dn. S69.500 FREE AP~ Blue Beacon* 645-0111 Laguna Beach ..,/'TO ~U,,1 ~ Marehall Realty ~7a.-4600 Costa M.11 lnvestment lr::=-::-::-:;:,-;~c:----1::.::.:::.:;::.;::;;:::;;_. ___ I REAL ESTATE Santa Ana Heithts 5".nll •nytime Corona del Mar NE\I/ Hilltop home v•/oc:ean $ TRIPLEX $225 . Spac 3 Br. 2 811., RIO $2(i0. l7~2 M anc he st er . l BR 2 ba 1 ntl 9:1 \•ie~·. 3BR. 2BA. Cprs. drps, $225 Per Mo. total 3 or 4 1190 Glenneyre SI . ACRI!: for COmn1'1 -Stable1 Private money from $1:500 r H, d I ~wk se. i blf·lns, trplc. \\'rt bar £.. 494.9473 549-0316 or ho"me &. itables. 673-nsl 0 ~1'_. ec ec · par o, oJ>('n beam cril1n25 + ram BR. form din rm. uaed brick or 673-5723 up for l at Ii 2nd Joens. r lec k11chen, shag • rug~. rm. S."IDO mo. 972 !.A ~lirada trplc. Ire car lot. 2 car tie-TOP CONDITION Trust DeeJ Center Inc. Closr to 1chools, S27.J, l.sr. 11 4!H-'200 tached 1u . Summr:r rental area. Duplex Tustin 1l23 N. Broadway. S.A. 67~5992 or ca ;) MARINER REAL TY with charm. Walk to beach. Loan Brokrrs Since 1949 3 BR 2 BA , blk f OCEANFRO~T I Br. Villa. 342.5-541 Call for ihowing Fully furni~hed .r. rll!'rited. HORSE Prr>perty by owner. 543-8381 anytimr: .. _ h. s•~ · ' N· '°,m Pa11ially furn . Pr1v. beach. k. t; Acrr, attractive 4 br, =." ,1~"":..~o mo . 0 pe. s. P--kl1kf> <•Tounrls. S 2 7 5 :.BR.&l.BR.A1 1ng f'~esu....,""" "',., Huntington Harbour $47.900. fam rm. d in's rm, bl!:am~ ~ · l\.lonth. 494-46.'13 ENGLUND REAL ESTATE ~ilina , dbl ial'9.ge " lrull I fl! 2 BR. Duplex s~. 2 BT'. L.d I I SA.CRIFICE • S38,000 . B .,...,, Must Movr! Sf.t.4()92 ~fultent house $225. ~J'a. cp1s. I 0 II 31! 'Iba.Ha, La.runa each • •" ---====--·I Mqnificfnt 4 br, 4 ba <494--IOt) drps. Call Ownt>r 67.'>-l482 **WATERFRONT ** waterfront home in Hun. 3 BR. I Ba . Stovt>, hobby LARGE 3 Br, 2 Bath. tinrton Harbour. l 0 l • Lido Isl• • Ir I I [~] ,, ... oo waterfront, 57· dock. cau 1 __ _,_,,.._....,.,=---"~ne:.~ .. PVT puty want& 16 to 20 HoUMI Furnished 300 rm . Nn dogs. s21;, Mo , Call S400/mn. Lrii~~-"'""""""' 213/ 9n·1601 tor appL Prill. * REDUCED * ~------' unit. from owner, Newport/ z,;;;;;;i1-----·1~.,,..~~5'l~A~fl~. !.'.."PM~·---l~N~e~w~po~rt~B~•!•~ch~==~1 ci-11 -1 •• , Imm BR •·-" •••••••••• Men area. 54().6752 -"---------1Costa Mesa """' """-' ac. !I ·, ........... y nn. ===-:,..,_-,,,..,,......,,,-----------Adults Preferred lrvl-45 Ft Lot 1trfft·t~ Acreage for 1111• 150 WAl'fl'ED. ,2...12 cle4J1 units -POO V LE ··-·---"-------for pn'v••· ··-. DESIRABLE L A AILAB 1~t. By app't. only -"" .-.. •:1 1-C 0 UN TR 'i •Llvin<-* 64" ~,.,u + HOME 2 BR. 2 Ba.; garage" '.w I "u~ ~ 2 PERFECTION LIDO REAL TY INC. Placerville are1. 5 ac on OFFICE BLDG. 2 Br. '2 ba, cptd, rlrp~. forTed 3 BR. 1 1 Ba ., ga :age For a small price Stt these 3377 VIII lido 67J.7300 prlv. Jake. Dffd rertric· Net lncome ~,5()(1 Air hrat, Garb-d1sp. blt.1 n~. REALTOR ."48-6966 • bdrm. N ., 2 frpJ(". tion, bridal trails, sw1a« SiI!,Jle tenant "AAA"' 645..01 1 T lrplc, pa !io. garagf>, \\"Jl.!l'r \\'ATERFROl\l :t BR. 4 Ba . rownhouset: e have a l•guna Niguel l'Olld!I", piped water, Oaka 4' Price WO,OOO •n w. t ttti, CMt• w... turn. Adult1 only, no pet~. home. nf'"" IY rprle r., on san· e 1el tion of this mo· BY Ownrr • immac. 3 hr, apecla.cular" views. $15,000 Returns l O% on cuh lnv. RATE REAffi:-.'ABLF: r!~ hfosch . Sl.001 !\1onth ai.!. from l30,950 to w/terms. Owner. 642-1968 $115 _ Incl ut!I _ Nice 1 Br. Aero~,; fmm Country Cluh Rill Grundy Rltr. 64.24620 "'°'"""' tod 21,-i b1, fam rm, !dry rm, W. R, DUBOIS INC. nri M D p 5'la .,~,..,,, ·-:: ay. irplc, Ir deck, $.ll.000. * Choice multiple mned * MS..TI66 * Wllk to 1totts. MOVll! In 10. · f'.~a r. * h. · · "'""'''" BEST Ne~·port !f)cation, 3 i . -~ red h'111 I ·-·-..... ....,338_________ Onn1e Col.Lilly acttta;e LIDO ISLE-32D Nord. 6 day. 3 BR. 134 BA Condomln1um. RR. den, riinini::. inrl la wn Miulon Viejo llania llta(flJ beach apta. rum. Gu. 80' Blue Baecon * '4.S..0111 Bit-in range • 0 vf> n. ma1nt. S•l2::i. Call 646-4414 64~ "=" beach. Leasr:hold yr. 2014. Bachelor pad w/ys.rd S60 d~shwasher /., g 3 r b a i:: e Newport Heights REALTY SEU. or LEASE .....,.,.,,_, Askin&' Sl40,tl00. Consider Bach pad v.•/mald ~r S80 d1spo•al. Largr ma -~ If' r1--;..... __ .;.... __ _ Un.iv. Pal1t Center. Irvine Deane home 3 br, lge lam 200 Acrrs. ocean v I e w , trade. 642-4097, 548-2211 ext AL.A Rental~ e 645--3900 b r: d r oom ~/cnnnectlng 2 BR , dlb gar, frnet'd yard . rm. fully crpt/drp. lge 7-milr:s from ocean. Very 228 I ===--~~~~-=-I ba !h. 1 BR has h1rgr $200 p!'r mon!h. ( 21 3 J Call Anytime 833.082(1 pe.tio; Sli,900, w/conalder hilly. $700 per aett. 10% STEIPS lo bch 2 Br. 2 Ba, b1lrony, fully c 8 r P,. I e d , 4~9-987:> 1 P\1 'tll fi PM 2nd TD n.·-r· "'~"U68 d•. ,~,. ,·.,.AL"' REALTY lots for Sal• 170 chldrn or ingls, SlfiO w/utU. dra.""d S22j, AvAil. April U . . p k . v ... , .... OJ<r" • " .-" ....... ~ Blue Beecon * 645-0111 l. 549-2625 ~1vers1ty ar Mes11 Verde 714-7'26·1188 uk for Alan. 1--------- Bu1ines1 Pro--rty 154 FORECLOSURE BUDGET SAVER 1 Br. han· 3 Bf'droom,? bi th .Executivr 4 BR. & fam!!v rm .... S3.15 La Salle Model. 4 BR, family, PACESETTER ,.-dy to bch. Utll pd S95. ho~. Bit-in~. d1shwa!htr, · . 3 bA , 2 110,....,, price reduced 3 BR. 2 ba. Hravy 1h11.ke 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Al.A Rent.11.t.s • 64~3!KX> tiisposal. lirtplll cl' p11.1!0 3 TRR.tl. leRm . krm. & din. r~ ., -• E . h •· I OG KENNEL 2~ acre hor1t ranch repo1· ~~-~-~---1 N B k & ,· . ur e nc ,,,,, ,,, .. s.-'i S5000. Be.st buy! '"'""' llJOY t e Nve Y 1um· D Hued frnm formtr aero-Balbo• Island r. a rr 81':'1e\\.. 3 BR .. & din. rm ....... $.125 BRASHEAR REAL TY mer brer:ze!I". Low priC'«I Establi.llhed oommucial ken· 1pace employr:e now avail----------1 Nnr1h Co~ia Mf"~a . $24.i mo. 4 BR 21 b h $.US 847-3507 Eve1: 833-205.l for this fine area a t $37,500. nel 011 l .1!1 acn:i. Include' able a t devek>peri con. 2 BR. turn. house. Garagf'. \Vatrr pd_ 2 yr lE"aM-11.v111I. ·• .i at s ....... . CORBIN $250 Yearly. Refs f., !"r. depos11 n>· L11gun1 Batch • laf'le, modern 3 Bedroom SAVE $3000 REALTOR 67~3331 quired. 54.'>-ff>09 Cor 11pp"t. home plus AmaUer l Bed· * OC!:AN VIEW VlLLA * room gueet or employee on these h.bulou.a, oak itud· Huntington Be1d1 AVAIL -4/L 4 br, 1 ba. compl New, ok1e world des.ian: 2 MARTIN ho ., 1 tillty ... crptrt & drpd. <l~hwshr. . use a..... severa u drd, ranch site 1pre ..... 1. SHARE my home. Mah.Ire rt'ncrd vllrrl. Sto\'I! if Of'f'd· BR. den I: rec. rm. Din. buUdinp. Exi1ting set.up LocAtl!:d in the booming lady or couple. Room tree f'd . \~! ·;., 111~1 mo .._ 5100 :=: 7-h~':~. w/~ _R,.E_A_L_T70_,R,_S-~644. __ 7_66_2 could be modified for vrret· South Coa1t area nrar San for pt timr Ille h&kpng. 1 M"curitY fet> 32.'t "46-9390 Newport Beech inary clinic or incorpora te J uan Capistrano. H i l h rhlld ok. M6-40S3 • · ' · · Ml pri~. Lov.·er dn. pe.ymt. ---------·I II. pr! slol'f!. $130,0CXI. For above lhe amor, prlvAle ~~~------2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpt1, i.,1 \.Ve.stern_ Biink Bid& OK. TERRIFIC TRIPLEX further information. pleAse road And locked gate gu1 r. Lido Isla drps, srovr, refr1g, Quir1 UnJvrrsity Park ~tJSSJON REALTY 494--0731 17~2 .... Cor11I Piece call R.E. Knox with M ttt the natural beauty ot TO sublet 2 BR 2 BA furn tropic11.l 5~11in1: fnr Adults Days 83)..0101 Nights • BR .._ den .l solarium, Channing, xJnt cond. 2 BR'i Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. this formrr Spanish GrAOI on nice Lido' Stttet. 2 only. 1 blk to shops. SJ60.f~'!'. !'!'l!!"'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I 3 bi . l/J •Cft view Jor. 541.26ZJ. Eve1/wknds 5311.94J..<; aurround~ by beau!itul months as 1 ub.1 e n an I , 6464-4.10. Ut-;JQUE To\i·nhousP 3 br. ~&qorf~~iri· Call :~::.~~~~;:'~s.Pri~: Qevela.nd National Fore1t. Landlord approval will f'X· L'RG 2 BR IP.' gar. No ,;ml. ~e~~i·s lrg ~~ r~. l~r ~~· Frvlc. Choice atta. AMul.I C•metery A11 utili tie1 available, trnd 1l monthl. S375 . ctiildren or ~t.s. Sn11 yd. 0 · ~~~: •• '1:.4~·7321 J. 3 UNITS nr beaeh, 1hop&, lot1/Crypt1 156 615-8246 \\'ater furn"rl. $150. 961!.gz-.,,1 •1nrr . , ,11.1. -virlP.", furn. 10?0 down or Income S5.l40. Price $.f2,500. ,..,RICED FROM S!l.930 .,_,., ~ 2'6Zi8 trade. ~9•500_ 494--t925 F•rel Welk•r Realtor l·H-ARBO....,_,R-._R<-...ot-M-,mor--ial LOW DOWN·EASY T'ER.r.fS Newport Be•ch nr . ....,. ·I_ ' • S11nt11. 3 BR. 2 baths ...... ,. $300 '"7414 or 54• uo• ---------1 Ana Avf'. ln<fr hoUst> C. 3 BR 21l balh I'~ For rut rewita •. Call ''The -•--Park. Co1ta Men, plot 6U 2 Br turnl!1hed houae !or ·· ..., ~ · · .. · ·• · "'1l' Hot I.Jne" .o.tJ,y Pilot PANORAMIC VIEW !l"Plcts A·B, Sunwt Lawn, Circunutances force the Im· ~nt No peta BEAUTIFUL 1'1F.SA DEL :t BR. 2 he f11n1. rm ... S.Wl Cl··""ed ,J • •. • .,. __ 1 • S40(]. (213) 322-0l!ll9 •ft 4 pm. mediate dl1positlon of the&f: •6......, ..... .:....._ 0 l\IAR, ~ Brdrm, 2 b11.1)'1. J BR. 2 ba. hon1r ...... $325 ........ .,. Jetty "" main c,,..,,ne · ,) few choice parcels whole I ~~-·""~~~~~·~-"--'~=! nt'I• cArP'll 11vail at S24j VILLAGE II 'll 0 b ,. !fl I' I !ti. - - -,..lq.P11liur "SINCE 1946" BR., 4 bl!. hom~ wl'formal Commerc1al formr:r OWMn LOSS ii your Houses Unfurn. 305 pt>r mo. on l~AAr. C1Jl a gen~ iii d h•11 d in. rm .• ...-iudy:--, f'rpl cs. Pro-rty 15t G c ~ f "0 ,,,, re I "· 'N-·~ _... ,.-AlN!! all or 11..,1, or G I .,...,...... ~ ; w•I r.>11r. .....,.,, 1-..uecor.,___________ •nora '· complete details and mtor · On 1andy beach. Sl69,~. COA'S'T Hwy • 2nd, So. IA· =,.,..--,,----..,....12. Br. Dupli>x, Garagr. ~n ' 2001. Baytlde Dr. By aPl)'I. 1\11)8, Pr'I~ cor-nu. 50lc50 on·J.lte photos. Buy d!N!l't POOL • 2 Br, 2 Sa. pets. Adult~. $1 ~4/mo 773 RrALTY e©~lA-~r;~s· I I The Punle with the Bui/t.fn ChucHe & ~·':l.~m"' r r r r I' r I' 1 e ~"=~llTTll$ 10 I I I I I I I I SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 Biii Grundy, R•altor 2 sty bldr, $82.SX>. fr?m the Mvrloper: cptl/drpi, bltn~. kidi A \V. \Vil.son. S4R-2802. I Un1\ P11rk. Ct>ntrr, fr.1ine 833 Dover Dr .• N.B. 642.~ florenc• mccu• rltr. RANCHO CAPISTRANO :,'~s·i1~1 1 64I ~-1120 ~!O. 2 BR homr . Ir& C•ll Anyrim~ ll.' .. 1·M20 &12.-ll""'time 2172 Du~ D · Rm II ....,., e n 5 """""" !iv rm. '2 Chlldrtn !lm!t. 'T.:::':~T"""-----f BALBOA COVES ''"" 'Y runt nve, Sl~ • Newl y dee, 2 Br. dbl 1(111 \V11ll aN> Mf>..'26.~4 Westcllff WATERFRONT Condominiums Newport Btach. Cal. 93964 :cc-:ccc-,------ Tl'andtnrd • MIU! aell! for 111• 160 &3l-32l3 .fi· 18:. for kk1.*s :cio1·11 2 BR. HnuSf', "'lits. drps, PARK-l.1k, ~, 111 n t nr Prime Joe. 3 BR. l ba. &inala R••I !1tat1 W•ntH 114 ue Cl>n 1 or 2 small C'~ilrtrt'n. 110 \lleatrllfl 'htlr 1:. Alfr1e 2 story. Newcy dll!cor. Fenced EXECUTIVE c.ondominiwn MOVE In Today -2 Br. Jl('t~. Gar11g~ Sl5.:1, 646--'2719 Br. fl'f'.~!-;lv PAin!~rf fltlP.' yd. 30 ft. tio.t &lip. t75,500 ~lfMe~ur!:~rd~. Nsr!'!!. ~ ~~.v!c~:. ~k!.·. 2 to CID stv/r!f, kids/pets. S150 LEASE 4 br/2 ba, lg fncd Ahai:; rr1. I"''" "ll!(n.' (!Ule t Biii Grundy, Rteltor •J .., ALA Renta.11 • 645-3900 yrd. Chldrn OK adul1~. no II"''· Rrf~ r<>q'd. 333 Dover Dr .. N.B. 642-4620 ~:~ ~·!1b·1 n ~~,:~~ Realonom!c1 67~700 Landlord ... Owner1 * * 64S.~1.l4 * * s2-i01;:; in1•l1b .r11rdf-Mr • CliAR.MlNG, ntuly new 3 Kitchen It Bath. Spac~ \re will refer tenants to you HOUSE in court, 2 Br. cprt1. •~tr -mii bdrm. 2 balh1 & tamily d ining Ar l!vina; mom. Tl'• ._ ______ jll •I FREE ol charff', •• ~!any C'lrp1, pa rlo. m \V. ll th St Houaes Fcu=rn".-o-r---·I rm. Laree kitchen \\'/f'lect. Yciurs for the priC'f: $35,SOO fnineW . de1;in.hlt tenants on our No. A, C111. S4g...23J!I Unfurn. 310 hltna. Lovt!ly nflw carptt1. win 1tll fumi1hed, ~ a.I wiltlf\A' list. D11n• Point l;--:::--------1 Stonll! t11)1c. 3 Garqt1, f'ltc 302• Ouh H<IUM: Ck'cle, ALA Ren1al11 e 64~3900 San Clemente door. Sff fh1I ~fort you :M0-8'199 fOr 11ppt Art Atfalr. 8u1fn"s 3 80"'' F·-n.. -·-SPANISH 0«1nfn,nt VIiia, ON THE: B" ~. b S39 !{JO """·· ~ rm., ,,... .. IJ>'.r eeeludl'rl * r o u n d I r1A1...n + tn-G~Moi REALTY 646-2414 EXECUTJVE Opportunity 200 like yard. ca.ta Mna. Kida YachtmAn·i pirtd~r. s4;n rrt>tflbl, vi'"" !"'ri1·11 ie com. CONDOMINIUM WR.ECKl-~-N-G-y&n1-'--. -x1-.,.-loc-,-. OK, brk., S200 a munth. NO ~99-2128 11~•n1il\ Pia•k .. nit two~ch _ OCEANFRONT In M:tn. Vtrdt.. N•xt ro Goll F"EE. ~rm. '"'rru a !'ti"r ~ S afi Course. 2 1tory 3 81', '" tlon .. R.eaJOnablf'. Will •t ll 3 BURM + tamlb' fuJl 3 BOR.\t. 2 BA., IAm1ly nn. Cl~nlrl"lt' 4.",.1\1\ .~ f I DUPLEX tJ1 or p1rt. Cal16T~Tl85 dinlna: ~ bullt-U:··brk "P'!· drp1. l.A\•f!lv \11"11. Arll•l • tlo'J•i,r f°l'lnr ·1,.\·~ls. Good Income. $18!).~ ~~~ !"'~:;·~:cl:. TIME FOR S39tl a tft.Oath. NO '•ra: $.24.i, a\1U A~r \ 4!lf1-~7J I ll"'firr'lt1r,,, 1•, bit.hi: BURR WHITE YOO!li for The prkt' w.~ ftUICK C •SH Nawport se.1m. Founte in Velley .::11.111·1··~ ti1n11lv ron m. rt Jto 47$.UlO 1 ,, A l -.c~;;:;;J.C.'-',.'7''.-.c-;:l:~'.:'.'.O~---'----l •11••1·11, "!r l'nlurnlfhf'rl t)f' te r \\'ti! sell turnithtd. See a1 THROUGH A rAMTLY ne~ed · 2 Br. ll SPACfOIJS. very cltan l br. fiuni-hiotl Lllnll ·lffOI ll"aw Bn Ne'IVpt'll'l Blvd., N.8 . 3014 Club Houte C\rcla, yd. Vaeanl. Avl now $125 2 b11., Zllc22' pAnf"li>d '~m nrih-111\\ri~r tr~\~llnR' 19~ CHARMING hJllaldt homt 540-3799 for 11.ppt. AM Adair. DAILY ,ILOT Al.A R.entAI! • 64~ rm. S2'.'Jl ~~~·lAAJ m" (',.)) !iMo ~"i.-:iTl~ ·· w/view, Newport lt ts, Tht "\'tllo~ Pa.re•" ot WANT .&. D DAtL\' PiLOT !or aetlon! Tum unu~d ·ii"tm, Into quic-~ .~ nr ~1'M..1 desstfteit ... ~ "' Call 6U--4811 .t: kw' cuh. a&ll s.ti..."'671 Call 842-:.m No1P.•' -., ..... Thursdl)', M&rcll 18, 1971 OAJ LV PILOT fl I~ t Aoorl-UI•-I~ I -....... I~ 11·-lltl, ...... -. --ll•l 1 ... ; ... ·-· I .. .: l!!l 1 · .... ,_, __ l~ I -"'-Htl I •t l liiiiiiiiiii~' --"'-_ .. _lit! P uplaxa• Unfvm. :UO •~ F i:.....:.....~--~--""''"' um. Corona del M•r Coit• Meta JU Apt. """"" ce.ta- Ml Apt. Unfvm. Ml Al(tt. Unlum. Huntington Beach San Ct.mom• NE\V 3 Br. 2 ba, cptt, dtpl, ' _gar. $300 lt1o., lse. Corbin-Martin Rltrs.64t-7662 * $13) UP * 111181 Children Welcome DEUJXE 2 BR., 2 Ba., GlANT 1 • 2 BEDROOM! VENDOME MEW llEW NEW tmow: .• Br, 3 Ba. Studio blllno • ...-............ GocJieoos. park-like telful&. lPt. +plex. Priv, patio. Adult.t only. $1!!0. 4!n--2259. Newport S..ch Apto., Apt ... Fwn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. ot Unfum. 370 Huntington Baach Huntington lloach ela Quin/a JJermo6a LOVELY 2 Br, ~ ba home, 1~hoic l!' B l uf f 5 loc. Crptg/drps, frplc, 2 patios. '.flvail end of April. 644-1623 o o...i ..,.... tor ..... IMMACUT..ATE APT!! TOWNH ..... USE VIII I co-a ""'"· ...... bl .... Lr< .,., Lnta Ana in1um security. Quid street. ADULT and U LUI llWJ area. C'lll-de-sac •t No pet.I. Adwl>, no pota. 2020 FAMIL:Jl' Section 11871 Be1J Orcie. BU-3677. Clsual estate ll9ing. Entar La Quinta ff.,.. Full•rnn Ave Cllatbor ., Cl-to thoppi"I, Pork 2217 -· neor WU... QUD.T.a.u'J * FRESH AIR VILLA MARSEILL!S mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree- Bay, th<n So. until 2 bll<s * -3 Bii'~ 2 b& e 2 BR. l BA TOWllHOUSE. • Unit A1Mt BRAND NEW lined walk ways w your apt So. ol N•WJ>O'I. Blvd. 642-* SW!m pool, puV.,... All "' l -· 1125-lllS ""°a''!''°'lntlDeo.,,ploltx x Walk l blU to Btaoh! SPACIOUS ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 8690 * Fcyl, ~/lnd17 lac'b • lluted pool.Mullo only 1 I • llt~ Beaut bla 3 BR .. l w/w I & 2 ·lcfrm. Apll. I BR. Uni. $150 -Furn. $180 Unbelfavably S..utlful 1145 Anaheim A... : ::: =, *' ohopplq ED-wlll llo a .,..,. crpu, drpo. bllN ""''' Adult Llvl"t 2 BR. Uni. $1IO -Fum. $210 I Ap•rlments !or ~ent I~ VAL D' ISERE Garden Aptl. COSTA MESA ~ are. Deocn.ttns this k>wJ)t, nfrl&. S22S. No pell. ~int Pum. i. Unfurn. 3 Spac. fir. plans, deco:. furnishings: live Aduli> -no pats. Flowors n-i~-p 1 1 ORWJIS lllTS. ...-.., wlll llo • ;,,. I Ma.'1. FtM Rant Dish-. O>lor roon11nat. within romantic selling w/fun or privacy. 'w~~~re,.~. .stream., Rm' --tin nsu • N' 1 • Sptc:W cUlmt ll*Cf ASK About OW' dl.acount plu! ed appUancn . plulh sha.&: Terraced pool, prl. sunken gas BBQ'• w/ atcil&U, ., poo Rtt. • 2 BR. -ia .... ._ m e LocS 1V11'1 w/ Jc •tor 2 BR. crpta, drpg. bltns, oar· carpet • cbolce ot 2 cok1r uld d "-~--d •· F Sauna, Sgla 1·2 Bdnn, Fum-E Ji.,.y"W'tni;""'';:''te 1 ADtJt.TS ONLY • Bm c111 • LDd.ry • PaUoe port. S140. .chemea • 2 bathl • itall ::fn. e seai.wg compl. w,.\4,l.Lla a u oun· Apt1. Fum. ~~-from ~ IT: $i?51mo.' Yrl,y $215/.mo. W: 2 Al BR. Avail. Privat. pa-• DW/dlspl • HQse Pl itve 725 Utica 536-Ulil lhawen • m1mnd ward· * Ccilor co-ord. kit w/ indirect lighting. """"'• oultt No. C SB-15%1 or tlo. pool • tndlv. J&-, i.e. • -""""-Nr Hunil"tton Harbour robe doors lndu.et ll<l>t * D I • Pl h h t Ct.YSTOM FURNITURE RENTAL. Se(' ad cla.ss 810 * call 54~81 * f\'E\V LRG DELUXE APTS 541-mt (Nr. Oranae Co. Airport; TIU-e n.ep 2 mlar lbq Id cben tire~ • uxe r•n9e • ovens * us 1 •9 ctp 9· B11ch-furn , , ... $139.50 C-a ,_t u., ttn at lTtb St: nr. WatclitO. CU1111', ~ Triplex -quiet area. Lr& l ::. ln .b t pri • 1 Je ced * Bonu1 stor1ge •P.•ce * Cov. c•rport 1 BR f $l49 SO ......... --GM A WATEJ\ PAID Br • $140, 3 BR · SW. Peta ,,.· pluge h •-~~~ 1° * Sculptured marbl• pullln1n & til• b1ths -urn · · · · · • •1.u ok. 1n4J 846-0071.. pa • UJ ......-p ng • * Ele9•nt recreation room. 2 =~ AVA,J,!~~50 ~~~::;:., Ma~::;,,~':." cM.,... 2 BR. I ba. dlabwHhor, .....,. Bu-B.Q's . larJo "'°" FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS .. a.a..~ (Neer ..... ~' ............. I."""· ....... ~l'Oi" to. "ir\~tot St. Blk from Huntington Center. San Diego t"URNISHED Bachelor apt 1760 Pomona 642-2015 ..,.,(~!.. MARCH See Jdar, Ttd Woodhtad :"::f ~:~~:J:~ (~ML N, ot So. Coast Plua) Frwy .. ,Goldenwest Colle2e. Corona del Mer for man only, ulit paid. iiiiiiOiiOii0ii0iiOiiOiiOii0 . __ .;.;;--.. MA IOH only. Sill> util ~. 17676 S.nta An• San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. OD q,;,1. 1 blk !rom all shop•. GARDEN LIVING ON TEN AC!llES Mov .. ln loftus Cameron, """'"· PHONE: 5S7-1200 Beach. 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt I<> • • • Call 6-14-7701 for appl to Quiet, attrac, pleasant. Util 11: 2 BR. Furn.. Unftan. 1 mo's Free Rent AVAIL Now-2 Br. all xtru. LaOu1nta Hermosa 7 14: 847-5-44 1 see paid. lieated Pool. Fire .. 1 .......... / ~. patfol. _...... .,.. · •u ~:n allowance Pool. Kid• ()k, $139 • $1~-• LRG Bachelor, lurn util I Br $140. 2 Br $175 Pools Tennie O>ntnn Btrat. .-··-·..,.... pd 2 blk B' C 1 Adul ... -· 2p~~ ~REDM ~. ""'~~; TOWN HOUSE rum avail. 17-431 A. I: B · 5 ig orona. ts, nopeta, 900SeaL&ne,CdJ4~ ~&.c.u& ~ ~~ Keelson Ln. 968 -7510, Adlt. $14-1. yrly. 642-8520 7-IO \V. 18ttt St., C.M. (MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) 6 cozy FAMILY UNJTS. 847-4856 SINGLE STORY •· LRG Bachelor, furn util '"""'"~!!!!!!!'!'!!!!!""'""" CONV. LOCATION', VILLA J217 llu11or, near WUtoa BEACHBLUFF Apti South Sea Atmosphere prl. 2 bl"-' me Corooa. 1 * SUS CASrf AS * COROLIDO.APTS * 1llESA APTS, 719 w. wu.o.. 2 BR. 11> BA snm10 NEW 2 BR. 2 BA. dishwash-2 BR. • 2 BATII Adil. Sl20. Yrly. ~2-8520 Lrg: nicely turn Bachelor & 2 Br. ltudlioe It atrfft Ievela. '45-1251. 'JOWNHOtJSE. $1.e/mo. ers, pool, patio. 8231 Dill. Carpets le drps l Br furnished. Including 1 Br. i;-.·-•·hed models $185 6 up, hntbouMI S2Z. e Heated _,.i_Ad .. i..... ..... 1.. • ..... _... 847 -7 Air CorxliUoned ~-.......... * •tVI UP* -..... -~ ~·' or -.;JON Pri,.-Pa~ utilities, $135. O""n daily. Dshwhr. frJil. dbl carport. _,., e No pah ,., to -~•--•• -67>2-440, Broker 'illo Nev.'POrt Blvd, CM Poot 6~78 GIANT 1 It 2 BEDROOM! ·a =gz 2 Br apt-w/w, drpl, bltn<1, HEATED POOL M -,,'~C:..:::;!':::.:,=:..:.::,::;.;..,.1 ,;;;;;,.-;::::::-:w.:-:::;;--:;:;:-I Gorreoos. park..11.R wtttrc. diapogal, laundry space. No Plmty ot lawn Costa 11• * Studio Apt $110 FOR ''""· .i.1x. all elt<. °""" ..,.... "" max· * STUDIO APT. * .. ~. 962-8578 tor inlO. ~ 6 St<n., --------1 ii' ... w w/a vlow 2 BR. lmum ••curit7. _,, ... l . e 2 BEDROOM WALK TO llEAC lllDDEI< VlLLAGE $!SS.SHARP 2 BR. * 1 Bedroom $130 1 BA •••. All blt·U. md Adulb. no ..... 2020 • 1% BATHS Hll d. h··~-dbl Adib LOVELY NEW 1 It t BR'1. GARDEN APTS. Heatl'd pool. Adults, no Pf'IS MAPLE ST., NEAR lSTH : w:'!•......., · pr. Fullerton Ave CHQ'bor to e ADULTS ONLY Crpta drps dsbwuMl'3. 2;JOO South Sa.It& fteen ok). Ahlo 2 Br. unfurn 645-0349 ° y . .,,~.. Bay0 then So. mitil 2 blka e H£ATED POOL 709 Palm'• 847-39;:,, Santa Ana w 546-1525 w/refrig. Eastside Sl40. 1---~~-~---Colt• Mt1a So. of Newpcrt Blvd.) llOI Mlmion Apt. D, CM 6n-9S20 LIKE NE\V! F r eshly ;;;;;;;;;;:;;;i;;;;;a;;;;;;;;;ll~..,._~~~-.,-,~---1~51Q.~-~----_!SIQ.~1"'9~ MODERN 2 Br. Duplex .. 1!1-!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!1!!!!!!! ....... 1~~..c'----~~-c I painted. Eastside: 2 BR Ir. np1. bltna, ts drpe ll LGE nicely furn 1 BR. apt, Din rm. $lfi0. o:nn~ at P•rk·Llk1 SurrouedM\g Levetv SfMnlth Dear NEW, A.Tl'RACTIVE 2 hr well-~aintained~ ~~ Aph., $135. Clos~ garage. No $200. 192 Tulip Lane. Call QUIET. DELUXE ~ltOM $1U ~ed dupkx. Frpk, ok. $135/mo. 80-5817 Fum. or Unfum. 370 Pf'lll, no men. Inquire 1920 Pete 557-9187, 842-4423 1-2 Ir. l BR APTS Gu and Water includtd crpbi, dlti9. bet.mtd ceil· ,::!:::.!::::=:::_,::::::=:.: __ .I~.;.;..;.;-'.-____ _ "ff' \Vallnce or 838--0038 Prv patK>I * Htd Pools I & 2 lldreomi ingll, bltrE, paOo, AOO!ta 2 BR apt, 3 blks from ocean. General 2 BR crpt'd, pt drp'd, water onl No-· ~J-.. 9950 $165 mo. Avail Mu. 21'.lth.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:; LGE 1 BR $120, Bach $105, fum'd. No sm1. chlldren or Nr ahOp'a: * Adultll only Built-ins e Air Colld y. ,... .............. ,. ... · · '11 urn pa;d. av,,:i;. 113· ~0 ~· "•RTINIQUEAPTS. <:arpem • Drapa• 2JSISontaAnoAv<,m-03!6 ~5.16-=':.:.n:.:.0·'------1 • j.1&-2107 • pets. :i. ;;IQ0·;7~ ()r Ml"\ ,,. __ ,_.......... ......... D • 1 I Newport &..ch 546-6051. ·a;27 Sllilta Ana 17TI Santa Ana Ave., CM ~-.--u •--.ea olM re " Costa Mesa Ave. Inq'r house C. M A ll3 ,,.,,, "'"'•" Pool I: Recrtation Jtoon'l I-"==~=-:::-----= --:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:=11 BR --•-~00 00 l-'-'-''f;_$l:i';:;'---:-I ;;;;""~·~';;,';;,I!!!!~~-~-;; 160 W Wll 642-7171 PECTACULAR OCtaMml " ~w• •••••••• •-· 1.;;;;;;;:;;;;:;.;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;; ** $135 ** • '°" vie•, 2 BR, 2 ba., 1tove, MARINER SQUARE 1 BR film ••••••••••• $149.50 Lovely 1 BR, lrg & tutetully LRG dlx apll, '1t0 2 Br, CORSICAN l'l!frtf, cptl A drp8. $22.S. APARTMENTS Bacbl!Ion Fumiaherl furn. Encl yard. Lnd1cpd. $160 3 Br, 2 Ba. Htd Pool. N£W 1-2-l Bdrm. All bltna, 137-.5370 Announces the availability of from $135 Close to OCC. 1004 El Newly dee. Play yd, Cptd. ahq: crpta, dtp«, cloeed pr-I lkM 2 A: 3 BR units for adulta 2 BR apts $175 mo. Camino. M&-5704 Drp.. Bltns. Patio. Child. a&"e•, frplc in l Br. JAi mi. alt dealrine to live amidat beau. mo.Imo. OK ok. E. So. C.out PWa. Ott Sun-ty by the tea in the pres-e POOL CAN1 BE BEAT PALM MESA APTS. * * * * El Puerto · Mesa Apts * • • * I Bedroom Apts. Apt1., Furn. or Unlurn. Apt1., 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Newport Beach Newport Be•ch FROM $135* Olympic sit.• poo~Billi1rdi-S1un•s-T•nnis pro shop-Color TV loung..--H•alth Club1-- lndoor golf driving r1n9...,_P•rfy Room--Full tim• Activiti•1 Director. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Singles, I & 2 Bedrooms, furnished or unfurnJshed. REASONABLE RENT': Singles from $135. 1 Bedrooms from $145. 2 Bedrooms from $200. Low move in char ges. No lease req'd. Models Open Daily 10 am to I pm. SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN Apartment& !Just for single people) Irvine &. 16th 714: 64S.0Sl0 Apartments (resort Uvi ng for single & married adultsl 16th btwn Irvine & Dover 714: 642·8170 •Rent subject to location DBL. wide mobile home. $130 &: up incl. utililiea. Also Comp. fum'd. Mat u re furn, Pool & Recreation adults. Until Oct. 1 a t . il..rea. Quiet Environment. 1 ,,"'"--'-'..,36=-:,...,------ 0lf street parking. No Chll-Dan• Point 19911 Maple Ave. 64U344 flower at Rosa. Mo-al Cl NEWPORT llACH ~ Westclltt area of e SAUNA Apts., Apts., m.4 Collrge Ave. 64&--0621 W, Stevens. 562321 VIII• Oto1necla Alm. Newpott Beach. •.JACUZZI Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 WU..SON GAllDEN APTS. * $170 * Foor bedl-. wlO. b.Jeoo. FROM $230 00 Meoa Dr. Senta Ana ----~----------- 2 BR Unfum. Nt1.1ly dee. 3 Br l% Ra. patio blt-ina, i«t above A: )lelaw. Gradoat For lnformation phont Mr. $_~a:.:nt;;a;;..;A;;n;;a.....; ___ .....;S:.:a;;nt;;•;;...;.An;:,:;:.a _____ 1 New cpta/drps. Sp a c CZ11~ dr]lrs. AU about CIUI' llvirlc A .met erounc.tmc Robert M. Buckley. Mana&· Costa Mesa SINGLE, TV, pool, peb ok. grounda. Adl~ '; ~ dilcount plan. ISo Cent.er Sot family with ehD4ml. er, at cnt> _&0252 or wri!r BAY MEADOW APTS 19,j9...1961 htaple Ave. $25 &: up. wkly. Dana Sl40 I mo. (JUJJ St W-3340 Neu Conma de1 Mar HJ&h to The Ottice o1 the Man-• Costa hfesa hlarina Inn, 34111 Coo.st Way E. (H&rbor, turn W. ' ScbooL J'trtp2aee wet bU' I: aier )fariner Square: Aptl ,.,...,~ .... ~~"l'~'!!"'!! I 1-l~y. on Wllaonl. • QUI!:T. Adulta. 2 BR. built in ldtd»n ~ llH' Ir.vine Ave NB C.al' Beam ceilings, panellnr. priv. I' e $lO WEEK & UP No petl. Drpl, crpt1, l33 .ilaoos WAY '44-29Sl 92664. ' . • paUos, recttatlon 1acilitle1. Huntlngtvn Beach * BRAND NEW * -· ht•.tod Apool. $l3l. ~'~" n.-~ .0 ~ AU Aduti,, no pel.!. l BR. or STUDIOS turn wl 7J95 Pacltic CM ........... -. _,._. ""'" comp!. kitchen 11.ll elec.). BEAtmFUL FURN. APTS. LA COSTA API'S 1 A: 2 BIL 548-6S7I fl,~· . llana&!QC iont 5llaz:l PARK NEWPORT~ frtt * Bachelor Apt $l~O * Free linens, heated pool, air-$140-Sl.65. Quiet, priv, patio, BU:na awtmmhic J,ooi I: pr-Cll' e NIW DILUXI • llVE overlka; the water. 7 * 2 BR. b'orn $1~ * · ..... ....,, •-"d I 2 wudrobes '-le ..:1-.-1.... 'All utll pd. "~ to..,_ LRG. l Br, 2 Ba. New lbq poolA:, 7 tenni1 eta $750,000 COnu, •• "'mai serv ce ..__, __ ~ .... .,., ........ ;::_~ aae. ........ ...,,,,, C1'Jlt Ntns. CarportS8Jl,2BA.Apttarleue.lncl Bach. l or l Br. AL9o 238'TW.BaySt.(btwnHarbor avail. rm, 11JU11eu iep. KU'· .i-UU&o mo Adult.I no peta. -.......... .,., ••-Sa una. Rec rm. ~~"A. -•·'CM ,...,., ...,,.. Sl69/mo. Newly dee. Nr. ltl&C. _ .... a • ..... rm •ty Townhou1es. Elec. kit., • Newport Blvd. %. nU N. Daily &. Monthly rates ~ voe...,., ~;uuo OCC u 7 ~" • dbl ..,... auk> ~. •• 17301 Keel.son Ln. (1 blk W, ' ' . --........ ., 1 ..,.,... pr. pat or bU 1ubtm parkg of uth SI). 2060 Newport Blvd., at 21st ope ·-" ~· 6 "·-aid CA • -i • 642-261.l • of Beach Blvd. on Slater). 2 Br. Unfum Apt. Sto:ve • e Newly Decetltecl ner ava.u. '""' ....... opt m ser, eyt., drp.c. LL 64 .......... , l ~B!..Am~o~,;~'"~'~',;,•~>~l:_:/~~-~-I i*B8~42--;784;;;'t·;;:-;;;;:o-;;;;;;;;; I rdrlr incl'd. G•,..•e. Pool Quiet 1 I: 2 BR'a. Gar A area. Just N, of Fashion Isl ~t NASSAU PALMS ............ --. ,._, .. ~.• • 05 • Jam~e &: San JoaqU1n 1 BDR!l1. Adlh;, no pets. l BR, patio, pool, natural All util pd. Adlt!I only. no pool. .... .. ts. clfl)s. .rw ... ls ~ AmJp Way, NB Hill~ Rd, 644-lOOO tor leas-Summertime ntar the beach. $lZ5 mo. incl. util. Nr beam ceilings. Nr hospital. pets. Mrr. No. 9, 3&3 W. only, no peta., 64i.a:>c2 MaMctd by inc in.lo. 1 &. 2 Br. apt1, Hld pool. !hop'g. :J32 Center S t Ava!I April L $165 util pd. Wilton St. *· LRG 1 BR. apt All MW WILLIAM WALTERS ro. ,.., ~r1:' Shiglrs can .-bare. $140 to •• , ~23 17676 Cameron, 842--5192. EDROOM _. .. A.-tile ~ -...1... SEA.......u.r Manor Apt.Ii, 2 $100. ~ 3 B -•-· -~· ~·· TOWNHOUSE dtlxe 2 Be, Be, opU, drpo, bllnl. pool, 177 E l'lnd St CM S30 WK • 1 per, ...,., kit DELUXE l &: 2 br • \Valk l Vi bath, patio, SUn deck, =-~ ~C.M~ 21Ai Ba. bltns, Jr,!, patio, priv patio, studk> type, 11,-ii &C2-Jl66 . . S4l-95fi6 $35. Maid ser, li~n'.'I'., TV to beachi2 Adults. $135 6 dbl .• garage, fittpl.ace, ~ enc pr. Quiet. 6T>503.3 Ba. Child ok. 5'8-2682 1525;i;_..,c. ______ _ & tele. Sealark ~totel. 2301 up. 220 th SI, 219 15th decon.ted. 657 Plumrr, Apt 2 BR. 2 BA. trplc. Up.fain. 2 BR. 2 BL .Din. rm. fpl. Placentta. Ask about our 2 BEDROOM Npt Blvrl. 646-7445 St. C, 4-7 PM weekdaya, 9 JuVJ.. New cpt, drps, llodul.U:, no l-Ltwl. Vl.rw. $2!IO Mo. dilcount. Bright " cbtery kitchen. 1 BR. Trailer $lOO + ulil. * Bach apt, comp! kitch 5:30 PM 1''l'ekenda.. Rrtu-~2.rniEvn ~. Dt.yt Avail Mq 1. 144-ll33 Bkr FOURPLEX. 3 BR. 2 BA Spacioua rooms. Hrd pool. !\lature people only. Studio I: bath, 1 blk H.B. pier. enceir; required. ow, frplc, lmmed occupy'. Separate childrens area. apt, $90 incld's util. 646-1809 ~-Yrly. 1 adult. 6-12-8520 INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY * BEAt.mFUL l 4 2 :BR. Oanlen Greve n:zs. Adults. lnq. ruo A NASSAU PALMS From $150 Rft 4 pm. ~tOBILE home at beach, 2 ADULT UVJNG Contemporary Garden AptJ. EASTGATE AR.EA (Jean Patrice Rd. 542-4317 177 E. 22nd St., CM 1,~·"tC~E~L'ocY,..-r'°w--n-.,"h-.U.,.-::-2 ~8:;;RI Br. $160 mo pays all. Lg dlx 2 br 1% ba ••/aar Patios, frplc•. pool. ~2 BRJtnBAstud~ 60-lm. &n-3645 or 541-9566 up 5 1 a! rs bark a p I 536-7860 or ~7 .&: stor. P a rk· Ilk e at-'16-$1$>, Call 546-510 apt Patio, cr)ll. drlJI, dee 2 BR, vie>A' ot Back Bay. RING BROS. Annou nces \V/Aundeck. $160. ~,. garage. Laguna Beach moaphere. Fncd patio, CID, 2 BR. hrdwd. ftoots wa.W kltdl, lauDdly faclllt!.e1. Crpts, drp1, all elec. Pool, Apt.I. Now Available Adult!. &l6-6004. wtr pd. 646-tl.2) pd. $1M mo. um Wallace, W&llr to abopplrlc. Nr trwy. tennis. Secured b l da . MEDITERRANEAN 1.,-•-"D'°E"L"UX". :E...,.--1,--;8;-;;R,-0&' STUDIO, near beach &: 2437-D ~ A\"r. S155 (cor Hamiltan) $110 mo. 1*2 Ball9'y. 1279.50. 644--0~ eveg. VILLAGE shops, util. pd., nic e .1 ..... 7-liK~V•;'•'°.,',."'•S•L••iliil1ii55 n?I;";. .... ........ 2 "r. ,,.._. m~ 2 Bachelor apls. S35 ...,·kJy & Refe!'f'nces. $l05. 4~25 -~~ u .... v .. 1..:::...::;.=c_. _____ DELUXE 3 lit", ba. Water 2400 Harbor Blvd. up. Furn. incl utli. l\1onthly GARDEN LIVING drps, bltns. Adults. no pet.. Huntlnthn IHch \"iew, in blk to bell.Ch. Year· Costa ?t1e6a terms avail. 998 El Camino. Lido Isle 1 Ulil 180 RodM!attr. S40-8100. ,...._ ORO ·-s ly $285/mo . 67"">3126 eves. tTI<I 557·8020 Quiet, attrac, p euo.n!. .....u:..lo ror, 1.::"':::s.-0<.,:.:S~l-=~~~,..--' ./ BEAOI APTS. Bachelor paid. Heated Pool. 2 BR. 2 BR, 1% BA, cptl, drpt, 1234 Atlallta, 1--2 BR., pool, BEAUTIFUL PA.R.K NEW· * $50 move 1n allowance , $25 Per Week & Up $200. 1 BR. $225, $250. 320 tS165, Adulta, no pttll. 740 patio, no ptU:, 1175 mo incl private p.rqe Wuhua PORT I BR apt. tor au.tr Lovtly 1 A: 2 Br. pool, apt1. , BACHELOR .tr: 1 BR. Norcl. 642-f-097 or 548-2lll W. l!th St., a.t util. 3.!&-A Cabrillo. 54l--8I03 dryen. 53M031;0 52721 ' le&ie. Call 644-0901. From $12>. AdullA, no pets, dren, no pets. ftent.alt ·--·-"l'tlolj __ ,..,_, ntmmrn1JIOOfl,1....._C9llltlr., s-. Md thasmartast -sc-t·1 R1111.a11 I~ 'TV & maid serv avaU. .. xt 228 ,.,.,.,,..,...,.,..,..,,.,. .. SHARP Ip 1 BR. Cpt, Drpa. ISO iJiOVfu1 allow New 2 2 Blks from beacb-.l Br. 2 nr 1hopl, frwy & bch. . 450 Vic!orh1, C".M. Newport Beach 2 Bedroomll untumilhed apt. mtn1, quirt b1di. No J>ttl. Br from tiJs_ Cpta/drpl Ba Duplex. Patio. Dlh\\'br, 642-2181 or 675--0507 1----------1 Room1 400 QffiET, etudioG SUS. 1 Br wtth private patio, carpetJ. $130. stG-9722 bltnl, fncd patlol. J>U1 Sl35/mo, 835-0890 Mo~Frl ; e LOVELY, lrg 1 & 2 BR. LGE room, pvt beth & en-----·-----! $1.2:l. No chldm 11r pet~. Cl.ll'E Bay1n)nt Apt. Suitable & bltinll. Easll1M-O:>sta • 14 2 BR. Newly carpeted uta. ... ml. wknds 642-1837 Panel'a, patio, yrd, g~r/wtr trance. Mesa. Ve r d e , COLLEGE or working girl 213.~ Elden Ave, CM. Sf'e for single girl, \Wio likes Mesa $135. 6 4 2 · S 3 I 8, dra.pri, elee. kitckn. ) 2 BR. CloMd prqe Patio XTRA LARGE 2 Bi', 2 ba, pd. Inf.ant ok. 12192 ~~nrer. Employed penon. 549--3612 Balboa Isl, shr ktt &: TV higr Ap t 6. 1'\\·imming & boa t i n i', &t&-1287 ehUd ok. Ph. "6-8153. area. Chlldtm 4 mMu pet crpt.8/drpl, bltJl.'li, paUos, lf&rtx>; Blvd lo ~Le 1, E, .,.~;io.""-o,""'=-----~ ~36~~· $6.5/mo It up. 1 BR . $12S • 2 BR. $140 $150lm• "11 pd. 540.t202. HARBOR GREENS 2 BR 1 BA Cl'pts drpo ok. $1.,. m.m; •ncl '"· lllS. f>18.]708 on Edi-. 830-0959 e 115 PER wk "P w/ lcil. ==~~--~~1 i>ool. Blt.ns, crpb, drps. no I ~""'-,,..,50-24-,.,..,--.,,.--..--1 GARDEN A: S'I'UDIO APTS bltna~ anti ,U. 1 chi1d ok'. CONDO. 2 Br, l% ba, trplc, WFSI'CLIFF area l BR, 2 EXc:_ITING furn l BR apt • $25 week up Aptll. MOTEL ~~~rEyR ~~j hp~ivale ctrlldn'n, no pets. 325--J E. \V ILL sublet attr. tu m, &ch. ' 2, l BR'a. from $110. no pell. $145/mo. 6f6...34l2 patio pool adull& 1115. ba., frplc. bltns, adulta only. $133. Pvt de ck, pool, Crpll, 54~0.;;!1155=,.,..==..-,.,-,--. B k OCC 17\h Pl C •t "•o 2738 bachelor apt in fab Pk. ..,. ,,... ..... ~-~~"" • ot<JM _,. -.,.,,.. d""', bltm, "''alk to town. : F a i r v 1 e w I a er I · ·" · ,,..,,.. · Ne,,\'por1. App 5 min lo 2700 Petenon Wa7, ~· NEWLY decor 2 BR. cptl, .-tVft. ...-...... '11~ l4f' E. lSth, C.M. 548--91)49 SLEEPING ROOM. Mature area. 5-10-1998 2 Br. furn . '"'''" cpl, ne1o1ly ocean >A·alking distance to 5*-0370 drp1, bltna, l-::ar prap, $125 CLEAN 2 Br, Crpta, Newpert Halght1 evts btwn s &: 6 11>orking person, non-drinker, -Cal~l~ .. =....,.~-=~.~s.~ .. ~,--1 de<.'Clr. Ne~· Jurn. Pool. Gar , • ..,.<:h ·1,1 &M-l908 OWNHOUSE * ... u. f'1~190I ..i-.. bl-· -~ p<IL non.smoker. 646.fiOlO ~~~~~~~~~~I avail. 140/up. No children " * T ......... "'"'P• u... .., no 2 Br Uppfr. f'llllc, pr, 1 & 2 br tum A: unfum. ~~~~~~~~~ ""''" 540-5!76 BAYCLIFF MOTEL 2 BR, 1% BA. crpb, drpo. LRG-QUllToCLIAN uo ........... -"""°· laundry. Amlb. no $125 . $160. Pool·PU ttln• rm : ~ ' l BR. Heated Pool. No * LOW WEEKLY RATES* pa.Mtlolod. Ad~~·· ~ .. r:'·1 .... 1!4 E. $165. 2 BR.E ldl~ ~; o~.~!~ t Ir. .. Te IHch pets. $170 mo. 642-3781 Bahla Mar Aptl, 5'&--0492 I ~rlmtnts !Of"Rtril I~ I Ap•rlmtnls. f«Rtttt l =:a ...... , -A:..i • e Y ..,.,, ,,,_.. ivo or Adltl. 4 • .......... ........,.... CALL -..C ._._ .. n•-2 br, pool, g0 •, ·~ oq fl •-2 B•. 111 Ba, .. · -T pets. Crpts, drps. 126 :\tonte Kitchen.,••'!. ........... aerv1ce. &al 9S4" "''""' "'-c .. .._..,., ,. • Vista Ave., 0 , Heated Pool. . " NEWLY redecorated ltUIHo, DAILY PILOT lat action! crpt/drp1. Adulll, net petl. uU rm for "'h/dr, pa tio, TO\\'NHOUSE £.-side 2 Br, 64&-3X5 2 BR. l BA.. Ga.nlen ...... ~~ 2 BR, ~~ $1~ i:...,•~lnl Call MJ.aTl 6 Saw! $100. £42...8)ll, 642-8006e pr, cpt/dp. $165. ~ Aptt., Apts., 1 ~ Ba. Pool. No pet3. $175. BALBOA ea,y Club N.yt:ront Shaa: erpll, drpl, ._ .. w, .. , 4 lchooui, ""' _,..],ow AJA, Unf""'" l•S Apt. Unfum. 365 J BR $125 unfum: S145 furn. Purn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn . 370 t!lll 646-6610 terrace apt. 1450 sq ft, 2 i-tio, bN.m celUnp, frplc, * mIOIO 2 Br. NW c:pt. Families welcome. BI G _;,.;.;,.;.;,.;._c_...;.;_..;.;_..;..:.;.;;;...;;:.....;.~;,.;.;....;;_; · ab t b d"' gar. 2650 Elden. 537-4062 ""-.pool.l chlld~ S-o•--Sonta•--SUR APTS. 204 3-2049 NawportBoach N-portn·-ch N"EAT t Br w/gnr. $110 br, a, ~'C ar. sep in g aft 7 pm I: sun. $1.~mo. ...I"' * 646-0CI&;; •m ,.... --"'•llace St. Phone: 543-4llt ~~~==~:;:~======~·;;~~;;;;;-~~~==~ Back Bay al"t'a. 2811 Del rn1. F'urn or unf. 646-6230 APT 2 B l " ~lar. (213) 431-9568 1 BR near pier. Utllitiea GARDEN · r, .,... l BR, uMd brick trplc. wtw, Huntington Beach freC", $125 mo. Ba, Sf'tld)o New cpl.I I: bltM, beam ttil, patio, J140. SPAC. 1 Br. Cri>ts, drp1, drp~. fncd patio, ~) blk to l Adlt Yearly. "'4500 pool. nr shop&, Ulil JXL lSS' \09 23ni St. 714182S-llS.t 17th St. lhop'f . l&Olmo. ===c:--;,.-:,..--,,,,.-1 J\tonm\•ia Ave., CM, 548-0.138 BACHELOR apt. "'/garage. Adlta. %>.1 Cabrilk>. 63)...0l61, EASTSIDE 2 Br. bltna, I , Nr. bay. XJnt neighborhood.1 ..:1,:=;::c,::::,0.;;2:::,B-N~-~,.-' dshwhr, cr,ul, drps, •ncl E/SIDE I Br. w w crpt &. Call 673-718;, STUDT r . ew cp , nr. prtv paHo. ~2939 bltn1, sundeek, util pri, 1 -=====-,..-,.~-I drp11. Patio. Clo~ gar. l'iii Adil. $138. Yearly. 61~ * OCEANFRONT bachelor, Ba. Nr lhop'g. Adulti:. no $US mo. 1 br upper, frfth gar, partial kiL, $lll/mo. p<ta. $155. 66-3515 dpalnt, dbl alnk ~~e • $1:> per v.•eek u P 1apoMl Porch. •i.rv7'1 wf)dtchen!I, $25 per wttk Yrly. &12-M43 l Ir 2 BR. SlSO &: $1'0. · uo Apt.s, MOTEL, 548-97~ Newport Heights Incld& util. Adultl only, 2 Br Duplex, pr. Pltlo. BACH. Apt Priv. en!. Ir no ptfa. 2f1 Avocado, OI. &dl\I, 8S9 lttb Pl, C.M. $lDI LRG l Br. Duplex apt. New &t&-0919 mo. Yeat leue. 5U-6t1I bath. GnrR.ge 1n-ail. Cpts. I --•• d-"''--"·· W IV ... ,....., .,..., un:, '"""V 1 Br cony den condo-._!,. UtA pd. $70 n1n. 548-9811 decoratf'd. Matutt adulta LGE modem 2 Br, 2 Ba, 11o' pool • -· • ·~ "· "·J nl II' •. -cpt -•r ·--· Pl • • NC -.ll, car. $100 SINGLE. Sub-lei. ,,.,1.,., n y. or 1ng w om•D .,.... • "'" ... · AdllJ $160 60-DM Towen. For senior only. pref'd. No pf'ls. $135. Ye.rl.1. BllnA. Stona:e. S 11 ~·1 ,::;:,,;;.·~_,,· -"' ~..,..~-1 B n.. '"" 11"~ 16-1496 1 BR. Smt.11 child oil. From "2-9986. Y v,.'flt'r .,...,... "" 1 BR. Jurn. $150 incl ur1l, CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlts, 2 BR. l~ BA. •hl.rp. Opts, $125/mo. m W. lAth St., I • -Id •-. l2IJO oq. ft. Avallable CM. &4>-IJ15, &e-.21m. Pool ,' garal":e. d 1 s po Ra • no pets. '4 l. $135-$150. ....,. AduJlli, no pets, 6'12-2383 2421E.16th SI. NB. 646-mt now, SU6 mo. 545.-(1118. lf 'ENJOY pr'lvacy T Dtlwr. l TIME FOR Apt. Unfurn. US no""""'· ~ Br, "'""· ,.,,.,,, cpl/..,,, ll 8r afudh).;Pvt patio, acl pr, b&\e. tlM1IO Cj)UICK CASH Gonocal rar. 1% "'· ...... I -' LARGE 1 BR, bl ... w/w H A --------1 bltns. No. CM. $16'. Adull& crpU, ..... $115 mo. 114 D THROUG HOLIDAY PLAZA 51~0Cl. Camino, Illa C4M4l2 DAILY PILOT D>:LUXF. Stmdou• 1 Bit rurn Apl $1.\i Healed pool. LG 3 Br, 2 Ba, new epUI, 2 BR. Twnhee, l \; Be, Pf.tio, "WANT AD i\n1plt pt1.rkin11:. No children drs>t. no P"tA, children ok, 1 child ok. no pttl:I, $.150. •• 1~ Pn nr 1ehla. Sl&l/mo. 545-1245 l!Ma-A Mb1kMi. $0.-tSU 642°5678 · "" P"~. ~ mona. C\1 We'll help you 11111 "2.!18'11 For bl.It 1'ff.\Wtll NJo6ITJ Come and Relax •• " "Nert doot'' to South C:O..t Plau. Jacuul, swimming pool, built-in kitchtm, •utornatic ~plJances, a.r· pt11 ond d,.,,.., su BarllQs, ••rs• rec hall, pilYate patios. One bedroom -$1!1{2 lodr6om and ectta b•th -only $117 /Townho<ne-$17S. PARK PLAZA 3900 """" Floww • Sonia Ana • Alie for ld Hof!, Mo....,• (714) 54So3l14 r ON BEACH! % BR ........ Fn>m $23$ Furniture Available Carpeta.drapeHliahwuhlr heated pool-aaunas-tennia rt( "10f?l-oo!an viewa patlow.mple puidnc _., ........ HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 111 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. 11l4) 536·1"7 Ole open 10 am-6 pm Daily WILLIAM WALTERS CO. 2 BR. $1'5. 3 Br. $1*!/up. Pa. tin. Pool. Children ok. MOR.A KAt Apll, 18881 Mon. Kai Ln, \.i: blk E. of Betch, ott Garfield. 962-1994. BAOfELOR .t: J br apts. Nr &y, EVN. 61$--7876 • 1 ....- Brand Spanking New In Beautiful BACK BAY 1 •nd 2 Bedrooms Fumlthed and Unfurnished Adult living * Dishwasher * Stove acd Refrigerator * Shag Carpeting (4 exciting co lors) * Sound Proofed * Billiard Tables *Pool * Large · Recreation Center Occup1ncy In Mar-ch RENT STARTS $155 • Vista Del Mesa ApcntlMnts ff\ TUttln l MM1 Ori•• \:I 545-4B55 I . . I+'• 32 OAllY PILOT .. • . -· •• Thund.17, M.ard1 18 1971 I~ ~I ;;;;;; ...... ;;;;;;. ~I~;;;~ I ... , ... ,_ J[g] 1-... -1~ 1---:-I~ l--·-!~1---·1~ [ ,_,..,, J[Il]1;;r -·---~lll!~ii i&OO R•ntels Want•d 440 Found I free ed1) SSO i ·B-•~b-y-:::s-:::lttc:l::ng-:-==--Cement, Concr.te Ironing Job W•ntecf, Fem•I• 7~ Help W•nt.d, M &. F 710 Help Wa!'lted, M & F JlO I [ fltnt.llt Rooms <-R-OO-,-,-.,,.--,,.,,_,--,-!Ok-l"l--f,-d·y 2 BR. unf Mu.st w/ ~tO\lf', t-OUNO Nr: fair O t . COSTA MESA ee CONCR.£'TE. floon, lRONJNC J1l)' hOlnt $.t25 Jl'r IUGHLY qualified Cauc•sian C 0 UP LE 11 I ch u t ch • flf.AD \\'AITRESS • 6: \\ho wl,;hrt homf' ,1_ SH'<! lncd )a.rd for •ml Domettic lotig halr'fod ma.I• PRE-SCHOOL patlol, drtwtl, .sde~lb, hr': Brina own banet". ,,.·oman deiires. penn&.lll'llt c-u11odial exp fa; rellJ:IOUl! 011 ,,.ic DinN'r HouiW>I dog. CM area. CaU ~3565 &N'Y I.: wtit tabby cat, J-2 llltt: ol Monrovia. % .day + ~ "' •-Don .., ..... '""' SQ.76'1. 11 .. _,1 ~ .. --... -, _,.. org Sal & ap1 on prrm Penn. lnten·u•¥.s 9 10 J:Z n1osphPn·. ! a . ocu. ~14. ·~"" ,........,... ~,..,. ,........, "~~ ~-,,, -~-SA,\J 'S SEAFOOD' * s12~776 * aft pm yrs. !);16.-1547 ruu day atSlion., Plann!d J It I I F 1 ""O"'a ...,,._ ,,,,,, .. i RESPONSIBLE cpl "''ants to Loat S55 program, hot luncb.s, Aps CEMENT \VOR.K, n> job loo In or 1 uon, or In t>rv w IM9" ,,...,. COUPLE 10 manage 14 apti; J61ig Parilic Hwy. Hutll.• NICE room lor \1'0rk1ns: m11n s•·.n .. ~ .__ 6 AM.. p 1 amall, ~a90~Je, Free -.,,,'.'::'.::-:-::--:-..,--.-c-.,,,-l'V0:.\1AN will c:'t f'Venini: '" Bal~ .. rn<o !182-l:J.lti Bi·h. ---~==~-·I I I k, 1,,1 rrnt hse or apt 10 MN. -.i. ..... :30 :00 !\ -Es" H Stu•' k ~•o _..,~ ,;. ........ -w <ir .,,,. 0 coo g pr"' Lag Sch or C.M. 6#-8809 LOST $11 wk.COMPARE! 6'2-t050 um, . u )C ' .... ~. SPARKLE Janitorial. \Vin. nieal ln'lm J nn phiK SCOTT REALTY. )09 N -HOUSEKEEPER. , -"-"'-''-'-· _e>_.r_._1'4_2_--0326--,---= IV • f U 0 _1 0, o"o "-PATIOS, walb, drives, in-dows, .Doors, crpts & coustr light lltitfti. M2-:S24 "'' E•cfld. Upfo·•, Calir. WANTED •c •25 Mi"sc. Rentals .. Lr: oman s an wa rr. .... . ~·-.~. cl 1 .1 3 ~ . ._ Vacat ion R.ente•s .. _.,,, ;;;,;;,-,,;--=-,.,---,--,,--SUl.ll new lawns, 1aw, break, eanup. A compete comm ;,,., EAf),'ER Ii Su1nmt'r, 3 BR & 2 ba. \Valk to bch t. pool, \\'kl}' or monthly. TI-4: 5-1&-21161 '9 FENCED K!orage area. oil surfa<:~: Costa lolesa. Call 646--0:281, 962-7813. R~~Share 430 I [ , Announcemlnu BACHELOR to 'hare 11opt w I i<a.rnr BP..iu!Llully !urn )~ ap1 . .t,,1r rond, rolor TV , C•rd of Thanks/in p.»I. JIOO mo Call Ter11· Memorium al ~~i-2!H!I bl'tore &am or sos J/l3. Vic, Afarket Baskt>t, CHILD care in 1ny home. remove. 5t8-8668 for ell, serv. For free est ca11, "p~R~A~C~.-,~.-,,..-_~Good-~~-,,-,-.,-.· 1 DENTAL ASSISTA!'.l At 9:30 A,\1 ro 2:30 Pf.f. 4 to 5 N.B. or Bal-Bl'O&llled Chick· Infant to 4 yn o!d. Have l:=.,-.---------962--0672. pl'r. llome or hosp. Own least I year experientt'. da~s 11 wrek . fltust havf' fin, Ball:m. Kttp money. l yr old daughter. Ferx:M Chlkl Care 7 _ r-.1at11tt . 968-5782 O\\n ll'fUISf>Clr1a1lon. he ~· "" 1 o ~1 73 ... Painti"" & ll'afl5P. a1n-1pm or? TU:"!urn . · ._ .. J 6 ...,..34 att yard, large home. Ca.II MO'niER wtll are tor your Pap~~h•""ing ~8--4621 * DENTAL HYGIENl~i' • liablf' & experierl(.'Nt. Call 3 pn1. SJG.-070, hl"I 7:30 to 6:00. Infant _ J yrs old. Hn: ~;,;:::;;.:~·:!_'.·•:.:!,---,--,,:1----,N~UiRs~E;----p&.rl timf' bf>riieen 9 30 A\l & 4:30 REWARD! El Toro, ritiuion Viejo area 7-5:~ pm. 543-6018 PA.lNTlNG profeulona! All ..... • 962..&i7l * P)1 ·.iA-776;, ask rot ~fu;~ BABysrrrlNG ._A • · "'"'"· v.•1th ehfl'rly \'•-"eml""c" !or info leading lo thf. arrest my ,..,me, CDntr•ctor work i u • r n . Co Io r Local ~ff'rences 64&-1822 DE.'\'TAL. rect"plionis1. ag""i,.c.::::'~::.:.~~='-;;-c.-..,,-::-I & conviction al pet'IOn who v.•kdays Ii vokenda. Behind I ~·~po~c~f.i~;,~t~&l6-~~7081~·~· ~54:C7~-J~44~l1 IHi;ii>VV>iOti;(l."M&Fffii I J0.-40, !\Ion thru rr1, E."<pcr Housewives & Mothers stol, 1970 Honda mlru trail PomoM School. 646--5894, ROO:\! Additlon5. L . T. p Al NT ING : H 0 n e 5 t Help Wanted, M & F JlO req'd. 644-TI62 o-, )'OU .•. hkr morM"y? Like from 116 fotonte V111a, C:0.1. C1'.I ConstrueHon. Sina:lr story Ol' guaranteed work. Lic'd. Adver-tiaing Salesmen DISTRIBUTOR, manage people? Are )'<lU O\'f'r 2.)? Sun e\'f'. 3/14/71. 642-5790. CHILD care for mothen who 2. Elitim., plans Ii layout. I..oca1 ref's. Call 67;)...5740 10 !It'll space for Orange you r ov.·n busines~ \\'/in-}1a\'e you 10 hrs per 1'k. you LOST'; Male tabby cal, drk. have io 1''0rk & don't w~ul( 841-1511 alt 5. County publicat10n. \\'rite: come potential of $1000 Jlt'r could spend in a "·ell paid. all II pni In mt-mory of Ins Spurlin: long !ur. S.A. Hats ana. 10 leavl" lhetr children just ROOM Addi!ion1/Remodel-PAINTING!papering. u yn P.O. Box 5204, San!a Ana, mo. Initial investment ltss part ume job! II you anl\\'er YOU~G girl nPt>ds 2 female Jn llw multitude 01 my REWARD Plea!W c all a.nyv.ilett. 646-866:? int. Free planning 1erv. in Jfarbor area. Lie & Cali!. 9Z71H. than $100. Early retirf'mt>nt ye-s to thest> ~questions,""' roon1malPs. Sil mo. Child thoughts \\·ittun ffif', thy 54>.lq7J BABYSITIING, my home, Kennedy &: Hause, 633-6270 bonded. J'..et's turn. 642-2l56.1"*~-.,~N~Y~O~N~'E~o-,-.,-,-35~.~.--ho-possible 642-21;.(I !hould ::er 1ogPfhrr. Cati ml", ok. Call 64G-OZl7 air 4. 11·k· romfoMI! dt-hght my 8001 RE\l'ARD 1 · f 1 day Ii night; Costa :1'.tesa. days/538-Q49 eves. DISH I SHER S.12 m at 839-29Zl 1tron1 Psalm &1) To her or in o re Of!! N R INT & Exter. Painting. ill .... ·illlng to \\'Ork, apply * \'A • a · nds anyumt. c:-.1. loving relatives: 10 h,. r malr Siamese kiUen 16 M~~·~. area. e & s • ~1Y \\'ay, quality hon1e Lic'd, ins. f'rtt es!. JO yrs in person DELANEY'S SEA Bayview Convalescen,1 1 HMPhp. HOUSEKEEPER, Live • in, \\'ILL Sh3N' m~ 2 br, ~[ niany. many dtvoTtd mo's1 . ..,,•/yellow t'~S. Vic. repair. \Valls, celling, Ooors exper. Chuck, &15-0!!09 SHANTY, 630 Lido Park 2055 Thurin St. C.:. : P.,·I room. TV. ,.;;pantsh ba , flOOI ap! \\/student or frif'nds: fo hc-r kind and Solana. \\'a,v, L.B. 494-~ BABYSITrER, all age~, 24 etc. No job too small. *PAPERHANGER *•-,°',-"_N_'._R_. --~-.,.--642-Jj05 ~peaking OK, G<lc:xi Wary. \\Utklng girl. N.B. 642~n rlJOUghtful ncighbor.1: BLACK female Afghan 1o111 hours. Wann ~als. biC 547-0036, 24 hr a111. serv. rr· s.6 rA bl • DISH\VASHER &.i&-lS-13. \:~~~G2 ~~ta;:·~~~thli~m~~ \\';-~~n~:·:~sr ~1:;i:~ b~t" ~a~~n~ B~;~:;:~N~2-~m~lt~me Wc"ALKlN_fMf>'pe. r•;~~efi1ULn~g11;,~ *~r~:?L~;~~Rl*-2449 ssem , er :.x;~~~. Applyinpe1~n HJ~~SA~~p~l.:y~g!:y .>l!{..-773S, 536-0J!lO 11pprt'elatl\'f' famil)·. """""""'" -all age!, anytime. .,...,..,'"' u""' lo Harold, ALLEY \\'EST, 1-8 E. l61h .S.A. 547--0395. l i~~~~~t~~~~ /~~~~~~~~~~I 54~7641 When )'OU call "ltlac" 210& Oceanfront, Ne\\·port vu- 1 Office Rental 440 !~~~~ ~~=~Y~. er:·.:~.· CHILD care my horn<? only, Adi=k ~ ~:00. L~~~g 548-J.f« 646-lnI Tra"1nees Beach, acl'OS! from pi~r. HOUSE\\'TVES • l openingi; SUPER-DELUXE UAUTY Pir50!Yls • vi<". Brookhurst Ir. Warner, J~arper Sehl district, Call 673-0041 • 549-2170 Painting Contractor OMV BOOKKEEPER No exp nee \\'e train. For Q I I~ _.. -LESCO P/rimf'. Aver. $.1 J)f'r hr. 1-2-3 room. up lo J,000 iQ. }"'V R"""ARD -•3838, rn1r"" Int/ext. 2 Storu specialist. 'I 1 h 1 m !"· ,~, It. office suites. lmmed. oc-C-------' -· ".~·-"'" .,,,_.. .,....,.... w..o Llc'd Contr. Remodeling Also. a c co·~ st. ceil. 0 . C. Employmen1 Agcy " us ave s x on •k~ ~.,,. . appt. call {'.1rs. :O.luller 1---------· ~.,,, BABYSITTING by hour or Addi'"'---Pl.no '--•t iente in processing D:'>IV * "' .. 5711l * cupaney. Oran;e County. '"-""'• • ....,,~~~ spraying, Lie & ins. 12-l Broadway CM 64;..311J ...., · '•·f •-530 2 Lofll dogs: Go.Iden rPrrievtr week, any houn day or Karl E. Kendall 548-1537 .,,.__.,.,,,.. forms and general offite l"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil /.1rport .uY ne ._.,mmerc-Personals ,,.."-JJ~ o 1' & ""'hitf' mln pood I e. nite my homt'. 642-7316 F . •ASST HELPER• procedures for Au10 eater. Compltx, adj. Airporter R.foward . Lait &ef'n 17th & I c===--~~~--f urn1ture PAPERHANGER, Dock, foil, • Paid vacation, i;iek Jeavf', Hotel & Rrstaurnnl, banks, " f1.JLLY LICENSED '* Stn.t1\fER reservations IM!ing I f · h e $3 75 HR e Ne\\'J)Orl Blvd. S.1&-7:'127 taken bch & park. Reas. FURNITURE Strippi.Qa _any v ny, guar .• estimat<?li, l e · · group ins. benefits. etc. Sal· ~~C~~~o'f:~·p~!"'rJ~c Rei:d~·.: o~i':1uu !~~~~:list; ,-,,,.--ol~d-w~h;-,.-.-.-,-,,~~--~ lic'd & ins. Q.'f. fJ.19-(1706 average chair or rocker Hangman' 54 7-58 4 6 • P~rmanen1 employment F'ull ary commensurate i1i1h &.b1!. .sa ...... .....i loet vie 20th &: stripped $5. 642-3445 Schwar1:z llme or part IJmt. Depend-lty. Call Ed Hacquebo1d, i;: LOWEST RATES Lo\'e, ri.farrlage, Businelill ""',)''~' BABYSITTING in my home, ~~~~------I p f able """''Im'"'. 2li2 DuPon1 D?'. R o· · 7 d Santa Ana , C>\1. 5-18-5731 all ,..__G - d • A NTJNG/papering. 18 yrs · . :H6-8Clll ..,. Pa lfl!t5 given ays a fenced yard, rel's ......... ta er en1ng in Harbor aiea. Lie & Call 1\lr. !-'rank * 5'16-9862 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC .. P..m. 8, Ne\\'J)Ort Bt'ach 1\'Pek, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. :i ri.1esa area. 6'12--0384 833-3223 Courtesy to Brokers Jl2 N El Camioo R.ral. LOST Nl"uteft'd ..,1,_,. ..,,·ith 1-~-----~-~~ AL'S GARDENING bonded. Refs furn. &12-2356 BAB~'SITIER net"ded al my DO~IESTIC • Li\'e in lady ., """ ALL day or after school, I -~ · • If ho d · d 'th' DESK SPACE San Clemente Ilea collar, v;,, Spri-dale or 5"""enmg sma * PAINTING* me uring ay ...,,, in 001 under 4j_ !or couple . .,. 1'.1y E-siM C.t.!. home. :\ton I nd · I ff So hf C-" ·"1 ( 492-9136. ~92-0076 & \Varner. ~lB. 846-5158 lhru fri. Over 2. 642-l3ll6 a scaping serv ces, ca Hi QualiTy. Reas. Prices. 5:;ra551~295 atta. llJJ ... -'~"'~'o;·-C:-;;;d~>~l~. "~';;'"~"°'c;;---.-111YJNE PERSONNEL SERYICES•AGENCY 222 Fore st Avenue h 1 540-5198. Serving Newport, Free '''· &16-0664 • * REDUCl/IOG rec no ogy BURMESE Siam~ cat, 7 Builders CdM, Costa l\Jeu., Dover . BABYSITTER needed, * DRIVERS Laguna Be ach N\'olution1u-d. Jnche-s laken mo·~. l\1esa Verde a~a. _,"°",,_."'°-,-----:-Shores, \Vestcl!U. Plaster, Patch, Repair responsiblP, 5 <ta,.. a \.\'Cf'k. N E , oH 1n 70 min u I es . RE\\' ARD. 540-4357e ..::ru~-· bf--'-f I '==O;;;=-,,,--;;"",;;;"" 0 Xper1ence "94-9-166 ri.leasurable rf'~ults before '-"'· """'• concre e, JOHNSON'S GARDENING * PATOI PLASTERING Bay View School area, S.A. AVAILABLE for immediate your \l'ry ('yes. &romt' "DORA", 1 Siberian Hullk)'. carpentry, ho1111e leveling, Yard care, c I e • n -u P s, All types. Free estimates Hgt5. 5-1Ha88 aft 5 Necessary! Receptionist $500 S bf I ""ddeofy Slender. Home childn-n's P1"1• loi:;t 3111 in all types rem«leling. No planting, IP rink I e r s · Call ~i BEELINE Fashions nee-Os 10 Must have clean Calif. driv-occupancy. · u rasp peas. ~ S.A. Hgt.~. 54G-7325 job too small. Uc. Contr. 96z...2005 h.. 2- Call Director e:..;per req'd ant 4 room ~u1te. 2().1.l \Ve~!· self-applied mPthod. }'N'f' 962-6945 PLASTER ~ p 8 t ch.Rm. am 11Jous ladies. \Vardrobe 1ng record. Not under ~. <'lift Dr .. Sui1e 200 Ne\\1JOrl cla,;l! & rlemons1ra!.ion. Call LOST ~" Sheph'!rd 11S PROFESSIONAL. Prunina:, Adds. New "'ork. Free +. profit. Car necess. Call YELLOW CAB CO. Gan'I Ofc $400 Bracti. &12-769(1 or .see build-!or reSf'rl'atio11. ~:l9Q.1 Samoyf'rl, all wnite, female. Business Service tree v.·ork, sprinklers, aera· estimates. 545-4;,ss a.fl s VJ !714) 522-7647 186 E. 16th St., C.ll1. Ing manager. l-.-D-IS_C_O_V~E~R--,Y-OG=A~! Vit" Lake 51• H.B. &l2-67.'i!I TYPING SER.VICE lion. peats, diseai1e, \\·eed Plumbing e BLUE DOLPHIN e e ENGl!lolEERS and Acctng Clerk $450 PBX relief lype tiO ldinr G V I. • 'l I PREGNANT Cal, T i gt r control. G Clean ..._"P5893jobs. •-,::-:::-:::=:o:--:::=c-::::-• ill"AITRE'-~S . ,, , , EXPD'. e ELECTRON· IC TECH'"f. Sho-M'f •"gd geh'l ex""r-BEAUTIFUL :: roo1n oflh;e 1rea1er 1ta Hy .., u f'nta . .1 v · Neat, a~curall", fast. Pick up T :...:>->r:. " .,. "'' ""' suitp \\'I kitchl'ttel1r. JileaJ Abill1y! fRF:E DE.\10N· stnpcd, short bob la i · IC. &. deliv. 645·0481. erms. eorge, PLUMBING REPAIR O\'Pr 25. 115:> Via I.Ado, N.B. CIANS • O!'sign and ience. Detail n11nded. !or archurcl. 1 n g u ra n r ,. :-.'TRATTON .Sat at 10 am: 131h St, N.B. 64a--O.l!IO EXPER. Japanese Gardener. No job too small assembly, .i;olid slate agent, rea!tor. ere. On sun & 1'.1on a1 8 pm. ~agrs =R~E=w~A~R~D"-, :,..--;~,h-'""'S.~t~,.-,-pu-p-.1 TYPING my hom,. Term Complete la'"" serv & • 642-3128 • • • • BOOKKEEPER circuitry. -i&S E. 17th lat llv1MJ C.~J. :0.1onro\·1a SI. in N . B. 12.n1 Yoga CPnter, 44j E. 1nalf'. S mo·s. Marilyn, papers, master thesia, Call landM:apina. 5 4 6-0 7 2 4, --~e'"°"P~Lu=M~B~l.~N'°G~.;----IUnique. young. growing com-Ad\1ance-d Kinetics, Inc. 642-1470 .... ........,.""' ""'~14~• LuxJa 846-4147 • ;;.&g.'.70Ci3 P'"Y wo 1h •• •'''' ,,,,.,,_ 1231 v;clo,,·, So. C.~l. S350/SJOO pP.r mo. 64j....{)77G I7rh SI., C.Osta 1.lesa, .... """",,,. .,,,.... -H Electrical Repair $S hr " .... , .,, 646.11'28] V Carpenter E>..'PER Jap&N'&e--American 64:2-T155 642-1403 potential, seeks a vivacious, 17141 &16-716:'! ./ KITCHEN HELP DESK SPACE lOS No. El C•mino S.Jn Clem•nt• 492-4420 Reel CORO~A DEL :<.IAR I !· Z P.oom o!flce spa~~ avail. 0\VNER * 673-6757 3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB •ON THE BAY • 6/.l-2-164 or 541-5032 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C:\! F'rom 3CKl Ml· fl. JJc sq f1. 67;..2464, or .5-lJ .j()J2 OFFICE . xlnt Joe, R11'ersidf' Dr. NB. $8.'I mo Avail 4/1. 6..\.'>-:.0.iO or ft+l-j \ii NE\\'PORT BEAOI Civic Center. 310 sq. It. An..-w . .Ir. Sf>cretariaL 67':.-J£o01 Business Rental 445 PRIME LOCATIONS E. 17th S1., Costa ?i1r~& 1120 Sq. ft. ""ith park1n1 '!le Pr1· Sq. f 1 Rroad11a}. lA!nJ'l~ Real·h J6j() Sq. fl. with parking :lOc Per ~. F1 Rralonomics Bkr 67j.6100 STORE bldg or ofc for !lit'. Xlnt ~pt Bl\•d "Xix>surf'. 960 s/!. Across from city ball. 6T>l601 GALLERY Shop ror Rf'nl. Con111c1 ViUagP Inn Hoiel, 696 So. Coa.~1 H"y, Laguna Bea<'h. 4!1f-91.'fi NO\V i\vail;ihll' -2 rn1 shop nr oll1rr spaef'. S6.l/mo. 823 \\'. lfi1h SI. [l;,B 5.JS-004~ Industrial Rentel 450 SMALL UNITS COSTA MESA S9j, & $167. Per lilonth Jmmediatt Occupanry =-:ew 6..100 sq 11. unit, J81h '-' \\l111t1er. 110.220 po~·er, plenrr of parking. See: RobC'rt Na1u-ess, R.ltr. C~ta :<.le~a 64:?-1 IB:i NEWbidg, 1:'168-t'i28-sQJ'i: Nr Baker t· Fain iell', 1 )T. lease. Sullivan. ~)M)....4429. ;o;i.r~IERC!AL-1:'\DUSTRtA.C 500-1500 s;q fl. lk 10 12c IJ San C\en1rntf' ·196-!SW* I RENT 111-1 112:, ~q 11, $l2.l mo. 111;) Logan, r;'o. ti, C~I. 67f>..:Jl 16 Rentals Wanted gardener, complele garden-p abo\'e-avera;::e f'/C Book-Equal opportunity employer nel'dt'd. Appl'. m "'"°"· DREA MS< I I~ CARPENTRY ower Sweeping · lnitruction ~ i~ service Ii cleanup. kl'<'per. This lit an P.XCep-EXP'd lady 10 sit 1\1.fh 3 blwn ~ ~-~1 pn1 \\lla1 mes$3ges 81'1' rh('y 1ry-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;; l\.fINOR REPAlRS. No Job 893--0150 PAC IFIC ~v.·er Sweeping & !ionaJ opportunity tor !he yr old in our home. Ca][ PORTOFl\:0 !lllif to 1ell you! "'ntt: Titl' Too Small. Cabinet in aar-f 7AL~·s-· -,-J,ond..,.-,--,-m-g-_-:T~,-,-,e Garrleninx Serv. No job too righ1 person. fi1 4J ~ll()...60oj(l 5-l~l blu.•n 11 & ~ only :?:82:? :\lil'l:uxl~ Blvd, Lymburn lnstitute Suite 180 ages I: 0 I her cabinets. removal. Yard remodeling. small. 673-1166 2-1 hr.I. Anaheim. e ENG l:'\EER . fiberglass \liss1on \'/f'JO •--NB c Schools & "''5-817,· ;r no answer le;ive lo ';;;"";-;;;-cc--:c=-c,,---4.'iOO ...... mpus ,_.,.. a. -11 Trash hauling, I <:leanup. PARKl:'\G Lo! Po\\ f' r180\'S J~l6 earn big monry production_ lll al' Gregor LJGIIT <t~~1>n1hl~ C 1,. ;i n 9266C. ins-trudions. 575 nl.l!g. at 646-2372· JI. O. Repair sprinklers. 673-1 166 Sv.·ttping & i\1a1nt. A-1 for ~unimer, own business, Yachl Corp. 1631 Placentia., p[a .. 1w no1·p\1 ~r~ 6 hr. di!), DIS:OOVER DISCOVtRY ~S YOUR MOYE Andl"rSOJi. EXPER. Japanei;e gardener Poll'er s .... ·et>ping. ~:>-87?A. no invf'~tmen1. 49.1-1!162 C.1\1. :i day~ morning~. 89-l \\' find Yo~lf CA RPENTRY -Re-pair. AU Reliable mat nle nance , Resume Servic& CASH BONUS GAL FRIDAY 1_1_8'_h._O_._r ___ ~--t I" ".··-m~ne Else C phai;f'!, Home & ap!, Litt Reas. monthly ra t es. *LIQUOR CLERK* " -~ "" INDUSTRY AREERS 2 p Call Loraine, M~2TIO, \\'est· C.11 Now . "'o Oblieation hauling. Evr: ~-41-6 66, 892-3219 \VE havp t'--most unique aid promptly to Real Es. ,,., N _ _, 10 C >f '~ '"" cliff Per!IOnntJ Agency_ w~3 i ot U•KJf'r , osta , esa 171,) .... ~ "og:; Day: 537-1860 ~EE,-, Compf '' .,-••J RrnUME SERVrCE in Or-ta!P. Sal('sman. local e:><peri-_,1 ~ r n.. "" •" \Ves!cliff Dr., N.B. area. :\lusr ha1e reta1 The Av.•ard \\'inning Se!'\'. AIRLJN[ & JRAYEL REi\IODELING & R.f'pair lawn main!. & <'leanup. ange CounTy. You get a com. enced preferred. Join and ===~-.:C'----~~~1 liquor rxperience. Apphca- SINGLE? WIDOWED?-SpeciaJis1. Comm'!. ttMiden-l..!'-1. Gardening, M'l--0975. plf'le referral service. not grow with VINCO. GENERAL Clerk -Req. M.S. lion~ confiden11aL Ph: D ivorced? Over 21? lial. Paneling. cabin~ts, Gardenin, Servi<:e jU!I ropies. Let our r>:pert Vi ~d. lyJ>t> 50160 \111m lsta. ~48-3&~3 f' OPERATIONS AGENT marlite, formi<'a. 644-759H iechnlcal \\Titers council you lftCO Realty tis1icaJ1, sonie kno11·Jl'dge of1..:---:.:..,=~~=~--·I For a sell explanatory me!. e TICKET SALES by experien1.'fli Japanese -JO key adding machine-& MECHANICAL ••gt> 24 hr! a day cn!I e RESERVATIONS Cerpet Service e 968--0183 e 111 your job seeking. \Vear(' 2029 Harbor. C:O.·J &16-0033 d 1 · h 1 1 1 ,. __ , E · 1 1 1 d & r:.:perts in employnien1. itlo mac 11ne e Pu . .....,..,.,.. .'<pcripncer 11·1t 1 ian · 496-4!!0! or 5"11·9991 e AIR. FREIGJ-IT-CARGO Diamond Carpel Cleaning EXPEJt. Hawaiian Gardener * CLERK TYPIST 11 111ar1ing salary + potf'nt1;i! po\\·er lools. Cap.1bl" of PALi.\l 6 Card Reader, SlO a CO~l'i\1UNICATIONS Avg siie room SS Comp I e I e Ga rd en l n g THE MORRIS $443 1o $565 per mo. with Rl'O""'ing firm. Call !or ::'!<'curate \\·ork .. ">i9-1178 re11dina~ only $3 "'/this 11rl . e TRAVEL AGENT Repairing & installfl tions Service. Kama.lani, 646-4676. RESUME SERVICE Application~ 1,·ilJ be 11rerp!. lnler\'iew, 492.1153, fllrs. TOPATRON, INC. 10831 Beach, S ! • n Ion Airline Schools Pacific F'ree E~I. 615-1317 CO?tiPLETE yard Ca re . 835-2522 rd ro j-o'clock pni, ,\larch Gonzalrz. _o_:n_-3'_06 _______ 1 610 E. 17th, San1e Ana TIRED ot that old fumltutt'!' Cleanup, trash hauling ,by 2100 No. Main St. 23rd. GENERAL HELP * MEDICAL * FOR ladies only,$.'> m~!oage 543-6596 It's really not that bard job or mo. 897-2417, 84&-09 __ 32_ Suite 30'1. Santa Ana e CITY OF' t.'O::.IA ~fESA e J;-.!SURANCE CLERK, p ' special 55. 17(34 Beach VIR GO Swim Sc ho o I to repla~. Just watch the LEEPER BROS. Com pl yard 77 F'air Dr. 1 i14 ~ 8J.l-:>JO.> • $3.85 HR.. • lime \\Tirk. Three 8 hr day.c Bh·d .. H.B. 847-9713 Lessons, 6 mo's 1hru adult. funtlh.rre 6 miscf"lluv!o'JS z. garden maint. Res & Roofing Large chain ne-eds 9 men, or fJ\r .-. hr days. :0.lusl ALCOJ-IOL ICS Anonymous. Garden Gro\'e Z. Balboa Isl columns tn !ht Cusilied comm'!. 646-6872 or 548-7~ T. Guy Roofing. Deal /? /}/)_ I fuU or part lime for mer· koo11· CR\"S & <1!1 mf'dlcilol Phone :>12-i!17 or ..,,Tiie to 6J6..-25J(I Section. EXP. ,,.,.,.... G-~--r. Lo{l~·fl ..< chandis1ng and sen'lce. insurancr. E:\per Only $3 _ C ,1 " .-... ... ,..,.,.,_ Direct. I do my ow.1 \\urk, "-' Call ·'Ir. Day S-16-986:? hr. P. 0 . Box 1'""' osla . esa. Gen, cleanup. Hauling trtts. 61:>-27~. j.18-9590. OAi'iCE lessons: 1....atin I.: * * * * * * Mainl. yard 6-lG-0619 \\'ENEDA P.oofing: Aulhoriz . Opening~ ava1lahlr IQ[_ • GIRLS • GIRLS i\I E 0 1 CA l. t\,i-:=tST.\:\'T American. Introductory oil· General Services pd Appl1c111or for Sno-H1de A.ssemb!y Operators a iW' Establi~hed firm, open1ng Front & ba ('k ofc. Kno..,,, er $4Jll'r hr. 673-7185 Roof System~. &1:>-1691 lnspPCtors. J\lus1 ha\e nev.• branche.c. f'l. or pl. CBC's & unnes. l\o Sat. To ED_ Husband Busy'!' CaU MOO&fl ,\TOS exper. Sh1f!s in-11me. ~er Bever1y at home. [Loil ind found )[g] Found (frn ads.) sso S;'.11\LL black p'1ppy, Ha~ white 1·hest & pa.w• and i;mall \\hilr ,:rol on back ot neck. \111y be part rat- trrr1er & ma1. Dubem1an. \Wi-3649 Trader's Paradise lines times dollars LARGE pet rabbit, lighl Havt' J60 Acres, rt<". M1n- bro11'J\ +n rolor. weigh.~ a~ nesota.. "'ant boat, airplane, prox. ID th1 , M11 r. 14. San-mobile home, TD's. or 11ub. t1ago !lr, l I.Ilk from Irvine-. 1n11. Mr. Jel\lirn, agt. 1,;.1&-:-i886 6i:J.j726 642-8120 E1·e~- YNG mttlf' c·a1. pul't' whllP, 1l3 F'ord i, T pick-up "' .i;hort hair. l:rt'"" ~yes. lumber rack & tool boxe•. ~\\t."f'I. Yng blaek c·~r 11 /4 Tradf' l<ir your equ11y in 11 h11e f('('t 84'i-'i::.Sil lalf' 111odrl pick-up or rM, S\IAJ.l. blk & \\'h11e dog, lo mlleagP. ~8-19-lj vie 10th & Nl.nta Ana A\'e, \\1AJ'\jT GOOD NE\V OR C:\l ('all to i dent i fy, LIKF. NE\\' LRG REFRIG. :\'llt1200. FOR GOOD CUSl'Olll t;p. .. ~ou~D: Sm. hro1vn Tf'tTil'r 1101.. OF YOUR CHO!Ct. t)-pe doi,: "1nr11 rol111r, t4G-85,j8 f('n1aJr. vii''. R.Nlh11J & 1 ~ro="="'=.,~1o~u~s~,c. J""B~R-. ,~,-.~B'"'• ,,111in, J/1:-i. tH'.l-K>40 Ne\\'port Brach. Eire kit., " J English 6 rooms. secluded on level h1Utop lol. Beaul 1·ond. nr Pasadt'na. YOR Duplex/houst/vacant lol, NB /CdM/Of. Ont ~·3532. ':z.r Isl ander sailboat, i.leeps 6, docked ar slip .. Exchanl!:t' weekrnds foi· mobile camp. • 6\2-6820 • . 1 Yr. okl Great Dane. 1'.tale brindle. Papers-AKC-5 grn. ped .. champ. stock. Inc. dog hsr. Trd for old car. srnl . boot, turn. or '!' 646-6942 5-15--0820 alter ft...Repair Sewing/Alteration1 elude day & sv.·1ng. and • $3.40 HR. • $:ioD nio. Bulld-Serv 111ost Things ALTERATIONS, resl\.·Jing. non.standard "'Ork 11eek. Call :O.Jr. Grand * .>l(,.9S62 I HEALTH & FAMILY \\'ELDING E..'<pert finer. Top rrf'i;. I Girl Office l\lu~t kno11· CARE AGENCY Portsble v.·eld1nii. Call N.B. area. IH&-270-i Call " APPLY • "")-ff & geo olc .,,,,.,. '" , ·-· •v · . · " ~. l"V-, :'\, Broad\\a), S.A, l..a!T)' Aft 4 pm. 64.:2-0679 RuTh Call J!l(OO JA'.\IBOREE BL\'D., he able to lake phone orders I,.,..,..,..,,...,...,..,..,,,., I • LABOR UNLl~tITED * 'A~l-te-,-,-1;-.-.,--~64~2~-~514=5-< Nl-':\\130RT BEACH t.· assume resix>n sibill1y *** MOLDERS lfANDY:o.IAN Neat accurott 2() years exp, . Apply in 1>erson Johansen v.1elding • Carpentry 613-1922 ' ' Eqtl\\1 nppoM11n1ty f'n1ployer & Christensen 898 \\". 16th Exp!!r1cnced only, all l shifts. EUROPEAN dressmaking -.. ...... ..,.., ...... ,....... ' G HANDY.\1AN v.·\11 rio mobile -SI. N.B. 1 lac regor Yacht C.Orp., home N"n"1 r & plun1bln". all cusrom fitted. Very * COMPANIONS * lf'.31 Plaernlia, C.:'>1. ,.... ,.. reasonablt>. 673-1849. HOUSEKEEPERS* * 646--6!M5 • * :-:EEO . Z .\l(lldcr.~. 2 Assem-Tile Lh·r In Lag. Bch .. ~.JOO mn hleri; J 11·ood\\'orker. Hauling -----.----~.·!Aide ... , ..... S300 mo Coup!,. in On1ario 1 , 1 "-1 bo •• CERAod~lllC tilt' lll'\\s' U <for elderly t:ouplel 1n1u<1 c1n1c1 ,s.;:l(} " 1"'-·ri;: a$s a ..... YARD, G11ra.gc cleanups, rem I". Fre<? ~t . ma Aid .,~ • .,. · · · f.>;p 'd. onl~'. 612.5.171 trees dirt ivy removal, skip · b , 1 5 3 6 2 4 2 6 " · . . . . . . . ... >JU mo ;\!01 herless hOml' . . loader, backhoe. !162-87·15. ~~come. . , •for rehrcd doc1or1 I 1mu~1 drir,., , •... .s~:i.o :\URSl:\G ;i.1d to Catt for a He11hh & f'am1Jy Care Agcy l ;\lorhPr'i-; Hel~r lad\· '.'. llh P::irk1rt.~n1~~ HAULING, gen'I clea"Lu.p. Tree Service \S()j :-J. Broadway, S.A. / 14 rhildJ'f'nt S:(,Q f:.p\r~I ~hill, R<'rs. 6Jf-5S.l8 tl'tt serv. Handyman. Reas.1 ~""""'-c""--,,--:::-.,-. . · · • · · ari ·' pn1 6%-j.IWll. T!~~=!ie,s,h~~~~rim. • C:OUf\IER_ C:IR' .. Apply I ~~o~~~~l~~~l:.'". . •. , s::oo -,-U-P.-s1.-,c~~------~R:~,-.. c,l TRASH t. Garaa:e clean-up, G4:i-4030 Big John IM. KENT UC K' FR IE[) Cnuplr in Laguna . . , S300 F.x,?"rirnrt'd 7 da.y1. $10 a load. l'n!I' CHICKEN. 6!1.l So. COR!<I Health .$· Family Car•t Age> * ;,.l!).3061 * t'st. Anytime. 54&-5031. Tutoro'ng JI • -.,_ ~ '--o "''Y ..... gu1111. ,....·acn, '"" 11·n li'\OJ N. Bmadl\'a}. S.A. • PART.T l '.\!~: + i\10VING. Gara.ae clean-up 1-4 P:O.I , 111 Pf'NOn !llCKOP.\' FAR:'>lS bf F'0Ri\1ER English tP8Cher1'7~=--.,.-.,...~~~= Ir lite hauling. Reason e. .,.,~ .. tutor studt>nt, '" ht'r Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 I~ To11·n & Count!). Orangr f'ree •~timates. MS-1602 ·ui Costa :\1esa home: g111c!es PA RT 11n1r TWlkkerper 1n Housecleaning 4-11. $7.50 Per Hr. 540-2197 you1· hf)n1r r1>r G::i.• Servicr SP~JAL CARPETS * Upholstery !'la. f.xr rircf'd. \\'ill tr;o.ln * .-.... ·· · *Rest•ura nt c 1 1 11\'0llil < r ,\Jar on I y . cleaned, 4c Jl<I fl. $25. minimum )Oh. Please <:all LIC Upholsterer -Qull.lily ANNOUNCING ANOTHER ,,',,7~='~"=--,---~-1 ~2'l47 or 536-2129 wotk. Anthony'!! Uph. PART r1111f' traifl('f'.C, malr, RETIRF;D R ~: lirokrr &i FOUND uri F.as1hlutr Or .. "1lc, q ti I" 1. di•prridnb!f', NB. Rr11nd nr1• spor1~ t·11r dP~U"l" :t RH ln11t'r 11111. nr hubcap. Pll'll.S.f' lrl<'nlll). frplr. pOOl. Pri. patio, \'.1l· ue S.'U,000. T11kf' T.D. Tra.11- f'r or '!' 011'ner 6~6-66.J.I \\'Aj'lj'TED lalt ntodel V\Y ~u11reback. Hfl\'" 1966 i\fu111an.1t (V11, .1111lom111lcl, lov.' 1n1le&.jl'f', 5r')Oll tlrts. nn.tt O\\'Tlf'r. 10 tnl. 4!16-:;957 \Vaterftonl loC 7) " 300, Carlsbad. i·!Par, w/c::iJTY 1 .~1. \\lanl l.x~ Unp'd. prop. or goud l!ICM'kl:. Rict! Irwin, ~:xch11.ngor. 67a.«a:l. Bay & Beacb Janitorial Se!'\•itt>. 642-5877 N.B. E xciting 11<; nr C<>I L No .-xp !11"<:. The 7..oo Rr~llLHl(lnl, Coo~! Crpts, windows. noors l"'IC. Far West Serv"1ce lh\'y "' ~li'Al'thur. Reo. • Comm'f. 64&-l .. J I II I •. I HOUSE OF CLEAN t•yment POX (>J'TO:HATOR hou51'. unfl;m t In~ r rt ti·ll--.il52 garlLJ(r. Nn ynrtf 11vrk Or· cF~O~U~,--o~.-,-.,,.-.-.,,-, ... -~;,~H~.Rc. <"UJ)Afl{') _-'111}' Isl. L:p lo nn 3111'1'1 "'I rollar. Call s:m. 64&-.irn -& identify 5.16-8271 eGARAGE WANTED• TA:O.IE Hrln<llt bunny on Approx 2-car 11:!1-l.', for ti~ I Balboa Jslanrt. l)Ulld1nii: (lf 1 l' !11'.l1'rJ?l11\ ! 673-9223 boa1. Nef'd Jnr 90 da)1 ar I DARK f':>odlr tyPf' do!: lt'UI. 1\h·~·a1lden-Ne"·hope. 1 rt a • 6M;4665 • \'OUNG toiD. "ilr. 2 k11lc rlf't'd 4 Br 2 Ba lum l"lr uni lor 1~. Bl"Rln .rul). Prl'ft'r N B , Cti\1 \\'rit• Sh)Ucoff, l~ GrffnVlf' .. , S.f . !mll. 2 CAR Gua,re ln Cocta )fesa. To be uM'd for stonie. eau Tern•". The Real E~lA!P:rs ~2313 !ll!'-.l:iJ2 HLIO\ and 11tlt raht1n Yi<" J111rhnr Huth. Call and ld~n rif) :;1s-1l83 \'Ol 'NG femalr "-hilt k gn'y r:1!1t'O Cflf Vi<": Rrookhural I. Sli.1tr. F. V\y, 968-0033 BLACK m1nietutt' Poodle. mi.Ir, found vi(' Adam11 I: Jlarlxir Sal. nitr. 96:Z...J'.l65 BLACK & \\"hlte nbbit v1c Jlarbor Ht~ a~a. ·10 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr, lnadf'd. S33.'10 \•A.lu '61 °"'" lmpal11 4 dr, loe.~. $1600 1·alu TR.ADI:.; lor TD'11, lots, "·hal ha\"° ,l'OIJ. C9l L<r.?1. f<Qll rours" lnt.Chn~lmas Val., Ori" S.:!000 1• 11 I u f' tor quirk 1tral \VIII !rd 11900 rq lor e11r, hoal. lf'11elry, anliquf'~ t1r ~ 673--0S02 ·oo 01d1 cu1111~ s • lo11de<1. Jny,,· m111!'t, xtr11 (']f'.lln. ,.,.,.dr Jr.r Mll bo&• or molote)"cle. 491-'.M52 Lll~ll Bl'llth 11AVE: BIG BE.o\R J Br furnil!hed homt. $30.!XX'l. SRUJ rquity. \\'A.llfl': Car, land, or !~ Myen . REC"F:PT ION!m' Complete lto11t.I' Cleanlnr ~------m /, 642-6824 * * On 1()U l11n·r a l'nll'I' l!mt Job Went.ct, Mele 700 00/ll•a ll!I' 11 n~\\<'l"I "I rlon'1 k1in1~ who Income Tax )c>u aN1. hut 11'~ n1<"' 10 673-61"6 Smiley Tax Service AniphihiOUI car &. hURr lln· tiqut ho\l.!lttar V.'Orth $180) e lJth YEAR LOCALLY e ,\ $l200. \\'1nrl \alt' big f'ar. Qualified • Re!l$0Nlble i\\tmodl'~ or ~ fi.U.5ml) or W. A. SMILEY ~>4.1!-lS69 art . fi . Ct11irled Public AC"OOUnt'I Tu;n herb. Bkr n"w, f'amr &12·2221 anydme MG-966ti 1111h mobilt hornt. '""hat" TAX SER.VICE $4 UP ·,.m Nct'd douh!t> hc<I or ~ App'! •vallAblt d•ys. ("all l'l'f',, "'knds . .).IS.IMS. 5&1-6993 1&12 Nt"'))Ort, C:\f Ila,·, ,\JG ri.tidgrt road11trr. I ---r=-1,-,~T~,-,~s.~,.,~;-00-- nl'"' IJl'ln1. l!fl(ine, top, G.~7 W. 19th SI. C.;\J. Xln1 (>ond. Value $89j, OPPoSlff'l Brrhrl TO\\·tn fradr tor tr11\·tl tn\lkT or &~76.'1 ""' "°"" "'"""' SKOUSEN TA~x~s=E=Rv"". SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Kitten -Groin -Admit - Normal -~lOOTINI A C'1lW Amhlt'ff up 10 11 rorkr1ll bar. The b.'\r!tndrr a~krd, "\\'hal do )'l"IU ~ .... Tht row rtplled, "I'll takf' a ,_IOOTINI." Job Wenttd, Female 702 LfVE-in hnulW'kttpt'r () r bahy1dttrr Call 280-796? .and a~k !or :\liriAn N I, 1· I ' I h"ar !roin 1'0u ' -ow accep 1n9 app 1ca ions or-· l).yo..; If i.;n1 Ur "hen )OU ~1,,..11k~ • FOOD & COCKTAIL WAITRESSES • HOSTESSES •COOKS • BUSBOYS • DISHWASHERS • BARTENDERS Apply in person only 1:30 A.M. to 4 P .M. 18452 Mac Arthur Blvd. D'lf'ic )01.11· r:'Lll,.r 11l"A}"S N'nrh lhP f>.'\rly to "horn I ll<' 1• ~P"11k1ni:-• I On 1n11 M1111n11n1r11.1 r ,., lt>1·h1r)} "llh rhr rn1hl 1r .11\d tu11r i;irnr1 11I n'11('(' •nri '>11- lni:: ,,klll· lr,.u u:. ~'"t -11n1o1 11.• M2-i9GO l~.\I .. ,11 l.F.AO~ C ~H II' II 0 !/ i; JN G sY.'ir1·\T". r:-.t· ro. Rri' '/Hill. j>.'r11r•1r1 kf'l\f'h C11.hf, '•Jl;r,~ ~ 'l ~' • 1 nriv:r1nn 11> l•.n11dn\11 GROUND roo ofnet' lf>ICI': -.antM, Cororlll del Mar. f.ll of H!;h"a~ fif+-1361 n·c11 twolp Y')11 M'llTI4:z.....irl "'6·"627 * * * * * * \lc1-o-lfo~El~o-ph'ii.n1 Dime-A-Lint '.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!!!• Reu . \'our Home. 50-3894 l\'e'U help )w .ell! 64Z-5671 AIDES r or C'On\'111('~('1l('f', r.lderly can" or family care. Across fr om Orange Count y Airport Thr '"""•! 1!1~1n 1h,. 1r;;i 1 l"i.11 il\ J'llo! Cla •~lfll>d A1J 411-Jlii~ tromf'makers . .l.Ji-frGSl Ii••••••••••••••••••• .. . . ' . . . ... ... .... . . ....... . ... DAILV PILOT :J.:t -----------. -~--- [ ~ ._....,...,_. ![Il]l[ ~ _ ....... _,-·~l[Il][ ~ ;;""""""";;. ~![§];;;;;~ 11 :-l _ ........... _. ~I~[§) I -·~~ I' H•lp W.ntR, friA & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Furniture 110 Furniture 110 Mbctllaneou~ 111 Sporting Good• Boatt /MariM Cycles, Blk•t, j[i] 830 Catt ll2 PBX 1inswer1ng aervicr. l'X·I •• TRAINEE ee P ;_VT;;.__pa;;..r-1y:..,.o_n_u-,.-,.--"-i"-,.-1 so~F~A-+-m-,-,-rl,-u<>g-lo-,-,-,.,-at ~10VJNG. Must 5"'11: Da\en· RIFLE: t.lARWN C'.old11n ~ 3 SlAi\tF~~ KITTENS --E~q~u~IP~·------~9_;,04 "Scoote" llt'r pl'E'l'd, lo'ull llfille, lllt'ady Drpoi l\tgr. Saies.Serv. Eire. hOu.se full ol bl' au t . $15. Chairs. lamps, end por1, Like nl'W $60, 4:1' oak A ri.tounhe, Z2 c.~I, l..l'v<'r SEALPOINT • SI:> EACJI JCUl"SON ion,;: i;halt o/b, We Take \\Ork. ~1 11 a. trolull Corp. lmn1. empl. Spa.nish/f.1edlt. furn: 9' tables, small OO!lkll, coffee dc!I~ v.•/lamp Sll, Clt'an acuon, W/•1 X Qu11hntll 1 ___ _:*..c:.,.._=-~'"='c'_*:c___ v.•/manua.l & part'!. Never P IANO teacher, over :w )rs, I For tnt. ph, Cr\siiald 8-IO gold velvet so!a It love5eat. tbl. Oravc1. while or beige, quti.I ~5, dbl & 'l:'.l S30-S4!J, .oope. sr.,, Call 528.981.i Oogt 154 u11Pd. S.'~O. ph: 646--789-1.. Motorc.ycles W'lll"" 00 •· ,,.,,,., ,,,. iitn only tl&nRl. King.sz bdrn1 M't, Game all sin's HoUyv.·ood beds Projeetor u.·/ioom Jens & --'-"-"-'_Pc·-"-"-"-"-'_dc•">c'· __ 1 Boat p 906 In Trade • " c -~c~~~~~ set, Hi-back velvl't +dbl. bed. Maple BR. set, bt'adcd 5Cn.'t'n S7.i bolh, LAKELAND 'fEHHIE!tS -s, ow•r i;.art I ll~/· l"!llplnit Jn lllU~I(' * WAlf RESS-EXP'D decorator chairs, Deng· blk 2 chests of <lrawl'I'S; also Doyle comm·t Va c II u n1 TV, Radio, HIFi. Royal Irish Kt>nn<'I~. Re~ '69 (lJJ'~\'SLF:R bl' 'IJ HP. On vw·, .:_chool • .,.113-7593 _ -1 No1 undrr 21. NO PHONE naug. sofa & Jovest>at, s· ml!M.'. itl'.'ml'. (:reclan mot.it \\'/a ttuehmen!~ s:i0, ELec A1n<'1·1c11'i; tnp hr•'rlhni;: " S1 3!1.-, '62 Chris 1!1' \l'OO<l, e PHARMACIST e I CALLS. Apply in person. cotklail tahl!' 11•/n1atching bar/rm. dividt>r, orig, val. ttddins: 1nachlne S1.i. l-1-fluty St•reo 136 i;how <'6111bl1~hnwnt nff<'r Hl'i H.P .. S\50(). OR BEST BILL YATES I ~urf & !=iirloin, 5930 \\'.Coast c:on1n1odes, 10' 50111 -green $1 .000, \\'!11 sell $300 494-2436 lT•lo-tiller $60, ML~. Open (IU lstandinJ:: pupp1e!I. ,.hi'!!(' ot-f'ER. &12-Kl97, YIS-~'211, VOLKSWAGEN nclil'f. part 1i1nr. S11utd;iy Hll'y., N.R. & golrl -import!'d tklgian.1~•c>cl-c7c;cl8:....,~----~=I lo n·a,sc111ohle offerl'. •• Vacuun1 1utw-VOLT youn~ster~ 1•·1U 11111.t· n1akl' ex! 2211 arn ·l hours. Hospil11.l expcr-iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ru! velvet, Pictur<'s, larnps, Garan• Sai• 812 962-49lit 19771 Estuary Ln, ~11:.1·1:,n, lleiile!! f'ackarrl, i:rand foundatio,n bt1 eh(''i. c,6~,,_c.,,18~."-C~ha----1c1-00~-J2."l:i2 Vaill! Road lt>11C:<' f1refrrr<'d. e MUNT· 1 t'lr. All less than 3 mo • 11.8. lb1wn !\lagooJ.ia & niodrl ~00 H, Xln! conduion; Doubte chan1pion hrcd-Pric-rge-r .al tTon1 San ,ltu1n Ciipl~traoo ll ~);1 ~~~n~-~~~~;"~'"~3~~17'..._jp,iTjiQ'S;J;;!";;:;,;;;:;;;;; Eka h Biii.if ... f I''-" ,~_,... boat w/trir. 4~ 1'ord i>ng. R.17-l'{(X)/4\lJ.ljll/1!19-2'.llil INGTON JNTERC0t.11\1UN-Metthilndiff . old . ...,.,sperate. I !).)U-. c S7:\ or n1aki' oller. Call l'u ro1n ,,...., to . ..,.). Days ~lbM/alt 6:30 '"" ___ ----------I IT\' HOSPITAL e PC'rson. WHY BU'!' PATIO Sa.Ir: 2 niotorrycles, ALL 1ten1s br'!lorl nrw -LO\I/ 52S-9845 alter 6 p :-it ! 80:1196~·2728 or 11n1e ""-~ 7.,1 n.n..rLl'V'I ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;;iiiii t'llr air l'Oixll!iOlk'r, 2 TV's llo JI " I d C ,_ " -1 Dopl J777" n .• ,,, Bi"d I • HF.AT COOK\VARE ~}A'l', \l('rkrlays. :< •• ~lJTl\llli'r {Ill ' a '"' · "'°" · ·· n1C'n's cloU~•. n1attl'l.'~Sl's, 1=~ '''"Ch ' H I B I 11 1 ~ v.•aterless, stainlrs..; slrl'l, t' ,\ N 1· ,\ S 'fl C VALUF.·. !l.m67. """ 4<> ns Crall Connie • THINK 1,1nl ngton eat 1• or ca Antiques 800 1, pl'l'SSure cooker, e!eclric Xl ".. SJ 7-I D &17 7807 fURNITURE7. sold hon1" derno $3.i!l lakr Spanish 1\lecht stereo con· GREAT Dane. ~ial<' Brindle • 111 COuu. · Jo:· ay~ Q :A -. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij llkilll"t, firtplace lJgs. lad-1~0 o·" I -""'"' 547-~; eves 67J.7',!j7 ff ND ,,,.. Iii.Ill '"' cu 1~ " sole, A:'ll/F:0-1, ta,.,.. ou!le1 l yr Papt"l'S-AKC-~ ""n. PR 0 f" BS SIONAL phunc rler &. various n1isc. items. ..... .,,... k SJS '' ' ,., e.• -- 1 'bl 1 MMd .,.,.,..tat . · a1c.11n1; Cos1 $fiOO N<'11! !\'ow $lii r-c<1121'f'f' · ch:unpion i;rock. Bo•ts, Rent/Chart'r 908 SU solicitor • Dana Point, San LIQUIDATION SALE B• F ex1 • zs.tJ Eul'opa Dr., 01 f'arrJngs Sl3'1 take S20-"'0 37,c Sh•' 1 " Clemente, Capistrano al't'a Rent nw. to mo. with s.K>-3283 aft 6 ~·eekda)'ll, all .,...,,.... .w. ' "':c, f'ars cro1ii)('< · vl'ry ''FRIEDLANDER · Spanish sola & IOVf'SIE'BI $6.iO genHe & hou.sebmkl'n. I""-· \\'ANTED: Sabo! \\'I th all \\'ork in your 01vn home. fOO•'• Purchase Option 1_ru._!_s._1_-_sun_.______ ak 1319 b 1 f ""'171 i\tOVING. 9· cuS101n cabinr! "''~ J \ 11 I " or s or .,.,.,.-. hou~ inrl. SIOOO Jn•t'st· f'f!Ulpnlt'nt or' u.r;usl. r••nt in •••CM (HWY. "1 Bf'~t deal in al'('ll., Pholl€' Highest Qu1lity Ind. ilem scltttion THURS thru Sun. F\Jrn, Jl h . 1nclt1dl's .Bo(::an RB 115 H1-fi, or buy - R. E. ~·xk1n , 5.l7.{.i824 e f!!ll..7566 "'3>' 14"' •-1,,·-· 9·00 , "' I 24 H D I * * INVERTER, <'at Kit, A,\l/t'o\l, G·-~ '"'"''bl•, me111. $.\..l(I or l'lf>~1 offer "'· ,,....,., '""' · -· r. ey. heds.clothes,decoraror .... 1'1Pl4 l2VDCI 110 ....... ," •· ~ '&"""12 300 F:. \Vi~•ttria Avf'., NEW·USED-SERV. atld noon European Ant'ques OM nluue " • 0 patl() SJM'aker. records & nr !raur lnr . j,_. .. .,,. I -~=·---__ I I CUST fllC('('~. f'tc. E1·f'ryth1ng 1n VAC, r,o cyc!Ps, 400 Y.att 5. ID Arr1ul1a. Calif 9100fi RECEPTIONIST Furniture Rental tip-top shape, 30192 Gran<le NEii' ,, .. mblo<I ,< •ftl'"ked mus1cs1.~:110nsS ... ti73-270~1 1\KC SI L.KY PUPPJF:S ~'>· T . Ch.--,-11-- - - - -e · "" " ~ \Ve're 9 wks & rC'ady for "~ . 1_\tn~rr:e1". 11s. !.l .Y • ... ..,. .... I t\lust h!!.V" lU'Crelanal b;11·k. 517 II'. 19th, C.'• l. ug,3•31 Vii;ta. Laguna NJ g u c I. I Sa,,.,,.,_ 1100 c--•1 PanalP..lnit 18 .. Color TV I u d F .,, or c ---.., " '" .. Oil . ,.,, . d.L 11(>11' hnn1C'li, 50 CClnH' S!'C ~ I~ . ' l~1u g NlS· -'68 TRIUMPH 250 ground, no Sil. Exprr. Proposed Antique Shop A'laheim 774-2800~ic'c'c'-'~""=c-------528-9845 aCler 6 p J\1 . y,'fs!and. 6 mos old. $300 u~: \\r boys at·r $!OO & ~'"c•c·_>l-''i--.---"c"-·-----ol r.1ktng advC'r11s1ni; or Pit Must liquidate all it La.Habra 694-3708 i\IOVING·B<'<ls, sofa, bunks, l','('('kdays. :~~~~S~47~-~2l~37~~~~ sis is $,l.25 v.•/o P8P''r'S. S200 Boats, Sail 909 good. New ofc~. OC. Air-ESTATE SALE!! crib, chlldrens furniture. ** VACUU'.\I TUBE VOLT & $225 u.·ith. ~8--lfJ.'>7 flOl'f. Advanttnl<'nt. COST OR NEAR COST F . Sport Catamaran. bookra.~!l t\1ETER. Hcwl~lt Packard, l J[ s , F CORONADO 23 Escellcnt l'(lt1d111on. 18377Gil $49S MISS EXEC AGENCY rom niolion picture eX<'CU· & n1uch. n1uch nion'. \larch n1od!'l i!OO 11 xlnt rondi!ion: Free: 10 You ,,TAL: Silky .t--niale. ei·('nir. usrd.Lnt1df'd r!vr'sluxur1ousTustinho111e. 19 · W _ 2l. 164-1I t\Ialdl'n · I 1oy.m1ni Poocllr Bo1h BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 410 \V . Coast Hwy., NB in Garage Sale Sacrifice 7 roonts-of ltallan • S75 01· 1nakr OfI('r! ! C11ll 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii5'~~ ,._,,,,1,1,,1,_ 6 ,16 _ 0 1• 2 ,,,. CORONADO 27 61:3-39:1!! Ci~lt> Hunlington Harbour. 52S-9S45 afl<'r 6 Pill I '"'"" ., Denio.Loaded. St11l' SZOOO SI I k I 790 & !\-!edit lu1·n1shing.~ inclu d· • :l4S-1022. 33:~ E. 17th St. . 1rra1on f l!S • ll'a nu1 1 · l MOVING Eas! Curage v.·et>kdays. F R1':E to a good hontl' w11h CORONADO 30 RECEPTIONIST Qu.,,, "'"" d<k. o~k li30. ing oil paintings, F'ine Iv-'Sal F . Sal & 5-,. C:\l :1~2 Valle Road &in Juan CapislrAJIO 837-lHOO / .J934:i 11 / 499.2261 " " • " in rm ierl's Kin bdrni <', ri. · un. urn., ,\!UST SELL Entir1' llousr-lov1n~ cart', aricirailll' J)en10.delu.'((' inltnor. Geo'l ""'lice S.fOO. l\1aJ·oo· ~lis-Cnlru i•i·nch Brk1rn1 1820. g P • g appl. goll club:-, fr<'<'Z('r, Id ,. . 1 f 1,0,~o,0 -d Pu, p<•Pf), >'loo•<. Sacrll1c(' S;ilr• v• ·~ 5Ul!e Pcr11ntablrs&hH1111s · ho rurrns1u11:~. rPr1.rr, ~· •. - ' ion Vif'J'o co. Vl'r"' pl('aS· Provincial sec'y lR'.lO. Dul ch ·.. ·. , · · sterro. l11.111ps. Dutch llaven h~~·hrkn. ti~ 2 ~ 1 • 3 ·' ooll Ch1hu11lu1as, i;nod blr..-.::1 linr 116~ CORONADO 35 ~ 6 11r11f plan1s D1nPl1r set piano, ICIY$;. h 1k<'~. n11sc. ~ " I' & f I d an111o·orkin,ronds.Call;'lt1~.~ Sea Chest 17th C<'nt/ Tyro-: • · 'l\1anna, 6221 Fenley Dr.. 530 :Ill!! up~ ncri· og. Sh I I An obJects. 1V, n1uch 1nore. ll.B. 2235 :'11rycr Plal'c. ~18.2169 or :, ' · Doivt L/Hll', c.~I !n 11·atrr. ~howf'r, d1c1rl. dinghy. l1C'n10. Laura. jj7.6122, Abii:ail Ah-IPan ches1. 1 t Crn1 18 · Fri. Sat & Sun only, 10.5.I ---------~-!)42.57G9. LOV1\BLJ:: golrlcn Br ;\!~I~, bot Pf'rsonnrl ARrncy, 230 all;ir chair. J7!h Cent. French l""I Rod llo'll, Tu'''"· )'.\OV ING -Lint'ns ~ .. hc'drlinc., Sp"og('r SpaniPl and Collir Ak:C, ft•n1alr BraJ:lf' PlJp~. I 17 h C '''" LADIES ski boots, Sll.e 61~ 4 Id ,,-··-·c D\11 W. \Varner, Su1!r 211. SA. IS!. Jg. 1 !'nl. -"'-"c'-C:.--'""--'-----1 old & nf:'1\· i·e1•f'lrv antiq.-I , 11-·' I I inn n , .1. ""' 1 • SETS . ho . " I d d sk ' k ~,, mix ~ . . ~-... U'f'l'l . S;i1•r no11•. Ba nk Terms-Trades Y achts Royale Inc, 1<JI? \\'. CnJ.<;! Jh1y. 4 rw1n x sprincs botlle.~ & insulator'!', lots or a 1es 01•«n i P r a, ~1... Fr<'ckll'o;. LnvPo; I'.' h 1 1 fl . .~ SIRE, 18 1110, S40 for RELIABLE young n1an, O('llt Also decorative access. & ma11resscs S2J SI'!. 4 ,c;pu; . o.. 897 8, ski rack, Nt'cc1 supt'r -'~"-''~-··· "'_:_-,·~c·-~----'>~ "" 1 Jnisc. ~·ri. ~t & Sun, ft-12-i09ti: S:i641~3 3118 " ,....,. appearanct', agr ·""~'" ;Jr double box springs & mat· f"o\'a sr1v111~ n1ach1ne. Ar1 !ull time gardening Ja,1n DUU'h farmer ~lyle pe11-$21i t l 9 CPnlPr !rear!. C.:0-1 l pnl. 673-1292 SUPl'.:R affetr. 10 mo. old SCHNAUZER Pup~, 111alc a1 .maintPnanct' 11'0rk. CIJOCI tr1·. A~•irted <'oarh lamps. ~:~~~~:ii cor:r · i::rou.p ~ e OESPERATE_l_J _e_ puppil's. Need gd hon1e 1m-s1ud. groonHni:t N.R. 61.>.1$10 • 1 , 1 <h hi li~hl fixtu1:f's & candPlabra .--11 POOL, _,_,.c, slatr, olrl-816.0ll:I~ t>ppor uni Y or {' rig ., hlul' gTTen Si \!J.con1pl. All Gara;e sail" -must St' med. ~1ale pt. Poodle and 962-861? Peasant 11·01·en ta11Pslrit's. !'ls. 7', W. 9'. _C_A_L __ ,-,-. llkf> n('11, 11'ry 1·IPan, 500 cc '·· h ' ju~r :.! ~rs nld R;irini;: &· Inn, ne1v c .. tc . tires. 1 _m_•-"-·------~---I Paint ing~. Small mirrori;. in J:ood cond &· stC't·ihzM furn. &: houst'hold l!<'n1s Sacrillce. ill <l..,hvl'r lrrr. ? lr1nalc Cock t\ Poo. SALES -i\!('n & \\'on11'n Cradl('s, Spanish Hlrs. A."-UFF. lR&'i H.arbor Blvd. Thurs. thru Sun 673.0:tt9 l l-12 Hay<'!i i\i·r. Long 968-726:. 3/lfl POODLE: pups, brau1. l1Hle tiny !oy & lny~. Stud serv All rolor/i. w.13-9719 cnno;ini:: P '1 11 i fl Cnni-brakes, p1s~on a~ lo'A·C'r pctilrvrly prirf'tl. 673.'15.'>.I ~nd. Purists delight and STOP!!! so1trd pil'c{'s of f)Ot1('ry. C:VL 548-9157 VISTA Gard~I" Sale, 21592 Beach, 713/ 435.888.1. China. rrystal, 1vood. brass DEATH in fanlily-mus! ~11 Kankoa Lanl', Hun!lngton :0.1Y nan1t' is \\'olf$;1!..ni. I'm a IUZ:t)' dog, full of !un : __ _ e RI.ACK SCmTIE, AKC, 2 ~rs nld, n<'f'ds good ho111<'. $.~~,. ;,;1&-1w2 Nc1,pnrt 20 t1j~)tl in [X'rfrrt shape. Best oUe.r O\'C'r S950. 67~595-l after ' LOOKING & ACT & CP!lflC'r BABY grand piano SIOO, 8' · prtva!r pty, aln1ost brand BC'ach. ~3 P~t. Sat· har & ~!ools $125, f>.burnl'r and nC'<'d a f amil~· fl -•" ~11p .(: F11mn:ing_. --1969 YA:O.l.\HA Sales minded person, see rnr yoursrlf, a rra! career np. por1uni1y. Xlnt f!.l!Ure lor ngh1 man. Ean1ini::s eon1· n1enre 1n1n1cdial('!y ~holdd hf' in f'Xe>'s~ of SZ$0. J)t'r 1\k. No canvas~ini:: nr ~olic111ng. lntl'rvil'.'11·s h.v ;ippointn1en! only 9.3 Wr('kday~. 8.lJ.277!. SALES 1rainl'e for marking rle1icei; S: sra1 1onr1;.•. Earn 11·hile you ll'arn. I! no! 1~ill ing to Ir.am at !rainer pay. don'r apply. r.ond op- porl11nit1 . Outline <JUal1lica- horu;. \~'l"ill' C\as'<ificd ad Nn 110, Daily Pilot, P 0 Box 1560. Co~ra '.\lr~a. !12fi2fi SALES \\'nmnn. lmm('ri p'l~i· tmn for lully exprr fa..,t11on I salt's 11·oman. S.,1lar} + 223 62nd St Nprt Bch (N1•1\·part Shorcs1 01· call for arpt. an)1lhnc * 646-6486 * Second Hand Rose ANTIQUES i\iaplC' chopp1nJ: block, lar:::c pint" hu1C'h lable, pine corn('r cab1nrt. m1'lplf' & pint 1ea cart, 11alnut linrn rahinel. p1fll' dry i;ink, s.: many other Jo\'r]y Pl<'l.'('S. OpPn \\ltd thru Sal 11 A\l-'l P:\I 139 \\', ls1 S'r. 1!38·0742 ron1m Apply Chri.,· !'o-1 T\l~tin Coast Plaza. Ask for \!rs. _,,.,.,...,...,..,,., .. ..,,...""!"' Echvards or :'.1r. Brrohn. • •••••••• 4 SARA.I-I Coven1ry ne<'ds fl. Liquidation Sele or pt tim<' h!'!p. No 1n-· h I \v·11 I . . Pn:ipo~l'd RnTlQUr s O!• vestinen . 1 r111n, min . '" ,3,1,07 & '1'906S \!11~1 hrpil1!·1h• 111! "1 :_g~. '.::...: ~ :.._ ~ COST OR NEAR COST S~Y$ill I 22~ ti'2nd ~L. N.B. Fee1 on the i>':l'Ollnd. To salrl' li"°f'l\pror! Sho!'f'SI develnp1n<'nl d}nan10. fil!\.6186 1H'.\11111r Lit Re;nde" •••••••••• Personnel Agency * ANTIQUE *~ 4.;ocJ Ca1npui; Dr .. :-..?.. Spanish \Valnut rlininJ!' rn1 Call For Arr><:11111rner\,I Sl't, 6 Chair•&. table 11· ca.iv. ~16-Zl18 f>~ ba.o;r, $150. Also old trunk ..-,,...-.~ s1:;. 6-llJ.7TI.l -===~==~ Sec'y /Treas. $201< * ORIENTAL RUGS LA. art'a. Con~1rucnon I Ro~·al 1'Prm1n. 12x23, &ISO hac~ound hrlpful. .•mlr sut's. 67.>.t:)."; Sr. AC'tt. $18K Appliances 802 Con~lr. CPA nr PA bkgrnd _____., GE auto u.ash"r S:-il. K<'n-N EWPORT ninrl' ;ul!n \1a'<hf'r !;6:1 Ro1h Personnel Agency lale mocl('ls & xln1 rond. 833 Dover Or,, N .B. Guar ,t;.. delivered. ~6-8672, 642-3870 S.li-811:} 1------~--~ SECR.ETARIAL, Pl 11n1e--l); hrs/\\·k: S?.O Mighl cons1drr radio advert1~11ll? agrnry app1't'11tlte. Nr Balbo:1 ls. Rex A111t't'115ini::. 67J.-f,(i6.l SERV ICE Station A1tl!ndant, ru ll nr par1 timl'. 11\Pt undC'r 18 Mu~t br nt'a1. ~ood ap-~ara.nct" & personAblr. Good rrfl'rt'nt'('S. 3 0 0 6 Harbor Blvd., C.:'1-1 SHARP GIRL. lor prrwl11ct1on ai;c;1i.;nml"nts, srhcduling, in. 1rntory, part~ ordrr· lne--typing l'l'QUlrl'{i. ;\lal'(;TT~r Yacht {.'nrp. 16.ll Pta~n11a, C.:0-1 Sharp Gid Frid-;y- AUrac!1Vf', W<'ll grocnned "Live-\Virc" \\'ilh good tell'- phone voice !() 11ct as TTcep· tJonist in a bllsy, exciting oClicc. l\1ust he f'Xprr'd. in rle11ling 11·i lh !hi' puhhc. Sales hack,.;1·nrl pn::(itT<'d bur not nC"c. C11!1 i\hs1 For· rrst 64j. IJ21 . SHARF: my homr. Ma!ur,. COIN--0pcra!Pd 1v;u.hrrs & rlr.1·rr~. elec. dry<'rs 2'lO volts. Xlnt t.'Ond, .$100 pr. j!~lt,;OS 111! :. * GAS dryers .t rPblt 11 ash<'rs, s;J{). \Vil! de I \1'/gl1ar. ll lstr Chi::. i'vlaytag l'epairn1an. 531-86~7. REFRIG. Scars S?.6.'>, wh 1 \' rros1les5, 1rf>n1kr. 11·arr. P('l'f('el. Sac $226. 962-5.1115 REFRIG. \\·/lrg b o I Io m freezer S9~1- Call 61&-71120 11 CU t"t ropprr fros!-frPC l'rfrig; 20" Philco B&\V TV, maplC' t·ab. &14-2416 Rt-:t"RIGERATOR t3' Adn11raJ SJO. Xlnt cond, necrls tray. 673-0i74 ADMIRAL l"l'frigeralor, 12 cuh1e fool. Top freezPr, good ronrlition S:JO. S.'"17-4639 KF:N:'l10RE wash<>r. $3.l. t'X· cellrnt: Alsn \\'ashf'r & Dryrr sPt 5-10-109:1 Cameras & Equipment 808 lflrlY or couplr. Room ft.,.r ROLLEJCORD Ill C c&R for.pl time h~kpng. l child S20 Hcilancl F u111 r11.n ic nk. 8-16--lMJ Strobonar {lash S20 Bnll'X ** SHARP GIRLS l61n111 nit'l\li(' can1erfl 3 lens lum'I S&l Ampro 1000 \\lltl looking for a prrnia~I JM>-16 min pl'OJl'CIOr S'l5 Af'R\l!i sition. 0llt' of OrMJ?c Coun-Cl Sl:i Goldit 3.Jmm i;hdr 1y'5 hnC'st botiC[ue!I. i\tust br pr~i.)N·lor Sl5. f.tany smaU f'};f'l('r'd >n 1111 phtl5es of n1nv1r 1tl'ms 962-RtU botiqur ~elllni;t. Full time I ====--=--c-~--7.'C rotml po~ition !or rii;tht gal. PENTAX Spotma!1c, fl.4 Ill II f lrn~. C.O.S. mrtrr xlnl If ~-on qua y i:11 or ap. ,,lE LOOK rnnrl . Sli\ 96.\-.715« !)'.liniment. . 61.t.2400 Furniture 810 TE 1.EP!IO:"f. Acll'ert1~i11~ I·---------- lrnn1 nur pl!'aAAnl Nf'\\port Cl'..o;;'f(}\! made St>ctionfll ofhet'•. llrly 11At?CS. 1'1orn-vif11. modrl'n, bh1f', xlnt 1ng nr f'Vf'. shift$. 66-3030 Mnd1hnn Call 6i5-341.'l 11.l l\1r. :.1nrlrld~-~~ A""TIQUI'.; oak din'g table T F. LE P 11 0 N r. I N. Sa(· ,\lapl(' rlhle. bed. 212 1't:Hv11:w1:-11:. Nn M<ll1110:. Poppy, fd\J 12-i Eflrn S·ln to S."!(J Jl('r v.t"'ek. • ;, noo:-.1s or flJR:-J: \\'ork .111 hon1f', rhti~f' y<iur RDll:0-1 , LIV 1:; R\1. DJN'G o\\'11 hCl11n.. C11il 714 !1'28·0Z:•~ H.\1, RF:fl{IG. 67:1-0Rf't>. The fASll's! rlmw 1n lhn \\'1·~1 CASH for lurnilure. ap- . , 1 Dni!v P1klt Cl~Sliihl'<l I pl1aflC'r~. lrinl"l. m1~r item:<. AO 642...:iGiS Open 9 10 !I. 642-70\;i nl.'11• ~panish sofa .t lnvr ~larch 201h, 1971 i;\ove Sfl(), n cut ft h'f'('7.<'r S('af. sold for $1i;i0, plea!W QUALITY furniturt> & 1n1sC'. $175, Piano mo1•111g dolly n1ake cash offer. No ~·rom 9:30 to 4:30, Sal 3/20. $2.i !!70-6919 ~~~~ble ofll'r rl'fused. ?92 E. _1s1h St, c ~I. NEW OOGHOUS"E ILLNESS makrll it a necP~Si· Machinery 816 for sal('. $15, 51!1~10:i9 ty to s<'ll a ll 10 !'IJOn1sl-----------Miscellaneous o( nt'ar neiv ~1 e (l 1 t. :.!O.R Ai\1P Onan ~enera!or. Wanted 820 furniture. Cheap e>1ample !!' r,-;00 v"att output. Buil!·in I----------- black naug, 50fa ,t, Iovc.~eat st11rtt>r. S250. 548-9497 \\'Al"TED: Lad1r~ quali!y nr\·rr used S150. (213) Miscellaneous 818 I !'prin1; & Sun1m<'r 11<'Rr. 925-3622. Bags. je11e!ry, small An· *AUCTION* 1 :. PC \\'a!nut finish hdrn1 M'l $59. 1 5 pc Spanish 11alnu! finish r\n>:>.srr 11·/ Friday 1 P .M. n1irror s~. 3 6 dra1•·pr March 19th 11·alnut f1n1sh dre~eri1 $2,i Furn. ,\ppliancr!<, Colol'f'd f'a. All Ln good con<!. UFf. TV's. S!Pt't'OS & much more! l~:i Hartxir Blvd, C:0-1 Windy's Auction Barn 5 1~9-l:i7 ------~-c120i~i'~ Nr~·porl, C\I 6'6-S686 I 4' SPANIS!I d~sk $49. I Behind Tonv·~ Bldg. ,'rlat'l 5 pc dine I tr set $29. 1 s1~=~=~·cc~-'':~~ pc Sponi."lh rl1n('ttf> 1't'1 S:J9. PRIME Yacht CI u b J 7 pc rlint'tt<' S<'I antique Membership For Sale v.hite finish S39. AH in good Below Market. Own•r roncl. UFr. Hl!l:l Harbor Moved Away F r o m Blvrl. C711. 5-1R-n.ri7 Are a. ca 11 (213) BEAUTIFUL Kini;:-sz bc>rl. 588-7557, Mon. Thru !inn. Nel'('r u~~d, ~till Fri. 9 AM-5 PM. Wknds packacrri. framr inclurlrrl. (J14) 756-2196 $1::0, 11'1'.>rlh $260. \V j 11 • rlt>l1ver. usually home . )'.10DER:-l !'nurh. stereo R!2-6ti36 A\l/F:0-1. Coff<'e labl f', .'.orNJt\G rm set \\'/hi-back floor la111p. Chair & ol· I I h ,1 !on1;in. N-i:8US::r" H.O. train. <<'enraor ran·~. ,, 1~c •4 .• 302 chau-,;. Oil paintini:i:~. Dror•1-'-·~-'-------- l<';if desk. Chtllf'~f' 9x12 nJg . :0-IOVJNC, srl!ing f'l'C'IJ-'lhing: Sun llnlv 9-3. 576 Sea"·ard furn .. \\·ash/dryer. h11by & Rrl Cd~1 . kit. lh1n"s . 494--8973, 483 Oak liqul's 0 n ronsigninenl. TUI'~-Fri. 9: 31}5Pf>I. .-)H-!1311 \\'ANTED: n or 32 Cal. blanlf pi~lol k 11la~t1c ('Ol'PN'd ll'•'1gJ1t~. R.17-5900 Office Furnitur•/ Equip. 824 CALCULATOR, f 11 r r r n I 1nOO!'I. 12 Di.:;it 11o·11h tape, r<'caH memnry, fi7.i-60f"i0 Pienos/Orgons WE QUIT!!! 826 • After:, ycari;, we arr clo.~ing our dOO!'i; in Co.~ln J\.lf'~~. All remaining Pianos & Or· gans. nrw & u~cd, 10 <'l<'PJ at auc11nn prl{'I'.~. Sa1•in.c;s ur to 50';~. No dC'alers pll'11~r. \\'ARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO 11!19 :'<J<'11•port Blvd. 642.S.IS4 J L~RGF: sofa S.· lo\'t' !IC!atq~5c1c"_La;:c""c:c"c':....,_~-~- $91:. I 8' Sp.1n1sl1 r,ofa & ifi" GIRLS h1cycles: t>luP CLEARANCE love scat SJ1!1. 2 Sp;tn\~h Ruc\g roaster S20. rrd SALE lo\'r seAt.~ $29 f'a All in Sch\1·inn coastl'r. S 2 :i . t:Mrl ronrl. f.· sl<'riJ17.f>rl. 6-l4-21Zl Ovl!r 100 Pianos & Organs ~==~~=~~=~~I Reduced for lmm('rl. sale. UFF. l/!SC1 Harbor Blvd. \\.ANTED: 1!159 :'llf'C'lullnch Buy Now & Save I C:'l-1. :"11R-94.)7 t~fying Scot1 60 HP. any 0pPn Daily 10 til fi i<P.W nrver usM k.tlROEL· rondition. "1Lll P6Y up lo I~ "~1 7""! Fr' J0.9 * ~11n 12.5 F.R SPANISH SOFA&. love· ·"'· . .., .. ~:r COAST MUSIC se!lt, 11~tch guard!'d, pv! NF;\\'PORT Beaeh Tennis NEWPORT & HARBOR p1y: Solrl $675 1•·i!J arcept, Club ch art e r mPm· Cosla MeAA * &12-28:il :s:.;l!l nr bsl ofr. 968.58()6 h!'r.;hip-S400 + transfer. Call 642-U10 \\'ANTED: llon1elcss piann 8' !=iOFA, newr usrrl, q1ul!Prl<1-=""'cc'-"--~--~ \\!ill slC1rt' piann lgrand flnra!, scntehguarded $1 2.i. A,,·JPH ! Cat. br11nd ne111. 2 J'lrf'fcrrcdf In niy hnnic. NI) :O.lntchini; ]()Vescat S 7 J . .hrs on <'ngine. run in walrr. rhild~n. ~0-2'l79 aflrr 5 53~195j sa.nd. snow or 1vherevl'r. SOFA. roast, s75. Virtuf' ;....1us! sell Sl093. 548-468.'l '"Pc·c"c"-~~~ d1n<'tt~ sci, rnd table. 6 C0:0-1:0.IODORF: outbrd mo1or BABY GRAND PIANO chrs. $15. all xlnt, 846--6060 5-HP SW, Sailboat fibE'rg!ass 6(1 Y!'ars old. $.i()J, Urright, <197-20.~2 :11w G. Shep/B('aglr 1 1 ~ yr. olrl n111lr 11ell lralnf'd l111es rvrryixxly 5-19--i•ll7 air 2 P:-.J :;119 SUPF.R aflect1onatc c11!ico killf>rl dr~Jl<'rah'ly nr{.-ds 11 i;orirl l10111r . 6 mo old, lonJ: hair. 530-0153 :l/!S GER\1A'.ll Sheph~rd & l~1br11dor puppiP~. tl 1vks. P('rfN'T for children, 49~~709 E'.'\'t;r,1srr ~pr1ni:;rr ~pan1rt Ptip.~. Al\C". ~7:, .• ~· up. 18\~1\ \\'h;i dnn, 11 R. 8·12-3223 AF"ralAN ru1111i<'s. n1u!r & h'n1al<', i;ho11 qua Ii ( y. T('rn1s. filfi-flG!l2 SILKY !rrr1>'r puppil'!I F<'ma!r S7iO: J\1alc Si5. Arlull fpmalr $:.0. Al,C. fi.lf>..7ll5 , _________ _ 2 CURLY bla\·k Ccxk-a-poo puppie~"." 5 \\('<'ks nld. SlO c11l-h . :i.1.>..;,9c"'------ J\10VING lo\·11ble pup -D.\CJISHUN D pup~ 111111. hshrkn to goorl hClmt' y,/y<l. I AK<'. Blk & !an & Sh,.,rt h~1r I?t>xir _Poodlr niahocany rl:'rl. 714/li33--101ll OoJ:h~r 1nr1. .ilR-fl ll).> 3/20 N""D 1 ho -1-1-r~..-ov1n2 mr w 1•nr- G Shrp. puppi~s 7 11N•ks <'rl yiird Jnt' hr11utiful :i yr oild anrl l G. ~hrp, ovrr nll1 Afi!:hlll'I hotJnrl_ 611-13~1 a yr old to 111u1.j ho1nr, -----------• :'llalf> Braglr, Ah C 5UU1SJ3; R36-<l l9:: 3/19 H~ISIC'N'(I. $10 ADORABLF: \\hit(' puppy -* ."i.j7-7&1S ,.. :<hor!hairt'd. shots. ve r y 1-M-lN-lA_T_U_R_F-. -SC-1-1-,-,-0-Z-,-• .,-5 fn<'ndly, 1'o good Mmr. Ar\rl love for a pcrf"t'I f)('! T'ac1f1c ) arh!s 613-1.110 ... · 139-00 4 300 . ---.:..Ill !'.l, 11\'lfl, .. l. ' •• Trad1l1onal C11pr Cod Cal 1nilc~ Vf't)' clean. Call &=lllbol.1t l Ion disp hrad ' ~1:"1.l·I~ rlayl', n1tc 642-4330. slfl-2 f;ini heat R:\-l-J~.il3 A~k ror .IOI' 'll' Cnl Ch111t~rill '6'1 ,c.,-,,c,,-,-,,-,-1"2";-E0,~,,.,-.,-,,0!1~ke Rr11uliful!y nuilntalnC'd, Pvl nt"'i\', '71 lie pla!r~. J.,o!s pty. $:1750. ll11-1ll.%. nf r'(JrHs Sl~~. Call Tum CAPE COO CAT BOAT Cri$~ JnsurancC', S.IO-iS78 or )8', fbrbls. C213) 834-3SS.l fi73-12!12 acll _:,_. -~~~~I COLU:".IB!A 2& 1969. Dav~: AT,\LA Ill" racing h1kt, htf> 213 / 636·0737; Eves: 714/ \\l'IRhl. 21 .. fr11mr. cam· 6-\f>.j72~ nr 213 I 333.Jlll!. pagno!11 eqpt 1 \\'l'l'kS olr!. B Sl.-/D-k-9-10 Ori~ pr\ci· $17.l. Sac $125 oats:. 1ps oc s 612-2107 RALBOA Island ITlOOl'lll~ & HONOA'-,.~"rc,-.,",,-,,c-,cl-"c'c" 21 · inboarr! rrul.SC'r !or sale. hkl' n<'~. lr~s th11n 700 m1 Sip~ 2. r.rav ma.rifl(' 6 cyl Rini;: neck phca.sanl oockE pn111nr. S2100. Loc111Pl1 in ~l'\--01:\6 nnr1h Ray or: Sapphire SL -.,-,-.:\Qi--5'-.-,-"-"'-~-,-,.-.-IC"--"-"c11c,-"' 611-:&6 c•in<lll1on $3!0. or best oUer 21;· slip, $6:"1/n111. Pril'all' %2-76M..q , hnrh. No. 2 _ Ralt-.na Co\'E'~. 1ro·N-'D_A_305-. -Sc~,-,-mcb-,.-,-.-,-,-,-1, N.R Call fi7:Hl11 rond, eonipl rebll engine. 1~'11" ); 30· ti BOAT shp. $375. &15--1976 67:1-6999. 3120 f\t11r!lnrl't'!lt Krnnf'I~ ~f..00~9 4-~ay tir. $100 mo. Everenl-.-67-Y-A-1-1·-A-H"A-.,";-.-,-..,.-1-.,,-,,.c_I AIREDALE terrier puppies, M1C'hRel._iU!r. 67~~ i\1ust i;rll. F irst $"l25 take,;. BEAUT 6 mo Old male pl Collir. pt Col·kPr. G<Y1rl 9 1\k5. Pvt pty. Champion BOAT SLIPS 642-2;>-lu siI<"d. 51.';...10~'-'-:--;;:;;;-;;;;;:;;;: 1--'-"~'~'"1._N~.B. ·C11.11 SIS·~l.1~.l 1-,-!16-,-,-,-,70-N"D_A.,.._o,,~.,-c"sc.~,7,oo~ SILKY T<'1TJ(:°r~ 1\l:ill' punny ----BF:AUT. r<'J:: Collie nreds N 2 adull fl'mal('Q, H<'as Boats Speed & Ski 911 n1i, $·150 Firm. Call B!w: n11tt11'<'rl & arcectlon:i1<'. 6~2-Q . ..,.1:1 r'VP~. 3/El 11('\\' hotn('. NPl'(lS ,,.,,s nr ' ____.._._... 10-3 prn. 61&-1;).l!l ro ;:rlflfl h111>if' l\46-7;l1;, love & affection 54l>--1<11Q BOSTON WHALER Mobile Homes b111·n 9.:l:.10 .'illl! IRISll ~t1"r JlllPJlll'~. AKI.; 'G45·~'l·ll 93S ~ l't"'J(d. Field 111){1 bho1v. Ph: ~-.,--.C:C~.:.C---.= --------..... .,--- }'"JP.F;\VQ()D rnr br ~ r h. !l6~..f,r":c'-------Boats, Storage 912 CONJ EM PO 11·a.~h1n~ m11chine. r1n~Pr· !vrc' in 11·ork1ns cunrl BEAUT1~·1 1 1. HOXEltPl'I'~. OPEN Boat yarrl. l't'paii:; '1-l~ti2. :\/1~ Ii 11k'< 11ld, $111. 612~~SJ8; N l'loraj!r. ~ per ft. COMMUNITIES 2 Trrti;1("r kitt<'n~. :-.11:-:-;; f'\rs :1·':c"c"'sc'c'------673-6809. eves 9fi2-61JT. :\folly and TPfil!v Bov Jnr.~ 1\KC Grrn1. Sh('p. pup~. 8 S nl l~n~ hair arui JovC. Al1 I 11k~ Cha111p1on Juir SM\s. ~ • LAGUNA HILL M9-l 117 3/lS 11_0_1·1n~·r!. $100_. 812-72 ·c'°--Tr1ni;potl1hon rh 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. -L ______ _J ml ICorn<'r or ~foulton P~yl S\1ALI. f<'mal<' Lil11c rt.1 • ELEGANT Afsthan Pups. Prestige adult communJly, Siaml'.~" Ca! lff't' tn J!oorl AKC. Rlark maskc<l 11lver. HdJacent !() L e Is u r c lrimr. C1111 5.'i7-11Rfi hrt1\'""n 962-fi9.ili art 4 Campers, Sale/Rent920 \Vorld. Beaulifut surround- 12 noon & 4::111 1vkd11ys :1120 AKC Ch11n1p1on bred Germao KJ'ITl'.;NS 7 n1n·s. Alw ~ Shepherd 11-k old k1HM1s a\•ail l'ollll't'h C11ll 5.31·4~1 22_ R.V'i-4·1('1.1 :'\/21'! Horses 856 T\\'O bab,v rabh1ts Jn a good -----------hornr. {'11 ll 49J-&"!9'l, !=ill~ .J1Jan Capi~trom :1/20 \\IH!Rl,P(J(}L \\a.~ht"'l' rlrycr (~1n1h<1. VPry 1·lrnn nrcd~ 11r1,· hr11rine G.1:?-!17!¥.J :-11 18 BF.AUTIFUI. ft'111alr G . Shrp, 1'1 yrs sp11yrd 10 f'X· cep11on11l homf' 1116-9617 3 19 CAMPER CLEARANCE SALE Lal'£e selection pre 'il Campers Now SlashC'd to OYER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE SI 10\\'CASE OF.ALER tn'?s, all lu ... ury appoint. 1ncnls. puH1ng green, hobby shop, much mor(', CALI, ;.i:io-.i900 e SANTA ANA 40&1 \\'. FIRSr ST., S.A. F'A!\llLY 01mn1unity, a bun· rJanl'C' nf rrcrcal1on ror ch!l- drrn, nr. gd, sehooli;, 5hop. ping, pl lV, tlllb hoU!!C. aft 5. uvcr ply11·oorl, hot niasl SJ50. j4S-9i11 nr 646.1517. , ;&~"~i~I ~'l2;;=5.~8J:::C7-~3~9"7-~ P ianos/O,gans 826 1 COCKAPOO Pupp11'~ tl('ed a DRE.'\'EL Early American1; . sofa, chain;. rommod<'. \ikP RIFLE: MARLING loving home. 8ffi..9015 eve.~. llf'I\<, $450 makf' offer. A .\1oun1ie. 22 cal., \'er HAMl\lOND S l eJn1vav, 3/lS ~fi.1 action. \V/4 X Bushnell Yamaha. 'New & 11s(.ri BEAUT. 1\·hitr fr1erlflly 8 u.·k JIM'S ll1ll!np :\lr~il Bo11rrl· ln~ S1ahlr.~. All strf'! corrul~. riuJo. 11 11lf'rr'r~ 1: ini. nul Ortrga !!1\'Y rron1 San J uan Cl{pi~1ran11. ol!l:\.'.1111, 11!1 5. HORSF:S hoarcll'd rt>ntrrl, tr11i11rrl . lro;."'1n~. f:n.l:ll~h & \Vesl;•rn, 1000 a rr<'~. Re<l\\QOI[ Stablf>~, 202116 Lal{una Cnnyon Rd. FOR ELDORAOO CA~!PERS THEODORE ROBINS FORD CALL 83..q..3880 Buy 1he mobile home of your ch()ice, n1ove In 10 any one ot our "OPEN" p.1rks. NOW OPEN!! b , d scope. S73. Call 528-9845 aft pianos of most makr:s. Bf'sl nlrl puppy, ln1·ahlr & af· GP.EF.N naugah.11d(' 6 kd I 1· , 4•1 '"'7 3129 dilan. like nf'IV. Sfi{). Coffer p.m. '1'C!'! ays. buys In So. Calif. at Schmidt cc 10011 "· "-..... . 1ahlf' & 2 rncl 1able:s all GO'l"TA GO •ti! sold. !\1ffiit 1'1u~ic Co., 1907 N. Main, DUE tn ~tlrlbY must give S2'l. E~·rs ~l :vt d1n'g, 3 BR M'L'<,, Lamps, Santa Ana. a11·ay Black ~1anx kittrn. rui's. Honda 50, M isc . STEIN\VAY Gtanri $1ROO :H6-ll:i2 31111 Bi\R s!ools originally $100 e;i. queen l'Z hPrl. 10o·1cker 1_'168-.:,c_7c8?.0C.,,~=~==--(ro11t S.'lOCKl). Shown by appt. WVABLE Cock<'r Terrif'r hcadhrd, nite 5!nd, lamp, e YACHT CLUB only. '19-1-.">861. nux, 5 mo 11·h1 hPit:<' ears r!r. ~~&-2605 :r.1£!\1BERSHlP Sewing Machin•s 828 l/'IVl's chtldrcn. 5.19-7181 3/18 SOF'A 8' lon~. beaut i;:old SAVE S30(I. qu1111'd \'('Iver. Brand new. • 644.-096.1 • Accrpl Sl7:J. 963-485.1 BICYCLES. all ! y fl rs. \VALNUT Breakfront. Xln! S!\n£Tay!<. J Sp. 10 Sp. R<'as. rond, 6'(4 'i', S2m. 1'.'i28 11~ Ori Mar. CM 642-1272 Cornw~ll Ln. l'\.8. fi•lfi..i!Q.IR SIGNS, shcrc:ar<ls, post('ri;, t"ULLY n:u!tlmAlic pus!l-hul- ton zlg-ui:i: Adler M'1\•111~ mrirh. llarflly u5Cd, $1 00. Call ~.l!-11231 h!wn •I & 7 pni Sporting Good• 830 Srr !<(lllrl l\'fllnut dbl bdrm lvinr\01vs. tntck!i, low price. liiiiiijijjjjjiiijjjjijjiiijijjjjjiiijji ~('1 Sl1 ~1. Kini.: bras~ h('adbrd Morn or eves. !ll:iZ-3M7. $10. Rot i.~~ S20. 5-l&-71~7 WE Jo;in-Buy-Sell anythln.g. FIP.~J,ir1,1_;s1zc bcrl 3 mo's Coast Pawn I. Aur:tion. 2426 old. Xln 't Condllion. $100. Newport Blvd. &12·8400. 002-61!13 BOOKS :ic-$1. P i c t u re s ri.10V ING -Livin1: nn, 2 ;K:-j()c. PuNe.~ 5Ck:. hdrm sets. m1!>r 11cn1s. 258 646-0818 Shrrv.ood SL, C \t . FRO[.JC In the sno1v-moun- SOFA tNI V('IVel Spanish, rain cal)in. sips Ii, S!Xl/\\'k. E"ood'ronn. Al~ 111knds. !Q7~10Z'i. $75 * i:;.i4466.'l GAS p!"IW('r('d golf cart. COOD rond: 8' Mila S\50, llC'f'llSC'd for day rnad USf'. 6. M k cof!N! tbl, 2 ch!11n:. 1't)(). DAys: 64&-0:>ll i\!111tnavox &. ml'<'. 6 1{..116.'\ * BALSOA BAY CLUB • SOFA. malchinG: chair &:. 3 P.EG m"mhrrshlp SlJOO. inc. !ables $100. tr11n~ ft(' 646·1i87 963-9709 JltVINF: COAST COtJ1'llRY The "Earl Of Arms" Gun Shop • • All Gunll, Ammo & Ac· At Below \\iholl'.'· Opt"n Noon ·111 8 3ft PM Tue"lday rhru Sat!.lrd11y (Newport et B•y) Costa Mesa 646-7318 MTS!=i niRrked S111mesc and 1abhy manx 6-S mo' s, frmRlr~. 546--73011. '.l/lS NEED gd. honie \\•/yrd for RTO\\'n En1<1ish Sf'Hrr n1Alr 11:r!. y,·/k1d~ &IZ-2:198 3/19 SMALL l1'h11r n1ale k11tcn 968-7210 3119 ONE rabbit u.ith c~c: onr guinra pig 11 L!h ca g f>. 96S-:l16.2 3/19 :-OtALE pt. \\'a1rr Spi,1.nlrl. About 3 yn. Friendly 53&-2WI 3/20 To quabflf"rl home. 8'>11u1tf11I 11mbl'r, malr, killy. S11t·"t, lnvRhlr 5~R--0Rll 3/:!fl 3 f<iHl'ns, 6 'Aki; olrl. 2 Ion..: l\eir, 1 5hort hair. all black 6'16-126R 3120 CERi\IAN Sh#>phtrd, fPma!(', 7 mo. rood w/ki<l~. !JG.\.-1.'37 ~/:ZO S.\tAL.L rouch &15.2819 THE BEST OF '.D60 HARBOR BLVD. BOTH WORLDS COSTA ri.IES,\ 612.0010 ---------For a beautHul home, tow '68 YW CAMPER moioteo.nre •od archliorur. ally Impressive design, ~ General 900 SPRING CLEARANCE * DELUXE SUNDIAL !he-('xcilln~ new "Village ~ G G • Lik" 0 .. w. 11ouse" by Levitt r.1obtlc ~· Dyt'r lamnr 1rl. in!rr-" • s d' I ._ _ _.. * New ri,cr "-"W u.•i<IP lire~. ystems on JSJl ay now at ceptor pov.·er, outllUa.I" ,~ BAY HARBOR d · S?l!O • Lo1v mtl1'$, 11('11' rniz. riv('. -·· · MOBILE HOMES 21' L1tps1rakr ut1Hty, Volvo * S'.l.17.l. Or brst ofter fl0Wel'1'd. s:rli~1 • Pvt party 64:'J.2fi3.1 alt 5 142.l Baker St .. Costa J\.1e:sa. 8' r 1 I 1 I · 10, , C •-F d Just S. of S.D. 1'~wy at Harbor 1 lf'rg a~s < 1ni:: iy, A!I is. i 1 uslorn a.,.,ver nr 114154a.9-170 $:JO. I '66. 4.i;pcl ~rick, ~lp~ 6, hu. l,.iiiiii-iiiiii,_oiiiiiiiiii J . 6 l"YI 11sr1I Nordbrr11: ('n• t~nr, ~lri·. Sl"ffl Day CAMBRIDGE 24x63 ginr, frClnt pn11rr !llke.oU & 6~5·171J: ('\If> \\·kend '>BR F 2 ba C I r••duct1on g('flr. * ~l·IZl * -· nin rni, • PIS I drp~. (#109il . l onJy.l !')'J L 'l<'r dll'~~I FOR Salr· 'fi7 Nim rod Dlsllnrilvr• .•.••... $1·1.00t'J I usr<l Chryli!t"'r Crou.·n u.•/ r11n~prr, Slpo; 4 ro1nfortably CAPITAL SALES CO. rPrl1111lon ~l'Ar :Xln t conrl, ~1ake offl!r. 200:i1 Beach Blvd .. 11 .B. (Nlm-'r Arl.int1'! • :.36-Mlfi l·:r.! 1·011 hr11vy duty genera· ~l.">..16.10, 56 1-00!l' t()r ,ti ~"Heh pa rwL CA\1PEP. 1910, V\V Pop Top.,.,,...,.,... ......... ,..,..,..,, 2 !.ll>f'd fi5hinll:' chairs. R11dln. 7000 mi., S3650 or124xOO D F. LUXE ?ON-l\1 t!I<'. bo.11 t1av1!:s. hest oller. 493-17i0 DEROSA 2 br/2 ba., lt1.11cpd, Mfly !)(> S('f'n I! Lido ~hip· )liln1, 900 Lido P.:trk Di·._ Cycles, Bikes, lg pnrrhlcrpt, C't'mcnr par1r, Scooters 925 rorn"r lot. Spal'e Ill. 17YJ "'Al"TED. 19;,9 :\lrCulloch \\'h11tirr, C:'I!. See ThW'!I & t'ly1ng St.'(111 fjl1 HP. any TANDEi\l SCH\\' INN ~un·.- n:inchtlon. \~'111 pay up lo I DELUXE r idrlen twice. l-=,-,...,,=,-,,11~A~ST=E~R~B=u•t=LT=I s~.n 531-72!!1 G11.1AA.i Jn 't 2~ Cabana. v.·/e,;tra. BOAT, molor, rr11lt'r, '.\.) '70 Yi\'.\1All,\ \i;i-cc Ewh•M 1i11 rh Completely furn . hor!W rlPrtr1c 1lart $450, Xlnt ('Olldl•inn. E.li.l ras. S5:iO C11rport &r toolsheds. ~. 1169 Dnl'!'if'I Llln<'. C i\1 (11.H ~I 64~21'"l Bonts/Merin• f ACR.IFICE '70 nucati 3.iOc<' Sx ll-No-,-.,-,-. ~,,..-,-,,,~i1°u=1 -,.-,,.7.1 Equip. 9G4 Tnp !hflP<.' S35il. 10032 l"rt'I, $2100 2191 Harbor NE\V f\lrdit, O~k coffN? tablr CLUB ~f EM BERSHIP, f..· commodf', $."ill ~ch. Calli..;'c',.;....:.'°~7~'~=~----~'1,f,...10'20 * LAnv·s COLD J\'.ING.~IZE: hc11dboarrl. 2 gi~ ROLEX \VATCH * NVF:RTFR 11 h K! J\'.11ku1, H.R. 962-161'1 I C".:'11 .. lot 61. The key al Like Nr111 -3 LARGE cat"'tus, yo~ ·II~ *rr,:1:1 ~P1 1 '12V1;."'ro 11'0 ~·, )',\\1\lf' ~:-N<'11· tran11 ~No rh~~dT\'n or P"t•. tlmr, Sl50 j·I0-2279 a!1rr 5 nm. 3/1!'1 VA(' tiO 1»1;1Cll 400 wnl!~. I ,'. ":'>:I s:·;:·, 1 "!,.:;') VIKING-Clean, nent lahlr,;, Rnl!quf' wbl1c &: • Aftr>r 6p111: 67~r.lll Ji;nld. S\25 6T.'1-R'l28 EXERCISE COUCH- KING-SIZE BEDVS ll"VIRRJ\TOR $10 • l1~_.:.qa .,. • .i;1s.0&111 * &12-~2i2 1 111hlt!' n1alr Mud r~! Nt--:W .lllM!!rnbleci '" rhl'.'('li.r1 1 C'lll 1'1i~7'.112 11if1 :; rm 11,rn 1 hr. sh~·. Larun11 l1Un llF:Afl ~Kl~ ~f11nd11rr! llfl i\/Cllt?P. il::0-111"'3 ~/IQ ll111 Sarnfir•' $1fWI. f"'I ;j;Q 01•1•, I' ·u•tlfnl 1~1111t \I/ti rtk'. S:-il mn. Sl'T50 li7~26-\.1. bind~. boot~. polf'~, St'>' I i\IAl,1': ii -e-)'rOr;r-.,;11J11" 5..'l8·9Sta al1rr 6 P,.\J. 1~et'k I ffll • ,.., ..... tank. Sncrlfltt f;-rr-tilf' old 11tulf 811.Y-lM _•_ll>-O'l __ 1_2_______ H:'~b:l'L::..~~::::2Ml::.:,_ __ =31~1~•~~d~'Y'!.::•--------Sr7' lii7:-1'\l':", I._"_''-'-'-"-''-'------" • ., . . ·~~1~4~·~·!l~LV~Pl~L~DT~~~~f,!!!!!!!!!!!!!Th!'!'!w!•Y!.!M~M~<!•!1~·~1 ·~a~1~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~,1~~~~~~~~~~1:~~~~~~~~~ .................. !~~~~~~!':~~' 1 !.__ 1_-_"1"'~lil I .,....... l§J I . .,....... l§J ~I ·;;;-"";;; .. ·;;;;;l §J~1 ~I ._ ...... _"""___,]§] I .......... l§J I .......... l§J I '""'""'· l§l l ~I ._,, .... _ ... ;;;.;J§J;; 1 .J•••••••• Xu .. L .. •lnv ;a w -Mobile J:torne1 935 ___ L_E_A_S:-E----1A_u_to_,,_1m_po;.....rt_o<1 ___ 9_70 Autos, lmport9d 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmPOrtld 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lJMd 990 Autos, U..cl 990 '"""'oo"°'EL,,....,'°'m::::s"'1LE.,,..,H°'o°'ME"°'s •NEW lm BMW JAGUAR TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN 1n 0>51.1. :-,1,u.'s Grttnleat PINTO VOLKSWAGEN '68 VW SEDAN CADILLAC CHEVROLET Park. Z4x60 Am('rica na $50 00 Bl\fW'S NE\\'&: USED, all TOYOTA NEW '71 $15,900. 2lb.~2 M 0 n I' r' y • mo. models, parti:: and •erv1ce. '69 IA u NO DOWN J12.750. Cornp!e1ely sierup (36 mo.) Q\-erseas Delivery. G AR XK£ '63 VW SUNROOF Cad. '67 C • e. De Ville I '69 Malibu ~/skirts, a111nings, porch, open end C. BOB AUTREY !lfOTORS etc. RENT 1860 Lon~ Bl!ach Blvd. GREE:"'LEAF PARM: A NEW 1911 ZJJ.~l-8711 1730 \Vh1tt1er Ave., C \f, PINTO .67 Bl\l\V lflOO ~ Fine cond. &lf>-25 10 ** 6~~.JO $4 DAY SliOO. Pvl pty. Day s : ON \\'a!<'r-24 Bays 1 de AND 646--0525; Ev<"s: 642-0278 VUlag•, N.B. 2 be, 2 b•. 4¢ MILE CORTINA Jge cabana ltY 'K rmtd1n g nn <'Ombo. frplc, cus1om. PUT A LITTI.E klTchen ,\ltx1can s ! one KICK JN YOUR raho. 'country <'lubhllt LIFE~ w/pool pr1v, boa! slip ;1\a1l. THEODORE 15~ yr land lease. J27.000 ROBINS FORD 6'1'5-2816 2060 JlARBOR BLVD., Motor Homes 940 COSTA 1'.fESA iijiiiijjiiiiii .. .,,,,. * K1n9s Coach * Auto Service, Perts 96& Motor Home Agency I 1959 CADII.LAC S . * Landaiu AIR CONDITIONER uper1or RADIO . SHOW SPECIALS RADIATOR New 71's 5 Im', roof alf, trtg \\1NDSHIELD \l'IPER a1r. Al\f.f".\f Slt'N'<t &-!Apt, "'0TOR <'ru1se control. ·Ill engines, d ua l holding tanks, water puriherll. loaded~ lt1UST DISPOSE OF THt:~E ITEMS THIS \\'EEK-END M.2-3120 J.'OR APPOINTME:-..'1' '69 CORTTNA GT XLNT COND. $1200 or Best ctffer! 545.1282 DATSUN '65 Dorsun Wa90n 4 speed, dlr Real Nice. IYCT 333) Full Price $599 BARWICK li\1PORTS J:-.:C, DATSUN 998 So. Coast Hv.·y. Coop.. 4 sPttd. radio, heat . er, air conditionina. • 11·ire 1\•het>ls, Brillsh racing c:reen v.• I sandlewood leather in- terior. (X:X0260! $3795 BAUER BUICK 234 £, 17th SL Costa ,\1esa ~S.7"fi> MERCEDES BENZ : . • • .. PAYMENT $1100 full prlc• $700 full price NO !\!ON EY OOWN (0t\C) No MONEY oowN 10AC> $48•69 Per Mo. $69.01 MONTH• $28.37 Per Mo. (36 " OAC> u vxn 194 36 n1os. De(. pay price. 136 Mo. OAC1 Lie. ZZR 924 Intere~i oompute~ on 1~ % $2484.36 or cash pr Ice Jnterest contputed on ll'lc automotive discount rate $3J03.5J incl. Tax & Lie aufo1notive .discount rate, '>1-'hich is equivalentto2l.2".' ,\,P.R. '1t5'I~. Serial No. which ls equiv&lent to 21·2'7a annual percentali:I!: rate de- 131347. annual percentage rate de-ferred paymt"nt price ls •on approvtd credit fcrred payment price is $1753.04 including all inter. BilJ Maxey Toyota SlO'll.32 including all in!{'r· est. All t&.~cs and license or ~st. All taxt5 and license or if you prtfer to pay cash, ihe 18881 BEACH BL. IMT·8555 if )"OU ~ttf~r to pay c_ash, t.he full price 13 only $1289.00 Jn. HUNTINGTON BEACH fUJI _pnee ts only.flal .OO 111. eluding tax and license and $1871 eluding tax and J1cerue and not one penny 1nore. not 0"' <ent "'°"· BILL y ATES 1971 TOYOTA ('()ROLLA 2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED •9878 CHOICE OF' 5 ..De.Mle.W 9 TOYOTA BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 32&52 Valle Road 32852 Valle Road San Juan Cap1s1rano 837-4SOOl 493-4j 11I499--2'151 San Juan Capislrann 837 .4800/ 49J....4 jll / 499.2'261 . '67 V\V SEDAN -Top cond. •66 YW GHIA Loaded 11/extra.s. Sunroor. 'fellow, 'vith Black landau $1200. 64.2-9941 t.1ERCEDES 190 SL '57. 4,005 I . h 1 N 1 1966 Harbor, C.:>1. 646·9303 top, new va ve jnO XNH~t VOLVO mi on over au . ew c utch, XEY $l l 99 rear end & injector5 . Bill. MA p Air cond VS, au1om111c. dlr. FACTORY Radio, htattr. •YYJO'l3l. AIR CONOITJONI~G f\lust sacrifJCf', $2395 lull F ull pow<'r, beautiful cloth & price. Call 494.7744. lr.a~r inter. ~, door locks, cruise control, trunk opener. Li&:h! sentinel, auto dlmmtr. most every dlX. eX· tra. ilVV650l. $2666 ~~~~ AUTHOAIZfO OE•LER 260o HARBOR BL, C'OST A ,\IESA ;H(l.9\00 Open Sunday • 1----".---1 Largest SePection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS '70 NOVA V8, automata:, p<>W<'f slttr- ing. dlr. Loadrd. (CVE369) J-~ull price $2195. CaU 494-77-M '6.) Chevy 2-dr hrdtp, auto. iNo. PID6101 $299, SlO llelJ V<'rs on a.pproYt'd credit. St>e 11.1 i g.i;. Harbor BJ\•d, c.~1. '61 CheyY 2-<!r INo. RVP374\ $199, $10 dehvtrl on ap- p10\·ecl C"redit. Sfe at 19-lj Harbor Blvd, c.;.,1. CHRYSLER '61 Chrysler .Se"'J)Ort 4 dr Neof'ds n"p111r. L«e motor. easy on ga~ $200. R/H.I 11.tr, e:<lras. 548-6768 in Orange County COMET I • 1 ~~..,.-~~~ This Weekend Only 6()4 N. Harbor. Santa Ana R•"0"" to origi""1 cood. j CHICK IVERSON 1 - - - -• 1959 CADILLAC $20.jjl 839--0728 ._. ........... READTYRATONST;A!lKESSIOANW"" DOT DATSUN >LB. '61 "''°· Aic, b'""I ITIQ~VIC)ITIAI VW ~ TOHINl Laguna Beach 5-16-4051 i 494-97i1 19 Cpe Oe-Villes. J8 Sed. De. '6.~ :llerc Comet. Auto tram Villes,6El0or<idos-5Con-Good tr an!portatio n .l 839-91130 Oprn 9 lo 9 daily ·"'-· ri" D.. s ·1· • --~" "' • 549..1())1 E 66 67 'V LVO' l°!!!i!!!~!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!l'!!!!!!I EX'CELLENT CONDITION_ OPEN DAILY co • ...,. r vt. p!y. acn ice xt. or I~ · · AND $995. 67J.51Z7. 18881 BEACH BLVD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. nrN, T 22· \\11nn1 $225/wk, 1st CALLER '8UYS H t 8 ch 147 •555 OST sa ver1ibl<"s. 16 other select S4Co.1 0 s79N;oTlllN7, E"N"'T"A' L I !tJ.d<'·ins. 1963 thru 1970's ib '70 LINCOLN Con!'I 4-<lr .. ' "MAJ eii; Air , !Pather, Vinyl top.I .a.~CAOILLAC 50,000 ml warranty, $4650. .....-.. SUNDAYS un • ea • c A 1'1ESA ~;~::;· by1~1r;J: :>4~~57 it FOR ~~~:-rr 111835 Bea.ch Blvd. MG 1 mi N. of o:..t Hwy. en ad '63 VW Bug ''FRIEDLANDER'' Trailers, Travel 945 Autos Wanted 968 ~~~~~n ~~~ ~ '68 Corona Hardtop ';93.!S:Sc~ '~-4'~ -""°'w=E'""P°'A"'Y.,..,T"o'"p,...---c,--~,.,--=---· I Radio, heat<'r, 4 speed. (WAZ NEW USEO.SERV AUTHORlZUl DU.Ult 67;>...8343 '67 Shasta Travel Traller New '71 Datsun • THINK Loaded. Black landau top. ll}lf, -• ' 17' v.·ith e leetric brakes, CASH "~G'' Auromatic, radio, --hE'a!er. Full Pric• ~ ,600 f!ARBOR BL., CORVAIR COSTA ~IESA I ( I 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp.. stove. re ng ga~ m11nnt' (V\\IN 748) Take small down. $3- t ·1 1 6 t 1 bl) er. Sa.le price $2099 dlr . .,., 01 et, s f'f'ps com or a \\'ill finance pvt. pty, Call BARWICK $3081 540·9100 Open Sunday '63 Con·air r-.1onz11 IEIG825J, Auto, .$299 $10 deliven, Tem1s ava'tl. 1945 Harbor BIYd., C.:ril. • Co m p I e t e I y enclosed (:: PLl214j2270l \Vil! take cabana, all Jacks. 30 gal. tor used can; & trucks, just car in trade. \\'ill finance "'FRIEDLANDER'' aft lOB•En,:._494B.AR7506GAocIN54().S 3100 l~IPORTS INC. ~-nmoVO•L28Vl09 p~ssurizt'd y,•aff'r lank & call us for tree estimates. private party. Call S46-8736 "' u.- 30 gal. holding tank . or 494.6811. inst llACH (HWY. lfl COME SEE OUR DATSUN CAD. '65 Cpt>. De Ville. Air, all p1\T, lthr. !andeau top. tilt v.•heel. radia!ll. Xln! c o n d • J l,6.jO, 675-6060, 644.6111. ... d II' II k GROTH CHEVROLET 893-7566 • S37-6824 SELECTION OF B<'"tifw coo . ' la ' '61 D""" Sp11'1' 1600. RIH. ' SI550 ca.sh or \v1ll trade New tltts. $lZ75. 6+1-507S NEW-USEO.SERV. TOYOTAS 998 So. C.oast H"'Y· ~e.Mle.W QP VOLVO e ·63 CORVAIR c onv t Spyder-Good cond. ?\lake o!- ler. Eve~ 642-Qll. Inc ,mall station v.·agon (V\V Ask for Sale11 tfanager ~ J' SI I t Laguna Beach after 6pm 1m emons mpor s "'"' ,,.;1 / -·•m Squarehack or Toyota, etc). 18211 Beach Blvd. --~------, 140 W. Warner ..... ...-.v... """'"' CAMARO '62 MONZA, black. Fair cond. $165 or cffer. Call !>19-2625 Huntington Beach FIAT MGB Santa Ana Larqe Selection 1966 Harbor, C.~1 . 646-9303 '66 AJRSTREA"f Int'! as 8-17·6087 . KI 9-3331 0 E & • 642-9220 ---------pen ves. ...un. Of VW Campers, '61 VOLVO 122 s. 4 dr, Orig tv.·~n. AC, '!"'nlng. Top con-WE PAY CASH - - - - -1967 l\1GB-Xlnt oond. Lo ml. 54~4125 owner. gd r ond. lo mi. $375. c11t1on. 642-1666 • --- -1 Pvt pty .69 Toyota Corolla, 22,!XXl Vans, Kombis, Call 962-:1017 '6S CAf\1ARO. Xlnt cond. 19i0 =~-~'""'--,.----, • 427 eng. 30,000 mi's, $2l50. '65 Corvair f\lonza, 4 1pd. Pv! ply, 64::>-1907 good cond. $J50. 847-2113 Trellors, Utility 947 FOR YOUR CAR "THINK" c.11 '"" 6, 67>46112 m•«, 1o lop <oodll<no. Buses New & Usecll;,c;;5s""v"'o"L''v"o---X~l;-n~t -.o-n~d 14' Tandem Trailer OPEL ~3fi...3·1771~1158 Immediate Delivery S.iOO. 64+&17!1 or 832·1)j?7 or Eves. 962-3031. '70 Camaro, air. A..\l/F':'l-1. lo mi. Must sacrifice, make \VRECKED '62 Corvair, '65 offer. 892-5329 engine. Run11 perfect. Call 557-7399 \Vllh 4 wh"I" All .... 1 w•lri. CONNELL /":tl,D'/l;S,fl iiiiii!ii.iiii~~~-1 TRIUMPH CHICK IVERSON Auto•, U1ed 990 ed consll"Uction. ~'" Stet>I ,.j 'JiflJ d"k plotrng. Wilt "II or CHEVROLET s.. '70 OPEL GT '71 SPITFIRES VW BUICK CHEVROLET CORVmE trade for pickup. 3166 Sicily, 2828 Harbor Blvd. ''FRIEDLANDER'' NOW ON DISPLAY 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 (~fesa Verdel C.'.\f. Costa Mesa s.is.1200 Automatic, radio. heat<'r. red Come in for a test dri\'e! l970 HARBOR BLVD. '68 Chev. Malibu 2 dr. PS, 6 cyl. Bsl otr. over $lj50. Xlnt cond. 830-7395 I eve 64:)..1546 '64 STINGRAY. Xlnt Cond. .I spd, 411 pos. Blk int/ex!. Drafted. $1800/bst otter. 5.'Ji-2277, 67J...5CJ.18. --,, . \I Av10~ lo• S.1lt 4:.ft I~ ' Antiques/Classics 953 e '57 T-BIRD Cla1s1c Good cond. m.-9678 or 830-5210 Dune Buggies 956 1960 CORVAIR TOP DOLLAR 1,, CLEAN USED CARS See Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD 206() Harbor Blvd. C.Osta r-.lesa 642·0010 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS 13750 BEAC:H BLYD. Y.'ith black vinyl interior. FRITZ WARREN'S COSTA l\tESA 'fi9 BUICK WAGON 89J..7~W: ;;:-682-4 Only 7.000 mile.•. (9-llBf.JJ SPORT CAR CENTER '67 V\V Bug, beige, 24.000 NEW·USEO-SERV. $3095 710 E. lst St., S.A. 547-07&1 m1. C~ean. tape deck SlCIOO. Sports wai::on. 9 PMs, VS, Open daily 9.9; closed Sunday &-;2-2?56/aft 6 644-4864 auto., R.t:H, P.S., p B .. roo t BAUER BUICK ·ro TRIU~1PH TR-3. \\'in! 169 VW FASTBACK rack, tacrory air. {Yl\1~1052J _ \1·hsl, new ores. Runs good. Y\VD 177 $3295 '6S Fiat 8.iO Spyder 41.000 234 E. 11th Sr. SJOO/best offer: 54~2608 $1299 '{H CheYy Impala. A-1 rond, AIC, .P\\T 1-1·indows, Orig 011't'l(.'r, $8ij. 6 73-8269, 6.;f>...2182 '6S lmp11 la 4-dr hrdrp. Air cond VS. Au to trans. '64 CORV Y-B, Am·F'm. Hurst. posit. CLEAN * .... 5-!6--0239 * • COUGAR ::;:· :~~;:' • "'' 1 • 1 • .,,.,..~j ~ VOLKSWAGEN CHICK IVERSON 1 "'' Fi" ... , "'''"· '-"'· PORSCHE '66 VW 8 VW Power. Vinyl lop, $1450.1 ---------· I "" E. 11th s, ·~. ""3366 '68 Cougar XR7 BAUER BUICK lo mi. Good transi:nrta.tion. ug 549-3031 EX!. 66 or 67 $650. Call 642-2440 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '63 Porsche Super Radio, heater . .t i;pcNI (P.JB COSTA r.xESA Coi!ta r-.tesa 548-7763 'fi6 EL CAMINO -Very l!'J!!!~~~ clean, new auto trans., '62 8 · k 1~1 4 d P/S bucket seat~. make offer. Make Offer 546.7817 After 6 1"'"1 It you r car Js extra clean, see us first. JAGUAR Cpt. Bahama yellow v.·ith blk 8731. interior, Al\1/F"1, chro111e Full Prirc \Yheels. recent e n g i n e $999 '68 VW CAMPER UJC nVJC a. r. -540-2608 P/B, air, ,;tereo. Tmm11c. =~~~---~Ex. C'Ond $450. &1&-8610 1957 Chevy 2 Dr. 6 cyl stick, VS, automatic, dlr. Pm.•tr s!eerin g, 11.ir cond. Pri~ to sell! f\VXE042 1. Kelly Blue Book $2425 Our Price Truck• 962 BAUER BUICK . -1 234 E. 17th St '68 CHEVY IL TON Co•I• ""' 5'>77'; "/2. l)U'ORTS \VANTED Long wheel ba5e Fleetsaie pickup. Nabers Cadillac 5'r. vi~ Truck. V8, automatic, power brakes, full cus1om. Orange Count.it! TOPS Blln:R. BILL ritAXEY 'roYOTA 18881 Beacb Blvd. H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 radio, heafer, mag Yo.heels. I ==~~-~=~~-\VANT late model Ford Van. 51de rail.~ r!I'. 1 8 6_,cyl. no junk, please. $ 8 8 ""'"' '"" 4 p.m. ~~~L~ .o.UTMQlllZ(D Ol.lLlR 1600 HARBOR BL., COSTA l\IESA 5'10·9100 Open Sunday • '69 Che'IY Yi Ton Autos, Imported 970 AUDI '70 AUDI 100 LS 4 Door Sedan. Black ,,,th beige interior. Immaculale~ Only n4 actual miles, (874- CBYl. JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS 'n1e only authorized JAGUAR dealer in the entire Harbor "'"· Complete SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA 2Z4 E. 17th Street 5'1&.7765 '67 Jag XKE 2+2. 4 -,pd, F':'ll/A:\1, "1re v.·hls. In mi. BeRut rond. Pvt. owner. Sac. 6i~>-jl27 '6:i Jag 3 R :0.1ark JI sedan, Xln1 tnt>('h;1nit·sl, OtiginaJ, $2.WO. 67:)-4177 P XW98' BARWICK *.DELUXE SUNDIAL '61 Boi.•k """"good 11m, $2399 * Like nev.•. runs. needs motor 11·ork a.s new se;1t NVE"rs. good <'.'.On- ll ition, $3('j], 64'2-4893 "65 Che\'elle, V8 Runs good, Needs bod). 1York. 1r.1P0RTS INC. * Ne\Y Liger paw \\'ide tires. is S7:i 67.'>-3223 at1 5 P;\I CHICK IVERSON DATSUN * Low m11.,, n•w <0g. • '65 BUICK WAGON VW * $2475. Or best offer SR50 • * ~ 7cno l'ves S450 * * 6iHi30 ~)8 So. Coast H\\·y. * Pvt party 645-2633 aft 5 ·-;,7 CHEVY -283, Xln! cond, 5-i9-30n Ext, 66 or 67 La_!i\Jna B<'ach CADILLAC 48.000 mi's, needs l!res, 19i0 }!ARBOR BLVD. e '69 V\V SQUARE'BACK . S300. 549-1369 ~16-40:11 I 4!»-9771 COSTA 1'.fESA Auto !rans, new brakes. 1 1 ---=~~~---7e~17_,=,~vw=~s~U~G-~P~n~.,-,-,e1 $1800 * 6i3-6182 'SI Cad Coupe DeVille, au 'GR Chevel e f\Ialibu Sport '66 912 h p Coupe. Lo1v mileage. Ver}' party must sell. Only S79J. * '66 V\V Bus. Good cond. 1So1. Jte. Oll"<'r & air. Sll50. <'lean. $1750. 962-665.1 846-1871 New tune. ;700 or.best oUer. uth Coast Car Leasing, 1 ~~==~~~~~- Dark Green "ilh Black inli>r. ior, M.[/F,\T, 4 Speed. (NOS421 ) Real Nice! BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle P.oad San Juan Capistrano 837 .4500/ 493-4511/ 499.22fil 1966 91 1 PORSCHE: Bahama yrllo1\·. 5 spd, 42.000 mi. An1/Fm bl aupunt radio I ow•nrr. Crimplete §etvice 646--64i'B &t:l-21!12 '6,'i CHEVY 2 dr Impala l.:'.'.:'.::'.'.'.'. _______ 1--<·.,o-rc;;;;:::cn;::.v"·"'l:--·I :;27 eng. S:l30. '66 BUG • Xlnt. \Vhl/red oupc '-"' u e 217 AGI' Full power. good rond. * Call S93-4!H3 * $1699 int. 43,000 m1. 1\e'>I-· lire;. 6i3-2262 or 673-5723 '6-t Che\'y 4 dr. r/h. po11er. 1 ~s950~·~·~·~r~~>l~27~oc~>Is.~11S~9~li>'i'1TI"iYii';<i<c';;;;-';;iii:;-;;;;I CHICK IYERSON I· • 1970 COUPE de ViUe by !~c2'.1n.~~r. Xln't <..'Ond. SG95. 1969 VW BUS $1750 pvt party. s:iill:i "" ,... ... VW .. * 54&.2742 9 * ...-673-469S * e tl\IPALA '67, AtR. P/S. '70 VW BUG 549.?,()3\ Ext. 66 or fi7 '68 V\V Bus. Xlnt condition .. 69 Conv<"rtible, l oade d P/B, $1295 OR BEST OF'· 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Sunroo!. S2150. $4200. Can linancf", priv. FEP.. &12-9787 =~.:C:::O'.:ST'..'.::A-'M'.::E:'.'.SA.:..,~-l-.,.;-;--;54,_8;;.lc;4-Sl-;;-;-,.,;--I pty.. San Clemente 714: '6.'J Che\'elle Sedar\ auto, 6 '60 Karmann Ghia Conv!, '64 V'W BUG 492-2800. ryl. P 's. r h. S~iJ. Prt. Xlnt cond , beige \\'/hlk top, R'7Jrv 399 19M El Dorado. LOADED 1-c".cc"7' ~"~"-"-"~'-1-"-·~~~ $1799 BARWICK r~tPORTS r.-ic. DATSUN 99S So. Olallt H ..... y. Laguna Beach Sl&-1051 I 494-!ITTt '70 Cougar 15,000 Mile Warranty 2 Door Hardtop. VS, 11.utoma- 1ic, factory alt' cond., pov.'er steering, poY.'<'r brakes. vinyl root, nnted glass, ra· dio. heater. while wall tires, '>1-'h<'el covers. (837 AKTl. $3111 VS, auT0111.i1ic, t·ustorn cab t3200c!E I BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN '' \V HITE ELEPHANTS" log. 646-2486 days, MS-.S180 Eves rcrl in!er .. Rehl! cng, 30 5799 $3800. '57 CheYy 2-dr Bel Air JV1.P ,G., $575. 614-6316 673-3301 or 673-2""11 $3'j(). Eve!! &12-1%1 Garden Grove LINCOLN-MERCURY 10120 G11rdt>n Grove BlYd. GardC"n Grovr fiJ&.2980 Kelly Blue Book ~267.i Our Price 52399 .. BARWICK f:0.1P0RTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. ~t Hwy. Laguna Brach 54&4lrll I 4~·9771 DUMP TRUCK $995 1~7 G:'.IC Good opr:rating conchtion. See at Daily Pilot 330 West Bay Street Cosra l\1esa or call !\irs. Greenman 642-4321 .'ii 4. whl dr. Int . ~ T. P.V. Shor! \\he4"lbasr, 8 sprl n·a.ns. T-f uhs. h1g 111·e~ & low <:ampcr 1••/t11ck 13JO. S4S.!l&12 f'OR sale or rrade: '63 lord 111 T pick-up v.•uh lumbn- n ck Ir. roo.I boxes. $450. St&-19-15 1959 Chev truck, Long ~. fl1et1 lde. $300. Ca.II anytime, 5(5....8189 '67 GMC :!ii T Pal'lf'l. )'} 000 1 mi's. V-8 1t1C"k shill. Sl69j 5'3-.3224 mort\!. '6T Dodge Van V8 stirk, ">:In! I '°""· &OOd ".:!:' .. !!"~ .... ce.n fiNlnee tH~ I ·59 Of.EVY P .U. V~. 3 &pd, I r/h, Xlnt Cond. $1 ~ or ht!. ofr: 642--0M.1 '69 Ford pick-up ~ rQn Ranft'r. Air & full JlO"'~r 1'ilb cvnptt shell. Ex·1 OL"tlfont condit'IDn. 893-4m fut ruuiftl af'4 ju1t • phone <all •'Wa)' • 64~ l2852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano overrunning your house? I ----~--~-- "Cash" .. sell them thru • 1968 PORSCHE 912 coupe ';Jai.ly P ilot Classified 4·spd, air, new 1700 engine, -A-u-to~s-.,-v~i-ce-.~P~e-,-,-,-9~66~ 1 n~w tires. ImmRculalel)' '67 K1\R!llANN GH IA. XLNT CHICK IVERSON '60 CAD. Near nev.· engil'lC', '6l Impala 4-dr hrdtp. VS, '67 COUGAR 837 .4500/ 493-45ll/ 499. Z261 Auto Service, Parts 966 AUTO AUCTION SUNDAY, MARCH 21st. 12 NOON TO 5:00 P.M. IOCARS CADS-CHEVYS-TRUCKS FORDS-MUSTANGS FOREIGN CARS AND MANY OTHERS ALL CARS MAY BE SEEN & DRIVEN FRIDAY & SATURDAY, MARCH 19 & 20 * 20•1. Deposit on Bid * SS-0.00 REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT * No P•rson1I Checks Pl••~• * 3 D1ys Allowtd fer Finaincing MARCUS MOTORS * * * 2100 HARBOR, COSTA MESA 645-0466 • COND $1100. VW Very clf'11n. $.125. factory air. $400 • C11ll :tt&-9249 * • • 96&-1801 * Owner. si7-1641 Air, recent June.up, new tlr· f'S. Eves. & Wknds. 897-tl74 cared !or. ~7.6091 daJ-·s: 673-1901 n1tes & \Vknds. * '6S V\V-A~1 radio, 8-tr11ck t::ipe. <'OCCI mat~. chrm whls Real rltan. Sll:l). MO.Ol4i"> 5-19-3031 Exr. 66 or 61 1970 llARBOR BLVD. Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 LATE 1966 PorM·hc. Sa.nllary Corvair conversion. Very clean, all the goodies. Stoll or trade. 53&-1690 '70 91 l T. f>..spd, Beaut orange, 911S ints. & \\"his, AM/1'."1. ~·I ply. 6»-5347 NEW '70 911T Emerald (t"l!'en v.i.th black leather inter ior. Ar-1/F)t. Lou more! #9110101882. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano R37-4S00/ 4.1)3451 1 I 199.2261 RENAULT RENAULT J961. One O\\Wr: wxx! rond In k our. Askinjil S200. Call 549-4212 aft 5 pm TOYOTA '70 Crown Sedan COSTA lt1ESA '67 VW BUG WANTED Blue ,,.ilh blaC'k interior 1500 I'll pay top d<>llar for ~-our l'ngine ha~ '68 seais .t VOLKSWAGEN toda~. Call bumpei-~. Spt'cial ol the and a!k for Ron Pinchot, wtek. (Z;\"U8r.6 1 549-3031 Ext. 6£.67. 67J.OOOO, $999 CHICK IVERSON vw 5'1~-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA f.1ESA 1970 V\\1 SquaITback. Auto, r adio, lite blul' \\'/black lnt. '68 VW BUG VTS-907 $1299 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR 3LVO, COSTA MESA likr nrw•, 14.000 mi. Extr11s l--.,-,.63"°'V\=V~B"U"°G,_,•-- $2·150. lli.1-;,;,27 XLNT CON D e '68 VW, $1300 * 642-1308 alt 4pm t-• n.r,.Sffl~ • '69 VW BUG zvc 708 $1599 CHICK IVERSON vw ~l\.3031 F:xt . 66 or 67 l!TiO 111\RBOR BLVD. LEASE A NEW '71 VW $51.89 P1r. ~lo. + Tu AT COSTA ~I ESA l..osidM, n1u~t sacrihrr LP~s I ~~~~~~----1 Than 10.000 milts dJr. •4246 lll!ii f ,\S'J'BACJ\ • A \1/F\1. 5unroof, Jn m1, Spotlt'~s. 5149:; 644-1 :\~:\ BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN :128.i2 Val!r R<iad ·rake small do11n or older e11r in tradt Aft. Jo a.m. 540-~100 or 494-7:"106. San Ju•n <':Al)ls rr11 no 837 ·4800149J.4511/499.22fil ';'°•l \'\V 'l\l F;ni'lr!f'. :-.; r I\ '6~ V\\' A:\l /F'"'I!. A"\i'i"O: hritkr~ JM"rfecl run n Ing ;unroof.' p RI c Ea TO t-nnr!. fil S-17·10 11rt Ii SELL LEASE A NE\V ·n Toyotl\ lor only $49 98 mo. with just s!¥.l.96 -+ I.le-. e '63 SEDAN $395 * &iW17 *" BILL i\TAXF:V T 0 \' 0 TA * 6-11 -41\27 * ·.l.l \IV • Rl"bH t~ M'w 185.SI Beach Bl. ll ~VW 9 Pass Bui br11ke~. S330 or .tx-st 'o!IC"r.I 8~7-8jbj. Hunrlnrron Bf'llCh $2(Wl 64~.~;ll 117J...J.;.\S aft 5 ANCHOR MOTOR COST A MESA "" "'"0 ' ILVD. 546-3050 Op•11 7 Deys '•"'· tp"' Sl HAILA fSl'ANOL All CARS PLUS TAI & LICINSI All i:n•kes & models 1957-1969 Down pymt. no problem here. Monthly Semi-Monthly & Weekly Pymt. Acc•pted. 1st, 2nd & Jrd car choice hereCREDIT NO PROBLEM, TRADE UP OR D~N SERVICEMEN WELCOME '61 FALCON Sit. W9"· I Ql<S'i'12~ $299 FULL ,RICI '•1 CHIY. lmii•lt ll&H (TUJ l'14 l $799 FULL PRICI '6] CHIYY II STA. WGN, IJXSSSI ) $399 l"ULL ra1c:1 '611 FOJIO Cly. Sd". W9". Na. I ! 26 $149 FULL l"RICf I '6l DODGE 1 OR . H.T. $'199 JULL Pl!Cf I ''5 f'ly11101tll CONY. ISK04'5! $399 llULL P'llCI .,, Jn-•1111 !ZLS8~JI $AVE '62 T·l lR D !Gl'RJ80l $199 FULL PJllCI • '62 llAMILfR STA, WGN, !GFE5401 $149 ,ULL 'ltCI I ''6-0LDS f ,95 1Vl!776l $599 FULL PllCl I '6] Clle•r•l•t STA. WGN. ISI A<S•l $199 FULL PllCI '66 Cllryi.l•r JOO 17•88111 $399 '61 YW IU• I 165ASll $399 FULL P'llCI 'Sl DODGE PICKUP IV28 ))7) $99 fULL PJllCI '62 CHiii« ! 77SCIDI $299 llULL 'llC! MANY TO CHOOSE FROM INCLUDING ··1 fOltO w,1,, Cc11r. '•6 Chry,lltf N•wparl '•f lOA.OIUNNll '67 CAMAlO '64 FORD IG•l•r. "XLl '6J FORD (GAL X XL ) '6• OLDS W,90" ·61 DOOGI Co"•· .,, 'LTMOUTH Co"~ '64 DODGI G.T. .,5 MU5TANG '64 M•rc1ry W•90" '67 Pfy1111111th W•9a" '61 C•OWN IMa•tt•I '66 Ml•C. Cycl'"' '64 K>•D W~9a" '69 CHA.Gii '6? DODG-1 W19D" '6? CADILLAC '64 CHlY. W•'o" '64 DODGI w.,.o" '70 OUSTfl '•f •A"41Lll '61 ,.OAO i;.1, 500 '61 FOID 6t l•~. '6) C"-.,., Nt1~• 55 '64 T·lllD '64 AMtPhl Hftl•, S,roto '65 LINCOLN '•J fOID W•9D,, '64 CHfY. W•9011 '66 fOlD G.T. '6) llOlD F•lt'" '61 FALCON Wt'D" '64 /11tot11otl•1111I •·T. '61 'ONTIA.C leM•n• '69 Co1,,n11 4-dr Blue. R&II , • "68 V\V Bu,• I 11\r, 11.uin. \h1\t ~ t 11. 1 Turn unu,!"d ltt-m..( into quick Good ronci, Must 5f'li 2150 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA. 546-:1050 Slt9:'J/bl"~1 oflf'r . 96~i2 t3Ah. c•ll &12-!167M S:<:ll~50~--'*~•-_:!~7:':·'-':C9>~~!'1• ........ iiiioiilliiiiiiiiliiiiioliioiiliiiiiilliiiiiliill ............... , • - . . . . . Thllt'Sd11, Matt.h 18, 1971 OAILV PILOT C .,.,.fu,... l§J I ~ .. fu<.. ][~ -.M<.. l§J I .,,,.,,,om l§J I .,, .. ,,, . .,. l§J I .,.,.,,,,.,. l§J I ...... ,,... l§J Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UNd 990 Autoo, UMd 990 Aum, UMd 990 Autos, Used COUGAR MERCURY PLYMOUTH ~.-~~~---PLY MOUTH PONTIAC PONTIAC PONTIAC ~-P-0-N~Tl-AC~-PONTIAC '67 FIREBIRD 70 FIREBIRD ESPIRIT '67 COUGAR 1970 MARQUIS CPE. '69 Plymouth Roadrunnor. Pontlac1 Finest LUXURY SPORT SHOWROOt.1 TYPE OF CAR New tires, clutch & paint. '69 Grand Prlx with alJ the BeautiJul li~e tr05t l~nlsb, 11,000 MILES '69 PLYMOUTH T.O.P. Days 838-lS64/alt &oodies. Beaullfu( turq<>uls I-Ia.rd.top. Excellent condition, 4 speed V8 I cond power with black interior, equipped Attractive medium tuni:uolse 5:~ pm 96S-?4Sl with White landau top. $3166 dlr. Full price U299. Take steerlr;., ;a~; &~. AM/ with automatic trans., pow. mist finlsh with white inter. Roadrunner 2 Dr. H.T. VS, PONTIAC Johnson & Son, 3626 Harbor 1mall down. CZRW889) Will FM, wide oval• with ma& er steerlng, powl!r brakes, lor & landau roof, immacu-auto., R&ll, power steering I---------· I Blvd., Costa Mesa. MQ.5631) tin. pvt. pty. Call 540-SlOO 01 wteels. 1727 BQl) factory air, ra_dlo, heater, lat"! Premium equipped & brake1, bucket 1ea~. Only 1968 PONTIAC l'irf'blrd 400 .• 61 GTO Pontiac, or 1 g 494.7506 aft 10 am, $2999 compl~tely serviced & ready a.uto. trans., am-fm itereo 16.000 miles. (YPT372J No power, no air. Clean. owner. Less than 40,000 BILL YATH for imm>edlate dcllvery. radio. heater, PCl\.\'er steer· $1945 Low mileage. Best offer. m\'1, 4-spd, Too ma.ny can, 1968, 2 DR, Bonneville hard '~ $1675. (Ul H787) Johnson & ing, power brakes, factory 54.8-lSM alt 6 pm eves. No :reasonable oUer refused. lop. Full powr, In c l VOLKSWAGEN So 2626 Harbor Bl d AM/F~t radio, nu '68 BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. H.T. VS, auto., R&H power steering & brakes, vinyl roof, factory air, low 1niles. CVCLS48 ) $2295 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Complete Sales A Strviq, 2480 Herbor Blvd. ' at Falr Dr. Costa Mesa 546-8017 Open 7 days a week 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM ·,, T-BIRD "· ' " •fr cood. Truly •l>Otl•s. O BAUER BUICK •o; Pontlao 2 dr HT, Full 6!"'53! ·-•··· ~ V-"-Road BAUER BUICK Costa Me.0.. 540·5630 like ne.,., 4 near new tites. I"'"°"'"'°"-,-,---,.,---calibrated pol.,.....-prem. .-r..M .. ie . ~· E l!th St. power, clean, 2 bbl C8J'b. '67 GTO wtstereo, Many ex-tires. Xlnt cond., orig ownr, San Jua.n Capistrano 234 E. l?th St • '62 T·BIRD '69 Cougar, IUl' cond, vinyl etc. See Ai ask for demon. ~ · $500 or oner &tr>-2768 -a, •-• • bla·•, N~ Sl195 R 4-"'' •··· 837 ·-/49°'-"499·-•-• d I u •• · 1 bl boo . "·" M ~•o....,..~ """' .ncu "" .. ~ . es. ~. ......... "10Ull J-"001.ll/ "'~' ,.._,,_Mo•· u•.7765 U\NI' con II on . ....,. toJoo ne~re!f o4 3/Jue k, stration. (916 BEQ). John· ....,,..a eaa .,_,,.,.. House Hunttn&! wateb llie tifts. Btst otter. l onr. 4!H-0768, 54.0-8876 I 'Dall"°""''°y-=Pl»t=°'w"'°".,"'t-..,.,.,.-,-.. -,,.-11 1~~~~~~-~~~~~~~IJ"'~'..,....,,.~C~· _:M:""":_:o:lfet:! I $ . t : pm -llOn & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., OPEN HOUSE column. 544.2922 I °"''°"°"'~:-'"°""cccc---1 •·-tn. galore. 6'75-tim 549-316.1. COJta Mesa. 540-5630. Autos, Used 990 A";t~~' Used '69 COUGAR-Lo mi. AIC. 1969 Mercury Montego RIH. V/T, auto. Xlnt cond. ATTRACTIVE & Lo book, pri pty. &12-1070 EOONOtl1JCAL DODGE Light '"" llnw. wilh "°" • -----'---I terior equipped with auto. RE BLT '5 7 D 0 D GE ma tic trans., radio, heater. Suburban sta wag. Rec power steering, etc. Priced tuneup. 1'ransp car. t.1usl for quick ~e. U675. YCN· see to app, $150 as ls. 380. J ohMOn & Son, 2626 646-6442 llarbor Blvd., C.osta ?lfesa. 1---.F'""O~R°'Do---1 '""·""'· MUSTANG 166 Ranch Wagon '69 MUSTANG CONV. AlltOl'l1a1ic, power steering. (SWJ003l. Kelly Blue Book $ll.85 Our Price $999 BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN Auto., Radio & Heater, Pow. er Steering. Llc. XUF 358 $1699 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32.852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 9'l3 So. Coast H\.\'Y· 837-4800/493-4511/493--2261 Laguna Beach '65 Alustang 2-d.r, VS, 4-6pd, 54&4051 I 494-9m (No. RZF487) $599. $10 1965 Ford Gal SOOXL delivers on approved credit. Bucket seats, power steering, See at 1945 H11tbor Blvd, power brakes, automatic ,,c~.M~. ===-~~-1 trans., 46,000 orig. miles. '70 !'.fUSTANG Fastback. \Von't last Jong. NMV 268. 14,000 mi, 351 2v, 4 spd, $775. Johnson & Son, 262S xlnt cond. Loaded xtras, Harbor BL, Costa J\.lesa. $2495. Call Jim: 540-4063 5'10·5630. '68 AlUSTANG 2+2, pis. '64 Ford Galaxie 500 p/b, air-cond. $1600. Call 2 Door Hardtop. Radio, heat-1,,_,".,,"-"2"58"5.=,.--=~c-~ er, )X1Wer steering, power SACRIFICE! '6."i Mustang brakes, factory air, auloma-2+2 Jaslbck, Make offer. tic trans. $645. ORB 512. Pvt party, Call 673-4355 Johnson & Son. 2626 Harbor '66 Jl.fUST ANG Hdtp VS, auto Blvd., Costa Mesa. SoID.5630 trans, air, PIS, + Xtras. '67 COUNTRY SQUIRE .::"~A~~" Air "'"°· ""' brakes factory Ii ! ere o . 390,VS, AT., Pl, pb, fac air, Loaded 646-&19. lug r11.ck, 48,000 mi. New '66 MUSfANG. Xlnt cond. brakes. shocks, battery. Re· ....,,,, 3 pd 1 ·1 $975 bl Cl ~ "" '"°"• s ., ow mi e. . Sl~~nsk.29;~~ 6""" co . 551-6241 Alt. 2 PM 1970 Ford Jl.1averick OLDSMOBILE Xln't value at $1&00. New ----..,----- wlw tires, heavy, duty • •• ,,,.,,;0" & •""'•• Low OLDS '69 TORONADO mileage. 644-2387 a.fter 6. '67 FAIRl..ANE Conv: 3 spd, FACI'ORV VS, lo mi, very clean. $795. ArR CONDITIONING 1~84,_&-=1=16=5~=---~ Full ]Xl\.\'er incl. trunk cipen· '61 FORD XL, air con d. er, cruise control, tilt wheel, Yellow. b!_k Inter. Good stereo-multiplex, etc. Beau- cond. $1115. 83..1-3921. tHul fire frost gold with full '67 Ford Ranchero. 500 XL vinyl dlx. interior. Local P/S. RIH. Auto. Best ciUer (1) owner je\.\'el. (YCL560). • 54<-7927 • $3333 '69 FORD LTD fully loaded. 1 owner, $1995. :\._ cau 542-0011 GN'ttbe~ '66 FORD VAN, xlnt oond. A ~CADILLAC $1500. Reblt. eng. Al/TMOAIZ£O O£Al£1' Call 962-083.1 2600 HARBOR BL., *'62 FALCON WAGON COSTA MESA Like new $298. 968.5789 540-9100 Open Sunday 1 -p~1°'N.,.C:T~Q-.=F~O°"M=o~c=o-.-,-"-.1 • wife's car. Xtnt. Loaded. Below dealers cost. 968--6360 '69 LTD, 429 hp, full po\.\·er, $~~ * * * 497-1376 Supreme 2 Dr. H.T. V8. auto., l "'=~-="°""~-,,-,=-1 R&H. power sleering & FORD Van '67. 289 V-8 Very brakes viny[ roof factory Clean $1000 or trade for air. 1XvF.ci.4) ' I VW & SS. &12-"1'6 $2395 '38 f''ord Coupe-V-8, original cond. $750 Cash. Call 642--4.U 7 BAUER BUICK IMPERIAL ---------Costa M!'sa IMPER I AL Le Baron .1~!!!1'~~~!1!!1~~~ Load•d! 6 mo old. 20.00o1: '68 CUTLASS--mi. $8200 new; $~ cash or iake over pym n t Ii. 536-4287 wkdayl 8:30 lo 10 vg, all1omatir. po\.\·er Jtttf'. pm. ing, vinyl roof, radio, heat· JAVELIN '68 JAVELIN Automatic trans., power steenng, radio, heater. WAR 129. $1375. Harbor American 646.0261 1'16'1 HARBOll. COSTA MESA er. (2'29Jmll • $1699 BILL YATES . VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 493-4511/ 499·2261 '69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H.T. ONE OWNER 14.000 Ml. . JEEP Be11.utifuJ sliver mist finish 1--------,~· I w i th burgundy interior. ·52 Scout Jeep, Post Office Equipped with auto trans., model. Grod cond. Specl11l radio, heater, power steer. inter. decor. Make offer. Ing, power brakes, power 83!)...J~ll wlndows, a.lr cond. If you 1..::::::..;:;:,4;;l-J"'E=E"P'°$8°'00..--·I are hard to please. don't Cash, 546-2154, 8 AM· 9AM. miss thlJ tine car. (Xl.JllS) Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor MAVERICK Bl., Co•I• M•H. Slil-5630 '70 MAVERICK Pvt pty, Best ofr, 64 .. 2470 MERCURY 1970 MERC. CONV, THE SJ>ORTY ONE '67 Cutlass Air cond. dlr. V8. automatic, vinyl top CUEF'364l. Mu•I 111!11. f1695 run price. Call 494-7744, Thli nuhy tulip yellow with '99 etm..ASS Supreme, auto black top Ir. interior auto-tt11.ns, PIS, P/B, r&h. Im. moblle ha.I been driven only m•c cond, pr!v ownr 495-0280 u ... mil ... must ho , .. , PLYMOUTH I driven to appreciate. Ra· dlo, hearer, powu a11erlna;, I, 053_P __ L_YM,....O°'trrn=-o,-d,.r.-b°'t_ac.,..k, power bnke1, f•ctory air or11 cond. 19 mpg Pl) or cond., etc. 4 near Mew Ure•. Trade. 645-4687. A.•k for demonatratlon. (705· ·so Plymourh, Good ~Pl. JohMOn It ~n. 2626 tranf!portat.lon car. ~~bor Blvd., Costa Mesa. S150. Ph: 9611.7359 ~5630 '67 BARRACUDA F"AST· aitJST tell, ·~9 M,.l'('llry !'1<111.r· BACK • Air, auto, clean. 411!1 \Vaion, Rllilo, ~lr M11.kfo ofter, 833-2300 con<!, 429 l'nR", lo ml•.1~~~""'"'-----~9-JR93 Sell Idle Items now! BRAND NEW '71 DUSTER l:ARGE SELECTION IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WE WHAT WE SELL! '65 CORVAIR Convertible. CWBX344) $495 '65 NEW YORKER Full Pov.'er, Air Ccinditioning. (NHN67SJ $895 '66 STARFIRE 2 Door Hardtop. Factory air cond. Full power, vinyl roor. (SLY 648) -$1195 '68 FURY Ill 4 Door Hardtop. VS, Air Cond., Auto .. Power Steering, Landau Top, CUQZ415J $1495 • '63 IMPALA 2 Door Hardtop. VB, automa- tic, power •teering, radlo. heater. (HBF 363) $595 '66 VW SEDAN 4 spPed, standard equipment. (RUJ329) $995 '67 DATSUN 1600 Cnnvertlble Roadster, 4 1peed. (TIID209) $1195 AutomaUc, pciwer st~rlng, ra· dlo, heater. Lo\v, low miles! (XCF 141 l "$2195 The be1t value in the automotive industry, featuring roominess, economy and ease of handling. Standard equipment include• 198 cubic inch six cylinder engine column mount- ed manual three speed transmiuion, all vinyl bench seats and a choice of 18 exter• ior -colors. • \'L2911E111•10 '63 FORD WAGON Country Squire. 9 passenger. CXU.713) $595 '67 VALIANT 4 Door, Auf.9ma.tic, VB. (VTI.,. 818) $995 '66 GALAXIE 500 2 Door Hardtop, Jo miles. ISLJ· 749) $1295 '69 Suburban Wagon 3 seat. factory air cond., V8, automatic, power steering. (YPP 547) $2195 INCLUDES DESTINATION CHARGES. '62 IMPERIAL 4 Door, Full Po\.\·er, Air Cond. (8DKJ02) $595 '66 IMPALA 4 Door Hardtnp. VS. automatic, air cond., power steering. (RTV 047) $1095 '68 SATELLITE 4 Door, VS. 11.utomatlc, po\.\•t>r steering, radio, heater. (\VVG m1 $1295 '69 CHARGER 500 VS, factory air. 11.utomatJc, power steennr &. brakes. (YVA 04!5il Below Wholesale Blue Book. $2195 Real · Beauties, NO C)THER PLACE IN. TOWN HAS IT ALL! .., - I I " • • • •• 31 DAILY PILOT Th1.1rsday, March 18, 197l ' We're Celebrating Our 10th Birthday .wi~h YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. !l ~~. Sportsman's Safari Contest WIN A SUBARU STAR! ~ it's out of this world THE STAR ;·--·-----WAGON . • ---~A 7 U£1\\~ • with tront wheel dri~e _ ' lJ -!) ~ o nce you ride a Siar you'll undersland why front I -~-. wh€JCI drive makes the bl'.) d1t!erence ... better . J J . -maneuvcrabili1y, pos1t1ve tract.on, more le_g room. = / -. .. ~ Plus ••• up to 40 rnolc~ per gallon, 0 10 60 1n less --~ than 17 seconds, no rnph lop speed, all vinyl fully 1ecl1ning bucke t seals. nylon ca1pe1ing a11d 4 speed sy11chromcsh transmi ssion. Your automobile needs will be solved for one.half yea r • • • That's right! Th is exciting Subaru Station Wagon Is yours for six (6) months. Your's to t ake anywhere you like. , • The High Sierra, Las Vegas, anywhere .• • You'll be absolu te ly amazed at how little your new Su· baru needs to make those big trips ... As Motor Trend Magazine says, "it qualifies in the group of all time barga ins." NOTHING TO BUY •• , JUST REGISTER and WIN Set of Goodyear Polyglas Widetread G.T. White Letter Tires Set of Young & Lane Cj)uality Retreads Brake Relinings-lncluding Linings and Labor Front End Adjustments-American Cars Only Complete Four-way Brake Adjustments .•• and Many, Many More BLIMP RIDES YOU'LL LOVE IT •• WIN A FI SHING VACATION A fishing vacation that's sure to ple ase the w hole fam ily. Boa iing and fishing on one of the most ou t- sfo!inding recreational spots in Cali- forni a. Beautifu l Vail La ke & Bu fl er- fiel d Country. Trout, 31uegil, Big Bass , Catfish and Crappie ••. All ready a nd wa iting for yciu at Va il La ke. INCLUDES MOTOR o BOAT BAIT A CAMPER VACATION Yo ur choic11 of camper picku p or ca mper van for an e1"citin 9 week- end for the fam ily a t Beautiful Vail la ke & Butterfield Country. These 1971 units have everything you'll need. You can a lso hor~e ba ck rid e .. nd try out over 50 mil es of mini - bike +rail1 <11t Butterfield Country,. , a nd fish Vail lake. Includes Boat e Motor e Permit~ . FAMILY FUN RESORT AND AT 70 MIL~S PER 1-lOUR IT DOESN'T EVEN BREATHE HARD! f~E E Goodyear Blimp Balloons For The Kids FREE Coffee And Doughnut At All Stores "!·b !!\t £1": Si' .,.,, ... ~, ··1=''"m i •=•@ 'US-•l!;~;~:§:ho:~-""'f-Z'@h S S~'' =~--~·== Battery I Booster cable I r Absorbers -saPER-RIB .. BOAT TRAILER ti RES •11~~~~: • Triple·tough 3-T nylon cord, controls cord strclch. •Heavy Tufsyn ro bber, for long tire Efl!I, res1S'lr.cc to ct1ls and bruises. 11.1·1.1· •r>«' l~~eltn plln 11 ~I FM. E" l•~ •n<I 010 ''"· THE POLYGlAS GT TIRE iJ ,;,her L B It. copper coble BUY 3, GET 1 Features extra long r 89' : Don't be cau~ht short -bot prPparrd "'·1th lhE"se bat~ry . cables. BRAKE &ALIGNMENT lfl SPECIAL$ 95 ' I '129S .Anru.s.»11to.ParbtJtrtlf ..,.. ___ ~;r;:~ ..... Regu ar needed. Add S2 lor ti" ' .I This Week Only w1tn 11r GOl'ldlUC!11ln1 Trained ei.:p11rt1 v.!ll adjust lirakcia on 111 four '~h~ell. Aild brw\:e fiuid if nee"'lrd and le!!. Clean, in!pecl ~nd rrnack !rnnt whrrl hr~rin11;~. R~·~li~n front Pnd. Correc't ~~mbrr, r '•<!~r ,.,,! '"r·in llr ~ll' Rll 4 \\hel':• l'~T AVAILlllE AT lOCATIONS WITK TKIS SYMBOl 0 FREE f\lake your tire~ l11sl longer. ''FREE INSTALLATION" .. Spalding Goll Balls liquid Center 3 f $}33 ''(;o.fllt e" or Gives consistent Jong d jg. tance 8: accuracy, Lasting tough cover. A great valu11 at this Jow·low price! s11nd1rd or opt1on1t •~11.,pm1nt o~ mt 1 el lhl 1911 ••p1r ===========-:======c==-· -·- Llmtted 1l1e1 av1ll1ble at allghtly higher prices and 1houl b1 u&ed only on c1r1 1peclfled by car manufacturer, DINERS CLUB CARTE BLANCHE • '*Starred Loc11tions Do Not Honor Bank Credit Can:ls. SERVIN G SOUTHERN Costa Mesa Laguna Beach Tustin Ridgecrest 1 $96 Newpor1 ll'td. 548·9383 494-666 6 544-7650 446·4912 Barstow Ventura 1010 I. Mel11 5t. 515 [, Tlt1'"p11n1 ll•it, ' 256-8986 643·2131 OPEN SUND AY MARCH 28th 11 :!10 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. ' . ' ' l i ~f. 1:1 ~ 7 l' 1 ' l! " I ' I )1 ' I }J ' ' . ' ~l •