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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-22 - Orange Coast Pilot7 _, , -~·--·· --·-··· _.._ ____ ··-~ .... -·- I I Nixons Planning ··uoudini~ Survives. Week~s Va~ation In gan CleJDente Dive to Death Off Seal Bea~h DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 22, 1971 VOL. 6"1, NO. ff, t Sl!.CTIONf, ~ .... $11 Won't Stand Trial Murder-Suspect ·"' .. . . . . Declared Insane By TOJ\.1 BARLEY 01 tllt Dl llJ ,Ila! Sltlt Steven Craig Hurd today was ruled to be insane and unable to stand trial in Orange County Superior Court for Ille murder of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Judge Ronald Crookshank sent the 20- year-old transient to Atascadero State Hospital for an indefinite term after reading the report~ of six psychiatristll. "He will remain there until such time as he regains his sanity," the veteran jurist commented. Defense attorney Willia m Gamble depicted his fidgeting, twitching client as "crazier than a hoot owl" in urging that Hurd's form of committment should not contain the "legal loopholes" that enabled "Candle Light Killer" Roberl W. Liberty to regain his freedom . The late Liberty was released from mental custody and immediately used his freedom to kill two men before meeting his death at the hands of a fellow inmate in a San Diego jail cell. "There's no doubt this man is insane." Gamble commented. "Jf he is faking he Js an excellent act.or and he should get the acaden1y award for fooling si.1 psychiatrists." Chier deputy dist rict attorney James Emight agreed with Gamble and added letters written by Hurd Lo a young Sal'lta Ana girl to the pile of reports placed before Judge Crookshank. · Those letters contain the comment by Hurd that he was personally responsi ble for the earthquake that rocked Southern California a month ago. Hurd, manlcled hand and foot, shook his head and smiled while lhe comment Orange Coast Weather Hazf sunshine is the best the weatherman can offer for Tuesday, following cloudy skies in the mom · Ing hours wilh ~mpen1turea reach· ing 68 degrees along the coast INSIDE TODAY You cnn learn to fly and stilt keep your feet on the around bl/ U$ing fliaht simulolors o/ a New- port Beach firm. Poge 21. ... one • C•lli.n111 4 Clle<•l11t U1 t Ct1111Hld Jt.'4 C9!!1lc.I 11 CrM1W91'11 n D111!ft Ntll<tl 11 Dl....,.ttl 11 lf•l!Of'lll ,1911 I , .. ,.,,.,""'."' " l"l11111c1 U ·U ...___ 1& AM l.il!fln 11 MflllMI I ••'-• 2• N1llMlll N-..... or ... ff Ctllll" IL ...... ,....,.,. u lltf'tt t)<tJ l lk• Mlr11•tt U·U T1 .... li.lell H T11t1!9f'tl N W11llltr 4 WtfTllll'I It-1 .. 11 Wfl'lf Ntw1 W l was made. He, displayed a complete Jack of interest In the court hearing and refused to acknowledge his mother and 1ister who were seated in the courtroom. Judge Crookshank's decision reverses the earlier ruling made by Judge Robert Corfman. Judge Corfman dteided after reading reportl and listening to Gamble that Htad was sane and he ardered the yaung drifter to face trial. Hurd ' i.! accused of being the leader of a gang of drug-taking drifters wbo (See HURD, Pace I) R ed Tanks Hit By U.S . Pwnes On Laos Border SAJGON (UPI) -U.S. fighter-bomber!! and helicopter gunships today blasted a force of North Vietnamese tanks pursu- ing South Vietnamese troops toward the border of Laos. Front dispatches said they knocked out 10 Communist tanb but that a tank 1bot down an FIOO. The U.S. Command reported new heavy bombing strikes a&:ainst North Vietnam today, the second auch raid In two daY1. bringing 1 warning from a Soviet news agency Tass commentator that the USSR cannot ignore the new e!lcalation and will give "all the necessary &id" to Hanoi. WIO Gregory Fleming of Columbus, Ga.. pilot of a Cobra gunship involved in lhe tank·aircraft battle said the twin- jet supersonic FlOO "blew up In the air" as the column of 21 tanks poured a hail of fire at the Americans trying to protect the tail end of the relreating Stigon troops. Fleming said nine of the Communist tanks were destroyed and one damaged by rockets , bombs and cannon fire . He said at one point the tank column was racing full speed straight down route 9 in pursuit of ARVN tanks and armored personnel carriers bringing up the rear of the withdrawing South Vietnamese task force . Fleming said that about 75 minutes alter the intial air attack the Com· munists ' armor 'slowed to about 15 miles an hour as it neared the South Viet- namese border . He said the CommunisU were abou t five miles behind the South Vietnamese column and that the ARYN force had "stalled" two miles frorn the border. Smoke from massive American born· bing of Red troop concentrations as well as cloud cover. hau and dust block· ed aut later 1igtlt.htg.s of the Communlat llnkl. Fleming described them at IS.. LAOS DUEL, P•1• I) • • rv1ne I 00 ea e Es~apes Da'1Y Jone8 . , . .. . . . ' 'IT WAS VERY DANGEROUS. I ·HAO HOPED I WOU LD MAKE IT. l'M GLAD· I DID.' D. D. Masco M1k11 Good on His Gr••t E1c1pe Off the S.11 BNch Pi1r Pre8ident, Wife Set Week's Stay In San Clemente President and Mrs. Nixon will arrive in San Clemente Friday for a week-long stay at La Casa PaCifica, informed sources said today . It will be the second ~n Clementt visi l qf the year for the first family. No confirmation of the reported trip has yet come from Washington, D.C. Presidential aides generally announce such trips two or three da ys in advance. If next week·s stay follows the trend set by the Jan. ~12 visit by the Nixons, it will be a quiet ene with more rest than work. On the last visit, the President found the weather chilly along the South Coast, but 1lill m!l\aged somt walks on his private beach. He celebrated bis birthday during the last slop, changed the name of his home to La Casa Pacifica and pa id a visit lo i;tudents al Concordia Elementary School nearby. MOllt of his working hours were spent drafting his State of the Union 'Message and meeting with his top economic 1d· vlsers. t Escape Artist Lives · Through 'Deat.h Dive' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKJ 01 "'' OlttJ ,,It! '"" Escape artist D. D. Masco completed. his "Dive To Death" into the waters off the Seal Be3ch ·pier Saturday and lived to I.ell about it. The 32-year .old restraint breaker back· , ed his boast that he could' "do anything Houdini ever did'' by freeing hirt\lelf from two pairs of handcuffs 25-feet of chain, three padlocks and a SO-pound weight while at the bottt>m of the ocean. A crowd of about 1,000 persons watched him complete this stunt in 16 feet of water. He took only $3-seconds to free himself from the bond. "A hoax." cried some watching off the pier. But those who had been In lhe bobbing vessel with Masco, anchored a few feet off the pier knew it wasn't. All of the locks, as well u Masco himself were available for inspection . Masco's band! trembled and h1s fact tu•ned crimson as the. cuffs were snapped around his wrist. and the cha in Ued • tightly around hit body. The padlocks were attached behind his ba ck. "I was a lltlle 1pprehensive.'' 1aid the 270.pound escape artiat 1fterward. "I'd never been in the ocean before ." As two divers readied thelr aqualungs, Masco first placed one leg over the boat's transom, then the · other; and finally gushed into the water. On ly a white circle of foam remained on the surface as Masco was on the sandy sea.bottom, work.int" bis magic on the Jocks. And 110011er than expected, a shock: of red hair breaking through the surfaet: of the water signaled that he bad com• pleted bis escape. · Back on board, the drenched Muoo · lit a long-stemmed pipe and aakl, "It was very dangerous. I had hoped that I would mBke it, and I'm glad I did." The dive wu the ruWt of a challenge by one of Masco'a friends. Ralph Yarnell, of Alhambra. Next month, Muco clalma he will conduct another dive, lhia lime in water off the Santa Monica pier. "!"II be weariflg three ·Pairs ol handcuffs, leg lrona Inside 1 cr1te with ll weight on top. We'll 1ee hpw lhtt workt out," be laughed. Technical Argmlients Slow Pu·sh By L. PETEii KRIEG 01 ltlt oe!IY l"I ... 11_,, The quution of who may legally 1ign petitions for .-n election to ineorparatt the future city ot Irvine Saturday 1tallecl the planned kickoff of 1 aignup catnp&Jin. More than 100 iuidenta of the future city gatheted at the Altporter Inn far 1 breakfast rally but were told that technicalities will puib Dack pentfortinl at least one week. ·The "technicalities·• were described by aome ·leaders as simple 1t11Unc tlcUCI on the part of county arflcials. John Burton, chairman of the COClDcll of the Communitiea Of Irvine, cityhood sponsors, said · the Orange COunty Counsel's Office P'riday had decliried tit define who i.! entitled to li&n the pett .. tions. "The law says only property owner• may 1ign," Burton said, "but It' ii 1m- biguous in itl definlfions of who CIWDI property." He said apparentJy the term eould mean the fee awner .. cmly, ar the one who pays taxes, or IOll!ieone with a lease-option or 10D1eon1 wltb anly a ·tease. The Que5tion Is further complicated, he said, bee.all$! L'le ln 1Up.d1te1 thi.t ooly · property ownen. of record the previous March l can-&iln. "In our cue, tbll would be Much J, 1970," he said. He 6kplained this ·Would make about a 2,IJOO.household ,dlffereoce and Wetab heavily oo the number of 1ip1turw needed. CCI mu.st f)btain tilt a11171tures flf. ~ J>t!rcent of the jJroperty ... ..,. who. ln tarn, m11St represent B petcent ol the as.!essed valuation. , ·"The latter is no problem," BurtoR said, .pointing" out thal tl'le Irvine Com- pany own1 1bout 80 pereent of the 1sses. ed valuation within the boundarlea o! the 18,000 incorpor1tion area and ••of. ficials there have invited us to 'CODlil by with our pelitiona." Burton uid CCI officials are takinl the question ta the Slate Attorney General's Office at onCe. H"e said he is hopeful there wit! be a clarlfic.aUon by next Saturday, "but if there isn't, we'll just go 1et everybody's name. we 'Jlt)Uibly can,~ It It ho to be on. lllree dUferent peti- tions." Burton· noted lh1t time ii starting to play an important f1ctor in the signature campaign. CCI had 90 days from the date tt filed Its notice of intent. to cln:ulat.t petitions to ·get the signaturta:. That paper WIS filed Feb. D, he pointed out. Burton also commented brleflY on the furor raised by Santa Ana over lnclualoa of a 920-acri industrial secbon that Sabta !See PET!TIONS, P•p II t I • ,. ~ 2 DAILY PllOl s :House Unit OKs Service ··Pay Boost WASHINGTON (AP) -A two year . draft extension nearly tripling President Nixon's pay boost lncentl\•e for a "zero ' <!raft'' volunteer army was approved today by the House Armed Services -Committee. The bill, which wou1d boost milita.ry pay and allowances especially for Junior enli!ted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, was approved 36 to 4. President Nixon had asked a $987 million raise next year, and the Pentagon projected the balance would be recom· mended the following year. The com· -mittee folded both into one year. But chairman F. Edward Hebert <D· ~-), pointed out the committee had J)Ot approved President Nixon's goal of -~achieving a "zero draft" volunteer army by June 30, 1973, which iJ only a goal ... , fDd was not in the bill the administration _ sent to Congress. · : "I don 't think they can ever get a ,volunteer army unless they draft it," Hebert told newsmen . "But we're going to give him all the help he wants to implement it. "We're giving him all the rope he 'Wants," Hebert said. ~-The committee rejected an effort by Rep. Charles W. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohlo), to extend the draft only one year, 30 to 9. "· ' The bill sent toward the House floor would extend the draft two years beyond "' June 30, give President Ni1on authorlt)F to abolish student deferments including divinity student deferments and add a , ·third year of non·military service for •· , conscientlow objectors. '""· _ Hebert said the conscientious objector provision would not change any of the ~·present requirements for obtaining that ' gtatus but he said be believed it would ' •be easier for draft boards to grant · tbe status in quesUonable cases. ·• "In my personal opinlon," he said, "I don 't think the draft boards would wresUe with it so much when they know the man will serve three yea1'S." Tbe four members voting against the bill were Whalen and Repa. Alvin E. O'ltonslti <R·Wia.), Michael Harrington (D-MaS!.) and Floyd V. Jilek> (D-Wa1h.). The pay raise is similar in total dollars to the recommendations of th e :-"President's Gates Commission last year · 1 to replace the draft with an all volunteer _army. .~-.. But the commission, named for former :-,Secretary of the Anny Thomas S. Gates ·-who headed it, had recommended the ·'--increase be entirely in pay while the House bill based· on the President's pro- , ·poaaJ would boost pay $1 .825 billion and f ' livizl& allowances $862 million for a total increase ol 12.687 billion. : Carnival Ride .·.Operator Felled By Mesa Police A carnival ride operator is grounded 'In Costa Mesa City Jail today, after ~ allegedly offering to get passengers ; higher than his ferris wheel could. ·: Arthur DeWitt "Young Blood" Johnson, ~: ~8. was booked on suspicion of possession · of marijuana after police were sent _to the White Front store Shopping center. Investigators had more than one com· plaint Sunday morning about a camie employe <>tiering m a r i j u a n a to youngsters, according to Sgt. Bob Goode. Confronted at the ferris wheel. Johnson remarked be had to teU his boss and broke into a dead run for the trailer <>ffice with Sgt. Goode in bol pursuit. A plasUc bag of pot was found on the trailer floor apparently where some· cne bad tried to get rid o.f it. DAILY PILOT H•tt4...,.. .... ............ S. Clsa:sa.,. OltAHOI COAST J>UILllH1HO CCM'AICY Rolio•tt H. Wot4 'r•!'ff'lll tftt 'ubli.Mr J•ck R. C11rl•Y .• VkS ,,. ... ..,, tr.4 GfMr•I ~ Thol'll•• ICte-Yil f:dllot 1hol'll•l A. M ~rphi11• 111 .... ,.,.. Eidl!Df° Ch•r1t1 H.. loos Rich•r4 r. N.11 .... Mlttnl M•Ntlr>t lldtton Tel.,llw 17141 MJ-4121 Cl..rfla• A....W .. 642--1471 S. Claasata Al DepalaaJ!fta T...,ito• 4•M4H c.,:,r11111. ttn, On<IOO c-.t ""'°"''"' C-W.fl'J', M• -11'0rlft, lllllttr9fltN. •IWltl _.,_. ot Ml\'WTI...,_,. .,..,... IMJ' tio r•poc•uc:• ~I ...... ,_. fl'llfflM ,,, Clll"t'fJgilt -· ...... daM ,....._ Mid •I """"" ._,. .,.. C.t• ...,, C:.lltotlllll. ••ulPf• IW ~ U.lt "*"IJllWI "' iNI lt,Jf ....,,,.,., 1'1111,..,., .. ......,..,. .... fNftlf'lly, ' ' Hot Pants Down Under 610 Evaeeiated Reds Threaten Laotian <Capital VIENTIANE, Laos (UPIJ -Nor th Vietnamese troops have overrun govern- ment positions in an arc three to five miles northeast of lhe royal capital of Laung Prabang and the city's security is directly threatened, a governmeot a;pokesman said today. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said 610 dependents of U.S .• French, Swiss and Filipino officials and workers \Vere evacuated Sunday from Luang Prabang to Vientiane. the administrative capital 130 miles to the south, by the CIA chartered Air America Airline. most of them are heavily populated, mostly V>'ith refugees. Knocksy told newsmen fighting was still in progre ss today. He sp.ld the North Vielnames lau nched about 150 morlar and rocket roun~ against seven government positions Saturday night and early Sunday. Most were directed at the Luang Prabang airport and the headquarters of the first military region, which c o m m a n d I northv.·est Laos. 'fhongphan said the heaviest fighting '''as taking place two to five miles northeast and east of the airport. In case you're wondering, hot pants have hit Sydney, Australia, too. Here actress Sherien Bettke, 21, models a pair of torrid trousers equipped with a lion's head on a snakeskin belt. Lovely. Mili tary sources said six persons had been killed and many wounded by Com· munist mortar and rocket attacks on the· Luang Prabang airfield and nearby military camps and that the shelling destroyed or damaged five planes. He gave no details on casualties. Military sources said between 10 and 20 rocke~ and 1nortar rounds were Juanched early today against the airfield and nearby military installations. They said one ammunition depot near the airfield received a direct hit \Vhich caus4 ed a "thunderous explosion." LcU Golnndrinas Parade In Capistrano Packed San Juan Capistrano was bulging at the seams Saturday as thousands of people lined the streets to watch the 13th annual Fiesta de Las Golondrinas Parade. Marching ofr with the &weepstakes trophy for the best entry in the parade wis Newport Harbor HJgh School's band and drill team. other first place bands were Santa Ana High School, senior division; lsbell From Pagel PETITIONS. • • Ana had thought was going lo be part of its tax base someday soon. Santa Ana has gone to court over the issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable lo reason on a number of things, and hasn't been for the las t 20 years. Burton cited a number of other in· stances in which he claimed are testimony to delays in the cityhood bid created by the county. He said plans for county to build a fire station near the Irvine Industrial complex have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't been furnished the legally acceptable descrip- tion of the Irvine boundaries until Wednesday -after asking for them a month ago. The Saturday morning rally was sponsored by the newly.formed City of Irvine Now (COIN), headed by Andrew May, who also address the gathering on the various chores confronting the incorporation movement. Fro1n Page I HURD •.. killed Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro, Juoe 2 and removed portions or her body in Satan worshipping rites before burying the remains near tbe Ortega Highway. One other member of the gang1 Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 17. will be sen· fenced Frlday to what is likely to be a life term in state pri~on for the relaled killing 24 hours earlier of service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. Another gang member, Olristoper ''Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, arrived in Orange County during the weekend from Oregon and was scheduled to receive a trial date today. of Santa Paula, junior division: Burke's Pipe and Drum Band: Whitter Cavaliers, and the Norco Drum and Bugle C:Orps. Firsl·place trophies were taken hom'e by the Mystics of Fontana for their color guard; Eleanor Badsturner as "morning star'' for the best single marching entry: the Leisure World Hikers for the best walking group; Santa Ana ·High for its drill team. Sweepstakes winner in the float divi4 sion was Dana Point's Alamo Restau· rant. Best commercial float was the El Adobe Restaurant: best civic float ""'as the Chamber of Commerce of San Juan Capistrano; best non professional float \\'as Frances Williams and her pony cart pulled by "Pee Wee", and the best school float was Marco Fors.ter Junior High. Among numerous awards given for equestrian entrie! was a first to the Marco Forster Junior High for its mounted group: a first to Tony Hernandez and Salvador Lamas for their plain v:orking Western pair, and a first to the Gilbert Aguirre fam lly for the best family group. Second·place in the family group ""'ent to Mayor Tony Forster and his fam ily. Salvador Lamas also won a prize in the "hairiest man in to"'n" contest for his distinguished beard. The best comic entry awards went to Timothy King, first, and Judy Rose, second. The parade, containing 3 , 7 0 O participants, took place to honor the annual return of the swallows to San Juan Capistrano Mission. Rubella Epidemic Bypasses County Orange County has escaped an unusual outbreak of Rubella despite a statewide epidemic, county health department iipokesman reported today. The disease also known as German measle! has found cnly 33 victims so far this year in the ccunty. This ccmpares with 31 reported to the same date la~t year and 187 cases for all of 1970. The California Public Heallh Depart· ment reports said there were l ,836 cases reported in the state this year, t11,'ice as many as last year. Heavy concentrations ""·ere reported in Los Angeles, Ford Ord and Lake Tahoe. The Orange County Health Department recently put on a county wide vaccination drive for Rubella . Slide Buries II 'County Missionaries A1no1ig Lost A missionary for a Santa Ana·based inslitute's quest to translate the Bible and open its word to the tiny Tifalmin tribe ended Sunday night in New Guinea , amid a thundering n1ountain landsllde. Walter Steinkrauss. 44, and his wife Yvonne, 41, and daughters Kerry, 11 and Lavonne, 8, were among at least 11 persons missing today and presumed dead . Officials of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, 219 W. \Valnut St., said they had little solid information about the tragedy. Civil Defense Director Ian Skinner said a plane carrying medical supplles and relief goods landed at the village of Tifalmin today after a flight from Port Moresby. Additional aircraft 11,•ere scheduled to bring out injured survivors of the slide which engulfed the Steinkraus home and more than a doien native huts. Eyewitnesses said the slide thundered down the mountain, sounding like a gunshot, sweeping everything in its path to destruction. Rescuers dug with bare hands for hours In the mud and feared the death toll In the tiny mountain village - named for the tribe that inhabits lt -may be higher. AuthoritJes In P or l Moresby, about • ----- 500 miles fron1 Tifalmin. said it has a population of JIS. while the tribe itself numbers 2,500 persons. Benjan1in Elson, executive director of the nonsectarian religious organization for \Vh.ich Steinkraus "·orked said the family returned last fall following furlough in Orange County. . The Steinkrauses v.·ere sent to New Guinea in 1957 and both daughters were born there, during their mission to the Tilalmln tribe assigned just ten years ago. "They had other 11,·ork before that." sai d Elson, He noted that the Summer lnslitute of Linguistics is not as ~·ell-known as Hs sister organization, the Wyckliff Jnsli!ute of Bible Study. • The organization studies unwritten language and translates the Bible and fllhrr helpful books into native tongues to improve living conditions. Steomkraus was engaged in learning, analyzing and creating an alphabet for the Tifalmin tribe, based on specl;iliied lr11lnlng by the Institute. This is normally-11 10 to 21).year task, depending on how heavy the missionary's other dutiei; may be. Steinkraus was a graduate of Wheaton College and had attended the Fort WAyne Bible College, Fort Wayne, lnd., Elson aald . Laguna Group Seeks Word On POW 'Son' Exactly three years ago today, Air Force Maj. Don Lyon climbed into the cramped cockpit of his jet fighter aircra ft and flew a routine mission over North Vietnam. He didn't come back. And word of his welfare has not cOme back either. His pretty brunette wife, a University Park resident, doesn't know if she is a wido11,•, but she hopes to obtain news of her husband through the efforts of the people or Laguna Beach. Maj. Lyon was recently "adopted " by the Art Colony as a symbol of concern for the 1,600 Americans either held prisoner by North Vietnam or miss- ing in action. Today in Don Lyon Day and representatives of Concern for Prisoners of War. a Tustin organization, began promoting concern for Lyon. The group hopes to prompt 1,600 Laguna Beach residents to write letters to the government of North Vietnam asking •·\Vhere is Don Lyon? Bumper stickers and wrist bracelets with Lyon ·s name on them will also be sold at tables set up at shopping areas in lhe city. Board Sought For Comtline SAN RAFAEL (UPI) Assemblyman John F. Dunlop (0- Vallejo), says he will again propose a bill to establish a single state commission to control development of California's 840·mile Pacific shoreline. • A similar bill failed in the las~ session of the Legislature. Dunlop alw told a subcommittee hearing at College of ?\-1arin that nuclear power plants on the coastline might be charged for their use of sea water to cool their reactors. He said this would help pay for protecting th'\ coast. Defense ministry spokesman Gen. 'l'hongj>han Knocksy reported earlier to- day that an estimated six North Viel· uamese battalions (3,000 to 3,600 men} had launched heavy attacks on the government positions. L a l e r , a spokesman said six government positions "'ere virtually wiped out a11d Communist troops were three to five miles from the city. The spokesman said government troops had been redeployed in strategic areas four miles northeast of Luang Prabang and that one and fXISSibly two battalions of government reinforcements had flown into the city to stiffen it defenses. Military sources said the North Viet- names struck at the government posi· lions, so swiftly the defenders had no chance to evacuate civilians, including the thousands of refugees who have converged on the Luang Prabang area to escape the Communist offensive on the Plain of Jars. The sources said U.S.M. and I.Milian planes were unabble to strike effectively at the Communist-held positions because Heart Disease Tests Planned The 300 civilian employes of El Toro J\larine Corps Air Station will be screened for susceptibility to heart disease in a program to be held Tuesday through Thursday. The volunlary screening is designed to detect abnormalities associated with a greater risk or developing heart disease. Dr. Gerald Wh ipple said. He heads lhe Orange County Heart Associa· lion's community services committee 11,·hich is conducting the pilot program. Base medical technicians will assist and the air station will share expenses for equipment and extra personnel. Capt. \1• G. Benson, director o[ medical services at El Toro. said. Results of the exams \\'ill be con· fidential. Police Probing Strange Injuries A Newport Beach resident wa!'I mysteriously injured early this morning oulside a local seafood restaurant. Ernest Ray Stroud. 23, who lists his address as Slip 59 Lido Anchorage, told police he received a puncture wound in his chest, a cut above his left eve and several bruises about his head aOd shoulders \\•hen he fell on a board in a restaurant parking lot on Lido Park Ori\'e. Stroud ~·as taken by police l-0 Hoag ~lemorial Hospital where re refused treatment for his wounds. The subcommittee met to discuss proposed al!ocations for the State Department of navigation and Ocean Development. particularly $150,000 to begin developing a coastal master plan. Police are continuing t h e I r ln· 1 ~==============!.__:;_vestigation of the incident. ONE Of THE OUTPERFORMERS! Prime r-.1inister Prince Sou v & n n a Phouma flew to Luang Prabang this morning for a first-hand view of the situation and damage caused by the weekend shelling. With him aboard the Air American plane was Finance Minister Sisouk Na Champassak, who also is deputy minister for defense. Sources said Souvanna planned to have an audience with King Savang Vatthana, \1·ho has refused to leave his palace at the royal capital, and has canceled a trip to preside over state celebrations of armed forces day Tuesday in Vien- tiane. From Pagel LAOS DUEL. •• "larger " than PT76 amphibious tanks, which means they were either T34s er the large T54s, which so far are not yet known Im be committed to battle. The United States has massed artillery and tanks near the border to protect the withdrawing South Vietnamese and Americans in the area said they had been under heavy Con1munist mortar and rocket attacks and had lost a number of armored personnel carriers (APCS). Sooth Vietnamese military spokesmen said tonight government troops support.· ed by air strikes killed at least 600 Com- munist soldiers in fighting lhrough the weekend about sl{ miles west or Lang Vei, the former tireen Beret outpost four miles inside Soulh Vietnam front the Xe Pon River boundary. They put government losses in the fighting at 85 dead and 38 wounded. The U.S. Command said '"aves of U.S. jet bombers for the second con· secutive day pounded missile sites. an· liaircrart positions and "related support facilities" inside North Vietnam today. They said the· tv.·o days of strikes over the North v.·ere the heaviest since the abortive attempt last September to free American war prisonjrs from the Son Tay prisoner of war camp. The command called 1Jien1 "protective reaction"' strikes and said they wer e in retaliation for "attacks on our unarm· ed reconnaissance. aircraft and attacks an aircraft interdicting North Vietnamese supply routes in Laos. Central Japan Hit By Light Earthquake TOKYO (UPI) -A light earthquake s~ook ~entral Japan Monday tempo rarily disrupting train service when electric power was cut. No injuries were reported. The quake hit cities in central Honshu. largest of the Japanese islands, at 7:18 a.m. and measured three on the Japanese scale of seven. lo!. R•eiti ® PIONEER" SX-770 AM· FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver eund Your slereo system eround this versaUle lntlrument. AU solid stale, it oilers 70 watts of musrc power output. 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I I ' I I I I 11 I I, ! 7 Ho~tingion Beaeh Today's_ FbUil VO~. 64, NO. 69, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAG ES • MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1911 ' . JEN CENTS ORANGE cou Jr.r, CALIFORNIA New Tax Bid Studied fo~ Huntington Schools • By ALAN DlRKIN Of Ille ENll~ Piiio! S!1H The Huntington Beach Union High School District Is tnlering what many observers regard as its week of decision. The question : Should the 1chools be 6pera~d oc an ~cent tax rate or sbOuld anpt)ler override election be called? The present $1 .39 rate will revert to Bkenl! July 1 as a res~ll ' o'f three unsuccessful-votes to increase It Today, Robert Matthew, a deputy county. schobls SJJperiDtendent, estimated that another vote could be held Junt 15, just be(ore :iununer vacation, if trustees acted by this 'Ibursday evening:· ' The four-man bOard will be meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Dist. Supt. Jack Roper has announced that· the last part of the meeting will constitute an open forum for all organizations and parent! to give their views on bow the board should act. \n • One trustee, Tr. Ralpb Bauer said thla morning be will propose that the board call a special metting "In a day or so" to review the commenl;& and decide whether to have another shot at the polls. ''I'm waiting for the input to aee how citizens feel befm making up mind on it,'' Dr. Bauer said. "But I understand that. if we do decide to aCt, ·this we.ek i! the dea~line and J shall propose that we meet again. 1 think we have an obl!JaUon to'the voters to·tak• 1 stand and explain why." Ali attempt to Poll bOard. members thi• morning £~1ed to give a clear io- dlcation of bow the board will act, although It showed that, if another vote is· ealled, it ~will probably be for less than the 89-cent boost to a $2.08 rate that wu de!ea~ iii the la't two elec. tkins'. • · ·· · · : Board member John Bentley said be was "ketplng an open mind" on Uit question until Tuesday night's forum. go to the pe<>ple again al all thla year:" But he added,· "Moat of the feedback "People are saying they don't want 1 have been getting IS 1n favor al another to spend more money on the achooll try but ~Of: for $2.08." -people have to see the need ftrst~·· Board member Ray Schmitt -rould not Weyukei-went on .. "Tbe earliest I would be reach.eel for comrpent. Board Presi-consider an election W-Ould be in the dent Ma~w We}'\lker ls opP,06ed to fall and then IL would be an aQlOU!l& calling anather ·elecUo.n SQOA. · much less than I& f2.09 figure." -Weyuku, ~ho ls_nol-letkiNI rHledJon._ Weyqker also d!vJosed -tbat..he would and. whole term will be completed June recommend a. plan that weuld alkl\f 30, comqanLed, "My adV~e would be tbe.. llS\ricf to keep offerinJ a sis-period to ' take a _ lon& hard l~ ~fm:e we ' • (See SCHOOLS, Page •>· Laotians Overrun Royal Capital Luang Prabang Periled VIENTIANE. Laoo (UPI) -North Vietnamese troops have overrun govern· ment positions in an arc 'three to five miles northeast or the royal capital of Laung Prab'ang and the city's security ts directly threatened, a government 'pokesman said today. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said 610 dependents of U.S .. French, Swiss and Filipino officials and workers were evacuated Sunday from Luang Prabang to Vientiane, the administrative capital 130 miles to the south, by the CiA ch?r:ered Air America Airline. '{;:{ '{;:{ '{;:{ Yank Planes Knock Out I 0 Red Tanks SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. flghl<r·bomber1 and helicopter gunships today blasted a force of North Vietnamese tanks pursu- ing South Vietnamese troo'ps towai-d ·the border o,f Laos. Front dispatcht!s said they knocked out 10 Communist tanks but that a tank shot down an FlOO. The U.S. Command reported new heavy bombing strikes against North Vietnam today. the second such raid in two days, bringing a warning from a Soviet news ageney Tas!I commentator that the USSR cannot ignore the new escalation and will give "all tbe nece.55ary aid" to Hanoi. WIO Gregory Fleming of Columbus, Ga .. pilot of a Cobra gunship involved in the tank-aircraft battle said the twin· jet supersonic FlOO "blew up in the 1ir'' as the column of 21 tanks poured 1 bail of fire at the Americans trying to protect the tail end of the retreating Saigon troops. ' Fleming said nine of the Communist tanks were destroyed and one damaged b,y rockels, bombs and cannon fire . He said at one point the tank: column waa racing full speed straight down rout.e 9 in pursuit of ARVN tanks and armored persoMel carriers bringing up lhe rear of the withdrawing South Vietnamese tuk force. Fleming said that about 75 minutes after the intia1 air attack the Com- munists' armor slowed to about 25 miles an hour 11 It neared the South Viet· namese border. He said the Communlllt! were about five miles behind the South Vietnimese column and that the ARVN force bad "s\alled" two miles from lbe border. Oruie C:Oast Weather Haey '.unshine is the best the weatherman can offer for Tuesday, following cloudy skies in the morn- ing hours with temperatures reach Ing 68 d~greel along lbe coasL INSIDE TODAY You can ltarn to fly and itiU keep your feti on tht ground bu u..1ng fligh t i imulator.!I of a New- port Beach firm. Pagt 21 . ... 11111 ,. C1tlt.r11l1 ' C~K-lftf U. t CltHJfi.il 2'-111 c-1e• t1 ''""",.. " O.lltl Netkn 11 IMW~ 11 ••flterl91 ,._ • •Rfll'tl\11-1 ff P'bt-1 lt·U --" Allll L1'"'9n ti Mlllllll• • IM11lll '' Nll .... 11 N .... .., Orll!M c .. ""'° 11 ·~···· """"' 11 l!Mf'h t).U llt(' Mll'tl1h U·1J flltWI.... " ""'"'" .. w .. t11tr t Wlll'lll'• N-lf-11 .., .......... Military sources-said .gix persons had been killed and many wounded by Com· munist mortar and rocket attacks on the Luang Prabang airfield and nearby military camps · and that the shelling deatroyed or damaged five planes. Defense ministry spokesman Gen. Thongphan Knocksy reported earlier to-. day that an estimated six North Viel- namese battalions (3,000 to 3,600 men) had launched heavy attacks on the government positions. L a t e r , a spokesman said six government position!! were virtually wiped out a11d Communist SUFFERS MYSTERY ILLNESS Tina Kysell1, 12 Valley Child Still Critical Although fl.nanclaJ help ill on the way, Fountain Valley's 12-year-old TI n a. Kysella remained in critical condilion today.. suJiering a mystery illness at Hoag H05pita\ in Newport Beach. Tbe daughter of an unemployed heavy equipment operator, Tina was hospitaliz- ed last Tuesday with an Illness that caused paralysis and loss of speech. Tina, \fbo lives at 17451 Santa Lucia St., iB a student al Tamura School. Mr. and Mrs. William Kysella have five other children but reportedly have limited health insurance. A special fund set up for nna at the Bank of America, 17430 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley. has been receiving donaUons to defray some of the medical bills. Donations are also being taken at Tamura School, 17340 Santa Suza1U1e St., Fountain Valley. Hi gh Court Nixes Free Press Pass WASIDNG'OON (AP) -A bid by 1Jie Los Ange les Free Press to obtain pteas credentials for reporters on underground newspapers failed today In the Supreme Court by a vote of 6 to 3. Justicu Hugo L. Black7 William O. Douglas and William J. Brennan Jr. were willing. to hear the Free Press' argumeQt that press passes are part of the Constitution '1 i:uarantee oL freedom of the press. However, W1der court rules1 the vott of at least four jusUces ls a prtrequlsitt lo 1 hearing. The underground newspaper failed , then, by a single v&te. troops were three to five · miles-from the city. The spokesman uJd government troops had been redeployed in strategic areas four miles northeast of Luang Prabang and that one and possibly two battalions of government reinforcements had flown into the city to stiffen it defenses. Military sources said the North Viet· names struck at the government post• lions, so swiftly the defenders had no chance to evacuate civilians. including the thousands of refugees who have (See LAOS, P11e ZI Committee OKs .Militar · I t, • Y., .. Pay llleentive . WAS JUNG TON (AP) -A two year draft extension ne.arly tripling President Nixon's pay boost tneentive for t "iero draft" volunteer 1rmy ·was appr"oved today by the House Armed ~rvices Committee. The bill, which would boost military pay and allowances especially for junior enlisted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, was approved.36 to 4. President Nixon had asked a $987 million raise next year, and the Pentagon projected the balance would be recom· mended the following year. The com• mittee folded both into one year. But chairman F. Edward Hebert ( 0. La.), pointed out the commJttee had not approved President Nixon's goal of achieving a "zero draft" volunteer army by June 30, 1973, which is only a goal and was not in the bill the' administration sent to Congress. "I don't think they can ever get 1 volunteer army unless they draft it," Hebert told newsmen. "But we're going to give him all the help he wants to implement it. "We're giving him all the rope he wants," Hebert said. The committee rejected an eflort by Rep. Charles W. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohlo), to extend the draft only one year, 30 to 9. The bill sent toward the House fioor would e1tend the draft two years beyond June 30, give President Nixon. authority to abolish student deferments Including divinity student deferments and add a third year of non-military service for conscientious objectors. Hebe.rt nid the conscientious objector provision would not change any of the present requirements for obtaining that status but he said he believed It would be easier for draft boards to grant the status in questionable cases. "Jn my personal opinion," he said, "I don't think the draft boards would wreslle with it so much when they know the man will servt three years." Escape A:rt~t ~ives . ' ' Thro.ugh 'Deat·h Dive' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of t1M D4111 '1ltl Steff Escape.artist D. D. Masco extmpltltd his "Dive To. Death" into .the waters off the Sea.I Beach pier Saturday and lived to tell about it. Thf: 32-year old restraint breaker-back· ed his boallt that he could ••do antthing Houdini ever dld'' by freting hlm"self from two pairs of handcuffs ~feet of chain. three padlocks · al'ld e· SO.pound weight while at the· bottom of the ocean. A crowd of about 1,000 persons watched him complete · Uris 'ltllrlt in -16· feet ·of Rubella Epidemic Bypasses Co1Inty Orange County has escaped an unusual outbreak of Rubella despite a statewide epldamic, county health department 11pokesman reported today. The disuse also known as German measles has fOund on1y 33 vicUJna · ao far this year in the county. This ·compares with 31 ·reported to the same date la.st year and 111 · cues for au of 1970. The California Public Health 'Depart- ment reports said there were 1.836 cases reported in the state thi!: year, twice as many as last year. Hea vy concentrations were reported In Los Angeles, Ford Ord and Lake Tahoe. The Orange County Health Department recently put on a county wide vaccination drive for Rubella. ... water. He took only 63-second! to fre. himself from the bond. "A hou:," cried aome watching nU tbe pier. But those who had been in the bobbing vessel with Masco. anchored 1 few feet off the pier knew it wasn't. All of the locks, aa well as Masco himself were available for IMpectioo. Muco'1 handl trembled and his face turned crim30D as the cuffs were snapped around bis wrists and the chain tied tlgbUy around his body. The padlocks were attached behind his back. "l was a llllle apprehensive," said the 270-pound escape artist afterward. "I'd never been in the ocean before." As two divers re!.dJed lhelr aqualungs, Masco first placed one leg over the boat's transom, then· the ottter, and finally gushed into the water. Only a white circle of foam remained on the surface as Masco was on the sandy sea-bottom, working his magic on the locks. And sooner than expected, a shock of red hair breaking through the surface of the water signaled that he had com- pleted his escape. Back on board, the drenched Masco lit a long-stemmed pipe and said, "lt Was very dangerous. I bad boped that I would make lt,.and I'm glad-I did." The dive was the result of a cbaUenge by one of Masco'• friends, Ralph Yarnell, of Alhambra. Next · nionth, · Masco claims he will conduct another dive, this 'time in water off the Santa Monica pier. ''I'll be wearing three pairs of handcuffs, leg Irons inside a crate with a weight on top. We'll see how that works out," he laughed. Bolsa Chica Issue Beach Conflict Continued ~ ~f\etween the city of Hun- tinstoni ')each and the state over the Bolsa Chica State Beach was continued in Superior Court today. The dispute has grown from the state's announced willingoeu to settle with the owners of the Sotrthetn Pitcifrc Railroad right-of-way on the two a1td"three-quarter mile beach and buy it for $3.I million. The city intervened In Ute immenenl dmnain action with a claim for a public recreational easement owr the property. State attorneys have agreed In letter• to lhe court that the city'a claim reduced ,1 • the uttlelMnt figW'e but the state PubHc Works Board Is not planning to pay the city 1ny compensation. The question that wu before Judge Raynrorxl Vincent this morning wu whether the city's claim had any tangible benefits. The hearing was continued untn April 12 with the 1creement of attorney• from both agencies, Clly Attorney" Don Bon fa has admitted that the conflict ls ·over the larger l.ssu• of whether the city should have manage. ment 11nd development rights, under a Ion& term lease, to the beach. "The ltate asked UJ to tntmene In this with our claim for a recre1Uonal eesement," Bo~fa eq>la.lned.·"Now they want to 1et rid of us and settle with the ownm. But we are not going to play deed." State Parks and Rec.re,uon Director William PtM Mott has realsted city rtqUtlll to let It operate the beacb. on lhe grounds that the state Is under an obUgatlon to• run It. Hun Ung ton Bea oh offlclala m1fnllln the state does not have adequate fund1 to develop the beach. • I MAS~O BEFORE-DIYE - Choin od, CUll..t ·and Wolghtod President, Wife Set Week's · Stay In San Oemente Pruldenl and Mrs. NlJon will &rrlve in San Clemente Friday for a week-long stay at La Casa Pacifica, informed sources said today. It will be tbe 1eCOnd San Oemente visit of the year for the first family . No conflrmaUon of the-reported triP. has yet. come from Wuhlngtotl, D.C. Presidential aides generally 1nnounc:. aucti trips two or three day1 In advance.. If ne~ week'• stay foUows tht trend set by the Jan. &-12 visit by \he Nl1om., U will be I quiet one Wilb more tes1 tban work. On the last visit, the President found the weather ctillly 1long the South Coast, ~t still managed some waikl on hit priVate beach. He celebraled hb birthday dur1Jl1 lb4 le.st stop, changed the name of bis bomf to La Casa PacUica and paid a visit to students 1t ·Concordl1 Elemtntlll School nearby. I ,. •• % DAILY PILOT H Mondaf, Mwc:ll 21, 1971 "-~ "' Petitions Delau.ed, .. - • • Irvine City hood .. " •·' Drive Slowed ~ , By L PETER KRIEG OI Ills 01!1'f Pli.t Sl1ll The question of who may legally sign peUtions for an election to incorporate the future city of lr\•ine Saturday stalled ,. lhe planned kickoff of a signup campaign. i More than 100 reslaents of the future :; city tatbered at the Airporter IM for f a breakfast rally but were tcild that teclmicalities will push back petitioning ~ at least one week. ~ The "technicalities" were described by ! some leaders as simple &tailing tactics : on the part of county officials. : John Burton , chairman of the Cowicil : of the CommwUUe1 of Irvine, cltyhood ) spopsors, said the Orange County • Counsel's Office Friday had declined to : define who Ls entitled to sign the pell· ; tions. "1be law says anly property owners may sign," Burton said, "but it is am. biguous to its deDnlUo.ns of who owns property.'' He said apparenlly the term could ., mean the fee owner only, or the one ; who pays taxes, or someone with a ; tease-option or someone with only a .. !ease. :'. The question ls further complicated, .. he said, because the law stipulates that ~ only properly owners of record the :,, previous March I can sign. i' "In our case, thl.! would be March J, 1970," be said. •• ... He explained this would make about a 2,000.bousehold difference and weigh heavily oo the number of signatures needed. CCI must obtain the signatures of 25 J>l'tcent of the property owners who, in turn, must represent 25 percent of the auessed valuation. "The latter ls no problem," Burton &aid, pointing out that the Irvine Com· pany owns about 80 percent of the assess· ed valuation within the boundaries of the 18,000 incorporation area and "of- ficials lhere have invited us to come by with our petitions." Burton said CCI officials are taking the question to the State Attorney General's Office at once. He said he is hopeful there will be a clarification by next Saturday, "but if there isn 't, we'll just go get everybody's name we possibly can, even if it has to be on three different peti· tions." Burton noted that time is starting to play an important factor in the !iignature campaign. CCI had 90 days from the date It filed its notice of intent to circulate petitions to get the signatures. That 1>4per wa11 filed Feb. 22, he pointed out. Burton also commented briefly on the furor raised by Santa Ana over inclusion of a 9'20-acre industrial section that Santa Ana had thought was going to be part of its tax base someday aoon. Santa Ana has gone to court over the issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable to reason on a number of things, and hasn't been for the last 20 years. Burton cited a number of other In· stances in which he claimed are testimony to delays in the citybood bid created by the county. He said plans for county lo build a fire station near the Irvine Industrial complez have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't been furnished the legally acceptable descrip. Uon of the Irvine bollOdaries until ·Wednesday -alter asking for them •month ago. The Saturday morning rally was sponsored by the newly-formed City of Irvine Now (COIN), headed by Andrtw May, who also addresa the gathering on the various chores confronUng the incorporation movement. MRS. DONNA OLIVEIRA, FRIENDS PROMOTE MEETINGS Michelle Klrchge1tn1r (t1ft), Diane Ollv1ir1 Help Out OIAN•t C04ST DAILY PILOT OltANOI COAIT ,-UllllHINll CtlM'AH'I' ••b•rt H. Wt.I ,,..llHnl .,. P'Wllllllf' J1,lr: ~ Cvr{1'( Vlei P,..ia.t Mii 0..-1 Mtn11tl' Tiie"''' KM,Jf l:dltor Th•m•t A. M 1i1r111'!~ .. N.1,....1,.. EdllDI' Al1R Dir.iR w .. 1 Or"'9<1 ,_,., Edlttr . ' Alb11t w, 11••• M.otS.tc l:t!lw Hutf .. tff IHc• Offlt.• I 7171i a.1ch l1ul1•1r4 M•lll~t Aeclr1t11 P.O. lo• 7,0, ,2.41 .,_ "'""' l....,.. l•dl r tt: ,,_, A"""" Coll• Mont: .JJO Wni a1v !1rM Nmwllft IMd'I; ~ N1wpor1 11.o1,1:..,1rll 5" Cllmtnft: al Horlt\ IJ Gl"'lnl l•I DAILY Ji'ILOT, wftl'I '«lflldl It cwNl"'M ""'- ...._. .......... _.111'1111111111111~1 w.. •v 11111 _.,.,. .,,,,.. ,... w.-•~ N..,.,-1 hldl, C.11 ~1. ...,, ....... ~ '"--"' ".~~ &111 c........,., ~--.,,. ... . ........ -, .. lmlll cllllllOft.. ~rtnt1,.. prll'ltltlf Mnt .. ~ * W.1 ky '"""'· °"'" ~ ,..., .... (7141 '42-4Jl1 et-lflff ... , ....... '41·ff71 ~. Im, Or9N1 Cllllf ~•lrlt ~. N1 .._ 1_,., lth;nr,.t ...... •"""91 -ltw .. .,,,.,........... """'" _, • ~llClll wl"*'f .,.... lllW• .,... ... 9' cmpyriflu _., ....... dnl ,_,. Niii It .. .....,, l'9dl .... Qlf9 "'-· C..lll'WQ. ~­ .. _,.., IUI ,,_,1'111'11 ..,. -· 1t.n ~ 1MM111ry ... ,....,,....., b ,n """"""..,.· Five Candidate Nights on Tap In Huntington It's time to meet your school board candidate, according to members of the Huntington Beach League of \Vomen Voters. Between ~larch 30 and April 15 they have scheduled "candidates nights'' for trustee hopefuls in five local elementary school distr icts. During each of the sessions, candidates \\'ill speak briefly and answer queslions from lhe aud ience. Candidates for the Huntington Beach Union High School District Board of Trustees have been invited to speak at each of the meeti ngs. Members of I.he league have distributed 50,000 sheets with the location and da te of the meelings. The meetin.is, each 11chedumt to begin at 7:30 p.m .. are as follows : fi.tarch 30 -Ocean View School Distri ct. Community fi.1ethodist Church, 6662 Heil Ave .. Huntington Beach. April 1 -Weslm.in!ler School District, Westminster High School, 1432$ Golden West St.. Westminster. April 12 -Fountain Valley School District. Fountain Valley High School, 17816 Bushard St .. Fountain Valley. Apr il 14 -Huntington Beach City School Diatrict, A&ne1 Smith School, 770 17th St., Huntington Beach. April 16 -Seal Beach School District, McGaugh lnterm<dlato Sdlool, Bay Boulevard and Bols1 Avenu\, Sell Beach. DAILY PILOT 11111 Plitll Bay Crossin.g Ban Approved , S,O.CRAMENro (AP) -Legis. laUoa to 'ban coostruct.ion or '"" other-bridge llCl'OS! San Francl3co Bay passed its final legislative test today oo a 57 to 2 Assembly vote and was sent to Gov. Reagan for his signature or veto. The bill would halt plans for the $402 millJOA 'Southern Crossing, a bridge planned for construction about three miles south of the ex· isling San Francisco.Oakland Bay Bridge. From Page 1 SCHOOLS ... day. Cutting the number of periods or Increasing the number ol student pet teacher have been suggested as possible solutions to the fiscal crisis. PASSERSBY AID MAN AND WIFE INJURED ON HUNTINGTON BEACH CYCLE-CAR CRASH Tustin Min Remains in Critical Condition After Coast Highway Collision Friday "I would be in favor of maintaining the six periods a day by reducing the number of minutes in a period from 50 to 40 minute~. "That way we could maintain the broad curriculum offering. It would also fall on the students to do more homework. maybe." Doctor Denies A11y Blame With Blaze in CdM Offices Tustin Cyclist Still Critical After Collision Roper has estimated that if the 85-r~nt rate is used it will n1ean culling the schools' $14 million budget by $4 million. The 8.5--cent rate is the maximum allov.·· ed by ille state without an override. No other comparable district i n California is operating on an 85-cent level. By TOM BARLEY 0t ltit D&llT Plltt lltH Dr. Ebbe Hartelius today fi<tnly denied responsibility for the fire lasl April 9 at bis Corona del Mar offi~s and he ju11t as firm1y rejected in the closing bour11 of his Orange County Superior Court trial allegations that be fakt.d the tbelt of his car nine days earlier. The dapper SO-year-old physician plac· ed the blame for both incidents squarely on the shoulders of Jim Blevins. the brother of his blonde mistress and the man who had earlier testified that Hartelius planned the fire and bribed him to leave the state at tbe height of a police investigation. Hartelius testified today his first knowledge «>f the fire Was when be Abortion Raps Filed Agai1ist 2 Mesa Wo~nen A pair of Costa ~1esa room-males who allegedly worked for admitted abor· tionist Dr. John S. Gwynne al his Santa Ana headquarters were set for ar- raignment today. The premises were raided Friday, with Dr. Gwynne himself and six: women £mployes booked. Diane J. Bodine. 18, and Diana ~1. Grimstead. 22, both of 307 21st St., and lhe remaining suspects are charged "'ith conspiracy to commil abortion. Seized by officers and district al· torney's investigators Friday \Vere medical equipment, books and records lhat reveal , one office r claimed, •·un· doubted proof that hundreds of abortions were performed in that building." The new booking by police was )lnother In a series of arrests thal began last May 13 when officers charged tbe 28.. year-old physician and his assistant , Deb- bie Meyer, 19, of \Vhittier, with perform· ing abortions at the 17th Street address. A Jong list of charges that now includes Gwynne's mother, 11rs. Rubye Unruh Gwynne, 56. among lhe defendants is currently stalled in Orange County 's cou rts while judges a"'·ait the California Supreme Court's comments on the legali4 ty of the state 's Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967. Gwynne's lawyers condemn that act as unconstitutional and they are also seeking relief at the federal court level from the abortion charges filed against Lhe!r client and his assistants. Gwynne has stated in and out of court that he will continue to perform abortions at any time they are required. He challenges the validity of ex:isting abor· lion codes and predicts that the Sup reme Court will "defend the right of any woman to obtain an abortion whenever and wherever she pleases.'' Also booked Friday were Wa ynette Bruce. 18, of n41 Concordia Place. Westminster, Ruth Newman, 18. of Azusa. Barbara Johnson. 32. of Tustin and a 17-year old Garden Gr ove girl, who was booked into Juvenile Hall. Frona Page 1 LAOS DUEL. • • converged on the Luang Prabang area to escape the Communist offensive on the Plain of Jars. The sources said U.S. and Laotion planes were unabble to strike effectively al the Communist-held positions because most of them are heavily populated, mostly "''ith refugee s. Knocksy told newsmen fighting wa1 stlll in progress today. He said the North Vletnames launched about · 100 mortar and rocket rounds against seven government posiUons Saturday night and early Sunday. Most v.·ere directed at the Luang Pr1bang airport and the headquarters of tbe first military region, which c o m m a n d I northwest Laos . ThonJphan said the beavlesl fighti.nt 1VU l.aklng place: two to five nill• northeast and east of the airport. got a call from his answerin~ service to advise him that smoke was pouring from his offices al 2345 E. Coast Highway. He said he told Newport Beach police detective Sam Ambergey at the fire sceae that he could only think of Blevins as being responsible for the blaze. Harlelius was arrested and booked on arson and fraud charges IO days later. The physician testified in his clipped accent that he could account for every minute of the time last March 31 when he was supposed to be driving to Long Beach with Blevins to hide the doctor's car behind a supermarket. That time, he said. was taken up v.·ith visits to local hospitals and patients homes and it was late al night v.·hen he returned to the Costa ~1esa home he shared with Reba Vaughn . Hartelius said his first indication tha t the car was gone came when he looked from the living room window nex:t morn· ing to notice that the car was missing. "Did you take the car?". defense at· torney Matthe~ Kurilich asked. "I did not," Harlelius replied. "Did you plan the fire?" Kurilich ask· rd. "No, I did not." Hartelius responded. Hartelius is the last defense witness In the trial. It is expected that the issue v;ill go to the jury late today after testimony from rebuttal witnesses called by Deputy District Attorney Al Novlck. Shoplifters Flee Market A male and female shoplift team browsed lhrough a liun tington Beach discount store Sunday night and fled after rifling the meal counter. Jim Maguire, employed by the Alpha Beta Market, 6911 Warner Ave., called police after he saw them stuffing themselves -in trousers waistband and ladies' purse -with 20 packages of prime S'teaks. By the time officers arrived, the thieves had waddled out unseen and vanished in a white station wagon. Police said they apparently feared cap- ture and dumped lhe sirloins and filet mignons at nearby Golden West and Clay streets, where merchandise from three other markets was also recovered . Orange County Medical Center officials said today Stanley E. Riggs , 39, Tustin, is still in critical condition as a result of a traffic collision Friday in Huntington Beach. Riggs suffered head injuries when his motorcycle hit the rear of a car on Pacific Coast Highway near the Edison plant. Police said Riggs and his wife, Helen. 41. were southbound on Paciric Coast Highway, abou t 6 p.m. when their machine slammed into a vehicle driven by Adrianus Verdult , 67, of 21851 Newland St.. near the Newland Street intersection. 1'raffic officers are still investigating the crash. Neilher driver was speeding, they said. Mrs. Riggs sustained only minor in· juries in the collision and was treated and released al Huntnngton Intercom· ruunity Hospital. Neither she. nor her husband, were wearing !afety helmets , according to of ficers • Edward Breeding Rites Tuesday Funeral service! for G. Edward Breeding, 49, of 16872 Bolero Lane, Hun· lington Beach, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in St. Michael's Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View Drlve, Corona del Mar. Mr. Breed.Ing died Friday at his home following a heart attack. A native of Missouri , he was a veteran of World War JI and the Korean conflict . He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Vashke Breeding, assistant principal or Newport Harbor 1-ligh School, and a stepson , James Lambrinos, a Peace Corps volunteer in Colombia. Burial will be in Pacific View f>.1emorial Park. Angela Davis Given Offer Pending Bail SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -t\.lan:ist philosophy professor Herbert Marcuse has offered lo hire jailed Communist Angela Davis if she Is released on bail, Howard Moore, chief counsel for the 26-year-old Miss Da vis, said Sunday lhnt his client had studied under Marcuse at Brandeis University and la ter at the Universi ty or California at San Diego. ONE Of,THE OUTPERFORMERS! ® PIONEER" SX-770 AM·FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver Deputy County Supt. Matthew ex· plained that it takes 75 days to hold an election from the time it is called. He agreed that, technically, an election could be held in the first two weeU o( July, but in that case the dilltrict would have to draw up two budget! -one based on a successful vote and the other based on defeat. One of the budgets could be adopted late in July, but Matthew pointed out that the distri ct would incur double prin· ting costs. Lagunans Urging Hanoi Letters On Don Lyon Day, Exactly three years ago today, Air Force Maj. Don Lyon climbed into the cramped cockpit of his jet fighter aircraft and flew a routine mission over North Vietnam. He didn't come back. And word of bis welfare has not come back either. His pretty brunette wife, a University Park resident. doesn't kno\V if she is a widow, but she hopes to obtain news of her husband through the efforts of the people of Laguna Beach. Ma j. Lyon was recenUy "adopted '' by the Art Colony as a symbol of concern for the 1,600 Americans either held prisoner by North Vietnam or mlss-- ing in action. Today in Don Lyon Day and representatives of Concern for Prisoners of \Var. a Tustin organization, began promoting concern for Lyon. The group hopes to prompt 1,600 Laguna Beach residents to write letters to the government of North Vietnam asking ''Where is Don Lyon'.' Bumper stickers and wrist bracelets with Lyon's name on them will also be sold at tables set up at shopping areas in the city. The tables will remain at the various locations . a spokesman for the group said. until 1,600 letters. one for each POW·MIA. are sent to Hanoi. Printing of S,000 copies of the Hanoi letter was financed by the Irvine Company. The tables are located at Boat Canyon Shopping Center, Monarch Bay Plaza World Savings and Loan and the Alph~ Bela Shopping Center in South Laguna. lob ltdtl Buffd Yotlt •t•reo l)'ltem around ttils versalna 111~lMnent. An aottd 1late, It ollers 70 watts of music power output. Inputs for magnetic and ceramic phonos, rnlclOPf'ton&, taP«t monlfor tnd auxlUary. 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JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SIU. lllADI 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHON! 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COST A MESA -lie'-Harbor & Jlradwa I " I . -.. . _, ---·. -~----· .. ·-' Mondlf, M11ch ~. 1971 H OAJLV PIL4l :J Hurd Held · l·nsane • Ill Teach~r.'·s Cult · -SlaY,ing By TOM BAllLEY or ltlOI O.UY ,.. ... 51aff Steven Craig Hurd today was ruled to be Wane and unable to a~nd trial in Orange County Superior Court for the murder of Mission Viej{) teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Judge Ronald Crookshank sent the 29- year-old traruient to Atascadero-State H<>spllal for an indeflnite-. term after ruding the reports of six psycblatr!m. "Ht will remain theft: until such time as be regains bis sanity," the veteran jurist commented. Defense attome1 Wllllam Gamble depietM hla llcfaetlng, twtlchlnl client : as "cralitr· thJn a boot_oWJ" fn1 urgmg llillt. 'l!Uq!'• lorm of <Oliunltunenl should \not conlaln lbe "legal looplioles" that .enal>~ • ''Cllidlel!Pt. Kill'!" Robert W. ~ to'te&all\ hla freedom. l The late l,ll>orty . -. rtlwed from m.nta1 ~ and lmrnedlately used II/' freedom·. to kill ·1wo men bel<>r. I meeting hls death at the hands of a fellow lnmate in a San Diego jail cell. "There's no doubt thJs man ii ineane," Gamble ~ommented. 0 11 he ii fakli:lg he,Js an excellent Rctor and he• should ·get the academy award for fooling six psychi{ltris.ts." : . Chief deputy 'distrtctfi attorney' James Emlgbt agrft<I with Gamble and added letters wfitten by Hurd to a young Sanla Ana g!rl to lbe pile of rtJlO!ll thO rem•IM near 111t ortta• Hl811...,. One other member of U. PM. AiUJat Cralg jjMoose'1 •tube, 171 Wiii . lie ,.. tenced Friday to whal II U!ollr tt be ·a Ille term In slntl 1lrtloa-, 'tor Ille related killing 21 hours eiilter v .. rvltlo station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlle. ~ 11 q I lllentber, Cllu1lloper "Goo" Gibboney, 11. arr1vec11n ~· Cowity during the weekend ~m Ortpn ' and was oclleduled to receive a trial 4ltt w.,. ~ Congressman's Bribe Trial Will Stand .Slide B .uries II -~" "" Coun~y Missionarlei Among Lost WASllJ NGTON (UPI) -The Supnome Court refused today to quash bribery and perjury chargea against Rep. John Dowdy (D-Tux.), wh() ls scheduled to 10 on trial in Baltimore May 3. In a brief, unsigned order, the court rejected a claim by Oowdy's lawyers that he was immune to prosecution because of his Constitutional protection against arrest as a Congressman. But in another action, the j u a t i c e s agreed to hear a case involving a hotly contested recount in the election of Sen. Vance Hartke (0-lnd.), over his GOP opponent, Richard L. Roudebush, last November. A three-judge federal court in In· dianapolis ruled on Dec. 17 that the state's recount law was• unconstitutional and upheld Hartke's legal move to have the recount halted in Marfon County, The Supreme . Court will he a t arguments in the case next fall or winter and then hand down a written decision . Dowdy ls an 11-term Congressman who won rMlectlon last Noveni>er after his indictment. He was c h a r g e d with obstructing justice, lying to a grand jury and using interstate travel for the purpose or accepting a $25,000 bribe to help the now-defunct M o n a r ch Construction Co., a Washington area borne improvement firm. A former president of Monarch, Nathan H. c.ohen, and the former sales manager, Myrvln C. Clark, were indicted along with Dowdy. They were accused of giving the Congressman the money to influence a Ju.stlce Department investigation of the firm. The court took these other actions today: -Let stand a decision that the com· mander of a military iMtallation may ban di.s_tribution of printed material on his post if he has a "reasonable basis" for believing it to be "a cltar danger to the loyalty, discipline or morale of is troops." An appeal against the lower court ruling had b e e n brwgh to t h e Supreme Cou,rt by 10 servicemen once stationed at Fort Jackson, S.C. -Voted ll to 1 that a state has the r ight to require a one-year residency before a candidate may run for a state circuit judgeship. The ruling came in an Alabama case where the residency requirement Is contained in both slate law and the Alabama Constitution. -Let stand a lower court ruling that Los Angeles authorities were entitled to deny ROlict press passes to reporters for a Los Angeles underground newspaper. Digging Dane As Tuesday sniffs for a clue, Thursday gets right to work searching for the rabbit they lost while out for their Sunday run. The great Danes are owned by Jerome Stabile of Bethlehem, Pa. Tape Recorder on Stand ' In My Lai Proceedings FT. BENNING, <l't (UPI) -Two whirling wheels of mJgnetlc recording tape moved with almost hypnotic impetus before a combat·tested jury today and the Midwest farmboy voice that came from the loudspeaker spun a tale of horror at My Lal. The six-officer jury at the military murder trial of Lt. William L Calley Jr. lltared at the moving wheels but in their miods they could see on the witness stand Paul David Meadlo, 23, of Terre Taute, Ind., a black-haired youth in a green short-sleeved sweater who had limped into the courtroom two months ago on an artificial foot. Meadlo lost his foot when he stepped on a land mine planted by what his attorney called "those same innocent people" the day after the .March 16, 1968, sweep in which Calley ls accused of murdering 102 screaming women, children and old men. Meadlo -testified Jan. 11 and 12 and the jury -now in its slitb day of deliberation -requested not only bis star government testimony but that or three other key prosecution witnesses be re-read or replayed. The voices came from the recording machine soft and somewhat muted but clear. "Why did you gather the people up?'' asked the prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel III. "Because we all considered them to be Viet Cong and as far as I am concerned they are still Viet Cong," Meadlo replied, • A missionary for a Santa Ana-based lnatitute's quest to translate the Bible and open lt. word to the linY Tilalmln tribe ended SUnday night in New Guinea, amid a thundering mountaln landslide. Walter Steinkr.iuss, '4, and b1s w:lfe Yvonne, 41, and daughtm Kerry, II and LaVonne, 8, were among at least 11 persons missing today and presumed dead. Officials of ·the Summer Institute of Linguistics, 219 W. Walnut St., said they bad little solid informatlon about the tragedy. Anaheim Diver Loses His Life At Crystal Cove An Anaheim scuba diver Sunday was pulled unco~ou.s from Crystal Cove and, despite revival efforts by Laguna Beach and Newport Beach lifeguards, was pronounced dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital. The stricken diver was identified a1 John R. Edmiston, 35, and the preliminary cause of death was listed by the corone r's office as drowning. lnvesUgators said Edmlnston, clad ln scuba gear, was pulled ashore by a diving companion, Dustin Short, of Orange. The two men were certified scuba dive rs and had entered the water off Crystal Cove at about 2: 30 p.m. Accocdlng to Short, Edmiston began coughing underwater and inflated hia float vest to bring him to the surface. Short said Edmiston lben began yelling for help before he collapsed and Short pulled him to the shore. Short left the victim on the beach to run to a phone to call for help. ., • • When Laguna Beach lllegua.rd& Mike Hartley and At1 Small arrived, two unidentified men were admlnlstering mouth-to-mouth breathin' a h e a r t massage to the unCOMCIOUI d i v e r . Hartley took over the heart massait while Small called for an ambulance. Two Newport Beach lifeguard!, Ron Johnson and Dave Horack, arrived and Johnson took over the mou~to-mouth breathing until the ambulance arrived at about 2:55 p.m. The victim wa• ruJhed to the hospJtat where the doctor on duty at the emergency room pro- nounced him dead. Investigators have not yet determined II an equipment malfunction wu responsible for Edmiston's death. An autopsy will be performed to determine the exact cause of deatb, a coroner'• spokesman said. p~t~; Tll ·• • l\lllll lllfti toit M "·~~M~lt brin(' ~· Mtlmt 0! 1111 11* whldll tie IW!ftlr1111 blltll lll4 mort lit a 111t1tt bllll. · EYl!tl~ ••14 tW •11'-lllllMtlff down thl -~tlJn. eaurtdlfla · IJM • ~. 1111 t¥111t111nt Iii HI patll ,., WJIJI bllt blft4I ht' houn In · t 11tild ed ltllff! 1111111 loll in Ult Uil7 l!IOll~tal~ ~ ... - named Ill•(.~, tribe lllal · bllt II -may bt~t. Aulhorllltl-ln t•rl Mortl::t, lbout 500 miles from Ttlllmln, I\ h11 a popu!altoll ol Ill, w1i1Jo tribe lt.ell numbh t,W perM!ll. . Benjamin lllili. epqttUvt dlltllor of the nonsedarlQ 1111110\lt or1e1satton for which~lf • •kid ast4 the fam U, . I.al fill · following furlolllll up Couai,, 'Ille St. IJ!tJlllll ·w.re iJo New II Ill hd '6th da~t rs were hllnl lhelr m~I fh lo the lie liillJled jual ten years ago. "They bad other wort before that,'' Old !1'611. He noted that the Summer Institute of lJnguisUcs ls not 11 well·known as Its sister Ofganlzalion, t.be Wycklilf lnatltute of Bible Study. . The organization studlti unwritten language and tranalates the Bible and othrr helpful book! into naUve tongues to improve living conditions. DAILY ,ILOT lltff ...... .UNDERWATER EXPERT Dr. WhHler North Ocean Authority Dr. W. J. North , Receives Award Dr. Wheeier J. North of Cal Tech': Kerckhoff Marine Laboratory in Coro:-'1 del Mar bas received the American LI . toral Society's James Dugan Memori~i Award for 1971. Steomkraos was engaged In learning, The society is composed of naturalists analyijng and crea~ an alphabet for and divers who are devoted to conaerving the Tifatmln tribe, based on specl.allzed and studying the plant and animal lire training by the Ins'tltute. of the sea. Phillipe Cousteau, a naturalist This is normally a 10 to 20-year task, and son of the oceanographer Jacques dependtn1 on how heavy the missionary's Cousteau, won the award in 1970. ~' dutlq maf be. • 4 . ..._....,,., P,t North ii aq,•ulhorlb\ °"' ~ coaatal " Stetnkraifs Wai I gradultf! rA Wftf!~ • . 8.tb of Cailfo~a ~ja Cillfomia College and bad attended the Fort Wayne !n~ has headed a program 'to preserve ~~.College, f~. '!!~T!!' .:.•· ~? .,,=~~~~~~ion oil ,. brougb· hi& work at the Corona del Infant Born puring Wreck; Motlier Dies · QUINCY, DI. (UPI) - A wqman more than eight months pregnant waa killed bUt her , infant daughter bu survived a ooe-car accident after being forced through the mother'• abdominal wall by Ute Impact. nte eight.pound, 14-ounce girt waa reported ln saUsfactory condlUon at St. Mary's Hoapital today. "There ap- parently are no compllcaUona,'' a hospital apokeaman said. · Mar Jab, Dr. North and hfs uslstanl.! raise kelp spores in a nursery·llk.e en- vironment and transplant them to ocean bed! where they serve as a food supply for a Jatge variety of marine life forms. Central Japan Hit By Light Earthquake TOKYO (UPI) -A light earthquake flhook central Japan today temporarily disrupting train service when electric power wu cut. No lnjuriet were reported. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Talk about value! Check El Rancho's low low price on this popular hair spray ••• and see why we can claim the hottest price in town! No lacquer ••• regular 13 oz. cans •• , and in a formulation to take care of your hair problem.a •• , choose the one to suit your needaJ -. Stew Beef ....................................... 99 rb Lean chunk& of U.S.D.A. Choice beef ••. bonE!esa and h•arty flavor. ' London Broil ....... . s149 . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .• LI. Serve bot and hearty beef , • , and wnlch Oie smilea of anticipation Smoked Ham Hocks .................................. 49¢ Cook a mess of black-eyed peas •.• creamy, thick split pea soup I Vegetable Medley ..................................... 39¢ For a hearty beef stew ••• r•nhburn Farms , • , fnnen • , • 24 oz. Salads • Puddings ................ 25c Knudsen's.,. choose your favorites in the 7-ounce cups! Price1 in effect Mon., Tue!., Wed., Mar. tt, .t3, .t4. No ialeB to dealer1. Kubro Soup ............. . ................. 49- Frozen ••• beat and aerve ••• in a variety of flavors ••• 16 oz. cana. Lipton Dinners ......................... 59' Chicken Supffille, Beef Stroganof!, Ham Cheddarton. Clamato Juice ............................................. 59 .. It'• different, •• It's dellcioua l Lord Mott's • , • six S'h oz. can&. Miracle White Cleaner ........................... $1.29 Laundry additive that gets the job done, non -oolluting! y, gal. aiz.. ARCADIA: • PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Bl'd and SunlCI and Hunl rnglon Dr ([I Rancho C"nic<) Ir. 1iC\I Colorddo Blvd formnnl and llunlrnglon Dr Warner and Algonquin (Bomlwalk Cenlri) 2555 [aslblull 01. (Eastblulf Village Center) ,. • \ fl DAILY PILOT MondOY, M"'h II, 1971 -,';~lillillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiii~iiiiiiiii ...................................... .. ., ' Key to Pea~e in Mid~as1? ' I ' • .. ' , . I ' OCCUPIED BVISRAEL .:IUNE1967 + -~ .Jo~••o ll A; -~. .. . . ,• JORDAN • • • , . • (EGYPT·) .. .. . . .. ·· •• ••• ' . J .... ·~-. '.~UtFOF •A'QABA • -.... z GMLF'OF, $VEZ ·· . • t• J ., ' • ·~) "' The United States and Israel are disputing how Is· 'rael'1 security could best be served in a Mideast 1 peace settlemect and a , major obstacle concerns ; Sha.rm El' Sheikh, the fortress guarding the golfs ,.of Aqaba and Suez. Israel i> r eported cdnSidering leasing the. vital real estate from Egypt as part of a t.erritorial settlement. UPI newsmap spots Sharm El Sheikh and territories occupied by Israel since the six-day war in 1967. ,. , (logers Presses Israelis I To Make Boundary Map i · 117 UDHed Preu !Dteniatlonal ll'he United States bu urged Israel O' aubmlt a tent.alive m•.P of ill .ter· !&rial demandl aa a metbod ol brul<inl IJ deadlock In the Mkidie Eaot peace tteoUalionl, . diplomatic sOurct.!! . t n f4"rusalem said todaf. ~· IOW'tel u id Secretary of State pjlllam · P. ·Rogers made the recom· ipncsation tn. talks wi~ Israeli Foreign ~ ~bba Eban ·in· Waahingtcn last ~ Ro~ez:& sµgge~ tbe 1 map ahow he (uturt: bowldaries th!lt Israel would ~ ocaptable, they .aaid. . . ~ raised the draft age from 30 [) 35 today and silffened penalt.iu ijaln!I deserten in conUnuing ita ~Uon for pouible ruumption of libfJng with Israel. J!:~ President Anwar Sadat con-ttted for three hours 'fHlh military Jdmm,anden 1n Cairo Sunday, briefing Kem on the political and military sltua· f ' $eer Keg Kills Man I IPIT!'SBURGH (UPI) -J o 11 p h Mehner, 63, of suburban Penn Hilla w.ls ~led Su n d a y when a pressurized Wmintan beer keg exploded as he was t1,Pping It in hiJ home. lion. He prliled their "efforts to raise the combat efficieocy of the armed forces," the semiofficial newspaper Al Ahram 'said. · 'Ute .newspaper said Sadat wou1d aend a three-man delegation to Moscow Satur· diy to ·attehd .'th,e 24th -corigress 1of the Soviet Communist party and discuss the Middle East 'cOOflict wltfi Soviet leaders. Eban said Sunday in an interView on the CEis-TV program "Face 'the Na- tion" in New ·yn that hiS talks With U.S. officials last week )Vere friendly but frank and had strengthened the mutual respect of the two nations. · Eban said· neither side had changed its· position but "I certainly feel better about it than I did IU days ago." The United States favors a withdrawal o( Israeli tioops to the borders that Waled before the 1967 Middle East war with only minor adjustments. Israel has insisted on keeping the fortress of Sharm El-Sheikh , the Syrian Golan Heights and the Arab half of Jerusalem. Ambassador George Bush, the U.S. delegate to the United Nations, said on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press" that the United States had no intention of putting pressure on Israel to change its stand. Bush sRid that after talking with Eban he was optimistic that the peace talks under U.N. negotiator Gunnar V. Jarring would not break down. Snow Avalanches Trap Thous ands In Italian Alps ¥ILAN, Italy (UPI).-Thousands or penons were trapped in hotels in the Italian Alp& where weekend avalanches triggered by rising temperatures sent tons of snow and rocks roaring down the mounlains. Police aaid five persons died in avalanches between Friday and Sunday nights and another three were known . to be trapped under deep anow and were presumed dead. One avalanche Sunday struck 11 men working to keep open the road leading from Turin to the Mount Cenis Tunnel on the French border. Eight were rescued, some suffering frostbite and broken bones, before resp operations were halted at 10 p.m. The other three were missing and presumed dead, police said. Two Italians died early Sunday and four were injured when an avalanche of snow and rock! slammed into a resort hotel near Morbegno, northwe st of Milan near the Swiss border. Officials said an outcrop of rock behind the half moon hole! that slowed tht: snow probably saved the lives of another 30 tourists s:aying there. An avalanche a ciuarter mile v.'ide :i;wept a car from a road near Mendatica in the t-.1aritime Alps Saturday. Two girls in the car died but the father of one or them, who had gotten out to repair the car, was spared. Winter Just Won't Let Go - 1st Day of Spring Brings More Record S1io ws in U.S. <:allfornla CO.O L S•mBICU"!I ., IJ•llM ,,._, l"*NlltMI Wini,., (old _l,_r -.!lltd In fflll c.,\tr1I •'1 ol !!'le l\lllon fl'llt "°""',.. '"'· 5<11terllll -ecc-nltoel rM D>I<!. si-.n doutld IM•_,,.,, ""'II• In Flor~ 1rtd "" 9111t '"'°"' Wll'm -the• n'lldl 1 comtbedl. Salt--...... .... "'""' Grtll L.i<n '"Ion 1fld tM "" 11oft ol Ille toc:•let to 1111 C...lr•I P111,.. "'°' l!W•(Un' llfQppld ~ 1b0ul ztro In _,,..., o<trr1lohl w11h 1n "''' l'>Or,,. lrlt NllClnwldt !-o1 10W btlow II Lrw1110W11. ""°°"'· 511o.,..,_ PODt>tod ~ 11'1~1 ll'lt 1CWJl1'1, "'OV9fl pr.C.IPlll!lon Wit "*°ll'f ...... M-f nlltM w11 roet.,......!n• trom 1 record wM-'111 ltWIWl!llrf!I ........ ,....., Ml In olllclll w!n!• _....ttll ·~ flf IJJ1 I~ "9Mlflt 1119 UM r-lf <:o ... tal (llMltlo l!Urlne rNll'rllN but IUMr •flt~ .....,.,, L191'11 vtri.blt wl""• bt- -..1"" Wft*1l' 10 lot 11 knat• In •'· ,,,_, 1'11dtr •ltd TutlCN'f. Ml.,. I04eV ,..., 65 Celtfll t-rt!urtt •t"91 lr.1'> .. lot '7. l ... lnd l.,.,Pl!rllUrt ... 1111 W. WI,.... ""'HNNre .12. Sun, 1'1oon, Tides MOHOAY I Qa pm, 4 o fUllOAY ,lrtl l\lirl'I 6.1111¥1, t .J l"lrtl low •• U.11 1.m. l.J ll'('MWI l\lfl'I ............ 1:11 l'.m. I J lt<ond ft ............ 1:001.m, •·• Te 111peratures T1tnPf'reru•H OM prf<lplt1r1"" •• It.. 2•1\our ""'llld flfl(llng 1t ~ 1.m, MIOH LOW .. 11.lt . ,..,~ . .,~ " .. AlblJQU .. QUf " " Allon!~ " " ,finchnr191 " • 8osl!><> • ll l!uttalo " ,. (hk&l'O " • (lndn.,111 "' ll Cleveland " ~ 01111• " " Ofnv1r .. " ' Oes Moi..n " " Oe1..,;1 .. " •• F1l,~n~1 ll " HCJnolulu " .. ... ll>dl1nts>Oll1 ~ "' J UflffU "' " K1n111 Clh' .. " u,, Vepe.1 " • Loul1vllle .. " M...,111111 .. ~ M l1ml .. " MU ......... w " " M!l'lt!MPOIJI " " N1w Orl11n1 ~ " ·" Ol<I.,_ Cll'\I n .. -· .. n •• P11<n Sc>rlnv. • " PllolllltlOllll .. " ·-· m • Pllhbu~ " " Pn"t.ond • .... " • ' @•~d '" ll .. ·" ··~ " " II.It""-!!. VI. " ~ $61;!'tmt<>IO n .. "· """ ~ " 5111 L.0~1 Clh' .. "' Sin DI• .. " J.tn Fr1!1CIKt " • S..1Ult • " ·" Venc:ouVll' • • ., Eban Se es- Hands-off U.S. Role NEW YORK (AP) -Israeli Foreign Minister Abha Eban says he is eonvinced the Nixon Administralioo will not try to Impose on his government a plan to sett le the fo.1iddle Easl conflict. Eban said Sunday that policy dif- ferences between the two governments still exist and that neither changed its position during his talks in Washington with administration officials. He said on CSS..TV'a ··Face the Na· tion'' program that Israel intends to slick by ils tcugh stance in the current indirect pea~ talks because he thinks the Arab position on territcr::ial con- cessions is f]eJ.ible . "I believe the Arab mind is in a st.ate of flux and that the evolution of their thinklng has not reached its conclUsion," he said. "You don 't try to bring this thing to a head until thinking has further evolved." Eban repeated the Israeli refusal to give up Sharm el Sheik, Jersulaem and the Golan Heights -territcries it OC· cupied in the 1967 war:-and its rejection of Secretary of St.atf! William P. Rogers' suggestion for an outside peacekeeping force . Stand · Reversed ........ Irish Hardliner· Will"Enter Race BELFAST, Northern lrelapd (AP) - A leader of Northern Ireland·s Protestant hard-liners, former Uome M I n i s t e r William Craig, reversed himself today and became a candidate to s u c c e e d Prime fo.1inlsler James Chichester-Clark. A caucus of the ruling Unionist party nominated Development Minister Brian Faulkner, the early favorite, and Craig. Members of the party Jn the provincial parliament will make their choice Tues· day. Craig had indicated earlier he would not oppose Faulkner, who lost lo Chichester-Clark by one vote in 1969. The British government made clear earlier that whoever replaced Chichesler- Clark must follow his moderate policies or risk having London take over the provincial government. Harold Wilson, the leader of the opposition Labor party, packed the government position, but Home Secretary Reginald Maudling said the government would take over direct rule of the provice "only as a last resort." Craig had warned that direction would be ··resisted and could lead to a blood· bath." Gerry Fitl, pro-Republican independent member of the British Parliament from Bellast, also predicted that a British takeover would lead to further trouble. Chichester-Clark resigned Saturday under heavy right-wing pressure lo crack down hard on gunmen of the outlawed Irish Republican Ar1ny. F'aulkner was predicted read y to ake at least one move to appease his party's militants -the rearming or Nor thern Ireland's riot police. The force, made up almost entirely of Portestants. ":Vall stripped of its weapons at the height of clashes between Protestants and the Roman Catholic minority in August 1969. When the conflicts over equal right! in voting, jobs and housing came near civil war. Britain took direcl control of internal security and sent troops to the province . Some 8,200 are stationed here now, and another 1,300 are schedul· ed to arrive this week. Faulkner a wealthy businessman and recent convert to moderation , could have trouble gaining confidence of both sices. His earlier conservative stance earned him the distrust' of the Cathloics, while the Proteslants hard -liners don't approve of his recent changeover . But he is considered an able politician. and many believe he will have greater success bargaining with the British government that Chichester-Clark did. WE NEED CASH FAST! OWNER DIES! WE HA VE CUT PRICES TO THE BONE ON EVERY ITEM IN OUR HUGE IN- VENTORY OF NAME BRAND FURNISHINGS. EVERY ITEM MUST GO TO SATISFY THE ESTATE AND BUSINE SS DEMANDS OF THE LATE PRESIDENT OF CHFC. ACT NOW, AS OUR TIME, AND THESE UNBE LIEVABLE VALUES, ARE LIMITED. SAVE 30% 40% 50% e~~~60% . SAVE AS NEVER BEFORE ON QUALITY NAME BRAND FURNITURE THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STORE. CHOOSE FROM ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECT IONS OF LIVING ROOM SETS, SOFAS, BEDROOM SETS, DINING ROOM SETS, KITCHEN SETS, LAMPS, AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER ITEMS, INC LUDING CARPETING. M1sttr Ch1rg1 and llnlr.Am1rlt1rcl Honort4 Me l11·A•lf '1111 lllu• t• lllr11tic1ll1 ,.... .i11c1.i ,ric11. OPEN SUNDAY DAILT 1D AM to1Dr M ··~ ----.. •• -, --• --~--·--• --• _. j, •• ··~---·-·-· ·- J • • BEA ANDERSON, Editor Mtl!Nr, MwU n, 1'11 H ,..,. 11 Ball Finale In Suspense Suspence will be the uninvited guest when the Huntington Har· bour Committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society sponsors its annual Grand Marshal Ball. The black-tie dinner dance, to be climaxed by the naming ot the 1971 Grand Marshal, ~·ill take place Saturday, April 17, in the Balboa Bay Club. Prior lo the announcement sleekly gowned com mittee members, guests and their escorts will gather for no-host coc ktails at 6:30 and din- ner \Viii be served at 8 p.m. Serving as general chairman of the spring event is Mrs. James DeMaras, assisted by Mrs. William Fitch. Others cooperating with arrangements include the 1t1mes. Gilbert Thompson, recording and corresponding secretary; Robert Bruns. tick· els and programs; Claude Jones, Walter .Janssen and Robert O'Brien, overall reservations, and Ross De la Haye. decorations. Accepting grgup reservations are the Mmes. Donald Goodwin , Admiralty; Edward Nicholson, lsland; Ronald Drews, Marina. and \Vil· liam Tally, Starboard. ' Working on decorations featuring fresh spring flowers with Mrs. De la Haye are the Mmes. Ben Hunter, Ronald Malecki, Murray Wiener, J. R. \Vilhelmsen and John S\vain. Serving as advisor is Mrs. David Mey· er, board ways and means chairman ~ Special guests at the ball will be nevv members of the four groups \vhich comprise the Huntington Harbour Committee, sponsors of the annual Christmas Boat Parade and Cruise of Lights . .. SMOOTH SAILING -Casting off with funds for the Orange County Philharmonic Society are Oeft to right) Mrs. Harry I. Riegel Jr., Mrs. J. Donald Fergu- son and Mrs. James DeMaras. members of the Hunt- ington Harbour Committee. Comprised of Admiralty, Islander, Marina and Starboard groups. the commit· tee members raised funds throu gh their annual Christmas Boat Parade and Cruise of Lights la st December and will sponsor the Grand Marshal Ball next month. Funds from both holiday events and the ball benefit continuing youth concerts which are provided free of charge to all Orange County children. ' Presenting the new Grand Marshal with his nag will be Robert Kerr. present Grand Marshal ·\vho headed last year's successful boat parade. Assisting him were \Villiam Ekberg, John Silver and Arthur Knox, fleet captains. " Commun ity Gathers Reward Spring Fling Takes Flight Perky pink and \Vhile bunnies and bright spri ng flo,ver.s wi11 center tables of 10 when the Assistance League of Huntington Beach sponsors its annual Spring Fling. The traditional funding event for the league will take place Sat- urday, April 3, in the Airporter Inn . "Fol!o .. ving a social ho~r at 11 a.m. members and guests will enjoy a noon luncheon and a ~1splay o~ the latest finery for Easter and through the summer from Lido Fashions. Serving as models will be league members including the Mmes. \Villiam Henry, Richard Cra,vford. Raymond Beem, Edward tloward, Robert Murray, D. R. Parsch, Edward Sullivan. Owen Miller and ~1iss Janet Henry. Commenting on everything from "hot pants to pantsuits" will be Miss Pat Harrison, representative from Lido Fashions. Tickets for the affair no\v ma y be obtained through any men1ber of the Assistance League. Servin g as general chairman of the event is Mr_s. \Valter Dabn.ey and assisting v.•ith preparations are the f\.11nes. Gray Miller, Jack Colvin, .John Gera Jr .. Raymond Walker. Robert Neyman, Robert Murray, Wil· liam Russell, Fred Mccarl and Herbert Crawford. Greeting members and guests '"ill be league hostesses including the ~1mes. Leland Valentine, Robert Wilkin, Harry LeBard, Lee A1os· teller, Gilbert Turnbull, Richard Couch and Joe Irvine. The Spring Fling is the major fund-raising event for the league which suports many year-round philanthropic projects. A1onies raised are returned to the community in the operation of a speech center, scholarships, camperships and general 'velfare for needy families. League members al so participate in Operation Merry Christmas to collect food and clothing for distre ssed area families and Operation School Bell. They staff a Thrift Shop at 223 Main St. which supplies low-cost clothing and hou sehold items and they provide volunteer serv- ice at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital. BENEFITS MULTIPLY -Anticipating the largest turnout ever are members of the Assistance League of Huntington Beach, sponsors of the annual Spring Fling taking place Sal· urday, April 3. Rounding up the perky bunnies which will center tables are {left to right) Mrs. John Gera Jr., co-chair- man; Mrs. Margaret Colvin, chairman, and Mrs. Herbert Crawford. Funds from the luncheon and fashion show are returned to the community through. the league's many phil· anthropic projects. Widow's Pillow Dampens Hopes for Public Performance DEAR ANN LANDERS : ~1y husband passed away after a Ion~ illness. He suffered a greal deal. Since he was a private person who disliked pubhc displays ol emolion, I was determined to control myself at the funeral. With difficulty t managed to keep my head up and my eyes dry. Perhaps I had done so much weeping in my pillow during his Illness thete were no tean left when he died. Dozens of callers gathered at my home after the funeral and I accidentally overhead two women talking in the kitchen. They were saying how strange it was thal I didn't seem at all shaken by my trusband':ir death~ One woman said, "This i5 the lirsl lime I've ever ANN LANDERS seen a widow who didn't go to piece&." Did 1 do my husband an injuslice by concealing my emotion? Would it have been better lO have displayed my broken heart Lo the world? The women in the kitchen were nol trying lo hurt my feelings. They had no idea I was behind the door listening to every word. Tell me please. -A SINGLE ROSE DEAR ROSE: Your hu1band would have been proud of you. But you certa)PIY I di1appointed the town busybodies by depriving tbem of the show they bad come to see. They will not forgive you ea1Uy. f.1y ceodolence1 to you and hcartlt1t congratulations for your non· perlormance. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Occasionally you print material by others. I hope yoo will do liO again . Here'! a poem by Veda Ponikvar of Chisolm , Minn. ll's one of my favorites -L.A. OF WASH .. D.C. Saints And Sinners ''\Vhen some fellow yields to lempla· lion IL And breaks 11 conventional law, \\'e look for no good in his makeup. But, Lord, how we look for the flaw . No one 11sks. "Who did the tempting?" Nor allows for the battles he's fought. Hill nnn1e becomes food for the jackals, The saints who have never been caught. I'm a .sinner, O Lord and I know I am weak, and I blunder and fail. I am lo!!Sed on life's stormy oceJn like a ship that is caughl in a gale. I am willing to trust in thy mercy , To keep the commandment!; thou·st taught, But deliver me, Lord , from lhe judgment Of the saints who have never been caught." DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband hired a new assistant several weeks ago. Last week the man's family moved here. His wire is a pleasanl person, attractive and swee t, but she makes me uncomfortable because she laughs all the time -at ,nothing. At the end of every sentence she gives out this llttle "ha ha ha ha ," 1 had an aunt who did the same thing. We called her "The Hyena." Why do certain people have such an odd sense of humor? -NEW MEXICO DEAR N.~1.: This type of laughter ha1 nothing to do with humor. It 11 a mechanism lor reltaslng tension. Ltf1 hope that wMn lbe woman be<:ome1 more comfortable In be.r new 1ur~ rounding1 1be will do le11 ha ba balq. lf you have trouble gelling along with your parents .• , If you can't gel them to let you live your own llfe. send for Ann Landers' booklel, "Dugged by Parents? How to Get More Freedom.'' Send SO cents in coin with your request and a long. stamped. self-addressed envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. ,. ' j ' ' .. I l i ' ' ' ' I ' 1 ' ' ; ' , ' ' ·' • . ;_ DAILY 'ILOT Horoscope: Virgo Use Caution TUESDAY MAl\CH 23 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): Avoid becoming involved in controversy about m o n e y . Some friend would like to draw you into battle. Maintain diplomatic, neutral stance. A special relationship is put to test. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You may feel it is time for a change, but first be sure you have all the facts. A sud· den move now could be premature-and costly. Leo · individual can be a valuable ally. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Pay heed to hunches. Inner feeling s now serve as reliable guide . Key is to be perceptive; take Jong-range view. One who demands immediate action U i.mmature. R e s p o n d ac- cordingly. CANCER (June 21..July 22): A friend can help extricate you from embarrassing finan- cial situation. Don't let pride stand in way of progress. Bf versatile. Have alternative methods available. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): One who brags about short cuts may be tied up with red tape. What you get now is earned. That proverbial silver platter is nowhere in sight\ Do what must be done in thorough manner. VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22), Avoid becoming involved in office gossip. Base actions on factual information. not rumors; Gemini individual can help if you avoid forcing issues. Improve relations \vith co-workers. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Emotions fly high-romance, intense expression of feelings are emphasized. N o t h I n g halfway-tendency is to go all the way or nothing. Applies to money and Jove. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Stress practicality. 0 b t a 1 n valid hint from Leo message. See through sham. Avoid seeing persons, situations in light of self-deception. F'ace fa cts as they ac tually exist. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dev. 21): Before embarking on any journey, be positive you have s u ff ic i en t in- formation. Older indiv idual is .M'illing to cooperate. Your ap· proach holds key to success or fa ilure. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): You can break through to greater success. Much depends on reactions of parent or elder. Some events occur in manner which benefits you Pounce on opportunity. State needs. PI&'CES (Feb. 19-March 20): What appears .a certainty needs more checking. Applies to situations and indivi duals. Contact one who aided you in past. Be cooperative: Share knowledge. Ask for help where required. Cunninghams Select Newport Beach Home CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Protect assets. Some would like to be v e r y free-with your money. Finish what you start. Get rid of burden which doesn't belong to you. Investigate prior to investing. IF 'TODAY IS YOUR BmTHDAY you a re in· vestigative, have g r e a t amount of curiosity, can put together bits, pieces and corns up with complete picture. You have natural inclination for writing. You have original ideas and you gain greater success this year, with Sept· ember indicated as outstan- ding. Where Skirt Hits Leg Draws Divided Views . . ' ' .. r ~·."i j w • : • ':! 'I ·'g'· .... -.,, .;J;'J •. •~ \f\'\~.,,..:·~~" ROMANTIC INTERLUOE -Members ol the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse Patrons Association will take a break from their work Thursday, ?\-!arch 25, for a rqmantic evening of wine-tasting and dinner. Samp· ling the fare, to the accompaniment or strolling mus- icians Dom Raciti and Cliff \Vesdorf (left to right) are Mrs. Anthony Toto and Mrs. Howard Forster Oeft to right). .. . Chapter Salutes Defense Psychic Power Demonstrated r.1rs. Walter Dunn will demons trate psychic power for a meeting of the Hun- tington Beach Chapter of the Psynetics Foundation at 8 p.m, tomorro w in the Midway City American Legion Hall. Mrs. Dunn will be in- troduced by her husband, the Rev. Dunn of the Stanton Metaphysical Church, who will briefly explain how she dei.ldQfled her abilities. m MAVCO a new world of beauly for you ·It's d World where you can be free from the · embarrassment of unwanted. hair. Our skilled electrologists· can remove such hair,· ·genlly and painlessly, using the world fa- mous Kree Dermalron Me1hod, Phone for an aP,pointment and dis- c'-ver how ea.sily you C'1fl open up a new vk>dd of beauty and setf·confidence for ·~If. Call .the May Co Beauty Salon neAr-<tl;you. " Ladies Join Manpower Romantic Scene Regular '4.99 99 20.te. BOX • No rubbing or scrubbing ••• it does all the work •Really gets down deep to get clothes clean • Use % cu p per loa d even in hard v.·ater •Clean wash for you ••. cleaner water for everyone All Se11n S1ort1 oprn daily 9:30 a.n1. to 9:30 p.m •••• Sundey11]2 noon to S p.rn. In this 'AGE OF AQUARIUS' DAILY PILOT Today's Newspaper for ALL the communities of the Fabulous Orange Coast OTERY EASTER COTTON ~-KNIT PRINTS ' ... ' these will make the scene anytime IOO'll. COilon~ • pO!ye•ltr/COllM Reg. $1 .99 yd. Velue 57~%~ .. ®Ci the linen -look FLAXTONE PRINTS a textured blend of cotton, ra yon, flax mod designs, neutral backgrounds. Compere et $1.98 yd. BEST EASTER BUYS :··s1~i"EER~LENO PRINTS 98' yd. $139 yd. dreu up ''mor11h1g qlory" • CREPE PRINTS $159 yd. Une11-look rayon "Sah.oro .. •.BUTCHER WEAVES $169 yd, rnl11i d•1lg111 for 5prh19 • "SUNSET" FLOCKS ' $298 yd. bold, ll'lod acr"ned • ACRYLIC PRINTS $329 yd. washable "flo11 post1l1 & whi te • BONDED LACE fostff brlgltf bull•••• s39s • EMROIDERED PIQUE yd. cono111, rayons, blends 44"/45" wlcf• the now knits SLINKY LOOP KNITS WITH THE WET LOOK great ran9e of new spring pastels on • really neat kni t for min i to maxi dresses, pentsuits MACHINE WASHABLE 52"/54" widths amel trlacetot• ~@® yd. HOUSE OF FliBRICS So•til c-t Pl._8ri1tot •' Se11 Di•90 Fwy. ColtG Mn. -54.5·1516 Ore1199folt Mc.i.l--Ora n91 tho1pt •nd H•rbor Fullltl'to11 -5J,.Jll4 Ho"' Pf-17th al Bri1tol So11ta AH -54Jo5551 lutlMI P'ar• C.11'9f-l1 P.tlm 1 •I Sl111to11 i....-Pef\ -121·6121 7 7 f'l• 1 ..... ·-• -- Fo11niain Valley I 'l'od~8 ~.FIDJI) ----itRk8 VOL 6-4, NO. 69, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PJ,-GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCl'.'f. 22, 1971 ·TEN. CENTS New Tax Bid Studied for Huntington Schools By ALAN DlRKIN Of "'-Dfllt~ Pilat llftf The HuntinglOn Beach Union High School District is entering what many observers regard as its week of decision. The question : Should the schools be operated on an 85-cent tax rate or should another override election be called? The present $1.39 rate will revert to 85-cents July 1 as a result of three unsuccessful votes to increase it. Today, Robert Matthew, a deputy county schools superintendent, e&Umated tllat another vote could be held June 15, jU&t before summer vacation, if trustees acted by this Thurada'y evening. The four.man board will lie meeting at -7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Dist. Supt. Jack Roper has announced that the last part of the meeUng will constitute an open forum for all organizations and parents to give their views on how Uie board should act. One trustee, Dr. Ralph Bauer aaid this mornin& II< will propose thal U.. board call a apeciat meeting "in a day or so" to review the comment.I and decide whether to have another abot at the polls, "I'm wailing for the input lo see how citizens lee! before making up mind on it," Dr. Bauer said. "But I understand that, if we do decide lo act, this week is the deadline and I shall propose that we meet again. I think we have an obligation "' tha \iotfr1 lo lake •·&land and explaln· why'." . An auempt to poll boar4-JtltQlben this monlln& failed to giv~ a clear .iQ- d~etiO!;I of bow the board will .act. altb~ It showed tbat, if another vote Is catted.. ll wW probably be for less tba·n the Sk:enl boost to a $2.08 rate that wu defeated ln the last two elec-- tiofts.' · · Jk,ard l'(lember John Bentley said he wa1 "k:eepi.n& an open mind" on the quesUon Uhtif Tuesday fli&h\'1 t«um. . Bul he added. ··~t of the .(eedbf~ I have !><ell i•lting is In l•!Or ol •l\Qlh<r try '!Mll not !Or 12.Jll. ~ 7' - · Board member Ray 'Schmitt .could not be. reached for commel}t. Board Prest. dent Matthew · Weyuke~ Is _oppo{led to calling another elecUon.. "°!OP· ~ Weyuker, who Is not seeltin1 rt=tlectton and wbose tetm will be cmnp1eted June 30, commented, "~ advice woUld '" be lo tati _'a IOni hard ·!?9~:,bf!.di~-,,.. 10 to ~e people a&iUn at all lhb y:eu.. "- "People are a.ayiDg the.y don't want to spend more 'l'llOnl:y on the eChoots -pec>ple have to see lhe need 1(int,'' Weyuker went on. '"Tbe earliest I .Wd consider an e1ecUan would be ln~ ~ fall and then l\ would ' be, an ~t much·Jess than the $2.08 figure." ·""'. Weyuk,r also disclosed thal be ;would recommend a-,,1an 'that 'would allow lhe 'liltricl Jo ~eep offering .a, ·~·perli>d 1 (See/SCJIOOU1 "Pa&e I). ,. .. ;. .'"I Laotians Overrun Royal Capital Luang Prabang Periled VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) -North Vietnamese troops have overrun govern· ment positions in an arc three to five miles northeast of the royal capital of Laung Prabang and the city's security is directly threatened, a government spokesman said today. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said 610 dependents ()f U.S .. French, Swiss and Fillpino ()fficials and workers were evacuated Sunday from Luang Prabang to Vientiane, the administrative capital 130 miles to the south. by the CIA t hartered Air America Airline. * * * Yank Planes Knock Out 10 Red Tanks SAJGON (UPI) -U.S. fighter·b<lmbera and helicopter gunships today blasted a force of Norlh Vietnamese tanks pursu- ing South Vietnamese troops toward the border of Laos. Front dispatches said they knocked out 10 Communist tank! but that a tank shot down an FlOO. The U.S. Command reporled new heavy bombing strikes aga inst North Vietnam today, the second such raid in two days. bringing a warning from a Soviet news agency Tass commentator that the USSR unnot ignore the new escalation and will give "aU the necessary aid" to Hanoi. WIO Gregory Fleming of Columbus, Ga., pilot of a Cobra gunship involved in the tank-aircraft battle said the twiD· je} supersonic FlOO "blew up in the air'' as the column of 21 tanks poured a hail of fire at th~ Americans trying to protect the tail end of the retreating Saigon troops. Fleming said nine of the Communist tanks were deslroyed and on e damaged by rockets, bombs and cannon fire. He aaid at one point the tank column was racing full speed straight down route fl in pursuit of ARVN tank! and armored personnel carriers bringing up the rear ()f the withdrawing South Vietnamese task force. Flt.ming said that about 75 minutes after the intial air attack the Com· munists' armor slowed to about 2S miles an hour as It neared the South Viet- namese border. He said the Ccmmunlsts were about five miles behind the South Vietnamese column and that the ARVN force had "stalled" two miles from tbe border. Or ange Coast \\'eather Hazy sunshin'e Is the best the wtatherman can off Pr for Tuesday, following cloudy skies In the morn- ing hours with temperatures rtacb- ing 68 degrees along the coasl INSWE TODAY You can ltmrn to /ty and still ketp your feet on the ground by using flig ht si mulators of a New- port Beach fi rm , Page 21. •0111111 • Malftlo• • C1ifler11l1 • -" tll+r:tlftl U• • lf•li.tef .... •• c 1111111a:1 "'" Or_t_fJ' " C1ll'l<1 .. IYl¥1• hr1tr " CntH-NI " -· U·U Dfflll Netl<t1 " SMCll M1rll•h U·ll Pt.,...ctt " TMwltitll • l!clllt<'ll l '"' • ......... • lftt...ltl11mp t " Wtlll!t!' • "'"'"'' 11-U W""""''t loitWI U•U Mtl'ftl:t" .. ww• Hm •• "'"" L1•n .. Military sources said six persons had been killed and many wounded by Ccm- munist mortar and rocket attacks on the Luang Prabang airfield and nearby military camps and that I.he shelling destroyed or damaged five planes. Defense ministry spokesman Gen. Thongphan KnOcksy reported ea'rlier to- day that an estimated six North Viet· namese battalions" (3,000 to 3,600 men) had lau,nched heavy attacks on the government positions. L a t e r , a spokesman said siJ: government positions were . virtually wiped out aJ1d Communist SUFFERS MYSlERY ILLNESS Tina Kysella, 12 Valley Child Still Critical Although financial help · is on the way, Fountain Valley's 12-year-old TI n a KyseHa remained in critical condition today, suffering a mystery illness at Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach. The daughter of an unemployed heavy equipment operator, Tina was hospitaliz- td last Tuesday with an illness thal caused paralysis and Joss or speech, Tina, who lives at 174Jl Santa Lucia St.. is a student at Tamura School. Mr. and Mrs. William Kysella have five other children but reportedly have limlted health Insurance. A special fund set up for Ttna at the Bank of America, 17430 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley, has been receiving donstions to dtlray some of the medical bills. • Donations are also being taken at Tamura ·Sc.bool, 1734-0 Santa SuzaMe St., Fountain Valley. High Court Nixes Free P ress Pass WASHINGTON (API - A bid by the Los Angeles Free Press to obtain prw credenUals for reporters on underground newspapers failed today in the Supreme Court by a voie of 6 to 3. Juslices Hugo L. Black, William 0. Oouglu and William J. Brennan Jr. were willing to hear' the Free Pre11' argument that press passes are part of t.be Constitution's guarantee of freedom of the press. However, under court rules. the vote or al least four justices 11 a prerequisite to 11. hearing. The underground newsp11per failed, then, by a single vote. ! troops were three to five miles from the city. The spokesman said government troops had been redeployed in strategic areas four miles northeast of Luang Prabang and that one and possibly two battalions of government reinforcements had flown into the city to stiffen !t defenses. Military sources .said the North Viet- names struck at the government posi- tions, so swiftly the defenders had no chance to evacuate civilians, including the thousands of refugees who have (See LAOS, Page !) Co1nmittee OKs Militar y Pay In~tiv~· ~ _ WASHING TON (AP) - A lWO ~ draft extension nearly tripling Prtsident Nixon's pay boost incentive for a "'zero draft" volunteer army was approved today by the · House Armed Services Committee. The bill, which would boost military pay and allowances especially for jul'lior enlisted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, was approved 36 to 4. President Nixon had asked a $987 million raise next year, and t.he Pentagon projected the ba lance would be reeom· mended the following year. The com- mittee folded both into one year. But chairman F. Edward Hebert '(D- La.), pointed out the committee had not approved President Nixon's goal of achieving a "zero draft" volunteer army by June 30, 1973, which is only a goal and "'as not in the bill the administraUon sent to Congress. "I don't think they can ever get a volunteer army unless they draft it," Hebert told newsmen. "But we're going to give him all the help be want! to implement it. "We're giving him all the rope he wants," Hebert said. The committee rejected an effort b1 Rep. Charles W. WbaJen Jr. (R-Ohio), to extend the draft only one year, 30 to 9. The bill sent toward tbe Hmae noor would extend the draft two years beyond June 30, give President NiJ:on authority to abolish student deferments Including di vinity student deferment.II and add 1 third year of non-military service for conscientious objectors. Hebert said the ccnscientlOUI objector provision would not change 1ny of tbe present requirements fur obtaining that status but be said be believed it would be easier for draft board1 to a:rant the statw in questionable cases. "In my personal opinion," he said, "f don 't think the draft boards would wrestle with it so much when they know the man will serve three years." '• . ' . \ .. . "' Esctt pe'A.rifs t : ·~ves • ' Through 'Dea·th Dive' . ' r. ~ By RUDI , N!EDZIEL81U , Of tfrle Dt!h° !'llat lteH , Escape artist D. D. Masco compJ.eted his ·~Dive To Death", into, the w'~a off the . Seat Beach pier S~tUrdaY. 111d lived to teJ] about it. , ·The 32.-year old reatraint breaker Aact· ed his boaJt that he could . "do arry.thrnJ · Houdini ever did" by freeing himself from two pain of handcuffa is.feet >Of chain. three padlocks and· a 50-pound weight whlle at the bottom of the ccean. A crowd of about 1.000 persons watched him complete thia stunt in · 11 . feet of Rubella Epidemic Bypasses · Connt y Orange Cdunty-has esca~ an unusual outbreak of Rubella despite a 1late"'.ide eplden;dc, rounty health department spokesman reported today. The . dlseaJe also known as German meules has found only 33 vlcUms IO far thil year in the county. ThiJ compares with 31 reported to the same date last year and 1 187 cases ,for all of 1970. The California Public Health Depart- ment reports aaid there wete 1,136 cases reported in the state this yeu, · twice a.s many aa last year. Heavy concentrations were reported in Los . Aniele.s, Ford Ord and · Lake Tahoe. The Orange County Health Department recently put.on a county wide vaccination drive for Rubella. · . ' • • • water. rHe took only ' 53osecon48 ·to ' free hlmseU from lbe bond. .. :A ~/".cried IOR'le watching off JbO., Ill«· But thcJoe who ~ been in ~ hobbjng.v..,.1 wllll.Maaco:;"!ch«ecl a•fe1' feet ofi the pier lnew lt "Wasn't. AU ' of the locks, u well a1 lMlcO himR1f w.ere avallab}e for lnlpectlOn. ., 'Malco'\ hands trembled aiia his t!!lt" turned crimson as the cuffs were 1napf)i!d aroiind bla ·wr1111 aricf· tile chain tied tightly md·pi• OOdy. The padlock> wtre attached beQind hli back. "[ wl' a· lltUe apprehensive,'' 1atd the 270.pound escape artist afterwlrd. "I'd nf:verbeen in \he Oceam.before." Ai two dlvtr1 readied thelt'· aqualungs, Masco f&at placed oo~· leg .over the boat's traMdm ,' then ' \he othtt, ""ahd ' finally guahed into the water. Only a white circle of foam remained on · the surface as Maiu:d w11, 11n 'the sandy 'sea-bottom, working " his magic on the locks. And sooner than ex~. a shoCk1 •I red hair breaking through lhe l\lrf"61 of the water tfgnaled that he bad -com· pleted bis eac&pe. • • r · · Back on board, the drenched .Muco . lit a long-stemmed pipe and said, "It wu vert dangerous." I bad · hopei! that l would make I~ aod rm pd l ~lq." The div'e ·waf the result ot a Challenge by one of Maaco's friends, Ralph YimeUJ of Alhambra. Next mOnth, MasC() cl.ilms 'ht will conduct another dive, this ttme •in water off the Santa Monica pltr. "I'll be wearing three pairs of handcµffa, leg irons inside' a crate .with a weight on top. We'll see . how-that worka out," he lau11hed . .. ... ..:..<::i~:::..-.:--::: '·' ·1.-~ --··- President,.·Wife ·-· ----~.~~ .W~k's Stay in ~an · Clemente Bolsa Chica Issue President and•1Mre;,. Nlxon will•ATTive in San Clemente Friday for a week-Jona B h C fl • t c .1. d ' :::! ... :\.\:::::.·Pacifica, ·inf<>rtped · . · , . · · '[t will be the second San Clemente ea C 0 R IC 0 ll Ill U e· vfllt o/ lhe Y••r.foi •II< 1rrsl l•mllJ. · ' · Nif cOlifU"maUon of the reported trip A CC>nflict betwet11 the city ()f Hun- tington Beach and UM state over the &Isa Chica State Beach wu continued .in Superior Court todey. The dhspute baa grown Crom'lbe state's lJU\O(lDCed "!WUU'ngnegs kl setUe with the owoera a(~ Southern Pacific Railro•d rfght"()f-w1y on the twn l'9d three-quarter mile beach and b\.ly it for '3.8 million. The city intervened In the immenent domain action with a d'Aim (or a public recreaUonal easemel'\t ove{ the proptrl)'. State attorneys have ag'reed In leflers to the court that the cit):'• claim reduaid J !he 1tUJement·fi1ure but the state Public wOrka 'Board ia nol plaMJ.na: to . pay the city any compensation. The que!lion that WIS before Judge Raymond Vlhetnt this morning • was whether .the city's clatm bad any tangible benefit.I. The hearing ·was CC1ntinued1untfl April 12 with the agreement of att.omeyw .Jrom both agencies. City Attorney Don Boni• bis admitted that the cottfiict is over the larger WUe or whether the city should have managt-- mtnt and. deveklpmeflt right&, .\mdet a Iona term lea1e, to lbe beach. .. '°The ala .. -wed .. "' lntevene in thit with our clalm for a recreaUonal euement.'.' Bont•·exptatfted: "Now they · wa~ to &et rkl o( · 111 ind aeltle v.1th the ,oWbenir"Bot ·we •are. not.·:eotna to play-dead.," I ' • ' '• • • 1 Statl -hrb and Rei:H:aUont Oireclt.or • Wtfila),\1 Pinn Motl has n:sisttd 1 cft.y requesit lo · ftl ll opera,. U.. beach ... on the grq1nds· that the 1tate Is ·under • .Al) obll11U0n "lo run IL Huntlnilo•·~~cll •• nfflcl1l1 malnWlin the lllte ~ Mt: have adequ1t1 funds to devetoP. • tlie ·· h<ach. 11ili yet come fratn Washington, n.,:. Presidential aides generally a'nnounce such trips two or Ulre~ days in ad\fanct. U next week's &tay followa the treftd set by the Jan. i-12 visit by the Nlrom, It will ht a quiet one with more rat ~ ... ,k. . floj tbe Jy •l~ll'. the Pr<sidenl (oui1' lht W.other chilly along tlie SOOlb Coo>~ but still managed some Wiiks on Ilia privi.te beach. . H• celebrated hi1 birthday durine tht la•t slop, <h•Qied lhe qU!M! of hts )!c>tyl• tol Le Casi Pacifica and paid a vlait l<r otudents •l C.ncon!ia Elomontal"J School nearby. • \ Jl. J DAILY PILOT H M'i'dl1, Mlfd\ :U, 1971 ( ' . 'i. Petitions Delayed'.~ ~ Irvine Cityhood Drive Slbwed ·( • ' By L. PETER KRIEG Of llflt O.llY ,.ilot Stiff The question of who may legally sign petitions for an election to incorporate the future city of Irvine Saturday stalled ::! lhe planned kickoff of a signup campaign. S More tban 100 residents of the future S city gathered .at the Airporter Inn for 1 a brukfa.st rally but were lclld that ~ te<:lmlcaliUes will push back petitioning .,! at least one week. 1' The "technicalities" were described by "$ some leaders as simple stalling tactics f on·the part of county officials. ~ John Burton, chainnan of the Council .! of the Commwtilies of Irvine, cityhood t sponsors, said the Orange County ·: Counsel's Office Friday had declined to ': define who is entitled to sign the peti· · tions. "The law says only property owners may sign," Burton said, "but it is am- biguous ln its definitions of wbo owns property!' .t He said apparently the term could ''" mean the fee owner only, or the one ;: who pays taJes, or someone with a ; leas&opUon or someone with only a ~lease. ~ The question is further complicated, ~ he said, because the law riipulates that : only, property owners of record the ~ previous ¥arch 1 can sign. "ln our case, this would be March I, 1970," he said. ··. He esplaioed this would make about a 2,000-household difference and weigh heavily on the number of signatures needed. CCI must obtain the signatures of 25 J)f'..teent of the property owners who, in turn, must represent ~ percent of the assessed valuation. "The latter is no problem," Burton saJd, pointing out that the Jrvine Com· pany owns about 80 percent of the assess-- ed valuation within the boundaries of ' the 18,000 incorporation area and uo r- flclals there have Invited us to come by with our petitions." Burton said CCI officials are taking the question to the State Attorney General's Office at once. He said he is hopeful there will be a clarification by next Saturday, "but if there isn't, we'll just go get everybody's name we possibly can, even if it has to be on three different peli· tions.·• Burton noted that time is starting to play an important factor in the 11ignature campaign. CCI had 90 days from the date it filed its notice of intent to circulate petitions to get the signatures. That paper waa filed Feb. 22, be pointed out. Burton also commented brieny on the furor raised by Santa Ana civer inclusicin of a 920-acre industrial section that Santa Ana bad thought was going to be part of its tax base someday soon. Santa Ana has gone to court over lhe issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable to reason on a number or things, and hasn't been for the last 20 years. Burton cited a number of other in· st.anas in which he claimed are t.estimony to d'lays in the cityhood bid created by the county. He said plans for county to build a fire station near the Irvine Industrial complex have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't been furnished the JegaUy acceptable descrip- tion of the Irvine boundaries until Wednesday -after asking for them a month ago. The Saturday rooming rally was sponsored by the. newly-formed City of Jrvine Now (COIN), headed by Andrew May, who i.Jso address the gathering on the various chores confronting the incorporation movement. MRS. DONNA OLIVEIRA, FRIENDS PROMOTE MEETINGS Michelle Klrchgestn1r (!eft), Dl•n• Oliv•lra Help Out OIANll COAST DAILY PILOT OllAHGE COAST f'UILISIHNQ. COMf'AHY •ol:itrt N, Wie4 P'ra~t •NII Pllblilhfr Jack L C1trf1'( Viet ,,_IO~I Ind ~1 Mt111ttl' lho111•• K•••lC Edltor Tho11111 A. Murplii11..- M1nt;1,. ldllor Ali" Dir\i" Wnt Orengo C.O.,,n11 £d1'9r Albert' W. l1t11 Auoclllt Editor H•.tlllft'Oll ..... Offtn 17a71 k1ch loul1•1ril M1ili11t Addr1111 P.O. l oit 7t0, 92641 .,_ "'"'" l...-11-.cll: 2:1::: l"or•I A...._ CO.fl Mtt1: l3CI WMI 81y SI,._ Ntwp0rt a.td'I: »» N._,. aou: .... 1nS IDfl C..,_te; .J0S HOt1t\ ll (11111nt l!.Nf T11.,•-17141 Hl-4Jt1 Cl-'fW ............. '41•1671 Five Candidate Nights on Tap In Huntington lt's time to mett yow-school board candidate, according to members or the Huntington Beach Le'ague of Women Voters. Between March 30 and April 15 they have scheduled "candidates nights" for trustee hopefuls in five local elementary school districts. During each of the sessions, candidates will speak briefly and answer questions from the audience. Candidates for the Huntington Beach Union High School District Board of Trustees have been invited to speak at each or the meetings. Members of the league have distributed 50,000 sheets witb the location and date of the meetings. The meetings, each scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m., are as rollows: l\iarch 30 -Ocean View School District. Community Methodist Church, · 6662 Heil Ave., Huntington Beach. April I -Westminster School District. \\'estminster High School, 14325 Golden \\'est St, Westminster. April 12 -Fountain Valley School District, Fountain Valley High School, 17816 Bushard St .. Fountain VaUey. April 14 -Huntington Beach City School District, Agnes Smith School, 770 17th St., Huntington Beach. Apdl IS -Stal B<ach School District, McGaugh Intermediate School, Bay Boulevard and Bolsa Avenua, Seal Beach. DA\l.Y l'ILOT Slllf f')lflf Bay Crossi1ig Ban Approved SACJ\AMENTO (AP) -LeslJ- JaUon to bu consb'uctlon Of ••• other bridge across San Francisco Bay passed its final legislative test today on a 57 to 2 Assembly vote and was sent lo Gov. Reagan for his signature or veto. The bill would halt plans for the $402 millio" Southern Crossing, a bridge planned for construction about three miles south of the ex· isling San Franciscl).Oakland Bay Bridge. Frona Page 1 SCHOOLS ... day. Cutting the nui:nber or periods ot Increasing the number of student per teacher have been suggested as possible solutions to the fiscal crisis. PASSERSBY AID MAN AND WIFE INJURED ON HUNTINGTON BEACH CYCLE·CAR CRASH Tustin Min Rem1in1 in Critlc1I Condition After Coast Highway Collision Frid1y "I would be in favor or maintaining the six periods a day by reducing tbt number of minutes in a period from 50 to 40 minutes . "That way ~·e could maintain the broad curriculum offering. It would alsct fall on the students to do more homework, maybe.'' Doctor Denies Any Blame With Blaze in CdM Offices Tustin Cyclist Still Critical After Collision Roper has estimated that if the 8~nt rate is used it will mean cutting the schools' $14 million budget by $4 million. The 85-cent rate is the maximum allow- ed by the state with()ut an override. No other comparable district i n California is operating on an 85-cent level. By TOM BARLEY Of 1111 0.llY 1"1111 lllff Dr. Ebbe Hartellus today firmly denied responsibility for the fire last April 9 at his Corona del Mar offices aod he just as firmly rejected in the closing hours of his Orange County Superior Court trial allegations that lie faked the theft of his car nine days earlier. The dapper 51)..year-old physician plac- ed the blame for both incidents squarely on the shoulders of Jim Blevins, the brother of his blonde mistress and the man who bad earlier testified that Hartelius planned the fire and bribed him to lea ve the stale at the height of a police investigation. Hartelius testified today his first knowledge of the fire was when he '.Abortion Raps Filed 'Agaimt 2 Mesa Women Orange County f\-fedlcal Center officials got a call from his answerin~ service said today Stanley E. Riggs, 39, Tustin, to advise bim that smoke was pouring is still in critical condition as a result from his offices at 2345 E. Coast of a traffic collision Friday in Huntington Highway. Beach. He said he told Newport Beach police Riggs suffered head injuries when his detective Sam Ambergey at the fire 1notorcycle hit the rear of a car on scene that he could only think of Blevins Pacific Coast Highway near the Edison as being responsible for the blaze. plant. Hartelius was arrested and booked on Police said Riggs and his wife, Helen, arson and fraud charges 10 days later. 41 , were southbound on Pacific Coast The physician testified in his clipped Highway, about 6 p.m. when their accent that he could account for every machine slammed into a vehicle dr'iven minute of the time la st March 31 when by Adrianus Verdult, 67, of 21851 Newland he was supposed to be driving to Long St.. near the Newland Street intersection. Beach with Blevins to hide the doctor"s Traffic officers are still investigating car behind a supermarket. the crash. Neither driver was speeding, That time. he said, v.·as taken up they said. with visits to local hospitals and patient.~ Mrs. Riggs sustained only minor in· homes and it was ]ate at night when juries in the collision and was treated he returned to the Costa 11csa home and released at 1-luntnnglon Intercom· he shared v.•ith Reba Vaughn. munity Hospital. Hartelius said his first indication that Neither she. nor her husband, were Deputy County Supt. Matthew ex- plained that it takes 75 days to hold an election from the time it is called. He agreed that, technically, an election could be held in the first two weeks of July, but in that case the district would have to draw up two budget! -one based on a successful vote and the other based on defeat. One of the budgets CQUld be adopted late in July, but Matthew pointed out that the district would i.icur double prin· ting costs. Lagunans Urging Hanoi Letters On Don Lyon Day wearing safety helmets, according to the car was gone came when he looked officers. Exactly th ree years ago today, Air from the living room window next morn-Force Maj. Don Lyon cli'mbed lntO the ing to notice that the car was missing. "Did you take the car?", defense al· cramped cockpit of his jet fighter torney Matthew Kurilich asked. Edward Breeding aircraft and flew a routine mission over "l did not," Hartelius replied. North Vietnam. He didn't come back. ''Did.you plan the fire?'' l{urilich ask· Ri T d And word of his welfare has not e<>ml A pair or Costa Mesa room·mates ed. tes UeS ay back either. His pretty brunette wife, ~·ho allegedly worked for admitted abor· "No. 1 did not." Harlelius responded. a University Park resident, doesn't know tionist Dr. John S. Gwynne at his Santa Hartelius is the last defense witness Funeral service!! for G. Edward Ana headquarters were set for ar· In the trial. It is expected that 1he Breeding, 49, of 16872 Bolero Lane, Hun· if she is a widow, but she hopes to raignment today. issue will g() to the jury late today lington Beach, will be held at 3 p.m. obtain news of her husband througll The premises v.·ere raided Friday, with after lestimony from rebuttal witnessei1 Tuesday in St. Michael's Episcopal the efforts of the people of Laguna Dr. Gwynne himself and six women called by Deputy District Attorney AJ Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive, C.Orona Beach. employes booked. Novick. del Mar. Mr. Breeding died Friday at Maj. Lyon was recenlly "adopted" Diane J. Bodine. 18, and Diana M. his home following a heart attack. Grimstead, 22. both of 307 21st St., A native of Missouri, he was a veteran by the Art Colony as a symbol or and. the remaining suspects are charged SJ l'f of World War 11 and the Korean conflict. C()ncern for the 1,600 Americans either with conspiracy to commit abortion. lOp l terS He is survived by his widow. Mrs. held prisoner by North Vietnam or miss· Seized by officers and districl al· Vashke Breeding, assistant principal of ing in action. Today in Don Lyon Day torney ·s investigators Friday were Fl M k Newport Harbor High School, and a and representatives of Concern for medical equipment, books and records ee Ur et stepson, James Lambrinos, a Peace Prisoners of \Var, a Tustin organization, that reveal, one officer claimed, "un· Corps volunteer in Colombia. began promoting concern for Lyon. doubted proof that hundreds of abortions A male and female shoplift team Burial will be in Pacific View Memorial The group hopes to prompt 1,600 were performed in that building." browsed through a Huntington Beach Park. Laguna Beach residents to write letters The new booking by police was another discount store Sunday night and fled to the government of North Vietnam tn a series of arrests that began last after rifling the meat counter. asking. "Where is D<in Lyon? Bumper May 13 when officers charged the 28-Jim Maguire, employed by the Alpha Angela Davis Given stickers and wrist bracelets with Lyon's year-old pbysician and his assistant, Deb-Beta Market, 6911 Warner Ave., called name on them v.•ill also be sold at ble Meyer, 19, of Whittier, with perform· police after he saw them stuffing Off p d B tables set up at shopping areas in the jng abortions at the 17th Stree' address. themselves -in trousers waistband and er en ing ail city. A long list of charges tbat now includes ladies' purse -with 20 packages of The tables will remain at the various Gwynne's mother, Mrs, Rubye Unruh prime steaks. SAN RAFAEL <UPJ) -Marxist locations, a spokesman for the group Gwynne, 56. among the defendants is By the time officers arrived, the philosophy professor Herbert Marcuse said. until l,600 letters. one for each currently stalled in Orange County's thieves had waddled out unseen and has offered to hire jailed Communist POW-MIA, are sent to Hanoi. Printing courts while judges await the California vanished in a white stati()n wagon. Angela Davis if she is released on bail. of 5,000 copies or the Hanoi letter was Supreme Court's comments on the legali-Police said they apparently feared cap-Howard Moore. chief counsel for the financed by the Irvine Company. ty of the state's Therapeutic Abortion ture and dumped the sirloins and filet 26-year-old Miss Davis, said Sunday that The tables are located at Boat canyon Act of 1967. mignons at nearby Golden \Vest and his client had studied under Marcuse Shopping Center, Monarch Bay Plata Gwynne's lawyers condemn that act Clay streets, where merchandise from at Brandeis University and later at the \Vorld Savings an d Loan and the Alph~ as unconstitutional and they are also three other markets was also recovered. University of California at San Diego. Beta Shopping Center in South Laguna. seeking relief at tbe federal court level 1-====---------------'------------"-------'---"-------__.::=:=- from the abortion charges filed against their client and his assistants. Gwynne has stated in and out of court that he will continue to perform aborlions at any time they are required. He challenges the validity of existing abor· tion codes and predicts that the Supreme Court will "defend the right of any woman to obtain an abortion whenever and wherever she pleases." Also booked Friday were Waynette Bruce. 18, of 774.1 Concordia Place, Westminster, Ruth Newman, 18, of Azusa, Barbara Johnson, 32. of Tustin and a 17·year-old Garden Grove girl, who was booked into Juvenile Hall. From Page 1 LAOS DUEL. • • converged on the Luang Prabang area to escape the Communist offensive on the Plain of Jars. The sources said U.S. and Laotion planes were unabble t() .strike effectively at the Communist·held positions because most of them are heavily populated, mostly v.·ith refugees. Knocksy told newsmtn fighting was still in progress tod ay. He said the North Vletnames launched about 150 mortar and rocket rounds against seven government positions Saturday night and early Sunday. Most were directed at the Luang Prabang airport and the headquarters of the first military region, which c o m m a n d 1 north\\1est Laos. Thongph.an sald the heaviest fighti'1 "'"' taking pl~ two to flv• rnllee northeast and east of the airport. ONE OF.THE OUTPERFORMERS! ® PIONEER.SX·770 AM·FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver Butld 'YOtn' !lereo sysloM lrOUrrd thls vem1ne fnstrument. All solid alata, It otters 70 watts of music powt1r output. Inputs !or magnetic aoo ceramic Phonos. microphone, tape monitor and •uxlliary. Two speaker outpuls make ft Jdeaf as a power source fOI' any fin9 11ereo syslam. 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Wlilwl ON HIGHWAY 9, Vietnam -. "Hell with il aarge, we don 't wa.nt to go back there." B1-1t lhe sergeant ignored his men because he knew they would go back. And they did. · Tired, scared, covered in · grimt, the ''.track heads" grimly board~d a lank, lwo atmored persoMel carriers and two "dusters" :._ vehicles armed with con- * * * U.S. Planes Blast Ten Red Tanks SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Ughler-bomber• anli "hellcopter gunship& today blasted a'force of North Vietnamese tanks pursu· lng "South Vietnamese .troops toward the border of Laoi. Front dispatche1 said they knocked out 10 Communist tants but that a tank shot down an FlOO. The U.S. Command reported new )\eavy bombing strikes against North Vietnam today, the second such raid in two days, bringing a warning from a Soviet ne'."'s agency Tass commentator that the USSR cannot ignore the new escalation and will give "ail the necessary aid" to Hanoi. W /0 Gregory Fleming of ColumbUJ, •rrotecthle Reactlon' WASHINGTON !AP)·-· Secr•Jary of De.fen.st Mtlvin. It LaiTd 10.id'. to- day the South Vittnamt;it op1rati9n in Uros itill i1 "going forward accord- ing to plan." Laird, however. said at an im- promptu Capitol Hill news conferenct that any withdrawal carried out uiith the enemy in contact· "i.t a difficult military operation." Laird, who made. hiJ comment_ after testifytng in closed session before the Senate Appropriatiom: Committee, al· so aoid "protective reaction" bomb· ing of North Vietnamese missile aitts "stopped as of 12 p.m. today , .. I want to make that clear, those strikes have stopped." U.S. pilots will be allowed to ... pro- te ct them3elves" he said. "But as far as large strikes are concerned, that que1tto11 will be answered on thtr basis of what happen$ from now on." Ga., pilot of a Cobra gunship involved in ·tbe tank-aircraft battle 11id the twin· jet supersonic. FIOO ''blew up in the air" as the column of 21 tanks poured a hail of fire at the Americans trying to protect the tail end of tbe retreating Eiaigon troops . F'leming said nine of the Communist tanks were destroyed and one damaged by rockets, bombs and cannon fire. He &aid at one point the tank column . wa1 ra cing full speed straight down route 9 in pursuit of ARYN tanks and armored personnel carriers bringing up the rear <1f the wi~drawlng South Vlelrlamese ta sk force. Fleming said that about 75 minutes after tbe initial air attack the Com- munl!tl' armor slowed to about 25 miles an hour as it nu.red the South V~­ namese border. He said the Communilta were about five miles behind the South Vietnamese column and that the ARVN force had "stalled" two mllea from the border. Smoke from massive American bom· bing of Red troop concentrations as well as cloud cover, haze and dust block· td out later sightings Qf the Communist "larger'' than PT76 amphibious tanks, which means they were either T34s Or the large T54s. which so far are not yet known to be committed to battle. The United Slates has massed artillery and tank.! near · the border ,to · protect the withdrawing South Vietnamese and Americans in the area said they h•d been under heavy Communist mortar and rocket atlackJ and ba.d lost a numtiu t>f armored per90nnel carriers: (APCS). NEWPORT HARBOR MUSICIANS WIN Newport Harbor lflgh SchoOl's b8!\lf and drill team marched off with the 1weepst.!lkts trophy for the best entry in Saturday's Las Golondrina1 ParJde: tn Eian Juan Capilltrano. The high school group took top honon In the parade which featured more than 3.700 pArtlclpanl• marching In honor of the ant1ual return l'lf the swalk>w1 lo tbt San Juan Clplstranl'l Mlr;slon. ,( verted W«ld War ll 1qU-&lreraft guni -and beaded west a.lOlll Highway 9 toward the LaoUan border to guard q:ainst any North V)ttnamue advance in South Vietnam. "We've been hit every day on this road 1inct M1rcb 18;" explained Plltoon Sj!t. Kermy Osborne. 12, Welcl!, W.Va. "We w~re ~i.t th~ m~lng. I feel just like my boy1., l wa.qt to 11:~t . th~ ,hell out of here and go home. "But we're 1tayln1 uhtil ·•• gd · the Job done." Osborne's me:i meertngly refer to him as a "lifer" -; 1 · c1reu Army man -but they grudgingly admit he's "got h1s atuff together." •·A" Battery of the 1st Battalion, 44th Artillery, is one ar the mechanlr.ed armored units waiting on the border for North Vietnamese tanka: whlcb'are pursu• lng a South Vietnamese armored colwnn oul of Lao.s. ·While they Wait,· they endure mines, mortars, a r t i 11 er y , rocket.propelled erenades and small.arms fire an what bas becoma known u "Ambosb Alley," a llx·mlle 1lrttch of Hipw1y I between LAl)g Ve! and the bordtr ct0$Sillg of Lao Bao. "fl'a ·a cjeatb trap," mutter-ed Sgt. Wlill1Jrn Lore, 24, a Canadian from, Toronto. He enlisted 1n the Regular Army when he moved to San Francisco because "they would have drafted me anyway." Lore 'carrlei a ciiarette lighter in· scribed "Duatera don't die, they go to hell and regroup." He's a cannooeer and proud of his ablllty to load the 40mm pom.poms fut enough to flre 240 round! a minute. The five vehicles passed bomb craters and the .cutted . hulks of two armor,ed persoMel carrien and three tntcks. As they rounded a bend in the road, all bell broke loose. Mortars slammed into the road and AK47 bullets ricocheted off Osborne's duster. Up ahead an armored peraonne.1 carrier beloo(lng to the lit Brlrldo of !be Sill Meclw!hed Infantry Dlvlo!on was bluing flerctly, viet.lm of • db'9ct hit from a rocket·propeiled gr""adl - an RPG. • Osborne crabbed en M7' Jr!Dlde launcher and began burlinf blooper rounds into the 1urroundin1 brush. Sgl W1yn< Coons, 23, North Silleln, Ind., sprayed· fl~e from· hla M'60·madilzte gun, Spec:. 4 Jack Wootin, 21, Moftroe, _ (S.. ~ Pq~ I) _ • Fire Blame Denied. Hartelius Accuses ·M:istress' Kin SOUTH VIETlllAMESE FACING HEAVY ONSLAUGHT IN LAOS Six RH 8att11lon1 Attack, Threatening Luang Pr1b1ng Reds : Overrun Positions, T~reat.en ~oyal Capiu;i -VIENTIANE, LIO. (uJ!) -Nor11> Vietiwnela troop1 have oVerrun govern- IUnt poe:IUons Jn an arc thrff to live mues northeast of the royal capital of Liq Ptabang and the city's security is dlreclly threatened, • aove.rnmeo.t spokel!man l!laid ioday. A U.S. Emb"'l' spok•l!l1All said 610 depende-ata of .U.S., French, Swiss and Filipino officials and ~kers were evacuated Sunday from Prabang to 'Vientiane,' the admlnlstr ive capital 130 miles to the south, by the CIA chartered Air America Airline. Military sotirce.s said 1i1. perlOns had been killed and many wounded by·Com· munist mortar and rocket attacks l'ID the Loang Prabanj: airfield lDd nearby military camps and that the shelling destroyed OT ·dlmaged five planes. Defe12~ ministry spokesman Gen. Tbongphan Kbock!y reported earlier t& day that an tJl!ma1'd Iii N"111 Vlll!I namese battalions (3,000 to 3,&oo men) tiad launched heavy attacks on the government positions. L a t' er • , a Spokesman said si1. government positi.ons were virtually wiPelf Oat a11d COmmunlst troops were three to five miles from the clty. The spokesman said government troops had been r«!eployed in strategic -areas f-0ur miles northeast of Luang Praban& and that one and possibly two b•ttallon& of government reinforcements had OoWn into the city to stiffen it defenses. Military sources said the North Viet· names struck al the government posi- tions, so swlfUy the defenden bad no chance to evacuate civilians, inciudini the thousands of refugees wbo have converged on the Luang Prab&ng area to escape the Communist offensive on the Plain of Jars. Service Pay Boost Ol{ayed ~ ASHlNGTON (AP) -A two year draft extension nearly triplin& Preskient Nixon'• pay boost Incentive for a "uro draft" voJUntee.r army wa1 approved tod)y by tbe House Armed.. Service• Committee. The bW; "Which would boo8t military pay and allowancea especially for junior enlisted men and <1fficers by f2.7 billian next year, was approved 36 to 4. President N"1100 had asked a $987 million rai3e nert year, and the Pentagon projected the balance woo.Id be recom- mended the following year. Tbe com· mil tee folded both into one year .. But chalrman F. Edward Hebert (]). La.), pointed out the committee had not approved President Nixon'! goal of achieving a "zero draft" volunteer army by June 30, 1973, which is only a goal and was not in the bill the adminislraUoo sent to Congress. "I don't think they can ever g~ a volunteer army unless they draft it," Hebert told newsmen. "But we'ft goine: to give him all the help be wa.ni.. to implement it ~ "We're giVing him all the rope he wants," Hebert said. 'lbe commJttee rejected an effort by Rep. Charles W. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohio ), to extend the draft onfy one year, 30 to 9. By TO~ BAJlLEY Of "'-0t17 •n•t SMtr Dr. Zbbe Hutelius today firmly denied rel!pon.s.iblllty for the fire last April 9 at hls Corona del Mar officeE and be just as firmly rejected -in the closing hQllls of his Orange County Superior Court trial allega.tlons that he faked the theft of hill car nine days earlier. The dapper ro-year-old physician plac- ed the blame for both incidents squarely fin the shoulders of Jim Blevins, the brother of his blonde mistress and the man who had earlier testified that Hartelius planned · the fire and bribed him to leave the stale at the height t>f a 'police invest11ation. Harte.Hus ~stified today his first kllowlede:e ef tbe · fire wu when be . ~ .~~lan4~rs r '' Res11~e Fight. , For Fire Unit Balboa Islanders are reSuminJ: their fight to keep their fire station. Pressure to abandon the Marine Ave- llUI rac111ty began tl'l bulld when Newport Beach city officials announced plans for a new cenlral headquarters one mile north of the island on Jamboree Road. At lhe tlme the City CounCil allayed residents' ·fears saying almost to a man that the ancie11t island 1tation would stay put. Now, however, as Newpott Stach a~ proacbea an awtere 1971·72 fiscal year, Fire Chief Jan .Bri.seoe bas said. the colt savings that will be realizfd by closlnl: the station would outweigtlt advantages of its location. Newport city councilmen have yet to be convi11ced, however, and the Issue Ukely won't be re30Jved until city budget adoption time in late June. The folks on Ballxia Island aren't wait· Ing however. They have begun their bat- tle i11 earnest. In a letter to Mayor Ed Hirth and the l'lther s!x member! of the council, Thom- as Housto!'I, president of the Balboa Island Improvement Association, crlti· cizes Chlt!f Brillcoe'1. proposal and cited a numbtlr of neWSP.aper fire sccounts that he said are teatimony to the need for the station. In hill Jetter Hous\on said, "The board of directors of the SIIA (eef it wou-ld be impoulble to respond to our fire and ~scue need.I elfeatively from a itation more than one mile away. to l!ay nothing of the difficulties in crossing Pacific Coa!t Highway .and Bayside Drive. · "Our traffic problems and the clNe construction of structures on the island demand immediate action ii diustera are to be 1verted," he said. Irvine Petitions Delayed ' Te~hnical Snag Hit: Who May Sign City hood Forms? By I. PETER Kll!EG OIJM Qlllr f"I• i.\11f The question. or who n\IY legally sign petitions ' for an election to incorporate Ille future city al In/Int Sltunlay stalled the planned \lckoff of a aigzlup campaign. More than 100 rt1idenll of the future dty gathered at the Airporter Inn for a breakfast rally but were told that technicallliH w!U pull! bock petttionln& at least one week. The "tedmlca!Jtle•" wert described by aorne leadtrl 11 1tmple stalling tactia on the part of county officials. John Burton, chairman or the Council of the Cornmunllles l'lf Irvine, cityhood •ponaor1, uld the Oranae County ~·· Office Frid., hid declined to dtlino wbo II .. uued to 11111 th< pell· tlona. I ''The law uy1 only property owner• may aign," Burton uld. "but It la am· blgu~ in Ill definitiorui of who OW'M property." He aaid apparenUy the term cnuld mean the fee o~r oply, or the one wbo pays taxes, er someone with a lease-option or &o.meOOe. with only 1 ieue. ' . 'lb& ftt!e&tita-' '8 ·further tC<lmpllcated, he uld;~ llle 1aw stipulatts that only property ow~ of record the previous Marc~ 1 ctn tJtt\. •·1n our we, .. ti ,rrould hf: March 1, 1970," he said. ?· He t1plalntd thil WOUid make about 1 2,000-b°""hold 4llt•rtnc• and welsh heavily on lhe. DU\btt of 1lp.a.lu.rtl needed. " CCI must obtain.' the •lcnatw-es vf •• • 25 percent of the property owners who, ln tum, mult. rtpresent 25 percent of the awued valuation. "The latter ii no problem," Burton aaid, pointing out that the Irvine Com· pany owna about 80 percent of tbe use» ed v1luatlon within the boundartea of the 18,000 lncorporatiM area and "of· ftcials tnere hive Invited WI to coma by with our petitiw." Burton said CCI officials are taking the question fo the State Attorney General's Offict at once. •Ie said he Is hopeful there will be a clarification by ntxt Salurday. "but U llJere Ion'~ we'll just go get · everybody'a ntme we PoUibly can,,eveo tsto IRVINE, P ... I) I got 1 call . fi:om blJ answerinj ·service to advise hlm lhat smoke was pouring from hi1 offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway. lje said he tald Newport Beach police detective Sam Ambergey 8( the fll'e sce"ne that he could only think or Blevins as being responsible for the blaie. Hartelius. was arrested and booked on arson and fralld charges 10 days later. . The physician t.estilled In his clipped accent that he could ac'count for every minute of the time last March 31 when he wall suppoeed to be driving to f.ol!i Beacb with BlevlDI to hide the doctor'• car be.bind a 1upe.rmarket. ·4 .. That time, be said. -loken .up lflth v~lts to local hospitals 1114 paUtlrtl boi>es411d !l.wu 1a1o -1t nlgbl, wbea ~ .• -~ 1· ' ... ,. .. Zipping Along Heeled over and bull dciwn-if he had a hull-Don Rypinski of Laguna Beach steers his stand sailor on two wheel& hard on the wind. For more about sand sailing, see Page 11. President, Wife Set Week's Stay In San Clemente Prelident and Mrs. Nixon will, arrive tn San Clemente Friday for a wttk·lon1 lllay at La Casa PacUlca, Wonned sources aald today. It w111 be the second San Clemente visit of the year for the first family. No tonfirmatlon of the reported 1.r1p bas yet come rrom Washincton. ·D.C. PresidenUal aldt.s generally ~ee 1uch trips two or three day1 iD advance.. If next week's stay follow• the trend Jet by the Jani 1-12 visit by the Nllou~ it .,..1u be a quiet ene with more ~ than work. -' Oh the last visit, the President found the weather chilly along the South Coast, but ttill managed tome walks on bi1 private beach. . lie celebrated his birthday during the last stop, changed the name of his home to La Cua Picilic1 and . paid .a visit to 1tude.pts at CcJn~rdl1 El~mentaz:y School nearby. } be · return«! to tho Cmll 14.,.. bome be shared with Reba Vaughn'. •· ··. • HarteUus said bli fiiit indlcStlon" ·that the car was gone carne·wheD be looked from tilt living roo'm window. next.morn- ing to nouce that the car waa nUsstns. "Did you take the. c,ar?'~. de!We a- torney Mitthew Kurllleb asked:· · • "I did not.'' Harttllus "Plied. . .. "Did you plan the fire?" Kmilich u t- ed.. . . "No, I did not.," Harte:Uus responded. Hartellus is -the last defense witness in the · trial. It ii e1pected that the issue will go to Ill• jury !11' today after testimony from rebuttal WltDllMa calied by Dtj>uly Dbtrld Attorney Al Novick. <;ity Employe$ :~~~ , _ More Benefits 'Newport Beach's ~e. tmpl~y• ~lions are el}ying away from major ~lary request! in nert year!a wage demand!, puahlng lnltead for . im- provements in a variety of ·-frln&e benefits. City Manager Harvey L. Htn'lllort to- dly released copies of !he prellmbwy 1971-72 requesll. of all three IJ"OUPI• the City Employes AuoclaUon, the Firelighters Auoci1tion and U.,. ~ Employ<! AMOclatioo. ·. For :salary .increaset,, all tbr~ are uklng lor parity w!lli IUlTOWldini .com- munities. Firemen. however, are requetUnc a five-hour reduction ln their wort w&k. The asaociaton la propoelnt: a 56-boor week. The work week for flremen wu dropped from 7lfo 61 this.,__. · · - The. lir'efighttrs assOclaUon al90 1.i aat· Ing for l!I feasibility atody of adoptioq of the California Hig1!way Patrol· retire- ment ll)'ltem, which allowa retirement ,at age 50. The police assodaUon doesn't want a study, It wan ta the program. Both groups now have reUrement establlshed at ag'e 5$. • 'rhe elnployes iSsodation "la utlna fer a l!limilar retlrefuent plan plua :" -Pay for all-deli 'leave upon termini· t1on or retirement -Time and one-hllll pay for Ill boura over-eight fn any cine'l!ay. .:. TWo hours pay for •lght houra ol atand-b~ time. -Frid&y1 off Wbenevei' a holiday falla en ·safurday. · · · -A bonus plan for employt •UC:- gestlons. Oraage Wea titer Haey sunshine -b the best tho weatherman caft"Offer lor Tue.Say, following cloud1 lkles in the morn- ing hOura with temperature• reach- ing' 68 degr"' ~I Ill• coasl INSIDE TODAY , Yov ca" ltanl to /lv end still kltp ~our ft.et 0'7I. tht ground bv 1'8ing /ligh& 1im1'lo.to11 of a NetDo po<t Beach /i,.... Pogt 21. ) '·-- ' ~ ~ DAIL V PILOT H ft1onday, Mardi 22, 1m Council to Move • Voters Mandate • Newport Beach city Ciluncilmen will move Monday to carry out the mandate ~ handed them by voters in the lopsided anti-freeway referendum nearly two weeks ago. • Rellidents lttarch 9 voled nearly 6-1 t: to ask the council to relcind the city's • agreement with the sll.te Division of ,. Highways on the route of the Pacific if' Coast Freeway through Corona del f\tar. 1 Since that vote, the CilUncil has in· f formally agreed il will form a negotiating committee to meet wilh the California ~ Public Works Department in an attempt ., to bilaterally rescind that agreement ~ -rather than cancelling it unilaterally. J State ofilclals have threatened that S unilateral repul will bring court action. Officials of both the Highway Com· California concerning: rescasion or the greeway agreement and other matters rela!lng to lhe city's transPortation needs." Resignation Of Hurlburt Faces Council DAll'I' ,llOT St1n Pllthll From Page I l AMBUSH .•. N.C., opened up wilh the 40mm dwter guns. Lore and Sgt Drayton ~tarkle, 23, St. Augustine, Fla., loaded frantica111. '1Get the~ dammit!'' yelled Osborne, poto1!ni to 1111' muzzle Oubes of North Vietnamese mortars a mile away at the base of Co Roe Ridge. The porn-porns swiveled and se nt more than 500 shells across the Xe Pon River into Laos. The mortars were selenCed. .. I think we got them," said Osborne. ''That makes four this week. Those damn ARVN sitting on top of the ridge have let the North Vietnamese move in right under then1." He was referring to a South Viet· namese marine b.ase called Hotel l, isituated on top of Co Roe about a half mile inside Laos. Osbo rne 's platoon moved on, passing the blazing APC - an armored personnel carrier. .. Poor bastards," said Coons. The duster crunched over so me "C" rations and split a sleeping bag that had been hurled otf the wreckage. Feathers swirl- ed in its wake as the men exchanged •·v" signs with crewmen of another meChanized unit traveling in the Oppo!ite direction. • tnWion and PutiU11 Works Department have lndlcated willingneaB lo at least talk the special committee, although by commission reaolution any negotiations must be conducted by the department. The Newport Btach City Council tonight will act on the resignation of City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and is expected to immediately launch a search for a successor. Hurlburt said today he would submit his letter of resignation to the council at this afternoon's study session. He is expected to give 60 days' notice. 'IT WAS VERY DANGEROUS. I HAD HOPED I WOULD MAKE IT. l'M GLAD I DID.' D. D. M11co Mlkt1 Good on His Great E1cape Off the Seal B11ch Pier Behind them mortars opened up again and Markle curse dsoftly : "They'll bit us again on the way back." A propo11ed resolullon to be considered n by the NewPort Beach counci l Mon· !, day cites the overwheltnlng outpouring .. of opinion in the special election, forms • a negotiating committee and states it ; shall : J ". , . be authorized to represent the • city CilUDCil in any and all negotiations ~ with representatives of the State of " Pope Will See Tito VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI will receive Yugoslavian President Jose.Ip Tito for an official visit to the Vatican next Monday. Mayor Ed Hirth said today the council will likely deliberate method! o f recruiting a replacement. When Hurlburt was hired six years ago Ule recruiting v.·as handled by a CQilsulting firm. However. several coun· cilmen now are expressing a desire to have the search Cilnducted by a coun· cilmanic Cilmmittee. Hurlburt announced 11 days ago he l'ill leave, the statement Cilntlng three days after he was on the receiving end of a blistering attack by Councilman Dooald Mcinnis. • ltAllY f'ILOT 11111 l"ltlte ~~~~~~~~~~- From Page I IRVINE ••• if it has to be on three different peti· lions." Burtoo noted that time is sta rting to play an important factor in the signature campaign. CCI had 00 days from the date it filed Its notice of intent to circulate petitions to get the signatu.res. That paper was filed Feb. 22, he pointed out. BurtDn also commented brieny on the furor raised by Santa Ana over inclusion of a 920-acre industrial section that Santa Ana had thought was going to be part or its tax base someday soon. Santa Ana has gone to court over · the issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable to reason on a number of things, and hasn't been for the last 20 years. Burton cited a number of other in- stances in v•hich he claimed are testimony to delays in the citybood bid created by the county. He said plans for county W build a fire station near the Irvine Industria l complex have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't been furnished the legally acceptable descrip- tion of the Irvine boundaries until Wednesday -after asking for them a month ago . The Saturday morning rally l''as sponsored by the newly-fonned City of Irvine Now (COIN ), headed by Andrew May, who also address the gathering on the various chores confronling the incorporation movement. Edward Breeding Rites Tuesday Funeral servil'!s for G. Edward Breeding, 49, of 16872 Bolero Lane, Itun· tington Beach, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in St. Michael's Episcopal Church. 3233 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. 1.1r. Breeding died Friday at his home following a heart attack. A native of Missouri, he was a veteran of World War II and the Korean conflict. lie is survived by his widow, Mrs. APARTMENT DWELLER SARTORIO EXAMINES CHARRED KITCHEN In Newport Beach, Four Firts in 11 Many D1y1 Vashke Breeding, assistant principal of Newport Harbor High School, and a stepson, James Lambrinos, a Peace Corps volunteer in Colombia. Burial will be in Pacific Vlew Memorial Park. OUN•• COAsr DAILY PILOT 611.AMCli CO.UT PUtlliHINO COMPAN'f l•lt-" N. w.,~ Prn:Hnt •rid f'111>1l111er J11.k l. C11r49v v ice· 1'n110 ... 1 Mil G_.., Mllltt«' n .... 1, r.,.;r Editvr Tlte,..11 A. Murphin• M1net·"O Edl- l . P1t•r 1Cri•9 Ntwpotl 8Hd'I City Editor ft'...-,.rt IMc• Oftlc• llJ] N1wporl lo11l 1~1rcl l1f1llift9 Addr111: ft.0. I•• 1175, '244J o ..... Offic" Clll!1 Melt: ~ W•I ltY' Street L .. -ludl: 22: l"lll'ft1 •~..,..., Jfuntl,,,t'l:t 8NC~! HltS llHcll Soulr.r1r<f s.n Cltmenlt: ., N"'1fl e1 Cimino Rul T .. ..,. I 1714) &4:1..tUI Cl-.HW Atfwf'tk ... '4:1·1171 Newp ort Apru·tment Blaze Causes $8,000 in Damage Damage from a fire y,•hich gutted a Newport Beach apartment Saturday afternoon was estimated today at $8.000. Fire investigators said the blaze at 120-B 24th St. apparently started when a pan or grease left on the apartment stove o\'erheated and burst into fl::imes. The apartment occupant, Toni Sartorio, told firemen she was visiting neighbors in an adjoining apartment and noticed smoke coming through the wall dividing the two residences. \Vhen firemen arrived, the fire was burning the porch, kitchen . Jiving room and bedroom and was spreading to lhe roof. Portions of the adjoining apartment were damaged by flames and water. No injuries were reported. However, fire department spokesmen noted that It was the city's fourth major blaze in as many days. Wednesday. a blaze caused a n estimated $3,500 damage was done to the home of John Sanchez. 324 Orchid Avt. , Oirona del lo.far whe a piece of cardboard v.·hich y,·as cove · a !urna~ vent caught on fire . Thursday. Cosll Mesa ff:sldent Andre Russo received second and third degre burns on his face. hands and legs Y,.h a compressor Ignited Jacqueur he w s spraying ln an apartment at 1129 . Balboa Blvd. Fire officials estimated damage from the fire at Sl,000. Russo Is listed fn good condition today at J, Hoag Memorial liospital. Early Friday morning. a fire cnised by a short in the refrigerator wtrlng resulted in an utimated $2.000 damage lo the kitchen of Hank's Ocean Front Cafe, 2300 \V. Ocean Front. Mr. Sturtevant Rites Tuesday F'uneral services will be held Tuelday for Newport Beach contractor Austin D. Sturte vant y,•ho died Friday in his Corona de! 1-tar home. He was 66. Mr. Sturtevant had Jived in the Newport Beach area for 25 years. He operated the general Cilnltacting firm of Sturtevant Corp., at 4ll23 Birch SI. Mr. Sturt.evant leaves his wife. Ca.therlne, orlhe famUy home, 2028 Villa Cajon; a son Warren D. Sturtevant of 1'1ewport Beach; a daughter, 1-trs. Howard Jones of San Mateo; sisters, Mrs. John Buckingham of Corona del Mar and Mrs. Floyd Hu1hes Jr. of Council Bluffs, Iowa. and ! Iv e grandchildren. Services will ht held at I :30 p.m. It Pacific View Chapel. The family has suggested Memortal contributions to the Orange County Coun- cil of Boy Scouts of Amerlcl. Escape Ar.tist Lives Through 'Death Dive' By RUDI NIEDZIELJ;KJ Of fllf OlllJ l"llel ll•H Escape artist 0 . D. Masco completed his "Dive To Death'' into the waters off the Seal Beach pier Saturday and lived lo tell about it. The 32-year old restraint breaker back- ed his boast that he could "do anything Houdini ever did" by freeing himself from two pairs of handcuffs 25-feet of chain. three padlocks and a SO-pound weight while at the botlOm of the ocean. A crowd of about 1.000 persons watched him Cilmplele this stunt in 16 feet of water. He took only ~seconds W free himself from the bond. "A hoax." cried some watching off the pier. But those y,•ho had been in the bobbing vessel with Masco, anchored a few feet off tile pier knew it "''asn 't. All of the Jocks. as well as 1.1asco himself were available ror inspection. Masco's hands trembled and his face turned crimson as the cuffs were snapped around his wrists and the chain tied tightly around his body. 'fhe padlocks were attached behind his back. ''I was a little apprehensive," said the 27().pound escape artist afterward . "I'd never been in the ocean before.'' As two divers readied their aqualungs, MasCil first placed one leg over the boat's transom, then the other, and finally gushed into the water. Only a white circle of foam remained on the surface as Masco was on the sandy sea-bottom, working his magic on the locks. And sooner than expected. a shock of red hair breaking through the surface of the water signaled that he had Cilm· pleted his escape. Back on board, the drenched J\.lasco lit a long-stemmed pipe and said, "It was very dangerous. I had hoped that J would make il. and I'm glad I did." The dive was the result of a challenge by one or Masco·s friends, Ralph Yarnell, of Alhambra . Next monlh, Masco claims he will conduct .anolher dive. this time in \Valer o[f the Santa ~1on1ca pier. ''I'll be wearing three pairs of handcuffs, leg irons inside a crate with a weight on top. We'll see how that works out," he laughed. MASCO BEFORE DIVE Chained, Cuffed •nd Weighted Crystal W ase Rites Wednesday Funeral services will be held We<f· nesday for former silent film actress Crystal L. Wase who died Saturday in her Newport Beach home. Mrs. Wase 1\as known as Crystal \\rilliams during her acting career in silent pictures. The 83-year-old former actress had Jived in Newport Beach for four years. She leaves her husband. Edv.·ard, o( the family hofne at 400 Park Newport. Services are scheduled for 1 p.m. in the Pacific View Chapel. ONE Of THE OUTPERFORMERS! 00111 R1citi More wrecked vehicles: littered the roadway as the column pushed V.'est. It passed two 175mm guns, ruined by North Vietnamese artillery fire, and another battered APC that had hit a mine. Farther up the road a bullet-riddled Huey helicopter blocked their way. They detoured around it an d halted beside lhe wreckage of an ambushed Jeep, where an American major had been killed the previous day. Mortars con· tinued to fall around their position and a lone 122mm artillery shell landed 20 yards from one of the tracks. Its crew didn't even look up. They were busy hitching the 17Smm gun to be towed back to Lang Vei. Then the tracks turned eastward. the PAC was still burning at the site of the first ambush when the North Viet· namese opened up again. This time no one stopped. Guns blazing, Osborne's column raced through the n1ortar and small-arms fire. The platoon sergeant pointed to a cloud of yellow smoke hanging over a bush. "See that? That's what an RPG looks like," he lOld his crew. "You see too many of those smoke clouds and you know you're in trouble." But no one was hit as the column roared past the shot down helicopter, wrecked tanks. PACs and trucks. Coons fell asleep. his head cradled against his machine gun. undisturbed by continuing incoming mortar round!. "~tan rm hungry," said Lore. "Time for some "C" rations. He turned bi.t bead and displayed .en inscription on bis helmet: "The End?" Not yet. Police Probing Strange Injuries A Newport Beach resident was mysteriously injured early this morning outside a local seafood rest.aurant. Erne.st Ray Stroud. 23, who lists hi~ address as Slip 59 Lido Anchorage, told police he received a puncture v,.ound in hi! chest. a cul above his left eye and several bruises about his head and shoulders when he fell on a board jn a restaurant parking lot on Lido Park. Drive. Stroud was taken by police to Hoag Memorial Hospital "·here he refused treatment for his wounds. Police are continuing t h e i r In· vestigation of the incident. Israel Site Shelled TEL AVIV (AP ) -Gunners in Lebanon shelled Israel's northernmost settlement today for the second time in four days, the lsraelis said. lob ll•c:ili ® PIONEER9 SX·770 AM·FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver BufTd Ytl'n' .stereo 1Y1tern around this wrs~ITie l1'19'1rurnent. 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You ar. lnwlt'lll te como k'I •rid Ml our dl1play of ttt. finest aound ~lfH'llflt at bl1 MYlng1. e PIONEER e J .V.C. e ELECTROPHON IC e WALD e GRANDSONIC e BSR 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COST~ MESA1 JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, BUY, SIU, TU.DI 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·774 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-Betweon Horbot-& lrNdway , • I --.. ·--.. .,.,,,-.. ~ BEA ANDERSON, Editor MIM•Y· Mu(h n. 1m • ... ,, ,, Indispensables Taking Bows Indispensable is the \Vord for the Patrons of the Newport Harbor Auxiliary of Children's Home Society. These are the distinguished men and \von1en of the Harbor Area who lend their aid to the Auxiliary in providing medical and emergency care for needy mothers and in sponsoring children awaiting adoption. Newest to join the Patrons' list for 1971 \Vil! be honored on Monday, ~larch 29, when Mrs. William C. Adams will open her Newport Beach home for the traditional Patroness Tea. Honorees \Vill include Mrs. Arthur G. Coons, Mrs. Frederic Webster, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Doane and Dr. and Mrs. Edward Boyd, as well as the Messrs. and Mmes. Robert Vordale, Robert Garrison, Louis Boyle Jr., Thayer Crispin, Paul Elmquist and John Murdy. Three new Children's Home Society provisionals will attend the tea as well and help with the year's fund raising events. They are the Mmes. James V. Loudon, James L. Gray and Garry Short. Uppermost in the plans for the coming year are the biennial Soiree d'Art to be presented in the Santa Ana Country Club in May and the annual Debutante Ball in December. ; . . ; · . • Before becoming active members of the Auxiliary, the provisionals will assist in the baby clinic in the Children's Home Society office in Santa Ana and serve as hostesses for the Father and Daughter tea in July. Joining Mrs. Adams in receiving guests for the Patroness Tea will be Mrs. Robert Meserve, Auxiliary president, Mrs. Donald E. Swedlund and J.1rs . John B. Parker, who is chairman for the occasion. CORDIAL WELCOME -Children's Home Society provisionals Oeft) Mrs. Garry Short and t1rs. James L. Gray step ashore to re· ceive greetings from New port llarbor Auxiliary Patrons Mrs. Lawrence E. Brown and Mrs. Arthur G. Coons, preceding the tradi- tional Patroness Tea which will take place on Monday, March~.!"; in the home of f\1rs. \Villiam C. Adams. ~1rs. Coons is among n'eW:- patrons to be honored. _,. . .. . . Model Tran sportation's Fashion Giving a cheery invitation to ride along to a spri~g fashion show lun cheon on Saturday, March 27, 1n the Balboa Bay Clu b are rteft to right) the Mi sses Cathy f\1artin. Lynne Cirkle and f\.terle Anne Par· ish, representing the Keynotes of the Harbor Ke y, Bound Child Guidance Center of Orange County. Entitled \Velcoming Spring, the fashion showing will be the major fund raising event for the teenage Keyn otes. Mrs. Daniel Gilcrest. 646-6087. and h-trs. R. R. Ifill· gren, 644·6357, are accepting reservations. -~· ~ Circles of Service Widening·~ Busy members of th e Newport Beach Junior Ebel! Club are ever widening their efforts in community service. Lal2st among their projects are monthly craft sessions: und ertaken in a re a con- valescent ho sp i la ! s by members of the Fine Arts Committee headed by Mrs. Dan Mcsweeney. The Youth Committee. led by Mrs. Richard Bechtel, has sponsored a babysitting clinic for Cadette Girl Scouts, col- lected clothing for the Albert Sitton Home, staffed the Youtll Problem Center and supported the Youth Employ- ment Center. Members of the Education Committee. headed by Mrs. Larry Thayer, have donated volunteer efforts to the new Eastbluff Elementary School, and other Junior volunteers have found time to staff the well-baby clinic and aid in the r u b e I I a immunization clinic. Recent disbursements were made or funds raised in the past year by the energetic group, whose president is Mrs. Eugene Kovach. Among organization.~ receiv- ing su pport for !heir com- munity efforts were I h e Visiting Nurses Association. the Marden Schoo!, tile Boys Club. the Youth Centers. and the Newport Beach Library. WELL-TEND ED TREE -Junior Ebell Club members view with justifiable pride the money tfee \\lhich symbolizes support given by their group to various philanthropic organizations. Mrs. Larry Thaier llett) who was named Junior Citizen-of-the-year joins Mrs. Len Miller Feaeratlon Development chairman. in admiring the tree of contributions. Reci pients of the monetary assistance, wbo were named at a Las Vegas-themed meeting presided over by Mrs. Eugene Kovach. inc lude comm unity organizations suet, as the Youth Problem Center and the Mardan School. w ·idow' s Pillow Dampens Hopes for Public Performance: .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband passed, away after a lorig illness. He suffered a great deal. Since he was a private person who disliked public displays of emotion. I was determined to control myself at the funeral. \Vith difficulty I managed to keep my head up and my eyes dry. Perhaps J had done so much weeping in my pillow during his illness there were no tears left when he died. Dozens of callers gathered at my home after the runeral and I accldentaliy overhead two women talking in the kitchen. They were saying how strange it was Lhat I didn't seem at all shaken bv my husband's death . One wo~n s8id, "This is the first time J"ve ever ANN LANDERS '1 seen a widow who didn't go to pieces." Did l do n1y husband an injustice by .concealing my emolion? Would it have been betl.er to have displayed my broken heart to the world? The women in the kH:chen' were not trying to hurt my feelings. They had no idea I was behind the door listening to every word . Tell me please. -A SINGLE ROSE -DEAR ROSE: Your husband would have been proud of you. But you certainly disappointed the town busybOflles by depriving them of the show they bad come to ste. They will not forgive you ea1lly. 1\ty condolence11 to you and bearUest congratulaLlons for your non- performance. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Occasionally you print material by others. I hope you "'ill do so again. J·lcre 's a poc111 by Veda Ponikva r ·of Chisolm, ~1inn . It's one of my ra vorites -L.A. OF WASH., D.C. Salnts And Shiners "When some fellow yields to tcmpla· ti on it. And breaks a convwtional law . We look for no good in his makeup. B.ul, Lord. how we look for the flaw. No one asks. "Who did the tempting ?" Nor allows for the battles he 's fought. His name becomes food for the jackals, The saints who have never been caught. l 'm s sinner. 0 Lord and J know f am weak. and J blunder and fail. 1 am tossed on life's stormy ocean Like a sh1 p lhal is caught in a gale. I am willing to trust in thy mercy. To keep the commandments thou'st taught, But deliver me, Lord , from the judgment -Of the saints who ha ve never been caught." DEAR ANN LANDERS : r..ty husband hired a new asslslant several weeks ago. Last week the man's family moved here . His wile is a pleasant person. attractive and sweet, but she makes- me uncomfortable because she laughs all the time -at nothing. At the end of every sentence she gives out lhi~ litlle "ha ha ha ha." 1 had an aunt who did the same thing . \Vt. ca11ed her "The Hyena ." Why do certain people \ have such an odd sense of hu""'? -NEW MEXICO DEAR N.1\1.: This type of lauglt\er has nothing to do with humor. ll1ols • mechanism for releaslng ttnsJon. '4:i hope that when the woman becomU more comfortable In her ntw ~ niundings she will do less ha bl hafna. '. - If you have trouble getting along wilb your parenl.S . , . if you can't get t~ to let you live your own life, setlcl for Ann Lander!' booklet. "Bugged .t}y Parents? How to Get More Freedom~ Send 50 cents in coin with your Tequi{g and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope in care of the DAILY PlLOTt . . • -: T • -'=' , • • . .. . " . . . . . ' ..... Mond11, March 22, 1971 ltQMANTIC INTERLUDE -Members of the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse Patrbns Association will take a &eak from their work Thursday, March 25, for a .~~·antic evening of wine-tasting and dinner. Samp-,. .. ,, Ho_roscope: Virgo Use Caution TUESDAY MARCH Z3 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Avoid becoming involved ill conlroversy about m o n e y . Some friend would Uke to draw you into batUe. Maintain diplomatic, neutral stance. A apecial relatlombip is put to te:Jt. TAURUS (April 20-May 20)' You may feel it Ls time for a change, but first be sure you have all the facts. A sud· den move now could be premature-and costly. Leo individual can be a valuable ally. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Pay heed to hunches. Inner feelings now serve as reliable guide. Key is to be perceptive; take long-range view. One who demands immediate action i3: immalure. Respond ac- cordingly. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): A friend can help extricate you from embarrassing ·finan· cial situation. Don't let pride stand in way of progress. Be versatile. Have alternative methods available. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): One who brags about short 1..uts may be tied up with red tape. What you get now is earned. That proverbial silver platter is nowhere in sight. Do v.'hat must be done in thorough manner. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22l ~ Avoid becoming involved in office gossip. Base actions on factual information, no t rumors; Gtmlni individual can help if you avoid forcing issues. Improve relations with co-workers. IJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Cunninghams Select Newport Beach Home Emotions fly high-romance, inlense expression or feelings are emphasized. N o t b t n g halfway-tendency is to go all the way or nothing. Applies to money and Jove. SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-Nov. 21): SLress practicality. 0 b t a i n valid hint Crom Leo message. See through sham. Avoid seeing persons, aituations in light of sell-deception. Face facts as they actually exist. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dev. 21): Before embarking on any journey, be posltive you have sufficient in- formation. Older individual is v.•i\ling to cooperate. Your ap- proach holds key to success or failure. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Protect assets. Some would like to be v e r y free-with your money. Finish v.·hat you start. Get rid of burden which doesn't belong to you. Investigate prior to investing. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You can break through to greater success. Muell depends on reactions of parent or elde r. Some events occur in manner which benefits you Pounce on opportunity. Slate needs. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): What appears a certainty needs more checking. AppUes to situations and individuals. Contact one who aided you in past. Be cooperative. Share knowledge. Ask for help wbere required. IF TODAY IS YOUR BffiTHDAY you a re in· vestigative, have g r e a t amount of curiosity, can put together bits, pieces and come up with complete picture. You have natural inclination for writing. You have original ideas and you gain greater success Utls year, with Sept- ember indicated as outstafl.. ding. Where Skirt Hits Leg Draws Divided Views ~~apter '~Salutes Ladies Join Manpower Romantic Scene 's ~: ( ~efense • • ' i Psychic Power l Demonstrated Mrs. Walter Dunn wUI ; demODstrate psychic power : for a meeting of the ·Hun- , tington Beach Chapter of the : Psynetics Foundation at 8 ! p.m. tomorrow in the Midway • Clty American Legion HalL : Mrs. Dunn will be In- troduced by her husband, the Rev. Dunn of the Stanton Metaphysical Church, who will bri"1,ly explain how s h e clev'eloped her abllities. m MAVCO • ' ' j .. 4 new world ofi beauty for you ·It's a World where you can be free from the: embarrassment of unwanted. ha ir. Our skilled electrologists· can remove such hair,· gently and painlessly, using the world fa- mous Kree Dermatron ~hod. Phone fo<·•n· a intment and dis- how easily you open up a new of beauty and ~ iC.onfidence for. self. Call .the May Beauty Sa lon near- you. Regular •<& •• 99" 99 20·LB. BOX •No rubbing or scrubbing ••• it does all the \\'Ork •Really get! down deep to get clothes clean • Use ~ cup per load even in hard water • Clean wash ror you ••• cleaner "-'&terror everyone I Sears I nut. aorava.: Al'ID co. All Stan Stor~s open d11ily 9:30 1.n1. to 9:30 p.m .••• Sunday• l 2 noon to Sp. m. In this I AGE OF AQUARIUS' DAILY PILOT Today's Newspaper for ALL the communities of the Fabulous Orange Coast SHOES FOlt WOMEN & CHILDltlM !U If. 17'11 SI. Cost1 Mal • Ml·ml EASTER COTTON ....,._..,KNIT PRINTS'· the linen-look FUXTONE PRINTS a textured blend cf cottcn, raycn, flax med d•1igns, neutr1I -these will make the scene anytime b1ckgrounds. 1~ tol'to!li • p0l~nt.,/tottorl Reg. $1 .98 yd. V•IU. Comp•r• •t $1.tl yd. 57~%i .. ®~ MACHINE TI~ @ WASH 44"/45" Id w • d y • BEST EASTER BUYS :'sH'eiiti'No PRINTS 98', .. $139 yd. dms u' "mo111h1t tlory" • CREPE PRINTS $159 yd. llHtt·look royo11 "Sohora" •. BUTCHER WEAVES $169 yd. 111h1I de9'1JM for 1prl-.. • "SUNSET" FLOCKS $298 yd. bald, inff Kl'MIMCI • ACRYLIC PRINTS $329yd, w.dlable nyloo posttil• • white • BONDED LACE cottoin, nryol'll, binds 44"/41" wide the .now knits SLINKY LOOP KNITS WITH THE WET LOOK gr•at range cf new 1prin9 pastels on e really neat ~nit for mini to maxi dresies, pantsuits MACHINE WASHABLE 52" /54" widths omel triacetcrt• ~@® yd. HOUSEoFFB BRICS So.ttlri c-t ,..,._Briitol 1t s • ., Oi,90 Fwy, Co.te M ... -545· 1 SI' On1ittefolr Moll-Or1~9,tl'lorp1 ind H•1lxir Ful1Mo11 -51,·2lJ4 I HOMr "--17tli 1t 9,;,tol ......... -143-1151 luet10 P..t: ~l• P1lm1 11 Sl1"to" ..... , .. -1214111 • > • • • -.... -..... -·· J f;os1a Mesa Today's F liial . EDlllON -. N'. Y. Stoek« • VOL 64, NO. 69, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUl'!TY, CALIFORNIA''\ _, ... • I 'MONDAY, MARCH 22, .'1971 • TEN CENTS ~ , . • • ' . -• • U.S. Tanks Await Reds Near ~A~hush Alley' By BOLGER JENSEN A-let.II ,PU.I Wrn.rt. ON HIGHWAY i, Viell'Lf!D -"Hell with Jt sarge, we don 't want to go back there.'' But the sergeanL ijinored his men because he knew they would go back. And they did . Tired, acared, covered in crime, the ''track head.ls " grimly boarded a tank, two armored personnel carriers and two "dusters" -vehicles armed with con· * * '* U.S. Planes Bla st Ten Red Tanks SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. fighter·bombers and helicopter gunships today blasted a force of North Vietnamese tankJ pursu- ing South Vietnamese troops t.Clward the border of Laos. Front dispats::hes said they knocked out 10 CommllI1ist tanks but that a tank shot down an FtOO. The U.S. Command reported new heavy bombing strikes against North Vietnam today, the seCQnd such raid in two days, bringing a warning from a Soviet news agency Tass commentator that the Us.5R cannot ignore the new escalation and will give "all the necessary 1id'' to HanOi. W/O Gregory Fleming of Columbus , 'Protert l"e Re urtlo n' WASHINGTON (AP) -Stcrtt.ayV of Defttut Mr lvin R. Laird 1aid to- day ' tht South Vietnam.e1t optratinn in Laos still is "going forward accord· tng to plan." Laird, howrver, said at an im- pTomptu Copitot Hill news confertncc th.at any withdrawal carTied-out u1ith thf! enem~ in contact "is a difficult military operation." L'aird, who made his comment aftf!r testifying in closed session bf!fore thf! senate Appropriations Committee, al- so sa id ''protectivt reaction" bomb· ing of North Vietnamese missile sites "stopped as of 12 p.m. today ... I want to make that clear, those 1trikes have stopped." U.S. pilots will be allowed to "pro- tect themselves" he said. "But as far es large strikes art conctrned, that qul!stian will be an swered on tht ba.siJ: of what happen.!1 from now on." Ga., pilot or a Cobra gunship involved in the tank-aircraft battle said the t\\:in- jet supersonic FIOO ''blew up in the aiJ'" as the column of 21 tanks poured a hail of fire at the Americans trying to protect the tail end of the retreating Sa igon troops. Fleming said nine of the Communist tanks were destroyed and one damaged by rockets, bon1bs and cannon fire . He 1aid at one point the tank column was racing full speed straight down route 9 in pursuit of ARVN tanks and armored personnel carriers bringing up the rear ()f the withdrawing South Vietnamese task force. Fleming said that about 75 minute! after the initial air attack the Com- munistli' armor slowed to about 25 miles •n hour as it neared the South Viet· namese border. He said the O>mmunist! were about five miles behind the South Vjetnamese column and that the ARVN for ce had "stalled'' two miles from the border. Smoke from mas sive American bom· bing ()f Red troop conctntrations as (Set LAOS DUEL, Page !) Carnival Ride Ope rator Fe lled B y Mesa Police A carnival ride operator is grounded in Cvsta Mesa City Jail today, after ,Jllegtdly offerlng to get passengen higher than his ferr is wheel could. Arthur DeWitt "Young Blood'' John50n, 18. was booked on suspicion of possession of marijuana after police were stnt 10 thf: While Front store lhopping center. Investiga tors bad mon! than one com· plaint Sunday morning about • cani)e employe offering m 1 r i j .u • n a Jo youngsters. according to Slit. Bob Goo4e. Confronted at the ferris wbt:eL Jobnsan remarked he had to tell his boss aod broke into 11 dead run for the lri.lltr office with Sgt. Goode In hot pursuit. A plasllc bag or pot w11 found on Ole trailer noor apparently whert IJ()mt- one had tried to get rid of 11. vert.ed World Wat' 11 antJ.alrcrah guns -and beaded wea:t along Highway 9 toward the Llolian border to guard against any Norf,h Vietname$! advance in Sooth VietnaQl. "We've been •hit every day on this road since March II," ei:plained Platoon Sgt. l«<my Osborne, 32, Welch, W.VL "We w.ere tllt thil mtming. l feel juat like my boys. jJ w111t to 1et the hell out of hert and go tiome. "But we're staying until we 1et the job done ." Osborne's men sneeringly refer to him as a "lifer" -a career Army man -but they grudgingly admit be·s "got bis stuff together." "A" Battery of the 1st Battalion, 44th Artillery, is one of the · mechanir.ed armored units waiti ng on the bordrr for North Vietnamese tanks which are pursu· ing a South Vietnamese armored column out of Laos. While they wait, they endure mines, mortars, art i 11 er y, rocket-propelled grenades a.mi m.lll:mns fl.re on what has become lmo)!ll u "Ambush_ Alley ," • slI-mlle •lltl$ of Jligln"y I bet)reen Lalli Ve! anif the border cr<JOSing of Lao Bao. •'Jt'1 1 ,death \rap," muttered Sgt. WilU.m Lore, .U. a Canadian froin Toronto. He <n!~h!(t In the RegUJar Army when he moved to San Franclsco because ''they would have drafted me anyway." L<ln! catties 'a cigarette lighter in- scribed "Du.ster11 don't die, they 10 to bell and f'!:l('OUP -" He'• a canooi>eer and proud ()f his abWty to load the 4omm pomiJOmS fut enotJgh to firt 240 rounds a minute. - The fin vdrlcles passed bomb craten and the gutted hulks of two annored personnel carriers and llµ'H trucks. M · they rounded • bend In the roid, -all hell broloe loooe. Mortara slammed Into the road an(! AK47 bullet.a ;1cocheted · Off Osbomt's duster. Up ahead an.armor.ed pt.taomleJ cam.r· be!~ lo U.. lat Brlpft of the llh Mediaiiiui!' lnfantiy Dlvillon WU blazint fie«eJy, yic:(lm a/ A di1'd hit from • rocUl-propelled ~d· - IURPG. Oobol11f grabbed All M79 ,,.....i • lallJld\er and began hurling hloilper !Oundi Into lhe surrotllld!ng hnull. Sgt. Wayne Coons, 23, North Salem, Ind., sprayed fire from his M&O machine • gµri.' spec. 4 Jack Wooten, 21, Moruiie, !See AMBUSH, Pqe Z) Fire Blame Denied . . Hartelius Accuses Mi,stress' Kin · SOUTH VIETNAMESE FAC ING HEAVY ONSLAUGHT IN LAOS Six Red S.tt11ion1 Attack.. Thrutenlng Luing Prablng Reds Overrun Positions, T·hreareri Royal Capjtq~ \l!ENTIANE, ~ (UPI) -Norlll Vie ........ lloops ~Y!'OverfUll ioveni- ment JKL'H~ in •I D' arc thrtt to five miles northedt of the royal capital of Laong Prabang ind tht city's security Is directly thrtateoed,, a 1ovunmenl spokesman said1todJy.' A U.S. Eftlbassy spoke!man said 610 dej>endeII~ of l!.S., ·French., Swiss and· Filipino officials , IJld workers were evacuated.'Sunday from 1.Al8ng Prabang to · Vientiane, the administrative capital 130 miles to the south, by the CIA chartered Air AmeriC.a Airline. Military sources sald six persons had been killed and many wounded by Co m- munist ·mortar and rocket attack! on the Luing Prabang airfield and nearby military camps an4 that the 1helUn& dest:oyed or damaged five plane!. Defense ministry spokesman Gen. Thongphan Knocksy reported earlier to- day thal an eatimated six North Vl<t-namuo hllallOllJ (3,GOO lo 3,l!OD mill had l1wiched heavy attacks on the government positions. L a t t r , 1 spokesman said sii: government PoSitions were virtually wiped out aid Communlst troops were three to five miles from the city. The.spokesman said gpvernmtnt troops had been redeployed in strategic areas four miles northeast of LUaQ-g Prabang an.d that one and possibly. two battalion& of government reinforcements had flown into the city to stiffen It defenses. Military sources said the North Viet. names struck at the government posi- tions, so swiftly the defenden had no chance to evacuate civilians, including the thousands of refugees wbo have converged on the Luang Prabang area to escape the Communist offensive on (See OVERRUN, Page Z) Service Pay Boost Oka yed WASH1NGTON (AP) -A two year draft e1tension nearly tripling President Nixon's. pay boost Incentive for a "zero draft" volunteer army was approved today by the House Armed Services Committee. 'Ibe bill, which would boost military pay and allowances especially for junior enlisted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, w11 approved 36 to '4. President Nixon bad 11ked a $987 million raise next year, and thi: Pentagon projected the balance would be re.com· mended the following year. Ttie com· mittee folded both into one year. But chairman F. Edward Hebert CD- La.). pointed out the committee had not approved President Nixon's goal of achieving a "zero draft'' volunteer army Dy June 30, 1973, which is only ·a goal and was not in·the bill the administration sent to Congress. "l don 't think they can ever get a volunteer army unless they draft it," Hebert told newsmen. "But we're going to give him all the help be Wltl'll to implement it. "We're giving him all the· rope be wants," Hebert said. The aimmltttt rejected an effort by Rep. Charles W. Whalen 'Jr. (R-Obio), to e1tend the draft only one year, 30 to I. By TOM BARLEY OI IM 0.lh' l'lllt lt1" Or. Ebbe Hartellus tod.l.y firmly denied responsibility for the fire last April 9 at his Corona del M1r officts and be: just as firmly rejected in the closing hours of his Orange County Superior Court trial 11legations that be faked the theft of his car nine days earlier. The dapper 50-ye3.r-;ald physician plac- ed the blame for both incidents squarely on tbe shoulders of. Jim Blevins, the brother of hia blonde mistress and the man who had earlier testified that Harte.Ii"' planned the fire and bribed him lo leave the state at the height of a polloe investigation . HarteliUS ·testified today his tint k.Dowleclge ef the fire wu when be Costa Mesa wnr· ilidy ·· .. • • Ti'f'.. , , I '; • • • Adult Store A proposed. law intended to tetp boOk and f!ll\1 ehops cal<!ring to adulL< only acro8s the north dty limlt.s in Santa Ana goea before the Costa Mtsa P1ann1n1 ~m~is.tlon t.OOtght. The ordlnan~ · scheduled for rec.om• mendeUon ·lo the city council ia set tor dfecussion under commi&sioners' new business. Specif!Cally, It would require issuance of a· tone e.xoeption permit for any firm whose merchandise it forbiddtn to be advertised. Ot IOlP to those Udder 21 before it could Open. A similar method of attempted control over ·such establishment.a. now dotting a stretch of Harbor Boulevard in Santa Ana. has been initiated there. "There ~n't &DY problem now. We bave none." says Planning Director WiUi.tm L. OUnn . He added the city is willin& to risk the possible illegality of the ordinante to keep Costa' Mesa clear of. llich adult.I only operati9ns. ' "We'll try It anyway." Dunll 1aid. Operators in ~anta Ana -some now facing criminal prosecution for dealing In allegedly Obscene and pornographic materials -ha ve maintained this argu· ment against such controls. The ordiriance; whlCh would 10 into effect in eo days, merely makes adult.s- only firms apgly for zooe nceptlon perm.iUI subject to public hearings. Comml~loner1 and co'lincilmen. ma1 then decide wflllher they wru be granted at their own detenninatiOn of btheCit to the community. Erperience shows they frequently draw (See BOOKSTORE, l'a(e Z) Irvine Petitions Delayed Technical Snag Hi t: Who May Sign Ci tyhood Forms? By L PETER KRIEG 01 "" o.lh' Plltl Stl'ft The question of who ma.y le1aJly algn petitions for an election to 1ncorporat.e the fulurt city of Irvine Satun:lay stalled the planned kickoff of a sienup campai111. More than JOO 'residents of the future City gatbued 1t the Airporter Inn for a breakfast rally but were told that LechnicaliUes will puSh ti.ck pelltionina at least one week. The "i.chnf<aliUe•" "'"'.described by some leaders •• simple lltillilll lacUca Oft tbe part of county officials. John Burton. chairman of the Council of the Communities of Irvine, cltyhood BP._Onsor1, aald the Orani• County cOunteJ's Office Friday had decUned to define: who La entltltd to slsn the peti- tions. "The law say1 only property owners m1y sign," Burton la.id, "but Jl 11 arrl· biguous in its de.fbtltiona of who owrui property." ' Ht said apparently the tenn c.ouJd mean the fee owner only, or the one who pays ta.xes, or &0meone with a lease-opt.loo or someone with only a lease. The qutstlon b further complicated, he u id, b«awe the law sUpulatts th3t only proj><rty owoers of record the pA:YRiib.J Mard(l can sign. "'ln ~our ca.~. this -would be March I, 1970," he sald. He explained Utls would make about • 2,000-household d!Utrenct and weigh he1vily on the number of slpatures needed. " CCI must obtain the 1\gnaturu af 25 percent of the property owners who, Jn turn, must represent 25 percenl of the' uaessed valuallon. "Tbe latter ll no problan," Burton 11id, pointing out th1l the Irville Com- pany owns 1bout IO percent of the aSIHfo ed v1luat1on •!thin the boundafies of d.e 11,000 Incorporation 1rea and "of· ficlals thtre have: invited us to come by wllh Our peUU0111." Burton 111d CCI officieil ..,, taking the quesUon to the Stat.I Attorney General'• Oflict •t once . He 111d he ii hopeful thm will bo a• cJarUlcatl«t by ne:xt Saturday, "but It there hm't, we'll just ao Jel everybody'• name we possibly can, even IS.. IRVINE, P1p·z1 .J got a call. from hiJ inlwer~ servict.. to ad".ise blm that smoke was pourln« Crom his offices at 234S E. Coa~t Highway. ·he said he told Newport Beach pollct detective Sam, Ambergey at the fire scene lbat be could only think of Blevins as being responsible for the blaze. Hartelius w1s arrested and booked OD anon and fraud oharg'es 10 days later. The physician testified in his clipped accent that he could account for every ni.inu"te of. the time last March 31 when he · was .supposed to be driving to Long Seach with Blevins to hide the doctor's car behind a supermarket. That Ume,-he said..-wu· taken up with .visits .lo local boapitals .and patie.nta ' bOmes and it -was late at night wbeD ~All.Y '!LOT0 l'Vf"f!!!'IJ" Zlppll'fl Al.ong Heeled over and bull down-if be had a hull-Don Rypinskl of Laguna Beach steers his ' ,&tand sa~Qr on two wh~els h•rd on the wind. fpr more about sand sailing, see Page 11. ' . . · P resident, Wife Set .Week:s Stay In San Clemente President and Mr1. Nixon will arrive In· S.n Cltmerile ·Friday 'for a week·Torig 1tay at· La Casa PacWc•, informed sources said today. It will be the aecond Sin Clemente vlslt of tbe year for tfle fint f11mily. No· cenf~malion o! lhe reported. trip ha!i yet come from Waablngton; B.C. Presidential aide.a aenerally iinnoance · auch trif>s'twd or three days In advlnce: U nen week's •lAY folloWJ U.. tttM ut by · the Jan.4 6-12 visit by the Ni1<1nl, Jt will be. a qutet one witb more tts1 than work. On !be l11l •bit, U1e ·President IOUl\'f U.. wealhtr chilly along 0\0 SouUi, ~ bul lllll manqed IOllle w~llur Oii !!is prtVate beach. He· celebrated his blrthd•r durtng Ille last stop. ch1nged Qte name of his home to 11 C111 P~ and paid .• vlalt to students al CohtordJa ElententarY SCbool nearby. ' ' he "'hirned to tbe Costa ltl6oa . bomt he shared wilh Reba Vaugbll. Hartelius aaid b.11' tint indicaUOll"' tbal the car wa.s gone came wlieo. be looked from the J!Ving room window ~ motao ing to notice that the ear wu mlAlng. "Dld you take the car? ... defe1111 at.- torne'y Matthew Kurillcb asked. -"i .did not," Hartelius replied. · "Did you plan tbe fire?" Kutillch.aat• ed. "No. I did not," Harl<llus r.sponded. HarteliU9 is the last defense Witness in the tria1. It is ei:pec:ted that the issue will 10 to the jury late toda:1 after te!timony from rebuttal wit.Dessal called by Deputy Diltrlct Attorney Al Novick. Government "f.BL-;T. ... U ' "~ p Pot Smoking WASHINGTON (UPI) -Using <Mil· seated marijuana, the government bqan making 2 mJJlioa clprettes today for ~e in laboratory e:rperlmenl!I to tee whether smoking large amounts ot "pot" can Jead to cancer. ~·These are tbe first steps ever made in this field ," said Dr. Clo Cori of the National Cancer Institute. He said the ~garettes being turned olJ1 in a suburban Virginia labOratory would be tran.sfer:ed to:;New York wher1 the etperimenbi otl mice and bampsters wm be performed. These animall were chosen, he said, because they "have reacUona that an be t.ramlated to humans." The marijuana for the ci&areUes came from ihipments Hized by the U.S. Bureau of I O.Utoms and represents ''the average national quality" of the drug. Tdbacco cigarette! have long been Im· plicated in various, Cf,.ncers in humans, particularly lung cancer. JJu.t tbe J{ealth. Education and Wellare "Department, under which the National Cancer Institute operate!, told ~ngtess Jan. 31 that it had "no present evidence tCI suggest that marijuana ii cancer producing." But in testimony preSented· U\,at day, HEW noted th11t it was only after many year) of cigarette smoking by a substan- tial part of the population that the health batards of tobacco were rtCOlnized. "Concern has been upresstd that marijuana, when smoked in large quan- tities. .might be expect~ to h.tve slmllar carcinogenic (cancer~auling) effects to thOlle associated With cigarette smokJn&,~' HEW'uaid, Orange Hazy sunshlne Is the best the weatherman can offer for Tuesday, following cloudy tides in the mom. hlg boura with temperatures reach· ing 68 degreta atona the coist. INSmE TODAY You can ltam to flv and stUl kttp .,our feet O'l'l tht around bv usihQ flight simulotort of a NtTD- port Beacil firm. Page 21 . • • • ,..,. 11 .. " " • N , .. ,. " " - ) ' • l ' ·' • • • \ " t • ) • ~ DAILY PILOT .. ' ' ' '"' . "' t MGM.1y, MW 22.. 1971 DAILY PILOT ltlft P ..... 'IT WAS VERY DANGEROUS. I HAD HOPED I WOULD MAKE IT. l'M GLAD I DID.' D. 0. Masco Makes Good on His Gr•at Escape Off the Seal a.ach Pitr ~ ~Escape Artist Lives t ; Through 'Death Dive' MASCO BEFORE DIVE Chained, Cuffed ind Weighted From Page 1 IRVINE .•. tf it has to be on three (fifferent pell· tiona." Burt.on noted that lime Is at.artlng to play an important £actor in the aignature campaign. CCI had 90 days from the date It filed Ill notice of intent to circulate petitions to get the al.gnaturu. That paptr was filed Feb. 22, he pointed out. ORAHGI COAST DAILY PILOT OllAHCiE COAST PUllLl$111NI) COMPANY Rebert N. w,,, Pr11:011>I tlld PuDll""-' J 1tli: R. Curl1y Viti Prt1id.nl t lld Ci4nwtl IMMttf' Tk•m•• IC1tvil lldl1or Th•"''' A. Mu rphi~• M111111nt lfdll'Or Ch1rlt1 H. Looi Ritll1rd I'. Ni ll ... Hillt"' foll~l91nu E"ll Ofl. CDIN MH• Offk • JlO W11t B1y Slr11t M1!1!~9 Addr111 : P.O. loir 1560, ,2626 OtMr Offl«t N"'POrl 1111c~· JW Ncwcort 'uu:orv1rd l.IOllnl IHCPI! '1:' l'Oft•t A .... l'Wll Hu~U1111to• l!tJ(~: 1'tn &11th 8oul•vtrd S•~ '''"""'" * Nottfl II Cimino R••I , ......... 1114) 642·4]21 . C:loulflffl Ad""""At 64.l·S67t (°""91'1t, 1'11, OO'll'ICI (on! ,,u.11~,.. c.,,.att1, ,.. """"' 11ot1tt. 111u1lfl!IO"'I. UIOWLll ffloH\91' Ir ltl~l<ltl'Ml'lll ~119111 "''' .. ,.,......vcM •lt-t 1pecltl JM- ,...1,11M .. ~t ·-· hc:.W cttJJ potlDet "'"' •I Me-' 81tdl Dr>d C:0.11 M.... (1HIO<'~lt, SlltlloC•l .. lti'I 111 CD"'lw U .• -l'l!yt llJ' -II U II ,.,._.,, ll'llllD.., ••llM!IDN, t2 JS -•Illy, I . By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of fflit DtHJ Plltt Miff Escape artist D. D. 1'1asco completed his "Dive To Death'' into the 1Jattrs off the Seal Beach pier Saturda.y and lived to tell about It. The :Jl..year old restraint breaker b1ck· ed his boast that he could "do anything Houdini ever did" by freeing himself from two pairs of handcuffs 25-feet of chain, three padloeka and a 5G-pouod weight whlle at the bottom of the ocean. A crowd of about 1,000 per1on11 watched him complete this stunt in 16 feet of water. He took only ~seconds to lree bimsell from the bond. "A hoax," cried aome watching <lff the pier. But those who had been in the bobbing vessel with Masco, anchored a few feet off the pier knew it wasn 't. Al l of the locks, aa well as Masco hlmlelf were available for lnlpectlon. Malco'a bllldl trembled IJld hll race turned aimJoo Uthe cuffs Wert snapped around hll wrl1la IJld Ille d>aln Ued UpUy around his body. ll1le padlocks ¥.We attached behind hi.a back. "I wu a little apprehenalve ," 111d the mpow>d e1<1pe artlat afterwll'd. ''I'd never been in the ocean before." AJ two divers readied their aqualuna:•. Maaco first placed one lei over the boat's transom, then the other, and finally guahed lnto the wa~r. Only a white cln:le <lf foam remained on the l\Uface u Muco w11 en the sandy tea-bottom. working hi• m11lc on the locks. And IOOiler than u:pected, a lhock of red halr breakin& throua:h the rurfact of the water signaled that he had com· pleted hll e1<1pe. Back <lD board, the drenched Muco lit a IO!ll·stemmed pipe IJld llld, "It ~·u very danaerOUJ. I had hoped that l would make I~ and I'm &lad I did." The dive wu the result or a challena:e by one ol Masco'a lrtenda, Ralpb Yll'lltll, of AlbambrL Harbor Dwellers Launch Traffic Victims' Drive Friends and a Harbor' Area service club are poollnl their eflorll to aid two lamilles who each lost a teenaaer in a tragic traffic actldent 17 daya ago. One is solely supported by a work.in&: mother and the other had no insurance covering hospitaliuiUon and death of their son. Claire Arbuckle, 14, of 2002 Maple St .. and Edward Hernandez, 19, of 2163 National Ave ., both Co!!ta Mesa, were killed and two other teenagers injured. Miss Arbuckle's brother Paul. 17, re-. mains In serious condition at Hoa& Memorl1l Hospital sultering brain in· juries it was inlU1Uy expected would prove fatal. ''His specialist Is hopeful now. He can see stins ot improvement .'' says t.1rs. Mary Jane Jones, a close friend ()f the Arbuckle family. Medical Insurance will cover 1 ma jor share of hospitalization and cart, but Mrs. Arbuckle, an induatrial assembly worker with eight children , hasn't worked liince Lhe tragedy. "They didn't have too much and the monfy from her salary hll stopped comt.nc ln," says Mn. Jone1. The Arbuckle family came to Costa Mesa from Glasco. Scotland. 13 years ago, whert the husband and father still rernalns with two !IOnl. Lem11.ng of tht family's plight. tht Nev,.port Harbor Exchange Club Board or Oire<'.tora pledied $100 and uraes furthtr member contribution. Club omctr Cal Sttwart. Newport Beach Parka end Recreation director, says 11nyone desiring to aid thl Arbuckle and Htm1ndea famille1 can do so throuah ~ club. Funds may ff sent to P.O. Box 1022, Newport Stach, d•l&Mtfd for t h a t humanttarltn use. ~~~~~~~~~~- From Page J AMBUSH ... N.C., opened up with the 40mm duster guns. Lore and Sgt. Drayl<>n Markle, 23, St. Augustine, Fla., loaded frantically. "Gel them, da.mmil!" yelled Osborne, pointing to tbe muzzle flashes of North Vietnamese mortars a mile away at the base of Co Roe Ridge. The pom-poma swiveled and sent more than 500 shells across tbe Xe Poo. River into Laos. Tbe mortars were aelenced. "l t.biDk we go't them," said Osborne. "That mates four this week. Those damn ARVN sitting on top of the ridge have let the North Vietnamese move in riaht under lhem." He was referring to a South Vitt· namese marine base called Hotel 1, situated on top of Co Roe about a hall mile inside Laos. Osborne's plaloon moved on, passing the bluin& APC - an annored personnel carrier. "Poor bastards," 1ald Coons. Tbe duster crunched over 1ome ''C" rations ' and split a lleepi..ag bag that had been hurled off the wreckage. Feathers swirl· ed In itl wake as the men e1changed "V" signs ~·ith crewmen of another mechanized unit traveling in the opp01lte direction . Behind them mortars opened up again and Markle curse dsoftly: "They'll bit us again on the way back." More wrecked vehicles littered the roadway as the calumn pushed west. It passed two l75mm suns, ruined by North Vietnamese artillery fire, and another battered APC that had hit a mine. Farther up the road a bullet-riddled •luey helicopter blocked their way. They detoured around it and halted besJde the wreckage of an ambushed Jeep, ""here an American major had been killed the previous day. Mortars con· tinued to fall around their position and a lone 122mm artillery shell landed 20 yards: from one of the tracks. Its crew didn't even look up. They were busy hitching the 175mm gun to be towed back to Lana Vet. Then the tracks turned eutward. the PAC was still burning at the site or the first ambush when lbe North Viet- namese opened up a(ain. This t1me no one stopped. Gun.a bla.zinr. Osborne's column ractd thrOUgh the mortar and small-arms fire. The platoon sergeant pointed to a (loud or yellow smoke hangh1g over a bush. "See that? That's what an RPG loob like," he told his crew. From Page J OVERRUN • • • the Plain of Jars. The 10urces said U.S. and L&oUon planes were unabble to 1ttike effecUvely at the Commwtist-held positions because mosl of them are beavUy populated, moaUy with relu.a;ees. Knockly told new&mtn fl&hlini wu still in progress today. He ~aid the North Vietnam.ea launched aboul 150 mortar and rocket l'OWldl against 15even government polltlons Saturday night and early Sunday. Most were directed at the Luang Prabang airport and the headquarters or the first military region, which comm and 1 northwest LaOll. Thongphan said the heav\e~t fighting \\'as taking place two to five miles northeast and east of the airport. He gave no details on casualties. f\.1ilitary IOW'ces said between 10 and 20 rocket and mortar round! were luanched early today againsl the airfield and nearby military in1tallatlona. They Eaid one ammunition depot near the airfield received a dirttt hit which caus- ed a "thunderous explosion." Prime f\1\n.IJter Prince S o u v a n n a Phouma flew 10 Wane Praban1 thil momina fOf a first-hand view of the gituatioo and dama1e c1uaed by the "'eekend shellin1. With him abGard the Air American plane was Finance 1'1inlaler Slsouk NI'! Champ1ss1k, who also is deputy minister for defeiut. Sourcts said Souvanna planned to hlvt 11n audience with King Savang V1tthan1 , who has refused to leave hla pilace .at the royal capital. ind bas (lnctled a trtp to pre1lde over stat! ctlebrauon1 or armed form day Tuesday In VI~ tiane. • ' City Seeks ' News About POW'Son' Exactly lhree years ago today, Air Force Maj, Don Lyon climbed into the cramped cockpit of his jet fighter aircraft and new a routine mission over Norlh Vietnam. He didn't come back. And word of his welfare has not come back either. His pretty brunette wife, 1 University Park resident. doesn·t know If .!he is a "'id ow, but she hopes lo obtain news of her husband through the efforl.9 of the people of Laguna Beach. Maj. Lyon was recenlly "adopted'' by lhe Art Cclony as a symbo l of ~m for the 1,600 Americans either held prisoner by Nortb Vietnam or miss· ing in action. Today in Don Lyon Day and representatives of Ccncem for Prisoners of War, a TUstin organization. began promoting concem for L'yon. The group hopes to prompt 1,600 Llguna Beach residents to write letters to the government of North Vietnam askin1 ••where Is Don Lyon? Bumper gtickera and wrist bracelets with Lyon's name on them will also be sold at tables set up at shopping areas in the city. The tables will remain at the various locations, a spokesman for the group said. until 1,600 letters, one for each POW-MIA, are sent to Hanoi. Printing of 5,000 copies of the Hanoi · letter was financed by the Irvine Company. The tables are located at Boat Canyon Shopping Center, Monarch Bay Plaza, World Savings and Loan and the Alpha Beta Shopping Center in South Laguna, Resignation Of Hurlburt Faces Council The Newport Beach City CcUJlcil tonight will act on the resignation of City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and is expected to immediately launch a search for a succeuor. Hurlburt sald today he would submit his letter of realgnalion to the council at this afternoon's study session. He is expected to give 60 days' notice. Mayor Ed Hirth said today the council will likely deliberate methods o r recruitins a replacement. When Hurlburt w1a hired six years ago the recruiting was handled by a conaultin& firm . However, several coun· cllmen now are erpru1lng a desire to have the 15earch conducted by a cowr cllmanlc committee. From Page 1 BOOKSTORE. • • heavy support from clergymen, church· goera and other coocemed citizens in decldlng aplnlt permit approva l. The attempted adult book.store and movie film ban heads the 7:30 p.m. agenda followed by 10 other items. One rezonlng petition seeking to switch 1 l&rae parctl or land on Newport Boulvard btween Victoria to Bay streets from C.2 to Ct.CP zoolng will be withdrawn and tabled indefinitely. Planners are favorable toward the change. but questJons must still be re.solved between landowner K e it h Collins and the state Division of Highwa)'I lor Ne~-port Freeway rlghto(lf· way 1cqulsltio11, 1cwrding to city of- ficials. Public hearings are also scheduled for two apartment projects o[ 10 units at 2332 Elden Ave., and 12 units at 622 Hamill<>n St., with Philip A. Splller as appllcant. DAILY PILOT Sltlf l'IMN 1 ON THE BUTTON -Steve Cannady, 11. (mackinaw) clowns \vith Sugar Ray Robinson for appreciative audience of Keith Christman (center) and Ken Fether (striped shirt). Boys met the former champ following his appearance Friday at Costa 11.lesa Chamber of Commerce banquet. Sugar Ray Receives Aw¥.d At Mesa Chan1her Event By STEVE MITCHELL OI flM OlllJ P1191 J"ff Su11ar Ray Robinson's Youth Foun- dation got a boost Friday night at the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce an- nual membership banquet at the Mesa Verde Country Club. Guest speaker for the 21st annual event, veteran mlddle\lo'eight boxing champion Robinson, was Costa Mesa's Heart Award recipient for 1971. Dick Lane, of television and RoUcr Derby fame, Jntroduced the SO.year-old boxer to the several hundred Harbor Area businessmen and wives who arri\·ed for the installation banquet. Sugar R.ay described his foundation for youngsters and explained his method or "getting to the kids." He said his youth foundation Is im· parting values through the use of sports. "If you can keep a kid active in sport!. or at least interested in sporting activities. he won't have time for the drugs," Robinson explained. .. We can't be 11tlsfied with throwing these youtha In jail <ln narrotics charges. We've got to find a cure and ~ is my contribution toward thl1 61<1." Following Sugar Ray's presentation, Gordon A. Martin, 1970 Chamber presi· dent, gave the boxer the coveted Heart Award. "This award goes to Sugar Ray Robinson. boxing champion and humanitarian." Martin quipped. "Both titles flt him like a 11Jove." The Chamber also presented Roblnaon wiUt a check for his foundation and cash from raffle ticketa. Gordon Martin then lnttodwced new Chamber of Ccmmerce president, Joe R. Metcalf, manager of Seara, Roebuck and Company. Metcalf presented plaques to out1oing Chamber members Jack Hammett, Kerm Rima, J .C. Humphreys, Melvin Schinkel and Cordon Martin. In presenting Martin's plaque, Met calf said. "If the Chamber does as well as Gordon did, ~·e will pass the l ,000 mark this year." Other members of the executive com· mittee include Gene Bergeron. first vice president; Vaughn N. Redding, second \'ice president ; Werner E 1 ch tr, treasurer. This year's Board of Directors for ' . the Chamber include : Thomas A. Baume, Thomas L. Chandler, Kenneth S. Clark, Jack Curley, Charles E. Edward!, Alton L. Geiser, Roy E. June, John C. Leonhardt, Roy r-.1cCardle, Dr. Robert B. Moore, Mrs. Lucille Pinkley, Samuel T. Parker. Ray A. Russell. Robert G. Vande Verde, Clifford M. \Vesdorr and Frank F. Zrebiec. Fron1 Page J LAOS DUEL. • • well as cloud cover, haze and dust block- ed oot later sightings of the Communis t ''larger" than P'Ii6 amphibious tank!, which means they \\'ere either T34s or the large T54s, which so far are not yet known 1G be committed to battle. The United Stales has massed artillery and tanks near the border to protect the withdrawing South Vietnamese and Americans in the area said they bad been under heavy Communist mortar and rocket attacks and had lost a number of armored personnel carriers (APCS). South Vietnamese military spokesmen said tonight government troops support.. ed by air strikes killed at least 600 Com· munist soldiers in fighting through the weekend about six ml!es west of Lang Vel, the former Green Beret outpost four miles inside South Vietnam from the Xe Pon River boundary. They put government losses in the fighting at 85 deed and 38 wounded. The U.S. Command said waves of U.S. jet bombers for the second con- secutive day pounded missile sites, an- tiaircraft positions and "related support facilities ·• inside North Vietnam today. They said the two days of strik.!s ()Ver the North "'ere the heaviest l!ilnce the abortive attempt last September to free American war prisonjrs from the Son Tay prisoner of war camp. The command called them "protective reaction" strikes and said they were in retaliation for "attacks on our unarm- ed reconnaissance aircraft and attack! an aircran. interdlcting North Vietnamese supply routes In Laos. ONE Of THE OUTPERFORMERSJ ® PIONEERe SX·770 AM·FM Multiplex Stereo lteceiver Butd yeur 1terto l')'ttem lftlUnd tf'lis wm1nt tn1tMMnt. An lolld sl1!1, 11 ollers 70 watts of rnuaie power eutput. lnriuts lor magnetic Ind ceramic phonos, mferophone, tap.9 monitor •nd •uxni.ry, Two •~Ir outputs rn1ke ll ~eel &1 •power IOUl'C9 lor any line attr90 syai.m. 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Leaders cf San Clemen~·s flourishing hqUine project begun on a grass-roots A!evel last year are bristling this week a ver what they tenned an attempt lo 1horl circuit µie program by "poachers" ln Sante Ana. TJie local hotline effort -supported tntirel,r from local service . club con· tribulionl -apparMUy became affiliated with another separate venture from San- ta Ana. Al1d the locals don't like it. Bud Schee1e, one of the originators cif ·the San Clemente project, said tbe problems began when solicitors arrived in San Clemente several weeks ago to canvass residentl and businesses for donations to Human Outreacb of Santa Ana. It ii a bona fide hoUine aervkt, Scheele said. The trouble begao, he said, when the solicitors told donors that the funds would be &hared with the local hotline service. Some businessmen consented to donate. Then they phoned tbe local hotline service to verify the solicitors' asserted claims. Local volunteers aaid there was ••definitely no agreement" to share funds. "I contact«: the oflicWI ot the Santa Ana service, Scbeele-eJ:plltned this~. "and .wa.s told tbat it Wll a mistake and the volunteer canv1sstr1 wen a 'bit over.ua.lous', then they usurtd me it Wouldn't happen igain," he aald. 'Mtat was about two weeka ago. Since tlien, however, Sc~le aaid the Cll)'(IS~tS . relUl'Jl~ . "Jn~ covered the ist ' ur Nixons Set Week's Stay In Clemente Pr~sident and Mrs. Nixon will arrive in San Clemente Friday for a week-long atay . at La Casa Pacifica, informed · sources said today. r It will be the second San Clemente \'isit of the year for the first family. No · confirJllation of the reported trip bas yet rome from Was~ington, D.C. PreSidential aides generally annoµnct auch trips twe or three da ys In advance. If next week's stay follows the trend aet by the Jan. 6-12 visit by the Ni.J:oMt It will be a quiet ene with more re~ than work. On the last visit, the President found the weather chilly along the South Coast, but sWJ managed some walks on his private beach. He celebrated his birthday during the last stop, changed the name of his borne to La Casa Pacifica and paid a visit to students at Concordia Elementary School nearby. Most of his working hours were spent drafting h.iS State of the Union Musage and meeting with his top economic ad- visers. Clemente Police Use Chemical To Subdue Man Sti: police officers and .!I. shot of an aerosol chemical were needed this morn· tng to subdue a violent young San Clemente man who locked himself in an auto al police headquarters this morn· lng and refused to emerge . The man, in his early 20s. app11.rently was suffering a psychotic drug reaction, officers said. He initially was driven to headquarters by his father. The young man had been wandering through the nigtJt and had severe burl\I on his fingers and cuts and other wounds elsewhere on his body. ,. ' · OAILY. '"-OT"tt.tf ,,.... 'SAN 'CLEMENTE HIGH'S MARCHING BAND STEPS OUT.ISMAR.TLY IN SAN JUAN . Thoutands Thronged to Parade Which Highlightetl WHk.fong Cere.br11!on ' Capo Crowded Thousaruls . Watch Swallow Parade San Juan. Capistrano was bulging at the seams Saturday as thousands of people lined the streets to watch the 13th annual Fiesta de Las Golondrinas Parade. Marching ·off with , the sweepstakes tr.ophy for the best entry in the parade w.as. Newport ·Harbor High School's. band and drill team. Other first place bands were Santa Ana High. School: senior division; Isbell ()f Santa Paula, junior division : Burke's Pipe and Drum Band: Whitter Cavaliers, and lhe Norco Orum and Bugle Corps. Flrst-p\ace trophies were taken home by the Mystics of Fontana for their CQ\or guard; Eleanor Badsturner as "morning star" for the best single marching entry: the Leisure World Hikers·for the be1l walking group; Santa Ana High for its drill team. Capistrano: best non professional float was Frances Williams and her pony cart pulled by "Pee Wee", and the best school float v.1as Marco Forster Junior ·High. Among numerous awatds given for eQUestrian entries was a first to the · Marco forster Junior High for i~ . mounted group ; a first to Tony Hernande!': and Salvador Lamas for the'ir plain working Western pair, and a first Lo the Gilbert Aguirre family for the best family group. Second-place in th• family group went to hfayor Tony Forster and his family. Salvador Lamas also won 1 prize in the ''hairiest man In town" rontest for his distinguished beard. The best comic tntry award! went W Timotby King, first, and Judy Rose, second. · ... O' Byrnes Zoo Ope;i" Where'? 'Mr. and · Mrs. l'ted · O'B)'l'nel · of Capistrano Highlands wish they weren't so .popular. Shortly · after moving into their new home they were invaded - by a weasel. When the animal c o n t r o I authorities removed tbat pest they breathed easier, but not for Ieng. They ntxt found a skunk ln their house . Other varmint& havt included several mice, two snaktll, and two large tarantulas. "l don't know how they get in,'" said Mrs. O'Byrnes. '' We ' r fl fanatica about closing and locking doors." Their neighbors haven't had any problems, so they've dubbed the O'Byrnes' ruidence the "zoo." · entire town with the' s.ame pitch u befDre." · Scheele, a local lMurance executive, said the ls.sue 1s not over money. "We receive our e1penae:s from local service club..'! and agencies as group donations. We doo't beat on lndividuals doors and ask for money. "We don't want to share what's been a>llected by · the group in ·Stnta Ana, either," he said adamantly. "What we want to make clear is that no matter what anyone else aaya, we are not sharing any money collected by Human Outreach of Santa Ana. "This hurts our Image. We don't like to speak before a local buslnessman at a service club meeting, then turn around and put the touch oo him at bi.I doorstep or office." .nsane Down the M •• ISSIOD Trail Saddleback CofC Manager Named . SApDbEBApK V AI,LEY -Ji mMan- lon has been named temporary roAM&er of the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Comm~. . ,.. Tl'P'''" Al . 8t.i• who _,;....., .. ~.~ .. dt.!O ~ ii'"-i ;;ir~ .......,.... . p .firm. ~,~dea in ELT•e.~ ......... ,, ')' .. !I (;IMH!S · . · · · · · MISSION VIEJO -. A yoga ·e~ t. foi:minc at the Montanoso Recreation Center of all members of· the community. · PeMy Jessee will instrutt the class which will begin Wednesday at I· p.m. The clas1 will be ·held on socceeding WedRudays. e:x:cept during Ea1ter VICI· ti on. , Far . lnformatioo c.all the center 1t 137-4084. Salling Le11ons LAKE FOREST -Sailing lessons will be offered to Lake Forest resident! 1tarting Tuesdiy. Children's classes will meet on Tuesday aiid Thursday · •fternoons from' 3 to S p.m. Adult classes will mtet on Saturday from 3 to 5 p.m. beglnning"March 27. fer fee information and registration call the Beach and Tennis Club, 837-6100. Di88ident Students Agree to End Strike OAKLAND <UPtl -Dissident 1tudenta who forced MerrlU College to .dOlt for five days last week have agreed to end tbeir dimJpUons and "set on with the bwines:ii of education." A student dele1atkm, led by Black Panther Douglaa Miranda, entered a faculty meeting late Sunday · olght and made the announcemedl The campua beginl final 68minations today and both faculty and studenta met durln1 the weekend in eUorta to ease tenalona. Judge Nixes Death Trial For Suspect By TOM BARLEY 01 .... OallY "'"' , .. ff Steven · Craig Hurd t.oday wa1 ruled to be in:sane and unable: to atand trial in Orange County Superior C'.ourt for the murder of Mission Viejo teacbet Floren<;e Nancy Brown. Judge Ronald Crook.shank sent tbe in- year-old transient to · Atascadero State Hospiltl for an indefi;ite tenn after reading tbe reportl of six psychiatrista:. "He will remain there until such tlme as ~e re1ains bis aanlt1," the veteran jurist commented. Defedse attorney William Gamble depfetecl h~ fidgeting, twitching client as .. crazier than a bool owl" in urging lb.Ct flurd.'s form of committment ~d not contain the "legal loopholes" that enabled "Candle Light Killer" Robert W. Liberty to regain bis freedom. The: late Liberty was released from mental custody and immediately used his freedom to kill two men before meeting his death at the bands of a fellow inmate in a San Diego jail cell . "There's no doubt this man is insanl!'," Gamble commented. "If be is faking he is an excellent actor and he: should get the academy award for fooling six psychiatrists." Chief deputy district attorney James Ernight agreed with Gamble and added letters written by Hurd to a young Santa Ana girl to the pile of rep<rU placed before Judge Crookshank. Those letters contain the com(llent by Hurd that he was personally responsible for the earthquake that rocked Soutbe:rn · California a tT)onth ago. Hurd, manicled hand and foot , shook his head and smiled whlle the comment was made. He displayed a complete lack of interest· in . the court hearing and refused to acknowledge his mother and sister who were seated in the courtroom . . Judge Crookshank's decision reverses the earlier ruling made by Judge Robert Corfman. Judge Corfman decided after reading reports and listfining to Gamble that Hurd was sane and be ordered the young drifter to face trial. Hurd Is accused of ·being the leader of a gang of drug·tak.ing drifters who killed Mrs. Brown. 31, of El Toro, Junt 2 and removed portions of her body In Satan worshipping rites before: burying the remains near the Ortega Highway. The victim was uninjured in the severe 1truggle with the officers. He later was taken under restraint to the psychiatrict 'facility at Orange County Medical Cente r for treatment. Several officer1 received scrapes and bruises in the fracas which occuned at •bol.lt 8:15 a.m. Sweepstakes winner in the float divJ •. sion was Dana Point's Alamo Restau- rant. Best commercial float was the El Adobe Restaurant; best civk float was the Chamber of Commerce or San Juan Viejo Library Dedicated One other member of the gang. Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 17, will be sen4 tenced Friday to what Is likely to be a life term in state prison for the rela'ted killlng 24 houra earlier of service 11.!tion attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. OA.ILV ,II.OT tttff Nltft TWINS RECEIVE FIRST LIBRARY CARDS AT MISSION VIEJO Let Anne and Ellen Marlt Flt1ger1ld of C1pi1tr1no Hlghl1nds • By PAMELA HALLAN OI 11111 OtHY 'lltt Stefl The !ipacious Spanish atyle Minsion Viejo library was dedicated . Saturday with fanfare: and plaitdits from a h~t of dignitaries. Mrs . Carma Leigh California State Librarian, praised the county for pro- viding a quick and reliable source of information for people in the Orange County Library System's southern region. "The phenomenal growth of Orange County is well known," said Mrs. Leigh. "But if such growth · does not provide for .growth of the mind it contains lbe 1 ~ds of its own de1tructi9n ." · ,~)le said the 'power of inferm9'Uon • :.r.•b'1~Do ·bot111deries. •It · is · a qomfnon .Y'~e "Wltith ·unit&. 1he: Mrld. "Books are as impOrtant as bread. The ideas In them s~d. ~ind . ~verJ human being. This librarjv~lth '6old and subsidiary materials stMd! ?b; and makes enrichment possible ." li.frs. Leigh said the most fundament.tl object of a library Is i, c::oinmunla~ ideas from one mlnd t41' 1ootNir .• Stilt' t<lucation through a public library ii a lifetime proct.Ss -one ls never too old or too young. She said Lhe Ubrary aids all le'vels, from researchers to homemake.rs. Even the schMI dropout often becomea the library "drop in.'' "The quiet. ad of e!lablishing a library has a lasting effect/' ahe said. "ldeu are durable, accessible, and combustible. Ideas await the apar:k of the: human mind and this Ui what enditm. The quiet ect of establishing a library can make a very loud noise in the world." The Jib'rary q a. ronstant source for Updating jnfOrftlttion. ,.,There is~ no Wa'f on earth to ~h a ~)ege ' 1tudent , whit he-Med& tO 'know 25 yeatr •hlence 1 and tbeie ii T'IO•l!•Y tdiJcation can relate 1 • ltua(llt to 11 world he needs -for a lifetime exctpt through allbrary. Ml"~.Fte1gh ·aaid the dedicaUon ot~ the llbrar{ $hould be Uw: greatest bls'torical event to date· In Orange Countyibecaoae the ideas thlt. now .tnrough it .-11r· "'-'e the moat fir rtachin1 effect \of ·tbe ' . I future., • : Sbe praiser! the ·county system for ' ill" conununlc1tion and lendin& proctSS whereby each library has accua to matertal In all the: others. She. said despite tM difficulty In beginning the Orange County ayatem It bas been worth It and tbe Mluk>n Viejo dedication iS a wonderful way to mark It& 50th an- niversary. Master of Certmonifll £or the program wu Supervisor Ralph Clark who ln· lrocluced State Senatora 0 e n n i 1 Carpenter and James: Whetmore and county librarian Harry Rowe. Other dignitaries present wtl'I: Cf Featberly, former COU1't)' npervtsor. Tom f••.U. .. •dmlnjgtra)I" a!d• lo Supervtaor llon ~lllP""' archillct1 Layne· Tom •nd" Jan Trugl(ler, J. B. Hook. vlce. preskltnt ar "the .Miller Conotruction Co., Lindo Huber. Mils Mill.Ion Viejo, Mra. Alicia Coooper. Friend.! of the Library~and Ellen Matie and •Lee Anne Fitzerald, I · ytar Oki twin daughter1 of Mrs. Joyce l'ltqerald who received their·flrst library cards. .,,bstnt waa R. J. O'Neill of the: MiMlon Viejo Company who was l1uded •for the compan)'\i ienerOus donaUoD of land for tbt llbrar)' 1it1. OraBge Weather H&zy sunshine is the best the weatherman can offer for Tuesday. following cloudy skies in the room- ing-hours with temperatures reach- ing 68 degrees alOng the roast. INSWE TODAY You con learn l.o fll/ and still keep 11our fee' cm the ground by ..,;~g f)lg~t 'Jimw/<jtots of /i New- Pof'I s .. ch finh.' P•o• 21: · ... ... • ...,_ I C.Ulw!ll1 • ...... .. CPIK•lllt u, • "'"""'' -.. Cl-HI .. .... or.,... C911•tv " CMtlc.1 " ,,,, .. ,.,tlf' " c ... , ....... H '"'" u.u ........... " l!Olet *"''" 11·1> ....... " ·-,. ••ltwltl ·-• -.... H 1•1"1 .. ~ ,. WM-• ·-· 11.u w~·• N••• ,,.,, .. _ " .... ·-.. ... u ... ,. II \ • • ' I l .. . • Z DAILY PILOT SC .. Petitions. Delayed Irvine Cityhood Drive Slo.wed By L. PETER KRIEG ot tht oau, ,. ... , ll•H The question of who may legally sign . petitions for an election to incorporate • the future city of Irvine Saturday stalled ~ • the planntd kickoff of a signup campaign. More than 100 residents of the future city gathered at the Alrporter lnn for • a breakfast rally but were told that technicalities will push back petitioning at least one week. The "technicalities" were described by · 50me leaders as simple stalling 1'clics on the part of county officials. pointed out. Burton also commented briefly on the furor raised by Santa Ana over inclusion af a 921).acre industrial ,section that Santa Ana had thought was going to be part of its tax base someday soon. Santa Ana has gone to court over the issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable to reason on a number of things, and hasn't been for the last 20 years. Burton cited a number of other in· stances in which he claimed are testimony to delays in the cityhood bid created by the county. -. DAIL'I' l'ILOT 1 .. H l'llltlll House Unit ~ 01\.s Service ·pay B~ost \YASHJNGTON (AP) -A two year draft extension nearly tripling President Nixon's pay boost incentive for a "zero draft" volunteer army was approved today by the House Anned Services Committee. The bill, which .,..•ould boost military pay and allowances especiaJly for junior enlisted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, was approved 36 to 4_ President Nixon had asked a $987 million raise ne:tt year, and the Pentagon projected the balance would be recom· mended the following year. The com· mittee folded both into one year. • John Burton, chairman of the Council · of the Communltles of Irvine, cityhoocl • sponsors, said the Orange County 'Counsel's Office Friday had declined to define who is entitled to sign the peti· tions. · "'nle law says only property owners '· may sign," Burton said, "but it is am· . · biguous in lls definitions of who owns He said plans for county to build a fire station near the Irvine Industrial complex have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't been furnished the legally acceptable descrip- tion of the Irvine boundaries until Wednesday -after asking for then1 a month ago. 'IT WAS VERY DANGEROUS. I HAD HOPED 1 WOULD MAKE IT. rM GLAD 1 DID.' D. 0. Masco Makes Good on Hi1 Gre1t Escape Off the Seal Beach Pier But chairman F. Edward Hebert (0- La .), pointed out the committee had not approved President Nixon's goal of achieving a •·zero draft" volunteer army by June 30, 1973, v.·hich is only a goal and ,,·as not in the bill the administration sent to Congress. property." He .said apparently the term could . · mean the fee owner only, or the one who pays taxes, or someone with a · lease-option or someone with on1y a lease. . The question is dirther complicated, he said, because the Jaw stipulates that only property owners of record the ·previous March 1 can sign. "Jn our case, this would be 1'.1arch I, 1970," he said. He explained thl! would make about a 2,()()1}.household difference and weigh -heavily on the number of signature! needed. CCI must oblain the slgnat~a of _ 15 pP..rcent of the property owners who, in turn, must represent 25 percent or the assessed valuation. "The latter is no problem," Burton &aid, pointing out that the Irvine Com· pany owns about 80 percent of the assess· ed valuation within the boundaries of the 18,000 incorporation area and "or· ficials there have invited us to come by with our petitions." Burton said CCI officials are taking the quesUon to the State Attorney General's Ofrice at once. He said he is hopeful there will be a clarification by next Saturday, "but -if there isn't, we'll just go get everybody's name we possibly can, even if it ha5 to be on three different peti· tiona:." Burton noted that time Is starting tG play an important factor in the signature campaign. CCI had 90 days from the date It · fl1ed tis notice of intent to circulate · peliUoru: to get the &ignatures. That paper was filed Feb. 22, he Capistrano Sets Study for Annex A study on the feasibility of annexing Capistrano Beach and Dana Point to the city of San Juan Capistrano will be presented at tonight's meeting of the City Council. The study, undertaken at the request af the Chambers of Commerce of both -beach communities, will include a review of the public workJ, planning, engineering and financial aspects of annexing the territory. The two communities represent half the &lie but twice the population of the San Juan Capistrano. They have attempted to incorporate three times but each time have failed. Director of Public Works T. J. Meadows said the slaff will not make a recommendation on the annexation but will merely present the findings of their study to the council. 0,AN•I ~OAIT DAILY PILOT OAAHG;X CO.UT PUll.ISHING COMl"AHY ll•Mrt N. We•' l"IWMtnl lilld "1.IOllMW J1ck ... c • ..i • ., VIA P,..IOelll 9M G-•I M.w\etW' Tholl'I•• IC.,,,11 ...... llie111e1 A. M.,,1.1111 Mu.lfl\nt IEl!lw Ch•rf•• H. Looi llcli,1r4 P. H.ln Allllf1n; ""'""kill E"""* Let-.._. Offke 111 FiJrett A••11uo s-c._... OMc. )OS Nortll ll C1111i110 l••I DAILV l"l\.OT, wfflil tllflldl Is ~ tht .,_ ,.,_, ill putillill'IM .ieitt •e• s- .._, Ill ..... ,. .. •"*-,.,. UltlN ~ ~I kOdl. 0. .. MtM, Hull!~ 1-'t. l""-'911'1 Vellf¥, .... 0..-t'lf c..p.1,_ .,.. ktNIDMdl. •lrit .... -, ........ OlllnM. l"fkll!U ,,...ftllt -.nt .. •I Ja W•I .. ., Sir..:, CO.le ~ '•'••••• cn•t MJ-4JJ1 a ....... .u...,.. .. 1 .. 1 ... 11 S.. C' nteAI D• I h& T1l1~1• 4fJ-44n ......................... , , ....... 4f4.t4'6 CW'l"\ftrt• tf'l'I, Otwlf9• C-Ut itwellsllN ~f. No -,....,.., M ... trerlMI. • ~ --., .nwf""'*'" ......... I .. ~ wtfloWI ..,.... ,.,. -·~'--· S...ONt Cf.H ,. .... ,. .. el H~ .. Id ~ c..tle M991t, C•I""""•· IAtl '""»+ ..., eartW U.U INl!lflll¥1 lly '*'" llJt _,.."' rnH1t1•' .. 1111111'9nl, •.If ~. /, The Saturday morning rally was sponsored by the newJy.formed City of Irvine Now (COIN), headed by Andrew May, who also address the gathtring ?n the v~iOU! chores confronting the incorporation movement. Heart Disease Tests Planned The 300 civilian employes o[ El Toro Marine Corps Air Station will be screened for susceptibility to heart dl3ease in a program to be held Tuesday through Thursday. The voluntary screening is designed to detect abnormalilies associated with a. greater ri!k of developing heart disease, Dr. Gerald Whipple said. He heads the Orange County Heart Associa- tion's community services committee which is conducting the pilot program. Base medical technicians will assist and the air station will share expenses for equipment and extra personnel, Capt. V. G. Benson, director of medical services at El Toro, said. Results of the exams will be con- fidentiaL 1961 LBHS Class 10th Meet Set 1.1 ember! of Laguna Beach High Schoofs class of 1961 are being rounded up for a 1().year reunion celebration planned for 1.tay 22 In the Hotel Laguna. Committee for the reunion ha! al· tempted to contact all the 1961 grads but has been unable to locate a number of them, according to William Tinkey of South Laguna. Member! of the clas!I. or friend s who cou1d help locate members. are requested to write Class of 1961, P.O. Box 362, South Laguna , or call 49!M083. The reunion will feature a buffet dinner and entertainment. Pope Will See Tito VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul Vl will receive Yugoslavian President Joseip Tito for an official visit to the Vatican next Monday, the VaUcan an- nounced today. Stilting Satta ~~~~~~~~~~- Festival Aides To Open Sales Early This Year \Vith mail order requests f r o m members topping all previous records, Festival of Arts official!!I have decided to open box office aale of Pageant o( the Masters tickets early this year. To accommodate persons who would rather pick up their tickeLs in person than wait for mailing, lhe box office will be open April 1 through April 10 from noon to 4 p.m. Persons who have requested ticket order forms may make their selections and call at the box office for their tickets if they wish. The box office wtll close Easter Sunday and reopen April 15, remaining open Thursdays through Sundays on1y from noon to 4 p.m. until the Pageant opens July 16. To date. 32,500 ticket order forms have been mailed out to persons re- questing them. Sliot Kills Dog; Pellet Hits HQrne A large female collie running loose in a San Clemente neighborhood was lcilled by a shotgun blast over the weekend. One of the pellets from the shot penetrated a Vt'indOw of a nearby home. Police said they received a report of a loud blast and a yelping dog at 141 Loma Lane Saturday night. Carol Scofield, who lives at the ad- dress. said she heard the blast and moments later noticed the dying dog in her garage. The next moming the v.· om an discovered a broken window. Police said the damage was caused by a stray pellet. The Identity of the dog's owner \\•as not immediately determined. The in- cident occurred at 8:39 p.m. .. A V(lry tall Uncle Sam leads about 200 followers of evangelist Carl Mcintire to stage a ''Victory in Vietnam" rally on the steps of the State Capitol. The sWl·walklng symbol of America recently paraded in San Clementr. (1 I Escape Artist Lives Through 'Death Dive' By RUDI J\'IEDZIELSKI Ol JM 0..111 l'I .. , 111!f Escape artist D. D. Masco completed his "Dive To Death" into the waters olf the Seal Beach pier Saturday and Uved to tell about it. The 32-year old restraint breaker back· ed his boast that he could "do anything Houdini ever ,did" by freeing himself from two pairs or handcuffs 2~feet of chain, three padlocks and a SO-pound weight while at the bottom of the ocean. A crowd of about 1,000 persons watched him complete this stunt in 16 feet of water. He took only 53-seconds to free himself from the bond. "A hou," cried some watching off the pier. But those ·who had been in the bobbing vessel with Masco , anchored a few feet off the. pier knew it wasn·t All or the JockJ, as well as 1'.fasco himself were available for inspection. Ma!co's hands trembled and his face turned crimson aa the. culls were snapped around hi! wrists and the chain tied tighUy around his body. The padlocks were attached behind his back.· "I was a little apprehensive," said the 270-pound escape artist afterward. ••J'd never been in the ocean before." As two divers readied their aqualungs, Masco first placed one leg over the boal's transom, then the other, and finally gushed into the waler. Only a Y.'hite. circle of foam remained on the surface as hfasco .,..,as on the sandy sea-bottom, working his magic on the locks. And sooner than expected. a shock of red hair breaking through the surface or the water signaled that he had com- pleted his escape. Back on board. the drenched h1asco lit a long-stemmed pipe and said, "It \\·as very dangerous. I had hoped that I would make it, and I'm glad l did.'' Tiie dive was the result of a challenge by one of Masco·s friends , Ralph Yarnell, of Alhambra . Nexl month. hlasco claims he .,..,ill e-0nducl another dive . this time in \Vat.er off the Santa Monica pier. "I'll be wearing three pairs of handcuffs, leg irons inside a crate with a weight on top. \Ye'Jl see how that work! out," he laughed. MASCO BEFORE DIVE Cha ined, Cuffed and Weighted Infant Born During w·rcck; l\(otlier Di es QUINCY, II!. <UPI) -A woman more than eight n1onths pregnant y,·as killed but her infant daughter has sur.·ived a one-car accident after being forced through the n1othcr's abdorninal \va\l by !he impact. The eighl·pouncl. 14·ounce girl was reported in satisfactory condition at St. 1.1ary's Jlos pital today. "There ap- parently are no con1 plications," a hGspital spokesman said. ONE OFJTHE OUTPERFORMERS! 00111 R1 clff "l don't think they can ever get a volunteer army wiless they draft it," Hebert told newsmen. "But y,•e're going to give him all -the help he \vants to Implement it. "\Ve're giving him all the rope he \\'ants," Hebert said. The committee rejected an effort by Rep. Charles \V. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohio); to extend the draft on1y one year, 30 to 9. The bill sent toward the House floor v.·ould extend the draft two year! beyond June 30, give President Ni.Ion authority to abolish student defennents including divinity student deferments and add a third year of non-military service for conscientious objectors. Hebert said the conscientious objector provision would not change any of the present requirements for obtaining that status but he said he believed it would be easier for draft boards to grant the status in questionable cases. "In my personal opinion." he said, ''I don 't think the draft boards would \vrestle with it so much when they know the man will serve three years." The four members voting against th1 bill were Whalen and Reps. Alvin E. O'Kons ki (R·Wis.), h1ichael Harringto11 {O·Mass.) and Floyd V. Hicks (0-Wash.). The pay raise is similar in total dollars lo the recommendations of t b e President's Gates Commission last year to replace the draft with an all volunteer army. Petitions Still Circulating Over High Rise More than 3,000 silllf_tures have been obtained to dale on illtiative petitions seeking to block high rise in Laguna Beach. a spokesman for Village Laguna 1;aid today. Although only 1.050 v a I ida led signatures are needed to qualify th• petitions. the spokesman said. circulation of the papers \\'ill continue at least through the first announced deadline of April 5 in an effort to obtain "a true picture of public opinion." If signatures of 15 percent of the community's registered voters are ob- tained and validated by the county clerk, th~ city_ ~n~il is obliged to adopt the height hm1tat1on ordinance or place it before the electorate. The proposed ordinance would limit buiddings throughout the city to a height of three stories or 36 feet above grade. Signatures on the qualifying pelition!I have been collected for the past-}d.5 days at shopping centers and by neighborhood circulators. lob lecUi ®1PIONEER9 SX-770 AM-FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver Sulld YoUr lfereo syttem •round ttiT.s versaliTe frtttrument All M>lid alale, It olfers 70 watts of music power outpuL l nputa lor magnetic and ceramic phonos, microphone. tape rroonltor and auxiliary. Two ~peaker outputs malte tt kl•al as a power soun:e lor any fine stereo sy.11em. Top quality c ircuitry plus. many refinements tound onty ln 'much more e11;pensfve un11s. Lunar Glow lunlng ac.le appears only .,,Ith Switch On.. Hovsed In a handsomely styled olled walnut c:at>lnoL Be preparod lor lho ullimate ln I~ Gfl.loymont. VISIT OUR NEW COMPLETE SOUND ROOM ONLY $249.95 COME 1N FOR A DDIOHSTRATION W• ha\1 racwitty Hdad a MW sound room te our st.Nr. Yov are l'"'lted te <em• In and aM ovr tll1pl•y of tM flneat aound equlpmlflt at big sawl,.,._ e PIONEER e J.V.C. e ·ELECTROPHONIC e WALD e GRANDSONIC e BSR 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. BUY, SELL, TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -B•twMn Horbor & Bn>Odway • I \ I I I I f . . . . -----" - • Lag11na Bea~h · • • • I VOL 64, NO. 69, 3 ·SECTIONS, l'4 'PAGES ' ORANGE CdUNTY, CAUFOP.llllA . ... ,. . -. •• • MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1971 . ... Today's Fin .. TEN CENTS Hurd· ·Held Insane • Ill Te~cher'·s .Cult Slaying By TOM BARLEY Of ttt. O.llr f'llOI il•ff Steven Craig Hu rd toda y was ruled to be insane . and unable to stand .U;lal in Orange County Superior Qiurt for the murder of Mission Viejo teacher Flor~nce Nancy Brown. Judge Ronald Crookshank sent lbe .20- year-old transient to Atascadero State Hospital for an indefinite term aft-er reading the reports of si..l psyi:hi3trists. "tie will remain there until such timt e s Zippi~g Alot19 Heeled over and hull down-if be had a bull-Don Rypinski of Laguna Beach steeri his stand sailor on two wheels~hard on the wind. For more !bout sand sailing, see Page 11. ' Lagunans Urging Hanoi Letters OnD011LyonDay ExacUy th ree years ago today, ·Air Force Maj . Don Lyon climbed int.o-4he cramped cockp it of his jet lighter aircraft and flew a routine mission over North Vietnam. He didn't come back. And word of his welfare has not comt back either. His pretty brunet le wlfe, e University Park resident. doesn't know tf she is a widow, but she hopes to obtain news of her husband through the efforts or the people of Leguoa Beach. · Maj. Lyon was recently "adopted" by the Art Colony as a symbol of concern for the l,600 Americans either held prisoner by North Vietnam or miss- ing in action . Today in Don Lyon Day and representatives of Concern for Prisoners of War, a Tustin organization, began promoting concern for Lyon, 'J1le group hopes to prompt 1,600 Laguna Beach residents to write letter1 as be1regain1 bis unlty;";the veteran jurist eom.mented: Defe'5f: attorney W~iain Gamble depictdl ~ fidgetln&, twitchlng client as "cruier than a boot O\VI" in urging that Hunt's form of committment should not contain the "legal loopholes" that enabled' "Candle Light Killer" Robert W. Liberty to regain his freedom . The late Liberty was released from mental custody and iinmediately used bis freedom te kill two · nien before ' lllfftln& hit deatll · al .Ibo halJds el .a fellow inmate in a Sao Dieso jail cell .. "Tbere 'a no doubt th11 man ii insane.,"' Gamble commentH. "I! bt i! faklq be i.t an excellent actor, and ~ dlOtdd get the academy 1w11d~for foOling 11.x psychiatrists." ' Chief deputy district attomay James Ernighl agreed with Gamble and ·added letters written by Hurd to a YOUD& 58.nta Ana girl to · lbe plle ·of reporta~ verrun Nixons to Visit President Plans Week on C(Jast President and Mrt. NiJoli will arrive in San Clemente Friday for a week.tong stay at La Cua Pacifica, informed 50utee.s said today. ' It will be the second San Clemente visit of the year for the first family . No confirmation of the reported trip has yet come from Washington, D.C. PresidenUal aides 1enerally announce such trips iwo or three days in.advance. U next week's stay follows the trend ,.t by Ille Jan. f.U· •lsll by Ille NbtoDI, Jt will be .a qlliet •ne ·with more rest tbu work. On the last viail, the Preaident found tbe weather chilly along the Soutb Coast, but still managed some walks .en hil private beach. He celebrated his birthday during the last stop, changed the name of his home to La. Casa Pacifica and p.aid a visit to stude,ntJ at Concordia Elementary SchoOI ntarby. Most of biJ working hours were spent drafting· bla State .of tbe Union Me11:111 apd m<etiJ11 will> hit top -M-vbera. ·;. .... 1'J !... • , ........ Giti;en. A:p~l; ~e.fllbl. .~ · Star ·Pine Coniroversy The cue ol the Stu Pine and Illa IU station ii by DO mtlDI closed, spokesmeri for the Citizens' Town Plan· ning Association and Village Laguna said ~ay. A property owner living within 300 feet of ~ proposed Standard Oil facility at 1251 N. Coast Highway will rue a formal appeal to the City Council, pro- testing the Pl•nning Commission's cra11t· ing of a condlUonal UH: permit for the site, the CTPA spokesman said .. The oiJ firm '• first plan for the 1ervice station wa1 rejected by the Planning Commission 11 unsuitable for Laguna. Concern also was expressed regarding possible damage to the 50-year-old Slar Pine, a Laguna landmark at the northern entry to the community 1 which grow1 on the property. A second plan , more in keeptng with Laguna '1 archit.ectural character, was approved by the commission alter a company 1pokesmaa gave assurances that a landscape archilect had been hired to keep Ill eye on the famOU3 pine tree. However, city couocilman Roy Holm said he was not aaUafied witb the Plan· ning Commission acUon and 1ought last week to have the Ctty Council restudy !be matter. His motion was defeated "'hen only aiuncilman CharlM>o Boyd aupported it. But tbfl dJSCUS!ion will be reopened, Star Plne 1upporters revealed today. Board Sought For Coastline SAN RAFAEL (UPI) , will> tile liliaf ol a citizen appeal ri Ille PlllllJlinl CommWol1 actlon. JamtJ Dilley aald the CTPA board h8.d decided to support Ute appeal atter canvaising Mighbortng property owners and learning tbat mbsb oppose tht tdea of another aas station In the 1ru. Al!o aupporlin& the appeal will be lbe newly organi2ed Villagt Lapn1 group which la spearheadinl the' lrtlaUve to limit buildin& height \n Llgun1 The appeal will be based on pogslblt environmental damage likely to ruult not only to the Slat Pint but to the communlly ln general, by permittln& another aas 1tation. Laguna Studies Sewage Problem The Laguna Beach Qty Council wW meet at J p.m. Thursday to .coru:lder i.nstallinl a new eleclrlcaJ l)'ltem in the city'1 antiquated ae:wa&e treatmenl plant. The facility, vkltace 1135, does not meet present day electrical · blllldlng cbdes. accOtding Uf Public Worb: Direc- tor Joseph Swaeny. Beaidu, be uld additional eltctricaJ ·lints Ire needed for the new cblorinaton praenll,y •being lmtalled. . The esUm>ted coot·of the project ii $40,000, but 80 perctnl ol thla fitur•. or 132,000. can bl lundod with lederal monty, Sweany uid. The council will be asked to allocate the required $8,000 of city . m<mey tod approve the rewirilli.of_the plant,; Revival :.Falb placed'befcn Jud(• CrooUhank. 'Tboae. lettera contain the comment by Hurd tbal he wu personally responsible for the wtbquU. ·tb<t rocked Soothem ~ornif • morlth ago. Htt"d, manided ·hand and feot, shook his, head and smiled while the comment -:as made._ He displayed a ti>mplete lack of lntttest in the court he.aring .Mld-ref\lse4 ·.to. acknowledge his mother and 11Jter Wbe were seated in the courtroom. Judge Crook&.bank'• dec.iJion reverses the earlier 'n1llng made by Judge Rob!rt Corfman. Judge' Corfman decided after reading reports and listening to Gamble that Hurd was sane and he ardered the young drifter to face trial. Hurd ls ae<:Used of being the leader of a gang of drug-taking drifters who killed Mrs. BrOwn, 31, o~ El Toro, June 2 and removed portions of her body in Satan worshipping ritea before buryin& By Phil lnlerl•ndl "Nothi,,.,, Deir: I 1fm~y iald, 'Bey, would f ffko lo mah a deef with • her' ••• on a t"touse, .of· couru." ' Planners Will Consider . ' ' Lagllna Beach Revisions i..,una Beach t>laMin& commissioners "ill 11.udy revlsion1 in conditional use permit procedures, reor1aniiation of the Board of Adjustment and e Laguna Can· yon rezoning proP011l durlll& an in· formal atudy session at 7:30 o'cloCi. t.onight In city hall council cblmber1. The CUP reviJlon involvu no major cbangu, according to city planoer Al Autry, but rather a "cleaning up'' to cove certain provtsk>nl pertaJnlng to apeclfic zones oftr into the ionlng ordinance where they rightfully belong. AUtry wW present the commiulon with an ouU,int ol ·Ille BOA reorganization under which , the board will hear alt varim:e •ppUcatlona to free Ille Planning Rll88 Blast Recorded UPPSALA. Sweden (UPI) -The Soviet Union triggered • powerful suJ>. knanean nu~ar device in central Asia Early today, ti* ae~ologlc lnaUtute ,,.,. IJUIOIDICed. Prof. Markus Batth, who head! the tmtltute, said tht nploeiOn w a 1 equtvalenl to the Richter nugnllude ol l.O. .. Commmisskln for other m a j o r assignment.I. Commi1aionm also will pondtr 11 coun-- ty proposal to change 2,300 feel of Laguna Canyon road property near Big Bend from At (General Agricullural) ziiilln1 lo Ml !Light lnduslrtal). School Volunteer Luncheon Slated Continuing their .efforts lo acquaint the community with the Laguna Beach 9Chooll. members of the School Volun- teer• will present e aeaind luncheon program 1t Thurston lntermedia~ School Thunday. City officials, members of lbe wata district board, and school board can- didates have been Invited to see a slide presentation on the high .chool cµr~ riculum and sit down to a lunch prepared and served by Thurston home economics ltudenll. The volunteer parent group earlier apomored a similar luncheon~ for direo- tora of the Chamber.or Commerce. to the government of North Vietnam 1 asking "Where is Don Lyon~ Bumper stickers and wrist ~racelets. with Lf!>n'1 name on them will also be sold. at tables set up at sliopplng. areas in the city. • The tables will remain al the varioua locations, a spokesman for the group said, until 1,600 letters, one for ea~h POW-MIA , are sent to Hanoi. Printing of 5.000 copies of the Hanoi lette.r wu financ:ed by the Irvine Company. ...... mbly1111n.John F, ~CD-_. ~~DeJo).·11y1 be .. w agaiot pr-• a bill ID estibllab a sin«'! it.ate · commissk1n:to contrnl devtlopnient of Callfontia '1 · atO-rnlle P.aclfk: oborelina. . A aim.Uar bill failed in· the. last aes.slon of the Le&blature. Crystal Cove D.iver Dies The tables are localed at Boat Canyon Shopping Center, MO!larch Bay Plua, \Vorld Savings and Loan and the Alpha Bela Shopping Center ln SOUth Llgun&. Israel Site Shelled TEI, AVIV (AP). -Gunnorr In Lebanon shelled Iarael't nort.btmmo1t settlement today for the '~d Ume In fou r days, the Isra~lls 11id. .. ., Dunlop allo told a 1ubcommlttet hearina: at Colle&e of Marin th1t nuclear power plant.I on the mlltllnl mlC)it · bo c:har1ed for tbelr use ol Ml water to cool their rflilcton. lk •Id tllia would help pay for prof«ling Illa coul Thi subcommittee met to diJCUJs pn>pOMd allocl-!or Illa Stall Deparlmenl of naV111tlon and o.:.an Developm .. ~ parllcularl1 1150,lolt to belin dl .. Joplnf I caaslll m11ter plan. Two NeW!>ort Beach · '1141n w!rile'Small cau.d·lt@·'" · · ' Jorn-and •Daw .· .•~1114 .,..,_ took .,.r · . ~fll.i<>moulh brealllln( ••"I 'the mnl"'!'ftC!I ltTivtll II •boul 2:111 p.m. Tjw' •iotlm We• ru911ed' to Illa hospllaf where. \fie .~ on duly at Ill• emeraenct -""'" ""'"1(llld him dead. fnvatlgatora ""' 1iOt jOt•drtennlned if ID tllqUlpmeftt mllfunctloo Wll raponol~la for Edml1too'1 deatll. An auloptY wnt be performed to determine the exact cause of death, a coruw'• rpoiesmaA aald . J the remains near tbe Ortega Hlghway. - One other member of the gang, Arthur Craig '1Moose" Hulse., 17, wtll be aen· ten ced Friday to what ts likely to be a life term in state prison for the related killing 24. hours earlier of iiervice station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. Another gang member, Clu'istoper • "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, arrived in Orange: County during the weekend from Oregon and was scheduled to receive a trial date today. aos Capital Threatened By Advances VIENTIANE. La°' (UPI) -Nortll Vietnamese troops have ovemm govern· ment positions in an arc three to five miles northeast of the royal capital of La.ung Prabang and the city's security Is directly threatened, a governmen• spokesman said today. A U.S. Embassy spokesman aald 110 dependents of U.S., French, Swiu and Filipino officials and worke11 were evaC111ted Sund&¥ from Luing Prabang fit ~ Ille •dminlstrative capital r.t ~,-fl.' 4IJo 'lciutll,'. by Ota CIA Mred Alr-kiitiicl. Aiillne. "Mlllfm' IOUl'C<I aaid obt persons hsd been ~ed and m>ny wounded by Com· munist mortar and ~ket attacks on I.he Luang Prabang airfield and nearby mjlitary camps and that the shelling destroyed or damaied fJve planes. Defeme ministry spokesman Gen. Thongphan Knocksy reported earlier to- day that in estimated 1i1: North Viet· nameae battalionJ (S,(O) to 3,$'.JO men) had . launched · heavy attacks on the government positions. L a t er, a 1poktstnan aalO six government positions were virtually wiped out a11d Communist troops were lbree to five miles from Ille city. The spokemnan said government troops bad been redeployed in strategic areas four miles northeast of Luang Prabang and that one and possibly two battaliorui of government reinforcements had flown Into the city· to stiffen it defemes. Military sources aaid the North Viet· names it.ruck at the government posi· tions, so rwifUy tbe defenders had no chance. to evacuate civilian&, including the thousan~s of refugees who have converged on the Luang Prabang area to escape the Cl'.lmmunist offensive on the Plain of Jars. The IOW'cet aafd U.S. and Laotion planes were unabble to strike effectively at the Communist-held pogitions because most of them are heavily °populated, mostly with refugees. 1 Knocksy told newsmen fighting was atill in progreu today. He said the North Vietnames launched about 150 mortar and rocket roond1 against seven government positions Saturday night andr early Sunday. Mostl were directed at the . Luaug . Pr~ng airport And the tieadquarters of the first military regl°'ll j,bj<;Ji c o Ill m a n d 1 northwest ~~: 1 : ~, : • • .. . ~· er .. , •. :-....:.. ...._ .. ·-, .... ·-........ -.. Jfllllrttl ,._ l•IW1•1R-t ....... .. _ Al!ll YMIR • • • ..... " n " " • h 11·11 _,. " . • I I . ' ~ Z DAILY PILOT SC MMdQ, M1tdt 2'. 1971 Petitions De laye d Irvine Cityhood Drive Slowed By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tM 0.11., ,1111 Sl•ft The queatlon of who may lega11y sign , .. petitions for an elecUon to incorporale -the futu~ city of Irvine Saturday stalled the planned kickoff of a signup campaign. ' More than 100 residents of the future ·: city gathered al the Alrporter Inn for a breakfast rally but were told that lechnicalltles will push back petitioning ,, at least one week. " Tbe "tecbnicallUes., were described by • some leaders u simple stalling tactics oo the part of county officials. · Jotu Burton, chairman of the Council . · af the Communities of Irvine, city hood . sponsors, said the Orange County Counsel's Office Friday had declined to pointed OUL Burton also commented briefly on the furor raised by Santa Ana over inclusion of a 920-acre industrial section that Santa Ana had thought was going to be part of its tax base someday soon. Sant.a Ana has gone to court over the issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable to reason on a number of things, and hasn't been for the last 20 years. Burton cited a number of other in· atances in which he claimed are testimony to delay1 in the cltybood bid created by the county • DAILY PILDT 11111 Ptwlt& Hou se Unit OK s Servic e 11 Pa y Boo st WASHINGTON (AP) -A two year draft extension nearly tripling Presjdent Nil.on'11 pay boost incentive for a "zero draft" volunteer army v.•as approved today by the House Armed Service! Committee. The bill, which would boost military pay and allowances especially for jWtior enlisted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, was approved 36 to 4. President Nixon had asked a $981 million raise ne:ii:t year, and the Pentagon projected the balance would be reeom• mended the following year. The com· mittee folded both into one year. , define who ia entitled to sign the peti· '" .. tiooa. , "The law says only property owners 't may sign," Burton said, "but it is am· ' · biguous in its definitions of who owns • property." He said plans for county to build a fire station near the Irvine Industrial complex have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't been furnished the legally accept.able descri!>' tion of the Irvine boundaries until Wednesday -after asking for them a month ago. 'IT WAS VERY DANGEROUS. I HAD HOPED I WOULD MAKE IT. l'M GLAD I DID.' D. D. Masco Mak11 Good on His Great Esc1pe Off the Sei l Beach Pier But chairman F. Edward llebert (0- La.), pointed out the committee had not approved President Nizon's goal of achieving a •;zero draft" volunteer army by JWle 30, 1973, which is only a goal and was not in the bi!! the adn1inistration sent to Congress. ·· He said apparently the term could · mean the fee owner only, or the one . who pays taxes, or someone with a ' lease-opUoo or someone with only a lease. The question b further complicated, he said, because the law 1Upulates that only property owners of record the · · previous March 1 can sign. · "In our case, this would be March · I , 1970," he said. He explained this would make abc;ut · a 2,IXJG..bousehold difference and weigh .• .heavily on the number of 1ignatures • needed. CCI must obtain the signatures of -25 per~t of the property owners who. .. in turn. must represeDt ~ percent of • the asaeued valuaUon. ~ "The latter is no problem," Burton · said, pointing out that the Irvine Com- pany owns about 80 percent of the assess· ed. valuation within the boundaries of the 18,000 Incorporation area and "of- ficials there have invited us to come by wlUt our petitions." Burton said CCI officials are taking the question to the St.ate Attorney General's Office at once. He said he la hopeful there will be . Ji A clarif1catlon by next Saturday, "but ·:"lu there i.m't, we'll just go get everybody's name we J>OS$ibly can, even ..-it it has to be on three different pell· -tion.s." . Burton noted that time 11 starting ,. Jo play an important factor in the slgnature campaign. • · CCI had 90 days from the date It • filed its noUce of Intent to circulate )etltklns to get the 1tgnatures. 1bat paper was filed Feb. :Z, he :,:.Capistrano Sets ·.Study for Annex A ltudy on the feasibility of annexing Capistrano Be.a.ch and Dana Point lo the city of San Juan Capistrano will ~be prPJll!Dted 1t toni&ht 's meeting of • Ille City Cowicil. '· The study, undertaken al the request .-.of the Chamber• of Commerce of both ".-; beach onmmi.m!Ue1, will lDc:lude a review !Of the public works, planning , engineering . and fiDaDclal aspecta of a.nne:ring lhe tmltory. 'Ibe two communities represent half the slie but twice the population of the San Juan Capl1trano. They have attempted to incorporate lhree Ume1 but each Ume bave failed. Director of Public Works T. J. Meadows said the 1taff will not make a recommendaUon on the annexation but will merely prtsent the findings of their study to the council. .. Ot &Hal COAlf DAllY PllOT Ou.NG~ COAIT "11L11MINO c::oMPAN't k•t.•rt N. w,M ,r.lfflt Mill '"'*1111111' J 1ck ... c,r1,, Viet ,.,,..;a.,. .... ~ """""' 11it l'll •• ICenrl a•ttw 1\eni•• A. Mwr,111" -..... a.rt •• H. ln1 RI•'-•" '· N•n Mlllltt1'll MIMI ... 1.U.S ............ om.. 222 For•1t "''"'' S-Cl ts OMee J 05 Nott'-El C1111i11• k•1I .,.... ....... 0.HI Mft•: :uo W•I •• ., srrtet N.....,. .. ell: »I) lkWl*t lllllllY•"" HvnflrWIHlft ~I 11'1.f IMCll lel.tlft'•rf DAn.. Y Pl\.O'f, ..... wfllell It ~ "" ........... 1111111114...,.. •11ty •c• lllfl.. ..,. fill ....,.,. ........ "' ~ -..0.. ......,, ..,.. c-tl .... ~ .... -....... ......... V•IMf, a... ,..._,., CM*.,_ .,.. .................. .,,.. -,......... ...... ~· """"'"' ....... ., ....... .., ...... OillS "'- , ... ,. r rn4J 142"'121 a ... All•'ltd•1 '4W71 S. 0 ti Al Dspaf 1 t 1 Ttflpt SS 492-4411 &,.,_ .... .41 lap llUIA*tt T1t1pt et 4'~t4M ~ ,., .. °'*"' c.... ........... ~. W. -tlltf'ltl, MlllltirttllM. r "* ..,.n. w HW<'f...,_" ,...... ' ......... "" ~ .......... II !wl sf ..,,.., -· ....,,, c..... ........... , "..,.... .... ,,_. C-ta Mee-. C•I.....,.. ~.­ "' ClltfW IUI llM!ltMYJ 1¥ -" tLJI "*"""'1 191111111ry ... 1iN1i.. UM fllSllftht. The Saturday morning rally was sponsored by the newly-formed City of Irvine Now (COIN), headed by Andrew ?-.lay, who also address the gathering on the various chores confronUna: the incorporation movement. Heart Dise ase Tests Planned The 300 civilian employes of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station will be screened for susceptibility to heart disease In a program to be held TueJday through Thunday . The voluntary screening ls designed to detect abnonnalities associated with a greater risk of developing heart disease, Dr. Gerald Whipple said. He heads the Orange County Heart Associa· tion's community services committee which is conducting the pilot program. Base medical technicians will aasist and the air station will share expenses for equipment and extra personnel, Capt. V. G. Benson, director of medical 1ervices at El Toro, said. Results of the exams will be con- fidential. 1961 LBHS Class 10th Meet Set Memb e r 1 of Laguna Beach High Schoors class of 1961 are being rounded up for a lG-year reunion celebration planned for May 22 In the llotel Laguna. Committee for the reunion has al· tempted to contact all the 1961 grads but has been unable to locale a number of them, according to William Tinkey of South Laguna. Members of the class, or friends who could help locate members. are requested to write Class of 1961, P.O. Box 362, Soulh Laguna, or call 499--408.1. The rewpon will feature a buffet dinner and entertainment Pope Will See Tito VA TI CAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI will receive Yugoslavian President Joseip Tito for an official visit to the Vatican next Monday, the Vallcan an- nounced today. Stilti ng Sana ~~~~~~~~~~- .Fes tival Aides To Open Sales Early Tins Year With mail order requests f r o m members topping .all previous records, Festival of Arts officials have decided to open box office sale of Pageant of tbe Masters tickets early this year. To accommodate persons who would rather plci: up their ticketa 1n person · than wait for malling, the box office will be open April 1 through April 10 from noon to 4 p.m. Persons who have requested ticket order forms may make their selections and call at the box office for their tickets if they wish. The bo1 office will close Easter Sunday and reopen April 15, remaining open Thursdays through Sundays only !rom noon to 4 p.m. until the Pageant opens July 16. To date, 32,500 ticket order forms have been mailed out to persons re- questing them. Shot Kills Dog; Pellet Hits Home A large female collie running loose in a San Clemente neighborhood was killed by a shotgun blast over the weekend. One of the pellets from the shot penetrated a window of a nearby home. Police said they received a report of a loud blast and a yelping dog at 141 Loma Lane Saturday ni.Qht. Carol Scofield, who lives at the ad- dress, said she heard the blast and moments later noticed the dying dog in her garage. The nett morning the w o m a n discovered a broken window. Police said the damage y.·as caused by a stray pellet. The identity of the dog's o"Tier Vlas not immediately determined. The in- cidenl occurred at 8:39 p.m. • A very tall Uncle Sam leads about 200 followers of evangelist Carl Mcintire to stage a "Victory in Vietnam" rally on the steps of the State Capitol. The sllll·walking symbol o! America recenUy paraded In San Clemente . Escape Artist Lives Through 'Death Dive' By RUDI NlEDZIELSKI OI 1M Diii' Pli.I St•H Escape artist D. D. Masco completed his "Dive To Death'• into the waters off the Stal Beach pier Saturday and Jived to tell about it. The 32-year old restraint breaker back· ed his boet that he could ''do anything Houdini ever did" by freeing himself from two pairs of handcuffs 2S.feet of chain, three padlocks and 11 50-pound weight while at the bottom of the ocean. A crowd of about l .000 persons watched him complete th is stunt in 16 feet of water. He took only fla.seconds to free himself from the bond. "A hoax," cried some watching off the pier. But those who had been in the bobbing ve.uel with Masco, anchored a few feel off the pier knew it wasn't. All of the locks, as well as Masco himself were available for inspection. Mas(:9'1 hands trembled and his face turned crimson as the cuffs were snapped around hb wrists .and the chain tied tighlly around his body. The padlocks were attached behind his back. "I was a liltle apprehensive," said the 270-pound escape artist afterwBid. "J"d never been in the ocean before." As two divers readied their aqualungs, Masco first placed one leg over the boat's transoJn, then the other, and finally gushed into the water. Only 1 whlte circle of roam remained on the surface as Masco was on the sandy aea·bottom, working bis magic on the Jocks. And sooner than expected, a shock of red hair breaking through the surface of the water signaled that he had com· pleted his escape . Back on board, the drenched Masco lit a Jong-stemmed pipe and said, •·11 was very dangerous. I bad hoped that J would make it. and 1·m glad I did." The dive v.·as the result of a challenge by one of Masco's friends, Ralph Yarnell, of Alhambra. Next month. ~1asco claims he will conduct another dive, this time in \l'ater off the Santa Monica pier. "I'll be wearing three pairs of handcuffs, leg irons inside a crate 1vith a y.·eight on top. We 'll see how that -works out," he laughed. MASCO BEFORE DIVE Chained, Cuffed and Weighted Infant Born Dur ing Wreck; Mother Dies QUINCY, JU. (UPI) - A woman morie than eight months pregnant Yt'as killed but her Infant daughter has survived a one-car accident after being forced through the mother's abdominal \l.'all by the impact. The eight-pound, 14-ounce girl was reported in satisfactory condition at St. Mary's Hosp ital today. "There ap- parenlly are no com plications," a hospital &pokesman said. ONE OF~THE OUTPERFORMERS! "l don't think they can ever get a volunteer army unless they draft it," •lebert told newsmen. "But we're going to glve him all the help he wants to implement it. "We're giving him all the rope he wants," Hebert said. The committee rejected an effort by. Rep. Charles \V. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohio), to extend the draft only one year, 30 to 9. The bill sent toward the House Door v.-ould extend the draft two years beyond June 30, give Presiden t Nixon authority. to abolish student defenntnts including divinity student deferments and add a thlrd year of non-military service for, conscientious objectors. Hebert said the conscientious ob]ector provision would not change any of the present requirements for obtaining that status but he said he believed It would be easier for draft boards to grant the status in questionable cases. "In my personal opinion ," he said, ''I don 't think the draft boards would y.·restle with it so much when they know the man will serve three years." · The four members voting against th e bill y.·ere Whalen and Reps. Alvin E • O'Konsk.i {R·Wis.), Michael Harrington (0.Mass.) and Floyd V. Hicks (D-Wash.). The pay raise is similar in total dollar• to the recommendations: 0£ t h 1 President's Gates Commission last year to replace the draft with an all volunteer army. Petitions Still Circulating Over High Ri se More than 3,000 signatures have been obtained to date on initiative petiUons seeking to block high rise in Laguna Beach. a spokesman for Village Laguna 1aid today. Although only 1,050 v a 1 i d a t e d signatures are needed to qualify th• petitions, the spokesman said, circulation of the papers will continue at least through the first announced deadline of April 5 in an effort to obtain "a true picture of public opinion ." If signatures of 15 percent of the community's registered voters are ob- tained and validated by the county clerk, ·the city council is obliged to adopt the height limitation ordinance or place It before the electorate. The proposed ordinance would limit bu iddings throughOut the cily to a height of !hree stories or 36 feet above grade. Stgnatures on the qualifying petitions ha ve been collected for the past 15 days at shopping centers and by neighborhood circulators. ®PIONEER" SX·770 AM·FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver l:lulld vcur s11reo sys11rn •round thls versatne Instrument ..,II aolkl ata!e, it otters 70 watts of music pow.r output: ll\f.)Ull lor magnetic and ceramic phonos, microphone, tape rnonllor and auxiliary, Two tpeaktr outpuls make It Ideal •a e power tourc. tor any tine stereo system. Top quallty clrailtry plus many ttflnemtnts found only In )nuch more •xpenlhot an!IL Lunar Glow lllf'llng scale appearw only with Switch On.. Housed In a handsomely styted oiled walnut c:abUlet. Bo Prtpend tor tht ulUmato in 11$torjng enJO)'Zl:llnl. VISIT OUR NEW COMPLETE SOUND ROOM ONLY $249.95 COME Dll FO" A D!lllONITllATION Wa ha.,. recWltfJ Mid .. • fttW ~nd room to our 1~ Y.u are lnvlf'9111 te cOftM In end Mt •w dl1pl11 et the flnnt MUNI 141Vlpm.-it 1t ~ uvl,..._ e PIONEER e J.V.C. e ELEC TROPHONIC e WALD e GRANDSON IC e BSR 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY, SELL. TRAD E • 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-BolwMn " ( San Cle111enie Capistrano EDITION Today's Fl,nal N.Y. Stocks VOL. 64, NO. o9, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN!A-MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1971-TEN CENTS - San Clemente Hotline Finds ·By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1"9 0.111 l'llel S11tt Leaders of San Clemente 's flourishing h~Uine project begun on a grass-roots level last year are bristling this week over what they termed an attempt to short circuit the program by "poachers" in Santa Ana. The local hotline effort -supported entirely from local · service club con- tribuUQTtJ -apparenUy became affiliated with anothu separate venture from San· ta Ana. '- And t.he locali-don't like it. Bud Scheele, one of the originators of the San Clemente project, &aid the problems began when solicitors arrived in San Clemente aevetal weeks ago to canvass, re~ideqla and businesses for donations to HUJTlan Outreach of Santa Ana. lt It a bona fide hotline ·aervlce~ Schee.le said. The trouble began, be laid, when the solicitors told donOrs that the funds would be shared with the local hotline aervice. Some businessmen consented to donate. Then they phoned the local hotline aervice to verify the solicitors' asserted clalms. Local volunteers said. there was ... defin!tely no agreement" to ahare funds. "I contacted· the Officials of lhe Santa Ana servk:e, Scheele es.plained lhia week, "and w11 told that it was a mistake aftd the voluntttr canvassers were a 'bit· overzealous', then they assured me it wouldn 't happen aaain," he said. That was about two week& ago. Since then. however, Scheele 1aid the canva~ra returned "and covered the • IS ur Nixon s Set Weel\:'s Stay In Oemente President and Mrs. Nixon will arrive Jn San Clemente Friday for a week-long 1tay at La Casa Pacifica, informed aources iiaid tod ay. It will be the second San Clemente visit of the year for the first family . No confirmation of the reported trip bali yet come from Washington, D.C. Presidential aides generally annoµn ce t!U Ch trips two or three days In advance. If next week's stay follows the trend set by the Ju. ~12 vi&ft by tht Nlxou, it will be a quiet ene with more rest than work. On the last visit. the President found the weather chilly along the South Coast, but &till managed some walks on h.is private beach. He celebrated his birthday during the last stop. changed the name of his borne to La Casa Pacifica and paid a visit to students at Concordia Elementary School nearby. Most of his working hours were spent drafting his Stale of the ·Union Message and meeting with bis top economic ad· vi.sers. Clemen te Police Use Chemical To Subdue Ma n Sil police officers and a shot of an aerosol chemical were needed this morn· ing to subdue a violent yoong San Clemente man who locked himself in an auto at police headquarters this morn· ing and refused to emerge. The man . in his early 20s. apparently was suffering a psychotic drug reaction, cffll.-ers said. · He iniLially was driven to headquarters by his father. The young man had been wandering through the night and had 1evere burns on his fingers and cuts 1nd other wounds elsewhere on his body. · • .. · DAl.LY,,t\.OT·Ml tf 'Jlti1 ' SAN CLEMENTE HIGH'S MARCH ING BA ND 'STEPS OUT·SMARTL Y IN ·SAN JUAN Thouwnd1 Th fongad to Pa rada Whi ch Highli ght.cl Wffk·I Dftg C~l't~r1tloft, ·capo Crowded . . Thousands Watclr, Swallo w Parade San Juan Capistrano was Bulging at the seams Saturday as thousands of people lined the streets to watch Uie 13th annual Fiesta de Las Go\ondrina1 Parade. Marclling "Off with the sweepstakes trophy for the best entry in the parade v.·as ;Newport .Harbor High School's band and drill team. Other first place bands were Santa Ana Hiih School, senior division; Isbell of. Santa Paula, junior division ; Burke's Pipe and Drum Band; Whitter Cavaliers, and the Norco Drurr. and Bugle Corps. First·plact trophies were taken home by the Mystics of Fontana for their color guard; Eleanor Badsturner as '·morning star" for the best single marching entry; the Leisure World Hikers for the beat walking group; Santa Ana High for its drill team. Capistrano: best non professional float ~·as Frances Williams and her pony cart pulled by "Pee Wee", and the best school float was Marco Forster J unior High. Among numerous awards given for equestrian entries was a first to the Marco Forster Junior High for ll! mounted group: a first to Tony Hernandez and Salvador Lamas for their plain working Western pair, and a first to the Gilbert Aguirre family .for the best fam ily group. Second-place in the family group went to Mayor Tony Forster and h1s family. · Salvador Lamas also won a priz.e in the "hairieiit man in town" contest for hill distinguished beard. The best comic entry award! went to Timothy Klng. first, and Judy Rose, second. . O'.By rnes Zoo.· Opett~Wliere? Mr. and' · Mrs: Ffed · O"Byrne1 . of capistrano Highlands wish they weren 't so pcpu1ar. Shortly after moving into their new home they were invaded - by a wea sel. When the animal cont ro I authorities removed that pest they breathed easier, but not for long. They next found a skunk In their house. Other varmints have lilcJuded several mice, two anaku, .and two large tarantulas, "I don 't know how they get in,1• said Mrs. O'Byrne&.' ' ' W e ' r e fanatics abcut clcsin& and Joe.king doors." Their neighbors haven't had an)' problemii, .O they've t1ubbed the O'Byrnes' mldence the "wo. '' Wires Crossed entirt town with the same pitch 11 before." Scheele, a local lnaurance executive, said the issue is not over mone)'.. "We receive our eipenses from local service clubs and agencies · 1s group donations. We don't beat on lndividuall doors and ask for money. "We don't want to abate what's been collected by the group in Santa Ana, either," he said adamanUy. "What we want to make clear is that no matter what anyona elR says. we are not sharing any money ccllected by Human Outreach of Santa Ana. "Thi1 hurts our image. We don't like le 1peak before a local businessman. at a service club meeting, then tum around and put the touch on him at Im doors\ep or office." • nsane Down the Mission Trail Saddleback CofC Manager Named SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Ji mMan- lon baa been named temporary n:ianager cf the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce. Ht replaces 'JJ Blaia who · resicned 'lo .,_. 'iftf '9tatieifpu•n• rmul!U· llnn. 1o1..ion:rea1c1N Jn ti Toro., • y_,,. CIMse• MISSION VIEJO - A YOil ciaos IJ forming at the Monlanoso Recreation CeJ!ter ol .all members of. the ct1mmunity. Penny Jessee will instruct the class whlch will begin Wednesday at I p.m. 'the clas1 will be held on succeeding Wedne.sdaya u cept dtµ'irig Easter vaca- tion. · For information call lhe center at sll-4084, . Salling Leslo~• LAKE FOREST -Sailinl lessons will be offered , to Lake . Forest resident.I starting Tuesday. Children's classes will meet on Tuesday and Thursday 1ftemoons from 3 to 5 p.m. Adult classes will meet on Saturday from 3 to S p.m. beginntng·March 27. For fee information and registration call the Beach and Tennis Club, 837-etoo. Dissident Students Agree to End Strike OAKLAND (UPI) -Diuident students who forced Merr itt College to clmie for five days Wt week ..have agreed to end thelr diin.IPtlonii and "get on with the business of education." A student deleptlon, led by Black Panther DoUJlu Mira.Pda, entered a faculty meetin1 late Sunday night and made the announcement. 1be campua begins final examinations todaY and both faculty and students met durlng I.he weekend iD efforts to eue tensions. Judge Nixes Death Trial For Suspect By TOM BARLEY Of Ille (MJty '1 .. 1 ll•ff Steven Craig Hurd today was ruled to be insane and unable to stand trial jn Orange County Superior Court for the murder of Mission Vieja teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Judgi!: Ronald Crookshank sent the ':o. year-old transient to Alascadero State HOspital for an indefinite term after reading the reports of 11i1. psychiatrists. "He will remain there until lll1Cb time 11 be ngain1 hi& 1anity," the veteran jurist commented . · · O.fense aftomey · William G.antNa clflilclod l!IJ !ldgetjng, twllchlni client 11 "crufer than a hoo' ~1" in urgine that Hunr1 form of ccmmittment !hould not contain the "legal Joopbole1" that enabled "Candle Light Klller" Robert W. Liberty to regain his freedom. The late Liberty was released from mental custody and immediately used his freedom to kill two men before met:Ung his death at the ·hands of a fellow inmate in a San Diego jail cell. "There's no doubt this man is insane," Ga'mble commented. "If he is faking he is an excellent actor and he should iet the academy award for fooling six psychiatrists." Chief deputy district attorney James Ernlght agreed with Gamble and added letters written by }Jurd to a young Santa Ana girl to the pile of rep<>rta placed before Judge Crookshank. Those letters contain the comment by Hurd that he was personally respchslble for the earthquake that rocked Southern California a n:ionth ago. H\Jrd, manicled hand and fool. shook his head and smiled while the comment was .made. He displayed a complete lack of Interest In the court hearing and refused to acknowledge his motber and sister who were sealed in the courtroom. ~udge Crooksbank's decision reverses the earller ruling made by Judge Robert Ccirfman. Judge Corfman decided after reading repcrb and 11.Jtening to Gamble tha t Hurd was une ilnd be ordered the .young drlft~t to face trlat. Hurd is accuSed cf being the leader of a gang or dh.ig-tak.ing drifters who ldlled Mrs . Brown, 31, of El Toro, June 2 and removed pcrtlons of her body in Satan worsftipping rites before burying the remains near the Ortega Highway. The victim was uninjured in the severe struggle with the officers. He later wa s taken under restraint to the psychiatrict facility at Orange County Medical Center for treatment Several officers received scrapes and bruises in the fraca1 which occurred at about 8: 15 a.m. Sweepstakes winner in the float dlvi- sion was Dana Point's Alamo Restau- rant. Best commercial float was the El Adobe Restaurant ; best civic float was the Chamber of Commerce of San Juan Viejo Library · Dedicated One other me.mber of the gang. Arthur Craig "MOOie" Hulse. 17, will be sen• tenced Friday to what ls likely to be a lilt; term in state prison for the related killing 24 hours earlier or service atation attendant JerrJ Wayne Carlin. • DAti.V 'ILOT Steff,._.,. TWI NS RECE IVE FIRST LIBRARY CARDS AT MISS ION VIEJO Lff Anne and Ellen Marla f'lt191r11ld of C1plstr11no Hi9h11nd1 .. • I j By PAMELA HALLAN Ol tt'll Ol llY '1191 5l1ff The spacious Sp11nish style Mission Viejo library was dedicated Saturday with fanfare and plaudits from a host of dignitaries. Mrs.· Carma Leigh Gallfomla State Librarian, praised the county for pro- viding a quick and rellable source of information for people in the Orange County Library Systmi's southern region. "The phenomenal growth of Orange County is well known," said Mrs. ~igh. "But if such growth does not provide Jot growth of the mind It ccntalrui the seeds of ilJ own des~tion." She said lbC pOWer of information hes .. no boundaries. Jl Is ·a ccmmon heritage which unites the world. "Booka are as lmPortant as bread. The idw In them stand behind every _ human being. Thia library with boob and 1ubsldiary materials stands for and maket enrichment ponlble." ~frs. Leigh said the most funda object of a library 11 to a lifetime process -one Is never too old or too young. She said the library aid! all level'!, from researcher• to homemakers. Even the sch>ol dropout often becomes the library "drop In." "'I'he quiet act of establishing a library ha1 a lastin1 effect," she said. "Ideas are durable, accessible, and combustible. Jdeaii await the spark of the hum an mind and this is what endui:n. The quiet act. of establisbin1 a library can make a very Jolld noise in the world." ! ,,.. 'til>r•ff li' • conslanl IOW'Ct' ror 1 updatlDg intormltion. "There ii no way on. eartl> \o ~ 1 col~ atudenl whal he °""' IO kllow 2$ " :tlenoe and there 11 r~) way tducatlco. an relate a itudenl to a world He netda for a lifetime eicept tll'Ough 1llbrary. Mrs. Leli\i said the dedlcoUon of the librari should be the greafelt blllortc11l event to date In Orange C.o\tnty' becau!le the ldtas tliat flmf through tt -wJJI• have the lllOll for ruchinf elfect ol the Idea• from one mind .to a education through 1 pubtit ' I future, . ; • • • 1Slle prai.ted the county system for F}lt' 'ill eommunkatlon and lendln& proot.11 • I • whereby each library baa accesa tb material In all the cther1. She aaid despite Ute ~flculty in begiMing the Orange Ccunty system it has been wcrth it and ·the Mi.!alon Viejo dedication I! a wonderful way to mart lta 50th &n· niversary. Master of Ceremonies for the program was Supervisor Ralph Clark who in- troduced State Se11atorll De n n I s carpenter and James Whetmore and county librarian Harry Rowe. Otber dlgnltarle& preaenL ,were. OJ Featherli. form,.. coUnlY oupervioor. Tom Fuentes, admlnlstraUve aide to Supervllol' -.Ron' ~ orc~ J.ayne .fi!m ,lftd ~ 'l't\lflder, J. B. Hi><>k, vice pretldent of the lollllor <;onstructlon Co., Linda HUber, MIM Miulon Viejo, Mra. · Allcia Cooper. ~nd~~' A~e Li:r::~ ~~ :ne~.~·!: twin dau'ghter1 of Mr1~Jt1ycl /1tzge·rald who, ,...lytd-lhelr.flr1t bbflfY cardo. ' -w11R .. J,o·~.~~­v11J~ QjmpanT who wos lft)llCj foc Ole compan~11 · generous donelloh Of •land for the library alto • Orange C:Oast Weather Haey !Unshlne Is the best the weatherman can offer for Tuesday, (oUowlng cloudy skies in the mom· Ing hours with temperatures reach- lhl ·sa degreea along the coasl INSIDE TOi,A Y You can lta.rn to flfl and stiLL k4qi.wour.JeU qn. thl grou.nQ l>11 wirg Jftv!\t '•'I'!""'"''' of '11;,.. port Brach firm. f>•o• 21 . ~=II • "'"" I • f:':'"' H (l!Mll ... U• • ..... -.. Ctl""""' ... OfMM C-IY " Ctmk1 " ,,,, .. ,lfM'r " CrM1Mr11 " "''" t>U Dtlttl Ntt!c .. " lleU ~1'11.tt lt·U ........ " ,_ " .......... ,_ I -H ,...,,..._..., H WM-• ·-· 11·11 ._.. """ , .. " -.. ..... ....... .. Allll LI'*" II I ' ' I I .. ,,. . !f._ 2 DAILY PILOT SC Monday, M1rcl11 22, 1971 : Petitions Delayed • Irvine Cityhood Drive Slowed . ' .. . -' By I. PETER KRIEG OI IN U.!IY 1'1191 $1tlt .. The queation of who may legally sign • petitions for an election to incorporale •. the future city of Irvine Saturday stalled the planned kickoff of a signup campaign. More than 100 residents of the future ,.. city gathered at the Airporter lnn for .a breakfast rally but were told that . technicalities will push back peHlioning . at least one week. . The "technicalities" voere described by -• some leaders as simple stalling tactics -on ~ part of county officials. ~ John Burton, chairman of the Council :.·of the Communities of Irvine, cilyhood ;~.sponsors, said the Orange County pointed out. Burton also commented brieUy on the furor raised by Santa Ana over inclusion of a 920-acre industrial section that Santa Ana had thought was going to be part of ils tax base someday soon. Santa Ana has gone to court over the issue and Burton charged Santa Ana is not amenable to reason on a number of things, and hasn't betn for the last 20 years. Burton cited a number of other in· stances in which he claimed are testimony to delays In the cityhood bid created by the county. DAtl't' l'l~DT '1111 '119141• Hou se Unit Ol{s Service Pa y Boost \YASHll\GTON {AP) -A two year draft extension near ly tripling President Nixon 's pay boost incentive for a "zero draft'' volunteer army was approved today by the House Armed Services Committee. The bill. which would boost militarf pay and allowances especially for junior enlisted men and officers by $2.7 billion next year, v.·as approved 36 to 4 . President Nixon had asked a $987 nlillion raise next year, and the Pentagon projected the balance would be recom• mended the foUowing year. The com· mittee folded bolh into one year. Counsel's Office Friday had declined to ., define who is entitled lo sign the peti- ' lions. "The taw says only property owners ·.may sign," Burton said. ''but it is am· He said plans for county to build a fire station near the Irvine Industrial complex have suddenly been bogged down and also said he hadn't bee n furnished the legally acceptable descrip- tion of the lrvine boundaries unt il Wednesday -after asking for them a month ago . 'l'r WAS VERY DANGEROUS. I HAD HOP ED I WOULD MAKE IT. l'M GLAD I DID.' O. D. M11co M1ke1 Good on His Great Escape Off the Seal Beach Pier But chairman F. Edward Hebert (D· La.), pointed out the committee had not approved President Nixon's goal of achieving a "zero draft'' volunteer army by June 30, 1973, v.•hich is only a goal and v.·as not in the bill the administration sent to Congress. biguous in its definitions of who owns • . pro;>erty." • He sakt apparently the term could • mean the--fee owner only. or the one . 'who pays taxes, or someone with a .. lease-option or someone with only a lease. The question is further complicated, _ he said, because the law stipulates that · on1y property owners of record the . • previous March 1 can sign. . ·: "In our case, this would be March • 1, 1970," he aaid. .. He e:rplained this would make about ,;:!'a 2,000-household difference and weigh , ;i. heavily en the number of signatures :· needed. CCI must obtain the signatures or • 25 ptrcent or the property owners who. in tum , must represent ZS percent of the assessed valuation. "The latter is no problem," Burton · 1aid, pointing out that the Irvine Com• pany owns about 80 percent of the assess- ed valuation within the boundaries of the 18,000 incorporation area and "of· ficials there have invited us to come by with our petitions." Burton said CCI officials are taking the question to the State Attorney Gene.rat's Office at once. He said he is hopeful there will be . a clarification by next Saturday, ''but if there isn't, we'll just go get everybody's name we possibly can, even .··If It bu to be en three different peti· I• lions." Burton noted that time is starling to play an important factor in the signature campaign. CCI had 90 days from the date it . filed lls notice of intent lo circulate . petitions to get the signatures. · That paper was filed Feb. 22, he , Capistrano Sets . Study for Annex A study on the feasibility or annexing Capistrano Beach and Dana Point to . the city cf San Juan Capistrano will be presented at tonight's meeting of the City Council. The study, undertaken at the request ~ of the Chambers of Commerce of both beach communities, will include a review of the publlc works, planning, engineering and financial aspects cf annexing the territory. The two communities represent ha\£ the size but twice the population of the San Juan Capistrano. They have attempted to inccrporate three times but each time have failed . Dtrector of Public Works T. J. Meadows said the staff will not mske a recommendation on the annexation but will merely present the findings cf their study to the council. DAILY PILOT OltAHG .. CO.UT PUll.IStUJfCr COMPANY lebert N. Weed ,,..,,Wit .... l'vOlllMf' J •slr: l. Curt.., Ykt ,,.""'' ttllll °""'~ ,,,._,.. ,,.'"''' x: •• .,n lll11W 111•"''' A. MurHi11e lrMrwelnf l'.lf!6w C ht rte1 H. l eo1 Jl.ldi,'4 ,, Ntn ,.. .. ,.,.; """"'"-lllnw. ...__. ...... 222 fore1t A.,111ue s. c ....... Offtce JOI Horth El C•mi11e ~tel .,_ °""'"' CO.la Mft1: DI W•I l l 't' !.trl'ef Newport Ifft~: DSI Nt'*POl"I 9oul .... ~ tM!tllle"" atl(ll: 11t1J ... Cl'I ""'1w1r4 D4rLY l"l\.OT, wllfl llltlldl 11 ctoNilflW t11e .._........ .. pUMl9heill lll ll't .. , .... kMo M"t IR ... rt t. _,,,..,. for L.1 .... 1 "-di. N"""'l a.m, C..• IMH, ~Willl'ltln aMdl. "-""' v11..,, S.11 c"""'""' Ctp6f,_ .... ...,leMc:tt. .... """' -,..-., ~ l"nlC .... I ............... , II -4 .JJI w.t ...,. J'""4 C-N MIN, Tel•• .. •• C71•1 MJ-4Jn a-.lflMI .,.,..., ... M1..J1n S. eta • tr All •••=•••u ,,,,, ••• •f'J-4421 &..lw ..... Al lq:att_ .. 1 , ......... , ..... .... ~ 1"1, 0,..... Cllltt l"llWleMllS ~-"" ,_ ....... 111111ln"""-.. ...... ltWtter ,,, ......,._.. ..... I M •• s•ac• .ithllvl .. lo91 ,... II IM fl ..,,.,...., _.,., ......... ,.. ........ ., """"""' ...,.. ,.... tMt• ...... <~•~. ~ lllf _,.., 12.as "*"""'' .., -11 n.'f ~I fftfllltn' ... llnltftN, tr.JI -lflN, • The Saturday morning rally was sponsored by the newly-formed City of lrvine Now (COIN), headed by Andrew May, who also address the gathering on the various chores confronUng uie incorporation movement. Heart Di sease Tests Planned The 300 civilian employes of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station will be screened for susceptibility to heart disease in a program to be held Tuesday through Thursday. The voluntary screening is designed to detect abnormalities associated with a greater risk of developing heart disease. Dr. Gerald Whipple said. He heads the Orange County Heart Associa- tion's community services committee which is conducting the pilot program. Base medical technicians will assi st and the air station will share expenses for equipment and extra personnel, Capt. V. G. Benson. director or medical services at El Toro. said . Results of the exams v.•ill be con- fidentia1. 1961 LBHS Class 10t11 Mee t Se t 11 embers of Laguna Beach High School's class of 1961 are being rounded up for a IO-year reunion celebration planned for May 22 in the Hotel Laguna. Committee for the reunion has at- tempted to contact all the 1961 grads but has been unable to locate a number of them, according to Willia m Tinkey of South Laguna. Members of the class. or friend s who could help locate members. are reque sted to write Class of 1961. P.O. Box 362, South Laguna, or call 499-4083. The reunion v.·ill feature a buffet dinner and entertainment. Pope Will See T ito VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI will receive Yugoslavian Presidenl Joseip Tito for an official \•isit to Lhe Vatican nexl ~1onday, the Vatican an· noun~d today. Stilting Sat•• ~~~~~~~~~~- F es ti va l Aid es To Open Sales Early This Year \Yith mail order requests fr om members topping all previous records, Festival of Arts officials have decided to open bo:r office sale cf Pageant of the Masters tickets early this year. To accommodate persons who would rather pick up their tickets in person than wait for mailing, the bo:r office \vill be open April 1 through April 10 from noon lo 4 p.m .. Persons who have requested ticket order forms may make their selections and call at the box office for their lickets if they wish. The bo:r office will close Easter Sunday and reopen April 15, remaining open Thursdays through Sundays only from noon to 4 p.m. until the Pageant opens July 16. To dale , 32,500 ticket order forms have been mailed out to persons rt-- questing them. Shot Kills Dog; Pellet Hits Horne A large female collie. running loose in a San Clemente neighborhood was killed by a shotgun blast over the \veekend. One of the pellets from the shot penetrated a window of a nearby home. Police said tbey received a report of a loud blast and a yelping dog at J~l Loma Lane Saturday nigbt . Carol Scofield, who lives at the ad· dress. said she heard the blast and moments later noticed the dying dog in her garage. The next morning the w o m a n discove red a broken windov.·. Police said the damage 'A'as caused by a stray pellet. The Identity of the dog's owner 'vas not immediately determined. The in· cidcnt occurred at 8:39 p.m. • Ul'I T119~1t A ver y tall Uncle Sam leads about 200 followers of evangeli~t Carl Mcintire to stage a "Victory In Vietnam" rally on the steps of the State Capitol. The still-walking symbol of America recently paraded in San Clemente . ( Escape Artist Lives Through 'Death Dive' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI • ot tllt 0.HJ rltlf Sltff Escape artist D. D. Masco C<lmpleted his "Dive To Death" into the waters oil the Seal Beach pier Saturday and Jived lo tell about it. The 32-year old restraint breaker back· ed his boast that he could "do anything Houdini ever did" by freeing himself from two pairs of handcuffs 25-feet of chain, three padlocks and a 50-pound weight while at the bottom of the ocean. A crowd of about 1,000 persons watched him complete this stunt in 16 feet of \VAter. He took only 53-seconds to free himself from the bond. ''A hoax," cried some watching off the pier. But thou v.•ho had been in the bobbing vessel with Masco, anchored a few feel off the pier knew il wasn't. All of the Jocks, as well as Masco himself were available for inspection. Ma.sco's hands b'embled and his face turned crimson aJ the culfs were snapped around his wrists and the chain tied tightly around hit body. The padlocks were attached behind .his back. "I was a little apprehensive," said the 271}.pound escape artist afterward. "I'd never been in the ccean before." As two divers readied their aqualungs, Masco first placed one leg over the boat's transom, then the other, and finally gushed into the water. Only a white circlt. of foam remained on the surface as ~1asco was on the sandy sea-bottom, \Vorking his magic on the locks. And sooner than expected, a shock of red hair breaking through the surface of the 'vater signaled that he had com- pleted his esca}'.IE'. Back on board. the drenched Masco lit a long-stemmed pipe and said, "It ,,·as very dangerous. I had hoped that l 'A'OU!d make it. and I'm glad l did." 11le dive was the result of a challenge by one of ~1asco's friends. Ralph Yarnell, of Alhambra. Next month, ?-.lasco claims he will conduct another dive, this time in v.•ater off the Santa Monica pier. "I'll be wearing three pairs of handcuifs, leg irons inside a crate \Yith a weight on top. \Ye"ll see how tha~ \\'Orks out." he laughed. MASCO BEFORE DIVE Chained, Cuffe d and Weighted I nfant Born Dw·in" "' W ree k; J\1other Dies QUIN CY, 111. !U PI \ -A v.•oman more than eight months pregnant was killed but her infant daughter has survived a one-car accident alter being forced through the mother's abdomina l wall by the impact. The eig ht-pou nd, 14-0unce girl was reported in satisfactory condition at St. Mary's Hospital today. "There ap- parently are no complications," a hospital spokesman said. ONE Of; THE OUTPERFORMERS! Do .. R1clfl "I don't think they can ever get a volunteer army unles s they draft it," Hebert told newsmen. ''But v.·e·re going to give him all the help he v.•ants to implement it. ''\Ye're giving him all the rope he v.•ants," ~lebert said. The committee rejected an effort by, Rep. Charles \Y. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohio), to extend the draft only one year, 30 to 9. The bill sent toward the House floor \\'ould extend the draft two years beyond June 30. give President Nixon authority to abolish st udent deferments including dh·inily student deferments and add a third year of non-military 5erv ice !or conscientious objectors. Hebert said the conscientious objector provision would not change any of the present requirements for obtaining that status but he said he believed it would be easier for draft boards to grant the status in questlonable cases. "In my personal opinion ," he said, "I don 't think the draft boards would v.·restle with it so much when they know the man will serve three years." The four members voting against th e bi!\ \Vere \Yhal en and Reps. Alvin E. O'Konski (R-\Yis.). J\1ichael Harrington (D-1\tass.) and Floyd V. Hicks ID-Wash.), The pay raise is similar in tolal dollars to the recommendations of the President's Gates Commission last year to replace the draft with an all volunteer army. Petitions Still Circulating Ove r Hi gl1 Ri se More than 3,000 signatures have been obtained to date on initiative petitions seeking to block high rise in Laguna Beach. a spokesman for Village Laguna liaid today. Although only 1.050 v a Iida t e d si gnatures are needed to qualify the petitions. the spokesman said. circulation Of the papers \Vi\I continue at )east through the first announced deadline of April 5 in an effort to obtain "a true picture of public opinion " If signatures of l:l percent of the community's registered voters are ob· tained and validated by the county clerk, the city council is obliged to adopt the height limitation ordi nance or place it before the electorate. The proposed ordinance \\'Ou\d limit buiddings throughout the city to a height of three stories or 36 feet abo\'e grade. Signatures on the qualifying petitions have been collected for the past 15 days at shopping centers and by neighborhood clrculators. lob R1clti ®•PIONEER9 SX·770 AM·FM Multiplex Stereo Receiver Bllild )'OUr s1erao syslom •round lhls Vt'!rsatile lntil.Mnflnl. All aolld state, II oflera 70 watts of mU$ic pawer output. lnpu11 for m1gne1lc and ceramic phooos. microphone, lape monitor llnd auxlllsry. Two epeaker outpLJts make H kleet as a poWer eource for any flne stereo aystern. Top qoallly c lrcullry plus many rellnemenls tound only In ·much fT'IOI'• tl!1pen1lve units. Luntr Glow tuning scale appears only wit" Switch On. Housed In a handsDmely atyted oiled Wllnut cabl.ncL Be prt1pared IDr the ulUmale In Ustenltlg enjoyment. VISIT OUR NEW COMPLETE SOUND ROOM ONLY $249.95 COME lN FOA A DEllONSTRATlOtC W• haw rsc"'ttJ added • "" MMmd room to our ''-" You ar. Invited le come In and PO our dltplay ef t M flnaat '°""" 1111Vlpman t •t 1111 11vlnp. e PION EER e J.V.C. e ELECTROPHONI C e WALD e GRANDS ON IC e BSR 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUT, SELL, TRADE 1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -8elwMn He rbor & 8 ,..,.dwrf ) 12 DAILY PILOT SC Mo11d.iy March 22 1911 111 lligla Gear Complete-New York Stock List U::GAL NOTICE ---LEGAL N011CE Small Cars Makii1g hnpact "", .... , ,-• 'lJ >,c > ~ ~ 11'> + 1. Fluor o!I l UIK Mtl MM .,. ,. i!E, '4 ,,.,, Fly flor 111 IW..I Hit/\ W.. CllM (111 ~!' MOt 5t 2t . 71 t .. F vTI' oil :Ill =JI IS 1)0 1) FMC(D IJ -A-IJemN~1 :. ~ ~~' ::.": ~ -1~ :~I:?. lttO I EGAL NOTICE ·-· CllTlf"ICATl OF I USINlill ,ICTITIOUS NAME P 101 !>11 " LEGAL NOTICE --,c.,.~e1110Reou11TOF-T~ STAT!! OF CALIFOlNl.lli 11'01t TH( COUNTY OF OltANGI!" No A..atll NOTl(f OF HEARING 01' 'lff!TION FOii: ,lOIAT( OF LOST WILL AND l'Ol LETT E It S f(iTAMENT ... lt'I' l lOND WAlllEOI E11iT• Of EMIL 'I' T HAOLEV O.Cta• " Tiit uNltrsltlned ~· <trT IY lntY ... NOTICE IS HEllE&Y GIVEN T~al rOflltU<TI"" • bu1lnK1 •' xi.1 S..1l~n (Ol(>tll>I St ,., "•rrlno Frtn-!n nt1 1 i..., 0t1 ... H...,._, llttci'I Ctlllotn. t1660 ... t n • P<'I I on lor o•oMI• of IO•I n<ter 11\t !1ctllloi;1 I r n ntmt or w 11 and ID• l\ou•ne1! 01 L""'' AIRPORT MEDICAL CLINIC tllO 11111 T~lii11"1tll1't• to Ptll omr !80nd Wtlw ••Id firm IJ {Drn-1!<1 .,, ..... lollOWlr>V ~) ''" ""'" ID ""'f(" • ,.,..,. IO 1terwn• wllolt "'""' In lull tnd Pl•c•• turlller P• r cul• • 1na '""' !lie Time of ..,1.,..nte • • •• lo !owl 1r>d plact 01 1'1~1•!1111 Int ••mo 1111 By CA RL CARSTENSEN Of"" Diii, .. 1111 lltft Domestic small cars are making oin Impact In lhe tn dustry sot.I Ford 01v1S1on s Pinto Is proving ll<le!lf t~ n1ost popular new car ever introduced in S o u t h e r n Cahrorn1a by F ord Motor Comp:iny J ohn Hall Ford Oiv1s1on Los Angeles d1str1ct sales n111n<1ger has reported In lhe s ix n1onths that Pin to has been on tht marke' ' Hall said 11 has done bt'tter 1n the L A sales district than e11her the t.1ustang or the f\olavenck 1n their first six months Throu~h the first 10 da~s in /\1arch a 101al of 17 680 Pintos have been sold by Ford deale rs 1n the LA salt's • AO..CutF '°9 "bbT~t I 10 ACF lllCI 3 00 Acn .Cit• .a lo(mf Mk! ~ AOmlEK '6f lw;i MIUIJ ~ Ad<l••ll 309 -1r•i ..... ,,..L,. I .0 .......... lf pf i ~!u "' Co Ar.'Vr...lr.c1¢11 A r fl:e<! 2119 AJ ln<lvll fti •••on• la "IO CtJ 1 10 Al••I>." lnlt i A,ll>ft1cC J1 Al!>l<"tsns .--lt "It•" .Iii t1m ! "l{a~1a<1<1 XI "I"'""'' )O~ AllAmLI 2•t All'g (p lOe A,I ·~t~ '< AUetudPl A,UegPw 1 II -"Ille<! Cl\ 1 JO Alld Mtln 00 AllOMhl llb Allied Pd la All e<!Slr 1 o1G "lllt>d Su1>er llillh Cll 1-. "l"'"'A"I to """'t P Cem 'llCOt I IO :A:~~' L,.O F"tll 1(1nn M 0 1'0(1 NI-I bH<1 >ti for AP I I 1'11 a! t lO "~•nw TU•lfn (1lltor11ft Franl E "m In the ,.,., 1 nom 01 D•Pf'11'\tnt Obtili.., MD lSOO E Ktlfl t Sul!o No J of ~llll CO>U t .. , 100 (IVlc G Orin... Ct lllorn I M ~It II t w Ct>nt~ Or vt Wf~I I" tht City of S11w1owtlr.I M 0 7905 Edln1•r IWtill S.n!• Ana C•I !ornl• d istrict By contrast, 17 235 /\tu st angs and 136111 ft1aver1cks were sold 1n the comparable period after 1n troduct1on Ply111011th Parley Amt•~. 11(1 :~~·p1?i& AA ,r; Ur 110 Am A!ti " 90 A6&'<t• OS~ A 8rrid1 120 An 8nc~t 1 20 Am Ctn?:!ll A C&n pf IS Am Cem~nr Stntt Ar\t Ctllforn I 01 t<1 Ma Ch 1S 1'/1 Oiled "'••rh II IHI W E ST JOHN F•o;j Kann C& nl• Clp ~ Milt!ht<I S!tWIOW>~! COLONEL SELIM H FRANKLIN F,..,,~ E OblJl!en !OJ Et1I lllh Slrwt S!•Tt> ot (ti !otnl1 Or1n911 (O\lnl• CO•fl Mnil C1I klrftlt ttl!I On Ml Cl! 11 101 btlo•t "'" ' T•I 1no ~l-'111 NOl•r• PYb1 c n ind lo• ••<I ~'"'" Allotn•r lor 'tl•l!ontr <>~ >Ont IV t l>Pet .cl F 1111< Oriul •n F ed Pub one<! Or1np• Co11! Ci v I' In! ll~hn Mtllh•w S11w ow.11' known lo M1 ch 6 11 n 1911 !U 11 me to bl! lht Pt•1on1 whou name• 1--------------- • e JUb'I<: lbfd lo Ill• wl!hn ~•I ument LEG'L NOTIC~ •r'KI 1cknowlt<lted tilt• tXtcYIM lh•'---~ ' c .~.,... I" COFFICl"L 5E ... ll NOTICE TO c•eo1TOllS M1rlo I• W p yor SUF'Ell:IOR COURT OF THI!' NOlilf'V F'ubllt C1lltornl1 STATE OF CA~IFOIN IA FOlt This section or the country has really proved to be Pinto territory ' Hall added Since 1ntroduct1on a bout 12 per ct>nl of all Pintos sold na t1on;illv ire sold 1n this district Thal s ahnost Iv.ice v.hat v.e normally sell as a percent of F'ord 01v1s1on s na l1onal total At left R D /l\1cLaughlin gen e ral n1anager Ch i ys le r Plymouth D1v1s 1on n1ects "1th Al Taddeo gen era! manager Atlas C hr}sle r Plymoulh Costa Mesa at the Beverly Jhllon H otel M c Laug hlin discussed ''1th C hrysler Pl) mouth deaJers fron1 the Los An ~eles Orange Countv area advertis ing and sales plans fo1 the 1971 m odel year Of paranio unt inter est lo lhe <.onsu1ner and deale1 s was the recent in troduct1on of the sul>-coinpact ca r the Pl~ mouth Cricket A Chan I 60 "crrs~o 1 •o ACrvS pll SO ACv•n d I ?! Am Ol>t I 1 .lliEiT• 1111 ~'& .... ~y~lv,~.·~ AnlEIF'w I 10 Am E•D Ind ""' E~o pl A Ctnln1 50 A t.nln of! •D AmHo.i 40 A Horne 1 10 -" t>-c•l A'" 1"1CSD 2• P lllC p1I 011 ct In THE COIJHTV OF Oll:ANCiE o 1n1e Coun!v No A "6n M• Commlnon E•Pl'I E.1!1t• OI ANTON 1-iERSHEV Oece11 Oecembtr 76 1'11 to Pub \1h"' Or111g, (Mii Otll• Pl ol NOTICE !! HEREBY GIVEN lo !1\1 March 1? :If Aprll 5 11 !911 17• 11 ctl<:ll!O" 01 Ille ltloVt niml<I OKl'<ltnt ---------------I '"•I all ""''""' h•• nw cl• m1 "9t n•t LEGAL NOTICE I~ i. d deced..,r •re rl!<lu rPd lo !I• •11tm wllh !ht ""''"'"' vouchll" In --~~~~~"C"'7CCCCCC-:-C:--· I 'h• oH C1I! of !tie-clerk ot lne il>cove NOTICE 011' MARSKAL S S•LE ..,.,1111.o coUrl 0, IC P•tHnl !hem wlln Nt lU .,S the neceuarv vovcn.,, to In• un »G!tvWOOd O I Corno1nv 1'111111 U •• a0,, tned 11 1ne otflco of M 111or,....• 5••1llrn W B aatora Oetendtnl E 1.,, B• anver Mven. & !min 1501 I~ v!•tiw of an t•ec11Tlon h•ue-<1 on we,!cl 11 0• ve NeNPotl !le1cn (11 ! F'•b 1rv 11 1'11 by !lie Mun c Pl1 ttlll>l w~ cn 1 1~ ploco 01 t1u1 n•n Court ol Ctlllo•n <l CO<lntv of Lot ol ll\.f una~I pM<I n ti! m""t"" ""'' Jlllttlt• Lo<>'<I 8••<11 Jvdl< •1 Olsrr cl 1,, n ,.0 10 lfle ,,18te o1 u ld ""'Pd•nt unon • junamenr onto ed In 11•0• DI I w inln ' ,.,0n1~1 •flt '~ ' s1 .. vb!<•' "" Hol '"'""" o I C~mpanv ii ludvmenl ct tn 1 ~c• ct c •II 10 and 19•ln" St.,.n•n W 11 •dlord O•t"'\_ 11~ en l! 911 ns ungmenl dt~tor •howlnt • nol ~ n• He 1~y bl anC• of 17 ttl QI actunll• duf on E,'re<utr ~ 1 h.f W \ 11!d (uao~M on I~• di • cl t~t o! !h• 1~ve """'"" d•ceaent 1 .. u1nct f/I oald ••Kulon I nave lev td E I•" llarrai"'' Mvt., & Smit~ """n tll '"" rfgh 111 e and lnte ••1 HO! Wt•tclll! Ori.., Po eo• lHI ol 1ald lucktmenl llfblor In tho o DPe•!v "'""P"'I INeh Catitornlt rtUI In lflf County of OranQe SI' ot Ttl 1710 •O IS" Cal lo nll <!t1crlbed t• lllllcw1 Alloriwvi fOf E•...:ut"x to! ?6 T••tl 901 Boo~ of MIPI Pvbllt~Pd 0 lllllt CCII I D• v plot 11n;ts 1S.3ol In t"" CO<lnlv of Ort noe M&•t~ 1! 12 19 ind Aor I 5 1971 SJ~11 Slot• of Cillo nl tnd !octltd •t l------------~11iu~:i, Lida Sovd NewPe ! Betcn LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE rs HEREllY (;!VEN lh•ll----------------1 on lutld•v Ma ch 30 1t11 11 10 00 P-40fft nroc~ AM at t'1!nl of C<>u !l>ouoe CE•T1F1CATE Of" BUSINESS 561 Wtst 11!1> Sire• Cllv cf Ccs!a FICTITIOUS NAME "~•• C• lorn • (cun v ol Ortnotl. Slllt Tl>t und~ 1 9f>l'<I no ce 11fv In•• ••• c,I C•llfom • I w I •• I 11 cubl t cnnovc "" 1 bu•lneH at 7:!01 W Balboa 111<1 on T9 tl\t 1111~••' b ao,, for c&•h e1v11 Npwoon B•OCI> Ca !crn t un<I•• In 11wtvl ,...~, o• "'' Unltl'd s111n l~e 'c!ll ""' 1 rm n1"" ol WHO ARE ~I th• r Ohl TI . •"0 In••·~·· 01 THOSC (;I.IV<' 1nn n•! ••Id f '"' • •• d !udgmtnt lltbla 11' 11\e ibrw• ccmPOlt<I el th• to!IQw ng PtrW<11 wh01• or1cr b..., .,.,,,,. tv er .., mucn !ht f'Of namn n t~U •"" pla<•• or •• dencr ~' "'"' bt naceu1rv to ••• s!v •t 0 • • ,, 10 lows •••cu !on w !II IC~•u•d lntortS! and llQM Thu man 1'..llj ~ t1Cu•~ A•• co•!• Ncrwolk C11 r Ktn l(lu1 l)OI Wu• OM•<! tt CD1t1 MUI Cal lorn • M1rcn 8•1~ 81vll NtWP<lrl Brien ~ tll Otlt<I M1t(h 19 HI! OtLLAllD 0 Wll!C llSON RolM'tl Tnutm1n ,_,. .. ~•I Ken l(lu1 MunlclNI c,,.,rl Stitt o1 Cal lorn 1 Or1n1• County 0 •noe Cauntv On Mirth If 1911 IM'fore m• I Ht tier Jvd tltl 0 1rr Cl Nalarv Putil c 111 tn<! !or •tl<I ~lilt lh C " c;_..,ln pf ..,..,,11, •P<l•tred R<>Mrt Thurman tnd Sft9eanl K•n l(lus know" 10 me lo bi! the MIC H•EL 0 NOTT P'"'"'" wile><• """''' 1 • >ubscrlbed ~ 11"1111 I A"oriw1 1<1 '"" whh n ln$lrum•nf •nO ocknowlldt Ut E 0<•111 llvt St1llt 1111111 td 11\tv e>:KUl.ci !tie Umt l-ll•tcft c1111o .... 11 NI01 !OFFICIAL SEAL] Pinto con!Jnues to a collnl for one out of every lhree F'ord D1v1s1on products sold 1n the LA d1str1ct Ford 1sn l alone a s Chevrolet !I new Vega 1s doing its Job \\ell and contr1butlng to the d iv1S1on s O\erall sales comeback J ohn OeLorcan general manager said in a recent 1nlcf\ 1ev. The Vega 1s adding plus' business to General Motors diverting sales from foreign cars and helping expand lhe size or the total new car m arket he said DeLorean a GM vice president said the Vega ts now beginning to move 1nto the market 1n s i ze able number s and the 100 OOOlh unit has a lready been built The first JOO 000 v.ere I he hardes t he satd They took eight months to build because of shortages due lo the strike By contrast "e expect lo pro- duce the next JOO OOJ Vega:<: 1n less than three months ' Del..orean said that research among early Vega buyers 111 d1cates that 70 p-:rcenl of Vega sales represent plus b usiness to Gener al Motor s Vega sales are now O\ er 20 000 un1ls monthly and ' will increase rap1dlv In future months ' he said lnd1cat10Jls are I h a t eventuallv the Kammback "agon wlll ac count for about 20 pe1 cent of Vega .;;ales the sedan about 20 percent with n1osl of the ba lance goini to the popular hatchback couple The panel express truck has not been produced 1n sufficient volume to test the market thus far • • • ANNUAL CONFERENCE TO BE HELD 20-Z4 The twenty sixth annula Spring Business Conference o[ the Motor Car Dealers Assoc1at1on of Sou I he r n California \\Ill be held April 20 24 at Indian \\ells Dick Arnold pres1den! of lhe g roup announced The business sessions will ctnter on d1SCuss1ons of pollu Your Money's Worth lion problems steps being ~mM~'t! ~7 taken by thhe industry lo meet: ~I/El:~'~ I t Am Moton consumer comp a1n s on war ANa1Ga1 2 1o r anuus and repairs and :i:1'8~0 0~ analysis of sales approaches:~ /~~1 ~ 1n overcoming the business !ms~:1~ 1 ;g slo>Adov.n caused by the recent !~"'S:~ 1'" 10 economic recession -" ~rd ct• 15 A'" SIO I •8 fhghhgJ'lts In the progran1of1~&\a."'T'160 speakers 1ncludC' \Vednesdav ~w.11w• 60 " P •I 1 15 April 21 Robert C Cozens Am z "' D 0 _ fAm~on 60 1rrctor ..,,;partmcnt o Am~1•~ 60• Motor Vehicles The Auto :~f./n~ 90 Dealer 1n lhc 7 O 's :;;;~P~n.,< ~', Thursday April 'll Robert S AmPt• Co o -Am~!a• 7" 1.1 c C u r r y v ice president Am•t• 11n •1 Aml!8r pt 68 Au l o mot 1 ve Sales and Am"ed 16'1 rln T•I :)2 SC'rVICeS Chrysler M o tor s An•<ono1 1 C T h d IC AllChHOC-1 orp e In ustry o om Ancoro S•c 1 S Good And(IV 120 mun1ty ervices year Al>3(~~t11 1~ Tire and Hubber Co Are ~'rto0c~ !9' You a Pr ocess1ona r yAPL 01eM1 AllA S•t l 116 Caterp11\ar' and \Varrcn J !.~:\!N °:1 1 t.!cEleney of Clinton lo"a ~re~ o~n 1 President of the National ... ~ ~n[sD !t01 Automob1lr Dealers Assoc1<1 :,~~" ~,1v~ .. 11on NADA Toda\ !r~' ~'/,~0 'I m" C>. Ml Tht' conference end!> Satur Armc~ e>!l 15 Atm 11u ! •O day night "1th a banquet and A o corp VG d d II Arv~ lndl ance al In 1an We s Country "'•hid o, i lo Club !~b0 A~~~ Auo OG I"° 1$S<! l•an D Aini-tnn .11i11Cvf1 1 J6 At (l~EI of 4 Arr Rl<h"o 1 Al llf(h OU 15 A I II <f'I n1 1 At R~n "fl Ill Publ •hed 0 t~9• Co111 O.llv P lo Marr B~ll'I Matton M .. ch I lS n 911 SOS.71 No1arr Pub le c .. 1 Jorn• LEGAL NOTICE T 1 S•I F' nc Pal O!flco In O• .. nor Countv Nv C<>mm •$en E•c •• Apd V 1911 Publ •he<! O .. nq• Co•1 O• v ~1101 Home Improvement Loans "I A• Cf'lem I AtlAS CC p ITC Inc °'" Auror• P C<f -"u om O.i~ A" amrn Ind AV(C Ce<c Avco en w! M8•C1' 12 19 & Apr I S 1 1911 i7l )I Avtn ot) i~ NOltr '" ' • ~•t£ 01" "ITV AT $A~E U~Sl -------- LEGAL NOTICE I~ th' Suet vu• ot "'f ~!le ---cc,,,-c,--~~~~,~~--111 (1 lo n t fer (f!tlnlY cl LOI NOTICE TO CIEDITOIS ,..naelt• SUPERIOR COURT OF TH I! 11' thf Ml r of •n• Ella . DI ST ... TE OF CALIFORNI ... ~DI Should Be Shopped For AVMV Pll ~ l1m~1 I r I ~r C Ovnn Pit O "'-<l~t 0 I /JI ll•t>ckW SO l'.ER ENl(E CRAFT HIES TAN 0 THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ~':,'::°, ""''"' a •e" th~1 '"' ~" Eitite ot M ~",.:~!~on •k• M arid By SVLVIA PORTER <1enlon•n will se1 •• P vait s11e M Et on Oe<:Nsf<I If )OU own the roof over !a "'' ~lonell Ind t>f!•• I> <IO•• SYb!etl ,.0~1cE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tn~ h d h f t k f 1~ ccnl •m•llon 01 •a a ~u1>er"' Cou•t t•l<I 10,.. of '"' •bovt nem...i <le<ed•n! you r l'a I IS irs WC'C 0 1111 ar •fl•• "'• 1n0 dav ct Aorll rl\1t ti! Pt"••OI'• ~•v 1111 c111m1 1911~11 spnng is v. hen you start to 191! 1! !~t of! c• ct fruit !)oop1rlm•nt "'" •• d dKt<ltnl l'f required to 11• P•"~"· Mt!n Olllc• SKu t• P•c fie "'""' wl!ll !he nece..wrr vnu,hen 1" think about re mode l 1 n g N1t on•I l•nk no E••• Cotor-8Wd the cl/ ce of l~e clerk cl th• tbD•• f h f b h tf p1 t""na Ct l torn 1 t111>1 Coi;ntv of tnlllll!d tou.i "' 10 o•tH<'ll Hitm wnn re lnJS 1ng re ur IS 1ng LM "n•tlt1 s11i. o! c111t0tn • •H 1111 ~cnwrv vou(11t•1 to '"" "" you are among the millions l"e rlont t !le •nd 11te•ot ot •ad dt•sl9n.cl 11 11\t oUlce IJf Hurw 11 I f h dtt•.,... " •~• ' me er ntl!h ind Hurwtu ana lleme• Allornevs ~· l•w conlemp aung any o l ese ex Ill tht rl']M 'lit """ Into ••I m1t '430 Jlr>d ~· •• , N-t1 B••<" C•llforn A penSPS this IS also the week the •"•I• cl •• n nec ea1e<1 1>1• •CCU •I'd '766) wn '" lJ ""' cr•t• of btl> """ "' Ol!f , on or law nr oTh•rwht 01 '"" ur>de, 9....., n a11 m•l1••• Pt• you take your first step aner ll\111 o In 111<1l!lon tc "'ti 1a1n "ll to 1ne ••t•I• ol l!<I 11"'""'•n+ tO\\ard a home improvement ol otlll ne•:eo111<1 • tht t mt of w •~" lour men hi attu Int t rsl Pul>Ut• er•'" n '"" to • 1 tnt tr 1" !Ion cl 1nt1 nollc• loan And 1f you are typical conn""' n um Un t lleil oroo>t 1Y Ot td Me•cl'I 11 lVTI h h If , ui ed n tnt Lt JU•• Word Lt;una Cl>a •• Conn• I t IS IS V. en yoU WI save H • co~n v o• o •n;t s • t cl E••cvlo• money JUSI by lcarn1rg how C•tDrn• p•lcutrv d~l<r -•• olthtWllolth• 10 0,.1 .,,.,. r •1><1v• named oe<•d•n• to shop for this lype ol loan F'AltCEL I Dwf + nt Un 7 ft 1" HUIWITZ HUltWITl and fEMElt 1111 1<11n; No 1l90 , w n un T '' 4JG 11nd Stre•t To begin with I m assun11ng •lldwn on ""' (e•1a1n Cl!fldnm n ""' Ntw""r' 11••<~ c.i lorn!• 9JHJ that you can l finance your r an I !a'""' to .,,,, "'"O• • P•rl (1U) 61J.flltt 01 na c••I• n Otc ~at on o ! A1tomev1 tor E•t<vlor imprnvcments V.l\hout bar t ovtntnh Cond ! ~n• 1nd Re•lr c! on• Publ '""' Or1n;e (.,,, I 0•11• F' o! I ,~tor<l•<I ocrcber 1 969 In eoot Ml en 1s n 19 1nd AP 11 s '11 ~10-11 ro"1ng m o:;t peop e cant - 9096 PeQt 80• "' on cal lletord• \\hich 1s why home nn In !h• OU ct al II~ (&Jn• Recorder LEGAL NOTICE ef ~· d (f!tlnl~ tnd 1 1Jl'7nd ur>l1 vldf'dl------·----prOVCmCnt Joans !Oday IOtaJ ntertsr n "nd To loll I 7 •M ""°'n $4 billion A e>' T •cl No 107< t1 l>I'' map CEITll"t(ATf: OF 8USI NESS !oto<dPd n lloo~ 761 P•9•• •1 to FICTITIOUS N ... M( Im assuming 100 Iha! you •S Inc UI ., of M ice l•""""S MtP• l ht un<lt • ;!'fd do c• Illy lhf1 Rrf n tf'I• 011 ct o• •• o c°""" 11...:e<otr tOl'nuct..., • bt.t!ln•" •I P o eo~ are aw a rr charges on home •hown tnd n•11""d •• Common An• 8-0 1•v,.,. C•t '"'nl• ynntr 1"• '"' ~u1 improvement loans can vary 011 1n1 aeav.-1 • rtd le COlldomlnlt.tm I '"n•mt ot RAMON S OF CALll'OF!NIA f' In I'll! ntl Yd f rm 15 C<>ml>Oled ofd----- EICtPI n1 ""' PO 'on ot Lo! A !tie lo lnw rt!! r>er1ot11 Wl'IOSP t1•mt1 n LEGAL Nf\TICE nl T tC! No •95t •1 t>t• mac ••«>•<le<t lull 1nd pl11en of rHldenc1 "" •• " !loo~ 2SI PtitS 1• •r>d )S cl loll.,... 1---------------- ,., >tt ll<W'O•ll Maas In t!I• Oii <• o! R•m<lll M Giii n :JOl,1 SP n<l•U1 Ill• co.1~1v ll!Kotllt• 01 1• d (Pllntv LI~ Hun! n9ton eoa(!I C•I lo•n • E•t"!'!IM from It d LO' I 1 ''"' Bonne L (,~tin )'()1'7'1 ~olndr II A a! '"' a I "'""''" IXln• m no ah t•n• Hunll...., on O•acn C1 Uor11 t ond c!lle 1ub1tencts ly n9 bt!!CW ' Otte<! N-artl> 11 191 oep ft cl S00 00 t"t ti.It w !~out i"'t llA<ncn M (;Ill n r 91'11 la •nlPr uoon In• •urfA<• "' 80f'n • L G•I n •ull,~rt .. ce of lhf P•~rly tbo•• I S••I• ol (o1 tn 111 Orange Counlv lltPlh 01 50000 ,,~1 lot .. n• Pll PD'• On M~«" ll 1•11 btfo • "'r • ... n. ........ II .......... In <!HdS of Nott y Pull! f_ II ~"" to ·~" ~ •'t rM:Olll -"""1!1 v aPootrl'<I ll1mon M Ctl!I" PARCEL 1 No" t~CIUJ Yf ti•em..,tl •nd Bonn t L Ganin •ncwn lo mt '"' Ing '" and •i•tu ""l>lk u• Utt• 10 bf tne "" '"'" wnoi. nitmt1 ••1 •ew• • t nd '"' oll 1>U•eo>t• nt den ti sYIKc•lbl'<I lo tlle w rMn In•! umtnl Ind th• tto r11Junlno llut t>OI Im !I'd to •t•...,...1-f<I ·~~ •••Cul.a !11<1 umo in, conit•uc!on l n1tollo l lon IOFFl(IAL SEAL) r•olKtmtn! • • <> 1 I• mtlnttnan<:e M>irr lle!ll Morton '"' .. .. ,,, FICTITIO US llU51NESl NAME SfATeMENT lnllaw "' ..._., .... ll cto,.. bus neu ZINCS 3111 Ntwpprl Blvll NowPort lltttll Ctl I 'lMO Ra~mcnd L••o• lllch•Y & Dcn11a ~ae II. <h•• ll!l 0cf1n F on! ro,,..,,,., &,1cn C1llf 9166'1 Jiii• 1>u1!rw-u I• bf n1 cOllductrd bv t n Ina •ldvtl l••mond LttoY Rl(ll•v Publ ·~~ Ot1~9e C~.i Dal y P lat Mtrch I 1! 1, :If lt11 Sl)J..11 sharply from )ender to lender bul you re vague on details Thus its probabtv ne"s 10 you that you can p;iy as much as 18 to 24 percent or more or can gel this type o r loan for half these r a t cs Spec1f1ca\ly (Ii Go first to yoLL~ local bank credit u nion or savings assoc1at1on and ask each "hat v.ould be lht' lcasi expensive "ay to raise the cash you need You may be told that a regular passbook loan would be the least expensive but or course you must have a savings accounl against v.h1ch to borrov. On a regular home improvement loan from nne of these sources the tnlcr('sl rate should range between 11 and 13 percent the maximum loan amount usually "Ill be between $3 500 and $5 000 and the maximum repayment period JS typically f1 ve years t2l Inquire al your local lending 1nslllut1ons about T1 tie I and other loans which arc insured bv the Federal Hous ing Adm1n1strauon 1 n \Vash1ngton The n1ax1mum for th LS \\ pe or 103n I!'! $5 000 r epayable "1th1n seven years and 32 da}s The max1mu1n interest rate for a $2 500 one year loan ts 10 57 percent and eoer•I on •~d uH of • neceut v Np"" Pub! c-Cellt"'n t "' "'' tll. roadw••• I dOWtl~. Ind p nc "' Otflce In 1 000 . OF OIL PAINTINGS for a $5 000 loan 9 58 percent LEGAL NOTJCF. .....,.,u •• c•e !II• l1nd dncrl-1n Orenvt Coun v P••<•I 1 01 "'u c•n•ln aff<f ...:orata M• Commls•lon E•P e• 'itOt•mbt• II l~J n 8~ 91)10 Ac II ' 1'11 Po&e Sii cf Of! c el I t<"'"' !n In• P~bt ..e-1d °''""~ Cn•ll Oo ly PI<> Otllct cl !~ (ounh RKO•Otr cl M1 cf'I IS 2J 711 8nd Apr]I S 1011 .SU-1! 1t n coun • WHOLISALI WARIHOU5l -modestly below the interest OPEN TO THIE PUILIC rates charged on regular com· 50°/o OFF merc1al bank h nm e 1m "" E eo1Noir1t SANT• ANA provement loans These loans '"°ft' •u oot a re available for virtually any PtllCEl l A non •1c1u1 ·~ ••1•menl !or "9 '" 1nd "1''1' 1>11111 c ut I I el -.w• > no D I f,u•I'(' 01 n ' ' II e tto n<1u<1!n9 Du! nnt ! m!ted ID •~• "'"' ~cton ~•It I• on "II a<:tm~n1. t t O I I mt n!rntn(• Cot •!!on .. nd U'f ol •I l'KtHl!ltf c ""I ob t otdw•v• I a•w•I•• """ CO"llu 1 C~ft Lo! 8 nt TrKI No 5111 n •n• Ce.."'y ot 0•~"9• S • f .,, (I ltorn 1 ft c-maa tKO did 111 800-lu P•ot1 II to I' 1n<lu1 •~ c• M t<•I t'ltOO.!• M•<>• ~ !!•• c+I c• gt "'" Ce..ntw Rf'Cotdtt al \lld Coo,."'' ..,.,,, cetnmon • ·-" '' DEALE RS WANTIO r h h 11 th NOTICE OF INTEHTION TO !NGAGE -------------proiect w IC WI improve e IN THE lALE 0' ALCONOLIC l·---------_;·--------·····---------.,1 Mtnor No ,1'0 18 V • Ma• Ms.t Wf!! ~t~ullt MlllJ Ct lorn t (IO 119 ><Id •• 1! r,,,.., .,. 1ti.o 111 11 .. 1u1 mo""• c1 "'' Un tfd 5tt!t• Ol'I con• rmttlon ct ••I• Ttn ~ctn' ol ar1\DUn• ei.a II bP Gl't'Ollf<I w ft llt 11 d• or otff'rl to llt 111 w•ltlnt tnd w!I! tit' r«t wPd It lflt tl01'1110 olllc:t •t '"' llmt Jfl•• I'll I .,1 PVllllUI~ ll••"fll •I'd l><'t"'' <!tit ol v i• Otltd !h ! Ith lltV of M• Cll 1111 IU O G J Ano• llclft l!•H IO• ot !~• f\lo t IE VE RAGE S 11 M••t~ 11 nn Tow~ ..... 11 Ma• Ccnct,, s b e<I to • u•"'' ~I I~• I con" ~-ed •or n(>I tt I hi-l•ll• •IV•ft ~·t In• u~dotl OMtd Pt Ol>OVI •o ,,u • •('!'>ti c bf"•,.••<1r1 •I l~e prrm ••• d"l(tlbo-G •• !O!lowo lSI Etlt ,,., SttHI (11".I~ M•\• P...-1utnl IC IVCh l~lfnl on ,~, ijn- d•t\ qnt<J 11 AOOl•\"9 to IM• Df<>• tm•11I ti' AICOhOt t ll•v•rfilt Con1to1 tor luu•n<.• 0.. "''-ntl •PPllC:tt on ol •" • (Ofldl t bto\lt•tOf I (tnH for l~l'\f ll'tm Ill ti lcllovn ON SALE GENCRA~ !llon1 F de Publlt E1U"' PW.ct) A""ont clf1lrl"9 I'll 1rofP\t l~e l11u•nc• !It •U<~ flc•..W mt• I Ho I ., l...i •f'Oltt! •' "" oinct ot !~• °"''''"''~' ol' "l(Hlol ( 11 ... ,,.,., [ontrel or b• "'tll •~ '~' o~c1r1m1M 01 ,.le_! ( a ....... ,,. c..onuc 11 5 o $t ,..., Stt•1m..,1e (1! tor11 t 9$1 • io a• '" tit r•<~ Vrd w "' ~ JO (i.<OY\ ,,I !~• <11!• •~• r_.a o""'''' ~· 1 •I WATER PURIFIER GUARANTEED 2 YEARS SKEPTICAL? n+ ''" OHi'<!..,, Jo•I•~ lHlft A,.,..,..,~, •"" c .... ftot 1~11• MO l"lr•I w,,,,,~ l1nl litt 1n ''" ct .... ,,. '"'d :~ ~.., '';~ "01.:10u~~ ·:· • .:.~~:1 t·; lltENT tHE OSMOTIC AT OUlt RISK '•i•'"'' C•llf t1111 Te f2!J) '" •ut A11,.....,1 """ •ne<I 0 •"41' r""'t D1 I• 1,1,"~ n n " 1n1 ..,,, ..., .. l!(~n\f'd ·~ ,~. OAI• nf • <:flllO c ~~ .... '"' ,.,. "' . ., '"''"" •.. CALL LINVIRON1 ii" Obll 11111 t ...... l~f O!ll(t ot l~f D"'l'"""'t Ofon1' • & IC•!ll• n• ~ YOUNG I !'IOI Pu~•~•<! Of•~•• Cws! Ol !J "'"'I 1714) 645·0520 ;11 11 M••c" n 1'11 • '11 'L------------------------~~=--_.1 BakrOI T ~$ II b I f h d Bal! CE l U \a 1 ity o your ouse an ea~•n• Punt grounds -but not for luxury ;:~~~c:1 l 1~ improvements such as burglar::~~ ~1 ~t,/ lllarrns and sv.1mm111g pools :: :n:o' ", ~ It s quite possible banks 1n ~=! ~ Pn~.;: \Ollr neighborhood are not ~:'~~ ~·gpt 1 1nak1ng F !!A loans because :a n.i "' of lhe1r low intcresl rate ce1[ 11!v~c'i.L~1' ~ 8~•1l~b II ins bul ask about them e~ .. 1< c1c \II 8~~· r~, t anyway et""""' 1 1~ 8M:~m~n ~ (3) Do not egret lo the "•ct o ~ '" e .... c11,. r 11 loan terms v.h1ch n1ay be of 'l•t<>Pt' "°" ft~d•n•~~ fcrcd by your hume im '" 11nn11 ~n t t t th t O•llHcwto provemen con rac or \\ 1 ou "" in rco~ (lhk t 8•m1Co~ 1rs c cc ing up nn ern1s 11~n11. 1 <1a offered by local lending in ~:~1~:' ',., s11tut1ons ~~~=1 ::; ~ 14) Consider r:i1s1nA funds ~~~v;; 1n by rchn:inc111g your mo1 lgage ~;1~~;, P,";11 't tod •Y s mortrraue interest ll-• Tt.••• 1>0 bO 6t(k01<~S rr1tcs plus closing costs Your ~1r,:J't~~e 1' rno1 tg.ige may include clau~s g\oc.1<~: ,J~0 v.hleh wlll let your refinance s1us 1 P" 11 llobo I 6•1<• under favorable terms Again A.,.~• Co .io at lcsta check into this ggn'f'',.d ,5~ (5) The cheapest y,ay of :~~:'n1~, ~?9 all well may be borro>A 1ngl:~·~~~· j~~" against the cash v a I u e of :~~ ~:1• 1~ ~: your hfc insurance policy You Flourn1 Fnc 11,~n I Alrw surely know this but 1f you1ar ;1sr 1 o0t do lake 1h1s route make a :•~,:::~ \0 ' -" t II• !Ptl '11 p t.-ugc to repay your can 8dw• 1ia1e 1 i61 A Jillie knn1vn source :~:.;~J\ "',~ or home improvement Jo:ins ~l\~;.;:,u~o' 11 Is the so-called htlle F'llA 1:-=~~~0: 1?0so loan available 1n lunlted num e uniw~ 11 lhKV t.• 1 )0 hers to lo\\cr 1ncome11 ... a en I e .. dd Cools homcov.ners l!ving 1n rura Aunn•1 t"!I h I Bul!Forq 1 10 communities wll popu at1ons ev cv•w 6IJ I Th I 8\Jnl\ 11~"'" of 5 5llO or c~s e \\ptca Bunt<ll ~11 ~ interest r ate on these ll'derally :~ 1N~~<1 \,"g subs1d1zed lo(jn5 i~ currently :~·~~e' fJ n 71 ~ percent ~although thP r:itP. :~:~"'Un ~o cnn be as low ;ii;; I percent for those 1n the 1n .... 1 sl income c~t><>1 co 10 radt~~ 1n11 bracke!sJ and 1hc lo;:ins are c. r ~.,.1 • 1ca ahn Mno:'I rC":l):iblc over n 33 }ear C•mcll Lk " ,. lc . .,011 ~•s ru.r1od You re alrnos! C(."t' t'•mo ;n l 10 I'" Cdn II ~w ·~ la1nly not ellR1blc but mv cnn P·~ 1 JO 11 (11><1111 I 10 po1nl ls 1hc 11n1>0rtJnce u C•n t enc1~ h d If c.,,b lJO s opppu1g -an your are C.• 1,, 6G ehgiblc inquire al the county f~'g'=tPi I ~4 f' armers Jlome Adm1n1stra ~:,~,..;l~ : " on office r1nc 1 s1~ Ct !Wal aot (7) And also shop not only ''"i.c• 61'1> I t C•tf•Tr 1 :Ill for the m08l fa1nrab e 1ntcres cc Co<P "I cct co pft 11 rrile 1erms to you '' 1op as ••1acn o ta v.cll for other flnanc1ril ad ~~l:~'~,~ 1~ vanttlgcs surh as thC' lov.estlf~::<0i::'v' ,., charge ! If :in} I for processing f:~1 ;;'~~" ~14 J nur \o:in and th(' lo1\C$l C•~ PS M ~r11t~r1 ""•nalt1e11 11r any I ror early c·~M"w '~ I'" ( ~nl~~ I ) repJ"'n1ent I'~"' s.ov~ J c~~T•I J 9\lt A final 1101r Strirt 110\\ '"• ·~ c~ ., Cr t •~d •I lor1()r112 1i:r 1nOn(')' IS hcl'Qm1ng r. 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I ~ 111 o f' ... •J..t1nPl10I 10 1t• H \' ~'"f••MI fll•I -\\Jtr(PpfOJ6 ol1 !l"' l" 'I I I 1~• F~m Iv Fl 611 SI n ~ l'4 15 1 -'> Je•CPLI cl 4 1 1 I 3 F1n1I~ Int 41 I o h ._ ) JfW'' (O I.XI 110 ) I 17 n -'4 F• WO.I F II 11 1~ ,,,, h' -ti, Jim Wtll ~ '° • I • • r. •M>'IO •• ll d +4 ~ ,. -.. JlmW pt '60 ll6lt~•Ml<i-'ir; ... s~11 111 .1•·:1· JlmWollP!I l T~ • t • II • l~P<lder1 iO 100 'I • ·~ 1 t ... JohnM~n 11'0 •• •l •1 O •1 I -'II"""' ~ I l'O )I ) )0 ll ... Jofl~Joll ~ • 76 11 tf 61 -1 F•d"'°9 t IO 6J :rt o 1t,. 1t -' JOh111 Svt 10 11 11 1 19 • IS • ~ Ft<INMt9 tt If' r. o &.i 61 .. +I\\ JOhll SY( Pl J 1110 10 ~ Ill -1 FtdPIW:[ 11 •• 1• 1 • ~ -I• JonLolln IO IOI ?I • 11'\ 7'1~ + > F PK pl l H H Jti., 19~, -• J-• LIU <I 7J ~, 11 1 ,. ·~ FtdPooed 1 I 1l • 2l U'~ -• Joratnl.n 1 )0 1• ~~ .. jl JI > -~,I' P&n l>ft 1$ 1110 XI o 1'01o 1'0 o J"'lffl1 }1] ~ 11 f 31 + ~F...,Sl1nS 60 I :i6 ... 'XI :IO .. -\t J,,,.Mfo 100 ~ rt ti • 11 ~ -'FK!f ~I• Inc: '° 11 10 ... tOl• ll;tltr .llilum I 101 '1 ~ '4'• ,.,, "F1110-orsr. 1 161 •! 1 •S , ..., , -\ c.1 ... 11>1 , 11 10. 4'I • .;r. •Tl• t t FPde•tl Ot• u '"' It ''---'-""ll:alvc .... J.O 1'0 51 s, 5,+v,,.,,~c,. PO 11 ~It'~""'"'•-t1t11Cm ""150 J Hr Ill• It ' ~1Flbttt> d hi 4• J :12 1 ll"• -1 CtntMlr C1'Q 6 14• ?J 1• o • tf'lellll;!M \40 1 \ )6~ ~1 -41((!~F'l! ~illl 110 69 6& • •• I '"IFlttrot 100 M 14 /5 75 -tlllt l(C PL pUJ.0 1 •1 tl •1 'IR Fl!<ltr•ln ti I "4 1! + • I(( !IDu Ind 1 ti! •Al 1• •l'I f f\M 11111 SS )I) .. '9'• •9\,--l(CS.0.:.111 I ll 11. II r1c~·1 l•I " ...... ,,1.,, \ol(t .. GEIU I 1'1 o 11 ?• o o r11.Y.tq H• \6 ) • :If) • .JO_.., t I 1(_1~Ntf)f" 1 JJ ~ ' •1f'•IN~!Ooo 1 I IJ /t\o 11 l(~nl>\' '> •• ~ • i.;,, ) • r,tNC. t, , If IS~ n . I]. n' -.. 11:11• tie! \ 7• {,, 11 , f\tNStr .SO. S ~i,, " -16 • +-• K~tv t~ Dfwl ' tl , ,,.. 1 , • Fht~tKl'I 911 n '1 I" /I .. " K1u1 tlrd 10 5 \ ·~ ·~ 'I r •~•id 0)111 lt I~ ,\ I .. -1 IC'AWIC.~ J(il> J1) 11• )•I ,1 l•h~t~ I )) I 6 16 -4JCtYM•Ro 60 1•1 le ,.. ,... ~1'1•"(~1 I 101 l.&1. "'• 3~ • -'• K••b t 1 j(I 7C '" 1~. 6• •·Fl~mlhq ~ If 13 • l ··-IKt t•" nd 60 !fl l{I '"!() 'II~ I ctr \1 :-0 • s:t• rh K'I ~I )~ ), l \ ,1~1~1 ·:~.'/' 19 ~lo )I ''"" i:i ... ::~::II ~)(! )2 ll •"•~~ ~ Jl1' ?•--11~ ~ICt"""'lllj)b ,. 1 r ,11Pew 11~ '1 111 l1 -')l(•~n'fOfl I • \ • A • lo[Fl•PwU l ' '! I o n.. ) l(•F•C~k ~ 1• I \1 ' ll'• f • <t""I , o 1'! XI -o I(• UI I 1 411 d f , • • \o F-+uon.,o I )I SI 11 J• 1 lt1• -\.t KttMtG l SO l I ·: ·= : • . • l ' ; i • ! . • • • . • 1 l • • •. • j ~ 1 • • l ' ' ' ' . ~ , For The Record Dissolutions Of ltfarri..,e Death Notlre• .. Monday, Marth 22, 1971 Toomey To Head Contests World decathlon rec o r d holder Bill Toomey, formerly of Laguna Beach, will be honorary chairman of the 1971 DAILY PILOT Explorer OlyJl'lpic Games ,J~~~~~~~~~ The multi.event competilion will be held at a number of high schools on June 19, ac- cording to officials of the Orange Empire council, Ex- plorer Division, Boy Scouts of GROUP OF SAND SAILORS SPEEDS THROUGH SAGEBRUSH ON THE EDGE OF EL MIRAGE DRY LAKE If You Ar• Bored With Pokin1 Along on Water,. Try Dod9lng S.gebr"sh it 50-60 Miles Per Hour ST RS Sagebrush Sailors Sydn•v Omtrr h on•. af tht w11rld'1 t'••t ••tr1lo91n. Hi1 col~mn it ont of fht DAILY PILOT'S grttt f1•fur11. America. '===========::! Coast Racers Exchange ,Hulls for Wheels Track and field contests, plus basketball, ch es .s , checkers, swimming and div- ing. rifle marksmanship and many others will be offered. Sailing competition will be in Newport Harbor, with A group of Orange Coast sail on beaches and abandoned presentati-On 0 f a DAIL y STORY, PHOTOS th sailors have left the high seas airstrips left over from e p 1 LOT.sponsored perpetual to try their luck on the high BY LEE PAYNE war, but around here , a large trophy . desert. Of the parking Jot is about the only Co-chairmen Don Casino and Trading hulls for wheels flat obstruction·free available Larry Namelka noted Toomey th . DAILY PILOT Stiff for a test sail. Fortunately, was asked to head the games they have set e1r course .._ __________ J as winner of the 1968 piympic across the windswept salt flats the 0 range Count Y Decathlon event in Mexico Ci· and dry lakes where they unlimited class catamaran Fairgrounds and Ange I ty and the 1969 Sullivan Award are able to triple their speed h b racing ideas. These machines Stadium ave een very as America's top amateur under sail. may cost as much as $2,000. cooperative in letting us use •='~'=hf~e=t'=·========;J Sand sailing popular in Europe since the 1930s, is The most popular are the their facilities . gaining favor in the U.S. One Desert Dart and the Sand "I have found ," continues of the most active groups Sailor. They can be purchased Foster, "that you can do meets at El Mirage dry lake ready-made for about $400, or everything in a sand sailor in the desert near Adelanto that you can in a sailboat just a few miles beyond Cajon built from plans available and tacking and jibing are Who Cares? No olher newtp1p1r ln the world caret •bout your commu· nity Ii~• your community d1ily n1w1p1p1r do1s. l1'1 the OAILY PILOT. PaS!. from the manufacturer. much easier." There, on a J t e r n a t e How does sand sailing com·-'"".'~~~::_----,-,-.. -.,-" .. =~="=,=, ========='! weekend! sand sailing. en· pare with the water variety? l MARCH'S BIRTHSTONE , '-the .{J~t.<ant'-tift~ the Egyptian1 plattd thtir • court. of law and tbtir battla fields under ill protect.ion. f •1t••rnNo thusiasts gather with their Three young Harobr Area ~ ~~ H~n~.!';"'on ';!:~":'o.1:~ = craft to exchange information, residents, Russell Foster of !! INrch "· survr.....r bY wue, v .. 1111e practice and race. The season Costa Mesa. and Dave Carroll " •• • Denture Invention For People with 0 Uppers" and "Lowen" The nnmt thin&: to havina: your helps Protect i\ltlll from bruising. own teeth is polliblt now w1lh 1 You eat more nalurally-enjoy plastic cream di9CO'<'l!fl' that ac· apples, com-on·thr-cob. 1 The rolor·ot the Aqoamarina ~ hu been liktn~ to a &houaul1 ]tague1 ot 1unlit If& fmpritoMCI in a cup. SuppoMd to lharpt~ the inttllect and fTallt cow-ap The Bloodstone i• the COl!IJllD birthstone for Marcb, Worn. IQ' men, lt 11 oft.n carnd wiU. mono"""'• ioiow " ....... 11 '~ Brffd1,,.; 1t1P1011. Jim u.mer11VH1. sen--started March 6 and coatinues ~ k... Tund•Y· J PM, s1. Mkr.e.r• and Tom Hallett of Newport ., Ee!KOJl•t ct1<1rtti. 01r«reo:1 bv P..a SAILOR FOSTER CHECKS SAILS BEFORE RACE through June. Beach, all with considerable .., femllv Colonl•I ,.,...,.,, Hom•. H H Do bl luff D . Wiii dd s--' I f " GATWA1to • opes u • e11gn a r--A considerab e number o experieace building and racing ... ,..._ Anto1nett1 Getwerd. 10462 -------''---------.:,_-----'-----the sailors are from the catamarans, have i·ust design· ~a si....rl l.1 Drive, HIJnll,,.ton a.di. Ora Co t " su,.,IYld by hu11>1nc1. Fr1ro111 da111Jftf1rs, nge as · ed and built their first sand r>en1w r11ompU111, C•te .v.. .. 1 Lnlle The vehicles are built from sailor. Anti ~lwood. Rl'lcldttl1 ; 1>1•eo.ll, Mr. M p bl D I e"" Mr1. Frink Nll1n, Rl>oclnl1; 1111.w, oney ro ems e ay 8 variety of materials. Some '"The biggest problem," Sa)'S Mr1. sh1r19Y su~. RhDC1e111. s ..... k... sailors use machines made of Foster, "is finding a place Tueldlov, 2 PM, Btll Broed'wtl' ChtP411. '""'".....,'' P1cu1c v1-M-1.1 Per1t. c s d p old bicycle parts with an to practice. I have been chas· ._ .. , ,_,.,, :'~s" ~·~•~•. . 0 unty tu y fOJ• ect Army surplus par•chute sail ed orr parking lots !com ~ .. 11 AbneY GJ•r•. 110Vt 0t11wer1 costing $5. Others have high McDonald Douglas in Hun· tually holds both "upper&'' and F!XODENT m1.y help you IPf8,k: '"lowm" as lllHf lltj1J1r p~usiblt. more clearly, be more at ease. It'• a revolutionary discovery The special pencil-point dia- called FIXOOENT. for daily home penxr lets you •pot FIXOOEN'T use. (U.S. Pat. #3.003,988) With with precision • , . au/terr n1rd1d! FlXOO!NT maoy denture wearers One application may last round now eat. gpeak, laugh, with little the clock. Dentures that fit are worry of dentW'CI coming loo9e. etsential to health. See your F1xonENT forms an ela1tic denti1t regularly. Get easy·to- membrane that helps abeorb the use F1xooi;:m Denture Adhesive •hock of biting and chewing-Cream at all drug counters . Wear rOMr ~iri11~1 /rw /ntllioa 111"4 1ood fwt.:At ~ ' The pl1c1 to t• '" G1nuint l irth1lon11 ........ , H11nt111111 ..... •11c11. Ott• ., """· performa-e ~w·pment in· tln,.."n Beach to Collins Radio Mtrch 11. Svr"Vtvld D'I' ...o!l>er, VJon• '"' "''t !i...., Co1l1 M111 540·1066 Kote111 b<"Olher•. 11:1vrmind '"" J. L. SANTA ANA -Orange Aeronulronic Division in -~c~o~rpo~r~a~tin~g!_~th~e_Jl~a~tes=:t _:i~n_J~n~N~e~w~po~r~t~. ~l~n_:E~u~ro~pe~~th~e~y=======================:L.'::=========~ Glllt; 1!1len, Mrs. Nacllne Drt!~ •nd Co ! t di uJ ' Mrs. MlxlM Ttiont't'. Gra't'111c1e ..,.,kn. un Y s U es on pop abon Newport Beach and chairman -.hM41v. t :XI AM. v. A. Cemttwry, goals, Dealtb priorities and of Proi·ect 21 , made the re--w.t U. A-In. Pelt;; F-.n!ll' Colonlll l.A .. a · f ] · ,....,..,1 Home, Dl'«'lcn. 11v••~1ng or ow l n Come quest to the board. He said oouov families may be delayed or that UC Irvine. which has c!vde L O<tud'I. s1n11t1r1 MnC11"' ,_, d ped 1 la k 11· cm· M"'°""kt L.,.,,... a"cti M•tu•"'· rop or c o 1nan g. helped fund Project 2 1 , •·t..1r• Holm•rt. ~~~"..,..1us •nd ,,.. UCI·Project 21 whicll has withdrew financial backing ""'*''· w......,..,., 1::111 PM, w.tmi... been undertaking the5e and because of money problems. am M«nol1•• P•,._ MornHiry McJ C1nt-similar studies for the counly Lawson said the business 9ttn'. M<CLUNO is out of funds and bas asked and j.ndwtrial communities Frtc1er1ct J. Mc<:lu1111. m.s l!tlt:t"""' the county 8 o a rd ef be ked f 1· ... ,,.~ t•" Mn1. 011e of _.,,, Mtrdl may as or mancial 20. SU,.,IVMI by wilt, Htoell; lllftl, Dr. .Supervisors for $10,000. be\p. ~~rid Ji.:=1~~· ~kin:. ~= Supervisors, decided to wait UCI-Project 21 studies have Gnwe1 1Seutnt1r. Mr1. J1mu o.111n , until they begin reviewing been completed in the areas Col!• M .... 1 bnllft..,, Euttne I'. M<· J'!/t 72 b d t bef c,_, N1p1n, c•rtt.; .1,1.,, M.,. Charltt • u ge ore com· of open space, urban problem T•vlol', Huntlnvton "•"'; 10 1r•ndch11-miling additional funds to the solving, county planning, air id....,; -1rNf .. r1rldchllC1. S""'kts. t d . ct T~•v. 11 AM. P•clllc v1ew ch11111. S U Y proJe · and ground transportation and l!'illcmbmml. P1c1r1c vi.... M-l•t John B. Lawson, general deterioration of downtown :::,; F:1~f'::ir=-1on~1•h:_:: manager of Philco-Ford's areas in cities. cfiollrlbule to ll'lt MtlOlllt Temllle 811lld· __ _: _____________ :_:._ _____ , I... Fund, Arc:tcll1, C1UI. Pe<lllc View MwfU•ry, Olr..:ft>r1. ; STA.Ml" Kids Like to Ask Andy JQflat! l . Sllfl'IP. AOI f.I, ol' 7''2 P...-r. 11'9 ~. Co1ll Mtu. Diii of cJtttl'I, Mfrctl :ID. SUrvhfed bl' Wiie, Miii IClfto .ICllll•l'I L. Sl•m• Jr,; trtndto11. Jtl' It. ------------------------1 SllfmP. 5oen'lul. to.11v, Mon111v. r ,.M, ll'flll: Clll'Dl'll <Ml M•r Ch'"4. Servlcn w1f1 conclvdl In cl'l1pet. Prlv•lt lnl••· ,,....., 11 P1cltlc VI-M-111 Ptni. llfi'tt '°""" del M•r Mortu1ry, Dlrec-..... •: llUltTIVANT ACll!ln D. Stun..,1nl . 2021 Vbll C1lon, ctr-,,., ,....,_ o.1e o1 llMll'I, Merell 1"i; SUr"Vl.....i In' wl!t, C11t11rlne D. Slur· ,_nl; '°"' Wtrre<1 D., of N--1 115-d'I: d1U11tht1r. Mrs. 1"10w'•rd JonH, Sl(I M1teo1 1lt1.,.1, Mro. Jolln 9\ldtlne- ..._"'' ~ de! M•r; Mrt. FIO'rd H!Jtlln Jr., Ill Council 8luif1, 1-1; ""' 1,.l!dcl'll1Clr.,,. S.rvk n. Tlltldav, 1:• PM. P•<lllc View Cl'l•pel, En!Omb-rnFo!, Pe<lflc VI""' M""°rltl P•rt.· Ftm- llv 111ff .. I• ll'IDll within• ta m1k1 mt- ""*'l•I c~lrlbullonl. pl"K contrlbutt -· the D•-· COllnt'I Council of BOY soilu11 of ArNirlu. "-<Ille VI-Mcwlll· '"" ~r.,;1111'1. WASI! Cr:f'll•I L. w,... 1t<roown •• c,.,11a1 Wlllltmtl GIO P'trlr. N _ _,1, N.,.POrl 8t1<h. t>11!1 of dt•ll'I, Mt•dl 10. ~r­\ll'ftd by l'MJHllnCI, Ed'w1rCI. $.,..,lc1t, ll>'edl'lltodtY. l PM, Pt(lllc VI-Cl\lpe!, 1~ ... t. !"ttl!IC \II-M...-111 P'trk. Pf<;lflc View """"'1•N• Olrtcton. WIM•lt t>ti. Llllle Wlmtr. IU) N-PDrl' 81v4., C•1'11 Mal. D1!e of -th, Mtrdl 20. lkofvlved bY '°"'' Chllltt, J•dl •nd Olsll Llthtfool; 11ot11ehler1, Ptut!M Cfllnell.., •rid Ger•ldlne PnwlM; - tlrltMf'; -tltlt•l twentY·fWD ...... ~Clrtllr _,..,.four trfff-tr..-ddllklren. S«vlc• will bl l'lt!CI In Tl'l'CI'\. Oii.i• ._,., l,.IKll •rTtllltmlnh ll't' P'NI! Flill'llll' Colonltl P'u.-11 H-- ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 41'1 E. l'lllt SI., Costa M,.. -• BLA'l"l MORTUARIES Corona del Mar .. OR 2-HSI Coltl Mesa ...... Ml MU4 • BEµ BROADWAY MORTUARY tll:Jroadway, Costa MeP LI g.1133 • Md)ORM!CK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY llli LqvU C..you Rd. , -• PACIFIC VIEW MB:MOIUAL PARK C.m<Wr7 MorturJ ~pel --VlewDrlte Nnpol1 lladl, Olllf..U -• PEnFAMILY OOLONIAL FUNEBAL HOME '1ttl 8olJe An. W....,luler llUllf • SMITll'S MOllWAllY 117 Malo 81. -HUDllllfAtO Bud< laxes taking too big a bite? use our money! Thia year, pay all your taxes with a loan from Morris Plan. Then schedule payments to fit y0<1rbudgeL On approval, you can borrow from $100 to $5,000 or more for taxes, blll consolldatlon or any good reason. And you'll get our Moneya Back Guarantee (if you find you can do better, retum the money within 5 days at no cost to you). Talk to the friendly people at Morris Plan about money for taxes or any worthwhile purpose. We'd like to help. Morris Plan 67:1-3700 Newport INch -3700 Newport 8oultv1rd Ottler Oftlc:ea throughout c1r11ornlt Sale! Self ~learilng ranges for people who want to .get out of the kitchen, fast! $819~-"-"~- -- Sale s199 Reci. 229.95. Pet1ncre1t® 30" gas rant• EYGtklee,... porcelain enamel Rnlsh owen panele clean themsetwes during nOfmll o....,n use. Fluorescent lighted blckguafd with clock and minute timer. Receued cook top. sae-lhru own door. WtMte, coppeltone. 81lOC8do ••• oo&or costs no more at Penneys. l\nnet11 Sale $369 Reg. 419.95. Pennerett • double oren gas range. Full size lower oven plus eye level oven ... bolh with continuous cleaning Everkleen• oven panels. High fashion styfin; with black glass oven doors and chrome trim. Fluorescent Hght Illuminates cooking ·surface. White, coppertone, avocado Ofl harvest gold ••• color costs no more al Penneys. CALL...(714} 52H401 Available at these stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport 'Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington BeacK Use Penneys time payment plan. • • Monday March 22 1971 SC DAILY PILOT JS Monday~s Closing Prices-Co1nplete New York Stock Exchange List •• '" ... " " " . ., ' . ,01 '~ ' ' . lo 9 ~ 141 Jll,,, '" ~ l•O,.. •o l2 • " ' 0 "' ~~ ir-r ' ,. l•S 391':! ~89 , ..... ? .,~. . " s: '~ l J? .. ' ' •8 l • " -N- 0 " '" ' " " • "' " " " ·~ ' " '" •• "' • ' m ' " • " ,. ' .. ' • • " " ' "' " " •• " " 0 " • " " ' " • • " '" " lHo ' . • " .. " '" • .. " ,,.. "" "" " • " ,. . •• "' .. " " '" J ' " .. '"' ' ' . " '" ~~~ '· .. r .. ... • "" .. '" " . ' " ~ ?&lo " "" "" " ' .. ii '" '" .. " " . "" " • " ' . N.Y. 11'i1111ers and Losers Complete Closing Prices -A1nerican Stock Exchange List NEW YORI( IA.P MOl>do 1 cmp o • A.mt (~II s Cl(~ E~Cll•nvf D t•• S• n Nt! (lido J H t h Lfw ( o't Cllt ?5 • 3 • ll 3 )6 • • • } J I l f 11 '°"" 20 .. " .. ' ... " ' " • " ' ' • • ' ' " m • • ' ~ " " • • • " ' ' • ' ili • • ' .. "' • "' s ,. ' ' • l ' .. ' • I .. l1 0 • " . • ' • 0 Si It N' rn" I l1 ;II Low c 011 Cht ,. . ' . ' } J ... • ,t If~ II, J u \~­• ,a ,'' ' . ,,,,, 11 '"" ' • ,: ~~ ,t: • • • ~J 11 \ ,,.. • l • J ~ ' " ' " ' " ' " ' .. • " ' '~ " .i " " " • ' ' " 0 " • " " , . " ' • ' .. • " ; • "'1 : ,,; • • 1Q J • 0 " " " " .. ' ' .. ' .. -H I- ' • • " ,1 ' • • • " ,f " •• '" • ' " • " " \ Si ti tOI hd1 l N tl'I Low Clot Cllt " s " ,. .. " 't .. ' ' i • • , • m ! " '" 0 " '1~ ' "" ... .. " ... • !·~ ... • • ... m .. .. ' " ' ' • • . ,, . ~~: : . . ' ' . $1 l ' '~ 'Iv. ' .. s~ :ni.. l 1 l ~ • • ' I ' 2U ' ' ~ 1~ • ' " . ' ' ,, ' " • llO'I. • " " • ' ' . lll 1l • ' .. ' '" '.I l lo }) ' ~ I l8 o " " • • " ,., ' ' ' " .. , : ~ : ,, ,, ' . • 1 '• : l ., f, l ,• '"' ' " " " . "' .. '" .1· ... ~. '" I o .~ '" '" • •• •• ,~ ,., ,, .. '" l!. " l~ • ... • ". •• • " " ' • " ' • ,. • • ' . '" " • • ". '" " . • • ,,, ' . ... '" .. - • • '" • " ' ' " . • '''• • .. " l' • ,,, i i •\ Hel llMI• I Hifll LfW Ci.•t Cllt ' " "' .. • • "' ' ' • • ' 'l ,. " " .. 1M 0 , .. I " "' ' • 1\ ' 1,: • " • . ' » • ,, ,J ' ~ ' ' " " ' " " 1l " ' ,, l: ,i; " • ' ,. • l ~ l n ' I• l 1l • ll' n .. " ,; • ll l ' " " 'j " • 1: .... 1! •• " • ' . • ' . : . '" •• • ... ' . '" "" " •• ' . ... •• ' . ' . • ... ... '" ... • n. • ' ,. .. " lr.l " . " ,,. .. ' J,: "" ... l~ .... ... '" " '" " "" '" '" " .i.. , .. f. .. '' " '" , .. ... " '" ' ' ,:., "" ' . ' "' ,,. ,i;: ... • ' ' ·~ ' in: .. .. " '" '" '"' llt<i • "' , ... ~i ,. " ~, • • I!, •• '" " ' " ,!l: "" " . .. ... ,,. • "' 1211 " .. • '" " ' • • •• ' . ' '" • ,. " "' .. ~ " " . • " " ' t: " ' . ' . " " '" " .. l ! I.: '" 18. '" '" 1: " ,1.J. '" ... "' l~ '"' 1Jll " ''\" ' '~'t ,,. ~,, ' . .. , .. " -.. ~· , .. ' ,, .... •• '" ~ rt') ,:; " :~ ' "' '" "" " .. '" '" ., 1:!? •• ' I '" • "I .... '" ,.., \ I I I I • l • Newport Pushes Choiee Proper-tr- v ctluable Parcel in Hqntington Beach Gets Only Few Nibble s ,!fewport Beach is having Its troubles drumming up interest ~ • valuable chunk of real "1ate if owns ln, ef all places, H\rntlngton Beach. Th• l.U.acre parcel, at the prime commercial intersection ~ Brookhurst Street and Adams Avenue, was acquired u parl· of a 93-acre tract bought some 50 years ago for water well sites. Water wells at the time we.re Newport's only source cf water. The preperty was purchased, in 1921, for $350 an acre. It bas been sold off pieces at a time, the largest piece aeing in 1960, 86 acres for p river Oass {SchedUled ). defe111sive driving course, sponsored by the American Assodation of Retired Persons and the National Safety Coun- cil, wilt be held In two sessions Wednesday and Thursday at the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. 'The classes of two hours each will ~ held at JO a.m. a)'ld 1:30 p.m. at the church which ls located at 798 Dover J:?rtve. Newport Beach. just over $560,000 all told. Today lhe minimum price Newport Beach ·will even con- sider for the last remaining two.acre parcel if $324,000. At tbat ptice, the . nibblers ha.ve been few. So few that the city council has appropriated $1,000 from t the Water Fund to advertise the sale. "We thought people would jump at it," Philip F. Bet-l~ tencourt, assistant c i t y manager, said. But he reported to the coun.. cil, when asking for the ad- verlising budget, that only six prospective purchasers had bought bid specifications the first three weeks after the property went up for sale. The ad campaign doesn't seem to be helping an awful lot. • With bids scheduled to be ' opened two weeks f r o m DAILY PILOT Pllml Friday, there have only been "" three more bid packages ob- tained. "We had counted on 30 er 40." Bettencourt said. FOR SALE SIGN ADVERTISES VALUABL E CHUNK OF REAL ESTATE Land Bought SO Years Ago a $3 SO an Acre fo r Water Well Slte1 The sealed bids will be open- ed April 2 at 10 a.m. in the office of City-Clerk Laura Lagios. But that won't be the end or it. Following the opening .. at the City Council meeting April 12, a public auction -open only to those who have sub- milted qualified sealed bids -will rtake place. Betteneourt has declined to specuhrte how high the bidding might go, although he 's cJIUre that however many sealed bids the city gets, they'll all hover prttly' close to that $324;000 minimum. That $324,000 mirUmum hap- pens lo be $1,000 below an offer from Downey Savings and Loan the city had to turn down in order to meet charger requirements for bidding pro- cedures. Hurlburt, in his pitch to the council Feb. 22 for the ad- vertising funds , had said the reason for the Jack of interest Js uncertain. It is known, however, that Huntington Beach planning staff officials have refused le commit themselves by saying what uses the planning com- missi on might allow. P't LTE R •Ct CAR ETTES •.. ,,., ······"-·~ ... ·· ......... , ... .. 120 m• ...... 1.3 mg. mttlint '" Plf cip~ll. FTC Roport NOV. 70 David, Julie Heavily Guarded VlRGINlA BEACH, V a . (UPI) -The shingled house looks like many other rented hou.5e.5 in thi! resort city, ex· eept for the armed men in the garage. 'Ille address is M64 Ocean· front Road and Its temporary tenants are the Navy's most heavily-guarded officer, Ens. David Eisenhower and his wife Julie. The Eisenhowers arrived by plane from Washington Thurs· day morning to take up residence in the powder blue. three bedroom house with garage. The ensign, com- missioned earlier this month at Newport, R.I., starts an eight-week course in naval navigation March 29. The garage is a command II post full of liste.nlng gear and Secret Service a&ent.s assigned to guard the grandson of President Eisenhower and the daughter of President Nixon around the clock. The agents wired the house and property with electronic sound sensors. The Eisenhowers drove to the Dam Neck Navy Base at 2:1S p.m. in their personal car, a 1969 blue Plymouth CdM Gradua te Barracud1, so David could report for duty. It took Mly 30 minutes. A N 1 v y spokesman old Eisenhower wasn't officially due unW mid· night March 28 but he 11ved leave time by reporting early. Stud~nt.s have no other duties here so until hls first class starts David needs only to telephone the base ewry morning to satisfy hill mllit.&ry obligations. Once 1 c b_ o o I starts. the spqkesman 11ld, he will be "treated Ii~ any other :itudent." Diane de Forest daughter,;==========:::; of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. de Forest, 1437 Serenade Ter- race, Corona de! Mar, rece.ntly was graduated wilh distinction from UC Berkeley having completed an honors program in geography. GOLF TIPS L• k:ere t11elllfn • GaOlllll $M11 ...... -'••elk• •• ,,.. ... NEWPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURS! Sl.00 wltli tt1i. M w..t Hfs • one month only·! • • yours ... at a sale of a price! . i I 1-RITt'llCOCK.HITCffalCICH'IU.E,COID!. WARRAHTED.1 Sala s2900 llow Thfou1h April 21st Reg. $35.00 Now featured at Biggar's ..• these famous "Co un try" ckairs from Hitckcock. Authentic reproductions in black with antique cherry color seat, with traditional floral stencils. Mixes comfortably with any decor, at kome in any room. Everyon e needs one favorite chai r -'now you can toke yours at a sole of a price I ON SALE NOW AT ALL 3 STORES! SANTA ANA e Main 11 El1v1nth 547-1621 Semi AM St9N o,_ FrWtlf 1 ... 11111 PASADENA e Colortdo 11 El Molino m-6136 POHONA e Holl •I Gorey 629-3026 • • Grand Marshal Singer Roberta Lynn, former champagne lady on the Lawrence Welk show, serves as grand marshall of the massive parade in San Juan Capistrano Saturday. The town bulged at the seams as thousands thronged into ils village atmosphere to \Vatch the highlight of the week-long community celebration. 53 Troops Refuse Order; General Relieves Captain KHE SANH, Vietnam (AP) - A com- manding general said today he does not plan to take disciplinary action agairut 53 or h.is men who refused an order to move forward to secure a damaged helicopter and their com- manding officer's armored vehicle. "I suppose if I went by lhe book, we could take them out and shoot them for refusing an order in the face of the enemy," said Brig Gen. John J. Hill, "but they're back in the: field. doing their duty. I don't think it should be blown out of proportion.'' The commander of the reluctant armored cavalry troop, Capt. Carlos A. Poveda, was relieved <>f his command. Hill, commanding general of the 1st Brigade, 5th Mechanized Division, said the captain "made an error in tactics" that resulted in his losing control of his unit when he became separated from it. The men who balked were members of two paltoons of Bravo Troop, 1st Squadron, 1st Cavalry, America I Division. They are temporarily assigned to Hill's division in the northwest corner <>f South Vietnam, supporting the South Vietnamese invasion of Laos. A similar incident occurred in the America! Division in August 1969 when an infantry company refused to go forward after five days of heavy casualties on a mountain held by the North Vietnamese. Hill told newsmen the incident occurred late Saturday night. Informed sources gave this account: The armored unit had tried for several hours to move forward and dislodge an enemy ambush on Highway 9 between Lang Vei and the Laotian border nearby. Three times the two platoons of Bravo Troop moved up, ran into heavy resistance and pulled back to wait for their heavy weapons and air support to soflen up the enemy. On the third move forward, the troop commander's armored personne.l carrier hit a mine as the un it again pulled back. and the platoon! became separated and disorganized. Just before dark, two other armored personnel carriers moved up the highway and picked up the troop commander and his crew, including one wounded man. Shorlly after that a helicopter made a forced landing behind lhe abandoned command vehicle, but the crew <>f the chopper removed safely. About 8:3{1 p.m., Bravo Troop was ordered to move forward again to secure the helicopter and the command vehicle. but the men refused to go. Hill was informed and sent the squadron com· mander, Lt. Col. Gene L Breeding to taJk to the men. By Land or Sea s DAILY PILIJI; :S Capo Schoo1 Aides Wait~ Whtie ldlool o!Bdala In Ill laul two other Oron(e O>ul ·.,... are brtlllllC over a new atate propoul to 11.WO tho tu wtalll>" by jupllnf IU raltl, leaden In the C&piltrano Uollled Sc!llool Dl5trtct m waiting qulelly ond hofllc for a change for the better. Supl Truman Benedict lald beqlllC of the repldly chlnglng -p~ of IO DWl1 1tate educaUon llllluta,, 116 and lrlllllla hope lo "wait ond •• whit bappond beforo t•llllll veey.1"1117. 'l1tl bloW came earlier lhla -wJlh the -nt that tha · baale IU ralf llert eould jump by J> centa per flOll ti --vahlatlon. • 'l'bt !gun u port of a plan endorsed 117 'lbl State Department of Edueallon to · thore up "poor" school d1strictl and Wt· tbe "rich ones. · Members of the San Clemente Aquatic AsSociation not only advertised on their float that "we'll S\vim anywhere", they seem to get along well on land. Here members pull their offering in the traditional Swallows parade in San Juan Oaplltrll)O. The parade lasted more than two ~cul'I ind ll'JI ri1wtd ~f thousands. Many famillt1 broull\l'~lonlo lunohaj and made a day of it in Salt luln Sllilrtl•1· • , 0 We have seen so many of tllel8 FJpoHd education la"lfl change com-- p}ttely In a matter of days, that we'll jUlt try to ride ' UW: <me out," Benldlcl: "· llld recently. ' Charm, Modeling Courses Offered Laguna Beach high school and junior high girls will have an <>pportunity to polish their feminine charms in a new course sponsored by the city Recreation Department. An eight·week chann and modeling etiurse will be taught by recreation department fashion director Christine Hunt from 7:30 lo 9:30 each Wednesday evening beginning this week. Classes will be held in the Recreation Building, 175 N. Coast Highway and will include weight and diet analysis, walking and posture, good grooming habits, make-up and skin care, hair styling and care, wardrobing and etilor harmony and visual poise and personali· ty. Fee for the course is $35 and enroll· ment will be limited. Registration Is availabl~ now at the Recreation Depart· ment. New Lake Bor:n . In Lake Forest • Friday a lake was born. It will be in less than one month the largest man· excavated lake in California. The location is Lake Forest, a develop- ment of Occidental Petroleum Land and Development Corporation in the El Toro area. The new lake is near the in· tersection of Jeronimo and Canada roads in the newly developing area, which now boasts 2,000 residents. The first lake which gives Lake Forest its name was completed in January 1969 and has a surface area of 15 acres and a shoreline of 1.25 miles. The new lake covers 36 acres for an average depth of 14 feet and has a shoreline of 3.5 mil es. ,j DAILY ,ILOT Ill" l'Mlt Looks Like Reign Steve Sanchez and Linda May Dunn are dressed for the part. They served as king and queen of the traditional St. Joseph's Day pageant held during the return ot the swallows to the 200-year-ald mission in San Juan Capistrano. Language Program Due A summer language arts program for San Joaquin Elementary School District teachers has beeii approved by the Board of Trustees. The program will consist of a class designed for San Joaquin 's particular needs which will be taught during the summer at Cal Slate College in FuJlerton. ·The board approved paying $2,500 for the tuition of 40 teachers. At the end of the three week program lhe four teachers will be selected to write a guide compiling Information-fr<im all - the textbooks used in the district. "The guide will correlate the state texts," said Mrs. Marilyn Harris, direc- tor of instructional services. "When a teacher II giving Instruction in a particular area, the concept may be In different parts of the handwriting, spelling, and reading materialll. "The guide will tell a teacher where she can find something in her materials. It will help her to interrelate grammar, spelling, handwriting, creative . writing and reading." Utcoast; however, among ofnctaJt /of ll>t l,aguna Beach Unllled ~boo! Dblrtct -1'hich would have lo cough up \1.12 In tax rate '1}kes to tnalntatn lbs pre.sent ~el -tempers. are much hotter. 1 School leaden there. have vowed to llght the proposed law vlgorOU1ly. · "'Ibere ill so much last-minute stuff that goe> on with the state le~tton that it doesn't seem worth tJie. Ume and ene.rgy to react to it until it's all ready 111r adoption," Benodict. Ald. . "Some or 1hat leglslatlon geta pal3ed so late that it's brought up ill 1th& spring, then passed in August when we'n already into a new fiscal year. ·• He said that additional provisions of the proposed legislation could make Jt easier for his di!:trict to juggle the tax rate structure and take aome of the bl(\> out · of the pooslble »cent rate increase. Capo Boy Dies Of Crash Injury A Capistrano .Beach boy and a young woman from Westminster died of traffic injuries Saturday. Derrick R. Angel, 16, of S4475 V1a Gomez, Capistrano Buch, died at South Coast Community Hospital of injuries rec.dved March 15 when hil blcycie wa1 struck by a car in San Juan Capistrano. Sheriff's deputle! said the youth wu riding a bicycle at night without lights when !truck by a car driven by Walter C. Prado, 17, of San Juan Capi.rtmao. Kelly Ann Roberta, 24, of 15824 La Pat Place, Westminster, was killed Saturday when her motorcycle went out <>f control on Chapman Avenue In Orange and struck the abutement ,of 1a Santa Ana Freeway off ramp. Police said she was thrown to the pavement and died instanUy. Armstrong Improves NEW YORK (AP) -Louis Annltrong is reported by hil doctor to be recovering from a heart condition which Jed tD his admi,.,ion to Beth Israel Hoapltal March 15. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. . . ' Talk about value! Check EI Rancho's lo\v low price on this popular hair spray ..• and see why 've can claim the hotte!t price in town! No Jncqner ••• regular 13 oz. cans ••• and in a formulation to ta'kc ca.re of your hairproblems ••• chooseU1conetosuityourneedsl Stew Beef ....................................... 99~ Lean chunks of U.S.D.A. Choice beef .. , boneless and hearty flavor. London Broil ................................ s1 ~ Serve hot and hearty beef .•. and watch the amilea of anticipation Smoked Ham Hocks .................................. 49' Cook a mess of black-eyed peas •• , creamy, thick split pea soup! Vegetable Medley ..................................... 39' For a hearty beef ste\v ••• Marshburn Farma ••• frozen ••• 24 oz. Salads • Puddings ................ 25e Knudsen's ••• choose your favorites in the 7-ouncc cups! mn Prices in effect Alon., T11 rs., iVed., II Mar. It, 28, 24. No sales to dealers. • Kubro Soup ................................... 49- Frozen ••• beat nnd serve ••• in a variety of flavors ••• 16 oz. cant. Lipton Dinners .......................... 59' Chicken Supreme, Beef Stroganoff, llam Cheddarton. Clamato Juice ............................................. 59• It's different •.• it'1 delicious! Lord ?.-1ott'a .•• six 6~ oz. cana. Miracle White Cleaner ........................... 51.29 Laundry additive that gets the job done, non·polluting! ~ ral. 1izt. ARCADIA: PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH : 1711 Nowp01\ Blvd and Sunset and Huntington Or. (ll Rancho Cenler) 310 l'lesl Colorado Blvd freinonl and Hun\mglon Or. Warn er and Algonquin (Boardwalk Cen\ei) . 1555 fas\bluff D1. (Eastbluff Village Center) t J ' 11 ' I I I fl DAll.Y PILOT • Monday, Mart,h 22, 1971 • Key to Pea~e in Mideast? OCCUPIED av ISRAEL JUNE1967 . ~ ' DAMASCUS 0 .. ' ·SY.RIA I -GOLAN HEIGHTS . OAMMAN- ~. ' ' I ... ~~ • ' • "fl'll . ' I ' ' ' ' ~ ()CAIRO,-.. ;: .: : ~d I) A·. R·. \,~ Jordan · River JORDAN •••• •• • • • ,. •• ,-(EGYPT) r 1. · • · 1 • ' • •• ..... . . . . , ·~ .... . , . ' . 1 GlitLF.QF •SUE"Z •. l; ·t'-' ~ :.eut,;F OF ·~A'BA ... ;. ' 'I ''4· . ,.. .,, .,.. ,z; ' I I . • ... • ·. ' . . . ,• ,, • ! • t : • .. . .. . .. ' .. ~The United States and Israel are disputing bJW!!Js. ·rael'a security couid best be served in a Mide'ast ~peace . setU.ement and . a major obstacle concerns ., &arm El Sheikh, the fortress guarding the golfs :(If Aqaba and Suez. Israel is reported cons'idUing leasing the vital real estate from Egypt as part of a territorial setUement. UPI newsmap spots Shifm El ... Sheiliih and territories occupied by. Israel since the six-day war in 1967. . . ~ogers Presses Israelis . . To Make Boundary Map I : By· Vatted Pre11 I.DWrnatJonal fhe ·United States ha.! urged lsrael Di 1ubmit a tentative map cf its ter- i{orial demands as a method of breaking ~ deadlock in the Middle East peace ieg;ouation~ diplomatic sources i n le~rusa.Iem. said today. ?:'he sources said . Secretary of State Villiam · P. · Rogers made the recom· pendation in talks with Israeli Foreign dlnis~ Abba Eban in Washing~n last 1·eek. Ro~ers, suggested the map show he future boundaries that Israel ·would l~.acceptable, they said. )!:gypt raised the draft age from 30 o . 35 today and stiffened penalties ipimt de&erten in continuing its ireparation for possible resumption of tghting with Israel. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat con- erred for thrtt; hours with military mnmanders in Cairo Sunday, briefing hem on the political and military situa-, Beer Keg Kills Man Pl'M'SBURGH (UPI) -Joseph ~:ehner. 63, Of suburban Penn Hills WJS tilled Sund a!/ when a pressurized Uuminum beer keg exploded as he was apping it in his home. tion. He praised their "efforts to· raise the combat efficiency of the armed forces ," the semi of fief al newspaper ~t · Ahram said. • .. 'Ille newspaper said Sadat would send a three-man delegation to Moscew·Satur- day to ..attend the· 24th congress of the Soviet ·Communist pat'ty ,and discuss the M_~e. E~t conf!icl with SQ.viet lettden. · Eban said Sunday in ·an interview on· the CBS.TV program· "Face· the Na· tion" in New ·York that· h1! talks wi,tb U.S. officials Ia.st. week were ·. friently but frank · and had · strengthened the mutual ·respect ·of the two n8\lolJI. · Eban ·said neili2er side., bad .. changed its j)otition· but '!I certainl)r1 fed 'better abOUt· it. tl>an I did ,IO•~l\lrs 880·": · 'Ihe Unitei:t States favors-:a•wilhdrawal of israeU ·troo1>3 -to -the··borders that existed beCoi:e the 1967 Middle· East war with ooly'minor adjustments. Iirael ·has insisted on keeping tbe•fortress•of&barm El-Sheikh, the Syrian Golan Heights~and the Arab half of Jerusalem. Ambassador George ·Bush, <the U.S. delegate to the United NaUons, said on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press" that the United States had no intention of pllUing pressure on Israel lo change its stand. , • Bush &aid that after talki,ng with Eban be was _optimistic ttiat the •pe1'Ce talks uhder U.N.,negoliator Gunnar V. Jarring wOuld not break down. Snow Avalanches Trap Thousands In Italian Alps MILAN, Italy (UPI) -'lbousand.1 of pei-sons were trapped in hotels in the Italian Alps where weekend avalanches triggered by rising temperatures sent tons of snow and rocks roaring down lhe mountain!. Police said five persons died in avalanches between Friday and Sunday nights and another three w_ere known to be trapped under deep snow and were presumed dead. One avalanche Sunday struck 11 men working to keep open the road leading from Turin to the Mount Cenis Tunnel on the French border. Eight were ttscued, some suffering frostbi~ and broken bones, before rescue operations were halted at 10 p.m. The other three were missing and presumed dead. police said. Two Italians died early Sunday and fo.ur were injured when an avalanche of snow and rocks slammed into a re!Ort hotel near Morbegno, northwest of Milan near the Swiss border. Officials said an outcrop of rock behiod the half moon hotel that slowed the snow probably saved the lives of another 30 tourist! staying there. An avalanche a qua rter mile wide swept a car from a road near Mendalica in the Maritime Alps Saturday. Two girls In the car died but the father of one of them, who had gotten out to repair the car, waa spared. Winter Just Won't Let Go ' ' ~.!' \..;:. ' 0 • ~ • "1.1 • 1st Day of Spring Brings More .~e'e.ord Snows iii U.S. California 'z.oo,~ ,. .....;; "'' wr•tKlll fOTD~·~~~::::...c."? co_oL S11mmat'.fl • , VIII... h tH l111ff'Mtltl'll w 1111rv (Old -it.er i>enltt911 !11 "'" (et1tr1I "!1 ol '"" Nlflotl' ttll• ~ .... k •"trlld -M:<-"lfd ... cokl. ~ dalnH ""' toull'I. wt>!lll • In l'lafl<ll 1M !Pit .,." r"'811. • .,.,,, wnlhlr fllNe • '°"'"""'· ~"....., -llOll.O "" ... , ..... Greet l.aktl r191of! tllld "'-"'' alOOt ot the Rockie-I IO tM C~lr1t P'lt lN. n. merci;rv d~ IP tbelul wro 11o """'''"~ fl¥trll1,tll ""'"' .......... PltONI· , ... fttflOl'IW!Jt '""' ol tow "law ., uwft1ow11. Mtnl, ~·· ~ 119 !flroutf\OU! 1111 io)fil, flouth PrKilHillllOll Wll ,,,_,,.,. N11!t. JoltW 1111!11...i -• rKINtr!nt ft'lll'l'I • ~ ..... tN:I M'IOWlllll'"'· Vtl'lftel'll •I Ill etfl(lt l Wint.,. IP'IOW .. 11 '9COl'd fil l;it., ~ H•lrts 11'4 !Ml rKOl'd C~astal CkMW clurlne ,..., .. 1.,. but tutlfl'f 11'!er -· Lllllt v1r11lll1 winds llt- ciqonlllf"Wft....,, 10 It II k""tt In 11· ,,,,_ lo6IV .,.. Tuttc11v. l'litll tod1v l\tfr II. CofiiJl l ~l!\lrH ru1tt frlt?\ ft 'la •1. l ..... l'ld ltmHr1turt 41 f9 .... W:llff' hm·l~t\IA $:1. SuK, Jtloon, Tide• MDHOAY TLlllD.l'I' ,1,.1 llltll • n 1,m. s ! ,Int l<rW l,~12 1,IT\. t,, IK....ci hltll 1;1• ,.m. 4 t 1tcon4 Ill• ........... 1iDO,.lfl, ~.t ·; • Temperature• T-r11urtt 1 ,..i prfCIPlll!IOll for h U-llour ""led ..,.,1,,. •• • 1.m. AllHl"V Al~Uti'QOJ* All•"'" Anc:l'IOfl91 ·~~ llutt1la Chl(tllCI Clnclnn1!1 Clevt\1,..i Otll11 Oenvt• Oet Molnn CHlro!t F1lrt>1ntt Honolulu l""ll M l'Ollt ,_, 1(1"111 (llV L•• v, ... , l.oul1vlllt M~ll Mleml MllWlull'! ,,..,..,..-.;. ,.._ 0r1••"' Oltltl>alN (llV """"' P'1tm kiri.,. P!l!!tdtlpl\19 Piw1Ml1 Plll ....... '111 Portltlld. On 1t1~ Cll'V ·~ Ilk""'°"'' VI SiKTI"'"""' 51. l.1111!1 S11! Lt'• Cltv kn Dl-oo S-11 Fr1nc:IKe S•1!tlt "~ HIOl'I t.OW Plll:C. " . n ~ Jf ., " m a » " " " " .. " a " It •1 .. 71 T " " .., '1 .6' JS lJ 11 ,, ~ " " " ~ ~ m • ~ " .. " ,, .. " " " .. M " n " •• -> 1t .ID ... . ~ .. . • • ff • ' lJ (II ,!I " " " . 11 •1 M ,. .... 1<1 S7 M • If Jf .lJ .. . .. , -. Eban Sees Hands-off U.S. Role NEW YORK (AP) -Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban says he is convinced the Nixon Administration will not try to impoBe on his government a plan to settle the Middle East conflict. Eban said Sunday that policy dif- ferences between the tv.·o governments still exist and that neither changed its position during his talks in Washington with administration officials. He said on CBS-TV's "Face the Na- tion" program lhat Israel intends to slick by its tou gh stance in tile current indirect peace talks because he thinks the Arab position on territorial con- cessions is ne~ible. "I believe the Arab mind is in a state o( fiUK and that the evolution of their th inking has not reached Its conclusion," he said. "You don't try to bring this thing to a head until thinking has further evolved." Eban repeated the 11$raeli refusal to give up Sharm el Sheik, Jersulaem and the Golan Heights -territories it oc- cupied in the 1967 war -and its rejection of Secretary of State William P. Rogers' suggestion for an outside peacekeeping force. Stand Reverseil Irish Hardliner ' Will Enter Race BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP} - A leader of Northern Ireland's Protestant hard-liners, forn1er Home M in is t er William Craig , reve rsed hilnself today and became a candidale to s u c c e e d Prime ~1inlster James Chichester-Clark. A caucus of the ruling Unionist party nominated Development Minister Brian Faulkner, the early favorite, and Craig . Members of the party in the provincial parliament will make their choiti! Tues. day. Craig had indicated earlier he would not oppose Faulkner, who lost to Chichester-Clark by one vole in 1969. The British government made clear earlier lh al whoever rep laced Chicheste r· Clark must follow his moderate policies or risk having London take over the provincial government. Harold Wilson, the leader of the opposition Labor party, packed the government position, but Home Secretary Reginald Maudling said the government would take over direct rule of the provice '·only as a last resort." Craig had warned that direction v.·ould be "resisted and could lead lo a blood- bath." Gerry Fill. pro-Republican independent member of the British Parliament from Belfast, also predicted that a British I takeover would lead to further Lrouble. Chichester·Clark resigned Salw-day under heavy right-wing pressure to crack down hard on gunmen of the oullawed Irish Republican Arn1y. Faulkner was predicted ready to ake at least one move to appease his party's militants -the rea rming of Northern Ireland's riot jXllice. The force. made up almost entirely of Portestants, ~as stripped of its v.·eapons at the height of clashes between Protestants and the Roman Catholic mrnority in August 1969. \\1hen the conflicts over equal right.!I in voling, Jobs and housing came near civil war, Britain took direct control of internal security and sent troops to the province . Some 8,200 are stationed here now. and another 1.300 are schedul· ed to arrive this v.·eek. Faulkner a wealthy businessman and recent convert to moderation. could have trouble gaining confidence of both sices. His earlier conservative stance earned him the distrust of the Cathloics, ·while the Protestants hard·liners don't approve of his recent changeover. But he is considered an able politician . and many belie\'e he will h;ive greater success bargaining '\'ilh the British govern1n('nl that Chichester-Clark did. WE NEED CASH FAST! OWNER DIES! WE HAVE CUT PRICES TO THE BONE ON EVERY ITEM IN OUR HUGE IN- VENTORY OF NAME BRAND FURNI SHINGS. EVERY ITEM MUST GO TO SATISFY THE ESTATE AND BUSINESS DEMANDS OF THE LATE PRESIDENT OF CHFC. ACT NOW, AS OUR TIME , AND THESE UNBELIEVABLE VALUES, ARE LIMITED. SAVE AS NEVER BEFORE ON QUALITY NAME BRAND FURNI TURE THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STORE. CHOOSE FROM ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF LIVING ROOM SETS, SOFAS, BEDROOM SETS, DINING ROOM SETS, KITCHEN SETS, LAMPS, AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER ITEMS, INCLUDING CARPETING, • \ Master Ch1rg1 '"d 81nkAmericard Hono red DELIVERY ' ARRANGEMENTS: No l1y.Aw1y Pltn du1 to dr1uic1lly r•· duced pric11. OPEN SUNDAY DAILY 10 AM to 10 PM -- ' Colonial Items Museum's Silver Display Heisted MIAMI (UPI) -Three gun-statues dot the grounds. The men overpowered a guard ear· multlstory main house of the ly today and stole an antique . estate was converted to a silver display from t h e museum that houses hundreds museum at the palatial Bis-of pieci!s of art and anUques. cayne bayfront "Vizcaya" estate. ...... .. ~-­ t Protesting for Soviet Jewry 700 Militaut .. Jew£}ailed.in~Capitql WASHINGTON (UPI) - Almost 100: tbiUtant .Amerlcan Jews were arrest~ Sunday in a mass protest sit-down • • near the Soviet Embassy. 1bey wen! north today $10 poorer and . with p o 1 I c e records; bul .,onlldent they bad "·•""ned tho day when ·~. Senate Near ~70\:may leave the Soviet About "1,500 Jiws, many of C • } V t them frpll\.. ~Ne,w York, rUC18 0 C northern '. New . Jersey and UPI Teltptio .. Police said the s i I v e r display, worth up to $1.5 million, included irreplaceable colonial items and several pieces reportedly used by Napoleon and dating back to 1815. College Chief Rips Martha; V erbal Ilk -~hiladelphi.,· took part in the 011 SST Funa protest led, 'by Rabbi Meir Ka!Wie, bead ot tile Jewish Senate ls nearing its crucial The prQtest inC!:Nded a rally I moment on the supersoriic on the ellipe:e, a mareh pre.st I WASHINGTON (AP) -The Defense JM!lle·~JDL). s The silver display was on loan to the Dade County-owned NEW YORK (UPI) -Mrs. tra rt 'th . ed a n un\Jlll~ "U..guarded · I IN COURT AGAIN WWII'• Tokyo Rose museum from Sam Kirt and Jacqueline Wexler, a former "responsible'' public officials and other citizens wl:lose •·verbal barrage against young people as a whale, against students and 'intellectuals' as a class, against the er.tire CQlJege community .• has reach· ed frightening p,.aportions." nspo w1 11 uncorrurutt White Hou.,e. •·a cateh4lly .a votes the key to the future Janned bUl=•jn.anN'lln..~ slWi -. -p • ..,-T~· ' I . IQ. "'· Toky o Rose Fine Cas e Reopen,ed C!IlCAGO (UPI) -The federal government h a s reopened its efforts to collect the balance of the $10,000 fine imposed on Tokyo Rose after her l!M9 treason conviction for broadcasting Japanese pr~ paganda during World War II. The case has been dormant since 1968, when U.S. District Court Judge William J. Lynch ruled the U.S. attorney's office could collect the cca.$ value of two insurance policies held by Mrs. Iva Toguri D'quino -Tokyo Rose's real name. Those policies b r o u g h t $4,745. A hearing was schedul- ed here today on t h e government's effort to obtain the remaining $5,2$5. "[ just really don't know why," Mrs. D'Aquino 's at- torney, Wayne M. Collins, said Sunday in an interview in San Francisco. "They must have billions in fines they never collect and never try to col- lect. II Collirui said Mrs. D' Aquino "has got nothing. She works for a pittance." The government prosecution of Mrs. D' Aquino, the longest treuon trial in American history, lasted 57 days and cost more than $2.50,000. She was convicted of being ()Oe o~ at least six women who broadcast A m e r i ca n music and propaganda to American Gls in the Pacific Theater of World War II. A typical "Tokyo Rose" broadcast said: ''Hello boys. This is your old friend ... I've got some swell new recordings for you. just in from the st.ates ... You'd bet- ter enjoy them while you can . . . because tomorrow at 600 (hours) you're hilting Saipan •.. And we 're ready for you •.. So, while you're st i I I living ... " sons of Baltimore. It was in- side an antique breakfront. It wu insured for $500,000. Pol~ said th e gunmen barged into the palatial est.ate of the late millionaire John Deering about 3 a.m. The gunmea overpowered a lone guard in the basement security cffice of the estate, tied him to a chair and ransacked the silver display from the upsatirs: museum. The bandits, initia l ly described only as young white men, escaped in apanel truck that had a Bahamian license plate on the front and a Florida tag on the rear. The rambling, beautifully landscaped estate is one of Miami's most popular at- tractions. ·Dozens of marble 2 Officers Dead,2Hurt In Chicago CHICAGO (AP) -Two policemen and another person were killed and two policemen seriously wounded in a series of incidents over the weekend. Detective Melvin A. Galloway was slashed during a raid on a cocktail lounge Sunday by a patron who then grabbed another officer's gun and shot Gallaway fatally, wit,. nesses said. Other plainclothesmen shot down the patron, Am t: i Freeman, 26. 9!1e deteCt.ive 1 u·f f e r e d · cnl.ical knife wounds. Four persons were arrested. Off-duty policeman Richard Gilmore was killed by two shotgun blasts in the neck early Saturday as he ct>n- fronted intruders who invaded a card party he was atttending at a South Side residence. Five men were arrested. Seriously w o u n d e d in another incident was policeman Daniel P. O'Sullivan. He was accidenUy shot on the South Side by a fellow officer whose gun was jostled by a suspect he was holding in a purse snatching incident, authorities said . .yog .i&! y.-ce(b.'d ttt"'°"-...-lfie'i..-·..:!'lf..._fOr~ ~ ....... ,, lvoul<t'bc • n\emohhle J!; .;.,;. NEWS RELEASE: ,,..,, . rhc man '<1;~ WEST COAST ::!.~: ~~· BANKS REDUCE ~ ~;: INTEREST !.'l ¢ ON SAVINGS ; .. ', .... ¥ ANAHEIM, CA~l nterest rates lun<' (IC 1 beno, ~ on savings deposits were cut m !:f ...,.i. sharp ly Friday by West Coast '"'!>. ? banks as they joined ot her .!!:) :"! banks across the nation in re-mi.1" -"' le 'd . on ducing the ra s pa1 on sav1ngs aa o. " 1' deposits. lhuf i of Ao ex~i<tous . analysit Of flCC\l· :U.: lat . (It.. ~~ ._;, UE '11111 S11U GITTING lllE llDST FROM TOUI SAYINGS? AMAH~M SAYING$ PATS lllE HIGHEST llllDIST IATIS 01C llCSUHD SAYINllS 50/oto60/o Qrrent 1mual nite oo passba ICCOllJls ~dally 90 doy bontls ln!eret eccounll wllh l!llftilntl1l bllata One 11> l1ft .year tenn certiftcata -wtth mlnimln blllnct Two to ten yeor term certlflcate _,..,,.,., with mlM1u1I bl~nce 5% 5J4% 5~% 6% ANAHEIM SAVINGS ANO L.OAN ASSOCIATION Roman Catholic nun now president of a secular college, said Sunday Martha Mitchell and many other people in the nation are •·making it almost impossible for college ad- ministrators to work." Mrs. Wexler said there is an appalling number of She was interviewed in the current issue of McCall'• Magatine, released Sunday. of the government-subsldlzed at an int~ a 'block ftDd I GnQ ,ll~i stfAQ airliner. one-hall troln,.:ti)& So.V'-l e t • I . ..._ ... .,..,_1424,.11 Deba be Embassy. Mly yoartg Jews te gins Tuesday with chanted "NeVlt .;.Ap~! .. the · I pn nn11Af!S:...CAU."'7..nts _ f. ~~:e;::n~c~~~1~ :~~~~-~~~~w0~0~~-JDL'.300 ~ "I. L'IVINQSTON~S I one. JDL membetl ".had been. I · '" · I "! imagine UUs lobby · they harassing Sovie' ~,fplomals at I . t;ARP!'f .. -CUSTOll DRANRllS I talk about will go into high their private homes all week I' · · · · ·Mii 10. ifMN ~ Cor. ldlnott • Wf1'A ANA ear," said&!nate Democratic and Kahane Rid a \l'C,h •. MOCMI: DA:*LY-~;.l;:IO P.M.-fNDAYI ~ 1:00 P.IL d MOL. u ••• <j kf slbl M.lil..; \ ·--~-----------------a er uui w.a11.ll1 e • , pressure was i;espo;n e, ~-. . , . ... : , • . . --- "I never thought I'd feel that way about a car, but I can't iniagine parking our Mercedes-Benz where something might happen to it:' Jim SletnOnS Imports, Inc.·120W.Wamer Avenue,SantaAna,Callfotn1a92101Phone:7l4-546-4114 , '• • ' ' ( .. r I • t l 0 -I I • • b n ~· " • a I ' ' I ' ' • • ' 1 I • • l -' '· ! ~ Q DA~LY'PllOT State Re1)ttlllica 11s Ce11sµ1·e McClo sl{ey for Nixo11 Atta cl{ Tate Case ',.. o_u_E_EN_1_E _____ By;._Ph_i1.._1_n1_er_la-~_di., Attorney Buried? . ., • . . " LOS ANGELES (U PI l - GQv. Ron~td Hoagan and the Californi;i Bcpublil'all Asse1nbiy have assailed COP Rep. Paul N. a.1ce1oskey for suggesting a nal!onal deball' on "'hcther President Nixon should be impeached. The CRA ··c rn s ured '' t\1cCluskey at lhc "·1ndup of ils 38lh annual convention Sun- day and accused the San t\1ateo County congress man of "siding "'lth radical groups on lhe left to promote violence.'" It alsu asked thl' ~1arinc Corps Silver Star winner to leave the Republ ican Partv. In a rare attack on a fell ow Republican. tt e oi g a n de· nounced McCloskey durin g a banquet speech to t h e grassroots organization. The CRA. largest GOP volunteer orgnni1.ation in the " antipoverty progr~ms and ef- fort to abolish lhe California Rutal l..egal Assistaiice. But I he 12,000-mc inber organization's attitude toward Nixon was mixed. Jt went on record in '"strong oppositi on" to Nixon's pro- posed family assistance plan and urged the President '"lo stand b,Y ·his campa i gn statements." by striking the guar:intced income feature from the wel(are program. LOS ANUELES (APl - Authorities from three coun- ties are checking an anonymous tip that a missing Sharon 'I'ale murder trial at- torney is buried al a remote Dea th Valley ranch, once the hideaway of Charles Manson and hi s "family ." Ronald Hughes, 35, who was defending Leslie Van Houten , 21. one of Manson's three ,.,,omen codefendents in lhe trial, was last seen in lhe Ventura CoWlty Sespe Hot Springs area during I he Thanksgiving holiday, deputies said. , ., . '>·l.Z Ul"I T•leP'-10 But ii backed the President on Vietnam,· anli·inflation ef- for ts and ABt.1 development. Arid it overwhelmingly re- jected a resol ulion to condemn Nixon for · "socialism" and threatened not lo support his renomination in 1972 "unless his present actions are revers- ed." Ll. Robert Hindman of lhe ~ -t-I? /J . , Ventura Sheriff's Department, i..;~..;;;.;.;.;.::;:::=:::;;,;..:®::._"~··~·~~~·;..··~·~H~-;;.;;"·~'-;;;;.· ~"~"-·.-~"..;;;'";..'"-'•"•'".",.. CENSURE TARGET Rep. Paul McCloskey "Why don't you write all your jokes-down on a piece of paper and I'll be honor-bound to read them when · I get home?" state. reaffirmed its slrong · loyalty to Reagan -coin- mending him for his welfare "reform'' legislation, veto of said Sunday the Sespe area is about 200 miles from the Death Valley ranch, but, "we can'l afford to pass the lip up no matter how ridiculous ----------------------- it seems." You Work Less You Save Money Keeps thi ngs cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer Laundry ii Cleaner Oishts Spark.Ir GrntJr In Baby'1 Skin Ftrl Frellt and Ota• Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Complete In s ta ll a ti o n Ava ilable! Just Ask'. "" f Sears I . . ..... --~..-... So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St . Ph. 540-3333 Buena Park 81>0 La P alma Ave. Ph. 828-4400 Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Ph. 547-3371 Indian Warpath? Sightseeing Vessal Sightseeing Vessel SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Operators of a San Francisco Bay sight.seeing boa t complain their vessel was peppered Sun- day with a slingshot barrage of steel nuts from Indian-oc· cupied Alcatraz. Skipper Robert Tindal of the Harbor Emperor told the Coast Guard one of the nuts, ranging from o/.i to ~ inches, narrowly missed an 8-year-old boy. smacked into a pane Df safety class and dropped in the boy's lap. He said at least six other missiles of the same kind whacked into the boat but the only damage was a crack- ed window. Aboard were 33 passengers. The Indians have com- plained in the past that the wake from lhe big tour boats operated by Harbor Tours Inc. rocks the Indian supply boat Clearwater a g a ins l lhe Alcatraz dock and causes damage. According to a Harbor Tours spokesman the Coast Guard said the matter wa s cut of their jurisdiction because the tour boat comes under city control He added, "They to ld us to contact San Francisco police or the General Services Administration," the federal housekeeping agency which is in nominal control of Alcatraz. Tour di spatcher Don Joseph denied the charge by Indians that his boats raise big wakes past Alcatraz. Skippers, he said. have been instructed to go dead slow past the rock which India ns have occupied for 16 months. Fresiao Traastee Younge st Elected State Aide Dead EL SOBRAN'TE (UPI) -. Robert 'r.rolter, California's youngest elected public official and a fugitive from Fresno police, was found dead Sunday in lhe home or his brother-in· Jaw in Contra Costa County. "Trotter appeared to be the victim of a suicide due ll> an overdose of barbituates." said Lt. Stan Garvin of the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department. Trotter, 22, a Republican member of the Fresno County School Board, was wanted on bench warrants fo r a variety of misdemeanor charges in· volvlng what he acknowledged recently as a drinking pro- blem. Lt. Garvin said Trotter's body was foynd in a bed at his brother·in·law's home in El Sob ranle. Garvin said of· fiei!rs found several red, bro.,..•n and blue pills, belie'led to be barbituates, in the pockel~ of a coat and trousers at the fool of the bed. Trotter Rallies Hit Sacramento SACRAMENTO (APl Loudspeaker shouts f r o m militants of the left and right rang through the state Capitol grounds in separate "'eekend rall ies which state pollce felt were scheduled too close together for comfort. It was a tense time for police -many called in on their day orf -as long-haired youths changed "more jobs, not war " while older persons gathered for a "Victory in Vietnam'' rally. But there were no c!ash:?s Saturday betwe en the demonstralol':!I of opp o s i t e sides of the political spectrum -to the relief of police in the Capitol basement, riot- ready with helmets, tear gas and olive drab jump suits. was wearing a shirt and shorts. Garvin said an autopsy would be pe rformed Monday by the county coroner. Trotter, a bachelor and the son of a Fresno minister. was elected to the school board in 1969 to become the state"s youngest elected official. Ile was believed to be the youngest black man in elected office in the nation. Rolls R oyce Negotiators Fl y to East 8 URBANK (AP) Lockheed Aircraft and 13riti~h officials negotialing over 1:011· tinualion of the financially troubled RB211 jet engine pro-- grain have r 1 0 w n to Washington, D.C.. for un- disclosed reasons "They will be there A d11y or two," a Lockheed spokesman said af!er they left Sunday. He didn't indicate "·hy. or \\•hether meetings were plan- ned with U.S. Goveminent of- ficials. Loekheed is using the RB21 l to power its new trista r jet airliner. Jn the group ware Danirl J Haughton, 1.o ck h e c d chairrnan, and repres~ntath·cs of Rolls Royce Ltd ., man11fac- turers of the nB21 I. They have. been negotiating siPcC. Friday, and prior to the Washi ngton flight. were scheduled to continue meetings into nexl week. A spokesman said offer.,. were exchanged Frida~·. but he would give no detail s. If cn'line production is stopped. Tristar product ion , at Palmdale, would have to be halted, or another engine found. Either measure "'ould be costly to Lockheed. offi. cials sa~·. .•. I see olher cars thal have a lot of fumes from the exhaust , .. we 've never had that. since we've used F-310." I Ger1rude E, Weico\\ DOES F·310 WORK? 1, " ... lhe performance ol the car actually seemed as ii I had a major tuneup ... " J. C. M1cDoug1ll \ ..... lt had more oomph lo it, you know, like you could al most step on the gas and you could gel to where you want to go .•. " Mrs. Adriln v. Clve111lllny I " ... It's almost like a brand new car when I use F-310 in It." M1r1h1 Amici " ••• one of 1he best times t ever had waa with the F·310, because 1 had no trouble . I still use ii, you know." Mrs. F1irl11 P. W1lkllp ~ f F.lC.JH~Y CIP.fUS Peace Ohservors Perform Vital Joh CARIO (UPI) The killed and five •er i o us I y police-but noL superv.ise-the Zoppolh was quk:k to note ed hostilities are restricted to "We are only permitted to Austrian officer leaned back wounded trying to do it sinet truce lines that emerged from the limitations of the team. diplomacy and the cooperation observe an~ DOthlnc elle," in the chair and poo-poohed the team was created to the 1967 Middle East war. whose weapons against renew. bf the combatants. Zopportb ntd. bis importance. 1 -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-~C--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:..:.~------~~~~~ 11 Mommy, can I have a pane i I ? 11 Sand Barrels Used To Slow Runaways VISALIA (AP) -f'ifteen plastic barrels filled with sand ha ve been positioned al an accident-prone freev.ay in· lerchange west of here in a test of a new highway safety device. Labelled the "Fitch Barr· ier," State Division o f Highways officials say the barrels are designed to pre- vent a fast moving vehicle from clobbering roodsidc ob- jects such a~ signs and light poles. The ·barrels have been in· stalled at the interchange of U S. 99 and state Houl e 198 v.·hete lhere ha\'e been 27 ac- ciden~s in four years. Highway en gin ee rs ex- plained the plastic barrels were filled with v a r y i n g amounts of sand and placed in a triangular shape with lighter barrels in front. a Connecticut engineer, is call- ed the "energy attenuater" :ind has been tested safely al 55 miles an hour. It has been used in several Con· necticut locations but the Tulare county test is one of the first in California. ''This device, we feel pro· vides a safe, effective means of stopping, as opposed to deflecting. an errant passenger vehicle," s a i d Robert H. Ramey, Fresno district highway engineer. "Il can reliably protect a typical passenger car from an ad· versely located r o a d s i d e obstacle which cannot be removed or designed for safe collapse y;hcn impacted," he said. - Ran1ey said the transfer of the car's kinetic energy will be transferred to spraying sand and "will turn 'hard' accidents into 'soft' ones." .. 'We are prepared for everything, but our influence is limi1.ed," Lt. Col. Gerhard Zoppoth said. "We can only try to arrange a cease-fire if they start shooting." Zoppoth serves as the U.N. peace observer team's senior liaison officer with the Egyp- tian armed forces . It is his job to convince the Egyptians to silence their guns, if fighting against Israel erupts. And despite his adopted low profile , a number of western diplomats say the career of- ficer and the 90 observers stationed along the SUez Canal could hold the key to war or peace in the coming weeks . ''The biggest risk right now is an accidental war that neither side wants." one diplomat said. "And, the observers are in the best posi- tion to prevent such a mishap from escalating." In an interview at his head- quarters in a fashionable suburb of Cairo. ZOppoth said accidents co u I d be a dangerous element in the cur· rent de facto truce, but re· mained confident the observers would be able to soften their impact. These officers from Argen- tina, Chile, Austria , Finland, France, Ireland and Sweden stationed on the canal have a big job. Three have been Cub Scouts of Oranqe County Enter Now! NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. ( ~-------~ Los Angeles (Orange County, Palos Long Beach to Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, etc.), San Francisco $18 Long Beach is like having your own private Including tax. leave long Bea ch: airport. You don't have to fight the free- Heavier barrels are closer to the object . protected and an out-of-control v eh i c I e theoretically v.l o u Id be gradually slowed as it plows through the sand. The barrier near here pro- tects a large steel sign post and guardrail. A dozen ac- cidents involving the obstacles have killed one and injured 10 persons in recent years, officials said. Our pepul1r 1nnu1I Pin•wood D•rbv will b• h1ld M•rch 27 in th• mill 111 cub 1couh m1y •n+1r c1ll 540.4qqo pri111 includ• porl1bl• TV •nd 1•h of Junior Encyclop11di1 Huntington C•nl1r 1t l•1cl. l Si n Oi•OJo fr••w1y Now you ci.11 fly PSA from Long Beach 7:40 am way traffic to L.A. International. There's Airport to Sa,, Francisco. Four times a day. ~0:45 am easy parking. And the crowds haven't More or1 weekends. More flights than 1 :30 pm found it yet. Next time you head north The invention by Joh,n Fitch, 297 cars, representative of California's total car population, tested F-310. The cars were changed fr0m the gasolines they had previously used to Chevron with F-31 O and dri ven by their owners for 2,000 miles. Exhaust emissions were tested by an independent research firm before and after using F-310. While not all cars showed reductions, hydrocarbon exhaust was reduced an average of 13.9°/o for the group as a whole. Carbon monoxide was redu ce d an average of 11 .6%. These results mean that if all cars in ..... I don't get the smoke from it, ll's got a better Qlck up." E•rl Hudtp1lh any othE'. airline. Connections to Sacra--4:30 pm (or south), head for Long Beach Airport men'"· Qr, avoid the freeway and fly to Mon lhru Thurs & Sat. by way of your travel agent and PSA. San C1ego. If you live any place south of ~-M_0_•_•_11_19_h_••_F_ri_&_s_u_n_. ~ PSA 1f¥es J'OU a lft. California alone used F-310 , exhaust emissions, compared to leve ls before F-310, would be reduced by almost one million tons per year. Below are some of the people and their cars who participated in the test. The ir comments are further te stimony to the effectiveness of F-310. F·310. IT WORKS. CMwon Standard Oil Company of California Ill " ... and I just never knew the difference in gasol ine until I had tried F-310." \ " ... I don't have to t ' look for another car, because it's l)&rforming beautifully ... " Beverly I. Wagner ,I " ••. you can tell lhal the engine w11 jusl running amoother." / T .. IM ..... out ol the F'"310 I really did gel good mileage." c,.ce H. ll••le '· I · • OAIJ,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Right of Beach Access uprescriptive rights" is a term that has come into the public consciousness In Orange County as a result of a decision by the state Supreme Court. Webster's dictionary defines prescriptive rights as the establishment of a claim of title to something under common tav,r, usually by use and employment for a period fixed by statute. A great many roadway~ across the na· lion became public thoroughfares by thts means. Applying this to California's beaches, the high court ruled that where owners of private beaches had permitted free public access for a period of five years or more, the owners could not then exclude the public. The decision means that the "good guy" owners who have long given free public access to their beach prop- erty must suffer loss of exclusive use while owners who have withheld their beach land from public use face no danger. Because of this apparent inequity, bills have been Introduced in the Legislature to give equal treatment to owners of private beaches. But in the interim, public bodies are moving to take advantage of the court de- cision. The city of Huntington Beach, for example, Is seek· Ing to maintain public access to privately owned beach northwest of that city's municipal pier. Now the county is moving to protect po~lble public accec;s rights to 3.5 miles of beachfront owned by the Ir· · ->: Co. between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. T vo cities and Irvine oUiclals: are discussing annex· at . and the company has a major development pro- gram planned for the area. By applying an overlay zone through the new county Beach Recreation and Development District, the Board of Supervisors would gain dedicated public access before annexation could eliminate such zoning. The move may be considered unfair to the Irvine Co. because It must postpone development pending a legal determlna.Uon. But the county's elected officials are duty:bound to protect po..tble public rights .. a first con.aderttion. YollFigure It 011t Three weeks ago in this space we reported the amounts of federal grants various cities on the Orange Coast might receive in the unlikely event President Nix· oo's revenue-sharing bill should become law. Rep. Richard T. Hanna, D-Anaheim, was the source of the figures. He reported, for example, that Costa Mesa would receive $394,346 while Newport Beach's share would be $545,164. This meant that the formula used In Washington was not based on population. H it were, the figures would be reversed. So we asked Hanna to ei:plain. He said "Simply' stated, the Individual Local Government AU~atioo is the share which correspond's to the ratio of its (the par .. licular city) general revenue effort to the sum of gene1al r~venues fo~ all eligible local governments. The popula· t1on factor IS only a small consideration and enters into the formula only through a combination of other form· ulas •• , The detailed formula looks something Iilr.e this: X • L G z L: GN N=l X-Indlvidual city allocation L-ToW (all) cities allocatlon G-Revenue effort of the city Z-All dtle.s, counties, etc. N-Indu •of local· governments congressman Hanna's fiual Jtateme.nt was, '4Smile." We'll try. ( . • • • . · Guidelines Dear Gloomy Gus: Bis Greatest Attribaite Was Competency In Dealing With Children ~~ ,,.. ~"' f Hayakawa In dealing with our children, I know of nothing th.aL makes us better parents than remembering always that events as we know them take place in the neIVOU! systems of human beings. No event is an objective fact independent of the person mak- ing some kind of ev· aluation of iL NG trip to the zoo, no cross word, no book read aloud, no good- night hug, exists for l h e participants without an evalua- tion being involved as its most import- ant ingredient. In every situation be- ween parent a n d children, evaJua· lions are there, and they interact on racb other. My wire tells the following experience ln illustrating the point: "ONE DAY I WASN'T functioning very well as a parent. Jn fact T was being lousy. I was getting dinner in a hurry. Alan was being a nllisan ce, interfering with what I had to do and pestering his younger brolher. "And I thought, "l'his Is too much. He is being purposefully annoying because he can't stand my not paying attention to him. He really must learn that people have other things to do.' "I was getting tenser and tenser and mv tension was communicating itself to· him, because he got more and more resentful and uncontrolled . Because I \\'SS feeling tired or something, I was choosing to run head-0n into what 1 evaluated as 'deliberately annoying behavior' on Alan's parl "WEU.. THINGS WENT on In this gtate of unpleasantness until Alan came over, put his head in my lap, and I felt his head, and I jumped up and got the thermometer and discovered he had a temperature of 103. "So I immediately began to evaluate the whole situation differently. What was Intolerable annoyance became simply a symptom of his illness. Up to then t had evaluated the situation by saying, 'I haven't lime for him.' Suddenly I discovered I had lots of time. "Now when any of the children's behavior seems to be intolerably an.- noying, I say to myself, 'Suppose you discover he has a temperature of 103? Jn that case there would be no question oI tolerable or Intolerable. Suppose you B" George ---. Dear George: How did you get into this bU!lntss? BECKY Otar Becky: That" DOI Ille lmpartant part -what I want to know l.s how can l get out of um business? However, Jn answer to your question , l dJdn'l rtaUy get lnto this businm oa purpoee -t just dropped by tit< oewspnper omce one cby to dtllver a new ahlpment of paper towtll ror the wa&hroom; sat dowo 1t a \\'tcant desk to rest my feet., and have been ans wering letters a1gned "Dtatra..i>t Bird Watdl•"' ever since. Those "Stop Pollution" bumper stickers make hypocrites out of the drivers of those internal combus- tion vehicles. -B. E. n.11 luhll'f ""*"' "'....... ¥1..... - llllCftt.llr11y ltte-. .. tilt _.,. ........ '''" ,_,. -tt OlltlllY 0111o C>ellJ 'li.t. stop evaluating 1n those t.erms and look for a better approach.' " TRINK OF THE evaluations with which we browbeat children. "Eat your custard; it's deUcious.'' "That sand is wet. Ugh!'' ''That old wheel is dirty. Put lt down." "You should love your tittle brother." "Come here and say thank you. Your Aunt Bessie won't bring you any more presents unless you say thank you." "That's just attention-getting behavior. Ignore il.'' "Stop that crying. There's nothing to cry about." These are mild examples. We needn't descend to the shocking levels of rudeness, strident commands a n d physical violence which you can see any day ln a playground or supermarkeL These represent the politer sins of forcing one's evaluations on the child, or trying ... '"Ibis IS delicious.'' "That JS dirty." '"l'bi! IS how a big brother should feel ." .. That IS attention-getting behavior.'' "There IS no reason to cry." IS. JS. JS. The objective feet , supported by tbe size and power of the parent. And no awareness t.hat these assertiom con· lain an evaluation. No saying, "This is how I evaluate It. Does the child evaluate it in the same way ?" JS A PRESENT DESIRABLE because It cost a lot of money? ls the dirttnesa the most Important thing about the wheel? Isn't the child's right to explore the world important to him? Isn't It a very important question whether the custard is delicious to him? And how can you teach politeness, in this case saying thank you, when at that very moment you are being impolite to the child, showing him up before Aunt Bessie? And what's so wrong aOOut attenlion- getting behavior? Do 1 want my attention-getting behavior ignored? God forbid! And what good does It do to say, "There's nothing to cry about"? There obviously Is, or be wouldn't be crying. A GENERALIZED consciousneM of the fact that one always sees Udnp through hb own evaluative fllter,1 and that the cblld is doing lhe same, makea for a more flex.Ihle and more adaptable and much more effective approach to problems that parents are constantly confronted with. 'lbis consclousneas of evaluaUve sroc· esses need not be a source of insecurity or lnde(lntteness of opinion. When you are drJvlng • car, just at the. tdge. of your consclousneu Is tbe white Une that Wis you that you are on tbe rlgbt.lwld side ol the road -b<)'ODCI w!t1cb ts Ille dltd>. You doo't have to won')' about that white line every oecond. lt'a there. al the edi• Ii your COOJClousn<», IN THE 8AME WAY certain n&les ol thoUgbt -lllCb u tbe habit ol evaluating one'• tvaluaUCnl which one acqulm lhnlollh aemanUc llludy -act like that wblte line. You don1 bsv• to think about It all Ille time. It'• Juli there. ,\lid when yeu wand« O'ltt It, you poll yoonetf tog•thtr and ..,, "What am I dolng btte?" By s. I. Haywwa Prtaldeot San F.-.ncl1co Stale Colkge Dewey Set TQne of GOP Leadership WASHINGTON -Visiting with old friends during a relaxed evening in Washington a couple of. days before hl.s death, Thomas E. Dewey expressed his pride in the performance of Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Rogers was, in a sense, a protege of Dewey's. Dewey hired Rogers for $35 a week as a member of his racket busting staff in Man- hattan more than 30 years a g o, which was the beginning of Rogers' public ca· reer as a prosecutor, congressional invest- igator, attorney gen- eral and secretary of state. Rogers had been identified with Dewey in greater or degree lhrough this career. The source of Dewey's pride was Rogers' courage and detennination in of- fering and persisting in a balanced Arab- Jsraeli solution regardless or domestic or international Jewish political pressure which has been a considerable factor on the American political s~ne for many years. DEWEY, FOR ALL his listeners knew, had nothing to do with the formulation of Rogers' po!iUon, but when the former New York governor and presidential~ dldate tiled unexpeetedly, the Impact of his attitudes and convictions on -··...,.~~ ;.,,:.~t'.'l"f~4 ' Richjlrd Wils ' · ~-· , .... ,,..,,., Republican policy was brought to mind. Governor Dewey, in defeat, had more to do with the general direction and thrust of Republican policies in 1be: post- war period than most of those who were candidates or held officiaJ positions. By adopting, as far back as 1938, the int.emaliooal lawyer, John Foster Dulles, as his foreign affairs adviser, Dewey Injected into the political stream a personality who was to affect American policy for many years to come. In concert with his own campaign manager of 1944 and 1948, Herbert Brownell, and Rogers. as well, Dewey in 1952 broke the strangle-hold of Robert A. Taft on the Republican organization and succeeded in nominating Dwight D. Eisenhower for President. EISENHO\VER TOOK the Dewey- favored Sen. Richard M. Nixon for Vice President, and Dewey helped save Nix- on's political Ille in a crisis over cam· paign funds when other Republicans were urging Eisenhower to drop Nixon from the ticket. Eisenhower brought into his ad- ministration Dulles, Brownell, Rogers and others of the Dewey circle . Thus was begun a continuum which lasts into the present and which sets the ·tone of the present Republican leadership -leadership which, like Dewey's, is based upon the concept of high competency in public service. That was Dewey's greatest attribute, competency. He had demonstrated it in prosecuting highly dangerous criminals and for three terms as governor of New York. But he cou1d not convince the majority of lhe American electorate in two presidentiaJ elections that he possessed those qualities of compassion and humanity which are so often given a higher priority in the popular vote. HIS POLICIES, however. did nOt Jack compassion and humanity. They were moderate policies, moderately liberal and internationalisl, for he had asserted the ascendancy of such ideas In twice win- ning the Republican nomination over conservative opposition tinged with the old isolationism. Dewey could not win In 1944 against Roosevelt. He realized that. He was going against a tremendous political powerhouse in time of war with no popular issue. It was different ln 1948 against an underdog president, Harry S Truman. But overconfidence, things undone that ought to have been done, and .Dewey's inability to seasoo his image of.' com- petency with compassion, humanity and humility, cost him an electim be could have won. Those who had believed that it w:U time for competency and expertise· fa government after the long Roosevi!Jt- Trurnan era which was so overU¥ political were distressed by Dewey's defeats, and not necessarily because they were sorry for Dewey. THEY BEGAN TO look for others who might be expected to bring some order and restraint into a proliferating government, re-focus aimless programs. and, to be qu.ite direct about it, conduct a government on behall of the majority instead of soccessively a pp e as in g organized labor and the v a r i o u 1 r:ninorfties 1n the name of compassioa for the common man. Robert A. Taft was too conservative. So, by far, was Barry Goldwater. Eisenhower, immensely popular, was basically nonpartisan although highly respectful of the managerial, ownership, white collar, suburban and establishmen- tarian groups at the core of Republican strength. Nixon was the answer and in direct line of descent from Dewey. But i11 the end Nixon was able to win narrowly only in reaction against the Johnson administration. And now, once again, the problem ls the same: Cornpa§ion and "charisma" vs. competency; the common man against the "lntef'e!~;" general policy vs. the demands of minorities and proteit groups. Catfish Are Becoming Respectable For all the attenUon It's getting lately It looks as lf the catfish ls beginning to give the trout a run for Its money as a California gamefish. The ugly but toothsome catfish also promises to bring forth a new mu1ti- million dollar commercial enterprise in the state. Until a decade or so ago most western anglers looked down their noses at any freshwater quarry other than trout , but things are changing. We can recall hearing former State Fish and Gamt Director Seth Gordon tell a sport.smen'a group ln the early 503 that Californians shou1d -and would -learn to enjoy warmwater fishing llke their brethren in more easterly locales. Population prts5ure p I u 1 development of new lakes and nservoirs, Gordon held. would force the change. WHILE TROUT ARE 1Ull number one, of course, fishing for black bass and other warmweter speclea has boomed In califomia from Lake Sha1ta on the north to the San Diego dty lakes on the south. And now we've even got caUlsh hatcheries. The It.ate bu a ntW wermwatet hatchery In Imperial Volley which ii ala.ltd to turn out half a mllllon catchable alu catfllh by im, Jariely for planting In Southern Ca1Uomla Wll<rl. The D<partment of Flab and Game allo operate& the c.entnJ Valley warmwater hatchery near Elk Grove. ~ And commer<lal hatcherla, IM!tttt known as catfish farms, are upectfd to number .. many .. 2llO and to aell aome 10 mllllon calllsh by the end of the year. TUE DFG FACILl'l'lES are pr!marUy for stocking public flshlng -.rat.era whlle the catfish farms are aimed al developlJt& a new product for the fish oounters cf the stat.f_ Once western ho11xwive1 catch on to the culinary deligh!.s ol the calfisb -e$pedaUy when ( l ---._,.......... -. Guest:Report ' • \ he's skinned, cleaned, shorn of his huge whiskery head and ready for the pan -the fish farmers predict • thriving new market. 11\e commercial fish farms also serve as an additional source for !tocking public waters with catfish. The largest ol these in tbe state, Wewah Farm near Richvale, for example, supplied the fish for an interesting catfish experiment in Lake County. There Clear Lake resort operators and residents having learned of the progress in catrish farming decided to give a boost to that body of water long known for its excellent warmwater fishing. ONE OF mE problems with any fish species is that the little ones get eaten by the big ones so planting fingerlings isn't always the best procea... Pond· reared caUlab usually take aOOut three Wearin' of the Black To the Editor : Tom Barley's column on the wearing of black on SL Patrick's Day was an ~ffroat to all Amf!ric:ens with even so much u a drop of Irish llneage i1 thelr genealogy. To wear the tradlUonaJ green on St. Patrick'• Day II N<Yr to pay homage to the lrtsh, but to honor the death of a gmlt Catholic uint, who "found lttland all beathen and left tt all Chris. tian." It boDm'I 1 man who founded over 300 churches and baptized over 120,000 people, and who, aa 1'feDd will have t~ enU<td all tbe '°"''" In lttland down to the .. amor. wbert tbey w ... drown«L ST, PATRICK bu had nothing to do 'l"'lth the present clvll war, ei:eept, perbapa, In not mrcllln& hll role or Patron Sah'lt of lrtland I UtUe mort energetically! Had Mr. Barley been around In the 1181·1865 period, no doubt he would have expounded for the same color of costume on the Fourth of July, mertly because there WIS a arttt War Between the Staltl. And. perhaps, tbe first Thanklglvlng Ill 1621 should nem have been celebrated, e1cepl In blackJ ln view of J Mailbolt . Ille Catholic pme<IJlloa In Enaland at the banda or tbe Puritans! AND, PERHAPS, the Jew1 ahould not c:tlebnte Pusover this ye1r, except ln black, for they ore aUll not completely out from und!r E1)11tlan domination! A por; on y•, Mr. Barley! And may the Saint.I preserve us, for ye were probably 1-wurln1 a bit o• orange on SL Patrick's Day, tool (But, Mr. Barley -hl1ck and orBD.i' are colors for JiaUoween I) MARY ANN O'CONNELL ' years to go much over a pound, but fish culturists have found that raising them by the "live car" method substantially accelerates their growth. This means rearing the fish in a wood and wire mesh cage suspended In the lake water, usually from a dock, and feeding them until they've grown to a size safe from larger predators. The "live car" method ln some parts of the country has !ffD catfish grow from less than an ounce to more than a pound In just four months. AT CLEAR LAKE the first batch grew from under two inches to more than tight with IOme up to 12 inches in that Ume -and they're now swimming fret and gettlng evm bigger. Residenll are planning a program which could eventually see as many as 50,000 catfish a year reared and planted in thll maruter. So while he bas't fully outlltmned the trout yet, the very wtpretty catfish has taken a big mp up the ladder toward respectability In Callfcrnla. ~. Mike Abramt0a Cattl'"'11 Feollln Servb --W- Mo nd.l y, March 22, 1971 TM editorial pagt of lht 0.Up PUo1 lttb to fnform and ltim. 1'latc rtodtr1 bu prc11nUno thil "'10rJ)aprr'1 opinkmt and com.- mtntaru on eopfc1 of inttrt1t and dgnffJc<m<t, bp providing a l°"'m f<W tit• t%J)f'ttrion of our rtockrt' opfnfom, and bv prttffttfng thl di!Jfrlt uitw- pmnu of Informed ob1trt1fn ttt1d IJ)Oktnntn on roptc1 of tM. dap. Robert N. Wed, PublJJher t CHECKING •UP• • I • l i There's a Girl ~ ' In My Spaghetti J By L. flf. BOYD ~ THREE OUT of the five : most recent besl·selling non· ~ fiction books ha\'(' been sex 'manuals, reports the , marketing men, sadly •.. A~f ASKED WHAT 1namn1al • normally has the highest body • le01peraturc. 1!'11 a toss-up : bet1,1,·cen the timber wolt and '. the city editor I thiok • HOW 00 YOU explain "'hy : five limes as many city me11 ; as farmers catch SOfll.e sort · of. scalp disease'.' Statistics shOw thal CUST0Pt1ER wants to kno1v "'hatever happened to Miss , Pcit O'Shea. Pat is a coed. 1 Or was. at last report. In : 1he University of North Carolina. Am checkin,11; on her : situation right now. Lawmen · picked her up recently. Charg· : ed her with an uJtreasonable ~public disturbance. They said ~ she created same when she ;jumped nude into 80 pounds : of cooked spaghetti. Two other :students fixed up this · enorn1ous platter of spaghetti ·as-their modern art exhibit. Jn a showplace called the \Veatherspoon Art Gallery. But Pat fell the work needed something. so she . . Think of that~ CUSTO~f ER SERVICE: Q. "D;id you say a tub bath takes mOre "'ater than a shower'.'" A. That's right. About It gallons more. Ordinarily . Q. "Will your Name Garnc ·tti~n accept r..1r. Corn , ·a_gricultural commissioner of ·c;aflfornia's Fresno County, ·ror·membership in The Proper 'JOO Club'.'" A. No, he rejects· that nomination. However, If fl'lr. Grapevine ever gels the job, please advise . . . Q. "Any wild mustangs still loose around here'.'" A. About 16,000. AU over the West. Just 70 years ago there were two niillion. IS A HOJ\1EOWNER a bet· ier credit risk than a renter? Everybody seems lo think so. But the Credit Bureau of Greater Denver is quoted as saying no statistics actually prove that. Surprising . , , AVE RAGE PAY for an ex:- excutive 's secretary on the \Vest Coast now runs $134 a week ... TH E CO~IPUTER BOYS say about one out of every 400 credit card bills ge~ fouled up son1ehow , .. "YOUNG NEWL \'\VEDS buy twice as many mobile homes as retired couples. i t ' s reported. OPEN QUESTION -Why do we refer to a scapegoat as a patsy? LOOK AT THE RECORDS of any dozen men you "'ork with regularly. Is there one among them who turns up absent one day at a time very now and then'.' If so. don't bet h1,>'ll stay on. That's the man most apt lo quit before the year's out. So say the personnc) specialists. Your q11cstians crnd com- 111e11ts are welcomed a11d v11/l be used in CHECKING UP wherever possible. Ad· <lress letters to I~. M. Boud, P. 0 . Rox 1875. Newport Beach. (,'alif., 92660. LAST 14 DAYS One Large 8x10 and Six Lovely Wallet-Size Portraits of Your Child 5aa Hurry In now for the most s pectacular portrait event in townt You'll ge t a big, bea utiful 8x10 for you and six charming wallet-size for fa mily and friends. A fine portrait of your child is always a warm and wanted gift. Remember ••• you can c harge It at Penneys! l\nnelfJ PUlllltTON Or•"'•'•'' c.·~··· ~ l!Oll•, 111.d.O HUNTINGTON llE.t.CH Nl!:Wl"OltT 111.t.C .. H~n!I"<;'"" (tl!ltr 1'tllll0f! l•ltnd )nd 11oor •91 n 11 1nd rioor, ''' i)l) o'""•• "T~• cu1·• ,n.sott ,. \ • • DAIL V PILOT 9 • It still means something at Penneys . $6 Comfortable pant shifts in spring prints, stripes and solids. Assorted fabrics. Sizes P-S-M-L Bright, casual shifts in a wide range prints and solids. Sizes S-M-L Sizes XL-XXL· $5 2 for $1 Special! Lace-trimmed bikinis in nylon satins and nylon tricots. Women's 99 ~ Special! 41 "x81" curtain panel of snowy white rayon net. sizes S-M-L. Special! Boys· sport shirts of Penn- Prest• polyester I l.!Otton. Lo ng-point or regular collar in a wide selection of stripes aid plaids. Sizes 6 to 18. Dressmaker values ! You don 't have to be r ic h to own an orig inal. 98 ~ yd, Penn-Prest~ 'Misty Leno' prints of Kodel t11 polyester/cotton never need ironing. Choose from florals. paisleys, polka dots. 44/45~ wide. 98 ~ yd, Flocked broadcloth of Avril~ rayon/cotton. Washable, needs little or no ironing. Choose pindot or daisy pattern. 44/45" wide. 1.66 yd. Cotton crepe, the practical fabric for your prettiest fashions.Minicare<ii finish to need no ironing. In a bevy of screened prints. 44/45" wide s8~yd , Special! Better sportswear cottons 1n a terrific assortment of prints and solids. Perfect for spring fashions, even f r home decorating. 35/36" wide. We carry a complete selection of McCall's and S1mpl1s:;ity patterns. 1QBB twin or lull size CHARGE THESE VALUES AT Y OUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! j J JO DAILY PILOT Monday, March 22, 1q71 At Murdy Park Festival Entry Blanks Readied Entry blanks "'ill be sent next v•eek to 200 lluntinglon Beach org;:inizatlons asking them to join in the annual city-Yl'ide feslival ~1ay 15 at f\1urdy Park. Bruce \Villiams. one of the chairmen for !he festival, said co1nm1ltees have now been formed and plans are being madC' for the festival. ''\\'e'IJ send forms to every service club. PTA, church group, youth club, school organization or anyone else we know of." \Villiams said. Last year 150 clubs and organizations joined in the cily-1ride .. come together" festival. l\'il!iams said th ere are three "'ays to p<irticipate. "Either by building a booth, perforrning on stage or sponsoring a competitive game or activity," he ex- plained. "Groups are avelcome to do any one. l\.\'O or all three of these things.'' The aVO\\'ed purpose of the festival is to !('ti citizens what Huntin gton Beach is all about -"'hat groups are in it. The feslival is sponsored by the city's coordinating rouncil. "What we need most," Williams said, "are perforin- ing musical groups." Anvone who wants to join the CitY·wide festival can con- tact Williams at Golden 'Vest College, 892·7~1 I: Pat Downey, Boys Club director, 53&-9415, or city librarian W a It er Johnson. 536-5479. In addition to those three, other cominittee members now organizing the festival are: A1rs. Gretal Barnes, representing the Girl Scout Council vf Or<,!nge County: Mrs. 'i1arian Olcott of Las Olas Toastmistress Club: Rod- ney Jones, Youth Coalition Council: Norm Ginsbur g , OCt"an View Sc hoot District: Lee Mossteller. Huntington Beach Union High School District; ~1rs. Betty Kennedy: and Rip Ribble and Bill Reed for the city. War Buff Recreates Battles VISALIA (AP) -Jack Scruby delight! in recreating historical battles just to see if he can arrange an outcome i better than the origina l generals did the , first time around. 11< calls himself a "war BACK TO SIDEBURNS gamer" and ~a he 's just Valentino, Circa 1924 one of an estimated. 50,000 Writer Recalls 'Good Old Days' By ALBERT W. BATES persons i11 this country who THIS lS A message -a faint one -from find fun 1 i~ buildin g and Squareaville, U.S.A. man i p u at1ng battlefields, Today's Vl'\ungsters, and not a few of its old-complete with soldiers equip-., ... ped with rifles, c&Mons, sters, have been flaunting extreme styles -lots of horses -w b a t e v e r • s hair up topside, fancy shirts and ties, bell bottom necessary for "cotnbat.'' · trousers for the men, and enough War gamers, he says. are high exposure by the gals to land •·not war nuts." They are men them in jail a generation ago. and women, young and old, To this old Umer, it's a case of "even soldiers fighting for 4Tbis is where I came in," at least their lives in Vietnam" "'ho or part of the mod scene. For the delight in playing out cam-est of it, it's a study in contrasts. paigns such as those Napoleo n Not a few still around remember \vaged or the American e early and mld-1920s on the Or· Revolution -but on big tables ange Coast. Rudolph Valentino had wilh immaculately realistic not only made the Jazz Age women swoon, he had toy soldlers. fields and forests influenced the males of America. all scaled to size. Scruby is one of about 25 HIS LOW sideburns and bell bottom trousers internationally-recognized toy became the rage. (So these are new now?) makers specializing in the He bad all of America's young males copying hand-crafling and manufac-his style in hirsute adornment -those sideburns, turing of "period" toy soldiers plus slicked down straight hair. None of this wild Kids Lik e to Ask Andy for armchair generals and col· and wooly rat's nest hair to the shoulders. And cer· -.;;;;.--;;.;------------.:i.--~le~c~lo~rs~. -------.i;i~i.i;;;;;oii;..;;;;i.;.;;;i;;;_,1!( tainly no beards to interfere, itchy-scratchy, with ,--------love-making. VASELINE was the preferred "grease" for a Valentino hair style, and plenty of it was sold. Instead of scraggly hair to the shoulders, the Valentino style wu the round-shaved neck. Swains of the era appeared to have impressed their moth- ers into service, using the chamber pot for the neck-shaving line. VALENTINO'S influence was felt in other ways on the Orange CoaSt, especially his dancing. The tango was "in" for years after his untimely death. That ended, of course, when the kids stopped dancing with each other and went in for the modern dancing in proximity to each other. As with all other lads, this too will pass. In this old-timer'• book, the kids are great and they can reform from hell to breakfast, but they'll go some to top what their elders enjoyed. What they need most is what they horribly lack -a sense of history. New Stamp Club Slated SlamPI -those tiny oolorlul squares that seem to cost 10 much on Jetttra -will be the object of a special club now forming in FOWltain Valley. . Amateur phflateli.!ts -(stamp collectors) wi11 bold an organizational meetin& at 7:3G pm Monday, in the com-~u~ity center, 10200 Sia let Ave. 1 The new stamp '?rub s sponsored by the city recrea- tion department. Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Treat yourself to a "Festival" body perm. Including shampoo, cut, styling and Helene Curtis "Incredible" conditioning treatment. 8.44. Or, come in for a fashion cut by one of our experts. 2.75. l'ULl.ERTOH Or•notf•lr («ilw 2nd rJcor, 111 • .uo NEWPOll:T Stec~ F1ll\I01'1 b t.nd :tnd floor, 6U-2JU HUNTINGTON IEACN ; Huntlnglefl c..nM 2nc1 floor, an.m i Now! Save 15%on ~:~~ed ~$479 Only! You Get These Conveniences on Either the Side-by-Side Or the Top Freezer Model. Good·bye Defrosting, Both these Frigidaire Relrigera· tors are 100~ Frost·P1oof. Smooth-glide nylon rollers meke these Frigidaire Ael1ig· erators easy to move, eesy to clean behind or beneath. No help needed. Either right or lefl·handed. Change your mind, change your kilchen arrangemenl. Reversa-door Top Freezer model lets you conver1 both Reversa·doore lo right· or lelt·hand opening. Side-by-Side Is just naturally ambl· dextrous. Organi1ed 0001 Srorage. lots of room to store In lh• door. Removable egg trays, bu11er and snack compart- ments, deep doof shelf !or hall-gallon mllk cartons. More door storage on freezer doors. Happy Medium Meat S!o1ege. Flowing Cold Meat Ten· ders keep meat just above the freezing point for aelety, yet ready to cook without thawfng. lttte9rlt11 nHd Depettdablllly sh1ce 19'11 COSTA MESA EL TORO loquna Hiiis Plaza Decide on the Automatic Ice Maker Either Now Or Later In Ellhar Sida-by- Side Or Top Freezer. Radio Oisp1tched SERVICE TY & APPLIANCE Frigidair• e RCA Sylvania • Maytag For Oependabl• Frltndly Service 411 E.. Snlftt•tnth St. 646·1684 doPy f .f SClt. f.6 (next to Saw-On) 837-3830 dolly 10-6 M/F 10-9 Call 548-3437 t ' I custom draperies, slipcovers, and bedspreads ••• all matching. Create a total decorating look.•. choolefl'Om our caaual ~odor' fabrt-lortul plaklr, /J check.I, atrtpea of wovtn cotton. Have draperln. 1llpcover1, even bedapruds, custom made. Alkour profeNlonal decorator to help you mekeyour 1elecUona. Call now ... 1aveablg1&%1 Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service, free. Decorate now. U1e Penn•r• Um• payment plen. ' ' .• For The Record r--) Dissol11tions • l l , < ' ' ' • .. Of Marriage • .. • • • • • • .. ~ l l ,, l • • ' , ., Deal11 l\'otiees lllllEEDING G«>r1t Edwtrd B•H<li"!I. 161n Bolero L•M, HunH"oton BtlC". 01t1 o1 <lt•Th. Mtrcl! lt. Survlvl!<I ~Y wofe. V1111~t ll•f'ed•""" 1tt1>""1, J lrn Lt merinos. St rv· 1~1. Tund1y, ) PM, St. Mlcl!•tll E•!ICOl>t l Cl!Urch, Dl•ecTe<I bY Pffk F•mlly Colonltl F1mer1f Hom t . GA TWA RD Frtnctl AnTolnetle G.rw1rd, )()<.!? Y.t~orl Lt Drive, Huntington Buel!. SurvlYed by hu1b1nd, Frtnk; dtllthlers, 09nlw Tl!om1>>011, Cotl• Mew; Lesli• Ann Gt!~, Rl!<ldttl1; 1>ar1tnt1, Mr. Of><! Mrt. F•t nk Nllen. RnDcle1l1; 1hter, AVI. SMtln" Sulter, Rhod•1le. Servk••, '•1'aucl1y, 2 PM , Btll BrDfl<lwtV Chapel. 1,...rnm•nl, Ptclllc Vltw Memorl11 Por~. B"l Broo<lweY Mortuary, Olre<:!or1. CLAlE Ru.sell Abney Gl1zt. 110'~ 0<i11w1rt A.-.., H11n!il!llt011 Betel!. 01!e ol de•!~. Mon;:h II. Survl11.0 bY motht t, VIDnt Kold.I; brothtr1. RtvmOlld t ncl J. l ~O~llt; 11.it ra. M••· Ntcllno Ort ln ond M~. MOxln1 Tl!o<>eY. Gtt Vtllde ltrvlcu, T11e1cl1v. 9:l0 AM, V, A. Cemettty. Wur Los AnOtle1. Pttlt F1mllv Co10nl1I Funert! Homt. OltKIO•S. GOUDY Clyde L. Goudv. Se•YltH ....,..lno or McCormick Looun• 8"CI• Mortu•.-,.. HOLMAH ''Lil'' Holmen. C"-~1 11rvlct1 i ncl In· 1...,,,...1, Wf'clnttdov, 1:l0 PM, Wn!mln- l!er Memor!t l P1rk Morluory ond Cem· •ltrt. " McCLUHO Frldtrlclc J . McC111no. ms Ellttmtrt Avt~ Cotlo Mew. Dolt of <Seith, Mere~ 20. S!lrvlvtd bV wife, Hedci.; s.on1, Or, Freclttlck J. Mc<.lul!ll, Jr., DI C.llOll• P1r~1 1r>d ROO.r1 M. McC1uno. Gtrdefl Gro1111 c1tu0Mer. Mri. J"••e1 Davie., Co..t1 Mui; brPtht'f', Euoene F. Mc· Clune. N1Pltt, Ctll!.; 11tter, Mro. Charl es T•lor, Hun!ln111on Ptrk; 10 orendcl!ll· ortni °"" oreal-trlrn:!Chl!cl. Strvlcn, Toetc11v. II AM, Poclllc View Cha ... 1. Eiilomtlment, Pec!llt Vltw Memorl1I P"1c. Ftm!IY IUll&HI~ fhOH wi1hi"11 10 milo;1 memorltl conlrlbvll0n1, PIH•• c<Wl!rlbu1o lo llMI M1scnlc Tt mPlt Build· lnl F'und, A•U0.11, Coll!. Ptclllc View MM!u1rr, Olrecto•1. STAM~ JC111ioh L. St1mo. --.01 94, of ~62 PIPPtl•· ,, .. Lol'lt. Ccst1 Mt''· 0.tt DI Guth, N.frcfl 10. S!lrvlvf'cl bY wl!t, Mee; ion • Monday, MirCh 22, 1971 Toomey To Head Contests World decathlon re c o r d holder Bill Toomey, formerly of Laguna Beach, will be honorary chairman of the 1971 DAILY PILOT Explorer Olympic Games ;:~~~~~~~~~~ STAitS GROUP OF SAND SAILORS SPEEDS THROUGH SAGEBRUSH ON THE EDGE OF EL MIRAGE DRY LAKE The multi-event competition will be held at a number of high schools on June 19, ac- cording to of!icia!s of the Orange Empire council , Ex- plorer Divillion, Boy Scoot! of Svdnoy Om•rT 11 en• of tho wOrld'• qr1ol 01trtl•t•"· Hit colu""" h 0111 of tti. DAJLY Pl LOT'S troot f1ot11re1. If You Are Bored With Pokln9 Along on Water. Try Dodging Sagebruth at 50-60 Milea Per Hour • SAILOR FOSTER CHECKS SAILS BEFORE RACE He Hopes Double-luff Design Will add Speed Money Problems Delay County Study Project Sagebrush Sailors America . '==========~ Coast Racers Exchange Hulls for Wheels A group of Orange Coast sail on beaches and abandoned STORY, PHOTOS sailors have left the high seas airstrips left over from the to try their luck on lhe high BY LEE PAYNE war, but around here, a large desert. Of the parking lot is about the only Trading hulls for wheels flat obstruction.free available DAILY PILOT Staff I F I they have set their course for a test sai. ortunate y, across the windswept salt nats ~----------• t h e O r a n g e Co u n t y and dry lakes where they unlimited class catamaran Fairgrounds and An i e 1 are able to triple their speed d h ._ racing ideas. ,These machines Sta ium ave .,.. .. n very under sail . Track and field contesl.5, plus basketball, che s s , checkers, swimming and div- ing, rifle marksmanship and many others will be offered . Sailing competition will be in Newport Harbor. with presentation o f a DAILY PI LOT.sponsored perpetual trophy. Co-chairmen Don Casino and Larry Namelka noted Toomey was asked to head the games as winner or the 1968 Olympic Decathlon event In Mexico Ci- ty and the 1969 Sullivan Award as America's top amateur athlete. may cost as much as $2,000. cooperative in letting us use Sand sailing popular in ;:===========.! Europe since the 1930s, is The most popular are the their facilities. gaining favor in the U.S. One Desert Dart and the Sand "I have found,'' continues of the most active groups Sailor. They can be purchased Foster, "that you can do meets at El Mirage dry lake ready.made for about '400, or everything in a sand :sailor in the desert near Adelanto built from plans available that you can in a sailboat just a few miles beyond Cajon and tacking and jibing are Who Cares? No oth•r 11ow1p1por 111 th• world c•r•• obout your commu· 11lty Ilk• your co111rnu11ity doily 11•w1poptr dote. lt'1 th• DAILY. PILOT. Pass. from the manufacturer. much easier.'' There, on a I t e r n a t e How does sand sailing com .. -'.'.'.'.'.'.:'.'...:'.:'.'.:'.:._ ____ 1..,-.,--',_==.=1 ========='I weekends sand sailinz en· pare with lbe water variety? thusiasts gather with their Three young Harobr Area craft to exchange information, residents, Russell Foster of practice and race. The season Costa Mesa and Dave Carroll started March 6 and continues and Tom Hallett of Newport through June. Beach, all with considt:,rable A considerable number of experience building and racing the sailors are from the catamarans. have just design· Orange Coast. ed and built their first sand The vehicles are built from sailor. a variety of materials. Some "The biggest problem," sa.ys sailors use machines made of Foster, "is finding a place old bicycle parts with an to practice. 1 have been chas- Army surplwi parachute sail ed off parking Jots from costing $5. Others have high McDonald Douglas in Hun· Denture Invention For People with "Uppers" and "Lowers'' The ncare.~ thing_ to having your helpt Protect gum• from bruising. O..rl tetth 11 po111b\e now wilh a You eat more naturally-enjoy pla1tic cream dMco¥tty thllt ac-apple:I, com-cn·the-c::ob. tUllly hokll bolh "uppm'' and FIXOD!NT may bdp you IJ)el.k "lo"'tr1'1 ., '""" lltf.,,• ,1».uil>l1. f!}C!e clearly, be more 1t ea11e. lt't • rtvolutionary d!IO)Yeiy The special pencil-point di1-ca\ltd F1xOD1tN'f, for d1!ly home pen!ler let1 you 1pot F1xooENT use. \U.S. Pat. f3,003,988) With with precision . , . wllnr mtdld! P1xODEN1' many denture "'earer1 One application may last round no"' eat, 1peak, laugh, with little the clock. Dentures that fit are worry of dentwu coming looee. e11enli1l to health. See your FJllOD!NT form• an el11tic dentist rqultrly. Get ea1y.to- memtnne thlt belP11hlorb the u1e Jl'tXOOENT Denture Adhesive llhoclc. of bitinr and cMwiaa:-Cream at all drua counters. MARCH'S BIRTHSTONE 1he +J~v.4!fl1.til1~ The color of th1 Aquamarim ~ 'hu bN11 like11ecl to a thomu4\ luiuu of 1imlit 111 impriaoaecl , """'· s.,...., .. ..._~ tb1 i11Wlleet ed (T'&Jlt ecnmp th• E11Ptiat11 J1laced thair courts of law a11d U..lr blttk ~•ld1 u11dt.r itl Jtrot.Ktioa. { Tht Blood1tone. i1 the COlllJ&lli birthstone for March. Won bJ ' nten, lt i1 ofttn uned with mollO(l'iurut1 Uiitlall or Ullta. W«1r vow.r lilr&Mtou /w I /111lin--' ,_ /ffftlf 7 I Th• pl•c• lo t• '" G•ftu>n• l irlh1ton11 South Cotil P111• l ri1!ol 11 lht S111 Diet• fwy, SANTA ANA -Orange County stud ies on population goals. health priorities and housing for low i n C' o m e families may be delayed or dropped for lack of financing. performance equJpment in· tington Beach to Collins Radio Coit• Mo•• 140-906' Aeronutronic Division in ...:_c~orpo~~ra~l~in~g:_~th~e'_~la~t~es~t:._~in'_~in~N'.::ewpo~~r.'.:t.__.'.:ln'.'...:E~u~ro~pe:_:lh~ey~======================::!.~========'=:= Newport Beech and chairman UCI·Project 21 wh ich has been undertaking these and similar studies for the county is out of funds and has asked the county B o a r d of Supervisors for $10,000. .. Supervisors. decided to wait until they begin reviewing 1971-72 budget before com· miting additional funds to the study project. John B. Lawson, general manager of Philco·Ford's of Project 21 . made the re· quest to the board. He said that UC Irvine, which has helped fund Project 2 1 . withdrew financial backing because of money problems. Law-soo said the business and indu11trial communities may be asked for financial help. UCl·Project 21 studies have been completed in the areas of open space, urban problem solving. county planning, air and ground transportation and deterioration of down town areas in cities. Kids Like to Ask Andy Sale! Self-cleaning ranges for people who want to .get out of the kitchen, fast! Sale ptlcn e-.. llvaallh Salunl1J. .JolY!h L. Stomp Jr.; ortnos.on, J av R, -------------------------StlmP. S.rvlctt. lodev. Mor .. uv. 1 PM, 8'411 Coron• del Mor Cl!elM!I, S""'TCH wlll con<:lucle In Cl'ltotl Privtle lnltr· rnrenr 1t Pt clt!c VI"" M-la! Port<. Bani Co•-d111 Mt• Mortuerv. Dlrec· ..... STUJITEVAHT A""'lln 0 . S!wrleYtnl , 7011 Vllto C1lon. Coront def Mir. Oa!• ol deall\, Mt•ch 111 Survlvf'cl bv wlre, Cnh•ri.,.. 0 Shir· te.ionl; ion, Warren O, at Mewl>Ort f191<1'1; d1ungf\1er. M•s . .-1rd Jone1, San Mlleo; sl11ers. Mn. Jolln Buckl.,... h1m, C-Ml Mer; M•I. FIOYd l--lw~es Jr.. of COi.ineli Bluth, low1; f!v• ,,.endchlldren ~rvkt•· Tul!".ldov, l.30 PM. P1c1f!c Vi-C1!11>el, En1omb· ....,,,. Ptclllc VI-Mtrnoriel Pt•k Fem· lly !U90l!".lls 111011 wl1hl"; to make m ... tnorll l cont•I011!1D111. plee.., contrlbult fQ 1119 Orange Ccun!V COi.ineii ot &..,. Scouh of llmerlct. P•Clflc Vi"" MOrtu· ''"'· Olrecton. WASIE Crv~1.1 L. W111. IKl'IOW" II c·~•ttl Wl!U1m1l ml Pork Ntwi>Ort, i.ew1>ort &Heh. O.te ol dteth. March 70. Sur· Ylved by t1u1b<lnd, fclw~rO. Servlce1, \'.f'c!Mld1v. 1 PM, Paclllc VltW Cl!aPel. ln1trmirn1. P1clllt VI-Me<n<>dt l Ptrk. Paclllc VltW MortuerY. Olrecton. WlMIER Cill Lllll• Wlmt• IUI N..,..parl Blvd,. Coatt .\\HI. O..le cl (ltttl!, Mt rch ~ s~rvrvl'd bv ions, ChttTtr, Jtc~ and OUM Llofltloot; <11uohttr1, PtuUne Cl'lilftcller •nd Ge<91dl.,.. Provln•; Oii~ ti,,,._, -1lottr: twotn!V·IWO orend· c:hllclrirn: .....,1y.1our gru t·ttt nochllclr..., ~lcH wlll lit Mid In T.yon. ~II· tiom•. Loc•I 1rr•flll..,,""" 111 Pttll Ftm!I V Colonltl FUftft'OI Homt. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF l\.10RTUARY 427 E. 17lb St., Costa Mesa 516-1181 • BLATZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar .. OR 3-9450 Costa l\.1esa ...... Ml MU4 • BELL BROADWAY MOl\TUARY UO Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 8-3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Lapila Clnyon Rd. ' 494-905 • PACWIC VIEW MEl\.10RIAL PARK Cemetery l\.fortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drtve Newport Bt-acb, Callfomla 544-!'700 • PEEK FA~DLV COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolla Ave. Wts&mlnster 893-Uts • SMITH'S MORTUARY m M11ln St. 53MS31 llunllnglon Beach Taxes taking too big a bite? use our money! This year, pay all your taxes with a loan from Morris Plan. Then schedule payments to flt your budget. On approval, you can borrow from $100 to $5,000 or more for taxes, bill consolidation or any good reason. And you 'll get our Money· Back Guarantee (if you find you can do better, retum the money within 5 days at no cost to you) . Talk to the friendly people at Morris Plan about money for taxes or any worthwhile purpose. We'd like to help. Morris Plan . 673-3700 Newport Beach -3700 Newport Boulev•rd Other ofllcet througl'lout C1t1lom11 ,. " • J: It -,,.... -- Sale s199 Reca. 229.tS. Pnncrtst® 30" fCt1 ran9e Everkleene porcel•ln en1~1 fin ish even panels clean lh9tn$elves during normal oven use. Fluorescent lighted backgu1rd wllh clock and minute timer. Receesed cook top, se.thru oven door. W"ite, ooppestcae. avocado ••• cokJt COiia no_,,.• ~ ~::::::::::::::::::~s~ ... ~-- Sale $369 Reg. 419.95, Penn<:l'llllt• double oven gaa r•nge. Full size lower oven plus eye level oven ••• both with continuous clean Ing Everkleen • oven panels. High fashion atyllng with black glass oven doors and chrome trim. Fluoreacent light ill uminates cookfng Surface. White, coppertone. avocado°" harvest gold ••• cok>r costs no more at Aa.eys. CALL...(714) li2.H40l Available ot these stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Conter: HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Bue~. Use Penney' tim• poyment plen. • . ' • ' • ... II DAILY PILOT s MGll!Uy, Marth 22, 1971 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE lta Hi gh Ge ar P.-WI NOTICE rs HEJtl!l!'r GIYEH 111•1 Clltllil'KATI CIJI •UJINl$J !l>t' lol"""'ltie l!-1 et IOvnd or ._....., il'ICTITtOtn NI.Ml 1r-rl¥ ri.w ~ l'ltld OJ ''-ll'tl!~t T1'li9 '""°'"'9"" ""'' ,.,,.., l\f !1 °"'""''"'°~' Ill lf'>t Cf"' M (Ml• M-.• ~ I -l ... u II Cotll M"I' lo< I P<ltiecl lfl l.l.UU el 111MN 001 C1Hfon!l9 .,,..... !flt llcll!lwt II"" ,,_,... ~11: Ill I. 6 $ ORY CLl!.AH f:•$ 111d ltlal Ono ~ bllt, '"'' rt(I bl.It. two Ml• firm 11 ~NCI ol ..., +el..,.....,.. blt;I lllkt1. -I'~" bll1. ,... ''""It Mr-. wfloH ,..,.... Ill 11111 '"" •le<:t bllfl, -IMi.,,,..llC Clf'Mfl , - Small Cars Makin g Impact "' ~I 11 1 0 fol-.· trH<I Coll\ -M SI~ L. ~. 111 • Hamlllon NOTICE 15 FUltTHEJt (itVE"' lh1t ..... ~ CM .. M111. Ctlllw!llt. II 11C1 O••">e' 11>.Wl'I ,,,., "'""II ftll D•t.11 M9rtll "· "'1 -""lD "' '"' Pf001rl¥ w\111111 MWft Sl...nttl L. I.•....._ 111 4•¥• lollo•lnt 1n1 •~lltlc"lorl of 11119 flf C1Hltorfll.I, Ort-(GOJn•y· 11111 NfllC•• "'' tllll '"-''"' 1111111 Wll 0.. Morell IJ, ltll, ~' "''' I HI lllt !lo'ldlt, II lflt" i.. orw, or ,,. .. ,,.., "'*Uc In """ !« ulll &ll!t, fn 1111 Cir, of Cm.rt MHI, In wllk.11 --.llY ·-•ltd !!~ L L~"'ml)rl Cll~ Ill• O'llf>frly Wll ~ sold II ... _.. .. -.. M .... H'lo"" """"'" •ul!!IC lllCliofl 11 • tlm• 1no .i1i. ....... •• 1ubt<1lbo<f "' "" wllfllfl I~· ID bl ·~"OU"'~· tln;tntnl •nd ICAMWltcltoM llt PllCUlll<l DA TEO: M1rcll ,1 1'11 '"-H-. R E NETH 10!1'1'1C1Al SEAl) CHIEF OF POLICE M1r1 Boll\ Mll!"toll Publl.,,~ Orl!IP Co.>l Otllv ,.!lo! Not•"I P\lllllc.(1Hlor~I• Mire~ :l:l. 1'1! ~71 ,.rlnclN1 OHICf lft Ol'lfltl (OUMV ""' Commlnltol Eu>1r11 Ao•fl I , 1"1 l'ul!ll•'*I Or1111e Ce111 01111 "'"<~ IS tJ, ft 1f>d A1>rtl J, ltll 1.EGAL NO'nCE ....... Cl•Tll'ICATll! 0, •US1Nlll l'tCTITIOUI Ill.I.Ml ,.llO! i..1 11 LEGAL NOTICE By CARL CARSTENSEN ~ "" CNllY l'Uof ll•lt DomesUc Bmall cars are making an Impact In the tn· dustry and Ford DivisiOn's Pinto ls proving ltselt the most popular new car ever introduced in S o u I h e r n California by Ford Motor Company, John Hall, Ford Division Los Angeles district sales manager has reported "In the siJ: months that Pin- to has been on the market," Hall said, ''it has done better in the L.A. sales district than either the Mustang or the Maverick in their fir st si.z months." Through the first JO days in March. a total or 17 ,680 Pintos have been sold by Ford dealers in the L.A. sales district By contrast, 17,235 Mustangs and 13,628 Ptfaverick! 1,1•ere sold in the comparable period alter in· troduction. Ply1no1ith Parley "Thls section or the country has really proved to be Pinto territory," Hali added. "Since introduction, about 12 per· cent of all Pintos sold na· tionally are sold in this district. That's almost twice what we normally sell as a percent or Ford Division's na- tional tot.al ." At left. R. D. fifcLaugblin, general manager, Chrys· !er-Plymouth Division, meets with AJ Taddeo, gen- eral manager, Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Costa b1esa, at the Beverly 1-lilton Hotel. McLaughlin discussed \vith Chrysler-Plymouth dealers from the Los An- geles-Orange County area advertising and sales plans for "the 1971 model year. or paramount inter· est to the consumer and dealers was the recent in· lroduction of the sub-compact car, the Plymouth Cricket. Pinto continues to acount for one out of every three Ford Division producl3 sold in I.he L.A. district. Ford isn 't alone as Chevrolet's new Vega is doing its job well and contributing to the division's overall sales comeback, John DeLorean, general manager, said in 1 recent interview. The Vega is adding "plus" business to General Motors. diverting salel! from foreign cars and helping expand the size of the total new car market, he said. DeLorean. a Glt1 vice- president, said the Vega is now beginning to move into the market in .!lizeable numbers and the 100,000th un it has already been built. "The first 100,000 were t h e hardest," he said. "They took eight months to build because of shortages due lo the strike. By contrast. we expect to pro- duce the next 100,000 Vegas in le!S than three rMnths." DeLorean uid that research among early Vega buye rs in- dicates that 70 percent of Vega sales represent "plus" business to General Motors. Vega sales are now over 20,000 units monthly and "will increase rapidly in future months," he said. Indications are that eventually the Kammback wagon will ac- count for about 20 percent of Vega sales; ttie sedan about 20 percent with most of the balance going to the popular hatchback couple. The panel express truck has not been produced in sufficient volume lo test the market thus far. • • • ANNUAL CONFERENCE TO BE HELD to-u 'The twenty sixth annu1a Spring Business Conference of the Motor Car Dealers Association of S o u t h e r n California will be held April 20-24-at Indian Wells, Dick Arnold , president of the group announced. The business sessions '''ill center on discussions of pollu· Your Money's Worth lion problems. steps being taken by thhe industry to meet C1lnsumer complaints on war- ranties and repairs a n d analysis of sales approache,, in overcoming the business slowdown caused by the receot economic recession. Highlights in the program of speakers Include : Wednesday, April 21, Robert C. Cozens. Director, Department o f Motor Vehicles, "The Auto Dealer in \he ''7 0's'': Thursday, April 21, Robert S. Mc Cu r r y, vice-president, Automotive Sales and Service11, Chrysler Motors Corp., "The Industry of Com- munity Services, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., "Are you a Processionary Caterpillar?"; and Warrtn J. McEJeney of Clinton, Iowa , President of the National Automobile Dealers Associa· lion. "NADA Today." The conrerence ends Satur- day night with a banquet and dance at lndian Wells Country Club. LEGAL N011CE T-71141 NOTICE 0, SALi! 0' ••At r11orl!11tTY AT r111v1t.TI IALI Iii•. NI ,.,,.u .. LEGAL NOTICE In lht SIUle•lot Ceut1 fJf lhf ~ll•e t --------------et C1!ll0tnle. tor lhr Countv el Los NOTICI! TO Clltl!OITOillS AnNI.,, 1ur1:1t1011 COUllT 0, THl In ""' MettH d "'' E1111P ti STATE o• CAl1,0•1111A FOllt Home Improvement Loans S hould Be S1wpped For 8EREN!CE CRAFT HI El TAN 0 • THIE COUNTY 01' OftAlllQE Dec:e••fd. '"· A4J" B SYL 'lorlct 1> '-•"" ''""' lflel ~ 11n-Ed•" et Mll4•fd E•t"" •k• MUc1r..i Y VIA PORTER sharply from lender to lender, d!rsl•""" wln '"11 •I Pr1v11r '11' M. E•'""· OecN"ld. If you own lhe roof over but ' d t ·1 le -Ill"'"! ""' but blckltr. •ubltc1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEN to t1't you re vague on e a1 s. "' cDnl!rm•non o1 ui. Sul'Pflor C11<1r1 credlft<r• 01 !ht •W-t ...._, cle<.cl•"' your head, this first week of Thus, it's probably news to "" ... .n... ,,,. '"" dlY d A-Drll ""-' 111 Pt<IOlll 11 .... 1... clllml .,.in.. spn· g ., he t l t lh t h 1n1. 11 """ o111ce at Tr111t °"'"'"m""1, lht ••id oece11et1t '" ,,...11rr..i 1o ,,1, n 1 w n you s ar o you a you can pay as muc ,,..-,, M1 111 on1ce. 5'!alrlh' P1c•nc ,..,.m wit~ th, ,_ ...... ,., ~" 1n think about r e mo d e I i n g , as 18 to 24 percent or more N"lon•I 91n11., 1• 1!111 Colll!"-81..., .. ttw ~lie• o1 tllt ctett. ot "" •~e 1· · h. .. ..-... c1111 .... 1111 '1101 .c°"'~"' o1 "''lllN cour1,.,.."' •••lftl• '"""'· wllfl re 1n1s 1ng. refurbishing. If or can get Ibis type or loan t ... A"9t'leo. s111r o1 C•titorn·•· •" lht ...aue,., vouc1>eri. to ii.. un-you are among the m1·111·ons for half th·•e t tl>lf rl"11. Ullo •M lnllr•lf ol 11111 Otrsllned •I the office vi Hu..,.llI ~ r a e S · a.., •• ..., 11 •hi ,;..,, "' H•lll .,. Hllf'W'l•1 .nci """''· "'""'""" 11 L•w'. contemplating any of these ex-Specifically: ell !ht rltlfll, lltle •!Ml Jnt••eot It'll! &JO l1"" SlrHI. Ntw<>0r1 llt•c.11. C1liloml1 th• · J h ""',..,,1, "'1•1" cH<:r•Hd 1111 Kllu""' .,66,, wlllcl'I 1, .,,. •'••• ot buoi..... pen.ses, 1s is a so t e "·eek (I l Go first to your local ...,. -·""" o1 1 .... • "'""""'''· fJf ''" und•••I•_, on a11 rn1ne" "" you lake your first step bank, credit union or savings o,,,., lll1n or In -Ill"" !O 11111 l1lnlr19 lo !ho r1t•!• t;1f •••d drcr<l•nl or ••Ill oec.e•"""· 11 .,,. time 01 w11t11n four "'""'"' •lier '"' li•ll oul>hu-toward a ho1ne improvement association and ask each what """'· i.. •"° 10 •" 1111 ,,•r1•1n llo<l o1 111•• ""'icr. loan. And if you are t)•pical. would 1..-t1..-least expens1·,, tOf'llkllnlnlUM u .. 1, R•el P•ODe•IY 01!fl1 M•rcl\ 15. 1t11 lJ'C llt: 1nu.1ec1 In n.. Ltl1ur1 w .... 1<1. 1.1111111 Char~, conMn th!s is when you will save "'ay to raise the cash you l•H111 Cll<ll!IV ol Ot1n~e. S••t1 ol E•ocutor • d c..n"""'•· 1>1r11c111or1, """r1t..o •• "'"'• w111 01 '"' money JUSl by learning how nee . 1c11ow•. 1,.. ... 11· '"""'" n•mfd ooc!d•n1 to shop for th is lype of loan. You may b t Id th t PARCEL I: Owelll~• un.1 ,_, In HIHIWITZ. HUIWITZ •ff 1t•MEI e 0 a a 11uuo1,,. 1110. :mo. •• •• 111 unit I• .,. nM strHI To begin with, I'm assuming regular passbook loan v•ou!d '""'"n "" thll ctrlaln Conc10mlfl!11m N-n lt•c-. Clll'°'111• '1UJ lh t · f' "· the least ex1>ens1·ve. but. P11n 111•dl"' to '"° m•o• , •••' uui 47J.."7'1 a you Can t inance your ue fJf th•' , .. u1n OKl•••llon a 1 All•rM•• i.r E•"'w11r iniprovements without bor· of course. you n1usl have a Covl!<l•nlt. Co,..,llillf'• •nd lle1l•ltlicn1 P~bll•htd Orono• Co••' 0111• Piiot, ,.._.11..i ooobtr 1. 1u1 1.. eook M1rc11 u. n.,. anc1 Ao•1• ~. 1911 no-11 ro~·ing, most people can'l -savings account against \l'hich °'°'6. ••oe 1111. "' 0111,111 11~cord1•I----h. h · h h · to borrow. On a regular hoine ·~ Ille 0!11<• of th• C°"'nty Re<otdtr LEGAL NOTICE \V IC IS \\' y on1e rm-... ''"''°"""'· end• 111'1nd """'Yllll'd ------1 provement Joans today total improvement loan from one h•1t••11 Jn '"" 10 Loll " ' "111 , ... ,u $4 billion. of these source!! the interest A of Tr1ct No ICli, 01 Of'< m•O CEllTt,ICATE 01' llUSINIEll ·-dM 1n -1&1. ,, ..... ~, 10 P'•CTITtou• ••M• l' · rate should ranne br.tween l l ,, 1 1 1 f "' 1,11 111""'°"' M1•• m assumrng too that i·ou ,., ""u• y "'' · TM """er11ont11 "" <•<111, '""' ••• and JJ percent. the max;mum in the Otllc• 01 ... a COii""' lilec:o<d••· c-11C11,,. 1 Du•i n 1 p o so~ are aware charges on home -n 11111 d•t•M<t •t "(am"'"" "''f1'' e-0, 1rvine, c1111orn~1.'u.i: .. ,,.;, 11C111•011• • Joan amount usuatlv \\o'ill be ""' IN 1boYt·•-1•""" to cenc111m!nl~m nr"' nom• o1 llAMON'S OF CALIFORN IA improvement loans can vary betw-n Sl,500 and 1·,·.ootl, and Pl•n. . 1nd 11>11 11ld firm Is como>1nfd of "" E•cH>11n• '"" "°"'"" 01 Lot "' "'• to1tow1,,. "'''""" ...._ "'"'~' '" LEGAL N~JCE the maximum rep , y men t .. T·~· No. HJ! .. '"" m1D •fCO'litd full 11111 oltCtJ of rtlldi!<>CI ire I I •·1 In IDOi( u•. P•••• 1• •"" 1i "' 1011ow. 1--------------1 period is typically five years. M11ttllll'tClll MtPl In lr.t Olfi<t of II•"-M. G1Hln. 1(111'1 Slllnd•lll ' JU 2 f · I I !fie Coun1' ltKOtdl' ot 11fd (OUfllT. l•~. Hunllnq!"" eH<h. C•llklrfllt. ••CTIT ICUS IUSINl!SS ( I nqu1re at your oca E•c"'ll"' l•om ••I• lO!I 1. ' •NI 11-•· l. G~"'"· Xt"1 Soindrltt NAME ITATl!MIEHT lending institutions about "Tl· lo •II •••. oll, hYdroc1•1>0n1, n\ln.t••IS L1,... Hunllnoton l!l••cl>, t11uo-n11 Tiit !0Uow1no 1>trson ,. c10,.,. bllilnfH I I" •nd o111er •~b11onc•• r.1.,. beiow • o.1tt1 "•r<h 11, 1911 1, I e and other loans \\')11ch 11"''" "' soo.oo '"'· 1>111 wl11'1D111 111• Rim"" M. G1tt1n z111os. 3111 111twoot1 l lYf. "'•-·' are insured by the F'ederal •l""I te tnlrr u""" ltl' wrflCf 0t l!IDMif l . G~HI" 9t1Cll, (IHI 91'40 1..0Wrt1c1 o1 1t1t orooe•rv ebov' • 51•'• ot t1nto<ni1. O••no• coun1y· R1YP'flOl'ld i.. .. o• 111c"'• • Conni Housing Adminislration i n 11..,1n at !IOO.co '""1 '"' •nY ...,,.,.,... on Marc~ n, 1•n. lit.lo" "'"· • R•• -!cht•. »1' Oct•n Fr11111. NtwP<l•I \\'ashington. The maximum -.1 ... YI/. II ,,,...,..., In oeffl ol lllo••"I Pub•ic In 11'11 •o· ••Id St.rr. 9••<~. Cell! llU<I ,.,..,..d ot~•I•• """'''"' R•m<u• M. G1111r< T~I• b1111,..11 11 ~lno coroc1ue1oe1 b1 for this type of loan is $5.000. "ARCEL 1• Non°ntl11tl•t t•1....,tnh a...i llOflnlf L. G1tlln •!Wlwn In mo 1n lndl•ldUll. tor 1""'"' •nd 01rfu. 1>11bllc 111n1t1e1. 10 "' the .,,r....,, '""°"" """"'' ••• ll••mond LtroY R ic~•• repa}•able \\'ithin Se\'en Year~ .~ .. ""' '"' 111 PUrOCIHl lnc>dtnl•I 1utt.crlbe~ lo t~· wllllln in•lrumtn! '"" 1'11Dtl•ll.-I Or1ng1 Co11! Ot!!r l'Uot and 32 days. The maxi.mum 111 .... t!O includlnl blJ! nol llmlltd lo •t•nowled1.., !htv ltKuled !lie II-Mire~ I, IJ. 7'. 19, lt71 SQ).11 ,.,.. comlf'l1C1lor1. 1n11 .1 1.11on. (OFFICIAL SEAL! Interest ra~ for 11 $2.500 one- rte11cemen1, 1 ••I It , m11 .. 1en1nc•, M~ry 9•!1> MO<"Ton l · 5 0-111..., '"" 11•• o1 •II no<e•s~rv Noiarv Pu1:<llc<i111orn1• year oan 15 10. 7 percenl and or dtilr1bl• roe<1w1Y1, 1ld•w111<• •"" Prlnclot1 ottk' '" 1,000'1 OF OI L PA INTIN$S for a ~.000 Joan. 9.58 ""rcent cO'ICl11lll .,.,,, n.t ltnll doJcrll>td In ' Or1n1~ Cwnrv WHOLISAll WAllHOUSI ,,._ P~rcti J 01 1nu c•r111n """ r~rdtd My comml.iion l!.•olr•• OPIN TO THI PUILIC -modestly bek>w lhe interest so1116nbrr "· '"'· 1n aoo11 toN, A.o•ll •· 1911 rates charged on regular rom-'"f .Ml of 0t11c111 llece•li• lft "'' i-ub ll11tt!I 0.•not Co..l! 0~11• '''"' 50"' OFF Otll<• 111 1111 c.°"""' RK .... .,., 01 M1••" n. n. :If"'"'"'"'" s. 1'71 i.u.11 10 mercial bank h o me im- ••:.~o;i;~•·,. A _. ... ciu•lv• ••••m•n1 LEGAL NOTICE 1'11 •· ROINor•. SAlllTA """ provement loans. Thelle loans for 1nore1, ,,. rv,. ... p,ibllc Mtllhl••· ----''*" •1J-W111 are available for virtually any ·~I .. na tO• 1" oU<P<'tl ncld~~l•I lllOTIC!OI" IHTl!MTIOlll-TO •MOAGl.,_> ___ ._._ .. _••l Wlt.NflD ....,.-rw ' t h• h ·11 . h '"""'°' lllCIU<llntl 11111 flat 11 ... llld • IN TNE SALE 01' ALCOH01.•Cl1~:iiii:::.::::::iiii~~~p~ro~J"'~~w;;:;~·c~~w~·;,:,~·m~p:ro:"~t:e1 1111" con1l•UC:llofl, I ft 11 I 1 •• I I 0 "' ••VElilAOIS ••llfenotn1. r t •I l r . "'lllnlwl"''· Miicll 11. 1t11 -•119n ""' 111• of •11 ""'''""" To Wi'lo<'fl ll Ml• Cenctrn . or dt1lr.tllt roldw1v•. Jlckw1!IU •lld S\ll>ltcl to l•iu1nco of "'' Uten1t c°""""lt' -lo! I ol Tt1U No IPollt<l lor, nallct It f\rrolrY 11ven rn11 Ult, lft lht Counlt <II Or•""" S11tt: lllt unde,.111n1t11 ,.,__, to ull •k-llc I ol C1lllof'nl1 •• ..... "'IP tKO"Md l>f'Vf'"'" •I lllt Pftmlu1. lllPK•lllHI I" 8ool! J'4. P1ttt "·le n lncl111lv• 11 totlOwi: WATER PURIFIER °' MIKtlltMWI M1pt, I~ "'r oll!ct IS) E1ll 11n. Slrf'tt, C01t1 Mou. ti !fie C...11.,. RKordlf< If ••If'°"""· Pi>t111tnl te ouch 1n1.,.Hot1, !I'll u,.. ...,..., c""""'°"'w ln-n "' ~"'"'""" It ...,..,.1,,. 11 IM Doeutr"""' • M•""' Ha. ,,.._II \111 M1•IP01I ol Al(Otloli(. ......... N. Cer>t,OI 19' l..,M•~<• w"'· t••-1<11111. C•ll11W1111 Ito be ,... or1111111 •"Oll(.••lon of •" •l<:OllOllt •okl •• 111. l>n.,111 llaMe ttt-"'••t •"""1'"1 •ti T1t1m of Nit lft ........... .._y If followl· tt.. Un/If(! 5111f!1 .., clll'!flr"'1tlof! " ON SALE GENEftAl !Ion• "llltl ••tf It~ -~..-1 Of -nt 1114 lo l'llbMc 1!111,,. r11<t) ._ _,,,,., ,.1,.. Old. ""'"'''" cletfrlnt ro Ptolttl n-. luu•MI I '"'' or ellor• !ti bt In ... 111,... .....ir 91 1...C~ lie-m1v 111r 1 ~••lfl•d .... 11 bt •""<•!\>HI II IM ........ 11 eftla ,,..,,.., ,, ... v olflc1 ol , ... 0.••"m.,ot •' 1ny !Im• ell., ll'IP flrtl M!lullM ol ..._lcotlollc lltvt~tt• (.iilrel. or llv "'rtol incl llol!Ott •111 Ill .. 11. ,.. ... """ 1111 Offl'tl""'"' ol Ako!lo!lt 01tM 11111 ltlll ,., el MilrCI\, lt71-.. .,..,,,. C0tt1ro1, !ti! 0 )1r ... 1,I Herald J, A"""'*'or $0cr1....,,10, C1lllornl1 1$fH, 10 fo 101 l ••tMIGI' ~ rH•l~rfl wlltlln JO II••• of Ill<' If! "" l!fl•" <Ille lfl• o•OPoU<I .,tmh11 ,...,. 11,.1 j ~I •II~ DK..o.<tl -'"· 1!1111'11 •""'nd• tar li""'ll! •t '"""· •Mll'I, ,.,........, ,.., c...,.._ provlfl(f !)\I 11.. T~t or1m1 .. , '" Sullt ... '"'' WW-IMll 11... nat -llc1n1N1 lot t~r 1•!• o1 11<:011ollcl • ., '"' c ... , ... 11¥£ be-••tt· .,~, '"'"' "' ... ,.1111:11! ......... rt .. flM, Cfllf. t11H i,. alllll1'ect ,,,...,, In• olllct ol lh• An.....,., 0.111111 & 1C1•~•••ne L VOVlllG GUARANTEED 2 YEARS SKEPTICAL? RENT THE OSM OTIC AT OUR RISK CALL LINYIRON 17141 645-0520 r,·, n1u nt•1n 0tp1r1,,,..,,, I llvfll11~'11 O.-•nv• Ce.i•I D•llr r ll&I flijll/l"1H Or1n11 '"'" 01ll'i' "llol M11t11 l1, ~ 19, 1111 "l .. 11 Ml fcf'I n. lt11 117 II ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~I , I livability of your house and grounds -but not for luxury improvements such as burglar alarms and swimming pool:s. It's quite possible banks in your neighborhood are not makin~ FHA loans because of their low inlerest rate ceil- ing, but a:sk about them anyway. jJ) Do nol agree lo the loan terms which may be of- fered by )'Our home im- provement contractor without first chec king up on terms offered by local lending in- stituUons. (4) Consider raising funds by refinancing your mortgage at today's mortgage interest rates plus closing costs. Your mortgage may include clauses Y.'hich will let you r refinance under favorable terms. Again, al lesta check into this. ~5) The cheapest way of all well may be borrowing against lhe cash v a I u e of your life insurance policy. You surely know this, but if you do lake this route, make a pledge to repay your loan. (6) A little known 90urce of home improvement loans is the ~ailed "liltle FHA" loan, available in limited num- bers lo lower income homeowners Jiving in rural communities wilh populations of 5,500 or less. The typical interest rate on these federally subsidjzed loans is currently 7~l percent (although the rate can be as low as I percent for those in the lowest inco1ne brackets), and the loans are repayable over a 33-year period. You're alrDost cer· t11inly not ellgible, but my poin t L! the importance of .shoppping -and if your ire eligible. inquire at the county Farmers Home Administra- tion office. 171 And Jlso shop not only for !hr: most favorable interest ratl! lermi; to you. Shop as 1,1·ell for oltfer financial ad· v11nl11ges such as the kH\'C5l Ch<'lrge Of any) for processing your loan and the lo~·ut penalllt:s (if any) for early rcpayn1ent. A rinal note: Start no\\'. ~1ortgage money iii bf-coming 1ncren~in11:ly available. lender! arc looklng for customers, ral.c.s are iliding moduat.tly . Finance Briefs TULSA -Polllla and other (acton have caused the COl!lt or hauling oil by tankerlng to rise during the put year to about the levels reached in the 1967 Suex crisls, the Oil &: Gas Journal says. The re.suit has been a :significaot reduction in imports and a~ tu.al losses to some oil im- porten. The actual increase in tanker freight charges dur- ing 12 months ha11 run as high as 40 to 50 percent, lbe magazine said. NEW YORK -PeMsyl- vania Power & Light Co. expecta its construction requirements in the next five years to be about $927 million, almost 50 percent more than the annual rate of such outlays in the pas.t years. This was disclosed Jn a talk to New York Security analysts by President Jack R. Busby. Six- ty percent of the total wih be spent on generating and high v o I t a g e transmission facilities. WARE SHOALS, S.C. Riegel Textile Corp. will lay off about half of its research and development staff or 50, Research Director Ro g e r Varin disc!Oied. Varin said he hirnseli is being laid otf. NEW YORK Esso Tankers, Inc ., has ordered three 30,<X»-ton tankers from Saint John Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. in Canada for delivery in 1972 and 1973. The vessels will have a speed of 15 knots. BOSTON -Executive Airlines, Inc., which claims to be the country's largest commuter airline, has leased facilities at Sullivan County International Airport in New York for service to the Catskill Mountains r e s or l region. Daily flights between the Catskills Airport and New York City's LaGuardia Airport will start Pt1arch 22. A similar service will be operated between Boston and the Catskills resort. GREENVILLE, S.C. -Dan River. lac .. the textile giant, will drop 600 salaried workers in all departme n t• im· mediately. the company an- nounced. The layoffs will not affect hourly workers. or whom the company presently ha.!1 almost 20,000. Dan River President Robert S. Small said the payroll reduction i s necessary if the company is to return to profitability. CUMBERLAND, ?11d. Kelly-Springfield Tire Division of Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v.·ill lay off 80 hourly workers. starting this month and may have to lay off more the company announced recently. COLORADO SPRINGS - Holly Sugar Corp. said Aton- day it defin itely will close ils Hardin, ~'lonl., fa cl or y permanently. Production of beet sugar at the plant was suspended for the 1971 crop year anyway and the company now says the plant's location and small capacity would make reopening uneconomical. Closing costs of the Hardin plant will substantially offset an exlra ordering credit of Sl .4 million or 94 cents 11 share thi! year derived from a self-insurance fund. NE\V YORK -International Paper Co. has announced it l\'ill invest $.1.Z million In "'asle treatment facilities at its North Tonawanda, N.Y., pulp and paper mill. NEW YORK -Western Union Telegraph Co. bas formally placed before the F e d e r a 1 Communications Commission details of ifs pro- posed mallgram se rvice to transmit mail for the post office by a satellite com- munications system. The com- pany said the mail gram transmission syslem could be a first step towards a nation · wide television system via satellite. Western Union of· fered to build II West CoR.~t ground ret.'eiving links lo 38 television stations affillattd with the major works tbrough its satelli te sylllem. \VALTHAM, Pt1 a• !I. lloneyv;ell, Jnc .. will close its computt r component a ss embly factory at Peterborough, NJI., by mid- summer. About 70 workers v.•111 be laid off at the plant at the end of lhls wct:k and the remainder of the 250 v.·nrkers wl\I be dropptd later. Dec!inlng govemment orders and absole."JCtnce o( the Peterborough \\'Orks caused th~ decision. the company ia1d , Who Listens To Landers? • . ' <· • ,., __ t I .. • ' -. SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does. Tllat's Who You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers Daily 1n The DAILY PILOT • l ' I • • • ' ! t .· ,• ·~ ·' .. .• ,• .. : .· ' ' ' ·~ ·, ' ' . • ' ; l ),_" I l Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! Here's ;;:s. ·c• ._____,. here's here's htre'a here's 11111 but not leul, hare's CHARLIE BROWN ••• and LUCY ••• and L!NUS ,, .and VIOLET ••• and SCHROEDER ••• and SNOOPY Pl1011e 642·4321 (Circulation D~partment) to have the '"bole Peanuts gang come alld visit you dally. I • . . ........ ... .. -... ' 14 DAILY PILOT Newpo1·t Pushes Choiee Property Valuabl.e Parce l in Hurltirigton Beach Gets Only Few Nibbl.es ftewport Beach is hav ing its troubles drumming up interest in a valuable chunk of real tstate if owns in, of all places, Huntington Beach. The 1.93-acre parcel, at the prime commercial Intersection of Brookhursl Street and Adams Avenue, was acquired as part of a 93-acre tract bought some 50 years ago for water well sites. Water wells at the time "'ere Newport's only source of water. Tht prnperty ,was purchased, in 1921, for $350 an acre. It has been scild off pieces at a time, the largest piece going in 1960. 86 acres for Driver Class Scheduled A deferisive driving course, sponsored by tfie American Association of Retired Persons and the National Safety Coun· cil, will be held in two sessions Wednesday and Thursday at the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. The classes of two hours each wlll be held at JO a.m. and 1:30 p.m. at the church which ls located at 798 Dover Drive, Newporl Beach. just over S560.000 all told. Today the minimum pri~ _..:.:.::...::.-;!;;,.~":-.:,.~;;~:71 Newport Beac.h will even con· .... sider (or the last remaining two-acrr parcel if $324,000. At that price, the nibblers have been few. So few that the cily council has appropriated $1,000 from the Water Fund to advertise the sale. "We thought people would jump at it,'' Philip F. Bel· tencourt, assistant city manager, said. But he reported to the coun- cil, when asking for the ad- vertising budget, that only six prospective purchasers had bought bid specifications the first three weeks after the property went up for sale. The ad campaign doesn't seem t.o be helping an a1A1u1 lot. With bids scheduled to be opened two weeks f r o m Friday, there have only been three more bid packages oh· tained. "We had counted on 30 or 40." Bettencourt said. The sealed bids wJll be o?fn· ed April 2 at 10 a.m. in the office of City Clerk Laura Lagios. But that 'l\'on't be the end of it. Following the opening. at the City Council meeting April 12. a public auction -<1perl only to those who have sub-- DAILY ,.ILOT !'MM FOR SALE SIGN ADVERTISES VALUABLE CHUNK OF REAL ESTATE L•nd Bought 50 Years Ago• $350 an Acre for Water Well Sites milted qualified sealed bids -will take pla«. BeUencourl has declined !G speculate how high the bidding might go, although he's sure that however many sealed bids the city gels, they'll all hover pretty close tt that $324,000 JTtinimum. That $324,000 minimum hap- pens to be $1,000 below an offer from Downey Savings and Loan the citY ha d to turn down in order to meet charger requirement.i; for bidding pro- cedures. Hurlburt, in his pitch to lhe council Feb. 22 for lbe ad- vertising funds, bad said the reason for I.he lack of interest is uncertain. It is known, however, that Huntington Beach plaMing staff officials have refused to commit themselve! by 1aying what uses the planning com· mis1ion might allow. • ;: 1 Winston Fl L TE R ·Cl CiA "RETTE&i """ •• , ..... 19 ......... ~·· , •• ~ ~ 20 mg. "1•~.1,3 mg. nicotin11v. pet c1g11ene, FTC Aepon NOV. '70 I 11 . . . . . . • • David, Julie Heavily Guarded VIRGINIA BEACH, Va . (UPI) -The shingled house looks like many other rented houses in ttU& r~rt city, ex· cept for the armed men in the garage. 1he address is 5504 ~an· front Road and Its temporary tenants are the Navy'a mosL heavily-guarded officer, Em. Dtvid Eisenhower and his wife Julie. The Eisenhowen arrived by plane from Washington Thurs· day morning to take up residence in the powder blue, three bedroom house wilh garage. The ensign, com· missioned earlier this monlh at Newport, R.I., start.i; an eight-week course in naval navigation March 29. The garage is a command • post full of listening gear aDd Secret Service aaents assigned to guard the grandson of President ElsenhoMr and tbe daughter of .President Nixon around the clock. The agents wired the house and property with electronic sound sensors. The Eisenhowen: drove to the Dam Neck Navy Base at 2:15 p.QY."'in their personal car, a tt&9 blue Plymouth CdM Graduate Barracuda, sr David could report for duty. It took only 30 minut.es. A N a v y spokesman said Eisenhower wasn't officially due until mid· night March 28 but he saved Jeavt: time by reporting early. StudenU!i have no other duties here so until hls first claS! starts David needs only to telephone the base every morning to satisfy his military obligations. Once s c h o o I starts, the spokesman said, he will be "treated like any other student" Diane de Forest, daughter '"'======--===::; o[ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. de Fore.st, 1437 Serenade Ter· race, Corona de! Mar. recentJy was graduated with distinction from UC Berkeley having completed an hooors program in geography. GOLF TIPS Low ~r• IMludft • 0eM ~ (i•rM -l'raclke II tlle •.• NEWPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE s 1.00 ..... ttlb ...... r. ..,. II one month only! • • yours ... at a sale of a price! I l .,,.i..._i.i Sale s2900 Now Through April 21st Reg. $35.00 Now featured at Biggor'1 ••• these famous "Country" choirs from Hitchcock . Authentic reprod uctions in block with antique cherry color se at, with tradition a l floral stencils. Mixes comfortably wi th ony decor, at hom e in any room. Everyone needs one fa vorite chair - now you con toke yours at a sole of 0 pricel ON SALE NOW AT ALL 3 STORES! SANTA ANA e Mein et Eleventh 547-162 1 5-11ht AM St•r• Op•• Frlcl•y lff11l1t91 PASADENA e Coloredo et El Mollno m-6136 POHONA •Holl 1t Gorey 629-3026 • I I I BARBARA DUARTE, ~94-9466 IMnd•"t. Mwcto n. 1'11 s ..... ,. Dual Celebration • First Year Takes Cake They're a year old. The mothers are, that is, not th eir itvins. ' Members of Saddleback A1others of T\\'ins Club, their husbands and prospective members attested to the fact as th ey lit a birthday candle during a meeting in the ~fission Viejo home of l\1r. and Mrs. Robert Harmer. The club has been under the leadership of 11-trs. Robert Figiera this year anti boasts a membership of 22. All members are mothers of multiple births, adopted multiples or children \vith not more than six months dif· ference ln age. Purpose is to di scuss and research probl ems in the care of children and aid mothers in buying, selling, loanin g or trading twins' equipment and clothing. l\1eetings are scheduled the third \Vednesday of each month. Perso ns interested in membership may con· tac t ~lrs. Figiera at 830-3531, or Mrs. ~1ichael Arm· strong, 495·0479. • The group scheduled philanthropic projects during the club year as \veil as planning social outings for members and couples. HAPPY BIRTHDAY -Ji1rs. Roy Hall and ~trs. Ken Wiebers {left to right) hold twin birthday cakes celebrating the first ann ivers~ry of the Sadd.leback ~1others of Twins Club. The group, drawing Bosses Profit In Fun Bosses had a night out this month. In fact, they y,•ere treated royally by members of the Laguna Beach Business and Professional Women's Club wno honored 'them at the an· nual Bosses Night on March 18. Utilizing a St. Patrick 's Day theme, club members pinned their special boss with a carnation boutonniere a n d treated him to a dinner in llotel Laguna. Entertainment for Lhe even. Ing was pro vided by the Upside Downcys, a comedy barbership quartetle ju s l returned from a lhree-wetk tour of the South Pacific, hav. ing performed for patients in military hospitals in Japan. the Philippines, Guam and Hawaii. ?\1rs. Berl Lo\'elady is presi- dent of the Laguna BPW . Mrs. Irene McClure handled ar- rangemenls for the evening. ' r IT'S BOSS -Balloons, boutonnieres and fanfare greeted special Laguna Beach bosses feted by mem· hers of the Business and Professional Women's Club. Receiving a carnation and party decorations are (left to right) Roy Childs and Mayor Richard Goldberg who are delighted by the attention of ~1rs. Berl Lovelady, BPW president. !Tiem~rs from the ~rea bet\veen Laguna 1-lills and Laguna Niguel, 1s dedicated to serving the neec{Fand questions or parenL'i of rhil· dren of multiple birth or adopted multiples. The Laguna Line Sunset Casts Spell AS THE SUN DROPPED behin d the majesti c splendor of Wood's Cove, Joani Justus and Douglas Day Sle\vart recited th eir personal pledge of marriage. 1"he couple chose the beautiful Laguna Beach cove, locked in by rocky outcroppings and intensified by gently lapping v.•aves. as a romantic setting for rites performed by the Rev. C. Petersan of Claremont. The bride. \Vho \vore a v.•hite blouse and long skirt '"ith hand· woven Viennese panels, is the daughter of ~1rs. Susan Justus of Los Angeles and George J ustus of \'ienna. Austria _ lier husband, an author or note, is a forn1er Laguna resident. I le is the son of the \Vorly Stewarts of La Jolla. ON TONIGHT 'S PROGRAM for Mrs. Jlarold Mailland of Emerald Bay and her s ister Mi ss Genevieve d 'Elloy is a concert of the J.,os An geles Chamber Orchestra in the J\lusic Cen ter. The <·oup le will hear Parisian Pierre Amoyal. 21, \Vho has been a student of Jascha 11ei(etz for the past four years and \Vas gradu· ated from lhe Paris Conservatoire at 12. He has been guest soloist with the Paris Philharmonic as well as other major orchestras. A month ago, the Jo~rench governn1ent presented him a Stradivarius from the ~1u scum of h1usicaJ Instruments in Paris. MEMBERS OF ST. CATHERINE 'S School Auxiliary are collect· ing and storing ne\v and used treasures for a Saturday, ?t1arch 27, rummage sale in th~ Laguna Bea~h Woman's Club. Organizing depart· ments are Mrs. Lucien Brack, chairman, and the Mmes. Albert Kiessel· bach. Thomas Mauro, Sidney Hobbs, Richard Carlson. Robert La\\'son. Robert Daniele and James Martin. Widow.' s Pillow Dampens Hopes for Public Performance DEAR ANi'f LANDERS: ~1y husband passed away after a long illness. He suffered a greal deal. Since he v.·a~ a private person y,·ho disliked pubhc displays of~ot1on. l was determined lo control m r at the funeral. \\Tith difficully I man ed to keep my head up and my eyes dry. Perhaps I had d~ so much weeping in my pillow cluring his illness there we~ no lears left \\'hen he died. Dozens of callers gather~ al my home after the tuneral and I accidentally overhead 1¥."0 women talking in the kitchen. They werl!! saying how strange i1 was that I didn 't seem al all shaken bv my husband",; death. One woman s8id, "TI1is is the first ti.rne l'\'e ever • ANN LANDERS seen·a widow who didn 't go to pieces.,. Did I do my husband an 1njustict by concealing my emotion? Would It have been belt.er to have displayed my broken heart to the world? The women in the kitchen were not trying to hurl my feelings. They had no idea I was behind the door listening to every word . Tell me please. -A SINGLE ROSE DEAR ROSE: Vour husband would have been proud nf you. Out you certainly disappointed tht town busybodies by depriving them of lbt 1how llM:y bad come lo 1«. They wm not forgive you easily. My condolences to you and heartiest Ci>R&ratulatlons for your non· performance. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Occasionally you print material by others. I hope you Y.•i\l do so again. Here's 11 poem by Veda Ponikvar of Chisolm, h1lnn. . Tfs one of my favorites -L.A. OF \\'ASH .. D.C. Saints And Sinners ""\\'hen some fellow yields lo templa· ti on IL And breaks a conventional law . We look for no good in his makeup, But, Lord, how we look for lhe flaw. No one asks, "Who did lhe tempting?" Nor allows for the battle~ he"s fought. His name bccon1es food for the jackals. The saints who have never been caught. l' m a sinner, 0 Lord and I know I am y,·eak, and 1 blunder and fail. I am tossed on life's stormy ocean Like a shi p tha! i! caught in a gale. ·r anl willing to trust 1n thy mercy. To keep Lhe t-01nrnandmcnts thou ·st taught, But del iver n1e. Lord. from the judgment Of thr saint!! who ha\'e nevrr been caught.·· DEAR ANN LANDERS · t.iy husband hired 11 new ass1slanl several weeks ago. Last week the man's fantily moved hrre . His w1rr 1s a pleasant person. attractive and sweet , but she makes me uncomfortable becau5' she laughs all the time -at nolhing. At the end or every sentence she gives out thi!I litl\c "ha ha ha ha." I had an aunt v.•ho did lhe same thing. We ca lled her "The llycna." Why c.'o certain people liave such an oclll sense or hun1or? -NEW MEXICO DEAR N.rtf.; This type of laughter ba!I nothing: lo do with humor. It Is a mechanism for releasing tension. Lefs hope that when the woman become! more comfortable In her new sur· tounding1 she ••ill do less ha ha baiq. If you have trouble gelling along with your parents ... 1f you can't get them lo let you hve your own life, send for Ann Landers' booklet. ''Bugged by Parents? 11ow to Get More Freedom.'' Send 50 cents in coin with your request and a long, stamped , seU·addresscd envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. • I (' • 4 •• . . . . . . . DAILY PILOT Monda)', March 22, l li 1l Horoscope: Virgo Use Caution '• ... " ' . :,.:-) ' .. . . . ... ~ .. ., I j...,.-: ',o fl'j TUESDAY MARCH ti By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES {March 21·April 19): Avoid becoming involved in controversy about m o n e y . Some friend would like to draw you into battle. Maintain diplomatic, neutral stance. A special relationship is put to test. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): You may feel it is time for a change, but first be sure you have all the facts. A sud· den move now could be premature-and costly. Leo individual can be a valuable ally. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Pay heed to hunches. looer feelings now serve as reliable guide. Key is to be perceptive; take long-range view. One who demands immediate action i5 ROMANTIC INTERLUDE -J\1embers of the Costa f.tcsa Civic Playhouse Patrons Association 'rill take a break from their \\'Ork 1'hursday. ?i tarch 25. for a tomantic evening of ~'ine·tasting and dinner. Samp· ling the fare. to the accompaniment of strolling mus· ic1ans Dom Raciti and Cliff \Vesdorf (left to right) are i\lrs. Anthony Toto and Mrs. Howard Forster {left to right). Chapter Salutes Ladies Join Manpower Romantic Scene Defense A discussion of youthfu l manpo\\.'er \lo'ilJ be presented for members of the Orange County Chapter of National t-.!r s_ George Buccola v.•ill Association of \Vomcn in open her Corona de\ Mar Construction tomorro11· even· home for the \Ved nesday, ing at 6:30 in the Anaheim ~larch 24, meeting of the Col. Holiday Inn. \\'i!lia m Cabell Ch a pt er , Don Van de r gr a f t of Daughte rs of the American \tcKnighl and \lcKnight v.il! Revolution. sho1v slides on the \\"orld of... Follo\1·ing a 12:30 p.m. Construction, a course for desse rt , ~!rs. Joseph Visnak JUnior high school studen ts. of Upland. state chairman of Dale Post of First American national defense, 1r1ll speak Title In su rance Co. 1r 1 11 in observance of National discuss a Young If o rn c Defense Day. Builders Council at Valley Mrs. Edga r ~f. Cox Jr.. J1 igh School in Santa Ar.a. regent. ll'i!J preside. l\lrs. John Hep re s e n tati\·es frorn iiope\\'OOd is chairman for the Orange Counly schoo ls ;ire in· day, and hostesses \lo'tli be v1ted to attend the program. the Mmes. Charles C , - Put • Gaylord. C. E. S1ovall Jr., --------------------\\'illiam Ashbaugh, R. B. Conn and R. A. Speed. Psychic Power Demonstrated \!rs. \!;'alter Dunn \\'ill de1nanstrate psychit· power for a rn!.'eting of the llu n- tini:ton Beach Chapter of the Ps~ nC'tics Foundation at ll p m. tomorrow in the \1idway C11~ Amenran Legrnn Mall. \!rs. Dunn \\"ill be in- troduced by her husband, the Rev. Dunn of the Stanton Metaphysica l Church. \1ho \V il! br iefly explain how sh P devclcped her abihtieo;.. m f'V'IAV CC> a new world of be.iuty for you '. ,., ' • ' ~iili\\\. ; l 1i\.t r.;;;i . 1~i"1~~\ ~ • , , . NON-POLLUTING lAUNDRY · OflfHGfNJ '· ·~ ~l ' j It's a wor!d where you can be free from the embarrassment of unwanted hair. Our skilled elec1rol0R i~ts can remove such hdir, gently and painlessly, using the world fa· mous Kree Dermairon Method. Phone for an a.gpointment and di~· ~r how easil y you can open up a nrw ~Id of beauty and s9f.4Confidence for ~rsclf. C_.11 , the May CO: Beauty Stilon nc.lr· ltri.rular 'J.(JC) 99 you. ' 20.1,11. BOX • Xo rubbing or scruhbini;:-.,. 11 do<'S :ill the \\(lrk • Really J:C'lS do""·n Ue('p to i;:ct clolhC!i clean • L se ~,cup per load even 111 hard \>.ater •Clean wash tor }OU ... cleaner water for everyone I S~ars J 114111, 101.1\JCl A.ND CO. .\II ~tar~ ~to r,.~ 1q1r11 d:1il ) •):30 u .111. to '):30 11.111 •••• :0,untlll}l' I'..! noon /n:i 11.111. Script In this 'AGE OF AQUARIUS' DAILY :PILOT Today's Newspaper for ALL the communities of the Fabulous Orange Coast immature. R e s p o n d ac- cordingly. CANCER (June 21-July 221: A friend can help extricate you from embarrassing finan- cial situation. Don't Jet pride stand in way of progress. Be versatile. Have alternative methods available. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): One who brags about short cuts may be tled up with red tape. What you get now is earned. That proverbial silver platter is nowhere in sight. Do v.•hat must be done in thorough manner. VIRGO f Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Avoid becoming involved in office gossip. Base actions on factual information. not rumors; Gemini individual can help if you avoi d forcing issues. Improve relations \\'ith co-workers. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emotions fly high-romance, intense e1pression of feelings are emphasized. N o t h i n g halfway-tendency ls to go all the way or nolhing. Applies to money and love. SCOJ\PJO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Stress practicality. 0 b ta in valid hinl from Leo message. See through sham. Avoid seeing persons, situations in light of self-deception. Face facts as they actually exist. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dev. 21 ): Before embarking on any journey, be positive you have :sufficient in· form ation. Older individual is willing to cooperate. Your ap- proach holds key to success or failure. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Protect assets. Some would like lo be v c r y free-,vith your money. Fini sh what you start. Get rid of burd en which doesn't belong to you. Investigate prior to investing. AQUARIUS (Jan.' 26-Feb. 18): You can break lhrougb to greater success. ?o.luch depends on reactions of parent or elder. Some events occur in manner Yihich benefits you Pounce on opportunity. State needs. PISCES (Feb. 19-M arch 20): What appears a certainly needs more checking. Applies to situations and individuals. Contact one who aided you in past. Be cooperative. Share knowledge. Ask for help where required. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTllDA Y you a r e in- vestigative, have grea t amount of curi osi ty. can put together bits. pieces and come up with complete picture. You have natural inclination for writing. You have original ideas and you gain greater success this year, with Sept. ember indicated as outslan~ ding. Home . ·- Where Skirt Hits Leg Draws Divided Views COTTON lid-.....,,KNIT PRINTS '. .. these will make the scene a nytime 100'!. canons • p01~•1!tr/colton DTERY SHOES FOil 121 E. 111~ sr. Co111 M111 · J.41·21"11 the /inen-/ook FLAXTONE PRINTS a textured blend of cotton, reyon, fle x mod designs, neutrel backgrounds. Compare •t $1 .91 yd. 57~~;~:. '®~'" MACHINE TI ~ @ WASH 44"/45'' wide d y • :·'sH"eiR'L.ENo PRINTS 9sc .d. $139 yd • drat up "mo"'l"IJ 9lory" • CREPE PRINTS s1s9 yd. line"0l1ok rayo" "lioharo" • ,BUTCHER WEA YES $169 yd. 111h1I dnl9M for •prl"IJ • "SUNSET" FLOCKS $298 yd. ~d, ft'ld Kr .. lled • ACRYLIC PRINTS s329 yd. waheblo ll'flo11 pcrstols & whl,. • BONDED LACE 44"/45" wlft the _now knits SLINKY LOOP KNITS WITH THE WET LOOK great r•nge of new sprin9 pestols on .. reelly neet kn it for mini to mexi dresses, pantsuits MACHINE WASHABLE 52"/54" widths aniel trloc.etote ~®® yd. HOUSE OF FllBRICS 5e11t• Coen• Pl-lrlstol 11 Sin Oi1110 Fwy. Costa Mne -141·1516 Oro"~fo/r Moll--Or1n91tho•p1 1nd Ha rbor F11llorto1 -52•·2JJ4 H-Pia-11th •I lr!.tol So"to A11e -54J-SSll luMo Porfl C.11tff-l1 P1lm• 11 St1nlo" l11011a P•rk -121-6J2J l Vows , Rings Exc hanged Meson Claims Bride Linda Miller became the bride of Stephen D. Odenath of Costa Mesa during double ring rites read by the Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierentield in it. Andrew's Presbyterian MRS . S. D. ODENATH Newport Ritel Churcb. Newport Beach. Parents of the couple are James W. f\tlller of Torrance. f\lrs. Peter K. Van Riper or Newport Beach and f\1r. and Mrs. Albert P. Odenath of Santa Ana . Given in marriage by her father, the bride was attended by Mrs. Paul Leitchfuss and Miss Yvonne Delano. Bridesmaids were M r s . Ronald Swartz. sister of the bridegroom. Miss She i I a Lostrom, Mrs. Greg Calvin and ~1iss Kathy Van Riper. FIO"'er girl was Joy Bricker, cousin of the bride. Albert R. Odenath Jr. wa-' his brother's best man, and ushers were Douglas \V. Miller, brother of the bride, S\\'artz, Ben Wiley , David '\'ilson and Grant Hamilton. The bride attended Newport llarbor High School. and Orange Coast College and her husband attended Santa Ana College. They v,·ill reside in Costa ~tesa. Patroness Tea Guests \Vhen new patrons are honored by the N e \V p o r t Harbor Auxiliary of I h e Children's Home Society dur· ing the Patroness Tea in the home of Mrs. \\l iltiain C. Adams on r-.1onday, March 29, also present \Vill be the many patrons who are continuing their aid. These men and women who arc dedicated to the work of the Children's Home Society include lhe Messrs. a n d ~1mes. Bewley Alien, Lloyd Lees Aubert. Wallace .\Yhitc Barnes, Chester E.. Brabyn, La1vrence Edward Brown , Joseph Logan Carver, Leroy Langhcnry Carver Jr .. Earl George Corkett, Vic Io r BE FR E E ... OF FACIAL tiAIR FOREVE", LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO "EMOVE EXCESS HAI " WITH MOD CP!:H ELECTl'IOLYSI S , MEDICALLY .A~~lllOVED, • • SAFIE, FAST, GENTLE., C:OHSULT WITH OUR LICEHSCO T t.:CHHICI Al-f IH CUii: a EAUTY SALON, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT Listed Newman Ellis. Lo\Yell \Vin ston Evans, Byron Farwell, Ly1nan Ha'i''es Farwell, David Ladson Fraser, Norman Alexander Gamble, \Valier Ga vner. W. Allen Grubb. A. Alexander Hamilton and Rolla R. Hays Jr. Others on the distinguished list include the fo.lessrs. and Mmes. Edgar R. Hill. George r-.1eade Holstein. J a me s \Vahham Laws Ill. ~1oreland Leithhold, Maurice Co v le McCray, R3ymond f\Jurjih y. Paul Nissen, Paul Arlhur Palmer. George T. Pfleger, John F. Porter, Edward Angus Raulston. 0. \V _ Richard, Hast.er R. Ring, Paul Millon Rogers, Henry 1'. Scgcrstrom, Richard Steele. Denis Sulli\"an, John J, Swigart, Richard C. Vernon. Edward G. \Yarm· ington, Thomas Ca m p b c 11 \Yebster, Robert Nauer \\l eed, Charles S. \\'heeler, Horace S. \Vitson Jr. and George Perkins Yule. Others include Waller Bur- roughs. Robert Guggenheim, ~1rs. Joseph Allan Beek, r-.irs. Russell Lewis Iseli, !Ytrs. Ge-0rge Yardley Jr .. Judge and Mrs. Elisha Avery Crary, Judge and Mrs. R o ber l Gardner, Col. and Mrs. Alan .Jocelyn Mickle and Ors. and Mmes. Daniel. Ga skill Aldrich Jr., Robert Beauchamp. John Kenneth Hamel ancl Harry E. Stickler. Choral Group Every i\1onda y al 7.30 p.m. members of the Prospective Aliso Valley Chapter of Sweet Adelines convene in follission Viejo High School. Mon<l~J. Marth 22, 1971 DAILY PILOT J7 .. r_ ' ----'--'--~.;.;__...::t:--~---., Indulge Parents Artists~ J l ~ "ri1agnificent" is the \vord for this combina- tion from the Dinah Shore collection. T~e slim shirtdress, designed with fla t-felled sea1ns,· deep pointed top-stitched collar and French cuffs, can be made full length or n1id·calf. The matching skirt, set on a waistband, has unusual pleats of staggered lengths that release into a flow· ing illusion. A 2" 'vide belt cinches the waist. Both patterns are cut in ~Jisses Sizes 8-18. 72600, dress, size 12 requires approximately 5111 yards of 45" fabric for the long length and 41/R yards f~r the mid-calf version. 72580, skirt, requires approximately _4 ~~ yards of 45" fabric for the long length and 3~ yards for the mid·calf version. qrder 72600 dress; give size, name. address. and zip. Sl.50 postpaid. Order 72580 skirt; give size. nan1e. address and zip. Sl.50 postpaid. COMBINATION OFFERo both patterns _$2.50. Address SPADEA, Box N. Dept. CX·l5, Milford, N.J. 08848. Laguna Lesson Turk Teaches Dancing •• Trek tiz,. Equal Time Demanded By ERMA BO~BECK I h.ave just read seven rules for ur.rl~rstanding t o d a y ' s young people, Contained in them was a poignant plea frt1m kids not to be condemned ror their long hajr, beards and grub e1olhes and not to be prejudiced for their ap. proach to movies, music and morals. As a member in good stan. ding of lbe over-30 Dinosaur group, I l~ink it is only fair that we receive equal lime. We too are misunderstood and prejudged. Her2 are some of our suggestions. I. White anklets do not make us wHd. You must not put a mother down for v.·earing them as she is exercising her desire to be acceptable to her group. When she s a y s defensively, "All the other Season Ends AT WIT'S END mothers wear them" please refrain from answering, "But you aren't any n1olh~r, you are MY mother." lt reduce!> her status lo appear al bridge wtth mod boots and hose and have to explain, "~ly daughter made me wear then1." 2. Try not to Judge parenls on the shortness of their hair. Just because your mother wears a Gale Storm featherrut and your father an Eddie Albert burr· does not n1ean they want lo continue the war. Jt"s what's undefneath thnt counts. After all, St. Joan of Arc had short hair and was not laughed off the bus stop tor it. 3. \Vhen parents w a I t i together, touching palm lo palm, It does not necessarily carry any sexual significance. ll is only people wilh dirty :;;z Af . ~ r1c minds who do not recognize will present a slide 1 the honesty of establishing a meaningful relationship with titled "New Notes ,., someone you enjoy. Africa," for members, the 4. Please try to understand Torana Art League .a :30 our music s3ys something to p.m. on Wednesday, Madillf.24. us. Unless you have danced The slide safari, illusi:(f\ln~ lo Lesler Lanin asking the handicrafts from six~Bn musical question, • • c I i m b countries, will be sh in Every Mountain'', Uien don 't the Santa Ana Libr d knock 1t. And stop nagging is open to the public. ~ al parents to turn their music Dende l is a sculptor, "up." engraver, illustrator .n d [). llonkcy dorey, oke dokey, designer. Berore tumi• tr1 keen and spirfy is 0 u r art, he managed a~r vocabulary 3nd is n 0 1 plantation In Liberia est necessarily meant 10 be Africa, where he met fe. understood by youngsters. If r-.1rs. Dendcl, an au~ho Y.'C overdo it, ii is because write s under the pen~' • it says what v.·c v.·ant to say of Esther Warner. ~S ed a BA degree from Io le in a wa~' we ivant to say University and a mOlPri' at it. Columbia University(,"!,_:~·$_ r. 6. Don't Jtldge us by our d bland "G" rnovies. (Golleee) trekked through the h. n of Liberia collectin~ ks Some pretty incredible pro-for museums and na'.it:~in· posals ha ve been made while dlcrafl. ~ Club Plays Last Card The final nionthly benefit luncheon and c:ard party of the sc~:;on sponsored by El Camino Real Woman's Club will begin al noon on Thurs· day, ~1.{lrch 25. in lhe Dana Point Community House. Chairman of the lunch, Members Look To the Future vdiich will sport an Easter viev.•ing, "Bambi Returns To The couple is kn for lh '1 J h R f Muscle Beach." ~ cmc. 1s 1• r5. o n en ro their 1nnsa1c desig ,.• er assisted by the ~1mcs . Alfred 7· Indulge parents in their their busu1ess title of ar materialism. r-.iosl parents put Mata. Ray ~111\er. Jlusscll Ceramics in Costa ' emphas15 on money only :'.:Z \Yalker and Hu bert Jones. bc<:ause they ntusl support ·m Reservations for the event. teenagers "'ho need rnoney lo .;°" a benefit for a nursing 1 Soror.1ty New.s'. 1ve \vhile they are protesting scholarship, may ~ made their parents' materialism. 'vith t-.trs. Renfro of Dana r-.1rs. Lynch Riege~ .Della Point. Gamn1a Province Alumnae On Wednesdflv. March 24, Nuts 'n Nibbles chairman, will be the featured the c:arden and .8C3Ullfical1on speaker when the Sanf:thAna. Sec1ion will enjoy tea 111 the Attending meetings every Newport Harbor Ch <1 Ot er Dana Point home or Mrs. Ab-Fnday at 10 a.m. are lf1c meets al 8 p.nt. toifuirrow bie \Vachter and r-.trs, Laura women of Fountain Valley · th C l 'I h f Election of officers \Vil\ take in c os a 1• esa ome o Heyd Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club. Mrs Ted N h enbe g '" Place when Beta Alpha Xi · · e r r ·' r-.Irs. Thon1as llarrison will r-.1embers have selected the Th k '11 b th chapter of Bela Sigma Phi e spea er wi r e ffif>Pls tonight in the present a comprehensive ll.ecreation Center in Hun· group up to date on current dissertation on herbs for the tin"lon Beach for the mcet1·n" Delta G act· ·1· · a d Westminster home of Mrs. b to amma 1v1 1cs.u1 n Hank Schniitlen, home. place. around Southern Californp. Members also will select lhelr--'=::.....::.._--=:.._--;;;;_-----"--'====~-~~::....-"-====·:!=::;, member \VhO has g o n e "beyond the call of duly" and name her as Girl-of-lhc·year Turkish dances will be Persons interested in at· and discuss plans for a hot Color portrait taught by Bora Ozkok to tending the session may call dog booth during Stanton members of the La g u n a Sol \Viener. Laguna Beach. Days. Folkdancers at 8 p.m. on \Ved.ljiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.ii~ .... --..--..--..0.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nesday, f\1arch 24. in the qhl ~;~:a',iu~~"h High school Crowning Glo1~y Ozkok. a student al the Univers1tyofCal1fornia , } 1 Berkeley. has collected elhnlc >eauty sa 0111-i dance material from his nat ive land o[ Turkey and plays several Turkish ill· strumcnts. In addition to folk dancing, Ozkok is interested in swim· ming and represented his country in lhe 1960 Olympic Games in Rome. He plays soccer on the Berkeley team and was All-American in 1967. After receiving a degree in of your child, 1.49. EASTER GIFT IDEA Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5x7" size photo ••• 1.49 each • Set of 4 wallet size ...... 1.49 set Two chRdren photographed logolhor ••• 2.98 . architecture, the student in- tends to do graduate \vork l in dance ethnology at UCLA. ~ , _ __,,..., 1,000'1 OF OIL PAINTINCiS WHOLESALE WARfHOUSE OPfN TO THE PUILIC 50°/o OFF Ill' E. EOINGEll, SANTA AHA ""°"' Ill-~ ' DEALEllS WANTED - I See by Today's Want Ads • Redecorated large 2 hen. room. new cSI"]x•ts & clrnp. C'~. bu1l1·in~ $150. Child Okay ... Ck 365 C~1. e OfX'raling Agency, l1Cf'llS· I'd by the sla1c of Cah. fornia. Training avail. can be J1nanccd. Check 200. e \Vurlltzer Spinet Organ. 1 )'r old, double manual $650. Ck 826. 8 LJOO.i\fOVING Lge n11r. ror, hllrdrock maple hcd fram!', !runk, Nartonal C~raph1c:r:, hols!Pr.~ k cover, anchrons. Ck 812. I i SHAG CUT ... llliilt:SH~AG PERM I sggs The new longer look! Beautifu lly curled by our carefree perm. 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Poll Shows Attitude to Students ' ' \ ' I Ul"I TtltpMl9 Ht1ge Carrier Ready Again -SAN FRANCfSCO IUPI) - The public beheves that really t>erious students don't get in· volved in can1pus demonslra· lions and thal the n1inority v.·hich challenges and defies auUioriUes should be kicked out. That's the conclusions of the latest California poll, wb.ich. also found that the public feels that studtnts accused of breaking rules be given the same nghl o( due process of law thal other citizens have "'hen accused of breaking laws. Pollster P..1ervin D. Field tG- day also reported these con- clusions from a series of ques- tions concerning a I l i t u d e s toward education and students: -There is generally high agreen1enl th.al student unrest Is m0st1y a resull of young people's frustrations w 1 l h society's failures to deal with. some or our major problems. -There is a significant :~~ SPAGHETTI~~: EAT WITH OUR DELICIOUS GENOA MEAT SAUCE AND GENEROUS AMOUNTS OF FRESHLY GROUND BEEF I TUES. 23rd WED. 24th THURS. 25th MAR. WE SERVE LOW CALORIE SPAGHETTI SPECIAL • , . LET'S GET ACQUAINTED OFFER ADULTS 95~ CHILDREN 55¢ UNDER 12 PLIA5E degree of fear that oor schools have become little more U1an staging grounds for revolu- tionaries. -Th.ere is increasing sup- port for the idea that students should be given ntore voice in deciding campus rules and ·..: regu\aUons. \Vith her eight nuclear engines refuled for another decade. the USS Enterprise, the world's largest war· ship, glides lO\\'rlrd the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge en route to her home port -Alameda Naval Air Station. In the background is San Francisco sky· line. The carrier has been at Ne\vport News, Va., for a major overhaul. nlfiony4 SPAGHETTI HOUSE • .:~:;', •. Clned Mo•id•r Is Nixon Over Gap? lnfor1nal ,Chat Another Sign of Efforts WASHINGTON (AP) President Nixon is nt<iking a determined effort to bridge the gap bel"·een his rather stiff public image and the "real Nixon" whose private life always has been ex· ceedingly private. A forthcoming wedding in the family -and a not-too-dis· tant election -may have somelhing to do with it. Perhaps by coincidence Nix- on's allempt to show himself in a more informal light has become increasingly evident with each drop of his populari- ty ratings in public opinion polls currently at their lowest point. In fact, the Nixon move toward improving "'hat his aides consistently describe as "communication" with. the voting public began soon after the November elections. label· ed a GOP victory by the President. Nevertheless. Nixon and other top-ranked pa r t y members began a reappraisal of their position. One result has been an a 1 most· k~Jeidoscopic series of \\'hite House initiative aimed at transforming a very prh·ate n1an. Nixon. into a more pleasing public man. The next step will be 1\-lon- day night "'hen the chief ex- ecutive ·subjects himself to a" hour-long ]i\·e inter\'iew with television ne"•sman lfoward K. Smith of the American Broadcasting Co. Never before hns a Presi· dent been questioned !ive and at length by a single broadcast journalist. Ronald L. Ziegler. Nixon'i; press secretary, said equal time has been offered the Columbia Broad c a s I i n ! System and lhc National BroaclcastinR Co .. in alphabetical order. T h e nel"•orks. he said, are free to nick the quc~noners. The Nixon image-building. or search for "'ays lo better communicate. follo"·ed nol on- POW Meet Scheduled ' I A public meeting about! American prisoners of "'ar1 and men mi ssing in action "'ill be held Wednesday at1 St. ~1ichael and All Angels Church, Corona del f\.1ar. Sponsored by lhe Conttm fo r PO\Ys-l'\11As, the meeling 1 will feature a film entitled ] "Does Anyone Remember Me?" I Newport Beach resident.' f\.!rs. Stanley Clark, "'hose 1 husband is an :\Jr Force lieutenant colonel missing in1 action in Southeast Asia. will 1 speak at the meeting. 1 Tht: arfa ir ii; open to the 1I public at no charge It will begin at B pm. in lhc church al 3233 Pacific View Drh'e. LOCAL No other n1w1p&p1r l1!11 VOii '"DPI, ·~•'V div. 1bo11l wh.1'1 9oin9 o~ in th1 G•1<1le• Or<1n9• Co1ul 11!1n tht D,._ILY PILOT. Jy the November ba\loling but mounting complaints from reporters that he had 11ot held a Wa shington news conference during nearly all of the last half of 1970. The news conference lapse was rectified on New Year's Eve when Nixon invited a few White House reporter s, photographers and broadcast technicians -the only ones around on a sno"·v nil'(ht - to his hideaway office for an hour or cocktails and con- versation. Having promised through Ziegler to try new ways of communication, Nixon pro- ceeded: A January 4 live "conversation" \\'ith four TV· radio journalists, a non· televised Oval Office ne"'·s conference and, last month. a live TV-radio conference in the White Hou se. Th e experimenting con- tinues. In a somewhat different vein, Nixon has begun gran· ting exclusive interviews to \\'titers -first to Peregrine \Vorsthorne of the London Sun· day Telegraph, then to C. L. Sulzberger of the New York Times. Between \Yorsthorne and Sulzberger Nixon telephoned Helen Thomas of United Press International. responding to a question made to an aide about the Sunday worship service at the \\'hite flouse. The President not only respon- ded to the question but sub· mitted to inquiries about th.e search for a Middle East peace. Then Wednesday, Nixon's move for a better image took another form He solicited the good will of the nation's black press and its readership. Five Negro reporters and photographers traveled with the President and l'\irs. Nixon to Lexin,:tlon. Ky ., to attend the burial service for \Vhitney J\1. Young Jr., executive direc· tor of the National Urban League. STARTS WEDNESDAY EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT They were personal guests aboard Air Force One and got exclusive articles and photos as the Nixons mingled with such black officials as Supreme Court J u s t i c e Thurgood Marshall and James :rarmer, former assi s tant secretary of health, education and welfare. During the past week , Nixon al so \.\'ent to unusual lengths to set the stage for daughter Tricia's engagement an- nouncement, by talking to women reporters about the private life of the First Fami· ly. Nine newswomen w e re gra11ted an 85-minute session timed by the White House for publication in Sunday's fat newspapers. Then N ix on filmed a long talk fest with NBC's Ba r b a r a Walters, which wa s broadcast Monday. In his meeting with the nine newswomen, Nixon remarked that wife Pat can't just walk out of their Florida house without firsl making certain everv hair on her head is in p·lace . Someone might be aiming a hidden camera at her, he said. The President himst:lf gives much the same impression. The public rarely sees him in sports togs or pursuing ordina ry acliviUes -swim· ming bowling. golf or just romping \Vilh the dogs. Not even Dwight D . Eisenhower. !he spit-polish mililary man. projected such a formal public image. Nixon did agree in January -perhaps as part of his ''communication.. campaigr to pose for n ews photographers while walking one o( hi s dop:s slang the beach near his California home. But an unexpected wave caught him and the best- remembered photo of tbc OC· casion shows the President \if. ting a soggy foot out of the surf. He was wearing shoes. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS fOlt BEST DIRECTION & BEST SCREENPLAYll "THE MOST EXCITING & MEANINGFUL FILM IN TIARS'' -LIFl MAGAZINI "~WERFUL"-N•wt.wH• "A MOST EXTRAORDINARY FILM!" DMt Of Tiil lllAft WOfllf.M ••• ... 11opptd al ..ot~·"9 1owvi! THE REVOLT THAT STIRRED THE WORLD/ "' i llUll• STattT IOY ... ...,__ . "'""' he1ol • • "'IUllU Wl'llS!i ..... -Ul!!1 s.:i-1, IWIJ "'"...,...-A flLM Cf' GtLLO PONTE CORVO ..,... B A L B 0 A -NOW-INDI TUISDAY..!! 'Tho Virg in & Tho Gypsy' 6f.1°4041-0PEN 6:4S-"Lo"'" & Ott.er Stt•ltf-" MODERN AIR CONDITIONED, 250 SEAT FAMILY RESTAURANT LOCATED AT ... The DAILY PILOT- The One That Cares HARBOR BLVD. AT McFADDEN SANTA ANA . , . 839-2281 Acro11 fro"' Harbor Drive-hi Theater Electricity Is wltal to your way of lite. So is a healthy enwlronment. We're working to bring you both. • 1son What we're really fishing for are environmental facts. At the San Onofre power plant, located near San Clemente, sea water is used to cool the plant condensers, and then the warmed water is r eturned to the sea. To determine whether this harms th e marine envi.I·orunent, Edison commissioned an oceanographic company of national stature to monitor th e offshore waters both before and after the plant was built. Monitoring began in mid-1963 -four-and-a-half years before the plant commenced commercial operation -and has continued ever since.. r Department of Fish and Game made its own study of the sam e marine area in 1969. The Department concluded that the nuclear unit's operation did not appear to have had an adverse effect on the near-shore marine environment. Aside from the marine environment ' some people may be concerned about radiation in the atmosphere from nuclear power plants. Actually, natural background radi ation is e~erywhere and always has been, It comes from the air you breathe, the food you eat, the materials used to • In bm1d your home. The San Onofre nuclear power plant is a source ot some radiation, too. The question is how much addi tional radiation are' people exposed to living near San Onofre? The answer: so little that an elaborate monitoring program for the area surrounding the plant has yet to detect any additional radiation from operation of the plant. Based on these and other facts we believe nuclear plants are a safe and sensible way to generate electricity. Clean, too. Since there's no combustion in a nuclear reactor no by-products of combustion are ' 1released into the atmosphere. At Edison, we plan to rely more and Result: twenty-one reports reveal no significant changes in the marine environment. And that includes three years of plant operation. / more_on nucl ear power to meet th e / . growmg need for electricity in the 14-county area we serve. sC.E In addition, the California State Southern California Edison t .. • " .. . . 20 OAllV PILOT MGtlday, March 22, 1971 Our Whole Family Invites Your Family ADMINISTRATION Jloberl N. \\1eed. President and Publisher Jack R. Curley, Vice President and General Manage1· F.velyn L. Bell Bonnie J. Gregory ritargaret Greenman ACCOUNTING Bernard Schulman, Controller Betty L. Allen Reba H. CaneUi Bonnie S. Chau\'in Patricia Coe Roland V. 1-lolm Patricia C. Johnson Helen M. Scott Florence C. Levine Dolores P. McPaul Tanya Palm \Vanda L. Spain Terri C. Tank Co11i Jean Van ~1etcr CIRCULATION Milan A. Leavitt. Circulation 1'1anager Tania Allard Richard E. Backstrom llal Bakke Paul Bartlett Russell Beard Robert J. Bresee John D. Cole Frank J. Durante Daniel E. Ferryman Glenn Gibbons Claude B. Greene George \V. I-larding Bryan L. Holland Howard D. Hutche111s David E. Jacques Gregory J. Johnston Richard Jourden Ruth R. Leavitt .Joseph E. Nobles \Villiam E. Oakley Reuel K. Olson Lorin L. Orchard Jr. A. Foster Ouelell James D. Mullen IV Ronald Davis Myers .lames D. Parks Donald W. Richmond Blaine S. Roberts Terry F. Ruellen Frank N. Salatii Jr. i\1arjorie M. SullivaA Hiram Harry Seeley Charles L. Smith James E. Seay Tom P. Tate Linda F. \Vhilt Benton C. \Villiams Donald L. Williams CLASSIFIED J/orace Blanco. Classified Advcrtis1ns ftlgr . Delores Blanco Jo Ann Bray ~!argaret J . Davidson Beverly Ellinger Juanita L. Folson1 Peggy J. Ha yes Jean L .. Jobst Dorothy \V. Joyce Jacklyn K. Kra vitz Kandi Labbtt Phyllis J. i\lohler fi1ary Beth Morton Carol F. Robinson Shari J. Slagle Robert A. Seling Gaye C. 1'ickncr Virginia S. Van lioulcn Twilla B. Young COMPOSING ROOM llcrold C. Andersen. Superintendent Paul JI. \\'ard. Day Foreman David Gutierre1 .. Night Foreman Anne Allen Robert C. Allev Evelyn M. Andersen Roy .I. Barne~ Raymond R. Bender Marjorie F. Bro11i11 Hobert 0. Callahan Carolyn A. Capalbo .Joseph i\1. Carney William N. Cra\\·rord ~hlford F:. Danley Don.aid J. Df>Forc F'rank Casev Duna Gerald L. Goodner Jesse L. Gutierrci F'rank L. Halley Billy Pat Halverson Robert X. Harper Dona ld D. Hohanshclt Robert E. Howe Marjorie J .. Jackson Harold E. Johnso• Dorothea Joner; Bernice G. Kunar Carl A. Knapp \Yilliam D. LHrell James Luhrs Jewel '-f. Lussier Robert 1-f. Mack Arden K. Malsbury G:ibriel Mata Jr. William D. Meeks Jr. Charles L. P.filll!!r Larry E. Morgan Larry G. Morgan Donald E. PKOl .1.,.p11 A. Reed John Routh Seth Shenton I Paul E Sma,1ilc Robort 0. Stepha• Patrick A. Tool HArold K. Tumtr GeorRI!! Wiiliam J. Toth .John S. Wald Jolln P. Wlldn- I DISPATCH Dudley B. Rich, Department Manager John T. Bourpos Susan Christophl!!r Corey P. Sag et ,John A. Sperling \Villiam f\1. Thomson OISPLAY ADVERTISING Cha rles Pritchard, Display Advertising ~·!gr. Charlotte F. Andresen Joseph E. Davis Arthur D. Dawson ~faurict J. Gardner William E. Greene ~1ary K. Henry Roy A. HeRSOn .Jack K. Littleton Leon F. Peterson James G. Riley Norman Stanley Fred \V. \Villiam~ f.1ichael C. \Yilson Ernest Vitucci EDITORIAL DEPT. Thoma s Keevil, Editor Thomas '.f.furphint. J\lanaging Editor Charles Loos, Assistant f.tanaging Editor Richard Nall, Assistant ~lanaging Editor Bea Anderson. \ \Yomen ·s Editor Lucy Bell. \\'eekender Editor Albert Bates, Editorial Page Editor Glenn \Vhitt. Sports Editor Norman R. Anderson Robert R. Barker 1'homas A. Barley Vrancis P. Boyle Jr. Jack Broback Roger F'. Carlson Jacqueline Ann Combs Terry s. Coville Barbara 0. Duarte A \aJI J. Dirkin Howard L. Handy Pamela Hallan Jodean Hastings Cheryl Kravitz Richard Koehler Barbara Kreibich L. Peter Krieg George A. I.tidal Almon Lockabty Jl.1argaret A. McAlister John S. Mitchl!!ll Rudi Niedzielski Patrick O'Donnell Jo Olson Lee Payne Joanne Reynolds Phillip E. Ross \Villiam L. Schreiber Craig W. Sbeff Tom Titus John ~alterza Arthur Vinsel Rosemarie \Vesl MAIL ROOM George E. Arauz, Department Alanag er \\'illiam Eastman Lorraine Andre ws Alice Dunigan i\iarianne Sharfe Marika Raes t.1ary L. -Oaum Dorothy ,,_fikols Gladys Bell Patricia Domecq .Janet Ford f.1aria Vicari Shirley Robinson Bernice Wagner Nancy \Yitherspoon MAINTENANCE Eugene F. Laney. Building Supervisor John i\1artin, Automolivr. i\lainlenanct \Villiam H. Haye!! f.fichael D. i\larquardt ~1ichael A. Pfeifer Rayford Lee Tabor NATIONAL AND AUTOMOTIVE ADV. Carl Carstensen Jr., National and Automotive Manager Jeff Stevenson. Automotive Sales !\tanager Dennis D. Landry Hope C. Shutt!! PILOT PRINTING \\lil\iam L. Brown PROMOTION AND ART DEPARTMENT Thomas hlcCann, Promotion ~1anagtr Anne Hamblin STEREOTYPE Charles J. Haubrick, Foreman Gerald J. Hill Daniel E. Kirkmeyer Gordon M. Nielsen Edward E. Quinn Michael Ralf•rty SWITCHBOARD PatrlcJt Blakketter Mary E. f'rledauer Peggy J. Forney .. • - COME AND SEE EXPANDED, MODERNIZED FACILITIES O~ THE DAILY PILOT 330 West Bay Street Costa Mesa . . WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY MARCH 24 and 25 GUESTS RECEIVED 7 to 9 p.m. BOTH EVENINGS WHO AND WHY Friends ~eep as~in9 members of our fa mily when memb ers of their family can come and see the newly enl ar9ed and remodeled faciliities of t he DAILY PILOT ol 330 We,1 Boy Street in Co•I• Mo••· So ... by populor demend, as they say ••• we're opening the doors Wednesday and Thu,.doy, Morch 24 and 25, from 7 lo 9 p.m. to anyone end everyone who would like to see the ''factory'' wh ere we produce ei9ht editions a do y of your DAILY PILOT. • HOW TO GET HERE The DAILY PILOT pion!, o! 330 Wes! Boy Street in Cosio Meso, i• "freeway close" to its readers all along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Clemente. Bay Street runs from Harbor Bo ulev ard to Newport. The plant is about midway betweent those two major arteries. It ea1ily can b1 reached vi a either Harbor or Newport from the San Diego Freeway or Pacific Coast Hi9hway. The plant's 175.car employee parkin g lot will be open to the public both "open house" evenings. I I How to Fly~ Keep Feet on Ground Newport Beach Firrn's Fliglit Siniulators Teaching Real Thing Roin•ow 8rlght WASTE BASKOS •Good grlefl Populor ''honutt" chorodore ond erhor mod, mo,. .... 1,,.. lllecoroto 12 "I'· "'otol wottebotkot1. Ro9, $t.39 69' ••• Amr _M_o_od_,_~_M_M_c_h_2_2_._19_7_1 ~~~~~--~D-M~LY~PIL~ A SUPER 'EXTRAORDINARY V ALU El DRAPERIES UNUSUAL lllf.C'TION - Do•ll·Younelf CIUI "INSF ALllNG WALL PANELS" Wolll .. M.r. 24, 7·1 ~ A-holnt Tl11111rt,. Mor, lJ, 7·1 "'" rountoh1 \'alloy o .... ,, ........... O, ... lhntffh - l•••u• O'Cetf•r SPONGI MOP • Qu ick """ "'wlttl le11 effort. • Chrem. ond 11lclcel ,1111.111 motol fro-- ••clv1lvo hondi. rol•olo ell.., ·•~c:·~ Tu:nd1 .,.,. kn"' c\oonlng. •••. $2.lf $199 9! ... LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l'TCE ·--· cl!"•T•"1CATll o~ IUllNISI f'ICTITIOUI HAMI Tl'le urdtral1ned 6oell c~•!llY ht 11 co1111udlnt 1 bu•lnat 11 lt:U H9WPOrt 8 1..,., Cool• MKI, C1tllornl1, vnclet lh1 lldtllou1 nrm n•me of COSTA MESA TIRE CENTER ~"" 11'11 U IO llrm 11 comp0tN o1 1111 followlnt "'"°"• -· "'"" !ft tvH •"" ptoc.1 ol rlllldenco II •1 fol'-1: L~o E. Batlln, lt1'2 SM!dle, lrv!nt, C1. t".!U-1 o.iecr M1rc11 17, 1t11 L" E. 111 .. t1n S't1te ol C1lllornl1, O•-• C011t11'1'; On M1rdl 11, ltTI, before ..,., a Nt!•ry Publtc In Ind ltr 11ld M1l1, P1r1Cn111v t PP11rtd Lff E. aov11n known lo ,.,.. lo bl 111<1 "'""" w!l-n...,I 11 1ub1crlbod to !111 w!rllln lnoln1monl i nd ~C-nDW!!'d11!!d 111 ••tcultd 1111 ume., / (OFFICIAL SEAL} Loul•• E. G1t11rd1m Not•rv Publlt.C1llloml• Prlnc1,..1 01!1.:. In Oran11 Counl'I' Mv Commlnlon E~PlrH "''''""' •• 19'2 Publ11h!!d Or.,1111 Coat! Dilly Pl" ,,,.rch n. 211, Aprll J.'11, 1f71 126-71 LEGAL NOTICE .... "ICTITIOlll IUSINl!SS NAMI STATIMINT Tiie lollowlnt pertoM •rt 4eln1 bu1!ne11 11: HILLSVIEW SA.DOLi! CLUI, 114l~ 5o. Htrbor Blvd., ~n!A A,.., Ctlll, n1" w. "· H1coct. 1'41 "' Ht rbor lllvd., S6nlt A,.., C1lll. '77M. T. J . Hkoctt, 16ollol So. Htrkr llf-...:1., Sanft Ant, Ctlll. 9771M TM1 but l,,.u It bel... condvdtd bf I p&rtner.hlP. W. F.Hkoct "ubU1~ Ora11111 Cotti DtllY "Htl M1rd'I 22, 211, A11r!I s, it. un ltt-11 LEGAL NOTICE FURNITURE POLISH ••1or ..... LINK DOOR MAT ---ff-f--··· NOTlCI 0" 1'119LIC H•AlllHG IEFOlll THI! CITV' COUNCIL 0" THI CITY O" l'OIHITA1N VALLIY NOT1CI'! IS HEREBY GIVEN fh&I on Tl\urlld1Y, APrll 1, lt7l, II J:JQ P.M. In lhl Council Ch1mblrt, CllY Addicts' Agencf' Funded Special to the DAIL V PILOT SAN FRANCISCO -A ma- jor grant to Orange Counly- based Teen Cha ll ence. volunteer agency to aid drug addicls, has been announced here by the James Irvine Foundatio~. Teen Challenge Executive Director Cliff Morrison says the grant will go toward down payment on Benedict Caslle. a Riverside County hlstoricaJ landmark. The 40-year-0ld s to n c rortrtss will be transformed Into a JOO-man facility f9r training and education of rehabllllAted drug add I ct s committed lo the Te e n Challenge idea. Morrison said the novel BJ>' prolilch to providing a fully accredited education to the youths will probably be the only one of Its kind In America. Founded by the late land haron J ames Irvine. of Orange County, Lhe n on profit nrganizalion is headquartered ln San Francisco Bnd 11 ids many charitable agencies. "Wlrh lemon 0//1" • Contoln• lemon oll plu1 Slllcon•• for !hot high lv•tre, longer IGJ!ln9 thine, • ,, ponotrOIOI to protort- 7 O.E. ooro10! con. Ro;. 39c 29' 12'' Jr 12'' SHAG CARPET TILE • lnlfolt o woll to wotl foorwo,_r In ony ,.. • ..,. •Seit odhothre -ooty lo lntloll tllo In a rainbow or 1 .. nd·••rtln9 celor1. 59~. Mahogonr _..,,BAR STOOLS "four·Lo99ed frlendd" • Phfllpplno mohogony 1lt·vpon- 1ondod and ready to flnl1h. 24" ••••• 30" ••••• FATIGUE MAT • Durable, rvbber covered focrm "'ot--tU9ht lmport.rtlon .. •Choice of ortontlon• 9ortln9 colon. Ro9. lie 59' Stal11le•1 sr .. 1 FLATWARE SALE! • Heavy wof9ht, well 6'1l9nod hlbloworo. • Mo6em ond trodltlonol portemt to chooM from -moloot 11 001y 10 buy l""f whot yoll n-d. Rog. lSc " 15' ... . . . • • 0 I ''I w ...... rT9 ""' rlth• •• ""''' ~vontltlo1 • • ... Odd Loi Salo LEATHERETTE ''We Bought 1h• Manufacturers fntlre Stock uf End Rollsl'' •Top quality, fully-backed vinyl uphalsl• material ••• great 1elett1on of colors, textures, etc. •All 54" wide In random lengths. •Cover your favorite chair, pillow or whatever and SAVEi SAVEi SAVEi VALUES TO $1.99 , 2'' r•Jdr , .. ,. PILLOW FORMS • Odorl•11, 11on ... nor1onlc '-"' - ,...,.,,,to covor re tlillt y•w f•IKJ'• • 11" 11110-tff In round1 or l"IVG!'OI, •••· 19c Yo11. Cholq 15~. Long N•rttllocl SHAG CARPET RAKE • 0001 your 1ho1 hovo ti co•• ef tho frlulo1T K••P It boautlhrl with thl1 tight, d11robl-o 1ho9 roloe. • Long wooolo11 flondlo mako• )'•Vr f•b 001lor. log. 99c 69~. •'' ,., . .,,, GRATIR BOWL "H•ndy l'ltcho11 01d1otryl" • Strln11. 1rcrto1 or throlll1 dlrertly Into 111 ow1t non·•llp •owl, • Colorl1td •owl wl!h 1nv1 flrtlnt lld. •••• 77• Your Choir• KITCHEN GADGETS GALORE! "Wo,. '°""''t ol • Potlt.ol·l'leo1/111f Prlc•I'" • Ouollty lcltcho1t 1crdgot1 to hol, with oll yo11r food ,,..parotlont. • lltcor1, ,..1o,., 1coo,., ~-aon -ond '"°llY• monr more, Ro1. 17c c!:~, 59~a. Hiii, lll'lOO Sl1!er Av1nu., 1''<11.lftl1l11 V~llev, C~lllorflla, tl!t Cl'y C:cur<"I .,..Ill hold I PLibllc h1arl1111 on lh• ltllowlnt: 1 A1>oc-il on Plann1n1 C'1ftmlulon A<flon re11rdln1 l'recttl Pl111 HJ 'rMI Conclltlon11 UN P1nntt jt bl' Nfll P. Roeatt 1rid Thom11 M. S!l•fl. Woolct Sll"'PlnQ Conl•r •I lh'ookhunt 1nd EGlnoa1r. Thlt mo!l~r It ilelll!I procn.11d pursu1nt la !hi P!tnnlno L•wa ol !tie 'Tito o1 C1lllo1nl1 (Gov'!. Codt IS.COO el 1e<1.) 11111 Ille Founllln v1t1rr l.Oft1'10 _ Ordinance The 1onl1111 trd!nonce, lOfllno ' maos. 1rid •~hlbl11 1r1 Oft flle In lhO •• Plt nnlno °"""rfmlnl Ind otl ov1ll1ble tor Public ln11>Kllon ind t•t..,lntllon. TlloH dnlrlno 10 l••lllY In '"'"" DI' In llPPOllllon lo lht1 -•• .... 111 bo t lven In ~n!l\I la da 10. II lurlt'ler lnlonntllorl 11 dalrH, 'l'Oll ml!/ ton!KI Th• Pttnnlnt Dtatrlmtnf •I t6t·1Q~ llld r111r ta 1111 obove Utm. CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FOUNTAIN VALLl'f Marv E. Colt CllY Cltrlr l'ub!l$111<1 Or1r1111 Coalt D•!IV !',l~o_!, Merell n, lt71 _,.11 LEGAL NOTICE ,....,, Cl!RTIFlCATE OP 9USIHll .. PICTlTJOUI NAMI The 11rod1rtl1nl'd 00 n•!ilv ffltY 1r1 condudln~ 1 busltien 1! U• "C" Er•t 11th. Cost• Ma••, C1llltrnl1, vndtr I' f llcllllou1 firm n•mt ti NEWPORT Bi\Y INTERIORS 1nd lhtf tlld """ 11 rom· Pot!!d ol the tollr>Wlflll perton1, .... ~··~ n1m11 tn lull tnd Pltcn ot rnld911t • lrl '' IO!!OWI: Rontld Gtlt, '67 Vlclorl1, C111t1 Mesa, Ct. Thom11 Ellclr.rr, 1'41 Min· dOU, C111!1 M111, Ct. Oiled M.trcll 11, 1t1l R11t1tld Gilt Thom•• Elltktr 3!ate o1 C1IUornl1, Or~1191 COV!!IY! Cl!I M1rcn 11, lt71, belor• ,..., t Nor~rv Publlt 111 1rd for 111d ltt1f, per:o..,.llf a""•rtd ll:on•ld G1'9 I nd Tl!oma1 Ellcil•r k-to mt to bo tile pert,J.;1 .,..ha11 n1m11 ,,.. wbtcrrtit.:I to !ht .,..llhln lntlrvmenl Ind tdl,_loelt-- ed Thev t•KVll'll 1111 llmt, (OFFICIAL SEAL) MARY BETH MOR TON No!1rv Pub!fc • C•llf0<nl1 PrlnC!NI Olfkl In o .. n11e Countv Mf Commlnlan EJQ>lrwt April f, lf71 Publls!\1'11 Or•ntt Coa1t DtllV Piiot Marci\ n, l'9 & April J, 11. 1t71 116-71 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI!" OF INTl!NTION TO l!NOAOI! IN THE 5.1.LI! 01'" ALCOHOLIC BEVIRAOE• M ... ch 19, 1'71 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEll:N: S1·blcc1 10 1-.u1nc• ti tn• llcenu eoolled for, nonce 11 !\111111' elvtn lh1t 1~1 under1!9ned P•090'"' lo 1•11 •l~lle bevtr111n 11 lhl preml111, deKrlbed 11 lo'!.,..,, 4'911·1) NtWPDl't Blvd. MtwPOtl BMdl Pur1ut nf to 1ud'I lnltnllan, lftt un. der1!Gned It 1oplyln11 to 11\1 ~01rtm1nt of Ale-lie B~1r1111 Con!ro! !or lu u1nc1 bf tr1n1!1r of An 1lcohollc blY1r110 llet nte lor 1he11 11rtml111 11 follow•: OH SALE BEER {Public Prtmllft) Any-de1!tln11 lo pro!l1I 1111 l1w1nc:1 ol 1\Kh ltctftM{I) MOY 111• I Yttlllld Prolesl ti 1nr ollle. ol lhl DeNrlmonl ol Altollo!lc llever1tt Control, Of' br 11"1111 It fhe o.,.1rtment of AkoMll11 llev~••9t Control, nu o S!rtel, S1cr1nll!ftto, C1!1lonil1 fH"U, i.o 11 1111 be r.c:tlved wlll!ln :JO d•Y• of lho dr!~ 1111 pr-.d pr1m!111 ... ,, flrtl pmlod, 1!lll11t1 lrovnd• IOI'" dtnltl 11 orovtd~ bl/ !low. Tt>• orln'll''' 1•0 """" llCff'llld tor 1111 111o ot 1!cohollc bcver~~e.. Tn. torm ol vtr111C•1IOOI m1v bl Dt>11 lned lrom '"' otllc1 of tho Dlo1r!men1. l(ASPEJll, Rldltrd Publl1~1'd Orlnft Coa1! D41!1V Piiot Mtrd'I 22, 1971 fJ0..11 LEGAL NOTICE IUPl!lllOll COUllT OP TH• ITATI! O" CALIFOJlNIA POil THa COUNTY OP ORANOI Ne.A..uet NOTICI O" HEAllNO 01' PITITION f'O• PllOBATI! O" WILL AHO "011 LETTl!ll TllTAMINTAllV' l lOND WAIVED) Es!alt of lOUt~ MOltRIS STEUIEllo ~·~-NO'rlCI! 1$ t11!:1EBY GIVfN tllot Mery LoutN KoNut lln llltd l'llrollt A Ptfl!kn tor Probtlfl t i wm Ind fflf' luu•~C• of L•ll•rt Tnt1mtnt1rv lo Pell!!_,. !Bond Wt lvtdl rlf1rtn<1 lo ""'lch lt mtdt tor fllrtlllr 1>1r!kul1'1, 11111 lhll Int llrnt ""' Piie• ol Merino !'Ill "'"' 1!11 bffn 111 lor AJH'll I, 1t71. 11 ':JO 1.m., Iii !1M covr!•- lf 01111r1mori1 Ho, ~ ol w lcl court, ti 1tlO Clflc Ctn19f" Drtvt WHt, In Tllo CllY of S1nt1 An1, C1lltoml1. Otltd Mt•C11 11, 1t71 w. I!. II JOtiN, CovnlY Cltrt HALL Sl•LET .. "''"'Mil/I ,,,.... t.in11 Ant, C1lllor- T111 C'11) S41.etfl A" :rrOJ !If" Ptto:lo!I• ' •~11•1\td Or~~tt Cotti CMllY "11111 M.rcn If, to, 1.$, 1911 '21·11 The CAILY PILOT-I Tops in locol Spom ' r~,., _ _,,...,._... .... ,. . .. . ' .. ' .. . ' ... ' ,. .. 22 DAILY PILOT Monday, MMth 22, 1971 • lNIMAlogic .,-.. Brand NEW FulI 4 · Ply NYLON Rematch Of Year? You Bet! For sure It isn't yachting's most heralded event. It may not even rank in rankness with the Character Boat Parade. Nevertheless, t he un- daunted, but dogged, Balboa Punting and Sculling Society has formally announced it will host another thrilling rematch of the tugboat "Michigan" and that unnamed vessel flying the burgee of tile San Diego Rest and Aspirati(lfl Society. Sailors everywhere w i I I recall the embarrassment to the locals when they took the mighty Michigan down coast last year. I To schedule a rematch took courage enough, but Puntingl and Sculling publicist Dick Shaw actually 'saw fit to publicly declare the next race will take place, in public. Far be it from the DA ILY PILOT to interfe re with the prose of a man named Shaw, so his press release is printed below, almost in «ital: "On April 3 the San Diego : Rest and Aspiration Society 1 is coming to Newport Harbor for a rematch. The race will run a cour~ o( tile length of Balboa Island on the South Bayfront side. "'Ille contest will be at 3 p.m. after we fortify ourselves at the Balboa Bay Club starting al noon on that day . . . then back to the Bay Club for cocktail hour and the presentations. Then the ball. "The Pavilion Queen will be the spectator ship and cocktail bar. The Queen will also leave from the Bay Club." STOR GRAND PRIX MARCH 28, 1971 at ~ Ontario Motor Speedway SPECIAL SEARS DISCOUNTS s...... s lli•eoant •11 9 l'ri~c SEARS FAMILY DISCOUNT P LAN 17 Buy Any Ticl;er ar Re.1;ular Price.:. (;c! AdditinnaJ Ti(kcts (of sirni(u "¥alue) for ONLY SJ fur cach Child l b )'CMS or Under. Shaw also described the participants. Jn his words, mind you, __ ,,.._ T' • Pick Up Your Discount Coupons At A.nf Sea fl Aum C".cnttr Anu v..·t JC1<ell 1.u<fhe San Diego Rest and at the Ticl.:rtron Outlet At (LHiomet Conven1eoce Counwr. Aspiration Society is made up l--.,.,~.-:---;:7<r':"'"r-r"°"1''r'"""'\"'I of retired Admirals while the Balboa Punting and Sculling Society is a collection of millionaires and bums." And in a parting pr~ motional plug, Shaw viewed, "This should be an exciting match of skills-but not seamanship particularly." Drug Use By Athletes Condemned A reso lution condemning the use of hazardous drugs by high school and c o 11 c g e athletes was adopted in the closing hours of the California M e d i c a 1 Association con- vention Wednesday in Anaheim. Antibolic androgen steroids, used to spur weight gains in athletes. when t a k e n by adolescents "promote sterility and an inhibition of normal sexual functions." Dr. Allan J . Ryan said. He chairs th~ American Medical Associa- tion's committee on physical fitness and is associated with the University of Wisconsin Medical Center. When used by older persons. the a t eroids lead to overstimulation of lhe prostate glands and may influence the fonnation of cancer, Dr. Ryan said. Further, there I! little proof the drugs aJd athletes. "They don't increase strength or en- durance," Ryan said. The re.solution a150 con- demned use or amphetamines noting "lhere is no way to estimate ln advance the level of normal pre-contest st.ate of excitement." While am· phetamines may lhcoreUcaUy tmprove an athlete's performance by rem11Ving In· hlbitlon, the uncertainly or the amount of natural excitement m akes judgment of the proper dosage dlfrlcult. Too much 11mpbelamlne may actually damage an athlete's - ALLS1'A"l'I<: IJ,\~S1':N (;E Jl TIRE GUARANT EE Gu•ranl~d t\a11in~1: AH 1ire fai l. ures from nntm.il road huuJ.~ or Jc. fi:as in mat end or worl.:man~hip. t"o r llow l.on1t: for the life of the orig.inal rrcad. Wh•I Sc•N-Will Do: lne1.chan,i:c for 1he 1lre. fC'J'lace it, char.1;1n,11. only fOf 1bt-proponioo of current selling price pluJ Ft'denl l~cis.e Tax 1h.11 r"l!re>o s.t"nll lrt-...1 use, Rep;i.ir ruil puncturet •I no chiige. (;uU"anteed. Al:•in1t: TrcilJ ~'Cat• O"' 1-"or How 1..ong: The number of r:nondu specifit-d. WW.a St-•n1 "'ill Do: In clch"U\,111 for the 1ire, replace ic ch:u)!ing rh1 cur1tn1 ielling p11ct-rlus Federal Ex· cis.e T.u lel5 lhe following allowance. Month• Gu•ranltt-d \ 8 10 21 27 '" j \J •• Allrnnn u:e IU';. ::1)<~ PRI CES EFFECTIV E March 21 tbru 'Wa rcb 23 -Se<trs IUIHA PAii( To\ 8 .... 400, lll-4Jl0 CANOGA P.t.•lt" 340-0UI f t MOHTt CM J •J f lt OllHOAl.f CM 11·1004, Cl ..... 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His collection of gold may never be topped in the NCAA college divi!ion swimming competition Coach Ed Newland's UCI swimmers won the team title for the third straight year with three victories, a second and a third on the final day of competition {Saturday) in Springfield, Mass. UC! ICUod 242 polnll with the University of Southern Florida a diJtant second with 176 followed ~Y San Fernan- do Valley State College with 152. UC Davis was ne1t with 108 and host Spr· ingfield had 106. Martin's fantastic showing In the meet (five gold medals for• the third straight year and a fourth victflry in the 500 freestyle), was the big news. Richard Eason, swimming in the sb.adow of the fabulous Mr. Martin !or three years, won his first-ever individual victory in the 100-yard freestyle In 47 .80. Eason, like Martin, has been a member of two winning relay teams far three ) I , I '; , j • • • yean aod the 100 free victory &ivt11 him seven 1old medab overall. "l thought it was Euon'1 beat meet ever by a wide margin," a tired but happy Newland 1aid upon return home Sunday night. "He dld exceptionally well as did Mi.kt Carnahan and Mark Nelson. "We really have our work cut out. for u.s ne.rt year. It is nostalgic to lose three kids the calibre of Martin, Eason and Nebon. We have to do 1 lot of recruiting this summer ." Martin won the 1,650 freestyle in easy fashion, outdistancing the second place man by more than 15 seconds. He also ~ ' r l t. l , I ~, ;;:. --;1 { t -. • Ul'ITt'"""" GARY PLAYER SHOWS DETERMINATION THAT HELPEO HIM WIN $2S,OOO AT JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Player Captures Playoff From Longshot Rival JACKSONVILLE , Fla. (AP) -Tough liUle Gary Player scored a par 4 on Hie second hole of a sudden-death playoff 2nd beat longshot Hal Underwood for the $25,000 fir st prii.e in the Greater JacksonviUe Open golf tournament Sun. day. Both Player and the 25-year-0ld Underwood parred the first extra hole, but Underwood bogeyed the second from a trap and Player made a 2-foot putt that clinched his 12th victory in the United States. They had tied at the end of the regular 'n holes at 281. Player had a final-round ti9 and Underwood, seeking his first vW::tory in two years on the pro tour, hid a 71. It was a bitter disap)Xlinlment for Underwood, a 1ed-haired, raw-boned Tex. an, and equally as disappointing for young .Johnny Miller, who Jed most of the way in the final round. \ Miller, tied with Underwood 1for the top spot going into the final round, took sole control of first place with a birdie on the second hole and held it-until both Player and Underwood birdied the 17th. Player, a S.foot-7 South African ge1lerally regarded as one of the world 's finest players, and Underwood were in a twosome jusl ahead of Miller and Lee Trevino. Both Underwood and Player made par ()n the final hole and both Trevino and Miller drove the fairway there. Trevino, jast one stroke off the pace. put his 11econd shot 12 feet from the flag, and lipped out the putt that would have put him in the playoff, too. Hidden Hills Country Club course. He had a 282 total I stroke back and tied with Trevino, who had 1 final 71. Player, de\caring "I'm the fiUest man playing golf today." plans to battle it out with the world's best for another 11 ·years; then hang up his cleats. "I'm just romi11g into my peak now.'' he said after winning. "But I don·t want to be playing when I'm 50 like Julius &ros,'' Player declared. "He en· joys it or he wouldn't do it, but 1 want to ·be with my children and do a little ranching . "t.-1y target date for retiring right now is 45," he said. He is 34. Laver Surprise Fourth Seed In Tourney CHICAGO (AP) -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver probably oouldn't care leSll over his N~. 4 1peeding in the Chicago phase of the 20-city World Championship of Tennis tournament which starb • week-long session today. It's the first time since Augwt of 197G ahtt Laver, whose racquet·thumps a steady march to the bank, has not bttn accorded No. I seed In a tourney. Lefty Benches, Fines Johnson; Angels Win PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Alex Johnson is in the soup again. The An;ierican League batting cham· pion of 1970 was reportedly fined $100 Sunday for lack of hustle hi a Saturday e.xhibition game. Then Sunday, Johnson was benched after one inning in the 7.S victory over the San Diego Padres. Johnson, who came to the San Diego Padres. Johnson, who came to the Angels-a year ago in a trade with the Cincinnati Reds of the National League, has been at odds with players, managers and newsmen since his first day in baseball. Some called him sullen, other11 1aid he was just quiet and others said he was just an introvert who. didn't want kl be bothered with aocial discourse. Manager Lefty Phillips didn't confirm that Johnson was benched for Jack of husUe in the Sunday game but Johnson'• actions indicated it. He was the last out of the first inning, bouncing out to third base. He merely jogged toward first base on the play and then just jogged to his left field position, Phillips said Johnson was '•hilting like he was injured." Tom Reyoolds replaced Johnson and proceded to double and 1ingle for two runs as the Angels held ofl the Padres, a good home run hitti ng club this spring. Dave Robinson of the Padres slammed a three-run homer, Dave RobiMOn tripled ror another run and the Sin Dlegans pounded out si1 additional hits. swim an the h100 free rtlay team that e1llblbbed one of three UCI IChool record.! on the fln1l day in 3:11.49. In all during the three day competition, UC I bettered nine school records and Martin s tablished an NCAA 1tandard in the 200 frttstyle. • Nelaon improved his qualifying position to lllke aecond place in the 200 backstroke in 2:03.71 to lower hi.s school mark. Carnahan was third in the 100 butterfly In Sl.lt, also a school record. He wa1 in front until the final 10 yards when he began to run out of gas. .. He waa a little too anxious at the 1lArt of the race," Newland said. Don't Feel Too Sorry Fo1· l(ansas WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -Don't put the "poor Kansas" tag just yet on the nation '• fourth·ranked basketball team whose next foe is mighty UCLA. icansaa coach Ted Owens wouldn't think of 1aying his Jayhawks haven't a chance against the top-ranked Bruins When the clubs ro\lide Thursday night on the NCAA semifinals at Houston. In fact, if a comparison of scores means anything, it could bt a cliffhanger from start to finish. Kansas drowned Missouri three times, once by 33 points. UCLA beat Missouri in their only meeting. UCLA reached the Houston semifinals by nipping Cal State (Long Beach) 57·55 Saturday. Kansa.9 gave Long Beach his first af five defeats, winning 6S.52 and at one point held a 32·4 lead over the Californians. Kansas has won so many of its 21 straight triumphs in the final seconds the Jayhawks ought to qualify (or a patent on late victories. Each of Kansas' last si1 games has been won in the last minute or less. The Jayhawkl reached the test against UCLA by storming from behind to beat Drake 7J...71 Satuday to win the Midwest Regional. Two days earlier, Kansas edg· ed Houston ('18·T1) to reach the regional finals . Dave Robisch, voted the Midwest tourney's outstanding player, and Roger BrowJI did l't'IOllt of the Kansas-scoring tn a late sur1e that wiped out a 8-point aecond half deficit. Robisch got 27 points and Brown 15. Leon Huff was high for Drake with 20. Owens described lightning-like Drake 1s "certainly equal to anyone we've pla yed this year." Even though he's aeen UCLA on television he believes the Uclans "bigger and stronger than Drake . We know we will haYe to have a great perrormance to beat UCLA." Owens 1aid he told the Kansas team, trailing :i&.30, at the h al r lo "get the ball ·in to Robisch.'' Tht Jayhawks did, and Rohisch respondtd with 19 points after tht Intermission. "We were stiff in the first half," Owtns &aid. "Just too tight and it show· ed. "We went to a quicker line-up in the second half and moved better. lt didn't make a big change in the game immediately but I think it helped us. Drake Is just so quick. "Roger Brown played much better in the second half. He just wanted to do well ao bad in the first half was too tight. I'm disappoint~ that we got outre· bounded. I felt we should have beaten them on the boards." Robisch said after the game he just wanted t.o relax now and start thinking about UCLA. St. Bonaventure, -Michigan Romp NEW YORK (UPI) -Greg Gary ig· nlled a blistering secood half fast break with JO points during a stretch lo spark St. &naventure to a K-79 victory over Purdue Sunday in an opening round game of the National Jnvitation basket· ball tournament. In another opening-round g~me Sunday, Henry Wilmo~. one of lhe 11ation's outstanding sophomores, scored 22 points and collected 19 rebounds to pace Michigan to an 12-76 victory over Syracuse. CAIL V l'ILOT Slllf l'M19 MIKE MARTIN -HAS THE GOLOEN TOUCH Will Face Kansas • UCLA Returns to Dome --Site of '68 Disaster UCLA. By Associated Press the No. l team in college basketball. plays at the Astrodome in Houston Thursday night for the first time in three years. Thal could be a bad omen ror the Bruins in their bid for a fifth straight national cham· pionship. It was at 20, 1968 that the Astrodome on Jan. the Bruins Jn their bid for a fifth straight national cham- pionship. It was al the Aslrodome on Jan. 20, 1968 that the Bruins' 47-game win streak was snapped by Houston, 71·69. before an all-lime paid basketball crowd of 52,693. It was UCLA's only defeat that season and it kepi the Br~lns from breaking San Francisco's all-time collegiate win· ning streak of 60 in a row since they won 41 straight after that. The occasion for UCLA's return to the Astrodome is the semifinals of the NCAA championship tourney. The Bruins pla y the Kansas Jayhawks and the Villanove Wildcats take on the Hilltop· per!! of Western Kentucky. UCLA wiped out a I I-poi nt deficit in the second half of the beat Long Beach Stale 57-55 on four free throws by Sidney Wicks in the Jatt 25 11econds. Wicks is a handy man for UCLA coach John Wooden to have around, even when he's sitting on the bench. Wicks, the brilliant &.8 forward for UCLA's No. t ranked Bruins. made the difference Saturday a:ii the defending NCAA champions barely edged by tenacious Cal Stale <Long Beach), 57-55. The game wasn't decided until the final 25 seronds. With the score tied at 5.1-all, Wicks was rouled. Despite a tremendous din created by 14.003 fans screaming for an upset by underdog Long .Beach, \Vicks made both shots. A few seconds later, he was fouled .again and iced victory with two more free shots. After the game. Wooden addmitted. "That's the best defensive team we've met all year." Long Beach vaulted into the lead midway in the first half and led until 5:16 left to play when Henry Bibby tied the score at S0.50. Wicks rommitted his fourth foul just over two minules into the second haU. That seemed to doom UCLA's hopes but Wooden said later he was glad of the chance to rest his All·American. "Even with Sidney sitting there or< the bench. they're thinking about him," Wooden said. "Also, their big men hat' to keep going all the time Wicks was resting .'' Wicks didn't re"'fntcr the game untl' 7:27 was left to play. The rest did him good as he dominated rebounding the resl or the game and finally won the contest with his clutch foul shots. Turkanian said he thought his team did Y.'E'IJ against UCLA. "For most of the game, Y.'e too~ nothing but lhe good shot. But later we rushed some shols, and a gooc defensive team makes you do that.'' '"ff I had it all to do over again I wouldn't change a thing,'' 'I'arkania1• said. Who does Tarkanian pick? ''UCLA is from our area. Naturally. we'd like to see them win." In tht · consolation game. free throws also decid· ed the issue. Pacific's Paul Scheidegger hit two in the final 14 seconds to ice an 84.81 victory over BYU. The Tigers finished the year at 22-l and BYU fell to IS.II. Wooden said after the championshir game he was surprised by Tarkanian': Z.J zone but not concerne~. "We'll play defense with anybody,•· he said. \Vooden said his preSfnt team wasn'' as good defensively as the UCLA club~ which featured Lew Alcindor. ''Lew's a pretly good defense all b:' himself," he said. \Vicks was named tht: toornamenl'r outstanding player. Also named to thl all-tournament team were George Trapr and Ed Ratleff of Long Beach, Curll: Rowe of UCLA and Gianelli. \Vicks' 32 points in the two game: gave him a career total of 1,385. He'! fourth on UCLA 's all·time list. 16 point: behind Walt Hazzard . Miller was on In 2, some 20 feet f[Om the pin. He left his first putt 2•. feet short, then missed the 1econd r>Utt, knocking him out of a share of the lead. Miller, 23. in his third year on the tour, was in tear& as he signed his card for a 72 par on the 6,943-yard In the three-site tourney here marking the third leg of Lhe World Championship series, the No. 1 seeded player i-' Australian biggie , 1970 Wimbledon cham- pion John Newcombe. Also seeded ahead hand-picked 32 man Ashe, No. 2; and Rosewall, No. 3. of Laver Jn the field are Arthur Australia's Ken Ex-Oklahoma Coach Dies While the World Championship show is picking up again since the aeco~ 1eg ouUng at Sydney. Australia. tw weeb .ago, Laver last Friday night w the New York phase of the Tennis Cham- pion Classic series to raise his 1971 earnings to $160,000. The Classic and the World strie.s art not connected. The $&1,00'.I Chicago tourney, offering a top 1ingles priu of · $10,00J, will be contested during the wttk it tl\ree sites in a schedule the sponsors hoped wouJd perk attendance . After two.day seSllions 11 Wheaton (111.) College and a Bl~ Island 1111.) high achoo!, the tourney settles down Friday at Northwestern University's McGaw Field House for the fin.it\ three days concluding Sunday with the UU1 round . NEW YORK (APl -Allltough stunned by the sudden death of athletic direct.or Gomer Jones, the University o f Oklahoma's basketball team will go through with thia evening's game in the Nalional Invitation basketball tourna- ment because "we feel that would be Gomer·s wish." Jones. 57, football coach 11 Oklahoma in 1964-65 and in hill si1th year as director of athletics, collapsed and di~ on 1 1ubw1y platfonn Sunday night while waiting for a train . He and other members of the Oklahoma party, In· eluding his wife. Jeannette, were en route to the theater. Coach John MacLeod, who wa~ 1tan· ding next to Jones when he died, 1ald, "We're going to play the game becaul!il we fetl that would be Gomer'a wish." Oklahoma wa1 1eheduled to meet thfl University of Hawaii today ln a first.- round game. Dr. ·Pele Kyle McClrter, acting presi· dent of the unlversit)l , i1sued the follow- ing atalement: "Coach MacLeod, the Oklahoma team and our entlrt official party are &tunned. The world of lnterrollegi1le athletics has lost one of it! finesl leaders, but we 1l the univer1ity are also overcome with a grtat iense of personal loss. "II is our 1incerest judgment that It wou ld be in accordance with Mr. Jones· de1lre:a that the game go forward ." Jone.s was a fJmlliar football name dating b1ck to the mid·l930s. A native of Cleveland, Ohio, he was 1 star lineman for three years at Ohio State. He co.ached at John C.rr;oll University and Martin& Ferry, Ohio, High School prior to three years ol Navy service during World War II . After spending the 1~6 season as an aSllislant at the Uni versity of Nebraska. he moved to Oklahoma and served as line coach for 17 years under Bud Wilkinson. He succeeded Wilkinson as head coach and his 1964 team posted a S.f..1 record, including a 3&.19 Gator Bowl loss to Florida State. The next year Oklahoma's record was 3-7. clim axed by a 17-16 loss to Oklahoma State In the flnale. the first time in 20 years the Sooners had lost to their intrastate rival. He ~tepped down as CQach shortly arter the season although hi11 co ntract had two years to run. GOMER JONES Z4 DAllf fll~T ~. M#U 22. 1971 D .. ll Y il'llOT ~ .,_ 1.M ,.,,,.. LB Poly, Garden Grove Share HB Spike Honors By PHIL ROSS OI 1M DolltJ l"I• $*'ff Long Beach Poly and Garden GrO\'t bucked strong odds and a chiU~ wind 10 cop lt'am titles in the large and small schools' diYISIOO .11 the SOth annua.1 Southern Counties track and field meet Saturda)' at Huntmgton Bt'ach High. ~ usual pack~ throng m lhe south bleachers along v.·nh the athlelt's sta- 11oned m the north stands v.·atched the Jackrabbits from Poly upset fa\·<nd Centenrual. ll-29 in tbt large category while the Garden GroYe Argoo.1uts shad- e:d de:ftndmg utlist 1.tomingllide by a 31-30 ~ge m the smaller group. Area t.e:anu from host Huntingtoo Beach and Corona df'I )tar placed third and fourth m the smaU schools' team scoring with 23 and 1417. points.. J.tarina •tJ tied with Palos \'erdes for 10th in the large division v1hile. Sewport H&rbor was knotted for 12th with Eaenho\\·er. both "'ilh 71.J markers. Last yur·s CTF 440 champion Tony Knyt.Osiai. led Garden Grove to its small schools' \'ICt.Ory and walked off wttit the mee:rs ou1Starding aihlete honors. Tony K v.·on !he loog jump v.·ith a tJ-9•4 leap 4Hunungton·s Garth \\'lse posted a 23-1 career be:st for the runnerup spot 1. 1o1·as \'lctonous 1n his 4-w race in 49 0 o\·er P.fommgside·s Perctll l\ttl· ing and the anchored a second place Argonaut mtle relay quarat to a l 28 I mart. Tht onh· other individual double: win- ner of tilt da~· was Saddleback's blrly sprmter Ot,·on Trahan. 'mor in the small .schools" 100 and 220 dashes with i.·1ndy clockings of 9.9 and 22 2 mile races wbtle bettttmg runne.rup Emenon Divis of Pasadena by 3 4 """""' The clocking by \\'alker 1s a national seasonal p~p ht-st. Three other r .s. top marks for 1971 v.:etf" areompllSbed by Centennial half- miler Anthony \"eney. Blair 440 ace Ray Johnson and long jumptr Tony Brov.•n of Long Beach Poly. \"eney. v.·ho hadn't dipped under 2 00 0 in the half befort Saturday's fief'!. ran ooe of the most eiciting races of the da\". He stayed in the middle of the pack for about the first 600 or so yards of his Large.-schools' race: and then shot past Palos Verdes' Joe Berry 1o1·ith 2:50 yards to go. racing home in the: coUossal eartv seasoo time Of I :52.9. Johnson ou1Jeggtd fa,·or~ Carl Sha\\' of Momingsi<k. 48.2 to 48.4, in one of tht' small schools' 440 clashes. Brown soared 23-10~ lo win the large schools' loog ]Ump and establish the country"s best prep leap thus far in 'ii. Se.-wpor1's ~tark StevellS won the large schools' shot pul with a 60-10 hea\·e .,.,·ttile teammate Terry Albritton failed lo place. The Golden Aruli\'ersary show v.·as h1ghlighl.ed mMiway through the meet by the presentatJon of brome: com- me.morat1\·e mtdallions to coaches. meet managers. sportsv.-riter! ano officials .,.,-ho ha\·e hem associated with the meet al one time or another sinct its 1922 i..nceptioo. ........... IOI -1 Sn-I.Ole tk-Yl 'I ! 1111111~ tE11 .... ho-1 '' l J~ 1C.,.,_..U '' •. llou Ill Pol, Ht S Flr<IW< CM~!<l ltl no -1 """'"""" 1"'"" 111 ' "'""' !C"''""· r .. 1 111 J 5,, .. _ 11(-y) ?7.1 • 1..-f ILi p~~ z:) s ...__ lllot .... ! 2' 1 HIO -I T•11'an (»OdltOld:I t.f 1. T-lt ClrH ) 100 l. lroolc• (Momlll(p~! M.l I. l•!• tCo""'" ofl Marl 10.1 J. To:nev ,,.._ XI 11..J, no -'· Tr1Mn C ~Od~I 22.! I. 1"..,i. tlrM) n J l . lrocb (Ml)f"llln{pidod 22..J I. K......-n !El 00!"-l n I 5. Toatl CCCWW\I clel M¥) D.7. "'° !II•<• n -I. Kr?yooilt '"'"'-' G-1 "O J ICHllrog CMo•nlncl•ilH) lf.J J. WI'""""' (Nlfll '9 l •. OIWI (E111nc:l1) JO.O l.. J~ """'"") ••• VICTORIOUS SEA KINGS -Corona del lllar·s i\1 ck Rose lleft pholo/ ~prints to ,·ictory 1n his small a:hools' 880 race in 1 ·57.6 while teammate Carlo Tostin lleft photol l\"ins the 440 rela\" heat in 43.9 during Saturday's Southern Counties Spike meet. The DAILY PILOT Pe.rpetual Trophy. v.h1ch annually goes to tht meet's fastest mile.s. 1o1·as nabbed b~-Rich \\.after of Arroyo \\"alker zipped around four laps in 4 I; 9. to ~-m one of the large schools' ..cl (ll•<e 11 -I Maftlrf i(,..,1ron+•I\ "1 l ~-1-..0 Oc<t>..-<l If• J J-IEoMrt"""""" If I ... ~ ... ..,, •"•-) ""1 1W!l+-y 10<•~ #If u:;i 1<1ace ' -l G•I•,.. l ~v•""'I "'I 1 C•1'1<1 os....,...v Milli! #1 1 l L..i.s,... "L-'•..vGOI #1 f I ••• .., , ...... v..-oe.J 1t I l Gr........, ((t '>- 1..-...111 10 1. 400 (llKt 71 -I, JOIO""°"' !llllrJ 412 1. 1111"' tMorn"'91illt ! 41 • J, McC .. llOuVft CAM•i.91 •·• 4.. .-O;l•H 1s.~r1l 51.i $. Jtr1n ... Y CL.I Mll'Mll Jl.6. MO (lll<t ll -I, llMt /(IH'ltNI Oii Merl l :S7' 7 II"'• (t11Wft!OrM) ,,y' J. JOIOno IE! Dw-l ! $'I •. J-Mll'I (.4¥111""") t:n.• $, Mon.ltllll t~ ..,.,.,,...,,) !:00 l. Rugged Schedule UCI Basketball Tea111 ' Plru1s Exte11sive T1·ips By HOWARD L H.\~l>''f An old I\a\"y slogan used lo go something hke this: Join lhe· Xa,·y and see the \l'orkl. Coach i1m Tift could 'ery •ortll trampose the sk>gan lo read · Jorn the UC Irvine basketball team and set' the United States. College basketball schedules a r e something that takes lime to develop and t:CI has iv.·o outstanding trips lined up for the next two campaigns after playing in :'\e11 Orleans and F'londa this past season. ~ext year 11 \l.'111 bt a four-ga!Tlf'. 10-day trip to the east coasl !or games \lith the L"n1\·ersitv of TennesStt. '''est \"itgin1a Lni\'ers11y·. Seton Hall and Army 1 t ''est Point. At home the Anteaters \I 111 en1ertain ~ t:ni\·ersilv of Ha1o1·a11. LSC of :\"ev• Orleans. SetOn Hall and Ctucago Statr along v.ith LC Riverside and other Southern California teams CCI will al5o play at1Cal State !Lon[!. Beach • and San Diego State and games ~i1th tC Santa Barbara and Loyola tnr\"f:l'"Slty ~ dlst10C\ poss1b1ltt1e:s "Rjght oo• ~ havt nine or 10 game!'i -..-ith un1vers1ty division teams .. , Tift says. ··\\"e arf' playing two team!'i ~!ere:! In lhe .'\ IT. tournament Jn ::-.·e"'' "'l'ork 1Hai;i.·a11 and TennesSttl and onr in thf' ":\CAA unh·ers1ty dh·rs1on p I a yo f Is iCSLB I. \\"e ¥' also playing !he top rated team 1n the KC.• •. A rolltge d1\·ision (l.Sl""SO • ., \\lute the An1ea1er S<'hedU!e isn't com- plete for next season. there art ~ games listed . Norlllem Arizona JS anothtt possibility and 1ht three competing team1 iwilh l:CI 1 1n the hohday tournament, are still undecided "I wx:lerrta nd that Long Beach IS having troublt v.·1th a bov. ling lOUrm- ment at tht Long &am Arena ne1:t sea- son and there 1~ a ~1b1hty our game with them might bC' pla\ed at tht Anaheim Con\Mlioo Center ·· T 1 I I re\'ealed Looking ahead to tht foUov. 1ng 5e850ll. UCl .,.,iJI go \\·est to the Hawauan Isl~ lo pla~· one or 11o1 0 gam6 .... -11h tbe l'ni\'ersn:-aloni; \1 1\h cine or t1o1 0 other LA Wilis, 101-98~ Wilt on Bench J~GLEWOOD IAP1 -As soon as Jem• \\"est was declartd out for tM re.it· or the National Ba.ske.tba ll AUoc1a- luJO seasoo. LO!! An&t&es Laker roae:ll Joe Mull.aney began jugghnf! hl5 lineup in ~ of findmg another "'Inning com- binatloo. can 11 be that hes rou00 it .... ,th 'i-foot-l center l\'1lt Clll.mberlam oo tht _, 'The ma~t\P Chambtrlam pla)td in the ftnl Quarter of Sunda~ n1ght"s 101 -98 \ld.or) f.l\e:r Ox-f\e:w ,.ork t\rudi:s but !hen wasn ·t ~ again. ?.lullaM}· prefer- red to fl'·e )OWlg Rick Roberson a bit ol playing Ume and t~ ~'BA a>pbomcn did we.II. gnbbuic ll rebounds .,aWt the dtfendio( worJd dwnp1oru. /1 le.arm in t~ islands.. _,fter that it eould easily be a t r i p lo Big Sky country against such foes .u Idaho SI.ale. lM-lJru\·ers1ty or ldho, ~1ontana State and olhers in that reglOn. "If our schedule for next ye.ar isn't fln1shed by the lime I go to the !\CAA COO\'ention in Houston. I hope lo add a couple of more: out-Of-state games ... Tift said. Tift 1s a member ur the rtse.'.l.rch committee of the :\"CA..\ Jor Di.strict g ··0on·1 ask me \l'hal that e:ntails r1gh1 now. because I really don "! know;• he told lhe DAILY PILOT. The Houston COO\enUon ._;u be: held 'Tuesday through Sa!urday in coo1unction \\llh 1he :\(.-\..\ un1\·ers1ty d1\·1s1on cham- pionships Coast Area Spike.rs Shine In HB Classic AJUxiilgh none or them "·ere: able to gh.Illet the: mttf!'i outst.anding athlete: honors, Orange Coast area track slars still ended up ~·1th lhelt fair share of hardware in Saturday's SOth aMual Southern Counties track and field meet at Huntington Beach High. Host Huntington finished in third place in the: small schools' categtiry betllnd strong aggregatiOl:lll from Garde:n Gro\·e: and P.1omingside. Oilers Steve Pickford 11 4.7\ and Garth l'"ISl' t14.IJ w ·ep1 10 a surpnslflg 1-2 fmish in the 120 high hurdles while \\"ise: esl.llblished carttr best of U.l for himself 1n placmg SttOnd in the king Jump behind Garden Gro\ e's classy Tony Kryrosiak. Oil City miler John P.!ult1ru equal~ his previous best with a 4 2:4 4 5eCOr)(I place finish behind Pdark Sch!Oing of Garden Grove while Huntrngton shot pul- ler! Tony CianUi ISl-3~1 and Bob Dreil· lng ~51-81.;1 went~ in their specially. Corona de! Mar al.so had its O'.t.'fl l)('rots 1n finishing fourth in the: small schools" d;\'is.ion with 14~ poinu Sea Kmg distance ace '.';ick Rost took his 880 race in 1:57 6 "htle mate Ttrn Anderson was fourth .in anolhe:r aao con- test rn 2·01 3. Their Junior ~print malt Carlo Tos11 .,.,-1..5 fourth in the 100 and fifth 111 the Z20 at 10 2 and 22.7. Estancui had Bob Bell caplure a I S9 4 runnerup spot bthtnd Anthony \"ene~ of Cenlmnia1 in tht small schools" 880 while Eagle Eric Olson new !ICl O for 1 ourth m one 440 ra« ~hss1on \'1eJ0·~ Ed R.adermacher 14 Z7 61 was fourth in his smaU ~hools' milt ract •·hi lt 1ofar1na·s Bob Briclmtr 1 • 24 i 1 W8$ ~ in lus large sci"n>l."' ra~ and \'ik1ng malt 01\"t Lockman v•etll 9.2.8.4 for fourth in the 1u.·o milt Xe1111-port Harbor picktd up 71.; In the large SC':hool!' scoring with ~fark Ste\"f'TIS (60-101 winning the shot put and John Kar.me.r 1 M i I) mg for fourth m lhe tu,h jump. I UO lll•<t 11 -l. kH linO (Motnl"PIOI) l :Sl• '· It'll cE1ltn<:ll) 1:5'.• J. For•• (PM XI l:ff• • AnCllH'-(CO'-!It! Mir) J:Ol.I J • ..,..,,. !El Moc!..,•> 2:01.1. Miit (Rtct 11 -l, M•rs ... lt l lledDndoeJ 1:2'• 7 Ko"'lv IPOl't"'llll 4:2•• J. Ntll (11. llmlrdl '111 4. M~tlt CSIH'Vllt) •:l't,I J. ll(~lnQ (Avllt""l . "' Miit !Jl:1ct 11 -l Sctlolliflt IGIF'dWI G rowl • 71 I , Mulh~I (Hunltnll'"" 111<1') ,,,._. J Mlptl iStn Mi•>tlOI •:71.0 • lltdt"""cMr IMIUlon Vltft) • 11• S L..CI fll H•bttl <:l't1. T-m;11 -1 Kr.o.iri (SI ........ d ) 9:1• J 7. KoPOt• (5t. JON! BOl<O) t :l't.O J. Rt,.,.., CL.I Ht-! t xi J •. :SOUz• llledOoc!O) f :ll.l $. Gr11;1 (.4w11t~J t ·:U I uo HH -l , Picklor'd (H,,..til>Qllln altltd!J H' 2 W••e (Hlll'li"91en l1tCft) 1• I J. Ltilli.. !Ht*• -rnt) IS I • W•ltD!'I tMoml"'-'iOt) U.J 1. U,_,.by (G1rdtt1 Grovt) IS I, ' 1111 LH - 1 Llltnby !G1tdfll G1'9Wl H A 1. 11~'"" IHt-•,,..I 1' I l Gl>l"ffo 111 .... 1 lf l ' '-'"''•"' !111-r~I lt t S. Gulllt< jLP Wlbonl ~.I. Ull •tllV -I l l1or •l • 1 Tit """""" 'f!PtT• °"""' ...... (O<O"" Otl Mtr 4l f •. Plut X -4..J i.. 1-i•-nt'-'1 M•I• ,.11v -I Mornor>Ql"1t l 1• l l G...-dtft G•~•t l 711 l Ntfl l ll 1 •. Un Mir-J:Jl.t i. l rN 1111 Polt vt~I! -1. F1r.atl l51N_.tol 1 .... t. ,,.,_.. (V1len<:il l U-• J Wlltl~ll1k! (Notre DI-) JM 4. C111ro (Sa~!o1510 ) !l-0 $ Allt'Nn IS.Ii Vtt...,.l lM. !r.ot p~t -I. K1yt (51n M1rlM) J.).4<, !. 1'01!melt IAv,11"'nl S\ I• 1 J (larelli (H""I""'"" Bucnl Sl·I·• • Drtll•roq [Hynhr>QIOn l11d!l JI"''·• s DIVf'>OOrl (El Dor•DO I ~s·' Ki\I~ 1~mp -I Dollney (!.onorl) 6-4 7 ~ (Lt H1br1J 4-l l Moort !Pomon1) •l I. E!Hr ILi Q~lnlt ) ._, S, G1tc!ntr (Gtrdtn G.-.vt) M . l<>ng !YmP -I. K<lYIOSllk (Gt•d.,, Gr9vet ,,.,,~ 7. Win IH,,..!ington Bt1c1'> '3.1 J. Wllcr.,...~I !No!r• Demel 11·10'. i. RobPrion IMOrnln111kltl 11·10 J, Ga•c!nt• jG11dtn Grove) l1-t\o. ~Ina! S<ore1· Garoen G•ovt 11, Mornlnt'•~t JC, Hun!lng!M Be<itn 1J, Corona del Mtr U'h, How· !!>Orne I<. !•ddleDoac~ and 811 lr IJ MC~, lltOonc!• 1...i San Morfr.a 11 •1cn. Notre °""" 917, S"•. Btr~•td f, S1nll1wa, L1 Ktb•1 i ncl A•llllon I N~- Area Calendar HERE COMES TONY -A small schools' 440 race is Percell Keeling. Tom ,,.illiams of 1\efl and Estancia's "·on by Garden Grove·s Tony Krzy1osiak at Satur-Eric Olson trailing. Knyzosiak. urned in 49.0. ,,·as day's Southern CountJes meet v.·1th 1.lorn1ngside·s accorded the meet"s outstanding athlete honors. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Spence Batting .429 Three A1iteater Plnyers Hitting at .400 Average A dilemma exisl.!i fo: the l"C ]!'\'Ule baseball team but it 1s ont that coach Gary Adams lS happy abouL 1l1e lop l\IO regulars tn h111111g are both first basemen and ob\ ious~· \\'Ofl .t be. on !he playing field at the same time. Tom Spe:nC'I':. a returntt from last 5eason ""hen he led the team 1n home: rwtS and rbt. 1o1·as sideltnt'd \li lh a leg injury for st\: games and in his plaC"t \\'as freshman Jeff ~faUnofl Sptn<'t 1s billing at a .42.9 clip and ~talinoff 1s uNI with Rocky Crail;. s'lartmg C'211tl'rfttldn. with a 400 mark. Craig. tht tl'am s leading hitter a :i.ear ago. "'as ltkev.1se sidelined •·1th an 1n- JU~'. miSSUlg fL\e romplele game.s and p1nch-h.Jtung m st\"traJ others Dt-spite his absence from lhe hneup. Spence 15 lted "lll""Jlh '.\ltke: Saska for the rbi lead v.1th nine:.. Craig, by the same token. has two homers m 11 gam~ and as lied with shortstop Dan Hanse.n 1n Lh1s depa.rtmeflt. Bob~ Farrar. the only player lo par11C'lpatl' 1n all l"CI ea~ over IM t•o ~ear span, tw tht most hits jJi/ and also the most plate appearances 1l\t Antea1er team baltmg &\'er.tgt' Is hl'alth'i' 11 a m mart. On t~ pitching mound. ~lief rur Tom O'Connor has the m0!1 •W with a 4-4 record. Of the thref: .rtuters wilh fivt game:s ; apiK'f. Bob Barlow has the be:sl ER."., a I 4;, mark for 30 2 mn1ngs. Denni! '.\1cholson and 'Tom Olxld. IM otber two, boast ident1caJ v.on-losl r«'Ord v.·1th Barlow. :Z-1. !\"icholson is tht striktoUI leader v.ith ti 1n 3-t .:Z Innings ,.·1th Dodd second at 21. Greg Pennington. the relief specialist from Saddlt"ba rk College . has struck out 19 in 13 2 1nnmg~ and has a 0 Gt ERA U(I l'tTC"llOIG •ECOllOS fl• G•-1 ••<•••" .... °" ..... ..... .,Ir' 1 0 ••1•ll l••t:O ,.........,_ I t I 0 \J~ 1 I I 1) lt t• .. o c-•••is~J llJ •lll;ot I••-~ I X; 1 r. S 1; 1• I d '°'-<""""'"-""' I ll-<JH J.o•t~n10. ""°"""" 0 D 0 I) ~ l 1 11 J~ c-s J 1 "*' 1' n 11 '' =1 • '' T"''' >t • IJ J 1111 1" 1:· lOM II) ~lo9 U(I OA"lltO A(CO!l:DS "• 0.•"-I ..... , .... -· --(••<1 ""' G•...,•tv .. _ -, ...... ··-'~ ··~ ....... """ ' S"o .... \.,....,... ..... ·--""'"'""°" '~~ 0 eo-i ..... .. _..,.._ ·- . ... , .. , ........... l ••l l ll l t .iM 11 ~·1 11$19 1J?ll f 11 1 1C .Ct II lll 11 11 1 I 1 I Cit 11 .. • ll I J 1 J - 11 •1 I 1' • I I o 0 .)01 ·~·••llfl1...1Jl 1 1 1111tr•m s •1 , ••• ,. lll 11 11 11 11 1 ' • s • ~ •11 lltllll""l nu • 111 1 l!1' 11.IJ u1 1111 rn •01111:s1 ,,,,,,l b!\ 1} l~ I .o J 0 I I l4J •1•1•111 1 1 111 t 111J l lt11-W' 1111 111111.1,. t 1& 1 ) t I I O t 10 \I JtlJOllll l~1 , J ••••••• -11 t I t I I I I I «:I) , . . . ..... -""7tlllo2'U thU ,l11 FAST~ST IN U.S. -Ray .Johnson or Blair nips 1ttorningside's Carl Sba\.\· m the small schools 440 Saturday at Southern Counties. Blair ..,.-as clocked in 48.2. fastest p;rep mark in the nation in 1971, \\"bile·· Sha"· stopp~ the v.·atche.s in 48.4. '- - Stunning Loss Bucs Blmv Lead, :· Split Twin Bill ·. Orange Coasl College's 8-6 baseball loss to host San Diego in lhe second hair of a doublehe11der Saturday could haunt the Pirates the rest er the 1971 season. Coach Barry Wallace's Bucs won I.ht opener by a 9-4 count and appeared headed for a sy,·eep, holding a 6-0 lead going into the home half of the sixth in the nightcap. But the Kn ights scored four SOUTN CD•ST COHl'lflt•NCI. 1111 L T \ill 1'111!1•!0<! • ' 0 Ml. Si n Antonio J l O J Ctffll OI l ] 0 31, Stn D\1110 Mt J• J J I lit S1nDI"° l J 1 lh Orl"9• CCMll! l O S.nt1...,.. o o S•lurdlY'• Sctrn 0•1n~e C11o1n f·I, Sin Ditto 1·1 F11ll1r10n .... Sol~ D!09CI Me11 0.5 big ones in lhe sixth and then forced the game into extra innings with two in the seventh. San Diego then won It in the ninth on a LWl)..run homer by Jim Matlock. The stunning setback ran OCC 's South Coast Conference mark to 3-4, four games behind circuit 1 e. ad i n g fi'ullerton (8-l) which won a MD Faces Saint Nine After Lo ss Maler Dei 's 1ttonarchs drop- J>Cd their Angelus League baseball record lo l·l with a 7-0 setback against the defensing champion Bishop Amat Lancers Saturday on the Monarchs' diamond. Coach Bob Wigmore's Maler De:i nine will attempt to right its paU1 Wednesday when it Aosts..Sr. Anthony's Saints. Saturday was definitely not the J.-fonarchs' day as they "'ere able to punch out only tv.·o hits I singles by Chuck Al'tGELUi LEAGUE • ' ' e i-Amal ·M.t!H Dti l'lus X Sf. Antl'torly • Seryl•t :SI. l'tul ' • S1tvr•1,•1 S<tr11 •l"-Amll 1, Mite• 0.1 • 1'1111 X s. sr. A~t"°nv 1 ,s...,u, ~. St. l'tul 1 WIKIMMl•1'1 Gtmel SI. "•~I .. Bl•-•mu St. A1t,..flfl¥ a! M11tt 0.1 .Strvht ,ii P!u1 X ' .. • ' ' Adams and Mike Kemmesat ). The hosts did threaten seriously on one occasion, though. Trailing 2-0 in the bottom of the fourth, Mater Dei load- ed the bases with only one out. A squeeze attempt "'as squelched and turned into a double play when a Monarch batter missed the ball. He was called out on strikes and the incoming baserunn er ~·as erased to complete the 't"1:in·killiny and snuff out the .potential rally. : Amal enjoyed its biggest in· "11ing in the three-run seventh when the Lancers taok ad- vantage of a hit, an error and three walks. pair from San Diego ~iesa Saturday. Orange Coast will try l• rebound Tuesday. traveling lo J\o1L San Antonio. Thursday the Bucs host San Diego. The Pirates also jumped off to an early lead in the first game, scoring a pair in the initial frame and three more in the second. They added a duo of tallies in each of the eighth and ninth innings. Pete Pijl continued to hit well for the Bucs with a trio of singles in five trips up in the first game. Teammates Jim Hawse, Steve King and Don Snyder all collected two hits each. One of Hawse's blO\\'S was a triple that scored the two Iirst inning runs. Billy Powell had the other extra base blo1v for the Bucs with a run-scor- ing double in the second. Jn the nightcap, Pij!, Dan Clark and Bob Leavy banged out two hits each. Leavy (tri· pie) and pinchhitter Jay Love (double) had extra base hits for the Pirates. Love 's twl)..baser "'as a 4~ foot shot off the center field fence in the sixth inning and Leavy's triple came with one out in the eighth. Both were left stranded. Relief pitcher Marty Quisen- berry saw action in bot h games. picking up the victory with four innings of 1vork in the first, tilt and taking the loss in !he nightcap. 1'111, ~, Cl••"i:. 7b l'awell, Jb HIWK, lh ltlY .. , II "IRST GAME Otlntt C1to11I 0) .. ' ' . . ' ' ' • ' ' ' • • . '" ' ' • • ' ' • ' ' ' • ' ' • • ' • King, It R•mlre1, rf Snyder, t scr.o.111e•. o Cunnlneh1rn, p Hln .. 1v, oh Quh...,bl•r~, 11 • • • • • ' • u • • • • • • • • • • Tot1l1 • • ' " 1111 Dilw /41 •• ' ' • M•llflt\, ,b Me•111d, ,r c°"'"100 ... St1l•n1, \ti Helftoc\, lb MCGh en. cf ~ ...... ,, McCasHn. c Waychtk, • McCr~c~rn. o To!ll1 ' • ' ' • • ' • • • • ' • • . '" . ' • • • ' • ' ' • ' • ' .. • • ' • • • • ' . ". ?:IO 000 071-t 11 ~ O)(I 010 001-ol 11 4 SECOrtD GI.ME Or11tff Co.ii (ll 1'1!1, cl Hl1tnlv, lb Pow1ll. :lb Lave,·P~ llaws~. 1b Clerk. ?h Lfl\CY, n McNttlV, II l()n9, er Wllkt"'""· c Sn~dor. c P11rl, p Qui\t"~'"'• " To•t ll .. ' ' ' ' ' ' . • • ' . • • ' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' ' ' . ~ . Siii DitN tt> .. ' • Mlll<K-. 11> Joitn.o ..... 7b MOl'"ltld, rl ,lon~e•a, rt Cn•on1do. u H~l!rlcl<, lh SIA!tOI, lb McGn..,., <' lloV81, II McC11li11. c Han•Cl'I!. • Sttnlev, • Whit11ktr. • McC••c~ln. p Tott l• ' ' ' , ' • • • ' ' • ' " ' • ' ' • • • • • • • • ' • . "' ' . • • " • ' ' ' • • ' • • ' • " • ' ' • • ' • • • • • . "' ' ' ' . • • • • ' ' • ' ' ' • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' OtA1tV• COl!I 5an Qlqo . ". 001 .JO? 000-t 11 s 000 001 202-1 • ' DO YOUR OWN THING ORT!iOPOX If aolf Isn't enJoyablo It .~ shouldn't bo ployed. For that / \ reason I never crltk:lze a player 11 \ who chooses • somewhat un. / orthodoJt method to make a shot ~ \ succetd ... ~f isn'f a matter of how, but rather of how in1ny. The illustration shows an ex· \ ample of hoW a relatlvel)' inex-\~ perienced golfer. might 1?'9rform \'O ' better by resorting to • some-\ ~ what 1bnormal type of shot. \ ~ This situationgenerallyrequJreS; \o I a hi&h pitch that would land on \i I the green. -.,_. But some players find it dif. \ I ficult to hit shots with high. lofted clubs.· They feel more s.ec:ure with a 4.-. or 5-iron. ~·; Such players should take · th• -r .. •• shot that is easiest for them. Jn this case it's a run-up shot with the less·lofted club. IRON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTSJAmold hlmer"sbooldlt .. Hittlnc th• Iron•'" &Nes ch1mpJonshlp tips lD tltlp sh•l'PM }'Oltt. lronshot technlqUL S.ftd 20l and • 5tlmplCI, nturn M¥lllopt; ID Amokl Plllmer, in cer. al this nwspap.,-. Dowi1 Two Foes f\farina's Vikings and the Estancia Eagles went about their different ways over the weekend on the Orange Coast area swim scene and also came up with different results . Coach Chuck Morris' hos l Vikings once agai111. demonstrated their might by scoring 77 points to capture a triangular meet from La Habra (57~ and Fountain Valley (2'4 ). The Eagles of coach Les Cutler, meanwhile, swam in Ule Upland, Rela ys where they placed out of !he team money in all illree divisions. Redlands captured I h e varsity trophy at Upland with 215 points ~·hile El Dorado (201) and Riverside Poly (172 1n ) took home top honors in the Bet and Cee categories. Eric Files 150 free). Chuck Holloway (lndividual medley ). Kevin Williams (breast) and Chip Davies (diving) paced Marina's overwhelming vie· tory while Fountain Valley was unable to cop a first place spot. Estancia Bee M 11 t o n Kawabe established an Upland meet record in the 100 backstroke with a 59.3 clock- ing. Steve \Vebster was the best Eagle in the varsity division as he took a third in the backstroke at 1 :02.3 and a fourth in the 50 free at 23.7. Dan Kent of Estancia placed third in the 400 free with a 1:06.8 mark "'hile the Eagles· 200 medley relay team managed a I :19.3 third place clocking . In addition to Kawabe, \Vard Saunders was fourlh in bo1h the Bee 50 and 400 freestyle races. Other Estancia v a r s i t y med81ist.! "'ere Bob Petrina (4th, breast) and Doug Weiler (5th, back). Estancia's Jeff Davi! was fourth and fifth in the Cee fly and 50 free. ' Yl,,ily M1rln• 1n1 Un Lt H1•r• U•) l<v 200 MedleY Rt-11v -1. M1rl111 2. L• H1b•1. Winn Int time: 1 :41.J, 200 Fr-L c.tm"Ol'I Ill J, Mtlll>"f (Ml ). l(och., CLI. Wln11lnt 11mtl t !S'l.S. 50 ""'" -I. Flits IM1 7. Ntll- lll 3, Ctrdtr!IJ CM). Wlnnln1 llm1: 13 s. 20Ct tnc!J\oiduel Mt<lltr -l Hflll-•Y (M) 1. Uml>lrter (LJ 3. Sc,,,,11• /Ml. W!nnTM tlm•: !;U.S. Dl~IM-1. Dtvlt 1 /Ml 1. Gr"'" !LI l Goedt CM). Wlnnlnt POint1· •5.11. 100 Ft' -I. Hol'-•Y IM) 7. Hoolrl !Ml l. lll•m ie !LJ. Wlnnin1 flrne; 1.00.1, 100 Frtt -I Woll IL) 1. C•r-l !Ml J, s1~..-d !F l. No llftie. 100 Btcl< -I, UmlHlrftr ILi 1 . Hooos !Ml 1. Scl\clles CMJ, Wl1111l119 llmt: l:OJ.O, IOO FrH-1. Ctrn•l'Utl IL) 1. MtHbY !Ml 3. IElth lF). WIMlllW llmt:. 0:1'.1. lOD Brt•ll -I, Wlllltms IM) I. NllllO/t IL) l. Glvetis Cll, W!M in• llrnt: l:K.i. IOO Re!t¥-l, L• H1mt1r• 1. M1rlnt. Wlnnln9 f!mt: l :ll.1. ••• M1rln1 (il'~) 01\'>) LI" 11tl fl\I 100 Ml'C!ley RtllY -I, M1t ln1 l. l• Hobr1. Wl"nlM !Im°' l:.H.S. 100 Frff -I, Rollln1 !Ml 1 All1tr1t-lon (LI 3. Wlttm11t (Fl. WlnnlM lime: 1:0J.7, SC F'H -I . S1>rin~tr ILJ l . 0 'C<>f1· ltlll (Ml l. ROOl!tll>" (Ml. Wlnri1ne lirnt: l•.S . 100 ll'dlwlduol Mt<lltY -I. H•ll<I" Ill 7. OOlllHIUm IMl J. Abl1hor (fl. Wlnn!M 1lmt : l ilO.j_ 100 Fly -L H•l•ln (LI 2. S1>rl1t11tr Ill 3. F•hrt'tlkrvti {Ml. Wl1tnl"11 time: I, lC.7 • 100 Frn -1 Mc•d•m1 II') 1. llotrlnsCIOO !Ml l. O'COl'Mll tMJ. Win· nlM lime: .H.I. 100 i!t1c• -I. ROllin1 CM) !. l1Jn (Ll l. J1c1<-IF), W!nnl"ll llrnt: l:Olt.1. .00 Frtt -I Tt!m•n ILi l. Ctn· boom (Ll J, F1hf'rirv• CM). Wlnnlnt llrnt: •·ll.i . 100 lttll! -1. Doll~•um IMI 1 . flomlnq Ill l. McC•rlh, !Fl Wln1tl11W ''""'· 1:11.1. .000 F-rtt ~oltY -I. M1rl,.,. 1, F111,1nl1ln V1llev. Winl'ine tlm1 J J!.t.. ,_ ,.y IM"'I tl-1,,.,1 Lt H un Mt •ln• 1013 Ml<l'!fY RtllY -1. l • Hthre f . Fo111tffln V•lltv. Wlnnlroe I!-: 1:st.S. 100 Frtt -l. 11'1ct IFJ 1. M<><ldY fl) l. Aalr1mel (M), Winni"" llmti : l •ll,I. Pro Cage, Hockey Standings ... l11IH11 Dl,l1M . ' " ~ " " .. ~ ~~.,­ l"nl!1d.-t!llllt Ctlllll'l lvttei. I'd. GI ,. n " ,S11 s .531 I .lll JO ot• .. ltlmor1 Alltnlt Cl'IC.lnn1ll (f4'Y•lt nd CMtr•I Dl,11 .. 11 . ' . ~ P~t ••• ,flt • * " . " .. ·"' ·"' . lri W"lw" Olwl1l.,, Mlfil'HI DIYlll.., C:-Mll ... o,11(" Clll<eM Pnetnl• Dtt•olt 1111 L P«, M " 1, .~ ~· ll .1'2 u .. J.I .SIS II u JJ ,,., t1 P1ciMc OIYllltJI w ' C'l.IN •nMltl 4f 3" P(l, ~I ... s.,. l'rt ncl1<& •I 41 S1n 0 1""' «I ~1 s .. m. :. ~4 hortlal>d 11 " c-CUnclltlll ltlvl1IOl'I 11111 ... ... ·"' '* Sl~Y'I llhllll\ £1111,,_.1 nt, PMi10tllllll1 l lJ Ch~ llt, Alltnl• In c1rn11nc1 n.t 0.l•all IN ' • " ... P'of'lltnd 1U a11tt1le Uf, •verllma Pl'loMI• 11'-S11ltlt 101 O<lly e1m11 Klledultd. l''Y'llfncl Ill. Cltvtllf\d 110 i'MlecMIJilllt 12!1, atlllm..rt lot BOllOl'I 13.S, Cl11clnn1!1 110 O""'olt 111, Clllctto 111 LM A"9tlt1 1~1. N-Yto•lo. tt San Dino U7, Pt>oenl• 1 U $"1111 llf, S..n Frtn<IKll ICli On:y .. ,..,.. IChtdUIH. T ... 1r'1 G•mH Me .. ..,.. Kl\tdulect. T.U1~•1 01.,.. ll .. vl ....... II 1111111 ,,_,11nd 11 ci.v111nd Or11, .....,. Kf'ltdultd. -V?h--- AU Ital Olv!Mol'l W L I'd , oa SI 17 .•lol ~ ,, .SJQ> ~ ~ ... • " •V!~l!ll 1(1n!\16,Y N-Yortl l'lor!dllN ,.lnJ!iu"1! Ci r.line 14 •• .4 i 11 .JJ +I ..flt II JO " .lilt 31 Wn l Dlvl11M . ' ut11> ~ 1l Prt, GI .~· lndl1n1 lol 1~ """""h!1 11 ct o ...... ., 11 '° 'Tt••• ,. so r.Clfncltfld dlvb!on flt~ .. , ••• ·"' ·"' S1tvnl1r•1 flhull1 V!rt lflolt ll.'t, "'""' Yotll: 1'J Dnll' ""'" ~tdulllf. 1uM11y•1 ll1wi1, c 1...,11n1 in. P1ttlb11f'9fo 13' Ut•h 111, KfillUC:kY lot Te1111 ll't, VlfQlnlt Ill Ftorldl1n1 lot, M1mP11!1 1oi O!liy •-I t(lltdUIM. TMIJ'I 0.!l'lfl Ul1h ti lndl1n1 Dtl1r M mft tClloodlllM . T~r'1 •-a Ntw .,_ 11 Mtm!H\11 Dlnv•• ti Ulth 0..tf 11me1 9cl'ltdulld. "" •11! Dlvl•I"' WLT,.11.G~ ~ 11 1 llS 31) " , .... " •• ,. c.;!IM!"" Norw Yo•~ Mar!l~I l<W"Ctl!O lkltlti• O.trulr \llt>eO\I~,, u 11 11 " 111 "' Jilt 71 ll " :Ml lfS H JO 4 n 130 11? 1'0 ll ll SS ltl 161 M 41 10 JO lfT '1• :to £] ' ~, lf1 11~ '#8'1 DIYltltft llllLTPll.GI' ot.Chlot<ll .. 11 • 101 Ml JI. LOUii ~ 71 17 n ]ti Ml",,_' ,, JO 11 6' 110 PllUlll1tc>l'lll H ll 11 U 111 ~1n111t11"v11 )(I u lt se 201 LOI Anwl.. 22 l1 11 5" l1S •• .. , '" ~· ~· "' VO Ctlll.,,..,I• 1' Ill J .Q lit ?I! c..Cll11ctrt'd d!vl1lan tine ltt1tn11r'1 1t .. 11lh lorDnlo 3, N•w Yor\ 1 Mot1lr111 I. ll111!1lo 1 Borlot1 J, l'Mltdelohl1 i St. L6U!J 1, Ot •roil ! LO'! Angtt .... P'l!lSll<lr•ll S111t111r'• •11u11, Mlnl!W'S0!1 '· Venc111,1v•r I C11!'6rn!1 $, LI» AnNlH 1 Toronto l, Phlltdth•h!t I, II• Chlc1qo 7, Oetrllll 0 lull•l11 1, Bost"" J OlllY e•m.. •thood11fl'd Ttd•r'• Gll'ntr N& ,..,,.., Klltd<Jltd. T~hlll1y•1 .. _ BuUtlo ti Nt w York St, Loul1 •~ V11>COUW> L111 .. ,,.,.!11 11 Ml-t• Ofilv e•ma 1chftlultd. Final Mat Sta11dings l111111 Ovll WtHllln1 Vtrtlt'r DAJL Y PILOT 25 For Coast Area Teams Ten·nis Summaries UC lf'flfle cu ill C•1tt• Slllfln (l\f-1! !II dtl. G'oul ((), 6-1, •·1 J•olon~I IH °''· W!IJOI'> t(I, •.;i. l-1, ••• Nt...W.Uell h) lltl. J°""-tC \, ...... , .. Arm11ton11 ICJ 4-t, 0.lt (I), 1·S, l.a, .. ) P•v•n UJ •1. Elltlm-(C), .. ), 1 .. , •• , Crill<' Ill cit! COit 1(), '-1. 6•1 -... Clloll>Hll •NI Crlpt def. Arm11•flht •»cl WllllOfl !CL 6-0. ._ • J1ll'°"fkl •lld NtC'>''ld (II 1111. GrflUI t»cl JOf\n\Of' t(), ... 3. '• Hewbrowll Mtd l'1Y.1n It) dot. co~ •nd EO.tman (Cl. •·l. •·? UC lf'Vlat Ill UJ l'ttlrt Dime Sl11tlh CPll~t Ol Ott. &t-n !fO ... l. ).1 •.. , Nil'WbfW9t1 tll dtl. L•Sllvt 1"4), ... w Allt ... IN) llef. Otle {II, '·i 1·1 "'"'n Ill llof. Rtll!" OU, 1·S, I} W.1!>11 lNI llH. 01po tO, l.J, 1-t N"Mrld ~II aef. kl>tf!tr 00, t·I , ., O.wb\9f Cllt-11 t nd C•IH Ill !Sft, l•~g,o Ind R'llly (N), t -t, t-l J.Olon1kl .in11 N1t11tr>d !K\ '"'· arown tnd All•tt Ufl, S.1, •1, • 1 l'IYtn t l>d Nf'Wbrove~ ~IJ dtf Mwr rt~ tnO W.il•ll lNl. 1•, l·S Vtt'lllY e.i11~ .'111'11 <1\'fl ••1111e11 Sln•IH Mtllatl 1E1J Ott Htrill !Eol •·0·1 dtf. RI~ Eo! t.fl1 d~I. B091rd /Ed i.o; dtl, McKinney !IEd' t-0 GtYner lE1I lo\! 0.6, 7·1, 1 ... , 1·6 R11u1ll !E1I kl&I O•. 1•, 1·1; woo •• 1tln1oo IE•l 11)11 1·6. l•. 1·'· f·6 o.u~1., MtllM•Wad1 !E1I la1t ta l'•iCf• 0••-(Edl 6-2, J.t; 1pl!t Wi1h Ancl•f>On·H•mllton l Ed) 6 I. ... Wllk·Morrl1or1 (£1) ioi.I 1-l, 1·1: , .. , ~ .. JMnlw \11rtlh EdllOn 111 .... 1 IJ\~I l•tl"'Cll Slnwltl Homnt··~-·E•l IOI! la ~·'-•Min !£d) 1 .. ; •-· wl"' Huntu 1-1 MCOllltle (£1) loll M. 1M £n•i.1 (£11 loot o Cl<ll !Edi H : k»t lo loc.k (Edi •• Dttnba\'.lt llE1) kl•I l•, 0.1 Oel.obl .. Ntlltl·MCCr1nn IEol dot F•illltr-S~on (Edi l·S; aet !11la·llodn•• !Edi •1 G...,r1n1111ls·i!t11rr1U (El) t1»1 t·t, , .. Y1r"ty n•11 Sa Y111t, Sint!H Mill•• (C) def. F•nanclu CS) 6.fl: dtl H1n,. ('l l·I: def. M1ggl1na CS) M ; !lei. OIM>n (S) I.fl Ov.,. !Ct ....,,, 6-•. t-l. 1·1. e.a Lewl1 !C l 1011 1 .. ; •4; WOt1 l•l, ... Guile~ !C l lit<! 1·11 won •·'· 1·1, •• Y•rtl!Y 1'11111111• Y1lt.r \'"°'' 11\'ll •11111 .. , llllWlt• ll:tlWC/V~ I,) lo!! 6·1, Won l-tft~ll (Fl Wflfl t-1, .. ,, •·•, .. ) CM .,. Sh•.,. (Fl won D~ <kl.11111, •1, •""t•!tntuol•. If I iolt ).I, won H . 6-1. 6-3 Prep Gymnastics II ••Milot lnw lllllfllll High be• -1, R111:lc1 !We1!miMl"l 1 S"itl'I !Ll~twood) ). J«>n1 (5o\ltn Hllltl. Winning IC"'• I'· Sll!ellon• -I. Ht!Tlt<I CL•lo.•~ 2. S..~mc11tr (W1t1rmln1te•J 3. 01rt1v· llll•t ll'••aden1l. Wlnnl119 1CGf1 1.1. Rl11g1 -!. Wlleel !L1k,...ood) 1. LU1'1<1¥ ISclllrn Hiii>) J. JOl'lr11on (W•ll· mln1ftrj. WINun• w;a•t t.), l'tr1lltl Oln -I . Tl<l-11 !l1~e­ -) 1. H•r1"frf U., M!lll~fnl J. Mul\Mlft CW11trnhUlf'I. Wlnnlno KOO"I I.•. F•N t•Ncl.,. -I Wurll !LB Miiii· ~Inf 1. lt\Nltl CW•l!mln1!1<l J. i!tHCh 1~111 TCW"r•n<f), WIMlnt ocore l.S. Loni hor.w -1. CIJTICO !S..Ulh H!Ull '· Fffrtlt !AnltlOPf' Vt llffl J, Gt•(ll (lelttw10<!). W1,...1n, Kort u TOO> TNm1 -I. Ltkrwood t. WtSI• mlnot...-J, Scl\ltll Hlll1. 0Yl'n!l.llllCI S•n Gt~i.i l11vU1rleQI Lorto l'ofll'lt -I. Corrlco !So<irn HUI>! I. Ftrrth tAnlt~ VtfltY' l. G1rc11 CL1•twOOOI, Wl!lt'll!W tOlll "~."' •••rclie -I. ZIPP (1'1,,.,!'t'!ll I Aul1t (Wntm1111t•• J. P1r,,uo (L~kn.D<ld). Winni"' >eor1 11_1 High bolt -I, Strffftl !L1kn-• 1 1111111 \W•Jlrnln111rl J. Oltttrlcn (Sa\.llh Hllll , Wlnnl119 loll! 25.1 1llng1 -\. '°""'°" !W•lmlnsltrl 1. 01r1>1 !El R1nc11o1 J. Jolin• (S.U111 Hlll1). Winni"' tot1I 11.t Sldtl'lor1t -I. Dlrbl'lhln• ll'1s1d-) 2_ S11Ym111,1r (Wtltl'l'llM!t!'l l , Lone (Ltktwooct~. Wlnnlne 10111 11.2 l'1r•llfl bin -I. Mun'°" (Wt1l- rnln11tr) J. Rude CLI MIU1~1n) l. Tlcl~ll ll•~t-1, Wl!lt'/M Nlflf 15.1 Hl1h tolnt t¥mn11 -1. llurlt (Wqlmll!J!HI t. Z..llP !Pt...,..,.>. rum to1111 -t. w1,1mlt11t1r 1. Sou"' HUl1, Lt1<1¥000CI Ult ). Ho Hit1h •Ytil1Cll1 WttlmlMNlr llMAJI ftl.•t Cd# '--l'lor'M -I. LICoe IWI 1. Tomb .. llo IW) '· Jon-IWI. l"olnl1: 1·',,_. 1•1rtlH -I. ltwlks tWI 1. Jollnson IWI I. '\ffrlof!. tW), P.-lnh; l.~lth blf -1. Ru1!c1 IWJ 1. JOM-IW) J. Ktlllnt (WI, P9inl1 1 · 1s1c1. hOr" ... -1 ~y-IWI ' E""'" !Wl I, Find! /WI. fttnl1: l.~••tllel °"'" -I. M-IWI 2. e.,.,.11 !W> J. Holm• tWJ. ~nh: 1 " 7if1n91 -1. JOf\n10n IW) I. EvtftM (Wl 3. Finch (W) Polnl1: l.J. JHl-•ound -I. J!l#ll\Mlft lWI •.&. Complete with wide profile and fiber glass belts. Foremosl"'Tigre belt 220 with 2 fiber glass belts ona2ply ' Starlet Dave Nanry and relievers Gary Simpson and Dafe Kiley .shared mound chores for Mater Dci. ll1flOI Amit Ol S11t:rrin, u S.nthtJ. 1b M11n«111, lO (arivtr1inc1, II \le......,I, Ill llOIH•, fl Pellltlon, rf Nf('(;l~MI. ( kn11•1," Tot1I• ·~•hflll • • ' • ' • ' • • • ' • Rustler Ace Captm·es JC Cage Scoring Title SC Frtt -I, M(Dawtlt fl! 1. A,.. dr~' (F) l . Brtlnev !Ml. WlnnoM ,,,.. •. no. 100 !ndlvld111! MedltY -L Mo!!allne ILf 1, F1bi1n IMI J, l •octt ll (F), W11t1ti1t~ lime· 1:01.1 50 F IY -1 MOfflln<I IL! 7 Frtd-- •i<-!F! J. Nol11t (Lf. Wlnnln9 timt: "" IO<I F• .. -t Wooctrv!I !Fl I .... .,... \!ranq IMl J Tit O.t'Wttn MoodY CL) I nd Ancl•.....S IF), Wl"nine llmt : 1:00 l, 50 Bacio -l , Wooctrun (Fl J. S...1u-I (Ll l. L""•t!I CF!. Winnln1 llmt ; J ·.IO • W•1t,rn Wntmln•t~r H11ntl/t'4itcn l••tn Mt tin• N.....,oort H1rtl!lr •"•he!rn SAn!t An• L(09rt We\lml~ltt• Wett••~ Hun!lnelon l••d• • ' • ' • ' ' ' • • , ' • ' ' ' • ' • ' ' • nylon cord body. ---Fed.ta Size Price F78-14 ...... 2.$& ···-21.a G78-1~ ••••• 2.69 ••••• 25.11 I Dual wbitewal tul:l tl- Flld. la ' ' ' • » • ' , • • • ' Selt11r, d CIOUtfl, ' Mtttf Oii lfJ .. ' ' . ' . i. ...... ,,. '' cen .... ab ' . ' . ' . • • ' . ' . ' . • • ' . " . ,,..,.. ~~ lftftl~,, Slrnl>llDfl, ,,.., l(!lf'<'. p A<11m1, 1b ittl'nmtH'. II Mltldotl. lb IOll1nry. 11 (rtll. f'f Tot111 ' • ' • • • ' • ' ' . '" • • • • • • • • • • • • ' . • • • • • • • • ' . . ". 1oono1-1 • 1 000000 0-0), , Golden West College's Chris Thompson is lhe area junior college s c o r i n g basketball leader for the second straight season. Thompson scored 769 poin ts· (13.3 average) in guiding the Rustlers to a 26-7 season. Saddleback 's Eric Christensen had the second best average (19.8) with 534 points in 28 games. Golden West's B r i a n Ambrozich had the third lop average (18.4), getting 535 points in 29 games. wh.ile :Two Tritons Selected To Coaches' All-league :·Katella"s Mark Steinmeyer ~ Tuslln's Paul Zyskowski 'fUe named co-pl;iyers of the rQr in the Creslv\tw \Lague ill selected by the circuit's Wcties. Orange Coast 11rea players l6 make the !$>·man roster were San Clemente's Craig Anderson and Steve Kalota . PllYtr, Sc""' P111I lYl--\~I, Tu1tl" 0.... $w1l11, T11lll~ 11611 l uv1!1, Foal~ljl Cr•le AMlf..,.,, S•~ Cl'"''"!' AMI ttt.,.!, Dl'llltl ..... ' ' • • • P11 Mcln1l1Y, \11111 "••- Tom J,.-. f:I Mlld~ftl M••~ St,i..mtr1r. Kalfllt ••Y Sctwt11. Foottrlll sr-1(1lo••, Stn cr...,..,.rt Ilk -J•ct!O"I. O••n•1 11!0" IOC!d, VUl1 Ptrk Jpt! H11t!ari, 1(1ltll• lr•d MCP!\HSOI\, 0''"" St1t1 Wf'li•I-. Klltftt ' ' • ' ' ' • ' ' F "'-•bit .,..,.11611: AM'IOI CNmltv ITu1Hn). lllll Htlm (f1111!~I. ""' A1f'l(•Alt fM(ulott v r,1oi. ltM '-~ "°" (Mlu lfll! V•1illl, ll l(f'I Price (Ml•· 1IOt1 Yll lOl. JI.., WtJt ll'ootf'lllll, l'ele s111,., !ltn cr..,.....,t•l. J,,, hl••M tOr1Mtt), !ttv• l1rebl1111 IYlll• l'trto. L ttrY JOl'lnlOfl !El MOClt~•l. 11rn 1lvtt11~ !El M00.~1 1. "8n 1111• 1 i.:~ttl!t l, Tom L•u~ ll<t1t!l1l. ((lotl1y1" of l!lt Vtlf! M•rt. Sr,1J1- INY1t 11(.•tt l!f) lllCI l'Olll ~,.~owtli.I ~ 111,1111,, - teammate Jim Anderson lol al- ed 573 in 33 tilts (17.1 per game). The fourth lop scorer was 5.addleback's Steve Minton with 476 points in 28 games for a 17.0 average. Orange Coast's leading scorer wa, Steve McLendon (400 points, 14.8 average). Oeldt11 Wt1I 01·11 Ch'11 T11Gm11...., B'1•11 ,lombroik rt JlmAn<11r1on M1rti: O!t~l1r Jeff POW91' Il le~ Btrnt1 ll"url lrown ' 11 II le •vt ll 1'0 lit ,,, ?l 3 1t ,11 11 ilS !I.I ll ''J 11 S1l H 4 31 111 IO ~11ll1 ll 13 " '°7 6,3 11 '' ~I !It 1.0 1t " ,, ., 1 9 107t76(13D 10 ll 11 17 3.1 50 Breo1t -I. Tlf'rY (LI 2. l!v1n• If! l . Fol>oln IMf, No lime. 1at F•1t Rtl•Y -I Lt Hlb•I 1. Foun!ll~ Yt !ltY. Wln"iMI 1;m1; 1:11.1. Uni Banquet University High·s basketball teams will be feted with an awards banquet tonight at 'J'urlle Rock Elementary School. Festivities gel under way at 7:30. The Trojans earned a ClF A playoff berth In their first season. """"'"' HttOor Morin~ An•lltlm LCM!ra S..nta An• W111m.~1!1r Wn!frn M1rl11t N...,..,,, tit rbcw Hu1ttl119lon ltK~ S1nt1 •n1 •111nclm L01r1 Prep • ' • ' ' ' • w ' • ' • ' ' • • Golf ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' M1l1r Oii Utt) 0111 S1rit1 A•t flil Htl"I Jot Cl'OOrn C•!vln G•thtrn Oirl C1rl1on iltlck Mt1t11 Mii Pl•tt 10 '' J u l.11'r----------;;;;;·---------------.1 ?S 16 l » l.Jil :: ,: : ~ ;; Why It Pays to Know Ml!tllt ll fMl !1, F11d (M) 1"1, Ir. win (Mj 60, ••l<h IM) f), Cl1rk (Ml If, M1rk111 lMI to. Mtrt. W~IHlold ..... Tottl' " ..... "' , .. ., ~.. BOB PALEY St.oltNel 11'·141 Eric; (hrl1!1na.n S!evt MlnlOtl Tom Glr'dnt, P•lt H""llW1011 BOii Li.lift •lrt E<fw••d1 llucfv t-lolmH Gr" DllmlMll11'11 5••~ OooMrlri., C1•rn..,c..,1, Tt1111 I It It hr .,. '9 '°1 1)0 &11 II I )I Jlj .Iii •1•110 If IG7 ~· 71~ 11 • ,. .. " '" ... HTJ!!!UJt 11 •l 11 IH SS1 nn,11•ss.• 1110'111• II I O 11 I J I l 7 I ! 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Se, If VDU n u '° 11-4 11 l11v1 th• 1tl9ht11t riotio~ tlut '10111 '' IS 11 771 • 1 ln1ur111ce could bt bett11, could olfer Size 078-13 ••••• 1.88 ••••• 2t.ll .: E78-14 ••••• 2.J?,7 ••••• K• F7B-14 •••• , 2.54 ,. •••• :5..18 G78-14 ••••• 2.69 ••••• 21.aa H7B-14 ••••• 2.95 • , • , • :Kl.a G7B-15 ...... 2.80 , • , ... 21.N H78-15 ••••• 3.01 ••••• 30.U ~15 •.••• 2,96 ...... ~ Tire saver special 3 days only (Mon., Tues., Wed.) Here's what we do: align wheels, adjust brakes. balance 4 wheels. 1088' liloel- BOii Au••I~ °"'"" Diiiie Steve S!lt!&-f flllb Adtltllft !1•v• S••lwi J•ll t.lblt O!htri '' t1 J9 7U 1.4 A... • )J J' 41 Uf • l ~ biller ,:r•oft,fio11, ml9hl oto1I 1111, ~~ ;: ~ ::: ! ~ ~· 111k ;1 .,~,, with th, "''" whe w on't Yes, you cen shop 12 to 5 Sundays, too, at any of these Penney Avto C1nt1r1: '! '! 1~ ;! ~: ~;1::.1• 1 ,':",11~1 .. •, 6 n 11 ' 111f;::~· ~d~·il ~!~ FASHION ISLAND, Nawport Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington '(ltfl• ; ~ ~ ': :~ SAFECO l!im ,, •1• l . 11111 St .. Ce111 M•••· Beach. Uie Penneys time payment pl11n . '' 11 11 INSURANCE P'h1n1 •41.l&OO ,, ,,, •n '"".,, L---------------------------•1 I I • • 4 • . . . ' .. 2f OAllY PILOt Mondat. Mardt 22. 1971 Irvine Co1nmunltt1 Theater · . 'View From Bridge~ Brilliant~y Staged By TOM TITUS Of .... OeW,. l"ti.t "'" Rartly, all too rarely, in community theater t h e r e comes a production in which all cmnponents -script, act· ing, dlreci.ing, set, lighting, sound -mesh together as the bone and sltlew qf an unforget· table theatrical experience . Such a production is, the · Irvine CommuniW Theater's staging of Arthur Miller 's ;. modern tragedy, "A V i e w ::·From the Bridge.·• It is. '. without qualification , I h e finest, most totally impressive piece of theater mounted on an Orange County community stage this season. This is the sort of excellence one might .upec:t from a eroup with Its own theater building in Which to spend weeks honi.ng and 'PQJishing both dram"atically .and technically. But the fact is that the Irvine cast had only one reb.earsal undei performance cood.iliOds .before ~ning "View" on Saturday night. makJna it! succtS! all the more phenomeual. Miller's play is not geared for such conditions -U is a difficult, demanding project both artistically and technically. Yet the [rvine players, working under the ad· ditional handicap of the death of a key actor less than two weekll before opening, have fashioned a minor mlrade. And if "View" ~ an entity u "" represents a tremendous boost and Jhe guts of Eddie, the prepared, ta the cornerstone play, is done s k I 11 r u 11 y , coarse. brooding Insteurity of the play, and given a although the screening of that feeds uPori the swtaining thoupUul, .comeassionate ln· credits in lieu ol a curtain of his own superiority •nd lerpretaUon': others of lesser call is more imaginative than consequence are b I ende d dramatlcaily 1 at is I y"J n g. erupts into violence when hi1 skillfully In to the action -Background music and sound iron will ia disobeyed. A truly Bud Emerson as Eddie's bowl· effects ate first rate, while masterful pe.--formance. ing buddy, Terry Fitzsimons lhe themf: music is as relevant Janet Gordon is equally and Bea Teaford as the squab-to its new purpose as it was brilliant as Eddie 's wile, bllng couple upstairs. Monte Jn its original function. Simt and Ray Jaoobs as the "A View Prom the Bridge" Beatrice, bringing the inner immJgration officers and John is clearly the summit of the outrage of he:r pal he tic Schaeffer, Ilene Gordon , community theater season in character to the surface. in George Spelvin, Harry Selby, Orange County. Only four a series of verbal clashes MJke Egan and Mason Dow more performances remain, at which are stunning in their in background assignments. UC Irvine's old Studio Theater crispness and d r am a t i c Mixed-media staging, the Fridays and Saturdays with economy. She a Is 0 suc·.'i"uii"'•'iifiisl~1~·d~esioi;toioi;IU~usiiiiitr~ateiii;;;th~e..ia~o~8~0~·~c1~ockiii:;,~curt;;;a~ln~.:;;;;;-~ Exel us iv• Showing TV·. 'DAl~·y· LOG. '; inprestigefor the!rvineCom--munity Theater in Orange County, it la oo less a personal triumph for director Richard , 1 Dow, whose stamp of quality cessfully reflects the warmth 11 and devotion of her role in her quieter scenes, particular· ly in her heart·rending appeal to her niece. . The fresh, untoudled Dower in this jungle of hate and suspicion is beauUfully in. terpreted by .Karen Card.tier as the niece whO cannot resolve her affection fur Eddie with her gen uine love for an LIMITED ENGAGEMENT "Something for Everyone" L_ -· _....._ ... ...____ ......._., .. -" may be found on. all phalli!! Monday cm .... J Uhll• of the production. No~ only doc!s Dow share primary THE BATTLE OF THE BUTT! Evening ·MARCH 22 1:00. llJ: " ... Jlfry °""· D UllC N...mc. Ttn1 """"· 0 n1 Allt• Slliw l'iutJb Ill Pt!er L1wlord, Alltn Stlerm1n, DI. Joe T1klmla1. Cilal'O ICO·hoab. O SI& O'~ ....,.: (C) (90J "ltlMI lafidtl" Part I (lliocn11llY) '59 -Cr•IOIJ P9C[. Dlbor1h Kerr, [ddl1 Albtrt. Thi df1ma!U1tlon of Sll•ll•h Gr1hlm'1 lllMI 1bo!Jt her bta11f!ln1 1 Hollywood columnist 11ki liar tOmll'ICI Ml~ f. Scott fltz. 11r1ld. 1 rre•t llO'l'lllst on lh1 "" downrrlde. ODlctVu ~ ·, m TH flllbU ... m@ID ""'"' 1!1 Mllffllll~ ''Vl1!t to !ht World i' el MUffrn• #1." • :: IBCIJ-/W-/SpW I!) filW fa•llJ 11)-14 : . m Wi•11 .. Adwlrtwt r· Ill) LI Min FnlNlr •• Ctmlltlo al ""'9 Jl111 Htwlllom1. ,15., Art Stltdit ''Maaks & ColtUmtL" • ~IO 0 Cnrdld C.11tr11 . m TM flJin1 J'lun llJ(IJ NIC ,_ mHod~Ltdfi ,• 9(])C8S Ntn GI s.1tcttt1 Fil•1/1111111a11 m n. o.wrt •""'1 l EI!) LH Olridtdn 1:05 UE) AquJ Tt•1 P1f111• l!JO 1J 9 (I) fflre't luq (II) Luc, dltcov1ri !Mt • l1r1t manur~ut· 11'1 1u1ranlH1 on its mlllJ Prod· ucb pu\1 1111 customer II 1 1111t d1S1dlv1nta21, ind 1h1 Ills ou! to orr1niz1 • P1ottsl ONTPD m D1wld f11st Sllow Guests: David fryt, C.rmen McR1e. Jack Ander· son. Jrnny O'H1r1, Princ.ess Luci1n1 Pi1111t1rn. m'""'""' alien youth.· Miss Gardner "" v1sw PaoM TH• •1t1DO•'" enacts both relationship.s with :Md•;:r11i: t!'1~~~"'~~11'b'ow~1r~:: sincerity and conviction. mtM11tr S~tron Th.....,irold. oounCI fKf'lnk.i.n E""I" lllO.tr, 1111t11nv John Mangela is ca.st in the IKhnltl•n e ..... 1n lr.otn. ,,....,..,,I'd b~ 1M 1~rnt: comm11n1tTY Th••tt<. traditionally tricky role o f Frid•~• •rod s11urc:11,, tllrO!Jth APrll Rodolpho, w•-· -•-·acter J ti 1'1141 old UC ltvlnt: StudlO T~tttr. ~ u1&1· TH• c:An and motivation must be ac- Eddi. t •rbo<ll .•••... ...,, Gor00ti cepted as written rather. than ltttrlct Ctrbont , J-GorOOtl (t!!l ... IM ••••••••••.• Ktr.., Gtrdner as implied. Mangels is con-~=1:.no··::··::::::":::. JllJ.~M", .. ~ vincirfg early in the play as t'!.'1~.::::::::::··:::: .. ltd" E~:;g: the dreamily awe struck ~r:; :: ::::::;:::::::::"'o:r-~ Italian youth, but. falls short £I'i) P•Htnl 1., lMlto Mr. Lt1>trl •• ...... T•rr,. "''"'"""'' of his missioo in later scenes Mra. L"'-rl .•..• , . " lei Tttlout U!n f a;) Mlrutlitt Y11du saiow ~~01~1~r:·.:·: .. :.:: .: ~·~.~:;: ca g or a &tronge r ln- Ton, G.aree S11tlvon terprelatioo. ' .. fJ ~ ~ ·~-0 • D '"' N"""tbol' Mlk• E••n/Mtoon 0..w 'f11 , \,U)...,_. ·•-·• ...... • a e strong but restrained Ltt pliys •city pl1nntr who c.omes usut1n1•rh1t" ••• •••·•·· H••l"'I' ~ib-t" older brother Marco is given to town to work with Sam, just •s a powerful portrayal by Gary his 1rrttrirnd, Mi!lir, ltrves on credit f8r t~e production, the Saderup, who casts an v1c1tion 1nd Sim rind• himself in excellent set and the mood- 1 veiy precarlou' posltloll. sustaining sound and lighting ominous shadow of physical -"""(I) m WorW l'n111itr1 Mew· effects. he also turns in a sfo"r~~embleacwyoorl'der Ednd d!e'~ cotmh. _...., .... a 1s 1n e 11: (C) (Z hr) "Trflll• l'llT' (com· strong performance in the role end more of a threat than 1dyJ •70 -em Dally, Larry H11· of Allieri, vacated by the his younger brother. 1 n min, Willi1m Windom, TilrH HP•· death of Howard Malick. I .. Ito -•1 "I Id Saderup's demonstration of r• • 111 n corn..., U. 118 1 Exceptional acting is a o u T " "The G0>d Ut • .. "I• strength, which closes the first · · ·• •· prerequisite for this hi"" Tlllr• 1 Doctor ln th1 t+ou•t' 1r1 ""'" act, there is a mixture of THE CHALLENGE: r......-i:...,·~~ Every man, woman, and child to quit smoking for 30 days ..• ...,!or your country, for your honor, ~ 'l'CJ> for S25,000,000! /:. f11turtd, · tension , heavily \feighted ac· audio-visual excitemeat which g Tiit ,iittm count of the passions and builds to a crescendo of throb· ·~-Dlll l(Jt'IDlt!OI m"' ""''"' jealousies which dominate the bing intensity, the like of. • DICK VAN OYKE .·rnlOl\JRKEY" -• lives of 'those living in tbe which is unequaled thu9 far W m RN.lltlu "Flea lo fto1: Mtd•· shadow or the Brooklyn Bridge I th I I th ""'-OM N~= I M O• · 0 '"' 1 n e oca eater season. Plff.aDTI·1t111'11'ilC1·llMM:l£'t0£lll(llCl·Q•W•OUD tnryn1 ·1WP"J£M yn urray n11r v,, r, •r on the New York waterfront. Baum1n." Dow's Alfieri, bast l I y 1--9Jl'OIQl .~11 '6!1W!lfJll·s-..,11lllllWILUR .. 'M..LIAllAIIAJ.Jl And th is is precisel y what -•-11IDIWIL£.11 [fililfDt COLDllOJ&t.t' ...... .,..... EE)lO Milnltts the Irvine theater offers from ----ALSO PLAYING----~ "",.... top to bottom !n Ill superb Jo1·11m" g Cast 2nd BIG COMEOY HIT IY:I • ._ production. p S II Heading a distlnguisbe<I cast Bier 8 erS finds 1n •P1rfmtnl In San Fran· NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES BEGINNING MARCH 24th A ONE WEEK LIMITED ENGAGEMENT SPECIAL STUDENT & GROUP RATES AVAILABLE CONTACT MANAGER NOW ~R GROUP INFOR~TION Ji1iis~iITs CAES No grander Caesar .•• No greater cast! "l ,S. I Lo.,. Yo11 .. '" '1'11e lollod ~· EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT "Tora, Tora, Tora" @• VALDEZ IS COMING Read the DAILY PILOT For Top Sports Cove rage (DAIC Ntw1 1;00 IJ CIS Nen W1lt1r Cl'Ollkilt. 0 mt NIC Men 01vld l rlnkllJ, John Cllll'IClllor, ,rant JkGt•. t :lOIJ9CilOerh D11 (It) Doril ts Art Gordon ·ai!I the tern· HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ''THE PARTY'' cisr.a Offf"·· '" ltePan remurinr pestuous, tragic figure of E<i· Nita Talbot and Frank Aletter owned hy Anrie alWll l...ouls Palll.ltd die Carbone, a man whose have been added to the castll~~~~~~~~~i~~······················· IKIYt e1111rc1 ind Berni. Kii""~) unnatural affection for his 1 'Fu ""' t · ·d h. o ' nny Face," vi de o bllt h1r 1•11 11 e1mtld tht flnt een-age niece ovem es ts da1. basically decent n a t u r e . version of the movie at Para· CJ Whir• u1 Un11 m@ID I"" "~ O ! l!IClijiWMtl ""• Cllww.1_G_o_r_do_n_bas __ c_•p:.t_ur_e_d_lh_e_he_ar_t __ rn_o_u_nt_. ________ 1,, ution: Th• President i nd Howard i- mo. ... ~ @(IJJlllll ED Thi World WI Llvt ht 9 ([)Truth or Ccln1tqu111t11 iS Chrbt tht Llvin1 Word tJ) Mi A111tr po1 n EID Simplt111111\1 M•rlt m Morie ''"'' 7',.30 U 9 (I) C11n1111ot1 John Sllon 1uelf stirs as Vir1il St1nley, • fann1r, who 1flurns ho1111 alter eijht ytl/S In 1Wi3on In hO!>H of nccwe1in1 !tit lortun1 he stole. lt Smith. 0 Candid C.1111ra m Hlvf G1111 Win f,..,.I fl!) Mnkll•/Putw'• Dtti ·m tl6tn1 111 Anrustin 10:00 B ~ (j) tarot luntft Slltll Ori1in1\es in New York's Ed Su lliv1n Theiler wll~ 01vid Frost. £ileen rarrell and M1rilyn Horn1as1uests. 0 Bi1 S N... KM~ S1nd111, Barney Morris.. 0 B•d•r W11d J'lrn m Ne .. Puln1m/Fishm1n. m DEBUT MIR T11p Al H111Ml hoits. Cl SEARS PRESENTS A 1!!1 World '"" * FAMILY TV SPECIAL 1IJ '"""' WALT DISNEY'S (El Hit dtl M1111tm "WINNIE THE POOH" , CJ @ CIJ m ll!lfilU Win It ID:lO 0 Hornr WNk Mlvll: (1 hr .tSm) th• Pooli and t!i1 HoneJ T11~ nln ''Cltost Bru•n" (c:omtdr) '.tO - this Wilt Disney inlm•l•d proth.IC· Bob Ho.Pl, P1ul1tt1 Goddard. Weird lion b1ud on A. A. Mllne'I "Win· Nppenin~ In • hlunttd cnti. to nie the Pooh'' stories, !tie roly·poly attte oft ltl1 rllfllful h1lrt11. l!ttl1 betr t•h Into trouble try!n1 U I lfi@ I E11 If lfit Sbtl• to satisfy his hun1er lor honey. m l ll, Jol1111 " ... 0 Vir&i1l1 Cr1h1111 Dow Sr.hed· el ltitrtld1111bft uled iuerts •rt .l.ln11 MOOlthttd. 81rb1r1 M!n~ul. John Mlrlty and 11:00 IJ QICIJ OiJ "IWI Anion t1VtJ. D 9 (I) m ""' 0 lHJ (}) m Alt Mind., llovit: 0 m ..... (CJ (2 hr) NAlrlca-T .. 1 Styli'" 0 Miwlt: "X ••• the Unknon'" 1dvtntur1) '66 -H~1b O'Bri1n, (sci-Ii) '57~an ltUtr. Jolln Milli, Mrienn1 Cont Story ol G) M111\I: "Myltlty If tflt Whitt 1 CO\llboJ wha capturn al!d lama leoM" (m)'Sltry) '3Mruca Cabot. wild 111nt en the Oar'« Conli11111t m 111t ttt1 cs.ct 0 llRlltft $ ...,ii: (2 1\1) '"1llt (17} (J),.,.., .... Cllolt lld Mn. M11il'' {dr1m1) '47 fI!1 WOfW ,,_ -Ru H1rrllOl'I. Gtn1 TilrMJ, Niii· lie Wood. LOMty •idow finds PllCt 11:!0 fJ 9 (I) Mn liritfltl "8tautlful •rod m1lerill for 1 bMt·stlNn1 Peosil1." Clint f.astwood, Princess book, wtien she !alb In love with Luciana Pi1111tem, Mulmli1n $dt1H lh1 thost of 111 old •• capl•I~. and M1urica Woodrvtl tutll, m rr.o. "Coniequtnces O @@mJo111111 c.r.. Alan QJ II T•n 1 Thlll King Sllbslltules II holt. 0 ffi Did: C..vttl fD City W1tch1r1 C!l Cil!IMI 30 i;oi a ID IJl m """'• l•l """' ' . llymlda·1u1sh 11 Ch1rln Ch111llll flt • look ti ttle oldllme rnovlt dirt "' lV• l•t• .,..., ID T• Ttl IN Trwtli m Movie; "You P11 Ytt>1r MOMf" (mystry) '57 -Hurh McDermott. lZ:OO m Mo'tit: ~lid ~t" (mysltfJ) '41-Wilh1r11 G1r11n. @ID ""'""" 1:00 1J Mftie: "'tnlriov1 l tWfll" (com· ldJ) 'W-Glt'J Cooper. Q ONrn • AU: About Sears Convenient Credit Plan• SA VE :iiJ Oto :li50! Behirtd-the-Ear Hearing Aids Rellllar $1Jt ~·;io: • :rStu.,... .............................. 229 5 'i' ~r~: •............................. ~234 diary otamad hou-wlte a frank perry film ~ ·---·...-ca..-- ROBERT REDFO~O 'TELL KATHARINE ROS THEM ROBERT BlAKI' WILLIE BOYIS SUSAN CLARK HERE" It UN!V[RSAL PICTUR£ g;p, <O ~do NIWPOIJ If.I.CM •• •I 1•0 •••,...,. ,. ,.~.1 ••• ll~• hit •• 01. l·ll!.G EXCLUSIVE ILLIOTT GO ULD DON SUTHERLAND MARCIA RODD "TH E LITTLE MURDERS" ALSO JACQUILINE 11ssn IN "THE GRASSHOPPER" IOTH I UTID EXCLUSIVE 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST PICTURE I Be1t Actor 4 Ryan O'Neal f" Best Actress ·Ali Mac:Grow p PWllOOllT f'tflllt1S PRISUlS ' ,, I Ali Mac6raw ~· r. _ Ryan O'Heal rr 1 ~ LGP,-~· COLOR ~ \,!) !,..;. ' , ACADEMY AWARD NOMINIE • BIST SUPPORTING ACTOR. Chief Don Geonio ~¢J ·t:;t .J DUSTIN HOffMAN' ~ '. 4'> TH•&TI•• "Lrrrll s: BIG ui ........ .... • ..,. ... o-s.c~, .... ...,_ .... ,IO I I ILL rr~ ... __ ...... ___ ... __ _ Also BorbcJra Henhty ~ ,"THE BAIT MAKER" (R} Panr.<iaion•Technico1or• ~o CHIEF DAN GEORGE -FAYE DUNAWAY 10!0~'''"""""' At_l_.....,.., ... ,,_ ..... The Great White Hope S11•un1 James Earl Jonn. J1~ ._lutilder. P'l•lU<'1 .. ~-f'oC1 l ........ Oltt<lt<ltyM.ltMilMt. -·-.. ·--.... -.... -.-· !.c ........ ,.,_ .. 1$1< ................. ~'1 ....... -· ·-........ ~. ,..,... -~~ ............. ~-~---·~-· Plus Yv15 Montond m "Z' ~~=-.;;:::;- Plus Brian Keith and IN MISSION Vl~JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~~<j Oof<:;n fllil ll (4 PAZ fiJRlllGIF 8311 '-'190 "diary of a mad housewife" richard benjam in Iii ~ carrie snodgress r- 1~ ""''"'"~I Joanne ~ c. / \\00d11:ud "They Might Be Giants" . ' ·-·-Ii> ....... 2:30 f) ·-= ....... SllQM, ,, ..... DaWtW ('""'trY) '.41-UoJd Nt- 1111, W1lltr Abt!. .4VE' ·, tr.i:.ii-............................. ~69 'll'OW(ll5oll.Jll£.,.,..,,,,ro-t-•1Cl\1•t>TtO!IC:Cll.Oll' al 0 .· , Tijesdoy DAYTIME MOVIES t:IO D "Stlll twMtt" (d11m1) ·s1- G111t [wini. SIM Bfodit. "T111p (mystety) '41 -lllch•rd Wld11111._ ~ Nolin. M1tt Sll .... 1\1, m ~Anttl '#lltl 1 Tr111111)tt'" {dr•· 1111) 'SO -El!t111 Herllt. l•all Sid· .... 1:00 m (C) "Dwil'• CMptt" (wnttm) '53 -Vir1lnl1 Ml)'O, O.lt Robtrt· AM'111•11t" (1dYfiJlu11) '49--0on son. krlJ, Stm BrM~. Z:OO 0 "Mr C1111 I• Qllcl" (myste17) t:il D "'Mi 1114 fli a.Jft &• T• '57-llobtrt 8117, Pat Do11th~. ,_.. (CDmtClt) '51 -Mlf1o1i1 .f.:)O IJ (C) "DMl.1111111 MIAlon" (dr1, M1!11, ,tl'CJ Kl~rid1. rn1) ·~ -ViCIOf M1hir1, Vill(lnl SH'~' Rq11tt:f~ llmZ ••••..••••.••.••••..••..••••• ~289 He1r1n1 Aids At A Price Yo. CU Afford.,. Backed by A Oompuy Yoa Caa Depe.i Oa. 1!~1rln1 Alda Art Av1il,.ble 1t the FollowlJ!I SMn Storu lftCltw* Lon&lkad Pa•d•• Pie.1tlUmp..• ALSO "SUDDEN TERROR" R Cheek the Most Popular New Column Alive ..• 'Cheeking Up' 0 "T1lt StrHI WI• "' N11111" Price. PIDtr l1urlt. 1---------------------·ll _________ _JI ... HITJ "'"'"'" "THE ""!"' .. Al RUB.AN -SAM SHAW,.,.._ c•·· FD cmza1u Pllft-lrlo1 .. Ith ht "SUDOEN TERROR# 'll!!!!!IMll. • • HAWAIIANS",., . . ' , :· .. • . DICK TRACY • TWK. PIBlet!O owe AMO n.IE RINU FLf.W OllT~ TMEV ALL MU5T CONTAIN OIAMON05. TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan ·: . ,,,,.,,., ... ,._,..,.,_ MUTI AND JEFF 101 -102· 103-104 I CAN1T SLEEP' I'M .COUNTING SHEEP! YEH, I LOSE TRACK WHEN I CotJNT IN MV HEAD, 105"· rf'/UCK! \ I ' ' SHUT UPI '. I CAN'T SLEEP! ,,_w ... ,_.,. ................. ~ .......... By Al Smith JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux ~· . ·'· WHEM JOHWNY IC.\NE MENTIONS THE NAME '.t.UNT IMRTHA: ").&&EV SPENCER REMEM8El'S WMO ME TS! MOW, JOHNWV •• I INSIST TMAT YOU COME Off TO SEE ME FIRST Tl-l lN6 IN THE MClrNIMU~ WELL,LIKE I S,_1P .. I WAS Pl.A.NNlt.I ' TO &E-ON M.Y WA.Y av D"VLl6MT •• &LIT I SURE WOULP Ll lCE TO MEET ¥011, Ml~ SPENCER ! ALL AUNT »..A.RrnA EVEll PIP WAS TA.LK ASOUT VOU •• MOW 5ME LOVED YOIJ A.\OR'E THAN IF YOU WERE MER OWN PA.U6MTER: ! TM ... T SETTLES IT! I 'LL SEND SOMEON E TO PICK YOU UP AT TEN IN TME MORN· IN6~ WMERE ARE 'IOU STAY IN6<?° I 'M. IN A UTILE OLD MOTEL DOWN· TOWN .• BUT I 'LL 1 fllrilt> MY WAY OUT TO SPENCER: FARMS ! PLAIN JANE By Frank Baginski • . . ' i ' ' u-=oA==-IL.,.,...Y c=R=os=osw"""'oR==o-.. -. by -R .• -. POW~ER I • ACROSS : I l ight ~ sourcrs . 5 lnltrirclton . of 1rl1tf ·' ---la visa J 4 Mass ·15 Coat ol ~ 11170. , Informal :;6 Sta tr :11 Entrrtainers ·'l.'7 List o! ~ candidates O Value ~l Compellin g ' lo1ces :23 Ad~ancr ; showin9: • 'Var ~5 PrrPare for ~ contest ~b Brin~ ~8 Gar;i1shrd 411 Small • air plarit ,7 Pusll ;3B Gn~w ''I Hills ~ of sand )I Sid~ ,1way from tl1e ' ' wind ~2 Played a ro lr :45 TV prompter: Sling 2 w1ords 51 Shadcws 54 Pl,asant surpr1sts SB Oo 1n9 ttr\11n ntwspllprr ·~· 6Z 'llord of mouth: Law h3 Ammoni a compound b4 Suptr· mar~el: Zwords bb Skirts: Informal b7 To1eador's '" •B l!~lian royal lldn:e 69 5~ 11! fe~tur e 70 IAt~l dish 71 P1ofaund DO 'llN 1 R 0111r l :err 3 ....... o~-": r~t.,•dr~I 4 Oors 01e's hr st 5 E. 1rnin9s. lolorr:i;il b •.:r1~1 fastene1 7 P11 t into v19orous Sah1rday's Puzzle Solved: p 4 s s ( 3 122171 <'./ ~a11cv girl~ 40 Combustion 10 Having one's prorJ11cl noon •neal : 43 USSR 2 words re p11b l1 t 11 ..•.. of Da•1id 44 Most 12-Frtncl1nia11 1s ht~d l l Grf'rl'. q:irJ lB P1•ce o1 :· ~IL il Gloo v 2~ 1.: .11 ~l:i1 i7 :1~rt:1• {J,~ ?1 ,lif,,~~·· t ~! :J ~t tll '«'£S JJ •• ,, . '"' 1~10;.• I ::2 ,', 1 • ~ )} Ci\ f Pl T•, ~<; precious 4& \'/Jlerprooted cover111g~: lnforrr.J! 47 Defrauded 49 h1sec t eqg 52 Elr~~l~s 53 Facial fl'a\1rrt : SJ~nq 55 C.tre in:o h"l:'(j 'b Ric': CJ,~ •,; s~ 11ail'rt 58 lnclintd PERKINS 1o:i T~• ~""'"' j ~ t.o •. ••• r .. ~···. , ,.. . ... "' II'. "' ... MISS PEACH Al<THW~, ;r WANT YOU 'IV GETOUr OF MV LIFE! STEVE ROPER '" ~ '" '" "' '" ~ "' "' '" '" "' • EVE" 71-0UGH YOU ~EJECT ME,I Wll.l. ~LWA'IS 5E HIOING-IN THE Cl.OSEI OFYOU~MINO Ll't: ABNER Norman Crockwell'& "' •Mr. Parf"ec:t.• A CDmpoc;ite of the SPecif \""t i01'6 VOU!O ~ 15 million t.een·ege Qlr ls" He"'""' flawteS& phy61q ue. a lu)l..Uriant. moneof hair- GORDO MOON MULLINS ® "THEF<o's NO W~~5TLING PF<OGF<AM ON "TONIGHT, KAYo . ANIMAL CRACKERS < :r.11/e 'DECIDED To I i 8) \IJl'O fl?l.l'fCS, J 1 By John Mllef '" '" '" "' '" •" '" '" "' ' " "' '" • '" "' By MeU FINEi, WHILE. YOU'~ THEIZE, 'IOU MIGHT LOOK R:lfl MV VOl.LE.V-1!1\l.L 5NEllKEl{5, By Saunden and Ov•rgard ~a Untie ~cl ion ~D B1bl1cal I Sad!le1's )4 Fr ,I ,1;' f ;5f.,l1JI Od V ~r 35 El:rl'm1ty Jb Check p~~SJ~e.•.,1y )'J '.:a11's Ui•~t 60 Tit~ bl Blood rr-==--~='."'1 pal11arcli tompan1o n ' • ' ' ' ' • " ' • '·· " ·'"" 16 I I· .. ~· " • 'I' 21 22 I , i;,, " ~ ' ~ •• " v Iii t,t," ' ' lJ ,. " " ~ .. J7 . -~ 39 ~ " ' . " ' " .. l·"l " .. ., I' •• " ', .. . I l1 " " . " " .. ' ' " " ,. •• " ~ '" ,, •• -'" ':~. 11 " ,• I ) &5 --··Jo ·t"> ;; " ,, I . -L jy XI ljl- " ' " " " . \ . -· BE! 1£11/NG THE ~·4llE£:i A.llE ·" s .:~ ,,1::~1 µuo hAS Rl.l:iHED TO AiNSWER THE OOORBE' L A~D · PEANUTS YOU AIO:E UNDER ARl<EST, A1R. DANNEMOQ.' ... C»J 4. ( HAR&E Of GR'AND LAR'CfNY/ .J 7ti1'5 5 ~'vi IT D'IFfE~ ,L!GHTLI( FRo~ I '-.:;~c -.r rM M..f OTME!l DANCE5 .. JF :;N1N6 1' Ji~-t~k ,~ DANCE (~.1 ..,. ~ ..,,_ N "' .,,,, By Charl•s M. Schulz THE OIFFW>ICE,Of C00\5f, IT'S All. IN T.iE ACfl<lN 1,; VEPH svm.e ... OF lHE 'TOES-, Cd ' C?~ ·i , ' •• r1'fJ'J-. I t<i.,l.<.-/..u 9 ,.~ DAILY PILOT 27 1y Al Capp • fl I' tt ' By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson You JUST !>ON'T !<'NOW WHeF<e 'TO "TUNE IN ... ~ ~ By Roger Bolen MR.MUM------ DENNIS THE MENACE -rr:i '"~ • I -• .. :-e-:,.,, '-'.,... r . • Come Fro111 Behind Victory Picl{ard Wins Congress Cup • Ill Final Match . • ' - ~·· -.. - MANEUVERING FOR ST.ART -< lr1se!le~"' of thl~ year's Cong.res.sional Cup compet1t1on t~ indicated Hl this starting line 1hot v. 1th tflmpet1tor· maneu~er1ng 'I-,• ,. . t I)....,. • COCKPIT ACTION -'fom 1'1<-kard lsceond frr1m left1 appears ralm a<; rr•·v.mcn fur1ou -.1 y ~rind \l.1nc he.o; dur1n~ a t.;1r·k in thr ' rnr 1al rare \~1th I !en r·; ~hof1eld "'h1r h ~ilV<: i'lf k<ird the <r1n~rc:..,i.Hinal ( ui1 DaYc [.;II man Wins 1'hrcc l st A ~ar<l s 11;.~~· I 11111;•1 1,f Bitlho:1 ·v l'lc:h1 r111h !t)(1k 1n11·<· ~1 rt11ght fl f~l.~ l<i WI" th!' /!I 1 ,.<1 r o n;irl1~1·, ln\'1!<t!1•1no1 rf'~at1;, ht·ld tr \\1•'.,JI•· \;.chl Club 11n 1,,.f p I'"" t1·•a Sunda\ l'llman I\ a 1 h:ur•1111.n oll•i~ in bolh Sn1pr~ ;,ntJ l.1d1rl4 • hut 1h1~ Y.'1\ h1<1 l1r<1! 1 rim· pt'Ul1on 1n ('.J~ • • - -. • • • ' around committee lx>at Committee l'·atch es action fo r po~~ible foul. \ 11 trir:-· \rgyle f'ampbell <back to camera) "''ho ua.~ !'1r karrt ~ 1i:lttirian lf)ok~ aft to 1her·k on the eon1· p<:lllJl1fl Ir AL"°S LOCKA.IEY Thtrr were 45 !Dllmdlal mau::bes Ul the I t 7 I Coq:rtsJIOftal Olp And ft ud that fin.a.I tmkb to ddenn1ne lhe •umu . The crucial ~ w:-tory. tnt. rr1mson blaur Mid lht: ngbt lo ba'.e hi! name tngra\ed oo tht silYer bowl lhat took an K1 of Coagr~.'5 l.t cnai.t we:at lD Tom PlcWd. JS. of th.""" and -Long Beach Y acbt Club. It "' .:u the KCOOd tl!l'k" around for Plcbrd wh:I. dur· Jng the hrr:. 1wo days baked anytlun& but a winner. At the cooctusion of ha flISt thrtt malehd on Tbunday hr lad -.on oo.ly one tact Starting the SttOOd da~ he dropped evtn farthn" down w1t.b a delcat by Creg Booth ol Hawaii. ltaTing him 'lrllh 1-3 rttord. His rally came in tht second match of the suond day wht:n be bea1 John Jennings of St Petenbur2, F1a.. whidl turned out to be n crucial a:s hi.! final victory of Henry Schof.ie!d o f ~i&hboting Al.amllo5 B a ~ YKb! Oub. Pickard primarily SttVcd J..! I poiltr for $chn&ld who. WU liltin& atop lat heap Wlth only one loa W!lil that fin.al matdl. lbe loss LO Pd.ard di oyped ltim LO a 7-% rtt«d along with Prl.atd buruielf and Jenrur!iS -a thrtt w·ay Umt <JO .-ms and ~. Btn the Uy to the ~ tlnng .. ai that Px:brd had then but.t:n both Scbofieki and Jen:rungs. and JdtuDp bad ~a.oded ScMfidd his only prmOUI defe::al Tho'5e a.re ~ that oo- ly prO\·e bo1r rompetitive I.be Coogrt:s:siooal Cup match TIC· inc compWboru W become in sn·en ,-ean .Sot 1mct the third seM Das there been a H winner. 'The fint t•n wen won by Gerry Dnscoll of San ~o and the thrrd by Scott .tJ!an of S e.,.-pOrt Harbor. Tbis is tht first lune that a !kipper from tht 1ponsonnc Long Beach Yacht Oub ha.5 won tht Congre5.5 iMJal Cup It was the second try for Picbrd. As I crew be had on board Wt year·s winntr. Ar IY Ir Campbell of Balboa Y 1cht Oub. v1bo acted U lac· tivian. Otbu5 in the crew PICKARD TRAILS -Tom Pickard. v.•inner of the 1971 Congressional Cup \1:asn't a]"·ays out in front. Augelman Series were Aody ).lacdoo1ld. Mlkt Mxdonlld. Guy Dorin. Dou1 HRnX aod John Ed&comb CampbtU. Andy Macdonald and Guy Doran art all topflighl co~11ate s a 1 Io r ! from LSC nnng.s were tenu, both 1n Ult sailing flttt and tht large spectalor flttt u lhe dtf:1d1n,I! rruitch betwttn Pickard and SchofKld c1me up Tbt race had i ll tht unnarU of a bell-rin&er fro_mc Uw: start "hen both boa LS 1ot elf on a vlrtwiUy even basi~. After a luriow t.ackin1 duel. Piela.rd ltd by a mert 33 second5 al the fir'! ~·mdw•rd m.ui<. Y1lith a 1>11 knot brtC"t.e Jock.in& up a 1wo-lo0t sea. it Wa5 iot\1table that 1Jnt boat at the other shou.Jd 1uffer equipment f a1ture ~ dreaded 1ear failure~ befell Schofield. One of them had a man aloft for a matter of minutes. VMS at the end Plcbrd's time marain \jo·a3 l minutes Ind 04 lttOn(ll. Havm1 bffn beaten by Jen- runp. Schofield did not hlvt the coruolatian of second place. He wound up third in Ult 1tandinp, wbkh looktd Jikt lhlS I J ! Tom Pickard. LBYC, 7. 2. 121 John Jenninp. St Pettr1bur1. 7-2: Ill Kenn· Schofield, ABYC, 7-2. 14~ Patrick O'Neal. Larchmont. :-.' Y., 6-3, 15) Bobby Burru1 eve.:. S-4 . '11) Bob ~101bacht:." /loutloo, Tex , 4-5 , • 71 John 0dtnbach. Rochester. ~.Y . J. 6. 111 Hal Mc:Corma ck, San Francisco. :J..S: ltJ Cret Booth. Hono lulu. 2-7: 110 1 Ch1rlPy fl1organ, St Pettr1bur1. 1-1. ,. ~ Saturday's race'! SERlES 7 -111 Booth dd ~10!bacher. I 10: BurnJ def. Odtnbach. 1:11 : Schofield~ McCormack, 1 :00: Pickar<! def. Morgan. l · 19: Jenning~ def. o ·seal. 1: 15. SERIES 8 -Schofield def Odenb1ch . 1:36 : Pickard def Burns. 1:07 : ~lo1bacber def. Morgan , 2:54 : .Jenninlll def Booth. 3·39; O'Neal d e I ~cCormack, 1 :32. SERIES I -Jennings def. r-.1osbacher. 27 secs; Pickard def. Schofield, 2:04 : O'N"t1! de!. Burn~. 1:03: "°1cCormack def. Booth. 2:15: Odenbach def . Morgan . 16 JeCS. In this race he trails Pat O'i\"eal of Larchmont, N.Y. on a dolll·nwind run. Puff Captures BC 20 Fatho1n Race Puff. skippered b~· Dave Stone of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Sunday \joas lhe Class A Y.1nner or the Hun- tington 21).fathom ract>. the serond feature of BCYC"s Angelman Serie5 for Pacific Handicap yacht.~. The Class B v1ctnr11 11ent to Bill von I\ I e i n S m id ' s Starsh1ne. [l;ewport Harbor Yacht Club. and the Class C "·inner 11·13 Dave Lang·s Edelwiss. Balboa Yacht Club. The ract \jo a3 held in con- 1unct1on ""ith BCYC"s St. Patrick·s Day Regatta. Final re sult.s : Huntlngton 20-Fathom ra ce: CLASS A. -(ll Puff. Da\·e S!ont . BCYC. 1%) \'anktt Clipper. l..aY.Tence \Veinreb. \'YC: (31 Andale , Gordon Graham. SSSC. Cl.ASS 8 -ll) Starsh1nt. Bill von KleinSmid. !\HYC. • 2 f Aloha IL Glenn Reel. SSSC : 13, Goldilock.s. Eddie Arnold. BCYC. CLASS C -(ll Edel\jo•eiss. Davt Lang. BYC; 1 2 l Pussycat. John Szalay. 8CYC . (3/ Pao Pao de Owai. Dennis ' '.\l2son, BC\'C. St. P:>.tr!ck·3 Day Regatta:.:: LID0-14A -~ 1) One Fer The Road. Jim Tyler, BYC:: 121 Blue Linen. Don Bradbur)'.; BYC : (3! All's \Veil, Pettr Parker. NHYC. LID0-148 -1 !l Pirana. Jim Kerrigan. BC\'C: (21 Hellion. \Villard Hellman . WYC; 13) Tackless. Dudlry Johnson. BCYC. Dalla Point Race KITE A -111 T••r. Nina \1elsen. NHYC. . KITE B -ill Chinook. L k CL _ v • Bill Lapworth. ~H\'C; 1%\ UC y 1iunce ictor ~\;g• ,, Loci s'""'"· SABOT A -11 l Racm1 '.\1achin e. f.~ark G au d Io . Lucky Chance. skippered by i'Oewport Harbor Y1chl Club larger Cl1sg A and B bolt~ :\'HYC ; i21 Ocean Toad, ~fark: .John Bromley or Ba hi a at the helm. wallo\loinc in their "·ake . Hinshaw. LJYC Connth1an Yacht Club, y,·as The 18-mile ra ce dJ\"Lled Final result.s : SABOT B -i 1 \ Pre-Shrunk:. the O\'erall and Cla~~ D "·inner itself into 1~·0 races early OVERAll -(I ) Lucky Stev e Nelson. BYC 1n Balboa Yacht Club ·!il Dana "·hen the wind died at lhe Chanct. John Brom 1 e y . SABOT C -111 Cyclone. Poinl Race . the opel'ler of the 14·eather mark. The MORF' BCYC : 121 Patrician . Da1·e Scott Mason. BC\'C : (21 1971 66 Series. and Classes C and 0 of the Pillsburv. NHYC : 131 Andale. Sunkist. John Lord . BYC: (j~ ~·inner ln the :'liidgtt Oc· Octan Racing fleet. go I Graham· &: Gray. SSSC: ~~) Fiasco. Brett t.1ason, BCYC. cean Ricing Fleet y,·as Dark around the mark before the S"·is5 Sa1·1. Dick Deal"er, --.. ---·- Star. with JeH farmell of wind went f!al. leavi11g the B\'C. 1.11 \"olante IL Mike LEGAL NOT ICE Hirsh. BYC . l40T1cr: o" 1 uL11: ;111..,14,,.lflt-CLASS A -11\ Encore . u..,. 1111 -n11 u.c.c.1 C G d E d H II b RI BYC 2 ) loc.-w H1. uu JI Oasl Uar l er U IC)". : ( NOi~• 11 ht ••llv tlv•~ 10 !Mf Crlllll! ... o n s un Dorothy 0 . Bob 8'8"champ, • >OMMY '" "'"· '""'""" ''HYC 3 y k c1· Who1t bu1lnttl '"''"' 11 i101 WlltCllff l' : t l /In te 1ppe:r. Drivt, Now111ri !••c~. CDU.,tv nl o, • .,., La11·rence \\"einr('b. V''C. .s•1•1 11 c 111tor.,11. •~•• " 11u1~ '''"',., ~ regatla y,;, Iii,, l!r•1 fl'lr \\.'eRtlake vr· \1nri· IJ'·ir1~ admi tted to 1h•· ~nulht'rn Dhlorn1a Ya1·ht1 n11; \· "" 1;, 11nn in Frbruary r omn111d,,11· J~m llolder ~aid 1h(' f'luh h.1 an active racing pr!il(ra rn 1,t IL! own and will bt 111n1n••l 1r1~ in othrr SCYA rvl'nt!i \Vind' for Sund;1y·<1 rr11;:itta ran11;rd lrom a bn~k l~-2~ kn11I.\ Final rcftults 111 Oa11r lllman. B\'r 121 n :in Clapp. l·evc 131 B Pu Ctll. An8CHpa YC 14) RI;.·~ F'ran rl'I . SBSC: !.~1 Jun lAn·key. wvr .I LONG BEACH IAPI -'"l h ed b h CL . '1 •bo!JT to bt m•ll• to JAMlE 1(1• LV ~':..Iii' uu Y1a3 ampe.r Y eayy ASS B -Ill Firebrand, TEMl"LETON '"" J.t.v 11:t~Nv Coast Guard officials suspend· 101. The search resum'd Sun· Gt()t'ge \\'est NHYC \2l TIMPLET0"4. • ••rtn"1~1or. T''"'"'"'· Dana Point Ramp Shut The launcl\111.i; ramp :intl marina arr<t of Onn11 Pn1n1 Hitrb'lr will hr 1·lnsrd fflr 11 penod of abnt1t 1hr<'r n10111h" due !(I con!'itruc11nn Krnnr1h ~amp!On, l)rangt r n \J n ! \ rl1rf'rtor or harbor'! ii n d hr.1r hr' 11nrj p:irks 11n1H1nncrd ANOTHER CLOSE CALL -Torn l1u kard'.~ boat r!·'.1 ra:-c~ her ho\V al ong<;idc 1-o n1rct1tor to :::a1n in .. 1dc 111crl:1p d11r1n g one of tlo.~r ral"c ~ of the ('ongrcss1o nal ("up n1al<h 1"<1(1'\ orr IA1ni: Hr:Hh 'Y:irl1 l !'luh P1lk:lrd \\1)11 1hc 'i{'l'JC~ \\"Ith I 7.z l'l'to1 d nf \Ill):-a111l lo re • • who1t Du1ln~n '""'"' lo ""' lllftil,. ed an air-sea search after day a1 sun burned oH coastal Sanderling. Poole. Kirk & ""'" Ntw1>er1 •••ch '""' • 1 "' H Bcyc , BYC C11'11••woocr, WH1'1'11"•'•• CDUM• l'f co11enn1 %,000 squart miles fog, but produced no results:. ope, "" .: 13) O••nt•. s1.10 •• c1111o•n1t ." Trend Jim Linderman BYC lht oro1tt1v to be"""''"" 11 I«•'"' looking for ri\'t persons who t"-s~•esm•n s•1'd L · · : -' 1101 w"'t"" or1w, N"""" ll•K• '"' ~ · C ASS C -11 l Puff. David CCMMv •'Or""'' Srttt 11 C1llttrnlt . ra d10f'd their ship 11.as s1nk1ng "Wt ha\·e searched the Stone BCYC· 121 Jmpeluou~ "11 ''°"'''• " "''"1"" '" •-·•' ' • ., '' -"It •toe> 1., ht,,. '"""'' '"6U'I • and they .,.,ere aoandon1ng 1t "hole area and researched Charles Gl1s10111. BYC: 13) "''n' •"" -.. 111 11 '""' 1·•u'• ..... .,. C "-L H BYC owolnto ,_ '' TOM Jl:AE H•\11: . .\ Coast Guard spokesman \\'c don 't rc3ume unless some-onquest1. n..n.y a ue. · STYl1s1' .,.. '°"''oo 11 1101 w"t<tJ"' said a distress call ..-·as rcc:e1\• one spots deb r is or his Chet.ASS D -i 11 Lucky ~~:;: .~·c~'::'~~ .. ~;••"· coun•• "' o...,... anct. John Brom 1 e y. r"' "'"' n'""" w111 be, ................ ed Saturday night rrom a man new informat ion, '' the BCYC · t2l Patrician Dave on or '"'' '"' Jiot ••v "' 1o11rc11, "hos •Id "W . lh Se k 'd H 'd . . . 1'11. II N,,.,.,,, N111on11 111111;, ,,. " . ere on e a spo esman sa1 e 3ai Pillsbury. r-;HYC: ~31 Andale, 1v1.1ci." 011.,,, '4''"'°"°'' ,, ... .,. Ctwltf' Dog We're taklng on 11aler visibility Sunday 11·as rour to Graham k Gray SSSC "'o,,,,.,, ''"' "' C•ll'"'"'' I • · ~ h• •• 11.""0wn 11 11\t Tr•n1'9tff1, 10 1n1es nrf Point Conreption five miles ~fORF -II~ Dark S!ar.•11 e...11nou "'"''' ,..., •H'""' .,.., n<'ar Sanla Barbara and "e're He sa1'd the sh1'p's or1·g1n J fl o II NHYC II~. y,,.,,,,,,, "'' '"' '"'" v11rt ••s• e r arv1e . : I •1111 11 t1111,..,, ''""' !fl.I 11111 .. , ,,,. ~handoning the boa!·· There nr de~tinaUon 11·eren·1 known. Gold1'locks Eddie Arno 11 H,... ' · ' ' . ' Dt!tl Mt rdl U. 1'11 Y.11, no [Ater metsAgt. nor the identities or those BCYC: 13' S1bon, Don J1"'1' Kf11y Ttm•l•Hin A seitrch by IY."O hehcoptf'rs. atxiard lie s11id ther11: arc TAln111dgt. 8YC: !4l Veloz, i::"~':;~: l•m•1t•t1n ll ~eaplitne and rwo cullers more than 15 "Sea Dogs" Ken Ross. BYC. r5\ Tw1stl T""''""' I h d · d' , 1 ed c r , ~"b'·•~t• o .... ,. CN•• 0••·1 ...... 1111~ iiunc c 1mmc 1a e y, re11ster 1n ali orni11. II, Aridy ~1ortland, NH' C. Marc~ n. 1111 ,11•11 Monda1, Marcfl 22, 1971 Everyon e Hos Som eth in g That So meone Else W enh DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It , Find It, Trade It With o Wont Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results Gener al Gener el JlnJa J d/e PR ESTI GE WATERFRONT HOMES BAYSHORES BAYFRONT New Exclut.ive 4 Be::!room1, 5\) Balhs View family room * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * S Linda Is le O riv1 Just co1npleted 4 BR., 5'h ba. home w/fa1n. rn1. & study. l\1agnif1cent 39 ft. \vaterfront !iv. rm. w/frpl. & \Vet bar. $164 ,406. 2 rireplaces Panoramic Bay Vie1v Bayside Heated Pool Immaculate dream home By appointmenl only $293, 10() WATERFRONT HOME FOR LEASE From April 1 thru August 15. Furn. 2 BR + bedrm on lower level. Beaut. bay vu. Pvt. pk w/flowers & trees. Call for details. For complete inform at ion on all home' & lots, please call: "Our 26th Y11r" BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Sen Jo1quln H lll1 Ro1d 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 General $50 DOWN fo anyone, plus $700 rost and 1mpcll.1nds, "'ill n1ove you ln to thi.! spacious f'"OUR BDR~IS. T11.o Bath hon1c near school?"; and shopping. Redecorated in flnd out. ca~tcd and drap- Pd. Large 70 FL fenced and 11.tU Jarn:lscaped lot. Priced to sell last at $2.J.000-CALL NO\\"!! General EASTSIDE COSTA MESA l.,..,..,..,.,..,...,_,..,..IEJiaclous l\10DER...._ cus-Westcliff Area -28,950-WALK TO ~atcd 1n Harbor High area. THE BEACH ;, Jnrge bdrms -complcte].y F ,. . redecorated _ new c rpet-rom t IS choice C.Orona dtl ina:: -drapes. Roo:i !or t.lar '"hoine plus_ income". boat or trailer. Outdoor !iv· 2 • 2 Bedroom un11s recent- lng on brick pa!io. Financ-ly nde~raled wll!1 o_pen ing \'ery flexible. Owner ~am c:ethngs, S\\"ed1sh _flrt· 11 11 consider Jease.opUon _ P ac:e, separate private last possession -beuer yards ~ of cour~ .. south- hurry. Call 6-l.>-0303 of-the-highway locauon. A top \'alue at only IORE\l E OL\11~ '" REAi.T O R S S-19,750 CALL6~ \0 THE RF:AI, \"-ESTATERS TOl\I BUILT ran1bhng home. Coniplctely fenced in with brick \\'alls and "'rought iron i:•tes. Large L1v1n1 Rm. ~·ith open beam- ed ctiline:s. Thrre Bdmis. Tu·o baths, Din. Rm and electric 811 Kit. Fenced ofI heated and filtered POOL. Prlctd 10 Sell at Only i29,'500 \\1th GI or F1iA TERi\.lS. ' ',.,. '• .. 220 E. 17th 646·0555 , ""' H".'°" a,,,. M• .. E""'"'' c.n "''-"" I ..... w ... o"u"L"D ... v"o"u ...... ll --=-====~=.=,-=:::::=°l220 E.17th 646·0555 5 BIG BEDROOMS BELIEVE CUSTOM BUILT E""'"'' c.n &i2-7438 This great vie1\·? 4 L1ra::e bedrooms, 3 bath_s. \Vet bar: Near CHU Drive&: neat view IN·LA w sunE Outst<tnding :! story home v>ith 3 ba1hs, family room & formal dining roon1, com- plete air l'ondil ionrrl & humidity <·ontrollcd au· sys· 1t>m. Tl s 11duh occupiPrl and the grounds arc well plant- lf'd \l'ilh lots of shrub!!. tiv>rs and flo1ven;. At SlS,.'l()(J. ifs choicl'~ COATS " . WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- ~0ptn E v1nin9 $) POOL $26,950 Tht best bl't i~ 1he r1r:•L prr- 50Jl to see lhi& absolutely iorgeous 3 bedrn1, :I bath home 1v1ll be the ne1v own- er. Sparkling condition, coot covert!d patio. lully crptd on great corner location. all electric klt ., sunny 1 1 t _, Come set this clever solution b '·J 1 d' rom ron ya,u. . re-al\ ast room, onnaJ in· * 3 bedroom.! & den to the difficult problem of 1ng room; i:orner lot.. ~0~1· * 2 baths where to put the folks and mun!ly swim pool. S19,j()() * 51 ; ye;u•g old. tillli iive them the prlvacy -- • Room for BOAT or they need. Jn addition to a TRAILER la.r£;e .u1umab\e Joan, I.his C 'dwell Ba * Newport Heizhts • '-''ell mainta1ne::l hOme has 0 1 nker * S.lj 9JO boal access, 3 ~rooms, .......___ .o.111o c0M,.t.111•~ Call ~ow to lite this "alue l '' ~aths. a. dinina: room ~ priced home• 6754930 •M l!'i near s<:hool1 a nd ' F.outh Coa5t Plaia, VA or 644-1430 .COl£SWORTl<Y&CO.. F'HA Terms available. All -::::~::;;~~;;;~~~li!~-~~,REAl;~-~~T-~OR~~~"~··~"~' ! this for only $27.00lt Hur· ;: ry! This one v•on·1 last! 833-0700 OPEN HOUSE DAILY M inetur1 Horse Raneh 546-2313 1206 Pembroke, N .B. $30,000. 1 \\'UiTCLIFF 2 Blocks from Situated in Costa r.teu. on a Mopping & school. SpoUtss 1;1 acn of Jand. This honle 3 BR, 2 BA home. Extra is reminiscent of a 1eclud· oTHEREAL 1 ~ESTATERS ' ' • ' ' • • I 'f !gt> liv rm & family, dble fr-eel country retreat con1plete 1-~D~l~R~T~Y"'=B~A~R~G~A~l~N~"° plce. I\.1n.; size k!l chen. with knotty pine panel1ne. $23,SOO Plush crptg & drps. Patio. separate family rooni and Located in Eastside Costa Dl>lr i;11ra.gc, shake roof. '-''id.e optn lip&Ces. Zoned for Mesa lhls 3 bedroom home Lachenmyer Realtor 1860 ~e"•port Blvd., C.\I horses ad the price ls ri&hl. has 2 baths A double a:11r- See it And name your terms. age, Jara:e' fenced yard, 3'16-8640 • Rlty walking d!Rtance to schools CALL 646-39'l..8 Evrs: 642-27371-~~~-~~~~=-1 LAST CHANCE E"erybody qualifies to as. YOUR OWN sume this low 1n1erest VA I To do your own decorating, pick colors and c~tlng and make this your home. This ne1v custom home will bl' ready !or you in 30 day1. 4 big bfodmom1, 3 bath~. Jargr family room wi!h and ihoppin&. It needs soine paint and T.L.C, but at !his price your total payment v.~U be only $189.00 per month. Hurry, '-'Un't last. 546-8640 '"'" -"'"' '"'~' c. II PRIVATE SPA j-15-8424, DelightfUI Colltge Park - \outh"' roast --- ~ bedroom plui; bonus addi· !Jon. Largt living and !am· 1ly room Hf'ated anrf fllter· rd pool Jjx::2 '"Fie~ta'". Cul· de -sac. Assumt 6« VA L.111111 Posh Palace pncrlrss v 1 ~ w of golf Xtra sharp 4 BR. J BA. roursr. Plus :'\ c•r garaae. beaut. ule entry, huge Call today ror lull details. panelled l1v rm \\•/stone General LIKE TO TRAVEL? But 1\-ant a hOme lo return to:' \Ve ha~·e the i;;olution! ! A luxurious, beauti!ully ap. pointed 3 Bedroom 212 ba!h VIEW home in "The Bluffs" It ~·i!J be \\•ailing lor you just the "'ay )'tlU left lt on your return - ~7.500 CALL BEFORE ''OU LEAVE AT 673-8.;50 10 · THE Rf:AI, ''."-ESTATE :RS '" 'J ,., • 11 ' ' •.. COLOR ME LONESOME and looking !or a good own· rr. I'll lavish you "'ith cry- stal POOL, huge oversized bedroom~. sh~ carpet.Ii, custom drape:i., SEPARATE family room, secluded p11tlo. and ft.lJ for only S28.IXXI. ~1AKE ME HOME:! Trade yours. Walker & Lee flealton; 7682 Edtni:tr 1n41 842-44~ or 5.w.5140 4 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM Great living for families on the go! 4 Bedroom, 2 bath, d ining, dble garage, sha& carpets. Lots of llvini;:-. 1oad11 of fun and no yard work. Short \\·alk to the clubhOuse. F'u][ price $22.!I~. submit your terms. Call s.tQ..1151, (o~n e\'1!1.) Newport Heights S bedrOOm8 \\'ith a sparklina: pool. Kitchen has built-in ~ frigerator, freezer and blender centl":r. Lara:e f11m- ily room with f1ttplace and bar-h-que. Entertain in a lanai room v.·1 th v.·e1 bar. This hOme must hi' se.-n. $39,500 646-7171 \R. 'THE Rf.Al, , ESTATERS OPEN A IR LUX URY 2700 SQ. FT. $33,900 $7.J.000. 546-2313 lrplc. Cu1tom crpt1 & drps I ;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii thruout, rormal dinini: area. Bltn range. oven k dsh1vshr, Approx. 1300 sq. ft/ $32.500. r.r or FllA 1erms. Call r" 1·, .,,, ,. •"·' This be!luh[ul spacious l"X· ecutive hon1(' 1~ only 1.1, years old. A hon1r 10 ht proud or. 2 s1orie.~ or ran1- bling prest1ae. !av1sh car- pet1n'l" over dtluxe pild, ex- Pf'nsive Cors1c:in drapes flow fro1n ca1ht!dl"al re1l1ng- !o floor -c!aborall' mastlf'r hr.ciroum suite \\"Ith pr1valf' terrace ancl Juxurioui; tiled ba!h -hom,. is now \·ac11n1 and owner i.\ anxiou.~. No do1\'n to vet1 or a ~su1ne pres<'nt VA Joan. Asking }j3,tnl. 5·16·8640 -Rlty HERE'S YOUR DOLL HOUSE $19,950 ll"s on 1he l'.:aslsidc in grl'At a1't>ll, Jargf' Jot for children. 1llr re~idence i~ very nlf'aT ancl clean and il 's bari;1111n priced for fast i;alr. Take 11mr 10 set 11! .}l6.8640 Assumable 6% Loan 847-12'21. Sh11rp 3 l>edrm, 2 balh ~Ies11 Aj\&\tt\11\A" Verde homl", Lar&e country ~ stylr kitchen with bHns, lTI4l Beach Blvd., Htni Sch heautiful covered pa!lo. Oprn 'til 9 p.m. Complel,. pr1v11ey ""1thl--~=~~'"'-~~- many trees. Pe11ec:I Joca-NO DOWN tion -close ro schools .\ TO VETS Macnab-Irvine Rr-al~ Con1peny AMONG THE TREES NESTLED A delightful 3 hedroom homf in b('Autitul Irvine Temict. $47,500. Call !or 11.ppt. 675-.1210 Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 67.1-3210 park. Normal dO\\n aod as-.~ume high ex1sllnil" 6'1> i\ll'SI. del Mar heauty • 3 : •=>..,,..=-~=-~sp_,__.., .. Gene ral ASK YOUR TAX MAN \rhat ha lhinks about the in- come tax beneflli of O\\"nin& lncon1e property. Then call us about thi:i. Costa ~tesa triplex "1th hantwood lloors. forced air heat and separ- ate }ards. $11,500 r or A Solution To Your Problen1s CaU 673.S.J.50 \\'e're Hert To Help DUPLEX $29,500 Eastside location near Coun- try Cli.ib. Big 70xlffi yard, block 1vllll enclosed. Z Bcd- rm5, «'llCh unit \Vith lcpat· ate iarages. Newport •I Fairview 6464811 (1nyt ime) Vacant $18,990 3 Bedrm To\\·nhOuse in ex- C'ellent area. Close to every- thing. 2 Bath areas, '-'"/1v cpts & d111s. bltn range oven + N'lrig. Outdoor Jiv. lni, shuf!Je board, 1ennis, pool, BBQ. lt's ready for you! Fun price $18,990. Sub- mit your tern1s. Call 847-1221 17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch Open 'Iii 9 p.m. MAGNIFICENT-- MESA VERDE W ITH POOL 3 huae bedrooms, 2 dran-.atic fi.rlf'places and ~pa.rate for- mal living room. Pool 'is fenced for safety. Huge c:ov- ~red patio wilh B.B.Q. C.Omr see it. It's beautiful 11.t $33.950-Trade \JI your old hl)\]Sf'' Walker & Lee r700 H11rbor 81\'d. Ar Adl'lm5 !1-l:"r016:> Opt"n 'ti! 9 Pil1 •AYCREST AREA Big -4 Bedroon1 and family room -Formal dining room. Larg{' yard • $41,500 • only JO~o down or no down VA. - Best financing in !own .• Phone 646-TI71. DOVER SHORES View home. 1148 Santiago Dr. B<'st buy . !PIC'. 5 BR. 4 ba. Adaptable floor plan for couple or l""· ran11ly. ;\e\\Jy rl'1"Qra1cd. By apri't. $91,000. 8111 G rundy, Realtor 833 Do"er Dr., N.B. &12-'1620 ,Back Bay Speciol Lovely homr in the ba('k bay lll'f'a pricrd at ju~t $23.9':!0. This home has thl't'e brd- rooms and ll beautiful yard to it:o with 11. ro1nplr1r "·Hh a SIOnf' B.B.Q. Uod('r the tree11. Room for a pool Hur- ry on thi.~ one. 546-~313 1o ·THEREAL ''."-ESTATERS ~EAT Joan. Payments only S19J bedrooms + lamily room -BRANO NEW per mo includ1n1 tv:t1, Call giant c:o"ered patio, new Immf'dh1 te occupenc:y, prl~d I-==:=:::::= .)-16.jSSQ, 1open e\'es.I "'81tt heater, dispos&l and helow J"t1)lac:emenl. 4 BR, * INCOME * '" j '· "'"' • ,..,,. -FarrpW- HURRY! HURRY! $21,950 \Von"! la'! Jon.I!, 3 b4Klrooms, 2 hath, hard\\uocl floors, AS A PIN •-=-,,.-,----~I automatic wa!tr softener • 3 Ba + pv.·dr room. P11nel-Duplex, 3 le 2 BR , .$62~'!00 l~AGI ] heavy ahake roof and dandy lf'd fam rm w/:md trplc & Duplex, 2 BR \\"alerft S7l,500 ~ .. ISJAft yard for kiddie~ • CRV pric-Ntn "·et bllr. Sparkling Duplex, 3 & 2 BR .... $62,500 . • ed at $31 ,000 -Home a.lnady pool! tB.'\l Jl,Jaii'!rrs Dr,, Tripll"x, 2 BR ea. , •.. $72.500 1ppraJ1ed. Dovtr Skorr1. Roy J, Ward, Triplex. 3 BR. ra ..... $94,500 ""'4,..,....,N..,..___(... $31,000 Rltr. 646-l:tiCJ, Open 01\Uy. Cal! 673-.1663 &12-m.J eve11. -lll£6Q. Vm.. 546-2113 or l42·253S PRIME EASTSIDE A nH'Y Corona rlel ~lar du· plex in an excell1nt •·y,·aJk 10 everything"' location. Ideal lor the ov.·ner occu- pttnt. Call u~ about 1h1s shRrpi,. Only $42,500. For 1nrvrn1ation call 673-8:J:l0. carprlt-;. draplf's. h!lns. dble 3069 MADEIRA 11:ar.. hu;:r covcrf'd p11.rio, Clean ··Coriaa:"·· :'\ Secil'm \0 THL. RJ::AL ~ CSTl\TJ::RS R-2 Lot. l block from f:. 171.h St. Build duplex 11nd live In this much desln'd locallon. f'or appoin!nl•-111. associated hlock y,·all fenre. J•ull prLCI' I Quiet Street Nr Schools $21.!)j(), No rlo"n \IA or New Paint In Ar Out :1·'.t'• !nsn ran br assun1ril -'""""""=""==""'"-I Neat P11110 WHAT A PRICE '·. •,'J '' JEAN SMITH, RL TR. 400 E. 17th :-i!., CM 646-32;,a OAOKEAS-REAL TORS 1015 W Dolbon 6ll•J66J -E XECUTIVES l•llh SJ30 a nionlh P•Y~ alt. CANYON SITE 5\i~(> Loan $21 ,500 Call ~1 10.J\51, lo""'n e\'es.l .,.._. 10% Down _.R_, 1.& Live 11n11d luxury. Lclwl'~l price in Pn!ltige area, see .--\Yi!h parlial ocean vi~w. ~ ••r "'"'what a nurne with 3 over- iledrn1 & den, 2 b1th + Only $33.JOO ~iz.rd ~rooms, ~luded lmmKiat• Po11esalon vll.lue grow, Mme~ priced Owner say~ sell lhls 3 bed-lo $jl,OO'.l. \Valk to schools. room \1le1t1lde bel.uty. New. Ov.·ner u·11.nsft'1TCd, must BIG FAMILY $1000 UNDF:R \',\ APPRAIS,\L + I f\t>rf~uOffil + l R11!h' • l..11rcr Separate. fa1nlly r.on111 • Ehllnl:' A~a In Kllchf'n "* CuJ.dr.v.r S!ree1 t-Now SM.:iOO Il's 11h<trP 11nd 1111rac11ve! ~16-2313 NO m•11Cr wh11I II ~. you r~n 111'11 II ~'1!h 11 DATLV rn nT \VAN I I\[)' 8~:.-~"78 DRIVE BY~~ bl'au111111 ram1ly morn cl7x murn suite, invillna firt· ~i' 11•1th tlags!onr hre:place, platt. \\'ith carptls <ind •pecia! panellin;, in1oked dtaf)f'l lhrougho:ut 0\\-"NER l la1" "iMOl\'8, $26,i:iO, ANXIOUS. Roy McCardle, Realter' w lk & L •Ito N'"""'" "'''·· c.M. 1•iiiiii&iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil a er ee 541-7729 IRVINE TERRACE Realtor• _N_O_T-ONE CEN-T ' BR. ' be. B<1otifut ,,.., ,,~ Edt • • • lit 11n1e offerf!(l ""-'£ nrtr VffiRANS st.,,ooo mn """"or'"''"'° Home Show Reeltor 1 * MESA V E RDE * to movr yOU In lhu sh1u·p 3 ~droom, 2 ba rh, modern "Armchtalr Ho11~.-hunt1nt.. Lo\·~IY. lmmac. homt l st 675-7125 oNerlna. Beaut. around~. Co". pe,tio. New co11per plumb'a. Blk ro aolrcour,1. ly decoratrd, v11cant . •rll! Slee.I thl1 one at $23,500 ~"·""'' PERRON 642-1771 E lll1-Schrod or, Rltrs. 192-6606 FOR LANDS SAKE * A·F RAME * Buy this cute a1 a bui'• l"ar 2-Sty. beach home xlnt cond. 2 bedroom Ea1ts1de Co•t• ~ B" 1•• b' 2 " n., "' •• ca.r car. !lteia. charmer. The land Rl!n~. Nrw cp1~. $33.900 alone Is \\"orth !ht: pric" or CAYWOOD REAL TY $17.9~. Don't dra.a: your fret ·~,... w c H NB ~ . tllll~t wy., on this on.-. C•ll now. 1 ___ 548-1290 Walker & Lee $23,950 Wki'"'a'l"k""em•r. 'g1""'Lme20e···1::::::;::::;::;::;:=I TRANSrER $38.500. 7i9o Harhor Blvd. at Adams 2013 \\"c~ttl1tf Drl\'e YOUR PROBl.F::'.1 George W flli1m •on 5--15-();IS,; Open 'tlJ g Pi\! $137 A MONTH 648-iill Open 'HJ 9 P~l to SPECIALISTS REALTOR 1;-;\(-fif.:-POOL-HORSE~ P roperl'f Mane9emen t 6T3.<4Jj(l 64:>1564 EVES. U pper B ey • Ntwpor t 3 hr, 1 '• ha. cou.ntry~!yllf' Rte l E1tat1 la y0u ad ill th• cla1&Wed Charming 3 hr, 2 bai Mmr. hon1r nr11r new p11rk. 6~\'f(, STEPHENS&. KAYE SECTION'! Someone Is on quit! ftrNtt. Good tenni. 10fln \l11y f' 'If r h a n 1 r . ()45.0122 /\NYTT..,lE watrhln; for It. D ' A I 1,,.;°"-"',.::.'rl~A~•~t-llll!:.c.·~'14~7~7·c_ __ n11 nrr/Ae1 11~.!Jti7 61.:-~s IMll)'l ~11ldl~11.-1n• l'I0\\11 Llf'•~ than rtot. 3 bdrm. den, rf'llr hving nn., dinin' rm,. ('ntry hAll, no do'-''ll trrm~ 11v11ilable. :i.11).\720 T ARBELL 2955 H•rbor Ge neral COZY FOR A COUPLE Only 2 yrs old FHA/VA ok. An impossible find in the Costa 1\lesa area. A iv.o year old home \\'ilh Jara:e bdnni, condition for S23.95Q \\"i th modrrn kifl'hen in spOtle11.\ f11A-\'A 1rrn1s. You'\'e got to Sl'e to hehevr. Dial 645-0303 roRISI [ Ol.SON '" /l ~A L T01lf 2'299 Harbor, Costa rttesa Macnab-Irvine Rralty Company BRING ••• YOUR CHILDREN to see Lh1s sparklint con1for- tal>le family home on a quiet cul-de·uc. 4 BR, Fam· ily rooni, formal d1n1na: room. Everything !or hap. py chlld~n and ('lreb~e family living. Double brick firtplace, s unktn Roman bath and drlia:htful child· rl.'n·s play yard. Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 67.1-3210 -Spring ls Here Enjoy this \11rge lree form pool no1~·'. Th1s lovely 4 bed- room home is tt.ltua!KI on 11 cul.rte-sac strcel in the most desired J\'.ewport }lei_1:h11> Gene r al DISTINCTIVE EXECUTIVE 3700 sq. II. of charm \vith ma&n1ficen1 \•1ew of Har- Dor, Loaded with special leatUI"l'5. !;niqulf' tri-level conslruction. Truly an out· standing nomr. $61,000 546-2313 or 646-7171 \-0 THE REAL \"'-ESTATERS ' •l'I ~I I j 'I ' 0\ " '"'' EASTSIDE Old~r 3 be::lt'OOm home 1vith 3 car i:111ragt on !rt acre Count.v R-4 lond_ Hurry on thill" one!! $23,950 Ntwpe,rt et F1lrvitw 646-8811 (1nytim•l TOTAL LIVING 3 blocks to the bl!:ach. l block lt'I shopping, l block to tht pool and tennis courts. En· JQY this 3 bedroom. 2 bath h1Jn1e 'vith S\\·ed!Ml fire- place, new painl and lols of ~hag carpeting, C o s t ? $29,950. 646-7171 Costa M11a D I SAS T ER SI'R.UC}(:-thit E1stilde Costa ~feu. hom1 sold and o\\·ner purchased another. buyer unable ttl m1nplell! purchate -1eller needs help So.bmlt all tern\11 en thu sparklina: 3 bedroom home "'i lh hard\1'00d Ooor1, b I I n s , pi,tio, dble lirtplace and more $33.IXXI or 8e1t nllflr. Call 54>3-124. South C.0..t Rtalton: URGENT~wner bourht new hom"' -musl Rll im- mediaf'ely. $31,950 or submlt olfer -all terms avallah~. r.tanicured yard, 2 maasivfl fireplaces, 3 larae bedroom• & 2 1parklina baths, Call 54[>...8424, 9:>uth Co a • I Realtor11 RARE VALUE Charminit & beautiful Eut- s1de honir. 3 J..arae bdntts, lBf'ie ta.ni!y rm. It kitchen v.·ith all bllns. 2 Bat:M. Lovely Uv. rm., new shaa carpets. Dbl. frplc. I: dbl. guage. $30.950. GRAHA1t1 Rl:ALTY Ml-2-11.f. TROPJCAL PARADISE Fish, atttams. waterfall11. G~nhse. p.rden w/3 BR + 2 Ba, ffl)!C, dbl pra.&e. Quiet cul.de-MC, Al11Urne 6% FllA loan. Appl only, 5'18-1243, 2238 Catherine: Pt SUPER BUY, ALL TEfilS 3 Br, 1~~ be, A-1 area, CIOl!e to St. John's & all AChaoll!. These don't laaL. $Z3.500. Onr/8.(t 5-16-0116 ai·ea o! Ne\\'port Beach, 1-========= \Valk IO 1ennis courts ,find 8 UNITS · BY owner, 3 BR, den, l,,i BA Hlllcrtsl home. Crpts, drps. thruout. Bit-Int, pMI size lot. ARsumr: 61~ FHA Pkl. 5-15-6119 school!. ~e th1.~ today • Just. listed! Good 11·ea of Owner 63(4•/o VA loan $4000 ca1h • 4 BR, 2 8.A, 2000 i;q. f t. $33,300. $270 f'lltl. P.l.T.I. Imm. Pou. Nti quaJ. ityine. s.;1.6SJ6, 5'8-0Sll. BY ow~r. E-S!de 3 BR, I BA, CJ'J'ts, drp1, tirepl. lzr: 101, sprinklers, On a U ~ha,~d 5trce1. weu kept. only $-11!,9:i(I. a46·2313 Corona del Mar Income Units Dandy duplex 1vifh room !or lf':tpans1on. L o c a t e d in Orange Counly's mo~t de1ft-. rd arf'il. Ideal Sl't up for home plus income or a iood lnvestml"nl. Comr Re lhe numrrous po!<•ibllities the&e uniUi offer. Prope:T1y in thi~ arl"11 Is hard to find- don·1 drlay. Call &1~0303. I ORISI E Of.SO~ "' R L°,At 1"(}11 $ 2299 HARBOR, COSTA 1\IESA SEE IT Sharri 4 BR. 2 b11. Ohl. gar, Cpts. drps. Nr. school!>. FHA or VA lrm~. Only $23,T:>O Ch\"Olf'r/Aglf'nt 5"6-~186 $23,500 • No Do"·n VA • Nor!h Cosl.<t Jl,lesa • 3 Brdrooms • 2 Bath~ • Au1!1-1n'~ * C.ornC'r Lot "* IJouhJe Car Gar11ige • FHA -VA Tenn~ + Call Now 546-2313 READY FOR THIS? B!g 5 brdroom11 -North C.Osta Me1a. $26.500 -VA· f11,\ or lake over the rxi~l­ ing .J!t '1 annual pen"l'nta;c ra!r G.I. Joan, Ready to d\"i!il? Let'• a:o. Walker & Lee Realtors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at A<lams 5-J:>-9491 Open 'tJI 9 Pr-.t An11heim. Be Pyramid 67~·!\800. first to Jiff! Exchani:ors CAMEO H IGHLANDS Sl.i,IXXI, 6-IZQSJ ~11.n view: ex·modtl home. .. BY OWNER. S28.500 4 BR.,, 2 b& .• formal din. 3 BR, 2 ba, Din"& rm, ram rm. Huge Jo! w/2 pool:i.ize --.J _ h . nn, forced a ir, Lg• ~· YA•uS + c arming, tropi-Small do\\7l. 548-82*> f'a1Jy lndscpd tea hot.15'! & I ~~'--~=='""''=--~ t11h pond . Many morf! cus· JUST LISTED, E-alde ~ trizri features • can'l pos· tripln, $49,500. GI no dlOwn. 111bly last long at only Bob Ol~n. Rltr 546-5580 ;.19.500. Dover Shor•• {;.st~ 11.Jul(' ·~~ 2<114 Vista Del Oro Newport Bllach 644-1133 * UNEXCELL!D VIEW Pictureaque European 11Y'lt but contemporacy & convtn- ienl, for family le ent•rtain· Jnr. 5 baths. 4-ear 1ar1a• + m~y xtra features. $169,~ 54g..7249 E••t Bluff DUPLEX BLUFFS CONDO 0-PLAN I .2 -2 Bech'OOm l'louse.s ln one Located on Ju1h &rMnb«!t, Nr • of our btst south -of . the Bay. 3 br/21) b a , - -highway locations. Excel-crptldrps. By Ownar : 6-14-59&3 lrnt income, and can be 1 ------~----l i.een almost anytinie. Fountain Valley S~S.950 CAW. 673-ml WOWI $30,5001 Low VA/FHA T1rm1 4 Btdroomsl lg• Deni Crpts, drps, won't last! Can assum, Jow lnt loan! HAFFDAL REAL TY DREAMY LOCATION • .,.,.,; E"" 541-24<6 and dreamy house with 3 bd-BLDR'S Sacrifice-Sp&11. ityle rms., 2 bath11. \1 B!k. 10 the nu CUlll'om 4 Br, $3'..l,!500. bt>ach. Try 10';::0 down. Ask-$1500 dn. Loaded w/ xtra1. ing $5'1.!lOO. Shake!li. Frpt Crpt thruouL De lancy R•el Estate Sprnltlrs, lndscpd, f n c 1 , :!828 E. Co<ist lhl'y., Cd;\J 1DZ23 Pheasant Ave. ~4-7270 537--0380 ----IRVINE TERRACE Huntington Beach S yr~ )'Ollng. 4 hr. 3 ba + 1---:::..------po~·dcr rn1, family rm. stop.. FAMOUS arate. dining rm. Great fam-''DEANE'' HOME ily hOu.~. F"or sale by own- f'r. 1108 Dolphin Terrace, Once In a '-''h1le you 1et to Open Sun 1 to 5 pm. see a home like !hi1. It'1 ju~t be1utilul! A 3 bedroom PROV. CHAR.\1-1.o ol h\\jl, & family room. moit taste- R-2. 2 BR 2 BA 2 Fpl's, Miy d~orated, Lovely free Lrg op bfoan1 liv nn ON THE Cnt:ry-&tyle fam rm kit Dbl form heated&: filtered pool aiir 11m;·5 for xtr_.. inc . 432 ~·Hh therapeutic pool for re-W A TERFRONT Carnation. Op 1.4 daily l11xlng. Be tint in line. Jusl Jis!cd! 4 Bedroom~ 3 l-'•~12:..-::":::":_ ______ $45,950 842·1535 b/\ths, rl('n PLUS 11 !lifl/\Clous Cos t• Mesa paneJJeil bonus room. All lhe amenities of a:racious Jiving 111 the hr8ch. ONLY $49.500 J Usr CALI. 673-8Sj(] TO SEE \-0' THE REAL \"-. ESTATERS '-l""JPI '' U•Jlll • 1·~- HOME & INCOME Enjny 1hr comfoM1 of thi~ ,.,.ry n1f'e 3 bl'droom 2 bath homt And let thl' j ttnt11l 11n1111 hl'lp you p~y fnr the propcny. Only s~.5oo. Arnold & Freud 388 E. Jith St . r.,_.11 i\tesa 646-7755 B/B 22 YEARS or Rf':AL ESTATE SERVJCF:; IN TH'E }!ARBOR. AREA INVESTMENT OPP • Two lots adjoin. commcn-iaJ. 2 Bn. hOnle plU! apt. lr. iucst hou5". Only $69,500. 675-3000 m11.n ~ 11r.,.-11 · 1u:.u:r\· 1:0.r. ' 1 f ~' t 11Q 1 ". JC~O J YOU'U. Love lhi1 beautiful Cambrid1e 11iJhlll1'lds homt: mi qull"t cul·de.1ac ln Col· lest' Park. 3 la.rie ti.d- rooms • 2 of them 11hut· YA 63/4 °/o Loan $166/mo include& all. Lr• 2 br, incl bllru Ir. refrl&. End ol cul.de-sac. Near e~ry. thing. $4100 cash .l tak~ ovlf'r this loan, No quallf)'- lng, &47-7176. $1500 Down Assume 6'/• FHA l Bedrooms, MW cuper.. Latte covertd pahO. Jt'a \•acant and rl"•dy to IO. Call ~ M2-2S35 tenid, 2 balM, lamlly room, REPOSSESSIONS 2 flrepla~11, new lush ahag BY Owner l tty. 4 Bit. SpMkllns clran homes, 90me r-arptt11, rlectrie built-in•. 3 ba, Fam rm, 01n·1 rm. newly painted &a carpet~. 2, t.ovr\y backyard wLlh patio, La.undry, frplc. Shake roof, ~. 4 t: !i hdrma, Some w1tb nlf'~r sehOol~ and shopping. Block \\"All, T'rrau entTy, pool11, FHA-VA con". terms, ti:tOOO 11.'ll h 3 !i ,, "~ rov'd pt1.!\n, Open h• Sal trnm S20.000 ., $<10,000. •~~un1able loa" call ~741~ t> ~11n, 6401 Athfn& Dr Collins t.. Willa frM", li11dy Pilot \Verir Ada havf' F11.st reiulls are ju•I a phone .tQ13 Adlln'lll' A\'r, 911.?-Po.~2:i , -'~'~r"':..::.'"~'_:c"~'~°'~'----I 1"111\ ;111V11v · lt42-51i7!l I • ., . ' . . . "' . . 30 DAILY PILOT Mo11day, Marcil 22, 1971 I _ ..... l~ r HoulelforSalt l~I ~ .__I _"""'-"' __,!~ I l~I ~untlngton Btach Laguna Beech University Park Income Property 166 1-~-~--o'.',...-1 ------1=--====1------ Bu1fne11 ~pportunity Houses Unfum. 305 Houses Unfum. 200 ~G~.-00-,-.~1 ~~~~..;.;.... Newport Beach 'MOUNTAIN CABIN • Tlllll::E ARCH BAY* BES BUY COSTA MESA NEED pa11n('r 1n small pain· GIAN1' t!l'.nllly mom , \Vood Desigiwd for functional 1ami· T tin< businc8$ ,v/10 yrs ex. ... . "' ' 305 Apts. Furn. Coit• Mt s• La Quinta Hermosa t h d It We sinCt'rely bfhevf.' this to TRIPLEX 1'"'REE H.£NTAJ. BOOK • LOVELY 2 Br, 2 ba honie, Unbtlievably Beautiful ht!1amed ~·ell!ug, knolty pine Jy t'llJOY!ll('O \\'II " u be !ht>, be l bu ·n \Jniversi l>f'1', 64.5--0809 <:c11ne In and bl'O\V~A tbi'U ch 0 I(' e a I \If t ll l 0 c. u,·n .. h. al>o ,, .•. ,,1, ,, ... ,," privaci·. This honie takes · Ii Y 1 • .,... I 1 I ·~ C Id I · VAL O' ISERE Cardrn Apl> s' an sh Co>•"'-E<tatr• Liv--, "' ' u .. " 11 d 1 ty P·ui<' 3 Bdrrns S.· dining ,,ie coses you can come o WRECKING yard, xlnr Joca. our ll('rvice-3 &. 4 beds. rpt~ rps, lrp e, 2 patios. Ad ,.1 · P 1 """ Cllstuin \\E'f .bar. $21,:ioo , lu a \'S ~iage o .a~ rut 'PL'us a h~ "bonu11 hvlng for free after an lnlt-tlon. Reasonable. ·Will sell apU;., mo. to mo. or lea~e Avail end of April. 644-1623 ev:~~he:. P<'S~~amO\\•er: ing & Spaciouls A11:1~1n1cnt8. ,Full prit..'<',. 3 Bedroom 2 ~::~;,~:;n~ ca o;:,,.~~ ~ ~1\" IUI X JO u.f JJnn1ac'. ial \/1\•estment of only 20~ all or part. Call 673-71~ \VALK ER &: LEE, BEST Ae .... ·port location, l \Vaterfall. 45' pool Rec. Rm, Tberr~:ed poo; :.ur en ~s • bath, O\'('f'Sl:tl'd dtJ!c b":lr' I . _, • b<lm>S ' bat"" C"'''" • ······-" ,, , ..... , '" .~. do\vn (approx. $8300) JS tlug 1-a-.-.-, .• =e~.~.-w-=.=.=,= ... ::...c=l-1-0 REALTORS BR d d'nl . I l !ll'•uo:•que. 1 ~ pay yaiu J ., ,.., .v ....,, ... -..-... .. ,, _.,, ;JI.I , en, 1 ng, inc a\\'n Snuna, Sgls 1-2 Bdrm, I"urn-Unbclicvable Livuig c_cc b!tn i·ancC' " uv1'n, Jatnil ~in, stud;. prlvat~ INCLUDING THE LANO, \rel! localed westslde tr!-l714) 842-4455 main!. $42j, Citll 646-4114 Unlurn. (l'o1n $m. SEE IT: du~slu.·r. ~·i-i~~ts, n'.·:i~-cornr:unity. t'C'atul'f'& for with xlnt 1er1ns available. pie:-:. Til~ec ~~Y 2 Bt!d-\VANTED: Orange C n t Y 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, large • BLUFFS PLAZA-2 br, 2 2000 Parrons, ~70 1 Br un~-0$1~~:urn $180 es, OOleOl'l' IO!.i>pr111 ·1 ('V(TY mrmber of· the room un\s Wit separate general on sale liquor kltche.n , carpets, drapes, ba, den, pools, Nr .schools. $l 7 f $'lO ,1rr•. landscaped, JU)! l1st· 1 Jamily. s79,500, 4~2159 or garages. hardi.:ood llOON l i cc n s e. eon al ide fireplace, double garagt-and $325/mo. 644-l3% e BRAND NEW e 12 Br unf 5 urn £ • It, hurr,v. 499-223:'J for appt . and private pa!Jo areas ex-restaurant. Cash. Courtesy great back yard. For rent! .L~EA~S~E;=:-~B=A=\='C=R=E=ST~.~,~B-R~. 1.2 BR. l',a BA. Pool. Blrins. ALL UTIL IN'CLUOED ' • .,, 500 • cellen! for the owner occu-to brok1>rs, 714/8.19-6770 at $19j.00 nionthly. Call J)!shwasher, Carpetldra,....s. Special Bonus; a silver-_.,, pant Broker S:l.5-9'-191 din rm, den, nice pool. $475 Utll pd. .-~ plated i·andll" snuffer \s lmmae. 3 Br. ho1nc, :<Int it.rl 5·00. 67.8550 Money to Loan 240 ~i;"C';;;:::.,;i;:'-;:;:;:c-:;:::::-l .'m"'u":._IR~l~tr'._'64~2-::5200""1____ d 962-M71 ( :::' J 546-8103 art'a. Lo\•rly »round!). 2 Car """ ' ~ $210-4 Br. Bltns. cpts, drps, :>ZJ Vh:iorla St. )Ours 11 :rou brin.!: this 8 ''Deane'' Home garagt'. Fire;iac:e. "SINCE 19-JG" gar, fncd yd. Kids/pets y;elc Newport Heights 400 l\lerrlmac Way \\ hE'n yOtl visit out• 1nodcls . • $6'.500 • lst Weslcrn Bank Bldi: Cash Fast '· Blue Beacon * 645-0111 2 BR dlb _.. rd I"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""" 4 blks s. of San Diego ft'W)' • U . . k • gar, fenccu ya , I ~ on Bcarh, I b!k W. on Holl Once 1n a 1\'hilr you gel ro ~ce a home like !hii.. H's just bcauliful. ,\ 3 Bed. and Fam Rm Honie in ex- cellt'n! condltion. Lovely free lorm heated and filfer· ed pool 1virh th<"raput1C' pool for relaxing. 812-253.l .Fan!astic Olde English home. nivttrst!y Par $200 per month. ( 21 l) * SUS CASJT AS \\'oods Cove area. Xlnt Day1 833-0101 Nights 1-===~---== 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds $200-3 Br. 2 Ba. Pool. Bltns, 44g..9g75 1 PM 'tll 6 p;..1_ L . 1 f B h 1 • to 16211 Park:;ide Lane. • •o UNITS e FREE APPRAISALS dbl gar. Av! now! rg nice y urn ac e or ..: (71 -11 847-54~1. gl-onnds \1'/lot!I o! shrubs. ' C M Blu• Beacon * 64S-0111 University Parle 1 Br. Furnished models l ""!!!!!!"!!"""""""""."'~~I PLACE REALTY 494-9704' \'/ell n1aJntained, w/pooJ osta esa lnv•stment open daily. * Bach apt, 1..-on1pl kitch Z969 s. Coast H""'Y, LB ~ Gross $3-1, 100. May exchange 548-nt 1 anytime Corona del Mar 4 BR. & family rrn •.•• $33a 2110 NeWpOrt Blvd, C'.\1 &. balh 1 blk H.B. pier. * OCEAN VIE\V VILLA * FORTIN co. 642·5000 3 BR ... _ I 1s· y 1' 1 d It 642-S:J20 ,\~------_J 1 t TD L 2 BR. Fireplace. Water & · ., uuu. rm. & dn. rm. LIKE NE\V! Fr('shly J, ry. au. New, 1Jlde \\'Orld design; 21 .. ·-----·-·l ~L!!;s'._~~r;,_~!_~e'..._._.-1~0 S oan T"rtl "--k ~~.,-· 1-" E t 'd 2 BR & QBILE I t •-h 2 1 • gardner furn. Crpls, drps, " e n.uo.; • • ••••••• • .,.,,.a pain cu. as s1 e: · M · iome a u.:ac , BR, den & rec, rm. Din. FORECLOSURE stv/refrig. Sl9S. 833-2l'16 3 BR., & din. rm. ...... $325 Din rm. $1611 Q:in1pa.red at Br. $160 nio pays all. area. Frpl, Kitch. '\'/r11nge. Acreage for sale 150 G~,,r{, INTEREST <BR 2" b ••.. 1325 1200 192 '"1· • -C 11 '8'" •" 0 317 ,' o< 3 B 1 B 1 C ., ;.ii au.,,........ . . •<I lp ..... ne. a :»&-1 w or ....,...-v. ovrn, dish\1·nshcr, $39,000 ~ -· ,~ acre horse ranch repos· 2 d TD L r. at l. rp Is· p t ·-7 9187 0'2-4423 -"""''-'--~c-~c---tull pr. Lower dn. pyt. OK. EGG RANCH ~essed froni former aero-n oan Available now. S2jQ/nio. e e J..> -• ~· AVAIL now·2 hr, all extras, ~11SSJON REALTY 49'!--0731On8.:i acres Brookhurst Ave. spaC'e eniployre now avail· Yearly. Call 673-6356 ** $13:1 ** pool. l\nls ok. Sl49 up. V.A. RESALE ON THE MALL * ft'Ontagc ln \Vestminster. able at developers cost TC"rms based on equity, Costa Mesa Lovely 1 BR. lrg & tasll"lully 96S·7~10 or 8-li-18j6 . * LEASE • SELL • TRADE, 642-2171 545-0611 furn. EnC'l yard. Lndscpd. 3 queen sized bedrooms. i\1onarch Bay. 2 BR. 2 Ba. Cl zonC"d, excellent shopping SAVE J.3(.00 .... ~ . H bo 21 Close to OCC. 1004 £1 1 Laguna Beach Great extra large cu\ de sac condominium. $59,500 cen!er site adJ'acent to Mo. -=s "''"1' •Mr r area yrs, 3 BR, l* BA Condominium. Camino. 546-5704 lot.. Anyone can lake .o\'er I BETHKE REAL TI.' 49-1-2858 bil• Home Park. Owner mo· on !hcse fabulous, oak stud-att er ortgage Co. 8.lt·in range O Yen• "SINCE •ruo" 1 BD"'M Adil ... FOR lease. niC!.' 2 Br. 2 " 336 E 17th Stre t d>>h"-•her & garb o g e ......,.... ,,.. · s, no po... 8 be h Al ' "b)ect to VA loan ''"tlh a d"d, ron•h ,,., 'P"•d>. · ' ... o apt nr oo oo l." 1 . · · d •13 UNITS nr beach, '""''· U'>oted, s"bm'tt'. •. •. '· " ~ L • ~ •• , W t Ba•'-Bid 1125 mo. incl. util. Nr · · ' · · ' t f h u Located in the booming Pnvate money front 11""" disposal. Large mas tc r ...:> es cm '"" g: 1 5.12 C a stnall s:::le. \\'/kit. & ba. 1 11' ' 0 cas an poy· vie"" furn. 10'0 do,vn or Larwin Realty, Inc. '-"-h C 0 _ 1 .JIN b c d r o o n1 v.·/connecting University Park s 1op'g. enter St B·.thk• Re-'ty nienl 'lfi.I rvor n1onlh • 9 ~ 4""92. ..,,.,ut oast area near =n up for st & 2od loan>. i:•n "" ,_ '-"-' ,,... trade. $4 ·"""· ,...-. a Exclust've Agents b•tlt l BR h••· Jorge Days 93•0101 Nt'ghts ~23 inclut <.IL Go n1an go. L'd I I Juan Capistrano. High Trust Deed Center Inc. · ~ .r 1304 S. C~l H\\'Y. Laguna 0 5 e ?JjS2 Brookhurst H B balcony, fully car Pete d, $30 \\'K . 1 jl('r, I\'/ kit I-.:::.:..:::..:.;=.=....:.:..="--'--· I Wa I k & Lee I -5 6-54 " . . above 1he smog, private 1323 N. Broadway, S.A. draped. S22j. Avail. April $35. r.1aid ser, linens, TV l ~L~id~o'--1-sl_e ______ I er -:*LOROE~o'>uliic~E~D;;-*:;:--·1-~~4~~1~1~a~n~y~f~tm~e road and locke<.I gate gUar-Loan Brokers Sin~ 1949 I. 549-262:'.i 3 BR. 2 baths ........ S300 & tele. Sealark i\lotel. 2301 ACREAGE INVEST~lENT anlee 1iie natural beauty of ~3-838! •nyl>.>ne 3 BR 211. bath> "'~" N 4 • ./ BEAOI APTS. Bachelor l · BR f II 3 Bedroom, 2 bath r,,,,,,,·ve " i'3 ........ ~ pt Blvd. 646-7 4J 20 mniac. a " am Y rm. 4(1 ac1'l"S in Cleveland Forest this former Spanish Gl'ant I '~~~~~~~~~~ h Bl ,.~h., 3 BR. 2 ha. fam. rni .•• $340 $200. 1 BR. S225, S2jQ· 3 Reallors 2790 Harl>or Blvd. at Adan1s j..j5-9-J91 Oprn 'ti! 9 P~f 45 Ft Lot street.10-f'ast of San Jan Capislrano. surrounded by beautllul on1e. t-tns, is \Vasher, 3 BR 2 b h 132-$25 Per Week & Up Nord. 642-4(197 or ~8-221J street, By app't. only Utilities & good aC"cess. Ex· Cleveland National Forest. JI fl! I disposal. fireplace, patio. . a. omC' ...... a BACHELOR & 1 BR. f'Xt 228 j SUPER SH ARP-it· s im· S93,750 tt!len: development poten-AU utilities available. Housesforflent Nr. Baker & Fairvie\\'. i" .... '.·. red hi·11 TV & maid serv avail. 1 BR. co1np. Jurn. incl. oolorl maculate. 3 BedroQnl home LIDO REALTY INC. !ial. Only $1875 per acre. North Costa J\.1esa. $U5 mo. ._ 4.50 Victoria, C'.M. TV. Garage. $175 in quiet residential art'.'11 -3377 Via Lido 673-7300 Tc1ms. R. S. 81-0\\71 Co. PP.ICED FROM $9,950 'Valer pd. 2 yr lease avail. \Valker Realty 6i~5200 I close 10 schools & shopping. 493-1774 LO\V 00\\'N.EASY TERMS Houses Furnished 300 Refs & sec. deposlt re-QUIET, studios Sll5. 1 Br ~~a!~u~n~a~N~ig~u~e~l----l<:C>m;:;m;@;;;;:-W;;;;<! quired. 54>.8609 Jor app't. REALTY Sl2j. No chldrn or pets. For $30,9;1! 1his has lo be Cl uttl 1----------2 oo c f * io1ce m pie zoned Circum~tanccs force (he inl-General U . p k C i..., Elden Ave, I\ . See •he best hon1e !or 1.hf-mon<'y *29 MONARCH BAY* o Co 1 SPARKLING 3 bedroom, 2 n1v. ar enter, Irvine mgr Apt 6. in Hunllngton Be a ch. BY O\r:-.'8R range un Y aC"reage mediate disposition ot these I----------ba!h home with large family Call Anytin1c 833.082() 7""-=-'o=~~=~~~ Car.,...ts, dra""s, bltns, plus ~att"ta .,., ~alfy few choice parceJ5 whOse room, all bltns, f" I I y ''"""""""!'"""""""'"""~ 1 1 BR. $125 ~ 2 BR. $140 ,... ,.~ Beaut. Colonial tri·level 5 » ~c: I LOSS· " I' Plus•. plus! Call :l-l:>-&12-1. ' ormer owners , is your ca1"'"ted. nice en C' Io s e d Houses Furn. or Pool. Bltns, c:rpts, drps, m BR, 212 BA, sundeek. f;in-6tl-6J60 C ~ South Coa~t Rt>altorr>. GAIN~! all or write !or RENTAL FINDERS yard. excellent location. Unfurn. 310 children, no pets. 325-J E. ~---ta~ttc 'vhl1e 'rater vlrw. 2· 200 Acres oce<in vie\\', C'Olllplele details and cOlor Lease S250 per mo., O\\'tl{'r 17th Pl. C.M. 548-2738. $1500 y1·s·"'"." Compl crplrd, a!I -,-m,·le• 1,· •• , ...... , •. Ve~• .1 bot 8 .. d' 1 Free To landlords .11 . . C 1 M ~ v" v-.cc " 'J on-s1 e p os. uy ll'CC \1·1 oons1der optJOn 10 OS a: esa 2 Br. !urn triple.'i:. W/w cpl, hh-1ns u1c vacuuni sys1rn1 hilly. "'700 ""r a" .. f'. 10% I th d lo--645-0111 h c II 54 -8' 2 • ~ ,.. ,_, 1• rom e eve .. ~.: pure ase. a J-~ '•, newly decor. Ne\v rurn. Mo I & sauna bath. 3 ("ilr gar, fin. 6'."~ int. ALA."J REALTY So th Coa R 1 4 BR., best ~1esa Verde area. YES YOU N r u1o '1kler RANCHO CAPISTRANO 4l5W.1 9th,CMtoMe1e1 , u s! ea tors. f'am rm 2b !pl Bltn · Pool. $140. No children or Choice Huntington Beach 3 f::~ey dJ;0xt':.as t:'~~mer~ 7l4·725·llS8 ask !or Alan. 2172 DuPont Drive, Rm 8 •CH.ARMING 2 hr duplex-}<~ull · car·p· & a.drp>'. Lg:: pets. 548.5376 C t $100-util pd 1 Br. apt. Avail c d bit d bedroom • llC\\' carpe", ous 10 menlion. 1135.000. eme ery Ne"·port Beaeh, Cal. 92664 rp!s, rps, ns, screene yard. Atrium. Lge. patio NICELY furnished 2 BR L /c 156 now. Child sml pet ok. · t _, & large CO\'C'r('d patio • as-1-'="~·="="::...:•=r=l131=-·="="'~·---1 --•-t_• __ r~y~p-••____ 833-3223 Blue Beacon * 645.0111 ratl~hil~v ;~~,·u 00 gara .. ~~--part cov'd. Gardener incl. up stairs back apt sun1r 6o/4'i" loan. • • v· . \RBOR I M 'I I . $29J. :HZi-3604 Art. 4. \V/sun<leck. $160, 1.~ garage. $26 ,900 842_1535 M1s51on 1e10 J-[, • P.est i\Ien1oria obi e Home $135.Ulil pd. La!,runa. Year $17(1/mo. 2101r~ Cecil PL (in A<lulls. G4£Hi004. SELL or LEASE Park, Costa r..fesa, plot 618 Trailer Parks 172 round. Nice Bach. Nr beh. rear~ 646-7jJj. Newport Height' $l 55-SHARP 2 BR • ..,-~~~·~~-~-,·~~r~;.,.,I~ spaces A·B. Sunset La1vn, , • , Bl B * 645 0111 2 BR G pr Cr ~ Deall€ home 3 br, lgc fam $~[1(). (213) 322.0819 aft 4 pm. £XCELLENT opp. 2a',~ of ue eacon • · ar. a 10. pts. 2 BR. BBQ. rel11g/lreezer, Heated pool. Adults, no pets ;; rn1, fully crpt/<lrp, lge two 5 Star }~am. M. H. \VE HAVE IT! ] Br. great <lrps, sro~·e, rctrig. Quiet ov<'n rotisserie, {res hi Y Ileen okJ. Also 2 Br. unfurn C ;, patio: S2S.900. w/ronsider Condominiums PHrks for 6~:\1. Tota! spaces location. Util pd. $100. ti-opical setting for adults painted. no children. Sl7:J \\'/retrlg. Eastside Sl<W. 011.Tl('r. 3 BR, 1.,, ba. l-'2_rnlc.cT..:D~·-=O=•~·~_r:_8..:31J....:...:l..:16=....8. _ for sale 160 312 0 •12 sp. ready to start ALA Rentals• 645-3900 ~.1310.blk to shops. $160-unf. $200 /urn. J.18-8261 -"':cc2·=''=.2=0 .. ~--~=-- Classifie~ INDEX Advert1srn9 ~,..--",..'_"_._·" _ _,JI ~ I Cl.tssificaiion I 00-149 Real Ei1a11, I.al Central ~-Cl.tssification 150-184 Cl.tssification 200-260 ...... _-_ .. _"_'._"_'_,)!~I Patlo & v.-aterlall. Assume Mesa Verde COZY CONDO, single story ~o~str.J. Liniiled Partner. AT the bt'ach . yi· round~ BEAUTIFUL :"l!ESA DEL Duplexes Unfurn. 350 LGE nicely fw·n l BR. apl , ~~~ ~ ~a7~9~;,t mo total. I PACESETTER ~ be~rm, 2 b_ath, formal din· ;~:; .'l~e~r~!~.r~.0:1~~ta~:~ Kids ok. Utfl pd. $13j. I :'llAP., 3 Be<l~m. 2 bath, Corona del Mar $130. Closed g1ara~e. 19N~ I · · · 3 ·ER. 2 ba. Heavy shake 1n:::: 1oom, air cond., luxury call 682_1Jii?. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 new carpels, avail at $24;-i pets, no men. nqu1re 'w . 4 BR, 1'¥ BA TO'-''llhOUSf', roof Enjoy the lovelv sum· crpri;, t:!rps, vacant. Only1~=-=---------Balboa 1,land per mo. on lease. Call agent NEW;-: Br. 2 ba, cpls, drps, "B" \Vallace or 838-0038 ' Cl.ts$ification 300-355 Ap.1r1ments for Rent ] [ 9 ] Classification 360-370 assume :11,~ r~ FHA. pool, mer. bree.tes. L 0 11, · prit'ed Sl-150 do1v11 F1iA or no do1vn Real E5tate Wanted 184 5-.16-4l.tl gar. $300 J\lo., ls('. BACH apt. $90/mo. ln-tenn!s "I" Q\vner l24 000 GI ' BR f h G Corbin-Martin Rltrs.644-7662 I d.. ·1 n. h t a·1 962-1680~ .... • , , for lltis lint? area a! S37.:icto. . \\'ANTED: 3 Br & 2 ba house, ,, . urn. ousc. aragl". SPACIOUS 3-4 Br, 3 ba, cu Ing ull , .,.,,c r t er CORBIN-DUTCH CLEAN, cus!om car. 10 buy?" condihonal sales $250 Yearly. Fam rn1, Lge fncd yard, Huntington Beach SGJ + 11\il. Matw'£" persons Slicers Shanty & d . 1 tontr. in area of o. C. 1.R_E_A_l_.T_O_R ____ 67_>-_333_t Frp!c, $350. Call Jim ai 1 ·2-B_R_/..;..l_Ba--pt--1-,--...:0:::'1:oY:..· ::64::""...:1::80::9 ____ _ pel~ rps, private enc College. Call 549-5808 Corona del Mar 6-15-1976 or 833-2113 ' er 8 rps, MOBILE hon1e. completely i\lake your hon1e thC' 19th MARTIN patio. 3 bedrm. 21, ha, 2J~~~~~~~~~~ stove-garage. Rec.enlly furnished. Adults. Til Sept hOle alter onr of those days ca r gar. Take over 6'0 Govt 1; PANORAMIC V1e1v \\'bile 2 BR, nc,v, gar, \Yater pd, deror. Lake Park. Avail 30th. Call 54S-2.t36 a1 l\1eadowlat·k "hen no1h· loan, asking S21,9:icl. rast I I[.} \Valer & San Joanquin Hills, leaSC'. No pets. Nr 16th & 4/1. S1651mo. 962-7137 1ng-11·rn1 n~ht. 11 yo11 REAL TORS 644-7662 possession. Financial Nwpt Blvd. $1 50 Imo· j t~~~~~~~~~~ TOWNHOUSE E-side 2 Br, . 1 Beach block, 2 hr, lge patio, 642-3837 11 ~ Ba. Pool. No pets. $175. ~",.....-""'·~!~ Cl.tssification 400·465 ~-''_"_""'_'"""_"__,)!~I Classification 500-510 \rant to glVf' up t ir gamr 3 BR, 2 BA. t"an1ily rn1 . I !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;-:\ _~•~dd~i~"~"~'~l~o~lf~-,~tr~o~e~t ~p~ark::in~g ~ c 11 "'° 0010 \\'e have a big baek yard f'rplc. Blt-ins. Fencrd yrrt. F.VERYTHING SHJP·SHAPE I~ Lease S397/mo. 675-298.) UPPER BAY. Large 3 Br, ApartmentslorRent "' ~·=~=~""'c._=--~- \vith an alley t'ntranc:t' !or S29,000 By O\\'ner. a.15-0-155 bltnbunkbe<.lsindownsta1rs Business Houses Unfurn. 305 2 Ba, b!t-ins. f('nC'e<I , ~----~--' SPAC, 1 Br. Crpts. drps. , 11'1·) •--i Pl 4 •-ct 2 "'"' 1 · .... , "e-·•c. 12~.-lea••. 2<'9 pool, no >hoP>. Util pd. 1884 Personals """s. us ,.., roon1s N t B h •J'l:Urm, ge mezzanine mas· Opportunity 200 ~u....., ~ .,., "'° " baths and e.'i:ctl!cnt condi-ewpor eac ter bedrn1 & bath suite + -'---,·---...;.'-'-General Norsr. 540-1251 filonrovia Ave .. C:'l·J. 5-18-(1336 ~~-c~-,,-~- tion. All for $36,950. 842·;QJ:, RUSTIC CHARM guest roon1. Obie garage has AAA BUDGET Booster-2 Br. 1 .A_p_ts_._F_u_rn~·----360-E/SIDE 1 Br. w/\v crpt'g, 1 Cl.ts~ification 525-Sl:i Nearly new 3 bclrms., fain-bltn cabinets. \1·ork bench CANDY AND ONE month's rent .... yes, Cpls, drps, kids & pet~. General blt11s. s11ndcck. util pd, 1 ' I II Q~ l Huntington Harbour GREATLY REDUCED Beautiful settint: & vieY.'~ 3 Lg BR, 3 Ba. din rm, gourmet kit .S.· lirkfst rm, \l'i'l bar, pier & slip. $119,500 1 Ric Rickard. Pete Barrett Rlty 642-5200 SACRlflCE $88,(100 r..fagn1ficent 4 hr, 4 ba 11·ate.rlront 11ome in Hun- tington Ha1·bour. 101 ' ,<·aterfront, 57' dock. Call Zl.3 / 5!)2.1601 for appL Prin. t'ipals only. Irvine ily rm . & kitchen wllh bl!ns. 11.nrl c!rc door opener. Best SNACK SUPPLY less than one n1onlh's rent S14j, Adlt. $138. Yearly: 642--8520 _ lost and found . 2 Full baths. Lovely new value a! S2J,500 anxious WE ESTABLISH ·is your total do\vn payn1rnt ALA Ren1als e fi.1>-:1900 CUST0'.\1 .FURNITURE * SIS per v.eek u P O''·n ' ALL ROUTES on many fine 3 or 4 bcdrm REN'f" S• d cla 810 Classific.ttion 550-555 l'al'J)('ring. Stone irplc. 3 · er. LEASE 4 br/2 ba, lg tnro 'ut· e a 'ss \\/kitchens, S25 per "·eek L • R It I ("' 11· · 1 di homes! Call us to see if * Call 54°3481 * garages. elcc. door. Don't arw1n ea y, nc. ,~o s1> 1ng 1nvo\'e yrd. Chldrn OK. <>-up Apts. MOTEL, :>-18-97:J5 l~,--,----')[l•J · · · 1~ ~ '1~' Bcookh t fl B C\SH RE"U!Rc'D YO'J qualiiy. SEY :\I 0 UR * 640 _734 * * 1.,,, ... 1,.0• miss sering 1h1s! ,,,,.,,.....,, .,.,_ urs · · · ' • "I! "' RE,\LTY, call 847-1221. , ~=:_~*.,:;=w~·'""...::....::.~,-Balboa Island J BR. furn. Sl:iO inc! util. " UL " CALL 0 ,46.2414 546-5411 Anytime Plan one············ $975.00 12 BR Du I G N p 1 d' 1 Pl $162'00 RENTAL 3 Br & dlnln" rni . pex. arage. 0 *I BEDROO:'ll * oo, garage, ispo~a . Cl••·,·1,·,,1,·o· 575-580 ~.""' Income Property 166 an !\\'o .......... a. + 2 bath s2;l(l ""'r m~ lst ,"°v"· 1Ad11J1s. ,_s 28 M 0 42/mo. 733 Available 'til July :!d. Adults, no pets. 642~2383 ~· " --and last + 1100 dep. Dial ' ~-=·-=-~·=·"=··~· ~·"=-==·---* 6'•'°"10 * I Br. spacious. Adlls, $12Zi. l ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,;;.IPlan three ........ S37a0.00 ,.... \Vt'~"" ~· ~ REALTY E'i:crllent income for a few 1c ~ s · -•R JUNIOR 64~ "'"3 fot•>i f.·. Ol~n. SPAC 2 Br. S!v rl'!Mg, Pool. tdesl !or hAC'hclor'!'. tfYICes a11u epair5 Nc•r Newport Posl orritc hours \\'C'ck!y \\·01·k.~ Days & ,,.....,.,., .. '' Co ona del M -SHOPP I NG CENTER Li·cnin«sl. Rt•lilling •nd coJ. /nc. Realtors, 7299 HarbOr, <·pt/drps, kids/pets. SJ50 r ar 1993 Church . .Y18-!l6l) I Cl .1. . OCEANFRONT DUPLEX Good JnC"On11>. SGC.500 BURR WHITE Realtor 675-4630 2901 NcY.')Xlrt Bh·d., N.8. EASTBLUrr, beautiful 4 BR, 3 BA, fan1 rnl, 2100 ~-fl Xlnt location, !ithOols, f''ashion !.~land & Country Club. j l\1in 10 OCC'all $-17,500 01\'ner 6~~:.Jj ., Co~ta :-.1esa AL..<\ R1•n!als e 1)..13-3~ "'s1 ic ahon 600-699 100'' OcC'upied 11·1111 ]eciin~ inoney froni coin OP· ., I • LRG Bachelor, furn util Dana Point ,.-------~ r.rl1<1ble Tenrinls !.'ralt'rl f!ispcnsers \rithin a Landlords-Owners I HOUSI:; in cour1, 2 Br, cp11s, pd , 2 blks Big Corona. l I Jrfil All on Jc;l ses qu:ili!ied n re a. ~Handlrs \\'e \vill rcf1>r tenants to you {l!'ps, patio. 97& \'/, 17th St. AdU. Sl41. yrly. 642-8520 S~~GL!, TV, pool, pets ok. Ernploymentll!J Profit ab11i1y nianag('rl nan1" br;ind candy and F,REE of charge., .l\1any No. A. C:\l. 5-lS-2839 * LRG Bachelor, furn util l\tarina ~1;~, \~rJ~ g:a~~ Closiification 700-710 by 11111· managcn1ent drpt. ~11<1.<·k~I For personal inter-desirable tenants on oul'' Dana Point pd. 2 blks Big Corona, l Hwy. Prin1e location close view st'nd naine, addre~s \Vliling list. --'--'-'-"-------Adlt. Sl20. Yrly. 642--8;)20 I I[~] lo frl'e\va.v in ri L-· ALA Rcnt3 ls. e &l.i-3900 3 BDR:'I!. 2 BA ., family rm, 2 BR, Ava·,1 Ap"l & '.toy Huntington Beach Merchindise · · Orange County :111 phone i111mu.:I' to J\.1111!1-cpts, flrps. Lo\·ely vic,v, •, ., . . S111re Drs1ributing, InC., l!l81 3 BOR.i\f., Family rm., park S:blS, a\'ail. Apr. j. 496-5023 only_ All bill~ pd, $200 nto. BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS. Classification 800.836 $185.000 Full Price \rest Broadway, Anaheim, like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids Adulis, no pels. Gij...3:i1 1 $14()....$165. Quiet, priv. palio, Ca. 92802 !71·1) 71g.~n. 01' bk 1200 th ND Fountain Valley 2 d ,_ I I dr .,. 11 ][El """"' \, r .. a mon . 1 Ar furnished. Inc!ud1ng \Var 1-ou.:s, l'P c es~ ni:; p ~ Q1~TR!BU'iOilSNEEQED FEE. 541)...1720. SPACIOUS, very clean 3 br, utilitir.s, S13~1. rm, locked sep. &ar. Pool. el& •nd Supplie& n TIUNT'S "SNACK.PACK" I ·l-'1~2ll=L-'-l~B~"'--, ~,-,-/~l~ 2 •,. -.· 22' '"'ll"'led !~.... 6i.l-2~40, Broker Sauna. Rec rni . · · 1~ r. ap · v re ric. v ~.,,, I"'. ~ "'" 1-,'." 1 '"·el·-n L». (\ blk tV, Classification 850-858 Nrw 1nulli-n11llion rl o 11 ;Jr t1rw i:pts, drp5, gar, Chlld r111, S~::(I. ~42-1681 Costa Mesa ,,., "" .,., nrh·rrt1sc•rl snH('k pa<'k pl'tl-ok FOR ise, lmmac 3 BR. 11 ~ o( Bearh Blvd, on Slater!. rhH·ls. NEED NO\\'~ Blu.e Beacon* 645-0111 h h d * 1130 UP * * s~7-7S.lS. $55,000 \\'ill buy ;i l)eauL 3 Br. 2 ba. 61' \\'ATERFRONT. Oot'k. l){)at inem, 3 BR. lo Boats and /tC a. new s ag cpts & rps, Reliablr n1en or \1·0111en in lrplr, bltns. $240 mo. GIANT 1 & 2 BEDR00:\1! I BR, patio, pool, natural %1:!-9iil3 or 213/241-!588. Gorgeous. park-like se111ng. beam ceilings. Nr hospital. hon11' in !hr prr.slige area... by ownr for quick REALTORS Turtle P.oc:k Hills & you o\vn 6.-l900 !"INCE 19"14 the land! E\•erything ha~ I c='~·~..:::::::.· -------1 673-4400 your area to Sf'rviCf' ja.~t· 3 BUfill. + tanuly rn1., full ~n done, all lndscf)!'I. & CHARMING hillside home movint: coin opcratt'd pro-dining rm., built-ins., brk. · kl d 1 C' iv/view, Newport Hts, ·~~~ ... ..,,~.,..----, duets in com""ny ~l'CUl'('d $390 a month. NO FEE, Huntington Beach . ~pnn ere . ('cc, g11re.g "7983 CUTE EAST-·SIDE-,~ N rt 54n 11211 door opener. 1:11-g(" PA!\o, 1 -="=~'-"=-~--____ 1 locations, commercial or ('\\'po , ,,,... · self-clcanlng ovc-n, ell'. Call· Newport Shores DUPLEX taclory Part or full time . BEACH Cottage-~tv rclrig, NR bcacl1, 2 BR condo \\·/rlShY.'S!', \\/I\' crpt, dbl garogr ,\, patio, SI i 5. jJG..1802 1-I.B. 6 10 12 houl'll prr \Verk. children & pets. \'rly S13i i)red hill * BARGAIN * 1\«\\' rondition. T1\'0, one bpfl. J)is!ributor ot produC'l only ALA Ren!ali;; • 1}4:,....3!lOQ Lovely becich hornr. 2 r.., roo11\ units ,~·ith alle.chcd lno affllla!f'd 1\'ilh Hunts· Sl65-2 Br, n 0, rpls, drps, \:Qll\'. dt'n. !·', Ba. Srp. i;::irages. Ownrr built, qual· \\'rs~n Foods. Jr1e.) • no h /d di 1. J 'lrl k I BR, im!lo. pool, natural brkfst. rn1. Nice ,.,u·p. ,i,, \iy l--Onslruction. S300 per S<>llinJ,!. CASH REQUIR£D s1·s r Bry, ~, pa lll;,4511 01 ;•1· hean1 c<'Hini;:~. Nr hosp1!al. rlrap!'s. Bea111t'rl re1l., bit-rnn. ifl('Otne. &c today -S600 to S'l99j, \\'rite for mo"", ue eacon * · _ A\·ai\ April -.... $16.l utll pd. nEALTY Univ. Park Ccnl<•r, lr\'1ne Call AnylimC" 833-0820 i11~. Olferrd for $29,ij() &. \\'on'I la.~I. i11lor111n1k:in; tnstanl 1'-oorl 11 ~tan's Doma111-Prlva1e & 1i676 C11n1CJ'On, !112-:1192. \1'orth it! $34,900 Terms 646-7171 :-upply. P,O, Box 3155, Tor· Qu lc-t. $7(1. 3-Sr, 2 ha, rrp10nrd yar(I, MORGAN REAL TY ranee, Calif 00:105. l11tlude ALA RC"ntats e 6lJ...:\9nn OHns. dbl gar. S2l:i/nio, 12 VILLAGE II 673-6642 675-6459 phonl' nuinhl'r. $183-3 Br. 2 Ba. Dbl gar, lnl'd rni !o beach. 536-32!6 ~d. irlral lrg f<11nily. SALE O\' !ease, Lg(' 2 BR, Blue Beacon* 645-0111 1 Jlw ba condo, frp!r, Bltns. NEWPORT ll°i:l~---2~ B;:: Poi;;I. 01vntr, 199--~~fi4 eve.' Bltns. Cp!~. <il'f"S. Ai·; lllJW Huntington Harbour La Salle Model. 1 BR, family. 3 ba, 2 story, price reduced ax>o. Br~t huy! BRASHEAR REAL TY 847-~i Evc11: 833-205.1 l•g:una Beach San Clemente TO BUY OR By 0 1\'Nc·R·. Lo 1 2 SELL A BUSINESS "' \'(" y INDIVJDUAL 11 0 use fl.Pl. See nrdrootn home '\'/SOM<' t E I C I l\1 '""'". s,. ~uest hou~e . Xlnt proJcr· · ~~ 08 a i.>sa. HOLLAND BUS. SALES location. OPF.N HOUSE Sun F'~lly ?'Xupied. l..o\v N'?!nli::. "Thi' l3rokc-1• ''1th En1p111hr" 61., 11n11•i; l!l'O!ili. $1~.000 1-~i. w S·l(l.000 dn. Principu.ls _in~ Ora~r Avr., C.:\·I: 14.~ \'/. Cornil10. 492-12.16 only 54g..1674 &l.Hl1(1: 5'\0.0608 anyt1n10 _P_A_N_O_R_A_M_l_C_IS•nta Ana Heights OFFICE BLDG. RESTAURANT ACP.E for Comm'l S1ahle~ Net lnoome $26,500 VIEW or hon1,. & ~table~. 673-2262 Sini:Je tenant "AAA" + 4 BR. HOME Or 6~,-123 Prle(' S270.l)J() f\11 bo~y C-2 Hai bor Sh·rf. l Bridt'(Kl:n hon1<' l)('rc-:IJ~d.on , ~='-='~c=-c.=~~~~,--1 11 • · Rt' turns tor;. on ca~h Inv oc::i on. ~clud111"1 1111Js1l'lr v.i!h un-TIME FOR ...---~~-~~ ob!i1ruet("d f)('l''i•n \'lo•\\I frotn \\ :· ~~~t~s ~'\C. Vinco Realty a.I! j•J(l!f1 . .; \\'11Jk111g di!llll.11("(' - to btach. Deck., ,v., larl.'C QUICK CASH LJOO ISl..£-SW-t\11nl, tJ 2029 Harbor. C1\l 6-\ti--0033 rttrar<"d ;ral't'I, BuUt·1n k1ldl· h(o"ch ap!s. Furn, (i11r. ~· \\'ANTF:D: Oranr.e C n t y en A: Hi-Jo'i 11y1tefl1. <"1"n-THROUGH A bra.ch. U-a~('hold yr, 20\t ~f'nl"ral 011 ~slr liquor ~ ,.1or;ige 51w1cr. Gar-Aisklng $140,000. C11nsidrr t I cc n ~ e. Bon 11 f Id " qe. $-1.2.51);), Cail • trade, 6~2-4(197, 5iS..:l'.?U cx1 l'('!l\1turanL Ca!lh. Courtesy DAIL Y PILOT m "' hmke" 714183""'70 P\rr party "·an1;; 16 to 20 ASSOC. y,•ith $100,000 m hr!p WANT AD unlla Ct'Oniownt>r, l\c\\·port/ ronn lras1n1f ('Omp11ny. Ter- l\r.~~11 ar+'."a. 3'1(1.67j2 nric profll potent la l, 642 567 \VANTr;n. 2-12 1·h•<'n units l'<'MJl'Cd . Grf'a.t opll('Jr1unity, 1190 Glenra:~Te <;! -8 fftr rrivATI' f'!lll'I"\. :"11r. 011\'"' 714:lU7-9462. 4,.JJr71 :11'l-n.i!6 • li lZ-~:i01 • \\r'll iff'lf1 yau Jl"l!! 64z..J67i -~~~~~~-'-~~....::::.c.::::'-.~- .A-Olan REAL ESTATE '1 !180. 1--.:;_ ___ _ ALA Rt'ntals • fH:)...3900 $.i."iO Braullful 1\'ater1rnt 3 $135. Separate 2 Rr. Duplex. I BR, 2 ha \\/~undcck & Stvrrcfrig, g:ir, ch ilrl ok. I o.:>ek. l~ or opllon. &14...ol\32, Blue Beacon * 645-0111 ~"c."c..-::122:.:1~-~--­ l.\'ll-lAC. 2 Br. 2 Ba~ I Laguna Beach 1lrps, bltl11'i. t!llel l{ar . 51·10. , 3 BR, 2 BA. bltn!, relr. ALA Rent11\~ • 64.S-3900 frpl, yarrl. $2!\:i nio. La~un;1 )'. l.aguna-Slli1-s;-:o;:t\· re-N1iwt>I. 4f»--l7·16. 4~13.11 fr1_g. <'P!•, rlrr~. •n"I' (I\. f)lewport Beach Blue Beacon* 645-0111 -~---RARE Jndt'rd-lr:: 1 Rr-Slovc rrfri,1-:, ;n1I yd ·111il prl S!l:i, . ALA Ren111!11 e &1.).3000 $IT.'1 • Ne\1•ly dl"e, 2 Br. dbl Jr~r. fn<:d for kid.~ ,(· prti;, Blue B•11con * 645-0111 VACATION yr-roun<I Kidl \\·el('Oml' Util p<I , $1 30 Adult5 Pref•rred POOi. A\'1\ILABLE 2 BR. 2 811.: .l;lll~e .. $22.i 3 81{. 2\, Be .. garoge REAL TOR 5~8-6966 LEASF: or We Op(1on .j Br, 21,s Ba. bllns. !'pis, drfl~. lrplr, rlb! ger, ~ml yrl Nr pools .t· tf'n111s rrl. \\'11lk to heh. $300 . Dy~ 71,t:S27-374G. to\l't' 6M.>-m;'tl ALA R~nr"'l" e 6~~-~900 The "Yi-llow P.il:('s" nf 1'111.-~ifj, (1 • , Ii t=·~7'l For best result~~ 612-!;61S- Closed garages for ma.'\· A\·a1J April 1. S165 util pd. lrnum security, Quiet S!tcel. li676 Cameron. 8~2-5192 . Adulls. no pct~. 202(1 Fullerton Ave tHarbo:-to DELUX~ 1 &: 2 hr -\Valk Bay., then So. until 2 blks !o brach. Adults. 513:; & So. ol Neviport Blvd. 642-up. 220 ]2\h S1, 219 Jjfh 86!XI St. ./ AVL 001\·-l & 2 Br rurn. e 1 BDRM CON~DO- Pool. 1-rC' rm. gd location. No Furn. SIG.J. 962-9J68 fX'IS or (~hildren. 6-16-5&24 }o~or bes1 result~\ t:tl-567!1 M•rin• Equipmenf I '-----,----'' Clas~ification 900-9 r 2 [ '"'"fur .. ,. I §J 1 Classification 950-990 SAGITTAklUS HO~. 1! ../_,_. OfG. 11 {i1:! J. e.10. ~ ~ 28-~8:1.M O:• CA~klCOkH OtC. ll, ,/ J~~. n ""t_ 1116·40·4'1 4$.52·6~ . ' DAILY PILO~ · Sfi '-"'"'""' ... [tJ , ...,..,.. .. ,,. •. ,. li!J I ...,. .. , .... w l!tl I,.. ......... -J~ , ............. "' I~ I ~ ........... lrtl I ·-~I I~ I' --I- ~ .;;;--.-~~l~;iiiiiiii--~.;1;.~jjjm~~ S6S Apt. Unlum. 3'5 Apt. Unfvm. S6S Apt. Unfum. KS Apts., R.,n,1 400 Rentals Wanlod 460 Personals 530 -co'"'•-l•_Ml_•_• _____ I Cotta Meta N.wport a..ch Fum. or Unfurn. 370 REDUCING lee h Do Jo r Y Apts. Fu•n. 360 Apt. Unlurn. -------Newport Beech Corona del Mar --------.. Cost• Mei• c:1'.!0~u.ar ahr~ ~ w~~ ~w:rpo= ::°''tiiionu: ~·II~:~ VIEW apt, J large room. FOR leue, delx, all elec. IND~B~~~~ACY BACHELOR bun;alow, I S R rm..t ttl.1, $85/mo • up. exec wld•uahter • Meuun.ble results bofon trplc. bath, kitchf'n, Ont lac, oow w/a view 2 BR.. Lg dlx 2 br 1~ ba. w/p.r pvUy tum SllO mo. uUl MARIN llM QUNTAS E BAY MEADOW APTS. 675j613. housekpr, requ1rt J BR turn )'OW' very ~·· Become adult only, $175 Incl util. l BA apt. AU blt·lnl incl pd. 626 Hamilton Apt E APART E MASTER BedfOOm private hse or apt. nr beach 1: SUddtnl.Y Slender. Home 642-6889 dlshwlhr, dbl, a:ar . .AdHa & stor. Park-like at-642-H22Wrl730 Announcutti.avall&bWtyot Beamce.lllnp puieltna.prtv e ntry & baih Ali*> Sehl in Laaun&. •lt•ppUed method. Free BALBOA Bay Oub bayt.ront only. 6'1~. ~;_re~ patio, CID, * BEAUT11'UL l It 2 BR. 2 A 3 BR u.nit. .Sor adults pat.ior, recn~tton tacUIUea'. F a Irv I e.,, I B Iker i 0CC Detalll pleua to ad 1 No. clus • dt:monstratkln. Call terrace apt. 1450 sq ft, 2 * COROLIDO APTS * 2431-D ~ Avt. $155 Contemporary Garden Apts. desirlna to lfw amldlt beau. AU Adulll, oo pets, arta.. 5f0..19S8 84, Daily P11ot. P. 0 . Box tor neervatlon. ~ br, 2 ba, wet bar, sep din'g 2 Br. atud1ot A street levola, 661-K Victoria St. $155 Patios, frplca , pool. ty .by the II& tn tbe prea-* Bachelor Apt SllO * ROOM tor non-cmoklna la.d 1560, o.ta M ..... Cal.It. rm. Film or unt. 645-6230 $185 & up. Pen thou.es @ $145-fUiO. Call 5fS..51£3 tig101.11 Wutcllft area of * 2 BR. trocn $18$ * who wilhn )lo°'• al ~ -------·---- * 1%1 WEEK & UP * D•hwh•. trp~ dbl oarport. * BRAND NEW * Dana Point NowpofrtRS.0Maeh$.230 mollphe,.. . ·1;Tl!;u.E-;Roa=o"H"o=me::,:o. Drummer=::::-,: I ~Ind_, llr\1 MESA MOTEL Pool. 673-3313 331 W. Bay St. (btwn Harbor « &u..4ne: * wt.oil 2 BR houae or apt . L:\J K'Hchen, TV's, ma.id service. LA COSTA APTS, l &: 2 BR. For information phone Mr, le Newport Blvd. ~ mi N. ·. · . to rent on a ptn!Wlent 'iimmiiiimm~;=-1 Heated pool. 646-96Sl Coste Mela Bltn1, swl.mmln&' pooJ A: 11J1o S PECTACUL.AR octanfmt Robert M. Buckley, Mana&:· oJ' l9th St). ROOM Nw/b6.tll,, ~.t ~:°t buls, CdM or Nwpt Bch • -""°'""'"""~_..=-·I aa•. All util pd. $UO to $1'/'tl view, 2 BR, 2 ba, 1tove, er, at Cn4) MS-0252 or write CALL U6-00T3 ~~ mttlO~ 71 UUi aree.. tn sa:>O range. Stllrtina Found {frff ed1) ~~~~~n~~ig~:!r~: ORLEANS APJS. ~0A=d'! ~ peta. 642-9708 ~~~·70 cpta " drps, $225. ~ ..... '?~= !.~ -= RING BROS. Announces NICE roo:n w wor1dn& man MGa.y ht. 875--'ml • FOUND: Bowlinr bU1 vie. call 673-7185 • --· .,.......... • Aptl. Now Available • e ARAGE WANTED 1$tb A Ha:t>or c M. ca1t AO'" 'TS O"n..,. East Bluff 1244 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal, wt or w/o cook I prlvil, Approx 2-car slit for the 6'i.-J.S92 * OCEANFRONT bacholo•, uu nu• CORSICAN 92664, MEDITERRANEAN £ . .i.to, CM. 63-<l326 bulldlll< cl U' • Obtrglu .. ldenijfy, allel' gar, partial kll, $130/mo. 2 &: 3 BR. Avail. Private pa. NEW 1-3-3 Bdrm. All bltns, VILLAGE e $15 PP wk up w/ kit. boat. Need for SO d&yJ at I "'3"P".M"'.,,_-,.-,,,...-= Yrly. 642-3443 tto, pool -lndiv. laundry fac. ib&g crpta, drps, closed pr. A New W•y To Liv• 2400 Harbor Blvd. • $25 week up Aptl. MOJ'E1,. ltut. BROWN and white n.bbit ~£:.,';.": ...!.,~.' 2 B• <:· ~~·s~·:,W~~;:,~ ~··;_; ~,,1;,!,.&0:;! r:1t=~:~1~.. o!~~i:R·;~N <~>,. ,_;::~ ~"' • 1un room 1n 2 ~ = : eo.1a ~-~Ill. ~1~ ~ Call 673--6801 1141 Tustin, Coala Meu. flower. at Rau. Mgr &t m le11 above Ir: 'tlow, Graclout APARTMENTS NASSAU PALMS C.M. Nice il qUiet home Mesa. To be used lor 1..:3..:P.:;M;:·-------1 ~l BR. SUNDE CK, Mg.r, Mn. Thompson 6C-46C W. Stfvens, 545.2321 llvina A qtllet llilll'Oundlng On 16th Street btwn Summertime near the beach. for WO{'kin,g nwi. &q-4794 itorap. Call Terry, Tba BLACK A: brown JIUW'I• ao DOCK. ~¢~ HARBOR GREENS !DZ lam"1 w<tb .lbll._ ltvlllo(714and) 642~170ll,. 181 &12 B•. ~;_H'!R"'to'· LOVELY nn-fJS/wk. Gol~~ Rlol Ellste" !14&-2!13 :;:;, ~. ~llton A GARDEN A STUDIO APTS Near Con>na del Mar H1gb .. na: ei can Jan.a~ .... ~ Weit & C.OUt Collea:e .,..... Miac. Rentals 465 I ·P~AIR,.:"•':!"'co"'n"ta"'ct""1e ... , ... _.....,!ound,...-,1 SUB 1"8'e l B• gara1" apt MARCH &eh. l, 2, "BR'o. !rom $110. School. rlnplace, wot bv A IEACHBLUFI' Apb $115. trlct 136-2091 H.B. •-~-'·t I o.--= ~i:~~~~.'fil Move-In Bonus ~tenon Way, c.M. :U~:~A~p1~ N!:~r!: l!~:· !.~~'. d:'i 60-~ E. 22nd St. ~.95661iRO:e;;n;;t:;el;;1<to.:OSh'"-•:;,.:;----.430;v;l~~-u:;:~::: ..... :-:CED:::oo<1:::::-·.-,""~-.. -;::-,! ; =~l ~ ~ BEAur "'" 2 B• 0 ••••· 1 mo's Fr•• Rent Cold-" ··-•-• eo EU1a ····-• ··i-· • LOVE'Y ,_ 1 • , BR. •·COCKER=~-Spe--,.,-,-. ""'-,-.-Call-• . . . \.}\..., ... ,... GARDEN APT. 2 Br, llAi Ma .. a....1:.""'A::nt.._ ~~· ~ · _ ...... 11 r'" .._, ... • "5 "" YOUNG rirt need.a 2 temale Call 646--02&1 96l-78U. front Apt. $200/mo til sum-$50 mov•ln allowance Ba. Studio New cpts & _. ........ ~" Ol'U,..;u.u LG. 2 BR studio, 1~ BA, Panel '1, patio, yrd, gartwtr roommates, J:li mo, CNld • b:> ldent1tym...- mer. 645--073S 2 BR. FROM SUS. COM· drps. fncd patio, JA blk to e NEW DELUXE e crptJ:, drps, bltns & DW, pd. Infant ok.12192 Edtnaer. ok Call 646-0217 aft 4 wk·ir-------, Newport Heights PLETELY REDEC, CLEAN 17th St. shop'g. 160tmo, 3BR.2BAAptfor1-le. lncl near Hoag Hospttal. $185. Harbor Blvd to Zodle'' E. nd~ anytlm.e. t'M, ' I 11•1 PURE Cdlle about I mo. &. cozy FAMILY UNITS. Adltl. ZS CabrUlo. 64U461 spac:. muter sultl!, din rm 6-12-4387 642-lm on Edinger. 839"-0959 ""°""' vie. Hart>ot High. 646-Ed2 CONV. LOCATION. VILLA door EXCITING tum 1 BR apt SHARE my waterfront home LONG ha.Ir Golden Retreiwr CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlts, MESA APTS 7J9 W WilJon.. 2 BR. 2 BA. frplc. Upstairs. A dbl Jara.gt, auto .,.. * LIDO ISLE-Waterfront .,,.," ........... _, Crp"" w/dock. Man, 30-«> )'Un. vie u--'--ui..-.,.0 ~- •· 1 ~ '·'t 11"$150 • · N t ,_ d I'-opener avail. Pool I ~. LARGE 3 Br, 2 Bath. ......,. ""v• -...... ......,., "'• llSO/mo ..-A,..,.. • nai·.,....-'""'" .,..,......,,,,., no pe ...... ....,, A-I • v.r · 646.1251. ew cp • ... ., .. , a u .... no area. •A'''"m• 1..,.. --drpa, bltn1, walk to town. · u•..-w.:i.i. Auto transportation 525 2421 E. 16th St. NB. 646-1801 peb!. $160, Eves 5'0-0896, ~~ u"rooou l'5 E. l8th. C.M. se.9949 FEMALE roommate wanffld lo.t W Apt. Unfurn. 36$ GIANT *1 ~~~~;ROOM! Days 540.2510. 865 !u: w!, NB DELUXE 3 br, 2 ha. Water eves btwn 5 & 6 til J~, 2 ~ 2 bt., Balboa FORMER Buick Dealenhlp ---~L~O-S_T __ __. NEW NEW VILLA CORDOVA QUIE'T·SAF'E {Near Back Bay) 40 Unit Adult Apartment Complex 1 & 2 BEDROOMS Entertalning Will be a pleas. ure. Decorating thia lovely, spacious apt will be a joy. • Special cabinet space • Leek garages w I lg &tor • Bm C1!ll e Lndry e Patios e DW /dilipl e HUge gas stve e Special soundproolini • Deep 2 color shag carpets, drapes I GAS & WATER PAID Mo. to Mo. From $140. I 2323 Elden Ave, CM See Mgr, Ted Woodhead ~3'! VEN DOME IMMACULATE APTS! ADULT and FAMILY Section CIOM to shopping, Park * Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba * Swim pool, pul/green * FrpJ, Indiv/lndry fac'ls 1845 Anaheim Ave. O)STA MESA 642-282-4 Just for Single Adults • SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS Newport Beach 880 Irvine Ave. {Irvine and 16th) (714) 645-4550 Gorgeous, pa.rk·llke 1etting. I STUDIO 2 Br. New cpts, Mana.pd by view, % bllc: It:! beach. Year-(2) 1 BR aptll. fum $140. Isle, Fem 673-6900 Courtesy cu DR.IVER wlll Woman's tan wallet, kt. CJosed garages for max-drpa. Patio. Cosed Pl'· 1% WIU.IAM WALTERS en. ly S285tmo. 6Th-3l26 eves. Unfurn $130 util pd. Adults, Office Rental 4iCi drive tor one famUy or 3113. Vic. Market Baaket. lmum security. Quiet street. Ba. r:.;l"sh.,°fc'i~·IC1~ulta, no WESTCLIFF area 2 BR, 2 no petll. 820 Center St. SUP~o-,_ QUALITY-group, Your car or my N.B. or Bal-Bro&1ted Cbick· AduJ!J:, no ""ta. 2020 pets .......... ...........,,,...... TOWNHOUSE delxe 2 Br, ba, trplc, bltn~. adults only. 642--5848 i;.-~~ Riviera, 673-5644 en, Balboa. Ketp money. r-2~ Ba. bltns, frpJ, p&tl:i, $200 675-4562 l~ room up to 3 <m 1q.1"'=,_-,.,--,.,-~~-Fullerton Ave (Harbor to 1 & 2 BR. $150 & $170. enc pr. Quiet. 675-S033 mo. 2 BR $125 unfurn; $145 furn. ft. ottlce .Ultea. ~ed. .» NEED ride btwn 7-8 am Return I.O. calI 6'l34U4 &ft Bay, then So. until 2 blks Inclflg util. Adults only, Newport Heights Families welciime. BIG cupaney. Oranp County. trom C.M'. to Fountain Vly, 3 pm, So. of Newport Blvd.) no pets, 241 Avocado, CM. 2 BR 2 Ba, Din. Rm, tpl. SUR APJ'S, 2043·2049 1 ,_ •-•·· eo--·-. wkdaya. can 6'2-4014 -R=E-W~A~R~D~O~F~F~E=R~E~D-t 642-8690 646--0979 1-Level. View; $290 Month :Ml --· .u.-v..,.. ...-.-.. Avail May 1. 6"-ll33 Bk:r. 2 Br Upper. !'rplc, pr, Wallace St. Phone 54&-4 1 Complex, adj. Alrporter LEAVlNG 3-25 for Gtorala 11l Loit-sbort blade btoadtalltd lovely Spanish Decor 2 BR, 1% BA, sharp. Crpts, Huntl~ton n.ach patio, laundry, Adults. no 1250 1q ft Ia 2 Br, 1% Ba, Hotel " Re1taurant, banks, '69 Doda'e. Shara dttvini .t fur jacket w/mink collar. FROM $135 d~. lllO sq. ft. Available ··• U9 pets. $170 mo. 642-3781 utl rm tor whJdr, patio, San Dleto A N'pt J'wyl. expenaes, 548-f757 49&-418'> Gas and Water included now, $165 mo. 545--0n.8, it --==~.....,"==-S•n Clemente pr, cpt/dp, $165. 546-8688 UNCROWDED PARKING P I 530 -=o.:,UNco;G:..Burm~-----1 I & 2 Bedrooms no answer. 83S-4427 * FRESH AIR Hunt! ton •·ach LOWESl' RATES er1oni1 s Y e11 male cat -. ...,...,,,""°....,.-.,.....,,_ "II -.~. I 2172 ~.~ f Dr 1-:--::=:""::"~::=:=::::-:-blUe eye1, chOcolate coat, Built-ins • Ait Cond 2 Br •tudio-Pvl patio, encl Walk 3 blks to Buch! BRAND NEW lux . 2 Br, -;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;~;o;;:;;;;;:~;lvwn~r mgr. .....u-un · * FULLY LICENSED * loud voice, scar on ear, bt C&rpets • Drapes gar, l~ ba, crpi, I drps/ Beaut. bi&: 3 BR apt. w/w 2 Ba 1100 Jt Q\de • Rm, 8, Newport Beach Renowned Hindu Sp:lr1tualllt vie East'bluft. 6"-223S Enclosed garages bltna. No, CM. $165. Adult.I. CJ1tts, drpa, bltna e31cept cul-de:sac. P~ic ~ ON BEACH' 833-3211 Courtesy to Broken Advice on all matters. ,..:,.-,,;;;.;.c..c;;__;;;_~-1 Pool & Recreation Room 549.()(33. refrlg. $225. No pets. 536-lTU of ocean. Adults 0 .. 1 .. llBO. • DESK SPACE Leve, Marrlqe, Buslneu UlASA AIPO (am &Olden. 160 W Wll 642 7373 ·~ .... ·-·) "Chester", ma!• • son • NEWLY decor 2 BR, cptl, 1 Mo.'s. Fl'ff Rent 492-2259 Fo A ~adlngs given 1 days a •• ._.,. Park-Like Surrouodlng drps, bltns, 2-car sara.a:e. ASKAboutourd1'eoLU1tplan! · 2 BR •••••••• From 5235 222 rest venua week, to a.m. to 10 p.m. lost vie CdM. Pls co.tit.ct QUIET. f)ELUXE $160 673-lro9 2 BR, erpts, drpl, bltns, cu· 2 !~1~ CS:::~!:A~~ r.~u.!;.~~~ Laguna Beach SUN. El Camino Real. m-7155 1 2 & 3 BR ·~s , '"GE 2 ... ,,_ .,. ...... .........+ ri..... rice< ,............ ..........,.. -.A IUi!.. San Oemente REWARD for Info ra lolt • ~· ~ uau.<111, u-.l'lle, t"'"" ., .. ""· no petl, .,.....,..,, .,4"",...,..., heated pool.saunu-tennia ~'"""' 492-9136 492-0078 male Siamese ldtten. (6 Prv patios * Htd Pool1 w/w crpts, drpg, trplc, 725 Utica 536.2462 ~-nte Ana rec room«ein views AVAILABLE f lmm.edl te u Vic. Nr shop'g * Adults only gar., adults only, nso mo. 1 .,,-,.c-~-c--,..,.-.-boo-u--or a * SAILING VOYAGE mo'sl. 'W/ye ow e~s. &12-4422 646-1730 Nr Huntington Har r pe.tioH.mple parkl.nc, occupancy, S11bleue p!tu. ~ eicpensea on a roman· Solan& Way, L.B. 49'-599f MA'RTINIQUE APTS. Triplex • qUiet area. Lra l Security ruudt. ant. room suite. 2IM3 Weit-tic Old World 150' gquate St. Bernud Puppy, m rno 1m So.nm Ana Avo., CM SHARP lge 1 BR. Cp~ °"'" B'. $140, 3 BR . !l<D. Peg VILLA MARSEILLES HU~NGTON dll! o,., SU!to 2110, Nowport !'laod clipper lhlp. Call<na old, 1.,1 vie HOl,C Hoop. Mg!'. Apt ll3 6(6.5542 ~';\,1,'.'.'~bldc, N• ..... ok. tn4) 846.0071. B~~c?.o~~w PACIFIC ~·"'· 642-~o .... bulk!· In 12 coun1r1 .. & 17 porU, Reward. ~· 2 BR, 1 ba, dilhwuher, manager. departina: 1n 2 we.U.. Eric "P"RE=GN'°'ANT"=~ea.,,..,~~T~t'"c-er LRG dlx a.pta, $1-40 2 Br, 2 BR, l BA. Crpl:!l, drps, range, dispolal, C'!l'la, df1!g, · 1 & 2 Bdrm. Aph. 111 OCEAN AVE., H.B. BEAUTIFUL 3 room oWce Nord, $160 3 Br, 2 Ba.. Htd Pool. bltns, angl gar, 1 child ok, natural beam ceilings, patio AdUlt Living <n4) 536·148'1 suite w / kitchenette, Ideal 21.31378-~ itrlped, abort bob tan. Vic. Newly dee. Play yd. gJ~· no pets. U45fmo. 646-3432 & pool. Nr hospital. Adults Furn. & Unfum. Ofc open 10 arn-6 pm Dally tor architect, in•urance t DISCOVER YOGAI l3th St, N.B. &45-0810 Orps. Bltns. Patio. · 2 BR. Unturn. $130/mo, Jn. only. $111) utll paid. 17676 Dtsbwaaher. color coordlnat. WilJ.JAM WALTERS t'O. agent, realtor, etc. On tal ok, fant ck. No pell, JO&Jm St., Cameron, 842-5192. ed appliances • plush abag '"""'"""'""'!""""'.,."!!'"I Monrovia St. in N , B, Greater Vltaltty -': Men jfiiil 1998 Maple Ave. 642-6344 CM. 54S-3431 AVAIL Now-2 Br. all xtra1. carpet . choice of 2 color 2BR.$1!!.3Br.$180/up.Pa. S350tS300 per mo. 645-0770 Ability! FREE DEMON· ln1tn.1etton~ 2214 College Ave. 646-0627 IL~G~E~l -i..-. -.. -w-paln--,-&-crp-ts, Pool. Kids ok. $139 &. $159. .chemes • 2 bath& • Jtall tlo. Pool. Oilldren ok. DESK SPACE Sl'IUT2l!ON72) Myon at CS pm. ';mimmmm~iiiiiiiii NEW, ATTRACTIVE 2 hr dshW5ht. $120; With pet. Furn avail. 11431 A A B thowen • mbTored ward-MORA KAI Aptl, 18881 Mora ages • op tnt•r. I soundproofed duplex. Frplc, $130. 968-4622 or 642--0844 Keelaon Ln. 968-1510, robe donrt. lndlftct lllbt-Kat Ln, 11' blk E •. ot Beach, 305 No. El Cimino Rtel '445 E. 17th St., Coat.a Mesa, Schools & Crpt.s, drps, beamed cell-LG 2 Br, 1% Ba. studio apt, 847-4856 in& in kitchen • bttakfut ott Garfield. 962-899C. SGrt Clemente 646'8281 instruction• tnrs, bltns, patio, Adulta no pets, tamilies only. Pr1v WALK TO BEACHll bar • huge private fenced Newport Beach 492-4420 DREAMS! ~·~ peAts. ~· = patio. 726 Joe.M St. S140. LOVELY NEW l 6 2 BR's. patkl • plush landscaping • • WILL sacrWce-Lcw Ren-What rneeqe• att they try.. Discover • Great New ta na ve, • 2 Br. unfum a.pt for ttnt. Crpts, drps, dahwuhtrs, brlckBar-B.Q's.larpbeat. VISTA DEL MESA tal. Executive MJUe ot ot-lni to tell YoU! Send name C•reer With The • BRAND NEW • ls ,_, bt-· fl~/mo 709 Palm • ••7 """7 ed pools & l&nat. A I I 11ce1. 3345 Newport Blvd. • ,. . , bum In crp ' "'"' um, ......... . O'I ~ 3101 So B I I I St par mens NB can 645-4545 ' Puune no, ,..ym • 1.2-J BR. Pool. Blt.ns. Diah-,_Call __ 646-_22711 ______ I ·~c-h~lld~r-e_n_W~e~,,-.-m-e-1 • r I 0 • 1 &:: 2 BR. Furn&: Uni. Dtlh· . . 1tltute, rm 180, ~ Campua, washer. Carpet/drapes. UtU NEWLY redeom.Md studio, Immac. 4 Br, 3 Ba. Stud.kl (~Mi N. ot So. Cout Plua) wuber • Stove and Refrli ~ * NEWPOI\T BEA.QI Civic NB Ca. 9'Ji60 pd, 2 BR, l'Ai ba, nr shopping apt. 4-plax. Prlv. patio. PHOSNtnEta 5A57n!200 Shaa crpt'1-Lrg Rec center. ~~~ ~~so1nrwerl...:,D<;!Si,00;;;;.,VER;;;;.:,D"'JSCO=:.VER=:;;y,.-IA. natural for young peop1I 525 Victoria St. &: achools, $165. S.fG-1153 Crptl, dtpl, bltna, Lr& play I ~;;;';:; -o Occupancy in Man:h OFFICE xi · 1 Rl l'lncl Younelt who Warlt excittment plutl 400 Menimac Way * snroro 2 Br. new cpt, area. Cul.cfe.aac at. No pets. I; RENT Starts $155 • nt oc, venlde In Someone Elme Ticket A&"entT Air F'rlJlhtT drp1, pool, l child ok. 1'1!71 Bell Circle. 842-3677. CAN'T BE BEAT Tustin & M11i1 Drive 64D~ .. ~· ~.~~rrAvaU 411. C&U Now • No Obllaation Station a 1• n tT Reaef'vl.. WILSON GARDEN AP'I'S. * 646-0496 * * 545-4155 * .rOMN or ~.j, cn4) 835-6S85 dona? Ramp or trawl 2 BR Untum. Newly dee. ~=--,.,-=-c-,--,.-MODERN 2 Br. Dupl~. t'ORONA DEL MAR The Award W1nnlng Sm<. t.pntT Wt'U train )'OU fOr ----- AIRLINES 575 New cpta/drps. SP a c 1 BR. used brick trplc. wfw, Frplc, bltns, crpte, drps, BACHELOR. A 1 bt' apts. 1 A 2 Room ottlce IJl&eel ----,-theae and more, day er nib!. HOLIDAY PLAZA grounds. Adltl, no peta. bltns, beam·ceu, patio, $140. well-maintained. 2 chBdnn SINGLE STORY Nr Bay, Eves. 675--7816 or all OWNER * S7J-&7'l SINGLE? WIDOWED We include placement g. DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 2'm 1 1 Adlt. Yeqly,·~ ok. U35/mo, 84UB17. South Sea Atmospbn 494-2250 av • Divorced? Over 2t? furn apt $135. Heated pool. $140 I mo. Founta n EASTSJDE 2 Br, bltna, I CHEZ ORO API'S 2 BR. • 2 8.\111 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB For a aeU explanatory m11. alltance. Ample wlcing. No children Way E. (Harbor, turn W. Carpets &: drpa: Sant• Ane e ON nu; BAY e __ ,, 1965 Po on Wilson). dshwhr, crpts, drps, encl 8234. Atlanta. 1-2 BR. Pool. aAf1 24 hrs a day....!. • no pets. mona. 1 -''-.,..C~=,---.---gar, priv patio. 645-2939 Private G1.t1.ge. Wa1htr. Air Conditioned 6~2464 or 541-5032 496·4801 or 5f1·9991 CM. * $170 * 2 Br Duplex, gar, patio, dryetB. 536-8038, 536-2'771 ~;p~L LAS PALOMAS 1610 SANTA ANA AVE, CM ALCbHOLICS Anonyrnoua:. Balboa Peninsula 3,!',·,,1~.! .. a. ~~kttaobo~ltt-i::; adlts. 35916th Pi, C.M. $155 2 BR. Closed garqe, Patio Pllnh· of lawn B•andAP?.2:'1troENTSm Sl40 Fro6.,.. ~"~-sq. ft. ~.1~~~ Phone 542-7211 or write to .,....,.. ••• -·---.... ...l" tu mo. Year lease. 548-5218 area. Children & amall pet v ,..,.. . '""W'IU"I u• ""·.-u P.O. Box 1223 Costa. Meu. 2, BR. unfurn. w/garage:, discount plan. SSO Center ,.Carport A Storare 1 & 2 BR. furn.-unfllrn1shed B I R I ,.5 Near beach. Utilities. $170. St. 642.8340 ENJOY privacy'!' Deluxe 1 ok. $140. 842-8365 HIDDEN VILLAGE w 1th dtmwuher. Heated UI ne11 enta -DANCE leuona; Latln & \:early. Responsible adults. I ·.=.;;QU,::l,cET~. -,-d-ul-,.-. '°'l~B'"°R. Br, bltns, refrlg. cpt/drp, $125 CLEAN 2 Br, Crpts, GARDEN AP1'S. pool &; 11.11al. Central gas PRIME LOCATIONS American. Introductory otr- No pets. Avl 0Apr 15. No pets. Drps, c r pt s, ~·~·~'·=b~ol~c._962-4=_1780 ___ 1 drps, bltns. Adults, no petl. 2500 South Salt& heattnr a, alr.condltlonlna:. E. 17th St., Costa. Meu. er $4 per br. fi73.n85 545-1784 dshwht, heated pool, $130. LARGE 1 BR. bltns, wtw 1 ~1<0~Roc-h_•~•1~"-·-~---Santa Ana 41 64&-Ui:l5 Gu & water paid, Private~ Sq. ft. commercial bid&. ED. 2 BR., frplc, bslrony, 315 2295 Pacific Ave, CM. crpts, drpg, $ll5 mo. 984 El 2 BR apt, 3 blka from ocean. patios. Color choice •has with parklna. $3(X) Mo. .,.. Btver1y at home. E. Bay. \\.'inter rates. 548-6878 m-642-4429 Camino. Bkr 642-4422 $165 mo. Avail Mar. 20th. carpeting, $175/mo. Yrly $225/mo. In-1-'-•~NC.e"'w~l'"y~D~e-c-o-,-.t,.e'd-2 BR. Twnhse, 11,i Ba, Patio,, ~536~·1_n_o. ____ ~,._ Apft1., U fu 370 Santa Ana 540-3988 Broadway, Lqu.'la Beaeh * * * Est. 21 Yfl. Approved for Veterana, Ellaiblt lnatltu:Hon under the federally lmured student 1°'411 proo"am. Alrllna Scheol1 Paclne 610 E. 17th, S1nl• Ana 54U596 For that tt.rn. un4tr $50, try the Penny Pincher ---. - * * * quire No. C. 673-1521 or Quiet 1 & 2 BR's, Gar & 1 child ok, no pets, nso. 2 Br, cpta, drp1, 1tove. Im.· urn. or n m. 1400 Weit Warner Ave. 1850 Sq. ft. •to~ with park!ni 548-77'71. pool, Cri>ts, drps. Adults 1048-A Mlsslon. 545-1382 mac. Lndry f.acll. Avl now. General North of South Coast Plaza Nr. Coast Hwy. $500 Mo. 1 ... ----------------... I Coron• def Mar only, no pe!.'ll. 642-8042 MODERN 2 Br, :z Ba Studio, ~N~o,;"="=·,cl125~ .... 962-3886~-="'° Shopping Center & near San R.ealonomlcs Bkr. 67S.6700 ~c,., ·¥ ('-/~ ON TEN ACRES J & 2 BR. Fum, It Unfllrn. tireplace1 / prlv. pattoa. Pooia Tennis Contnt'I Didst. 900 Sea LAne, CdM 644-2611 (M'a.cArthur nr Coast Hwy) -~• bl "DE'UXE 2 •-2 ba w--1 Diego & Newport Freewaya.1,-=:0--.,,.-:--:".:"':':-: 2 Br. Uniurn Apt Stove &: apt, new cpt, nr .,.,.,us, tna, .., gJ' , • • .,.c, PALM MESA APJS. Conveniently located corner SUITES Avallable: 1T612 relng lnd'd. Gu• ... Pool. Pot ok. $Iii;. "'-1400 ,..frig, bl..,, gar, Ocean vw. Wamor A Bri11ol. B"ch Blvd, H.B. Park!nt' All utU pd. Adlts only, no ~2°'B"D"RM=,°'2~Ba~lh~a-p~t~U~tll~ 1 U75. 536-fi72J. Air cond: Heat In 1 : pets. Mgr, No. 9, 383 W. Room. $150/month. 2 Br apt-w/w, drp1, bltnl. 1 BR unfur11 •••••••• $135.00 NOW'S THE Carpetirc: Jan.ltorlal terv. Wilson St. • Call 54~2545 * disposal, laundcy space, No 1 BR tum ........... $149JO TIME FOR InqUlre .SWte 8 or call REDECORATED lge 2 br, LC 3 Br, 2 Ba., new cpta, pets:. 962-8511 for Wo. Bacbelon F\trnl3S sh~ nurcK CASH t=540-5='=-".,..,,:--:-:-:-·11 now crpt• & drJ>•. blaa. drpo, no pols, cblldron ok, 150 movtnc allow. New 2 !rom II ..,. sroRE bldg ., o!c !DZ lte. 1150. Child ok. 642-7315. "" .eh!•, llM/mo. S<SC-7245 Br trom $135. Cpto/drpo, 2 BR api. 1175 mo. THROUGH A Xlnt Npt Blvd .,.,..ure. 960 ADULTS only. 2 Br. Cpta, 2 BR. hrdwd floors ;ater bltns, fncd padOI, play rno./mo. OK •II. AC!fOU from city ball. . ... •. ~7277. • POOL DAILY PILOT .~ ·-1 dl'p•, bllns, gu. ,pd. 1135 mo. 1093 WaUae<, 1,==="=-~---•SAUNA 1-'~--------ll Trader's Paradise lines times dollars CaU 646-5983 '"" Hamlltonl Newport llaach • JACUZZI WANT AD lndu1lrlel R1nl1I 450 LRG-Al"'c 1 & 2 B•'•· Hid 2 BR, 11> BA. ept., d'P'. PARK NEWPORT......, "" 1561 Mesa Di-. Santa Ana 642·5678 1-SMALL'iUNiff's-11.._ ____________ ...,....) Dally Pilot Want Ada have pool, cpts, drps, displ, utll p&tkl, no pets, Jllj mo Incl llvg overlka the water. 1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!ll l.,.-,.-::..:=-==.:.:;.... __ ,I ~-:::;;;;;:;;;""';:•:"':·::====pd:.:':88:4:M:onro:::vl:a.:543-®'l====utll:' =· 339-=A=Ca~brill;:;;;:•·;;-;;;;;;;;; 1 pools, 7 tennis' di $750.000 Aptt., Apt1., COSTA MESA Watertroat lot '15 x 300, Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Alto 2 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. er Unfurn. J'70 $95: A $167. Per Month Carlsbad, clear, w/carry sty Townhouses. lee. kit., ---------,..,-~_,.-,,....-,--Immedtata Oocupancy i.t. Want local lmp'd. prop. C.//Q-0 .§\'1t. f _ f#-C 'hiQ.• pr. pat oc bal 1ubtm pukg Huntington Be•c:h Huntington Beach New 6500 .q, ft. unit, 18th A or rood stocks. Rich Irwin, o~ J.'"U !."). ~ P<i" v opt m&Jd ser, cpts, drpt. Whitner, U0-2a> poww, Exchangor. 675-6000. T' p / , h / Just N. ot Fuhlon Isl at plenty of parJdna. W11l tnde ht &. clear ne un e wifn f e Bui f-ln Chuckle Jombo"" & "'" Joequm ""' Robtrf Nat...,, Rlfr. Family bmiard parlo• roii or0-::r:~b~'!o,i:: ~~Inf~· &ff-lb} b' leu-at tbe heacb. ee Cotta MeM $42.l4BS late model Cu, ~r, kJrw-to form four tlmpli words. SEACUJ'F Man.or Apta:. 2 1500 eq ft-All power, hf:at, Motor homt, Bott, al Ea-. I f. i-.S;.....A~E::...E;;.,T,;,_il i, I J' I • 1 Sign on door of a •un-down . . . . unprosperous clond nlg~f ... .-------~ club: "Opened by -.• HOYLED I ~, .... , ... , .... , ....... "! ~,...:;.~1 -i G Uwnp1.,. "'-dun1?-~~ by fjlllnq In tho mluJno -d. . - - - . . y.., dl'!"ll'Op from ltfP. No.. 3 btlow. 8 PRINT NUM8E.Rf0 lEfT[RS IN THESE SQUARES 6) g~iC:~~i\ l!TTUS TO I I I I I I I ~ SCR AM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIF!ED 700 pool 9/10 , II , th L h I J\gbta, putl.tionl A. noon late 9r fT-t 642-20«5 s,, epll, """· blw, . o a m e rom t uHC I !I bbod 1,., M ta priv patk>, •tudlo type, 1 % Goso "Recreation City" with 2 ewlmmlng n · onrov • Golf COUf'le 101-Chrlltma• Ba. Child ok. 54~*2 1525 I uttl II yb II N.B. Call &45-0770 Vat, Ont. $$000 value Plaeentla. Ask about -our del poo I, p ng green, gym, VO e 1 X)MMERQAL.INDUSTRIAL for quick dul. WW t1'd. n~ dltcOUnt. court, eauna, bllflard room, club--500-1500 eq tt. l3e to Uc eq. for car, bOat. jewelry, FOURPLEX, 3 BR, 2 BA. e -t houee. Ont or two bedrooms, fu,,. * San Oemente 498-1&40• antlqUea or r tB0802 Dw -1 Im ... ~-nl1hed and unfurnl1hed, private R t I w ~• 460 ..... t' c, m""' occupy. en • 1 an,_ '69 01da-CUtla.s s. lotded. $225. Adulta, lnq. 41!0 A e patio, f/rephtce In two bedroom, low mJ11t Jttra clean Trad PatrlC1! Rd. fi42·4!17 elev1tor1, dl1hw11h1ra, carpet• YOUNG MD, wife, 2 ldd• · • 0 64)..1771. d 1 d 1 need 4 Br 2 Ba hlrn or tor ..U boat or motCl't;Yd-. and r11p11, no fU!te, a ultl only, al unt for yr, Betln July. f94-3452. 2 BR, view ot Back s..y. utllltlea except llght1 paid, pttl Prefer N.B'l CdM. Write Larun• Beach :"",,~'1,·. ~:-~.:..•1"i, 1';;'°'1 : " accepted. From $145. Sholkott, U "-· s.F. ~ -·" • .-..;,.;w"S\I £ MU'l •u r WIY lmprov'd ""') Iott $279.50. 644--0253 eve•. · r.:-. •J a.... 1•~• lOI)) ct••• .. a WANTED to nt I w ~.~ -· -· OCEAN w )Tl'/ 2 Br. 2 I ._ 2f88f Brookhuf'lt St. re or IM WlU Divide. Want Motor. Ba, trpl. elec kit., enc ra.r. r1 Huntfngton Beach. Of lune. Furn.1 3 Bd~ home yacht. Alrpl&n.e &y1lda adlts, no pell. $265. 613-li90, (7t4) lm-t8S3 ~Ple~ :'v~~r;. :,:. home or IDc. <n•1 m-3103 n!:553--lln. A1k for o ... trled Ad Jio. S8 DaUy1·---t do-,-.-.-ho-v-,-.,-.,,..--, BEAtrr!FUL PAJ\K NEW· Commender Rlllfng PUo(, P .O. !!Ox l!Sl Coota Liit II ""' -In an,,.. PORT 1 BR apt. for sub-, Mtu., Cl.lit. 926l8. . ColtntY't llrttrl Nd trad. lease. Call 6ff-090t ooN·T iJVe 11 away, pt tn1 po1t.fCW611 XTflA LARGE 2 Bt, 2 ba, quick cub for lt with a """/"""-bltno, patloo, I ~~~!!!! DAILY Pn.Or Oaao<flod * * tncJ car. $115, $48.370& I. Call 642-S678 & cha.rte It. I HA VE' BIG BUR 3 Br fumllhtd bome, $SO,OOO. $3400 equity, WANT: CAr, land, « fT Myers m<716 AmphtblOUI Cir I hlll' an- tique bou.ecar worth $UOO a: $1200. Warrt late blc cw, Merctllea at r 6'2-5690 or 543869 an. 8. 'tW1n bedt. like new, e11.nwi wlth mobile home. We bite 'etn. Need doublt bed at T Cxll -trave MG Midget roadster, -"""'~ ........ ""' Xlnt ccnd. va1ua sa Trad• fOr tr&vtl tra1ltr IX" old boll. - ltAVJ!: 8ta'Jtttul 3 Br. N51t Beach home. Loan $22,000. Equl~ 121,000. w.,.,, 1'> COMt, Oom .. Vacant J&nl!: Mareham n-.iw. - GIFT Shop aotna: bu1lnus. Good locaUon, lllt1eu iq. ~• trade for ttal atate,_P" tot home or T! $10,000~ ue. ~~eves, * * * • I , • I / ,. ' J[ll] ~I i;iili'i-~,,..,.l[ll]~it I .....,_ . lltlJ I l[ll] I firpoyment J[I]l l__ ___ ._][Il] When You Want it done right ••. Help Wonlo4, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wa nted, M & F 710 Looking for a Job? lll'tt's a once·in·a·liletln1c opporluni ty fCJr lour sharp, well-groon1ed, attractive galsi with a desire to make Jots of money 1mmediately! If yau llke to \\'Ork in pleas· ant su1'1'0uodings, in an <'X· citing, busy a1111osphere 1.,./orher groovy people k can think in tenns of earn· ing $8()0.SIOOO a month, lhtn you'N' tht:> gals \\'e'rl'.' look- ing for! \Ve need you now! Call &l.>-4121 immediatel)o. Ask for t.fiss Lyons. Babysitting Gardening Call one of the experts listed below!! ----===,...-,-COST A MESA *LANDSCAPING* Painting & Paperhanging PRE.SC HOOL NP.w la\\'Os, lr<>e removal, PAINTING, professional. All 18tl;. & l>foorovia, lfi day+ sprinkll'n, drains, arbors, wor k gua r n . Color full day sessions, Planned pa tios, fl'nt'e!. Lic'd COntr. specialist 646-7081; 547-1441 program, hot lunches. Ages 13 )'~Joe. exp, 536-1225, PAINTING : Hone s t , :Z.6, hrs 6:30 AJ\f.6:00 PA!-. JOHNSON'S. GARDENING guaranteed w 0 r k. Lic'd. $18 y.·k.CO?.lPAREJ 6424050 Yard care, c:lean-upa , Local ~rs. Call 61S-.S740 or BM-5237. planting, sprinkle r&, aft 5. CHILD care in my home. c"'c,:,'-=20~3=5~---,,,..-~-PAINTING/paperin&. 1B yrs Infant ro 4 yrs old. Have EXPER. Japanese Gardener. in Harbor area. Lie & 3 yr old da1lghter. Fenced Complete la\vn serv &. bonded. &f's furn. 642-2356, yard. large hon1e. Call landscaping. 5 4 6 · 0 7 2 4, lNT & Exler, Painlin&;. 830-4370, hrs '1:30 to 6;00. 548-7958 Llc'd, ins. Free est. 30 yrs ~'™ OVERSEAS OPENINGS ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS Rad1 r or Avlon ic1 MECHANICS Jet engine, Aircraft/ Alrfram, Send resume and sel1ry history to: Classified Ad •127, D•lly Pilot. P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. ACTION HERE AT THE 540-6055 WE PLACE PEOPLE e WANTED e ~ent finiaher to build fonns .and !lnlsti 7 yards for patio slab. I will wheel le grade &. assist Ol'f a wknd. m,57511 (FUiierton) •COOK• Must be available for all hours, day or night. INTERVIE\VS 3.j PM Coco ; 1555 W. Ad•m• Costa Mesa CR. SUPERVISOR Sll,oo:>, Estab. co needs out- standipg person lo !ill posi· tion. &:per. a must. Golden oppor. now! Company pays fee. Call Ray Long. 835-252'l THE MORRIS NETWORK AGENCY 2100 No. Main St. Suite 302, Sant& Ana. (Aho fee jobs l El Toro, l>lission Viejo area _E_X_P_E_R_J-,-,-.,-,-~-.-A-m-,-,~,ra-n l~'~'~"~'~·~C~h~u~ok~·="':::.>-0809=:_~-I' e SECRETARIAL T ING H I I _, DENTAL sec'y, diversified t. B. Y SIT i -our Y. gardener, compete gan.1en-P laster, Pitch, Repair Apptica.nts Uy. \\·kly. f'en("{"<f yarrl, ing service & cleanup. e OFFICE duties, isecretarial skills. I I t 89' 01~ Mature, congenial, Top t mca.c.. P ayma cs . .:r11"" * PATCH PLASTERING SERVICE CENTER e CLERICAL Peterson Sehl dist. 536-7784, cA=L=·s=· =La-n-d7,-"-.~,-•• -.~T~,-.-e 1 All tyPes, Free estimates Emp,loyment Agency salRry, 644-~5G 536-1113 removal. Yan:l remodeling, Call ~ * * * e SALES DENTAL rec:eptiflnist, age AITER SCHOOL CARE Trash hauling, lot cleanup. 1-P-LA_Sf_E_R_E_R_, -,.,-,.,..--,.-.,.-,-.' Skilled Counseling 30-40, Mon thru 1'"ri, Exper Frcl' pick-up at schools. Repair sprinklers. 673-1166 Own tools, p/time work ok. Clerical e ADMINISTRATIVE req'd. 644-TI62 Arts, crafts & recreation. EXPER. Japanese gardener l=C=•=ll=S~"'="=·~"= .. 7'.:."='=· ~~-I Profeisional e TECHNICAL DISTRIBUTOR, manage 6 yrs-10. ()p{'n until 7:30Pl'>l, Reliable maintenance. your own business w/in-d "'"''"" PLASTER -Patch· Rm -Pl•coment1 ' · 1 f 11000 7 ays. '"o:r vu Rea~. monthly rates. come potenha o per Adds. New "-'Ork. Free ASK YOURSELF mo. Initial investment les!I LOVING home, fenced yard. 892-3219 estimates. 545-4588 aft 5 <'A•4-Hot ml'als, craJts. z yrs ..:::..::.::~~==~--1.,;;;==--------1 Heten Schaffer Vt'f" ~' than $100. Early retirement 86 BACKACHE? Plumb'ing =--Ne\'""'rt Center Dr., NB possihl• &12-2150 up. 54!}-2615 or ~~7 2 I & -·~ 1..::!:'-:.::..::::_::_:,::...:c...__ Call 557..fiOS for a1vn rar-1----"-------·l l'""'!!!""'~S~o~H~·~53S""'!!!!""'!!!' I Would l hie• me-if I were * DISH\VASHER * BABYSITTING in my home d n ca PLUM BING REPAIR II I. -~'::_='~';_· --~~,--I the employer? Bayview Convalescent H06p. -a ages, any ime. :0.10\\1, edge, vac:. lrnt & rear No job too small ARE YOU satisfied \\'lth '.m5 Thurin SL C.i\f. Ph: 54;>-7641 .... kl 1~ IH• ____ ._"4_Z._3_128_~•---J yoor present income? Let Will my past records stand 64 ,, ,,~,, )·us. \\' y; £ 11 ino: · ·,nv-t•''""tion and am I _...,.,,, CHILD care n1y home only, .. "m• H B ""'0 7318 e PLUMBING e your ability'" pp I em en t .._ .. ~-1..:c::..==--=---- .. u • • · """"'" ' proud of it? *DISHWASHER Harper Sehl district. Cati l-G-,-n-,-,-.-1-s-,-rv-ic-1-1---Electrical Repair $8 hr you r income. Husband & * PciRTER JtS-1623 642-27~ 642-1403 1vife work together. For in-Ir your answer is an hon- . •---fi 7 5 • l • 5 h J .. Experienced. Apply in penon BABYSlTIJNG by hour or * LABOR UNLIMITED * Power SwNpinn terv1ew p""'"' -" • est yes, may we e P yo,. v.·""'k, any houn day or HANDYMAN ""' n ,,.....,, searc . • •·tw • • PM h" to Harold, ALLEY WEST, L,,_ 7106 Oceaniront, Nt>wport nite my home. 642-7316 \Velding -Carpentry 673-1922 PACIFIC Power Sweeping & e ASST. HELPER• 'I\\'O \Yeeks (If loi;t wages Beach, ac:rou from pier. Gardening Serv. No job too will covrr our fee to help Builder s H•uling small. 673-1166 24 hrs. e $3.75 HR. • i.horten the gap between Draftsman BRICK, block, concrete, YARD, Garage cleanups, PARKING Lot p 0 we r P~rmanent emp.!oyment. Full jobs. ARCHITECTURAL carpentry, house leveling, trees dirt 1Vy removal, skip Sweepir1ti & Main!. A·l time or part time. Depend. Come In. in your (Sunday -DRAFTSMAN - all types remodeling. No loader. backhoe. 962-8745. Power Sweeping. 545-8734. able. Best) and discU$ this with ?.!ajor Rt'a.1 Estate ~lgmt. job too small. Llc. Contr. lfAUIJNG, ren'l cleanup, 1-R-'----S~~. ----!Call 1tfr. Frank * 546.9862 us, we can shorten time C.o., seeks an individual to 962-69-15 Re esume ervac• BEAUTICIANS between jobs. We speak as assist in the coordination & tree sei;y. Handyman. u. a third party when talking preparation of preliminary Busin•ss Service 646-5848. \VE have the most unique WANTED to employers and many RESUME SERVICE in o, H G J U · '" ff · k \vorl.ing drawing for teh· TRASH & Garage elean-up, -ey, as! you re v:or1ung times c:an more e ective· TYPING my home. Term 7 daYJ. SlO a load. Free ange County. You get a com. or have worked in the ]y point out your skllls and ant improveml'.'nts in office papers, master thesis, Call est. Anytime., 548-5031. pl<'te referral service, not beauty or cosmetic field, good qualities \\•here it and retail bldgs. Linda 846-4147 just copies. Let our experl \\'e'vr. got a great opportun-would seem like bragging Position requires lhre(' yrs. 1tlOVING, Garage clean-up . 1 · il if you were to say the architectural drafting f'X· Ca rpenter & lite hauling. Reasonble. technica wrllen counc you ity for you. Wt-need exp'd same thing to an employer. rA1: ~""" in your job seeking, \Ve are gals as instructors in the per. and an interest in de· CARPENTRY Free estimates . .,...,..LOii.. · ; J · eXpl'.'r\5 in employment. application of a tabuloull, sign space P anning, b.nNOR REPAIRS. No Job Housecleaning new beauty product. The SEC'Y TO PRES This is a career position with Too Small. Cabinet in gar. ------"-AR-P-~--.-1 THE MORRIS right gals can earn a min· a stable company. Please ages & other cabinets. *1 ~~IAA~···C ft"''~I:!." RESUME SERVICE imum of $600-$800 8 month? SH. type, lite bkpng. \Vork st"nd letter or resume OU!· 545-8175 if no answer leave c ea,,.,.,, .....-sq • l. 2522 for the number 1 man in lining qualifications and 0 minimum job. Pleue call 83S-This i& a eareer opportunity. his field. Terrific fringe msg. at &1&-7372. H. · 5.'lfrZZ.17 or 536-2129 2100 No. Main St. Call Miss Robbins today! benefits. Start $600. Call salary h istory. Anderson. 1...:.c:_:-""===~~,-· ,_ •· A "'"'!"' THE IRVINE CO. HOUSECLEANING & iron· 1 ~..:S;"~''~·=~:::::··=~="'~•:...::~n=•--l,~~~~"" .. ""===,-=:7:'7 Sally Hart. RPENTR" nA · All 550 Newport Center Dr. CA ~ · '"'pair. ,·-g, 1~ full day, 110 for R--•1·nn BABYSITTER nttded, '! ~ •--· H & t L'te " ~" CWT • Newport Dea.ch, Cah .... ........, p,..._.i;, ome ap · 1 i 3 day, Thorough job -1 ---.0...------responslble, 5 days a Wffk. hauling. Eve: 54 8-6 266 , GT;>.-256S. \VENEDA Roofing. Authoriz. Bay View School area, S.A. BOOKKEEPER Personnel Dept. l-'D'.:''-Y':.."=.'-..:'8611:::::. __ ~~-1 DAY \Vork by e.xper lady cd Applicator for Sno-Hide lfgts. 545-4588 aft 5 Fantastic oppor. for the * DRIVERS * RE:0.10DELING & Repair w/car. Refs. SIS a day. Rool Systems. 64;>.-1691 BABYSIITER needed, my f'IE'tsOn w/insuranre kno\\·J. N E • Specialist. Comm'!. residen-121 3f 73!}-9794 T. Guy Roofing. Deal Direct. home during day 11 occ'I <'dge .\ nice phone voice. 0 xpenence tia!. Paneling. cabin er s , 1 ~ k 61"2780 · h. So hi s tart $425. Call Jean Necessary'. Hous•~EANlNG uu my O\\'n \\'OT • .r , eves 'vit tn nora sc marlilc, formica. 644-7~ """·..., 9·-Call ft 5 ~" 557 929• Brown. Exper. Rclia. Refs. 548-J'1U. al'e8 . 4 :,,., -"· r..fust have clean Calif. drlv. Ca rpet Servic• Call 531-5468 Se w ing/Alterations BABYSrITER. housekeey('r, ing record. Not under 25. Diamond Carpet C!raning Avg 11lze room SS Repalr!ng & installations Frre Est. 645.1317 Cement, Concrete Bay & Beach Janitorial Crpt.s, v.•indows, floors etc. Res. & Comm'!. 64~141.:1 HOUSE OF CLEAN Complete House Cleaning "2-<824 Income Tax Smiley Tax Service --.;;....------1 mature dependable, live RECEPTIONIST YELLOW CAB CO. ALTERATIONS, restyling. in or~!. 968-8230 aft 5:30 186 E. 16th St., C.M. Expert fitter. Top refs.I;; _________ ; J Plush modern cen ter. Grl'et N.B. area. 646-2704 CalllBetty Bruce patients. lite typing, X·ray * DO YOU 'VANT A Ruth Ca!I exper. Start $450. call STEAD'l PART TIM E Helen Hayes. JOB? Interesting survey Alt9retions -642·5845 m f1 type_ job from home. NO Neat, accurate, 20 years exp, i:.J.& C..xec SELLING, \\'rite briefly to EUROPEAN dressmaking SALES PERSON Classififfi ad No. 121 The all cuslom. fitted, Very .A Daily Pilot 330 W. Bay, ?.lake your own futurt>. 1.1 -= C ou1•le:J';I Per6onne/ ' 8 GAL THURSDAY 8 You don't have IQ be as ~harp as our Gel Friday, but we'd Jlke )'Ou lo want to be. Gtneral clerical \\'Ork w/lte typing, Principal ac:- tivit)' includes fil lng, order proctsslng & inventory posL Ing for m!g'r of pharmaeeu- tlcal products. Ex'per. in drug or food supp!emr.nt in- <lusrry desirable bUl not manda1ory. Steady crnploy• ml'nt iv/health benefit~ pd. ca.Ji 646-3931 for \ntcrviPw, LIN\\llLCO LABORATOR· !ES, Costa ri.tesa, Calif. G•I Fri !Nogot) $500 Glan1orous ofc n!'f'<ill ~al Friday. Type 60, Ille SH. J-Ielp bkpr, recept, gen'I. Salos (fr11) $500 GAL FRIDAY Laguna Bc:h based, non profit Bl'st benefits anywherf'. l:"Cology organ, exp ~ r, SH 80, type 60, warm. Will mature dynamic sec'y, r.1ust handle saJcs ord. desk. be strong in public re1ations \\'Ork type 50 \VPi\1 + S.H. '.salal'y open. Benefits. Ofc Mgr (split) $650 <\97-l724 i'o'lr. Lack Want sharp legal sec'yl.:~G:.::E~N'.:.,'.E;R~A_:::L:::::.71:17E=L~P"" who can run a m•d. law ofc. 8 $3.85 HR. 8 Large chain needs 9 men, full or part time for mer· Repro (reimb) $550 chandising and service. Tustin ore needs gd rcpro Call Mr. Day ~S.SS62 r.1 AC HI N I ST-Welder All-a.iuund bench machinist ~ \V('ldf'r. 4!»-8989 8 M EDICAL SEC RETA RY 8 i\laturr well groomed, 2 yra.. secrel~rial experiencc. Typr. 50 \\'Pm. SH SO 1vpm, famil· . iai· 1vlth medical trnninol· ogy. e \VESTiflNS'I'ER CQi\f:0.1UNITY HOSPITAL e Personnel Dept. 17772 Beach Blvd., Hunlington Beach, or Call 8~7-7807. typist who types 60 up. Sec'y Ue•) $4SO .\1EN OR W0.\1EN, part or full 11n1e, canvas local 11.tta.1 Accur. typing. Handle cor-_ no selling. Call ewnings resPondence, purchase or-497_1817 ders, simple bkkpng. $,j()() _::c..;:::.; _______ I G IRL F R IDAY Small S.A. ofc needs sla· ble gal. SH 80, type 60, benefits. a n10. PRENT IC E PERSONNEL AGENCY 523 No. Gra nd, S.A. 835-0322 Extremely attrac. ~al V.'h0 1 "'!..,~~"'!'~~~!'!'~ ~~~~:,.PBX. Type GO, ""'"• GIRLS • GIRLS Ro<ept (sp t;I) $42S Established firm. opening new branches. FL or pt time. Gen Ole (split) $42S JVJIDDLE AGED LAO'{ i'UR LITE CLEANING 3 TO 4 HRS PER DAY 5 DAYS A \\'EEK ***MOLDERS Very sharp gal \vho typt>S e $3.40 HR. e Experienced only, all 3 shift5, to learn personnel. Gal Call J\lr. Grand * 546-9862 MacGregor Yacht Corp., Fri. • HEAD WAITRESS . 61-'-"'-'~P_''~'-'"~"~··~·~c~·~''-·;---I Figures (fee) $475 Da \vk . Dinner Houw. e e NEEDED Perm. lntcrvie\Vs 9 lo 12 Ty{>f' 60, hvy slat sec'y. Variety. noon. SA;>,1'S SEAFOOD Two Office Girls 16278 Pacific: lf\\')'. Hunt. Must be 2:> and able to drive work & Bt h. -APPLY - e JfOSTESS -Clubhouse, 186 E. 16th St., C.~f. Leisure \Vorld, L a g 11 n a [ iiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiiiii lfills. Recreation & social El Toro area needs attrac. activities background "'arm gal w'/lite SH. helpful. Part time position, Sal Sun & rtion. Apply Recept (fH) $450 Typi•I (111) $450 Pe'rs'onnel Office. Administration Bldg, 23522 Paseo <le Valencia. Mon U:-gal dept. Handle library, thru Fri. No phone calls type, file. 1 2p~t·~·~~~·-----~--I Housewive s & Mothers Acct. Clk (free) $500 Do you .. .like money? Like people'! Are you ovl'r 2j? Have you 10 hrs per \\'k, you could spend in a well paid, part time job? If you answer J\1ust havf' construe. exper. Kno1v ~<'n'l ledger post. bank rec, etc. NCR (111) $475 yes to these 4 questions, \Ve should gel together. Call me, 9·12 am at 645-3822 Sharp J:al \V/6 mo's expcr. HOUSEWIVES . 3 openings AIP & NCR. P/time. Aver. SJ per hr. Acctn9 <•plitl $450 No e.xp nee. \\'e train. For a.ppt. call Mr.J. Muller * 546-STIO * Po~t to ledgers, type, vari· HSKPRS Emplyr pays JeP, ety. Cute &. sharp. Geof1{e Allen Byland Agen- ry 10&-B E. 16th, S,A. Escrow (free) $700 FHA-VA &: Conv. Need processors ~ckagcrs. Bkpr (negot) $550 Really sharp gal w h n kno\\'I\ her acctng A: sets of books. constr. 517--0395 newport. personn~ agency 811 Dover Drive Nev,.1>0r1 Beach 642-3570 Sec'y $550 Constr/Good Skills Recept/G. Ofc Lite Typing Sec'y/Ord desk Type 4fJ $425 $520 Technician $700 up Compoter Rtpalr Rea l Estate Sales Proven Sales Abilily Sales Reps $850 up Nol Door To Door Skip Tracer Legal Knowledge Prefe.JTl!d e e CONCRETE. Floo", pallos, drives, sidemlks, slabs. Reas. Don 642-8514. CE.\IENT \VORK, no j<>h too ~ma!l, reasonahle. f' re e Eslln1. H. Shirlick, S.18-8615, e 13th YEAR LOCAU..Y • rca~onable. 673-1&19. a OltCU Learn a dynamic f1eld. ~2 Costa r.1es11, Ca, · v.ro.;;<1, llMNE PERSONNE:l SERYICES•AGENCY Qwt.lified • Reasonable CERAMIC tile new & SECRETARY Tile d d Hr + comm. Call Sally "g~iv~i~ng""'p~ho=""i-'"~u~m~b<i'T'·-:-:--l 2 y 1•5 exprr in gcn'l prac. Hart. El•c. Assemblers finr. SH 80,_ type 60. Ver· Secreta ry to $600 NURSES AIDE. , .7 to 3:30 Exp'd or 1\•ill tr:un. Full time. Park L i do Con- valescent Center 642-8)44 PART time Bookkeeper in your home for Gas. Service Sta. F.xp pl"cf'<f. \\7ill train. Cllrona de! l>lar on I y , 67~1.12 Contractor w. A. SMILEY umodel. Free est. Small Boat manufacturer SH 70. ROO:O.I Addi1ion.c.. L . T. Certified Public Accoant't jobs "'elcome. 536 • 24 2 6, SO. Lite bkkpng. Seu al&rt· Cons!ruction. SinglP srory or 642-2221 anytime &ffi.9666 536-8885 er.] Girl ofc. 2. Estin1 ., plans & la>·out, TAX SERVICE $4 UP Tree Se rvice 847-1 ~11 App't available days, TREES, Hedges, Top, Trim, A/.RECEIVABLE . ROO:.I Additions/Remodel· eves. \\·knds. 5':18.0C>SS. <"Ut removed hauled. Ins. Fam1har v:/data proct:ssmg ing, Free planning sen'. --~l8~172_N~07•~1>0~"~· ~C-'-'--&4i4o30 Big J'ohn ~e~.ods, 10 key adder, type Kennt'dy & l~ause, 63J.6270 T for Tax Service .N-vu days/:i~ll.49 e1·rs. 657 \V. 19th St, c .r.1. Tutoring ~1Y \\'11y, qliallty home Opposite Be!ht>I To11'ers GERMAN & FRENCH RECEPTIONIST -patr. \Valls, cell ing, (]ooo~ 64fi..6765 M thod r.fust have secN!tarial bark· •L Easy Pleasant f' etc. 1''o Joh !"O ~mall. SKOUSEN TAX S ERV. For Adults & Olildrtn. ground, M SH. Exper. :'t47--00?,£, 24 hr an~. ~crv. Reas. Your Honie. 54~3894 * Sll-C>:»t • l>fktng:, arl~rtislng or PR Additions • lt<'modr\ing I ___ ::.__::;;..:.:.:.;_ ____ I good, New ofcs. O.C. Air· G · k , ··-L. Ironing Upholstery nnrt. Advancement. ,('rwic "' .-:•ullS, l('. ,.y 6~1 • ~19-2170 mONING my hOme Sl.25 ~r LIC Upholsterer -Quality SEC'Y CONSTR L;c'd Conlr, Remodeling br. Bring O\\'n hangers. work. Anthony•s Up h . Additions, Plans, Layout 54:>-7&U. Service. 64.2--5&27 N.B. P.Tktng &. Sales. ~tust have 1(11.1'1 E. Ken dall 54'1·1537 Janitorial Real Estate bckgrnd. Good Furnitu re tkill'I. SPARKLE Janitorial. Win-~~~~~~~~~~~! FURNITURE Stripping -any dows, tloon;, crpts & constr MAIL/STK CLERK average chair l)f rocker cleanup. A complete comm"l II 1 I 1 Hi-Sehl grad. Delivering mail stripped $S. 642-3445 ~erv. For Frt'e est call, EmploymMI . t (rom 1 facility to another. Gardei:iing 962.()672. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:11\tul!ilith exper. good. Pre.I. Painting & 1 youni: man. AL'S GARDENING P a perhanging Job Wanted, Male 700 for gardening & s ma 11 landiicapinJ( servic:ei., call No \V•tTIOR 540-5198. ~rving Newport, * WALLPAPER * OL'd, O:lsta ?.tcsa, Dover When you can "ri1ac" SllOJ'es, \\1estclilf. 54S-J444 646-17" SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS PROFESSIONAL. Pruning, LESCO Painling tontractor tree \\'Ork, Aprlnklers, aera· Jntle.xl 2 Story ~pecialist. tion, pest.<i, disease, '~'Ct.'d Also, accou1t, c11il. Kt.'ttlc -Rapid -Tea1t - TEMP. SEC'Y :Z.l l\10':1. Slrong secretarial skills tor outstanding citi· zen. 410 W. Co11t Hwy. Newport ·Beach By Appl. 646.393' control. Clean up Jobs. !<praying. Lie & ins. l\olflody -P.1 1STAKE Tvrm~. C"..oorge, 64~5-S93 615-2399 Sign on door or a run.00\.\'n • • BOOKKEEPER Gardening Service PAP~RHANGER. flock. fo•I. unpro!!{W'roua closed night • . by e.-:pe rienced Japanese vin)·l, guar., estimate~. the C'lub "Opened hy MISTAKE." Unique .. young, g1'0\\'l11J;.com- • 968-(1183 e !4 G ~-... -------panywtthanextraoni1nary Ha n g m an • S • 7 ~ 5 • Jo~ Wanted, F ema le 702 potential, ~eeks a vivacious. ~PER. I fttY.'allan Ga.rdefl<'r Schwartz a.bovt av<'ragr. F 1c Book- C n in p I,. 1 e Garden Ing PAlNTING/paJ'IC'rin£. 18 yrs AIDES 1-'or <."C)llv11le~nee. Th ~-rvict>. Ka.mttlan1, 64&-4616, t'ld('rly cnrt or ran1ily care. l«'cper. ls ls M <'XCrP· ""' In }farbor aiea. l.1c &· tional op]'IOrt11nlr:v, ror the CO E anl C r. -" n f' f ~·"~ Homemake~. 5-17-.6681 )IPLET Y a • bond...... e !I urn. t;>'l"'".J..111 right pc~n. \714) 5J0.6050 Oeanup, 1r:io;;h hauling by * PAINTING* Jobs Wanteci, M & F 704 AnaM-im. Joh or mo. l!!•T-24.J7, 846--0932 11, Quality. Reu •. Prier•. O\'S d N DAILY Pl! .IYr for actiOi\i EXPF.RlENCED Jan i 1 or BUSB \\'1tntc . , cat ap. To $2.80 hr. Expcr. v.•IJ'l.C. satile. Young Progressive Fu1n PART /f1JLL TU.1E Start bu.~1 nc~s managemt>nt C.!N'l'r in expanding com· pany, Scvl.'raJ areas open. \''1!J 1 train qualifil.'d ap- pllcanls. Call ~5856 RECEPTIONIST .. Dt'ntal. If you hav<' recent chairside &. insurance ex· per. the job is yours. Start :S400. Call Jean Brown. MGMT T RAINEE fantastic oppcr. \vorking "'/sharp chal!Pni;:ing \\'hole· sa.l!'n. Start S5700 + l.'X· riense account. Call Helen Haye!. SALES Stable p<'l'Son 1\'/J:d sale~ exprr. J::Pls t hlll job. :S600 Guai·anteed + cornm. Call Sally !~art. GEN'L OFFICE P/timf', Great oppor, to "-'Ork \Vhill' children arf" at ~chool. Lite typing &: plea- 11ant phonf' voiN'. Start $2.25 hr. Csll Jean Brown. SECRETARY l'>!l'dic111. Ba.ck & front. l Gal of<'. * day Wcdnes· day. No Sats. 41,i, Day v.·cek. Call Sally Hart. boanis, Stable_ bckgrnd. All illhifts. Call !\fiss r.telanlP, 557-612'2, Abigail Abbot. 230 \V. \\'arncr, SuitP Zll, S.A. ECG TECH., II time, hrs may \'Dry. Pc~nne! Dept. Hoag Hosp. N.B. e ENGINEER -Fiberglasi. produclion. MacGrego r Yacht Corp, 1631 Placcntla, Costa illeAA Engineering CIVIL E NGINEER ING -TECHNIC IAN - l'>fajor land dev('lopment cet., seeks a technician to per· fo1m various Civil Engi- neering, drafting and office task$. Position requires Hi~h School gradua1e with drafting/dr.. sign and grading. Some col· legP and public: \vorks e.XJX'r. in 11 sulrprofessionaJ ca- pacity is clesirable. Thi!! is a career position V.'lth xlnt g:ro\\1h opporl-unity. Pl!'ase sPnc'I lel!er or re- sume outlining qualiflca- tion.~ and salary history. THE IRVIN E CO. S:iO NcY.1>0rt Centl'.'r Dr. Nt"'.\'poM Be1tch, Cali l. 92660 • Personnel Dept. EXP'D \\'a.ifressc>s -Xlnt )nY ·~~~~ P~~m~:p~~ D ENTAL O FFICE CHAI RSI DE bh\'n 11 & 3 to Mr. llt'lmul Orl11odontic tralnini; \\•Ill &hcsky, NC\\l!Orf Bl'!lrh land this great oppor. Tenn\~ Cl\1b, 2601 Easlblulf \Vork fnr fanla11tic bo8s, l _;D;'~· ~N~.B~·-~---,.,-,,..-.,, .s1111·t $400. CaU Helen 'EXP. <.'(luplc 1rantl.'d to 1-IA)'C~. m11nagl'.' 20 unit mot~! in I ... , 1J11 hra. 1-'r!'C art. + perc entage. 646-1730 6t2-l.122 Roce pt (fee) $450 Sm. ofc nl.'eds gal Fri. RP· cert. act as backup to secs. P ub. Roi (free) $600 Sec retary $500 4 DAY \VEEK 1'1arkel ing Background Ac:ctng Clerk fo $475 Type 50/Varied Acct Bckgrnd PART time !rainees. male, I-IS or Co!l. No exp nee. Tl1e 7..oo P.estaurant, Coast Hy.y & i\lcArthur. Scr'y Sil 90, type ;io .. At· Girl F rid ay .to $560 tract., outi.;oing, f!l'XJble Bkkpng, Type, 1 Gtrl Ofc. for Laguna ore. * PBX Operator/ Recept. Gen. Ole (foe) $400 V~ry vPry Acc·ur. typist 50. r.·tuSt lik<' figures. Raise in 90 days. Beach Joe. Ex•c. Sec'y (free) .$600 2 Gal ofc. Payroll or 85. Type 60, SH 90, grovo'ing firm. Xln't futul'e. F /C Bkkpr (fr11) 511 0 wk Po~! lo lf'di:;cr~. \Vant grn') at(·t. r'lpl.'r. x1n·1 advance· n1ent 1~·/menufacturcrs. F-REE/ FEE JOBS 507 Bank of Amer. Tower O nt City Blvd. West Orang• Gen'I Office $400 Filing, Type 60. PBX Rclief Recept. $500 Call Director E:o;rer Plra~ant pcrsonali1y, front otfire lady 1\·ith 3 yrs. e.X· l)('rirncp as S"''l!chboard op. t.'ra tor. n1l'.'rling rhc public and Jill' typinJ:. Ca 11 - !"\'n-IY .'il7-7·!7~ behvn 9 Mail Girl Type •l. $305 1un & 4:30 pm. Ac!ive J oh 1 'P~l~A~N~Q~lo-,-,~h,-,-. -.-,,.-,-,.~,,-,-,1 F ile Clerk $315 Detail i\flndcd /~lath Ap Order D•sk fo $450 \\'illing lo be trained for part timf' emplmt in m-u:iic school. "1S-769J 8 PHARMACIST 8 Typt 60, Exper 1-l~·lpful J Rl'licf, part ti1nc, S1turday ain •I hnur!i.. Hosp1!al e."q'IE'r- P art time to $2.SO hr I icncl.' preferrrd. • HUNT. Ll!e Bkkpng, 10 Kry Addi•r INGTON 1NTERCOM!\-IUN· I ITV HOSPITAL e Person- Cost Acct. to $700 nrl Dep1, li772 Beach Blvd., Gov't Con!r Exper Drsirrd lluntington Beach, (Ir call $.17 -7807, Sr. Acct to $1000 P & L F1n3n<'ial & Sricclal Reports. No 'raxl's. .JSS E. l71h !111 lrvlnel C.:\t. 642-1470 .lANITORJAI..- \\'an!rd. ;is.«istant !or rl11h mrtlnt. Call Frerl Voi;:rl ll17 -~i-tl.1 8 8 PRODUC ~ MAN 8 8 l\·11n1cd by rt>lll.tl\'('ly ~mll\I fl'l(lfl grore -Not a suJ)f'r- rnnrk,.t, A 1·man job. M> l'X· ~r1l'nre i~ nf'r.c~~<'l"Y. No n11t ht or Sundt1;,o '"Ork. i\p. ply at J.1ndhur1o: Nu1 rltinn, \or111f"d 1n b11cK of Triy \\'(lt'lrl Stn"(' 1u !hr !'outh fna~1 Pl .. 1;1 :'tmprlng Ccn · LADIES !1pf't'i11H,v ~hop nr,.rJ~ 1t•r_ JS::.1 Br1~101 !'1.. Cottta pt lin'I(' «11.lf's help, Balhoa j\f~t'a 1~1 6i.~7i0 ----------1 Frre e-sl. ~-0864 c:oupl<' dC's lred ofllN! clf'an-pearaJIC'e. Xln1 pay. Ovtr Call &12-567~ & S8Vfll FOR clean &: neal pe!nHns. ln-g. 1\fnn-\Ved-!'rl evt~. 2l full or p11rt lime, Appl~ LEEPER BROS. C.Ompl yard inlPrior & f'Xterior, Call 5-1~ri.1 Jn J"l('nion Tu<'s thn1 F'r1 '540-6055 2790 Harbor Blvd. EXP'D Sal e 11g i rl for LADY, (l11.rl -l ln1r . LL P RO F ESSIONAL p~ ~lici1or • nana Point, San Clemenrr , Capi11trnno &l't"a. \\•flrk In your own home. Br. t deal in 111~a. Phone 83:r1~6.\ beh\·een 9:00 a.m. i·~~··~"'~'"~~n'~'!ln~t.~1"~•~·~ J ~D~i'.j''~·~!J68..4jjj00~5iAJ~if'if'* J H I W ted MA F 710 btv,.-n II k 3 to ~1r. Ht>tmut r.'Ontm'l. 646-6.'11'2 fir ~8-1054 • P an ' lkhesky, Nt'\\1J()r! Beaeh "'.", P. ·'''''"RA Gardener. * PAPE RHANGE R * Advertising S •le smen T<'nnls Club. ZGOl Eastblult •~·~ "" Prior Jnatructor. 646-2449 o N B Gttn, cl,.~nu11. H11ul\ng tttea. 10 M'li •pace-for Ora.11.iCI_:~'~· .:c;·~·'------=- ?ll1tinl. )'ani &tG-0619 Coun1y pu bhcal!on. \Vrile: CLERK -Lile tYf11fli. n I . ' • ' ~. P .O. Box !i204, Santa Ana. time, \'aried hn. ~enOMl'!I Catl f, 92704, Dept. lloag Hngp t\.8. • dni~!(lroe Sarg & sun's. hat1Sl'l1·rwk in Alnll11 Trfllll'r Anrl nron. Submit n'.'!!Ume to Box 365. Park, 132 W, \\'iL'it'ln. C ~1. Coron• d•I ""· C•1". (J14) 639·6050 *LIQUOR CLERK* (Harbor Blvd. * r-·otJNTATN \VORK .. Nol undrr 4fl, Co~ta r.l i'sll <'xpcrirrw-e l'ICN'~s11ry. 11 rr11. ,\1 u.~i h:ivr l"l"I A1l at Ad1ms) Call 64...._1402 835·8461 llQt1•1r e:o1p<>ri"11\r. Applir11· I ThP fa~t!'~l drA"' rn thf: West Cost• Meia Hotl!Ce J-Iuntlng:~ \\rAh~h the I tions conf1tlt'nt11d. Ph· Fa.~l rc.c.ults ~ ju~r a phoot , _________ . ~O.:.P.:.F.::.N~H..,o_u ... s"E'-co_lu_m_n_. __ ••••••••••'_:lll::;l:::·'::·'·c.":_ __ -,-__ !"'111t 111\111• · 642-~3 ' Mond1f, Maret\ 22, 1971 DAILY Pll!!f :JlJ I~ I -... I~ I F>oo .. v.. ![I I -~ ·1~ [ "-•• ~--~1·~--~ ![Ill l~-~-_ .. ··~![Il] [ lil "---'[ ~___.:-'--""__.!§] [ ' .......... -AlltOI hw s.1• .. 962 Autos Wo nted Help Wo nted, M & F 710 'l1lp Wonted, M & F 710 Gorogo S.11 112 Planos/Ortana 126 Lovable ync adult tema.le Oentral 900 Cempen, Sale/Rent t20 Truck.I med. •lie wlf&.bl.lred ter-l==oo--,---,..... 1_______ 1·-=,.....,."",.....,""'~-·-e R.N ... e I YOUNC tnt'I (0 1tek:s M,rmt. MOVlNG \Yed-M1111 Stll. Uk1 New, prtbl d/w, $95, a:•s SIO\'e $20; drk brv.·n tc>!a ;20; ~4," ,I,; 26" bikH, ;tO l'll.Ch, plUI h<1ilc. 2J!i6 RunJ Pl, CM 64~1129 WE QUIT!!! ""' mb< I "" ""rt-haired WANTED' 1959 McCulloch '69 FORD !I "" camper • ·-WE PAY CASH Jn!en&1ve care/cardiac care. FUll time, ll to T:lO am. e HUNTINGTON 1NTF.R- J>Pt10nntl. Vartablt hrs, unlimited Income. '97-:U79 terrier mix, JO lb1. m~Je. Flying Scott 60 H.P. aoy apecl&l, Ranpr. Auk> tn.z., CHEV '68 C"""" Oood w'<c""°''· lo>o <hild-,,,,,.,;u00, Will "*' .., to PIS, P.T dJ,.. braWt, Air • UollUm -FOR YOUR CAR ttn. Need iooct h01ne1 w/ $50. 531-7294 rood, 11' ce.bover camper, ftnceel yam,, 1..532-.3187, ~i "Boa,-'t'"•""i"'"M'"o-r~lno-----$500) firm. 846-$f'T Arters yean, \\'e are closine 1,Pc.,m,,,.=°'=---3-,----3/-,2t Equip. 904 Cycl•s, Bike•, CONNELL our doors in Coat& r.tesa. PRETTY purple1, part Scooters t2S ~ ton v.g 1'ltttittfe with Ion& CHEVROLET C01\f.MVNITY HOSPITAL . l 11"' I Pf'rM>nnel ~!. 17TI2 Beach AiffctYndlM V PICKUP M lscell•n.ou• 818 B.lvd., llunUncton Beach. I ij· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:;.~ ·-------- or Call 8-t7-7807. 11 * AUCTIO.N * All re1nainin& Piano.1 & Or-Shepherd, pa.rt llusky. 7 * * JNVERTER, Heath Klt, VJheel bue, f\111 cw:1om, 2838 Harbor Blvd. rans, new & used, to clear wk1 old. !ill litmilton, model MPl4, UVDC 10 110 .......... _.. auto. tral\J., cbrame n.1111, Coata Mua 546-12>0 at auctlon prices. Savings C.M. 3123 VAC, 60 cycles, 400 watll. I ... --· -• power brakts, rad .• htt.1~----~---=·t up to 50'7o. No dealers FEMALE ti1t'r..titrlpf!d eat, NEW assembled & checkrd THICIC Heavy duty bum p er. Autos, lmportld 970 '-;-;-;-;;;;:--=::":~~--I Antlques 100 F'·-Fur 11 'SALES . Men ,&,; \\"omt'n J;;;;;;;;;:O.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; u~ n ure STOl'llt 4: Appliance •• Second H•nd Rose 1 Auctions .Friday, 1:00 p.m. LOOKING & ACT ANTICj)UES i W indy's Auction Barn please, lowly dirpostion. free 10 out. Sacrifice $100. Ca.II HQ~TD, .._ CHROM:t MAG WHEELS, \VARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO good home. Call eves aft 528.9345 after 6 P.r-.t. "'eek· 'il.W ~ etc., etc. Nabtrs Cadlllac·s AUSTIN HEALEY Sales minded person, M!e !or I · 1 2075l!i Ne\\'POM. CM 646-3686 yourself, a real career op. J\.faplt' chopping block. I Behind Tony's Bldg. r-.tat'I. 1819 Ne\vi>on Blvd., 642.8484 7, 847-3492 3/2l days. Ml own 1tl"Vlce trUcic. (Q98737) 1----. • ..,.-_,_,-.,°"'-I CLEARANCE MALE 'I Collie " S~p '" Boats, Powor 906 ""FRIEDLANDER" <J888 AUSTIN-HEALEY portunity. Xl"t , .. 1 .... 10,. large pine hutch table, 1 " " ....... · 5 spd 20" blke $25. Couch •i.fht man. Earnln•s com· pine corner cabinet. yrs old, loves children, f ENGINE 100-6 SALE n e e d 5 Io o d b om e , 1---------''"' tuCll CMW\'. •• 2639 C.C. 161.1 cu. ln. Ca1t Over 100 Pla.t'lOI A: Organ, Ms-6202 3/22 18' RUNABOUT, f u 11 y 537-6824 e 8!)3..n.66 ib ...f. Iron head, intact. d!u.ssem· Reduced tor tmm~. aaJe, 2 IDENTICAL wb1. kitties equip'd, Elec bait tank. NEW-US~O.SERV. ~ C9d) bled and partially ttbullL B N & S I _.... ._ Convert lop, 35 HP Johnson, .... ~ - -All pans included .. ..gener- ·• ma I • · t art $20. Stove $10 4 pc red\\"OOd mence immedlal•ly •ho"ld Pe • pine ea c • • -' 1· bl set ;10 Powl'r n\ll\\'tt $20. ..._ Jn exces• ol 1-. -r wk. wiunut lfll'n ct net, ""' "'N ,... · d ~ k _, spd Ai.\1-F~t coMOle $ll. No canvuaing o• .,1,··lll•g. pine ry "'" · Art'!' ·a1 5• uy ow •Ye to 6""" ..... me, pre!1r h.d.12 .. \\"hee! trlr, Sacri1ice • - -..... 1 ADIUAC Open Dally 10 tiJ 6 togeUwr, male &. fem. ;;,9;,. 968-5946 AUTHOAiztO OOOEFI ator, etc. Call ~0-2888, and Fr. 10.9 * Sun 12-5 ~9861 3122 ] ;-;o-,====,---,c,--JOO cc VELOCE'ITE Tl'Lnlx· 2600 HARBOR SL., leave your name and phone ' ' " & •-I I · 1 ic1 tree. orange & fntervie"·• t... appointment · many 01 .. .,r ove y pieces. b onl 9 l ukda~ Open \Ved thru Sat rov.·n. Lots more! 117 E. Y · \\'tt y1. 8J5.zm. ll A.\l·S M! 18th, Cl\1 Sales 1.3'9 \\', 1st SI. FUN FOODS: Pop c or n , lJ. CORTCRAM' -Glass on COSfA MESA number COAST MUSIC NEED good home !or Cock ton, new dutch tlre1, · '----· ==,.,.---! EXCELi.ENT 1NC0).IE op. Tustin 838.0742 Sno\\'OOMI, cotton candy & fli"EWPORT & HARBOR A Poo Puppy. Curly & Cud· "·ood, fornnd contnMs, 35 braki?s. piston and loo..,.er MQ.9J.IJO Open Sundayr Costa Mesa * 642.2&, dly. Fe~ yard. 968--2379 hp Evinrude, cu,ton1 end. Purilt'a delight and --.....-.,~•:.._.,-;--;--ll'°'o-o~,-:-.:B~M,,...WO"".~,,,--,I all-f'lec t r a 11 e r . ;500 In perfect shape. &11 oller '69 Ch T HAINES baby rrand piano, 2 puppit's itte to good home. g.u.1095 over $930. g~ alter 4 evy _Vi on BM'IY'S NEW &. USED, all white &. &Old, ?ited siz.e. Mixed sm breed 8 wks old. ,69 CHRYSLER 14, 4S HP, p.m. models, parts and servt~. f.'ORTU NJTY ror ~IA'ruRE 1 .,..,~!'!!~~~""!!!!!!!!!! I \'ending machines. Su pplies, t.tAN in Costa ~lesa.1 · *ANTIQUE* R~ntal1& Repalr1. Newporl Bl'ach area. Dif'l'CI I " 15193 Moran St, \Ymstr, Span sh \~alnut din.in& rm ~~JOO yrs old. ;soo. 837·8803 312.i. $1 395. '6l Chris 19' woocl.1 ~-..Y"A"MA~'"H"A'""'t~OOc~c--V'S, automatic, custom cab c~=-A~~~V·MOTORS .,---,,---co,--~--=12 LOVABLE 6 '~eks old 185 11.P .. $1500. OR BEST Runs Grtat! Good Tint. (3~E). 1860 ~Beach Blvd. n.Je1 e x p e r i e n c e not Tony Capas!!O 714/531 """'1 Sf't. 6 Chairs & table "'/CUV· ~ neceliSaJ)', but mus! have eC: base. $150. Also old trunk POOL table, fu ll 1 i z l' abUlly to deal with O\\'lll'n, Sl5. &ffi.7335 \\·/~. balls. etc. •tome managers and purehasing beer bar w/retrig unit. Bar qems for conunereial and *ORIENTAL RUGS Sporting Goods 830 to qual home. party poodles OFFER. 642-4097, 548.-2211, First f140 takes, KeUy BIUe Book $2S7S 21.3-S9l-871l iiiiiiiiiij-jjjiiiijjljjjjiiiiljj l:f,'""'~;j'~·d;· ~!16S-~2~37~9i.;;o:~3~122 ~',.'~' ~"-'~--~~--(Kirk) 546-9685 Our Pr!~ St. Bernard pup. 8 mo. old, '69-lS' Charger flatbottom 1969 YAMAHA $2399 ntecl.1 a be.tier home. boat "'/lr!r, 428 Fo1-d eng. BARWICK industrial accounU. ?11en Royal Kennin. 12x23, also & 2 hi stoob, $45, Bo\\·ling over 40 prefeJTed, but all smlr sizes. 675-3353 bl~ls v;/baa:sTv CoMOif! TV DATSUN Tho inquirll's re~lvt' equal con-. 2 port s $15 t'flch. sideration. Write: Dept. 66, Appli•nces 802 557-3331 ''Earl Of Ar ms'' Gun Shop 548-3615 3/24 Days 83&-1564/aft 6:30 pm, 250 c.c. l\\'in. $395.00, 4,300 968-7481 miles. Vl'ry clean. Call IMPORTS INC. '65 Datsun Wagon ~~~~~-~17";-;:"""""'"'""",,,_,,...,,,,. Consolidated Inter.America * GAS dryers k l't'blt ** INVERTER, Heath Kit , Corp., 912 E. Ohio Bldg., \\'&Shen, $50, Will de! model l\-1PI4, l2VDC to 110 FREE to rood honie· 2 female mixl'd poodlt's, 7 CleVl'land. Ohio, 4./.ll4 \~lguar. Mstr Chg. lolayta& VAC, 60 cycles, 400 \\'atts. e e All GurtJ, Amt?'!() & AC· wks old. 847--0864 "" ~s tr . 1 ,. .,_ n'" an 531 0007 NE\V uscmblt'd & checked , A B lo l\'hol FREE mixed pUp. 2 ~ ainee or mar 1ng '"p ...... m . -.,.,,,, · 1 i3/ .0 00 cessorie:o t e IY e· 11 bl k 1 __ , d.""'' & 1 1-E ou . cr1 ce $1 . C11ll a ac , enlil.lt'. s a 1onery. arn KENi\10RE auto \\'H~r. 528-984 after 6 p .'.\I . sale. \\'/kid~. 968-3175 3122 while you learn. If not \\'iii· late mode!, Xlnt cone! •"""· _,, \reekdays. 7 Id · ing to learn at trainee pay, Guar & delivered. 546-8672, \\'K o puppies. mother don't apply. Good op. 847-3115 ** VACUU~I TUBE VOLT Open .Koon 'til 8:30 Pi\.1 Basset hound. 7662 Da.nube portunily. Outline qualif!ca· l\IETER, Hewlett Packard. Tuesday thru Saturday Dr. H.B. 847-344S 3/11 lions. \Vrile Classlflt'd ad KENi\10RE "·asher. $3.), ex· model 400 H, xlnt condition; G She I I cellt'nt: Also \\'uher & 17• k . p over yr. ovt. .. No. 110, Daily Pilot, P.O. Dryer set. ~1095 :> or ma e: oUer!! Call (Newport •t B•y) kids. Needs new homl'. Box 1560, Costa ~fesa, 92626 528-9845 alter 6 P :-.1: 836-4493 or 548-0813 3/23 S ALE S Escrow Of· e APT-SZ REFRIG, ;75, -'~'"=k_d•~Y~•~·,---..,-,---~ Costa Men LOVABLE 9 month old Still under \\·a.rranty. Willp ~ooL labl I I Id 646-7318 fleer-Savings & Loan As50C. deliver. 4!»-2968 es, s a e, o . Beagle. J..ow11 ch I Id re n, Laguna Beach Reg Ion al fashione-d m~ls, 7', 8', 9'. I ~~~~!!II'~!!'!~ good home. 539-TI81 3/23 Ole. Salary o(len. Equal Op-KEN:\10RE auto \Vasher, Sacri!i~. WUI deliver frtt. I: por. En1ployer. Send Good cond ;.i.~. Guar & 1442 Hayes Ave. Long RIFLE: 1'tARLIN Golden J9. LOVABLE youna: &itl'red cal s35.1492 da.y1, niie &12.-4330. DATSUN 21' TROJAN, G.-.y M..-ine A•k toe Jo'- eng, dbl landltrlr. Needs ·I speed, dlr, Real Nlce. (YCT ' 333) f'ull Price paint. $1000 or b.9t ofr. e MAVERICK 50cc '10 998 So. Coast Hwy. 646-3909: a.ft 6, 968-3925 model·Good cond. Must sell. Laguna Beach $599 ~~-Only used 2 \\'ks, 54640'51 I 494-9171 1958 26' Chris Coonie, twin ~2371 screw. Xlnl cond, $3250 Dys BARWICK 547-5466. eves 673-7257 HAVE A NICE DAY 4r CHRIS 'jg hi-cabin, on a ·10 XLClf Sportste.r • • 545-1282 • New Inter., Full equipment,];;,-;:=="'"='""'=~-­.$20,j()(]. 644-4132, 6"-422l 'W YAMAHA 2.50. New trans & paint. ;325. Boats, Rent/Chert'r 908 Ca.JI 897-7942 alt ~ pm l.~68~BJ~MW=~ae°"a~,,~tl!ut,;::;~"'~""=~w~/6 gal. touring tanlt. Sacrifice $815 67>1385 32' Twinscrt\\• Chris, fully equip·d. Fishina: or Cruis- ing. 54&.2434. Boats, Sail 909 DUMP TRUCK IMPORTS INC. $99l DATSUN 1957 GMC Good 998 So. Colu;t Hwy. operating condition. Laguna Beach See at Daily Pilot st6-4001 I 4!U-9rn. 330 Weit Bay Street ]---------: eo1ta Mua DOT DATSUN or cau y Mrs. Gree"°"" OPEN OAIL AND 642~321 SUNDAYS 1957 CHEVY P .U. i~ Ton. 1!S3$ Bea .. h B!vd, ~liume: to Classified Ad No. deli\'ered. 546-8612. 847-S115 Beach, 213/ 435.8883. A l\Ioun1\e. 22 cal .. Lever free to good home . I action, \V/4 X Bushnell 64~7096 3/23 READY for summer 24· 53. Daily P\ ot, P. 0. Box Cameras & LGE quanti!y Br a z i I! an 17-Call 1560, Costa l\1e!a. Ca 92626 808 em er a Ids. g 0 od. mf'd scope, J. 528·9845 l r-.10 old • male ~~ Doxie, Holiday Yawl !Dutch bu1ltl, ·68 Y anl&ha 250 Enduro dirt bike. Good cond. Muat sell. ;465 or best aUer. 646-8717 Custom cab. Sharp! New Huntlllaton De11C'h comp! eng. 4 new tirl"s. 842-mt or Yfl.-04.U Equipment alter 6 p.m. v;eekdays. 1, Beagle, \'ery triendly, lully equip'd, 5 sails. Mint Mobile Homes 935 Tunt'd. See to appm:iate? 1 ~~-~c=.c-=---·I SARAH Coventry needs fl. quality. For cash. Looking cornl. Inboard Palmer elec or pt time help. No ln-PENT AX Spotmalic, n.4 for dealer or other. 548-7865 FISHING equip, r if 1 es' !)4S-4804 3123 NOW OPEN FORD 2 T. flatbed , Tilt cab. 1600 OHC, Pickup wl!h camp. : tm i \l'UI IT 1 1 lens, C.0.S. meter x.lnt 1ho!guns, ammunition, other AUSfRALIAii sh l' p he rd system. Radio, Ga 11 e y, 642-8340 New '71 Datsun \•es en . a n, m n '63 Datsun P.U. w/'67 eng, ··" II d 4~ ~· CONTEMPO-New rack. 4 spd. 2 8pd l!!'r. Sale price $2099 dlr, : ,. "'"1407 •-"'3-""°-~ cond .. $175, 968--7158 1iporting guuu l l t' m I · P"PPies 5 \\:ks o l cl, ·ea "3""'~VOJU •it: ·,,.,..,... """" """"· J115t 'v:ell broken in, AU ~· 007 · --~=~=~--·! LA~UNA HILLS tear!ncl. First $1500 takes (# PL5214522701 Will take : F I .lo i7UO"""OO 3 968-5344 ' 3123 KITE 857 ~ 1 .. . urn ture mech cond TOPS, S49J. Apt 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. t. ........ 1691 car In trade. Will finance 1 gas range, perlectly clean 6'8" PLASTIC fANTASfIC PUREBRED poodle puppy. Full racing gear. Completely .56 CHEV. 114 stake t ruck . private party. CaU 546.8736 SECRETARY WHY BUY FURNITURE? ••;> 114 Continental C l\1 $60. Ke"' B.C. T\VIN FIN, ~2-4773 3/23 canvassed, rlo\ly, Irun1ac. {Corner ot Moulton Pkwy) $.100. 1513 Ora-e or 117 o• 494-6811 . ..., . . .. . ~;~·1~·~· ~$85~·ft. ;;6~4~~4594~d,;~Zji,,i:~~~~~~~~~~ ~. 6i5-./.91·1. LAGUNA HIU.S .. ., • 4x8 CUSil\1 made pool table, HEAD SKIS standard 210 Pri:lstlge adUlt community ad. E. 18th, CM 642-56ti6 l---~F-l_A_T~---I Imported balls, Cues & .,--"•·gs •-ts pol m' l ll ~l Newport 20 jacent to Lei!ure \Vorld. '69 CHEVY P.U. V8, 3 apd,, __________ 1 lnter e1tlng position In 1eroap1ce engi· nffring ire•. Good skills are r9qulred: typing 60-65 wpm, shorthend ao • 90 wpm.Ability to work with • m ini· mum of supervis· ion. hard\\'Oeld \\'all rack, ;;;so ~72• uvu ' es, .,....,. r.t1 and Supplils $3500 BeautiJUl 1urrnundlngs, all r/h, Xlnt Cond. $1950 or1 · value. Will &ell $225. I'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;; Slip & Financing luxury appointments, put. bst otr: 642-0563 ~ 1 Re:ez!.'~=i~~l with 968-5946. • HOBIE 'JiVIN FL'I 6',lt Pacific Yacht~ 673-1570 Una: sreen, hobby iOOp,"·=.,~CH=E=v=y~i;=,-..,--pi_ck_-u_p_.1 "THl"'K" • O MOVING, &eU ing everything: 14'hite Xlnt cond. $95, Pets, Generil &SO CAL Cat • Incl trailer. Xlnt much mon:. / Good nd $37S 1'- 100-/. Purcnase ptlon furn .. wash/-·er, baby "-54&.5168 cond. ~lust sen, mili olll'r. CALL.............. co · · ~Dmfl Ind. Hem selection ..... 54{)....4119 ~ Call 642-9182 24 Hr. Oely. kit. tbinp. 4!H-8973, 483 Oak TV, Radio, tllFi1 PRE·Eastl'r Special Mar, ~~~~===-~ THE BEST OF Auto Leasing 964 CU.iTOM St., Laguna Stereo 136 22nd lhru l\1ar 26th. St.00 e 12' Ft BERG LA s s BOTH WORLDS Furniture Rent1I \VANTED : 1959 AfcClulloch ----------nlf on all dog voomlng. SNO\VBIRD, \\'ldolly. xtra For a beautUul home, Jaw S.. Flying Scott 60 H.P. any ** Vacuum tube: VOLT El Camino Pet Shop sail, Xlnt cond. 673-7933 malntenanceandarchitecur. LEASE ''FRIEDLANDER" ' 517 \V. 19\b, C.~f. 548·3481 rondition. \Vill pay up to METER. Hewlett Packard. 492-1766 21' VENTURE -SLPS <!; ally 1m si d I Se A NEW 1971 A'laheim 714-2800 $50. 531-7294 model 400 H, Xlnt condition;]~..,-------~= Head, trlr &: loads of xtra.s. the ,x~~-v~ewes·~Iu ... e PINTO 11750 IUCH ILYD. LaHabra 694-3708 I :c.==""""°"""-,-,=-~ ;13 or make oller. Call Cits 852 531 =•i -~ $50 00 fHwy. JtJ Please: apply 1n prrson 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa :\lesa. Calif. NEWPORT Beach Tennis ....,.,., House" by Levllt Mobile • mo. ......, "'''"' • 537-· i\tUST sacr1Ii~: Beaut Cl b h 1 528-9845 afttr 6 P~l1----------CO S =•~ -u c a r e r mem· BEAUTIF L RONADO 25: I.mm a c rtl'm1ondlsplaynow ol (36mo.) NEW-USED-SERV. ATLANTIC RESEARCH A Division ol Susquehanna. Corpoi·niion custm bit 9' velvet sofa It .... weekdays. U SEALPOINT -ut:rship..S400 + tr811lifer. SIAi"\i ESE kl 10 k Cstm boe.t. All Xl:ral $T.m BAY HARBOR open end loveseat. Vectra hide-a-bed Call 642-2440 FANTASTIC VALUE. 1 tens, wee s or bst ofr. 64&-8303 MOBILE HOMES RENT & matching chair. Olive Spanish ?t'Iedit 5ttreo con· old, ;zs. 962-7198 barrel chairs, Cotltt table BICYCLES, Stingray&, girls sole, Ai\l/Fl\f, tape outlet. Dogs 854 CAPE COD CAT BOAT 1425 Baker St, Colla Mesa A NEW 1971 & commodes, p e can & 24'', boyg &: girls 3 z.p; Cost ;60() Newi Now II1i 1--"---------18', tbrbls. (213) 834-3883. J ust S. of S.D. Fwy at Harbor PINTO childs. Reas. 642-1272 AKC SILKY PUPPIES "QiWiiIBiAT&"l969:-lli<;;;' I ~==~'.;~~~~9!7~0~== $4 DAY oak. Beaut lamps. Dinette, 548-3735. CpLUMBJA 28 1969. Days: r .nir 6-pc Queen bdrm, Also 6-pc 12 Captains chairs ;1 & $10. ===~~-----NA..\1E YO UR OWN TERMS 213 / 636·0757; Eves: TI4/ i1-10DEL MOBILE HO:<tfES ANO dbl bdrm set. Stereo ..,..,ip, Hrd pcs fire\\'ood, cord $25. COLU:-OIBIA Stereo, k\1·F.'.\-I, They're delightful. Ha ve '""5724 213 ; •••3438 ln Costa Meaa·1 Greenlea! All llke ne\Y. See k; .. '°ap-548-82117. !o24 Ll!Kll"n Pl Cl\1 Garrant ~hanger. Like Tie\\', shots. Can De bough I '""" or ~ · Park. 24x60 Amer I can a 4~ MILE prttiate. ~2-9-192 i4 yds w/w crpt, $2 yd 1-'Pl•~p~lo~S~t;;>J~_-;64&-"''1~<2;;;;;6:-;;v J~P~•~io~l•~·~·l~y~. ~P~h~. ~><~S-4~9~57:__ J Boats, Slips/Docks 910 $15,900. ~52 Mon I e re Y PUT A J..ITTI.E I Panasonic 18" Color 1V $12 7= C I I KICK IN YOUR l.10THER-ln-law moved in, !adelrss blue. periect. easy i\IALE Silky & malt', cren1e, BALBOA Island mooring & • ""· omp ele Y setup 'W/5tand. 6 mos old. $275 I kl •· In ch LIFE• too much furniture. Custom C&.l'l'. ~decorating. 675-4859 toy.mini Poodle. Bo th 21· inboard cruiser far sale. v.• 1 r~, awn gs, por • · '70 FIAT Spyder 850 Con-, vert., Only 9IXXi ml ' s , Radials. R/H, SacrU.lce of· fer. 8'16--0982. I =~~~~-~-~~·· 1967 Fiat 4-<lr sedan. 4-1pd, lo ml. Good trans[J;)rtatlon. $650. Call 642-2:WO JAGUAR gold nubby.texttll'l' sectional A..VJPHI Cat. brand new. 2 I :o==c-c~"~1-·'~13~7=,..,=~I beautiful! 6 4 6-O 14 2 or Sleeps 2. Gray marine 6 etc. THEODORE sofa ""/table $75: Deluxe hi'! on engine. Fun in \\'ater, 1970 RCA 21"; Xl....'JT COND. 5-JS-.1022. 333 E. 17th St. cyl engine. ;2100. J..ocated GREENl..EAF PARK ROBINS FORD JAGUAR * SECRE'TARY / General roll-away ;35; Desk $25: sand, snow or "·herever. ;220. C).1' in north Bay of! Sapphire 1150 \Vhittitt Ave., C.:-Ot. 2060 HARBOR BLVD .• Equal opportunity en1ployer ate. Dicta!!on-manuscripts. Caro c e 11 e c ou ntertop Mu5t sell ;1ooa. 5-18-4685 • Call: 893-4943 • 1 p'~oo=o~L~E-.,,-,-,-. =.,-,-,,-1.-l~i<-tle St. 64.4-5836 ~3-2510 ** 64f>.O.IJO COSTA ?ttESA HEADQUARTERS Lyceum Productions. Inc. dish\\uher, new S25. 309 COl\.!1'lODORE outbrd motor A).IPLIFYIER top like ne:"· tiny toy & toy&. Stud sen1.126=' -d~l.-.-$65=.,-m-o-.-Pri=·v-a-le SPACE on Ocean, dble wide. ~~~-642-00~~lO=~~~ITiie only authorized JAGUAR P . 0. Box 1226. Laguna Narcissus. Cd~I. 5-HP $80, Sailboat fibe:rglau 240 "'3.tts. $135. 152./. Anita All colors. 893-9TI9 bAth. No. 2 Bal boa Coves, 1\Iobile Park has 9 hole, Auto Service, Parts 96li dealer In the entlrt' Harbor Beach. <194-62.·>l B~AUTIFUL Kin&-u bed, over plywood, Sabot mast Ln. '.11.B. 64~5302 e BLACK SCOITIE. AKC., ~N_._87. _Cat~l~6_7_:>-4_33_1 __ = 3 par golf course, other ----------Are,,_ SERVICE Estab·d. fuller firm. Never used, stlll & 1all SU5. 831·7039 Zl " COLOR TV $lj(). .2 yr.1 old. needs good horn''.' Boats, Storage 912 l"f!C advantagt's. Come to 1959 CADILLAC Complete Brush rte. S1 2:>-SliJ 11k. to packaa:ed. Frame included. RIFLE: :\!ARLIN Golden 39-19" Por!able Sll. '35. ~1802 office at 21462 Pacific Cit AIR CONDITIONER SALES ~ at · ~ .. , ···-$130, \\t1Mh $260. \Viii • ::.~o "~"" * --.7."--=-~-7 OPEN Boat yard, "pairs Hwy. Huntington Bch , RADIO SERVICE '"·· 50 p1. l!nie .,...,..,1' .. J deliver. usually ho m 1 , A 1-olountiP, 22 cal .. Lever ,,..O"<>J .. ~ AFGHAN puppi~s. male &: &. 5!orage. ~ per fl. 536-8871 RADIATOR ~-* f HAff P_G.IRLS 842-6636 ~=: $~~,/~al!X323:~::: [ J li ~e:~.· ~2 qui I l t y · 1 1~6~73-<809~~-~·~v~e~•~96~2~-<~1~1~L~~ 87x=4~2-N~..,...--,~ .. -,-,,-n~fo-l_ro_od~, WINDSHIELD \l/IPER :~~:; 1ng or a PCrmancn1 po-8• SOFA, nevet used, qullted 6 kd s furn, S7100. ll91 Harbor, f.fOTOR BUICK sition. Onf' of 01·ange Coun-floral, scotchguarded $12:5. p.m. \\'et'· ay~. Fm: to Yo11 , S!Lh.'Y l~rrier puppies . c.~1.. lot 61. The key at MUST DISPOSE OF THESE ty'i; fine.s1 bol iques. ~lust be f.latchlna: loveseat $ i 5. • YACHT CLUB I ~~~-~-~;;~~i [='~·~m;at~·~·~"'t'~"~•lt'J'~"'~·~A~d~"~" I jf llij of.rice. No children or peta. ITEMS nns WEEK-END IN ~xper·d 1n all phasr$ of 5J5..l9J.5 :!\TE~ffiERSHIP 11 female ;JO. AKC. 646-7335 Triniportition . 8xJ2 Masterbullt _ l0x2.f 542--3120 COSTA MESA botiquf' selling. r'ull rime SAV~: S300. BEAUT. long . hair Aust. TOY POODLES-AKC, mRle ban I -b h FOR APPOINTMENT SOFA. roast, $1;i. Virtue ca a w ex.... at . 234 E. lTth Street perm pos1flon for right gal. dinel!e se1. rnd table. 6 * &14-0963 * Shl'pherd dog, ou tside dog, & female. Bro\\11 & black. Comp! tum. Carport & 1959 CADILLAC Jf you <1uahfy call 1.,r ap· chrs, 545. all x.lnl. 846-6060 EXERCISE COUCH bushy tail, nds gd home, Call 968-3925 C1mpers, Sele/Rent920 tool sheda. nzso. 645--2159 TRANSMISSION liiiii~~~948-~77j65~j!!!!!iiiiil pointmenL TIIE LOOK. IV/"!B"'TOn 10 -fncd >'ard loves child.-.o &i.1.2400 all S. v ,...,. $ • · DACHSHUND pup1 min.. CAMPER Motor Homes 940 READY TO TAKE AWAY! CASH for furniture. ap-* 646.Q818 11: l!mJ666 5:1~:30 pm only AKC, Blk &. tan & EXCELLENT CONDmON -'69 JAGUAR XKE 9iARP GIRL. !or production pliancei. tools, mi!IC itenu. 1-i 0 v I NG: Washer/dryr. or 8J6....4493. 3/ZZ mahogany red. 714/63:J.....4018 1st CALLER BUYS auignmen!~. a;cheduling. in-Oprn 9 to 5. 642-7015 "'orlc hence \\•/viY, chair 1 BLACK m11le cocker SILKY Terriers r-.tale puppy CLEARANCE SALE * Kings Coach * 542·3120 venl'ory. Part .~ order· 1 ~~=~-~-~~~ & misc. &17-3733 $J>8niel and 1 female black & 2 &dull Jeml.!e1. Reaa FOR APPOINTI.rENT Coupe. 4 speed, radio, heal· lng-typing nquired. DANISH ieak\\·ood din' g k · 1 .._th c Mofor Home Agency ~~~~~~--~=I er air conditioning wltt t bl Al t Cost ;n BOOKS !ic-$1. Pictures coc er spanie "" :>\K 10 good home. 646-1335 Large selection pre '71 Auto& W1nted 968 "·heels. British rac1ni green ?tlacGregor Yacht Corp. a e~./\ m,"",~ Ar::· J, r egiste red Champion r Sf( ·-. Cam eo•~........ Sunarior * Land•u 1631 Placentia, C.:'>l rxiw .,......,. .,.....,,J., 5c-50c:. Purses SOc. pedljt'tts. 2 yn:. Together RI , ~lter pupp1e1, AKC Ptrs Now ~'""" to rT WE PAY TOP \\' / sandle"'·ood leather in· Sharp Girl Friday DOUBLE bed box sprin1,1,,==~640--08-"-'7"--~, only, and to fncrl yd only. regd. Field and show. Ph: s49 OYElt 604 N, Harbor, ~~ .... Ana CASH tetior. {XX0260) 1'1lfl mattreu & !tame. $35. IRVlNE Cout c.ountry Club &'6--359./. 31'12 ~ ACTUAL Open daily 9 to °"""9030 $3795 54S--0016 membenh!p for l!laie from Si\IALL mother dog and 2 AKC Germ. Sbep. pups. 8 ~~~~:~ RENT 22• Wlnnl $2:25/\\'k, ~~~~,~~ .. \~~!~ ~:[! KING-SIZE BED $75 member. 644-4.159 puppie~. Black and bro~11 wk.I. Champion line. Ehots, SHOWCASE Summer. 7c/ml. ;200 If 5""" * M4.241S • 4Z...gallon !thaw fi1h tank and pl. Chihuahua and cloxie. \.\.'Ormed. ;too. S4Z...'l279 re1erved by 4/30. 545--7857 for Used cars ifr b'Ucl<a, just call ua for frl'e estlmalt's. BAUER BUICK phone voice lo act a.1 recep. &CCl'UOlie1 $S. 316 Polpar, 212 33rd SI. ?'\ e w port 2 SABLE AKC Collie11. 1'i DEFAOLERR .71 8~... d•l .. •e motor tionist in a busy, excllinc Gtr•ge Sel• 112 1 ·-· .... h ld 1.1 t 11 d t v......... .... ofticc. ~rust be exper'd. in '-5"'M .,.,.,c · Bch 3124 )"TI 0 · us " ue 0 ELDORADO CA?iTPERS coach. 26' fully equip. Bel. GROTH CHEVROLET 234 E. 17th St. Costa ;\lesa 548-71G:i dea.l lng with the public. :\10NDAY thru Sat.. 9-3, ~,R~Vl;;-:;N"E,..,_C~OA7ST=-;c"o"'u"NT=R"'Y'1 ~w=v-=-A=B-LE~•-d'"h-, -,,..,-,.~,al--ro~.1 illf"lt'!ls. 54o-S95;l THEODORE 8:30 A.JV! or Alt 67J.18&t Sa.les backgrnd prefemd cln.ning out cupboards, 1.11-CLUB i\I E :l\I BERSHIP. or 01er blk & .if'l'Y lam.Uy BOSTONS & Chihuahuas, ROBINS FORD I I 945 Alk for Salee Manaa;er •67 Jag XKE 2+t 4 · apd, tique: &lusv.·are, china, old 6'7~3073 cat, -•Y•d, rw:ls Jo\·i..,. Adul t females, AK C, Trai •rs, Tr1vt but 1101 nt'c. Call i\1111 For· 9 1' • .., nit 645.4121. colna. 1tampg. silver. lots I c1~v=E~1.,.-~~n~,,-,~.g.,-11-,.,,.-lh~l~,,-1• ~. allel'i)' in family. Reasonable, 842-2825. 2060 HARBOR BLVD. 111211 Bt'ach Blvd. FM/AM, l\'ire v.'hls, lo mi. l;.,;-;;;;;;;;;;;-o;;;;;-o;;;;;-o;;;;;-;;;;;;;.....,;;;;;;; I of Avon, collecton l~m•. CO&.'!t Pa\\•n & Auction. 24~ 532-2416 3/Tl * 2 FEMALE Pocxlll's: t COSTA MESA &42·0010 ~ jl?\\·rlry. bedspreads. clothes. Ne\vport. Blvd. 642.8400. RALPH needs a iood home. black Miniature $25; 1 white '68 VW CAMPER '67 Shula Travel 'J'ra!ler. 17" with electric brake8, sto\.'t, retrlg (gas) marine loilet, 8lttps 6 comfortably. Corn pletely enclo1ed cabana, 11111 jacks. 3(1 aal. pns!urlzed water tank & JO gal, hOlding I an k . Beautilul cond. WU! lnke $15.50 cash or will tni.de for small atation wagon (VW Squareback or Toyota, etc). 54!1-21)25 11untin&1on Beach Beaut (t)nd. Pvt. owner. 147,6087 KI g,..3331 Sac. 67~:>12'1. ---~~~~~~- N'eed Ne1v Flo"'ers \\'ith many mon old and new Ml•coll•noou• Dachshund mix, ll3 Toy $25. 347-30?9 thing~. hro\\·~rs \\'elcon1e, B dY. c ?11 6424818 Good Typing & SH SklU:c. JQl "I E.d Dr H B W•nted 820 roa ·a.v, .. Liz Reind1r1 ~71 ye " · ·!...,=--------3il3 ! j~ Personne l Agency PATIO Sale: 2 motorcycles, T•EpdEN00g,,i.r51 .:~ah~~',·nnu_S<dPri~ rREE Dachshund, male. 2 M.::'~ .,C -450() Campu~ Dr., N.8. .:..; ~ "" ,.,. yn old. pure h red .]'--------"· Call f or Appoinlmen! car air conditioMr, 2 TV's the object. 546--8965 hk"broken, has •hots. Calll tt••••••••-men·s clothes, mattl'l'~s. '11l--095 I' 546-2113 pressure cooker, electric Office Furniture/ 7 3122 Gener•I ~ 5kUlet. fireplace lop, lad· Equip. 824 BF.AGLE PUPP[ES TE LEPHONE adverti1lnc d ' r!o · 1 210./. \\'allace, Costa }.1esa SPRING CLEARANCE frmn our pleaunt Newpor1 ~5 ~:ro~! m~:. !e;i CALCULATOR, c !l r rt n I • 64>3862 * 20' Oyer Glamor Girl, Inter· offia>s. Hrly v.age1. ?.tom. S40-ll33 aft 6 Y•tekdayi all model. 12 Olgl1 -..i.·11h !ape. 3/22 ceplor po"'tr, outboard itJc or f'W. shift~. 64>-JOJO day Sat-Sun. ' n caJI memory. 6T.~" -1-A-l'CH~-,,-N=G-°"'°'3---1-,,--.,.,-.1 dnve, $2195. 33, MR. ~tADRID Pl /0 826 caslonal chair. B 1 u e . ZI' J..apatrake ulillty, Volvo E FISHING ... ,1, ~'"'· •m· •no• rg•ns _... ~ •• TRAIN E •• ~.. •--U1abte. ~n,c alt 6 pov;e,TU, •~'"· Dtpot Mir. Sales·~N. El«· munition. mi&c h u n t In I WANTED: Homeless piano. pm 3122 g· flbtr'ii..,. dln.lhy, •• !s, I I eqpl; r.xrcutive v.'OOd de&k: wtU 111ore piano IJrand ..-..... tra ux Corp. Imm. crnp. k ..J..-1 1 _, chal · 1 °" eRmANY Spaniel, 6 .-. •·or int. ph. Griswald S.10 u"""" If\\."'~ r. \•Jny prefert'l'd) In my home. No ...,.. old mat•. •--•y lo 1 •. 6 cyl ultd Nordberx err. ('nuch, I mm nlovie can\er.t children. j.M)...2279 alter S ....... ~ ••. rt & am. only 496-2383. • d tr&ln 6-45-2271l 3122 l'l.Tk", front power f<U<t -O UPH~ 0 c•Oc-' h projec!Of, bran l'll'\O,: p.m. T ; re:dUC!ion a:ear. I v~T~R s elper. 968--8873 HA1=7M~M=o=N=o~. ~s-.-.-1-n-w-.-y-. 'OUNG ~llt'n& Joni and 1 onJy.t cyj Llattr dlese:I A""'ly in per10n Johan!tel'l GARAGE Sale Sal &In; \'amaha. New I used mart hair, all c 0 1° r a 1 Ult"d Chrysler ~11 "'"/ ~ ChrliteNll'.n 8911 \V, 16th ToYW. G11.mes, Books. L&mps planot of most make•. Best 546--7308 3122 reduction gear. t N.B. portable garbep disposal &t huyg In So. Calif. al Schmid! BEAUT. white trtendly 8 14·k 1.32 volt heavy duty ltl'leta· * WAITRESS-EXP'D ml-M-. 1319 ~1rast. c;\t, l\fu slc Co., 1907 N. l\la!n. old puppy, lov!'ble & 8f· ior & switch pantt. Not under 21. NO P110NE "WEED It .i reap" .. cleM Santa Ana. fpctionate. 494-5881' 3/29 2 uted Mshtnr r.fll.lrs. C4.W. Apply In f)f!t.eon, out thl' tttamres & trash -DIAi.. dlreci &a.:i678. Charge 3 Free v.'hlte rabblt1. 3013 M111C. boat davits. Surf A Sirloi n, 5930 W. Cout film into cash thru a D1ily your ad, lhen •11 hack and CIPvela.nd Aw., C~ ~I a1 ~fay be ~n l'1 Lido ~hip· Hwr .. N.8 . Pllt11 Classlfle'I 11.d 64UJ678 ll!ttt kl the ohnne nnr1 M"'lll'I 3123 yttrd, 900 Lido Park Dr. ~.:..:.. ______ _ ' *DELUXE SUNDIAL * Llk~ new. . ../ * New tiger pa~ tire&. * Low miles, new eng. * f2475. Or best ofter .. Pvt party 645.2633 alt 5 * * INVERTER, Hl'ath Kit. model MP14, 12VOC to 110 VA.C, 00 cycles, 400 watts. NEW ~mbled & checked out. Sacrifice ;100. Call 528-9845 alter 6 P . 1\1 , \\'ttkdays. Trollors, Utility 947 14' Tandem Trailer With 4 wneei.. AU atl'el weld. ed construction, %. " Steel deck platlna:. WW It'll or trade for pickup. 3166 Sleib', 101,.j Custom C&bovtr Ford 1i6. 4~ sOck. slP& 6, bu. 1anl', eJec. $2500 Day {Meaa Verde) C.M, ---=.--,=;-;-c=--1·65 Jag 3.8 Mark 11 sedan, TOP DOLLAR Xlot mecbaokal, Orl1lnnl. $2400. fi75:...4177 !or CLEAN USEO CARS Sn Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD m>o H&rtior Blvd. Cost& Mua su.0010 WE PAY TOP OOlJ..AR. TOR TOP USED CARS rr yout ear la txtr& clean_ lh 111 ftnt. BAUEK BUICK 234 E. 17th St. KARMANN GHIA F'OR sale 1959 KARl\.1ANN Ghia conv. Good J)lllnl & top. New ~ng\ne $ 3 0 0 . 545-5632 MERC:EDES BENZ • Costa Mesa 5'8-71'GS &15.lTil; eve \\'kl'nd J _ , !. , * ~1423 * l 1§1 IMPORTS WANTED i1~61 sedan. Alr, bta,ut "TO CAMPER, 8' cat>over. I Auto' fof S.11 M On.M(e Counlle1 cond. Pvt. pty, Sacrlllce 6 pack \\'/jack• $1000. ~------;-~;;;;I TOP $ BUYER •642--lm aft 3pm wkdys eru. MAXEY 'IPYOTA Sl95. m.~11J. I 13881 Beartl Blvd. -r."NAULT "MAKE Room For Dad· Dune Buggies 956 ·~..: d Y., ... c I ea n out tht' I ----'------ll. lleach. Ph. 847~1---''-------,• I garage .. ynur tr11.11h ts CASH I 1960 CORVAIR Wi\."-'T l111e modtl-Ford vAn. 1007 RENAULT -\tt'ry I with 1 DaUy Piiot t.iaulllecl Make Ofter 6 cy! no junk, pl~ue. mt. Xlfll C:Und, S."'1. Pl ad. 546·7811 Afttr 6 f.'i\.1 P"'~ ~(T"l 4 o.m. p,, .. "'48·0712 I I • \ l • ' . 34 OlllY "'LOT Autos; lmpomd 970 AU!ol, UMd Aulot, ·lmpo<tod 970 Autos, Imported 970 i---M_.G___ VOLKSWAGEN 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used ·990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autoo, UMd ............. .~ nllNl ... ~ .. ''FRIEDLANDER'' 1ns. llACM IMW'I'. •I 893-S& • 537~ NEW·USEO.SERV. ~ MGB '6S !\!GB Soft To p. Ovr-n:lrtve. Radio, w I re "''his, r11d1al tires. 13.000 mi. Xlnt 640-4763 1967 ?otGS-Xlnt corxl. Lo nu. ""' ply call all!'r 6, 67~ OPEL '70 OPEL GT Automatic, radio, heater, red with black vinyl inter1ar. Only 7,000 miles. (941BEJ) $3095 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St. '67 vw SEDAN R.t.d)o & Heater. (UUV8.11J $999 Harbour V.W. 18TU BEACH·BL.' -~ llUNTINGTON BEACH '66 YW GHIA Yellow, wlth BJack Iindau top, Mw vahrto jnb XNH6.'t I $1199 CHICK IYERSON VW - 549-3031 EXL 66 °" 6T 1970 HAR.BbR BLVD. COSTA MESA '68 vw WAGON Radio, bl".ater. fXEV457) $1599 Harbour V.W. VOLKSWAGEN BUICK '63 YW Bug Radio, he11ter, 4 speed, (WAZ ll)-ll. Full Pricl: $399 BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. c.oatt Hwy. Laruna Beach 546-4051 I <l!M·9m '65 vw SEDAN (RIZ 306l $825 Harbour V.W. 18111 BEACH BL. 842·4435 HUNTINGTON BEAClf '66 YW Bug Radio, heater. 4 speed (RJB 873). Full Price $999 BARWICK • BUICK '68 RIVIERA FACTORY AIR. CONDITIONING Full power, vinyl top, full vinyl strato uat.s, 1p()rt wheels, tilt wheel, AM/Fllf. radio, ~w tlres, stt to ap. preciate. IWIA518). $2666 ih ij ~c!LUc AUUtOAIZW ()(AUil 2\AX> HARBOR BL .. COSTA MESA 540--9100 ()pt'n Sunday • '69 BUICK WAGON SportJ wagon. 9 Pas11. V8, auto., R.&H. P.S., P.B., roof rack, factory air. (YMM052) $3295 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th S1. Costa Meu MS.7765 CHEVROLET FORD '69 Malibu '66 Jlanch Wagon Alt concl. V8, automatic, dlr. Automatic. power 1tttrifli". Rarilo, heatl".r. <YYJ023J. (!<:WJ003J. f.1llst aacrilice. $2.195 lull Kelly Blue Book $1185 prier. C11lJ 494·Tl44. Our Price $999 BARWICK '70 NOYA MERCURY MERCURY '70 Monterey 10 Pass, Ste. Wag. OLDSMOBILE '69 OLDS CUTLASS 12,000 Ml LES SupN'me 2 Dr. R.T. VS, aulo., 'f'.hi• bf!o~tilut 11110011. ~agon. R&.11. power •tterlni "- 11 in like new cond1t1on In bra.ke$, vinyl roof. tactory e11ery reapecf. Popular pa&-" air, (XVF4~) iel gtl!en linlsh with saddle $2395 leather t!Olor interior, spot. V8, automatic, power steer· IMPORTS JNC. leas througOOut. Eqwpped ing. dlr. l.oadod. (CVE369J DATSUN with '"'o. Ir.Jn•., """· BAUER BUICK Full price S219:i. CaJ.1494-77'4 heater, power 1tt'erin1. ...,. b k . ...,.., E, 11th St. '61 Chevy Z-dr (No. RVP374l 998 So. Coast Hwy, power ra e! !actory iur Costa Mesa 548-7765 $199, $10 deli\'f'l'I on ap-Laguna Beach oond, Center · facing third PONTIAC -------. ·5tBfriNtV1fit 4 Dr. H.T. \18, auto., R&H power s1eer1ng & brai~ v!nyJ rool. lactory alt', lo• miles. (VCL.948) $2295 BAUER BUICK' 234 E. 17th SI;..-._\ Costa Mesa :>tll·T765 proved credit.. See at 1945 546-4051 I 494-.9771 meat, See & drive today. ""'°' Bl,d, C.M. <2!1!AQSJ p,;.,,d 10 "11. PLYMOUTH DAVE ROSS Ford '70 LTD 4 Or, S.d. Johnson & Son, 2626 H,11rbor '68 Chev. Mallbu 2 dr. PS, Excellent local trade. Beau· Bl., Co:s!a ?olesa 540.5630 PONTIAC 6 cyl. Bst otr. ovtr $1550. lifUI dark Ivy metallic lin-· Xlnt cand. 830..7395 I e~ mi with matching landau CO~GAR 1969 '69 PLYMOUTH Complete Salt-1 It Service 64>1546 roof. Ivy aold interl01'. 26,000 . miles. One OWrlf'r. Al· 2480 Harbor Blvd. '64 Chevy 4-dr, r /h, power, Equipped with auto. traru., cractive plaunum 'finish wit~ Roadrunner 2 Dr. H.T. V8, Coste ~e~;ir Dr546-&ol7 factory llir. Xlnt cond. radio, heater, po~r steer., black bu~et Rais. Be11uti-R&H $550 • * * 642·39'45 power brakes factory 11ir fully appointed throUghout. auto., , power steering 0J)t'n 7 days a \l.'eek etc. Showg e~cellent care'. Eq~ipped with auto. trans., & brakes, bucket seats. Onty 8:30 AM to 9:00 pf\.{ CHRYSLER rad he 16.000 miles: IYPT372J <Jr;,CQSl Pr1Cf'd 10 sell. 10• ater, power steer. $19 5 1968, 2 DR, Bonneville hard 69 TOWN C Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor ing, power brakes. etc. SZl75 . 4 top. Full powr, In c I , & o u n tr Y Bl., Cos!& Mesa, 540-5630 sale priced. (\'CL637). John· AM IF' M radio , nu r~~~e~r~~· ~:! '64 Ford Gelaxie 500 ,_r._~_i!~~7;~;.=""'=·.,..,.~"~'30~'"'~'-B_1.. BAUER BUICK ~~~~~~~t :~~1:~i :!:~: dry weekday• only, 642-1<m 2 Door Hardtop. Radio, he11t· 1-MUSTANG :ni E. 17th SI. $1795. Res. 49.'.H124, Bus. CONTINENTAL er, power steering, power Costa Mt'SA :Wl-7765 494--0768. M0-8876 brakes, factory air, automa. -----.-----1 Uc tran1. $645. ORB 512 .• -65-M-,-,,-.,-.-2..,-,-v-8-._-,-pd-Pontiacs Finest Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor tNo. RZF'487) ' s599, stci BARRACUDA '68 '69 Gr<1nd Prix with all the CONTINENTAL '66 Blvd., Cosla Afesa. 540-5630 deliv1>rs on approved credit. Priced for quick sale. Beau-goodieg, Beautiful 1urqouls tiiul lime frost metallic w•'lh ·~h·1 I _, t 13166 1965 Ford Gal SDOXL See at 1945 Harbor Blvd, "' i e auuau op. Costa Meu 54S-776.'i 18711 BEACH BL. 842..(435 IMPORTS INC. e '6S BUICK WAGON S8SO • • 646-7010 eves CM wuh black buckl't seats. Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor Bucket seals, piJ\l.'er steering, 1_·_·~~~~~--auto. trans., radio, hracer, Blvd., Costa MeM. 540-5630 power brakes, au!omatic '70 MACH I power steering, air condi· 4-000R PORSCHE '63 Porsche Super Cpe. Bahama yeUow with blk interior, Af.1/FM, chrome whel".ls, reeenl e n a l n e PX'W98l $2399 CHICK IVERSON YW 549-3031 EXL 68 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA * 1968 PORSCHE 912 coupe 4·spd, 11ir, new 1700 engiflt'. new tires. Immaculately cared !or. 547.0091 days; 673-HIOI nites & wknd!. * '70 911 T, 5-spd, Beaut orange, 9US inlJ. & whls, Ai'11Ft>.t. Pvt pty. 6-14-5347 1966 PORSCHE 912-Many ex· tras. M111t sell. Be:st ol!er. 67.3-22TI 1960 PORSCHE 1600, S!IOO. or b8t otler. Call 9 am to J pm. 536-4889 TOYOTA TOYOTA NEW •71 NO DOWN PAYMENT HUNTINGTON BEACH DATSUN '67 vw BUG 998 So. Cout Hwy. Blue Mth black interior, 1500 Laguna Beach engine. hu '68 seata Ii; I -~----o.;-'~'-'~,..-""~-­ b"m,.n. Spocial ol tho large Selection week, (ZXU866J $999 Of YW Campers, CHICK IVERSON Vans, Kombis, vw Buses, New & Used 549-3031 F..xt. 66 or 67 Immediate Delivery 1!110 HARBOR BLVD. CHICK IVERSON COSTA MESA YW '68 VW CAMPER 549-303! Ext. !ti or <I Deluxe sundial, like new, 197tl HARBOR BLVD. New tiger paw widf!" tire!, COSTA MEsA low miles on new eng. $247:; 64.>2633 aft 5 wlc. days any• time wknd5. '69 VW, R&H. Xlnt oond, lo mi's orig ownr. $1450. 54S-80;)8 alt 6 pm. '67 VW SEDAN -Top cond. Loaded: W/t'XtrB.!I, Sunrool, S1200. 642-9942 '66 vw SEDAN (VlN 672) $888 Harbour V.W. CADILLAC i-~ACTORY trans., 46,000 orig. miles. PIS, air, 3 spd, aulo trans. tion. Nrar new tires. iVRP· '6fi GTO W/42f Chevy, &cat- AIR CONDITIONING Won't lasl Jong. NMV, 268. Eqpt for sterea. \Vill Sac! 767) Sl77j, Johnson & Son, lPrShield, header:i;, Cr-a.gars. • L•rgest Selection FULL LEAniER INTERIOR Sffi. Johnson & Son, 2626 ~. Call 642-Dl:rl. ..,,,.., H Castlers. Xtras, $1395 or bst H bo 81 C M _,.,., ~-arbor Bl., Costa Mesa ofr. 64G-6Ml L~ _THAN ~.850 MIL~ ar_ r ·• osta esa. '66 MUSTANG Hdtp V8, auto 5-1()..5630 ===--~~~~ ~qu1site exf'Cut1ve blac~ fin. 540-5630. trans, llir, P/S, + Xrras. ~,96.l~"°'B~A~R~RA~C~U~D~A--~S~lic~k TRANSP. car. '61 Pontiac OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS ish w/matc~ le~th. tnH!r. '67 COUNTRY SQUIRE S9'15 * * &14-5892 shift. 6 cyl, back seat folds ~~76i~'ag. 4 ad. Tires. Full pwr. incl. tilt whe~I, '68 MUSTANG 2+2 p/s down for storage. $595 cash, in Orange County door Jocks, AM·FM radio, . ' ' Call 642--0185 1968 PONTIAC Firebird 400. new \VSW fide!! & absolute.. 390 VS, AT., ps, pb, ~ac air, ~~r-cond. $l600. Call ·=====~~~~·I No power, no air. Cle11n. 1 near brand new lnaide lug rack, 48,IX)() mr, New 1~--·--~---'53 PLYMOlITH 2 <Ir, black, Low mileage. Best offer. • 19 ~ DeVtlle1 • 18 Sed. De.· &: out. (TEZ5!!7) brake1, shocks, battery. Re· '69 MACH t. Air rood, disc orig cond, 19 mp&' $£100 or 54&-1553 aft 6 pm eves. SALE PRICED TODAY btt '""'· ci,., "°"" "'""· b"""· ''"°"" '" "o . Trad<. &15-4687. RAMBLER Villes,· 6 El. Dora dos • .5 Con, vertibles. 16 othtr aelect Sl600. 892.2970. Loaded. Sl800. 646-6319, '60 Plymouth Fury Convert trade-ins. 1970 Ford J\laverick OLDSMOBILE 1963 thru 1970'1 ::\._ .f. Xln't value at $1800. New1---------ibe~ GN'4be~ w/w !ires, heavy rluty '69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H.T. CJN'nl .... V cAOILLAC au_sPf'nsion & shocks. Low ONE OWNER 14.000 MI. , ..t..~CADll,.l.AC AUT>lOR1ZEO OEAl..EPI mileage. 644-2387 after 6. Beautiful silver mist finish AUTHORIZUI OEAL.f"i 2tiOO HARBOR BL., , * '68 GALAXIE 500 wit h burgundy interior. 7ti1XJ HARBOR Bl.. COSTA MESA 2-dr HT, V8, auto, PI S, vinyl Equipped with aulo trans., COSTA MESA ., ~9100 Open Sunday top &. Int. SlOO under. \l.'hlsl radio, heater, power steer. 540-9100 Open Sunday • book. S1275. Xlnt cond. Pvt ing, po11.·er brakes, power e CORVAIR ply, 968.2768 • windo\l.'S, air cond. If you --~=~~~--1 --.:::::::.:.::: ..... -l'·ii611iFCcOlIRUD)Raiia.oc1>e;c;>;;m;,:-;,,.;w;I are hard to please, don't CADILLAC .,., "'--· . M (EIG82Sl miss this line car. <XLJU8) '70 SEO DE VILLE ''" UJ1vf1r onza . , brakes, clutch & reblt eng. • Auto, $299, $10 delivers, Xlnt cond. $175. 525 Vic· Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor 12.000 local miles. Only by Terms avail, !MS Harbor tori&./apt 19, C.M. Bl., Cos1a Mesa. 540-5630 &Uing and driving this like 1 CM l iiii"~C,::~7,,:""=-=-cl---,,.,,.;::;:o::-:cc--- Good cond $150 I---------- •968-5946 * '69 Plymouth Roadrunner. New tires, clutch & paint. ·r.o.P. Days 838-1564/aft 6:30 pm 96R-74~ PONTIAC '67 FIREBIRO '68 JAVLIN Au1oma11c trans., steering, r a ri J o, WAR 129. S1375, .. ...., he11ter. Harbor American 646·0261 1969 HARBOR COSTA Ml:St. '69 Rambler Station Wagon $100 undl'r wholesale book . Hardtop. Excellent condition. Must Sell! Sl400. 846-0045 dlr. f'~uU pncp $1299. Take I ~·~"='~&=w~~="='-nd~'-,.-,~­ srnalt down. (ZRW889) \\'ill '65 RAMBLER Cl851!iC 2 Dr. fin. pvt. pt)'. Call Sf0-3100 or hrdlop, low milea,11:r.. New e 1965 VW BUG-Private party muat sell . Only ~ . .... 1B71 . new trade in can you ap-B vd., . . 1970 Ford RANCHERO-P/5 '67 Cutlass 187ll BEACH BL. 842-4435 pttciate condition. Exotic '62 MONZA, black. Fair 5,000 mi. $2800, Call 847-2884 .69 VW AMF HUNTINGTON BEACH green gold metallic finish cond. $165 or offer. Cell atter 6 pm. Air coM. dlr. V8, aulomalic, 4!J4-IJ06 aft 10 11m. !ires, 1 011.•nu. 836-1398 '67 GTO Pontiac, 0 r i 1:: '63 CLASSIC Rambler O\l.'ner, Less than 40,000 PIS, PIB, factory air. sunroof.' PR~C~D Au~ ,64 VW BUG with harmonizing interior & 642·9220 '67 Ford Ranchero. 30(1 XL vinyl top (UEF'364l, Must SEU..* 644..ro27 * landau niof. Fully ~r e "63 CORVA IR convt P/S. R/H. Auto. Best oiler sell. $1695 full prier. Call ROW 399 equlppt'd ol ro~. plum Spydl".r-Good corv!. Make ol· • 548--7927 • 4!H.7744. '67 VW Bug; beii'e, 24,000 $799 AM/FM s!ereo, tele ~ ti.It ler. Evt-s MZ-6832. '38 Ford Coupe-V-S, original OLDS 98 '61. n,cm mi on mi. Clean, tape dtdc $1DOO. ltrg, \\.'heel, AJR COND., COUGAR CMd. sr;i0 Cash. motor, new trllllS, all powtt. W.7'"6/aft 6 "4-<864 CHICK IVERSON pha m""' MORE. S.. !hi• Catt 642-4117 N•w ru... s;oo. 543-5150 '69 YW BUG YW OM before you buy. (290-'62 ro mi's, 4-spd, Too many cars,, ___ SJOO_,=*-=*"'!J62.=-'"'---I ~~fnable oiler refused. 1 · T -BIRD '69 GREEN GTO, 1 owner, Lo mi's, $1950. 675-5396 DAILY PILOT for action! 1970 T-BIRD. I.ow miles. Full power. Air cond. Pri. ply. 545-8261 between 8-4pm Mor.--FTi BEJ), "'""' to""· John· '68 Cougar XR7 • • RD convt-A~to. Wo'lt holp you "ll! !J2-5'78 ZVC Tos 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 So 2626 H rbo Bl v8, 5S,OOO mi. Xlnt. Alking A t N 980 Autos, t.ew 980 Autos, New $69.01 MONTH• $159.9 1970 HARBOR BLVD. llOn &: n, a r ., $400. Call S4Z-1135 u os, e_w-----'---------------36 Def .-c Costa M~sa. 540-563(1 VS, automatic, dlr. .Power .66 FAIRLANE 2 d• ,1,,n m". . pay ...... CHICK IVERSON ' __ "'co,.,s-0-TA"'MES==A--,,,,...,., ...... =-==--,, . " . 980 $2484.36 or cash pr Jee 1 · WANTED '64 Cad C.00.pe De Ville, all 1teering, 11.ir ~ond. Priced xlnt cond. P/S, tape deck, $2003.55 Incl. Tax Ii: Lie YW white. Power & air. $1150. to sell! <WXE042J. Make !air offer. 646-9126 A.P.R. "14.54~. Serial No. J'll pay top dollar for :iour South Coast Car Leasing, Kelly Blue Book $24~ 134347. 549-3031 Ext. filS or 67 VOLKSWAGEN today, Call 6'>-2182 Our Price IMPERIAL •on approved credit 1970 HARBOR BLVD. And 11.sk for ft.on Plnchot, e $1799 Bill Maxey Toyata , __ co~ST=A~M£S=A--519..1031 ""'· 66·61· 6'1"'900. CAO. '70 BARWICK IMPERI A L Ll".B aron. Loaded! 6 mo old. 20,000 mi. S8200 new; SS600 cash or l11ke over pymnts . 5.16-4287 wkdayr; 8: 30 to 10 pm. 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 vw '66 BUG '68 YW BUG IMPORTS INC. HUNTINGTON BEACH MINT CONDITION SEO OE VILLE Al""'"" .,...n bnl"' •ith VTS.007 • DATSUN $1871 "''•• '""'°'· ndio. h•>l· $1299 19n TOYOTA COROLLA "· '"· "''"' ""' oui "" CHICK IVERSON FACTORY 998 So. Coast Hwy. 2 DR. FACTOR'\' EQUIPPED pricl". & quality. '<TRH543! AIR CONDmONlNG #9878 $925. John!on .l Son, 2626 YW I Vinyl padded top, lull power, Laguna. 8e11ch 546-4051 I 4!14-9m JEEP CHOICE Of S i{arbor Bl. Costa Mesa. 549-30Jl Dct. 66 or 67 plush cloth Ir. lea.Cher inter- 540-563{1, 1970 HARBOR aLVD. ior, llf'reo. most &11 dlx. ex· '70 Cougar '62 Scout Jeep, Post Oltice model. Good cond. Special inter. decor. f.111ke otter . ..De.rut Lew W TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. ~6.9303 BILL MAXEY !TIOIVl§ITIA! 181111 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. B11ch 147.&SSJ I ml N. of Cout Hwy, CID Bd '68 Corona Hardtop Loaded. Black landau top. Automauc. radio, heater. <VWN 748) Take small down. Will ftnance Pvt. pty. Call aft 10 am 494. 7506 or 540-3100 BEST BARGAINS t'OME SEE OUR SELF.CTION OF TOYafAS Jim Slemons Imports 140 W. Warner Santa Ana Open Eves. & Sun. 54Ml2S '70 Crown Sedan '69 VW FASll'BACK COSTA f.fESA tras. (531ANGl. YWD 177 VW JJOO, "'''"'' ronn;ng $5777 $1299 cond. Inqu!rt 212 CHICK " IVERSON M"'""'"· ... "" 64+-1740 ibeA-Afl 6 pm. GXfal .l<l) VW e 1970 VW · YPllow, sunroof, A~CA.OILLAC 54~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Xlnt cond, Sl&li • '6!J vw. AU?HOAIZEO OtAWI 1970 HARBOR. BLVD. Xlnt cond. Sacrili<:e Sl~. ~ HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 673-2271 or 546-<tlM, \Vhlslr OOSTA MESA 15,000 Mile Warranty &10-1548 2 Door Hardtop. \78, 11utoma.l--7,4"s-J"'"E=E"P~$800=~­ t1c, factory 11ir cond., power ca~h. 546-2154, 8 Af.f. 9AM. 1teerin.1;. Jll'.l lller brakes, vinyl roof, tinted glass, rll· MAVERICK dio, healer, whitl!I wall rires,1-----..... --- wh~I corers. (S37 AKT) '70 MAVERICK $3111 ""' pty, """ ofr, &M-2410 Garden Grove , __ M_E_R_c_u_RY __ . '68 Bug blue/white lnter., '65 VW • Reblt eng, ~w 540-9100 Op@n Sunday Nf'w tirea. Radio, W/W, paint, v~ry good cond. e . LINCOLN-MERCURY 1970 MARQUIS CPE. coco mat& n250 Aft 5· Reas 642-351~ or 642 9463 10120 G&rdton Grov1 Blvd. SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR ., •• ""'~a ' ' ' · . · CAD. '65 Cpe, De Ville. Air, G "".,....,,._. 1967 FASTBACK -AM/FM, 11.ll pv.T, lthr, Jandeau top, arden Grovr 636-2980 ll,000 MILES ·r.o VW Bug:, Reblt trans 1unrool. Jo mi. Spotless. tilt wheel. radial~. Xlnt '67 COUGAR Att:ac~v~ m~ium t.u~oise & eng., iood tires, ht!aders, $1495. &14-1343. c 0 n t1 . Sl.650, 675-6060. LUXL'RY SPORT ~1st lini.sh wtth wh~te tnter. etc .. S400. Aft 6 pm: 494-4~ L,oc68~B,;U~G~E~,-_.--.-.-eu~,-,m '~""~·'~"-'-· ~~~-~~ Beautiful l!me frost finish, ior &. landau roof, Jmmacu-', late! Premium equipped '00 Kannann Ghia Convt, yr-llow, chrm '-''hls, tach t. '69 Convertible, loaded, withbl11cklnterior.~uip-d I be.' r-auto. trans .• am-fm a1erro X nt oond, 1ge 'l'.'/hlk top. 11lt'rM, ImmaC', S1400 lirm. $4200. Can linance, priv. "'ith aulom11lic trans., po11.·. rl h nd intl".r., Rebll eng, 30 831-2695 p~., san Clementi n 4: rA 10, cater, pov.·er steer· M p G «75 ~· "'16 '---====---~ f'r sleering, powt":r brakes, ing, po11·er brakes, factory ' • • .. ~ • .,.,..._, 1 VOLVO 492-2800. faclo'"" air, radio, healer, . Trul I~~====~~~-·.r a1r cond. y spotless ~ '62 VW Bug -Paislt.y '60 FLEET\\'OOD 4 · d r. completely aerviced &. ttady like ne'-" .( Ml.r new tires, 11W\TOOJ, nu tires, aeMra!or. 1---------~folor in xlnl rond. htts for immed111.tto delivery. etc. See & ask for demon· 54&-7734 494-2940 ~ fa ir, new painl. Needs &eat $1675, (UPH787) Johnson & stration. (916 SEQ). John· '£,6 vw. Cle&ll, aunmol & ~ THINK coven. SJ2j. 557-J331 Son, 263:i Harbor Blvd., Kin & Son, 2626 Harbor BJ., radio, 6000 ml'• new en.ii. 'VOLVO' e 1970 COUPE dt Ville by ~ta Meu. 540-!!630 Costa ~fesa. 540-5630. S((M). 67J..2196 pvl party, $:>185. '67 COUGAR. Popul!\r gTttn 1970 MERC. CONV. '70 VW BUG • * 67:1-t698 * color, C':<I. Ir int. Auto. THE SPORTY ONE 217 AG·r "fRIEDUNOER" ---,,69""'C~ou---O.~V~il~l,--1 trans, P/S, di~ brakes. Thi1 flashy tulip yC'llow with •-laclory air. R/H. R~nl . . $ 1699 1-'u/I po11.·('r, good col11'1. tune-up ~w fiN"s See at blac~ top & interior au10-1m,~c· 1'6,;~ 673-~ or 673-5723 Gull Su;_tion. Bob.a .f.. Spring. mobtle has been driven only CHICK IVERSON NEW·USEO.SERV. CAMARO d•lo. HB, Call 897-8174 1"000 mil" & m""·"' "'n VW f'Ve~ & v.+:nds. Bl'5t Oflt'r! & drrven to appreciate. !t•· ............... '68 CAMARO, Xlnt cond. 1970 1----------1 dlo, heaftr, powrr i;teer1ng, Loaded, mu1t sacr11lce. In$ Sf9-3001 Ext.·96 or 67 • 427 ena:. 30,000 mi's, S2150. '69 Cougar, air cond, vinyl p!)\l.'er hrakes, lactory alr than 10,000 mlle11 dlr. •4246. 1970 HARBOR· BLVD. $3081 Pvt pty, 645-J907 top, ntw tires, lo blue book, cond .. etc. 4 near new tires. Take small dQ'l'.·n or oldPr COsrA MESA 19n VOLVO 12300. Call art 4:30 pm -A•k 1 d •-,. (10" I =~=-~---~ CHEVROLET .~ or emons .... 111on. J• car in trade. Alt lO 11 .m. '66 BUG • Xlnt. Whtlred Dllmo •2819 S.9-316.1. AZP). JohnMn & Son, 2626 540-3100 or 4!M·7506. 1n1 -0.000 mi. Nl".w tire1. ~.,~,-co=u~G"°A~R~.7t.o_m_i.__,A~IC"",1 Harbor Blvd., Costa ~lt'sa. LEASE A NEW ·n Toyota SIGO. 61S-2027 or 543-3389. "ft•M L111~.a 'M Cbevy 2-<lr hn:ltp, auto, R/H, V/T, auto. Xlnt cond, 541)..563() ftJr only $49.98 mo. wlth Jw;t 1959 VW • $400 VOLVO delivt-f'I on approved Cf'l!dit. Lo book, pri pty. 642-lOM 1969 Mercury Montego I UUL (MllD lNo. PID610l S299, SlO l==~--~~-- $91l.!l6 + Uc. Good """'· .,....,, . S.• ,, "" Harbo< Bl,d, DODGE AITRAC11VE • BILL ~e!'.J~YOT A '66 VW: Gd Cond. radio. c .r.1 . ECONOt>.llCAL m,e HunH .. -.Belch Call to\°"* !!,~ !?J~ 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '61 CHEVY Van, R/H, l 'Sf l)(){X;E 440. 2 <Ir. Au10. Llg~r Ivy tl_nl.sh "'il~ R'Old !n-u.,...... ~,,......IO:I • 'SI VOLVO • Xlnt cond owner. Lo mi'1, New ~. tnM, P/S. Gond & ter1or equipped "'Uh auto. TRIUMPH '71 SUP B I $SllO. 644-6(79 or 1132-0677 Xlnt. $1.73/tnde. 64;)...4687 f't'h11blf'. $499 o · best oiler. m11.t 1c Iran!.., radio, heater. '71 SPITFIRES NOW ON DISPLAY Come Jn for a test driwl FRITZ WARREN 'S SPORT CAR CENTER no E. i.1 St. u 541~ Open dal)Y 9-9: "1oofd SU""' Tl\JUM PH 170 TR-6, RMdlk!r, Witt whtels. A..\tlfM, Lo mi'a, $29~ MH132. pvt pty 644-4221 ,..;,_ UC. auto, P llY 548-9890 powrr 811".uini;. etc. PriCf'd 111pe, \,,l'l'rMntint, war r . Autos, Ulld' 990 '65 OIEVY :z <Ir Impala. for qul('JI: a.!lle. s1675. YCN· "'•' """'· s... 962-2667 m '"" '""" FALCON . ...,. · 380. JohMOn !'. Son, :2626 SACRIFICE Sal" ffi68 Vollm BUICK • Call 893-f.SU * Hlll'bor Blvd., Co.sta t>.1esa. .E'-'"Ythina on it! -------• lt>.IPAl...A '67, AIR, PIS .• 1962 FALCON 4-dr l!Ation 5"40-5630. Call M&-1077 '61 RIVIERA -Loaded. P/B, $1295 OR BEST Qf. ""lOfl • Automatic. S2'25.t•19~70~.~,E~R~C~C~o~"-ny~~-k-S~tn e '63 SEDAN $l9S AM/FM 1tcttio. Be au t . FER. 642--9787 Call 67l'>-6194 " rv ,.., ,.. 6+4-4821' * allw.r "''/blrick vinyl top. ==~~~~--~ ---~~~---1 WRTI l0.J'M$11. 7,f.Q} AC Wkdys only, 642-4000 Mr. 1957 CM:vy 2 Dr. « cyl •Uak. FORD TI:AL MILES, .(29 V8, auto, Ron McKendry new a.at covers, good con· ---------1 lug rack, lac air, w/\v, NO-matlft' 'MtAt ff la. J'O!;l l,,.=-.-=.-,., .. ,~-i..--'-~=-c~-~2 -,~,--. dlUon, S.100. 642-<1!93 *'61 FALCON WAGON Mm Pv1 P1y: &10-417~ can "'"-" It with a DAILY Ot.J DW<.;A .,..,,., ..... --~-'..,~,--s~--- t>AtLY PILOT WANT AD. xlnt m«h. Good tlrn. nu ~ Li.ice new ~-96il-5789 ·~ MERCURY MONTEGd C&lJI 642~ & charie II, pAJnl S.WI or bst o!f. '6S Impala ~nvl. 841·7li6 1 HOUSE Hunfil'll! Watch the m Sta \\"11:n w/a1r, iti8C ~ alt 6 '-'c-="=-'.o"-='-'-'6"1-'8-'&=-"Sa'-w-"'-! --I OPEN HOUSE column. br11kr,, PIS. Sl7.3o &12·7041 1971 MONTEREY 2 DOOR HARDTOP Deluxe all vinyl Interior. automatic transmission, power steering, whisper air conditioner. AM radio . Dual rear seat speakers, Decor group, remote left hand mirror, tinted glass, etc. •1Z46K5778. Immediate del ivery. RETAIL $5029.80 DISCOUNT $ 829.80 54200 JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA ' S41).S630 642-0981 • 17