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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-23 - Orange Coast Pilot17 . ~ o ·un • . DAILY PILOT Jurors Tahing •siesta ·~ * * * 1oc * * * ' • •• • • • • • I •• • TUESOAY·AFTERNOON,·MARCH 23 , :197[ Wl.· .... NO. ... J l•CTIONI.-U. PA•IS • • • I Newport Names Acting City Chief Lt. Calley's Lawyer Rips.._. Tri~ Jury FT. BENNING. Ga. !AP) -Lt. William Calley's defense attorney com· plained bitterly today that his client's murder jury Is "conducting business as usual" and dragging out their delibera· lions, in tht: seventh day today. "lf they're watching the Glen Campbell and Ed Sullivan shows and wining and dining themselves, I think that's a disgrace,'' George Latimer told the trial judge. His complaint was prompted by newspaper reporls that the sb: officers on the jury had requested a week's supply of fresh laundry and that ar· rangements be made for their paychecks, due March 31. Latimer's outrage was prompted by 1 story in the Atlanta Constitution this morning that said the jurors spen_t Su~· day night after a half-day. ~ss1on tn court. watching those te\ev1s1on shows and "before going to bed, two had beer, two sirped bourbon and one had scotch." Latimer told the judge: "This is nol 11. siesta. This is serious business. We have a man's life at stake." But Judge Reid Kennedy :said "wh~n you 're talking about drinking there is a difference between having a cocktail and getting drunk ." At this point. the judge aaid he will ftOl set hours for the jury ~ause .. 1 would rather see the verdict in this case be a well thought-0ut verdict ." Latimer protested about the reports that are getting to the I a r g e group of reporters about the jury's activities -such as sending out Monday night for a case of beer. "Certainly lhere Is something leaking out of the jury box." Latimer said. "I think lhal is a breach of the secrecy required frQm the j!iJtY.:.:. · The t r i a I judge :s a i d he thought Latimer"s complaints about the jury'! rel axing after court were ill-founded, saying ''They have lo get haircuts; they have to eat." PILOT HOLDl1VG OPEN H OUSE Tri ends and readers of the DAIL V PILOT are Invited to a two-nights-only open house to inspect the enlarged and modernited facilities of the newspaper at 330 W. Bay St,, CoslPMesa. The plant wl\I be open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. both Wednesday and Thursday. Some parking places will bt available on the plant's parking lot; other visitor! may find on·!ltreet lpaces along Bay and Thurln streets. Last Viets . Withdraw Melvin Whol' Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman has turned up in London. claim· ing he entered the country us· ing the name or U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird. O!fic· ials denied the claim. SA Missionary, 1 Child Found Dead in Slide Fr~m Wire Sel:\'ice1 TIFALMlN, New Guinea -Rescue workers have recovered the. bodies or an Orange County-based Bible translator and· one of his children from a llndslide that wiped out the family of four. Walter Steinkro11us. 4~. his wife Yvonne. 42. plus daughters Kerry, 11 ; and La:Von- ne, 8, were swept away Sunday night along with seven tribesmen. He was employed by the Summer Institute of Linguistics. 219 W. Walnut St., Santa Ana, and bad been ministering ·to the Tifalmin tribe In the rugged mounl.aln ,coontry for JO year5. His role as 1 linguistics arialyst wall lo learn the unwritten Tifalmln dialect used by 2,¥K! of I.he natives and develop an a1phabtt for lranslaUn1 the Bible and other he1pful books. Officials speculated that a major earth· quake several week5 ago across the nearby New Guinea·lndonesian border opened a fault in the 400.fOot cWf behlnd tbe Steinkl'l\15 home. Heavy rains leaking through fissures filled it, lhey beUeve, until pre55ure caused the fact to crack and plunge down onto the village. Most of the rtm1inin1 115 villagers were iway galberlng wood, or the death tell miabt 1a .. bMn mlich bl&bu. From Laos SAIGON (UPI) -The last of 24,000 South 'Vietnamese troops who &truck into Laos siJ: weeks ago were withdrawing tonight under heavy North Vietnamese fi.re. Communist pressures intensified on U.S. l!iupport units and at least eight Americans "''ere killed, field reports 1aid. Military l!iOurces l!iaid South Vietnamese commanders closed another outpost in Lao5 late today, leaving only one re· maining base of the several which had been established for the offensive against NIXON ANALYZES THE WAR, PAGE 4 the Ho Chi Minh Supply Trail. Fewer lhan 5.000 South Vietnamese troops re- mained on L.aotian soil and military sources aaid they would be out by Wednesday night. The men retreating Tuesday night drove acros! the frontier back to South Vietnam in a colullUI of tanks. armored personnel carriers. trucks and jetpll which, field reports said, were coming under "increasing baras!lment" from North Vietnamese. U.S. Army helicopter gunships and U.S. Air Foret F4 Phantom jet fighter· bomber! corutanlly w~led and circled 'overhead, firing rockets and cannon and dropping bombs into well concealed posi-· tions manned by North Vietnamese units using rocket-propelled grenades, mortArs, rockets and rifles. Reports s<iid the Communist,, scored several hits on the long armored column which included trucks filled with wounded South VlctRamese and one command jeep without tires. Tht: North Vietnamese. (Set ASIA WAR, Pace 2) Nixon s Send Note To Chief Murra y San Clemente Polict: Chief Clifford Murray continued to improve from rt· cent major heart surgery -his spirit! buoyed by a personal getwell letter from President and Mrs. Richard Nixon. The chier, recovering rrom the major artery bypa~ operation. is expected to remain at St. Vincent's Hospital for perhaps two more week!, then return borne tor more convalesceoce. Aldea at lhe hoflpltal have termed lht surgical procedure 1 complete IUC· cesa. The letter from the Nilons arrived at Murray'• room late last week. The Nlxon1 are expected to arrive for a week-Jona stay in San Clemt.nte later thl1 week. Fatal Dash -DAIL 'f PILOT l"Mtt W •tartr41 ICMfllW ' DASH FOR FREEDOM COSTS SUSPECT HIS LIFE Deputy Don Andr•wt Stands Ov.r Body of Robert Clemas Costa Mesa Bandit Slain In Desperate Freedom Bid By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of flte ~Hr l'Mtt 1 .. 11 Oartirig down an alley and Ignoring commands to halt, a bandit suspect with a reputation 11 1 loser made a suicidal d~h from a Costa P..1t:sa courtroom Monday and was shot through the heart al 50 feet. Robert J. Clema!, 21. spun around once and collapsed to the pavement. He apparently died In the arms of Deputy MaNhal Donald H. Andrews, outside the old. MCUrlty·poor Harbor Judicial District Court. Cle.mas' sllter wa5 al her clerical job lnakle when it h1ppened. The fatal incident was the. second escape at the 1956-built facility which Is badly outdated and overcrowded. Marshal Dillard O. Wilkerson said he may demand additional manpower to I toughen security at the old facility, which includes a mobile trailer courtroom for Division One cases~ Clemas hid been confronted by police sevual times since March l, when he was arrested In Coata Men b,Y Patrol· man BUI Bechtel char1ed with aaaault on a police officer. He-was frtt on hls own recognizance pending a hearing when oo March S. a gunman claiming to be blgb oo drugs held up the Bargain Buket Market. 117 W. 19th St., C.OSta Mesa, of t11,<m and lled. Cle.mas, ol 2070 Federal Ave., Costa Mesa, was arrested the followln1 Monday night after depositing $1 ,000 in ca1h at a nearby Bank of America branch. The teller recognltcd the bundle, bound with a rubber band, as one the branch !See DEATH DASH \ Pa&< 11 I Bettencourt Sqccessor TbH~rlhurt The Newport Beach City Oluncll Mon. day eight appointed Phllip F. Bettencourt 11.cting city manager effective April I after City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt, Jn a surprise move, announced be will quit as of lhat datt:. Hurlburt said he wUJ remain with the city a:s a consultant until May 21 . The action came after Hurlburt first gave 60 days' notice when he handed in his formal re.signatioo during the alternoori study session. The council went into executive person- nel session shortly thereafter. It made no formal statement, however. Bettencourt, now assistant c i l y manager, wa5 promoted to that position only five months ago after serving two years 8! admlnistrative assi5tant. Bettencourt. 2:&, was graduated Crom Cal State, Long Beach, and holds a bachelors degree in p u b 1 i c ad- mirilstration. Prtor to joining the city staff here. he served 85 assistant to tbe city manager in Se.al Beach. . The council · did Ml dl scu,5 the salary Bettencourt will rective while holding the interim job. He currently earns $16.500 annually. Hurlburt will continue at full salary and benefits through May 21. Hurlburt had announCed he would resign March 11, three days after the: growing disharmony between the council and himself flared openly In the form of a highly-charged attack by Councilman Donald Mcinnis. Hurlburt, in &MOtmclng his .deciaion Monday night. put 1t this way : "As you all know It takes at tea.st (See llURUIURT, Pa1~ 2) Oruge Coa•t 1''eather That chilly coast.at fog will creep further Inland tonight, bringing a cooler Wednesday under haiy sun- 1hine and temperatures In t h • middle &Os. INSmE TODAY Prtside:nt Nb:on ttU& Mtion that South. Vioe.tnornc1t handled thtmscdves very wtU iri. Lao&. Story, Page 4. C•ltftrlllt t CllMl!l!tt u, t Ci.ttlfltll »?S c-ic. u (l'ftlMf'tl u OMlll Hiiien t ,,._ t a4tl«iel Pl.. ' a11rwt1111mtrrt lt •llllflf* U•ll HtrMc-14 A1111 l ..... o U MerrilM L!ct11• f ,,._¥fts It Mlrl!HI P•llfl 1• N1t•11 H.-..s ... O•t-C-f'f • IYltlt !'Wtw 11 lnrh , .. 1, S1'otll Mftlttl 1 .. 11 Ttltri"911 1t t•••• " W11t1Mt 4 W~lhl W1WI 16 WMIWll'• H1wt 1).14 Wttlll lffwl ... .... ·- "z OAll. Y PIL.Ol s · From Page J DASH •.. had lsoued to the aame stcre robbed three d1,J1 e:arUtr. _ A cache of $10,000 was recovered from CJemas' home, while: de:lectivts linked him to three: more holdups while: the: de- fendant WIS ln custody • • He •u also charged w\lh parole viola- t,icm, stemmlng from a 1969 Garden Grove market robbtty. 26th ArraendHaetat ' Vote at 18. Set For Congress OK C.omplalnlll charging him ln those cases ,.,.ere lasued Friday, leading to Cle:ma;_.J scheduled arraignment in Divisioo One Monday afternoon. WASHINGTON •UPI) Congress planned to give · 1111 approval today to a new c:onstitulions\ righl -lo vote al age 18 -a.nd send the proposed 26th amendment to lhl' U.S. Constitution 10 the states for rt1lif1catlo11. vote in recent years, especially in stales where there have been cainpus disorders. 1'hc amendmt•nt itself is sin1ply "'ril· ten . sa) 1ng · "The nghl of ritizcns of the linited States. \1ho are 18 years of age ur oldt'r. to 1o!t· !>hall not be denied or abridgLd by Ule United States or by any state on account of age.·• Standin& at the trailer -· only a few feet from the jail holding cell, Deputy Andrtwl cal.led C~mu' case al 1:40 p.m. and Deputy Al Eichler HCOrted him forward. · He was not handcuffed. , Breaking away two feet from 1he mobile courtroom door. Clemas sprinted down the alley through parked c&rs ad- jar-ent to the Ame::rican Legion Hall , • Deputy Marshal Eichler was in hot pursuit, a few feet behind. Costa Mesa Police Detective:: Clpt. ltobert Green aald Eichler and Andrews tcimmanded Cle:mu to halt four times between them, 1'hlle 11tat.e law prescribes three such ordera. Lawmen are Umlled lo ahootinf at fe::lony suspecta, or if they are en· dangered. · Realizing he wu losing the race, Eichler started lo draw his own gun, when Andrews' .38 caliber revolver Cracked, spinning C1em:U around wilh ~ groan. He: feJI 50 feet awa}'. .' Costa· Mesa de::tec:tlve:s Don Casey aM Bob Lennert -attracted by the shouts IP !Wt -ran ID lhe door just In lime lo witness the fatal shooting. . Clemas wu dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital. From Page I HURLBURT. • • four months to recruit a new manager. ln the interim, to insure an orderly transition, I would assume Philip Bet- tencourt would serve as acting city manqe:r. .. It b: a difficult position to be thrown into during the middle of budget prepara- tion ao I am recommending Mr. Bet· !encourt be named acting city manager m two weeks. I will provide: assistance:: in an advisory capacity from then on to the time I leave the city. "He will have a dilfic:ult lime at best," Hurlburt said. Mayor Ed Hirth immediately said he "'anted to "expreS! our appreciation for the six years of service: you have given the city." P.1clMi5 then proposed the: council 6.dopt a four-part re:!OluUon accepUng lhe resignation, designatingi BettehCOtlrt acting city manager, rttQmmending Hurlburt be retained as a consultant and directing the: PerlOIUfel Departm"1t to begin the: rec:nllting proc:eu im· mediately. Brakes Blamed In Boy's Death Possible:: faulty brakes on an ice: cream vending truck wtre blame::d today for the deaQJ of a 2-ye:ar-old boy in Cowan Heights. CJ:ifomla Highway Patrol officers said the victim was David L. Hund, san of Mr. and Mra. Lawre:nct Hund 11>481 Broadview Plact, Tustin. ' Investigators said truck driver James M. Garcia, 18, Santa Ana, had parked the vehicle Monday al the top of the grade on Broadview Place and left It. The truck rolled backward about 100 reet over the curb and struck the bby playing on a neighbor'• lawn. It then overturned. CHP officials said no charge::s have been riled, but the lnve::.stlgatlon of the accident is conUnulng, DAILY PILOT "--.., __ Ceste ....... "'"" ......... -·-... C1••••• OltAHOI COAST PUILISHING COMPAH'f l.'Nrt H. W••' Pr•!""" .... '°"""'*' Jet\; l. Cvrl.., Yk• P!WldW •1111 0-•I Mfi~ Tii•m•1 1(,,,11 l!dlW Th'""' A. M1rph\111 N11Mtlnl M liw Clia1l11 H. l111 litherd P, Nall Ahbllnl Ml"'tllne ••""'-........ Cot" Mete: Jll W.t l1y $!mt H""""°"' 8Mdl1 am ,...,,..., 1ou1..,.1~ uo-••01 m .,_, ,..,,.,.,. l'IUll!lfif!On l"'-11: 11111 8Nt:fl .,.., ........ S.11 Cltmlnltl -H«1' II C.mln9 11;•1 f The. !louse scheduled . 'vh11! v.as ex- pected to be easY debate and an overwhelming approval of a proposed amendment that v.•ould require state! and localities to lower their m1nitnun1 voling age to 18. Sponsors ha\'e hoped tbe required 38 state: legts\atures would ratify the change in lime for the 1972 elections. a U UPI Tlldlletl ~ERICAN HELICOPTER PILOT KICKS WRECKAGE OF CHOPPER DESTROYED BY COMMUNIST ROCKETS Destruction P•rt of Continuing North Vietn1mtM Offen1fv1 Ag1Tnst Kht Sanh Base The amendment. approved 94 lo O earlier this month by the Senate. v.•as drafted m·ore to remedy a situation that Congress caused last year than to bre::ak new ground 1n voting rights. The 1970 \'o!ing rights law sough' to qualify citizens 18 and older to vote in all l'lections, but the Supreme Court later aaid CongreSJ could set such qualifica· tions by law only for federal elections. From Page 1 ASIA WAR •.. were: reported to have destroyed several vehicles. A U.S. unit or lanks am:! armored Newport Balks at Cost Of Coast Bridge Work Thal left a situation in ,47 states v.·here 18 year ofds were entitled to vote for President , for seriator and for members of the !louse. but not for governor, mayor or other state and local officers . Only Georgia. Alaska and ·Kentucky now give: the stale and local vote to 18 year olds, and it seerned unlikely to Congres! that many others would change their laws (and in some cases, Constitutions) before next year. The pro- spect v .. as for dual registration and voting \l'ith attending confusion and extra cost. personnel carriers took 21h hours to carry newsmen from the Soulh Viet· namese outpost at Lang Ve::i in South Vietnam to the Laotian border. a distance of eight miles . Reporters sav1 11mouldering tanks and bodies along the road. Official spokesmen at forward opera- tional bases and in Saigon would not speculate on Communist tactics. but field commanders said that wilh the Laos (lffensive ending, North Vietnamese units could be expected to concentrate on posilions in South Vietnam held by the 10.000-man U.S. support force. Field reports said at least eight Americans were killed and 20 v.•oundcd 1-tonday and Tuesday in actions in and around Khe: Sanh. the big U.S. support base in South Vietnam 's northwest ror· ner. These raids included one in which North Vietnamese: commandos, carrying satchel charges of dynamite, stormed into the base, killing three Americans and wounding U. '.l'1le wtnddown In the: Laos campaign wu"Ttflec:te:~ in the decreased U.S. air role. The: number of 80tU• reported Tiltsday -400 -was about one-fourth of :the figure flown at lhe height of the·campaign. A sortie: is a single strike by a single: aircraft against a single: la{get. (n S~lgon, U.S. headquarters said Aiperican warplanes which attacked North Vietnamese territory Sunday and MOnday destroyed three: antiaircraft missile sites. The: raids were: flown by u:s. Air Force and Navy p\ane:s against bases in the area of the Mu Gia Pass. a funnel from North Vietnam h1to the upper reaches of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. A communique:: said the raids v.·ere ordered in response:: to North Vle::tnamese:: firings on American planes flying over Laos and South Vietnam last week. In Laos proper, gove::rnment troops counterattacked today and recaptured Communlat·beld Ban Done-Cho, five miles northeast of the: Luang Prabang airfield, reliable military 1ource:1 reported. Widening of the Pacific Coast Jljghway Newport Bay Bridge iµls .,on . inltial approval of the California Division of Highways but may now be losing support from the Newport Beach City Council_ Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin told the rouncil Monday that the project v.·ill take more than five years to com· plete at a cost of more than $600.000 -some of v.·hich the city would have to pay. Didn't See Seale At Death Site, Witness Declares NE\V HAVEN. Conn. (UPI) -A witness for the: prosecution who placed Bobby G. Se"lf'• codelendanl In the building where alleged police infonntr Alex Rackley was tortured before: being killed testified today she dld oot see Seale there. Defense i\ltorpey Charles R. Garry drew the c:oThrr<ent from Mrs. Margaret Hudgins, 2.1, a former Panther, who last week said Mrs. Ericka Huggins was in the basement whe:rt Rackley, 24, was tortured. Garry asked Mrs. Hudgins if she saw Seale ii): the building on May 19 or May 20, 1969, previous to Rackley 's death . "I never saw Bobby Seale: on those prtmi.ses," she: said. The state alleges Seale, visiting New Haven at the time for a speech at Yale University, gave the orde::r to kill Rackley, whose body was found in a ?i.fiddle::field swamp May 21, 1969. Earlie::r today, Judge: Harold M. ?.1ulvey rule::d two rourt·appolnte::d psychiatrists would administer any mental tests to be give::n George Sams Jr., a prospective key witness. The defense wanted a doctor of its own choosing. OAIL Y •1\.0T Stiff •11ti. Straall Participants ?\lrs. Chrilltine Bensi nger, president of the Leisure 'Vorld Canine Cl ub, is shown during the massive San Juan Capistrano S\\'allo¥lS ' parade \lo'ilh hf!:r smal? companions. l\\'O cleverly dressed poodles. Parade w11 '".:itched by thousands. It clim3xcd a ,,·eek of community celebration. I j The council instructed its newly-formed , Fre.e11i·ay NegotiaUng Committee:: to discuss the project wilh state officials after Councilman Lindsley Parsons pointed out "we could have a offi.-foot high level bridge built by lhat time.·· The bridge o[ v.·hich Parsons spoke Is planned in conjunction ~·ith the adopted roule of Pacific Coast Free\\·ay. Devlin said it is unlikely that the state will proceed with the bridge without the freeway. Parsons insisted that the matter at least be discussed. "We still must reiterate our desire for a 41).foo\ high-level bridge to totally :iolve our problem." he said. He pointed out that the rebuilt bridge. planned slightly to the north of the e~isling bay crossing, would open the Upper Bay to larger boats as well as solve the auto bottleneck that now exists. Devlin. however, noted that to build a new bridge. a t~mpOrary crossing ~·ould be required, and that in itlelf would cost as much as the .. ~idenlhg project Under the tentative plan for temporary widening , Coast Highway Would be widened to six lanes between Dover Drive: and Jamboree Road. This. Devlin explained. would require the purchase of additional right-of-way. some of which. state officials said, would be the responsibility of the city. Devlin said tentative approval of the bridge has come from Haig Ayanian, chief eng ineer of state: highway District 7 in Los Angeles. Navy Planning ROTC At 2 Black Colleges WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Na\.'}', which has fewer black officers than the: other services, plans lo open reserve officer training corps rourses al two largely Negro colleges-Savannah State in Georgia and Southern University, Baton Rouge. La . Al present there: I~ only one Navy ROTC program al a predominantly black school, Prairie: View A&M in Texas. A ConstitulionaJ amtndme::nt does not need presidentfat approval. so· that House passage by at least a two-thirds majority ends federal action on the proposal. JI is transmitted to the slates -47 of v.·hich have legislatures in session this year -by the: General Services Ad- ministration. The amendmeht mu~i. be approved by three-fciurlhs of the states -38 -lo become operative. Although backe1's hope for quick action, the amenQment is v.rrit len so th at ratification can lake as long as seven years. That is the usual time limit on cocstitutional amendnlents. and some observers. less optimistic about the pro· posal's attractiven<'SS than ils sponsors, think it may need the [ull time. They poinl out that votcr:s in a number or states have rejected the 18 year old Y outl1, 18, Ge~ 5 to Life Tenn --.. -~ In Man's .Sl~ying Miles Cox of Westminster was sen· tenced Monday =io five years'· to life in state P~ison tor hfs role in the killing of a Hu.rttington !each hardware ex· ecutive. Judge lfyron K. McMillan Imposed the maximum tenn on Cox, 18, of 1750 Irene Way. He denied a plea for pro- bation on Cox's conviction for second degree murder. Cox and Frederick Yanke·, 20. Gardena, were arre:ste::d last Aug. 21 shortly after Huntlngton Beach police found the body of Walter Christle, 51, at the bachelor's home at 8131 San Angelo Drive. Cox admitted he was responsible for the multiple stib wounds and slashed throat that led to Christie's death. Yanke v.·as later sentenced 'to one year :n Orange County Jail on reduced charges of receiving stolen property. Tnvestil!;atots said both men were: hitchhiltin·g when Christie picked them up ~nd invited them to spend the night in his apartment. His naked body v.•as .found on the living roon1 floor the next morning. Rnps Reagari llC Berkeley Chancellor Roger \V. J·Jeyns tells a nc11·s confer· C!nce the tampus "tannot l'On· tinue to fulfill its 100-vear·old commitment to a leading role 1n the affairs of the state'~ un· less it gels more 1noney than Gov. Reagan has allocated. See story, Page 8. Sl1arp Temblor Of 5.7 Rocks Norway Island liPPSALA, $\\•eden (AP) - A strong e:irthquake on the Norwegian island of Jan l.1ayen in the Arctic Ocean today measured ' 5 7 on the Richter scale, the Uppsala Seismological J n st i I u \ ion reported . I Prof. fllarcus Baalh. director of the: institute. said the quake on the sparsely populated island 640 miles east of TromS() '~as "uncommonl.v strong. considering the area concerned." The L'niversit,v of Ca 1 i r or n i a sei~n1ographic laboratory at Berkeley <.1!so reported the quake at 4:36 a.m. EST and measured 1t at 6.25 on the Richter scale. It placed !he quake in the ocean bctv.·een Jan Mayen and Spitsbergen, 6i!O 1n1les northeast of thi!!: isl.and. Spitsbrrgcn. an ;1rchipelago 400 miles east of Nor\\3}'. also belongs to Norway. I! is not heavily populated. COLOR IT BRIGHT! , There have been · more innovations in carpet dyeing processes in the last ten years than the preceding fifty years. Dye houses can dip carpeting in a single dye beck dnd come out with a carpet of si.: colors due to a unique operation of treating yarn to accept or repel different pigments. Several printing methods now exist. One method involves tufting • white carpet and subiecting this carpet to a moving track which has trays compressing against the carpeting with a sort of "silk screen" process, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted with a design through this printing operation. The newest method is really spectacular. This involves manufacur· ing as much as fifty thoust1nd yards in the same dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpeting todt1y and mt1tch it one year la ter with an e.:act dye lot, using this process. One other operation de serves mention -solution dyeinq, where color is put in when the yarn is liquid, makinq it part of the fiber , and virtually eliminating fading. To assure yourself of the ri9ht c ho i C e, shop at a reputable retailer. (Alden's, of course!). SANTA ANA. ORANGI, TUSTIN Cell • , , ALDIN'S ltED HILL CAJtPITI & DRAPERIES 11J74 Irvine, Tuttln, Cal IJl·JJ44 ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . • • COSTA MESA 646-4838 I I 7 • \ /, I 7 . . ,\ ' Huntington Beaeh . EDITION Today's Final N.Y. St.oeks • VOL. M, NO. 70, 2 SECTIONS, 26 · PAGES ORANGE COUNtv. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY.,-~AR.Cl'l 2J, 1971 TEN CENTS . . Stale Mud Controversy By AUN DIR\(IN Of ... Dllll:Y , ... ll•tf A four-hour public hearing on whether the 39-acn St1venon brothers mud. dump In Huntington Beach constitutes a public nuisanet: ended in s.talemate Monday night. • Five members of the city council, sitting 11 a quasi-judicial body, d~dlock· ~ on a motion that a nui5ance does ulst -with two "A"yeJ," two "Nos'' and one abetenlion. 'Bloodshed' CJty Attorney Don Bonfa . ruled that the motion failed, moliONJ to rtt0ns.ider and continue the bearin1 for additional reports from the city's Environmental Council , and the city staff were then made by councilmen. These mot.ioda .carried and lbt public hearing was continued to 7:30 p.m. at th~ April 19 ~uncil meeting. Bonfa pointed out that he doubted whether subsequent tesUmony could legally comtitut.e addllional evidence. "The finding was made at the ~ clusion of evidence," he commented. Bonfa had recommended that the coun- cil find a public nuisaoct existed and indicated that if this was the finding the staff wouJd not fUe an injunction calling for the owners to abate tbl nuisance immediately buL would aUelhpl to reach some settlement with the operators. If the brothers, Joseph and CarJ Stev.erson, cooperated in efforts to .~~· the problem. then the action might never be filed. Bon!a lllld. William carJson, an attoroey represen-tilll the t.""Others, said that the brothers hoped to give a . definite comirlllment witbln sii months O;f1 the futur_e. of the dump at Hamilton Avenue ·and Magnolia Street, behind the Southern Calilomia Edison generating station. He listed· four stept the owners offered to take in-the me&ntime: ~ -To aintinue working with dried ' . ' ' Viets • Ill Stalemate baclttla cultun1 that 11eat'' the crude oU at the dump and purportedly eliminate odors. Estimates ot the tot.al cost of this program varied from $30,000 to !80,000. -To coniider usin& 180,000 cubic yards of fUI dirt, pollJbly to convert the lite to a trailer park or a recnatlonal area. -To s~p up the .skimming Of oil from the ponda. · -To limit future dumpin& of oU field wastes to hall t.be dump. Leave Councilman balked at the last proposal with Vice Mayor Jerry Matney and COUn· cilman Jack Green both arg1.itn& that continued dumping at the aoutberly 20 acres of the aite would compound. tbe problem. Councilman Ted Bartlett countered that for the. benefit of oU drilling opera• tions in Huntington Beach the dump would have to · be phased out over a (8ee DUMP, Pa1e.-ZJ Laos Threat Made By Man son l ~ Hea vy Red Fire Follows Pullout ' LOS ANGELES (UPI) . -Chari,. Manson told two of the prosecutors at the Tate-LaBianca murder trial that there was "going to be nothing but mlirder and 'bloodshed afterward!" il be get& the death penalty. Deputy District Attorney Vincent T. BuglJosi and his auistant, Stephen Kay, were 'Chatting with Manson through a wire mesh grill in an anteroom w~e be listens to proceedings by loudspeakers befort the session beagn this morning. Kay told newsmen during a recess 1n the closing arguments of the trial'• penalty phase that they had made some remark that Manson seemed to have a cold and that the cult leader 1uddenly said to lbem: "If I get the dea~ penalty, there's soing to be nothing but mW'der and lliodshed a!terward1 because I'm DOt IC in& to la kt it." -• Manson just a short time' earlier had -!inlled out . by tile attorney for '111< of the !htte woman defendan!J, Leslle V4n Houten, as the J!lllivolent t'lgure who' '1systenlatically . destroyed 1verything that waa good in the young &irl and led her to murder." . Without mentioning Manson by name. Maxwell Xeith said the 2l~year~ld Miss Van Houten was tran1formed from "a quite ordinary girl" into a killer. He said she Md been taking drugs alnce she was 14 and ·~her mind was a \iacuum -a vacuum for the. intrusion, of the devil" when she Went t.o the 6pahn Ranch where the Manson "family" U,ed. • Manson's lawyer said in Mondiy's pro- pedings, the cult leadtt was ''enti~ed lb his life" because money wa! being fnade ftom the trial and be wu a \'lctim of politics llld jlllblidty. Ma rina Palace Name Changed ,f o Airport Cl ub The name of Seal Beach's controversiaJ teenage dance hall. the Marina Palace, bas been changed. As of . this morning a sign out.side the quonset building on Pacilic Coast Highway proclaims it to be the "Airport Club." It's the 1ame oame Wider which OW"ner William i.. Robe.rt.son once hosted a legal draw poker operal~. , "I want to make it alieDlutely clear that thert is no connt!Clielt with the old 'Airport Club,'" lllld ~."But I expect aome trouble from the little old ladles." · Last summer, RoberlaQn and bis wife Were brought before the city council JD a license revocation hearing. Polkt .allegectlhat they had allowed drug traffic on the premises and condoned pro- mi~uous activities among patronJ. r The Roberuons wete cleared of the ~barges when the city councll voted ~ to dismiss the case. -..Robertson. a former Los Angeles police lieutenant. made headlines during the .Ud·flftles for his operation of the Airport Club poker palace and repeated attempts to bring gamblin& back aftec It had been ouUawed. PILOT HOLDING DPEN HOUSE • •Friend! and re.adetJ of the DAILY Pn.oT art invited to a two-nights-only oPen houM to ln1ped the eniaraed and modtmlzed facilities or lhre neWiplpet at'3311 W. Bay St., Cool.I Mua. TM plant will be opm to the public tiim '1 to t p.m. both Wednt.lday and Thur8d1y. Some parking plaoes will be 1V1ilable on the plant'& partlng lot; other v\slton: may find on-1treet apac:u lloo& Bay and Thurhl m..u. ' DAILY f'IL•T.Pllelt ~·ltlc:~•rilll KMflllr DASH 'FOR FREEDOM COSTS SUSPEC'I: HIS LIFE 0.pt.lty Dqn Andrewa St1nd1 Over Body of Robert Cl1m11 Costa Me sa Bandit Slain In Desperate Freedom Bid By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "-Dtll' Pli.t lltff Darting down an alley and ignoring commands to halt. a bandit suspect with a reputation as a loser made a suicidal dash from a Costa Mesa courtroom Monday .and was shot througb the he'art at 50 f~t. Robert J. Clemas. 21, spun around once and coUapsed to the pavement. Ht apparently died in thf: arms or Deputy Marshal Donald H. Andrews, outside the old, security-poor Harbor Judicial District CourL Clefflas' sister was at her clerical job inside when it happened. ~ fatal incident was the second escape in one week at the 1956-built fa cil· ity .which is badly outdated and over· crowdod. Marshal DiUard 0. Wilkerson said he may demand additional manpower to toughen security al the old facility. which includes a mobile trailer courtroom for Division One cues. Clemas had been confronted by police se.veral times .since Marth 1. when he was arre.!lted in Costa Mesa by Patrol· man Bill Bechtel charged with assa ult on a pctice o!Jicer. Hg was free on his own recognlunce peliding a hearing when on March 5, a gunman claiming to be high on drugs held up the Bargain Basktt Market, 817 W. 19th Sl., Costa Mesa took $11 ,000 and fled. Clemas, of 2070 Federal Ave., Costa Mesa. was arrested the followin& Monday night after depositing $1,000 in cash at a nearby ·Bank of America bran~h. The teller recognized the bundle, bound with a rubber band, as one the branch had issued to the same store robbed three days earlier. A cache of $10,000 was recovered from Clemas' home, while detectivl?! linked him to three more holdups while the de- fendant was rn custody. He was also charged with parole viola· tion, stemming from a 19&9 Carden Grove market robbery. Complaints diaJ:ging him in tbolt cases were issued Friday. leading to Clmias• scheduled arraignment in Divlsk>n One: Monday afternoon. Standing at the trailer door, only 1 few feet from the jail holdin1 cell. Deputy Andrews called Clemaa' case at 1 :40 p.m. and Deputy Al Eichler escorted him forward . He was not handcuffed. Breaking away two feet from the (See DEATH DASH, Pace Z) ln1ur.ance Rate s to Soften SAIGON (U PI ) -The last of 21,000 South Vietnamese troops who struck lnto Laos six ween ago . were with~awing tonight under heavy North .Vietnamese fire. Communist pressures intensified on U.S. support units and at least eight Americans were killed, field reports said. Military aources 1aJd South Vietnamese aimmandera closed another outpost in Laos late today, laving only one re- maining base of the several which had been eftablished for the offensive against th1 Ho Cb! Minh Supply Trail. Fewer than 6,000 South Vietnameae troops re- Oil Company S.eeks W (!,Ste \ .-... ; ~ .... ~- 'Qu{f#ll ~"" .... ' . . ":' . Sfanal Oil. and Gii Com)JlllY ii ... kin& permJa~on from the U.S., Army Corpa ot Engineers t.o .build 1 24-lnch . outfall waste water d.lapoaal lint near the bluffs in HJJritlngton Beath. The line would dump 1alt brines - the wate:rilparated from oil depo&lts -940 feet.i t into the ocean. It' would run. paratl tO in uletlng 16 lnch ouUall 10me 1,153 fH:t "M:st of 23rd Strttt. Permissio'n for the line hit already been granted by tht California Water 1'l:source1 Control Board. City Public Works Dirtctor James Wheeler said Hunt!niton Bead! has no poaltion on l.bt wut.e line. "Wt hive DO Lrequiremenu more 1trin- 1errt thu· tbt water · re!OUrce board ," he explained. The Army Co~ of Engineers ls asking f« comments on or objections to the wam line to be aent to Department of the Army, Los Angeles District, Corps of Engineers, P.O. Box 2711, Loi Angeles, California, 90053, by AprU 20. The Corpa said granting of the permit will be based on the impact of the propo&ed work on "Navigation. fish and wildlife, water quality, economics. con· aervatlon, aesthetics, recreation, water supply, eCOllystems, and other factor~." Army Sets Hea ring For Captain Med ina FORT McPHERSON, Ga. CUPll - The Army announc.ed today that initial pre-tr~ btarini in the court martial of Capt. Ernest L. Medina, Charged with overall responaibUity for . the My Lal muucre, will be held here May 24. • . Medina Is aet to be court·martialed for the premeditated murder of 102: Viet· namese civilians durltll b1a company'• sweep through the My Lai hamlet on March 11, 1968. The 34-year-ald care.er officer coulc!'. receive lhe death aei:itence U found &WJty of the speciflcaUons. Beach Fire Rating prop~~ Homeownen and bw!lnessmen in Hun- tington Beach can look for drops in their Ci.rt inmrance premlus, city Fire O.ief Ray Picard announced Monday. He and Water Superintendent F.d Slang revealed that the clty hu rl!Ceived a lower firl rating number from the Pacific Fire RaUn1 Burtau. The city has bee• ..,1aned a dw 1 ratinc compared w1th the class 5 ar•de 11ven the city at the last rallng in December, 1964. Picard pointed out that a ~uctloo of one clay usually me11ns • reducUon in fire lnsaranct premluma of aboul 10 perc<nt. "Sul for tome homeownttt and businessmen the reductions may bl aa much as ll pm:enl," he said. r He advised ruideots t.o contact. their insurance agents to detmntne bow the new grade will affect; ~rn. "What effect lhia will b1ve co in- surance rates will depend oo the in- dividual policy and ill c:ondl.Uons and t.trw," lhe fire chief obstrv& "Tbe cuts will come at renewal time .'' Picard 11ld that the reductlooa will not apply to mas of the dty having mut"usl water campanle11 or belnc aerved by privste wel111. "There ls no cbana• In the t-B cla&Silicatton for these wattt -. defid•llC7 ...... ~ be IJJd. J Gollll u.....p -ol tlia areal .... a4llnod by tile ritlnc bureau, Ploud nocM tliat tlia lmpro11tment In· tl1" fire departmen~ '!'hlch now hjl1 117,~men aod a 11.7 mllUoo bucicet, WU 47 pettenL "ff11f of tht dflflcleocy point.I fo the put e1me. for tact of mll1l)OWtr and tnadequatt ladder companies." ht U· pl1loed. • The city will bave • aecond ladder company operatln& soon and two ftf1' fira ol.IUOOI In Jiine. The tmprovemtttt In water 11upplle1 al"' halped lower !be nlln&, the chief llid. NI XON ANAL YI ES THE WAR, PAGE 4 mained on Laotian 90il and military sources uld they would be out by Wednesday night. The men retreating Tuesday night drove acr01Js the frontier back to South Vietnam in a column of tankl, armored per50nnel carriers. trucks and jeeps which, field reporta: aaid. were coming under "increasin& haraisment" from North Vietnameu. Ask 4 % Increase U.S. Army helicopter gunships and U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom jet fighte:r- bombtrs constantly wheeled and circled overhead, firing rockets and cannon and dropping bombs into well concealed posj. tions manned by North Vietnamese wtits using rocket-propelled grenades, mortars. rockets and rifles. Reports said the Communists acored several hits on the long annored column which included trucks filled with wounded South VietJtamese and one command jeep without tires. The North Vietnamese !See ASIA WAR. Page II Elemen~ Teachers Bid ' . . ·''For Pay Raise Tonight By TERRY COVl!JZ Of IM Dlllr l"llet l llfl Teachers in the Huntington Beach City (tlen'lentary) School Dtstriet will, present their inlUal pay ral&e request& "'tonight at·•. meetina or cUstrict trustees. The 26J clauroom teachtn have prtpared an eight-page d o c um e n t outli(llng 23 proposed chana;es in teacher contracts. . 'the aalary increaae requested Is four percent for all teachera, plus an aMual cost of living lnma.se Is lilted In the C.OSt of Living lndtz for Oranae County. ~ year's CO&l o'f llVin& increase was about 4.t percent for the area, Pie r Bee r Sale s Fo r Huntington Okayed by ABC Beer will be sold In early May on the Huntington Beach Pier. The Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) Board has overruled a protest by a local clergyman against tbe beer salei. proposed at two snack bar a on the pier~ City councilmen had Initially approved beer sales late last year, but a protest againlt their approv1l was filed with the ABC Board by RIV: Edward Erny, pastor of the F l r 1 t United Me\hodist Oiurcb. Rev. Emy e:ought to 1top beer sales 1t a sandwjch anack ahop owned by Ron Smith on the &rounds tbt pier ii • pubUc reaeaUon area. "We have no further pla.m for protest." Rey. Erny uld t.odaiy.· He uld a letter from the ABC Board informed him Friday that beer aales would be allowed. "They said we didn't estJiblish 1 ca~ that It would be dl!lrirn<otal to public morals or ln~eue poUce problems there." . The Rev. t:my pmenltd hiJ prote&t at an ABC bearing f'eb. 11 Wll.h It.ate aJll'O)nted hearing officer William G,..n pmldln& In llllntlnrton B<1cb city <OUR- cll cbamben. ,,,. 6eer ..i .. .,.., 1iar! .w!lll 1i>Oli) May I becoUlt of a 40'\W ,...itJni ~ l"'l\llred by tlM ABC Board. • ~· ; 13-natWn Everest Party at Base Camp KATMANDU. Nepal CAPl -1'11 IS.na- tion Ml Everee:t expedltlon Shed base camp today 11 17,700 1 .. 1. Hi-first malo target on the journey up lhe world'• hlghut mounl.lln. · Norm>n Dyhreofllrth, tho U.yeaMld SwJu.Amtrtcan le11der of the npediUon. aald he and .his 29 other climbers would ,.t out ooo• to pltoh their first hl&h- alUtude camp at 20,000 feet. • •. according to Charles Palmer, deputy distrld auperintendent. The cost of living raiu pill.! four percent would ral:;e teachers' pay about nine percent, nearly the same as they received this fall following a summer· Jong salary battle with trustees which ended in arbitration. "We have two main concerns in our proposal," said Cary Trickett, chalrma~ of the certificated employes council which negotiates salaries. They are the salary in~ase and elimination of the ma,sters' degree requirement for top level pay raises. '1 Aft.er 90 many ye.ars with the district, a te)lcher Is requJred to have 1 master's degree for further step (iutomatic) in· creases within the di.strict salary range. "We'd rather see graduate units re- quired rather than a master's degree," Trickett said. Palmer indicated the most expensive Item in the teacher proposal could b9 a request for aimpensation for IC· cumulated sick leave. Teachers want to be paid for sick leave days a\Jowed, but not taken when any 'teacher resigns, retire:! or dies. "That could cost more than $500,000/' Pallner said today. The pay proposals are the initial step lor meet and confer procedures . Teachers are asking for a March 29 seSllon with district trustees to di.scu.sl their proposals. Several meetings are expected. with: both sides offering changes, before a final contract Is wprked out. "We expect things to be more open and much easier this year," Trickett said. Palmer wlll present costs of various teacher requests t.o the trustees at tonight's meettng, s:heduled for 7:30 o'clock in the library at Dwyer School. Orange Coast Weather That chllly cosst.al fog will creep further inland tonight, bringing a cooler Wednesday under haiy sun- shine and temper1ture1 ln t h e trtiddle 60s • INSW E T.ODAY Pre.UU.nt Nison telll natio11 ti\a' Sou&h Vittna.m.ese hondltd thtm,,elvts ver~ U1fll in LaoS". Story, Page 4. (alllet'M • C~-U• I Cltftlnef ,..U c-1n ,. C,.......,.. II DMltl ~ ' .,_ . •fl'-"I ,... • lllttrt•lll"ltllf lt 'llllMI ... ,, ::=.,. ;; """'!Qt L._,.. t J _OAJLY PILOT H Add 1,000 Feet Erom Page l . • : , Marine Cho·p.pei;s DUMP ..• period o! lime. The hearing included tesljmony by four homeowners, Air Pollution C o n t r q I District investigator Ora Well&. Deputy Dislri~ Alloroey Ralph Hamon and tllf' dty't (lil tnapector, BOb Davia:. ''' To Fly Higher At the end of the lengthy and detaile' hearing, Vice Mayor Matney, Councilmen Gearge McCracken and Green wanted ' t~ntinue it for a report from thtt E vlronmental Council and the st~ff. · I'\• By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .... Dt.11'1' t"lle! '"" Orange Coast homeowners who live under the air path! used by Ma,rine Corps helicopttrs from Santa Ana •nd' El toro will ret some relief from the noise guierated by the obJpL Hirth Heads State Meet On Freeway By L PETEii XllIEG 01 .. Deltr ~ll•t ltlff Newport Beach will confront the State of California on the issue of their Pacific Coast Freeway agree~nt with a three- man commJttee beaded by Mayor Ed !Urth. The Newport City Council Monday night adopted a resolution giving the committee only 60 days to engineer a bilateral reaclssion of the agreement. Mayor Hirth also bowed to the Freeway Fighters' wishes by naming Viee Mayor Howard Rogers and Coun· cilman Donald Mclnnil to serve with him on tbe negotiaUng committee. Mcinnis and Rogers were the only two councilmen to support repeal of the agreement in the Marcb t special electioo in which resldeotl voted over· wbelmtngly to cancel tbe contract. In adopting tbe resoluUon, which Mcln- nis had authored, the council acted almCN1t without commenl The directive states: "Tbe City Council will unilaterally res- cind tbe existing freeway agreement as described above within 60 days in the event that a mutually-acceptable bilateral rescission agreement is not achieved." The state bu indicated a willingness to talk to the city about the agreement, which involves the freeway route easterly from Bayside Drive through Buck Gully in Corona del Mar. 'Ibe state bas also indicated it might agree to modification of the route ii a pending city traffic study shows a need. But to .date the state has not come right out and said it will agree to throw the agreement out. Whatever becomes of the negotiations. they will apparently start in a. hurry, '1be council directed Mayor Hirth to write state Public Works Dir~tor Jimes A. Moe asking that a meeting be scl>edul· ed as soon as possible. The Freeway Fighters bad pressed hard to get MclMis and Rogers on the negotiating committee. 'Ibat pressure became apparent Monday nlght when Wally Koch. chairman of the Freeway Fighters Citizen Coordinating Committee, addre:saed the council. Koch said the CCC "feels duty bound and compelled to strongly urge that Howard Rogers and Donald Mclnnls be authorized to represent the City Coun· ell." Tbe council's tough al.and in the up. coming negotiations should have been even tougher, according to Koch. He also said the people didn't vote for a negotiating committee, they "overwhelmingly approved a ballot pr~ posiUoa to adopt an ordinance rescindin&: a portion of the Freeway Agreement." "Tbel'f;fore, it is incumbent upon the city to immediately notify the state that the city of Newport Beach rescinds that portion of the freeway agreement per· taining to Route 1 Freeway between Newport Beach City Limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive," Koch said. OUN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT OfUMOI COAS1 J>UIUIHING CO#A,AH°y lobort N. Wool .,...., """htllllW J1c\: L C11tf•Y' Vic.I ,,.'""' Mil GMonll ~ T1io11111 x:,,,.ir . ••n°'" Tli•111•• A. .. "'"""'" MMMillr'9 l!dlJOt Alo• Dlt~i11 _.. Otlll!IC '°"""" l'dl"tr Alb.rt w .. l1t11 Mtoe1-lci Edlftr " ........... OMea 17175 ... , .. 10111.,.,,, M1lll111 Alllire11: P.O. lo~ 1t0, ,2,41 --""""' a.di! :m k9t ... _ C.11 ~l llil W.I 11'1 """°' """""' a.di: no """""' 11011:0¥•~ s.ft o.-tf; -N«1ll 1:1 (.lll'llM II.Ml Brigidier General Henry W. Hlse, co~ mandin& general of El Toro MCAS, today announced the helicopters would be ad· dlng l,llOO feet to their cruising altitude while inside the Orange Coast control ..... Effeelive Thursday, the l\Iarine Corps bellcopters will fly at 1,800 feet outbound and 1,600 inbound. Hise made the announcement at a press conlerence held at El To.re MCAS. He said tbe chan1e is 'the result of eight montba work with representallves of t.he Federal Aviation Administration (F Ml and lhe Orange County Aiiport, "We want to do anything ·in our power to mio.lmlu the objectionable aspecta: of our operaliom and still carry on those operations," the general explained. A Real Toehold uncilman Al Coen objected. arguing Iha the purpo5(' of the hearing was to alre a finding a.nd that the. on.!f rea&<ln to continue it '~oulcf be~io ·hear additional evidence from homea\lflfrs. t Matney, holding out for t hr Envlronmental Council and staff repor~ c:orn1nen1ed. •·1 can't n1ake a decision ol\ what I've heard ton ight." With Bonfa recominending that a fir,. ding be made, Green moved that the council find the dump a public nuisanc~ Matney and c;reen were in favor witlt McCracken and Bartlett -oppos~. t (.oen abstained. explaiJ:tlng later that he did not consider ~he dump a publ~ nuisance so far as odors were coocerne.4, but felt that it was an attractive nuisa;;;e to children. He thought barbed" .wir+ should be put on top of the fenct. 1 CurrenUy, the helicopters fly at 800 feet outbound and 600 feet inbound along seven routes which were established in 1951. The al titude is figured from mean sea level, so at limes the helicopters are about 300 feet from rooftops in billy country. A locksmith's deft fingers finally free a young San Francisco lady's toe from· this p"dlock which closed on the pedal digit during som~ horseplay with her boyfriend. The embarrassed girl. 20, refused to identify herself. McCracken moved that tHe matter be reconsidered and then Continued·to April 19 and these votes carrJed. 1'.layor Donald ShlPle)', who is in Pacifica Hospital, ancf.C.O.~ n ·c i Im a R Nor ma Gibbs did not atteDa1thej:8'int·; The control zone is an area of about a five mile radius from El Toro MCAS which is used to control all civilian and military aircraft in the area. Hise said the higher altitude flying will be used in visual fllcbt conditions when the ceiling is above 2,300 feet. ''When the ceiling drops below that, as Jt has today, we will go back to our previous toutes 8ltd fly on in- struments. We estimate that these weather conditions will prevail only about IS percent or the time and the frequency of flights under these condi· tlons will be small,' 'the General ex· plained. Hise said the two areas that the facility bas drawn the most-complaints from are tbe Palisades route near Corona del Mar and the Tustin route. The Palisadea flight pattern leads from the. Sa.nta Ana Air Fa~ility, over University Park, UC Irvine. along the eastern edge of Corona de! Mar and out to sea. l~ ls used by helicopters participating in exercises on carriers at sea and as a route to Camp Pendleton. Fron• Pagel DASH ... mobile eourtroom door, crernas ·sprinted down the alley through parked cars ad- jacent to the American Legion Hall. Deputy Marshal Eichler was in hot pursuit, a few feet behind. Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt. Robert Green said Eichler and Andrews commanded Clemas to halt four times between them, while state law prescribe! three such orders. Lawmen are limited to shooting at felony suSpeets, or if they are en· dangered. Realizing he ~·as losing the race, Eichler started to draw his own gun, when Andrews' .38 caliber revolver cracked, spinning Clemas around with a groan . He fell 50 feet away. Costa Mesa detectives Don Cisey and Bob Lennert -attracted by the shoUts to halt -ran to the door just in time to witness the ratal shooting. Clemas was dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Ecology Tree Eron• Page 1 ASIA WAR ... were rePQrted to have destroyed several vehicles. . .' A U.S. unit or tanks and arl'tlored personnel carriers took 2ift · boui'! to carry newsmen from the Sollth 'Viet· namese outpost at Lang Vei in South Vietnam l.Q _ the ·Laotian·, ~rd~r1 a distance or eight miles. Report.era saw smouJdering ,tanks ;md bodies (ilon,g' the road. . Official spokesmen at forward opera· fional bases and ill Saigon wool(f not speculate, on Co.mnillpist tactics, but field commanders said that with the Laos (lfiensiVe ending, North Vletn!me.se units could be expected to concentrate on pcisitfons In .SOUth Vietnalll held by. the 10,000-man U.S. support force. Fl~!~ reports said itt -·le.a~ eight Americans were killed and 20 wounded Monday and Tuesdaj in action$ in and around Khe Sanh, 'the big U.S. ·support base in South Vietnam's northwest cor- ner. These r~ids included :o~ in which Nort.h Vietnilmese commandos, carrying satchel charges of dyn'1'n.ile, · siormed into the base; killing three Americans a;nd 't'Ounding .13. , . . , , , The winddown In the Lat>s campaign was reflected in the dec:r~ased U.S.-air role. ·T~ · 'riui'tlb'er "cif·: 'si1MfeJ, 'iepot'tH 'l'ues~ay · -~ -was · aboul one--fotirth or the figure flown · at the h'efght o( the campaign. A sorfie is a sinfile strike by· a single "aircraft ag'ainst a single target. In Saigon, U. S. headQ!Jartets said American warplanes which attacked North Vietnamese territory Sunday and Monday destroyed lhrf:e· r-t8Jlua.il:.CS'aft missile sites. The raids were· nown by U.S. Air Force. and Navy planes against bases in the area of the Mu Gia Pass, a funnel from North Vietnam .iJl.to th'e upper reaches of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. A communique said the raids were ordered in response to North Vietnames·e firings on ~merican plan.es Oy,ing over J,.aos and SOuth Vietnam last week. · 1n Laos pfoper, · gov'ernmerit trOo)ls counterattaCked today ·and recaptured Communist-held Ban · ·Done-Cho, five miles northeast of the Lualig Prabang airfield. reliable militarY 1 o u r Ce s reported. · lt may nol be ex.3.ctly what poet Joyce Kilmer had in mind, but this free-form ecology tree which has-sprouted on South Pacific Ayenue between 17th and 18th Streets in Sunset Beach certainly rates an "E'' for e.!fort. The "tree," made from abandoned wine bottles and olher flotsam, }Vas produced by amateur ecologists on a cleanup campaJgn. ( lnn0cence Proclaimed .. By Hartelius at Trial By TOM BAJILEY Of !lie O.ll'p lllt'9t llaH A long pros.CUuon l1ilJlng o1 Dr. Ebbe Jia~llUI Wef!;t lnto its second day todiy ~tb the <Arona de! Mar physlclan repeatedly denyirlg aCC"Usations that he planned the burning of his office and the theft nine days earlier of his car. Visibly disturbed by persistent ques- tioning of Deputy Di.strict Attorney Al Novick, Hartellus protested at one pOlnt this morniog: "I was innocent, I was innocent.'• But be continued to wwer "I don't know" or "[ don't recall" to scores ot qUestions as the prosecutor probed -the banking transactions that led to what the D~ alleges ~as the bribing of key prosecu~ witneJs J..im.B.levl.ns. Harteliua iMisted \oday that the $900 paid to Blevins by his blonde mistress Reba Vaughn· was paid at the woman's insist.enc~ ind.that he had no knowledge of the reason for the payment. Blevins has testified that Hartelius gave his sister the money to send him out of the state as police investigation into the fire and theft inten_sified. He told "th'e jury in Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge's courtroom that he collaborated with Hartelius last March 31 to hide the auto in Long Beach and that he doused the doctor 's offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway with gasoline and sparked the blaie la.st ·Apri.J,.t.,, · . · Hartelius today blamed Blevint· for both incidents and· told NOvlck lhlt ht rtpeatedly ad~is.ed N~•rt ~a,t;h »O,llce of Blevins' responsibility ~h.eit 'Mrs. jaug~.'s brother ~emanded, ,M~qday Miles Cox or Westminster was seri· rom im. tenced Monday to five years to life The SO.year-old physician' refuted Mrs. in state prison for his rO!e in the killing Vaughn·s cllilm that he asked her to of a Huntington Beach hardware ei:. pay bribe mo»ey to Blevins to reduce ecutive. the cltances that·irivesUgatO!'! could trace the payment to him:· Judge Byron K. McMillan imposed the Defense attorney Matthew Kurilich maximum term on Cox, 18, of 1750 repeatedly stepped in to halt the ques-- lrene Way. He denied a plea for pro. tioning as the persistent Novick con- bation on eox·s conviction for second stantly rephrased his questions In a degree murdet. bid to draw a definite response from Cox and Frederick Yanke, 2Q, Gardena, the physiciatJ . • .#. ' ' . -· .. Corona del Mar Girl Undergoes ' Kidney Surgery;-~ I Kidney trapsplant surge~y for a tetnager receiving a healthy organ from ber mother to replace her own 1ing1e remaining diseased kidney was under way thls morning at Orange County MedicaJ Center. -. The critical period for Corona del Mar High School senior Mary French, 18, still lies ahead. She has been in the facility since her kidney -ravaged by a birth defect that claimed the other 14 years ago -failed March 10, well ahead o( the schedu1ed operation. Doctors Carl Pearlman and Ronald Miller were implanting one from Mrs. Joanne French shortly before noon, but prior tests indicated the operation should give Mary a new life. She has been confined to home af · 20291 Kline Drive. Santa Ana Heights,' or the hospital, in recent weeks, when mechanical dialysis was used to·clea~ her bloodstream . -L J. - Repeated medical costs ha Ve deplete<! the Frenc~ family's savings and a Marf French Fund Drive containing $4,oo6 'sci far is established at 1321 S. Olive St., Santa Ana. Miss French Is a member in Harbor Area 4-H Club activities and variOJD chapters have orgallized benefit prC1-' grams eliending into summer monthf. to help the family. Rest Room Bids : Out at Doheny were arrested tarot Aug. 21 shortly after But the great majority of his objections H1ff1lington Beach police found the body ·were overruled by Judge Judge who The State's Department (lf Genera\ of Walter Christie, 51, at the bachelor's made it clear Monday that Kurilich's Services Utis week advertised for bids home at 8131 San Angelo Drive. unexpected · placing of the defendant on on a rest room pro)ect at the Doheny Cox admitted he was responsible for the wllnes! stand left Hartellus open State BeBch campgrounds scheduled t;o. the multiple stab ~·ounds and slashed to a much wider scope of qoestloning cost nearly $200,000. 1 throat.that led to Christie's death. Yanke than would have been possible otherwise. The bids, which' will be opened April was later sentenced tG one year in NGvick today predicted that the case 14, cover the building of three standard Orange County Jail on reduced charges will continue at least two more days. re st rooms, two others combinint of receiving stolen property. He expects to put at least 10 rebuttal showers into their use, several wastei Investigators said both men were witnesses when be completes bis grilling water stations, along with water, 1a9' hitchhiking when Christie picked them of Hartelill!. and sewage installations. .~ up and invited them to spend the night Among those witnesses will be Reba All the projects will be built in the jn his apartment. His naked body wa!I Vaughn, the CoJla Me!la woman who campground section <lf the beach, apart found <ln the Jiving room floor ihe next shared her home with Hartelius prior from the recently remodeled day-use morning. W the burning of the doctor's office. and picnic areas. ~~~~~~~~~~~~; ., COLOR IT BRIGHT! There have been more innovations in carpet .'dyeing processes in !ht last ltn years than tho preceding fifty years. Dye houses can dip carpeting in • sin9le dye ,beck and come out with 1 carpet of. six colors dut to a unique operation of treating V~rn to llcctpf or repel differont pigmtnn . Several printing methods now exist. One method involves tufting a white carpet end subjecting this carpet to a mOving track which hos trays compressing e91inst the carpeting with ·a sort of "silk screen" process, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted with a design through this printing operetlon. • · · ' , The newest method is reelly spectacular. This involves menufacur- ing as much as fifty thousand yerds in the same dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpeting todey and metch it one year later with 1in exact dye lot, using this proc11s. One other operation deserves m.ntion -solution dyeing, where color is put i1' when the yern is liquid, m1•ing it part of the fiber, encl virtu•lly eliminating fadinq. To' •ssure yourself of !ht right ch o l c e, shop at a reputable retailer. (Alden's, of couml). " ' ALDEN'S : SANTA ANA. OltANGJ. TUITIN Cell • • • Al.DIN'S llD HILL CA!l,l'TI & DltA,lllllJ 1U74 lrYIM. Tuttin, CAI. Ql·SM4 CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • ' ' ;•.:•·:.:"'::':!:'':_M::::;"::'':..::"::c·..:lc,;l;,;'1;_ ___ _:.• :._• __ _:l . .'I PILOT ,S Orange, San Diego Counties Gain Rail Stops 1 From Wire Service• WASHINGTON, O.C. -Or1nge Ind ~~ Diego counties will gain slx oew IOcal passenger and freight stopa: under • plan by Railpax for Its new railroad atf:vice system. 1 Trairis will .go Into .servic~ after M•Y 1;• but not all stops are lillted in the cumprehensive network due to 'some inter-connection_ service. (See related 110ry, Pap I .) Railpu uld ttopo are acheduled In Fullerton, Saqta Ana, San Clemente, Oceanside, Dtl Mar and San Dleso. Other rail service linkupa announced on cross-country, and 1orUHouth traru:lt runs include : New Orteaa•lo. Attitle1; N e w Orleans, New Iberia. Lafayettt, Lake Charles. Beaumont, Hot11ton. ·f S an Antonio, Del Rio, Sande..-. Alpine, El Puo, Lordaburc. 'ructon. P ho e n i :r • Yuma, Jndlo, Pomona. Paaadenl and Los All(elts. Clllcq:o.Su Frucllot: C b I ca & o , Aurora, Mendota, Princeton, Galeaburs. Moomoulh. Burlincton, Ml Pleannt. ()t.. tumwa, Crt1ton. On)aha, L 1 n e o I n , Hastings, McCoot. Denver, Granby, Bond, Glenwood Sprtql, Grand Jundlan, !lelpor, Prow, Slit L<l:e City, Wtlb, Carlin, Spul<I, Reno, Slcrllll8llto and Oltland. le1W.lu Diep: S..lllt. Tacoma. Eul O\ympJ1, Centralia, Jtebo, Van- couver, Portland, Salem, Eu ctn e, Klamath 1'allt, Dunsmuir, Gerber;· Div· It, Oa'1111d, San J ... , Sllinu, Sln·Luit Obispo, Blnta Barl>lro, <>mm! and Los Ancele1. 'Life at Stalie' Lt. Calley Atto~ney Blasts Jury Rnps Reagan U.C Berkeley Chancellor Roger \V. Heyns tells a news confer· ence the campus "cannot ron· tinue to fulfill its 100-year-old commitment to a leading role in the affairs of the state" un- Jess it gets more money than Gov. Reagan has allocated. See story, Page 8. Senate Democrat Assails Reagan Administration. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Senate Democratic Leader George Moscone con· demntd the adminislration of Gov. Reagan today as "a four·year experiment ill' tovern,ment that hasn't worked." The San Francisco Democrat, con· sidtred a likely candidate for governor in · 1974, said the Republican governor has headed California towar.d bankruptcy and Chaos. He aetused Reagan of "the forced deterioration of a once-unparalleled public school {sygtem'" and ~ attacking welfare for political gain . Mo&e0ne claimed that under Reagan, •;pennypinchin& bas disemboweled our \¥liversity and college 1ystems; halted ~ education of our minorilies and threatened the stability of our teaching and administrative staffs." ,ffe said Reagan's wellare reform pro- eram does nothing but shift the bulk ol wClfare costs from the state to the local property taxpayer by putting a ire8ter burden on county government -30mething·Reagan says is not true. "I believe Californians have been us- ed," Afoscone s·aid. ';I believe that the governOr has played upon our natural frustrations and antagonisms Califotrila met 1971 on its hands and knets. We have r1ol had the courage tp reorder our priorities, or to move boldly." 'Moscone's strong criticisms came in ii talk by the Senate majority leader (ltepared for a meeting of Town Hall, A Los Angeles civic luncheon group. ' was the same forum Reagan used tD unve.il his wellare reform plan March t. ' , FT. BENNING, Ca. (AP) -Lt. William Calley's defense attorney com- plained bitterly today that bis client 's m~r jury is "conducting business as Usual" and dragging out their delibera· tions, in the seventh day today. "If they're watching the Glen Campbell and Ed Sullivan shows and wining and dining themselves, I think that's a disgrace," George Latimer told the trial judge. H~s complainl was prompted by newspaper reports that the 1ix officers SA Missionary Found Dead In Landslide From Witt Servict1 TJFAL~IN, New Guinea -Rescue workers have recovered the bodies of an Orange County.based Bible translator and one of his children from a landslide that wiped out the family of four. Walter Steinkraus, ~s. his wlfe Yvonne, 42, plus daughters Kerry, 11. and LaVon· ne, 8, were swept .away Sunday ni1ht along with seven tribesmen. He was employed by the Summer Jnslitute of Linguistics, 219 W. Walnut St., Sant.a Ana, and bad been ministering to the Tifalmin tribe in the rugged mountain country for 10 years. His role as a linguistics analyst was to learn the unwritten TifaJmin dialect used by 2,500 of the natives and develop an alphabet for translating the Bible and other helpful books. OfficiaJs speculated that a major eartJl.. quake several weeks ago across the nearby New Guinea·lndonesian border opened a fault in the 400.foot cliff behind the Steinkraus home. Heavy rains leaking through fissures filled it, they believe, until pressure caused the face to crack and plunge down onto the village. ,Riverside Ready To Ban Lead Gas From Wirf: Servictl RIVERSIDE -The Riverside County 8Gard of Supervisors Monday night adopted an ordinance banning the sale of all leaded gasolines in their county. There are, hoy,•ever, a couple of hookers in the surprisingly stiff anti· pollution law. · First, it won "l go into effect unless Orange. Los Angeles, Ventura and San Bernardino counties pass a similar ban because they too are within the smog· plagued Los Angeles basin. Secondly, County Counsel Ray Sullivan had grave misgivings about the anti·lead law. He urged the board not to adopt it on grounds that state l1w doesn't allow counties to legislate on motor fuel. 'The county attorney figures the new ordinance will nunk its first court test. But the Riverside board went ahead anyway. Supervisor Norman Davis reported that Orange and the other ad- jacent counUes promised to pass similar lead gas bans if Riverside would just take the first action. on the jury hid r.quested 1 weel<'• supply of fresh laundry and that 1r- rangeme-ots be made for tbtir paychecks, due March 31. LaUmer's outrage wu prompttd by a story in the AUanta Constitution this morning that said the ju.ron .spent Sun- day night alter a baU-d.iy 1eaaion in court, watching those television show.a and "before gotna: to bed, two bad beer, two .sipped bourbon 1-od one bad acotch." Latimer told tho Judge: '"'1iio Is not a siesta. This ia aerious buslnua. We have a man'1 lile at atake." UPI T...,,..... .Uelvln Who2' Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman has turned up in London, claim- ing he entered the country us· ing tbe name of U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird. OUic· ials denied the claim. Solons Kill Wiretap Bill SACRAMEN'IO (UPI) -The Senate Judiciary Commlttee today defeated a bill to perm.It policemen to use wiretaps ind bugging devices to gather evidence on suspected criminals. The measure by Sen. John L. Nejedly (R·Walnut Crttk), was killed on a split voice volt despite a plea for It by the personal emissary of U.S. Attorney General John Mitchell. Harokl G. Bradford, represenUng the state bar, opposed the mea!Ure on grounds it would violate an innocent person's right to privacy. Sheldon Portman. representing the California Public 0 e f e n d e r 1 Association, called the bill, "A new kind of totalitarianl.vn." Onofre Beach· Needs Funds , • State Park Officials Hope for Private Donations ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Because of eov. Reagan's construction {re e z·e. ~Ufornla park officials are a!lk.lng for "tubllc donations to develop their prize .-ew beach just south of the Western White House. r 1be mile-long San Onofre Bluffs State leach four miles from San Clemente wlll open for the first time dur ing Easter Week April 3-lt. 1Users will be asked lo contribute to tile California State Park! Foundation :..... Sl 1 night for camping and $1 for •Y use -rather than paying a fee. •If enough money is raised, temporary lcilltles will be installed tbot will lltow • State Parks and RecreaUon Depart· ~t to rtoptn the beach for all or • l\'!l of the 1ummer. ' Department Dtrtctor William Penn , !olt Jr. 11kf he hoped for $60,IXIO or 0,000 and that uxr1 might J've more an the S3 and $1 donations requested. The beach. acquired list fall from tile U.S. ~farlnes, wlll have temporary dlil!mlcal tollt:ts and sirbage cans. No - \ lifeguards will be on duty. There will be no water or fuel and no tent camping or fires will be allowed. Acquisition of Southern California beaches has been • priority program for the Reagan admini!ltraUon, but it mtght be two years bt:fore any develop- ment funds for San Onofre could be incl~ in the budget, aaid Joeeph M. Loog of Orinda. chairman of the non·pn> fit parkJ foundation. Even thtn San Onolre would have to compete for a spot in Reqan's Gtneral Fund budget with other projecta The foundaUon was created Jn 1161 to receive glfll for Ule state park syrtem. The donations it collects at Sao Onofre beach -or Pendleton Stach as It also is called -t.hls Eaater can be chanelltd directly Into development without being subjected lO the Re1g1n administrat10i'l'1 stringent budget controls during the, cur· rent fiscal crisis. Long erplained In 1 pren 1lat.ement why no development funds could be in- cluded in the CW'rtnl state budget : "The state only learned late in 1970 that this beach would be available and this came after many yurs of negotla· lions, so thett was no way to· anticipate the lease of this land at th ls Ume." Reagan's new budget for 1971·72, the fiscal year starting July l, doel include SIH,284 for optra~ funds for the new beach and •• lltlll in bond luadt '"' devetopmenl But there are no funds fer devtlopment ol the beacll area lllell. Uoe or the bond fund.1 11 limited to br1f1&1nc water and 1ewtr lines from San Clemente to the edge of the pork. They CIDl be u.ed Inside the beach pm llsell. While the Parks ind Recrtallon Department hu been ·~ by U.. Leglllatuno'a llsctl •lP'fl ·fl, onrpla,,. nlng park and beach projecto, It 11 considertnc minlnnam developmtnt at San Onofre In an effort to preserve Ila wUd character~ ' But Judge Reid Kennedy uid 1'When you'" tllkln& lboot driJ1kini there is 1 dillmnco between hlvlna 1 cocklatl and aettlna: drunk." At thl! point, the fud&e "id bo will not set hours 10< the jury because "l would rather 1te-the verdict in \his cue be 1 well thoogh1.(1Ul verdict. 11 LaUmer protested about the rtportl that are 1ettln1 to the 1 a r g e eroup of reporter• about the jury's activities -such as sendint: out M<nday night for a case of beer. "Certain\!' there II llO!llethlnJ leaking out of the jury box," LaUmer Aid. "I think that ii a breach of the aecrecy ~ulred from the jury." The I r ! a I juqe 1 a I d bo tllouiht L<Umor't complaint. about Ibo jury'• reJuln& after eourt wtrt ill.founded, •IYlnl "They have to 1et baircuta; they have to e1t." When be turoed tho lour-mon1hl worth or tuUmony over to the jury one weU ago today, the judge told the six veteran offlCUI they eould set their own houri aod · not to ,et over-tired. He limited, OOwever, to the houn of t a.m. to t :30 p.m. any bualneu which requim court personnel In01t of whom are either 111 the Army or under civil servtc.. ta the f1!'11 •Ix days, the jury opent ...,. SI boun actually dellbentlng and many other houn Jn tho courtroom listening to a re.s.bact of. testimony from 10 key prosecution witneua. Most day1 they atarted I.heir talks !horUy after I a.m. and one night atayed as late u 1:55 p.m. but the rest ol the time their work day ended ~t 5:30 p.m. The Jury Is docidlnJ the guilt or 111· oocence of the 71-year-old defendant who ia charged with the premeditated murder of al least 11)2 vlllaiers wben bis infantry platoon stormed My I.Ai March 16, 1968. LatiJllf:r 1aid 10ldien don't work bankers' hours on the battlefield and they should not do IO when a man's Ille ls at 1take. Harbor Budget Of $4,021,243 Adoption Urged Orange County Harbor Commiul.oner1 hive recommended: the Board o f Supervilors adopt 1 propoled district budcet ol Sl,021~41 lor liacal lflt-12. Ken Sampson, Harbor Department Director, told the four attending com· milslonera -Frank RoblnlOn wu not present -the budget included $1 ,410,IXIO for the acquilitlon and development of Salt Creek Beach. With these eipenditures Included, the district'• projected tax rate would be S.8G2 cents per $100 aseued valuation to flnance $2,174,027 funding. The re. malnlng $1,847,211 can be funded by unemcumbertd cash carryover. The tu rate for fl.seal 1970..71 Is 4.13 cents. 1f the cost for acquisition and develop- ment of the aouth county beach were borne by the county'• general fund - as wu the cue of Aliso Beach and the Sunset Beach perking Jot -the eottmated llindlng required lrom tile tu bue "ould be 1784,027, multlng ia I dlltrict ta.x rate of 2.1111 cents. In vottna to inctude the beach ac- quisition and development COit.i in the district budget, commissioners noted tbtt the cost will be 1baorbed somewhere in the county budget, and htatorieally it has been handled by the di.strict rather than the general fund. · With commlaslon approval, the pro- poeed budget will be forwarded to 1upervll0fl for lnclUJion in the county bud&et. Nixons ~nd Note To Chief Murray Sin Clemente Police Otlel Clll{ord MUl)'ay continued to tmprove IN>m re- e<nt mojol' ileart ""1"1' -hll aplrlta buoyed by • ;>enon1l 1et well ktteT rrom Pruidtmt-IDd Mr1. Richard Nl1on. The clllel, ''"'"""'' lnim the mojor ort<ry bypul operation, It e<peCled to rtm.atn a! Sl Vlnoent'1 H01Pital for perhaps two mttt Mtkl, tbe:n rtlW'Jl home for mort eonva~. Aides 1t the holpttal hive tttmed the aur1Jc1J Jlrocedurt a complete sue- ""· Tbt letter from the Nbon1 arrived at ·Murray '• room late Jut week. 'Ibt! Nlxons ~re expected to arrive for a wed-long 1tay in San Clemente later thll week. Clllcop.l.ot ADlel'" Chicqo, Jollel, S~ator, Chillicothe, G11esburg, Ft. Madison, La Plata, M•rteline, Kansas City, Emporia, Newton, Hutchlnlon, Dodge City, Garden Qty, La Junta, Ratm, Lai Vegu, Limy, Albuquerque, OaUup, Winslow, Flagstaff, Seligman, Kingman, Needles, Barstow, San ~rnardino. Pomona, Pasadena and Los Aligele!. ~1ttle> Otlcago. Clenvl..., Milwaukee, Colwnbus, P o r t • I e , Wisconsin Dells, Tom.ah, La Crout, Winona, Red Wing, Mlnneapol~/St. Poul, WUlmar, Morrl1, Breckenridge, Fargo. Grand Forks, Devils Lake, Glacier Park, Whitefish, Libby, Troy S a n d p-o I n t , I Spokane, Pasco, Yakima, Ellenburg, E. Auburn, SeatUe, Minot, Williston, Wolf Point, Gl8sg<1w, Havre and Shelby. Rockefeller W~ds Winthrop Paul Rockefeller, son of the former Arkansas governor, and his bride, lb~ former Deborah Sage, pose outside Bruton Parish church in colonial Williamsburg following their wedding ceremony. Congress 01\.s Youth Vote; Final Choice Up to States WAS!ilNCTON (UPI) -Congress awarded its approyil toci.a:r t.o a new constitutional right -to \'ote at age 18 -and send the proposed 28th 1mendment to the U.S. Constitution to the stale! for ratification. The 11ouse completed what WU ex· peeled to be easy debate and an overwhelming approval of a proposed amendment that would require states and localities to lower their minimum voting age to 18. Sponsors have hoped the required SS state legislatures would ratify the change In Ume for the 1972 elections. The amendment, approved 94 to O earlier this month by the Senate, was drafted more to remedy • situation that Congress caused last year than to break new ground In voting rights. The 1970 voting rights law sough' to qualify citizen• 18 and older to vote in all elections, but the Supreme Court later said Congress could set such qualifica- tiOlll by law only for federal elections. That left a situation in 47 states where 18 year olds were entitled to vote for President, for senator and for members of the House, but not for governor, mayor or other st.ate and local officers. Only Georgia, Alaska and Kentucky now give the state and local vote to 18 year oldS\ and it seemed unlikely to Congress that many others would change their laws (and tn some cases, Beware of Bank Dog PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A specially trained guard dog has gone on duty at a branch ol the First Pennsylvanta 8'ni wblch has been robbed three times last year. Jf Barron, a 103-pound German thepherd, prevents holdups at the branch oUloe in the Kensington section, said George Butler, executive vice president of First Pennsylvania, other dogs will be put Into service. Constitutions) before next year. The pre> 1pect was for dual registration and voti.n& With At~& confusion and' e.ztra ~t. A Coostjtutional amendment does not need presli:!ential approval, so _that flouse passaae by at least.a two.thirds majority end.f 'federal action on lhe propc;isal. It is transmitted to the states -47 of which have legislatures in session th.is year -by the General Services Ad· minlstration . The 1 amendment must be approved by three·fourths or the 11tate1 -38 -to become operative. Ralph Williams In County For Divorce The world's largest Ford dealer drove his 1971 Cadillac from Encino to Santa Ana today for the opening of an Orange County Superior Court divorce trial that could whittle away a considerable portion of his $37 million empire. Judge H. Walter Steiner was assigned today to rule In a nonjury trial on the plea of Ralph Williams for the dissolution of his four·year marriage to Mn. Annabelle Lowry Williams, 38, or Newport Beach. Assets listed by Williams In the court file include his Ford dealerships at Encino and Clovis, property holdings throughout the Southland, and the couple's $275,000 home in Newport. Mrs. Williams is receiving $4,000 a month in support from her multi· millionaire husband for herself and their two children. Willi.ams and his wife married March 9, 1!157 and parted Dec. 4, 1969. Beverly Hills trial lawyer Paul Caruso is repe.senting the auto dealer ln the Superior Court trial. 'No :-.... Ato1n Plants' State Aide Asks PUC Hearing SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -William E. Bennett, speak.Jng for Consumers Arlte Now, has asked the State Public UttllUes CommlHion for public 'hearings on whether nuclear power plant.I will be buJlt on the Callf-ornla coasl Bennett, a former PUC member, is now on the State Bo1rd of Equalli.atlon. tua client.II are a group of Hastings C.ollea:e of the Llw atudentl . In question are electrlclty-gener1tir\8j plaals the Paclllc G11 and Electric Con!' pll11 pl•M In Mendocino County and near Santa. Cruz.· Btnneu -anded that a>nstructlon 1hoold be hilted unUI 1 1tudy lw been made of the earthquake hazlrd to ouch planta. "We're standing on top of 1 fault right now," he said Monday at 1 news confertnce ln San Franciaco. "Cali fornia ii nothing but earthquake country." His complaint 1h10 said there was not enough evidence co n c e r n I n g dlle:bqes from nuclu'r pla.ota and their "effect on the delicate ecologlcal balance of our coastal regions." He mentioned 1\r, land, water and thermal contamln1tion. California's residents, he added, should be consulted on whether they wanted to give up more of their coastline, "which ls mostly gone now." Of the total of t.072.7' mile• of state coastline, 660.3 miles art privately own-- ed, 353.3 miles are owned by the publle and 58.9 miles are Owned by the f~nil government, bis complaint said. Gals May Open Doori WELI.ESLEV, Mass. (Ar I Wellesley C.Ollcge may accept men students provided tflat It does not beoome "a coeducational college In the trad1llona1 sense where activltk!s ind ltadcrshlP. roles are or\ented primarily to men, ' the Commisslo11 on the Future of the College recommends. • .. i I • 4 Mil v mor \ \ •· I ~ps We Advance By Hyphens By mOMAS MURPHINE Of .. Otli)I ~llM S!ltf Ni x on WASHINGTON CUPl l -Pr'5ident Ni.J:on, declarinc that the full importance of the Laos invasion wlll not be known for some Ume, said the campaign shows the South Vietnamese can right very well and ha ve "passed • milestone" in the capability to teke over the fighting. Nixon , in an easy. relaxed hour-long intervtew with ABC TV commentator Howard K. Smith, predicted the Laos opera\Jon wouJd enable him lo continue withdr1wing U.S. forces 1t the current rate of 12,500 a month. The Laos operation, Nixon said, "can- not be judged a great succus" but it "cannot be judged 1 failure." He said the campaisn could be UR.Ued Says s. only on a lone ranae buis, and that would not be known for JOme time. He said It now m1y be possible for hifu to announce accelerated withdrawals and hls next &Mouncement may display "the end of the tunnel," a phrase often used during the JohMOn Administration. "1''or six weeks the South Vietnamese have disrupted the enemy supply lines," he said . "For six weeks they've tied down some of the enemy'a best divisions, and for she weeks we have seen, too, that the South Vietnamese have been ablt to hanclle themselves quite well under very, very difficult circumstances.'' Smith asked Nixon if the Communists will be able to repair their trails and pipelines before the r1iny seuon be,W 1n about a month. .;They can never &•in back the time ,'' Nixon 1aid. The interview in the White House Library was devoted mainly to Nixon's guardedly optimistic assessment of the Laos operation. But the President did speak about 1972. Nixon. who was widely wtitten off arter his 1962 defeat for the California governorship and his lost bid for the presidency two years earlier, said he made no decisions about 1972. And. he voluntttred -with o u l prompting by Simth -that he had not decided who "may be the man who Pass Milestone runs for vice president." Some liberal Republicans are demandln& thtt Nixon dump Vice President Spiro T. A&new from the ticket. But as to whether h~ would voluntarily become 1 one-term President, Nl.1.on told Smith : "The idea of what you call 'voluntary reti rement,' I would augge,,t, is quite premalurt where I am concerned and I would say that anybody who reads my life wou1d perhaps lake that kind of story with a gra in of salt." Nixon steadfastly ruled out any deadline for complete withdrawal - which Democrats in Congres~ are deman- dine. He contended it would "torpedo'' •hit tittle hope remalnl for 1 necoti•f.td setUemtnt and enable the ConununJJt! to adjust their military tactics ac• cordingly. The South Vietnamese, he said, had shown in Laos their "capability of hacf~ ing it," and "if the United States now were to throw in the towel and come home and the Communists took over South Vietnam, then all over Southeut Alia, all over the PaclHc. in the Midtaat , in Europe, in the world would suffer a blow . . . would suffer • blow from which it mi,tu not recover." His (Oil in South V~tnam, N i I 0 n declared, was to end the war in such a way that South Vie1n1m "will surviv. a.s an independent country." NUMBERS GAME: If you're one of tbt: folb who flt:IU'e &oodneN by bigness, you'll be happy to learn today that the Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove Metropolitan Area is no longer the 39UI Jarcut in tht naUon. _______ .,._.,..,, _______ ...., ______ .,.... __ _ Alao. in cue you do not r9COa:niu the aforementioned hyphenated me1alopolis, it means the Orange Cou1ty area, elve or take a few mlle1 here and there. Anyway, the point is that in the U.S .. Cen1us of 1960. roughly one decade back, our Orange County area ranked popull· Uon-wise 39th behind such other areaa or urb1n sprawl as San Bemardino- ltlverslde-Ontario (31st); San Diego (Z!rd); and of course Los Anceles-Long Beach (3rd). NEW FJGURa now emerge from I.he lflO Census. Our Anaheim-Santa Ana· Garden Grove Metropolitan Area now ranks 18th largest in ~ mtion, a con- siderable boost in the standings. Total population for our area In the "TO figwea was pegtd at 1,420,33& soul!. * Anti·growth factioll.'I perhaps will 'draw 10me solace from the fact that we still haven 't passed Los Angeles-Long Beach In the impaction race. The growth meter for LA-Lone Beach in the 1970 rankin1s now gives that blessed area upcoast a total population or 7 ,032,075. lt moved up from third to second in the n•lional standings. * We. ho~'tver, did manage to 1hoot ahead of S•n Diego, San Bemardino- Jtiverside-Ontario •nd other places likt Portland . * So what does it all mean? Well, Chamber of Commerce folks rather enjoy all this rankinc of metropolitan status, especially if it appears your area is winning. It tends to show industries and others in far-away spots that your place ia a boomer, with economic Mwcle, a potential labor pool and besides that there must be some reason wby all those people are rushinc in there. PRESlDENT NIXON , HOWARD K. SMITH SHOWN AFTER TV IN TERVIEW Chief Executive Say& Incursion A betting U.S. Withdraw1I Stratqy * IT J\fUST BE admitted that in aome of our high-&rowth areas along the Orange Coast, like Huntington Beach and Cost. Mesa. there has been a amall measure of grumbling over the way they named our Metropolitan Area. Maybe, they say. it could have just been called the Orange Co u n t y Metropolitan Area rather than eoing to all the trouble of hyphenaling three town names that some will argue are a bit obscure to the folks in Billings, Montana. * Or. if you 're goinc to hyphenate in to1t1'n names, why not tdd a couple of more hypens and get in Huntington Beach or Costa ,_1tsa? Or maybe )'oli go for smaller but still well-known spot.! like San Juan Capistrano where the swallows come back. San Clemente where Presidtnt Ni1on comes back or Laguna Beach where, on a summer Sund1y afternoon, it setms everybody came back. And don't forget Newport Beach has John Wa yne. * Anyway, the poss ibilitie s for llyphena~d metropolitan Oran1e County are endlas. But take cheer, coastal folks. Someday they may decide to use thue metropolitan are.ts for smog designators. Then we'll be glad An1heim fhyphen) tanta Ana (hyphen) Garden Grove get all the credit. Moderate Wins Ballot For Irish Premiership BELFAST. Northern Ireland (U PI) - Brian Faulkner, a moderate, defeated hardliner William Craig today in a Unionist Party vote and became Prime Minister of Northern Ireland. He told newsmen his main aim would · be to restore law and order in the province torn by extremist violence. Faulkner. 50, succeeds Jame s Chichester-Clark. who resigned Saturday under pressure by Protestant con- servatives demanding a tougher policy against the province 's Roman Catholic militatts and the outlawed Ir is h Republican Army (IRA). He received his formal seal of office shortly after the election. Under Bri tish Parliamentary procedure the election was by Unionist Party members of Parliament. and the vote v.•as 26-4. The Unionist Party has ruled Northern Ireland since 1922 and twice before Faulkner missed the premiership by narrow votes. Faulkner. development minister io the outgoin& government, met more than 200 newsmen packed into the main hall of tile Northern Ireland Parliament building. "Tile most important 11ingle aim or my administration is the restoration of confidence to the whole of Northern Ireland," Faulkner said . "The kernel of the matter is law and order. We don't need new principles. We need practical rtsults on the ground." Faulkner made it clear he intended no radical departures from the policies of Chichester-Clark, whose t~·o years in office were pla(Ued with sectarian violence between the Protestant majority and the Catholic minority. A crowd of about 50 Protestant women shouting support for Craig. massed outside Parliament and s c r e a m e d .. Coward .•. traitor'' at Unionist Party members when results o( !he vot e became known. Faulkner told newsmen no law abiding person need fear bis aovernment' s policies. Cold Wea th er Knifes East Sno w Flurr ies Persist in Great Lakes Califor n ia Tempe rature s I' UMITI O ~11111 IMTl llMAT IONAt. sour,,..,. 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Further details were not immediately available. Stevens was named premier "-1arch 21. 1967, but was overthrown the same day in a military coup led by Brig. David Lansana, the army commander. T\\'O day~ later and four years ago today. senior army and police officers :1ta~tc1 a counter coup and 1et up a nal1oniil reformation council. It v.·as o~·erthrown by army and police non· commissioned officers in April, 1968. Constitutional government and civilian rule was resto red on April 26, 196& an~ Ste~r~s v.•as sworn in· again as prime minister. Sierra Leone. a former British Colony ~nd protectorate granted independence in 1961, lies in the southeast comer of . the West African bulge bttwetn Guinea and Liberia. The country, slighUy smaller than ~~ Carolina. has a population Of 2.S m1lhon persons. Ch urchill Gtm Sold LONDON (AP) -A pistol which Sir W in~ton Churchill carried when he was 11 young v.'ar correspondent has been purchased at auction by Carl Foreman an Americ an film producer, for $9.840. ' Wick a ~ Ol 0[ Q[ 0[ 0 'Go lda on 1, Trudeau on 2, Heath on 3, and an ob&Cl''IC! on 4!' 'War of Nerves' Russians Boost Arms to Syrians By United Press lateraallOAil Diplomatic sources in London said to- day the Soviet Union has followed up big new arms shipments to Egypt by Increasing the shipment of jet warplanes. antiaircraft missil's and other arms to Syria. The report came as Egyptian govern· rnent sources said military and political leaders were in the midst of conferenCes to prepare for possible resumption of hostilities with Israel. The armed forces of Egypt and Syria were recently placed under a single commander . Sources said the Egyptian meetings were part of Cairo's war of nerves aimed at "putling some muscle'' behind the Soviet-Egyptian drive to force Israeli withdrawal Irom occupied Arab terri· tory. UPI diplomatic correspondent K. C. Thaler reported from London that the Soviet arms shipments were part of a campaign by Moscow to woo the new Syrian regime of President Hafez Assad . His sources said that "considerable'' quantities of ~f I G fighters, SAM.Z missiles, tanks and other weapons had been shipped to Syria in recent days . The reports said Syrians were being trained by Russians to operate tbi Soviet 1urfa~to-air missile11. The Syrians already bad tflG fighters and tanks 1upplled by the Soviets in tbe past. Cairo reports said Egypt is stepping up a· diplomatic offensive to rally support from Wester n European nations for its proposals for a peaceful 3ettlement of the Middle East crisis. They said that wa~ the main purpose behind Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad's scheduled visits to Rome and Paris starting Satur· day. Wife, 18, Dies 111 Cruel Hoax SAN DIEGO (AP)-For a week, anonymous telephone callers told Rosyeln Johnson, 18, that her hus- band was back from Vietn1m and not interested in seeing her again. A similar call came in a male voice Monday. Mrs. Johnson telephoned her mother about it. The young Army wife then shot herself fatally in the chest, deputy coroner Glenn M. Saunders said . The husband is still in Vietnam, the Army advised. Israel has rejecud demand! by ECYPl and propoaals from the United States and United Nations to pledge withdrawal from Arab territory captured in the 1967 war as the price for peace in the Middle East. Prime Minister Golda Meir has said Israel will never return te the prewar boundaries. Secretary of Slate William P. Roaers was reported to have asked Israel to draw up a map of whit it considers "secure borders" in efforts to break the deadlock. Coup Toppl£s Newest Chief 111 A rg entina BUENOS AIRES (UPI \ -Argentina's military junta took over control of the country today after deposing President Roberto Al. Levingston in a bloodless coup. First act of the junta wa1 to reinsLate Brig. Gen. Ezequiel Martinez to tht. post of head of the joint chiefs or staff, the post from which he was fired by Levingston last Friday in a move that precipitated Monday night's crisis. Levingston. SI, stepped down 1hortly after midnight Monday after tryin& l!J fire Lt. Gen. Alejandro Lanusse, S2·year· old army chief of stall and chairman of the country's three-man junt.a. A communique from .army head· quarters shortly after midnight 1aid "the commanders-in-chief of the armed forces have decided to fire Cdn. Levingsto11 in his functions as President of the republic. We have decided to a.ssum~ political power in the nation until we fulfill the process of the Araentine revolution." Levingston, SI , quietly quit the Presidential office into which he was projected nint: months aio by the same three-man junta.. He walked out of the frosted pink government house at 3:25 a.m. and shook hands with about a dozen reporters. "Good luck," he said. !hen got lntn an automobile and drove to his official home three miles away. He has several days to pack up and move. out. Levingston's ouster came on a power play that failed. UP'I T.i.Mll I Bac k Wit h Mothe1· 1t1rs, Florence Wood has her baby. Dtuglas. safely back in her arms les!i than an hour after he w1s kidnaped out.side a Brooklyn store. 1 Police recovered the baby and arrested the abductor auspe ct shorUy 1 after receiving a description o! the woman from a ta xi drivtr. - I I 1 , • Fo•••••tl* Valle y Totlay'• Final .. IW.Y." Stocks ; --. .. ' ' VOL "4, NO. 70, 2 SECTIONS, 26"PAGEs ORANGE COUNTY, ,CAtiFORNIA TUESDAY,.MARCR 23,. lt71 TEN CENTS • . ' Stale ·Mad Controversy Ends By ALAN DllOON Of .. Dtiltr , •••• A,1four-hour public· Marini ·on whether tJ>t. 3$-acre Steveraan brothers mud dump ~-Huntington Beaeh coristltutes a public nW.aanct ended ~In st.ale mate Monday .l!iRhl. . ·Five members of lht city council, • ~rfg as a quui-judidal body. deadlock- ed on a motion that a nulunct does ui"st -with two "Ayes," two "Nog" end one abstention. . 'Blood shed' ' • City Attorney Don Bonfa ruled tbal the motion failed , motions to reconsider arut. conUnue the hearing f<r additional n:poda. from the city'& Envlromnental Couuml and the city .. sta.fl were then made by cooncllmen. 1'\e;lle moUons carried and. the public hearing was coDUnued to 7:30 p.m. at th• APril-lt·couocil meeting . Bonf1 pointed out that he doubled whether 11ubsequent testimony could JeqllY ~Utu\e ~~Gnal evidence. . : ''Tbe finding ·wu made ~at tbt ·.c:on- cJtWoo ol evldenet," be commented. ~ Bonfa had recommended that the coun- cil (ind a public nuiSance exlated and indicated that if thia was the finding the stiff would not file an tnjuoctlpn citlling for the awne:n to abate tJ)e nuiaance immediatt.ly but would attempt to read! aome setllemeflt wllll tbe operators. lf the ·brothers, Joseph and Carl Stever~n.i cooperated Qt efforta xto ,spl~ the IRblem. then the action might never be filed , Bonfa Aid. W!lll1m Carlaon, 1n attorney· reyresen- tln1 the brothers. said that th< brolh<rs hoped tn give • definite commitment within 11.x months on the future of the dump 1t Hamilton Avenue .and Magnolia Street, behind the Southern California Edi.sOn generating station. · · He llated" four sll!ps the owners offered t.o'take In the meantinie : -To continue working with • dr ied • Viets ' ' • Ill Stalemate bacteria cultures that· "eat" the crude oil at the dump Ind pwpartedly tliminate odor&. E.sUmatea or the total CO!t"-of this program varied from $30,000 :...to $80,llOll. -To consider ua:i.na: la:J,000 cubic yards of fill dirt, possibly to convert the site to a trailer par,k or a recreational area. -Ta step up the skimming of oil from the ponds. · _;To limit futqre dumping" of oil field wastes to ball the dump. Leave Councilman balked at the last proposal with Vice Mayor Jerry Matney and.Coun- cilman Jack Green both 1rguin1 tha• continued dumping •l the southerly 20 acre. of the site would compound the prob fem . · Councllman Ted BartleU COW'ltered tha t for the benefit of oil drllllng opera· tions in Huntington Beach the dump would . have to be pbued out over a (Set DUMP, P11e J) Laos Threat Made • By Manson ' , ' . Heavy Red Fire Follows Pulwut LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charle.t Manson told lWi> of the prosecutors at the Taie:.LaBianca murder trial that there was "a:oi.ng to ht nothing but mufd&r and bloodshed afterward!" if ht glfs lhe death penalty. ' Dlputy District Attorney . Vlacent T, Buglios i and his aS!iStant, Stephen Kay, were chatting with Manton · through a wire mesh grill in an anteroom where he listens to proceedings by loudspeakers before the session btagn this morning. Kay told newsmen during a rece!I ln the closing arguments of the trial 's penalty phase that they ,J!,ad made some remark that Manson seemed to have 1 cold aqd that the cult leader suddenly 1aid lo them : "lf I get the -death penalty, there's gaing to be nothir\.g but murder and b!odshed afterwards because r·m not goin& to like it." Mamon just a short time earlier had been singled out by the attorney . for one of the three woman dtfendan~. Leslie Vin · Houten, aa the "matevolent figure who "systtmatk:ally destroyed everything that was ·good · Jn tht yoong gltl and led her to murder." :without menOoning Manson by name, Maxwell Keith said the 21-year-old Miss Van Houten was tr&Mformed from "a quite ordinary girl" lnto 1 killer. He said she had been taking drugs 1tnce the was ll and "her mind waa 1 vacuum -a ·vacuum for the intnu1lon of the devil" when she went to the Spahn Ranch where the Manson "family'' Uved. . Manson's lawyer said In Monday'• pn> fttdlngs. the cult leader was "enti~ed t.Q his" We" bttause monty •u belllg rillde from the trial and he was a vtClim of politia and publicUy. Marina Palace IY.ame Chan[ • i: o Airpo rt Clu b , Tbe name of Seal Beach's cpntroversial ti'ei'lage dance hall, tht Marina Palau, bis been changed. Al of this morning a sign outside tbi quonstt building on Pacific Coast Highway proclaims It ~ be the "Air~r! Club." It's the same name uftder which owner William L. Robertson onct tio5led a.legal draw poker operation . •t ·~I want to make it ahlolutely: clear tb1t there b no ainnection. with the old 'Airport Club,' •· said Robertson. "But 1 •Qpecl some trouble from lht litUe old ladies.'' . . -Last summer, Robertson and his wife •re brought before ~. ctty . couocil ln • 1 license revocation hearing. Pplict tineged that they had allowed dnig traffic on . the premises and cohdened" pl'o- tnbtuous acUv\Ues among patrons. The RobMts<tnt were de.a~ of the cHUges when the city council voted f.1 to dismiss the case. ~ Robert.son , a former lm Ange}es police llitltenant, made headllnes during the mtd·11fties for his operation of the Airport Club' poker palace and repeated attempU to" bring gambllni bad: an.er It b1%1! titett outlawed . PI LOT HOLDl1VG OPEN HOUSE ,. J ' P'rteod! and re1den: of the DAILY Pp.pr are invited ·to a two-nl,hta-ooly oPtll houJe to inl'peet the •larced and modernlted faciHtle• of 1he newsp1per at 3.10 W. Bay St., eo.tl M1!111. ' . ,:n,, plant will be open' "' the puhli< tmm 7 tn t p.m~ bM.h WedMlld1y and 'lllll!'l<l•y." Some porting plaw will be availablt on the pUint'I parking Jot; other vlsltor1 may find M-&U.t lptCU lllilJ Bay and 'l'bllrin -la. '· , SAJGON · CUPJ) -The last of %-4,000 South Vietiiameae troops who struck Into Laos &lJ: weeka ago were withdrawing tonight under heavy North Vietnamese fire. Communist pressures intensified on U.S. suj>port units and at least eight AmericaM were killed, field reports said. Military s<>W'ces said South Vietnamese commanders closed another outpost in Laoa late today, leaving only one re- miinlng base Of thl! several whk:h had been established for the offensivl! against the . Ho Chi Minh Supply Trail. Fewer than ~.000 South Vietnamese troops r~ ...... Oil Company Seeks Waste ·Outtttll OK · ·-. ,. 1 , . ".:t , .(l.\IL.Y.il1~T ....... W •ldlltof ..... ,_.; ( ' DASH FO~ fi'!IEEDOM COSTS sosp'ECT HIS .l1FE . Slftll llll'W G~ COmpaOy Ii ... t1n1 per-mis.Mon ·frOm the U.S.· Army Corps ot En.gfriee'a to ~babd a 2f:.indl olitfaU wute .w1ttr .dilpoHl. line · near \he · bluffs In Hwitlngtmi Beach. O.p~y. Do_n And~t~ St1nd1 Over.Bod.y of .Robert ~ltm11 · The line ,WOil.id dump 11alt brines - the .water stparated from oil deposits -·MO feet ou~ \nto the ocean. It, would run· parallel to IJl uisting 16 inch outfall IOflle 1,1~ feet west of 23rd Slreet. Co sta Mesa Bandit Slairi ' · Peirnlsslon for the line has alrl!ady ~ &rapted by the California Water l!."IJl!'OI Q)nJrol Board. 1n· J;lespera~e Freedom Bid City Publlc Work& Director James Wheeier said Huntington Beach has no p>alti011 on the -•aste lint. "We ha ve no reqllirement.s more strln· gent than the water resource board.'' he explained. -By AR.THUR R. VINSEL OI tlte D4-llY "'llil ltiaff Darting down an , alley and ignoring commands , to halt, a bandit suspect with a reputation ag 1 la.,er made a suicidal dasb · from a , Costa Mesa courtrpmn Mol1day and was 11hot lhrough the .heart at SO feiet. · · "Rober.t. J ., CJem1s, 21, .spun . around once and1eollapsed to the pavement. l:fe appatintly died in the l.rms or' I?tpaty ; M&r.:haJ Donlhl !i· ~dre~s. outside tilt old; securlty·poor Harbor JudleiaJi Of.Uicl CourL . Clem1s' sister wat al her clerical job inside when i( happentd: · Thi! faja,1 . incldent was I.he Uj:'Ond esca~ in one·tJeek at the 195&-b.uilt fac il- ity "whiCh la ~Y outdated• IJ'ld ovei:- crowded. . · · Marlhal Dillard ·O. ·wnkers:on· said tte may demand additiPnal mahpoWer· to toughen lt!f;:U:ity al the old facility, which inClu:Hes ·•· ntObile lraifer courtroom for Division One "CaaeS: . · . · Cleln.Q .hl:d been 'confr'onted by polia &e\tetal · ttm'es' ainct . Mirch t, '·when he waa ·•cresl.ed , in -O>stl · M~a by P.atrdl· man Bi.II Bechtel charged with 1ssault on a poUce offiar. · He. ·was ·Cree-on his. own recognizance pendini a bearini when .on· March 5, 1 gunman claim.Inf to be high' on :dr\Jp: held up the Barg&Jn Basket ·Marke_t., 817 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa took $11,(111) and fled. · Cltmas, of %070 Federal Ave ... Costa Me!ja, was arrested.the followlng Morid.1t' night after depo15iting $1.<m in' cash It 1 nearb)' Bank·.-of1 America branch. The teller recognized the bundl"e, bound wtth a ·rubber b1nld, as one Ull! braneh had issued to the. same store robbed three day1 earlier. A cache of $10,000 was recovered from · Ciemas' · home. while detectives. linked hhn to thret more holdups while the de- fendant was in custody. He wa1 al.so charged with parole viola· liQfl; 11temming from a 1969 Garden GroVI! market robbery. Q!mplainla cb&rilng him in tl1o4o C1$el we.re ilSlled Fri~y. lea.ding to Cle.maa' schedUitd arraignmenl in Division One Monday afternoon. St.andiflg ·at the . trailer dcKr. only a fiw · feet from 'the jail holding cell. Deputy . Ahdrews called C1emas' case at .1 :ta . p.m. and Deputy Al Eichler escorted him fO!':'tard. He 1'BS not handcuffed. Breaking away two feel from the IS.. DEAlJI DASH. Pace II The Army Corps of Engineers is asking for cammenlt on or objections to the waste line to be aent to Department of the Army .. Los Angele1 District, Corpa of Engineers, P.O. Box 271 t. Los Angeles, California, 90053, by April 20. The Corps 1ald granting of the permit will be based on the impact of the proposed work o.n "Navigation. fish and wUdlife, water quality, economics, con- serv1tlon, 1e1thetlca, recreatlon. water supply, ecmyatems, and other factors." Army Sets Hearing For Captain Medina l'ORT McPHERSON, Ga. CUPll - The Army announced today that initial pre-trial bearing in the court martial of CapL Ernest L. Medina, charged w!1::. overall responalbility tor the My Lai nwaacre, wW be held here May 24. Medina is aet to be court.·martialed for the premeditated murder of 102 Viet- name&e civilians during hia company's 1woep through lhe My Lal hamlet on March • lt, 1988. 1be 34-year-<1ld career officer could receive -the death sentenca II foand suillY ol th< apecillcaUon" Insurance Rates to Soften . . . -Beach ·Fire Rating Drops Homeowner• and businesSmeh \n 'Hun- tington Beach can look ftr drop.. in I.heir fire Insurance premius., dty Flrt Olid Ray Picard lllVIOlll1<ed Mqnday. He and Waj,u Supttlnltndent Ed Stang revealed that the c1ty bu received • \l'wtr ftre ratJna: number from the P..aclfic 'Ffre"Rlting ,Burtau. The -city· hu bun anlgned a' class I ratlll1 eoftlplil.;i wllh lhi dm • iu•de tgiW!n lthe clty1 at 'the 'list rating in 1-mber. lfil<. Picard 1'0tnted DUL th.at • reduction er one·ela$1 Ufually mtans a reduction tn· . fire lnsuruoe prt1nltum of about 10 'pm<nl. ., ··But . for some homeowner1 and deficteney area•/' he aaid. buslM.ssnwi the. reductlODI may be u Goln& throuah IOIM of the areas U· much u 30 percent," ht uld. 1mlned bJ the: r1Un1 bureau. P1card. He 1dvited reskienl! to conllct thdr noted that the lmprvvement in the Ure lnsural'JCt!: agents to determine ho'( L'8 dtpartme:nl., wbicb · now hu 1%7 men new grade wtll 1rted them'. . , f ¥Cf. a Sl.7"m1Jll:on buqet, wu ff percent. "Whit effect lhll will hA" ,.,. ;to. "!fall. ol,, the .deficiency polnta In th< llil"lnce ratn will depend on the: lD-I J)tlt C.mt ·lot · 11ck ·of manpower and di~ Policy 1nd , It.a ~ .... 1 tn$tte> ladder . .companies," he U· terms,'' the ,firt chief qbWYft. '"1'* · ·!J!:ll 1 • , • • cull will comt. at rene~aJ Ume." , *' .I ~ it~ wt11 1'1-it a · RCond ladder Picini 11id that the ft(IUctk>nt ' I ~any opet1lin.g toan end two new not 1pply to areu of tAe. city · havi g fl" 1titloN: In tJUne. mutu11l w11ter companies or being .uved 'Jbe tmProvement in water supplies by private wen.. "There ts "° chin&• , 1lso helped lower the Jrlting,. the . chief In lhe t.B classillcallon for lheH waler &aid. NIXON ANAL YIES THE WAR, PAGE 4 malned on Laotian soil and military sources 1aid they. would be out by Wednesday night. The men retre.ating Tuesday night drove across the fro11tier back to South Vll!lnam in a column of tank!, armored. personnel carriers, trucks and jeepa which, field report.t said, were coming under "increasing harassment" from North Vil!tnamese. A~k 4% Increase U.S. Army heUcopter gunships Ind U.S. ·Air Force f4 Phantom jet fl&hter· bombeta constanUy wheeled and circled overhead, firing rockets and cannon an4 dropping bombs into well concealed pot1i- tions manned by North Vietnamese units using rocket-propelled grenades, mortars, rockets and rines. Report.a said the Communis~ acored several hits on the long armored column which inQuded trucloi filled with ,..-ounded South Vietnamese and one command jeep wlthout tires. The North Vietnamese !See ASL\ WAR, Pase J) Elementary Teachers Bid . . ' for;Pay;R~ise Tonight By TERRY COVILLE Of tM Dtlly ....... ,, Teactiert in the Huntington.Belch City (elementary) School Di1trlct will praent their inltfaJ pay raise reque4b tonight tt 1· meeting of district truat.eet. The 282 clauroom . tl!achers have prepared an e.!Jht·page d o o u m e n t outlining 2.1 proposed changes· in teacher aintracts. · The aaltry increase reque1ted 1& four percent for 111 teachers, plus an 1Mua1 cost of living increase 1s listed. In the Cofit of Livi ng Index for Oringe County. Last year's cost of Jiving increase was about 4.9 percent for the area, Pie r Beer Sale s For Hunti ngton Oka yed by ABC Betr will be sold in early May on the Hun Ung ton Beach Pier. The Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) Board haa overruled a prolett by a local clergyman ag1lnst the beer aala proposed at two an a ck hara on lht pier. City councilmen had lnlUally approved beer ull!s late last year, but a protest againat their approvll was filed with the ABC Board by Rev. ~ward Erny, pa.sfor ol the F J r s t United Methodist Church. • Rev. Erny soua:ht to stop beer sale1 at a aandwich anack shop owned by Ron Smith on the grounda the pier ts a public recreation area. "We have no further plll'll for protest,'' Rev. Erny said today. He &aid a letter from the ABC Board Informed him Friday th.at beer aalet would be allowed. ·"They 1aid we didn't establish a case th.at it would be detrimental to ~bllc morala or increaae police problenu: there." '!'h• Rev. Erny preaented hll proteal al an ABC bearing Feb. 16 wllh mi. appointed hurin1 officer William Green praldln1 In HWIUngton Beach cllY ....,. cil chambers. 'D'll! bffr. nla can 't ltlrt unW about May I because ol a 40<lly walU., period required by lhe ABC Board. • 13-nation Everest Party at Base Camp KATMAllDU. Nepal (APJ :.. The l&ile- tion Mt. Evere!lt exptd1Uon pttched bate camp today alol7,l00 feel, Ila !Int matn targ~t . on Jbe Jour!leY _ up ~ w'"'kl'a hi&htlt mount.In. llonnon [)yllJ:tl)furtb, tlie '1-year.old Swlu-Americ•n leader of the erpedltlon. 11ld he and his 21 Other 'climbers would 1tl oul ,.,,, to pitch !heir. lint big!> alUtuda·camp at 20,000 feet. according to Charles Palmer, depulf dllltrict superintendent. The cost of living raise plus four percent would .raise teachers' pay about nine percent, nearly tbe ume as they received this fall following 1 summer· long aaJary battle with trusteea which ended in arbitration. "Wt have two main concerns In out proposal," said Gary Trickett, chairman of the certificated employl!a council which negotiates salaries. They are the salary increase and elimination of the masters' degree requirement for top level pay raises." After so m11ny ytars with the district, a teachl!r is required to have a master'• degree for further step (automaUcl in- creasea within the district salary range. "We'd rather see graduate units re- quii-ed rather than 1 muter'• decree," Trickett said. Palmer' Indicated the most expensive Item 'in the .teacher proposal could be a request !Or aimpensation for ac- cumulated sick leave. Teachers want to be paid for sick leave days allowed, but not taken when any teacher resigns, retires or dies. "That could cost more than $500,000," Palmer said today. The pay proposals are the: initial step for meet and confer procedure•. Teachers are asking : for a March 29 session with district t.-iistees to discuss their proposals. Several m~tings are expected, with both ,aidet. offering changes, before a final contract is worked out. "We expect thlnJs to be more ope~ and much easier this year," Trickett &aid. ' Palmer will prtsent costs of var~ teacher request. to the trustee! at tonight's meeting, tcbeduled fOr 7:JO o'clock in the. library' at Dwyer School. Oruge Weather That chilly coastal foa will creep further inland torright, bringing a cooler Wedneaday under haiy &un· shine and temperatura In t h • middle IOs. INSIDE TODAY Prefilknt Nimn uUs nation that ·south Vlctnamc.se handled therftsl!lv.!1 wr~ wtU in Laos. Storti, Page 4. ., 'l l ., ' J? D>ILY PILOT H T1.1t$diJ, Mmll 23, 1971 Add J,000 Feet Front Plfflll I: Marine Choppers To Fly Higher DUMP ••• ' perled of lilnt. The ~arlng Included testlmof)y by f<MD" homeowners, Air Pollution Co n t r o I DI.strict iDve.1tlgator Ora Welll, Deputy Diltrld Allofoey !Wpb ~anoon and tho clty'1 oil inspector, Bob Davit:.' · At the end of the lengthy and detailed hearing, Vice ~1ayor Matney. C.Ouncllmen George 1t1cCracken and Gretn y.·anted to continue it for a report from the Environmental Council and the staff. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tJle Dl"f 'lltl Stttf Orqe Coast homeowner• who live under the air paths used by Marine Corps helicopters from Santa Ana and El Toro will aet wme relief from tbe noiae 1enerated by tbe lbips. Hirth Heads State Meet On Freeway By L PETER KRIEG Of 1tte OtllY Pllet lllff Newport Beach will confront the State of California on the iS!ue of their Pacific Coast Freeway agreement with a three.- man committee beaded by Mayor Ed lllrth. 'lbe Newport City Council Monday 11igbt adopted a resolution givl{tg the commJttee only 60 days to engineer a bilateral ruclulon of the agreement. Mayor Hirth also bowed to the Freeway Fighters' wishes by naming Viet Mayor Howard Rogers and Coun· cilman Donald Mclnni.J to serve with him on the ne1otlaUng committee. Mcinnis and Rogers were the only two councilmen to support repeal of the agreement in the March 9 special ~lecUon in which midenta voled over- whelmingly to cancel the contract. In adopting the resolution, which Mcln- niJ bad authored, the council acted almost without comment. The directive states : ''The City Council will unilaterally res· cind the existing freeway agreement as deacrl.bed above within 60 days In the event that a mutually-acceptable bUateral resclaslon agreement is not achieved." 'Ibe state bas indicated a willingneu to talk to the city about the agreement, which involves the freeway route easterly from Bayside Drive through Buck Gully in Corona del Mar. The state bas also indicated it might agree to modification of the route if a penclin& city traffic study shows a need. But to date the state has not come right out and said it will agree to throw the agreement out. Whatever becomes of the negotiations, they will apparently start in a hurry. The council directed Mayor Hirth to write state Public Works Director James A. Moe asking that a meeting be schedul- ed u soon u: possible. 11le Freeway Flghter1 had pressed hard to get Mcinnis and Ro1era on the nesotlatlng committee. That pressure became apparent Monday night when Wally Koch, chairman of the Freeway Flgbten Citizen CoordinaUng Commlttee, addressed the council. Koch 1ald the OX "feels duty bound and compelled to strongly urge that Howard Rogers and Donald Mcinnis be authorized to represent the City Coun- cil." The council's tougb stand in the up- coming negotiations should have betn even tougher, acrording to Koch. He also gaid the people didn't vote for a negotlaUng committee. they "overwhelmingly approved a ballot pro- po5itlon to adopt an ordinanti! rescinding a portion of the Freeway A(reemenC." "Therefore, It ls incumbent upon the city to immediately notify lbe state that the city of Newport Beacb rescinds that portion of lbe freeway agreement per- taining to Route 1 Freeway between Newport Beach City Limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive," Koch said. OU"•I COAST DAILY PILOT OR.I.NOi COAIT rUILJIHIMQ COMl'AH't l•lt•r+ N. Weel ''"'""' .,,. l"vbl....., Jetlc a, C111r{e'f Vlei '"'°""' Miii ~I M•~ lli•••• Kee,iC ..... llie111•1 A. M111rplll•.- ~ll'll E•!llllt Al•• Dirlil• Mt or-. '-'' '"""' /.liter+ W, l1te1 Auecllll EdhW ,. ................. Offk9 1717i leech le11J1.,1r4 M1lll•1 A.ttfr1u1 P.O. leit. 7t0, t2641 OtW """" utMM a.ct11 m ,...,., ,._ C..11 Mlllltl 1111 Wat ...,. Sir"' ,.....,.,. a.di: .am .. .....,, ....,:ev•rf h11 C..,,_M; llS Nfll1l'I II C..Prllrlt R.NI Brigidicr General Henry W. Hise, com- manding general of El Toro MCAS, today aMau.nced the helicopters would be ad- ding 1,000 feet to their cruising altitude while irullde the Orange Coast control zone. Erfecllve Thursday, the ?i.farine Corps hellcopten will fly at 1,800 feet outbound and 1,600 inbound. Hise made the aMounei!ment at a preas conference held at El Toro MCAS. He said the change is the resuJt of eight months work with representatives of the Federal Aviation Administration (~AA) and the Orange County Airport. ''We want to do anything In our power to mlnlmlze the objectionable aspects o! our ·operations and still carry on those operations," the general esplalned. A Real Toehold Ul'I Ttl•H19 Councilman Al Coen objected, arguing that the purpose of the htariQf WlilS to make a Onding and tba{ 't8• orily rea.sOn to continue it y.·ould be, Jq\ htar additional evidi!nce from homeowner~ · Matney, holding out for t fl• Envp-onmental C9uncll and st.aff reports, commeoted, "l can't make a decision on what I1ve heard tonight." With Bonfa recommending that a fin· ding be made, Green moved that tbe council find the dump a public nuisance. Matney and Green were in favor with McCracken and Bartlett o~sed. . • Coen abstained, explaining later UtJt he did not consider the d\Jmp a pu~lic nuisance so far as odors were conce(Oed, but felt that it was an attractive nuisepce: to children. He thought barbed wire should be put on top of the fence. CurrenUy, the helicopters fly at 300 feet outbound and 600 feet inbound along seven routes which were established in 1951. The altitude is figured from mean ~a level, so at times the helicopter• are about 300 feet from rooftops in billy country. A locksmith's deft fingers finally free a young San Francisco lady's toe from this padlock which closed on the pedal digit during some horseplay with her boyfriend. The e1nbarrassed girl, 20, refused to identify herseU. McCracken moved that\tbe matter be reconsidered and then con ti nu~ to April 19 and these votes carried. Mayor Donald Shipley, who is In Paclfjca Hospital, and Oo u n c fJ riJ.' n Norma Gibbs dld not attend tb£ bel)'i.J1C. Tbe control zone la an area of about a five milt radius from El Toro MCAS which is used to control all civilian and military aircraft in the area. Hise said the higher altitude flying will be used in visual flight cond!llons when the a!illng is above 2,300 feet. "~en the ceiling drops below that, as Jt has today, we will go back to our previous routes a11d fly on in- struments. We estimate that these weather conditions will prevail only about 15 percent of the time and the frequency of flights under these condi· lions will be small,' 't.he General ex- plained. Hise said the two areas that the facility has drawn the most complaints from are the Palisades route near Corona de! Mar and the Tustin route. 'I'be Palisades flight pattern leads from the Santa Ana Alr Facility, over University Park, UC Irvine. along the eastern edge of Corona del Mar and out to sea. ll is used by helicopters participating in exercises on carriers at sea and as a route to Camp Pendleton. From Page 1 DASH ... mobile courtroom door, Clemas sprinted down the alley through parked cars ad- jacent to the American Legion Hall. Deputy Marshal Eichler was in hot pursuit, a few feet behind. Costa Mesa Police Detective Capl. Robert Green said Eichler and Andrews commanded Clemas to halt four times between them. while state Jaw prescribes three such orders. Lawmen are limited to shooting at felony suspecLs, or if they are en- dangered. Realli:ing he was losing the race, Eichler started lo draw his own gun, when Andrews' .38 caliber Tevolver cracked, spinning Clemas around with a groan. He fell 50 feet away. Costa Mesa detectives Don Casey and Bob Lennert -attracted by the shouts ta halt -ran to the door just in time to witness the fatal shooting. Clemas was dead on arrival at Hqag Memorial Hospital. Ecology Tree From Page 1 ASIA WAR •.. were reported to have destroyed several vehicles. A U.S. unit of tank! •nd armored personnel carriers took 2i,.i, haur1 to carry newsmen from the South Viet4 name.se outpost at Lang Vei 1n South Vietnam to , the Laotian border, a distance of eight miles. Reporters saw smouldering tanks and bodies along the road. · Official spokesmen at forward opera- tional bases and in Saigon would not speeulate on Communist tacUc.s, but field commanders said that with the Laos offensive ending, North Vietnamese units could be expected to concentrate on positions in South Vietnam held by the 10,000-rnan U.S. support. force. ·Field reports said at least eight Americans ·were killed and 10 wounded Monday and Tuesday in actions in and around Khe Sanh , the big U.S. support base in South Vietnam's northwest cor- ner. These raids included one in which North Vietnamese commandos, carrying satchel ·charges d.. dynamite, stormed into the base, killing three Americans and 1,1.•ounding 13. The winddown In the Laos campaign was reflected in the decreased U.S. air role. The number of sortie!' reported Tuesday -ton -was about ant-fourth of the figure fl-Own at the height of the campaign. A sortie is a single strike by 1.a ·single aircraft against a single tatget. Jn Saigon. U.S. headquarters said American warplanes which attacked North Vietnamese territory Sunday and Monday ·destroyed three anl\alrcraft missile sites. The raids were flown by U.S. Air Force and Navy planes against bases in the area of the Mu Gia Pass, a funnel from Narth Vietnam into the upper reaches of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. A communique said the raids v.·ere ordered in response to North Vietnamese firings on American planes flying over Laos and South Vietnam last week. In Laos proper, governmel'lt troops counterattacked today and recaptured Communist-held Ban Done.Cho, five miles northeast ot the Luang Prabang airfield, reliable military 1 our c es reported. CIAIL'f' Jl'1LOT Steff 1'11119 Tl may n~ be exactly what poet Joyce Kilmer had in mind, bul this free-form ecology tree which has sprouted on South Pacilic Avenue between 17th and 18th Streets in Sunset Beach certainly rates an "E" for effort. The "tree," made from abandoned wine bottles and other flot.~am, was produced by amateur ecologists on a cleanup campaign. \ Innocence Proclaimed By Hartelius at Trial By TOM BARLEY OI ttte C111tr l'lllt lltlf A long prostc11Uon grilling of Dr. Ebbe HMteliua went into its second day today with the Corona del Mar physician repeatedly denying accusations that he planned the burning of his oUlce and the then nine days earlier or his car. Visibly di.!Jturbed by peraliient ques- tioning of Deputy District Attorney Al Novick, Hartellus protuted at one point this morning: ''I was innoctt1t, I was innocent.'• Bui be continued to answer "I don't know" or "I don't recall" lo scores ()f questions as the prosecutor probed Youth, 18, Gets 5 to Life Term In Man's Slaying Miles Cot of Westminster was sen· lenced Monday to five years to life Jn state prison for his role in the killing of a Huntington Beach hardware ex- ecutive. Judge Byron K. tfcMillan imposed the maximum term on Cox, 18, of 1750 Irene Way. He denied a plea for pro- bation on Cox's conviction for seC()nd degree murder. C.01 and Frederick Yanke, 20, Gardena. were arrested last Aug. 21 shortly after Huntington Beach police found the body of Walter Christie. 51. at the bachelor's home at 8131 San Angelo Drive. Cox admitted he was responsible for the multiple stab wounds and sl ashed throat that led lo Christie's death. Yanke was later sentenced to one year in Orange County Jail on reduced charges of receiving stolen property. Invesligators said both men were hitchhiking when Christie picked them up and invited them to spend the night in his apartment. HiJ naked body was Jound on tbe Jlvlng room floor the next morning. the banking transactions lb1t Jed to what the .DA alleges WLS the bribing of key proSecuUon witness Jim Blevins. Hartelius insisted today that the $900 paid to Blevins by his blonde mistress Reba Vaughn was paid at the woman'1 insistence and that he had no knowledge of the reason for the payment. Blevins has tesUfle:<i that Hartelius gave his sister the money to send him out of lhe state u police investigation into the fil'f: and theft intensified. He told the jury In Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge's courtroom that he collaborated with Harte!Jus last March 31 to hide the auto in Loog Beach and that he doused the doctor 's offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway with gasoline and sparked the blaze last April I , Hartelius today blamed Blevins for both incidents and told NoVjck, that he repeatedly advised Newport Beach..police of Blevins' rf'l!lpomibillty when Mrs. Vaughn's brother ·demanded Monday from him, The 50-year~ld . pbys.ici.an refuted Mrs. Vaughn's claim tlJat he asked htr to pay bribe money to Blevins to Teduce the chances that invesUgators could trace the payment to him. Defense attorney Matthe\v Kurilich repeatedly stepped iry to halt the ques- tioning as the persistent Novick con· st.anlly rephrased his questions in a bid to draw a derlnite response from the physician. But the great majority of his objections v.·ere overruled by Judge Judge who made it clear Monday that Kurilich's unexpected placing of the defendant on the \\0ilness stand left Hartelius open to a much wider SC<lpe of questioning than would have been possible otherwise. Nov ick today predicted that the case will continue at least two more days. He expecll to put 11t least 10 rebuttal witnesses when he completes his grilling of Hartelius. Among those witnesses will ~ Reba Vaughn, the Costa Mesa woman who shared her home with Hartelius prior to the burning of the doctor's office. Corona del Mar Girl Undergoes Kidney S,urgery : Kidney trahsplant surgery for a teenager receiving a healthy organ from her mother to replace her own sinsle remaining diseased kidney was under way this morning at Orange Countf, : Medical Center. ' The critical period !or Corona del Mfr High School senior Mary French, 18, still Hes ahead. She has been in the facility aince her kidney -ravaged by a birth defect that claimed the other 14 years ago -failed March 10, well ahead of the scheduled operation. Doctors Carl Pearlman and Ron1ld Miller were implanting one !rom Mr.s. Jo.anne French shortly before noon, but prior tests indicated the operation should give Mary a new life. ; · ' She has been confined to home at' 21l1:91 Kline Drive, Santa Alla Heights, or the hospital, in reti!nt weeks, 1,1.·~n mechanical dialysis was used to cleanse · her bloodstream. Repeated medical costs have deple\fd the French family's savings and a Mary French Fund Drive containing $4,000 so far is established at 1321 S. Ollve St., Santa Ana. Miss French ls a member In Harbpr Area 4·H Club activities and varlo\J.! cha pters have orgallized benefit pro- grams extending into summer months to help the family. •:i Rest Room Bidi· Out at Doheny The State's Department of General Services lhis week advertised for· bi'ds on a rest room project at the Dohen)' State Beach campgrounds scheduled., to cost nearly $200,000. The bids, which will be opened APi-il 14, cover lhe building of three slandHd rest rooms, two others combinhi& showers into their use. several W8.$k water stations, along with water, p.41 and sewage ilL'ltallations. • All the projects will be built In tfie campground section of the beach, apatt from the recenUy remodeled day-.u.st and picnic areas. COLOR IT BRIGHT! ,. ' ' There h•ve been more innovations in carpet dyeing processes in the last ten year5 than the precedin9 ftft)'. years. Dye houses can dip carpetin9 in a single dye beck end come out with a carpet of six colors due to t unique op9r"1tlon of treating yarn to -.cc1pt or repel different pigment1 • Several printin9 methods now exi1t. One method involves tufting 1 wh~t• carpet and subiecting this c1rpet to 1 moving track which has trays compressing against the carptting with t sort of "silk screen'' process, sometimes the carpet is dyed end t~en overprinted with e design through this printing operation. The newest method is rtally sptct1cul1r. This involves mtnufacur· ing as much as fifty thousand yards in the same 'dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpeting today end match it one year later with 1n ex•ct dye lot, using this process. Ont other operation deserves mention ....-solution dyeing, where color i, put in when the y1rn is liquid, miking it part of the fiber , end virtually eliminating fadin g. To assure yourself of the right c h o i c e, shop at a reputable retailer. (Aldtn's1 of course!). " ' • • • ,,, .. ,, .. ALDEN'S:: SANTA AN-' OlANH., TUSTIN Call • •. ALDIN'S RID HILL CAIPITI I DRAPl.111 llJ74 lnl"•• Tvtth'I, CaL ........ I CARPETS e DRAPES . 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA . ' 646-4838 I I ' • 7 I 77 --... -- Ne rt Beaeh Today's F inal --N.Y. Stocks ,VOL. 6-4, NO. 70, 2 SECTION~, :26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MA~H 23, 1971 TCN CENTS Marine Choppers Get New Cruising Altitude By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1M OellY ,.,_. ltelf .11: Orange Coast bomeowners who live under the air paths used by Marin.e Corp1 helicepters 'from Santa Ana and Bl Toro will eet some relief from the doise gent[ated by the ships. ;Brlgidier General Henry W. Hise. com- manding ·general of El Toro ~CAS, today announced the belicopter1 w.ould be ad· cDna 1,000 feet to their cruisinJ aJUtude Last Viets Withdraw From Lao s . SAIGON (UPI) -The last of 21,000 South .VletnameSe troops who 1truck into Laos 1ix weeks ago were withdrawing tj,night under heavy North Vietnamese fire. Communist pressures intensili~ on · NIXON ANALYZES THE WAR, PAGE 4 U.S. support unita and at least eight Americana were killed, field nports said. • Military sources .said South Vietnamese commanders closed another outpost in Laos la'te today, leaving only one re- maining base of the several which had been ,established for the offensive against the Jlo Chi Minh. Supply Trail. Fe'j'l'er than 5,000 South .Vielnamue troop5 re- mained on Laotian &Oil and military ,..,.,_, Uid they woold be out "" l\ledneidty n!glit: • • ---' ., Tbe men retruting TUe1dJy .night ljrove ....... Ille ftonUet ~IO 8outh Vle!Mtn !JI i coluJDD or tanb, JrmOred ptrsonnel carriers, trucb and jeeps Wihicb,. f!ild, r,portt .•aid, w.ere .comln&: • (See ASIA WAil, h i • I ) New port Faces People Problem for Tax Funds Newport Beach has a populalJOI prob- llm . It miy be an overpopulation prbble.m, ~l on the other hand it may be u un- lerpopulatio:n problem. · It all depends on whether Newport leach wants to 10 after 1 federal grant or apply for more state ga.! tax .fUAds. 'The city's e11timated popul&tlon today 11 51,900. On official &tate records, haw- 1wr, it is listed at 49,422. To get the gas tai · boost, of a.bout M-0,000 a. year, in rebates. the city would have to apply for certification of the higher figure. iBut to get a federal "701 Program" fl'Anl for a shoreline environmenlal study, a city must have fewer than IOIOOO people. · .!fhe decision should be a 1imple dollar nd cents one, but the problem i.!I New- ptrt doesn't know how much it might let for the 1tudy. It could be as much rJ 1100.000. 11').nd it won't know until the allocation! are made on May I. •'#JI may not be lost. bowev~; in. fad., ~rythh1g may be gained. -_,,,e City Council was told Monday nl&ht if it plays its cards right, if may bt able to wind up with both. . City Planner LaureDCt Wilson reported that the city can go ahead and apply •for the: gas ta1 hike and ask for uother '30,000 in motor vehicle license fee re- bates. ..Jn the meantime. it wlll find out how much the ecological grant will bt. 11 the city can get a 701 contract &igned b~ June 10 -the date of allocatiO'l'I of th1 gas ta1 funds -Newport could wind up. with lu basket fuu. However, Wilson explained. Jr there laino contract by that date, the city will h&ve to decide which money it wantJ. PILOT HOL DING OPEN HOUSE Friends and readen of the DAILY pjLoT .,. tnvlled lo a tw~· opon hou!e to !rilpocl Ille tnllfl'd ud niOderntud f1<llltles of Ille newspoper at330 W. Bay St.; Cotta Mesa. 1he plant will be open to the Public from 7 to t p.m. both Wedneaday and Tlllrsday. Some porklns pt..., will be avtilablfl on the pl1nt'1 parking lot; olMr vl1ltora may flnd MHtreet 1pacu 1liln1 Bay and Thurln 11mta. ·'·· • while i1111i:le the' Orange Cout cont.rol to mlnbnizt tbe objection1ble upecta ol, zone. our operations and still carry on those Effective Thursday, the Marini Corpa operations," the general explaioed. belicopten will fly at 1,800 feet outbouncl-... CurrenUy, the bellcopters Dy at IOO and 1,600 inbound. ?feet outbound and 6lll feet inbound alon1 Hise made the_ •nnouncemeot at a aeven routes wblch were established in ~ conlerence Jlild ot El Toro MCAS. ti51. He .said the change Ls the result of The altitude is fiaured from m.ean sea el&bt months w.ort with representatives level, so al times the belicopten art of 1.tbe Federal Aviation Adminit:tr1Uon about 300 feet from rooftops ln hllly (FAA) and.the Orqe County Airport. country.· ''We •wint.te do anythln1 in our power 1be control sone ii an .area of about 1 flve mile radius from El Toro MCAS which ls used · to control all civilian and military alrcraft In the area. , Hise aaid the higber altitudf: flying will be used in vi~al flight conditlom when the ~illn& is. above 2,SOO feet. "\\lbe.n the celling ·drop! below that, as It 'has today, we will go back to our previous route! al!d fly on in· 1trumenll. We estimate that these weathu CO{lditions · will prevail only abOut 15 percent ol the time and the frequency of llighta under these condJ- ttona will · be amill,' 'the GeneraJ ex~ plained.. . ' . H.ise said the two areal that the. racility ha~ drawn the most ~mplaints from are the Palisades r«ite ntlf' Corona del Mar and Lhe TU.d.i.Q,.route. The Palisades fUIJ!t pattern leads. from the Santa Ana Air Facility, over University Park, UC Irvine, along the eastern edge of Corona del , Mar and out to sea. It la uud by hel~coptera participating in exercises GD carriers at sea and as a route to Camp Pendleton. The Tusti11. route is over central Tultia to a landing slte at the Prado Dam. Hise noted that out.side the control tone the helicopters Ry at l,000 fef:t and they will drop out of cruising altitude within one mile of their landlng altes at Santa Ana or El Toro. The other routes utilized by Marine helicopters are the route over aoutbern (See COPTERS, I'll• II ' •• Hurlburt Resigns \ .. Newport Selects Acting Cit y Manager . "' ~:r: The Newport Beach City l::ouncll Mon- day nl1ht appointed Philip F. Bettencourt actlnj: city mana1er effective A.Pril 5 after City Manaeer Harvey L. -Hurlburt, ln a surprise move, ~ounced be will quit as of that date. ,Hurlburt said he will remain with the city 11 • consultant until May 21. Tht action came after Hurlburt first gave to days' notice wben he handed in hl1 formal resignation during the afternoon ltqdy aession . Bandit Slain In Costa Mesa .. ·i~e~ • • ' 11.vfill ..... lwf!M 1tr'-t1.., ~.( down ID alley and IJl!orlnf '°1\imandJ , lo bait, a b .. dk auipect With' a rtp!JtaUon 11 • loser m,ade a aukldal dllb from e Coata M!IA cow:tropm Monday and was 1bot throuah ti>• tie•rt ano f .. t. Robert J. Clima1, 21, spun around ooce a,nd colla~ed to the pavement. OotiapaJa, Ooinpala . . . . . HI agpai;ently died In the am11 of Depu\)I Marahal Donald IL Andrews, out!lde the old, oe<11rily·pbor Harbor JudlcJal DIStrict Court. Tuba player Jan Fi.tzgerald, 17, pracU 0 ce .!cir her ippeirince-with ot~er ' in•trwnentalis!.s Friday night at annual Newport Hartior High sc1r9o1· SpriJ!g <:oncer!. It gel.& under way at 7:30 'p:m. in schol>J ·anditol'iµ111; Pli<• of admission is $1 donation to l!arbpr Hig)l .Mps!C,Scbolu!\llp Fund. ~'.~ Bandill, Mibe~~mteMn· anti d =u·'~;~ 0'!11~\t,,~.perf.o,l'J11\ FeaturcwOUIOlSt w -i...~s e ssa. -.run. r • • • • • • Clemu' sister . waA at her cltrical Job lriald• whee It happened. ' . The fatal lncldeot was \hi aecond &ea.pt Jn one wetk at the llJ66.built facil· ity' which ii ~dly outdated · a.nd ovtr· crowi1ed. · Marsllal Dillard 0. WUUrson 1tld he may demand add.llional manpower to toughen aecurlty at tile old facility, which includes a mobile trailer courtroom for Division One cises. Man son Warns of Iffilings H Condemned to Death · aemas had been confronted by police aeveral time1 since March 1, when he waa arrested in Costa Mesa by Patrol- man Bill Bechtel charged with assault on a -police offlcet, He Was free on his own recognizance pend.inf a hearing when on March 5, a gunman claiming to be high on druga held up the Bargain Basket Market, 117 W. ttth St., Costa Mesa took 111.jlOO end fled. LOS ANGELES (UPI) .-Cliar!OI Manson told two of the prosecutors at the · Tate-LaBianca mur"der · tiial -that there was . "'going· to be nothing-but mutder and ' blood!hed afterwardJ" if be gelo the dtotl!•pMa!ly. : · 0.:puty Distrlct · Altorcey .Vi""""l T. Bu&lioli and' hia 11.ul.!llant, Stephen X.ay, We!O dlottlllg wtth :MllMOI\ thri>ugb a wire mesh grUI · ln an anteroom where be llattns to prooeedinga by loudspeakers before; tbe 1~1oh beagn this morning. Kay told newamen during . a recess in the closing arguments· of the trial's penalj.y pbue that they bad made iome remark that Manson aeemld to h1v1 a cold and that the cult leader suddenly said to them: "If I get the death penalty, there·s going to bt nothing but murder and Waterfront Ban: 'blodshed alt.uwarda because I'm not gping to take ft." Manxon just a short time earller had . been ain&led out by the attomej for one of the ~ woman defendanta, 'Leslie Van' lfouten, u the maltvo11rit figure • who "gyalemaijcally d..troyed iveryth.ing that Wll good in the )'OWll gir1 and.Jed.her to murder ... WithOul mentioni'ng Manson by name, · M!n-tU Keith said the 21-year~d Miu Van Houtep w~ tran&fcrmed from "a quite ordinary girl" into a killer. · He II.Id she bad been t11ring drug1 since she was 14 and "her mind wa1 a vacuum -a vacuum for the lntrualon or the· devil" wben she went to the Spahn Ranch where the Manson "family" lived. Clemaa, of ~2010 Federal Ave., Co.!lta Mt&a , was arrested the following Monday niaht after depmiiting $1 ,000 in cash at a nearby Bank of America branch. • The teller recoanized tbe bundle, bound with a rubber baBd, as one the: branch had luued to the same store robbed three days earlier. A cache of $10,000 wu recovered from Clem.as' home. whlle deteclJvea linked him to three more· holdupg While the de- fendant wa1 in custody. · H1 wu also charged with parole viola- tion, stemming from a 1969 Garden Grove market ro~y. Complaints charging him ln those cases (See PRISONER,' Pere!) Fuel Do·cks Under Stud.y Newport Beach may be forced to ban all marine fuel docks Jn Nnport Harbor. The City Council Monday nf1ht ordered 1 study of the 11fel7 of aU waterfront tueUna faciUUfs after • PlanninJ Com- miuiOll report 11id "hazardous condi· Uons" e1lst at a.II ol them. The council wW meet April 11 with tire Martha! William Noller to 1tudy the problem. Fire Olief R. J. Briscoe aald this morn-ina: the problt.rn ml)' not be u wlous .u the Planning Commisa!on memoran- dum stated. but confirmed that huardl do txi1t •t tM fuef docks. 11'1ey are all located ii crowded ar- ~ "'·" Brl-..id, "end~ lo llnll ~!' • mtet Allioui aalety 1llndenf~ a hazard when you briq e tent lnlcll 'Tbi~'i r.j>ott w~' piil of a loaded with gu into a Cf'G'Wded area." ~ apimt a zooe ~nae ciall1 aionned; bowtv,er. ' . • ..,_.... . .... COUllCI :r--· The Planning CommlJS!OI wu erpe--=...., .. , to"' -·1 b ~-•·· 1n 1ta r<por1 11-iald, "tllo eonuru..i~. tY an<1 s.mc. Club. coocludtd that ha.w'dool 'COlldltJono oc-T!i1. SS3 had hffn. dtftied the cbaqe cur_ at Wat1J1i marine l\Millft otatlona h)' the oommllitioo ·for a rue! dock •ilJo- "" tbe i..r. • 1 cent to .thJ Ball!N Pavtllon, on tbe rec-'The commi.Woll, tbtrtf,...., funner ol!)mtneWloo of Noller. ncomm-that the city OC)ilndl Wt11t1 Br~ uld tbla 11\0rnlna that recoJD< octfon to comet tbe hll;rd6u1 COii<!~ 'mendal!Or Wll baud on the feet the U0n1 1J1d, In the event (l\o """1!!lona I "" '1i """lally <roWded." :taMOI be corrected, to a.ball> the use> • ~'!'II dld not toke ocUon on the of tbe Iue!Jn1 focmu ... " , e 1, JJ\itea4 rtllltlnt IJ back to·the Brllcoe said that may W •11fttlt far-· p uteri •ft.tr the SSS offered to modlly retched" IJ1d noted thet uiaU111 laclU· lta oltalnll pl11n1. ~ !> • The council went lntO executive person- nel seuion lborUy thereafter. It made no formal statement, however. Bettencourt, now assistant c i t y manager, was promoted to that position only five months ago after serving two years as adminiatratlve assistant. Bettene-0urt, 28, was araduated lrom Cal State, Long Beach, and holds a bachelors degree in p u b I i c ad· minl1tration. Prior to joining tbe city 11.f..ff hire, NEWPqR:r'S ACTJ ~G.' f!IANAGER HUrlburt Aide lltt1ncourt he served as assistant to the dty managu in Seal Beach . The council did not discuS.!I the salary Bettencourt will receive while boldin& the interim job. He currenUy earns $18,500 annually. Hurlburt will continue at full salary and benefits through May 21. Hurlburt bad announced be would mign .March 11, three days after the growing diahannony between the council and bi.mseU flared ope.nly 1n tbe form of a highly-charged attack by Cowlcllmaa Donald Mcinnis. Hurlburt, in announcing bia decisioa Monday night, put it thl1 way : .. As you all know It lakes at lust four monthl to recruit a new manager. In tbe tntertm, to lnlwo ID on!<rly transition, I wouJd assume Ptl.lllp Bet· teocourt. would ferve 11 actins citJ' ~· ~ •lt·IJ a dilficull-poalt!on to be throw• Into durlna the middle of budget prepara· tlon so I am recommending Mr. Bet.- tencourt be named acting city manager In two weeks. I will provide assistance in an advisory capacity from then on to the lime I leave the city. "He will h1tve a difficult time at best," Hurlburt said. Mayor Ed Hirtb immediately said be wanted to "e1preS1 our appreciation for the six years of service you hav1 given the city." Mcinnis then proposed the council adop\ a four-part resolution accepting the rtslgnation, designating Bettencourt actin& city manager. recommending Hurlburt be retained as 1 consultant and directlllg the Personnel Department to begin tht recruiting prOCWJ im· mediately. Harbor Teachers' Salaries Highe st in Orange County By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 l~t D•llJ ,lllf lt•ff The median salary paid to Newport. Mella Unified School District teachers l.!1 the highest paid by any of the eight unified diltricts in Orange Cowity, ac- cording to county school officlala. The salary at the midpoint of·the range of all teacher1 ular)es in the Newport. Mesa dlatrlct Is $11,150, st.atistia sup- plied by the county Departm~nt of Educa- Uon show. This compares with the medi- an saliry of $10,917 in the Garden Grove Unilled School District, $10,912 in the Caplltrano Unified District and $10,575 in Laguna Beach Unified. Other ataU1tlcs comptJld by the county nep·artment" of education show 177 or 15.9 percent ot Newport.Mesa teacher• are e,arnlng 114,400 or more ea~h year. Thia compares with 46, or 12:'.5 percent in Garden Grove. In Laguna Beicb only 11 teacher• ot a.s per'c11nt o1 ·lhe ataff, earn DHft'e than $14,400. · Newport-Mesa alto employs the laraest number Of teachers Jn the $15,000.plus salary catecory with SI br S.4 percent of all teachers in the. district. Three unU!ed dlslrictl In 9r>nge· County - Orlt\le, P~tia a.n:.d ' Sant.a Ana - have no 'teacher• In tl'1I aalary br.acRt. taguna Beoclt· haa rM. Caplltrano baa u.o aod Garden Gmr, the · blrJ11f dfrlrfct hf the coun\)I, em·p<ldy'e n te1<:h¢ al more lhan •ts.cm Pft' ytar. Tbl' average Newport.Miii VnUltd tote! w rote of IU3 per 1100 of aaoeaed valuation ranb fourth amor11 tht lunHJed dlotrlcta of Oran1e County. Tha dlotrtct. rol!O"n PlacenUa wit!! IUl, Or1111e with $5.IJ and Garden Gnm wltb ls.117. Lll\ina Beactl la lowest wllb 1 rate of 13.03 per 1100 . The •~a&e 11mnunt 1ptnt In 1-.10 for ucb pupll In Newport.Men 1Chool1 Ii f/90 which lo 110! per pupil more J than the average of all o t h e r unified districts In the county combined. The 1~70 average per pupil CO.!lla of $790 In Newport-Mesa compared with a high in Laguna Beach of $955 and a low in Garden Grove of $612. The amount of assessed valuation per gtudent in Newport.-Mesa dl5trict i8 $17,ftl ranking the di1Uict th ird behind Laguna Beach with '13 ,822 per student and Capistrano Unified with $19.942 per 1tudent. Garden Grove rates lowest of all eight unified diatricta In Orange Coun- ty with only $.5,g14 of assessed value per pupil. Weather c. Thtt chilly coastal fog will creep futther inland tonight, bringing a cooler Wednesday under hazy sun- shine and temperatures In t b e rnJddle 608. INSIDE TODAY , Pni:aidtnt N.Jion klll natfo,., tMi Sout"-V"'iemaniett Mndltd them.selves verv weU i" Laos. Story, Pogt 4. (•It'-""'-• .. .... " C!Mdl-. Uto • MllfY.tl '~ II '""'""' .. H N11ittl•I Ntw1 .. '""'' .. 0..tf\M (.Hli" • c .. n...., .. 1m1• ,.,..., " OHtll Mtlc• • ,_ 1 ... 1., """" • llttk Mtf11th 1•11 lflNl'lll p ... • Ttlf'fttltlt " lllttl'Nll!-' " Tllt•~n " ....... ... " WNll!ff • -" Wllllt W1sfl " Aft•L.._., .. W .......... "'"" \).II Mln'llK Llctll... f --... ,,. I • l • 't DAILY PILOT N Tl!Mo1. -2J, 1971 Hirth to Head Group Newport to Confront State Over Freeway By L. PETER KRIEG Of ltll DeH., rili't ll•ff Ne\\-port Beach will confront the State cf California on the issue of their Pacific Coast Freeway agreement with a tbree- man committee beaded by Mayor Ed Hlrlb. 'The Newport City Council Monday night adopted a resolution giving the . comntittee only 60 day1 to tngineer a bilateral rt1eission of lhe agreement. Mayor Hirth llso bowed to ·the l"Moway Flght.ra' wlsbea by naming Vlce Mayor Howard Rogers and Coun· cilman Donald Mcinnis lo serve with him on the negotiating committee. Mclnnls and Rogers were tbe only two OOUDcilmen to support repeal of the qreem<nt In the Mareh I apecl>t elect.Ion In which re1identa voted over-- wbelmJnlly to canceJ lhe contract. In adopting the resolution, wblcb Mclft. nis had authored, the council acted almost without cornmeal. Tbe directive stAte.s: "The City Council will unilaterally res· cind the exisUng freeway agreement as described above within 60 days in the event that a mutually-acceptable bilatera), rescission agreement is not achieved." The state bu indicated a willingness to talk to the city about the agreement, which involves the freeway route easterly from Bayside Drive through Buck Gully in C-Orona de! Mar. The state has also indicated It might agree to modification of tbe route il a pe>dlna city trllllc ltudy -a "* But lb .dale the 1tttt· hu not come right cut and said It will aaree to lbrow tbe agreement out. Whatever becomes of tht: negotiations, they will apparently start in a hurry. The COUDc.il direc\ed Mayor Hirth to wrlle stale Public Wo!ks Dlrrctor Jamrs A. Moe asking that a meeliq: bt schedul- ed as soon a5 possible. Innocence Proclaimed The Freeway Flghlers had pressed hard lo get Mcinnis and Rogers on the negotiating committee. That presSW'9 became apparent Monday ni&ht when Wally Koch, ch.airman cf the ~eway Fijbters Ciliu:n Coordinating Commltttt, addressed lbe council. Koch sald the ca: "!eelJ duty bound and compelled to strona:ly urge tba1 Howard Ro1er1 and Dould Mcinnit be authorized to represent the City Coun- cil." By Hartelius at Trial The council's tough stand in the up- coming negotiations should have been even tougher, according to Koch. By TOM BARLEY Of tl'll Oallr r1111 Stiff A long prosecution grilling of Dr. Ebbe Hartellus wen1 into il.s secood day today with the Corona del Mar pbyslciail repeatedly denying accusations that he DAIL1 r1LOT $tiff'"'"' Marijuana Jllnd I Newport Beach police officers George Coelho (kneeling) and Don Follett inspect one of three marijuana plants they unearth· ed this morning near 32nd Street and Newport Boulevard, within a block of police head- quarters. It was not clear whether plants \vere growing wild, or were left over from gardens of homes recently cleared off land for street wld· enlng project. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT ~ANC'it: COAST rUILllHINO COMrldf1 . l1Mrl H. W114 Pt-911"111 ,,_. hDIWW J•c~ L C'111r.y Viet' ~I tM 0:..-.1 M11119ar n ..... , ,,.,.jr ldll« Tho1'1•1 A. M••phin, Mtftlt..,. IEdl!Df" L.. Ptt•P Kri•t .. ~ 8wdl Clly fdli.t """" .._. omc. ])Jl N1wp•rt Jou11v1•i M'•lli119 ~d'''': r.o. ••• 1111, tt66l OtWOffk• eo.11 Met•: m wwr ••Y Strwt i.,..-alfdl: tt: l'orn: AVMI.,. ftvillllll ... ...Oi t7'7~ ~ aov1 ... ,~ .i.n c..........,,.1 • 1'1"111 11 ·c.mlrwt Aoal planned the burning of hi! office and the theft nine days earlier of his car. Visibly disturbed by persillltnt ques- tioning of Deputy District Attcrney Al Novick, Hartelius protested at one point this morning: ''I was innocent, I "'as innocent." But he continued lo answer "I don"t know" or "I don't recall" lo scores of questions aa the prosecutor probed the banking transactions that ltd to what the DA allege! wa! the bribing of key prosecution witness Jim Blevins. HarteJiU! insimd today that the $900 paid to Blevins by hiJ blonde mistreu Reba Vaughn wu pa1d at the woman's insistence and that he had co knowledge or the reuon for tbe payment. Blevins has testllled tbat Hartellu.s gave his sister the money to send him out of the state as police investigation into the fire and theft intensified. He told the jury in Orange County Superior C-Ourt Judge Jame! F. Judge's courtroom that he collaborated wJth Harteliw last March 31 to hide the auto in Long Beach and that he doused the doctor's offices at 2345 E. Cout Highway with gasoline and sparked the blaze l>Jt April 9. Hartelim today blamed Blevins for both tocld<ni> and told N-Ovlck that he repeatedly advised Newport Beach police of Blevins' responsibility when Mrs. Vaughn'• brother demanded Monday from him.· · • Tbe ~year-old physician refuted Mrs. Vaughn's clalm. lhtl he. asked. her. to pay bribe money to Blevins to reduce the chances that investigators could trace the payment to him. Defense attorney Matthew Kurlllch repeatedly stepped in to halt the ques- tioning as the persistent· Novick con-- stanUy rephrased his questions in a bid to draw a definite response from the physician. But tJi_e great majority of his objection! were overruled by Judge Judge who made It clear Monday that Kurillcb'1 unexpected placing of the defendant on the witness stand left Hartellus open to a much wider scope of questioning than would have been pq15sible otherwise. Novick today predicted that the case will continue at least two more days. He expects to put at least 10 rebuttal witnesses when he completes his grilling of Hartellus. Among thou wllne"'s will be Reb• Vaughn, the Costa Mesa woman who shared her home with Harleliu! prior to the burning of the doctor'1 office. Newport Gets Flood Money The stale today reimbursed Newport Beach for nearly all the cosls jncurred because of floods in January and Febru- ary of 1969. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt sald he received a $37,000 check coverlng all but $3,000 the city had laid out for beach cleanup and repair. He said the money wa1 paid out cf the s te'1 Disaster Relief Fund. He also said the people didn'~ vote for a negotiating committee, they "overwhelmingly approved a ballot pro- position to adopt an crdinance re.sclnding a portion of tbe Freeway Agreement" "Therefore, it is Incumbent upon the city to immediately notify the stale that the cily of Newport Beach rescinds that portion of the freeway agreement per· taining to Roule 1 Freeway between Newport Beach City Limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive," Koch 1ald. Councilman Carl Kymla, a leading Op- ponent of the ballot propositions, 1ald he inlends "to carry cut tbe mandate" but called for calm while accompllahill& it. "ll it takes unilateral rescission, I will support that," he 1aid, "but I prefer bilateral action, it would be best for Newport Beach." I-le also said, "J want to admonish the committee members that I.he people and this council expect no le5.1 than a professional and mature approac.b to the negotiations." He encouraged the committee to .deal with "facts and not emotion, Jo11ic and not rhetoric." He pointedly re!errtd to "statemen ts made during the heat of the camp.aign't and said now i.s the time "to set feelings aside and work constructively toaetber." Kymla WI!'! given an ovation by the Freeway Figbters in the audience. Jlrom Page l COPTERS •.. Santa· Ana to J\1ile Square; Brownlni~ which runs over agricultural areas to landing sites in the Cleveland National Forest; El Toro, whlch i.s an lnland route to Camp Pendleton rarely used because of a dearth cf visual alds; Freeway, which follows the San Diego Freeway to San Juan Capistrano and is the primary inland roule to Camp Pendleton, and the route between the fields at Santa Ana and El Toro. Col. Henry Huntington, operations cblef at EI Toro, said they have noted the frequency of complaints has dropped in recent montb.!I, even though he estimated 95 percent of an helicoptet1 operations in Orange County were military. Hise said they ezpect more helicopters to be coming into El Toro and Santa Ana as Marine Corps ullita are moved out of the western Pacific. ''I think ll's a matler cf residents becoming wed to the inevltabllny of the helicopters," he said. "OUr cbjecttve is to be as good a nleghbor as poa:slble and still carry out our n1Uonal defense mission.'' ABMs Blast Target WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Anny ha! announced that two Sprint millilel, the fast short-range part of the Satecuard Anllballistlc Missile System, were 1uc- cesstully launched from the mld-Paclflc: and intercePted a third mlsslle which earlier had been fired 4,200 mlles al'ay from Vandenberg Air Force Bue, Calif. Newp rt Balks at Cost Of Coast Bridge Work Wldenlna of the Pacific Coast Highway Newport Bay Bridge bas won initial approval of tbe Callfomla Division of Highways but may now be losing support from the Newport Beach City Council. Public Works Director Jaseph T. Devlin told lbe councU Monday that the project will take more than five years to com· plete at 1 cost of more than $600,000 -some cf wbJcb the city would have to pay. 't'be council instructed ll! newly.formed Freeway Negotlatlng Committee lo dilcu.ss lhe project with stlte officials after Councilman Llndlley Pariions Pointed out "we could have a 40-foot high level bridge built by tb1t time.'' The bridge of v.·hlch Parsons 1pokt1 Is planned In conjunction "'ilh the adopted route of Pacific Coast Frtfl\\'I)'. Devlin s1id ii ii unlikely lhal the slate will proceed with the bridge without tbfl freeway. Panons ln1i1led th1t the matter at Ira.st be discussed. I, "We llill must reiterate cur desire for a 46-faot high-level brida:e lo totally solve our problem," he 1aid. He pointed out that the rebuilt bridge, planned sllabllY to tbe north of the existinc bay crouin1, would open the l.}pper Bay to larger boat& u well u 5olve the auto bolllentck lbat now exists. Dev1in. however, uoted that to bulld a new bridie, a temp0rary cronifl& would be required, and that Jn n,.u would oost as much as the widening project Under the tentaU,·e plan for lemporary widt'nlng, Co1st HJgbway would be widened to siz lanes betwttn Dov• r Drive and Jamboree Road. This, Devlin explained. would require the purchase of additional ript.of-way, some of which state officials said, would be the responsibility of the city. Dt:vlin said trntatlve approv1J of th1 bridge has come from Haig Ayanlan, chief engineer of statt highway t>iatrlct 7 In Lo.!l Angeles. ' DAILY r1LOT '""' ~, llkllll't Kfllll1-r DASH FOR FREEDOM COSTS SUSPECT HIS LIFE O.puty ~n Andrews St1nd1 Over Body of Robert Clem11 Jlrom Pqe l PRISONER SLAIN ... were Wued FrJday, leading to aemas' scheduled arratpment In Division One Monday alt~. Slandln& at"the trailer door, nnly a few feet from tlie jail holding ceU, Deputy· Andrews ca11ed Clemas' case at l:fO p.m. and Deputy Al Eicblu escorte.d hJm forward . He was not handcuffed. Breaking away two feet from tbe mobile courtroom door, Clemu sprinted down the alley through par Iced cars ad- jacent to the Amerlcan Legion Hall. Deputy Marah1l Eichler was in bot pursuit, a rew feet behind. Colla Mesa Police Detective capt. Robut Green said Eichler and Andrews * * * S.~n~..J_1$!tiv~ In. Mes,-.:Nailed < By Jail Trusty A fu1Jtlve sprinted from Costa Mesa City Jail Monday aflemoon just two houn after another prisoner was killed fleeing a downtown courtroom, but the seccnd man wu luckier. John M. Perry, 2fl, of 414 Aliso Ave., Newport Beach, was brought down in the rear parking lot with a flying tackle by jail trusty Peter Lee. Officer David Stern said Perry had been argested en three Los Angeles County warrant!, charging felony drug offenses and bad check charges. He asked to malte a phone call al 3:45 p.m. and was escorted out of a cell, but suddenly dashed through the jail kitchen area and out the rear of the station. Officer Stern yelled for Patrolman Laece Heuer to head him off, but Lee, working outside on the vehicle washrack, heard the commotion and caught Perry. A complaint charging Perry with felony escape was being sought today, in ad· dition to the Los Angeles warrants total· ing more than $8,000 in bail. commanded Clemu to halt four times between them, while .ata\e Jaw prescribes three such orders. Lawmen a.re limited to shooting al felony suspects, or if they are en· dangered. Reali.zing he was losing tbe ract, Eichler started to draw his own gun, when Andrew!l' .38 caliber revolver cracked, !pinning Clemas around with a groan. He fell 50 feet away . Costa Mesa detectives Don Casey and Bob Lennert -attracted by the shouts to bait -ran to the door just in lime to witness the fatal shooting. Cltmu wu dead on arrival at Hoag Memoriat Hospital. Authorities noted an Ironic aspect in that many holdups occur far from the 1uipecta' homes, while those charged to Clema1 happened in his own llllgbborbood. He lived three blocks from the Bargairi Basket 'Market, while two cbmplainta involved· Tic Toe Market sUctups · · at 1913 Pomona Ave., In the !lllrie vicinity. HI.a arrest triggered by the fateful ca!h deposit was at the Bank of America branch at 547 W. 19th St., which ii only three blocks from where he was shot. A 26-year-old Corona del Mar wmnaJ1 charged in a check forgery case ran from the mobile courtroom the previous Monday, under identical circumstancts, but no shota were fired as Deputy Eichler chased her. She was picked up in Santa Ana only eight hour! later. "If that's the way they want to go, okay," a longtime deputy mar1hal remarked Monday after Clemas' body wu removed. "We just don't want 1nyone else to get hurt," he added. Polar Quake Noted BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) -An earth- quake believed centered in the Arctic Ocean jiggled the Berkeley seismograph and regiatered 6.25 early today at 1:36 a.m. • Saddlehack : Computer .. Plan Told A consulting firm Monday recom- mended' that Saddleback College In Mission Viejo enter an agreement lfllh Santa Ana College to computerlui Saf dleback's unwieldy, time-consufTlin,t ""'" istration proetss. . I Jjm A11denon, a represeatalive or Nott- ris and Gottfried of Los Angeles, tol~ Saddleback's board of trusiees such an arrangement would relieve the faculty rl clerical duties at registration time and eliminate much "standh1g in line." J The consulting firm v.'a! hired by Ult college to develop short and long ranjtt objectives for the use of computer. ~ administration and teaching at Sact- dleback Collegl'!. I Anderson said hi! report was ba'd on careful study of the entire apectrtul of the problem, including consultatlo~ with faculty, a survey of other,ICboolS now using computers and the recoui• mendatlons of leading com 11.U te:r manufacturers. Anderson said the needs of Saddlebac~ College were assessed and it was f<JUnli the "most pressing" requirement .at U. present time was to begin computeril.hl& l he area of student administration. ' '"The clerical load is very greal.¥ he told the. five-member board,. "and \1·e found ~· greaL deal of band pr~ ces.<>ing." Ht' noted that the process ~ registration St the college, although Co pleted only twice a year, is an .. , hands effort." = In addition to registration, said a computer could easily be emplo for use nn grade reporting, testlne an.- for mailing purposes. I Anderson said the college should ilT' mediately hire what he called a "co~ puter coordinator" who would aow !el'V• as a computer operator and would ultimately become the "nucleus of com• put er operations at Saddleback College." After such a man was hired, Anderson recommended the school should enter an agreement witll Santa Ana College to use its computer facility. Saddleback's coordinator would use the Santa Ana College computer during tbe evenings and on weekends to process the school's punch cards, \\'hich would be punched by clericaJ personal et Sad· dleback College. 'The cost of the program would totaf about $30,0IXI a year. Anderson aaid; with the coordinator receiving a salary of about $15,000 a year and Santa .Ina College being paid about Sl ,000 a moatb' for equipment rental. From Pagel ASIA WAR ... under· "increasing harassment'' from North Vietnamese. U.S. Army helicopter gun.1hip11 Ind U.S.' Air Force F4 Phantom jet fighter• bombers constJntly wheeled and circled' overhead, firing rocket! and cannon anif dropping bombs into well concealed posi· tions manned by NoMh Vietnamese uni~ using rocket-propelled grenades, mortarf.' rockets and rifles. " Reports 54id the Communists scored several hits on the long armored column which included trucks rilled with wounded South Viet11amese and one command jeep. without tires. 'The North Vletnam~ were reJXlrted lo have destroyed several vehicles. A \J.S. unit of tankl and mnore(t personnel carriers took: 21A hours yt_ carry newsmen !rom the South Viel·· namese outpost at Lang Vei in Soutif Vietnam lo the Laotian border, i distance of eight miles. Reporters 1a~ smouldering tanks and bodles along ~ road. COLOR IT BRIGHT! p There h1v• betn mort innov1tion1 in carpet dyeing process1s in the I.st ten yHrs then the preceding fifty y11rs. Dyt hous11 c1n Clip c1rpetin9 in 1 single dye beck end come out with I carpet of siz colors dut to • unique optr1tion of tr11tin9 yarn to Jccept or repel Clifftrtnt pigments. Stvtr1I printing m•thods now e1ist. Ont method involves tufting 1 white carpet ind subjecting this carpet to 1 movin9 track which has trays compressing against the carpeting with • sort of "silk screen'' procets, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted with a d1si9n throu gh this printing operation. _The newest method is really spectacular. Thi1 involves m•nufacur- in9 as muc.h as fifty thous1nd yards in the same dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpeting -today and match it one ye1r later with en exact dye lot, usin9 thi1 proctss • Ont other op1r1tton deserves mention -solution dyeing, where color is put in when the yarn is liquid, mekin9 it pert of the fiber. ind virtu11/y elimin1ting f1din9. To assure yourself of Iha right ch o i c e, shop et e reputable ratailor. (Alden's, of course!). ALDEN'S IANTA ANA, OltANOI. TUITIN (tll • 0 0 ALDIN'S llD HILL CAlPnS & DIAPlllll 11S14 Ir.Int, Tvtth,, C..I. .....~ '· CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 1 646-4838 " . ' ·. ' • . . • . . .,_. - Costa Mesa EDITION VOL. M, NO. 70, 2 SECTIONS , 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOll.NIA TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1971 Marshal·s Move Against Mesa Golf Credilllrs moved against the private operator of the public Costa ~1esa Golf and Country Club Monday at 5 p.m., lt!aving nothing available today but the playing greens. The closure by Orange County deputy marshals makes even th.is considerably less appealing. No electric golf carts. wheeled bag caddies, liquor. soft drink.!, food or IC· ces.sories such as tees and balls can be obtained. an Hartelius Claims Innocence By TOM BARLEY Of tlll• Olllf '11•1 1t11t A long prosecution grilling of Dr. Etibe Hartelius went into iti second day today with the Corona de! Mar physician repeatedly denying a"CCUSations that he planned the burning of his office •nd the theft.nin• day1 earlier of hiJ car. f Visibly disturbed by persistent que5- Uonlng of Deputy District Atwrney Al Npvick, Hartel.lui;.protested at one Pbtnt this morning: "J was Innocent, I Was innocent.'' But he continued to 11.nswer ''I don 't know" or "I don't recall " to sa>res of questions as the prosecutor probed the banking transactions that led to what the DA alleges was the bribing of key prosecution witness Jim Blevins. Hartelius insisted tOOay that the $900 paid to Blevins by his blond11 mistress Reba Vaughn was paid at the woman's insistence and that he had no knowledge of !he reason for the payment. 'Blevins has testified that Hart.elius gave his sister the money to send him out of the state as police investigation into the fire and theft intensified. He told the jury in Orange Coonty Superior Court Judge James F. Judge's courtroom that he collaborated with Hartelius last March 31 to hide the auto in Long Beach and that he doused the doctor's offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway with gasoline and sparked the blaze last April 9. Hartelius today blamed Blevins for both incidents and told Novick that he repeatedly advised Newport Beach police af Blevins' responsibility when Mrs. Vaughn's brother demanded Monday from him. The ;:io..year-old physician refuted Mrs. Vaughn's claim that he ~sked her t.o pay bribe money to Blevins to reduce the chances that investigators could trace the payment to him. Defense attorney P.1atthew Kurilich repeatedly stepped in to halt the ques- tioning u the persistent Novick con~ stantly rephrased his questions in a bid to draw a definite response from the physician. But the great majority of his objectlon1 were overruled by Judge Judge who made it clear Monday that Kurilich's one:r.pect.ed placing of the defe~ant on the witneS!I !':land left Harteliui opep to 1 much wider scope of questioning than would have been possible otherwise. Novick today predicted that the case will continue at least two more days. He expects to put at least 10 rebuttal witnesses when he complete1 hl1 grilling ()f Hartelius. White Hous e Gets Threat WASHINGTON • (AP! -The While House received a telephoned bomb threat this afternoon but a careful search produced nothing. Jn response to inquiries, the Secret Service said a "young male voice" telephoned the White House· switchboard to say that a bomb had been placed at tM executive ma nsion. James Warner. Seo't:t Service 11pokesman, said, "We took the routine proceedings that we lake whenever we have a OOmb threat." He said no bomb wu found . This was the .8ttf>nd auch known threat llR•inst the White Houae this month . City offK:ials emphasized today the situation ill only temporary, taxpayers' $2 million equity ln the bond-financed course is not endangered and it will soon be back to business a.! usual. Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan said lessee Earl Atkinson has unofficially been replaced already. Agreemenls 'are signed with Harry S. Grttn, succeufuJ concessionaire for 21 year1 at Los Angelts' Griffith Park. Green bid on manageme1t of the four· • year~ld C'OUJ'se ln February , U110, but Atkinson'• offer seemed mart appealing. He is also a local resident. Green ·wanted to run the resl.lurant, bar, ,pro shop and related facilities on a city-paid fee buts. Atkinson has been operating the facility for five percent of the gross and golfer use' hss ·risen 21 percent during the past year. "He has paid us , since Feb. 1970, about $15,000,'' ·says Jordan. who wu • I I .e llnder Heavy Fire Last Viet Units Pull Out of Laos NIXON ANAL YIU Y.HE WAR, PAGE 4 instrumental in city g o v e r n m e n t • aponaorship of the sprawling double-- course facility . The payment! ceased in Deeember, hawever, and Atkinson's contract whlch e:rpired Jan. 27 has been wider ne&ot.ia- tion. Jordan said the city has seen gross receipts figure!, but no profit-loss statement!, indicating Atkin~n's initial optimism was over-estimated. He s~d Griffith Park concwionalrt • Greu, however, bas acctpted a lease arrangement like Atkinson'• Instead of his original flat fee request. Credltora today were inventor)'lng Atkinson's lssets in the two-story brick clubhouse prior to placing liens on the privately owned merchandise: a n 'd motorized golf carts. The tushrilan Motor Sa>Oter Company is not allowing rental uSe of the carts for which it was lD receive 4G perunt Ill ea SAIGON (UPI) -Tbe last of 24,000 South Vietnamese troops wbo 1truck into Laos si:r.: weeb ago were withdrawing tonight under heavy North Vietnamese fire. Communist pressures intensified on U.S. ~rt unitl and at least eig}Jt Am<riciini"'ere kliled, •field l<poru 1ai.L M1ll~ gources said $qutlt Vietnamese CO!!llllln-cJoseil 'litoll!ei Olllpost Jn Laos late today, leavini· Only ane re-- maining base of the several which had been established for the offensive against the Ho Chi Minh Supply Trail. Fewer than 5,000 South Vletnamesi troops rt-- mained on Laotian soil •nd military sources said they w<1u1d be out by Wednesday night. bomber1 constantly wheeled and circled overhead, firing rocket& and cannon and drow!111¥!DlillJnlo..QU.'.ffll«lit4 ,...._-'", f!Ons mahned."·1,Yf-loitJl=Vietnamese unit.I usina: rockel-JJ!Qpe}.¥ enades, mortars, tttclftl 'l.nd~..il ~ ' r• The men retreating 'I'Ue!day night drove across the frontier b.tck to South Vietnam in .t column of tanks, armored personnel carriera, truck! and jeeps which, field report! said, were coming under "increasing harassment" from North Vietnamese. U.S. Army helicopter gunships and U.S. Air Foret F4 Phantom jet fighter· PILOT HOLDI 1VG OPEN HOUSE Friends and readers of the DAILY PILOT are invit~dl to a two-nights~nly open house to inspect the enlarged and modernized facilities of the newspaper at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa . The plant will be open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. both Wednesday and Thursday. Some parking places will be available on the plant's parking lot ; other visitor1 may find on-street spaces a1ong Bay and Thurin streets. Report& ~d the Communists acored sever1l hit! on the · lone armored column which Included tnicks filled with wounded South Vieu1.amtse and one command jetp 1¥1thout tires. The North Vietnamese were ~ported to have destroyed several vehic)es. A U.S. unit of tanks and armored penonnel carriers took 2"2 hours lo carry newsmen Crom the South Viet· nimese· outpost at Lang Vei in South Vietnam to the Laotian bortler, a distance of eight miles. Reporters aaw smouldering tanks and bodies along the road. Official 1pOkesmcn at forward opera· tional bases and in Saigon would not 1peculate on Communist tactics, but field commanders said that with the · Laoa offensive ending, Norlh Vietnamese unit.I could be expected to concentrate on positions in South Vietnam held by the 10.tro.man U.S. support force. Field reports said at least eight Americans were killed and 20 wounded Monday and Tuesday in actions in and around Khe Sanh, the big U.S. support base in South Vietnam 's northwest ror· ner. These raids included one in which North Vietnamese commandos, carrying satchel charges ol dynamite, stormed into the base, killing three Americans and wounding 13. The winddown in the Laos campaign was reOected in the decreased U.S. air role. The number of sorties reported Tuesday -400 -was about one-fourth (Seo ASIA WAR, Pa1e %) Harbor Teachers' Salaries Median Highest in County By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 11M Diiiy Pllll ll1tf The median salary paid to Newport· ~1esa Unlfied School District teachers iJ the highest paid by any of the eight unified districts in Orange County, ac- cording to county school officials. The sal1ry at the midpoint of the range of all teachers 1alaries in the Newport· Mesa district is $11;150, 1tatist.ie11 sup- plied by the county Department of Educa· lion show. Th.is oompares with Ole. medi- an 1alary of $10,887 in· the Garden Grove UnJfied School Distrlct. $10,91.2 tn the GapisSrana Unified District and $10,575 ln Laguna Bt.ach Unified. Other statistics compilfl<I by the county Department af education show 177 or 15.9 percent of Newport-Mesa teachers are eamin1 $14,400 or more each year. This compa.rea with 46. or 2.5 percent In Garden Grove. 111 Lacuna Beach only 11 t.tactMfs or 1.5 percent of the staff, earn more than· $14,400. Newport.Mesa 1lao employ1 the largest number of teachul in the $15,000-plus ••lll'Y category wtth sa or 3.4 percent of all tucherl ln the dbtrlct, Three unified dl"ltrkui ln Orange County - Or1n1e, PlacenU1 a n d Sant.a Ana - have no teaebtn in this salary bracket. . • Laguna Be1ch has five, capiJtrano has two and Garden Grove, the largest district in the county, em p Io y 1 one teacher al more than $15,000 per year. The average Newport-Mesa Unified total tax rate of $4.93 per $100 of assessed valuation ranks fourth among the unified diitricb of Orange County. The district follow1 Placentia with $5.15, Orange with $5.13 and Garden Grove with $5.07. Lagllna Beach iJ lowest with a rate of 13.03 per 1100. The a~age amount spent In 1969-70 for each puptl In Newport·M"' lchooll Is $790 which ls $103 per pupU more than ttle: average af all a t h e r unilled districts In the county combined. The 196~70 average per pupil costs of $790 In Newport..Meu C(lmpared with a blgh In Laguna Betdl of 1151 llld a io-. In Garden Grove (If $61! The amount of 1s.aeued Yala1Uon 1per 1tudent in Newport.Mm dlatrlct Is 117,413 ranl<lni the dlatrlct 'third beblnd LI.sun• Buch with '31,C2l per ttudent llld Ctplatnno Unified with 111,142 per student. Garden Grewe rattl '1owegt or •ti eight unlllod dlJtrlcll In 'Orange Coun- ty with only 15,914 of auessed nlue per pupil. DA.IL V ,ILOT Plltl1 W •1t111,.. l<Mlliw • I ' I · ' · · , • , DASH FOR ·iRliEP!)M ~OSTs,~~ci~g HI$. LIFE' , , , Deputy Don AO!IPll"''Stends Ovor, . Ol ltobdt-Cltfnoa. . , . , 'M ore Blood' Promised If Manson Get,s Death LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles Manson told two of the prosecutor• at the Tate:LaBianca murder trial that there was "going to be nothing hut murder and bloodshed afterwards'' 1f he gels the death penalty. Deputy District Attorney Vh1cent T. Bugll0&i and hia aS1istant, Stephen Kay, were chatting with Manaon through a wire mesh grW 1n an anwoom where he listens to proceedings by loudJpeaker1 before the 1e11ion tieagn thl1 morning. Kay told newsmen during a rece55 in the closing argument! of the lrial'1 Mesa Heli cops 'Ground' Kiter Coct. M.,. police helicopt« Eagle One was cru.lllng at 500 feet near the Costa Mesa Civic Center neat Monday, w6m observer Chuck Duvall aJ)Ott<d a OY1n1 ob- ject at 11 o'clock. The UFO was quickly Identified -I kite. Dir<cling Officer Dovld BrooU by mllo •. Ult llellcopltt plnj>oint"1 111 • O(l&lll on the Orange Coall Colla(• domplll. • . P1tralm1J1 Braokl CMtact.ed kite fi)'er .g.,. stdfrti1S and ordered htm to rttl in his 1,000.foot atrin1 on which Ult kite w11 laiily dtn- clng at about 700 feet. Feder•! Avtatklb,,.AdlnlnistraUon ru1 .. limit unmannod atrcrall to • mtxfmwn allltude o[ l!O Itel, to avotd creating 1 hazard to other fiylnJ. Object. coostclera~ly mora costly. penalty phase that they had made some remark that Manson seemed to have a celd and that the cult leader suddenly said to them : "If I get the death penalty, tbere'1 going to ~ nathing but murder _ and b)odshed afterwards because I'm not golna: to take It." . Manson just 1 short tllM. earlier bad been alngle~ aut by .. the attorney for one of the three woman defendanta:, Leslle Van Hout.en, aa the malevolent figure who "systematically destroyed everything that was good In the young girl and' led her to murder.0 Without mentioning Manson by name. Maxwell Keith said the 21-year~Jd Miss Van Houten was transformed from "a quite ordinary girl" into a killer. He said she hlld been taking drugs since she was 14 and "her mind was a vacuwn -a vacuµm for the lntrusien af the de"Vil" when &he went to the Spahn Ranch where the ManlOR 0 famll1" llved. Parent Program Being Orgariir.ed A losr. lnJu,.d, dck, or lrlghteJied •cho91 child tn Coot. Me.a may IOOn find aate haven at homes marked' by 1 cheery liUJe sunsh.lne face. 1bt: sy1tem will be Ultd in a Bttk Parent Program currently b&lnl oi'g1nlr- od by lhe Collte Me .. P9tlce o.p,artment '"\munil)t Rtlatkms DepartcMnt. A special lnformatlon, mtttlna for lrt- tere1led parept• b ocheduJed tooliht 1t 7:30 ~'clock In the Llndbcr1h Schoof mulU-purpoee room , 220 E. 2.1rd St., 1ccordlng to Mrs. H'i' Garner. Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Course of I.he rental revenue, while Atkinson retained the ·rest. Jordan said it iJ expected they will re.main for service as soon as the new opera~r -the fourth one in four year• -takes over. " "Without a liquor license, ht could conceivably lake over today," Jordan l!;dded, uying Gretn and City Attorney Roy J~e were simultaneously in Santa Ana, discussing il with state Alcoholic (Seo GOLF.COURSE.<~ai< l) as Mesan Shot In Try to Flee Court By ARTBUR· R. VINSEL Of tlla Deltr ftl»I Stiff Darting down an alley and ignoring commands to halt, 1 bandit suspect with a nputation u a loser made a auicidal Qash from a Costa Mesa courtroom Monday and WJS shot through the heart at 50 feet. Robert J. Clemas, 21, spun around one» aild C(lliaJM(l to the pavcmnt. }{e ai)parentlY died tn. tht · arms el Deputy Marshal Donald H. Andrews, otl~ the •fd,' ·lealrity·poor Harbor Judtclil Dtmlct Court. Cletnas' sister wu at her clerical Job Inilde wben I~ happened. The fatal incident was the second ~ape In one week at,the 1956-bullt facil· tty wblch iJ badly outdated and over· crowded. ·Marshal Dillard 0. Wilkerson said he may deinand addHional manp0wer lo toughen secuifty at the old facility. which Jncludes a moQUe trailu courtroom for Division One cases. Clemas had been confronted by police 11everal limes since March l. when he was arrested in Costa. Mm by Patrol· maa Bill Becht.el cliarged with 1.suult on a police officer. ,. He wa1 free on his own recognizance pending ' a hearing when on M~ch I, a gunman claiming to be high drugs held up the Bareain Basket arket. 817 W. 19th St .• Costa Mesa took $11.t:m and fled . Clemas, of 2070 Federal Ave., Costa Mesa, was arrested t.ht following Monday night .arter depositing $1,000 in cash at a nearby Bank of America branch. The teller recognized the bundle, bound with a rubber band, as one the1 branch had issued to the same store robbed three days earlier. A cache of $10,000 was recovered from Clemas' home, while detectives linked him to three more holdups while the de- fendant wa.s In custody. He was also charged with p1_1role viola· tlon, stemming from a 1969 Garden Grove market robbery. Complalnb charging him in those cases were lsaued Friday,. leading to Clemas' scheduled arraignment ln Division One Monday afternoon. Standing at the trailer door, only • fe.w feet from the jail holding cell, Deputy Andrews called Clemas' case at 1:40 p.m. and Deputy A1 Eichler escorted him forward. He was not handcuffed. Breaking away two feet from the <Seo DASH. Page 2) or .. ge Coallt \\'eather That chilly coe1tal fog will creep furtMr inland tonight, bringing 1 cooler Wedneeday under hazy sun· &hine and lempt\•tures In t h e middle 605. JNSmE TODA.l' President Nizo11 telll 'llGlion that Soulh. Vittna.1'tflt htutdltd thr.nutluts ver-u wll 1,. La0&. Stor11. Pa.gt 4. C1H"'1>MI I Cllttll"'• U• I Cltonl"M tt-JS c...i1n 1t c,..nMff 11 DMtlll "9tltt1 f .. _ . .l•l!Clrflj ..... ' lillfolf'MllllllMt 1• , .. _. 1 .. 11 ...,._...,. u A1111 LlllWtn It Mwrt... L.lcilft-• I, - -.. MUllHI ,~..... tt "'""' ......... ~a...,. '-" ' lflY.. ,..,,.,. 11 .._,. 16-11 Sllcll Mltftth l .. tl ,....,.,.... 1• Tiie~ ,. Wlltfllr I Wiii*-*•ti! 11 .,.,_..,, ,,._ 1i.1• --... • ~ DAILY PILOT ' t llt'ida.Y, Marth 23, 1971 From Page 1 DASH •.• mobile courtroom door. Clemas sprinted down the alley through parbd can ad· jacent to the American Legioll Hill. Deputy Marshal Eichltr was tn hot ponul~ 1 few Itel belllnd. Colta Mt!a Pollet Detective C.pt. Robe.rt Green said Eichler and Andrews commanded Clemas to halt four times between them , y,·hi\e state law prescribes three 1uch orders. Lawmen are limited to abooling at felony suspects. or Ir they are en· dangered. Realiz.ina: he was losing the race. Eichler st.arted to draw hl$ own gun. when Andre~ .31 caliber revolvtr cracked, spinning Clemas at?und with • groan. He fell 50 feet away. Costa Mesa detectives Don <;uey and Bob Lennert -·attracted bYJ$lle. ahoula to hall -ran to the doOr j"'t In time to witness the fatal shooting. C1ema was dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Authorities noted an Ironic aspect In that many holdups occur far from the suspectl' home., while thoae dl.arged to ctemaa happened 1n hla own neighborhood. ff..e lived three blocks from the Bargain Basket Market. while two complaints involved Tic Toe Market stickups at 1913 Pomona Ave., In the same vicinity. His arreat triggered by the fateful cash depoalt wu at the Bank. of America branch at 547 W. 19th SL , wbicb is only ,three: blocb from where he was Ehol A »year-old Corona del Mar womaa ch:irged ln a check forgery case ran from the mobile courtroom the previous M"nday, under identical circumstances, but no shots were find as Deputy Eichler chased her. She was picked up in Santa Ana oaly eight houri later. * * * Second Fugitive In Mesa Nailed By Jail Trusty A fugitlve sprinted from Cost.a Mesa City Jail Monday afternoon just two hours after anolher prisoner was tilled fleeing a downtown courtroom, but the !tCOnd man was luclder. John M. Perry, 28, of 414 Aliso Ave., Newport J!e1ch, WU brolllhl down In t~ rear parking lot wltb a flyillg tickle by jlil lnlsly Peter Lee. Officer David Stem said Perry bad been erre.slad on IM.. Los Angel .. Coo.nty warranta, cbargiJ11 felony drua: olfwes ltld bad c:heclt <barges. He asked to mate • phone call at 3:45 p.m. and was escorted out of a cell, but suddenly dashed throu,lh the jail kiLchen area and out the rear of the station. Officer Stun yelled for ;Patrolman Lance Heuer to llead him off, but Lee, working oulsl~ on the vehicle washraclc, beard the commotion and cauabt Perry. A complaint charging Perry with feloay escape wu being sought today, in ad· dition to the Los Angeles warraDts total· lng more than '8,000 in bail. Burglar Takes $1,432 in Loot A burglar pried a bathroom window at a Cost.a Mesa tire dealer's Back Bay area home Monday and stole $1 ,4l2 in loot including a rla, set with diamond! and an emerald. Newton W. Withers, of IMS Boa Vista Circle, Cost.a Mesa , told palice the in- truder drank a can of malt liquor while prowlin• lh• home. He also took $180 in cash and 1n as· 10rtment of bottled liquor. DAILY PILOT OllANGI COAiT PUILl5MING COMPAN'f" R••••t N. w.,4 Prt1lil.nt and Pvltllll'ltf' Jad1 R. Cwrl•v \/Ice ptrnklml •r.cl G-•I MtJ\tW lh•"'•• )C, •• a fdllor Tho"'•• A. M1trphi11• M..,..Olr>Q fG!tor C h•rltl H . l•ot Richard P, N•ll Aial1t•t1l MtfltOlfl\I I Ollor1 I CW• Mes• Offlt• llO W11I 81y Slr11t M•lll111 Acldrtn: P.O. So11 1560, •1626 Ottltr Offlcn VPI T1)ffMi. A Real Toehold Add 1,000 Feet I r M~rine Cho·ppers . To· -Fly 'Higher ; By JOANNE REYNOLD!; 01 Iii. DIUJ PUtl Sttti' Orange Coast homeowners who live. under lhe air paths used by Ma!'ine Corps helicopters from Santa Ana and El Toro v.·ill get some relief from the noise generated by the sbips. Brlgidier General Henry W. lf ise. com. manding general of El Toro ti1CAS , today announced the helicopters Y:ould be ad· ding 1,000 feet to their cruising altitude v.·hi!e ins.ide the Orange Coast control tone. Effective Thursday, the Marine Corps helicopters will fly at 1,800 feet ciutbound and 1,600 inbound. FreeY.'ay. whi ch follows the San Dieao / Freeway to San Juan Capistrano and is the primary inland rou te to Camp Penile.ton, and the route l)eJween the fiel<t; at Santa Ana and El Toro. · I ~ewport Bay Bridge OK'd For Widening Widening of the Pacific Coast Highway Newport Bay Bridge has won iniUal approval of the California Division ot . ' . Highways but may now be Jnslng .fUpport A locksmith's deft fingers finally free a young San Francisco lady's toe from this padlock \Vhich closed on the pedal digit during some horseplay with her boyfriend. The embarrassed identify herself. girl, 20, refused to Hise made the announcement at a press conference held at El Toro MCAS. lie said the change is the result of eight months work with representalives of the Federal Aviation Administration \FAA) and the Orange County Airport. froin the Newport Beach Ciiy Council. Public Works Director Jostph T. oevlin told the council Monday th't tbe project will take more than five Years to comM plelf at a cost of more· 1b;an $600,bOO -some of which the citj would hive to Ray. Newport Confronts State Over Freew~y Agreement By !. PETER KRIEG Of fMI DfollY P'lltt Iliff Newport Beach will confront the State of CaWornia on the Iuue of their Pacific Coast Freeway agreement with a three- man committee headed by Mayor Ed Hirth. The Newport City Council Monday night adopted a resolution giving the commJttee only 60 days to engineer a bilateral rescission of the agreement. Mayor Hirth also bowed to the Freeway Fighters' wl!hes by naming Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and Coun· cilman Donald Mcinnis to serve with him on the negotiating committee. Mcinnis and Rogers were the only two councilmen to support repeal or the agreement in the March 9 special election in wblch residenta voted over· whelmlngly lo cancel the contrld. lD •dopting the resolution, wblch Mcln- tda had . authored, the council acted almost without comment. The directive states: "The Cfty Council will unilaterallx res- cind the existing freeway agreement as de1cribed above within 60 days in the event that a mutually-acceptable bilateral rescission agreement Is not achieved." The state llas indicated a wllllngnen to talk to the city about the agreement. wblcb involves the freeway route easterly from Bayside Drive through Buck Gully in Corona 4e1 Mar. . The state has also indicated It might ll'lff to modlflcatlon of the route if a pending City traffic study sbow1 a need. But to date the atate bas not come right out and said It wW agree to throw the agreement out. Whatever becomes of the necotiations, they will apparently start Jn a hurry. The council dl~cted Mayor Hirth to write state Public Works Director James A. ~1oe asking that a meeting be schedul- ed as soon as possible. The Freeway Fighters bad pressed hard to get MclMis and Rogers on the negotiatiQg committee. That pressure became appa ren t J\1onday night when Wally Koch. chairman of the Frteway Fighters Ciliien Coordinating Committee, addressed the council. Koch said the CCC "feels duty bound and compelled to strongly urge that Howard Rogers and Donald Mcinnis be autboriled to represent the City Coun· cil." The council's tough stand in the up- coming negotiations should have been ewn tougher, according to Koch. He also said the people didn't vole " Good Scouts for a negoUating committee, they "overwhelmingly approved a ballot pro- position to adopt an ordinance rescind.in& a portion of the Freeway Agreement" "Therefore, it is incumbent upon the city to immediately notify the state that the city of Newport Beach rescinds that portion of the freeway agreement per· tainlng to Route 1 Freeway between Newport Beach City Limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive," Koch said. Councilman Carl Kymla, a leadlpg o~ ponent of the ballot proposiUon.s, said he intends "to carry out the mar\d,ate" but called for calm while accompllshlng iL Planners Delay Adult Bookstore Action in Mesa Consideration of a law indirectly clos· ing the city's gate to those book and film establishments whose doora are clos· ed to under-21 customers bas been tem- porarily stalled. The Costa Mesa Planning Commission voted Monday night to hold action over to April 12, following revlew of legality and wording at its April 5 study session . Adults-only bookstores catering to the sexually oriented with magazines , films and devices would be required to file for a ione exception permit. Planning commission and city council members then would review each request before voting approval or denial. Planning Director William L. Dunn concedes the proposed ·ordinance may not be legal,, but is a step toward keeping shops such as those along Harbor Boulevard in Santa Ana out. None officially optrates in Costa Mesa today. In other actlon Mon d a y , com· missioners : -Recommended approval of a i one exception permit for Photo-Disc Corpora- tion. Santa Ana. to install a film and tape sales carousel at 19th Street and Wall ace Avenue. -Recommended approval of zone ex· ceptlon permits for developer and former football star Phil Spiller to build .1 IO-Unit apartment development at 2332 Elden Ave .. plus another 12·unil project at 622 Hamilton St., both in R-2 iones. Joo G. Pallo (left) and Kevin D. Platte or Costa Mesa Troop 339 ore new eagle scouts. Both are 15 and both have !our years of scouting behind them. Joe is the son of ro.tr. and Mrs. George J. Pallo, 3029 Hordini Way. Kevin Is lho son ol Mr and Mrs. Richard J. Plalle, 867 Corlez St. I Frona Page 1 ASIA WAR ... or the figure flown at the height of the campaign. A sortie is a single strike by a single aircraft against a single target. In Saigon, U.S. headquarters said American warplanes which attacked North Vietnamese territory Sunday and Monday destroyed three antiaircraft missile sites. The raids were flown by U.S. Air Force and Navy planes against bases In the area of the Mu Gia Pass, a funn el from North Vietnam lrito the upper reaches of the Ho Chi Alinh Trail. A communique said the raids were ordered in response to North Vietnamese firings on American planes flying over Laos and South Vietnam last week. Jn Laos proper, government troops counterattacked today and recaptured Communist-held Ban Done-Cho, five miles northeast of the Luang Prabang airfield,. reliable military s o u r c I!: s reported. North Vietnamese captured seven government positions Monday, some of them as close as three miles to the capital, 130 miles north of Vletrt.iane, and a govem.ientfPOi.man.aaid the aecuri• ty of the city was threatened. I ,i '"·'~· Lodge to Hold Tunnell Rites Funeral services viii\ be conducted by the Mar Vista Masonic Lodge o{ C.OSta Mesa for Carl 0. Tunnell, a lodge member who died Sunday. Mr. Tunnell, who was 68, was a retired carpenter who had v.'orked for the city of Los Angeles. He had lived in Costa Mesa for 12 years. He leaves his widow Bessie M. Tunnell : a son. Carlton L. Tunnell; daughters, Barbara J. Godsey and Carleen Shaldone, both of Garden Grove, and 1 5 grandchildren. Services will be held Wednesday, 11 a.m. at Pacific View Chapel . Polar Quake Noted BERKELEY. Cali!. (UPI) -An earth- quake believed centered in the Arctic Ocean jlggled lhe Berkeley seismograph and registered 6.25 early toda y at I :36 a.m. ··we want to do anything in our power to minimize the objectionable aspects of our operations and still carry on those operations," the general explained. Currently, the helicopters fly at 800 feet outbound and 600 feet inbound along seven routes which v.•ere established in 1951. The altitude is figured from mean sea level. so al times the helicopters are about 300 feet Jrom rooftops in hilly country. The control zone is an area of about a five mile radios from El Toro A1CAS which is used to control all civillan and military aircraft in the area. Hise said the higher altitude fly ing will be used in visual flight ·cond1tlons when the ceiling is above 2,300 feet. "When the ceiling drops below that, as it has today, we will go back to our previous routes and fly on in· struments. We estimate that these weather conditions will prevail only about 15 percent of the time ind the fr equency of flights under these condi· tlons will be small,' 'the Ge neral ex- plained. Hise i;aid the two areas that IM facility has drawn tbe most complaints from are the Palisades route near Corona del M.1r and the Tustin route. The Palisades flight pattern lesds from the Santa Ana Air Facilify. over University Park, UC . Irvine, along !)ie eastern edge of Corona del Mar and out to sea. It Is used by helic:Rpters participat.int ln exercises on carriers at sea and as a route to Camp Pendleton. The Tustin route is over central Tustin to .1 landing site at the Prado Dam. Hise noted that outside the control zone the helicopters fly al 1,000 feet and they will drop out of crulsing .altitude wlthln one mile of their landing sites at Santa Ana or El Toro. The other routes utilized by Marine helicopters are the route over southern Santa Ana to Mlle Square; Browning, which runs over agricultural areas to landing sites in the Cleveland National Forest : El Toro, whicb is an inland route to Camp Pendleton rarel{ used because of a dearth of vl.sua aids; Duo Sunulating Guns Rob Mesa Gas Station A pair of men arrived at a Costa Mesa service station early today and. simu- lali11g guns, ordered the attendant to empty the till. Glen E. McCourt. o! Harbor Texaco Service, 3001 Harbor Blvd.. said the bandits escaped with about '50 from the cash box. 'flle council instructed its newly-for~ Freeway Negotiating Committe,e to discuss the project with 5lale <iftlcials after Councilman Lindsley ParsoM poirited out "We could have a 46-foot high level bridge built by tb~t time." ' Tbe bridge of which rarsops .N>Og:· is planned in conjunction with the adopted route of Pacific Coast Freeway. Dtvlin said it is u.nl(kely that the· statt will proceed with the bridge without the freeway. Parsons insisted that the matter at, least be discussed. · "We still must reiterate our dHlre for ~ 40-foOt high-level bridge ttt totally solve our problem," he. said. Frona Pagel GOLF ... Beverage Control officials. He said it will be at least 10 days before drinks are served again, while more than a dozen ser\'ice clu.b lunch.J" eons and banquets this week ak>ne are"' tentaLively canceled. The city-owned clubhouse itself ~ available if the groups affected -M including a city employe awards banquet Satu rdaf nj,gbt -can relalp cattrinc services to pmide food and uterwfts. ... Jordan said lie believes Atkinson owna the glassware. while creditors are trying to attach liens to crockery and silverwar.- among -0ther items. Liens on equipment and merchandlh" owned by Atkinson himself will prob.1bly be in effect by Wednesday, Jordan theorized. .~ He said despite the third private• • operator's fiscal woes and the iM convenien ce posed to golfers and users t of dinlng facilities. lhe total picture isn't gloom}'. for the public. .. ... Use of the attractive facilities in.r creased dur ing 1970, along with the 21 " percent jump in goUing volume. Jordan said city income Crom that · recreational and athletic use alone ii providing bond paymenls on schedule. . ~ course established on st.ate pro-•. perty leased at $1 per year in 1967 ~ suffered an immediate, major clubhou~e rite and repair delays subsequently fore--·: ed the first operator out of busine.u. " City officials have criticized a second'1 triple partner organ i za t Ion for 1 mismanage1nent that Jed to failure and the lease agreement with Atkinson. "Now, we're on our fourth," Jordan ~ said today. " COLOR IT BRIGHT! t TheN have been more innovations in c1rpet dyeing processes ifl tho last Ion years then tho preceding fifty yurs. Dye houses can dip carpeting in a single dye beck ind come out witfi a carpet of six colors due to 1 unique oper1tion of treating y1rn to 'accept or repel 'different pi9ments. Several printin9 methods now exist. One method involves tu~ing a white carpet and subjecting this carpet to 1 moving trick which has trays compressing against the c1rpetin9 with 1 sort of "silk Kreen" process, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted with a design through thi1 printing operation. The newest method is really spect•cular. Thi' involves menufacur· inq •s much IS fifty thousand yards in the sam• dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy cerpeting today and match it one year later with an exact dye lot, using this process. One other operation d11erve1 mention -solution dyeing, whera color is put in when the yarn is liquid, making it part of the fiber, •nd virtu•lly eliminating fading. To a11uro youri1ll of tha right c h o i c e, shop et • raputabl1 r1t1~1r. (Alden's, of o:Ourial). IANTA ANA, OIANOI, TUSTIN (all • • • ALDIN'S llD HILL CAl,ttl I DIA,.11111 11Jl74 lrvlrie. T"'9tln, car. Ill IM4 1 " I ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plactntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 ; " ' r , , • , I ' Toda1'• Flnal Saddlehaek ,, • VOL 64, NO. 70, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · TUESDAY, MARCH 23 , 1971 TEN CENTS Clemente Eyes Golf Cour·se Area Master Plan A master plan including two large condominium projects and scores of estate-siud lou on acreage ne8r the San Clemente Municipal Golf Course will come before planning commissioners at a public hearing Wedne sday. The Douglas~·Pacific Corporatinn - which has developed the Colony Coves and Beacon Bay communities locally -seeks a conditional use permit and a formal subdivision on the huge portion of acreage known as the Rumuasen-Ayer property. The bulk of the proposed de.velopment, Plannin1 Director Eugene Scbulte ex- plained, would be 484 condominium units built in the cluster concept on the land next to 5th, fith and 7th fairways o[ the municipal course. An additional 75 eiitate sit.ed ·19ts each · an acre ·or more · in siie -ar1 planned for the more hilly areai above the llnkl. Tbe project -large by San Clemente 11.andardt -would involve two hlcb· density area~ of development, but Schulte e~plalned that the over-all density fac!or' computed for the more than 12 million 15quare feet would make a very low concentration of development. . In the total computation. he said, the development would have one dwellinc unit for every 22,754 sqiwe feel of i.nd. Preliminary indicatiol\I call for the dedlclUon cl mucb of the hiUy-primarl· Jy unbulldable -terrain u open ·apa~. aUowing for large green btlll throughout the development. Thfl application for the pl!:rmit Wed· nesday will be a public hearing. Spokesmen for tbe developer art e1· pected to make • deta.iled ezplanations of the total ~uter. plan., . One 1idel11ht to Wedn~ay's MJ;jol' application ia the .pending ~talf 1tudy called for last week by' city councllmen On provision of access roads and major utilities lo the large chunk of property. Negotiations between the principals in- volved with the Rasmussen ·acreap and city officials ha've gone on for the · past several years on methods of pl'tlviding acer.is. sewera ·and w1ter maina to the large parcel. • iets _eave May Change Mind Capo Upholds Zoning Denial San · Juan Capistran• City Councilmen narrowly upheld a planning commission decision Monday to deny prezoning the 109-acre Rosenbaum aMexation as a planned comnwnity. Councilmen stated. hbwever, they \'lould approve the annexation, if the developer reapplied under the planned development iont. , · The property, which is currently being considered for annexation to the city, was to be prewned before the city ac~pted it. Ed Akins, president of the South Coast Development Company, said during a public hearing Monday that his firm preferred the planned community con· cept to insure a substantial amount cf security that their plans would be un· chang'ed for three years. The decision to opt for a planned development zone seemed to. rest on • technicality. Planned community zon- ing is supposedly fo.r developmepts much larger than the 1()9.acre one and ~ust c:ontain areas for scbool1, recreation. par~. in.dustrial development and retail businesses. The proposed Village San Juan develop- tm!nt would have a density of 7.6 unit.!I an acre and would include MS garden homes, 290 townhouses. 18 acres of parks, 1 five-acre lake, pools, volleyball and tennis courts, a tot lot and a baseball diam ond. A large number of protesler1 were present from the Spotted Bull area north or the Rosenbaum anne1.atlon outside the city limits. "We're opposed to the concept of cluster housing. not the developme~t itself,'' said Charles Dargan. their spokesman. •·we had hoped the area woold be developed i n to haU-acre or acre tots but we'll go along with your decision." Other objections voiced by residents af that area included high density, reduc- tion of water pressure to surrounding areas, additional chik!ren for already overcrowded schools, loss of bridle path! through the area (the developer will Firm Appointe·d · 'J;o Aid Hospital The Lutheran Hospil.\l Society of Southern California has appointed the rlrm if Swinerton and Walbert Co. to coordinate construction of Saddleback Community Hospital, Laguna Hills. not Include any) and ·lncompatabillty with the Spotted · Bull area which allow a horses. "We didh't feel we should ni.arry the city to a planned community," said Plhn· ning ·Commibion Chairman Gerald Gaf· fney. Under the pl1nned devetopment z~ne the' developer's pl~ art aubjtctfd to a very close '.!lcnrtiny! · Bec:ailse tbe Roeenbium pr.operty ts nol yel i>art or the Cify the developers w111 either re1i)ply under the planned developmeri.t ZOnt or wfthdraw their ap- plication for anne.xaUon and take their plans t&·tbe county. Another Parade For Arbor Day Okayed in Capo Another parade? That'& right. The San Juan Capistrano City Council appl'tlved an · applicatiori to grint 1 parade pennit to the Clamber of Com· merce for Saturday, April 24. The council also declared that day and the third Saturday of April in future years to be the city's Arbor Day. The parade is to follow i short route from San Juan Elementary School down Ortega Highway to Ca~ino Capialrano all the way to the new mini park. Participanl.!I in the parade will be the Marco Forster Junior High Band, Miss San Juan in a decorated cart. and children riding bicycles. At the mini park plans call for awarding poster contest prite.!I for the theme "Help a Trte Grow" with winning posters displayed in the park. Prizes also · will be awarded tO the best· decorated bikes. The plrade, sponsored by t h e chamber'1 San Juan Beautiful Com- mittee, will end wilb a band concert and a speech given by a cily councilman, according to Phyllis Sbainman, Arbor Day parade chairman. CofC 'Mixer' Slated One of the San Clemente Chamber of Com,mer~·s regular 10Ci1J "miJ:ers '' i1 schf:duled for Thursday afternoon at the municlp.al golf cour1e clubhouse. Cbambet meinberi and tuem are welcome to the ·s:»a p.m. event · 1111n.T '"·en-111tt ...._ ·THE DINNER 'SHOULD BE GOOD, THE' CJl.USE .E'XCE~LENT D9nlH RMv111 Mrs. Mlrosr:, Debbie Waahin, JMnette Mlyor1 Eating. for Cash Viejo 'Dime a Dip' Dinner Set Samples o( cuisine from all over the world will be offered. al the annual fund raising dinner sponsored by the Mission Viejo High Scbool American Field Service chapter. The array of delicacies will be served Thursday, March 25 from 5:30 to a p.m. in the Mission Viejo High School cafeteria. PILOT HOLDl 1VG OPEN HOUSE Friends and readen of the Oft IL Y PILOT are invited to a two-nighta-only open house to inspect the enlarged and modernized facilities of the newspaper at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. The plant will be open to lhe public from 7 to I p.m. both Wedneaday and Thursday. Some parking places will be available on the plant's parking lot; other visitors may find on-street •paces alona S.y and Thurln "treetJ. Co.st of Ult mtal will be 1 "dime a dip'' and all proceeds will be used to bring a foreign student to live with a Mission Viejo family and study in the hia:h school ''We al.so hope to ralJe enough money to tend one of our studenta abroad," u.ld Mrs. Marion Maroaz who tbil year is "mother" to Jeannette Mayora ot Argentina, MWion Viejo'• firlt eichange studenr. The cost of sencUa1 a student and brlngi.Di one in ls '950 each. Students from Peru, Braz.il. Venezuela, Japan, Switutland, Norway, Sweden, France and Gennany will be present at the dinner to chat informally with guuts. These 1tudent1 are attending &chool ln nelghborinc e om m u n i t I e 1 through ·the AFS program. Other fund railing events have been attempted this year by the Mission Viejo AFS chapter. The atudents held a car wuh at which S2I was raised and a taffy aale which netted $100. The dinner iJ the major fund raisinc project. The entire community iJ lnvlted to parUcipate. For information on lhe dinner or the AFS protram call Mr•. Marosz at '30-ous. Robert Hartman. the hospital's director of · architecture and planning, said the firm was the lowest of six firms bidding for the project. Among other respon1lbiUtiu. Swinerton and Walberg will conduct pha1ed bidding of the project to th~e rtrma who will do the actual construction work. $3~7 Mil~ion Project A nnancial support campaign Is un- derway in Saddleback Valley. George Baird, general manager of Burroughs Corp., Mission Vie)o, is in charge of the· campaign· aee.irJng-·n.s inllUon '10 help finance the.SJO inillion fat.lilly. Chevalier Gets Check PAR.JS CAP) -M11wice Qievalltt is in the ho!p!tal, but his seatllry 1ay1 he entered only for one or hb periodical physical checkups. She aaid Monday the enter11lner, 83, wa1 fetllng fine and 1hoUld bt out and about ln a dly or ~ 1 . . Saddlebae.k Library ·OK'd 'Flnal ·plans for 1 library (Jtsaroom comple1 at Saddleb1ck Colle1e. after 1everal trips hick to the drawina: bc>ard, were unanimouAly approved Monday by the collegn' board ol truatees. Tbt 13.7 mUUon ltrueturt,. which of. ficiala hope to hllve completed by the foll ol 11?2, wDI be the !irll pmnantnl building on the )'()Uftl coUq;e'1 Ml1sioa Vejo campu~. Archltttt Robert Lowrey told trustetJ Mond•y hb firm h•d red"l(ne~ the structure lo ellmlnale: prtviou•" com· . . . • plalnll of too much glaa and too ma111 baJconies ''where people c.e u I d throw books down." A a DKT.mber mettln& when· the pJa"' hod·Unt been submllled, boanfPresldtnl llllJ' V"l'I hid lltled 'the eUmlrmlon ol•around Doer windows beca1111 or hllh mellltenonce colll l!ld poulble br .. ~ ... ''The final pl11n1 for the llbraq hive no . wlndow1 on elth&r the groond floor or tn the clas."room ireas," Lowrty told the trustff:I as he pointed to an 1rtilf1 concept of the concrff:' 1tructure. . Lowrer said the loelllty wlll· hive "c:ontroD•d mu" touch ~like Utt UC Irvine library where lludenta will hne to pau throuah twiutlles for entr1nce and elli Thia proc... 11 designed r.r library ""'w. to Insure thtt no booa art .atolen. The pl1n1 far tbe buUdlnl will ' now be " oubmlu.d to the 1talt tclucolloo d•pirtmonl ror 1pproval. u the pllon1 art approved , tht col.lece wtll open bktJ for construction of ~brary . · Daw.t the . ' Mission Trail International Dinner Slated MISSION VIEJO-St.udenis from eight foreign countries who have been Uvinf: in Sou.the,rn Califorl)ia for th~ p1,t ,year Ul!der Ille Amerkao · Fldd .Strvlco a• 'liuae program wlll be 111"1.a g ~ illluoatlonal dinner al i.pas1oa· vloljo llfih School 1burld1y. . . ' · 'Ille dinner, 1pol1!Qted.tiy MJ14!00 Vlejo AFS, II open , to th< pu~llc. '!\le c:Oli>- mw>ily 11 invited to 11op by aJid -t yOW1g·Vlaltor.1 from Venezuela, GmNny. E~ia, Chile, Tballlnd, Ft an c e, &wilwl!llld and Brull .. l\'i!w Adtilsor MISSION VIEJO -Hans Vogel, preal- dent of Saddleback Col1e1e'1 board of trusteea, has been named . ro the stat. community college ad hoc adVisory com- mittee on tevW'e. Dr. Sjdney W. Brossman, chancellor Or the C.llfomia Community' Collegu appointed V9g~I to the commiUff. \!Giel, of Tustin, bas served on the Saddlebac,k board since formation or the Ci\slrlct in 1967. • c1ti1> Cluinge• LAGUN~ H(LLS -Anliqulty Masonic Oub or Saddlebaek Valley has c:har1ed It& meeting date and Place to 7:30 p.m. on the second and roUrth Fridays of each month in the Great Western Savings cOmmunity Room, El Toro ·Road and Valencia Avenue. ' There are still some openings on the charter of the new club, according to pre11ident Vinet Alllanlello, and all Master Masons livlng in the valley are welcome to 1ttend meetings. Stmi·annuat elec:Uon of oUictrs will be held Frldiy. March 26. For information ea 11 Allianiello, 837-3274. College Signup Set Thursday Registr1Uon for sprinJ quarter cluael at Sadd~back CoUe1e wUI beiln. Tbur1- day for both the day ud ut.nded da y programs. Students who bave completed entrance applications will bt proceued Thursd•y and FTiday from I a.m. to 3:30 p.m. 6 to 9:15 p.m.' each day. Late registration for the spring quarter IJ schedulelf AprU 5 from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and from 6 to 1:30 p.m. the coorse OfferinJ for the extended day cateaory next quarter will total 90. Another %50 COW'ae1 are offered to day atudenll, college spokesmen Wd. Entrance ts offered to hlih tchool graduates or to nongraduates over 18 yem old who We 1 fOrtnal petiQon for entranoe. Clua 1Chtdule1 are 1v1ila&Je through lhe eollt.a:e admlnlltraUoo offiee1. • Absentee Ballot Deadline March 30 Absentee ballots for voters who will be away from borne tor ~ Aprll 6 bond election in the Sin J01quin 5dlool District are 1v1Uable trom the Re&iatrat of Voters, SilntA ·w . Deadline for obtalnln& 1n 1bsentte b1Uol ii March 30. <;ompleted bolloll must be returned M later than April S to be consldettf: v1lld. ln the latest request, they have aought the city's auiatance in lnltiating uusa- ment district · proceedinp in lbe ma to help provide for lbe badly Deeded services. One other plan being explored 1J the conlitrucllon of a major roadway from the property at the aoutherly city limlta sl(tlching through st.(tions of Camp Pendleton, finally linking with Avenida Pico at the norlh. aos Reds Press Offensive; 8 Gls Die SAJGO.N (UPI) -'Ille last ol 24,000 South Vietnamese troops who struck into J.,.IOI a1J: \'leeks aco were withdrawing tonight under heavy North Vietnam.es1 flre. Copnnunis~ pre.!ISW'es intensified on. U.S. support unJts and at least eight Amerkans were killed, field reports maid. Military sourCes said South Vietnam.eat emnmander1 clOted another outpost in Laos i,te today, leaving only one re- ~ base of the several which had been established for the offensive again.U NIXON 'ANALYZES THE WAR, PAGE 4 the Ho Chi Minh Supply Trail. Fewer than 5,000 South Vietnamese troops r• mained on Laotian soil and military aourc.es said they would be out by Wednesday night. The men retreating Tuesday night drove across the frontier back to South Vietnam ·in a cohunn of tanks, armored personnel carriers, trucks and jeepl which, field reporUI said, were coming onder "lncrealing harassment" from North Vletname.!le. U.S. Army helicopter gun.ships and U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom jet flgbtu~ bomDers constantly wheeled and circled oVtrbead, firing rockets and cannon and dropping bombs into well concealed posi· tions manned by North Vietnamese units using rocket-propelled grenades, mortars. rocket& and rifles. Reports stid the Communist3 acored several hits on the long armored column which Included trucks filled with wounded South Vittaamese and one command jeep without Urea. Tht North VietnameH W@re reported to have destroyed sevual vebicle1. A U.S. unit or tank! and armored personnel caITlers took 2~ hours to carry newsmen from the SOUlb Viet- namue outpost at Lani Vel in South Vietnam to . the Laotian border, a distance or ei1ht miles. Reporters saw amouldering tanka and bodies along the road.. · Official spokesmen at forward opera· Uonal bases and in Saigon would not speculate on Communlsl tactics, but field commanders aaijf lhat with the Laoa offen~ive ending, North Vietnamese unitJ coUld be expected tG concenlrate on JIO.!lltions I~ South Vietnam held by the. 10,000-man U.S. aupport force . Oruge Coa1t W!l'adler That chilly coaJt&I fo& wJU cre.ep further inland tnnlght, bringing a ·cooler Wednesday under buy 1un· . lhlne and temperaturea !n t h t middle !Os. INSIDE·TODAY Prtsfdent Nizon tells Mtion thci South Vittname.1e handled thtmielvt1 uc~ wtU in Lao1. Storv. Pogt 4. C•~ t Clltclli.. V. t c........,. •u CMtlct 11 -" Olefll .... ._ • .. _ . ••INfiM • .,. ' ••1trtll11-..t ,, ,Ill_• lt-11 -" ........... ,, Mlrr111M LkM .. t .V..WIQ ft MlltMI """" t• ......... 1,.... w ....... ...., . l'l'!Vtl hl1tr It ~ 1•1• llMll' ........ 1 .. 11 ttlt¥ttllll lt tllt411lt\ It ·-. Wllltt WUll lt """'"'" ....... ,,.,. ............. ,____,. __ ~---1· • • z DAIL V PILOT SC Add J,000 Feet Saddlehack Marine Choppers To Fly Higher I Computer . ' . Plan Told By JOA1'NE REYNOLDS Ot tha Oallw Plllt Siii! Oranae Coast homeownera who live under the air paths used by 1ttarine C.Orps helicopters from Santa Ana and El Toro will get some relief from the noise generated by tbe ships. Br:lgfdler General Henry W. Hise, com- manding general or El Toro ~iCAS, today announced the helicopters would be ad· Youth Voting Law Approval Wins Approval WASHINGTON (UPI) -Congress awarded its approva I today to a new conslituUonal right -to vote at age 18 -and send the proposed 26th amendment to the U.S. Conatitution to the st.ates for ratification. 1be House completed what was ex· peeled to be easy debate and an overwhelming approval of a proposed amendment that would rtquire states and localities to lower their minimum voting age to 11. Sponsors havt hoped the required 38 1tate leglalatures wouJd ratify the change in lime for the 1972 electiom. The amendment, approved 94 to 0 earlier thil month by the Senate, wu drafted more to remedy a altuation that Congress caused last year than lo break new ground in voting rights. The 1970 voting rights law sough' to qualify citizens 18 and older to vote in all elections, but the Supreme Court lal.er said Congress could set such quallflc&• lions by law ooly for federal elections. That left a altuation in 47 states where 18 year olds we.re entliled to vote for President, for senator and for members of the House, but not for governor, mayor or other at.ate and local officers. Only Georgia, Alaska and Kentucky now give the state and local vote to 18 year olds, and it seemed unlikely to Congress that many others would change their laws (and in some cases, C.OnsUtutlons) before next year. 'lbe pro- lJ>e(:t was for dual registration and voting with attending confusion and extra cost. A ConstituUonal amendment does not need presidenUal approval, so that House paaaqe by at Jeaat a two-thirds majority ends federal action on the proposal. It is transmitted to the 1tate1 -47 of ·which have legislatures tn session this year -by the General Services Ad· ministraUon. The amendment must be approved by three-fourth~ of the 11tate1 -38 -to become ope.ralive. Candidates Set For Forum Meet 'Ibe 12 candidates for three upcominf vacancies on the Laguna Beach School Board will appear in a public forum at 7:30 p.m. Monday ln city hall council chambers. Date of the forum waa incorrecUy given as last Monday in a Daily Pilot editorial. Each candidate will be given flve minutes to present hls plalform and at the conclusion of all remarks the audience will be invited to participate in a question and answer period. The forum ls sponaored by Uw: Laguna Beach Coordinating Council. .l 0,ANll COi.st DAllY PILOT OltAHQ;! COAIT ruaLISHINO CJJNIJ,J('( l•Mrt H. W•H ,~, Mil '"'*'~ J•c• l. C11rfey Vice Pnllffrlt tM 0-11 Mtntf" n-·· K • ..,n t:dnw Tll•••• A. Mvr.lii .. MMllllll ••1iw- Cll1rltt H. t..., l l,.;ll•r4 P. NJlt ...... ""' MIMlllll hlloB __ .._ 222 Forott Av•Rw• S..C ....... Offk9 JOii Nor"' ll C•1t1iR• l••I °"°'""'"' CMlll Mall: JID Wftl ••¥' llftlt ,.....,.,, IMdlt II» N"'Jll"f 1Dlllf¥1 ... "~''"'"" ~ 1111i llld'I 9'ulnl ... • I ding 1.000 feet to their crui!ing altitude while inaide lhe Orange Coast control zone. Effective Thursday, the Marine Corps helicopters will fly at 1,800 feet outbound and l ,llOO Inbound. Hise made the announcement at a prtSS conference held at El Toro MCAS. He said the change Jis the result of eight months work with representatives of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the Orange County Airport. "We want to do anything in our power to minimize the objectionable aspect! or our operations and still carry on those operations," the general e:xplaJned. CUrrently, tbe helicopters fly at 800 ffft outbound and 600 feet inbound along seven roulf:1 which we:re established in 1951. Coming to Laguna A consu.ltlng . firm Monday recom. mended that Saddleback College tu Mission Viejo enter an agreement witll. Santa Ana College to computerize Sad. dleback's unwieldy, lime-consuming r~ istration process. Jim Anderson, a represe1dative of Nor- ris and Gottfried of Los Angeles. told Saddleback's board of trustees such a11 arrangement v.·ould relieve the faculty or clerical dutie! at registralion time and eliminate much •·sta nding in Line." The consulting firm was hired by the college to develop short and long range objectives for the use of computers in administration and teaching at Sad· dleback College. The altitude ls figured from me:an sea level, so at times the helicopters are about 300 feet from rooftops in hilly country. Dr. Stanley Glarum conducts the 6().voice choir, ol Lewis and Clark College in PorUand, Ore., which will present a concert in Laguna Beach's Commun· ity Presbyterian Church at 8 p.m. \Vednesday. The choir will sing both contemporary and traditional works. Anderson said his report was based on careful study or the entire spectrum of the problem, including consultation with faculty , a liurvey of other schools now using computers and the recom• mendatlons or leading computer manufacturers. The control :zone is an area of about a five mile radius from El Toro MCAS which is used to control all civilian and military aircraft in the area. Hise said the higher altitude flying will be use:d in visual flight conditior11 when the ceiling ls above 2,300 feet. "\\'hen the ceiling drops below that, as it has today. we will go back to our previous rou tes and fly on in- struments. We: estimate that these weather conditions will prevail only about 15 percent of the time and the frequency of flights under these condi· tions will be small,' 'the General ex~ plained. Hise said the two areas that the facility has drawn the moat complaints from art the Palisades route near Corona de! Mar and the Tustin route. The Palisades fllght pattern leads from the Santa Ana Air Faclllty. over University Park, UC Irvine, along the eastern edge of Corona de! Mar and out to sea. It is used by helicopters participating in exercises on carriers at sea and as a route to Camp Pendleton. The Tustin route ls over central Tustin to a landing aile at the Prado Dam. Hise noted that outside tbe control :zone the helicopters fly at 1,000 feet and they will drop out of crui!ing altitude within one mile of their landing silts at Santa Ana or El Toro. Tbe other routes utilized by Marine helicopters a~ the route over southern St,ilta Ana to Mlle Square: Browning, wblch runs over agricultural areas to landing sites in the Cleveland National Forest; El Toro, which is an inrand route to Camp Pendleton rarely used because of a dearth ·of visual aids : Freeway, which follows the San Diego Freeway to San Juan Capistrano and is the primary inland route to Camp Pendleton, and the route between the fields at Santa Ana and El Toro. Col. Henry HunUngtcn, operations chie r at El Toro, said they have noted. the frequency or complaints bas dropped in recent months, even though be estimated. 95 percent of alt hellcoplers operations in Orange County were mll!tary. Hise said they erpect more helicopters to be coming into El Toro and Santa Ana as Marine Corps unit.s are moved out of the western Pacific. ''l think It's a matter or residents becoming Ultd to the inevitability or the helicopters," he said. "Our objective is to be as good a nleghbor as possible and still carry out our national defense mission." Drug Suspect Leads Police To Five More A Colorado youth, arruted on narcotic.s charges Monday night in Laguna Beach, as.sertedly told police where he had purchased 20 tablets of LSD and Jed to the arrest of five more youths and two juveniles. The roundup 1tarted with the arrest at 8:25 p.m. In a market parking lot of Richard Wayne Halstrom, 19, a transient from Colorado. The trail led from the parking lot to a residential hotel at 1289 South Coast Highway. In one room at the hotel, police arrested Joseph John Lam· parsky, 19; Alan Larry Pfeiffer, 20; Alister Mcintyre Christie, 20; Barbara Oltle, 19; and Deborah Faires, II. All but Miss Faires, a transient from Hous- ton, Te:r., said they lived at the hot.el. Arrested with them were two juvenile girls, a 17-year-old from Garden Grove, booked for lack of parental control and a 14-year-old girl from San Diego, booked as a runaway. The latter pair have been ~ed over to juvenile authorities. · The adults are awaiting arraignment on charges ranging from pouesalon of marijuana and possesion of . dangerous drugs for sale to contributing to . the delinquency of a minor. Silas Guttridge Services Slated Services will be held at 8:30 o'clock tonight in Pacific View Chapel fer Silu L. Guttridge, 1510 Avenlda Majorca. Laguna Hills, who died Saturday at the age of 76. Mr. Gutlridge is survived by his widow, Grace: a son, Silas Jr. of Atlanta, Ga.; two daughters. 1'-frs. Virginia Stewart of Torrance and Mrs. Patricia 'Phiele of Orinda; a n d by n i n e grandchildren. Entombment ·will be at Paclfic View Memorial Park. DAILY "!LOT fl•"'"'" Snaall Participants ?.1rs. Chrlstlne Bensinger, president of the I...eisure \Vorld Canine Cl ub. ii shown during the massive San Juan Capistrano swallows parade with her small companions. two cleverly dre~sed poodles. Parade was watched by thousands. Jt climaxed a week of community celebration. . ' I LagunaAdjustmentBoard May Get Variance Powers Under a recommendation by the city planning staff, all variance applications would be handled by tht Board of Zoning Adjtlltmen~ Laguna Beach Planning Comml.moners learned Monday night. "Such an adjustment would allow the plaruling commlsslon more time to look at the priority list ol action programs," aald Planner Alvin O. Autry. Church Doesn't Have a J:'rayer In Paint Job Despite several requests from a Laguna Beach church, both the city and the state have refwed to pay the cost of painting a left turn lane on Laguna Canyon Road at the church's entrance. 4 The Church of Rellglows Science. located near the intersection ol El Toro Road, had originally requested the !late pay the e<>st of the left.turn pocket as lt would be on a state road. When the atate refused on the grounds It was for a private drive, church officials looked to the city for the financial sup- port. The church bas already spent $7 ,500 for other improvement! at Its entrance, including widening the road to ac· commodate the turning lane and con !lructlng gutters and sidewalks. However, when requested to paint the necessary stripes on the road. the city echoed "'hat the state had already told church officials -the turn Jane is for a private drive. The city did agree, at the state's request, to establish a "'No Parking '' zone in the v\clnity of the church. But church officials were told they would have to paint their own lines or hire the state to do the work for them. City Publi c Works Director Joe S"'eany estimated the project would cost in the neighborhood of $200. "It's not lhe expense involved," S\\·e.any said, "but the principle. The left turn pocket Is a private project." Such priorities, he said, are the adoir tion of the General Pian, the Comir rehensive Zoning Ordinance, the Sub- division Ordinance and sue~ plans for underground utilities, parking structures and rezoning within the city. Autry suggested the change in the role of the BOA be made at the same time cQnditional use permit standards are adopted. Commissioner James Schmitz ques. tioned the right of the BOA to hear all variances. Noting that the three man board is made up of an architect, a real estate agent and a citizen at large, Schmiti said there is a good chance one man will be abstaining quite a bil of the time. "That could mean. a lot of one to one tie votes. Maybe we should expand the board of adjustments to five men," he said. Carl Johnson .suggested in case of a lie, the city council make the final decision. Schmitz. said tbat the BQA shouldn't burden the dty council. • Autry said to let the BOA function as a three-man board for a while to '·see how it works." "If we find it needs to be changed, we can do that easily," he said. Nixons Send Note To Chief M1rrray San Clemente Police Chief Clifford µ1urray continued to improve from re- cent major heart surgery -his spirits buoyed by a personal get wtll letter from President and Mrs. Richard Nlxon. The chief, recovering from the major artery bypass operation, is e1pecled to remain at St. Vincent's Hospital for perhaps two more weeks, then return home for more convalescence. Aides at the hospital have termed the surg1cal procedure a complete suc- cess. The letter from the Nixons arrived al Murray 's room late last week. The Nixons are expected to arrive for a week-long stay in San Clemente later this week. Anderson said the needs of Saddleback College were assessed and it was found the "most pressing'' requirement at the present time was to begin computerWng the area of student administration. "The clerical load Is very great," he told the five-member board, "and we found a great deal of hand pro- cessing ." He noted that the process of registration at the college. although com- pleted only twice a year. is an "all hands effort." ln addllion to registration, Anderson said a computer could easily be employed for use nn grade reporting, testing an4 for mailing purposes. Anderson said the ctillege should im- mediately hire what he called a "com4 puter coordinator" who would JIOW serve as a computer operalor and would ultimately become the ••nucleus of com· put er (Jperations at Saddleback College.'' Arter such a man was hired, Anderson recommended the school should entel" an agreement with Santa Ana College to use its C<lmputer facility. Saddleback's coordin ator would use the Santa Ana College computer during the evenings and on weekends to process the school°s punch cards, which \\'Ould be punched by clerical personal at Sad-- dleback College. The cost of the program would total about $30.000 a year. Anderson said, wlth the coordinator receiving a salary of about $15,000 a year and Santa l.na College being paid about $1,000 a montb for equipment rental. In response to board q u e: at I o n 1 regarding ·economic feasibility of the program, Anderson said the monetary savings would be minimal now. However, he said the growth of the college's clerical staff could be halted . Asked about the possibility of Sad· dleback College having its own computer-, Anderson said such equipment would rent for about $3,000 a month and would be difficult to operate with only cne person. Anderson also said it would be difficult to enter an agreement with Santa Ana College without hiring a coordinator l>ecause "you v.·ould be relying on their staff for your system." Anderson said if the board decided to enter the agreement. his company could have the entire 1ystem operational in time for September registration. Elvis' Eye Checked MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP ) -Entertainer Elvis Presley underwent a check of his inflamed right eye ~1onday by doctors at Memphis Eye and Ear Hospital. Tht singer left his secluded Graceland Mansion to visit the hospital after regullr hours. , COLOR IT BRIGID'! • There have been more innovations in carpet dyeing J:>roc:es11s in the la~t ten years than the preceding fifty years. Dye houses can dip carpeting in • single dye beck and come out with • carpet of six colors due to • unique operation of treating yarn to llccept or repel different pi9ments. Several printing methods now exist. One method involves tufting a white carpet end subjecting this carpet to e moving track which has trays compressing against the carpeting with a sort of "silk screeA'' process, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted with a design through this printing operation. The newest method is really speC'tacular. This involves manufacur- ing es much as fifty thousand yards in the same dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpeting today and match it one year later with an exact dye lot, using this process. One other operation des1rves mention -solution dyeing, wh1re color is put in wh1n the yarn is liquid, makin9 it part of the fib1r, end virtuelly eliminating fading. To assure yourself of the right choice, shop 1t 1 reput1blt relaHer. (Alden's, of course !). ' SANTA ANA. OU.NOi. TUSTIN Call• •• ALDIN'S RID HILL CARPITS & DRAPl!Rrll 11J74 IMM. Tuttln. c.r. ......... 1 ALDEN'S . . CARPns • DRAPES . 1663 Placentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I • • I l . . • • , Lagun~ Be116. EDITION Toda y's Final N.Y. Stoeks . ' VOL M, NO. 70, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY,o MAR~H 23, 1971 TEN CENTS Planners Nix Rezone Bid for. County Property A requesl to rtzone county property adjacent to Laguna Beach near Big Bend in Laguna Canyon from Al (Agricultural) to Ml (Light Industry) received a unanimous 'denial from Laguna Beach planning commissioners Monday night. The official deci sion on the rezoning matter will rest with the Orange County Planning Commission . However, since the land in question borders the city, By Laguna Panel • the local planners were asked for an opinion. Don Schoenleber, 2$1 Wave St., who owns 22,000 square feet of the property, brought lhe request before the com· mission, claiming that no development is possible on the land since it is zoned for agricultural uses only. "I'd like to see the land z9n~d county Ml ' so that I can develop my· prtiperty ·use Permit Rules Given Last Look Laguna Be.ach Planning Commissioners took one last look at Conditional Use Permit (CUP) slandards Monday night, and made minor revisions before the 11tandards Come up in public hearing April s. Carl Johnson said he would like I.a delete sentences which would allow the commission to grant deviatlou from yard, fence , height and Jot size regula- tions. "The CUP was set up lo provide more stringent standards, not make releases from existing standards," he said. City planner Alvin O. Autry said that the deviation clause allows "flexibility" for structure placement on Jots, especial· ly in the RI (resideritial) zone. "I sugge5t if you want to provide flexibility you write it in the RI stan- dards," Johnson sharply countered. Commissioners also agreed that a clause which provides that all landscap- lng on a site be done by a "landscape architect." be changed. "I don't think there is anything special about a landscape architect," Johnson aaid, "Let's leave him out and provide that landscaping be approved by the planning office of the city." Johnson also questioned the lo.day period in which an appeal must be made to the city council regarding any planning commission approval of a CUP. "I have heard that 10 days may be First t o Sign too short a time to prepare an appeal,'' he said. Other commissioners generally agreed that anyone who prepares an appeal U5Ually does so very soon, and for that reason co lime extension would be n~d· ed. The "Intent and PW',pose" section of the ttandardt 1t.ate1: ••u11u wmitted 11ubjtct to CUP are those yses net't!sary for the developinent Ortttie' community, having ·inherent qualities . or :chaMc. teristics which, . unless provided for, would cause such uses to be incompatible with adjacent or nearby uses." Commissioners, in approving a CUP application, make use of the following criteria : -That the site for the proposed use ls adequate in size and topography and that yards, walls. fences, parking, etc., adjust to the use of the land and the vlcinlty. -That the site relates to the streets and highways which will carry to tralfic generated by the use . -That the proposed use will have no adverse effect on adjacent property. -That the conditions are deemed necessary to protect the public health, safety and general welfare. ' · -That the right of use and occupancy are contingent upon meeting all set con· ditions·and requirtmenta. ' OAILY PILOT ltlft ra.i. Mayor Richard Goldberg ol Laguna Beach is first to •ign ·letter to Hanoi demanding to know \Vhether Maj. Don Lyon (missing in ,action) ls alive. He was shot down three years ago. The art colony has adopt- ed Lyon. From left to right are Goldberg; Donna Lyon, 8; Scot~ 8; Mrs. Janice Lyon; and Suzi. 11. ,, •• and offset the higb toes I'm faced with," he said. While planning commissioner• agreed that the area should be zoned for some industrial use, they felt SchoenJeber should see.k to annex the property to the city and then zone it MlA (lJgbi Manufacturing). "Our problem," commented chairman William Lambourne. "is that the county Ml zone allows industrial uses which we don't want to aee in the canyon area, which will eventually become a part. of the city.-'• ' "We have to be very careful with any development of that gateway to the city. Since It is an entrance fo the city, we should keep it appealing," &aid James Schmib:. He not~ that the city MIA zone has provisions which "control " industrial uses wilb landscaping, fencing and -screening requirements. "The county Ml doesn't have any of th05e reQllirements." City planner Alvin 0. Autry rqaintained that Shoenleber could have his property annexed to the city wlthln 90 days. Schoenleber said that there was enough opposition within the area to prevent annexation right away. Schoenleber's personal interest in tbe ione change is his plan to build a er PILOT HOLI)l NG . OPEN HOUSE Friends and readers of the P'AU.,V PILOT are invited to a two-nights-only open house to inspect the enlarged and modernized facilities of the newspaper at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. The plant will ·be open to the public from 7 to t p.m. both Wednesday and Thursday. Some parking plaw will be• available on the plant'a parking lot: other vi5ltors may find on-street spaces along Bay and Tburin streeli. Newly Finished Vi~jQ LWmry Dedie.ation Held"' .. Ideas await tht spark of the humllft mind and thl1 is what endures. The quiet tct of establfshing a library can make A very loud noise in the world.'' With these quiet words, carma Leigh, California State librarian, dedicated the newly completed Mission Viej".t Library Saturday. The spacious Spanish style structure, located at 24851 Chrisanta Drive, is the most mOdern brancb of the Orange County Library System. "The phenomenal growth of Orange County is well known," Mrs. Leigh told the modest crowd of dignitaries. "But if such growth does not provide for growth of the mind, It contains the seeds of its own destruction ." "Books are as important as bread'' she added. "The ideas in them stand behind every human being. This library Y>'ith books and subsidiary materials st.ands for and makea enrichment possi· ble." The new library. designed to serve all of southern Orange County, will ultimately hold 40.000 adult volumes and 13,000 children's books. A communlty meeting room also has been included in the fi;cility. Mrs. Leigh praised the county library system for it.!I lendin,q process whereby each library has access ln material in all the other branche5. She noted the Mission Viejo dedication was a "won- derful way" to mark the system's SOth anniversary. The new library i1 <1pen from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday; noon to 5 p.m. on Friday and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday. The facility i! closed Sundays and holidays. Chevalier Gets Check PARIS (AP) -Maurice Chevalier is in the hospital, but his secretary says he entered only for one of his periodical physical checkups. She said· Monday lhe entertainer, 83, was feeling fine and should be out and about in a day or so. HE'LL HELP GREETER CELEBRATE. BI RTHDAY Young John Ro11 With Laguna'• Eller L1rsen, 81 • Birthday Party Greete r To Be Honored on Blst A Greenbelt birthday party at Laguna 's Bluebird Park Saturday will honor Greeter Eiler Larsen on the 81st a& niverwy of his birtb. The unique tribute I.a the bearded nature lover will be presented by youngsters from Laguna's three elemen- tary schools and SL Catherine'• School. The birthday party in the park will Jaat from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 pim. and will feature a !ikit on the Greenbelt theme from each school group, along with individual poems and drawings prepared all gifts by the children. Coordinating the event are Mr1. Florence Beane, president of the Laguna Beach PT A council; Al Kiesselbach, president of St. Catherine's Parents Association ; Mrs. Carl Manus, president of the Junior Woman'll Club; the Assis· teens: and George Fowler and Doug Allen of the city Recreation Department. Author Stone Given Award by Colleges LOS ANGELES (AP) -Author Irving Stooe, 68, bas been awarded an honorary doctor of literature degree by the California State College system: In presenting the degree Monday. col- lege officials said Stone, through such book!i as "Lust For Life," and ... The Agony and the Ecstasy," has "enabled the world better to see and understand Itself." $3.7 Million Project Saddlehack Library OK'd Final plans for a library clasarobm comple1 at Saddleback College, 1f~ several trips back to the drawing: )oard, were unan1m<1111ly approved Mondi)' b,r the colleges' board of trw:tees. The $3.7 million structure, which of.. fkiaJs hope to have complettd by the fall of 1972, will be the lint permanent building on the Youn.I colleae·s Miaion Vejo campUll. An:h:tteci Robert U:iwrey told trustees Monday bis firm had redesigned th• strudure to ellmlnate previous com· l plainti -01 too much 1lus and too many balconiu "where peGple co u I d thr-0w books down." A a December meeting whtn the plans had flrifbeen submitted, board Prtaldont Hanir VogeF "hatr W'ged the elimination o! "°""d floor wtndowa becaUJe ol high malnttna.nC.•eosla and posaible breakage. "The nnat plans for the library have no wlndow1 on either the ground floor or in the cla!.!room arus." Lowrey told the trustees BS he pointed to 10 1rUst•1 C6t!Cept of the concrete ltructu:re. Lowrey said the fac\lity will have "controlled areas" much like the UC Irvine library where students will have to pass: through turnstiles for entrance and exit. This process is designed for library worker1 to Insure that no books are stolen, The plan• for tht building will now be submitted lo' the state educaOOh department f<1r approval. If the plans are approved, the college will open bids tor construction of tho llbraly. ,:;~ e,800·square·foot warehouse en his pro- perty. ''With tbe opposition to annexation, my only choice is to turn to the county for a zone change." However, the planning commission recommendation that the • ione change not be approved is expected to carry considerable weight when the final decision comes before the county plan- ning agency in May. ur 'Busine ss As Usual' Alleged FT. BENNING, Ga. !AP) -Lt. William cal\ey's defeme attorney com- -plained bitterly l<lday that hi! client's murder jury is "conducting business as usual" and dragging out their delibera~ tions, in the seventh day today. "U they're watching the Glen Campbell and Ed Sullivan shows and wining and dining themselves, I think that's . a disgrace," George Latimer told the trial judge. His complaint was prompte.d by newspaper reports that the six officers an •\bl jury bad requested a week's llllJiply of fre.sb laundry and that ar .. rangementa be made for their paychecks. due March 31. Lattmer's outrage was prompted by a story In the Atlanta Constitution thil morning that said the jurors spent Sun• day night after a hall-day session in court, watching those televisioo showt and "before going to bed, two had beer, two sipped bourbon and one had scotch." Latimer k'lld the judge: "This i5 not a siesta. This is serious business. We have a man's life at stake.'' But Judge Reid Kennedy said Hwhen you're talking about drinking there is a difference between baVing a cocktail and getting drunk." At this point, the judge said he will not set OOurs for the jury because "I would rather see the verdict In tllll case be a well thought-out verdict." Latimer protested about the report& that are geUing to the I a r g e group of repOrters abOut the jury's activities -such as sending out Monday night for a case of beer. "Certainly there Is something leaking out of Qte jury box," Latimer 5aid. "I think that is a breach of the secrecy required from the jury." The t r i a l judge 5 a i d he thought Latimer's complaints abcut the jury's relaxing after court were ill·founded, saying "They have to get haircuts; they have to eat." When he turned the four-months worth of te5timony over to the jury one week agO today, the judge told the six veteran <1fficers they could set their own hours and not to get over-tired. He limited, however, to the hours of 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. any business which requires court personnel most of whom are either in the Army or under civil service. Jn the first six days, the jury spent some 34 hours actually deliberating and many other hours in the courtroom listening to a read-back of te.stimony from 10 key prosecution witnesses. Or u ge Coast Wea t her That chilly coastal fog will creep furl.her inland tonight, bringing a . a>0ler Wednesday under hazy sun· ahine . and temperatures in t h e mlddl• l!(Jc, INSIDE TODiY President Nizon tells 'Mtion that South Vietnamese handled themielve:s ver11 well in Laos. Story, Page 4. CllllltnN • ....... .. Cltftltlll1 Uit • M~tvtl l"Vlllt\ " (lllHl'*li •H "'""''' ....... ... CM!llc• .. O••"'' (tvftl' • ,.,._ .. s11wt1 1'911• .. Odltl Nttk• • ·-1•u Ol'ltfet• • Site.It Mtt'llfh 1 .. 11 l"11tt1'1 , ... ' Ttlnl•lfll .. ll'IWllllllfttlll .. Tllt•t.n " '•lfl111tt ' 1 .. 11 Wttllltt • --" Wllltt ··-" A1111L.....,1 It ·-·· """ 1).-14 Mvt'M.. Lia!!.. t WltrlC Nn1 .. ' ' ., Z DAIL V PILOT SC Add J,000 Feet Tutsdq, Mardi 23, 1971 . ' Saddlehack Marine Cho·ppers To Fly Higher Computer • Plan Told By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tM t>&i!y 1'1191 Slllt Orange Coast homeowners who live under the air path! used by .. Marine Corps helicopters from Santa Ana and El Toro will get some relief from the noise generated by the ships. Brigidier General Henry W. Hi.st, com- manding general of £1 Toro MCAS, today announced tbe helicopters would be ad· Youth Voting Law Approval Wins Approval IVASIDNGTON (UPI) -Congr<S! award.ed lts approval today to a new coruilitutlonal ria;bt -to vote at age 18 -and send the proposed 26th amendment to the U.S. Constitution to the ttates for raWic.aUon. The House compleled what was e1· pected to be easy debate and an overwhelming approval or a proposed amendment that would require states and localities to lower their minimum voUng age to 18. Sponson have hoped the required 38 state legislatures would ratify the change in time for the 1972 elections. The amendment, approved 94 to O earlier this mooth by the Senate, was drafted more to remedy a situation that Congress caused last year than to break new ground in voUng rights. The 1970 voting righls law sough• lo qualify citizens 18 and older to vote in all elections, but the Supreme Court later said Congress could set such qualifica- tions by law ooly for federal elections. That left a sltuaUoo in 47 states where 18 year olds were entiUed to vole for President, for senator and for members of the House, but not for governor, mayor or other state and local officers. Only Georgia, Alaska and Kentucky now give the state and local vote to 18 year olds, and it seemed unlikely to Congress that many others would change their laws {and in some cases, Constitutions) before ne:1t year. The pro- tpe:Cl was for dual reg istration and voUng with attending ronfusion and eitra COit. A Constitutional amendment don not need presldentlal approval,"° that How:t pauage by at least a tw~thirds majority ends federal action on the proposal. It Is transmitted to the state.! -47 or which have legislatures in session thiJ year -by the General Services Ad· minlstration. The amendment must be 1pproved by three.fourths of the states -38 -to become operaUve. Candidates Set • For Forum Meet The 12 candidates for three upcomln1 vacancies on the Laguna Beach School Board will appear in a public forum at 7:30 p.m. Monday in city hall council chambers. Date of the forum was incorrectly given as last Monday ln a Dally Pilot editorial. Each candidate will be given five minu tes to present his platform and at the conclusion o1 all remarks the audience will be invited to participate in a question and answer period. The forum is sponsored by the Laguna Beach Coord lnatlng Council. ' OJ.ANal COAi? DAllY PILOT Otu.HG: COAIT l'UILISHIJrtO COMPANY l•Mrt N. w,,d ,.,....., Mil ...... .,,... J.c ... wrt • ., Vke ..,.... • .,. ~· Ni.-.. '"''"''' r,,,.n ldllw ll•"''' A. M•rp$ilft• MINtlnl ldllw Chal'l'at H. l..ot llcllard '· Ntft M"ttl'lt ,,,._..,,. l<:l!!fn i... ....... Offk• J22 Feratt A'f'aftua SM C.._....Offk• JOI H•rth El Ca,,.IRo loal .,_., ..... co. ... Malt: :DO w-.1 lat ltrttt Ntwal0'1 a.du D» HtWl!Ol'I l oi,lwanl """'''"''°" hidl;r 1n11 ._ell lavlf¥1nl ; ding 1,000 feet to their cruising altitude while inside the Orange Coast control zone. Effective Thursday, the Marine Corps li beltcopten will fly at 1,800 feet outbound and 1,600 inbound. Hise made the announcement at a preu conference held at El Toro MCAS. He said the change is the resi.:lt of eight months work "'ilh representatives of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the Orange COunty Airport. ''We want to do anything in our power to minimize the objectionable aspects o! our operations and still carry on those operations," the general e1plaintd. A consull~ng Orm Monday recom- mended that Saddleback College in Mission Viejo enter an agreement wilb Santa Ana College to computerize Sad- dleback·s unwieldy, lime-consuming ret• jstration ptOctss. - Jim AnClerson. a representative ot Nor· ris and Gottfried of Los Angeles, told Saddleback 's board of trustee! such an arrangement would relieve the faculty ot clerical dutie:;i at registration time and eliminate much "standing in line." The consulting firm was hired by the college to develop short and long ranga objectives Jor the use of computers in administration and leaching at Sad· dleback College. CUrrenUy, tbe helicopters lly at 800 feet outbound and 600 feet inbound along seven routes which Vi'ete establlihed in 1951. Cmning to La.gutta Anderson said his report was baaed on careful study ot the entire spectrum of the problem, including consultatio11 with faculty, a survey of other school If now using computers and the recom· n1endations of leading c o m p u t e r n1anufacturers. The altitude is figured from mean sea level, so at times the helicopters are about 300 feet from rooftops in hilly country. Dr. Stanley Glarum conducts the 60-voice cho ir or Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Ore., which 'vill present a concert in Laguna Beach's Com mun· ity Presbyterian Church at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The choir will sing both contemporary and traditional works. The control zone is an area of about a five mile radius from El Toro 11CAS which is used to control all civilian and military aircraft in the area. Hise said the higher a!Utude: flying will be used in visual. fl ight conditions when tbe ceiling is above 2,300 feet. ''When the ceiling drops below that, as it has loday, we will go back to our previous routes and fly on in· struments. We estimate that these weather conditions will prevail only about 15 percent of the time and the frequency ol flights under these condi· tions will be small,' 'the General e1· plained, Hise said the two areas that the facility bu drawn the most complaints from are the Palisades route near Corona de! Mar and the Tustin route. The Palisades flight patt.ern leads from the Santa Ana Air Facility, over University Park, UC Irvine, along the eastern edge of Corona de! Mar and out to sea. It is used by helicopters participating in exercises on carriers at sea and u: a route to Camp Pendleton. The TustiA route is over central Tustin to a JandinJ: site at the Prado Dam. Hise noted that outside the control zone the belicopt.ers fly at l ,000 feet and they will drop out of cruising altitude within oDe mile of thelr landing sites at Santa Ana or El Toro. The other routes utilized by Marine h~J~ .,. the rout. over ,aoulllml Santa Aria to Mlle Square; Brown[ng, wbicb runs over wicultural areas to landflW "sltertin thtlCleve:lldd Nallonal Forest; El Toro, which is an inland route to Camp Pendleton rarely used because of a dearth of vlsual aids ; Freeway, which follows the San Diego Freeway to San Juan Capistrano and is the primary inland route lo Camp Pendleton, and the route between tbe fields at Santa Ana and El Toro. Col. Henry Huntington, operations chief at El Toro, said they have noted the frequency of complaints has dropped in recent months, even thoq:h he estimated 95 percent of all helicopters operations in Orange County were military, Hise. said they expect more he:licopttrs to be coming into El Toro and Santa Ana as Marine Corps Ulllts are moved out of the western Pacific. "I think It's a matter of >esident.s becoming used to the inevitability of the helicopters," he said. "Our objective: is to be as good a nieghbor as possible and still carry out our national defense mission." Drug Suspect Leads Police To Five More A Colorado youth, arrested on narcotics charges Monday night in Laguna Beach, asserted.ly told police where he hid purchased Vl tablets of LSD and Jed to the arrest of five more youtha and two juveniles. The roundup started with the arrest at 8:25 p.m. in a ma.r{tet parking lot of Richard Wayne H~m, 19, a transient from Colorado. The trail led from the parking Jot to a residential hotel tt 1289 South Coast Highway. In one room at the hotel, police arrested Joseph John Lam· parsky, 19; Alan Larry Pfeiffer, 20; Alister Mcintyre Christle, 20; Barbara Oltle, 19; and Deborah Faires, 18. All but Miss Faires, a transient from Hous· ton, Tex .• said they lived at the hat.el. Arrested with them were two juvenile girls, a 17·year-old from Garden Grove , booked for lack of parental control and a 14-ye:ar-old girl from Sa.n Diego, booked as • runaw~·i T1ie latter filit .hive 1lc!tri lurrled over '° juvenile au,YMJrit ies. ~ !!'he adults +it cwoitini' atTi!IJlm<nt on charges ranging ·from possesaion of marijuana and ·posses1on of dangerou11 drugs for sale to contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Silas Gu!tridge Services Slated Services will be be1d at 8:30 o'clock tonight In Pacific View Ciapd for Silis L. Guttridge, 1510 Avenida M1jorca. Laguna Hills, who died Saturday at the age of 76. Mr. Guttridge: is survived by his widow, Grace; a son, Silas Jr. or Atlanta, Ga .; two daughters, Mn. Virginia Slewart of Torrance and Mrs. Patricia Phiele of Orinda; a n d by n i n e grandchildren. Entombment will be at Pacific View ~1emorial Park. DAILY PILOT Sii" Pllllt Small Part~ipattts Mrs. Christine Bensinger, president of the Leisure World Canine Club, Is shown during the massive San Juan Capistrano swaUows par1de with her sm1ll companions. two cleverly dressed poodles. Parade wu watched by thousands . It climaxed 1 "'eek of community celebratlon. ,. t LagunaAdjustmentBoard Anderson said the needs of Saddleback· College were assessed and it was found the .. most presshlg" requirement at the present time was to begin computerizing the area of student administration. • "The' clerical load ls very great. .. he told the five·meinber board. ,;and "'e found a great deal .of hand pr9" cessing." He noted that the pr~ess of registration at the college. although com- pleted only tw ice a year. is an "all hands effort." May Get V ai·iance Powe1·s Under a recomme:ndalion by the city planning staff, all variance applications would be handled by the Board of Zoning Adjustment, Laguna Beach Plarutlng Commissioners learned Monday night. "Such an adjuatment would allow the planning commission more lime to look at the priority list of action programs,'' aald Planner Alvin O. Autry. Church Doesn't Have a Prayer In Paint Job Despite several requests from a Laguna Beach church, botll lhe: city and the state have refused to pay the cost of painting a left turn lane on Lag~ .Can}'OD ~d ft the church's entrance:. Tbo Church ~'Jl<lltiou1 •• ~. located near the fiiCtrseclio]\ of El Toro Road, had originally requested the state pay the cost of the left-turn pocket as it would be on a state road. When the state refused on the grounds it l\'as for a private drive, church officials looked to the ci ty for the financial !Up. port. The church has already spent $7 ,500 ror other Jmprovemenl.! at Jts entrance, including widening the road to llC· commodate the turning lane and con structlng gutters and sidewalks. However, when requested to paint the necessary stripes on tbe road, the city echoed what the state had already told church officials -the turn lane is for .a priva te drive. · The city did agree, at the 1late's request, to establish a "No Parking" !one in the vicinity of the church. But church orficials were told they would have to paint their own Jines or hire the state to do the work for them. City Public Works Director Joe Sweany estimated the project would cost in the neighborhood of $200. "It's not the expense involved:' Sweany said, "but the principle. The left turn pocket Is a private project." Such priorities, he said, are the adop- tion of the General Plan, the Comp- rehensive Zoning Ordinance, the Sul>- division Ordinance and such plans for underground utilities, parking structures and rezoning within the city. Autry suggested the change in the role or the BOA be made at the same lime conditional use permit standards are adopted. Commissioner James Schmitz ques- tioned the right of the BOA to hear all variances. Noting lhat the three man board is made up of an architect, a real estate agent and a citizen al large, Schmitz said there is a good chance one man will be abstaining quite a bit of the time. r "'That rould mean a lot or one lo one tie votes. Maybe we should expand the board of adjusunenlS to five men," he said. Carl Johpson suggested in case of a tie, the city rouncil make the final decision. Schmilz 1aid that the BOA shouldn't b4.trden l)1e city councU. • Autry'· did-1o 1et the BOA fu'ilctlon as a three·man board for a ll'hile to "see how it \\.'Or ks." "If we find it needs to be changed, we can do that easily," he said. Nixons Send Note To Chief Murray San Clemente Police Chief Clifford Murray continued to improve from re- cent major heart surgery -his spiriu buoyed by a personal get well letter from President aod A-frs. Richard Nixon. The chief, recovering from the major artery bypass operation, is expected to remain at St. Vincent's Hospital for perhaps two more week.s, then return borne for more ronvale~oce:. Aides 1t the hospital have termed the surgical procedure: a complete suc. cess. The letter from the Nixons arrived at Murray's room late last week. The Nitons are expected to arrive ror a week-long stay in Sao Clemente later this week. In addition to regislrati9n, Andersop. said a computer could easily be e~ploy~ for use 1U1 grade reporting, testuig an4 for mailing purposes. Anderson said the college should im· mediately hire what he called a "com· pute r coordinator'' who would JIOW serve as a computer operator and would ultimately become the "nucleus of rom• puter operations al Saddleback College." After such a man "'as hired, AndersoD recommended the school should entet an agreement with Santa Ana College to use its computer facility. Saddleback·s coordinator would use the Santa Ana College computer during the evenings and on weekends to proces.t the school's punch cards, which would be punched by clerical personal at Sad..- dleback College. The cost of the program would total about S30.000 a year. Anderson said, \\'ilh the coordinator receiving a salary ol about $15,000 a year and Santa .lna College being paid about $1 ,000 a monl.b !ot equipment' rental. In rest:ionse to board q u ts t i o n 1 regarding economic feasibility of tbe program, Anderson said tbe monetary savings would be minimal now. However, he said the growth of the college'• clerical staff rould be halted. As~ed about th·e possibility of Sad. dleback C.Ollege h·aving its own romputer1 Anderson said such equipment woulcl. rent for about $3,000 a month and wouJd be difficult to operate with only ont person. 1 Anderson also said it would be difficult to enter sn agreement with Santa Ant Olllege without hiring a coordinator because "you would be relying on thett staff for your system." Anderson said if the board decided to enter the agreement, his company could have the entire system operatlonat in time for September registration. 1 ' Elvis' Eye Checked i1EMPHIS. Tenn. CAP) -Entertainer Elvis Presley underwent a check of his inflamed right eye Monday by doctott at Memphis Eye and Ear Hospital. Th• singer left his secluded Graceland Mansion to visit the hospital after regult hours. COLOR IT BRIGHT! There have been more innovations in carpet dyeing processes in tho list ten y11 rs thon tho preceding fifty years. Dye houses can dip carpeting in a sin9l1 dye beck and come out with • carpet of six colors due to • unique optration of treating yarn to ~ecept or repel diffe,.nt pigments. Several printing methods now exist. Ont method involvts tufting a white carpet and subjecting this carpet to ' moving track. which hes fT1ys compressing 191inst the carpeting with •~'silk ~n" process, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted ~design through this printing operation. The newe st method is really spect1cular. This involves manufacur· ing as much as fifty thousand yards in the same dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpeting todey end metch it one year later with an e11ct dye lot, using this process. Ont other operation deserves mention -solution dyeing, where color is put in when tht yam is liquid. making it part of tht fibtr, lnd virtually tliminating fading • .To enure yourself of the right ch o ice, shop ot • reput1ble ret1iler. (Alden's, of course!). SANTA ANA. OIANG(., TUSTIN C•ll • • • ALDEN'S AID HILL CAR .. ITI & DAA .. lltlll 11174 lr"YIM. Tu•tln, C•I. UIU44 ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 " " ,, San Clemente Ca is1rano • VOL M, NO. 70, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE •COUNTY, CAUFO~NIA -. TUESDAY, 'MARCH 23, 1971 . . Today '• F inl . . N.Y. Stocks • JEN· CENTS Clemente Eyes Go·If Cour·se Area Master PI~n A muter plan . including Lwo larae condominium projects and scores of est.ate-siud lots on acreage near the San aemente Municipal Goll Course will come before planning commlS!ioners at a public hearing Wednesday. 'The Douglass-Pacifi c Corporation - which has developed the Colony Covet and Beacon Bay communities locally -seek$ a conditional use permit and a formal subdivision on the huge portion of acreage known u the Rumuuen-Ayer property. The bulk <Of •the pl'Ol)GSed development, Planning Dir«tor Eugene Schulte ex· plained~ wou)d be 484 condominium unlL!I built in the cluster concept on the land next to 5th, 6th and 7th · fairwa ys of the municipal course. An additional 7S estate 1ized lots each an acre or mort in size -are . pl&Med (or the more billy area above llH! llnl<3. The project -large by Sa9 Clemente standards -would involve two high- density anas of development, but Schulte u:plained that the over·all density factor computed for the more than 12 million square feet would make a very low concentralion of development. In the total computation, he gaid, the development would hsve one dwellin& unit for every U,754 square feet of land. Prellmlnary indications call tor the dedicaUon of mut'h or the hill,y-primari· ly unbuildable -turaln u cpen.apact, allowing for lar1e sreen bells throughout the development. The ap.plicaUon for the ~rmlt Wtd- ntlday will be · a public hearin&. Spokesmtn for tht developer are e1- pected to make detailed explanations of the total muttr plan. One sldeUght to Wednesday·s major application is the pendin& staff study called for last wetk by city councilmen on provision of accest1 ioads and m-.jor utilities to the Jargt chUnk of proptrly. Negotiations between the prlnclpal1 fn. volvtd with the Rasmussen acreage and city officia11 have gone on for the pa1t several yeus on methods of providing acC6S, sewera ind wit.er mains to the large parcel • eave Capo Upholds Zoning D.enial San Juan Capistrane City Councilmen narrowly upheld a planning commission decision Monday to deny prezoning the 109-acre Rosenbaum anne1ation as a planned community. Councilmen stated, however, they would approve the" anne1atiot1, if t.be developer reapplied under the planned development zone. The property, whlcb Is currently bein, considered for anne1atlon to the cit)'. was to be pruoned before Ult city aceepted lt. Ed Akins, president of the South Coast Development Company, s.aid during a public hearing Monday t.hat his firm preferred the planned community con- cept to insure a substantial amount of security that their plans would be UD· changed for three years. The decision to opt for a planned development zone seemed to rest on a technicality. Planned community zon- ing is supposedly for developments much larger lhan the IDS-acre one and must contain areas for schoOls, recreation. par~s. industrial development and retail bus messes. The proposed Village San Juan dt¥elop- inent would have a density of 7.6 units an acre and would include 545 garden homes, 290 townhouses. 18 acres of parks, a five-acre la.kt, pools, volleyball a n d tennis coorts, a tot lot and a baseball diamond. A large number of protesters were present from the Spotted Bull area north of the Rosenbaum annexation outside the city limits. "We·re oppostd to the concept of cluster housing . not the dtvelopment !Uelf," said Charles Dargan, their spokesman. "We had hoped the area wpuld be dtveloped i n t o half-acre or acre Jots but we'll go along wilh your decision." Other objections voiced by residents of that area included high density. reduc- Uon of water pressure to._ !WTOunding areas, addili<lnal children for already cvercrowcled schools, loss of bridle paths through tbe area (the developer will Firm Appointed · To Ai d Hospital The Lutheran Hospital ~iety of Southern california has appointed the firm II Swinerton and Walbert C.O. to coordinate construction of Saddleback Community Hospital, Laguna Hills. not include any) and incompatability with lbe Spotted Bu.U area which a\low1 horses. "We didn't feel we should marry the city to a planned community," sai.d Plan- ning. Commission Oiairman Gerald Gaf- fiiey. Under the planned devdopment ione the fjeve~r'1 plaas ¥t. aul)jected to I ~ocy <Iola Mr\llillll• • I BeeaCie tlle llooenblllln property It not :iei .. pen-.r µ. cllx•lb4'.~•lopera will ~ithei-rUppty under : tbt planned dt~lopment·ZQDe or withdraw lheir ap- plication for anne1atlon ana take their plans It· the' CCWlty. Another Parade For Ar~f>r Da y Okayed in Capo Another parade? That'• right. The " San Joan Ctpi.strano City Council approved an "application to crant a parade perm.it to the Chamber of Com- merce for Saturday, April 24. The ~until also declared that day and the third Saturday of April in future years to be the city's Arbor Day. The .parade is to follow 1 short route from San Juan Elementary School down Ortega Highway to CaminG Capistrano all the way to the new mini park. Participants in the parade will be the Marco Forater Junior High Band, Miss San Juan in a decorated cart, and children riding bicycles. At the mini park plans call for awarding pc>Ster contest prizes fOr the theme "Help a Tree Grow" "!ith winning po&ters dilplayed tn the park. Prizes also will be awarded to the best· deeofated bikes. The parade, sponsored by t h e chamber's San Juan BeauUful Com- mittee, will em! with a band concert and a speech given by a city councilman. acwrding to · Phyllis Shainman, Arbor Day parade C;halrman. CofC 'Mixer' Slated One of the San Clemente Ch.Imber of Commerce's regular IOclal "mixers" is seh~uled for Thursday afternoon at the,munJcipal golf course <:lubbouse. Chamber members and iue1t.a are weJcGme to the 5:30-8 p.m. event. ' CAIL 1 'ILOT l llff '"'"9 THE DINNER· SHOULD BE· GOOD, THE CAUSE EX,CELL~,..T OeniM Ruv1s, Mr s. Mlrosz, Debbie Washln, ~eanette M1yo~t . Eating for Cash Vie jo 'Dime a Dip' Dinn,er Set Samples of cuisine from all over the world will be offered at the annual fund rai.!ing dinner sponsored by the Mission Viejo High School American FielQ Service chapter. The array of delicacies will be served Thursday, March 25 from 5:30 to II p.m. in the Mission Viejo High School cafeteria. PILOT HOLDI 1VG OPEN HOUSE Friends and readers of the DAILY PILOT are in vited to A two-nights-only open house to inspect lhe enlarged and modernized facilities of the _newspaper at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. The plant will be open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. both Wednesday and ThuTsday. Some parking places will be available on the plant's parking lot; othtr visitors may find on-street spaces along Bay and Thurin streets. Cost of the meal will be a. "dime a dip" and all proceeds will be used to bring a foreign student to live with a ~fission Viejo family and !tudy in the high school. "We also hope to .raiae enough money to aend one of our studenU abroad,,. 11Jd Mrs. Marion Marosz who this year is "mother" to Jeannette· Ma.yore of Argentina, Mlulon Viejo'• first exchange litudent. 'lbe cost ol 1e.!Hlin1 a 1tude.nt and bringing one in ta $!ISO u.cb. ~ Studentl from Peru, Brazil, Venezuela, Japan, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, France and Germany will be pre1ent at the dinner to chat informally with iuesta. These 1tudenlJ are attending school izl neli;hboring c o m m u n i t i e 1 through the AFS program. Other fund railing eventl have been attempted this year by I.he MW:k>n Viejo AFS chapttt. The students held a car wash at which $28 was ra.isf.d and a taffy 1ale "'hich netted $100. The dinner la the" major fund raising project. The enUre community II invited to partlclpatL For information on the din·ner or the AFS program call Mr1. Marosz: at S3Q.. 0136. Robert Hartman. the hospital's director of architKture and planning, said the firm was the lowest of si1 firms bidding for the project. Among other respon!ibllitiea, Swinerton and Wslberg will conduct phased bidding or the proJed to those firms who will do the actual construction work. $3.7 Million Project A financial support campaign 11 un- derway in Saddleb&ck Valley. George B&ird, genual manager of Burroughs Corp.. MiS!ion Viejo. i.s In charge of the campaign seeking $2.!i million to help Jlnance the 110 million facility. Saddlehack Library OK'd Chevalier Gets Check Final plana for a library clasmiom <'Oltlples at Slddlebaci Collete, after several trips back to the drawinf: board, were unanlrDOU1ly approved Monday by the collog.,• board of ,,,,,,_, The $3.7 million structure, which of. PARIS (AP ) -Miu.rice Chevalier is ncial1 hope to have ccimpleted by the In the hospital, but his secretary PYI fall of 1972, will bl the fint permanent h.e entered onl y ror one of his periodical building on the youq coUe1t's Mlulon phY,slcal checkup!. She said Mond•y the Vejo campwi. entert.lner, 8.1, w11 feelin1 fi.ne 111d Architect Robert L<lwrey told truatea: thould be out and abGut ln a day or Mond1y bis flrm bad rednl&ne'S UM -. ' atructure to eliminate prevlOUJ ..,~m· plalnlt of too much &i•u and too llWIJ Lowrey uld llH! llCllity will hlYO bak:onlta "wbert ~le co u 1 d 'throw "CQl'ltrolled areas" much Uie the tJc books down .... ~ A a December rneetlr\i: wMn the plans Irvine library where studftltt wW have had flrst betn 1Ubmltted\ bO-nt President to pa.sa throui}\ turnaUle'I for entrince Hans Vogel had urged the elimination arld el\L Th i• prochs 11 deli&J>ed !or of ground floor windows beca\IH of high library workers to insure that no boob malntenance coats and Po11ibJe breakage. are stolen. "The llnal plans for the llb"ry have The ·p1ans for the bulldin( win' nbw no wlndow1 on either the ll"""d O°"' 1 .b• "'bmltll:d to the 1ttle td,u .. um or In the cl11ssroom lfU'·" Lo~ey' 'epartment 191" ,approval. If the plam told the truate., 11 he poln\ed lo u tr\ 1pprov~, tj>t cqJlege will open bldt 1rtlst'1 conctpt of the concr1:truc1ure. ~for a:instrucUon ol lhe,rary. Down the Mission Trail International Dinner Slated MISSION VIEJO;-Studenta lrom eight foretgn count:rlea who b~ve betn livin& in SoutherQ California for the put year under ~lclJI · Fl•l<l Strv"'• ~ ....,,. m wlll "'""11'~ n lntematlon'1 dinner at MiJlloD Vle!O ijllf> B<hool Tliurtdly. ' ., '!'he dlruler, 1j>on1ored by Mtslloi\ Vltjo AFS, ii ope.n to th! publlc. Tht mm4 munity It lnvlll:d to stop by and meet young visitors from Venez.uela, Germany, Ethlopi•, Chile, Thailand, F 11 a n·c e • Switzerland and Braiil. New Advllor MISSION VIEJO -H•M voiel, J!l'!•l· dent of Saddleback Colleae'1 board or trustee!, has been named to the state community college ad hoc adviaory com4 mlttee on tenure. Dr. Sidney w. Brossman, chancellor of the California Community Colleges appointed Vogel to the committee. Vogel, of Tustin, has served on the Sa.ddleback board 1lnce formaUon of the district in 11&7. Club Cha.nae• LAGUNA mu.S -Antiquity Masonic aub of Saddlebact V11lley baa charged Jt.s meeting date and place to 7:30 p.m. on the aecond and fourth Friday1 of each month In the Great Western Savings Community Room, El Toro Road and Valencia Avenue. There are still some openinas on !ht charter of the new club, according te> president Vinet AlliJiniello, and all Master Masona living in the valley are welcome to attend meeUngs . Semi-annual election of offlcer1 will be held Friday, March 26. For information c a I I Allianiello, 837-3274. College Si gnup Set Thursda y Regiatrallon for 1prtns quartrr claua at S1ddleback College will be&!ft Tburs- day for both the d1y lbd aJended day progratn1. Students who have completed entrance application• will be P~. ".{bunday and Friday lrom 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. 6 to t:15 p.m. each day. Late registration for the sprln1 quarttt Is 1eheduled April I from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and from fl to 8:30 p.m. The course offering for the extended day category ne1t quarter wilt total 90. Another a50 cooraea are offered to day studtntl, college 1pokesmen uld. Entrance la offered to high tchoo~ araduatea or to nonar1du1tes ovtt 18 year• old who file a · formal peUUon 'ibr en\rlJ!CO. Clus IChedulea: are avallabll tllrou&h the coDege adm..li11attatk>n otttca. Absentee Ballot Deadl ine March 30 ' Abstntee b111Gla for votera who will be away from home for the April 6 bond election Jn the S111 Joaquin SCbool District. art available from the Re:1i1trar of Voter•, Santa Ma. Deadllf\t, •· obtalnln1 an absentee b1lkll ~ Mardi 30. Compl<ttAI .ballott muat bt returned no later than AprU I to be Qlnaldu-.,valld. ' 1n the lated request, they have IOU&ht the city's assistance in lnitiatina: alHll" menL district proceedlnis in the area to help provide for the badly needed strvices. Ont other plan being explored ls the construction of a major roadway from the property at tbe. JOUtherly cify Jlmlts 1tret.ching through 11tttions of Camp Pendleton. finally Uriklng with Avenida Pico at the north. aos Reds Press Offensive; 8 Gls Die SAIGON fUPll -The IBll ol 14,1100 South Vietnamese troop• who struck into Laos sil weeks ago were wllhdrawing tonight under heavy North Vietnamese fire. Communist pressures intensified oo U.S. support units and, at least eight Americans were killed, field reports aaid. Military sourcea said South Vietname5e --""'°"' Olltpool Jn Laol lilt. todoy, l*vlng Ollly ... .... oWnJM,bue of the l<Verli which had been eetabllshed far the oUenalve against NIXON ANALYZES THE WAR, PAGE 4 ihe Ho Chi Minh Supply Trail. Fewer than $,000 South Vietnamese troopa re- mained on Laotian 1011 and military source& 1aid they would be out by Wedne!day night. The men retrealing Tuesday night drove across the frontler back to South Vietnam in a column of ta.rtka. armored personnel carriers, trucks and jeepa which, fitld reports said. were coming under ''increasing bara1sment'1 from North Vietnamese. U.S. Anny helicopter gunships and U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom jet fighter- bombers constantly whttled and circled overhead, firing rocket.I and cannon and dropping bombs into well concealed poai4 tions mSMed by North Vietnamese units us.Ing rocket-propelled lf"nades, mortars. rockets and rifles. Reports said the Communist.I 1eored several hit.! on the long armored column which included truck& filled with wounded South Vietnamese and one command jeep without tires. The North Vietnamese were reported to have deatroyed several vehiclea. A U.S. unit of tanks and armored J)t!:rsonnel carriers took 21Ai hours to carry new!men from the South Viet- namese outpost at Lang Vel in Soulb Vietnam to the Laotian border, a distance of eight miles. Reporters aaw 1mouldering tanks and bodits along the ro.ad. OffiCtal spokesmen at forward opera· tional bases and in Saigon would not speculate on Communist tactics. but field commandera saJd that with the Laos offensive ending, North Vietnamese units cou;ld l\e. expected to concentrate on positions in South Vietnam held by the 10~000-man U.S. aupprt force. Cout \\'eather 'T'hat chilly coastal foa will creep further inllnd \oalgh~ bringing 1 cooler W edneaday under huy 5Ull4 shine and temper1turu in t b • middle 6(\0. INSIDE TODAY Pr11idcn& Nil:01'. uu.r m tion tho& Sou.th Victnomt1a hand.ltd t.ltemselt1t1 ver1t weU in Laos. Sto~. Paa• 4. C1I ..... • ..... .. C119U"'-1,1, • "'"'"' '""• " CIQ1in.f .... N1ll•"•I l'Kl"1 •• ..... .. o''"" c-.i1, • ,,..,_, .. .,l'rit ~ " OMtlil W.ttffl ' ·-· 16-1, ~-.. ' SIM* ~ ... '"" •fltwill , ... • r.i.w111tt " ·~--... --.. Tlllt"" " ·-1 .. 11 -.... • -M WM!t Wtiltl .. """" ........ " w......-. Ntwt 1•1• .... Llffll .. t Wlrlf NIWI M --- • SC IJICldoJ. Mar;h 2l, 19!1 Add J,000 Feet • • Saddlehark Marine Choppers Compute1· Plan Told To Fly Higher 'By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot tlM ~Hf "'-1 Slllf Orange Coast homeowners wbo Jive under the air paths used by Marine Corps helicopters from Santa Ana and El Toro wW set some relief from the DOi5e generated by the &hips. Brlgldler General Henry W. Hise, com- manding general ol Ef Toro h1CAS, today amoonced the helicopters would be ad- Youth Voting Law Approval Wins Approval WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Congress awarded lts approval today to a new constitutional right -to vote at age 11 -and &end the proposed 2Sth amendment to the U.S. Constitution to the states for ratiflcaUon. The House completed what was er- pected to be easy debate and an overwhelming approval of a proposed amendment that would ttquire slates and localities lo lower their minimum voting age to 18. Sponsors have hoped tlJ< required 38 1tate Jeglslaturell would ratify the change in Lime for the im electioll!. 1be amendment, approved 94 to 0 earlier this month by the Senate, was drafted more to remedy a situation that Congress caused last year than to break new ground in voting rights. The 1970 voting righta law sough+ to quailly citizens 18 and older to vote in all ~ctions, but the Supreme Court later said Congress could set such qualifica- tions by law only for federaJ elections. That left a situation in 47 states where 18 year olds were entiUed to vote for Prealdent, for senator and for members of the House, but not for governor, mayor or other state and local officers. Only Georgia, Alaska and Kentucky now give the state and local vote to 18 year olds, and it &eemed unlikely to C.Ongress that many others would change their laws (and in some cases, CooaUtuUons) befote .next year. 'J)i6. pr~ sped wu for dual registration and voling with attending confusion and extra cost. A CoosUtuUonal amendment ifoes not need pnsidenUal approval, so that House passage by at least a two-thirds majority ends federal action on the proposal. It ii transmitted to the states -47 of which have teglslatures in session this year -by the General Services Ad- mln!straU011. The amendment must be approved by three-fourths of the 1tate1 -38 -to become operative. Candidates Set For Forum Meet The 12 candidates for three upcomln1 vacancles on the Laguna Beach School Board will 1ppear in • public forum at 7:30 p.m. Monday in city hall council chambers. Date of the forum waa Incorrectly given as la.st Monday in a Daily PUot editorial. Each candidate will be given five minutes to present his platform aod at the conclusion of all remark! the audience will be invited to participate in a que!Uon and answer period. The forum ts sponsored by the Lagui'la Beach Coordinating Council. DAllY PILOT ClltAHG~ COAST PUILllHINO COM.PAlft a1Mft N. W11• ~ end PWllsMI" J•cli l . C11rley Viet PnHttnt -.A 0-el M1Mtr n.-•• K.,.,.n ••aw Tit•M•• A. M11rp\i1111 MIMllfll •Gf .... Q1rt11 H. l•o• llchc1rl P. H~JI #.Mllftfl: """'91111 ••• _.. ........... Offke 222: F.r-.t Ave11111• ._..__ JOI Nori" ll C•"'i11• lt•I ding 1,000 feet to their cruising altitude while inside tbe Orange Coast control zone. Effective Thursday, the Marine Corps ~ helicopters will fly at 1,800 feet outbound and 1,600 inbound. Hlse made the announcement al a press conference held at El Toro MCAS. He said the change is the result of eight months work with representatives ol the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the Orange County Alrpor1 . "We want to do anything In our power lo minimize the objectionable aspects of our operations and still carry on those operations," the general explained. A· consuIUng nrm Monday recom- mended that · Saddleback College ill Mission Viejo enter an agreemenl wllll Sant.a Ana College lo computerize Sad- dleba c.k's unwi~ldy, time-consuming reg· js'1'ation proceS.11. Jim Anderson, a represeatative Qf Nor- ris and Gottfried of Los Angeles. told Saddleback's board of lltlstees such a11 arrangemenl would relieve the faculty of clerical duties at registration time and eliminate much "standiag in line." The consulting firm was hired by tb' college to develop short and Jong range objectives for the use of computers in administration and teaching at Sad· dleback College. CurrenUy, the helicopters fly at 800 feet outbound and 600 f~et inbound along "ven routes which were established in Cmning to (,aguna 1951. ity Presbyterian Church at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The choir will sing both contemporary and traditional works. Anderson said his report was based on careful study of the entire spech;um of the! problem, includiJlg consultation with faculty, a survey of other 1chools now using computers and the recom- mendations of leading c o m p u l e t n1anufacturers. The altitude ii figured from mea n sea level, so at times ,the helicopters are about 300 feet from rooftops in hilly country. Dr. Stariley Glarum conducts the 60·voice choir of Lewis and Clark College ln Portland, Ore .. which will present a concert in Laguna Beach's Com mun· The control zone is an area of about a five mile radius from El Toro MCAS which is used to control all civilian and military aircraft in the ·area. Hise said the higher alUtude flying will be used in visual flight conditions when the ceiling L! above 2,300 feet. "When the ceiling drops below that, as it has today. we will go back to our previous routes and fly on in- strumeot.s. We estimate that lbese weather conditions will prevail only about IS percent of the Ume and the frequency of flights under these condl- lions will be small,' 'the General ex· plained. Hise said the two areas that the fa cility bas drawn the moet complaints from are the Palisades route near Corona de! Mar and tbe Tustin route. The Palisades flight pattern leads from the Santa Ana Air Facility, over University Park, UC Irvine, along the eastern edge of Corona de) ~far and out to sea. It Js used by helicopters participating in exercises on carriers at sea and as a route to Camp Pendleton. The Tustin route is over central Tustin to a landing site at the Prado Dam. Hise noted that outside the control zone the helicopters fly at l,000 feet and they Will drop out of cruising altitude witbln one mile of their landing sites at Santa Ana or El Toro. The olber rout.es utilized by Marine helJooptm are 4be route oveMoutbun 5;.anta Ana to Mile Square; Brawning, which ryM over qricultural lila, to landing sites in the Cleveland Ni.tlonal Foreat; El Toro, which is an inland route to Camp Pendleton rarely used because of a dearth of visual ai<h; Freeway, which follows the San Diego Freeway to San Juan Capistrano and is the primary inland route to Camp Peod1eton, and the route between the fields at Sant.a Ana and El Toro. Col. Henry Huntington, operations chief at El Toro, said they have noted the frequency of complaints bas dropped in recent months, even though he estimated 9~ percent of all hellcopters operations in Orange County were military. Hise said they expect more helicopters to be coming into El Toro and Santa Ana as Marine Corps units are moved out of the western Pacific. "I think It's a matter of ~sidents becoming used to the inevitability of the hellcopttrs," he said. "OUr objective is to be as good a nieghbor as possible and still carry out our national defense mission." Drug Suspect Leads Police To Five More A Colorado youth. arrested on narcotics charges Monday night in Laguna Beach, assertedly told police where he had purchased 2G tablets of LSD and led to the attest of five aue youths and two juveniles . The roundup started with the arreat at 8:25 p.m. in a market parking lot of Richard Wayne Halstrom, 19, a transient from Colorado. The trail led from the parking lot to a residential hotel at 1289 South Coast Highway. In one room at the hotel, police arrested Joseph John Lam· parsky, 19 ; Alan Larry Pfeiffer, 20; Alister Mcintyre Christie, 20; Barbara Oltle, 19; and Deborah Faires, 18. All but Miss Faires, a transient from Hous· ton, Tex., said they lived at the hot.el. Arrested with thetn were 'two juvenile girls, a 17-year-old from Garden Grove. booked for lack of parental C{)ntrol and a 14-year-old girl from San Diego, booked . u ••t\lD.llWay.., ·., i0t t-t The latter patt have been turned over to ju¥.enil4' autllorit~; 1. .. ~ . ..a___.~-~ The adwts lre •11tlng arra- on charges ranging from possession of marijuana and posseslon of dangerous drugs for sale to contributing lo the delinquency of a minor. Silas Guttridge Services Slated Services will be held at 8:30 o'clock tonight in Pacific View Chapel for Silas L. Guttridge, 1510 Avenida Majorca. Laguna Hills, who died Saturday at the age of '16. Mr. Guttridge is survived by his widow, Grace: a son. Silas Jr. of Atlanta , Ga.: l\*o'O daughters. Mrs. Virginia Stewart of Torrance and }.!rs, Patricia Phiele of Orinda; and by nine grandchildren. Entombment v.·ill be al Pacific View f\.1emorial Park. DA.IL'( ,.!LOT 11111 ,.l!tt9 Stnall Particlpatats f\.frs. Christine Bensinger, r,resident of the Leisure \Vorld Canine Club, is shown during the mass ve San Juan Capistrano swallows parade with her smt11l companions. two cleverly dressed poodles. Parade w1s watched by thousands. It climaxed a 'veck of community celebration. , I LagunaAdjustmentBoard May Get Variance Powers Under a recommendation by the city planning staff, all variance applications wouJd be handled by the Board of Zoning Adjusbnent, Laguna Beach Planning Commissioners learned Monday night. "Such an adjustment would allow the planning commiulon more time to look at the priority ll!t of action programs," aald Planner Alvin O. Autry. Church Doesn't Have a Prayer In Paint Job Despite several rtquests from a La~ Beach church, both the city and the state have refused to pay the cost of painUng a left tum Jane on LaJUN •.Can)IOll Road at .U.. el)w<h'• entrance. ·a. Th< CbW'<h GI lliuiioos ~. located near the interttttion of El Toro Road, had originally requested the state pay the cost or the left.turn pocket as It would be on a state road. When the atate refused on the grounds it was for a private drive, church officials looked to the city for the financial sup· port. The church has already spent $7 ,500 for other Improvements at its entrance, including widening the road to ac· commodate the turning lane and con structing gutters and sidewa lks. Hov.·ever, when requested to paint the necessary stripes on the road, the city echoed what the state had already told church officials -the turn lane is for a private drive. The city did agree, at the state's request, to establish a "No Parking" zone in the vicinity of the church. But church officials were told they would have to paint their own lines or hire the slate to do the work for them. City Public Works Director Joe Sweany estimated the project would C{)St in the neighborhood of $200. "It's not the expense involved ," Sweany said, '"bul the principle. The left turn pocket is a private project." Such priorities, J1e said, are lhe adop- tion of the General Plan, th~ Comp- rehensive Zoning Ordinan~. the Sub- division Ordinance and such plans for underground utilities. parking structures and rezoning within the city. Autry suggested tbe change in · tbe role of the BOA be made .at the same time conditional use permit standards are adopted. Commissioner James Schmitz ques- tioned the right of the BOA to hear all variances. Noting that the three man board is made up of an architect, a real estate agent and a citizen at large, Schmitz said there is a good chance one man will be abstaining quite a bit of the time. "That could mean a lot or one to one tie votes. Maybe we should expand the board of ad justments to five men,., he said. Carl Johnson suggested in case of a lie, the ~· council .mah.• tM. fmal decision. Schmitz said that the BOA shouldn:t bq_rden the city councU. · Autry , said to let the BOA funltion as a three-man board for a while to "see how it works." '•If we fi~d it needs to be changed, we can do that easily," he said. ' Nixons Send Note To Chief Murray San Clemente Police Chie[ Clifford ~1urray continued to improve from re· cent major heart surgery -his spirits buoyed by a personal get well letter from President and ti.1rs. Richard Nixon. The chief, recovering from the major artery bypass operation, is expected to remain at St. Vincent's Hospital for perhaps two more "Weeks, then return home for more. convalescence. Aides at the ho.spltal have termed the surgical procedure a complete suc- cess. The letter frorn the Nixons arrived at Murray·s room late last week. The Nixons are expected to arrive for a "'eek-long stay in San Clemente later this week. Anderson said the needs of Saddleba~li College were assessed and it was found the "most pressing'' requirement at the present time was to begin CMlputerWn' the area of student administration. "The clerical load is very greet." he told the five-member board. "and "'e found a great deal of hand pro- cessing." He noted that the process of registration at the college, although com· pteted only tv.•ice a year, is an "all hands effort." In addition to registration. Anderson said a computer rould easily be employed for use nn grade reporting, testing and for mailing purposes. Anderson said the college should im· mediately flire what he called a "com- puter coordinator" who would JIOW serve as a computer operator and would ultimately become the "nucleus of com· puter operations at Saddleback College." Afler such a man was hired, Anderson recommended the school should enter an agreement with Santa Ana College to use its compu ter facility. Saddleback's coordinator would use the Santa Ana College computer during the evenings and on Y;eekends to process the school's punch cards, which would be punched by clerical personal at Sad- dleback College. The cost of the program would total about $30.000 a year. Anderson said , with the coordinator receiving a salary of about $15,000 a year and Santa ln3 College bEiing paid about $1,000 a monlb tOr eg\iipmenl r'ental. • · · ln re.s??nse to boar~ q u e ~ t I o n 1 rtgardlflf economic feasibility of the prograin. Anderson said the monetarf savings would be minimal now. However, he said. the growth of the college's clerical staff could be halted. ' Asked about the possibility of Sa<fl. dleback College having its own computer~' Anderson sai d suc h equipment woul rent for about $3,oOO a month and woul be difficult to operate with only ·one person. Anderson also said it would be difficult to enter an agreement with Santa Ana College without hiring a coordinator because ''you would be relying on their staff for your system ." Anderson said if the board decided to enter the agreement. his companY rould have the entire system operaUonal in time for September registration. Elvis' Eye Checked MEMPHIS. Tenn. CAP) -Entertainer Elvis Presley underwent a check or his inflamed right eye Monda y by docto11 at Memphis Eye and E·ar Hospital. Ttf, singer left his secluded Gracelarid Mansion to visit the hospital after reguly hours. " COLOR IT BRIGHT! There have been more innovations in carpet dyeing processes in the last ten years than the preceding fifty years. Dye houses can "dip carpeting in a single dye beck and come o ut with a carpet of six colors due to a unique operation of treating yarn to ·1ccept or repel d ifferent pigments. Several printing methods now ezist. One method involves tufting a white carpet and subjecting this carpet to a moving track which has trays compressing against the carpeting with a sort of ''silk screen'' process, sometimes the carpet is dyed and then overprinted with a design through this printing operation • The newest method is really spectacular. This involves manufacur- lng as much as fifty thousand yards in the same dye lot! Thus, it could be possible to buy carpetin9 today 41nd match it one year later with an e•ect dye lot, using this process. One other operation deserves mention -solution dyeing , where color is put in when the y•rn is liquid, m•king it part of the fiber, and virtually eliminating fading. To •uuro yourself of t~e r;ght ch o; c e, shop •I a ropulablo reta;lor. (Alden's, of course !). ALDEN'S iANTA ANA. ORANOI. TUSTIN C•ll • • • ALDIN'S II.ID HILL CAii.PiTS & Dll.APlllllS IP74 ltvtrt., Tu1tln, C•I. IJl....JJ44 CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I \ J 0 DAIL V PILDT s T11tsd1y, Marth 23, 191\ Your ltlo1aey's Worth Y oungsteli's Life Insurance OVER TJIE CO"b1NTER Complete-New York Stock List ""'I •• ..,., ......... Qlltll "'" NASO Llsttng~ for Mo11d1y, Mlrch ~ 1971 iti,t,110_. i.-c-.~: ~1,t11~ 1ff ;a ffil ~~ !. tZ ~=!9t.ll~!Jo •t";~.!'~ ~"=i:' ,:.·~·~~~,..:: ~ ~:::.:...... __,,,_ ~~-~ ~ ~ ~ 1'tt ~ ~ i5f,f11J A ii bl L P . 1,, .................. .,. ....... !llJ .......... 1~~!~;",,t:' l~n i11\ 1.lli ~1~=~ .. \1rJ:' . a~ l!21't i!ii t =~~,·, .... Va a e at Ow rennums 1· ~-!:nci 2 • ~I tt • ff~ ~~ = ~ .. un ,,, .~: u:: n... ! l~ ~~=~ ~· ""• ti.,_ .. ;: •i. ,...:1': -'<~~ £ ~ ~\~~ \~ ~~°\\ =-lt h~'::::to ~.·,-:,,. 111 !~ lh -.... F~ 111 ,4'! ~r. .M ll ;£1~ 11 .... ln. -\lo h, ,.,» '•' ~&a J!! ,Ill~ ... . By SYLVIA PORTER On their grandson's 5th birthday recently, a hep cou- ple we know bought him as a gUt a $10,000 straight life lnSurance policy -wilh lhe pledge that they would pay the premiums until the boy reaches 25 and would arrange lo have the policy p.a1d up lmmcd1ately should they die be.fore that dale Young Dick's parents were less than dehghted "1£ any life insurance is to be taken <11.Jt," grumbled the dlsap. pointed father, "tt should be on my hfe, not Dick's " -"I gave that boy the best present I could think of," said the e q u a I I y disappointed .grandfather, "and neither my ,daughter nor her husband understood it at all " 1ngs habit for the child. In this case, our friend plana to pay the premiums unlil lhe boy IS 25. lie also Jw taken out an inexpensive "peyor benefit" c o v e r a g e. which will waive t h e prenuums W1td the boy is 2S shouJd our friend die. (You bavt to be undr.r M years old to be eligible for this ) At 25, though, the boy knows he must take over and start paying for his protection. (4) 1l11s policy might be parttcularly valuable in times fJf emergency or to help fina~e the child's tducaUon. The $10,000 policy will have a cash value with paid·up ad- d1hons of $1,550 when Dick reaches 25, He could borro'v this amount at the low guaranteed rates charged on life insurance p o I 1 c 1 e 1 NEW YOlll( tA'll Gt• S1t 1 .. 1 1'-~ .U W.. ~ VIiii. 4~ I"* A ..,., »t 1i1 Ult il'o'I 3l\I --·-•• 11. I"> > n,1,. · , Ai C11 •• -llle follOWll)I ill ~ VIII I 11'1 $NIP l!t \( 14\'ll VII MM 4"4 .... AOll\lrtl 111 1...-. :; n~ -+ • !'"•• -» -t A' Cr."" 1-1 llll<.flod .., Alrtn ~ tri Smlllt 111 1 I V11 llvm '2 )2\'t Altll1t.ft !.IO lil31 Sn\ .. ..,." \i ..., 1t II l ~ I~ -~ !El I.~ whenever he wilihed and could 'fi:,~1 ... ~~ ... i; ... llf~~ ~Vo l~v. I~. f~~ ft~ ~ ~r~: ~ Ut ~~v~: l~ 2 l :i. mi· ~~ ~=·\lo : •N1?:i I r ~ ~it ul'J t a 111 l,.: n Jet hi& -OWR f .C p A Y mt. n t "" (Ollft!fr &l/lk, c.:~•r,.1 ~Yll ~ H 1 ~ ~ ~ tll f,"k(~ :u :E ~!~To~~ 2a fit~ ~:: \Ii l~Gpff.e-Jl 12~ 1,1\lt llW. 117~ -\It n~ ,a" schedule. :~.~~~· lllllW (#! ... ,. w ~--~SW I Sv UV. lf\(o U11lv .... r •I' A.Ir ltMt 1Qt 1 ... n.,.~ ~ -~ in ""•'/ d,;l •"•~ ,., ... "• •• -+"'• It f.)O f a. k no Th.Ill IOI> •1111 If\ :N~ Sllvrn C. 1214 U"' IJP Ptn P u ' Vi AJ lnd\111,lu Si ~-. -4•i E Pr ·• •• '1., r M . (~) And, of cour&e, this he 1,1 ,',..! ~. ~, ere 111'1 l•V. s,,,C'tn' ""' ,n utu Ind 11\'J 2'1'1 AklOll• '! ~ ~. \\ o111 "° "' in ,u,c J,40 I ~ .w111 "~ -~ !'w~' '"' ...... ;.-. u )O\'J ~lift $ltf\dYll 21 21 VUln> C)1 n Al• 011 10 ,,1 ! !•\Ii "",, .. t~ IT'"~~s~ "°:1 •ri"" 1n 1nr1 + .... ..., ' orl , insurance ls protection for the l:lE~''l :"' lltt c 1 ... '"Sid ll~I• ttYJ 2J vino Air ui. •ia AL•tk• •n11re · ~,,• -· _ ~,~. 111,15~ 120 , 4 04 *"' l!l: • t' ~ n '.fl: '" ho td "·Ir child d'e ••v " 10 10 1a 11 1 1'111 !"II d ~1\.i •\'\ Venu s 'l2h Ulolo AlbtortoC » '4l +! ., ... ~ 1 ~ -221, ?,'" , paren~ s u .. ~ l • • GYI tFln )I ~ I« .. !' u~ ''"' v.ic.. llO\li '1'AI Alo.r11111 ... ,.,» 'l!ll' IG~ 1.V.\ + "' nv , • 'i,c 4011 •• ~ + 1} 11r .~4 '""~ r•-ificaU-Ons Of in• t1.!':!! :~ ttl'l ~ rt ... (;11 lf'I f\(o trewt I 41 "' V..,l,Oll ll\fo 27 AlcWI illllf'll I ll •~ ~31,\ ,"', > = ,•, Ir° J{ Sit 1 (i"Ji ,.., !fil -I') A rlll 1:-M •1"' ..,..., UV, 8lh ~ MhUr11111 k m:ll\4 Wto;,.Tw S j\\VlllrOll 114 m !~,,l,~l'ldEi)O tf ui' ,Mo 271'1 -.;, h' $tr1 •' ,1~ .!i~ t -t It A 111,f!'~ auranct for children are not v. Nlnk 111,1; a~ G1A Mi. ~ ""'' F 1111> 1 w.c1, 1>11 1~ 1~ AllA,.,LI )11 1,v. '"• 1•1, + 1, I',~ ••, 1,40 1 ..,,,. + v. e. , ... generally known. Just lo II· FldV111'Tr''~f,. 4lllo ~=r ~ J( n,_ ~ ~ 1:1'1 li~ :·;·,.~: ~~ 1~~ :u::L~ :I.Ml ~ ~~ ~ 1~~ -\l .,...,,. c?1i' 11& .0 .. 71 M~ i~ imtl\.lo; =-•• · i~~tl! \. lu.tra•·, If you have group •• , ,•-, ,1,i.11, ..... ~-A~v, •! .. 144"9,•m,,." 2~ i~ ww'~ •,• '•'"" u vii AlltoL~tl p1 J 1 ~ ~ .a\O + Vj 1ev£1 ~/I a.~4 ~"" .-... + K """ II ,.,.. ,,... r '"' \'i IOtll ~ "'"' ""' f D.,_ 10'4 Ai!ffpy ) )I ~ 2l't r J:l\k -\t IY r Ill UOO 11 11\'J 1 -h Ill ... m medic·' •·-·ra""e, you mi'ght '•'io' ,'.::.' 1,i•,, I' .. ' •,,11.,,1111 11• ,., r1v1or 1 21~ '"' WtbCI R• nh u A 11tc1 0o 1 20 14<4 v~ 2 tJ'4 t I\ 1et011 "' m ,1 ~ ..o-.i -,... ... K I~ .. Q~ ..... ·-n. , ... T1ylr WI ~ H I') Wt111ht w 101\ ll'lli Alld M•l11 '° 11 "'"' :ti'N IU.1111'•• '° s• li"' '°"' 2Ut + h """ ft .611 hoo t ' b"ldren T r"r II: l' 14\'a T~~ Pub ~ 1 W•re!rn ''" lO\I; AlldMJll 7Sb 20ol l' 2' 11 +I ..... 11111 .. 1111 , .... ltl\ , • .,., -',\ :ta: .i·" C st 0 ln8Un! your C I :v.J g:-1~ l~ 11.t11 In ._, t'-TM:wm P 1tt lH Wt IZ1 M i1 11v. Alll«i I'd o11 ,. •~• 11\.\o 11~ -~ ~A' F11"J..15J'0 'ill 21• ~ il -,,. .,. Ho.II individually. Abu1 IM 2h !" "~'""'t:>F 3' 40 Ttlt<am i.14 I Wtlll M llwt 1t'I\ All\"!'' 1 40 "' 3't'o 1414 :M\Q -14 ~ • ,:,•, !!.\~ ~ --~ n hut ,JOt nd Acll61'1n p J~ 2 \lo fl U\11 14 TTY Cam Ml l~WWtll G•~ 15 1'~ Al tel tt p'14 zlOD s' $1 " -1 -,~, ',1-,, ' _., .. ~ , ... , ~ tf'll°"" pt ) Then you could e1te or A<ln}IJ' 1 Jn 1 11 ~v. ~'· 111Mn1 21~ n.. 1•t11 P •'• '"' ... 1 td Jllflt1 ,, ~ .,,. ,,,_~ -... .... ... tllMl!I• " AOdl'n w 11•.11 1n,. "''' Afl9 • •~Te• AmO '"" 2~0 N11" NA •14•1'1 Allll c~ .lOt '"' 1~. 11\la 14~• ' · 0<: 01 Jl 1n ''"" tr~ t?'--1b en MO• I'! lncreast the benefits to pro-l\4Y Ito~ ,.,., ,11 Hkkx lllf l~ '"' Tllerm ... IV. ""Wll11 M!• .~. •lo AlltltlA11i .IO I• ,,~. ''""' 24\t -v. ~ 811• " IS ,,~. ~ .Utt nMOI Jo I ''' 'I 1-· , .. Hok>Om N 10\'t Tiii)~ Co U 1"11 W1!n P1t~ 1'~' U~ Al•~ I -1"' ... • •I• Ptl 1 411 SO ..... "' '' •C _ lect yourself a d e Q U a t t. Y A!r'~n4 ll r..; J'4 H-tt •l'I 4t Tltfl'IY Ill tl.'I 10 Wit St Ur ir. 110 Am.iS\lf -, to 1 ;Mt :rt.. 21\lo :_ \to n~ 1~ Sj' 11~ 60ll°(t ~l't 6"·~ + l't 1~i.t>U'i" 1.60 against the -Mly bruises and Al-HO ,v., '"Horii •• ,,,. lll4\ T11111 Grp l!! '(' w •• ,... llo,;; ISU AMBAC ..Ml 31 l•\o l)U 14 . I Ill "'' ,. I ' ,,,, •,, ~ lttfr•ci .. ..,., Alberti 13 ll .... ttowrd GI II 11\lt Toi E Lt 4Uo Wtt!md ,, .. '31'0 Amt• Et 1 2CI lf 24\li 24\lo 11\lo -\(o 010rn111 1 to ' v. 11Sl9nl l 10 hoSpita) Vl1iitS which are part AICClllC J ~.How,"' In 21 11 Trtc!W" C 6 Wint Whl S'• W. Am E1 pf2 611 1 '-' +.I ~ -~~ oli lnO I ~ ~= nit ~ = ~ n,SI\',,' •,.} Alcon l..D SI " HIK Ml ' J\.11 TNtcllf G lib It\\ Wl1111 Mil 'It n l't Am Heu 07• 111 u ~ $.!.\lo -•• 011n ,,,, u 1 U'• 11 S1\<0 "" of vour child's growing up. AIGOll ~I l\.I ' Hiid PP Jt 411 Tr111111 0 U\\ ~\la WIK PL 12"-tH'o AmtH Otl.stl 117 111'1 170\.t 1'10\11 -1\lo In pf1 '° , "'~ ) 1l + ~ 11TelE! 1 J2 H, I -'' aJ , Auw L;olf u,. It+\ t"l...,..t P I t V. Trl/.lob l>f , .. JV. Wclwrd I. ?l''fo JO MltFlllr .IO 13 st>.t " St -"I ll l 40b ' ••• lf•• '' -_ '·· TFlt 111!,» OW you app y 1.11lS t e IS .t.11 rec11 , ~ ttY•ll C11 11~ 23'·-Trlto Pel 311.0, 3'V. wrlclw e ll'O 1-. Am Alrll~ t<t .l4l 11<1o 161/w t7\\-\lo J! ! ~ ,,;;: ,. ~!'"' + 1;; 11 Tire !J I Bu A!lt beY 'I• •n ""'" Int U'4 131'11 tldtlr l\'> Ro WtltM w •tU. 4111> A9•k., .11)e )(1'1 2m u ')\!, + \o o~ ~:· l It IQ "°'" ,, ... -~---\' .... r:~· r10$ up to you entlre. y. t you AH" l;Q"' '" ,~, !.,,." ,s... •u~ 1~,. r~':n.~ ,~ 1~ "li~"J, ~ .~. i::! ~,~&~:, 2i~.-·,~~·' •,,'f, ,~~ ~!:1 +-•,, •,,~Pc,: ,·.~ ..o~ ?!.~ ,",''•• '~"•• +_",', •,•,•,•, ·."'~• Should at le.st kno.•n what's ',!'!.11 ,',',,' ",•,. ,'.! ,m.," •• J', ,,_ ~ '""' ,.... ...... " '""' •• •••• ...,. ,. ~ 19\'t~ Am:,J,~270 <IS>• d'1o •ll't-V. ~ n lllt «I~ olO V.-\'I p llf 1 .avei!abJe and Whet otbtrS are ~::~.:i~.o !" !~ :~::r 61~ ~ )~ t.,C c~:~i?i' ?~ 1:~ ''~ 2'~ _!: ;: ornl 1:!1: )OI ~\'lo ~~ ~\~ = ~ 'r*g'• \ n'~' doing •• you can reach an Am eu11" 2u 2111'1 1n111rt:1 n,. l\1 " c1111~ 1,t& J ""' 2'\l.t 2tw. + " ornt$o1 111 to 1 1• 1, ,, '"' ,,1 , • "" . . "'" .. mp Hlo J;Wt \"' Cant 1,1~. ','!~ M T AL :c~~Vt 111•, 6 22fo 21'41 21~'1 + \lo omwE:/ilOb la ~ 40 401/o :.. 1' i•nPC .,. mtelhgent, informed declS1on, A '-I l..•Q I•• '"' n1rm, ~n -u u C kl ,,, 34.i.I ~ 34\'o -~ ornE .« '' 111\, !11\<i l1•u . !)rill Fin Am Ellll ,. .. ~I '""' .. 11 ... U\.~ Am 0111111 ' c 2011• 7'\t Jl)tt + ~ -e II IA • 1J :l.lh 2! + 1'. GIOCI Llwlt Am F·~ '" ,,. I Ill LI II c """ ''"' l\m Ou1tV111 ' f'lll •'A t\lo -l\ omo llfl n lf :IOI~ .,.,.. JOI'! + ... ..I I ' I , Actually, both grandfather and father were right and wrong. The. first and top priority in life insurance must go to adequate coverage for the breadwinner. And smce Dick's mother hasn't earned a penny since he was boru and the family 1s having a tough struggle on o n e paycbeck 1n today's inflation. our friends could have been a little less original in their gift to Dick. And if they were determined to give a hfe in- surance policy. 1t should have been to their 25·year-uld son· iQ:·law More Fir1ns Catering To Senior Citizens ""' t-lnl ;Jol\I ~ 1111 tlW1h R• 71~ AOl1tTtl 10. 71 .UVi '2'~ 4l -\lo DIT\W 011 .60 lit !~\t 11 T•ltlo -\' lllfltl 1 40 Am GfM! i•I• SI; In! Mvllll '•'> 11" A01tl/'t 111.... 14 m\· IJ 13\io + \~ on'IP\11 Sci In 12 11~• l,l\I -\~ m I~ A MedoCP IY'r'I l~h lnl Syt 4:0.. '°"' A"'E!Pw 1 l'D 411 \ :ioiti .. -'h Ill r. fl 11·"1 ill1 '''h -1'\lt Jen Aldtn ·-'"'' '''' ••• ,',~",.'u•ll u IPA FUNDS' A"' E~11 1nc1 '' u, 11u 11--I\ °"' Mii 11 '1 "Jell 1' -v, ltMI f>fJ IS "'" ) Jl~ 311'. AGnlF(! ~ 20 ''~' 2N 'H -Vo Of\111111!9 11t 114 21\• m 1.-., + l'i Id 1 =rrf: J~ ~ 1:~~~ t 1R) 1:h ~ t?~~~1~~1 ao ff' Jt.,~ r1M1~ _-. :r1~11~ • 1.! ~·· 11~ ~1! .. e£:t ~r1; :~:r,rl: ':~l~\111:,~m-.. w 1 t' J~11'ttz Olill!W:S."Jfi.tU.1!1f 5EM ~mH~~l1: ~, ~: .. ~~ ;~~~!5 !l!?.20\ J ~ ~ m:ru!'~ ~~1:1~Jf> ArCIMIY llf 12111 1av.1on ""'Holl! N 2U )lh )I l-11'1o -\• Of\FGpU,$0 11~,, ••• ,, ••... , .. ,;! • Jiiiy If• 1111 '" NEW YO~I( !APi 1nv CoA U U U,tO ""' lnv1t ..SO U 100; Ullo U~ +\lo Oii Frtthl 1 41 •"!:! •'•' + ill '\' -Ar~I' U~ n J~l't11 M 20W »*~TM 1ortowl1111 ""°' 11v C.ultl ' II ! It A Mtdlc1\ .lf 1~1 1n'a :»U 17 -~• !°" l.qllfttl ~ ""' :;? rKt JO ~~J~11 1::! 1!~ <'M°'> c1.,11 21!1 21.'1 11110n1, 1t11P1'11td ~r. Inv" Bos 12,l1 l tt AMHCI• 1-'0' tll ~ l3 U1\ •• OllNt!G 1 U ~ l t.>.,; nm J~ -~1., ,·,·~·-~01 f. : On the other hand. our friends are domg t h e i r daughter, son-in-law and grandson a tremendous favor by buying that policy so early in Oick"s hfe Since m1lhons or you will be directly or indirectly affected by this tale, here are five key reasons why. ~ (I) You can buy basic in· iurance coverage on a child's life at extremely low rates This $10,000 policy on a f1ve- year-0Jd boy costs $112.90 an· )IUally, and $6 less on a girl because of her longer life ex· pectancy. Jn contrast. ex- plained Robert 8 . Hamor, senior vice president of Con- tinental Assurance Co , a 'subsidiary of CNA F1nanc1al Corp • this $10,000 policy on a 2s.year-0ld man would cost .$177 90, The boy's policy will be worth more 1n cash value ;ind dividends lhrought his life. At age 65, the five-year- uld's policy may add up to $8 000 more than the 25-year- 'old's. <2) The basic $10,000 policy Is set. On top of this, you can guarantee the child the right to ront1nue and add to .t11s life insurance startmg at .age. 25 -despite any illnesses or accidents 1n the 111terim \vhich might otherwise dis· 'qualify him For instance, says Hamor, !or an extra $5 81) a year, you could guarantee the child the right to buy $10,000 of hfe insurance at age 2S plus an additional $10,000 every three years after that until age 40 -a total or $60,000 m add1t1onal insurance (3) The insurance 'establishes an important sav- If y111 ere ... nlet A1t1-.rl1111 Senke, Y1111 •re •et ,.nl111 •II of'''' clllfla. TILlrHONI ANSWEllHG IUlU.U 835-7777 NEW YORK (UP!) -The men w1lb computer rrunds and keen eyes for sales figures in the corporate ledgtr are starting to pay more attention to oldsters. While it's true that nearly half of the country's popula- tion 1s now under 25, and the youth trend is growing, it also is true that some 20 m1lhon Americans aged 65 aJld older spend at least $40 billion annually. Because or earher ret1rement, more 1 i be r a I health benefits and medical breakthroughs, their numbers also are growing. Senior citizens now account for about 10 percent of the national population, 7 5 per· c'ent more than a century ago. Mort: and more companies are starting to cater to the oldsters. Tht Colonial Penn Group, lnc, specializes In servicing the insuran~. travel and temporary employment 11eeds of people aged &5 and up The Philadelphia based ftrm. orgaruzed 1n 1963 ma1nlv to supply accident and health insurance, has expanded Into the ltfe and automobile in· surance needs of the geriatric set The drug field is another one heavily suPPorted by oldsters. More than 43 percent of all people using drugs are SO or over. and 37 percent of the total population are in that age range. according to Don Walsh, assistant to the preSldent at W R Sim- mons & Associates Research, Inc .• a marketing and media research firm Walsh says this 37 percent of the population buys 29 per· cent of the cosmetics in the U S "Not up to the drue; figure, but still substantial." seJd Walsh The older generation also ts a heavy supporter of the luxury car , market. T h e average Lincoln Continental buyer is S4 years old, a Ford spokesman said. ~""111'.:''"'tdM:Jll ~ 1,000't Oil Oil rAINTINGS ,1 WHOLISAll WAllHOUll orlN TO THI rUlllC 50°/o OFF 1•1' I , IDIHOlll:. SANTA AHA ._~ P""'• IH-41111 .. i',.l'~ OIALIRS WANTID"r' ~' ~~~10o01 ' ORDE~ ~; Beautiful R \, '" st·ick-on ' , ' . .. ;? YOURS \ LABELS ,~ v !l"'"oNLY~ TODAY! ~ $100 ~l INC'j ~~---- Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For YourMlf or a Fri•nd Ml• bt \t~ °" ..,.,.11(1&1 I• tflllfll tdelrt'1 !•ffh Al .. .... v MMV •• lt!c,•llllcll .... ltbllll IO• mtttlno f>ft"IO!'•I 11.,.., •lo(" •• -· •Kor&11, tnol&\, tie L•HI• oll(k °"' lllH t~4 .... 1 IM' .. ~t"'f l'llf <tltfll.lllf l>omc ~·nllft HOii llc1"\I> • .0.11 l•Delt trt ,,..1~ .. a .. 1111 ••Yll•~ v111w 'Y" .., 11~1 <l""lilt ""'ltt 4U~ Pl"' --------~--------------, r .. U! !n thl• ( ... ..;, 41!• .... m•ll WI"' 11 " ... I I '11•1 l'rlnlln1 Lt-.1 DI~ .. ,.0. l~l lut 1 I <•"' ""'"' C•lll "''' I I , I I I I I I I I t I : PILOT PRINTING J L-----------------------• FREE BONUS • With •v•r'f ord•r of Label• w• will include fr" set of P•ck•te Miiiing L•bels. 14 lA\\ 1111 N1ll0111I ""°'. inv .. 1or1 Grov'' Am Motors 3.4' n, 1 1 °"' .Powe ' ,, •• •• ,,.. Arrow H U ('> :»\, Kl lier $t 2~ -~~ tl!lln ol S1<.urU111 tOS ndt 4 It J,11 ANllG11 2.10 lff 31'4 l1Vo H : : !onPw 111f J'2 uji ff 1 6t ~ ~ -'"' In IY II ~Ylcll s iir I~ l!;llt'9 ~ 20\~ 21 Oe•lttl, IN:. lft M\11 10u11,14 A"' P~IO 11 29J 131.li lJV. 1m -1\1 onPw Pl' 50 llto ... .., MO,:, Ullc • • &'•"ltvUe I 0n the Other end Of the A:rcn »:I .: '41 ~:."':~ 2' 29\/t !he Pr1Ct5 11 wtllch f'rot 4 S4 4.t) A ltnOV Glt 154 !1\.\ 50\lo ---~ ont Air l.ln 1e5 1'1/o lj\\ !'lt :: G~:~b~ 1 ~ travel scale Greyhound ge•a AllG•' Lt 15'~ !5~1 Kii& Gtll 12\'K JJ 1111.. iKutlllH $10C:k lOOI 21 '° A"' s .. 1 11 ll ''"' 11-r. 111' -~lo onl (Ill 1 '° .,, ~ • .c ... -~ Grt Al.P I. • ~ A~•o ~c. 1~· 11° K 1rn ~~ r4 (:~~~1c1~::.ci.~h1 i~r~y ;:U :·n ~rns~~if 1 ~ ,~ ?:~. ~~ ~~ ! t: =::f~or:', 1~ L~ :;-:;. :.~ -¥o G11.kt1r 1 'Oii a lot of sales mileage out B•1rc1 At s S1• K:!r T u11t 1.»1 111v ll••h 5 01 5 • .AmSoA1r 7o 111 5,v. 51,;; siq __ ct cp P1.u,., ,., 41'1 •ni 41-\ _ '" GtNorltOfl 11 f l•-t h h ti' t l•kftM 20\~)IKoKMMCt 11"'1J •1<1A1k !S!el ' 11"2261AmSldl lJ1JW.Jl'"1'\'-"ConMto.!s. lhnl\n »"-+l GINoN•kl..H -0 OWi ers W -0 ave me o B••t Pn1c I'• 1:ir.1<.1u,11 I'" lV.A11ttdn 111 23,1...,. tJt ,,. A'"'""" ,., 'h '° IO\l -l',. Con! 011 !JO 111 3..,.. 34\, ~'~ GNNnte 1111 de and like to see something B•llf HY ll\• 11to Ke11 .t.111 •, '"" At:1m1reu~ F'1n<I• J H1>1:oc:k 1 u , 11 Am s1et11 41 11 1 u 25 _ "Ii Con• 011 ,,. 2 3 41-. "' 4I\~ + 14 Gi w1" F1n1 rl 8k•m Jiit 25,, ~114 Ktllwd )t!• ~ Gr-Nth '111 'IS Johnt111 2t2• t2 :N AT~T WI ~l I '• l!li ,. -Yo ~0111 SU to J nl~ H~; ti\~ -'h &1w11un11 .90 a/011g the \\'IY A bu! ticket :•rrnt1 ~ 'Vo ~\~ KtllY Svc .)J'.'t 3J\lo lncom ~ .lf 4 t1 KtYll-Funai. !c; 1:,.T 2 60 1tt 41~1 " 4 t't • Ollt 111 to 2!3 2t\'O ~. J$V. -\/,; G~~l~l,;i '.~ I h · h •· 111• .. e•111 ~"' .fe~I Kw11 E 11~ 111.lo tn1ur t3.llOM APOiio 10-1111• II && ~• 11'.lo 1 l't.-" ortlrol 0111 501 M\o '3 •lV. -1\io GrllS/'~• ii"o a so stretc es l e ..,...c1a ,111m•M , •1 ~ K•v• Fib 'm1'11• 17hActv11r, s st 1.n c111 'j 19 1110.01 •,•.,H,,•,","•'• 110 17';i 11.,,. uv. ..•• coriwooo 1.JO 1 utt. :u1. 3o1114 + \.') 0t ~· -· 1 I IVI~ k 1 t. 24 "' Kft'I CUI 1 • 14~ f!M Ftl 10 Ot 11.03 CUI e 2CI °' 2111 I.JO 2J\>J ,,,.., ll\1 • ClfOI! unn so 1r JS :M :U\io -1111 :i!:efi'·"r ·~ Security dolar B~11m, Jl :uu KtYtl PC 1 JO\'J Alllllll<I 1 11 1 u c111 ec 112 ,J11A,mm,.~11C.. l ti\ th 1l;+1\t<10Ptrln 140 21 "'':mt 32lt . "m"m"'~' 1 t>f•""IC ••14 , .... Kl1111 Int J~ 4 Al I f 11 t 1> ( s kl I 0( I 11 -· "" 3 "Xll\ 10... :IOI~ -(\ (Ooper Tll 11 1''11 1'~ 16! " v A "substanhal" percentage """' ~10 ~. • .. Klntl'S El 4\\ ~,. Air 1~ F .13 tl c~. K2 5 u s IS ~·f~ '°' 10 ,.,, ll IA + "' ~-T 1111 2$ l »w 20 10.! + ;: GlfLIHlcl :u. ( C I · I p , I g G g .ier~ HU .. 4 Kl<I: C' 1''1 ' Al'•"•• "" 11 >> C11' JI lt 2, 20.fl • , "',.to "' »'~ 3~11. l!~\ -11 Olltltnd 110 lt 61~> 67'1:1 t7\). -la G~"Mo.0,1 ',·'!!' 0 0 on1a enn s <lt•l l.1g •I 111'1 K111• ... 1S' •• -...... I( lt '"" 47\(o 4f.lli R SOb Ii~ "" f II. 111go Ml 1.;.;. ,~,. ,, ... ,, .... :JI Allt~• Fa n.u n 11 (111 $! TO 12 II II AMP In( 64 29 '"'• ~l-''"I ::. ,_,. ,~.".,, ' St l7\lo l6Vt ~ -&"II Rftf(t revenue 0 110 ml Ion 'am' • , W ''' '' ·-•,'h 2t Am1;111 •.ll 11] C111 IJ I H 19"' Af!ID,OO "' > fl• a., -~ 10 ti 1Mlr. I™ • llR ' -llllfli '1 nd R•• 'Ill 614,t,m But ld t10 (llJ S( S.03 S..SOAm""' Corp UO l"I ,-1 , ... , ;_: .. ,'!'.01n!ti,1 ~! I :mt. JlVo U\•+"y, V fl e •v from servicing the -OVet'-5.S II rd -a .. \t Ill! Wt! 10"• 10\lo Am Ovl~ 11 1t 12 ll Po(tr l tS (,U Amlltr 1.16 "" -'" 1 "-)1 lll 'U7Vo 21' I Glflll:ts 1111 .lO llor!ch• ~ J~ t..erlll't Jt• 3~ Am Eth S 3' J.U K11k~b 1..U I.JO AmJt1r pf... ll '1~ ~ II -•I Cow~1 Com 1H 11\.\o 1U~ 12\io -:j: ~-GN~IUlll I 04 market a c c o r d I n g to "1'• HUit lt\~ J,..., L••<lv c11 1114 1e'lf. Amer E:o:Pr•u· 1C11lct Gt 10.°' 11 OJ Am11t11 1 611 ,; ~k ,;~ 13~ • Cox 11c1«1 .30 216 »"• l M 21\'t -'141 g~1;;~ ::!~ Ch '' Jh JM WI!' ::::.ct.I 1'/'.!11,•,Ll'llCotl 21\11!o C•Plt tOfttlt.-Ftl '"'"Amtel 32 JI t l' t\lo i11r:..v.CPCl11U110 Z&1,L~~.?!'-"_-1!i ~llWn.» airman on ac 1 1am ~.. L•ll~r G uv. 1no 1ncm• tUloUL•~ Grt~ fff1c.11 Ant(llllll• 1 "'2114 ,1"' 11111 er'"" 1• ,.,. "" .... .,,., ""'"' ,1, J r. "Auto ''"'"ance is the ::: f',~ l~l!i l~~ ,'fu~' •,• ,,',', 11111 121.:o 1nv111 '11 '~ t.1• ll:Kh '' OI u s1 A11c11 Hock 1 u lll4 »'• 31.._ +v. Id Fin 12 ' "' 1~ 1t~ + v. ulfW 111111 u •o-• .. ,, •I II'" ll~J Si>l<I tl7 t.lllltlY 6$1 1,11 AllCOrll Svc I 3 201._ '0" -·~ _ 1•, ',~.-." '•" "is »10••,, »111>0 • •• ~. t '• UllOll I" f t I t f ' en ,, 1 L 1tnk ~IV. Sloc:t tl11017Lll• $tk SU•» AMClty 110 11 Ul,lo '4 <VYO ~·· 41 ' iSlts grOW ng Segmen 0 b<lllMS 41 4"1'1 L 1w 7'\lo 1~ Am Grlh 4 12 7 45 tlfl Inv 1 U l:Jl Af>tch.C• .lS '-' -V, rt\lsl'Hlnd I 11 H~ 21\'t '6\11-\!! OUr b U' I. n e, 5 • • said .ir~li k 1 •)h .... Lon CdY 1'" 2411 Am 1nv s" s.•~ Inc Nit 1113 12 , AKOO 1,,,, ~ 1711r. in~ 11'4 -" rowColl Uf 111 1s,. ll'l 1s -'Ii t"l•ekWtt , • • ll1w111 Ar l•l'I 1ol\'o Lot E!rn 12\lo tfll ,t,,., M1t! t 55 10 41 Line 4 7l • , , APL Corp l2"< 12'' jJlllo -'It rown Cork lN i1"1, 21\\lo fl" + V. Mtll ftt I •~-MacWiJliams One r If! a s 0 n Bnll Ber 111111 tt;. Lvnch c 2'\.t ™' AmN GI~ 3 (l '11 t..ooml• S•Ylfl APL "' Cl w ,~ g'-~"' }(IPA + v. ,"-, '.'" .1.20 ll• >A\ )J\'o lH't -" H•lllblltl ·;o; h .h h •1:1ucllbM ll\111.,_Mlt!GEI u.,..u Al>C~Gr-· C•n•cl l22'l12IARASvcllll 1"T3J\11 1ll U21~ ••rll' 11,., .. ,,.,t!.L ",. :.:,,KtmltW•I per 8pS l! t at t e company kll/Cltlft l 1'"' 12~ Mii Pool W. J\lo C.1>01 I 11 'SS C1on ll 11 11 11 Arc•it Olll '' 20'0 70-• ~ ·• ~TS COfP ..0 ...,., Htmm P•e 1 ' I d BunMOtn 3'.'J • .. Ill' IA ll>M Grwt~ 11 n U f2 Mui l• t11 h 10 Arel\ Oen 1 ~ '-'" 4J\~ Q\lo -l '!f',!,°' ... , lS tl 22 211Ao 21'-' -~ Htmmntl .40 sells a po icy guarantee 1111rn s1rit lult,,...., Me 1iv1 nv. to 1111:~ •:lj , 1, Lu111 1r1 12 » u .a Arri P~, ~ ,, •• 'fil .. ¥ " 1, uv. 1.11• Jn' • H•-1m, .., I ~ 'f t:lt: t.N• lQ .. !Mii "•·-C 0" o~ "" M I ff 1 ... ' I '" ... ~, -\lo "ill• .. ,,·, A If'• 10 ,,,, '" reOe\\•ab e Up (O age ou, I C.elWaV i™ Ullo.-,,·-.,, .,. -Flf ln1 t,2 10,1, ''"" II ', r 1n1 5!r 61 1m I 11~ -1, ~mmE11 N 13' q"'" 41~ '10 ! '/J Htntl H1r .1J ' ' 1"· 1't'o~ Vtnl 4l.474l'4Llllh llto 12.ll1J 4Arlt11 IUtv01 ttl" 1 IJ\/i-l't c,., •••• t 11" II 11.\0 .. t'tl!il)QC• .50 the applicant ho\dS a Valid ,•,m,,~MNl'I .. ·~ 01• ,•,~.:: lSVJ 1' A:lron ..:n Sn MllN In I.ti I It Armco ~II 1 Ill 10"' "2(1\\ JOI , '"' '" H"111111 M I JO •• ..,. 11'\liUWt 1 Houth!Oll M•nhl11 Sll 5IOArTllC Jlf1JO ?l 29\ t -\(ur!l11Wrt 10 12'\to Ul".o ll't ''Mirto 11 license and has nol been con-CtnMn B ,,.,, 11 Cor SO II Fvl\G A 5 p '33 Mkt Gr!ll I" 'N Amir •U.7J 1'550 'l 'O !f~ l~ =1t; C1trtlH\t'r A 20 tt'W 21\1 12:z + i, H>lffl•~fnt I Ctnrld P ( 4\oli cO\Ny 27 tN Fund • 1 01 1 1t M1111chu1e11 Cc Atlmf Ct 10 294 351 3'!4 3,1~ 1 C~lltrH 1 XI tJ1 »,,~~ 11,,~ 1»,,, = !~, Het1co c11 1 victed for drunken dnv1ng, c111 Mt" ,. J•lf; Ml<lk: H ,,~ l\11 s111<k 1.21 , u Freie! 1 S-1 1.:w Arm ~u I IO s ,.,~ ,. + • CYtlollt • ••" ,,·, _1 •. 11•rt5Mr~ IO . f C•ll SW51 1\1 fl' Me<I M1• 2""" 2J',., $(! (p 4,Q J" lndtll t U 1 25 Aro Corp 90 5 7ll\ U V, n~} _ " Cv11ru1 Mint 't • .u I -» H•rvAI 1.10 narcotics or a elony. l•P•n Air • '"Mtdlrn :w 3'"• l•blOll '·" t.6• M111 11 )I U•J AN1n r"" 1 it ll 3,,,, 3,,, _ v. -D-H1W11 El 1 44 M W'lt ed 1 C•ll Te<: lV. 3\1) Merle! 111 1ti'o 11'6 BtYrc~ • SS • u M•n In( u" 1' 17 Al.'!la -011 1 J& 1 It 26'ri '"'" 2fi~ + •.•• , '"'' .. ... ,,,. ,,,, H•n1 Albn 1 ac 1 tams cit severa ,.,, c11 i1' S-•\ M11(r E11 n, •"" llNCOll u,JO ,, JO M•n Gth 12,1, u u Aud llrtw 11 ti 9.... a• ... -.. 1,,111 •• C•nt Ill• l \.t ~VI tu w 1014 ,,""lie•• Kn\ • 21 t ,J( MIH Tr 1• ., 16,00 ~!~,oG 1 10 • ... ,-.\ -'" Oen• CP 1 '' u •"•~ 2t 291/• -''•,.. ·~ reasons wby the o t d s t er c1t1 Gr1t 24\.} u•~ Mldltl C• P.1 1~ 11,,k Gll'I , n 7 "' Mt1•• '"l """ "'t! P i ?Ob ': 49" II\.< '""" -1 0.,1 ll'ld JOb •s .. ~.\'o l1\' -11ti HCA Int k t If n • t C•K HG \lllo 1n. MlclltM 2~. 2h 8ollll!IM ',. 111 Mtthtrl n t2 u,, '-,•,!_ti Trentp I 37~.·1 11:i. flt' + ., O•rt 111(1 pl 1 ,1• 6l\~ .:!\'lo 13'• -+ ',,• ~:1~·.•,', '," mare WI grow, CIYl\fll' t\> 17\laMI""' Gt 70 21 ...... '' O" o.•SMIOA M\t JtO 14' nlone 11\d lH .! .. 0"-~,J, Ottl Proe;e11 n 11Vo 16-'"o 16~• C ',,_' I ..... ., ArJC~EI 1" ...... ...... ..... 4 .. .,, Cl•YccC• I u ' \fl~ 19l'o , .... -v. HtltN Cvr! decrease Rising Social Secur1-""""• .. 4 • Mm1..,. " s.s 1011 Fan 11 .•112.'6 MOocl\I c,. u n UM "'I' ., ~"' o. ''" 24'~ 2'' + ~ 'JO ,5 )4V. :wv. l-IVi • " H•U•r 1n1 611 · Ct!IV! n II"" It Miii Mu• U I! lttlCll I 4, t.2.1 Moocl~'I 13 05 U 21 A le ~ 1100 51 .M JI,. g•~n~\ld l .o ?Slo 24<141 H _ \Ii Ht!mPG .40b ty benefits art one factor C•nV Ltb IO~'i 11'\i Mlf>lf' Ill 10\Jo II :rwn Fcl J.M '·'° MIF" Fcl 'OS '·'' A'11R ~di' .. ,•, J7J '™' ...... ,, y, .,..II L 60 ,,, !~"-"•• ''" •... HtlmrhP -•. ·c~•nceA ,,_,ll'l>~G• 'm.:f. .. , ... c.tvln· MIF Glh sn111,,I '"•-'"r, 1!0 St $1 P, -Ol'I.. ., ... ,,, ~" H ~·· Even more sigr1f1cant IS lhe Ch•rt OU 6'1i •V. Ml\1.llT IJll\ I i.wtlCk 15 u 11 SS MuUS Gv 11O'l11,20 ,, ,!.~,, •'• J 11~ 112'\~ 11 ~ ....:1" OPL plO 1A ''•'•" ) lOlY, ,~,., "' •• ~.','" ,.ll. .. Clltm Liii 12\io IHI Ml \11 G 1•14 1 \lo 1 M o G 5 15 •.M "'' t• 54'1\o 'l'• I< •, O..re Co 2 4 til4l ... i -•• l!C proliferation of pension plans. c11ese 111 ,,,., 1 Mo "11:sch u; ,~, ~1-!i':i~ 1}.J t ~ ;1 ~ 0Z:111 1u 1111 u "i"•'' c~-1 1J n11r. ,,;:: ~ + ,: Otlr.':'•P 111 211 l••• IU\ 11~ -~ H,'~"' CUMUI U\loU'NMOclSCl .,,~Wt NllWSID7ll11SM\ll Shra "nut1to"1C11r•A. 1St J ''• l 0.IMn!•llO 117 2~ ,, ~·v. .,ll'IF\10 As recently as 1950 only Chi er1<19 tJ\"o u111 MOllwk 11 24"" ""' NY vnt "nu 31 Mvt Trtt llfllv111 , .. ,,,,M •. ,""' n 11•1 lj'' 1n, 0.11, Air 50 •J2 31'h 15V• 11•4 -v. HtVbl•I" .IJ . Ch!llOll 13\/tU MPlllCOI 19 I~ F 1" 1•EAMI10111oto ~ rod l'1 I'• \lo l!.o :..:',, Dtlltc Int 1' 61'1 4\~ •'1 -l,.HtWPtct 20 25 percent of the working c:11riik ,,. no , ,. luiM 11 ·• t. ' 11 Au1am O•t• ': S6'1 Jc11i 'lh _p! 01nn'-M'• '° Jr 11" ,,tt. "i. + "' Htth vo1111 11'\INtG F(! lt 0$JONNtt llld ll,3011:t0Automtn 111(1 11t ll'j T~ "'"'O.nnylt•I 04 1'1 11\io 11'AI 1111it'MHlllonHclf I populati·on was CO"ered by !',,~1!5 ',', •~, .. .'~,,,, ~' s.. 1iv. 1'"'11 c,,.,.,r 1 t4 'OJ Nit secur Sir Avco Cor, 10 1.. .,_ _1 _ _ 1 "'"'' , • • -·Ml ...,, ,.,..,..,,. "'11111~1•1!11 t11w Jll )tS 81l1n 11"12WA~Cow• .. ,, ''"' ~11+1'""'n1111lytnl 1 ll ~•• •• ,. -, I .... n UI " ,,,, ,,,. Mt T ... 15':1 ,,\lo 8 "" "' ',, ·-~' ~'4 c•• 41• Otr~ pl I l 5f\lo Jt Jt . Ha.r11Wtl '° Private pension p ans Wl111 11Ut••"• 0 ,," ''" M•',I, ~.. •11rt $hr IJt 121 ° Av<o Pll 20 )1 ,r~ ,,~, 41"'-O•SQ!olne ., 11 "'"' ''" ''" _ ~ Hort Erectrn v " -• I IYI Ctnl Shr lt.1714,(M Olvlt! 4Sl (tJ Avtry Pit 1" t? )llo Uoo "r,} +• Oo•Ed'• ' -H >I" >I'" '''" , 110lltl>"' l) total RS"'" Of IJ2 billJon Said ltrk Ml lO lO\tMolc~ M S'!o 4111 (1\lllllln• Fvncl1 Grwth t.1110'1 Avntl Inc JOI '"" .. "' " ' \;) ' 1•1111111 ' m iJ:l,Clvb o,. 1t\'o 81!111 11.11 It ft Pf Stk 1 St 1.)0 Al'Oll P• I.. lJt~ I)'~ 1 + \lo Of! Ed pit ]1 tl90 121.,.. 111\'t 117'11 HollySyf lOlo Ma Wltli.m. T • d a Y • ..._ CU I 011 ,,. >• I 11°" 11" t 5 Sl 'OJ ' 131 '4\1 f)o\ , 1~ + 11 Ott Et! pfJ JO 1 N'.i 16\'J U\I + \Ii Homtll~t 12 c. ' 1"·ci:.11C# '°~21 ,.,,.,..:.'~ ~ N ·~~SI ~·r:iii S~ 14',1J z!ICOll 7lt l3'8-!J\< 16 .... l11Mo-•10ftttr .'4 11 :10 ?O :l'O •• /10,,YWlll>O proximately half the popu a-c!' ..s 41 M!l' t.~ 31 ,....,, lncam , 14 1 41 Ht! Grlh t 15 10 to -or11,1n1n 40 1J in; 16l:t 111' -\<o Hoavr11 1 :ia . d ,,,,,, '' , ••• ,,,.. ••• ·-··· ,,,,, ••• , ... , •• -......... w·· ·--SI" Ol1m!Mllto 5'0lt4J\/t tJ\li-\loHOlllltCpA"' ti on have this protection Un er Co Sir JI\~ l~ N•r•f Ci> 17''< 1~ c.;f.'. Gr 8oi: ""' NeW Fcl 110.11 Of W"::ouT fs (s )4;~ JJ,., :12\J -''t Ol1m Shim 1 4f 'l2 2llllo n + llo Heit IMI .M lt2f)bll b II Com Cit 5l\1$t'liN1IC1rR. f(>411v. c ... 11 7131.dNewwttll)OU,7111ltGE1,•1 lOJI 3''t SI"~ +U10l1Sh•IC1 'mi UI\ J2"4o-'hHOIH:ltll!t '° • l I-On um re a. (IN'nl $11 ,.,,. lni H" G&O lrn ... .. ... ,,., • "10.tO Htwl... 11 JI 16 tJ 1111 "' I• 50 11oa 11 ~ ;, -~Ir 01..S •I 01 lO f 11~ 11*11 111.0, . • H-Miit «t E · t R E M Com Go1 1i 1l N t"1os11 V! \1\ l'Jnt ff u '3 '' Nk:l'I Sir• 14 61 u 41 &tit r; o:tt (4 llO 41,~ • Okllrof\One II ll'lo 1~~ lOYI -"/1ou•1hF I 2CI conom1s oger urrav camw Pt 2"" ''\1 "'' Ltb 4 \i t.f an1"11 11 .tt 11." Ncr•••• 1s.Jt 11 :it B11111cr Punt J " " •1~~ -"' D1.t111c1 'ID 11 '"-' 1sv. uv. -•l'l H111,1•F '" '° f th T h r & C:am Hlth 11:\'0 1 H1I Mid 3' 161'1 Sfftl tJt 1041Ckn111!1 7S2 St I~ otC1t 1.14 r; Mi: ll;\O; llli -\i g1Glor1 "40 IJ 11\io II\~ ,,,,. •. HO\ltF 11lt$0 o e eac ers nsurance Cr;>M Ps• 14\o 1-A't N P11en1 ts 11 c"tmd 111~ 1, 13 omtt• 111 1" 111nk er NY 1 11 4,.., :°''.! llll + j• ,.-.111 E41tl11 111 111io ttl't '°"" -lV. Hcmr: 11n.J1 Annuity Association predicts c,.,111 cm 11 1ty, H ~·11.11'1 111\ 11•• coton111: 1~ Fulll" u '' u 11 ••nk Tr 114 111 41 ,4 ''"' -.~ 01H1~hm «1 " 111~ ii ,, -• H0111L,. 1,10 (mp 1111! '"' HI. NII ~!'low '!'a ,.... E411!y • ,. ',, 101 FIHICI ',, 10.'3 lttd Cit ,,, ll ,. "'• Sl\li =" 01111,,. pt I 2 I " :IJ " -I HovatNG1 IO that by 1980 the number pro-C"'P' Tee: 1'4 t>r4i N11 sovr si• ''" 'uncr 11 3112 •l OM wms u '111 SJ !••le Inc IO , 1tl\ u un + h OHIO!! co " s Hllo :uv. n•.i. + v, HouG Pll,JO It be "t]l Comret 2~ l N 1!1111GE 1"'° 1~ Grwth 15' 1110'Ntll ll1413JI 1te1 Mf~ 305 HVi 11 ll t2 Dl'1\ey 10 >66 ttV. t7 tt'!o +I~ ~owJotin ,4 tected Wl 60 tiercent WI Clon Pip tt~ 2J'h ~J ~·· ~ ~?~ ri,.,, tncom t IO 10 11 g11p ... h M ,t tt 1; H :•ltl Ml pf I "' ll'~ ,,.,, 1\ 2V. g11!St•• 1 70 ~ ~~ :~.. ~; + \lo a:-~~~ ~~ pens·100 assets of about -~ •• •.~.' '•'•• "·· ,"".,,,~, Vent 'ls 5,u "" A! ,., ,oihtnct 10 " ll\li ''"• 1 v, _ ,,. 1 ..... 1nc1 » ,, ,,,, ,, .. _,... ,,. ,, 1 •INll -· n. 4-1 """ 11 Gtth lJ.!.211.U OTC Sec 10 60 1 l 11nln 012 50 1 11 U \\ 61\I t 1<io OlvMtt 1 G'41 .,. .,.., bill! n COOlltr l.. 11 nll> Mi.Un fl 4'\11 .u111 oms ac1 5 n s" P•c• Fllcl • 21 t 01 B1u1c~Lb to 16, 1$ 'I 7'\'0 Jl'o OrPt•Pfr 3' S5 29'~ ,.,. 21llo -'l'o vcr~y flll ,?O 0 ' CcreN: ~l\• 31~ NO(ir c:;, 1~'• U ~Wllh A8 1 '-' l J6 P•ul RIY t ~ 9 U 11&•1 lib l t Sl' ll 2 '-]1 tl\~ DcmtMn' tll 1> It'' UU It ... -Vi Mr."9 Htl 10 "What most firms tat! to Co0•0•m s,, ,••. 10s~ H,w'"N'o~I l'• 3'\ :With C I 11 1.t4 Pt1111 Soi 1 .. 0 1-4P 1•vk Cit 50 IS lO"o 101" !ll'!o '•' OomF.,a Ue '' f'i Mo t>lo -14 d~~I ~h"' 11 c ,. . .,, ln•1i 1n>, com11 "' 10 u 11 n P• Mut J 10 J 10 c1rln11 1 1 •1•1 ._. 4-1 , Oor\lltllt1 4.1 '° "6W 21v. 2w. -v, 1~.r 1";1 I'° realize.1• said MacWll\lams crw1rt:1 u u~ NW P11~v ,l,,. "1l•~ c~"' 'n 111 Ph111 1s111•" Bttll'd• 1 u 111 ,.,, 311 .. :111, .:.1"' 0or1c c11 n 1t 2JE 21 1714 -" I'! cint 111to 1 Cros~ Co JS\4 l6 t.lo~•I (o " ~\l om' lcl f II 10.26 Plltrlm 10 29 11 JS Be•I Fd1 pl I l 111' !OJ 11)1 i ... Dorr Dllver ~ 11 10 10 -~i I C..r "'3 JO "is that the older people Crutch 11. 1 7'ALNw1J1>c 17•~n cnm11 Fa l&JJlll•Plne s1 not12111eeckm1n 50 10 lt!/o 11v; lf'll v,0o.,..rc1 11 11 " 41 ''> 12v.-•"'t1 Powr:/jM Culler F fir• JOV. l"ltltv1 M 31•, "'to com'lt 'SS f t7 Pion Ell! I 1t I"" !"'' O!ck Ja 11 11,, ~l'h 4)4~ I\ OOwChm ) '° 111 ffl'I 11~~ ™~ 'I' Pow i lf mar}(et JS made of pwple with CY~res c m tl'Foii'° Ari '"'• 11111o contort! IH'l•v•11 PIO!! Fno 12 io 1l 3J H'Ch A Tr n •! u~ is•,;, ''" I'> Dr1VlfC1:1 1 40 J 29 :1u, x'ri -~ t 1 p-n f 01 .... 1.bi l'.t t\ir lo F•rr 21 ,,~C011ilOl l11 IJODUJOPI~" tnw lllJ1216j•/coPtl Siib ,, Z?l.l 'l2!r• 220..:.-ll;DreHlncl 140 102 JJ\~ lJ lJ lmprl(p "'"" 8 uture 8•nlr Mu lJ~if'JllJ~lle •11. 5 Con1klG '·"' 7,}'Plletth llllU60 ftln;H IOO l 7"i ,.,.. 244'-V.OreHPf,20 "40'/o .,.,~ JtV1+'ilNAC1t140 1$• C11 11 110..:. Ool Sc:1n ll' > 14 Cllfl Ml t tt f ,f 1'r!c1 1'1111<1• 8•11 kaw ,6(1 20 4"' ~-. •jiio + ''i Ortur llfll 2 5 ~It U'h l6Vi -Vt fl<Cmt Ctllll ''The average man of 5.S 0111 °'' I''O s\li ~tic T1c s , 11'1 cont Giit 10 ~ 10 " Grw1~ 2t 11:i.11 eeu 1n1rc0t1 )I 1~ 12\0 1 u -'4 §;'~1v1 C• 1 S6 )1•4 ll 11 . 1111: cc11 lief I k f d t 23 Ott• G111 31\o lm Orn Mii •·~ Sit cnr11 Lei 1$ n 11.'4 N E•• 1a 41 IG,41 L~i' )O 40 1• "''" 1m ,,., -"' k•"" l.o!O 111 J~ '4 2•\lo -~ rnt111n Hd !e today can 00 orwar 0 Otl• Pck Jt ••• ,. °""'°"' 111\ 11\t ClllY (tp u .. u y N HO<" 2•" JP•• 1.;;;1• ~ 16J 3' :J;ll\ 34 +I k• 111110 110 111 111 111 -Yt '"" Hcl pU 50 more Year' Of lrl.' -'lie ••· o",',',," ,•, •.~~ ',~ ',' ,r,P nv, 22 cr11 wo1v 1 Js 613 Pro Fune! 10 1t 1on 11x1, , ,. •,•, ,st:k "'"' 57l~ -~ Oukl ,,.,,,$ s 101 101 101 +1 111<1n&(';1 1 ft Wll \,UC •• ,.. ·~ '" Crll WO.I 117 7 "Pro Po11t UMVlll ,,e" 1/1 "u;; 1'\ 57\'o '"'· -""OYn ra 20. St StV. ~· ,. -... ,nGpl1PL l 50 Woman'• tlfe expectancy isO•y Mtr lt\4l014 ~•YC•• n 1~, ..... h M 10fD10fDltrOYcl"I SOI !4•1::::11 "1•'» 110 f. Jt "' .. Qy,11~ 601 205 .tl .... ..01'1 d~+1tlo11G1trN1t fD I DtlV• Ch 76 17 ti..t er S-1 S.l'lt Oel•w•r• GrO.OJ!ll' lt fu $IP 10" 11 '° t•nff 5,,,, '.so • .,., lflt 1ti\ -,,. cluPont I 1$<1 Ht 1~\ l"V. 1 •2 -2 -r Rtnd , three years longer than that.' o.c.r tn t\'> •~• 1c G 11.e :ia 101,1, 0te1t 12 » 11 s P111n1m Funo11 _1111, ~ :n ':~ :u;z · ·· ouPont "''so J 11 >J'h 1c + vt !nolld !)11 » Otktll A! 11'6 UV! Ptkco J'4 5\lo Otlwr lJJI u 14 E•11lt 110 t IJ lft\Q\111! tn 11 n, r;, 11 · GuPo,',' f'.'.so j 51'~ 51'.> 51'1\o -'It /nlt~cl s11 J Marketing men are beginn-o.0.r1,,•~r l!!~ :11~ •• ;·.~,, 0 '"' 2"' o.t1t 111 1 S4 Geo•• 14.$> n 11 11k•• PllO u1 nl, 1,1._ 1 1l + 1~ [• u .. niir ,,g 11"~ ~::~ ~;~ t ~ 1';,,~1 ~r11 I I , d '""" ·~ 3'.> JV, o.:;.,, Co~ U U 1! 11 Grtll 10.SO 11 • lr.!h SU I :10 1jJ :12" 7211 '2\11 _ "' e 1 lOlll'l !' t10 )0\1 :JO\/> )01,0 , /"~ ••I IJ n" to re a 1 z e , soi 0t1 1er tt>.1. n v; P1rk Or 121' ll~ 0r.-e1 u,,, u ,t• 1nr;1m • » • u 11 Thret .Ml 1 "' 4 ,, d:i.i +" " • or;11 E Jl-t ' Ptr~J "I !" ~ ""'I [cl JJJO U,10 lnvt•I 1 H Ill ll•c~ Oii n ~ •>': ,,,! fl" ;1 u0:_l;,' ~.~. 1J$0 ttl Jl'h 1t . n1 rC01 ' "acW1ll1am• that sen1 or o c '''"'', •" , •• •-•i ·• v1111 '"'3' ~ -·· .. -o ... v"" '' 14.,., 111~ ""•+"•1n1erco120 1n , m t •• •r·-"' "0,.., v 1 •• W;< lllrJtlln a l'll\• 1J~• tit -~ Oynem Am n 1 rl~ • + \t ln!r!kl~ l to 'I' f f he oi.i11 Ao 11., 2 P•l'l\w H t\I> Eeron&How••ll Voy11 111 1" 1111 .. L•w 1 11 U\~ u w. + "' E F tllM s.:ia Cl 1zens. ar rom 1ng a o\1n rn ~' • Pat F••~ "'4 "~' 1111111 10 1111 u Arvert 11.1•1211 eloc:tHA ll '' 1cv. o11u .. " _ '' ---ln1 Chm lie!• bunch of "outsiders.'' now g !;.. 1"J 1:,, 1;1' ::~~~r.,. ,:tr1~ f~~ 'l;: 1: ~ ~~~.~~ 1:~:; ~ l1itii~·~1.11\0 1f ~~ ~~ ~1~ + ~ ~::~p~~ ~ n g~ ~r.t ~~ = ~ r~IF~~~ ·~ constitute • very "tn" •roup ""o--'~!~' L ,•,:1 •'"•• ',!!,', '•'• 1tVt 211v. s~1 f 2110 u sclldd•r Funai Boilb1t Bt~1 ,, 11 u~ 1._ _Vi e:111 Air \l' .,. 'jffi 'l!•, 21l.!o _ '·' IMHoia tie e '"cl"'' ., ~ !IV. 111~ Stoc:ll 14 Ol lS )9 Int l"v u.2.i1 4t la.I"' Co 40 sn 11'-101-i J1+\ •. EtllGs I. 1 so 1~ ~· .0'11 "' Jnl IMvtt with significant sales poten· Oow Jo~ An, 41 Peerlet T 'UV. 34'1i Ebtr1t 14,11 u .t1 S11tl 34..S0.14.JO 11011c11 lSll us 4l''o •l\< '''lo -,. ,.,, uur "° 4 ,.,.,., 10,.,, -IMlnt!A o1 DoVlt 01 l'ol1A 2,U ltt~n lt1t 1\!o 1" Etrfl 11 .t$ 11 67 811 11 ftlS ft Bond Ind 27 1l14 13 1]\lo -\lo 11Kodtk 11 f.st \'o 11\\ 7'1\ ! "'I lnt MIMr1I tlal. Ovt11tl11 0 1~~ Ith ... (\~W ,,~. )1'1 Em•• ic I (l ' 02 Co"' St ID'' 10 $1 lookMrh , 2l i ;1~. U\~ ,,.,,., -\lo 1!o11Y• 1,40 JO .111'1 m~ ll\!i 11.r llllMlntr ol ' OVOI-Pel t•\ t4' ... It! IW En'rt~ U d U d StctJ?olV Funcl1 IOl't!lll 11(1 SSJ 11 i6\lo lf'"' cioll11 Ml to 114 :JI J~ JI h Int M1111 Ourlron 16hl7~Pt!rolll !• 5:Jl~Enl~rH 6(7 7?1' E•u!y 359 3tJBortWtr ,,, '°' ll )(I :JO\\-"• cktrGJ tt olO 42~ 41•1o 11 -'11~Nkk 16°' El P1!rrt IV. t Pot!lbOn 1i1, l•'>E~ulh tdlO.U •~veil l lS fW 8orm1n .IOI> ti 11•, II''> 11..:0 cll1~Bros 1 I»'!~ 3j• ,,. llllPto 1.50 Etll Sh U \!o lS Pn11 S1tb ll\~ J:tti £qui Glh t 11 f M Unr1 7.50 l.1J totE011 j.U 22 «l\1 .Olo crVi +Iii G~G -.10 JO ltlllo l 'h 1t\\ -'I\ "i'l"I • V d St Ei!erlln 5 S'llof>lloton Uo t'4 E4111Pro , .. An Stl•c AmlOll0101!1otEt!pl.111'to1111.lol1l\loll , ll(IAll«" .. 1{1 1''1 7h+1A n !/'r." en Ors e Econ Lib u·~,,,,,,lt<lml A ' 7~•Ftlrld 10"'10CISllSOICS1'10UV~rn• Inc $0 1•v. II 1 ... lt,tn04!• 111 to•io """ 10'"1' '111fT~ .,u EdllC Sr• l•t l~'t Pin~•!~ ~l, It\:. Flt"' lu 10 'J 10,tJ Senll Gth I 1J t 4t 1t1nll Alrw lOl 10 t•~ IV. -_,. ,, µ..,,.. M111 11• 11\IJ ll'o Ut> " "IT& P•H 4 El P11EI 141,;, H•\ ,111111" !"lo llV1 FIG Otll 1,Jt ' "Sll•m Ft 11,'11! ,, lrl11St , 40. n 6l'• ,, ,, -1IJI MMt ,,, 1 :u ll 1»1 "'' \~ Tl.T 1fl • JO Elt>e Syll Ill 1U Pe.rt HK 11~• ?tl<i F!de!lty (;rwp· ShHr AP 31 61).1 n 11'!1! My 1 :l'O 11' 44<~ t•!Jo 4''11 -V. ltln ~-l · :lt 611 6t• j11o -... "\l,tl PIJ 4 t eiatr II• 71' "" Pouj1 M • t\• Cio11 n 65 13,IJ s~ Ottn 1t 7111.'7 lrl1IM1 pl l 1 4~'1 ~ ,,.. ltlM>NG t ltt lJ'" II ! \.'t -VI In T 1>fl(4 F A I El Nuc ll'IJ H ''OC: Pl IO'fo 10~, (Of\lr 'IJ 10 U S!cit 10 0911 Ill 8r!!Pfl lOll U 10''o 10"° lCPo -\lo !flCP I l'tl 31 1 ~-71\'t 71\1 n J.fL i-50 Or Ila lelm Enro"' 4U S'AI ,ro Gn!I sv.u•" e111~ 1o1.11 u..111 Sltm• Funcr1 B•P• rn.;io. 2 1oi. 10•1o 10•1o . Ml Lid Of• ti fl.lo 1 • -"' IT1'.\mN .lls El Modul ~·" Sl't ltrvr! ,...In •;.I , EYrsl •13 11 u" C1111t ' "lo 12 9c1w,, Htlt I 2! ~ 40 40\'t + """ mtr El '·" 11,1 "••''1 191'0 •'"• . ,~I 'Ciul ~ Et C~m •'1 S'~PvDS1'i~t ?•~7''> FIGel 1141110\ Trull t31 0141dWJ'H.,lpl1 I "t' ,,~ .... ~-'i mElt>ll.to 41\lo , t E"'llS Oil If Jt>/o Pv~ S NC 11Vt l"i P1trtft JO '11111 Sml!h I 10.ll IO 31 ltkWYGlt 10 41 lt"° l>'io :II" t ~ mervAlrF 1 71 •I' 44 '''-' -i\ t ''"''' 1 Ent1•tV c :M )6 Pvbllhr "" I\' S•l•m 5.51 • r. .. ,, l/IV • " 10 ,, E"nVO I n 11 '''" 21\i '~ 11 mh•rt I lC lS )tl,I 391' .. ltl'l -v; nl·~~I L •-1' It 1v. m 1tvr1111 1"'4111\lr Tr.ntl 111311,t SWIW Gt 11l J11 rew11 Ce :t? 10 ''\ 10 +'" moPl1t 1t1 U ~"' lO'~ >01.1.i \) ~l:r:~ 1;¥ En1w st 4\!o S P &..i~d l•V• 211~1 F!nenr;l1I Proe• St!vtt Inv 13 S! I( to wn1hr1 ..20 U U'\lo 11111 IVoir + -Empire G11 .~ ••', il'M re*,, ,'" nt.,tr "!1rj E11Kg I" )111 l'1Pu1nc~p Jlt ' Dynm '" •tlSl>Klr• 1.4.! 11tlwnho.1JO 11 ~ 31\lo,. . En•1hMln act ,., ' .. OWi IW E<:iull 011 lll4 12\.lo Q\1•1 CM 1~ 1~1/'0 lltdlltl J,ts •.)2 SIFrm C.f ~I• 4.1( &run1wl! ,U llS 7tli ,,1,, 1t\ll -'°I ~I M llf' 2.S 51 lH I ! 1" 4 1'# l!'t l.~ . Eilt Tee 4V. 61ill:T SY•' JV, 11'l 1111:om '°''"!''"St 4105(.IJOI~' lrl.10 7' ,,V. lG\ 26~•+"' 1111!,IF 0111 ''II'• 11 1114 \lo ow:llGt 'j The newest merchandise £,.ee H11 no '1' lt•••n ~r 1~·1o 1~ Vtnt 4 s1 4" 1e1dm111 F1111<11. ~ o ,,, 'jh I u•1r -1,, ~1111 G' 1.10 • .J. ~. >4'4 ''"' "' ""'''" / FPA CP 10 IOVilt•~•H ( I•'",. FllF VI 11.,,,,. Am lf\cl Jt1 .,, F "'"' wt 1 •••. qulfllt M Tif"'i11.,'·" 11~ ~l~=:r-~10W•ftJ;!,. vtndinl machines and nearly Fii Ceco ,.,. J"' lt•n\llt t: ,1v. ,. ,,, rnv,1tor1 A•111 F 1.JS ,,,.. 1 lnd 21 10~ 1 -ir IOI!. -"'!' "" 1''" , 2 , r,( H .. '1ar1 cir f4\4 • -11 r: 11n 11' Ol•o o" '" Flcl•-7 ll 1 01 1$"or• 1.10 j' ~~ j ~ ii " '' 111¢ ·'° 1 1 ~• 76'1' -I I~ M 3,000 men·wbo operate them F•" Ttk 2 19'1t:Vinnt1 1 1n1o1•·~ Grw1h t.;10.us1.1n .... 1t• Fc11 iu ·~ '° 111s fl~ 1iv. if: .. 1:!!'!)~1~:10 U !:~ 1~i: !m-~.~T.S°'P Wul Converge al ,._ Anaheim F''"",'?! •,~ •, ... ,!!..M, E• "l't n s1ock 1~ot11°' ee• 205410.u " ~ 'IT.ft t?i\ 01~ ~1,-\4 11,ro" .011 11 1m. u i. 11t =•" 11"·$0 l.ll'C • ·~ •• ~ 3\t~ Jlt<i "" M~ltl l ,, lt.52 C1p °" f.54 ' ,.. vr1 1nl 4a Jll '"''"' 4(\lr v. v. ·~'fl c .... 10 21\li '"" ,,~t "" ConventlOD Ct:nter ~1arch 19-Fllldl•r 11 & 11~ lte~ Fnv .. ._. ,,-., Ft! Ntl H 14' S!OC:k 14 52 14 52 ur Nor lit! ~''~ .() 4 \~ -, fh I J, ~ I~ a(I )fl,,\ :tUt .: VI jtf:ktnA11 1t • F!llf Ort "' l\'o 11-t Cr"d 'f\11 "vt F11 $1tr• ill XI IO n tvperwltd. Inv• vrlHor ft St jj '" 1''°1 'h Eur~ 't 7t 'l'O'~ tol\ .,.,_ + ,_ 1i.:.tAt 111,.io 21 for the 10th annual Fin•'"' U\l uy; •kl<I• "u ,..l-1 )M,\ Fi.1 C•• '·" ... Grin 'S-1 • 1A Utnclv 10 nv. if1' "' -14 E111o1a 1rl, 1 ua 11,.. lto/o •• . j•-r ,., • F'll IOI! 14111 IS\,\."" F~ •·t~ 4".d l'ltf ,l'ld 'IJ .. . S\lmll 11°'n11 l \llToh' to 21t ll\" ' VO 111\.\ -l'O Ev1111Prd IO !' u '1'• .q"lo -~ •nh ... , .. Western Confer<' nee and El· "•'G Rn n • 7" ~Db'" M 11 ,1.,. Fl• Grh ' u • • TKll , 10 •JO 11111tr univ 1 1 'I.Ii n -v. !KCeuo 1 25 ,. 21 111,,.. 20\ft _ ~ •o"Fd L•lo ti M h FltP Ml• nu." •OSl'IOl'I • '""1'1111 G•h '" ,,,1SVl>Cf GI 11071191 -C-lbt .... e .a(I 41• It 11"lt If + J10F 1r.1.'11 hlblt of Automa c ere an· FlltMt 1111 ,,v. n """"t 411~ ''"' Foul'lffr1 oroup· TMlt -.. u.o11 u n ·~'°'" tOb is1 ,, ,, .u _ JJlffoP e1 to d d Food S FtPM wl ... '~•ow•~ '" ffio 1'4 Gr.'111 If.OJ 17 n T .. ,nr1 10 11 111• tllDl CP 10 )J "' 4~~' # + •i F• rch C•m m :lt<\6 ll:ii. )t4, +1'-Jr.w.t cl I ~ l!ilng an er v t c e Fil WFlll :w. , Rvo s•ov ll"• SIM lf\Corrt IJ" 15111•CMCI 3" I XI •dl1K• 'I" ,r/ " •• ~ 1 ': 1:1~; :: F, r Hiit .... S2 11 .. 11q H\' + ,,. jrm Wt I ."fo· Mana""emcnt. It will be the F,•,,1tk11<1'''' ?l~ll"',,:',,d~l••,., ',,•!!I' Mv111 '" ''' •mP~•,• ',',',",,i! •/,~'~"t-",.;, l''' tt"'+''F•l•rnon1 I )' ·~ "~" in1-v. l~~:~.!.:J e· .,.,.. .., " r I ,.1 3roec:I 1~ n 1171 owr ..,. • n '"" _., ~• ,\/< \• _ 1~ F•l1ltfl 1 t 11~ +"' .,.,,,, •, second consecutive year ror F11 w1.u 4'~ Al ~(~~·~ 1=:1 .,,., ~ "°"'"" 10.111111 ''" .,. 1 rt 1 ~• lfl'l1Rt. ·ti 2;r, n\'o 31 l _1 rF1m11y F1 ·'° , I \!"' "'• + ~ jo11 """o11 .IC F<!Ocl Fili> l\I ,~. ~"°'' I~ ''• •l, Fr411~!1" GtQllD l'•" E~ 10 n 11.n •mg S• 1 l IS 11. 1i~ ,,, -\'o F1n1!nl Inc " I I) 1>'• -....... ~Svc :0 tht show to be held in Orange ~:~::ii.OH 1~a ~;: ~~! \"~ .: •• .,,"!! g~,~ : n 1; n~ G~ 11-:: 11·1: d~ ;:~ ,·.~ ll "* .. ~ 6''-\ -~· ~=~1'ii'%:l F!~ J1 lt'~ ..:~· '':: • "'ja!\11 $V( Ill 2 County. Fmt litnl ,,1 .. 2'w. ~•11101 H 1"~ 1A•4 UIH t ~ J 04olWllC Inc 4 OI f 47 1n1~ 1 0 ul mz jf'°' ~:\lo = \~ FAS ln11' 71 I tit °'j\1 = ~ ~"Cau"' ffolom ll~ t\i\f:;lolo •~'t A'I f11¢0l!'t 7lt,o!OUnll Mui 106411'' 11 Id(~ '1 61 Sl\6 ~\~-W.Fttldtr• 40 111 '6\li 4Slo 41 -1-J-L•uol 5 Vending company e:<ecutives f'r111'I (e 7'1 1 O..o\~ ftt '"~ •? f'd frM11I 10 U IOU U"lftl 14 ?I' II.ff irbiun 1 1) 11'~ 11\~ Ul.i + V. F=tl t.20 '' ~!Wt XI\\ lQ\lo -'4 Jor1tn1n 1 )0 l"mMl11 I! Ill) ll?i ~._•rt~ al ""'" "'"' Flltld Inc OtP' Union Svc Grp• trllilt tO 2JI 1f 21\.\ 71\~ -Yo Ffd I IO 14 ~'' ,,Vo 2t\'J +\Ir J01!101~·· and employes from 10 Western Fr"" F1 ,, ~ ~11 r..... 1n·~ 11 c,.,l'l: •.•21a 13 .,.,.a 1•.ll u" ro '"' 1·" ?! ??\lo l2~~ ll\6 -+ ~ '.,"",,", ·'' 2~ o ""' ,,. utt +1 Jow M 1.40 bu , Frllcl tcr JI' :Ill''> • ....,,...~ f'I ~~ ru. lmNt 1.:11 '07 Nit Inv t 0) t.11 ••P ~ •:f •• ... ,,.. ... " I' '· E I ,._.. lf'lll 11\lo . , . ~I" A um 1 states will 1ttend s1ness n11:1 c..... tt~ '~ ''""'" ,,. '"°' '"" Trtl ,,.,~ 14..,. u" C•• 10,n 11 ,. •r,i. 11,,. ,, ••• 1 •. 11 ,..v, _ ~ FMP•,ltl 1 it :n. jlt tt"" _'"' 1 ""' 4 '! ... sl·ons and vlsi't an exhibit G•i. 1"11 IN •~ svc Cr• '"" "" 1tuo1 1 n •.t• W111111 u .n uA •1'<'4 at 441 '•"• r;;,. ,,~ 17~ _ \\ Ftd!tns .a 10 H'h 1011 + v. , Al Ill •'1 V!ld Am t ,ts ; 11 u11neo l=vM• it1rTr 1 10 ~\l "'" •rn -\lo l'et1g:a11 111e 11 'fit to•~ + "~111rCfffl iJ! :.-·~~C=~i~an~i :::iuy~ All n !tt 111 ~ 1001 tmrtl9d~rt.r.~ tf.n:,:a ~=~~ ,11)il1,~ 1~?~:-0: I~~ j~ ~EM;l~~eot~~r:'lt1:~l 1;r :::: ~ :a ~:(~~~~c;il;~i ,..,. s.c lllCGm 11 l .. ~ cor '" 1 ,~ 1J\'t ' \'lo -.. F •b"' '° $4 ~t!.lo it~ ;t;'i + \' K~'lN Ind 1 firms •C#I tor U1111e •!11111t.f 11'1 ..,,IOI -"I• ,, .• n .... , $<:fen I (M 111 • " ,(,.4..,. ' •l"* II\• • I• + h 1'1t lklM I '° "• Im »,... ·.~ -. ~ !,-;: .. t .'~ ett t\'ttltct!"IOllll .... 1"'9!We&rrlt4 ltl I'd I." tn r•"t J·'T 1:1: Oft(O lnl. 1w ,••\ .·~. 141 +l~F,11,'"', ... ' .. r•" l~ I"• U1"'·•_:.:.~11,1r nc1:-A consumer-oriented presen-• ,,, ,..,,-• .,, •N •-•• -.~,, •t '•'.·~ 1'~ ,,!_ '<'•-,•,. c;..,, I'd• " 1ru 11 11\.1 + " "' ... .. ,. .,.. '" .. "' , ·~ v-o ,_ ( Hiid 1,111 U tJ'h 1"6; Jj\' + l\ l'lrtl!M ta Mt,& .,,_ ~ K•f't 11-::wl talion, preview of a motion un1tt1 olf\etWIH w.ntM!ea· 111 •M rt11 tl'ltl ,,,,."" v11 Lin 10..1.n~"'m1. ISi ., 2tlA ,5i, u i'-""'lc11rt.1,•u ''' •"" '"' ~:..-·~is~~·• .10 .. 1r11 111:1 t!Kl1rtt ., 1Nlt It ftf lf'lll vttdn 2t 11 'H.11 l~om $,4J •S "fl11Lt I ,.f, 10 1!0D U1o'l!UV. U~ ., ,,, 1'1 Mlt .om Jt )1 »ii -"' it.-.JOI:> plcturt depleting the Industry, , .. ,, ... l'Oflll., ~•111 lcl N•IMllt., ~';l/IOll: .... I"'' ~5 ·~~' t:~ '~ fjlllP5 1,1' n"' ~It ~~ ~~ :.:·li· 1:m~~°'-l, 1M ~ ~ ,:~:~a~:. t..f pricing aiuditS aftd forecaalJ. IOC:vmllllttd tl!Tldlrlllll ltl) Nlti lit! Glh •. qlt :t4 Vtndtbt 7,'1 ) .. !~,!I 1l 2CI 11 20't '1 -,•lf'll Ir .11 )I •r ... \t. 111-ll + 1' ;r,;:: 11111 ,ta and 1 twlHiay seminar for 1"'" 111 c.nh e1v• 11Mtlr 111 •ntW•• .,,..,. •.w •'4Y•ntl'.I 4., Jft :,.11wr1 ; ill! ""' •"' + .<11 ~ ~ 1s '1t11 J7 ,,,~ + 1, ~=t 11.lCI ... 1. l>lvt lllcli lllwlclrrtdl lh) 119\d "'" &C "' 11 .. ,, " '1 '"' !·l~ ' 11 en! kl•• 1 '1 Ullo 1~ -lt F!~~~ .l).if ~ 'I"' 1• 14 -~ Kffld•ll M vendlna: and food service fflr-1111•! t!IVI--.n!lfotl 01 •Pr H!.ib ?!;. 1: :t 1:.;; !11'1'! 111 .:; '·" ... TtfV ,fllb I~ '"' -•• , ..... ,,., +'(,, ~r..11:' .1l' 1U ~ yr-i.WI + ~ l(lf!l'll'!lll .M · Ii cent In tfct11 11111! !llf n1'1 l~I Mr H.0.I 11.ff .,.... '"I Mii lJ.U 14.U ~o (p ;\ •• I .. +IA Fl I f, 11 > '~ ~?oil f management compsmes a C1111 11, •r.cki 1•1 1" Mnllru•tn· .... .,1," 1 ·a 111n1111 Gr-. E ~1"'., ... ui :, Jr-11, rrfnVk~. • lr.l Ul! = ~ "1 u" •1 ~· are part o{ the COTiftrtnct Ul\'lt'lhlP ot rto11111tli100lll (I) U•llt! MIM 11 11 O !..'f.t 211,~11 ,.,'r.' ~ ... ,,,•",.. 1 211~ 21;, II\:..:...,, l"llhlelA .JO flllt &\i .. \t + '6 lfl' 'f.J .... •-·-1 I II Mo~lt'ln 2 41 I •-· •-->1 -:it -" _ 1t !!!ti! Coe~t • 1Sll Ul.i 3°' -ill trMcO JO Program. Nicolay said. tl!lfrlllY!loll1 C•I , .............. llM Fllll 100 .:n Mere 11'0 111C!ll SH .IOI! "' ... Fl•Gtl liO ! B'; Im' Im ''a°'Mc "1.JO Whitt llwetlo fwll WltT"lll'tll. ISi Or-l jtcltw 1.4' l!ttfltrll Ill< 1'1 !;; :1.\ n: ~~,II• ~ow 1iU 'Ii I I')::_') ·~''!', •• , ',··~ Mteting durlnf!: tbe con· jl.ftACllOHS! 10 llldlt•'" "llt\l'lllf Crwlll VIUl¥111 NII 1•~11"il :'":i~: ,,, ID: 31"'1 ))\t+*m~l.t ,,, ll ~ " .... f.r.nc. Will he mtm~rl of nou"" 1rl(lklfl l!'l 12r1c1J1 oi l!Wluffl lf'ICOl'I 11111v111 w111,1 II !' m NY 1 •f :it jJl\o •l't _ v. • s'"' t 1.1 {-tetm • , llfl tbe California, Or~on, :::::::•11'"::'~~1111~~,:.;:,;~ r.: !·ii:,~ ~i.::,7Nf 11Ji,l;~ 5£~1~1 !~ 11:! ~,it !J:!+~ Y !•l n'j~li·~[ "':~i\:s~,iJ W.·•tngton, Hawaii, Alflska. tu Ntknrlnt nr-11l•.ctlolt1111ttttt11 tm: e.111 M n ntP llt! .11 I·" l'!Kk., It.Ii 1 ! ~ ti" tN!J:: -1 ~ •: ~,,• fl' l~ U Klnllt'I -" 2, -'!1 fl) lndlctlft foollcwtnli f!Me It ftl(tlon ll'IC. ,_, A II M 14 !IA 1 W,nfltl•. u,: l "• _"J,~l U n-• ' P, ~\6 :! Kl--to j and Arliona 1t1te vendina: lfl ,..,., :~.,~:• 1,~,t:J~;.'j,."' tOl J.1» iiif;MV'J.11 ,ff' 1 ..... tm t::!'~~-rJr';; t ·~ 1\\\ 1 ~'::.~.:tf'lf.L. u~octatlons 1HTG" '• 1•~ i1111tt 10 4S 11..tt .._,, 1• ~ • u Convention • j r I I . ' . ' • I ' ' -<. I ' ' ' . Tutsd11. Marti\ 23, 1971 DAILY l'ILOf 9 F 01· the Record College Mother New Sfl•Uma Seen Police Air Space Crush Under Study Dissolutio1as Of Marriage 'llH Mlotdl 11 C•ylOfl, Jofrtn M. 1'111 P•llV ' Htrl NI IC ... n.tfl I ncl M1lltll"' Htrlltt, G1Q.t11 1"4 Dontld A 'T1ylor. Dunc111 H I J>d Win<!• H lumr1U. Slll,lfflt 1M GMll$1'1 Y, ••-let, ClllY'IC.... Lllttr I II . ICtllltrl"" Mv1r1, Lll111 Loul"' "'" D1rro1• Otvl~ ll1mW1", JICk.MW> Fr1t.,ld1 I NI O!t M. 'T,,.,.,11, 11""' I nd E!flYIM Hkk.1, GI.,.,, (D11W1y, .Ir. tncl A'lll"t "'" 8raum1,t . Ellwt rtl t 1M •tf1Nr1 M '°""''"l•ttl, Htfalll E tM Ptt•l<ll '· For1•••• l'lhY Otlort1 tl'ld Cll lllfl(f 1'1'11111• lovettee, O•r-G, •nd Jerrv H ,lllMI Mtrdl 1 I F lor•. Midwel NldlOl11 1M Elet nor Mt •I,,. Lu,..., CllttorG t llf A .... lt 8twltf', Donni Jiu!!> 11'111 flt u le Arlyn l r-11, $u1t n I t o>d ... IYh1 H. lart, IU!t·F tncl Ctrl W. ....,,,,..,, Sltw•n F ""' M1•1orl. " llOO,l•utl. Et!rtDtt~ 1M Edw1rcl G'l."•lu"' f'otrl.,, Willi•"' JO!ln t M Mt•r Ame ht SltYtn•. Sl'•h I' •ncl Jahn C Mao1e. ICtrrn SY• 1n<1 l t wl• l ff l i no.,.., Wtv,_ c. •nil N1ncv K Otlltl,t . f11101rt A 1na Sl~tn O fle•nntv. Ptut Brawn 1nd OtO't '" w111on, Il le~ •rMI M''"" ""II(• Ow~"'· R .. Mt rv II t nd CIJdt L ~'nocllla, Cl'l•ll!11111'11r JI, i nt ~.1rl1 '· 'Ter11,.on, JOI'·-~ A, 1>\11 Eut'"' '· Hule!lln-, M!IGrt'd lrt 111 t M Ot Ykl ICtllh INTlllLOCUTOJIY DICJllll •~1..-111 ...... ,di ,, •1r1an, A•tlltdtt tnd llatMP" Erlt Mtlonr, 0 11!1 A, tncl We•ltY Tl'ldm1•. c,1111,,. '"" w 11111m """"'-••1tty, ICt ren Louli.-t M Et rl O'Nt1I M1y0trr1. E!l110tth A. Incl ICfnnf;ttl '· IClvtlfttrlci. Mt,,.. L and Jolln e Ntltan. Hllb4Prl P. Incl Ja.n Mtrlt Co•u_.11 Bt rbart Ann t l'll P~lllt larrn l"hllllp1. Mlldrl'CI E t nt "'''' lltwt,I. Erin M '"" S~-n lllc.lllrcl C lt •lllOll. Mtrlht t llCI Tam Edwt rcu., Lindt G ""' Ornn11 M •l<:<t n!i, Ewtl•n EU110tlll t nd .ltlTI H JIOC<O Mtlm, 8-lt E 11'111 EllWtrd F Fa•llovrn, Fr1rw:l1 T, 1"" Jt nnt ltt G Wlndtrmt n. Drva•1 '"" Mt lY•n Frrd Goodner. te1ll1 \lir1ll 1nc1 \l>cl1 81tl'l<ll ICtrnt•. S1111n J ""' .leramt "· IC"'""''' llutll H 1J>d Gi lt L PllllllOI, Gtrl1udt (. And Floyd 0 Gird•. llldro Corter 1ncl M1rlt Mtrw!tl S1tel, LIW'f'ICI Edw1rd 1M \ltrt E. Joi'"' Mt•v tr'IO Vlfentr E McC1 1l1r.d. Jla1•llt ""' FIG'ft I". 0111, D•nnv W. incl Ginter b . M<Ml ll•n, Jovc1 An11 1nd Buddy Lit H11ltr JOOln C. I ncl E1ktr P. lll'hH. Mt ,ttl G. t nd Gw1""'01v .. l•lcllt , D1vld S. I nd Thta6ft't M, :· IC•ll~r. 11_,, M. tnd St llv Ann olbtndonll. Vlr1!nf1 M. t r'IO Ml<~ .. t , Death Notice• •" 80YC I •'111drt'd H. 8ayce. 1111 111111 S• .. Tor· :••nee; torm1,1y of (111!1 M111. Ot te cl "1111111, Mtr<h 21 ~rvlveo by ~111band, 4 rll'lu,; bN111'1tr. Ltllla• Halrn11, al 5111 ;aern1rofnc1, 5.,.,1,,,, WtdlltldtY. J PM. ~1cll1< Yltw Clltotl lnt~rmtnl, Pt cllic ~lew Mtm0•11! '1r•. Ftmll1 IUflt tl• >-ase wl111Jn1 •a m1•1 mt1T1arl1t co"' <(rrbut\0111. pl•••• can1rlbv•1 to 1'l>t ""m••· '\ct n Cine., 11H;lttv. P1tl!lc Vlt"' /Wlr· )u1ry, Olrtdar1. :;_ CLa MAI ,ollert J, (l!'mtl. :11110 Fl'Cl.,tl, (0111 )\H t . Strwlct1 pelldlnt 11 W11tc!ltf 4 h•Pll Mar!ut rv, ~ollll. •. COTTON )tJ111tl1T1ln1 H. (anon, 11S E. lllh ii. L1111 MI H . O.!t at "'""· Mt!tn 71. ~rylvl'CI by two brot~1r1, l 1vmolld Cot-;t""• Cc1t1 MHI : M11olt Collon, Pllll· ,1Mon, C1llf.; lwp 1ll!t 'I. Mfl. Gt rlruCt •C. Grttn!ll'ld, Co1t1 Mtlt: Mri. Alic1 (. 'McKlrntn. MOllnC, M!nnt10l1. Sl"'ltll 1n<1 lnt1rm1nt will bt lltld In F1lrman1, Mln11t1al1. 8tlfl CCIII MHI Marfl/l lY, , Farw1•dlnt Olr:;~'~y ·C l•~• l . Gaudv. "'' 11, of llSll Mon· 1er11, SOU!h L1tllnt Surwlytd DY 1ll11f, M,,. E!lltl Grllnllt l. 01•l1ncl : nt11htW. Ellwtrd Grunlll l Jr .. at Ntw1r~. C1llt.: lwo 1re11"''""''"'• Ed,.1rd J, 1'111 Kurl Gruncltl; Cf\f t rN 1·nl.ct, J1nlnt Grun· 611, 111 elf N1w1,k. l"flv111 1ervltH WI" held 1001v, Tu11<11v, McCormick t 11une 8tlt~ M(l'1111rv (~tot! lnltflTlf"I, C~· on1• l t wn Ctmtlt•Y, Ca!1T11, (t ilt McCarmkl l t t un1 8ttcll Mor!ut 'l'. Oi- GIUTTlllDGll! S•lt• L. G111t•ld11. 1Jl·O Av1n1G1 Mo· lo<e•. l 1tun1 Hiil•. 0 •1• ot d11tll, M1r<l'I :oo. Sur ... 1vtc1 bY w.t1, Gr•c1; """· ; s 1111 Jr, ol ""ll•n!t , Gtor•lt; two . ;::~:::·r,;,~_M;~t•l~l1:'~~~tlt~1';1~~11;!,":; ""'"' lftn<lcl11!d,t n. Strvlct 1. 1o011. lut l· ;e1v, I :IO PM, P1clllc Vltw Cllt Ht. En· """'O"'tn!, Ptcill< View Mltf'l'lorl1I P1rti P1ciflt VltW Morlul•'" 01'''"'"· O'JIOUl lCI ;,,,,,, #,udr1• O'Jlourltt. Aot .,, cf 1'11 •$•nMlwood, Ca1!1 M111. Diie ol dt1tlt, 'M•rtll 11 511•Y••H br 11,1.,1, l a,,1ln1 'Jl..,d. Cc•ln1; Edn1 Ha1kon1. 'Toran!a. 'Cfntdt. Gr1vnld1 •••vlc11. W.onudlY, Morch )I, l l"M. Ot•d1lt Mt<l'lll•l•I 1"1 r~, 1t01 5. Gr•"" Avt , GltllCIClrt . tl1kc1tlt MCll'!UlfY, Dirt ctar1. SWl,T Ill• Swill. 111J S1ntt -""' "••. C:cot1 ,,..... Dltt cl CN\ft, Mtrr~ ?2 Su•· ''\llvl'CI by wile, Gcldil Str¥1CH, Thur o- 111v, I XI PM, Sfll Srotdw•r (~IHI. lnTermtn!, M1r1>ar lh•I Mt<l'llldll Ptrl, •ea Sre>10w1r Mc.,u1,., OirtUllrl. TUN!ll LL Corl o Tunn1ll. ll!f Su"''"' •1101, Cr.st• Mi ii . D1Tt ct d••'"· MlfCll n 5U•Y•¥1d D• wl•e, 1•11•1 M Tunntlll ion. (t rt•an L Tunnell, a1u1Mtr1, 8 •f· b"'' Jai n GOClltY inc C1rlttn Sll1ldant , 'bo•n QI Gt •dt n Gro••· IJ 1•1ndcllll drtn, S1rvoc11. W1dn11d1v. 11 ol,¥.. Ptco•lc •\l•tw cn1a11, .. ,1n q•• .Jo•c• /lo. """"' .,,,,. t nd 1111 M1f \1'11' LCIOt l F a. AM :.,1 Coilf M111. olhC•I""' ln11,,,,.11t. .t;1raor Rt•I Mt mo1111 Park. l"tclllC v .... Martu1ry Ol•tCIO•I ARBUCKLE &: SON Yt'ESTCLrFF ~IORTUARV 4Z7 E. 17lh St .. Costa ~lesa &16-<8'8 • BL ATZ l\IORTUARIE~ Corona del Mar OR 3-9450 Costa Me1a fl.II HU( • BEU. BROAD\\'AV MORT UARY 110 Broad1'·ay. Co1l11 f.lesa u S-34lJ • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17ff i..1una Canyon Rd. 4'4-NIS • PACIFIC VTE1I' ftlE~IOIUAL PARK Ctmettry Pl1ortu.ary Cbaptl J50I Pa(lflc View Ori''~ f'liewport Rt.acil, CaJUora .. llH7• • PE~K FAMILY OOLONJAL FUNERAL HO~fE ':'Ill 8ol11 Avt. We11mtn1tt r l •l41U • ~"!TH'S MORTUARY -lfl ~111ln St. SSMllt Uuntlnfton Beac• •••btt. \llrt l"lt J~111 t no Don1lo ~-Hlltf•lll· Juli£ I tn<I Br-kl. A. Win s Top Honors By JOHN VALTERZA Of lfMI Dtll't I'll .. 111!1 lhan would install new in patrol cars and transmitters and other units "'w elec· banW would only be a tern· porary !Olution -lastin£ no more than five years," Eaan explained. MllCOllTI. llOnt t..U Jalln A OllO<'I, Ml"'ln H. Incl Ctlll1rl ... M c,_.,. $le11tn Lou!~ •ncl Jore• l_.. l<Ol&b, Dlfltnt ""' w1rr1n 011• M•lll>IW1, Jave• l. t llli JOHP/\ s. Rottro, Otnl<t M l n<I DtYld C (t,l!n. Tt rrll P. trod Sus1n l . l!'nl•rw Ml'C~ 1S IYfll, llobt" t . l llli 0afO!/\Y M P1v1rl•rl, Gtr1T1tin1 A. t nd t.oont rda ' PH1um. Slltran I and Ptltr t-1 Verml'Ultn, Ct rOI Ann tn<I R1vr110<\ll ' WIUltm•, Suu,,,,. llOOl'lt t r'IO ll:ottr LlrM:Oln Mtri.11. 0011n1 J t nll '"""'" EllmOlllllOll, r.1rbar1 L•nti tr'ld Ml fYon •• JIO•l l Willl1m Albert J, Ind Ah(t (Of tint IC•lvto... 00llnt INI .!Dnn J l'loflctr, Daral!ll' Olt n• t ncl WOllttn• Morttn. .lt C<wi!llfll l '"" ROnl lCI ' ""°"'''°"' Ger1I0<111 ( t nd w1,,.1cn .. hntm. RontlC Oelbert •M Mt tvt '" Colt, W/\ffler trlll Sl'll•ley M. Stlltr. Mortcn 1nd Vlrt ,n11 C Cl1r~t. Jr .• MttlO"• Lou tr'IO l•I -1-iick• Flllldt1'. Kt!hltt" •. Incl Jonn ( Maort, O.r"nt H11lt Ind Otnnol Gtor9t (1Hll, Oontlt Wl rt•n t ncl Jo Ann 8tnllfl, Juallll Mtrit tnC M1 11<1tl M(li11 ICtina, Oollft1 Cl1rt 1na Jclm J1c Fltmlnf, Llnclt Ltl 1nt R"°"tl ol,IJYn CtPOI, F,1nce1 A. an<1 Don Gr1nt C11tv. .l1ntc1 L••••nf Darlor Ind JO!ln TtrrV l!nttrt~ Mt rcll •• Rvt n, Lutllt E. ""' Ptul J (OWtn, Liii MDflt ncl t ncl CtrlV Nltl"l•l 8t111!rly .... t n!I JO$t~ll eovd. 0111 ll1v '"" Mtl1nle Jo Past. "ltt c. 11'1d Rlc111rc T. W1rd, Ot1nn1 tNI J1me1 C11rk O•n•I, Jt~kt RIY• Incl R1vmcnd Armtncl · Brown, WHltv P. tnd S/\1ra11 J••nn• llav1, Ltr!"I' Wt vn1 tnd M.lrtlltl Clt l•1 9tl<M r M1rv £. 11'11 llcDtrl C. SH l r. Ch1rlt1 IC. tncl Su..an ( F1rltY. IYI A. I ncl Jll~•·o c ll.'°'Ddt5. MtrY Lou 1M OcntlO G. Cowell. 0.nnv 1MI Shtrlv kl'l••I. warin• L. tnd TIWIJ l •• ::'i~fl:: 'S!y,~ :~1~!i'\:1c.'!1wr:.E1n111 ErcllTltnn, Su1•nM. Frtncn 1M F'ierd ,~. Marriage Lice1ases LAS VEGAS. t.ltv . -Mtrrlttt l.c1n~t$ luutd "''' lntlude: ERl·LD!IOON-Mlt. 7, 'Tlltadc '~ Salem. It, at l 11un1 111•<11 1M Pt !riclt Jt tn, II. o! Co1!1 MtSI. 11.0USSEAU·RDSINSON-M••· 7, "~rt F .. 1t. •ncl G1ryl1 Ann, 13, boll\ al Hu11tlno1"" &tt<ll. HOOO·SAXlEJl-Mtr 1, ROO.,.t E,, l.! al S!htflll!O, I nd ShltltY ... nn, 11. o1 Wt1tmln1tor . HOCKMAN·SWANSON--Mtr. I , Me<lo E., •1. i nti Donnt LOVll,, ll, bo!h of Newport &ttch. 'TOMA-TILLMA,..-Mt r. '• W\lll1m 1,, JI. al Hunlln11on Br1tl\, t nll Vicky L., l6, al Lent ll•tOI CONN-BJllLEY-M1r. 9, Mlct.1 tl .J•me1, l-<. 1nt Vlr1on•1 Mir:,, "· bo111 al COl!I M1•1. CtMP.SWol,N-Mt r. t, R•i.v J0<11lh1n, 1'. or 1•1-!!ltn<I and Cntrltent Louhr. :n, o! ll•lbaa Ptnin!ull MUNOZ·MU NOZ-Mlt 10 .... u,.llo, )•, ffm1,,;e<1 Jtc...,rll~. 50, bo•h ot (O•ll Me11 NETWlG·MtllEOMONE -M 1.-11. (11ftncr l tf0¥. 0 , tn<I (ynl~I• ¥.trit. 16, bolh of Hunl•nllon lfl<h O'LEXEV-OESEL-Mt r. I), .lclln B , u . tn<I !loOb;e, II. bath of Ne....oar1 lltacn. ITEIN·"OISJNS-.M•r. 12. TllClmts l , ., al co"• Meu, '""' M1r~r1r Mtry, 't. at St.,,. Ant i(EJ18Y·"UNl<E-M1r. ll. Rant Id Etw1rd, Jl. 1nd J t MI M, 33. !)0111 ol Wt!!mln'1tr MC IC INZIE·STOLTZ-M.,, IJ, Ar!hy• J ., JJ, a/ Co111 MtH, and .Jun• A .. Jll. at Orentr. 'TUCKElll·MARTIN-Mtr. ll, J1"'n A., .u. ind llfblft J. JI. llOtll a! Wtsl,..,ln1t1r. WAAIC·"EITZ-Mtr. 1J, Wtllt r D , II. int llc~tnnt El•lnt, If, llOTh al (OS1t Me••· EOOV·.!Oll Y-Mt• ll. C:~1rlH (., JI, Incl ol,111• J, 10, boln Cl We•lmlnlttr. IMUS·G ... RLAND-Mor ll, 0"" All•n. JI, ct WutlTlln•lor, 1N1 Rhcr'I01 .le, JI, al Barden Grov• (.UY PEN·ll ... EJl-M1r, IJ, 0 u • n • l'..•H~. •I. •'Ill M1rv J e•n 19, bell\ or wutmln1t1r. Wol,ITS·EOWAROS-M.u . lJ. S!P~•n tt, n. a/ An111elm, 1nc1 tonc11 IC1rtn. 11. or wn1,..,1n1ttr. H 0 P"' E R.ttol,N)(LEO€N-M"' IJ, Harol1' D .• 52, i nt ElfM>Ort, •). both al Wt1!m\f,.tt• 9 •NAG AS · P HJlllPV -M1r l), Jl lch1td R , 11. '"" Oonn1 J •nt, 11. bott> al Hun!ln~•cn ll•1C1> ( 0 RN El !SON·WILLEY-M•'· lJ, R1IPh Ctrl. ll a/ ~1nt1 An1. 1nd Cnervl Annt. 16. or Fountain V1ll1v . f'ULLERTON -A 'IS.year· old 1nother of two who .. thoroughly enjoys learning " is the firsl student to qualify for highest honors al gradua· lion from Cal State Fullerton. Mfs. Dorothy R. Keen of Irvine topped the January class of 1971 with a straight·A grade point averag'e. Highest honors go only to graduate! 11>1ith perfect grades in all their college courses. Mrs. Keen, whose husband Al is an aerospace executive, took her lower division studies at Fullerton Junior CoUege and transferred to Cal State in 1966. "! thoroughly enjoy studying with younger students," she says. "and truly believe that J am a better informed citizen Billboard Ban Vnder Scrutiny SANTA ANA A new ordinance which will allow the phasing out of billboards ~·1thin three years is being considered by the Orange County Planning Com mission. The la\\', se nt to planners by the county Board of Supervisors for a recom· mendal1on. would not only elimin ate billboards but also would restrict business signs. Such signs would be rest ric ted to walls and with a 50 square fool limit for e a c h business. Eliminated would be roor and moving signs. CMA Picks' New Chief ANAHEIJ\I -Dr. Jean F . Crum.' a general surgeon with olfices in Do"'ncy a n d Norwalk, is the new presidenl- elccl of the California Medical Association . Dr. Crum, elected al the association 's an nu a I con· fcrence here last week, will become pre s ident of the 24,000·member CMA next J\1arch. CJ\1A members re-elected Dr. Willian1 F. Quinn of Los Angeles as speaker of the organization's J1 o use of Delegates. Dr. Joseph F. Boyle of Los Angele~ was re· elected vice speaker of the house . which is the C,._1A's governing body. Dr. Philip F. Voigt of Long Beach "'as elected to the Cf.tA Counci l. which meets during the year 10 carry out policies determ ined by the I-louse of Delegates. ,'!fag 'Jl!S!1 • ,11:1l(J(d u. ..... ibe .... gc for "' rou i:tt su.retr 'M>Uld be a memon.ble ... ... NEWS RELEASE: .. .,µ .... • dW!J ""'" '"' WEST COAST dghi t . l thin1" 1K:h BANKS REDUCE -· lin1 chis t nd INTEREST '""' '"' aoini olf ON SAVINGS '"'"' " dv ftOO< [; one ANAHEIM, CAL-Interest rates h•n<' ·k I btno °' on savings deposits were cut <1o'1 P' tnd sharply Friday by West Coast stop "nd? ba nks as they joined other This I icd banks across the nation in re-""" .ui.:h thi1 ,.f on ducing the rates paid on savings tn Ot ~. is depcsits. ..... ' ol AA p<d ' • ~ . 'C 40 ex lftOUS aru. SIS f OOUI. 0 ICC\.I• JI •lated ~... ~ """" -~ l)t'Q'll"L p.i , ARE TDC sml GITTING Tlf[ MOST FROM TODR SAVINGS! INIH!IM SAVINGS PAIS THE HIGHEST lllTEREST RATES ON INSURED SAVINGS Current annu1I rale on piS$book 1ccounts compounded daily 90 day bonus interest ao:::ounts "ith minimum balance One to ten year term certificate accounts with minimum ba l1oce Two to ten year t1rm e1rUfle1te 1CC:®nts with minimum balance 5% 5\ti % 5:i4 % 6% ANAHEIM SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION as 1 result or aUendin1 t..'01· 1egc." Mrs. Keen worked her way through the MiMesota School ef Business in Minneapolis in the 19405 and was working full time as a secretary when she enrolled at Fullerton JC ln 1960 as an economics ma- jor. "The first years were the roughest." she r cc a 11 s, ''because of the need to study such subjects as chemistry and physics." Both her son and daughter are 5tudents at UC Irvine, majoring in computer sciences·social sciences and languages. respectively. Three of Mrs. Keen 's (.'lassmates were a cc o rd e d high honors for achieving grade-point averages between 3.85 and 3.99 on a 4.0 scale, v.·hile 23 others qualified for honors with averages between 3.5 and 3.84. Taxpayers Talk Slated \VESTMINSTER -\Yilliam E. Hablin. vice president of Union Bank will be the speaker Thursday at the meeting of the Orange County Taxpayers Asociation. The sess ion will open 11t 7:30 p.m. at the Keystone Sav· ings and Loan Association bu il d ing, Beach and Westm inster Boulevards in Westminster. SANTA ANA -On a typical Friday night, lhe police radio Ironies gear. band serving four Orange Coast cities can sound like Cast eatimates are not yt'l the entire population of the available, he said . state trying to talk at once. Some of the expenses to ··we htve two years to i:.o and the crowded air space isn't critical yet, but it's still serious." But under a system pre>-the county'1 own com· _____ _ posed by the County Com· muriications equipment will be 'P----------., munications Department -of· picked up through granU ad- fering each public safety ministered through the State jurisdiction ils own clear-of California Criminal Justice channel frequency the Council and il.!I Orange County rrustrating ezperience of a itubsidiary, Egan said. GOLF TIPS L.•w Score Include• A OaN Shert G.lm•. l'rect lce et tM .• , patrolman finding air space. The existing system. getting will be a thing of the past. more jumbled all the time. NIWPO•TER INN It may take two years lo went into effect thrtt years PAR 3 GOLF COURSE accomplish , say the officials begun to contact the chiefs ago. $1 with this ad w•k •h•Y• of the county communications of police and city managers ,_~"Wj'ii'i'iiid~liih'i"~thiailiisihia~n~n~gii~;;ii~~~ii~~~ department. of each of the county citiesl But thus far the countywide lo explain the plan and ha ve. DANISH PUINITUll SWIDISH Cl'fSTAL project lo phase into nt!W them determine their own lllDAL llGISTIT CHINA &; STEIL ullra-high.{req uency range 5 equipment needs." has unanimous support of all Thus far , Egan said, the re the cities contacted . even are absolutely no holdouts. !hough it will cost money . "They all can't wait (or the One zone where the air space crush is particularly new system lo be installed .'' dOnf~~ ::;e~~!~:i~~ s~g~~;;d ~:~;~ ch~~~~ri~~;v~~n~e.th~e c!~~~: 2G40 E.CoaJl H1n1..1. 1 Corona 1el Mor would vary in cost in each -~ <I' Newport Beach. L a g un a .1 Doif,. g:30 ~ S:)I Tel: 644-7340 Beach and San Clemente. ci y. ., The ne\Y equipment v.•ould .S11.,..ya 11 +oS loFA -M .. t.,. Ch~ Under the present system.,1.~be~bo~u~g~h~l~b~y~e~a~c~h~c~il~y~,~w~h~ic~h~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~ all public saf1:ty departments In those cities share the same airways. "It makes for some pretty confusing a n d frustrating situations. "What's more." .said one veteran police dispatcher. "it makes for some pretty noisy radios." Tom Egan. admin istrative services officer for the county! communications force lvhi ch coordinates the entire network of law-enforcement airways in the county, said the new UHF idea i~ 1tlll in the formative st11ge.~. "In recent weeks we ha ve HAMS " . . . So Good It Win Haunt Yau 'Tll It's Gone" ' °"' """" , tt mt fint.i car,,.ffld tew1 p0rt.;e,. -Ovr •low •<'f cwrlrw;i mtl"<Jd, •tll w .. caro.,n lllclla•y •'Ill tPJll•woocl tmclolnv ..... lC·"-GYtn b~ting hon~y '~ tPICt glllt .,. un!Qut In Ill "" w1trld Sa Otlic<t~• 1nd •l!Ptli1n·1g wt IU•I wouNln't knew llClw II Improve 1hl1 praouct w•'~• M•n ""~'nt 1er JI """· S•l•t l 1lictd toe, from lcp IC l>OHom •O m1t t•CI> doleCl•Dle u~lf;r"' 1!lc1 Ca1\ Ot rerncvecl eflcrH1 .. 1v. completely *">•ttl •rod rea.dy ta 1ervt. 0!". dt r vc11• Honr~ 8t~td Ht m tCIO•y, ~n 1dvtn!Mrt In lltm-loymtnt. you'll n1ve• large!, RETAIL STORES 1700 (. Cu1t Hl1hway, Coron• do! Mar-473·fOOO . 1222 5. arookhur1t. Anehtlm ~24'1 SEMl·ANNUAL GREEN TAG TIRE SALE! 2 WEEKS ONLY MARCH 22 ·APRIL 3 .. - ' ' SAVE from~3.80 to*32.80 ON 4 TIRES TUBELESS BLACKWALL 2 'AO Tubelt .91 !tr "f Wllilew1ll S+l1 1 ~·13,69S·11 '•II ffl011 AM~ 1. 81u1cwd11 Ctr'I· .,Cl. Cll1Wllt o. Cam111 Cauotr., Otr11, F1u11n.1. t,ju111no1. '"'o''"' Ft 1' £1. T1~ it fl 75 Incl SI ti ~I! tl rt dt1>9,..,lng an 1111 DEPENDING ON SIZE TUBELESS BLACKWALL 2 'A5 '"""' I.... W1'<tfw1ll S•ltl 7.7.S-11, 7 75-1 5 ~•11 ..,01! t mao111det1 Ch•"•' Cht \'f' II I. Oadg11, Fardo. Plymeul~\ red E• T•• •• s1.1• '"" $2 tt ptr '"* dt p•nC•nG a~"'" TUBELESS BLACKWALL 2 '50 '""'"" fir Wll<!rw11t S1111 11.25·1•. 11 25-15 '11 "'011 Ch••v•. Dodo ••.,_.~ •• r ard1, lfl t •&u•r•. Plrmo'1th1, ~•~· t•t &1. luit~ S1>t to1l1. T·81fdt ftd. E1 T1• !1 1,.31 i nti 11 )I 1or tut d1p1nd!nt on 1111 If II'• G,.1n T1111d .. ./T'S ON SALE! •llN CNfCI , •. $11.,;lf IVf IVfflJ' el M1"• hrt 11111 II tifttt ··~ Ptfl •~•lllC 1!111 tvt~\. •I ·~1(1 ~tl'Of '"' Mdfrl 'lttlf ~IW fl' 111\r!t ,,11.,.,, 11 lh1 t lnrlllt'll' "l<t. ~'l<ld I I 11\0••'n t i G1n1r11 Tift ltt •t l . Charge it at General Tir~ ... ~II ......... .. <:a.,.,ptt•tov11, P''''" II •ndl"""'"' t111l1n tl•t~!•r•nr 1111 c;,.,,,,1 \en GENERAL TIRE Don Swlldlund COAST GENERAL TIRE Ill W. 1 ftll, Cette Mne 141·1111 •4•·10JJ AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE ,., .. , ... , .. ltult 'ler,jl, H•11ti1tt•1 ... ,. 147-1150 STORE HOURS 7:30 AM· 6:00 PM Mon. thru Sit. L----------------YOUR SAFETY IS OUR BUSINESS ----------------' ' . t:cl Glf I •S m•<1U.. l l ...... , ... tlllw •11r M Inv II ol IO "' n= s L.,., ta JO t11r ol1 2S tlKO Coro tllCO Df1.~ lllHWIV S0 t«hH ~ ~­t'hl'C-. tl'IV&I ti\ Ltl>n\11 I 1 LtnO• nc ~.,, .. ,O (ID ltf'{~.:: 03,. '!' =~= .'h. lf)of!y l" I """ . " loOt Mv 1 .SO QOMol' !oaM o4 S 15 f /""' '. l'lta fl Nt t "-" . ' I"' Ttm \II 111TV AA 111lV pf S !-I: ~"'to, t llon Ole Pl l tr.ni>tB J toc:kn.,.. Air t=~· -SC1m I -SGt 11.<I -lilt 1.Jol t ' •• s 11 .. pfE•l'l LILIOIJ IJ Lor•I Cori LI Lind 1 tS Louy1GE 1 M L1111LlN11n It L.-111 11 t0 Lwtw 10 70 LuO.v U 90ll liidlow I OI l uktn1SI IO Lurn1 Inc tvo coni y " ... ,..., ;:,, Yn1 pl T11tW.y March 23 11171 SC Tuesday's Oosing · Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List s..i... Ntli-------------1 lMt.J Hltll L•w Clew ~ Market Declines St lt• Ntl 1., .... .,llllllll.,lllllllllEl .... lllllOICO .. lllllllllllll1111llllllDllf Stoek Leaden (Mt.1 N1t11 L .. , .... °'' Ji ~~ H~ ti~ ~ ~ AIOST SHA!l.M 1~ ?~~. ~5 11' • .! •, : fig ~ Im :t ~ NE~'l1fo\'I( 1r111)~i~~f r!: lj Ju: ttl~ : = ~ Jl M fft! w -II\ ~r ~~~":f.I' ~ !Jr·= it Ji ~ "' .!: \; -L-4 " .a ~, ~n,l: .. ffi·l:!! !!" t~\t ~ ~ "" , + l: liif:/ oir'!JQ.o i i: .. u 1• ~ 1~·-i:l!! ~· !,. ~. lfil.. :::. =-~ h1 Light T1·admg· i" ... :;:•~ ~ I l~ ~ tl~ + "t r~Hlt:, Mi; m_.~ :t:.• ,:1h tllf"• .IOb lo!!~ • • 111~; 1i .~. ~ l lMil'I' Corp 25 ,n~ .. ,..,. + "'' '1'i~ t'I) t 11 •r• GO 1.:1! "'' -r:f'-'t>Co '°'" J IQ !O'JIJ !lust ~ ~·~( \»i ~\lo ~ = •,:,"" ~ij m Mt fJ% n:~ -1'-I }lr.;,o: l• ~ 1.>t th: -' "Oii":r,' .... lt1 12'. -" rv~l~ iJl ~~ ~;; 2~3<11 • =• v. ;:J:~:;: on• '!, ~n ~ u1o=~~N"fc11& ..... , :,ii:.;~ =~;H911 tf. ;11 m: ;;~ I!~~ NE\VYORK(UPl)-.Stocksdeclinedonmoder 1:~1.cQ ,, Ii n. ~ nl'I = tt , ... ,!. ir :i.-* 1::" ~.~ ~· ~IG pf!~ '4, 21~ m .. ''-;-. ate turnover on the New York stock exchange Tues ~=" .. }, ~ J ':\Iii i.~ f.w; ~ ...... "" ""~~1 t u ~ u~ t~ :i u day F:= f'~~ '!'. lt" 11; + .: U•l • Uw a-a.. ltHTHr"' \t tl\t f\ ~ =:: ~=~!.1 I ii .. ,.. tt 1err•Pw•( 111 M ;1 .. 11\ al4 •" The Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 171 T••G ,11 ~ ,., 114• 1 1''• • No Mt 111.2J1 J • • • • • • ..,, co ..o 1"' • • 1f" 1.1>. -at 908 89 near the !mat bell while Standard '·Poor s Tu G s... ..o ; l';: 1i~ 111, Norlh•o. 1 ,. '~ ,,'" 13. -,, !laMI • tit t ·~ -I Ql lUfl n<J Ja ' • I 1r = ~~ ~:..'f'~1'11.!l ~ ~. ~Ii ~ =·\'> :=o: I 0 1'~ ~ ~ ..: -1~~ 500 stock mdex showed a loss or 0 32 at 10~ 30 De ~::o' a~. '° 'f: ~~ 1i: 1'" +i-. Nw1•anc 1 oo r. »Vi 11 ~1 1 -.,. ~ Pr~ 160 • • 1 • f, -• clines outscore d advances 829 to 504 on 1 637 IS '•~Pi.a .}Of ?: l:: 1I!. 11~=~~=-1~ ~ n ~~ ~,,_ ~~:;,:!~P~ l :f:b ,, i'f.li l~I'> ''i\I ~ll SUeS On th e ta pe ~:: u.,,. ~'n I 21 y~ Jlh t 1:Nw111M pl(71> 20 "* 61\ct 11 .. -t\lifi::'C~)i:> '; ::.1 ··~ 4\. ~l Tt•ll ,.1111 51 SI Sl\o 51"--"'Nws1$ w 1 :rt lJ IJ'lo , ... 7•'t -"~&e9CO _. ,._,. )(I ,, ,..,, ~ I r d 16 300 000 I '" J •• J20 <m1 101 ) 1i! 1'1° 1an 1 ~ 11 )I :n ~ :n,,. - 1 'kf111v 0 , , 1 ,, '"" 0 .., _ A turnove r o aroun s 1ares com r11io~ .o 1Ut<t!o l>1"'1 "'-1 ~or11.-.-lfjllt!l Sl\+1'S11 Cor• ''1'\•7J !t\•J't' d thJ4290000 h t ddM d Tt1omllt Ot •s1•v.1111'11 1\'i -1~1 °''s •1 to 10,,111s"1 -1r.iwr-.10 l'-IJ1.3\.l-1 ,.,.., pare w1 s aresrae on a:> r11oml'ld~ 31 11\'i. 17\l 7 \'I + ~ vr; Co fl 11~ ltfli 1• o -It Sml llAO "° 1 ~I._ Jl • !1 , -ThofflJW 1511 :i "11~ r,~ f~~ + i.t -0-P-~:i: ~ ~F ;c' ,1; fi~ ?l::: U, :!_ Closing prices included A1&T 48'~ unchanged J" l:c!1. 11010 i ' llVt" -v.0•~Eltct 16 IO '0 ' 10 • lO \-oSm'-"kH JO 6 ! .. I'' 1•1 -Bethlel1en1Stecl22"orr11 DuPont142o£!2 For.a Td .... t M \0 10 1110 21 H ---01~ tPd to II 11 1 ' 1 -o Sol• lltl \0 II So )lo 1)' -\ 'l'll II ffli.l.w;: \JO •• "° "' 6'!i -~01:cldP•110 1191 '' 11:. i•o +w~"' • '"" '" ,,., 61 " up~ Gereral Elc•tric 111 " u~ '•General TmeLMr w ln J011i ,,., W-1 Ol:clall't " ' 20 '"' 11 , _ ., • CP Q.l• " 7J~ "' ll ' 71f 711 ... JS 7 T m•.., 1 IQ 1 ~ ll"" J.Ho -~Occl<IP p JtO ... '°""ill• St~+~ .. [ ln0)9 Jt 21 11 Mt 83 '" rr ~. IBM 355" fl ,, So ih fltflll. oOb .U 7t 'o ~, ... 11 .+ I OttldP pf7 It 10 )l'lj, JJ 1 lJ '> -nf !Jio 11 3t 3' o + o 0 OrS 711 0 '1J 74 0 4 U efl1. Tot> nPCk 60 • I \I llM. I .... o.den C0t1> l02 1' 1 II • -·1 s CMS I" • 111 !'1 '" -fl Pacific 38'• orr "• and us Steel 33" un•hanged TOOd Sit 10 1•5 *" ...S\~ d •-140..R r,11r1 I~ lO > JO"--SC1rEG D JO 7'\ Ill: 21\'I .,~ Yll ~ To-E llO 1 1,... 10\o 14!o -~ Oltlo~d 1 IJ,4 115 ~ J~lo '5lo , So./11'dw~ nc j ~ ' 3' + Too lltlll "' IS :itw 21 21 -h °"ea or "'° o '6>\ .. .. , -115.odWn ol 10 1 l21, J?'--So I b t d k t -•-t io1 ''" 2•0 11 -V.0tiEd1tJto ,30 n s.b u -1 !E;""s1.n 1 11 .. u'" 1~ me anavsts attr1 ue mare \\e-...1ess o roo:irR(' ~ 211 1S • 241/o 151~ Oll.liGE ~IO l.o.40 U ~ 1 "' -~ 1 E 1 5e 2.Sl JO 10 I" • f I t k hil th Id th I ( h t t l •M a '° 11a n • n , n .... ~•GE 1,. " no;. 16\ ,,,~"'+::; co 11• n• ,. • 1•111 11'1 pro 1 a 1ng \Y e o ers sa e 1s was es1 a T 1n1 u 110 llO 60 60 o0 Ok t NGI 1.2• 12 J l1I 211 m nGE 1IO I 36'• Ji• ,... d th t T 1t11W A r 1)9') 111<41-. i0oi , 1o.i , + , oiln cin1 11 u• ,,. _,1 ',', • + " NG•• 1 '° "' S5'• • / ff -~ Ing am1 sings e economy was no 1mprav1ng as T nwA1r-p \ .. no ~ 1~.+ 14,._ • "' •v.... + Ptt 190 t4 1'11 o -V. d Tnwf'n 00! 130 U ., • ~II -U'o vml 11 11 1Jl'J 1J ll'llo -o Ito nlh :S. 96 rn., lit.. 1 ._ -t. fast as expecte T '""'' t SJ 10 ·~ JI 1 V. _ I.lo ~LI 10 ll 111'1 20 • '4 -. O\llh RY 1)1 I 1!(•; IS l)lio 1 tnst 1111 J.o 13 '9\lo ti~ \'I ~ 1 l'ot 1 7 11" 11~1 II ~ UG11 1 2f 1' J6 :Mio 21'• T l '>K<ln l'O 1 """ ss, 1s~ _ <\l ·~"1·11 1 10 12 ' " ~1 1 111 .. lw Al•m I' ' • • ,,. 11 +.,. Internat1onal news also appeared to be exert rr1ntc "' 111~ I.I~ IJ~+'ll lb.fltvJ IMT •• oJ •J l ~ 0 weoTPS • SI 10\'t \'' • k Id d Tint on ••• ,.,.' •~ ·~ 1 Marl 1131 31 .11 ,+,,s11ar1an.<i0 210"' o' ~ .. 1ngpressureon tbeltst ThePen•·gonacnowege ,,,.,,-.., 2WI n,,_ ,,..+~ !~Co ~ I! ''t ~ 2\ -:\'11PltfYHWI I 11 Oolll. ""' lflo -1,, WI TrlVff>Pi'2 1 D"-21"' n lffit'Z is 2~ ~ ~· ~·+1 ~:~fi:14l%' 3.,J l6l i~.1~ :; ~ Tuesday that the Laotian operation \\as cut short rr•vi.oae ,5 '•"• "',, ·.~ •.: .,, 11' 3s •3 621'l 11 • 6j -"' ..,..,!It' E1 31 ' n~ Jv. " because of st1f! 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' '"' 1) 21tJllJ~ II 1 •~ 1!, 2 ' 16 I 1 '.> ~~ I~ I t" • l • 1 ~ ~ :·. 31 I I I ' ) '~ "i • ,, 1J l t I~ • ., t i ' u ,. • ·': ,;"" ,f~ ~ 1\• H I " • " • ~ ... "' OAIJ.Y •lLOT )J \ \ J! D.lltY PILOT U.S. Puts Skids On Aliens CHARLOITE AMALIE, V.1. (AP) -Clutching stuffed suit· cases and shopping bags, hun. dreds of West Indian families have passed through the airport terminal on S l . Thomas in recent weeks lo be deported to their home Islands. The scene is repeated on nearby St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands as the federal government cracks down on illegal aliens working here. As of March 5, the U.S. Naturalization Service had deported 1,100 aliens, \\'hile many others had left volun· tarily since the roundup began about a month earlier. Alien labor is an important part of the economy in the Virgin Islands .-out of a work force of 36,000 nearly half are aliens. They are im· portant lo the economies of the other West Indians islands since they send home an estimated $4'-h million every year. Businessmen unable to fill all the available jobs in thl' Virgin Islands' burgeooing tourist trade have traditionally drawn on labor supplies in neighboring islands whe re u n em plQyment sometimes reaches 46--00 percent. But th!! constant need for workers has Jed aliens to enter illegally to find jobs, or overstay their allowed Lime on U.S. territory. In many instances, aliens complain that employers lied to them about havi ng d-One the necessary paperwork with the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service to keep them legally employed. Most of the time. they say, nothing ~·as done and their passports gathered dust in desk drav.·ers. The roundup has brought I complaints of incidents or , mistre atment by fed er a I authorities and local police called in to assist them. "We 're not com pla ingi ng about the right of the govern- ment to deport illegal aliens," says George Goodwin, a legal alien and president of the\ Alien Interest Movement. "All we are asking for is to be treated like human beings and given human rights." Overcrowding and lack of 11ufficienl sanitary raci!ilies exist at jails v.·hcre aliens await deportation. Reports of outright brutality are di~­ countecl hy Virgin Islands of.I ficlals and govern me nt! repr'!Sentalives from other j islands. Alien groups ancl Virgin Isla nds are asking the govern-I men! to do somclhing about employers ~·ho gave theirl alien employes m!slea~ing .in- formation about 1mm1grat1on procedures. The St. Croix A\•is, in an editorial. said allens "'ho blindly trusted employers find 1 themselves rleportrrl . : ''In all fairness." it added , "the federal government must ] now tum Its attention to those employers who flooted the law." 1 Federal law prov ides for1 (ines and jail sentences for employers guilty of illegally hiring alien labor Last ye11 r I represcntati\·es from the U.S Virgin Islands anrl the \Vest India n islands a~reed on a "preclearance" scheme so job eppHcations wouJd be funneled thr ough go vernment departmenls on each island, 11ong wilh police reports. on each applicant. After review by the Immigration service and Virgtn Islands officials, th\1 precleared pool of ap- p1ie1Uons woukl be offered to employers neec:Hn& workers. Immigration men 1ay the plan still a,waitli approval from l\11ghington STARS $.,drt•Y Om•rr it one •' tile w0flil'1 t t••t ,,,,,109111. Hit c.oli11'1111 !1 '"' of 01e DAI LY l"ILOTS ,,,,1 1.,1v1••· .. • T~Hday, March 23, 11J7l PRICES SLASHED ••• OUT THEY GO ••• HURRY LIMITED QUA~~TITIES SINtl 19ll WHITE FRONT MEN'S PANTS s200 RUG REMNANTS s.50 LADIES DRASTIC REDUCTIONS FLARED PANTS ON ASSORTED 5200 BABY FUltN{JURE VALUES TO $9.97 REG. $6.97 VALUE 200/o •• 50°/o ORIGINALLY $1.37 DENIMS, CORDUROY, & ACRYLICS RADIO DEPT. . ADMIRAL CLOCK RADIO REG. 26.97 HARDWARE 28 PIECE SOCKET SET 1/1", J/I", e1ul 1/4 .. SQUAii DllYI soc11.ns LADIES ROBES WINCHESTER AND DUSTERS AMMUN.ITION s4oo WAS '1¢ 49c 22 A•un-22 Sltort YALUIS TO Slf.97 WAS 72' ssc L•itt & Short h• All Pebflc.t. 22 Amll'l-22 l.e119 REG. 7.n NOWoNLY s4oo QvlltH, Terry, Cknll'" & Conn "l11f'I &Sollcb. WAS 71¢ 59c ALL SIZll AYAILAILI 12 ""'"'-L•mt am. SALE I Fantastic Savings ••• Electrics ••• Power Too Is ••• Apparel ••• Housewares ••• Sports. Sundries· Garden· Records I MEN'S AND BOYS' I Ori9. $2.97 Men's P.J ., -········--·-······--·······-···-··--···············----$1.00 Orig. $2.97 Mon'' Shirts ------·-··-··--·-----···-·-----------·-·-·-----·4/$5.00 Orig. $1.97 Boys' Shirt1 ------····-··-···--·-···-·-···-·-·--··--····-·---.l/$1.00 Orig. $1 .97 8oy1' Pants --·--·····--····---·--··--···---··--·--·-·-··-·--··-----$1.00 Orig. $1.58 Boys' T-S hir t1 ----······--······-···········-··---·· .. ·······-··-·$1 .00 I DOMESTICS I Orig. $1.28 Bath T owol1 ---···-·····-········-· ·······-·····--··-·-············$.50 Ori g. $1.2 9 Beel Pillows ------······-·····---·--···---···--····---··--·-····-··-$.77 Oriig. $.39 Washcloths ......... ···········---···--····--·-···-····--·10/$1.00 I BABY FURNITURE I Orig. $49.97 Chl!st -···--·······-····-···-··-··--···--··-··-·······-···-··-··--Sl4.00 Orig. $53 .97 Chest ---··············--·--·-···--·-··-·-····················-···$2&.00 Orig. $54.97 Ches t ----····-------~----··-·--····-·····--·····-·····-····--···-$2S.OO Orig. $29.97 Cr ib --··-···-··--··-·····-·····--··---·····-·:···-·····-···-···-·-Slt.00 Orig. $34.97 Cr ib -----·---·-·-··-----·-----··-···-···-··--····-········-----Sl 7,00 Orig. $41 . 97 Crib ·-----------···--····---···-···-···---·--··-·-·······-·--·---S!O;OO Orig. $53.97 Crib ----------·---·-·---·-------------····-· .. ·-····--·-$26.00 Or;g. $43 .97 Cdb .............................................................. $21.00 Orig. $31 .97 Crib ·--·····-·····-·······-····-·-··-···--·········--····-···--···Sl t.00 Orig. $40.97 Crib -······----····-·-·····-··---·-···-···----·-··-··········-··-$29.00 Orig. $12.97 Highchair ·------····--···--·····--···-·····-····--····-····-····-$9.00 Orig. S 16.97 Highchair ----···--·····-····--····--·········---·······--·····$12.00 Orig. $12. 97 Car1e1t -·-··········-···············-···-···--···---··-····--·-··$8.00 Orig. $I 5.97 Carseet -·--····-·····-····-······--···· ··--·-····-···-·-·$10.00 I LADIES I Otig. $2.97 Half Sli ps & Petti Pa nt1 ··--···--···--·····--··--······-····-$.50 Ori g. $5. 97 Br al-All Whit a --·····--·-··--·--·-·····-·····-··-·--·····-· $.SO Orig. $1.97 Ladies' Hos iery ---·---·-···-··--···--··-··-···-··-·-·····--2/$3.00 Orig, $1.97 Ladies' Panty Hose -··--···---····-······-·····-·-··-----2/$3.00 Orig. $5.87 ladie1 ' l 00 "l. Nylon Gowns ···-·····-·····-····--····· $2.00 Orig. $6.97 Cotton Ponrhos . -·--···-·············-····--·····-··--······-$1 .00 Orig. $2.97 Pri nt Tops-JOO "/. cool cotton -···--···········--···-···$.50 Orig, $1 8. 97 ledies' Pantdresses -···-·······-·····---·--····-·····--····$4.00 I SUNDRIES I Reg . $2 .33 Our• Glo1s-Complete Mike up Kit, cont. 2 blushers Eye Sh1dow 1pplie1tor 2 eyeliners Blusher Mini 8ru1h 4 Powdered Eye Sh1dOw Eyeline Brush $1 .00 Orig. $.SO Be-Gone Oeodor1nt -···-···--··-·-··-···--·--·-·····---·-----··--S.ZS Orig. $1.69 l ife Shampoo-16 oz:. bottle ·-------·-·····--·····----·-$.11 Orig. $2.99 to $6 .99-Wigs , F1ll11 Wiglets ·····-·-···---·--··-----$1.50 I AUTO I Reg. $8.47 R11ly Lin e Tool Box•s ..... ········-·-·····-···· ........ $5.00 Reg. $4.97 One Piece Vinyl Flooor M1t --·--·---····-··--··-······---52.18 Reg. $2.95 Autto Trans. Stop L••k -···--····---····---·-----------1/z Price Reg . $1.65 Engine Tun• Up --····-··---····--·····-·-····-·····-·-··.1/z Price Reg. $I .6S Car I Clean•r ..... :---··-·····---···········-··---···----·-·· 'lz Price Orig. $29.97 N1nol1 Rad io --·····--·····-···-·-·····-·--------·-·····--··-··--$20 I SPORTING GOODS I Otig. $39.97 Gym & Swin9 S11ts ··········--··-····--···--······--·····-$35.00 Orig. $44.97 Gym & Swin g Seti _________ ., ............................. $35.00 Orig. $3.99 Bicycle "Wheelie Be r'' -·····--······--··---·····-·-······-··$.50 Orig. $5.97 Roddy 2-G•llon Jug by Thermos -····-··-··-···-····$4.00 Orig. $3. 78 Vo it T etherball Set ··-····-·······-··········-·····-···-·······$2.00 Orig. --·····-As1t. Fi1h ing Rods --····--····-·-···-··--····---······--25°/o off Orig. $7.97 E11ercise Be lts -All lge. Site ..... _, .. $4.00 I RECORDS I O rig. $.33 4S RPM Roeord1 . Asst Nemes & Titles --··--··-··-----$.10 I HOUSEWARES I A1sorted Gadgets & Tools -··--··----···---···-----------·--------·-··10c each Optn Stoel Fl1tw1re --··-··-···----------·----···--------·-···--·-··-··-·· 1 Oc tadl Glassware I open stock) ·-----·-···--·--·--···--····-·····-·-···----"--·-Sc eadi Orig. $3 .99 T1ble limp ·----·----··--··--··-·····-····--··-·--·-···-·-····-··$2.0Q Orig. $4.99 Table Lamp ···-····--··········-···---·-········-·--·-···-·-·----SJ.00 Orig, $9.88 T1ble lamp -···-·····--···--·····--···-····--·····-····--··-···--··$6.00 Orig. $12.88 Tabl, Lamp -··-···--···-·····-·-···--···-·····-···-·-·······-$8.00 Orig. $I 5.88 T 1ble lamp --········--·········-·····-····--···---·····-····$10.00 Orig. $ t 9.88 T 1ble lamp -············-····---L·-·····-·····-····--·····---·$12.00 Orig. $.99 C1rdboard Storage Chest -······-··············-······-·-····$.50 Orig. ·-···---Assorted Plastie1 -···-·--·---···---···--·--··--··--·····22c eactl Orig. ---·-··· Cloth•s Pins -···-·-·-·-·-----··-------·------··--·------····2/$1 .00 Orig. ____ Shelf Piper ----······--········-······--···-·····-···-····-----···-·-3/$.99 Orig. $5.97 P1ntry Queen Paper Dispensers ----------·-···---···$2.00 Orig. $.25 Open Stock Melmec -··-·-··--··-·-···----------··----10/$1.00 Orig. $.68 Rid X Liquid Drain Cle anet -----·--·--·--··--·-··-·----2/$1 .00 - 0rig. $9.88 Oet1eto Hamper ---·-··-----·-------··-----··--··--··--··--··$'.00 Orig. $11 .97 Detecto H1mper ·--·---·····-·-------··---··--·---·--·--$7.00 Orig. $I 0.97 Oetecto Hem per -··-----·····-·--·--·-·-----···-··-·-------·$8.00 Orig. $ t 6.99.$17 .99 Oetecto Hemper -···--~----·-··--·-···-·--···$10.00 Orig. $35.88 Stainless Steel Cook Set -----·--·------·--·----·····-$20.00 Orig. S 1.00 Woodware ------···--·-··--·-·---·-··--·····---···--·-----··--2/$1 .00 Orig. $.98 per sq. ft. SO-ft. Clothesline ·-··-············-··········-··-$.91 I HARDWARE I Orig. $1 .48 Slater Bu+1ne Torch ····-·····-·····-···-----··---·-··--····-·--S·66 Orig. $.79 Genuine Sis al Rope ----···-·-·-··-····---··---···--------··--···$.44 Orig. $1 .99 Portable Pl1stic Tool C1rrier -·-····--·-·--·-----·-··-···$1.0Q SPECTACULAR SAVINGS FAMOUS BRAND TVS • STEREO CONSOLES RADIOS AND MAJOR APPLIANCES AT NO EXTRA COST • • • 1 YEAR COLOR TV SERVICE ON PARTS & LABOR 3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY ON ALL T.V's e 2 Yr. Parts & Labor On Most Major Appliances. 12 INCH AC PORTABLE $ With Carrying Handle, Dipole Antenna, Lighweight, UHF.VHF. • DC 00 PORTABLE BLACK AND WHITE TV'S HAYE 90 DAY PARTS AND LABOR PLUS 3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY O'KEEFE AND MERRITT 30" AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE With continuous clean oven Liners. Lift top for easy cleaning. \ $149°° NOW ZENITH 25" COLOR TV CHROMA COLOR AFT CONTROL Rog. $629.97 PHILCO 18" PORT ABLE COLOR TV FINE WALNUT GRAINED CABINET 5299 PHILCO 18.4 CU. FT. FROST FREE REFRIGERATOR 160 lB. FREEZER No Defrosting Even Ir. FtHJ•r or Fresh F.Md Compartn'Mnf. NOW COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. A~"'~ BRISTOL & SAN DIEGO FWY. y~< ;_«#. DAILY NOON TO 9 PM SAT. 10 AM TO t PM SUN. 11 AM TD 6 PM CHARGE IT TODAY ' • . . . • . 1 I I I s DAILY Pll.17 3 Public Donations Sought for · On of re Beach SACRAMENTO (AP) -Because of Gov. Reagan'! construction free 1 e California park officlab are asking tO:. public donations to develop I.heir priu new beach just south of the Westtm White House. The mile-long San Onofre Bluffs State Beach four miles f~m San Clemente will open for the first time during Eutu Week Aprll 3-11. U1<r1 will be uted to contrlllW to lhe Calliorna Stale Pub Foundation -IS 1 ol(ht ror eompln1 ond 11 r.r day use -rather than payln& a fee. U enough mooey LI rabed, temporary facllitiet will be lnltalltd thlt will allow the State Parks and Recreation Depart. ment to reopen the beach for all or part of the summer. Department Dlrector Wlillam Penn Mott Jr. said be hoped for $60,000 ar 'No A.1010 Plants' State Aide Asks PVC Hearing SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -William E. Bennett, speaking for Consumers Arise Now, has asked the State Public Utilities Commission for public hearings on whether nuclear power plants will be buiij on the California coast. Bennelt, a former PUC member, is now on the State Board of Equalization. H.is client! are a group of Hastings College of the Law students. In question are electriclty-generating plants the Pacific Gas and Electric Com- pany plans in Mendocino County and near Santa Cruz. BeMett demande<I thal construction should be halted until a study has been n1ade of the earthquake hazard to such plants. "We're standing on top of a fault right now,'' M said Monday al a news conference in San Francisco. "California is nothing but earthquake country." His complaint al.so said there was not enough evidence co n c e r n l n g diJcb~• from nuclear plants and their "effect on the delicate ecologicaf.balance of our coastal regions." He mentioned air, land, water and thennal contamination. Califomla'11 residenb, he added, should be consulted on whether they wanted to give up more of their coastline, "which is mostly gone now." Of tM total of 1,072.7 miles of state coutllnt, 660.3 miles are privately own- ed, 353.3 miles are owned by the public and M.9 miles are owned by the federal gnverrunent, his complaint said. Harbor Teachers' Salaries Highest ·in Ora11ge County By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 ltll 01111 Piiot Si.ff The median salary paid to Newport- fo.1esa Unified School District teachers is the highest paid by any of the eight uniried districts in Orange County, ac- [Ording to county school officials. The salary at the midpoint of the range of all teachers salaries In the Newport- Mcsa district is $11,150, statistics sup- plied by the county Department of Educa- tion show. This compares with the medi- an salary of $10,987 in the Garden Grove Unified School District, SI0.912 in the Capistrano Unified District and $10,575 in Laguna Beach Unified. Other statistics compiled by the county Department of education show m or 15.9 percent of Newport-Mesa teachers are earning $14,400 or more each year. This compares with 46, or 2.5 percent in Garden Grove. Jn Laguna Beach only 11 teachers or 8.5 percent of the staff, earn more than $14,400. Newport-Mesa also employs tht Jargest number of teachers In the $15,~plus sa lary category v.·ith 38 or 3.4 percent of all teachers in the district. Three unified districUs in Orange County - Orange, Placentia and Santa Ana - have no teachers in this salary bracket. Laguna Beach has five, Capistrano has t1vo and Garden Grove , the largest district in the county, e m p I o y s one teacher at more than $15.000 per year. The average Newport-~fesa Unified total tax rate of S4.93 per $100 of assessed \•aluation ranks fourth among the unified district! of Orange County. The ttiJlrict follows Placentia with SS.15, Orange with S5.13 and Garden Grove v.·ith $5.07, Laguna Beach is lowest with a rate of SJ .03 per $100. The average amount spent in 1969-70 for each pupil in NeYtport-Mesa schools is $790 which i.s $1113 per pupil more Smell of Sewage In Laguna Beach Just Temporary The pungent aroma of sewage that floats through the air of the Art Colony, plaguing resident and visitor alike, can be expected to fade away in the near future, says Laguna Beach Public Works Director Joseph Sweany. \Vork has begun on the installation of new chlorinators In the ... city's sewage treatment plant and, once operating, they 11re expected to quell the unwelcome smell , at the same time improving the quality of the effluent entering the ocean from the Laguna outfall. Installation of the chlorinators is part of a $77 .500 plant upgrading project, or \vhich the city expects some 80 perwit will be financed by federal and state krants. Tht project was started last year with the installation of new ventilation and pumping devices to meet state Industrial safety standards. It will be completed with remodeling of the t:larifying tll\ks. to increase the plant's capacity to meet the city's needs at least until 197S. Court hnprisons Man ,For Taking Own Car LONDON (UPI) -The Appeal Court has ruled a man c1n 5teal his own car and be jailed for it The court Monday rejected an application by Frank R. Turner. 45, appealing a theft con- •iclion in July and fined h1m JfiOO and orclered him lo pay $300 cost!. The CQUJt ... :as told the car was taken from a g11ra ge whose owner had kept It because Turner had not paid for repairi. than the average of all o the f· unified districts ln the county combined. The 196~70 average per pupil cost! of $790 in Newport-Mesa compared with a high in Laguna Beach of ~ and a low in Garden Grove of $612. The amount of useased valuation per student in Newport-Mesa district is $17,482 ranking the district third behind Laguna Beach with $32,m per student and C8pistrano Untned wllh $19,942 per student. Garden Grove rates lowest of all eight unified. dlstrlcta in Orange Coun- ty with only $5,914 of assessed value per pupil. Harbor Budget Of $4,021,243 Adoption Urged Orange County Harbor Commissioners haVe recommended lhe Board o r Supervisors adopt a propoaed dlstrlc& budget of .$4,021,243 for fiscal 1971-72. Ken Sampson, Harbor Department Director, told the four attending com- missioners -Frank Robinson was not present -the budget included $1,410,000 for the acqui sition and development or Salt Creek Beach. With these expenditures included, the district's projected tax rate would bli 5.862 cents per $100 1ssessed valuation to finance $2.174,027 funding. The re-- maining $1,847,216 can be funded by unemcumbertd cash carryover. 1be tax rate for fiscal 197~71 Is 4.13 c:ents. Jf the cost for acquisition and develop- ment of the south county beach were borne by the county's general fund - as was the case of Aliso Beach and the Sunset Beach parking lot -the estimated funding required from the tax base would be $764,027, resulting in a district tax rate of 2.06 c:enl!. In voting to include the beach ac· quisiUon and development costs in the district budget, commlsslonera noted that the cost wlll be absorbed somewhere in the county budget, and historically ii has been handled by the district rather than the general fund . With commission approval, the pro- posed budget will be forwarded ID supervisora for inclusion in the county budget. · Clyde L. Goud y Services Held Private ltfV\ces were held for Clyde L. Goudy, 21511 Monterey St., South Laguna, who died Saturday at South Coast Community Holpltll. Jie was 71. A native of Utah, Mr. Goudy was a professor 1t Los Angela City College for 40 years and had lived in South Laguna for the past 25 yeara. He ii survived by a sister; Mrs. Ethtl Grundel of Oakland; a nephew, Edward Grundel Jr. of Newark, Ca11f.; t•-o great nephews and one great niece. Interment was at Cypress Lawn, Colma, Calif. McCormick Mortuary, Laguno Beach, d~ectort. Parking Meters Run Sundays, Holidays •• Laguna Beam parking meters will be operative on Sundlya and boUdayt, as well as wetkdays. starling In Aprn. Police Chief Kenneth Huck ha.a an- nounced. n.e summer parking policy, de1igned lo encourage turnover of parking spacts during the bwy tourllt seuon, wW re- tnAin In effect lhrou&h Sept. 30. l $70,000 and that users mlght give more than the $3 and $1 donations requested. .TbtJeacb, aoqmr.d rut ran lrom the U.S. Martnts, wiU have temporary chemical tojltll and garbaie cans. No lifecuardl will be on duty. There wlll be no waltt or fuel and no tent camping or fires will be allowed. PRIORITY PROGRAM Acquis!Uon of. Southern California be!achts has been a priority procram for . the Reagan adminiat:ration, but tt might be two yura before any develop- ment fUJ\da for San Onofre could be Included in the budge~ said Jooeph M. Long of Orinda, chairman of lhe non-pn>- fit parks foundation. Even ~n San Onofrt would have to compete for a spot In Reagan's General Fund budget with other projects such as educaUon and welfare. The foundation waa creeled ln 1989 to ruelve glflJ for the state park 1y1tem. The donaUona It collects al San Onofre beach -or Pendleton Beach u It. also I! called -this Easttr tan b& chlnelled dlrecUy inlo developmtnl wtlhout being subjected to the Reacan 1dmln.ltt.rallon'1 stringent budget controla durlna: the cur· rent fiscal crisis. Loog explained Jn a pre11 statement why no development funds could be in- eluded In the cumnt llale !Jud&d: "T!I .. llate an!)' lum«I lal• In ll'M thal thla belch "°"Id be avlltabll end thla came alter llllllY yun of l!<fotlo· tlona, IO there WU no WIJ' to anhclptte the lease of this land at this Ume." Reagan's new budget for 1'71·'12, tht fls<al yeu sllrtlnc July l, does Include 1191,284 for operatlnl fw1dl for the "'" belch Ind 1136,llOO In bood fundJ for de.vdopment ' NO BEACH FUNDS But there are no funds for development: of the buch area Itself. Use of the bond lundt is llrn!led lo bringing waler and sewer lines from San demente to the edge of the park. They con't bl used inllde lbe beach park lllell. While the Parka and RecrtatlOl'I De'parlment hu been accused by the Leglslaturt'a fiscal ope.rt of overplano Ding park ond belch project&, 11 ii considering mlnlmwn developmenl •! San Onofre in an effort to preserve its wild character. "I'm hoplng that the people win ro-· pond to this." Directer Mott said <i the contribution campaign. "This glv~ the general public a chance to suppor:t the Parka and Recreation Department in a very direct and effective way •.• "This, of course, is a beach that llt1 between two major metropolitan centers (Los Angeles and San Diego) and hn potential for tremendous year-around use." For 11everal years, Reagan had worked to lease the beach -just IOUth of the San Onofre nucle•r·powered generating plant -from the Marines at Camp Pendleton. The rtate finally won 1 25-year lease at $1 a year. While the state has betn criUcized for ill extensive development plans •t San Clemente and Point Mugu. Mot\ said U>e Son Onofre beach would be an experiment In minimum development. "Assuming mo111t people come in trailen and campers, we want to preserve this more or less in Ill natural atlte," he aak!.. "Being IO t:lose to metropolitan areas, having a natural wild beach where people can camp would be il! greatest value." SOlll'JILAND PROJECT ' SPREA~!llG WORiµ.Qrange County's South Coast isn't the only area affected by the emergence of the Krishna chanters. In the top photo, two of St. Louis' 10 members of the International Society o! Kri.shna Consciousness drum up some sentiment on the cam- pus of St. Louis University. Below, three Krishnas hawks their religious wares on a Laguna Beach street. Mou said a priority program for the 1tate has been acquisition and Im- provement of beaches in Southern California -from Point Conception near Lompoc in Sant.a Barbara County South to the Medcan herder. Survey Reveals But both the San Clemente and Mugg projet:ts have been stalled temporarily. Major changes in Hnanctng of park development, aays LegislaUve Analyat A. Alan Post, and the upltal constructioD freue have aerioualy complicated • p~ gram "that already had ita full share ol difflcullles." The administration bu revised tts ex· tensive planl for development of Point Mugu and hu temporarily frozen Pian. .. for San Clemente oDCI phua two of development 11 Corplntlrfl Stole Beach. Post dlacu.uea such problems 1n bit . budget analy1is in detail and commenta : ''The foregolng discussion of planning ~ and development difflculUes Wuatratei special sltuaUons which explaln why the department spends ·auch large auma on planning and frequently atill does not have definitive plans and CO!t estimates for many of lta more important pro- jects." Ru1ing on Youth Held in Slaying Expected Today A juvenile court judge wa1 expected to rule today that Christopher "GYPllY" Gibboney be tried u an 1dult In Orange County Superior Court for the k1Din1 of Mission Viejo teacher Florencg Nancy Brown. The 7-year old Portland, Ore. youth was brought from h1a bome state l11t weekend by Orange County offlctrt. He bas been formally charged with the murder of Mrs. Brown, 31 , of El TDro. Commune Life No Utopia Judge Robert Kneeland earlier had autboriud the adult court trial for ~ defendant Arthur Craig "Moose " HuJae. Hulse, also 17, will be aentenced FrJda1 for the murder of service station •l· tendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. Hulse was of \ convicted of being an •CCH!OJY tn the klllil11 ol Mn. Brown. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Many ol !he thousands of American youngsters who have tried to find a new way of life by )Dining communes have found llfe difficult to terrible, according to a report on the situation. "There is a real spllt in communeii on how many demands to make of indtviduals," said Rosa beth Moss Kanter, sociology professor at Brandeis Universi- ty and one-time resident of • New Hampshire commune. "Jn one commune. there was e v e n a debate on whether to drive in a nail with five or seven ham.mer blow11." But she said communes are the wave of the future : ''The failure rate of' com- munes is high, but so ls the failure rate of small blL'linesses and nobody is suggesting there won't be any more small businesses." Her view of 20th century t:ommunal life wa.s ouUined Monday •at \be 48th annual meeting of the A m er i c a n Orlhopsydllatrlc Association, represen- tlnr-3,300 proftsStonals from t h e behavioraJ, medical and social sciences. For a full afternoon men in shlrta: and ties, women In knee-la'lgth dres1'f:a and young people sat, Aood and sprawled on the noor in a t:handellered conference room at one of Washington's plush con- \lenUon hotels to dlscuu communes. They heard an "establishment" fathtr, Dr. ~1alcolm S. Belnfleld, director of gentt:il surgery at the Norwalk (Conn.) H08pltt1l, describe his daughter's com- mune in northern California as a place • rife with hepatitis and other diseases. "They were defecating Into a stream that was their only source of water and using that same water downstream for drinking,'' he said. Btlnfield called the s~le of living "a wanton lack of 01urch Work Begins ~oon Construction will begin soon on a &.7· acre lot In Son Juan Capistrano-the site of the area's new Seven~ay Ad- ventist c:.urch which has been the goal of the local congregation for years. The land, on Del Obii;po Road east or Agua~ate Road, already has approval for use as a church from the San Juan City Council. SPoke1111en for the congregation say construction will 1tart this spring. The first buildings will be • fellowship all, temporary Sanctuary and sabbath school. For the past thrtt years l()Cll Adven- tists have used the South Shores Baptist church In Laguna Niguel u a house of worship. After the Initial facilities are built, plans will be completed for a permanent sanctuary and an elementary day 5Chool for 25 to 50 students. Gary L. Case, a rei;ident of the South Coast for the past two years, Is the pastor of the new church. I desire to follow the basic precepts aan!talion." He uid young men and women with master's degreea and Ph.Os In IOClology and political science were havtng trouble growing com. "lt seemed all the efforta of the commune were dlrtcted to lbeir own survival," he said. Dan Murphy, 21, a commune reaJdent who formerly lived in Luton, Iowa, agreed that communal life hu Its drawbacks. but said It beats apartment living In cities. "The only thing we havt In common la that we meet when there's • crisis ln the house, like when a bill c:omea due, or when the hotlSfJ la dirty to decide who's golng lo clean It or wh:elher to clean It, or whether It wfll clean Itself," said Murphy, who now Uva ln Washlngton. "I haven 't found a Jot of fret H:I," Murphy said. "Most of the people I know in communes are trying to develop their Jlv~ with one perton. We 111 want something we can cling to aometb:nff In the form of another penon. .Bu1 we can gel a lot of our good feeling from more than one petll)n." Mia Kanter was asked In an intervkw how many communes and commune residents there are In the United Stites. She said one commune me m be. r estimated about six mllllon peraorui were living In g r o u p settings that mlght qo~1tfy a$ communes, but her own tstlmate was between 100,000 ind 250,000. 11"1 the Boston area 1lone, ahe said, there ~ e.n esUmated 200 communea. ' Lawmen say both youths w e re members of the gang of drug-wine drifters led by Steven Craig Hurd ln the "devil cult" killing of Mn. Brown June 2. The teacher w1s killed in an Irvine orange grove and her nmalns buried after her slayers removed portions of ber body In Slt.an-wonbJJi,ng ritH. Hurd was ruled Monday to be insane and Incapable of facing trial. Judge Ronald Crooksbank ordered his detention in At1st:adero State H08pltal unW be regains his 1anlty. Laguna Hills PO Pact OK'd A contract baa been awarded for con- struction of a new branch post offJce at the comer of Piie() de Va)encla ond Calle de ta Magdaleno In LaClml llilll. wllb openln& lcheduled for tho lprlng of 1172. The new facility wUI have 13,000 square led of Jntlttor IPl''" compared wlfll z,roo 1qUll'< 1 .. 1 Jn U>e wtln( 1.q11111 Hilla branch. The bulldlng will be owned by J.,.ph and Grace Penner of Loa Angeles. who •111 lease It to the postal aervlce for 20 years 1t an aMual nntal of '36,170, with renewal opUons running througll JO years. ' ~ . -.... .f OAll V PILOT l w5d.1y, M¥th 23, 1971 • . ' ' .... " Nixon Says S. Viets \ \ •· I ~ps We Advance By Hyphens By THOMAS MURPRINE or .,. .. ," """' •t•ff NlJMBERS GAME: If you're oae of the folks who figure goodntu by bignelS, you'll be happy to learn today that the Anaheim-Sant.a Ana-Garden Grove Metropolitan Aru is no longer the 39lb largeat in the nation. Also, in case you do not recognlie the aforementioned It y p h e n a t t d me1alopoli1, it mean1 the Orange Cou11ty area, give or lake a few miles here and there. Anyway, the point is that in the U.S. Ctll.!UI or 1990, roughly one decide back, our Oran1e County area ranked popul1· tioo-wiae 39th behind aueh other areas of urb1n aprawl u San Bernardif'IOo River!lde-Ontario (31st ); San Diego (23rd); and of course Loa An&:~le,,.Long Beach (3rd). NEW FIGURES now emerge from the 1970 Cemw. Our Anaheim-Santa Ana- Garden Grove Metropolitan Area now ranks 18th largest in the nation, a cof)o 1iderablt booat in the atandings. Total population for our area Jn tht ~ filW'eJ was pegged at 1,420,388 souls. * Anti-1rowth factions perhaps will draw eome solace from the fact that "* 1tJll haven't passed Los Angeles-Long Beach in the impaction race. The growth meter for LA-Long Beach in the 1'70 rankings now gives that blelffd area upcoast a total population of 7,!m,075. lt moved up from third to aecond in the nalional staridings. * We, however, did manage: to ahoot ah11d of San Diego, San Bemardino- Rivenide-Ontario and other places like Portland. * So what does it all mean? Well, WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon , de&ring that the fuU importance of the Laos invaalon will not be known for aome time, said the campaign shows the South Vietnamese can fight very well and have "passed a milestone" in the cap&.billty to take over lhe fighting. Nixon, in an easy, relaxed hour-long Interview with ABC-TV cominentator Howard K. Smith, predic ted the Laos optratlon wouJd enable him to continue withdrawing U.S. forces at the current rate of 11,500 a mlhth. The Laos operation. Nixon said, ''can· not be judged a great success·• but it "cannot be judged a failure." ffe said the campaign could be assessed only on a long ran1e basis, and that y,·ould not be known for some time. lie said it now may be possible for hu11 to aru1oun<.-e accelerated withdrawals and his nex t anoouncement may display "the end of the tunnel," a phrase often used during the Johnson Administration. .. For six weeks the South Vietna mese have disrupted the enen1y supply lines," he said ... For sa weeks they've tied down some of the enemy's best di visions, and for six .weeks we have seen, too, that the South Vietnamese have been able to handle themselves quite well under very, very difficult ci rcumstances " Srnilh asked Nixon if the Communists will be able to repair their trails and • • pipelines before the rainy season be1ins 1n about a month. ·'They can never 11ain back the time," Nixon said. The 1nterv1ew in the \Vhite House Library was devoted mainly to Nilcon's guardedly optimistic assessment of the Laos operation . But the President did .speak about 1972. Nixon, who was widely written off after his 1962 defea t for the California governorship and his lost bid for the presidency two years ea rlier, said he made no decisions about 1972. And he volunteered -w i l h o u t prompting by Simth -that he had not decided who "may be the man who Olamber of Commerce folka rather e:njoy all this rankine: of metropolitan status, especially if it appears your area ill winning. It tends to show industrie11 and others In far-away spot! that your place is a boomtt, with economic muscle. 1 potential labor pool and besidis that there must be some reason why all Uma people are ru1run, in there. PRESIDENT NIXON, HOWARD K. $MITH SHOWN AFTER TV INTERVIEW Chief Executive S1y1 lncuraion A betting U.S. Withdrawal Strategy * lT MUST BE admitted that In some m our hifh·gro,,.th areu along the Orange Coast, like Huntington Beach and Colla Mesa, there has been a small measure of grumblin1 over the way they named our Metropolitan Area. Maybe, they 11y, it could h.11ve just been called the Orange C o u n t y Melropolilan Area rather than going to ill the trouble of hyphenating tltree town names that some will argue are a bit obscure to the folka in Billina:s, Montana. Moderate Wins Ballot For Irish Premiership * Or. if you're going to hyphenate in lottt·n names, why not add a couple ar. more hypens and get in Huntington Beach or Costa P.fesa? Or maybe you g11 for smaller but still well-known spots like San Juan Capistrano where the awallows come baek , San Clemente where President Nixon comes back or Laruna Beach where, on a 11ummer Sunday afternoon , it seems everybody came back . And don 'l for1et Newport Beach has John Wayne. * Anywa y, lhe possibilitie1 for hyphenated metropolitan Orange County are endless. B:ut take cheer. coastal folks. Someday they may decide 111 use these metropolitan are1s for smog desipatort. Thtn we'O be alad Anaheim (hyphen) Sant.a Ana (hyphen) Garden Grove 1et all the crediL BELFAST, Northern Ireland <UPil - Brian Faulkner, a moderate. defeated hardliner William Craig today in a Unionist Party vote and became Pnme ~1lnisler of Northern Ir eland. He told newsmen his main aim y,·ould be to restore law and order in the province torn by extremi&t violence. Faulkner. 50. succeeds Jame !I Chichester-Clark, who resigned Saturday under pressure by Protestant con- servatives demanding a tougher policy against the prov ince's Roma n Catholic mllitaf\s and the outla\\·ed I r 1 sh Republican Army ~ rRA l. tie received his formal 11eal of offiee shortly after the election. Under Br itish Parliamentary J)TOCf'dure the election \\"as hy Lin1nnist Par1.v members of Parliamenl. and the \01<' was 26·4. The Unionist Parly has ruled Northern Ireland since 1922 and twirr before Fau lkner missed the pren11crsh1p by narrow vot es Faulkner, development mi nister in the outgoin1 government, met more 1han 200 newsmen packed into the main hall of the Northern Ireland Parliament building. ··The most important single aim of my administration is the restoration or confidence to the whole of Northern Ireland," Faulkner said. ""The kernel of the matter is law and order. \Ve don't need ne\v principles. \Ve need practical results on the ground." Faulkner made it clear he intended no radical departures from the policies of Chichester-Clark, "'hose tv.·o years in offlce v.·ere plagued y.•ith sectarian violence between the Protestant majonty and the ratholic minority A crowd or ahoul 50 Protcslilnl wo1nen shol1t1ng support for Craig. mt1~~rd nut ~idr Parliament and s e r c a ni c d "Co\\·ard .. lr:utnr"' at L111on1~t Pa rty nien1Ders \\hen resul!s of the vote becamr knO\\'n. Faulkner told ne\\·sn1e11 no la\v ab1d1ng person need fear his government"s policies. Cold Wea th er l(nif es East Sno ·w Flurries Persist • Great Lc1ke8 Ut Collfornla •t UliflT•O f'llll• l .. TflUIATIONAl SOU!t\t<'ft (1lllefnlt ,.,, ..,.111• ftlr •••lft tedl1' .. 11 ... -lot •nCI .... <....,_. •lent (""'' 1tctilfl crv"nt Gv1lv Wll'Cll 1ncr ''"lb't CIOvG!nns ....,ll'lllH lft """1nt11n 1na ln!t •oo• , .. lent as,..,,.,,,,,," tte<•m• 11i1h1. W CM!w. A 11111'1 11 M <ll'trMO WM ••NO:IH t" LM Anttltt lodl• lollow1n1 1 ..... !"°""' r .... lllf el 71 Montit•. 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"'' '"'• !~ t~ 11 ... (>!. tool•~ 1'10 llC'•'~ .... 1 .. •l• .... '°(!. n11d1v th•~• 100:.-• 1$ 10 •} (n11t•I ,.....,flf .,,,.., ••~tt !•c.., IO) lo It !ftlt"ICI r...,.Mrt'~'" '""'' "~'" 5.i 11) t9 Wtlr• !tmrt•ll••e )I S1111. ~'"""· Tld<'.• l•uino ~1~· 1 11""' •, l'i'11 i.. ... F tr11 ~··~ ~''""~ ·~ ... s.uncr " ·~ WlD'fltDIY II). ... , ~ I 00 o .... J I 1 " n,.. e 1 1 \JI'"" I I ~''" '"" \ 11 • ... ,,,, • '' ~ ¥('(!" ..... , !rtt •·. - T P111 per a t11 r·e~ I • UNl"tEO f'lltSS INTEllNATION.t.l Ttmo••UUrt• •nil .... K+O•ltf,on '"' th• H·~Our ..... Ott ~ll!ll'lt .. ' I "' .. b ..... .t.lbu~'!•rou• .-.111nl1 ii.'1(flo•••• llo•!C" llufl11() r"'''.., r "< """'' c1,~l1r~ "'''•• O."··· o .. "'"'" ... l'lf-irr 1 ~ «rl>lln~• H<1•no ......... 1,,. tr.11n~r"''' J1t\t11n.,110 lv•,.u '•~••• r .,. l•> V•~·'• I"' A~·o• !• I '< ''~''·• ..... ....... "'' "' ......... . /II '"~'l"I'" '"'"Ye" () ... ~ ..... (<fy "' ~ ~I'• ro, ""•'•"'l~~·I ""·"·"·. I' Ir •on ,. ....... !!.. o .. '''0 I u ••f"'n•o . ~ ..... '••L•>•°t''' ... 0 •')(! Hl•ll Low ~re~ . " JI •l •• • .11 '~ H ll " " . ~ I\ l\ u " ·~ .. ,, . ll It "' •I ll M . " 11 ,, 1• II '< < l <II ll ¢1 16 l~ }} 11 •\ JI .. . 11 ll !I '• ,, . II 11 ll to N ·t I) " JI ~J '• ' ,1 I/ " ' ... " .. ~I II fl ;o ~ " " ,, 10 \I " . ., ,, -" " " Plott to Murder Sierra Leone's Premier Foiled FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (UPI) - fo.1embers of the military attempted to assassinate Pre mie r Siaka Stevens and seize control of the ·government today but !he coup fa iled, government sources sairl The sources said security n1en killed h•,.o soldiers attempting to enter Stevens ' home \\'hich was badly damaged during the assassination attempt. Further details were not immediately available. Stevens was named premier March 21. 1967, but \vas overthroy,·n the same day in a military coup led by Brig. David Lansana, the army commander. 1'wo days later and four y~ars ago today. senior army and police officers staged a counter coup and set up a national reformation council. It was O\·erthro"'n by army and police non· comm issioned offi ce rs in April, 1968. Constllutional government and civilian rule 11as restored on April 26. 1968 and Stevens was sworn in ag ain as prime mrnister. Sierra Leone, a former British Colony ::ind protcctora!c p:rantcd independence tn 1961, lies 1n the southeast corner nl Ilic \Vc~t African bulge bcty,•een Ciuinca and Liberia The country, slightly smaller than South Ca rolina, has a popul.ltion of 2.5 million persons Churchill Gun Sold LONDON !AP\ - A pistol which Sir \\11nston Churchill carried when he was a young \\·ar corresponden t has been purchasrd al :iuction by Carl Foreman, an Amencan film producer. for $9,840. ft'icks 'Golda on J, Trudeau on 2, Heath on 3, and an obscP~e on 4!' ' ' Pass Milestone runs for vice president.~ Some liberal Republicans are demanding that Nli:on dwnp Vice President Spiro T. A1new from the ticket. But as to whether he would voluntarily become a one-ttnn Prtsident, Nixon told Smith: "The idea or what you call 'voluntary retirement,' I would sugaest, is quite premature where I am coneerned and I would say lhat anybody who reads my life WGuld perhaps · take that kind of stGry with a grain of salt." NixGn steadfastly ruled out any deadline for compleW: withdrawal - which Democrats in Congress are deman- di ng. He contended it. would htorpedo" """"" 'War of Nerves' what l.IWe hope remains for a negotiated settlement and enable the Cotnmunists- to adjust their military tactics ac· cordin1ly. The South Vietnamese, he said, had shown in Laos their "capability of hack· ing it," and "if the United States now were to throw in the towel and come home and the Communists took over South Vietnam , then all over Southeast Asia, all over the Pacific, in the Mideast. in Europe, in the world would suffer a blow ... would suffer a blow from which it might not recover." His goal in South Vietnan1, N i x on declared. was to end the war in suclt a way that South Vietnam "will survi,,e as an independ~nt country.'' Russians Boost Arms , to Syrians By United Press International Diplomatic sources in London said to. day the Soviet Union has followed up big new arms shipments lo Egypt by Increasing the shipment of ~t warplanes, antiaircraft missiles and other arms to Syria. 1'he report came as Egyptian govern· ment sources said milltary and political leaders were in the midst of conferences to prepare for possible resumption or hostilities with Israel. The armed forces of Egypt and Syria were recently placed under a single commander. Sources said tbe E1YPtian meetings were part of Cairo's war or nerves aimed at "putting soim muscle" behind the Soviet-Egyptian drive to force Israeli withdrawal from occupied Arab terri- tory. UPI diplomatic correspondent K. C. Thaler reported from London that the Soviet arms shipmenU were part of a campaign by Moscow to woo the new Syrian regime of President Hafez Assad. His sources said t h a t "considerable" quantities of M I G fighters, SA~f2 missiles, tanks and othe r weapons had been shipped tG Syria in rece nt days. ' The report.! said Syrians were being trained by Russians to operate the Soviet sµrface-to-air missiles. The Syrians already had MIG fighters and tanks supplied by the Soviets in the pasL Cairo reports said Egypt is stepping up a diplomatic offeruilve to rally support from Wettern European nations for its proposals for a peaceful settlement of the Middle East crisis. They said that was the main purpose behind Foreign i\1inister Mahmoud Riad 's scheduled visits to Rome and Paris 11tarting Satur· day. Wife, 18, Dies In Cruel Hoax SA N DIEGO (AP )-Fe>r a week, anonymous telephone callers told Rosy eln Johnson, 18, that her hus- band was back from Vietnam and not interested in seeing her again. A similar call came in a male voice Monday. Mrs. J oh n son telephoned her mother about it. The young Army wife then shot herself fatally in the chest, deputy coroner Glenn M. Saunders said. The husband is still in Vietnam, the Army advised. Israel has rejected demands by Egypl and proposals from the United States and United Nations to pl edge withdrawal rrom Arab territory captured in lhe 1967 war as the price for peace in the Middle East. Prime Minister Golda ~teir has said Israel will never return le the prewar boundaries. Secretary or State William P. Rogers was reported t11 have asked Israel to draw up a map of what il consider:oi "secure borders" in efforts to break the deadlock. Coup Topples Newest Chief In Argentina BUENOS A.IRES {UPI ) -Areenlina 's military junta took over control or the country today after deposing President Roberto M. Levingston in a bloodless coup. First act of the junta was to reinstate Brig. Gen. Etequiel Martinez to the post of head of the joint chiefs of lilaff, the pot;t from which he was fi red by Levingston last Friday in a move that precipitated Monday night's crisis. LevingstGn, 51, stepped down shortly after midnight h1onday arter trying lo fire Lt. Gen. Alejandro Lanusse, 52-year- old army chief of staff and chairman of the coontry's three-man junta. A communique from army head- quarters shortly after midnight sa id "the commanders-in-chief of the armed forces have decided to fire Gen. U ving.stG111 in his functions as President of the republic. We have deci ded to assume political power in the nation until we fulfill the process or the Argentine revolution." Levingston, $1, quielly qui t l h e Presidential offic e into \\'hich he wa 5 projected nine months ago by the same three-man junta. He wa lked out of thP frosted pink government house al 3:2.'i a.m. and shook hands v.li th about 1 dozen reporters. "Good luck," he said. then gol inln an automobile and drove to his official home three. miles awa y. He has several days to pack up and move out. Le vingston's oust er came on a powr r play that fa iled. Bacl~ lfitla ltlotlier J\trs. Florence \\rood has her ba by. Douglas. safely bark in her arms les~ than an hour after he 'l\'as kidnaped outside a Brooklyn store. Police rcc~~ered the ~ahy and arrested the abductor sus.pert shorUy after rece1v1 ng a description of the woman from a taxi driver. Mars Life Now Seen Poss ible PASADENA ( U PI ) Organic compounds probably are being formed on tbe surface of P.fars and there is a good chance a prin1ltlve form or life will be found on the planet, three scientists reported Monday. "This is the most favorable indicalion for a possible Mar- tian biolog ical evolution that \1•e have had In the last five years," said I>r. Norman H. Horowitz, biologist at the Calirornia Jnstitute of Technology. Horowitz and h i s col- QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandi c.:...r-~ i.... 1t11 .... ..w ....,..-"""" laborators, Dr. Jerry S. llub-l".'.:7."--""'.'---..:.---..:.;:!;:::;:::l:~;!::::t;:;: bard and James P. Hardy, created the compounds in a "Mirror, mirror on the wall, if you can tell me who's laboratory under simulated fairest of them all, why can't you tell me what hap-~1artian conditions. The c·om· pened to the folder on the Perkin• mf!lrK"tr?" pounds, form a l de h yd e, ----------------------- acetaldehyde and glycolic, are similar to those from which life sprang on earth. Edge by SST Foes Seen On Eve of Senate Vote TutWif, Marth 2J, 1911 DAILY PILOT f Capital Voter s Go To Polls U.S. Orders Recall of Fluid Used in Intravenous Feeding WASHINGTON (UPI) WASHINGTON (AP) -The Government health authorities national capital voled today sought hoapllal .i:ooperaUon to- in its Urst congressional ell!C· day in a crash proa:ram to tion in nearly a century with the candidates ranging from stop the use o[ an intravenous the usual Democratic and solution linked with an out. Republican nominees to l!I break ol. blood infection blam- black nationalist and an ed for at least nine deaths. acknowledged homo.sexual. Tht!i Food and Or u g Democrat Walter E. Faunt-1,000 fele Administration (FDA) ordered roy was con!lldered the favorite for the nonvoting the contaminated prod u r. t delegate post to the House. G Cl • £ recalled from hospitals Mon- The 37-year-old minister is a ang lie day but said each hospital Negro in a tawn where 71 would first have to replace percent of the population Is HUNTIN GTON STATION . it with another brand. black and where registered N.Y. (AP) -More than 1,000 Intrave nous solutions are Demo c r a I s o u lnumber ""ells paid $!~a-plate Mort-Republicans six-to-<1ne. •-administered by needle to pa- Fauntroy has drawn the en-day night to attend ' a tienl! unable lo eat or drink. dorsement in recent days from h~stimonial dinner for J oseph The contaminated product, black Reps. John Conyers and A. Colombo Sr., a reputed made by Abbott Laboratories, Charles C. Difgs, both 0. leader of organir.ed crime. has been used by about 4,000 Mich ., Jes.se Jackson, director Colombo, 47, a cofounder of of the nation's 7,000 hospitals, .of the ChicagG-based Opera-the Italian-American Ci vi I the FDA said . lion Breadbasket, and Coretta Rights League, wa! honored FDA Commissioner Charles King, widow of the slain civil by the league for "restoring C. Edwards told a news con- rights leader Dr. Martin dignity, pride and recognition ference Monday other Luther King. to every Italian." manufacturers had enough A record 260 ,244 voters are Colombo, who says he is solution on hand to supply eligible to indicate th e Ir a real estate salesman, is free the nation for two months. preference for one of the six on bail on a perjury con· He said all hospitals should candidates. The winner must viction. He told the gathering be able to replace the Abbott Uons" Jn lhe meantime to avoid infection. Abbott Laboratories Issued a 1t.1tement saying it would cooptrate with the FD.\ to effect an orderly wlthdt'iwal of the solutions. Dr. Davld K. Senctr. direc- tor ol the U.S. Center for Disease Control, said i 1 hospitals reported 350 caus of septicemia, l!I blood ht- fectlon, from use ol the con- tamln1ted product. Nine c1au were fatal, Sencer said. He declined to estimate bOlf many cases may have oc- curred nationwide and said federal health authorlt.les pro- bably never would know. 11>t FDA-issued a waming about the product March 11 and ur1ed 'hospital precau. lions. But Edward.! said Mon- day the warnln1 was not hffd. ed by all hospital pei'sonnel. Cowboy, 110, Cites Daily Pepper Dose WALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP) - A 110-year-old former bronco buster lays his claim for long life to daily amounts of cayeMe pepper. "I'm atill just a young man,'' says George Gibbs, who was born March 20, 1161 in Fort Worth, Tex., and lives alone in his amall home. He 1till cuts his own firewood and does his own housekeeping and cooking. Gibbs, who never married, says his eyesight ls failing ind his "bonu are aching 10me now." The bleak television pictures or Mars take!\ by the Mariner spacecraft had reduced hopes that life could exist on the plant. The probes d I d , however, sample the Martian atmosphere and the amount of ultraviolet radiation strik- ing the surface. WASHINGTON (AP) Foes of the supersonic transpo rt plane appear to hold the edge at the start of final Senate debate on the projecl I.hat so far has c06t taxpayers $866 million. He traveled west to Colfax, Wa1h., by os: team wagon when he was 12·year-old. Gibbs says he has operated a ato~e, farmed and tamed wild horses. Peter Dominick, (R·Colo.), collect 40 pe~t of the vote he is not embarrassed by hls product within a week, ind Ernest F. Hollings tD-S.C.), to escape a runoff. conviction. urged "strict handling precau- Hubert H. Humphrey fD-l;::"===='===================================::i,,==;;;;==========;;;;;;;;;=============================================:; "Our findings suggest the ultraviolet presently reaching the !\lartian surface may be producing organic matter." the scientists said in lhe cur· rent issue of the proceedings ef the National Academy of Sciences. Unw ed Pair Released From Jail TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) The St.ate supreme court has freed from jail an unmarried couple \\'ho admitted violations o[ a 17+.year~ld New Jersey Jaw against fornication . But the court declined to rule that the law is unconstitutional. June Clark and Charles Barr had admitted having had sex· ual relations in a paternity suit brought by Miss Clark againsl Barr. The Paterson. N.J .. Welfare Department had required Miss Clark to file the suit in order to rollect benefits. Barr admitted fathering her four children. and agreed to pay $15 a \vcek support. Two years later. in 1967, he was brought into court in deiauJt in his peymenls. The judge hearing the case ordered the l\\'O held for the indictment. The Supreme Court held Monday the conviction violated their constitutional guarantee against s e If· in· crimination. A vote on whether to end SST federal funding March 30 or contlnue il over the next three monlhs at a co:st of $134 million is scheduled Wed- nesday afternoon . An Associated Press survey Monday showed 48 senators against the SST or inclined to oppose it; 39 for it or leaning that way and 11 un- commilled. Sens. Karl Mundt tR-S.D.), and Everett Jordan (D-N.C.), are ill and are not expected to vole. Bo!h sides continue to predict a close vote either way with a Republlc11n forecasting a difference of one vote. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew is expected to put in a rare appearance as presiding officer in case his vote is needed to break a lie . The uncommitted aenalors include Conservative - Republican James Buckley or New York who was widely quoted lasl year as being op- po!!ed to the SST. An aide said :P.1 on day Buckley always has supported federal help ln SST-prototype development on lhe theory it would be the quickest way to solve environmental ques- tions raised by the l,flOl}..mlle- per-hour airliner. The o t he r uncommitted senators are Clinton P . Anderson (D-N.M. ), John Sherman Cooper ( R -K y • ) , Car of Agent A uto's Tur11 Signal Se ts Off Explosio11 BOISE, Idaho tUPl) -A turn s1gnol apparent I y dl'\onaltd an explosive device \\'hich blasted !he car of a narcotics undercover agent Jn Boise last Saturday, according lo poliet> investigators. Lt. Jim Lamborn said it appeared the born!>. "probably dynamite,'' \\•as wired to the stl'ering column of the car . J::i ck Anthony, 24. wa!I in- jured when the bomb went off as he drove to Army reserve duly. He was released from a local hospital Monday with cuLs and an injured eardn1m. Anthony's wife. Pamela. is 8 vice ar.d nitrrolics ~ q u ad undercover aj!;ent who has testified in more than ::i dozen narrol ics ca ~cs rec en 11 .v . Police said drug pushers h11ve threatened her life , Lamborn said the bomb w111 so wired that the principal force of the blast was directed 1oward the passenger's side of the vehicle. He said detectives working on the case will set>k a charge of attempted murder if an arre1t is made in the case. "As far as we're concerned, it would have been murder if she had been ridJng on the passenger side," Lamborn said. Sgt. E. C. (Chuck) Palmer, head of the vice squad, 1ald a volunteer effort by citizens has raised nearly $ 2 , O O O toward purchase or a new car for the Anthonys. He said funC!! also will be ustd as a reward for information leading to the arrest 11nd con- viction of a susptct or suspects. Donations . Palmer !111 Id , may be lefl with the police department. SELLING A HOME ... FBA·VA? Compare the low rates and especially the low /OClll fees available at Home Savinga. Call the t.ling lmuler See why Home ma.lc:e1 mor. loan.a than any other auoda· tion l.n. the nation. You are giv•n cdl the facts, and on qualllJed credit and pJOperty you are given <m:. acfuaf .locm commitment. pt..-...,. offb ol Ho .. B&•ial'• America'• Largest Minn.), Russell Long (0-La.), Charles Mathias ( R -P.! d . ) , Gale McGtt (0 -Wyo . ), Margaret Chase Smith (R.-- Maine ). and Stuart Symington (0-Mo.). * * * Dick Ca vett Show Tied To Defeat NEW YORK (UPI) -Th• Nixon Administration. claim· ing the Dick Cavett show helped defeat the 1uper!lonic transport bill in the House when SST opponents appeared as guesls, asked for and recei\'ed Monday n I g h t a chanct: to present its view· point. A spokesman for the Cavett show said exeeutive producer John Gilroy received a telephone call from an aide to White H o u s e Com· municaUons Director Herbert G. Klein Friday complaining about the guests and sug· gesting a n administration spokesman appear on the show. The call came the day after the House voted a g a i n s t furlher government fund1 for the SST. A crucial vote on the plane is expected in the Senate Wednesday. "He (the aide) said they felt the Cave.It show was partly responsible for defeat of the SST in the House j because throughout 1 9 7 1 Cavett loaded his prog ram with anti-SST people," the Cavett spokesman said. "They suggested -and ?.'hen the White House sug- gests it's mo re than just a suggestion -that we book !SST project manager! William) /i.1agruder on the show." WHICH IS THE RIGHT RING? They're all lovely. But, which one is right? That's w hat w e want to discuss with t he two o f you. Let's talk about it. Shown. diamond solitaires in 18 karat white or yeflow gold. Rings illustrated from $750. Others from $150. Aak lbolrt our divided payment pUn. P'1c• 1...cludH -·~vino of i:o111>1t'1 tint n1mH •"II wedcllllO d~tt. Ctll "I• "c•-1• •~vllffl. ""'trklft •• , ... u , SLAVICK'S Je"·rlrrs SlncP 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1 31 0 Open Mon. and Fri., 10 a.m. to 41 :30 p.m, Would You Be lieve A WESTCLlf f .. WHAT'S··LEFT SHOE SA lr Just Our Own Great Shoes At Ridiculous Prices MEN'S & WOMEN 'S Rog. To $32. NOW $2. to $15. 1052 Irvine • Weslcliff Pl•z• • N•wport Bo•ch • SiS-868"4 • ' ---... s DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' Eroding Local Control Fluoridation or municipal water supplies as a means of reducing the incidence of tooth cavJties in children has long had the blessing of every national dental._med· ical and scientific society qualified to form and express a judgn1ent. Both scientific investigation and empirical knowl· edge long ago placed Ouoridation on a public health level \\'ith chlorination for bacterial control ot water supplies. This has largely remO\'ed fluoridation from controversy in the niany eastern and midwestern ciUes which have adopted it. But in other areas mere mention of !JUoridation triggers an emotional response, with opponents charg· ing everything from "a Communist plot to poison the people" to •·violation of religious convictions." 1'he city councils of Huntington Beach and Foun· lain \'aJley last year authorized adding fluorides to local "'aler supplies -and triggered just such a response. Op- p<1nenls are demanding a vote on the issue in lhe two cities. In Fountain Valley, a special election has been sched· uled for June 8 on an ordinance amendment to require a vote before fluorides may be added to the water sup- ply. Huntington Beach has delayed implementing flu· oridation to give its new Environmental Council time to study it. \Vith local action proceeding normally, it appears action by Assemblyman Robert Burke, R·Huntington Beach, is both unnecessary and unfortunate. He has in· troduced .a bill in the Legislature requiring public ag· encies lo conduct an elertion before fluoridating water supplies -a broadening of a present requirement that Epccial water districts follow this procedure. Elected representatives of the people are expected to become more knov.•ledgeable on all aspects of a pro- posed governmental action than would be possible for the 1verag1 vol<r. They lhould bt shields 111lnst ill· advised action multlng from emotionally-activated pres· sures from minorities -or even majorities. But the initiative and referendum are there to use when enough voters disapprove of their representatives' decisions. The safeguard is provided if elected officials abuse their office. Intrusion into this 5ituaUon by the state should be resisted as vigorously by opponents ot fluoridation as by those in favor. All voters have a 1take' in opposing runniitg to Sac· ramento and Washington for answers to problems better aolved in the local commuoity. Ignorance of the Law lgnoronct of tlle l4w tZCU.!ta no mon; not tho.t oll mtn know tht law, but btet1uit 'Us an t.z:cust tt?trt1 man wiU pltod, and 110 mon con ttU how to rtfutt him. John Stldtn (1584-1854) A lot of architects, builders and inspectors have shown ignorance of California lav.'s requiring access to public buildings by the handicapped. Now members of the California Paralyzed Veterans Association are surveying shopping centers, restaurants. civic buildings, churches and recreational facilities in Orange County to determine how many are inaccessible· to persons confined to wheel chairs. A pleading of ignorance of the law will begin to be even Jess valid after next month as a result of current efforts of the Paralyzed Veterarfs and the Easter Seal Society of Or1;11ge County. The handJcapped have been neglected in thia rtspect lOr much too long a time. 01ily Minor Changes Expected Hart Blushes , Shies Away On Pantyhose Two More Years of Draft WASHINGTON -The Se l ectiv e Service Acl -expiring June 30 -wi ll be extended for · two more years with only minor changes. That's 'A·hal the House Armed Services Cornmiltee will presently recommend. The committee is now in prcSCess of drafting such a bill, after completing a months-long series of hearings. Aim of Chairman F. Ed'A·ard Hebert, 0-La., is to put the measure through tht House by April l 50 as to , clear the way for speedy Senate consideration. Chairman John Stennis. P.Miss.. of the Senate Armed Services Committee, says ht intends to have a blll ready for the Senate by ~fay 1 in the hope of getting it pa~d by Junt I. Time 'A'ill lell \\'hether that can be reallud. WITH NO limilation on debate In the Senate, it's possible opponents of the draft and Vietnam war may 11tall disposal of this vital legislation until after Jwne 30 -'A'hen the existing Seltc· live Service Act expires. \Vhat 'A'OU!d happen in that event is anyone 's guess. lnside 'A·ord in the House Armed Services committee is that the major ' ' provisions of lt.s forthcoming bill will be as follows: -Draft ext.ended for two years under the same sysltm and procedures that OO'A' prevail. Student deferment will be put in the hand! of the President. That ls, the continuance or suspension of student deferment will be specifically and ex· plicltly left up to the President as com· mander-in-chlef. The present statute is ambiguous on that. Tht committee will clarify the provision BO as to leave no doubt about the authority being in· vested in the President. -CONSCIENTIOUS objectors will have to certify themselves as such when thty reach the age of registering for the draft. The bill will bar claiming that status at the time of being summoned for service. Those Cfrtifitd as con· ~ientious objectors wlU be subject to three yeara' aervioe in a non-military activity -auch a11 VJSTA, Pt:aet Corps. etc. -Big lncnw in pay for lower-rank enllmd penormel -a hike of from 60 to 75 percent. President NIJ:on recom- mended a ~ percent boost; bipa.rfuan committee aentlmtnt favors going higher than that. sun to be' determined is whether the contemplated bill will be open for amendment on the House floor. That decision is up to the Rules Committee, which is expected to act nerl week. A SO.CAU.ED "closed rule" would bar amendments and permJt a vote only on the legislation u • whole. Foes of the draft and the Vietnam conflict want an "open rule" so they can offer a variety of amendmtnU. among them one calling for e1tabUsh· ment of an all·volunteer army. Armed Servicts Commltt~ leaders ~ill strongly urge a "cloaed-rule" and expect to get that from the Rules Committee. By Robert 5. Alle.1 alld Job A. Gokhml~ Freaking Out on Jesus Sooner or lall~r, nearly every emerging movement in American life makes its 1''ay lo \\'ashington for a show of force or principle. The jaded capital has ho.sted everything from Coxey's Army to a Poor People Campaign. The latest on the scene are the Jesus People, known variously as The Children of God, Jesus t,reaks, aDd Slrttt Christians. ~fembers of the movement recently set up a \Vashington retreat house !Ind baptized young members in the Renee· ting Pool. The air near the Lincoln 1'1e1norial was filled wilh cries of "Praise the Lord~" and similar joyoos ex· clamations as converLs, some of them former drug users, were :submerged in the icy 'A'aters. Freaking out on Jesus is the nev.·-tlme religion of the young. One religious editor reports: "Tut movement -unorganized and very much akin to the! Great Awakening early In American history -has swept at least eight stales in force and is ad vancing easl'A'Brd at a fai;t pace. What it amounts t() is wholesale revolution.'' But a peaceful one. THE BIGGEST Impact of the move• mcnl i:s among youthful dropouts from the sy:stem. Disillusioned 'A'ilh the drug and protest 11Ctne, the fio'A'Cr ptaple have turned to a God that nol long ago wa.a declared dead . It Is not the first Ume Chrlatlanlly has provided a retrelt. Harvey Whetler point.s out: "Chri1- ----Tuesday, March 23, 1971 The ·editorUJL pagt of tht Doilt1 Pilot i;eeks to inform. and .rtirr,,. adott teoden bt1 pre.sentirra Shia ntwrpoptr's opbtiou and com· mtnklry on topic1 of lnttrt1t and significance, by provi4ing a forum for tl1e t:rpre1rion of our render•' oplnio111, and bl/ prt.se111i11g tht ditier1t view· f)Oi1111 of tnformtd observers and 1pokttmen ou toplC$ of rlit doy. I Rob<rt N. Weed, Publi.sher ,,.,~ ~,. -. • .._. I ·r I Editorial Research \ i i I I tianity possessed one very sizeable virtue: it furnished ancient men 1''ilh a spiritual sheller to which they could repair in the face of the cultural disin- tegration they saw all about them." Wheeler sees man as a religious animal in an anthropological sense. "Just as men do not. exist except in a aoclaJ setting, so also men do not exist without religion." Part of the movement's appeal is its avoidance of conventional forms. A Gallup poll found. for example, that $8 percent of college 1tudenb polled Quotes Tu: foundation, toe .. New York CKy -"Sinct 1956 total government (federal, state and local) tax colle<:Uons have increased by 181 percent. In fiscal 1956.. collections amounttd to jusl over S100 billion, or tht equivalent of $1,045 per American household . For fiscal 1971, estimated tax collections will tot.al S21l billion, or $4.328 per household. Of lhls total, SI~ bllllon will be federal and "6 bilUon wUJ be state and local ta1 receipts.'' Cbarlea C. Cl1yton, prof. of jounallsm, e Soutber1 JUJnol• Unlvenlty -"~ten of what profwlon art sure to be ln heaven! Newspapermen. that', ~·bo. They don't need docton in h!avm. Nobody will ever be sick there. 11ie:y "'on't need preachtrs. Everybody there wiU hnve bttn saved. But people In the 1JOUlh e.nd of heaven \\ill want to know 14•hat people In the north end are doing. They'll nttd ne14'Spapermen." ~lax Crotrtr. Alameda -"The radical left wing elements, by prt\.·enUng lltnry Cabot Lodge from 1pe.akinc al Stanford, ahowtd they were lnk>ltrant, closed minded and bigoted -all the attrlbutts they vehemen,tly accuse the Ea:tabllshment or havlna." replied "no" to the question, ''Is organiz· ed religion a relevant part of life?" 1-fany young people can't see how church· going relates to living a good life. BUT IN DOING their own kind oE god-bullding, young people are making this ont of tht most religious periods of all history. They sum to agrre with one student who uid, "If it's outside the church it's not rtligion -it's faith." The spiritual revival outside traditional ecclesiastical institutions is reaching down , in fact, to the high school level. The Sentry. .student newspaper at Yorktown H1gb School in Arlington, Va., rtpoit.td that 200 of Its students - one-tenth ol the student body -wert attending wttkly gtt-logethers of a Jesus-orltnted group called Young Life. Jts local leader, Skip Ryan (Harvard 169), told the reporter : "There Is no membership. so nobody belonp lo Young Life. It's for everyone.'' One youthful parUcipant described the special appeal of the iroup experience : "It makl!!S me fetl clean and free." JAt'QUES PtfONOD, A French molecular biologist, has "'Titten in ''Chance and Nece&mty" th a l, "Man knowt 1t la.st that he Im 1Jone ln the indifferent' immensity of the universe, whence ht hu emerged by chance." YO\lilg people are more: aware than niNt Uiat ac\ence and technology threaten familiar religious and ethical systems. But the answer of the Jesus People Is to re:affirm a ~llg\ous faith that is nearly two thousand years old and to invest It with new 1neanlng. Dear Gloomy Gus: A ml felt cowboy hat banded -·Ith a cartridge btlt (1) for mlladv to wear Ea.,tu Sunday, of all d3 yx! (Picture and capUon, 0 A J L Y PILOT. March 17.) -~ff'!I. ~I. R. ,... ...tw. r.flK.. ,...,. .. 1...... - IM(ttMlllY .... .. .. .. __ • """' 1'111• Mt "°'"' " •""91Y ••• DlflY P'I..._ • WASHINGTON -Michigan's gentlemanly Senator Phil Hart, who blll.!hts easier than anyone else in the Senate, has been asked by scores of indignant ladies to do something about their Wlder~W'. They have complained bitterly about the cost and quality of pantyhose. Joining in the protest, C.Ongruswoman Leonor Sullivan, J>..)fo., has charged that pan- tyhole are mis·advertised, mil-merchan· dise:d and misfits. Hart ordered the ataff of hi.s Senate Anti-trust Subcom· mittee to investi· gate. Here's what they found : The pantyhose re· volutioR has pro- duced the biggest clothing boom since the bloomer. Women have been buying the sheer, skin-hugging undergarments by the millions, paying Up to $4 a pair. IN TIIE BEGINNING, Japanese "fit all" panty host flooded the llnge.ria .:ounters. They may have fit all Japan- ese, but they 1''tre often three inches short for long-stemmed American beau· ties . Then came the German imports. Too big in the calf. American mills hastily turned out more than 200 aiies and shapes, which left the ladies at a loss to find the right fit. Now the industry has finally gotten together upoa uniform sizes, more or less. But still1 the ladies are plagued ~'lth pantyhose problems. For instance. "no- run" host may not run, as the ad- vertiliments promise, but they often develop holes. TheM! are caused by hid- den flaws, not rough hands as the housewives may think. INCREASINGLY, marginal-qua l It y host is sold as ~uality hose, and "seconds" are passed off as "perfects." Hart's sleulN found that a big mill may blrn out 120,000 pairs of hose at a time. A big chain, such as Sears, oft.en buy tht best. J00.000. The remaining 20,000 -somt good. some bad -are aold to jobbers OT brokers \lo'ho then rtSell them to packagers. These pantyhose, though of dubious quality, will be sold under tht same label at dis<:ount prices. But the Senate'1 perfect gentleman can't bring. hlmseU to hold public hear- ings on pantyhose. Instead, he has asked the Fede.ral Trade Commi!ISion to crack do\\1\ on the unfair pantyhose practices. WE REACHED Sam Berry, president of the NaUonal Hosiery 1-lanufacturers Association, which represenb to pereent of the 200-plus American mills. Tht har.....i Berry said U.. Industry ~ doing its best to police itself. But ~ last ""'"'rd comes from Congress...,-oman Sullivan who would Uke to know why men. v.1bo can make space suits for themselve1 to walk on the moon. can't produce .a pair or pantyhose guaranteed to Jut out a day in the omce. Footnote: llart panicked tht clothing industry llll!t year \\hen he invesligatrd the po111lblllly ol industry collusion tn push the "mkfj" upon American \\omen "'hose wardrobes y,·ere already stocked up with tht "mini." Hart's verdict : "Thi! prtUmlnary staff 1tudy fall1 t.o indicate any con1plr1torlal collusion." UAW LEAPC:R5'1lP 'SCAB!l' Despite Inflatio~,_ We Can Buy More Suppose t wanted to "prove" that our inflation is terrible: and that our grandfathers could afford to buy a good cut of steak more easily than we can. What I would do is prepare a table showing the prices of staple food ittms about 50 years ago, and comparing them y,':ith today's prices. Here 's bow it 'A'OUld look : Then. a pound of "M'hite bread was 6 cuts, now it is 2S cents. Then, a pound of round steak cost 23 cents: now it costs $1.15 or more; then, a pound of bacon was 27 cents ; now it's 82 cents; then, a quart of milk 'vas nine cents ; now it's more than 30 ce.nts. And so on. BUT, THEN, SUPPOSE t wanted to "prove" that wt are much better off than our grandparents were, even taking inflation Into consideration. I would prepare another table showing how much our grandfathers could buy with an hour of labor, compared with how much ~·e ean buy v;ith an hour of labor. Here 's how that would look: White bread, 31h: pounds for an hour's labor then, and 13 pounds for an hour's labor now; round steak, less than a pound then, and 21,1 pounds today; bacon, eight-tenths of a pound then, and three and three-quarter pounds now: milk. 2\1 quarl.3 then, and almost JO quart,, now. THESE FIGURES, by the ¥-'ay, art obtained from Og Mandino's interestin& new book of condensed statistic.s, called "U.S. in a Nutshell.") So that. in an .absolute sense, despite inflationary price.s. the hourly return we make today enables us to purchase three or four time.s u much as out grandfathers could. Again, we can use whatever 1et ol statistics we want to. It is frightening that our consumer price index has been rising so rapidly: in the last doun years it has gone up more than 17 percent, and if continued would more than double by the tnd of thil century. HOWEVER, IF WE turn the figures around. \lo'e can see that the mofit thrivin& country in tht post-war world, Japan. has had a con.sumer price index increaae of 55 percent -three times as muclt as ours. Prices have jwnped S3 percent in Denmark, 40 percent in Fran~. 31 percent in Sweden, 37 percent In Italy. 35 percent in Nor'A·ay. a'nd tven our neighbors. the Canadians, hav1 had a 19 percent rise. Are we well off or poorly off, compared. to our grandfathers, or compared to other nations today? It all dept.nds Oil what you want to prove, and how you want to prove ii. It is \lo·orth keeping in mind that, like a CQmputer, nothing can come out of a statistical table but what you put into il Auto Insurance Reform WASHINGTON - T. Lawrence Jones. president of the American Insurance Association. made the following CQm· ment on Secretary of Transportation John Vo}pt':s testimony before the Sen- ate Commerce Committee on the need for auto insurance reform : "The American Insuranct Association fully endorses the proposed Concurrent Resolution of the Congress providing for a broad stale system of 'no-fault' automobile insurance. "Secretary Volpe. the Department of Tran!lportaUon staff, and the Nixon ad· ministration correctly per~lve both tht problems and the solutions to them. They also rtcognize tht anxieties and dislocations a!ISOCiattd with great change and ha\'t lald out a reasonable program for accomplishing this nttded reform . "SECRETARY VOLPE'S testimony and the final report of the. Department of Transportation represent the rno5t exha1L')tlve body ol evidence ever developed of the need for fundJmentrrl change In the \lo'8Y people a.rt com· pensated fOr their crash losses. '"1ey cement four decades of documentaUon of the failures ct the t:a:i:sting lawsuit system of auto insurance and of how those failures can be remtd.led by a com- plete flrsl·p,<1rty, no-lawsuit auto in· surante system. "With 1uch a conclusiw rtpOrt. there c:an no kmger be any doubt lbat it Is time for our states to rtvltw the system under which people injured In IUI() crashe1 receive insurance btoefJts. Further study would only ~·astr lhe publk:'s lime and l'fl()ney. and v.wld serve to deny the public the nttded solutJons. "LEGISLATORS NOW bavt 11! tht I , I; o\ Guest Rep~ . . •. , . • ·J data they need to construct a sound and econon1ic reform program that wlU enable all accident \'ictims to be corn· pensatt:d for their losses. without tne need to fl:t legal blame for tht crash. "All motorists and pedestrians no• have 'A'\thin reach a system that will compensate them rapidly and fairly , with certainty replacing chance, and at substantially less eot1l than the lawsuit system. All they have to do i11 motivate their Ja\lo-makers to brlnE" about such change.·• ..---By Georre ---1 Dtar Gtorge: This ls the third lime I've .,Titltn asking you .,,hat became of tht old hula hoops. ANNOYED Dur Annoyed: Yes, and trying to find out the answen to quest.Jons like that la precisely why rm not 1 big syrt- dkated problem solver like those lady advice columnists. Don't you have any aexy problems? I'm two months behind in my car payments now. (Hula hoops ! ShM:ab! All thre delightful trouble around to 1e.t into and this one worrlu about hula hoops!) I ~nd your mn.sl heart-rending problen1s lo ~It· He t n j o y 1 a little rest from his own htart·ren- dinR probltms.) it• urn ... out Ori ... in& an. ... uch enl 31 ly. out • ed IO OA "' ing ing but - . . . . T11tSOAY, Marth 23, 1971 c df · is~cu.nl OUR NAME MEA:NS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY! WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES . STEWING ~=NIA CHICKENS :~i:~ .,,.. ....... ·· :· . . . \ , ... ~t . ~' ··~ ' • . WILSON'S ~: ... ,;;SLAB BYTHEPIECE ,.1. '? l . . . ,' ~~ DAILY PILOT 7; c . ' . I SWOOD ITEMS I l(APTAIN KRUSTY • l LB. PKG. 79 FRESH WESlERN OYSTERS 79 -. -SHRIMP TIDBITS :.. . . IOOZ..IAR • . . :.. FRESH RED SNAPPER FlllOS fAMllT51ll 6.2 OUNCE TU8f CLOSE-UP . 69' TOOTHPASTE ; - .5 81.AOlS • OOUll.f fOGE PEISONNA 59c TUNGSRN · I.! 1201. NO MORE TANGLES. .. °''·"" '-1' SOME.~ 111 i&iift ·&t ~l'llnfillJ;I . . • ,':i,~i, o..?O:n , Hi!!" ·!l'"-"!'!'n ' CHAJIGf PllCl . .flt ·~0$EA'IO-t>OZ. • , • · -.::,. WIDE NOODLES -· '9"' 29c tfllQB Al 01~coyNr I z~~·. ·~:irr @w'Nc.t"MEA1 T°s"'cED j5• 49C ' PACKAGE OF 2 JOltHSCH&JOHNSON010I. .,.!! HANDY WIPES BABY · Lic>u10; 2zoz. r:m /MIOIUM~ 19 · 7 rlJICTOI &UIU 6k @ AU MlAT, AU lllF THICK SlKID ~ 1 PINT• FOR FOOD ~ IMO DRESSING ;l(• 35c TEK DELUXE C > • ffi'i."i-iwtK 4 FOR . HAIR SET TAPE 1oo SHAMPOO .. .;:;.! AJAX CLEANER It;:' '"'" """' 1 03 " . oz ~ ROSARITA• 120Z.•fROZEN ~ Mexican Dinners )5'• 41c TOOTHBRUSH °""'"" · ,;t, French's Mustard J{• 18c . • 140Z. ® APP1LEPiE''"''""" 1'· 69c @ wliiP0roliPiN6 ¢· 45c '-----' .,.!! AJAX CLEANSER ).!• 13c "Y-< 49 OZ. e lAUNDllY GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS IULI •CA1IOTI VEGOABLES ::::w PINEAPPLES Oc@CANTALOUPES lb. WATERMELONS 10'-il. 49c;.. ' 39~. 1oc ... GREAT FOR SALAD PEANUTS :11':~ FUERTE AVOCADOS 3 t0L ~.00 PUS. a . VAllm ••srut GREENS : :::.:.·t='"' 1oc ... forget me-not flowers DAFFODILS 68CBUNCH 2&~u. FRESH PICKED ARTICHOKE .9c EA. BROCCOU RADISHES ff= 23~ ·~ ... RUSSm 10:. 3tc .£, AJAX DETERGENT ~· 68c .:t. &liv'io® w CJ< . 1l8.CAN•AUGRlNDS ,;t, FOLGER'S COFFEE jt• 81c . . 3 LI. CAI o All GllNDS )M 2.41 ®p~~~·:;;j,'fc;;;;;•;;t 79c ~ AUNTJEMIMA•90Z.•FROZEN ~Waffles Buttermilk#' 43c ~ fADellNCHP/E ~French Apple Pie ~:,,75c "P• 21c IOZ.e FROZEN STAR KIST TUNA PIE 8 OZ. REGUtAROR SW£ETMlLK . FAOe6 PACK PILLSBURY BISCUITS J(' 9c English Muffins }f ~2CJ< i~~d 'O Frost Lunch Meat '9· 35c • ITALIAN @* DRY ""' 8 OZ.• 5 VARIETIES ~ .,,, 37c · SALAME . PEN & QUILL DIPS . p _____ _.;. __ @ 181/202.CHUB ••••• 1.89 . 1302.CHUB .•••.••• l .-45 KRAFT•71/•0z. 19 .. STAR ~. MACARONI C DllCOUNTI e.1 D·1NNER AREEXTRAOISCOUNTSIMOEPOSSI· BLE BY SPECIAL PURCHASES FROM THE MANUFACTURER & PASSED O,.l 4R0ll PACK . . SAllTA AllA 2120 SO. NJSTOlAT WARNER COST A MISA 2200 HARBOR 81. VD. AT WILSON LA PALMA 8023 WALKfRATLA PALMA • -·~-....... DAILY PILOT T~1SCS.,, Man:h 23, 1971 CHECKING •UP• "'Perry Mason Lost • • 011e Case 011 Tube . , . , .. I) L. 1\1. aovn llO WIDOWS wtio prompllY : re1n:1rry poqtN 1ny alnal• : <'Onlmon char11c1erlst1c• So In- • quires a client. Nol wit hout excc:ption. But our L<n•e and : \\'ar man s::i~s his research re1eals that trait most apt lO be common among these highly desirable ladies 1s a. low and gen tle voice. Faces ~ figures, bank balancer;, ~itchen talent, they all \'II')'. ::but t~ tones of voice usually :~re mellow , he says. :~ A.S TO WHO has worn con- fact lenses dall y I o n .11 eat \\'ithout lo~ing one or both of same, Kart'n Birtchet of \'ancouver. Wash., reports 12 yE>ars, and now claims the t11Je , . U.S . SENATORS live considerably longer on the arerage than most other men. But why is a myst~ry. Just refuse Lo give up lheir seniori· ty m11ybe ... ONE SCHOLAR conltnds lhose sisters who ~rile under lhc bylines of Ann Landers and Abigail Van Buren art II•• onl1 twln1 Ill hlslol')' •ho ever bec1m1 tnJ.ly famous . NEZ PERCE I,\IOIANS always mounted lhtir horses on the righ t. Cinched their saddles on the right, too. That's why they rarely lost their animals to allen horse thieves _ Other tribesmen ap- proached their horses from the left. but the Nez Perce poni!S \l'ouldn't put up with that. So reportJ a 7&-year-old 1ubicriber who 1Ptnt moat ol his life on the reservation. CUST0!\1ER SERVICE: Q. ''How many of our glrls aged 18 or 19 are married'?" A. Just 22 out of JOO . Q. "Perry Mason did, too . lose one case , " A. You going t() C()Unt that two-part series? First he l()Sl, but came back the second week to clean It up. Come on ... Q. ··Who hu th• moat dana1rou1 job, the policeman or t h e fireman ?'' A. The fireman. !\1ost dangerous job of all, In fact. ~1iners used to claim that dreadful distinction. Not anymore. THOSE f I N A NC I A L FELLOWS who in\·est in pharmaceuticals get an 111 percent return on their money, average. That'• hl1h. ThOR who tnveet In t1a:tl111 11t an B.3 perctnt return, 1ver•1e:. That 's low .... WHAT A LOT or lh1! business boys u,,.._ fortunately rail to figure when they try to launch a rompany is this: It cost an average of $6.843 to find and train a new salesman. That add! up, mister. You r quesl io11s and com· ments are toelcomed and will be med in CHECKING UP wherever pos.ribl.e . Ad· dress tetttr.s to L. M. Bo yd, P. 0 . Bo: Jl15 , Newpor t Btach, Collf .• 92660. Revolutionizes Denture Wearing The nt.aret:I 1h1n& tu hanus: ywr o"n ttt"th •~ 11'-,w;ihle no .. ,.·1th • pla~1 1c cream d1:1C"'''TY 1hat aclu· •llY h old~ bo1h ··uppers" aod "lo.,.•t.r•" aJ "''" l>tjott pa .. rM• 11'1 ~ rt.•'olut1onary d1"co,·e1y nilled F1>001•r.-.·1, for daily home U\ll'. ~U.S. P~t f:l.111:1988! V.'itb Fi:tOOf.""T num1· tli!nlUrt ·~rt.r• m~y cM. ~~~~-1~11~h. "'Ith little "'OH)' DI ~kruun· C<•fllllll \DOK F1-.nuF•tt l<1rm• an tla•llc mem· br.mt tha.I ht.Ill" ~h..orh the "1oc:k or b1W11 and cht•ui1-belpt ~ L«t cum' from brul~1111. You m1y bite ha.r~r. t.at more 111 lurally- enjoy opp.ell. com-ll!l·tl'le-cob F1:tOVE!<o'T may help you •J>fak mort cleiir\y, bt. more at eal't. The $pec11I pcnc1l·po111t •h~penwr Ith yoo spol F1XOOl!t."T with pre- ciiion ... .,.~,,, nn'''! Ont •Ppl~1 1on may la~t rl>\Jnd tht clock. Oen1urt1 tl'l at fit are t 9111'111l•I to hfalth. Set yt}llr dmn•t re1ularly. Gf.t US1·10-Ull! f u.Ofl•.i.'T Dtnturt Adhe1n·e Cream •l •II druJ COWIWL Make the world you Rve in ... livable. TURN WINTER HEAT TO SUMMER COOL. If you have forced-1 ir h1ati11 q, ch1nc.e1 ire we c.1n 1d1pt your furn1i:e and e•i1t in9 duct-work to spread cool. clean a ir to every room in r,our home. It's •n eaty matter to add "day & ni ght' air c;ond· tionin9, air p urificetion a nd hum idity control ..• A rtal booo to hou1o1wiv11o who likt fre,h, cl ean, du1t free, odor free home1. We htve Electrie me• deli with S ye1r 9uar1nt111 i ncl 9i1 mollllel1 with I 0 yt•r 9u1r1nt115. DON'T SWELTER THIS SU MMER. BE LIKE THE Pecific Bter, enjoy your 1rmch1it. day&night e Call today for a frff, no-ob.ligation estimate. Pacific Heating1 Co. Air Co11dlllo11lrt9 Speclalbf• 2175 LAGUNA CANY.ON RD . Call Ua For Prompt S.rvic• and Repair U6UN.A ll.ACH LA•UN.A HILLS-VllJO 494.9745 837-2000 " . Solons Hit Rail Route For State WASl!INGTON (UPI) - Both Calllornla Stn1tors are protesting Railpax's plan -to abandon rail passenii:er .!lervice In their state'l!I San Joequln Valley. Sen. John V. Tunney (0- Calif.), called the decision a "direct 11.bandonment" of the Vall•y's oeeds. "I mual 11~, how1ver. lh•l 1 am not 1urprl11d at thll decision," he added Monday. "I feel that it "'as dict1ted by an ill·advlscd penny-pi,,.. ching Congreu (that inlilted) upon early oprration of the system ... Both he and Sen. Alan Cranson tD-Calif. ), said the Rallpax plan should Include both inland and coastal routu between Los Angeles and the S•n Franclaco B•y Area. Cranston 11r11d with Rep. 8 . r. S~k ID-C1IU.), Uial Valley cities should look into the possibilit.v of rontracting "'ilh Railpax for service. Rep. Harold T. Johnson (0.. Calif.), declared : "there ap- pear! to be no appeal from the decision which apparently mearui the end of r a I I pas!enger services in our 1rea1 after May I ol thls year." By plckln1 only 1 t'O&l!ltsl rou te bltwesn Loi Angeles and the Bay Area, Railpax wlll "prevent direct con- nection.s between many of the state's major population areas and the l!ltate capit al,'' Johnson added. Heyns Says Low Budget To Hurt VC BERKELEY !UPI) University of Cali fornia Berkeley Chancellor Ro1er W. Heyns said Monday the cam- pus "Cannot continue to fulfill ii.! JOO-year-old commitment to a leading role in the affairs of the state unleu it gel! more money than Gov . Reagan has allocaltd. "The proposed b u d I e I , which fails to provide th• crucial minimum 1 u p p o r t , calll!I into question California's historic dedication to public higher education," Heyns l!laid in a statement prepared for a news conf erence. "No body of men and v.·omen knows better than our legislators what the con- tributions of the university ha ve been to California,·· said Heyns . "The university cannot con· nue to fulfill that century-old commitment unless the state meets Its commitment to fully 11upport the university." Manson Said Victimized By Trial LOS ANGELES (UPI) Charles Man&0n is the vlcUm of politics and publicl\y and "is tnUUed to hl1 llfe'1 because money is being made out or the Tate-LaBlanca murder trial, hl1 law ytr in· l!llsted Mooday at the end of bis final argument. Irving Kanarek told the penalty phase jury t h 11 t Man.son was being made the scapegoat for murders In v.·hich he played no part. and he asked the panel to 1p1re Manson from death btc•U•• the truth might finally come out. The burly defense attorney stuck doddgedly to the in· sistence that tt1anson wal!I in- nocent despite the facl the very samt jury hal!I found him aunty of seven first deii:ree murdera and a ch1r1t of con- spiracy to murder . The lawyer •lso reiterated his arii:umenls that many per.sorui, mol!ltl y writer•, h•v• profited from the c11e while Mtinson suffered. Following Kanarek ·~ argumenf.l!I and an appearance by another defense lawyer, Su~rior Court Judge Charles Older told jurors there was a "reasonable probability'' thev would be instructed and seqUestered this afternoon. The last of final arguments today were e:irpected to take four hours and the prosecutor said ht probably v.·ould not offer 1 rtbuUal. Hell's Angels Chief Arrested OAKLAND (UP IJ -Hell's An1els leader Sonny ('t'iny J Barger is In trouble with the law again. He was arrested Monday after police stopped him in a car in an industrial area and found a loaded automatic pistol, several other guns. a tear gas grenade, burglar tools, a telephone tapping device and two black masks. 5967 .J_O Dinner Council Gets Chicken Bill LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Councilman Robe rt M. Wilkinson Monday prel!lented the city council with a $967.10 bill for fried chi~ken and drinks. \Vilkinson asked lhe council to reimburse him the money which he said he spent on food and drink for city employes shortly after the f'eb. 9 earthquake. He said he purcha!'d the Items, including $707 for fried chicken, for persons at th e Knollwood Country Club com· mand posl in Granada Hills. At that post, police, flremen and street maintenance V.1>rkcrs had not bad breakfast and a caterln& truck from the polict department was not expected until noon, the coun- cilman said. "I did it on my own. ·with the understanding that I had no legal authority, because nobody else wa s do i n g anything and l felt it should be done." \Vilkenson said if !hr city doesn't repay him, ht \\'OUld take the money out of his conlingency fund. Councilmen receive S2.~ annually lrom the city for various ex- penditu res related to their duties. The bill was sent to the city attorney for recom· mendations. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: *MAIN OPl'tCl:ll\ lHlll, Loi A•lel • 12'-1Sl1 1f W1LIHIPIE et QftAMlllCY PLACl:3833 WDlftl,. 81Yd .. L.A.. Sll-1ff5 LA.CMC CINTIR: 2nd I Brotdwa)'. 121-1102 1t HUNTINGTON llACH: I t Huntlrtg\on Cen"t • (71 41897·1047 aANTA AHA LOAN llJlVICI AQUtCY: 1IOI N. Main It.• (l't•) 147 .. 117 • IANTA MONtoAt 711 WllllllN l!Yd. • 393-0746 * IAM PIDRO: 10'lh I ,actrlc• 131·2~1 * WllT COYfNA: EllUand Shopplrio Ctr.• 331·2201 * ,ANOPl:AMA CITY: 1111 Van Nll)'l l lvd. • 892·1171 • TA"ZAMA! 11711 Ventufl Boulevltd • S45-H14 *LONG llACH: 3rd & Locuet •.Q7·7.at * 0ptn S.tunll)'I-9 tm \o l '"' Dtltf Kouu -' Im to 4 .. ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION ······-·· ... ··.·.·-·.~ • J • • • • • ~ In Committee• . Youth ·Vote Ol{'d; !!Y]~Qhi~:!Q~ mankind's most dangerous voyage of uplorotion- the journey of one man·lnlo The Passions of thl Mind War Bill Killed SACRAMENTO (UPI) -the bill Monday. 'Y'hert wa1 Leglslation ii:lving 13-year-old no debl;t1 tlnct the meUW'tll --------··-u R Callfornlana the vote advan~d had Mien &lven 1 public hll,.. '.1'1 ing earlier. 1n the a1semb ly today but a youth~rienled bill seekini dl~d s~m!~ ~::~~11~e~~~ n~ss .. ONS a court te11t of the lndochlna CommJttet Jut year. £~ ~ War was killed. Moan1!~e1 UM Conslitu-_j)f 'l'ht l~)'HM>ld YOitr .,,.. Uoul a ..... m .. la ctlMllllat poeal went to the floor after on a unantrnous voice vote the Constitutiona l sent the IS-year-old voter leglslallon by Assemblyman amendments committee turn-\Villle Brown Jr. tD-San Fran- ed back a Rep u b Ii can· ci.sco) ta the full Asaembly. sponsored ef fort to amend it with what the author called SimUar legislation ha1 betn potentially fataJ changes. approved by lhe Senate. For the second straight But before final approval, year, meantime, a proposal t h e D e mocratlc~trolled aimed at teatins in the U.S. committee defeated eflorta by Supreme Court the legalJty of R e Pu bllcan Assemblyman American troop involvemut Robert Beverly of Manhattan In the Indochina War failed in Beach and Robtrt C. Cline A Nollniih ..... "°'"'fl/ ~1119nd Fmid "1 111e ..,Chor or 'The AP>" 111111 a.e Fni•">" 140 ,., ••. 'I o.oo llOW at the "' Ill •'II ol al Cll1"11 Park lo amend It vo~~ 11 an 1 •ro ' ct Brown prete1ted ttlat tl'lt The author, ~semblyman amendments would jeopardize John Vasco~lloa { o. s an bolh legl1latlve approval of ·Bookstall J ) Id h Id lnl od his proposed ConaUtutional ose . sa e wou r uce amendmtnt and vol•r ral"lca· JJJ L 17th ST., COSTA MISA the bill again next year if u 548-4611 "I have to." He blamed fell ow tion. whtre parkln9 behind the San Jose Democrat Alirter Beverly proposed that in ad-la conynlent Pancake House McAllsler for killing it. diUon to lowering the voter·1---------------------- The bill, which would pr~ age from 21 to 111, that all hlbit a Callfornlan from btin& IS-year-olds be le:1ally con- requJred to fisht in an un-1ldertd adult.a with all the d«:larod worb nwled al ltaal r111>ta ind prMlt•u. U.trtol, N VUI f1vor1 le VOlll ln tM tncludlnl that of 4r111lln1. Judiciary Committee to wtn;!jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii Attend the Church of Your Choice Re9ularly approval . Committee Democrats outnumber Republican.! seven to nv~. On a vote that crossed party lines, the rommittee rejected CHICKEN LOVERS!! Youngest Official A Suicide? CHICKEN AND flXIN'S S.MO.RG,AS.BOR.D hlelutln Ginos Golden Fried Chicken, French Fries, Cole Slaw. ADULTS Sl.39 CHILDREN 75c EVERY WEDNESDAY 5 TO 9 P.M. EL SOBRANTE (AP) -A preliminary findinii: of suicide by drug overdose has been announced in the death of Robert Trotter, at ?l beJJ,ved the youngest elected black public official in the nation. Trotter had been away from his home in Fresno about tv:o months, failin1 to appear in court on charges of drunken G/no:S 19051 Brookhurst St. (At c;.rf!1ld) Huntington Beach 968-7666 drivln1. indecent exposure,J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ driving without a \'&lid license]; and resisting arrest. Dr. William L. Thompson, who conducted the autopsy Monday, said the preliminary finding was based on a note found under the body and bot- tles at the scene belltved to contain barbiturates. The note, which sheriff's in- vestigators i;aid bore Trotter's 1ignature, said, "No more." Sen. Alqitist Raps Route For Resort SACRA~1 ENTO (AP) Sen. Alfred Alquist (0.San Jose), says the state should halt proposals to build an ac- cess road into the planned Walt Di s n e y Productions resort at Mineral Kinii:. "Freeways and parking lots are not the solution to every transportation problem especially in our dwindlina: 11reas of grl!al. natural be1uty such as ~1ineral King," Al· qu ist said f\.1onday . A GREAT CHILDREN'S SHOE SALE At Ridiculous Prices! WHAT'S LEFT FROM OUR STOREWIDE SALE REGULARLY TO $17. to SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24 "~Vhere Shopping 1s A. Real Pled.!ure'' The legislator proposed a study or alternate access r o u t e s to the ruort, which is bein1 stalled pend in i ~solution of a court c::hallenii:e brought by the conservation· minded Sierra Club. 30 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER e 644-2464 Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join ~ ........ Ide I ;, . " Oub Wtlh a $2.500 balance In your 11Ylng1 ecooun1, you 1r1 tllglbl1 K> become a Member. Subttan1l1I 1avi~1 1ro available when purchulng many Items tftcludlnQ au\Ontobll1s, furniture, 1ppUane ... jewelry. Plu1 many frtl MtVicet -mon.y orders, Olfe.,_HbOXOl,etc. [----"-·· -~-·--~~~ 1 COAST I ANO SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAV --------· ·- Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUNDID DAILY AND PAID OUARTEALY.• 5.00°1°-5.13°/o PasabOOk; No Minimum. s.2s•1 •• 5,39•1. Three Month Certificate; No Minimum. 5.750/0 -5.92% On•Y11rC.rtlftcatt; $1 ,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.180/o TW1>Yt1rCtrtlficat1; $5,0CX> Minimum. • EfftctlYw Mmlll Ell'fllnp • INSURANCE TO $20,000 I 11 DAIL V ~ILOf 9 College Mothe1· Netv Syste1n Seeta For· the Record Police Air Space Crush U11de1· Study Dissolutions Of Marriage P ilM Mlttll 1i l;;orlon. Joron No •M P•11, $ Hott ld 1(...,.1111 Ind MoOtl!M H1rtt1r, Gkl•i• •ncl Ootltla "" T1rlor, Ounc;1n H. 1r>ll Wtnclv .. Sumr1ll, SlllrleM I ncl Goraon V 1!11ntdlc1. ClltuM•• Lt!l•r 1 n d Kolllorlnt Mvet1. 1..11111 Lculll 11'1<1 D1rrcld Devld lltmMy, J1ckson Frta~rl(~ t'ld Dltn• T11om11. lt1!Ph ona E!tlvlne HI<~•· Gl•nn C011w1y. Jr •"<I •nc1re1 ''" l rcu•U•rd, t:a"'''" l 1'1d 11• ... r• M P•r.d"lrtll, Horold ( ' l'or•llfrt. "'"' ~lo'"' 1no1 Clottntl PllllllP LCvtlocr. Dorl-G Incl Jury H l'llff Mlf<ll 11 F-•Otf, MlOll!I Nfcllel\11 I/Ml Elt•r.or M11ln1 Lunn, Cllfloro l l'ld Ant•I• ltvtr, Donni ltulh 100 florrie Arlyn !lrown, Susen I 1na Alvin H. Ba<ll. 11111 F. 1na Clrl W W1gMr. Sllv•n I'. •r>d M1tl0<W • ltoOfltut>. Ell11t>tr11 ona Edw1rd G1•telurn ~(Wrl•r. w1rn1m Jol\n •nd M1r1 •m•h• IT••tn•. Su1n F ond JPhn c Moore. Kort'1 Su• 111<1 Ltw<1 Lt• l1ndrv, W1rne (_ 1na Nina .:: D1u11re, 1!11r1>1r1 A._..., Sre.-i1n O l5ere1n1v. Poul Brcwn '"" 0t0r1 '" W111on, 11:ren or>d Mttr11 Alie• Owen1. "'·· M1tY 15 •M Cl•d• l ~'"«h;o, Ch•illOPhtr 11. 1no "'"" • lor~trion, Jo-<·-· A 1nd fu11nt ' Hu1c11lnson, Mildred Iran• 11\d Dt•ld l<:tllll INll!ltLOCVlDRY DlCRllS l!nl•rtd Ml rcll 16 l5111on. ArtMll"f or>d llcborl Erl1 M&lorn-, Dl•lt A. and Wnlt• Tllom1>1, Crls!lnt '"" WIH•tm Anarow 8•111y, Kortn Lou"t 1"<1 E••l O'N•1I M1vt11rrv. E111ot>ttn A 1nd l(t nnelh l Klu1ltwoc1. M'rn• L. i nd Jonn I l</tllOt'. H11~•1 P, tnO Jctn Ml rl• Cc1nwtll 91rb1r1 Ann 1NI Pnoll• lCftn Phl!llD•, Mlldrt<I E 111(1 Poler St•wt•1. Erin M 1no Sltohtn ltl'111rd Cl1rk!.O'" M1rt~1 tno lt>tn Edwerds. L!nd1 G. tnd O.-nn11 M 81cc1n•i, Evelrn ElluMtn t nd JtmH ltOCCI> Melm, Bnnnit £. In~ Edwtrd f Fo•ho1r1n. l'roncos T •"" Jtnntt11 '· Wlnd.,m1n, Dtvor1 ona Melvyn ~ .. d GooOntr. L•1l•t Vortd i ncl vkl11 111....::n l(•rn•v. ~uun J. •NI J"'°'""" A Ktnneav. Ruin H t nd Gilt L Pnllllps, Get!•Udt c end Fklva O G1rcl1. l•l<lro Car1u 1no Mt rll MonMl ~lttl. LIWrPnc• Edword """ Vtrt f Joi••· M1rv 1no Vlctnlt E McC1s1.,,e1, llc11li1 1...r Flor •'· Dll•. Denny W. t M Ginttr D MtM1h1n, Jo•<• Ann 1nd Buddy L•• Hts''' Jctn C. 1nd El~tr P Rtnst, M1rct1 G, •nd Gwtnacl• ' l••<ht, Dtvld S 1no Tneodot1 M • ll;•lltr, lloblrl M ftnd S1llv Ann -Ab~oi<lond. Virllni1 M Ind Mlcn11I , .· Deni/a Notices ·. • IOYC:l l<i11ar..ci H flcvco. 1411 71111' ii. l"'· ,N II<•. lorm1tlY ot (COlll MHI Diie " 4••!11, Mire" n. Su•v•v•d bv nu1b1 .. o. <f.rtl\ur. b•o1n•'· L1llor Holme>. or Sen _,.,n11alno. Serv1cu. Wea~••O•Y. l l'M, ·,.1ci11c Vitw cn1etl lnte•mtnr, P1d 1.c 'low M1morl11 1'1rk. Flmlly tuoge1t• "'olf ''"'"ino to m•l<t m..,,crlt l con-Jrl~u!lon•. •11111 con!rlbu!• !ti tne Amt•-ton C1nc1r Sctle1v. P1cit'c V1tw ~r· 1rv, Dfrecion C:LIMIS ...... ,, j c1 ..... 11. N10 FHtrt!. Coot• ,,.. .. , ~trvl<•• oondln• 11 Wti!t!l!I )n1etl Mortu1rv, 6'6·•1ltl. •:• COTTON IYolntlMin1 H. Colt,,.., ?IS E 111~ St , t os11 M•11. 0.1• cl d11111, M•rc~ 11 Surv1vte1 b• ""o bro!hU•. 1t1rrncn11 Co!· IOo'I. Cos11 MtJI; Herold (OllOn. Plt11- •nt011. (Iii!,; ,.,_o 1.s11t1, Mfl Gl"•uat C Groon!leld. CO.Tl M111, Mri. Allct C. Mcl<:l•n111, Mouna. Monnnol• Str'fiets ~n~ inttrmtnt will be 1'11<1 1n FllrmoM. M1~nuo111 8•11' Co111 Mt•• Matfut•v. Fcr"'&ral"9 OirK10tl. GOUDY r.1v~• L. Gouav Ao• I\. o! JIS11 Mon· tertv. Sou11'1 L8oun1 , Surv,.•d b• 1l1!1r. M r1 Elll•I Grundtl. 0•~11"°; ntontw, EdWl•d GtUr>dfl Jr .. of NtWlf~, Ct lil.; two 1rPtl·nP~lltw•, E<lwtrd J. Incl Kl.Jr! Grundtl; Olll 9rt11·<\iect . J1nlM Gr~n· c:otl, t i! ol Ntwtrk. Prlvt!t .. ,....kll WI" llold !oder, Tu••d•v. MeCorfTlltt L11un1 S tien Morlu&r" Cn101I l"ttrmtflt. C1· pr•n L•wn Ctmtttrv, Col"'•· (111!. McCorm•cli; L1oun1 B11cll Morh/t r'f. DI· ffCIOfl. GUlTlllOGE !•11• L. C.ullrlo9e, lS!·D A.•en1d• M •· le•c1, Ll~U<\I HlllJ 0111 o/ det!ll, M1rcll XI. Survlv1<1 ~• wolt, Grttt: 1cn, Siio• Jr.. ct ... t14n10, GeoreTt: 1wo Clou;nler\, M" Virtlnl• S1tw1r!, lat· ranc" M-.. P•"ld• Pn .. 11. o! Orllnclt: "'~' t11nac~Horon. !>trvlc'I. !odov. TuU· ll•Y. 1.)0 PM, P1cific Vltw Cll•P•I En· !ambmen•. P1clllc V•tw Mtm<>'lll Ptrl!. P•c•f•c v .. w Moftv~rv. Directori. O'llOVllKE fl•rn8 Au111ev O'Retjr\t _ Aoe •I. o! IOI ~•nll•lwe<>d. Co1!1 Me.., D1tt of a11rn, lvlt•C/\ 11 SvrV•"t<I D>' '''""· lOfltlne J!eld. Covln1. Edn1 Has~on•. l o•Of\10, Ctn•d1. c;re• .. •d• .. ..,nets. WNn11.S1v, M••cll 7•. l PM. 01kdll1 Mt mo•lt l Ptrll !401 S. Grtn<I Ave, Gltl\OOrf. (t1~e1le M...-!uor., D"t<laro 5WlFl Po• ~wotT i~ll St n!I "'"I A•t • (1>111 Hn• 0111 er ntal~. Mt1'11 n Sur· Yo>ed bY wol•. Gtlnlt Sttv•CH, lhUtl· do•. ' JO PM. !1•11 Br<lldWIY cn1oel. ln!ermcnT, H1<1>0r Re>! Mt'T'Cflt l Pt rk. ltll &•ot<IWOY Mor!111ry, Oortclurs. TUNNILL {"'I o 7unn•ll lilt S~mllro Plte•, c o· la ,...., •. Dolt o! O••lll, M••c~ ,1 , Su...,,vPd Dv wl11. f11111t M T.,,.....111 •?n. Ct•lton L l11nne11, d1110Ml'I, ltr· b•ro Join GOdltY 1nO Ct!INn Slloldc<>t , both o1 Gi•dtn Grovt: !! '"n«hl!drtn. s•rvocer. wt<1nuo1v, II 1>,M, PKlllc ......... (llt~•l. willl Rr•. JGY(t A Mu,.. 11nf •nd tne Mir V•!ll LO<IOI ~ & Al.A 1r COll l M•U. oft1C1111n~ lnllflNftl, H•rllo~ llUt Memc•l•I Pork. P1ell!C V<1N Mcr1vory, Olrt<IO•• ARBUCKLE & SON \VESTCLIFF J\IORTUARY 427 E. lith St.. Costa J\lesa 646-4888 • BLATZ t.10RTUARIES <;o rona dtl r.tar OR 3·94$0 Costa i\1esa !'I.II HU• • BELL BRO.,D\YAY l\IORTU/.RY J 10 Broadway. Costa J\teaa LI 8·3433 • J\frCOR:'tfTCK LAGUNA BEACH ft.fORTUARY 171S Lag:una C11nyon Rd. 4H·tf15 • PACIFIC VIEW t.tEJ\fORIAL PARK Cemcterv J\lortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific Vic• Drive Ne\,·port Ut.acb . Callfornla 644-2700 • Pt:EK FAl\111.V COLONlAL flJNERAL RO\IE 7801 8ol~a Avr. \\'rstmlnslt'r lll-33U • S)IITWS ~IORTUARY tt7 J\lain St. 536-6'39 Huntlnj!"tnn Rt-11ch l•r ... , Ylrtl,.,11 J\IN< Ind o.t\1111 '"""'' lolllllr1!11, J11li. I , 11\d l•tCJrlU. A. Wins Top Hono1·s By JOHN VALTERZA then would hutall new In patrot rar1 and unil~ banW would only be: 1 ttm· porary !OiuUon -lastln& no more than flvt years," Egan e1plained. M8l<elr'll, LIWll 1NI '°"" A 0110fl, M.&r'flll H. I nf C11M•IM II\, Cr~r, Si.v1n Lout1 1..0 JIR"f LIM!lt 11o11~, o.r1-'"" w ... .,. o.a. M .. 1'1c'..,~. JovCI L. IM J-\. Ill-fl. 0.lllc. M. itnd Dt'flO C (1rlln. fffry I". tnd $\/tan L. I"''""° "'••<~ n 1 11r1t, ltolltrl L. 1l'H:I Dorollw M Ptvorltrl, G1rm1l1>1 A. "'" Lft'nt tO. ' Pf(111m, 5Noron I . tlltl P•!fr ... V1r..,.11l1n, Ctrol Jinn tnf ltt Yn>On<I '· WllU1m1, $11~1nn1 lta.Dtrl1 t NI Jl:fl .. f llnccb\ Mir"", DCH'll\& J 1..n Cl>t rlla 11 E<lmonclton, l1rMr1 L•nn and M.&rvln •• 1toy1I Wllllt m .. It.fr! Jr. '"" AIK• '--.: ..... ,. DOM.I IM Jann J. ~•Sl\Ctr. DtrolhY OltM t lld Wtltltl\I Mor111n. J1c..,t H<H. L. 1"41 ltot'lt ld ' ltobuhon, Ge<tld<nt C ,,.., Wlru.!111\ .. l>l>tm, ll:iltlt"' Delbert llld Ml tYt , .. Co11, WnMltr "'a Sl'llrlev M Sttn" MOr!on 11\d Vl••lnl• C. Cl••k~, J•,, Mt tlorl1 LO• tna lrl Hick I FllndorJ, K••l>lttn fl. 1no JO!on C Moort, Dtrltne Hult tM D1nn11 GNrt• Cu1ll, Oon•IO Wt ff•n '"" Je "'"" 1!11nl1t1. Jl/Ollh Morlt t /111 Mt l'l<lf:I Ml>lit Krlrio, Doti,... Clt rt 1na JQ!on Jtc Fl•mln1, Lina• Ltt t na ltoOerl "'llvn CIPPI. Fr1nc1• A. •nO Don Grt nl Ctll'f. J1tlle1 Ltvttne D1rl1r •M JOl'ln l1rrv IM'<M M1rcn •• lt••n, L.all1 e. •na Pt•l J Ctwtn, Llll Ml>l'llr>d 1...a Ct rt• N;11M•I 15tvor!y "-· •nd JoilPll eovo, Din lltv t nd MJ11nl1 Jo Po11, 11111 ( Ind lllehltd l Wlfd, D11nn1 i nd J1m11 Cl1rk 01nu. Jt nkt R1v1 1<'lli ,1t1rm1n0 Arm Ind lrown. Wtll•V P. 1na Snt ron Je1nne Rove, Llrrv W1vne Incl M1r11rt1 (ltlrt l!ltkhtr Mirr e . 1nd llOOlrl c. Si>ett, (lllf\fl IC Ind ~~ .. n ( Ft•ln, IVI A. Incl ltl<111ro c . llhoclf,, M1rv Lou I nd Oo<llld G. c .... 1!!, D1nnv ind S"'rl• Sthut, W1rn1 L. 4na ton! Lii Wik .... Wt ltll Pnlll• t nd Alm• Elnlll Prolll!, D1vld It. Ind o .... LH Erom1nn, S~11nM Fr1nc;u I ncl Fiord ,~. ltla1·ria9e Llcetases LAS VEGA~. N1v, -Mlrflllt l1ctntt• lnued lltrt lnch10t. Ell:fl·LDNDON-Mtr. I, TllttOor ~ S•ltm. 1', ol L•tun1 111~ •ncl Potrklt Je1n. It. ol Cosll M111. 11: OU$ SE AU ·ROl!llNSON-Mtr. 1, Pot..rt , , H . tnO G1ryl1 Anf\, ll. Delft Gf Huf\llf\llOll !ltlOI. HOOD·!IAXTEll-Mlr. 1. Jl:tll>tr! [., JS ol 511Vttldo, 111<1 Slllrl11 Ann, l•, cf Wulmlnl!tr, HDC!O;MAN·SWANSDN-Mor t, Metil E .. ''· 111a Don~• Loul11, ll, boll\ o! Newp0tl l11en lDM..._.llLLM.t..N-M1r. t, Will!t m T., JI. ol Hun!ontlOf\ &toe~, 11111 Vlckv L., U. ol Lont Bt1e11 CDNN.IJllllEV-M1<. I, MI c 11 1• I Jt mu, ll. •ncl Vl•1inl1 Mttit .... botn 01 c .... r. M••• CAMP·3W"-N-Mtr. t. Riiey Jentlllt n. 16, 0( 15t ibcl h llnd Intl (ll1rll!IM LOUoH , <l, DI lllbCI P'11lnt~I• MUN02·MUNOZ-Mu ID. Auri lia. S•. rrm1r1lte1 J1c...,ell11e. )C. botn ot (Ol!I Mt'I NElWIG·McllEDM0N£-M 1 ~ " Cll•tnc• L1•c•. '1. 1na (~ntno1 Ma•IP, II. bo111 o/ HuntinQ!Gn Beotll. O'LEXEY·DESEL-Mtr 11, JWln I. ••. •ncl flobfllo, 11, both al Newioorl l5t1c1>, STEIN·!tDIBINS-Mtr. 12. lhomo• L, ~• ct Co•!• M•11. "''II Mtr•er1t M•rv. 4'. of S•n• An• 11;£ llBY-PUN10;E--M1r. !l, II o n I Id Edward, JS, &nd J1ne1 M.. JJ. bo!ll ol Wtslmin1ter. MC KINZIE·$lOl.lZ-M•r. ll, •rlllu• J_, "· or c ... 1, Ml••• 1"" JuM A .• lll, ot Orin.,_ lU(KEll·M.AltTIN-Mtr ll. J•mU A , <$. t"<I B•t~1r1 J JI. bo"' or wutmlns!tr. WARK ·llEITZ-Mt r ll W•l1tr 0 , !1, Ind ltO•tnM El1on1. "· bclll of Ce110 Mt•&. EDDY·JOLL V-Mor ll. (hlrlt\ l . 11, 1r.d "-rllr J., ll, bGI~ of Wt1!ml1111er. IMUS.C.AllL ... NO-Mtr !J, Oen Alltn. 14, of W•t1mln1l0<. 1nd 1tnc1111e Jo, !1, cf Borden G•ovt LUYPEH·IAEll--Mtr ll. Du • I\• Ktlln. •1. 1nd Mort J etn :It, oarn or W11rrnln•ltr. WAITS·EDWA llDS-Mor. lJ. SHv•n H, 13, ol An•Mlm. 1nd Linell K•r1n, n, ot W•olrnlnsir r. HOPPEll·H ... l<IXLEDEN-Ml r II, "forold D , ll, I ncl E111ncto, •!, bolh ot W111ml11Jler. SANA G"-S·P HtlllPY-Mfr. 1J. ltlcl\ard It .. JJ, 1r>d Denno Jtnt. II. both cl Huntlnt10n l~•tll C 0 It NE L ISDl<l·WlllEY-Mtr. ll, lt&IJfl (&rl, 21 OI S1n11 Ant, Ind Clltrvl Anni . 'U. of F ..... ru,ln Vt lll •· FULLERTON -A 41-year- old mother of two who "thorou&hly enjoys ltarnln.&" is the flrat student to qualify for highest honors at gradu• tion from Cal State Fullerton. hirs. Dorothy R. Kttll of Jrvine topped the January clas,, of 1971 with a stral1ht·A grade point average. Highest honors go only to graduates with perfect &rades In aU I.heir college courses . Mrs. Keen, whose husband Al is an aerospa~ executive. took her lowu division stud.its al Fullerton Junior Collc.ie and transftrred lo Cal State in 1966. "I thoroughly enjoy studying with younger student!," she says, "and truly belicvt that I am a better informed citiz.en Billboard Ban Under Scrutiny SANTA ANA A n,111' t1rdinanct ""hich will allow the phasing out of billboards v.·ithin three yrars is being considered by the Orange County Plannina Commission. The law, sent to planners by the county Board of Supervi!Ors for a recom- mendation. would not only eliminate billboards but also v.·ould restrict bu.slnt:ss sign!. SUch signs v.·ould b I!: restricted lo walls and with a 50 square foot limit for e 1 c h business. Eliminated would be roof and moving signs. CMA Picks' New Chief ANAHElr..l -Or. Jean F . Crum, a general surgeon v.·ith offices in · Downey a n d Norwalk, is the new preeident- elect of the California Medical Association. Dr. Crum, elected at the association·s an nu• I con· ferenct here last week.. will become presidtnt or the 24,000·mem~r C~iA n t :it i\-1arch. 0.IA members re-elected Dr. William F. Quinn of Los Angeles as speaker of the organization's Hou se of Delegates. Dr. Joseph ,,., Boyle of Los Angeles w1s re- elected vice speaker of the house. v.·hich is lht C~1A's governing body. Dr. Philip F. Vo igt of Lon1 Beach was electtd to the CMA Council, \l:hich meets durin1 the year to carry out policies determined by the House of Delegates. "°' ~!, . ~~ ~ .-.. tlfte.·~~ ?W.;,•t S\&!cl ,:tie'->r: "" ;;:; ... • I 1ich hn& ond •"' oil nor le I Or ""' nd ? ~d .och NEWS REWSE: WEST COAST BANKS REDUCE INTEREST ON SAVINGS ANAHEIM, CAL-lnterest rates on savin15 deposits were cut sharply Friday by West Coast ba nks as t hey joinl!:d other banks across the nation in re- f on ducing the rates paid on savi ngs •. \f deposits • -~ ~ l\n expeditious , lNJplt ·lmred c• '""' ,.... IRE TOU STILL 6ITTllN TIIE llOSI flOll TOllll SIYllllSI INIHElll SIYINIS PITS THE NllHUT lllT!REST !!ITU OM INSUR!D SAYIMIS Currerit annual 11le on PfSsbook accoun ts compou!Mied dlily 90 Gay bonus interest tcaltlntl witn minimum b1l1net Ont lo ten year term certific:ate accounts with minimum b111nce Two to ten ye1r l11m certifitl1• a~nts with minimum blltnct 5% 514% 5*% 6% ANAHEIM SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ., ... ,.... I I -, lllW U_•_ .,I __ n.•-'""' lll'J -·"'~ ._..,..-~ -c-l :,.q -.1111 ll..-i _..,, as a result or 1tttnd1ng L'OI· lege.·· OI !flt D41HY Plltl Ill" new transmitters and other clec· tronics gear. Mrs. Keen worked btr Wa:J through the Minnesota School of Business in ~1lMeapc11is in the 1940s and wa~ working full time u 1 secretary wben she enrolled at Fullerton JC in 1960 as an economics ma· jor. SANTA ANA -On a typical t"riday ni&ht, the police radio band serving four Orangt Coast citits can sound like lht tnllre populatloo or the state trying to talk 1t onct. Bui under a system pro. posed by the County Com· 'llUnlcat!ons Dcpartmtnl -of· ferlng each public safely jurisdlcti<>n its own clear· channel frequency the frustrating e11:perit11ce or a patrolman find ing air ispace "'ill ht a thing ol the past. t:ost estimates are not yet available, he said. Some or the expenses to the county's own com· "Wt have two yean to gn and lht crowded alt spact l~n·t crlllcaJ yet, but it's still serious." munieations equipmenl will be lPii..-_______ ,_, • picked up through grant! ad· ministered throuah the state of California Criminal Justice L•w 1,.,. lncltffq A Council and iU Oranae County OMtl lhert Game. GOLF TIPS subsidiary, Egan said . The existing 1ystem, 1ellin~ 'ractlct at th• • , • more jumbled all the time. NiWPORTIR INN went into effect 1three years PAI l GOLF COUISI .. The fir5t years "·err the rouahest," she r e c a 11 s , "because of lhe need lo stud)' $Uch subjects aJ chemistry and physics." Both her ion and daughter are student s at UC Irvine . majoring in computer sciencts-social scitnces /I'd languages, respectively. It may take two years to accomplish . say the officials of the county communications departJnent. But thus far the 1eoun1ywidr prOJt'C\ to phase inlo new ultra-high-frequency r a n g es has unanimous support of all the cities contacted. even though it will cost money. begun to contact the chiefs aao. $1 with thl1 H week 4ay1 of police and city manager~ 1 _-::;"Wj'ii'ii'iid~lihein~lhaiill•ihiairi~ng~~~~~~~~~-~~ or each of the county cities I lo explain the plan and have DANllH PUINITUll SWllllH CIYITAL Three of Mrs. Ketn 's elassmates were a c co r de d high bonors for achieving grade-point averages between 3.85 and 3.99 on a 4.0 scale, while 23 others quallfitd for honors \\'Hh 1verages bttv.·een 3.5 and 3.84. them determine their own lllDAL 11•tSTIT CHINA & STiil equipment netds." Thu.'! rar, Eaan said, there arr absolutely no holdouts. "They au can't wait ror the nrw systrm to he installed." Changing over lo the rlear- channcl UHF rangt>, ht said , would vary Jn cost in each One zone wherr the air spare crush is particula rly severe is the singlr band ser\I· ing agencies in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach. Laguna Brach and San Clemente. city . . d0nr;-.. ~ .. , 2'40 E.Coull-l""'.' Corono Joi Mor »<i;lq 9,30 .. S:Jt Tel: 644-7340 ~•Oiloy1 ll '"S &o/A -M"'~•d;Mrt& Taxpayers Talk Slated U d th I t The new equ1p1ni>n1 would n er e prrsen sys em. '"-bo hi b h .1 h. h au public saft!IY departments -~~"..'.:;':"'~~y~ea~c;'.,;c~i~y~,~w;;"~~========~-'===========~ in tho~e cities share the same[~ WESTMINSTER -William E. Hablin, vice president of Union Bank v.·iiJ be the speaker Thursday at the meeting of the Orange County Taxpayers Asociation. The session will open at 7:30 p.m. at the Keystone Sav· inas and Loan As!OCi1tion buildin1, Beach and Westmin1ter Boulevards in Westminster. airways. "II makes for some pretty confusing and frustrating situations. "What's more." said one veteran police dispatcher, ''it make~ for some pretty noisy radios." Toni Egan, ;idministrative .services officer for the county communirations forct> which coordinates the entire network of law-enforcement airways in the county. said the new UHF idea is ~till 1n the formative stage~. ··in recent werks wr have Sl'llAL SLICED WHOLI Olt HALF HAMS " . . . So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone'~ Dur """" ,,., tn1 Hn11I corn-fld lcw• DOrt!..I•• -Dvr tlOw fl''I' turlnv m•lllCO, rt•I w1,co1111n hkkt•v '"" •11t1!tw.al ,,,_lnl ,,.. .»~Oii' ovtn ba~inv i.onev 'n 1olct tl•I• t r• un!Ql;t In 1fl .,.. world Se dtllclii"' end •PPtll•lnt ..,, 1u11 wovllln'I kr.ow llew tt'. lmprtYI i!llJ ptOllLJCI wt•vt bffn INlk'M fir Jt YHfl. St lrt l 11~, IOO, from top to bctlom '' tnol ••<II dt ltct1D1t vnl!wm 1lk11 CID k re..,.vlf 1norti•otv. Comp1tio1y N~lf 11111 roffy " 11no1. OJ-••r your Honey l!lokM Mom !0111y, •11 1,,.,...tvrt Ill Mn..lfYINflt YtV'lt ....... ll•tt!. RITA.IL ITORll J70I I . C1a1t Hlthw•y, Carena llf1I M1 ........ 7,.._ 1222 S. lrMkh vr1t, An•helm 6JS.2411 • BEMl·ANNUAL GREEN TAG TIRE SALE! 2 WEEKS ONLY MARCH 22 ·APRIL 3 SAVE from~3.80 to*32.80 ON 4 TIRES DEPENDING ON SIZE " BIAS PLY 111\E .•• ' NYLON D GENERAl:S ~-,lOM COi 4·Pl1 JET-AIR 1ll 1rta1ALl.S all!. wtt• ~·· 9LACllW~l.l.u TUl!L!SS ILACKWl.Ll 2 'AO T"'""' fir .. Wh1ttw1ll s.,. 6 !10-13, 6.i~., 4 Fn1 ....,., 11M• 1. B11r1~11a1s, !..•"'· •rt• Cll• .. 11••. co"''" Cc11~11· Dl r1t , ,1lrl111t1. Mu1ttnf1, l',11lt•re1 ,I~. f:1 f l ( II $1 II l "<I $1 ft ~II '"" d•••rnllng o" 1tll TUBELESS BLACKWALL 2 'A5 '"'"'" IOI".. Wn11ew1lt SilDI 7 7$·1•, 7 1$-1$ '•It mot! ""'ll••,•d<>•• c nov1• .. ~,., 11 •• Dodg11, Fotdl. Pll'lflOU(ftJ r oo [• T~• ••I~ 14 1"<1''11 ~·· 1"1 d•C•r>d•~o en ••II 2 f1r 150 ~uh~~~!~t S1tt1 8.25· 1 '. 8.2!>-1!> • •h moi1 Cn••Y•· Oad911. f .a~ •. fo101, t.o1rc111r•. Plymo111~1. ~ll'o "fCI, l!l~oc\ $ptcl1l1. l ·ll•d t fr~ f• 11~ 1112.31 1,.. 1131 ,.., "'• d•P•nd,nv on '"* If 11·1 G111n T1111d ... IT'S ON SALE! 'II• CMIC•. Sliavlf 11vt fllf"1 &I Ifft\' Int 111t1 or lint• rw11 tllool 'url~1 1~1, '"'~I. .,, ,.,11 ~o"or '"1 erdu1 fl'''' ~o• "-' tvt~r1 at llYttJ 11 t~r1ih'l<tl1t'll p•lte ~ .. c•d •• 1110·..,.n 1t G1nt tll l ift tl11r11. Charge it at General Tire ... 'om!Ml•l•~•lv '"Ci d 11 lndeHnd1n1 11111111 0•1Pl•y•n1 thl G1n1•1• 1•1n GENERAL TIRE Don S•edlund COAST GENERAL TIRE ''' w. 1ftll, c: .... 1111 ... l40·S711 •4l•IOJJ AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE ,,,., Jffcll la•l1""1, H111tl11tttt 1 ... 11 .. , ....• STORE HOURS 7,30 AM-,,oo PM Mon. thru S•t. '----------------YOUR SAFETY IS OU~ BUSINESS---------------"' I ' ' • ' s :(0 D•llY PILOT You1• ltfoney's lfo1·tl1 Youngster's Life l11sw·ance OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tln91 for Mond•y, March 22. 1t71 fl•-MIN• k'I,.,.. ......... llieft• •I .,,.,,.,u~ t am ,,.,.. 111.t.SD. l'Tku .. 1111 IMlllM r.,.11 w l!Mrll~'-IMl'kM•• .,. -~ Complete-New York Stock List A vailahle at Low P1·emiums • •••••••m11t l•~c111il" Mt ,.,._ fflLfJ 1°. •Ml 4111 .. hi AcfMCleY It Ac~ Mk! hi Sy SYL\IA PORTER On their gr;indson s 5th birthdav re~ntl} • hep cou pie we know bought hlf1l as a &lft a $10 000 )tral.ghl lire lnsW'ance policy -v. tth !he pledge that t.bey v.ould pay the premiums until the boy reaches 2S aod 11.ould arrange 10 have the: policy paid up 1n1med!::itely should they die before that date Young Dick. s parents v.ere less than delighted lf any Jife insurance 1s Lo be la.ken oul ' grumbled the dJSap pointed rather it should be on m) hfe not Dick s I gave that bov the best ~present I could think o! said the e q u a l 1 y dlSappo1nted grandfather and neither my daughter nor her husband understood it at all ' lngs habit for the child In thu case our triend plans lo pay the premiums until the boy is 25 Hr also ha~ taken out an 1nex'P'Jls1ve p<1)0r benerlt cove r age which will v. a1ve I h e prenuums until the boy LS 25 should our friend die (You have to be under 55 yl':ars old to be eligible for this I Al 25 though the boy knO\'IS rte must take over and start paying for his protection t 4 ! This policy might be partit'ular/y valuable 1n times of emergency or to help rmante the child s education The $10 OOU policy will ha\ e a cash value with paid up ad d1t1ons of $2 ~ when Dick reaches 25 He could borrow this amount at the low guaranteed ralts charged oo hfe lllSurantt po I Jc 1 es NEW ~'J!,K !AltJ Svc l .. o IUO "'1tn U )f .. St 0U111lec f'o f \io ::: .J~G1 ~ -Tl\f W. 1111 •Y Giii 1 I ~'>Oii lil ll t U 1411 Un \::HK 4\lo ... .__ JO; ,.... nd Id I• • ..i.r..i rt." "', ,i~ Sl'r.Nlill\lt ~n •'•" n'•· ·.~ 1111!!', .ll: ·.~ Mmlr .. \lihenevtr he. Wl:»IC\I. cou l'll•lloNI s.c .... 111ri .K lk .. T,. ... .. y - a....1 ... 1 Anti WH I t.1 tli 10 S •I Wt! U!t 1 ""Uf l""llf \.> lb A.= .. Mt:'l' r :;el his Ol"D rep i 'i men t "" ct11<1t.-111111. ttt.n s ~. SoNE r.i •V. ~ u E v1• io.... ~,. .,. ~ •·'•dul< lf\loJtlMt .. ll'ICl\lt Gl,1tff11 W l!.• .. ". !:'.w ,•,• •'•" 11\t 111y, USI -· -~ 411 r, A lofn In( ~· 1ri.1 llOCkt. G ""' ... 1.\\ '"" Un \ II.lo n. Air ,., .. ,.,. ('I •nd of course this life ••nk •rwl T1w1 ·~ R,1111 n' fu •n '" in-11-. u~ "• ,. :u 2•" Alr 11.a 2Gt 11 /1 111 8111<1 •!\ S1ot .v I'<: lflh 11 .... !iNc••Y •Ii ~-VIII IMI 11\lt .1'!1 AJ lnOul"llU insurance ts protection for the ht a tv• 10\!o 11 GOOd L~, ""!" Sl•rwb·n ~' l! v.n1v C.1 11 AillOIJ• 1, I h lEmp l f: H,.., ' ' \.lo I'd •31• UV. V•n Air I"" t~ Alt Gtf 1 1t parentsshouldthelrch1ddle 111v. •• , 1ov. ~110E~r .. ,: ~'\i.$::ii,H,!~ ~r,::~~~=~' ~m:z=::t.c',.'.11' The ramiflcatlons or in ~~~ ~ t1ot H" r•M ~ ''' tv. su...,• 1 "' .a.1 v.n1rw1 2•v. 21 .t.111ertfM _,., Sutlnct for Children are not ~~·H:: ~ l:t fr"MI• =.It~ =~IT~ 1l\.t l~V. ~':.IW!Pv t~\11 t!t ~(I" Alum I II I rfff'I t.lt 1n,. ! s...,.r E1 l !$'4 11n 8tl 11~ 1~ A~=, .:. generally known Just lO F1c1ur111tf17~ qv. r1111 11:e 11 2 ~ r1ME oc u l\lr w .,,. ,v. 3h .i1AmL .J* lustrale if you have group ,...,, ~~"111~ "" G~:. "':~ ~ 1i~ :=:r: 't 2~v. :r... ~~ l:~ l~ :J:::~~ ~ n1ec.l1c3l insurance you might A~ ... ,.,, 1r1.o 1•u G 1~1"1 7\\ 1~ 1•uor • 2\\ ,.,,. wt1111 11:1 11" n Al'" 1111 ,,, choose to insure your children !tU ·~ :C: :$ =~~f .~ 1£: i~ !~~,:w~ 1~~1;?" :i~i": :~ l~ ~)~.~'•jg tndlVldUally Aller 11111 JI\ l"" :!:'t1edJ F n ~ 14 l~~= ~ lt\ll ~~II~~ \~r :t~ :J1f!11~tll~ 111en you could extend or Acu•1111 ,. 2;.,. 'i'"' Ht 11 e':' :1 ~ Jh '"'111111 21.,. 2211o w11a1 ,. 1111 ti.:. Alllldltr 1 411 :"~' W ll'At 17~ Hff> App I 6YI Tt• Am0 2'-th W'I" NA 6\lo6Vi A.I IN Sur. increase the benefits to pro-"4v 1~01 41, '" H111ot 1~1 '"' 41\ T,....m A 1v. 7YI m Mrt .._ ~ •1r.i" " II d I I '" >• '"' 1,. E:IOl>m t't 101\ Tlln~ Co >• I~ W•• '"' ,,, .. 1••1 A , •>Ao! ,. 1-t you-• a e q ua • y ,, .. ,",-,, ,,, _,, _, .. ~ -,.,_ '<r<: ,., .., ,.. -' ~ T\U11y In f \'ll 10 11 $1 Ur '"' 214 A.ldi•,. Ctm against the costly bru1Ses and A10.. +f<I •1oo •l'I ... .:_K, •,•, • • '°*' T111n G" •h +t~ w1stN1 1311. 11\6 Alco• ''° A.IOttll n Ill\..... 1 ! 11~ Toll E Le ""' v. W• .. md •:Ho C\' Am•l5w• I IMI hospital v1s1tg which are: part :i~111cU> ,~ ~r' ~:':'1 i!.,~ ~ 2~.,.. l~::i-~ 1~ 1;1 .. wl:'i %~ 21.s4. J~ ~"i, r.10 of vour child s grow ing up Alden e 1>,o • "",~,,,", lf 411 T''"'° o 1~ 2011ow1K ~L 22\'i tti. Ami~tu G~ A < LIMI I I I I~ T )Motl H •'ill ''4 Wdwrd \. 291') llO AmtH Mi How you apply th1~ talt: IS A ~ten ... :i:H¥•tt Cp lP.. ll • rlco "" :>ll't 3''4W11e1w E ?\\ 2-. M1rF11tr· I A'' • ,,~ ..,.. Hv1n In! ll\O lJ\1 rr1t11lr J\.t 3'1\ Wr oM W .~.,,, l l\IJ Am A rlln IO up to )'OU entire v Bui you Aii: e::~, ;1• ;,\;Im•" 3v 111t 12v. Trltn OG 5\1 ~ vrd~ E • 404 All•ll•• 06G should at least known ll'hat s A vn 111e ,...,. u111 1;:;,••,.,. ct. Jt: ,:~! Tv110111 F 12h tl\' z1onu1 e ,,~ l•v.. :,,,'ii":':, 'i~ A.lot trm l • l \'J "' f'I• fU Am c1,. 2 20 available and what olhers are A11rwim, '" j , l~::'" 011~ •< JL. .., ''" P11 J~ h """ "' • I ' ,, Am ,.,,,.M doing so you ca.'.1.. rdeac an :~ t~ ~. ~ ~:••t:ni 1~~ in_: MUTUAL ~Ef::J; 11~ 1nteJhgent lnfOrml;\j eclSIOD :~tE':oo .!t• '~ :~:~": f_" !11'\ U\'J A rv$/lfY "int 1w1n •"••' •'•·' '•~""v'•••••\Jl' Arn ~Ill Jol>U "L•l1 C ... A.m F11r" •It '\II ~ Mo>> < >•'• >>"· A. bl •I QoQ Actually both grandfather and father y,ere right and v.Tong The hrst and top priority 1n Ille insurance must go to adequate CO\erage lor tht bread\\ inner And since Dick s mother hasn t earned a penny since he \\aS born and the family is having a tough stn1ggle on o n e paychttk 1n loday s 1nflat1on our fr1end5 could ha\e been a little less or1g1nal 1n their gift lo Dick And 1f they "'ere determined to give a life 10 surance policy 1l should have been to their 25-year.old son tn law More Firnis Cateri11g To Senio,. Citizens "' ., "" ,,.,,, OUt lVHI Am Gr1oe1 JI • ~•"" lnl Jy1 .i~ ~tu UNDS A.OUVI Pl;U. " Me<! {II 19\1 .,h Otlkl s 1~:. F ···~· .~ "'n Telr. ~H• 2• t 11 Sol.It I 11,i._1 3•'"•• Am 1;p n.d A.n Weld ]\llo 11'.l'I JICllb1 F • A :~~.!.: 1 .!,' ~ J1 .. u1n c 1~•: 1!,. ~,,,~~x,-:,.rP.o AA''4 In IOI! I•" ',!:::.,••,> > " > A " " •• _ .. , lw I~:. ll!!:m:l m n ' .lO "''' ill<! ·~• 1 J•~tbY JO'At ljli A. Hon!f, I 10 jlt,fO M1y 11 1 12\lo Jll Fdt :n. U " Homt Pl t "rMMol' n h lJ Joi I'll M 20\lo ~ NEW YOlllC i"'P) I"" CoA. U-'l uto "m 1-fosD 1j ArllWtG 1.#l'I U\6 ICDI C1t 2 2\'o -TM IOllOW .... 'I-nY Guld t 11 t 11 Am lnv1t A.r~Y In ' \ 'lo KM> .~ u • 1' ltll-IUPrled lw """ .... " 11 \3 ff A Med Ctl t On the other hand our rr1end5 are doing l h e I r daughter son m law a n d grandson a tremendowi favor by buying that pohcy so early in Dicks life Since millions of you \\ 111 be directly or 1nd1rectl} affected by this tale, here are five key reasons why \ 1) You can buy basic in sW"ance coverage on a child s life at extremely low rates This SlO 000 policy on a five }ear-old boy costs $112 90 an nuall) and $6 less on a girl because o! her longer life ex pectancy In contrast ex plained Robert B Hamor, senior VICf: president of Con Unental _.\ssurance Co , a subsidiary of CNA F1nanclal Corp lh1s $10 000 policy on a 25--} ear-old man would cost J l17 90 The boys pohcy will be \\Orth more in cash value and d1v1dends through! hts life Al age 65 the five year old s pohcy may add up to S8 000 more than the 25-year old .s !2) The basic $10 000 policy Is set On top or this you can guarantee the child the right to continue and add to his hfe insurance starting at age 25 -despite any illnesses or accidents 1n lhe 10ter1m which might otherwise dis- qu alify hLm For instance sa~s Hamor for an extra $5 8U a year you could guarantee the child the right to buy $10 000 or hfe insurance at age 25 plus an add1t1onal $10 000 everv three years after that unttl age 40 -a total of $60 000 1n additional insurance t3) The insurance establishes an important Sa\ ff Y•• .,. ••t -.i11t An-r•lllJ s.Mc:• y,, .,. Ht ....,,.. ort .t Y••r C•ll1 TELEPHONE ANSWEl:INCi IUl:UU 835-7777 NE\V YORK IUPI) -The men ~1th computer 1n1nds and keen eyes for sales figures 1n lhe corporate ledger are starting to pay more attenuon to oldsters \\ h1le 1t s true lhat nearly halt of the country s popula lion 1s now under 2a and the youth trend 1s growing 11 also is true that some 20 milhon Americans aged 65 and older spend at least $40 b1lhon annually Because of earlier retirement more l 1 b e r a I health benents and medical breakthroughs their numbers also are growing Senior citizens now account for about JO percent of the 111at1onal population 7 5 per cent more than a century ago Mo~ and more companies are starlmg to cater to the oldsters The Colonial Penn Group Tnc spec1ahzes 1n servicing the Insurance travel and temporary emplo~ment "eeds or people aged SS and up The Philadelphia based firm organ1ied 1n 1983 ma1nlv to supply accident and bealth Insurance has expanded into the hfe and automobile in su rancc needs of the genatr1c set The druJt field 1s another one hea\ ily supported b v oldsters !91:ore than 43 percent of all people using drugs are SO or over and 37 percent of the Iota! population are tn that a,ge range according lo Don \Valsh assistant to the president at \\I R Sim mons & Associates Research Inc a marketing and media research firm \Valsh sn\ s this 37 percent ()r the popu!allon buys 29 per cent of 1ht COSlTIC!lCS in the US Not up lo the drue. figure but still substantial said Walsh The older generation also 1s a hea1 y supporter of the luxurv car market The ;nerage Lincoln Contlnental bu' e1 1s ~ vears old a Ford spokesman said 1 000 1 Of OIL PAINTINGS WHOLESALI WAllHOUSl OPEN TO THI PUILIC. 50°/o OFF lilt I 101110(11: SA.MT,\ Alll ,.,,.,,,, us 4161 • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--_:_o••••••••••~•'_"•~·~·~'~'~''..'._ _ __'I ~ 1000 ORDER \;~. Beautiful Stick-on YOURS \ LABELS TODAY! ______ _, • Stylish • Efficient Order For Your1oelf or • Friend M•V W 1t•f'tl 1111 fnWt!Ott\ •• ,._,..,.n """ itO '-"111 "' • .... , ~•nllr •1 Ide n • 1 .,.., 110.11 11~ m• -no po """" !'"" ·~~II •• -.1 01erO• -Ill el( I •!:I*• I le' °" , '" ,,., m•v IMl "''"° ii "''"Int ""mt C•"~"' lot~ llf-,t,11 """' •tt orlfl l'I Wlfll 1lyt!t11 YOO\OI 1rM Oii , .... _.,, wlll • ~ .. _ ------------------, r---::.!l>lllllft"""". ··~~1111lwt11,1 M. I I p .. r Pr,.tlllt l.•"'I O• P O •~~ lJM I I Ct!!• Iii••• C1lof ,,..,, I I I I I I I I I I I I I i PILOT PRINTING J L---------------------- • FREE BONUS • With every or1'er of L1bel1 we wfll 1n<l'-'d• fr•• 11t of Padt.11• M1 ilfng libels § • H ,., ... ... • ,,,. N•TIOM AIMC~ '"""'°'' Gr-" Mtlc ~ l.«I ,,_ ·•»I.,.' K•lj.l'r St 2fto 21l'o t ~ of Se<urlrltt 105 nd! '" 5 ll A Ml Clx DI • A.vd1 11?11l'IKtllSlpl 20,.21 0.•ltn Inc ''' Mui 102.!ltl•A.mMolOI'• On the other end of the ::rcni:1 ~·.~",',·~~~ 1N, .. ,N,,~1111 •rlc11 ,, wMc~ ,.ro. '"' '''"N"G•• 210 I I I G h d .. _,, ., ••.. lhe11 ll<Ur1tlt1 Slocll 20 I» 21 to ... .., Ph<lto 16 rave sea e rey oun gets ,•,•o,",,', is • u' K•t• G•n J•z , ..... ..,1d <bia1 0, t>ollll'lt s. "' , 11 , to"'"''°" d.i11 I I I I ) ' 7 I KtY'm >> ,,, (t tktd) Molld'ly "'' .. , 1 S7 I U ....... ~." .n a ot o saes m1eage out1,1c1Ar s s.,~K•••T 111011,. ,,~ Aikln,,v_.•wi ,','"'"5~"mSm;1~16# Of oldsters WhO have ltme to ::~er~IC lJ~ ~~ ~:'~t Cp Jlo l\O A~rdn 1 it t J9 lvv'P 1 :If 1 jt A.mSoA.lr 70 ride and hke to see something ::~ t1,:11 ll.~ ~l~ ~~iwct""' 3' ! ~ MG~~~ty i;u0~•175 j~":"k Jl,t 2~ ft~~:~ t" 10 along the way A bus ticket ::.~~ ~ 4 • ..:~~:!:If sec n~ tt1: := ; :. ,:;~ K~l't'!' F,i::• 1 611 ~s1i1:~t/S ... also stretches the Social 81umr11 '°'' ""'Kev• F o 1,.., 11"' Ad~!'" s s• • 11 cut a1 1t 1120 01 •raT wt BIYIS Mk 1J'eo 24 ~ 1( .... 1 Cw• 14\~ 1~0 Atllll Fd 10 °' 11.oJ Cut fl2 20 IM 21 u "m Ta T 2 fO Sect1rlt) dollar 8-hm :Q ... ~,,. KtY11 PC ... 101') AUIUlld 111 I u Cu1 ., I S2 'JO AW"Wll fO A b I" t l>eetr.e F 6 l'AIC"9 In! ·"' ,'.AAlll•Al>mt " ,11 t Cui 1(1 llM 1nAW plfl?S SU stant1a percen age D!l>I ~10 '" IY Kl11ts El ,. .,. r IJ f l Cul K2 SM S 15 Am Zinc I Cl IP 1 9 '9 1H~Hat '4 ,.. K~Cp 1 .. t Allit1t1 lllMJlll Cu1S11tn20n "'mero"" 0 0 on1a enn !!! tit!• l•o •I •11\1 KNIP Ve! 1S. 3' "'Phi Ff n 1( 13 27 CUI S2 10 ., 11 11 Amtltk "' f 170 II e lllOD lvit 9.,. 10 ~ .... "'. n :ia~. )9 A.mc.p '5~ 7 lJ CUI Sl I If I ,, AMF Inc to revenue o m1 ion cam s uP~ w 11, n Lu ..r Jlt• ~ 6'A Am l\lf. 3 ,2 31 cuo s. Siil 550 "m11c eo from 5er\'JClng the OVer 55 11, ,',·"" •, ·,~ ~t0M,._ Wtl 10 • lovi .....,. Dvln 11 lt l? 2l Pol1r l fS 4 JJ AMP Inc 64 '" .,. L ~· PO , .. Arn EllY s l6 l N Knlcllb 1 51 • )Q AtnloPan lllg market I. cc 0 r d t n g to bl(• till I :i. • J/\'o Lll1N CP 11\• JIU Amtr EurtH Knick Gt 10 °' 11 in A.mot• CM• lllXIUt El 2 • 2h Leh Co.I 2 ~ lllt. CtPll '°' ',, l-x Fd ' .. 14t Am•l•r 110 Cha1nnan John J Mac Wilham 1100111e<:, ',', "•'•~ ~e •• '~,, ,•, is.,,, 1~. 1ncm1 t tJ 10.s1 L1" Gr•~ '" 10.11 "m•tr on 15 o h llOOZ" ,..._ 111'> 12\.o tiwtU ,11 tN lt.o lltch ll0117S7 Am1t1r 1'161 Jr Auto insurance 15 t e llou C•P 11 . 11.,,,\.ln ac.11 11•11n1 S1>tcl '.l' LIO.riv 1 s1 111 Am•'"' llO fastest growing segment or~·~." jhJ;t::i~~ ~ '~A~'~";.,h :~1j!Jt1:: t~~ ~: ~t,~:::!..Ji 1 b n t S S Said brk1 S.:1 <S~t l6';o Loi! Ctlv 1~• 2•1 A.m 111~ s 1' s 76 \.Inc Ntl 11 ti 1111 ""'" Hoc;;k 1 our USI 11rwn9 A.r 11v.1•>11..09 Er11 11417'.•"m Mui tS510 4.I LIM 476 ":::i"ra Svc! ~lacW11!1ams 0Me re a !Ion 11,',',",,':. I"' 19tt Lynch c 16~ 16.\I AmN G1n l '7 319 \.c-.otnl• s1v1e1 : Cf.1•,• > ~, ... I If 17 Mtd GEi 15 ~ 1,• AM nor Group '•"•ti 32 25 l125 A:~· ,0,,/ perhaps Js that the company t11Kkev1 11 . UloMtl ''" ,!;~,,.· c.,, 111 t ss C•Plt 11111111,,, , •• , -·.J 8u11119" l '> 4 Mt ill!tV .,... Grwl~ 11 .J'f 12 t:1 Mui U IO U 10 ,,c -sells a pohry guarantceu Burn ~ m :kl\'O ~ i.1111crt JTV. IO lncme I ll , u Luth ero 11" 13 " ._ af 1 so bl I 80 r CIC LMi 10"° l!Mt lflOI'" C IV. 1:\0 Ft! 1,,., t 2110 14 Mt9111 In 19 7 '" A4,RA,5vc 1 06 rene\l:a e up o age I C•1w1v 11>t n1~ ., Mft !f.! ~ v.,,1 ., ,, •1 M \.lllh era 12 nu" A.r~t!N o:f 1 the applicant holds a vahd ,','':!.tit•"•, .fo,•, ,', • .,,•,•-,,· ..,.., " As.ir°" • n 5,, M'l1r11 111 •" •,, Arch 0.11 1 "" ,. 11'A ll'4 A.•1 HOUthlM M'IM!n S Jl 5 to Ar 1 PSv 1 ot hcense and has not been con-c,,·~,-., '• "•'",'·· "'.,~~.. ~ n F""" A s 12 1 u Mk1 Grtn 1 " 6 '' "•••n• 0 sir k " ro "" 27 21'16> Full<I 8 I Of I )I Mt1>ttn1111 I Co Arion R: ty[)\I \ lc~ed for drun en dnv1ng Cop Ml•• 2• 241'1 MMlc H ,,, t ' s100:1c 1 21 1.. F 11<1 1 s.1 •,. Armco s11 , r I CIP Swl'I I~ f \0 Med M I 2•" 15'.lo kl Cl • fJ S 2S lndtll 6 11 7 25 A me Df 2 lo narcotics or a eony C•pl"A' • •loMtdt~ u li•B•IM011 tit ''' Min l1ltl1'1"rmrp1j 7J CIP TK l \• lll>Mt[ld 111 ll"' l1Mlo11yrelf 155 t l4M•H Int 15'416 11 A mu C• ao Mac\\11lhams cited several C•' CP ifo S'r' M• er E11 P.o t lttcon u ..so 1• 50 M•u G111 n li5 u 13"' mCk p13 11 h lh Id I Cart b l l"' lVJ Mdt.CW 20,~> .. lt.1er1 l(M t l~ t1•M111 Tr 116'1'00,o.rm R:11160 reasons W V e o s e r c1r1 Gro ?•11 ''l Mldld C• ., l 11.-k G111 1 n T.56 M• e1 'SJ '.u "' o corp '° mark.t will grow n o t ,c,m,~'!Gc ',..,' • ',',~ M•lct,1.!•,, J• ,n. 1ond11M 11• 1 JJ Mtthtr' ll '2 u n A.r~ln Ind 1 "•" n """' •• I fllltteft SI 131 tUMlclA. Mu 5to 1.'SA1Md011120 decrease R1s1ng Social Secur1 ,".~!?, ,, ',,l~ u,,• •.,',', ~ •• , ~ ss !loll F.sn 11 67 lt ,, MOa<t• CP 11n11 .. "'r..io Pn '° ... ., l ' 1J flollon I 'S t2J~1 130Sl'.2<1 I.std I". tw IY benefits are one factor ce .. y LIO 10!1 11~. llff tn 10 \ II llrwn Fo l IM • 20 MIF Fd 'OS t 11 ""d OG I 20 Clltnct A 21 27\~ MPh G• lSlo ~. lulkK• Ctlvl" M F Giii Sn 6 It "'net Trt'IS<I E\en more s1gruf1cant i~ lhe cn1r1 011 1\9 6\.'IMl11 ttT 1s\\ 16 1111 c• 1s1211.uMuus GY 1111111"20 "'1111-1~ proliferation of pension plans ~:::S~ ~"11 1:1~ 1J" ~ .. A11K11G 1~~ 1~; ~1~" 1~,t 2~ ;~ :::;~ ~~ 1i~ 1~ ~ !\1~)'..."e1 ~'1 ClllHU! u.11 ModSc 1 ,r. Nt1WS101ll7SMU1Sh1llt:ll''l"''Jllcllld' As recently as 1950 only en 11r1c1, 15 11;:, Mollwk It '4"" 1.s.., "1'1' v111 16 n 11 31 Mu• T"' 11ntv111 A1IJ1,n l'fJ 11 25 perttnt or the working ~~111:S. 1;~ '1~ =·c~· :~~ lm~r~0Fd 1J=1:u1~!\A /-:Ou1 ~~UlY~ !l1J1~11'hJ1lo poru•lation ••as covered by cnri,s ., I°' lot Moore s tit• 16'-ii C111mr IJ!' t a "111 '"'"' Ser 'i •• '"""' ' l"y " Cllrn Ml'I IHoU\!:LMMrlll IC ,",,,•lJ~ftPlt Inv ~'1 l tS Dtltn ll "11-":r';1 1~WO':,/ Pn'at. pension Plans With c,•,•,m,,u,,", 211o. 21~Mt1• ''" _,. '''' '"' \ .. 111 •ond 510 551, • 24 1'"'1 Mt1Tr WI I I • Ctn! Sllr 1 .., U 04 0 vld • !1 4 tl urMI ~• total assets or $12 btlhon .!!Sid CC trk Ml lO >0\6 Motch fl\ 5'\ 4l~ C~1n11!nt Funds G wtll t 11 lO '1 !~:=l~D~~ T 1"1fl9 I 1+.MolCub 17111\ l ttn 11 11n•1 Pl Sit 75' l lO .... .,ceCorlt ~fac\\11lhams o day ap-c11 .. n 01i '• J'" Mu• .. n•, n • com s1 1 11 1 •s l"'om s.s2 1 OJ Avco'" wr t I h Ir th I Clow c~ 201-; 21 Murpn ,. ~• >:i4 Grwtll 5 " s ts Stock I "' t.!S AV<o ora it! proxima e Y a e popu a Cot•• '5 ... MYer \.'E :M :µv, lncom 11• ,_.. N11 Grit! ''s 10 '° "v"" Pd i<1 t h h I t d Collin l"d 11 11\.'J NCC ll'MI I ~\ SPK! 1 11 2 1M Ntuw Cel I JO 'tt Avnt In< ion ave I IS pro ec ion un er co1<>r1 s r' J1 Jn, N• •• C• 11 ~ n~ c1111e Gr flos Neuw Ft1 n °' n 119 Av el pl 1 a $120 billion umbrella C~m c' SI ' S•\• N• Cl JI " 10 l CIP I ) 7l I <&S N•w WICI ll '2 .. 61 "'"on Pd 0 Coml ~h 11~ It~ NII Gl.O 11~• n I Ful\d ',,It.to N-!on 15..SI 1, ts .i.ztec 01 )JI Economist Roger E Pt1urrav ~=:: ... G;•, ~~. ~! .... ~.rr~ "~ ,fr.' s~~i!..i ,t: n:: ~~~.:t"• l~ ~ l;~ or the Teachers Insurance & c,,~. ~.",h 121• n•o Nt! I.AM 3li 36 • SPK t.5'1' 0 .. Ocntoll 1 51 1 51 ,.-l~o l•!1 N "•tent IS II lltmcl 11 U If tJ OmtVI I n 119 811>ctV SO Annuity Assooation predicts ',•• ,c'" 16 1'\, N ~dhn 1 1, 11•, Co1on111 100 Ful\CI 11 •115 11 Bt~rOUT u mP n,1 l o ,P,N1t S-F o Jo Eciuty •u •IS,101 Ful\CI t7J10'311I GElll that by 1980 the number prir Cmo• Tee 1, eu Hit s11v on. '\ F""" 11n12 4l one Wm5 u n u.s1 1 • ..,,,.. "unt II •·<• hCOn>ro• 2 • 3 NEftf'GF 1"'11f~ Grwl!I •.51 711DNtl 1Jl61l21 1!a119Ppf l tected V. I UC "" percent Wit (Oft P1p 22 • ,,Vi l\TJ Ntl ('; lt ... '"\ '"'°'" 'IO 10 " °""'"" I 3' '11 8k OfC1I 1 3' I r bout *"NICO<'IRoct ll n Nlchht1F Jl o J!l;; Vtnt S).S515Dpp A.Ml1llllJJ811\kofNY ! penslOR asse ~ 0 a ·-'°"''•II ,,, "'Ni.tin • " "'l,(; ~o Grt~ 13 5? ll S'IDTC Sec 10 IO 11.52 fllllll Tr 'M bill On COOl>fr L r1 21 \ N el1n 111 """ •J1A oms Id s 2J s 61 Pict Fnd 11• t 01 l1•b0 l lll I Cortf'I( J', JJUHoC1r 111 lli1 l• Cw!h A.8 1'4 l.56P•ul Jl tv '02 tU e1rdC" r51 'Wh I I I r I I Cor11 s •• S\~NEu DJ ,. J'lt Vllh c ,,, l t•P~1111 SD 1•7 1nfle11c fJC tO a ffi()S lrln~ a1 0 Ca>m Yr t\o 10 I NW Na•G 10 '> 101. Camp A.I 10 1111 131P1 Mui S 10 S 10 l•s C p!l JO 1eahze •said ~1ac\V1lhams c,':!,',, u IS'l<NWPSv ''l '' comoet 1u 1t1Pni1 1s1•61o1B•~sMlg v• 15~3' Ne•• Co '' •• Ccm• !ti t ..i 10l•P ••m lOltlljS Btu Ml 1>!1 1s I hat the older people c 11tcn 11 ' 1 • Nu It«: 1•\ 1J ~-Fd 10 25 11 u Ptne s1 12 Ot n 01 •"",.,"' ,", ,0 Cut!e F f•lO lvvM 31 o't'l OtlUlk 4!5 ,.,pkifl E11I 776 I d '"11 I>.-rnttrket IS made of peoplt 111lh Cvpru c ti, •, 01o1o "" 10, 11>. conc11ro u .. •v•H p on F"'l u 10 JJ lj ll•~fthLb IO ' future Oo.•M•• •.~ ,,•• ,',"•. •,,",!,•,,r 11 ? ' lco"IOI 111 12 w 12 so P11n 1 .. v 11 u 12 1 ::~~ LlF, ~ ., ., "'~ ' Cont!fl 0 Ito 7J.1Plklrth 1l.'.161•IO O > l r r :: 0111 (:p II II' pf,,, .. ll ,, c~u Ml 112 1)2 ... f(t Fur\d1 •••i:r,1 The average man o ..., De, 0t1 J, s ODUc Toe s • ' •cont Gtn 10 o 10" Grwtll 16 312' 31 ~::~~;" 1 s& today can look rorv. ard to 23 8:,: ~~ ~" 3f! g~~t11 i ~ 1~ : Z~1: i.dr. il !1 l!1: ~ ~~~ ~r :J ;;~ 1:~~,1~ rs more years of Ifie \\ h11e the 8:~·, n F: ~ ~ ~~ 8!.':; Jr '~ : 'i . ~~~ :81i ~:: ! ~ ~': ~~;;1 10 ~~e:t ::i:~·~ IO~ womans life expectancy 1sc0,•1•,,M,, ,',' •,•,••,,",,,",', 15 1J••1ev1n M 10to10toPevdnt 501 141 8,1o~ot1 '°" " 51 s.IU. Ot IWtfl Gro"" P 11 SI,. 10 1911 to lltl H<1w IQ 1hree years longer than that " Oteor In 1 ~ 1" P1c G Jlo 211 'l'O'" Dn11 12Mll11 PYtn•m Fund• 1111 tn1 co~ Dt• O "e .,,, 19\~ P•kco 5 • 5 • l>tlw~ 13 y H a. EQu I t 10 I &5 lemlt Co 00 ~larket1ng men are beginn ee nr ·~ 11 • t H~ P'""o1 1 • r.r. D~t• 111 1 s.i Geo•• 1• n 15 11 1,r..r1• 1 ~ Del CanT 1'017lo '"•"'°ll 0 l • l l Dodli Cox tsll\51) Grill 105011.Alflel'ldl~ pf) 1ng to realize !la1do.1 11 21'•'J i .. •r•D 12 .1'""°D•e•t1 ut•l•t• 1""°"' 1utu11.ne1co11111 h DoN•Y E 31 0 P••'I H I ~ t 0,.,.1 Fd 12..SO\l lnve1I 7fl 1728tMI! pl550 Mac\\11lhams I at ~ e n Io r D 1m c " , i1 P1 tv G• n 21 \ ore'f'f Lv u 11 u ts v1111 t.55 ,,, ll•MI ,.u 10 C,11,ens far rron' •• ,., 8 00 >,•,",j-jlt,o s'>•' '• '•'•> •,,,'! IU, t !110<'IJ.How•roS llOYll 1 JI 1" lt"9Uf! UC ,, ,, 11 2) • 11 1n 10 1! 11 11 Jlevtr• I I ttll 2l flflltUfl In b.lnch 01 'outsiders nowc0•,,1c;._,1n,' ,• ,•,••,,·~.",',," 1~• VI Grw111 12"1•:ioJ11 .. 1r11 t1061'1Jll1r~1Y Phtl ~· • \9 l•:li Inc om 114 1 t:I kllu$1r "fl\I SI lfl!I 511 1 70 conslllu!e a verv 1n group ~0';~1 L 1! , 1:1: ~::; ~ 1i\~ °ffh ri;-~ ,/~1\\ ~ Sc::,1o:111n:ur:~.u,.. e::C111 ~~ (f \\tlh s1gn1f1cant sales poten 0ow JC'\ •1 1•• Poerlt•' n ,:µ~E1>1rt1 1t1ut1 s11c1 l4SO.MSOll• Jol'ln '' Dllv t Dll 24 l•'i Ptnn Ptc '~ 1~~ Egrtl lJ O it 12 81 15 l"JU 99 8 lu ltul I tlal Dun• " D It~ 1' • Pt G& u 11\o r1•. Em•• Sc I 11 1 O'l Com 51 10 57 10 JJ •,•«,MA ?6 Oupl• Pel t o ,., Pt1>1! IW EM 1v ll •S ll 15 Stcu lly F1,1n1H !LOI! • 7Q Our ra" 1'" 11 ' Pe!>o!lt S' SJ ~ E"IPrw 1 61 1 n E•ulv l st 3 tJ 8 ufl I iot• IS El Pi n! I t t ""'"°"' ll'!, U E•llllY t410:)6 ln~HI IJ5 tO.O Bobble lr~I E••I Sh 1' I 15 Ph t Sub J)\ ,,,, E•lll Gt~ t 11 '" UI ,. 156 I 2'.:I 1001 ... Ce '° EOtrtl" I Sl• Pha <WI 8 • '"' E•ut Prt , 4' , tt St tc Am 10 00 10 H Bol1C11 2.SO Econ l•~ 's 26•P!td,.., A I 11•Ftl ld 10 .. U005tl 5ote:$ 16I0113JI-lr\d Educ Sv1 1' 1 ' P n~rl~ .. '' • Farm lu 10 15 10 15 Slf'll Q II I ll t" .·-.. 1111 .!,:ll El Pt•El 1• lllpP l In l>U ~Fltl Oes1 I ll Shim Fl 1!111111 M" "' Elbt s,,, 1't no Port H!C 11i.. 11\.1 Fldf nv Grouo Shetr jlt,p ll I .M l5 '•"''W"' 11;"' E oter 81 1•1 I Po111 M O '10 CtPll " Ill 13 t3 Sii Detn 11 7111 11 Mmt" F A I • El N11c 11 lt P oc P 10 l~"l, Contr f IS 1G 66 S!dt 10 Mll 06 1111 Edll 74 Or Ila lelm £1 rom ' S Po Go I l u • 1 Eli!~ 1116 1!41S11mt FUl'Mll IOI Ed 1111 M El Modul • J ', Pr~d M " ~ l Ev"I ll 72 l• '9 C•Pll t tolO I! IOUTll9 lflt E Ch"' •• 1 .. ,.ub l NM'' ~J\o Fflttl 1'1t1101 Trull t.ll101•1r,n l Alrw Em PS 0 1 It 1f , PuO S NC I Vt 11'' "u t.. 10 Jt !1 11 Sml h 8 10 Jl 10 l1 B0r~I·~ '1'°~ Ent•tV c J• )6 Publ)l\r r' -I Selem s 51 '°' SWSI Inv '•t 10 11 r y Er.ettY It 7 • n ' Pue?• i~ .. I Trer..r 1' 13 21 \4 sw111v GI 1 11 7 11 8rhtMv Pf 2 E"h" 11 ') S it llt11nfl JI~ "'"' Fl111nclt1 ,.rlll Saver l11v ll SJ U to lrtt .. 11 ?~ EP-CI Ill ll.o l t itutl) l'.•11 ~-' t>y,.,.. •..Sl I tl S...:trl 1 '5 I 16 8dWY Htlt 1 Eciult 0 11 11 • 11\1 Ot 11 CM 1• )J\~ tndu.t J ti 4 n SiFrm GI 4 M 'a.c 8~t1•t pll Erlf Tee 6 6\o AT S"o'I '"" I ~ "'om 4 Ot a 16 Slllt SI 41 OS 4.llO fl ... WYG 1 IO The neY.est merchandise E1ec .,;,. 1 , ', 11.10@"0 ,., 10~ 1~"" ve111 4.s1 , ,4 5~1".,..." Fund• e1i.1,.11uG • n FPACP 10 lO~lllht C It 1' Flll"lll 111t11." A"'lr\d 3tl•l5lllownCe vending machines and nearly ~fl c1co 1 1 • "'M"' I!' "' '' Fu t11veJto" """° ,. 115 A ewnsnrP 20 th l'•brl c•r 14 1s l!tvd• l'.o 1 • 1 • D .co t" t r1 F due: 1 u , 01 1-s11ee l 50 3 000 men who operate em F1b Ttti. '"" "' "'""'"" o 11 Grwth , "10 n stt,. Jlo. Fc11 trvn1w~ 1' II I th • h "' adv u• '~ Aecff Et 'l' '' stoc:• 10 Ot 11 °' fl•I 20.s.i it! S4 uo Er 110 WI converge II e nna eim "' rl"' i ,, I ~ A.e<:• 3~ »I• "• Mu n '1110 51 cao a-t 5.1 's.i 1::1 ~~ 111 s "-nvect1on Center T-.1arch 19' F n•H•v 11 • nv. •n~ l"~v °" u. F11 N•I 711' 161 s100:1e 14 n 11.s2 lludclet 1..,, \.N ~ n! Dr1 3" '\ Jltl Cr•d "II) '""' ,_.,1 Sit t 41 JQSO11 luH vltd l"v lhrf!Foro 1 lf 21 for the 10th annual 1'1,,.r111 "'" 1'14 Jl.lditT Pu ,., • ,.. l " ti C1P 1.n Gr h '$4 1 '' ewiov1w 60 l'tl llo<I 14\l UV. Potd F• I > .. ,., Flt! FllCI 5 )J SUmtt 11 (If n U IUftlir R:tmo Western Conference and Ex F11G Ats ''''~'ob" M '' 21 ~F11 Giii ''' '" Ttc11 110 •..so1111111• an i.o h1bll Of AUlOma\JC T-,!erchan FllP M,_ "' ,, ... ~''°'°" • •»itl\CI Glh •Jl •'7Stroc:r Cl 100711!11 ur! tncl l'CI ~',,'"•t·~" 7~~',',,',!e.",. 1, •, ',"';'F11<111Cit•' Gr-T11.11t ~noun ur lNor .Jli> di .Ing and F··• Ser">CO ,.-,,., "' ~ • Grwtn UOll7S2TMcll11 10111114 u11Nor orss UUU • F<I W" ~ 1 l JI"' S•ow l.1'11 )'> lroc:on'I ll tt 15 II rl!Chncl ) tJ 4 )D urNIY ,0 'lanogemenL II v.11\ be the Fl(~n• '1 ,. ... ~Ml I .,., ~l'lo MU't•I l fl f.llT""1P Gt JS11J7S1 urrct~! IO " F 1 T 1':t1 n ~ 11'• ~ctn D•' n, fl\ SllKI 10 1111 n Towr Mlt s S1 a ot &ulh univ ••cond consecutive year for"• w11ou • •'-'~('""El s ., SJ""•FtM11"1<1 101111•Tr•n c., 11t 1 11 .,... Food "' 4'> th ~chO!t tn ~lo ~11 Frtnkl" GrO!IP TltY EQ 10 n 11 11 the show to be held In Orange "o ot 0 I 1'" 20 ~~(I• Cell ~ ~ ONTC t ,. 1002 T\ltlOI'" Fd ll 4• ll 17 ~bet CD , • Form • S~• 6 ~<.cot• ~n "" "''' G wlh 1 .1-4 711 TwnC 01 1 n l '1 tcltr>« Ind Counly FMI GrM ,, ... ,, ~ ~(r 8't• H ,. 1A VIII ....., ''°' TwnC Inc 'OI • •1 ·1 Fllltft f'otom ~ '1' '<tr <lltl ' ' '1• troc:om 1 1t t (0 V11H MWI to~ 11 '3 I 111\n M?.i VendingcompanyexecullveS Fm-IC• '"I ~11ltd Po •Al'' F"tl rrMuf lOA.Slt UU11llll 10rtl12S tt110Jllll Frn~ln E 11 l ll'o .... ,1~ pl ,,~, ~v, Flll'ld !roe Cr• Union Svc Grp tmo JI fft andemplo)t.1[romlOWe!lern"'" 11 ,, l'-••l•CO'"I 1n ~11 Cl'fll'C •arto1J 1roH unuu •lflaSt110 """' co lit )Iv, •a,....11 F A I' lmNC I )D t C1 N1I ,.,.. I OJ I 1l C!M 8'11• _. states will attend business !':Al c.... •1, ''• • ..,,, " ' , •, ~nd Tri u .o ''" u11 cu 10 fl 11 11 con Ptc l )11 hlb I G1~ F't rt• Jll ~ SV< Gr• 6 • 7 ~ .. llot 1 tJ IAf ~111'1 ll nu as Ctntllt 110 scsslorui and v1s1t an ex 1 F""" ...,,. 1 •s , 1, un11.., """o' c1~br~11~~ h I h '' Produ-'• •'-Y t,. 10 St "4:cm I U I li (jf s ow ng mac 1n "''"" .,. S« 10_,., 10 n c°" er 13 u u 11 C1r1111e 10 •nd accessories of nearly 90 AH 111., 111 l'>UPICl!"tc11 JOOI emlTIHOlll<'•llr ,,ti '" c°" '"" 1100111s ~~oc,.01o,,1 !. l'OllP Ste lncom 11\IU oll ~ '9 ~ 160 hrms ncM1t ,.r lho11 """"""' 111 wllkll AH•" ••t ,.., kltll llM 111 c'''i.re"' 16 1r1 1r1dld 111 10 '"',. llrtll tflf arrled l't Fo •ft t,q 111M" 'tt 10 '' c:~ 1 '"11 A consumer-oriented prtstn-1n ...,11 01vtD~HD'1 , .. t-•1 ,,,, "'"s1 ,,,,u...o itd c1n '~' ,,, C•NW•• '°' talion pre' lcw of 1 n1otlon uni,,.. ""'•rwlH icll!l1t,..., tt1 .iv. ~"1,.: ,~:,; ~ t!~ \.~""' 1 J , n c.111ee• "" etlr11 fbl lleel•l'NI or Mltl llO ltr 11111 Glllnl~ H n "n I"(..., ~ U J ts !''i''l:,..~ lD picture depicting W industry vt•r ""rewi .. r•t• cc1 N"""",.. ... ?':ton '" 53,.J:ss.~ ~:i ~ e cl itfl'5 pr1c1ng studies aod forecasts •~e1.1mvlt1H1 it11tldtM1 1a1 nld 11rt "'" 1 oo • 11 v1nc1r111 , 11 1,. :: ... ~. ': d t d • a for Y•t•I (t i Ct\11 thlt lltdt l (II '"""'' •l"Olr '" eu •"911 •n $.)I ft!•ro "'"I" an a 'AO-ay em1n r ,111 1Jt1r1 II«'" t1lvldtnil1 !Ill Hltl lh" ,.c '" ""'2""'' 11111 .. s10 J s.i tnet in•,,. vending and food sen Ice ,,.,_1,~1• av10P111 "'"r""'' co,., ~e~ ~ 1::f 1r~vi:1ra 1n 1t !H 1nr ,~ manageme.nl compani~ all mr 111 •1oc:t 111" 1•11 .,.,,,, 1~1 "' ~"'' 11ll12 ,. w1111 Mv u 11 u J• '" rt', 1 l, • Ctllt !n ••OC:-(GI Ill bl1*rv1ICY .. kff!I.. , rtooWt!l\ntrlll Gr'WP :.~, 1:i are: part of the: C1)nference ttlvtl'lfll• or ttot••n u•loni io tt•"'' M'"" 11n 16 111 l•iotr '1.a.12'11 11111.iEt , I Id Cltlrlll/lilllll I") t~•NJ4t/>ll lwl)l-IYIH."'n 1•1 •01 IYHI 'll'l"r. fflM,.w 120 progrem Nico ay Sii W'°t." !1wtt1 lwll -"Mii, IM Fl ... 100 '" MMI I I , 0 1nl1Wsl j ~feeling during tl\t con f'lt.&CTION S tfl lfldlc.ltn fol!IJ'l'lnt 15~~f:u' untvtll r~: 1~/f1~.JJ~"'~tfOY'1 f II •-~ I fltu•• II trtclklrl "~1 Ill lndl<1t11 •nc-Vl\IYtll Wtlitl It'° UM wrn ~' 11' Cl cnct ~I ~ mem .... rs 0 lol ~ ... llt lltllt• • lrtcl en "' ""111 (P) ~r 1h~ ::::~ :"~" :: ~l nu ~ .. H It! .. the C1hforn1a Oregon 1ouow1,.. '"""" 11 ll'K11et1111 "'""' ,..,; r.: ,,,.111 ,4 t it i'rw1 1" ,,. r.i~!ti.!"i.o W.'hlfllllOn ll:l\1 111 Alao;ka C•I Poli-Int""'"' .. Ir.ct .... Ill IHfl'l•I '"'" G" flO I JI wi..c.. !'ti SM 6 '1 CFI SH IOI I.' fl) inolti t\ ..... ,.,. fll'll .. l• f!'Klloll '°'C J'~ 4 1' M J(IU Infield '17 I tf (l!ldl>r!I tM' and Arh:0na ~1ntc vending 111161111. inc Fde 101 1nw1te '' t.1' '"g•111bn.t o11 1c.,, ...... .,,..,. •• ,..,..,,11n11•• ~ sn lti ortn jOJ t«i ~•m•S 120 associations ,, 1NlGH 'f.t11tM Jt1t1.r 1 ~ !IA •rttr MY r Vendors Set Convention • • • • • ' I • ~ I • " • •• • • • • • u • •• • ' .. • • • •• • • "' • •• ' , • • .: • l ••• • • • •• - ' • ' . •• "' • • • ~ • • • • I ' . •• + .. • • •• • • • • + • " ... • " -'• '• • • • • . , ... -. -" .. -. .. -0 :i' . -.. +" -. -" • . , ., ' . " • -. -. ' .. _, I = I iJ ,, , " . , " 9 l •• 16! ll J~ ~·~ " ~ . " 7J7 ••• l O J' ~ '~~ 2r- l60 a• ' " '~ l~ ll) 76 ... '0 ,, .. ll4 ·~u IJ J>;, 1SJ XI ' . ~­,. 77 .. . .. ,;J, ll " " . " .. , . o •O • . ~ ,, 11\o " ' . ,. 'l " l IOI ~ '' 1J .. tl l?'-1!'0 11 '" . • 0 SJ • .. " t ,,..., ,, 71'1 " " "" " '"' ••• '" •• '" " . ~~ '" " . ., " .! " " " . ' ·~ ' • " . ' ~~ .. " " " . '" ~~ '" ~~ .. ... " ' u l' '" '" .. ~~ Marc.h 1971 DAILY PILOT Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Stoek LeaderA DOWNS L•ll N• , -. ! . -•. -, " -201.1 -1•• u•,. • fl -1 ~ ~ -11 ~ -" -' _,, -·--·~ 11\ ~ 1: l~ * -1'o I 10 -I Ill -'-'llh -1 u;: = ,~ ..... .. .. (Wt.I MIP Lnr ClitM ot.!-i•r-•••m""lllB:llR•••m•ma•••••••I S.• N• ..... 111 .. l..._I lfllft "9W CltM Ciiio Hrl v=tn.~1!f t::.~~!~trHtt (Ms.t Hi. Ltw 0.. ca., 10 1..-. 14-'4 1•" + -; lvbton to 0 I l.i JOit lil:'' -t\ IT ltl 0-H II L""' CIOlt N Wttl'IC• l 20 2 .,\i ., il + M 'll!! '" s+ Marl\:et Fm· 1·shes ,,_ ... . '"' ... .• "" "'""I~ ... u .,._,~ ...... M ..... __ ,, 'J •»l't +• ltlonDonn Ml1 \1AO -•:io'rn20JMlllli&l"j;7001l-Uwicll•l1.17t "',...'"*"+at ' ni... -~• -T-IS u11 us1 • \Utt 174-» 171 11 -0Mw•~-ir: •" I ~ .,1\.\l,~11\ r:,.,060 111 ~11 4 .ss11i;:)l)(l.;11)0a.1,.)s.mtw -1nw,rt-11 1 , 1 •'Dtt'' +\-. 1lt ~ I\ ;.1, + 1eqtt 1 Q ~ a• ?, \>I\ '¥,ll + 4., r::.~non1 tn aetckt \!HO In •~tf1•n W1 tn\ t , ~ill im"' i ~"' "'' :11::.:r, ",t ,l:i ii:t='l.i;r~' ill ~:I"~ ll ~ :::l l 1 ~=-\~ t:=-t~.,to 11 i11l: ~ if~-Vt '5 Ilk 1,J;l ~:::·~~' 1ll ~ Jti t 1\' .. . Lo . T din i~-i:~f.Q ~ ~ , 4-1~ 1~~ ,~ i I.lo w.-·~,11 "10 :J .ililii' ,:.... -~ •1 l\\: • ~ •·1 wer m ra g 'm·"~" .. •·· ,,. ··+· ..... ·· ·1·P'!'· 1~ ,J, ,~ .. ~ ~=···· • "'• ··m l lfb!ll• lH .... llV. )1\o\o -1\o\ Cllllil 1 M)ftl i..w c .... Cllt ~ ~WI lit ;; '';r "•• ill:J~ ,•,.J: ~ _+,~ : :r~, Ii' ' I 1l1" ,?t 1R"' -n~ u" E/ .n so 1 o ~ ~. so w:.~'Bf 1J! 11 ~v, ff:Z I' ±1 ~ .. .. .. 1 ••• 'r ... " 11. rn: -• ''1l""' , .. ,. m: ,,. + 1' ·s"M> 1'.ll ': • + ~ U1. 110:"1°1~-\lo ,:.:.12 /, ';~ ~.t \.~ u\::.~8nr.e'r.' fl .? DU i l i J :,~,,1n.Joli11J ~I 111!~ ::,1;, ,, "" .., " NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks ltntsbed lower m -. ~ • 1' ii• " lit u """"'# ,. .,. • °" " _.. n\'t 11~ ~ -" mod••ate trading Mondav partJv reflecting tn dica t_-.i'*-•15 50 110 "" 164 • -~ u~ 1o11e:, i : -,i: ,t -141 w .. ~,., ~~i >' 1 ~, 1 1 :t: ~ ti U\~ 1..-mt+ ~ ~ ., ., r.:lV; lt°!l fl2 JJ • ~ -i-\unl..,.,,, 1 • ~~ lii111 '-ttw .. rhd n 1111 j '!!"" 1ll ml Y~ !t ~ -11o lions that econom1c recovery will be alower than r .. a.~ 1" ~; ~~ 1!:t illt :_ ~ 8~ ~: ,J , ,iji ~;\ Ra 1 ; = ,, ~. '/:1 t 1! 1 ,,_. \? 1 • !. ~ '1 ~ ... ~ s.J =,~ expected +:~ S ti1 Ji)"' 2tf lf1: ~'" ll t :: ~ u~u .or.• 1 ~ 'n 1t ~ W"' 1 • .! ~ ~: ~.~.fOf:O 1' .!t~ ft' ~ -" "j : ~ ~ ~ -'! 1::::1"~4 ~ 1l! 111"14 1H ~ 101~ -''~"Ir~~ f ~ '~~ 1• 1o 1r~ l\:,; w~'•''r.i} 1111 tt ;l\, I? 1 ~J1 • .u 1,1o .u•; + ~ Shortly before the final beU the Dow Jones In l•~o G•• ~ '• 11 ~ 39 _.._ ·1 u 11...i ::;< 'O X'I 1, 1 ~ i-N t l'I 4 ~JS ~· "' 1'J =11: ** ,,., 1>' im -' dustr1al Average eased off 2 46 at 910 46 Standard tt-KPL~ '1111 ' 13 ' " R -,. u .. i11:1 l': • 0 ' '• 1' l'1 "' I " " "' jt •• -t: l* ·,'ru'~ H.~. n.~ =_+1 ~ & Poor s 500 stock index showed a loss of 0 33 at tE~r orli1 Ji ~ ~ h.; *~~ t ~ 8fa1 ~1" ~I lOll i::~ r~ 1 f ~=~!;,:Tu 1~.. ~ ~ lt i4\l +\. ,. 11 14.. 100 68 t~k.'..fl' .,·o I IA y. 1~ 1 ~ Ul\Jtro k•' ., ,, " -"W11ln Pt-( li \f ~ 13"' ur -1,, :~ ~ ~ ~\4 -~ lllon itl Oi 10 ~ • ,, • +1 ..... tl~ ~~ 1 lO ~1 tltv, ff• ':" ±. l: w .. un on 1 40 'l23 if ... \" + n 1 ,~•~•"'4~1'<~1-~' Thomll'ICl"O t7lo2lo -.,u .. 1PkMn u ,~. tii 11lt _..,Wwnu~..i•,~,. l ~''"''" • 32 )!\. 'Wi Q( the l 633 lSSUeS On the tape 841 pointed fh(>(flJW '!' t2 SO '9 + h UI l'ldG 1-'0 '' '41>< .O, .U -\ n On r l l 411f 110"' + ' •.... ~) JI,_. ,~, I Th ft 0 ' •• 11. 26>.l; ,. • u "ft OM )~ « 4) • .w. + \!WWII•,' ,•,tt ,10 • • '° to _, .. ... 72•• O\\ er whtle 540 gamed 11 co.., \ '° o 1n. " l31. • u Fors 1 u , •• " JS 31 _ .s • ... 'GO '° ~ " -~ ~ ll~ i~~ ~J\~· + , ti~~.j·' .so SI '"'" :It .. ,,~, u Frffl 1.4 1 1 ,, • u. 16 -' Wl tl\l'O I 05 )I n". • , .. , • -.. .... ll ! ... ll 'iit>f \.~u GVP•mJ IJ '' 60 0 60\ l)JWlll'/Ollf•,sG no n .., "'"' • v. -.._ Closing pr1ces included AT&T 48" unchan ged ""JM 50 (JI, '5 ...s 11 u Gyp pfl 10 io 3'4 11 • u ~ , , w""'' 1 211 , '1 31 n -~ 1)'.KI MV. lft ~ "" 'I t: T mk1n l to ii 3•""' Ul~ .,.___, -' u llldl.ln 6IJ IJ ,,,,. 2• 7• :,. ~i W1•tfllt .0 2ff JI\ 57''J S7'\ •1 ~sh "40 +" Bethlehetn Steel 22~11 unchanged DuPont 144 off 1 .~1111v oll'll) ,., ?•• u 1.,_1->uslt1H1 1' 11 lJ ;10 1J +1.,wev~, '"1s "21i.1ui.1tif''~ l l:M Uh ll'o Toblnl'ck Oii ! ..... ,, UjP!yCll u !.U 37~ 36~ r.•-1Wh1e P11s ~,' I~~ 't -V• '""" 1' 1 ~ % Ford 603/• up~ General Electric 110% off~ lO<ld,.,:•, II l6 10 ~ ji1.1 u PCh ,,n10 J.u 3t "" i,_nw"""' 6Pt 1uo !J ~1 -11,1. '2CI ''"' 1' \t -'I\ '.1111 w· 'l• , .... ~u, Sl>of" 'H' 'I ' ·1·~ WhHP 5111 i110 ~ '~ ,,l\o+.• 3•1'4 ,, •1 -Genera1 Motors84 up Y1 IBM358'4 off2Ys South 10o•1111ttt l•, l'! ,j •u Jm11 lD so i.1 1121.-,w~ CP''° ••~7".1""--s.s 50111 SO li()'t Toot o tOtl t u ~· llfJ$0 t s '' )j + !Wh e<o~ .o n• 11~ 211i. ,,\Ii+ V. 1ts it't-•t.t 14\ ernPacil1c38'1Soff1n Texaco36~off% and US T•ntCotO .,., lli 1 \-\+11o1u "''·"° ,., , 11 .... m .+ w~1c~o1A.J 2~!fil3'\~+~ I .. ~ '"' 11\li 1 ~ S 1 301 ! ",',',"w .'', ,,," •, • 't "• -}:'1 u ob•j 110 tl l'l~ n _ ~~w~1 c ptC J ~ lf,' • , ll\i +" i , O\'o ,°'.,., i ov. +1 tee o) V• up 111 • ,._ , -.. u~1• u 11 tt 110 '""" ,1., ,. + "w~ ee n '' 11 , ; " ,, -'• 103 JJ\\ 1lVJ 7.1\t -1 T ~WA.~ Pl S 16>. I • lm + ·~Un i V w ~I t•;. t~+ \.\Whr.• Molor JO I• 1!'111 !O • ""' ,.,_. 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I'd Kol1m1n n o .... •~•-~svcr~r tO 1,., ll't , _ \ UV VtndoCo .0 14 7 6 16 -••wto1:1•CP ., 72 11 1n1 H\ +v. 6111••3• l• -\1o c1110 '''"~.w.s1 .. -svnr11m 4o 1 2,,2J"j'•-l• - -11r,co~1 1 sss1 ),••1 --.. wootwi~''° J36S\s.s1 +1.tl , .,, u ~:: fa14 -\ ,• 0,0 N"· 2..,.» lll 5•~~ .,.,. st ~ 1111\0U lb •• ~. .-, s:i~. 411 -1 l UAL nc lU 3 •• lOli ir-~. ~i'ff~~ ~ ~~ ,l ;6 • ~: • :!:.. r1 ·.-. "'• l'l.10, .. 'j n • 'I -· , '13 11'\ JI., 71 I-• 11nOl'l •ll,l •6 •1 -I I UAL~'"' lt 1'11. -'lll •111 lt no 1 7'1 -f •-j' ~ fV. ~~-4\\ •1 34 1.1'4 U I 'oSdOOll1lfl I"~• n'n 13 1 +'• 11nO.• to 2~ 2no ?t•o 11 -; ,~A RC 0 11 JI!1' -lV.ll•Comw ao ~•ti' jlli~t 11_+1.,.Wrl•,ev» •1UV.1'-'\l"~-2• 14h ,.... UV,-~SIOOh Pllli t )0 tl '2 621 'undl!rnd 10 .. )1)11 '9~ 311 + o,;, G 1 IJ 15 • '! """-, llt EPw 1 Ill! YJ llW WY 111 tn n ,,, 1J\.O li'llo-111 6 :1611o ~ loll.i $a ,.rtu 9 I 1> 'II -"fil1! ~fl SCl J ., <it~ •I ' v, C ' ' ' • t ,, ,_ !" pf) lj r \'1 lo:! ljl ~ Xt O• CP 10 3't 101V. 10J\< 1ot\lo -"-'3 Jn't JS\;, 15'-lo -\'o $ Pru<lf!\I w •• 10 ., 111-10 1~1 + -1\ .~. , .. ''' ,,,.. '' ,.,. 7 .. 0 :'.:':_ na,012 41 I • "' 0 .. , •• , > + ,, '''' ,_ 01 m~ 21\\ 19\<o -.._ IU ""~ ,.,. 19~-~1nv~ 60 l 5'1o .ff 't+o -h ~•'"lltu 10 o 11 " 31 n +~1..1~~N~ lllo f I:( 2lw JZ:Z -~~:n,~0 °1 1 :i'( ll"• E• 1'0 -~V"'1s'0 1 20 :icS 19.J 1,.1. 1~+'• 1•1 ,,,,. 1'1\ 11'1-1"' l1n11 olO I l., U l:lllt+\.'o1~ro11o11 tf \U1'1"'1 U.S'1 u"cimp t2 16 4 !Jl: , +~vs co·o d t ~ ! \ 11"\.'o-~?1ltCorit" '~ m• ~-""8 '", ,•, ' ••' • ,,',', 2; !'. 510• .. ,•,•, ~.. 00• ,' ,,' ','., -. •, uom!< G to •:M 36 l! U'h + \I Un (• olae l 110 •jh ~ w• -1-1 llulun Ml! l • 'i~ • 2li\ + ~ !•Ptl• Norn If "• Jfil"' ~ -Y! -lv .,. ' ''"" \~pmkPll lO ~~'o •l 11 UftQll(Ofp jH w_,-..tl'o VWllUntJJ •v.15 15\o+"'•Y•CO'• ~'1 l ;-o 4• .. -V'O :M ' 15\li • + v. lllutl pll IO J 4,0 ) •,1:1 ~\It urvrl'd .111 I• tu s ;, s.. 'J~ E It ( " ,,,, '°" .., Nl~ + v. W X • !"''"' It I ., ,, ~ "'"' -~ 13 ·~I•~ tll \•C~I .q l? ~ ..,.. l~+\,t tllk -· 43 14\r 11• 2i\<o-V.U~E1 tUJO ','!! °',.',, '1"]' jl -·~ \If\ rod 11 ll-m .. 2'M 22\lo-•'f ' ioi.. 10\'\ IGV. 11 on.. ao 141 "' "'"' •4i-+ ~ 1 co 11> ~ "~' _.. 311'> _ ~ IJn I! P1 , "" "' w~ t\a will tt. 11'1'-loCI 1100 st it " -;. °"'~' 1111ti11 •v Tht Ataot1•114 Prru 1'7\ l I • -' JZ DAn.V PILOT U.S. Puts Skids On Aliens CHARLOTTE Af\1 ALIE. V.1. (AP) -Clutching stuffed suit· cases and shopping bags, hun· dreds llf West Ind ian families ! have passed through the, airport terminal on St ·j Thomas in recent weeks to be deported to their home islands. The sc-enc is repealed on nearby SL Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands as the federal government cracks down on illegal aliens working here. I As of f\1arch 5, the U.S. Naturalization Service had deported l,100 aliens, while many olhcrs had left volun-1 tarily since the roundup began about a month earlier. Alien labor is an important part of the economy in the \1irgin Islands -out of a work force of 36Jl00 nearly ha lf are aliens. They are im· portant to the econamies of the other West Indians islands j since they send home an l estimated $4 1·1 million every y~ar. Businessmen unable to fil\ alt the available jobs in the Virgi n Islands' burgeoning 1 tourist trade have lradilional!y drawn on labor supplies in 1 neighboring islands where u n e m ployment sometimes reaches 40-!iO percent. But th<:! constant need for workers has ll led aliens to enter il!egally to find jobs, or overstay their allowed time on U.S.. territory. Jn many instances, aliens complain that employrrs lied to them abool having done l the necessary paperwork with the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service lo keep them lega lly employed. Mostl of the time. they say, nothinJl l wa~ done and their passports I gathef't'd dust in desk drawer~. The roundup has brought c<lmplaints of incidents of1 mistreatment by fed e r a I authorities and local po!ice 1 1 called in to assist them. "We·re not C<Jmplaingingl about the right of the govern· ment to deport illegal alirns."I says George Good"·in, a \ej:lal alien and president of the Alien Interest Movement. "All "'e are a.~king for is lo be l treated like human beings and given human rights _" Overcrowrling and lack or sufficient sanaary facilities ex ist at jails where aliens a"·ait deporlrition. Reports of cutright brutrility are rlis· counted by Virgin lslands of-1 ficials and g o \' e r nm en l rep~sentalives from other islands. Alien groups 11nd Virgin Islands are asking the govern- ment to do something about employers who gave their Alien employes mii:leading in· fnrma!ion about immigration procedures. The St. Croix Avis, in an editorial. said aliens who blindly trusted emp.]oyers find t~msel ves deporteCt:- "ln all f11irness." it arlded. "the federal government mus1 1 now turn ils attention to those e?nployer!! who flooterl the la"' .. Federal law provirlcs for l fines and jail sentences !or employers guilty of illegally l hiring alien labor . La st year 1 representali\'es from the U.S Virgin Jslands and the West ~ndian islands agreed on . a I • pre<:learance'' scheme so Jobi applications would be funneled through governmentl departments on each is land, along with police reports . on each applicant. After revie w by lhe immigration ~r.vice 1tnd Virgin Islands off1c111ls, this precleared pool of ap. pllcations would be offered tn employer!!'. needing workers. Immigration men say the plan still awaits approval from Washington. STARS S.,d111y 011'1••, It on• .r fh1 •01/d'1 91e1t 11trolo91r1. Hi, c:ol11"'"' it 011• of th• DAILY 'tlOT'S ,,,,, f11lw111. PRICES SLASHED • • • OUT THEY GO • • • HURRY LIMITED QUA: :TITIES Slltl 1929 WHITE F,RONT MEN'S PANTS s200 RUG ' REMNANTS s.50 LADIES DRASTIC REDUCTIONS FLARED PANTS ON ASSORTED 100 BABY FURNITURE VALUES TO $9.97 REG. $6.97 VALUE 200/o 10 50°/o DENIMS , CORDUROY, ORIGINALLY $1.37 & ACRYLICS RADIO DEPT. AD·MIRAL CLOCK RADIO REG. 26.97 HARDWARE • 28 PIECE SOCKET SET 1/2", J/I ", •RC 1/4" SQUAii DllYE SOCkm LADIES ROBES WINCHESTER AND DUSTERS AMMUNITION s4oo WA.S 'IC: 49c 22 A"'in-22 Short YALU ES TO Sl t.t7 WAS 72; 55¢ L•flt & Short I• All F•IMic& ZZ A"'m-22 loflt REG. 7.77 NOWoNLY '400 Q11llte4, Tttry, Cfrt.t!TIJn & Co"•• ,,l111tt &Sollch. WAS 71; 59¢ ALL SIZES AV.Alt.AILE ZZ A111111-lo .. llflo SALE I Fantastic Savings ••• Electrics ••. Power Too Is ••• Apparel ••• Housewares ••• Sports. Sundries· Garden· Records I MEN'S AND BOYS ' I Orig. $2.97 M•n's P.J.s ····--···························-·--···-···············$1 .00 Orig. $2.9 7 M•n', Shirt' ·······-··········································4/$5.00 Ori g. $1.97 Boys' Shirts •................................................ 2/$1 .00 Orig. $1.97 Boy5' P•nf, ........................................................ $1.00 Orig. i1.ss Boy'' T-Shirts ................................................. $1 .00 I DOMESTICS I Orig. $1 .28 Bath Towels ····-·· .............................. $.50 Orig. $1 .29 8dd Pillow' ...... . ············-········-·····················$.77 Oriig. $.39 Washcloths ..... ············--·············· ....... 10/$1 .00 I BABY FURNITURE I Orig. $419 .97 Chest .. ...... ............. $3-4.00 Oriq. $5 3.97 Chest .......... -···· ..... _ -··········· ............. $26,00 Orig. $54.97 Che,t ······················•···············-·····-···············$25.00 Orig. $29.97 Crib •............................................................ $1 9.00 Orig. $34.97 Cri b ····-·-··········-········ ·······························-···$17.00 Ori g. $41 .97 Crib ··········---·-·····························-·············· $30.00 Orig. $53.,97 Crib ............................................................... $26.00 Orig. $413.97 Crib ······························-·--···························-$21 .00 Orig. $3 1.97 Crib •............................................................. $19.00 Orig. $40.97 Crib .............................................................. $29.00 Orig. $12 .97 Highch•ir ······················-··········· ·--··-··········-$9.00 Ofig. $16.97 Highchd ir ·········-············ .............................. $12 .00 Orig. Sl2.97 C•rs•dt ·····-···· ............ -····················· $8.00 Orig. $ t S.97 C•rseat .. $1 0.00 I LADIES I Orig. $2.97 Half S)i ps & Petti Pdnts ........... $.SO Orig. $5.97 Bra s-All White ....................... ···-·· ...... .... S.50 Orig. $1.97 L•dies' Hcs iery _ ...................................... 2/$3.00 Orig, $1.97 L•di•s' Pd nty Hc5e . . ....................... 2/$3 .00 Orig. $S.87 Lad ies ' IOO Y. Nylen Gowns··-..................... _$2.00 Orig. $6. 97 Catton Pen rhos . . ........ _ ----····-············ -.. $1.00 Orig. $2.97 Pr int Tcps-100 "/. ecol cctton ......................... $.50 Ori g. $1 8.97 Lad ies ' P"•ntdresses ................................... ____ $4.00 ( SUNDRIES I I Reg . $2.3 3 Our• Gloss-Complete M•ko up l<it, cont. 2 blusher• Eye Sh•dow •pplicator 2 oy•lin•r• Blush•r Mini Bru1h -4 Powderod Eye Sh•dow Eyeline Brush $1.00 Orig. S.SO Be-Gene Oecdcrdnt ........................................... $.25 Orig. $1.69 Lif• Shempco-16 oz. bcttle •........................... $.88 Orig. $2.99 to $6.99-Wigs, F•lls, Wiglets ........................ $1.50 I AUTO I Reg. $8 .47 Rally Line Teel Bc xes _ . ················-·· $5.00 R•g . $4.97 f'no Pieco Vinyl Flccor M•t ·····-························$2.88 Rog . $2.9S Auttc Tran s. Stop Le•k ................................ 1/2 Price Reg . $1.6 5 Eng in• Tune Up ........................ ·-······-········· .... 1/J Price Reg. $1 .65 Car B Cle•ner ................................................ 1/2 Price Orig . $29.97 N•ncl• Radie ................................................... $20 I SPORTING GOODS I Orig. $3 9.97 Gym & Swing Sitts ....................................... $35.00 Orig. $-4-4 .97 Gym & Swing Sets ....................................... $35.00 Orig, $3.99 Bicycle "Wheeli e B•r" ...... ·········-···-··· .. ······-·-$.50 Orig. $S.97 Reddy 2-Ge llcn Jug by Th ermcs .................... $4.00 Orig. $3.78 Veit Tetherbdlt Set .... ~ .................................... __ $2.00 Orig ........ Asst. Fishing Reds ..................................... 25°/o off Orig. $7.97 Exerci'e Belts -All Lge. Size ....... . .. $4.00 I RECORDS • I O rig. $.33 -45 RPM Records. Asst N•me\ & Titl•s ................ $.10 I HOUSEWARES I Asserted Gadgets & T eels ··········-···················· Open Steck Flatware ............... -.......................... _ .......... 10c each' Gl•sswere (cpen stock ) •................................................. Sc each Orig. $3.99 T•ble Ldmp ...................................................... $2.00 Orig. $-4.99 Tabl• Lamp .................................... : ............ -... $3.00 Orig. $9 .88 Tabl• Lamp ················-··································-···$6.00 Ori g. $12.88 Table Lamp .................................................... $8.00 Orig. $1 5.88 Tdble lamp .................................................. $10.00 Ori g. $1 9.88 Tdble Lamp ··············-·········-···························$12.00 Orig. $.99 Cdrdbc•rd Stcr•ge Chest ··············-··············· ..... $.50 Orig ......... Asserted Pl.sties ........................................ 22c each Orig ......... Cloth•s Pins ·····-··········································· 2/$1.00 Orig .... Shelf Paper . ·································-·-····················3/$,99 Orig, SS.9 7 Pdntry Queen Pdper Dis p•nsers ...................... $2.00 Orig, $.25 Opan Steck Melmac ----~···········--···············1 0/$1 .00 Oriq. $.68 Rid X Liquid Drain Cl••n•r ............................ 2/$1.00 Orig. $9 .88 De tecto Hamper .............................................. $6.00 1 Orig. SI 1.97 D•t•ctc Hamp•r ···················-······················-$7.00 Orig. $10.97 Oetectc Hampdr ............................................ $8.00 Orig. S 16. 99-$ r 7. 99 Odt•ctc H•mper .............................. $10.00 Orig. $3 S.88 Stdinless Steel Ccok Set .............................. $20.00 Orig. $1.00 Wocdware ................................................... 2/$1.00 Orig. $.98 per sq. ft. so.ft. Clctheslino ·········--·····················$.98 I HARDWARE I Orig . $1.48 Blazer Bu+•ne Tcrch ................ . Orig. $.7 9 Genuin e Sisal Rcpe .............................................. $.44 Orig. $1 .99 Pcrt•ble Plastic Tcol Carrier ................. -.......... $1·.00 SPECTA .CULAR SAVINGS FAMOUS BRAND TVS • STEREO CONSOLES RADIOS AND MAJOR APPLIANCES AT NO EXTRA COST • • • 1 YEAR COLOR TV SERVICE ON PARTS & LABOR 3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY ON ALL TV's • 2 Yr. Parts & Labor On Most Major Appliances. 12 INCH AC. DC PORTABLE /' With Carrying Handle , Dipole Antenn a, lighweight, UHF.VHF. $ 00 PORTABLE BLACK AND WHITE TV'S HAVE 90 DAY PARTS AND LABOR PLUS 3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANn O'KEEFE AND MERRITT 30" AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE With continuou1 clean oven Liners, Lift top for easy cleaning. NOW ZENITH 25" COLOR TV CHROMA COLOR AFT CONTROL Reg . $629.97 PHILCO 18" PORT ABLE COLOR TV FINE WALNUT GRAINED CABINET PHILCO 18.4 CU. FT. FROST FREE REFRIGERATOR 160 LB. FREEZER No Oefrc1tin9 Even In Freezer or Fresh Food Compartment. NOW $269°0 COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYE. e JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. /-~-~ BRISTOL & SAN DIEGO FWY. Y W ' , ;,#.« DAILY NOON TO 9 PM SAT. 10 AM TO 9 PM SUN. 11 AM TO 6 PM CHARGE IT TODAY . _,, . ' • SAMPSON HIDES UNDER LOCKS Men's Wigs Set New Trend By JOOEAN HA.STINGS Of tll• O.llY .. l .. 1 Si.II The quaint Image of the bald-headtd man in the front row today is as passe as the Model·T. But if the man in your life is sporting, a headful of neatly trimmed, neckline.. length hair. think twice before you decide to run your fingers tenderly through bis locks. . Cbances are the Sampson in your life bas more hair than you do ! Stretch wigs of synthetic or human ' hair are the biggest trend·setters for men today , and are making more of an impact than wigs for women . But instead of being used for vanity'! sake like hairpieces of the past to rover a shining dome. they are serving more practical purposes that affect the man 's 50eial image or life style. "Wigs for men dehnilely are not a fad," claims a pert young miss v:ho for more than a year has been working in the wig bar of the May Co,, South. Coast Plaza. Synthetic wigs in the early-Edwardian 15tyle, ranging between $25 and $35, also art carried in the millinery section. The early-Edwardian or mod style is shaped slightly long at lhe neckline with 1ideburna and a part or slight break sweeping to one side of the forehea~. 'l'hey art trimmed and sty led to fit tl¥! facial structure and feature!! of the buyer. Biggest purchasers for this type or wig art younger men with limited budgets who are seeking housing or jobs. or by those whose employers take a dim view or their own naturally long locks. They also are popular with surfers who want to visit MexiCfl and want to avoid a hassle at the border because, of the hippie image their long hair might create. For the businessman-over-30 who want5 W go mod to match his weekend ma<_>d. more expensive creations in synthetics and human hair wigs ranging from ap- proximately $100 to $500 are avail~b\e. On the flip i;ide of the coin are servicemen on leave who prefer to sport longer wigs rather than be singled out for their peeled-Onion military haircuts. Although many purchasers may be ba1d.ing men. those who have worn the more C<lstly hairpieces for yea.rs still favor them. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor TUftdly, Mar'~ U. 1'" '"' II Pal Mitchell plans to cover his net- urally long hair wi th an Edwardian· st yled man's wig. . __ ....... -·-· ; \ " l ~ ~. Jewelry Designer Gives Lowdown r I I I I ' i ! t . ! I STRAPP ED FOR SUMMER Champagne In Clonky Shoes? By MARIAN CH RISTY N~~W YORK -Kenneth Jay Lane, the designer v.•ho carved out status in fa shion wit h his flamboyant jewelry, has dropped his interest. Shoes are his ne1\' love. Two pangs have spurred the1lowdown. So·called "monster shoes" with bulbous toes and clunky heels have become an eyesore to him : •·Stomping women are fr ightening creatures," he says. "Re· sides, it's like looking at a woman with beautiful hands with mi1tens on.' and looking seductive lo the nth degree." The designer is so gung·ho on lhe sensuous shoe, he is creating high·hee!ed pointed·loe shoes that lace across the instep an<! up the ankle. Dazzling punctuation marks to long skirts, he i;ays, and labels the look "leg dCcora· ti ons." He also secs the shoes st.ceped in romance: ''It lakes a man a bit of time to untie a laced·up shoe." F'ew people reali ze that KJL got his big start as a shoe man. He worked in the shadow of grest l!hoe designers upon his graduation from the Rhode Island School or Design - KJL, an insatiable dreamer who dab-Roger Vivier. Delman, Christian Dior. • blcs wholeheartedly in fantasy, says that KJL's self·assessed best training no man in his right mind would drink ground was Delman. cham pagne from a shoe that clonks. "I worked for a designer v.•ho WRS . . . .a demanding tyrant. His name w.:is An~ Cinderella, that lovely fa1ry·tale James ,Josephi . ·He insisted I know the maiden,_ had the good sense lo ~~ar location of every sample in the factory glass slippers that exposed and glor1f1ed and be able to find it instantly. If her feel. J took more than two minutes he'd K.JL insists that contemporary women ha ve a lantrum. He'd stomp his feet arc in dire need of sexy shoes. and even cry a little. He was wonderful. What jelled his concept or femme He taught me -0rganization and ef· fatale shoes was a visit to the ficiency ." Metropolitan Museum lo view the One day, while working on a Dior fa scinating Rita Lydig shoe collection. shoe collection, his bol'iS told him to Socialite Rita Lydig. a "shot nut" and cover an evening shoe with flat one of the most extravagant fashionables rhinestones. KJL was surprised lo see of circa 1900-1925. was painted by Sargent !hat the rhinestones weren 't metal back· and idolized by men. ed and, therefore. surprisingly light- KJL on Lydig : "I went mad when weight. Besides, they stuck stubbornl.Y I saw her shoe trees -made from lo the shoe after the wearer had danced old violin wood -created expressly a million steps and had her toes for her by the director of Paris·s Cluny mercilessly stepped on by gawky ~luseum. AcLually , she owned llO many partners. rlelicious shnes in brocadell and silks lie ·says: "1 figured if rh1nes1ones thal she didn't Jive Jong enough to didn't fall orr the shoe and were as wear them . And there they were -light as 11 feather. I could do wildly llpilling out or Cordovan leather trunks fantastic rhinestone earrings that wou!d ha ve the same lightweight quality lhat didn't bog down the lobes.'' It was one of those rare deductions that launched 11 mu!timillion-do!!ar business and got KJL star status when the Beautiful People of the '60s -Jae· queline Ken nedy and the Ford women -pul the real thing in vaults and wore KJL's fake flash. Jt didn't take long for designers like Oscar de la Renta, Bill Blass and Valentino to tap KJL for orf-bcat jewelry lo show with their collections. Now the same desigllt'rs are asking him lo do-the shoes. KJL thinks boots have had the ir heyday and they sold, not only because they looked chic with long skirts, but because they represented a certain subtle eroticism 1hat lurks in the sou! o! most women. He sees boot.s as sy nonymous with Amazons or Athena on a horse. When KJL saw a TV rerun of Greta Garbo in "Mala. Hari'' wearing boots, he says he started thinking dirly. "If only I could get women to practice sensuous gestures with their feet. How lo cross lhe leg al the ankle. How lo sit at an angle so tha t the foot is ln sharp focus. Few people realize thcre·s a great language lo feet. less explored than 'body language' but \er· ribly powerrul ," he says. Summer 1971 will rind KJL making sandals that become gladiator boots. European fashionables are already wear- ing this shoe at resorts with the new craze -hot pants, alias short shorts. Needless to say that sandals put the naked foot on di splay and KJL wisely envisions pedicure salons popping up e\'erywhere to take care of pump bumps, corns and calluses. r Me n's wigs are the biggest trend-setters today. While Miss Pam George grooms Mitchell'a short wig (left) Rodge r Bradford favors a long wig lo cover his short locks. -·~· ..,.,., "<+ta LE G#" / / • LACED UP Givtnchy's Midi Look l.. .I • 4 DAIL V PILOT Democrats Convening Pl•ns for an .. n nu a l membership ltil and se1·eraJ !. fund railing evenlJ ~·Ill he;,id the aaenda when t h e I. Democratic \\'omen ot Oranil! County meet on Thurstla~, M1rch 25. l Mrs. Claronce Hansen \\'ill pr~akle during lhe 8 p.m. gathering in S<1nla Ana ·!I Great Wtstern Sa vings and Loan. Present vdll be ne11 Jy :1p- pointed chairmen tron1 th r. area, including 1hc ~Imes. Nathaniel ~lcPet>k I ro m Westminster. Andr~11· Ch1rke, Garden Gro1·e. Louist ~lnunt , Fountain Vallty 11nd Uale Hart, Huntin&t.on Beach lnLerested Orange County v.·omen are in vited lo attend the meeting. Painters Inspired ; 1 f Newport Beach artist f\'lrs. t Rock Dultman will give a lee- . lure and demonstration on t watercolor technique~ for I, members of the Rivif'ra Club in her home al JO a.m. 1 Wednesday, l\1arch 24. • Interest Grows • Banking 1n DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hope you won't consider this problem too macabre lo print. I do need help. For the last few years "e ha \•e been living next door lO a fa1nily with a bad history of kidney diseases. The father and two uncles died of nephritis and now h1·0 of the t hilt.lren ha ve this illness. One boy is alive tor.lay only because of a kidney machine. ANN LANDERS '1 ' As a result of my friendship \vllh this farnily I have decided to leave my vital organs to an organ bank, with the under!llanding that they can have any part of me they deem useable to save the life of another person. 1'1y father who is now 69 heard of my con1mltment and announced that If he should outlive me he \vould not allow my remains to be disturbed. He said he would not bt able to sleep al night thinking about it. He also insists this is the against the Ca tholic religion. Js it? My mind is made up, Ann , but l"d like Lo know how I can prevent a rtlati\'e from interfering with my wishes. - E. L., WORCESTER. MASS. DEAR E. L.: A Unlform Anatomical Gift Aet ha1 been pa11ed in '48 states. Thia law makes It po11lble for Individuals to do11ate their organs or their bodies after death. Tbe commitment is legal and binding and cannot be changed by retallve1. All that ls required Is that the donor obtain and carry a Uniform Donor card. If a donor should cbaoge hls mind at some tJme during bis Ille, be need only ' dt1troy tbf' card. Donor cards tao be obtained by writing to the Nal1011aJ KJd. ney Foundation, Bos 100, New York. N. Y. 10010. Your father 11 wr olJI about tht Catholic religion frownln1 011 lhls practlct. The church, In facl. con1iden It an act of generotlty. Tbt penon wbo makes this deel1lon gives the Jttate1t gUt of all -the gift of life. 1 hope you and millions or olhen: wlU send (or your donor card today. It could mea11 the dJf. ference between life and dealh for an- other human btlng. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Pertaining lo the man who wrote to say hls wife was such a miserable witch that he had lost all interest in sex and he was eating himself lo death: That guy sounds like my brother·in·law. fl.Iy darling sister was a happy, laughing girl when she married this Pillar of Society -this self-annointed Paragon of Virtue. Three years after they married HE \Vasn't interested in sex either. The poor girl changed ijer hair-do, lost 10 pounds, bought a bl!\ck silk nightie -all the crazy things ~'OrJ?l?ll do to "rekindle the flames or ma11cc." tOf course they never work.) • To make a Jong story short, s cauiht hi1n with a barber. Then th re was a scandal over a JO.year-old ighbor girl. Next it was the man o ran the gym. I hope you gel the idea. I'm not saying e very man who i:> too tired for his wife has something v.·eird going, but il"s a possibility lhal should not be discounted. Since you print all shades of opinions I thought I'd throw this in for whatever it's "·orU1. -COVERING ALL BASES "JEAR COV: Here's your lelter.·- for \\"halever it's \\'Orth -and I.ii my opinion it i1 \\"Orth printing. Thanks lor ~·riling. l.1nsure of yourself on dates? \Vhars right? \Vhat's wrong? Should you! Shouldn"t you? Send for Ann Landers' booklet "Dating Dos and Oont's," enclos· ing with your request 35 cents in cojn and a long. self·addressed, stamped envelope. Horoscope: Leo Checks Showing Scheduled WEDNESDAY Check insurance po 1 i c i es, MARCH 2-4 receipts; take inventory. Refuse lO accept the By SYDNEY Ol\1ARR superficial. Dig deep for valid future i! brightened by 3ctions taken at this time. ln her moods wlth mu.sic l technique, Mrs. Dullman has 1 her students soak the surfac~ , of their paper. While they ~ listen to music. they paint • the mood they feel. l The artist feels this method Is effective in loosening up bea:inning painters. Born in \Visconsin. L-Oi5 Duitman has painted. taught and uhibited throughout 1he world. She has conducted classes on television and designed a do-il"')'ourself pro- ject for a children's ward in Manila. FILM UNREELED FOR FUNDS -The United Jewish Welfare Fund \Viii bene· fit from a Cinema Brunch sponsored by the \\"omen's Division. Planning the af- fair are ~frs. Robert F. Hobtnson. chair man lseated ) assisled by Mrs. l\1arvin Neben and J\lrs. Louis fridhandler (le ft to r ight 1. ARIES (l\.1arch 2l ·April 19): information. Scorpio lndlvldual Some events have an indirect can aid you in arriving at effect. You find it difflcult truth. to get finger on exact silua· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): lion. When you don't know Stress is on inter-exchange what to do. do nothing. This with those who may hold op. phil osophy is now \'ery apir posing views. Be diplomatic, CAPRICORN (Der. 22.Jan. 19): Get thoughts on paper. E s I a bli.!h communications with close relatives. including brothers, sisters. Stress in- dependence. original thinking. AQUARIUS \Jan. 20.-Feb. 18): Earning and spending are featured. Your intuition can be transformed into profitable transaction. Follow through on A showing of the film .. Does Anyone Remember Me'' wlll take place in St. ~1ichae1 arid All Angels Church. Corona de! J\lar. at 8 p.m. Wednesday. fifarch 24. Cinema Brunch Served ropriate. Let others state their reac· Guest speaker during the evening will be fl.lrs. Stanley Clark, v.·ife of an Air Force She conducts wt!ekly Tul.'s· day art classes froni !O a.m. to 4 p.m. on techniques in oil, acrylic, watercolor, plastic sculpture and batik r o r members Of Shark Isla nd Yacht Club. Club Discusses .· Civil War Days Israeli "Sa llah."' a 11· i d c 1 y ;1:·- claimed Israeli fil m. will be fea luretl when the \\lorncn·~ Division of the t.:n1!i(:I Jewi,h \\!el fare Fund of Oran•"~ l_'nu11- ty hosts a Cinema Brunrl1 at 10·30 a.m. Thu rsda~'-:\1:1rch 25. in the Ne"''porter Inn . Starring Chaim To;pu1 the• film depicts a hum.ir11us and heartwarming story ol a poor, TAURUS (A II 2 M 20 lions. You gain by being a Life Viewed pr ll-ay ): shrewd obsetver. Synthesize Accent on friends, hopes, information. !ipecial desire. You get what you ask for -but key is LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): to know what you really need. Obtain hint rrom VI r i o Some have been giving you message. Stre.s11 ability to be aged .J~w 1\hn mu1l'S h1:; fJn11- ly to Israel nn d 1hc diff:cultil·s he encounters in adJ11.:.t111!': 10 his ne11 horneland Thi' event highlights t he ~roup·~ fund-raisin~ !.'flort ~ now in full s"ing !hrrughout 1hr county. ~1rs ~:up:rnc \lcChntock of '\c"·por· Beach. l·ampaign ch a t r m :1 n . l'tn- phasizes the r('ed f ;r lund.:. by all area. national and erroneous reports. Know this perceptive. Give attention to overseas agencies \\' h i c h _ act accordingly. pets, dependents. Don 't benefit from the carr.p<1 1gn. GEfl.1lNI IMay 21.June 20): neglect essentials. You galn ).1rs. Robert F. Robin~on 01 Your natural qua 1 it j es , if thorough. Improve relallons Corona de! \1ar is cb,·1rma11 a bilities are rewarded. One wilh cirworkers. vf the brunch. who is jealous makes con· SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): hunch. Talll"US individual now Lieutenant Colonel missing in proves harmonious. beneficial. action. who will relate goals PISCES (F'e b. 19-March 20): of POW-M IA wives in seeking Lunar cycle is high: apparent in1pro~ement of prisoners' setbacks are transforined into condition. advantages. Try various ap.,jiO..ii--iiOiiOiiOiiO-iiOiiOi proaches. Refuse to be limited in concept. Spread influence. DIAMONDS AND ESTATE JEW ELRY PURCHASlD The role that the stale or Missouri pl3yed in the Ci vil War will be under discussion when the Emma Sansome Chapter of the U n i I e d Daughters of the Confederacy meets at I p.m. on Thursday. Theme's For Ebell Splash a Luncheon IF TODAY JS YOU R BJRTHDA Y you are in pro-I ce1s of resettling. This applies to numerous areas, including personal a n d professional . Some of your desires have I changed . filajor objectives v>'ill be revised. Hang on and finish \vhat has been started. The changes tha t are necessary cannot be forced. ~lajor recipients include thL• cession. This provides opening. Good lunar aspect coincides Jewish ~'amily Serl"ice cl Take advantage of ii. Stop \vith crt'ative activities. !"fia· Orange County. Hillel clubs feelin~ sorry for one "'ho lions \Vilh children. You seem at L"C I and California Slate doesn't deser\·e it. able now to n1ake proper College at Fullerton. the CANCER tJune 21-July 221. selections y,·here speculation is An1crican Association f o r Good lunar aspect coincides concerned. Exude confi dence. Je1vish Education :ind thr \~·1th journeys, higher educa-SAG ITTARIUS fNO\". ??. l"nited Je"'ish Appt:al, througil lion. contact v.'ilh those at Dec. 21 t: Domestic affairs h. · "d d" G d "I d · p Id To !Incl out ..,.,,,,., luc~v fer •ou \>." 1ch Americans prO\'I e ~up· a 1stance. 1el eta1 s in om1nate. arent or c er in montY •na 1o•e. a•d~r ~vantv port for Jsraers health, eduC<l· order. Accent solid ground . demands certain concessions. ~:"·~,,.,~~~·en:.:Sev:.!.i H~:;ha!~: lion, welfare and immigranr Check directions. reservations. Ctive them. You can build t~, .. ~ 1~"~,.1 ["v ~;'I.Of. t;!'a:h":t. So ~th Co11! Pl11• Co1i1 M•11 ~~0-'106• l ritlol 1t !ht :>111 Oi19a F.,.y, programs. lii"'~L:E~0 .. ~1 J~u~l1~·.!23:·~A~u=g~ . .!22~)~:illlb:r~;d:g~e;.o:f~g~ood~.;w~;~ll~:~y:ou~r~i~~'.~~~~l~~fr:."':"~'~"~"~'':"·~"~'·~~vo~r~"~~~~~~~~~~~~ \'!rs. Robert Aaron or lr1·inr - ----- ---- is president of the v.•omen·s March 25. The Santa Ana hoine of l\f rs. C. A. Nisson v.•ill be !he locale Bubbles the \\'hale probahl.v for the gathering. fl.{ i s s Christine Brooks. President \\"Ill not attend, but the ~~be ll and Mrs. Anthony Grasso ll'ill be co-hostesses. • , Those interested inay call ~ · Mrs. Nisson for further 111- ~ formation. Clubhouse, Balboa. otherwise "'"ill be transformed into l\larineland when 1he Junior Ebe!ls meet for luncheon on Thursday. March 25. ~ " 'Finian's Rainbow' .. ; • Film Benefit Staged f 1;-. A public sho\ving of '"F'1- ;. nian·s Rainbow" starring Fred ·: Astaire and Petula Clark v.·1!! \. be presented in T a m u r a ~:School auditorium, Fountain ~Valley, al 7:30 p.m. on Frida). ::_~arch 26. ..,., Proceeds (rom the evening. :.'-which COits 50 cent s ror children and $1 for adults. . will go toward philanthropic .. programs sponsored by I he ' Fountain Va 11 e y \\'oman·s Club. Exprl·ss1ng cuncern f o r prisoners of ";ir 1n Southe;1·1 Asia. me1nbers l1111c l'l('tln! to suµpor1 till· !'l)\\.~11.\ bracelet, C"111-:r..11rd 11 i!h t11e name or ;1 ~0ld1t·r rn1ss1ng 1n action, <11111 lh<' datl' ht• was r.:apt url'd. Club n1em bcrs 111 11 p11reli11sr bracelets fro1n \'\.11L'('~ 111 \"1 t;d America !VIV1\1. a st l1d,•11t organization d1·dn·.1i('il I 11 responsible ac11011 To Further ;ud 1hr 1.111\1'. !he Fountain \'alll'_> organ11;i- t1on also plans :in April luncheon as a bE>nelll for a nC\\•ly organized ConcC'rn fur POW office 1n Tustin. llcghlighl or a busincs~ n1ccti ng al Ill a.m .. preceding the luncheo n gathering. wll ! l>c tht announeerncnt uf 1~·1n- 111·rs for lwo a.,.,.ards· the l'h;11r1nan·of·t hc-yrar a nd the l'IUb rnernber 111th the most scr1·iee hours ~1rs. James '.\lurar will con1- n1u nicate the progress of Ne"'port J uniors v.•ho are con~· plcting their rl·ports for com- petition at bo1h d1str.ct and state levels ,\!rs. Frank Jluc;hcs hJs ar- ranged a program by a represcntall\"l' of the :\c\I port Uc<ith Hc~cUl' Squad to ilt:OH1n~tra!l' the l:l!cst tech- n1<111('s ln he U~l'd in emcr- genl·y ~1tuat1ons. tlll'luding 111ou1h lo 1nnuth rcsuscitalion. Tho~l' allcnd1ng \1ill l1a1e the t1pporlt•n1,l tu prac!1C<' thC' 1t'eh1ui1ucs 11n a life stLed n1;1n- 11cqu1n. Sorority Adds New Members Division which Is under lhc auspices of the Jewish Con1- munitv Council of Orange Co untY. Assisting her :-:re tl'c f..t n1es. ~l orris S r h r a g er . 1 Laguna Hills. and Leon Kraus. Anaheim. v i ce pr~sid ents: La wr e n c e \Ve i n s te1n, Anaheim, -secretary an d i Cha rles Gerenraich. Sant3 Ana. parliamentarian. ~1rs. Lou is Fri dhandler Irvine, is in charge or publici· 1v and ~1rs. San1 Hcffman, i:aguna tlitls. is advis.1r. Tribute Readied A contingent o( Orange Coast f('!;id('nts \\"tll be aniong rnen1bcrs of the Los Angeles Chap!e r of Clipped \\'ings I honoring the chapter's founder during a lu nc heon \\'('dnesday, l\lareh 24. l\lrs. Michard Sinclair of Phi Alph:i l\;1ppa. Alpha Rho Pas1:1dena \\'ill be the honored Chapt('r of F.I Toro 11ill initiate guest during the 11 a.m. event l!l'\1 tll('Jllbers ;it 'i 30 p 1n. in the Palos Verdes Country 1>n \\"('dnc'>d;1y. ~larch 24. 111 Club. Hurricane Blows Ill Painter Pl ans !he El Toru homl' uf i\1:-s. 1'1tcmbers nf Clipped \\0ings A director of lhe Lniled llichnrd Corradino. are for1ner t·nitcd or Capitol ,\Ir~. (:cne Chrislrnscn and airlines ste\\"ardesses. The Cerebral Palsy Association of Demonstrat1"on '' o ·' c· 11 b rs. il\"lu ox \11 <' group supports the Harbor Orange County wlll speak lo 11e!romert u1to thr club. A Srhool in San Pedro for men- mwibers of Glass 1'\1ountain All those interested in pain-p1zz:i dinner will ro1!011 1ally rrt?.rded. Inn, Inc., a nonprofit organiza-ting are inv1tf'd to attPnd ;1lr----------------------tion working ror housing and dern.onstra tion b\ l\lis~ \11nll'I 1 employment or physicall~· Pa r k h u r ~ t • when the disabled adults. al I p.m. on \\'est n11nstcr Ari 1\!'scx.-iation' Wednesday, March 24. g:Jl hers al i p 111 on Thursda}.I Aslo on the a&tnda for 1hr March :!fi I aeasion in the v t t e r a n .~ TI1e \\ c:.trn111~1cr Ci v it" Charltablt F 0 u n d a i 0 n Cent('r \1 ill bi· \h(' 111r('\111~ building in Santa Ana is a plare for thr group Ul'<'oNiin~ I 20-mlnult film entillM "Hur-I ~ H1ch<ird 1'11 Loll publ1r11y' rlcane Within." R i ch a rd _dire('tor Rossman wlll demonslrale,,..-----------, wort bt-ln1 done In workshops. TransportaUon will be sup- plied by off-duty firemen. 1,tf0'1 0, OIL rAINTINGS WHOLISAU WAllHOUll ONN TO THI rUILIC 50°/o OFF 111J I . IDllllOIR, SANTA AMA .............. DIALIRS WANT•O • THE BEST lt1141r1hl, ,.11, ,, • .,, "P1.1· 1t .. 1" It •111 •f th1 we,14'1 mo1t f"ll'tlflf c•ll'llC tfrl,1. ltt4 It 4tllf lt1 ih1 DA ILY ,ILOT. LET'S BE FRIENDLY tr you ha\r nr,1· nrh:hL111r~ or krM111. nf :inyonr 1110~ tni.: to our arr·e. J)l"A"{' lf'lf u~ a;o lh•t \\!' rnay r>;h'ncl fl fri~ndly \\"t'l(·on1r 1u1d hl'lp th~1n In IW"'orl\t> 1trq1H111111'(1 in tht'ir """ 'urr.,urid•nll' So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 , 04-9361 Harbor Visitor '46-0174 I I See oy Today's Want Ads e Fa111a-1u• '1f'11· nf Nrll'· J~ll'l B;i.~. Raltio11 IJ<l11nd ,\ Ol•run. :\'rarly nPll' ."r.in1.,h·st~lr ] Ill", ::i ha f'\• <"1111 \(' hotnr ... Ck ~I\) l"d\1 • ~ •""hu-r h('J11 1\ a 11 ! rd, ~1f'ad.\ "'"rk !or steady 11orkrrs, Ck llrlp \\ anrM 11011 .. i i ·' kinda hkt Diff• 10·111 :<1ru\<.('~ /or rl1f. fr n•n1 folk, ' • \1 11'1-.l) .. IS l1l!'Qilll~ ... l'l1·11~r li1·!p 01\ nrr to lo- '.11r lh<'lf doi.: -1 i l;,•r- n1.1n ~hrphrrd 1u1cl Don. rrn1;1n. 111alc . 011 nl'1·~ ,.1ri·t·1ng s:"° R£:\\,\RLI' • r11<'d~ our ··~-n.EE 1'0 \"(.l! ··· C'11lun1n .~ go cr:.l) "1111 1·\t"t)!h1ng-!hll! peo- plt 11r" g1~·i ng A\\ay _ .• i i·~. 11 ·~ ~·rl'r!!' Newly Expanded Facilities of the I DAILY PILOT I 330 W. Bay Street Costa Mesa will be WELCOME >- OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Two Nights Only March 24 and 25-7 p.m. to 9 p.m. YOU'RE INVITED •• DICK TRACY . "11UrCV, OON'TTRV TO F""JR.E ~15 ONE,.JUST ACT! TUMBLEWEEDS UJ.flMATUM 11> 'f.K.11\'ftN: IT 15 WIT~ A PHP 5EN5E Of SltOCK AND P151!ELIEF11!AT I NOTE 1!J Wf>\T 50RPID PiPnts YOO WILL 5TOOPID G-ET A LAOilft. ttsrrnPAY I WAS A ~EAL1tl(. VIBRANT, '/f±i@ Pi:RfORMER' PUTlflllLY iROPD!A\; THf. !'LJLPY WARPS Of 1H:s &RU9FI <rFORT 'ltJU CALL A COMIC STRIP. MUTI AND JEFF '!"MIS 15 A NA•10N OF NUMBERS- 'ZIPcoDE IN5ilRANC~ INCOME .,r TAX NllMIJEll .. ~ . . . . . . . .. . ~ f.tEN, IN AN A1TEM1'T 10 MILK A fEW MORBID CACKLE I fRllll A BOR<!I AUPl~CE1\00AlLOrl'<VMt10 BI: l!ARMRICi\U:f SHORN Of llf{ ND"&LE PROB05CIE!.:101'AY I AM A NOS!'.LfSS fRJ:AK, fORC!:D 10 PAAAP!: M( GROT!'SQUJ:RY fOR .1!.L TO OGif-! ll'tLL, l'V! I/All If! El1lffR Gil'r ME MCK MY l.IJSE OR I QUIT!! YOUR CftOIG' 15 Ci.EAR: MY NOSE 01\ MYllUIGNAflON ! ; I~ 11t'° LO$ UJClCfi1'WiS1f:SQ. ONIO MORE NUMBER AND I 'LL GO MAD! """'~­....... _, ..... -.~ ... By Tom K. Ryan cmcKt:N. .. i By Al Smith .,,,..s,,,.t:t.-. JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Don Tl-IE WEPHEW OF MY C.\.llLPHOOO 60VEl?NES5 •• M.A.R:fl.IA l·H6BS! PLAIN JANE ""''""'"'"'•::D-:A-L::E::T::TE::•:-::F:::•o=M::-,-, o-::""::-""=cv::--:n<=1w::G-:T;:H::A::T-c7 w=EL-:L-:. r"M"•.,.r" 15 IT PONi ENCOOl.l.GE ,IMRTll.l. A.&Ot.IT TWO MONTl-l5 WOR~EP MER WA':> JOMNNY5 (AN &E POSSl&LE MER, Jl1P6E~ Sl'E >.60, SHORTLY &EFORE MER: LAC.IC OF P1'1VE .• ™E !=A.CT A VIRTUE TO NCTI-A.&OIT TO Of'EN PE-ATH! SME TA.Llr:EP ABOUT -rnAT I-IE MAS HO fNTEr<'· AATMER n-1.Alrl • V.ATE A MAN TllE tl()()RS OF JOMIJNY •• WHi\T A. COM~IIT EST IN MONEY Of!?: AMY A MA.Nt>IC.t.P.' AT A.GE SPENCER: \.IE'D BEEN TO HER:~ /i!J.fERIAJ.. ™IN6S ! A&&EY ! TWENT\'• FUMS TO .t.M· ~f· E16HT ? OTllER STRAY! By Frank Baginski F"OR RELEA SE TlJESOAV, MARCH 2J, }q7J I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS SO Ro'"a" Ve1tenlay's Puzzle Solved: tutelary 5U :iS PKC I H A S A I Part of !!Pity O T l,jA X I U (~ "to be" Sl Co11dil•on ~C T~CS5£S S L AT £ ~ Cat of log ical ¥RI! 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" Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS SMM.A ·· YoU1V~COOT •o STOF> BOSSING Mc Al<OUNC>! ®! " ANIMAL CRACKERS YCS. rHAVcn> STAKT" S1it'.IGHTWNG I.JP MV~- TLPSd~r. Mvtl 2), 1971 DAILY PILOT IS -WHICM tS QUITE A COMPL.'i-MUi.JT TO ME. AA S'P05E -tlG A HUS!>ll<l·TAAPPIOR- l>UT ONCE THE.'f- Am&J. By Al Capp OOM'T PANIC!~ tT'SONL'{ Tl-IEOU> LAUNDRY LAr:N rr By Charles Barsotti ~>'11& ~I ~· _.. ___ _. "'------'"-'''-~~-==-------' By John Miles -~ By MeN -WF!rc l<A\llNG- Cl>'IPAAIY NEXT SUNCKY. ,. ' r. /f ,, ~ .. -- THf STlANDf WOllD w ' , By R09et" Bollen ,_I:~"llie<,I ~ 6lll'f'OSet> -ro Pllstl A~ ~"llAll llW'- 0 DENNIS THE MENACE By Saunders and Overgard By Charles M. Schulz •I ~T/OIOlll IF HES STA'llNG ~ WNCH OltNO!'. llEs CAWllG NISA'Oll!BI. "D SEE l'<1W SltfS AAVING !" I . I i 1 l ..... lc!• .. ·-\·t.•f •• •• • j • '• DAILY ~LOT METS RUNNER MIKE JORGENSEN COLLIDES WITH CATCHER • ~~~~~~~~~~~ UCI Tackles Bruins Tonight Mter 4-1 Loss By HOWARD L. HANDY 01 !tit Dtll'f !'It.I SlaM UC Irvine takes a shot al the UCLA Bruins tonight at Anaheim 's La Palma Park in the second rowid of the Anaheim baseball tournament. The first pitch is billed for 8 oclock. "All we ever see is Nicholson, Nichol.son, Nicholson," UCLA coach Ar\ Reichle says. The UCl star defeated the Brulng 7-0 In the only meeting of the two teams last year and was on the mound to start this year's rained-out game. UCI and Southern Tllinios (an NCAA world series finalist with USC in 1968) ()pened the tournament Monday with both teams hilting the ball well. The Salukis posted a 4-1 decision with southpaw ace Dick Langdon on the mound all the way. Other first day scores included: UCLA 4', Cal Poly Pomona 3: Chapman 14, Cal O; Eastern Michigan 14. Cal State (Fullerton) I. Langdon had an impressive i-l record last year with a 1.67 ERA and worked more innings than any other pitcher on the Saluk.is staff. He appeared in mid-season rorm Monday, showing little effects or a long winter. While the Anteaters garnered eight hits to seven for the victors, wildness on t~ part of UC! starter Bob Barlow conlributed to bis downfall. Barlow, obviously nervous at out.set ()f the game, walked three men to load the bases with one away in the first but struck out the next batter and forced the next man to popup. He wasn't as fortunate in the second when he gave up a walk to the leadO(f batter which was followed by three base hits for a pair or runs. Two walks. a sacrifice and a bunt single brought in another tally in the third to give the Carbondale, Ill. squad a 3-0 lead. ln all. Barlow walked seven. UCI averted a 5hutout in the eighth when Jeff Malinoff came off the bench to drill a single to center field as a pinchhitter. Chuck Spanski ran for him and moved to third on David Lyons' single. Rocky Craig brought the run across with a sacrifice fly to deep center field. Dan Hansen had two hits for Irvine. UC l"IM Ill S•. lltiftol• (I! •• , .. ,,,. •l•ll•ltl ,....... I! svkor1, lb Lvon•, lb Cr1!1. ti Sp...ct, lit "'·-·· rl M1nMn. •lo. Gi"HflWIV, 211 Sl!ltllnt. c Atr\ow, " c.....-, Ph O'tot1ner, p M1!lflflll. pft S1>1n1~1. •• ,. ..... !nglOn, • lot•ll UC !..vine ~-ll!!rwll •O IOEae11.Jt> 1 10 1 l0100w•fr.cl •01 0 1 O 1 O 8 111o.1rv. r! 4 1 1 1 JO 0 1 Radl1on. Ht ) o 1 l JOOO Mlcl\1l1lo., It 1110 l0 10S,dl~.t JOOO •OlO ltlrldano. 11> 1100 t OIOM1n ... u •011 t OtO Laft'l'CIO"·D J010 1 o o o T"°"'11. er O a O O , 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 o 1 a 0 I 0 0 0 0. 0 )' ! I 1 Tol1l1 la~., 11111189• :lll ' I ' • • • -O'JO 0\ll-1 • 0 021 001 00•-4 , 0 Angels Ripped HOLTVILLE. Calif. (AP) -Jim Maloney. acq uired by the California Angel! In an orrseaS()n trade, was shell- ed for all 10 San Diego Runs Monday •s the Padres shut oul the Angels 16-0 in a spring exhibition baseball game. Maloney allowed five first-inni ng runs with the key hit a bases-loaded single by Al Ferrara, Dave Campbell was the hilling star for the Padre!! with three of San Diego's 14 hit&. Right.handed hurler Al Santorinl pitched seven innings of shutout ball for the Padres. •••. AND ST. LOUIS' TED SIMMONS MAKES THE OUT. NY WON. 2·1. Says UCLA .Coach Ex-Area Distance Ace Holds l(ey for l(ansas Saturday's dual track biggie between Kansas and host UCLA could be decided by a former Orange Coast area product who now sports the unmista kably bright colors of KU. The chap. Mike Solomon, was a California state prep champ;on whi le ---WHITE WASH ---- 01..IMN WHITI at \Vestminster High. And according lo UCLA ~pike boss Jim Bush . Solomon could be the key to Kansas winning or losing lhe meet. Bush feels the mile will t e 11 the talc-ifs that close 1n his estimation. And Solomon owns a lifetime besl of 4':03. However, thal came late last season and Bush is hoping ~Uke won"t be ready for that kind of effort this early. Ho"•ever, taking into account that Kansas had an extensive winter indoor ;c:chroule. Solomon just may be primed for a snappy showing. Last yea r aga in11' UCLA Solomon ran 4:06 to place second and at the time his performance was a lifetime best. lncldentially, Bush is so intent on win- ning Saturday's mttl that he.'ll run \Vayne Collett in the 100, 440 relay and inter mediate hurdle• with a posslbili· ty of using him on the mite rela y team. * * * J\tany observers are 1ayl111 that poor percentage fie.Id gaal attempu In tbe last minute. pro\•ed fatal to Cal State (Long Beach) in its 57-$5 NCAA basket· ball loss to UCLA Saturday. And maybe they're right. But "'hat about that crnclal turnover by Chuck Terry of the losers In the closing seconds ~·ben he tried to dribble betwetn '"'o defenders and lost the ball? Long Beach surely didn't burl its prestige any. however, with that great showing against the nation 's No. I team. The question now : Will UCLA hang an for lwo more games and another national title? Th.is corner dotsa't think so. * * * P.·:!cause 12.000 athletes, trainers and officials, 6.500 press. radio and television r~prcsentatives, and seve'ral million spec· IAlors are expected in Munich for the 1972 Olympic Games. The staff of the Organizing Committee seeks additional helpers for the period Aug. l~Sept. 1972-27.000 in all. fi'or JObs in the Olympic village, in the press Quarters, in the press centers and at the various competition venues. Some of them will rieed to speak foreign languages -for instance, the 260 hosts who are to be attached to ihe national teams as "maids of all \Vork '". Or the 220 house-wardens in the men's Olympic village and the 1110 sle"·ardesses In the ~·omen's village. Or the l.000 usherettes in the stadia. Or telephonists and data typ ists. There will also be a need of: t.000 messengers. mainly for the distribution of results sheets to journalists, 500 ticket Inspectors, technical assistant! f o r assembly and operation of installatlons ranging fr om score bo11.rds to park amenities. a cleaning squad numbering 2,000 persons, etc., etc. Application s should be sent to : Organisations·Komitee Refert1t 9a. 08000 tilunchen 13, Saarstr. 7, West Germany. '· •• + • ·-• -• • '· '• ' ' . • + ' • UCLA Secret: Poise, Def en·se LOS ANGELU !AP) -Pol,. •ind • tentacle-llke defense have P1Vtd the way for UCU's top-ranked Bruins throu&h a numbtr ()f close games to just a hop and a slclp Into a fifth conMCUtive naUonal collealale ba!ketball tllle. The Bruins once were known, in the d&)'I of Walt Hazzard, G&i1 Goodrich and Lew Alcindor, as a run-and-g\111, rast break, score a bundle outfit. Not so this Ume around, uy1 coach Jobn Wooden. "It's been wtll known that we are not an outstanding offenalve team this year," said the veteran coach. "Defense: has held us up as far as we've 1one. Whether we've faced a ~to-mq or a zone defenae, we just haven't shot \'ery well but I've never had a teaJD respond any better to tight sltuationt. "We've been in bad spot! before but we've neve.r lost our poise. We've been down bul we don't try to catch up all at once. We 've been paUent and we've played good defense, especially In the last 10 minutes. I've been especially pleued with that!' Indeed, Wooden'• five hu been ln hot water a number ()f times this seuon but so far, the only loss in 21 gaaie.1 was 87-81 to Notre Dame. -Lowly Stanford, which wOQlld up the geason 6-19, defended UCLA well and played a slow-down offense Jan. 15. The Indians crawled to within tW<l polnll with just two minute. to play but UCLA hit clutch free throws to win 58-13. -Third-ranked USC had UCLA down 59-SO with just 911a minutes left in thtir Feb. 6 contest but UCLA's viselike defense clamped hard and USC scored just a single free throw until the buuer. UCLA won the key Pacific-I game &MO. -The following mek lhe Brulna trailed Oregon 61-67 with leu than one minute left and the Duckl owned the. ball. But Bruin guard Henry Bibby stole Uie ball from Bill Drcndiak. raced the Ien1th of the court for a layup and UCLA won by a point. -The next night, Oregon State led the Bruins almost the entire game witil UCLA tied it with 40 seconds left. Then the Beavers dropped the ball out of bounds under pressure of the UCLA press and forward Sidney Wicka won the game with a 20-foot bucket, 87-35. -At Washington State Feb. 27, the Cougars cut a UCLA lead to just 55-53 'vith seven seconds to play. When UCLA reserve Terry Schofield was fouled hard and inju red. Wooden took him out of the game for good and sent in the team's best free throw shooter, John Ecker, who made two free throws for a four·point victory, -Two days later at Wuhington, Olarles Dudley of lht Hulikies hit a free throw with 42 seconds to play, giving Washington a 6MS lead. The Bruins came down, flipped lhe ball in for forward Curtis Rowe, who jumped over tall Steve Hawes and hit a Il}.foot jump shot with 29 seconds left and the Bruins won by a pair. "It's unbelievable how they can win games like that," said Cal State (Long Beach) coach Jerry Tarka.nian. "l don"t think anyone who's not in coaching can appreciate just what that team has done. It's incredible , up there in the northwest, in Utah. That was the most painful loss I've ever suffered.'' Emerson Wins; Laver Withdraws From Tourney WHEATON, Ill. (AP) -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver, the leading money winner, and seventh-seeded Bob Lut.& of Los Angeles, bowed out of the $50,000 Sportface International Tennis Chim· plonships 1'-1onday night Laver withdrew from the toumamant because of a batk injury and Lub wa1 upset by Australia's unseeded Ray Ruf· fels. 4-6, 6-4, 6-1. ri.1eanwhile. Newport Beach·s Roy Emerson carried on with a 7-6, 7-S triumph over Graham Stillwell of England. Art.hur Ashe defeated Roy Barth, 1-2. &-2. Fred Stolle, Australia, defe•ted Bob Maud, South Africa, &-3, 6-4. And fifth-seeded Tom Okker of The Netherlands de feated Allan St.ope of Australia 6-3, M. Tarkani•n reftrrtd to laal Sat!U¢ay11 57-M defeat to the Brulna: In the Wutem Regional tourney of the NCAA. "We did everythlng right -we neutrallJ,ed their preu, we rebounded well, we ran out offense and wt reduced the ef· fecUveneaa. of their lnllde pme. But llley juat didn't mike llll' mlo!Ut•." Tarkanla.n 11ld. "Wicks, Rowe .ncl Steve Patt.enon hive improved defensively ever lut ynr," nid Wooden, '1but Bibby may have been our key defenalve pl1Ytr." "I'll 1gree lo 11111," ul<l T11Ulilln. "He wun'l hilling hit oboll but ho wa1 all over the court and he accrtd two bucketa irulde where I didn't lhini he had a chance. "He had lhne loub ,, hallllm• ind In the lltCOnd half, he WU putilna: defensive preuure all over the court. "I kept walt.tng for him to get that folU'lh foul : I thought then he'd take lhe prt.liure off. Biit he never eat that fOurth foul. He wu jwt 1uper." But Wooden conUnued In hla unabuhed praise of the cat-qulcli: s-a Wicks, the muscular AU American. "He'1 a tremendous competitor. I mean, forget hill phyilcal talent&. He can do things out thert when you need them th1t are amuln&. SomeUmes he won't score a. lot but he does Lhtngs that get the rut of them golna:. H1'1 one of the flnut cempeUton I've ever ceached." It was Wlcb: who hit four trit throws In the finol 25 l«Onds S&tutd1y 11111 beat Long Buch. Kansas Zone Could Give UCLA Trouble LOS 4NGELES (AP) -John Wooden, UCLA bukeU:i•ll coach. has oft!red the.J• complentl on the Kansu Ji.yhawka, ti.ls team's opponent& Thursday night tn the NCAA semifinal round at Howl()n: ''Anyone who bu ·won 'l1 1games and lost only one baa to be good. UCLA, like Kansu, ill 27-1. They are a big team, a good shooting and rebounding te.am and we are going to have to be at ClW' best aa:ainst them." Wooden aa.ld Kanaas' l·)-1 zone defense could pose 1ome problems for the Bruil\s, ·who had difficulty penetrating Cal State's 2-3 zone Saturda y in tilt West regional won by UCLA. 57·55. Gary Cwiningham, UCLA assistant coach who scouttd Kansas at the Midwest tournament at Wichita, in- dicated he would be clearing up one mi.sconception of Wooden's. CUn.nlngham 1 said, "All season long I'd heard about how 1low K1nsaa was, but they are not 1Jow at all. "Bud Stallworth is ei:tremely quirk and Dave Robisch ii faster lhan he is given credit for." Saturday, Wooden had told new•m1n he w1s aware Kanaas had r..10 forctourt men in Robi.sch and center Ro1er Brown. "But when they're that big," Weoden said, "they're usually 1low, and quiet Is tht name of the game." IX.COM WHIZ JOHN YULI Hawaii Five Nips Sooners; Yule Gets 19 NEW YORK (AP) -A tum ll>1l cam• some 7,000 miles to play basketlJjl will stay lo play aaaln -bul thilk Ate no tomorrows for the "neighborhood kids" in the NaUOl'lal }J\vitatibnal Towna· ment. Hawaii, this year's Cinderella tea tn in the tourney at Madllon ~ Garden, completed first-round play Moo· day with a thrilling 88-87 come-from behind double-overtime squeaker o v e r Oklahoma. Oklahoma's junior canter John Yule, former Corona del Mar High player, scored 19 in a lo1in1 cause. Then. in the night's opening of q1Jarterfin1ls play, North Caro 11 n a OJthusUed and outnu11eled Providence 16-79 to gain a shot at Atlantic Ceast Conference ri val Duke, aR easy 71-64. victor over Tennessee before 12,437 fana. The loss by Providence meant that for the first time in the U-year history of the NIT, an Eastern team fa.tied to make it into the semifinals. The quarterfinals contlude WedneadaJ nt1ht with Hawall facing St. Bon1ve.nturt and Michigan going 1galnst Georgia Tech. The winner of thO!e two l&Jnd will oppose each other in the lf.lnls. Hawaii's Rainbows, drawing l h 11 crowds' affection w Ith their hlJla-glrl i:heerleaders and "hot pants" uniform$ with bright Jeaf-grten patterns, seemed' to have made the Jong trip for nothing in the first half. They trailed Oklahoma by 14 at one point and Were still down by an unsettling 46-35 at the break. But after just four minutes of lht: second half they were within a basket of a tie -and it stayed pretty much that way unlil Tom Newell's 2&-footer deadlocked it at 71-71. • One more field goal apiere sent 1$ Into the first overtime with Al Davis and Newe ll putting Hawaii on top 7'1·'1S befare Yule and Bobby Jack brought lhll Sooners back. ' But there was no slctpping the Rain· bows in the second overtime. Within a minute they led 84-77 with John Penebacker -their ttigh-polnt man with ~ -getting: five of lhe seven points. The lead dwindled to a point before Newell 's free throws with 10 seconds to pity sealed It. Jack had 32 for Ok1ahoma. Bill Chamberlain, the Tar Heels' &-fool· 6 junior forward. was electrifying In tht closing minutes. He scored 10 of his 19 in the final six and added 10me brilliant ball-hawking -including a 1teal and lay-in on a Providence In-bounds pa~ that seemed to deflate the IC!'lppy Friars. Su~ar Discusses Figl1t Told Clay He Needed More Time j By STEVE GIBSON 01 ~ Dtnr roM '"" Did Sugar Ray Robinson, former middleweight boxing cliamplon of the world, have any words or advice for Muhammad AU prior to the bi1 fight March 9~ In a brief interview with the DA.IL V PILOT at the Co!lta Mesa Chamber of Commerce members.hip banquet. Sugar l\ay talked about the Ali. rraiier fight in Madison Square Garden, whtr• Joe Frailer beat the former heavyweight boxln1 champ after 15 groelin1 rounds In the ring. "I told Clt1y that when the first buuer aounded be better run over and get up agalftgt the ropes because there ain 't no way he wa1 goma to btal P'r1tler." SUGAR RAY ROBINSON Clay Scoffs at Report He Was Doped suiar Ray said Alt came le lff him seven weeks before the charn- plon1hlp bout 1\ld uke<I Roblnlon lo watch him bo1. "He wanted mt to watch hls 1tyl1 but I told him 1 wouldn't lo It unless be moved back the ft&ht date," 1\obln5()f'I stated. "I told him the most difficult thing ror mt to do aft.et beln& out of the rln1 for a couple of ye an wu to re.ai:tlvate my lep. '' for you. Yoo 1ot to k•ep It tuned. Well, the human body ii a machint and you g:ot l() keep it twied too." "I told Clay he needed more time. CHERRY HILL. N.J . IAP) -Muham· mad All termed as "lilly" and .. rldlculou•" Monday a report by a BriU.h doctor that All may have been doped in losina his heavywei&hl title n1ht to Joe: Fruier. Jn New York, the State Athlfitic Com· mluiion'• dJaJrman, Edwin B. Dooley, labelled the 1tatunent "completely Ir· responsible'' and aald it wu dtflnitely not In lht but lntuttll of botin(, th• medical profr sslo n or good 11port.smanship. Or. JoStph B\on5tcln, president of the Mecllc31 Commlssion or the Worltf Amateur Boxing Assoc1ation. wrote about hi !! suspicions tn a London n1ctlical journal. The General Practloncr. "I am not s a yi ng Clay doped himself,'• the rioctor wrole. referring lo Alt by hl~ Chr1st1an anti not hlJ MU5lim· name. "He could hive been doped without knowing anyth1n1 about •I "In all lhe ma jor fight! I have seen Clay I ha,·e nerer seen him move .so slowly ·· The doctor said he watched thf: hsllt ?>.1arch 8 on tlnsed circuH telcvlilon. Frat1cr "'on a unanimous lf>.round dcc1.sion. ''To mr, Ali"s acbons were mysterious. His eyes looke d slaztd/' the doctor said. Ali. reached at his home here. scoffed al I he report. "It sounds silly to me.'' the former heavyweight champion uld. "How could he see so good on televi11ion •hen the judKeR were so blinfl at ringside and said I didn 't win? If my eye1 were glazed, evrrybody else would h•vt notlc· ed it right aw1y. "Maybe: lht doctor had tears in hit ry@s bec1usc he had bet on me and that wu the 1l•ze he aw." Robinson teUred from b o i i n 1 several tlma during hi.I dteer. com• lnlC back to t.ake the chatnpiOMhlp on twe occasions afler 1everal )'111'1 out of the came. "The human bbdy ls Jwl like an aut.ombblle," Sug1r c<mUnued. "lf Yo\I let It 1lt around day atttr day. that 1ulomol>ll• Isn't 1oln1 hi do n&tl\1111 Hell, that fight was a matchmaker 's dream." SU£ It uld. "Nine and seveD- ei1hlhl of fhe time a bo1er likl Clay will wln over 1 clubflghter like Joe Frailer. Bi.it when the pin& don't work. the boxer IJn't going to beat llle clubflghttt." And lh1t's why Su.11r Ray Roblnaon told Muh111rnm•d AU he w1s a:oln1 to g1\ whipped. •• ' ' DAILY PILOf lllft PMIU . , . . , . . . Tu1Jday, Milrcll 13, 1~71 DAILY PILOT Jl OCC' s Livsey Won't Give Up . Despite L,uckless Campaign Orange COast College basketball during the 197~71 season was a disaster. Coach Herb Livse'y'1 freshman-dominated club could only win three of rl games, the worat record in OCC history. Such a season would make a lot of coaches throw in the towel, The mention of such thought to Livsey brings an emphatic NO from the likeable Pirate coach. "I have a great de.sire ror the ·came and l ------------CRAIG SHEFF think r c'an produce a \\'inner here. rm not about to quit and rm sure t won't be re- placed." Livsey is already talking about next season, He figures that if he can recruit some talented front-liners from the area to go with the guards that are coming back ·next year. DCC will have a representative basketball team. The OCC captains have already been elect- ed for next sei90n and one ot them has never played a 1ninute of basketball for the Bucs. eas, flpnt Uiat U k lands T'111H.1'1 Pul Zy1kow1kl, bt'll be la pretty 1ood 1Ppt. Zy•iowstl, • M ceok!r:.forward, wu &M: Crestvle" Learue'• IDOlt valuable pl.lytr. Stevta1 bas lliled •P tkree tournameat1 tor aeit susoa. 11te Gaucbo1 wW paJ1lelpatt la lhe· Oestr11 ~It. Saa Jacinto 1Dd Or•n&e CNJC affalr1. Saddleback bu dropped Cypre11 from ltl scbedule, but wW IJ•ll meet G,eldta Weft, Fullertoa and Santa AU la aon-ceDferum lilts. * * * Two or the top JC guard3 fn the area (and the state) au reportedly being heavily re- cruited. by Cal Stalt: (Long Beach) coacb .Jerry Tarkanian. / Saddleback's Eric Christensen Ukes the idei bul Golden West's Chris Thomp:tOR still leans toward the University ol Oregon. Tarkanian is also after Cerritos' Ev Fopma. the ~ giant \\'ho led the Falcons to the rtal.t finals before losing to Long Beach City. * * * Cbriatenaen aet a handful of records this past season. The $-11 sophomore a;uard acored 134 poin ts for • two-ye1tt total of l,03S, ec:llp1laa Bill Noon's old mark of 181. Christensen alH broke the old scoring average mark for one season ilt.11 with It.I polnt1 per g1me. He al.Mt flnl1hed with ISO fret throw• tt break the old atandard of l2t set by Nooa h,·o (ampalgns ago. r Besid t1 bel.ng: named to the All·Desert Conference team last season, Chri1&t1sea also was a unanimous all-l'\ll1s'9n circuit cltoict tbls past campaign. JUDY NEW ADMIRES TROPHIES FOR SATURDAY'S BEACH CITIES TRACK MEET AT N~WPORT HARBOR HIGH. He's 6-1 guard Glenn Nelson, a product ol Trenton, New Jersey, who Livsey says is a fine shooter. The other captain wiU be letter- man guard Chris Lacher. The Pirate coach has been hot on the heels of a trio of county :stars -namely John Sey· moor of Servite, Eric Southwick ol Watmin- ster and Jeff SL Clair of La Quinta. * * * Jerry Hinojosa, who quarterbacked Edison -'TROPHY WINNER Arroyo's Richard Walker is ··presented the DAlLV PJLOT first place Trophy by UCLA track coach and ex·Ne\vport Shores resident J im Bush (right) after running 4:17.9 miles at Sat- urday's Southern Counties meet at Huntington Beach High . Walker's coach Juan Hernandez (left) looks on. Recreation, Vacation Show Se t Coach Cracks . Whip; No Rest for Chanips How to Get '72 Tickets For NCA.i\. The 26th edition of ff. Werner Buck's Los Angeles ~portsmen's, Vacation & !I'ravel Show -one or the nation's largest outdoor equip- ment expositions' -will be launched for a ID-d ay run Fri- tlay at Pan Pacific Auditorium. Spread over several areas t>f spaC1!, the Show features 1he lalesl in fishing tackle, .recreational vehicles, tents, J>oats. sleeping bags, archery Jtems and wearing apparel (or the outdoors. : The g i g a n t i c Springtime ~vent provides the family with, the ideal setting for planning vacations by obtaining in· formation from experts on "where, how and how n1uch ." "Tackle Row" -a real at· •tention getter -is literally known among fishing afi· cionados as lhe largest single 'Public collection of fishing · gear ever assembled . JC Tennis Picture, it you will. coach Ed Newland. himself a former pugilist and a devotee of weight lraining, wal king away from the plunge at Springfield, !\1ass., with a third straight NCA A champions hip trophy under one arm and lhe olber around his star performer. Ne.,.,·tand. a devoted father in his own right. has had Mike Martin under his wing as coach, advisor and vacation companion dur ing his entire four-year collegiate swimming career. !\1artin has responded to the fatherly lrealment by winning an NCAA gold medal in his freshman campaign and since that time, the NCA A max- imum of five each season for a grand total of 16. What do you think the con- versation between these two was during that walk on snow· rovered streets to the team ·motel in Springfield? "How about a day off tomorrow'?" Martin asks in innocent fashion. A day of rest he has richly earned after a fall season devoted to \\'aler polo and an eventual NCAA college and university d i v i s l o n cfuun· piorulh1p followed by h is performance in the NCM swimming championshlps. ''No way can you take the day off," he tells Martin. "We begin workouts Monday at 8 a.m. and I expect you to be there." Of course. Martin had plan- ned on being there a.JI the time and his next complaint \\'its about !he late starlinJt time. During school clatsroom periods. the first workout I! at 6 in the 1norni11i and MArtin is the first 011 hand each day -along with his coach. "Swimming is a way of life with us." Newland explains. "!l's what we spend our life doing. "Physical pain on 1 y lasts a very short time. But if you foul up, that lasts a lor1g time. The mental angUish, if you don•t do a good job. will last a lot longer th a n any physical pain you might experience in working out.'' The UC Irvine swimming team that won its third straight NCAA college division tHle, will not have Mike Martin next year. It will also miss the serviets of Rictiard Eason and f\1ark Nelsoo, a p a i r of talented team members who might have been the star of many other teams competing in the nalionals. All three are seniors and have completed swimming ellglbllity. ' Two of the three will perform with Newland's CINA AAU water polo squad in the Pan American trials at Bel- mont Plaia in Long Beach May 28-30. While Martin played 01; the NCAA championship team in the fall , Eason tawi up and will compete with the AAU team and return to school for another year of com- petition in the fall. Martin 's next request for 1 dl!ly off may have to wait until after tile Pan American Games are completed. He was a mcmbtr of the U.S. travel- ing team in Europe Jut sum- mer and 1t:arids an excellent chance of making the Pan American Games team . 'rickets for the 1972 NCAA basketball finals to be held in the Los Ange les Memorial Sports Arena, March 23 and 25, 1972, will go on sale by mail order only starting April I. The price will be $10 per ticket with no order for more than four tickets for each day. . and each order must be for both the semifi n als (Thursday, !\1arch 23, 1972) and the finals (Sa turday, March 25, 1972). Checks and/or money orders must be made payable to the "LA Sports Arena" and it is a necessity that a 50-cent mailing and handling char·ge be added to your total purchase amount No orders \Viii be accepted that are postm11rked prior to April I, 1~1 and all rcquesli'I should be mailed to : NCAA Finals. P.O. Box tm, Los Angeles. 90054. Tickets will be mailed out on or around a.1ay I. 1971. So, tickets a~ 011 a first come. first servtd basis and in J{l68 it was a sellout within a tw~week period a f t e r Uckets v.-ent on public sale. UCI Duo End Swiin Careers If he can land those three to go along with ~5 letterman forward Ste ve f\.1cLendon , the Pirates could have a winner in 1971·72. Meanwhile Orange Coast has abandoned thoughts of a two-game trip to Arizona to launch the 71-72 campaign . The trip was originally part of a doublt-- header package deal involving Palomar Col- lege with a pair of Arizona jaycees. But when Palomar dropped out, so did OCC. High to the CIF AAA football champloruhip. reportedly will play for Golden We.st in '7L The crafty Charger QB was not only nam-· ed the q>a!l area player of the year, but al90 se\ttted to the All...CIF AAA flrrl team. .: Hinojosa completed 17 of 172 passel (50.I percent) in the Chargers' 13 games for 1.692 yards. And he was intercepted only five • limes in the entire '70 campaign. * * * Fopma finished as the top JC ICOrtr LI the 1tate with Ml points ill %5 regular tealOD ;i In place of the two games, the Pirates have added LA Trade Tech and Golden West. Mike Martin and Richard basketball games. That's a %5.1 aver11e- Tbompsoa was fifth with a Z%.5 averait. • Eason closed out four years Teammate Brian Ambroilcb Ualshed 11 the ' of swimming for UC Irvine * * * fifth leading rebounder with 15.t per came. in the NCAA college division Saddlehack Colle1e loses Ila top six bas-The pact utter wa11 Contra Costa's 0We Elli-·• championships in Springfield, 1_k_e_tb_al_l..cp_la-'y-en_, _b_u1_G_••_c_bo_ .. _•_c_b_Ro_cy_s_1e_v_·~-'°-•_!_ll_.1_1_. -----------.,- Mass. Martin set an NCA~ record ef 1:43.70 in the ~yard freestyle in addition to win- ning the 500 and 1,650. Eason won his firs~ver in- dividual gold medal by cop- ping the 100.yard freestyle and tbe two combined with Jack Dickmann, Jlm Fergus and Mike Carnahan on a pair of winning relaY. teams. During the-three-day com- peUtion in Springfield, UCI established IO school records includlng Martin's NC A A mark. Mike Ca rnahan , a sophomore, and h1ark Nelson, a senior. each contributed two school marks. Eason, Martin and Frank Gardner had one .apiece and all three UCl relay teams lowered previous standards. In addition to thtt three seniors (Martin. Eason and Nelson) the UCJ team had two juniors and f our sophomo re s. Juniors were Jim Cooper (breast) and Jim Fergus (free ). Sophs were Wadejii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiii;;iii;;iii;;iii;;iii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Arens (breast), Carn ah a n!i (Oy), Dickmann (free) and Gardner (back). UC! SC HOOL SWIM 111(011.0 $ it.T "' NCAA MllT IH Ull !'00 lr•tttvlt -Mike M1r1!n O:U.7!!) All<! 111 l<C:AA "cord. 11» bKktlrelP;t -Frenk Gtrdntl t~.I). 100 b•t;k1lrokt -M•rk Htli.on Cl :Ol.llL loo blltl"llY -Mlkt C1rn1n1n IJl.lt l. 11» t1vtttrU1 -Mlk• '""""'n U:00.6'11. 2111) llld mt'dltY -Rld,.rcl EllOll 11 :01.JJ. «!O llld. mf<lltY -Mtrl<. NflSOll (1 :1'.K ) .oao I••• rtl•v -Mlkt c,,,..,..n, Ji.ck Dlckmtnn. Miko Morlln, lllc1._rd Et$G11 U:ll."L llOO l•H rt!tr -lllcnt rd Et SOf' • JKk Dl<kmtnn Jlm Ft'"''' Mike Merlin (7:07.71 ). a ... .., .. ¥ ••l•Y -"""" G1rG ...... w..,, "'""'· Mlk• Ctr,..n1n, JKk Olcllmtnn (J:l l ,0). 1• IOld mea1lt -Miko MM11n (1 y .. r1 IM. Ulldit!N ltd In 500 lru), > teem chtmp1or>1nl• In OU<<eHlon. Mtrl!n t i.a ~OIGt NC:M rKordt In Ille JOO t rod 1,6» tre..t!Yk . Gymnastics ..,.,..,. Wt1! Cllf.111 lllJ.40 Mt, ••n A"1911M "'-••trcl1t -L McF•ul !Ol. 1, PIClttd IG), l. 5•fl(MZ 4G). Wl"nlnt 1 ¥ .. IH : '·' Sldt l!ortt -1. Htmltlon (Ml, GtthlfM IM), J, llldt IG). WIM!tll .... , .... , 1.u lllntl -I, S11ntltr.d (Ml, t, MDUU•tu re), J. Smith !G). WI""'"' 1¥ ..... , ··" L.... norw -I, Slf>Cl>U tGl. 2. DI~ (M), J. HMrY 4MI. Wlnn!nt t ¥trtH: I.OS l"•rtl .. l bt .. -I. O'Ntl" IGI Ht'...., jM), J. Gt tlllrnt IM). Wll'lnlnt '¥"'"' l.J 111111 blr -I. YOO\ Wiiii (GI, 2. McF111I IGJ, l, ~1111 CMI. ""I""'.,. 1vtr1ff: 1.1 .... "°""° -1. ~F...,t IGJ, !. 11'"'1' (M), Winni.. ,...,,, .. , '·" Ocean Academics Comes to Orange County SCUBA OCEANOGRAPHER ,·I Pro~"•"' /rw IHl#r r111J l'r1111 h D1J1c•t1J to Oc1•" A '"'''""'u • OCEANOGRAPHY • MARINE llOlOGY • MARINE UFE • SCUIA AHD SKIN DIVING • ICOlOGICAl SURVEYS • ARCHAEOlOGICAl TRIPS HOW: OlllNTATION MlmN• WHIN i MAICH 21, J1JI ,.111. WHlll: llTAN Cl4 HllH COU.L IOOM ' ·' .· (,,,,.,., ..:~=· 'I ha.,. to gtt right bock outside so all the kids can en joy me ."' Hitcl1hiking Gals Shouldn't Do It By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ,..,,. Dl!IJ ,l.., t111f THEl\~·s AN OLD saying that run! somethln( to the dfect lhat peoplt shouldn't ah•:ays believe what they read in a newspaper. Or if they do, they should at least take it ¥:ith a arain of saJt. ' Perhaps that advice would bf: well applied to tht article which ran on a recent front page of our Women's Sec· lion. In case anyone missed it, the art- icle, "'No Hitch to Hitchhiking." \VIS written by a UC Irvine coed who es· plained that thumbing, as practiced by girb and women, i! an oulgrowth or \Vomen's Liberation and nothing more harmful than "uploring for recrea· Hon.'' Some of tM local constabulary don·t »hare this rosy out· look and for obvious reasoru. I have t.o a11:rtt with them for a couple of reasons of my own. t COVER A POUCE but and I see lht repom which cover -with chilling professional detachment -tht 1fl8ly things that l'Lappen lo v.omen too innocent to know better than to hitchhike. \Vlth lht police, I can point to an unlimited number of oases of rape. robbery. murder and agort.ed forms of may· hem perpetra~ on hilchhikers of bolh genders. And, unlike · the coed notes in her writeup. it is not 1lways the sinister lookini dirty old man in a late model car that is responsible. There are as many cases where the suspect is young and driving an innocuous looking car as there are of the other type . And who's to say that a psychopath or sex offender is not going to bf: young and groovy looking:• /t. COMMON REJOINDER by hitchhikers is lhal the percentage of !hose \Vho do get murdered or hurl is very small. l!Olated instances, blown out of all proportion for scare·t&ctic purposes by police, they tell you. 1 Perhaps. say the men. v.•ho investigate these cases. But those incidents that hit the front pages of newspapers ref.lo re5ent a very small portion of the crimes in which hitch- hikera are the \·ictims. CASES GO UNNOTEO and uninvestigaled because they are unreported. The reasons the reports are not ma de are l'&ried -the victim doe sn't think the police really care about them as a person, only the crime; the victims don't \\'ant their parents to know that they hitchhike: the victim, particularly in rapt cases. is embarrassed. Whatever the reason. police say these so calltd isolat- ed cases are about as isolated as the lip of an iceberg. There's really no way to know haw many of the innocents picked up on the streets become the victims As one \l'earv del~tlvP notes: "YOU~G P~:O PLE think we're jusl out lo ha ssle them. f don 't think there ·s 11ny amount of !.!\king or pleading \\'e could do l.n convince them or the dangers or what they're doing. All we can do is point to tht caSts v.·e have and sav 'Don'l do ii. This is "'hat could happen to vou. Don't hitch· hike.' " · Drug· Addict Leur11s Kicking Habit Hard EDINBURG, Tt.x. (UPI\ - Te rrel J•me~ Sansone shifted from one foot to the other and pulltd at 1ht no1ver' decorating his shirt . "Whtn did you first get into trouble?" Judge J. R. Alamia asked him ''\\'hen started using dope.·• Sansone repli~d- Sansone said he began using marijuana about four years 110 while he was living In Miami. F'la. by lhe li1ne lht 20-year-old f o r m P r bus dlspalcher was arre.~1ed in South Ttxai; ht h~d become a heroin addict "'Ith • $100.a· dly habll. "I tried five times to kick the habit." ht 8aid . "lt'.s hard. man." Alamia l!Cnlence<I San!lOnt tJ> Uve years in prii;on Wt:dnelday ;!ttr the lh1n youth pleaded gu.lll y on tbc burglary ind (otgery charaes. Sanaont 11id ht wanted LO ao to Jilli . .. I realize I ao.t l.O act my ht1d rlghl ." he. said. "But I can'I to ti alcl'lt ." 5a11,one ~aid he I~ now ''Ph>•slcally·• otr heroin, .. Rut I i.UII hJve 1 mtntal habit,·• he said . "Vou really don 't know \1hat it's like until Quint l\lother Returns Jlou1e '" 11; MIYA.11.0 aAtMA, ll T.,..11 L (tun. Irv. Oran .. Mly•k• flf OrlMI. Inc~ l3 r ....... L Coun1ry, Or1n11. T"l' bu1lntu 11 Mlft1 confuc16tl llf 1 -"••lion. Str. Ni1Mk•w1 Secrtllrw Tr1•1ur1r Mfw1~1 • Ort "" Inc. '~bllU.MI Or1n,1 CMsl OtllW M1rd1 2l. lO 11'1d A1rll '· 13, lfll ' . . . • • LEGAL N<ll'ICB LEGAJ. NOTICE LEO.IL N<mCI LEGALNCmCI . . Sa11dbnrg Show se·t :.OC.C Perfor1na1ice to Aid Speech Tea1n A collaat of poetry •nd bur1 ." lnvitatlcnal. when OCC com· pr08t comprising 1"The World Purkiss said the show In-JH!led v>'ilh so unlversllies and of Carl Sandborg" wilt be eludes a great deal or 1· · hed presented by Orange Coast previously u n pub I is he d four--ye3 r collcgt!S and 1n1s pollege Wednesday to .he Ip material by Sandburg. fifth. Rend lhe OCC Speech Team to "Everywhere we ha ve The debate tea1n oJ Blll the national champion11hips. performed this show, we have Landers or Costa ri.tesa and _ J'ht presentation will begin had a magnificent response," Mike ri.1lk1aus of Huntington 1t 8:30 p.m. in t~ OCC Purkiss said . "We've done it Beach won the senior cham- Auditorium. A SI donation will fo r large groups and tiny plonshlp, the only time in 20 ~ asked. groups, but each time . the yea rs fl junior collese te11111 The show ill a polish ed pr~ reaction is different." had done that. duction that has already Purkiss said the material On the slrenglh of its toured throoghout Califomla. covers the whole spectrum cf record. the team has been At San Jose State College. life _ Jove, hate, war, peace invit~d to compete in the Na· the: OCC group received a <1,nd death . lional Cha1npionsh1ps in St. standing ovaticn. All proceeds will go to the Louis April 12-17. . William Purkiss, direetor of OCC speech team. The tt:am dirring in the Sandbur~ t~ show, said, "The show is undefeated this year. win-will be ~targuerile LI real ly an ei.:peritnce , not ning 15 straight sweepstakes audon, Donna Soto, Pam a feadlng . You come out o! championships. One of tht: big-Hall . Alex Golson, Ken Falset- U>ere knowing Carl Sand-ges~ wins was at the Arir.ona to, Tom Arnold , and stage ----------------1 manager Clark BannE."rl. --1--- _.,...,-'l._,.,~ _,""'"'II £!') fllfl 11it1')11 lullntUIMI O> Stnrbat l :MCl)Uli1 Lan diary otamad houaewlfe a frank perry film - ' . . . Hungarian Quartet Set For Laguna The Hungarian Quartet, ac· clain1ed on five continents as "great interpreters of great music," will come lo Laguna Beach Thursday to present the third concert in the current season sponsored by the Laguna Beach Chamber f\lusic Society . 1he 8:30 p.m. perforrnan ce in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium will include Beethoven's first publi shed quartet, Op. 18, No . 1, in F major. Bartok 's Quartet No. 3 ( 1927) and the Schubert G Tuesday Evening MAltCH 23 1:0011111 Kiwi .Ntry Dunphy. Cl lNIC .... Tom Snyder. 11 Tiie AKI• Shtw Schedult d cu•sb art lob Crtnt. Kuen V1len- tin1, Dr. Wll!ltm Ortm1n, J1yn1 M116awl. Charo co-hosts. 1:30 f) llfi (I) .... Hw Am1nd1 Bl1k1, Mlekty MtnUt ind Ch1rli1 Pridt ...... Single tickets will be ROBERT REOFO~D 'TELL majoc quartet, Op. t6t. KATHARINE ROS THEM available in limited numbers B "'" ROBERT BLAKE WILLIE at $4.50 fo, adult,, 12.50 for BOYIS fJ tiil (]) aJ uc Mowi• ol th• SUSAN CLARK HERE" students. WM\: (t) {90) ~1n St1rch 11 For rese rvations call 499· A UNIV(A5Al PICTURE !l;lt 0 AIMrkt~ (d11m1) '70 -Ca rl eet1, 3!06 or 833-2666. Ver• Mil•. Ruth Mdlevitt, Jett l~~~~-;-ii;;;;;;::::::::::::~:.i~i;;;ii;;;i;,i;;., ... _ _,-..,..-. fJ Ill O'Qod; Mmt: (C) (90) -.. tlovH lntwtl'" Conclusion {bitlr- , fl,~Y) '$9-GlllDIJ Pttk, Otborlh Kerr, £ddl1 Albert Thi d11m1tlu- tion of Sheila~ Gr1h1m'1 110¥11 1betlt htr becorninr 1 Hollywood columnld ind Mr ro1111nca with f. Scott f1tJ11r1ld, 1 lrtll Mttli91 M lht down1red1. G Did: ••• °"' m Tiit nlm.ttn• m Mwll: t21/1 hr) "Tiit little ti tlil llw" (mmtdf) '60 -Pater S.lltrs, Con1tanc1 Cllmm!n1s. ~I]) Stir Trtt fJD M1Hlnlt114 "Vi9lt ta !ht WDr1d if Mufflnt #2. .. 18 t]) 1 ... /Wlltht1/Sp~rt1 l!l PWI• F••tl'J II> ".udt" 34 al) llilf'llb 111 tM Sun 111) la Kin Cllll Conau1l1 .m "'" Jim t1m.11orn1. 1:15 fD Art StMil ''C1ry Sculpture.• t ;SO D c..w: C.111r1 GJ Tiii f1Ji11 N1R llJ CiJ "" .... fD~Ltq· IBJ([lCll• .. Im w.ctM flt•/Mlllkll1 1%11\tD.-I~ tli) LM Olwkllllu &)AIC•IWI Brid1u.. A lfl0¥in1 s1o1J of • thru - 1enerltfon l1mily'1 11um !or v1luts. wh en • lHn•a• J'Olflh drops DUI DI M:tloOI ind ch1llen1H his puenb. m David frtst SllCIW Gutsll: Ch1r. 1!1 Minn, Ptulint Klei, ramn YDun1, flud YDfkin. m ftlony Squad fZ!I fallt1ry In Ni111t lsfltli Pinto· mimlst Juli Arkin 11 spotH1hltd. C!:l Pattern lor lMn1 Ul LI Criad1 ll1n Cri1dJ 9:00 ID ~ I]) m Nit TrHld•J Mevi1: (C) (2 hr) "Spi11 Out" (mu1lt1I· comacly) '&6--Elvis Prtsley, Shelley Ftb1ru. Ditl'll McB1in. The INder &I 1 t011rinr 11111Slee1 combo is ptlnued by four (lrl1 who ••~I It m1r11 him. n Tiit furtti" m"" lrmdtrt IDTM- IE t111l 11119 a> LI CMltitKitn m "•'"*'• t :30 fJ IS CJ) All i11 the F1111itJ Carroll O'Conl!Ot, Jt111 Stapl1l1111, Roll Rein· 1r. Stlly Sttutl'ln t1:1r. Gloria dis· ccrven Womtn's lib tl!d moves out of lht 811n•1r houseflold. m Clndid Ciflllfl Ci:) M•talt/PutVs hfk 1!J C.dtn1 di Aniustia• 1~ II CIS ....... wintr Cmnkltt. PtnUpn," (R) M tx1min1tion or STARTS WEDNESDAY EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT l:r.!JJ:!•t.!1 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS FOR BEST DIRECTION & BEST SCREENPLAYll ,.THI MOST EXCITING. l Ml!ANINGFUL FILM IN YIAIS" -LIFI! MAct.UINf "POWllFUL"-Ntwtwffli "A MOST EXTRAORDINARY FILM!" -HIW TCMll IVllll' 01( Of ll!E MAil WOllCI ... •" tlopped a! not~'"ll 10 '"'"' THE REVOLT THAT .STllfRED THE WORLDI '"' AllllllAI ITft[{T IOT ... ..~o betl""' • t1bll '""' -- BA.TTl.EOF 1WilER5 ,., • . ,,. M.llD Mltm C-""-'* .... .,.~.~,l~-·-A ALM Of GIUO PONTECORYO - -NOW-lNDS TUISDAY-B A L B 0 A 'The v;,g;n & The Gypsy' 671.4041-0PEN 6:45-"Love" & Orllff Str•11t9n" NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES 1o:oa IJ 9 (fl ''The Stt11n1 •' th• I D m NBC ,..... D1vld l rink1'1. ll'lt P1nl11on·• public re\1tiDn1 OP· J'--::::;;;;;11iiiiiii Frink MeGtt, John Cli1nctllo1. 1t1Uon. Roser Mudd rtpor1s. I ::~~~":.., :~;;;; ........... M.D BEGINNING MARCH 24th •!IJ(i)l--..... "' '1h• "''~'"·"A""'' •'" ... A ONE WEEK LIMITED ENGAGEMENT ,6~rt-P"lek. velops an ult!r bec1 u• she IHll (dram•) •W•J htf rich ptrenll don't love her. f1l) Wla, Fm ... Onie 0 krtef Ward Nh's . fB (() Trwtll tr Clft9"1111m . Im QtW 11141 llirin1 Wffd fl) Ml A9tf P'f TI m Hnn Pr.rtntm /frshman. C!J M111 Trap fill Hip ScMll rtobltms II!) 11111,IMlf"" M11il O)Mft 11• GI!> r..U.tl Mnlune 7•30 8 9 ()) IMrty HHlbMlln Actor . -DldF. Br111111k1mp (M!kt Minor) lO:JO 0 H11flf Wttk ~ovlt: (90,l "l .. l!llkla G11il'll'IJ bt!lwt h•·• rtlited l1nd tf lost Sovl1 (dr1m1) 33 - · 10 DtYJ' Crockett, 11111 Dl}'Ml•lt he's Belt Lu1osi. Ch11!t1 Laughton. J. P111I GtttJ'I rttpht'lf, ptrsu1dt1 l!J l"I Joh111 N1W1 J1111 Htlh•••Y to 1cctpt him •• I blrd-w11thtr tnd tries to elope with m l11urtidumbf• l!ly M1y, ll:tlOIJeDJ (J)ll)Ntws Q m Jiiii• "An)'Ont lor T•n•"ts:· I l'l ID (]) m""" llndlord Sol Cooper (Ned Gita) . lltcides to NII his apa r1mtnl bulld-0 CiD News 1n1 and mtlYI to 1'1\m Spl1nn. Ci) Mfril: "S11.,1i1o m th• s•1" ie Vlfalall lnilla• SM Tom (1ci-lll '56 -~ran Moort, Lois 'Pt.Wn. EUr1belh Ashley, Tommr Mtxwell. lton.tll 1nd Liz Re111y 111.i. m lllwit: "EMll111tt4 Cott.111" U ~{I) OJ IJIM Sci-' "Th•j (dr1m1) '4~Robtrt Yount Doro- 'Pilct If Lev•." line: lt\lmbl11 thy Mc:Guira. onto tfM kJdntpllll of I JOlllll boJ ti) lllt Ille CIKli Ill 1 6utrt~ fl!olt town and IM· eetntl I llMltft. a lllilllt• $ lilflir. (C) (2 hr) m lhtlititl _"lltlettit c ... ti Wtr" (aune~) ll:JQ fJ 9 (fl lllerw Ctltl!lt Wflttt J. '60 _ f r1nd1 8l1neht, Brl1u1t Hlclriel utsh. Btrdot. Jtc:qu11 Clurrler. French 1 .sil1 wertln1 Jrith the ,, .. frtndl C!l ID (j) m JthftnJ ClrMll ' In Lendon al'ld • ,.uni frarKh D m Didi CMtl U.uttMl'lt art 11trt to Occupied Frtn~ bJ Britllll lntttn1111ce ~ kldlltJ I Gtrn'llll G•Mfll. mrrwttt • c.~·..- .. fl!) F1nl1rt "Qutrtt!." cm t111t111• '° llJIA- 7:S5 Gm'"""" .. StpllMt l:OO IJ 9 ([l ltM• Acr• Four city • thlldr'" vltll tllt nou111ut1. . D m Dtfl llllftl G111tn 1rt Edit Mtllll. ''"'" Mc"tlf, l1uls Nyt 1114 tht liloll. : m le Tiii 1111 Tr'lftl m lllMt: .,.,. 111 llp-Ott" (myi- ltry) 'Sit -Rlch1rd Con1e, Con- s11nt1 Smlllt. 12:IO m All·Nlt:ld: SMw: "TMJ lift '1 NIP!." "flfblddtll" 1111l (C) ~1 Drt1M tf J .. 1111k. • i:cm a Merit: "Ht "'" All tht w.,.. (dramt) '51-Jollll G1r1leld. ShtlltJ W"mltlL DD".., ::ao 1J llllforit: "lt11ti11t11tll .lolrHY" (d11m1) '45-Johft P1)'M, M111,ttn O'Htfl, GI ~..,.. SaaPI" (ctllltdO ·t~ Wednesday -T•n1111h ••11kht1d, Ann• B•l1.,, Vi11et11t Prkt. DAYTIME MOVllS ~==~ttA1~1~"""1tt" fd1am1J '61 t:Ol 8 "'°"' ., t11t Min.a.I" f«llTI · 1:00 m "flit llJ' IMrtrttl'" fmYslc tO ' tdf) 'l4 -Iii•• West, lllttf PrtOf, ·~ -'"d Ast1lre. G1n1tr f!tla1 11. "OllfJ "" lrt'n" (dflrfll ) '30 -::oo 0 "Witt!•• •• "' PmtcV'lkl11" G C6oPtf MH'f ari111. I ldrtlTl•J ·sa-r)"'Dllt Powtf, Mer !:JO of'/(t) ,, .. l\lt It Ptrlt" (cam·, ltM Oil!rieh. SPECIAL STUDENT & GROUP RATES AVAILABLE CONTACT MANAGER NOW FOR GROUP INFORMATION JuJJus Caesar ... ., Charlton Heston Jason Robards . John GielfUd @J• "l ,S, I L•Yll Yew~ "' ''TI!• l•ll•d •I C•hl• H1t11t" ~·lil#8 ' ' ...... EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT "Tora, Tora, Tora" t@@fb VALDEZ IS COMING . . . ·. . ... ' ., -., . Tu~sday, M~rch 2l, 1~71 DAJLV PILOT JIJ Santa Ana Players 'Li lies of the Field' Appealing Show By TOM Tn'IJS Ot 1111 O.Ur l"li.t ll•" The tran1IL1011. of material from one. medium to another Is tr1dltionally risky business, particularly when the stage is on the receiving end rather than !he genesis or the author's creativity. In such cases. the end result orlen is ,an episodic productio11 ove.rly dependent on the im- agination of the audience . On a rare ocr:asion, such as Westminster's recent "David and Lisa ." the script and the acting talent are able to meet and overcome the incessant challenge to suspension of disbelief. ''Lilies of lhe Field," the latest production of the Santa Ana Community Players, is no "David and Lisa,'' but it is a play which manages !G capture, with some appeal ing performances. the ht:art of its audi ence. This is an important factor for. aside from being episodic and difficult to present as llve theater . "Lilies'' must be accepted at face value, requiring a J:ood deal of faith on the part of the audience , as well as the charicters. This tale of • wandering ex·soldier "'ho helps a group of near-destitute nuns build a chapel In a remote Arizona valley carries the s a me buoyant optimism as many B movie~ or the 1940s. It is lightweight, short on sustained conflict, yet abundant in warmth and gentle humor of a sort long absent from the American stage. It is the latter virtues on which director Herman Bood- story Is p\&yed by Bob Utz, a novice actor who rushes through his many 1nonologues with ~ar<fly a hint of dramatic emphasis. Additionally. he is hampered by the il'IClusion of unnecessary stage business such as the donnJng of his cassock or lhe binding of books, during his narration, \Vhlch both detracts from his effect on the audience and creates additional property problems in a show which can i!J afford them. to the proJect. while Joe 'Offt 1s less effective as the con- struction chief 141ho joins ift a OH less enthuslesUcal!y. Nancy Baloyan Is the standout of the band of sisters whlcb also includes Pat Boyd. Alicf f\italletl and Karol McG iii. The virtue of "faith" b defined 111 the play as belicl in an unreasonable thing. Ir this context. there is a good deal of faith required of th• playgoer as well. man capitalizes In his treat-~nt of what could ea!Hy be a Frank Ballotta gives a flne very pedestrian piece of performance as the ~1exican theater. Boodman has Instilled chef who lends his assistant•e "Lilies or tl1e Field" con· tinues for two n1ore weekendi al the Pla yers Theater. sot \Y . 6th St, Santa Ana . the human, natural and mO!ll Jl-1""-.-;. ____________________ , undramatic responses in his performers, and in the ma· jority of cases this \\'Orks in his favor. II is primarily evident in the excellent performance of B1,1ddy Fort as the "black Baptist'' who finds himself an unhired hand for a group of German nuns . and who stays on to finish his impo~sible task for reasons even he is not quite certain or. Fort performs "'ith deceptive ease, alternating naturally betweer firm resolve and resigned capitulation in one or the fin - est pieces of acting dl9played this season. June Winslow is equally strong as the mother su perior who accepts Fort's presence as the >A·ill of the almighty and turns a deaf ear lo his protests and appeals for compen9atlon. That her character is hard and seem- inJt\y devoid of gr;atitude is difficult to accept, but Miss Winslow displays a splendid identity with her role. The priest who narrates the Extlusive Showing LIMITED ENGAGEMENT "Something for Everyone" THE BATTLE OF THE BUTT! THE CHALLENGE: /:: ~,,_ "' Eve~an: woman, and child ~~ to quit smoking for 30 days ... for your country, for your honor, ~.. for S25,000,000! Haggard Heads C&W Awards Presentation HOLLY\.\'000 {UPIJ- Merle l~aggard w a s named top male \localist and enter- lalner of the year and the song "For the Good Times" took three major honoNJ; Mon- day night at the sixth annual awards of I he Academy of Country and \Yestern Music. Haggard. who won f iv e awards last year including top entertainer. had r e c e i v e d seven nominations to I ea d ttie field in the 23 categories of competition voted on by the academy's l,500 members. The top fer.ale vocalist of the year Wai Lynn Anderson and the top voca l group was lhe Kimberlys . The louring band of the yea r was Haggard 's Strangers and the top television personality was Johnny Cash. Julie Signed HOLLYWOOD I AP) -Julie Roljlinson, the off-.screen wife of Harry Belafonle, has been signed for a role in "Buck and the Preacher," starring Sidney Poitier and Btlafonte. ~do 111wron 11.i.cH --•• .~. ••I••-'• hMlo~• ll~• lolo •• 01 . 1·411~11 EXCLUSIVE ELLIOTT GOULD DON SUTHllLAHD MAltCIA ltODD "THE LITTLE MURDERS" ALSO JAC9UILINE llSSIT tN "THE GRASSHOPPER" IOTH It ltATED ALSO "SUODEN TERROR" R LOCAL No olhor "'''"'P•P•' t1llt vou 1'1010, •••rv div. 1bo11t wh1t't ••111t 011 i11 th. Gr11t1r Or1nt• C1111t thin ffl1 DAILY PILOT. 1 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS 'Nciuo///c BEST PICTURE le1t Actor· Ryan O'Ntol Bttt Actrtll • Ali Moc:Graw ~I rtC!l.llS PWISUJS Ali Mac6raw Ml Ryan O'Neal 'l' 1 I r.·• 0 \\!,!\ tGP, -~ ·• COL R • _..." ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE · BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR · Ch;et 0.o Geo,ge ~ ct;t·z:;1 .3 . H•ATll• ..... Qll "' ......... (0S1• ... .I.to. -\16 l•O ---·----.. --.... [------·-·· ---· ·-·· -··-I fM;J!'i1'" mt. Plu1 Yw1s Montond 11"1'·1·- DUSTI~ HOffMAN\ "LITlU 816 MAN" PMlvlsion•Techlicoiol• ~o CHIEF DAN GEORGE · FAYE DUNAWAY fnt Actor-Actrn1 Nomh•- 1!;\0C...11<1 '"'"""'"" •l _, ..... , ..... ., .... ,,_, ... The Great White Hope St1rr1111 J1rnn [1rl Jon"-J1ne. ·""'ildrr. -od., l __ , '"'""" ~""" .. ""'"'...,. ... ,., .... b'r-"~""" ..... ""'"" ..... ' ..... -·. ~-~ .. ,, <·-····~ Plus Brian Keith a nd Helmut Griem In ''McKENZIE BREAK" <GP) J •tlfl '°"'" or w 1111co rwv. ' IN MISSION Vl~JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ,.., • 'q.,, ,, 'ra• ll,ll!PoOI< ,,, ''''If' Joanne ~C. I Wlochlllnl "They Mlgh1 Be GL1111s" •vw·-.0·.,1~1"""Wtf< .• ,,.,. • • '•"~-<'II,"'' iQl CJll "THE HAWAIIANS""' Al RUBAN -i SAM 5HA.W ,_ c•·u JD cmsatu -·-.... ---·-·· _ ... . 1!!!''9 •-· ·-. -......... . Pl11-l rle ICtltll 111 "SUDDEN TERROR" (OP! '11!11!!! I id tf1) ·ss _ TOflJ C~rtk, Gltflt 4:00la (C) "1&111 tt lilt" (dr1m1) '50 J ________ _::::::::::::::=_ _____ _ DtNM!I. I -111arld Bu1man • .IOll r11111f. !'=============~ • ,. " ' r. . -. ' • • ,. ( • ., ' ' " ' " I ' " .. . '• .. • • " • • . • .. .. " .. ' • . . . ' . '• _,. ·~ .. . . ./' . ~ . .. .. •• • ~ lo • t ... ' •• DAILY PILOT ' • Tutselay, Marcfl 2.l, 1~71 Six 110111· C11stle One of the rn ore involvC>d productions al Aquatic Park in San Francisco was this ver.y ornale sand castle. which has finishing touches put on by its builder Ted Cisneros. It took hnn six hours to complete it. • Paris Gets Skyli11e Riverfront ~fay Soon Look Like Chicago I PARIS (AP\ -Against the background of the Eiffel Tower, Paris 1s bu1ld 111g a fl\'erfront skyline that may soon look a little bit like ~cw York's East Side or Ch1cago·s Lake Shore Drive. There is mild crit1c1sm of the glass-box, high-rise architecture, but the re<il pro- blem is that the new <."(In- struction is the kind that pushes the middle class out of the city, dividing its core between ri ch and poor. Twenty 32·slory buildings 11re scheduled to be completed by 1974 just downriYer from the Eiffel Tower. A couple are office buildings and two are apartment houses '~ith limited• salary residence re- quirements. F'rench re a 1 estate promoters call the ethers "towers·• -buildings v.·here the avereagc four-room apartment costs 4 0 0 , 0 0 0 fr<lncs. about $80.000. There is no middle range . Studies for 2.660 apartments show that the buyer is ex- pected lo ha\'e monthly in· come exceeding $1 ,260. This means the executive class in France. The press has virtually ig- nored the situation . The only. sign of neighborhood resistance is ·a wall painted over to read "15th oui, 16th non'' -a rererence to the 15th Arrondissement. being turned into a high-rent district like the 16th Arrondissement, or borough. that faces ii across the river. Bernard Ducroix . spokesm~n for a city-backed corporation ill charge of the rehabilitation project. was asked how the middle class was left out of a program that takes in roughly 75 acres of rlvetk~ land. Of the two Pla1its Bei1ig ~rown Now i1i Test Tzibes RIVERSIDE iAPl -Planls -asparagus to yucca trees -are being grov.·n from hits of plant tissue in test tubes v.·ith better results than using seeds, University of California al Riverside researchers sa~'· ~lore than 50 kinds or plants have been gro\vn using the test tube method. Dr. Toshlo 1'1urashige. UCR p I an I physiologist. said. including lemons, oranges. £1011 rrs and ferns. A small piece or 11~~u1· ls trimmed from the plant typt! to be reproduced and then grown in a test tube under controlled conditions_ Ifs as though a bit of a person's finger l.'ould be cut off and then used to grow a twin of the 1nd1vidual. \Vhite this 1sn·1 r>0ss1hle >11\h humans. !\-turashige explained. it is ·with plants because ''\\'llh appropriate chenucal trc;i1· n1cnl we can cause plant cells to develop into a root. a .:.len1. a leaf or a nov•er " ~lurash1ge satd therr arr lwo main ;idvanla~es to 1hl' te st tube tissue c u 1 t u r e method. "First, plants developing from seed often are ex- asperatingly variable. You never know what kind ol plant ynu'll gel," he said. ·'But the offspring of plants that grow from tissues arc identical to the parent," 1-iurashige said. "When you invest a lot of money in valuable plants you can't afford to have half of them turn out lo be un· marketable b e c a u s e of variable quality." The second reason, he said. is that plants are 1nuch freer of disease v.·hen tissue is grown "There i:-; a probletn of disease ainong plants pro- pagated b y conventional niethods such as l.'Ull1ng and g"rafling but by growing plants fr on1 carefully selected bits of tissue V.'e can free valuable plant varieties from disease organisms." ~1urashige said. ~lurashige said as the tissue l.'ulture method is adopted it ~hould have a large impact by iinprovinJ: quality and crop ~ile by continuing exceptional strains and cllmina!1ng many plant diseases. ~nalpli' Hns 26 Bnbies \ow·renl constructions, it was noted, one is near a heating plant and well away from any river view. The other is partly financed by the post a 1 workers' fund : 80 of its ~00 apartment units v.•ill be available let the average truck driver or factory worker. "All that is true." Ducroix said. "and in reference to the middle class that is the particular tragedy or these operations. But without the financing from the big real estate promoters we never ¥.'ould have been able to put in the low-rent housing and other faeilHies. It's. regret- table that lhe middle class. people like me, didn't fit. But lo lell you the truth as Pa.ris stands now. I don't see any other area of new construction that is aimed al the middle class either." Ducroix said the renovation program v.•as one of the city's first major projects of the kind since the end of the 19th century. IA 1961, when the city began buying up the old garages and warehouses that lined the waterfront, it wanted a prestige operatietn. Because the land was ex- pensive it was out of the ques- tion. Ducroix said, to devote it to · middle-Or I o w-iocome housing. B uilders wanted a return on their investment. The city placed a priority on c\~aning up the tumble· down aspect of the neighborhood, so the high-rent constn1clion seemed t h·e fastest way to do it, with provision for later phases of the rcnC'1va! plan to create 1nore low-rent housing behind the luxury towers. Ducroix indicated the city also felt morally satisf~ because it held a 6().year lease on the construction and could conceivably tear it all down around 2035. Claude Ogilvie of John Arthur and Tiffen. which is building three lowers, said it planned on about 20·25 percent profit. "We weren't too optimistic .ii firs I." he said, ''because we fi gured the French might not react well to skyscraper housi ng. But no\V it's taking off and sales are equal to oUI hopes ." ~ u,,,,.....,.. Phil ;\rena. a Univcristy of \\'i~consin junior fronl \Vaukcsha, \va s a bit surprised last \!o'Cekend \Vhen his pet boa C:C'lnstriclot "Ralph" turned out to be 11 female that gave birth to 26 boas. Slx·foot.long "Ralph", looped comfortably around • \rcna'li ncek. 1: kc!= a lrC"k :'ll nnC' of hrr IO·inch long orfs-pring. 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L ¥ p I L 0 . T c l A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 . . . ·. " . . '.• '.. '. ' · ... .. " ... " DAILY PILOT WANT ADS·. I _ ... _ l~I _ ... _ l~ I _ ... _ )~ 0.ner•I General Gener•I c;.n,, .. . oflnJa !J~fe •PRESTIGE-WATERFRONT HOMES 12 Linda Isl• Ori'ltl -Optn Sunday Elegant new 5 BR. 4 lh ba. home w /formal din. rm., fam. rm., wet bar. Impr essive en· try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500. For Compltte information on 111 ham•• & lots, ple•M call: * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * OOVER SHORES -$10S.000 Brand new home w/dramatic 2·story 1ivint room, 4 bdrms, study, garden rm w/wet ba,r & formal DR. Island kitchen &. 3-car gar. "Our 26th Ytar" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reelton 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road . NEWPORT CENTER f44.4f10 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dov•r Dr., Suitt 3, N.8. 642-4620 UPPER BAY-2 STORY CU1to1n built NEW ENG. LAND olferlna: elep.nt en· try, lllfle Uvinr Rm. Mar- ble tlttplace, formal Din. Rm. Elect. Kl1. lncludlnt Electronic oven and Break· tut Rm. Five BdrmL Three and one hall Bath.,, Lrg. ram. Rm. 800 Sq. Fl. all purpose rumpus room, Service porch and 3-car gar. are. The perfect ansy.·er and a perfect aettin& for a 1ara;e family. Priced below marlce:t a! $79,500 -Shov.'n by apPOin~nt. ..:Jl!l .. ••••11:~ I General General --~==-=-1 :..=.;:....-.---.1 Beauty Shop Business cHRISTEL JENSEN Gtneral Gener ii POOL $26,950 The best Mt Is the lirat per- .an to Jiff this absolutely iQI'ie<IUS 3 bedrm, 2 bath home will be the new own- er. Sparldlng condition, cool covered patio, fully crptd on great corner Jocation. Everybody qualif!u to U· 1ume this lo\Y interest VA loan· -best hurry! Ca 11 :;M424. -~-BAYCREST- POOL Extra size. Jot -3 large bed- l'OOITlll .&: 2~ baths. Large living room and panefu>d family room betth with fire. places. UPi?'&ded "'Ill to wall throughout. Profe&Sion- ally landscaped. 16X36 pool \\1ith Olympic diving board It pool slide. Mt • FM in every room & patio. Best value in Baycrest. .. undet- priced at OlllY $:13,900. Call now! 67j...IJ90, 220 E.17tH 646-0555 Eveninp Call 644:·7003 ASK YOUR TAX MAN What he thinks abetut the in· come tax benefits ol owning income property. Then call us about thia Costa Mesa triplex with hardwood floors, forced air heat and aepar· ate yards. EstabU1hed shop ready to take over. Owner has do<:· tor's orden; to se!I, SO ~1UST SACRIFICE. Well located in a busy section of Costa Mesa. Beautiful ne1v equip- ment and decor. Pr:ice $10.000. 4501 Camd•n Dr. Corona dtl Mir You an the winner of 2 tickets to the Royal International Circus at the ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNOS Saturday, Apr11 3rd Please caU 642-5678, exL 314 \au th . C Oil St --. $41.SOO For A Solution To Your Problems Call =-We're Here To Help . COATS " WALLACE REALTOR$ 5414141- (0pe.n Evenings) Westcliff Area -28,950-• be-tween 9 and 1 pm to claim your tickets. (North Counly toll·lree number is Ml).1220) • * • COIY FOR A COUPLE IN-LAW SUITE Come see th.ls clever t0lution to the dittlcult problem o! "·here to put the folks and still &ive them the privacy tbey need, In addition to a large assumable loan, this well maintained home has boat access, 3 bedrooms, l~ bath.'\, a dinlfl&' room and is near .wchools a n d South Coast Plaza. VA or F11A Terms available. All this for only S27 ,000. Hur- ry! This one \\'on't lul! ~6-2313 ~:.:1 Assumable 6% Loan Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bath ~!en Vmle borne. Large country .11tyle kitchen \\1th bltns, beautiful covered patio. Complete privacy with many trees. Pet1ect loca· tion -dose to schools & park. Normal down and u- sume high existing 6% loan. Payments only $195 per mo including taxes. call 546-5&80, (Qpen f'Vt'S.) ,oTHEREAL \0. ES'.f A'.TE~S DUPLEX $29,500 Ea.stside location near Coun· try Qub. Big 70x1{fi yard, block wall enclosed. 2 Bed· rms, each unit with sepnr· ate garages. Located in Harbor High area. 3 large bdrms -completely redecorated -new carpet- ing -drapes. Room for boat or trailer. Outdoor !iv· ing on brick patio. Financ- ing very tlexible. Owner 111!1 consider 1ease-0ption - last pos!tesslon -better hurry. Call &la.-0303 Only 2 yrs old IBA.NA ok. An impossible find in the Costa Mesa area. A two year old home with large bdrm•, condition !or J23,95o with modern kitchen in apotleu f11A·VA terms. You've aot to see to believe. Dial 645-0303 !~=I Ntwporl •• Fairvitw f OR[Sl E OISO~ '" R FA lTO R S 2299 Harbor, Costa 1.fesa WOULO YOU BELIEVE HlRISI f. OI Sil\ '" P£ALTOR5 2299 Harbor, Costa Mesa B/B o THE REAL ''"'\.. ESTATERS Corona del Mor Income Units Dandy duplex with room for expansion. Lo c a t e d in Oran&e County'• moat desir- ed are.a. Ideal set up for home plus income or a good investment. Come see t~ numeroo:ii poMtibillties the!tt> unit.s offer. Pn:iperty in this area Is hard to find- don't delay. Call &15-0303. DIRTY BARGAIN $23,500 Located in East.side Costa 1'.fesa thi.11 3 bedroom hl1me hu 2 baths, a double rar· age. large fenced yard. walking distance to achool a and shopping. Jt needs IOl'ne paint and T .L.C. but at this price your total payment 'vtll be only $189.00 per month. HWTy, won't last. 546.8640 646-1111 (1nytim•J Macnab-Irvine Realty Company Thu; great view~ 4 Large bedrooms, 3 baths, ,\·et bar; all electric kit., sunny breakfast room, formal din- ing room; corner lot.. Com- munity swim pool. $79,500 22 YEARS OF REAL ESTATE SERVICE IN THE HARBOR. AREA INVESTMENT OPP. T"·o lots adjoin. commerclal. 2 BR. home plua. apt. I:. guest house. Only $69,500. 675-3000 71' OF . BEAUTIFUL BAY FRONT ~ Coldwell, Banker ~ m II,\\ ,\ llE.\1'11 llE.\U'\' L\I'. I EST _!_~19 __ ~75.)000; Owner has 2 ya.chis docka:i in front or this charming custom built 5 BR. home . Extensive brick I-y,·ood. B11Jiard size family room. Bay view from every room. First time oUered $!19,500 133-0700 644-2430 REAOY FOR THISt Big 5 bedroom~ -Nori~ Costa r.tesa. $26,500 • VA· FHA or take over the •:fut· ing 51,4 % annual percent.a.a• rate G.L loan. Ready 10 deal? Lef1 (0. IORl\I E Ol~O\ " N(~£f0NS 2299 HARBOR. COSTA 1.fESA Posh Palace Xtrs sh&rp 4 BP.. 3 BA, beauL tile enu·y, huie panelled !iv rm v.•/stone frplc. Custom crpts £: drps thruoul .. rOrmal dining area. Bltn range. oven & dshwahr. Approx. 1800 aq. It/ S32.500. GI or FHA term~. Call M?-1221. 4 BEDROOM 642.t23S 67$.3210 CONDOMINIUM Great living lor families on I"""""'""""'""""'"""""" .,. ••' • Bodroom. 2 bath, Vocant $18,990 dining. dble garage, shag carpets. Lots or living, Joaih o! fun and no yard "·ork. Shetrt v.·alk to the Clubhouse. Full price $22,950, submit your terms. Call SID-1151, (open eves.l [W ~~:::l 3 Bedrm Townhouse in eX· eellent area. Close to every. thing. 2 Bath an!aS, \V/W cpt1 & drp1, bltn range oven + refrig. Outdoor )iv· ing, sbuff\e ~d. tennis, pool, BBQ. 'lt's ready for you! Full price $18,990. Sub- mit your tfrms. Call 847-1221 I l\1l1\£T\ll\1l~ BRAND NEW -rmmedlate occupancy, priced 171"1 Beach Blvd .. Htan Bch below replacement. • BR, Open 'Iii 9 p.m. tn41 Bea& Blvd., Htn& Bch .,_ p I 1-~~"";;:,;.;:c;;.--Open 101 9 p.m. 3 Ba + pww. room. ane. MAGNIFICENT 1--.,-0~~~"'""~--1 led fam rm w/Znd frplc & MESA VERDE NO DOWN b!tn '"t ,,.,._ s.a•·•un, pool! 1033 r.tarlners Dr., WITH POOL T'o VETr 3 hu•e bedrooms, 2 dramatic ~ Dover Shores. Roy J. \Vard, fireplace~ and separate 1or· ;\fe!l.a del J\;(ar beau!y -3 bedroom.~ + !an1ily room • giant covered patio, new \\'ll(Pr heater, disposal 11.nd automatic \\'&let softener • hea\)' shake roof and da~ yard !or kiddies -CRY pric- ed at Sll.000 -Home already appraised. $31 ,000 Rltr. 646-1550. Open Daily. ma.I llvin:; room . Pool is FOR LANDS SAKE fenced !or salet)'. Huge cov- Buy this cute as a bug'a ear ered patio with B.B.Q. 2 bedroom Eastside Costa Come se• it. lt'a beautiful al J\feu. charmer. The land $33,fflO. Trade in your old alone is y,·orth the price of house. '"·""· non·t ..... "°"' l"t W lk & L on thi• .... Cal! now. a er ee 546-2313 "' Walker & Lee 2790 H""°' Blvd at Ad•m• 142·2535 ~ Op«n 'til 9 Pl\f YOUR OWN PRIVATE SPA Walker & Le~ Realtors Delightful College Park - 3 bedroom plus bonus addi· tion, Large living and tam· Uy room. Heated and filter- l!'d pool 15x32 "Fiesta". Cul- de -sac. Assume 6% VA Loan. $33,900 279o Harbetr Blvd. at Adazns 646-7171 I ~~91 Open 'til 9 PM $22,900 NEAT AS A PIN A nifty Corona del l\lar du· plex: in an excellent •·v.·alk to everything" location. Ideal for the owner occu· pant. Call us about tl'iis $harpie. Only $42.!iOO. For infonnation call 673-8550. HOME & INCOME Enjoy the comforts ol this very nice 3 bedroom 2 beth home and let the 3 rrntal units help you pay lor the property. Only SJ9.500. Arnold & Freud 3 Bedrooms, 11.h 6a1ha Only 7 years old, lt baa a buill·in kitchen forced a ir heat. Can be Occupied irrt mediately, HurTy on thi, one. 546-8640 -Rlty. • 2629 Harbor. C.:\1. Newport H•iCJhtS On Holly Lane 3 bed.rm, nl ba, nice 1.ize 'living rm w/ fireplace. Exira lge baci yard, good crpts &-drpll'. Obie garage. call for 'Q'lqrt information. • Lachenmyer Rlty Call 6~3928 Eves: 673-fjT'l O THE REAL ,'"'\.. EST ATERS 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-0465 Open 'til 9 f)f * INCOME * 388 E. 17th St .. Costa Duplex, 3 Ir. 2 BR -.$62.~ '46-7755 '-'• ' ' I• LIOO WATERFRONT APTS.·320 LIDO NORD $140,000 Price \Vlth 7<;~ Isl T .D. & Beaut. fu rn. uni ta; 6 car i:arages lt. util. room. 80 Ft. on awimmlng beach. \Vill consider trade lor boat or ma.'l:imum $85.000 J.ie. 4 BR. house. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 83l ·Dovtt Dr., N.B. &12-4620 * MESA VERDE * Lo\-ely, hnn1ae. home. Isl offering. Beaut, arounda. Cov. patio. New copper plunib 'g. Blk to i(llf course. $38~. Gtorg• Wllllam1on REALTOR 67J.4.l,;O 64J.15&4 EVES. VACANT VIEW LOT OOVER SHORES \'try lllr"~. Grtat ou :!ook. Hom • Show R•altor a '',\l'lnchalr Houethuntin11:" l)3.) E. Coill~t Hwy., Cd;\f US.7225 TR}.NSFER YOUR PROBLE~f to SPECIALISTS Proptrty Manag•mtnt R••I E1t1te STEPHENS A KAYE 645.012% ANYTD\fE Duplex, 2 BR Watertt. sn.500 I"""""""""""""""""' Dupt•<. ' • ' BR •.• ·"'·"" CANYON SITE Triplex, 2 BR ea ..... sn.500 REPOSSESSIONS'', lmmtcllate Po11•11lon Owner say& seU this 3 bed· room \Vestside beauty. 'New· ly deronttttl. "i!lcanl. $23,500 PERRON 642·1771 I STEPS TO OCEAN Triplex, 3 BR. ea ..... '$94.~ Call 6TJ-3663 &12-2253 e\'el. associated BROKERS-REALTORS 202S W Balboa 67l·l66] EXECUTIVES Live amid luxury, Lowest price in pt!atllf'! area, stt Value !JrOW, homes er\ced to SIJ.000. Walk to schools. <h\·per trarrsferrt'd, mus! sell! Steal this one al A·Fn.me; beach hon1e<. Xlnt SJ.t.500~ eond. 3 BR. 1~ ba. 2 Car El ll1·Schrader, Rltrs. gar. Bltns, 11e"' cpt. $33.900 192.6606 CAYWOOD REALTY 6306 W. Cout H•y., NB $23, 950 5@-1290 $1l7 A MONTH ~N~E~W~P-ORT-BEACH-Le'E.S thsn rent. 3 hd rtn. Top condition. 4 BR, lge lam den, rt'ar living rm., dlnln:;: rm. pool, h11ge kitchen w/ nn .. entry hall, no dn11-n din IU'ta. Sep offii:t. gut's! l~rm~ 11vRilalllt-. j ll).\t!CI hou.W or dressing nn by ' TAR BE LL 2955 Harbor pool. ~.000. Pet• Barr-.tt Rlty 642-5200 \VE Loan-Buy-.."rll 11nythln~ Coe!' P11v:n .\ Anc1ion. 2426 Ne"·port Rlvd. &12--MOQ . \Vith partial ocean \1ie1v. 2 Sparkling clet.n bOmes, '°"* Bedrm & den, 2 bath + newl,y painted " carpet:=: beautiful family room {17x :::, 4 & 5 bdnns. Some 37) with flagstone fireplace. pools. F TA.VA conv. t , 1pecial panelling, smoked from $1.0,000 10 $40,000. g1as1 windo1l's, $26,750. Collins" Watts Ioc. , Roy McCardlt1 R•altor gg.i3 Adams Ave. ~ 1810 Nev.1>0rt Blvd., C.~t -;,--ACRf:POOI....HORSl!',i __ .,..,-:54772'~--3 br, 11i ha, c:.oun!Ty-11)~ $800 TOTAL home near new park. f"-1' Joan. ?.lay e xchaal"". Owner/Art Ms.&417 ;:: I! all you need to move into this 4 bertroom, 2 b a. t h charmer with bnck BBQ :~m ~~ickro;::pt!~ioE TIME FOR, for chilly evtnings, and Jots QUICK CAS nlOre! \\'0\\' -fl4.000 Wal~er & Lee THROUGH 1~ Edins:er m" ,.,_,.:..;"' ;.t,.,... DAILY PIL SEE IT Sh11rp 4 BR. 2 b3. Dbl. Jl'.a r. Cpts. rlrpti. Kr. :1ChOOl!l. nlA or VA trrru;. Only s2:;.1j(l ()l\•ner'A2f'nl ~16·5.'l86 Wl'NT AD : 642-5678 :' • • tlAILY PILOT Tut~J. Mardi 2.3, 1971 Everyone Has DAILY PILOT Cl:ASSIF.IED ADS You Can Sell It, Fi nd It, Trade It With a Want Ad . Something Tha t Someone Else Wa nts The Biggest Mark~tpJace on the Or~ge Coast -Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results U1'11CllJl'C t1Cl-'il'CS RM I btmte, 1751000 SALESMAN UNIQUE la rollin& and plan- nina; on expanding. This v.·ill create 2 additional sale1 opportunities. There 'viii be UNIQUE profit sharing. aales aids. and commission schedule. Contact Jlm Wood, GrJ-6000. lJ1'11CllJf t1Cl-'iU A1t1! E11.ttt. 17S«XID JO~l E. Coil1t Hwy. CorON a.I Mar,c.ill. EASTSIDE Oldet l bedroom home •with 3 car garage on l.J acre County R--4 land. Hurry on this one!! $23,950 Newport ., Fairview 64U811 (1nytlm1) Macnab-Irvine Re~'tv Company NESTLED AMONG THE TREES A dellghtlul l bedroom home in beautiful Irvin(> Terrace. $47.500. Call tor appt. ""3710 Macnab-Irvine M2-1235 675-3210 HARBOR VIEW HILLS PANORAMIC VlE\V of New- port Harbor, Blue Pacific, Catalina lllland and Migh- borlng cities. Evening lia;till are like a million shinnin&: stars. Adult <1Ccupled, split level Th.tee Bdrma. T w o bath, Fam. Rm. Dlnlng Rm. Elect. Kit. home. Best CdM buy at Only $52,950 .,,,.Ith liberal terms, I [i] ;ml ~~l!il_.1~1 .. -...... -;;;1 ;;;e 1 Costa Me1a Huntfn9ton B1•ch Mes• Verde Jncorfte Property 166 Income Pl'OIMrty 166 Bu1 lneu Hou111 Furnlm.d 30Q YOU'LL Lo" tht. h<autilul FAMOUS PACESETTER • 20 UNITS • Opportunity 200 Co...,. dol Mtr Cambrida"e Highlands borne ,, ,, 3 BR, 2 bL Heavy lhakt .. J.UNIOR on quiet cul.de.sac in Col. DEANE HOME roof. Enjoy the lovtly 1um. SHOPPING CENTER WeU maintained, w/poot TO BUY OR PANORAMIC View Whlte lege Park. 3 large bed· Once in a while you a;et to m.er breez.e1. L 0 w prl~ 100% Occupied with ~~~·~: Ma,y e~= SELL A BUSINESS Water .I: San Joaquin HWa. roonts • 2 of them shut· see a home like this It;• for "thla fine area at $31,500, Reliable Tenants See Beach block, 2 br, i.e ~Uo. lered, 2 baths. family roon1, just beautiful! A 3 bed"room COR·BIN-All on leases Lots for s.r. 170 HOLLAND BUS. SALES addltion1I off·srrttt ~ 2 fireplaces, new lush shag & family room ~t wte· Profit ability 111anaged FORECLOSURE "The Broktt with Empathy" Lease $397/mo. ~2985 carpets. electric built-ins. fully decorated'. Lovely ftte by our manaxefnent dept, 1TI6 Orange Ave., C.l\.f. ligun• N iguel Lovely backyard with PB:tlo, form heated & filtered pool MARTIN Prime location cloae 2~=e ::,r;:: ,::!r re:;:: 645-4170; 540.0603 anytime 2 BR. V'-w ol Mt-A·-'"bl• neu school_s and shoppt~. ivilh therapeutic pool far re..-to freeway in ,., ... v&UG $33,000 with a 5 ~ ,o !axing Be first in hne . Orange County ipace employee now avail-Business W•nt.cl 210 to end of sdlool yev. Mr. assumable Joan call ~7413 $45,95c, 842.i,5 35 REAL TORS ~7662 $185,000 Ni Prlca able a.t deV'tlopttg cost. Peterson n4:521-4:;73 TROPICAL PARADISE Newport Be•ch SAVE $3000 WAN~1D: Ora~e C11n t Y HoUMI Unfurn. 3Q5 Fish, streams, waterfalls. a;ene,,.. on -..e quor --------- lli I Grenhse, garden w/3 BR TRADE UP JO on thest> fabuloU&. oak 1tud-llcen1 e . Bona11de Gener•I p..;-..1 I + 2 Ba. frpk, dbl garage. ded, ranch size apreads. ~staurant. Ca!h. Courtesy ---------1 Quiel cul-dt'-l&c, Assume Located in the booming to brokers. 714/~ ONE monlh'• rent •.• ·Y••· Evenina;s Call 644· 7003 Coron• del Mer B/B 22 YEARS or REAL ESTATE SERVICE IN 11-IE HARBOR AREA EXCEPTIONAL PRICE A very cute, small home, Cln low maint. yard. Perfect badtelor pad. $29.500 675-3000 r-·------:==i m HA\' ,\ llE.\1:11 : UEAl:I'\' l:\'t' I-=-=~-~=~ ---------1 leas than one month'• rent 6% FHA loan. Ap~t only, $700 ·TOTAL CASH WAJERfRQNJ South Coast An!& near San Money to Loan 240 !1 your total down payment 5-18-7243, 2238 Cathenne Pl. Customized 4 BR Townhoiw:. Juan Capistrano. H i I h on many tine 3 or { bedrm SUPER BUY, AIL TERr..IS Like new, shag crptJ, drps, Looking for oft ~ .. ter home above the smog, private Cash Fast ! homes! Call UI to llff If 3 Br, 1~ ba, A-1 area, Close cov patio. Pools, putting road and locked gate guar. """"' quality. s E y Mo UR in Newport Beaeh area in I !!~~~~"'!!~~~!' t ,_ to St. John's & all schools. green tennif; courts, club 1, antee the natural beauty Cl REALTY, call 847-ll21. The!e don't last, $23,500. house'. \Valk to school!, !~~:, 10!.a_~e~;~t 00~!~ CUTE EAST·SIDE this former Span.ish G1:t 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds RENTAL 3 Br Ii: dlninr rm Onrlagt 5*--0116 shoppg, banks, Cali 8-17-8507 This honie has 4 bedrooms, DUPLEX surroundedN by h<aFou ul FREE APPRAISAl.S + 2 bath $250 per' mo ht JUST LISTED. E-side Eves: 968·4377, 3 baths with dock, land· Cleveland ational reat. Co1ta Me11 Investment and lasl + $lOO d'J>. Dial triplelC. $49,500. GI no down. m sea.ping & sprinklers al-New condition. Two, one bed· AU utilities available, 541-7711 •nytlme 645--0303 Forest E. OllOll , :.:.~'';;.~~~ ""'"" j: 1:§ I '.' .. !.UJ ;ha~yT!~~~u: ~~~:U~. call ~~~=!~~~~: w1:vR~~:;fs~ ~~s "1~s'"t"'"'!l~D!!"'"'!!l'"o""a"n"""1 ~·,~~:'· 2299 Harbor, -• ..... .. W Huntington Harbour L•ndlord .. ~---rs * UNEXCELLED mo. income. See today -Circumstances force the im· vwnw PATNT & SAVE $$ Sales Corporation Won't last. mediate disposition Clf lhese 6%% INTEREST \Ve will refer tenants to YOU VIEW 3 Large bedrooms 1% bath 714 : U.1361 $34,900 Terms 646-7171 few choice parcels whose 2nd TD Loan }'REE of charge .•. Many Picturesque European style I famil kitchen ahor; . EL fC1rmer owners LOSS ts your desirable tenants on our ~ut contemporary & conv~n-!:ik to s~hool, handy man RUSTIC CHARM GAIN!! Call or wrl!e for Tenn1 based on equity. ~!ting list. ~ent, for fam~y &t enterta+ can buy at $2j,200. Or make Nearly new 3 bdrms., fam· complete details and color 642-2171 545-0611 , ~-ALA=-R~'~"W=·-•~64~>-1900=~· I Ing. 5 baths. -car garage an offer. owner leaving Uy rm. & kitchen with bllns. on-site photos. Buy direct Serving Harbor area 21 ""·'~FREE RENTAL BOOK _ mao7y xtra feature s. Sl6S,500 Calif. next week. 2 Full baths. Lcwely new l --:===,...,,==~-1 trom the developer: S ttl M t c"" · nd ~.. ••-· 548-249 Lar-o'n RHlty, Inc. carpeting. Stone 1rplc. 3 INCOME UNITS a er or gage o, COrM m a "'"wee uu.u " 00 336 E. 17th Street our aervlce-3 iii: { beds, East Bluff 54~5411 anytime garages, elec, door. Don 't f·O 2 BEDR M RANCHO CAPlsrRANO mia11 aeelng lhis! $39,500. (1) 3 BEDROOM Z172 DuPont Drive, Rm II Private money lrom $1500 apts., mo. to mo. or leue •EXCLUSIVE AGENTS • BY owner. 3 BR, 1%. ba. CALL .t;\ '"'·l<ll• OWNERS UNIT Newport Beach, Cal. 92664 up for 1st & 2nd Joana WA LKER & L EE. DREAMY LOCATION SALES . LEASES Patio &t waterfall. Assume 'Ii~~ Fenced patios. clC1.sed gar· 833.3223 Trust Oeecl C•nt•r inc. 1~~~ 6% VA kian. Sl:H mo total. 4MC1& ages, Owner will finanet", M bll H / 1323 N. Broadway, S.A, a;!~a:h~~u:. ~~~~1! ~; [jut f~ ~~:g~;9:•rbour N1t•r Nc:p~:,L:•Y•tt~flc1t ~7tpk~~~~~-Pete Bar· ;ra~er oP.~kl 172 Loa~='!n:~e 1949 3ki~1:~~~thad~~ l [~T ___1..!•!9 --"~ beach. Try lO'ia down. Ask· OCEANFRONT .;.::!....'.:::!'.~:;::'.:::'.C,..~-· I ~E:::X;-;:C:::E::-L-;-L:=:E~N:;:T-:'.op'.'.p-. -:2;;5;:;%-:;of ~--------·I fireplace, double p.rage and ing $54.900. SACRIFICE • $ 8 8, O 0 0. 30 to 50 Units two 5 Star Tam. M. H. Mortlilages, great back yard. For ren Delancy Rea l Estate re• 17 Magnificent • br. 4 ba DUPLEX urgently needed in the Costa Parks for 65M. Total spaces Trust Deeds 260 al $195.00 monthly, Call 2828 E. Coast H11,'y .. Cdi\1 waler1ront home in Hun-r..1esa area. Will purchase or 312 (142 sp. ready to start * * * Broker 545-9491 644·7270 N ~424 B"v.ista Del 064~1133 tington !·!arbour. l O 1 ' GoodBURloRromW•H· 1"'TE,SOQ effect a tll.x·tree exchange. constr.) Limited Partner. ELAINE THOMAS $210-4 Br. Bltns, cpta, drps, 1 e11,"PC1n each ... watei'tront 57' dock. Call 'r".,_., R, a It y eo-.. 8 1 N I d g•• f-d yd Kld· 'P''' •·•I• IMMEO. POSSESS. 213/ 5921so' 11 t Prln R I 67' "30 ....... v~ ... ship. Net tttum the 1st 21 5 ew an ..... ..... • w ia ... V t . hi . , BLUFFS CONDO D-PLAJ.J · or app · ••tor ~ ~Zl75, 9 am 10 5 pm. Eves year 3M per mo. For details Huntlnnton Beach Blue Beacon* 64.S.0111 acan • move rtg in. Located on lush greenbelt, Nr ,_c_i,.,pal~•-•"_IY,.,·_____ 2901 Ne-.vpon Blvd,, N.B. 968-6"Xi7. ., S'pac. 4 BR., family rm .. 3 Bay 3 b•/2,1 b a "I I -~'=='=----~·I call 682-1357. You are the winner Cl( COOL POOL + air oond. • rv ne EASTBLUFF, beautiful 4 ~ baths. Lge. mstr. BR. suHe crptidrps. By Owner ;I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BR, 3 BA,. fam nn, 2100 INDIVIDUAL house apt. Mount•in, Oeiert, 2 tickets to the 2 Br bltns, CID. kids/pets. w/fpl. Reduced to $62,950. &J.1-5983 l 1 sq. n. Xlnl location, &ehools, pro}e-cl. East Costa l\.tes.a. Resort 174 Royal $150 MORGAN REAL TY Overlooking Perk Fashion Island & Country F'\J.Uy occupied. Low rentals. International ALA Rentals • MS..3900 673-6642 67>6459 Fountain V•ll•Y ••. and hillside; country at· Club. 5 1\.Un to ocean. $4'f,SOO 61,i times gross. $154,000 LAKE Armwhead propmies Circus $'200-l Br. 1 Ba. Pool. Bibs, THE KEY RELAX & SWIM! I mosphere surrou nd.I this de-Owner 644-4~ w/$40,00) dn. Principals Lskelront·lota • cabil111 -at !he dbl gar. Avt now! LOVE'Y POOL (H&F) lightful ::i BR., fa1nlly r m.1---==,,...=---1 only. 54&-1674 houses CaU 548-8&12 a.it ORANGE Blue Be•con * u••Jll to future development, 60 It. • v•/v.·et bar home; garden 64' WATERFRONT. D!:>ck, OFFICE BLDG. COUNTY --Next to conimercial. Big 3 SPACIOUS 4 BR k<'t•"'"' '" ha o•t-,·,,,.,. boat incm, 3 BR, lo Price Real Estate Wanted 184 S 3 BDll!M., F .. -n .. rm., --~ "-'"' • '"1 •• "''" ....... Net Income $26,500 FAIRGROUND .... ........, .,... .. bednxun home vi'ilh frpl., Crptcl, drpd , lovely yard, low cul de sac strf'et, Owner by ownr' for quick &ale. g,·,g1, t•n-•t "AAA" WANTED: 3 Br&: 2 ba hOuse, Sa .. ~. A rtl '-d like ya.rd. Costa Mesa. Kids etc .. rented. $5.9.500. VA/FllA terms. Underpric· trans. $59,SOO. 6T>l!IOO. Pr;-;; WO,DOO to buy on conditional &ales tw uoy, P '" OK, brk., $200 a awnth. NO University Realty l'd. * On Canal -By Owner + contr. in area of 0 . C. Please call 642-5678, eXI. 314 FEE. SU>-1120. 300! E. Cst. H"'Y· 673-6.JIO HAFFOAL REALTY e·. °'-. red h·111 4 BR.+ conv. den&: ple.ynn. Retuma 10% Cln ca.sh inv. College. Call 548-5909. betwe~n 9and l pm to daim J12Q..Lq: 1 Br. apt. Stv/retrlg, 842-4405 Eves. 541·2446 3 ea·1. \Valk to beach. W. R DUBOIS INC. your tickets. !North County new cpts drp l lll' Orlld Mlnl•ture Horse R•nch Coat• Mesa I BLDR'S Sacrifice.Span. style $48.500. 66-0114 Aft. 4 P?1 * 545-TI66 * ~oU-free num!"' la 540-1220; ok. • s, • s:ao,ooo. ~ 1---------nu custom 4 Br. $32,500. REALTY CHAR.i'dING hillside home LIDO ISLE-320 Nord, 6 II•) Blu•S.econ*645--0ll1 Situated in Costa r.fesa on • DJs A STER STRUCK-this 11500 d Loadod / tra beach apt.s. Furn, Gar. 80' Fini rK:ial [ :~~~~~~~~~l;';iiii]~~~;;;J~~~ii l '' ol land Th •-" w ' ' l . w/";<w, Ne\lt ...... ..+ Ht I, l Bl>RM + ~ ·1 •·" ,, acre . is nun1e Eastsidt Co&ta t.lesa home · · Univ. Park Center, rvtn. 54s:_7983 't""'' beach. Leasehold yr. 2014. ~ . . ,,.l?ll Y nn., ~ ...... is remlnlacent Clf a seclud· sold and owner pw'Cha~d ~:~~~Fi~ds~ ~t: Call Anytime 83J.(}820 H • h Asking $140,000. Consider I•••••••••• HoulM forR9"f. / 11! dining nn., built-1.ns., bric. ed coontry retreat complete another. buyer unable 10 10223 Ph t A Newport e1g ts trade. 642-4097, 54&-2211 ext Business . $391> • month. NO l'EE. with knotty pine paneling, complete purchase -l\Cller 537_Q380 ea!ian ve. Laguna Be•ch Open House Fri 1•5 =""=-~--,-,~,-.:: Opportunity 200 '-------' Newport, 540-1720. separatt-family rooZomd•1nd needs help Submit all 2500 Holly Lan• PVT party want$ 16 10 20 ---------$165-2 Br. RIO, cpfa, drps, wide open spaces. ne or terms on this sparkling 3 Huntington Beach OCEAN VIEW 3 BR, 2 BA. .belnled" c:eillng, units from owner. NewporV DISTJUBUTORS NEEDED Hounl Furnished 300 wshr/dry, yd /paUo, child ok horses and the price is right. bedroom home with 4 BEDROOM Cheerful & sunny, new J bed· brick trple, extu. .lg lot, Jl.fesa area. 540-6752 HUNT'S ''SNACK·PACK"G ~-.-.-.,-.-,1------·I Blue Beacon * '45-0111 Sttitandnameyourterms. hard11,"00d floor~. bltns, POOL HOME roon1, 2 bath home. Wood , '·-'"-I . N If 111 . d II BESf LOCATION-2 Br, •ml :>:6-"''"". Rily patio, dbl, fireplace and b . k great ma~ 11 worn.&uuP tar· WANTED, 2-12 clean units e1v mu I ·m )()n o a r ~ , -k· 1 · hom " «IE'rior. Used r1c entry: rl d i··-• k k yd -gar ONLY ~~ mo-. "".000 or &st Cltfer, UJU ing or a nice e. age_ for p vate party. e ver L""-'ll SMC pac pro-, "'"' · .,....,. MONSTER FAMILY ROOM 18'X30' separate •nd uady to move in. Extra !hick car- pets. modem kHchen. 3 queen sized bedroom! • all on tree !had~ lot. $26,500 ""~th F.H.A. or V.A. terms. Trade yours. Walker & Lee Rtaltors 768:1 Edinger 1714! 8~2-4455 or ~5140 TOT AL LIVING 3 blocks to the beach, 1 block to shopping. l block to the pool and !ennis courts. En· jay this 3 bedroom. 2 bath home 'vlth Swedish fire· place, new pain! and loll; or shag carpeting. Cos t ? .. f,!9,950. 646-TITI I UNITS Just listed! Good area ol 1' Anaheim. Be first lo ~! P y r a m l d Exchangers S"m-8800. ''" ....., no maintenance. On end of N R T du NEED NO w ALA "---•· e 64° -Call 54~8424, South COO.tit \Ve h8\'e a sharp. clean, 4 JEA •SMITH, L R * 642-35CM * els. ! .-u.in....., .......,......, hed ho th 'ghl low traffic street. Vacant .....ci< Reliable mf'n or vromen in RENTAL FINDERS 3 Realtors room me at mi le. available now. $36,SOO. 400 E. J7th St., Cl\-1 646-~ COSTA MESA ,,,..,.,. ....... to '"'"VI"• I••<· $1~ Br. 2 Ba. Dbl pr, fncd URGENT-owner bought new flt your requiren1ents. this S _, h ,,~... ..... ... ,_ Fr•• To l1ndlords yd, ideal lrg h.m.Uy. home -must rrel! im· home ha~ carpets, drapes, Call. ant•· An• Hstlil t1 TRIPLEX moving coin operated pn>-"""'5..0111 Blu• Be•con * 645--0111 nice [andscapin"' w i th ACRE fo• Comm"l St•bles duels in company .secured u-. mediately. $31.9511 Cir submit .. ..,,IOt. • The closest you can come to I t" I I M IMMAC' New --ts / d .... ~ •p1inkle .... + a pool. Assume O «.'/t or horn• •-stables. 673-"""" oca ,.,ns, com mere a Cir 4JJ W. 1 tlil, c .. tc ... · .. ,. · .... . ofler -all tenns available. '" ,.. ~ living for frre after an init· f 1 p rt I II 1· ~t!0;~~~~==~-1 dwhr Mv/rel Kids flJO 6~ VA loan "'ilh tot11I or 673-5723 ac ory. a or u ime. _ • · · •• · Manicured yard, 2 massive REAL EST'A'JE iaJ. investment of only 20% 6 to 12 hours per week. BUDGET SAVERS ALA Rentals • 64>3900 fireplaces, 3 la.rgc hedrooms monthly payments of ~ZlO. "" down (appro:1e. $8300) is this Distributor Clf product only STEPS to BCH..Sml yd for $135 • Separate 2 Br. Duplex. &: 2 sparkling baths. Call Priced at ;33.500. See it to· G s ~ woU located westside tri-(no •l!ilt'atod with l'"nl•· L GU I 5'15-842". SJuth Coast day. 1190 lenneyre I. fte•I E61•t•, a I .,...._ :z Bed l I~.. pel , encl gar, A l'lA $ll5 Stv refrlg, gar, child ok. 49'l·9473 549-0316 General .m pex .• , .. .,.e roomy · Wesson Food!!, nc. · no F'JNEST AREA·Lovely yd, 1 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 Realtors I' room unit• with separate ,e\Jing. CASH REQUIRED 8 h" d k. u pd Sl20 --R=A-'R"E""V'A"L'U"'Eo--I e $46,SOO e garage•, hard"·ood floors S600 to $2995. Write for more r. c u 0 11 . FAMILY Wanted: 2 br, lncd tmmac 3 Br home xlnt ~ 1 ~ood ALA Rentals • 645-J900 >'d, enc ""'r, kids, .,ts. $140 Charming &. beautiful East· '62 ••71 ( -") 546 810J · · • A f I 150 and private patio areas eX• informauun: nslant .-•" ~ ....... • area. Lo\•ely .......,,nds. 2 Car creage or 11 • ,_ th o.. l po Bo 31"' T 1100-utll pd 1,Br. apt. Avail ALA Rentals • iof5--3900 side home. 3 Large bdrms. •·--cellent wr e owner occu· ..... pp y, . . x ""'· or· large fa.nily rni. k kitchen V .A. RE-SALE garage. fireplace. ACREAGE JNVES"f'!l.1ENT pant. ranee, Calif. !K>505. Include now. Child sml pet ok, S, Laa;una.$135 1 Br. Stvltt~ voilh a!I bltns. 2 Baths. l queen 1ir.ed bedrooms. • $62,500 • 40 acres in Cleveland Forest $41 ,SOO 67U550 pl'IOne number. Blue Be•con * 645-0111 fr ig, cpt.J, drps. sn~s ok. Lovely hv. rnt., new shag Great extra large cul de sac Fantast.lc Olde English home. east of San Jarl Capistiano. WANTED: Orallf:e c n t y $I~U!ll pd. l.agUna. Year Blue B•acon * 645-0111 carpels. Db!. frplc. "-dbl. !or, 1\nyonc can take over \\'oods Cove al"Cil. Xl.nt UWitiea & good acceh. Ex· genttal on sit!e liquor round. Nice Bach. Nr bch. SP.AC. 3 Br, 2 Ba, all bltn., garage. $30.95CI. subject 10 V.A. loan with a grounds v•/lots of 1hrubs. ce\lenl development poten-l icena e . Bona f ide Blue Beacon* 64.5-0111 CID. Kids &t pets. $170. GRAlfAM REAL TY 646·2-114 li1tle dab of cash and pay-PLACE REALTY 494-97()4 lial. Only $1875 per acre-. restaurant. Cash. Courtesy Al..A R t J • 645-3900 ments of $164 per month • 2969 S. Coast Hwy, LB Terms. R. S. Bro wn Co,!-'=======~~ ro brokers, 714t8JS-.6770 B1lboa Island en 8 s BY owner. 3 BR, den, 111 includes all. Go man go. * OCEAN VIEW VILLA * 493-4774 $175 • Newly dee, 2 Br. dbl BA Hillcrest home. Crpts, I -=cc--c"7-cc7"-:.,.---TIME FOR ASSCX::. with $100,000 to help 2 BR. rurn. house. Garage. gar, fncd for kldi .I: pets. drps, lhruout. Blt-ins. pool Walker & Lee New, oldc .,,,.orld design; 2 R·3 Cit c.1 .. n1ng. 1+ acre. form lt!asing company. Ter· S250 Yearly. Bl 8 '4S.0 1 size J.ot. Assume 6~; fllA BR, d('n &: rec. rm. Din. C1Wner will subordina te OR ri lic profit po t ential, REA LTOR 675-3331 ue ••con* 11 P&I. 545-6119 Real! . an?a. r~rpl. Kitch. w/range. 8.3 acres prime comer ZC1n-QUICK CASH secured. Great C)Jlportunil)'. Coron• del Mar LAGUNA-2 Br I u x u ry Ol s oven, dishwasher. $39,COO eel C·l Trade -long term f\Jr. Dave 114:847-9462, wlview, walk to heh. $180. Owner 63/4Y• VA Lo•n 2~_Harbar Blvd: ~t Adams full pr. Lo\\'er dn. pyt. OK. lease or sell, Ownen anx· THROUGH A . -;-;;;:;:~-:;;:-;;-;7;;;--;:;l",ALA~_;Ro~oW~•:-,,~•:_!&4'.:5-3'00~~1 $4000 cash. 4 BR, 2 BA, 2000 J4.>-9191 0(X'n Ill 9 P~I r.tlSSION REALTY 4~731 NEED partner in small pan~ FANTASTIC V 1 E W of ious. try anything. ting btu1lness w/10 yrs ex· Newport Bay, Balboa Island Coron. d•I Mer ~:r.r~i: 1~;1;;~~~~qi'.;1~: $100 Total Cost it ON THE MALL* Larwjn Re•lty, Inc. DAILY PILOT per. 64:>.-0809 &: ~an. Nearly new * FIREPLACES * ifying. 5S?-6.J36, 5-iS-058!!. GI or low down FHA. 4 Bed· Mo!larch Bay. 2 BR. 2 Bl. 546-5411 WRECKING yard, xlnt loca· Spanish _ slyle 3 br, 3 ba 2 BR. house, bltnl ..•••• $225 rm, 2 ba, 11,'fpool thrown in. condominium. JS9.500 * C"-1 wO l -~ WANT AD tloo, Reasonable. Will ,ell .. ho Will l 2 BR 1 ~ BY 011,·ner, E-Sidt! 3 BR. ] '" _,., nu ce m Pe zo,tc» ex~ .. ve me. eaiie . apt., arge •••••••• ......., A rf'RI buv In ehoi~ arta. BETHKE REALTY 4:rt·~ Orange County a<'ttage _al_l_o_r~pa_rt~. _ea_l_l6_7_3-_7_185_·~· I furnished or unfurnisMd. University Real.., ...... ""10 BA. crpt11. drps, firepl. Lrg V M. f NO"" -= ..,, "'""'1i.I lot. sprinklers. On a U <1can1.1ove n ... ~! 3 UNITS nr beach, !!bops, ltattfalt"talf•• 642-5678 Turnunuaeditemsinloquick L ive-I ~ maid lncl.3 Br. 1 Bath. Crpt1 . shaped irtreet. \Veil kf'pt. Collins & Watts vie11., furn. 10% down or 642-6560 a.t,t [ ::========o=:i"":::O:h;;·;;•:;al;;l;;64;;2-<i6;;:;;";;;;;;;:_~71;:;;:4/;;64>-:;;:;;1"353:0:;;=:;;;:===1 Available now, $250/IQo. $2.:i.000. 642..6263 8843 Adams, lluntina;lon Bch, trade. s49•500. 494-492.3 Yearly, Call 67J..63:l6 SZ2.500. LO\Y down to buyer 962-5523 lido Isle :lXl Acre•, ocean v I e w, Cost• Mes• 7-mUes from ocean. Very w/good credit&: assun1e SUPERSHARP-it'sim· *REDUCED* ..3 BEDROOM BEAUTY Fl-IA. 3 BR. good slret'L maculate, 3 J3t'(lroom home Immac. 5 BR., famUy rm. ~~y65's~~. r~.u:~t°i; Agt, ~ or 61H930 in quiet residential area -45 Ft. Lot itreet.to-S©\\.~1A-'-'£2rS" • CHARMING 2 br duplex • Crpts, dr1>1, bllns, k't'f!f!ned patk>. pvt yard Ir: ~. 1 child Mly, no pet1. $170fmo. 21.0'Ai C«il PL (in reM) 64&-T;,35. 'A'k 'or A" Coatal. 1 , hool • ho · 714-726·1188 ask for Alan. ZONED c.2 c OllC 0 l\l' ~ Ii pping. !itreet By app't, orJy * BY OWNER $28,500 For '30,9.'iO lh1!1 has to be l9J 7 Cemetery for home & busine1s l BR, 2 ba. Din'g nn, f'am the best home for the J"Y\l)nfy LIDO REA'L'j(JTY INC Lot1/Crypt1 156 $31,000 1 In HuntingtC1n Be a ch • 'smma. 11r~1:..~. ~!r...,. ~e poo · Carpets. drapes, bltns, plu~ 3377 VI• Lido 673-7300 VI R nv """'" ,,.. Ml'.! 2 UYT'S in Harbor Re&l ftCO ea 1 ,M~E.CSA~V~E"°R~D~E-"Loo-.,~l~y~3"B~r. plus! plus~ Call 54~24. L•guna Nl!ilu•I Memorial Park, Cypress Sou1h Coost Realtors. . c---tlon. "·'I °'" ·-2 Ba. Blins. Buy from ~;;;:;:;;;;;;-;;;:;:;:...~C:J~~~;:::..~~~~~~·~~--0 •.' ner & save~ Da.y~ $1500 *29MONARCH BAY* Condominiums 8.'l.")..3551, eve'S 540-91J2 B'r" OWNER. for a•lt 160 Fast results 11.re just a pOOne MOVES YOU IN Bc>1iut. Colonial trl·leveJ 5 · ~ Harbor. 01 · Sell ldlf ilem5 no\lt·! I &42.-5678 Now! I c:all away • 6~2-5673 BR, 21.~ BA, sundeck. fan-1---------1,,.-,-...,,.,,-----Choil'f' Hunllng!On Beach 3 tastic 11,·hite water \"lew, 2· CHEAPIEll Cosf1 Meui Coi t• Mes• IM!oilmom • new carpets, yn new. Compl crpted, •II Only $18,000 for the cute1t, lat'R'e covtred Pft!lo • as· bh·lrut inc vacuum 1ystem cleanest 2 br, 1\.1 ba you'll sun1r 6~ % loan. A n.un. bath. 3 ca:r pr. ever find, lt V."On't WI, Move to the BEACH! $26,900 842·2535 '"" rm, '"" ""'''"'"· FHA, GI ... FHA 2llll2 l\tany dlx xtru too numcr· term.•. see it now. Foract 1boN: Jon& driva to your f11voritc ou1 lo mtnllon. $1..lS,DOO. FRENCH QUARTERS bf:ach or w•tcr arra. New J or 4 bedroom, ~-<198 ••1 \'M alnsJe or 1wo al.Of)' homes in cl<>te-in eo.ta ...,.... or °" · """'· 3 lkdrms. 2\1 ~th In tlp toP M..,_ $ 0 ""=-.,,,,.-=~---iMlssion Vielo condition. Auume 6~ lnL from 3 1500 4 BR. 1\~ BA Townhou~. FHA '°'" or buy no down assu~le: 5\ii:'., FHA, PQOl,1--SE-L-L~o,-L-E-AS'"E--GI. Ext!ellent Costa tiiesa ew ~;~etc. O\\'JK'r, $24.000, [)('ane heme 3 br, lge fam Jocatkin. J91ha,.dWhlu1,rA1·r:., • rm. fully crpt/drp, lac Larwln Re•lty, Inc. Costo Mr.Jlf BY owner-Town hc>u~. 3 AR, pa1H'I: SZS.fKXl, \\/C'On5lder 21:i62 Brookhum, H.e. 1 ._, .. o mc. PfMwle: (n4) 545-0337 :1 BA. fpl, wthr/dryr/refrig. 2nd TD. Owner: 830-1 168. 54~$411 •nytlme ~ SIS.MIO. 962""4900 ro;:---fhaf ilem undtt $50, A rood want ad is • &OOd ~""""""""""""""="""""'""'""""'""'""~~I \\'e"ll help you ffl!! ttt2-."lli78 try tl'te ~IU' PincMr Investment The Pun/e with the Bui/I-In Chuckle 0 1!:90r1Unoti I.ti.rs of th. four acrornbled wordJ .,._ low to fornt fovr ll'mplm words. &Al.HOF I 1 1·1·1 I I 1-i-Ty .;;.A.;;,S-TiArSi-11 f ". 1·1 e1 _. f. ·-~ 1 1 ~"'--"" T U F 0 H _ i Ccmment of a boa.tlul t--,.--.,-T, ...,,..,,,-i • baby-sitter: "I'm so greot the ~~-_.,_ ---'--'·-' bobles a re broken -hearted r---------.when I ~vt; to, I let them M 0 G H E A I woor their d;oper1 -.• t-.. 7rl -,,,,._,,,-.,,-... ,-! e Compl•I• th• dt uckl. quotild by filling In th. mlni119 'll'Ofd-, . 'fOll d ..... lop fl'Oftll stitp No. 3 b.low. s r :~~:,~~~•ES r 11 t 1·· r r I' 1· r 6 ~~~.~~ 10•1 I I I I ~ I I I I I SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 2 BR. Gar. PatJo. Crpta, drp1, stove, retrlg. Q.ilet troplal aettini fM adulta only. 1 blk lo thops, $160--· SPACIOUS l-4 Br, J b&, Fam ·nn. Lgl! tncd yanl, Frplc, $.150. Call Jim at 64~1976 or 833-2113 2 BR, new, gar, wa~r p:I, 1,...., No pe:lJ. Nr 18th A N11.'Pt Blvd, $150/mo . 642-.1837 LEASE 4 br/2 ba, le tned )'nl. Cltltlm OK. ·•~Tl"** 2 BR. Duplex. Garap, JIO pets. Adult•. $144/mo. 133 W. Wlbon. SCS.-2302. 2 8R ~e. m prt•. $19'.l/mo. S50 cleanlrc fee . 119 4 Pomona HOUSE llunttnc? Walch the OPEN HOVSE colum11. I I I I . . . Aph. Fum. UO Apt. Untum. .,.;.........,----- 305 Cost• M••• Coron• del M•r I l la Quinta Hermosa , r-1 :,,,, I 11·llil. -· -I I l'11ll11r ~ . ' • U5 Apt. Unfvm. Coit• Mei• NEW NEW NEW VILLA CORDOVA -. ' JNDMOUAL PRIVACY ADULT LIVING L& dl:c: 2 hr l~i ha y.•/gar Ir; stor. P• r k-l lkf' al· motphett. Fncd pa.tlo, C/D, Wtr pd, 63fr<l12Q 2437-D Orange Aw. 667-K Victoria: St. Sl55 $155 *BRAND NEW* LA COSTA APTS, 1 & 2 BR. Bltns, swimming pooJ & gar- &&:e. All util pd, $150 to SlTII mo. Adults no pets. 3.54 Avoctdo: Of. 642-9708 or Unfurn. Apt1., 370 Furn. DA.IL Y PI LOT or Unfvrn, 370 Huntington 8••ch -: OCEANFRONT vu. Sundttk.i;S..;....• .. ••;.;..A;:;•.:• ______ s;;';;";:1;;.1..;A_•c..•-----"'.I : Bea<'h. Smoeftte. tff:wer , dlx 2 Br. blln!s, cph1, dml. patio, lndry, rar, Ill" ShoPtl \ Ir pif'r. SI&';. Adlls, baby ~ ok. 536-2131 * RI.ESH AIR Walk J blk.s to Beach! Beaut big 3 BR apl. w/w Cf'PIS, drps, bltna o.cept retrlg. $2'l5. No pell!. 5JS.17ll Nr Huntington Harbour Triplex . quiet area. Lrg l Br • $140, J BR • $240. Pets ok. ITI4! &46-0071 . ---- My o.ddy ..,._ "Live and JMrD " MyM,,__ "TM!'swlry .. #wool' ' -' Apts., Furn. cir Unfurn. 370 Newport Beach VISTA DEL MESA Rentals I~ Rooms 400 430 435 DAILY PILOT * POND EROUS ELEPHANTS *DARING AERIALISTS HEY KIDS HERE COMES THE SEE! * FUNNY CLOWNS *BRAWNY BEARS 20 OF THE BEST CI RCUS ACTS IN THE WOR LD ROYAL INTERNATIONAL FREE ONE DAY ONLY, SATURDAY, APRIL 13 2:30 OR 8:00 P.M. ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS·COSTA MESA I~[ l~I ~ _ ..... _ .. ,. ;;;;;;;;l~~- 530 flenttls 440 R•nt•f• Wanted 460 Per1onal1 305 No. El Cem ino Son Cl•mente ......,., R1o1I 8u1ine11 Rtntal 445 PRIME LOCATIONS E, 17th St., Costa r.tega 1120 Sq. ft. commercial bldg, Wirh parkinJ". $300 J\1o. lncfUstrli l Rental 450 SMALL UNITS COSTA MESA $95. Ii $161, Per Month Immedia te Occup&ncy New 6500 sq. tt. unH, 18th & \Vhlltier, 110-220 po"·er, plenty of parklng. See: Rob!rt Nattress, Rltr. Costa r-.tesa 642-14&5 7500 sq ft-All power, heat. lights, partitions & fl~rs finished. 1535 Monrovia, N.8. call 645--0770 :OMMERCJAL-!NDUSI'RIAL 500-1500 sq ft, 13c to 12c * San Clemente 4~1S40 * Rentals Wanted 460 \Viii trade, free &: clear, Family billiard parlor, FOR !ate model Car, Camper, l'>Iotor home, Boat, Real Es. !ate or ? ?? ti42-2W5 47 Fully lmprov'd R-1 loll (iii $t500 {$211,500) Clear. \\'ill Divide. Want Motor· yacht. Airplane, Bayside home or Inc. (714) 459-3103 TO\VNHOUSE J BR. 2~ BA Newport Beaeh. Elec kit., ----------I frpl<:, pool. Pri. patio. Va.I· WANTED: Yearly rent&! ue \32.000. Take T.D. Trail· from May 15!h, responsible er or ? Owner 646-6654 exec w Id a u g h le r & Have SO units, Jow vacancy. housekpr, require 3 BR furn Trade all or part fo:-othtr hse or apt, nr beach & units. Farrow Rtalty Corp, A Ibo Sehl in Lag u n a · 5J0..2l 75, 9 am to 5 pm. Ot t.ails please to ad No. Evt-s 963-6767. M, Daily Pilat. P. 0 . &'! 1560, Costa Mella, Calif. '57 Cadillac 2-dr. good mo· 92626 tor & transmission. Run- THE Road Homt-s' Drummer n1ng. V.1UJ trade for furni· \\'ants 2 BR hou~ or apt ture, bike or ? to rent on a permanent ____ 645-_~°"-'---- buis CdM or N11.'PI Sch area .' Jn $200 range. Starting Trade - for late model car. May lsl. 67:>-7~73 2'12 A. ~in Newberry Valley- eGARAGE WANTED• near Barstow. The Valley ol t~ Lakes. $4000 apprais· Approx 2-car slze, lor the al. 5-IS-0509 building of 14' fiberglas ---,----..,---,--,--:--: boat. Need !or 90 days at What do you have to trade? leui. List It he.re -1n Orang& * 641!4665 * County's largest read tril4- ing post .642-5678 2 CAR Garage ln Costa ~t~sa. To be uaed for stonge. Call Terry. The * Re&! Estaters 546-2313 * * * * -------. Schools & ln•tructlons 175 PIANO hta10nt, me m be r Dt!lta Ornltr0t1 ProftlflOMI Fnt~m\ty, P'T1, Snt f9'7·1382 Find Your Name If you r n•m• 11 ll1lod In • 1poclol 1cl-lt could 1ppoor llnClor 1ny cl•••lffc•tlon, 10 look e t th•m all-phont 64t.J671, Ext•n.slon 314; befwMn t 1.m,. and 1 p.rn. to m•k• arr1n9tm•nt1 to pick up your tickets at eny conventtftt DAILY PILOT office. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT 1-... -1~1 --J[ll)r ~' ---·-·-.;][;;HJ•, Job W1ntod, Fomalo 701 Holp Wonted, t.1 A F no •COOK• Coco; 1555 w. Adom• Costa Mesa ... .. ...... I I ' I I I , I ·~ • • • :Z4 OAILV PILOT • • .. .. ) . . . . . .. ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ Tund•1, Mmtl 23, 1971 . . • • • . -. . . .. . . . ' . • r • .. • [ f11.,io,mn J[tl]( ,___ _L 0 "'_·00••_J[Il]I "--_.,....,_ ... __,J[Il] I lt§J .__I _ ... __ I[§] I - 935 Help Wanted, MI: F 710 1 H•lp Wanted, M & F 710 H•lp Wanted, M &. F 710 Antique• IOG Mf1cell•neou• Ill Plano1/0rvon. 126 Lova ble y"' adult li:male Boats, Power 906 Mobil• Hemes ---------:1::;;.;.::;;;;:;;;:;~--..:~ nlf'd. !iite \\lr1!·llii:1red ll'r-1--...:..--------l -~c::'.:":'.7"':0=:P:;E;:N;:---1 R.E . s.1.. Seco-> Hond Ro11 • * WE fli"r 11\lX I lllTI :.hort-hai.rt:d '69-18' C'haral'r nathOH-Onl NOW LAND S •LESMEN na MARIAN LOGAN boat ._.llrir, 128 rord ""i· CONTEMPn ~ NTI terr1l'r 1n1:1., 10 lbii, male. DRys S~l51H/afl S:30 pnt, ....... ------r:nrinttrini; ~oil CIVIL ENGINEERING AC'COYntant $700. 2 Yeari -T ECHNICIAN -e~~ncc. MaJOr 111nd dt1•clopmf'nt ('0., Liz Reinder• ATTENTIONll I A QUES Tnl Klnv• Rd. QUITl,l,I, Good w"'""°"" lo" ohold· 968-tm LAGUNA HILLS LTCENSED/UNL.ICEN'SED Maple chopplnc block, Newport &.•ch l't'n. Ntf"d goocl homt.!IJ w 1 1,:::::.,,"""--~-~--' 23.'lOl RIDGE ROlITE on. II &II )'Ou'~ look.Inc !or large pine hutch ~ble, You are the winner of lenct'd yards. 1·532-5187, ~T 71' TROJAN: Grry '-1ari°" lCorner of t.foullon Pkwy) i~ BIG mgncy, that'll e'1· pine cornt'r cabl~t. l 1lcket1 lo the Arter 5 )'f!&rs. we are closing pm, or 836-4~93 3124 cng, dbl tand/lrli·. Ncru~ LAGUN A 1-ULLS ~efks • lechruf'la.n to pe-r· Personnel Agency lorm vanou"' Civil Er11:1· f ,_ -• ff -1500 Canipus Dr., N.8 . nt'('nn~. dril lu11; a,,..., o ire Call for Appointment a1:tly what we'll olltr maple & pint) tta cart, Royal our doors in C06ta t.te1a. l -S~\l=A~L=L:..:o=,0-,= ... =r'-d-oi:-,-,=,..:.:71 !'?~"~~ $I0001 6 ~~" ~!~ <J[r. Prr11tl1;e tidult com111unity ad. you. If you should also ~·alnut hnf'n cablnt't, lnt•rnatlon•I All l'emalning Pianos & Or· puppiPI. Black ~nd bruwr••I =-~=~~·"· '~'~'.:::.· ~~::.:::::"~:-.,.. Jaccnt to Leisure \Votld . tasks. MS.2118 Po!'-lllon IT<JIUl't'& lll£:h School I :-~-~-~~-~-~~-~~-~-~~-~-~~-~-~~­graduat~ v.·it h dnfting/dl"· * LIQUOR CLERK* sign and grading. Some col· ~·ant a new 1971 Cadil-pine dry sink, C ircus aarni, ne\v & u.t;td. IC'I clear pt. Chihuahua and doxie. l!WI ?6' 011is Connie, l\1•ln Beaut1(ul su1Ttmnd1n.::s, ill l11 r, Contintnla\ nr any & many 01her lovely plttt1. at t!lr at auction pri~s. Savings 212 33rd St. N,. w p 0 rt N;"rt\V, Xlut t:ond, $32j(l Dys luxury appointmf'nts, put. Not uoder 40, Ct>sta Mrs11 leje and publlr works exper. .a.rl'!a. :-.lust Jwi.\'e retail 1n a sut>-pro!f'S5lO n&l ca• liquor e.\pel'ience. Appllra· patiry 1$ r\!'s1rnble. lions confidential. Ph: Ttu11 JS a career position "hh oOit>r comparablf' 1971. Open \\Ped thru Sat ORANGE up to 50$~. No dealert &h J/2.4 5'17-5-lli6, f've~ 673-72~7 ting green, hobby soop, car, \\"e"ll give you !hat 11 A~l·S PM COUNTY plea~. DOG 3 ino old black stan· 41 ' CHRIS 'i<J, tr1-cabin, much 1norr . too. H You're looking for "139 \V. lllt SI. FAIRGROUNDS \VARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO dard Poodle, puppy, shots ~e"". in!rr ., Fu!l f!<Juipmtnt, CAU.. 830-3000 top rompensation1. vest-Tustin 838-1'1742 Saturday, April Jrd 1819 Ne\\'PoM Blvd, MZ·848-I pd. for. Female. Movlni;, $20,500. &l.J-413'.l, &14-4221 _ -~T~H~E~BEST OF ert contr11c•s. commls· PleaSt' call 6-12-5678 ex.1. 31 4 CLEARANCE can't kC'ep. Great with kid1. Boats, Rent/Chert'r 908 BOTH WORLDS 548.J883 :o.Jnt grov.•th oppor1unity.1c-==------ Pl<'R5l' i1rnd letter or re-LAUNDRY help. \Vash man. suoie outlln1ns:-quahf1ca· :\ton·fri. Pt nn. posilion. uons and salary htslory. Benefils. Std. Uni for n1, i;1ons paid in ten (10) VE RY ANTIQUE IX'1"'f:en 9 and 1 pn\ lo claim SAL &l&-7304 3/25 For a beautiful bonw, JoW da)'"· .1, secure future, SE'Yi'JNG MA_CH_ INE, com.· , ..... look•<•. (Noroh "-"•Oy E 32' T\vinscrew Chris, fuUy _ _. w·r ,,..., ......, .. ,. RALPH ON·ds a o:ood hon11:0 . ....,,,·p'd, ,.,.,hong 0, Cruo·• n1ainll'nance auu arc ecur. mgmt. pos11ion, now 11 pll'tely ref1n1shed & 1t oolJ-•-, •uno•·r ;. · ..• ._.~1 Ovet" 100 Planos A "-ans 0 h h d 113 "' 11 · · d 1 <· u"' .. ...., .. .n """"' ""''" a r. ll u n n11x . 1 54g..2.134 a y 1mp1"ess1ve es gn, -=e the llme to rail for an in. works! \VAU. HAT RACK-* • • ReduC'l'd for immed. sale. SrOO.d\\•ay, c.~I. &lZ-JSUI ng. · the exclti~ new "Villa~ Jc"·Jew. \\'ait too long to w/niirror. For added inlo: r-----------1 Buy Now & Save l 3123 Boats, Seil 909 llou~" by Levitt l\lobilt call and \\'e may not be 6-$6-1335 BA:-OIBOO tum., 4 chairs, 2 Open Daily 10 til 6 ----------· THE IRVINE CO. 1n11 Crnbb Ln, H.B. 5j() Nt"-port Center Dr. LOOl\l/liG for several exp'd Newport Beach, Cahl. ~ mature C"leaning matrons br ff · •nd tabln S50 Patio s\\·\ng LOVELY spa)ed I yr old Neiiport ai Sys1em9ondl!iplfll• now at Per!'.Onfll'l Dept. for h1-<lemand r.mnmert"i.al bldgs in S'n Org. Co., pt EXP'D \\·a11r"sses • Xlnt &. n time l'\'es ~22 a t to o er you any. * OR I ENT Al RUGS -. Br•lrl·" n>·h>n rug, 1"-''• Fr. 10.9 * Sun u.s BAY HARBOR Thing -n()'lv 11 the tlme _, .,.... -COAST MUSIC cat. Shon hair silvrr Tabhy $3j()() 10 act. ll just takei. one Royal Kennin, I2x23, alSO x 101 ~ SOO Relrig S50 Chest & longhaui!d Calico . Slip & f inancin6 MOBILE HOMES amlr .sizH, 6T:>-3353 of dra.,.,·er.i \~1/end table & NEWPORT&. HARBOR S.16-7308 .1/2J Pacific Ya.chis 673-IJ~O 1425 Baker St. Costa J\lesa phone C"all. Costa Mesa • 642.2&J, · bo N.wd •• I •rtal 'onvtn Applianc•s I02 mimir $2.l. Single matln!ss FRIENDLY I yr. old male • 12· FIBERGLASS JusiS.ol S.O.Fwy atHa.r r pay lull or part time. Apply r -------~-- in 'Jlf'rson, Tut"s thru fri Men•gement Trn htv.'Tl 11 & '.i to :O.tr. Hrlmut Hotel or ~lotel exp. Call :'ll1ss Rf>M>~~. Newport Beach S111ilh, \VPSIC'lilf PPrsonnel Ttnnls Club, liOl Ea11blulf Agenc-y, 20-1:)' \\'estcllff Dr., • • • & bx sprg. $25 Crutches \\'ANTED: liomeless piano. TI4J540.9-170 I bd. Isl s In \\1in-ifair Terrlf'r ru ix. Si\Q\\'BIRD, \\'/dolly. xtra I ~=~~=='°"""'=°" ory, au iv on , • l\IUSf Sell ~1 usl See! Like $3, 412 Cambridge Cir. Will store piano ''"""nd · I I t ... ~ Needs good hon1~ \\'Ith .sail, Xlnt cond. 673-7933 :O.IODEL )JQBILE 110:\ll::S cent1ve pens, comp e he new GE heavy duty 4 cycle 646--0339 prefem!d) in my home. No childrPn. 962-1887 3/2j • ALCORT CATA:'l-IARAN in Cos1a ,\lesa's Gn'Cnlraf fringe benefit1 -plus v.·a.shing machine, v.·hi~e. ** rNVERTER, Heath Kit. children. ~6--2279 alter S Park. 21'<60 Amer 1 can a offices. Free d•y or Both under warranty. !"pt model l\IPl4 IZVOC to 11.0 .P~·~m=·=~~-----BEAUT. white lrlendly 8 wk 1\/lrailrr. Best offer ove1· Dr. l\.B. N.B. &l .'>-1710 h I • Bah ,-8812 ' ~ old puppy, lovable & a!· S·150. 837-787~ Sl J,900. 20xj2 1\1 on t ere Y EXP. couplt \\'anted to ~IATURE \\'()man to cal"f' for manat:e 20 unit motel in my""''" inlanl, permanl'nt~a 1..8 H:ibra. 'Fret ap1. + day wk. Call 962-8262 H.B. nlg t tr• n1ng. c •> VAC, 60 cycles, 400 v.•atts. HAINES baby trand piar.o, $12.750. ConipleteJy !ll'tup OPEN l\10.'IDAV * GAS dryers &. reblt NE\V a..uC'mbled & C'hecked \\'hite & gukl, i\ted size. ~"~'~"0~"~'~"~·~49~·1~~'88~7~~3~129~COHONADO 2:i: lm niac 11 /skirt~. awnu1gs, porch, 111ROUGH SlI'.>jDAY v.·ashers, $50. Will del out by professional tlectron-Over 100 yn old. $900. : Cs1 0 m "°"r r.6.~~~~u·as $72001 l'lC. CALL NO\V y.•/gUar. r.tstr Chg. l<.faytag le engineer. Sarrifice $100. 5;;7-3331 I ][B or st or. ·~l cnEE:">!LE1\f' PAll K !'ll'r el'n l a ~t. 642-4422 ;\lF.N OR \\10:'<.-IEN. part or l.A:-IDHOLDERS. lNC. repairman. 531-8637. Cal! 528·93-15 af!er 6 P .:'11. 830 I Pet1 ind Supplle' 'Li CAPE COO C'cA.~T~B~O~=AT )7:i0 \\'hiltirr Avf> .. C.:\I. &lfr.173G full time. canvas JocaJ areas 0 C r r •.. 7 57n kd , 11 d ···•k· Sporting Goods ~ ~n EXP'D S a I r s g i r I for -no selling. Call evenings drugstore Sat's &. Sun·s-,. 497-1Fl7 Submit l't'~ume 1'l Box 365, 1---------- rangt ounty _.,, -KEN:\IORE auto \\'asher, wee 11.ys c-: a ay ~-18', fbrbls. (2131 834-3883. (i-IJ-.2510 * * 61;)..()4 j,, Ask For Mr. Yager late model, Xlnt C'Ond $65. f'nrls. Ril'"LE: l\1ARLI N Goldf'n 39" COLUr.lBIA 28 1969. Da-,-,, Wanted To Buy Coruna.dl'l ~1ar, Cal if. FACTORY hl'lp \\"an!ed . Sttady \\'Ork for i;tf>ady \\"Ork•1'll. Apply 11..t 32972 Ca.lie PtrfeC"to, San Juan Capistraoo + FOlil\TAIN \!.'ORK • e;i.;ptrielK't' ll('('f'~511 ry. Call &W-7'°2 ---General Office typing, filing, )OUng ro. ca..11 Loraine, \\·estclir! Personnel Agency, 2043 \\'eslcliU Dr. N.B. 615-7i70 GENERAL HELP e $3.IS HR. e Large chain needs 9 men, full or par! time for mer- chandising and urviCf'. Call ~Ir. Day ,?40-9862 GENERAL OFFICE lyping, filing-youni: ro. S.A . aN!a. Call J.orTall'IE', Westcliff PerMnnel Agenry. 2043 \restC'l ilf Dr., N.B. 645--2710 • GIRLS • GIRLS EstablishM firm, opening new brAnches. fl or pt. um •. e $3.40 HR. e - Call !\.tr. Grand 11r 546-9862 * JlEAD WAITRESS • 6 Da v.·k. Din~r Hou~ Perm. lnterviev.·~ !I to 12 noon. SA~f 'S SEAFOOD J62'i8 Pacific H1\y, HunL Sch. e HOSTF.SS -Clubhouse. ~isure \\'orld, L 11 i:: u n a H!ll... Recrealion & wcial 11c1lvi!il'S b11.ckgro un d helpful. Part Time po.o;Hlon, Sal, Sun & J.lon. Apply Per~onnel O f r l cP, Admi ni~tra!ion Bldg, :z3j22 PaM<l rle Valencia, J\lon thn1 l'ri. No phone calls pltaM. JIOU!'E\\'IVES . 3 oPt"ninf(s P/tlmt. A\·er. SJ per hr. No 'XP rwc. \\'t train. f or appt. call :\ln. :\luller * ~;ino * llSKPRS F.mp\yr paya fee . George Allen Byland Agen- ry 106-B E. 16th, S.A. ;)17...{ll9.l • I~SURA."\CT. GIRL * :\lu~t be exprric~. Auto r1!er k undrrwriter or com· mtrr.ial lines 1'('("f1'!ary to work \\"•!h a<X"Ollnt t'..'<- ttlltlve. Salary open, he&.l th p!an k tf"liremt"nt plan. Pear-ock Jll!<urarrce. 4 0 I Glenfll')T(', Laguna Beach. 494-1(),117 , i\ll'l\. Bradley ISSUP~\NCE A~cncy Girl, l'~pE'r. ('ll'r~nal Ii n t ,,, p/l\mP. C .. \I. lo c a tion. &i2-6;{11 .. IRVINE PERSONNEL SERVICES•AGENCY Machine Bkkper $43l Youn' br1i1'11 group Sec'y $500 To aale1 manag<'r Acctng T r•lnee $400 ~ TyJ>f', bkkpng 1chlng Girl Friday to $5SO Rllht h11nd to dynamic bo&a R. £. ,...xper. helpru1. Cost Acd. to $700 Gov't Contr Exper Dtslred Sr. Acct. to $1000 p It L f"rnarM:iaJ At ~La.I Reporta. No TlXe5. ,.. E. 17th (at lrvintl C.:\I. 642-1'70 JANJTORlAL- W1nttd, aJD1J1tant tor rluh- hnll• malnt. eau }>~red VQlf'l ~7..SW. V .ACANCfE:5 Colll rnoMY! Rent )'Otlr hnulW', •flt, aton bldt , tit>, lhnl a DIUy Pilot ( t.,nlt!"'(I 111! 'l\TIDDLE AGED LADY !-'"UR LITE CLEANING 3 TO 4 HRS PER DAY 5 DAYS A \\'EEK Sales Guar &: delivl'red. 546-85i2, NEAR ne'v powf>r la\\·n. A i\1ounlil', 22 cal., Lever Pets, General 850 213 / 636-07J7; Eves: i 14/ EXCELLENT JNCO:\fB Qp. ic'='~".:::•11~5~---~~-mower & po\\'l'r edger action, \\'If X Boi;hnell '"" ,.,..,. or 21' I 00'34" PRE.Ea~ter Spcc1al 1'1ar. O'I.,....,,.,, -...,~ .;.n. PORTUi\'.ITV for MATURE KEN:\TORE washer. $35, ex· $50 ea, i taple hutC"h $30. &copl'. $75. Call 528.9845 :?2nd Thru J\lar :26th. $LOO '69 Columbia 26 :'11ark !I pro- J\IAN 1n Costa i\f e i; a· ceJlent; Also \Vasher &: Camera, li1l' n1etl'r & flash after 6 p.m. 11·tekdays & al! Nr\\·port Beach af't'a. Oif'l'Ct 0 1 ... 109• SJa. Old 78 recordg•, misc d k _ _. f)!( on all do;; grooming. fes.~ionally n1 a int a in e d , ryer se · ,,,..,.... <> ay \Ve<' euus. El Camino Pel Sho p 67~32m or 839-3610 11ales t x per i enc e oot c"-"'--==z~'='=~G~~1~75c l lumber: U gal l\1h tank ,,;..c:,.=~-'~-~-- 2 or 3 BC'droom !\Tobi le Home. &i up in family lchildrPn al!01\'Cd! pal'k. 1\lus! be 12' 11·1dl.'. Lt's~ than S.WOO. in ne1v rondilion. Call 642·3&H f'\'{"S 8.· II knds. The Fiv• Crowns Restaurant 3801 E. Pacific Coas1 Hv.•y., Corona <lei i\lar. ~o ph. rails. 1\IIDDLE aged couple to manager Bay View Hole!. Living quarters furnished + con1mission. 673-1410 aft 5 neces.sary, but must ha\·e •Sto'fAPTr .. :..S,r ,R,.~~~ty·. \Vill<>, complete v.•/tish & pump. FISHING equip, r i f!ts, 492-l7iiii Boats, Slips/Docks 910 .... ..., .... ,...,, shotguns, an1munit1on. other C 852 abilily to dl'al 1'·\th 0""'fll'l"!I, l ~d~e~li~"~r~-~4~94-::02968"""----1-="'~ .. ~7~4~78i:o,..;-.;;;;;;o:..-.-sporting good 1 t ems. •Is BALBOA Island mooring & I • ..,,_,..,.....,..,..,..,!""! I manager~ and purchasinr:: * AUCTION * DRIF'T\\'OOD Beach Oub agents for commercial and KEN;\IORE auto \\'&sher, 96S-8.S73 Dogs 854 2Sll' in~ Gcruiser !or sal<'6. .Spi.'Cla/. Lo\'ely Parklane, indusl"l"lal accounta. t.len Good cond S45. Guar & t"ine Furniture HEAD SJ(IS standard 210 et>ps -· ray niarinr B c ()\'er 40 preferred. but all del ivered. 546-8672, 847-8115 ~. A--liance bindings, boo.,, poles, $3J'. AKC SILKY PUPPIES cyl e~uw. $2100. Locatf'd 20xj7, 2 Br, 1 11 a, apt. '"'" ''" 646--0972 NA:\IE YOUR O\VN TERMS in north Bay of! Sapphire t'rPo. Pat. Sl·163. \\'on'! inquirits noadve equal C'OJ\· SEARS Kf'nmore Series 600 Auctions f'riday, 7:00 p.m. !----------·niey're <lelighllul. Have Sr. &l+.5836 La~!. siderafion. \\'rile: [)(>pt. r.6, ~ltttric dl")~r. Xlnt cond, Windy's Auction Barn SURFBOARD I Chuck den mo c .. _ b 1 1 1,C-'-'~='=~-~~-U •t d M b 'I H I Consolidaltd lnter·Aml'riC"a STJ. Pho"" 5:>7-9549 5"8" !\\'i n [in $6:i. • Is. an .,,. f) u g 1 2t3" slip $Gj/mo. Prh•a1e 61 •. ~3° ,•10 ° 1 e 0.';:!~2961 ***MOLDERS C 912 E Oh. Bid 207j1~ Ne\\-port, Cl\-1 646-8686 painlessly. Ph. :1-18-4~j7 ba1h . N'o. 2 Balboa Coves, -·~ orp., . 10 g., F -1 810 67.>-6610 af1er 6 pm Cl r \·eland, Oh io, 44114 urnt ure Behind Tony's Bldg. tttat'I. l\1ALE Sllky & male, crrn1c, N.B. Call 67HJ::l 8.-..:12 r-:or~I". bl'auhlul cond, E:o1perienced only, all 3 shifts, l\1acCl't'gor Yacht Corp., J63l Placentia. C.:\f. FUN FOODS: p 0 pc 0 r n. * HOBIE 11\'l~ F IN 6', 10y.minf Poodle. B 0 t h Boats Storage 912 furn, 52\00 1191 Harbor. SALE E~'OW Officer • Sav. WHY BUY Sno\\·co~s. rollon candy & \\'hitt. Xlnt C'Ond. S9J, bl'auiirul! 6 16-0 1 ~ 2 or ---'---'----C.;\l., lo! 61. Tht key at e e NEEOE0- ings &. Loan Assoc. Laguna vendin~ machines. Suppl ies, J~S..l16S~~---:-.-18-1022. 333 E. 11th St. OPEN Boat yard, repairs oHicr. No children or Jlf'I~. Bt-ach Rei:;ional Ole. Salary FURNITURE? Renrall! & Repa irs. TV, Radio, HiFi; CM & storage. :.nr pel' It. 21' x 60' n1obile home. 1\1. open. E qua I 0 p p or. • 15193 l\loran St, \Vmstr. Sterto 836 POODLE pups, beaut. l1t1le ti73-6809. eves 962-6111. sell $'4000 bc'low priCf', Two Office Girls r:mployer. Send rl'sume lo Tony Capa.sso il·l/531-3001 1iny toy & toys. Stud scrv. :'llov',g. compl \\'/all nu furn )fu6t be. 2:1 and able to drive C!assil!ed Ad No. 53, Dally Be Flexible I POOL table, full s ii e * * Vacuu1n tulw VOLT All colors. 89?.-9119 I llil 536-2·1~ _ APPLY _ P ilot, P.O. Box 1560• Costa Rent mo, hto mo. with w/cues, balls, elc. Homr i\1 ETER, J.fe,,·Jcll Packard, e BLACK SC01TIE, AKC, Tr11nsport1lion r.i!I 8x32 1\lastcl'huill -10x2.1 186 E 16 1'-1tsa, Ca ~2626 100•;. Pure as• Option bet>r bar "''/l't![rig unit. Bar od r 400 H Xi _,. · 2 ,.-ord. need•~ horn•. . ml cabana w I extra ba1h. . th St., C.!'11. In<! llem I ,.; m e , . nt couulfion: chl:"i;~;r:·~·=~~=-~1;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;,;;:;; -· se ec .. on & 2 ho' ''""''· •.1J. Bo\\·ling c $~-·~"ISO' C I r C ' ' r-:URSES AIDE ... 1 to 3:30 * • * 24 Hr. Oely. balls w/bags. •Col1fi01e 'J'V S7:'i or make oUrr. all .).). ·'·'""" • ~7.~\ieds. u;;z-.1'1. ::~~59 ., E;i.;p'd or "ill tr11 in. f'llll SHIRLEY SYMMONDS CU~TOM s-. ·.•port TV• 11,. •••h. S23-9!Wj after 6 P \l Af"GHAN puppie::. 1nalr & Campers,Sale/Rent920 · p k L · C w \\"eekdays & all day ,,·eek. f r r r t y "OLDE~ \VEST z.lxi7· 2 Br tim~. ar 1 d 0 on· 676 Bluebird Furniture Rental 557-3331 rma e, s 10'~' qua 1 · .., · ~ · · · valeSCt"nt Centl'r 6-12~14 ends. Tern1!. 6.J6-8662 CAMPER plus dPn. All adlt prk. Laguna Beach 517 W. 19th, C.t.f. !'~8.Wll * * VACUU~f TUBE VOLT I ...:96C.9C::::SP~Al~N~'l~SH~S~J~C~~l ,, • 893-&88:) * * PART time Bookkeeper in You are the \\'inner Of A"laheim i7+2800 ~IETER. H"wleot Packard, 1 tyr onsoe TOY POODLES-AK<". rnalr )'O"' ho-f r G• •·-' LaH b = ,708 • ~ 11lerl'o; Am·Fm slef'e() & & 11.'maJr Bro\\•n & black. ... ...~ o s ~· .,ce 2 ti('kt!s ro the a ra "'""'"' model 400 H, xlnl condition; c.rr 968-09-_, Sta. Exp pref'd. \\'ill train, R I C fl mono. Used 4 mo-Cost $600 _ ··~ oye ~!UST saC"rif1~; Be au t $75 or make olfer! ! a sell $210 or trade. ~&-J73J ----------r Corona deJ ~lar only . lnternation1I custm-blt 9' velvet sola l: 52S·9S45 after 6 P:'ll l\·etk· DACTISHUND pup.~ min. 61.>-4112 GE Stereo. 4 fl \1·11\nul A"'C Bfk • I & Circus lovesea!. VeC"tra hide-a-bed da.vs &. all day wekend~. ·~ · "" an · PART IF\.J1..L TI\tE a l rt... & matching chair. Olivf' Rft"E·. \!ARLIN Gof"-n 3n cabinet. Good con d i I i on mahoi;any red. TI4/6?.3-41l18 b . " L • "" ,,... $J:i0 . .;.JS.S7:H a!t 1 P~t or ~-Start USlfll'S! management ORANGE barrel chairs, CoClee table A \lountir. 22 cal .. Le\'Pr 54~1 !RISI! S<'ll<'r riupp1e!'-. AKC career in expanding com· COUNTY & commodes, pec a n & action \\'/4 X Bushnell rell:'rf . t'1eld ant.I shO\\'. Ph: pany. Sl'\·eral arl'a.s open. FAIRGROUNDS oak. Beaut lamps. Dinette, scope.' $i:l. Call 528.98-lj alt COLU\1BIA Stereo, A.\1-r.\I, $.~927 \\'ill train qualirif!d. ap. &-n.. bd Al 6-Garrard chani:::er. Like new, s r L c· \' · S•t"rd•>. Apn'r Jo·d pc '"'"C'en rm. 80 pc 6 p.m. 1\·tekday.s & all day "' phcants. Call ~36 " dbl bcl I s · :\111.ple S\30. 646-1426 Plea~e call 642-;)678, ext. 314 rm Sl' • iereo ~u1p, v.·f'rkends fP malcs·$2J r:ich, to gcod PART time trainees, malt, ... _ 9 ~ 1 1 . All like ne1v. See to aj>' .::.::::;:=::::.· -----~ Panasonic 18" Color TV homl's. &16-7:13:1 HS or Coll. r\o exp nee. ..,,_.tv.·een a..... pm 10 c aim preC"iate. 642-9-192 POOL tables, sla!~, . ol~· ""/stand. 6 mos old. $2ij Th Zoo R Coali your ticket~. fNorlh County . , tashlon!'d model~. 7. 8. 9. g.17.21 37 • IP.JSH N.>llrr fllipp1rs r()r e estaurant, t 1011.[ree numher is :H0·1220l BEAtrrIF'UL Ktng-!Z bf'd, Sacrlficr. \\'ill deliver rrcc. =~~~~~~~=~I sall', 6 wks. Bcaullful. l j() lh1·y t: ?.1cArthur. 1· N d 1·11 1970 RCA 21 " XLNT COND 96"1"' TERR!ERS.Atlulr CLEARANCE SALE Large seleC"tion pre 'il Campers Now Slashed to OYElt ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE SHOWCASE DEALER FOR l::LDORAOO CAl\'fPEP.S THEODORE ROBINS FORD :~Diii>r:i'\:~:::;;;:;~/ I ~*:._ ___ ~*'._ ___ ~* irm. ever use • ~ 1 1442 l1Ayts A1·r, Long ; • 1 • f>;ich. ,., .. , '~-* PBX Operator/ packaged. framl' included. Beach 213/ 435.888,j, $220. '-H"o"rs"-e"',"--''-"----8-S-6 ' R SALES. .t1.6Ilhr. s1arting $l30, .... urth $260. \.\o' it l · . I " e Call: 89.1·4'.H:l e 2000 llAP..BOR BLVD, ecept • Wary. Also M>me part lin1r deliver. usually home . l\IOV ING, sell1n~ C'\'l'ryl 11ng: AO\fPLTFYIER top like nrw ST~\VB~RR\'" roan m11rr. C'OSTA ?-IESA 6-1:?.0010 P l l for H.S. i;('/'lior,i; " colle~ 842-6636 turn., \Vash/riryer, haby & d I ,. r h -,-68-YW CAMPER--easa.nt personali!y, ronl ~tudents. 492-4422 ----------kir. thingi . 494-8973, 483 Oak 2.JO \\'atts. SI~. lil-1 Anit<i tra1ne or • n i:: 1 ~ oNlre lady "'ith 3 yrs. ('X· =~0--~--''--~~ Oecoretor1 Furniture SL, Laguna Ln, N.B. 646·5302 plcasuM': yr old, rpg 1: perienre as si\ilchboarrl op. S,\LES trainte for inarking 11 h" &. ld bd t 1~...:.==--~=~,-,~,.-, ~~~~~~~~~~~ Ar<1b Sorl'C'l t-oll. $j00 ca. de\ices & istationeru. Earn Pl""' ite : go rm se,. \\'ANTED: 19Y.I i\lt'Clu11och 57°,• •• ,,,art 6 pon * DELUXE SUNDIAL erator, meeting rh• public '" H•lfway m·-r • -n·" ~ "'hile >OU learn. If not \vi.II· • _ "'" "' ""v ;> .. • Fl>inc: ScoH 60 lf.P. any I I~ -• Lik r nrv.•. and lite lyping. Ca 11 -6.16-1Jli S ' Ing to learn at Tra inee "">• rondition. \\"ill pay up lo frH 10 You I * r-:cw r1gec pa'v \\'ide ro·""s. KAnlY 557.7475 he1"'n 9 ··-\ " am & 4:JG pm. don't apply, Good op. 8' SOl'A, never used, quilted $.J:l. 531-729~ I BOit and I[• JR l * l..01\· mill's:, ne,11 rng. portunity. Outlint quali !ira· Doral,_ scotchguarded $12J. SICK room !'-uprilies, Sl'ars Muine ~uiprnent: . ~ • S2~i.l. Or br!lt oller RECEP'TIO:'\IST, gen. offi~ t10111. \\-'r ile Clas!1fied ad ?ilatch1n&: lo\'eseat $75 . walker rou.11way bed J Free \\'hilt rabbits 3013 * Pv1 parry 61.).2633 all 5 duties. Xlnt opportunity. No. 110, Daily P i\01, P.O. Sl:)...1955 baske1ban hoop, 71" TV'. ---Preferably O\'Pr 30. N'pl. Bo ~" C O\f ,..,.,26 Cleveland A\'e., C os I a • *" INVERTER. lleath Kit, Cenrer. Call 64~14 IS.jl x J......,, osta ' f>Q, ·7~" SOrA, mast, SiJ. Vlrtue .'>15-7378 ~1Psa . :;12:; General 900 niOdrl '.\·IPl·I, 12VDC 10 110 SALES-Personal or company dill(!\\(' HI, rnd tahlt. 6 'i~ ydll Y,/IV crpt $2 yd VAC, 60 C')clt'~. 400 l\:dt.s. RECPT. $400. Front office rontacts in management. in· chr~,. S~J. all xlnt, 8~ f•defe« bl"", ~o·re' .. ,, "'.V PRETTY puppies, par 1 SPRING CLEARANCE ;.:E\\' assrmb\C'd & .... nrkcd Y T ., .... ··-~ Shrpherrl. perl Hu~ky. 7 20' o Gr G I r "" appearance. Ollng co. YP-dustry or eduCfl.Hon. Ex· al! ;i, cart'. Redecorating. 67j-JS:l9 irk.' old. .)SO Hamilt1Jn, )rr anior ir · in C".r· nut by pl"Ofessional rlrctron· ing 40 \\'Pm. PBX. 6-15'2770 cHin" concept. Full or part CASfl f r ·1u rcp1or llO""cr. outboard r 5 1100 . .,. or um1 re ap-C b nd , C \I '/2J r l'n"'nf'l'r. arrificr . 1imc. Leadership De\'elon.. · · '. A~fPllI at, ra nl'\\'. • •• " dn\'r. SZ\9.'i. .,.. l"IANO traclwr, over 30 )'1'!, m•nr "·n•tol'·"'", °" 0,,1.. phances, too. Is, n_11~ items. h'' on tn"'illt. Fun in 1,·atf'r Call :J..?g.98~j afll"r 6 P .. \J. \\'illini lo be trained for ~ .....,, "' "'"'3 .,...,......,... C)pE>n 9 10 :" &12-iOtJ AAnd !'-~iv or \\'hen>\'er: TO qual home. J.liniaturt ?t' l.apslrake ul1!1ty, Volvo ii rrkdays &. all day ,ice),.. pan lime emplmt in music SARA H Coventry nef'ds n. Si\CRJFICE. 48" T'OUnd, 2 '• 1 .. st' ~ell $109~1 5-IS-468:1 Schnaw.r1· Tl'rnC'r m i"' i JlQ\\'frcd, .$2r..~ rnrls ~C"hool ·is.. -6!13 1 1· I r N I " I " m a I e • f n c d ) d !\' rillt'rglass d inghy, as is, I~=~~-"°"--- • • ,.., 4 • • or P lm' le I'· 0 n. !ills. pedestal n1aplc dinini; CO:'lll\l ODORF: ou!brd molQr ~S.-081:) ."'./'!.:, SJo. Hl ' l Cu~101'1 Cu t)()\'rr 1-'ord Motor Homes * Kin9s Coach * Motor Home Agency Superior * Lindau 60 1 N. Harbor, Sa nta Ana Open rlaily 9 10 9 839-90'.lO \\"A~TED: Balboa l\t"Otor Uo1ne, in good shape, a! M'as prif·e. \Vrilt classified ad No. 4.1. Daily P!!ot, P . 0 . Ro;i.; \jG(), Cos ta Mesa, C:il\f. !12626 'jl Ho1·i1.on de\UXf' n1otnr c·o;ich. 26' fully rqu'1p. &f. 8:30 AO\\ or all ~1. 67~·1&)4. r:.E:-:T ?l' \Vinni $22J/wk, Su1nn1cr. "iC"/n1i, .$200 if t't'sei-verl by 4/30. s.i:i.-78j7 Trailers, Travel M 11' THAVEL Trlr, SeU cont. hke nl'\\". Askina: $950. '.>l~12J7 ~~.,--~~~---Trailers, Utility 947 14' Tandem T railer \\'1\h 4 v.·herls. All s!ef"l \\·rJd. rd consuuct.Jon, 1;" Steel cleck platini. \Viii sell or trade-for pickup. 3166 S1c1!y, I0\1r sa Vl.'rdC"l C,?-1. -.-PHAR-MA·~·c=1s~T~.-ve~1menl. \Vil! train, n1Ln ta_h'.'· 6 chn, malch hutch. ~!IP$"°. <·'olboat 10, __ ,,.,. '""' • ,.... k 1 6 h I 20 53(}..J.j()7 k 54~ 9066 ""' ""' .,,... ""'""' •;o ADORABLF. J'.:a~!Pr glrt-7 1 -6 rvl usrcl r-..-01·dh<'rt: rn· ""· "''51'" sTlC '~_P~ • U· I 1 1 ~.1 age . . . ..-. Xln t cond, 962-2837 ov~r pl y,,·ood. Sabot mal!t n10. uld calico k11ten. ll~brk . );In<·. front po1~cr take-oU & tlln(', rlec. S~.iOO 011.Y Auto~ lorS~!• Relief, part timf', S'1tu1't111y • SE'CRl:..IARY I General DREXEL Brr a k fro n t , & sa\I S\2J. 837-7039 rC'rluetion "'l'.'\r. &!J.1Il I; rvr \\krnd o -------~ am 4 hours. Hospital e;io;per· o!C". Dictation-m11nuscripts. mahogany. t xlnt. cond. $2i5 • Y 'Cl·IT CLUB ha.~ ~hots, grrat '"/child. " * :>4&-1~?3 * -· r • • HUXT I Prod · r " 673-76i7 ':',f2'j 1 only·l ("YI L1 s1er rlir•rl JPnre pre l'rrl'n. ' • ~ycf'um llC'tlons, nr. or hf-st oflf'r. 645--3917 l\1E.~ffiEP.SlllP I used Chr:.~lcr Cro11·n \\/ '69 t·ord Ca111p<'r St1""r Van. Dune Buggies 956 INGTON Ii\"TERC0;...ti\1UN· p O Rnx 12'.28 Laguna NEED good hon1r for lo\'ahle ,,. IT\' HOSPITAL e PPrson. Tu.a<'h·. 4~2~ . DUNCAN Phyfe JO pc din SAVE $300. Amber <:olored kittif. rrrlue11on .i;:<'ar. ~·ully rquip'd. Cl ran! rn1 se1 k buflet tablr, solid * &l.i-oo63 * ""l .. OSI ' 012. J.3:l \'Oh h<>avy rl ut.\· genl'ra· ~halp R"asonabl<'' \lorn· ne\ Dept. 17772 Beach Bl11d., S"RVfCE o p I r I ·• ·' " •1 r 12 '" ... ta. ump ~. a· mahoi: SH)(Xl, 897-6911 aft .i EXERC-l-SE COUCH tor & S\\'i1rh panrl. 1ng~ hr ore ; eves aft 'iO :'II!-. Yf:RS :\lanx 1600 CC r r11;:1nr. :l.000 ml'• ?\!any '-tl'":t~. 12?.oo IC'I bu1lrl. ::.ell $li,":(l/hst ofr. 833-3368 altt.r IJP\\ Hunlington Beach, or call tl"ndan!. Lil~ room exp. NEED good home ror grn!lr 2 ll~f'd fJshing ('hau ~. 10, 6~.J....7878 8~7-'iS07. pi'i'rrl. l\ol unrler 20. Celi\!. :\100. couch, GJ'f'en strif!l'd \\1/VIBR.ATOR $1D mtil" Oo;i.;1r, Fned yarrl ~~~=~~~-- p R 0 FE S S!ON'AL p•--Gi:l-ll t2 ~hndri•. · .. ,~'.·~~2,_r0 ;80nns, Xlnt * Sl&-0818 * 5 1~1 .1 312:1 i\h~c. bo11t rlavil~. '70 CA:'llPER. 8' r:ibovf'r, 1iu...... LV #-M O't ,..., \lay hr ~l'rn ar Lido !'hip-6 pack 11/Jacki; $1000 solicitor • Dana Polnl. San I ·s~F~.R~.v~r~C~E~~E~•7to7h7'd~.~F~o7tr~er ROOKS :ic-$1. P i ctures DARLlNG l1ttll" 6 v.·k old )arr!, 900 Lido Park Dr. •G42-17i5 all '.lpm 11·kc1~ Clemenlt, Capistrano art'a. Bru.o;h rte, $l2.>-$l7J \\'k. to KING-SIZE BED $75 5c--50c. Pul"'Ses ~...OC. \nUrns nN'd good homr~ s \\'ork in )'Our o\\'l\ homt . ~t ., ttlso pl. lime 546-~i.J5 * J.\.J.2~75 * 646--0l!ll! ~-.18-9697 ':',f2.i SCRAM-LET Cycles, Bikes, BP-I deal in area. Phone * * sHARPG~IRLS Garage Saie 811 IRVl:-:E Co11st Country Club 2 puppies trPC' 1<1 ;ocxi homr. Scooters 925 1960 CORVAIR \lf1k~ rJrff'r ~t16-iil17 /ll1rr Ii 1'\f 83.>1465 Ml\\'ttn ~:00 a.m. r men1bl'rsh1p for sale from l'lixerl ~m breed 8 v.·ks old. ANSWERS 11.nd noon. Mking !or a permMCnt JlO" PATIO. Sale: .2. motorryrle~, member. 61 ~;;.-;9 ~1!ion. One of Oran.gt Coun· car air rondthoner. 2 TV sol-----------1 837·880'.l 3 21 Trucks 962 l"'Lft.l"U"V Order Desk/Sec'y $.'120. ftt Paid. Typr 1:1, ?\o Sil. Good pholl(' \•nic•, CQn- i;:enial. Xln't lx'nef1 I!. NEWPORT Personnel Agency 833 Dover Dr., N.8 . 642-3870 e R.N.'s e Intensit·1> ca.re/cardiar C"are. Jo'Ull tlmeo 11 10 7::10 am. • HUNTi:-JGTON' INTER· C0'1:'1-1UNITY HOSPITAL e Personnel Dept. 17172 Be11th Blvrl., Huntington Beach, fl r Ca11 8.17·"TI!07. SALES • i\fen A-\l'nmen STOP!!! LOOKING & ACT Salf>s minded ptr'M)n, ~ for yoorM"lr, a real C"arel"r np. µortunlly. Xlnt luTure for l'lgflt m,11n, l:arnirn:~ C"1m· mel'IC'e immrdial1>ly sho\ild- be In l"XreJ! a! srio. Ptr v.·k. No canvauing or '°!Jclllng. Jnt,"'i!'w1 by 11ppol"trnl'nl only 9.3 ~·f'f'krfay1. j!Jj.2iil. ty ':i1 fines! bC)t1ques. Must bf! ml'n's clothe-!-. mann~.~l"I, IRV INE COAST COt.:l\'TRY FRl'.:E mt\.«! pup. 2 f'\"pcr'd in all phases of pressure cooker, electric C~U~ J\f El\IBERSHIP. all black, lemalr. botiQUf' fiC'lllng. f111l time ~killtl, flrrplaao Jogs. lad· 67J>-30 •J \\'/kids. 96&-llhi 1110. G <f ':,/23 F1ai;:on -/l•'S11.v -f ounr - Homac,. -J\,\LF-:\IA~ ~~~---~-~ THINK HONDA '69 Chevy Yi Ton pr1111 posirion for nght g;il. der & ,·ar\ous mi~. lien,~. \YE loan·Buy.Se\I anyth\ni:. If you qual1Cy C'11ll lor iiri· 28·15 Europa. Dr.. 01 Coalit Pawn & Auction, 2426 po!ntn1en!. THE LOOK. s.ID-3283 alt 6 1\·eekdays, all Nt\\-port Blvd. 642-8400. -~--"'-'1•2 100 0'='~'cc."'~'c-s~"~"~· -----Miscellaneous Sharp Girl Friday FISHING f'<tP I. gun~. ain· Wanted munition, mi~c h u n I i n g 120 eqpt; ~;i.;tculive v.·ood de5k -/\ttr11rt1\'r, 1\'e!I groomed & ho! r I h · r up "\\' ve t: air, \'lny W•nted To Buy "Live·\\'ire" \\"lt h goorl tele-couch, ~ mm movil" ca.mrra 2 or J o-drooon >lobol• phone \'oice to act as rPrep. & o b d = pmJcc OI', ran new: II S • FA~flLY tiQn\51 In a busy, exriting ~-:i om<' .. rt up in ' oU lt'f'. )lu.~t be l'Xper'd. in · '· park. i\h1-'t l'lf' 12' widt. 1ll.'1Jln£ l\'!lh !he public. THRU S.il S.~. Anl iqut's, l..css than S~('.(l(}. In new Sale• bllrk~rnd prrfl'l'l't'd A\'Onll, ''Id mU("h mono, oond1t1C1n. Call 6.J2.JSi4 ('Vt'S bu! not nl"c. CaU l\Usa For· IOljl Edye Dri1.'f:, 11.ll. k "''kll(J~. ttsl ~!i.4121. 968-4071 ........ -.... -........... 7 \VK old pupp1r", Bassrt hound. 7662 Dr. J-1.B. ~7-34-l:J molhrr Danuhr :l/23 Co1nn1rnt ()f a boaslful h11by·~itter· ''I'm ~ gr(':it th@ h1tl11ri; ;ire broken·hrar!· rd 1\hC'n I IN1\'r: so l IP! ... "FRIEDLANDER" G. Sh<'p over I yr. IO\'f'.'S tlH'n1 11rr1r lhe1 r rl 1ap<'rs kids. Nttd' 11"11· homr. llAJ.V.\1.\ST.'" '""' •••a1 fHW'f, "' 537.6824 • 8!'J.'\-75G6 836-4·1!13 or 54S--OS13 3123 \\'A:-..'TtO: 1!1J!l :'llcCu!lncl1 NEW-USED-SE RV. LOVABLF. 9 mon!h old ,_-1~111.c: Scott 60 H.P. any ......... - Bea.c:lr. Loveo;ch i ldrtn , rnndl!!f)n \\'ill pny lip lo • - -..... I good hoine. 53~7\S\ 3123 i:"t(J 531-7191 j()Q cc vr;UXETTE Thrnx· LOVABLE )'OUn.(: altf'red cat Boa ts/Marine ton, nr1\' rlutch, hrr", free to good ho m f' • Equip. 904 hrak~"· p1~ton a rlrl 101' •'r 616-7096 :1/23 e.nd. Purist s clelh;h1 ;11111 3 i\10 old • m11le i~ Do"l:1r, '2 Bt'aglt. \'t'ry lnenr!ly. 5-IS-480-l 3/2l In pl'rfr(·t sh11flt'. Be.~! olfrr * • INVFRTf~R, llrath Kit, tl\l'r $9.~. 6i:»-595-1 all!'r 4 mnrlrl O\IP\4, l2VDC to 110 p.ul. VAC, fiO ryclei<, .fOO \\'a\IF.1-'C:::'-=,..,,.,,-=~-- V~. 1111rcun;il1r, t•u.stom cab 1 ;;200 11~ f. Kelly Rlur Bnok $2'675 Our Pr1('e ,2399 BARWICK !:'llPORTS INC. DATSUN !Y.lil So. Coa~1 Hwy, l...A.Rllll:t Rl"arh '110--10.11 I 191.9iiJ -OUMP-TFfUCK- Wl l'.h7 l~;\1C BIKES, tw·n. &. m 11 c . TF.F.:-i i;:-1rl "'ants uKrl 10 TELEPHONE ad,·erll1'1n~ paPf"t'l>ack bOok~. m \\'. "pd bo~ 'it SC'h\\·inn. Price AUsrR.AUAN Shep h r rd !rum our pleasant r\t'\\llOrl Balboa t'o. 5 or 6ij-13)19 lhr ohJl'<'I. ~1&-Soo:; puppies, ~ wks o Id . NF.\V a"srmbled & rhrrkecl 19b"9 \' Ai\IAHA ~~ $"" (i.11"11oorl IH-d <nit hy proff>.,,1on11I ('le('!rOn· ,,....., c.r, 111 '"· ..... 'i.()O. ~JOO IC' rni;;:inN>r ~Arrtlirc $10(1 n111r~. \'rry rlr~n 0.11 Typ,. 11 ~«1 b:.o C11y olfiel"s, llrl)' ''"llgrs. \lorn. t-----------1 ---~------96S...j,).l.1 3/Z:: \r'ijl or ('\'e, Jhifts, 64>-JOJO Machinery 116 Office Furniture/ 2 nl 1'<"11pn11 R1•:i1•h C.111 :,28.~l.i 11.ftl'r 6 P \1 ~:;).J I~ tit)~. nHc 6\2 .. J:J30. 33. :\IR. \IAPRIDEI' --.-0 -IN-.E-E-R-.-,-1-r-,.-, ... -'. '-21-.. 1 Equip . * WAIT-RESS.._E_X_P-,D-rtrs .. auro. /!'n(th and rrns1i---------- Not under 21, NO PHONE travrl"'Sf' :r :oc 4' jay,• rhuck~. CALCUI..,\TOR. cur rt n t C:AJ.!~"· Apply In J.lf't:\On , plus lot~ or t1('(.'1'11~ril"S, S380 modPI, 12 Di.int "Ith tape, Surf&. ~irlo1n, ~30 \\'. Coa1t oflt>n. -19!)...3.127 11lter ~ p.m. rel'atl ml'nlQI'), 67:'H.060 124 Hiry., 1".A. Miscellaneous 111 Pianos /Org1n1 816 \\'0:\1 /\N ,-or-,-,-,-,,-.,-, -,~,-firr­ t'Rf.E bunn1eovldf'a! F..astcr A~k l"r .[""' <;oon ufl<·r-;111111; r nn1l1tion 1•1•rkda)~ & all d11y \\('rk. " u ..,,. g1flfi. CA~ AITER 2, ,.nr1,, ---------N'-r Al Ually /'1 ot a.t8-~17 3/T.i llAV F. A :>:f('F. DAV ;;;:,o \\r~1 ll~y Su,•el v TI S "Boats, Power 9o6 on a ·70 XI.All !'port~lrr ,.,...1, \Ir· .• ,..,1 EN 2 ff'n1a.le 1 ma!r e · r 1~ ._,,. ·"• 6 \\'eek~ 8-li-{..l.13 :il:!.l r ·---------1--~ ·1 .'l-- 2 • I •)r r ;11! 'fi!I OIRVSLl'R 1" 4:, llP. ·1;., YA)f,\l.r.l_ 2:i0. Nti\' tr11n~ \tr~ I in·• 11111:111 2 fN'f' Guinea Pi.':'S w/ra'>r,('. ., & s;;z I :>:>i-7'.l.1!7 312:, Sl~!l.1. '6~ Chr1& 19' ,,·oorl. ~in1 .• ..,'· ~ .. ~11 .. rm l~:i JI r ' Sl:llfl. OR BEST -'-'-"-'-~·--·-·11-nfr ~ P1_"_ '6'1 Clll \~IP IT. v·=,-=,-,-,..,.1 PUREBRED poodle puppy. OFf'f.lt 612-40!l7, j..18-2211, 611 B~f\\' 8<'au11f11I ('11nrl 11/G r/h :\hit (',111d, s°l9.'IO ~ !162-177~ 3/"2;\ P\t 1Zll .s::el. 1nur1n.s:: taflk. :i.ac:-nf1tc h~I oft· h"...flA~ ,1·nrk. Nral, l"ll"liculou• k NF.\\. PORT fkarh 'frnni-ll A~l.\IOND S t f I n ¥.' a y, \11.'ll 0~11n11r<l . Typing skill. Club C' ha r 1 t r m.-ni. \'an111ha. '1\ew & us~ ~-1 pn1 ~00 bC'n.hlp-.S·IOCl + transfl'r pla11011 ot mo~t mskeo'. Be11t A~; Pa!,, U thed~Esrn~~ ~ 1-....:..::.c....:..;...:..c.:____ f11i ll 642-2440 hll)-1 In So. CAii!. 111 Schmidt ;teJay .. call t~~)' fil2-Slii3 ! llMI~ 1runtin1t! \\"•1f'h t~ l ra~I l"<'SUlt! Ill"!' jurt . phollf' 1\!11,.le r.o., 1007 N. !\lain. ' (lf'F'X }f('lll"ll' ""''·1 -,.. 1 rnlJ 11y,11y · ~!7-!il:i8 !'ian1t An11 Bl::AUT IJ<'UL r fXlrllt pup~. )tir,7-:l?'• r h r 1,; rorin. SS7J 67;;..1 3Ri "\\ l .. J· IJ It ,_ M'-,-0.~ •• -.-,,-,.-0-r ~lorhrr AKC, 4n7-15S2 l/~5 " I r J "" \' h ·•~ ,. !1.re n·t111n ~rrw, U Y <>' an111 H "'"' 'E11d11t'O rllrl nu t l)lt' trtn•ur('\ f,, trA~h _ BLACK 11.nd \\'hill! hl•nn1e !ti r11uipprrl. ready lo £'0. b1k,,, C.nnrl ('1'111(1, i'olu~• .. 1·!l. tu"' !n1n ('/l'h lhl\I ,. OftHy 11 i:ood tiontc SUllJ .'.11.a:, :.1~:01~1 t i''",,.. h,.., •''"· ft', ~•17 P ol .. t (., ·n•·1I .111 i:.11.ri67! DAll v PH.OT TuiosdA)', Marth 23, tm '° .......... l§J I .......... 1§1 I .......... Truc ks 962 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmpor1.d 970 Aut .. , lmporlod 970 Aut01, Imported 970 Autos, UsH 990 Auto•, UHd 990 Aulo1, Uted 990 Autos, Used 990 "'·6'l""F"'o"'R"'o ""v.,"."'":T"o"'N'"'P"" . .,,..u . 1i sth. rlf'11 f'n~. !raui,, hr;1k<''i DATSUN PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN & bat\('ry. $17., vi trade. DOT DATSUN 'TO 911 T, a.11Mt, Beau1 1---------- Gl;l-.ffi81 orange, 911S inls. &-whls, "66 YW GHIA ffiRD·"i~·=r."r~l;i-1~-·d Trlt cllb OPEN DAILY Ai\111'":\I, Pvt pty. ~7 Yellow, 'vilh Black le.ndau ANO Nt>11 nick. 1 ~pd 2 N>ol l SUNDAYS 1900 PORSCHE 1600, $800. top, 11fw valve job :\"NU6:1 rearC'nd Fu-st Slj()() lakl'~ ! l&&l:> Cea .. h Blvd. or best offer. Call 9 8.lll $ 1199 it. 6-1;)...1691 lo 3 pn1. 536-4869 -,, cuEV. % ... k, "" .. ,.I .'!;'."~i;":~ .,~~ 1-"-"-'""'s"'P'"'R"'i°'TE~--· 1 CHICK 1vERSON s:X)} Jjl3 Orangio or ~17 ---"'iiiAT---1 ___ .;:::_::,::_ _ _,, VW t:. 18th. Ci\! G42-5666 1 FIAT '67 Sprite conv. Good cond. 58-3031 E.1Ct, 66 or 61 Auto lea1lng 964 ---------1 ~or bes! oUer. Prlv p:t;y. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. -- - - - -67;-0990 a1t 6 COSTA M£SA LEASE • - ------1-'-''-=~,C,..,=-- A NEW 1971 "THINK" TOYOTA l--=,68=----:cv=w=o-- PINTO $s~;f,eo>mo. /IBllJD T0'NoToowN' '11 WAGON optn er1d S.. A ~~~~911 "FRIEDLANDER" PAYMENT PINTO 11750 lfACH ILVD. IHwy. Jt l $4 DAY ""'5'6 • """""' RadW,, heatior. (XEV451) $1599 Harbour V .W. $69.01 MONTH* 36 n1oi;. Def. pay pricio. • VOLKSWAGEN • C.H. CHENEY 934 Ev•rgrHn Cost• Mei• \'ou art' The y,·inner or ~ UckelJ to the Roy•I lnt.matlontl Clrcu1 * at tile' ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS Saturday, Aprtl 3rd Please call 642-5678, ext, 314 between 9 and 1 pn1 to et.aim your tickets. i :-<orth CO\lnty toll-fret num~r ia 540-lZiOl • • • '63 VW Bug AND NEW-USED-SERV. s:.i.is.i.36 or cash price RRdio, heater . .f apeed. (WAZ l.l'Ln.IV'l.I SaxiJ.;).), incl. Ta.'C &: Lie 1m1 BEACll BL. 8-12-4435 IIHI. 4!t MILE PUT A Ll'ITLE I~ICK IN YOUR LIFE! JtUNTINGTON REACH A.P.R. 14.5-1~~. Serial No. -~~~~~~~--I 1·ert , Only !JOOO 1ni's, '"'On approved credit Blue\\ithblackinterior,1500 full Prict $399 BARWICK CADILLAC • L•rgest Stl•ctlon OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS In Or11ng1 County • 19 Q>e DeVUlea. lS Std. De- VUler, I El L'orado1 • S Coq.. \'ertlb!t l. 16 f)ther •tltet 1.rad•·ln1. 1963 thru 197011 ib it. ~A~L~ AIJlHOAIZEO Ou.wt 2600 HARBOR BL,, cosrA ~IESA ~·9100 Open Sunda.Y • 1968 CAD l'Ollvt -38,000 mi, Tt'&~·her's car. Xlnt cond. $3050. Call 213: 431)..6984 CONTINENTAL FORD • CONTINENTAL '66 4-000R '66 Ranch Wagon A1llornatic, po1~er steering, (~WJOOJ). Kelly Blue Book S1 IS5 F'ACI'ORY OW' Prtce AIR CONDITIONING $999 FULLLEATff£RIN1ERJOR BARWICI< I...ESS THAN 28.BlO ti-tfLES E."<quls!te execul1ve black lin. IMPORTS INC. lsh w/matched leath, tntt>I'. DATSUN 1'Ull PY.T. !nel, Iii! "'~I. 998 So. Cou! 1111)•. door Jock1, AM-F.:<1 radio, Laguna Beach new WSW Udes & abtolute. 546-4001 ; 494-9771 J near bl'and new inalde1~~-=~=~~~~ & out, rrEZ597) Ford '70 LTD 4 Dr. Sed. SALE PRICED TODAY £xceUent local .trade. Beau- r!M dark l"Y m"~"' fm. ~~~'~ AUTt<O~llfO 0(AL[lli 2600 HARBOR BL., a>STA MESA ID9100 Opet\ Sunday !sh v.·!th ma!chin&: landau root. Tvy KQld in!er1or, Equlp~d with au to. trans., radlo, heatior, powt>r sterr., po"· er brakes factory air, etc. Sho'A'I eX~llent care. IJT;:CQS) Prtced 10 sell. Johnson & Son, 2626 I I arbor Bl.. Costa Mesa. 5-J0-5i30 M U STANG '10 MACH I P S. air, 3 spd. au10 Ira.AA, ~:qpt f(lr istrr1·n, \\'UJ Sac! S:l.S)3_ Call &12-0137. e '65 \fUSTANG"·Nc.-,-~-,:ll-re-,s-.1 !lir !'<tnd, 6 1;yl. l\lake of/er. "'8-J098 O~LD~S~M~O~B~IL~E~' '69 Olds, 442 2 Or, H.T. ONE O\VNER lol,000 Ml. lleuurllul s1lvf'r n1ilt finish '" 1 I h burgundy interklr. Equipped with auro trans., radio, hea:er, power sleer· Ing, 1i011·cr brakios, power 11•1ndo"s. air cond. If you are hard 10 please, don'! n1iss this !Inc car (XUU8) Juhnson & 5on, 2f26 Harbor HJ., Costa },!esa. 54(}.5b30 '67 Cutlass THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 JIARBOR BLVD., cosr A :'IIES;\ 6-12-0010 'i '70 FlAT Spyder 850 Con-134347. . '67 VW BUG n.adials, Rill, Sacnlitc or-Bill Maxey Toyota engine, ha! '68 seats & frr. 81&--098:!. 18881 BEACH BL. 8·17·~J bun1pers. Special of the Ti\IPORTS INC. DATSUN '64 Gold Cad Sedan De Ville, :ill P"T, -H,OCIO mi's, Xln't cond, new llrea $10CIO. l 011·ner. 67~ • ! ---=c=o =RVAIR ,\Ir cond. dlr. VS, aulomatlc, vinyl top i UEfo'34HL Must .-:ell. $1695 full price, Call -1~~1.7744. '67 COUNTRY SQUIRE 1 =o=Lo~s =,, ~ .. ,~. ~u.ooo~m~I -o,1 Auto Service, Pa rts 96& .1939 C.\DILL.\C ,\JR cor-;or1·10NEP.. 1 1~16! Fiat 1--<lr M'dan. 4-~pd. HUNTINGTON BEACH "etk. (Z.'<U866J lo 1111. Goorl l1<111~porlation. $I S7l $999 998 So. Coast ll"Y· S6:i0. l'.all ti--12-:tl.JO Laguna Beach 'ti9 flAT 830, gold :-porls 1971 TOYOTA COROLLA CHICK IYERSON S46-40Cil / 494-9Til l'pe, blk lrt1tl"wr in\. $12.-...0., 2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED YW l c.~68~vw=~B~,-.-. ~,,,-.,-01~,-tr-a 4!l'.!-7277l, .J94-!l~l~ <tft ti •9878 ,_....iies. 11400. 61~738 bd CHOICE OF 5 ;)49.3011 E.\:t, 66 or 67 """" 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 10 am/att 4pm. JAGUAR '69 Convertible, Io ad e d, $4200. Can finance, priv. ply.. San Clemente U4: 41)'1.280(), '60 1'~LEE'IWOOD 4 -d r • Moto1· in :xlnt cond, llre1 fair, nt>'<'' p&int . Nttds seal covers. $325. 557-3331 '63 Corvalr i\lom:a !El':i82a), 390 VB, AT., pa, pb, fac air, Auto, SZ99 $10 delivers, tug rack 48 ~ mi Ne11• Tetn1s Aval!. 194.i llarbor brlkios, shoe~. bat!c~. Re· Blvd., C.i\r. bit trans. Clean good cond. '62 MONZA, black. Fair $1600. 892.2970. cond. $l6S or offer. Call 642-9220 JEEP rno!or, nc1\· rrans, all polver. i\'.r \\' lire!!. s:m. 5'1S-5750 PLYMOUTH ~11.''·-,. •.• _ .. '70 PLYMOUTH Ouster JlADIO RAD IATOR \\'l:\DSlllJ::LD 1''1PER .\IOTOR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS ...DPMle.wi4 W TOYOTA COSTA MESA VOLVO e J970 COUPE dio Ville pvt party, $5185. by •'63 CORVAIR convt "6:1 Scout Jeep, Post Olficr 1:.! Dr. ll.1'. Automatic, radio, '68 VW CAMPER Spyder-Good cond. )lake or. model. Good cond. Special l1e11.trr, JXl\l"C'r sreering, only {){'luxe sundial, like nevi. 1 -........ • * 673-4698 • fer. Eves &42-6$32. Inter. decor, !\lake oUer. O.OOU cal'cfu!ly drivrn miles .\!UST DISPOSE OY THESE ITE.\!S "fHIS \rEEK-E~D 5-12-3120 TI1e only. au!horiz~ JAGUAR 1966 Harbor, C.:\f. 646-9303 dealer in !he entire Harborl---...C..'--'--- Ne1\; tiger pay,.· \\ide tirio11, ...... - - -1967 El Dorado, Privalt> pai1y. $26C() Call ~1284 '65 CORVETIE 3Z7. 365 hp, 830-l5-i8 11nd Jacrory 11·nrrnnty is 4 1pc! trans, AM/F)I, $1000. '43 JEEP 11.1•11iJ.'.llJ!e. (317ALBJ FOR APPOINTi\IE:\"T Area. 6--15-2633 alt 5 wk. days any-'VOLVO' 1011· n1iles on new eng. $2-17;, ~ 1H1Nl BILL MAXEY 1im• wkod•. 1967 El Dorado, 1 OYrnr, Sllvior, blk Lindau, leathior buckM 5'l"a ts, S2900. 496-4392 .....,m RUNS WELL $2095 COUGAR &iz.2002 au ' "'' '45 JEEP $695 1959 CADILLAC TRANSil!ISSlON READY TO TAJ\J:: A\\".\~·! EXCF.LLE:'\'T CONDlTIO:-< - llit CALLER BVYS ~2-3120 FOR APPOJNT.\!E~T 6 eyls. Forti rnginr. Fut·lory rebulH "uh :.: speed 1rans 200u n11lM;, con1plclr . .\lu~r ~JI :HS-:-i"IBO Complete • SALES 'fi9 V\\', R&H. Xlnt rond, s::~~~e !TJOIYIQIT~ :~..;~ .~;': .~,':"' 1""'· "FRIEDLANDER" BAUER 11881 BEACH BLVD. "'6=1~V\~1~·"'s"'E~O"°'A"'N~-~T~op-... -... -c. '~;;c9°;;~ BUICK Hunt. Beach 147..(1555 1.JJaded "''/extras. Sunroof. NEW-USEO-SERV. I mt N. al' °'8.lt H"'Y. mt Bdl $1200. 6-12-99-12 IN '68 C H dt e l>;O VW BUG-Privole ~ COSTA MESA orona ar op •"'Y """ ""· oruy 1195. $30Bl 234 E. l7ch Street 846-lSTI 548-7765 l.oat!E'd. Black landau lop. '69 V\\', A~t/r:\I. Auto, 1971 VOLVO • CAO. '70 SEO. DE VILLE V8, automatJc, dlr. Poy,·ior1--------- stetring, a ir cond. Priced '70 MAVERICK to sell? (\\IXE042i. Pvt ply, Best ofr, 6-J~-2470 Kelly Blue Book $2425 "10 MAVERICK, npw paint Our Price Job, gd. cond. $1700 or make $1799 offer. 557-8£00 '68 Cougar XR7 c ... h. >16-2154' • AM -9 A>!. MAVERICK FACTORY Autos Wa nted WE PAY TOP CASH ~~=~~~--,-1 Auton1at1c, radio, healer. sunroof, p RI c ED TO Dt'n10 •ZSl9 968 1 !i7 Jag XKE 2+2. 4 -spd, fVWl" 7·1SI Take sn1all Qown. SELL. * 644-6027 * V.\l/A.\!, 11ire 11·hls, lo ml. \\'ill t!iiancc pvt, pty. Call =~~~-~-~= Beaut crir11I . P1·t O\.\'ru?r. alt 10 ani 49~.7506 or 540 3100 '67 V\V Bug, be:ge. 24,f.OO Sac. 67~j\~I. mi. Clean, tape d~k $1000. .DWLle.wi4 9 VOLVO Am CONDmONL'lG Vinyl padded to p, lull pov.·er, BARWICK MERCURY plush rlo1h & learher inter-t.:<IPORTS INC. !or, stet'i!o, nlost all dlx. CX· DATSUN MERCURY ""· \"'11ANGJ. '70 Monterey 10 Pan, '65 Jag 3.!I :<lark JI sedan. BEST BARGAINS 642-2756/att 6 644-4964 .'<lnr n1echanical, Original, COME SEE OUR $5777 998 So. C...t Hwy. Sta, Wag. Lquna Beach 12,000 MILES '69 YW BUG 19611 Ha.rbor, C.l\f. 646-9303 546-4051 I 494-97TI This beautiful sl1!ion \\"&gon $2Hl0 67:-Hlii SELECTION OF ror used cnrs & iiuck;; JUst !---co--===,----TOYCYrAS call us /01· fr\',. est1maies. LOTUS J im Slemons I rnports zvc 108 '58 VOLVO • Xlrtt cond ~ib ~ --,~7~Q~C-O-Ug_a_r ___ , is in like ne1v condition in $1599 $500. 644-fi.179 or 832.0627 e every respect. PoPUl11r pas- GROTH CHEVROLET 140 W. Warner 6:1 LOTUS Elan ·vello"· Santa Ana CAOILLA tel areen finish wl!h saddlt· CHICK IYERSON Autos, Used 990 AUTH01•11zto OU.UR 15,000 Mlle Warran1y leather color interior. spot- Ask for Sales i\lanager 18211 Beach Blvd. H unti11gton Beach 8~7-0087 KI 9·3331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET Conv, stg nr. :>1l ras. S.1,750. Open Eves. & Sun. ·l!il-3973 540-4125 vw BUICK 2filX> HARBOR BL., 2 Door Hardtop. \'8, automa-less !hrOughout. Equippl'd COSTA MESA tic. Jactory alr cond., power 1vllh auto. trans.. I""ddio, MERCEDES BENZ '70 Crown Sedan :>l!J..30::t Ext. 1i6 or 67 --------5-10-9100 Open Sunday steerin1, power brakes, hioater, pow e r steering, 1970 JtARBOR BLVD. e e vinyl roof, tlnted glass, ra-power brakes factory alr COSTA ~IESA BUICK '68 RIVIERA CAMARO dlo, heater, white y,•alJ tires, cond, Center' facing !hirrl Orange County'<. La rgest Selection New & Used Mercedes Benz Jim Slemons Imps. W<irner & Mui n St. Santa Ana 546-4114 wheel coveNI. {837 AKT1 seat. See &c drive today, Loaded, must sacrifice_ Less VW '66 BUG $3l l l (208AQS) Priced lo S('l]. than 10,000 n1iles dlr. #42~6. !\!INT CONDITIO~ FACTORY 'M CA.\fARO, Xlnt cond. 19'10 Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor Take sn1all do11•n or older Attractil·e green finish \\'ith AIR CONDITIO!'.'ING • 427 CJl&. 30,000 ml'i, $2150. Garden Grove Bl., Costa Mesn. 54G-3630 car in trade. Aft. 10 a.n1. belge interior, ..radio, heat· FLtll power, vinyl top, full Pvt pt)', ~>-1907 540-3100 or 49<1-7:i06. e r, etc. Check this out tor vinyl i tr•to seats, •Port '--"""'=~~~=--LINCOLN-MERCURY COUGAR 1969 LEASE A NE\V '71 Tuyota. price & quality. ITRH5431 v.·heels, tilt v.'heel, A~VFM CHEVROLET 10120 Garden Gro\'e Blvd, 26.000 mUes. One owner. Al- lor only $49.98 mo. l\ith just .$92:5. Johnson & Son, 2626 radio, new li?'l"s. see to ap. Garden G!'0\11' 636-2930 tractive platinum finish wilh \1 8 '61 ""d ,. b< I $99.96 + Lie. Harbor Bl Costa ~Iesa. preciate. ("11A51Sl. '69 Impala 2 DI' hrdlp Sal"!? ·57 COUGAR p pu.J black bucket Sl'a1s. fk>auri-:!828 1-larllor Blvd. I : · ':'. an. ' ir. . ~u BlLL i\IAXF.Y T 0 y 0 TA :;10-5630. · 0 ar green fully appointed lhroughoul. Costa i\lcsa :,.;G-1200 to~d. _P_ '-'· ply, Sacrifice 18881 "-•-h 81. I~=~=~==~=-$2666 $500. 350 f'll&'ine. auto, p/b, color, ext. & Int. Auto. Equipped wlth auto. /rans., $99 6 127 """ "" '69 VW FASTBACK pis, fact air, Jo mi's. Xln't tram, PIS, dl.c brakes, . Top DOLLAR ___ I . J . /J •• J M .G 841-85:>5 Huntington Beach YWD 177 cone!. Niow t I r es I br k a• factory air. R/lf. Recent ~adio, heat~1·~po1ver sic~~;: -~ib ;.t, stereo tape. $2195 For Quick tune-up, new tirl"s. See at ng, po~er r es, etc.J ~ TRIUMPH $ll'9 e-'tl' Sale. Will comider trade. GulJ Station, Bo!N. & Spring. sale priced. fYCL637). ohn for --------CHICK IYERSON , CAOILUC 642-9500 days, 645--0962 eves dale lffi call 897-8174 son &: Son, ES Hllrl>or BJ., CLEAN USED CARS • -~1 --,-7-l_S_P_l_T_F_l_R_E_S_ VW AUIHOR1Zto D!'.AUll '69 Malfbg e\les'" wk~ds. Best Offer! Costa ~fesa. 540-5630 I Sec And.\! Bi'Oiin ·~ ,_ 2600 HARBOR BL., , . 1970 MARQUIS CPE. THEODORE & THINK NOW ON DISPLAY :;.i!J..3031 Da. 66 or 67 COSTA i\1ESA 69 Cougar~ a!r cond, vinyl SJ-lOWROO!\f TYPE OF CAR ROBINS FORD ''~I~'' Come in fo r a te~t dri\·e! 19i0 HARBOR BLVD. 540-9100 Open Sunday Air cond. V8, automatic. dlr. lop, new tl~s. lo blue book, 11000 ll-1ILES FRITZ WARREN'S COSTA i\lESA e Radio, heater. fYYJ023). !~31·63Call alt -t:30 pm • Attractive' medium tur'"•oise 2060 Hathor Rh·d. .,....,... ... y Costa i\lesa SPORT CAR CENTER '68 Bug blur/y,·hite inter .. l ijjiijf.!iii!~ii!i!ii!!iiiiiii <\lust sacrUice . .$2395 full ' mist finish with white inler. &12.cxno ''FRIEDLANDER'' 110 E. 1st SI. S.A. 547-071H New tires, Radio, W/W, I' ,68 SKYLARK -'-"-"-·-c.t='~'"-="-"'~·---'69R/HCOVU/GAR-Lo n11. AIC, lor & landau rool, lmmacu-="'=~~ Open daily 9.9; closed Sunday CO('() mats, $1250. Aft 5: 'JO NOVA · T, auto. Xlnt cone!. late! Premium equipped \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR 11nD ••ACM tHWT. n i 64+-6038 Lo book, pri pty. 642-1020 auto. trans., am-fm strrro FOR TOP USED CARS 893-7566 e 537-6824 TR I U :'II PH '70 TR~. R d t \\"" hio,l s '60 Karmann Ghia Convt 2Dr.H.T. VS, automatic, ra· DODGE radio, heatio r, powior steer. If your car is extra clioan, NEW·USED·SERV. ·,~'11~~1''• Loire :-:-· 1297.• Xlol -oo, boir• w/blk top', dlo, heater, J>O\.\'er i !eerinr VS, automa tic, paYt'er s1eer. ----------i lng, power brakes, Jac!ory see us firs!. · ~' · mi~. a. '-" In dl Lotded (CVEJ69) Tru BAUER BL.'ICK m-----------.-. .. 644-U32. P\'t pty &14-4221 rtd Inter .. Reblt ena:, JO & brake1, \'iny! roof. Ju11 ~j r. 21 ' 11 '64 DODGE 440. 2 dr, Auto. alr cond, ly spotless •: -..~ M p G 1575 "AA ""16 ,·mmac .. '•I•. !WEf1=J price S 95. Call 494-4§ trans. PIS. Good & like ne'P 4 near IK!W tires, 234 E. 11th SL l--.-6-5-M-G_B_$-900--"64 TR 4· xlnt cond, \i'ire ' · · ., · .,......_ UJ "' '61 Chevy • •r !No. RVP31<) etc. See & ask lor demon- c••l• '''"·'' 348·7765 \•hi!'. 71.!us! sell bef J/26. '61 vw Bua: -Paisley $1925 ~ rPliabll". $499 o· best oUior. " ... , $199, $10 dio!ivers on a~ 548-9890 s!ration. (916 BEQl. John---lfii' C\prcs~ l.agu11a Bf'a{'h S77:i nr i)(>i;;! offer 67;)...3279 sunl'oof, nu tires, generator. ===~=~---I I.\1PORTS \VA:-ITED I · · ' "'ell" 4,,. .,.,.,, proved cred!L See at 19-15 '63 DART CONY·, A"<o "''''·, son&. Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., Oraogo Co"""" MGB VOLKSWAGEN ~~ ~ ~·~ BAUER BUICK Harbor Bl,d, C.M. R/H. Xlol Cood. $5511. Co•<• M"'· 540·5630. BAUER BUICK ZJ4 E. 17th SI. Cos!'.l .\lesa ~S..Ti(i,] ,. • •' •. • -, I • ,· '5.1 PLYMOUTH. l dr, black. orig cond, 19 n1pg ~ or Trade. 645--4687. '69 Plymouth Roo~~d,.,,-m-,.r.· 1 f'.'e11• tires, clurch & paint T.O.P. Day!> 8J8....lj64/all 6: 30 lJnl 9fiS.. 748! ~ ~-~·· ...... " ... , . '69 ROADRUNNER Z Dr. H.T. VS, automatir, ra- dio. healer, power steering, hueket sea1i;, low mileagQ wlth factory 1v11rranty rc- n1aining. 1 VPT'.1721 $1895 BAUER BUICK 23-1 E. 17th St. Co~ta il-lesa 548-7765 PONTIAC ,i,;, ........ -··-. ... •• '68 PONTIAC LE MANS Z Dr. 11.T. vs. automatic, ra- dio ,'<: ht>afer, po11•er steer· lng & brakes faefory air, bucket seers'. Rtd Y.'i!h black intl•rior. /VIS"~) $1995 DAUER BUICK '.!3~ E. 17111 St. Co~la ;\l!'sa 548-7765 DAVE-ROSS-- PONTIAC CoinpletP Sales ·" Service 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fnir Dr. Costa Mesa 546-8017 Oprn 7 days a week s::m AM fo !l :OO P.:<1 '67 FIREBIRO TOP $ Bt:YER '66 VW, Cielln. sunrool .t. 234 P: 1-th S '68 Chev. ~tallbu :Z dr, PS, 536-4173 -1970 MERC. C0NV.- BILL ',!,\XEY TOYOTA 164 VW BUG radio, 6000 mi'• MW en1, · ' I. 6 1 B -1·~ui Harchop. Excellent condi!ion, 196! _\rr;B-X1111 eund. Lo ml. sooo 673-2196 Coat.a ~1esa 548-1765 cy · ~ 011 · ovior .....,.,, FALCON THE SPORTY Or\E lSSSl Beach Blvrl. Pvl fllY RO\V ;:99 · Xlnt cond. 830-7395 / evl" This flashy tulip yellow \\'ilh dlr. ~·uu price Sl29!1. Take IL Beach. Ph. S.li·Sjj,) Cf!ll allrr 6, tiT.-100'.! $799 '70 VW BUG 64f>-.1MG black top & Interior auro-!'inial1 do'.vn. (ZR\V889l \Vil! ~~~-~~----'68 RIVIERA Loaded. '63 Falcon 2-<lr, 6 cyl, auto. r,• p 1 1 C ll 54" '[OO \\'AN,T late n1rnl!'I Ford Van. OPEL 217 AGr '65 Chevy 2-dr hrd!p, auto, •350 -b••I o<<•'· Carl mobile has been driven only "· v · P )', a ' ........ or CHICK IVERSON A.\1/F:\1 ~tereo. Beaut. ~ u, ~ 4947506afllOam 6 cyl. Tll.I .1unk. pl!'asc $1699 CNo, PID6101 $299, SlO :.•o •1« -•1 5:30 17,CXKI miles & must be seen · · -~-·~~~I !lilver w/black vinyl top. .,....,..... .... - !i75--J.'V1 aft l'r 4 p.n_i_. -~ -~ .. ~~~·~~ii VW \\'kdys only, &U-400J l\lr. delivers on •pproved cl'l"dif. FORD & driven to apprecia1e. Ra. '67 (;TO Pontiat", 0 rl ~ Autos, lmporte-G' 970 CHICK IYERSON RDn .\lrKiondry Sl"e at 1&45 Harbor Blvd. dio, heater, power &leering, own!'r. Less than 40,o<x.I I 54g.3031 E.'Ct. 66 or 67 VW C.:\f. power brakios, factory air nt i's, 4·spd, Too n1any car~. AUSTIN HEALEY '69 OPEL RALLYE 1910 HAMOR BLVD. 'G3 B"kk Le S.b" 2 Or. '65 L TO d 1 4 1 N<> '"""'bl• o!l<r 1·cfo,.d. '65 CHEVY: z dr ln1pala. con .. e c, near ne\v I res. COSTA ?1-IESA 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 :idnt mech. Good tires, nu 321 eng. S550. MUST SELL. T·Blrd tltotor, Ask for demonatra!!on. (7Q7i-1 "°6100:J-<i--:c53~1=--=-~~~ I AUSTIN-HEALEY 1 1 i.VC'!'cl 1ransn11fi.~ion rari10 WANTED l970 }lARBOR BLVD. ~~~ j or b!lt off. * Call 893--1943 * 57,500 mi., 2 dr. hardtop, AZP). Johnson & Son, 2626 196..~. 2 DR , Bonneville hartl ENG INE 100·6 ;i nc! hratr1·, l•r11 011Jcagr 1.1 d 11 1 ~~~c_o_ST~A-'~!£~SA,.__,_ c=~~~~-~=~ • 1,tPALA .61 A<R PS all po'A·tr exc, wind .. Jae Harbor Blvd., Cosla ~lesa. top. Full powr. In cl R' r ! pay lop 0 ar or !'OUr :-:: • 1970 CAD El Dorado-17,000 . • . 1·' . ut t m A~I F!\1 \' I"" .?f..J9 c .c . 1611 i·u. in. c,1 ~1 car. <1!l)t' tC>d. 11,1.1h black "OLKSWAGEN tod•Y earr '66 V\\': Gd Cond,-rad10. P/B, Sl295 OR BEST OF-air. a o. rans .. ' -· 54c.-5630 / . I r 1•1 r<1.dlo, nu buckl'! ~eat~ iVC !:l\H) ~ · Call evios 11.lt 10 pm ml, fully •quipped. Sih·er radio, radi•I ply, clean. xlnt --:----:~ --cn!ibraled poly·"lass p~m iron 1Jc;11l. 1nlal'.!. d1s ... ~sr 1n· .$1.3. 95 ' a.nd ask for Ron Pinchof * 67:P-4lS9 ~ grey k 1,1,•hltio. AM: Cell FER. 642-9187 cond 1 o"'·ner Blue Book 1969 Mercury Montego lires. Xlnt conrl~ 0·riJ:: ownr, hlt.'C!.. .ond f)til'ti;illy ir liiillr , I 549.3031 Ext. fi6.67. 673-0900'. ri48-:H86; Pi\1; 675-7102, uk 19[}7 Chevy 2 Dr. 6 cyl stick, JU' · c I ATTRACTIVE & All PRl"ll! i111·ludrr! ... 1;r111•r-• '63 SEDAN $395 for Paul Henderson. new sel'lt coveJ'S, good con-$1,J . Make an orter. al ECONO:>.tICAL ~17!l:i. Res. 495-1124, Bus. I C II -10 ~ss .,,,,, '68 VW BUG • "4 'RZ1 * 642-43Zl , Ext 201. LI h r ,:, h, I Id ~!H--0768, 541J.-&876 ator, (' c. .1 -1· -... ~ •• • BAUER BUICK ""' ... dition, S300. &12-4893 g t vy ins "'th go in-i "==i--~~~~-1 lea\'f' your 11an1r and phone \'TS-907 ,66 VW B • '65 BUICK WAGON '64 Ford Galt:xie 500 terlor """'lp.,.d wi!h auto. TRANSP. car . '61 Pontiti(.' • ,,.,•-•. '"4 ° Jl>h SI ug ss~ ** "'"'1ITTO '64 Chevy 4-dr, r/h, powe.r, 2 0oo H o . '"" ,. SI IV 4 I Ti "Y" "'·· ""' ~-. · · $1299 ..., ........ eves r ardtop. n..111dlo, hioat-matlc trans., radio, healer. a. ag. R"\ • N'S. Cllst11 'lesa ~HS-7i6;i facrory air_ Xlnl eond. rl R42-7674 BMW CADILLAC $5:1(1 * * * S4l-:J94J er, po1\'er !lee ng, JIO"'er power steering, e.tc. Priced CHICK IVERSON Rad!o, heate.r. 4 i;JX'ed IRJB hrakes, Jactory air, automa. for quick 11ale, $1675. YCN-VW 813!. --..,.,,.,..,,..,...,.,,...--. 1'68 BEL AIR 1,1,·aron-327 VI, tic trans. $645. ORB 512. 380. Johnaon J.. Son, 2626 '6·1 GTO-Extras. lllU~t SE'IJ, $795. Drafted. ~:.i\\'" . .; 1\"E\\t & t;SJ::U. all nl()d('I~. parts <1nd ~t'I' ir1· (Jvl"rsPa~ Drl1\Pf) 9'71;9 OPEi. GT-New tlrf'~. \hU .-ond , SZG~:i or hl"~1 of. Irr C<1ll ;1'11i-lO-;;, full Price CADILLAC air, PIS. luggage rack, Jollnson &. Son, 26l6 Harbor Harbor Blvd., Costa .:<Jesa. ;,1!).3031 Ex!, li6 or 61 $999 '70 SEO. DE VILLE R&H. :.take offer. 496-1411 Blvd., Collta Mesa. MG-5030 S40·5630. Call &IZ-023,j RAMBLE=R __ , C. BOB AUTREY .\HYrOR S 1860 Long l~l'IH'h Blvr!. PORSCHE mo HARBOR 3LVO, BARWICK 12.000 loc•I m<I". Ooly ~. CHRYSLER 19'5 F d G I 500XL COSTA i\.fESA "~ or a "68 MERCTJRY ?-IONTEGO sioeing and driving thi1 like a uckttseat1, powersll"ering, TltX Sta. \Vgn w/a!r, disc ---------- 2JJ..-:i91-S721 ---------1967 FASTBACK -A:-.tlF,,_t, --~D~A~TSUN ___ ,63 p h S ~unroof. Jo mi. Spotless. orsc e uper s149.:;. 644-1343. Cpe. ~ahanu1._yf!~low ~·Hh btk ·s.~ !JUG f.urope!ln, cui1tni , W 1 1n1er1or, A:\111' :.1. chro.nf! yellci\.\· chrm y,·hlll tach & 65 Datsun agon ll'ht'el~. rN:ent C' n;; l n c "h'r•'O. ln1n111r s1.H>o llr111. I ~l*('d. dlr. l~c11J :-.i\Cl'. tYCT PX\V91S2 837-2695 ' '33) $2399 ""~5~"' CHICK IVERSON BARWICK VW l'rpOI{. T" ,,,. :.ii1.J031 f:)lr. 66 nr 67 ' 1'l ' ~-J£170 JIARBOR BLVD. "f.o6 BUU -Xlnt. \Vht/red int. 43,CXKI mi. Ntw t..i.tt1. $..~iO. &H-·U26 or 548-3389. 1~ VW -t'actory air, nt\\' !Irr~. Blue 1v/blk interior. Xlnt cond. Call 832-«tll JMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. Coaat HY.)', Laauna Beach 5$!)....1()51 I 494-9771 Large S.lectlon Of VW Campers, Vans, Kombis, Buses, New & Used lmmeclltt• Dellvery DATSUN COSTA MES,, 9:1fol So coa~t ·111'>· l..aituna Brar h '62 vw Bug w/sunrool CHICK IVERSON POnscHr.-·s.-, C Superior >..1n1 corn! $.jj() 67~1552 YW -. ~>-16-40.il 19-1-9i71 1~1nd. ~trrl cond. l'i!ttl i;:ra) ,69 '"' •-· · 1,/re<I io!rr. chrni \\'his ~ • ..... ,OCk, auto trans. 54!-3031 Ext, QI or fi7 .luriSt>n li!OIT1on, Juli 1tuik1: ll('IV br1r1kv5. $1800. Call 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ~ew '71 Datsun l~'f'kt>r radio. E 11 ro r "i .,-",-;µ;~'8.-'...,,,.,,..,,_-~~ COSTA ll-fESA f()Q Otte, Pickup 11'\lh camri-IW1111wl-S3200 121:11 6911-36~ * * '61 V\V Squareback • "·.,=, ~V\=I'°' =s.c1~. ~1!3~d~lo~.-,~,,.,_-,.-,.,-k, rr. ~It pr1rt S2t'Y.l9 dlr • l'lAA PORSCHE !112 COUP" Good ('(lfl~1t1on. $1200 or beS1 l'illO"'' chalna. luggage rack. 1 # PLl214jZ'r.f}l \\'111 lake 4-.<;pd, itir. /\CY.' 1700 t'n:i;illf', ofler. &it.-8.109 Priced lo St"ll . 17'1~1 $45-~ ca.r 111 tr11dt. \\.·111 flnanc·e 1 OC'\\" lirt"l'i. lm11111culAttly V\\I bug 1960 Sunl1fl(' tup 1963 V\V Bull ;\take otter prh'l\HI' PArty. CaU ~6-8736 ('n.rt"d for. r~l7-60!ll d:iys: -ll('\\! lil'f'~. Sacrif1ce SJ1j. 1918 Seadrift Dr, Cd~! or 494-61111 ' fi73-1901 n1 tr~ /i,, \1kn1Js. • flT.l-817• 6~ new trade In can you ap· poWer brakes, 11utomatlc brakes PIS. $1750 612-71l~1 '68 JAVLIN preclate condition. Exollc trans. 46,000 orig, mlles. · S --Atuomatn: tr1u1.~ .. greion gold metallic finish '65 CHRYSLER \Von't, lait Jong. N~1V 268. MU TANG ~t("ering, rad lo, "1th ha.m1on1zlng Interior k S7TS, Johnaon &: Son. 2626 1 _________ \VAR 129. $1315. JXIY.'f'r heater. landau roof. Fully power ll•rtlor Bl., Colla J\fesa. '65 i\lust,.n<r '-<Ir, VB, ki•l, equlpJ)l"d of course, plua 4 Door Sedan. tmmacula!io -~ AM/Fi\1 s(ereo. tele ~ fill thru-out. Low milt8Jl'l". V8, MO-~. (No. RZF487l $$9!1, $10 s!rg, y,tJeel, ArR CONO., automa~;c, r11.dlo, hio1.tt r, '33 Ford Cou~v..a, orialnal dellvtrt on approved crNlit. -·er 1•or1•r 1zw~1 cond. 1'00 Cash. See• •t l!M5 Harbor Blvd, Plu1 much ,\JORE.. Stt thi1 .... -•" " · ~ $995 Call 642--017 C.ll-f. one befOl'f' ycu buy. 1290-====~=~~~ BE.Tl. Priced 10 sioJJ. John· . '66 rAJRLANE. 2 dr, clean. '66 ~tUSTANG ~ldtp VS, auto 1on & Son, :1626 Jfarbor Bl., BA~EER ),~h~~CK :i.:lnt cond, P/S, tape deck, tram, air, PIS, + Xrra.s. Costa r.tesa. 540·5630 ~take fair olfer. 646--9126 $995 ** 644·5892 C d C ~v·r1 11 1969 Fard LTD, full po11."er, 1970 BOSS !30:ll, f'ASfBACK '&I a oupc ..,.. 1 c. a CO!'" Me" 548°7765 o• 4 pd PI S PIB ' -< whitio. Po\.\·tr & air. $USO. .., Y.ith air. f.IAKE r fER. • , , , .,.,,\5 o Sourh Coast Car 1.f'asing. • * 497-1376 * • Xtras • $3300. ~3461 Aft 4 64>2182 'C9 TO\VN & Country '61 Comet 2 Dr. clean, xlnt. rondlUQn low ml. $300. cash 642-<514 ~ Mulltang New tqu.lpt, Must sell $795. • 675-104:) c"A70".--,,'s;~-""q,..:-,-cDe,--"V~ill~ •. -.7,~,.· I S-pas11engf'r y,•agon. l-"'lded. nll pv.T, lthr. lt1nrl~a11 top, AM/FM. Mr. Ron McK~n­ lllf whet!, radial~, Xlnf dry weekdt)'! only, IH2-4000 1970 Ford ltANCHERO.-P/s '68 MUSfANG 2+2, p/i;, '69 Rambler Sllltlon \Vagon $100 under \.\'holiosale book. '.\lu.~t Sell! $1400. 846-(J(HS C\'e5 & weekend~ '6;i RA'.\IBLER On.1Jsic 2 Dr. hrdtop, lo1v mllt·Agc. Ne\\' _lire&,_!_ OY.~ R30--IJ98 __ 1 '63 CLJ\SSIC H.ambler - PIS, PIB. lnr !ory air, $31).) .. .. 002-1 S44 T-tllnD-- '0 "d' $1,6'0, """""'· CONTINENTAL ' 5.000 mt""'°· Call 841-2884 p/b, alr-cood, 11000. Call 644 .6111. •ft.er 6 pm. 5-10-2585. 1'170 T-AlRU. Low n\il~ --.~.,~Co~"-.,~o.~v-u-r,--·I. ~63,-°'co"NT=·"'L-C"p-.-,-m-m-,-,,·l ,62 ford Oalu!t, R/H. P/S '69 ~IAOf 1, A'Tr"°Ginct, dbc rull po11't'r. Air cond. Pr\. Full po"er, good ~nd. .cond. Mu11t 1tt. 962--0613 alt Grod condition. MU:e offer! hrlk•• factory 11treo·1 pl;y :l1>.826J between 3-4.p fi7J-226Z or 673-5123 5 &. wk!Xl!I. S4Pr-1395 alter 5PM Loaded . .SlBOO. 6-16·6319. _,_lo-'o-_i_·,_, ------ • I • • • • .· r I • . . . ·- II DAIL v PILOT TUl!dOI. M""' 23. 19n ' Our Whole Family Invites Your Family ADMINISTRATION Robert N. Weed. President and Publilher Jack R. Curley, Vice President and General Manager Evelyn L. Bell Boilnle J. Gresory Margaret Greenman ACCOUNTING Bemarrl Schulman. Controller Betty L. Allen Reba H. CanetU Bonnie S. Chauvin Patricia Coe Roland V. Holm Patricia C. Johnson Helen M. Scott Florence C. Levine Dolores P. McPaul Tanya Palm Wanda L. Spain Terri C. Tank CIRCULATION Milan A. Leavitt, Circulation Manager Tania Allard Richard E. Backstrom Hal Bakke Paul Bartlett Russell Beard Robert J . Bresee John D. Cole Frank J. Durante Daniel E. Ferryman Daniel P. Ferryman John Garcia Glenn Gibbons Claude B. Greene George W. Harding Bryan L. Holland Howard D. Hutchens David E. Jacques Gregory J. Johnston Richard Jourden Ruth R. Leavitt Joseph E. Nobles William E. Oakley Reuel K. Olson Lorin L. Orchard Jr. A. Fosler Ouelelt James D. Mullen TV Ronald Davis Myers James D. Parks Donald W. Richmond Blaine S. Roberts Terry F. Ruetten Frank N. Salalti Jr. t.1arjorie M. Sullivan Hiram Harry Seeley Charles L. Smith James E. Seay Llnda L. Stinson Tom P. Tale Llnda F . While Benton G. Williams Donald L. Williams CLASSIFIED Horace Blanco. Classified Advertising Mgr. Delores Blanco Jo Ann Bray Margaret J. Davidson Beverly Ettinger Juanita L Folsom Peggy J . Hay~ Jean L. Jobst Dorothy \V .• Joyce Jacklyn K. Kravitz Kandi Labbee Phyllis J. r-.1ohler Mary Beth ~1orton Carol F. Robinson Shari J. Slagie Robert A Seling Gaye C. Tickner Virginia s. Van Houten Twilla B. Young COMPOSING ROOM Herold C. Andersen. Superintendent P~ul H. \Vard, Day Foreman David Gutierrez, Night Foreman Anne Allen Robert C. Alley Evelyn M. Andersen Roy J. Barne~ Raymond R. Bender 1.larjorie F. Brown Robert 0 . Callahan Carolyn A. Capalbo Jostph M. Carney Wilham N. Cravdord 1'-tilford E. Danley Donald J. Defore Frank Casey Duna Gerald L. Goodner Jesse L. Gu1ierrez Frank L Hal!ey Billy Pat Halverson Robert X. Harper Donald D. Hohanshelt Robert E. Ho\•/e Marjorie J. Jackson Harold E. Johnson Dorothea Jones Bernice G. Kunar Carl A. Knapp William 0 . Lltrell J1me!: Luhrs Jewel M. Lussier Robert H. Mack Arden K. Malsbury Gabriel Mata Jr. Donald Mclean William D. Meeks Jr. Charles: L. Mill.tr Larry E. Morgan Larry G. Morgan Donald E. Paeot J""'ph A. Rttd John Routh Seth Shenton Paul E. SmaglUt Robert 0 . Stepha• Patrick A. Tool Harold K. Turner G~rge Wiiliam J . Toth .John S. Waid . Joan P. Wilder DISPATCH Dudley B. Rich , Depart.meat Manager John T. Bourpo.s Swan Christopher Corey P, Saget Johe A. Sperling William M. Thomson Richard D. Clemeni., DISPLAY ADVERTISING Charles Pritchard, Display Ad vertising Mgr. Charlotte F. Andresen Joseph E. Davis Arthur D. Dawson Maurice J. Gardner William E. Greene r.tary K. Henry Roy A. Henson Jaek K. Littleton Leon F. Peterson James G. Riley Norman Stanley Fred W. Williams 1'-1ichaeJ C. Wilson Ernest Vitucci EDITORIAL DEPT. Thomas Kee.vii, Editor Thomas Murphine, Managing Editor Charles Loos, Assistant f.ianaging Editor Richard Nall, Assistant Managing Editcr Bea Anderson. Women's Editor Lucy Bell, Weekender Editor Albert Bates, Editorial Page Editor Glenn White, Sports Editor Norman R. Anderson Robert R. Barker Thomas A. Barley Francis P. Boyle Jr. Jack Broback Roger F. Carlson Jacqueline Ann Combs Terry S. Coville Barbara 0 . Duarte Alan J . Dir kin Howard L. Handy Pamela Hallan Jodean Hasting!. Cheryl Kravitz Richard Koehler Barbara Kreibich L. Peter Krieg George A. Leidal Almon Lockabey Margaret A. Mc.Alister John S. Mitchell Rudi Niedzielski Patrick O'Donne!J Jo Olson Lee Payne Joanne Reynolds Phillip E. Ross William L. Schreiber Craig W. Sheff Torn Titus John Valterza ·Arthur Vinsel Rosemarie West MAIL ROOM George E. Arauz. Departmeot Manager William Eastman Lorraine Andrev.·s Alice Dunigan Marianne Sharfe ~farika Raes l\1a~y L. Daum Dorothy Mikots Gladys Bell Patriria Domecq Janet Ford ~taria Vicari Shirley Robinson Bernice Wagner Nancy \\'ithe rspoon MAINTENANCE Eugene F. Laney, Building Supervisor John Martin. Automotive Maintenanct \Villiam It Hayes 1'-1ichael 0, Marquard~ ~!ichael A. Pfeifer Raymond Roof Richard Greco NATIONAL AND AUTOMOTIVE ADV. Carl Carstensen Jr., National ind Automotive Manager Jeff Stevenson. Automotive Sales lYlanager Dennis 0. Landry Hope C. Shull.! PILOT PRINTING William L. Brown PROMOTION AND ART DEPARTMENT Thomas ~fcCann. Promotion Manager Anne Hamblin STEREOTYPE Charles J. H1ubri ck, Fortman Gtr!Jd J. Hill Daniel E. Kirkmeyu C<lrdon M. Nielsell Edward E. Quinn Mlchlle! Rafferty SWITCHBOARD Patricia Blackketter Mary E. Friedluer Peggy J. Forney \ COME .AND SEE EXPANDED, MODERNIZED FACILITIES OF THE DAILY PILOT 330 West Bay Street Costa Mesa WELCOME >- -· ..• l WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY I MARCH 24 and 25 GUESTS RECEIVED 7 to 9 p.m. BOTH EVENINGS WHO AND WHY Friends keep asking members of our family when members of the ir family can come and see the newly enlar9ed and remodeled facili ities of the DAILY PILOT •I 330 West B•y Street in Costa Mesa. So ... by popular demand , as they say , . , we're open ing the doors Wednesday and Thursday, March 2'4 and 25 , from 7 to 9 p.m. to anyoni and everyone who would like to see the "factory'' where we produce eight editions a day of your DAILY PILOT. HOW TO GET HERE .. ' •• .. " ' ,, The DAILY PILOT pl•nl, •I 330 West B•y St.eel in Cost• Mes•, is :: "freeway close" to itl readers all along the Orange Coast from Se•I 11 • Bei!!ch to San Clemente. Bay Street runs from Harbor Boulevard to • ' Newport. The plant is abo ut midway betweent those two major i!lrteries. 1 ' It ealily can be reached vi a either Harbor or Newport from the San I Diego Freeway or Pacific Coast Highway. The plant 's 175.car tmploytt : parking lot will be open lo the public both "open house" evenings. -' • 7