HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-24 - Orange Coast Pilot)
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Gun1nan
Bobs Costa Mesa
Store of 5300
DAILY PILOT
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WEDNESDAY AFl'ERNOON, MARCH 24, 1971
VOL. M. NO. n, 4 llCTION1, U f'AOIS
Dogs Face
BeafchHan
In Newport
Newport Beach may follow · the lead
of two other Orange Coast cities and
ban all dogs from Its beaches.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers proposed
the ban, saying he has received a number
of compl;i.inls from constituen~.
The city council Monday directed City
Attorney TUiiy Seymour to obtain copies
Df similar ordinances already adopted
by Hllntinlton Beach and Laguna Beach.
In Laguna, where dogs are prohibited
on beaches from 9 a.m.. to 6 p.m.
during the summer. the law wu adopted
after a major furor that culminated
with a city-wide referendum on the issue.
The Hunti ngton Beach ordinance is
even tougher and bans dogs from both
lhe beaches and the pier at all times.
Councilman Lindsley Parsons pointed
out lhat dogs are also currently pro-•
hlbited from all state beaches.
Rogers told the council "the movement
Is the same up and down the coast."
He said that representatives of the
Peninsula Point Homeowners' Associa·
tion have been ad.ama.'lt In their requests
that Newport Beach take similar action.
"I've been getting more calls about
this than about the freeway," said
Rogers. a peninsula residenL
T r oops Leave Korea
SEOUL. Korea CAP) -The U.S. 7th
Infantry Division is being puUed. out
of Korea and disbanded, the U.S. miht.ary
In Seoul announced I.Oday.
Orpge Coast
11'eathe r
Those gray skies are gonna clear
up Thursday, bringing slightly
warmer temperatures to t h e
Orange Coast with readings In the
middle 60s locally and up to 70 de·
grees inland.
INSIDE T ODAY
President Nixon is in remark·
obly good health after 26 months
and apparentl11 is thriving on hi.I
'job. Pope 10.
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LOCATED, JAILED
Joseph Dulaney
New School Tax
Election Set
For Huntington
By RUDI NIEOZIEUIKI
Of tftt IMllJ l'ltlt l t•ff
The.re will be another lax override
election in the Huntington Beach Union
ffigh.Scbool District June 15.
The amount -.69-centl per $100 of
assesSed valuation -la the wne already
twice rejected by voters. it apprOVed,
it-would raile the diJtrlct'a tax rate
to fl,1)11, • d
Trustees decii:l.ed on the maxe Tuesday
njghl before a &tanding-rood.l~nly au-
dierice in the Huntington Beach High
School cafeteria. The vote was J.-0 with
trustees John Benllty, Ray Schmitt and
Ralph Bauer all casting "yes" votes.
Board President Matthew Weyuker was
absent.
Veteran trustee Bentley authored the
motion after hearing impassioned pleas
of former election workers urging that
Ult district again ask, for the $2.~ rate.
In making the motion, Bentley cited
the district's need of the $2.08 rate
to maintain the current educational pro-
gram and to restore cuts which have
been made over the past three years.
The election will be the district's fourth
try for an override in 14 months and
its third try fpr 69-cents.
A $9.5 million bond measW't combined
with a SO-cent override failed in February
1970. Tht fikent tax measures failed
on Nov. 3, 1970, and just two weeks
ago.
Earlier, Bentley appea.rtd to be iiet
on a s1.a rate, the amount deemed
necessary to carry on the current educa-
tional pn}gram. However. he withdraw
his motk>n and then asked for the hilher
amount.
Failure of I.he override for the five-
campus high school district woold mean
a reduction of the diltrlct'a bll!ie
ope.rating tu rate to ~ll! per SUll)
(Sff TAX VOTE, P11e ti
n
CoaSt ·Stoek •
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Figure "lleld
On Island
"' By TOM BARLEY
Of '" OlllJ l'llfl lllff
GloM-trotUng stockbroker J o s e p h
Dulaney la today in a Curacao jail cell
aWalllng actldn by Dute~ colonial
au,thorities .on tbe . extradition demand
being flOwn Co tbe Caribbean Island
from Orange CoUnty.
Gov. Ronald Reagan's slgnatlD'e un-
derline! accusations that Dulaney, '11,
formerly of Newport Beach, defrauded
Investors in hi.! Financial World Trends
empire of an estimated $3 million before
he fled to Europe from his plush Laguna
Hills "Taj Mahal" in December, 1969.
Investigators believe that the free
11pending Dulaney recently returned to
Manich. It was his home for more than
a year. Authorities said he visited
relatives in his lllinois birthplace recently
and went on to make several more
contacts before flying back to West
Germany.
Interpol and the FBI had Curacao
-in the Netherlands Antilles off
~faracaibo. Venezuela -high on their
checking list for reasons that are not
available today. The confidence in
lawmen in botll agencies was jmtified
when Qulaney checked in last week at
a Curacao hotel and was immediately
arr!sted on lhe long standing charges
of grand theft, forgery and conspiracy.
His wife , Marlene. 31. is still being ·
sought on identical charges. Investigators
are concentrating their search on Mon-
treal in the belief that Mrs. Dulaney,
who once acted as secretary for Dulaney
In the World Financial Trends complex,
may have taken the couple's three young
children to the Canadian city.
Mrs. Dulaney's arrest would enable
Orange County authorities to consolidate ~ou!t action against a trio alleged to
be r'f:sponsible for a series of frauds
assertedly conceived and carried out
from lavish office buildings in Laguna
Rills and Seal Beach.
The World Financial Trends corporate
complex and its facilities are now in
the han81 of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
and awaiting proceedings that lack only
the presence of the firm 's principals
for further acUon.
Mrs. Dulaney'• arrest will place her
ln the de!endant"1 box with her husband
and 3&-year~ld James Shipley of Hun-
tington Beach. the man promoted by
Duh11ney from vtct president to president
shortly before the Newport man left
fur Germany and what one Investig ator
described as the "life of Riley" t in
Munich.
Shipley faces Identical charges . He
Is schedWed to appear April 21 in Santa
Ana Municipal Court and Is free f>'I
l250.000 ball .
The bursting of the Dulaney bubb\1
IS.. STOCKllROKER, P11• II
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N ewpo:rt .S.tudies
Law Ki~king Dogs
Off Its Bea~hes
ow
• . • 1 • • ·• ·Y~t.i*g'; ~~r · ·SS~
Sen. James Buckley (C·NY) tells a news conference ln Washington he
will vote for the SST subsidy despite misgivings about the plane's
environmental effects. Buckley made the announcement foUowing a
White House meeting with President Nixon.
North Viets Intensify
Attacks on Laos Capital
VIENTIANE, Lao1 (UP!) -North
Vietnamese troops intensified attacks to-
day near the royal Laotian capital of
Luang Prabang and heavy fighting was
r~ported only a half mile from the
city's airport. The defense ministry said
the 1ituaUon "remains critical."
Communist unit& with mortar support
regained the strategic Ban Done-Cho po-
sition three miles northeast of the Luang
Praban& • Airport Tuesday night after
losing It to Laolian counterattacks earlier
In the day. The position was originally
1elz.ed by the North Vietnamese last
weekend.
Gen. Thongphan Knocksy, official
spokesman for the Laotian defense
ministry, said North Vietnamese ttoops
11tepped up attacks against the hilltop
r>osition of Phouxang a half mile from
the airfield before dawn Wednesd,ay, lhcn
withdrew shortly after sunrise to avoid
air &trikes.
Thongphan said Laotian troops recap-
tured three strategic hills north and
east of the airfield Wednesday but he
warned they might be lost again In
niiiht fighting. He said Laotian lo&es
were "heavy" but gave no casualty
figures for either side.
By Wedne&day night, Thongphan II.id,
North Vietnamese troops were dlrte 'to
five miles north and east of the alrUeld.
ElsewheM!I, in the Plain of Jar• area,
Communist gunnel'I fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made .'.t22MM rockets against po!I·
lions at Ban Na, Sam Thong and Lona:
Cheng. 1'hongphan said Ban Na wa1
hardest hit in a too rocket bArrage
but no significant casualties or damage
were reported.
own
Solun~ Split . ,... . .
Over Plane
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WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Th• Senoi.,
lta members subjected to one tlf th•
most intemlve -!Obbying campatcna in
memory, decides today · whether. to eon.
tinue governJl\enl financing of the con-
troversial supersonic iraf\SPOrt pllne.
The 100-member senate ,tppeated split
squarely down the. middle · in advance
of the 1 p.m. PST vote.· Battlint fot
the faster-tban-,ound airliner wer~ Presi-
dent Nixon an4 his adminlatraUmt, the
air.craft indtlltry and most of qaniled
labor. Envitonmentalistl . led , the ~
position.
The Senate last session voted against
the SST, but later bowed to Bouie
demands to continue the financing'
through March. Last week the House
reversed ilsell and voted to end
governmental funding.
The b!illot offered the leilding 197J'
Democratic presidential conten'defs 'their'
first chance In this aeulon of. COngress·
to vote on a major and controversial
issue. Most of the potential Democratla
contenders already were lined t1Jl igalnst ·
the SST.
But there were etceptions, 'lncludin&
Sen. Henry M'. Jackson of Washington.
the jetliner's No. 1 booster, and JKll!iblJ
former Viet President Hubert H.
Humphrey. . · ·
Of all the PotentW tl>emocr,uc can·
· didates, Humphrey appeared the only
one for whom the dec!slon wu a tQrtuous
one -and With g<lQd reason. He ha1
always banked heavily an the support
or organized lab!>r a,nd AFL-CIO Preai--
. dent George Meany ho stumped Ion1
and hard for the plane, and the Jobs
ISet SST, Page I)
Mesa A'ides See
Schmitz Lashed
Costa Mesa deleptea to a national
conference of city leaders witnessed a
rare spectacle Tuesday in Wash~ton,
D.C.. that Of · \hefr own congrearman
being chewed out bf h1a boSI. ·
Mayor Robert M, Wlloon ond Coo!>-
cilman Alvin L.~Pinklly obtained P.AllU
to watch a rOll call vote In 1hi Houae
of RtprtMJntaUves on UJe 11-)'tat-<ild
voting rlahts ilaue.
Congr..,man John G. Sd!IDllo (fl.
Tw;tin) WU ID'IOlll 19 H,Pratntatlve•
votin& again&t the bill , while 400 cqa..
leagues cut favorable blDota.
House GOP lea<IM Gerald Fcrd (fl.
t.Uch.) was displt1sed when t h e
California conservative and Jobn Blreb
Society member spoke against tt.
''Congressman Schmiti was tlMn to
task," Mayor Wilson re m•r k. e d
diplomatically today.
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F\ve States
Alrea~y 91~
fouth
1
Vote
.
;wASl!INGTON (UPI) -~late
l<Pl&tur ... '!&rned by Ille U.S, House
et n.p..-.u..,· Gyear<>ld Knlor
rdembtr that •"youth 1'ln be senied, ••
~ today to join In ratllylng a coo-'¥tuUonal amtodmfft lowering the
vqlil>a ace In •ll •lecUom to II.
~l&ware, ConoesUCUL. .Minnesota,
°"'ashington ud Tennruee climbed on
the bandwagon Tuesday, approving the
amendment as soon as it wu passed
by the HOUJe _, lo 19. Minnesota moved
SO. swiftl1 tt wu accuaed of juroplng tlfl! gun. . -
A UPl state-by-state survey showed
1t least 32 olhtr states expected to
give s"'ift approval to the proposition.
Legislative leadn ln· H9eral other '1atea
still were pondering what aetlon they
wW take. Tbe proposal rRust be ratified
by 38 sla~ before it becomes the 26th
albendment to the U.S. COnstlLuUon:
~Pm:~ by the senate l~t month
Id a 9f 1D 0 .vote, the amendment would
remove lllte powera to· &et ·minimum
\•Qling ages Ior ata1t pd local elections.
<A!ogress last ytu ostabllshed the 13'
yp.r-old qu.allficaUOD for . federal elec· lions. .
,It wu possible ,t]w: amendment could bt, approved in r-.i Ume. '!be currenl
~ of $iI. moQtbs ~ ab: days :was
qlablilh<I! 1" !IOI w)ien Ille slates ap-
proved the Uth amendment., which pro-
v)des: tbal menJb.n oC the. electoral
cjl,Jege .tmpt cut ~•le blllots for
iiJsfdeDtial ~ vice presldential can-
~les.
.However IOnle oppositio~ to the 26th aMendmenl -wls noted In States where
t~ ~ve been student dilorders. Gov. ~d tuq~ of ·, CllifOmia uld he
erred M1mitting the issue to the
ra. ind kt.ting ·them decide, He said
btlleved 'Congress ·waa infringing on·
rlgtitl of the· states tn submlning
the amendment. (See story, page 8).
Rep. -"ErfllnUel ·ceutr1'.0.N.Y.), 82,
chairman of the House Judiciary Com·
miUee, said he was cuta1n the amend·
ment would be approved.
"Any effort to stop Jt would be as
useless u a telescope to a blind eye,"
Celler taJd. "Of courte, I can't be )'OWlg
ag:ain, but maybe by offering thls amend·
ment I can at least wear the robes
of youth. I do not fetl youth will fail
us if we oCfer it the responsibility of
the ballot."
Several atates competed Tuesday in
Jn f.ffort to be fint to ratify the amend·
ment. In Olympia, Wuhingtm legislalors
kept a direct l\llphone lln< ope~ 1to
the nation's capltal while: the H'ouse
voted in Washingtoa, D.C.
But the Mimlelota l'ilalalure tJ>-
parenUy wu fin:t to ratif)' the amelJO..
ment, compleUns ILi acUon at 4:14 p.m.
!EST).
Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D.La.), preti·
dent pro tern or ihe Senale, added m..
name to the document about ~•:40 p-.m.
fEST), completing leglalaUve acUon 1n w asbiJliJon.
Goofed Stamp
Brings $36,000
NEW YORK (UPI) -An auction of
:are stamps and envelopes took in
J700,690 Tuesday nlgbt and ooe l t e m
- a 2-kelt air mall U.S. st.amp with
he airplane fiying uplide down -went « $.16,000 alone.
The auction, held al the Waldorf·
\Jtoria Hotel, was sponsored by Robert
t Siegel Associate!, and included what
•ne .spokesman said wtre several it.ems
~·hich wld for record prices.
Besides the upside down plane stamp.
r;sued in 1918, there wu also a 1989
J.S. :Mk:ent •lamp with the flqs flyln&
1pside down. It went for $25,000.
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Cloiing _St.ages
Last · of S. Viet
Units Exit Laos
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SAIGON (UPI) -. ,$ciU1h '\'ielnam
""'ithdrew the µ.,~ of lts '1'my from
Laos today, Jeaylng only 1 re-riuard
of ma.Tines to keep watch frbm a hilltop
positlan on 8dv411Clng Nbrth ' Vie~se
tanks and infantry. AmUtcans· 'began
Withdrawing rron;m ~ s&nh a'nd South
Vietha~ began ~ying po.ntiom near
the border.
The controvertl.al 45.daf.old incursion
Into Laos to try to cut the Ho Chi
Minh supply trial was clearly in its cloolnl 1tages wilh U.S. 'plana and
hellltlpters knocking out six North Viet·
namese tanks today and U.S. Navy
planes trying to destroy a oolwnn of
17 armored vehicles .and trucks aban-
doned by tbe South Vietnamese in their
wtthdrawal along Route 9.
He'll Keep Working
U.S. helicopter pilot Ist Lt. Erick
l;leintz, 25, of Spokane, Wash .. a veteran
of the Laotian campaign, said in Khe
SaM after observing the approaching
North Vietnamese, "lhe way the Com-
muniils are movinf they'll be on top
oI th~ place 1n a week."
Anierican spokesmen at Khe Sanh
predicted all American forces v.•ould be
out of the onetime U.S. Mar~ ba&1i
12 iniles from ~e bardtr by the end
of the week and specula ted that South
Vietnam would try to bold the area
when they left. Khe Sanh has been
Klt for nine consecutive lays by Com-
Munist shells. Eighty-two· fOU!lCb hit
there today.
Theodore J. Droppleman Jr., a Boeing employe for 32 years, will show
up for work at lhe Boeing Company's SST Developmental Center to
work on the SST mockup "until the con1pany tells us it's all over.''
H~ and 6,000 other "'orkers in the Seattle area nevet know which day
Jl?.IY .~ lheit last with the company if funding for the project fails.
Battin Calls for Study * * * B52sHammer Of One Super Government N.. h-V .. t · ort ie
Orange County government should like·
ly take a look at becoming the single
local jurisdiction rathe;· than having "26
little cities" operating mun i c i pa I
governments with.in the county.
This was the view expressed Tuesday
by Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana,
chairman of the Orange County Board
of Supervisors.
Battin created a bit or a stir wben
he made the remark in Anaheim while
speaking before the American Society
for Public Administration.
It came while Ballin, an attorney,
was discussing the possibility of a charter
form of government for Orange County.
"For instance, I think any such 11tudy
should consider a JJ061ib\!' overall govern·
ment for the county ln!1'ed of ·the county
and 28 small cities," Ballin suggested.
"It might not beJteasible but it should
be included-in ~ study if one is to
be done."
In his wide-ranging talk, the county
board; chief alao crltlctzed the lrvJne
Company, land developers in gene11i.l.
Suwkir Court judgea and tlie California
Publlc Utilities Commission.
He declared that the philosophy of
the present Board of Supervisors is te
slow down county growth.
Battin accused the previous Board of
Supervisors of "reacting to whatever
business wanted."
"That was the board's philosophy cif
the 1960's," Battin said. "Our philosophy
is to plan tht quality or life we want
for the majority and for government
to carry out those plans to see that
it happens."
"People moved to Orange County
because it is a good place to live,"
Battin added "li we allow ourselves
to be bamboozled into doing for business
what business wants, that will not be
in the best interests of the majority
of our residents."
The board chairman indicated that
Asia Hit by Quake
UPPSALA. Sweden (UPI) -A strong
earthquake tut the Tien Shan area of
Central Asia Tuesday night, it was
rtported today by Prof. Pitaukw Batth,
chief of the Uppsala 1.n!titute.
he still favored ousting County
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.
"The .new .board has the right to hire
an administrative ofricer to carry out
,.. Hs philosophy 1 of government," Battin
concluded.
From Page I
SST ...
its continuation represented.
Jackson had none of Humphrey·a pro-
blems since he represents the slate ol
\Vashington \Yhere the Boeing Company
is building !he \)Vo !fi>!ti!YPIJ1 wl\o"
future was at stake. Already plagued
by !Jeavy unemployment, SeattJ faced
the J>Oi!ihility of an even more drastic
curtailment of jobs without federal back-
ing ror the plane's development.
Moreover, Jackson's enUre premlJ•
rest! on the fact tbat be ill; as of
now, the only candidate appealing to
lhe party's conservative wing with his
strong advocacy of military strength,
distrust of Communism, and -in this
case -aviation supremacy.
The other potential Democratic can-
didates -and the Senate is filled with
them -appeared lined up as a unit,
avoiding any division on this issue.
They include Sen. George S. McGovern
of Sou th Dakota, the only announced
candidate; and Sen.. Edmund S. Musk!•
of Maine, Birch Bayh of Indiana, Harold
E. Hughes ()f Iowa, Fred R. Harris
of Oklahoma, Walter F. Mondale of Min-
nesota, WlllialJl Prom.ire of Wisconsin.
and Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts -although the later has
repeatedly declared himself out of the
'72 sweepstakes.
As a group they had spoken -some
more eloquently and at great.er length
than others -a.gainst the SST and
had spiraled its importance far beyond
the question of building a plane.
They, along with other Senate liberals
ooposing the SST, made a decision on
the future or the l,800-mile per hour
jetliner an h1tegral part of the con·
linuing fight over priorities and the battle
to sa\·e the environment.
S·upply Lines
SAIGON (UPI) -B52 bombers and
waves or U.S. fighter-bombers struck
supply depots and troop concentratioM
in North Vietnam on Sund.By and Monday,
military sources reported today. The
U.S. Command had announced raids only
against SAM missile site in North Vi,:t-
nam.
The oUicial annoWJcement said the
bombing 15 miles north of the
demilitarized zone IDMZI that separates
the two Vietnams were "reinforced pro-
tective reaction strik.es:·
The .J'Ulon Aci.,.m~nl~tration ln
Washinitbn 1 and ~ U.S. command in
Saigon ha! maintained tht "main
targets'' were three SAPt1 missile sites,
antiaircraft gun emplacements ~d
"related facilities" which had find On
allied 1lrcraft flylng over South Vletnain
and LaM. ·
The mllitary sources said a supply
and troop buildup in NQrth Vietnam
which could have been dlrected agatqst
Saigon troops pulling out of LaM or
against South Vietnam itself wai the
primary target of the raid.
The military sources said they surmis-
ed that the Pentagon clamped the lid
on the strikes probably because the Nixon
Administration was concerned over
charges of escalation of the Indochina
War.
The SOW'C!s "'ere not able to give
the results of the bombing. -
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
From Pagel Even though your diamond en-
gagement ring has an unforget-
table sentimental value to you, iti STOCKBROKER HELD • • •
In Dectmber. 1969 brought a rash of
bankruptcy claims and Superior Court
lawsuits, most of them filed by residents
or the retirement communities in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
One theme dominates in those actions
-the claim that the miave, handsome
Dulaney actively solicited investment
funds and converted them to his ov.·n
use.
. f\.1any residents have told investigators
that the polished. investment coumelor
successfully sought what v.•ere in some
casts their life sa11ings wilh a winning
mixture of grace and charm.
But investigators concede today that
there are still many residents of the
t\l'O communities who cannot believe that
the Joseph Dulaney they knew wa.$ in
any way responsible for the defrauding
of their neighbors.
Mort substanllal victims who figure
In investigators' reports include the SL
Bernardine Hospital in San lk'mardino
and the Chemical Bank of New York.
Hospital officials claim they we~ taken
ln to the tune of $500,000 by Dulant y
on the strength of collateral in the
form of stocks and bonds that \11ter
prov~ to be worthless.
Again, invesUgators claim , II w11s the
"same old story of Dulaney's fa st litl k
and his gift of the gab." He wai; hie.hly
regarded by bo th offici als and Ca1!1ot!c
nuns at the old San Bernardino hosp1!.J.I.
At this date, just $10,000 has b~rn
repaid on the $500,000 St. Bernardine
loan.
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
The New York bank came into the the care it should receive.
picture \\'hen Dulaney obtained a $500,000
loan from the Atlantic Co. of New York.
Investigators said pre-payment of high
Interest rat.es on the loan and the first
regular loan repayment left Dulaney with
just $360,000 of the amount borrO\\'ed.
But ttle bank may have fallen (oul
of what investigators claim were
cal'!fully conceived tactics by not obsen··
ing rules applying to cO-signatories y,·hen
Dulaney made two withdrawals from
the bank -one for $186,000 and the
other for $15.000.
And although a udiamond is for·
ever," the stone can be chipped by
a hard blow. and mountings can pit"'
and discolor if they come in con-
tact with a chlorine bleach when
you are doing household chores. So ,
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry \vhen you're doing rough
'''ork or engaging in sports or other
activities \\"hich might expose such
piec£'s to dan1age.
It may well be, it has bttn commented
in bankruptcy court, that t~ Chemlcal
Bank will be called on to makt good
lhat $201,000 y,·halever happens in the The enjoyment of your diamonds,
court action against Dulaney. the pleasure and the pride \\'ith
The $186,000 withdra\l'n in New York "'hich you \\'ear them, "''ill be
by Dulaney went to the Ntwport National greatly enhanced If you give them Bank as payment on his sumptuous home
at 33.1 Morningstar Lane in the Dover the care and treatment they de-
Sho~s seclion or Newport Beach. serve ; and although this care is
That home was \~lued in bankruptcy._ largely up to you, you should still coo~t ._,at least $16i,500 and the li\'lshly come In and see us at least twice equ ipped Lake Arrowhead home used ,
by the Dulaneys as their weekend retreat a year ... we 11 ch.eek your ring
c:Jrrled a price tag of at least $35,000. and other precious pieces ror loose
Doth residences ha ve been. rwaPo.we4 prongs and mounting \vear. And.
uri In a welter of bankr1.1 ptcy cla ims also at no charge. "''e'll give them that total more than $1 mlUlon alone . . , In documenl.s fllrd by individual victims a pro!ess1onal cleaning while you
(lf the Dulaney operation. \\'Bit.
Front dispatches uid the South Viet-
namese had begun strengthening
del"enses at Ham Nghi, the advance
~adquarters on Route f just \1-'ut of
Rhe Sanh. The' west.em defenses -
toward LaM -also were being built
up. the reports said.
American military sourtts said the
22,000 South Vietnamese troops pulled
out of Laos ~·ere still in Qaang Tri
Province and woukt try to hold Khe
Sanh.
South Vietnamese spokesmen said the
2,000 South Vietnamese marines still in
Laos \l'ere manning a lirebase called
Hong Ha, or llotel, l\1-"0 miles inside
Laos and two milm south oI Roule
f. Military sootCf..9 said, '·Hotel will
remain an outpost because it is the
highest point in that general area" and
provides a commanding view or North
Vietnamese attack routes.
In Wa!hington, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird said South Vietnam's
mission In Laos had essentially been
arcompliftd and the tro0ps were
withdrawing becaust: of ''tremendously
vicious and violeul'' auacks by the
enemy. But be said the South Vietnamese
achieved their primary objectl\'e of in·
terruptlng Communist supply lines.
The Viet Cong'• l..iberation Radio
broadca!t a communique tonight from
the supreme command of the Pathet
Lao Communists in Laos claiming the
SOOth Vietnamese drive iilto the Laos
panhandle was "smashed" after 45 days
of "sustained fierce fighting."
·Hanoi and the Viet Cong in statements
broadcast by Hanoi Radio and is.sued
In Paris by the delegations to the peace
talks for the past week have said thty
had crushed all AR·VN armor sent inlo
Laos.-
Sa.leon and Pentagon spokesmen saw
the locut!ion as a victory that disrupted
the Ho Oil Minh Trail, slowed down
Qmununlst. operations In South Vietnam
and Cambodia .for many weeks and
destroyed vast quantiUes of w a r
material. Saigon said its troops destroyed
or captured more than 176,000 tons of
enemy munitions and killed 13,000 Com·
munist soldiers in a 10 to I kill ratio.
Fron• Pagel
TAX VOTE ...
assessed valuation.
The as.cent Jevtl 1J mandated by state
law. Althoqh the district currently has
a ll,39 tu hte, lhJI aniouot will drop
to 'i!i·e 1stafi initUma"m this iuly when
the time limit on the present override,
approved by• voltt3 aeveral years agu,
f\J~Vfll. '.L J\ • i. ' ' • • Before auuplin"a: U>t. amount and the
date of the new eleClion, frustees heard
the opinlom or dotens of perso!U on
the Wue.
Some we.re opposed to any override.
Others favored an amount less than
the 61ktnt amount. Still others declared
that less Ui8Jl flktnts wOuld seriowly
erode the educational program.
Mi11 Claire Kelley. chairman of an
organization she calls the Council on
Se111lble Taxation (COST), urged that
"no more overrides take place for a
period of one year'' and that the budget.
be reviewed afterward to 5et! if ad-
ministratora made an attempt to live
within it .
A be1ut U11I
gold br1celet Is
B11sl1ed
1'ired and exhausted after a six·
\1·eek incursion into Laos, a
1veary South Vietnamese sol·
dier "'aits to be evacuated
deeper inside Vietnam.
North Vietnam
Envoys Cancel
Talks Session
PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam today
called off Thursday's scheduled sessioa
of the deadlocked Vietnam peace con-
ference as an "energetic protest" against
U.S. bombing and what it said were
threats against North Vietnam.
The move , announced by the North
Vietnamese de!egation, apparently took
allied delegations by surprise. A U.S.
delegation spokesman said it v.·ould have
en announcement later.
Under the ground rules of the Vietnam
peace talks, qualified sour~s said it
required agreement of a!I four delega·
tions -United States. North Vietnam,
South Vietnam and the Viet Cong -
before a plenary session could be
postponed.
The Hanoi announcement said it was
putting back ThW"iday's 108tb session
until the follo"·ing Thursday, April I,
because of U.S. bombs and threalll
against North Vielnomese territory.
The North Vietnamese announcement
followed three weeks of boycott of the
weekly talks sessions by the chiefs of
the leaders of the Hanoi and Viet Cong
delegations. They sent their deputies in-
stead.
After claiming that the United States
and South Vietnam had suffered defeat
in Laos and Cambodia, the North Viet·
namese announcement said the United
States heavily bombed populated regiont
of North Vietnam March 21 and 22.
ll's an
Omega
watch. • 1lnluUy luKurlous
gift. But a watch
11 certainly practical.
Par1lcul1rly when It's
•n Omega. In the world ol really line
watchea, the name and r&pulallon of
Omega aland out. When Omega artfully
conce111 one cl their superb limep ieces
In 111 tllqUl91te bracelet. it becomes a
11n11111y praclica1 gilt, See 011 r complet~
Omega collectlon, lr?m $65.
G A-1•( 1elld t l!l-101' IOl•lf
:lid co••r•llCI 1010 cov11.11.,
ttctl9l •ti brat tltl ""·~
. ?5tcl •!7&
J. C. .J.lumphrieJ -r}eu1efer:1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA
CONVlNtENT fEIMS
IANICAMfltlCAJ:D-MASTER CHAl&E
24 TEARS IN SAMl LOCAJION
PHONE •41.J401
•
,
I
,,
t 17
' .,
I
I
I
Huntington Beaeh
EDITION
,VOL. 64, NO. 71, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE CQ_UNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAR.CH 24, ·1971
c 00 s e
Tate Case Clositag Stages
DA Blasts Last of S. Viet
LSD Factor Units Exit Laos
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The proucutor
ln the Sharon Tate murder trial. in
an angry rebuttal of defense final
•rgumenb", said today that the use of
LSD does not uempt killers from recei v·
lnl ·the duth penalty.
Dtputy ·Dist. Atty. Vincent Bugliosi
denied that Charles Manson's three
women codefendant5 w e r e drugged
when they killed seven vlct.im! and said,
"The use of LSD is not a mitigating
fador justifying life imprisonment."
"There are tholl.!iands and thousands
of· acid heads out in the street," he
said, replying to defense allegations that
LSD made the women CJpen to sug-
gestioo1 to kill. "To believe that LSD
has made them so suggestible they would
go out and commit murder is ridiculous.
Thi:ii would be to say that t h e re are
thousands of cold blooded murderer!
roaming the streeta and 1 just don't
believe that."
Bugliosi, who took less than 10 minutes
for his opening final argument, decided
to rebut after hearing two defense
lawy~ tall \he women "sick Utile
atrls. He responded at length to allega-
tions by · aUomey Paul F'itigerald that
the killings were "L.51' mwrder•" and
the women 1hould not be eea.iUed for
act.II Committed while dru"ed.
Bu1UOll 111aid he is convinced they
lied wtien they said they were "stoned"
during Utt killings .and added "you can
be sure that Charles Manson would have
•ssured th8t none of his killer11 wl!
under the .1nnuencf: of LSD. He wanted
them to be as effective as poS!ible ."
The prosecutor started off by reading
to juror! from the Bible , telling them
that biblical tradition approved the death
penalty. He quoted several sections, in-
cluding one from the Old 'festament
wh ich said, "Whoever takes the iife
of any human being should be put to
death."
Jurorg, meanwhile. are being locked
up nightly to shield them from poubllcity
fbout a death threat attributed to
Manson. (See story. page 8)
PILOT REALLY
GETS RESUL TS
A DAILY PILOT classified ad doesn't
jui;t get re!ulU, it get.II results you may
not believe. Here's an example :
LOVELY 1 Br. Lra; entry
Crpts, drps. dwhr, pool.
Slfii. (Phone number).
Th.is ad needed only one response to be
auccessful, but before a week passed
thi• cuatcmer rented five out of six apart-
ments on just this one small ad. Call
the DAILY PILOT ad-visor (direct Une,
t42-5571) if you want super-rtsulUJ.
SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnam
withdrew the last of its army from
J..aog today. leaving only a rearguard
of marines to keep watch from a hilltop
position on advancing North Vietnamese
tanks and infantry. Americana began
withdrawing from Khe Sanh and South
Vietnam began fortifying pl)5iti0ns nur
Ole border.
The controversial 45--day-old incursion
into Laos to try to cut the Ho Chi
Minh supply trial was clearly in its
closing stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out ai1 North Viet·
namese tanks today and U.S. Navy
planes trying to destroy a column of
17 armored vehicles and trucks aban·
doned by the South Vietnamese in their
withdrawal along Route 9.
Laos Airport
Under l\.ttack
By Red Troops
VIENTIANE, Lios (IJ)ll~ ~ North Vietnamese troops 1inten1lli tttlcks ·to-
day near the royiJ Llot capita] of
Luang Prabang &ml he•vy fighting was
reported only a hall mile from the
city's airporL Thetdefense ministry aald
lhe situation "remains critical."
Communist unlt1 with' mortar 1upport
regained the strategic Ban Done-Cho po.
siLion t.hree miles, northeast ol the Luang
Prabang Airport> Tuesday night after
losing it to Laotia.JI counterattacks earlier
In the day. The position was originally
seized by the North Vietnamese last
weekend.
Gen. Thongphan Knoclsy, official
spokesman for · the Laotian defense
ministry, said North Vietnamese troopl
stepped up atticks against the hilltop
position of Phouxang a haH mile from
the airfield before dawn Wednesday, then
withdrew shortly &ft.er sunrise to avoid
air strikes.
Thongphan said Laotian troops recap-
tured three strategic hills north and
east of the airfield Wednl6day but he
warned they might be la1t again in
night fighUng. He said Laotian losses
were "heavy" but gave no casualty
figures for either side.
By Wednesday night, Thongphan said,
North Vietnamese troops were three lo
five miles north and east of the airfield.
Elsewhere, in the Plain of Jars area,
Communist gunners fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made 1!2MM rockets against posi·
tions at Ban Na, Sam Thong and Long
Cheng. Thongphan 1a1d Ban Na was
hardest hit in 1 100 rocket barrage
but no significant cuualties or damage
were reported-
Battin Calls for Study
Of Super Government
Orange County government should like·
ty take a look at becoming the single
local jurisdiction rathe.-t.han having "26
little cities" operating mun I c i pa I
1overnment.!I within lhe county.
This was the view expressed Tue.sdiy
by Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana.
chairman of the Orange County Board
of Supervisors.
Battin created a bit of ' atir when
he made the remark in Anaheim whlle
speaking before the American Society
for Publk: Admtnistration.
It came while Battin . an attorney.
was diSCUlsing lhe passibl\ity of a charter
form of government for Orange County.
"For instance, I think eny sucb study
1hould consider• pos.slble ovtraU govern·
ment for the C)'ll.lnty in.c;tead or the county
and 26 small cl lies," Battin suggesled.
"Jt might not be fea sible but it ahould
be included In any 1tudy if •n• Is l•
be dont."
In hfs wldt·ran1lng t•lk, the county
board chief alto cr1tici7:ed the trviJle
Company, lt1nd dtvclopP.r!I In general,
Superior Court jud11es and the California
Public Utllllies Commission.
He declared that the philosophy of
the present Board or Supervisors i1 t•
slow down county growth.
Battin accused the previous Board of
Supervisorg of "reacting to whatever
busineu wanted ."
"That was the board's philosophy of
the 1960'1," Battin said. "Our philosophy
is to plan the quality of life we want
for the ma'jority and for government
to can')' out those plans to see lhal
it happens."
"People moved to Orange County
because It Is a good place to live,"
Battin added, "If we allow ourtelvtJ
to be bamboozled into doina ror buiiiness
what business want!, that wW not be
In Ule best interest! of the majority
of our residents." · ~
The board chairman Indicated that
he still favored ousting Co u n I y
Administrative Officer Robtrt Thoma11.
"The new bo&rd has 1he right to hire
an admlnlstraUve officer to c•rry out
Its hmllosopby of 1ovemmcnt," Battin
concluded.
•
U.S. helicopter pilot lst Lt. Erick
Heintz, 25, of Spokane, Was.h ., a veteran
of the Laotian campai(n, said in Khe
SaM after observing the approa ching
North Vietnamese, "the way the Com·
ml,UtislJ are moving they 'll ht on top
of this place in a week."
American spokesmen at Klie Santi
predicted all American forces would be
out of the onetime U.S. Mar,ine ba!n
12 miles from the border by the end
of. the week and speculated that Soulli
Vietnam would try to hold the area
when they left. Kbe Sanh has been
hit for nine consecutive lays by Com·
munist shells. Eighty-two rounds hit
there today.
Front dispatches Wd the South Viet-
namese had begun 1trengthenln1
defenses at Ham Ngh.i, the advance
headquarters on Route 1 jwt west of
Khe Sanh. The western defenses -
toward Laos -also were beln& built
up , the report.I aaid.
American military toUttt.s u.id tht
22,00ll Sou~ Vidn&mel• """.'l'"~ed ~· ol w..· ...... ltlll''4n -Tit Province llld would 1rJ to 1'!1o
Sanh.
Soutll ~-.. ,,.. ....... Aid 111•
2,000 Soutll Vi~ DUJ_nn,. ttlll In
Laoc He ~· i firebali · callfl!
Hone· Ha, at HOteT. two milM Wide
Laos and · two miles !OUth of lloa1e
9. • Military IOW'eta said, "Hotel wW
remain an out.post. because It is the
highest point in that general area" and
provides a commanding view ·ot. North
Vietnamese attack routes.
ln Washiniton, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird said South Vietnam's
mission in 40s h'acl t!sentlally betrt
accomplished arid ·the troops · we r e
withdrawing because. of. "tremendously
viCious and violent" attacks by the
enemy. But he said tht South Vietnamese
achieved their primary objective of in-
terrupting Commrinist supply lines.
The Viet Cong's Liberation Radio
broadcast a communlqti:e tonight from
the supreme command of the Pathet
Lio Communists in Laos claimln& the
South Vietnamese drive tnto the Laos
panhandle was "mashed" after 45 day1
of "sustained fierce fighting."
Hanoi and the Viet Cong in st.awnenta
broadcast by Hanoi Radio and issued
ln Paris by the delegations to the peace
talks ror the past week have aald they
had crushed all ARVN armor sent into
Laos.
Ralph Williams
Counts Assets
For Divorce
fl1ulli·millionaire auto dealer Ralph
Williams' accountant today began what
Is expected to be a long analysis of
the Ford dealer'1 assets as the Orange
County Superior Court divorce trial went
into its second day.
Karl L. Waegle's openin1 comments
ln Judge H. Walter Steiner'• courtroom
centered on Williams' auto dealing opera·
tions in Encino and Clovis. Calif., and
the total value of 1 business empirf!
that may be divided by the disputing
parlies.
That value has been assessed In
Supe rior Court documents as '37 million.
But Beverly Hills attorney P1ul Caruso
insists .for Williams lhat hia client'•
nel worth i1 "nowhere near that figure ."
Caruso declined to place a cash value
on Williams' holdings.
Mrs. Annabelle Lowry William~. 38,
of Newport Beach. watched closely today
as her attorney Richard Curcutt qlie ..
Uoned Waegle on aspects of Williama'
auto operatiw and property nqoUa·
tiOftS. I
It bis been testified for ber that
she wag coerced Into an 1grttmenl which
included the payment of M,000 1n·support
fDr he:r and her two children.
Caruso denied that Tuesday and
pointed rot that ~ra. Winiitnls llgned
the pretrial agrttment In the preltne'e
of her ·attorneys and that It wU f\llly
explained to her.
Wllliam!I and his wUe married March
t. 1967, and p11rted Dec. 4. 19'1. Mn,
Wllliams currcnlly has posse11len bf tbl
couple's $275,000 homt on Lind• Lilt.
,
ew
Bond, T ax Vote
Actions Listed
Here 11 a breakdown on tu
and bond elections in the Hun-
tington Beach .Union High School
Distric t during the past decade.
Overrides: March 1971, $2.08 rate
failed ; November 1970, $2.08 r~te
failed; February 1970. $1.89 rate
failed ; March 1968, $1.39 !present
rate) pas1ed ; October 1967, $1.54
rate failed; September 11164, $1.39
rate passed, and October 1961, $1.30
ratt passed.
Bond lssuet: February 1170, $9
million Issue failed : November
1968, t12 million issue [ailed;
October 1967, $22 million issue fail·
ed; 1963 $16.S million issue passed,
and 1960 $12 million Llsue passed.
Huntingwn
Trustees
Slice Budget
ax
'
Huntington
Trustees 01{
3rd Attempt
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 "'' Otil'I' '"" ... ,,
There · will be another ta:r override
election in the Huntington Beach Union
High School District June ts.
The amount -19 cenl.I per $100 of
a~ valuation -~ tbe same already
twlce rejected by voters. If approved,
it would raise the district's ta:r rate
to 12.08.
Trustee! decided on the move TuesdJ.y
night before a standing-room-only au·
dience in the Huntington Beach High
School ~et.eria. The vote was 3-0 with
trustees John Bentley, Ray Schmitt and
Ralph Bauer all c1sting "yes" votes.
Board President Matthew Weyuker wu
absent.
Veteran trustee Bentley authored the
moUon after bearing impassioned pleas
of former election workers urging I.bat
the disllicl q1lq ask for tbe $2.08 ra te.
ln making the motion, Bentley cited
the district's need of · the $2.08 · rate
U the Huntington Beach City (elemen· to·maintain the current educational pro-
tary) School District spent all tbe money gram and to restore cuts which have
llated in its current budget it would been made over the put three years.
st.art tht 1971·72 file.al year with en1y Tht election will M tbt dbbict'• fwrth
110,000 ill Ille .blllk. try 191' e override ill 1' montlls u4
~ .... ~cl. ~· ..1.l"ll!"f)ll,!,~1 ·~. U.11111'(...,,_._.~ --f1 ... -frOlll !114 bndgel "'"""'r·m111t. A 11.f mllllon bond meuurt -bl'l"I
No" ol Ille euts_; teh06l offlciola oald, wlUi a 'lfl.eenl ov~ Wied In Fetruary
wUI Ille<! tducatiaoal Jl'°"IDlf· M!>ll 118., 'l'bo 1lij:ent tis m<..U.• ,."ed .,,,.,,... dropfld from lM bucliel wero on Nao I '1170 --• jun '-z~
l!enu Ille d!Jtrlc:l dqeln'l' poec!. , • • • ' -••• ~
F4r ·hl1la!>ce. 1111.ooQ" wu , ~ aC11-°' '-· f ' ' ' beca.U11° U.. diltrid won't .1iuy portablt tirtJor, illt tley appeared 'lo Iii ,.,
cladrooJM. They were tq be used by on. .a t~l8 rate, the *tnOUDt deem~
a ' larger riClmber of chlldten who wtr• n~ toi~ on th• current educa-
expected to enter district school.I Ult• Udl program. However. he witbdr1w
year, belt didn't. hia moCJon and then asked for the hlaber
Tbotle miuina children sparked 1 COJ'l'o am®nt.
troversy ovtr prtdlttons of a financial Failure of the override for the fiv~
crlsia made by Deputy DJs tr i ct campug high school district would mean
Superintendent Charier; Palmer. I reduction of tht dlstrlct'1 basic
Palmer predicted in January that the operaUna 'tal rate to 85-centa per floo
di.strict would have Only 'ab!>ut '6,000 IJ~ valuation.
to tlG,IXX> In reserves to start the oew jbe 85-Cf!ftt level Is mandattd by state
fiscal year. law., Although the diatrict currently has
District teachers challenQ:ed his fig-a $1.39 tu rate, that amount will drop
ures, claim.in& much mart moaey ns to the state mlntmum thla July when
avatl1ble to the district. the time limit on the present override,
The eonfi1aion was cleared up Tuesday approved br votera several years ago,
by Ernest Norton, asalit&nt aupertn-runs ouL
tendent of the Orange County Depart· Before adopting the amount and the
ment of Education, who double-checked date of tht new etecuon, trustees heard
the district's budget. the opinions of dozens or persons on
He verified Palmer's predict.ion thal, the luue.
on the basis of budgeted income. the Some were opposed to any override.
district would be quite short of casb Others favored an amount less tban
when April rolls around. the 69-cent amount. Slill others declared
"It would behoove lhe board to look that less than 69-«nts would aeriously
at budgeted items," Norton warned. "A trode the educational program.
begiMlng balance of $10,000 ls nowhere Mias Clslre Kelley, chairman of an
near what you need to keep from bor· organization she . calla the Council on
rowing money.'' Sensible Taxation (COST), urged that
Money was available in the budget, "no more overrides take place for a
however, a11 trustees showed by cutting period of one year" and that the budget
Items suggested by Palmer. be reviewed afterward to see if ad-
The confusion apparently began mlnlstrators made 1n altempt to live
because Palmer ba11td his projected within it.
fiscal cri!is on budgeted income, which The beids ol several citi:r.ens grouJ"
1uffered several losses in &late funds who worked for the previous elections
when the district enrollment was a,bout insisted, however, that another elect.Ion
$00 children lw than expected. was not only necessary but that the
Money could be found . however, by 6kent amour,st ii needed.
cutUng Items frOm the budget wblch Peter Horton, chalnnan of the Central
bad been planned for those e.ttra students Citizens Qnnmittee for Better Schools,
-such as the portable classrooms. and recommended that the trust.eta again
seven ind a half teacher• who weren 't go for the fJ.18 •ount this June. He
hired at a saving of $3.1,750. a'dded th.at tht committee favored the
Palmer listed a dozen such Items Tues-full amount, but would support anything
day which lrustees agreed to remove lesa than that.
from the budget. So now the district'• Another district resident, Herb
(Set BUDGET, Par• %) (Set BONDS, Pap %)
* * * * * * Belts Tightened
Beac h Sc hool Chi,ef Orders Cuts
Jack Roper. 1uperlntendmt «the Hun.-
Un(too Beach UnlM High School Dltlrict.
Wormed · trustees Tuesday night that
he bas ordered spending cuta in the
•mounl ol 183.000 for U.. rtllllDl1det
of the: achoo! year.
TM slashes, he e1plained. were an-
dertlken following the dlltrkt.'1 failure
to win " tu: override Marth 9.
Ttie cul.I and their dollar value art:
-Elimination or aubiUtutes f a r
cla.Wfied peraon•el with the exc.(pllon
ol cifeteria employea, $13,&00.
. -Un:ilta.Uon of. u:perwe&paJd oon-.
feteoetl to eertain isolatedrCMU, la,000.
-Tt1ciher anbStltules allocatiocli only
when classroom tuchtr. are • abltnt
Mcause ol Ulneu « petlOQlll leave.
ll,000. .
....Qirtailmeal ol ovorl1111t unietS
deemt<l ablolulcly oecemry, ll,IOO.
-Replacement of school eqlllpmtnt,
'36.000.
-£11mlnaUon of capital outlay uce:pt
kl prolccl district lacllillff. ll0.000.
Al Tuetdoy'I llWion, Roper ailO Hked
the board to consfdtt the elimination
o( bus 8'n'let euel!_t-for student.I lfvtng
fl1!ll't than live m1Jjl ltom tllt campus
they attend.
Allhou8)1 thal 1119'• would ,.., Ille
dlstrlcf about !30.0llO for the ,.malnder, et the year, · trUsteea tabled the acU9n
until mor1 det.iled · reuoni · aupportlna
(hat reQuest are &IV!G.
,
•
Today's Flaal
N.Y. St.eeks
JEN ·CENTS ' .
DAILY PILOT .... ,_
MOVES FOR ELECTION
School Truat•• ~tley
Board Chief
Cit es Views
' On Override
Matthew \l'O}'Uker, P"'idelil of Uio
HunU.cion 1leaeh ll'DJoO HI&)! lclxiOI
Dislrlcl blmd mWed Tue!ciay llltlrt 'a
1>om1 -uni. but oald today 1>e -w
bavl oppoted iooUW trJ at .a ~I
ov~e tax. ~·t honestly 'believe. that tbe txwd Is-nOr ttactlDg Jn• the way the majority
Of tbe .people want lhtm to,'• Weytti:et
said .this mornlna. ,
."I have no doubt . that the• $2,08 rate
is needed, based on budget studies, but
that' js . not the · question. I tbink 'the
board should see It will tlke a Herculean
effort to pass it."
Weyuker is in Sacramen&o where he
ls working as an 81de .to Assemblym8n
Robert Burke IR-Hunti!!lloD Beach). He
said he was unable to atttn& the boa.rd
meeting because bis lbtl Ke!iji, 8, an.
derwent eye surgery Tuesday. Weyuker
Is not ruMinl for re-election in April.
Weyuktt aaid he would ·have fl:Yored
an override for a lesser amount.
·"I· know a klt of people who Pid
they were not in favor of an Ooant
rate (the level that will •pply .Jtl:ly
1 iI the June 15 eledion faiJJ),1 but
voted again~t $2.IMI the ·last Ume ·think.iDI
this would force the board 1 to 'coqe
back with something le.II than $2.06"
be aaid.
Oil Pipeli~~ Bursts
In Yorba Linda Area
Yorba Li•da -'lboosaods of
gallons of oil gushed from a rnPtur,ed
pipeline at a hillside w~ll today c:oattnc
a three-block re&idential area.
Police traced the 'oil to a derrick
operated by . the Tenneco Oil .C.Ompany
and 11aid the "oil wa5 Shooting' into the
air. They were attemptiftg to locate
the valve to shut orr the now. Offictnl
Mid the oil rwU oril)' · 1wtface.' deep aM
posed no danger. ' ·
Wea,her
Those gr8y akiH lre•1oma clear
up Thutsday, brlnglnt .tllthll\'
Warmer telnpt;rattlrtia· to t ·h e
Orange Cout. with readings ln the
middle 60s local!)' and up to 70 de-
&rets inland.~
INSIDE TODAY '. Pra.ridtftt Nfzon U,i"11emcrt..
<bl ff good. htcllA o/tcr M "'°"'"'
ond apporsntlu ii iJt.riimtg on hil,
job. f'oot 10 ..
'•{
I I
~:-
' .-
:2 DAil V PllOT H Wtdntsda1, Mini\ 24, 1971
Held in Caribbean -Fugitive Nabbed
In Stock Fraud
By TOM BARLEY
Of 9llt 0.lll' Pli.t la.II
Globe-trotting stockbroker J o s e 'P h
Dulaney is today in a Curacao jail cell
awaiting action by Dutch colonial
aut.horitle! on the extradition demand
being flown to the Caribbean island
from Orange Cdunty.
·Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature W)o
dtrUnes accusations that Dulaney, 37,
formerly of Newport Beach, defrauded
t,1vestors in his World Financial Trends
empire of an estimated $3 million before he fled to Europe from his plush Laguna
}fills "Taj ~1ahal" in Deeember, 1969.
Investigators belleve that the free
spending Dulaney recently returned to
Y..1unlch. It wa1· hl1 home for more than
a ytar. ,\uthor!Ues said ht vlsJttd
teJatlves in h1s lllloois birthplace recently
and went oa to make several more
contacts before flying back to West
Germany.
Interpol and the FBI had Curacao
.:._· ln the Netherlanda Antlllea off JtiracaJ~, Venezuela -high on thelr
Checking list for reuons that are not
'vatlable today. The confidence in
:B52sHammer
North Viet
~upply Lines
SAIGON (UPI) -1!52 bomb<ro and
wave• of U.S. flghter-bombtrs 1truci:
£upply depota and troop concentrationt in North Vietnam on Sunday and Monday,
military . sources reported today. The
U.S. Command had announced raids only
against SAM mi!sile site In North Viet·
nam.
The official announcement said the
bombing 15 miles north of t h e
demilitarized zone (DMZ) that separates
the two Vietnams were "reinforced pro.
tective reaction strikes .. ,
The Nixon Adminl1tration ln
\Vashington and the U.S. command in
Saigon has maintained the "main
targets" were three SAM missile sites,
antiaircraft gun emplacements and
"related facilities" wblch had fired on
allied aircran flying over South Vietnam
and Laos.
Tbe military sources said a supply
and troop buildup In North Vletn.l/f\
which could have been dJrected apttlst.
Salgon troops !'I. Olllp: ·~ againlt South _ 4fP '-'4'. YI
primary target ot rai .
The military sources 11aid they sunnµ,~
ed that the Pentagon clamped the lid
on the strikes probably because the Nixon
Administration was concerned over
charges of escalation of the Indochina
War.
The sources were not able to give
th e results of the bombing.
Ecology Lecture
Slated for GWC
What baa the government done about
ecology?
Mike Levett, a teaching fellow In en-
\'ironmental law at Harvard Graduate
School. will tell at 3 p.m. Tbur1day.
He will addre11 Golden West College
students on that subject Jn Forum I.
The public alto la Invited.
An assistant to former secretary of
the interior. Walter Hickel. Levett helped
form the federal governme nt 's
En \'ironmental Protection Agency.
OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
OllAHOE (QA.IT 'UILllHING COM'"'""
J.o!Mrt N. Wool
rrwi.s.n1 •Nil P"*llMI'
J••lo: k.. Curio'( Vkt rmlftirit .,... 0...-1 Mtftltll"
Th'""'' Koo•if l dtlW'
111•"''' A. M11r,fll11•
M1.,.11ln11 EdllOt
A/011 Dir~i11.
Wal Of1l'IOC C°""ty t:tllW
Alborf W. 11111
MtDCltlo ElllJOI" ,,
Hllttt ..... IMdiotne.
17175 l1och loul1•1r4
lav.·men in both agenctes was JusUned
when Dulaney checked in la.st week at
a Curacao hotel and was immediately
arrested on the long standing charges
of grand theft , forgery and conspiracy.
His v.·i!e, ?i.larlene, 31, ls 1till being
sought on identical charges. InvesUgators
are concentrating their search on Mon-
treal in the be.lief that Mn:. Dulaney,
Ylho once acted as secretary for Dulaney
in the \\lorld Financial Trends complex,
may have taken the couple's three young
children to the Canadian city.
Mrs. Dulaney'a arrest would enable
Orange County authorities to con.olldate
court action against a trio alleged to
be responsible for a series of frauds
assertedly conceived and carried out
from lavish office buildings in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
The World Financial Trends corporate
complex and its facilities are now in
the bands of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
and awaiting proceedlng11 that lack only
the presence or the firm's principals
for further action.
Mrs. Dulaney's arrest wlll place her
in the defendant's box with her husband
and 33-year-old James Shipley of Hun-
tington Beach, the man promoted by
Dulaney from vice president to president
shortly before the Newport man left
for Germany and what one investigator
described as the "life of Riley" in
Munich.
Shipley faces identical charges. He
is scheduled to appear April 21 in Santa
Ana Municipal Cowi. and ls free on
$250,000 bail.
The bursting of the Dulaney bubble
in December, 1969 brought a rash of
bankruptcy claims and Superior Court
lawsuits, most of them filed by residents
of the retirement communities in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
One theme domtnates In tho!e actions
-the claim that the suave, handsome
Dulaney acUvely solicited Investment
funds and converted them to his own
use.
Many resident. havl! told investigators
that the polished lnve1tment counselor
succt.Ssfully sought what were in some
cases their life savings with a winnin&
miltw-e of grace and charm.
PILOT SHOWS
PLANT TONIGHT
BUI Leary, creator of the newspaper
feature Graffiti, Is one of many na·
tionally featured newspaper ''celebrities"
who have sent greetings to the DAILY
PILOT for tonight's first public open
house in the newly e1panded plant.
Leary's original "Graffiti 's" and other
special artwork will be on display
throughout the plant at l30 W. Bay
st .• Costa Mesa, from 7 to 9 o'clock
tOn!ght and again Thursday nlabt when
the public is inv1ted to tour the DAILY
PILOT.
A self.guided walking tour has been
laid out to show visit.ors through the
entirely renovated and enlarged plant
facilities. Parking will be available on
the DAILY PILOT parking lot and on·
street in areas adjacent to the p I a n t
at Bay and Thurin street&.
DAJL 'f ,ILOT 5ttll Phott
Pay Package
Presented
To Trustees
A 17@,000 price tag has )>ee~ plaqd
on the inltial salary package propoeed
by the 262 teachers of ~ Huntington
Beach City (elemenU!.ry) School DistrlcL
This figure was handed to trustee.s
'J'uesday night by Charles Palmer, deputy
district superintencie11t, along with 1n
outline of the teachers' reque-sts,
Teacher spokeimen will meet with
de legates appointed by the board of
trustees during the next few months
until the two sides arrive al a mutually,
satisfactory agreement. T u e s d a y ' s
teacher outLne was only an initial pro-
posal.
Hospital Going l111 Besides a salary increase o( four per·
cent plus a cost of living lncre1se,
teachers are asking ror unu.!ed 1ick
leave compensation. reductions in class
size. reading specialists, an instructional
1naterials center. personal necesally;
leave and lncreasPd medical cover~ge •
\York progresses on Fountain ValJey Community
Hospital -the city's first -at Warner Avenue and
Euclid Street near Mile Square Park. The 114·bed
hospital is scheduled to open 13te this su1nmer.
Three medical office buildings are planned adjacent
to the hospital.
Oil Sanctuary
Off County Coast
Being Drafted
CaWorD.ia Senators Alan Cranston and
John Tunney are drafting legislation to
create a federal cil sanctuary off the
Orange County coast, Newport Beach
Mayor Ed Hlrth said today.
An existing state sanctuary from the
Santa Ana River south bans offshore
drilling three miles out. Federal legisla·
tion would extend that to 12 miles.
Hirth said he met with aides of both
senators in Washington, D.C., last week
and was told "legislation ill in progress
that would at least give Orange County
a sanctuary, as a startef.''
He said they told him a similar bill
died in committee Jast year because
Jt encompassed a much broader area.
Hirth said the new bill hopefully v.'ill
include Catalina Island, which now also
has a state sancluary.
"Going 12 miles out from shore and
12 miles inland from Catalina," the
mayor said, "they 'll meet in the middle
and give us a complete sanctuary
between."
Hirth said aides of both senators fttl
the revisions in the bill will "overcome
the objections" ·that led II the clemise
of Ille lefilljill<!li !&11 lll!•ti ._ ~ klrlli 1"' d/i:losed'lhlt FNfl Hu•kt~
a Washington lobbyl!t representing
various Orange Coast citles, including
Newport Beach, In offahore oU m1tter1,
will be in the county Marcb 29 to discuss
progress of this and legislation In detail.
"He has told me he is hopeful we'll
have t.hls legislation by the end of the
year," Hirth said.
School Approved
For Huntington
Southeast Side
Realdenta ol aoutheaat Huntington
Beach can be sure at least one mere
elementary school will be bullt there in
the near future.
State authoritie1 have granted the
Huntington Beach City (elementary)
School District more tha11 St million to
build a school for 750 children, in grades
kindergarten through five.
Charles Palmer, deputy district super-
intendent said the school is planned for
a 10-acr~ site in the quarter section
bound ed by Indianapolis and Atlanta
avenues and Brookhurst and Bushard
streels.
"We expect it to be open by Seplem·
ber, 1172," Pal.mer said.
"Two other schools we have applled
for aren't getting state money yel," Pal·
mer reported Tuesday night. ''They're
on the priorily list, but I'm pe!!lmlstic
about receiving funds over the 11ext 18
months."
He said the state only has S30 million
to dole out for school construction over
that time because other funds must be
spent to renovate earthquake endan·
gered schools.
Both Huntington Beach schools not
funded are also in the southeast part of
the city.
C,alley Jury Mulls Case Several smaller items are also included
in their request.
The most costly request, according
to Palmer. would be paying teachers
for unused sick leave. He said that
figure could be $483, 186, although it
\l'ouldn't all be paid in one year. Unaware of Criticism
FT. BENNING , Ga. (AP) -Unaware
or a defense demand that they be prcd·
ded to \\'Ork harder lov.·ard a \'erdicl ,
Lt. William L. Calley's murder trial
jurors asked for yet another read·back
cf testimony today.
It Is the eighth day cf their delibera·
tions in the My Lai trial that has spanned
the seasons from autumn into spring
-the longest court-martial in history.
The request was for the testimony
of Sidney Kye of Kansas City, Kan ..
\'lho had said he saw Calley firing into
Frona Page 1
BONDS ...
Crawford, implored the board to set
its sights lower. "The voters have twice
mandated not that you go to ~ents,
but that you don 't go to $2.08. I would
favor another override for less th a n
S2.08 but Jers start right now to effect
some economies too."
John Sumners, president of the Green
Valley Homecwners Association. chided
the board for not shewing enough Jinan·
ci~I need in it.s p:J;e ·ous election cam·
alKJl.li ~
He a id rthat Jli .;W'last election
the ballot argument! on the con sid•
were. loaded with deta iled objeetions
aganst the tax hlke while "the pro
side had no ammunition at all .''
Fron• Pagel
BUDGET • • •
beginning balance In April should be
about $172,000.
Norton , however. warned that even
the current statistics could change a
little either way, depending on the gro\vth
of schools by the end of the year.
GEM TALK
TODAl'.
by
J. C. HUMPHllU
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
Even U1ough your diamond en·
gagement ring ha! an unforget·
table sentimental value to you, its
const.ant pn!lsence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
the care it should receive.
what appeared to him to be a ditch,
and Daniel Hill, a heliceopter crew chief
v.·ho said in a de1>9siton he saw bodies
there btfore Calley and his men entered
the village.
Calley is charged with killing at least
70 petiple 'al that ditch, the main ex·
ecution site, according to the govern-
ment. The other site was at the crossUig
of two village trails, where Calley is ac·
cused of killing at least 30. The trail
incident occurred fir st.
The jurors already had liste ned for
lhe secon d time to testimony of 10
,.,.itnesses -eight prosecution and two
defense. All testified early in the four
months of the trial.
Calley's attorney, George Latimer, pro-
tested the readings and became even
1nore incensed J\.fonday when he saw
nev.•spaper stories that the jurors wat·
ched television in the evening and had
a few after·dinner drinks.
Teachers want money for sick days
they didn't use. to be collected whe.n
they leave the district, retire or dJe.
A reduction in first grade clas1 lizea
v.'ould cost about ~.000, accordint' to
Palmer. The propooed. salary Increase
would add $31W,OOO in e.s.penses.
Medical coverage improvements could:
cost $90,000. said . Palmer ..
Jn the figures he handed to trulteet,
Palmer also included another $.160,000
if health benefits and unused sick )eave
compensation v.·ere e1t.e.nded to ad·
ministrators and classified employet.
Trustees accepted both repdrts without
comment and set March 29 as the first
salary discussion date.
Apartment Unit
Plan to Be Seen
''I worked 18 hours a day, almost
seven days a week, during the trial,.. Plans for a proposed apartment com-
the m.year~ld LaliflV!r protested. '"Thi9 plex serving resident.J over eo will be
is not a siesta. Thia U scriOOJ business. pretented to the Fountain Valley Plan-
\\'e've got a man 's lire at stake." ning Commisslon toru~hL ,
The trial judge said, "I don 't propose Developers are ~kmg R-4 (high demi.-
to take any action at this time.'· ty apartment} zoning on 5.8 acre• ol
"They have to 1eat. p,ey ·have to get ·' land oq the southeast ~er of Magnella
their hair cut, they ~ve to aet their Street and Hell Avenue for the. retlrtment
clothes cleaned," he added. apartment,
Musical Show Slated
By Huntingt,on High
A musical variety lprogram called
"This, That And The Other" will be
presented by the Huntington Beach High
Schoo l Oiler Choir Friday and Saturday
n!ght.
Both performances begin al 8 p.m.
in the school auditorium. Tickets. priced
at $1.50 for adults. and $1 for children,
will be on sale at the door.
The Dutch Reformed Church wanb
to build three two-story apartments with
183 units for rent.
The city planning sWf ii recom-
meliding denial of the •request becau.te
it woul d place 32 1.1nit.s per acre on
the property, much higher than the 20-
per-acre maximum under R-4 zonm,..
One other apartmtnt ume req11e1t will
be made tonight by Thomas Grafton,
a former planning commissioner.
Granon wants R-3 (medium density)
zoning to put 183 town house unita en
17.7 acres of land al the northwest
corner of Edinger Avenue and EucUd
Street.
M1lll111 Addro11: P.O. 1011: 7t0, t2•41
o ...........
LtfUl'll ••di= m ,..,., A--Co.It ~11 :m w..1 lor .s1rw N..,.,. a.di: m:ll ,...,,...,,. ~..
kn O.-tt1 lO$ HOrltl II Clll'llne " ...
Painful Times
And although a "diamond is for-
ever,'' the stone can be chipped by
a hard blo,\•, and mountings can pit
and discolor if they come in con-
t.act v.'ilh a chlorine bleach when
you are doing household chores. So
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry when you're doing rough
work or engaging in sports or other
activities which might expose such
pie<;es to damage.
It's an\ ,,., oe11utJ1u1
0 . lilOld bracaltl ls mega }.; a al11fu!ly l1.1xurlo1.1t W81Cb. ~lft. But a Wl\Ch
11 c•r1alnly pr•ctlcfl. , ..._
Countians Victirns of Deadlines
A group cf deadlines. most of them
unpleasant.. face the citizens or Orange
County shorUy.
Here are the moat important ones
and where lnformatton may ~ gained
on them :
-March 31 . ~tedlcare supplemtntll
medical tnsuranct. This Is the voluntary
part of Medicare that helpe pay doctor
b!Ils. Basic monthly premium rates art
$5.SO. For further lnformaUon call the
Santa An• Socl1! Se<urlty Offlct, 836-
2221. Location : 1438 E. 1st St., Santa
Ana.
-April 15. This Is lhe big p1lnru1
date. for all •·age earners.
-Federal Income Tai deadline. For
tnformatJon, 2 City Boulevard East,
' ' )
Orange. Telephone, 836-2381.
-Stale Income Tax. For lnformallon,
F'r1nclllse Tax Board, 2021 E. 4lh St.,
Santa Ana. Telephone, &3S-~.
Homeowners Property Tax E1emption.
All homeoy,·ntrs eligible. Ir you have
not received and filed your exemption
form call Orange County Tai: Asse!JSOrs'
office, Homeowntts J n format Ion,
834-3821.
-April 10. Property t111 f"leadllne. St-
cond Installment property ta1es are. due.
Penalty of $3 per parcel plus 8 percent
If not paid on time. For this year
actual deadline Is Mond111y, April 12 at 5 p.m. For lnform•tlon : County Ta• Col·
lectcr, 630 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Telt-
phooo ~Ill.
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
lhe pleasure and the pride with
which you wear them, will be
greaUy enhanced U you give them
lhe care and treatment they d~
serve; and although this care is
largely up lo you, you should 5till
come in and see 113 at least twice
a year •.• we'll check your ring
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and mounting wear. And,
also <it no charge, we'U give them
a professional cleaning while you
wai~
(
l
J. c.
P•r1lcularly when h'• --=
an em.;a. In the world or rtll!Y fine',
watch ts, the name and r.pu!atlol'I of
Omega atind out. When Omtga'ar1fUlff,
conc•ela one ol their aup•tb tlmepl9C•
In an exqulall• bracelet. it becomee • •
•lnf\llly practlcar gllL See 'our.eom~
Omeg• coU.cUon, ·from~' -··-.~t' A-t'IC 1ollt 1-10( 1011• G ,oht COYlr•tl d GOUI ~GYlr>Ull "1~1t ... 11Cft llf"""I Wiie/i' ~ .. ,,
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS
IA.NK.AMERICAR~MASTiR CHAR~f
J4 YEARS IH SAMl LOCATION
PHONE 141·140f
( I
I
J
..
H DAILY Pllllf 3 .
Slnile, Young Doctors, You're on Irvine TV:
Wo111an Sees Fiance
On 'Candid Ca111era'
DETROIT (UPI) -One of Detroit's
more luxurious east side apartment
d"•ellings recently installed 8 television
camera in its lobby as a security
measure with a hookup to each tenant's
TV set.
By GEORGE LEIDAL
or tM oellr ~lff '""
Young Dr. K.lldares graduating from
CaWornia College of Medicine at UC
Irvine will be well acquainted with
television belort they gi:aduate.
The office of medical education at
Orange County Medlcal . Ceoter has
developed a $ 1 5 O , O 0 0 closed-circuit
television system that can .beam live
surgic,al operatlons to 64 color sels at
UCI. 10 miles away.
Dr. Ellis Wayne. learning consultant
to t:.e UCI medical faculty, heads Ule
medlcal education offict at OCMC which
produces teaching aides used to traln
doctors.
"WIU:I the television hookup to UCI,
medical students ca:n get a closer look
at a aurgical. procedure by television
than they could II they were IOQking
over the surgeon's shoulder. Further,
they can ask questions while the opera-
tion is being done," Dr. Wayne said.
Besides the opportunity to view live
operations, videotapes stored in the se-
cond noor television studios al OCMC
can be replayed for later classel!I of
students, Dr. Wayne noted.
"In the not too distant future, students
\\'iii be able to draw on the tape library
County Orders
Revised Census
Gambling on a virtually certain winner,
ihe Orange County Board of Supervisor!>
Tuesday laid $5,910 on the line for a
$233,722 return on the investment.
The $5,000-plus will pay for a new
state Department of Finance population
census.
A total of 1,420,386 citizens was shown
in the 1970 federal census, but local
oi>servers believe the county has grown
since by 45,000 or more.
for individual Instruction through a com-
puter to their televLslon set on campus,''
Wayne slid.
The new televlslon system wu shown
today to medical and adininl!tratlve
staffs of other hopsitals in the county
who may ul!le patient training rilms pro-
duced by the Medical Television Studio.
Instruction In exercises ror
rteuperat.ing heart patients -a kind
of card.lac's Jack LaLanne show -is
one example of bow patients may benefit
from the system. Selected programs to
teach patients how to take care of
themselves aner surgery or that tell
a new i:uother how to care for her
baby ate available and may be beamed
directly into a patient's room television. '
The reverse ls possible as well, since
outlets throughout the hospital may carry
television signals from cameras on the
~ne back to lhe studio for rtt0rding.
A cantilevered camera rig capable
cf "looking" over a surgeon's shculders
was devised. It is sterilized prior te
being rolled intc the operating room.
Charles ''Skip" llltchcock, c bi e f
cameraman, dresses for surgery in
sterile garb to man the color television
camera and 16 mm. movie camera atcp
the rig.
To capture the world's seccnd pancreas
transplant on1 videotape and film,
Hithcock and engineer Ernie Bork wru::.-
ed with doctors from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.
The pair also handles the regularly
scheduled tapings of patient interviews,
which train doctors in diagnosis techni-
ques, and laped lectures on medical
procedures. These and live individual
or group psycholherapy sessions are
recorded in the OC~1C studios. Late,
faculty review them and the lapel! are
edited to provide concise lesson material
for later use in lhe classroom.
The color televisicn system, the first
Troops Leave Korea
of its klnd in the U.S., Dr. W~
notes. augmenll the other more tradL.
Uonal learning materials prepared b1
the medical educallon staff.
In contrast to the llve. color picturu
now available on the television screen.
are lhe hand drawings prodUced by Golly
Baum and Carol Riley, medic1l U.
lustrators. They supply the artwork f<ir ...
medical articles and text.s and tradlU.. ~
sources of training mate.rial for .iudentlt:
interns and residents. ,.
Their work aiso contributu to tM
supply of films, slides and taped lectura
which are provided by the o(Uce C ,
medical education.
Dr. Wayne pointed out that tndivktual
study carrels at UCI already offer theM
recent educational innovations to medical '
atude.nls. •
Leaking Fuel
Halts Traf fie
•
LOS ANGELES {AP) -Trame, tralM-
and industrial operations were ordered
halted briefly today In a one squara
mile area of the Wilmington lndus:frtal ·
district after a tank truck leaked butaM •
fuel. officials said. '
Fire officials said the halt w1s ordered
becau.se any spark of flame could have
ignited the fuel, which leaked from ·a
truck at the loading dock of tbe Ten&
Oil Refinery.
Firemen toured the 1rea urginc
residents and industrial workers to shut
clo"'·n any equipment that mi1ht spark ·
an explosion.
A fire department spokesman said the
truck driver. John Arcularius, 26, of
Bishop, was hi:>p.!litallt.ef.I with-lttOnd and ·
third degree bums from the butane spil~
ing on him. He was Hated in I~
condition. But it seems one young woman resident
viewed her fiance entering Ule building
\Vith another woman. "'two champagne
glasses and a bottle" and immediately
,
1 broke their engagement.
If so, Orange County would gain more
than $233,000 in revenues distributed by
Department of 1t1otor Vehicles license
8nd registration fees.
SEOUL, Korea (AP) -The U.S. 7th
Infantry Division is being pu1Jed out
of Korea and disbanded, the U.S. military
in Seoul announced today.
Officials lifted the alert after two hours ·
after aUowing the butane, a liquid in
the truck: but a vapor In the air, to
dissipate.
·•·
CAMERAMAN HITCHCOCK FOCUSES ON OPERATING TABLE
Two Camer1f Capture Procedure for Wider Audience
County Sc1·aps Cl1ino Hills
As Site f 01· Jet Ah·1lort
.
By JACK BROBACK
01 IN DaH1 Pllll Sl•tf I
County supervisors Tuesday dropped
111 furiher study of Chino Hills as the
site of a future Orange County jet
airporl. .. Eliminalion of tile proposed site
northeast or Brea leaves the county
just where it started about six studies
ago l\nd $250,000 richer.
Chioo Hills ·was dropped because of
a Federal Aviation Adminlstr8tion in·
terim report which found that Oigbt
patterns would conflict with abo~ evf!Y
other airport in Southern CaJifomia.
Principal conflict was with Ontario
InternaUonal and Chino airports.
Supervisor David L. Baker, "'bo had
originally sponsored the ~ino Hills
11tudy. said it should be !f.ud1ed further
but he lost in a 4:-1 vote.
County Director of Aviation Robirt
Bresnahan said additional FAA probing
"•ou1d undoubtedly conclude the same.
1be county has had a series of •airport
studies since 19&1 and has spent almost
S:250.000 on them. The latest. by the
Ralph M. Parsons Co. for $140,000 was
recct•:ed latt fall.
Tt rerommended a jetport in Be~l Can-
von in the !iouthcast part of the county.
i111mediRle opposition cropped up from
f\.1issioo Viejo and soulh coast residenrs.
After several hearings it was the belief
of the majority of the supervisors that
Chino Hills offered the only possibility
of a facility to take over the-jet flights
from Orange County Airport.
Joint use of El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station has been pretty well killed
by litrong statemrnts from the military.
Tbis was also a Parsons recommendation
as; an interim solution to the county"s
jcl problems.
Supervisors still lean toward an in·
~rnational jetport at Calnp Pendleton
b\Jt tBe military objects to this idea
also and San Diego County ofricials are
not enthusiastic because of the disatnce
from their population center.
Wl1o!lll he l11vited~
Tricia's Guest List Mounting
WASHINGTON !UPI) -~1olher (If
tne bride Pat Nixon indicated Tuesday
she and Tricia are having a hard time
~-orktng out a guest list for her
daughter's wedding.
1'1 think we'll have to put names
in a bowl and pull them out." smiled
the first lady.
~he !old reporters that Tricia. \\ho
~ engaged to · Harvard law student
Jl!d"·ard Finch Cox, hasn't made "a
decision on anything ycL '' ;•rm ~ing very honest." she said,
But there were indications that the
,~edrling. origlnally scheduled for .lune
s, will be held in !he East Room on
th~ alttrnoon nf Saturday. June 12.
Cot ends his eiRms on June 2 and
tiis ~roomsn1tn. not vet• publicly named,
also "'·Ill be busy then 1n the lasl d:1ys
,
of their law school studies.
Hints from While House and Nrw
l'ork sourcrs indicated that it will be
a big "''edding. "''ilh guests drawn from
family. long.lime friends and officialdom.
Ccx is completing his second year
at Harvard in June. He w1U begin a
summer job in the office of Whitney
Seymour Jr., U.S. attorney in New York ,
on July 4.
Asia llit hy Quake
UPPSAl.A. S\\•rdcn lUPI 1 -A strong
l'arlhquake hll the Tien Shan area of
Central A~ia Tuesday ni11:ht. it wRs
reported today by Prof. Maukus Ballh,
chief nf the Uppsala lnst1tute
United States National .Bank
pays you a whopping big
%
on Savings Accounts
At United States National Bank, we still pay you a solid, wonderful
4V.%. Earn from the day of your first deposit. Computed daily. Com-
pounded quarterly. No minimum deposit. Withdraw anytime. Each
account is insured to $20,000. Switch over to United States National
Bank today!
Want more than 4:?1 ?
We'll pay it. 5V.% and 5%%. Deposit your money for one year and
we'll pay you a guaranteed SV.%. A two year's deposit will pay you a
guaranteed M4%. Start with $500. Add $100 whenever you want.
UNIT.ED~
STATES \51
, ..... ~:.n:~:..~~ NATIONAL
BANK
~g otf'iees In th• 5 major CounUu Of Southern ClllfornLI
Ca1ta ~.,. Office
18•5 N•wporf 81\ld,
I
I
South Co•1t Pl•t•
llll Bristol $fre•t
I I
' •
I
Cit ies Braced
Flooding Fe·ar~d
•' I
On Mississippi
' ~ps
' lJill Blimtrd
Facing Solons
I
By n!OMAB MUl\PRINE
Of lllt 0.11'1' Plllll l tefl
SACllAMENTO CALLINGo The verbal
blowby from Jegi.slaLive halls that bu
filled this place 1n recent days bu
ndw' been joll\ed .! by a barrage of
~rwork. Some exaIDples of tbt bill
bllu..ard :
,Senator Cll1r Burgener (R·Sall Diego)
h~ introduced a measure calling for
~ls , to operate year·around. His
gcjheme Jc.alls for 45 clau-day seaaions
intersperaed. by 15-day .vaca.Uon1.
iAJI he has to do now is ficure out
a system for when the llltf oomu up
on the wrong cycle. ' * ~mptyman JameJ A, Hay" (I\.
Long Beach) hu another legtallUve
ballmarlc. ln the hopper. Hil would rank
111 hlgh schools and school dilt.rl.cts in
the state according to the percentage
of their students who apply for unemploy-
ment bel'lefits.
You might suppose thit list will prove
who didn't get drafted.
* Senllor Denn~ CarJ>enltt IR-Newport
I'.' ._, • ~
.·~ l .· ""; UPIT..._..
Sp11 Figure Dead
Sir Hughe Knatcbbull-Hugess-
sen, the British diplomat whose
trust in his valet made "Cicero"
one of Nazi Germany's most
prolific spies, is dead. Sir
Hughe died at his home near
Canterbury, England just five
days short or his 85th birthday
and five months after the death
of "Cicero," his valet.
Israel to Give
U.S. Guideline s
For Border Map
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
Several cities aJong the u pp er
Mississippi River are shorlnl: up defenses
and building new ones against an an-
Ucipated Oood that may equal record
b<lgbts ol 1965.
In most cases, officials are optimistic
about their protection, barring heavy
rains coinciding with the peak runoff
from the heavy snows that manUed
northern Minnesota and Northern Wis.
consin.
Al Prairie du Chien, Wis., at the
base ol a bluff and partly on an island
in the river, they are not.
Prairie du Chien's location makes it
virtually impossible to protect and
flooding is almost as certain as the
coming of spring itself. Carl Hanke,
city clerk and treasurer, said the
overflow will cover the city's SL Friel
Island and ''quite. a bit of the main
part of town."
The city already has rented a
warehouse w h e r e flood-threatened
residents can store lheir furniture until
the menace bas paased.
Prairie du Chien, a city of 5,600, is
just upstream from the confluence of
the Wisconsin and Mississippi rivers.
The Wisconsin is a major tributary that
drains a considerable section o f
Wisconsin's deep snow woods and lakes
country.
A crest 311.t to 6 feet above flood
5lage is expected about April 24 at
Prairie du Chien and La Crosse, a city
or some 47,000 about 50 miles upstrtam.
LaCroase bu dlk" bulll In 1~ and
19'9, but many boles cut tbrougb them
for roads will have to be plugged. Mayor
Warren 1.0vtland 111ld the city, in the
fork of the Miasisslppl and La Crosse
rivers, has lo prepare for a flood ~ry
ye.ar Uicfwlll be ready for um ooe.
At Winona, Minn., Mayor Norman
Iadall uld he Is confident that a
permanent dike bulh ia IMS aud a
temporary levee built in 199 will need
only minor repairs to protect his city
from a major flood. In addition, 25
pumps lhat will go into operaUon if
water reacheii four feet above flood
stage, will help protect thia city of
25,000.
A likely trouble spot is Stillwater,
Minn., a onetime lumbering town of
8,300 on the St. Croix River. The strum
is a Mlnnesota-Wi~nsin boundary for
most of its length, and drain.I a con~
.siderable secUon of both states.
A mile-long levee that shielded
Stillwater's downtown was removed after
the 11169 flood. A spokesman for the
Amry Corps of Enefnetrs said:
"They have to start from scratch again
in Stillwater. We favor 5ome kind of
permanent dike but we run into op-
posit ion. Then when a flood is forecast,
we can't turn these people down."
Four fee t or waler flowed over the
Stillwater bridge during the record 1955
flood, and the roadbed was covered near-
ly as deep in 1959. A crest about equal
to 1969 is expected this year, the city
public works director, Jack Shelton, said.
Beach) came up with 1 bill Tue!day
creating a new division of the Fourth
District Court of Appeal in Sout.bem
Calliornia. Carpenter'• legislation wouJd
mandate that the judges bold regular
sessions in Santa Ana.
I wonder what he 's got agaiqlt lhe
judges?
*
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Israel has agreed to provide the United
States with guidelines for drawing up
a Middle East peace settlement map,
but has made it clear It will not give
up its secure borders in exchange for
an international peace-keeping force .
Government sources said P r i m e
Minister Golda Meir and top cabinet
aides had decided to give the United
States "guiding principles" on what it
would consider acceptable Arab-Israeli
borders in a setUement.
New Irish Leader Begins
Task of Quieting Nation
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (D-
San Jose) got his bill passed 64 to
5 that allows former heroin addicts to
get drivers licenses if they are u~r
going methadone treatment. Addicts
can't get licenses now because the state
considers methadone a narcotic. * .. By golly, there 's one here that the
Assembly passed Tuesday by a
unanimous vote, 76 to i it. Jl allows
overtime pay for state employes. And
who do you think would introduce such
a thing as that in Sacramento? Why
a hometown boy, of COUJ'le : Edwin Z'berg
(D-Sacramento).
* Here's another unanimous one frcm
the Assembl y: A bill mandating a one.
to IO yea:r term in the Big House for
anybody who slips poison or razor blada
into Halloween candy.
The bill was authored by Assemblyman
Mike Cullen (0.Long Beach) and you're
going to be hard·pressed to find
somebody that will argue with it. .
The disquieting thing that nags at
you : a sorry commentary on humanity
ihat we need il.
* AND FINALLY, from clear down at
the other end of our state, the Calexico
Chronicle reports that its City Council
Is mulling over a new scheme that
would lllrn their sewage waler into gold.
One Ed Fuller, a representative of
Miracle Processing Corporation - a like-
ly name -has proposed that he can
use his new process and boil S9 million
worth of gold and other precious metals
out of Calexico's sewage efnuent every
vear. He orfered the city fathers •
"10 percent cul -or $680,000 annually.
The councilmen. a bit on the cautious
&ide. referred this whole business or
medieval alchemy to the city attorney
and city engineers for a good hard
look and recommendation.
They may have their doubts but they're
going to look into it all the same.
Who knows? Calexico folks may be
flushing a lot or cish down the drain
right now.
The .sources also &.aid Mrs. Meir, in
conversations with U.S. Ambassador
Wa1worth Barbour in Jerusale m Tuesday,
made it clear lsrael would not give
up its secure bard.era in exch ange for
an international pea~-keeping forct a1
proposed by the United States.
At the same time, a top Israeli general
warned "the war ii oot over yet." Lt.
Gen. Haim Bar-Lev, chiel of staff of
the armed forceii, told a group oC
paratroopers Tuesday "although there
ill no abooUng now, and all is quiet
on the Egyptian border, we must
nevertheless be prepared for a possible
resumption of the war."
Wicks
'Tax ation Depa rtment?
I'm having difficulty
with my return!'
BELFAST, Northern Irtland (UPI) -
Newly elected Prime Minister Brian
Faulkner today began forming a govern-
ment to "restore confidence'' in the
troubled province. 'The man Faulkner
defeated predicted imminent collapse of
the new regime unless it took a tougher
stand against Roman Catholic ex-
tremists.
Government sources said Faulkner was
conducting meetings and would likely
announce the membership of his cabinet
early next week.
Faulkner won a 2M vote victory Tues-
day over rightwing hardliner William
Craig to become Northern Ireland's sixth
prime minister since the province was
established in 1920.
British Commons
Finishes Longest
Voting Session
LONOON (AP) -All unprecedented
aitting or Britain's House of Commons
ended at 11 mlnute.s past noon today
after an all-night session during which
the government pushed through the last
clause of its antistrike legi.slation.
Relays of Laborites opposed to · the
bill and government supporters, bleary-
eyed and footsore after tramping through
the voting lobbies 7 times since midnight,
kept the House in continuous session
for just short of 22 hours .
Veteran legislators couldn't remember
any previous &ilting in which so many
votes had been taken.
'The bill will get a formal third reading
In the Commons before going to the
House of Lords. It is expected to become
law by summerlime.
Throughout the night , the Laboriles
had waged a tactical struggle to make
the bill's passage as uncomfortable as
possibl@ for the government.
Rain, Snow Blanket West
Spri ng Fails to Show Fa ce as Cold Bites Into U.S.
Calltor11la Temperatures
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Faulkner Immediately said law and
order would get top priority in his
government.
"J regard it as my most important
single aim to restore confidence to th e
entire community in Northern Ireland ,"
he said. "I am utterly convinced that
without the restoration of confidence,
all else is futile."
"The kernel of the matter is law
and ord er," he said.
Craig said il the new government did
not change Ha policy "it will not last
more than a couple of months." He
said he would wait and see what
Faulkner does before pledging his sup-
port.
Faulkner succeeded James Chichester-
Clark, who resigned Saturday night under
preuure (rom Protestant conservatives
who bad demanded a harder line against
Roman Catholic extremists and the
outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Faulkner, like Chichester-Clark, is a
moderate and lhe Rev. Jan Paisley mili·
tant Protestant leader, said on television
Tuesday night that il the new govern-
ment follov.·ed "the suicidal policies"
of the old, it would not last Jong.
In the Protestant 0district of Shankhill
Road, there was great disappointment
that Craig lost to Faulkner.
"Traitors! Cowards!" Protestant
crowds shouted as they gathered outside
Parliament when news of the voting
was announced.
Police said a 2()..pound explosive cha rge
~ent off Tuesday night, heavily damag•
ing an underground pipeline carrying
water to a Goodyear Tire factory at
Lurgan, from Lough Neagh. (lne or the
la rgest lakes in the United Kingdom.
In Dublin in the Irish Republic to
the south, Premier Jack Lynch said
his country would do all it could to
help Faulkner keep order.
Loyal Officers
Seize Commander
In Sierra Leone
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP} -A
eoup of Sierra Leone's army commander
was upset Tuesday night when other
army or!icers arrested him and an-
nounced lhey were keeping Prime Min-
ister Siaka P. Stevtns in office.
"I am .still alive and healthy, by the
grace of God," Stevens announced this
morning in a nationw ide radio broadcast.
He reported all was back to normal
arter Tut'Sday's upheaval and appealed
lo the people to go about their regular
duties. The government, he added , is
determined to safeiu.ard life and prop-
erty.
This apparently referred to unex·
plained shooting which broke out In sev-
eral partii of the city just before the
broadc.ast. The shooting sent people
scurrying for cover .and many offices
and stores closed down.
The army's third in command. Lt. Col.
Sam King, said in a broadcast late Tues-
day llight that a majority of the coun-
try's 1,500-man army dissociated them-
selves from Brig. Gen. John Bangurah's
altempt lo seize power.
"\Ve refi!ard the present government of
Prime Mlnister Siaka Stevens as the
legally constituted au thority in the coun-
try."' King said .
Bangurah's attempt on t~ government
began at tlawn Tuesday when about 12
1rmed sold1t'.rs .attacked Stevens' home.
In a IS·mlnute gunfight. security guards
kllled two of the attackers. Sporadic
gunfire was also reporled near the mlli·
tary ba rracks and the center of the city.
~
I
I
UPIT .......
WINNER OF HISTORIC WASHINGTON D.C. ELECTION
Rev. W1lter F1untroy ind Wife After Congre11ion1I Victory
Former l(ing Aide Wins
Capital Congress Seat
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbe Rev,
Waller E. Fauntnly, a former aide to
the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
rolled up 58.5 percent of the vote Tuesday
to beoome the District of Columbia's
Uris delegate to CongreM in al.most
a century.
Fauntroy, 37, told supporters at a
rally as returns confirmed. hill victory
over five other candidates the vote
proved Washingto•, D.C •. was "ready" to
have self government."
"We want to have the yoke of col-
onialism lifted from our aboulden," the
black minister said. "We want to be
free."
Fauntroy won the DemocraUc nomina·
tlon for the non-voting delee:ate &eat
in January. He polled 66,119 votes to
28,044, or 25 percent, for bis neareat
challenger, Republican John A. Nevius,
a white lawyer. The district'• population
iii 71 percent black.
The other four candidatu sbared 16.5
percent of the vote.
The district has not had a represen-
tative in Congress since 1875. Fauntroy
will not be able to vote on the HOUSG
floor but will have a vote in the District
Turkish Leader
Chooses Cabinet
ANKARA {UPI) -Premier-desilJlale
Nlhat Erim has picked a cabinet of
"brains, class and brass" in his efforta
to shape a new government 1ccept.able
to Turkey's generala, pOllUcal sources
said today.
They said the former law professor
was ei;pected to announce his choices
by the end of the 'day. ?resident Cevdet
Sunay's approval of the list, required
by law, was considered certain.
Picked to replace Premier Suleyman
Demirel, who was forced to re.sign on
March 12 under threat of military
takeover, Erim said today he would
blend "young and experienced experts"
with poliUcians to form a ''brain trust
within the cabinet."
He pledged his government would pwh
for economic and social reforms.
Sinatra
of Columbia Committee. He will cet
the full conareasional salary ol. "1.500
annually.
Only 44 percent of registered district
voters cast ballob: in the eltdon. Elec-
tion officials had predicted a turneut
of more than 80 percenl
Fauntroy1 a graduate of the Yale
University Divinity School, served on
the district council from 1987 to 1981.
He helped organize the 11153 March on
Wash1ngton when King delivered blJ "I
Have a Dream," speech and parUclpated
in the 1965 Selma to Montgomery, All.,
march and the 1969 Poor People'• cam-
paign,
Terrorists Free
Uruguay Leader
After 13 Days
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguoy (AP! -Ter-
rorist. kidnapers freed Guido Berr'O Ori be.
Uruguay's attorney general, in \':!
health Tuesday night aft<r holding ·
capt.ive 13 days.
Oribe said be wu held 1n the same
place IS kidnaped British Ambauador
Geoffrey Jackson, whom he described
as "in good health and apparenUy 1ood
spirits." Jackson was seized Jan. I.
The a t t or n e y generaJ, 58, a.aid
Tupamaro guenillas drove him in a
stolen taxi to a spot near Montev1deo
relijious school and turned him loose.
His family Willi notified of h1a rtleaae
by telephone.
"I feel fine ," Berra Oribe told
newsmen. He said he and J ackloo, 51,
were held captive "in a basement which
was so hot fans were needed to keep
the air circulating."
Berra Oribe was abducted March 10,
eight days after the Tupa.mares releaiied
Claude L. Fly, a 6.>ye.aro(JJd U.S. soil.I
expert they held 208 days.
The guerrillas said at the time (If
the abduction that they seized Berrc>
Oribe to question him abou t irregularities
in the conduct ol his office and in
his conduct as attorney for Che.
Uruguayan Supreme Cow-t,
to Exit
•• STORMY 30 YEARS
Frank Sln1tr1
"little room or opportunity far renedUJR
rradin1t self·1:xa min1tlon and th.It need
which evtry thinking man has for a
fallow ptriod, a Jong phase in "'hlch
to seek a better underallndlng of the
vast transforming changes now t.akina
plAce everywhere In the world."
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' WtdMSdA)', Mardi 24, 1971 DAIL V '1L07 §
r · · '"'"'.,, nr~ -Peril to U.S. in FBI Theft Warned -Storm of Protest
Hits Railpax Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Tht U.S. attorney general has
warn~ disclosure o f in-
formation Jn FBI riles stolen
at Media, Pa ., could endanger
the security of the United
St11tes and the lives of so~
federal agents.
\ Attorney General John N.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A AFL<:IO Trwport Worken Mjtchell said Tuesday copies
storm o( protests ~nd the Union who called 1\ieJday for of the stolen records had been
threat of • COO&l'ta!l.onal in-n at Jo n a ) Ii a t lo n of the sent to some members of
quicy have greeted the map rallroa~. Congress and some members er the press.
detailing the nation's new and The Washington Post today
limited rail passenger service.. s 0 s ~ published some det11ils from
"r lhink u.. rauroada had • hoot ut ODS • set 011• documents it said
too much to say about the il received Tuesday moming
t " 'd R H t o under a covering leller and rou es, 111 ep. ar ey · "'ilh an additional statement
C s I a g Ke rs' ID·W. Va.), parents at Kent Bitter lrom the citirens commiss;on 01tditi01tS chairman of the House Com· to invt-sligate the FBI. The
merce Committee. . newspaper said most of the
Staggers said his committee NEW YORK (UPI ) in the current issue of documentJ; were on paees Of POW' S would look into the situation, Author James MicheM.r, who Reader 's Digest that the na· marked ''United St ates
but he didn't set a date. concluded from an on-the-spot tional wave of anti -sludt''1r Government Memorandum."
'SI k Criticism began rolling in . ,,,._ N 1. 1 sentiment following 1 he The Post said the records tOC i1ig' almost immediately after the mvesUgatlon wat 8 iona des cribed the FBI's National Railroad Passenger Guardsmen were not under shooting of four Kent State surveillance of campus and
NEW YORK (UPI) Corp. -Rallpu -announced attack at Kent State Universi· students last May was black activist organizations by
its final route selections Mon-ty, said that 25 percent of particularly virulent amonlil Informants that included a
Interviews with released day. The network starting s t switchboard operator on at the 400 students he in the parent! of Kent ta e prisoners and sources in May 1 will provide 184 least one campus. The terviewed told him their ·students. d d Washington, Saigon and Paris passenger trains to connect newspaper sai one ocument
Indicate that the plight of U.S. 114 cities with 100,000 or more parents thought it mta:ht have A mother with three sons instructed agent! to increase
population. been a good thing for the on campus and herself a high interviews with dissenters for
point acrMs there is an FBI
age ct behlnd every mailbox."
The newspaper 11ld the
awitcbboard oper1tor at a with a Ust of lone dlltlnce
Pbll1delphi1 1re1 college wu calls to or from a proftllOI"·
en,1«ed to furnish the FBI · at the ~ll•1e.
~PSA to San n~anclsco
and
(or San
fr01n
Al ..
prisoners or war in Vietna.m The plan to halve the na· school teacher said it would reasons "chief of which are
l h nation tf they, too, had been s "s ocking'' and many of lion's rail passenger service have been better "if the guard it will enhance the paranoia
the men have bttn subjected was labeled shortsighted and shot. had shot the whole lot of them endemic in these circles and
Ol •-.,e countyl' San Francisco $1 e; Sacramento; $2.., • 11115 SW_J'OU $X2D San Diego $S(all include1ax). Mor!~ l"OWICI ll'lptlD S.F. than anyolherairllne.PSA--alfC. '
to torture. Reader's Digest
0
_r_u_in_o.:.u•:_by:_to_:p_o_f_fi_ci_a1'_o_f_lh_e __ Mi_._ch_e_n_er_•_T_ot_•_;_n_•_re..:po_rt_t_h_at_m_o_rn_;..:ng:..'_' ______ •_·il_l_f_"'-'h_e_r_s_•_rv_e_l•_::ge_t_.:.the:_ _______________________________ _
magazine r e p o r t e d Wed·
nesday.
The article said available
information compiled by LL
C.ol. Joseph R. Calaldo, a doc·
tor of the Green Berets, in-
dicated that most POWs are
severely malnourished, 80 per·
cent have skin diseases, at
least 50 percent suffer in-
testinal worms. and 25 percent
may have active tuberculosis.
In addition, many have serious
vitamin deficiencies, mental
disorientation and muscular
wasta ge.
"Small v.•onder, then, that
North Vietnam forbids in-
spection of the camps by the
International Red Cross -in
direct violation of the Geneva
conventions," the article said.
"Instead 'showcase' prisoners
are paraded in propaganda
films. When anti-war groups
film small groups of prison·
ers, only the healthiest, bar·
bered and freshly clothed, are
trotted into public view to pat·
rot carefully rehearsed in·
formation.''
The article said Hanoi has
weak ened men by systematic
· torture. such as denying food
and water, suspending them
from ceilings by their arrru.
burning them with cigarettes.
and clubbing them with rifle
butt.s. It said that in numerous
cases prisoners have been
denied medical attention and
even major injuries have not
been tended.
Treecutting
Protesters
Defended
CHICAGO <UPI) -The
Chicago Tribune has offered
to pay the. fine of a protester
arrested Monday during !I
demonstration at Northern
Illinois University.
In a front-page ed itorial in
today's editions, the Tribune
said protesters "v.·ho have
reacted vlolenUy and destruc·
livel y have deserved con·
demnation.
·'The stu dents who
peacefully opposed cutting
t.rees in a nature tireserve
at Northern Jllinois University
Monday, however, deserve
cheers." the Tribune said.
Twelve students: w e r e al'·
mted a5 they tried to ltop
the university from cutting I
gtand of trees for a new
building.
"It was an outrageous
destruction of an irreplaceable
as~t -iind unnecessary with
a university situated on the
edge or a cornrield," the
editorial said. ··tr the students whn were
1rrested art fined, the editor
of the Tribune would Uk
per.sonally to pay the fine of
the first l'lne on the list
alphabetically. James D. Alleo
of Alsip (111.) We hope the.rt
art other!! among our readers
who might make !limilar ol·
rers ," the newspaper said.
Baby Deat1i
Rate Drops
WASHINGTON (UPI )
America's Infant death rate .
Jang a cause of debate over
health care !or the poor, df"tl'I>
l)td to a record ttw.> tn 1970.
the Health. Edu cation and
Welfare Department (HEW)
s1id toda y.
All the nyou
could "'7ant for
bu • a big car.
. Impala. Big in what it bnilds in for you.
Like a long«, smoother wheelba!e that aboorbo much of what your body med to.
A new double panel roof that aboocbo much of the noise your ears med to. Mere roominms
than any othe< car in its field. A new power ventilation systtm that kttpr; on bringing
you outside air, even when the car's standing stilt
You even get standard power disc brakes, up front.
Impala. Big in built-ins. Big in trade.in value.
And no"'7, bvo ne"'7 reasons for
b-.mng something rtier.
Announcing Rally Nova. 60th Anniversary Special No.L'
Chevrolet's been making cars now for 60 years. That's reason to c:eJeJ:n.tA And
.... ...... to offer you Rally Nova.
Which is a regular Nova we've done up. By addin& llCl2ftt
stripes. A black grille. A remote<0ntrol sport mirror. Color-
keyod carpeting. Bright roof moldinJI. A spedal ..,
pension. And wider 14 x 6 rally wheela.
We offer you a selection of the standard 6cr
V8 engine. Or a bigger V8. All nm just fu <a
no-lead, low-lead psoline. too.
Rally Nova. The economy car that pUbl ym
first by looking like it C06ts a lot more than it doeL
Announcing Heavy Chevy.
60th Anniversary Special No.1.
It's a Chevelle with a h>avy a<aSll .,.
making its presence felt. Ar. evidenoed hr
its special stripes. Special identifi..
ration on the side. Special domed
hood with loci< pin&.
Black Jlrillc. And 1' xi
rally wb<ela.
Some more nice ,tlimp:
It'a available lrith our
standard VS. er tbne
biatr enrin& Whldi all
move right out on nC).iaad er
low-lead p.oline.
Heavy Chevy. Only ill prim
is light.
The death ratt for infants
under ont yt.ar of Agt , tstimated from a n~tlon11I Rtmembtf, bucA:lint JIOUT S«ll mt4 !"'1ul4tt btlls is aa idtayouean liu wit1.
sampllnR or tleath certirlcntell .
was 19.8 deaths for each 1,000
11ve births In 1970. compared
:.
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DAILY PO..OT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Building on a Dumpsite
lt may be unsettling to some to learn that part of
the '3 mlltlon public library that will be the pride of the
Huntington Beach central park will be built on rtlatlvely
unstable terrain.
The lite chosen, near Talbert Avenue and Golden
West Stroe~ Is a former dllmp. But a study made by con·
suttant engineers shows that the structure can be built
on a JOund roundation.
Jt is recommended that the glass-encased library be
constructed on pilings, steel or concrete, driven from 20
to 30 feet beyond the fill. About live feet of the fill will
first be removed and recompacted to minimize the effects
of methane gas_ that also seeps up from old dumps.
. Tbe additional cost of piling and recompaction is
estimated at $30,000. not a considerable amount in view
of the total_ cost of the structure. Nevertheless, the city
staff w1s W1Se to apprise the public of these precautions
and their costs at thls stage rather than have mii::givings
arise at the last minute.
It's worib bearing in mind that both · Huntinl!lon
Center and Golden West College were constructed on
similar foundations.
It may ~ unsettling, but it does not appear dange ....
ous or exorbitantly priced considering the other plus fac·
tors of the location.
Second Class Treatment
. Trustee.s of the Westminster Elementary School Dis·
bict ~re being unreasonable in refusing to appoint a
Hun_t1ngton Beach resident to the Huntington Beach Rec·
reat1on and Parks Commission.
The district has a representative -on the commission
because of the need for agreements on the joint use of
playgrounds and parks. The Huntington Beach council
twice has asked the board of trustees to name a Hunt·
lngton Beach resident to the commission-only lo be re-
buff ed.
While at first one could sympathize with the tr111-
tees1 feeling ~at they should be free to pick whomever
they wish , their reluctance to comprom ise now can be
interpreted only as obstinacy.
The dispu~ bas come about because the district has
always assigned a trustee to sit on the commission and,
although the district has five campuses in north Hunt·
ington Beach, no resident of Huntington Beach has ever
been elected a trustee. There are, however, several capa·
ble stat£ members, including principals, who could sit on
the commission and report back to the trustees.
The rigid position of the board calls attention to the
complaints of north Huntington Beach residents that they
are being given.second class treatment by the district. [f
this situation continues. it may justify a move for West·
minster schooJ trustees to be elected from set districts to
insure broader representation.
Concern for Beauty
Fountain Valley planners will now have tighter corr
lrol of construction along Brookhurst Street and Warner
Avenue with the adoptfon of an architectural control
zone. ft
The move has been praised by many but also con·
demoed by some -mostly property owners who will
have to conform to the new rules. But despite claim! of
gover.nm~nt co~fiscating lan.d f~r 15·foot planting ~reas.
the city lS moving ahead with its plans for beautifying
the heart. of the city.
The Supreme Court has ruled that beauty is a logical
~oncern of governmental laws. And people are demand·
1ng rno~e and more care of their surroundings. Simple
econom.Ics has_ not forced developers to beautify their
work!. Fountain Valley's new law 1s timely and justified.
H
Each Man
Has His Place
And Functio11
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
No Other in History Ever Otitclassed Ber
A clear friend, with the kindest of
intentions, has been trying to persuade
me to invest some
of my paltry savings
in the stock market,
on the assumption
that it has nowhefe
to go but up.
I have been temp.
led, but I have re-
fused. For if I have
learned one thing in
life, it is this: that
a man cannot go against the grain of his
nature, that he must learn to llve with
_ his natural bent and not cut across it,
~-Money is a mystery to me. I like
t1 It as much as most people do, bul
1 I seem to lack that bump of ac·
quisitiveness that enables some men to
~ make large masse:i; of money in their
~ !Jeep.
>, l JF I INVFSTED in General Motors
t
. tomorrow morning, everybody would
start bicycling to work; aqd if I picked
1, up some General Electric stock, every
't household in America would switch to
~ candles. J am a naturaJ..born sucker, ir and am temperamentally designed to
:~ be sbeai:e<f in the market platt.
Moreover, I have neither the talent
~ · nor the patience to study the reports
:·and analyses, the averages and trends,
::that are requisite for intelligent
:,: participation in the investment field. It ! seems to me aa pinched and desiccating
~-an activity as poring over the racing
•:forms. I• ~~ 1F YOU OON'T really like something,
or have a natural flair for it, you
wlll never do it as well as those to
Sirens in the night are bad enough,
but when they cause lbe neighbor's
dog to t.owl they create a double
sleep disturbance.
-s. w.
Tiii• ... ,.,,. nflKh ~ •W... ... ,......, .. ,,IJ !tint fll ,,.. _.,,,,, ''"" ,_ ,.. _... " ...._ • .,., ~" ,n ...
whom it comes easily. Each man has
his place and function, and should learn
to do what he does well and to avoid
what he does poorly. It is the man
who tries to be all things who finally
loses even in his own special field.
· This waa the nearly fat.al blind apot
in the otherwise shrewd personality of
Mark Twain. The leading writer of his
day, he lost several fortunes in busines.:!I
enterprises, and was forever dralninc
off his literary royalties to pay for
his catastrophic commercial ventumi.
And this is what he meant when he
ruefully wrote: "I have been a writer
for 22 years, and an asa for SS."
CONVERSELY, t have seen highly
successful businessmen try to extend
their talents to a fickle field such as
the theater, and lose their monogrammed
silk shirts in lhe effort They try to
apply the same cold financial procedures
to a stage production as they would
to an industrial productioo. wholly
unaware that the elemenls 1 r e
unyieldingly incompatible.
Some persons operate best in llie realm
of ideas, some in the realm of people,
and some in the realm of things. It
is usually disastrous when we attempt
to use our expertise in one realm to
deal with another. The shoe.maker doesn't
necessarily have to stk:k to his las!,
but when he slops making and starts
maatpulatlng, he is bound to lose his
awl.
Lobbying Full of Irony
Polltica, they always say, make.s
strange bedfellows. Take fer example:
the spect.aele of two members of the
British parliament appearing before a
state legislature in thls country to lobby
.against a pending bill.
Passing atrange though it seems. the
two MP't had • very serious motive
for their lllp: 250,000 British and Freneh
Job•. 1be 1tory is that a New York State
Msembl)'lnan ha! presented a bill ban-
ning from state airports any aircraft
with decibel CO\D'ltl of more than 108,
efleclJvt July I, snd of 98 by 1977.
tn elf ed. thi~. would prohibit supersonic
<nR O'oln l.lncting in New York. And
that 1'0Uld include tht Angk>-Frcnch Con-
OOfde 1MM' in IJ('Oduction. The Concorde,
it ts d1ftned, .. 1 noile level reaching
I dedbel """'I cl llJ.
Quotes
o.r-11<m1ar1 111.ivta R. Lo~d.
In S.F. tpnc:ll -"SeU..i.tmnination
for the ReplJblJc ol VielMm re:malnll
our objective and ts 1a 'Clbtalnable 1oal
because the Sodth Vietnamese have 11
nev,,.found itrengt.b and cooftdence wUh
which to meet I.he: dwallenge ahead."
' ri1r1. RQgrr ~pb.am. widow of noted
s.r. clvk le•der -"One should not
s~nd Ume regretting -.·bal is done,
btcause "'Mt one might have done could
l'1i11ly bavt been worae."
),
Guest Editorial
' '
IF THE CONCORDE ls to bt banned
from New York, the Britons say, It
can't economically be built and the prG-
gram would be killed , wllh the resultant
loss of jobs ln the two naUons.
The irol1Y of British lobbying in a
U.S. legl!lalure is compounded by th<
fact that poor England and France may
lose lhooe jobs onyway. Both the British
Birline BOAC and Air France have re·
jected the COOCOrde aa being imp;>5Slblt
to Oy economically, regardlesa oI any
decibel pn,bleml.
Coming oo top of the Rolil Royt<1
collapse, and reports of thrtateoed
withdrawal of fOttlgn industrial ln-
sLJ\laUom becau.,,e of Englancr1 1evere
labor crises. could the COncarde case
bt the: precursor of another lobbylng
junket to the U.S .• to pelltlon for Brl·
tain's admissSon as the Slst stile?
(As an mlde, o. footnote seems a~
propriot4!:: 8f!Cau.fe tht EuroP4!an
superson ic program seems to have
comt a cropper. wt should not jump
to lht conclusion that our own SST
devtlopmtt1t iJ thereby automatically
modt obsoleh•. \Vt'd have no aviallo11
industry at oil If tverybody had qii it
wh.tn LungltlJ'S croft failed to f/11 in
1901.)
C1Ufornla Fe1twc Service
'Help to Save Coast Daylight Train'
To the Editor:
We are again close to losiag another
California historical landmark. For 49
years, the famou! Southern Pacific
Daylight passenger train has graced our
California coast line every day. bringing
joy and relaxation to over 15 million
pa.ssengen. It became synonymous with
California. In fact, to many, the Daylight
became u much a part of America
as the Fourth of July. When Premier
Khrushchev of lbe Soviet Union {on
his vialt to this country J was told he
could not visit Disneyland, he asked
that his second request be honored;
a ride on the famous Southern Pacific
Daylight from Los Angeles to San Fran·
cisco.
1 KNOW THESE facts because of
two years research for my recently
pub,lished 656 page historica l volume on
the Daylight No other "Name Train"
in the history of railroading ever
outclassed her, for sM was the "Most
Beautiful Train in the World," traveling
on the world famous Coast Line which
closely follows the route of the California
missions and, for more than 113 miles,
skirts the beautiful California seashore.
The U.S. government even acknowledg·
ed these facts in 1939 when it placed
a full-eolor, large photograph of the
Coast Daylight on the "wall of honor"
in the Department of Transportation.
She had won the all-time passenger-car·
rying record in a single year and it
was never broken.
As you know , Railpax (Nation Rail
Passenger Corp.), a semi-private govern·
ment corporation. will be nationalizing
most of America's passenger trains next
May l. They recently revised their routes
after much public pressure to include
the San Francisco to Los Angeles run.
NOW WE MA y LOSE this, as f\.1r.
Bruce Heard, a San Francisco travel
agent formerly of Fresno. has mounted
a per90Tlal campaign requesting Rallpax
to select the San Joaquin Valley Line
In lieu of the Coast Line because of
some illogical reasons like scenic beauty
and popularity, which are contrary to
the facts .
I reque:st that you use your editorial
power and ask the people of California
to make their wishes known on the
route they would like to travel. We
now have the golden oppartunlty to decide
·what train and what route we want
continued. All we have lo do ia take
five minutes and write Secretary John
A. Volpe at Department of
Transportation, 40.7th St. S . W . ,
Washington O.C. ?0491 , and make our
.---B11 George
Dear George:
Thanks for that advice on ho~
lo be popular with good-looking
girls! Boy, after what you advised,
girls Dock alt over me! GRATEFUL
Dear Grateful:
Uh, lhls is a bit embarrassing
for me to havt to ask, but do
you fl!membt~he exact date that
advice r1n? write aome of this
stuff before m fully awake, and
If whatever i said worked. I could
sure use it..
Dear George:
Who Invented the Y~Yo?
SAMUEL R.
Otar Samuel R.:
You do not have to be pro-
ml~cuous to be popular. (Yeah,
I know -it may confuse SRmucl
R . but the readers LIKE that
kind or stuff.)
(Writt 10 George. the originator
of Slde'"ays Thinking.)
}
I
Mai~x
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LetUr1 from readeri art welcome.
Normally wriUr.s sh.ould convey tMir
message.s in 300 word.! or less. The
right to co1tdense letters to fit spact:
or eliminate libel is reserved, All let·
tt:rs must includt: signature and mait--
ing address, but names may be with-
held on request if 1uffieient reason
is appcrenl Pottry toil! not be pulJ..
lished.
wishes known. Vi'rite him. He is there
to serve us.
RICHARD K. WRIGHT
Defeniible Borders
To the Editor:
As a former historian from Europe,
J would like to comment on Richard
Wilson 's article in your newspaper cf
March 18: "l5l'ael Can't Say No to All".
I have read many articles in your
newspaper by Mr. Wilson on different
subjects, and I must say that it has
always amared me to see that Mr.
Wilson writes with no apparent or in-
sufficient research.
Israel fought three wars in the past
25 years in order to survive. If she
cannot secure defensible borders, we
·would have in a 1hort time the aame
situation aa existed before.
NOW, IF MR. WILSON already dabbles
in political writings, it would be advisable
if he would acquaint himself with recent
historical facts :
Russia is accusing Israel of land-grab-
bing, but Mr. Wilson has already forgot·
ten what was armexed by Russia after
the second World War. Just to mention
a few little things : Latvia, Lithuania,
Esl.onia, the whole eastern part , of
Poland, not to 3peak about the recent
invasions o( Czecho-Slovakia a n d
Hungary.
All this was not done merely to assure
Russia's survival, but plainly to protect
Russia's own interesL
111£ WORLD STOOD by and nothing
was done. Now, a small, brave country
u Is Israel, which wants secure and
defensible borders, is being accused by
Russia and America of aggression. It
~ms to r_ne that, if Egypt is sincerely
interested 1n peace, it should make direct
contact with lsrael and not play into
the hands of the Russians, who eventually
will take advantage of the situation.
as history has shown in the past. FELIX VAN BEEK
1\'all to Ea r th's Coffin
To the Editor:
Arthur Vinsel's Pilot Logbook of March
18 concludes with hls penonal ob.serva.
lion on what he Is doing to help a
Ureatened world. As far as ]eaving some-.
one to carry on after he is gone to fight a battle agaln1t the world's
ills , • fight that will surely be drawn
out beyond his lifetime, he is doing
nothing. \•
He didtJ't say that he. was bringing
no mort children int o the v.·orld If
he has some It is under~l<1nd11hle that
· he cho:'lf: lo bring no more into !he
Jl(lpulation explosion that is undtr way
BUT IF lllS choict is to bring. no
children Into the world 1t i~ po:i;-:ible
lh11t he is adding one 111nall nail to
the earth's cofQn of the future. An
obviously talented and educated n1an
shQuld be ~ure that hf> i.~ foltO\\'ed b\'
one or more of his family who can
cape with what Is to come and solve
the problems. Not leave il up to the
under-educated and often irresponsible
who are multiplying at a rapid rate .
His decislon is a personal matter and
he is not the first in these days to
voice such. Dropping out is never a
solution but that is in effect what is
being done.
IT RE~11NDS filE of what an old
aunt of mine said y,·hen my daughter
was born in 194S, her gloomy statements
being to the effect that she would never
bring a child into this terrible situation
in the world. I'm sure thousands of
others for hundreds of years have said
similar things. When have things been
rosey and uncomplicated?
It sti ll is a personal point. I thought
l 'd make mine. I hope I have done
it. EDGAR R. BARTON
Deatl• Valle 11 f'est.ivnl
To the Edilor :
Don't you think it's about time you
people laid off the young people? I am
referring to the most recent article about
the upcoming festival in Death Valley.
What do you want people to do -
give up everything just because you
don't like it?
Up until now, lhe general public of
good old Conservative County has not
known or rock festivals .
NOW, THANKS TO Frederick
Schoemehl and his prejudiced writing.
he has surely fired up all YiTOng ideas
and thoughts of past festivals.
What is wrong with rock festival
anyway? It's the only place poor people
can see lots of their favorite bands
and have fun. Laguna Festival was
unreal -being run off like animals.
Less police and more understanding.
RICK NORRICK
18-Year-Old Voter s
To the Edilor :
11-1any students today are vocal in their
complaints against war, pollution, pover.
ty and crime. They are well·intentioned
in their criticism but do nothing con·
structive about ii. There is no easier
way for students 18 to 21 to gel involved
than to reg ister to vote in the natioo"ll
elections.
Possibly in the near futurt! the 18-year·
old vote will be extended to state and
local elections. where the young vote
would really have more influence. Until
that time I strongly encourage everyone
who is 18 to register or quit grumbling
about the existing condition11.
JUDY KATl~RYN KROSSE
•Otitrlghl De fiance'
To the Editor :
In reading Robert Bad ham '.!i report
from Sacramento, I was struck by the
assemblyman 's use of the following
phrase : " ... outright defia nce of federal
regulations will be needed .• ,"
Ill this a comtructive or procluclive
t8ctic to present in a letter addressed
10 his constituents? Doe!! it express
respon~ible k!aden:hlp? Does the state·
ment Imply or condone violence or ov·
verthrow of the government ? How would
law and order bt 11Hectcd 1r our
repre~rntati\'es attacked all problems
"1th th1~ philo.~ophy?
I\! lhe \'l'!"Y least, I y,·ould su,cs;e:;t
tha1 ~Ir Ratiham rrlract !luch 3 fruitlrs~
<1nrl Rnt11s:oni'.":!ic su,i;~e•t!on. Surel)'. l'IS
:in cl~cled official. hr shou!rl be con1·
n1il!ed to y,•ork•nir v.•1\hln !he system
of i.:ovcmrnrnt v.·h1ch the laxpayPr.~ sup-
porl
MARY W. MILLEll
lll e a t Eate rs
To the Editor:
Don't feel thrifty because your kid
quit eating meat.
"Do you eat meat?" "Uh -no. t
eat only fruit and vegetables." That
seems to be the trend among the wary,
you ng un·hip Junior Flip generation, you
know -the ltids who say they want
to be different, non-conformisl.8, do their
nv.·n thing: bul they all tend to go
along with the group. And I believe
it is a Communist plot.
Long hair everywhere, drugs. passive,
withdrawn and spaced out, vegetable
diet, 7.en. Buddha, meditation, rice.
Peace Brother, love -J'v• heard it
a thousand times.
OUR COUNTRY was settled by
courageous and active people. This type
is naturally a meat-consuming race. The
servile and down-trodden races in the
Orient and elsewhere are not meat
eaters. Where a race of meat eaters
is encountered. there will be found ag·
gressive and efficient enterprise in every
field. from home management to national
government.
This mod hippie trend isn't cute, mom,
it's a heavy trip and a bummer al
that. The Yi'hole thing is getting too
far out. Can you dig it?
S. G. UNDINE
T ax Clae a ter s
To the Editor :
Some time back a group of students.
protesting the Kent State kill ings, at.
tempted to tear down the American
flag .
T.hough their protelit was honorable,
their attack on the flag was not. After
~II. the flag represents all or us, not
iust a gang of flag-waving patriots who
in some instances are less patriotic than
the protesting liberals.
There are a number of rich people
\\'ho do ITOt pay their taxes, and there
are a number of churches which also
esc ape taxes because they are doing
~od's work, even to the point of engaging
1n many and varied businesses that have
no connection with God 's work at all.
Yet these businesses do not pay taxes.
WE KNOW THAT without taxes we
would have no flag becau:se taxes support
our country which is· represented by
the flag. So, l might ask: Who is more
dishonest, the boys who tear down the
flag or the people and religious interests
who will not pay taxes to keep the
na g flying ?
Recently the Freedoms Foundation
gave a boy $5,000 for defending the
flag against the protesters. I wonder
if that· organization would give me a
present for demanding that tax cheaters
pay up, thereby keeping our flag in
the air.
JAMES SNYDER __ ., __
Wednesday, March 24, 1971
The editonaL pagt: of tht' Dai ly
Pilot seekt to inform ond stim-
1dote readert by presenting this
n~tospoper's opinions and cqm.
m.entnry on topics of interest
011d significance, bu providing a
forum for lht t.tpressio11 of
our rc(1rlcrs' opi11io11s. and by
prrs,.nting tlie diverse vliw·
poin ts of lnformtd obsen.iirs
!'Ind spoke11114n1 011 topics of the
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
'
Founiai•• .v ·alley
E O·I TI O'N
f.
YOL 1>4 .. NO. 71, 4 SECTIONS,, 56 PAGES ORAl'IGE COUNTY, CALiFORNIA W~DNESDA Y, · M>iRCH · 214, 19M . '
c 00 s
Tate Case Closing S~ages
DA Blasts Last of S. Viet
LSD Factor Units Exit L'aos
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Tht: prosecutor
in the Sharon Tate murder trial, in
an ansry rebuttal of defense final
argument11, said today lhal the use o(
isn does nol exempt killers from receiv·
iog the death .penalty.
·Deputy Di11t. Atty. Vincent Bugliosi
d.e.nied tha t Charles Manson 's th ree
women codefendants w e r e drugged
w.hen they killed seven victims aod said,
"The use of LSD is nol a mitigating
fa ctor justifying life imprisonment."
"There are thousands and thousands
of acid heads out in the street." he
said, replying to ·defense allegations that
LSD made the women open to sug·
gestions to kill. "To believe that LSD
has made them so suggeslible they would ..
gti out and commit murder is ridiculous.
Thi! would be to say thal t h e r e aN!
thou.sands of cold blooded murderers
roaming the streets and I just don 't
believe that."
Bugliosi. who took less than 10 minutes
for his opening final argument, decided
to . rebut art er hearing two defense
lawyer! call the women "sick little
girls." He responded at .leng'th to allega·
lions by attorney Paul Fitzgerald tha t
th~ killings were "LSD murders" and
the women should not be executied for
acts commiJted while drugged
Bug\iosi said ht i!I con vinced they
lied wben. lhey said they ·were "stoned''
duri!llLU. killings and added •·you can
be sure that Charles Manson. would have
usured that none of his k;illert waa:
under the influence or LSD. He wanted
them to be as effective as possible."
The prosecutor started off by reading
to jurors from · the Bible . telling them
that biblica1 tradition approved the death
penalty. He quoted several sections, in·
eluding one from the Old Testament
which said. ..Whoever takes the iife
of. any human being should be put to
death."
Jurors, meanwhile. are being locked
up nightly to shield them from JX!u.blicity
•bout a death tllreat. attributed to
Manson. (See. story, page 8)
PILOT REALLY
GETS RESULTS
A DAILY PILOT classified ad doesn't
just get results, it gets results you may
not believe. Here's an example :
LOVELY l Br. Lrg entry
Crpts. drps, dwhr, pool.
$16..i. rP hon e number\.
Thill ad needed only one response lo be
successfu l. but before • week passed
this customer rented five out of six apart-
meni., on just thls one 1mall ad. Call
'the DAILY PILOT ad-visor (direct Une,
142-5678) ii you want 1uper-results.
SAIGON I UPI) -South Vietnam
withdrew the last of its army from
Laos toda~. leaving · only a rearguard
of marines to keep watch from a hilltop
position on advancing North Vietnamese
tanks and infantry. Americans began
Wilhdrawinr from Khe Sanh and So:uth
Vietnam began fortifying posiUons near
the border. -
· The controversial 4~ay-old incursion
into Laos to ry to cut · the Ho Chi
Minh supply trial was clearly in its
closing stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out si1 North Viet·
namese tanks today· and U.S. Navy
planes trying to destroy a column of
17 armored vehicles and trucks aban·
doned by the South Vietnamese in their
withdrawal along Roule 9.
Laos Airport
Under Attack
By Red Troops
VIENT!ANli, La°' aJ.l'll· .-, N•Jq
Vletname1e treops ·tntetu1ilied , attacks to-
day near the royaJ Laotian capital of
Luang Pr1bang and heavy jighting waii
reported only a half mile from the
cit)'.'' mjrport The defense minlStry said
the· situation "remaini Critlcat ..
Communist units with mortar support
regained the strategic Ball Dofte.Cno Po-
sition l.hree miles norlhea!lt of the Luang
Prabang Airport iueadS.y ·night af{er
losing it to Laotian counterattack1 earlier
in the day. The position wu originally
seiwl by the North Vietn·~ese last
weeke'!d-_
Gen. Thongphan Knocksy, official
SJX!kesman for the Laotia,n defense
ministry. said North Vietnamese trocrp11
stepped up attacks agai'nst U1e hilltop
position of P·houxang a hall. mile lro.tn
the airfield before dawii Wednesday, then
withdrew shortly after sunrise to 1void
air strikes.
Thongphan sa id Laotian troops recap-
tured three strategic hills north and
east of the airfield Wednesday but he
warned they might be lost again in
night lighting. He llid Laotian losses
were "heavy" bot gave no casualty
figures for either side.
By Wednesday night, Thongphan said,
North Vietnamea troops were three to
five miles north Ind east Qf the airfield.
Elsewhere, iJI the Plain of Jars area,
Communist gunners fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made l22MM rockets again.rt posi·
Lions at Ban Na, Sam Thong and Long
Cheng. Thongphan said Ban Na was
hardest hit in a 100 rocket barr11ge
but no significant casualties or damage
were reported.
Battin Calls for .Study
Of Super Government
Orange county government should like-
ly take a look at becoming the single
local jurisdiction rathe, than having "26
Utile cities" nperattng mun i cl pa I
gove.mmenl.5 within the county.
This was the view expressed Tuesday
by Robert W. 811nln of Santa Ana.
chairman nf the Orange County Board
of Supervisors.
Battin created 11 bit of a stir when
hf#tnade the ~mark in Anaheim while
1pe11king before the American Society
for Public Administration.
It came while Battin. an attorney,
was discussing the poS!ibllit.y of a charter
form of .iovernmen t for Orange Coonfy.
"f'or instance . I think any such study
1hould consider a poi;sihle overall govem·
ment for the county in!tead of the county
and l5 sm11U citit:1," Battin suggested.
"ft mi8'.ht nol be reaslble but ii ahould
be included Jn 11ny aludy if ene is l•
be done."
In his wide-ranging talk, lhe. county
board chief also criticized the Irvine.
Company, land developers In general,
Sl1ptrior Court judges ind the CaJifernia
•
Public Utilities CoQlmission.
He declared that the philosophy of
the present Board of supervisors is t•
slow down county growth.
Battin .ceused the previous Board nf
Supervisors of •·reacting to whatever
business wanted."
"That was the board's philosophy of
the 1960's," Battin said. ··0ur phll°"'°PhY
is to plan the quality of life v.·e want
for the majority and for government
to carry out those plans to Stt that
it happens."
"People moved tn Orange County
because it i.s • good place tG Jive,"
Battin added. "II Wf' allow ourselves
lo be bambom:led Into doing for bu!lineu
what business wants, thlll will not be
In the be!t interests or the majorlly
of our rt!idenl,."
The board chairman indlca tCd lhlt
he 1till favored OllStlng CG u n t y
Administrative Otrlctr Robert T'homas.
"Thf nt'fi bM.rd bis t.he riaht to hire
an admJnl.strative officer to carry out
Jta phil050pby ol aovemmcnt. ·• Battin
concluded.
U.S. helicopter pilot 1st Lt. Erick
Heintz, 25, of Spokane, Wa11h., a \leteran
of the Laotian campaign, said In Khe
Sanh after obstrving' the approaching
North Vietnamese, "the way .the Com·
munisl! are movtng they'll bt on top
or Otis place in 1 week."
American spokesmen at Kht Sanh
predicted all American forces would be
out of the· onetime U:s. Marine bas1t
12 miles from the border by the end
of the week and specW.ltd that SouU1
Vietnam would try to hold the area•
when they left. Khe Sanh has been
hit for nine consecutive lays by Com~
munist shells. Eighty-two rounds hit
there today.
Front dispatche11 1aid the South Viet-
namese had begun· 1trenglhening
ddenses. at Ham Nghi. the advarn
headquarters on Route I just west . of
Khe Sanh. The western defensta -
toward Lam -also 'were beinl bullt
up, the reports said.
Amer\_can military sources said the
22 ,000 South Vietnamese troops pulled
nut of Laos were still in Quang Tri
Provinte and would try to hold Khre ·
Sanh.
~ VietnaJ'l)tH apdc.eamee said· the
l!:.~v=~~· Hooe Ha. ~ twe miles inside
Laos and two miles sou.th of Route
t . Military lourcea il\aJd. "Hotel wUJ
remain an Q&ll:P.OJI! ~uae it i.& the
highest point bt p.it gener•I ue.i""aiid
provide.a a.• co~ \lieW of North Vietnamtl!I~ auact ro\ttes.
ln Wa~ Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird 1aitl SQuth VJeb\.IJTl's
mission in Laos hH edenUa11y been
accomplishtd • &1\d · tbe 1roops ·" e r e
withdrawing bec;ause of "~mendously
viciowi; and vlole.r\t" · attacks · by tbt
6lemy. But ~ said the South Vietnamese
acllitved their "prilflar)' objective. of iD-
terrupting• cOntnturiU!:t supply lines.
The • Viet eoni1s Liberation Radio
broadcast 11 eoirununlque tonigtit from
the supreme command of the Pathet
40 Conununi.m in Laos clalmlf\1 the
SOuth Vietl!~H ~v' inC.U tpe Laos
panhandle wn "smitrhed" after 45 days
or "sustained fierc.e 'flgbting."
Hanoi and.the Vie~·eong. in-·alate~nl!
broadcast by · Hanot Radio and ~ wued
ln Paril by the delqatlma to the ·peace
talks for the past week have ia\d they
had crushed all ARVN armor 1ent Into
i.. ...
Ralph Williams ·
Counts .Assets
,
For Dj*oree .
r.1ulti·milltonaif.e · iuto dealer · Rilph
Williams"_ aet'04flt.aqt today he11'n ·what
is ex~ted to be. a . long an11lysis cf
th·e Ford dealer's as!t:\11! n 'lht Orange
County Superior Cotlrt divortt trial \wept
into its second day.
Kiri L. Waeglt'I cpenin1 cOmmeJIU
In Jadge H. Walter St.einer's courtroom
centered on Williama ' auto dealiii& aper•·
lions In Encino and Clovis, Calif., and
the total value (I( a bu!ilneu empire
that may be divided by the disputing
par1in.
That v11lue has been assessed .in
Superior Court documents as $37 .million.
But Beverly Hiijs attorney Paul Caruso
JnsislJ for WilliaJTIS that his clienrs
net worth Is "nowhere near that figure."·
Clruso declined tG pllce a cash value:
on Williams' holdinp.
Mrs. Annabelle Lowry Williams. 3',
of Newport Beach. watched clcselY' toaay
as hf'r a1torney Rlcti.ard Curcutt ques-
tioned Waegle ort aspecU .of .WUllams'
!'u\o operations and prOJ>'r1Y M&oU•·
tlo11s.
11 has been teatified rM' her that
shfl was coe:rced·intt1 an qreement which
Included the payment tif '4,000 in 1uppo11l
for her and her two'cblldrtn.
Ctru50 denied that 'IUtsday and
pointed GUi that Mr1. WW.IU'ls siJned
the pnitriol 1gr .. ment In the ~
of her oltorneys Ind thlt u,-,~y
es plained tG her, _
William• and bis· wife murled '¥adl
I. 00, and parte4 De<. 4, IM. Mis.
Williama currently has po11111ioa .el tbt
couple'• $21$,000 home on Unda b'8.
.Bf?nd; Tax Vote
Actwns . Lisred
· Here ' IS a breakdown on' tax
and bond tlections in the Hun-
tington Beach Union High School
District during lhe past decacjt.
Overrklet:· March 1971, $2.08 rate
failed; November 1970, $2.08 rate
fa.ilad: Febf'\lary mo, $1.P rate
failed; March 1961, $1.39 (pre!eflt
rate) passed; October 19'7, SL~
rate failed; September 1964,. $1.39
rate pal9td, and OctOOer 1961 , St.30
rate passed.
Bond l1sull1: February 1970, $1
million issue railed; November
1968, $12 million , U:sue failed :
October 1967, $22 million issue fail· 1 ed; 1963 $16.5 million issue pa,ssed,
and 1980 112· million issue passed.
Huntington
Trustees .·
Slice Budget
If the Huntington Beach City (elem'-'l-
lary) School District spent all the money
li!ted in its current budget it' would
start the 1971-72 fiscal year with only
$10,000 in the bank.
So district trustees promfltly , cut
$162,000 frrim the budget Tuesdl)I night .
·None of the cuta; 1chool officials 1aid,
will affect educaUonal · programs. Motl
.~~· dn>~ lht ·=· et 'I"! .,-,-7~, . . 'l ~· "·l.;>1 '.
000 "' ;..1. I • , u aavea
bet:aust the di'strtct Wtin 't buy portable
classroolll!. ~ , .. ,. lo be lloed by
a larger num:btr of children wht! were
·~ to enllt di8Uict IChoolJ this year,•bwt dldn'L ·
Tboff miaaln& cl14dren sparked 11 con-
tro~a.y . ov~r pridic#>rl• of • financial
crisis made by DeP!JtY .Di1tr jct
Superintendent Charles Palmer. · ·
Palmer predicted in January that the
di.!trk:t would have only· ·aboUt '6,000
to. $10,000 in reterves to start. tJ)e new
fiscal year.
District teachers clw.l)enaed his fig·
ures, claimfng much mOr.1 m.<1111~y was
available lo the district.
The confusion ,.as.cleared up ·Tuesday
by Er~st Norton~ asslstabt sµperin-
tendent of the Orange Cmnty' l'.>ep.irt·
ment of EducatJon, who ·double-checked
the district'• budget.,' , ·
He vqified P1lmer'1 prediction 'that.
on the biuls' of' &udg~ted income, the
district would be qude · abort cf cash
when April rolls around.
"It would behoove !he board to look
at budgeted ·1tems," Norton warned. "A
beginning balance Of $10,<m . i1 nCJWhere
near what you need ut keep from bor·
rowing. money ."
· Money , wa1 available in the budget,
however, as trustees thowed· by cutting
items auggea:ted. by Pa:bner. ·
The con~usion apparenUy b e g a n
bec~use Palmer' based 'hi• projected
fisc;al crisis on budj:ettd income. which ·
iuf(ered stVeral Josies in s~te 1 funds
when · the district enrollment was -abdut
500' chUdien less than nptcted.
Money could be found,' howe\'er, by
cutting · Items trom the budget which
had. been planned for th!>se extra 1tudenta
-such as the }X)rUible cbSsroo,ms, •nd
seveh and a hall teachers ·who 'weren't
hired at 1 aaving of '33,750.
Palmer l11ted a dbzen such itein! 'IUt&-
day wh\ch trustees •greed to remove
from the budget. So now the district'•
IS.. BUDGET, P11• %1
' '
ax
Huntington
Trustees 0 I(
3rd Attempt
By RUDI NIEDZIE!.';KJ
' Of ""' O.lly P'lltt lllft
There will be anothtt tu override
etection In the Huntington Beach Union
High School District June 15.
The amount -69 cents per $100 of
.11..ssessed valuation -is the same already
t .... ice rejected by voters. If apProved,
it would raise lhe district's tax rate
lo $2.08.
Trustees dtt:ided on the move Tuesday
night before a standing-room-only au·
dience in the Huntington Beach High
SChool cafeteria. The vole was 3-G with
trustees John Bentley, Ray Schmitt and
Ralph Bauer all casting "yes" votes.
Board President Matthew Weyuker was
absent.
Ve~eran trusttt Bentley authored the
moLion afler hearing impassioned· pleas
or formt.r election workers urging that
the district again ask for the $,2.08 rate.
In making the motion, Bentley cited
the district's· need ol the $2.0ll rate
lo m1inlain the current educational pro-
gram and to restore cuts which ha\le
been made over the past three years.
The election will be the district's fourth
try for an override in 14 months and
i~ third try for 69 cepu.
A n.~ million bond measure combined
with a 50-cent override failed in Februiry
1970, The lktnt In "IOU\tt.. failed i;r·· t. ~~o. ~ ~. ,.,.. .. ·~
Earlier. Bentley appeared to be let
on a tl.18 rate, the ~ det!Qed
necessa,ry to carry on the cwnnt edqc:a·
tlon,&!. #.oir1m. Howev~. he withdr•w
hf.I ·~ 1114 &hen asked for Iii• bfill<r am01111l
F*Uure. of the override for the five-
c1.rt;1put high school district would mia n
a reducUon of the diatrict's baSic
operaUnc tu rale lo IS<enta per $JOO
&SRSsed vaJuation.
The 85-cent level is mandated by slate
law. Although the district ctirrently has
a $1.39 tax rate, that amount will drop
to the atar, minimum this July wh'en
the · Ume llinit on the present override,
approved by volers several years ago,
runi out. .
Before adopting the amount ind the
dit.e or the new elettion, trll!tees heard
the · opinions of dozens of pu1on1 on
the issue.
Some were opposed to any override .
others favored an amount less than
lhe 6kent amount. Still others declared
that le&! than 69<ents would seriously
erode the educational program.
Miss· Claire Kelley, chairman of an
organliatlon she. calls the Council on ~·eMible ' 'J'.'an~i~n /COSTi, urged that
'110 more overrides take place for a
period of ·one ye'1" and that. the budget
be reviewed 'afterward to see if ad· minl~lrllors nlade an attempt to live
within it. , .
The hea,ds ~f ,sever,.1· citizens groups
who. wdrJc:ed for the previous elections
insilte.d, ~wev.ei. that another election
was not only neCesnry but. that the
&kerjt amoUnt ia needed.
·Perer Hoitcin, chainnan of the Ctntrll
Citizens <;:ommittee for ~tter Schools,
recommended ·that the. trustees again
go for the '2.08 amount thii!' June. He
added that the commitlet favOred the
full amount, btlt ·would support anfthing
leu th'tll that:.
Another . di.Ytrict resident, H e r b
IS.. BONDS, Pip ll
* * * * * * Belts ·Tightened
Beach School .Chief Orders Cuts
Jack Roper , auperlntendent ol the Hun-
tinaton Beach Union Hil(h ~ Dllttkt,
lnlonned tnlli..t Tu<Mlly ni&ht that
he ha1 ordtrtd spending cuta in the
amount of $83.000 fdr the rf!manndt!r
of the· tchool ye.ar.
The 1lashts, he explained. 1'trt ·un-
dertaken following the district'• failure
to win 1 lax override March t.
The cuts and their dollar vaJue art:
-EllmlmtUM of oubstllutea f • r ~"liflOd porao11Ml with Ill< eieeptiM
of.Gile~• emplcyea, •13.500. .
-i:linlJlllon of -•-paid con-ftrenc4i t8 certain l10l1ted cut1. Q,000.
-Tetcher 11Jbstltute1 allocations only
w~en classroom teacher• ·are absent
•
becaUH of illness or.. peraonal luve,
$1 ,000.
--curtailment of overtime unless
deemed absolutely neceuary, •1,500.
-ReplaCement or school tquJpmf:nt.
$35,000. '
-EllmlnaUbn of c1pltill 'ouUay except
lo protect district facWllu. $311,000.
At Tue!lday'1 SCMlon. Roper also asked
the board th consider the ellmlnatlon
ol bus Service except for 1tud,nta llvlng
more thin five mllea from the campus
l1My 1U.nd.
Although that move would save the
district •bout d>,ooo for the remainder
cf lht year. lnlltets t•bled the action
until more detailed reasons 1upportlng
\hat request ire &iYen.
'
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' I
Today's .F,.al·
_,
. . . -
. \, '. ' ..
MOVES FOR ELECTION
~chool TrustH Bentley
Soard ·chief
Cites Views
On Override
Matthew Weyuker, president of the
H~ington Beach 1 UniOO 'Hi&h ~
Di~lct , board ~ ~·'11"1'. l\l&lil'I beAntmeet1ng,,t1111.M'10$.Y,be"'et
havl opposed . another try at a . lt<eQ&:
over ride tax.
·"! honestly ·believe that the board
Is not reading in the way "tbe majority
of lb< people wan! them, lo," W~)'lllcU
said this' morning, 1
"l baVe .nc dOUbtt thaf ·tbe b.IM rate
is needed, based on budget studJes, but
tha( :l.5• not .the ' que~on. ·I . think ' the:
board should set it Will t'akei a1Hereoleaa
effort to pass It."
Weyuker i• in Sacramento where-he
ls working u an i:ii:le .to .Assetil.bl,ymi.n
Robert Burlie (R-Huntinglon•l!ucbl. He
said h1 wu unable to attend the board
meeting because hia ,soo K~tb •• 8, aft.
derwe.nt eye sUrge'ry :Tuesday. Weyuker
is not running for rwleclion in Aptil.
·weyukeT ·said· he wou~rtia~·favoted
an override for a lesser .amount..
."J know a' tot cf petiA]·e whG i sOI
they were not in fll\lor · of an 85-cf.ltt
rate (the level that will apply , July
1 if the June 15 elec:Uon fail,I),· ~t
vpted against J2,~ tlle·last time, thinking
this would force the board to come
back with something less than •i.o&'•
be said.
Oil 'Pipeline Bursts
In Yorba Linda Area
Yorba Ll1da .-111ousands of
gall~ns of oil rushed· from a ·~
pipeline at a h.illsl~e. ,well. today cm.tltt&
a three-block regi~atial area ..
Police trace.a the . 'oU to ·a derridt
operated by , the T<~ Oil'.Compaqy
and said the 'oil wa! 11\oOttOr mto the
air. They were attem.ptlJig tn )~
the valve to shut off the flow. Officer•
said the oil was only 'swiace.: deep abd
posed no danger.
Orange .«?c1•
'' n-Rrlll' ati~ar•·gbnnl'cl<1r
up Thursday, briJll!rig lliahtl1
warmer tefnPtralurts to t b·1
Orange Cmalt, W'itll readings in tht
middle 60s loca!Jy ond up lo 70 <le-
i,.... inland.
INSIDE T@DA-Y . ' . PreiitUn.t Nfzon. fa tn rnaorJc.o
ibly good heo!to oft<r 25 ••>iill1r' end oppar<n!l~ Is 'thtivinli on ~!Ii
;ob. fage 10.
...""' n ,.,,"""' ' . c-c.nott u c-..1n1· U• , • II ( .. ul..... . .. 5'
~~=--::
' I :
f
I •
% Dln. Y PILOT H Wtdntsdiy, Mirch 24, lfi)l
U~ld 111 Caribbean
·Fugitive Nabbed
•
'
In Stock Fraud
By TOM BARLEY
Of .... Dtllf ,lltl """
Globe-trolling stockbroker J o s e p h
Dulaney is today in a Curacao jail cell
awaiting action by Dutch colonial
authorities on lht: extradition demand
belng flown to the Caribbean island
from Orange County.
· Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature un-
derlines accus11t10111 that Dulaney, YT,
formerly of Newport Beach, defrauded
lnvestors in his World Financial Trends
empire o( an esUmated $3 million before
he Oed to Europe from his plush Laguna
Hills "Taj Mahal" in December, 1969.
Investigaton believe that the Cree
1pending Dulaney recently returned lo
Munich. It waa bla home for more than
a year. Author!Ue1 aaid be visited
relatives In bia Illinois birthplace rect:otly
and went on to make several more
contacta before flying back to We.st
Germany.
Interpol and the FBl bad Curacao
-· in the Netherlands Antilles off
1'-1aracalbo, Venezuela -high on their
ch'ecking list for reasom that are not
evAilable today. The confidence in
B52sHammer
North Viet
Supply Lines
SAIGON (UPI) -852 bombers and
waves of U.S. fighter-bombers struck
i;upplf depots and troop conctntratlons
in North Vietnam on Sunday and Monday,
militarY sources reported today. 'The
U.S. Command had announced raids only
against SAM missile site in North Viet-
nam.
The official announcement said the
bombing 15 miles north of t b e
demilitarized wne {DMZ) that separates
the two Vlelnams were "reinforced pro-
tective reaction strikes."
The Nixon Administration in
\Vashington and the U.S. command in
Saigon has maintained the "main
targets" v.·ere three SAM missile sites,
antiaircraft gun emplacements and
"related facilities'' which had fired nn
allied aircraft flying over South Vietnam
and Laos.
The military gources said a supply
and troop buildup in North Vietnam
which could have been dlreded agatnat
Saigon troops pullU.g out of Laos or
against South Vietnam itself was the
primary target of the raid.
The military sources said tqey surmls..
ed that the Pentagon clamped tba lid
on the strikes probably .because ta Nb:on
Administration was coocemed over
charges of escalation of the Indochina
War.
The sources were not able to give
the results of the bombing.
Ecology Lecture
Slated for GWC
What has the government done about
ecology?
Mike Levett, a teaching fellow in en-
vironmental law at Harvard Graduate
School, will tell at 3 p.m. Thursday.
He will address Golden West College
students on that subject in Forum I.
The public also ls invited.
An aS31stant to former secretary of
the interior, Walter Hickel, Levett helped
form the feder al government's
Environmental Protection Agency.
OIAH•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Oll;AHGI! COAST rutLISHING COMrAHY
RoMrt N. W••4 .. ,......,. •"' "'*'"'*"
J 11k L Curle'(
Vic.. Prwllltint allll ~I ,.,._....
n.0111 •• tc: •• .,1c
ldllW.
Tiie111•• A. 1!1 11r~f11f'
,Monqlnt ldl ....
Al111 Dirki" w•1 Orll!fC c-iy r.,1.,...
Alb•rt W. I•'••
Auocltlt Editor
Hntl ......... ~
la\\·men pi both agencies wu justified
when Dulaney cheeked in lut week at
a Curacao hotel and YI&! immedialely
arrested on the long standing chargu
or grand theft, forgery and conspiracy.
His wife , Marlene, 31, is still being
sought on identical charges. lnvesUgators
are concentrating their search on Mon·
treal in lhe belief that Mn. Dulaney,
who once acted as secretary for Dulaney
in the \Vorld Financial Trends complex,
may have taken the couple's lhrec young
children to the Canadian city.
Mrs. Dulaney's arrest would enable
Orange County authorilles to consolidate
court action against a trio alleged to
be re_sponsible for a series or fraud!
assertedly conceived and carried out
from lavish office buildings in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
Tbe World Financial Trends corporate
complex and its facilities are now in
the hands of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
and awa!Ung procetding!I that lack only
the presence of the firm's principals
for further action.
Mrs. DuJaney's arrest will place her
in the defendant's box with her husband
and $.year~ld James Shipley of Hun-
tington Beach, the man promoted by
Dulaney Crom vice presld~t lo preaident
shortly before the Newport man left
for Germany and what one investigator
described as the "life of Riley" in
Munich.
Shipley faces identical charges. He
is scheduled to appear April 21 in Santa
Ana Municipal Court and is free on
$250,000 bail.
The bursting of the Dulaney bubble
ln December, 1969 brought a rash of
bankruptcy claims and Superior Court
lawsuits, most of them filed by residents
of the retirement communities in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
One theme domtnates 1n those actions
-the claim that the suave, handsome
Dulaney actively solicited investment
funds and converted them to his own
use.
Many residents have told investigators
that the polished investment counselor
successfully sought what were In some
cases their life savings with a winning
mixture of grace and charm.
PILOT SHO WS
PL ANT TO NIGHT
Bill Leary, creator of the newspaper
feature Grafllti, Is one of many na·
tionally featured newspaper "celebrities"
v:ho have sent greetings to the OAlL Y
PILOT for tonight's first public open
house in the newly expanded plant.
Leary's original .. Graffili's'' and other
special artwork will be en di!play
throughout the plant al 330 W. Bay
st .. Costa Mesa, from 7 to 9 o'clock
tonight and again Thursday night when
the public Is invited lo tour lbe DALLY
PILOT.
A self-guided walking tour has been
laid out to show visitors through lhe
entirely renovated and enlarged plant
facilities . Parking will be available on
the DAILY PILOT parking lot and on-
streel ln areas adjacent to the p I a n t
at Bay and Thurin streets.
Hospital Going llp
Work progresses on Fountain Valley Community
Hospital -the city's first-at \Varner Avenue and
Euclid Street near Mile Square Park. The 114·bed
hospital is scheduled to open lale this summer.
Three medical office buttdings are planned adjacent
to the hospital
Oil Sanctuary
Off County Coast
Being Drafted
California Senators Alan Cranston and
John Tunney are drafting legislation to
create a federal oil sanctuary oft the
Orange County coast, Newport Beach
Mayor Ed Hirth said today.
An existing state sanctuary from the
Santa Ana River south bans offshore
drilling three miles out. Federal legisla·
lion would extend that to 12 miles.
Hirth said he met with aides of both
senators in Washington, D.C., last "'eek
and was told "legislation is in progress
that would at least give Orange County
a sanctuary, as a starler."
He said they told him a similar bill
died in eommiltee last yeat because
it encompassed a much broader area.
Hirth said the new bill hopefully will
include catalina Island, which now also
has a stale sanctuary.
''Going 12 miles out from shore and
12 miles inland from Catalina," the
mayor said, "they'll meet in the middle
and give us a complete sanctuary
between."
Hirth said aides or both senators feel
the revisions ln the bill will "overcome
the objections" that led to the demise
of the legislation last year.
Hirth also disclosed that Fred Burke,
a Washington lobbyist representing
various Orange Coast c,ilies, includin&.
Newport Beach, In offshore oil matter!!,
will be ln. the county March 29,to discu!!0
progress of this and legislation In detail.
"He ha! told me he is hopeful we'll
have this legislation by the end of the
year," Hirth saJd.
School Approved
For Huntington
Southeast Side
Residents of southeast Hu11Ungton
Beach can be sure at least one more
elementary school will be built there in
the near future.
State authorities have granted the
Huntington Beach City (elementary)
School District more tha11 $1 million to
build a school for 750 children, in grades
kindergarten through five.
Charles Palmer, deputy district 1uper·
lntendent said the school is planned for
a 10-acr~ site in the quarter section
bowided by Indianapolis and Atlanta
avenues and Brookbunit and Bushard
streets.
"We expect it to be open by Septem·
her, 1972," Palmer said.
·'Two other schools we have applied
for aren't getting state money yet." Pal·
mer reported Tuesday night. "They're
on the priority list, but I'm pessimistic
about receiving funds over the l'ltxl 18
months." He said the state only has $30 million
to dole out for school construction over
that time because other fund5 must be
spent to renovate earthquake endan·
gered schools. Both Huntington Beach schools not
funded are also in the southeast part of
the city.
C,alley Jury Mulls Cas e
Unaware of Criticism
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -t;nawar e
of a defense demand that they be prod·
ded to work harder toward a verdict.
Lt. William L. Calley's murder trial
jurors asked for yet another read·back
of testimony today.
It is the eighth day of their delibera-
tions in the My Lai trial that has spanned
the seasons from autumn into spring
-the longest court·marlial in history.
The request was for the testimony
of Sidney Kye of Kansas City. Kan ..
who had said he saw Calley firing into
Fro•n Page 1
BOND S ...
Crawford, implored the board to set
its sights lower. "The voters have twlce
mandated not that you go lo 8S-cents,
but that you don't go to $2.08. I would
favor another override for less than
$2.08 but let's start right. now to effect
some economies too."
John Sumners. president of the Green
Valley Homeowners Association. chided
the board for not showing enough finan·
cial need in it! previous election cam·
paigns.
He said that during the last election
the ballot arguments on the con side
were loaded with detailed objections
aganst the tax hike while "the pro
s)de had no anununition at all."
From Page 1
BUDGET • • •
beginning balance in April should be
about $172,000.
Norton, however. warned that even
the current· statistics could change a
little either way, depending on the growth
of schools by the end of the year.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
J. C. HUMPHllD
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
Even though your diamond ett-
gage1nent ring has an unforget·
table sentimental value to you, iU
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
Lhe care it shoul d receive.
"'·hat appeared to him to be a ditch,
and Daniel Hill, a heliceopter crew chie[
who said in a depositon he saw bodies
there before Calley and his men entered
the village.
Calley is charged with killing at least
70 people at that ditch, the main ex·
ecution site, according to the govern·
ment. The other site was' at the crossing
of two village trails;where Calley is ac·
cwed cf killing at least 30. The trail
incident occurred first.
The jurors already had listened for
the second time to te stimony of 10
witnesses -eight prosecution and two
defense. All testified early in the four
months of the trial.
Calley's attorney, George Latimer, pro-
tested the readings and became even
more incensed Monday 1"'hen he saw
newspaper stories that the jurors ·wat-
ched television in the evening and had
a few after-dinner drink s.
.. , worked IS hours a day, almost
seven d![)'S a week, during the trial,''
the 70.year-<>ld Latimer protested. "This
is not a siesta. This is serious business.
We've got a man's life at slake."
The trial judge said, "I don't propose
to take any action at this time."
"They have to eat, they have to get
their hair cut, they ha ve lo get their
clothes cleaned," he added.
Musical Show Sla ted
By Huntington High
A musica1 variety program ca1led
'"This, That And The Other'' will be
presented by the Huntington Beach High
School Oiler Choir Friday and Saturday
night.
Both performances begin at 8 p.m.
tn the school aud itorium. Tickets, ptiei!d
at $1.50 for adults, and $1 !or children,
will be on sale at the door .
It's an, !""""'"'"'
Pay Package
Presented
To Trust ees
A 1768,000 price tag has been placed
on the initial salary packa1t proposed
by the 262 teachers of the Huntington
Beach City (elementary) School District.
This figure wa! handed to tru!teeis
Tuesday night by Charles Palmer, deputy
district superintencie•t, along with Id:
oulline of the teachers' requests.
Teacher spokesmen will meet with
delegates appointed by the board of
trustees during the next few month!
until the two sides arrive at a muluaU)',
satisfactory agreement. T u e s d a y • !'
teacher outline was only ah'1nitial pn>
posal.
Besides a salary increase of four per·
cent plus a cost of living increase:,
teachers are asking for unused sict
leave compensation, reductions in claM
size, reading specialists, an instructional
materials center, personal necusity:
leave and Increased medical coverage.
Several smaller items are also included
in their request.
The most costly request, according
to Palmer, would be paying teache.ra
for unused sick leave. He said that
figure could be $483,166, although i~
wouldn't all be paid in one year.
Teachers want money for sick days
they didn't use, lo be collected when
they leave the district, retire or die.
A reduction in first grade clw slits
would cost about $58,000, accordint to
Palmer. The proposed salary locrease
would add $309,000 in expenses.
Medical coverage improvements could
cost $90,000, said Palmer.
In the figures he handed to trustees,
Palmer also included another '360,000
If health benefits and unll!led sick leave
compensation were extended to ad-
ministrators and classified employea.
Trustees accepted both reports without
comment and set March 29 as the first
salary discll3Sion date.
Apartment Unit
Plan to Be Seen
Plans for a proposed apartment com·
plex serving rfsidents over 60 will bl
presented to the Fountain Valley Plao-
ning Commissioo tonight.
Developers are seeking R..( (high demi·
ty apartment) zoning on S.S acre! of
land on the southeast corner of Magnolia
Street and Heil Avenue for the retirement
apartment.
The Dutch Reformed Olurcb wants
to build three tw<r!ltory apartmenla with
183 units for rent.
The city planning staff Is recom-
mending denial of the request bec1u1e
it would place 32 units per acre ()D
the property, much hJ~er than tbe 20-
per-acre maximum under R-i :zoning.
One other apartment zone reque1t will
be made tonight by Thomas Graftoc,
a former planning commissioner.
Grafton wants R-3 (medium density)
zoning to put 183 town house units en
17.7 acres of land at the nortbwest
corner of Edinger Avenue and Euclid
Street.
11171 •••" lo11le•1r4
M1llh11 .Udr1•t1 P.O. l e.1 790, 92•<41
.,_ """" ..,°""' ...o1 m ,._, ,,._.,. Painful Times Ome[ad 111old br1c1l1t I•
*\•sinfully luxuriOl.9
W8fC glft. BUI a W11th
la certainly prticllcl'I.
Partlcularty when it's C.IO M.9111 :UO Wftl a1y :=...,.,
Newport l 9Kft1 *W N"""'1
"" C""*"te: JOS HOl1fl l!I c.m.... a..t Countians V ictims of Deadli1ies
And altllough a "diamond is !or·
ever," the stone can be chipped by
a bard blow, and mountings can pit
and discolor if they come in con·
tact with a chlorine bleach when
you are doing hou sehold chores. So
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry when you're doing rough
work or engaging in sports or other
activities which might expose such
pieces to damage.
an Om•ga. lnthe world ol rn.rty nn•~
wtlch••, the n•me and repulallon of
Omega •land out. When Omegt artful!y
conceals on• of 11'1111r superb tlmepi9Cea
tn an axqulllte bracelet. llbtttomta •
1lnlulty prtictlcal gift. See our, compJ& A group of deadlines, most of them
unpleasant, face the clttiens of Orange
County shorUy.
Here are the most important ones
and whert information may ~ gained
on them: -~larch 31 . 1'-1edicare suppltmental
medical insurance. ThiJ is lhe voluntary
pa.rt of Medicare that helpc pay doctor
bills. Basic monthly premium rates are
$5.60. For further tntormaUon call the
Santa Ana Social Security Office , 836-
2221. Location : 1438 E. l!t St., Santa
Alla.
-April 1$. This is Ott big painful
date for all wage earners.
-Federal Income Tax deadline. For
infonnation. 2 City B<lulevard East,
Orange. Telephone, 836-2381 .
-St.ate Income Tax. For tnformaUon,
Franchise Tax Board, 2021 E. 4th St.,
Santa Ana. Telephone, 835-954-0.
Homeowners Property Tax Exemption.
All homeowners eligible. If you ha\•e
not received and filed your exemption
form call Orange County Tax AsseSl!Ors'
office , Homeowners Inform at Ion,
834-3811 . -April 10. Property tax deadline. Se-
cond installment property taxes are due.
Penalty of $3 per parcel plus g percent
if not paid on time. For this year
actual deadline is Monday, April 12 at S
p.m. For infonn.atlon : County Tax Col-
lector, 530 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Tel•
phone 834-;411.
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
the pleasure and the pride with
which you wear them, will be
greatly enhanced if you give them
lhe care and treatment they de-
serve; and although this care is
largely up to you, you should still
come in and see us at lel'st twlee
a year ••. we'll check your ring
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and mounting wear. And,
also at no charge, we'll give them
a professional cleaning while you
... 1~
Omega colltctlon, from S~. r -.. .
J. C. fiumph rie:J J ewefer.-1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT T£RMS
IANKAMERICAR0-MA$T(R CHARGE
24 YEAllS IH SAM.I lOCATION
tHONI 141·1401
I
I
N"ew·port Beaeh
-'EDITIO-N
Today'11 F1'ull
'
N.Y. Steeb
' ' voe. 64, NO. 71, s SECTIONS, 60 PAGES QRANGE q<)UNTY, CALIFOR~IA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, '1971
Ecology Vigilante·s Might · Patrol Preserve
F.cologic;al vigilantes may be used by
Newport Beach to patrol the Corona
del M~ ~arine Preserve.
"Peop~e. come with crowbars to
•vtrtum boolders to gel at the squid,"
Councilman Lindsley Parsons told the
City Council Monday, sounding the alarm
to prtserve the preserve.
"The arta's 90 percent eradicated
1lready but we've still jot some left,"
be said.
. .
Parsons firat auggested the pollce
department be directed to beef up Its
surveillance of the area, which Is loqated
at Little Corona Beach.
He said the California Fish and Game
Department "hits hard when they get
here. but they don't haYe the manpower
to do it often enough."
, Parsons saKi the council should ·"ask
the police chief to have his men warn
people and issue citations. It'll soon
Will Jt Be Aha~ned?
"
aet around the city police art brvolved,
too."
Councilman Richard Croul suggest~
environmental enthusiasts might even
do 1 better job.
"Ecological groups could set up a
force, go down and inform everyone
that they are in a P™erve-." bt said,
"il's tough ta a'sk the police to keep
alter them."
"The police can do Jt." Parsons said,
''they just need instructions (from 11$)."
DAl\.V ~tT lt•lf "'"""
· Niwport' Beach city councilmen are 1ttfdyin·1 a
· pti>!>OSal to abal1iltin this lire station on Balboi
lslarid. Fini Obie! R. J. "Jan" Briscoe and City
Manager Harvey Hurlburt have recommen4ed the a~iion, saiyin'g it would save the city $100,000 in
op,ral(ng expenses. The llalbor ll!and Improvement
'Asloclltion is protesting. Tht council 's decition 1s
due in connection with adoption o( th~ municipal
budget !or 1971·72, probably in June. .
New Court Unit
Sought for SA
By Carpenwr
Board Adopts Resolutions
To Preserve Upper Bay
Special to the DAILY PILOT
SACRAMENTO -A bill requiring
creation of a new Fourth District Court
of Appeals branch with regular sessX>na
tn Santa Ana was introduced by Sen.
Denn.is E. Carpentu (R-Newport Beach)
Tuesday.
Simultaneously, the Orange County Bar
Association went before c o u n t y
supervisors to request temporary space
for it in the old or new courthouse
if Carpenter's bill Is approved .
The board requested a report on the
matter within three weeks, a maneuver
making it too late for presentation next
week to the California Judicial Council
meeting.
"Your commitment would help achieve
the action," Bar Association leaders told
tb.-board.
Supervisor Ronald Cas~s· campaign
to block development of the Upper
Newport Bay and have the area made
a wildlife refuge moved ahead Tuesday.
At hi1 request the county Board of
Supervisors adopted a series of resolu-
tions calling for federal help in
establishing the refuge and informing
the U.S. Department of the Interior
that the county Intends to "preserve,
protect and enhance the ecology of the
Upper Newport Bay."
With the aid of the City of Newport
Beach, the county General Planning
Program staff, the county Harbor
Department and tbe county Ocean and
Shoreline Development-Committee were
ordered to Investigate all available
federal funds that might be used in
the planning and acquisition of the bay.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth said
his city was willing to pass similar
Battin Calls for Study
Of Super Government
Orsnge County government should like·
ly take a look at becoming the single
local jurisdiction rather than ha~ing "26
little cities·· operating mun 1 c Ip a I
govttnmenl.S within the county.
This waJ the view expres5td Tuesday
by Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana.
chairman of the Orange County Board
of Supervisors.
Battin created a bit of 1 stir when
he made the remark in Anaheim while
iJPt:aking before the American Society
for Public Administration.
Jl came wblle Battin, an •ltorney,
was discussing the possibility of a charter
form of government for Orange County.
"For instance. I think any such study
should consider a possible overall govern·
ment for the county instead or the county
and 2$ sm111l cities,'' Battin suggisted.
"It might not be feaslble btrt it 1hould
be Included In any atudy ii ene Is te
bt done."
tn l\i1 widt..rAnging talk, the county
board chief also crilicile4 lhe: Irvine
(:6mp1ny , Janel developers In &eMral,
Superior couft judge1 and the California
Public Utilities Commission.
He declared that the philosophy cf
the present Board of Supervlscrs is l•
slow down county growth .
Battin accused tbe previous Beard or
Supervisors of "reacting to whatever
busineJs wanted."
"That was the board's phllosopby or
the 1960's," Battin said. "Our philosophy
ii to plan tbe quality of life we want
for lhe majority and for government
to carry out those .plans to see that
it happens."
"Pecple moved to Orange County
because it is a iood place to live,·•
Battin added. "If we allow ourselves
to be barnbooiled Into doing for business
what business wanb. that will not be
In the be.st intett1ts of the majority
ef our residents."
The board chairman Indicated that
he ttill · favored .ousting Co u n I y
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.
"The new bolrd bas the right to hire
an adm.lnb\r1Uve officer to cart')' out
Ila philosopby of aovemment," Battin
concluded.
resolutions to pre.sf:nl a united lr~nt
to the federal government.'
The city, as one or three members
of the Upper Bay Cooperative Planning
Project. had been seeking a federal
Sea Grant for a study of the physical
properties and uses of the Upper Bay.
The study woUld bave then enabled the
project ,participants -which included
the county and t.be Irvine Company -
to plan development of lbe are1.
In Tue,,day's meeting, Hirth said bis
group has been informed no Sea Grant
funds are available for the project.
Caspers indicated the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers bas been asked by the
Interior Department to study current
conditions in the Back Bay.
A group of Corona del Mar High
School seniors were present f o r
Tuesday's discussion.
Fifth District Supervisors Caspers took
care to erplain the status of the bay
and development of il to the studenta.
"It's rather like the British crown
jewels.'' he said. "We want to keep
it, but we're not quite sure yet what
to do with jt." ·
He dismissed questions about the Up.
per Bay land swap with the Irvine
Company by saying "The· trade is dead
and there Is oo development work ahead
right now."
The stodents posed questions about
the possibility of a law suit against
the Irvine Company to st.op silt from
uplands development from flowing Into
the bay.
Board Chairman Robert BaUin, an
attorney, e~resstd the opinion that the
success of a lawtuit "depends'oo lettinl
the right judg~"
SENATE REJECTS
FUNDING FOR SST
WASHINGTON' (AP) -The Senate
voted to d a y to halt federal fUndin&
of the supersonic transport plane.
The action wall a setback for thf
Wh ite House, described In Ule tinal houri
al putting pres.sure on waver i;.g and un-
committed senators "In tvtcy . w.ay 1v1U·
able."
The vote was 51-46.
Acting ln the wake of last wctk'1 215-
204 House vote agalnsl the SST. the Sen-
ate thua killed an •dmlntstntk>n requtst
for $134 milliOR to continue development
of two prototypes.
" •
He aaid the people from Cameo Shores
and Shorecliffs go down now and tell
people they are on a marine preserve .
Councilman Milan Dostal said h!
thought •·most people would respect some
kind of warning."
Par50ns pointed out the area ls already
posted.
City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt con·
firmed tbat the police department does
have the au_thority lo act, and that
they have bun lnstructtd lo do so,
but, he said . "It's a matter of degree ."
Hurlburt aaid the poSJibilily of having
llfeauards issue cltatlon.s bas also been
discussed.
"However, there's a great feeling on
the police department about persons
otber than highly trained officers issuing
citations," he said.
"They can cause more problems," he
Jald.
Crnul said be still tbougbt tliO vlilWi1ol
would work.
;,If we get a tough vo1unteei foo::e
down there saying they'll call tlle pol~
it should work," be said.
Mayor Ed Hirth said, ''They WGUld
have to be very sensible people."
Hurlburt told the council lae would
pursue the possibility by diacuulnc ·.1t
with various ecoloeica1 N'lanl:A1iooa.
Bond Split Sought
l(ymla Views Civic Center Issue
By L PETER KRIEG
01 Ill• 0•111 1'11111 ltllf
City Councilman Carl Kymla said today
he wants to see the bond issue for
the planned Newport Beach Civic Center
split into two propositions, one for the
police station and the other for the
propased city hall.
And he said he Is not sure be would
support the second one.
"This is definitely the time to meet
the requirement for new po I Ice
facilities ," he said. ''but I v.·ant to take
a £ood, hard look at future requirements
for the remaininl municip11l facUitles ."
Architect.a are currently preparing
preliminary plans for the civic center
at Newport Ctnter. and art working
now with revlsed space requirements
designed to pare the cost of the entire
project.
Councilman Rlchard Croul, chairman
of the city council building committee
formed two months ago after estimated
COAL! ballooned to more than $10 million,
has 1aid the architect can now design
the entire project with a price tag under
$6 million, including land.
Councilman Croul could not be riached
for comment on KYD'l14 '11 bond · tilua
proposal. but Mayor Ed 'Hirth saJd tb1a
morning he thinks . the SU.U:estioft II
premature.
"We've got no cost figures to 10 00, 11
Hirth said, "and f.o make · 1 dttlsJoa
before we know them i5 premature."
Under curient plants, the boDd iuua
would be SC'.'beduled for September ' ar
October.
Kym la, however, cit"1 growing op.
position in the community to plana ·for
(See CENTER, Paa< I)
Coast Stock
Fugitive · Held
In Caribbean ·
North Viets Intensify
7:!.tfi!cks o ':':..~~os Capital
ly TOM 8ARLEY
Of tN DellJ l'l .. t Stiff
Globe-trott!ni ltA>ckbroket ~·o.U•P"b
Ouliney ii tOday ln a CUrt.cto jall Cflll
awaiting actio,n by Dutch colonial
authorities on . the extradltlon demand
being Oown t.o the Caribbean lsland
from Orange County.
Gov. ·Ronald Reagan's slgnature un..
derlines accusations that Dul!ney, !7,
formetly of Newport Beach, defrauded
Investors in his World Financial Trends
emnire of an estimated $3 million before
he ·ned to Europe from his plush Laguna
Hills "Taj Mahal" in December, 196.9.
Investigatqrs believe that the lrtt
spending Dulaney recently returnee! to
Munich. It was his home for more than
a ye.Ir, Authoritil!s said he visited
relativfls in his Illinois birthpla'ct recently
and went on to make several · more
contacts before flying back to We.st
Germany.
Interpol and the FBI had Curacao
-in the ·Netherlands Antilles off
Maracaibo, Venezuela -high on their
checking list for reasons that are not
available today. The confidence in
lawmen in both agencies was justified
when Dulaney checked in last week at
a Curacao hotel and was immediately
arrested on the long standing charges
of grand theft, forgery and conspiracy .
His wife, Marlene. 31, is still being
sought on identical charges. Investigators
are concentrating their search on Mon-
treal in the belief that Mrs. Dulaney,
who once acted as secretary·for Dulaney
in the World Financial Trends complex.
may have taken the couple's three young
children to the Canadian city.
Mrs . Dulaney's arrest would enable
Orange County allthorltle:s to consolidate
court action against a trio alleged to
be responsible for a series or frauds
assertedly concei ved and carried out
from lavish office buildings In Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
The World Financial Trends corporate
complex and its facilities arc now in
the hands of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
and awaiting proceedings that lack only
(Ste STOCKBROKER, Paae I)
I i ' ! (
Vt!:'N't!iNE. t4•1 <UPI) ~. liprtll Vi--latel\fUied .U.clc1 11>-du near the royll Laotian capital of
i...ia ,S>rabang and,h••'l' ftlllllni was rtP6r11<1 'only a half ln1!E·,rrom tbt
ell;"• lirport. The dere...e mlnl•lrl' u.ld
the aituatlon "rem1lns critical."
* * * South Vietnam
Troops Leave
Laos ·Behind
SAIGON (UPI) -~utb Vietnam
withdrew the last oI ·ill army , from
Laos today, leavlrii only .· a rearguard
of marines to keep wat~h from a hlllt.Qp
posiUon on advancing North Vietnamese
tanks and infantry. Americans began
withdrawing from Khe Sanh and South
Vietnam began fortifying positions near
the border.
The controversial 45-day.()Jd Incursion
into Laos to try to cut the Ho· chi
Minh 11upply trial was clearly in its
clo1lng stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out six North Viet,.
namese tanks today and U.S. Navy
planel trying ta de!troy a column of
17 armored vehicles and trucks: aban-
doned by tbe South Vietnamese in their
withdrawal along Route 9.
U.S. helicopter pilot 1st Lt. Erick
Helnti, 25, of .Spokane, Wash., a veteran
of the Laotian campaign, said .in Khe
Sanh after observing the approaching
North Vietn~e. "the way the Com-
munists: are moving they'll be on top
of thil plact: in a week ."
American s?okesmen at Khe Sanb
predicted 1U American for~ would be
out of the onetime U.S. Marine baso
12 miles from the border by the end
or the wee.k and speculated tbat Soulh
Vietnam would try to hold the area
when they left. Khe Sanh ha! been
hit for nine consecutive days by Com-
(liff PULLOUT. P•1• l )
Dog Ban Asked
Rogers Seeks Ca1tine-free Beaches ·
Newport Beach may follow the lead
of two other Orange Coasl clUes ~ind
ban 111 dO@:.!i from Its beaches:.
Vice Mayor Howard &gers proposed
the ban, aaying he hu received a number
of complaints from constituents. .
The city council Monday .dir~ed City
Attorney Tulty Seymour~ ob!Oln cop~•
of 1lmllar ordinances s~ady fdopt:ed
by Huntington 86ach ;ind Lagun1·Btach.
In Laguna, where dogs are problblttd
on beaches from t e.m. to t p.m.
during: the summer. the law was 1d'!JM.ed
after a major fU(Or that 01lmlnated
wilb 1 clly·wlde referendum 011 t.he laue.
The Huntington Btach ordinance Is
even tougher and bans dogs from botb
the beacbea and the pier at all times.
Councilman Lindsley Parsons pointed
out that dogs ate also currenUy pro-
hibited from all 1tlte l>eoches.
ltogen told the council "the rriovement
Ii the 11m1 up and down tbe coast.·•
H• said thal representatives or lhe
PMln!lula Point Homeowners• As:socl•·
lion have b!:en adamant In their requesll
th1t Newport Beach take similar action.
·•I've been gelling more ca1ls 1bout
lhll than about the: freeway," 1a Id
Roaer1, 1 peninaul1 resident.
I
'
..
Copununist unlta with martar support
reaatntd the strategic Ban llon6'Cbo Po-
oltlon thr" mlie1 oortbe.a1t of )he Luff
Prabal>g Alrpdrl' ~ •nl1~11 aJtet
loaing ft O> Laotlall counteratticU·11rliet
fn tbt day. The position .... oril!Mllt
seized by the North VletnarDese last
weekend.
Gen. Thongphan Knocksy. ofiiclaJ
spokesman for the Laotian defense
ministry, said North . Vietnamese troop&
stepped up at~ac;ks against the hilltop
po!:ition of Phouxang a hall mile from
the airfield before dawn Wednesday, then.
Withdrew shortlY after IWU'lse to avoid
air strike.!. · .
Thongphan said Laotian troops reca'p.
lured three. lltrategic hills nOf\h and
east of the airfield Wednesday but he
warned they inight be loSt aailn In
night · fighting. H& ·aaid Laotian loUe1
were "heavy" but gave no casualty
figures for either side. ·
By Wednesday nilhl, Thoogpban sald.
North Vietnamese troops were three io
five miles north an('.f east or the airfield.
Elsewhere, in . the Plain of Jara · area.
Communist gunners fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made 122MM rockets. against posi-
tions at Ban Na, Sam Thone and . Lon&
Cheng. Thongphl.n uid Ban Na wu
hardest hit in 1 100 rocket barr11a
but no significant casualties or damage
were !'!ported.
Long Cheng ill headquarten: of Gen.
Vang Pao. the chieftain who commanda
an army of Meo tribesmen whoa .ac-
tivities against Communist .forces In the
Plain of Jars area are 1upporLed by
t.he U.S. government.
Thongpha.IJ iaid 1 ca,ptured North Viet-
namese prisoner told · 1n~rrogatois that
Hano i's 304th ·d.Jvl.sion had moved . inta
the Plain to augment Communist troope
a1ready there. ·
Orange
. Weather.
Those gray Uiu are &OllD• clear
up Thursday,' brln&inl 1lJibtly
warmer tempiratures to t h e
Orange Coast. wltb r11diligs ln the
middle 60s JocalJ;y and up to 70 de-
grees Inland.
INSmE TODA:Y
Preiidmi Nizun b in rl'niot~
ably good healtll aftlr 26 m0nlla
and apparentlu ii thriving on W
fob. Pao• 10.
IMllllt n c..u...... • c...-Ctnltt II
CMOi.t "" 1• ·-..... ·-.. c,....... " ~ Nfltlth '
DI .... '"' t ••1ttrlt+ ..... ' 1-.e111Mt111 ... ,,
, .. _. M-tf -. ·-~ . Miii... •
' •
)
I
°i OAILV PILOT N Wtdntsd1,y, Martb 24, 1971
Bartelius Case
.Evidence Sought
From Policeman
A cloak·ll.nd~agger element and the
name "Alex Zaronsky" today stepped
tnto the Orange County Superior Court
arson.fraud trial of Dr. Ebbe Hartelius
and imposed at least a three-hour delay
on the final stages of the bard fought
SH1ion.
Defense attorney ?i!alibew Kurilich is
PILOT SHOWS
PLANT TONIGHT
Bill kary, creator or the newspaper
feature Graffiti, ia one of many n~;
Uonally featured newspaper "ei!lebrlties
who have sent greetings to the DAILY
PILOT for tonight's first public apen
house in the ne~y expanded planl
Leary' a original "Graffiti 'a" and. other
special artwork will be on display
throughout the plant at 330 W. Bay
st., C.OSta Mesa, from 7 to 9 o'clock
tonight and again Thursday night v.•hen
the public is invited to tour the DAILY
PILOT. A self-guided walking tour has been
laid out to show visitors through the
entirely renovated and enlarged plant
facilities. Parking will be avaUabJe on
the DAILY PILOT parking Jot and on-
1>treel in areas adjacent to the p l • nJ
at Bay and Tht.trin street.1.
Airline Trainee ,,
Free of Chargh
An airline pilot wa s cleared Tuesday or
assault charges filed after he allegedly
pistol whipped a NtW"port Beach physi-
cian in a dispute over the defendant's
estranged wife. .
Michael David Hanley, 30, of 18742 Via
San Marco, Irvine, pleaded innocent on
his arraignment before Judge Byron K.
McMillan. Judge l\-fcMillan dismissed charges of
assault with a deadly weapon and ruled
that no such assault had been delivered
on Dr. Fred Teneyck, 42, of Sl23 River
Ave. A district attorney's spokesma1 today
15aid conflicting report! by witnesses and
the refusal of the defendant's wife to
testify against him "probably led to the
judge's dec ision."
Police said Hanley, a former Navy
pllot and airli1te trainee, used a gun to
beat Teneyck about the head in a 2:30
a.m. fracas last Feb. 16 at the physi-
cian's home.
OU.M•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
fSUHOll!I CO.UT PUaLISHIMG COMPANY '
l•Hrl N. W•tl
Pr•IOtnl •N PwtUIW
J1c.k R. C'wrr.y
\llct' ,.,..loHrlf 1M o..tnl ~
1'•111•' IC' ..... 1r t:•lttr
lho1111s A. Mutphl11•
~llllilll Ed !lllf
L P1l1r k1i•t
Htw11«i 11Mt1t ,111 fdlttr
"'"""' .... °"''• 3)JJ N1wport loulo¥trd
uoing lb< delay grudgingly 1ranled by
Judge James F. Judge to obtain from
Zaronsky -better known In Newport
Beach police circles as Sgt. Leo Konkel
-any notes of evidence complied by
the officer during bis investigation of
Hartellus.
Hartelius has identified Zaronsky u
the man who questioned him in his
Corona de! Mar offices and on the
telephone about the pbysicians's rela-
tionship with Jim Blevins, the former
Costa Mesan ~·bo testified that he burned
tbose offices at the doctor's direction.
Harklius and his secretary \old the
jury that the man they knew u Zaronaky
told the physician lhat be knew all
about the deal with Blevins and that
he persistently sougbt what the defense
descrlbed as incriminating 1tatement.1
from Hartelius.
The 50-year-old physician is accused
or burning his offices at 2345 E. Coast
Highway last April 9. He is also charged
with faking the theft of his car nine
days earlier and altempling to collect
the insurance oney.
Newport Beach detective S a m
Amburgey came in for another grlUlng
from Kurilich today as the trial lawyer
resumed his persistent quest for the
notes that, he says, have been denied
him throughout the trial.
Amburgey told Kurilich that notM
relating to Hartelius' alleged bribini of
Jim Blevins -the doctor is accused
of paying Blevins to leave the state
at the height of the investigation -
were turned over to a Costa Mesa police
oUicer.
Costa Mesa officials claimed during
a trlal recess, however, tbat no sucb
notes are contained in their archives.
Tbe frustrated Kurllich Jmmediately
turned to the possible nole·t.ak1ni ac-
tivities of Alex Zaronsky and demanded
that they be surrendered to the defense.
A trial tbat bas never been without
a touch of the bizarre stayed true to
form TUesday afternoon with all three
attorneys involved in the trial questioning
each other in what Cine court wag
described as "musical witness boxes."
Deputy district attorney Al Novick
questioned Kurillch and several times
wished be hadn't as the defense lawyer
entered lnto long involved explanations
over \he objections of the prosecutor.
One of those explanations included
what appeared to be an extremely ac·
curate impersonation of Reba V1ughn.
the Tennessee-born blonde f o r m e r
IQistress of Hartelius and the woman
wbo testified that he '&rran&td the fire
aiid set up the bribery.
Tbtn Kurilich •uestloned his co-counsel
Tom Reilly cf Laguna Beach and ended
an unusual trJal phlse by then puttin1
tfovick on tbe wltneaa atand, .
Nqylclt !Oday predicted that tedlmony
In the trial will be concluded by late
'l'hufsday and that the jury will hear
final arguments and mull its verdict
?tionday.
From Page 1
CENTER .•.
the city hall. At the aame time, he
stressed the inadequacies of existing
police facilities.
"The need for new police facilllies
Is self.f:vident. They are substandard,"
be said.
"However, the people of Newport
Beach today are demanding three things
-an improved environme'lt, adequate
public protection and economy Jn govern-
ment.
"Before 1 can endorse the new city
hall," Kyrnla said, "I want to see if
it qualifies under that third one."
In studying futilre city needs, he said
the CC1uncll must focus on the strong
possibility of a reduction in the number
oc city employes through attrition, •
proposal advanced by the councll'a
budget policy committee, of which he
is a member.
''We are just beginnlng to study work
measurement standards, attrition savings
and other economy measurea," he aald.
He pointed out some municipalities have
rolled back employrnerit as much aa
o~third.
Besides noting the changing public at-
titude toward government coats In
general and the new city hall In
particular, Kym la also pointed out there
will 500t1 be a change in the Newport
Beach administration.
He suggested the new city manager
"should have the opportunity to take
a lresh look at the program."
'
•
I '.• ....,...._
Claanging Newport's 'Cannery Row'
Schematic top view indicates proposed future layout
on Lafayette Avenue for future restaurant com-
mercial complex that will be replica of Western
Canners Company's old cannery presently on the
site. Rhine Channel is at top. More parking is below
Lafayette Avenue.
Ralpl1 Williams
Counts Assets
From Page 1
STOCKBROKER HELD • • •
• the presence of the firm's principals
for further action.
Mr•. Dulaney'• arrest will place her
in the defendant's box with her husband
Multi-millionaire auto dealer Ralph and ~year-old James Shipley of Hun-
Willlanu' accountant today began what tington Beach, the man promoted by Dulaney from vice president to preeident is expected to be a long analysis of shortly before the Newport man left
the Ford dealer's assets as the Orange for Germany and what one investigator
For Divorce
County superior Court divorce trial went descrlbtd as the""ille of Riley" in
into its 1eCond day. Munich.
Karl L. Waegle's opening comments Shipley faces identical charges. He
in Judge H. Walter Steiner'• courtroom Is scheduled to appear April 21 in Santa Ana Municipal Court and is free on centered on Wllllams' auto dealing opera-$250,000 bail.
tions in Encino and Clovis, Calif., and The bursting of lhe Dulaney bubble
the total value of a business empl'e in December, 1969 brought a rash of
that may be divided by the disputing bankruptcy claim! and Superior Court
parties. lawtuits, most of them filed by residents
That value bas been assessed in of the retlrement communities in LagWJa
Hills and Seal Beach. Superior Court documents as $37 million. One theme domtnates In those actions
But Beverly Hills attorney Paul Caruso -the claim that the suave, handsome
insists for Williams that his client's Dulaney actively solicited Investment
net worth is "nowhere near that figure." funds and converted them to bi.I own
Caruso declined to plact! a casb value use.
on Williams' holdings. ·Many residents have told investigators
Mrs. Annabelle Lowry Williams, 38, that the polished Investment counselor
of Newport Beach, watched closely today successfully sought what were in some
as her attorney Richard Curcut~ ~ues; ca~s their life savings with a winning
tioned Waegle on aspects of W,ilhams mixture of gra~ and ,duum.
auto operatiOlll . and prctiptY ~oU~,,.. But inffstigatlJrY'amcede today that
lions. · " .. ' there are still ·many residents of the
lt has bee:n testified. for her t~at two communities who cannot believe that
she was C9UCed into an agree~nt which the Joseph Dulaney they knew was in
included the payment of $4,000 in support any way responsible ror the defrauding
for her and her two children. of I.heir ne1ghbora.. pb~~SO out ~j=~ ,:.~ willi'::y Sig~~~ ~Ore ~Ubstan,ii,t viClir!1S Who figure
"· t la! · Dt In the presence In 1nve$hg1tors fepo~ts include the .st.
Ulll:' pre r qreeme . Bernardine Hospl.fill lll San Bernardmo
of her attorneys and that ll was fully and the Chemical Bank of New York.
explained to her. . 1 11. · 1 1 · th t k Williams and bis wife married March Hosp1ta o 1c1a s c alIIl ey were a en
9 1967 and parted Dec. 4, 1969. Mrs. in to the tune of $500,000 by Dulaney Wulia~s currtntly has p0ssesslon of the on the &lrength of collateral in the
couple'a $275,000 borne on Linda Isle. form of stocks and bonds that later
proved to be worthless.
From Pagel
PULLOUT. ••
mun!.<! shells. Eighty-two round3 hit
there today,
Front dispatches said the South Viet-
nameSe bad beg\in sirengthening
defenses at Ham Nghl, the advance
headquarte.rs on Route 9 just west of
Khe Sanh. The western defenses
toward Laos -also were being built
up, the reports said.
American military sources said the
22 000 South Vjetnamese troops pulled
ou't of Laos were sUll in Quang Tri
Province and would try to hold Khe
Sanh.
Again, investigatora claim, it was the
"same old story of Dulaney's fast talk
and his gift of the gab." He was hlghly
regarded by both officials and Catholic
nuns at the old San Bernardino hospital.
At this date, just $10,COJ bas been
GEM TALK ' v
;TODAY.
bY.
1
l
'
'
South Vietnamese spokesmen said the
2 000 South Vietnamese marines still in Laos were manning a firebaae called
Hong Ha. or Hotel, two miles in.side
Laos and two milts soulh of Route
9 Military sources sald, "Hotel will r~main an outpost because it is the
hl&hesl point in that .aeneral area" and
provides a commandmg view or North
Vietnamese attack routes.
In Washington, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird said South Vletnam·a
mission in Laos bad essentially been
accomplished and the troops w e r e
withdrawing because or "tremendously
vicious and violent" attackl by the
enemy. But he said the Soul~ Vietnamese
achieved their primary obJe<:Uve of In-
terrupting Communist supply lines.
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
Even though your diamond en--1
gagement ring ha& an unforget·
table sentimental value to you, its.
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
the care it should receive.
repaid on the $500,000 St. Bernardine
loan.
The New York bank came into lhe
picture when Dulaney obtained a $500,000
loan from the Atlantic Co. of New Yori.
InvesUgators said pre-payment of high
interest rates on the Joan and the first
regular lOM repayment Jett Dulaney with
just $360,000 of the amount borrowed.
But the bank may have fallen foul
of what investigators claim were
carefully conctlved lacUcs by not observ·
ing rules applying to C<Mlgnatorles wben
Dulaney made two withdrawals from
the bank -ooe for $186,000 and the
other for $1S,OOO.
It may well be, It bas been commented
In bankruptcy court, that the Chemical
Bank will be called on to make good
that $201,000 whatever happens in the
court action against Dulaney.
The $186,000 withdrawn in New York
by Dulaney went to the NewJ>Cirt National
Bank as payment on his sumptuow home
at 333 Morningstar Lane in the Dover
Shores secUon of Newport Beach.
'That home was valued in bankrupt.cy
court as at least $167,500 and the lavishly
equipped Lake Arrowhead home used
by the Dulaneys as their weekend retreat
carried a price tag of at least $3S,OOO.
Both residences have been swallowed
up in a welter o[ bankruptcy claims
that total more than $1 million alone ,
jn documenta filed by individual victims.
of~ Dul8,3.V operation.
Newport Teache1·
Rushed to Hospital
A Newport Helghta Elementary Schoof
teacher is liated In fair condition today
in Hoag 1'.femorial Hospital after she be-
came ill Tuesday afternoon.
Mrs. Terry Hardesty was rushed to the
hospital by a fire department rescue
team after she became faint A school
spokesman Indicated the six-year New·
port Heights in structor had recently been
ill with the nu.
It's an , 'ACttlllllful
License Fee ,
'
Under Study
By Chamber.
City councilmen are bQwtni .to ,ob-
jections raised by Newport Beach's 1m1U
businessmen over tbe recent bikt of
the city's business license fee .
1'he council MQnday dit;ected Miur.or
Ed Hirth tn write the Newport }fubor
Chamber of Commerce, a supporter oC
the new, doubled, fee schedule, asking
If il has any second thoughlS on the
matter.
"We'll be happy to look into it agaift;'
chamber President William Ring said
loday. He declined to forecast any change
in the group's position.
The council voled to double the fiat
fee to $50, {$70 for out·of-town
businessmen) after the chamber IOObied
strongly against a schedule th1t would
have included a gross recelpts lal' on
1nost retailers.
The original city administration pro-
posal for the sliding scale had reoom·
mended a $30 minimum for bua:ineues
\\'ith less than $30,000 in gross receipUI.
1'here was no maximum, however. and
spokesmen for large businesses objected.
With these protests and with virtually
no support for the staff's plan, the
council abandoned the gross receipt&
system and merely doubled the fee of
$25 which had been unchanged for 21
years .
Either would have produced about the
same in new revenues, city ofllclals:
said.
The small businessman didn't ni.st
his voice unt il he got hi.s bill The
council was then deluged with com·
plaints.
"Anytime a tax or license ls doubled/"
chamber President Ring uid, "you an
going lo have a certain negative reactkm.
It's not surprising to me· they bad a
number of complaints.
"It would have been a lot wone tr •
the original proposal had been adopted,"
he said.
Councilman Lindsley Parsons had l\ll•
gested the review, urging that it be
conducted immediately so any changes
might be reflected in the next budget.
"We did work a hardship on soma
small businesses in this city," ParlOlll
said.
Mayor Ed Hirth, pointing out the time
and entrgy spent in preparing the flnt
revision of the fee since 1949, aaid be
thought a study "will take comlderable
time."
"We've got the basic formula, we could
easily modify it," Parsons countered.
Parsons said he had talked with 1ev1r1l
members o( the chamber who told him
the businessman's organlution "has
lost a lot of members as a result of
this thing and they, too, feel IOme
modification is needed."
Jack Barnett. executive director of
the chamber, denied that: Parsons' stlte-
ment about the loss , of memberlhlp
because of the chamber stand was true.
"We've lost a couple," he 1ald, j'but
everything else has been normal at-
trition."
Barnett said those who have left were
mostly out-of.town busineSsmen "who
told me they couldn't afford tG atay.
members and pay the new $70 fee,
too."
He said. j'These are the types who
want to join, \\'e don't go after them.
"We tell them, that's the way the
cookie crumbles," Barnett said. "We'd
like to keep them but don't urge them
to stay on."
M·1ili11t Atlllrttt: P.O. 1•11: 1175, t16•J .,_.,,...,
Cal• M.1$1 ~ DI W•I ••Y Strwt Uifll!W •ud'l1 m Fora1 ,.,,., .... ._, ....... aetdll 1711$, lhK'I • .., ..... ,,.
-Ian CM!Mftlel m Hwftl f.I C."'IN Alll
Painful Ti1nes Om gold braC•let Is ~ ega~. tlnlully luxurlou• lf'llCb Clift. But a watch
• I 1t c11talnly pract iC:I' .
Par11cularly when 1!'1
Countians Victims of Deadlines
And although a "diamond is for-
ever," the stone can be chipped by
a hard blo~·, and mountings can pit
and discolor if they come in con-
tact with a chlorine bleach when
you are doing household chores. So
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry when you're doing rough
work or engaging in sports or other
activities which might expose such
pieces to damage.
an Om1ga. ln tlMI world of realty fineol
watchfl. the name and rapulallon or
omega 11and oul. Whtn Omega tr1fu1'Py'
,conceals one or their auperb Umeplec:Q
A group of deadlines, most of them
unpleapnt, fact the citluns of Orange
county r;hortly.
Here are lhe moat important ones
and where Information may be cained
on them :
-Match 31. Medicare 1upplemental
med.lea! lnsuranet. Thll la: the \'Olunt.ary
part of Medicare that helps pay doctor
bills. Buie monthly premium rates are
$5.SO. For further lnformaUon call the
Santa Ana Social Security Office, 136-
2221. Location: 1133 E. lat St., Sanla
Ano.
-AprU 15. Thi• Is the big painful
date for all wage earners.
-Federal Income Tax deadline. For
information, 2 City Boule\'ard East,
Oran1e. Telephone, 836-1381.
-St1te Income Tax . 'For information,
Franchise Tax Board, 2021 E. 4th St .,
Santa Ana. Telephone, 835-9S40.
Homeowners Property Tax Exemption.
All hotneowntrs eligible. U you ha\•e
not rtaived and filed your exemption
form call Orange County Tax Assessors'
office. HGmeowners I n f o r m a t I o n ,
834-3811. -Aprll IO. Pn>ptrty tax dead\lne. Se-
cond lt1stallment property taxes are due.
Penalty of $3 per parcel plus S -percent
if not paid on time. For this year
actual deadline is Monday, April 12 1t &
p.m. For information: County Tax Col·
lector, 830 N. Broadwiy, Santa Ana . Tele-
phone 13~3411.
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
the pleasure and the pride with
which you wear them, will be
greaUy enhanced if you give them
the care and treatment they de-
serve: and although this care is
largely up to you, you should still
come in and see us at least twice
a year ••• we'll chttk your ring
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and mounting wear. And,
also at no charge, we'll give them
a profe.ssional cleaning while you
walL
J. c.
· "1 an e11:qulsll1 braceJel, It becomn a
: 1lnfulty practic1I girt See our.GOmplll•
Omega collection. from $6$. ,,-,~ . .,;;•
I A-1•1C tellt t 11-1flC ••tit 11otd tOVl r·lllf 1otd CO ... •·lld
llrKalfl w.tth ~•'4fll witch J~ prs
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS
IAHKAMlll.1CAll.D-MASTER CHA•GE
14 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION
PHONE 141-J441
Wtdnt~, MM"th 24, 1'171 DAILY '\LOT §
f .. l!"luft]I Th~~
Storm of Protest
Peril to U.S. in FBI Theft Warned
Co nditions
Of POW's
'S hocking'
NEW YORK (UPI)
Hits Railpax Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The U.S. 1ttomey general has
warntd dllclosure o f in-
fonn1tl,on in FBI files stolen
at P.ttdia, Pa., could end anger
the security of the United
States and. the lives of some
feder1l agents.
Attorney General John N.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A AJ'L.CJO Transport Workers 1.11tcbell said Tuesday copies
1torm of protest. and the Vnloit who called 'l\le:Mlay for of the stolen records had been
thre1t of a congwJonal in-n at to n al I 1 a t I o n of the sent to some members of
qulry have 1tttted the map rtilroada. Congrtss and some members ef the pl'fss.
detailing the n1Uon'1 new and The Washington Post today
limited rall pawn1er service. sh 0 s ~ published some details from
"I think th• railroads had ' oot ut ODS ... to! t• documents ii said
too much to sey about the It received Tuesday morning
--•• R H I o under a covering letter and routes," "1U ep. ar ey · with an additional statement
st• g I•"' ([).W, Va.), parents at Kent Bitte r from the rilizens commission
chairman of the Howie Com-to investigate the FBI. The
meroe Committee. newspaper said most of the
Staggers said his committee NEW YOllK (UPI) in lhe current issue o( documents were en pages
would look into the situation, Author J&mea Michener, who Reader's Dl&esl that the nt· marked "United St 1 t es
but he didn't set a date. concluded from an on-lh~!pol tional wave or anti-student Government Memorandum."
CriUci.sm began rollln& in The Post said the r~ords aJmost lmmediately after the invesUJatlon' th1t National sentiment following •he de 1 cr 1 bed the FBJ's
NaUonal Railroad Passenger Guardamtn were not under shooting or four Y.tnl Slate surveillance of campus and
Corp. -Railpu: -announced attack at Kent Slate Urtlversi· students last May w a 11 black activist organizations by
!Ls final route selections Mon-ty, aa1d that 25 pertent of particularly virulent among informants that included a
lnl.trviewa with re 1e•1 e d diy, '!be network alartlnf switchboard operator on at
point across lhert 11 1n FBI
aaent bthind every m1Ubo1."
The ntwspaper said the
•
switchboard optrator at 1
Philadelpbta arta eolleae was
en11a11ed to turnllh the FBI
with a list t:A loq ~
cal!J to or from a prtf.,,..
at the «ll•J•· _
the 400 atudenta he in-the parent,, of Ktnt State prisoners and aources in May 1 wlll provide 1M least one campus. The
Wa.shlngton, Saigon and Paris passenger trains to connect terviewtd told him t.hf!ir students. newspaper 11aid one document ~
Cle 8 e P g l 0 · · populat.ion. been 1 good thing for the on campus and hersEl~ a l1igh interviews with dissenten for OI ... Countrl San Francisco S18;Sacramento;S21
.
'
Ind! t th t th 11 h 1 US 114 cltle! with 100,000 or more parents thought It mlJht have A mother with three sons instructed agents to increase ~ '
prisoners of war in Vietnam The plan to halve the na· school teacher said it would reasons "chief of whicl\ are This Sa¥9S~MI $l.2D San Diego $8(all lncl ude tax). More~ta
I " h kin " nation U they, too, had been -..a...._. ..., s s oc i: and many of uon·1 railpassenger service have been better ''If the guard it will enhance the paranoia ro&a'MI t:o S.F. than any other 1irlln1.r...w-a.... ...
the men have been subjected was labeled sbort!l&hted and •hot. bad shot the whole lot of them endemic in these circles and ,,
lo torture. Reader's Digest. _:_'.:_•ln:....:_•ua=-b::y_t;:_o:;_p-'o'-ff-ic_l•_~_of__:_th;..• __ M_lche __ n•_r_wro:....:_--t•:....:_in_a_r_e:_po_r_t _:'h-'a;:_t_m __ o.:_'_n_i•.::g_.'' ______ w_i_ll_f_u_rl--h_or:....:_se_r_,._t_•..:l:..•_t _th __ e"---------------------------------
magazine re po r led Wed·
nesda y.
The article said available
•
information compiled by Lt
Col. Joseph R. Cataldo, a doc-
tor of the Green Berets, in-
dicated that most PO\Vs are
severely malnourished. llO per·
cent have skin diseases, at
least 50 percent suffer In-
testinal worms, and 2S percent
may have active. tubercu1osis.
In addiUon, many have ~rlous
vitamin deficiencies. mental
dl!orlentatlon and mU!cular
wastage.
"Small wonder. then. that
North Vietnam forbids in-
spection or the camps by the
tnternation!il Red Cross -In
direct violation of the Geneva
convenlions." the article i;aid.
"Instead 'showcase ' prisoners
are paraded in propaganda
films. When anti-war groups
film small groupa of prison·
ers. only the healthiest, bar-
bered and freshly clothed, are
trotted into poblic view to par-
rot carefull y rehearsed in-
formation."
All the nyou
could wa11t for
bu • a big car.
The article said Hanoi has
weakened men by systemaUc
torture, such as denying food
and water, swpending them
from ceilings by their arms,
burning them with cigarettes,
-'Ind clubbing them with rifle
butts. It 1aid that in numerous
cases prisoners have been
denied medical attention and
even major injuries have not
been tended.
Treecutting
Protesters
Defended
CHICAGO (UP!J -The
Chicago Tribunt has offered
to pay the fine of a protester
arrested Monday during a
demonstration at Northern
Illinois University.
In a front-page editorial in
today's editions, the Tribune
nid protesters "who have
reacted violently and destruc-
tively have deserved con-
demnation.
"The students who
~acefully opposed cuttina
trees in a nature preserve
1t Northern 1\linois University
Monday, however, deserve
chttrs." the Tribune said.
Twelve 1tudenll w e r t at·
rMted as they tried to 1top
the university from cutting a
stand of trees for a new
building.
"It was 11n outr11eous
destruction of an irreplaceable
is.set -and unnecessary with
1 university situated on the
edge of a cornfield." the
edltnrial said.
''If tht students who 1Fel'f:
11rrested are f\ned. the editor
o( the Tribune would like
personally to pay \the fine .of
the finil one on the list
1lphabetically. Jame• D. Allen
of Alsip (tll .) We hope thert
are others among our readers
who might make 5imilar of-
fer1." the newspaper said.
Bab y Death
Rate Drops
w ASHINGTON !UPI) -
Amerlc.'s inf1nt death r1tt.
long 11 c1uJ1e of debate aver
he1lth care ror the poor. drat>
ped kl 1 record low in 1970.
the Heallh. Education •nd
Welf1re Department {HEW )
uld today
Impala, Big in wh.at it builds in fer you. _
Like a looger, smootller wbeelbale that abacrbo much of what your body ll9l!d to.
A new double panel roof that abacrbo much of the noise your ean 1-1 to. More roominesa
than any other car in its field. A new power ventilation system that Uep6 oo bringina
you outside air, even when the car's standing still.
r
You evengetstandml power cli8c brakes. up front
Impala. Big in built-ins. Bi& in ~in value.
,,,t death ratt: for infants
under one ye1r or agt. estimited rrom 11 national Rt1tt.tmb1Jr, bu.cHilft your Stat and sltDuldlf btlJs iJ an id.ea you can liH IOiLl..
sampUns or dl"alh ctrtificales .
..-·111 19.8 de111ths for e11ch 1.000
!Ive births In 1970. compared
with20.7per 1,000ln 1969. ~ -~-
Announcing Rally Nova. 60th Anniversary Special No.L'.
Chevrolet'a 1-1 makini cannow la60 Y""" Tbat'a ttal<Xl ID cdel:n1e. All4
Which is a regular Nova we've done up. By addinc '°'*It ==:~·~,-~-~~~-:~t<>~off~er;y;ou:Ral: ly Nova
, .~· otripes, A black erillc. A cemotb<:ontrol spat mirn>r, Cakl'·
• keyed carpeting. Bright roof moldin&. A epocla1 ....
peruion. And wider 14 x 6 rally wheolL
We offer you a oelectie11 of the11Andard Sor
V8 engine. Or a bigser V8. All nm jult fine <11
no-lead, low-lead gasoline, too.
Rally Nova. The economy car that pall :roa
first by looking like it coets a lot 111«e than it do-.
Announcing Heavy Chery.
60th Annil'a'AJ')' Special No.2.
It's a Clievelle with a berry llCC!tDt <11
makin& its pttlenct fell >.. m<llD<'«I tJ,.
its opecia1 lllril"'L Special idmlili-
ca tion on the Bide. SpecW domed
hood with lock pin&.
Blaclc ari11e. AJld I' s I
rally whee!L
Some ""'"' nice thinp:
It's availoble with ""'
standard V8. or Uno
bill"' qina Which aD
move liibt out .., ftl>oftd or
Joor-load a-line.
. Heavy ChtYy, Only ill prim
.. fighl
. . ....
•
;
;
•
•·
' r
'•
"
I •
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t: • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Locati~g New Schools
Two new schools "are needed ·tmmediately." New-
port-Mesa Unified School District trustees were told re-
ceoUy.
Ye~ In the ume report on the projected growth of
the district. Supt. William Cunningham said some ele-
mentary school &ites presently owned by the district
might be declared surplus.
The seeming contradiction may be attributed to the
'"ma.turallon" of westerly areas o( the district which has
resulted in a lessened pressure on school enrollments.
The eastern portions, bov.•ever, are continuing to grow
at a rapid nte. At present. the single family homes un·
der construction o'n Irvine property are increasing de-
mands on elementary and middle school space.
California schools traditionally have supported the
neighborhood school concepl Parents have come to ex·
peel 1 school within walking distance of their homes.
But, as the rate of school enrollment increases less-
ens, will it always be practical to continue building new
i;cbools only to abandon them one or two decades later?
Last November the board Was told total enrollment
tncreased by only four new students. While high school
enrollments increased. elementary populations dropped.
Trustees specul ated that within five years the district
may be in the unusual position of seeking new schools
while abandoning others.
Abandonment may be advisable fiscally and edut:a·
tionally. Sale of formerly needed school property may
benefit the district, assisting financing of schools for
newer areas. Further. shifting populations due to the
tur~over of property use Crom single family to apartment
or industrial zoning use, have already diminished the
location desirability of some district schools, such as
~tcNally, Woodland and Monte Vista in Costa Mesa.
Further, the district owns a 5Cklcre site, of which
IO acre& is assigned to Bay View Elementary School near
the intersection of Palisades and Jamboree Roads. This
site Is being suggested for development of a. new middle
(inlermedJate) school. It could also support a specialized
continuation or vocational high school or centralized dis--
trict offices.
While convenient to two proposed freeways, the site
is not contiguous to heavill residential portions of the
district. Years ago, critics o its purchase pointed out the
site, which could support as many as 3,000 school chil·
dren, is located adjacent to an Orange County Airport
flight path.
Harbor View Homes residents have awaited anxious-
ly the deve1opment ol their elementary school west of
fl.iacArthur Boulevard near Ford Road, on a site reserved
by the Irvine Co. A trade of a portion of the Palisade:;.,
site for the Harbor View site has been proposed, but ad·
minlstrators favor outright purchase of the Harbor View
location, preserving the Palisades acreage intact until
1975.
The Board of Education action on the two schools
must re!lect the changing nature of the district.
Their Tuesday decision may chart a new course or
continue the long-established tradition of neighborhood
schools.
They must weigh the advantages of population-
centered schools versus the increased costs of transport·
ing ~tudents to less convenient school locations.
But, at a time when education co!\s are getting out
of hand, the economic expedient should receive more
than cursory attention. The economics or centralizing
;chool facilities should be \Veighed equally v.·i th consid·
eration of continued construction to meet shifting school
populations.
N
Each Man Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
No Other in History Ever Outclassed Be••
Has His Place
And Function
A dear friend, with the kindest of
intentions, has been trying to penuade
me to invest some
af my paltry savings
in the stock market,
on the assumption
that it has nowhere
to go but up.
I have been teml>"
ted, but 1 have re-
fused . For if I bave
learned ane -thing in
life, -it i!I this : that
a man cannat go against the grain of his
nature, that he must learn to live with
his natural bent and not cut across it.
, Money is a mystery to me. I like
l ft u much as most peaple do, but
; J seem to lack that bwnp of ac-j qu.isitiveness that enables some men to
• make large ma55es of money iD their
sleep.
IF I INVESTED In General t.1otor!!
1 tomorrow morning , everybody would
t ttart bicycling to work: and if 1 picked
~ up some General Electric stock, every
. household in America would switch to
·candles. I am a natural-born sucker,
and am temperamentally designed to
be sheared in the market place.
Moreover, I have netther the talent
nor the patience to study the reports
and .analyses, the averages and trends,
that are requisite fur i n t e 11 i g e n t
. participation in the investment field . It
' seems to me as pinched and desiccating
an activity as poring over the racing
forms.
IF YOll DON'T really like something,
or have a natural flair for it, you
will never do it as well as those to
So Newport's •ieeooomizera'1 are
going kl cut out the $87,000 contri-
bution to the Olympic-size pool! It's
the city's pool, too, and the city
should pay for part of It. Besides
swim meets can earn $1,000 in on~
weekend! It could help the budget
instead of draining it!
-P.A. B.
'~" ffftu,.. l'tflKhl ,......... ·i.ws. "" -·™"'"' flltM .. .... ---· • .,... _, ... _._ .. 9*""' .... Olltr '"ltM.
whom it comes easily. Each man has
his place and function, and should learn
to do what he doe.s well and to avoid
what he does poorly. It is the man
who tries to be all things who finally
loses even in his own special field.
This was the nearly fatal blind spot
In the otherwise shrewd personality of
Mark Twain. The leading writer of his
day, he lo.st several fortunes in business
enterprises, and was forever draining
off his literary royalties to pay for
his catastrophic commercia1 ventures.
And this is what he meant when he
ruefully wrote: "I have been a writer
for 22 years, and an ass for 55."
CONVERSEL V, 1 have seen highly
successful businessmen try to extend
their talents to a fickle field such as
the theater, and lose their monogrammed
silk shirts in the effort They try to
apply the same cold financial procedures
to a stage production as they would
to an industrial production. "'holly
unaware that the elements a r 11
unyieldingly incompatible.
Some persons aperate best in the realm
of ideas, some in the realm of people,
and some in the realm of things. It
is usually disastrous when we attempt
to use our expertise in one realm to
deal with another. The shoemaker doesn'L
necessarily have to stick to his last,
but when he stops making and starts
manJpulatlng, he is bound to lose bis
av.·I.
Lobbying Full of I ro:ny
PoliUcs, they always say, makes
strange bedfeUov.'!. Take for example
the spectacle af two members of the
British pa.rUament appearing before a
1tate legislature in this country to lobby
agaimt a pending bill.
Pusinl strange though it stems, the
two MP'• had a very serious moUve
for their trip: 250.000 Btitish and French
jobs.
The story is that a New York State
Asseinblyman has presented a bill ban-
ning from stale airports any aircraft
with .decibel counli of more than 108,
effective July l, and of 98 by 1977.
In effect, this would prohibit supersonic
craft trom..' Jandi~g in New YorJc. And
that would Include the. Anglo.French Con·
COJ'de 11DW kl woducUon. 'fbe. Concorde,
It l$ claimed, has a noise level reaching
a deQb<I count of 112.
Quotes
Dd-Sec:retsy Md.,_ R. Laird,
11 8.P. spttdl -"Seil~ettrmlnation
for lhe RtpubUc of Vietnam remains
our objective and II 1n obtaln•ble 1oal
because the South Vietllamese have a
new-found atrentth and conlidenet "ith
which lo meet the dWlen&t ahead."
f\lrs. Jtocer Llphara, widow nf nottd
S.F. dYie leader -"Ont !hould not
spend ttme regrr:tting what ii done,
bee1UR what one might have dane cou.ld
taJlly hav& been wane.''
• .. ·-.
Guest Editorial •
IF THE CONCORDE ls to be banned
from New York, the Britons say, it
can't economically be built and the pro-
gram would be killed, wtth the resultant
loss of jobs in the two na1ions.
The irony of British lobbying in a
ll.S, legislature ls compounded by the
fact that poor England aind France may
lose tho.'e jobs anyway. Both the British
airline BOAC ind Air France have re-
jected the Concorde as being Impossible
to fly economically, regardless of any
declbtl problems.
Coming on top of the Rolls Royce
collapse, and report.a of threatened
withdrawaJ of foreign tndwi:trial ln--
stallallons because of England'• AeVt.rt
labor crises. could the Concorde case
be the precurs-Or af 1nother lobbying
junket to the U.S .. to petition for Brl·
wn ·s admlS!ion as the 51st state?
( A.s on aside. o footnote seem1 op-
propriatt: Becatise the Europcatt
1uper&cm1c progrom &eemi to 11ave
came a 'Cropper, we sliauld 11ot ;ump
tO rht conclusion thot ()flt own SST
developm4!ttt 11 thereby automoticollu
mode obsolete. \Vt'd have no av1al ioi.
rndu1try at afl if evtrybody had quit
when Larigley'i craft failed to fly ii.
1903.)
C11lfornJ1 FeaJure Servk't
'Help to Save Coast Daylight Train~
To the Editor:
We are again close to losing anothe r
California historical landmark. Far 49
years. tbe famous Southern Pacific
Daylight pa1Senger train has graoot our
California coast line every day. bringing
joy and relauUon to over IS million
passengers. It became synonymous with
California. In fact , to many, the Daylight
became as much a part of America
as the Fourth of July. When Premier
Khrushchev af the Soviet Union (on
his: visit to this country) was told he.
could not visit Disneyland, he asked
that his second request be honored;
a ride an the famous Southern Pacific
Daylight from LDs Angeles to San Fran·
cisca.
I KNOW TH~E facts because of
two years re.search for my recently
published 656 page historical volume on
the Daylighl No ather "Name Train"
Jn the history of railroading ever
outclassed her, for she was tbe "Most
Beautiful Train in the World." traveling
an the world famous Coast Line which
closely follows the route of the California
missions and, for more than 113· miles,
skirts the beautiful California seashore.
The U.S. government even acknowledg·
ed these facts in 1939 v.•hen it placed
a full-colar. large photograph of the
C.oast Daylight an the "v.•all of honor"
in the Department or Transportation.
She had won the all-time passenger-car-
rying record in a single. year and it
was neve:r broken.
As you know, Railpax (Nation Rail
Passenger Corp.), a semi-private 1overn-
ment corporation, will be nationalizing
most of America's passenger trains next
May 1. They recently revi sed their routes
aft.er much public pressure to include
the San Francisco to Los Angeles run.
NOW WE MAY LOSE this, as Mr.
bruce Heard , a San Francisco travel
agent formerly of Fre:sno, has mounted
a personal campaign requesting Railpax
to select the San Joaquin Valley Line
in lieu of the Coast Line because of
some illogical reasons like scenic beauty
and popularity, which art contrary to
lhe facts.
I request that you use your editorial
J)OWer and ask the people of Cillfomla
to make their \\ishes known on the
route they would like to travel. \Ve
now have the golden opportuolty to decide
what train and what route we want
continued. All \\'e have to do is take
five minutes and write Secretary John
A. Volpe at Department of
Transport.aUon, 4CJ..7tb St. S . W.,
B11 GeOl'fle
Dear George :
Thanks for that advice on how
to bt popular with good-looking
girls! Boy, after what you advised,
girls fiock all over me!
GRATEFUL
Dear Grateful:
Uh. this is a bit embarrassing
for mt to have to ask, but do
)'()I.I remember the exact date that
advice ran! l write some of this
stuff before l 'm fully awake, and
If whatever 1 said worked, I could
1ure use It.
De&r George:
Wbo invented the Yo. Yo?
SAMUEL R.
Dear Samuel R.:
You do not have to bt pro-
miscuous to be popular. (Yeah.
I know -it may ('()nfu5c Samuel
R.. but the readers LIKE that
kind of stuff.)
(Write to Georgt , the originator
of Sideways Thinking.)
,<w~ .... ~~-f""l"~.,.~~3,1"~? .... , ;; \); .·· ·J ?4: '""''';;1,+ '' • . ~,( ~;,,-'• -__ '
. · ·MailbO~ ' . .... ~~. \ -~ -~ ..1'it JS: ~.t,;;l
Letttr1 from rea<Ur1 are welcome.
Normall11 writer• should convey their
mtssages i'll-300 WO'rds or less. The
right to condense !etterr to fit space
or eliminate libf!t is reserved. All let·
ter1 must include signature and.mail·
ing address, but names may be with·
held on-request if 1uffident reason
i.! appcrent. Poetry will Mt be pub-
lish«I.
Washington D.C. 'Z1>491 . and make our
wishes known. Write him. He ii the.re
to aerve us.
RICHARD K. WRIG!fr
Defe11slble Borders
To the Editor:
As a former historian from· Europe,
J would Jlke to comment on Richard
Wilson's article in your newspaper af
March 18: "Israel Can't Say No to All".
I have read many articles in your
newspaper by Mr. Wilsen on different
subjects, and I must say that it has
alv.·ays amazed me to see. that Mr.
Wilson writes with oo apparent or in-
sufficient research.
Israel fought three wars in the past
25 years in order to survive. If she
cannot secure. defensible borders, we
would have in a short time the same
situation as existed before.
NOW, IF J\fR. WIUON already dabbles
in political writings, it would be advisable
if he would acquaint himself with rocent
historical facts :
Russia is accusing Israel of land-grab-
bing, but Mr. Wilson has already forgot·
ten what was annexed by Russia after
the second World War. Just to mention
a few little things : Latvia, Lithuania,
Estonia, the whole eastern part of
Poland. not to apeak about the recent
invasions of Czecbo-Slovakia and
Hungary.
All this was not done merely to assure
Russia's survival. but plainly to protect
Russia's own interest.
THE WORLD STOOD by and nothing
was done. Now , a small, brave country
as is lsreel, which wants secure and
defensible borders. is being accused by
Russia and America of aggression. It
seems to me that. if Egypt is sincerely
interested in peace. it should make direct
CX1ntact with Israel and not play into
lht hands of the Russians, who eventually
will take advantage of the situation,
as history has shown in the past.
FELIX VAN BEEK
l\'all to E .. rth'• Coffl11
To the Editor:
Arthur Vlnsel's Piiot Logbook of March
18 concludes with his personal observa.
tJ()n on what he is doing to htlp a
threatened world. M far as Jeav1ng some-
one to carry on after he i5 gone
to fight a balUe against the world's
Ills, a fight th8.t wiU ·surely be drav.·n
out beyond his lifetime., he is doing
nothing. ._
He didn't say that he was bringing
na more chlldrtn Into the world. If
he has ~n1e it I' understandable that
he cho'se to bring no more into the
population tXJ'llO!l()n that is undtr ~·ay.
BUT IF ms choice is to bring no
childre n inlo the world it is pos.~ible
that he: Is adding one small nail to
the tarth's coffin af the futu re . An
obviously tnlented and educated man
1hould be sun that be ii followed by
•
one or more of his family who can
cope. with what is to come and solve
the problems. Not leave it up to the
under-educated and often irresponsible
who are multiplying at a rapid rate.
His decision is a personal matter and
he is not the f11st in these days to
voice 11uch. Dropping out is never a
solution but lhat is in effect v.·hat is
being done.
IT REMINDS ~tE of what an old
aunt of mine 11aid when my daughter
was born in 1945, her gloomy statements
being to the effect that she would never
bring a child into th.is terrible situation
in the world. I'm sure thousands of
others for hundreds af years have said
similar things. When have things bee.n
rosey and unCX1mpllcated?
It still is a personal point. t thought
l'd make mine. I hope I have done
it.
EDGAR R. BARTON
l111remo11uble l\'obe
To the Editor:
The entire country ls being subjected
to increasing noise levels on the streets
and highways beyond 1 point v.·hich
might. by any adult person, be deemed
reasonable. What is being done about
this?
Have Super\•isor Ronald Caspers or
city government made any effort to
put a stop to th is exploitation of the
public's peace and quie t which is being
invaded for the benefit of a few money-
hungry sports car dealers and muffler
shops who serve the child driver and
the adult ones who have never matured?
Twenty-five years ago muf[\er la"'.!I
were enforced. What has ha ppened to
our highway patrol • and local traflic
enforcement agencies?
WE LIVE EIGHT blocks easl of the
Pavilion on Balboa Peninsula Point. At
times our walls vibrate from the effects
of sports cars and motorcycles ac·
celeraUng down Balboa Boulevard. 'The
neighborhood is a nice one , with the
bay on one side and the ocean and
beach an the other and ha!! pleasant
home.s; but the poople who live here,
like people in alher areas, are being
deprived of their right to peace and
quiet by unnecessary noise from cert.a.in
vehicles.
My business has been located at
\•arious places in Newport for the last
five years. al one time on West Coast
Highway and at present on Via Lido.
Businesses on these streets have to hold
up personal and telephone conversations
mnnv time.!I during lhe day wh ile some
sports car. truck. motorcycle or even
school bus gors by. None or this is
necessary. Correction of 1hiJ1: n1Ala1se
JS long overdue.
EITHER WE put a stop to this
nonsense or ""e let it grow unii\ 11
drives an already upllght populace to
ihe wall.
There are many ills In aur societv
the: answers to which are most difficllit
and complex. However, it would seem
that this rather simple one could be
solved by A few leaders of courage
who will stand up to certain greedy
and childlike f'lcmcnl!S in our society
and say "'ith clarity and firm ness: Stop
that noise!
CHARI.ES P. AVERY
l8·l'e nr·Old Voter•
To the Editor :
f\1Any studl!nts today are vocal in thtlr
C'Qmph1ints against ..... ·ar, pollullon, povcr.
ly and crime. They i:ire well·intentiQned
in thei r criticism but do nothing con-
strucllv1 about it. Titerc is no easi~r
way for students 18 to 21 to get involved
than to register to vote in the natlon11
elections.
Possibly in the near future the 18-year·
old vote will be extended to state and
local elections, where the young vole
would really have more influence. Until
that lime 1 strongly encourage everyone
who is 18 to reg ister or quil grumbling
about the existing conditions.
JUDY KATHRYN KROSSE
•011tri9ht Defiance'
To the Editor:
In reading Robert Badham's rtport
from Sacramento, I was struck by the
assemblyman's use of the following
phrase: " ... oulright defiance of federa l
regulations will be needed. •. "
ls this a constructive or productive
tactic to present in a letter addressed
to his constituents? Does it express
responsible leadership? Does the 1tate·
ment imply or condone violence or ov-
verthrow of the government? How would
Jaw and order be affected if our
representatives attacked all problems
with this philosophy?
At the very least, 1 would suggest
that ?-.fr. Badham retract such a fruitless
and antagonistic suggestion. Surely, a1
an elected official, he should be com·
milled to v.·orking within the system
of government which the taxpayers sup-
JlO•l MARY W. MILLER
!Uent Enters
To the Editor :
Don't fee l thrifty becaust you r kid
quit eating meat.
"Do you eat meat?" "Uh -no, 1
eat only fr uit and vegetables.'' That
seems to be the trend among the wary,
young un·hip Junior Flip generation. you
know -the kids who say they want
to be: different, non-conformists. do their
own thing; but they all tend to go
along with the group. And I believe
it is a Communist plot.
Long hair everywhere, drugs. passive.
w.Hhdr<1wn .and spaced out, vegetable
diet, Zen. Buddha, meditation, rice,
Peace Brother, love - I've heard it
a thousand times.
OUR COUNTRY wa~ settled by
courageous and active people. This type
is naturally a meat.consuming race. The
servile and down.trodden races in the
Orient and elsev.·here are not meat
eaters. Where a race of meat eate rs
is enrounlered. there. \\'ill be found ag-
g_rcssive and efficient enterprise in every
field. from home management to national
government.
This n1od hippie trend 1sn·1 cute . mom
il's a heavy trip and a bummer ai
that. The \Vhole lhing is getting too
far out. Can you dig it?
S. G. UNDINE
----iWWW-
Wednesday, March 24, 1971
The cditorit1 I pogt of thf! D(lil11
Pilot $eek$ to inform and slim-
tLlate rtt'lders b11 prestnting this
newspaper's opl riions and com-
me11tar11 on topics of 1nlert$t
aud significance, by providing a
forum for tilt t.rprtssion of
our rradl'rs· opinions, and by
prl!Sf'Jltino rile dive1·s~w
poinls of informed ob$ervf'rs
a11tl spokesn1e11 on topict of the
da y.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
J
.. .
.. • . . • .
..
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.. :· .·
. • . .
. . • . . • . .
. . .
• • • • ..
IJ PILOT-ADVERTISER N
I I -• _./
END-OF-MONTH
Wtd11esday, Mo1tth 24, l 9n N DAILY "LOT J 1
NEWPORT BEACH
FASHION ISLAND
STORE HOURS
MON.-FRI. 10·9z30
TUES.•WED.·THURS. 10·9
SAT. 10·6
SUN. 12·5
MEN'S SWEATER CLEARANCE TOP-SELLING EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS ON
Wide selection of vests. pullovers and cardigans. MEN'S TOWNCRAFT SUITS
DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTIONS FROM OUR STOCK ALBUMS GROU' I OROU' II OROU, Ill
GROUP I GROUP 11 LaNlt Stylln1 Towncr•ft Ci'u• Expertly T•llorM
Fino F••rlc• f'•thlon '• rk• Howat Cut• 4.88 5.88 '39 549 .NOW 559 CLOSI 10 TOU, Ctrpentert ; PAl111Dlll FAMILY: Orl1. $75 •........ MOW Orl1. $7$. ........ NOW Orl1. $90 ....
OSMOND llOTHllS: PARANOID, 11eck S1bb1th.
BOYS SWEATER BOYS SPORT SHIRTS 2.86
CREATIVE KNITTING KITS TEXTURIZED POL VESTER
CLEARANCE REG. 3.67 NOW PIECE GOODS Fashion Right Colors. Complete with in· Long or short sleeve plaids & solids, &
Large selection or colors & sizes in lllDGI OVll TIOUILID WATl!IS; PIA.IL. Jenit structions.
many styles. regular & button-down. Joplin; Al~IAS, S1nt1ne; GOLDIN llSCUITS, Co-ordinated plaids and solids. 45" wide.
1.88 6.88 ORIGINALLY
125-188
Three 009 Ni9ht; LOVI S10lY. Sound Tri ck; ORIGINALLY
3.44YD.
ORIG. $2.44-3.88
$188-288 $1.99·$2.88 LOYI S101Y, And y Wilti1 rn~; STONEY' IND, !11-$3.98 NOW btrt Slrei11nd. NOW SWEATER AFGANS NOW
3.86 REG . $4.49 NOW 4 PLY GIRLS DRESS BOYS -3 H.P. MINI CYCLES POLYESTER TIRES CLEARANCE DRESS-UP JEANS TAPE AND Pinto Demonstrators. 33 mo. guarantee. Black wall 650x13, Our Golden J\lany styl es to choose from -at great Penn-prest fabrics . Special purchases. RECORD SPECIALS 995x l4, 560x15. Sii.es 8·18, slim & regular. savings.
GROUP I GROUP II
.88 ,. 2" 3" •• 5"
MEN'S DEPT.
MENS DRESS SHIRTS
M•ny styles In long or 2 8 8
short 1IMve ..................... Orig. 5.00~7.tl NOW •
MENS BETTER SPORT SHIRTS
Woven incl knit 1tyle1. Broken 3 88 6 88
,;,.,_ ..... O•lg. S.00·7.H NOW • • •
TERRY BATH WRAP
With matching Kutt1.
LINEN LOOK SLACKS
fin• qu•lity 1l1ck1 with •
. Orig. 2.tl
luxury look. . .. . .. Orig. 20.00
MEN'S LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS
Poplin or nylon-tpecial
purchalL S & M only ---·-···· .....
MEN'S CASUAL SLACKS
A wide variety NducH from
eur own 1t9Ck. . . ............... .
MEN'S LEATHER JACKETS
Short style, brown only.
Smooth leather ............ Orig. 50.00
MOD WOODGRAIN SLACKS
Flare leg1. 30 to i•
waists. ............................ . ... Orig. 7.fl
. MEN'S SPORT COATS v .. r •round weights.
4' plH•• only ................. Orig. ~9.95
NOW 1.22
NOW 12.88
3.99
1.88
~
NOW 29.88
NOW 5.88
NOW 29.88
WOMEN'S DEPT.
SUEDE LOOK VESTS
Po,ul•r r:olor._..n• 5 88
11:.e fits all. .... . ....... Orlt · 12.11 NOW •
WOMEN 'S HANDBAGS
A•10f'ted color• In l•t"t 3 88 4 88 •lyloL .... . O•lg. S.00 ... 00 NOW o • o
WIG LUSTER
Addi IHe end Miine
to you r wig •.
JEWELRY CLEANUP
..• Orig. 1.47 NOW 088
choo1e from pln1, n1ckl1c11 & 1 44•2 44 1.1rrln91. . .. Orig. 2.00-J.OO NOW • •
WINTERWEIGHT SLEEPWEAR
Assorted 1tyl11. 1 88 3 88
""'"'"' ..... olO<k. . • • •
WOMEN'S HOSIERY
~:;y ~.~.I-~ .. ~~ ~~~~~........ ... . ............... 3/1.00
WOMEN'S SLIPS
full & half 1lip1. ·77 1 88 ... k•• .1.... .. . • ••
WOMEN'S BRAS
AoN•lod oty!H & <Oi"'L Not oil 1 88•3 88 1il1s. . . Orig. J.oo-s.oo NOW • •
ACRYLIC PLAID ANKLE PANTS
F11hlon colors, m•chln1 3 33
wuhoblo. .. .. •
STRETCH DENIM JEANS
For work or pl1y. 3 88
11.1d11t price. Orig. J.00 HOW •
100'!. POLYESTER ANKLE PANTS
5tr•lght leg 1tylin9. 8 88
Smell 1ir11 only. Orig. 10.00 NOW •
WHIP CREAM BLOUSES
100% d•cron polyu t•r. 3 88
Whit• enly. . . Ori1. J.00 NOW •
SOLIO PASTEL BLOUSES
With bow-4••Y 3 88 cer• tebrlc1. . . Orig. 6.00 NOW •
PRINT WHIP CREAM BLOUSES
With bow-100% lllllocron 4 88 polye1tor. • Orlt. l .OI NOW •
MATERNITY WEAR CLEARANCE
~':.:."' •Iou-I onklo 2.88• 12.88
CORDUROY PANT SETS
With print blou••· 9 88
''"k & purplL ... . Orig. 24.00 NOW •
NYLON PANT SETS
Stf'iped to,_.olld pants. 9 00 Special purcheM. •
WOMEN'S SUITS
45 RPM Records . , .... , , . , , .. , .. IOc ORIGINALLY
$129°
0 1600
250 299
4·Tr•ck Tapes , , •.• , , , ••. , .... 99c $1S9.00 + exch. and TO 8-Track T•pe.1 ....... , ••.. , . , . $2.99 NOW fed. t•x Stereo Albums ....
, WOMENS CASUAL JACKETS
Sollcll & 1trlpt1a-w11h1bl1
fabrics. ···-··· Orl9. 6.0M.00 NOW 4088•6088
WOMEN'S UNIFORM CLEANUP
M1ny 1tyl11 to chooa• from,
ll:edur:M from our stock, ...... . 4.88· 10.88
WOMEN'S DRESSES
All reducM from our •tock
for wvlng• to you ..... 5.88-12.88
ALL-WEATHER COATS
Wot-look vinyl. 14,88 Sm•rt & •tyll•h. ............ Orig, 21.00 NOW
SHOE DEPT.
CHILDREN'S KIL TIE SLIP-ON
All le•ther uppers,
composition •ole .. ... Orig. 7.H
BOY'S STRAP OXFORDS
Drui•UP •tylo •t a play shoe p.-lco •.
BOYS SLIP-ON BROWN BOOT
All·INthor Upper•;
dur•W• •ota. ...... . ........ Orl1. I.ff
WOMEN'S MEDIUM HEEL STRAP
NOW 3.88
1.88
NOW 6.88
Popul•r •tylln1, 4 88 cushion llnln9 ..................... Orif, 1-" NOW •
MEN'S BROWN OXFORDS .
Popul•r ll•ml-boot style, 9 88 long-woarlng solo. ... .. . .... Orlt. 12.ff NOW •
FAMILY SLIPPERS
Men'•. womon'•, childron's.
Not •II •lie•. ........ Orig. s.H NOW 1.88
BOY'S DEPT.
BOY'S PAJAMAS
Flannels & knits In a l•rt•
variety. . . Orig. 2.49·3.SO NOW 1.88•2.88
BOY'S DRESS SLACKS
luy now for E•1ter.
Ollvo, bl•ck, n•vy •.
BOY'S FLARE LEG JEANS
Tho look of todoy-
llutton•front. Spoci•I purch•so ....... .
BOY'S SPECIAL SWEATSHIRTS
NOW 3.99
3.50
~:;~ ~r~~~rta::~,~~· W·•··· ..................... -·-··· .• 2 / 3.00
. . . . . ' . ' ' . . $1.49 12Sx14 21.00 88Sx14 2S.OO
L.___T_OY_DE_PT_._~'~' _B_ED_Dl_NG_DE_PT_.__,I
EASY CURL VANITY
H•lni•tt•r for tlrl•
by Kenner ...... . ............. Orig. 1.r1
PLAY AND SHOW
'rojac:tor by K•nner-
5ff & hHr. . . Orig. 13.tt
MATTEL HOT WHEELS
NOW 7.88
NOW 10.99
M•ny popular modols.
All •t•• Ilk• 'em .. Orlf .. 77 NOW .59
MR. REMBRANDT
'>raw• thouwnd1 of
.. eslgn._.utom•tlcally.
STAR SEEKER
Pro1rammocl sp•ce vehicle
by Mattel.. . Orlf . 7.11
SMALL TOY CLEARANCE
1.8°
NOW 3.88
BEAUTIFUL KING BEDSPREADS
Wost•rn flowtr. 49 88 100 % cotton. ... ......... Orl1. 10.00 HOW •
ASCOT PLAID
Twin beclspr••d.
W••h•blo. Orig. 20.00 NOW 17.88
FASHION MANOR
2-JllKo t•nk cover •et.
Top •nd bottom. . Orig. 4.tt NOW 3.88
EARLY AMERICAN ANO FRENCH STYLE
Miiano 1Md1prHd•. 44" 88 Full si10. . Orig. 60.00 NOW •
BONOEO ACRYLIC PIECE GOODS
Sprlng·Summor plolds.
54" wld• •................... Orl9. l .tl HOW , •. 1.88
m m O
066 I DRAPERY DEPT. I
SPORTING GOODS I L..Tl-ER-C-UR-TA-IN-C-LE_A_N·U_P ____ __.
Toa•tors, pl•nes, Or.
& nur•e kit1. ... . ........................... .
L..---------------~ Fruhon up your homo for Sprint. 1 18
24" to 36" len1th1. . .. .. .... ... .. .. NOW 111r. •
BOWLING BALLS
Tornado. V•r. wts.
3 only . . . .. .... Orig. 12.tl
FOREMOST SPINNING ROD
NOW 7.88
~~~.~J.~~-~~.1.•• ................................ HOW .99
BYRON NELSON REGISTERED CLUBS
StMI •haft. 79 88 . Odg .... n NOW •
MACGREGOR MASTER
J•ck Nlcklau1 ••t
Aluminum shaft. Orig. 139.91
BETTY JAMESON SET
Alum. •h•ft.
. Orig. 10t.tt
NOW 109.88
NOW 85.88
BYRON NELSON REGISTERED SET
Alum. 1n•rr. Od1. 129.tl NOW 1 04.88
NOVELTY BAR GLASSWARE
S•loon or cec•-col• do•lgn.
S•t of I cool era. ................... Orl9. 1 O.SO NOW 7.88
IRONSTONE DINNERWARE
Tr•dltlonol do•lgn, 21 88 S•rvlce for I. .................. Ori1. 2t.tl NOW •
ELECTRONICS DEPT. I
3 PIECE STEREO
Component•. SO w•tt•
peak power. . . . Orig. 2tt.OO
CONSOLE STEREO
with rHI to r"I t•pe
dock. . . Orig. 4tt.OO
NOW 229.00
NOW 288.00
SIDE BY SIDE REFRIGERATOR
BOY'S & GIRL'S SKI PANTS
Orl9. 10.11
MEN'S & LADIE 'S SKI PANTS
24 cubic ffft 499 00
6 88 Auto. lco mak•r ... Orig. St9.9S NOW •
NOW • AM/FM CLOCK RADIO
M•ple cabinet.
.. Orlf. lt.tl·M.tt NOW 8.88• 13.88
MEN'S & LADIE'S SKI SWEATERS
. Orig. 11.91·24.tl
KASTINGER SKI BOOTS
NOW 6.88•9088
Orl1. st.ts NOW 39.88
19" PORTABLE B&W TV
Floor rnoclol.
One only •............. Orig. 9t.OO NOW 69.00
GIRL'S DEPT. I .... 0 '1'' ...... TO.DO
L..Gl-RL-'S-C0-0-RD-IN-AT-ES _____ __. I HARDWARE DEPT •
NOW 29.88-42.88 FURNITURE DEPT.
SOFABED -TRADITIONAL -70"
Styling-blue print.
Oddi and 1nd1 from m1tchln1 3 88 5 44
'"""· .... ....... ........ 0 • 0 7" CIRCULAR SAW
GIRL'S SHIRTS I. TOPS
Whlto & '°lid <olo". AIM ol•I.... 1 88 3 88 knlt1. Orl9, 4.00-5.0G NOW • • •
SKIRT I. VEST SETS
Acrylic•, vlnylt. & moro .
S.v• •It now. Orl9. 4.00·9.00
GIRL'S JEAN VALUE
F•movs Wran9ler@ •tylo.
A1tortM strlpe1. . -·· Ori1. S.00
GIRL'S ACCESSORY CLEANUP
Slips, tlovu, purN&, ltows,
•II reduced for you •..
NOW 4.88
NOW 3.50
.44·1.88
3-PC. GIRL'S SLEEPWEAR
,olyMffr & cotton ''*""'· Ll1htwel9ht •tyl ..... PKl•I ....... . ·-....... 2.44
I amp. 1 'f, H.P.
l imit.cl
1.8 AMP SABRE SAW
3000 •,4" stroko.
Limit.cl .
3/8" ORILL 3 AMP
1000 RPM
Ne lo•d 1poed.
STEER HORN LIGHTS
G•nulne le•thor .
~
1 only. . Orig. 79.IH)
FIVE LIGHT WAGON WHEEL
Cop,.r finish.
Limited. .... .. Orl9, 49.00
4 LIGHT ANTIQUE CAST BRASS
Poll1hM •ut prl•m•.
Limit.ct. . ... ·"···· ......... Orl1. 29.tl
16.99
8.99
7.99
NOW 39.00
NOW 34.99
NOW 19.98
.____l_NF_AN_TS_DE_PT_. --Jj L--1 _C_AM_E_RA_DE_PT_. ___,
DOUBLE DROPSIDE CRIBS
All h•rdwDCMI <•ntlructlClfl.
Whlto I ruplo. •. ... Orij. 17.tl
DRESSERS & CHESTS
All hardwood con•trwc:tlon.
S only-whltL .. ....... Orl9. IS.ti
INFANTS & TODDLER TOPS
NOW 19.88
NOW 39.88
HOME MOVIE OUTFIT
Por Super I movlM. 'roj.. c•mora a ll1ht. Orig. lit.ts NOW 99.88
BELL & HOWELL SOUND OUTFIT
lvorythl~ for Mund movlu . Super I 377 00
camor• I proJMtOf'. -Orig. IJH.tS NOW •
TIFFEN SER. I FILTERS
Doublo ti11 • ···-·· .• Orlf. 2lt.OO HOW 199.00
MAN 'S LOUNGE CHAIR
Rev. <u•hlon"
Ilk. Vinyl .. . Orl1 '1.00
HARDWOOD WALNUT CHEST
''••tic top.
Orlt . lt,00
3-DRAWER BACHELOR CHEST
Pla•tlc top.
NOW 58.00
NOW 79.00
NOW 69.00 . Orl9. 79.00
2-DRAWER MEDITERRANEAN STYLE
Night •tend. . ....... Orlf. IS.DO NOW 59.00
MEDITERRANEAN STYLE DOOR
Commode. 78 00
WMCI to,. ···-··-.. ········ Orl1o 19.00 NOW •
AUTO CENTER I
REPLACEMENT OIL FILTERS ,., ,.,,., .
Chevys while they 1 .. t .•.
12 VOLT CAR BATTERIES
40 month gu•r•nt ...
For mo•t Am•rlc•n <•r1. , ·~
POPULAR 4 TRACK TAPES .,, "•l'M .,.,., ..
L•tftt numffr1 •peclal
1.49
18.88
l ach.llnte & Tai'
.99
.. Orlt-J O.ff46.00 NOW • • • Lont & short ''""• knit. ltrlp9s & tolld" Orif, 1..39•2.00 NOW .99 Skyllght ., IS.
NOW 3.88
BONELLI WOODS BIKE
4.SCC c•mJl9f' •,o<l•I •Ith traU
.,,Mkot. , .. -........... • Ori,. 32'.H NOW 299.00 I T"o I )•p<. •lyloL doublo knit. 19 88 26 88 ·L------------"-------' ,
\
I
I •
I ,, OAILV 'ILOT WtdnfldtY, Mtrt;h 24, l97l.
Attitude Che~kers
Neiv 'ZZf!OMM ' Program A ids Dro p-ou ts
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ..,_. ~Ir '°Hit II•"
8':lylng il.$ ~.,!ring title,
''ZZOOMMt.-t" a ¥notlvational
program. beln& tried at
McNally Continuation School
e•1cts q u i e t con~ntratlon
from (ormer school dropouts.
Newport-Mesa Unified
·School District's Hot.Jdea fund
ls providing $1.600 to purchase:
inspirational materials ped..
died by Success Motivation
Jnstitute of Waco. Texas.
~ cour5e work, frequently
\lied by industry to motivate
salesmen, has met vdth suc-
cus in several schools acf'OM
the country . Its application
at McNally is the first use
of the materials in Orange
County schools. Mfl. Laurel
Reilz said. She is a represen--
lative of the firm offering
the materials.
Carole Castal d o. con-
tinuation school teacher, said
with only five sessions of 60,
~mpleted, the dozen random·
ielecled test students have
lhown some slight gahu in
attitude.
Two girls and 10 boys aged
U to 18 were selected fro m
the Continuation school stu·
dent body to test the success
of· the program. A similar
group will not receive the
course .
Both groups \I ere tested at tt-ie outset ol ··zzoor..tMM"'
lw behavior characteristics
and will be tested again to
i&e if the program materials
lritprove self-molivalion in those taking the coorse. . DAILY PILOT Sti ff Plll'le
.;Two pop,Jac paperbacks CHANGING STUDENT ATTITUDES WITH 'ZZOOMMM'
WJtpplement records, tape• and Tucher Carole C•st•ldo Httds McNelly Testing Plen
•lfde materials used in the--------------------! r:lassroom, "P~cho
.(jybemetics" and ''Think and
Qrow Rich." ·
: By June, the students will
have complete d the
coursework and hoperu!ly have
lhlproved their views o f
themselves.
·Jn a recent class. students
assembled quietly to he.ar a
rfJ:orded reading ot mofiva·
tM>nal material projec~ on
tflf: screen.
: "Do you know the difference
between success and failure?"
tbe record droned. "It is a
roatter of altitude . . . you
rnust change your mind to
be JUccessful."
One means of changing
one's mind offered by the
r&cording was the suggestion
ta=: draw up a list of "ob-j~tives for my physical being,
~essions and personal al-
fjjrs." ~fter hearing the sug-
g~tion. students began their
lijJimak ing.
~·You'd be surprised at ho'"'
JttlllY possessions I don't
Wllnl," one said. ~frs. Castaldo urged the
stiiden!J to be honest with
the-Ir Jistr, since no one would
a~ to see them. Their purpose
is: .to remind the studenl.s of
"'~t they want. Repeated
gf4nees al them should spur
Ulem to directing t h e i r
beliavior in ways that will
aia achievement. A tlendance. a •·continual
pr(lblem al continuation
schools." Mrs. Castaldo said,
is one sign of slight im·
provement. One student, who
1nust supfKlrl his femlly. com-
rs. in to make up the
··7,7,()()()~1MM" coursework
\\'l\ton his job connicls with the
regular class hour.
Outside speakers. persons
,.,.!th success stories, also are
lnvJted to !!hare their ex-
pr;riences with the drop-<>uts.
Malibu
Figl1ts Too
Residents of Malibu. v"ho.
hke Newport Beach residents,
ire fighting the Pacific <Aasl
rree\\·ay, \\'ill hold a public
meeting ~1arch 29 to discu~s
the widening of Pacific Coast
Highway in their area
The meeting i,1•ill be held
at 7:30 p.m. in the Santa
Monica Civic Auditorium and
is sponsored by the State
Division of Highways.
P,our alternate plans for
wisfening the highi,1·11y between
thf-Robert E. McClure Tunne l
in $anta Monica lo the Malibu
C;Ojyon, will be discus~ • ..
~
WHAT DID
/,
SHE HEA.R
" i!ETERBOROUGH, England
IAP~ -Every Limf' houM:wlfe
Pi1aty Appleton went ror a
•·alk 1he heard mystery
roota:tepa: behind her but could
lll>e. )Kl one. The ruter she
"'f'QJ:, the fa11t.u the po.Uy
St>u:Qd puriued her.
On Dean's List
Coast College Lauds
70 Ho11or Students
Orange Coart College has
named 70 Students from cities
aloog the Orange Coast to
the fall semester dean's list.
The area students main-
taining pe r rec t straight-A
records are:
From BaJboti: Cindy A.
Svendsen, Jan D. Traphagen
and Judy A. Vincent
From Corona de! Mar: John
H. A D d e r s 0 n. Daisybel E.
Ebert, James T. Goodrich,
Lynn A. Pfannenstiel, Carolyn
L. Prough, Chery l L. Real
and Maxson B. Smith.
From Costa Mesa: Joanne
R. Basebe, Jack H. Behlman,
Robe rt E. Blake, Thomas J.
Callende r. Gary A. Dunn,
Dona ld V. Fregeau Jr.,
Lois J. Fuller, David A.
Ga ffn ey, Johnnie L. Greer,
John W. HerrlJtg, John D.
Hershfeld,
Ledru Heileman, James A.
Hoffman. Grant P. Jones,
Joseph E. Kee, Elke M. Kolb.
John R. Maday, Dennis J.
McMahon, Kakan N. Peterson,
Melissa D. Purcell, Harold D.
Steiniweg. Rose M. Thompson .
~1ichae\ D. Vanderlan. and
Beveraly J. \\'est.
From FountaM V a 11 e y :
Douglas 0. Cowden. Larry E.
Hart. Chrii;tina Rasmussen.
Sharon E. Rich , and Cheryl
L. Soto.
From Hunti ngton Beach: -
James P. Barker, Jana S.
Bradberry, Valerie A. Breton,
Judith F. Ca le, Roberta L.
Cason.
Stephen E. Kankin, Edward
J . De Orio, Stephanie J . Di
Orio, Mark W. Hamilton,
David L. Haielwood,
Anthony H. Luick, Sandra
L. Mallicoat, Patricia J .
Mangels, Robert L. Money,
Aura J. Norton.
Jan E. Pfister, Betty E.
Ross, Beverly J. Stunn and
Phillip L. \\!heeler.
F'rom Newport Beach :
Barbara J. Brockman, Gary
A. Delph. Franklin T .
Deienso, Margaret A. Griffith,
Meriel J. Hunt. Steven R
Lutes, Douglas S. Smith, and
Donna G. Soto.
From Westminster: Dennis
M. Cuff, Carol J. llaines, Joan
M. Maldonado, and Donna b.1.
Ricksecker.
Eartl1 Da y
Marks Start
Of Spring
NE\V YORK (AP) -It was
a seed-planting. Krishna-chan-
ting, kite-flying f r i s b e e -
flinging, bongo-playing, gui-
tar-strumming, pot-smoking
hippie-rapping Central Park
happening.
It was an Earth Day and
the first day cf spring a n d
nearly 3,IXIO persons. mostly
youths in their favorite blue
jeans and second-hand
jackets. turned out Sunday to
tune in lhe season.
Activities at the sunny but
chilly park were sponsored by
the Pro ple for Earth Day.
i,1·hich plans seve ral da ys or
environmental concern this
spring including the principal
Earth Da y on April 22
At the United Nations.
Secretary Gene ral U Thant
rang a pcilce bell contributed
by Japan and delivered a brief
Earth Day address.
"An Earth Day has suddenly
becomf' necessary to remind
us of the fact that our small
planet is perishable," he said.
"At long last• \he concepts
o( Earth Day, of world
patriotism and or the family
of man have come into being.
"f\.1ay there only be peaceful
and cheerful Earth Dayi; to
come for our beautiful
spaceship carlh as ii ccnlinurs
lo spin and C'1rcle in frigid
space \l'ilh i!s warm and
fragile cargo or animalr hre:·
Thant said.
service at
your fingertips
seventy-ann at
~~~~
$196 SALE llll. Pit
• Lace-to-toe style coll on uppen
•Long-life PVC•olcs, heels
•All sizes; white or black
UMrT: 1 pn. ,_cu'*--
•Lengthens, thickeDS
• Aaorted lhadet
UMIT: 2 ,.,., .. ~,.,
COLORRIL
PUICRIAll
SALE24<
• Tnnate11e11!1il1
• A'90rtcd eol"or1
UMIT:lperruat-
WHOPPERS®
MALTED BALLS
SALE53c
· • ~ 11.vory milk btlls
•El pour, EZ ato1'9
UMrT: 4 '-ontpwaNt......-
• 6 btgl "With lies
• Lakprool plu1ic
UMlr: 4 .... ,_.cu.t_.
I" duperation she went to
a aptelaJhit ""ho dlacovered
"h11 Wll v•rona -1he wa.o;
.,.raring hPr hc:11rln,g aid the
•rona w1y rou!MI and h•d
bttn U1tenJng lQ her own
he11rtbe1L
MOO HAMOR tltVD. /COSTA MESA C114) M0-1100 GRANT PLAZA •
Sim plfai aitsl c.1-1-1q11
118t• nl1t1i lllonrpasH ..... 111, u111Hta•I•
~ualltyl Wist ... thrifty 'npor 1hopptrs' will hurry
In now for these -11111-1 '"'pl
WHISPllY..t.lliHT
ITAUAll-STlll SAIDALS
SALE 96< PR.
! • Casuw in two-bad orT..irap
•Richly crafted ; aoft cu!hion insole
• Brownoriowhite;size~Sto 10
UMIT: 1 ~,.. cultofMr"
SALE 86' "...i.
• Makel Pr 10ft
• Makea it loftly
UMrf: 2 ,...utomw
sM001H FITTllG
PAmHOSE
SALE 68'.rci. S1
•Run-resistant meelt
• Fuhioa a111de:1;oeon4 ~i:u: lits all
UMrf: 1 pn. pwa.i•ton-
KllTTlll(i
WORSTED
86
( ..oz
SAii sn11
• 4-fily 'ffrgin. wool
•No re.wind: aew colon
UMn":4...,.,.rcuatomer
MOD ART
Im PILLOWS
SAii $196
-~ l"'!J-!" •21 127"cutlim UMrr:i,...........,
I a.GAL STAllllSS STm. #
AQVUIUM STAITll m
SALE ~.1 0 ~.94
• Pump. filter,
heater
GtAm 100 coun i I
ECOIOMY EllYEl.OPES
SALE28' eox
IO"nFLOl 11
COAnD FRY PAI .
SALE s141 ·
20.CiALLOll
TRASH CAii
SALE $137
• Rustproofplutic
• Lock~p tovtn
UMIT:l,_a.i.._.
WASHAILE VllYL
WllDOW SHADES
SA1188C
• 36 112• lize
•Cut to fit window
UMlf:4,..twlu:tt•
IROOKHURST AT ADAMS • HUNTINGTON BEACH
-,
'
' I
I
' ,,
I
I
5 PILOT-ADVERTISER N WtdlM!~a)', Mlr(h 24, 1~71 Wtdnt!d!)', Mvch 24, 1•71 H DAILY PJLOT JS
~ndustrial Puhlishjng Opens New Opportunity Ho·ri on
-Jly JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY the emotional strtnglh to H· Engllab should receive slronj physical 1nd b Io Io g I ca I workshops. cenl reported earnings or communicatloiu dlrtclorl of national Assoc!latlon o(
Dtar Joyce : I'm bttereated plain, COllfront and ptrau.ade 1c1dem!c e m p b 1 1 I 1 . A scieoct1 ind poll tic al aclmct. E A R N I N Gs ADV ANC& $10,000 or more. S.laries an organlzatlon, occuionally ness Communlcato'rs,
,_ht uplartac lnduJtital edJllna. tbase balding opposlna: vlt1'S. knowledie of how business Typtn1 ls very helpful. The MENT. A 1910 survey $bowed reported might be low because at the vlce-presldenUal level. Braewlc.k Clrcle, Akron,
-F. J. ~f .. h.llerlon, Calli. EDUCATION. lt'1 not man-operatea ls es se n Ii a I best way ta learn industrial lhal u1ar1es of bualness com· of the predominance or the FOR FORMAnON, Readers «313.
Here's the story , straight datory to hold a degree In (economics, marketing and editing ls on the job, starting munlcaton are good to small organitatlons In this wltb specific questJons con-Send career topic sug-
from the 1 n tern at i 0 n a I )oumaUsm, but 1ome u-history ). Basic knowledge in as an a!!lstant or associah: moderate. Of 800 respondents, survey. Advancement i s cemin& a career in industrial gestlons to Joyce LaJn Ken·
Aasoclatlon of Bwiness Com-perience in wrltln1 and many other lields is desirable, editor. tABC or fer s op. nearly 51 percent reporttd usually to a larger publication editing-who enc~ a stamp-nedy at this newspaper. Sorry,
municators (IABC ): publlcation · p~ucUon i 1 including art Philosopby, portunJtle1 for professional earnings of between $1~20.000 and blghu earnings, or to ed. sel!-addrts!ed return enve-no personal replles I re
NEW Pl\O~ON. Com· neceuary. Journalism and psychology, sociology, math, growth through seminars and 1nnually; and nearly 70 per-public relations director (or lope -may write to : Inter-possible. pany1ndorga niz 1t ion·'-~~-'-~~~~~~~:....:.~--='--~~-"-~~~.:....~~~.:....~~~~~~~-'--~~~...:...~;:__~;:__~~~~~~~~~-'-"-'--~-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'."J)Onsoffii publications began
-:,to mu.sbr901ll during World
lYa'r 11. Reasons: the need
~~ keep worker spirits high
/
:r and war output up. and to
, atay In touch with e :1 •
~employees ,way serving their
.•'ceuntry.
~ Today, about 10,000 publica·
'.~tions are directed to a variety
·of audiences, with readership ., , ..... _____ ...,
Caree r
Cor n e r
totaling tens of millions. These
gpomored pubi l·cations
generally grow in size and
number as business expands.
Right now, industrial editing
jobs are not easy to find
because public relatioM ac-
tivities, including publications,
are often among the first •
casualties of a recession.
READERSHIP Industrial
editing. in general, includes
the full range of activities
involved in publishing a
mags.tine, newspaper fl r
newsletter for distribution to
a particular audience
.usociated with an organiza·
tlon. The most common ex·
ample is 1 publication issued
to employees of an indus1rial
firm, hence the term "in-
dustrial editing." But this
ctreer field also embraces
those wbo publiab materiaJ for
olber groups: staffs of
hospitals, membe rs of pro-
fenional or trade as.wciations,
spomors or charities, alumni
of sdlool, civilian employees
and· servicemen in govern-
ment units, as well as
customers, dealers, retirees or
stockholders (If commercial
conctrns.
THE JOB. Men and women
(this is an especially good
field for women) Industrial
editors perform a wide range
of fUnctionB in connection with
the pubUcaUons. These may
include selectlng subjects, in-
t e r Yi e wing, writing,
pbOtograpbJng, designing and
laying out the pages, ordering
art and supervising t he
engnvlog, printing a n d
distribuUon. On some larger
publlc1Uons, these functions
may be uslgned to spechillsts
er to professionaJs outside tbe
erganitaUon, but it is more
common tor the editor to do
them Ill. One of the editor's
blq:est responsibilities i s
managing tbe publication's
budi•I.
ADDmONAL DUTIES. In
&Oriie jobs, the industrial
editor Is also accountable for:
bulletin boards, letters to
employees' homes, a phone
information program, closed
circUit TV, annual reporl.5,
movies, plant visi ts, paycheck
1tuffen, suggestion system,
direct mall advertising pieces,
academic emphasis. A
sales aid!, reprints o f
speeches and other com·
municatlon wignments.
PERSONAL QUALIF1CA·
TJONS. You'll need :
the ability to expre11
tboachll In logical order
and lnttlatlve. Resilience -
frustration is an occupational
hazard for ere.alive attempts
art frequently t h w a r t e d .
bte(rlty -although an editor
is responsible for promoting
the best interests of the
employer organization, h e
must protect the cred!bill~y
"' bis publication to maintain
Ila efiecUveness. Cowa1e -
Marines Sue
Irvine Co.
A ~farlne C-Orps s t n f I
aergeant and his wife have
wed the Irvine C-Ompany for
$100 000 in an Orange County su~rior Court lawsuit charg·
mg the flrrn with negligence
leading to I.be drowning death
of their five-year-old son. '
Fletcher A. Robinson 111
drowned Jn the Wherry Hou.s-
q Reservoir, near the El Toro
Marine C-Orps A1r Station OD
March 17, 19'/u, shortly an.(r
be aod his brother crawled
tinder a fence JUrroundlng the
Ilk•. Sgt. Fletcher A. Robinson
Jr. blames the firm for the
tragedy and alleges that it
failed to take adequate
Rfe<:autlons to p r e v e 11 t
tffspas&\ng at the reservoir.
THE BEST
~1'••4•nllip petl• P''"' "'•~·
........ i1 011• ,f th• world'• 11101t
'ffl11l1r ~•111lc 1trlp1. ~••d It
:"'•fly la ffri• DAILY r1LOT.
•Y GUJID
r.olorful ISsorted
ldorJbl1 Bunnies
in various fK)sitions.
Ftvestytn.
llGll
1.98
10.C NllSHIY'S
Rally Bar
lhe llrt: roll M!fed
with real milk choeo·
late. 111. l fir 15c
SHIH
Hair Brushes
100% J11J•lrUlln."""1!d 1 69 p:i(l(ll« 1tyle1 tor rm lrw:I
WM!e!I. Vil!'ioas colDrs. Eac-•
MITACMI
Hair Dryer
Streamline hal'ld type •••
•let. powerftl, bree1e 14 95 llC!lon. Cool or hot 1ir. ,
#HD511111
1/2 Gallon LIQUOR
Count Y~a 11 1111 ..
!,!D A•~IAI 6.99
Davenport II c.1~.
~!r 01'!,.lAI 6.99
MacKinnon' s ,. '~'" ~~10TC~~ 111 8.88
Canadian Reserve 11 111111
WHISKY • II ... 8 99
II PrMf II(. l.U •
Foster Creek 11 1,1111 ~!~.~~011 •• , 111 7 .99
6 oz. SIZE
"Scope"
MOUTHWASH
AT 2~$1
Place To Shopl
Jelly Bini Eggs LUDIN'S CHOCOLATES
l lACH'S
~orted f!'llil flavors. for tile entire C lender e111:·shaped jelli!s witfl as· 39 East!r Bunny ligures in solid a/Id llo!lcw milk
cllocolat1 attrietJvely dtrorated. Jndi>/idually
family to tnjoy. t l~.11( ·
... c•·s Fruit & Nut EGG
LUDIN'S -Highly ll)list.ed, Mth 35c white marthmalltlw cent~. Assorted
Ea!l:er ct1lors. 11 IL hf
CLAl•Ol
"Kindness"
J IL Miit Acttnlfj C. ..
lllti1Hr for your eledrie
hl!rsetter. Adds body & stliM
~n .. 1·1 E"""" t... 1')0'rhair. 119
• Prlt11J1 •
"Feminique"
N IZ. fmlllH ttnfnt
D11ll1r11t -troose spr1w
or powder ht le111>n Twist.
Rtg11lar, Gr Wild ~.
Sat·••'s E"'Jll•r l•• Prkt 1.11 • -'Laredo' Cigarette ••r
Hiah QAlity ci1ntm can be
made QtJiekly with an easy lo 1 69 11Se ~bioe. t.nster ill(lud·
td. 11&-1JI •
•lfl n Cnilt1r l q. lk 87° ·-
SAVE llOllEY llOW
WHILE PRICES ARE LOW
Old Crow s ... 1,~s ,. "'~' ~!~IB0.?11u1 11.99
Smirnoff 11 ei11 ..
~,!DK~11n 10.49
Wolfschmldt
VODKA
ff ""I
l-l c111t1
8.99
"Binaca"
CDLDEN BRE.1111
FRESHENER
I
Just 3 "nn!~" and JOlll'
bi ea th feels MI so fresh.
11z. °"-' Ju. sinr
llf. lk ·~ 1.11 59c ggc
FAMILY SIZE
.Tide XK
DITTRGENT
lOor. UQUID
CARNATION .
"Slender"
"FIRI-111NG" Bakeware
Allel!DI llOl:llM' -c,,stal cu assortment or easy ta elun
tia•inr dishes i11 ••ious shapes
and sim for )'Diii' everr l!M.
• 1~ QL R111d C11se11l1/
KDll COYer
• l Yz QL Onl Cassmle/
A1 Gra ll• Corer e • 5r9" D11p Lt al Disl • r s,,.,. Ca kt Disl
•
• 1112*" UtllilJ B1ki•E
I~ Di112Qt.
~ YDUR aec CHOICE EiC!
• Ci11t I.Iii h t {Psl 113)
• r' Pl1 P11(P1l 1I II)
MAX FACTOR CrHM
'Tried & True' Samuel E; Webster 11 1.1111 ~ISKE! 7" 6.99 . #,
Sift Clltr ftr JllT '•Ir ... l1rk .. ,s.
~ Ki~ Geo2ie IV ,. can .. ~rn.~T 1~11 " 10.99
Spec;,/.,..ii;.,..,
llYI I ietltle COIOf I.I", lelYIS your
h11r ~~in1n1 tnd
1!/ve. CoverS rr1~
littler too
C11tlc1 11 Ctltn 2.251
12 oz. Gllltltt
Soft & Ori ..... ~ DEODORANT ~ SCHiid
1.19
141> or. SIZE OF
"J s" ergen LOTION
W/DISPINS!R
For Dry, Chapped H11ds.
7 oz. SIZE OF
'Twice As Nice'
SHAMPOO
ShampOD & Conditioner
In One!
CAT FOOD
All Fln orsl
OllTE "Fashionique" · , SHAG I ·
CARPET TILES
l1urlt11 lle1p-pi11ll1~1t
I• 111'L ttlars! ~. ~
Install yo111sel! •.• alld ST!f! on higl'I Ind SI• ~
insl1llltioD cosls. Buiit·in, high-1lx12"S.,lrll'"
dtnsily, foam ru~ cushiorl bac.k 3 69 •ith self &dlleswe llondmr. 100~
nylon lace !or longer war.
Sn -ti's Emyllay ln Prle1 3.!I • •
Cost C~art for Roo11 Siles
Sl!E DF!DDM SQUll!S n lCE
5x6' Room • 31 • 18.45
9112' ROOlll • 108. 66.32
12x15' Room • 180. 110.70
15x20' Room • DI • 184.50
om112.12" Carpet Tiles ~:::;~
Grut for ki!chen, batlt. deL Built· ltw Pric12tc
in foam rabbet back. Stain resistant .
-Colo< last I°' spills pick 1111. "::.:." ~
wash off, put bact! Full range of -:r: -.Lr'""•W.
~~ 4:1.00
ozin Spray Adhesive
Cortvenieri!, fool prvof way 3 49 I~ pvt carpet Wes dowrn.
23M! IZ, e
ArfilimPlace To Shopf
MIW,OllT llACll
IOM l..,Jflt, Wnt<MH "Ill•
HUNTIMOTOM llACH
S"1~1fdlll •nf llllntlr
HUMTIMOTOM ll"ACN
Al&lll'll .... I '"""11"1
0'1•tAM
to10 ,M
7DUS
A Wiit
I
• .
18 D.t.ll Y PILDT Wtdnr~, Marth 24, 1971 Wtdntsday, March 24, 1971 .. PILOT-ADVERTISER ~·G
UC Irvine Names Orange Co~st's Deans List Scholars ::
( . . •
Ac1demlc deans 1t UC Orchid Ave. 17341 ·Orey Lane: Pamela 1611 Verano Place; Nancy Eveli'n Mallinger, Mt Summit retis Dr.Ive, and M 1 r k MarUn Way; Dlane Jean William LOrence Uzgali!, 1701
Irvine have n1med students From uaatlngtoa Bt&cb: Lynn Myer, 17292 Brenda Hanks Connon, 1511 Verano Drive; MerediJ,h, 24102 Adonla St. Nugent, 230.1 Eastbluff Dr.; Golde Rain Road.
from cities alon.& the Or1n1e Robert Glennon Barnes, Jr., Lane; PlaC1!; Carol Beth 'Goorevltch, Nancy Allison Mies, 969 From Newport Be.ac .. : Craig Thomas William Ptay, 22Gl From South L 11 u • •
Coast to the honor roll fDr 4002 Morning Star DfiYe; Rodger Loren Nelson, 17101 4171 Brisbane Way; Elouise Skyline Drive ; Donald Wilbu r Merrill Adlms, 1400 Marlne.ri Vi1ta ~Iuerta; Catherine Radcllfre ·aowe1
outstandln& sch o 111 tic suunne Maria Bolllgtr, '6&31 SL Andrews Lane: Robert Gametta Grimes, 1524 Verano Otto, 2699 Solano Wa y; Suzan-·Drive; Dare! JOO.n Benvenuti, Margarel A~ Roecker, 506 31511 West St.: Jtmes JoRJ1
achievement during the cur-Canterbury Drive; Kertneth JJernard Pearson 111. 6891 Via Place ; Stephen We sley ne Ca~ling Paulson, 217 21 Linda Isle; J une Lee 36lh Slreet ; Elena Ruth Orlowski, 30671 Marilyn Dd
rent academic year. Arlef!,>ijrady, Jr., 111551 Mari.e l\ngelina Drive: Terrie Diane Griswold, WI Verano Place ; Emerald Bay; Lila James Bleiker. uoo Holly Lane; Schroeder, 1627 Port Abbey and Marce la Rita Paz So~a1
Area students maintaining La~ Robert Fufion Childs, RQberl!j, 17162 Tree haven Lawrence Jeffrey Maltz, 237 Staples, 590 N. Coast Hugh Heiby Bowe Ill, 1807 Place; David Gail Smith, 132 3 North Encino Drive. ' 1
at least an A-minus average 16411 Me rcier Lane; John Lane ; Beryl Elaine Schenk. Verano Place : Robert Wil son Highway ; RDgert Lowman Santiago Drive; Chrl1tlne Via Ithaca; Rjchard Randolph From We1 l ml n 1 l e
are : Patrick Collins, 16.361 Rhone; 10131 stoneyb rook Drive; Gary McDona ld, 19212 Biddle Drive; Sweet, t37 'h Myrtle St ·: Lavonne Coco, 1923 Highland Sogn, 8Sl Domingo Drive; Dee Deborah Jean Babcock, ~
From 81lbo1 I 1 I and : Frank Edward Go Id er, William Tannehill, 173 2 1 Ronald Lee Pot eet, 225 Verano Claudia Irene Wlshnow , 2387 Drive: Manson Thomas, 855 Amigos Meinhardt ROad ; Te rt
Barbara Lynn Gaylord, l14Ya 18761 Gregory Lane; Nancy Avalon Lane: Frances Helene Place; Frederlrk W i I Ii a m Ashantey Y. Zazshiru, 1285 A James Alan Collier, 1411 Way, and Debra Lee Wright, lleene Ballard, 6000 .Ga.rt'
Grand Canal and Bruce Stuart Megna Harper, P.O. Box MS ; Van . Horn, 86151 Hoskins, and Steeby, 2511 Verano Place: San Clemente St, a n d Mariners: Bruce Everson Co1, 83S Seagull Lane, Grove ·Blvd.; C~cUce }
Reynold•, 123 A~thyst Ave. James Michael Ht nning8, .8291 Chery Lynn Watson, 8321 Joseph Bennie Valdez 111. 1624 Roosevelt Lane. 408 King11 Place; Anna Marie From San aemente: Linda Clouse, 5562 Nonna Orf\
Frem C.pl1tr11t10 Be1ch: Atlantic Ave.; J ames ·Kenneth Bryant. Drive. Verano Place, and lt{ary Fl'Gm La1 u11a HW1: Stephen Gilbert, 1908 Irvine Ave.; Elizabeth Bank, zag Montalvo James Douglas Coryell, J•
Waltt!r Russell Allen, 34502 HOffman, 4025 A\addln Drive ;. From lrv>ne : George David Caroline Wood, 17951 Bascom Michael De lano, 25271 Vela11· Patricia Emily Grafston, 2411 and Debra Marie Smith, 371 Loyola Ave.: Slephen MlcU<-
Vla Verde. Valerie Dawn How, 8231 Anderson, 1422 Verano Place; St. quez. 16th St.; Larry Alan Griswold, Camino San Clemente. Gillette. 10441 Ma~t Ave.;'
From Coren• del Mar : Deau ville Drive; Darlene ~tarie Bailt!y, 18751 From Laguna Beach : Ford From Laguna Niguel: Linda 111 Topax St.; From San Juan Capistrano: Brenda Miller Hoffma1
Mary Suza nne Hoyle, 61 51/z Cathy Lynn Jones, 6082 Via Siena: Marsha Ellen Beebe, 420 Myrtle SI .; Davida Helm, 24222 La Naran-Kenneth Quintin Lindahl, Cecile Ruth Rogers, 29361 10042 Green Fem Clr11I•
Jasmlne; Byron Stephens Medford Drive ; Becky Ann Bailey, 303 Verano Place; Christopher Cloud Bradley, 273 jas. Jr., 201 Grand Canal ; Andrea Spotted BuU Way. Gerard Joseph Huerta, ljl
Kilpatrick, 3901 Topside ; Johnstone. Zl l41 Amberwlck Lji.wrence fatark Benveniste, Beverly St.; Jeri Jeanne: From Mission Viejo : Yee-Jeanetle Lingle, 2014 Diana; From Seal Beach: Jeanine Monroe Ave.; Ronald lvi-
Robert David Le sser, MIZ Lane; Benjamin Carr Kept 36 Verano Place; Marguerite Collins, 391 Diamond St.: Hon Jeffry Fong, 2 6 I 7 2 Andtea Lynn Martin, 1607 Kay Legg , 4817 Candelberry Swanstrom, 5111 Harv a r I
Lighthouse Lane : Richard A. peler, 6052 Doyle Drive: Bladen, 4262 Sandburg Way; Kathryn Louise Lambert, 29M Avenida Calidad: Samu e I Mariners Drive: Cy nth I a Ave.; Arnold William r-.1iller, Ave., and John Carl Tangrie~
Lyons, 103 Bayside Place, and Trudie Cassandra li-1 on l e, Chai;.les Thomas Boardman, Alpine Way: Polly Celine Deluce.nna Ingham, 26771 Car· Christine McWhirt, 1712 4765 Candleberry Ave., and 5572 Amador Ave. David Scott Ryan, 2731 Coast1-----------------------'----'---'---------=--------------'------_:_:_:::.__::.__.:.:_::::__::::::.__::::::._::::::::.__:_::__~-
Hlghway.
From Cosb Mesa : Marlene
Winell Baker, 31~ Sharon
·Lane ; Gregory Patrick Beal ,
185 Lexington Lant ; Davi
Lee Dunlap, 478 East 20th
St.; Gregory Michael Fahy ,
3229 Dakota Ave.; Linda Ann
Gen.ls, 2904 Baker St.; Patricia
Jean Hen!IOn, 268 E. 19th St.;
Carol Rhea Hyland, 1072
Salvador St.; Y11onne Anne
lsner. 2749 Lorenzo Ave.;
Laurie Elaine lten, l 2 0
Yorktown Lane ; Jo an n e
Gerald Lee, 2053% Charle St.;
Gregory Paul Mertes, 1917
Maple Avenue; Grant Jen-
nings Munsey, 393 Romona
Way ; Beth Melanie Newman,
1731 Labrador Qrive; Joseph
Oliva, 1977 Corona Lane:
Cbris William Olson, 22111
P."ciric Ave.; Susan Alpha
CA8on, 22111 P•cifit Ave.;
Edward Wallace Ross, 3104
Pierce Ave., and J a mes
Wolford Thrasher, 267 Nassau
Road .
From Dana Polnt: Paula
J ea n ne Sweet, 33 282
Bremerton St.
From Fountain V a I I e y :
Patricia Lynn Beausant, 9371
El Valle Ave.; Jay Richard
Bierkortte, 17958 Cypress SL ;
Eli11abeth Hammer Brown.
17775 Sant.a Fe Circle; Frank
Alan, MacDonald, 1 S 6114
Redwood St.: Teresa Ann
McFarland, 17581 Briarwood
St.: Elaine l.(luise Pasierb,
16613 Lassen St .; Claudia
Lynn Rowlett,. 16714 Mount
Baiter Circle; Karen Lou
Schendel, 8582 Lii Cutia, and
Bonnie Kathleen Stetber, 11515
Trustees OK
Bond Sales
In District
Trustees of the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District
have authorized the Sile of
the last $4.5 million worth
of bonds from the 1969 bond
election .
Ernest Bodnar, spokesman
for Stone and Youngberg. the
district's bond consultant, told
board members that if the
bonds were sold within the
next 60 da ys, they woukl prtlb-
ably be .able to get an in·
terest rate between 5.4 and 5.8
percent.
The sale represe nts the last
nf $16.9 worth of bonds ap-
proved by district vote rs in
1969. A year ago voters were
called upon to approve a hike
In the allowable inte rest rate
(from five to seven percent )
on the remaining $9 million
bonds of the 1969 elec tion.
Half of th:i.t was sold last
summer. and th e last of it
will go on the markcj with
the trustees' approval. Funds
will be used for the dist.rlct's
capital projects.
Sacramento
Trip Set
Sacramento 111 only 18 day5
from Fountain Valley -at
least for 70 eighth graders
in Nieblas Elementary School.
They'll be in the state
capital March 31 on a special
field trip. The group joins the
jet set by flying there.
"The kids are excited
because" they earned their own
money -about $20 per stu-
dent -for the trip," Principal
Don Hendrk:U said.
Through IUCh projects II
a car wuh, paper and bottle
drive, aluminum can col-
lections, candy and cake sales
they totalled nearly Sl,500 for
the..ir Sacramento viJiL
The trip wUI be 1upervlsed
by several teachen an d
parenbi. lt'1 considered a
bonus to t.beir government
1tudiu.
LOCAL
Ne •th•r 11•••P•IM' f•llt \'0111
"'•''• •~•r'f' tl•'I'• •lt•11f wh•f't
9el11t '" 111 th• ~r••+•r Oreftf•
C••tf th•• ttl• DAILY ,llOT.
w<' . 11. Bl~ SALE DAYS
'' MARCH 25 TtlRU APRIL 4; 1971
• ,,,~ ...... ~lb.• . ~ ....... ,, ••.• ·i1,1 ,., ... ~., ..
Heavy duly mot.or oil
In 20 or 30 weight.
For sending packages,
tieing branches,
newspapers, and
many other uses.
,1airL•1
. I . '
48''
Sm>Joth surface pressed
wood chips. A ha ndy
size shelf to use most
anywhere.
39!.
Most outstanding
spring blooming
flower in the
ga rden.4'0fantattic
shades to choose
from tuch a s purple,
deep blues, red1,
peppermint, pinks
a nd' more.
E PORIU
OPEN DAILY 9 A,M, to 9 P.M. .,
SUNDAYS 9 A.M,'to 6 P.M.
Full size · Full length a rms,
first qUa lity, sturdy,
well-braced, strong
::;;.!:'.'"T.';~~it-• we bbing.
This clear plastic sheet
measuring 9' x 12' is jua.t 15
the thing 'to cover rug on~
furniture wherl painti • l
Also •xcellent fO""UJ:• ~ a ~
covering for gorQ<Qe s'-red
items to proteg from du1t
di1d tnofllUfe. ---L •
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TUITlll'
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IRVINE BLVD.
1l4J E,
KATEllA AVE.
WllTMINllTll
LA HAalA
6751
WESTM INISTf.R AVE.
2221 w.
lA HA8RA-8lVD.
aUINA PAii( VAllEY VIEW ST. ROCICflElD
FULLllTON '""· COSTA MISA '" CHAPMAN AVE. E. 11th ST.
• I AKEllSfl[LD e CHATSWORTH • COVINA • ESCONOIOO •GOLETA • GRANADA HILLS • LA CRlSCENf A • LAOERA HEI GHTS • LANCASTER • £.LOS ANGELES • RE SEDA • R1V~RSIOE • SAN lf.RNARDINO
• SAUGUS • SIMI • SPRING VALL£.Y • TARZ.AN A e THOUSAND OAKS e UPLAND •YAN NUVS e VICTOlllVILll • ~ENDA HllGHTI ---
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Costa Mesa Today'• Flnal
N.Y. Stoelu
' voe. M, NO. 71. 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 197 1 TEN CENTS
Creditor·s to Put Lien
Liem are to be placed on cityo(lwned
properly by credllors of the private
operator of the public Cmta f\1esa Golf
and Country Club, it was ronlirmed
today.
The unusual situation is obscured by
a web. of. legal technicalities.
Marshal's deputies closed the facility
Monday, at 5 p.m., locking il up to allow
lnvent'ciry of a~!.$ lhal Earl Atkinson
contracted lo purchase from the city
11 months ago.
~losing Stages
He agreed at that time lo pay $26,000
for golf gear, bar and restaurant equi~
ment. food , sportswear and other mm-
modities before 1igning the contract
agreement.
The sum has never been paid, officials
asserted, though monthly use fees have.
Thus taxpayers 'today are in the un-
comfortable -but, s&y ci ty olfi,c:ials
-temporary situation ol bein5 entangJti;l
and indirectly responsible for A.tkinson'1
financial problems.
Last of S. Viet
Units Exit Laos
SAIGON (U PI) -South Vietnam
withdrew the last or its army from
Uo1 today, leaving only a rearguard
of marines to · keep watch from a hilltop
position on advancing North Vietnamese
tanks and Infantry. Americans began
withdrawing from Khe Sanh and South
Vietnam began fortifying positions near
the border.
The controversial 45-day-0ld incursion
Into Laos to try lo cut the Ho Chi
Minh supply trial was clearly in its
closing stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out six North Viet-
namese tanks today and U.S. Navy
planes trying to destroy a column of
17 a'rrii.o.red vehicle:s and trucks aban-
doned. by the South Vietnamese in their
w:ithdraw•J along Route 9.
.U.S. helicopter pilot lst Lt. Erick
Heintz, 25, of Spobne, Wash., a veteran
of the Laoµan campaian. said ln Khe
Saith · after observing the approacliing
_N~~~tnamese, "the way the C<>m· ~·-.mo•lng tlley'll wdll''top of thll pltce in a week:"
American Spokesmen at Kht Sanb
irredlcited all American forces would be
out Df the · 4'netime U.S. Marine base
12 mile.s from the border by the end
of the week and speculated that SouU1
Vietnam wouljf try to hold the area
when they left. Ktie Sanh has been
hit for nine consecutive days by Com-
munist shells. Eighty-two rounds hit
there todily.
Front dispatches said the South Viet-
namese had begun strengthening
Mesa Store Hit
At Closing Tim e
A man with a Fu Manchu moustache
and a snub-nMed revolver wandered into
a Costa l\1esa department store at 9:30
p.m. closing time Tuesday. asked rw
1 catalog and then changed his order.
He told Sears, Roebuck & Cooipany
pet department clerk Donna Jones to
empty the cash register. Then he took
$300 in cash and checks while employes
Mary Steppe and Albert Freeman stood
by. Tur ning to leave, he stopped halfway
to the door and politely thanked them,
then ran to a waiting car driven by
.a second bandit.
The witnesse.a told Patrolman Ro~oe
Broad the vehicle sped from the parking
lot at 333 S. Bristol St., with its lighll
off and vanished.
defenses at Ham Nghi, the i dvance
headquarters on Route t just west of
Khe Sanb. The western defensei -
toward Lao1 -also were bein& built
up , the reports said.
American. military sources said the
22,000 South Vietnamese troops pulled
out of Laos were still In Quang Tri
Province and would try to hold Khe
Sanh .
Laos Airport
Under Attacli
By Red Troops
· V!l;lfllANE; Z-(°'1) -North
Vlttrramett troops iinect attaclls to-
day near the 1 royal tlah capital of
Luang Pr a bang and · vy Ji,hting wu
reported only t hilt' mile from the
City's airport. The defense dilnlstry &aid
the sltuition "remainl critical.'"
Communist units wit~ .mortar support
regained the strategic Ban Dt>ne-Cho po-
sition three miles northeast of the Luang
Prabang Airport Tuesday night after
losing it to Laotian counterattacks earlier
in the day. The position was orig inally
seized by the North Vietnamese last
weekend. ·
Gen. Thongphan Knock sy, official
spokesman for the Laotian defense
ministry, said North Vietnamese troops
stepped up attacks against the hilltop
posit.ion of Pbounng a half mile !ro.m
the airfield before dawn Wedne&day, then
withdrew shortly after sunrise kl 1void
air strikes.
Tbongpban uid Llotian troops recap-
tured three rtrategic hil11 north and
east of the airfield Wednesday but he
warned they might be I08t again in
night fighting. He . said Laotian losses
were "heavy" but cave no casualty
figures for either side.
By Wednesday night, Thongphan 1aid,
North Vietnamese troops were three to
five miles north and east or the airfield.
Elsewhere. in the Plain Of Jars area,
C<>mrnunist gunners fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made 122MM rockets against posi-
tions at Ban Na, Sam Thong and Long
Cheng. Thongphan said Ban Na was
hardest hit in e 100 rocket barrage
but no &ignificant cuualtia or damage
tSet LAOS, Pa1e IJ
Battin Calls for Study
Of Super Government
Orange County government should like-
ly take a look al becoming the. si~~le
local jurisdlction rather tha n having 26
little cities·• operating mun I c i pa I
governments wi1hin the CC1unty.
This was Ole view expressed Tuesday
by Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana.
chairman of the Orange County Board
of Supervisors. Battin created a bit of a stir when
be made the remark in Anaheim w~i\e
1peaking" befor~ . the ~mtrlcan Society
for Public Adm1n1strallon.
ll came while Battin, an attorney,
\\'IS discu.Mlng the possibility of a cb11rter
form of govcmmen t for Orange Coonty.
"F'or Instance.. I think any such study
ihould consider a possible overall govern-
ment for lhe county instead of the county
and 26 small cltier;." Battin 5uggested.
"ll mtghl not be fe•sible but Jt should
be Included In any study lf ene I• t1
be. done.''
In bis wide-ranging talk the county
board chief also criticized the Irvine
Company, land developer!! In generaJ,
Superior CoUrt Judgts and tilt tallfornia
Public Utilities Commission.
He decla red that the philosophy of
lbe present Bo8rd of Supervisors is It
slow down county growth.
Battin accused the previous Board of
Supervisors of "reacting lo whatever
business wanted.''
"That was the board's ptulosophy of
the t960's," Battin said. "Our philosophy
is to plan the quality of tile we want
for the majority and for government
to carry out those plans to see that
it happens."
"People movtd to Orange County
because it is 1 good place to live."
Battin added. "lf we allow ourselves
to be bamboozled into doi ng for bwioess
what bu.'iines.s wants, that will not be
in the best lntertsll of \he majority
of our residents."
The board • cbairmln \ndjcated that
he st(U f1vored ousting Co u n I y
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.
"The new board has the right to hire
an administrative orOcer to carry out
it1 phile>!oph)' of covernment, '' Battin
concluded.
"If you want to get technical ... yes.
thatl1 It," affirmed City Manager Fred
Sorubal today .
"We will get the $2$,000 eventually,"
he emphasized. Atkinson was paying
some SlS,000 per month kl the city, until
he skipped in January.
11ln the present agreement. we will
deduct_,ttie amount owed, making the
city one ·of Mr.' Atkinson 's creditors
too," he added.
"This ·was one of tbe breaches · of
•.
U'l T...J.
Bault~d
Tired and exhau~ted after a six·
weetr incursion into .Laos, a
weary South . Vietnamese· sol·
dier waits to · be evacuated
deeper inside Vietnam:
Ralph Williams
Counts Assets
For 'Divorce
Mulli·millionaire. auto. dealer Ralph
Williams' accountant today' began wbat
is el"peded to be a Jong a.na1ysis of
tbe Ford dealer's asset.5 as the Orange
County Superior Court divorce trial went
into its ·second day.
Karl L. Waegre's opening comments
In Judge H. Walter Steiner '• courtroom
centered on .Williams' auto dealing opera-
tions in Encino and Clovis, CaUf., and
the total value of a business empire
that may be. divided by the disputing
parties.
That value has been assessed in
Superior .Court documents 1s $37 million.
~ut Btverly Hills attorney Paul Caruso
insists· for Williams that his client's
net worth Is "nowhere near that figure ."
·caruso declined to plice a cash value
on Williams'. holdings.
· Mrs. ~nabelle , Lowry Willi.ams, 38,
of Newport Beacb. watched closely today
as her attorney Rlcbard Curcutt ques-
tioned Waegle on aspec:t.5 of. Willij!ims'
auto operitions and property negotla·
tions.
It has been testified for her that
she was coerced into an agreement which
included the parment of $4.(lOO in· support
for her and her two children. .
Caruso denied that Tuesday and
pointed out tha t Mrs. Williams signed
the · pretrial agreement in ttie pre1ence
of her attorneys and that it was fully
explained to. her .
Wiiliams and hit wife married March
9, 1967. and parted Dec. 4, 1969. Mr1.
Williams currently has postession or the
couple's $275,000 borne on Linda Isle.
PILOT REALLY
GETS RESU LTS
A DAILY PILOT clas!ified ad doesn't
just get results. It gel& results ypu may
nol believe. Here's an example :
LOVELY 1 Br. Lrg: enh')'
C~tl. drps, d'Whr •. eoql.
S16S. <Phone number I,
This ad needed only one response lo ~
ruccessful. but before a wttk paSM!d
lhls customer rented five out df 1ix apart.
menll on jwt this one 1mall ad. Call
the DAILY P£LOT 11d·,.,i50r {direct line,
642-M71) If you want super.results.
•
on Mesa Golf Course
contract," Sorsabal asserted in regard
to Atkinson's loss of the public golf
course operatorship in recent con·
ferences.
Harry Green, one of two bidders
Atkinson won over In February, 1970
contract negotiations, has already been
signed to lake over the complicated
job. • ,
Green has successfully operated Los
Angeles' 'Griffith Park concessiOM for
21 years an dagreed to succeed Atkin.soo
on the same five percent grois share
of golf course income arrangement.
H'e wanted a straight fee last year.
~1aneuvers w e r e initiated on an
behind the manager's desk when mar.
shals descended on the clubhouse ~100-
day night.
Green Is currently involved in a three-
W1y escrow deal with Atkinsbn -·third
private operator contracted since 1967,
when the course opened -. and the
city.
How soon can this be completed'f
"No idea," Sorsabal commented tpday,
saying lhe original sc hiedule bad been
for April I, before Monday's 'compl~ting
developments.
'Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordl.fl, who
played a key role in creation of the
bond·financed course on lea~
land, elnphasi:i:ed Tuesday onty ffii ln4
ventory is involved.
The clubhouse structure itself and the (!ee-GOLF, Pa1e' 1)
Senate Vetoes SST
51-46 Vote Scuttles Further Funding
WASKINGTON (UPI) -The Se11ate
voted today to bar aoy more federal
spending on development of the super-
sonic transport plane (SSJ').
The decision signaled the end of 1ov-
er11ment financing of research for the
l,800 miles an hour airplane as Of March
30 -and likely for good. The vote was
51-46.
The House last week refused to allow
any more federal funds for the SST.
At Js11ue was $134 million in fede ral
funds lo conlinue construclio11 of twG
prototype5 of the ,I .800 mph plane whlch
is strongly opposed by conservationist!.
The House last week voted to ldll the
funds requested by President Njxon.
Without the added mDfley, federal fin·
i ncing of the program would come to a
New Court
d1 ·Appeals~
Proposed
Special to the DAILY PILOl
SACRAMENTO - A . bill requlrin&
creatlob of a new Fourth District Court
of Appeals bra nch with regular sessions
in Santa Ana was introduced by Sen.
Dennis E. carpenter IR·Newport Beach)
Tuesday.
Simulta neously. the Orange County Bar
Association went befo're county
supervil;ors to request tempc:irary 1pace
for it in the old or new courthouse
if Carpenter's bill is approved.
The board requested a report on the
matter within three week.5, s maneuver
making it too late for presentation next
week to C1e California Judicial C<>uncil
meeting.
"Your commitment would help achieve
the action," Bar Association leaders told
the board.
The lawyers' organiiation has been
pressuring for tbe past several years
to win establishment of an appeals court
in Orange County.
Currently, the Fourth District Court
nf Appe als. with former Orange County
Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner
presiding. convenes in San Bernardino.
Bar Association representative James
Moore argued that fully a third of the
appellate court district's cases originate
In Orange County.
By locating a branch here. the judicial
process would be streamlined in terms
of time and expense to both taJ:payers,
attorneys and defendants.
The temporary quarters requested in
the county complex would 1 e T v e ,
presumably. until a new state buildin&
is constructed in Santa Ana.
halt a week from today .
In cloeing debatt, tupporters ol. the
SST scoffed at arguments the plane
would damage the environment and
wasn't needl'd.
"When we moved from I.he horse and
bu ggy to the automobile. there were
many, many dire predictions," San.
Frank Moss (0-Utah ). said. "People
said why get to Aunt Nellie's i11 15 min-
utes when you can hitch up the buggy
and get th ere in 30."
Sen. Howard W. Cannon (IJ-Nev. ),
noted that mi litary supersonic: flights had
logged 500,000 hours hi the air in the past
10 years.
''Why is the SST going to cause dam-
age in the future when il hasn't in the
past?" Cannon asked.
Sen. Hugh Scott hinted at the blttnalty
ol the pressures of the undecided wbell
he commented : "Two or three people.are
going through the tortures of the
damned."
Sen. John L. McCleUan (0.Art.), &aid
"I will state now that I have faith that
the environmental and technolo1ica l "
challenges presented by the SST will
be succes.s!ully met by the creative ap-
plica tions of American genius and tech·
11ological expertise."
President Nixon engaged personally in
the lobbying effort. He met separately
during the morning with four senators,
three of lhem counted as foes ol the SST
-Sens. Clifford P. Han.sen (R..Wyo.),
Harry F. Byrd Jr., (D-Va.), and Jack
f\.1iller, ([).Iowa ).
',J'hree ff.our Belau
I
Cloak, Dagger Element
Enters Hartelins Trial
A clo.ak-ind-da,gtr ~!tmt11t and the
name "AJeX' Zaronsky" today 11.tpped
into the Orange County Superior Court
ar~n·fraud trial of Dr. Ebbe Harte \ius
and im~d 1t lealit i three.-hour delay
on the final stages of the baid fought
session.
Defen se attorney Matthew Kurillch ia
using the delay grudgingly granted by
Judge James F. Judge to obtain from
Zaronsky -bettei' known in Newport
Beach pollce circles as Sgt. Leo Konkel
-any notes of evidence compiled by
the o'fficer durilig bis invel!tiga!IOo of
Hartelius.
Hartelius has ldentltled ZaionskY as
Spring Classes
Signup Slated
Registration begins Thursday for
dozens of Costa Mesa Recreation Depart·
ment spring classes and courses at
several locations.
One may sign up ThW'sday from II
p.m. to 8 p.m. and Friday and Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in fou rth floor
affices at lhe Costa Mesa Civic Center.
Everything from athletics to crafts,
danci ng, dog obedience. drama. music
and a tiny lots cooperative day care
program will be offered.
Additional information f11ay be obtained
by calling the recreation department.
the· man who qutStioned ·him ta hl1
Corona del Mat offk:ea and on thl
telephone about the physicia ns's n la·
lions hip . with Jim Blevins, the former
Cost.a Mesan who testified th.et he burned
those offices at the doctor'1 direction.
Hartelius and his secretary' told the
jury that the man they •knew as Zironaky
told the physician that be knew all
abou t the deal with Slevin! and that
!Je persistently &ought what the defense
d~scr!bed as incl'iminating 1titementa
from Hartelius.
The do-year-0ld physician Is accused
cl burn ing his oUiCQ at 2.145 E. Coast
Highwa y last April 9. He Is alsc charged
\,\'.ith faking the ·theft of his-car nine
days earlier and attempting to coUtct
the insurance oney.
Newport Beach detective S am
Amburgey came in for another grillini
fr om Kurilicb today as the trial lawyer
resumed his persistent quest for tb@I
notes that, he sa~s. have been denied
him throughout the trial.
Amburgey told Kurillch that notes
relating to Harteliu1' alleged bribing of
Jim Blevins -the doc tor is accused
of paying Blevins to leave the state
at the height of the investigation -
were turned over to a Costa Mesa police
officer.
Costa Mesa officials claimed during
a trial recess. however. that no sucb
notes are contained in their archives.
The frustrated KurUich immediately
turned to the possible note·taking ac-
tivities of Alex Zaron$ky and .demanded
CSee HAllTELIUS, Pate I )
Board Adopts Resolutions
To Preserve Upper Bay
Oraage Ceut
Weather
Su~:::rvl10r Ronald Caapers' campaJ.an
to block development of the Upper
Newport Bay and have the area made
a wildlife refuge m'oved ahead Tuesday.
At · hill requtst the county Board of
Supervlsor1 adopted a series of resolu·
t1on11 calling for federal help in
e.slablishing the refuge and informlng
the U.S. Department of the Inttrior
that the county intends to "preae"e.
proteci ind enhance the ecology of. the
Upper Newport Bay."
With the •Id of the City of ?iewport
Beach, the county General Planning
Program staff , the OOunty Harbor
Department and the county Octa11 ind
Shoreline Developmenl Com mittee were
ordertd to lnvestlgatt all 1vaU1•le
ftderal. funds that might be \!std In
the p1annlng and 1cquisltlon of't)te-bty.
Newport Stach Mayor Ed tiirtb &aid
his city was willini lo Pl\11 1lmUU
'
resolutlons to present a united front
to the federal government.
The city, as omi of three members
of the Upper Bay Cooperative Planning
Project, had been setking a fede ral
Sea Grant for 1 1tudy of tbt physical
propertlts and uses of the Upper Bay.
The study would have Ulen enabled the
project participants -which Included
the county and the Irvine C<>mpaey -
to plan deve\opmenl oC lhe arta.
In 'J'uesda1'1 meeting, HJrth 1ald his
group has been informed no sea Grint
lund1 are av1ilable tor the proje<:t.
Caspe rs lndlcated the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers ha11 be~ asked by the
lnttrlor Department to study eurrtnt
condJUOllll In the Back Bay.
A group <Jf Corona del MAr Hlgh
School 1tnlor1 wera present f o r
Tueaday'1 dlacuMlon.
•
Those gray skie1 are goMa clear
up Thursday, bringing ollghUy
wanner temperatures to t h 1
Orange Coast. wltb readings ln the
middle 60s locaUy and up kl 70 do-
arees inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
Prtsident Niz07l is tn rrmark-
ably good htolCh 4/Cer 26 mon.Ull
and apparenuu is thTiving on 1'il
job. Page 10.
IN""' U t•M ..... 11 I ,,,_ Ctffltf'. 11
Cl1•d1llle IJ• II
Cr.tt!llW *'" -· ~ ems~ t6 °""" Htllc•• • Olftl'C" •
&•lle!'4•1 ,... •
·~'-"'-· ,..,, ""'°MCI H.IS ..___ ~'
AMI LefldeB a
N4HI•• '
I
I •
•
~
I I
j
l
Z DAil Y PllOT c Wtdnt!.day, March 24, 1971 I
Held in Caribbean
·Fugitive Nabbed
In ·Stock Fraud
llY TOM BARLEY
Of .... Piii~ '''-• 5l•ff
Globo-1.rott.in& stockbroker J o s e p h
Dulaney is today in a Curacao jail cell
awaiting action by Dutch colonial
authorities on the erlradit.ion demand
being flown to the Caribbean island
trom Orange County.
Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature un-
klerlines accusations that Dulaney, 37,
formerly of Newport Beach, defrauded
investors in his World Financial Trends
empire of an estimated $3 million be.fore
he fled to Europe from his plush Laguna
Hills "Taj Mahal" In December, 1169.
Inve.stigatora believe that lbe free
spending 'Dulanty recently returned to
Munich. It was hiJ borne for more than
a year. Authorities said be visited
relaUves in his Illinois birthplace recenlly
and went on to make several more
contact. before flying back to West
Germany.
l Interpol and the FBI bad Curacao
From Page I
GOLF •..
S2 million equity in the surrounding
double IS.hole course are in no jeopardy,
despite Atkinson's own fiscal woes.
Golfer use !'o.!e 21 percent last year
and bond J>lyments are currenl on in·
come from that source alone.
The shutdown left only the greens
-av-ailable for duffen who don't mind
walking. bQ;ying balls and tees beforehand
1llld clrlnldBg IJld dining ehewhere aft-
erward.
Cushman Motor Scooter Company, with
-which Alkin!on had a *60 rental income
percentage agreement, also forbade use
of !ta electric golf cart!: until the dif.
ficultles were Jroned out.
"We are trying to work out an Interim
agreement with Cullhman to have them
ready for the weekend," Sorllabal sakl
today.
Bes.Ides the shutdown of relltaurant
and pro shop service, more than a dozen
civic organliaUons with meal · t ype
meetings were left in tbt lurch tJUs
w..k.
The group -including a city employe
awards night banquet Saturday -may
still use the country club structure, if
out.side catering can be arranged in
time.
Sorsabal said other maneuvers tQ_day
Include hiring a catering truck to IU'Ve
golfers and brlnglna In a trailer to
serve as a pro llbop If that facility
can't reopen by this weekend.
Green and City Attorney Roy June
were also in Santa Ana Tuesday, oo~
!erring with 1lale Alco!JoUF ll<j>erqe
Control Board officials <>n tranaler of
the liquor license.
Derplte a potenUaJ Iena:thy wait for
thlJ Vice Mayor Jordan said Tuesday
the new operalor could take over momen·
tarily a1 far as he was concerned.
1be golf course inventory around which
creditor's claims wue wrapped today
wu pW'chaaed from PRO Enterprises
by the city when the triple partnership
filled.
Sorsabal said Green, the new operator.
will buy back that collectlon of com·
modlUea Wider his fresh contracL
Despite the complexity of the legal
situation, city officials say the legal
paper• involved won·t allow the ta1·
payers to be left holding lhe bag -
golf bag, you might say.
And despite the misfortunes 0 r
Alkinson, whose worldwide bulliness con-
11ections and financial statements were
reviewed with optimism 11 months ago,
the situation has itll humorous aspect.II.
"Call Jt the Great Greens Caper,"
Scrrsabal quipped loday.
OJ.ANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
~
OUHGI COMT r Ulll5H1NG COMPANY
Reb.rt N. w.,d
PIWklttll •nd l'lllllllMt'
Jee~ II . C1ul•v
Vkl Prqkl"'I 11\d ~•I Mtllll,.
lh•111•t K.,.,.11
IEdltot
lti1lft•1 A. Mur1J .. i111
M•llffl~ ldlMr
Ch~rlet H. l•o1 Rich•rd 1. N1!1
Anl111n: M1n.;lnu E8111fJ.
Co"4 M11• Offlc•
)JO Weit l1v Slr••t
Meili11g Addrett: P.O. I•• 15&0, ,2626
Other Offk••
in the Netherlands Antilles o!I
Maracaibo, Venezuela -high on their
checking list for reasons that are not
available today. The conlldence in
lawmen in both agencies wall justified
y,·hen Dulaney checked ln last week at
a Curacao bold and wu immediately
arrested on the long standing charges
-0f grand theft, f-0rgery and conspiracy.
His wife, Marlene, 31, is still being
sought -0n identical charges. Investigators
are concentrating their search on Pt1on-
treal in the: belief that Mrs. Dulaney,
who oooe acted as secretary for Dulaney
in the World Financial Trends complex,
may have taken the couple's three young
children to the Canadian city.
Mrs. DuJaney's arrest would enable
Orange County authorities t-0 consolidate
court action against a trio alleged to
be responsible f<ll' a wles -0f frauds
assertedly conceived and carried oul
from lavish office buildingll In Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
The World Financial Trends corporate
complex and its facilities are now in
the hands of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
and awaiting proceectingll that lack only
the presence of tbe firm's principals
for furthe:r action.
Mrs. Du1aney'll arre:sl will place her
In the defendant's box y,•ith her husband
and 38-year--0ld James Shipley of Hun·
lington Beach, the man promoted by
Dulaney from vice president t-0 president
shortly be.fore the Newport man left
for Germany and what one investlgalor
described all the ''life of Riley" in
Munich.
From Page J
HARTELIUS ••
that they be surrendered t-0 the defense:.
A trial that bas never betn without
a touch of the bizarre stayed true to
f-0rm Tuesday afternoon with all three
attorneys involved in the trial questioning
each other in what one court wag
described as "musical witness boxes."
Deputy district attorney Al Novick
questlooed Kurilich and severaJ times
wished he hadn't u the defense lawyer
entered int-0 long inv-0lved explanatlon1
over the -0bjections of the prosecutor.
One of those explanati-0ns included
what appeared t-0 be an utremely ac-
curate 1mperll0nation of Reba Vaughn,
the Tennessee-born blonde f o r m e r
mistress of Harteliua and the woman
who WtWed that he: UTanged the fire
and set up the bribery.
Then Kurilich questioned his co-counsel
Tom Reilly -0f Laguna Beach and ended
an unusual trial phase by then puttin&
N-0vlck on the witneas atand.
Novick today predicted that teatlm ony
fn the trial will be concluded by late
Thursday and tbat the jury will bear
final arguments and mull Its verdict
Monday.
Critic of Mesa
City Officials
Cites Golf Club
Continuing criUc of Colla Mesa
municipal management Theodore C.
"Ted" Bologh today compares hlmselt
to the legendary little boy who cried
y,·olf.
He contends surprise closure of the
privately operated porti-0n of the city's
public country club and golf course sup-
ports hill claims of fiscal mismanage-
ment.
Bologh, -0f 286 Del Mar Ave., .also
aMounced a new campaign lo rattle
the rafter of city hall and bring at
least four councilmen crumbling down
-On feet of clay.
"The 'bigots' have lied to the people
for si:I years," he fumed , in reference
to financial problems involving club
operalor Earl Atklnllon.
Bologh declared he has mortgaged his
borne and placed $1,500 in the bank
to finance a private lnvelltl&aUve probe
of municipal affalrs.
"If there is truly a democracy. 1
wlll risk losing my home to prove It,"
he declared.
City -0Hicials were unimpressed and
wished him both luck and a continued
roof -0ver his head.
Councilmen
Impressed
'
With Meet
A team -0! Costa Mesa civic leaders
arrived back In Cost;B Me:s1 Tuelld•Y.
night, with glowing accounts or a con·
ference that Jn 1970 had left delegates
across the nal.i-0• reeling bitter and
snubbed.
Mayor Robert ri.t Willlon and Council·
man Alvin L. Pinkley were uniformty
impressed with the two-day Congressi-0n·
al.City Collference in Washington. O.C.,
"'here they were briefed in various prob-
lems and programs.
Vice President Spiro T. Arnew deliv-
t>red the primary address. revlewinl the:
Nixon Administration·ll hopes f-0r a fed·
era) revenue-sharing program that m1y
not pass Coftgress,
Changing Newport's 'Cannery Row' President Nilon himself was scbedultd
for the 1970 convention but didn•t show,
leading t-0 wide1pread centure by civic
leade:rs and letters -0f protest. Schematic top view indicates proposed future layout
on Lafayette Avenue for future restaurant com·
mercial complex that will be replica of Western
Canners Company's old cannery presently on the
site. Rhine Channel is at top. More parking is below
Lafayette Avenue. Agnew outlh1ed the current reVt.nue-
sharing package toward which. the ad·
ministration is favorable. while other
government spokesmen -0ffered different
formulas. Girl Given
New Kidney;
Makes Gains
She won't be back in the saddle of
her prize -winniag horse Dunny for
awhile, but kidney tramplant recipient
Mary French, JS, was reported pro-
grellslng well today.
Miss French, of 20291 KJlne: Drive.
Santa Ana Heights, recelved a heaJthy
organ from her mother, Mrll. Joanne
French , Tuesday during several hours
.surgery at Orange County Medical
Center.
Both patients today were listed in
satisfact-Ory condition.
Docl<lrll Cart Pearlman and Ronald
Freeman perfonned the delicate but no
longer uncommon operation, which wall
Mary's only hope for a n<ll'mal life.
She wu born with a congenital defect
that claimed -0ne kidney at age 4 and
the .second began de:teriorating recently,
despite years or care and health
supervision by Dr. Pearlman.
"They say the prognosis f-0r recovery
is good," says Mrs, P. A. Trudeau,
of 1321 S. Olive St., Santa Ana.
She is head of. the ti.iary French Benefit
Fund, wllich Juis collecte:d :roori than
$5,000 to help defray the anticipated
$50,000 total for Mary'll ne lease on
life.
The Corona del Mar High School
senior's illness has badly depleted the
savings of th~ tam.Hy, operaters of a
thriving Co.rta Mella bakery.
Fellow f.H Club members have
-Organized a series -01 fund-raising events
stretching into the spring t-0 help me:et
the heavy expenses.
Mary was living quieUy at home an-
ticipating the long-awaited transplant un-
til March 10, when her sole remaining
kidney failed and !he was rushed to
the hospllal.
A blood-elell\3ln,; dialysis machine has
been keeping her alive for the past
two weeb.
\\·ere reparted .
Long Cheng is headquarters of Gen.
Vang Pao, the chieftain who commands
an army of Meo tribesmen whose ac·
tivities against Communist force:s ln the
Plain -0f Jars area are supported by
the U.S. government.
Thongphan said a capturtd North Viet.
name~ prisooer told interrogalora that
Hanoi's 304th Division had moved into
the Plain to augme:nt Commwiist troopll
already there.
J
Women Miners OK'd
DENVER (AP) -Women can now
W1>rk in Colorado Cilll mlnell.
Gov. John L<lve signed a bill Tuesday
removing a ban on the employment
ot women in the mines.
The measure v.•as hailed as a \\·omen's
rights proposal when it easily passed
the legislature.
PILOT SHOWS
PLANT TONIGHT
Bill Le:ary. creator -0f the newspaper
feature Graffiti, i5 one or many na·
tlonally rhtured new$paper ''celebritlell''
"'ho have sent greetings t-0 the DAILY
PILOT foe toni&ht'1 flrst public open
houlle in the newly expanded plant.
Leuy'll -0riainal •·GraffiU's'' and other
special artwork will be on dllplay
t~hout the plant at 330 W. Bay
St., Co:st.a Mesa. from 7 to 9 o'clock
toniaht and again Thurllday night \vhen
lhe public is invited t-0 tour the DAtLY
PILOT.
A se\f.guidtd walking tour ha~ betn
laid out to shew vlllitors throu1h the
entlre:ly renov1ted and entaraed plant
facll1lles. Park.in& wlU be avai11ble on
the DAILY Pit.OT parlting lot and on-
rtrttt In artall adjacent to th• p J a n t
at Bay and Thurln stretts.
Painful Times .. It was an extremely successful meel·
ing among the 800 to 1,000 delegatell,"
Mavor Wilwn said today.
Countians Victims of Deadlines
Michigan Gov. George Romney, who
proposes various formulas for revenu~·
sharinR: also briefed the delegates, as did
Dr. Walter He ller, who conceived the
idea during the Kennedy AdministratioA. A group -0f deadlines. most of them
unpleasant, face the citizens of Orange
County lhortly.
Here are the moat important ones
and where information may be gained
on lhem:
-Mardi 31. Medicare supplemental
medical lnlurance. This is the voluntary
part of Medicare that helps pay doclor
billa. Ba.sic moothly premium rates are
$5.SO. For further information call the
Santa Ana Social Security. Ofiice, 836-
2221. Locati-0n: 1438 Ff· 1st St., Santa
Ana.
-April 15. This is the big painful
date for all wage earners.
-Federal Income Tax deadline. For
information, 2 9ity Boulevard East,
Orange. Teleph<lne, 836-2381.
-State Income Tax. For informati-0n,
Franchise Tax Board, 2021 E. 4th St.,
Santa Ana. TeleJime. BJS.9640.
Homeowner! Property Tat Exemption.
All homeowners eligible. Jf you have
not re«ived and filed your exemption
fonn call Orange County Tax Assessors'
-0ffice, Homeownerll l n f o r m at i o n ,
834-3821 .
-April 10. Property tax deadline. Se-
cond installme:nt pr-0perty ta1es are due.
Penalty of $.1 per parcel plus 6 percent
if not paid -0n time. For this year
actual deadline is Monday, April 12 at 5
p.m. For information: County Tax Col-
lector, 630 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Tele--
phone 834-3411.
•·He's pretty much the fat.her of 11.
although some of his ideas have
changed.'' said Mayor Wilson.
Besides the reveoue-sharing plan which
would give cities more federal mooeY
with fewer strings attached iJI its spend-
ing, welfare reform programs were
heavily emohasized.
Special White House Admlnirtrative
Assistant Robe rt Finch. former Seare-
tary -Of Health. Education and We:llare,
explained its various aspects to the con-
venti-0n.
Cost Mesa's Wilsoa himself was bl:-
volved in planning part of the confer·
ence as a member of its Environmental
Quality panel. steering committee.
Superior. Court Delays
Firehouse Bar. Hearillg
"We met for four hours. mostly Oil land
use planning," said Mayor ~ilJOn, ~·
plaining this topic is clo!:flY aligned with
environmental preservati-0n ~JKt contr~.
"You find yourself getting iato lt
through such things all -0pen spacts," h•
said, mentionb1g such land uses a1 cre-
ating greenbelts and parkwayll beneath
p-0wer company wire rights-of-way.
Tailored right into the NaU-0nal League
-0f Cities and U.S. Conference of Mayon·
spol)S(W'ed gathering, some 1~ Califontla
civic leaders cooferred with their 20
senators and coagressmen.
l .•
An Oranae COunty Superior Court bear-
ing int-0 the proposed closing cif the
Firfboulle bar and the sale by auction
of the controversial Costa Mesa tave:rn'1
contents was deJayed Tuesday for one
week.
Presiding Judge William Speirs will
assign the bearing to one of his
courtrooms March 30. Both sides agreed
to lhe delay.
Dislrict Attorney Cecil Hicks, who filed
the lawsuit fop his office and the State
of California, is demanding the issuance
of a preliminary injunction barring any
further operation of the tavern.
He claims that tavern -0wner Raymond
Rohm hall permitted frequent violati-0Jlll
of the Red Light Abatement Act, noting
that he and more than 20 of the bar's
female entertainers have been convicted ...... ,...,,,..
GEM TALK
•
TODAY I
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
Even though your diarnoo.d en-
gagement ring bas an unforget·
table sentimental value to you, its
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
the care it should receive.
And although a "diamond is for-
ever," the stone can be chipped by
a hard blow, and mountings can pit
and discolor i! they come in con--
tact with a chlorine bleach when
you are doing household chores. So
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry when you're doing rough
work or engaging ln sporls or other
activities which might expose such
pieces to damage.
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
the pleasure and the pride with
which you wear them. will be
greaUy enhancod U you give them
the care and treatment they de-
serve; and although this care ls
largely up to you, you should still
come in and see us at least twice
a year ••• we'll check your ring
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and mounting wear. And,
also at no charge, we'll give them
1 professional cleanlnt whlle you
wait.
o• lewd conduct and related vice charges
in recent weekll. The convicUoos,
however, .are all under appeal, wUh
sQtence~ Ind flnet atayed.
Rehm, 26, Co.!ta Mella, facell Superior
Court trial June 7 on charges of con-
spiring t1 present lewd and obscene
entertainment.
Dancer Cynlbla Louise Drey, 23,
Tustin, aoes on trial that day on identical
charges. She is ilaml!d in seve ral clla·
tiom illsued by Costa Mella police.
The Costa Mesa City Council recently
revoked the tavern's business license
over an unlicensed pool table, in the
wake of mounting protests against the
form of entertainment provided by the
bar and the fre:queccy of pol.ice action
against the tavern and its personnel.
It's an, ,,. t1tau111u1
Spokesmen for geographical areu (If
the stale addressed the panel Tueld1y, di~sing their probterris and what can
be d-Or'le to belp -0n Capitol Hill. .
"Some cities are in· &ad shape, while
-0t.hers -like Collta .Mesa -are dolnt
fine," he !aid.
Mayor Wilsoo and Councilman Pinkley.
who had a lleparate mission of poten·
tially great impact, were not 1mpreued
with one convenUPll aspect.
Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Maine) whose
presidential aspirations aren't secret!
delivered a heavily partisan poUUca
speech in what WilsOI said w11 a viola·
tion -0f the conference's 1plrlt.
"He talked like he wanted to run for
president," said Wilson. "It went over
like a lead balloon. Most of ua felt he
was completely oot of line."
0 go\d bracelet is mega"'. •lnlu!ly hnn1riou• WlfCh. Giil B11t a witch
111 c1r111nrv practlcl\.
Par1lc11l1rlv when h"• •
an Omegt. In Ike wortd or rttJly lln•I
watchu, \ht'""'"' tnd reputallon or
Omega •l•nd out Whlf'I Ome;a artfU~
concttll one ol their auperb llmtplecel
k\ 1111 exqulalte bface1.i, tt,btcomt• 1
atntuny Pl'•ctlcal g\rt. S.. Olll~~
Omega colltctlon, trorn $0$." .. --(; ' I A-t41( 1011• t 1-ttit ••116 I Olf CO•IT•l!d DOid CO••t•lld bru11tt ,.,1cr. blaQlllM M l'11 ~WO ~·
J. C. .J.Jumphriej JeweferJ
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVINllHT TllMS
IANK.4.MlllCAll:D-MA$TER CHAl5l
24 TEARS IN SA.Ml lOC.ATION
PHONE 141·1•01
Wrd11t~i11. Mmh 24, 1971 DAILY PILOT If
ltUJuiry Tlar,eatened Peril to U.S. in FBI Theft Warned (
Storm of Protest
Hits Railpax Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Tbe U.S. attorney general bu
warned disclosure o f in·
formation in FBl files stolen
at P.1edia. Pa., could tndanger
the ~urily or the United
States and the lives of some
federal agent!.
Attorney General John N.
WASlfiNGTON (AP) -A AFUJO Tran11port Workers Mitchell said Tuesday copies
storm of prot.esta and I.he Union who called Tuesday for cf the stolen records bad been
threat ef a conares!llona\ in-n a t i o n a 111 a t I on of the sent to Ml Me members of
quiry have greeted the map raUroads. Congress and some m~bers tf the press.
deUi iling the"r!rtieGf new and The Washington Post today
limited rail passenger service. s 0 s ~ published some delails from
"1 think the railroad• had • hoot ut ODS • ,., ., "documents it said
too much to say about the It received Tuesday morning
routes." said Rep. Harley o. under a covering Jetter and
P K B • with an additional statement
C d
• , Staggers, (D-W. Va.), are n ts Qt ent £tte r from the citizens commission 0 11, lLl OllS chairman of the House Com· lo invesligate the FBI. The
merce Committee. newspaper r.a!d most of the
Of Po W'S Staggers said his commiltee NEW YORK (UPI) in lhe current issue of document! were on pages
would look into the !!ltuation, Author James MlcMner, who Reader's Digest that the na-marked "Unit~ St ates
bu t he didn't set a date. concl uded {rom an on-the-spot tional wave of antl-student Government Memorandum.''
Criticism began rolling in The Post said the records 'S hock;ng' almost immediately after the investigation that National sentiment following the de 1 crib e. d the FBI's
" National Railroad Passenger Guardsmen were not under shooting of four Kent State surveillance of campus and
NEW YORK (UPI) Corp. -Railpax -announced attack at Kent State Universi· students last ~fay was black aclivist organizations by
Its final route selections Mon-ty, said that 2S pereent of particularly virulent among informan ts that included a
Interviews wilh re I eased day. The network starting switchboard c""rator on at t.bt 400 students be in-the parents of Kent State ,.~ prisoners and sources. in May 1 will provide 184 least one campus. Tb e
Washington, Saigon and Paria passenger trains to connect lervlewe.d told him lheir students. newspaper said one document
Indicate that the plight of U.S. 114 cities with 100,000 or more partnts thought it miaht have A mother with three sons instructed agent11 to increase
populatio11. • been a good thing for the on campus and herself a high interviewll with dissenters ror
prisoner s of war in Vietnam The plan to halve the na-school teacher said It would reasons "chief of which are
I h nation if they, too, had been ll "s ocking" and many of tion"s rail passenger service have been better "If the guard it will enhance the paranoia
point across there is an Ji'BI
agent behind every mailbox."
The newsp11per 1aid lhe
swll(hboard operator at a
Philadelphia 11ea college was
rniraefd to furn ilh lhe FBI
with a list (If IOftl dla:~
(all• te or rrom a pref
at the colleie. ,
.;
•
GI ... Countyl' San Francisco $1S;Sacramento;$2,.... a ; This __ ya_Q $X2D San Diego $8(all lncludo tax). Mor;~I~ round Cl'1t to S.F. th an any other alrllne.PSA. ..-ytllll a lift, ,
" the men have been subjected v.·as labeled short.sighted and shot. had shot the. y,•hole lot of them endemic in these circles and
to torture . Reader's Digest ._r_u_in_o_•~_by:_l•_,P_•_f_li_ci_a_1s_o_r_1_he __ M_i_chen __ er_•_·r_ot_e_i_n_•_re_,po_rt_t_h_at_m_o_rn_in_.:g:_·_" ______ w_i1_1_r_ur_th_•_r_se_rv_e_t•--=ge_t_1_he__:_ ______________________________ _
magazine reported Wed·
nesday.
The article said ava ilable
inforn1ation rompiled by Lt.
Col. Joseph R. Cataldo, a doc-
tor of the Green Berets, in-
di cated that most POWs are
severely malnourished, 80 per-
cent have skin diseases, at
Jeast SO percent suffer in-
testinal worms. and 25 percent
may have active tuberculosis.
In addition, many have serious
vitamin deficiencies, mern.al
disorien tation and muscular
wastage.
"Small wonder, then, that
North Vietnam forbids in-
spect ion of the cam ps by the
International Red Cross -in
direct violation of the Geneva
conventions," the article said.
"Instead 'showcase' prisoners
are paraded in propaganda
films. When anti-war groups
film small group..~ of pr ison-
ers, only the healthiest. bar·
bered and fre5hly clothed, are
trotted into public view to par-
rot carefully rehearsed in·
formation ."
The article said Hanoi has
we11kened men by sylltematic
torture, such as denymg food
and water, suspending them
from ceilings by their arms,
burning them with cigarettes,
and clubbing them with rine
butts. l l said that in numerous
All the nyou
could "W'ant for .
buying a big car.
Impala. Big in what it bw1ds in foc you.
Like a longer, smootlu!< wheelba!e that abscrbo much of what Your body~ to.
A new double panel roof that aboorbo much of the noile your ean used to. M<n roomm...
than any other car in its field. A new power ventilatioo system that Uep6 oo bringllla
you outside air, even when the car's standing still
You even get standard power di9C brakes, up front.
Impala. Big in built-ins. Big in trade-in value.
: . ..
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easel! prisoners have been
denied medical attention and
even ma.ior injuries have not
been tended.
Treecutting
Protesters
Def ended
And nowr, bvo newr reasons for
buying SODI • rtier.
• ..
CHICAGO (UPI) -The
Chic.11go Tribune has offered
to pay the fine or a protester
arresled Monday durin1t a
demonstration at Northern
Ill inois University.
In a front-page editorial in
today's rditions. the Tribune
s11id protesters "v.·ho have
reacted violenlly and destruc-
tively have deserved con-
demnation.
"Thr students who
peacefully opposed cutting
trees in I'll nature preserve
al Northern Ill inois University
Monday, however, deserve
cheers." the Tribune said.
· Twelve studenlc; w e r e ar-
rested as they tried to stop
the uni versitv from cutting a
stand of tr"ees for a new
building.
"It v.·as an outrageous
~struction of an irreplaceable
asset -and unnecessary with
a university situated on thf'
edge or 11 romlield." the
editorial said.
''If the student,11 who were
arrested are finro. lhe edilor
or the Tribune wouJd like
pPrsonally to pay the fine _of
th t> f\n;l (lne on the list
alphabetically. James D. Allen
(lf Al~l p (Ill .) We hope there
RN! others among our reader!
who might make simflar of-
ftr!I," the newspaper said.
Bab y Deatli
Rate Drops
WASHINGTON fUPI) -
America ·s Infant dt!ath rate.
Jong a rause of deb.11te over
healt h c11re for the poor, drop-
ped lo 1 r~rd low ln 1970.
the Health, Education 11nd
Welfare Department (HEW \
s11ld toc111y.
The de.11th ratt for infanl~
under one yt11r of •!t. e..~tlmatrd fr nm a nstion11I R~mbtr, buck/int Y<JUT seat and 3hot.Jdtr b'1l.s iJ an i.dtayoucan liu wUJa.
sampling t>f (lf'Rlh cert\ficate!I.
wa11 111.8 deaths for e8ch l.OOC"
li"e births In 1970. compared
with ll.7 per 1,000 in 1969.
(
Announcing Rally Nova. 60th Anniversary Special No. L'.
····-·
Chevrolet'• been making can now for 60 yean. That's reasa:i to ctleltral£ And
to oiler you Rally Nova.
Which is a regular Nova we've dooe up. By addin& acant
•tripes. A black grille. A remote<ontrol lport mim:r. Col«·
keyed carpeting. Bright roof molding. A opecial ...
pension. And wider 14 x 6 rally wheels.
We offer you a llelectioo of the standard 6 at
V8 engine. Or a bigger VB. All nm jUAt fine OJI
no-lead, low-lead gasoline, too.
Rally Nova. The economy car that puu Y""
fu;t by looking like it coots a lot m<n than it 00...
Announcing Heavy Chery.
60th Annil'ersary Special No. 2.
It's a Oievelle with a heavy acant oo
making its presence felt. A. evidenad by
its 'P<Cial stripes. Special identifi.
cation on the side. Special domed
lxx:xl with lock pin&.
Blaclc grille. And 14 s 8
rally wheels. I
Some more nk:e thinp:
It'• available with our
standard VB. or threo
bigga-engines. Which Ill
move right ou t on no-ltad at
low-lead pao!ine.
Heavy Chevy. Only its price
is light.
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!
t DA.B..Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Locating
Two new schools "are needed immediately," NeW·
port·Mesa Unified School District trustees were told re·
cenUy.
Yet in the same report on the .Projected growth ol
the district, Supt. William Cunningham said. some ele·
mentary ~I sites presently owned by the district
ml&bt be iliiclared surplus.
The seemiDg contradiction m•y be attributed. to the
"maturation" of westerly ireas of the ·disttict which bu
resulted in a lessened pressure on achool enrollments.
The eutem portions, however, are continuing to grow
at a rapld rate. At present, the single family homes un·
der construction on Irvine property are increasing de-
mands on elementary and middle school space.
California schools traditionally have supported lhe
neighborhood school concepL Parents have come lo ex·
peel a school within walking distance of their homes.
But, 11 the rate• or school enrollment increases less-
ens, will it always be practical to continut building new
schools only to abandon them one or two decades later!
Last November the board was told total enrollment
Increased by only four new students. While hi&h 1chool
enrollments increased, elementary populations dropped.
Trustees specuJated that within five years the district
may be in tbt unusual position of seeking new schools
while abandoning oth,rs.
Abandonment may be advisable fiscally and educa·
tionally. Sale of formerly needed school property may
benefit the district, assisting financing of schools for
newer· areas. Further, shitting populations due to the
turnover of property use from single family to apartment
or industrial zoning use. have already diminished the
location desirability of some district schools, such as
McNally, Woodland and Monte Vista in Costa Mesa.
Schools
Further, the district owns a ~().acre oite, ol which ·
10 acres is assigned to Bay View Elementary School near
the Intersection of Pallsad~s and Jamboree Roads. Thls
site 1-being suggested for development of a new middle
(Intermediate) school. It could also support a specialized
continualibn or vocational high school or centralized dis·
trlct offices.
\Vhile convenient to two proposed freeways, the si te
is not contiguous to heavily residential portions of the
district. Years ago, critics ol its purchase pointed out the
site, which could support as many as 3,000 school chit·
dren. is located adjacent to an Orange County Airport
flight path.
lfarbor View Hornes residents have awaited anxiou~
ly the development of their elerrtentary school west of
?.1acArthur Boulevard near Ford Road, on a site reserved
by the Irvine Co. A trade of a portion of the Palisade~
site for the Harbor View site has been proposed, but ad·
ministrators favor outright purchase of the Harbor View
location, preserving the Palisades acreage intact until
1975.
The Board of Education action on the two schools
must reflect the changin~ nature of the district.
Their Tuesday decision may chart a new course or
continue the long-established tradition of neighborhood
schools.
They must weigh the advantages of population ·
centered schools versus the increased costs of transport·
ing students to less convenient school locations.
But, at a time when education costs are gelling out
of hand, the economic expedient should receive more
than cursory attention. The economics or centralizing
~chool facilities should be weighed equally \vith consid·
eration of continued construction to meet shifting school
populations.
c
Each Man
Has His Place
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
No Other in History Ever Ot&tclassed Her
And Functio11
A dear trieud, with the kindest of
intentions, ha! beta trying to penuadl
me to invest some
ol my palUy uvlngs
lo the stock marlrot,
on the assumpUon
!hat tt has .... ~
to co but up.
I have been temp-ted. but I have re-
fused. For if 1 have
learned one thing In
lffe, It Is Ibis' that
a man cannot go against the gratn of hit
nature, that he must learn to live with
hi• natural bent and not cut acrOQ it.
Money is a mystery to me. J like
It as much u most people do, but
l seem to lack that bump of ic-
quisit.iveness that enables 10me men to
make large masses of money in their
~eep.
IF J INVF.STED in General Mot.ors
tomorrow morning, everybody would
1tart bicycling to work: and if l picked
up some General Electric !tock, every
household In America would switch to
candles. 1 am a natural·bom sucker,
, and am temperamentally designed to
be sheared ln the rqarket place.
.• Moreover.· t have oe.ither the talent
• nor the paUeooe to study the reports
· and analyses, Ute averages and trends,
that are requisite for i n t e 11 i g e n t
participation in \ the invutmenl field. It
seems to me· .. ,. pinched and desiccating
an activity as porina: over the racing
forms.
IF YOU DON'T really ID 10methlng,
or have a natural flair for It, you
will never do it as well at those to
Sirens in the night are bad tnOUgh,
but when they cause the neighbor's
dog to bowl they create a double
sleep disturbance.·-
-S. W.
fllh fiMtw9 "'*" ,.....,.. ........ ...
~" flltM .. .,,. _.,..... IHt
Piii' Ht """" It •9-llY ha,, Dtlfr Pi..t.
whom it comes easily. Each man has
his place and lunctloo. and stiould iwTI
to do what be does weU and to avoid
whai he does poorly. It ls the man
w~ tries to be an things who finally
loses even in his own special field.
Thia wu the nearly fatal blind •pol
in the otherwise shrewd perllOllality of
Mark Twain. 'Jbe leading writer of his
day, he lost Rveral fortunes in buainess
enterprises, and was forever draining
off his literary royalties to pay for
hit catastrophic commercial ventures.
And this ia what he meant when he
ruefully wrote: "I have been a writer
for 22 years, and an ass for 55."
CONVERSELY, I haVe seen highly
sucressful businessmen try to extend
their talents to a fickle field such as
the theater, and lose their monogrammed
sHk shirts in the efforl They try to
apply the same cold financial procedures
to a stage production as they would
to an industrial production. wholly
unaware that the · e.lemwts a r e
unyieldingly incompatible.
Some perllON operate best in the realm
of ideas, some in . the · realm <lf pe<iple,
and some in the realm ·of things. It
is usually disastrous when we attempt
to · use our expertise in one realm to
deal with another. The shoemaker doesn·t
necessarily have to stick t<> his last,
but when he stops mattn1 and starb
manipulating, he is bound to lose his
awl.
Lobbying Full of Irony
Politics. they alwJys say, ma'kes
strange bedfellows. Tak.e for example
the spectacle of two members of the
British parliament appearing before a
atate legislature in this country to lobby
against a pending bill .
Pwlng ltcangt lhwgh it see~. the
two MP'a had a vuy HrioU! motive
f«·their trip: 250,000 British and French
job!. '!'.he story ·ls lhat a New York State
Antmblym1n has presented a bill ban-
ning from state airport! any aircraft
with decibel counts or more than 108,
ellectlye July I, and ol 98 by 1117'1.
In effid, this would prohJ'blt supersonic crlrt from hlnding in New York. And
that would Include lbe Angk>-French C<>n-
cot* a in producilon. nte Concorde,
it ii d•lmed. haa • noiM levd reaching
a decibel c:ounl of IU.
---•• Geof'fle --·•
o.ar ·Gcoq.,
TllanU tor that lldvlce on bow
lo be ~r lfllh fOOd·lookillg
&lflol Boy, olltt '!bat you odV!sed, clrls Dodi: ID cnw mel , GRATEFUL
Dear Gracefol:'
Uh. lhll I> • bli <mberrauln&
fof' me to t.lvt lo ask, but do
you remembll:r the exact date that
advice. ran' 1 write aome of this
stuff before I'm fully awake, aod
lf whatever J said work.ed, I coukl
IW'I UR tt.
'·
-Gue11t Editorial • • -..:i...
IF THE CONCORDE I• Ill be banned
from New York, the BrllOn! say, ll
can't economically be built and the pro-
gram would be killed, wilh the reaultant
loss ol jobJ in the tWt'.l nations.
The trony of British lobbyln& in a
U.S. legblature is compounded by tht
fact that poor England and France may
lose those jobs anyway. Both the British
airline BOAC .Ind Air France have re-
jected the Concorde as being impossible
t<> fly economically, regardlesa of any
decibel problems.
ComlnC on top of the R<>I~ R<>yee
collapse, and rcporta of threatened
wtlhdrawtl of fortlgn industrial in-
stallations becauu of England's severe
labor crlse1, could the Concorde cue
be the precurtor of anolher lobbying
Junket to the U.S .• to petition for Bri·
taln's admlaslon as the 511t state?
(As an aside, a footnote Jttnu ap-
propriate: Because the £uropeon
.Jl'f>fr.11onic Eram .11er,m.a to hnve come a crop r, we 1hould ttot jump
to the concl ion that our own SST
deiielopment is tliertbll automatically
made obsolelt. We'd have no aviaf1CJ1t
tnduit'l at alt if evtr11body had quit
wh.!n La11glt11's craft failed to flfl In
1903.J CaWorula Ft1U1rt St!rvlct
'Help to Save Coast Daylight · Train'·
To the Editor:
We are again close to l<lsing another
California historical landmark. For 49
years, the famous Southern Pacific
Daylight passenger train has graced our
California coast line every day. bringing
joy and relaxation t<> over 15 million
passenger11. It became syn<lnymous with
California. In fact, to many, the Daylight
became as much a part of America
as the Fourth <lf July. \Vhen Premier
KhruUlchev ()f the Soviet Union (on
his viail to this country) was told he
could not visit Disneyland, he asked
that his second request be honored:
a ride on the famous Southern Pacific
Daylight from Los Angeles t<> San Fran·
cisco.
1 KNOW THESE facts because of
two years research f<lr my recently
published 656 page historical v<llume <ln
the Daylight. No <llher "Name Train1'
in the h.ist<>ry of railroading ever
outclassed her, for she was the "Most
Beautiful. Train in the World," traveling
<ln the world famous Coast Line which
closely follows the r<lule Of the C8Jifornia
missions and , for more than 113 miles,
1kirti the beautilul California seashore.
The U.S. g<lvernrnent even acknowlcdg·
ed these facts in 1939 when it placed
a full-cokir. large ph<ltograph of the
Coast Daylight <ln the "wall of honor''
in the Department of Transportation.
She had won the all·time passenger-car·
rying record in a single year and it
was never broken.
As yoo know. Railpax (Nation Ra il
Passenger Corp.), a semi·private govern·
ment corporation, will be nalionaliiing
most of America's passenger trains next
J\.1ay 1. They recently revised their routes
after much public pressure to include
the San Francisco to Los Angeles run.
NOW WE MAY LOSE this. as ft1r.
Bruce Heard, a San Francisco travel
agent formerly of Fresno, has mounted
a personal campaign requesting Railpax
to select the San Joaquin Valley Line
In lieu of the Coast Line because <ll
gome iUogical reasons like scenic beauty
and popularity, which are rontrary to
the facts.
I request that you use your editorial
power and ask the people ()f caufornia
to make their wishes known on the
route they w<luld like t<l travel. Vi'e
now have the golden opportunity to decide
what train and what route we want
cont.inued. All we have to do is take
five minutes and "'Tite Secretary John
A. Volpe at Department of
Transportation, 4G-7th SL S . W.,
Washington D.C. 20491, and make our
wishes known . Write him. He is there
to serve us.
RICHARD K. WRIGHT
Jtle1a'1 Councll111en
To the Editor:
Tuesday, March 16, your newspaper
ran a front page headline story titled
"Cooncilrnen Clash on Cost of Mimeo
Cctples."
I am getUng completely fed up with
our Costa P..1es11 c:»uncllmen bickering.
arguing, and voting on Issues th11t are
of no importMce to the future growth
of Costa Mesa or lls cltlzen!I. Why would
our council have tht stupidity t<> argue
over whethtr one councilman could spend
fron1 $8 to $10 on t.000 mimeographed
copies of a very Important document
that very strongly affec4 the c!Hiens
living on the east side. of Costa fo.1es<i?
This d~ent was typed on the City
of Cost.a ~fesa lettrrbead nnd signed
by '\"illiam L. Dunn. director of planning.
The document was dated June 19. 1970
nnd addressed to "Honorable City Coun·
cil, City or Costa ~fcsa." ~
THE CITY HIRED the lirm of Wiisey
~·.
., • _,..,
Letters from readers art welcome.
Nom1ally writer• should convey tJt.ejr
messages in 300 words or Uss. The
right to .condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. AU let-
ter• must include signature and mail·
ing addre.u. but namu may be with-
held on reqtttst if sufficient reason
is apparent. PoetT11 will not bt pub-
lished.
and Ham to conduct a survey. I will
not take your Ume t<> quote the entire
letter, although it should be published
in your paper. But I would like to
quote from two Very important
paragraphs that certainly affect the
rezoning of ·the east side. It was stated
in this document, "Jt appean that we
will bave under construction a minimum
of 2,2.SO units this year, 1970."
It also stated: "Our annual population
increase at this p<Jint in lime is averaging
about 1,500 persons net per year, and
ll Is predictable, w\th a reasonable
degree or accuracy. that a high vacancy
factor is imminent."
I THINK IT is the DAILY PILCYf's
responsibility l<l print both skies or every
issue that affecl.s <lur citizens. You ctr·
tainly cannot deny that the rezoning
of the east side does just. that.
Why don't our councilmen get down
to making coostructive decisions on very
tragic and very imp<>rtant problems that
face ()Ur city and citizens of Costa Mesa?
As an example we have a major
drug problem within our city and I
can't recall .our councilmen attacking
this tragic problem. Why can't they
set up a teen drug abuse committee
and Jet the teen·agcrs of <lur city have
a hand in solving their own problems,
with the help <lf a courageous council?
WHY CAN'T OUR councilmen do
SCJmelhing about <lur parks and teen-age
activities? I have been a very active
citizen in Costa Mesa for the past l l
years. I remember when the TeWinkle
park could have become a tremendous
faclUty for the adults and teen·agers
<lf our community. Yet there it sits
with very few 'improvements. Why not
build a public Olympic-size swimming
pool at that park site? Why not build
a teen·age canteen for oor young citizens
so they can have a place to go and
enjoy the fellowship of other young
citizens?
I am a father of four teen.age
daughters so I am very much aware
that there is oo place to go nor any
planned young adult activities <lf any
C<lnsequence within Costa Mesa. It seems
our young · citizens must go to other
communities for a pleasurable day's or
evening's entertainment.
WHY DOESN'T OUR. council inform
our citizenry <lf the true economic chaos
that our Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club has been raced with since its In·
cepUon?
There L, a way that we as interested
rltliens could raise funds in completing
these very Import.ant projecls I have
outlined, although I do feel our council
should have and accept th is
responsibility.
\Vhy not have our ('1)Uncilmen l'll !heir
twice n1onthly council meetings 1o•;ear
c::lown t;ult.s to fit their declc;ions? Then
the clty could print tickets and sell
them to the: citlienry and lhey could
h11ve an enjoyable e.vening oul al Just
twice a month. R. W. "DICK" MORRISON
ltlesa Verde Traffic
To the Editor :
Whoever wrote the edit<lrial "Mesa
Verde Problem,_" on the editorial page
of the DAILY PILOT (March 17) was
very badly misinf<lrn1ed. At no time
have we said, ''We want what we want
and that's final." \Ve have always been
open·minded to any sciluli<ln.
The traffic commission took a survey
of the cars using Country Club Drive
last summer and agreed with us that
we have a traffic problem. A meetini::
\1;as held al the Costa ~1esa Country
Club in August to discuss the problem
and v;e have been wailing ever since
then for the traffic commi.ssi<ln t<> do
iiomething. ANYTHING!
ABOUT TWO WEEKS ago we figured
we had waited long eoough and we
called the traffic co mmission and Mr.
Berna111 told the lady that made the
call that our street was a dead issue
and they couldn't help us. Your article
also states that the traffic commission
will probably vote to put In stop signs.
Mr. Bernam said yesterday that they
are going to do nothing.
Commuters use Country Club Drive
to get fr<lm Mesa Verde Drive to Gisler,
and then to the San Diego Freeway.
It is pr<lbably the only 25 m.p.h. street
along their route.
BOTH l\1ESA VERDE Drive and Gisler
were built t<> accommodate 35 m.p.h.
traffic. ~1esa Verde is a four·lane road
1,11ith no homes on it and Gisler is
a straight fo\11'-lane road with only a
few homes on it. Country Club Dr ive
is a two-lane wind ing street and the
visibility if poor. There are homes all
along Q)e"'Street and we must pull into
and back out of <lUr garages. Many
times it is almost impossible to do
this. Impatient drivers swing right
around you. Sometimes <ln the wrong
side. The volume of traffic is bad and
a real menace. Not only do we gel
passenger cars but all kinds of com-
mercial trucks use the street too. We
don't like it but, as the traffic com·
mission pointed <lUl to us, it ia a public
street and anyone can use it.
OUR ~tAIN concern is the SPEED!
Most people v.·ho travel down Country
Club Drlve go 35-t<> 40..m.p.h. and even
more. If they would only <lbey the traffic
lav.·s. we C<lUld put up with the in·
conveniences. There are 23 children under
12 yea rs of age in the 3100 block. I
don't know how many children are 1n
the 3000 block but there are quite si
few . It is these children we are concerned
about. The <lnly reason a child hasn't
been hit by a car so far is because
the little ones are kept in the house.
or back yard , and the older ones are
cauli<lned every time they step out the
front door. Some day somrone is going
to forget and a child will be hit by
one of these Jaw breakers.
Will the traflic C..'Qmmission help us
then?
FLORENCE SHERRICK
~leat Eaters
To the Editor :
Don't feel thrifty because your kid
quit eating meal .
"Do you eat meat?" "Uh -no, I
eal only fru it and vegetables." Thal
Sl:emi; to be the trend among the wary,
y<lung un-hlp Junior flip generati<ln, y<lu
know -the kids who sny they v.·ant
to be diflercnl. non·conformists. do thei r
()wn thing; but they all tend to go
along w\l.h the group. And I bche\'e
1t Is a Communist plot
l..ong hair rvt!r)'Wherc, drug.!i, passive,
withdrawn and !paced out. vegetable.
diet. Zen. Buddha, meditation, rice,
Peace Brother, Jove -I've heard it
a thousand times.
OUR COUNTRY was settled by
courageous and active people. This type
ls naturally a meat-consuming r11ce. The
servile and down-trodden races in the
Orient and elsewhere are not meat
eaters. Where a race of meat eater5
is encountered, there will be found ag·
gressive and efficient enterprise in every
field, from home management to national
government.
This mod hippie trend isn't cute, m<lm,
it's a heavy trip and a bummer al
that. The wh<lle thing is getting too
far out. Can you dig It?
S. G. UND!NE
J\'aU to Eat'th'• Coffin
To the Editor:
Arthur Vinsel's Pilot Logbook of March
18 concludes with his personal observa-
tion <ln what he is doing to help •
threatened w<lrld. As far as 1eaving S<ltne·
one to carry oo after he is gone
to fight a battle against the world'•
ills. a fight that will surely be drawn
out beyond his lifetime, he is doing
nothing.
He didn't say that he was bringing
no more children into the world. If
he has some it is understandable that
he chose: to bring no m<lre into tbl
population explosion that is under way.
BUT IF HIS choice is to bring no
children into the world it is poss ibl•
that he is adding one small nail to
the earth's coffin <lf the future. A1I
obviously talented and educated man
should be sure that he is followed by
one <lr more of his fa mily who can
cope with what is to rome and S<>lv.
the problems. Not leave it up to tht
under.educated and often irresponsible
v.·ho are multiplying at ,, rapid rate.
His decision is a perSClnal matter aod
he is not the first In these dayii t••
voice such. Dr<lpping <lut is never a
solution but thal is in effect what is
being done.
IT REt.1INDS !\lE of what an oltl.
aunt of mine said when my daughter
y.·as born in 1945, her gloom y statements
being to the effect that she would never
bring a child into this terrible situation
in the world. I'm sure thousands of
<lthers for hundreds <lf years have said
similar things. When have things been
rosey and uncomplicated?
It still is a personal p<>int. 1 thought
I'd make mine. 1 hope I have done
it.
EDGAR R. BARTON
Quotes
George Scott, Hollywood actor oa plan
to reject pri1babl1 Oscar -"l think
it is degrading· to have actors in com·
petition with each <lther."
--W-
Wednesday, March 24. 1971
The editorial page <lf the Oail11
Pilot seeks to i1lform and .11tim-
11late readers b11 prestnti11g this
newi;paper's opinio~ and com·
mcntory on topics of intertst
and significanct, by proulding a
forum for the expression of
ot1r rcoders ' opinions, and b11
presc11ting tltt diverse view·
roill!s of informed observers
anll spokes111rn 01~ topic$ <lf tht
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
I
l
I ;
, . •
/
Saddlehaek ~Today's Plnial ..,
••
N.Y. Steeb
•
voe ""'· NO. 71, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ' ORANGE COtJNTY, CALIFORNIA
• WE~NE~DA Y, 111 ... RCH 7~. 197-1 TEN~S
Camper Crush Feared on New Beac:h
Held in Caribbean
•
Fugitive Nabbed
In Stock Fraud
By TOM BARLEY
Ot tlM D1l11' l'tlOI Slit!
Globe-trotting stockbroker Joseph
Dulan'ey ls today in 1 Curacao jail cell
awaiting action by Dutch colonial
autbOrities on the extradition demand
being flown to the. Caribbean island
from .Orange County.
Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature un-
derlines ac.cusatioru that Dulaney, 37,
formerly cf Newport Beach, defrauded
Investors in his Financial World Trends
empife of an estimated $3 million before
he fled to Europe from his plush Laguna
Hilla "Taj Mahal'' in December, 1969.
Investigators believe that the free
spending Dulaney recently returned to
Munich. It was his home for more than
a year. Authorities said he visited
relatives in his Illinois birthplace recently
and went on to make several more
contacts before fiying back to West
Germany.
Interpol and the FBI had Curacao
-·in the Netherlands Antilles off
Maracaibo. Venezuela -high on their
checki11g list for reasons that are not
availabte today. The confidence in
lawmen' in both agencies was justified
when Dulaney checked in last week at
a Curacao hotel and was immediately
arr;sted -on the long standing . charges
of pl!Ml theft. forgeey .an~coosptracy.
Hi1 wife. Mar,ene •. 31, is atill. being
sought On identical charges. Investigators
art .concentrating their aearch on Mon-
tJ'eal tn ·the belie.f ~hat Mrs. Dulaney,
whO onef aded as secretary for Dulaney
in thl! World Financial Trends ccmplex,
may haVe taken the couplt's three youn1
children to the Canadian city.
~s. Dulaney's arrest would enable
Orange c.ounty authorities to consolidate
coilrt act.ion against a trio alleged to
be iespon's.ible for a series of frauds
usertedly conceived and carried out
from lavish office buildings in Laguna
Hill! and Seal Beach.
The World Financial Trends corporate
compla and its facilities are now in
thl! hands of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
tnd awaiting proceeding.& that lack only
Candidates Meet
Public Thursday
The candidates for the most heavily
contested seat on the C.pislrano Unified
School District boa.rd will meet the public
in a 1pecial town hall meeting Thursday
in Dana Point.
Sponsored by the Dana Point Chamber
of Commerce, the event will begin at
Henry Dana SChool.
The candidate• invited to speak and
answer the public's questions ar~ Johh
~erences. manager of thf! cap1strano
Beach Water District: Marvin Renfro,
an architect: AUon!O Jimenez. a bullding
materials businessman: Keith Jensen,
1 lawyer ; Orlando Tosdal, a research
firm manager, and Robert Dahlberg,
president of a marina development firm.
The public is welcome to the meeting,
which will include refreshments.
Oruge Coast
Wea'ther
Those gray skies are goMa clear
up Thursday, bringing illghtly
warmer temperatures to th e
Orange Coast. with readings in the
middle 60s locally and up to 70 de·
greet inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Prtsidtnt Ni:tan is in remn.,.k·
ably oood ht<llth a-ft«r 26 months
amt apparen.t111 i& thrivin g on his
Job. Poge 10. ... "" ,, C .. lftnlil I C•,_ c.rwr ll
Cllldllflf U• lf
CllHltilf O·M
Cffl'llc• "' Cr11fl--~6
l)Htll Ntflc.. •
Ol"tltf"lft. t
adlltf'llll ..... f 1111.t.i•"'""' ,.,,,
1'1111111'• t .. tt -" ·~~ L•"*'' • IMllV• 6
"'"" 111 hrvl1• lt Mtvllt l"t1
,,,,.hlll "v~•• ,, ,uti.1 .. 1 "-'"'' .. ,
Or1111" C-h' t ~TA U lrlvll .._ J4
'"'h 11·'1 or. SMl11Cf9M ll '*" .1111111'11.tf 14·11 Ttt.Yldt<ll H "Tl'letl,.,, "''' .. ..., ~
w-~·1 H"1 tt-"'I
W1rld Nrwt l•I
the presence of the firm's principals
for further action.
Mrs. Dulaney's arrest will place her
in the defendant's box with her husband
and 38-year--<lld James Shipley of. Hun·
tington Beach, the man promoted by
Dulaney from vice president to president
shortly before the Newport man left
for Germany and what one investigator
described as the "life or Riley" in
Munich.
Shipley faces identical charges. He
is scheduled to appear April 21 in Santa
Ana Municipal Court and is free on
$250,000 bail.
The bursting of the tlulaney bubble
in December. 1969 brought a rash of
bankruptcy claims and Superior Court
lawsuits. most of them fi~d by residents
of the retirement communitiea in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
Orie theme dominates in those actions
-the claim that the suave, handsome
Dulaney actively solicited investment
funds and converted them to his own
use.
Many residents havt told investigators
that the polished investment counselor
successfully sought what were in some
cases their life savings with • winning
mixture of-grace and charm,
· But inVestigaton cOncede f9day that
thert 1tt still m3ny residents ·of the
\wo communit;.es who qnnot believe that
the,.Jqseph Dulaney tb~y knew. was in
any way responsible far, the defrauding
of their neighbor&.
More substantial vlctlml who figure
in investigators' reports. include· the St.
Bernardine Hospital In San Bernardino
and the Chemical Bank of New York.
Ho.spital officials clain'I they were taken
in to the tune of $500,000 by Dulaney
on the strength · of ·collateral ia· the
form · of · stocks and bonds that later
proved to be worthless.
Again, investigators claim, it was the
.. same old story of Dulaney's fast talk
and his gift cf the gab ." He was highly
regarded by both officiala and Catholic
nuns at the old San Bernardino hospital
At this date, just $10.000 has been
repaid on the $.500,000 St. Bernardine
Joan.
The New York bank came into the
picture when Dulaney cbtained a $500,000
loan from the Atlantic Co. cf New York.
Investigators said pre·payment of high
Interest rates <1n the Joan and the first
regular Joan repayment left Dulaney with
just $360,000 of the amount borrowed.
But the bank may have falten foul
of what investigators claim were
carefully conceived tactics by not observ·
ing rules applying to co-signatories when
Dulaney made two withdrawals from
the bank -one for $186,QOO and the
other for $1$,000.
Jaycees Sponsor
Carnival Fest
San Cltmente's Jaycees will sponsor
a four-day carnival featuring dozens of
major rides and booths starting Thurs·
day in a Capistrano Beach business park·
ing lot.
The carnival. providM by Fairtime
Shows. will be held Thursday through
Sunday at tbe Von's Market parking
lot in the beach community's village.
Rides will be available through the
day, closing at 9 p.m. each evening.
Funds raised in the project will help
finance the coming year's activities by
the local group, including the annual
Junior Miss Pageant.
Swimming Team
Tryouts Slated
'l'rynutl for South Ccast youngsttrs
interested in organiud swimming act·
ivlties 1pon10red by the San Clemente
Aquatic Association will take place Satur-
day at the Municipal pool in Saa
Clemente.
Tryout times for children five years
old and up will be from I to 3 p.m.
Opening11 are avallablt for all age
croups interested in joingln& the novice
ctr advanced twim teama wblch compel.I
ln AAU·sanctionaed activities.
Parents •rt encouraged to 1ccompany
their children ta the-tryout.s.
VIEW FROM ATOP BLUFFS AT SAN ONOFRE SHOWS :NEW STATE BEACH
Fishing Good But Beach Disappears at Time• Ourl,ng ,High Tld•
U.S. Aides Set
Clemente Meet
On Revenue Plan
Li~king Litter
Capo Council Pushes for Action
San Juan Capistrano c1tv councilmen supporting research by bever3ge and Federal officials Crom six western .,, states will meet at the San Clemente have jumped on the envircnmental container industrie! in the field of 'bio--bandwagon. degradable container&. supporting pro--
Inn Thursday to discuss Prtsident Nix-The council Monday unanimously pass-gram! to encOurage citiiens to be mQre
on's revenue sharing plans and the ed a resolution urging action to.alleviate responsible ' tn dilpoiing the· containers
streamlining of the Executive b r a n c· h the problem of litter and waSte disposal , including rtcyclin~ and . ~!d.er•t~ Of
or the U.S~ Governme~t.· created b}' the t' of ;e. 1,~~ ~~~ -~
· The 1qay·loqg <01J1"8Dces Mt , beiqJ ,~llO&_f' nab ltd ' ' ' , <Iii'"'-'"'""'' \lcll ~· ' , 'I' , il>Oo!qrod by 'llie toi !ngelei'arid'·s .. · '"<illi"iilo'l\itfon urges illl ' ol' Tbi;iuti,!. aoinlew!td1.i J..i'·cm.'
Frabcisci> Fedtril ExtCJitivt Boar~a. ' , c.alifornia Cities, SountY ·su.i>eFY'f~!" trol of disposable. non ~ble ~
D:elega~es will, •tte~d-from .cal1forfti111.~:-·;(l!CclaHon, -and the state legislature tainer1 lbc:iuld be, inltlated~•t th .statw·
Nevada. Ari.Iona , Oregon, Washington to alleviate prob{ems. caused by thf" level, . ~
and RaWall. · contah1ers by tnacting IigjslaUOd tG'Umit 11t Council bat aufhOritM
· Speaket'I at· the · event will Include their use. · • '""' Council bat luthOriJ:fd.•
Rebert L. Joss. assistant . secretary for Way! t_his can.be done inclttdt requµ-tn1, dtstr-lbutlon Of tht resohitfOD "to , l~at
economic policy for the Department ·of a deposit on all beverage containers. legl!JI1tors.
' ' the Treasury, ,and Roy Ash •. president
of "Li.iton Indu!itrits and chairman of
the President's Advisory Council on E1·
ecutlve Organizatioii. ' ·
· The two officials will hold 11 press
conference 'JllurSdaY eftetnoon ·at the
inn tD .discuss the two issues covered
in the conference. ·
Clemente Theft
Foils 2 Suspects
Held in Ontario
A telltale receipt stuck to the back
of an expensive televi&on set among
the loot in a recent San Clemente
burgla ry led to the arrest of two men
in Ontario Tuesday.
The pair now will be charged in at
least four theft incidents here, pclice
said.
San Clemente detectives said the two
men suspected in the. thefts are Gordon
Ernest Bramucci, 27. of 214 Pelayo,
San Clemente·, and Donald Richard Stout,
28, of 211 C Pelayo.
The two men were arrested in the
• burglary of the C. H. Hargraves
residence at 2701 Via Montezuma whert
thieves stole about $1,500 in household
goods earlier this week.
. They were arrested after Ontario
patrolmen saw a car laden with
household goods exit a darkened parking
lot Tuesday evening.
After taking the two men into custody
for investigation, police said, Ontario
detectives began examin ing the items
stuffed into the car trunk.
On the back of a $600 color television
set they found a receipt which lhey
say bore the name cf a San· Clemente
repair service and the name C. H.
Hargraves.
Senate Showdown on SST
Scheduled in Vote Today '.
WASHl,NGTON IUPI) -Tb•' Senate,
its members subjected to one of the
l'nost intensive lobbying Campaigns in
memory, decides today wheth'er to con·
tinu.e government financing of the con·
troversial supersonic transport plane.
The JOO.member senate appeared split
squarely down the middle ln advance
of the 1 p.m. PST vote. Battling for
the faster-than.sound airliner were Presl·
dent Nixon and his administraUon, the
aircraft Industry and most or organized
tabor. Environmentalists led the op-
position .
The Senate last session voted against
the SST, but later bowed to House
demands to continue the financing
through March. Last week tbe House
reversed itself and voted to end
governmental funding.
The ballot offered the leading 1971
Democratic presidential contenders their
first chance in this session of Congress
to vote on a major and controversial
issue. M06t of t~e pctential Democratic
contenders already were lined up against
the SST.
But there were exceptions. Including·
Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington,
the jetline:-'s No. 1 booster, and' possibly'
former ·vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey.
Of all the potenlial Democratic can· ·
PILOT SHOWS
PLANT TONIGHT'
did.ates, Humphrey appeared "the only
qne. for whom the. Qecision was .• tortuous .
one· -'and with good rea:Sor!. He has
&!ways banked heavily on tbe support
qr organized labor and AFL-CIO Preti·
dent Gl!orge Meany bas stumped long
and hard for the plane, iind the jobs
its continuation represented.
Jackson had. none of Hu11.1phrey's pro-
blems since he represents the state of
Washington where the Boeing Company
is building the two prototypes whosa
futlife was -at stake. Already pl1gued
by heavy unemployment.· Seattle faced
the possibility. cf an even . more drastic
curtailment of jobs wiihout federal back-
ing for the plant's ~evelopment.
Moreover, Jackson's entire premis•
rests .on the fact that ht is, as of
now, the only candidate appealing to
the party's conservative wing with his
strong advocacy of . military &trength.
distrust of_ Communism, and -in this
case -aviation supremacy.
The other: PQtenlial Democratic can-
didates -and the Senate is filled with
them -appeared lined up as ·a unit,
1v11tding any dlvision on thi1 lssue.
They' Include Sen. George S. McGovern
m Scuth DaJroUJ, the ·only . annOunced
candidate: and Sens. Edmund S. M\l!lkie
flf Maine, Birch Bayh of Indiana, Harold
E. Hughes of Iowa. Fred R. Harris
of Oklaboma,:walter F. Mondale cf Min·
neso~. Williapl Proxmire of Wisconsin.
and Edl'lard M. K e Ii n e· d y of
Massachusetts -although Ute. later has
repeatedly Jl<c;lared h!msolf out of the
'72 1weepstatei.
Easter Week
Headaches ·
Predicted
By JOHN \'ALTERZA
Of thtl 0.111' 1>1111 Si1H
As the fanlare from Sacramento begins
to mount abcut the Easter Week opening
of the new San Onofre Bhdfs· State
Beach, local officials are hlrborinC
secret worries about the christening.
Some of the S;oathlaild's 11tatt parks
and public sarety-officiaJs ,fear·the-mtib
of campers and · bathers on a facility
not yet ready for them could tum the
weeklo~g use of the 3.5-mtle bluf(s and
beach into a major headache. ·
Because of a· lack cf budgeted funds,
the seven-day pericd when vehicle cam.
ping arid day use will be welcomed
will be a. jury-rigged -arfatr at·· best.
lt will be open from 8 a.m. April 3
until Sunset on April 11.
All camping -charged at ~ rate
of $3 a day -will , be done on ttJe
downcoaet. lanes of old Pacific Coast
Highway. · ·
Hundred! 6f visitors· could be expected
at the facility because of the crush
at other beaches aOd campgtcurids.
Their only access to the new beach
will be via the Basilone :Road offram-p
of Ult ~on·Wqo .~ay. ,: •
The JMtQfls~ who mlHel tbll ramp
will have to dr.ivi aeve~al mile1 farU.U
down '. the fl<eW!Y lo the ·Lea• PiilgH
offramp. crosa aver and bead back UPo
eout' • m·.:. ·and :probibl)' uiideri•
• s!int tf tho liorder Palrol cbeckpOln~
Onct on otd Highway , 101, visitor•
will , pus the • Sa:n Onofre Nutjear
Generating Station an0 informalicn
center,'. then · .drive abOut two , miles
firther· to the beach site.
' No ·clearing of the ruiie'd chapparal
of tht blufftops will be d,one for the
o'penirig. · · ·
Three trails,· weaving down from t:be
ro~dway through rugged canyons have
been cut by 1tate crew&, but as. yet
there is no ace~ to -the beach . by
patrol or rescue ve.}licles.
The parb ativice planJ to schedule
tWo rangera ~· shift to ~trof th6 bluffs.
6each Ind huridreds cf 'visifors. Explorers
~cout.s ~ve volunteered to help.
No lifeguards will " be· available; . .and
all visitors have been ·urged to bring
their own food and water.
A feW su"pjllies will' b;e ava'ilable throuah
several conces~lonaires.
The nearest telephone is, several mites
away ·from tht" beach aite, and . law
enforcement and rescue servic"el!I · arJ
based . in Oceanside, about 13 milu
downcoast.
Inherent · problenu don't end there,
however.
The average height of the soft, crumbJ.
tng·. bluffs · towering -above ' the "bhch
ii about 200 feel ·
State officials in their news releases
have warned visitors-to stay away from
the looming waJl1, termi11g f b em
"dangerous."
One other built-in dlsad\.rantage to the
beach ii ib narrowness.
"The be!ch is. ,excellent · for awim-
miqg," a state. aanouncement says,. "with
lf&'duaUy .alopina beacbts. . · •
"Most of the beach and . at limet.
ill cf it, disappfars ·at hlgb tides, so
visitcrs should keep this in· mind and
leave beach before tbe tide .hits Jta
height."
But the state parks depar.tment will
give· the beach a try anyway, schedulinl
formal dedital!On rites on April 3,' led
by Rep. Afphonzo lleu <• ataunch fighter
for the beach acquiaition) and State'
Parks Director William PeM Mott. The
ceremcnles will start at t. a.m.
.•
After a call to San Clemente police.
local officers drove to the Hargraves
residence, a vacation home, -and found
signs of a recent burglary.
BramUcci and Stout will be arraigned
on chltrges of burglary today : in 1 Scutb
Orange County Municipal Court. ·
Bill Leary, creator of thf! newspaper
feature Graffiti. is one of ma:ny na·
tlonally fe atured newspaper "ceJebrities"
who have sent greetings to the DA.IL V
PILOT for tonight's first public open
tiouse in the newly expanded plant.
·Last · ·no~ndup?·
Lqcal police also are investigating
several other thefts here Iii which the
pair' !11 allegedly involved:
Women Miners OK'd
DENVER (AP) -Women can now
work in Colorado coal mines.
Gov. John Love signed a blll Tuesday
removing 1 ban on tbt emptoymeni
of women in the mines.
The measure was bailed as a women's ·
rlgbta proposal when ll easily passed
tht Jeglslatu111.
t.eary's original •·GraJfiU's" and other
spoclal artwork will be on display
throughout the plant at~ 330 W. Bay
St.,' <:osta Mesa. ·from 7 to t o'cloc~
tonl~t and agaip .Thursday night ~then
the-public is invited to tour· the DAILY
Pnnr. ·
A self-guided walking low' has ~tn
lllld out to show visltors through the
entlrely rfnovated and enlarged plant
facllltles. Parking· will bt available on
t11t ·DAILY PILOT parking' lot and °"'
meet in area& adjacent 'to the p I a n t
at Bay and 'J'h\Jrln streets.
I
•
C'lemente .Police Turn Cowboy&
, I
Tudd'ay• was roanttup ·day 1°'?" San
Cl•nien\''a'.poJlce ~rtmeiil . ·
And toward · the end of, tho· ~
hour the to1-l Tiumber cf caut•·corr•lled;
by the force bad re1ched 31.
Broken fen·cts 1urrounmnl gru\na
ar'-'s In the northerly 1rea; P.f the clt}'
were blamed fOr th~ •pair Cl roaming
eattle calJs wtiich caru 1n at 1:34 pni.,
then again at &:St p.m.
Officers sent to the firsf call _.Jong
I ' _.
+·en1,~,.,:::~·~::~, ~ob d>~aui. '' roam .... ...,, .. ...,.,,·~~ . · , }
After herdlrtg" th> 'btel · 6aclf fine
pasture and mending fenC~. offiberS
ttti.lmed to more routine duti.el. •
Minutes later more callm: wre
mporting ano<hor IO head 1 .... ~
Pacific Cout Hlpway In the 1IOl1ll ..a
of the city. •
Officers agatn geil MddJed with --M ,.,-
duty and w.lng their newly learned u.-
pertlse rounded up the herd quickly.
I
•
'
I
,I
\
. f
I·
' •
One Government Eyed
• ~tiµly of County Super Agency Pr.opo~ed
I . ~
oraoca.,Oolii!y iavemmeol lbould Ilk': ...m for lht counl.)r hlltud ol lht ••>wily II .. pl.on Ibo q!lllJly or Ult Wt ,want
· ly tale 1 look •I becoming the single ll>d 18 unall clU..." llltUn llllU•l\!d. . ~or lllt llltjortl¥ lad. ·lot ••trnm•nt
. local jurildiclian rathe.-than baving "26 "lt !Dlabt not be futfblt. but Jt ~ to early out thOM ptini to see ' tllat
llllle cJtles" oper.!ltlng municipal be lncluaed Jn "anY .tudJ if one tJ tt J1 b.lppena." ...
, &overnment.s within the county. be done." "People moved to Orange County
'lb1I wu tht view expressed Tuesday In his wid&-ranttn1 tallt, lM county because it is a good place to live ,''
bY Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana, board chief also criticized the Irvine Battin added. ''ft we allow ourselves
-chllrman of tht Orange County Board C.Ompany, land developers in general, to bt bamboozled into doing for business ·of Supervisors. 1 Superior Court judges arid the California what business wants, that wlll not be
Battin created a bit of a stir wbe.n Public Utilities Commis1ion. in the hest inleresta of the majority l:ie made the remark in Anaheim while He declared that the philosophy of of our residents."
lJ)Ukln& before tbe American Society the present Board of Supervl!ors is to Tbe boAid chairman indli;ate<I that
rQ.r PubUc Administration. slow down county growth. he stUI favored ousting County
It came while BaUin, an attorney, Ballin accused tbe previous Board of Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.
wu discussing the possibility of a charter Supervisors of "reacting to ~·hatever "The new board has the right to hire
form of government ror Orange County. business wanted." an administrative officer to carry out
"For instance, I think any such stud}I "That was the board 's philosophy of ilS philosophy of government," Battin
thoWd consider a possible overall govern· lhe 1960's," Battin said. "'Our phllosopby concluded . •
Lakewood Man .Jump on Bandwagon
Pleads Guilty St.ates Rushing to OK .
:On Lesser Rap Youth Vote Amendment
·A Lakewood man accused on arrest
of the murder of a ~year-old wido\Y
whose almost nude body was found in
a bnuh-choked ?rjodjeaka Canyoo ravine
~on. 16 pleaded guilty Tu"dly to lesser
· charitS.
Orange Cowity Superior Court Judie
Byron K. McMillan accepted the plea
Or Glen Dale Fer1UIC>ll, 37, to charges
et volu.n.tuy maMlaUJhte.r. He iet April
2S u -&be unemployed construction
''orker's sentencing date.
· Ferguson faces a posalble 1tate prison ierm of up to five years. The Jnaky,
uewcut feflU&CID, newly arrived in
()range County from T a c o m a ,
\Vashingtoa, wa1 arrested by Orange
County inVtsUiatOI-s six days after the
body of Zelma Wltgensteln of Norwalk
was found in the rugged Modjeska
ravine.
Sherilr1 investigators today aaid lha.t
circumstancea of the 1e1 slaying made
it "highly unlikely" that any Judge would
accept the p«ssing of murder char1es
against Ferguson.
They 1ald the negoUaled plea was
accepted after a "con1iderable in-
vestigation" into the private life of the
victim.
Safety ·Awards ...
Go to 8 Drivers
Eight bUJ drivers from ~ Caplllrano
Unilled Scliool Dillricf bofe qQillrled
for safe driving awards ,fi:Gm i1R Na;
Uonal Safety Council.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Stat o
legislatures, warned by the U.S. House
of RepreaentaUves' 82-year-old senior
member that "youth will be served,''
rushed today to join 1n ratlfylng a con-
stituUonal amendment lowerln& the
votln& age ln all electlonl to 11.
Delaware, Connea:Ucut, MiMetota,
Washington and Tennessee climbed on
the bandwagon Tuesday, approvln1 the
amendment as aoon u Jt was passed
by the Howe. 400 ta 19. Minne.sot& moved
so swiftly it was accused of jumplng
the gun.
A UPf state-by~tate survey ahowed
al least 32 other states expected to
give swl!t approval to the proposition.
Legis:laUve leaders in several other states
:still were pondering what action they
will take. The proposal must be ratified
by 38 states before It become• the 26th
amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Approved by the Senate last month
In a 94 to o vote, the amendment would
remove slate powers to set minimwn
voting ages for slate and local electlorui.
Congress Ja:st year established the IS.
year-old qualification for federal elec-
tions.
It was possible the amendment could
be approved ln record time. The current
record of aix months and six days was
ettabllshed in 1804: when I.hf: stat.es ap-
proved the 12th amendment. 'ft'hlch pro-
Tlcl!i ~ -~,iol !\II ·-•I collegl' mut cut separate b\llllti' foc
Emhe.zzier ~tst
Prison ·Sentence
presidential and vice presldentiaJ can·
ctldlt ...
However, some opposition to the 24th
amendment was noted in states whl!re
there have been atudent disorders. Gov.
Ronald Reagan of Callfornla said he
preferred aubmltting the issue to the
voters and letting them decide. He aald
he believed Congress w111 infringing on
the rights of the states ln aubmtllln.g
tbe amendment (See story, page 8).
Rep. Emonu•I Cell or (0.N. Y.). 82.
chairman of the House Judiciary Com-
mittee, said he was certain the amend-
ment would be approved.
"Any effort to 1top it would be a!
useless a! a telescope to a blind eye,"
Celler said. "Of course. I can't be young
again, but maybe by offering this a(Jlend·.
ment 1 can at least wear the robes
of youth. I do not feel youth will fail
WI If we offer it the responsibility of
the ballot."
Several states competed Tuesday in
an effort to be first to ratify the amend-
ment. la Olympia, Waahington leglslatont
kept a direct telephone line open to
the nation's capital while the House
voted in Washington, D.C.
But the Minnesota legislature ap·
parently ·was first to ratify the amend·
ment, completing its action at 4:14 p.m.
!EST).
Sen. Allen J. Ellender (0-La.). presi-
dent pro tern. of the Senate. added his
name le> ll!i' ~~ abo!ll 4,<Q p.m.
lEST). Coiifpfitl!lg tet~lattve actlob 11·
W ashlngton.
Group to ic·Tour
'Ecology' Mart
Buahed
Tired and exhausted after a six·
week incursion into Laos, a
weary South Vietnamese sol-
dier waits to be evacuated
deepe-r inside Vietnam.
Marine Prisoner
Copter Pilot
Adopted b y Brea
'l'he Brea City Council has formal!;'
adopted El Toro marine helicopter pilot
Stephen Hanson '~ho has been missing
in action in Southeast Asia since June
3, 1967.
Closing Stages
' Last of S. Viet
Units Exit Lao·s
SAlGON (UPI) -South Vietnam
withdrew the last of its army from
Lao:s today, leaving only a rearguard
of marines to keep watch from a tiJ.lltop
position on advancing North Vietnamese
tanks and jnrantry. Americans began
wilhdrawing from Khe Sanh and South
Vietnam began fortifyln& positions near
the border.
The controversial 4:H!a y-old incursion
Into Laos to lry to cut the Ho Chi
Minh supply trlal ~·a~ clearly in its
closing stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out :six North \11et-
nemese tanks today and U.S. Navy
planes trying to destroy a col umn of
17 armored vehicles and truck.!! aban-
doned by the South Vietnamese in their
\\tithdrawal along Route 9.
U.S. helicopler pilot !st Lt. Erick
Ileintz, 25, tl! Spokane, Wash ., a veteran
of the Laotian campaign, said in Khe
Sanh after observing the approaching
North Vietnamese. "the way the Con1~
munists are n1oving they'll be on top
of this piece In a week.''
American spokesmen lit Khe Sanh
predicted all American force s would be
out of the onetiJne U.S. Marine ba~~
12 miles from the border by the ent.I
of the "'eek and :speculated that Sou\1 1
Vietnam "'OU!d try to hold the area
when they left. Khe Sanh has been
hit for nine conseeutive lays by Com-
f'T'Unist shells. Eie:hty-lwo rounds hit
there today.
Front dispatches said the South ~
namese had begun strengthening
defenses at Ham Ngbi, the advance
headouarters on Route 9 just ~·est of
Khe ·sanb. The western defenses -
toward Laos -also were being built
up. the reports said.
American military sources said the
!2,000 South Vietnamese troops pulled
ou1 of Laos were still in Quang 'l'rl
Province and would try to hold Kh•
Sanh.
South Vietnamese spokesmen said the
2,000 South Vietnamese marines still in
Laos were manning a fireba!e called
Hong Ha. or Hotel, two miles insld•
Laos and two miles south of Route
9. Military sources said, "Hotel will
remain an outpost because it is the
highest point in that general area" and
provides a commanding view of North
Vietnamese attack routes.
In Washington, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird sald South Vleinam's
mission in Laos had essentially been
accomplished and t~ troops w 1 r •
withdrawing because of "lremeodoualy,
vicious and violent" attacks by the
enemy. But he said the South Vietnamese
achieved their primary objective of in-
terrupting Communist aupply lines.
The Viet Cong'a Liber1Uon Radio
broadcast a communique tonight from
!he supreme command ol the Pathet
Lao Communists in Laos claiming the
South Vietnamese drive into the Lao5
panhandle was ''smashed" after 45 day1
of "sustained fierce fighting."
llanoi and the Viet Cong in statements
Lroadcast bv J.fanoi Radio and issued
1n Pari:s by ihe delegations to the peace
talks for the past week have said they
had crushed all ARVN armor sent into
Laos.
Saigon and Pentagon spokesmen l&llf
the. incursion as a victory that disrupted
the Ho Chi lt1inh Trail, slowed down
Communist operationa in South Vietnam
and Cambodia for many weeka and
destroyed vast quantities of vt a r
material. Saigon said llS troops destroyed
or captured more than 176,000 tons of
enemy munitions and killed 13,000 c.om.
munist soldiers in a 10 to 1 kill ratio.
{::{ {::{ {::{ {::{ {::{ {::{
North Viets Intensify
Attncks on Laos Capital
The husband of r-.1rs. Carole Hanson
of El Toro has not been heard !tom
since he was sho t down while piloting
a helicopter on a medical evacuation
mi!sion. Brea r.tayor Ed Jackson said the coun-VIENTIANE. Laos (UPI) -North seized by the North Vietnamese 1&51 Vietnamese troops intensified attacks to-weekend.
cil action would enCQurage personal let-day near the royal Laotian capital or Gen. Thongphan Knocksy, official
ters from Brea residents to Hanoi of· Luang P'rabang and heavy fighting was spokesman for the Laotian defen1e
ficials to urge release of Hanson. report.ed only a half mile from the ministry, said North Vietnamese troops
''It bas become evident that in· city'• airport. The defense ministry said stepped up attacks against the hilltop
dividualized and specialized efforts for the situation "remains critical." position of Phouxang a half mJle from Communist units with mortar support the airfield before dawn Wednesday, then
IODlll..()f O,\f' All)tJ'iCaf\;lervi<:i!men listed regained the .strategic Ban Done-Cho po. withdrew shortly after sunrise to avoid
as missing in action has proven sue· sition three miles northeast o{ the Luang air strikes.
cessful. Prabang Airport Tuesday night after Thoogphan said Laotian troops ncap-
"One wife of a man missing for t~·o losin&: it to Laotian counterattacks earner lured three strategic hills north and
nd • halt years organized a mas'.,ive in the day. The position wu originally east of the airfield Wednesday but ht warned · they might be lost again i• letter campaign in her hometown,'' night fighting. He said Laotian JOSM:s
Jackton notl!<f. Dra inage Contract were "heavy" but gave no c11ualty
''Two months sfter the conc!u:sion of figures for either side. The award ll given for one year of
driving without an accident. Any contact
between the bus and any other object
resulting in property damage of injury,
however minor' Is considered an accident.
according to Mrs. Jen S tr a t t o n ,
TransportaUon Supervisor.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 46-year.old
man has been sentenced to federal prison
for embezzling more than $3,000 from
an office at the Marine Corps bue
in nearby Camp Pendleton.
the letter campaign, :she received her F C A d By \Vednesday night, Thongphan &aid,
A group of Laguna Beach housewives very first letter from her husband." Or an yon pprOVC North Vietnamese troops were three to
· l•""I•• a ••mile tr1·p to market five miles north and east of the alrfMild.
Those receiving the awards which were
pruented Monday at the meeting of
the Capistrano Unified School District
board or trustee• are Dorothy Barnett,
Deane Bogart, Helen Bo1art, Chlrles
Croot,· Joy Forrester, Joan H111yard,
Patricia Irving and Barbara Scbenewark.
Asi a Hit by Quake
UPPSALA. Sweden (UPI) -A strong
earthquake hlt the Tien Shan area of
Centrnl Asia Tuesday nlght, it "·as
,.ported today by Prof. Maukus Batlh.
chief of the Uppsala lnltitute.
DAILY PILOT
OU.HG;! c;QAST PUaL.tlHIMO CCN.1"1ff
a.e ffrt ti. WeM
Prwaldlftt Mii hWwi.
J1(\: l. Cl!lf4..,
Viet ,,.... ...... o.-91 ~ n.-·· 1Ct "11 ""'
'"'''"'' J.. M•?lril1• ~Ullw
Ch1rf11 H. le" .aJdi1r4 P. N4R
AMlt!Ml ......... IMlttn
Let ....... Oflk'9
222 F.fMt A't ll•t
S-C' '' OMte J OI. Nortli ll C1111!11e a.e1I .,_......,
Qltl Ml!Nl D W.t .. , SIPW ....,_. l llKflr m::I "..,.,, ... ~
Hlln ...... 1Mdr11 11'7S lltdl IWtMtf
U.S. District Court Judge Thomas -Y.
Murphy Tuesday imposed a sente~
of one year and ont day on Raymond
E. Machado ,of Oceanside who workld
in the special services office.
r.tachado alM> was convicted of making
fal.se statements in requesting funds for
recreaUonal purpoaes,
Evidence ahowed an audit of the
special services office disclosed fr.
regulariliea in cub handling for a nine-
monlh period in 1967-68 while MachadD
worked the.re.
Autry Bows Out
As City Planner
Alvin O. Autry, Laguna Beach city
planner who went throu@h the almost
end1w general plan, the beginning• of
the St.at Pine controveray and the begin-
ning• of the h.igh rise flare-up. bowed
out before Laguna Beach plannln1 com·
missioners Monday night.
He will become the adminislrative
!el'Viees director for the c t t y ,
coordinating federal grants and an·
nex1tion. Wayne Moody of Tiburon.
Calif.. wlll begin work April 5 as
Laguna's new director of plaMlng.
Commlulon chairman Willl1m Lam-
bourne thanked Autry for "pulling us
out of a hole." Other commissioners
11reed "'ilh Lambourne'• comment.a.
is P ---e v..i· \Vlth the council aclion, the Mayor I • d · f 4 oo to see what an ''KQJOgical" supermarket A master Pan 01 ra1nage or .3 Elsewhere, in the Plain of Jara aru,
looks like. · urged letter writing campaigns by acres in the Laguna Canyon 11rea will Communist gunners fired 114 round.I of
The women, all members of Pro-en-:schools, clubs and businesses in Brea, be carried out by Christiansen Associates Soviet-made 122MM rockets against poll•
vironmenl·People (P:EP) a recently organization or PO\V and MIA days , of San Juan Capistrano. tions at Ban Na, Sam Thong and Loni
ronned Laguna ecology group, decided wearing or POW bracelets bearing The Board of Supervisors Tuesday Cheng. Thongphan said Ban Na was
to go set for them.selvet l!:fter a Friday Hanson 's name and communication to voted to allow the Flood Control District hardest hit in a 100 rocket bUTll • evening program in which the story to negotiate with the firm for the project but no significant casualties or dam ag1
of the San Fernando Valley's Alexanders l~t;;eg;;i;;sl;;'';;;';";-lll'-'-gin_· ;..g_th_,_,,_,_u;..pc_po_r_1. ___ r;;";;'h;;lc;;h;;l;;';;';;xpe;;;;c;;1oct;;;;to;;;;c;;os;;t;;a;;bo;;u;;t;;l;;IO;;.ooo;;;;.;;;;;;;;w;;e;;r;;;e;;r;;•;;po;;';ted;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. market chain ~·as told, ,...._, .. _
Th~ Na11ey piain bas I~ all~t ~or
ecology, from packaging .meat.a m b10.
degradable containers to listing pOOs..
phate content of all soaps and detergenLt
and drastically reducing the number of
paper bags used to pack customers'
orders.
PEP chairman Mrs. Luisa Hyun wl\1
lead the April 2 shopping trip. "'Ith
specific requests from two Laguna
market managers to bring b11ck detailed
informstion on "ero-marketlng." 1lle
owners of both Acord's and Gene's
markelS have asked for details of the
Alexanden plan, Mrs. Hyun said.
New Yor ke1· Selects
Rose P ara de T heme
PASADENA (AP) -A New Yorker
will receive a free trip to the f\ose
Parade and Rose Bowl football game
next New Year·s Day for suggesting
the Tournament of Roses theme, "The
Joy or Ji.1u:sic."
Mrs. Bert Hall's enlty won over 2.500
others. officials Of the 83rd IMUaJ
tournament announctd Tursdsy.
GEM TALK '"' 1
TODAY,
by
.1. c. HUMPH11n I bm ____ ..,
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RIN G
Even though your diamond en·
gagement ring has an unforget·
table senllrnental value to you, its
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
the care it should receive.
It's an, r"'ee1V111u'
Painful Times Om , GOid brace1•t ls ega ' • alnlully luxurloua
W81Ch. Gift. 0111 Q walch
Is cert•lnly pra ctlc1u.
P1rtlcul•rty when It's
Countians Vi ctirn s of Deadline s
And although a "diamond is fo r-
ever," the stone can be chipped by
a hard blow, and mountings can pit
and discolor if they come in con-
tact with a ch1orine bleach when
you are doing household chores. So·
avoid wearing preciou:s stones end
jewelry when you're doing rough
work or engaging in :sports or other
activities which might expose such
piece:s lo damage.
an Omega. In the world of roan., fin• wa1ch•s, 1he name 1nd r•pu1a1lon of
Omega sland out. Whtn Omega arUulty
conceals one ol their •uperb tlm.plec ..
In an exquisite bracel•t, ii Mcomn a
sinfully pracllcal gilt. See our compJet•
Omega collactlon, lr~m $8$. •
A 1roop of deadlines. moat of them
unpleasant, face lht cltliens of Orange
county ahorUy.
Here are the mOl!t importllnt ones
and where infonnation may be gained
on them : ~March 31. P.1tdlcare aupplemenl•I
medical insurance. This is the voluntary
part ol MedJcare that helpa pay doctor
bills. Basic monthly premium raU• are
$5.60. For further lnronnatlon call the
Santa Ana SOclal Security Office, 836-
2221. Locallon : 1438 E. 1st St., Santa
Ana.
.. -April 15. Thia is the big painful
date for ill wage etrnl!rs.
-Ftderal Jncome Tax deadline . For
ln!orm.aUon, I City Boulevard East.
Orange. Telephone, 836-2381.
-State Income Tax . For information,
Frandilie Tax Board, 2021 E. 4th St.,
Santa Ana. Telephone, SSS-9540.
Homeowners Property Tu Exemptioo.
All homeownen eligible. If you tulve
not received and fll td your exemption
form call Orange County Tax AMeuor1'
ofUce, Homtowner1 Inform at Ion,
83~1.
-April. 10. Property tal'.' drtidline. Se-
~ond Installment property lf!.xes art due.
Penalty of $3 per parcel plus 6 ptrcent
If not paid on time, For this year
actual deadline is Monday, APf'll 12 at 5
p.m. fo~or information : County Tax Col-
lector, 630 N. Broadwa)', Sa.nta Ana. Tele-
phone! 834-34!1.
•
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
the pleasure and the pride with
which you wear them. will be
greaUy enhanced i1 you give them
the care and treatment they de-
serve; and a1lhough this care is
largely up to you. you should still
come in and see us at least ty,·ice
a year • , , "'e"ll chec~ your r ing
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and moonting wear. And,
also al no charge, we'lJ give them
a professional cleaning "'hile you
wait.
I A-111( 10Pt ~ II-Tl'( 1ell(li eerd CD'••·l•d IOld fOO••r·•·• IN~ ... 1ei. IN~ "'""" ;:.:.a 167•
J. C. .J/.umphrieJ J ewefer:1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD ., COSTA MESA
CONVIHlfNT TERMS
IAHKAM ERICA •O.-MASTER CHARGl
24 1'lAll:S IH MiMI LOCATION
'HONE 541·1'401
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I
I
I
I
I
t
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Laguna Beaeh To.ray's Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks · . EDITION
VOL 6'4, NO. 71, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ' . ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, 'MARCH 14, '1971 ' . . -. TEN CENTS
Camper Crush Feared on New Beach
By JOHN \'Al TERZA
01 I'll.-O.llJ Pllllt 11•11
As the fanfare from Sacramento begins
to mount about the Easter Week opening
of ' the new San Onofre Bluffs State
Btach, local officials are harboring
Rcrtt worries about the christening.
-' Some of the Southland's state parks
and 'publie safety officials fear the crush
of campers and bathers on a facility
not yet ready for them could turn the
weeklon( use of the 3.5-mile bluffs and
be'ach into a major headache.
Beet use ·of a lack of budgeted fWlds,
Reds Send
POW Wife's
Letter Back
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of 11Mo IMllJ Plltl ll•tl
Another question mark was added to
the welfare of Maj. Don Lyon Monday
when his wife Janice re~ived a letter
back in the mail she had sent to her
husband. in care of the North Vietnamese
government.
Don Lyon was recently "adopted" by
the city of Laguna Beach as a symbol
ol concern for all American servicemen
held 'piisoner by North Vietnam or listed
u missing . in action there. Maj. Lyon
was &hot dawn over enemy territory
March 22, 1958, and i.s officially listed
as missing in action.
Mr1. Lyo1 ·received the returned letter
on .... .ital'IJl\qn of wl!ll wu 4~1arod
by the f;.aguna Beach City Council as ·•
Don Lyon {:lay, the third anniversary
of the pilof's disappearantt. Sb1 had
mailed ~ letter to her ·husband more
than a · inotlth ago and It came back
with 1 the Vietnamese tquivalent of
"return to sender" st.amped across Its
white envelope.
Mrs. LyoO, who says she has mailed
several letters to her husband, said it
Was the first mail which had ever been
returned.
Mr&. Janice JeSperson. a Don Lyon
Day organizer, viewed the returned Jetter
as a sign that the North Vietnamese
government i! being swayed by the re-
cent POW·MIA publicity.
"The bad publicity they (North Viet·
nam) have been receiving is doing some
good," Mrs. Jesperson said. "But if
they can go through all the trouble
of !lending a Jetter back. then they
should be able to tell her he is alive."
Mrs. Jesperson said she and Mrs.
Lyon will appear on televisio~ April
9 to discuss the POW-MIA situation.
They are scheduled to appear at 12:30
p."m. on channe1 9.
Mrs. Jesperson emphasized her group
would not give up hope for Maj. Lyon
based on the returned letter and said
they would continue lo work on the
J~tter writing campaign being promoted
lo Laguna Beach. . .
Her group is currently urgmg residents
to write Hanoi asking ' "where is Don
Lyon?" and they have set up tables
at local shopping centers to sell Don
Lyon bumper stickern. She said persons
wishing to volunteer to man the tables
may cont.act her at 495-4289.
'.f roops Leave Korea
SEOUL. Korea CAP) -The U.S. 7lh
Iiifantry Division is being pulle~. out
of Korea and disbanded, the U.S. mihtary
In Seoul announced today.
Oruge Coast
l\'eather
Those gray sides are gonna clear
up Thursday, bringing slightly
warmer temperatures to th e
Orange Coast, with readings in the
middle 60s locally and up to 70 de-
grees inland.
• INSIDE TODAY
Presidf?nt Ni%un. is in remark·
ably good health after 26 month.1
and apparently U thriving on his
job. Page 1 O.
Mf'll '" krvtu U
Ml•lf'I , .. " M\INll ~•Ml 24
M1tllfi1t ...... •·t
Orat1 .. C-ty ' PTA Jt
S)"1¥1t hrtW I• • ....,. 11·11 or. lttlM"'"' u ltedl M11'11th J+tJ
Tt.it\thlltll U
TllMl9" U.t7 w...-' • w-·• """ .,...,. w .. lf 111..., "'
the seven-day period when vehicle cam-
ping and day use will be welcomed
will be a jury-rigged affair at best.
It will be optn from 8 a.m. April 3
until sunset on April II.
All camping -charged at the rate
of $3 a day -will be done on .the
d~wnco.ast lanes of old Pacific Coast
Highway.
Hundreds of visitors could be expected
at the facility becaose of the crush
at other beaches and campgrounds.
Their only access to the new beach
wUI be via the Basilone Road offramp
of the San ·Diego Freeway. ·
K"I Tree
'DAILY Pll.OT li•ll .....
Th• star. or a eurrent nap in
Laguna Beach !&'this star pine.
It is 50 years old and a service
station is to be developed be-
side it. The oil company said it
will protect the tree. OpponenL1;
are not satisfied the tree will
be saved and are opposing the
service station.
Senators Decide
Future of SST
In Voting Today
WASRINGTON (UPI) -The Senate,
Its member!! 11ubjected to one of the
most intensive lobbying campaigns in
memory, decides today whether to con-
tinue government financing of the con·
trover!llal tupirsonic transport plane.
The lOO;member senate appeared split
squarely down the middle in advance
of the 1 p.m. PST vote. Battling for
the faster-than-sound airliner were Presi-
dent Nixon and his administration, the
aircraft industry and most of organized
labor. En vironmentalists led the op-
position.
The Senate last session voted against
the S.ST, · but later bowed to House
demands to continue the financing
through March. Last week the House
reversed Itself and voted to e.nd
governmental funding.
The ballot offered the leading 1971
Democratic prt&identia1 contenders their
first chance In this session of Congress
to vote on 8 major and controversial
issue.. Mott of the potential De~ocratic
cont.enders already were lined up against
the SST.
College Signups
Set Thursday
Registration lor 1pring quarter classes
at Saddleback College will begin Thurs-
day for both the day and extended
day programs.
Student.' who have completed entranee
aplication5 will be processed Thurflday
and Friday from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
and 6 to l :tS p.m. each day.
!...ate regislration for the spring quarter
Is scheduled April S from 1:30 a.m.
to 4 p.m. and from g to 8:30 p.m.
The ,eoorse offering for the extended
day category next quartet will total
90. Another 250 cour!le!IJ are offered to
day ttudenUI, college spokesmen said.
Entrance is offered to bigb school
graduates or to nongradu11ites ever 18
yean old who fife a form1J petition
fm-·entr111ce.
Class scbeduJu: art avallabl~ through
the college. adminU:traUon off!ct3.
Tbe motorist Who mlsse& that tll»P
will bave to drive several miles farther
down the freeway to the Las Puleu
offramp, cro&.S over and head back up-
coast again -and probably unde(go
a stint at the Border Patrol checkpoint.
Once on old Hlgbway 101, visitors
will pass the S.O Onofre'. NUcltar
Generat.ing Station'-and inlormaUon
center, then drive about two miles
farther to I.be beach site.
No clearing of the rugged chapparal
of 'the blufftop1 will be done for the
oped!rig.
Three trails, weavinJ: down from the
roidway through rugged canyons have
bef:n cut by gtate crews, but · as yet
there i! no access to the beach by
patrol or rescue vehicles.
The parka ser Yice plans to schedule.
two rangers per shift to patrol the bluffs,
beach and·hWldreds of visitors. Explortrs
Scouts have volunteered to belp;
No lifeguards will be available, afll
all visitors have been urged to brin&
their own food and water.
A few supplies will be available through
sev.eral conceasionaires. ·
The nearul telephone ls aeveral tnllea
away from the beach site, and law
enforcement and. rescue' servkes are
baled in Oceanside, 'about · 13 miles
downcoast.
Inber'e"nt prot)tezn. · ~·t end. there,
however.·
. The aver~ge height of the soft, crumbl·
Ing blv.fb toweriilg al>Ove the-beacb
Is.al!ou!.200 feet.
State official1 in their newa releatts
have ·warned visitors to stay 11way from
the . looming:-wall!, termiJl1 ... t·h: em
"dangerous." ·
One.other built·in JSiaadvantage. to. the
beach ii it.a narrowness.
·ro
"The beach ts e1ceDent for awfm...
ming," a state announcement says, "Wltb
gradually sloping beaches.
"Most of the· beach and at times,
all rot It, disappears at high Udes. to
' visitors should keep thi! ·in mind and
leave beach before the tldt bttr 111 height." . . .
But the atate parks cleparJ!netli wDI
give the beach a try anyway, scheduliM
formal dedication rite! on Apr:il 3, lei!
by Rep, Alpbonzo Ben Ca staunch ligll!Ot,
for the beach acquisition)" and StaW
Parks ·Director William Penn MotL tbe
ceremonies will Ila.rt at 9 a.m. ..
oun on
Hill Homes
To Cost More
ln··Ass~stnent j
81 l'A~IOYLS °'-~., .... lhff
The ~,~. " ti1'114ing • bll!sido
home Ill ~ Jelch M., beM mad•
more ~ve due tO a rea!lsessment
of policy rdnUy completed by 'dty
officials.
The Jncreesed eciat will be in the
form of a aort oi .. surcharge" on building
a structure on a slope of 15 percent
or great.er, according to Clydt Z.
Springe, city building· director.
Springe aaid a recent survey of coo-
sLruction t'Ol!lts in Orange Coooty r~vealed
that it costs about $15 per square foo1
to build a wooden. house on a flat lot,
The cost iS increased to about $17 per
square fo<it if the · s'a!M house is built
on a slope. he s;aid.
Thi! estimated 15 percent increast
In building co!lts increases the value
of a· '40.000 .home to U&.oo6, he said
and this increase will be renected in
the building permit costs.
The permit fees for a $40,000 home
are about $210, he said, and the increased
assessment will push fee costs up to
about $240.
Springe noted the fee increases have
been made to offset the higher expense
incurred by the city in making required
inspections of the home site during con-
atrUction.
"We are jllSt not getting as much
as we should out of the hillside homes ."
he said. ''It cosUI us more to inspect
them and this cost should be renected
in the fee!IJ the homeowner pays."
Spfinge said the increased fee· prices
for hillside O'.lnitructlon will affect
building permits ilS\led in Laguna Beach
aS tht bulk of lots are located on slopes.
'ln ..iddltkln to the 15 percent increased
v a I u a t i o n for hillside consLruction,
Springe said the cily hall set valuation
rates for issuing building pennita.
He said concrete s.tructures built en-
tirely of non-combustible materials have
been rated at $20 per gquare foot ot
floor space for building permit purposes.
Structures with masonry e1teriors and
wood interiors and metal buildings are
rated at $17 per square fool The valua-
tion per square foot of a Wooden slrUC·
ture has been set at $1~, he siild.
Springe noted the city had not previous-
ly set deflrtj.te valuation rates for is:suing
building permits but h&d iolttad relied
nn building indll!ltry valuation schedules.
In addition to the above valuations,
Springe 1aid an additional $5 per gquare
foot fee baa beto added to the valuatk>n
data for office occupancy buildings.
Woman Sees Fiance
On 'Candid Camera'.
DETJ!OIT <UPll -Ont of ·Detroit's
more JUiurioul east aide apartment
dwelllnp rteently jnst.ailed . i 'televi8ion
~amera kl , its lobby as a ltCW'1ty
measure· with • hookup tO each ten11nt'a
TV set.
But it lffms one young-woman resldeol
viewed her fiance entering the buildin.J
w!lb anotMr woman , "lW. champagne
glaues and • bottle'' and lmmed.lattly
broke their enaaaemtrtt.
Dulaney Seized
Qn .Coast Charge
• I ' • ' • ' ' . . . • • • • 1 ( ~'' ,,, i'r ·. " ' ., .. , · · \' •1
h •• • :!IY:t!O!!.@l-!Y '. · 'mWur• or., ... and cli111111.
"-G-tn>Ul.. ~~.U:: J 0 11 p -But inv<atlgators ..oncode tncl•Y tbal
LOCATED, JAILED'
. Joseph Duleney
Festiv:al Urges
Busillessmen
To Join Group
Lagµna business people who eorbplain
because they can't get Pageant tickets
for their cu!ltomers would be wet! 11dvised
to invest · $3 in a Fes~val membership,
Chamber of Commerce director!! con-
cluded Tuesday.
As members, they would be entitled
to purchase 50 tickets a season, the
directors were told, and the tickets,
if not used, could be cashed ln on
the day of the performance.
Max Loden, member of a joint com·
mittee studying Festival-Chamber
. cooperation, said he had been surprised
to learn that only 851 of the Festival'•
2,219 members are Laguna ruidentl.
"Most of the complaints about not
being abJe to get Pageant tickets O'.lma
from pe.9ple who are not Featival
members," Loden said. i•we feel the
ticket pelicy for membel's ill very
equitable and would urge more people
to invest $3 and become members."
PILOT SHOWS
PLANT TONIGHT
Bill Leary creator of the newspaper
feature Gralfltl, Is one of · niany a..
tionally featured newzpaper "celebrlt11s"
who bave. aellt greetings to the DAU.. Y
PILOT for tonight's lint publk ope11
bouSt in the newly expanded planl
Leary'• original "Graffiti'•" and other
special artwork will be on d~plly
throughc!ul lhe plant II JllJ w .. ·Bat'
St.. Costa Meu. from 7 to 9 o'clock
tonight and again 1bursd8y nllbt when
the publlc la• lnvlted lo tour the' DA 1L Y
PILOT.
A self.guided waiting tour ·has been
laid out to ahow vlaltora tbrougb the
entirely renovated and alqecl ptaut
facilities. Parting wUJ be 1VaUl5te on
the DAILY PILC1l'·parldng .. lol and ·oo-
rtrte\ In areas adjacent .to the1 p1-41 n t
at Ba,y and Thurin atrffts,
. I
(
'
tocfay 1n a. eu.ra·<*-0 ,. UWe J(.t _still many re11dents of ·the
aetlon "._ ·l>!i~ ' 1'!'1 ~un!Uea wbo cannot believe tbal
• olJ ~~-. tll6-Ja+oJ>h,,Jlu!alle7, Ibey Itniw .. , .. "' !><!ill lldw1I ID iJ,e , Carib*" 111 · . . Ally way', rllJ>Ol'llb!O f<Jr thi clefraildinf ~.Or'11ge,eounty,. , ._ of tl!•tr ~·· GoY:. Ronald ~cani1 1ttnature· ~ More aubatantial .\lictims who figure
detUoes 1ocusatio11J ,~t Dula~. ~' Lit '1nvf!!tiga.tors' reports include the St.
formerly of Newj)Orl seaCh, de.irauded Betnardine H05pitaJ in San Bemudino
tnVe1toc:s fn his World Fln&ncl&J Treitdl and the Chemical Bank of New York.
em~ !lf an estimated $3 million befott , Hospital offJcialS cl:aim they were taken
he fled 'to Etirope !rom his pl!i¥i LagtJna In to the tune of $500.000 by Dulaney
Hills ."Taj ~ahal" in Decem~ 196'9. ' on the strength of .collateral in, tb9
·Investigat.ori believe that the ·free form or stocks and bonds that later
•Pending Dulaney teeetitly rttumed to proved to be worthlesa.
~untch .. It wa1 ~ bo~ .for 'more-than Aga..in, investigators claim, it was the
a year_. Authorit1ea ~~id he vJsfle.d "aame old story of Dulaney'• fast talk r~la.tive!IJ in hi• tllinol1·b1rtlipiace recently and his gift of the gab." He was highly
1.!3d .went on to mat~· sevtral more regarded by both tifflcia11 Mid Catholic
contarll bifore Oyini back to ·Weit nuns at the old San Bernardini> hospital.
~=j Ud tM FBI tiad: eui-acao At this date, just St0,000 has ~I!
..:.. in , ~ Netherlands AilUU~s off r:n~d on the $500,IXX> St. Bernardine
Mara~albo ... Venezuela -high on their The New York banlc came into th• che~kinf · lliit for reasom tha_t are "?t picture when Dulaney obtained a $500,000
available. today. The. confide.nee .. 1n loan from the Atlantic Co. of New York.
lawmen m both agenc1e!I was JU.!1tif1ed Investigators aaid pre-payment o(higti
when Dulaney checked in l~st we~k at tntereal rates on the loan and the fird
a ~uracao -hotel and was !mmed1ately regular loan repayment· left Dulaney with
arrested on the long 1tand1ng. charges just $360,000 of the amount borrowed.
of g;and:theft, forgery and ~oru;ptracy ·. But the bank may have fallen foul
His wlf~. M~rlene, 31, 11 still . being of what Ui.vestigators claim were
aought on 1dent1caJ ch~ges. lnvesligators carefully cooceived tacUcs by not observl
a.re coi:icentratin'. t~etr search on M~n-ing rules app!yin·g to co-slgnator"ies wheri
treal in the ,belief that Mrs . Du\ant)', Dulaney mlde two wlf.hclraWals from
wbo once acted as secretary for Dul&n@y the . bank -one for $186 000 and thl
in the World Financial Tr~nd!I Complex, othe'r for tis,'ooo. ' . •
may have taken the ~uple. a three youtlg It may well be, It has been commented
chfldren to ~he ~anad1an CJty, . In bankruptcy ~rt, that the Chemical:
Mn. Dulaney s ~e~ 'w~d enable Bank .will .be ~li!d on to make g~
Orange ~untY. a~Uioi'Jlle! to con~olldate that $201,000 whatever happens in the
court action ag!l111Sl a trio alleged to court action 11gainst Dulane:y
be respon!lble f?r ,a aeries ' of. frauds · ne S186,000 withdrawn m' New YorlC
asserted~ <;0nr:e1ved . and c~Jed out by Dulaney ,went to the Newport NationaJ
from 1.av1sh ofhef: tJuµdinas m · Laguna Bank as payment °"'his sumptuous bomll
Hilla and Seal ~ach. . · at 333 Mo_minptar Lane 'in: the Dove&'
. The. World F~nanclal 'I'.'re~ds corpora~ St)ores sectkm of Newpe'.lrt Beach.
complex end 1ta f~cllities are ~.,. In. That home was •valued in .bankruptcy
the bands of S~n~ An? bankrup~y ~ court as at least t167,500 and the lavishly
and awaltlng pr,oceedings· that Jack 'only' equipped Lake Arrowhead home used
the ~resence 'of "the firm'I · principals · by the DlllaneY! as their weekend retreat
for further action. carried a price tag of at lea.st $35,000.
Mr!!. Dulaney'1 '1't'tst will place her Both residences have betn' swallowed
In the ·defendant'!! ~ wl~ ber husband up U, a welter of .b~ptcy d~
a11d -.rear~ld Ja~s Sh1p.ley of Hun-that total more than $1 million alone
tington ·Beach. Uie man promoted by in document.I filed by individual victiml
Outariey from vice 2ft!lident to president of the Dulaney operaUon.
1bortly before the Newport-man left
for Germany and· what on.r investigator
described as the "life of Riley" in
Munich-. , ,·
Sh1Ptey ,facea 14enUcal charges. He.
Is scbeduled to •PJ>W April %1 In .Santa
Ana . Mun}Clpal · Court arid ii free on
'2.!0,000 ban. .
The 'buisUng of th< Dulaney bubbJe
In December. 1969 brought· ( rub of
banllfuPlcy claims an.d . suP.,lor Court
law111jls, mO!I of,them filed by resijlenll
ol q-,. retirtment communflles. i.lf La4una
Hills and !lei! Beach' .
. ~e theme dorntna1es tn thoa arjions
-· the claim th:at lbe 1u1ve, hand9ome
b\tlaney 1ctivefy · iolicittd investment
fundl and convtrted them ID hia OV<11 ....
Many ·rtaldeni!I )tavt told investlg1tora
thal th< poll~ IJlvestmenl counielor
lllCCfflfully m,lit whot wea In .....
.. ,.. their Illa savinp wllb • wlnnlnl
I ,
County Orders
Revised Census
Gambling on a virtually ~rtain •lnMT,
tlle Orange County Board of Supervisors
Tuf.ld4y laid ~910 on the line for a
f233,722 return on the Investment.
The . $$,000-phJJ wlll pay for a ~·
state Department pf Finance population
ctMU$.
A1 total of 1,429.386 cititen1 waf! aitoWlt
111 .the urro federal ttn.sus, but 1oca1
Oburvers belltve tbs county haa growa
llnce by 45,000 or more.
I( iQ. Oran&• County·woul<lgaln ""'~ than 5233,too In revenues distributed by
Diijiartment ol Motor Veblclu llcenla
and re&istration fees •
l
•
I
I
I •
\,,dntsdl y M;u,li :l4 i .. ,1
One Government Eyed
Study of County Super Agency Proposed
ls lo pl1n the quallt1 of lllf we w111t
lot tlla majority ud lot CoYenuntnt
to carry OIJl tboat pl.u.I to Set that
It happeu."
·' ,!llmip c.aniy &OWl'lll!>tllt lbwld Uk .. tY take a look at becoming tbe sin&le
local Juritdlction rathe.-than having "26
U1Ue cWes" operating mun 1cjpa1
cvvernments within the county.
· 'lbla wu tbl view expressed Tuesday
Robert w. Batun of Santa Ana.
nnan ar tbe Orange County Board
~ SUpuvh.ors. ' ~ .. 4 Batun created a bit ()f a stir when
be ~de tile remark io Anaheim while
o.tUlnl kfore ,the Amerlcan SOclety
tbi Public AdJninlltratlon.
It came while Battin, an attorney,
was discussing the possibility of a charter
form of government for Orange County.
"For inlt&nct, 1 lhlnk aiiy &ucb study
~d .CODlldu a possible overall govern·
Lakewood Man
?leads Guilty
' -
On Lesser Rap
A Lakewood man accused on arrut or the murder of a 46-year-old wido\v
whose almost nude body was found in f. brusb-cboked ~fodjeska Canyon ravine
.Jan. l& pleaded guilty Tuesday lo lesser
dlarges.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan accepted the plea
' Of Glen Dale Fergmon. 37, to charges
Gt voluntary mamlaughter. He set April is as the unemployed construction
worker's sentencing date.
Ferguaon rac;es a possible state prison fum of up to five years. The husky,
itrtwcut P'erpson, DtWly arrived in
Orange County fl'flm T a c o m a ,
Wuhin,Jton, ~s arrested by Orange
County Investigators six days arter the
body of Zelma Witgenstein of Norwalk
was found in the rugged Modjeska
ravine.
Sherill's lnveaUgators today said thal
circumatances of t.he sex slaying made
it "highly unliktly" that any judge would
accept the preuing of murder charges
against Fergmon.
They said the negotiated plea was
accepted after a "considerable in-
vestigation" into the private We of the
victim.
Safety :Awards
Go to 8 Drivers
Elgbl b., drivers ll'IJlll 111,; Caollirano ._
Unified School Dlstr!cl fill* ~IJl!led · for safe driving awardl frorn the Na~ '
tlonaJ Safety Council. ·
The award la alve n for one year of
d:rlvlng without an actldenL Any mnllct
between the bus and any other object
ruultlng In property damage of Injury,
however minor 11 comidered an accident,
1ccordlng to Mr1. Jen Stratton.
Tnnaportation Supervisor.
Those receiving the awards which were
puented Mooday at the meeting of
the Capistrano Unllled School Dlltrlct
board of trustees are Dorothy Barnett,
Deane Bogart, He~ Bogart, Owles
Crook. Joy Forrester, Joan Hillyard,
Patrlcla lrvinl and Barbara Schenewark..
Asia Hit by Quake
UP PS ALA, Sweden (UPI) - A strong
urthquake hlt the Tien Shan area of
Central Alla 'I\lt.llday night, it waa
reported today by Prol. Maukul Bltth,
clllel of the Uppaala Institute.
OP.ANtl COAi?
OAllY PILOT
Clu.NCJ'e COAIT PUIUIMIN<; c;OM.PAHV
••Ml't N. w, ...
,,_111911 •-' PllllllhW
J•ck I. C11rt" Vkt '1takl• .. o.w.I MWfl'
1\Ml•I 1ttt¥d ......
,.,.._,, A. M11r.1il1t
MIMllnl •·1-
Q1rlH H. &... lie.••"' P. H~A
....... """""' ltlltn ---222 .......+ A"1111•
... Cl •• Offleit
105 N•rtli U C.1111111• l••I --c. .. MtM: • W..t ... ltrwt ~"""' tefffl: -"""""" .. ~.,,, """1iflPlt atedl1 1111l ~ 9oult¥INI
OAILV !I'll.OT, ,.,... .tlldl 9 ~ .. N~ II (lllUllllllW 4tllY --.... • .., Ill ......... ,_,. fW ......... ...0..
N...,.....I ihKtl. C-0" ~ Hlllll ......
mlldl. ..__,..,. V•••· "" Orio • 1111 Ct.,,.. ...... ..., ........ ...
f'lt ... llllftM. ~ .,..,.,.. .... .
l l ·Jll .., .. ., 51f.i. c-• ,....
1111•' cn•l MMll1
Or'tW Mo•t1 I a '414611
S. C'J Ill Al DIPl T ID ftJ , ....... , ....... .
i.,-IMdl Al lqutw., '1 ···= ,, .. '46& ~ "11, °""" CM.t ,,.,""'"" ~-... -........... '""""' ...,..... _...,. ., .. ....,...,_.. ,..... ....,. .. ····* .............. , ,.. .............. , .... . ..... c....=-r.i ........... ..... ;;-.= •• :~~ .. ~· .....,,.......,~· .... _...
menl for tbe county lnltead of the counfy
and 26 small cltles/' Battln suaeattd.
"It mllbt not be feulble but It should
be Included In uy study U one Is to
be done."
In hls wide'.-ran&ina talk, the county
board chief also crlticlzed the Irvine
Company, land developers in gen~ral,
Superior Court judges and tbe Ca,lUornia
Public Utilities Commission.
He detlared that the philosophy of
tbe present Board of Supervisors is to
lilow down county growth.
Battin accused the previous Board or
supervisors of "reacting to whatever
business wanted.''
"That was the board's philosopby of
the 1960's," Battin said. "Out philosophy
"People moved to Orange County
because it is a good place to live,''
Battin added. "If we allow ourselves
to be bambooiled into doing for business
what business wants, that will not be
in the best interests of the majority
of our residents "
Tbt board chairman indicated that
he still favored ousting Co u 11 t y
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.
"The new board bas the right to hire
an administrative officer to carry out
its philosopby o( government,'' Battin
concluded.
lump on Bandwagon
States Rushing to OK
Youth VoteAmendment
WASHINGTON I UPI) -S l a l e
legislature!, warned by the U.S. House
of Representatives' 82-year.old Rnlor
member that ''youth will be served,"
rushed today to join in ratifying a con-
aUtullonal amendment lowering the
voling age in all elections to 18.
presidential and vice presidential can·
didates.
However, some opposition to the 26th
amendment was noted in states wh ere
there have been student di.9orders. Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California said he
preferred submitting the issue to the
voters and Jetting them decide. He said
he believed Congress was infringing on
the rights of the states in submitting
the amendment. (See story, page 8).
Rep. Emanuel Celler (0.N.Y.), 82.
chairman of the House Judiciary Com-
mittee, said he was certain the amend·
rnent \•iould be approved.
Delaware, ConnestiC\lt, Minnesota ,
\Vashington and Tennessee climbed on
the bandwagon Tuesday, approving the
amendment as soon as it was passed
by the House 400 to 19. Minnesota moved
so swiftly it was accused of jumping
tho gun.
A UPl state-by-state survey showed
at leut 32 other states expected to
give swift approval to the proposition.
LegblaUve leaders in several other states
still were pondering what action they
will take. The proposal must be ratified
by 38 stales before it becomes the 26th
amendment to the U.S. Constitution .
Approved by the Senate last month
in a 94 to 0 vote, the amendment would
remove state powers to get minimum
voting ages for it.ate and local elections.
Congress last year established the IS.
year-old qualification for federal elec·
tions.
"Any effort to stop it would be as
useless as a telescope to a blind eye,"
Celler said. ';Of course, I can't be young
-again, but maybe-by offering this amend-
ment I can at least wear the robes
of youth. I do not feel youth will fail
us if we offe r it the responsibility of
the ballot."
It was possibla the amendment could
be approved in record time. The current
record of 1\x PlOnths and sil days waa
established in 11304 when the states ap-
proved the 12th amend{nent, wbich P.f'0-
"1il>I Gilt memberll bf tlle otec!Orat
college must cast 1eptrate ballots for
~zlei; Gets f ' ' ' ~ \ ..
Prison Sentence
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 46-yeor·old
man bas hffn sentenced to federal prison
for embeuling more than $3,000 from
an office. at the Marine Corpa bue
in nearby Camp Pendleton.
U.S. District Court Judge Thomas F.
Murphy, Tuesday imposed a senteoce
of one year and one day on Raymond
E. Machado of Oceanside who worked
in the special services office.
Machado also was convicted of making
false gtatementl in requesllni fUDds for
recreational purposes,
Evidence ahowed an audit cf the
special aervices office disclosed ir·
rtgularitiea in cuh handling for a nine--
month period in 1967-68 while Machado
~rked there.
Autry Bows Out
As City Planner
Aivin O. Autry, La1una BNch city
planner who went through the almo&t
endless general plan, the begiMlngs of
the Star Pine controversy and the beain-
nlngs of the hiih rise flare-up, bowed
out before Laguna Beach planning com·
mluionen Monday night.
He wW become the adminiltraUvt
servlcts director for the c l t y ,
coordinating federal granb and an·
nexation. Wayne Moody of Tiburon,
calif., will begin work April 5 as
Laguna 's new dirtctor of planning.
Commission chalrm111 Wl111am Lam·
bourne thanked Autry for "pulltn& us
out of a bolt." other commissioners
agreed with Lambourne·• comment,,.
Several st.ate. competed Tuesday in
an effort to be first to ratify the amend-
ment. In Olympia, Washington legislators
kept a direct telepbooe line open to
the nation's capital while the House
voted In Washington. D.C.
But the Minnesota legWaturo ap-
parenUy was first to ratUy the amend-
ment, compleUng its aclion at 4:14 p.m.
(EST).
Sen. Allen J. Elltnt\er \D-La.), presi-
dei>t pr_o ~ 94, tilt lenife, "1de( b1' name to the lli>Cinnenf--4:40 p.il'r.
!EST), completmli leglslaUve acUon In
Wuhlngtoa.
Group to iTou'r
'Ecology' Mart
' '
A group of Laguna Beach hou.sewlves
Is plannlnC a 65--mile trip to market
to see what an *'ecological" gupermarket
looks like.
The women, all members of Pro.en-
virorunent-P«iple (PEP) a recently
formed -Laguna ecology group, decided
to go see for themselves arter a Friday
evening program in whlch the story
of the San Fernando Valley's AleJ.anders
market chain was told.
'Mie valley d\ain has gone all-out for
ecology, from Jllckalif'g meata ln bio-
degradable containers to listing phos·
phate content of all soaps and detergenU:
and drastically reducing the number of
paper bags used to pack customers'
orders. PEP chainnan Mrs . Luisa Hyun will
lead the April 2 shoppi11g trip. with
specific requests from two Laguna
market manager~ lo bring back detailed
information on "eco-markeling." Thei
ov.'ners of both Acord's and Gene's
markets have asked for details of the
Alexanders plan, Mrs. Hyun said.
New Yorker Selects
Rose Parade Theme
PASADENA (AP) -A New Yorker
will receive a free trip to the Ros~
Parade and Rose Bowl football game
next New Year'• Day for suggesting
the Tournament of Roses theme, "The
Joy o( Music ."
Mra. Bert Hall'l entry won over 2,500
other,, officials of the 13rd &Mual
tournament announted Tuesday.
Painful Ti111es
Countians Victirns of Deadlines
•
A group of deadlines, most of them
unpleasant. faci the cltlz:ens of Or111ge
Coonly ahorUy.
Here are the mO!t important ones
and where information may be gained
oo them :
-March 31 . Medicare supplmental
medical Insurance. Thi.I ts the volunary
part of Medicare that help! pay doctor
bills. Baile monthly prt.mlum rate1 are
$5.60. For further Information call lM
Santo An• Social Security Office , 136-
2221. LocaUon: 1"8 E. !st St., Santa
Ana .
-Aprll 15. This 11 the big painful
date for all wage eame.rs.
.., -Federal Income Ta..: deadline. Ftlr
lnform1Uon, I City Boulevard East,
Or111ge. Telephone, 836-2381.
-State Income Tax. For lnrormaUon,
Fran~ Tax Board, 2021 E. 4th St.,
Santi Ana. Telephooe, au.9r,.w,
Homeowners Property Tax Exemption.
All homeoWners eligible. If you have
not received and filed your exemption
form call Orange County Tax A&se1sor11
orflee. ltomeO'fM.rl J n f or m a t I o n •
83~21.
-April 10. Property tas deadline. Se-
cond lnstaltment proi)E'rty taKCS are du!!.
Penalty of S3 ptr parcel plus 6 per~ent
If not paid on time. For this year
actual deadline is Mondiy, April 12 at 5
p.m. For Information : County Tax Col-
ltctor, 630 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Tele-
phone 834-3411.
Bushed
Tired and exhausted after a slx·
week incursion into Laos, a
weary South Vietname~e sol-
dier \\'ails to be evacuated
deeper inside Vi~tnam.
Marine Prisoner
Copter Pilot
Adopted by Brea
The Brea City Council has fonnally
ad6p,_ted El Toro Marine helicopter pilot
Stepheii Hanson who Das been missing
in action in Southeast Asia since June
3, 1967.
The husband of Mrs. Carole Hanson
or El Toro has not been heard from
since he v•as shot down while piloting
a helicopter on a medical evacuation
mission.
Brea fl.1ayor Ed Jackson said the coun-
cil aclion ~·ould encourage personal let-
ters from Brea residents to Hanoi of·
ficials to urge release of Hanson.
"ll has become evident that in·
divld~ an<\' ~ci~)zed elforts Jor
some of our Amerkan °fu.vicemen listed
as missing 1n action his proven sue·
cessful.
"Orie wlf1 of a man missing for Jwo
ar4 -~ half fears organiied a massive
letter cimpaign in her hometown,''
Jackson noted.
"Two months after the conclusion of
the letter campaign, she received ber
very first lelter from her husband."
\Vith the council action. the Mayor
urged letter writing campaigns by
schools, clubs and businesses in Brea,
organization cf POW and MIA days,
weari11g of PO\Y bracelets bearing
Han.son·s name and communicaUon to
legislators urging their support.
GEM TALK
\,TODAY.
by_
J. C. HUMl'tlllD
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
Even though your dlamood en-
gagement ring bas an unforgel·
table sentiment.al value to you, it.1
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give It
the care it should receive.
And allhougb a "diamond is for-
ever," the stone cnn be chipped by
a bard blow, and mountings can pit
and discolor if they come in C'OO--
tact with a chlorine bleach "\\'hen
you are doing household chores. So
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry when you're doing rough
work or engaging in sports or other
activities which might expose such
pieces to damage.
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
the pleasure and the pride with
which you wear Ulem, will be
greaUy enhanced U you give them
lhe care and treatment they de-
serve; and although this care is
largely up to you, you should still
come in and see us at least tvdce
a year ••• we'll check your ring
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and mounting wear. And •
nlso at no charge, we'll give them
a professional cleaning while you
Wal~
Closi••g Stages
Last-· of S. Viet
Units Exit Laos
SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnam
withdrew the last or its army (rom
Laos today, leaving only a rearguard
of martnes to keep watch from a hilltop
position on advancing North Vietnamese
tanks and infantry. Americans began
wilhdr.awing from Khe Sanh and South
Vietnam begao fortlfyln& positions near
the border.
Tbe controversial ti-day-old incursion
Into Laos to try to cut the !lo Chi
J\tinh supply trial ~·as clearly in its
closing stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out six North Viel·
namese tanks today and U.S. Navy
planes trying lo destroy ti culwnn o{
17 armored vehicles and trucks aban·
doned by the South Vietnamese in their
withdrawal along Route 9.
U.S. helicopter pilot Isl Lt. Erick
Heintz, 25, of Spokane, Wash .• a veteran
of the Laotian campaign. said in Khe
Sanh after observing the approaching
North Vietnamese, "the "'IY Ule Com-
munists are moving they'll be on top
of this place in a week."
American spokesmen at Khe Sanh
predicted all American forces would be
(IUt of the onetime U.S. Marme bas1?
12 miles from the border by the enll
of the week and speculated that South
Vietnam would try to hold the area
\\'hen they left. Khe Sanh has bee11
hit for nine consecutive lays by Com-
r~unist shells. Eighty-two round! hit
there today.
Front dispatche5 said the South Viet-
riamese had begun strengthening
defenses at Ham Nghi, the advance
headquarters on Route 9 just west of
Khe Sanh. The western defenses -
toward Laos -also were being built
up, the reports said.
American lnU!tary sources said the
22,000 South Vietnamese troops pulled
out of Laos were still lo Quang Trl
Province and would try to hold Khe
Sanh.
South Vietnamese spokesmen said the
2.000 South Vietnamese marines still in
Laos were ml\nning a firebase called
Hong Ha. or Hotel, two nilles inside
Laos and two mile.! south of Rout•
9, 1-lUitary sources said, "Hotel will
remain an outpost because il is the
highest point in that genrral area·• and
provides a commanding vit'W of North
Vietnamese attuck routes.
In Washington, Defense Secretary
fl.telvin R. Laird said South Vietnam's
1nission in Laos had essentially been
aC"COmplished and the troops " er •
withdrawing because of "tremendously
vicious and violent'' attacks by the
enemy. But he said the South Vietnamese
achie ved their primary objective or in-
terrupting Communist supply lines.
The Viet Cong's Liberation Radio
broadcast a communique tonlgbt from
the supreme command of the Pathet
Lao Communists in Laos claiming the
South Vietnamese drive into the Laos
panhandle was "smashed" after 45 days
of "sustained fierce fighting."
Hanoi and the Viet Cong in statemen~
Lroadcast by Hanoi Radio and issued
in Paris by the delegations to the peace
talks for the past week have said they
had crushed all ARYN armor sent into
.Laos.
Saigon and Pentagon spokesmen saw
the incursion as a victory that c:Usrupted
the Ho Chi Minh Trail, slowed down
Communist operations in South Vietnam
and Cambodia for many \veeks and
destroyed vast quantities of w a r
material. Sa!gon said its trooPI de!troyed
or captured more than 176,000 tona of
enemy munitions and killed 13,000 Como
munist soldiers in a 10 to l kill ratio.
* * * * * * North Viets Intensify
Attacks on Laos Capital
VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) -North
Vietnamese troops intensified attacks to-
day near the royal Laotian capital of
Luang Prabang and heavy fighting was
reported only a half mile from the
ci ty'a airport 'The defense ministry aaid
the 1ituation "remains critical."
tOmmuntd un.111 With 'mortar SUPPort
regalned1he strategic Ban Don~ po-
sition three mJles norlheast of the Luang
Prabang Airport Tuesday night after
losini it to Laotian counteratlicks earlier
in the daY. 1be Posllion was ortglna'ny
Drainage · Contract
For Canyon Approved
A master plan of drainage for 4,300
acres in the Laguna Cany-0n area will
be .carried out by Christiansen Associates
of San Juan Capistrano.
The Board of Supervisors Tuesday
voted to allow the Flood Control District
lo negotiate with the firm for the project
which is expected to co&! about $10.CJ!IO.
Jl'S 801 (A0t;IU\1ful
sel:r:ed by the North Vietnamese lad
weekend.
Ce.n. 'l'hongphan Knocksy, official
spokesman for the LaoUan defenM
ministry, said North Vietnamese ttoopl
stepped up attacks against lhe hilltop
position of Phouxang a half mile from
tht airfield before dawn Wednesday, then
withdrew shortly after sunrise to avtlid
air strikes. .
Thongphan sald Laotian troops recap-
tureil three strategic hUls no~th and
east of the airfield Wednesday but be
warned they might be lost agalQ h1
night fighting. He said Laotian losae1
were "heavy" but gave no casualty
figures for either side.
By Wednesday night, Thongphan Aid,
North Vietnamese troops were thru to
five miles north and east of the airfltld.
Elsewhere, in the Plain of Jara aru,
Communist guMers fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made 122.MM rockets against poal·
tions at Ban Na, Sam Thoog and Lent
Cheng . Thongphan said Ban Na was
hardest hit in a 100 rocket barr"lc•
but no slgnUicant casualties or dama1•
were reported.
0 1 gold bracelet ls mega::• •infullv luxur~u· Wlfch1 gift, But •watch 11 certainly prac!icl'.
Partfcularly wh1n Ifs
•n Omtga. en thll world ct rtaJJy fin• I
walchet, the name and ra putallon of
Om.g. 1t1nd ovt. When Omtga·arlfutft
oonc.111 one of lti.lr superb tlmeplecel '"wi 1:icqu~1t1 br1c:elet. It becornea a
111/'lhl!T)' pr.ct let I gUt. s.e· our c:ompim.
Omtg1 conecuori. ·f~ $6,.,
a A-1•K ••11• t a-t41C 1elld fll'ltl l"O'WI F•l!ll r•!tl Cl•IF•ll• ,,.Mitt 1n1d • 1"'411t -~ ~•!>)O ,.,.
J. C. fiumphrie j Jewefer:i
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVlNllNT TlclMS
IAf«AMlltrCAllO-MASTl:I CHAIS!
24 YEAIS IN I.AMI l.OC:Anott
'HONI 141·HOI
,.
'
7
' • ... ' .
--'
San Cleinente Teday's ·Flaat-
Ca EDITION N.Y. Staeks
VOL 6'4, NO. 71, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY; MARCH 24, 1971
CaITiper Crush Feared on
-,
Reid in Caribbean
Fugitive Nabbed
'
In Stock Fraud
By TOM BARLEY
Of IM (MUy P llft lllff
Globe-trotting stockbroker J o s e p h
Du1ahey J• today in a Curacao jail cell
awaiting actton by Dutch colonial
atithor1ties on the extradition demand
be ing flown to the Caribbean island
from Orange County.
Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature un-
derline& aceusations that Dulaney, 37,
formerly (If Newport Beach, defrauded
lnve.stor1 in his Financial World Trends
empire· of an estimated $3 million before
he fled to Europe from his plush Laguna
Hill1 "Taj Mahal" in December, 1969.
lnve1ligator1 believe that the free
spending Dulaney recently returned to
Munich. It was his home for more than
a year. Authorities :ssid he visited
relatives in his Illinois birthplace recently
and went on to make several more
contacts: before Dying back to West
Germany.
Interpol and the FBI had Curacao
-in the Netherlands Antilles off
Marac.albo, Venezuela -high on their
c.tfeeklng ~ for real(lns that art:. not
available. today. The confide.nee in
lawmen· in both agencies was justified
when" Dulaney checked in last w~k at
a CUrJcao hotel and was immediately
arTuted on tbt IQl'C standing C!bargeJ
of' grand ,theft. f«iery and c;oru!PirlC)'.
His wife. Marlene, 31, ti 1Ull being
IOl1gbt 6rfidentical charau. Investigators
in conc:entraUng their ae.ttcll on Mon-
treal in Ute belief th1t Mn. Dulaney,
who dnce ac;ted as secretary for Dulaney
in the World Financial Trends complex,
may hive· taken the t'Wple'S three youn&
children Mt the canadlan city. hb-1. ·DUJaneY.'• arrest would enable
Or!lnge County authorities to consolidate
col.!(t action against a trio alleged to
be responsible for a series of frauds
assertedly CQnce.ived and carried cut
from lavish office buildings in Laguna
Hills '11~ se~J Beach.
The World Financial Trend! corporate
eomplu. and it.:s facilities are now in
the hands of Santa Ana bankruptcy court
and awaiting proceedings that lack only
Candidates Meet
Public Thursday
The candidates for the mosl heavily
contested seat mi the capistrano Unified
School District board will meet the public
In a special town hall meeting Thursday
In Dana Point.
Sponsored by the Dana Point Chamber
of . Commerce, the event will begin at
Henry Dana School.
The candidates invited to SJ)l!ak and
answer the public's questiona are John
Sere.nets manager of the Capistrano
Beach Water District: Marvin Renfro,
an architect; AUonso Jimenei. a building
material! businessman; Keith Jensen,
1 lawyer ; Orlando Tosdal, 1 research
flnn manager. and Robert Dahl~rg,
~:sident of 1 marina development fll'ID .
The public is welcome to the meeting,
which will Include refreshments.
Oruge Coast
1''eather
Those gray skies are gonna clear
up Thursday, bringing 11.ighUy
warmer temperatures to th e
Orange Coast. with readings in the
rrJddle &Os locally and up to 70 de-
grees inland.
INSIDE TODAY
PresidtPU Niza.i U in rtmark·
a.bLu good htoLth. ofttr 26 month:'
ond oppartntlu iJ thriving OJt hu
job. Paoc 10.
..... "'s.r.la ,,
Mrfln »-tt
/llWlllt4 ....... tol
"''' ........ 44 Or•-'-" ' PTA U
,,..,.. hfWr '' ....,.. 1•11 °'· .... l!CftfWI 11 INft Mlrl8ttt te.U
TM<tlllM U
.,,,.,!WI "''' --. ~ .. "' .... ,...... Wfflif ...... ~..j
' th! presence of the firm'1 principala
for further action.
·Mrs. Dulaney'J arrest will place her
in the defendant's boi: with htr husband
and 38-year-old James Shipley of Hun-
tington Beach, the man promoted b'y
Dulaney from vice president to pre:si~nt
shortly before the Newport man left
for Germany and what one investigator
described as the "life of Riley" in
Munich.
Shipley faces Identical charges. He
Is scheduled to appear April 21 in Santa:
Ana Municipal Court and Is free on
$250,000 bail.
The bursting or the Dulaney bubble
in Decembtr, 1969 brought a rash of
bankruptcy claims and Superior Court
lawsuits, most of them filed by residents
of the retiremf'nt communities in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
One th'eme dominates In those actiom
-the claim that the suave, handsome
Dulan~y actively solicited investment
fWlds and converted them to his own
use.
Many residents havt told inves1igatora
that the polished investment crunselor
fiUceessfully !!Ought what were in some
case.!· their life savinp with I winning
mixtUl'e of grace ifnd charm.
But tnvestia:atori ci>ncedt today that
tbjore · "'' . 1un • roinY ~<l)ta o1 th• t~ communIU~ 'who CJ'D;llOt bell~e that
th~ J*ph Dulaney ~ !mew -"'U In
any w,ty rtspolillble fof'"'tht defrauding
of their nelghboh.
Mort substantial vlclial8 who figure
in inVtltigators' repor;ll )nclude the St.
Bernardine Hospital In San Bernardino
and lhe Chemical Bank of Ne:w York.
Hospita1 officials claim they were taken
ln to lhe tune · of $500,000 by Dulaney
en the · 1trength of 'collateral in the
fohn of stocks and bonds that later
proved t.o be worthless.
Again. investigators claim, lt was the
''same old story of Dulaney'& ran talk
and his gift of the gab." He was highly
regarded by both c£ficials and Catholic
nuns at the old San Bernardino hospital.
At this date, ju:st $10,000 has betn
repaid on the $500,000 St. Bernardine
loan.
The New York bank came into the
pichft when Dulaney obtained a $500.000
loan from the AUanlic Co. of New York.
Investigators said pre-payment of high
interest rates on the loan and the fir&t
regular loan repayment left Dulaney wit.h
jwt $360,000 of the 1mount borrowed.
But the bank may have fallen foul
of what investigator• claim were
carefully conceived tactics by not observ-
ing rules applying to co-signatories when
Dulaney made two withdrawals from
the bank -one for $188,000 and the
other for $15,000.
Jaycees Sponsor
Carnival Fest
San Clemente's Jaycee.s will 1ponsor
a four-day carnival featuring dozeM of
m1jor rides and booths 1tart.in1 Thurs.
day iD a Capiltrano Beach business park-
ing lot.
The carnival, provided by Fairtime
Shows, will be held Thursday through
Sunday at the Von'• Market parking
lot in the beach community's village.
Rides will be available through the
day, closing at I p.m. e1ch evening.
Funds raised in the proj ect will help
finance the: coming year's activities by
the local group, Including the annual
Junior Miu Page.tint.
Swimming Team
Tryouts Slat,ed
Tryoul.J tor South Coaat youngsters
interest!d in org1nized 1wimmln& 1ct·
ivllies aponaored by the San Clemente
Aquatic AaoclaUon wiU take place Satur-
day at the MWll.;Jpal pool ill Sa1
Clemente.
Tryout Umea for children five yW'I
old and up will be from 1 to 3 p.m.
Openlnp are av1U1ble ror all 11e
groupt tnttrested In jotnging tht novlet.
or adv11nced rwlm teams which compete
in AAU.uncUonled 1cUv\Ue1.
Parent& 11re encour111ed to lrtOmp&n)'
their . .children to the tryouts.
VIEW FROM ATOP BLUFfS AT SAN ONOFRE SHOWS NEW STATE BEACH
Fi1hing Good But Beach Disappears at Times During High Tide
U.S. Aides Set
Clemente Meet
On Revenue Plan
Li~king Litter
Capo Council Pushes for Action
Federal officials from sii: western San Juan Capistrano city councilmen supporlin1 research by beverage and
states will meet at the San Clemente have jumped on the tnvironmental cootainer lndustriu in the field of b~
Inn Thursda di Pr~ident Nix-bandwagon . degradable coi:italner1, IUPJl'C"tinl· pro-, Y to ~us:s The council Monday unanimously pass-grams to encouraa;e cithen1 to be. more
on :s re_v~nue sharing Pitns and the ed a resolution uraing action to alleviate responsible In d.lapolj.nc the con.tainer1
itreamlining of the Eiecuuve b r a n c h th'e problem of litter and waste dfspogal includhtl recycling, and ~h;leratlon of
of.the U.S. Government. created1 bY, the .sale of be.s. in le&lllationi te probUUt·~ ~e .and ~ :rti< -~·long co!lf~!"I"' OP. .11<'!1J ; ~-...,..nablfci -;. cllot(j*19 •huch •!Uio't ':':!": ~.hf.lhe ·Loii :"'1_Cdes Ud-Sill! ,ffii.1U111in"'lll!!es lhe of The r""1u1k>n acbowled1<1 thal...,.
FranC1scq Feaeral Ei:ecullve BoJrda. Calllomla fJties, S<iunty Stipetl'fiabrs' · trol of dllpoaable. non reCurt\lble con.
Delegatq will a~end from CalifOrnl.a,, J Auodailon, and the atatt legislature lline!r1 sllould be iniUtited. at. Uii at&lf' ·
Nevada, Arlz.pna. Oregon, Washington to alleviate problems caused by the&e Jevel. . l , . ,
arid Hawi.it • contaiMn by enacllng leglsl1Uon tG limit 'lbt Councll ti.la utbottud ~
Speakers at 'the eYen't will ihcl'ude their use. · ' 1'bl Councll baa · autboriied " ~
Robert L. Joss, assistant aecretaty for Ways th.is can be done include.requir(in,g distrr6uUon of thi 'reeolut!Oa 'ao_ Stitt
economic policy for the ~partment of a depoeit on all beverage cOntainen, leJialat.On.
the Treasury, and Roy Ash, . president
of t::itton lndUstrles and chairman or
the President's Advisory Council on EJ.·
ecutive Organization. ·
The two officials will hold a preu
cooference Thursday efternoon at the
inn to discuss the two issues covered
in lhe conference.
Clemente Theft
Foils 2 Suspects
Held in Ontario
A telltale receipt stuck to the. back
of an expensive televi!ion set among
the loot in a recent San Clemente
burglary led to the arrest of two men
in Ontario Tuesday.
The pair noW will be charged in at
least four theft incidents here, police
r;aid.
San Clemente detectives said the 1wo
men :suspected in the thefts are Gordon
Ernest Br1mucci, "J:l, of 214 Pelayo,
Ssn Clemente, and Donald Richard Stout,
28, of 211 C Pelayo.
The two men were arrested in lhe
burglary of the C. H. Hargraves
residence at 2701 Via Montuuma where
thieves stole about $1,500 in household
goods earlier this week.
They were arrested after Ontario
patrolmen saw a car laden with
household goods exit a darkened parking
lot Tuesday evening.
After taking the two men into custody
for investigation, police said, Ontario
detectives began examining the items
stuffed into I.he car trunk.
On the back of a $600 color television
get they found a receipt which they
say bore the name of a San Clemente
repair service and the name C. H.
Hargraves.
-'
Senate Showdown on SST
Scheduled in Vote Today
WASlflNGTON !UPI) -The Senate. JtS member& subjected to one of the
most intensive lobbying campalgns in '
memory, decides today whether to con-
tinue government financing of the con-
troversial suoersonic transport plane.
The 1(1()..member senate appeared split
squarely down the middle in advance
of the t p.m. PST vote. Battling for
the fa1ter-than.sound airliner were Presi·
dent Niion and his administration, the
aircraft industry and most of organized
labor . Environmentalists led the op-
position.
The Senate last session voted against
the SST. but later bowed to House
demands to continue the financing
through March. Last week the House
reversed itself and voted to end
governmental funding.
The ba.llot offered the leading 1972
Democratic presidential contenders their
first chance in this session ol. Congress
to vote on a major and controversial
issue. Most of the potential Democratic
contenders already were lined up against
th< SST.
But there were exceptions. including
Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington,
!he jetliner's No. 1 booster, and Possibly
former Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey.
or all the potential Democratic can--
PILOT SHOWS
PLANT TONIGHT
didates, Humphrey appelred the-cnly
orie for ·whom Ole. dtd1ion wu a tcrtuous
Ol'le -and with «oocf • reuOn: He baa
alway1 banked heavily on the support
or organized tabor and AFUIO Proi-
de'nt George Mfany bu stumped long
and hard for the plane, and the jobs
its continuation represented.
J.!Ck.son had none of Humphrey's pri>-
blem1 since he represe.nta the at.ate of
Washington where the Boeing ·Company
is building the two prototypes whose
future was at stake. Already Plagued
by heavy unemployment, Seattle faeed
the possibility of an ev.en more dra1lN
curtailment of jobs without federal bact..
Ing !or the plane's development.
Moreover. J1ckson's entire premi.51
re:sb en the fact· that he Is. as of
now, the on1y candidate appealing to
the party's conservative wing with his
strong advocacy of military 1trtngth.
di11trust of Communis m, and -in !hit
case -aviation 1upremacy.
The other potential Democratic can--
didates -and the Senate is filled witb
them -appeared liMd up u a uni~
avoidJng any dJvlsion on this issue. .
They include Sen. George S. McGovern
of South Dakota, the only announced
candidate: and Sena. Edmund S. Mwkie
nf Maine, Birch Bayh of Indiana, Harold
E. Hug~cs of lo)Ya. Fred R. Harri.a
of Oklahoma. Walter F.~Mondale-of Min--
nesota, William Proxmire of W,i.9corJsin,
and Edward M. K'ennedy of
Massachusetta -although tbe later has
repeatedly declared him.self out of the
'72 1weep1takea.
Easter Week
Headaches (
Predicted
By JQQN \' Aj.TEllZA
Of flit MllY """ '''"
A! the fanfare' 6-onrSattamento beitns
to mount about the Easter Week oPenlh&
of the new San Onofre Blufft · State
Bia.ch, local J,ffiClals are harborinl
secret worries aOOut.the chrlsttnin&. ·
Some of ' the SOuthland's •tati parts
and public safely officials i..r. the C?1llll
of campers and bathers &n • facillt1.
not yet ready for them could twn the
week!ong use of the 3.5-mlle bluff! and
beach into a mifor headache.
Bee.Buse of a Jack or budj:eted f\lndl,
the seven-day period when vehicle cam-
ping ~d day ·uSe will be 'wet~
will .be a jury-rigged affair at; beat.
It will ·be , open fr.om a a . .m. April 3
until sunset on April 11.
AJI camping· -·charged al tht rate
ef $3 a day -Will .be 'done on ttla
dQwnc014t . lanes . of old Pacific Cout
Highway.
Hundreds of vislt.6r1 could t;e e1pect.ed
ar the facility beCatR of the mJlb , . ' ar other beaches and campgrounds.
Their cn1y 1cceu to the new belCb
will be via the BuilcDR Road offrunp
of lht san'Dle&o ~way:. ·
,,,. --6i' liliiaoo that ·-will bave to drlve 1eVerll.,m.Uta.f1rthtt
do<>1> llfo · ll:Otw1111 to ti. lM :Puflu
olblJlll!! eroa over Ind bud back UP' ,
ail •· ..... bl·, jliolij1y -~
i 'lflnf tl th• 8arder Pafrol'~Jtpoli>~ ·once on old HJ1hw1y tQl, vJslton
wl~ . pua 11><-·Sari Onofre N~clear
Oentrall,ng StaUon and information center, then 'drive about· two mile• Ia'rthet~to the beach. site.
No clearing of the rugged chapparal
of: lb• ... bJulftop• w\11 be ·done fm-the
Opeotnl.
Three .. trall1,· weavma: down !rom the
road'w1y 111rougb ruaed canycu have
been cut by 1tat.e crews, but .,.. yet
th.ere li no a~ to the beach by
p4trol or ~scue ~·· '.lb< parJ& aei:vk:e plallJ to ldledul•
~ i:wer~ per ab1ft to patrol the bluffs.
beacb ind hundreda of vialtor1. E1ploru1
Scouts have volunteered to help.
No • lifeguards will be available.' Ind
all visitors · have been uraed to brine
their own. food and. water.
A few suppliea: will be available lhrou&b
several concq,aionaire1.
The nearest telephone i.J aeveral mUet
away from the 'beach 1lte, and la•
enforcement and rescue Bervlcts •. are
b1sed in Oceanside, about 13 milu
downcoast.
Inherent problema don't ehd there,
however.
The average height of the soft, crumbl4
ing 'bluffs towerin1 above the beach
ii about 200 feet. · •
State officials In their ntwl releases
have warned visitors to Illy away from
the looming walls, ierml"g t h e m
"dangerous."
One other built-in d.illd9antage to the
beach is ita ~~·· "The beach b ezcellent for awim-mina:;• a atate announcement says, "with
IJ?'adually' sloping beaches.
"Mast of the beach and at times,
all of lt, disappears at hiib tides: IO
visitor• 1hould · keep ttU in mind and
leave beach before the lide hlt1 ill
height."
But the 1tate parks department will
give the beaeh a. tr) anyway, achtdulinr
form.al dedication rites on April 3. led
by Rep. Alphonio ~u <• stawich·llghter
for the beach acqutsttron) and Statt
P1rb Director WUUam Penn Motl 'Ibe
ceremonies will start at t a.m. After 1 call to San Clemente police,
local officers drove lo the H1rgraves
reaidenct. a vacaUon borne, and found
1igns of a recent burglary.
BramuOCi and Stout will be arraigned
on charges of· burglary today in Soulh
Orange County Municipal Court.
Bill Leary, creator of the newspaper
feature Graffiti, is one of many na·
tionally featured newspaper "celebrities"
who have :sent greetings to the DAILY
PILOT for tonight's first public open
house Jn the newly expanded plant.
Last. ~oundup?
Local police al!IO are inve.stlga,lng
several other tr)eft.:s here ln . which the
pair ii alle'gedly invt1Jved.
Women Miners OK'd -
DENVER (AP) -Women. can now
work in Co!Orado coal mines.
Gov. John Ltwe 1i&nfd a <bill ~•Y
removing 1 ban on the employment
of women in the mines.
The measure was ha.lled as 1 women'•
right& proposal when it eMily paued
the legL!lature.
•
Leary'• original "Graffiti'•" and other
:special artwork will be on display
throughout the plant at 330 W. Bay
St., Costa :M·eaa, Crom 7 to t o'dock
tonight .rut a.gain Thursday night \'!hen
th< pUblic ~ Invited to toor the DAILY
PILO'T. ~ S<ll·iuldod wafting loot hH been
latd out lo 1ho• visitors through ,..Ule
erittrel,y renovated tnd colarged p\.sn\
faciUties ., P•rkftlg will be avail1bli ·on ,th• bAillY Pll.cYr parking. lot ud ""'
ttreet ln are• adjacent tO the p I I 6 t
al e., and TIJurln •ll•el>-
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Ck'!"'ent,e P~e Turn Ctj>Wboys
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01;1e Government Eyed
-
Study of County Super 1:f gen cy. Proposed
i!.• t.o plan. 1hf quality or Wt 'we w~t
tor lb<, majority an~ for aoveniment
to CIM'.Y out those plans to aee that
it happens."
Orlll(t Oounty iovtrrunent ahollld lib·
Jy W<e a look al becoming lb• single
local jurw:fiction ratbe: than havlng "26
little cltleS" operating mun i c i pa 1
aovemments within the county.
· Tbls was the view expressed Tuesday
by Robert W. Battin ot Santa Ana,
Chairman of the Orange County Board
Of Superviso~ .v -~
Batun created a blt of • stir wbe.n
be made the remark in Anaheim while
Spealdnc be!ore tbe Amerlcan Society
(or Public Admlnlslratlon.
' lt came while Baltln, an attorney,
wu d!JCUSSlng the pGssibUlty of a charter
form of government for Orange County.
"For instance, I tbink any such study
J}lould co0&ider a possible overall govern·
Lakewood Man
Pleads Guilty
·on Lesser Rap
A Lakewood man accused on arrest
-Of the murder of a ~year-old wido\Y
whose almost nude body was found in
·& brush-choked Modjeak.a Canyon ravine .ian. 16 pleaded g\l.ilty Tuesday to lesser
dlarges. .
Oran&e County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan accept.ed the plea
of Glen Dale Ferguson, 37, to charges
of voluntary manslaughter. He set April
28 as lhe unemployed construction
worker's sentencing date.
Ferguson faces a possible state prison
1erm of up to nve years. Tbe husky,
crewcut Ferguson, newly arrived in
Orange County from T a c o m a ,
Washington, was arrested by Orange
County 1nvfst1gators six days after the
body of Zelma Wltgensteln of Norwalk
was found in the rugged Modjeska
ravine.
Sheriffs inve1tigators today said that
circumstances of the sex slaying made
it "highly unllkely" that any judge wouJd
accept the preuing of murder charges
against Ferguson.
They said the negotiated plea was
accepted aft.er a "considerable in-
vestigation" into the private life of the
victim.
Safe tiy Awa,rds
Go to 8 Drivers
Eigbl bus driver& ffOpl thl CaPJiitrano
Unifi ed School DIJlilct bate qualified
for safe driving awards from the Na-
lionaJ Safety Council.
The award Is given for one year of
driving without an accident. Any contact
between the bu! and any other object
resuJting in property damage of injury,
however minor is considered an accident,
according to Mrs. Jen S tr a t t o n ,
Transportation Supervisor.
Those reeelvlng the awards which were
presented Monday at the meeting of
the capistrano Unified School District
board of trustees are Dorothy Barnett,
Deane Bogart. Helen Bogart, Charles
Crook, Joy Forrester, Joan Hillyard,
Patricia Irvlng and Barbara Schenewark.
Asia Hit by Quake
UPPSALA, Sweden (UPI) -A strong
earthquake hit the Tien Shan area of
Central Asia Tuesday night, it was
reported today by Prof. Maukus Batth,
chief of the Uppsala Institute.
DAILY PILOT
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ment for the county inlte•d ()r the county
and 26 small cl lits," Battin suueated,
"lt might not be feasible but It a1'culd
be included in any atudy H one is l•
be done."
In his wide·ranging talk., the county
board chief also criticized the Irvine
c.ompany, land developers in general,
Superior Court judges and the California
Public Utilities Commission.
He declared that the philosophy of
the present Board of Supervisors is to
slow down county growth.
"People moved to Orange County
because it is a goo4 place to live,''
Battin added. "II we allow ourselves
to be bamboozled into doing for busine1u1
what business wanU!, that will not be
in the best interests of the majority
of our residents."
Battin aceused the previous Board of
Supervisors of ''reacting lo v.·batever
business wanted."
"That was the board·s philosophy or
the 196{f.s," Battin said. "Our philosophy
The board chairmllJl iodicaled that
he still favored ousting Co u n t y
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.
"Thi!! new board has the right to hire
an administrative officer to carry out
its philosophy of government," Battin
concluded.
lump on Bandwagon
States Rushing to 01(
Youth VoteAmendnient
W ASIDNGTON (UPI) -S l a t e
legislatures, warned by the U.S. House
of Representatives' 82-year-old senior
member that "youth will be served,"
rushed todJy to joln in ratifying a coo-
stituUonal amendment lowering the
voting age ln all elecUona to ll
Dela.ware~ ~Ualt. Minnesota,
Washlneton and Tennmee dlmbed on
the bandwagon Tuesday, approving the
amendment as. soon ai It was paued
by the HOU$e 400 to 19. Mlnne.wta moved
so swiftly It was accused of jumping
the gun.
A UPI state-by-state survey showed
at least 32 other states expected to
give swift ~pproval to the proposition.
Legislative leaders in several other states
still were pondering what action they
will take. 'Ibe proposal must be ratified
by 38 states before It.. become! the 26th
amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Approved by the Senate last month
In a 94 to 0 vote, the amendment would
remove state powen to set minimum
voting ages for slate and local elections.
Congress last year established the !8-
year--0ld qualilicatioo for federal elec·
tions. It was possible the amendment could
be approved in record time. nie current
reeord of iii: months and six days was
e.stablished in 1804 when the slat@s ap-
proved the 12th amendment. which pro-
vides th&~ membera.1of the electoral
College muit caat separate ,billets for
~~e~zle~ Gef:s,
Prison Sentence
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A 46-year-old
man has been sentenced tG federa l prison
for embeullng more tha n $3,000 from
an office at the Marine Corp& bise
in nearby Camp Pendleton.
U.S. District Court Judge Thomas F.
Murphy Tuesday imposed a sentence
of one year and one day on Raymond
E. Machado of CX,ansidl!!! -who wocked
in the special services office.
Machado also was convicted of making
false statements in requesting funds for
recreational purposes.
Evidence showed an audit of lhe
special servi~ office ' disc\Gsed ir·
regularit\u In cash handling for a nine--
month period in 1967-68 while Machado
'A'Orked there.
Autty Bows Out
As City Planner
Alvin 0 . Autry, Laguna Beach city
planner who went through the almost
endless gefll!!!ral plan, the beginnings of
the Star Pint controversy and the begin-
nings of the high rise Oare·up, bowed
out before Laguna Beach planning com-
missioners Monday night.
He will become the administrativn
service.a director for the c i t y ,
coordinating federal grant! and an·
nexation. Wayne ~toody of Tiburon,
Calif., will begin work April S as
Laguna"s new director of plaMing.
Commission chairman William Lam·
bourne thanked Autry for •·pulling us
out of a hole.'' Other ~mmis&ioners
agreed with Lambourne '1 comments.
presidential and vice ·presidential can·
di dates.
However. some opposition to the 26th
amendment was noted in states where
there have been student disorders. Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California said he
prefetm · eubmitUng the issue to thl!!!
voters and letting them decide. He said
he belleved Congress was infringing on
the right,.. of the states in submitting
the ame:pdmenl (See story, page 8).
Rep. Emanuel Geller (0.N.Y.), 82,
chainftan of the House Judiciary Com·
mlttee, said be was certain the amend·
111ent wouJd be approved.
"Any effort to stop it would be as
useless as a telescope to a blind @ye,"
Cell er said. "Of course, ~ can't ~ young
again, but roaybt: by offering this amenl'.l-
ment 1 can at least wear the robes
of youth. I do Dot fee l youth will fail
us if we offe r it the responsibility of
the ballot.''
Several states competed Tuesday in
an effort to be first to ratify the amend-
ment. In Olympia, Washington legislators
kept a direct telephone line open to
the nation's capital while the House
voted in Washington, O.C.
But the Minnesota legislature a~
parently was first to ratify the amend-
ment, completing its action at 4:14 p.m.
!EST).
Sen. Allen J. Ellender (~La.), presi·
dent pro tern of the ,Senate, added his
name to ~ docum~t about HO p.m.
!EST), "tonip!eihig Ieli>lallv• action in
WashlDgton.
Group· to1·'fodr
'Ecology' Mart
A group ol Laguna Beach housewives
is planning a s>mile trip to market
t() see whit an "ecological" supermarket
looks like.
The women. all members of Pr~n
vironment·People (PEP) a recently
formed Laguna ecology group, decided
to go see for themselves after a Friday
evening program in which the story
of the San Fernando VaJJey's ·Alexanders
market chain was told.
~ valley chain baa: gone all-<1ut for
ecology, from packaging meats in bi()o
degradable containers to listing · phos·
phate cootent of all soaps and detergent.!
and drastically reducing the number of
paper bags used to pack customers'
orders. PEP chairman Mrs. Luisa Hyun wilt
lead the April 2 shopping trip. with
specific requests from lwo Laguna
market managers to bring back detailed
information on "eco-marketlng." The
owners of both Acord's and Gene"s
markets· have asked for details of the
Alexanders plan, Mrs. Hyun said.
New Yorker Selec ts
Rose Para de T hen1e
PASADENA (AP) -A New Yorker
<A·ill receive a free. trip to the Rose
Parade and Rose Bo.,.,·l football game
next New Year's Day for suggesting
the Tournamtnt of Roses theme. ''The
Joy of r-.tusic."
P..trs. Bert Hall's entry won over 2.500
others, officials of the 83rd annual
tournament announced Tuesday.
Painful Times
Countian,s Victinis of Deadlin es
A group of deadlines. most of lhem
unpleasant, face the citilens or Orange
County shortly.
Hert Are the most important ones
and whert inftlnnation may be &lined
on lh"J!' -March 31. 1'1erlicare supplemental
medical insurance. This Is the voluntary
part of Mtdlcare that helpa pay doctor
bills. Basic monthly premium rates are
$5.60. For further lnform11tion call the
Santi Ana 6od•I Security ornce. ass..
222l. Location: 1438 E. lit St., Santa
Ana •
-April tf>. Thia iA lhe big painful
date for •II wait r.amers.
-Federal Income Tax de11dline. f'or
lnfonnatlon, t City Boulevard East.
Orange. Telephone, 836-2381.
-Stale Income Tax. l-'or lnform:itkln,
Franchise Tax Board, 2011 E. 4th Sl.,
Santa Ana. Telephone, 83>9540.
Homeowners Property Tax Exemption.
All homeowners eligible. If you ha\'e
not 'i"tc:tlved and filed your eiemption
form call Orange County Tax Assessors'
()ff Jee, Homeowners I n f o r m a l I o n ,
831-3821. -April 10. Property tax dcadtlnt. Se-
cond Installment property taxes are due.
Penalty of S3 per parcel plus 6 percent
if not paid on time. For thls ye11r
actubl dtadllne is Monday, April 12 at S
p.m, For information · County Tax Col·
lcctor. 630 N. Broadway, Sanle Ana. Tele-
phone 83~34! l.
\
Bu•hed
Tired and exhausted after a six·
week incursion into Laos, a
Weary South Vietnamese sol-
dier waits to be evacuated
deeper inside Vietnam.
Marine Prisoner
Copter Pilot
Adopted by Brea
The Brea City Council has fonnally
adopted El Tore marine helicopter pilot
Stephen llanson who has been missing
in action in Southeast Asia since J une
3, 1967.
The husband of Mrs. Carole Hanson
of El Toro has not been heard from
since he was shot do.,.,•n while piloting
a helicopter on a medical evacuation
mission.
Brea Mayor Ed Jackson said the coun-
l'il action would encourage personal let-
ters from Brea residents to Hanoi of·
ficials to urge release of Hanson.
•· 1t has become evident that in-
dividualized and specialized efforts for
some of ~ur A~an servicemen Jbted
as missing in achon has proven 'suc·
cessful.
"One wife or a man missing for two
and 11 hitf years organized a massive
letter campaign in her hometown ,·•
Jackson noted.
"Two months after the conclusion of
the letter campaign, she received her
very first letter from her husband."
\Vith the council action, the Mayor
urged letter v.-riting campaigns by
schools, clubs and businesses in Brea,
orga nization of PO\V and MIA days,
v.·earing of PO\Y bracelets bearing
Hanson's nan1e and communication lo
legislators urging their support.
GEM TALK .~. 1
TODAY.
by
J. C. HUMl'ffllft
TAKE CARE OF YOUR RING
Even though your diamond en-'
gagement ring bas an unforget·
lable sentiment.al value to you, its
constant presence on your finger
makes it easy to forget to give it
the care it should receive.
And although a "diamond Is for-
ever," the stone can be chipped by
a hard blow. and mountings can pit
and discolor if lhey come in con-
tact with a chlorine bleach when
you are doing household chores. So
avoid wearing precious stones and
jewelry \\'hen you're doing rough
work or engaging in sports or other
activities which might expose such
1>ieces to damage.
The enjoyment of your diamonds,
the pleasure and the pride with
which you wear them, will be
greatly enhanced il you give them
the care and treatment they de-
serve; nnd although this care is
largely up to you, you should still
come in and see us at least t"iice
a year ••• we'll check your ring
and other precious pieces for loose
prongs and m()unting wear, And,
also at no cilarge, we'll give them
a professional cleaning while you
\\'aJt.
Closi119 Stages
Last of S. Viet
Units Exit Laos
SAIGON (UPI) .... South Vietnam
withdrew the last of its army from
Laos today, leaving only a rearguard
of marines tG keep watch from a hilltop
position on advancing North Vietna1nese
tanks and infantry. Atnericans began
withdrawing from Khe Sanh and Soulh
Vietnam began fortifying positions near
the border.
The controversial 45-da y--0ld incursion
Into Laos to try lo cut the Ho Chi
1'.1inh supply trial was clearly in its
closing stages with U.S. planes and
helicopters knocking out six North Viel·
namese tank.s today and U.S. Navy
planes lrying to destroy a column of
17 armored vehicles and trucks aban·
doned by the Soulh Vietnamese 1n their
withdrawal along Houle 9.
U.S. helicopter pilot !st Lt. Erick
}leintz, 25, of Spokane, Wash., a veteran
of the Laotian campaign, sald in Khe
Sanh after observing lhe approaching
North Vietnamese, "the way the Com-
munists ;ire moving th ey'll be on top
of this place in a week."
An1erican spokesmen al Khe Sanh
predicted all American forces would be
out of the onetime U.S. Marine baS4~
12 miles from the 'border by the end
of the y;eek and speculated thal Soulh
Vietnam would try to bold the area
.... ·hen they left. Khe Sanb has been
hit for nine consecutive lays by Com-
munist shells. Eighty-two rounds hit
there today.
Front dispatches said the South Viet-
namese had begun strengthening
defenses at Ham Nghi, the advance
headquarters ()n Route 9 just west of
Khe Sanh.. The western defenses -
toward Laos -also .... we be.ing built
up. thl!!! repor ts said.
American military sources said the
22,000 South Vietnamese troops pulled
out of La os wtre still In Quang Tri
Province and would try to hOild Kh•
$anb. South Vietnamese spokesmen said the
2.000 South Vietnamese marines still in
Laos y,·ere manning a firebase called
Hong Ha . or lfotel. t11.·o miles insldi
Laos and two miles south o( Route
9. ~iilitary sources s.nid, "Hotel will
remain an outpru;t because il is the
highest point in that genersl area" and
provides a commanding \'\ew of North
Vietnamese attack routes
In \Yashington, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird said South Vietnam's
mission in Laos had essentially been
accomplished and the troops w e r e
withdrawing because of "tremendous!~
vicious and violent" attack.! by the
enemy. But he said the South Vietnamese
achieved their primary objective of in·
terrupting Communist supply lines.
The Viet Cong's Liberation Radio
broadcast a communique tonight from
the supre1ne command of the Pathet
Lao Communists in Laos claiming the
South Vietnamese drive into the Laos
panhandle v.'as "smashed" after 4a days
of .. sustained fierce fighting."
Hanoi and the Viet Cong in statemenu
Lroadcast bv Hanoi Radio and issued
1n Paris by i.be delegations to the peace
talks for the past week have said they
had crushed all ARYN armor sent into
Laos.
Saigon and Pentagon spokesmen saw
the incursion as a victory that disrupted
the Ho Chi Minh Trail, slowed down
Communist operatioos in South Vietnam
and Cambodia for many weeks and
destroyed vast quantities of wa r
material. Saigon said it.s troops destroyed
or captured more than 175,000 tons of
enemy munitions and lillled 13,000 Com-
munist soldiers in a 10 to 1 kill ratio.
tr tr tr ***
Nor th Viets Intensify
Attacks on Laos Capital
VIENTlAl\'E, Laos (UPI) -North
Vietnamese troops intensified attacks to-
clay near lhe roya l Laotian capital of
Luang Prabang and heavy fighting was
reported only a half mile from the
city's airport. The defense ministry said
the situation "remains critical."
Communist units with mortar support
regained .the strategic Ban Done-Cho Po-
sition three miles northeast of the Luang
Prabang Airport Tuesday night alter
losing it to Laotia" counterattacks earlier
in the day. The position wu originally
Drainage Contract
For Canyon Approved
A master plan of drainage for 4,300
acres in the Laguna Canyon area will
be carried out by Christiansen Associates
of San Juan Capistrano.
The Board of Supervisors Tuesday
voled to allow the Flood Control District
to negotiate wilh the firm for the project
v.·hich is expected to cost about Sl0.000.
seized by the North Vietnamese ta!t
weekend. I
Gen. Tbongphan Knocksy, official
spokesman for the Laotian deferu1e
ministry, said North Vietnam@se troops
stepped up attacks against the hilltop
position oi Phouxang a hall mile from
the airfield before dawn Wednesday, then
withdrew sh<lrtly after sunrise to avoid
air strikes.
Thongphan said Laolian troopll recap-
tured three strategic hills north and
east of the airfield Wednesday but he
warned they might be lost again io
night fighting. He said Laotlan losses
were "heavy" but gave no casualty
figures for @ither side.
By Wednesday night, Thongphan tald,
North Vietnamese troops we-re three t.o
five miles north and east of the airfield.
Elsewhere, in the Plain of Jars are•,
Communist gunners fired 114 rounds of
Soviet-made 122MM rockets against posi·
tions at Ban Na, Sam Thong and I.Dng
Cheng. Thongphan said Ban Na wu
hardest hit in a 100 rocket barra1•
but no significant casuallll!!!S or damage
were reported.
It's an, f'-Ct1ut1ful _
Om~ap gold bratehtl I• ·
~ • alnfuUy luxurloua ~ \Ylt Q\ft. But I Walch
Is certainly prsc1ica1.
P1rllcu!arty when ifs
an Omeg1. In the world of re any nne 1
watcMs. thfl n1me end r1pot11t1on of
Omega atand out. When Omega artlulty
conceals one cl their 5uperb 11meplece1
ki an tlCQulsite bracelet. It becomes a
all'lfully pratllcal gilt See Our comp.let$
Oml!!!gl collection, lr~m $8~.
111(1 cov,•0llcl 9old eove .. l1d I A-1•1( •&Ii ~ t R-t(I( I Ol!d
II•~ .,..,.~ llttutri ••~cit .~:o '"'
J. C. fiumphrie::I J eweler::1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TlRMS
IA....XAMERICAltO-.MASTflt CMAltSE.
24 YlARS IN SAME LOCATION
PMON£ l4t·l401
I
I
I
Language
Day Set
At UCI
"
Wtdtttsdl!, Ma.-th 24, 1971 DAflY PILOT I!!
f'.4itllL l' CIRCIJS bJI Bl&Ke1111e
LEGAL NOTICll LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICll •
su1>••10• COU•T 01' ..... Cl ,,,,, ..... "' • IN TMI! SUPlltlO• cou•T.., MOTIC I! 0" T•USTl!l'• l•LI ITATI OI' (41.ll•OltWlll l'l>'l It A W USIMISI ,. ..... ,, ntl STltJI Of' Ui ....... 1111• T..$. Nt.. l·IU.. TM COUNTY Oft..,_,.., l'ICttTIOVS NAMI Cl#'Tll'ICATI 01" IUlllilllSJ '°" 1111 WU#T'f' W ...... ,.. ..
Oit l"rte .... Mrll '· ltl1, .i 11 ~• • ..... A-4nh ,,.,, .. ~ ... ~ .... ""''"' ,.. Jt •tCTimUt·l'IAMI. CITY Oft" HUNTUIOfOlll ••• ,lot. •
AM,, TITLE IHSUltANCIE ANO TltUST 6tlllt of HEltllltT 0 It E 'I' l 1! f""l!IWl"-f • MIMH It Ult I!. CMJI Tlw ~tit""' 1119 l ............ .,, m....... ~....... ~ VI
COMPAHV, 11 ~ •PNllllM Tr.,._1 .. C>Kt..... ' 1-li.-~. '°"""' Ul Mar. C•tll1rN1 c""9!Kllr>f • !Mint" •I till T•!Ult• M.IJlltlt: E tLAI•, 1 wlclDw, a,t.N!C
----tM;"..-dM olo""u•I I, lM&. M 11151. Ht. Cflldl,...t of ~ .-.,. Minef M<.ttllwl'I of !(Ml ADYl•TtSING •"" tl'Mlt ulil of 0.1,... •1111 Ct41nlT ti S.n ltrMrdlne. '-'VtNGI ASSOCloioTION, • ,,."'91wl bt11~·
tlD. Ill boolt .. ,., -"°' ., otncltl "'-' ell -,...,;,. ell'"" MllNf fl"" 11 ~ ... .,...,. i.llowlnt '"-· C.1tlt., Ulld" ,.... lklltlo.rt fl~ ... -· .... ••..cltl..... T""'"" C»N!lL e. ftK"Ordl In rht offlu ol lhe Counh" ~ Mid ~lldtl'll 1,1 rMul"'f ~ l!ltl Wll6'1 1111 ... lll full 6IMI ..i«.t of rt1!-....C1 ti AVALAHCHf IM ,,,., t11f firm Llt:l!'OY, AcllT\lllittlr11 ... '1 .. Ettl"'
ltte.,... of Clr11111 COunlv, C1lltor11l1, i1-wllft i. It.._._, It '°"'"""" ol fflt lollGw-.. -. ti WI._ C. lt.rter, l"RM!LITY SALi.i
\: 0'~\\~~ ~----~-"""''( llMe1 •nil ~l'lt '-0... of To~.i NOTtCi: ll Hl!'lll!IT GIVlH 1 ttil' tHH, unMr Tr.. fkllllw1 l!r"' 11tme Aw .. l"-111#1 Yeli.., t2Jllll, C..,lllv 0~ Mtlt'lt!CA NATIONAL TltUIT ANO
Will ll!LL AT PUILtC AUCTION TO flM '"'[' ....... ,.,,-.::':t..,.,.,ve;;:•"t,...!" ll:rll!lffll M. S.Y ...... 11'1 1 ltfdwOof, ........ """'"Ill full. •••CH" rt1twftol COllU>AHY •• •N11"11oN!o ... Trwl ...
Foreil"ln lannuaiPe •tuden•a HIGHEST 8100(" FOlt C•IH INYl bl• ""llltd '-"" ..... ·-""""'. u: lrvl .... Cll,,.,..ll , """' ''""" ., ..... llOW1: c .•. lt!ALrt' I n Ullffl..-•IMI mlfto " ,.., I> .., II lime el 1111 111 1.....-lvl monet0 .. !ht fto"(~•Mo ' -'* .. w 01tlld Mtr<ll !. lf71 Jll'Mt I!. S.lvti, ,.II T•111ttr """'" AtlTALl!E GAYLE MILLl!lt. t lt.O k-front public and pr i y It e .... Unlttc:I Slll••I •t I~ So.it/I lront -•leMCI 11"'c11 ltotl..,.._ H!::.r "';: ""'""" M, s,ybl!d Ftur.•tl" II•'""· C•llf . .,,. 0-•I •• AltTALEI! CiAYLE ,OWl!LL. llTA ....
schools in Orange ,,.•unty w 'oll ..,,,..11Ce ~ IM Old 0<1111• (DUlllY c;.rl•nd "'llO'""'' fMt C•~u· Orlw ''''' $t c1111o11111, or111,. C,,.,M,, .,,,,,,., 0.1.110 OIL COM,ANY. , c-r~11-""' CourlhouH, "<•PW In tnt 700 flloc~ N•w-r flo..:h, 'cillforllllo, wh~ 1• Oii Marc.II 1, un. lltfoll! me. 1 J.ca L. ll:olf, Ull' H. H11111tfd, JAMii t.. CllOW'lHI!.._ •UNI('" O.
lake over the UC Irvine cam· ,.. of Wnl S.nlo Ant '°"'i.vetd ,,, .. ,,,,.,. tM •lie• of lluth'lllU., '"" .. ....,.ti•...: Heterv ""1)11( Ill ......... ttlcl lltlt. LIM:ltler, c.i11. tJSU Llml!M J'111Mr ll lNALOI, U:CUlllTY Tl TL. lff.
S
WHI 'Ill Sir.ti), S.nt1 Ant. C11!forftl1, In ti! mllftrt _.,1..,1..,. ti fht I .. ""-lll' llPNrt4 K1ni-.lt! M, ltrliocl1~ WIYM K11llt, :l6UI) Al'IU Avtl,. No. Wl.t.NCl" COMPANY, I or .. rtllt"'
pUS , a\Urd&)' {0 do their 111 tltl'tl. Hti. lrid f11!1•tl! CtlWl'llld tf llld flC..it"I w!llllll 1...,, ~~ --It mt to boo 11W •111011 Wl>o11 Ul, T..-r111C .. Ctlll ... Llfl\lt«t Tr111l11, C•t:s•NSIAHO 5.
·•Linnothlng.'' " •M l'IOW lltkl bY 11 Vndtf Mid ,u .. "'91trt1tut.1ic1llon9'1hl.l'IO!lc<I -I• WllM:r1'111f " ..... within 1 ....... ,...... Hl'ltNANOt:r. 9-l'kle,..,, LAUtll!N M. O °"" of ltutl In tlo1 lt'fll>&tlv olhHlltd Otltd Mtrcl'I J, UH " ttfVm.nf Miii Kll-IHHCI ~t tAICU!tll WJlllllft 1'. Alb11(11t, '4n ,-.,.., AYt ,. H.ANO\•Y ... NOHNA G. KAN°"l!Y
Lingothing Is lhe slud.nt Ill 111• Coun11 ,,,.., Sl•ll f11trlbld l(AfHfltlNI MAltll! OltlYl!ll ""'....... L111c11i.1. Ct!ll. IUlol LJm!ltd "''""" llft """"· AL GONU.ll!S '"" ltOl•I 1'~ All,..IMtltell'bl Wllh Wilt tOl'l"ICIAL SEAL! Wtllt• M, Wt'-'~"'' 21714 A1'"'1MI OCINUJ..l!!S. hlt wt .. , Sl!CUlllTY l'"tllt~T s'lecled name for an all day Lot• ~n •>'ti )1' ol T1tcl t01. ;i,11Mx.., of ,.,. Etllt• e-1 Mo,., K. tfl!lrv Or., kvtu" c1111. Llmlfft Par1111r NATIONAL &ANK. 1 c•r••r1tl111. · f II t-11 00\ t ma' llltflOI IK"Orlltd 11,_ lbvYe ntmtrf OICMtlll N011rv J'11bllc -c.tlo!ern!t ~FYI O, OtG"r, ~~ N, tth T•UllM, fLIZMElH G. LINOLl!Y, t
"t1"tCS 0 event.! to involve ~,.•,,°:i:n!!:.,''.!,", •• " •• '~ •• • •• ·~11•,"',,,· tlOll!ltTSON, HOWlllt. GAIUNll "•1n<JP9l Office 111 SI. I! .. Ur>U1t..-. (tiff.~ Lllnll'td wldM, JOSl!l'H s. l'EltM.,., JUNNI! a evels of language :stw:lent.s ·-,., ~ ... ,,., Ct.w.ou1 onvo o ...... , CoutltV "'''""r M. FEllM. '**"" Ind wl"1, o. u., Or1t111t C.Ollnlv. ...w,..,, .... ( .. (IM .... lit MJ Commlttlltll lt:r•lrtl CMF \H II. w111111o1rn. 12" Ctnd!t CAlLll, ,., .,.. l0\1111! CALLIS t.UI•
In 'Vents including Skits, EXCEPTINc;. THflllEFlllOM I 11 t Ttol! (1141 MM4M NI'/. 74. lt1J 0•, Stlt JOtl, (tilt. f51'1 Llmll..:1 kNI -wl11, •"""41&1 .... 1, ltO•l!•T
d f I I Nor11>t111trl~ !I lttt ot tot S1'. A-o ......... ,.,-,, ,111111..._. Ort-(NII 0.11¥' 1'\1o!, "''""" JAMEi WAltNElt llld JANIS f".
songs. ances, ore -cu 11·ne, ''' •• ' '" • ' ~. _, " ~.. ' -'' ' l>"' oe •• I •n ''""'' c.ollMll f'ut>llJ#ltd Or•nr• Cwtl Ctlll' I'll"' 1111"'1 2, 10. lJ, 14. ,.,. ~n l'rtnck '· W1hlt1t. ,.,, l<trwlll ...,M, w N It, hwbtnil .,.., """ LOWt:l L
exhibits, films and even i bil· dt•IONilOI\, ll •n•. "' !lit ,,,, ·~""' ,,., •• ell 10. 17. tt. ,,, lt11 no.11 "'" J-. C1Hf, Llm.lltd ,.,,.,,_, ASHLEY 1NI MAltl.ENlf ASHLl!Y. ""'' • dt-crlblfd 1bovt 11 IUtl>OFltd I~ ti.: ........ r'I A""'-"• UlU f"· 01"' btl>d I nd wlf9, HOWAllO ltlCMt:Y, •
1ngual puppet show. '°° v11 M111tene, N""""" 1uc11. LEGAL NOTICE ;i,v. .. L1nc111 .... c.111. '"" Llmlttcr tlntl• """· STATI! °" CALI'°'9:Nr"'· Celllor11!1. LEGAL NOTICE Pat"''' AL•fll!O JtOltlrl'SOH. T.,,.tw ,Ul)lfH
Sponsored jointly by the 'The ~·11111..i ,.,,,,,. 1111e111m1 111v ,., .. 11,. o.r..,, J'""'"' '" nn il'ltll!"M.t.lf, CAtl,.OltNIA "fl"Ol..l!UM Orange County f 0 r' i g n 11•lll1f!y for ""' ln<OfftClf'IU.t .. "'-~ CllTIJ'l.(ATI! O• IUSINlll, 011 FRNI,., n. a.11 • ....., ........ COll..oltATfOH, "· w. McCLl!U.AN. I -' • • ...... tltttl 1ddr111 ...... otntr tom"-CllTlllC"ATI! 0,. IUSIJll!I$ ,1CT1nou1 NAlrH" • Nlll•<Y ~k: Ill '"" tor ••lei Sllll, '"" o"" E\.IIABnH .,.... .... MCCl.l!L-
1..dnguage Association and the: --~ ...... ' dtti. ..... uon, II '"·· thew!> net tin. ,l(TITtoUI NAME 'Tlw llMt ... lllltd "°'' ct<fllv ht h .. ,oon1llv • ..,..,.., J•-E. $1M, LAM, hllllblnd ..... wli.. IEHlf" l. $ • hp I St!' 111• Wiii i.., ml<lt bul Wltl!eul Tr.. ulldt fl19nld "°'' ttrlll~ ""° It <Otl<furtillt 1 ltllalneH 11 lt'l'f Mowt>otl WtYM K111!1 W!ftlt"' H. Wtltrllurv. GOTHAltO, ODES 1 .,.,,. ....... t• i..;1..,
panis -or ugese department tiM 1 b. thd • M h co.....,1111 °" .,.,,..,,"', 1ur111 or 1,....11td, -~~11,.. , llvllnen 11 uo Yortit. &Ml~ c0111 Me.... CillMN'llt , 111\Mf IC-" .. me to be 1n. H•JOnt "'"°'' 11.,. '""' •" ,,,.... .,.._ e1111111n1
of UC!, the day's activities ommy s Ir oy II in ore and Daddy 's is '"'"'1"' "'"'· HUHlloo ..... -No. 11. Tt.1Hl11, (llilornl• ...... '""""' fkt;t19111 firm n1me tr THE ntmn .... MJh<tlbld to ""' wltlol11 -lltll w !nltrtll to'"',,_,.,,. o ..
h b • Q ~ber M 1 Q cumbt.tnces, .. l'•W I~• rttnllnfnt '''"' llcllllo\lt tlrm n1,..1 of itiNTHONY'S LEATHEll LlltON ind lllll Mf41 firm f,..lrllfl'lt nt Ind tdi-lt!Htd 1-mt lffldfnll, l\'C een plann~ by 1n CNI , JO aonmy1 LDERJ" cf••I sum" 1111 Nit IKll•t<I l>l'l'INE OtlA .. EtlY CAllE •nd .,.., ui.I• ~Id •I !ht tollowlnt .... on lt!oY••tcutt<1111t••-· TME 'liO~LE 01" THE tfAT'E" Mt
students. for studen':t. Slld 0.td or Tr1n!, f!>.wlt· Ut.OllO.OI, llr'I! •• c--.d llf fflt 10111 ... ;.,. Mrlo011, ....... 11111'14' "'"'" t NI ollct ol rnldtflc~ WITH£55 rnv 1111'111 """ Ollkl11 Wit. 0.Ll~O-NIA 51!!NO GltEETOIGI T~ ~ wllh lnltrtst t~r"n, 11 1rovlllld In wr.eit ,....._ ln lw~ •flCI lllKt 111 tt1lllf1Kt It 11 "'lotwt• (OFFICIAL SEAL! OE,EN0.1.NfS MMl!D IN TH f
Any seventh t 12th dt -------------------------------1 ••Id llQI•. ldVlfKll, If 1ny, under ,.... b •• fclllow1 · Ed'we•d • "'""' llll CNtl HW'\I MAllTHA ~-ElLtOn Hl!AOIHG 0,. TMIS ~•CIClEDOtG. 0 ifi lff"'I ol •t ht De.., ti T•uol, t..I, JHnlll MarNr1'1 Mor'lln, l.0 y.... """· No. IA, fWw;..'1 IH<I!. Ct lll. "' N011.., ,llllllc<1tllor11:1 'l'Olll .trt ""'°" dlrwctld fl 1-01
language sludent in the county (h•'lftt •tld '"""n• ., '"" tr1111" Aot "° 11 T 11 c t1'90 • Ott• M••d'I , '"* Lu Al!ftlH cwn!v 1 .. • WKtot ""°""",. """""' w may attend the 8 a.m. to •v.i at ttlfl '"'111 cr1111~ DY 111~ o.ifd ,;111 M,.111~n·197~· Edwtrd P.rsonl Mv tornmlultfl E••''" 1111 1111nt11t '""-'"""'..,. ..._..,r
YMCA Cl B • Oted of Tru11. Jotll!W ~~Fllflrl ·Mortin Slttt tf' (tllltf"l1, O•ll\lt Ctunh"• A1rll 1', ltU CDUr'I of "" Sltlt ti C1llfilnllt. Ill' J p.m. program chaired by asses Tho b.nollcltry ~ncttr ttJd OeH al Slllt et C1lltC>1"nl1 Or.tntt cc11n1y· On ~ .. ~ 1 ltll ii.loirt ·m, 1 STA.TIE Of CALl~OltNIA IO'ld !or Ille Countv .. 0.--"
M B I egln trv•t llflrelolo•t 1><1cu1tc1 1nll d1llvfftd On M• c.11 IS' ltll bole • Nortrv 'ubllc J11 ,rwf for v ld sialt COUNTY OF LOI ANOELIES SS. . '*'°""" !or. IN _,,_, ol 1 ....,
rs. every Cramb of · •o !ht vn11er111nt<1 • wr111t11 Oe<la•1Tlon Nitarv ~~bile 1~ end tor ;:., "";; i.' ~1t1oor1111v ·-••d Eo ... .,11 Piton! k-~ o.. 2m1,, IMftlre -· '"" ~Ml!•1i111t<1. 1119 1tw1 lt!Mlc Nrk __.. , ... utn ~farywood High School. ol Otltvlt •!'fl 01m1"d for S111. and ••r•-llv •i:....-ecr JHn11e M , • • ea 1111 lo ai.. !ht otrton whotio "'"" 1 lff!trv ""°'le 111 ..w fllr ttld s1111. IMldlllllll ftlt•flt. "" ffllifwl,. dt!icrlbff a wdllon TNollce of Ot!1ul! l "d Eltchai" Mi rl!n knowll lo Ole to be 1.,_ 1 111,., i• 1ubrlcl'lbtcl l o !ht within fn•llll"'tnl l'ttltl\tllY •••NttCI Wt•lll l(u!11. kl'IOWll ru! ,,.,.,..., 1ttU11td. lyl.,. ... 1111n11
"L1'ngolh1'ng ,., the fo'rs t II w • 1 Fl s • '0 Stll. ht ul\lltroltr>ICI ''""'° "" ...nos. n1 1 ' ,.,. , """.,."" •nd •<l(IW)wl<tdlltcl 110 t11Kultd lt!t 111ne " """ " boo "" -"n wholt n•m• In lht CHv ott Hl#llllntlwl aHd\ Cou111y 3 ' t t t Notice o' Oeltull t"d E:lo<!IO<'I lo Sell I mt ,:, IU :::..0 o wllMn {OFFICIAL Sf:ALI • I' 1ultlcrlbt<I .. !ht wllllln lndnimtnl of O•t ritt, Stolt of Ctillw"lt, 19 ;..It:
CQUnty evenl Which js OOt l 1 ower e in,g to• bt rocord,tll !n tht county W~ffl .'.;;~;:.sm,~: l:...t. 1 w!lldlod lhl IX• ltOY 11. McCAROlf: 1"4 l tllno\wltdttd tlltf ht tllttvt.d !flt J'ARCIL 1; Lelli I ...,_,, 1111:
Primarily a contest for the rh 0;it'.1 ::.::h 'r,,111~~11"'· tOFF1c1.1,L SEAL) NO'l•rv "'1!lnc · C1tllDrn!1 •am•. lllO'lh 1nc11111v1 in •lldl • at Tr•d TITLE t~SUllANCE Ind Mo.., 8ttf\ Mortin Or-(_.,,. WITNESS""' ~Ind tnd «ficl1t '-11. NI N , at lllown 111 1 ,_,.,. ~
elite student," Mrs. Cramb "TOVIT COMP..,NV N~r1,., Pu•tle • Ci ni.ii•"'' ""' corrwn1u1on l!'x.-rtt !OFFtC!"'L Sl!ALI 111 aOlk u, 1-1t .,, Ml1n11._.
The i;pring offering o t Guitar will be off d in 10 '" , °' No•. 11. 1tn ••rHr• J. Moorl•n M•P•. rteord1 ., °"'""' c_..,, aaid, ''J t's a fun day for all." ere ., ,,111 Ttul!~•. ""1111 flcie t" •ubU~ Dr•-(Ntl c11w ,.,1oi ""''"' •ubUc<1111orn11 c1111,,..n11.
The Ucl Campus ... 1·11 take classes at lhe Orange Coast half hour sessions i;tarting 'h MARVIE 0• MC Flf. 0 ''"'' c°""'~ Marth!, 10. 11. '" 1111 ~·11 Los""'''" c .... m •A•c•L t: The "°"" "'" 91 "" .. 111'1 Mv Ctrnmlltlon E,.,.lr1s M~ C-llllon Elll•u tolllh fwo..thlrott et 11'111 _. tlW'
on an international flavor as Y~ICA v•ill begin Thursday 1t1arcb 29. "u"1'~~ec1 N•"'""'1 H1t11or N1"'1 "''"' •••
11 '· 1'71 Jutv tt. in' twrlllt el' "'' -1'11 ti.If 111 :: t~ml:)l~oO with Dill• l!lot. N•wPOtl 'u•tltr.ad Or1n11 (H•I 01111 PllGI, LEGAL one °" Janll.tFV ''· ""· befoi"f -· • 90Ulh-t ""',,.... "" SIClllll '"
participating student3 arrive \\"ith an eighl·session flo"·er A s'minar 11n astrology ~'~~t11, c1 1o•o•~l1 M1rc11 11, i1U1.~\· fM•<h ,,, 2(, 31 and A•rtl 7, ,,,~ N ' E :'~1i:w:~~~~·':~.!:{ J~'<t...J'~~·. ',-, ..... "'',~ .1, """',, •. c, .. ,u-....," ".,.•-•'
in dress native to foreign LEG" NOTICE ~ "" ·• '" """' arranging rourse. taught by Rev. ~fr. \Yoodward ~ w. ~. Al~Khl. Horbtr1 "'""""°"' J.ck •••!IV '" "" 11:1nctoo L1 1o111 Ctilct. countries. ~•1• L. Kttt. l<l'IOWn 10 m• lo be lilt "' 1110wn .,, • Miit ....corfff 111
C · · · Other classe.~ lo be ofler'd v.·ill be held for 10 sessions LEGAL ~OTICE P ..... , C1"1tT•l'ICATe °" tUllMl"Ss Hf'llnl .,,,_ n1m'" ••• 111bM:r1bed aook s1. "'' ,, el' "o.c.11•-ompet1hon Will be 3 part ClltTl•ICATI" 0, IUSINISI l'ICTITl-OUI HAM& to '"" wHhln lnltr ...... 111 '"" tdlM>Wllllt• M•l't, rtCVQ ef °'1111N c-.tY, of the day's activiti's in ad· include: beginning ~1arch 30. •1cT1T1ou1 NAM• "TM vllffrii._, • '"'"" 1111'1 •rt"" to"",~.., execultd 11'1<! Nmt. c1Utornl1, 1110 11n11 btlrll .... -..c1111o AMf:HOIO T~t Undttlfl'°"' tofl Cttlllt' h It t-ueltnt • busl""I H lt1S ll'it•lntlOOI WITHl!SS "'y Mr'MI lllCI Offltlal Stll. Id Is 1M Otftlr•I -thlnf ~
dllion to offerings or career A lpha Rhythm, mental ex-Th' YtilCA v.·ill also offer NOtltl! 0 ,. TtlUITEl'I IALI" c..nc1u1;11n1 • 111111 ..... ,, "' c:rn111 ::,;..,. H·i:?; ~= INdl, c.u1wn11, 10FF1c1<1iL SEALI 1u1 •Old wttt 01 "" ..-__.....,,..
booths showing i'obs in "h.ch erc ise of ~If awareness. t . o. N1. ~tw.s """'· t11bH 1111M, c1111orn11. undff t 11"" 11•me or o ELVA"· LILLl!V "" "" """" "'"' 111 ""' ..,,,._.. ' I courses in oil painting for l•lt ""· N·ttf.f 11\t llc!lll""' rlnn ,,..,.,,. ol THIE a. l!NTEll•llt15ES """ ""' Mid Hof•"' Publk<tllfor~I· 'IUlrter .. Nhl Stctltll "·
knowledge of ( 0 rt i g n v.·hich begins April l at 7:30 o" ~,,, •. lf11 t i 1:00 ....... Hf:ltl· UNIVElllSITY INQUlltElt ~ 11\11 .. 111 !Inn" COll'llOllCI <Ff Ille lotlowlftt .... .,,.. Kun Counh" J'AICRL S: Th•! -1-• ,,. I . he! f t .th th R K beginners and • d v an c e d TAGE MORTGAGE COMPANY. II ll•m II c-....... Ill .... lolltwl .. ""'"' ............. In full .... l'ltCH of M't' (OIMllJtlon £Dir• fflt ,. -.. tM _. • IVOI
anguages IS PU· p.m. V.1 ' ev, 'n d TlutlH under tnd 1t11n111n1 to Oet<I wlu•11 n•int In Nit 1nd it11c1"" rutdonc:e'. ,.,~~~~-',"•'"',low" .... 0 ,. 0 ,0t1. L nn, ,.,, " ol ""' -"' h1lf of "" -"'-'
Immaculate Heart College's WoodY.·ord instructing. stu eats, creative macrame, Oi' Tru11 1111o<1 Nov1rnt.1• s "" 11 •• i.ii11-· ''""""' · ant• '""' •~.. · °" •bn.lorv • • ''""' ""· • ou1ntr ., Stctlon x. t--.t• 1.
b I. 1 Wardrobe selecti'on
3
n d d dance for '~Kiiie~ bv Ch1•le1 e. Grov~r. Jr. Je1.,.h T. c1111..,.., Jr .. '" Colllna ~-1• 1'1S She•l1111o<1 11. H-lDt Not1ry PuDUc 111 and tor ttld s1 .. 11, South, "'"" 11 w .. t • .,.r1,., '" "" i 1ngua puppet show "Aunt yoga an modern '"" cvnthl• " Grav .. •r><I rtoC11tded AYt ••I* hl•nct """"'°"•••ch. c.iu. ,..,_11v 101111rad Frt11e1, 1. w11k\ns. "'"""' u 1ot91 Chk• •NI .,,,,.,
Misery and her Pea"r Tree'' coordination, y,•hich btgins six children. Novttn"-r ,,, 1He. 111 Doo1C 11•1. 1•1• o.,;.i Mtrd'I u. 1t11 °11"TM•rch '· 1'11· Ch1,111 11. w11h1>urn, """""" 1o me lft 1~. ••..chit L11 MNt. ,, •hOW" l06 of Olflcltl Re<crds In 11u1 ollltt JO'l!Oh T ~ri.ww Jr Id G. Jo~•s le lie "'• "'""' wr.OM ""''" •rt 1111 I M11 rtctnl.., In lllOlc SI,
will be presented several sessions on April I Y.'ilh Further information on o1' int Rtcordtr "1 O••l!ft Covnh", 51111 o1 c 1111orn1~. orintr ccvft;V: 51111 .,0t;1\'!:.;11°"':' c 11"· ..i:•crl~:; :'with~~ 1....,,,,..,:, ~~d ~IKI• If. o1 Ml1c1111-.... MtM. rtCC1rlh
tlmes throughout the day. Colleen Percy instructing. class's is available ll'lrough f•11t••n1•· w111 9•11 ~' 1ut>11c 1u1;1i..., o.. M••c~ u, 1r11. belo'~ mt. 1 on Mo,c~ 1, • 11~'."·11e~: ·..,,. • =: ... ':'.""' 1 m• no uocu • o1 o .. n .. c-.1v c1tll•nl1, 1r!n•
B , d d d Al 0 hJqhesl blllder IC Cl.!h (PIVll:ll<I Hot1 .., Pubtlc In tftd to• t1ld 51tlo, NorarY Publk In i nd for \old Stilt WITNESS rn~ hind Incl O!lldt l Sill MMht<lv t i tllt l ol .. Or1t.,... Ohlrid
The youngest French chef eg1nning an a van c e ice Fox al 642-9990. •I 11m! o1 st!« I" 11w1u1 montr o1 01r10n111v ''"''Id ~oh T. c1111w1r P!r1011111v tPP••rtll tl>t-•t c.. Jont~ \OFFICIAL Sf:A.LJ ' =::.,1 11~ ";!<~'";':, 11;,, ~
""iJI prepare an SO l t --------------------'~----------1 "'' UnrrH ~ll!!~I •I Int 5.oulh F""'I Jr., known lo fllfl lo boo !I'll H•Hn 11'111 Otvld O. Jonei k..own fll ma HElllll!ltT N, •ENSON " a s r men Enlronc•, Old Ortf>Oe Counll' Cc~rl'>OUU, WllO" ntmt 11 urb9C'lbld It tn1 wl!Mn le bit tlw H flon• wl'IOM ntmtl 111 H6!U'Y J'<,>bllc.Ctlllot11T• 8-U, "'' JO) of MltcttllrwlCILlt
of his gastronomic specialties. Attend the Church of Your cnv ol l'>•nl• An•, (~Ill .. t ll •l1M. ln1lru ... 111I and 1cknowlH1tll ~. ·~·c~r-sublcrlbtd I• ,... wl,hln l~1lrum111l 1nd l'rlncJ•a• Offlc• '" T~. -~:·":..?,',',",!.t c.~" ... "· «...,"'",",'· •• ,
A t d t
Hiit 1nd lntere1! conYeYH to 1nd now ll>t ''"'' tkNIW'-o " -• c " I Cl ·• •• -S U en -Created Videota-hell! 01 11 unller u !d Ottll !11 tht 10•>,CloC SE•'! 1 '" t '"IV t~tCll!ld I t 11mt. Ollnll' v• t nll t rt •C>l"llon ol tr.. HSI JI Kf'll of tlot yv .. {OFFICIA.l SEitill Mr Comm1!1lon Eulrt• t '° prtsentation in f () r e j g n O•OPlflY sltuai.d In lllt C:ounlv ol Oran11. Mt.., 81th Morlan MtrY II: Man Mtr ( l97J WH IC!.. ., lfll louth h11f ol
Ch • R 1 I In 11ld County Ind S!tlt d11crlbed Noltry Pubtk.Cilltc•ni1 Hor,,.., p .... 11 '!c ' •.btlsllacf Orinot (Hsi O•llY ,.1101 111t tou~w11I -riff of l«floll 7f,
fanguages 8180 WilJ i)e SCften• 01 .. e egu ar y II' f'•lncl•tl Offkt In uu c II Hltn!t "Tow~thlit J IOlllt!. ll'tl'tOI It W,,_I, "' . Alt 1~., (tf'l•lfl lt nd 1"lut!ff Ill 0 c ... ~rlncl••I Olllco In MIFCJI , •• 17, 2(, n. 1111 ~, ... 11 ""IY 111 tht lt1nd!o Lit ..... ClllCll
ed ' •tf'ft 0\111,. OttllM (....,... "' " I -• -C .. , • fht Stilt el C1lilornl1, C011n1Y or Mr Ctrn,..lttlOn E•11t11 M c ·-"· ' • ... ' " .... • •• .._ .. --------Ortnet detcrll>ad 19 tot1ow1• A"'ll t lftl ' "'""" __,., llelrt• •• W-.. "' I Ni.• -..;°"'9d Ill
Lof 1. Tr1cl 1!-0I. aav V1tw ... :,1111 •ubllth.O cr; ...... Cotti C•llv .. illll l'ubll1~;· ~;a1.!.~ CNll 0111~ "Ho!. LEGAL NartCE look ,Jl, , ... 13 "" M111;1l1•-
Mauldin' s Own Favorite • • •
• • • Still Relevant
Two wars ltter, Bill Mauldin's cartoons still say it all for the 9uys who •re
"up front" doirtg the dirty work. Mauldin once selected the c1rtoon •bove
1s one of his own favorites from World W•r ll 's. "Up Fron.t" series ..
Ho said: "Once I fhought I did • very funny cartoon (about) an old.timo
cavalryman shooting his jeep •.• It has simplicity: it tells a story; it
doesn't need words. It is, I betieve, the very best kind of cartoon."
Mould in is still doing some of the world'i "very best kind of c1rtoons ."
A few strokes of his talented pen can make some of the most biting
editorial comments to be found on today's issues. If you're looking for
relevancy, look at Mauldin two w1rs Jeter .
Look at the Editorial Page of the
DAILY PILOT
l/ll!I '~'"" II t11own ... • "'"' M••d'I u. 2(. 31 ....... ,.u 7, lf71 su.n Mire~ J 10 11 11 lttl 4'1·11 '---------------~ljt.nlo'K. ~.",.', _ .. , ..... ,,."!:,."""" ... · re<ordod ln boo!!. '7, 1111 lt Ill '----·--·-· __ • ______ ... ..:•· ''" •· '" Mlsctlltnecin Moc" 111 tht o!llct cl T..EG" NOTICE r· T·71111 D'll1111t Olllrlct tloulld1" 11111 II IN C.OYnll' lllKOtdtr el 11ld Ortn11 /1.1..o ' LEGAL NOTICE 'IOTICI TO CllROITO•' d11Cfll>ad In 11'11 lnllrvrntnt rtcordft CM.Intl'. IU•t•IOlt (OUltT Of' TNI J~I• II. lflf In look 1', .... )la
Common llHUlptlon; 70MI Spt.it;f T·t1"1 ITATI! 01' (ALll'OtlNIA •o• "'Mi•t•lllntOUI lttconlt. °''-"""'
1 Avt., Stl!lo itinl. Ctlit. f11Q7 HOTICI TO Cltl!OITOJtS ..... Jll Ttll (0UNT'f 01' OllAM•I! fl', Ctllfe'rnlt
I
~tld .... Wiii ht mt clt . Out without SUl'l!llOtl COIMT 01 Ttll ClltTl~l( ... TI! o" I USINISI ,.._ ....... 1 """CIL ~. Tllfl ""'" MN .. "'"
coventM or w1rt1n1v. o._preu., i""llMI. ITaTI! Otr Citilt•O•N1A •O,t, l'ICTITIOU1 flAMR f:rl•lt 9' JEANNE A.. IVES, 1~1 till r.11f II '"°' toul-ool •u1•!t" '"'•rc!l"9 llllo, t>OHtnlOOI or t n• Ttll! COUHTY Olt OtlAN•I "T~• ul!dtr•ltno<I 0. ttrlltY lhh' tre J£ANNf: A. ANGElDI, 01u111d. ol 1~1 N>r!htnl ou1rltr of Ille ,..,.,...,ti cu,..l:lrt nco .. to 01r tho btl•nc• due NI • .l."""11 c....,.uclln1 -' t1u1ln11~ ti 13'7 C11llll1n NOTICE IS HElllEIY GlYE:N 11 lne •u•rlor of 1t<tlon :U. T~I• I
04'\ th• orlnc1Pol 1u"' ol tl'>t note tttured E1!1!1 of ESTELLE M. KRAUSE, Or., Hunlllltlon lttch. (1l1t1Dtnl1. Uftft• cr..i1tor1 11 tht tbov• namt<I dac.-dt nl Sculh, llano• 11 W11t. 11rtlv lit ?"-
bl' .. Id [)ffa. to-wil 1!C.,9'.1J. with 110.0 kl\OWf\ IS (STf:Ll(. MAY AOlu'o\5 !lit l/tlltlOYI llrm n1me et CXC.ELlf.Hl 11111 ell Hnont 11tvin1 cf1lm1 INlrnl R.r•<he lo t oh1 Ch1c1 Ind tt'11¥'
lnllre11 ffom APrll I. l,1'11, i s ;,, ulil KRitiU5E. OoK!ISld. 8UILCIHG MAINTENAN(E '"" 11111 Ille s1W llec•doml 1r1 rMulrtd le 1110 ln fht ll:1ncllo l as lol111, es -
note t rovlil..,, lllva11Cts, It 1n1, undtr NOTICE IS Hl"EIY GIVEN lo tllfl 1•kl flnn 11 cornPOtlld el !hi lol-!nt -wlltl ""' nectl!tl'l' -.id'lfl•I• In 1111 I MIP rKotdM 111 •col SI tllt tenn1 ot uld OtlCI ; fff•. dl•rtH t•..,llPt• 1r Ille tbovt "'med d.Kldtn1 Mnont. """-• ,..,.... In hlll ,,,. •llc:11 Ille oH\co of 11\t dirk Ill "'' 1boY1 •-1) el' ML1<tlll......n Mlli. recor~
Ind .... ""'' el '"" ''""" •Ml .. "''' •II •tTIOM MYll'll clt!ms 101lnat ., , .. ldtn<I ••• 11 hltlowt: tllftHld [OIJtf, ., , ... """ flllm. W'llh " o ........ Ceo.mtv. C1lllor1111.
tlot lt\1111 <"'•ltd b1" 11ld Ond. , ... Nill lleudtnl •r• ,... ... 1...i "' flit IC11111ttll L. Frlllllr, no Ctrlllltn lfll ,__.., 'fflld>lfl. "' ""' .un· J'ARCIL •= TM _,1111,.., l~ ''"
Th• lltrl1'flcl1rv u-r ••Ill Ottd, by 1r..m. wi~ 1111 NAINl'l' vouthtr1, In IDr .• Hu"'lntlon l11dl. Ct1lfornl1. ,,.,..,...,i " "" offk• fff htf' ,,,,,,.,.y1, of TM wut halt Ill !hi ""lhw.11
rt•""" or • • ... c11 "' 111111111 In "" effkt ol , ... cl<lrll of tM ...... JHtlll V, F1dl!ltl. 11'01 11n Cln:I• O.t.l.LY. CL.Alli(, WHllf ANO lltEILIN, f!Vlrltl' "' "" ""111 ... 11 _ .....
lh• obllt•tlon1 ttcu•..S l ~,' t • y , 1!111111 court, II' ,. "'"'"' """"· wit~ No, I , Ht11111"'1on ktCl't. C1lti.ml1, m1 Cllotldo ...,....,.,.,., l91 ....,. ... ,. "" norlhw"I llU•rltr of s.clllft ll lltrllofclrt t•tclltad Ind flllv.rtd to 1111 flt!tUlfY WOl.ICM'11" lo '"" \Ill> OllH ~rch 1, UJl Ctlllor.... '°"'1, whldl .. ff1e •lttl "Town•hl• 5 SOll!h, llltl!fl 11 WHI,
lllt uncloflll9""' 1 wrlntn OKl•r•llO<'! 61'119111td t i l!lt ol'llct et htr '""'IMP' IC•nnt!h L. Frllllor .. bullntH of 11'111 11Mle'1l11'111<f 111 111 '" tflt "•nc:llO LI• lol111, M11 Ill or Ofl1u!1 tnd 1Dem1nd fof" Sa,., t tld JAMES A. 8tlUEN, 'Sl l'r1ncl1co Slrttl, JO~IPh V. l"ld1nct mtllers prrtel111,,_ lo tflo Hllll cl look '1, llfl U. Ml1ctU1"'°"" M1,1, writ!.., ,,.,,;,, er llr11ch t nd or 11octlon ~•n Frtncltco. C1Hfclt~l11 Which Is 1!11 Sltlt of C1Ulor"i1, Or1111• Cou"lv' 11lcl 11ecfdtnl. wllhln fat11 mOfllttl .tfte• record! Cl O;•-C...,1111", C1llloml1,
ta (fllll !ht 11N1ersl1Mll ID ,.u 11ld •l•c• el' llulltllM ., tllt .,.,., .. 11111.., On MtFCh '· 1t7t. ~f(>l"f "'"· • lllfl first .ublkl""'" of lftll llOll(f, f'AltClt:L ,, Jr.. -ti r..Jf el' .... o~ le 'llllfY 11ld ob!l11llDr11, end 111 tll "'lllttt Hf'1t lnlf'lrl to lilt IP'lll"' Not1N l'utlllC I" t nd i<>r 11ld Stile. OllH M..-c:h 1, lt71 nOrlhwe1I 1u1rt1r el 1111 110r1~w111
11\erttltor. "" November 17, 1'10, !ht 0r ••Id lllK-1. wlttiln tour monllU •tr..,,.tlly "'"'"d ltt:llllMlll L. l'rflJj,r JULIA WAlllD ouarttr ol "'' 11orlhwn• •uart9r e:
und1t1loncrd c111n11 11111 l'IOtlce ol brtteh '"'' tht tint •ubllc•llorl of t~i• notlct. ~no Jos.•~ v. l'kl1nc1 -nown 11 mt E .. •;uld•., lt!r Will Stdlo11 U. T°""nt~I• S Soul". Ran .. 1tld of elocllon lo be re<ordell In Otllld Mt•ch 17, ltn. !o be lht 1erson1 who\I ntrn•• ••• ""'" 1t.w n.,.,W a...:tll~nt II Wnt 11'1 1111 lttnclle l•• 1111111,
OOOk f4'1, l'tll tll, ti 1•ld Dflltltt Mi•••rtl toulu Sht•lrd 1ub&c1/bffl la !>it wllh!n lnorrum•~I tnd DALLY, (t.AltlC, WIOTR AltO lltl!ILlN '' lllown on • M•P rtcordtll I~
Rec.,..d1. Admln!ol•tlrl• wlth·lhe·wlll 1c~now!tc!tlcl lh•V •~•Cul.cl !ht 1trnt. nn Ctlw-... MYtf'd 8oek Jl, •-lJ or Mlttttl1n"ut
Oall: Mltth 1, lt11 A"ntJl'ad of !ht tllllt ~! (0FFl(IAL S~ALI Llf •-111. Ct-Ml fM4T M•rt ftco1dt "' Ortritt (0Unl11
HfltlTitiGE MOfl_TG•GE !he ,_.1 "'""" C'tCIO,nl. Mt.., IC. I'!"""' Tih (1111 2U""9 Ca!lloml1, COM .. .1,NY JAMl!S A. llU•N NoltrV .. ub!lc Cilifornli ,11".,.,...,.., lw RJl'l(llfrlX t:•ctrllnt IMrlltom l~I 1oulhtrtr
..,. Nld Trustee. w lrll't<ilto JlrMt P'fincl••f O!llc1 In "u•lltllld ~ Coast CtllV 11101 li5 lftl. By ltott• G. OullJmtn S•11 il'r1tic.bet, (llHlr•lli o ...... Counh" M1rdl II, 1r. u. SI, lt71 J?,.11 J'AltCl!L 1: Tht '""'h -third llf
.. tllic:rlfll Tth ftlll 11 .... 11 M~ (OITVT\IHIDll &~IF!I IM WHI lhtlt..fO\ltlhl Ill "" Mflt\
S'S 2'4U All..-llll' ltr Mmlllltlrtlri. CtA N""· ?t. un h.il ti t!\t touthwnl •11trftlr <II ltcflllt'
J'ublitl>H HtWPorl Htrtior N1w1 Prt u . l'Ubll11'1td O•t"lt CMtl Oalflr l'ilt!. 'ubll1htd Or•~tf CNtl OtllY Piiot. LEGAL N011CE 1', T°"""'hlP J ~!h, lt1rit1 II Wtol. c-bll'lf(I w11~ Dally Piiot. Ntwtorl Mardi 11. "· JI •r'MI A.lrU 1, nn 5»7l M••<h J, 10, 17, 2f, 1'11 41'·TI PtrtlT l" !ht 111.tnd• L11 8011•1 11\d 8tatf\, C1Utor11!1 Mtrc~ 11. 1~. ll, Plr'llf 111 lt1fldll L1 lo!M Cttlc.I.
itn S06-n LEG" NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE '' ""O'OI" ., ' M•• 'ICIM'""' •~ 1'U l'...at ltoelr SI, '"' lJ ol Mltc1U1~111r
Cl"RTIJ'ICATI! OI' I USlllllJS, ...... ,., rfcordt .. Or1r111 c""'"'''
P.-a """"' •M:.trTIOUS lltAMI! CtlltOffll•. CltlTl,.ICATI 01" IUS1t1Ill tl•tlf'ICATI!" Of' &U11NIJI Thi ...... ,.. ......... <tr'l'lfl" o11t 11 YOU oloNO EACH OF YOU 1t1 fltrttrr
trlCTltlOUS NA.Ml! ,ICTITIOUI 'IAM• conducllnt • llu•I-•• "' M1rlllfl nollllad "' lllPtlr .... '"""' CtUll
LEGAL NOTICE
Tllt undenlt""' clot• ctr1111" f'w k T~t UlldtrsJ1~o<1 clot• cerllll' fl• Is Ave.. 8•1bol ltllll'ld. C•llklf""'-• undor 11 •nv YOI' htvt, wlly lttt ,._,,...
tcOTICI 01 1ALI conllucHne 1 bu'lllWU II 1'.0. 1'01 Hvf!o CoNIUClln1 1 b111!M1M 11 l'l'lO Gr•c~ lht lklllleil1 fir"' "'"'' gf Yfll:ICl'S dH<rlbld lllOuld !IOI bo C-t"'MCI t• Nollet !1 "''"~ t lvtn PllflUt nl ta tll\llon ltfdl, Ct ll'°"11t, undt• IM lie-Ltne. Cot!• l.lut. C11lfornl1. unoHr VAltll!TV ll~"'f: 11'd tloet i•ld firm PtlYM fw In IM C0111Pl1tnt, wll!lln
1e<lion1 l011 tncl JOn ol Int Cl•ll !ltlov1 llrm ~•mt ol Sl!!A GltAl'HICS !ht l!cllllOVI firm ntmt of tl EPf:tl"TOlllY 11 ~ ol "" tolllwlr>t "'"n· ,.., llDJ cllYI '"°' "'' Hf'UIC• ... Cod• of rnt Sltlt ol Ctl11C>l"nl• !!>fl .tn<I Ill•! iald !Inn h ,..........., ol SlUOIOS 1nd fh1t 1116 lltm h co,..p.....O .,...,., ,,.,... fn fuh 11\1f JleCI tf rWO.nc:t Y'Oll of lhli summon1, It untd wl11'1h
ur><lt<llllMll,. Bill ~ SCHULT! lotlll 1111 lollowi"' °'''°"• w"°'e ~t-ln flt t11t lollfwlf>ll "'-· wllot• n•me Is 1, tonowt: 1111 Cou11h llf Or111tt. 1r wll'lll" lfll•I' 1~!1 II PIJbhc '"""°"" II toD2 Ad1m1 tut! '"" •l•<• 9' rt1!cl1n<• I• •• fclllowt: In !ult •nd •1•<• of rMldf'ICI " •• Alkt ... ''""' llM ···~ Ave., (JO) lllYI, fl tl /'VICI' ,1,..,...,..., .... "vo., Hunllnrt""' 8atdl, Ct lll .• II l~ A. L Kt ufm•n. 171171 Twtln Llflf, ltllow1: ••tbol ltltl\d. l'Oll lrt ncrl111tll .!h1t LHlltH VOii V
IJn. on Stlu;ll1y, '"'" l•d lllY Ol .. !I lllkh•r• , ... ~. "" ltolf~"'"'" ltd., 0.t!d M1rdl' 1'11 ••11t11 '"" I MWtr II .tlMNt rHulrH A~•f!, 1t1\, ."'• toll_!,.. "'"rlllld .,.,. oft~ Mire~ 15, IOI Loa itinoel'" Ctllf0fn!1 "'!kt"· i..i.. ltll Plllnllff will I•-• 111111......,. tt· Mii~. to.wit. .... L 11:.tufrn•n 01t1d Morell 14. 1111 Stilt cl c.tll,.,,,.!1, O•-c.uNr: t11t Ctrn1Pl1lnl 11 1r111.,.. UIHWI cenlr1~
19'5 ford. 10 number JY&H10Htc, si.te el C•IUornli, O•llltf (""~"' l !ttttrd Cltlr On M•n:" t, 1'Tl, btf-mt, 1 If" win INl'I' fo 1111 court fer ·•""
L!cem1 ?""'bt' 70P8Af1J, Clllf. On M••ch 1$, lf)I, bltort ,..., 1 Sl1tt of Ct l!tor"lt. O••nt• Covnt1 Noltl"I' ~ubllc 111 -tor 11111 Stitt. olhtr retlef dtmtncllld '"!I'll C-!1!111. Stiel tll• 11 tor tho PV•Poll ol ltllllJl"t Noll'Y •ubllc In .tnd for ttld Slllt On Mttt~ H. lf)J, "-!Oft mt. I ptnW\111' •-'"Allee J' ...... known YOU MAY SEEK THE <liOV!CE Or
llt" "1 lhf ut111rr1l1nt<1 fer •nrlnt re11IF1 PtrtDlllll~ •••Mid A. L. ll:tuf,,.111 kncrwn No!1,., l'Ybllc ln t tld fg.r Hid 5ttte to mt to be tN __, ....._ "'''" AN ATTOltNl!Y ON ANY MATTEI> l09tt~r with to1!1 of allYtfll1lnt I nd !o mt 10 be Ille! 1111011 whon ntme Ptr\G<lfll1 ••P•t•!d lt!t~trf Ctn¥ k~own 11 IUbscrlbtd "' IM wl'lh1'1 ln1'Nmtnl (ONNl!CTl!O WITH THE CDM,LAtN~
"""'"''"of 11lt. . !t 1vt>utlbtll lo 1r.e wllhln !nilrumtnl II mt 10 be 1r.t HrlOfl Wl>o$• 111m• Incl 1cknowl"i!Qtll $~t IXHU~ 1111 vme. 011 THIS IUMMONI. SUCH AnOltNEi" 0.IK\ 1'1'1!1 'ltd da• el Mt rCh, 1111 t~d tCkfll')W1td...i 11t IUl(Ulld lht '-ml, 1$ 'ub1crlbtd le lht within l111lrvm•nl (Of'FIClAL Sl!!itiLl SHOULD 81! CONSULTliO WITHIN THE
!1111 H. Sctt11l1/ (QFFtCl"L SEAL) tnd •<kl'IOWl•llOtC' ht .,HUllCI l~e ltmt. 1.1 .. IY BETH MOllTOl<f TIME LIMIT STAfEO IN THI~ SUM
8v T. E Mearn• Jton L. Job11 (OFFICfaL ~EAll No!1rv Pvblk • C1llt.,nll fJ.ONI fOll ,ILING A WltlTTli/1
f'ubll1htd °''"" (Ntl 01111 "IOI. Nol•"' ~vbllc·Ctlltor"t1 I.It.., Both MO•'Otl "'lll[i.11 Ol'llu In J'Ll!AOING TO THE COMPLAINT. Morch 11, 1'11 utr.11 l tlnclptl Oftltt In No!lrv ~ub!lc•C11l!tr"11 o""" Cltln'llv Cl•tn undtr mY hind •ltd "'' ; OrtnQI CounlY P'•!n<l~ol Olllct In Mv Cornmlttllll Ellllft~ 11'11 Superior Court of tllt 11111 c ,.,.~ commlHIM £~•<rt-• Ort11111 Counll' ,,...u t . lt71 C1~10rnl1, 111 •nd fer !ht Cou"!v •
l.EGAL NOTICE Mire~ 1, lfn M• C.ommh1lon EAtlltl •ublllMd Ort"" Co11t Dtlb' J'ilol Clflnt•, lhll flh dtV el July. ,..,,
'uflll•h" Ortl\ll (etd 01i!Y l'ol&! .1,••il 9, ltn M••cll lt, 11, ''·fl, 1'11 St.1·11 (Of'f'ICIAL SEAL)
Mi rth 17, 1~. 31 1nd A11rll 1, ltH Jtl·ll l'ull'll•~ 011net CNtl 01llV "•10! W E. ST JOHN
NOTICR TO Cltl!OITOtlS Morch 11, ''·SI and .l.Prll 7, 1'11 Sf.,11 Coun!y Cltrk t rid Clt rlr. of
SUl'EltlOlt COUltT O/f TMI! LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l.EGAL NOTICE the "11trlor Court el' lhl Sl•TI! Of (All~OtlNI• ,0111 $1tlt of (alllor11!1. In
"TMll COUNTY O, OtlitiNOI encl IOt tr.I (ounlY Ill 0fane•
Ne. •·4MO f'.fMl<I ,. ... ,11 ST (llM" I!. loltm
I fltl!t er JOHN MilillllO O!ll. ~·1611' ClltTl .. ICATI! OP I UUNISI CltlTl-ltAT• o• •l.nlldS• OON ... •CHlil'A
Dte111ol!. ClltTl,ICAT9. O• IUUHISI flCTITIOUf NAME ,-l(TITIOUj NAM• Cl!'I' A"'"""
NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN ta !ht •ICTITIOUI NAME tr.. undtflltnt<I clot• t1tl1I" "• lt Tht ulldutl""" does Ctl'tifY tit 11 L04.I AlllH MAISMALL
crtdl!Of• of f~t •bovt n•mfd dKHt"I Tr.. undu1l1nlld 110t1 ttflllJ ht 11 conduC!•"I • bu1l~e" 11 >67 Either (tnducllflt 1 11\nlntu ti :2fJll ""°"' Al .... llllf Qty •~
lh•I all "'"°"' l'ltvll!f cll!m1 •••'"'' c00\d11dln1 • 11\nlPll'll 11 1117 Gltn""°" ~!., Co1t1 Mt11, Ctlllornl•, uO>d" I~• Ntw""'1 9ffdl. Ctllfomla. """' C9Y fff "'"'"".-•11cto ltlt u ld dftffltnl ••• "'oulrld la 1111 l-. Htw•orl INcll. C1llf0t11I,, ul'ldlrr fldllif\11 II""' no-ot OIV(ltSlflEO tlcftMOUI "''" -9' HOV'J.E M """Ol'lkl .. UI tlo•m. wllh ll>t llKKll.., ¥0U<htr1, In lht tltl!tlous ll•m ,..,... II IUSIHES5 MAINTENAHC( ... NO ltEPAIJt SEtlVl(E: SHlltON I P'ld lhll ltlf firm It c-.ef ....,,,.._ hMfl, C1llfclt,.;1
""' clllct of lllt cllra ol 1ht •l>lv• tNFOltMllT ION SYS11M5 •rid '"' u ld •!Id !ht! ••Id lltm ,, com--or ....... '1o11ow1111 """"' WPIOll ....... T.t! m41 ...... u,, •~t. 111
tnlilJ.., cour1, or lo ,,.,..,, lh•m. with llrm b umpooN vi the lollowlnt 1tr1011, !llfl tollowl"I ,..,IOI!. -• n.,... 111 Ill tun 1,.. JOllOI ., ,......,_ -A*"-'rl IN 'lll11ttf1
tht ~CHll>"Y l'011Chtr1. le tlo• un-"""°'' 111mt In fwll IMI .it1;"1 OI retlftnct "1M 1nd •ltct 11 rttlilt "l:t It'' fa n_,. 11 fol..,.., l'Ulllltlllcl Ort"'' (11'1 O•ll'I' ~11r·
C'•rilotted •I lht olllct of her tllcr'11fv, i. It loltow1: ltototrt 0. Altiuon, 3'1 Efl!ltr SI. •-kl E-(rtWflH. 11~ Orlntt Mwdl It,,._ ti .,111 .t.1111 I, I, 1'71 trl·ll
WAlL.l.C L. MITCHELL, ti, 1501 Wftl· Ptl&r W. t ltl>t'. Ulf ~ltnWOOd Ltllfl (OJll Mtlt A•t , (ell•~' C .. M.
clflf Crlvt , Suitt :IOD. NtwPO•! l11tll, Nt'WPOFI ll11cl'I. C1tltorftl1. Otllld Metcll 1J, 1'Tl Ooltd Mlrdl l, lf71 C1l;f0fnla t!UO, Wllld'I It lh1 •lie• 01tlN! Mirth 1. 1'71. ltbtr'I 0. Alt•-lt0ntlll f:~ Crtw,...d
ol Mlr•U• o1 "'" unde .. !1ned !n all "''"' w. a1cr..• s1111 el' C1t11on!l1, CIFll!f• CDU~"' s111t 11 C1rltlllnlt. or.,.. C-IY: rn11tt,. Plr'ltlnlne le ll>t &11tt1 of ~'"' tf (olllor11l1, °""''' (Ovnlv: On More~ rJ. 1'71. btfort m•'. t Of! ~•di ), lf71, 1Nf9of't me, a,1---------------·
111c! dtclden1. within foll• ,...,.lht 1ft!r cr.. March n, Hn, boofore -· 1 Not1ry l'ubllc In 1nd tor uld Siii•. HO'lllY ,.,,_.le 1n ~ for vld iui.. P .. 1116 !!It l!rll PUDllctllOn ol lhlt 110llc1. NO!lfl' •ubn< '" •nd lot ,.;, Sltlt. •etlt;nlllY IOlltrlfl ltobort o . AltMllOll, ........ llY ,_,_ .... 1e1 Euttllf c•11TI,.IC•TI o .. •Ul lWlll
Citied ,,,,er. '· "" ·~•IOl!tllY IPPtt•td ,.~,,, WIHl•m l ie"-' kno .. n I• m• " be '""' ....... """"'' Cr"""'" i..-"' "" lo -"" --,tcTITIOt.11 NAMI! Ml•V MtrVIFel lt F•• ~-n lo .... I• boo "'' .. ,_ Wl'oaH """'' " IUbtc-!llod ,, 111t wl•nln In-'"'""' nl!M It wblcr1"cl to ll'lit """" T"" vndttlllllflCI .... cer'lllY """ Ir £I•cul•I• """"" 11 tulK<r l!IM to Ille wlt~ln !n· 1lru"11111 tnd 1ctncwf..,ttd ht t•e<11ltd IMlrUl!llllt _,.,, 1ctn-lldttcl ht IXKltllM mlllll/Cllno I lvtl...,I .ti ~ TrtVlf'lf
of 1111 WHI ol tho ''""''"'nt t nll ack-ltdtt'CI tit t~tevltd tht ••mt. !ht ...,,.. °"""'' C•I• M•••· C1tlfornlt, t'Hl•.
1bov1 ~tmfd 11..ced•~t !"HI ••"""· (0FFl(litiL SEALI (0,-,-ICIAL Sl!"ALI ~ "" ft(!l!llll1 ftrm "'"'' II
WALLACI t.. MITClll"LL, II C!EitiLI Marv &d~ Mort... M1rv "· "'"""' "11.00IJIC-PAC .... 1'1.11 ttld flt'" It 1s•1 We1lclllf OllYt. Suflt 7W l(arlffn D. Mon10t HB1trv Publlc<tHlornl• Nol1rv "Ublk<•llforn11 ..-11111 of "" tolkrwlllt .. ,,..,, Whml
N-.iorl •••c~. Cl lllff"lll• tlut Not1rv Public • Ct!ito•••• "•lnclotl Olllct In Prl111:l•1t Olllcr 1n ""'"" 111 lull ttld 1••c• or r11IH11et
Ttf, Olfl ._.,.,... 1'1lnclo1I Dftkt In O"n'' Clllllllv (I,.._ Ct41nll' ta IO ..... : Alttmty lolr l!•trwlrl• oranea (O\llll¥ Mv CommlUIOll £~•1•'1 My """""l1tlOll lulre1 ,,...~I OtY9!1n, 50I Tr1v..,111 Of.,
1'1tbll1hH OrinlP Co11t OtilJ f'llG! Mv ("oin,..IHlon E••lfH f,prll t. 1'71 Nov. 1~. 117' ("ftl Mhl, C1llt0t11l1 M1,CJI J, 10, II, )A, IJll '14·11 July I. ltN •ubll1nt11 Orll!ft Cott i 01111 llllol "ublltlttd Of.tntt Collf o.11¥' f'llC! OalH Mlrtll 22, 1'11 l'ub!l1hH OrtnH Coast O•lly Pilot, MllTdl 11, U. JI 1nd .1,prll 7, 1'11 Jfl-11 Mtrdt J, 10, 11, ,., 1'11 """11 Mlrt•rtt G1Y1!111 Mire~ 11 11. 31 and Aprll 7, lf)l su.)J !tlll9 Ill C111..,nl1, Oronw Cwntr:
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE On M1l'dl n , ltn, bofllrt mt. •
LEGAL NOTICE Nlllf"f ~le 111 11'1111 IOI" •tld l ll!e.
J'-4tlM """'t!l• ,.._rfd MtFPrll G•¥tlli:
(lltTlll(A.TI 011" •UllNIS& tAlt llM U.I .,_ ~ ... t1W It bl lllfl H it.Oii WMl.e itlCTITIOUS NA.Ml 1'-*1• tU,.ltllOlt COUtlT 0, Tltf IU•l!lllOlt COUltT Cl' 'lfll flll't'll 11 t\lillllcrllllill M tho w!lt!l~ 1,..
T.. '
-' "'' ,. c••t•,ICATI o~ IUS!tcl!IS SlATI! 01' CAllil'O•Nr ... ,011 STAT• O• CALlf'OINIA ltOlt ul!Clfr1 •·~ o <•·, v •v •'• THO CO"MTT 0, o•••Ol """"""' • "luwwl ... td tht oecut•• Clflltud!"I 1 tiu'lnrt• 11 hUI 8tfC~. ,ICJITIOUI ltCAMI Tiii COUNTY 0, OllA••• ., ltll ''"''·
Hvn!lntlon tftell. C11Uornl•, II"°"' "" T~ uncltl"llt"""' ., ttrllt\I ht II .......... , If•. •'6"11 (Ol'PICIAL U!ilolol
lltllt!OU'I ''"" """" .. HUNTINQTON <ltwludlnt • lluJll'ltll ,, "' H!U St .• NOtlCll 0, t1•A1t1J•• •• ,,,,,,ON NOTICll 01' tllt:AlttW• 0,. J'l!TITIOtll M•'Y 1•11'1 Morton
8EACH C.HIYSLl!tl PLYMOUTH llflll L11wn1 •11ch, Ctll'6r•lt , urlllltr lllfl ,Ott •-o•.t.T• OP WILL AHi Piii: l"OI l"llO&AT• O• WILL AND ~ ""''"' ,uDlk.C:•l...,,nlt
"''' ••Id llrrn 11 (llmMtM el' ""lkllfl11111 11/'lft "'"" el' H.11.-1 ,..o. un111• Tl!STAM•lllTAll:T llJUANCI O' LlnllU TllT'AM.... P,,fl(INI Ofllc• 111
"'llowl"' ... -. W1'cllt Ill"'"' In lull OUCllONS '"" !I'll! ulcl ll•m 11 torn-''"" Ill' JOHN """'' ... y PftAn, TA•Y a...,..'""'"'' •NI ell(" O'I rttldfl!C• .,.. •• fclllfwo: ...... of "" lof!""ln1 "''°"' w,,... .... JOMN Ptv.TT. '" JACIC ,. .... n . 111111 Ill' WtlltAM "'· Mc.MOWN. ""' c-1"""' .... , ••• C~•flet lt•ktt. .an Sltl•!tv """'. ntfl'l9 In tull Ind 111ct or r~lftltcl Ow;11"''· OK4111d. A#tl t, 1"1 ltrr•n•, Glltlrl• A. Otrl1t, 711) El'Kl'll It 11 tollOWI: NOTICE IS H1!1tl•Y GIVEN tlotl ftlOTICI" IS Ml!ltll'f 01\'fN IWt f"ullll ..... 0 ..... (Ht! DtllY ~1111 A••~ v ... NII"•· Mlcllttl ''"'t' Htr!ltp, 4'7 Hm 51 .• WAYNE. H. STITH "'' fllo!f htr .... OOIOTHT c McNOWH Illa flkd lltfttfl """"',,., Jll ... A.orll ,, 14 1m """ Oiied M1tth I. "" L••--l•ttll. I "'"'"" to• Pro••tt of Wiii '"" • ptlllle'I "' f'1'91ror!• di wm ... , _______________ _ C~tr11"'91r~t• 01tt<1 M¥ch i. "11 for lnu111Ct OI Ltn11, lt11t'"tnlll"I' !or" !11v1nct ., Ll'll'tfl flfla""""-
G1,,..11 A, (llrill Mith.el J, H1rttn It Ml"l-r, •tltrtnct II wlli(I\ 11 It •tlll!Ol'tff, •flfftllCI to """"" II ll•te of c1111orn!1, Orantt c .... ntv • Sltll of c1111ern11, Ortl\ff c"""'Y: mM1 .,.. hlrlllt• Petll<ul1r1. tnd 11111 ,,,_ kit t11•lhH ,.,11cuttT1. *"' ""11---------------
0n Mott!\ I, 1'11, befo•t ""' I On Ml!'cfl 1, lf71, Mfcltt mt, 1 !ht !lltll tl'lll •ll(f Ill ~llflnt 1111 1"t II'"' ,... ~ ti ~ I'll ~f
Nolt,.., J'\lbQ( In '"" "' ttld '""· NO'lt.Y f'llblk '" ,.,. Nor MW "'"'' .. me ,... "'" "' ... ru I. n11 . ,, \111'11' hll blin tit !OW Mf!I L ltn. J'l(TITIOIWt tl.ltlN .... """"'111 ,,_....., ("''"' l1tltr erid Mt$0nltl'I' '""''"' Mlch1•I J1me• f"JO •·"'~ I" tlot c0111troem of OtPl•I· ti 9•JO I m• Ill !flt CN""""" II llNlll 11'&T•MltrT
Glorlt A. (llfl1I --"' .... ta "' Htrtltf ~II lo me .. -!ht "'"" "'""' Ho. , "' lllf c-1. t i IDCI °'"'""'"' No. ) •' lilt Clltlrf, " lft• fOl!cMl9 --.. *""' hllMU
"" "'""' w11 ... ft•-trt tvbfc•lbecl W"°5I "'""' II 111blc•lbtd l't Ill• wnhl" C.1'1t (ll'tltr O•lvt Wt1I. 111 ''" (If? lW Clvle (ll'IMI' Drl"f W•Jt, Ill "" •: to ""-wlthlll ln11""""nt •nil l(fl:llOWI..,._ lnl!F\ltl>ltll ..... l(t!,,....tdM• ht tlKUlttd of S..n11 Mio:. Cltllor1111, City o1 111111 Ant, Ctllfrorftl.. •1tOl'flSl~1'l P"IHAfKIAt ,LA~
... '"-Y t•tcufH "" ....... 1111 ....... 0.1M Ml•Cll II, ltn OtMCI Mire~ n. '"' NIJIG, ,... •• ·~ ••.• lk. 111,
(O FFICIAL SEAL) 10,il'tCJAL !I.All W. I . IT 'OHM, W. I . ST JOHN, Sifllt """" Jtl~ 1... Jobi! Jotffll f . Otv!t Counl1 Cltrti. cou~rv Cltrk ~ ,. I' lflt.. A C..!Mw"l' (IF-•llon.
NoltrJ ,ubllc.C11ifclt11/1 NeltfJ ,ubllc..CaU .... lli• ,.MIJ •• MIT(NltL McOWIN, Ollll!N • Svt.Yllt '"" ......._. ....... tol'llluc1 ... ,
l'flfl(l111 Olllt t nn "•lncl11f Cllllc• In •11 Clvk C•nltr Otht Wttt •• l••I (~-""""" t tor"'"*'
O•IO'IM CounlY Ortllf' (OU1111" 111111 ,11.,., Ctllfll'llll ft1'1 OJ111 .. , Cl"""""' ttilo6 I' , "• 11'<.o • C..'lllmt•
LEGAL Nanez
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Ny c -mhtko11 l••I'" Mr com,,.lulon Eo11rri Tto11 •JM•• t11ttl'litflt• 111n mn" Cor1111111tr1
v_. i . Mire~ '· lt7J JIJ!\t 11, ltl! """"'' lor1 ""l!ltMt AttwM1"1 fW1 '"'"""' tr:tll~ llrrvdlr, ",...jftnl 11..---------------------------------------------'I il'ub1
1
thtd O•tflOt Cot~• Ot•IV "•!ut """'''"'" Ortl!lt C.Hll O•llY ""O' ,.vbll•""' 0••-(•11t 0.11, P!i..t J'lllNl1htd Ortlltt '°"" Diil, f'•IO! """'I""' °"'"'" '-' 0.11' M••th J. IC, 17, 14, 1'11 ... ,. Mlrctl " , •• ,,, '" 1'11 ,,,," Ml•dr 2) J~ n . ltn •:Jt·11 Mtlth ,,. u . :io. ltn ~·11 Mtl'th '" ,, lllOl ""'111, l6.1tn
•
I
I .,. i •
I'
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DAILY PILOT SC WtdMSdar Mm 24 1971
Money's Worth
B)' SYLVIA PORTER
Wheo th~ U S. Covemment
admits this wt:tk tbal lbe $1
which bought JOO cents of
typical gOOds and aerv1ces for
a etty family In 1939 buys
Jess Ulan 35 cenls worth of
1lmUar goods and services in
1971 yoo will surely be
disturbed and p e r h a p s
frightened
But lhls ls stlll
statistical comparisoo You
don t buy food with a '35-cent
dollar Nor do you pay rent
with a C.Om:umcr Price Index
ligur<
only •
When however I tell you
that the bachelor apartment
which rented for $25 a rnonth
in 1939 goes for $12Wl50 to.
day the erosion 10 the dollar s
purcbasmg power m thts span
LEGAL NOTICE
CIRTl•ICATE o• aUSIHISS
,ICTITIOU1 KAMI
TM ufld4lnl•Md dO cert,.,. noav •rt
conclur;tln• • tl1n!flft• II II 1 WUICHll Dr N-POl't Beld\ C11lfornl1 uNler
tM flCllllou• fl•m nal'!>e or SKEARS SAMIS AGEMC'I' 1nd ffl-1 »kl tlrm
11 «ltl\POffd ol ttlt IO ffW I'll! r>ersons
whosl 111mei ln lull 1NI ~l•tU ot
raim!nt• -Ill folloWl Thomas H SheArt \211 V I Ciullo
N...,_t aeld'I C•I I
DGNld 8 S..mll. u.I SI I (CM'Ol'll
del Mir C•llf
011e<1 '""''°' 23 un eon.id 8 Sam 1
T~11 Ii Stitt •
STATE OF CAl.IFO~NtA
(IRAHGE COUNTY On M1rdl 23 1'11 b<tl0<• me. • Wot•rv P.,..1~ 111 1NI 1or 11!11 s111e
,..r!ICMllY 1-1red Tl>Oml$ M Siii••• af'd Donald e S..ml• k~wn to me to be lh<I persons wtio•t n1tn11 • t 1ub..:rl""'3 to 1111! w1111 n l11strument and
ac:knowlldotd 1~1r t>te<Vl~ 1111 ••""
IOFFl(;IAI. SEAi.i M1•v Belll Mor1on No1ar-, P.n:ili< cantorn11
Prine: Ot Oii U In
Or1not C111Jn!Y
MV Comml1tlon E•P rtl APrU t lt11
!"Ulllllhed Or1..w coast Ol lv P !fll
M1rcri 24. 21 A.oru 1 u , lf1l Ml 11
LEtAL NOTICE
C.lllTl,lCATI 01" IUS1NESS
l"ICTITIOUS NAME TM undtr11tne<1 OOtl certllv 111 1$
c:onductln9 • bv•IMU ,, 1211 V!t!I
i!1rla N..WPOrf 8t&d'I (II torn I Ulllftr I 11ctlllou1 1 rm ntmt oC MAii.QUE
-OOVCT$ •nd lh1I ~Id llrm It ~
..,ued Cll ti. follOWln9 penon wtloH
Nmt 111 fult ano plac::t of r•ildenct
16 IS iollowl f11pn1 • ,. ••• II nn Vl1lt M11erlf
NtwPOrt aeact> C•nlornl•
Oiied Ml•Cll 23, lf11
EU9PM Jt Parr II
lllfe ol C11ltornl1 Oranoe (OU..,..,
On M1rcri 2J l•ll wtore mt! •
tjol•l'Y Pulll!C 111 Ind lor 1ftlG State
{"!tM>Mlll' 1ppe1rfd EulfM Iii P1rrl I
tnown to me to !If !tit -"""' whoa
111me I• wb1crlbed 1~ !tie w It\ n In
11r11m1111 1nd ldlnow edted he e•ec111eo
~· "'""'' JOfFll;:IA.I. SEA.I.I
MIJrY Belh MOf11)11
f.lolltY PuD le C.I fofn I
Prlf\ClPl!l Olllce In
or1nw9 Countv
Nov Com"' 111ot1 EJcplre1
AprU t 1911
JlllbllsMd Or1nee CCMltf 01111' 1'11111
Mtirdl ~· lf 1nd Apr I 1 14 .. lt11 "2 11
l.EGAL NOTICP;
Ptl.1 •o. II_, l'"ICTITIOU• aUMNllS MA.Ma ITATIMINf
.. "Tiii follfl'lli'I"* ~ I• oel"' MltleH
111(()R.Kllt V.QUNA.. 600 W
Hltf!W41f l..ffl.llll Bffd\.
leaps out Paymg rent Is 1n
the realm of real life Just
this single comparison
dramatiUs the deprec1at1on on
our currency & buying power
So does the comment that
the 5-cent hotdog of 39 Is
30 cents today the 2<kent
movie ls $1 SO to $2 00 the
16-cent magazine J.S 50 cents
the 45-cent dinner ls $2 the
lG-cent wristwatch repair is
also $2
From these figures at least
three points emerge
(1) Starthng though the
upsurge 1n the CPl figures
1s 1t obscures the fact tbat
the prices of many goods and
services we need want and
regularly consume h a v e
spiraled up much faster One
New Yorker who kept a penny.
by penny dally diary of bis
hv1ng expenses when he was
a bachelor m 1939 msists that
evtty index Ugure t quote
to show price: trends 1s all
wet (You II find some of
bis d1ai;y Items below )
(2} While I assume you are
aware that increases 1n the
costs ol services 1n recent
years have been outpacing
price increases 1n other areas
you must not underestimate
the degree to which this 15
so Agaui, the New Yorkers
diary will document this po int
(3) Jt s downright neurot1e
to continue to refer so con
stanUy to 1939 s prices -the
PS one item which has
not budged stna 1898 1n the
New York area has been the
5 cent ferrybOat nde between
Staten Island and the tip of
Manhattan
But 1ust last week His Honor
the Mayor John Lindsay tack.I
ed that sacred relic and pro-
posed boostmg the fare all
the way to 25 eents Which
would leave unchanged on the
New Yorkers hst only one
item the penny we1gbmg
machine
Pacific Telephone's
Earnings Decreasi11g
~ ....
1 000 t 0, OIL r.t.INTINGS
WHOLISALI WARIHOUSI
orlN TO THI PUILIC
50°/o OFF
161' • lit:»Mel!lt SANTA ANA , .... .,.._
!Jlfl'ift"" OliALl!ltS WA.NTID
revenues and other mcome
totaled $2 087 794 000 com
pared with $1 ~ 154 000 m
1969 Hull said
Operating expenses, taxes
and interest 1n 1970 rose to
41 887 13 4 000, from
$1 741 373 000 the year before
Net income dropped t o
$200 660 000 from $2tM 781 000
tn 1969
Durmg the year tht com-
pany s total invested capital
mcreasecl by more th a n
1434 000 000 to $'819 831 000 In
1970 from $4 ll5 $39 000 m
1969
Irvine Firm
To Develop
New Product
Allergan Pharmaceuticals of
Irvine announced an agree
ment with
used cars
used
but not abused
Edwl•• s .!larntt. a Slnl• """' ,.,,. H--1~
Tlllf IMIMM '-11111't W!'ll"1tfM " _. klcll1fldlill ~,.,,,.. 0,ltM't ~ O.rlJ '°!tit • MM'Cfl u: ~ JI .,,,. ..... " 1 ,.,,, '"'"
LEGAL NOTICI> ' 1evenly-onn at
• ~~~
:•
•
,
•
Wedntse1a1, Marc.h 24, 1971 SC
~ ednesday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange List s.... ,._,, _____ ,.. _______ ,
IW..I Nllfl &. .. Qt1if C1llo
.05 1~ n
",, "" 'f"
' 0 \11 ''" -L-
110 1"' 11\11 "~ -.. i-···············•l"'••••••••/"!'IP.:tt 1 It v l l'~ !~ = l i:ir.: ,\;'' :« ~ ~ , u = M k D lin :::::;:....: . " . t ec es ttchMlf °" 11 1 1 " .. _ ... ar e Ttchtllton c,, ~1 ~filB!~ \ l~~
i! ii 11~ it•. In Light Trading Hsi~ ,J, IL: &t ~ .. + "' Tn!T"' ·ru , .11·•· mn~~ J ~nt u~ + :: ~:: •• I i'° ,! ffo "'' fi• -" NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks declined In mod· '"'~' , .l! • ~ lj" 1"" +11! era le trading for lhe fourth day tn a row on the i::g 1 ·~ .t i 11t Yl-v. ! ... '' 1,n lit lli~ n~ ti: :t ~ Ne\\' York Stock Exchange Wednesday r::U°"rm:
.tl W ~~ ~~ ~ ~ Shortly before the final bell, the Dow Jones f~~: ~",, if, 'tt1" ,~ .... "«"' ~~~ Industrial Average was ott 8 70 at 900 19 Standard 1...,,'J:' ~
•1 '" ,.,,. fl + &: P ...... r's 500 stoc kindext showed a loss o! O 56 at hrit1 0r
19 V. l' -UV ~.~~l._ 1 ·~ l:!: 1~~ Jrli.11o + tt 99 72 Declines topned advances, 872 to 493, 10 j\"" Ill( 1.o .. ' ••"-,.... -•• I ••3 · th 4.r m1tM1,. .so ...... ..--.. ,U"t is.sues on e uipe . , ... -~ tt f!14 ~ ='i.:. Tl~~,\'., .fl)I) H t~ fitt 115 = lt Closing pnces included AT&T 48 '1\ oU %, ~=:r~~k1 # Bi' Jf"' h~ ?at ~;~ Chrysler 26% off %, DuPont 139 off 3; General f:it°;. '!
7
t ¥,: 3*'h ~~ 1 "' 'Electric 110% of! 'i-2, General Motors 83Ya up V..; l~:::u•i: 1~ U¥; t:~ ~v. +~ IBM 355 off 3/.i Southl:!rn Pacific 3914 up ~.Stand· ~i~~~ ~i·
'4 , •• t'h '"' --l.lo ard of Jersey 77~ off JA, and U.S Steel 331A off% Trnw,111 '°" .n JI,,. S7 S1,,. -IN. Trantm•• U ;:: M: 'Iv. ~ = !;:: Softness stemmed from seve ral factors, lnclud· ~~:;:~ ,;:
l2' M ,,,,. ?~ + .... ' fj( ( k \he • ( d ffll1I\'~ l1fl 611'' 11M-611'" -1 1ng pro a lng, signs economy is no 01ng t••v• •• '°
S7 1\11 714 1'k + ''o JI l d d \h M ddJ Trtvtlrt Pl 1 33 11 -16". 1\Wo -'• as we as-expec e , an concern over e 1 e !•,•,Y..!:,octA.~~s
,, SN1r. st'h "'"' + l• E t d Id h 11-• i."" • 1J111 u\lo "''" -"' as an n oc tna r'''°" ptt 50 , 17 ,.,.._ ia--T•l• .... •l)CI • ,, ~"' 4:i'9 ' -~ "Th , r d d d t t " tr()C>kift• , 101~ 1a1'o 10 • ere s room or so me owns1 e a JUS men , TRW lftc ,, 11! ~ ::"' ff,,. -" one Wall Street analyst declared. 1:~ git: ts J1 .... 3W. :Utii -l'• l lW ph 'S
3ll 31 3Cl\lt ~•-\:. d d d ( fiiUnGE 71 i•s 1P.1o 20~ 21111 • • Alan R. Shaw. vice pres1 ent an trector o r_ft, c.ft, 11~ Wt !~"' ml+~ Market Research for flarrts, Upham & Co , said Tv"r Corp
t2: it: ~~ ~~ = •\! •On a near term bas1s I would rather lig hten hold· 'f loo 1="" ,~ ::,~ ings and take some kind of defensive posture than U•L inc
11 SO ~~ ~-i'w be b u UA.' ,.. ,, 31v; 11 21 -" an aggressive uyer. uA. c:o 110 t 1111,f, 11'4 11\11->;, UG Co 12' ,, tl\11 2) 21 -l Vo UMC lflll 11
2t WI\ M M -'i'••l .. llllOIO ...................................... \'Uft&,CO ~ It 0 '6'\ .WSi -"lot• Unl1Lld Ahl 57 7"" 2'"-1''1o -'11 Un!Ll<I f'n,~19 •10 29\.io 711'• 29\:i -11\ Unll"IV 1 let S d>'J '8 4 -1 SUPmk pf1 30 1 ~I '°s)f ~l + ,, SVDr'Oft pl1AO f ~·, ~ j6>o -''Un C:•mp 1
,7 15 ,,\t tru -v. ~wv~Fa lit ?•6 SJ' ·~ 1~ !: t;ISrilron Oo!ln tt l•1\ IS'a Uh -~. U11 C:•rDhle 1 3~ 11i1" ill ill = ~ s::m~ • .o."10 1~ ",,,..,~ l.~ Jf -,,. -T-~~1~"11f°1~ 61 '6 J.S'-' a!\11 + ""S~ron '° .. ., 31>\l 31\11. + \1 Toll ln:I .0 HI 401'0 )ti-, 40\t + \) Ull E! pf<l 50
'
OAILY PILOT 1$
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' !I DAILY PILOT Wtdnt1d:iy March 24, 1971
Theater Notes
'Gypsy' Set to Open
By TOM TITUS
01 tlle O.Uy l'llal 1111!
Last week. cro>A·ded into the
season's heaviest rush ol
theater openings, was June
Jlavoc's autobiographical play
"~tarathon 33," a dramati.ta·
lion or the actress' early at-
tempt to brtak into show
business after severing the
umbilkal c.:ord.
This week her big sister
gels equal time -all by
herself -when the South
Coast Light Opera Association
s"'·ings back inlo action after
a two-aeason layoff with
"Gypsy," the story of the ugly
duckling wbo blossomed into
Gypsy Rose Lee.
"Gypsy" IS lhl': I 0 n e
Wednesday
Evening
MARCH 2'
l:OOIJ lie Nns Jtrr)' oun,hy.
0 INBC lhws Tom Snyder.
0 Tiilt AllH SM9
0 Sii D'aod. Jktit: (C} (!O)
"Slltim'• [9pift" (d!lml) '61-
M•rti• Milntf, Clu 6ul11u, Kartft
Jtnsen, Und111 Chiles. Oon QI.line.
A w11llhy pl1ntllicn owner'• p!1nt
a1shts wtll11 on a SUIVIJ trip CWff
tilt Amazon jun1l1. 1
0 Did V111 Dyle m Tll• mntstonta
ID@f1)Sllf Trt~
Eii) M1rtlnllllll
t3Ltlfllns m fhll• r1111il1
IE ltotkilfl 34 m W1rtd-1ud
C'i) la Kn f.tllililr toll C.11SUtll m ""1 Jlr11 H1wth01nt.
1~5 fJ;l Art SIJN!it "fi1u11 f11inlin1.''
11'0 o CMlitl ea-, m Titie AJi•I N1111
raJ Ci) JllBC 111 .. 1
ED lhd1.,..ire Ltd1•
19 Cf) CIS News
81) 5*tld f"'lla/Nlllic.1lt m Tiie Dlllrt R1p1'1 ma. OtNHo•
QJAIC Ntw1
~ 1J CIS lt1W1 Walt• Cron~itt.
0 m lflC """ DIVid 8rinkl11.
OWDr1111r U111?
m @ (})I Lift LllCJ
m"-1!3 Cii "'""'
newco111cr on the week's
theater callboard and plays
Saturday night only, with
three mo r c perforn1anccs
April 1-3. ltuth Yielding, a
founder of the SCLOA. is di-
recting l'he musical.
Starring in the role of
Madame Rose, one of the
many stars in Ethel Merman 's
cro~·n, will be Carol Stanfield,
a DAILY PILOT award ~·in
ner of t1vo seasons ago. Clark
Farrell plays the boyfriend-
manager Herbie, while ~1arla
Sn1all takes lhe title role of
Uluise ~·ho evolves i n I o
Gypsy.
Others in principal roles
are Rochelle B o w e as
Baby J a n e, Jack Berges
B11b1r1 McN1ir auests 11 a sin1ln1
nlltitclub prop1irtrtl!.
ONYPO
0 @ (il Q) TIM Sllitll F••ilJ
"Brian i nd tbt Sheritt." Brien loins
hi1 !1itnd, an old ltomute1d1r ind
former Texn law man. in his 1rmtd
st1nd 11ail'lst wiction b~ !ht shtfitl.
Arthllf O'Conr1ell iuests. m DIM Frtlt a.. Oi1hann C.1-
fflll is sutst lloslul. Htr autsts 1r1
compo.wr Rich1rd Rod11rs. PfO·
ducer Alex1ndu Cohen ind th•
Beach Beys.
m Fe1on, Sq111d
ED li:rtat Alntfitlll Olea• Machi••
fll) P1tttr. fw U.in1
t:OCI 6 ®) (j) Ntdic.11 Canltt (R) 1111-
IJ' SullN1n i nd Diane Btktr 1uesl
Is 1n a1in1 prolemr ind hi1 wilt,
who is 11riously ill.
0 GEORGE C. SCOTT in * "Jane Eyre" on Bell
System Family Theatre
0 QJ 00 Elli I JjilCllt I "J1nt
[Jrr" Geor11 C. Scott and Susann1h
Yo1k Rtr i11 sped1I production ol
Charlotte 81ontt's novtl of suspenst
and romance. Sl1on1-witled, inde·
pendtnt Jane E1ie, 1 ioverneu 1t
Jhofnfitld Hill, falls in love with
h• emploJer, Edward ffO(htstu,
ind disalwn ffith!enin1 secrets ol
his Plsl
0 Tll1 F1filiw
0 @ CIJ rJ) .loll11ny Caall Guests
I re Tiit Clrpenters. Charley f11ldc,
Tommy C.sh, Bob lum•n 1nd Rtd
ltnr.
Gl TM ltn1den
Erl) 30 Mirrv11s
El Jb1.tc:l11
t:JO o CMdicl ca..,.
Ci) MllSittlt/rastor's Out
tI) Cadtnt ff Antustias
m .-.n111 line
9 (I) Trui. If ConHqWllt41
fii) Ctwilt ttM: lili111 W1r~
fII Mi Alttr p« Tl
10:00 tJ Qj ({} Haw1ii Fiwt-0 An fnllu-
wi!ill foreian corr1spondent (1uest
En~ 8rttden) comes to Hawaii, only
lo llnd himstll lht t1r1et lor 111
aU1ssin. John M1r\ey' also 1uesb.
G[il Si!IPlltlllMI Maril
m ll&owil ''IM
7:30 IJ 9 Ci) 111111 1t LIW AU01ntyi
Mctkil ind Hansen ere ucklled
with 1 tou1111 defense of 1 multi·
mllliont \rt ltnd devtloplr who is
1tcu:sed in !ht 1pp1rent homitidt
at his wilt. GIH!st·stll is Sine
fone.st.
o rD oo rn TH .... Fr•• 111i-
1111 "Jump Up." John Mdii1tf. l•n
St"1inL »hn Astin, Madlyn Rhue
•!Id Rldi; J1son 1unt·sl11 in • dr1-
0 Bil 5 Ntw1 l(fti• S1nd111.,
Barn11 Moni5.
o @ rn m TM Y111111 UWJtR
"I've Got 1 Problem." G1ry Lock-
wood 111esb 1s 1 radio tll~ 1how
host lirtd tor apressin1 1n!i·W#
untillll!nb on his pro1r1m.
0 lutw W1rlf NIWI
m Ntw1 PU1n1m/f1shm1n.
ID Ma• T111t
m Mfikl c.1111 Ali
m1 in\IOl-lin1 T1te's tst.1Pt lrnrll 'I ([I TY Nuic.al Ou.lrt
dl11n 11111 alter ll1v in1 bten fiii) lit .
f1amtd on 1 llom1cide d11r11. \ .... IHl.-
0 Vir&i1il li:r1llt• Shtw Guub lO:JO 0 Ktnw WIU Movit : (90) "SurM
i re hlarthl R1Je, .lof'J' Adams. M11i-I• Dtltll'' {mystery) '47 -8th lu-
lyn and Alan Ber1m1n, ind 1utbof 1ot1, Joyce Compton.
Mary Rocliers. ID lill kil1111 Nin
0 @ (})fl) Colll'bhip ti E4dit's . hta ·
F•lNr "OiKtpll111 h 1 f0<ir letter fil rtid!llllbr1
W1»d S~lled l·O-V·~.'' lddi1 1•· it:OOtJ S(f)5lJJlkn cervn hll tlm spankin1.
Q MAii• $ lilftit; (2 hr) "'O,ltt· CJ ~ (.1) @D Ml••
tiM Alum&-•· (dr1m1) '60 -0 m Nnn
0 Metit: "llrq• t( fur~ (drt·
m1) '53 -fwts Mont1nd, fltlll
as Rose's father, Gene Ap-
plegett in a dual role , Rich
Springer as Uncle Jocko and
Allee NeUen, Judy Nep and
Nancy Briggs as the strippers.
Completing the cast are
Tom Shellon, Ross Stanfield,
George Donka. Darryl Rapp,
Susie Tomlinson. Jacqueline
Hickey and Vickie Saunders.
"Gypsy" wiU be presented
in San Clemente's newly
refurbished Arts Pavilion in
the !\loose Hall building at
105 Ave. Pico. Curtain is I
o"clOck rather lhan 8:30, \\'ith
reservations being taken at
492-5761.
* Continuing its thr\!e-pronged
program tonight through Sun-
day is South Coast Repertory.
which is staging the original
musical "Mother Ea rt h ' '
tonight and Thursday, clooing
out "The Imaginary Invalid"
Friday and Saturday and win-
ding up the brief run of
"Next" and "The Indian
Wants the Bronx" cin Sunda y
night.
Ron Thronson and Toni
Shearer are the guiding lights
behind the ullra-successrul
"Mother Earth.'' while Ron
Boussom directs the com·
media dell'arte version of
"Invalid.•' The Sunday one.
acts are being staged by SCR
nf'Wcomer Shasnin Desai.
All three program.!S are
being presented at the com·
pany 's Third Slep Theater,
1827 Newport Blvd.. Costa
Mesa. Reservations 64&-1363.
* Arthur l\1iller's modern
tragedy "A View From the
Bridge" is being given a
superlative staging by the
Irvine Comn1unity Theater,
with performances resuming
Friday and Saturday. Richard
Dow is directing and doubling
as the lawyer Alfieri .
Art and Janet Gordon head
the Irvine cast. which includes
Karen Gardner, John Mangels
and Gary Saderup. The drama
is being presented at the UC
Irvine Studio Theater in the
I lumanities building on cam·
pus. Reservations 833-1024.
Another highly involving
drama is Frank Gilroy"s
"Who'll Save the Plowbc>y~"
which closes out a three-
weckend run \\'ilh fin a I
performances T h u r s d a y
through Sunday at the San
Clemente Community Theater.
ti1ary Eastman is directing.
The cast includes Russell
Martin, Marge Bradley, Chuck
SPRIH~ PR~~RAM
f.WEEJC COURSES
March 29 io May 29
Paintin9·Fi9ure & Laftd•
scape. Drowing·Life &
Anatomy. Ceramics•
Sculpture Art History·
Jewelry & Print Moki19
Chlldren's Art
Other day and evenln9
classe1 • .Approved for
veterans.
11"' rite or phouf for brbrh11re
17141 4'4-1520
610 Laguno Canyon Rd.
Petti rind!, [v1 Btrtok. Tony Brit·
Ion. Tht Briti$11 stnd 1 r1id1n1 puty
l11to Amslerdam It persuide the
dl1niond merdiants to Pt ttttit
stones to 11\em 101 11fektt11i111 bt·
tore lhe Gtrm•ni lind them.
m MM: "Hit 1111141 14 Wot1u~ laquno Be" .. ;, 92651
(cr1m1) '~I-Rebert M1tcllum, Jar.t !~::::"::::::::::::::~
Ruuell, Vincent P11c1.
V•n [Jek,
m Trvtll 1t ConwqHllUlt
Q) II T lk" 1 Tllilf
n;)Cin•• lO
iil LI Dlltn•
7:55 m Cutt'liol " SquHIJ
•:oo 0 IUi llJ CJ) R ... ZZZ "Ir It''
Hot Htrt, Wh11t Is n!" A l!·J"U·
old Vitt111m 11ltran h11 problems
wlnninl tcttptance f1t>m other 1tU•
dtnb whtn ht retum1 to tchool.
Mvrl'IJ Mtd..aod 1unts.
(O le Tiii t1M Tf¥111
fl) W.W FIOtNll ~ (Z hr)
Sportln1 Ctist•I (1'1111) vs. Ros.no
C.nlrat (Arpntint). m 1'111 f'9d1 CM! "Pot Au fltll.M
m;i ... -IEI Lidie LIWI
'"'e-·-1:• fJ QI (I) ft .... Wltll lMt (_,
Thursday
6'I lt•I 011 Cloa
lro(Il '9rl'y ......
fill E»W1 Wlldo11 11141 MoR1
Liii "ZWI Ind P1yehl1?ty."
l l:JO 6 QI (j) NtfY li:1llli1
a ~ 00 m John11 CllJOll
o m OiQ '"'" m .... ; "Tiit ''°' l.qrrua."
{mrst11}') '53-Cltudt 1!1in1,
IZ:OO @ (j) Dkt; Ca~.tt
l:OCfB liiMit: "Tit II•• Lt1•d"
(d11tAa) '56 -Huth O'Bri•n.
00 ....
1:)(1 m Alt·Nlatit Slllw (C) "TN Ottfll
SU." "Kln1 et Ttrflf" ind "1$11H
• Liit w .......
Z;JO 6 tMit; '"llrt Wt••• Tiltf #-
..-l,.cW' { ... sllffl) '53
llrl•11 Oont...,, Jot• ltJlll.
m "Adi• "" Cntrii" (dnn111
'50-Stnart Gr1111tr, ..11111 Sim -DAYTIME MOVIES l:OOCD "OiMy II • Cllt111btilllW' (41,,. 1
mil '4~.tultltl Coddtrd, lu1reu I
l :ll O "'lit ~ ..,_... (mJMty) Mertdi!h
'.54--1.Jard Bridpa. "SIMI r..... I (lllJ'1UY) ·~s-M11111 lftltfld, Z;OD ~ (t) "'llitllll•llf W•lt" (dr1m1)
t.JO O "'MJ fwtrlleJ#'~_'Sl l S4 -EH11beth Tl}'lof. D•flf An•I
-4loll Hope. ""'' um1n. dr .. s.
Who Cores7
No1 olh1r 111w1p1p1r ill th1
world ,.,,, 1bout 'lfOUf 'omlflu•
11ity lllr1 ¥our cernmunit¥ d1i1y
ntw1p1p1r do••· h'1 th1 CAILY
P!tOT.
•
~ ·_.
l'M YOURS -Clark Farrell takes issue with Carol
Stanfield when she says "you'll never get away from
me" in this scene from South Coast Light Opera
musical "Gypsy," opening Saturday in San Clemente.
Herman's
Herd Tops
Jazz Fest
Woody Herman and his
Thundering Herd \\'ill headline
the third annual Orapge Coast
College Jazz Enkemble
Festival, set for the college
auditorium Thursday through
Saturday.
Hennan, among the most
popular big band leaders in
the nation, y,·ill give a two-
hour concert in the OCC gym·
nasium at 8 o'clock Saturday
night.
The jazz festival. pitting
university, junior college and
hlgh school bands f r o m
California. Utah, Nevada and
Washington , is the largest
event of its kind in the West
The affair will begin at 8
o'clock each morning and will
continue throughout the day.
Director Charles Rutherford
Schleker and Dollie Smilh at Reservations 543-7647. announced that many
the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Giselle !'ltacKenzie heads the thousands of dollars worth of
Avenida Cab r i JI o, San cast in the title role of prizes. including instruments.
Clemente. Reservations 492. "Mame," entering its second records, trophies and cash,
0465. \\'etkend for the Buena Park will be given at the feslival . * Civic Light Opera. John Rich All awards will be presented
On tbe lighter side is the is directing. at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse's Also featured are Betty gym before the Herman con.
comedy of literary infidelity ?-.1otslnger, Charles Curtis and cert.
"J " ,. h 1 1 h Pam Rich at tbe Theater Arts anus, w 1c p ays onig t Each of lhe 75 bands will
th h S t d d th Complex of Buena Park High roug a ur ay un er e be allotted 20 minutes on stage
d. 1· f s·11 F ·k School, l\1agnolia at Academy 1rec ion o 1 uc1 . dun·ng the competit'"n. J udges
Bets H I d J in Buena Park. Reservations .., Y ewe! an acqu ie will be top-notch professional
A1offett share the leading role 879--40
237· muskia· ns ·. Sonny Stitt, Clark · th d !th R I h osing out a si:it·'A·eek run m e come y, w a P Ter'"", Dan Morgenstern of
R·cb-nd w 1•-Dal •1 ·t1 at the Long Beach Con1munity ·1 1 ""' • a LCr y, "1 Downbeat Magazine, Raoul
H and Ph 11· st d Playhouse is the comedy anson Y is rou Romero and Rick Dav is. They com plet i ng the casL "Ring Around Elizabelh,"
Performances are given at the under the direction of James will be pres en l in the
playhouse, 606 Laguna canyon Brittain. Final performances auditorium all three days to
Ro.ad, Laguna Be a ch . are Friday and Saturday at judge, and lo meet with small
Reservations 494--0143. the theater, 5021 E. Anaheim groups of young musicians and
Strindberg's Swedish classic Ave., Long Beach. Reserva· discuss music as a profession
"P.liss Julie" continues Friday1_t_lo_n_s_l~2-13~)_4_38--0 __ 53_6_. _____ •_n_d_l_a_te_s_<_tr_e_nd_s_in_t_h_e_n_e_ld_._11 and Saturday at the Nifty
Theater of Huntington Beach,
along with Franz Kafka 's
"The Judgment." Elliot Fried
directs both offerings.
Carol Dun I a p , Gary
Domazlicky, Wilda West and
Jeff Isaac comprise the twin
casts at the Nifty, 307 Pt1ain
St., Huntington Be a ch .
Reservations 536-9153.
* Further north in Orange
County, "Lilies of the Field"
enters its second weekend for
the Santa Ana Community
Players with llerman Bood·
man directing. Buddy Fort
and June Winslow head tbe
cast of the comedy-drama.
The show is being staged
at the Players Theater, 500
W. 6th St., Santa Ana.
'La Mancha'
Tryouts Set
Open auditions for the Long
Beach Civic Light Opera pro-
duction of "Man of La
Ptfancha" will be held Sunday
afternoon and evening at S18
E. 4lh St., Long Beach.
Director Gary Davis has an·
nounced that the tryouts will
be conducted at t and 7:30
p.m. and will require mostly
men for the musical based
on the legend of Don Quixote.
Leading roles require a
combination of strong singing,
acting and. in some cases,
dancing ability. Members of
the dancing ensemble must
be able to sing and will be
required to audition as
singers. There are no non·
singing roles.
"titan of La tilancha'' will
open June 4 and p 1 a y
\veekends through June 20.
Further informatian is
available at (213) 432-792b.
Pilot Fihus
HOLLY W 00 D iUPl)-
Paramount studios began pr<>-
duction on two new television
pilot projects, "Escape," a 90-
minute adventure drama star·
ring Chris George. and "Fun·
ny Face" starring Sandy Dun·
can.
I See by Tod ay's
Want Ads
e THIS IS FOR REAL!!~ A
Kangaroo Rat l. cag,. $16.
Also Plgf'Qtts. Ck cla,ui ..
lied, .. l'nl sure you ~'On't
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hauling.
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plus upsta ln hideaway
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Sou.nds G~at, Looks Greal
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100 Cd~f.
·~··································· Oldt Vin Oyk1
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AND THE UGL'il"
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SZ.00 Pl!I CARLOAD P1111 • "IUDOEN TEJIJIOll" (GI'! -
CHiLDREN'S MATiNEES
MGM
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2 SHOWS EACH DAY-12:00 & 2:00
---ALL SEATS 75¢ ---
AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS
0 ~ ..,.... (idwftlllfl) 4:JO fJ "CrMlfi,.• fdr1m1J ''7 -1
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Sl~IC..nf ... ,r-.. ......... \l\11<1ntConby,HT ·-
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EDWARDS
HARBOR ot ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102
ON HARIOR &LVC. ·ONE MILE SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY1
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BEST ORIGl!IAL SCREENPLAY
BEST ORIGJ!IAL MUSICAL SCORE
"Husbands is a great, important film!"
-JAr COCKS, TIME)
AL RUSAN o"" SAM SHAW~ ...... ,
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cm·••u 1 -.:II!!!!! •
Al ~'BAN .1.-·-sAM sH··11 w .. , ...... o '-'..., 11u • ~..,,,-,., ll -t••••" J HN CASSAY£TE~
"Oto! COLUMBIA PICTUll:ES ~cp; 0 r~
•11EMSTMllSlllC!N19: --2Nn HIT--I••
___ ,,......_ .. _ .. __ ,. -... ~
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"SUDDEN TERROR"-
IG-PI
Sofwtdoy & SundQY
12:110 & 2:00 P.M.
"Huckleberry Finn"
All Stots 75¢
20th Century-fox Pre~nt~ JAMES EARL JONES
o JANE ALEXANDER
~ u The Great ll'!!llfa
""'or White Hope"~
EXClUSIYI ORANG! COUNTY INGAGIMINT
il'tl Tl'tlll -STlllHNSTllllll CllN'tlllfl -
diary
of a mad
housewife
a frank pc1ry film \!Y
• •! ,.,_..... -
LAST WEE!<-ENDS TUES.
Znd Hit-BrloR Ktitli i11
''McKenzie Break"
Positively End1 Tues.
Start• Wee!., March JI
Wolt Di1R1y'1
"Barefoot Ex•cutive''
·di.I C"<!""">"',J-~"
'"' • .J ........ , ·' Posltlvelr_ End• Thur,, Apr. I
Start• Fri. April 2-
Wa!~r • El•I~
Mr-nhou Me., 111 "A ll-w LEAF" IGJ
Wtdntsday, Mlfth 24, 1971 S
Smile, Young Doctor·s, Y ou'r·e on Irvine T
By GEORGE 1.E!DAL
CM IM D.1111 'U•I Stttf
Young 'Dr. Kildares graduating from
Callfomla College of Medlclne at tJC
Irvine will be well acquainted witb
teltvislon before they graduate.
The offjce of n)edlcal education at
Orange County r..tedlcal Center has
developed a $ 1 5 O • O O O closed-circuit
television system that can beam live
surgical operations to 64 color sets at
UCJ, JO miles av.·ay.
Dr. Ellis Wayne, learning cnnsultant
to t~e UCI medical faculty. head~ the
medical education office at OCMC which
Ride Almag Plan
prodUC<l Je1cbin( lidea used lo train
doctors.
"With lhe ttltvlslon bookup to UCI,
medical students can c•t a clonr look
at a surgical proced11rt by teltvlslon
than they could if they wert looking
over tbt surgeon's shoulder. Furtbtr,
they can ask questions while the opera·
Uon is being done," Dr. W1yne aaid.
Btsides the opportunity to view live
operation.S., videotape• stored in the M ·
Cilnd floor television 1tudios at OCMC
can be repla yed for later classes of
students, Dr. Wayne noted.
•·1n the not too distant luturt, 1tu.dent1
will be able ta draw on tbt: tape library
Citizens Watch
• Police Ill Action
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 , ... 01111 "'" 11111 "Get in, quick."
Th~ invitation came suddenly; • terse:
And for the next three minutes a
San Clemente patrolman, a local lawyer
and a newsman were speeding through
dark streets in pursuit of a suspect
in ii felonious assault.
The chase ended in bizarre fashion
along Avenida Del Mar with a groggy
young Marine exiting his dent~ auto
as a patrolman shouted orders over
a cocked shotgun.
It \\'as one hell of an initiation into
the San Clemente Police Department's
ride-along program -standing on a
strttt corner. hearing a few insults from
a small crowd and watching policemen
spirit away a young man suspected in
a particularly nasty brawl several blocks
away.
One young man watched lrom the
curb and practiced his art of taunting
the cops . . . knowing full well how
far ht could go -naming the informants
he knew and the friends who "get rousted
by you guys all the time."
Patrolman Will Stockdale just stared,
saying nothing.
Later, as we rHntered his patrol
car to resume what had so far be.en
a disquieting evening Stockdale calmly
said the jeering youth is a fixture in
San Clemente.
"We see this guy all the time; be
doesn't bother me a bit," he said.
"It gets a little exciting sometimes
Jn sleepy old San Clemente," lawyer
D. Frank Lange added.
Only a few yards later, the next abrupt
Interruption to the conversation came
as three wide~yed ~1arines hailed
Stockdale to report a business door wide
open with no clerk in sight.
We never did find out why the door
v.•as open . The owner and his wife had
gone to a movie.
With the premises locked, the patrol
through the foggy streets re sumed.
Conversation meandered from talk tt
Stockdale's four· and one-half years on
the force to how many cities share
the same radio frequency.
It settled on the ride-along program
Itself as the prowl car made the routine
cruises or dark alleys throughout the
city.
Hundreds of teenage high school
students had made the same trip •
• • seen the arrest of felony-suspects
•.. asked the same random questions.
The ingredients add up to obviously
the best community relations project
ever undertaken by the local department.
And from the looks of it, the ride-along
project will be a permanent fixture.
"It's amazing how effective it is,"
Stockdale said.
"A large percentage of the young peo-
ple who ride along seem to have an
entirely different viewpoint after three
hours on the beat. Toward the end
they even start to behave like a Working
investigator.
"They'll point out a auspicious looking
car we may have seen earlier in the
evening. They'll even scan the dark
doorways just like a patrolman would,"
he said.
There are only a few aituatJons where
the policeman'• guests can not be ae-
rommodated -anytime that aomtont't
safety might be in obvious jeopardy.
But since the program btgan tut
September there have been few irultancu
v.·here officers have to dump their load
of guests on a street comer and !peed
to crime scene.
Actually, if there is one drawback
to the unusual program, it is the
generally quiet nature of San Clemente.
Crime just doesn't run rampant in
the streets, and often the visitor• never
taste the excitement which at time&
goes along wilh police work.
"It runs in bursta," Stockdalt ei·
plained.
''You fellows got one toai&ht."
Scottish Rite
Masons Plan
Special Program
Scottish Rite Masol'll from the Sout.b
Orange County ar.ea may attend the
traditional and obligatory Maundy Thurs-
day observance this year in a 1peclal
service April I in tht Hotel Laa:una.
The ceremony wiJI be conducted by
John A. Sickenberger. past vener1ble
master of the Los Angeles Scottilh Rite
bodies.
Feature speaker for the evening will
be Warren F. Morgan, to.year Mason.
Reservations for the 7 p.m. dinner
will close April 5. Tickets are $6. For
further information contact P a u 1
Amsbury, 72D Calle Aragon, Laguna
Hi Us.
High Recorded
In Real Estate
Laguna Beach real utate saln hit
a new high in February, i'ealtor Robert
Turner told Chamber ·of Commerce direc.
tors Tuesday.
"January was a good month., with
$1.6 million in mu1t.iple listing 111.lu,"
said Turner, "but February wu evtn
better, with sales reaching S2 million."
The figure, TUmer said, repnsented
46 sale,, out of multiple listing during
the month, at an average value of $43.000.
Jn 'the first two month• of the year,
he told the Chamber meeting, real estate
1alu in the Art Colony equalled 2'
percent of sales for all of lut year.
Nixon Moving to Block
Campaign Cost Limits
WASHINGTON (AP) -Hours afttr
President Nixon declared his support
for campaign $pending limits, the ad·
ministration moved on two fronts to
block a Senate committee from reporting
a bill to do just that.
Sen. John o. Pastore (D-R.T.), a
member of the Commerce Committee
who has been pushing hard for spending
legislation, was described as outraged.
Pastore told the Senate Tuesday mom·
Ing that Republicans already had asked
and received postponement of • com--
millet meellng on the matter and added ,
"1 hope we are not getting: into dll1tory
tactics on the bill.''
The Senate Commerce Committee had
hoped to complete work Tuesday af.
ternoon on a bill imposing sharp restrie-
tions on i;pending for political advertising
on television and rid.JO and in other
media. As tht Senate 3'SSion opentd, however,
Sen. WllJia.n Saxbe (ft.Ohio), objected
to a routine request by Democratic
Leider Mike Mansfield that all com·
mittees ht pennltttd to meet while floor
bustne~ w1u1 in progress.
Saxbe told a newsman ht was acting
Al the request of Republican IA:ader
Hugh Scott who was meetin1 with tht
President at the White House.
Saxbe said ht balked at a request
to bar all committees from meeting
and was then told to block only the
Commerce Committee.
At the same time, committee 1t1ft
members said the Justice Department
had dispatched • letter seeking a reo~n·
Ing of htarings, considered finished
several weeks ago.
They said the department considered
proposals before the committee too com-
prehensi ve to be discussed in a written
report and that administration ofrici1ls
wanttd to testify.
Both actions -likely to delay reporting
of a bill for weeks. If not month$ -
camt 1 day after President Nixon n ld
in a nationally televised interview, "We
do favor a limitation on e1pente11. There
ls no question about that."
lt was the flnt comment the Prtsident
has made on the iswe since he vetoed
a bill last fall that would have limittd
lipending for just teJevhJion.
The Presklent said the bill left
loopholes by not Including other media,
a position he repeated ln the ttlevlltd
interview over ABC Monday night.
for indlvldutl Instruction U\roUJh a com-
puter to their teltvlsion 1et •n campus,"
Wayne uid. ,
The new tde•ilion .X.tem wu' lbown
today to medical ind administrative
ataff• ol ether hopsltab in the county
who may we p1Uent training films pr•
ductd by tht Medical Televlsil>n Stud.lo.
lnstrucUon in e x e r c l s e 1 for
recuperauna heart patients -a kind
of cardiac's Jack LILlnne 1bow -is
one example of bow patients niay btnefit
from the system. Selected p/o1fama to
teach patients how lo take care ef
tbtnuelvea after aura:ery or that tell
a new motbet hew tt care for btr
blby are 1vai1able and may be beamed
directly into a patirnt't room television.
The revt~ae is possible 11 wet~ since
~ut.leti thrOu&botit tbe boapilal may carry •
television ltln•lt• from cameras on the
ICe:DI' back to tbe studio for rte0rdlng.
A cantUevered camera rig capable
of "lookina" over a surgeon's shoulden
was devised . lt 11 1teriliJ.td prior tt
being rolled into.the operating room.
Cbarlea "Skip" Hitchcock, c h I e f
~meraman, dresses for surgery In
sterile garb to man the color television
camera ind J5 mm. movie camera atop
tpe: rig.
To c1pturt the world's second pancreas
trwplant on videotape •nd fUm,
Hllbcock and engineer Ernie Bort Work·
ed with doctors from 5 p.m. to J 1.m.
'lb< pa~ also bandies Ill' .reJ¥iat!Y
schedlli<d taping• of pat\enl llltti:vlewi.
wblcb thin· doctor• in dlaghosla techni-
ques, and taped lectures en mtd!Ca1
procedures. These and live indivldUat
or group psychotherapy seaslons aA:
r«0rded Ill Ille OCMC studl03. Lole,
faculty review them and the tapes are
edited to provide concise lesson material
for later use in tbe clasaroom.
The color television system, the first
ef its kind in the tJ.S., Dr. Wayne
notes, augments tbe ~her more tradl·
Uonal learning material.a prepartd by
1he medical education atatt.
In contra1t to the Uve, color plctum.
now avaUablb ..,-I.he television tc"'4
"" the W>d dr1wlllg1 produced~ J:;oP1
Sawn and Carol Riley, ~I it-
lustratori. Tbty supply the artwork ~t
medical artlclt1 and texts and. trllditional
1ourct:1 et trainin& material for l'ludtnll,
Interns and residents. · ··:
Their work also coolrlbutn '9 tht i
supply of films, alldts and taPed lectures..
which are provldtd by the office .t.
medical tducaUon. t
Dr. Wayne pointed tut that lndlriduat.
study c1mls at tJCl 1lre:ady offtr tMM •
recent educaUOoal in.novaUons to medk:al
students. ' '• ·~ .•
Who'll he Invited~ County Scraps Chino Hills :.
.. As Sjte for Jet Ah-port. Tricia's Guest List Mounting ' ..
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mother ol
the bride Pat Ni.Ion indicated Tuesday
1be and Tricia are having a hard time
working out a gum. list for her
daughter'• •edding.
••1 think we'll have to put names
In a bowl and pull lhtm out," amiled
the fllSI lady.
She told reporters that Trlcil, who
is engaged to Harvard Jaw student
Edward Finch Cox, hasn't made "a
decision on anything yet."
"I'm btina: very honest," she said.
But there wtrt indications that the
wedding, originally acheduled for June
5, will be held iR the Easl Room
the aft.er.noon of Saturday, June 12.
Cox ends ·his e1am1 on June 2 and
his eroomsmen. not )'tt publicly riamed,
also will be busy then in the la1t days
or their law school studies.
Hints from White House and New
York sourcu indicated that It will be
a big wedding, with guests drawn from
family, long-time friends and officialdom.
Cox 111 completing his aecond year
at Harvard in June. He will begin a
summer job in tht office of Whitney
Seymour Jr., U.S. attorney in New York,
on July f,
87 JACK BROBACK
Ot ._ !>Illy Pllltt lllff
County aupervisors Tuesday dropped
all further study of Chino Hills as tht
site of a future Orange C.OU.nty jet
airport.
Ellmlnation of the proposed 1ile
northeast of Brea leaves the county
just where it started about six studies
ago and $250,000 richer.
'tudies 1inet ttsf and bu apmt almost~
12SO,OOO oo them. The latet~ by the
Ralph M. Paraons Co. far' tl«l,Olt WU"
received Jasl f1ll. ....
It rte<1mmended a jetpxt in BtB CaJl. .'
yon in tile southeast part of the county.
lmmtdlate opposition cropped up from:-~
Mls..ion Viejo and IOI.Ith cout residents. · 1
After several hearlnga lt'WU tht belie'
or the majority of the superfhor• ·tha!'~
Chino HJlls offtrtd the only pos1iblllty·
or • facility to Ukt O"f'flr tht 1a mptl"'
from Orange County Airporl:.' · "'
Police Checking Jewelry Theft
Chino Hills was dropped because of
a Federal Aviation Administration in·
terim report v.·hich found that flight
patterns would conf11cl with about every
other airport in Southern California.
Principal conflict was with Ontario
International and Chlno airports.
Joint uae of El Tofo Marine eorpi:I:·
Air Station baa bee.n pretty' weD tll~
by strong rtal<menta ln>m the mllltait."
This was also a Paraom: recommendlliM''
as an interim aolutton to the eoant)'~-t,
jet problems. · ·: ~· Laguna Beach polict are investigating
a burglary Tuesday night in which
merchandise including •t,500 a: o Id
bracelet covered w1th jewel.s wu taken
from a Laguna Beach home .
Authoritlta 1aid Sandra C. Little, (If
439 Hill St., discovered the theft on
retW'Ilin8 to her re•ldt:nce at 2: 30 a. m.
this morning. ln addition to the diamond
and pearl studded bracelet, officer• said
a. ltett0 phonograph and a television
set were taken from the locked residence.
Polict believe thieves gained ltntrance
to the house by dismantling and remov-
ing I doer lock.
Supervisor David L. Baker, who had
originally sponsored the Chino Hills
study, said it should be ituditd further
but he Jost in a 4-1 vote.
County Director of Aviation Robert
Bresnahan said additional FAA probing
would undoubtedly conclude the 1ame.
The county has bad a series of airport
Supervisors still lean toward an tn;.
ttrnational jetport at Camp Ptndlet~·
b"l the military objecta lo lhll ld;ll;
also and San "Diego ~ty offfciaJI ~
not enthusiastic bec•u.se of tbt.cUAtn~.
from their populaUon etnt.e(, • t.
•
United States National Bank '
pays you a whopping big '
on Savings Accounts
At United States National Bank, we stm pay you a sortd, wonderful
4¥..%. Eam from the day of your first deposit Computed dally. Como
pounded quarterly. No minimum deposit. Withdraw aQytime. Each
account Is insured to $20,000. Switch over to United States National
Bank today!
Want more than 4J1 ?
We'll pay it 5Y.z% and 5'4%. Deposit your money for one year and
we'll pay you a guaranteed 5~%. A two year's deposit w)U pay you 1
guar.anteed 5¥.%. Start with $500. Add $100 whenever you want.
UNITED
STATES ~
·-Mc:..n:.=NATIONAL
BANK
st-In lilo 5 majct COelilloo ol-C.-
C••f• M••• Office
1145 N""port llvd.
South Co11t Pl•t•
]))] Bristol Str••t
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DAll.Y PILOT
fities' Braced
Flooding Fear.ed
" . \
\
On Mississippi •• I ~ps.
Bill Blizzard
' Facing Solons
By THOMAS Ml!RflUNE
Of .. Dllb' 1'1#1 , .. "
SACRAMENTO CAUJNG< The vubol
blDwby from leeislative halls that has
filled th.is place in recent days has
now been joined by ,a barrage of
paperwort. Some uamples of tbe bill
bliz.zard o
Senator Clair Burgener (R-San Dieao)
hu introduced a measure callln& for
sc$oola to Clperate ye.AN.rOWld. His
scheme calla for 45 eta.as-day sessions
int.ersperstd by 15-day v1caUons.
'All hei .has to do now is figure out
a ,11ystem :for when the aurf comu up
on the .wrong cycle.
* ANeJnbJrman James A. Hayes (R·
Long :SU:Cb ) has another legislative
hallm1;k ia. the bopper. Hls would rank
all high schools and school districts in
the state according to the percentage
of their atudent& wbo apply for unemploy·
ment benefita.
You might suppose that list will prove
who didn't get drafted.
* Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport
U,I Ttlel'fl91t
Spy Flg11re Dead
Sir Hughe Knatchboll-Hugess·
sen, the British diplomat \vhose
trust in bis valet made "Cicero"
one of Nazi Germany's most
prolific spies, is dead. Sir
Hughe died at his home near
Canterbury, England just five
days short or his 85th birthday
and five months after the death
of "Cicero," bis valet.
Israel to Give
V.S. Guidelines
For Border Map
By THE ABSOCIATED PRESS
several clUes along the u pp e r
Mississippi River are !horin& up defenses
and building new ones against an an-
ticipated flood that may equaJ r800rd
heights of 1965.
In most cases, officials are optimistic
about their protection, barring heavy
rains coinciding with the peak runoff
Crom the heavy snows that mantled
northern Minnesota and Northern Wis.
consin.
At Prairie du Chien, Wis., at the
base of a bluff and partly on an Island
in the river, they are not.
Prairie du Chien's location makes it
virtually impossible to protect and
flooding i! almOst as certain as the
coming of spring it.self. Carl Hanke,
city clerk and treasurer, said the
overflow will cover the city's St. Friel
Island and "quite a bit of the main
part of town."
The city already has rented a
warehouse w h e r e flood.threatened
residents can store thtir furniture until
the menace has passed.
Prairie du Chien, a city of 5,600, is
just upstream from the confluence or
the Wisconsin and Mississippi rivers.
The Wisconsin is a major tributary that
drains a considerable section of
Wisconsin's deep snow woods and lakes
country.
A crest 3Y.i to fi feet above flood
stage is expected about April 24 at
Prairie du Chien and La Crosse, a ci\y
Clf some 47,000 about 50 miles upstream.
LaCrosse hat dlk,. bo!lt Jn 1965 and
1969, but many holes CUl through them
for roads will hive to be plugged. Mayor
Warren Loveland said the city, in the
(otk of the Mlaaissippl and La Crosse
riven, has to prepare for a flood every
year and will be ready for this one.
At Wi.Jlona, Minn., Mayor Norman
Indal! said he is confident that a
permanent dike built In 1965 and a
temporary levee built in ~969 will need
only minor repairs to protect his city
from a major flood. In ·addition. 25
pumps that will go into operation if
water reaches four feet above flood
stage, wW help protect this city of
25,000.
A likely trouble spot is Stillwater.
Minn., a onetime lumbering town of
8,300 on the St. Crol.J: River. The stream
is a Minnesota-WiscOnsin boundary for
most of its length, and drains a con•
siderable section of both states.
A mile-long levee that shielded
Stillwater's downtown was removed after
the 1969 flood. A s~kesman for the
Arnry Corps of Engineers said:
"They have to start from scratch again
in Stillwater. We favor some kind of
permanent dike but we run into op-
position. Then when a flood is forecast,
we can't tum these people down."
Four feet of water flowed over the
Stillwater bridge during the record 1965
flood, and the roadbed was covered near-
ly u deep ia 1969. A crest aboul equal
to 1969 ia expected this year, the city
public works director, Jack Shelton, said.
Beach) came up with a bill Tuesday
creating a new djvision of the Fourth
District Court of Appeal in Southtm
California. Carpenter's legislation would
mandate that the jlldgrs hold regular
1essions in Santa Ana.
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Israel ha.s agreed to provide the United
States with guidelines for drawing up
a Middle East peace .settlement map,
but has made it clear It will not give
up its secure borders in exchange for
an international peace-keeping force.
New Irish Leader Begins .
I wonder what he'a got against the
judges?
* Government sou rces said Prime
Minister Golda Meir and top cabinet
aides had decided to give the United
Stat.es "guiding principles'' on what it
would cons1der acceptable Arab-Israeli
borders in a settlement.
Task of Quieting Nation
Assemblyman John VasconC1!llos ([).
San Jose) got his bill pas.sed &4 to
S that allows former heroin addicts to
get drivers licenses if they are u~
going methadone treatment. Addicts
can·t get licenses now because the state
considers methadone a narcotic. * .. By golly, there's one here that the
Assembly passed Tuesday by a
unanimous vote, 76 to tit. It allows
()ve.rtime pay for state employes. And
who do you think woold introduce such
a thing as that ln Sacramento? Why
a hometown bOJ, of coUrle: Edwin Z'berg
(Q.Sacramento). * L !-Here's another unanimous one from
the Assembly: A bill mandating a one
to to year term in the Big House for
anybody who slips pod or ruor bJades
into Halloween candy.
The bill was authored by Assemblyman
Mike Cullen (l).Long Beach) and you're
going to be hard-pressed to find
somebody that will argue with iL
The disquieting thing that nags at
you : a sorry commentary on humanity
that we need it.
* AND FINALLY. from clear down at
the other end of our state, the Calexico
Chronicle reports that its City Council
ls mulling over a new scheme that
would tum their sewage water into gold.
One Ed Fuller, a representative of
Miracle Processing Corporation -a like·
ly name -has proposed that he can
tJse his new process and boil $9 million
worth of gold arid other precious metals
out of Calexico's sewage effluent every
year. He offered the city fathers a
10 percent cut -or $660 ,000 annually.
The councilmen, a bit on the cautious
&ide. referred this whole business of
medieva\ alchemy to the city attorney
and city engineers for a good hard
look and recommendation.
They may have their doubts but they're
going to look into it all the same.
Who knows? Calexico folks may be
flushing a lot of cash down the drain
right now.
The sources also said ~lrs. Meir, in
conversations with U.S. Ambassadar
Walworth Barbour in Jerusalem Tuesday,
made it clear Israel would not give
up its teeure borders ln exchange for
an international peace-keeping lorce. as
proposed by tbe Uniled States.
At the_ same time, a top Israeli general
warned "the war is not over yet." Lt.
Gen. Baim Bar-~v, chief of staff of
the armed forces, told a group of
paratroopers Tuesday "although there
is no shooting now, and all is quiet
ClD the Egyptian border, we must
nevertheless be prepared for a possible
reswnption of the war."
WleJu
'Taxation Department?
I'm having difficulty
with my return!'
BELFAST. Northern Ireland (UPI} -
Newly elected Prime Minister Bria n
Faulkner today began forming a govern·
ment to •·restore confidence" in the
troubled province. The man Faulkner
defeated predicted imminent collapse of
the new regime unless it took a tougher
stand against Roman Catholic ex·
tremists.
Government sources said Faulkner was
conducting meetings and would likely
announce the membership of his cabinet
early nut week.
raulkner won a 2M vote victory Tues·
day over rightwlnf b'11lliner William
O'alg to become Northern Ireland's siJ:th
prime minister since the province was
established in 1920.
British Commons
Finishes Longest
Voting Session
LONDON (AP) -An wiprecedented
sitting of Britain's House of Commons
ended at 11 minutes past noon today
after an all-nlg.bt session dW"ing which
the government pushed through the last
tlause of Jt& antistrlke leg:Lalation.
Relaya of Laborites opposed to the
bill and government supporters, bleary-
eyed and footsore after tramping through
the voting lobbJes 7 times since midnight.
kept the House in continuous session
for just short of 22 hours.
Veteran legislators couldn't remember
any previous sitting in which ao many
votes had been taken.
The bill will get a formal third reading
fn the Commons before going to the
House. of Lords. It is expected to beaime
law by summertime.
Throughout the night. the Laborites
had waged a tactical struggle to make
the bill's passage as uncomfortable as
possible for the government.
Rain, Snow Blanket West
Spring Fails to Show Face as Cold Bites Into V.S.
California Temperatures
1 ¥ UMl1'•D PltlSI IHTlltMATIOMAL
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Faulkner Immediately said Jaw and
order would get top priority in bis
government.
"I regard it as my most important
.!lingle aim to restore confidence to the
entire community in Northern Ireland,''
he said. "I am utterly convinced that
without the restoration of confidence,
all else is futile."
"The kernel of the matter is Jaw
and ()fder," he said.
Craig said if the new government did
not change it! policy "it will not last
more than a COU!'le of months." He
said he would wait and see what
Faulkner does before pledging his sup-
port.
Faulkner succeeded James Chichester·
Clar~ who resigned Saturday night under
pressure from Protestant conservatives
who had demanded a harder line against
Roman Catholic extremists and the
outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Faulkner, like Chichester-Clark, is a
moderate and the Rev. Ian Paisley mili·
tant Protestant leader. said on television
Tuesday night that if the new govern-
ment Jollowed "the suicidal policies"
of the old, it would not last long.
In the Protestant district of Shank.bill
R-Oad, there was gceat rusappointment
that Craig lost lo Faulkner.
"Traitors! Cowards !" Protestant
crowds shouted as they gathered outside
Parliament when news of the voting
was announced.
Police said a 20-pound explosive charge
~ent off Tuesday night, heavily damag·
1ng an underground pipeline carrying'
water to a Goodyear Tire factory at
Lurgan, from Lough Neagh, ()ne of the
largest lakes in the United Kingdom.
In Dublin in the Irish Republic to
the south, Premier Jack Lynch said
his country would do all it could to
help Faulkner keep order.
Loyal Officers
Seize Commander
In Sierra Leone
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) -A
coup of Sierra Leone 's army commander
was upset Tuesday night when other
army offictrs arrested him and an-
~ounced they were keeping Prime Min-
ister Siaka P. Steveni:: in office.
"l am still alive al'ld healthy. by the
grace of God,'' Stevens announced this
morning Jn a nationwide radlo broadcast.
He reported all was back to normal
afler Tuesday's upheaval aRd appealed
to the people to go about their regular
duties. The government, he added, is
determined to safeguard life and prop-erty. .
This apparenUy referred to unex·
plained shooting which broke out in sev-
eral parts of the city just before the
broadcast. The shooting sent people
scurrying for cover and many offices
and stores closed down.
The army's third in command. Lt. CCll.
Sam King, said in a broadcast late Tues-
day niaht that a majority of the coun-
try 's 1.500-man army dissociated them·
selves from Brig. Gen. John Bangurah's
al\emPt to seize power.
''We regard the present government of
Prime Minister Siaka Stevens as the
legally constituted authority in the aiun·
try," King said.
Ba11gurah's attempt on the government
began at dawn Tuesday when about 12
armed soldiers attacked Stevens' home.
In a 16-minute gunflghtL~ecurity ~ards
killed two of the altantrs. Sporadic:
gunfire was al~ reported near the mill·
t.ary barrac..kJ and lhe center al tbe city.
, Ul'I Ttltl'M ..
WINNER OF HISTORIC WASHINGTON D.C. ELECTION
R•"· Walt•r FaUntroy ind Wife After Congr111ional Victory
Former J(ing Aide Wins
Capital Congress Seat
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Rev.
Walter E. Fauntroy, a former aide to
the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
rolled up 58.5 percent of the vote Tuesday
to become the District o! Columbia's
firts delea:ate to Congress in almost
a century.
Fauntroy, !?, told supporters at a
rally as returns ainfirmed his victory
over five other candidates the vote
proved Washingto1, D.C., was "ready" to
have self government." ,
"We want to have the yoke of col-
onialism lifted from our shoulders," the
black minister said. "We want to be
free."
Fauntroy won the Democratic nomina-
tion for the non-votfng delegate seat
in January. He polled 66,119 votes to
28,044, or 25 percent, for his nearest
challenger, Republican John A. Nevius,
a white lawyer. The district's populatiOD
is 71 percent black.
The other four candidates shared 16.5
percent of the vote.
The district has l)Ot had a represen-
tative in Congress since 1875. Fauntroy
will not be able to vote on the House
floor but will have a vote in the District
Turkish Leader
Chooses Cabinet
ANKARA (UPI) -Premier-designate
Nihat Erim has picked a cabinet of
"brains, class and brass" Jn his efforts
to shape a new government acceptable
to Turkey's generals, political sources
said today.
They said the former law professor
was expected to announce, his choices
by the end of the day. President Cevdet
Sunay 's approval of the list, required
by law, was considered certain.
Picked to replace Premier Suleyman
Demirel, who was forced to resign on
1t1arch 12 under threat of military
takeover, Erim said today he would
blend "young and experienced experts.,
with politicians to form a "brain trust
within the cabinet.''
He pledged hi! government would push
for economic and social reforms.
Sinatra
of C.Olumbia Committee. He will get
the run congressional salary of $42,SOO
annually.
Only 44 percent of registered district
voters cast ballots in the electon. Elec-
tion officials had predicted a turoout
of more than 80 percent.
Fauntroy, a graduate of the Yale
University Divinity School, served on
the district aiuncil from 1967 to 1969.
He helped organize the 1963 March on
Washington when King delivered his "l
Have a Dream," speech and participated
in the 1965 Selma to Montgomery, Ala.,
march and the 1969 Poor People's Cam·
paign.
Terrorists Free
Uruguay Leader
After 13 Days
MONTEVIDEO. Uruguay (AP) -Ter·
rorist kidnapers freed GuidG Berro Oribe.
Uruguay's attorney general, in good
h<allh Tuesday Right alter holding him
captive 13 days.
Oribe said he was held in the same
place as kidnaped BriUsh Ambassador
Geoffrey Jack.son, whom he described
as "in good health and apparently good
spirits." Jackson was seized Jan. 8,
The a t to r n e y general, 58, said
Tupamaro guerrillas drove him in a
stolen taxi to a spot near Montevideo
religious school and turned him loose.
His family was notified o( his release
by telephone.
"I feel fine," Berro Oribe told
newsmen. He said he and Jackson, 51,
were held captive "in a basement which
was so hot fans were needed to keep
the air circulating."
Berro Oribe was abducted March 10,
eight days after the Tupamaros released
Claude L. Fly, a 65-year-old U.S. soils
expert they held 208 days.
The guerrillas said al the time of
the abduction that they seized Berm
Oribe to question him about irregularities
in the conduct of his office and in
his conduct as attc..rney for the
Uruguayan Supreme Court.
to Exit
Singer Says He'll Write, Teach
PALM SPRINGS IUPI) -Frank
Sinatra, an often stormy and ain-
troversia1 performer during his more
than 30.year career. announced Tuesday
he is retiring from show business tG
write and teach.
Sinatra, 55, said be hoped to spend
more time with his family, his close
friends and perhaps "writing a little
bit." He said he had no plans for future
motion pictures, television or recording
activities.
"I'm retiring from public life,'' Sinatra
told his family Tuesday in a letter,
a>pies of which were sent to several
friends. He also said he would enjoy
doing some teaching.
The decision, the mill\onaire singer-ac-
tor said. was final. He also es:cluded
further participation in poUtiC!.
Sinatra would not comment further
on his "retiremt!nt" but a spQkesman
for the singer said his decision to quit
show business was sincere.
"He has suggested and threatened
retirement in recent years and he is
sincere," said his pr~ agent. "He hopes
to teach and write and is in the process
or putting a book together, sort of border-
ing on an autobiography."
The spokesman said he probably would
not fulfill a commitment for a motion
plt'!ture for Warner Bros. but that he
would perform in his last schedultd
public appearance. the Motion Picture
Relief Fund Benefll at the ..., Angel"
Music Center June 11.
According to a copyright J1tory in the
New York Dally news by l!Ociely col-
umnist Suzy, Sinatra said his career
has been "a fruitful, busy, uptijht, loose,
.son1ctlmes boisterous, occasionally .ad.
l)ut alw11iys ea: cl Ung thret decades."
But he said his acllvlUes had allowed
STORMY 30 YEARS
Frank Sin•tra
"little room or opportunity ror NJnectmn,
-reading, self-ell'.amlnatlon and ttlat need
which every thinklnft man bas lor a
fallow period, a long phase In which
to seek a better understanding of the
vasl trar.sforming changes now takinl
place everywhere in the world."
DAILY ,IL Of §
lnqulrp Threatened Peril to U.S . in FBI Theft Warned
Storm of Protest
Hits Railpax Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The U.S. attorney general has
warned disclosure of in·
tormatlon in FBI files stolen
at Media, Pa ., could endanger
the security of the United
States and the lives of some
federal agents.
Attorney General John N.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A AFL-CJO Transport Worker~ Mitchell said Tuesday copies
storm of proleall and the Union wh6 called Tueaday for of the stolen records had been
threat of a congrttalonal In-n 1 t lo n a l l 1 a t J o n of the sent to some members of
quiry have greeted the map railroads. Congress and some members ef the p~s1. detailing the nation's new and The Washington Post today
limited rail pawn1er service. s 0 s ~ published some details from
"! tJtlnk the railro•ds hod • hoot u t 0 n s . set of 14 docum'"" it said too much to aay about the it received Tuesday morning
routes," aaJd Rep. Harley o. under 1 covering letter and
P K B • "''ith an additional statement
C Stag1er1, (0-W. Va .), arents at €1't ltter I o th ·1· ..
O,ldl'tt'OllS • ' m e ct tzens commtSsion chairman of the Home Com-to investigate the FBI. The
mer~ Committee. newspaper said most of the
Of Pow' Staggers aald hi! committee NEW YORK (UPI ) in the current iss:·... of documents were on pages S would look into the 1ltu1Uon, Author James Michener, who Reader's Digest that the n1-marked "United St ates
but he didn't set 1 date. eonctudtd from an on-the-spot tional v.:ave or anti·sludent Government Memorandum." 'S J k• ' Criticism began rolling in 1 N . 1 sentiment following 1 he The Post said the records tOC l1ig almost immediately arter the lnvestigat on that ationa de a er i bed the FBI's
National Railroad Passenger Guanillmen were not under shooting of four Kent Slate surveillance of campus and
NE\V YORK (UPI) Corp. -Rallpax -announced attack at Kent State Universi· students last May was black activist organizations by
its final route selections Mon-ty, sald that 25 percent of particularly virulent among informants that included a Interviews w!th re 1 eased day. The network starting switchboard o""rator on at
point across there b an FBI
111ent behind every mallbo1 ."
The newspaper 11id the
swltehboard optt1tor at •
Pblladelpbia area collep was
en1a12ed to furnlJh the FBI
and
(or San
froln
Al
with 1 list of Ion& diltane91
c1ll1 to or from a prefeoor
at the colle1e.
' "
the 400 students he in the parents of Kent Stale "" ... prisoners and sources in May I will provide 114 .I-least one campus. Th 1
\Vashlngtnn, Saigon and Paris passenger tr1lns to connect lervlewed told him their students. newspaper said one document
II' It. Ith 100 000 re t thou1ht ·t 1·ght have A motber .,.,·ith three sons 1 t 1-• •-t · indica te that the plight or U.S. c 1e1 w , or more ?I n • 1 m ns rue !;\I .agen..,. o increase population. been a good thing: for the on campus and herself a high interviews with dissenters for
prisoners of war in Vietnam The plan to halve the na· school teacher said it would reasons ''ch!ef of which are • " h ,. " d I n1Uon tr they, too, had been IS s oc 1ng an many o Hon's rail pas11enger servi~ have bttn better "if the guard It will enhance the paranoia
Oi .... eountyl) San Franclae~ $18;Saeramento; S2'1 • ,
This SSV:.-:" pm San Dlogo$8(all lneludetax). Mor:~ round a»S.F. thananyothoral~lno.PSA--alft.
the men have been subjected was labeled shortsI&hted and shot. had shot the whole lot of them endemic in these circles and
to torture. Reader's Digest ,-"'-in_oua_b_:y_to.:.p_o1_1_1c_11_1a_o1_th_e __ M_1chen __ e_r_wro __ te_1n_1_r_e.:.po_r_t _th_e_1_m_o_rn_111_· .:.'·-"-,-_____ w_;_11_1_u_rth_er_se_cv_• _t_•..:g.:.•_t _th_•-'--------------------------------
magazine reported Wed-
nesday.
The article said available
lnformalion compiled by Ll
Col. Joseph R. c.ataldo, a doc-
tor of the Green Berel!!, ln-
dieated that mO!t POWs are
severely malnourished, 80 per·
cent have .skin diseases. at
least 50 percent suffer in·
testinal worms. and 25 percent
may have active tuberculosis.
Jn addition, many have serious
vitamin deficiencies. mental
disorientation and muscular
wastage.
"Small wOn<ler, then. that
North Vietnam forbids in.
spection of the camps by the
lnlernation1J Red Cross -in
direct vioh1tion of the Geneva
conventions," the article said.
''Instead 'showcase' prisoners
are paraded ln propaganda
films. When anti.war groups
film small groups of prison-
er.~. only the healthiest, bar-
bered and freshly clothed, ire
trotted into public view to par·
rot carefully rehearsed in-
formation."
The article said Hanoi h11
weakened men by systematic
torture, such as denying food
and water. suspending them
from cellings by their arms,
burning them with cigarettes,
and clubbing them with rifle
butts. It said that in numerous
cases prisoners have been
denied medical attention and
tven m;ijor injuries have not
been tended.
Treecutting
Protesters
Defended
CHICAGO !UPI) -The
Chicago 'l'ribune has offered
to pay the fine of a protester
arrested ~1onday during a
demonstration at Northern
Ill inois University.
Chevrolet hn
All the nyou
could "\Va11t for
buying a big car.
Impala. Big in wh>t it builds in for you.
Like a longer, smoother wheelbaae that absorbs much of what yoar body used to.
A new double panel rool that absorbs much of the noise your ean; used to. More roominess
than any other car in it! field A new power ventilatioo 8)'Sltlll that keepoon brin&ing
you outside. air, even when the car' a standing still
You evm get standard power disc brakes. up front.
Impala. Big in bui!L-ins. Big in trade-in value.
And no"1, bvo ne"\V reaso11s for
b • son1 • rtier.
Announcing Rally Nova. 60th Anniversary Special No.L'.
-·~-. Cbevrolet'• 1-1 making can now fcr60 years. That'• reaeon t.ocelelnt.e.And ;==~·:.:· ·;:·::;·=::::::::::~to;o~ff~er~you:Ral: ly Nova. Which is a regular Nova we've dme up. By addlni: .....,t
stripes. A black eriJJe. A remo~trol 8l>O<t mimtr. Cdef.
• •
•
•
Jn a front.page editorial ln
today's editions. the Tribune
said protesters "who have
reacted violently and destruc·
tively have deserved con-
demnation .
keyed carpeting. Bright roof molding. A opecjal ...
pension. And wider 14 16 rally wheels.
'
"Thr students who
peacefully opposed cullin1
trees in a nature preserve
at Northern Illinois Univer.!lity
f\.fonday, howevt:r. deserve
cheers." the Tribune sald.
Twelve students were lf·
rested a'.'11 they tried to atop
the universitv from cutting 1
stand of tr'ees for a new
bullrllng.
"Tl was an nutrageous
destruction of an irreph1ceable
asset -and unnecessary with
11 universlly situated on the
edge of a cornfield,'' the
tditoria\ 11id.
"If the 1ludents who were
arrested are fined , the editor
of the Tribune would like
personally to pay the fine of
the rirst one on the list
alphRbtt.ic111ly , James 0 . Allen
of Alsip 1111.) We hope there
are others among our readers
who might make similar of-
fers." the newspaper said.
Baby Death
Rate Drops
WASHINGTON fUPI I
America'• infant death rite.
long a cause of debate over
health care for the poor. drt>i>
ptd to a record \ow ln 19'70.
the Health. Education ind
weJrare Df:partmtnt (HEW)
said today. The death rale for infantJ
•
under one yl!ar of age, R u t,1;llm11ilcd from a national mtember, bvc'"i"t YfJUr sat. and 3Muldtr btll.s is an idmyou, can li1e toiJJ&.
sampling of death certificate~. •
was 19.11 de111hs for each 1,000
We offer you a selection of the sbndan! 6 er
V8 engine. Or a bigger V8. All run jlllt 6ne ca
no-lead, low-lead gasoline. too.
Rally Nova. The economy car that put. ""'
first by looking like it C06U a lot more thanitdool.
Annooncing Heavy Chery.
60th Anniversary Special No. 2.
It's a Ch<velle with a heny """'1t ca
making its presence felt. AA evidllllad by
its spocial Itri-Special identlfi.
catioo on the side. Spetial d<lltll!d
hood with kxk pin&.
Blade 1ri1Je. And I' st
rally wheela.
Some more nice thlnp:
11'1 available with -
&tandanl V8. or three
biwr qina Which an
move ticht out on no.lad or
lalv-lead poolinr..
Heavy Chevy. Only ill pr;c.
is light.
Wve births In 1§70. compared
w!th20.7per 1,000ln 1969. 1--------------------------~------------------------•'-------~--------
-----·-
'
I
'
• DAR.Y PU.OT EDITORIAL PAGE
(
Student
Mission Viejo High School's student-run 111Plant·in•
was a smashing success with more thin double the ex·
peeled number of students turning out to dig for the
environment.
?I.fore than 600 came to improve the school's land·
scape with $3,000 worth of planls, trees and shrubs. The
aupervlsed work forte enabled the job to be completed
In half the allotted time. Only one of the 27 areas map-
ped for the plant·in '"'as still being worked at 2 p.m. Sat·
urday.
Parent-Teacher Organization ·spokesmen ~ave ob-
served that besides giving the appearance of the campus
1 Wt. the project became a "success ln spirit.11 A sense
of pride for the turf that blistered their hands has been
noticed among the student crews whose efforts beauti·
fied areas of the campus.
Further, the students have pledged to weed and
water "lbeir" planted areas, until the district mainten-
ance crews take over in June.
The LlFE ,e<:ology club is to be commended for its
organizational effort. along with advisor Gary Haynes
and student activities coordinator Keith Sims.
Their project is estimated to have given the district
a $10,000 landscape job at a fraction of the cost. A hearty
"well done" for the adults and healthy "right on" for the
gtudents are most in order.
Line Had to Be Drawn
San Clemente city councilmen made one of their
toughest decisions in months recently-a choice having
little to do with budgets, planning or major develop-
ments.
They had to say no to a group of boys engaged in a
worthwhile project.
Beautif ier·s
this year.
The Indian Guides wanted a fifth &tand approved
and spokesmen pointed to the worthwhile nature of the
Y program as justification.
The essential issue, councilmen stressed, was not
the merit of the sponsors, but where the city should draw
the line.
When a dozen sleepy·eyed boys dressed in Indian
regalia sit begging for an aye vote, disappointing them
is difficult.
One can only hope that the adults in the group im·
pressed upon the boys that the five lawmakers are not
mean men.
They did what they thought was right.
P ine Tree vs. Gas Station
The tall star pine at the northern entrance to Laguna
Beach bas developed a host of friends since a major oil
compan.y applied for a conditional use permit to put in a
gas station beneath its spreading branches.
Every Art Colony resident who loves trees or hates
gas stations, or both, is ready to do battle. If the con·
struction doesn't wipe out the 50.year.-old tree, they ar·
gue, the ensuing gasoline fumes probably will. And the
last thing Laguna needs on its front doo rstep is another
gas station.
Baffled oil company representatives promised to
take tender loving care of the pine, even hiring a land·
scape expert to watch over it.
Planning commissioners were persuaded to grant
the permit, but the argument isn't over. Two city council·
nen tried unsuccessfully to have the council reopen the
case.
•
The vexing issue was the freeze-ultimately leading
to a ban---00 permits to allow the sale of fireworks.
Adult leaders and youthful members of the Y~1CA
Indian Guides nearly filled the council chambers in an
attempt to break the freeze which allows onJy four stands
Now a neighboring property owner. backed by two
civic groups, is planning to appeal the commission's ac·
ti on.
As the oil firm is finding out, about the only thing
more distasteful to Lagunans than another gas station
would be a high rise gas station.
~.::J ',__---.-:;,,,:_ CPl "l11 ~r--.>
Each Man
Has His Place
And Functio11
A dear friend, with the kindest Of
intentions, has been trying to persuade
me to invest some
of my paltry savings
in the &tock market,
on the assumption
that it has nowhere
to go but up.
l have been temp.
led, but J have re-
fused . For if 1 have
learned one thing in
lire. il ts this: that
a man cannot go against the grain of his
• nature, that he must learn to live with
his natural bent and not cut across il
: Money is a mystery to me. I like
: It as much as most people do, but
· I seem to Jack that bump of ac·
quisiliveness that enables some men to
make large masses of money in their
: 1!ileep.
· IF I INV&TED in General Motors
tomorrow morning, everybody would
start bicycling to work: and if 1 picked
up some General Electric stock, every
household in America wou1d switch to
candles. I am a naturaJ.born sucker,
and am temperamentally designed to
be a~ared In the market place.
Moreover, t have neither the talent
nor the patience to study the reports
·and analyses, the averages and trends,
·that are requisite for intelligent
participation in the investment field. ft
seems to me aa pinched and desiccating
an acttvity as poring over the racing
fonns.
lF YOU DON'T really like something,
or have a natural flair for it, you
will never do it as weU as those to
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Ever since the repaintlng of the in-
terior of the council chambera in
Laguna Beach, people have been
asking what to put in the blank
wan behind the councilmen, Why
not chisel a Mt. Rushmore version
of the live city fathers?
-F. A. S.
"'" ... ,.,.. ftfltcH ........... vW#.. lltt
.._ • .,,. .,..... .,, ftllt --· , .....
_,. "' _.... "' 0 """1 .V.. 0.ll'f Pllft.
whom it comes easily. Each man has
hi! place and function, and .should Jeam
to do what he does well and to avoid
what he does poorly. It ls the man
who tries to be all things who finally
loses even in his own special field.
This was the nearly fatal blind spot
in the otherwise shrewd personality of
Mark Twain. The leading writer of his
day, he Jost several fortunes in business
enterprises, and was forever draining
off his literary roya1tles to pay for
bis catastrophic commercial ventures.
And this is what he meant when he
ruefully wrote: "l have been a writer
for 22 years, and an ass for 55."
CONVERSELY, J have seen highly
successful businessmen try to extend
their talena to a fickle field such as
the theater, and Jose their monogrammed
silk shirts in the effort. They try to
apply the same cold financial p~dures
to a stage production as they would
to an industrial production, v.·holly
unaware that the elements are
unyieldingly incompatible.
Some persons operate best in the realm
of ideas, some in the realm of people,
and some in the realm of things. Jt
is usually disastrous when we attempt
to use our expertise in one realm to
deal with another. The shoemaker doem't
necessarily have to stick to his last,
but when he stops making and starts
mantpulaUag, he is bound to lose his
awl.
· Lobb ying Full of Irony
Politics, they always &ay, makes
strange bedfellows. Take for example
the spectacle of two members of the
British parliament appearing before a
11tale legislature in this country to lobby
agaiDll a pending blll.
Pasains atrange though it seems, lhe
two MP't had a very serious motive
for their trip: 250.000 British and French
jobs.
1be story Is that a New York State
Aaembb'man ha.a presented a bill ban-
ning rrom state airports any aircraft
wltlt decibel counU of more thnn 108.
tffeci..tve Joly l, and of 98 by 1977.
Jn effect.. this would prohibit supersonic
craft from land.In& in New York. And
that woukl lodude the Ang lo-French Con-
oorde: now ln production. The Concordt,
It Is dalmed. hu a noise level reaching
• decibel cowrt of 11%.
Quotes
-llouMsJ Md.to R. Lalnl,
lo 11.P. qeedl -"SeU-dtlttmlnaUon
ror Iha ll<plj>llc ol Vlelnam ....,,., ..
oor ab)tcllvo and la an ol>talnable 1oaJ
becaote the South Vietnamese hafe a
new·fDWld tlrqlh and confld•nce wtlll
wtuch LO meet the chaJJenge ahead.''
Mta. Rolff 1Apl11m , 1'1dow of IOftd
A.f". dvle klder -''One should not IPflld time rtgreltlng: what la done,
beca111t whll one might have done could
u>ll1 ..... bffn _,.,"
1
.... ~ "" ..
f
(;veal Editorial •. •
IF THE CONCORDE is to be banned
from New York, the Britons say, it
can't economically be built and the pro-
gram would be killed, with the resultant
loss of jobs in the two naUons.
The Irony of Brltlsb lobbying in a
U.S. leglllature Is compounded by the
fa ct that poor England and France may
lose those jobs anyway. Both the British
airline BOAC and Air France have re-
jected the COncorde u being Impossible
to Oy economically, regardleu of any
decibel problems.
Comlng on top of the Rolls Royce
collapse, and reports of thrUitened
withdrawal of fortlgn industrial ln-
stall11ions becaust of England'1 stvtre
labor crises, could the Concorde case
be the precursor of •not.Mr lobbying
junkel t.o the U.S., to petition for Brl·
ta.1n'1 1dml.ulon as the Slst state?
(As an aside, a footnote seems np-
propriatt: Because tht E;uro~an
super.sO'nic program setms to II.ave
come o croppfr. Wt' sJtould not jumr
to tht COnClllSiOn that our OWll SST
deuelopmt11t is Lhertbll auto111n tleoll y
made obsolr.tr.. ll'c'd hal.le-no ovialioi1
r11d!l$try at nil if t vtr11bod11 /1ad qun
when Lan9lt~'1 craft failed to Jl11 111
1903.)
Callfornl1 Feature Str,·lce
s ''MOON, HELL-TH l5 15 SOUTH EAST ASIA .''
No Other ita History Ever Outclassed Her
'Help to Save Coast Daylight Train'
To the Edit.or:
We are again close to losing another
California historical landmark. For 49
years, the famous Southern Pacific
Daylight passenger train bas graced our
California coast. line even day , bringing
joy and relaxation to over 15 miUion
passengers. 1t became synonymous wit h
California. In fact, to many, the Daylight
became as much a parl o{ America
as tbe Fourth of July. When Premier
Khrushchev of the Soviet Union {on
hiJ visit to this country) was told he
could not visit Disneyland, he asked
that hi• second request be honored ;
a ride on the famous Southern Pacific
Daylight from Los Angeles to San Fran-
cisco.
I KNOW THESE facts because of
two years research for my recently
published 656 page historical volume on
the Daylight. No other "Name Train"
in the history of railroading ever
outclassed her, for she was the "Most
Beautiful Train in the World," traveling
on the world famous Coast Line which
closely follows the route of the California
missions and, for more than 113 mlles,
11kirts the beautiful California seashore.
The U.S. government even acknow\edg·
ed these facts in 1939 when it placed
a full-color. large photograph of the
Coast Daylight on the "wall of honor"
in the Department or Transportation.
She had won the all·time passenger-car·
rying record in a single year and it
was never brokea.
As you know, Railpax (Nation Rail
Passenger Corp.), a semi-private govern·
ment corporation, will be nationalizing
most of America's passenger trains next
May 1. They recently revised their routes
after much public pressure to include
lhe San Francisco to Los Angeles run.
NOW WE MAY LOSE this, as Mr.
Bruce Heard, a San Francisco travel
agent formerly of Fresno, has mounted
a personal campaign requesting RaHpax
to select the San Joaquin Valley Line
in lieu of the Coast Line because of
some illogical reasona like scenic beauty
and popularity. which are contrary to
the facts .
I request that you use your editorial
power and ask the people of California
to make their wishea known on the
route they would like to travel. We
now have the golden opportunity to decide
what train and what route we want
continued. All we have to do is take
five minutes and WTite Secretary John
A. Volpe al Departm ent of
Transportation, 40-7th St. S. W.,
By George ---.
Dear Gtorge:
Thanks for that •dvice on how
lo be popular with good.looking
girls! Boy, After v.·hat you advised,
girls flock au over me!
GRATEFUL
Dear Grateful:
Uh, this ls a bit embarrassing
for me lo have to ssk, but do
you rtmember the exact date that
advice ran? I write some of this
stuff before l 'm fully a"·ake, and
if whattver 1 said worked, 1 could
sure use it.
Dear George :
Who invtnted the Yo-Yo?
SAMUEL R.
Dear Samuel R.:
You do not h11ve to be pro-
mlsruou~ to be popular. I Yeah.
r knnw -It mav confu$.:? Samuf'I
n., but the reiiders LIKE that
kind of stuff,)
(\Vrlte lo George. tllf! originator
of Sldtw11y1 Thinking.)
Mailbox
~ measure by patrons who spend during
· · the year $2.5 mHlion for rooms but spe11d
another $10 million in the commun ily
while slaying here. This is an accepted
statistic.
Letters from Teaders are weicome.
Normall y writers should convey their
1nessages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense Letters to fit space
or eliminate libeL is reserved, All tet·
ters must include .rlgnature and mail·
ing address, but names may be with-
held on reque1t iJ tuJficient rea!on
ii apparent. Pottrv will not be pub·
lished.
\Vashlngton D.C. 20491, and make our
wishes known. Write ~him. He is there
to serve us.
RICHARD K. WRIGHT
R e pl11 to Civ le League
To the Editor:
The fearsome &pectre of Village La-
guna destroyed -not by earthquake and
fire, or tidal wave-but by buildings
(unsafe and unhealthy) of SO.foot height.
Th.is i& the message to Laguna in the
mass mailout from the directors of the
civic league.
If they actually believe this, that "the
moral and spiritual health of our com·
munity is at stake" because of some
new construction of moderate height,
and not because or some of our well·
kno.,.,n problems, they have to be kidding • •• In a continuation or their believe it
or not message to Laguna, they proceed
lo rate garbage and trash (revenues,
of course ? ) as almost equal to the
income from the city's principal in-
duslry! 11 this is so we are in big
trouble b'ying to function as a viable
and decent community, and one in which
we can afford to live.
MOST COMMUNITIES would rate a
resort hotel, if attainable, as the -most
desirable and productive, the cleanest
and least disruptive of the environment
of any industry. Already our tourist
b113iness. supported by 1,000 rooms. rates
as the equivalent of industries with fac·
tory payrolls of 66 millions annually.
This statistic is from the California
Department of Tourism and not the
hotel association.
Yet. civic league spokesmen at public
hearings suggest lhe proper place for
hote ls is out of town where other taxing
bodies are welcome to any benefits.
for revenues they suggest \Ve should
look for a handy chocolate factory with
a name like GhirardelH and convert it
to an Instant 11ttraction, and if not on
the Main Beach, then at the Laguna
Lumber Co. Nile. Perhaps v.·e can look
for a Queen Mary loo.
TllE REVENUE data presented. in-
!ilead of comparing trash revenues to
the bed tax, ought to emphasiie the
fact that the b113iness commWlity 11c-
counts for approximately one half or
tot.~I city revenues, including the very
high proptrty tall:es levied on hotel and
other buslneu properties, ales. use. oc-
cupancy and other taxes, a share of
the gas tax, fees for city services and
licenses.
The general planners understood the
role of hotels as economic generatori1
and (:a\led for I doubling Of rOOm!j:
over a 20 year period They wer(' paid
S'l0.000 for their ad\·ice. The directors'
advice is free. <Jf course, but will he
much more e:tptnsive for the community.
E\'ERYONE KNOWS that a community
v•ilh nothing lo tax exctpt bon1es is
too Cll:pensive to own property in. Our
buslnwes arc 1upported in large
Only 20 cents of the tourist dollar
is spent on accomodations on the
average. There 1s also the multiplier
effect of new money at five to 10 times
this amount as dollars circulate. This
enables a lot of other people to work
in town and pay their property taxes
(or rent) and make purchases.
AU. OF TlDS has nothing to do with
the catch words "high rise" and "people
parking," terms used to gain support
even though they do not relate to Laguna
solutions already approved by Laguna
planners. \Vhal does the community gain
by accepting a 36-foot height limit, for
instance, instead of the existing and ap-
proved 30-foot with 5(1 feet reserved
for areas already permitting this . The
difference is of rather little consequence
except to claim deliverance from that
spectre of a "village destroyed'' by
capitalist greed. Good grief!
1s the majority to be controlled by
the activists (with political muscle) who
would control the community by the
petitions of the 15 percent?
LOREN HANELINE
Laguna Beach Hotel
f\-fotel Apartment Association
Sa ter Scan Cle ute ute
To the Editor :
The question comes to my mind. is
it wise to spend $170,000 of the taxpayers'
money and, at the same time, not glve
them added fire protection?
In my opinion, they are spending this
large amount of money most unwisely.
Following are my reasons:
We have in our San Clemente city
lim its three communities that now have
practically no adequate fire protection:
namely. Colony Cove, Shore·Cliffs, and
the Harbor Estates.
THERE IS BEING built a new
hospital, a nev.· and large shopping
center, and Lhere already exists the
Market Basket and the surrounding shop-
ping center. plus a country club. and
none of these places v.·ill receive any
better protection provided by con·
structing a new fire station in the center
of this city .
I think it would be wise to build
11 fire station in the northerly section
of San Clemente and give these people
some 'Protection. They have practically
none at this moment, and l think they
deserve some consideration.
TlllS COULD BE accomplished with
the amount of available money at hand ,
Including new appara tus, and still im·
prove the present headquarters.
It would be wise for some of the
people who live in the northerly section
of San Clemente. and who are in business
there. to give this some thought before
It is loo late.
Garden Grove is a well-run city. A~k
the people up there v.·hat has been done
to give them better protection for less
money.
I submit this leUer M a contribution
to a better and safer Saa Clemente.
L. S. LEVOR
Capt., P~adena Fire Dept. tRet.J
1'1ent. Enters
To the Editor ·
l)(in"t feel lhrifty becau~ )'Our kld
quli eating meat.
"Do you Pal meal?'' ''Uh -no, I
eat only fruit and vege tables." That
sef'ms to be the trend among the wary,
young un·hip Junior f"llp gcneralion1 you
know -the kids who say they wa nt
to be different, non-conformists. do their
own thing; but they all tend to go
along with the group. And 1 believe
ii is a Communist plol.
Long hair everywhere, drugs, passive,
withdrawn and spaced out. vegetable
diet. l.en. Buddha, meditation. rice,
Peace Brother, love -I've hea rd it
a thousand times.
OUR COUNTRY was settled b)'
courageous and active people. This type
is naturally a meat-consuming race. The
servile and down.trodden races in the
Orient and elsewhere are not meat
eaters. Where a race of meat eaters
is encountered. there will be found ag.
gressive and efficient enterprise in ti.very
field, from home management to national
government.
This mod hippie trend isn't cute, mom ,
it's a heavy trip and a bu mmer at
thal. The whole th ing is getting too
far out. Can you dig it?
S. G. UNDINE
l\'nil to Ear tl•'s Cotti ..
To the Editor:
Arthur Vinsers Pilot Logbook of Marth
18 concludes with his personal observa-
tion on v.•hat be is doing to help a
threatened world. As far as Jeaving some-
one to carry on after he is gone
to fight a battle against the world's
ills, a fight that wi11 surely be drawn
out beyond his lifetime, he is doing
nothing.
f-le didn't say that he was bringing
no more children intn the world. If
he has some it is understandable lhat
he chose to bring no more into the
population explosion that is unde r way.
BUT If' HIS choice is to bring no
children into the world it is possibie
that he is adding <Jne small nail to
th e earth's coffin of the future. An
obviously talented and educated man
should be sure that he is followed by
one or more of his family who can
cope with what is to come and solve
the problems. Not leave lt up to the
under-educated and orten irresponsible
\\'ho are mu!lip\ying at a rapid rate.
His decision is a personal matter and
he is not lhe first in these days to
voice such. Dropping OU! i!i never •
solution but lhat is in effect "'hat ~
being done.
IT REl\flNDS l\fE of "''hat an old
aunt of mine said when my daughter
was born in HHS. her gloomy statement~
being to the effect that · she would never
bring a child into this terrible situation
in the world. rm su re thou sands of
others for hundreds of years have said
similar things. When have things beed
rosey and uncomplicated ?
It st ill is a personal point. I th-Ought
J'd make mine. I hope I have done
it.
EDGAR R. BARWN
-----Wednesday, March 24 . 1971
Tht edirori-Ol pogc of tlu: Do.1/y
Pilot seek~ to inform and sum.-
11/ate readtrs by presenli11g this
ric wspaper's opi11ion.1 and com-
menta111 on topics of illttrt.tt
011d significa11ct, by providing o
forum. for tltc c.tprts.~ion of
our rtadrrs' opinions. at1d by
prr.~rnt111g tile dn1er.l'c 1·itw·
pnn1t!I flf 1nforrned ob3ervrr.•
nut/ SJJu~·es,ttttt 011 toplc.1 of the
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
t
• ' s
• '
h
a
s
n
g
! I
t •
0
e • n
n
y
n • • •
d • •
' s
' " r
d
n
•
r;
· Wldne1Cf•L. Mill'ch 24, 1971 DllLV PILOT 7i
•
The Easter Page. Take this
page shopping with the family.
$6
Toddler girls' 2.·plece dress
and panty set or pant dress
~t with cute appllque trims, assorted colors.
Slzas 1-4T. ------
Skillet cloth of SQl.
polyester/50% cotton ln
a girls' peasant dress In
assorted colors and
trimmed with
.. mbroidery. Sizes 7·14.
Girts' non-run stretch
pantyhose. Suntan
In sizes 7/10
and 10/16. 129
·orion~ acrylic/stretch
nylon cable knee
socks in assorted
spring shades.
Girls' sizes. S-M-l..
89~
3so
Infant girls' knit aayllc
dresses. Embroidery and
assorted trims. Pretty
colors In sizes l>-1 i;.
The popular peasant look
In a full length cotton print
that she'll love. Mom will love the
price. Assorted colors In girls'
~lzes 7·14.
Crinkle patent pump C!1nkle patent strap Plain pump with new Neat little pump with
In black or bone. Full shoe In cool white. square toe In bone or smooth unlined upper
seamless upper with Buckles adjust for white with 18/8 heel. end stacked heal.
colorful trlcot lining. comfort Women's Women's sizes. Bone or whtte In
Women's sizes. slzas. women'aslze ..
899 999 1Q99 99s
1298
Boys' 1D-1~1 1598
Baya' 1D-ll\"1
$5
Prep boys' double
duo: coat and 2 pelra
of matching and
ooordlnattng slacl<s.
Doub I~ or single
breasted coat.
. flsre Jeg slacks.
Rayon/acetate In
fashion colors. Sizes 14-20 reg.,
14-18sllm. 2795
$6
suits: single or
double breasted rayon/acetate with
matching and
coordinating alacka
and reversible vest.
Fashion colors, sizes
3-7 reg., 4-7 slim.
aulbs: single or
double breasted
rayon/acetate with matching and
Coordinating alaci<9
and reversible vest
Spring fashion colors,
aizas 8-12 reg.. slim.
Toddler boys' :!i1>1ece
Eton suit. CO!to.n
double knltln
aaaortad colors. 2T-4T. ·
1 nfant bays' 3-p1a<:e
Eton suit. l'Dlyester
l'l!nn Prest• OMY care lnuaorted
colors. Slzas 1-3.
8pecl1l baJI
Boya'dreasshlrta;
long point collar,
short sleeves.
Pvnn Prest•
polyester/cotton.
Solids. strl~ or
prlnts.Slz~a 6-18. 199
Smart, smooth Cortam• Smart llnlP and buckle
wingtip brogue with treatment on a rich
long lasting Fantred• calfakln sllr><>n with
soles, heels. Black leather oole, rubber
or brass. Men'• sizes. heal. Black,
1299 men·, sizes. 17s9
Bays' flare ieg dress
slacks. Fann Prest• acryllc/reyon/
acetate. Stripes or
solids, aizes 6-18
regularorallm.
5s_s
Demi-boot of rich
boOlmakar brfarwood
gn!ln leathers,' composltton outoole,
rubber heel.
Men·a~ 1399
Boys' links cardigan
eweaterotAcrllans
.acrylic. Ivy, Ocean
Blue, Brass In
sizes B-18.
79s
The smashing demi-boot done In rich
bootmakar grain
ur,pera, leather quarter I nlnga, rubber
heel. Briarwood In
men"aalzes.
1589
CHARGE TH~~AL ES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE.I
(
-. -·---"
·~
•
I I
I
'
Bay Area
Teachers
Walk Ot1t
SAN FRANCISCO iUPll -
A strike by the American
Federation of Te ache rs
disrupted the start of the
Federal Jury h1dicts Alioto
On Bribe, Conspiracy Counts
..
Crackdown.' on Car Noise Level Vrged
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -greatest souroe er noise of-1 n d eovemment npraen.-
Tt&hler mtrict!Dns on th e fense to the creatdt. number tatJvu under the direction or
noise permltted from motor of people," the pantl told tht Ole State PubJlt Ht al th
vehicLes have been recom· Legi.sl1tW't T u e 1 d a Y iD
mended by a spec I a I reporting its findings after a Department. Olltrman wu
legislalive adv Is or y c~m-year·lon1 sr.udy of the pro-Dr. John M. lfes1ep, deputy
mittee. blem. director for environment.al
SEA'M'LE (UPI) -Mayor John J. o ·eonnell. former 5Ull pending against' took. "Noises emitted by motor The committee was made health · 1nd consumer \ pro-
Joaeph· L" Alioto of San Fran-Washlnat.on attorney general; .Both Alio(o, SS, and O'(.on-vehicle$ c o aa·t i tu t e the tu> of scientists, busineumen teetion in the department.
clscO • an'd three former ~ge K. Faler, O'Connell's nell, 52, have lD!lsted the ar-_:_:::::=__:__:__:_;_;__;___::'.__ _ __:__;_ _________ _.: ___ _
Waahlngton at ate offtclala former assistant; and John rangement was.'p.erfectly
were indicted Tuesday by a G. McCutcbeon, former pro-It.gal . Both volWJtarily ap-
school day today 1s pickets _, , ~
marched at th1 entrances of ~Joi.~_...
f~eral grand jury on charges secutor in Pierce County, peared before the grand jury
or bribery, mall [raud and Wash. and aald they cooperated with 'Y·~f ~ "!::-::-conspiracy in 1n alltged $2.3 The charges grew ' out or the federal panel in every tbe city's public schools.
The union said several "SURt,lflSMAft0'90AIC'-90T AT lb.ST 40U'lle C:MP'l.Olf•PI •
million fee -s p 11 t ting ar-Alioto's sharing with O'Connell respect
rangement. and Faler more than $800,000 Alioto, informed of the In·
schools, inch.Kling Commodol'f: ----------
Stockton, ·were unable to open
Alioto, who was flying back of $2.3 million in legal fees dictment after his plane land·
to San Francisco from a he received i.n an antitrust ed. in San Francisco, told
meeting at the White House suit brought for IS Washington newsmen and 100 cheering
when the indictment WB.!I cities and public utilities supporters that the grand jury
Issued, said It was a "!karat districts. The incident oc· investigation was a ''star
fake ," that he would plead curred before Alioto was chamber proceeding."
Don't buy a floor
until you've seen ...
felt ... stepped on the
• because employes refused to
cross the teacher picket line.
School officials had ordered
classes to continue despite the
walkout by the A.FL-CIO union
which represents about 1,800
of the school system's 4,600
teachers. The Wlion said other
labor groups, including
maintenance and cafeteria
Workers. were resepcting the
picket lines.
"We've got a good strike
going," said an A FT
spokesman shortly after the
opening-time of the schools.
"We have pickets at all the
schools and some of them will
have to shut down."
Teachers Union President
James Ballard ordered the
walkout because or failure or
the school district to make
any sizable headway towards
establishing a master agree;_
ment for teachers.
Representatives of the union
stalked out of a meeting with
school district officials Mon-
day, accusing the district of
refusing to talk about strike
issues.
Among the issues troubling
t!M! AFT were alleged failure
of the district to adhere to
commitments on reducing the
size of classes, elimination of
teacher preparation periods,
limiting pay raises, threats
to the dental plan and
rollbacks on previous gains
!uch as provisions for sab-
batical leaves, feache.rs aides
and reimbw"sement for loss by
vandalb:m.
Gov. Reaga1i
'Not Sold'
On 18 Vote
SACRAMENTO !UP!) -
Although Gov. Ronald Reagan
is not .sold on the l .. year-old
vote, leg.lslators p r e s s e d
forward today with plans t.o
add California's speedy
ratification to 1 consUtuUonal
amendment lowering t h e
voting age in all elections.
Reagan accused Congress of
Infringing on states' rights
Tuesday by approving the con-
1titutional amendment.
Thirty-eight states must
ratify the amendment before
it can become law.
Two ratification resolutions
now are pending in the
California Legislature -one
by Senate Democr1Uc caucus
chairman Mervyn M. D)rmally
of Los Angeles and· another
by Assemblyman Henry Wu-
man (0-Los Angeles).
Dym.ally said he hopes to
push his resolution through the
Lec;islaturt by Easter.
Reagan said he would prefer
submitting the issue to present
CalUorniA voters so they can
decide whether 1&-year-olds
should vote in all elections.
Commenting on the con·
gressionol action. Reagan told
his "''eekly news conference
Tuesday: "It is just another
one of those Instances where
the federal government has
imposed on what I think is
11: state's right -the right
to detennine its own voting
qualifications."
The U.S. Supremt Court has
ru1ed that IS-year-olds can
vo~ in fedtral elections. but
the minimum age for voting
In California still is 21.
Reagan s a I d he has "an
t1pen mJnd" but "I can't say
tb1t I've been sold com-
pletely" on allowing 1&-year-
oldl .to vote.
Tate Jury
Locked Vp
In Threat
innocent and expected to be elected mayor in 1967. He is "The only thing missing was
"vindicated.'" a Democrat. Madame Lafarge and her
U.S. Attorney Stan Pitkin The government said the in· needles," said the mayor. "If
said the defendants will be dictments were not cnnnected I can be indicted for sharing
'arraigned on tbe nine-count with charges by Look fees in a legal case, then
indictment elthei' Thursday or Magazine that Alioto had con-every Republican senator who
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Friday. nections with organized crime. has taken a rere.rral fee should
Tbe jurors at the Tate murder
1
__ ,,,._;::g_ra_nd_.:.ju_ry:_al_so_in_di_ct_•_d_AI_i_o1o_h_a._•_l_12_.s_m_i_ll_io_n _li_be_l_be_in_d_Jc_1e_d_.'_' -----I
trial were under ballilfs'
guard again today • ft e r
Charles Manson threatened
"murder and bloodshed" if be
gets the death penalty.
Judge Cbarles H, Older
ordered them sequestered and
locked up nigbUy in a hotel
Jest they read or bear abOul
Manson's warning before they
reach a verdict in the punish-
ment phase of the trial.
The-~year-old convicte~
murderer made bis remark
to deputy district attorneys
Vincent Bugliosl and Stephen
Kay Tuesday while they were
talking with him through a
wire mesh screen in the door
of an anteroom adjoining the
courtroom.
"If I get the death penalty,
there's going to be nothing
but murder and bloodshed
afterwards because I'm not
going to take it," he said.
Kay repeated the remark
to newsmen during 1 recess
and a short time later the
district attorney's office peti-
tioned Older to sequester the
jury.
Bugliosi was winding up his
closing argument for the death
penalty today with the case
expected to go to the jury
Thursday.
He said lht three women
defendants had lied on the
witness stand to save Manson
and that other followers still
free who testified also were
lying.
"I wouldn't be surprised tf
ailer the trial they don't go
up to San Quentin and offer
to go· tO the gas chamber
for him," Bugliosi said.
New Judge
• For· Angela
Case 'Eager'
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -
A suburban judge took over
the Angela Davis murder case
today with a pledge to ~nduct
1 trial that the black militant
ind the community will feel
is "fair."
Judge A.Jan A. Lindsay of
nearby Alameda County was
assigned Tuesday by the
California Judicial Council to
hear pretrial proceedings for
Miss Davis and her a>defen·
dant, Ruchell Magee.
They are. charged with
murder, kidnaping and con·
spiracy in a shootout Aug.
7 at the Marin County
Courthouse that left four
pt!'"SOOS dead including a
judge.
The council assigned
Lindsay to Marin County for
90 days. but said the period
could be "'tended.
More than just a
pretty face.
At one very pretty . 1188 pnce. .
-------
For ladies:
Dav 'n date watch
with goldtone cne.
----~ ~-~-. 0 0 Q_Q __ -~c-,~~r0:~~:~~:~~~~~~~~~~ -------------
l\nne111
fine JeweltY
All-sport calendar
watch with movable
bezel.
Telephone dial
watch with Roman
numerals.
Dav 'n date watch
with bronze face and
goldlone case.
Available at the following stores: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD
CHUlA VISTA DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY-SAN DIEGO FULLERTON
HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTClAJR NEWPORT BEACH
Cushioned Coronelle
@'mstrong
'n
PRESS TM
EXCELON.TILE
~t,a:t~~~g
~~ ~J...-1!
For a long time
Penneys has said-
the best vinyl floor
you could buy is
Armstrong
coronelle.
Now 1hat floor has
been made even
betterl lt"s
cushioned for comfort All
exclusive
Cushioncol'd beck
softens every step .••
makes the floor feel
warmer to the
touch ••• makea your
home quieter
because Cushioned
COronelle absorbs
impact noises.
Penneys has it
in a choice
of 4 colors.
Reg. 10.99 sq. yd.
11ow799•
oq. yd.
'Sale prioes apply to
stock on hand onty.
Now, e'f91'1 lll'I •IMhumtls
homemaker can put down•
beautiful. new tne tloOr-
and wlth no muu or i.ar
You just peel off the
paper (Place 'n Press has
its own adhesive right on
the back) .•• p!Ke the tile
in position .•. press....and
ifs on the floor to stay.
Ifs that easy! And it
doesn't cost a "forb..lie
either. Now29¢ 1J~X12"
Do it youraell and ...... r ...
Ooa9'x12'ftoor
for only 532.
l\nnelft
The judge said he was .. pleased" with the. ap-Com• in or phone: FASHION ISLAND. N•wport C•nt•r,
pointment and would start HUN-TINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach. Buy it on Penneys Time Paym ent Pla11•
ORANGE "THE CITY" RIVERSIDE VENTURA Charge iL
Teviev;ing records of the casel--:~===============;:==============:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::~====~====~:::=~~~~ tod~. Lind.say. 54, said heJ
"'ill work nights and this
weekend before setting a date
for further hearings.
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COMPOUNDED DAfLY AND ,AID QUAltTOLY,•
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Paaabook; No Minimum.
HOLLYWOOD iAPI -An
Alka Sellt.tr commercial in
which a chW'lk)' Julian com·
plains, "Mama Mil. that·sa
10me spicy meatball," was
named 'l\leldly the lelevlslon
Wff:Pftl.kes wlnner in the
I a t emat10111.I Bro1dcasUn1
AwudJ.
'lb< Hollywood Radio a n d
Televlllon Soclety sponsors
tht "Sptk.e" awardt, the 1d-
lnln'1 counlt:rpert of the
movie Ott.an.
The radio JWtepstakts win·
ner wat I.he "You've Got a
Lot to Uve'' commercial
ttria done by tht Batten,
Banoa, Duntlne and Oaborn ,.
advertising agency for Pepsi
Cola.
Doyle Dane Bembach did
the. A.lka Seltz.er commer~lal.
The society bonor«I Flip
Wilson, sW" of a televi!iion
~medy show, as man of the
year in broadcastinf.
Ttleviskln commercial
awards included :
Live act ion : Young
America, Pepsi Cola ; fishin1
Contest, Polaroid.
Animation: Evolution, Levi
Strauu: &: Co.
Conlbinatln n : Billy,
Eastman Kodak Co.
Pub le Servlct: Hotoe
IANTA ANA LOAN ll!RVICE AGENCY:
1905 N. M•ln St.• (714) 547·11257
• IANTA MONICA: 711 Wlllhlrt Blvd.• 393---0748
•UH PEDRO: 1oth & Paclrlc •131-23(.1 · * WUT COVINA! E11Uand Shopping ct~
•PANORAMA ctn: M111 Van Nll)'ll Blvd .• en.1111
• TAllZAHA: 11751 Ventura BouieVlrd • ~14
*LDNO l!ACH:3rd l Locutt•Q7·7481
"*Opell Sltwdlyi-9 IM to I pni Dalty Holrl-911'1'1 to 4 pnl
ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION
With a $2,500 belance in your savings
account, you ire 111gib1e to become
a member. Subttantlal savlngs are
l\ltilabli wf'len purchasl~ many Items
including automobllea, furniture,
appliancea, jewelry. Plus many
tree aervlces -money orders,
ule deposit boxoe, et~
5.25o/0 -5.39o/•
Three Month C.rtlflcate; No Minimum.
5.75°'•-5.920/o
On•YearC1rtifle1te; $1,cx:xl Mtnfmum.
6,Q0°/o.6,18o/o
Two--VearCertlficate; SS,000 Minimum.
• EH.ctln Annual E1rn /ng1
! TO s20,ooo
Movies, The Ruth Gotllcbol_ _ _::::::====================::::=================================:::'.~Kidney f oundatioa.
For The
Record
Marine Violated Pt•obatlon Nixon _Fund Sharing
Breakdown Revealed To Face Tustin T1·ustees Expel Tl11·ee
DU solutions
Of Marriage
Death l\'otlre•
<
Court
SANTA ANA -An Orafllle
County Superior Court judge
baa refused to dismiss long
standing murder charges fl led
against a Huntington Beach
Marine and ordered the defen·
dant to face trial May fi.
Judge Robert Corfman set
that date and a pretrial hear-
ing of April 22 after reviewing
revived allegations t h a t
Marine Gary Rayp, 21, fed
cocktails to an infant.
Judge Corfm an's decision
reopens Superior Court action
that ended last Jan. 15 when
Judge Byron K . .f..1c?\Ul\an sent
Rapp , of 2222 Oelaware St..
back to West Orange County
Municipal Court for possible
action on reduced charges.
Rapp and the bab y's
mother, Carmelita Reynolds,
21, were booked on murder
charges last July 24 . Charges
against .f..1rs. Reynolds were
later dismissed.
It was alleged that Rapp
fed the child a vafiety of
alcoholic beverages while the
woman worked in a nearby
bar.
Tustin Fears
Jani Packed
Classroo1ns
TUSTIN Overcro1~·ded
classrooms are forecast for
the Tustin Union }figh School
District next year.
Superintendent W i 1 I i a m
Zogg said enrollment pro-
jections for the district's four
high schools show there will
be more: Stul:fents attending
next fall than the schools were
built to house.
Univ~rsity H i g h . the
di strict's newest with a
capacity of t.200 will enroll
1,446, Zogg said. Mission Vie-
'PUSTIN -Tustin Union
IUgh School D~trict trustees
have ordered expulsion of
three students due to violation
of probation.
Two boys and one girl were
expelled from Mission Vlejo,
Tustin ilnd Foothill h i g h
s c h o t I s , Superintendenl
Bum Check
Artist Sent
To Prison
SANTA Af\A -Bad check
artist Darrell Graf Hafen has
been se nt lo state prison for
one to 10 years for dumping
$37,000 worth of worthless
checks on the san Clemenlt
branch of I.ht Bank o f
America.
Orange County S u p t r I o r
Court Judge Charles Bauer
imposed tht sentence on Ule
43-year-old Salt Lake City in-
vestment counselor after re.
jecting Hafen's plea that he
be freed on bail pending filing
of an appeal.
Judge Bauer ordered the
prison term ovtr Hafen's
voluminous vbjections after
studying a report compiled by
Chlho Guidance Center of-
fi cials who studied Hafen for
a thrtt-monthd i a g n ost ie
term.
Hafen was arrested in Los
Angeles last July 13 when FBJ
agents joined San Clemente
police in the search for the
man who passed $37,000 worth
of bad checkS at a local bank.
It Q.•as .teitified during
Hafen 's sentencing that he
was adcused in Salt Lake City
three ye ars ago of issuing
y:orthless c h e c k & totalling
nearly $1 million.
CLEMAI jo. built for 2,000 studentsi
1t0Dert J. Ctem••· "'' n. ot 1C110 Ffld. will have 2.?.85 in the fall .
Deputy District Attorney
Joe Dickerson told Judge
Bauer that Hafen had a long
record of check frauds and
questionable business prac·
tices both in this nation and
in Central and South America.
.,,.1 AYt.. Cot!l ..,....,,.. C.te or d••th. Tu 1. H" h •· 2 112 M1rcto 17. ,S11n1l~1d bY p1ru>ll, Mr. 1nd S ln lg expec... •
""'"· Mlcn111 ci ..... 11: two btol""'"' plus othe~ enrolled in special
Mlc11111 . Jr. 1n11 C..rv: !l111r. J0111 d F thill ·u ''""'''· v1,n•t1ot>. ,.,,,.11n1, w 11kliH programs an oo WI
c 111..e1, un111 ' PM. llowrv, Thurld•v. enroll 2,417, Zogg said.
1 PM, w111c11H c11.,,.1. Rt<1ullm MH.. To gain "a UI to 11 percent
Frl'"Y· t AM. SI, J01cto!m1 Cllllelk c11ur~. wltn F•~r Tllom11 Ntvln1 space utilization" the district -----~-------(
oui.e1.1tno. lf'li.tmt<'ll, Hoi..-•~111ci..r may put two or more or the Ctr>'11l1r)', WnJcllff (:Mpel ¥orlWrY1 .....,.ii. OlrfC10•1.' • schools on a seven period day,
Low11:Y the superintendent said.
Nori Tltl!Qlr,nct Lowrv. Silt Sluaft ":;===========::; Or.. Hun!lnt110n 811cll. O•I• of d•1th, 1.;
M1rch 72. Survived by ion•, Glenn,
Ernnl, C•rroll Ind C1rl Lawry; daU9h·
a r1, V1lm1 Lied, IC11h1r1,.. Trundtll
1nd Al,... H..,111nde1. Strvlc11, Thurld1y.
1 PM, Ptell. F1mllv Co!onl11 1'u111r1I
"""'· MOL I N
H..,mln Mo!tn. J)5·N AY1nld1 C11fl!lf,
L•111n• H~ll, Survlvld by wll1, MM.
,.rlvote 11rvli:11 will bl htk:I ThurS<:t•Y·
"•clllC VIN CNttl, 1 PM, wltt! llev.
8'11<1 kutrll ol!ld•TIJIG. PrlW1t1 lntt r·
fntnl will lollow. P1dlk Vl1w MorTu·
1rv, Dlr11etot1.
KIDS LOVE
UN CLE LEN
Saturdays in
The DAILY PILOT
llOllHSOH
Svlvl1 H. 11(1(1\N.On. Alli 1J, nf IOJ Hun!· ll::===========:='.-------------1 lnt!011 "'v• .. Huntlnelen 811d!. 0.11 or r "~11n, M•rch n. 5urvl¥1d bv hlltbM•d,
l •m; two IOlll. M11I 8. Jollnl!ofl, Hun!·
i 1 lh1c/11 Sl111tord l . JOIM1lon,
1 • "•"<"; ll>rlt 1r111dcftlllh"en, Ltt
Ind ll:Olll ld Jd1n1IOM1 / 5.,.. A1"1r. $HY·
lc:1 win bl' held TllurM11y, II 11.M,
Sml1t11 Ch1ptl. ·En1 ..... 111n1nt, Wnlml,.,.
sll'r M-111 P1rli.. $mlth1 Morlu1rv,
Dire<: tot I. JWIPT
ltOY It. swltl. Av• •1, of 2•u '•nt1 "'"'
""'""' (0111 Mlll. CH!1 of dNl!'I, M1rdl ll. SurvlvM 11¥ wli... Goldll l dlUlhltr,
Mrs. DorolhY St>'fdlf", of Plonftr Town,
C1lll.; thrH brotrotr•· Jim, cl l.•n·
wood: Frink, OrHOf\I Wiiford Swll'I,
td1no; lov• 1111.n. Mro. Cl1r• J1ml1011,
W••~lno!on: •n1t• Holt, Monl1111: Ev•
I Yilr. Nerw•lk; Vt•~ McM11r r1y, Nrl·
1<1• Strvlcts. Tllurld•v. l ~XI PM. ••II
l ro&dwlY Cft•Pll• wltll 111¥. Brue•
Kurrie 0Ulcl•lln9. lnt1rm1nl, H•rbor
ltHI Mttnorl•I P1rk, lt!I 8rc>..:IW•Y
Mortu1r•, Olr1ct11n.
TOLL•Y
N>Mm• R. TolltY. lMJ Anaftllfl'I A••··
Cl>lll M"I. 0•11 of dltll'I, M•~h lJ.
SUN!YM DY hu1i..nd, W1ll1r; d11111Mff,
Mr.. P1Trlcl1 Ann 1t1n1 of Stn l em•r·
dlno1 two 10'11, Midi••' D. TolltY. St•I·
Tie;' Tl'>Ol'nll w. Toll••· (Diii M•H;
1unj. Mfi. Mlbel SnYdt r, Co111 MtH.
Ro .. rv •• PM tofl!gllt, Wldn...WY, Blfll
C111t1 M4111 C!\1Pl'l. lleaultfl'I MtH.
TllundlY, t AM, SI. }Olchlml C11l'>Olk cnurcll. 111!•rment, Ml. c11v1nr c-..
terv k cremtn!o. ~tml!Y wv•nll lr>oll
wlshlflt 1• mMt m""°'l1I conlrl11Utlon1,
,1H1t co11lrll!U!I Ill ti..lr f1¥0rllt chl r· !,.... 11111 (Olli Mill Mertu•rv, OlftC·
tou.
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4%7 E. 171h St., Costa ~tesa ......... • lSLATl ?\fORTUARIES
Coron• del Mar , . OR S.J450
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tlt Broadwlt)'. Coll.I M~11
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BEACH MORTUARY
1715 Laguna Canyon Rd.
4M-1415 • p ACIFIC VIEW
~tEMORIAL PARK
Ctmetery J\1ortuary
Cbaptl
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Newport Btach, CalUornla ..... ,.. • PEEK FAMILY
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HOME
7801 Bol5a Ave.
We1tmlnster US.UZI • SMITH'S MORTUARY
G'I ~lnln SL
m-cslt
Huntln1toa Beach
fashion Mate·~;n..7!:arr P<lrtable sewing " :i--...::i
lllllChlne by Singer
with handy carrying
case.I.lends, darns
maxes bunonhoies.'...
all al this dollar-
slrelching saving!
$88
Reg.$99.95
SAVE s11 9s
SINGER EXCLUSIVE ~
STEREO ALBUM
BURT BACHARACH
& FRIENDS $129 ONLY
The Singer 1 to 36* Credi! Plan helps you hav•
th ls machine now-within your budget.
For addrtss of Singer Sewlnliil Cent~r nearest you,
ste whilt pages under SINGE R COMPANY
..,. ~tltl'tl:SlllOE~COM'NN
SINGER
COSTA MISA -lrlli.I A Sllflfll-, s..i1-CMU 11'!.lll\ t*t4U
COST• M'I"' -Uot fflr ...... I ""'" Hl .... t (tfllff, Kl t•l1'1
HUNTINOTOH ll,ll(M -lelft9" II I HCll, M\Hltillf""' •lldi C111fff1 f'7·1 .. I OltANOE -tt \1111-•111, "TM (lry" Clfltff, IO•"*
•AltDlll •1tO'll -ffU C:M"""" Orll"tl Cailfl'T 1'1•11, 1•4111
William Zogg said. Each had
been previously suspended· for
violation of district policies
drug USe. had been readmit:.
ted and subsequently li'k>Jated
school rules; Zogg said.
The board Monday approved
the fim rea.c:Ung of a pollcy
railing for expulsion of
students for use or t 8le on
or off campus of "narcotics,"
or o t h e r hallucinogenic
drugs."
The policy also provides that
"any student who is involved
in illegal drug abuse for the
secnnd time shall be expelled
Crom the dblrlct,"
Zogg aald the PQlicy was
simply •11 wrKiJI&. ol \he polic}I
that has tieen in effect in
the district. ft p'r e'v Ides
guidance to admtniBlralors in '
dea ling with drug users," he
added. ' ·
TI1e Education code gives
;a school board authority to
suspend, expel or subject a ;===========:;
student t<> "other disciplinary
action."
The p<>Hcy must undergo 11
second reading , before • the
board before · it i1 officially
adopted.
LOCAL
No •th., 11ew•p•p•t t•ll• yo11
rn•r•, .... ry d•v. •bout wh e1'1
9•i119 011 i11 th• Gr••*•• Or1 11t •
Ce1d th•11 tli1 DAILY' rlLOT.
SANTA A~A -President
Nixon's $2 bUU-Oft revenue
sharing proposal Would bring
an estlmated $9.5 million to
the Anaheim-Santa A n ·a •
Garden Grove metro"°lltM
statlstical area, fed er a I
figures lndlcate.
O! lhe $9.5 mUUon, Costa
Mesa would get $50t,000, Hun·
tinglon Beach $608,0QO and
Westminster $400.000.
The bulk of the revenue
would gO" to Santa Ana. $1.5
million ; Anaheim. $1.2 mi!Hon,
ind Garden Grove, $796,000.
The formula determining
eacll arta 's share Is biaed
on popul1Uon, overcrowdlq
and hou1in1 conditions,
Of the fund3 propooed for
allocation lo the Orange coon: '
ty stetls!.lcal area, more titan
U million are unusigned.,
Those fu"ds would lt •
allooaled at the dlscretlOI\ of
the Housing and U r b a n
D e v e lopment Depanment
(HUD).
Other county allocation• lrt-
clude Buena Park, $441,000 ;
Fullerton, $556,000 and Oraaa•
1456.000.
• Look how we've
underpriced our underthings.
Reg. 2.75
B-C cups.
O cups.. Reg. 3.50
NOW 2 for SO
Reg. $3 e.c cups.
2tor$5
Reg.$3
..... BcupS.
Reg. 3.50
A-8-C cups.
While & colors
$3
Reg •. $4
Ml·Ccups.
White & nude. A;'!;
s5
Reg. $6
S-M·L·Xl.
White.
s5
Reg. $7
S-M·L-XL
White & colors.
•
Sale!
Save on our
Adonna·
foundations.
Seom ,,.., bra wlth 100'.4
Da<;rt!I> "°"""ter ~
Eia.ticmid w1111 ttyltll1f
· (ytra~ ~x. B-C,
32·38. .
!leg. $4 llOW $3
GartsrteM ..,...,/SjlMdex/
rubber girdle. Wl>Ha &
nude. Sizes s-M-L·XL.
Rog.SSNOW$4
·Soft conlour llra ol t OO'llo
nylon with potyajter fiber·
fill. ElasUclzed wlll1 nylon/
Lycra<t spand~x. A·S-C t11ps.
Reg; S4 NOW $3
Garterless paniy girdle
'ol nyfon/Lyc:taS epandax.
Y(hile f< nude. S-M-1.-XL
Reg.$1NOW650
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
ennelfl
-
•
I ,
l
'
10 DAILY PILOT Wedntsd1y, M1rt~ 24, 1~71
By Phil lnterlandi Nixon Said Thriving on Work ,-----L-00 -----i
golf but now finds thla too assistant.! -Dr. Stanle}' H. With them they carry the 'V\" ~ ~ w i I h a Nu r. n ', WASHINGTON (UPI)
President N i 1 o n is in
rtmarkably good health and
eee.ms lo thrive on hi! job.
He has not been sick since
taking ofltce 26 month! ago.
At the age ol 58, hl.s blood
pressure Is normal and his
weight is steadUy between 170
and 174 pounds.
He agonizes over many of
the decisions he must make,
but Jong ago has learned t.o
cope with such suffering. The
only medication he has taken
since assuming offlce has betn
some antibiotics to cure a
mild care of bronchitis last
time-consuming . Bear -0f lhe Alr Force or life-sustaining e q u 1 pm e n t t .U tfl"')/ ,,,.,,,,, • , I"']' A,•# \J
Sometimes now he jo1s 1(1 Dr. William M. Lukash of the ne~ssary to deal with any f ~~auM 7,,r,,JAN"~ ~
place. But his favorite ex· Navy -are with the PreSl· forese eable emergency. . d A'--'' A "ce cream I
ercise is swimming, outdoors dent everywhere he goes. At Once a year the President f .an Wftw 1 .
and in salt water. He so leasl one of them is ne ver goes to Belhesda Navy • M•lh •Sund•••• Sod•1 • S""'"' Spl.h
dislikes indoor pools that he more than minutes away from Hospital in suburban t ~~D feat•rl111 -M-c•d•flllla Hwt le• Cr''"' f
gave up 1he White Hou.se pool him. Maryland for a thorough f /A ~
used by every president since When he is in public places, physical and periodically
Franklin D. Roosevelt and one of them Is at his elbow. Tkach checks his blood pres· I
made into a press room. Jn motorcades one rides in sure .
on ~\shetr~g:s t~w~o:~~ul~r~~ ~:ro~r h~ir~i~rts bea~;d p~:~ a ~~/~~ a~:[:in:a!r~i!. ~~·~ I \ lllJJ ~J S LAGUNA HILLS PLAZA. J
California and frequently one of the three has beeo never had a phys!ca] dis· I t1 ij JJ EL TORO (N••t 1 .. Vo11'•) 130·27CIO 1
takeslongwalksonthebeach there ahead· of him to order any more majOr than ---------------
in front of his vacation homes determine what medic a I a broken arm he suffered as:l----------'------------
at Key Discayne and San facilities are available and a congressman when he lrip-
Clemente. what the best routes are for ped and fell while carrying
spring. Tkach or -0ne of h i a reaching them. his daughter, Tricia.
So says his doctor, Brig. -------------------------'-----------------------------
Kids Like to Ask Andy
:; •• ••
"Quick, let's take off. Here comes one of the rea!'Klns
they put emergency buttons in these thing'I!.."'
~ . .r--• .. ~· ~ ~
~ :· :: .• . ' ' , .. , • .• .• . • . .. .• .. .. .. • • • " • • • ~ •
CHECKING •UP•
Average ;w.orker.
l(ills Hou1· a Day
By L. ftf. BOYD what are the chances she'll ~ ;· Mo R E M A RR IE D turn out to be a full-Oedged
~ COUPLES split up in Houston, star?" A. Just one in JD,000,
J .~Texas, than just abou t statistically, now .... Q. ~ : anywhere. For a city its size, "What animals, I mean be..
·: ; 1 mean. Why is a mystery. sides the primates, have but a ~ But our Love and War man '! : notes the divo rced partners single set of ma m m at y
~ : evidently don't mu ch like their glands?'' A. Elephants. Been
1-·liberty, after all. Among those gelling too many elephant ~ ·sentimental greeting cards quest ions lately, don't yo u
t. : printed up lo commemorate think? I don't want to talk
·· : no special day in particular, bo l th ~ . a u em anymore .... > : one of the best-selling in Q. "Don't more than half the ~ : Houston reads merely: "This businessmen still wear white ~ : is no better and it's much shirts to the office very day?" ~ : lonelier ." A. Far less than haU do &O,
~ : rr IS THE MOON CHILD the shir!·makers report.
~ ; FELLOW born under the sign DID OUR LA NG U AG E ~ : of Cancer, says our Planet r , k J\.1AN say "shipmanship'' is ~ ! man. who is most apt lo la e the only word that begins and $ : up cookery as a hobby · · · ' ends with the same four let·
'j '."EVERY TL\fE I meet a new ters? "I submit 'Pago Pago',"
~ r Interesting man," writ:s a writes a St. Louis subscriber.
!';femin ine' subscriber, Accepted. But it's borderline
;!-; discon solately, "either he's ~ : married or 1 am." Sad • . . • • .•• HOW J\.fUCH TIME do
" ' you waste on the job~ Don't -;. : THE 1\1 A R J J U AN A PED-tell, it's none of my business.
~ ~ DLERS, police say, admit Merely want to mention one
·: · they find their best markets of those efficiency experl!: ~ among medical sch o o I says his latest studies show
; • &tudents. the average worker kills more ~ "1"0W TAKE a good look than an hour a day just walk·
/ at the ends of your ing aroond. ~ eyelashes:· said wjse -0ld
;. . Cedric Adams. "If they're get-FIFTEEN YEARS AGO. the / statistics show. the average ~: : ting thin at the outer ends, automatic washing machine ;~ '. it denoles la1iness. '' Wise old required the attention of a
: : CedriC' Adams said a lot of repairman three times a year.
:: : things like that. For instance : Today said maC'hine calls for
·: : .. Short straight eyel ashes in· such service only once every
·: : dicate nervousness." And : "If four years. Mariufacturers are
.; '. vour eyelashes are gracefully pretty proud of this. Don't '.! ' Curved, without much doubt blame them.
:~ : yoo're a C'alm person ." Wi se ·~ · -0\d Cedric Adams did not )'our ques tions and com·
: : reveal his S<lUrccs . ments are toelcomed a11rl ,,. UJi/l be used in CHECKING
~ . CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. UP w11Prever possible. Ad·
Gen , Walter Tkach, who heads
a team of three physicians,
two nurses and two medical
technician s that cares for the
health of the First Family.
Tkach, an Air Force veteran
or Hungarian descent who
grew up In Pennsylvania and
served eight years in lhe
White House as lhe assistant
physician to President
Eisenhower, says President
Nix-0n is an extremely well·
disciplined man who seldom
relaxes but thrives on the dai·
ly challenges he face s.
He appears unlikely to suf·
fer a heart attack, one of
the more common ailments
of men his age who have
Jived much of their lives under
intense pressure .
A self-impooed diet he rigid·
ly follows ket:ps both his
weight and blood lipides. the
fatty substan~s that invite
heart ailments, low .
Tkach, who traveled widely
with Nixon when he was vice
president and witnesses his
fam-0w kitchen debate with
Soviet Premier Ni kit a
Khrushchev in M o s c o w ,
estimates the President
averages little more than six
hours of slet!p a night.
He never naps in the af·
ternoon and quite frequently
has lunch brought to is
desk. By his G w n estimate
Nixon eats both breakfast and
lunch ln about JO minutes.
Unlike his two most recent
predecessors, he never cat·
naps on the long f\ighl!: he
-0ften lt1kes. But during his
weekend visits to Camp David
and Key Biscayne, Fla., he
trequently sleeps in late.
"The -0nly thing rm con·
cerned ab-Out is physical ex-
ercise. I wi sh he would get
more ," Tkach said in a recent
interview.
The President u s e d to
bowl two or three ti me 1 a
week-there are bowling al·
leys fo r his use both at Camp
David and in the Execulive
·Office Building adjacent to the
WNte House -but nciw he
doesn·t make It as often as
once a week .
When he first came into
-0fice, he occasi-0nally played
Attention Investors
ti•.oot Lll'l U•UUIANCI
for •• low ••
$21.80 Month~*
.M "'"" 846•1245 r"• <•11
or writ•
ll!CHARD ,.AllAN
Jl"llt•rMI FlfttlKl•t A~wlHr
P.O. Box 2101
Huntington leech
C1llf. 92647 •• ,, lJ
Who Care•?
No -0lher newspapor in the
world cares about your com-
munity like your community
daily newspaper does. It's
the DAILY PILOT. ~ : ''When a young girl goes to dress /etiers t.o L, M. Bnyd.
~ ·'Hollywood specifically to seek P. 0. Box 1875. Newport
: ~h~•:r~fo~rt~u~,,~;~,~th~e'_'.m~"~'~ie:•~·~B~e~a~ch~.~G~o~h~1:··~9~26~6~0:·~~~=====:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:
"
HANDSOME TRJO of BOOKCASES
OPEN SUNDAYS 12 TD S
DIMENSIONS 32"x79"x 13"
--
' ,<!
" '
20%off Penncratt®paints.
Don't just sit there,
paint so01ething.
'
" I'·' _,. .. ·" .;, .. ."·~•"';~
'
lrrrm
Special buy, 2888
Penncnft • so pc. Yi· •ml \It· driwe
aocket Ml. Comes in slurdy plastic box..
Great gift Idea for the handyman.
Pieces If sold sep1r1t1ly (tool boJ:
not lncNded) totil 47.48
·~ •
Quart
Reg. Sale
Gallon
Reg. Sale Name
2.49 1.99 7.49 5.99
1.99 1.59 5.99 4.79
penncnn• Colorfast lnteriorl.atex 3.99 3.19
Penncnift' Decorator Interior Latex. 2.29 1.83 6.99 5.59
Penocrat1 • Accent Interior Latex 2.69 2.15 7.99 6.39
Penocratt • Noo-Ye!low•og Ceiling Latex 2.49 1.99 7.49 5.99
Pef!OCral\' Texture F1l'lish Latex 3.99 3.19
Peft'Cl'all • one.coat Plus Latex SemK>los$ Enamel 2.99 2.39 8.99 7.19
Perwuert ~ Non-Yelowing Late1 $ernt.Gloss ENmel 1.99 1.59 5.99 4.79
2.69 2.15 7.99 6.39
2.9\l 2.39 8.99 7.19
Penncnrt' One-Goat Ex11!1fiot Latex 7.49 5.99
Pemcntn.' Self-Primiflg Exteriol'Lalcx 5.99 4.79
Pa•aalt' One-Coat Plus Latex Ext~TtSn El'\arnel 3.39 2.71 9.99 7.99
3999
Penncraft port8ble lt*•rer.
For fast and even aPc:>'ication
of paint Excellent for shop and
hobby work. 3 amp. motor.
115 volts. 60 cycle.
6.99 5.59
449
Penncnn.• Wood Grafn Antiquing l(lt. comes with everything you need
including brushes a~ plastic:: mitt.
ENY to appty •.• use right O'Wlf'
old finb.hea. wipainted woodot metal.
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
enne111
U11 PeMty• lime payme•t pl•• a+ these 1+ores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Ce•ter;
Shop Sund•y. too, 12 lo 5 P.M.
HUNTINGTON CENTER , Hun+inglon B .. ek
•
~.
·--
. -.
.. ·~=· ,;;:-: ..... ·••·· ·:::: _ .... .•.. . .
' J J PILOT-ADVERTISE R S Wtdntsday, March 24, 2q71
STARTS THURSDAY 10 A.M •
I
END-OF-MONTH
COM'E EARLY, LIMITED SIZES
QUANTITIES AND COLORS-HUNTINGTON CENTER ONLY
WOMEN'S SHOES
Gre•t styles
A1sorted colors NOW
0fl9. '·''
3.88
LADIES STOCKINGS Cireatly Redlicff
I 00 i'. Nylon in colors 2/44¢
One 1i1e fi ts all NOW
GIRLS ASSORTED SLEEPWEAR
Greotly R1d11cff
Robes, 9owns •nd pajam1t1
AU styles end colors NOW 1,99
GIRLS SHOES
Patent leather
Black on ly
MEN'S SHOES
NOW 2.88
Orig , 14.11
Dressy styles
l imited quantity NOW 10,88
WOMEN'S SHOES
Open toe
Pump styling
WOMEN'S SHOES
Open ~ilty pump
Great for comfort
NOW
NOW
WOMEN 'S BED JACKETS
Nylon
Cool and comfortable NOW
WOMEN'S SHIFTS
Orig. '·''
7.88
Orig. t .tt
7.88
Orig. S.00
3.88
I 00 :t. cotton
Summer colors NOW 2/7.00
GIRLS BLOUSES Orl'J. J.St
Pe nn Prest
Ruffled front, sites 7 and 12 NOW 288
GIRLS BRACELETS
leather and su ede
country look in colort
54" PEARL ROPE
For Easter or eny
Speciel occesion
GIRLS BLOUSES
NOW
NOW
Oriq. l .00
66c
Oriq. 1.00 soc
Orl9. 2.59
Ruffled sleeves and colors
Polyester and cotton, sizes 3-61t NOW 188
INFANTS RUBBER PANTS
Comfort for the little ones 3 100
li mited sizes and quantities NOW for
19 cu. ft. REFRIGERATOR "''•· '"·"
Side by side· Frostless w/lce Meker 44995
only one f loor sample NOW
CONSOLE STEREO AM·FM/FMX
Orl9. 2•t.OO
Sol id state chassis, 3 only, floor 247°"
s•mple. Hours of enjoyment NOW
PSYCHEDELIC LIGHTS or1,. lt.t5
Hook up to Stereo 28''
l ights flash to musi c, fo ur only NOW
BENELLI COBRA TRAIL MOTORCYCLE °''•· 469.00
3S000 I 25cc Engines, '4 speed trans.
Duel Sprocket for treil HOW
BENELL! BARRACUDA MOTORCYCLE
250cc, 5 speed tr•ns.
85 m.p.g.-only one NOW
Or~. 751.0t
40000
GIRLS DRESSES Orif. 1.00 &-6.0t MEN'S SHIRTS o ... , o.;,. NOW
I 2.50 1.88
Dress and sport II 3.88 2.88
So lids and prints NOW 3,88 Various styles and fabrics Solids end Fan cies 111 ... 88 to 5.98 3.88
IV 7.98 5.88
KODACHROME II MOVIE FILM BOYS SUITS AND SPORT DUO'S
Ori9. 4.Jt Pre-school and boys Orl9. 12.fl te II.ti
Hours of memories 1.88 Daylight type NOW Regular and stims 9.88ro 14.88 sixes ). I b NOW
A llOU
MEN'S PANTS Fl••I ledwctio• HOT WHEELS SIZZLERS or1,. 2.t•
Solids and some Fanc ie·s liow2/3.00 Var ious sizes
Super speed 2.22 Assorted model1 NOW
FIRST FLOOR
MINI HITCH Ori9. J.50 .... 4.00
Panti hose
fnclu des repl•cement NOW
WOMEN'S SLIPS O rl9. 4.00
Full and h·alf
Assorfi!d colors and styles NOW 1.88
WOMEN'S SCARVES Ori9. 2.50 le 4.00
Greet a ccessory item
Soft pe1tel coloretion
HANDBAGS
NOW 1.88
Assorted styles 2 88 4 88 Smart colors NOW e TO o
SUEDE HEADBANDS
Decorative acce1sory
Fashion plus
LADIES VINYL BEL TS
NOW
Great color•
Many style• NOW
Ori9. 2.00
Ori9. J.50
1.88
INDIAN PEASANT JEWELRY
Maxi scarf holders
The in items
LADIES BLOUSES
NOW
Ori9. 2.00 /l .DO
1.22
WOMEN'S BLOUSES 0 .1,. 1.00
Acetates and Penn-prest fabrics ~88
limited quantity NOW •
LADIES PLAID PANTS o.;, __ ,.
Acrylic-sm•rt 3 30~
H•ndwash•ble NOW • I~
MATERNITY WEAR :
Tops • pant1 • dresses and
Pant sets· washeble NOW
Orif. 6.00 te 22.00
488 To 1888
MISSES/ HALF SIZE DRESSES
Sprin9 fabrics and
colorations
Orl1111. 10.0D to 11.DO
NOW S88To 11 88
SECOND FLOOR
INFANTS DIAPERS
All cotton
l imited sizes end quantiti11 NOW
INFANTS HOODED SWEATSHIRTS
OrllJ. 1.00
All cotton-sizes I and 2
Ye llow/navy/red combinations NOW 388
INFANTS ASSORTED CLOTHING
Suits, fops end pants
crawlebouts
Orl9. NOW
4.00 to 6.00 2.88
5.00 to 8.00 3.88
NOVELTY CURTAINS on,. 2.11
2_.., • 30". 36" length1
Sheers end solids 200 NOW I"'·
DECORATIVE CALENDAR TOWELS on,. I .OD
Bright colored linen
With hanger-limited quantity NOW sac
FOUR PIECE CANISTER SET
Orl9. 11.tt
Met•I with enamel fin ish
gold, poppy, blue, copper NOW 788
ALL IN ONE CANISTER SET
Ori9. ID.ft
Metal with enamel fi nish
gold, poppy, blue, copper NOW 688
BAMBOO SWAG
Modern design, Yellow enamel/
Yellow shade NOW
ROUND BAMBOO TABLE
Modern design
Grein/yellow NOW
SCj)UARE BAMBOO TABLE
Modern design
Orange/yellow NOW
Otit. Jt.tl
32"
Ori". Jt.tl
32"
Ori". J4.fl
2988
THIRD FLOOR
CUSTOM CHAIR
Great family room chairs
Bleck Vinyl--2 only
DINING TABLE
With leaf -Walnut
One only, floor ••rnpte
DRESSER -SPANISH
Hardwood -f drawers
NOW
NOW
One only, floor semple NOW
Orit. 169.DO
Orl9. 104.00
78°0
Orlt . 2$5.00
188°0
GOLF CLUBS
Byran Nelson 11 pc.
Aluminum shaft, '4 on ly
GOLF CLUBS
Betty Jameson 11 pc.
Alum inum sheft, 5 on ly
EXERCISE GYM
Bert Star
Eitercise set alt in one unit
Or/9, 129.tl
NOW 104"
NOW 8S"
Ori9. 24.ft
NOW 1S88
AUTO CENTER
TIGRE BELT TIRES REDUCED
STEREO TAPE PLAYER J 1tlJ l!Ykl -JO MO!llfh t.,.rnt.e
51?1 . NOW SIU NOW
Portable 8 tr•ck. Home or
Auto-with b•tterie, NOW 68.88 7DD•ll 4/68.00 775,15 4/84.00
73 5•1 4 4/84.00 12 5,15 4/96.oo 125,14 4/96.00
85Sx1'4 4/96.00 84 5" !1~, , .•. T. 0~~:!·~~
. • Wtdntsday, March 24, 1971 s DAILY PILOT ]JI"
GOLF BAG
Sheft saver -Bone color
Large utili ty pocket, only 6 NOW
0,,.. ''·"
1.1.88
PORCH AND PATIO PAINT
For exterior wood surfaces and 3 88
concrete--Various colors NOW •
ASSORTED KITCHEN GADGETS
GNOtlr le41tee4
Large <'l ilort ment of h•ndy helper1 2/ 100
for everyday use. Your choice
MISS UNIFORMS Ori,. I .GO te 1 J.ot
Cotton and blends s 00
Sit.•• 8-I 0-12-limit•d quentity NOW •
JR. SHOP DRESSES and PANTSUITS
Ori1111. 1 J.00 to 25.00
Polyest•r and bonded
Fabrics. Sizes 5-13 NOW 988ro 1788
JUNIOR ANKLE PANTS
Orit-6.00 f'e 11.00
Prints and solids
Sizes 7.( l NOW 488ro 8"
JUNIOR SHOP SWEATERS
~est and cardigan stylas
S.M.L limited quantity
CHECK FILE
light metal tan color
M•kes it ee1y
BOND BOX
Light metal ten color
Good security holder
Orft. t .00 ._ 12.IO
618 Gii NOW TO 0
NOW
-NOW
BAMBOO WALL LAMP Orit-44.H
Yellow with yellow shade
Sets the right mood NOW 35"
BAMBOO TABLE LAMP Ori,. Jf.tl
Green with green shade
Great for an end table NOW 32"
ACRYLIC MUSHROOM LAMP
Gold/ green/black/ or4'ng•
For the modern touch
GLASSES
Zodiac Pattern
NOW
Orft. 19.fl
1S88
Orit. .10
Your set in your sign NOW 3,., 100
GLASSES Orl9. 1.50
Helen• Sherbet ~ Nutmeg ·
limited quantity NOW 2 10< 1oo
BADMINTON POLES
Erire large
Breakdown type
DAIWA REEL
Enam•I cover
l ightweight, Fresh wafer
MARTIN 94
Automatic -fly reel
l imited quentity
SCANNER C. B. BASE
Station entenna. Complete
with hardw'.are end controls
Ori• ),,,
NOW 2"
NOW 8''
°'''· 4.ft
NOW 2"
Orl,. 74.tl
NOW 4911
KEYSTONE MAG WHEELS
Complete with lugs and center 4 for 9900
hub 1-4"-Ford 1nd Chevrol•t
. •
I
I
i:
j Z DAILY PILOT
Attitude Che~kers
~e1v 'ZZOOMM' Program Aids Dro11-out s
' ~ Uy GEORGE LEIDAL
"I. Ot he o.IW P'li.t S_,, ~ Belying ii.a ir"4ii.'>!J1nl title,
i~ZZOOMMM" a :rnoUvational
ogram being tried a t
cNally Continuation School
•jJaC'ts q u i et roneentration
1:-from former school dropouts.
;~ Ne-.·porl·Mesa Un j fie d
'School Dislrict's Hot-Idea (und jll providing ,1 ,600 lo pLll'Cbase
Jhspiralional materials ped·
dlt'd by Success Motivalioa
lllslilu1e of \Vaco. Te1as.,
The course work, frequently
Q5ed by industry to molivate
salesmen, has met \\'ilh sue·
eess in several schools across
: f>e country. Its application
~fl 1\lcNally is !he first use
~4! the materials in Orange
&>uniy schools, ~frs. Laurel ·~itz said. She is a represen·
· ti1:th•e of the firm offering
'the materlals .
. "'Carole Castaldo , con-
!'Jmuation school teacher, said
~~th only live sessions of 60,
·Oompleted. !he dozen random·
~~Jecled tesl sludenls have ~sltown some slight gains in
S(tlludc.
-i:: Tll"o girls and 10 boys aged
ll to 18 ~'ere selected from
tbe Continuation school stu-
<fl;nl body to test the success
at !he program. A similar
ifOUp will not receive the
~se .
•
. : ; Both groups ~·ere tested at :t.ae outset of "ZZOOMMM"
~ behavior characttristics ~d "'iii be tested again to
~ if the program materials
$di.prove self-motivation in
a)Ose taking the course. DAILY ,.1LOT s11n ,.11.i.
;~;Two popul" paperbacks CHANGING STUDENT ATTITUDE S WITH 'ZZOOMMM'
·*Jpplement records. tapes and Teacher C•rol• C•st•ldo He•ds McNair y Testing Plan
'tide maltrials used in the ~a ss room, "PsychCJ... -----------------------!
'1jbernl!tics" and "Think and
(itow Rich."
~y June. the students v<'ill
tilve completed the ~ursework and hopefully have
i. proved their views of
mselves.
n a recent class. students
i',sembled quietly lo hear a
Jjleorded reading of mofiva-
t$Dnal mal.e:rial projected on
tt)e screen.
?·Do you know the difference
1'ft~·een success and failure?"
t~ record droned. "It is a ~tter of attitude .. , you
rdust change your mind to b:li successful."
~ne means of changing
c4Se's mind offered by the
~rding was the suggestion ~ draw up a list of "ob-
~ives for my physical being.
~siona and personal af·
141ts."
f.!ler hearing t h e sug-
.tion, students began their
l.ijJmaking.
~'You"d be surprised at how
npny possessions I don "t
wjnl." one said.
1frs. Ca!!taldo urged the
s~~ents to be honest \\'ilh
tnfir lists,· since no one would
~tJ lo see them. Their purpose i•·:to remind the student!! of
wjat they want. Repeated
gl'nces at them should spur
thim to directing t h e i r
beiiavior in v.•ays lhat will
aid achievement. ~tlendance, a "continual
pqfb!em at continuation
s<!ools," Mrs. Castaldo said,
is · ... one sign of slight im-
priveme.nL One student, who
mGst support his familv. com· . . cs;. in to make up the
··~~1~1M'' coursework
wlSen his job connicts v.·ith the
r@tutar class hour.
t)utside speaker!!, persons
wiJ}l success stories, also <1re
ln~ted to share their ex·
P1!iences ~·ith the drop-outs.
' ,,.
tialibu
~
fights Too
iesidents of Malibu. who,
!;Newport Beac h residents,
a fighting lhe Pacific Coast
F v.·ay, will hold a public
J. ting March 29 to disc uss
l widening of Pacific Coast
Ht way in their area.
meeting will be held
at 7:30 p.m. in the Santa
Millea Civic Auditorium and
is ~sponsored by the State
i ·on of Highv.'ays.
r alternate plans for
w ing the hlghv.·ay be.t1o1:een
I Robert E. McClure Tunnel
in ant.a Monica to the Malibu c.iliYon. will be discussed.
f HAT DID
flf'E HEA R
P,l;TERBOROUGH. England
(All ) -Every time: housewife ';! Appleton went for a
Vt"• she btard mystery
f teps behind btr but could
~DO ooe. The faster she w..,i, tht fast<r lht Jlboslly ""lild p<Jrsurd her.
On Dean's List
Coast College Lauds
70 Ho11or Stude1its
Orange Coasl College has
named 70 students from cities
along the Orange Coast to
the fall semester dean's list.
The area students main-
taining perfe ct straighl·A
records are:
From Balboa: Cindy A.
Svendsen. Jan D. Traphagen
and Judy A. Vincent.
From Corona del Mar: John
H. A ad er 1 on . Daisybel E.
Ebert, James T. Goodrich,
Lynn A. Pfannenstiel, Carolyn
L. Prough, Cheryl L. Real
and Maxson B. Smith.
From Costa Mesa: Joanne
R. Basebe. Jack H. Behlman,
Robert E. Blake, Thomas J.
Callender, Gary A. Dunn,
Donald V. Fregeau Jr.,
Lois J. Fuller, David A.
Gaffney, Johnnie L. Gref'r,
John W. Herriftg, John D.
Hershfeld.
Ledru Hel!eman, James A.
Hoffman, Grant P. Jones,
Joseph E. Kee, Elke M. Kolb.
John R. Mada y, Dennis J.
McMahon, Kakan N, Peterson.
Melissa D. Purcell, lfarold D.
Steiniweg, Rose M. Thompson.
Michael D. Vanderlan, and
Beveraly J. West.
From Fountatn V a 11 t y :
Douglas 0 . Co~·den, Larry E.
Hart. Christina Rasmussen.
Sharon E. Rich. and Cheryl
L. Soto.
Fmm Huntington Beach: •
James P. Barker, Jana S.
Bradberry, Valerie A. Breton,
Judith F, Cale, Roberta L.
Cason.
Stephen E. Kankin. Edwarrl
J. De Orio, Slephanie J. Di
Orio, ~1ark: \V. Hamilton,
David L. Hazelwood,
Anthony H. Luick. Sandra
L . Mallicoat. Patricia J.
Mangels. Robert L. ri1oney,
Aura J. Norton,
Jan E. Pfisler. Belly ~.
Ross. Beverly J. Sturm and
Phillip L. \Vheeler-_
From Newport Beach :
Barbara J. Brockman, Gary
A. Delph , Franklin T .
De.ienso. P.fargaret A. Griffith,
P.leriel J. Hunt ,
Lutes. Doug las S.
Donna G. Soto.
S\e\·en R.
Smilh, and
from \Vestminster: Dennis
~1 . Cuff. Carol J. Jla1nes, Joan
P.1 . Maldonado, and DQnna ~1.
R1cksecker.
Earth Da y
Marks Start
Of Spring
NEW YORK (APJ -It f\'as
a seed.planting, Krishna·chan·
Ung, kite-flying r r is bee -
flinging . bongo-playing, gui-
tar-strumming, pot-smoking
hippie-rapping CentraJ Park
happening.
It '"'as an Earlh Da y and
the firi;t day of spring a n d
nesirly 3.UOO persons. mostly
youths in their favorite blue
jeans and second-hand
Jackel~. turned out Sunday lo
tune in the season.
Act1\"i ties al the sunny but
chilly park were sponsored by
the People for Earth Day.
\Vhich plans several da ys of ,
environmental concrrn this
spring includ ing the princi pal
Earth Da y on April 22 .
Al the United Nations.
Secreti:iry General U Thant
rang a peace bell contributed
hy Japan and delivered a brief
Et1rlh Day address.
'"An Earth Day has suddenly
become necessary to remind
us of the fact lhal our small
planet is perishable," he said.
"Al long last the concepts
of F.arth Day, of w or Id
patriotism and of the family
or man have con1e into being.
"r..tay there only be peaceful
and cheerful Earth Da.\"s tri
come for our be a u I 1 r u I
spaceship earth as it continues
to spin and circle in iri_gid
sp11ce \\'i1h 1\s 11"!'lrm and
fragill! cargo of ani 1nate hlc-,"·
Thant said.
service at
your fingertips
seventy-ones at
~~!:~
2eOO l-IAA801' BLVD, f COSTA MESA
(714J $40·91 00
RUGGED WTG® SNEAKERS
FOR MEN AND BOYS
$4'96 SALE I.Pit.
• Lace-to·toe style cotton uppers
• Long·life PVC soles, heds
• All sizes; wh ite or black.
UMff:lpn..-~
MAYBELLINP
• Leng\hms. lhici.r:n1
• A!llOtted ahldct
UMff:2pwCllltomM"
COLORFUt
PUNCH BALL
SALE24<
• Inna1."-Uil1
• A~rtcd coiors
LIMIT: l pwaatomw
Gl•t. price ntsl Colossal snln11!
Hugo v1lu11! Unsurpustd •ar1aln1, vn ... 11•1•
~uallly! Wise and t•rifty 'super shoppers' will hurry
In now far those seasatlonal ..,rs!
WNISPERY ~LIGHT
ITAUAN-STYLE SANDALS
SAL E 96C PR.
• CasuaJ g in two-band orT·slra(>
• Richly crafted; soft cushion insole
•Brown or in white; sizes 5 to 10
UMIT: l p-s. ,_.cud:.-
GRANTS SHAMPOO OR
CREME RINSE
SALE 86< 11..,i,
•Maas bair Mh
•Makes it loYely
UMff:l,.rcwt_-
SMOOTH FITIING
PAllTY HOSE
SALE68~ro.s1
• Run·resi.~tant mesh
• Fashion shadt:3;•onc size fits al l
LIMIT: 2 pn. per °''tomer
I 0.GAL STAINLESS STEEL
AQUARIUM STARTER SET
E$10 REG. SAL $1J.94
•Pump, fl.her. •Thmnomeler,
hea ler 1ubi111; .f
• CJ1ss wool, • A111 i~hlorine, fish 1
chan:oaJ food, inst ructions ~
uMJT,, ..... ~ffJluJ
GRANTS 100 COUNT
ECOllOMY ENVELOPES
~SALE 28< oox
IO" TEFLON II
COATED FRY PAii
SALE $147
• Cooks rood quickly .
• No&eouring.just u,_
IO&p and waler
l.IMTT:J .,.,antomer
, I
fl!fllfllf!/!f!/lJ!J/!Hllffflf(fl!l!f!fl/J'JI/ilh
WHOPPERS®
MALTED BALLS
SALE58<
.. ,.,.,.,,e-,.. ~
~
20-CAL TRASH I
CAN LINER ~
KNITIINC
WORSTED
~ ~
MODART i
BED PILLOWS ~
SALE $196
' ENJOY BEi I Bl LIVING WITH GRANTS CREDIT •
20.CALLON
TRASHCAN
SALE $137
• Ru~lproor plastir
• L:lfk·l">ll l'OVCf~
UMrT: 2 ,_..cu1torner
WASHABLE VINYL
WINDOW SHADES
SALE88<
• 36 t 7}," ,;,r,
•Cut In (11 •indow
'« dtspe.ralHltl she went to
ai Jt>tclalist who dlSl:Overtd
...,.,,,. WU ~ -she WU
wtalkla Mr he•rlni aid the •rona "'•Y roond and had
b@.eft liatenJne to her own
~rtbt•L GRANT PLAZA • BROOKHURST AT ADAMS • HUNTI NGTON BEACH
3 PILOT·AOVERTIS£R
Youth Has
Marijuana
Bum Trip
87 Pd<T J. Sldnttobll, MD
The following lell<r Is for
teenagers, espedally for those
*ho have been brainwashed
to believe that smoking marl·
Juana is no worse than laking
a drink or twO of alcohol.
I've often heard students
say, "My father doesn't think
a highball Is bad. Wbat rlgbl
has he \o warn me against
smoking marijuana'! One isn't
worse than lhe other." No
worse? That's a matter of
opiniOIJ. And mine, being a
voice of the "establishment"
will not be readily accepted,
so perhaps this youngster's
experience will make some
impression on those coo-
11idering the use or marijuana.
Dear Dr. Steincrohn: I am
19 years old. I have just had
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
my first experience using
marijuana. Nowadays you
bear so much about drug ad·
diction and the breaking down
of chromosomes as a result
of taking LSD and other acids,
but nobody seems to talk
about marij1ana exct:pt to say
that it produce.1 a relaxing,
two-martini effect, that it
soothes the mind end in-
creases perceplion. There's
very little said about its side.
effects.
Well, I smoked two joints
latt night at a ·party, along
with a whole mess of friends
from school. There was very
little reaction with the first.
but with the second, I got
"stoned," as marij uana con-
sumers say.
My mind seemed to be out
ot my head, colors came 011
brilliantly and everything did
seem to hit me harder, wheth-
er It was stereo music ar even
everyday conversation. It was
a stunning experience. ·
But that was not the end
of it Today, I woke up from
bed and y,•as surprised to find
that I didn't have a hangover.
I was putting that down as
Olle of the "plus'' items to
marijuana usage until I had
wbal I call a "flashback."
I work part time at nights,
and it was there that it hap.
pened. My memory went com-
pletely. I found mys e If
wandering around , desperately
trying to learn who I was,
where I was and how I had
gotten there. It was just like
a bad dream. Like an awful
nightmare. It all happened
suddenly.
AJ t write this letter I still
feel the after effect. It's like
feeling yourself going insane,
feeling yourself going off the
edge and trying desperately
to stay stable. My mind lost
it! ability to relate. My entire
perspective was rtversed and
inverted over and over again.
I've been told that this hep.
pens frequently.
Now, I'm not trying to make
an astounding statement as
to why marijuana shouldn't
be legalized. I'm just trying
to explain the nightmare I've
been g.oing through as a result
of an initial, supposedly
harmless experience. 1 swear
I've smoked my last "joint."
-Miss E. (1 hope you un-
derstand why I cannot sign
this letter.)
MEDICALLE'ITES (Replies
to Readers)
For Mr. B.: Yes, It's possi-
ble for a young man of 25
to have "Prostate trouble."
But this is a broad category.
Of course there's I it t I e
likelihood lhat the trouble is
an enlarged prostate which
we call ,prostatic hypertrophy -ror which the treatment
may need to be prostatectomy
(removal of the prostate ).
With your symptoms of fre·
quency and burning while
urinating, backache and pus
in the urine, it's likely that
the reason is acute prostatilis.
Your doctor will look for the
source of the infection .
Meanwhile, he's trying to help
by using massage of the pro-
atate and prescribing hot sltz
baths and anti-bacterial druga.
Therefore, calm d?wn, Mr.
B. I doubt that there s danger
you'll be losing your prostate
eland. • • •
A woman suffering severe
depression b e c a us e of
menopause can be hetped by
advanced medical treatment
says Dr. Steincrolm in ttis
booklel, "What To Do For
Change of Life." For a copy,
wrltt him in care of this
newspaper enclosing 25 cent&
tn coin and a STAMPED,
S E L r · A DDl\Es.SED EN·
VELO PE.
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Tho Ono Thlt C.ros
Wednesday, Much 24, 1971 W~dntsdar. March 24, l 971 OA!l V PILOT j:J
HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT :
5881 Warner at Springdale in Huntington Beach
---
f'OUlolTAllol V.t.LLIY-11* M..,..,11 fl. ti f11M1t
,OUNTAIN VALLEY-HUI H1 .... r 11~•. I ftlnfll
IL TOll.~11 T• .. 11 lt..:lltltH IUf
HUlolTINOTOfrt llACM-ll 1)1 let<JI 11..C. •I All&rlll
l°""TA ANA--141H '#. ltlfttlW IPMI lrl1'9t SI.
WISTMINSll"ll-4HJ Wttllllillilff .. OtliMt Wnl
COSTA Mii.......,, .. H.t..., '"'°'· .. W"-II. (OITA MllA-Jll f . 11111 Sf,
HUNltNOTON llACM-fMI ._...,,.II lr'lllllJI•"'
MUNTINOTON IU.C~ll I 1.....-
MUNTINOTON llAC,._WI,_ I W"'-le
69c.79• Stretch
Crew Socks
~
Reg,49:. Tablets&
Boxed Envelopes
A 1hrlfty lest $elltrl
for Min & Boys
So~. comfv ~lot -b cowol wear. Full C\llhlon
foot -stoy•UP rib top&. Whlt11
colo;.,-, Min's ·10-13, ~
6·8 \Jzi 9-11.
Ladles'
De•llok
Knit Pullover
~n'd"'" 2 's7 knits with O
short <t· ves, long I
point tollor
with button pkdclt
~-, Women's Knit
· Sweater Coats s12n
hlylic coats ~ 5 ..
b utton fTont or
Chontl style with
shawl collar. Colon. S--M~L..
39° •l .. T.w.t: 1IO .... •U•,,,,_. T •• 110 ..... , '"""""I~._ .. 4 •ll•'"'·"~---'100 • S.11·'-""• law: ............ .. • t.1.t r.v-1•1. 1 .. ef 4S . "-"""' ,,.,.._ ~'· • .... so
n1 !1!_1,j1u1lltlrlli•11 t111 llUl'IST IOtl a IOU. tUb: ff All Tltn!
"""'""" -·-· $267 , ..... Lttfl1lel Llfl .. ,..,,. ,,._.,.. ., .. , ... , .... ,
••••t-fr11•11-•f1l11, .... Ltt et IWll' .. ll!C :;:f. w ·u.i··1 ••1t . " ...... -_., ... _
'-fltl 1t.i•11'u Tiil 1111,.....UW. bMrt.
ladies' Nylon
Mesh Shoes
Yoara.oi ..
Smwn.r favor.ft• t •199 Sporty nylon strow
mtlh lrlp-cn In block .. """'~'-·~~ "''"· PVC molded heel. 5· 1 0
f
UIDUIT '198 PllCI
4 cute stylH in
solidi, ~ .. tones,
prints, full cut
7 to 14.
• TIMt • Qlilll Lttte,. ·--·--• ,....,"""_ .. knMt. .... •ltT.U1Tw••,,.....,....,. ....... .._ ..... WHli
• Sfnlltllt Aw_,• N_.,.,.td1 • PN fl. eff fiN+IN>ll ••MINI
4i$1
leg."914Wig
Head fol'lllS
:<:"v1~:;'of 48;
wlgl, holr ,,_
... WI& lflllle ,..,. ,lie
Reg. $1 Pro
Hair Brushes
rrv;i~,eFio:! 67;
rtPipfession.
o1 brushes. Foldlna
brush with cornb,
Standard Size Classic Guitars
M<nlanoko<>-<hockfl>l•bto•-e1995 tlful doalc QUltor with nyb1 • and Jt"eel stifngt, 18 fret flnget ..
boord. #CLJ 10.
I Pkk·UP lledrtc G1itlr, •• , ••• ,. •• ,$4·9.tJ
O•ltMtit• Aawpliff•r with 6" Spo111brs •• $19. 9 S
$2415 Value!
$26' Value! DoDlldn
Fashion Dolls
Reg. 88' Mattel
Hot Wheels Cars
Pnuonic Radios
Magnus Symphonette
Chord Organs
$134
Fl~J., lifo-llu,
lalntld. R a o t •a hair In tona hatrdo.
Eosy to ch. -weora Jump -..It.
$1AI l'oflll -c..1-1111 ...
791 Henhey Candles
•llmMy'!fH
• Candy Cealod ,_.,,.
Pound leas
59c
::r .. 59o
FCSlnt toy c G r I model P!av favor.
ttes .-Ith kids from
6 to 60.
$1.1t Net Wtit•ls strlf' Tnck t9c $2.71 lttt WMels
SllltAdltlllt Sl.16
s19•1
•Cleckot . .. ,..._ ......
iop quoflty ot a
discount prfc1.
Decorated Metal
19 inch Patio Table
.. u i1a1 "'''
"
'2988
12 chold """°"" 37 treble bys,
hand YOlum• con•
t1CI. Cobln1t,
music llght, book.
F'om~ styf1d
In best s1llln11
s'1oPM & 1tyt11. All with glo11
ltnMs, optical
kinges. # 16~0.
JaltaVodka
Half Gallon
;.';~,7 ~.::i~ .. or:.,,bt~: s5ea ~ our ewrym., low pnc. cf
$6.99 ••• now evtn greater
borgoin thn.I rieict . Tutsdoy,
79' ,., .. Plastic
Wash or toss
Dinnerware
!~~~:!~ 2'$1 •11 Cu•• 0 •• Dito ......... •11s.w 1..... I •1J.Dl..tPah1
5 Prece Bath Mat & Tank Cover '298
lbc30U Mot,
IW3" con• tourmat, tpe.
tank c.ovtt &
lk:I cover. Col·
Cf choice.
I!..,. typo ...
Ion 1 • actylkS.
poly11tera In
,colors.Stived
oraund, non ..
~ skid, 21x-48",
ttrrles In roae,
t'OOltlr, Zodiac,
mushroom design,
16x'.27",
•151 to 39!.'Plastic
Kitchenware
11 6i&7-~ Y111•Clitk• " .......... ,. ... , .. loll c-. Tftft • 2 .. ........ Tllllllm •
11t .,.. ••d:•ti • 11• ··"""' ,,.,.~.... . 1k ....,, , Mltfl
Bib Apple Juice
..... boby .. • ••• 7;·
llcious. 4.2 OIJf'ICI. ~
C-ol!4 ······"''·"
Poll and eo1y mop
'tll'ring1r In Avocodo,
ftomt, horvest gold.
Nomochlt1 1 or
hond wrlngil'l(f.
$1 s; Plastic
Wastebaskets
·~..... s11z t40Qt. llet.W. •'-4 mt. •40 Qt. l.d ... wlt1 ..., ..
• '~" T• Sturdy. top quallty, In cholct of
colon,
• 8 la. Spirit
•ID la. Tapef'lll
6 tor•tts ~'Halo"
Candles
S1•el1I ·l'r••
1AmOf\ Eln. =·~ erold, fvory, ... ,. ~r
•IU., Pink,' 6 ··4311, Rid, Tur• o 1i
quobl, eor.. & cil, Whrt.. .
$.23" Glass Door
Bookcci ..
WoJnut finish.
Ing doors, 12" """"~gloss slid-s15u
dee!', !28" wldt,
32" high, Alum·
lnum trim,
ft" v11111 Padded
Bridge Chairs
Soot & IMxk poddod, e499 covtred with hond· 'fl
IDmfl b I a c le. vlnyf,
Umit.d t lmt cffer.
-~ .. -'-· .-
' ' " ,, ~~§~~dB~g· ,,,..,,, 0 -. . ' .
Reg. $10" & •12"
Zipper Luggage
''., !9 111<1' Jumbo 1lt• in Finto sg44 Pio Id w Ith quo II ft•
hordwor•. Pfl·VOCO•
tlofl .uper-speclol1.
..
-,-
'
•
• . . . . ...-
-,, .
14 DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdily, Martll 24, 1971 WtdntldQ, March 24, 1971 PILOT-ADVERTISER j <f "" ________ ,..,,,.--~ ..... ~ ...
Coast Area Me11 in Servi~e .,
Marine Pvt. !\fkhatl W.
;:.• Burns, husband of the former
.· .~ Miss Dorothea A . Holl·
ingsworth. daughter of P.1r.
·'and lt1rs. Clifford Holl-
ingsv.·orth of 4552 Scenario
Drh•e, Huntington Beach, was
graduated from recruit
training at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot. San Diego.
He is a 1970 graduate of
the University of California,
Long Beach.
-~·Ito ___ ., ···""'--c. Kling, -4539 Fairfield Drive, radio operator in company U,
Sth battalion, 46lh Infantry
198th Infantry Brigade near
Chu Lai.
Army Specialist F o u r
Lieutenant W I 111 ams,
selected for 01'S througb com-
petitive examination, is being
assigned to Mather AFB for
navigator tralning.
The lieutenant, a I 9 6 6
graduate of Cos ta Mesa lligh
School. received a BA degree
in economics in 1970 from the'
University of Californ ia at
Irvine.
Donald R. Porter, 22, son of
f\1r. and Mrs. Louis H. Porter,
2026 N. f'rench St .. Santa Ana.
recently was awarded a letter
of commendation while St'rv-
ing with the 21st Artillery near
Ascharfenburg, Germany . Marine Sgt Robert C.
Corona del Mar, recenlly com-
pleted eight weeks of basic
training al the U.S. Army
Training Center, Infantry, Ft.
Ord, Calif.
He received instruction in
dri!I .and ceremonies, weapons,
n1ap reading, combat tactics,
military courtesy, military
justice, first aid, and army
history and traditions. Specialist Porter's IV i r" ' Leedom, son or f\.1rs. Ruth
Al.rman Dana T. rillscbtl. Oorina. lives at 3117 Killarney Leedom ()f 1983 Monrovia Navy Petty Offi"er Thi-' son of P.1rs. Phyllis G. f\.1ischel, Lane, Costa Mesa. Ave .. Costa P.1esa, received .... iu 247~1 Penfield, El Toro. has co1nbal aircrewman wings Class Jack W. Tucker, son
graduated at Chanute AFB, Jeffrey N. \\'llllams. son of while serving with Marine or Mr. and ltlrs. Prentiss N.
Ill .. from the tech n i ca I ti1r. and Mrs. Clifford O. Medium Helicopter Squadron Tucker of 5201 lt1cFadden
training course for U.S. Air \Villiams of 1213 Belfast Ave., 262 in Vietnam. Ave., and husband of the
forre vehicle repairmen. Costa Mesa , has been com· He earned his wings after former Miss Dusty L. White ·. S • ' l
Airman Mischel, now missioned a second lieutenant more than 250 hours of flight of 5392 Edinger, all of Hun-prang S Message (/pOJI the Wa f
qualified to repair material ln the U.S. Air Force upon time. tington Beach, is now serving
handling vehicles. is being graduation from Off ice r aboard the guided missile Graffiti on the retaining wall above Corona del Mar
assigned lo Travis AFB. for Training School tOTS) at Private Ktnneth G. Kling:, cruiser USS Columbus al beach at Bayside Drive may Dot 'do much for beauty
fancy turns to this time of year. Like Surf and Foam~
ers and Fantastic Rides and Joan and Brian and Lov'\
and •.. duty in a unit of lhe Military Lackland AFB, Tex. son of Mr. and ti1rs. Arlyn Norfolk, Va. -and charm but it sure tells you what a young man's
Airlift Command. -----'----------~-------------------------'----''--=-----------------------
The airman is a 1969
graduate of tifission Viejo
High School.
His "'ife, Edith, is the
daughter of ti1r. and lt1rs .
Eugene F. Campbell, 24581
Jutewood Place. El Toro,
Calif. Airman tif i s c h e I ' s
father, Daniel ti1ischel. resides
in Santa Ana.
U.S. Air Force Sergeant
Ernest C. Nichols, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Nichols,
2658 Santa Ana Ave., Costa
Mesa. and his wife. Chryal.
recently arrived for duty at
Jncirlik AB, Turkey.
They are member~ of an
lncirlik·based det.achmenl of
U.S. Air Forees in Europe.
The husband·Y.·ife t e a m
previously served al McChord
AFB, \Yash.
Second Lieutenant Paul 1\1.
P.1cDanlel, son of Mr. and Alrs .
Luther C. McDaniel at 13381
Sioux Road, Westminster, has
graduated from the training
course at Keesler AFB. tiiiss ..
from the tralning course for
U.S. Air Force air traffic con·
trol officers.
Lieutenant McDaniel. ~·ho
learned to direct air traffic
control and communications
operations. is being assigned
to Hamilton AFB for duty
with a unit of Lhe Air Force
Communications Service.
A graduate of Westminster
High School the lieutenant
received his AA degree in 1966
from Orange Coast College,
Costa Mesa , and his BS degree
in geology in 1969 from
Brigham Young University,
Provo, Utah.
He was commissioned in
1969 upon completion of Of.
ficer Training School a I
Lackland AFB, Tex.
Second Lieutenant John C.
Conky, son of U.S. Marine
Corps Brigadier Genera l and
Mrs. Robert F. Conley. 3-41
Riviera Drive, Costa Mesa,
has been awarded his silver
\\•ings at Reese AFB. Tex .,
upon graduation from U.S. Air
Force pilot training.
Lieutenant Conley y,•ill re·
ma.in al Reese where he will
fly the T·38 Talon jet trainer
aircraft as an instructor pilot
\\'ilh a unit of the Air Training
Command.
A 1965 graduate of Tustin
High School. the lieutenant
received his B.S. degree in
1970 from Texas A & l\.I
University whe re he v.·as com·
missioned through the Air
Force Reserve Officers
Training Corps program.
Navy Fireman Larry J.
Hom, son of Mr. and l\.lrs.
Richard J. Horn of 124 46th
SI.. t\ev.•porl Beach. v•as
graduated from l\.1achinist
l\.1at.e School at the t\ava\
Training Center , Great Lakes.
Ill.
Marine F i rs t Lieutenant
Leonard L. Sli:atoU Jr., hus-
band of the former f.1iss
Karen J . Morrison of Newport
Beach. received the "\Vings
of Gold" designating him a
Naval Aviator at the Naval
Air Station, Kingsville, Tex.
U.S. Air Foree Captain Ron
A. AnUaony. 50n of l\1rs.
Walter McKibben of 3 I 5
Granada, San Clemente. has
1rrived for duty at Kirtland
AFB. N.M.
Captain Anthony, an RB-S7F
pilot, is .assigned to a ~nit
of the Air Weather Service.
He previously served al Tan
Son Nhut AB. Vietnam.
A 1962 graduate of St. Vin·
cent Preparatory High School.
the captain received his B.S.
degree and commiS!lion In 1966
upon graduation from the U.S.
Alr Foret Academy.
Hil wife. Vicki, is the
daughter ol. Mr. and Mrs. T.
Milton Kok}ohn of 1312 Avenue
f', Yort Madi.~. Iowa .
Anny Private first Class
tt.caneth P. Katt, 19 , son of
Mrs. Je:an O Sachs. 241
A\'OC:ltlo St CosUI Me.°'a.
recently r~l'1\td lhf Purple
Hearl In Vietnam .
Pfc. Katt 1s 1ssigned 11 1
OPEN SUNDAYS ANb EVENINGS!
Carpet Your
ENTIRE
HOME
.. -LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM,
HALLWAY AND TWO BEDROOMS
YOUR CHOICll $
• DU PONT NYLO.N
•COMMERCIAL TWEEDS
• HIRCULON
IASlD ON 60 SQUAii YAIDS
tOMPLETELY INSTALLED
OVER LUXURIOUS
FOAM PADDING
HODEL POLYESTER
1 00% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP, RICH. DURABLE
SHAG BEAUTIFUL NEW THRJ:E COLOR DESIGNS.
LOW
FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE
PRICE
COMPARABLE RnAIL ••••.••••.•••••• $6.99
100°4 KODEL POLYESTER PILE. RICH , DEEP. LUX·
URIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI-STYLE DECO-
RATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT FROM. R~
SIST DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. LOW
FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE
PRICE
COMPARABLE RnAn •••••••••••••••• $ ... 99
Ml'H LANESE'
TMf TESTED ltAMf .. fJllU
100% fORTREl POLYESTER. LUSH, OEEP LON(;.
WEARING AND HARO TO SOIL STAYS BEAUTIFUL
WITH A MINIMUM Of CARE VERY RESIUANT.
BEAUTIFUL OECORATOR THRJ:E COLOR SHAG. LOW
FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE
COMPARABLE RETAIL ...... $8.99 PRICE
C•lo-'ll f-1 it o '"'d•-•t of fibe< l...!vttriff, l11e.
BRAIDED RUGS
9x12 •.....••..• 24'5
C-AIAIU llTAIL ••••••••...•. SH
CARPET TILES·SAYE $
DO·IT·YOURSflf-NOW SALE PRICED SAYE 59c
Feels lik1 w1l,1t -01twe1rs 1tb1r 29 1:arp1t -1asy t1 ilsbll C
9x12 .••••••••.• 39'5
AU SIZES 100% Cont >'iloment Nylori -Extra Heovy
AVAILABLE COMPAIAIU llTAIL ...•.•.•••• SIS
DUPONT NYLON
100,. Conti nuous Filament Ny.
lon Pile Certified with DuPont
501 Blue ""N'" label. 2!?. .... .....
COMPARABLE RnAIL .............. $4.99
KODEL PLUSH
100% Kodel Polyester Pile. Rich. 599 deep luxuriously thick pile. New so. YD.
decorotor colors. l~U
• /U.tr·Dl1~111
• ta.Yi. 1111 Tut ..
• Stti1 ltsbt.Nt IA.
• I Dttmt., ''lln • lft JIJI" Pilt 12"x12"
COMMERCIAL CARPETS
CONTRACTORS! BUILDERS!
HOMEOWNERS!
Your CltoicaJ SCI. TD. SAVE 299
• Nylon • Herculon s2.oo
COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••••.••.••. $4.99
DACRON SHAG DIEP Pill
100% Dacron Polyester Pile-499 Beautiful new deep shag with o
full deep pile. M<Jny new dee· so YD
omtor colors to choose from. s.i.v1 ·
NOW SALi PRICED AT noo
COMPARABLE RETAIL ............. $7.99
99 DACRON SHAG DEEP PILE
100% DACRON POLYESTER PllE. BEAUTIFUL NEW
DEEP SHAG WITH A FULL DEEP PlLt MANY NEW
DECORATOR COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM.
COMPLETELY INSTALLED
SQ. YD.
SAVE
$3.00
• 30·61-IO OIYS NO INTEREST • CONYENIOO CIEOIT PLINS AltO BAii! 1£RMS IYllWLE • Clll FOR FREI SROP·IT·HOME SERVICE• YISll OUR CUSTOM DRAPERY DEPT.
NORTH HOUYWOOD
7007 Ui'"I c .. ,_
lltt. -tl2·2200
HollywOOd freeway 10 Sllerman
Woy los1 to LC!Uf!I (tm"f<M'I Blvd
CANOGA PARK
J10JI SlltNI" Wsy
J47·Jl)4
IJtl'l!llfO FtttWOy to (OllOQO Avt
Nor!ll 10 Shtrmo11 Woy lhtrl right
WEST LOS ANGIUS ANAHEIM MONTEBELLO LONG BEACH PASADENA 11141Wlld1I"11.... M9 N. (1(lill St.
477.ss2s 4JS·7674 Son 01t90 frttwoy to W~~hirP. ' bloc.ks North of 5ont11 A.no
lurn.olf 6 Blotl..1 Wf~! on WJ. lrttwoy on (uc;l1d Ado~~ froin
sh·~ Cnl1lom10 ft'dtro!
WEST COVINA
2526 I. Werk111e1 Avt.
t6M471
Snn BeolOtd•rio frwv 10 (t!fu\
St '} blor.k~ N on (11r11s 10 Wo11
HOLLYWOOD
lllS ,., Vt""'"'""'· 666·7•SS 2 blo(;) ~ Norih of Hollywood
S!vd. on Vtr!TIQfl!
71S W. Whlttltr llvll
721..0167
(Ofll!I' o! "1\ontrbl!llo
ond Whothfl" Blvd
VENTURA
2501 L Mei11 SI.
••a.S041
J blncL ~ Wt'' ol
r..,.f Pom1s on Mmn
I
JOOI ltllflewtf' II.,.,
421.,,J4
Son 0.f90 Frttway 10 Bt0f1DWl'!'
Blvd lum-clfNorthonBtllflo._-
SAN FRANCISCO
Mill BRAE
J20 II c-111e IHI
692·2.SSS
2660 I. Celonlle 11¥4.
577.1900
(olorodo Blvd 01
Son Gobne! Blvd
TORRANCE
42J6 Atlt1ie 11¥4.
542 .. 696
T blocl. lost of Hcrwthon1r
R'vd on ArltSl(I
OPEN SUNDAYS
10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
COSTA ME~A
,1714 Newport Blvd.
645-3020
• •
;
'
f PILOT-AOYERTlSER S Wtdnrsday, March 24, iq11 Wtdntsda1, Marth 24, 1Q71 s DAILY PI LOT J 5
Industrial Publishing Opens New Opportunity Horizon
fay JOYCE l.A1N KENNEDY the emotional strength to ex· English should receive strong physical a.nd b Io tog i ca I work.shops. cent reported earnlng1 of communlcaUons dir~tor} of national Association of Busl-
. Dear Joyce: I'm tntertiltd plain, confront and ptrsuade academlc em p b a s I s , A sciences and pollUfal science. E A R N 1 N Gs ADV ANC£.. $10,000 or more. Salaries an organization, occasionally ness Communi cators. ll08
4b e1plorln1 todi$trlal editing. those holding opposing views. knowledge or bow business Typing is ver)' ~lpful . The MENT. A 1970 survey showed reported might be low because al the vice-presidential level. Braewick Circle, Akron, Ohio
-F. J.M., Fullerton, Calif. EDUCATION. lt'a not man· operates is es sent i a I best way to learn industrial that salaries of business Cilm-of the predominance of the FOR FORMATION. ReadMs 44313.
Hert's the story, straight datory to hold a degree in (economics, marketing and ediling ls on the job, starting municators are good to small organizations in this with speclflc questions con· Send career topic sug-
from the I n t er oat i 0 n al journalism, but some ex-hi.story). Basic knowledge in as an assistant er associate moderate. Of 800 respondent:ii. survey. Advancemei\t i s ceming 1 career in industrial gestions to Joyce l..aln Ken·
Association of Business Com· perience in wriUng and many other fields is desirable, editor. IABC .offers op-nearly 56 percent reported usually to a larger publication editing-who enclo.se a stam~ nedy at this newspaper. Sorry,
municators (l.6BC): pubUcation pfOdtl<'.tion is including art Philosophy, portunitles for professional earnings of between $10-'1,000 and higher earnings. or to ed. self-addressed return enve--no personal replies I re
•,NEW PROFESSION. Com·,--__:":::':::'_:ry:::·_:J:::ou::rn::•::llsm=__:an=d__.!p::sy~c:::h:::ol.:ogy=-:_•_:':::°"::l•:::IO:::IY::.:_· :::m:::•:::lh.::•_::gr::.o:.:wlh:.:::_.::lhr::.=ou:::g.::l>_:se::nun=· ::"":.:..:an=d__:•:::••:::•:::al:::ly:.:;_•:::•:::d_n:::':::":::IY:._:::1.:_0.::pe:::r:::·_::P:::"b:::li:::·c...::::re:::la:::li:o~n_:s_:di.:_rec:.:..:to.:..r_(.:_•.:_r_:lo:,-pe.::.___:m:::a:::'.y...::::wr..:lt...ce_t_o_: _1n_1e_r_·_P_•s_sl_bl_e_. ------
~"faoy and organ iz a tio n·
~pansored publications began
"'to mushroom during World ,,..ivar 11. Reasons: the need
r-!o keep worker spirits high
~~nd war oulput up, and to
;_i'alay in touch with e :x •
:~:employees away serving their
tifountry. ~ Today, about 10,000 publ\ca·
•=tcins are directed to a variety ;:fr audiences, with readership
,.
Career
Corner
totaling ~s of millions. These
sponsored publications
generally grow In size and
number as business expands.
Rlght now, industrial editing
jobs are not easy to find
because public relations ac-
tivities, including publications,
are often among the first
casualties of a recession.
READERSHIP Industrial
edit.iog, in general, includes
the full range of activities
involved in publishing a
maguine, newspaper o r
newsletter for distribution to
a particular audience
associated with an organiza.
lion. The most Cilmmon ex·
ample is a publication issued
to employees of an industrial
firm, hence the term "In-
dustrial editiog." But this
career field also embraces tboSe who publish mate rial for
other groups: slaffs o f
hospitals, members of pro-
fessional or trade associations,
sponsors of charities. alumni
of 1chool, civilian emplayees
and servicemen in govern-
ment unit!. as well as
customers, dealers, retirees or
stockholders of commercial
concerns.
THE JOB. Men and women
(this is an especially good
field for women) industrial
editors perform a wide range
of functions in connection with
the publications.. These may
Include selecting subjects, io-
t e::r vie wing, writing.
pbotographint, .cfesigning and
laying out the pages, ordering
art and supervising the
engraving, printing a n d
distribution. On some larger
publications, these functions
may be assigned to specialists
or to professionals outside the
organization, but it is more
cmnmon for the editor to do
them all. One of the editor's
biggest responsibilities i s
managing the publication's
budget.
ADDmONAL Dt.mES. Jn
some jobs, the industrial
editor is also accountable for:
bulletin boards, letters to
employeU'-homes, a phone
information program, closed
circuit TV, annual reports,
movies, plant visits. paycheck
stuffers, suggestion system,
direct mail advertising pieces,
academic emphasis. A
sales a.ids, reprints o f
speeche! and other com-
munication assignment!.
PERSONAL QUALIFICA·
TJONS. You'll need :
the a bi Ii t y to express
thoaghta in logical order
and lllJtiatlve. Rt:sUJtnce -
frustration ls an occupational
hazard for creative attempts are frequently t h w a r t e d .
Integrity -although an editor
is responsible for promoting
the best interest! of the
employer organization. h e
must protect the cred!bili!Y
of bis publication to mamta1n
Its effectiveness. Courage -
Marines Sue
Irvine Co.
' A Marine Corps s l a f f
argeant and his wife have
sued the Jrvlne Company for
$100,000 in an Orange C.ounty
Superior Court lawsuit charg·
fil.& the firm with negligence
leading to lhe drowning death
ol their five-year-old son.
i-Fleleher A. Robinson Ill
frowned in U)e Wherry Hous· Jng Reservoir near the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station on
March 17, 1970, shortly after flit and bis brother crawled
i\de~r a fence .surrounding the
Sgt. Fletcher A. Robinson Jr. blames the firm for the
$1'11.gedy and alleges that it
failed to take adequate
precautions to p r e v ~ n t
trespassing at tht reservoir.
THE BEST
•Y GUND
Colorful assorted
adorablt B1111nies
AT
6 oz. SIZE
"Scope"
MOUTHWASH
Fresler breall hr
b11rs! 2i$1
in varioos p.i~i\ioos.
f1vesty1es.
UCJI
1.98
Place To Shopl
' '
• SEKUll
ilii? Hair Brushes If/fl 1ooi pontmt"'-Wrt!I
women. VariollS color:. he-•
HITACHI
Hair Dryer s-har.l lyp! • ' • QUiet. powerful, breeze
actioft, Cool or Mt au.
#HDIOOI 14.95
5 11. Ktat Act1Y1ttl C11-
1Htl1tlf for yoor electric
11airsetter. Md's body l sl!int
to~~h•;r. 119 s., .... , [...,.., ....
• Prlet 1.$1 •
"Feminique" 1·
n4 ll. fdillll ltftf•••
D11•1nitt -CIM>ose spray I
Pritt 1.31 I or powdtr 111 lemon Twi~t.
Regular, 01 Wild flowers. gee I Sn·11'1 EYtlJdlJ l1w
'===============:: '·=======::::;:::;:;:;::-=·-, --· . "-"' -~-·----'Laredo' Cigarette •1r
...... 'Q9'::.:~~YS i
"Hoppity" Ball
~ Of fvll 11111 tmlSI ior 7 88 flt """ f"'11y. lasy &riP ma handle.. &iglrt coli3rs. •
MAnlL
Mini Wimer
Tf!J wlllrWI come in pain:! 1 43 _i. They're twice u tricky 11»1 (it ~Stld. 'ern -Bon:i 'eml •
•o•NNY uGm1•, Custom Cars
• """ Assorttd ltyl!s ;, ·c.s. 1-
,., , ~yTOPPll
toms" Cars ••. ''PiDt
01U1n, ""Wild Wimer," et'-
WMAM• O
Super Balloons
1.19
~1.-.tl I M JU Mad , , , J01r C AN1;n1 -Blow tt 11 ~ 10 It 93
flRgtn.,, yo.ir 110st.
•
Gliders .., M•n11
ror serious missioos or
stunt happy lllfl • • you'll
hJvt ' good 111111t. 1.59
lligh quality r:i1nttascan be
made ~lckly with 111 easy to 1 69 vse macbifle. Cllister iricllld-
ed. hi-I.II •
t1t1n Cnlrt« 111. 91e
run 16quart upacily. Beau·
til~l!y Jithorraphed wi!ll
-authen!ic reiroouetions 1f
LP. 1ttfum covers.
1.99
Ftr ladi1s 11• llu •••
87'
Me~·, Clul) Slylt. Asa't Mirror, corm and blll$h. Per·
styles fot ladies ••• fln, I feet combination !or JOllf
hlldlng. etc. Ill pvrse: for "IO\dl iiO"S-"
: mw, .... : .... :,:: .. :. ... llC,mt ... 2 ... =8 ... 8 .... c .iii l~M"2;~:0ill9.,..,-:i
GOLDEN llEAIR
FRESK!HER
I
I
Just 2 "flttle" Jtld yotir
bruUI feels tier so fresl
I u. Drips J 1r. S,rq
flf. lie All-I.II
59c 99c
FAMILY SIZE
Tide XK
DOERGENT
10or.UQUID
CARNATION
"Slender"
"FIRE-KING" Bakeware
IJICHOI HOCKING -Cl)SOI
clear assortment of easy ta tleaft
113king di~s in variolis shapes
•
and sim fOI' y0\11' evtty need.
• 11> Qt. Rnad C11serol1/
X10IC11er
• 111 Qt. that caumle/
Au Gratin Caver e • 519" D11p Lui Disk
• I" Sq11r1 C1kl Disk
• 111211'' Utility Bal int
-
Dis~2Qt.
· SP!dalcoo!i'"""
livt I <ltle colof
like, """ your ~1tr shinlnf and
alfo/e. Cavers 1ray
bettu loo.
c•11e111 t•lers
YOUR C
CHOICE 88 UCll
MAX FACTOR Croo!H
'Tried & True'
2.251
12 oz, Gi111tt1
Soft & Ori -·· DEODORANT ~ Sc1ntod
:• 1.19
141h 01. SIZE OF
"J " ergens ionoN
W/DISPENSER Far DIJ, Cblpped Hawds. .. ggc
7 01. SIZE OF
'Twice As Nice'
SHAMPOO
Shampoo l Conditioner
In One!
OJITE "Fashionique'~
SHAG
CARPET TILES
l1nrl111 ••e•·•il•• s~a1
i• ISS't. Ctlors! --·"-. ~ •
Install }'OlltStl( ..• and s.r1e on ~it~ . ,,;,,Sil i .
ins!1tlation costs. Bulrt-fo, ~1gh-ll11Z"S,..a111'\
ctensity, fGam rubber coslliort b~d~ 3 69 •itl'I self adfles1ve banding. 100%.
11ylon la Jar longer weer, i
S1t .. t's E~ay l1w Price 3.91 a [
Cost Chart for Roam Si111 >
Slit OflOOM SQUA!!S PilCE
5x6' Room • 30 • 18.45
9x12' Room • 1118 • 66.32
12115' Room • 180. 110.70
15x20' Room • lXl _ 184.50
ozm 12,, ... Carpet Tiles ,,,.,, (,trJ.Jt
Great for litcllen, bath, 6eq. &ill· L1w Price He
in foam rubber bar.k. Stain resistant ~ . •.
-C41of last tor spills pick up, ~. ~ """' '/1.'·
wash off, pvt b.ic~! rull range of .,,r./J···1 ~
~ 4il .00
ollrr Spray Adhesive
Con""'"~ fool·prool way 3 49 ft put carpet Iii~ ®w11.
23~ IL •
10 PRICIS PRl>~t.
Tll1nd1y, M1rcl 2Stll
t~fl S11d1J, M1rcl 211l
••Place To Shopl
M•Wl>0•1' Ill.CM
1 .. lrYIH• Wttltllft ~llUI
MUNTINGtOM llA(N
S11'111111tlt •"4 t•1"t.,
NUNtltUtTON llACM
At•ll'll 11"1 lrMkfMlnt
OPINtAM
t•TOPM
70AYS'
AWHK
•
•'
I
. . • •
16 DAILV PILOT Wtd11tsdiy, Mart~ 24, 1971 Wtd11tsd.iiy, March 24, 1971 PILOT-ADVERTISER r; .
UC Irvine Names Orange Coast's Deans List Scholars · Z
Academic de1ns al UC Orchid AYe. 17141 Orey L.ane; Pamela 1511 Verano Place; Nanct Evelin MaWnger, 961 Summit retas Drive, and Mari MarUn Way; Diane Jean William Lorence Utgalis, 170~.
, 1rvine h.ave named students From Hantinaton Beacb: LynJI Myer, 17292 Brenda Hanka Connors, 1512 Verano Drive; Meredith, %4102 AdonJs St. Nua;enl. 2303 Eastbluff D!'.: Golde Rain Read.
fmm cities along the Orange Robert Gltnnon Barnes. Jr., Lane; Place; ~arol Beth Goorevitch , Nancy Allison Nies. 969 From Newport Btacb : Craig Thomas William Peay, 2201 From South La & u LI :
Coast to the honor roll for .002 M9rnlng Star Drive : Rodger Loren Nelson. 17101 4171 Bnsbane Way ; Elouise Skyline Drive ; Donald Wilbur Merrill Adams, 1400 Mariners Vista Jluerta ; Catherine RadclUfe Bowers,
outstanding s cho I as tic Suzanne Maria Bolliger, 683J St . Andrews Lane: Robert Garnette Grirpes, 1S24 Verano Otto, 2699 Solano Way; Suzan-Drive: Darel John Benvenuti, Margaret Anne Roecker, 506 31511 West SL; )ames Joseph
achievement during the cur· Canterbury Drive : Kenneth Bernard Pearson Ill, &1191 Via Place; Stephen We Ii I e y ne Carling Paulson, 2 I 7 21 Unda Isle; 'June Lee 36th Street; Elena Ruth Orlowski, 30671 Marilyn Dtive,
rent academic year. Arlen Brady. Jr .. 15551 , M;µie Xnge·Jina Drive; Terrie Diane Griswold, 2831 Verano Plitct; Emerald Bay; LUa James Blelker, 2400 Holly Lane; Schroeder, 1627 Port Abbey and Mareela Rita Paz Soldan.
Area atudenl'I n1ainta1ning Lane; Robc!:rt FultOtl ChildS. Roberts.· 17152 Tree ha Y t n Lawrence Jeffrey Maltz, 23'1 Staples, 590 N. Co a 1 I Hugh Heiby Bowe Ill, 1807 Place: David Gail Smith, 132 3 North Encino Drive.
at least an A-minus average 16411 Mercier Lane; John Lane: Beryl Elaine Schenk, Verano Place: Robert WilSon Highway ;· Rogerl Lowman Santiago Drive ; Ch r Is tine Via Ithaca: Richard Randolph ~rom we 1 l m I n 1 t er :
art': Patrick Collins, 16361 Rhone ; 10131 Stoneybrook Drive; Gary McDonald. 19212 Biddle Drivt': Sweet, 437Y.i Myrtle St ·; Lavonne Coco, 19U Highland Sogn, 851 Domingo Drive : Dee Deborah Jean Babcock, $591
From Balboa Is I and : F'rank Edll-'ard Go J d er , William Tannehill, l 7 3 2 I Ronald Lee Poteet, 225 V!!rano Claudia Irene Wishnow, 2387 Drive : Manson Thomas, 855 Amigos Meinhardt Road : Te re 1 a
Barbara Lynn Gaylord, 11411] 111761 Gregory Lane; Nancy Avalon Lant: F'ranres Helene Place; Frederick W i 11 i am Ashantey Y. Zazshiru,_ 1285 A James Alan Collier, 1411 Way, and Debra Lee Wright. Jlecne B°3llard, 6000 Garden
Grand Canal And Bruce Stuart Megna Harper, P.O. Box 648; Van Horn , 86151 Hoskins, and Steeby, 2511 Verano Place: San Clem~nte St., and Mariners ; Bruce Everson Cox, 835 Seagull Lane. Grove Blvd.; Candice )Cay
Reynolds, 12.1 Amethyst Avt. James Michael Htnningii, 329t Cheiy Lynn Watson, 1321 Joseph Bennie Valdez 111. 1624 Roosevelt Lane. 4a8 Kjngs Place ; Anna Marie From San Clemente: Linda Clouse, 5562 Nonna Drive;
Fnm C.plstrl'IHI Beich: Atlantic Ave.: Jalnes Kenneth Bryant Drive. Verano Place, and Mary Frem Laguna Hiiis : Stephen Gilbert, 1906 Irvine Ave.; Elizabeth Bank, 239 Montalvo James Douglas Coryell, 5162
Walter Russell Allen, 34502 Hoffman,~ Aladdin Drive : From lrvtoe: George David Caroline Wood, 17951 Bascom Michael Delano, 25211 Velas-Patricia Emily Grafston, 2411 and Debra Marie Smith, 371 Loyola Ave.; Stephen Michael
Via Verdt. Valt'rie Dawn How, 8231 · AnOerson, 1422 Verano Place ; St. quez. 16th St.:-Larry Alan Griswold, Camino San Clemente'. Gillette, ltM41 Mawt Ave.;
from CorOtla dt'I Mar : Deauville Drivt; ' Darlene Marie Bail~y, 187$1 Frem Laguna Beach: Ford Frem Lagun1 Ntruel: Linda Ill Topax St.;·· From San Juan Capistrano: Brenda Miller Hoff m,a n
Mary Sut.anne Royle, 61517 Cathy Lynn JODeS, 6082 Via Siena: Marsha Ellen Beebe, 420 Myrtle St . ; D11vida Helm, 24222 La Naran· Kenneth Quintin Lindahl, Cecile Ruth Rogers, 29361 10042 Green Fem Ciicle;
Jasmine : Byron St t' p hens r..te<Hord Dr1¥e; Becky Ann Bai ley, 308 Verano Place; Cl:lrislopher Cloud Bradley, 273 jas. Jr., 202 Grand Canal ; Andrea Spotted BuU Way. Gerard Joseph ·Huerta, (4332
Kilpatrick, 3901 Top side : Johnstone, 21141 Amberwick Lawrence Mark Benveniste, Beverly SI.; Jeri Jeanne From Mission Viejo: Yee-Jeanette Lingle, 202-4 Diana: From Se.al Beach: Jeanine Monroe Ave.; Ronald Iyan
Robert David Lts..~er. ~612 Lant'; Brnjami11 'car\· Kep-38 Vtrano Place: Marguerite c01lins1 391 Diamond St; Hon Jeffry Fong, 26172 Andrea Lynn Martih , 1607 Kay Legg, 4817 candelberry Swanstrom, 5231 Harv~rd
Lighthouse Lane : Richard A. peler, liC52 Doyle Drive; Bladei:i, 4262 Sandburg Way; Kithryn Louise Lambert. ~ Avenida Calidad:. Samu e I Marin'e rs ' DriYC: Cy nt h I a Ave.; Arnold William Miller, Ave .. and John Carl Tangney,
Lyons, J03 •Bayside Place, and,_T_ru_di_e_c_.,_,.,,_ru-_,_,_M_o_n_t '..:..• __ Ch~"-''-'-T_ho_m_a_s_Bo_a_,_dm_an..:'_A_t.:.p_in_•_W:_•:::Y'..:;_P:_o::U::y_Ce::=li:::n::.•_:lle:=IUCeJl=:::":'_:':::":ogh:::•::m:::·_:'::':.:77:.:t_:C::•::""_.:C::hr:_:is:t::in:•_:M:::c_::W_::h:irt'.:'_:_1 :_7:_1_'.'.2__:<'..'.''.'.:&5'._'.C:'.a"'n::_dl~c".be'.'.r':ryr_:A~''.'.''::·•--"'"'"d'......:55:'.7:_2~A'.':m".'a".'d""or'...".A:'.:"'.:· ___ ·.,.. David Scott Ryan , 2731 Coastr
Hi1hway.
·rrom Cost• Mt'sa · Marlene
"'inell Baker, 3153 Sharon
Lane: Gregory Patrick Beal,
186 Lexington Lane: David
Lee Dunlap, 478 East 20th
St.: Gregory Michael Fahy,
3229 Dakota Ave.; Linda Ann
Genis. 2904 Baker SI.; Pa tricia
Jean Henson, 268 E. 19th St.:
Caro l Rhea Hyland, 1072
Salvador St.; Yvonne Anne
Tsner, 2749 Lorenro Ave.:
Laurie Elaine lten, I 2 0
Yorktown Lane ; Jo a n n e
Gerald Lee, 20S3l4 Cha r It' St:
Gregory Paul M~r1es, 1917
Maple Avenue: Grant Jen-
nings r..tunsey. 393 Romona
Way; Belh Melanie Newma n,
J'131 Labrador Dri ve; Joseph
Oliva, 19n Corona La.r.e:
Ctiris William Olson, 2216
P.i.cific Ave.; Susan Alpha
V1son, 2216 Pacific Ave.;
Edward Wallace Ross, 311).1
Pierce Ave., and James
Wofford Thrasher, 267 Nassau
!Wad.
From Dana Point : Paula
Jeanne Sweet, 33212
Bremerton St.
From Foontaln Va 11 e y :
Patricia Lynn Beausant, 9371
El Valle Ave.: Jay Richard
Bierkortte, 17955 Cypress St.;
Elisabeth Hammer Brown .
17775 Santa Fe Circle; Frank
Alan. M;icDona\d, 11 6 6 4
Retlwood St .: Teresa Ann
McFarland , 17r>&l Briarwood
St.: Elaine Louise Pasierb,
16613 Lassen St.: Claudi
Lynn Rowletl, 16714 Mount
Baxter Circle : Karen Lou
Schendel, 85112 La Castia, and
Bonnie Kathleen Steeber, 11515
Trustees OK
Bond Sales
In District
Trustees of the Newport·
Mesa Unified School District
have authorized the sale of
the last $4.5 million worth
of bonds ffom the 1969 bond
election.
Ernest Bodnar, spokesman
(or Stone and Yoon~berg. the
district's bond consultant, told
board members thal if the
bonds were sold within the
next 60 days. they would prob-
abl~ be able lo get an in·
lerest rate between fl.4 and 5.8
perct'nt.
The salt represents the last
of Sl8.9 worth or bonds ap-
proved by di.,trict voter! in
1969. A year aRo voters wert'
called upon to approve a hike
in the allowable interest rate
(from five to seven percent)
on the remaining $9 million
bonds of the 1969 election .
Half of that was 50\d last
!llmmer, and the last of it
will go on the market with
the trustees' approval. F'unds
will be used for the district's
capital projects.
Sacra1nento
Trip Set
Sacramento ls only II days
from Fountain Valley -at
lust for 70 eighth graders
in Niebla• Elementllry School.
They'll be in the state
capital March 31 on a special
field trip. The group joins the
jel set by flying there .
"The kids are excited
· because they earned their own
money -about $20 per stu-
dent -for the trip." Principal
Don Hendrick! said.
Through such projects as
1 car wash, paper and bottle
drive, 1luminum can col-
lections, candy and cake sales
they tol11led nearly $1,500 for
their Sacramento visit
The trip will bt oupen<ioed
by sever1J leacher! an d
parenLs. It's considered 1
bonUJ to their govtrnmflnl
atudies.
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J •· -ILY PILOT WHtnttday, Marth 24, 1971 ~~~~~~~~~--"------'------'-:.:._;:_
Bruins' '68 Waterloo
Wooden Cites
:Dome
HOUSTON tAP) -John Wooden and
the Astrodome are old acquaintances.
""niat's acquaintances, mind you, not
frl.00..
.. The Astrodome isn't the best place
-..in lhe v;orld lo play a single basketball
game," the UCLA coach said Tuesday,
-"but it's probably the best place for
a tournament."
Wooden brought bis Bruins into
Houston today for a run at an un-
precedented fifth consecutive NCAA
basketball championship.
An8 Wooden remembers how it \\'as
wben the Bruins' 47-game winning streak
was snapped by Houston 71-69 in the
Astrodome before 55,000 fans in 1968.
"The playing noor (in the Astrodome)
was out In the open and the background
made depth perception difficult," Wooden
iald.
"No one shot well before the game
and the televi!ton lights overhead made
It extra bright. Every player shot below
their season average except for Elvin
Hayes of Houston. He had a great game."
Wooden is taking some comfort in
the fact that NCAA officials are installing
7 ,000 seat! on the floor around the
·basketball court IP give it "more at-
..mospbere" for Thursday n i g b t ' s
·sem;final! and Saturday afternoon's
finals.
Floor level wiU be some four feet
.above the spectaWrs who will have W
J09k up to see the action.
Wooden said, "It shouldn't pose as
much a problem this time. The seats
around the oourt V.'ill help."
But he added, "The Astrodome is still
different than a normal spot."
Western Kentucky and Villanova collide
Thursday at 4:40 p.m. PST with UCLA
and Kansas schedu!ed at 6:40 p.m.
·(PST). Some 35,000 fans and a national
.television audience (NBCJ will view the
{action Thursday and Saturday.
. Under Wooden's guidance, UCLA has
:won 26 straight NCAA Wurnament games
'and the Bruins have caplured the na-
tiona1 title six of the last seven years.
Wooden grudgingly recognizes that the
Bruins should be favored.
"l suppose since we are the defending
,champions it's only natural tbat we be
Taled the favorites, but any team that
gets this far along can win," Wooden
.aak:I. "We are not a valkf favorite."
• Wooden said he was particularly Im-
pressed witb Villanova after watching
the Wildcats last Saturday on television
against Pennsylvania.
"I wasn't surprised at the outcome
of any of the other game1 in the NCAA
playoffs,'' Wooden said. "But the margin
of Villanova·s victory WR! unbelievable."
Wooden alsG sald the size and
quickness of Kansas impressed him.
"They will be dilflcult to beat," he
said.
He was asked about a report that
UCLA was spending a good deal of
time working on its zone press for the
Jayhawk.<i.
"I started that," he said, "because
I want Kansas to spend a tot t)f lime
working agains t the zone press.0
All four teams scheduled evening
v.·orkouts today In the Astrodome.
. Kansas and UCLA bring 27·1 record!
into the play<>ff with Vlllanova 2~ and
\Vestern Kentuckv ?J-5.
Wooden said UCLA's past performan-
C'es in the NCAA playoffs would be of no
hel., to this year's team.
"What we did iii the years before
is no help . . . The team this year
is trying to establish its own identity.•
\Vooden said. "We're not trylng"to break
anybody's record because we already
have it."
Ted O\\·ens, the Kansas coach, said
the Jayhawks "can't have Jess than
a great game W have a chance to
win ."
He said Kansas must play loose and
aggressive.
"I believe our players are realistic
enough to know they can't go In tense,''
Owens said. "We can't afford W be
tight for a period of six or seven minutes
against a team like UCLA."
* LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -A closed
practice, first in recent years at Kansas
University, p<>lished off Tuesday the third
session the Jayhawks have devoted to
getting ready for their NCAA national
basketball encounter with UCLA at
Houston.
Coach Ted Owens, coming out of the
regional games at Wichita last week,
said ''I think we'll still do what we've
been doing. When you've won 21 in
a row it might be psychologically bad
to change." But the secret session sug-
gested a possible new wrinkle or two.
Owens started off the three sessions
Sunday with half an hour of wind-sprint
type drllb.
I
........ '
DAILY PILOT ..... b'I' LM l"l'l'llt
HUNTINGTON FLASH -Junior Sieve Brooks (54)
was honored today \vitb a berth on the All-ClF bas-
ketball team for Class AAAA division schools. The
Huntington Beach tfigh \vhiz was on the second
team of the prestigious group alter being chosen
Sunset League player of the year !or pacing his team
to a co-championship.
Lakers Host Bulls Tonight
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Los Angeles
Lakers coach Joe Mullaney calls the
Ch'.cago Bulls predictable and sound.
This may seem faint praise, but
Mullaney is also aware thal the Bulls, a
team without a superstar, take the Na-
tional Basketball Association's third-best
record into tonight's opening pla,yolf
game against the Lakers.
In a league noted for freelance orfenses
dominated by fla!hy guards and high-
scoring games, the Bulls rely on college-
style patterns, a pair of strong forwards
and a stifling defense, the NBA's second-
best.
Their stars, CinciMatl castoff B:>b
Love and former 76er Chet Walkrr , are
hardly household words, but they are
two of the league's best forwards. and
they will give the Lakers' Happy
Hairst<>n and Jlm MeMillian a severe
test.
forward, his college position. in the final
weeks of the season when Los Angeles
was without injured all-pro guard Jerry
\Vest. ·
McMlllian and the &-foot-7 Hairston
both rebound \\'ell for their si7.oe and
should be able to help the Lakers' Wilt
Chambe,rlain match Chicago's Love.
\Valker. ·and either Tom Boerwinkle or
Jim Fox on the boards.
The Bulls also have a height advantage
in the backcourt. v.•here Jerry Sloan,
6-5, and ex-Philadelphian Matt Goukas,
6-6, team to set up the patient Chicag9
offense and spearhead a harassing
defense.
Sloan, one of the league's best
defensive guards. could be another key
if he is able W slow down Gail Goodrich,
the Lakers' 6-1 starter who has had
to bear a greater share of the scoring
since West was hurt.
Beith teams are thin on the bench.
Chicag<>'s best are Fox, wbcl could f<>rce
Chamberlain W move outside if he has
his outside shooting tou;ti; Bob Weiss,
a good ball-handling guard who often
gets the team running; and rookie
forward John Baum, a streak shooter.
Leading Laker reserves are guard
Willie McCarter and forward-center Rick
Roberson, two talented if sometimes un-
disciplined second-year men, and veteran
f<>rward Fred Hetzel, a good outside
shooter.
'fhe Lakers won the aea.son series
4-2, though their overall season mark
was three games behind the Bulls.
The teams play here tonight and Fri-
day, then move W Chicago for games
next Tuesday and Thursday.
Sports In Brief
Oiler Flash
2nd Team
Of All-CIF
HLUngton Beach High'• Junlor for-
ward Steve Brooks has been honored on
lhe 1971 All-CIF AAAA basketball team
as selected by the Helms Athletic Fowi-
dation board.
Brooks was one of two juniors W make
tither the first or second teams.
He was accorde<t a second team berth
after leading HwiUngton Beach High to a
co-championship in the Sunset League.
Ar. a sophomore he was a noo·starUng
guard on the junior varsity. ,
Brooks' overall scoring average was
21.1 during the campaign from hi! high
post. Another junior honored from Orange
County was third team choice Bob Man-
ker of La Habra while Servite's John
Seymour was accorded first team laur-
ela.
Seymour, a Costa Mesa resident, rip-
pled the nets for the Friars at a 21.15
oonn.
Verbum Dei's Raymond Lewis was se-
lected player of the year after leading
his team to a 29-1 mark and the ClF
championship.
He was the AAA player or the year last
year when his team won that division's
title.
Flr1t Team
Player, School Height Cla11 Avg.
F-Boyd, Crescenta Valley 6-7 Sr. 22.5
F-Dean. Morningside tHi Sr. 16.2
F-Reinke, Pasadena &-2 Sr. 20.5
F---O'Leary, Bishop Amat 6-6 Sr. 18.2
C-Ford, Santa Barbara 6-8 Sr. 24.9
C-Baker, Warren &.a Sr. 27.8
G-Burrell, Compton 6-2 Sr. 21.1
G-Lewis, Verbum Dei 6-0 Sr. 24.0
G-r-.1oon, Torrance 6-2 Sr. 20.2
G-Seymour, Servite S.l Sr. 21.6
Second Team
F-Brooks, Huntington Bch 6-3 Jr. 21.t
F-Ward, Mark Keppel &-3 Sr. 25.3
F-Phillips, Blair 6-4 Sr. 22.4
F-Echols, Verbum Dei 6-4 Sr. 12.0
C-Brown, Verbum Dei &-9 Soph. 16.9
C-Jones, Crescenta Valley 6--3 Sr. 15.9
G--Sagebom, LB Wilson 6-2 Sr. 22.3
G-Smlth, Pioneer 6-1 Jr. 24.0
G-Alexander, Notre Dame 5-11 Sr. 20.0
G--Sutterfield, Warren 6-1 Sr. 17.1
Third Team
F-11arks, North Torrance 6-2 Sr. 15.5
F-Mason, Santa Monica 6-5 Sr. 15.4
F-Manker, La Habra 6-5 Jr. 20.0
F-Bowman, Buena 6-5 Sr. 20.9
C-Kolod.ziejczak.
West Torrance 6-5 Sr. 25.2
C-Stroud, La Serna 6-5 Sr. 111.9
G-Ers.kine, Santa Monica 6-0 Sr. 13.4
G--Cowie, Loyola &-1 Sr. 19.9
G-Mallicoat, Pasadena 5-11 Sr. 12.9
G-PauJ, Ventura 6-2 Sr. 16.5
Player of the Year-Raymond Lewis,
Verbum Dei ~UCI Chasing
Bears After ·
~ . . .
,,opping Bruins
"Thls is no punlshmenl drill -there 's
nothing to punish you for but I want
you to be ready to play," he told the
team. "We're not going down W Houston
for the ride. We're going down f<>r the
championship."
McMJllian, the rookie from Columbia,
could be the key for the Lakers. Built
along the lines <>f Elgin Baylor at 6-(oot-5
.and 225, McMillian played well at
At the other . guard for Los Angeles
will be Keith Erickson, an ex-Bull ·who.
like Chicago's Goukas, can also swing
to fonvard . S2 Million for Ole M~s
. ~:
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of IM ~llY P'lltf Sltll
.' Pennis Nicholson went to the mound
"-»eaday night loaded for bear -ala
\!CLA Bruin!, that is.
; The young UC Irvine right-hander
f~hioned a three-hitter W give coach i18ry Adams' happy Anteaters a 4-1
'fictory over the Bruins and return them
t( title contention In the third aMual
~ collegiate baseball tournament
at Anaheim's La Palma park.
. Chapman Colleg~ Is the only un-
defeated team after two days of com-
petition with a pair of victories.
: Chapman defeated Eastern Michigan,
1-1; Cal Poly (Pomona) scored three
times in the bottom of the ninth t<>
d:efeat Southern Illinois, 4-3: and Cal
(lScrkeley) tripped Cal State (Fullerton),
7-i. " ·Irvine returns to action today at 5
e,gainst Cal with Chapman and So. Illinoi:!I
meeting at 8 o'clock. Tom Dodd will
~tch against the Bears.
·In Tuesday's victory over UCLA,
fik:holson p<>sted his second three-hitter
against the Pac-8 squad while pitching
in Irvine li\'ery. Last year he copped
a 7--0 win and the lone Bruin run Tuesday
WU unearned, giving him IS innings
apinst LCLA with no earned runs.
·UCI wa sted little time getting on the
acoreboard as &bby Farrar drew a
leadoff walk In the first and stole second.
He scored on a single to ctitter by,
Rocky Craig but an rrror was charged
on the play taking an rbl away from
Craig.
Dan Hansen opened the second with
a single to right and scored on a triple
by catcher Mlke Sheline with lbe latter
coming home on an inOeld out by
NJchol8on.
Final UCI score came in the eighth a Farrar beat a bobbled bunt to first,
went to second on a v:t\d pitch and
.scortd on Mike Sytora's single.
Craig had a big night at the plate
going three for four with l\\'O ato\en
buts and for the aecond 1treight game,
HADlen had two bits.
UCLA (II UC l,..IM (I) .. , ......
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JOIOSVl!.or ...
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no ooo 01~-• t t •
Sophomore Cage Whiz
JOE BERRY GETS IN THE SWING OF THINGS AT THE GELANDE .
Gelande (Terr•in or Bump Jumping) Keeps 'em Jumping In V•rmont.
!ifE~tPlflS, TeM. -The Illness of
his father, a wish to stay in Memphis
and pro basketball merger talks were
all factors in the decision of Mississippi
sophomore star J<>hnny Neumann W quit
college and sign a $2 million contract
with the t.1emphis Pros of the American
Basketba ll Association .
Neumann, a Memphis native, was the
nation's leading sr.orer with a 40.1
average this season.
e Egan Si%%le•
SARAS OT A, Fla. -Rookie catcher
Tom Egan's fourth extra-base hit, a
double. set up the Ue-breaking run in
the eighth inning that gave the Chicago
White Sox a 4-3 victory over the New
York Yankees In exhiblticn baseball
Tuesday.
Egan, with the Angels last year, also
11lammed a home rum and two other
doubles to give the Soi a four-game
sweep of Ole Yankees and a spring
record or 13-5.
e (J.S. Falls, 1·4
BERN, Switzerland -Finland scored
the first four goals and whipped the
United States 7-4 Tuesday In the world
tee hockey championships.
e Angels Bow
PALM SPRINGS -Light hitting Tom-
my Dean drove In his first two runs
of the !prlng Tuesday and the second
broke a tie propelling San Diego's Padres
to a 5-.( exhibition baseball victory over
the California Angels.
Ho1ne TV Sports Control Under Fire
WASHINGTON (AP) -tr a coople
of eongremnen have their way, sports
promoters won't be able to keep a
heavyweight championship fight, like the
rec.:-nt Joe Frazier-Muhammad Ali bout,
off home televis ion screens.
Rep. Les Asp!n (P..Wii1.), pl.::nntd to
introduce today a biJJ !hat \\'OUld place
•n outright ban on the production of
sports events over closed.circuit TV
whenever a television network or station
wanted to broadcast th!!: evtnt.
Rep, Charles W. Sandman Jr., (ft.
N.J.), said last wetk he would Introduce
legiSlaUon by the end of the month to In·
sure that championship events in profes-
sional sports can be witnessed by the
general public over radio and television.
Sandman's two bills would ban ex·
elusive broadcast contracts on sports
championshi 'ls Jn professional boxing,
footbsll , basketball, baseball and hockey.
The proposed mea~rts RN.' outgrow Lh
of the Frazier-Ali heavyweight cham-
pionship fight March 8. which Fra11tr
won. Promoter Jerry Perenchlo earned
an estima ted $20 million on the live
gate nnd clostd-circult tclevisl<>n wiU1
•17 mlllton coming from televi~ion.
Pertnchlo banned all home broadcast!,
even on 1 delayed basis.
Under Aspln's measure, almost all
sports event! would have t.o be shown
on home TV or not 1hown at all -in-
cluding a11 boxing matches, pro football
ctu~mp\onshlp, college football bowl
games, hasella\I championships and all
other spart events.
"Thia ls one of those ftw issues where
the lines are clearly drawn : simply put,
It is the rights of a handful of promoters
ta obtain oftrn excessive profiti1 on
close:d-clrcult TV against the rights of
120 mllllon American sports fans to enjoy
sports event! on borne TV and radio,"
said Aspln.
One of S.odman's propose:d bills would
prohibit licensed broadcasters, both wire
and wlreleu, "from seeking, conlracUng
for or exercising e1cluslve rtgbt.s" to
pl'1!senl cbamplonshlp event!.
"This will enable broadcasters In
teltvision, radio, cable S)'$tems plus ell
other types of media t<> secure ptt:sen-
tatlon rights to the:~e import&nt national
event.a.'' he said , "No one type of media,
like closed circuit television In the recent
ca11e of the Fraiier-All hcavywe.tgnt box·
ing ch,ampionshlp, will be ptrmltted to
monop<>Hze the rtght of tht public to
witness these events.''
•
Dean's ninth inning single ort Ray
Jarvis foll owed an infield hit by Fred
Kendall and a walk to Larry Stahl.
That put San Diego ahead 4-3 and
Stahl then scored what proved to be
the winning run when Jarvis uncorked
a wild pitch.
e Splkefe•t Switch
LOS ANGELES -The Kansas-UCLA
dual track and field meet scheduled
for Saturday at UCLA has been reshirted
to Sunday alternoon at 1:15.
The change to the Sunday date -
a rarity in college track here -was
made because of the National Collegiate
Athletic Association basketbaU cham·
pionship game in Houston Saturday after-
noon, Y.'hich will be on national television.
e Dodgers Lo•e
COCOA. Fla . -Doug Rader and Cesar
Cedeno clubbed home runs and Tom
Griffin pitched six strong innings Tues--
day as the Houston Astros defeated the
Los Angeh:!s Dodgers 8-3.
e Super Boml 1'fo1'es
NEW ORLEANS -Announcement that
the Super &wl wil\ be played here
next January lighted the dollar signs
in the eyes of thousands of New Orleans
residents.
In order to land the 1972 Super Bowl
the city had to guarantee that 82,QOO..seat
Tulane Stadium will be covered with
artificial turf for the game.
e Kings Dumped
SJ'. PAUL • MINNEAPOLIS, Minne-
sota 's North Stars clinched• West
Division National Hockey League playoff
berth Tuesday night with a 3-1 victory
over Los Angeles on two power play
goals and hustling Ted Hampson 's third
shorthanded marker of the season.
e Gardner Out
SALT LAKE CITY -Jack Gardner
Is out u bead basketba11 coach at the
Unlvtrslty of Utah alter IS years of
guidlna-the "Running Redskins."
Gardner, 60, was rtlievecl u co\ch
Tu-:sday by the school 's AthleUc Board.
Athletic DlrecWr Bud Jack said the
11earch for a successor would begin im·
med letely .
Gardner requested and received a sab-
batical leave or one year .
Arter that, Gardner it expected to
rttum to the school In 1ame capacity
with thfl Department of Physical EtCuca·
tion possibly as a aotr coach.
I
\
Estancia Downs Mesa, 5 ~1
• Eagles R un Irvine R ecord ro 2-0
I
By ROGER CA.RI.SON
Of 1M OlllJ 1'11•1 $1111
Estancia lligh 's v a r s i l y
baseball team swept to lts
sccond stra ight Irvine League
victory T u c s d a y afternoon
with a 5-1 conquest of host
Costa Mesa behind the lour·hil
pitching of Cal Shores.
It was a duel between a
pair of one.time teammates
as Shores was paired up
ag ainst Dan Quisenberry.
Both. had toiled for Mesa
as sophomores before the
for1ner moved 10 Estancia.
But it was Shores' game
al l !be way as the senior
righlhander v.·ent the distance.
struck out nine and allowed
four hils -t"'O l'.'hich came
in the seventh frame to spoil
his shutout bid.
Quisenberry, meanwhile,
Wa! the victim of non-support
as b.i.s tearrunat.es managed
five errors.
The Eagles of coach Ken
f.1illard put it away 1n the
fifth inning when they
parlayed four singles (lv.'o
were marginal) and three
Costa Mesa errors into four
runs.
It was a study in frustration
for Mesa as first Jim Schultz
led off with a bad hop single
and Pt1ike Powell followed with
a clean bingo to left field.
That set it up for a sacrifice
bunt play but tbe ball was
overthrown at first and both
runners scored.
Jim Watson scored from
thin! on a sq....,. play tbat
found Jeff 1.e1sdorf aafe at
first and be wound up at third
after another Mesa error.
Dave Ronquillo flnlshed it off
with an rbl-ptoduclng Dy ball
single to right field.
The ln!Ual Estancia acore
In the. fourth stanza came on
Charles Coakley'1 two-out tri·
pie te> right cent.er and Ron-
quillo's inrleld dribbler which
was bobbled.
-Mesa's only fireworks came
in the seventh when 1'fark
Christman led off with a walk
and Randy Embrey alngled
to move runner Tom Sampson
lo tblrd. Another hue bit by
Mike Allen (his second) a<:·
counted for Sampson at the
plate. ·
CdM Rips Chargers , 24-2;
Barons Nip Magoolia, 4-3
Corona de! !\lar and Foun·
lain Valley were both winners
in Irvine League baseball ac-
tion Tuesday but they were
on different ends of the stick
as two teams could be.
First off. c<>ach Tom
Trager's visiting Corona del
Mar Sea Kings walloped the
Edison Chargers of coach Bill
J\1orrls by a 24-2 score in
a contest which was called
because of darkness after Si.I
full innings.
While Corona was teeing off
en Edison, Fountain Valley
stayed unbeaten (2-0) in loop
hostilities with a 4.J squeaker
over invading Ptlagnolia.
Although Corona blasted out
13 hits in its lops.ided triumph,
the Sea Kings relied mostly
on Edison welfare as a trio
of Olarger pitchers gave up
17 y,·alks.
Included in Corona's array
or hitting were homers by
John Palmer (a two-run shot
in t.he sixth) and little Mark
Sears (a solo job to Jeadoff
the sixtb), a lriple by Reed
Johnson and a two-bagger by
Scott Parker.
AU of lhe Edison hits picked
up oft Sea King hurlers Dave
Vilas and Johnson w e r e
singles.
Coach John Cole'a Fountain
Valley Barons chased in all
four or lhelr runs in the se-
cond inning.
A steal and a pair of errors
coupled with bue hits by
Wayne Ouellette and Mike
Sbimaji got the Barons their fk tallies.
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'lbe loss dropped coach Jim
Haeey 's Mustang$ to an 0-2
league mark.
CdM Ace
Favored
In Sprints
A fairly tven field of
sprinters and quartennilers
wilt be representing t h e
various Orange Coast area
schools Saturday in the sixth
annual Beach C i ti e s in-
vitational track and field meel
at Newport Harbor High.
Junior jet Carlo Tosti of
Corona del Mar will be a
slight favorite to capture both
the 100 and 220 off his bests
of 9.9 and 22.7.
Oil City
Hurdlers
Top Field
Huntlnlton Beach's hurdJe
duo or Steve Pickford and
Garth \Vise swept to a 1·2
flnlsh in the 120 high hurdles
race of the small schools
division last &alurday in the
50th annual Southern Counties
track and ric:d meet at Hun·
tington.
And the Oiler twosome could
be in for a duplication this
Saturday when lhe sixth an.
nual Beach Cities invitational
gets off the grotmd at Newport
Harbor IDgh.
Pickford and Wise lead the
area hurdlers with 14.7 and
14.1 clockings In the highs
to far outdistance the other
area athletes in that specialty.
Closest is Marina's DeMis
Averyt with a 15.1 mark while
the latter's teammate -Gene
Taylor - is at 15.3.
Malt Hogsett (15,7) of host
Newport and Edison's Dave
Powell (15.1) figure to be the
only other seriow contenders
for hooors in lbe high.s Satur·
day.
Leaders ln the lows are
Averyt and Taylor, with iden·
Ucal 19.8 bests.
The Marina pair has taken
tuna in beating each other.
Hogsett and Fountain Valley
sophomore Richard L e n g a
have been credited with 20.2
top clockings while Pickford
is behind that pair at 20.6.
E<lbon'1 Ron Collings (21.2)
has been virtually unstoppable
in dual meets and could be
a threat in the lows.
DAILY PILOT J9
Vikes T t im Western
In Loop Opener, 2-1
By PHIL ROSS
01 tu 01ur P11t1 Jt•lf
lt's a fact th.at the Sunset
League Is a circuit of one-run
baseball games.
There was more than a
.single one-run decision around
1he loop on opening day Tues·
day and two or the principals
in lasl year's race-to-lhe-wire
Sunset derby v.·ere involved
In one of the tigh.t aflalril
as the host Marina Vikings
chalked up a 2-1 verdict over
the Western Pioneers, who
shared the league croY.'n in
1970 with Anaheim and
\Vestminster.
And Friday c;.oach Ray
Allen·s Vikings could be In
store for another tight squeeze
when tl1ey stay at home
to tackle the Santa Ana Saints,
a club featuring decent pit·
ching.
Th at type of decent pitching
\\.'as the prime factor Jn lhe
Wfi1"1'1 Ill .. ' • ~· Emdo, l b ' • ' ' Oe"afl, ~· ' ' ' ' LI Mtndotl ' ' ' ' ~lth1rd•. U ' ' • ' Loller, lb ' ' ' ' Wttk.$. c ' ' ' • Nitkll. •I ' • • ' Clllldrns. pl\ ' ' ' ' Oflr .. 10 ' • ' ' Brl•tndiM, cl ' ' ' ' 8001141•, Ill! ' ' ' ' To1111 ~ ' , ' Merine 11 ) .. • . ~· WhHltr, If ' ' ' ' Cem1>~!1. •• ' ' ' ' Ptmbtr1Dfl, 11).p ' ' ' ' w<tt " ' • ' ' C•e1c1. P·lb ' ' • ' Towle. cl ' ' • ' $w1..-.. lb-lb ' • ' ' w,u •• c ' ' ' ' Br-n, 10 ' ' ' ' T~l•l1 " ' ' ,
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Wt,ttrl'I .. .. ,_, ' ' M1rln1 .. ,. ,..., ' '
low run production Jn the Vik-
ing-Pioneer clash.
Tony Crescl hurled three
shutout innings of one-hit ball
before retreating to h i s
11ormnl spot at third base for
Marina while southpaw junior
teammate Brock Pemberton
finished up the Viking mound
chores, relinquishlng only a
th.ird-inning triple to Wes-
tern 's Rick Diets and allow-
ing just one unearned run.
At the same time, We.stem's
righthanded ace Greg La Men·
dole dueled the Marina pair
for lhe distance but he gave
up live hits and a couple of
fatal sacrifice files.
Jn fact, It was a sacrifice
fly that could've easily been
turned into a harmless foul
pop in the seventh lnnlnc
which got acrou the winnlnl
Marina tally.
With the score knotted 1t
l·l, Pemberton led off the
bottom of the seventh with
a Jong triple over the head
of the Pioneer centerfielder.
He raced for the plate two
pitcbea later when t b •
Western rlghlfie.lder caught a
foul down the line off Bob
Witt'a bat.
Newport Upended
By Colonists, 4-3
Ry CRAIG SllEFF
01 lllt Dallr Pllll '11H
A sevenlh·inning rally fell
a run short and as a result
Newport Harbor High. dropped
its Sunset League baseball
opener to invading Anaheim
Tuesday, f.3 .
Trailing 4-2 in the seventh,
Newport pinchh itter Bill Fer-
ree led o!f the frame with
an infield single. Afte r Ferree
stole second, a strikeout and
a ground out dimmed the
Tars· hopes.
The hit acomt teammate
Jim Grimes who had 1lngled
and stole second.
Newport got one back in
the home half of the frame
when Easterling got aboard on
a fielder's choice, stole second
and galloped borne wben Alvtn
White's infield single wat
overthrown at first
Knaub's single with two
mates aboard Jn the third
gave the Colonlsb a J.l lead
they never relinquished.
Diablo s,
Tri tons
Defeat ed
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Eollu• UI
However, Tosti should get
plenty of oompetition from
several other area 1print
notables including • 1 n i o r
teammate John Miles (10.0),
who claims one victory over
Tosti already this year.
Fountain Valley's Phil Maas
(10.0. 22.9) took second In both
sprint racu in last year's
meet behind graduattd Dave
Johnson of Estancia, so he's
probably Tosti's most 1erious
challenger.
Laguna in First Place
Following 5-4 Triumph
But Stu Weedn then stroked
a double down the right fiel d
line to plate Ferree. The next
batter - Mike Easterling -
then hit a ground ball between
third and short that appeared
headed for a base hit.
But Anaheim third baseman
MariC> Muntn made a nice
stab of the sharply bit
grounder and threw Easterling
out by two strides.
Newport pared the margin
tG one wilh a run In the
fourth on Alvin White's double,
a wild pitch and an error,
but Anaheim got It back ln
the sixth on a fielder'a choice.
a single an d two Newport er·
rors.
A~111t!1111ti:I r . fl Ao!
Cdmn, 2b ' ! Munor, lb 1 M"".oh 1 D '-·~· "·" ' ' l, ' San Clemente lligh's dcfen·
ding Crestview Le ague
baseball champions dropped a
game off the pace Tuesday
\\.'hen lhe Tritons' fell to host
Orange, 3.{l, in nine iMings.
~1ission Viejo. lhe Orange
Coast area's olher entry in
the circuit, dropped its second
straight 2-0 decision, this time
\o visiting El Modena.
Orange came up with a
single marker in the bottom
of the sixth to tie -then
won il in the ninth.
Three of San Clemente 's
seven hits were for extra
bases with Tim Wright, Terry
Neilsen and Scott Johannes
each collecting a double.
For luckless ~1ission Viejo.
it marked the 25th straight
inning wilhout a score.
El MHlflt (11 .. • ' "' B1rtlev, lb ' ' ' ' ~~~( •• "c1 ' • • ! ' ' ' P•lt•son. lb·D l ' ' ' LtCeslJ'l;ll, 111 ' ' ' Jombrc~. u I ' ' ' Cllri11ooner. •I ' ' ' Bc•oruufl, rt ' ' ' ' Leol!P!lt •. ~ ' ' ' ' Fol~,u ' ' ' ' 51bilkD " ' • ' ' Mvrr1, rl O 0 ' ' To1111 71 l ' ' MIHllft V~lo ltl .. • ' "' F f'OUIO!', 1b ' ' ' ' Oull(ll. u ' ' ' ' ~fire. •• j ' , ' 111on, lb ' ' Ptlce. cf ' ' ' ' ""l\crall. lb ' ' ' ' Jones. rt ' ' I ' C,•l~d. c ' • ' Wa<1t, o~ ' I ' • G!lltnw•ters. o ' ' ' Toll>tr!. o ' ' • ' To!1ls Scor• b' lnn?n11 ' ' ' ' ' • fl Modrn• 000 OCl 1-1 ' ' M"ilon Vit ia "' .. 0-0 ' ' Sin Cllmtnlt U) .. • • ...
n...iet'lln, n ' ' • ' i.;1~11. ~ti ' ' ' ' Rt.on1n, rl ' ' ' ' 5r•lrr•, n ' • ' ' l(lt•n~n. d • ' ' ' Wr!gM, c ' ' ' Douv11u. lb • ' ' ' JOl'l1n~$. 10 • ' ' ' Gib.on " • ' ' • NT•l..,n. o ' • ' ' P1•1fTIO. P ' ' ' ' Tot•I~ " ' ' ' Orlttft Ill •• ' • "' tlewm1n, lb • ' ' ' Bt•lfl1, .t ' • ' ' ..... 1 .... O'I ' • ' ' eon....,•lm•~-Pf • ' ' • ~·~••dtr. It • ' • ' Bt~ef, " ' ' ' ' c;,.1111~ •• < ' ' ' • t<ulll1"I, 10 • ' ' ' ~ ..... 01 ... ~i.1, ti ' ' ' ' LoC1to, Jb ' ' • ' u~1n111tcnt. ,. ' ' • ' l'ltll, p ' ' ' ' l OI-'• " '''" OJ lft~lft•I ' • ' ••• $1'1 (lem~nl• (II)! 100 OOC-7 1 I O••~•• JOO 001 001 -1' )
Benefit Tilt
AL Es tancia
'l'he DAILY Pl.LOT besket·
halt team "'ill come oul or
hricf retirement Saturd.1y
night lo f11ce an Estancia fac-
ulty squad in a bcnefil for t"'o
F.stancla students kll led re-
cently in an aulo ,.rash.
The game will be: held in
1hc Estancia gym at 7 and
"'ill be tollowed by a juniors
vs. seniors till at 8:30. A
Sl admls!Jion covers both en·
counters.
Also, a dance i~ being held
In raise funds and wlll take
f)la ce al llo.lecrcst Club in
Cnsta J\1esa. F' u r t h e r In-
formation on that can be ob-
tained fron1 Brian McCaughey
(~fl.9187! Qr Hugh Galloway
IS46-J406).
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Edi-NO :00.-l ' t
Joe Ventimiglia of Marina
is behnd the other area
sprinters in the 100 but boasts
lhe area's top 220 clocking:
of 21.6.
Estancia iopbomore Bruce
Girasole has betn credited
"ith. a 10.0 w hi le Mission
Viejo's Ed Letro has posted
a 22.7 furlong clocking.
Laguna Beach Hlgh's vars!·
ty baseball team rests atop
the Orange League standings
today following the Artists'
M elgbt-lnnlng victory over
host Saddleback Tuesday.
Coach Darrell McK.ibban 's
winnen rode the bat of Greg
Kessler for the win. Keasler
knocked in a pair of runs
with two triples and a single.
He'1 now batting .340 and
Included in his nine safe hits
are five triples, three home
runs aod a single.
in the lop or the eigh th when
Tom Murphine singled with
two outs -then advanced
to third on Chuck Corwin'&
safety.
Saddleback's defense then
took over for Laguna as a
tapper back to the box
resulted in a wild throw at
third base and fl.furphlne
scored the go-ahead run.
Ron McEJhany was the win·
ning pitcher after toiling the
last three fram es.
The Colonists were paced
by the hitting or first baseman
Ron Knaub who banged out
two doubles and a single, driv·
lng in a trio of runs.
Knaub's first double ~ame
In the lniUal inning and ap-
peared to clear the left field
fence by a safe distance. But
the base umpire ruled that
the ball bounced over the
fence, awarding Knaub a dou-
ble.
l(neub, 11> ' I Murll\c, 1s ! Ven Dll>en. ti M1dlntt. ct O 'Yourtat. ti J I
TMs. 1> Mortin. t J I
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l'011r, ._.. ..,. 111112Z... ) ' .. l#llltl'i Lions Notch Win, 1-0;
Huntington Falls, 3-0
The meet records of JO.O
(by Johnson) and 22.4 (by
Marina's Dave Lacy in '69)
could be in jeopardy if the
weather is obllglng.
Laguna's wlMlng tally came liiiiiiiiii
Bo1h the Westminster Lion11
and the Huntington Beach
Oilers were participants in
shutout baseball games in
their Sunset League openera
Tuesday.
However, the compa rison
slops right there.
D e f e n d i n g tri-champion
\\'estminster traveled to Santa
Ana and rode the three-bit
pitching or lefthander Mario
Sanc hez to a 1-0 victory for
coach Frank Munoz's nine.
Meanwhile, the Oilers of
coach Don Walker were vie·
timized by those refugees
a wild pitch and scored on
Mike Dodd's alngle.
Sanchez struck out six ind
walked fe>ur in dueling, the
Saints' Charlie PtfcKelthen in
a fierce mound confrontation.
The latter fanned IO Lions
and issued five free passes.
Bespectacled Paul Fulham
logged the distance on the
hill for Huntington, giving up
six ruts and whiffing sil:.
Jerry Ashford socked a do1J.+
ble for the losers while Steve
Deeter and Tom Crunk added
singles.
The 440, mea n whi le ,
showcases Estancia's Eric
Olson, the holder of the area's
fastest quart.er mark (48.9)
last spring.
Olson has zipped 50.0 in '71
and should be rated the runner
to beat at Beach Cities ahead
or Pi-farina 's John Jurs (50.6),
\Vestminster's Jim Keathley
(51.5), Fountain Valley aoph
John Sayles (51.fi) and Rich
Cordery (51.1) of Mission Vie ..
jo.
Olson may eclipse the 49.3
meet standard set by Hun·
tington Beach's Paul W1lllams
in 1968.
l tHlll IMclr UJ .. • c::-1". 2\11 ' ' Fte, d ·lb ' ' l!Hlltr, P.U ' ' Brook1, rl , ' Nld!Clll, •I • • Mt:EWllll'f. 10-, ' ' M1rtl1 ,. ' ' 0 1 .. (111, It ' ' Moorm1n. K ' ' 11.,..,,n, ct ' • Mur~lnt, c • ' lo1111 " ' s .. fl9Nck ro .. ' Gcmln1k!, Jb • • Ku~. 21> ' ' Munlotl, 11 ' ' lllulltr, t • ' G1rcl1, d ' JIC<llllll, < • ' D1Yld10fl, lb ' • F .. 1111rltk1~, rt • ' Thom-, II • • Tt11ll " • ., ... ..,. lft11l11•1 • L11Uft1 8t1cll 100 ~· ·-· 51Cldlt'l>1ck ·~ "' , .....
' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' • ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ,
' • ' •
• • • ' • ' from the Irvine League-the!piii00iiii00iiii00iiii00iiii00iiiiOOiiiiOOiiiiOOiiii00iiiiOOiiii00iiiiOOiiiiOOiiiiOOiiiiOiOiiii00iiiiOmj
\'isiting Loara Saxons-in a
3-0 contest.
Westminster knocked out
only two singles the entire
ga1nc against Santa Ana but
the Lions pushed across !hr.
tally that counted with two
~ut. in the top of the ;Utth I mn1ng .
Bob Nodland walked for the
Lions with one out and lhen
adva nced to second on Doug
Milne's sacrifice.
NOO!and went to third on
. "'
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Ltl'\l!!'l,>tl 1 t 0 ,':I MOr1IH. Jiii 0 0 1• Fr•-· 2b ~ 0 ,..~..,,Ph I I Tol1t1 71 > t
Ocean Academics Comes to Orange County
1
SCUBA
OC•ANOORAPHER
A Prntr1• frw IMln•111J YnJtth
OtJic1iJ1J to Ort•tt Ai,.,.r,..,,,,,
• OCEANOGRAPHY
•.MARINE llOLOGY
·MARINI UFE
• SCUil AND SKIN DIVING
• ECOLOGICAL SURVEYS
• ARCHAEOLOGICAL TRIPS
HOWr Ol llHTATION MUTIN IJ
WHIH1 MAICH JI. 7:Jt p • .._
WHIU1 ISTANCIA HISH
COU.L IOOM
= = = = = = =
firt$tone
CAR SERVICE OFFER
See us for fas t . expert car s ervice at low prices .I
I. Front end
alignment
2. Front wheels
balanced
3. Brakes adjusted
(D isc brakes excluded )
4. Repack front wheel
bearings (Grease seals extra, if needed) "
ALL4
ONLY
Price for most Amerlc1n
$ 95 Parts extra,
if needed.
Air condltiontng or
torsion bars ext ra.
Firestone Motor King
BATTERY
An es:oetlent
bettay. Fif.t
mot1t 12-volt
$ 88
~.WJ.
Cotto Met.• flrnt•M 11•'9
'7J l . 1111'1 STltl!IT.....U-1~
MOU•l1 """·· 'rt, I 1.111, 111 p.11\. S11 .. I 1.111, 11 J p,lfl,
H•11"'9tct• IMch f lr .. to• Sr.rt
11111 ,.llACH lLVh,-.Ul.410l
tlOU•l • M111., Pr\., I •.111. tt I .. "" •• , ... l .M. ... ,.'"-
Cfft9 111 .... -Jeny H..it
un NlWPOltf ILVO~
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' .
•
20 DJ.J l V I 1l1,1 r
Dues, Gauchos Fall
' ' .. •
Rustlers Rip Foe
. In Loop Baseball
! .. Golden Wen College banged
t out lS hits en route to a ru..s Southern California
, Conference victory over host ft.A Harbor to b1ghllght area .. f junior c:ollege baseball acUon
,Tuesday.
~ In other tilts, invading
._ Orange Cooasi dropped a 3-<t
; South Coast circuit decision
=~o Ml. San Antonio while
"1sitlng Saddleback fell to
Citrus, 10-1.
Golden West'• Rustlers piled
ap t t of their runs in the
fl,rst nve inninp to easily rout
U Harbor. Coach Fred
Hoover's club has now scored
%9 runs against the Seabawks
in two games. The previous
score was 17-3.
foi' the Bucs in the ninth bJ..
nlng.
Steve V albuena pitched well
ln defeat for Orange Coast,
allowing just the th.rte Mt.
SAC runs on seven htts. Val·
buena tossed the first seven
innings, striking out one and
walking one .
The Mounties got all three
of their runs in the third on
a pair of singles, a triple
j a double.
At Citrus, Saddleback was
held to five hits by Owls'
right-haoder Fred Zavala.
The Gauchos got their only
run in the eighth inning on
stngle.s by Terry Boyles and
Gary Jackson and Eric
Christensen's fielder 's cho ice.
.,Anrt.rn: Of TH£ D!CA.IK"'
"TRIGGER" YOUR GRIP WITH ~
YOUR RIGHT FOREFINGER
One of gott's most common
faults is holding the club too
much In the palm cf the right
hand. The fingers should dom·
Jn1te the grip, not the palm.
Hbld tht club so that lhe
right forefinger wraps around
the underside of the s~aft. As
if you are triggering 11 pistol. By
assumin& this position, it is
likely that the rest of your right·
'hand .1rip will be sutticienUy in
th• fingers.
The left hand controls the
club and holds it more in -the
palm. But the role of the right
hand Is more sensitive. Hold
the Glub eently. And re:.niem·
ber, never let your forefinger
"'squeeze the trigger.''
'
Coast Area Net Results
Jim Hogan, r.tark Cresse
and Mike Adams paced the
12-hlt attack.
Howard Hoyt had two of
the Saddleback bits, including 1----~---------~"~e:...m_• ~-'-· ---""'-. ..,.""'-
a double.
Hogan slugged a 415-foot
home run to right center with
a mate Jiboard in the fourth
frame and also doubled in
a run in the fifth.
Cresse bad bis best day at
bat wltb three singles ln three
trips, picking up a single rbi
in each of the Cirst and third
frames ..
Adatns bad an lJnusual day
with three . straight triples,
driving ln a pair or tallies
wilb his fi!lb inning lhrtt-
baser.
P.1ark Barr picked up the
victory for Golden West,
pitching the first five innings.
He struck out six. Rwtler
reliefers Glenn Oslerode and
Gene Barker combined to fan
eight more Seahawk batters.
Meanwhile at M't. S a n
Mtonlo, Orange Coast could
only solve Mountie pitcher
Coley Smith for a pair of
singles.
'11le first came in the
seventh when Jim Hawse
broke up Smith'• bid for a
n<>hitter with a one-out hit.
.Pete: PiJI also got a one-ba1er
CIF Spike
Honor List •
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1:52.f •·P.·• 1:14·' tu:i
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ol02 aR 11•-10 11 I
Uni Honors
Cage Players
Tom Mullinix was accorded
the most valuable player
award at Monday night's ban·
quet honoring the University
High basketball team.
Other varsity awards in-
cluded : captain-Bruce }.-1ico.
most improvtd -Dan Stuart ;
and most inspirational -Tom
Walker.
Nill!i Laurvik was named the
Junior •arsity team's most im-
proved player while Pete
~?J.o Weirenga received the 100 per-
24.I
1J1:i' cent award. :a.. Sophomore c a p t a i n s in-
' •1• eluded Tim lgoe and John t: I Dannunzio while Jack lier· t :1~ rington and Nick Surico ~:ere
,,_ , selected freshmen captains.
it i IPiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiil g•1 , .. ,.,
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GOLF TIPS
lAW Score lnclloHln A
GoM Shwt O.m ..
Prectlce et the •.•
NEWl'OITll INN
PAI l GOlf COURSE
S1 with this .. WMk d•y•
service
dedicated
••• don't hesitate
,\
)~~
CREST SNACK TRAY ,,,
4\·201?
BUENA PARK
'"cti It.,.._ .t Ultweu ...
SJDI leKtt 11•4.
SJJ.J040
4~. ·-~ • >
ENGINE CLEANER
99C
<4'2·1011
£N'1NE ENAMEL
77C ,. 0.-••
36-0~00
Ir., .... ,,,.. fol>! 4•• .... 1 ..... "' ......
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BUENA PARK
• u.c.i11 .t Yo\19y YJe..
HIS UMol11 ....
126·1100
•
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FISK .PREMIER
·4·PlY NYlON CORD IODY
14" 17" 1.76
C78-13 f7.00) 1.92
H78-14 (B.551 21" 24" 2.74
L-.:H.:.:7.::B_:· 1"-5 ,,IBo:.5'.:'.5'-) '-::._:-2.80 Allpoouo pl,.,F......,[~<••T"" ;:-
FR~E MOUNTINCi!
FREE ROTATION!
WITi. tlfO( ~URCH1'St
CHARGl;IT!
WI llJ.11"'1 TM\ IUOl!I fO IWllT:JKl1'H11!11l
~~ .
3488 ......
1..-111 ..... #IQ!lot-1•
aT"ACIC$ltRl O TAP~.~~~YER 688
JMto~ll"•
CHAAOEm
11.S0.1' 81-w.rl, Tubel-Pl~• l.lG F_,,..: (~cile T•~
f .; ·.• ., I ''"1-o'
T~e Lnl Jolwl!lt~ 'l' .... 'n IE"Yff
l~Y tor Y....,. Prnefll Cw1
HEAVY DUTY
MUFFLER
Forch, c r.evroll"' PIYO.-lllf .. . .. ,.11
Oo°""' Dld1""°"!1H,
P1111llocs • •• 1\.11
llUlclt • Cod!lloci.
Cllr"l'lle1'1 • •. ll.11
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NHVWAl1 1
USt \'OUR
Km•"
CllEOlf
C.11.llD
OR 'l'OIJR
BA .. K
A"'EIUCARD m
FISK PREMIER
BATTERY
n ~•"
36 MONTH GUArll.NTtl 7 ~1'.'..-:--::::.-:.::::.'.'.'. ':·:·::;'.'.!;
o.rt1 U"'-11'Slo~ ,.., .... • "'' ,. ,_. •. .,_,,.
ktll<IA AY<t11'7ttlt. .. ...... ~ • ., ••••' """ """"''
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Kmart MUFFl..llt :::.•~::.:~:.:-;,;:.:,""':,':" .. ""
GUIRAHTEE '"'"'~··•'"'''"'' . ., • .,. ..... ,,,... .... 1oc-1....,1"""'-.... ._ ...... , ..... ·-~· ...
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LOCK I NO LUG HU11 3.99
All Mo jof lt•di ef ·
MOTOR
~0!~7:::
JACK STAND , ••
COSTA MESA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
Molitor 11.,.._ _, W""91
2200 Horiter 11•4.
54!·2012
• 141fl9M StrMf fl l riJtol
1400 ra...-
so1,.11:11
• '"ch llri. et McNcUH
11440 hee.~ 11 ....
.,2.1011
..
JC, Prep
Baseball
Standings
S.OVTM <OIJ;T COftFEllENCll
W L TGt
f\ll1trtoo1 ' ' ' Ml. hn Antot1le c ... , ...
1.tonOl-
~ , 0 1'1
• l 0 3
J.11 DI"'° .V..W Or•-Coal! St1111 Alll
J J , ~· ..
l • ' •
J J 0 •'. 0 1 0 I
T.-MbJ•1 $corn
Ml. Ion Antonio ), OrenQf Coa1t O Cerri!~ 11. kn OINO Mt>• )
TllllrH1v•1 G11>,.1
San Dino •• Or•ne• CO••! Slnll Ant 11 Ct,.!IO• FriMY'1 G1mt Ful_,latl 11 C1rrH01
IOUT"'•llN CAL CONFERENCE
"'" Goolden Wu! ,,.,.u ··-UI ... _
IE•1t LA
TllMUJ'I u .. n
Goldfll WHI 11. LA H1rtlor J
L.ACC 6 CJlll'I" '
lllo HonOo 14, E•1I U. o Ft!Q1"1 O.mn
ltlo HMda •I a.-n Wnl Ent LA 1! LACC
C\"ll'l'IH 11 LA l11rbor
W L Ga
' ' , , . , , . , , , ' , . ' '
Milli~ CONFllltfNCI:
W L GI '"~ Saulllwnltrn
(NolteJ Gronmot11
f'1lom•r s... 1 .. n1ro11""
$.-lclld>Klc
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Sourhwtlltrn J, P1iorrl1r l
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ltlve<1k11 1t Sa<ld!fblt~
Cl\1118'1 1t Cl!ru1
Sin a.. ...... c11no II P•lom••
Southw111trn II GroumC/11
CRESTVIEW LEAGUE
• ' • ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' • •
WI. GI ' ' ' . ' ' I \ 1 \
I ' ' g l i
M1rln1 w1um1n111r An11l\llm
W L GI ' .
""" H1mtlnt110ft lttdl Newporl H1rbor S1nt1 .t.n1 W..h!rn TwHt~·s ktrwi Wnlmtn1tfr \, S1nl1 AN O
AMrlnt 1. Wtst1rn l
tMMlm ' Ntlwi:>Orl Harbor l oar• 3,. H11n!lno1on Beech o FrldaJ'S G1mn
' ' ' . I 0 . ' ' ' ' ' o I
Loar• ¥1 An11\elm 11 LI P1lm1
(I o.m.J
~~t~':n!I 1~uM'!'if~:1 Beach
NNl'Ol"I H•rtior 11 we~1"'1""'' IRVINl 1.EACiUl W L GI
E1:1ncl1 Founllln VtlleY Cor0ft1 dfl Mir
Los Al1mllos
Mu roe II• S..nll .t.n• va11t1
Colli Mt>•
Edl10n
' ' ' ' ' ' ' Tuna•''' 1(6"'1 corona Otl M•r 1~. Ea1 ... n 2
El1•nc:l1 s. Costa Me•• l
L .. All mllos J. SA Vlllty 1 founl1ln V1ll•Y '-Ma11noll1 l
l"riMY'• Gtmt1
CCllllt Mui 11 l.ot Al1m1!01
Edison 11 51n11 An1 Vtlley
E1lll'ldl 11 MllvnoU1
• ' ' ' ' ' ' '
Fovnt1ln Vtllly II Coron• clel Mtr
Fltal!WAT LEAGUE
' ' '
l:ll«IOft
VIMI nny Hllll Tro1
W L GI
' 0
!ll<'nl P1r~ ~""' e HIUl'I Lowell
' ' ' . ' . . ' . ' . ' ' '
1 Bush Will Coacl1
North All-stars I Coach Paul Bush of Sonora I
High's CIF AA basketball
champions has been named .
to guide the North Al.1-sta~s
In the sixlh annual Kiwanis I
extravaganza al Orange Coast
College June 19.
Sonora's Raiders won the ir
last 15 games in a row In 1
~apturt the Orange Leaguc j
and CIF titles.
\
DAILY PILDT 2J.
Checking Out Area Golf Greens Mickaelian
Mat Coach "FREE"
Sailboating Kevin Wheeler and John
Farrell Will meet fOr the
president's cup championship
at Mesa Verde Country Club
this weekend with D I c k
Miescke and Bob Littleton
playing ror the v I c e
president's flight title.
The only other match still
un<.-omp\eted is Jn \ h e
treasurer's flight where
Gordon Cannoa and T e d
Nehrenberg will play for the
title.
Ed Carroll defeated Roger
Waterman, 2 and I to win
the secretary's flight with
l~a rry Springmeyer defeatin g
Bob Buckhenizer. 2 and I,
for the chairman's flight
championship.
Flight winners i n c I u d e d
D3ve Schweitzer over Bob
Kitson, 2-up, in the first flight;
Pete Bruwe\I over J Im
O'Shaunecy. l·up. in SCCflnd
n•~ht: J ohn Adams over Ed
WP.Mer. 1-up for third Oi~ht
honrrs: Robert Polly over Jim
Kalit>e r. :l-anc:t·2. in the fourth
Oi tt hl ; and \\lilliam Cooner
owr Burk Wilson. I-up. for
the fifth ~t title.
The mpn's club at Mesa
Verde v.·ill stllge a 36.hole
selective tournamen! on Aoril
3-4 v.·ith t~e 11nnu111 seniors
tourney scheduled for April
17-18.
In a best ball lnurn:irnenl
over the 11·ee'.;.end. Banks and
Mary Anne \\lf!nam:>l.:P" lc.,m-
ed wit"t T1Jm and Onrlene
Bouse for fi,.~t place with a
net score of 60.
Second pl ace al 61 fflund
h'io le.,ms in :l de1dlock. Carl
ancf Gtn,.ia Bo11o·clcn te~merl
with \\lilliam and ~1argaret
Reynold" on one S"U<lti and
Stan find ChllrlottP Wood y.·ere
1vith Ed'e and Don Gow on
the other.
No changes have bef'n made
at ~1esa ve~de where a
reported sale of the count
and clubhouse facilities to a
Japanese finn ha! reportedly
taken place.
"We are operaUng as usual
and 1 understand no chapges
will be made ln the immediate
future,'' pro Barry~Sutherland
says.
ilfeadotelcwk
Laguna Niguel recenUy with Coaat: Howard SnUth of Dia-Second place went to Dr. Wayne Mtckat.Uu hu been
a score oI l~. m~ Bar; Paul Scoedeller Ted Witalls and Dorothy Eltey named to succted Vern
P.fr. and Mn. Richard of El NigueJ; Richard with 83li2. Wagner u vanity wresUing
Howell and Mr. and Mrs. Martinea of Mbslon Viejo; Mrs. Roy Ha 1 be r I or coach at Fountain Valley High
Lloyd Foley won a mixed be3t Willie Barber ot Barber's Goll Newport scored a hole·ln~ne School followtna tbret yem
bait of foursome tournament Center in Anaheim. on the 127-yard eighth hole u wist.ant \o the latter.
with a 61 , Also Pinky Stevenson of at Irvine Coast on ladles day, Wqner stepped down after
Virginia Country Club; Briln leading the Barons to tour
Jr"itte Co"'t \ Lake ol Huntington Seacliff: S•nta Ana consecutive Irvine Le ague Cecil Harris of Anaheim; and Irvine Coast Country Club J hnmy Thompson of Los Ed Crane began defense of champlonahlpa.
will be the scene of a pro-Coyotes Country Club. his president's cup title at Mlckatllan, 21, and a mi·
Piii TOUllW
OP THUi COSTS:
• l•tt• l11•t1fM•••
• Hi9k Moorin9 Co1h e lltp•lti I Mtl11t1n11u1:e e Cletnln9 Chor••
ln1urtnc•
II A PLAYIOYI
Your F1mlly or Glrl Fri•"'
Will lo•• Tho !dot Harriet Glanville continued member sweepstakes tourna-The Pro! will play with four Santa Ana Country Club this dent of Huntington Beach,
hMer d dolmkina~:C 1 °1 C 1th be merit Monday with 10 outstan· members with pairings com· week, ctimpetlng In tfle top served as Narslty coach at CALL LIDO
ea ow ar \.Nun ry u ding area Profess Ion a Is pleted by a bllrid draw Mon-flight with 31 other low Mayfair High for three years
"'omen's championship wilh 8 playing with member day morning. quaWiers. prior to bla duty at Fountain SAILING CLUB three-round. M-hole score of foursomes in a shotgun alfa1·r V ll ·-1 th 1 ed 1 1 Orv Shields and Mrs. Elmer The compotl\lon 11 by match a •Y· 675•0827 -n e annua m a pay beginning at II o'clock. A I tCulv
competition this week . ~~~~j~~~~~~JC.~t•~w~o~n2th~e~S~l~P:a:tr~ic~k:'s~p~l~ay~and~:w:W:W;~:·~fou:r~wee~ka~j~'~'~P~"!P~fl<:•:Pl>:":'~~e~r~~~~~~~~~~~ She has been defending eluded in the group of Shindig P i n eh u r s t Scolch to comp!eta. LQw qualifier for City High he wu runnerup
champion for several years pros scheduled to compete are tournament over the weekend the competttlon wu Mike Koll in the CIF flnals u a 157·
and outdistanced second place~ost _Ralph Evans of Irvine with a net score of 61. with 68. pounder.
finisher Helen Moullon by 32
strokes (2641. Low net in th e SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! So habl• Eopanol
~~~~pl~~~~ ~!~h~ ;;;~t to WESTMINSTER $ANTA ANA FULLERTON
First flight honors w.nt to 15221IUClllOD.•PllOllDW544 UOL1111Sl'Sf.aTCYPIUS•PllOllS47·1477 1531S.UllOllllUl.•PIMllEllN1'1
Kathy Bransford in low gro!IS MONDAY THRU fRIDi\Y •• 9:00 A.M •• I P.til. MOHIJi\Y lHRU IRlMY •• a«> A.Ill. •t PM. NOHDAY TRW IRIDi\T ., l:ilO,A.M. • t P.M. comoetilion with 278 follo1fed SATURDAY •••••••••••• 1:30 A.al ••• P.M. SATUMlri\Y •••••••••••• llOOA.fit. •• P'.M. SATURDAY •••••••••••• &oooUL·• PJI.
by Pat Eorlo with 281. The SUNDi\Y •••••••••••••• 9:00A.M.-i,P.M. SUNOAY •••••••••••••• t:OOA.M.·4P.M. SUNMY •••••••••••••• t:OOA.M.0 2PJiL
lov• net winner was Cuba Curl
with 233.
Second flight lo1v gross ac·
tion ended in a tie behveen
Barbara Hankey and Diana
Hoope r. cnch 1vilh 291.
Rose Erickson was the low
net winner y.•it.h a 228.
Jean Hight won the third
f!ii;:l:t with a 296 fnlln11•erl by
Fave Peterson at 303. Barbara Dl1Tth~m w:is the low net win·
nf'r with 232.
Jn the fourth flight. Shirley
Stcbbi ngs y.·o n low g:ross
honors with 333 folln1ved bv
Marion Darlir1g with 336.
lfelen Emert won the low net
compelilion with a 253.
f,agrnra Niguel
Jack Godwin. Harry Hilke,
Tom Gore and Martin Sanborn
c:.1ptured the best two balls
of foursome tournament at El
Niguel Country Club in
'
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TENNIS RE SULTS . • •
l{lno and Lun1 ISi won ft.l, 6'2. 4-0. ,..,
MARCH SERVICE SPECIALS
Rew.olurilnary .new opercirional method1 n;iean O ran9t' County's
N~. 1 'Lf'ncol~ Mercury deolcr now offert factory outhorited WI·,
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MOTOR
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FOR PICK-UPS,
PANELS l CAMPERS
SIZE
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""''"'_, ... flfll ,Hliot.UI
ft DAILY PILOT Wtdrwsday, Marth 24, 1971
$1 Million to Capture Cup
Briton Ready to Seek Elusive Yachting Trophy
LONDON (AP) -Anthony
Boyd••· Brililh prlatlng ty-
coon and yachting fanaUc, an-
nounced Frk!ay he ta ru.dy
to .spend close Lo $1 million
to challenge the United States
for the America's CUp, a
yachting trophy that has elud-
ed Britan for 1)0 yr.a.rs.
Yachting circles esUmale
lhe chaHenge will cosl Boyden
and two unnamed partners
about $960,000.
Boyden, who bore most of
the cost ol Britain's last
unsuccessful bid, in 1964,
iSl5ued his challenge through
the Royal Thames Yacht Club.
Six other dubs -three
French, two Australian and
one Canadian -have said
they might challenge for the
cup.
Boyden has ordertd a 12-
meter yacht from Camper and
Nicholson, one or Britain's
leading yacht designing firms.
"It might be built of i"'ood,
or it might be alumif\um,"
New 10-met.er Yacht
Different From Others
By AIMON LOCKABEY --Jn )ocal boaW. circles when
you me11Uoo a to..meter one
1uLomaUcally thinb. of those
&leek sailing yachts such ..
the Sally, Branla, Hilaria,
Sirius and otber1-
But there is I new "I~
met.er" on the market in
Newport Beach.
It bean not u.. slightest
nsemblaoct to the sailing
yachl5.
Jl'• a spanking new power
boal The full name of thi.s sleek
new 33-(oot power boat is the
Laguna 11)..meter. It was
~ by naval architect
Rol><rt Dorris of N•wpori
Beach and built of fiberglass
Only Five
Yachts Seek
Lipton Cup
Only five yachts will answer
the starting signal Sunday in
the San Diego Lipton Cup
Cball<nge.
The entry Ust is the smallest
in many ye.an.
As a matter of fact, three
ol the five boats will be from
the san Diego area.
San Diego Yacht Club is
defending with Gene Trepte's
.ff.fool sloop Bru.shfirc. design-
ed by Sparkman &. Stephens
and built by Gerry Driscoll
of San Diego.
Official challenger was Herb
Johnson's New Zealand-47
sloop Vector JI f r o m
Oceanside Yacht C J u b .
Johnson is abo a member
ol San Diego Yacht Club.
Al20 In the lineup is the
~meter Albatross which win
be ai..ippered by Don Bevar,
a former world champion Star
Class aallor.
Only bolt from the Newport
area wtU be Blll'ke Sawyer's
CaJ.32 Attorant.e, fiying the
mlon of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club.
The only other yacht is the
II.foot Sandpiper, an Italian
built boat owned by Dean
Brown of Santa Barbara
Yacht Club.
Tbue is some grousing
unong Southland yachtsmen
that SDYC pointedly selected
Vector II as the ollicial
challenger, thus allowing lhe
defending club to n a m e
Bruahfir!: as the defender.
Bru.shflre L5 considered one
of the fast~ boats or he"r
1iu in Soulhern California.
by American Marine Ltd. in
Singapore.
The first of the line is now
on display at Balboa Marina,
201 E. Coast Highway.
American Marine, with local
offices at 1501 Westcliff Drive,
b best known for its outstan·
ding craftsmanabip in custom
wooden yachts such as the
Grand Banks line and the
Alaskan Diesel cruisers.
The Laguna 10-meler Is
described as "high style, high
sped, high living."
"For some time now we
have been touting our power
boats as having ample speed
at 8 and 10 knots," said Chuck
Ullman of Balboa Marina.
"But in the Laguna IO.meter
we are talking in terms of
.speed£ of 18-20 koots.
The Laguna IO.meter is a
fiberglass bull with twin-screw
diesel engines a n d ac-
commodations for seven. Her
"wide Y bull was designed
specifically to accommodate
lhe turboed, high perfonnance
636 cublc-iocb marine diesel
engiues.
27 Classes
In Regatta
On Weekend
Twenty-seven classes 0 r
sailboat. are scheduled on the
lineup for Balboa Yacht Club's
annual East.er Regatta Satur·
day and Sunday.
Races wiil be held on inside
and outside classes. The
Ocean Racing, Pacific Han·
dlcap and Midget Ocean Rac-
ing Fleet yachts will have
one race Saturday and one
on Sunday on outside courses.
The other outside classe.s will
The advanced engine design
with special manifolds and
meter measure injectio n
deliver rapid torque RPM
hitherto unavailable w i t h
diesel power. 1be engine was
also designed to produce Jess unburned hydrocarbons and .. have two races Saturday and
carbon monoxide, thus reduc-one on Sunday. They are
ing pollution to virtua1ly nil. Pacific Catamaran, Rhodes-33,
Under way the Laguna !()... PC, Soling, Ca1·28, Cal-25,
meter L5 usually stable due Co ronado-25, Endeavor, Ex-
t.o specially designed planing calibur, Luders-16, Santana·22,
strips, wider than average and Cal·20 .
beam a~ greater t h a _n Racing on inside coorses
average displacement. She 1s will be lnternational-14 This-
easy riding, dry and ex-tie Snipe Finn Metcalf Lldo-
ceptlonally maneuve.rabl~,with t4A, Lld~14B,' Kite A: Kite
her ad~,anced design ram B, Flying Junior, Sabot A,
rudders. . Sabot B and Sabot C.
Erternally the boat "'111 .be other classes may be teeognlzed by her rakish . . h r flying bridge with control.s, in· e.sta~h.shed. wit 1ve or more
slrurnentaUon and seating for entries. Five . yachts on the
two. line will constitute a start.
Her interior design is com-
plimented by wann, rich teak
and parquets, spare-age FF A
approved fa b r i c.s and
materials.
The seating on the port side
can be made up into a double
berth. On the starboard side
is lhe console and lower con-
trol position.
The unusual galley features
are all-electric with plug·in
utensils held steady by special
clamps attaching to a bar
on one side of the worktop.
Opposi~ the galley is the
toilet compartment with head ,
wash basin and shower. The
compartment is made to look
larger by having both fott
and aft bulkheads of mirror.s.
The two forward berths in
the bows can be closed off
by a folding door. Two larger
wardrobe cupboards also
separate the fore-cabin from
the galley and toilet.
Improbable
Wins Race
MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica
(UPI) -Improbable, skip-
pered by D. W. Allen of the
San Francisco" Yacht Club,
.sailed across the finish line
fifth Tuesday in the Miami·
Montego Bay ocean race but
became the unoffi cial leader
on handicapped time.
lmprobable sailed the 811·
mile course in three days,
20 hours, 18 minutes and ~
.seconds.
Windward Passage was first
over the finish line more than
16 hours ahead of Improbable
but must concede more than
20 hours to Improbable under
the handicap.
he said. "We. shall decide after
tank tests. If we decide on
aluminum we could go In for
a really revolutionary design."
Boyden named J ohn
Oakeley. former F I y i n g
Dutchman world champion
and reigning British champion
in the Soling class, to be
helmsman.
Robin Fouger. described by
Boyden as "probably the mosl
experienced I2-meter man in
the world," was named
crewmaster.
The Royal Thames plans to
purchase an American 12·
meter yacht and use It for
design comparison and sailing
experience.
''We have an option on
several A1nerican boats,'' said
the commodore, .E I m e r
Ellesworth-Jones. "We shall
make our choice in the neit:t
month or two."
"ThiJ American yacht will
also be used as a trial horse.
but we shall oot race against
her for a year or two.
The America's Cup is nam-
ed after the U.S. schooner
America, which won the in·
augural series in 1851.
Maga%ine Still Fightirig
Still grousing about the disqualification of Gretel I[
in the second race of last summer 's America's Cup
defense, Sail l'vtagazine ran lhese photos and com·
ments by Jim l·lardy, l'vlartin Visser and Alan Payne
contending they did not violate rules in starting line
collision with Intrepid. Left photo sho\vs Grete! II
At1ssie Ca11se
(KA 3) luff ing head to \Vind in an effort to cul of[
Intrepid trying to squeeze through to windward.
Right photo clearly sho\rs Gretel II at point of col·
lision \Vith main and jib aback. putting he r on port
tack, \Vil h Intrepid on starboard tack and on the
\Vind.
AUTO CENTER HOURS: DAILY 9-9, SUN.10-6
NOW thru SUN .
POLYESTER GRANT-
MASTER SUPREME
SIZE REPLACES F.LT. SALE
£71-14 735-14 $2.2S 4 for 177
F71-14 775-14 $2.44 4 for •n
F71-1S 775-15 52.40 4for in
G71-14 125-14 $2.1•0 4 for '77
G78-15 125-15 S2.60 4 for$77
H78·14 ISS-14 $2.80 4 for 177
H71-1S ISS-15 S2.80 4 for •n
GRANTS
OFFICIAL MOTOR VEHICLE
POLLUTION AND CONTROL DEVICE
INSTALLATION AND INSPECTION
STATION.
GIANTMASTER TIRE GUARANTEE
I Tl'>I l 1l1 k~l"'tf AH•"'' 11•4 ~Uotl~
Wt .... uftltf •II C.""'"'""' l"f' ... ,.,1
1 .. \u•f' tto"' •II -"'•! , ... ~.,.,,.I• "'•
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1 TttN l il1 Gv•uot"' .-.u•W 0.!.<h
wr •• .,,.,.,. ti"' Gtt•',."'" "'" •W•"'I ,11 ••!f'(t• .r ,,..,.,,,1 ,,.. -J~IMft\.IO"' tor tho ...... t ... ,, ... _
A.,,. or "'""""'"'r: \111t,11t 1111• G•tM.,....1,. \.,. """"' -'1UV<01onl uo .. r \fo<T110 1 If' 11
'" C.••""I••· •It•" "'"'" •I lo (;rjof\ , .. wo will'"'"' •I h ........ •OU j .. IOO,l•Oftl ll •••• "'" .,, ·~· """". '""· ~ ......... <••· <<•1 "'hn1 .,,.,_,...:1u''"' fl'4f<•l l .C1"'T''·
l . c;...,•nt"' Atl•"'' T•u l W1w •
., ...... , .... 1 1 .... " ..... "'-...t ,. .. !I"
o.I 1.,-IOt ,..,..,..., el "'""'~' *''IM .... If l,.H •t•• • •~t dufl~I ''"' _, ........ :ir• , .. ~,, M lflotl'«I I• C.1.nt\ t ... M ••II , .. •l•U ot. <~•"'"' ~ <u<r1ot ,...,c., •tll1 ..
•"" "'"''••"•I £1{i .. lu In t ll'oo .. u ....
'"' "'"""hM •llftffl{I I .. "' 11\t -"""" .1.-1 ....
Tr~Cutr"°""
11-ll Mo"'~'
'l-40 1111•"'•
Tlti\ l•jj,.OIH <Uftl t.rn In N •--Cot
""''" '"''· '""'""' ,., •~ ow<! "' n •· '"'"'"! u...,,.e rHl;n ,... tuU ... tt _..,
•• )C' ••
Selection of Veclor 11 as
challenger and Brushfire as
defender set a rating range
that would <lnly include the
aging PCCs, Cal·32s B·melers
and Cal-48s -none of Y.'hich
are considered a match for
Brushfire.
All in all, this liberglass
cruiser shows the quality of
craftsmanship and beauliful
ream joiAer work for which
American Marine bas become
world renowned with the
Grand Banks and Alaskan
Diesel Cruisers. She features
a rare quality of
craftsmanship in glass.
Improbable also will get
time concesSions to the other
fi nishers in front of it but
appeared to have a good
chanct of not having to con·
cede much to tho se finishing
alter it because of slacking
winds which slowed the racers
still at !ea.
WITH THIS COUPON GRANTS WITH THIS COUPON GRANTS
HIGH SPEED WHEEL Both Sandpiper and Vector n have done well in offshore
races, but both are unknown
quantitieJ in closed course
ricing.
SLEEK AND FAST -Newest power boat to hit the Jou! boating scene Is th is
33-foot speedster. called the Laguna 10· meter rrom lhe Singapore yard or
American l.tarine, Ltd. lt \YIS desi~ned by Ne,vport Beach naval architect
Robert Dorris. The boat Is being d1Splaycd by Balboa Marina, exclusive local
°'Mii for American Marine. ·
'
I
GRANTMA5nR 300
power battery
·all MONTH GUAIANTll
SALE 51444
BALANCE INCLUDES:
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
SPECIAL • TESTING AT SPEEDS UP TO 90 MPH
SALE $4~~ • INCLUDES WEIGHTS
• BALANCE ON CAR
MOST tl,l..Un
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
GRANTS Regular
motoroll
20or JOWT,
SALE 18<
GRANTS
6·Plece Auto
Clean°Up Kit
SALE76<
GRANT DELUXE
shock absorbers
SALE2/5666
AUTO FIRE
spark plugs
SALE27<
•
Language
Day Set
AtUCI
FAJlllL\' f:IRf:IJS
(.. __
W•dltndaf, Mll'dl 2-t, 1'71 D.lll Y PILOT !:t
LEGAL NOTICE
MiHK• TO Cll9•1Y"1 )---:-:-:-:--o.no-----:1--------------·l--;:;:;;;;,.;;;;;;;;;-<;;;;n-o,;--IUl>••KHr <OUlT Of Tllll I Ill Tiil IUf'a•to• COUllT 01' MOTICI O" TlUtTll'I i.lll STA.Tl Of' (.t.LtNMnll4 P'Otl Clllnf'lCATI' .. I UIPllSI ...... It TNI STltTI OP CALll'OINIA
LEGAL NOTICE
T.S ..... l·\v.t tK• (llWlfTT 61" OL\lffll P'arrlO'lt tu.M• CIPTll"tCATI ff' aV11..-1 .... ,.., CC*lft"'I' °' OllA ....
0.. FriUy, .U.tl t, 1'71, 11 11:00 111 .. A ... J 'nrll YI .. W.011111' ..... """"' tlot Ill "ICTnlOW .a.• CITY Oii HfJWTlftOTOlll llACH, 1
A_M .• TITLE IHSUkAHC1: ANO TllUIT [tll tt 'fl tlllllltT D II I y I ill <"""1Ctlfte I klflnft1 8f !GS I!. CHll 1"" "'*"JffWC .. <_,.,_, _.., lft .......,_al c..._.etlM. f'IMIHt •·t COMPANY, It 4Yly •-""'-" Trwt .. ci.c...... . H~w. ,.,...,. dtl ,.,..,, Ctl ........ -11 .... 111n1 ... n ,, ttll ,_, 'Mll"IE I!. ILAlll ........... tANIC
.. (Ofdi'ICI ""'"'' 1, IN&, II lMt. Ne Cfildltwl • Wle ....... ,,,. ..... °""""'' .,, ICMS AOUfJITl$1NO .,.. 11'1•1 uld ., 0r.,.... ·~ C-ty ,, Sall ltf"llarlllnci, U.VINGi ASSOCJAT1CWll,. Nllol\al 11111-·
tit. "" llooll 117'. -"'· "' Oftlcltl !"411 •!I ,..,_, lllvlflt <l•IMI Mllntl """ ho<--91'""' 191Wll'l9 Mr-CMll'., W'ffr .. 1\dlll-"'"' ,..,.., lnll '"°'l1llM,. ,,,,.1... DANtl!L C.
•ewc11 In the olllc:• ... ,,.. (91.1nly "" wld dM:Mlfll ... •t<1Ul"11 .. Ille """" -In fllN.,.. •ltu., ~· ., AVALANCHI!: lllf ""'' lolld llrm l.ffDY, ........ 1 .... " ... lilltllf ll91:-f fll Or-• CouM¥, C1llfor11!1, ttwnl. wlttl IN llKt-rr VllY(llen In IA 11 '91 ...... : It ((!Jn.._,, Ill tllt '°""""""' "'11-" ..... C. "*'"• l"IOILfTY SALES .---~· -•r •Alf PllflU•nt .. DHd of Trutl NOTICi: II Holllll•Y CIVIH ... "-n.J.S. ul'IOtr ~ fk'llllwt fill" ..,.,.... A'H., F-l•h'I V•11f¥, '21tll, C-'"' M AME•ICA NATIONAL TIUST AND
~ Will Sl!Ll At PUBLIC AUCTION TO"" Gfflc• of ,~. c1t1• .t "'' .ii..v, ICllMlr!tl M. S.YMI&. IMll ll ....... MtlM ~ 1tl tun."""" .. ~ COMl'AMY,. ~ .. Truol ...
Foreign longu•gc :ltudents 0'\\ WIGMEST 810Dtll FOlll (A.Iii CNYt.blt ... 111w C-1. " "' ll•Ml'll ""•"'· """~ lnllftt, CIJ!ifllrftl1, ..... '''"" 1•1 .. Miiow.! c . ll. l&ALEY ..... ,,.,.;.,,t ... "'' ...
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from public and private \.\ , ~ _ _,,,,,,~, IN Uftl ... 1111•1 .. fM !.411111\ ft"twll ....,i.n.d •• cit ll...tt.... ...__" 1Ctn1111t\M. S•fllold '"-"'" Valll'f', C1llt, """ Cotlltr1l 11 AllTALEf GAYI,~ l"OVl!t.L, 'TAN-
I In 0 r. "It lftlr~t to tM Old 0.1mtt COIH!t't Gtfl1tl4I A""'"".,.. 0-c-. O'rl"' Sttte d Clllfort1I•. Or-COll"IV' l'•rltlet DAllO Oil COMl'AHY, t ctr1Ntlllo11,
schoo s range ...... unty WI Cou•lhou11. lo<•IH h• .... Ht:I •1o><k lttw-' &ff(ll 'c111forni1 Wfll(ll , • °" Mlr(ll 1. 1'11. ......... -· • J•ck L. ICeff. .....), "'· .._,e.td. JAMES L CllOWTHt!R, l'llANK o.
take over the UC lrvine cam· ,, "' w11• S.ftl• ....,. I011lev1•<1 Cklr,,...,1¥ 1111 titer e1 ~Ifie" " 1111' "'*'1i!tMd Nll'l•l"'I' "11~1c: "' 1nd .., ulll s111e, L•"'""'· C1ut. nw UM1111c1 ,..,..,.., ll•HAl.01, siecuttttY r 1TL1. 1H-
wa1 "" S!fNI), Slftlt .C.l\fl, C.Utorftle, '" •H "'""' .. -l•lt11ftt to ""' "'1 .. ""'-""' _,..,. IC-It\ M. S.,.IMl<ll WI"" IC11Ke, "'"" """ A .... ~ JUllANC'E C~ANV, • ~ .. PO•••le"' pus Saturd11y to do tbelr •II •Ith!, ll'lltl ..... l11t.rt1! (eftVfl'td ., ••Id dKtdrlll wltNn ,.... _,_ k-11 .. "" .. "' ..... --1111\M<I ::U!, ,.,,_... C•UI, ..., U...1..., T , •• , , I • c ll IE 'E N s I AN 0 s.
"Llngolhing... .. '"" llCI• Nld br II II,,.,., ...... l lltl" Ille ll'1l 111blk 111on" !till Mlle• "-If ll!.lfllM:rltlff .. lhl Wllt\/11 '"" l"lrt-Ht!llNl.NOU.. &ftwflcl..,,, l.l.VlllN M, 0.INI of T•""I In Ole trw•r!',I lltv"etl DtlH M.lreh 3. ltn ' Jl,.,,,...flt _,., tdtnowltOlto' ht "'ICUtff Wllllt"" "· •tt:w.clll, '40 "-I.vi., HAH~Y t l'lf HONMA Q, H"HOt.l!Y
Llngothlng lB lht! 11tudent Ill uld (OUft!, ,,,. Siii• llelerlbM KATNIERINE ,,....II! Dlll!YEll , .. -· u..u. .... Clllt. M.,t Llml1911 1'111 ... r Ill• w .... AL GOHU.Ll!S •NI llOSl lt u : A~ .... 1n111r1f'rlll With Wiii (0F1"1CIAL SEAL! Wl'llff N ....... bl,orv, lltlf ........ 11111 GO!ottAlfS, "" '""'· 11!CU•ITY l'lll\T
sclected name for an all day Loh S'J ..... ,,. ol Tr1("1 te). ... ..... ~ .. el "" fll1tt er Mt ... k . Hl'l'll"'I' D• •• S.V.ut. c.1;,. LIM! ... PlrlNr" NATIONAL llANI(, I (Ir •••• ' I 0 11 . · I '' 00•11 °" I !Tiit 111.,Hf rKOtQtt 1~1 lbovt "'""" 4t<fffrlt Noltn' Pwb!l t -C.lllitft!a ""'YI 0 . OtOHr, 4J.ll,I H, •t~ Trlfl'I-. ELIZABETH O. LIN'DLll!Y. 1
series or events to lDVO ve lft Book 21, P••n u ,, ~ lr><lt.lll••· •O•l•TSOM. NOWl•ll • ••llL.llND Ptlnc-llo1I Oftk:t ,,. "'· f ,, LIMlll ... C1•1f. ml4 LIM1""" .. ,,,..., JOSl! .. M s. FE•M -Jl!ANNl
alt I vels of language studen'-Mlic11t1ntoua M1111. 1tt;6•d• 11 1o11d ~ c ... ..,., 011.,. 011nM cw""' ,. .. i..er M. FlllM, ,,,,...... -..w.. o. M. e 14 Or1""r Ceunlv. ...._. loltf.11. Clllflt.,_ My C"""'llSllWI 1.vlrn eMt1n It. WM~tft, 171, C11\dlt CALLIS, Jlt. 11111 LOUtilE CA.l.Lll llUI•
in events including skits, E.XCEl"TING THERfFllOM f ~. Tth 0141 ......... "'°""·,.. an Dr. "" "-· Ct lll. tJlfl l""ll" "'-"" ,,,,.. •lfe, 9.wflcll'"lfl, 1109E•T
da f . . . ,,...,llfl•lerly 11 .... at lol m. A-....... ~lllllr•lfl• •ubll"'-0 Or•lltl c .. 11 01ltv ,!lo!, .... ,_ JAMl!'S WAllNfll •nf JANIS f .
songs. nces, ore1gn cws1ne, TN •""HI IOdru1 11111 011>er <...,....., l"llbtltlllod °".,.. c ... , o.u, ,11.,, Mlr!;lt ), 10, 11, 2-. 1tn 6'5--n "••ncla 1. w1tk1M. M17 IC•""'" L1,.,., wAJtNE•. ""''~ •NI .,.,., LOWELL
e xhibits, films and even a bil-dMl-tlon, 11 ... ~.er"" rt-11 ''°"''fY Mlrdl 10. 11, ,,, 31, 1n1 no-n s ... J&ll, c111t. L""!'-' l'lrtMr ASHLEY .,... MARl lENf ASHLIY, 11wt · Otscrli.d l bow '• ,utllOrtetl lo .... """"'' AllO'..-.. urn N, 01"9 bllld '"'° wllr. llOWAllD llKHEY ••
ingual puppet show. '°° "''' M•11ftwlt. '"""'"" 111(.11, LEGAL NOTICE Aw .• Uft(llMt, c.iif. ~ Ll'"llfil ,1.,.11 "'"'· STATE OF CALll"OttNt4. C1Uf&rt1l1. LEGAL NOTICE Pr•Yfter ALFllf"O lt091N60N, TrwlW JUOITH
Sponsored jointly by the TM unr.!er11'"°'" Trv1i.e •lse"lrfl' 1ft¥ ,._,. 01ttc1· J•nurtV 1t, 1'71 FllEE/o\A"', CALtl"<*;N11i l'l!TllOl.l!:U._ Orange County F 0 re i .. n lltblll!Y lllr '"' ltarr«TMlll el '"' 1'-41 C9RTl~CAT9: OI' 91KIH•tt.. °" F•\ltl"'I' ,),. 1f11, 'lltlrl ..... COll"°"ATIOH, •• w. MC:CLl'LL.At~. a ,,,.,, lddlHt 1/lcl elhft '°""""' Cl•Tll'l(.t.T• 01' •USINISI PlCTrTI0\1$ MAMS I Nohrv l"Wlk In tN W Wi<ll St•lr, Jlt., lft<lt ELIZABITH MARY McCLEL· Language Association and the .:-"";;. ~-de!l./\ltlen, It'"'· I-" Mrtlft. •l(TITIOUI MAME Tlw u<>d .. ~ <!wt urtltr IW 1• --llv _ .. J-E. ~. I.AH. ""'"'rid '"" ..lt,, •EltlE L. c :~~ p t d l t St1d u lt .m ... mMI• bl.It w!"""' ,."' 11<"4tnltr>tll •• (Miii¥ 1111> .. cond'lldilll • bu1IMU II 1'21 ,,.._,, W11 .. l("'llt WI*-"' Wllotblll"'I'. OOTM .... D. OOES I .._ 1• IMI"" ~panQ.11· or ugese epar men "Mom , b. rthd • • M h c ....... ..,, " w1rr.n1v. •••••n "" 1.....,11H. cerwtuc:n111 1 INlll-,1 1ci Y..-toe, aiV11~ c°''' ~. c.11 ..... 111•• """*' Knciw11 "' -'' "" ttw .,.,...,, W"°5t 11vr •1'14 111 ""°"' ""*-c1..,,,1,.
of UCJ, the d ay·s activities my S I ay IS In arc and Daddy 's is , ... 1111111 1111e, penn•IM. or .,.. Na. 11, T"'1Uft .. c1111w111 •• """' 111e IN 11ctti1eon 1w,,., ,..,.,.. <If THE.._ .,, •u..,,.t.t " ...,. w1111111 ..-.y t1111 w 1ti1ef1o1 ••""' __,.,.,Dr · 0 tobe M • 0 •~'"bl"•ftc ... tto .,..,. tM nm•lftlnt .,i,.. fk'llllout llNll '*"' e1 ANTHOHY'S LIEA"TMElt LAllOf,t 111d 111.t 11hf 11,..... lnltr"""""' """ ~llllf• i. '"' .....,""'· have b e t!ll planned by 1n c r, so ommy J LDER J" cl••I """ *" IN ""'' S9(Ur('<I IN l'INE DllAl'l!ttY CAllE •ftCI tl\11 ukl I• C-osed el Ille 1111ow1 ... "'"'°" ftw¥ ll!!tCll!etl "'' ,...... THE "!"°"'-!!! 01' THE STATE O"
students. for s tudents. 11!d DHCI of Trv11, 11:>-wil: 110.000.oe. """ It ,_"'..,., "" tollrllt11'19 ......... wll-........ In tu~ •NI tll" of rnl•nc; WITNE» ""' "-""' .. Oftkitl CAUF<HllNIA S£NO (;llfETINGI 10 •1111 l<1!••r•I "'""""· .•• •l"OYldrd tn -Mm. In fuN -•le<• 91 ···~ It It tollewi: (OFFICIAi.. SfAt.) DIElfENOAHTS NA.MED IN TH a
Any sevt!llth lo 12th grade t1fd Nl!t, tclvtncn. if ...,,, "'""'r "'' It II IOllOWI; Ectw•rd l"ls.I, 312! C•1• Mwv.. MAllTM<\ f , ElliOTI Nl!AOING OI' THIS l"ltOCl!fDIMO.
language student in tbe county !:.~u 0
' • ..,"~._:,: ~ ~"''Tr.!.': A::•;:: 1~;:'.:i*' ~·~~140 "•111• ~:e.i"'~.~ ~'7,1," 9"""' c.iu. ~::-Z ..... ~.:~~,... 1<1 Y': • :::ci!7r~"":"~.:";:
may attend the 8 a .m . to '"" ot "" •rv••f tt111..s .,., wlol o.'9ci iit~ 'Mlrch ft,,.,~· fh••d P1~1 ,.-, c~" fulrn ""' ..Mlnllft '""'-' "" '" !Ill SWtrlor
YMCA Cl B . Died 61 Trull, J01n1W Ml-r9•r'1 'Mttl!n !l11t el Crlflol"<1!i, Orllf'lt# Coufllf• ..... It 12. lf'I~ C-' Ill tllt Sl1t1 Ill c.tlttonll&o If!
3 p .m. Program chaired by asses T~• btntllcl1ry ul\Mr ••ld Dffd " Siii• el Ct lllorn!t °"'"'• c.....,,.,.. On Mt•(~ 1. 1'11. btlot"t ·""· • fTATf OF CALIFOllNIA .,,., for .... (°""""" " °''""· .. egin Trull ~tr•loftw1 ••«u•td •"" delivered °" M•rdl u. ltJI kl . Nel•l"'I' 'ubl!c '" • ..., tor Miii '"'' COUNTV OF LOS ANGELES u . . """""ft ,., ""' --· "' • 11111''11!.., ~1rs. Beverly Cramb o f Ii 10 ti.. ... ,,.,.,,,.."' • wrltr~n 0ttt1r1tklfl Neill'!' l'ublk: 1~ -· tor ont Id "'jj tt' ,.,. ..... uv ,_1r,d Eo ... trd 1'1-1 kMw~ °" 11nn1 Mlott ""' 11'11 l.lll-.i.n.ed. •'" •nll ll>IJO/k: .,.,. .,u_. ,,,. ...... M ood H " h S h J 01 O.!•ull I nd O.m1tld lw Salt, '"" P.,llOf>.111¥ .,, N 1 ' 10 .,,. to bt the per-wl'>elt Mtftl I NII"" l'Wlk hi .,,,,, fllr •W SllN, lrclcltn•tl #otAN, ffll lllllowln11 HKrlbttl ary w 1g C 00 • • .. rntt n Nolle• al Otltull rnd ElKllon Mrtllft l<t10w':"'1o Id ~°"';.,. lltfMl• .. rtt 11 iutr.t•ltled to Ill• w11ti111 '"''"'""'II ~-iw ..,_..s WIYM ICltl ... b.oMt rHI .,.._,, 11!\llltd. l"ll"t 1r111 bth,.
' L " th! ' th 1· t II w • h Fl s lo Stll. Tll1 11rid1ril1ntd c•u•ed ••Id ..,. . ffl'"JOl'I lftd 1ck110wle«lect llt •~•"'M tllt I t. ,_ i. bt lfW """" wllolr Mint 111 !hf Clly " H1111tlntfon hid\ Cout11., ' 1ngo ng JS e 1rs a • t t t . Nolie• of Dt'l•~U and E~Ctlo .. lo S.11 ~· "''7' :,:. tullotrlbtd IO ,,.. .,,,,,,. tOl'FICI Al Sl!ALJ -· 11 Mll!terlflld .. "" .... ,............,. ., 0.1n11e. ,,,,.GI C1UIOl'"ftl1, i. ~11!
c ounty evenl \\<hicl\ is not l ower e ing I\> ~ •Kordtd It\ t~~ COlllllY whttl toee'ut::"~r:'. .: ...... KknG•lldtllll ol\i IX• ltOY It. MfCAltDLE INil ldt,_llld1iell' 11111 lie -~-.... l'Al(I\. 1: lAl1 t Ill~ 111
primarily a contes l for the '~h.~: .. :.::c·:r1~'1~''"'· !Ol'FICIAL SEAL) ONOll l"'I' ",ubU~: C1llltwnl1 ··wtTNl!SS '"" ,,.,,. "".tl!clll -·· :::" ,:.l'l(.~:h~ llodcMA (If T.:_'!,! . TITLE INSUllAHCE •nd M•l"Y 8"111 Motllft rll•te 11"'"~ t I lo! ' h 111'1 1 U rtci,,,_ elilt! s tudent," ~trs. Cramb "TRUST COMPANY NO!ln' l'ub!I.: • C•llN•nlo My c""''"ln'en E•Plff• !OFF c,,,A.~:~~ ......... ~ laall • "'''',.,"' Mll<•ll•-""
iaid. "It's a fun day for all... 1'he Spring offering 0 r Guitar will be offered in 10 •• \lid Tr~te•. 'rlnci.11 Otfl(I In .. uw1.~:· ~~.:~ CNll 0.11, •not Nott rv l"\llllle.C10ttntl1 ~~ .. 1~trd• ol o,.,.., Count¥.
Th. Uc! Campu' W,'11 take classes at the Orange Coas l half hour sessions starting 11 MARV! 0 · MC FEE 0''"'' counno M••dl J, 10, 11. ,4, 1tn 4 ... ,. L.,. •-tn coomtr l'.ll•Cll 11 TM norl!I J11tf "' tllf 141'2 My c ... "'1111oo E•~lrt1 My Cammbo1011 l!luolrn -111 -lhi"'il• of ttw ""'' t11r ...
on an inlernational flavor as YMCA will beg· Th r s day .r.tarcb 29. P~bil stild N•••ori Mr•t>or N•v.• "'"' "P'11 '· 1'11 Jul¥ tt. 1'74 '°"'"" 11 1iw. Nl11ft t11lf of 1t1e In U tomt>lne<I wlt~ 0•11• Plkl1. t>twr6rt l'ubllMllld Orllll• (Nil D1Uy ~1101. LEGAL NOTJCE On JINH'' ,.., '"'· ... Ion ,...., I '°"'""'"I dll•rttr of llC:"Oll ;1
participating students arrive wilb an e i"ht-se ssion flower A seminar (ln a strology B••c~. c1111or~;, M1•ch 11, ''· J1, M••ch 11, ''· 31 •NI A~rlt 1. 1f11 su.11 N61••Y l'l.r~1i.: 1n """ 1<w ...,. state. T-hl-, Souih ll•"' 11 w j ,, t ' t f . b 1t11 ~s;.;i ~uor11ll'I' •IM•rff Mf'ryl D. DIGttr. ••rltv !ft 1111 1l1..d.. Lio 'a111u o 1~
tn uress na 1ve o ore1gn b R • LEGAL NOTICE w • • ' --.. _ arranging coorse . taught y ev . ,.tr. Woochvard ,...,1,. • · 11WtC11 • --· ~-· , .. u~ In ttw ltll'ICIMI L• 8')1.,. c111c1. countries. L. ""'· tc._. i. -• • "" •s \ll<M11 .,, , ,.... n<"''" m Other classes to be offered will bl! hel d for IO sessions LEGAL NOTICE • ..,.1 <••Ttl'ICATll °" •u11t1t11 ~ ....,... ,......, .,. .-cr1ti.1 aoo11 11. •••• 1J of MIKeo-CompetiUon will be a part c•llTll'IC.t.T• 0, S U1/MllSI l'KTrTIOUS MAH• .., .... •lftll" 1rs1r-n1 '"".,._.,. M•"· rk111'1ft, ., Orwif• c...n ..
of the day's a ctivities in ad-include: beginning March 30. ,,CT1T1ou1 NAM• ""' IH>d9ol9net1 c1o ctrtlt'r tMY •rt ed •• ""'"""' -~"" "'"'· CIU!ofnlt. ""' i.1111 ti.Int .1 .. 1tnu111o AM•NOllO Thr '°"'"''Iii..... doll trtll, hi Is t.9ftdllCfWot I e• I I ltn 5!lrrlftr!111 WITNl!SS ,.., .,_ 111<11 Offldll s-1. 1111 M "'°' U'llfrll ~Ir.I t •l....rilll
dition to offerings of career Alpha Rhyl.hm, mental ex-The Yf!ICA will also o iler NoT1c1 0 , TttlllT••'s SAL• C011<1110d1,.. , ._._. 11 11, c.11.,,1 '"'· H·10'J. Stldl, C11H..-ft11, !MF1c11.L SEAL) "" _. -•""" wnt t11rwM1urt11t
boo · f II Ul'ldrr Ille !Inn """" 11 o ELVA I' L"-L" ot ""' _,,, M.. ---tbs showing jobs in which ercise o se awareness, cou-·s ,·n 0 ,-1 p&1'nLing for T. o. Ne. ~ Av•. •1111111 11111111. c.n1or .. 11, und«.. T ENTl!lll'lllSEI ,,... 1111t u ld Notwv Mk-CtlltorftJ -·-~ ..... ,.,. • ...!!.....er........ 1
b be '""" Siie Mr. H·,.._I' lhf fk llt!oon 11...., """' el THE t• • 1 _...,."' _,_,,.., -
knov.·ledge of fo r~ign whic gins Aprill at 7:30 °" A.~ril '· 1n1 111:001.m .• ME111. uN1vE•S1TY 1"'QUllll:R n ,..., wl4' "" U111-.tt1tlllkinowlftil-n1, ICrmc-iv , l'U<•L :t: Thlt ~.,, 11w
I he I I P.m . \\'ith the Rev. Ken beginners and advanced TAGE MOll:TGAGE COMPANV •• firm II_... el ""fOILewl ... """' -. ........ lft !vii I nd ...... •I Mr c-...... Enires ,., • "'" el "" "'" .. ICTtl
anguages is Ip U . Tf111tM undu '"" 1ur1uaftl 16 'Oeell' whole ft""' lft tun ,,.,.. ei11c1., r1sldln<:; ''1"?•1><e ire 11 follDwl· Od. "1m fJf ""' -"' 11•11' of "" _,,,...."
lmmaculale Heart Colleg· • \\'oodword inslructing. studenls. creative macramc, <IA Trull dlttd Novrmber s 1,.. 11 ,, 1o11o~· · l!Hdor' G. Jo""' •~d D1v1e1 D. °" Fti..w.,. '· im, ~'-'• ""· • <tt11r1 .. 11 s..c:11en "' TllWMl'll1 1. e S r•KVl•!I 11, CM''" E. Gro...:r. J r. J~u" T. Ci lll•tr Jr, 114 c6mns JOM1, 1915 S111r1n111on ''· H•10f, No•..., P11Dllc tn 1NI lor 1114 Stitt. So<Jll'l. •-11 wm, Nrltv kl tllt
bilingual puppet s how "Aunt Wardrobe selection and yoga and modern dance for 11111 cvnthi• R Grev" uwt rtc&rded A 1 111* 1 L.tfld · NtwPOrt "••ch. c~111. ,., ..... 1no •PH••N Fr1nc11 1. w.1~1"" Rlf'dllo u ...,. c 111c1 ,,,., •••t!V
M isery and ht!r Pear ..._,,,. coordination. whic h begins s ix children. Nove"'""' JI, 1tu. !ft book '"''· '"" o:,;.i Mlrch 1~. 1911 D••f<ITMareh '·UH. CMtlts 11· W••"""'"· Known "' "'" In '"' lhnd• u.. •otus. 11 lllown 11 :lOil, of Ollicll l lte<6fd\ lft !h• olllct JottPh T C Ill 1~ J ed G. Jonei lo bt .... tettonl who.... M'"""'°' t rt flft I MIP "°'did It\ 81161t. ST,
\Viii be presented several sess ions on April I 1\'ith Further informalio11 on "' "'" 1tr<ot11r 01 o''"'e c 11 1 · • • r. oww D. J.,r1 1<1111er"'eel 10 '"' wi""" 111tt,_, •"" •-11, er MbaM~ MNJS, r.c:orott Ctlllar1111, wltl ;,II rt J ub1k: .~ie.; Sl•o'"M' ",.'tom,~•·°', '"'' .. ~ountY : Sttt•"' Cr l!forftlt, O••llf• C•u111,· edl1111wltd911d 11 "" """' •~tc\lh!d !ht of Or-c-1, C1lltorftf1, l'l'l""
times throughout the day Colleen Percy ins tructing. classes is available through " •r ~ 'n· ""''°'' mt, • o.. M••Cl'I 1. ttn , beftr• .,.,, , .. ,.,,, ""'"" 11 ,,. k . I d d to lllt htst t>lda" for <••h (P•¥•blt Nel••'I' l'utlllc: lft •NI for Nici s111e, Nol•n' ,ubrlc In • ..,, for 11lcl si111. WITNESS lllY ~·rwl •nd Ottlc:l1I S~•I. ' :::. ..... rv n ... "::"' :::c.·~ ~ .. Ir: The youngest French chef Beg nning and a Van Ce Alice For at 642·9990. 11 11"'! 61 ••'• In 11w1ut mo111Y ot "non1llY ••J1t•rld Jololll~ T. C•!l•w•v P••!IOrltll¥ 1Pl>l!1rec1 TMWo,.. G. J-• COFFICIAl SEAll lnilrU!tllftf ·--Jlll'r 17, 1,1, ..,
w ill prepare an assortment-------------------------------!'"' Un<ted s111 .. 1 •t '"' Sbulll Front Jr .• ~-" te "'' le bt "'' "'IOI'! •11111 O.vM o. JonH l<r.eWft ,. ,.,. Hl!llll!ttT N. l"ENSON laak n. .,_ m at Mt1c.t•-fnlr1na. Old 01•"91 Couftfy C<111'1'-l4'. Wl'!M• ,..,... It 1\lbtctlllld lo thr 11111~111 i. bl "'' --"""'• MIMI .,, t.tMlry l'llllllc:.CtUtorM
Of his gastronomic specialtit!s. Attend the Church of Your (Uy el ,.,.. •• Ant. C•l+I., •fl rl1hl, lmlru ..... rrl Ind tdt.~ed"' ••llCUNd ,.,111cr1bld "' "" .. 11111n lftll'rvml!1f 11111 l'rltlc:IP.t Offlct. Tl>r ll~Or. .:,.-;: =· ~ror;ia.,..,,
A t d l t d . 1111• •r>d Tn1.,11t <onYrred to '"" fto-« !ti• 11m• ICl<-le-Qed thtv 1x1cutld lft• itm• Cou"'' of Uftll C1••• ~ ., .._ -» --~ ,.
.!I u en -crea e videotape l>fld by II unoHr u ld Otld '" ..,. IOFFICtAL SEAL) (OFFICIAL SEALl • MY Ctrn,,.IHllrl f)lplrt• Wiii " -=-., .. -.:. "
presentation in f 0 re J g P•OPtrtv ,11u.111c1 1r1 Ill• counlv e1 °''"''' M1,., a111~ Mor1011 Mery «... liltlry M•v .., 1971
I n Ch • R I I In. ••kl COlfnfy ..... Siii• d1.w:rlbed Nolll"'I' l'utl!K-C1l!tornl1 Nllll"'I' "11bllc . (tllfr1~1t Jl'vbA•ri.t Or-• C-t D•llY 1'11111 ;i.:,.-a:-:JI ,.:::-.~ ~ ..... ~t
anguages &!SO wjij be ICl'etn• 01ce egu ar y It. All ltil f cirtllft l•M t l!Ullff In 6~~=·~!:~' 111 ,.rlncllotl Offlcr In Mlrch JI, 17, M, )1, 1,71 11'-11 ~ 1 .. tt. a...O. LM .... Oil~
ed. ,~. $1•1• ol C•llftrftlt •• Coufthl .i My Gflmr!llHktft fxo1rH ::~~"'::';:.. E~tlrtt :.d = i:. "': •;::o ~··:-; ----°''"'' °"'crlbld ••fallow•. APl"ll f, 1'11 N"" 'c un LEGAL NOTICE llOlll JI, -13 ol M11c.1111-Let ~. T••tl 110., ..... U'lew HlllMt l'u~lli.hM Ortnet CNlt 0•11• '11111 "ub!lJfted. o;...... CM11 0.1~ .. 1101, M.... ..'°'"' or an-CtuftlY,
Mauldin' s Own Favorite • • •
• • • Still Relevant
Two wars lettr1 Bill Mauldin't cartoons still say it all for th• guys wh o •r•
"up front" doing the dirty work. Mauldin once ielected the cartoon abov•
•s one of hit own favorites from World W1r ll's "Up Front'' series.
Ho said: "Once I thought I did a very funny cartoon (about) an old.time
cavalryman shoaling his jeep .•• It has simplic;ty; it lolls • story; it
doesn't need words. It is, I believe. the very best kind of cartoon."
Mau ldin is still do ing somt of tht world's "very best kind of cartoons."
A. few itrokes of his talented pen can mike some of th• most biting
editorial comments to be found on today's issues. If you're looking for
relevancy, look et M.1uldin two wars liter.
Look at the Editorial Page of the
DAILY PILOT
lJnll Tllrtt, rt 1haw" "" • m• M1rc11 11, ''· 31 ""'A,rn 1. ttn 515--71 Mirch l 10 11 11 lt"I! 6'1·11 c.1.1ton1l• M~ ---· • "" "'" rKo•ded In ""°~ •1, PIN 19 of ' ' ' • .._ •• Ml•ct ll•"teus MIPt. ,,. ""' efllct of r EGAL NOTICF. ,_______________ T·fM11 O•llfl•.. Dlstrlo;I lltouft4t..., llne ti
lht Couftlv RtcGtdtr ol iild Or•t111• • • LEGAL NOTICE HOTtCI" TO CllllDITOlll dttcrlbed In IN Int.I"'"*" rKor,.., Cou"''· 1u,1at011 COURT 0, Tiii: Jutv 17, ltlf ....... n ..... )Ill
Common d .. erlptlon: 10091 S11rlJ(t T•J\IU STATE 0, CAUl'ORNl.t. FOil Of M!JcllW....t ll-dl. o. ..... c-·
Avt., ~•nl• ""'' C•IH. fl)QI HOTtCI TO C1la01TOlll """""' TNll COUMTT 01' OllANlll .... C•IW...f\J• S1jd H~ wm bl f'l'llclt. but \0"11h11UI IU,lll•Olt COU'flT 0" THI ClllTIJICATI: o• •VllNl:ll Mt. A...,.1 l'ARC•I. 4: ,,,. _, Mtt ., ""'
(llVHll"' tit" •• ,,.nf'I', fl<Prtll er 1mPllfll, ITAT• OJ C4ltl'OllNIA l"OI l'ICTITlOUI MIMI E1Ult " Jll!ANNE A. IVES. •"• •illl l'llH °' IN IOUfhwnl <! .......
reoerdl"9 lllle. POSStNIOn er """ THI COUll'TY 01' ORAM911 T~t lllldenllfttd dt c•rtlh """ lff JE•NNIE Ii .t.NGEl.05, 0.CtlUd. el ltll "°""'"'....,... .... II 11111 Mrthl .. 1 cumbr1nc"' lo •• , 11111 b1l1m:t OUI "II. A.U.11 cll"'!Ndlnr t Wfl""I ti IS'1 Ca.tlllt" NO"TIC£ IS Hl!ltEBY GIVEH "-tr.t _.,.., 1111 .s.dlM l4. T-'11• J
., thr prir><1NI ...,., er tM llCltt Mcured ftll!• el ESTELLE M. ICllAUSE, Or., Hu..it ... lon 9 eit<h, CrtHerNe, llNltr <•tclftofl of llw t bove l'lllrMd dlcelltftl loull'I, llll'll• ll Wert, l'Wltr WI 111'1
b\I .. Id Ololld, 16·Wl! \)1).696.11, w!lh tlle ,._ft 11 fS"fELl.lt MAY AOAM$ lhe flCllllou• l'lrm ,..,,,, ol VlCELLEMT tllrl •II l'f!f...., Ioli~!"' <leltftt 111IMI Arl'ldle Lt hlM CMcl Arllll t1n~
lfltlor"HI lrOfft .... tit 1, TtlO. If lft ••1d KRAUSE , DKt•~· IUILOING MAINTIEHANCf -11111 1111 Ml<ll dtotdllll 1t1 ,_lrM ft 1111 lft !l'I ll:•nd'lo L ........ • sr-
no!1 p,.,kMd, ldvl l\C"-U .,..,, \lllllllr NOTICE 1$ HEllEl'f GIVEN te 11111 ~ flp711 11 '"""""""" Ill 'I'll fl!lowllll ,._,., w1111 fl't 1'19(.tllol.,. -"trt, "' Oft t M.. ~ ill !l(llllt SI,
ttit tem\I e1 Ml<ll Ortd1 ke1. ch1,_11 <•Miii•,. el lllr •llovt lllftletl lllctd...-t -· """"' .....,.. Ill lull 1111111 "1t<ft it.. ""1<1 of '"' d•r• 11 11'111 11:1o¥<1 ""IS o1 MllClll"-"""" nc:ordit
•ftd UHMll ol "" T,,, .... ""' If "''' •II N rlON l'\liYlns clllrnt "''"" ol ••lkllnu ... I I follo .... : ............ tfll;Wf, .... _, """'· .. ,,, ., Or•-c:-itr. C.Mtonll.
1,., truth. <tttlld Irr 1114' DIM. ti.t Mid l<lllOldtftt ••• rMulrtd ,. tllr "'"""" t... Fl"fl%!1•. QI! c"'n "" MCIDefY -oiors, 16 "" .,,.. l'•AtlL J; Tl'll '°"""'"' 14' ''"
The lletlrrk\tl"'I' Vftdtr .. 111 °""· fly lhtm, """" "" Ill(_,,. 1'0V(l'ltrl, lrt Dr •• Hvntlftlfon BMdl. C•llfllrnll. ~ ..... II "" tftk• ., ,.,., tttor'MYI, ol '"' "'' "'" " "" -tll•t tt t'HIOI' "' • "'••cit .. def•ull ltl tht olfk:t el ,,.. <ltrtt ., "" •llOW Joteph v. Fhl...c:r, 17'91 a.u (lrtlt DAU.'(, Cl.I.RIC. WMITE•NOlltESLIN, ""''"" ., "" llDl'"ttlwnt _,1 ....
1111 obll91110ftf MCY"" t II 1 r • • y , 1'1'111111 tourt, w lo _, !tllm, wllll Ha. s . HVnth"'°" llud\, c1111er1111. nfl Colortdo ...,...,.,.., La Al'lll•le•. tt'11 _.....,, _..,..,. 111 3'dlrn n
M•tlofo•• tl'tcllted tlld dtt!wrell lo "" tlfeUllO' 1'111<htn, lo '"' -Dl11d M••tft '· 1'71 Clllfenol• ""'· -.tildl II "" t llOI T ....... dll,e s Soutll, ··-" w.-1 • ..... Ut'ldt"'ltned 1 wrtlltrl Dtcltri lllll dtt1lllll'lll t i tti. etflce tf lltr '"°'"'¥ Ktnfltl~ L. FtllJltt el bu'lh•Ht f/lf 11'11 \r'W:lftlltned I" 111 lft rtlt RIMM Lii lleh11, Mat hit
of Oet•ull '"" Dffllt"ll IOI" Slit, lflCI JA.Ml!S A. BRl.llH, ~l l'r1ncloco su111. Jotnh V. Fld.111c1 m11trr1 Pt•l•ln!M le 1111 •'-1• er Book SI, '"• 11. Mlsc•ll•ftlOU• Mns, wrllllft llllflc1 of br1Kh 11\d el t1Kllon S.n FrtrKIJce. Cttllor"ll' wilkh f1 tM $!ale ol C11Uornl1, Ort'*" County: l•ld d1Ct6-nl, •lt"I" l(!llr inorMts r ll•r r•cot111-' 0.1-COUl'll'I', C1Ul'Orftl1,
ID tlllW IM v"""'11tr'lfd la 1tll uld ollu el 11111(11111 tl the UtldHllt""" On M1tell J. 1'71, t>elor1 m•. 1 !lw llrff tublk.ltlttl el llllt Nfla. 'A•CIL '' TM ""'" htlf of ltW P/"flPtrfY to ~t11ty 11!d obU11ll6fll, 1fld in 111 mttli rt 11o1rtilnllll fe !flt ntffe Net1rv l'ulllk: !ft tlld for 11lcl 5••!e, 011'ed M.....ct> I, 1')1 "°'lhWHI <tUl ,Nr fll IN ftltl'll\-1'
llM!r11n, ..... N""tmt>rr 17, 117'0, .... "' ttld dtcecltwll. Wlll'llll lout ""'"'~' ~·•on•llr -•rid ICtl'lflefh L 1"•!11!.. JULIA WAllD 0Ut'1tr ., tho -""""' .u .. ,., .. u,...,.. .. 1~~1d Cl\lled ••Id llCl!lcr el brt•c~ Illar !flt llrlt 'llbllClllflrl ., "''' llCll!(I. •Ml Jo ...... v. Fld ..... •no•ft le "'' EW91:Ul"1t: If'"' Wiii S«tl0t1 25. Tawnlhl• J Solrlt\, ••"'ll rr.d of •ltdlon lo bt recorded In Otlld M•rdl IJ, 1,11, 10 bt l~t Ptrllln' who~• him,.., •" II 1111 ..,,.,. ,......,. lkc"6*111 11 WHI In !he Jt1nel'lo L•• aolu&.
bo<>k •U,, ll•lt ftl, ti •lld Ot'flcl•l Ml•ll .. I \.oulft Sfltaircl t~bltt!btd lo lht wl!Mn lt11!rwn•ol '"" OALl Y, Cl.ARIC, WMITW .11110 lttlfLIM ti •"-Ill I Mlt '"°'dttl II> RKOl'dl. Admlnl•lr11rlx wllh·lht-wl!I 1ckncwled91d IMY f.Xtt:1t!fld I~• "'"'"· tHl ~ ._......,. took SI, 11-1l 1t MFKllltneollf
Diii: M1rdl '· ltn ............ ,, lh• 111111 of !OFFICIAL SEAL) I.a A-•"· c11i.n111 ""' MIPS,,,,,_,,,·-. dt ., °'-• c-ty,
HElllTAGE MOllTGAGI! !hi 1bovl Mmetl clfc.cl~"t. M•,.,. I(. ~I'!' T1h 11111 W4'.lll -COMPAMY • JAMii A. •llU•M Nftt••Y ,~t>l!c C•lllort11• Arter..,. fllr 1-Uff'lx ~xcoPll ... flltrlfrem 1111 -ititrh"
Al"" Truller. U1 l'rtll(llCt llr"f l'rlnclPt l O!llct In l'ubllfl'ltd Or-lfttt CftJf Ot!IJ" Pfltt 1U flt!. l!I~ lloetr G. D\1111,.,_ft It• 1'1111CI-, C1llflrt1lt Ot•1191 Cwnlv Mlf'C~ 11, 17, U. SI. 1'11 Sn·1J l'AltCIL 7~ Tl\• lflUlll -tlllnl II
PttJIOltll T•h l~UJ ,,,..,,, M, Commlnlotl ltlrplrt.1 "" WHf '~'"''"''"""' ef ""' """" Sl"S 111U .lltfer"'1 fir Mi'l'llAlrtf•ll'l.o. Ct• Hew. 21. UH ... If of lfle 1011lhwt11 -rltr" S.11°" 'ut>lhhllf N•WHrt "•rbor New. Prtn, "ullllil'lfd Dr•-c .. 1, 0 •11'1' "kif, l"ubll•llt<J Or1n1r (0111 D1!1r llfot, LEGAL NOTICE ''· Towllll!lt • Joillti, ll-11 W.11,
Comt>lfttll wnh O•llY l'llot. Nt•POrt Mrf'dl 17, ''->t trMI .._.,M 7, 1f11 _,.11 M1,ch J, I~, 17, 7~. lt71 '11·11 P•tll'I' lft ll>r lllllldlO L• 811 ... Ind
81•ch, C•lllo,,llt Mrrch 17, 21, 11, ,•11tv !ft Ill:~ lA ..... Cllkl,
1111 soe.n LEGAL N<mCE LEGAL NOTJCE '' "'°"'ft "" ' M•• ,_.,,... 1r P-49n Sook 11, N" 1S llf MllCllllMM•
CSllTIJl(.ATI o• IUllNIUI. M•Pt. rtco•lll .. Of•-Clllntr. ....... ....... l'ICT"IOlll ........ (1lltornl1.
CllRTll'l(.t.TI 01' B!XIMISS Cl!llTl,ICATI! 01' •Ul111111 TM """"'"lfMf ._ e11rtl ... 1M It YOU ANO EACH OF YOU ere fleritlr, LEGAL NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUI NAM• l'ICTITIOUJ M.t.MI cOll4utl!n1 1 111111ntt1 1r 2U /Mr ""lr!etl i. _,, ..... t!Ww r..111t
NOJICll 01' ULll ~ttl~r;~~':..:O:: .. ~~~~~"'Hu~ (~~1~:··:1•;:1: .. c•·;;~ ~'r.~ ::.·~,iJi~= ~-::"" ... ~11-;"v1~~ ~ • .:'~"""::...'k."""n.t "':: ~.
HOik• 11 M•Rlrf t 1Vlft PUl\U•t1I le llPlelorl •••di. C.llloml•, undl• "" fk:· LIM. c.... MPsl , Ct lllM"!•, unOfor U'4ttlfT'I' 1...0PPE '"" "'" uld '''"' ,. .. .,.. for lft "" c-111111 ... , ... .,. tt(llonJ J"I •nd 3071 of lhl-Civil t1!1111n llNll ftl.,,. of Sl!A OJIAPHI CS the fldllloon fif'm ,._of ltEl'l!RTOlllY It ~lld ol tr. ........... --· t..-i 1101 .. ,,.. '"., IM' _...kt '"
(ad• of ""' Slel• OI C•llflur,.lt IM •rMI tllet p llf fltn1 It e-.etl et STUDIOS ind llwl ttl!i /Ir'" It tom•tttd WhrN -11 tuU W lllac:e II rulMnoe l'OU d 11111 S11'""'°""' H -d wl!hl •
unclrrtl;r'lfd, •11.L 11, SCHUl..TZ will IM fOllowlftl ""°"' wlloir "e...,. lft f1f .... fo llo-«1"1 Pf•-, whott ...,,,. It •I tolt.M: tllt C-IV " Orw""• V Wlllll" thfrl'·
1e11 II Pllllllt t OKllln. •I ~ Adlmt !lilt llld llllCf el .. ald1n<• 11 II followt: 1.. lull I'll! .... ,. "' r11ldtMI Is " Allee ... ••toe... "°' ... ,, ~v ... UOJ • ..,.. " """' olttwl'ltrt. • ....
AYr ... H11t1lln"""" a.tdl, c1111 .• I I 10 A, L Ktlff"''"· 1101\ Tw•I~ LIM, fllllewl: .... lll9fld. "" ••• """"td """ 11nte. 'OU ..... •.m. en S"urd•Y· thl Jrd t., "' H.l!I. 1tlct11rd C.Hf, 71U ltOKOmlrt lld., Dlfed Mlrdl '· 1m _.,. '1111 1111'1'11" 11 tbwti -''IC
-"'•11, 1f71, ff>d IOl-lfl9 dtKr._ ,.e-Oi led Mirch 1J, 101 lot .C.n .. IH C•Ufotftll Alkt I'. ..... it. tltflltf" "Ill fl-t ~ fo
.. fly, le.wit: A. L tcrul'l'l•A Oaltd Mlldl 1,, lf11 Slllt el Ctl"'"'lt, ~ c.MY: the C-llLl!t II 1rtllt1e """' Cem'fle!
1"5 Ford. 10 """'brr $Ylll'21015fC, Siii• ot C•llltw"lt, O•r'lte counfY • ltlchtrd C11n-On Me•dl f , 1m. !Mfort me, o or Witt -~ fll fM cwrt for -lktnit ftllmbtr 10P9Af75. C•lll. On Mlrch U, 1•11, btlt'" "''' 1 $l1!t OI Ct llfarnl1, O"n9p COUftlf: NII•"" l'\IMI' lf'I 1"'11 11r ..W Ii.It ........ "1111 dlf!lllMltd Ill 11'11 ~lllfll. ~•Id 1.1, II for mt Pll•i>Cll• of ••ll•IYI"• Netr rv .-ut>llc '" •NI 161" 11\d 51111 On Ml •tll "· 1111. btf«t ""' • --"' _ .... .lllca ..... , .. -....i"'!'I YOU MAY SEl!.IC THE AOVICI: Of nr""' Int UllCl1n1tn..S IQr .... , ..... ,.1 .. ltl'IOl'!t llv IOPll'' A. L. l<•lff"""" kMWn NOlll"'I' Publlc 111 Ind tor tlld ll~t.! le "'" la bl flw _....,. ........ ,.._ AN ATTOllNl!Y 'OH AHY MATTI!'"
109tlllll" wllll Cl»l;J of Mv1rtltlnt 11\d Ill nw !I bt 1111 "'left wllc'f fttml HrlO"tllY •-••lld ltldllr' Cl..., k...,_ It: """"r..., Jo t11t wlltilft 1Mf"""MI CONNECTED WITH THll! COMl'LAINH ''"""\If ••I• II •ul>•crlbed le lhe •llft lft ln11r~m•"I ,. me lo bt lh• PltlMI -""""" ,.,,,,.. t nd •cltnoWledt td •ht t•K11tetl""' -· oa THl.S SUMMONS. SUCH ATTOllNE'" Oiled !1\11 2Jrd dlY et Mt1Ch, 1f11 tntl •tkftOwltdOtd hi 1•1CU!ed Ill• lolll'lt. 11 t<11>1erlt.cl lo !he wllllln !t11l•vm•nT IOFl"ICtAL SEAL) SHOOlD SE CONSUL TfO W19MIN TH(
Bii! M. Sthull1 (OFFICIAL SE.C.L) •~d •c~nowl"6tlfll ht ••«ultd tllo 1•mt. MAlllV 9 ETH MOttl"ON TIMI! LIMIT STATED IN THI., IUM· I~ T. E, Me1rnt Jl•n L. J~I {OFFICIAL ~EAL) NOllrY hllll< -Ctl!toml1 MONS FOil FILING A W•ITTEI:
l'ul>ll<llld Ort nllf COii! Qallr ~lie!. Nolt•Y 'ulltlc·Ct!llo•"!• Ml tY ""'~ Metlor> l'rlnclltl ()ffl(I In ,.t.fADtHG TO THE COMl'LAINT. MtrCl'I 1._ 1'71 6St·ll Pr!nclatl OIPlco Jn No!11"'1' l'utlllt·C•lllOtn!• o ..... G.....m-Olvlrfl ...:ttr lftV llltld Ind ... I '
or ...... Cou111v P•l/\CIPll Oftlc• '" MY Commlullll Ex•I•"' lltf si....il>r Court el .... 11111 •
Mv Com'"IHl•ft E•Plrt• 0,1 .... (°"""" htrl1 f, 1'11 C•llfo'"''· lft Mid !fir "" COUftfy I
M••th '· 1f)J MY Com'l'llllloft fx•lru l'ulllhllftl Or1t1111 C"•Jf 0.111 "11111 Orrn1e, Ihle flll dlV " J11ly, lN•·
l'ubtl1hed Ortr'll• CDt ll DlllY l'l!C'I April '· 1'71 Mlrdl 11, 1t, t4. JI, Tf11 sn.11 (OFFICIAL IEAl)
11---.. m<iC-,o<ifltt,Oo,--·\'"~"~':"~'~':·~~:·"'~·~·~·~·~·~·~'~"~'~·" •:n:.__:·~··:'.:11 l'1>tlli1ri.t Or1"'1 C<11ll 0111, PTlcPI W IE. JT .IOH N NOTIC• TO Clt•DITOllS M•nh u, 24. JI Ind .... rll 1. 1'71 "'·" CDl#lltl' Clerk I M C1•rll tf
IUl"lllOlt COUttT DI' TM• LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LF,GAL NOTICE ~'":~~-::~.~"!hr STATI 0' CAll,OllHIA 1'1011 tM for 1111 C-lv of Ortoltl
THll COUNTY 01' Otl:ANel " ·-< M1. •""46 ........ f'47'D • IOllf!I
fllltf ,, JOHN MAlllO 0 $TI, l'·Ml11 CEIT1•1c•T• o• a u1111111 C••T••KATS ~ •tntldU OOll '· .. , .. DKt.llt<I. c1•T11'ICATI 01' a u11Na s1 l'ICTITIOUS NAM• l'ICTIT104IS ....... °'A"'"""
NOTICE 1$ WfllEIY GIVEH le !ht •ICTITIOUI MAM• TM llftdrt"•llntd -tt rllf'I' l\r I~ Tiii 11fld1r11tned ..... certllY "' • I.OU"'"' MMtll!ALL
(J'ldllDl"l el ,,.,. 1bov1 """"td <llK"""' Ttlr """'"""" -Ctrllf'I ... Is (e<ldudl"' • bu•ltltH ,, )li1 !1lhtf (Ot\dUdlrll • ~ "' ,.. ,. ~ .. --"" ·-"'•' 111 Hrl,Olls h1vl"9 <l•\m' .. 111111 C!ll'Mluc!ln1 I bll1l11tH •I 1111 Gltnwetd SI., Colli ......,., C1lllott1I•, U,,.,.., 1iw! M-1 llil'dl,. C.1 ........ 11 1M111W" "'"" .It-... dt
tt!t 11ld dKedtflf ''' '"ulred ~ flit l •nt• N_...., 9etdl. Ct !llOtnl•. Ufldlr fltlllleut flt"' ftl '"' Of OIUfltSIFIEO nctillwt llrtft -II 'HOVll! ~ , .. Olm(:e .. 1tf lti•m, •1111 11'11 NCtHl rY "1111<111rs. In l~t llcllllt•J• firm t1•lftt II •USINEIS MAINTENANCE ANO lll!l"AIJI ll!tl:U'ICE JHlltON, I/Ml 11'11! Nl<ll "'"" 11 Ulnl09d ........_ •114 Ct1Henllt 111r offk• of .... <ltrk 9' IM • .,..., INF011MATl0N SYSTEMS ltld ~ Nld lft(I 11111 o•1d 11•m I• fomttfloltd Ill_, .............. ..,._, ........ Tth tn4.I .......... •at. U1
enlT!ltd court, er to ••ttfl'll !Mm, with II"" It CMnP<llld .t ""' fotl-lftl 1Mr-. lht toll~"' "''°"' w""' "''"' ho 111 tyll Ind fll~ •I f'Wldtllct 1r1 ~ ... ......, !tit nKllNl"'I' "°"""'"· lo "" ...... """°" ........ r .. ,~ .. 11111 tllCI., ••tldencr lutl •1111 ,1.c1 Of r ... 1dtl'l(t lt II 1otio.1· "wi:-! ......... O•-Cdftlf 01!h' "Ill dtrolontd 11 111/1 efllc' el Mr 1""'1'WY, 11 ti l&llOtr1: ltetltrt Cl, Al .. ,..,, Jl7 Etf!I.-It. l-'<11 € ..... ~ T74 D•-Mtirdl IL 2" 2f 111111 AJl'O I, L 1"1 JrS.11
WAll.l.t L. MITCH£t.L, 11, 1501 W"I• l'tt.r W l lehe'. 1111 (ilttl-LIM CO.II Mttl A"'-C.tP "'-"" C.llf.
ctill Drive, Suitt :oo. Ht•llflrl •••<~. i'lt•PON 9tld'I, C1tll0tftfl. DlleCI' Mirth lJ, 1m D .... Mlrdl '· 11n
Ctllforfti• nuo. Wl'\1(11 I~ IN 1l1et Dllild Mir(~ J, 1t11 ltDllfrl o • .lllf•IOl'I ._.. Ellt-~ffltd
el ltut!Mtt (II 11111 und'ril•n"" l'I 111 ... ,., W, •ic.~• Sl1!1 .t C•lllOl"ft!I, Orlftlt C.u"ty• 51,i. Ill C. ..... !111, Ori• «Mlr!IY~ "'"""~ 1>•rt•l"I"' to 111r •tl•t• G'I ~''''er c1uf.,.ftl1, Or•flf• caov111Y ~ o.. M1rch u . 1'71, ....,., -· • °"' MM-di 1 .. 1rn. bltitlW '""• ,,1----------~-----••!d ,.cedtnt, •lfflln IOl/t" ....,..1111 •llllr On MIP(~ "· 1111, btlort rnr •• Hfll•rv Publ~ In 11'111 for .. Id 11•11, NG'l.,y ~ lt! ..., for MM ~ ...... Ill• llt1I publlce!lon of thl• notl"· Nnt1rv l'IKlllc In tNI l1r "kl Sttlt, 1trton1l1y •-•rfod lloblrf 0. Al•R-. MrtOfllll'I _... lt:fll'ltld 1:-CllfTl'1Urof"I Of/ SUllN•SI
01rtc1 Mlrdl I, 1971 P1•!0Fl11!¥ •-••ed '"'' w1111t111 l lctll' l<nowft 11 "" Ill bl lltf Ml-"""" c,_.,,, ._ " -It M ... ,...._ •K"TTTIOV. ""1111 Mtrv M1r11rll lt Fir •-to "" k lie !I'll Mnfl'I _,. 111mr It .W.tr!b!O IQ IM •llhl" In-MlflN MIN It tWO!Ct"lbecl .. 11'11 WflNll ,,.. 111i<ltltlthuld ""' coNll'f fl'le ~
EwH;U!T1J "''"• II lul>Krlbtd le ~ •ll~ln lfl• •trvmenl '"" •tlt-llldtlC hi IXICirl"' IMfntoNtlf ... l(~WlecftlCI flt elllCl.llttl c.MllC:flM I ........... ,, '°' Tr ..... M
of 11'11 Wiit el 1111 '"U"'flll fnd ltcklMl•L.t!tfN ht t~l(Vled lftf 11mt. 1ti1 -· °""""' Glllill ....... Calllforttlt, t°U1'1•
•bo'H t1•med d•ctdtnl lllt .. ""'· (OFFICIAL SEAL) fOf"l"ICIAl l l:Al.I ......... tlld flClll.... Ami """' •' WALL.AC• L MITCM•LL, II !•£ALI M1rv lttll MlrtOft Mll"Y K . ....,,_, ,.lloout..-f'AC .... Wlef tlllil Nr1¥t Ill
1Jll Wtlldltl 0.1¥1, Sdllll 1'f l('•rlH" D. MOnr.. Nftltn' l'\lt'llc<tlltorfl1• No!tn' l'llllllc>Ctllfort1b tertl~ el ll'lt llllkJMole --· '#lllst
Nr#tltl ltl(ll, Cl!ltorllll ,,... t4611f"y ,ublf( • C1liflltfl fl "•lnclHI DftlC• ift Prlncl111I Offlte lft -Ill MJ trMI """ ., ftllcllM~
Ttl! 1114) U1·'"9 "•lll(IDll Oftlu '" Orin" Ceunl'f' Ont"fll (OUllTr It It 111-.:
Al'I_., .... a.u<wll1• Ori"'' Cou,.11 , MY Cornmlnlon 1!1.irt1 MY ~mlt.._ hlllre1 ,.._.,...,... ~ Ill 1"~ Dr.,
Pulll11hed Or•rov• COit! Otltr l'ilo! M~ Comml1tlell E•t!ns Apt1t f, nn Nov. ''· lfl1 etti. M-. GI.,_. M1n:ll J, 10, 17, l4. 1'71 '7'·11 Jutv I. UU l'ub\1111111 Otr""r Cetol 0111'1' Piie! l'u•H1hM Orlftll o..t MW l"!lof Dtlld Mffdl 22. lf7'l
"ub!l1ftecl Or11191 C1>11t 01Ur Pollll, Mlircll 1', ''· ll •r>d A~rU I, 101 .ff).J1 ~rdl J, JG, 11, 24, l"l ......,. ._,..._ ~ 11---~L~E~G~Al.'!:~N~OT~~!C~E'._ ___ j'M~•~'~'"~"~'~'·;'~'~'~oo~"7,'~"~'~·~"~'~'-~»~'~'''' 1----L .,.,. " C1"""1111. °''°"" Cti1mtr1 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE °" ~m n, 1m. ...._ "''· -
LEGAL NOTICE Not11"'1' J'i*k "' "" .., ""' '"''· l'.tl"6 ""'""..., --........ 4il vtll!! CllllTl,ltlifl! 01' •UllNt!IS ••R JI• S.t.l lltl ._ le -le M 1r11 ..,._ Wfllu •ICTITIOUS NAMll l'•f>f IUl'ElllOtl COUllT DI' "TH9 SUl'lllllOll COURT DI' "TN• 111.,,. I• ............ IM wtll\lft ir..
--•• ' -,, -c••n .. 1c ..... , .. ,,,.,. ITITtt: 01' c•Lll'OllNIA l'Ott ITAT• o• '''''o'''' '" • ,,,.. v .... trl tfltd '° ttn Y .,,fy •te. "' '''CO"••• 0 , •••••I •ltUmW ... Id._,_.. H 111<9l:utt ef)ftduc;llllfl • bu1lf'!fit .i , .... ltlC~. •ICTITIOU1 NAM• TN S COUNTY.,,. OllA,... " • !I'll .. .....
Mu"''"'"" lt•c/\, C1htorftit, ul'dtr the Tilt 11rlllt••lt""" ~ W !llv ht 1t Nt. ,. ..... , N" 1""71 ((Mii" ( AL M!A&.t f1Ull...,,, "'"' .,. ..... of HUNTINGTON ell'Mhlf:ll"' • lllJ1ln<111 •! 411 Hiii 11 . NOT ICI..< CW NIAlt:I ... Ollf PITITIDN NOTKI 01' MS•lllMG 01' l"ll!TTTIOM I ~llfV ...... ""'°"'°"
llf ACH CHPYSLl!tt flLYMOUTH •NI L•111n1 ... ell. c.11 ... ..i •• Wncltr '"' l'OR PROSAT• °" WIU ...,.. •olt "0" l''tOIAT• 01' WILL AlrfD f'OI: ~OIWV ~,.,,.
..... ••Id flrtft is COftllMed "' "" ntttt ..... f:r"' Mml • MART l'llO· Larn•• ''"AMlllT.t.llY tlSUANCI °' i..anau TalJ .... 11'· "•lfttfMI OMce I•
fellflwlftl p.,-. whew ft""6 111 11/lt DUCTtOHS 11111 ltlil 111<11 fir'" It ,..... l1t1t1 Ill JOHN llA.M.IAV l'ltATI, 1ARY 0.-~
'""tlt<tt el •Hidrr'« •• , •• fol'-""~ IOild ol "" lotl-1111 "'""' •hon tit.• JOHN l'llATT, 8la JACK ,. .... n ....... " WILLIAM I(. McfCllt'N, My c ... "'"'*-~
C!l.trlef a1rt1r. '°" Slllrlt'I ""'·· ,,,.,.,.. lft tutr ""' llKt er 1"9t11Nftet Olct•1etl. D.c:t..-. ...,M • 1t71 T1n1n1, Cieri• .... C~llJI. nu El'IC!r>r." 111...-.: NOTIC E ,, H!ltlDV QIVt!N 11111 NOTIC9 IS Hllll•Y ,CIVElf """ l"l*ith• o.-CMlf °""" "II" A~. V111 N!JVI. Mtc.l\trl Jt ,,..• Ht rllt,, 411 Hill Sl., WA.YNI: 11, STITH hll flltd fltr'tln DOllOTK't' (, Mt ..... llf' tltetl ......... ._.,.._"'JI ... ,,,.v 7 14 Mn MW'1
D1fld Mimi J, lt71 l...tl'llM l•adl. I pttlllof't ltr l'IWl'9 ti W111 erlll I tl'Mttilll W f'lollll.llt tf Wit Mf '
Cl'llrlH ••rl(tr Oiied fNrcll '· 1111 let ln11tftCI 61 L«Her1 T•11.,,_i.,.,. ...-luu1ne• ., Li'!,.,, Tttf..,..,...,
Glorl• A. ("1"1d Mldlffl J, Wtrt,.,. .. """'-· r"''''"'' .. wlllCl'I .. "' ,...n~. ..i.......:t .. ~ II S11111 .t C11il«t11t, Or""" CO\lftlv ~ a11 .. If C•l/1911111, or.,.. C"tufttr: '"'* I« fllrWlw 61/llcul•n . 1l'lf that f!IMf l6r lllr1tllf" l'•r!Jcv llo..., ...,, hi)-------~-------•
Oft M•r(~ 1. ltll. trio•• ""· • On Mll'cl'I 1. 1m. ..,.,, -· 1 "" """" •rid 111a .t "'"""' ttit thl """ ...,. .-. II ....... 911 ,.-. N11!1rv Pi,tbnc "' '"" tor u ld Sift, Nlllt.., 'll'btlc: "' '""" ffll'" ..... s11i.. u.,,. ,... kttl Mt April •• 1tl1, 1t "'""' I'll• tMoilll •ft ""' Ajll'l4 I . 1f71. PICTlnMll aUSINn&
__...111 ,_,.... Ot•rlr• 11ttt1r lflllll ..,_.,.... "'"'red Midi••• Jtl'flh •:• •·"'" 111 111t <-''""" of 0.••tt· ol' t ;a '""" lft i... ~_.._,,, .t IUMl ,,..,,......,.
OIOrl1 A. Cllfl11 ~~ to mt 11 Iii Htrlllt ~-.. "" 19 .. fhl te•lflrl '"'"I No 2 .t ttld w.ttt, •t l'OI Dt .. r'lfnMI ""' J Of .. td #Uri, ti 1111: "'""""'-.. -•• ..a.i,. Ml""'t
""' lloll""IOlll Wl'!CIM ftllnff ••• 11/bt(fl\ltll ....... ,,. .... " tUblCfil>ed IO "'' wn111 .. Cl•IC Ctf'lltr 0 ,1..... w.-.1. Ill "" (tly * (l\ltc" (tll'lllr OrlYt ....... In .... •1 I .. IN wlllllft lrttl"""'"' 11111 nit-ltd .. lrtttruml'l'tl"""' K'llfllwl<lllMd hi ll!!tc~led Of Sto1l1 ....,., C•lllMftll. City ff St!IMI AM, C1llfllrlllle. "Jt()(l"(U/OJU,t.. ,IHAMCIAL 11\.AH-
H ~ •~tcu'-1 ll'le "'"'· ll'lt tltM. 0.lecl ,,,..,di It, 1'11 o.tell Mlrtll n . 1m HIWG, "" L 11'11 "" tt-, )17, IOF'FICIAl SEAL) COFl'tCIAt. $1At.I W. I:. JT JOHN, W. Ii. I T JOit... s..>11 AM,.
Jrtft l., J•t Jest•ll I". 01v!1 Cou11lv Cl,,_ Coufl!v (It,_ I' I' .. I•~ A (.llllotMI C---11110f"
NO'•" l"ub!lc.Ctllllf~i• Nlill l"'I' "'*'1oG1111•ot1• JAM•t •. MITCN9LL Mt0WIN. Oll•IM • SYLVIA T~I• MIM• II """' ~ .,
"•lnc!t•I Olfl<•"" l'tfr><I••• Olll(t 111 ,,, Clvk c .... Df"1H 11'11t Ht .... c.._ A-I c..-....... Or1111t (Ollflllo o'"'" Ceu~11 llnll A111, ClfllorJll• '11'1 Df"l•ff· C1tlltnll• fH6I ,. I' ,., ll'IC... 1 c.!llw"'•
Mv CM1'"t11I011 Expl .. t My (lmtftlHIMI ·~•!•ft ltl! '"""" T ......... ! (n4) QMffl Cortor-""
L EGAL NOTICE
Ml•<I'> }, 1,7) J11nt 11, lt1' Alllr .. , ltf: Pit..._ A ..... •1 .......... l(f/tll ......... fOt"'ltlto!I
•------------------------------------.. ----~ ll11toU1~l'tl 0••111• Co.111 0.11, l'ilol l'ublll-l'ltd Or•llM (6111 DlillY '!let l"\tblltlltd °'"* c ... ~ 041lt l'ltfl ,...,_, an... CoHd OtflY '11111 l"utli-ar..... c.n .,..... J'ti.r. M•MI L 10. 11. "" ttn .WI Mu·dl J, , .. "· Mo 1'11 •'1·11 Mtl'(:h ,, '" it, 1•1' '"'"" M•rd'I , .. u . "· ''" t.ltl·" ... f!C)I u. !I I.Wiii ... ,, ·~"" '-Y·n
14 DAILY r1LOf S '1rd"""'1 M1<th 24, 1971
Your Mmaey~ WoriJa
Buying Power Dep1·eciation
87 SVL VIA PORTER
Wbtn the U S. Government
admits thm wttk that the $1
which bought 100 cents of
typical goods and service~ fo-• c1tf famll}.i 1n 1939 buvs
less than 3S cents worth of
sunllar gooch and serv1ce.s 111
1971 you "'11! sure!) be
disturbed and p e r b • p !5
fn,ghtened
Bui this is still only a
1tatist1cal comparison You
don t buy food with a 35-cent
dollar Nor do you pav renl
v.1th a Consumer Price inde x
0gu ...
When however I tell you
that the bachelor apartment
wb..ich rented for $25 a month
1n 1939 goes tor $12>$1SO to-
day thEo erosion 1n the dollar s
purchasing po\Ver 1n tb18 span
LEGAL NOTICE
Cl•Tl,ICATf 0' •USll'jlll
,ICTITIOUS /llAMf n.. ul'ld.rll1""" <lo ttfll y Inn I t
c:onduc11nt 1 bul!flfSa 1 1111 Wtl!C fl
O N!!WPOl'I 811Cll C• lo nit '""''
-fdllout '"" n•mc or SHEARS-5.AMlS AGENC'I' 1ncr 111•1 ~ d I rm
b lll)ITll>OMll of "'-lo 11"' n1 PefloOtlt -.e n1mt1 n lull •NI Pl•<n of n.i.nc• .,.., • follows TM!f'l'l.as H SM.$ I. 120 V I Ou lo
N--1 9tKh (1111 Donald B S1m!1. u.I Str I (Orot\11
dtl M1r Cl ll
O.fed Ml ch ~3 lffl
Oo11ald ti Sam ' ?"'°""'•~ H SM1 I
ITA'TE" OF CALFFOlttHA
ORANGE COUNTY
Oii M•rd'I :ti im Dtto • mt •
NoiltY Pllblk h> 1nd '°"' .aid Stile
"raon•llr •-•rid TI>om11 H She• 1
11'11 Oon• d 8 Samls k,_n to mt to l>f ll>t Pe .otlS Wf\OH llllrlWI I I
nlbK !bed kl the w !h n nt!tvmem 11'1!1 iC~l>OW ld(led !htY tXKU!ed !!Ml! •omt
!OFFICIAL SEALl MavBenMotOtl
! arv Pub < ~I !O•~li
leaps out Paymg rent I! !n
tht ttalm of real life Just
thl1 single comparison
dramatizes the depreciation on
our currenc~ s buying power
So does the C(lmment that
the Xent hotdog -0f 39 1s
30 cents toda\ the 20-cent
111ov1e is $1 50 to $2 00 !ht:
llkent magazine is 50 cents
the 45-cenl dinner 1s $2 the
Jkcnt urislwatch repair is
also $2
From these r1gurts at least
three points emerge
( l) Startling though tbe
upsurge 1n the CPI figures
1s 1t obscures the fact that
the prices of 1nany goods and
services v.e need want and
regularly consume ha v e
spiraled up muc h faster One
New Yorker who kept a penny
b\ penny daily diary of hts
J1v1ng expenses when he was
a bachelor 1n 1939 Insists that
everv index figure I quote
to show pnce trends 1s all
we' <You II hnd some <Jf
hiS d1arv items below )
(2; While I assume you are
aware that increases in the
C<lSts of services 1n recent
)ears have been outpacing
price 1nrreases Ul other areas
you must not underesfimate
the degree to whifh this 1s
so Again the New Yorkers
diary v.111 document th.is point
{3) lt s downngbt neurot1e
lo conl1nue to refer so con
stantly lo 1939 s prices -the
SubwlY blit fl t k
CO(I coi. (I 01 bol!ltl :k
c "''".. 1k c.~ b•• .k
H• '~"I 50C $1\ot •hnt 1k
J N~llOI ~.k
Lu11<h lSc
D!fl~ 4k
Drvc 11n n' 1.k $1
cne• nu1> k
AM> t or o 1n1t
PO•l(I d
A m•lf 11mo
c ~·· 11.,nnurt..-
Phont u I
kol{h "Ith)
WIM Ibo" cl
B~ wlll rrtrd
' ,, ..
" ~
k
'" • '" "' k
But just last ~eek ths Honor
the Mayor John Lindsay tack.I
ed that sacred rehc and pro-
posed boosting the fare all
the way to 25 cents Which
would leave unchanged <>n the
New Yorkers list only one
item the penny weighing
mach1nt'
Mio• Off Ct \ft
O••n~P Ccun t My C<>mm ~t Qfl Exp U
Ar>< t 1971
P<.OI st>N Ortnff Co.all 0. ly Plot
M•rcfl 24. JI AP t I U tll Ul II
LEGAL NOTICE
C:••Tll'ICl.Tf 01' IUSINISS l'ICTITIOUS /llltMlf
Pacific Telephone's
Earnings Decreasing
Th• 111"dtrt!tnecl -ctrt fy "' 11 <ondl/Cll... • bll•lntt• II nu VII I
Huetll ~-POrt &Htfl Cl l0<n I ~ndt
""" I ctltlOllt I rm ... me .,, MARQUE .. ROOUCTS •NI lhll 11ld ll 11'1 11 c.,..... "'°"" ol TM-fO (fW nt ~rwn WlloH
n1mt In lull 11'1d -1ct of re•ldllftCt
ll••folOW!o euvtnt It Pt I 7111 VI$• H~trt•
N!'WllOl'l 8r1c~ C 1 I o n I
Qlll'd Metc;ll 2~ 1911 E u9rn~ II P&r 11
S1aft of Cl '°"'" 1 0 lnGI~ Coun v On Ml cJI Jl 1911 ~to e m• •
Ho11ry Pub! c tn 1l'HI !or 11l<t Sl&I'
•tr-Iv 11'Pffrto e"utne R P~ tl;-n Ill mt 10 bl IT\e Pff)(HI Wi'I0'41
ntm• 11 WM( bt<I ID 111• wll~ln 1 ....
t lrum.nl tnd 1d<MWllldttcl 11t •~ecutl'd 1,,. Mmt
tOFFICIAL SEAL!
MliN &tlh Mor10"
H011N Pub! ( c1111.,..n I
Prine P•I Ol!IC• tn °''"" counh' MY Comm nlon l.x.i"•
Aprfl J ltn
"VbllJllt<I Or•l>IH CO&t! 0• 11 Pl'°'
Mtrd'I '~ )1 1fld A1>rll 1 u, nn Ul 11
rEGAL NOTICE:
Pac1f1t Telephone s I 9 7 0
earnings dropped to $1 46 a
common share from $1 52 the
year before President Jerome
\\ Hull reports
lmpro\ ement 1s essential '
he said When one examines
the av.esome challenges facing
the company
lnd1cat1ve or those
challenges llull pointed out
is the fatt that the company
will have to spend about $800
nulhon on construction of new
plant 10 Cabforn1a and Nevada
1n 1971
P-11111 By the nuddle of this
Clf•'TIPICl.TE 01' aUSINl!ll ,.1cT T1ou1 NAME decade he said we expect
1'llt undttt 11nld -I Cetl ly ht Jt; thi f (o be th con<lu<I ,,, • bu• nH' • 111 s Mtln s igure topping e
s1 s1n11 An• ciutorn • undt nt 11 b1lhon mark annually fl(l llout I rm 11-t of PANDORA S
eiox ,,.. 111•1 .-d t!1m i. compe.eo \Ve contemplate ex
"' ,,.. ~ owtn• """'°" _. n•m• d I th I d In tuH • ..., Pl•c• ~• f'" drnc• •rt pen 1tures o IS magn1 u e
•• to1iow1 at a lune when interest rates GlrY Lie CllY l ' S Ml n SI s1n1~ An• c11 l(l(n • for capital we must borrow
011M1 M1rch 7l 1~71 are at high levels when "< GtvLC•v
111111 e1 c11 tornl• o anve Coun!• haven t been able to raise our On M• ct! 2J 1'11 ~IOO'c mt I h Not.,., pu111 c ,. •nd IOI' ,. <:1 s • e d1v1dend Slnce 1961 and w en
ptrtOl\111'1' IP~~ "4 Gary LH C IY know the pr!Ce 0( OUr Stock has 1rll mt lo bt lhe per-wi'IOH nlmt
11 tuboc• 1>ea tp ~e "' n n 1n~1ru'"trlt been hovenng around book
•"" .,knowlirdted ~t •••o;v"d '"' ••m.. value he continued tOFFIC:IAL SE,t.,Ll JOMi>l'I e o.~11 During 1970 P a c 1 f I c NQll v Pub c (11 iornlf p ncPI oncc111 Telephones operating
0 11\Vt Counl<y
MY Comm u\oll EoP1rt 1 LEGAL NOTICE
Junt ~ 1'1' 1---~~--~~--~~~--I •ublhh.., 0 Anti Coal O• 'f p !QI SUPElllO• COUll'T 0, 'TMll
M••<h 2• 11 •..cl A"'U 1 U t7l ~I STtTll OP Cl.LIPOllN!I. FO•
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ......... :II ------~~~~----INOTICll 01' NEARING OP l'E'TITION
FILI. NO P~S FQll PltOll.TE Otr WILL AND l'O•
I.EGA". NOTICE
PICTIOUS IUI NEIS. lfTTlltS Tl!STAMINTAll'f
NAME $fATEMEN'T E1 o t ol JAMEi JOSEPH M,t.,U(;El
'fHE FOLLOWING PERSON S 00 NG o~~•••~d
9USINESS AS NOT!(E IS HEREll'f GIVEN tho! (0,t.,5T PROPERT ES 00 Jill ! EI~~ Mory MIUP~1 hol I HI htr. n
•• boe l!ou tYI d 8• bo• C• l!Orn' • pe ! ()ti ,,,, ,, ob•!• Of .... I •'Id
llnod• llull1 J•Y•HI Jll E Oceon M """" r ol Lt"t~ 'ftlll'menla v
llw ~•f11 8• bo3 Ca klrt> • to "' 1 -r rtltrt~c• kl wh c1'I ~ Th 1 bu1 n1n & blln1 <onc!ut1td by m•d~ I\>< fo lht PA llcul•n and lh•I
I n lndN Gut lht 1lm1 er.ct p ace ol ht1r!fll !tit
Rllod• Jl.1111> Joy~ ~•m' h11 bttn "" !or Al>I I lJ 1'11 ~ub •hod O l"q' Coif\ 01 ., P IO •I ' XI 1 m II' tnt courtroom ol
Mtr<h 1• Jl ll'ld Aor 11 \• 1'71 6lS 11 Oep1 lmrnt NO J ol ti <I CO<Jr! ll
LEGAL NOTICE
100 Clv c Cen er 0 lvt Wnl In ll>t
( v ot Stn t Ant Ct!llornl1
P11ec1 M• ch 2J 1t71 W E 5t JO"IN ANSW!lt TO NOT Cll' Otr INTEN'flON Counh' c. -
TO CIRCULATE llE!IC.ALL rt:TITION ltQGEll G L.AN .. Nll!!ll
Ntv n• II If<! n lh• I ru re<I 10$ Ntl'ttl Ctltl H1thWI., $uU1 L
I '"""' '"" YtN ~·m• MOP' h1v• L•.un• •••<II Ctlltwrni• mtl I I'd •nQl)I' ott !kin 'fhtv lllVP dflnt T-3 111'1 ... ""
IMS !or Ollll '"-onlv kl P 1vtn1 At,.rn" for "•lltleMt
fTMI! lrom con,cletll OU•1V tul I In• 1'W Pub la/It'd o '""' C011t 0111'1
dut!tt. 10 VOii ., YOUf <OllnC !r111n Incl Mlfth 'j 's )0 1m m•~ 1~c;;;:~:;:;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;s.,11ii!I Unfl)rtun~ .iv 111• t 1 • Mt 11 i wllo ~ • ~ "° ..ot w1n! II\ lndr<•tl'ldtnl C Iv COUl'dt 1 1m "°' 1 r...cbtr •'•mo tor ,,,~ I 000 • OF OIL PAINTINGS
14'Kl•I ln~rtlrlt Wl'>o w r.11 111 dom ""• 1111'. WHOllSALI WAllHOUSI "' "'~!:"' •••<" 01urv"' <OtlTlruct ,~ '"" '.i OPIN TO THI PUlllC "''''"'°'"' .,uni< P•I -nmtnl 1 wlU i SO"'o OFF un!I-IO OG "'"' ti.1 to IM'OVldt f /I
NI kl...i of IOYtrnmtnt ••It. •OINOlft. S..t.HTA ANA
I am P"IPlld ol "'"•I "'' Mtfl IC
c«nPll•htd -· -lh• tl•O•v• I I nc•11~~':.C~~·~-~~·~·~··~·'.!~~~!'~ IWf tltoe!IPt\. T"' vottn hlw tnt -t Cf:ALmt.S WAHT•D _..-Nftltr I<> ,,...., ,.. tho r1cou1 1..cl
I ..... (On1'cton! h•I lt_,y w I !'l\l~t
"" r191ll clttltlon I 1111 1vrt !My wm AIKI •nv •11.,,.o!t o d 1 ort 111~
trvlt! 11'4 Cl vtrt tl\llr • tenl\on !~
revenues
totaled
Irvine Firm
To Develop
New Product
.. "'" 1"11•.. tttl f " 1'I con otl !!'It I
wl!I W "'"" l o dlKuu !flt; t••I luvt' ~11nt our (Offllll"" ty DATEl> ~rd! 22 H11
MC)ttTQN A llAUM
Pllbll&htoll Dr•nte Co-11 Cl1 It M•~ ~ .. 1'11
used cars
used
LEGAL NOTICE
all.f NO P' ,...
l'ICTfTIOUS IUSINlfll NAM• ltl.TfMINT
.... lol Q .. "' "'"°" It dot,,. lioltllltU I
'"ico1tKER l.A(iUN..... IOO w Co•fl
Mllf>WIY l.lotl\11\1 •N<ll
EOWtrd I "•mn Cit lrt• ......_. ke(fl
'fhlt b>nlfWC& " .. , ... COllOll...ct.11 ...
lfl ~\'lcklll ~thM o '"" CO.rt O•llT IMrd\ IJ M. l'I llfld APrW 1 1tn
LEGAL NOTICt. ·-•KnTM>VS IVllN&ll
M.1.#1 STl.TIMINT n. ..,lowlnt _.._, ''" aotnt
....... ft
'°"'"'IC &HELl lTO"l lit "°"'""' -Pita N-" lltt(ll C:1llfon.l1 ,_ .,.. ttf'I~" •~•"It u~ w
"'''-SI CO.It M#w (11!tornl•
nri11 bvtl-t Jt; floltlllt tol'lc!WIH b'
HnNrtl'lll. J1mM G a,.alllt 11elfll a..n11
"llllllillld Ort11t• c-1 Dt!lt' P!lil!
Mtnfl 11. IJ,. U. II ltn DWI
but not abused
1eventy-one1 et
~~~L~
1600 HARIJOA BLVO I COSTA ~ESA
[114J $40 9100
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO ll1t1ngs for TueadlV, Mlrch 23, 1971
a...-1111or1 •• , ..... .., ...,i.r-.r 1 .... J:llMT.,.. t I 111 "9111 MAID.
l"rk• • •t •1111111 ,... .. 11 w -m-. ""'''"-., ~
,
I
Complete-New York Stock List
•
•
1~71 DAILY PILOT
Tuesday's Closing· Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
•
Slltt Net
1M•) Hltll L .. CM•• C:~ ..
.. . .. . ~ -.. . .... . .. . .
!6 DAIL V PILOT Wcdntsday, Mart~ 24, 1971
Theater Notes
'Gypsy' Set to Open
Herman's
Herd Tops
Jazz Fest tsy 1'0~1 TITUS
Of till D1il'f' .. Ii.I Still
Last week, cro'"·ded into the
seasoo 's heavies t rush of
theater openings , was .lunl'
1-lavoc·s autobiographical play
"Marathon 33." a dran1atiia·
llon of the actress' early al·
tempt to break into show
business after severing the
umbilical cord.
This V.'t'ek her big sister
gets equal titne -all by
herself -Y.'hen the South
Coast Light Opera Association
swings back into action after
.tt two-season layoff y,·ith
"Gypsy." the story of lht': ugly
duckling who blossomed into
Gypsy Rose Lee.
"Gypsy" is the Ione
newcomer on the week's
theater callboard and. plays
Saturday rught only, with
three more performances
April 1--3. Ru th Yielding, a
founder of the SCLOA, is di·
reeling the musical.
Starring in the role of
f\ladon1e Rose. one of the
n1any stars in Ethel Merman's
cro\vn. will be Carol Stanfield,
a DAILY PILOT award win·
ner or 1wo seasons ago. Clark
Farrell plays the boyfriend-
1nanager Herbie, \\'hile f.larla
Small takes the title role of
Louise y,•ho evolves i n t e
Gypsy.
Others in principal roles
are Rochelle B o w e as
Baby Jane, Jack Berges
• r ---
TV DAILY LOG
Wednesday
Evening
MARCH 24
1:00 fJ Ii& Men Jttry Dun,hy.
0 Qflt "IWI Tom Snyde1. one AJIM s-.w
0 5"111 O'Otd Movie: (C) (90)
"'Sulli¥&11'1 ltlplR" (d!l/111) '67-
Marti• Milner, Clu '-ul1pr, K1rtn
.llnMin, llndtn Ctliln. Don Quine.
A w111thJ pl1nl1tion owne(s plane
cnW1 lfllilt on t JUMJ trip owtr
the i\mazOft jun1!1.
0 Did Y111 o,kt m TH nhrtstonet
(()@(})St1r Tr1k m Mlffl11l1"'
IHJ(j) .... m Flalltr r1111ilJ m ltotilitf• J4
ID W1ridtf1111t
Ell> LI Mon f1111Ular con C.n&Uelo
(f) N1n Jim Hawthorne.
1:15 fD Alt Sbtdie .. Fi1ur1 P1intin1."
1:311 0 C.11t1it1 CHllr• m TH flJi•I Nw11
@(IJ HIC Htw1 m IW11P01111 Ltd11
t,i!(i)CIS Nim
ill) Slltcftd fll11/MlltiUl1 m n. ou.t ltport
mu. OlriPdM muc ....
l::DO II CIS "-t Yhl\11 Ctotrkilt.
em allC ,...,. O.rid l rintllf.
0 'nit'• Mr Lint?
m lflJ (})I LM L11er
m 11rap1t
-· B11b1r1 MeH1lr 111ests 1s • 1ln1ln1
nl1trtduh _propridre$$.
0 "'"' o @rn mn. snPt• J1•i!J
"Bri1n •nd the Sheriff." Bri1n Joins
his friend. 1n old homeste1der and
fo1mer ltxas la'll min. in his armed
sl1nd 1gainst 1Yiction by the sherift.
Arthur O'Con11ell 1ues1s. m Dawid J1osi S1rrow Di1h1nn C..1-
1011 is ruast hostm. He1 cunts •r•
tompowr Rich1rd Rod111s, PfO·
d11C11r Alennder Collen and ttit
Beath Bors. m ftlllftJ SqLIH
ED ;real Alltrkln Dru11 M1chiftl
Cl) P.tteni fir 1.Mn1
9:00 0 ~ [j) Modicll Ce1111r (R) B.r-
IY S~!liv1n ind 01ane Beker 2uest
1s 1n 12~n2 pfofessor and his 'llift,
D
*
who is v1i<lusly ill.
GEORGE c. scon in
"Jane Eyre" on Bell
System Family Theatr~ o @ oo m 1 1.1c11l 1 .. J•ne
[Jrt~ George C. Scott and Susannah
YOO: star in ~peci1! producUon of
Charlotte Bronte's novel of swpenH
and romanr... Slrong-wmed, Inde-
pendent J1ne Eyre, a pernes1 at
Thornlield Hill. falls in low wiU1
ht1 emplorer. [dwud Rochnle1.
•nd diSCO'lers fri[tl1enin1 stcfelS ot
his paU.
O The r urrtn.
0 @(!) tl) Johnny Ci.ti Guests
aie The Clrpentt1s.. Charley Pricl1,
lomlfl)' Clslt, Bob Lum•~ and Red
Lant.
mn.""""
€l!) 30 Mftwtes
(ID N1t1d11
!;JO 0 Cndid Clllllfl
iE) Mllliult/Pastor's OtP:
al ~en1 dt An1usti11 @ (jJ lr1ridtd
ED firin1 Line
9 (I) Tnrti • Con1111111nui
€i) Cllrilt ttlt l.ili111 Wiid
m .. a..,.,r.
10:00 tJ la()) Htwaii Fiwt-0 "" Intl~·
~ti1I loreian tofltspondcnt (2uest
Crit Braeden) comes lo H1'll1ii, orrly
lo find tUmself !ht tar1et 10f an
awr~in. John Mlffey also 111tsts.
Ci) S11BP11111111t1 Maria
aJM• '""'
l :JO 0 Iii Ci) Mt• al LI• Allo1neys
Mc/tell and H1nsen 111 saddled \
llfllh 1 touah dettnst al a multi
m~honairt l1nd dwt\Ql)tr who is
acc:u:sed in lht 1pp1rtnl homicidt i
of Ms llfllt. Gutst·stlr is Sleoie
Fonasl
0 QJ@ m n.t Mlfl Frt11 Shi·
loll ~Jump Up." .lohn McG1~t1. Jan
Sltrtini. John Aslin, M1dlJf1 Rhue
and Aldl Jason (Uttl·tl1r ift 1 dra·
0 Iii 5 News Kevin S1~rs,
Barney Monis.
0 @(!)CD Tiit fo11n1 ll.y111
"l'vt Got 1 Problem.~ Glfy lock·
wood IUed& IS I 11dio l1lk 1how
host l1rrd tor u.preuin1 an h-'lllf
stnl!ments on his PfOKfim.
0 a.iter Wiid NIWS
m News Putn1m/fisll m1n.
Q) M11 Tri,
ml inwlwinf Tait's fttlpt lrom • Em TV Mulk.ll 01111t
chain 11n1 1ll~r. h1vin1 bttnl f:T;l t itrnol• d'
tr1rned a.. 1 homiade ch1111 ....., n 11
0 Y1t1i•it ;re111111 Sllow Guests JO:lO 0 KD/fOf WMk Mavi1: {90) "Stut4
1r1 Mlf1h• RIJi, )Gef Ad1ms. Marl · to Dt•th" (mystery) ·•1-Bt11 Lu·
tyn and Al1n Btr1m1n, 1r.d 1uth01 iosi. joyct Compton.
Mary Rod1trs Q) Bill .Johns Ntws
O @@CDCwrtlllip tl Eddi1'1I ""'lnotl'tid br Fltll• ~onc1plint Is 1 f()llr litter '-Iii ~m 0
WOid Spelled l-0-V·l" Eddtt n· 11:0D65 C!J (mKtn
c1iv1s his lint ~1n~n1
0 Milllter $ Mtrit: (2 hi) ''Opttl· Q @@fD Nt•I
as Rose's rather, Cene Ap-
plegett in a dual role, Rich
Springer as Uncle Jocko and
Alice Netzen, Judy Nep and
Nancy Briggs as the strippers.
Co1npleting lhe caat are
Tom Shelton, Ross Stanfield,
George Donka, Darryl Rapp,
Susie Tomlinson , Jacqueline
Hickey and Vickie Sauhders.
"Gypsy" will be presented
Woody Herman and his
Thundering Herd will headline
the third annual Orange Coast
College Jaz.z Ensemble
Festival, set for the college
auditorium Thursday through
Saturday.
in San Clemente's newly
refurbished Arts Pavilion In '·
!he ri.1oose Hall building al ~
105 Ave. Pico. Curtain .i.! I
o'clock rather than 8:30, with
reservations being taken at
492-5761. •
H-erman. among the most
popular big band le aders in
~ nation. will give a two-
bour concert in the OCC gym·
nasi um at 8 o'clock Saturday
night.
The jazz festival , pitting
university, junior college and
high school bands r r o m
California, Utah, Nevada and
\l.'ashington, is the largest
event of its kind in the West.
The affair \\'il l begin at 8
o'clock each morning and will
continue throughout the day .
* Continuing its three-pronged
program lonight through Sun·
day is South Coast Repertory,
which is staging the original
musical "Mother E a r t h ' '
tonight and Thursday, closing
out "The Imaginary Invalid''
Friday and Saturday and win·
ding up the brief run of
"Next'' and ''The Indian
Wants the Bronx" on Sunday
night.
Ron Thronson and Toni
Shearer are the guiding lights
behind the ultra·successful
"Mother Earth." while Ron
Boussom directs the com-
media dell'arle version of
''Invalid." The Sunday one-
acts are being staged by SCR
newcomer Shasnin Desai.
All three programs are
being presented at the com·
pany's Thin;! Step Theater,
1827 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Reservations 646-136.1.
* Arthur Miller's modern
tragedy ''A View From the
Bridge'' is being given a
superlative staging by the
Irvine Community Theater.
with performances resuming
Friday and Saturday. Richard
Dow is directing and doubling
as the lawyer Alrieri.
Art and Janet Gordon head
the Irvine cast, which includes
Karen Gardner, John ~1angels
and Gary Saderup. The drama
is being presented at the UC
Irvine Studio 'Theater in the
11umanities building on cam-
pus. Reservations 833-1024.
Another highly involving
drama is Frank Gilroy 's
"Who'll Save the P\owboy?"
v:hich closes out a three·
\\'eekend run with f i n a I
performances T h u r s d a y
through Sunday at the San
Clemente Community Theater.
f.1ary Eastman is directing.
The cast includes Russen
Martin, Marge Bradley, Chuck
SPRING PROGRAM
.,.WUK COURSES
March 29 to May 29
Paintlng·Fiqure & Land·
scape. Drawlnq·Lif• Ir.
Anatomy. Ceramics·
Sculpture Art History•
Jewelry & Print Making:
Children's Art
Other day and evening
class•s. Appraved for
veterons.
l'M YOURS -Clark Farrell takes issue with Carol
Sta.~f~eld "'.hen she says "you'll never g'et away from
me m this scene from South Coast Light Opera
musical "Gypsy," opening Saturday in San .Clemente.
Director Charles Rutherford Schleker and Dottie Smith at
the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202
Avenida Cabril l o , San
Clemente. Reservations 492-
Reservations 543·7647. an n 0 u n c e d that many
0465.
Giselle MacKenzie beads.the thousands of dollars worth of
cast in the title role of prizes, including instruments,
"Mame," entering its second records, trophies and cash,
weekend (or the Buena Park will be given at the festival . * Civic Light Opera. John Rieb All ay,·ards will be presented
On the lighter side is the is directing. at 7: 30 p.m. Saturday in the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse's Also featured are Betty gym before the Herman con-
comedy of literary inlidelity ~totsinger, Charles Curlis and cert.
"J " h" b I · h Pam Rich al the Theater Arts anus, Y.' IC pays lon1g t Each of the 75 bands will
th 'ugh S I d d th Complex of Buena Park High r a ur ay un er e be allotted 20 minutes on stage
dl.r""i" f B'll Fu "k School, Magnolia at ~cademy -=--ion o I c1 · dunn· g !he competition. Judges
B Ls H It d J . in Buena Park. Reservations e Y ewe an acqu1e 879-4237. ·will be top-notch professional
Moffett share tlle leading role m"'"cia· ns : Sonny Stilt, Clark in th dy •h R 1 h Closi ng out a six-week run .....,, t come , WI a P Terry, Dan Morgenstern of
RIC. •-· d Walle D 1 •1·11 at the Long Beach Community ''"IVD , r a Y. n 1 Downbeat Magazine, Raoul Ha d Ph u· SI d Playhouse is the comedy nson an Y IS rou Romero and R1"ck Da•1·s. They
I t . tbe t ';Ring Around Elizabeth," comp e ing cas. ..,.;II be nresenl ,·n !lie P f · 1 lh under the direction o! James ... .. er orman~s are given a e auditorium all three days to playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Brittain. Final performances
Ro;id, Laguna B e a c h , are Friday and Saturday at judge, and to meet with small
Reservations 494-0743. the theater. 5021 E. Anaheim groups of young musi cians and
Strindberg's Swedish classic Ave., Long Beach. Reserva-discuss music as a proff'ssion
.. Miss Julie" continues Friday1_1_io_n_s_<_2_13~)-438-0 __ 536_. _____ a_nd_Ja_1_es_1_1_re_nd_s_in_1h_e_f_ie_ld_._11 and Saturday at the Nifty
Theater of Huntington Beach,
along with Franz Kafka's
"The Judgment." Elliot Fried
directs both offerings.
Carol Dunlap , Gary
Domazlicky. Wilda West and
Jeff Isaac comprise the twin
casts at the Nifty, 307 Main
St.. Huntington B e a c h .
Reservations 536-9158.
* Furlher north in Orange
County, "Lllies of the Field"
enters its second wee.kend for
the Santa Ana Community
Players with Herman Bood-
rnan directing. Buddy Fort
and June Winsl-Ow bead the
cast of the comedy-drama.
The 3how is being 3taged
at the Players Tb eater, 500
W. 6th St., Santa Ana .
'La Mancha'
T1·youts Set
Open auditions for the Long
Beach Civic Light Opera pr1>-
duction of "Man or La
1-lancha" will be held Sunday
afternoon and evening at SIS
E. 4th St., Long Beach.
Director Gary Davis has an-
nounced that the tryouts will
be conducted at J and 7:30
p.m. and will require mostly
men for the musical based
on the legend o( Don Qui xote.
Leading roles require a
combination of strong singing,
acting and. in some cases.
dancing ability. f.1embers of
the dancing en5emble must
be able to sing and v;ill be
required to audition a s
singers. There are no non-
singing role s.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DICll. V111 Dy!<I
"COLD TURKEY., !GP')
Cllftl E111W111d • Ltt V111 Clnt
"THE CiDOD, THE llAD
AND THE UCiLY"
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All C110r Exc11111v1 Drlv•l11 S1tOwln91
D1r1U11 Hollm111 • Ctlor
"LITTLE 110 MAM" (0 .. ) pl111 • John W1yn1 .. 11.10 LOIO°' !G)
Ill --) M ~~"::."'I.'.:.,~ "' I ' ' "-Alt Sl•r C•tl -"'-"CiOME WITM THE WI ti" le 1~1 5'7-6011 .. 1111 • AU Sllr , •• ~ "MOW THE WEST WA! WON" IG)
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
UN A11dtfdl11" tdr1m1) 'tiD -0 CD """ W tile or pho'1l' for hroch11r~ 0 Mwit: "W1pa ti fur" (dr•· Ptter Finch, [YI 81110-. Ton1 Bfll·
ton. The Brilisll Mnd I 111d1n1 party
into Arnsterd1m lo ptf11Jade !ht
di1n!Olld m11cnan13 to 1M tht11
1tones to 11\em hw f.lltk1111in1 bt·
tor. the Genn111s !ind them. ]
m1) '53 -Yyes Mont111d, Ptttr (7141 -'94·1520
"!l.lan of La f.tancha" will
open June 4 and p I a y
weekends through June 20.
Further information is
availablt': at (213) 432-7926. ~~~~~~-~ ..... I ··-
"IT'S A MAD , MAO, MAD, MAO
WOltLD" 401
v1n Eyti. 630 Laquna Canyon Rd.
m Mowit: "Mil ll:ind ., wo
11
in" li~=L~•~·~·~·~·~1;'~"~'~";'~2~6~S;l~~I {d11m1) '51-Roberl Mitchum, )1ne
Ru$S1U, Vincent Price.
Pilot Filn1s
HOLLYWOOD (UPl)-
Paramount studios began pro-
MJ-4717
"lu1 • Alt Stir C••I "All.OUNtl THE WORLD
IN t0 DAYS" fG)
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
m Trvt-"C.nst!!utllCtt
Q) tt TN a l\iel
l!i)Cii•• 30
Who Cares? duction on two new television 1r;;;:;:;:;:""
N11 other 111w1p1p1r 111 011
world c•r•I 1b11ut your cofr\fr'IU•
nit., li\:1 your c:11rnm1111ity d•flY
111w1p1p1r dot•. 1!'1 ih• DAILY
PILOT.
pilot projects. "Esca pe," a 90-._ _______________ _
I
ED £ut11• 'KllllOll 11111 Mod••
@El la DllllM lilt "Ztn uld Psrc~11l'ry "
l :S5 al) Cimtio• dt it11111do1 11:30 0 .;n, 00 Mtl'f ;1inilr
t :OO 0 ~ lt} m RM111 22Z "II lt'sl 0 i)J 00 m lthftllJ C.1Mll
No! Htrt, Whtft ls It"" " 19-yeu· 0 Cf) Dia Cftttt
old Vi1tn1m ¥eler1n llt• pl'Oblemi
wlnnin1 1a:epl1nc1 lrom olher s!u
Otnt1 when ht returns ta Khool.
Mun•J M•cltod 1111111.
m Mwlt: "TM Paris Ll£ir1u''
(my1tery) 'S3--Cl1u!!t R1inl.
12:00 @ 00 Okk ta.111 m Tt Tll 1111 T111llr
ft\ 1:00 fJ MM: "1111 l1n lqtnd"
UI hW footlll!I Socctr (2 hr) (d1ama) '5' -H111h O'Br!1n.
Spoltifl( Critt•I (Ptru) YI. Rosario
Cffltral (o\rrt11U111),
m 1'I ,~ Qref ''Pot loJJ flu."
llill1o'-
m llcM 1-.i.
l
1:t5 m n..,. d• o.,.1r•
l:lO I) QI (I) Tt .... llrflt LM !RI
1:)0 m All-Ni1llt Sllow (C) "TM 'Dtt'
5!1," "Kine tt TtlTtr" tnd "It.land
el LI~ Wt111t~."
Z;lO IJ Mwit: "The WM•" ltt.., Al·
-st LJtlCNd" (wtS!trn l '$3 -
B111n Oon!wy. Join Lesh•.
----
minute adventure dran1a star-
ring Chris George, and "Fun·
ny Face" starring Sandy Dun·
can.
I See Dy Today's
Want Ads
e THTS IS f'OR REAL!!! A
l\angaroo Rat & cage $16.
Also Pigeons. Ck cla11~i·
flrd, •. I'm SUl'f" you '''\ln'I
n11$ this one •.•
e (;U('S'( \\1\al~'.'~ 1-'~r
cle11n1ng or gar.'lgt'~. , .
For (are you read)' for
lhntl JUNK!!!~! Ck tiOO
Muling.
Thursday m "'Adi• Pd (v•lyil" (dunui)
·so.-sttwart (;r1r111r. it•• 51111·
mtrn1 e TERRIFIC VIE\\'. , ,You
DAmME MOVIES 1:00 m "Oilry" I Clla•btrlllld" (drt-O\\'n tht land \\"llh this
ma) '•&--Pault!tt Goddtrd, Bur('UI lani:t 3 br 2 bath hon1e,
1:158"111 ..-., 1•1111• (m1sery) Mt1ed1th. plu~ upstl..in hiclea"'"-Y ·~ lridf'•· "Sll11 T111•" 1 k d<Mmt1in ~rn-lltlon
(llW'dtlJ') '!15-JohJf lrt!t~d 2:00 Q (C) "Oephanl Wall" (drama) room hesld" th" pool ...
t:IO O .... , fft'Oritt Sn" (comtdf 'Sl '$( -Cht•btth Jayloi, Dana An· 1 Sountls Gl't'at. Look~ Gfi"11I
-3ob Mapt, ltedJ' l1m1n, I d''"'5 .• ,18 TERRIFIC .•. Ck
Cl~ lllrttl" (l~tnture) 4:JO 0 "Cra1Jl11t~ (dr1m1) '41 -1 100 CdM.
·4~[1rol n,n,,. Rotrert You~r. Robtrl M 1t'h~rn., "-----------------------'!
CHiLDREN'S MATiNEES
MGM
lHE MOST EXCITING ADVEHlllRES A BOY EVER HAD!
METRO-GOl.DWYM·MAYER -SAMUEL GOLDWYM. JR"S -,
MARK TWAIN'S
The.Adventures of
~c}debel'l'lJ llnn
SATURDAY 13/271 & SUNDAY 13/281
2 SHOWS EACH DAY-12:00 & 2:00
---ALL SEATS 75~---
AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS
"ORB OF TBB TBAJl.'S 10 BEST!"
S11phfn K•f.,, r-.....,..i.. Vi!'lfflll tol\by, "'· ,_
JvdMi Critt, If' . .._,... lob-SfllinDHL °"""' w ,.., .....
~,4 Hetm,, W IY S11WGl'f ICl1l11, Mfl•-r¥
Witllll"' Wolf,( ........... -Chorion Ct1Gmph11, I A f!-
W11ll SITlll J.vmol
DUSTIN HOffMAN
"l.ITTll 816 MAN " lfil>, ....
Chief D•n Georq• e F•Y• Dun1way
2nd Top Hit-Barbara Hershey "THE BABYMAKER"
EDWARDS
HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102
ON HARBOR BLVD.· ONE MILE SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY,
HOMIHATED FOR rt ACADEMY
AWARDS
BEST PICTIJBE
BEST DIBECl'OR
BEST ACTRESS
BEST ACTOR
BEST SUPPORTlllG ACTOR
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
BEST ORIGINAL M1JSICAL SCORE
••• • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. •
NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760
"Husbands is a great, important film!"
-JAY COCKS, TIME 1
Al R:UBAN ool SAM SHAW '"""' Ga-....
. .p .. "01· .. ··.. ! cm•e•a I ... __:Hr!! I I
,_ .. ..,Al RUBAN· ::::.~SAM SHAY/ ~·;;~;/:~JOHN CASSAVETE~
''°"' COLUMBIA PICTURES 'cPj 0 ~
t1 !Mrllll!MM1EICDllII: -2Nl'I HIT-I ~
-··-~-.. ~--... ~-.. -···· •U t U • ~-· ....... 6 -.. .., •t n
"SUDDEN TERROR"
lGPI
Saturday & Sw11d11y
12:no .\ 2:no P.M.
"Huckleberry Finn"'
All Seots 75C
2oth Century·fo~ Pre!.en!s JAMES EARL JON ES
o JANE ALEXAN DER
~ "The Great ll!llllrii
""'0' White Hope" ~
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
IN THll WlaTMINSTll!lt (;ll!NTll!"
"""-11.111 AT WIUOll ST COltll •IU. '''·O\ll
I IOIUS IOVIM Clf ""' DllCO r••
diary
of a mad
housewife
a frank Porf"J Mn'I 1RJ
LAST WEEll-ENDS lUES.
2nd Hit-8rici11 K1ith in
''McKenzie Break"
lee M1rvln
"MONTE WALSH" U;p;,
"otw1dav & Sv11d11v
I 2:0n ll~d l :On P.M.
"Huckleberry Finn"
.All ~11u 1Sr
Posit ively Ends Tues.
St•rts W1'1., Mirch l l
Y/1111 Di111ev·,
"B<trefoot Executive"
BEST ACTRESS
Amelia Gordon
Girl Wins
Drama Title
Amelia Gordon, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M.
Gordon of Westminster, was
named best actress of the
15th annua l High School
Drama F~stival at Cal State
Long Beach.
Miss Gordon appeared in the
play "Joan," aloog with Dan
Peterson, Sam Lewis and
Mary Herbert for Westminster
High School. Each actor
received a medal indicating
superior achievement in ac·
ting, wtiile the play was rated
superiOr.
l11d111lv1 Ortrlg1
Ceul'lty En11g1mt11t
"FIVE Wl PJICU'"
''MAGIC
CHRISTIAN"
E){cl11llw1 onnt1
Counly Ent1aiJfmenl
"RYAN'S DAUGHTER"
80){ Ott!c1 Open
1~ N1>11n • t P.M, Dilly
SllOWflmel Mon. thru Tllun .• I P.M.
Fri. -511, -1::111 P.M. M1t(ntu Sit. • Sun, • 2 P.M,
!{ILUJD!ol]!
NEWPORT BEACH • OR.3·1!350
Auditions
For Idaho
,Group Set
Lili .Featured
HOLLY\VOOD (UPI)~ Lili
Palmer \l'ill pl ay a featured
role in American lnterna·
lional'.-; producti on of Edgar
Allan Poe·s "Murders ln the
Rue :.'iorgue ", filming in
Madrid.
Btll AclrHS Nomln1tlon
ca-.11 5noclgr.s$
'Diary of• Mod HoYHwife" IR)
Plus
"The Bobymaker.. IRJ
""Ith 6~r11ara Hershty
LmUFAUSS
AnD llG HALSY
IOiriOIOO!llJI• t••Mltlllll!!J -Also Ploylnq
Henry fondo -Kirk Dou"!las
"THERE WAS A
CROOKED MAN"
£ye. Silo" Startt. 7 P.M,
CONTINUOUS SHOW
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
FROM 2 P.M.
FREE PARKING
Exclusive First Run
ELLIOTT GOULD -DON SUTHERLAND
MARCIA RODD
IN
"The Little Murders" ... ALSO "' JASON ROBARDS
IN
"The Ballard of Ca hie Hogue"
•
•
• Wtdntsday, March 24, 1971 DAILY PILOT 27
LA Mus;e Center
Am811 Dancers Home Grown Talent
ON THE PENINSULA
673-4048
OPEN 6,45
e Now Showing e Exclusive Engagement •
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS * Best Director * Bast Screenplay
By TOM BARLEY
01 .... 0.11.,. .. , .. , '""
• I
Peter Sellers in
MESA THEATRE
HARBOR & NEWPORT. COSTA MESA
•WILD ANIMALS
• SPARKLING STREAMS
•BREATHTAKING
SCENERY
• A true wildlife
adventure story
TWO DAYS ONLY!
Sat. & Sun.,
March 27th & 28th
12 Noon & 2 P.M.
Sponsored by
The Orange Coast
CIVITAN CLUB
Proceeds Go To
Harbor Are•
Boys Club
&
Other Youth
Groups
.. The Most belting ond M.anlngful Fllrit In Yton"
.. ~·;~·ST EXTRAORDINA~; _~!~;i:,l!i~~~~~~~~w~•~ .. ~ .. ~'~' ~~1
--~ Eve .Show Sr•rtt. 7 P.M.
OllE OF
THl tl'llT
WOllf.M ...
-~ 1t0ppt d
•tt>Olll•"IJ
10"'"1
THE RE.VOLT
THAT ST/RREO
THE WORl,01
"" alK~lAll
llMCT tor ...
"ho t>K•me
• "b•I htuo!·
.. ...-,; ...
• M .11.llUl WIST1
..... -.""'1w.o..u llllrrf~• ... A nLM Of GlllO romcoRVO Rt11111'
and HELD OVER -SECOND WEEK
"TH£ YIRGlrf' AND THE GYPSY"
Joenna Shlmm1 -Franco Mero -Honor lo11man
"A beautlt11t fllm -p1'ottrl119 short af momry -Purs plHs11,."
-Editti Criit
COi U>.6~ "'Cl'IJTS
NQ R,oSlAA PA(DJCTQ;:s Pr<C':l.Nf
A RAY STARK
HERBERT ROSS PrOducllOO
Contl11u1u• Show
Sat. Prom S-$111. P,om 4
le11rtirh1 Motlnff
Ivery Wednesday 1 P.M.
Barbra
Streisand The Owl
Geo~ andtlle
Segal Pussyr,at ®
Panavision e Color '"'------~@
ALSO THIS THRILLER
"SUDDEN TERROR"
-
have been tipped by the con·
tribution o( curvy dancers
Semira Tamer and Leona
Wood.
They gave their number just
as much a,, any !\-1iddle
Eastern lass could have been
expected to do and they got
Md fully deserved the ovation
of the evening. As in the
earlier suite of four North
African dances. the music and
its delivery was thoroughly
authentic a n d delightfully
delivered.
Artis.tic directors Anthony
Shay and Leona Wood deserve
the highest commendation for
preserving in our midst the
very essence of ()]d Europe
in this collection of Slav and
Near East dances.
A ONE· WEEK LIMITED ENGAGEMENT 1
Special Student & Group Rates Availabl•
, CAESAR
' -. . " -~ .,.Ji!',:
. • --. ~~~·,..Stool~llOtl William Shakespear•'•
Julius Caesar ""''"' Charlton Heston
Jason Robards·John Gielgud @1•
Richard Johnson· Robert Vaughn
Richard Chamberlain & Diana Rigg .......... ...::: Cbrlltopber Lee & JUI Benneu -· PETER SNELL
-"'"'_..,_ AOB!AT FURNIVAL _,__..,._,...,. MICHJ.EL LEWIS
_.....,&TUA.RT BURG£,"::=':;: HENRY T. WEINSTEIN & ANTHONY B. UNGEA11
PANA\1!$!0N~OC!lor11t TECHNICOtOA', , ........ ..,.. AMERJCAN INTUINAT10NAL P-
• • lt10 "-lean 1111 ..... 1...., -· loc.
FINAL WEEK-FRI. & SAT.
Ill•1lll'rc."!I
THE IMAGINARY INVALID
Wed. and Thurs.
the 11ew r evue
"MOTHER
EARTH"
Sundays
The Indian Wants
the Bronx & Next
BOX OFFICE: 646-1363 OR ALL AGENCIES
stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor
JdS~~yotpre never heard itsogood
•
' . ' . .. ~ • • • I. • • ·-· • • ' • • -• ¥ • " . •
•
' " DAILY PILOT --WfdntSday, March 24, 1971 . .
• • • • • • ¥ •
-VOLUME DEALER NO. 1. IN OR.ANGE 1COUNTY · . . ... . . . ' ' .
. 1971 /.
Demonstrators
NOW
197
T-BIRD
1 7 ... ·.
MAVERICK
1·970 ''
FORD L.T.D~.:
ON
2 DOOR LANPAU 2 DOOR SID-P·IOO · 2 DOOR HARDTOP
l.ooded-1.184N133363 (IK91U14:1ll07) · (f10ARXD42ll0) loadedllnooollalOf. (QJ62Y151089)
SAVE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE .. SA·LE $1500 $2095 $2671 $3495
eff....._ttkbr,,ic. •l9Stu&l&c.. · 1 .. .1:&l1Aa.t ' ntu&licMse
1 ---I 1970 1971 1971
• SUPER VAN L.T.D. FORD L.T.D. RANCHERO MAVERICK
Country Squire 2 DOOR HARDTOP With Six Pac Camper GRABBER
(E14GHK68517) Loaded 10 Pan. llJ76E145455 1 looded DemanstnilOr. (OJ62Y158838) (IA46H 103032) 2 Or. Spt.Sed. OK93l131099)
FULL PRICE SAVE FULL PRICE ·. FU .. L PRICE SAVE '$3145 $1200 $3695 $3·966 $450
12 ' .... :
. MONTH
FULL
PRICE
41MONTHS
$190 .
DOWN PAYMENT
i lf0il ............ _. .... Sll28 .. la.i_.,,...., .......... 71 lic.-.... ,...,. ....... _.... ...... 41 ..... 0..
_,_,_,,"""'i1$l1lt.7t ............ ~ llillils. ?I "'-w ii,..,,_.,., .......... prU io..,,$!051.t,-.... ...... •71-.~,--....,_~P~MIU1'1t.91•
•
.. ' WAGON $,877' -·64 s1·1ngray .,3.~.~,,,.,"~ .. ~. $1577 '69 G~laxie ~;.~~;·;~: $1777 '66 lmpa a l~~:£.::'•:'::Z:·~~; . '67 c·h IMPALA~ OR. $977 . $1 47'7 (I ti 4 • 1¥j ; (3 J t~ fzi I.' I i : I j',., J J :1 ev. :~.:.:. ~~:~ .. :::~;;. ~·~~~· ' '69 Toyota ~;~,,;,;··· .... ,..... ---,---·-·----STANG · ...:..::.....__:.._~~:--:::-$ =7 69 MU '67 Camaro , ..... ,,..,,,, $1177 .
'68 Plymouth ~~~:!~i 87 couPE ,66 Ch IMPALA $1077
V.I, -4 ipcl., p/il., power ldiic:l ~r1k11. 5totlc: #211lA ev 1 or., H.T., v.a, 11111<1. tr11n, .. '69 Torino t~~.~!. , ...... · ..... $1277 s14 7 7 . _ .. -.,.., ............... mo.. $ ~-----:-::::VE . '6.5 FORD E~:«,:::..,;.;r"· .. -1277 '66 T BIRD ...... '"'"" ~"""' SA . -A bMUllllll T·Blrcl. • $ · $997 '70 Mustang ........... ~ _.. 2477
I RD ;.u~J.0~ .. 5.~ .... '" ·~ $217 7 '61 FORD :"~. :~~~·,:,"'' """~ ~::.~;,, ·=:" 69 FO :·::::~ ........... ~ "" $1777 '68 Mustang s~~~E...... ... $1377 '68 vw BUS .,. ''""'11111. r1c11o, ""1. '66 FORD WAGON $1277 '"" '""""'· .... , ~ A<O. """ :;;t" '""" CW"· • ~a:~~~-,V., .. 8 $1377 '69 FORD ......... '"'_.. ....... .... $1877 $167 '67 LTD · , 11, toMHJonlftll, tor't 1lr, .,.....r 1!Mr1M. CX.TSJISl '67 T t LANOCRUISE,R . .. ~,:, ·~~;.,..:,'.''!..\,"'" ..... ""' Oyo a Like n•"" -111>d •Good•• d•u '°"· (WXF "31)
galorl. (TYT <tlll. ,
.... """''"
'.
•
Ingred ie nts are measured
carefully . as Harbor Area
giHs learn to cook
in the Girls Club.
As volunteer
instructor Miss Lori
Simon ladl es out soup ,
Debbie Stiles I left I
and Michele Pri ce lo ok
on hungrily.
MICHELE PRICE GIVES TASTE TEST
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Wtlhl1Ml1y, Mire~ 14, 1'71 Pqt D
Miss Simon gets fl
to•ty dish assembled
with the help of
(left to rightJ
Terri, Debbie ,
and Michele,
•II in the elub'o
kitchen.
KITCH ·EN ·CAPE~·s
Girls Keep Pot Boiling
Tuo many cooks never spoil lhe broth
at the Girls Club of the Harbor Area.
A class in the ba.sic principles of
cooki ng goes on there six days a ""'eek,
from 3:30 to 4:15 p.m. and from 4: IS
to 5 p.m. under the direction of Mrs.
John Lynch.
A simple recipe is used each day
for one week to allow the girls to
become fully proficient.
In general preparation Lhe girls learn
to slice, dice and chop vegetables. as
well as to bake, boil, broil, fry, measure,
mix and clean. They also learn tabl e
settings and discuss proper manners.
FolloWing are some examples of
recipes the girls have used in the pro-
gram, which is supported by the Uniled
Fund.
CABBAGE PATCH SOUP
1'4 medium head of cabbage
I tablespoon margarine
lfi pound hamburger
1,i: medium onion
1~ cup celery
1r1 can tomatoes with juice
1 cup ""'aler
1h cjln kidney beans
l teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon chili powder
In a large saucepan melt 1 tablespoon
.of margarine and add hamburger
Clean and slice thinly onion and celery
and add to saucepan to brown with
the meat.
Add to the pan the tomatoes with
juice, water, kidney beans, salt and
chili powder. Simmer mixture. Clean
cabbage and shred on coarse side of
grater. Add to soup and simmer about
10 minutes, covered.
For dinner of six servings, double
the recipe and serve with crusty bread
or biscuits.
PIGMY CLUBS
1 pound hamburger
l egg
y, cup bread crumbs
Y4 cup onion, chopped fine
1/z teaspoon salt ~'• teaspoon pepper l
Mix all ingredients thoroughly and
1hape around wooden skewers in the
shape of clubs. Soak each club for 15
minutes in 2 tablespoons of the following
sauce:
DAILY l'lLOT ""919' •r a1U1~ Klllllel'
OPEN SESAME SAYS DARLENE BROOKS
~ cup soy sauce
1 clove garlic, chopped
1 teaspoon ginger
3 tablespoons sugar
Broll on each side for 5 minutes.
MEXICAN SOPAIPILLAS
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
'Iii teaspoon salt
l tablespoon fat
:Ii~ cup water
Deep fat for frying
Sift flour. salt and baki{lg powder.
Work in fat until well-bl ended. Add
enough water to make a soft dough,
not sticky. Knead. Let stand 15 or 20
minutes. Form round ball. Divide into
4 parts. Roll each into a long 1trip
and cut in 3 inch squares.
Fry squares in deep rat until brown,
dropping each square into the hottest
part or the fat and immersing it several
times so that it will puff up evenly.
Drain on paper toweling . To eat, break
off end and fill with honey.
•
Consumer Comp~aints Take Many Routes T award Action
By DOROTHY WENCK
Ortlttt Cou111V H11mt &.clvlser
U you have a complaint to make
abOut a food product who do you talk
to? Your market manager? The
manufacturer? The Food and Drug
Ad~inistration? The U.S. Department
of Agriculture? The Feckral Trade Com·
miss)on? The Health Deportment?
My one or lhese might be able to
help )Vu, but the queslion is -'"hich
one could help you the most with your
parUcUla:. complal'nt.
And this Is a major problem for con·
sumers: where to go for help, There
are so many agen cies involved in con·
~u mer food protection that the situation
becomes completely confusing.
For example, lhe U.S. Dcp::lrtmcnl
Qf Agriculture is resr>0ni::ib1r for in·
~pection and grading of all meat and
poultry produclS; 1t may inspect ei:tJlS
and processed fnJiti; and vegclable! but
is not required to do so.
The Federal Food and Dr 11 g
AdminlstraUon Is responsible for the
Home News and Views
~..-.: uz a qe lU • z:11,~&e-=-----==----••••~••c~-m
safety and wholesomeness of food! other
than meat and poultry that are shipped
in interstate conimerce (from one state
to another), including foreign imports.
The California Food and Dr. u g
Administration htis the same
responsibility (Or foods shipped within
California. The Coun ty Health Depart·
ment oversees dairies and .milk Pre>-
duction.
The State Department of Agriculture
and lhe County Agricullural C-<im·
missk>ner enforce state laws regarding
food production olher than hii!k. F'or
example. lhey oversee the u:;e of
pesticides end other a g r i c u I l u r a l
ci-rmicals by ~rowcr.s.
Our Coutity A1.;r1cultural Cnmmissinnrr
is also the Sca ler of Weights and
~1er• 1rc~. fie sees that rr.ark,,l st"aies
weigh accurately, gasoline p u mp 1
measure gas correctly, etc.
The Federa1 Trade Commission is in-
volved in the advertising and sellina
of foods in interstate commerce and
would be the agency tO complain to
if you felt a product was misrepresented
in an advertisement.
Only two or these agencies provide
much protecUon at the local level. These
are the County Agricullural C.Om·
missioner and the County Health Depart-
ment. ln many cases. your first avenue
of complaint, If you did not receive
satisfaction Iron your market manag·er,
wnuld be the Health Department.
Recently, Orange County became one
of five counties in California whose
Health Department is certified to conduct
11 local retail food inspection progran1
that has been developed by the state
rood ::ind drug bureau.
Prior to this certification the Heallh
Department had no legal authority to
take action on food-related consumer
complaint~ but could only refer t.hern
to the state food ;ind drug office.
Now. in addition lo its routine sa nita-
tion inspection of restaurants, markets,
food processing plants, food dispensing
vehicles, and vending machines, the
Health Dcpartmcnl's consumer protec-
tion responsi bilities include;
Embargoing products suspected or
being adulterated, contaminated. or
misbranded; initialing libel act Ion
against unfit or dangerous product!' not
voluntarily destroyed ; detecting and
sampling adulterated. misbranded, or
ratsely advertised products; is.suing cit.a·
I.ions and conduclinR: hearings on viola·
lions and initiating prosecution whefl
necessary.
The latter runction can be impressively
helpful to consumers. In O:Ccembcr a
Redwood City Municipa l Court fined a
local supermarket $3,125 for holding and
offering for sale adulterated food and
mAintaining unsanitary premisc5. No
i;tnre wants th is kind or bad publicity,
The Anaheim Annex of the Oranf!e
County Health Department at 1011 S.
East Street houses the Sanita1ion
Consultation Section . The phone number
Is n6-555L
QUESTIO NS WE ARE ASKED
Q. When imported meal is used, for
example in hamburger. is the market
required lo indicate this on the label?
A. Markets use quite a lot of imported
beer in their ground meat and under
the present law they are not required
to tell you this on the label when it
iR sold as rresh 1ncat. (And often the
imoorted meat ... .-as frozen for shipping.)
Also, imported meat is used as an
ingredient in mAn y processed n'li!At pro-
ducts· without being labeled AS imported.
Onl v when a product is imported a·nn
sold a! is. must it be labeled with
the country of origin -for example.
canned ham from Holland . bacon from
Denmark. le~ of lamb from New 7..enland.
Several bills (HR 1031. 1405, 1406.
1407, and 3132) ha ve been introduced
In the House of Representatives tn amend
the Feclerill Meal lnspertlon Act to re-
quire th11t imported meal and rnl"at
food product! nrade In whole or In part
of imported meal would be labeled "Im·
ported" al all stages or distribution until
delivery to the ultima te consumer. All
of these bills have been re(efred to
the House Agriculture Committee.
Q. In the market where I . shop T
was shocked lo see the clerk wbo was
p11ckaging the barbecued chickens.liCking
her fingers as she worked. Who should
I report this to?
A. You ' should inform the market
manager about what you observed. I'm
sure he w('lu\d lake immediate steps
to correct the situation. JJ he doesn't,
report it to the County Health De.part·
ment, food s::initation division. ·
Q. What is the difference in ,fitl ·content
and number of calorleJ in re~ular sour
cream. i~talion sour cream and SOlll'
hal f.and·hillf?
A. Regular sour cream and imitation
sour cream have the same fat content
-20 percent -and the same calorie
count -62 calorics per nuld ounce .
lmit11tion sour cream ha:ii vegetab\t fat
regular sour cream has butterfat. Sour
ht1Jf.~nrt·half Cf!nlains 12· percen~ fat and
yields ~I calories per fluid ~
3fl DAIL V PILOT Wtdntsday , March 21, 1'11
Widow Beats Boredom . by Racing, Not Watching, Clock
DEAR ANN LANDERS! I'm writing
ltlis to the 50-\tar~ltl widow who is
desper1le for s0meoM to talk to. She
said if she had to spend another Saturday
evening alOlll' she·d go out of her 111lnd.
·1i11s da1nt' sound!i like a bore to n1e
l was disgusted "'llh her letter. How
rn the "·orld l 'BU a. pet·son be lonelv
\l'hen there are s,o n1an~· things thit
need doing«' An(i wh.\ did she invite
married couple.; 10 dinner when she is
single«' \\'hat lun could there be 111
111AT?
therap}', be a Grey Lady -the list
is endless. Surely she knows a younger
woman with a family "''ho would Jove
a free sitter one d8y a 111cek -or
an evening. If 1.irs. Lonely can type
there are dozens of volunteer offices
who would welcome her help. If she
can 'l type she can answer phones or
:stuff envelopes.
.. 1et-up-aad·lo" go& up and went.
I agree. Busy people are bappy people.
Perhaps 1omething in your letter \\ill
strike a responsive chord. I hope so.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am engaged
to a handsome yow1g man who has
1nany good qualities. Andy's display of
temper last SUJ1day gave me some second
thoughl~. Here is what happened :
. This wom1n needs to get off her
YOU·know-.hat ind go lo work . Fer
11'othing, 1f rH.'C'eSSlf'\'. 11\ere isn·t a
h1>5pilJI in lhl, rouniry lhat can 't use
help. f.on'lale9Cttlt homes, homes for the
aged, chlktren's hospitals. She could read
10 lhc blind, assist with occupational
I am in my mid-50s and also a widow,
but there aren 't enough hours in the
day for me. Believe 1ne I ha1•e no
tin1e lo cook dinners for married couples.
\Vhat that "''Oman needs ls some gel-UJP
and.go. Tell her so. Ann . -FIRST
TIME WRITER FR01'1 ST. CLOUD
DEAR FIRST: Of courst you are right,
but Pl.eax don 't be too harsh op the
poor &al. Not e\'eryone bas your enerc-
and out&oing: personatlty. ~laybe her
A fonner boyfriend whom I hadn 't
seen ln three years dropped by at !i\'e
o'clock. I had a date with Andy for
six. I-le showed up 40 minutes eerly.
I was sitting in the living room with
my parents and the former boyfriend.
I could see Andy was upset. He motioned
for me to come into the kitchen.
When he demanded that I tell the
fellov; to leave, l etplained it would
CALIFORNIA DAYS -Costa Mesa Girl Scouts ~eft\
Amanda \Vray and Tracy Orloff look over model of
the booth they will staff on Saturday, March 27.
when Orange County scouts gather for an all day fair
Associates
Plan Tea
Residents in tere1ted f n
becoming involved "'ith the
artistic community of UC I are
invited to attend a University
Gallery Associate s mem-
bersbip tea from 2 to 4 p.m.
on Tuesday. !\larch 30.
Mrs. Thomas Frank Is in
charge of arrangements for
tbt gathering, 1,1.·hich will take
place in the Harbor Island
borne of Mrs. John McNab.
Assisting Mrs. Frank will
be 1.trs. Aubrey Horn and Mrs.
J. Allen Beak Jr.
Coming up at the UCI Art
Ga 11 e r y Is the John
McLaughlin exhibit opening
April 6. A reception \\•ill honor
the Laguna Beach artist from
6:30 to 8 p.m.
For further information con·
cerning the Uni'lersity Gallery
Associates. individuals may
call Mrs. Frank.
Ecology •
Theme
Selected
The theme of the Fourth
District PTA·s annual meeting
tomorrow in the Fullerton
Elks Club will be t he
Challenge of Life and Brealh.
Principal spcak('r \\'ill be
Brian Myre s. biology pru·
lessor at Cypress College.
whose talk i5 entitled Wanted :
Housekeeper for Mother Earlh
-Urgent.'
Mrs. George P. Kercher ~·ill
preside over the bu~ines5
session beginning at 9·30 a.m ..
when 1971 ·73 office-rs "''Iii be
elected. Golden 0 r a n g e .
membership and p r o g r a m
awards will be presented to
councils dlJrlnc the noon
luncheon.
j
MRS. C. C. AUST IN
Exchanges Ring•
Beach
Ceremony
Performed
Sts. Simon and J u d e
Celholic Church, Huntington
Beach . was the selling for
the morning nuptial rites link·
1ng Dolores Beatrice Con·
treras and Charles Curlis
Austin.
The bride. daughter of ~lr.
1ind 1'.tr~. Selvador Contreras
of Huntington Beach . 111as
given by her father for the
double ring ceremony 11hich
11·as read by the Rev. Ronald
Collaty.
Serving her sister as maid
of honor .... ·as l\1iss Virginia
Contreras, and bridesmaids
\\·ere the f'.tisses Di a n e
L<l\•clace. Vilma Villarreal,
and Mary \Vrighton.
The bridegroom. son of ~1r.
and l\frs. Charles B. Austin
of San Diego. asked Otnnis
Seguine to be. best n1an.
Ushers \\'ere George r.!erritt.
Gene Nishimura and Lynn
\\1eber.
Flo~·er girl and ring bearer
in the Anaheim Convention Center. Songs and dances or Early California '"ill be featured by the Costa
li-1esa troops,
All Day Activities
Spring Fair Calling
County's Girl Scouts
The Anaheim Convention
Center will be bursting with
activity on Saturday, March
27, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
when approximately 38,000
Girl Scouts from Orange
Cou11ty get together for a fair
the)' call Spring Gaiety.
To acquaint the public with
the aims and purposes (If girl
:scouting there will be booths.
displays, fashion shows, and
nlarchlng parades, all under
the theme of Girl Scouts in
.<\ction. Service. Fun.
Costa Mesa Scouts 11·ill set
up a booth in which girls
in coslume perform early
California dances a11d songs.
Huntington Beach troops will
present songs, skits a n d
dances from other countries
to illustrate their chosen
lheme of Intern ati ona J
Friendship.
There 1'1ill be a 200-voice
Girl Scout choir to provide
musical background , and 1500
balloons given ()Ul by Corona
del Mar neighborhood troops
will soar overhead.
Tickets for the event at SO
cents. may be purchased at
the door.
Betrothal Disclosed
During Family Party
The betrothal of l\1ary Janr
Rotheram of Costa l\1esa to
P1ul Fuller of Santa Ana was
znnounced during a family
dinner party in the La
Crescenta home of the bride-
elect's mother. r..1rs. Rita
Bacey Rotheram.
Mr. and l\1rs. Grant Fuller
of Costa ~lesa are the parents
of lhe benedict.('lecl, who is
a graduate of Ne.,.,,pon. llarbor
High School and Orange Coast
College.
lie receired his bachelors
degree fron1 the University
(If California, Santfl Barbara
and is working toward a
tea ching c re-dent i a 1 al
California State College at
Long Beach.
The fu ture bride was
graduated from St. Geneviev e
High School and attended the
Uni\·ersily of San Francisco.
She 1s a senkJr on the UCI
campus.
Mesa Auxiliary
American Ltgton }fall in
Co.ta Mesa is the setting for
the meetings or the Auxllia~
to Barracks t2•9. Veterans of
\\'orld War I. The tlrst 'J'ucs-
d&}' of each month members
gather for " buslnen session
at 7·311 p.m. and the third
T~esday for a social and
potluck Jil ~ p.m.
\\'ere Ophelia Fierro and Tom· MARY ROTHERAM
A June 26 wedding date has
been set by the pair. The
ceremony will take place in
Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic
Church in Tujunga.
my Contreras. Wedding Pl1ns
The new Mrs. Auslin is a -----------graduate of Huntington Beach
High School and Orange Coa!lt
College, and her hwband i'.'I
an alumni!! of Punahou
Academy, Honolulu. and tht
University of Ca 11fornI1,
Berkeley .,.,·here he earned hi!
MSEl!: degree.
Valley TOPS
Lettuee-8-TOPS ronvene aL
7:30 p.m. each Tuesday for
programs In Fountain Valley
Element11ry School.
Senior Citizen•
Comm u n 1 t y Recreation
Center at Orange CO\Jnty
Fairgrounds is the scene or
J:tcUvity \\•hen Cosla Mesa
Senior Citizens meel at 11
a.m. fvecy Tue9d1y.
·:
ANN LANDERS ~
us knows what It is. Thank you.~
CONFUSED ·:•
DEAR CON: Accordin1 lo •>ne ~
the partnll of tbe yo11111 mu. dtOW.
contact tbe p&l'f;nls of tht yoD.111 11.;.
This IJ merely • formality, bowever.
Common eeue takes precedence ovtr
any rule of eUquelte. Tele~e at.
parents of yOllt future son·bHa• •r
write a letter saying you are pleated
about the upromiac en1•1ement, and
l.nvlte them to your city.
fe111on.al hel p •nd learn te channel bis
bostilJty. Or be prepared to live with
broken furniture; brolen gara1e door1
and maybe broken bones.
be rude and suggested that be sil down
and be pleasant and soon the guest
would leave on his own . Andy got red
in the face and stormed out of the
house. We hared a loud crash. He had
driven his car into the garage door
and then dri'len on.
My Dad suggested 1 write to Ann
Landers and ask what my life will
be like if I marry th.is guy. -RUTH
WHO WANTS TRUTH
DEAR RUTH: Probably a ttrits of
loud crasbe1. Insist tb1t Andy get pro-
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Our daughter
wants to announce her engagement to
a fine young man v•ho lives in a far-dis-
tant city. They mel in college.
A point of ellquette. please. Should
\ve contact the young man's parents or
\Vail until they contact us? We want
to do the proper thing and none oC
How will you know when the real
thing comes along? Ask Ann Landers.
Send for her booklet. "Love or Sex
and How to Tell the Difference:." Seild
35 cents in ctiin and a long, self.ad-
dressed, stamped envelope with yollr
request in care of the DAILY PILOT.::
,•
Lasting Relationship Guaranteed -:
Gem of Friend Diamo·nd .·
a
By JO OLSON of the Gemology Institute of
oi .._ D•llY f'11t1 s111t America in Los Angeles.
Are diamonds really a girl's • Weinert, a ''Sher I o ck
best friend? Holmes" of gems, first turned
They are if she gels in a his attention to the opal for
pincb and needs some ready members of the UCI Medical
cash, but they're not if she Faculty Wives in Is I an d
expects to make her fortune House, Fashion Island.
buying and selling them. "This is a baffling world."
They also are if she wants he said of the opel's bed luck
a family heirloom that can story. "In the Middle Ages,
be passed from generation tG chGlera was going around and
generation without tax ex-the opal became connected
pense. with Sickness." '
Delving into the mystery of In 1828 Sir Walter Scott
gems was Albert Weinert. wrote a novel in which the
retail jeweler and a graduate opal faded in color after the
Nuptial Vows Read
In Santa Barbara
The garden of the Unitarian
Church, Santa Barbara, was
the setting for the double ring
ceremony linking Sh i r 1 e y
Price l\lcCuistion and Ray-
mond Russell Piantanida Jr.
Reading the afternoon rites
\\'as the Re.,·. Dr. John A.
Crane.
Among guesls 1rere the
couple's parents. Air. and l\Jrs.
Price T. McCuislion of Corona
de! l\lar. Raymond Russell
Piantanida of Alameda and
l\1rs. Ernest A. Clark of
Oakland.
:\fiss Susan 7\-larie t..:nruh
and G reg or y Piantanida,
brolher of the bridegroom,
were the attendants .
The bride. a graduate of
Corona del M:ir High School.
earned her BA degree in
n1usic al the University of
California. Santa Ba r b a r a
where she was affiliated with
Alpha Phi sorority.
Her husband. an alumnus
of Skyline High Schoo 1,
Oak.Jand, earned his bachelors
MRS. PIANTANIDA
Garden Rites
degree in economics at UCSB
\\'here he was a member of
SiPma Pi fraternity.
They \\'ill reside in Santa
Barbara.
heroine 's health faded, sealing
the Ill reputation of the stone.
QUEEN'S GIFT
Opals were brought back in·
to popularity when Queen Vic·
torla gave each of her
daughters one as a wedding
gift. Still the legend of the
opal and its bad luck persists.
The reason the stone faded,
Weinert disclosed, was that
()pals are 20 percent water
and the water starts draw.
ing oul when stored. ''Re-
member that you have to
treat them carefully. They are
easily cracked. Don't wear
them in dishwater.''
To brighten them. je.,.,•elers
rub their fingers across the
opals each time they are put
back into the display case.
Weinert predicted t h a t
opals, which are found in
shale, will be set more and
more with shale in the next
five years.
He next discussed the merits
of diamonds as investments.
•·You have 10 wait a long
lime to make a profit." he
said. "But they have a ready
market value and are easy
to carry.··
~IONOPOLY
Diamonds are controlled by
the "only true monopoly in
the world,'' the De Beers Syn·
dicate which handles 85 per·
cent of the diamond purchases
in the v;orld including
Russia's.
When buying a diamond.
Weinert said the "four Cs"
of diamonds should be con-
sidered -color, carat weight,
cut and clarity.
The best diamonds are col·
orless, and the variations in·
elude black, red, pink, green
and ye!IGw stone. The color
may be changed by an atomic
bombardment.
Cut is important In that the
skill of the diamond cutter
is the key to the value of
the stone. he said. Carat
weight should be considered
because the prl~ per carat
goes up along witb the 1iu.
"Perfect diamonds are few
and far between," be added.
But then il you aren't Jn.
terested in a quick sale. ;i
family heirloom or a Ioni-
range investment, there are
always the new syntbttic
diamonds. They are much
softer than true diamonds and
are much 1es.s ei:pewive.
NO BARGAINS
The jeweler cautioned the
women about looklna: for
bargains in gems outside the
United States. "In today's
\\'orld market. the prices of
a lot of stones ha'le come
close to U.S. prices."
Taking one last look at tbe
value of a stone Weinert said,
"The more brilliant the stone,
the more e:ir:pensive."
Since every girl likes a
brilliant, mysterious com-
panion and the diamond is
both brilliant and mysterious,
why shouldn't il be a girl's
best friend? The fair sex is
ready to cement lhe rela-
tionship any time.
Wage Ga p
Widens
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
wage gap between me11 and
women in the United States
has been Y.'idening in re~nt
years, reports a sludy by UM
Chase Manhattan bank.
The bank attributes this
decline to several factors. in-
cluding that women a r.e
generally employed in lower-
paying, lower-level jobs than
men, and that the marked
increase in women on the
labor force has c r e a t e d
greater competition for the
jobs open to them, thereby
tending to dep~ wages io
those jobs.
Riviera Club Carats Aren't for ' Eating
The glitter or sparkling diamonds \\'iii set the Air·
port'r Inn aglolv on Friday, April 9, for the annual
Dian1ond Dall presented by the Riviera Club. Taking
a sneak previe1v of the affair, \vhich begins with a
7 p.m. cocktail hour followed by dancing to the music
of the Bernie Bernard Orchestra are (left to right)
the Mmes. Gilbert llodges Jr., reservations, A. Pat·
rick Nagel and Leslie \Veldon.
Wednt~11t. M11rth 24, 1971 DAILV PICOT rJJ
Horo scope
Aquarius: Pay Debts
THURSDAY
MARCH 25
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES 1r-.1arch 21·April 19):
What appears obviou:;i may
need added study. C.OOpcralc
with Cancer individual. No
time lo try going it alone.
Accent on hosriitals, in·
slitut.ions. clubs and organize·
lions.
TAURUS ti\pril 2'}.r-.1 a y
20 ): Social relalionships arc
emphasized. Con'le out of
shell; express yourself. If you
don't make known your needs.
they won 't be fulfilled. A
friend now is in position to
make you happier .
GEl\11NI (P.1ay 21-June 201:
Unusual situation could result
in special honor. Key is !r-
be thorough. Double check.
Ask questions. By-pass those
who are pretentious. Get lo
heart or matter. Deal v.·ith
top people.
CANCER (June 21.July 22 );
11elping one bom under Ari es
will prove profiLable. Experi-
1nent, write, test ideas. Apply
yourseU to advertising, pub.
lic!ty techniques. Key is im-
proving ability to comn1u1u-
cate.
LEO iJuly 2.lAug 22):
Concern with Yihat is hidden
or obscure could dominate.
You must consult ma I e,
partner before making finan-
cial commitment. Doing so
avoids controversy-you then
gain approval.
VIRGO I Aug. 2.1-Sept. 2'.2l ·
UAusual rapport can be
achieved with one who seems
determined to be ('()nlrary. Be
sensitive to trends. cycles.
moods. You can settle con·
trovcrsy by expressing love.
You will understand.
LIBRA jSept. 23-0ct. 22):
Stock u1> on slaples This
includes food a n d clothing.
Take nothing for granted.
Check with associates. Be sure
your meanings are clear.
Someone is anxious to mis-
CJUOte you.
~'CORPIO !Oct. 2J.Nov .
21 ): Your ability to give and
receive affection is acce nted
Be understanding w h e r e
children are concerned.
Remember your own feeling s
at comparative age. You are
completing a project.
SAGITIARJUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Slress new starts,
independence. A romantic
situation could get out of hand.
Be in control of emotions.
Know difference between love
and sensation. You can un-
derstand.
Rental Council Lists
Indian Art Available
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan.
19): Good lunar aspect now
co incide s with com-
n1 uni catio ns including
telephone calls and telegrams.
What hapriens occurs 'vith
suddenness. Don't take pro-
1nises of relatives too
:lerious\y.
AQUARIUS fJan. 20-Feb.
18 ): Personal satisfaction is
emphasized. You receive what
you have earned. You can
aid Taurus person and be
helped in return. Pay and col·
Ject debts. Don'\ e x p e c t
something for nothing.
Mother -daughter Fashions Swing
~ Getting ready for Paularino PTA's mother-daughter luncheon and fashion sho\v
on Saturday, March 27, are (left to right) Lori Bardsley, Traci H:tnson and Kath-
r¥n ~day. Fashions ~rom the May Co. will highlight the luncheon program, be-
ginning at 11 :45 a.m. rn the school multipurpose room.
Expresso Club Names
New Executive Board
New officers will be in-
. 1talled v:hen the Expresso
Club meets at 10 a.m. tomor-
row in U1e Nev.·port Beach
-Junior Club
Seamstress
A Winner
Winners in lhc Creative
Sewing Contest sponsored by
· the Orange District. California
'Federation of \Vern en's Clubs.
include Mrs. Craig Parks of
the Irvine Junior \Voman 's
•Club. whose entry took a se·
cond place award.
"There were general
membership, ju n i or mem·
·bership and high sch o o J
division awards· for first, se·
cond and third places.
· First place winners were
. Mrs. H. T. Hamann, Mrs.
James Wyn1er and Miss
Karen P.icGaffigan. Foothill
High School student.
,.1rs. Eugene Roberts is
district creative se w i n g
chairman. assisted by ~-!rs.
Warren George o[ the junior
; 1=lub division.
: . .-
:Chi Omega
luncheon
Spotlighted
home of Mrs. A. \V. Long.
ridge.
Also on the program is a
talk by Miss Claire Bacon .
acting executive director of
the Artificial Kidney F'oun-
dation, and Dr. A. Thomas
Ferguson. foundation presi-
dent. \vho will explain its cur-
rent work.
Officers to be installed by
1'irs. C. R. Lenahan Jr. 111-
clude the 1'1mes. Harvev
Pease, president: Ev a fi
Prichard. v ice president;
James Wayde I i ch , mem·
bership chairman: H 'a r o Id
Boyvey, program chainnan ;
Frank Marshall, ways and
means chairman: Jo s eph
Evans. recording secretary:
James Graham. corresponding
secretary; Virginia Bollman,
treasurer. and Leon Fry,
parliamentarian.
Artistic
Program
Arranged
Artistry in floy,·ers will be
demon strated by W a y n e
Williams of De Muri Tosh
Florists for members or the
llappy Homemakers Friday,
March 26.
The 10 a.m. program y,•ilt
lake place in the Fountain
Valley Community Cc n t c r
with ~lrs. Robert Cardinal
presiding.
Survival
Facts Told
\Vays in which students are
meeting the challenge or pollu·
tion, world s I a r vat ion ,
overpopulalio" and venereal
disease will be discussed by
Michael James Baughey. a
UCJ student of biologica l
i:.c1cnce, on Saturday, P.larch
27.
Baughey. who;;e father is
a UC I professor of population
and environment al biology and
an aulhorily on ecology. will
speak on Human Ecology -
Human Survival during a
luncheon for the South Coast
\Vellesley Club.
Mrs. James E. Murley will
host members in her Newport
Beach home.
Speakers
To Appear
Tomorrow al JO a.m. all
interested persons may jotn
the Newport Harbor
Republican \Vo1nen Federated
group in Island II o u s e ,
Fashion Island, in hearing five
candidales for seals on the
Ne'4'J)Ort·Mesa Unified School
District.
Each candidate will I a k e
five minutes to discuss his
aims and objectives.
Al~o featu red 11'111 be a tal k
by Carlos Galindo. executive
;;ccrctary of the Orange Coun·
ty Rcpubiican Central Com·
mittee.
The Art Rental Council or
!he Newport , Harbor Art
~luseum is orfcring a selection
of art and artifacts in con-
High Scorers
Capture Prize
ll1gh scorers will 1.:ariture
prizes in a bowling party at
8 p.m. on Saturday, i\1arch
27, for n1embers of Upsilon
On1icron Chapter or Beta
Sigma Phi.
t11embers, husbands a n d
guests will gather in Anaheim
B(Jvd for the tournament
under the direction of r-.1rs.
Hugh Davis. The group will
end !he evening in a pizza
parlor.
junction y,·ith the Art or thr
Jndian Southwest exhibition on
view in the museum through
April 11.
Numerous small items for
children also a re available,
such as Navajo dolls, head·
bands, beads, rings a n d
Kachina dolls.
1\1rs. Donald Ayres Jr .. presi·
dent of the council, announced
the additional items available
in addition lo lhe regular
items or riaintings. graphics
and sculpture that are offered
for sale or rent to area
residents.
Continuing tomorrow night
will be Cinema of the Thirties
in the Art Museum, located
in the Balboa Pa vi 1 ion ,
Balboa . Tickets v.·i ll be
available al the door for the
8 p.m. showing .
PISCES (Feb. 19-l\1arch 20):
You can break t b rough
restrictions. There are new
opportunities. Pounce on
them. Cycle remains high ;
your judgment. intuition work
to your adv antage. Take in·
it1ative. Stress independence.
If' TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are in·
trospective, analytical. You
desire perfection and, very
often, are startled when that
perfect state is not achieved.
You are embarked upon a
different kind of life . By July.
you v.·ill be more fulfill ed than
you have been in years.
)
i
' I
. The annual F'oun~ers Day
Eleusinian luncheon v.·lll take
place for members of Chi
Omega Alumnae or Orange
County on Saturday, ~1arch
27. in the Newporter Inn .
\V il\iams. past president or
the Fountain Valley Arts
Association. also will tell how
to take care of arrangements
and cut flowers.
Dentists
Well-l ighted Fire Lighted for Literary Warmth
One or the highlights or lhe event, which will begin at 11 The dental office of the i\lrs. Ann \Vhitcncr (left). president or lh e La guna Beach Altrusa Club, and ~lrs.
a.m., is a Golden 0v.'I silen t Soroptimists future will have aulornatically \\'ilJiam Roley. incoming board member. dccc.rate the mantel for .Joe O'Sullivan.
auction of antiques and 0U1er moving lights above the pa· president of the Laguna Friends of the l ... 1brary. 1'he club bas presented a check
Items. Soroptimisl Club of Hun· l!cnt:~ head and supplermnta l for a fireplace in the lounge o( the nc\V l.aguna Beach Library to the Friends as
The guest spca~er will be tington Beach gathers al 12: 15 lighting sources, it was their part of adding extras to the ne"' fac1l1ty . Funds \Vere raised through recent
:Mrs. ElcUse Kloke. c~eculi\'e p.m. the second and fourth rcpor:ted al the ~ n nu a I projects ihclud1ng a fo~lea Market sale and annual fa shion show. ~ssistant to the Chancellor at Tuesdays in F r a n c o i s meeting of the American Den· -------''----r----------------------
restauranl. tal Association. ~~11i interested Chi Omegasli"._.-...;.,.-0.---.-.-•••·-------••iiio-iiiiiimmiiiii--iiiii;,,,;;iiiiiiiiiiiOii;;....;;;...,-;.---•....,-1
'n the area are invited lo
tall Mrs. Hilton McCabe of
StlnLa Ana for reservations.
Gad Abouts
Book Play
Reservations are b e i n g
taken for a Rivlera Club Gad·
Abouts jaunt to the Ahr.1ansQl'I
Theater on Thursd:ty. Ariril
IS. lo sec Noel Coward's com·
Cdy "Design fnr Living."
A bus will lea\'e Boal Can.
yon in Laguna Beach at 11 3n
a.m. following a cofft>E hour
In Fashton Gallery. Members
will lunch on their OY.'n a!
the Music Center.
· Persons interested in mak~
ilig reservations may !end a
eheck for $7 per person to
Mrs. Harry Pisegna. --
It 1,000'1 OF Oil PAINTINGS
WHOLHALI WAliHOUSI·
OPIN TO THI PUILIC
•
NEwf IGURE FOR SUMMER
THE E·Z TRIM WAY
• l liminot•• Flob-Firm• M111de1 • leli•"" Monr Bock Problem• $48.18 Reg. 69.95
• lmpro'lft llOOllll Circvlation SSS.IS Reg. 109.95
WE OIVl PIOflSSIONAl INSTIUCTION AND toOKLITS
E-Z TRIM EXERCISER·MON.·SAT. 10 AM-6 PM
COSTA MESA ANAHEIM
1932 Harbor Blvd. 2841 W. Lincoln
\' •'-'• ....... ti .,,~ 1 ..... J llloth• •••t •I l••c~ 11"11 (Ml.~WIY J'I)
Phone: 645•3171
fr· .. IF YOU ARE .•. J1i BEAUTIFUL
INTELLIGENT
DEVASTATiNG
TmLLATING
.~ ! / lu1DESCENT
Q QUINTESSENCE ~~·· UNIQUE OR
"' J ExcmNG
'
1
{ ; The Bidtiqu• is th• pltc.• for you ... I If ;J,'1 you're not, thtt's ok•y too. We h•v• .JJt clofh•s to help you qu•lify. I
~ "" v .. '~~~:~~ .,, ... ,,
• so•/• OFF f HI' •· IOINOI•• SANTA ANA ,. ....... u .... ,
!,. • Ol!ALllll WAJfTIO ~
I Phon•: 821 ·5110 •
1\. ~ . ,,_f;,;•-. '[ ~,,,f k..."-"'~'v.'~~-"/~l!l' '5!!'. "-=====~===========~' ~ ~
Peering
CORONA DEL MAR High
School senior Dee Dee Pen·
nington ls a fina list in lhe
Southern California M i s a
Junior Achievement contest.
The winner will be chosen
and crowned on Friday,
.f.1arch 26, during the Junior
Achieve1nent Executive Ball
in lhe Sheraton Universal
Hotel , Universal City.
l\1iss Pennington, who holds
the tll!e of ~1iss Newport
Beach, is active 1n her class
sena te and class council as
well as a participant in many
Familv's
·'
Problems
Examined
Bi rth of the Baby and Fami·
Jy Adjustment will be discuss·
ed when La Lechc League
of Huntington Beach meets
at 8 p.m. tonight in the
homt' of ftirs. Morris R.
Around
sports including water polo,
tennis, volleybal and basket·
ball.
HOSTING A GUEST froni
Switzerland were Mr. and
Mrs. John Robinson o t
Newport Beach. Their guest,
Dr. Hans llaegi, professor of
mathematics in Zurich secoflo
dary schools. is v i s I t i n g
Southern California as part
of an official study tour of
the United States u n de r
sponsorship of the US . State
Department.
The Robinsons are members .
of the Los Angeles World A(.
fairs Council Visi tor Volunteer
Corps.
HONORED on their 30th
y,·edding anniversary during 1
dinner in Jaime's restaurant,
Fountain Valley y,·ere Mr. and
r-.otrs. Robert Gaar of Costa
Mesa.
Hosting the event were
seven of their eight children
and their son-in-law. Unable
to attend was Ragaan Gaar.
who is serving In Japan with
the Army.
Boyaner. AMONG freshmen student!
A bake sale will rollow the al the California HOl!lpital
meeting, lhird in a series of School of Nursing receiving
four sessions. their caps atfer six month.!
All expectant or n e w of training was Miss carol
mothers are welcome and in-Longtin of Costa Mesa. Tiut
formation may be obtained ceremonies took place in
by calling Mrs. D o n a I d Angelica Lutheran ~
Walker. Los Angeles. ~ ·-~~~~~=-~=-~~---;' f.
-------------------. ~ WIGS AND WIG ., ·;:
CARE SALE! ::. ·~ ~~~~~~~~~~ HEATHER i:
SALE $1244
ALYSSA
SALE $17 44
FRIE STYLING WITH ANY WIG PURCHASE
STYROFOAM HEADFORM
FOR YOUR WIG
SALi
I-folds your wig for brushing
ioto shape., takn wig pins easi ·
ly. Keeps wigs oeat between
wearint1s!C
DENISE
SALE
2
IAST ANAHllM CINTH
2140 E. Lincoln&. St. Colle e
HUNTINGTON BIA
9811 Adams Ave. Huntin ton
3204 Yo rba Linda Blvd.
' .. . '
;J;r DAILY PILOT Wtdnt$day, March 24, 1971
Curtain Rises on Fund-raising Activities
t•dJ•on lrfolt: A P••• d•vo•lld to
C•I• MeM. NfWPlll'I 9eteft, Lltunt
8HCll 11111 Minion Vlelo l"•Ml·TH<:hl•
oro1nlr1t1on• )11'111 tP~• 1n 111t O.&.ll v
l"!LOT t•<ll Wffl<. 1nt.,..mt l•011 mu•t be rtctlVed by tne """'1f l\'I dfP~•Tm•M
.., Mt1, Gtred ,.,,1111, 11~ Cen!ell1
f'lkl, Nl!'WP«f 8~1<1\ II• I p.m.
TllurMlt• tor Pt!bll<eT~n Wedntt<lt•. I
Harbor Council PTA
Mts. Nigel Balley
President
COMING. UP: Luncheon l.O
award the council's
honorary life memberships
and those from each unit
~·ill take place at 11 a.m.
Wednesday, April 14, in the
Airporter Inn. Offlctrs for
the CQming year will be in·
stalled and PTA awards will
be presented to units for
yearbooks, record books al\d
Fashion
newsettes. Mr!!. J am e i
Schafer and Mrs. Robert
Sorenson , hostesses are
planning a Mexican plate.
Reservations. at $3.50 per
person may be made with
Mrs. Carlton Russell.
Davis PTA
Mrs. Gene Pattenon
President
COMING UP : Board meeting
at 9:30 a.m. Friday , March
26, in the home of Mrs.
Gene Patterson.
REPORTS : Honorary I i f e
membership was awarded to
John Larkins, science
teacher. . .Officers were
elected at meeting and
fashion show last Saturday.
Take Spotlight
Eastbluff PFO
Col. H.B. Eliker
President
COMING UP : Or. Les Shuck,
assistant superintendent of
the Newport-P.1esa Unified
School District will speak
on the topic Changing and
Education at g e n e. r a I
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tues-
day, March 30, in the
cafetorium. Cna1rmen \\."ill
be introduced and a brief
report on committee func·
tions will be given by CoL
H.B. Ellker, president . Mrs.
W. L. Davenport. faculty
r e presentative announces
that a large box of articles
will be displayed for the
claiming of Jost items.
Robert Francy, principal
will be in attendance. •
-
•
Bill Vail, Edison High School athletic director, jolns Drill Team me_mber Debby
Boydstun in a modeling stint on wheels for the school's PTSA fashion show on
Monday, fl-1arch 29. entitled the Look of the 20th Century. More than half o_f the
show will concern the look in men's fashions. Tickets for the 8 p.m. event will be
available at the door. A showing of antique automobiles and other vehicles also
will highlight the evening.
Estancia High PTA
Mrs. Ralph Boegel
President
REPORTS: Officers elected at
last w e e k • s association
meeting were the Mmes.
William Nowak, president;
Ralph Boegel. A n t h o n y
Johnson and Charles Lamb,
vice presidents; Ke i t b
Kellogg and Robert Sanky,
secretaries; M. D. Grosz,
treasurer and Lloyd Baker,
historian. Don Lowrey will
serve as auditor. Honorary
service awards w e r e
presented to Mrs. Carl
Stevens and Mrs. Walter
Gayner. A panel consisting
of Dr. Norman Loats, Don
Haut. Gil Watkins, Estancia
teacher and Larry Banner,
Corooa del Mar teacber
discussed the p r o p o s e d
change in high s c h & o I
graduation requirements.
Harbor View PFO
fl.trs . William Wright
President
COMING UP: Students In
kindergarten through fifth
grade are participating in
a school emblem contest.
One entry per student must
be deposited in the library
by noon Friday, March 26.
Prizes will be awarded at
the science fair ... Students
in fifth grade are supervis·
ing the collection o f
aluminum, glass and paper
in the ecology drive.
REPORTS: Mrs. G. P. Parry,
chairman of the father-son
safari breakfast reports that
the event was very suc-
cessful a"nd the speaker was
provided by Lion Country
Safari.
Newport Ele. PT A
Mrs. David Reeder
President -
REPORTS: Officers elected to
serve for the 1971-72 school
year are the Mmes. Roger
Early, president; John
Franco, David Reader and
Robert Steward, v i c e
presidents; Walter Nutting
and Owen Johnson,
secretaries; Lewis Fannon,
treasurer; Pat G r ab I e.
auditor, and Frank
Spangler. historian. Master
of ceremonies at the first
Newport Follies talent show
was Len Wayne. Winners
were Melisi;a Kirchner and
Carol Ware, first prize;
Jean Locke and Ki m
Bernard, secondtprize, and
Milady's Art Undertaken at Early Age
Julie Moffett takes lessons in the art of tea pouring
from (left) Mrs. Fred Betts, president of Monte Vista
School PTA, and Mrs. Tom Herndon, in preparation
for mother-daughter tea on \Vednesday, March 31, in
Vanessa Vineyard, th ird
prize. Awards presented in
the art show went to Paige
Oden, first place; Davitt
Jones, second place, and
Gayle Johnson, third place.
St. Catherine Aux.
Al Klesselbach
President
COMING UP : Rummage sale
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 27. in the
Laguna Beach W o m e n ' s
Clubhouse, located at St.
Ann's Drive and Glenneyre
Street. Mrs. Lucien Brack,
ways and mean.!! chairman
is organizing v a r i o u s
departments for the sale in·
eluding housewares,
furniture, books, records,
clothing, jewelry, linens,
toys and games. Assisting
are the Mmes. A 1 be rt
Kiesselbach, Thomas
Mauro, Sidney Hobbs,
Robert Lawson, Robert
Daniele and James Martin.
Proceeds from the benefit
will be used to support St.
Catherine's School.
St. John Aux.
Mn. Gerald Walion
President
COMING UP: Rummage sale
with articles including,
swing sets. toys, furniture,
clothing and infant garments
will take place Saturday and
Sunday, March 27 and 28,
in the school hall.
the school. Students wilt model fashions from Sears
for the 3 p.m. event. Tickets, on sale in the school
office, are 25 cents.
Victoria PTA
Mrs. Douglas Bowler
President·
COMING UP: Students from
Rea Intermediate · School
will entertain fourth. fifth
and sixth grade students
with a band concert at 9:30
a.m . Tuesday. March 30.
Parents are invited to at-
tend.
REPORTS: Executive board
elected to serve are the
Mmes. Douglas B o w 1 e r ,
president; Frank Petita,
John Kirkman and Donald
Fogg, vice presidents;
Charles Doyle, treasurer;
William Linton and James
Madsen, secretaries and
Harlan Morrls, historian,
along with Donald Fogg who
will serve as auditor. •
Proceeds from the rum-
mage sale were $77.
Wilson PTA
Mrs. Jay Himmelbeber
President
COMING UP: Last cookie and
cupcake sale sponsored by
the fifth and sixth grade
students will take placa
tomorrow. Proceeds will bt
used for the first three win·
ners in the science fair.
First place, a trip to
Disneylaad, second and third
places. lunch out.
REPORTS: Mr.!1. John Ziegler,
safety chairman reports that
216 identification tags were
sold last month.
Units Stress Action • Community Service
!Edl!or'• Nott: A P•Rt devote<:! to Fountain Vallev, t<unllngt"" 8•tCll.
0<:e1n V•fw, S••• eeacn ~ n d West,.,ln1tfr Scllool Oislrlc! p~ren1-
letc11er 0•11~ni1dli"'1I will •P~ar In
1M CAIL"!' PILOT etcll ~!!It. fnt~,.,I·
!Ion ,.,,,., bt •Kti•«t b, Mfl Gllllerl
"'111tnt>ull, 5"1>11 Mangru"' Orlvt. Hun·
tln11ton Beacll b~ I pm. Tnursdav
tor put>llct!lcn Wl!One:ldt• I
Bushard PTO
Mrs. Gianni Gentilll
President
COMING UP : Science Fair
will be featured at general
meeting tonight. Science
projects made by t h e
students will be displayed .
REPORTS : Unit presented a
staff lunch~on last Thursday
to ralse funds ... l\1embers
collected trading stamps to
complete the unit's silver
service.
Spring 's the Time for Mardi Gras
Teresa A1;ason, second grader at Gill School. holds
··balloons -and streamers for· Mardi Gras decorations as
Jell Hickey aids sixth grade teacher Carl Schoene-
berg in hanging information poster. The annual car·
I
Cox PTO
Mrs. Harry Fockler
President
COMING UP : Unit meeting
will take place tomorrow
night at 7:30. Guest speaker
will be Bert Knight from
the Orange County Foster
home Licensing Depart-
ment. His topic will be
Fosler Care and Day Care
Needs in Orange Coooty.
Flag ceremonies will be
conducted by Brownie Troop
1889 directed by Mrs. Leslie
Mastchman.
REPORTS: Board members
voted to donate $20 to the
Superintendent Parent Coun-
cil student award fund.
Selected to serve on I h e
honorary life membersl)ip
nival ev ent at th e school wi\ !take place from 11 a.m.
until 4 p.m. Saturday~ March 27, on the school
grounds \rith game booths. a c:raft gift shop and plen·
ly of food for snacks and lunches.
committee with Mrs. Joseph
Dickerson, chairman, are
the Mmes. Robert Peake,
Don Marone, Gordon Jensen
and James Glendenning.
Fulton PTO
Mrs. Robtrt Welch
President
COMING UP: Bylaw revisions
will be presented for ap·
proval at general meeting
tomorrow night at 7:30, ac·
cording to Mrs. Gerald Hix,
par Ii am entarian. Flag
ceremonies will be con·
ducted by Cub Scout Pack
415.
REPORTS: Members are at.
tending a math lecture
series which meets i 11
Tamura School at 7:30 p.m.
each Wednesday for six
weeks. Classroom materials
have been provided free of
charge by Coast Community
College District. .. Members
attended a special music
program presented b y
Robert Olinger. vocal music
instructor. Mu.!lic lesson pro-
cedures were demonstrated.
. .School sweatshirts were
sold last week, according
to Mrs. Robert Wehner,
music booster chainnan. ,
CUrrenlly leading tile bowl·
Ing league is the Vice Squad
followed by the Seven-ups.
Mrs. J. 0. Simone holds
high game honors, Mrs.
Richard Burton, high series.
. .In the PTO-sponsored
youth bowling lea1n1e, high
game honors are shared by
Mike Chew and P a m
Seymour. high !'leries honors
by Robin Craft and Laura
Hinton. Team nine is 111 first
place, team one follows in
second pll!lce. . .Twenty.
eight members attended the
rectnt luncheon In Francoi!'I
rtstaurant. according to
T\.frs. Robert Welch.
Hope View PTO
"trs. Jud~on Grove
Acting Pretident
COMING UP : Talent show
will be presented at 7:30
p.m. Friday, March 26. in
Mesa View School. Tickets
are priced at 25 cents for
adults and 10 cents for
children under 12, and can
be purchased from students
or at the door. Door prizes
will be awarded .
REPORTS: Annual Spaghetti
dinner netted $365. Proceeds
will be used to purchase
educational materials.
HB High PTA
l\.1rs. Joe Muntz
President
COMING UP: Meet the Can.
didate Night will take place
in conjunction with unit
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Mon-
day, March 29, in the
cafeteria. Candidates for the
Huntington Beach Un Io~
High School District board
of trustees will speak.
Lamb PTO
Mrs. Edward Rodrigue1
President
COMING UP : Talent show
will be featured at unit
meeting tomoITt'.lw night at
7:30.
REPORTS: Unit Is collecting
food coupons to be used ln
obtaining a kidney dialysis
machine. Donors may send
coupons to the school.
Meadow View PT A
l\.frs. Marlon Harris
President
COMING UP : Family Fiesta
will be presented Friday,
March 26. from 3 to 8 p.m.
on the school grounds. Mrs .
Marlon Harris reports this
is the first evening carnival
pla nned by the unit. Ten
p:ame booth.!! will be manned
by the unit . Cub Scouts, Bby
Scou ts and the eighth gr2de
rl ass. Spin Art booth will
be featured. As.!ll.!l!ing Ned
Jones, carnival chairman
are the Mmes. Don Elster
Perfect Fit Measures Up
11-frs. Oliver Cushing supervises final fitting of pant·
suit for Mrs. Don Miller as Schroeder PTA members
prepare for a Sew and Show fashion display of hand.
made garments tonight at 7:30 in the school. You've
Come a Long \Va y, Baby will be the theme of the
event.
and John Vosburg. prizes;
Harris, Carl Thornie, Elster,
Charles Pharaoh, Duane
Co!e. Charles Davis, William
Neilon and Crandall Gud·
mundson, foods, and Frank
Zangger and William Quin-
ton, tickets. Game booth
chairm en are Ted Johnson,
llal Chapn1an. Dan Hag·
garty. Jack Hall anrl the
ScopeliUe. Ken Cubbison,
Geor ge Mattas. Do n a Id
Olmsted. Robert Lynn and
Jesse Bors. Tacos, chiU, hot
dogs, fish s a 11d wi ch e ~,
cakes, popcorn, cotton candy
and hot and cold beverages
will be sold. . .Plans are
under _ WJIY for a roller
skating party and an in--
stallation dinner and dance.
.. Bowling league is plsnnlns
it s annual awsrds banquet,
according to Mr.!I. Fabian
Gomez. High bowlers are
the Mmes. Harold Palluch,
Gomez, Jay Gaffney, Tho-
rnie, Mel Kyler. Jerald
McClelland nnd Gud·
mundson .
•
N Wi!dn,~ay, Marth 24, 1q71 DAil V PILOT :J:J
\
COTTAGE BABY
FOOD
Stl'W's stnmH Fr11U & Yt11tMl1s
·.·
·:·
..
a ICE AS NICE
......... Cood"'-· 59' •" ...... In 0...1 JY..11.
leMS Hair MINpable! •tL
Gillette Super Stainless ·.~· s1 11
Savage Hair Spray :::. ·~~ s1n
Crest Toothpaste ,<;.1:1:. ·~~· 761
Truly Fine Hair Spray ·t~ 531
Bright Side Shampoo w 991
Jergens Hand Lotion •.:,~· ~ 961
Alka..Seltier .::::: i::::,, .. ::. 591
Safeway Aspirin rr..::::.• ":-." 181
Center Cuts
From Young
Tender Meaty
Eastern Porl
DISCOUNT
PRICED! lb •
"\
Prlcti ClttctiN ii littMM s.ft•IY DI~
WHISKEY s:1'.'
Co~ Brook $J98 Blended Whiskey-1/1 011.
80 Proof 111.
Canadlaa Hiii WhiskeJ .'!. .. 14°
Rock Brook Bourbon ,i,:. •• 14"
8ourbo1 .. ~11 \':';,,., .. 1411
Sf!AIOl'S Gin .!.i':".., "' 1311
St. Elmo's Rum "~ ~.:!'' "' s3"
•
SALT 11· Sn1·W~lt1 C
Re ~Ill' or 1::fizte1 for 26-01.
AU T1bl1 Uu1! ai11
Blade Cuts C USDA Choice Beef
Safeway Trimmed
To Save You Monev.
C1nt1r T·l1n1
Steaks 79¢ lb lllDI l •tlM 111, •
~t Pork Chops lb.69' Top Sirloin ti::: $169
ltntlm C11t.......UIDl Chtltt i• 1111~ En• Cit er L1rr1
· '· llrl11,.._i.111r1 '•rk. Sat•••r A1•• 1: Trh111111111 • • • u.
,. Pork Steaks .'::~!·~.;: "691
"· 491
B f R. b St k "'1' "'''' ''" 99; ee 1 e1 "'°""'" "" " Pork Roast r:>.;;a;~·~· T -Bone Steaks ~~':~1 " s111
DISCOUNT BAKERY BUYS!
E1dish Maffins :.:-=
Fresh Doa1ts .1:!"~ e:;::,
Spice Cake , ... ":!.~
we are pleased to accept
U.f.:D.l FOOD STAMP
COUPONS
•••. 331
'" .... 391
ti I I
•• 331
t~.99c
$129 lb.
$139 111. • I
4s4.111. s3•9 ...
5-1'.$4'' Oii
UTH'S
WIENERS •
All MEAT 49c °"'1itr Yot Cln
Dtptnd On Too!
11 .. L Pt s.
SAVE MONEY AT SAFEWAY DISCOUNT
Prices Effec tive Thurs. ttiru Wed., l(ar. 2 5-31 at Safeway Discount.
Pineapple Juice F1esh Haw1iian Cl•tL Dolo 29'
Quick Oats
Cat Litter
Sal1w1,•s Own
Just Add Hot Waler lor
Dthcious Kot Oatmeal
kalnrp l ranlll
KetpS Your Ca(s Box
Smellin1 Clean & Fresh!
Flavor! ...
u11.5ftc ~., '7-
10 ~I~~ 39c
Instant Breakfast ~::.:· ·•::-57c
.EDWARDS
--. COFFEE •
Liquid Detergent c~~~~i~:;-~i~L 49c....__~~l\. .... _ ...
Cheddar Cheese ~~r ~~r.: 98c • 'AA:GEGGS
cream o• the Crop 45c
USDA Grade 'I'
Plump And Tender
For More Value'
2 to 3-lbs. A .... Wt.
Clll·U• 35¢ lb Fryers i.. •
Boneless Roast 89'
Rtllo4 • 1'11111 .. ; c~11t 1~
psDl Cllelu '"' • • . . • • . • •
0-Bone Shoulder Roast "' 7S-
B f C R'L.. lHo & Muty 6111 ee ross In ... , To""" '" ...
Midget Turkeys
Beltnill~ to &.lb.. A"I-wt 49' S.M Wltti OcNll ~IY Cnrbtrry
S.r.a I&«. 2k •Also llln.. wnprs Stirtfln1 Mii IJ.oz. 4Sc Ill.
Sliced Bacon ._.......... 49 .......... Clrl 12c. c
""" """""""" -· -· LENTEN SEAFOOD BUYSI
euas_ 1~5fc ..........
Mrs. Pails .. ~It':. :;; 851
Solt FilleU:! :'r.. r:= '" 991
Sh . c ..... "" """'·~· ••1 nmp r-"•·"~ ... ""
Cod Fillets =·~ ':: w
Rainllow Tro1t = .. '1"
Larp Shri•P ~ "':' !: '111
General Mills
CHEERIOS
•
Americ.-s
fl't'Ol'ite
Breakfast
Ceml
Ii-tr pkg.
Town House
OLIVES
•
t.11e Si1e-
Pltted lor
More Ealini
Value!
kt. e1n
c
U.S.No.1104 I ·c Russets ~•·
To frJ, Boil,
Bake, Of Mash.
'
lltdlum '•i. 41• 1 •111 •1• AIM ctn, Eltra Large ,, .. .,....
SAVE AT THESE LOW PRICES
aLiquid Cleaner ~ •::.· 921
8Coffee Mate =~\ '!;::851
a Graham Crackers ·~r .. •::~ 351
I Del-Monte Peaches ~,:~7 ·~:· 291
8 Pineapple ,:: ,::;;,; '!;~ 231
8 Italian Dressing ~· · ·~ ... 361
ePeanut Batter •;:· 'l;:• 631
8Prune Juice 'r,,~,!::' ·~:: 541
Coldbrook Margarine !;~ 21 1
Shady Lane Butter '!:, ~"!' 821
Juicy 8 er Navels :;;
sweet & Juicy.
G.re1t For l.tldln.
Large Avocados
Aniou Pears
White Grapefruit
-for S.lllk Or
"""'""'
...... . ...
Vttiely
4 for$)
4 ~ '1
8 •'~ 88'
Pin-pples wh l• 4 1 c Eat • Ready To Eat IHll!a lie)
Mallar• Green ":!:' ..... 18'
G 0 • """"-"""'"' 11'4 1'881 llOIS tton • ....,, ""' u·
Crisp Ruis•• 't.":. ... 10-
lfali11 ~··• "r..J:" "' 291 Crisp Carrots ';:':,l~,:::,~ 3;'!; 331
Yellow 01ioa..!f, 'I:'~ .. 3 ~-331
Tow1ho1se R1isi1s 10 ';~: 4S-
fMRlllf SHOP If/YI
Camatlons 99•
r1u11 M-Auarttd .....
·· Sulfat•20 ""89' ltA....a. .. ,
Ut11hl Fllllllur JI':. I: 181
Pla1llr Ila .. "::'l"'~ .... • :. ~ ..
S/l•ll Pelllll ,.,'"'..::.""r... ·~ 11'
. . . . . ~ . ' '' .· ~ ' .
.·
. ·' " ·' •• . , •• .. : ~
' :· :: ::
.· • j;
. •; . .. .,
.,.
·•
;.
•' ,· ,. ... ,• ,• :: :: :: .
:-.· .· .. ::
·: .;:
::
:-..
Wcdne~ay. Marct1 2'4, 1971
PJttCfS fffECTIVf
WfO. THltU TUfS .. JAA.JtCH 2-' THJtU 30
LOWEST EVERYDAY PRICES
THAT'S WHAT
IT~S ALL ABOU
AT TOTAL DISCOUNT
THRIFTIMART
lllTRA DISCOUNT!--------. IX1'llA DISCOUllll'-------..
Lenten Seafood FRESH EASTERN GRAIN-FED
Pork Loins Fr.J. Fili• 79 C cean Perch........... lb.
RIB END lST SIX RIBS
PORK 45c ROAST LB
IB END ~~RK 55c HOPS LB.
loin fnd-3 liw.. • Cu1!er Rib o~d
ROAST ............ 551'i.. LOIN CHOPS .... 851'i..
la<9• loin Wof•r T~On
•~hflllob $119 Dower Solt........ , ..
IAMCl'llOlL C.ll/Gf!T \ILYll $
::::::. .................. ~!
MQITNlllf W"Nlll !AMCT $ =~~~~ .............. I~
--~ FANCY 35• WHnlNG........... lb.
JllUll tlAllY0 LAAOl-M6 'r..,-
COOKID 89• SHRIMP........... ea.
CHOPS ........... 751b. CHOPS ........... 95,t.
fnrnily P~d, Coti"lry Styl~ Pork
CHOPS ............. 69,t. SPARERIBS ....... 651'i. ..
Wilw11'<Cti1ptil• 1HMortell'e Yorhkire 48 C
SLICED BACON ...................... ,., •. ..._ ea.
Dub11q11e ll11ffet, Hoff-11'1 h~id,
ttORMEl'Scm'E'il•fUllYCOOICED $129
Sig111<1"'• Voe Poli: Of forl'l'ler Joh11'1 59 C
SLICED BACON ....................... , ... .,,. ea.
BONELESS HALF HAMS........ lb. OSCAR MAYER BREAKFAST TREATS
REAL McCOY OK or May•~ 1-lb. Pkg. 79 C LITILE FRIERS ........ .
BEEF 69< BEEF 49c BEEF 29< BACON .. _ . .,11... SAUSAGE .... n. . ...n LINKIES ........... 1 ••·
0..:or Moy•r-ll·or. Pkg. 75 C SMOKIE LINKS .......
UeS. NO. 1 RUSSET
TATOES
·LB •
CELLO
BAG
c
f,.inst..11.d-l·lb.C•llolog · 39 c ' "ColiromiaGrown 39.• BLACKEYEPEAS............ ea. STRAWBERRIES .... ~;;r; ea.
fasyPHl-l ·lb. lclg 98 C Julcy·M.llow, Wirit1rN1l1i1 19 C NAVEL ORANGES........... ea. PEARS.-.... ·--· .. ··................. lb.
Plo·11 orSait.d inSh•ll 38 C Gr•enO~icon•or C t' I 0 C P0EANUTS .................. ,,,.,, '"' ea. RED RADISHES ..... '..'~ .. ~oL ea.
EVERYDAY DISCOUN1' PRICES ON FROZEN FOODS g1uw1n(l.Jo~."6<.l 24c ,o.aru.vo•s llc 111Mnr 48c <111•DYcH11i.t 94, range u1c•-.... ;........ Doi• Drinks, __ ,_,,.,.,. Tasti·Frie1 ..... -....... :io... .Box·O·Pina ........... 10.{1 • ... u .. , Jlll\llM-•Ol 41 c lfff lUUTIOSQ• 53c JoJD~nfW_[(ll.llolGlOIAl( 41 c CHt(lUIOARO,AIOU ll11ll•t.llo<I$ Bvttennilk Waffle1.... R•1arita Taco1 .... 1 n.. Sliced B•et1 ........... 10... Turkey RHst:._ .... Ju.... 2'1
..U.5M1!11"5Dl.ltc.lt 59c V!Gll,O.ll!!i.,.MINl~l~Otll 55c 'll'l'!tON!..-1.t.USAGlW1CffUS( 65( C::ll>l,l,TIONUEAOJll(IOI..U.) Apple Ple .......... : ..... :u... ICultro Soups .......... 16" Jeno's Piua Re 11 ...... flshSticlu· ............... 1t-.69c 'owi"o . 59, G1nwu1-•01. • 25< A•lvAt~mu -Joot. Sl< "WAHllHDl'AHCr-•oz. $ 45 c .. 1 Whip .................. ~... rape rult Ju1c•,,····-·· J ... o I Snack Logs ...... king c ......... , .. _"_ ..... I
DEJ,J CATESSEN DEi•ARTMENT'•-------
BELl BRAND PRE-PRICED 73c
POTATO CHIPS
12-0z. 49c PILl?W PAK
OSWiiii Miii
l·LB.
PKG.
c
EA.
O~A• MATll l:OU"'D 01 ~UAO! ,. c CISCO COIN
VARIETY LOAF-··--·""' v.'.. TORTILLAS,..,..,,._.,15<
J ANE ANDERSON WILNO KOSHIR
INDIV. WRAPPED • ITALIAN . AMERICAN DRY PRODUCTS
CHEESE SPREAD :l: SALAME 12-0Z. PKGS.
1-lll. 79.c 3.0L SLICED •• A9c ~~~~ 99.c
PKG. u. 6-01. SLICED ... 89c FRANKS U.
Ow:ir May.r--leg11lor-l·lh. 73c SLICED BACON •••••••
ChcorMoyerWof•r-12-ox. Pkg. 73c SLICED BACON ....... ..
Wedntsday, Muth 24, 1971 N PJLOT-ADVERTISEtl 9
U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' -GUARANTEED FRESH FRYING .
CHICKENS
WHOLE BODY
2-2~ LBS.
c
LB.
~-35• PAN READY FRYERS........... lb.
. EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICE
U.S.D.A.-Ct.oicti'" $) 39 U.S.D.A. "Choic•"C..,t•rC11t 69 c
T·BONE STEAKS........ ,.. 7·BONE ROAST••••••• lb,
U.S.b.A."'C""i~" $)47 U.S.D.A.''Choic•" 79c PORTERHOUSE......... ,.. O·BONE ROAST....... lb.
U.S.D.A. '"Choic•"lon•ltt ft7 c U.S.D.A. "'Choi,•" large E11d 95 C
ROUNDSTEAK ••••••••• 7 lb. RIB ROAST............ lb.
U.S.D.A. "clooic."a-f•M $) 09 U.S.D.A. ''ChoK."l'lon1l•u 98 e
FAMILY STEAKS....... , .. CLOD ROAST •••• ~;::.~ lb.
U.S.D.A. -Cho~To I roll $J 98 U.S.OA ''Choi<•., ExtrG lea11o 59 C
SPENCER STEAKS...... ,.. BEEF CROSS RIBS..... lb.
U.S.D.A. "'Choic•H '""•'"' $) 11 U.S.D.A. "'Choic•'" 39 c TOP SIRlOIN STEAKS.. ,.. BEEF SHORT RIBS..... lb,
fll:ESH LEAN-ECONOPACIC(3-l&S. OR.MORE) 57 C
GROUND BEEF.............. lb.
.--mmm1 •1XTRA DISCOU.NT
.., ' f PLANTERS DRY ROASTED
PEANUTS
8-0Z. JAR
Ti IXTRA DISCOUNT ~1----1 OH' BOY FROZEN
\ .:~;:::-~::-.. \ SAUSAGE PIZZA
\ M.C.P. \ 16-oz. 79c
\ .. 10CI ·PKG. 1 or.. __ ! ---·· I ; ,I, IXTRA DISCOUllT COFFEE ~ FOLGER'S
1-lB. 77' TIN
(2·lB .... $1 .69) (3.LB .... $2.-'9)
. · 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER. SANTA ANA
5858 WARNER, HUNTIN~TON BEACH e 23811 EL TQRO, EL TORO
·•
' . .
.
' .
' . '
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" :· :· .. . ' ' . ~: ~: . · .·
' .
' .. .
. :· .
• I
" . " . " . .. :
' .
AF"!'ER THE JOKE
RAID IN FLOWERS
WHAT HAPPENED
. . .. . . ' ...
..• we C®Jlled tbt black
eyed peu Jn U)e jar. Actual
count .• 11,119 •• G. H.
Healey of Corona del Mar
came clO!!iest with 11,145
and wins a case of
Sarsaparilla.Guesses ranged
from 437 lo 1,005,7&.'!, pro-
ving a lot af people don't
really know bow big a
black eyed pea is .
Our 23 anniversary party
was fun. And you know who
made it that way. YOU!
Think about it. If it hadn 't
been for you, we wouldn't
have had any fun at all.
Thanks for coming, for
laughing with us and at ••• The choice rib roasts and
1pena:r steaks flowed like
bubbles round the mulberry
bwb . . . Stouffer loving
folks pyramlded the i r
frtezen with good creamed
chicken and macaroni-beef .
Dinner tables from San
Clemente to Seal Beach
were !()Yingly centerpieced
•ith a fresh Baker's Dozen
t1f Red Roses .. Chocolate
Chew Cake was the dessert
of the hour and most likely ta ht: seen munched on over
tbe wttkend were glistening
Barbeque Ribs from the
Dell .. Arlicbokes .1teamed
in more pots and S and
W's frantaslic array (If can-
nt!:d splendor beamed In
friendly persuasion . • to
Rive the .1imply Wonderful
glow to plt!:nUous pantrit!:S
everywhere. Thanks again
folks for coming and lilting
the .1peclal wares Wt!: of-
fered while we did eur
thing.
HA VE YOU BEEN
TO HARBOR VIEW
IDLJ..S YET?
.. To see where
Richard's is going to ht:
next . . Out MacArthur
fr(lm Coast Highway to San
Joaquin •• turn right till
you see the &ign on tbe
left • • The sign says •.
to be completed In fall of
1971. 'Ibat'a this year.
WHICH ISN'T
BUYING BABY A
NEW PAIR OF SHOES
•• , Crinko oxfords sing
of a fling in the 1;pring
• . Wtt 1blnes in shades
et cb.alk wb.ite, cherry, and
eddy black .• with rubber
running soles. ropes going
round .. another Grasshop-
per. madt!: in Spain for U.S.
Keds . , Bandolet!:r bangles
chains from side to side
• . To keep catdtng com-
pany with Jong pants, hot
pants and Bla irmoor
KrinkJers . • Lops a n d
matching pants . . made
to be worn for a long timt!:
. . all easy do in your
washer and dryt!:r . .
beautiful pales to play
change 1bout with stripis
like the NUe and prints bu~
bling coot and serene ...
Te tht!: Yecht Shop first
• • . Then find Easter wetk
lun.
OLD GOODIES
AND GOOD NEWS
. . Grandma's Spanish
Seasoning, since 1899 . , A
very Richard 's specialty
milled by Parcel Post from
Sacramento •. Bueno flavor
e1cltement in any recipe
calling for chili powder •.
dapple in deviled eggs ..
aprinkle In pl1Ct' cf paprika
. . ind find your~U a ht!:ap
ef Me1lcan and Spanish
ceokery laste ust.
Grandma will send you her
true recipe booklet If you
write her a letter.
Brand New Max-Pax ..
1r how to make perculator
coffee without measuring,
spilling grouods or wuhing
the basket. It's aU done
with coffee donull . • the
hole gees ever the part
where tbe water bubbles up.
G<it the picture.
Rymal special in the Deli
•• Mt!:icican i>iz.za . . Doug
wouldn 't give up with the
secrtl ingredient . . . But
puckt!:r to plzia with chili
beans, olives.ch or i i o s ,
Spanish sauces and a blend
of cheeses for super mellina.
Richard's, the. Pen p I e
store. where nice people
shopping here are the
reason we're ah•1y1 1mll·
Ing.
PHONE 673~3b0 FOR HOME DELIVERY
IN OUR DELIVERY AREA
PRICES EFFECTIVE MARCH 25, 26, 27
WtdneMSq, Marcil 24, 1971 DAllY PllDT 35
111ttlllll£E
FRESH , TENDER, ALL.GREEN SPEARS , JU"1BO ASPARAGUS LB.
LIDO MARKET CENTER
NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE
GARDEN-FRESH, LEAFY
Boston Butter Lettuce 2 FOR 25¢
LARGE SIZE-SWEET, RIPE, ROYAL HAWAIIAN
Organ Serenad11 for your pleasure by Bernice Fay PINEAPPLE EACH
SPICE IT UP WITH ONION or GREEN CHILIES ,
AUNT JE"11"1A
CORN BREAD MIX 10 oz. 25¢
FOLGERS COFFEE 1 LI. 83¢
FOLGERS COFFEE ILL 1.65 I LL 2.39
AUNT JEMIMA
COFFEE CAKE MIX 10 oz .
BUMBLE ·see ALASKA SOCKEYE RED SALMON 16 oz.
POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL a oz.
CRISCO SHORTENING I LL
MORTON SALT "oz.
READY IN 5 MIN. INSANT RICE
MINUTE RICE 32¥• oz.
ARDEN AA BUTIER t LI.
GREEN GIANT
25¢
49¢
89¢
2for25¢
79¢
83¢
CREAM STYLE CORN 11 oz. 4 for 89¢
GREEN GIANT
PEAS 11 oz. 4 for 89¢
GREEN GIANT KITCHEN
SLICED GREEN BEANS 11 oz. 4 for 89¢
GREEN GIANT
NIBLETS CORN 12 oz. 4 FOR 89¢
GREEN GIANT 16 o"
FRENCH Sliced Gre en Bean• 4for89¢
NABISCO
CHIPS AHOY COOKIES "'''oz. 53¢
WELCHADE Grope
TAB DIET COLA
Juice ~T.
12 OZ. CANS
GAIN DETERGENT GIANT
SUNKIST
4 for $1
6for89¢
ORANGE JUICE 6 OZ. 6 FOR $1
SUNKIST ORANGE JUICE 11 oz. 3for$1
BIRDS EYE 35 oi.
Cool 'N Creamy Puddings 59¢
BIRDS EYE
Japanese Style Vegetables 10 oz. 39¢
BIRDS EYE
Spanish Vegeta.bles 10 oz. 39~
BIR DS EYE
Mexican Style Vegetables 10 oz. 39¢
BIROS EYE BAVARIAN
BEANS AND SPAETZLE 10 oz . 39¢
BIRDS EYE
DANISH Style Vetgetoblu 10 01. 39¢
ICELANDIC
HALIBUT FILETS 1 LB.
BU ITONI CHEESE OR "1EAT
RAVIOLAS 1t OL
llADl.Y
FOR BARBECUED BEEF OR HAMBURGERS
ONION BUNS
Cinnamon Twi.t Danish ucH
Buckwheat Honey Bread
APPLESAUCE CAKE
98¢
69¢
6for31¢
15¢
49¢
1.39
FINE FOR JUICE, NEW CROP, ARIZONA
VALENCIA ORANGES
OUR SHELVES ARE LADEN WITH WONDERFUL
THINGS FOR IMAGINATIVE DINING . FOR A SEN-
SATIONAL LENTEN DINNER, TRY OUR MENU •••
SAVORY SALMON PIE
ASPARAGUS WITH HOLLANDAISE
BROILED TOMA TOES
CORN BREAD
APPLESAUCE CAKE
Topped with rum flavored whipped cream.
A we ll chilled bottle of Pi no! Chardonnay is tho
perfect compliment to the 'd inner.
!\\EATS
WE'VE GOT A GREAT ARRAY OF MENU ."1AKING MEATS,
FOR MARVELOUS EATING !
LEAN EASTERN, FROM YORK, NE BRASKA SPARERIBS Who d .. sn'l lovt 'tm borbecutd?
10 LIS. s1
Bar-M Smoked Pork Hocks g ~••t with Mani
or l1ntll1. 69¢ LB.
BONELESS RUMP ROAST ...................... 1.09 LI.
BONE-IN RUMP ROAST ........................ 89c LI.
NOTHING IS MORE ECONOMICAL OR "10RE VERSATILE THAN RICHARD'S
LEAN GROUND BEEF 59¢ LB.
EXTRA LEAN GROUND CHUCK ........... . 79c LI.
ROUND STEAK L11n, bontlt11 ·for beef burgundy. 1,09 LB.
SWISS STEAK 5«¥1 It 11,.1..; wltti t11lt 11& •••••••••••••••• 98¢ LI .
98¢
LB. MAHI MAHI STEAKS From H1w1ll
SWIFT PREMIUM SWEET SMOKED SWIFT PREMIUM BROWN 'N SERVE
BACON .................... 69c "· SAUSAGE aoz. .............. 65c
Chicken A La Kiev fe11ll•r brM1t1 with l»11tNr & chlv" 1.39 ....
Zacky Farms Stuffed Roasting Chicken 59c •L
Stuffed Pork Loin Chops ..... , ..... _,,, 1.29 LI.
llELlfATBSSBI
Mt~• your f•vorit e recipe for double crust pi•. l ine
• 'I " pi1 p•n with helf of the p11try. Fleke 2 lb.
cenned 11lmon. Slice 3 hard -cocked 1991. Put htlf
the s•lmon in pt1try shell, cover with helf the egg
11ice1, 1prinkl1 with I tip. dill w11d, selt end pepper,
end clot with butter. Repeet leyer1 . Pour I C. med.
creem 11uc1 ever ell. Top with p11try, 1111 1d911,
prick top. Gltte with I beeten egg. 81k1 in -425•
oven 10 to 35 min.
FLtl\\'Blt SHtll1
SWEET PEAS
RIG . 95c 69~ BUNCH OF 25
IT'S A FUNNY NAME-BUT .DELICIOUS CHEESE,
LAUGHING COW
CHEEZBITS 4 oz.59¢
OSCAR MAYER
Sliced Bologna • oz. 45¢
KRAFT SLICED NATURAL
Longhorn Cheese 6 oz. 43¢
SHEOD'S OLD STYLE
SAUCE DRESSING 1ov, oz. 49¢
GANTS SOUTH AFRICAN
GUAVA SHELLS "''•oz. 39¢
To fill with crt1m c.hetit, fru it ieleci, tf<..
'°£'4~ MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPA IR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS
DAILY 9.5,30, SAT. 9.5 OPEN DAILY 9-6 DAILY 9,30.6, SAT. 1,30.1 OPEN DAILY 9-7, SUN. 9·6 OPEN DAILY f .6 OPEN DAILY, 9-6
}
•
... .. ... .. .... .. ... . , ..: .. ~: . .. .: .. .· · ... · .. ·. . .. ' .
3f DAILY PILOT
English
NEW YORK -.. An actress'
moat important attribute is
bting able lo look like cocktail
Mme at b~akfa&t," Deborah
Kerr said as we sipped mid·
morning tea in a friend's
apartment at the Ritz Tower.
She wali sporting a George
Washington coiffure. her blond
hair pulled back. tied by a
brown ribbon. She looked both
serene and chic in a midi.
long-sleeved gown of cocoanut
fawn on white wool cashmere
challis print.
·1 make a steak and k.Jdnev
pie. but I haven't done it
in an age for the simple
reason my '"'O daughters
I Francesca and Melanie J arc
much better cooks than I am.
And Peter (her husband,
"'riter Peter ViertelJ is a
marvelous cook and h i s
mother's a superb cook. \She's
32 and going sltong having
jtm finished taping an in·
tervi.ew for the BBC).'"
"Frankie was a J w a y s
playing in the kitchen ;
Melanie not as much. Melanie
surprises me really. She's
turned out to be such a good
cook it's only in the last three
years she's applied that rather
brilliant mind she has to lhe
thing of cooking." (A linguist.
Melanie's currently studying
Spanish in Madrid).
A third daughter ~ Viertel's
by a previous marriage) also
knows her way around the
kitchen. ..Christine's rather
good with chili." Deborah
said, noting that she is stu-
dying to become a teacher
at the University of Arizona.
Deborah loves a relaxed
way of entertaining. ''It's very
informal with the pants and
everyone helps themselves at
the table. It's just good food
we hope -that's the main
thing -and good wine and
good company. We never have
more than 8 for d!Mer. The
dining room is like a little
inn. That makes for a cozy
feeling, at least I hope so.''
The dining room is small
with a Lable in the corner
with a bench around two sides
and chairs arranged the other
sides. "There's a grill so "'e
cook the ~1°:tks right there
and undetf'ra°lh it "'e can bake
potatoes or cook vegetables."
A corner buffet holds china
and glass and provides a serv-
ing surface for salads and
cheese. "If we have steak
and kidney pie it's rather
heaVy but awfully good."
"If I have anything to start
o!f it could be melon and
prosciutto and just salad and
cheese for dessert. We 're in
a country with marvelous
cheeses, great Camemberts.
Bries or Ponti · E v e q u e .
There's a most delicious
c-ream c hee se \vith
garlic. ctllves and herbs .
There's another cream one
with caraway seeds stuck all
over it. They call it Borsin.
The cooking done is a
gallery.shaped kitchen design·
ed by Peter \\'ho"s built a
number of houses. "Peter
says. "I like lo be able to
put a pan down I.here and pick
up something from the other
side of the room at the same
lime. He can't bear to move
across to the other side of
the room.
"So he likes to be able to
11•ork like that. It's too narrow
for more than t"·o people.
but I'm shot out of the kitchen
anyway after rve done my
gracious living bit :··
Recipes fron1 Deborah for
Steak and Kidney Pie !design-
ed for American kitchens) and
Nan's Cocoanut Sinkers 1or
scones as !his lovely Scotlish
lady prefers to ca.II them,)
folio~"
DEBORAH KERR 'S STEAK
AND KIDNEY PIE
For the fllllog :
3 pounds lean beef I chuck
or round ). cut in J-inch
cubes
Seasoned flour. 3 table-
spoons flour. I teaspoon
each thyme. bay leaf
(crushed), salt: :I.'. tea-
spoon freshly ground pep-
per and 1 1 t e a s poon
cayenne
14 cup minced beef suet
2 cups liquid tbeef stock
or water)
I small onion stuck with
a clove
2 veaJ (or Iambi kidneys
3 tablespoons butter
2 medium yellow onions.
chopped
'~ pound mushrooms. chop-
ped, qptional
1 tablespoon flour
Handful chopped parsll'y
Coat beef with seasoned
flour. ~felt suet 1n large deep
skillet : Brown bttl quickly
on all side. Add liquid anr
onkln stuck with clove. Co\•er.
simmer about 11,, hours 10·
until meat is tender . I, stir
occasionally. Remove, d1scarc'
onion. Set aside.
Clean kidney by removin'
membrane and fat. Chop ir
I·lnch pieces. Brown llgh1!
-In butter; add onion anr'
mushrooms. Cook until onior
h transpaN!nL
Place custard cup up5ki
down in l'enler or a 21,, quart
"
Wtd~sday, Man:h 24, 1971
Actress Prefers Relaxed Entertaining
round baking dish. With slot-
ted spoon, arrange beef and
kidney mixture in layers to
fill casserole.
Crunbine meat juices; cook
to reduce in volume about
one-fourth. Blend I tablespoon
nour with a little water (about
3 tablespoonsl to rorm smooth
paste. Slowly s!ir into meat,
stock. Cook several mins. to
thicken. stirring until smooth.
Pour into casserole. Garnish
~·ith chopped parsley. Set
asid1:: to cool.
Crust
2 cups all-purpose flou r
I teaspoon salt
2 sgps all vegetable shorten-
ing
cold water !about 114 cup)
eftg yolk mixed with little
wate.r
Combine dry ingredients in
1nixing bowl. Cut shortening
into dry ingredients until tex-
ture is size of corn meal.
Add cold waler gradually toss·
ing with fork to form pastry
into bo~•:I.
Turn out on llghlly floured
b01\ I. Roll out crust to one-
fourtb inch thickness and
forming circlet that extends
l Ln·2 inches beyond size of
casserole.
Dampen edges of casserole.
Llrt crust on top of casserole.
folding under edges; press to
edges to casserole to seal.
Brush lightly with egg yolk
mix lure.
cut across in center of crust
with sharp knife. Fold b8ck
edges. From pastry trim·
·---~ ~-.. !.··~··~ .... -..
.l ~. ,7
'fl FULLY
COOKED
mlngs, cut decorative leaves;
place in ctnter o( hole. Bake
in preheated 400 degree f'.
oven for 45 minutes lor until
crust is well browned).)
Serve with brussel sprouts
(or green salad) and your
favorite libation (well chilled
da rk ale or chilled Bordeaux).
AFTERTHOUGHTS : This
English classic pie can be
m·ade many ways even using
oyster liquor for the moisten-
ing agent. Many English pe0-
ple m~y prefer a mealier
LEAN MEATY
vers ion made wnh fewer
seasonings or on11t I h e
precooking of beef and kidney
to shorten baking time
NAN'S OlCOANUT SCONES
Y~ cup butter
~cup sugar
I egg, well beaten
I cup flour
I cup cocoanut (sieved)
Dash le1no11 juice (Or lemon
extract) taste
Cream shortening . A d d
sugar and cream mixture. Add
beaten egg and flour and co-
coanut to form stiff dough.
Add lemon Juice !or extracl)
to taste. Drop by spoonfuls
on well-greased cookie sheet.
Flatten slightly with fork .
Bake in preheated 350 degree
oven until cookies begin to
brown. Remove from oven and
allow to cool. Frost with
lemon (confectioner's sugar
mixed with fresh lemon juice
until smooth) or lemon butter
icing. Sprinkle tops with co-
coanut.
EXTRA LEAN BEEF r;
ACTRESS
Deborah Kerr
BONELESS SMOKED
PIC·NICS
HOFFMAN
SPARE
RIBS I
•j
i.
SHORT
RIBS
:.'. BEEF ~~-
G ~ ~STEAKS
:; BONELESS CHUCK STEAKS "
.. ;\ .,
;,
" .; SLICED& TIED. 4't..
f>
SEA FOODS SPECIALS FOR LENTEN MEALS
OCEAN PERCH
FILLE·T ......... ; .................•.........•...•........
GREENLAND TURBOT
FILLET ............ .
FILLET OF SOLE
· lASTY ... · ....... .
PAN READY WHITI NG
MOUTH WATERING.. . ... ....... ..
PAN READY REX SOLE
TASTE PLEASING ..
HALIBUT STEAKS
NORTHERN , ........ .
.. lb.89'
... lb.69'
' lbs 129
lb49'
.... lb.98'
······lb s 109
EASTERN CORN FED PORKERS
MEDIUM SIZE
' '
lb. 1
CHICKEN LEGS
149,~.
FRYER DRUMSTICKS _. 59'
FRYER THIGHS ---·-·. 59'
PIN WHEEL PACK \~~:._,. 59'
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MA VF AIR'S
BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF
BONELESS MEATY
BEE F ROASTS
CENTER CUT CHUCK 7 ·BONE CUT
SHOULDER CLOD ROASTS
BONUS BLUE CHIP STAMP SPECIAL
~i 7-BONECUT
~f ...
' "'
BONELESS FAMILY STEAKS
JUNIOR TURKEY
FRESH DR ESSE D U.S.D.A. GRADE
lVPd MA YFRESH
TOMATO SOUP COFFEE MUGS .~'>OUIO l~l"otf~ ........ 50 STAMPS
DUPONT SPONGES ""' SO STAMPS 10 ''1 OZ CAN ." ................... .
M.D. TOILET
TISSUE
AltOLLPACK .................................. .
Hl-C FRUIT
DRINKS
AO OZ CAN ASSOllTEO FlAVOll~ ............ .
GREEN PEAS
BABY LIMA BEANS
COCK 0 ' THE WAtlC -MIX OR MATCH THEM
WONDER FOAM CUPS, .. ,.'" ... _ so STAMPS
BAYER ASPIRIN .oo. . ............ 50 STAMPS
VASELINE LOTION ;-:":.",';~,...... .. 50 STAMPS
PANTYHOSE :~;~;·,::,,,.. . .. _. 100 STAMPS
STYLE HAIR SPRAY~'."::; .... 100 STAMPS
LISTERINE MOUTHWASH ,.,, . 100 STAMPS
Q-TIPS ,,, . 100 STAMPS
ALL
VARIETIES
10 OZ. PKG.
MORTON MACARONI & CHEESE ...
]() 01. r~G. ·---· ----·-···-· ·----..:
SUNKIST ORANGE JUICE
l?Ol tAll O'. --·iOlC>~
CHUN KING DINNERS ~~;\;'"' " sur C~OP SULY.SHR1MP CP!Of/ M!lll. lGC. FOO voUMG ~~II
AJAX GIANT25' CLEANSE(l ..... .
MAYFAIR FARM FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES ·
LETTUCE AVOCADOS 4~s 1
LARGE CALIFORNIA FUERTE ........................................... .
LARGE CRISP SOLID HEAD
I
l
\
i
I
r ~.t
ti
. . .. ..
Industry Claims
,
New Objectives
For Nutrition
EXTRA LEAN ~ ..
'
Leaders of the food industry
have taken a new look al
lhe problem of nutrition and
are coming up with better
iO lutions.
llalf of the lop executives
in the natio n's $106 billion food
Industry have indicated com·
mitments to continue enhan·
cing lhe nutritional values of
their products this year and
to put more informalion on
their labels.
This was revealed by Frank
K. Lawler, editor or "Food
Engineerlng," following au an--
nual survey o! pacesetting
food manufacturing nnrui.
"Better nut riti on and an im·
proved environn1ent are the
major objectives of both
goven1men l and i n d u s l r y
research and devel opment 111
1971 ," Lawler declared.
Examples or the nutritional
upgrading of products by the
food industry include the
wi despread use of enriched
flour in cake, brownie and
pancake mixes : addilion of
vitamins to fruit drinks :
enrichment or margarine with
vitamins A aud D; fortifica·
tion of instant dehydrated
:;. ~~GROUND S l }1 CHUCK
s ~:
RIB STEAKS r: OR ROASTS 1
·
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR'S '
BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF
WElL TRIMMED. EXCELLENT FOR PAN FRY
c
., . THEFINESTGROUND MJAT
FRESHLY GROUND
''!' HOFFMAN
SLAB BACON
CENTER
CUT
PIEC!S
49f.
BY THE PIECE
WILSON BACON 55' CRISPIUTE .................................. lb
WILSON BACON 6"'
a 1n1HED ··-···· ················-·· .. ·--.. -lb. 7 .
MAYFRESH BACON 98' THICK SUCED 2-lb. PKG ............ -..... fa.
MAYFAIR DAIRY SPECIALS
IMIT.ICE MILK
!,~~~~ s~u~ CREA~ __ 49'
!!!!o!'J~--. '0'·""59'
SMOKED '.... • B" PORK CHOPS ,t "
CENTER CUT .......................................... -.... tb.
U.S.D.A. CHOICI OR MAYFAIR'S ILUI llBBOI STiii Bllf
!9M~.~.~!~~K.s ................................ lbs I 29
~~!~~I~ TIP S!.~A~S ..... lb.s 149
~.~!~ S!_f.~KS ·-·-· ..... -.... lbs 149
!9,,~!!.!,qt\~T ... lbs 139
!g~ ~IR~OIN STEA.~S ........ lb.s 189
!!~J ... ~~~~-~E~! ___ ........ -·lb. 98'
I YUBAN 79 COFS:EE ~·· c
,----MAYFAIR LIQUOR-----
CANADIAN DEW
NEW ca•ADIAI WHISKEY" PIOOF
~.~f2~1-LTERED ~DDKA·-· "'" s 2"
l!.~~.~2ill~ENDEDWH~-_,.,,,.5299
~~~!1!\~~~RTED RUM """'s4n
175 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~s7~~c,l .. ~ :~~:
EINBOCK BOCK BEER
1101 Klf'IOf'(Ali . -··----·····
potatoes with vitamin C and
enrich1nent or c hi Id ren 's
cerea ls with vitamins and
n\inera ls.
\\/Ith the v i t a m i n In.-
formation provided on lhe pro--
riuct labels, Lawler said it
Is feasible for th e homemaker
to select diets ensuring daily
intake of these essentia l
nutrients for all members of
the family . It is m o r e
econo1nica\ and convenient lo
obtain extra viiamins from
enriched foods th an t o
purchase them" as drugs.
•·1t should ):IP. not e d ,
however," Lawler continued,
"that the average normal
person ca n realize a suf-
ficiency of vitamins fro m a
balanced diet. highly im·
portanl also in obtain ing the
proper amount and com-
bination of all nutrients."
Lawler warned th:it an af·
fl uent society d n e s n ' t
necessarily mean a well-fed
population, according to U.S.
Department of Agriculture
studies which show that one
household out of every five
eats a nutritionally poor corn·
bination of foods.
It should also be noted, the
editor stated, tha t special
hlgh·vilarniQ diets are not the
complete. answer lo good
nutri tion. "To the contrary,"
he said, ''some nutritionists
hold tha t emphasis o n
vitamins as the nutrition
miracle of this er'a, has tended
lo overshadow a complexity
of other essential nutritional
factors. including minerals,
trace elements and amino
acids."
La wl e r o nin e d that
America's homemakers would
be well-advised to select
PILLSBURY FLOUR
RIAL
McCOY
~
• v ' •
DAil V PILOT
vilamhw:nrichecl fooda 1 1
needed to tnsure vlcorous
heallh for their famlllet but
that they should abo en-
courage the tONuntpUOn ot
a balanced diet for other
nutriUonal reasoos,
He reassUli.Jll;ly pointed out
that nG problems have arisen
to date with the Ule ol
vitamins in foods but aakS
tha t the Food and Dru&
AdmlnlstraUon,. looklng to the
future, is coll!lderinc the
determination of maximum
levels or potentially lollc (at..
aoluble vltamina.
Artichokes
Chilled
For Flavor .
French restaurants in New
York often serve fr e 1 b
artichokes with S a u c •
Vinaigrette as a first course
- a combination it would M
pleasant to meet up with ln
... homes.
Why not? The sauce ac-
companiment tG the cooked
chilled artichokes ls easy to
assemble.
Here's a delicious ver1ion
of it:
ARTICHOKES WITH
SAUCE VINAIGR!:l'TE
1 1/3 cups olive or other
salad oil or a miiture of
oils
6 tablespoons red wine vine-
gar
1 'rz te aspoons salt
'ii tea spoon pepper
1 large clove garlic, cruahed
2 tablespoons minced canned
pimiento
2 .tablespoons m j n c e d
parsley
2 hard-cooktd eggs, minced
6 cooked chilled articboku,
see notes bel ow
Into a jar {about l'n pintl)
tum the oil, vinegar, salt, pep-
per, garlic, pimiento, parsley
and egg.
Cover tighly and shake
vigorously. Chill. Remove
from refrigerator abo!Jt If..
hour before serving so that
any coagulated oll can liquefy.
Shake thoroughly just before
serving.
Serve each artichoke with
a miniature contaii)er of lh~
Sauce Vinaigrette so mealy
part of artichokt leavu and
the hearts can be dipPtd in
lhe sauce 11 they are eaten.
Makes 6 servings.
NOTES: To prepare
artichokes for the above
recipe, cut off the stems at
the base so artichokes cin
stand upright.
Pull off any small bottom
leaves. With a heavy sharp
knife, cut off about 1 Inch
from top of artichoke. With
a kitchen s~lssors, cllp thorny
tip from each leaf. Wash in
cold water.
Place articbekes, standing
upright, io a large saucepot
into which they just fit.
Add boiling water to baH·
cover artichoke.: add I/, tea-
spoon salt and I teaspoon olive
oil for each artichoke.
Cover and boil until base
is tender when pierced with
a fork -3S lo 45 minutes.
Stand upsidedown to drain.
Pull out center leaves in·
eluding the small purplilh
ones; use a teaspoon to scoop
out thistle portion (choke)
bl!ing careful to remove 11
little as possiblt of the heert
to which this portion clings.
Cover artichokes and chill.
Onions
In Oven
Each and delicious way to
oven-cook a vegetable.
ROSY ONIONS
6 medium (l'n: pounds)
onions
-? tablespoons each butter
(soft), honey and water
in: teaspoon salt
I teaspoon paprika
Peel onions and cut In .halt
cross wise ; pl11ice In a baking
pan {about 10 by ·a by l
inches). Jn a small bowl , mix
together the soft b u t l t r ,
honey, water, salt an d
paprika; sprtad over onions ;
cover-tightly -with foll tr
pan has no cover.
Bake in a moderate (350
degrees) oven unUI onions art
tender -f5 to &O mlnutet.
Serve the rosy sauce ln lh•
baking pan with the oniom.
Makes 6 servings.
Menu Aid
When entert•lnlnC. dtNW
guests, make a menu, Uin-
eacb part, then tape It ~ar
the range or refrigerator.
Before calUng l\JM\S to din-
ner, make a q,utck check.
• 3'1 DAIL V PILOT
Reader Offers Helpful Hint for Woman's Sweet Tooth
DE.AA NAN: Ooald )'M ez. Thtre is a new granulated because It doesn't have sponge and chiffon t}'pe cakes bulk satisfy 1 sweet tooth craving. section of your grocery, send of Mrs. Wiley's Booklet, "18
plain mt NJdlt powder ud sugar replacement on the sugar's bulk (any more than and those made by the mufhn You c.10 a.I.so eipeet cakes The side paqel of th is me a sell-addressed, stamped ~lost Asked For Recipes,"
market that comes in both , any other sugar suti,,titute) method of mixing. Those made with 1 r t i f I c I a I particular boxed product. tells envelope. I will be glad to send 25 cents and a stamped.
IOda de for • beldq white and brown types. It can it doea require specially work-madt by creaming shortening sweeteners to rlse only slight-you bow to get the needed give you the product name self-addressed long envelope
proceu! Wblt WOll1d ~· be used for a lot of baiting ed out recipes geared to the and sugar are less satisfactor}' ly ln baking. It isn't unusual special recipes, all on handy and address. along wilh your request for
U lot midi or ioo lJUJe •u or other cooking, sometimes product. witb the replacement because for the tops to be somewhat Hie cards. tf you cannot find it to Nan Wiley In car• of
ned! Do tltey ev« klle thelr
1
_..,_•_cu_:_p-_lor_-<11___.:p_bas_i_c._Bu_t. __ Y_ou~-=-g•_t _be_s_t_r_es_u_Ji._w_ilh __ th_•_m_ix_tu_r_e _na_t_ur_al_:ly_h_•_• _l•_.,_un_:_"_:_'"_:·_b_u_t _tbe_...:_y _:d.:_• _:he.:_l_:_p _:•_• _::th.:_•_:pr.:_od_:_uc_t _ln_:_th.:_• _di_:_.'-' _1ood_• __ 1.:_r _:Y_:_••::_w_:_ou.:_ld::_li:_k•::_•_co_:_py:___'he_D_A_IL_Y_P_I_LO_T_. __
•trenitft?' BAR M HICKORY SMOKED
BONELESS
Whit 1flt tlJI a.rt 1uppoted
t.o be altd? What woWd hap-
pen U I used Jumbo abed
e115 in a cake rtclpt? Would
they improve the cake'? What
Js lbe dtflnltiou of the lcaven-
ln1 procn1? I do a lot of
LETS ASK
THE COOK
by
Nin Wiley
baklq aod love H, bot tbesc
quest:IOftl all come lO mlnd
when I bake. l\fRS. G. C. J.,
DEARBORN, l\UCH.
There is a good reason for
rtdpes being worked out t.o
r.recise balan~. Too little
eaven.ing and cakes won't
rise, texture will be poor. Too
I
~~:t:~~ :!~:xd:~ FRYING
S ~d~i~~~~~j~ CH·ICKEN the cupboard askew. I transfer
boxed soda to a jar once it
1s open,. markill,! so .r won't PAN READY
confuse it with anytbn1g el se
later. Test baking powder by, __ _. Y:J:
stirring a teaspoon into 113i.: liiitJ •;Jj{•]•]l!;il.---.
cup hot water. It should really
bubble.
Soda in wable coodition
fizzes in any kind of water.
Tbe action of soda in a recipe
neutralizes t.be acidity of 500r
milk. When used together they
act as leavening. Unless
otherwise apecified, 1 o d a
abould be sifted with othe.r
dry ingredients, never directly
stirred into sour milk or it
low Its effectiveness.
When eggs are called for
In a baking recipe, medium
ail.ed o~ will generally do
okay all.hough I have used
large ones with no noUeeable
dillerenc:e. Rea1 jumbos might
be too much unle:u you do
10me alight gubtraction in
number called for.
Wbtire only yolk! are called
for you might wind up with
an egg-y taste you won't like.
Olemlats call the leavening
power of eggs "viscosity" or
"adbesive.neSll." If you've ever
had to pick up a dropped
egg, I don't have to explain
"adhesive." As a matt.tr of
fact. it Is only the egg whites
that leaven.
When heat reaches them,
EXTRA
FANCY
DELICIOUS
KY GREEN BEANS
YOUNG
-N-
T ENDER 29:B.
WATERMELONS
7 ~ 4
LB.
cells expand like 11 t t 1 e '""--balloona. In recipes calling for
egg whites only. as in angel
cake, it is important not to [
beat past the glo55y st.age
or you might as well forget
the whole thing. The best an-
get cake recipes are those
which cal] for a certain num-
ber of ounces of egg while
rather than the number of
eggs·
Today's cooks are lucky to
have preci&e recipes. Before
that, success might depend on
a cert.a.in knack which Is why
some women carried off prizes
et the country fair, others
never could.
DEAR NAN: You wrote
about the lady who wanted
to bow bow to get btr sweet
roll or coffee cake dough
sweeter than the 1ugar In ber
recipes made It. You lnform~d
her tbal too much sugar could
kill yeast acUoD ia basic
recipes.
\\'ell, if 1be wUI add some
Hquid 1weetaer like sucaryl
(_l tablespoon cqu1\s ~ cup
1agar) this won't kill yeast
action bat abe will bave the
deslrtd aweetDe11. Tbtn 1be
can ase u ertr• buvy 1lsz·
inc. Too. when one wants
rlmbarb sweet without using
IO much sugar. add some of
lite 1weeteoe.r and a little bak·
lq soda. A pinch of 500a
allO culs lmiat flavor that
Is ioo MMlr. I enjoy your col·
umn. Keep Jt up. MRS'. C.
M. HUISMAN, LYNDON ,
WASH.
Thanks for the. Up and the
kind words. 1 should caulion
against u1lng too much 5oda.
It can destroy food nutrients.
Oteck the label of ""hatever
artificial swtttener you use.
Some concentrates require
just a few drops. Others go
by tbe spoonful.
DEAR NAN : Jlecently 1
fond oat &hat J am dlabe:th::.
Howeva-. m:r condition can
be controUed wtlh dlf't. If
I ja1t lme• wbat io do about
some redpts. I could 1UU en·
joy I Joi Of lblqs.
la tbete 111y product that
ea1 be N1bt:tftaed, for let'•
uy, l cap aupr In a recipe?
Small amOUJlll l c11 replace
wltlt odle:r 1weetatn but the
Mc amoantl 1et me. VIOLA
&IJlllQEN, PUOEMX, ARIZ.
;.
CAMPBELL'S
TOMATO
PLANTERS 39•
SNIDERS 16 OZ.
BAR·B-QUE 49c
MARINADE R1~?· ea
With thi l 'oupOft, no '"inil'IUITI pu•(.~•1• r•~ui•td. l i"'il I
p•r c:oupo11 -011• toupo11 p•r c.ullo'"tr. \'•id ., .. , Su11d1y,
M•rel. 21th.
OOOD ONLT AT IA.ROA.IN IASlllT
VALUABLE (QUPON ---·
IPANA
TOOTHPASTE
6¥, OZ. FAMILY SIZE
ltl•ULAR Sl .09 AT OTHll STOllS
OUR ll:GULAR PRICI 6tt
With 11.il c:oupo". no l'l'li"i'"u"' p~rch••• f11C1u i1ed. lifl'lil I +ub•
P•• c.•upo". -Only 011• c:oupe11 pt r 'ullom••· Void 1ll•r Su~·
M1r,h 21+h.
10'
EACH
GOOD ONLT AT U.iGAIN .. 51CIT
USDA CHOICE
T-BONE
STEAKS
BAR M BULK STYLE fRESH SLICED
LUNCHEON MEATS
e BOLOGNA
e SALAMI
e BAR·B-0
e CHEESE'
e PICKLE PIMENTO
e PEPPER
Lipton Dinners
e CHICKEN STROGANOFF e BEEF STROGANOFF e HAM CHEDDARTON
R!GULAR 19~
59c
49
LB.
1 LB. CAN
.-~ . '" .{' :~ ., ... ' " . .. ;-' Jt.·l~ ,, •• ,·• '·•'io, •.• •
. ~ I I
' "'. ' . . ,
TAVERN
HAMS
WHOLE OR HALf
USDA CHOICE
BONELESS
BAR M BULK
TOP
SIRLOIN
STEAKS
SLICED BACON
YOUNG-N-TENDER
BEEF
LIVER
FRESH SUCED
77 c CRISCO
~!~BOTTLE
39
LB.
69
LB.
53c
AJAX
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT 69( LIQUID
AJAX 9 DETERGENT 4 (
GIANT SIZE
PARTY TYMI MIXfS e ~ulrl e lc1111011a Daqwlrl e WlilN:t, Sour e Moital e Gl11d.t e Te111 Celll111 •et. tk Al otrl.,. It.NI
ltet. 1' 01, Sh1k1r .. 111•
I
'
22 FLUID OZ.
•• SEVEN VALLEYS
FROZEN
FRENCH FRIED
POTATOES
9 OZ. PACKAGES
•
ROYAL HOST
PREMIUM
ICE CREAM
COLD POWER
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
REG. 39c VALUE
MIX OR MATCH
1.ALLAHTIHES
BEER 12 oz. CANS
PABST ILUI RlllON
BEER ""·"..,·''"'"'
GALLO
SPANADA •;,GALLON
ISLANDf:R-IMPORnD
RUM VllGIN ISLANDS
FULL QUART
ROUll!LOJ.
VODKA FIFTH
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
GLEEM TOOTHPASTE~:!:;.'::.:. 3 I $1
LARGI l l/1 OZ. TUIU
R•t· 1.50 at etMf 1tera
HAIR SPRAY IOOLCAN
so •. 89' F·D·S-R ... Sl .50 ot etl!•r sto•"
Time Release Powder
ORAL 1·40 011d ORAL I 60
TOOTHBRUSHES 59' RIG. lft
•1•. 59t 39' OR.Al .. JO a11d ORAL 1·20
TOOTHBRUSHES
39'
Prices Effective:
Thursday thru Sunday
March 25, 26, 27, 28
Prlc.n subitet to stock on hand.
WE l>LADLY ACCEPT
U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS
NABISCO
SNACKS
e CORN DIGGERS
e SHAPIES
e FLINGS
e CHIPSTERS
fllG. 41e
IOIIS 3 FOR $100
WI GIVE IVORY BAR SOAP .... ONAL SIU 12 .... 79c ILUI CHIP ;;._....;;;.~;;._....;;;.__::.:..::.......::c~:...:.::_'-""""'""'c=:..... __ _::-=-=""'-~.::_;:____ STAMPS
MJ=•=--=L=..:O::..::Nc.::..G=--G:::.:R:.=A:c::l:.=.N::.....:;R::..1 C~E=--,.~oz'-'. a,,,,ox,_ __ __:3=-.::9::..::C:___ COSTA MESA
MJB INSTANT COFFEE 1, oz. ;u '1" PLACENTIA
WIGM
ILUI CHIP
STAMPS
19th and Placentia
710 W. Chapman
. '
DAIL V PILOT Wednrsday, March 24, 1971
Alpha Beta's
Man in Blue
says:
PHIL NELSON
STORE MANAGER
600 S. SUNSET
WEST COVINA
TOTAL DISCOUNTS
EVERY OA'f
SOMt Al,fllA flETA
STOltlS 01$CflU~T
CHARGE PRICE
~ t-LB. PKC. •REG OR THIN _.;:: 28' ~LA ROSI SPAGHETTI ~~ '
~ OO!DEN GRAIN • S'!'IR N' SERVI: '~:::::/llI~X~8~1 'icc~fr~E µc 13¢
COLnE~GRAIN • /l/•·O'Z. Pl.C MACARONI !HD .
CHEDDAR CHEESE ~ 191
@ ~L~iE'~°i No68tE1' MOD!U)&; 29¢
~ 28-0UllCI BOX 63¢ ~MINUTE RICE .91c
@lll'iiA'~1·P16i'i'to'{? .59t 39¢
a 2-C1l Cll!CKDI RICI: OR CH iC',-.:. NOODU:
• \:ll.-OZ. VEGETAflU: ~.ll?;QZ. ON!Oll' WTUll'S INSTANT SOUP
14-0Z. • REOUUR OR \.INSCENTE:D @ A.NTI-PEflSPfRANT.
ARRID EXIRA DRY ;A!
!'.Q'Z. • UQUID • l.OTION • ORY FORMULA 781 £HOEN SHAMPOO · '8(
~ f;.2-0Z. f'AM!LY SIZE TUB~ 1 ttd 691 ~ CLOSE-UP TOOTHPASTE ,....
~ 3-0Z. IT.MJNlNt HYGIENE DEOD. • 1 DI ~ IEMINIQUE SPRAY J.69.
@UA~cEsssRDlri'N& PIN i9" 121
-----------------
@7-0UNCl 1U8E • SUPlR Silt
,,___., PRELL
SHAMPOO
FRtE
IU!CHlrl
!Rill P,ofae1olnl OR HOFFMAN'S RECIPE,
BIRBECUED SMOKED SP AT "S
HAW" ~ ' "'.lMS SHANK ·~ HALF
WHOLE OR BUTT PORTION
NOVA SCOTIA • fROif.M
TURBOT FILLETS
YOUR ALPHA BET A NEIGHBOR.HOOD BUTCHER
t the Man in the Red Apron) PR.OUDL Y OFFERS
BUTCHElt'S PltlDE MEATS
lb.
59:.,
58fb
MU.TS YOU'LL IE PIOUD TO SIRVE
•DISCOUNT PRICED • QUALITY AND
SATI SFACTION GUARANTEED
ALPHA BETA BlJTCHER'a llUCE BEEF AT DISCOUNT!
BONELESS
7-BONE ROAST 98~
STANDING LARGE
RIB ROAST END 97~
SHORTNRIBS 69~
CHUCK ROAST "~~·59:.
ROUND STEAK"?~' 98:.
FROZEN !ODDS QUICK·M EAL FAVORITES
CHUCK'S • BUTTEREO JO?CIEl'S nlUJ: • FRESH
12-0UNCE PACKAGt MEAT BEEF 49P 55:. LOAF STEAKS IN OVEN-READY FOIL PAN
PERFECTLY
WAK(Ftno SEASONED
CRAB ~i 139 MEAT 79:. MEAT PK~ BALLS
WE WELCOME FOOll STAllP SHOPPERS
IN iJty l.0$ ANi:ntS. •MJSlot OI OUJIG( COIMl'Y-IU'lll llll
-------
FIRST GRAE>E • I-LB. PACIU.GE
LUER .QUALITY
BACON
f/lfl'lllflJ'OHN
BACON I-LB.PACKAGE
EASTERN QUALITY
@ PORK
SHOULDER
,STEAK
fAR'lllflJ'OHH
SKINLESS
SAUSAGE
LINKS a.oz.
PKG.
CONCENTRATE JA9 l 39 THESE MEAT PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY thrwgh WEONESOAV, MAACJ-1 !25-31 ,
----------------
~ l':lNG S"!ZE a S-O'Z. BO'!TLE ~BROMO-SELTZER
TOTAL DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
~ AUNT Jt:M!MA •)~·0'.1:. PY.G. 291 ~COFFEE CIK.E·tLI MIX )Sf
@ P!USBURY • 19-0'l. APPLE-CINNAMON" • 14-0Z. eumR PtCAN OR
CJNNAMOf/ STRCUSEJ. 531 COFFEE CAK.E MIX ;at
QUALITY BAKERY AT
LOW Ol~COUNT PRICES
ALPHA SETA • 6.·PACI. 4'k 431 HOT CROSS BUNS VAJJJ£
lS-OZ. PACt:AGE ~'le VALUE 45¢ .ALPHA BETA.POUND CAKE
IHRntOLM S • ~-PACK 691 APRICOT DANISH _Mc
At Pt\11 BETA. •~-PACT. 29' ENGLISH_M.UFFINS ;1.: VALuc "
ARTICHOKES
CHECK THESE EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES
CANTALOUPE 39:. RUSSETS
PINEAPPLE l't.':..".tJ 49 :.
WATERMELON
CARROTS :~~:~:'i ..... 1 o:.
RADISHES ~,8:.~'" 1 OL
AVOCADOS FU£RTE 25 :.
VEGETABLES 10'
•SWISS CHARD • IC.AL(• COLLASl.D • Ml:l!.TARD
a SPfNACH
PEANUTS ;.~· 3 i $1 00
SALTED lN SHELL
THESE PRODUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS.~WED, MA RCH 25-31
TOTAL . DISCOUNTS '
(VERY DAY
< OUNCE ·~™GE 3"" HAIT PHILADELPHIA CREAM CllttSEM( 11"
~idTI'il{'VfuA CHEESl SPREAD Me 651
1-tB. PACT.J.Or. a AU. m:A.T OSCAR MAYER WIENERS
STCll HOOllf
MON. ...,. Jtf, 1f ..... PM
tAf. _, WM. 11 AM .. 7 PM
Jk 731
JOTAl DISC OUNTS
EVlRY DAY
SOME AU'HA 8£TA
STOflES DISCOUNT . CKMGE l'lllCE
~ 20-0Z. CAN • WHITE OR YELLOW 37¢ ~JOLLY TIME POPCORN 45c'
DRIP . £U:CTRA-MATJC ifl.!Hi. 91 I YU IN COFFIE .... I l·LB. CAN a REGULAR • nNE •
D-..,. 3-LB. CAN • REG. OR D,.._,.. EU:CTRA·MATIC "10 2.41
8-0UNCC JAR YUB!H IHSTA!IT COFFIE
4-0UNCI: lAR MAXIM fREEZf·DRIED COFFEE
S.OUNcr: !AR
~ PURINA a 13-02 C>JI ~TUN! FOR CATS
lJf 111
µ5 111
im l.'5
JBe 30¢
@~~~\'~'BO~• IW..()2. CAN .l8C 16¢
@f~yY'~li1/F rooo SW 6°'
@ i~'il~ i/f't6W"'. 8-0Z. ""' B8c 73¢
~ GARDEN GROVE • CA-OZ BOrn.I: •IM ~ GRAPEFRUIT ORlNK Jae' 'IV"
@.~6-02. CANS • GRApt •TROPICAL PUNCH • OR,1.NGt:
•BOYSENBERRY • CHtRRY-.AJIPLC 29¢ C!LFAME DRINKS ,33(
~ DIAMOND A • 12-0Z. C,1.N 'I.IN., 181 ~.CARROT JUICE <••
61/,-02. CAN SlARKISI CHUNK LIGHT TUN!
~ 4-0UNet: CAM" ~ sw1n·s VIENNA SAUSAGE
~ 9-0IJNCI: JAR ~ FRENCH'S MUSTARD
3llc' 371
lfC' 241
.ll< 181
~ 1'0Z. BO'l'Tl.£ • 0£Wl!E FllDlCll 471 ~ WISHBONE DRESSING ,,6lc-
~<'her.. CAN • CHOPP£0 131 ~ EARLY CWFORNIA OLIVES ~
CJII:AMY OR QIUNCHY ~ .. OZ.JAR 1.1' VAW!:Jll ~.ALPHA dET~ PEANUT BUTIER
@ ~\WNi~olt~;&slt~E J9o 39'
300 CAN • 16-0!JNCES 16' !PPL£TIME IPPlfSAllCE .21< '
8-0lfii.::? CAN ~ lk
'J.lh CAN • 29-0UNctS """' 3h1
~ PIU.SBURY • 6-PACX • 3 VARIETIES 4a. ~ INST!HT BREAKFAST ~ 'II"
~ 12.0'l. lAR • BOYStmlf.'RRJ • ~;GC°l{i\'$Ysyfu~0' ~ 411
1.LB. PACKA.GE • lMPORTtD •!l.o JIM OAK CIMIPPED HIM • .-11'
@W'cWSM'6~ 'i?lloc .He 49'
WkoU"!G~o HAM ilk 631 ""C.~
J.-OZ PXO. •PASTRAMI• CHICKEN • HAM'. CORNto er.er . WHllt TUJIXET 461 LED'S SllCED MEATS ..19<
TOTAL DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
WME AllAA MTK STOllES DISCOUNT CHIJIGE f'llllCl.
Do.w. 4-0Z. CONTAINER • 43c VALllr.. 36' D'-"' ALPHA BfTA BLACK PEJ>PER
n...... ~.ou11cr. aox __ _.41· D .... -ARM l HAMMER Sil SODA ~
@ DAYTIMl:•BOXOFro JU PAMPERS Disposable Dl1persJ.W
Nt:waoRN • eox or 30 i.w I .ti OVERlnGHT • BOX OF 12 illl:' 7lc
~PKG. OF 10• D!SPOSABJ.i ·TOWELS 481 ~ H!NOl·WIPES .58c"
~ 48-0IJNCE JIOTTl.E ~.UOUID 4a. ~CRYSTAL WHijE DETERGE!ITa9c II'
@1Jfi'tfd'u1~'r°tfuER lat 481
@ ~RffE'b"Eflli'&ENT -* 691
BATH SITT BAJ!• AQUA OR PlNK z~ 221 PHASE Ill SOAP ~
20-0UNCI:J.M • STRAWBcurt 631 .SMUCKER S PRESERVES Jk ·
20-0Z AR • APfllCOT·PINtAPl'l!: .iSct SS.
'21}-0Z: /AR• Se.dlN• BUCX!ll:RflY JIG f l• 20-02. AR • ORANGE MARMAJ.ADE ~ ...
COUPON VA.LIO
MIJICH 2Wflll l7J 1171
COSTA MISA-2il1 !. 17th It.
HUNTINGTON IEACH-9045 Ad•m•
HUNTINGTON BEACH-11 .. 1 .. M•I" St.
FOUNTAI"" VALLEY-l:tto W•r"er
LAGUNA HILLS-23541 C•ll• d• I• LulM
IRVl,,.1-11040 r'ulw•r, Unlwer1lty P•rk
IOUTH L.AGUNA-30122 \It, Co•1t HIWAY
I
'
J
'· •t . "
40 DAILY PllDT \Vtdnt1da~, Marth 24, 1971 Wtdntldu, March 24, 11'71 S PILOT-ADVERTISER 10
Meal-in-one Idea Wrapped Tastily
Here's a unique idea.
Instead of making that
rneal-in-ont a casserole or a
pot a feu, a.s the French would
say, wrap It all up inside
biscuit dough. That way, the
whole thing is edible -recep·
tacle and all.
For buffet &ervice, the Swirl
can be put on a cuttin& board
and the guest.s can cut sllces
for themselves. Jn that case,
SOUTH AFRICAN SWIRL
2 pack&J:es (8 ourices) South
African rock Jobst.tr tails v• cup butter or margarine
Iii cup chopped celery
1 package (9 -0unces) frozen
peas with baby onions
I cup grated Swiss cheese
2 eggs, well beaten
chee~
I 1/3 cups v.·ater
l can (10h ounces) cond·
ensed golden mushroom
soup
1/3 cup 50Ur cream
l teaspoon paprika
With sci!sors cut away
underside membrane of rock
lobster tails and pull out meat.
Dice. ~felt butter and saute
rock lobster and celery until
rock lobster is white and opa·
que. Add peas and on.ions.
Cool and drain excess liquid.
eus except for 2 tablespoons
to be reserved for brushing
lop of swirl. Qimbine biscuit
.mix, Parmesan cheese and
water.
Blend well and turn out
dough on a heavlly !loured
board. Knead a few times
until smooth.
Shape roll Into a cre~nt
shape. Cut outer ed1e of ere,,.
ctnt with scissors into slices,
l inch apart cuttini not quite
all lhe way through . Turn sec-
tions cut side up.
GOLDEN . BROWN SWIRL FILLED WITH LOBSTER
Then take your adventurous
pirit and the recipe below
n band. Read the directions
through and picture t h e
results. A golden-brown swirl
of deliciow dough filled with
a re.markable tasty mixture
of rock lobster meat.
4 cups )iscuil mix
~~ cup grated Parmesan Slit in cheese and add lhe
Roll out with a floured roll·
ing pin into a 14-inch square.
Spread rock lobster filling
over dough. Roll up like a
jelly roll. Turn under ends
and place seam side down
on a greased cookie shet\.
Brush \\'ith egg and bake
in a preheated bot oven (400
degrees F.) for 2~ to 30
minutes or until brown and
crusty. Combine all sauce in-
gredients and simmer until
bubbly. Cut into slices and
serve with sauce spooned over
each slice. Yield: a le 8 aerv·
in gs.
Grocery
Prices
Creep Up
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -
Average retail food prices will
probably creep up again in
the first half of 1971.
But Agricullure Department
food experts also believe the
advanee may be limited to
l or 2 percent, far below the
7 percent leap recorded in
t~ first half of this year.
Experts foresaw m i x e d
price trends for individual
foods. Small increases can ~
el"J)Kted for fish, dairy pro-
duct.I, sugar. cereals and
bakery products. Larger ad-
vance! are likely for fruits ,
vegetables and beverages.
COST LESS
Most other foods probably
v.'ill cost less, according to
a recent Agriculture Depart-
ment forecast. This includes
pork, which could be substan·
tially cheaper if retailers and
meat packers heed govern-
mtht urgings to trim currently
wide farm-to-retail p r i c e
margins.
The forecast was based on
expectations that consumer in·
come will rise more slowly
next year·, putting a brake
oo demand, while !Upplies of
some foods rise and farm-to-
retai\ price spreads increase
at a somewhat ~lower rate .
The question is whether all
these predictions will prove
accurate. A government
forecast of 1970 retail food
price trends. made public last
February, failed to accurately
measure the extent of this
year's price increases.
PRICES JUMP
Average retail food prices
jumped 5.2 percent in 1969
and Agriculture Department
economists had p r e d I ct e d
prices this year would average
about 3.5 percent of 4 percent
about 1969. Instead , govern-
ment experts now estimate
the rise will be about 5.5 per-
cent.
One reason for the bigger-
than-t1pect.ed jump was the
fact that 1970 saw a n
"unusuallY large·• rise of 7
percent in the spread between
farm and retail prices.
Food industry spokesman
said the .,-owth in their
margins v.·as necessary to
keep up with rising labor and
other costs. The department
tiaid part of the increase
reflects some catching up ln
margins to offset increases
in marketing costs in the past
year.
Government forecasts for
both 1970 and 1971 indicate
that consumers who eat all
their meals al home \l.·ill feel
less pinch from rising prices
than tho:;e v.·ho eat many
meals at restaurants.
GROCERY RISE
ln 1970, the estimated 5.5
percent increase in all retail
food prices includes a
predicted 5 percent gain in
grocery store prices and a
7.5 percent increase for food
eaten away from home.
For the first half -0f 1971.
economists are predicting that
"a•ay from home" prices will
~ up another 5 percent or
more over 1970, while grocery
prices may not edge up more
than 1 or 2 percent. Labor
cost Increases are usually
cited as the rea11-0n for the
more rapid gains in restaurant
prices.
Agriculture specialists also
uy preliminary data indicate
that average retail groctry
prices for the Jut quarter
of thil year will be somewhat
}ower than tor 1970 as a whole,
although still 2.5 percent
above a year 1i;o.
Lower meal prices are
mainly resp0n1ible for the
CWTenl IK>ft.ening in groctry
bllll, even though pork has
not decll~ as much as -Of·
rlclala think it 1hould in view
of the UDUIUIUy-sbarp drop
In bof prices.
THE BEST
a..,J,rshl, ~111 pr••• "'••·
flu11" 11 •11• •f th• werlcl'1 rno1t _.,,.,1., -i• .t1-i,.. R.e-4 If
• •
No prires are lower p ·
than ~~ ' prires.
\¥E GUARANTEE ... to m"t any price by any other 10ponwktt 11 It ii• nllllll' eta1dor,.;.. .. -1;,,1 broad< or ldmtical ,..a.ct qUality.
EY.ERYDAY WW PRICES EPERYDA.Y WW PRICES
faatern·Gral Fad PDl'k ~·59 C8llfornla Grown ~·28 PORK 1-DAY FRESH Grado A
STEAKS FRYERS 2,:;v~ib •.
RalpbS Meat Master Beef Farmar John
~-59 BONELESS-COOKED 1~9 CHUCK TAVERN Who!•
STEAKS HAMS or Hall
'
EVERYDAY WW PRICES EJ'ERYDAY WW PRICES
.7.Bcl'le
lb .• 89
'liud-S!Mlest
lb •• 89 BEEF ROASTS BEEF LIVER
C.nt•r-Chuck
lb. .98
Whol• 01 Slic.d
r. .• 35 BONELESS ROASTS BEEF KIDNEYS
f1.1U Cut
lb .• 98 SLAB
lb .• 45 ROUND STEAKS
Boneless
lb.1.79 BACON Whol•0< Holl TOP SIRLOIN
B•ef T end•rloin lyth• lb. 2.39
CenterC1.1t•
lb .• 49 FILET MIGNON Piec• SLAB BACON
Well Trimm.d
lb .• 98
Ji-t'n lot
lb .• 87 RUMP ROASTS CORN DOGS
Bottom Rourtd
lb. 1.19
Rolph•' Own-lulk
lb .• 49 BONELESS ROASTS PORK SAUSAGE
Extro Plu mp 3 lbs. and Up
lb. .33
INGd.d-Frozen
lb .• 97 KING SIZE FRYERS VEAL STEAKS
Colif. Grown!
lb •• 35 Heat and.at
lb.,98 CUT UP FRYERS BREADED COD
'l~g-
EVERYDAY LOii" PRODUCE PRIC!S
Colifomia Fuerte 25 AVOCADOS .. ,h •
Edra Foney Washington Red Deficiou• 23 APPLES 1b.,
APPLESashington Golden O.licl~·.23
PIPP;iNA'f>P'LES lb .• 23 l>or"AioE°s"·--r.. .10
Fresh Roasted Satt.d or Untalt.G: 33 PEANUTS s...i..,.
EVERYDAY WW PRJCES
Delicatessen Department
Ralphs-Pototo, Moccnvni, Cole Slaw,
H .. lth 37 SALADS ,...._.....,..
.Ralphs Slic.d All M.ot 55 BOLOGNA 10....p1cg .•
Heb~ Natiol'IOl-Knoc:kwvnt, franln,
Chob• 119 SALAMI 12-.p1cg. ,
l.o'• Turkey, Ch1cbn er
SLICED HAM t'1.pk9 .• 59
Wilton All Meat 88 FRANKS 1-1b.p1,.,
Pilltbury-ChocoloteChip 4H
COOKIES 1kt.p1, .• coo-KiEs1
11.oUin 19-a1.plco •• 49
Ho~ol 197 CANNED HAM1~ ..... ,
BiNAis lb.~10 1
U.S.No.1 37 PlfATOES·1~=~
DAIRY DEPARTMENT
Ralphs ZIM imitation
MILK ~I.carton 137
Ralphs
ORANGE JUICE
Rolph1
FRUIT PUNCH
BAKERY
WhH.orWJittot
1'opL ,73
~.25
\U:L'i)hH'S'"'r.,1 33
BREAD 1~b.1«.1..i 1
coi:'F'eE'CAKe ••. h .48,
Ra!,e!ts Cinnamon 35 RuLLS ' P1<g.o11 • ' Raie:• 45 ANGEL FOOD LOAF-': \1
UNI/PLUS
BUY
UNJ/PLUS BUYS help you save even more! UNl/PJ.US BUYS are manufacturers speeial allo'''ances and we pass the savings on to you..
These reduced prices remain in effect as Jong as special allowances are available. Here is a partial ]isling of Ralphs UNI/PLUS BUYS
Ralphs OOIB (Chunb,Cniahod, Tidbit•)
ICE MILK %-gal.ctn. • 49 Pineapple 131'~·· ,,, .25
G!orietta
11 ........ 32 G-Glo!lt'Miitel Wild ,,_,..., .53 WHOLE FIGS RICE
"''' '""""-.25
Petltirz
"' .33 SLICED PINEAPPLE PIE SHELLS
Pllttbuty ........... 58 IC.W ltt.t .... ...... 43 REGULAR FLOUR SIRLOIN TIPS
Acceftt ,~ ...... 27 Kehl Kist ......... 33 MSG BEEF STEW
Acc..,.1
IC>-. ..... 1.87 Kel .. ltlrt ......... 24 MSG CHILI & BEANS ......
..Y.--.N. .79 Kelcfltn•
MSG BEEF STROGANOFF .... ,., .49
Gh ..... •111 45 O..lcl1 .......... 45 CHOCOLATE CHI PS ,, ... ,.. .• TATER TOTS
w,...1.,.-1 (All flr,o.,.) ...... _ .79 1e-1SIKM .......... 27 GUM STRAWBERRIES
Fro1en food __ ....., .. __
GRl!N BEANS ._,,. .33 ........ _""""_ .. ............., 35 PIES •• • Pt'i'S"'......., ~ • ... .69 ..._..,.._ __ ,_, 19
MlAT PIES ._ ..... •
MfXiC.AN OINNERS 1s-,i.. .47
.... ·-.... 28 SHolSTIUNG POT A TOES "
l'aftfy flll•rt
~i~NDCINNAMOH , __ .39
too'il COLORS .,.., .35
!:1'l'tfllttRACKlRS ,_,.. .37
R;r!cRACKlllS ,_,... .47
liY'i'iRoxcoot01S ,_,.. .• 47
G.x:IYMIX ,..,, .11!
Ponfy 1i'1•tt
lStivi Oil ......... 26
~WDIRED SUGAR , .. _ .19
BR'bwN SUGAR ,, .. _ .19
ti~ 63 GRANUl.AnDSUGAR ......... • !itliim-·-NE ,,_,.. .19
;mm-........... 66
CLOSEOUT SPECIALS
WHIU THEY U.ST
1 lc: S!*-iol 111)"
Brtdoe or
POKER CARDS
Plaatic Coot.cf
"
,,,,,,
Ralphs 12-ox.pkg. ~'Nt°tJI~ lrRDPRC ~19 Potato ChiPi' · ''':59 .. ~
Royal c:...... 21 or. Mtti.
Di.t" Rite 32 •Z. bottle •
1"9!rr+Skle
6«.b.ltle .81 lo!,y ket {lle;u1er) ........ 1.tt SHAMPOO DIAPERS c •• i. ...... ao..,_....t ,,._,_ .53 .tlrwic:k ~Id
TALCUM POWDER ROOM DEODORIZER .... ..., .83 'r eudl of SwMIM ........... fl ,_PvrrlltvN , ... _.n HAND LOTION SPRAY WAX Seft I. °'Y-llKkltle1 l 5cOffLoW ... _.87 BATH OIL BEADS ,, ........ II ANTI PERSPIRANT
(cl1•,..._,.....
6'4c.wll ,78 lt•lpMAll~ ---· SHAVE DETERGENT ,,_GoW.,.,
,,... ..... 80 (ll•t~lar& i..o-1Stiel49cVeJM .... .aa BREATH DROPS ENVELOPES "'-........... 27 CeklP-
c;.;..,.t ........... 11 TOOTHPASTE DETERGENT
Sc:hld:Ad)vthble ...... ,. 1.27 Pwliite!M ~viol
12-. ...... .21 RAZOR BAND DETERGENT
H.allh & IHVfy AiJs H....io.IG N,.J, A.lco"°1'1e lrHIOfas l;\5~!1\'""' _ ..... 1.14 !:1llm
~t'Ab'I!""'"'-... ....... 65 . . ._._ AR SOAP
lml'ft ""'"11 ••• tOi'LETTISSUl msutr--"" .71 --STUFFED ANIMALS ~swnRON ....... 1.1.38 iciC'HlST5 ...... ANTISEPTIC ,_ ....... u Bil PRl SOAK
_.....,,66 iRirfc'llW1'111's ... a.a
....... 21 ~KA ...,J.89
-.28 ~ .... 3.89 __ .. tcol't.t4'--4.79 -·" i'rnt...,_.~ .... _ .19
u-. .... .36 ittli~ _, ...
~OUID SAV1
3
3c
DETERGENT .49
lorthenwo,.-29c Volu••
(lrown Roc lr,. Gold AYOCado)
MUGS
.18
.. oh .18 More than just low prices COUPON 0000 MAit 25 thrv )1
LIM.IT l -ONLY ONI COUPON Piil CUtTOMd
.._'_"1v_,,_,.._••_1L'-'-'L0_'·__,1RALPHS STORE IS LOCATED AT 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH , Store Hrs:
'
El Rancho puts your needs first ... with events like this week's ...
No ma.tter what wild claim.a
you h.sa.r, you can't have
e11ervthing! That's why the
so·called discounters have to
ct't back on b·ra:nds and sites,
among other things. Not El
Ra:nc.ko! Here, your needs
come flrat. You'll fin.d the
brands yott know and trust,
in the sizes you want. And u:e
sell the ni at conipetitii·e
p 'f ice a in spotlessly clean
storeB. There's niore. Come
in. Diacover the differe-nca
•.. and get tke 1nost value for
even) food doilar you spend.
El Ra·ncho.
Sliced! Crushed! Tidbits! Chunks! You choose the No. 2 cans you want , •• and save on qUJllity at tbi8 price!
HUNT'S
••••••••••••••••••••••••
From coast to coast it's Hunt's for the best! Why settle for less when you can get 14 oz. ot goodness at this prloel
• ••••••••••
Generation after generation •. , Gerber's ·has been the one to grow on I Choose baby's favorite •trained vsrietiesl
Frozen concentrate from Sunkist .. •.known for quality for years and years! 6 oz. cans. What more needs to be said about quality?.,. and value? 2 lb. can ... 1.65 S lb. can ••. 2.47.
Macaroni and ·eeef .... s.r~F~s .... 69' Super Meat Specials!
A favorite casserole in their famous restaurants ••• frozen, ready to heat and serve! ••• 111;2 oz.
Chicken and Noodles -~~~F.E~·~ •• 79c
Compare the quality for flavor, tenderness, value! Then choose El Rancho!
L b Loi R t I\\ • t\\ US. Sf '9 am n oas .......... ... ....•.... ., rir.
Tender chunks of tasty chicken ••• delicate noodles ••• flavor you'd expect from Stouffer's! Frozen •••
Peanut Butter ........................ 59¢ Pizza Rolls .............................. 59¢
Peter Pan. , . smooth or chunky ••• 18 o:z:. jar. Geno's makes them so tempting! Frozen ••• 6 oz.
... ~·
Ground Lamb Steaks ........ ~!'.'!....... 49~
Lipton Dinners........................ 59¢
?ifain course pleasure in minutes! 3 kinds!
Rosarlta Dinners .................... 49¢
Your choice of frozen Mexican favorites!
Chocolate Eclairs ................... 49¢
Rich's ••• scrumptuous treat? ••• frozen! 10 oz.
Lamb Chops ....... s.~A~~ ~~'~ ... : ... $1.59~
Flavor so delicate ... meat so delicious ••• because it's fresh, U.S.D.A. Choice Domestic Lamb t Macadamia Huts ................... 79'
Royal Ha\vaiian .•. 5 oz. can~., best get geveral!
Black Pepper ......................... 49¢
Schillings adds spice to life! 4 oz. can. Saratoga · Chops ..... ~~~E~~': .... $1.69&
Broil these for a real flavor delight •.• and the value i.s even greater with El Rancho'a closer trim.I
Facial Tissue .. . . ... ... .. . . .... ... 4 roR '1
Chiffon ... 200 ct. pkg. . white or colors!
Bathroom Cleaner ................. 69'
Dow's .. 20 oz. can .•. does the job so easily!
Fri skies Dog Food ................. 59¢
Cubes or meal mix ••• save on 5 lb. pkgs.
Fresh-a-byes .......................... 1.29
Disposable diapers ••• pkg. of 30 •• 3 sizes ! Center Cut Chuck Steak 59& Days Ease ................................ 69'
The bowl cleaner "'ith the daisy? ... 534 oz. can. Make the comparison test.. look at theirs· .•. then ours .•• and soe that the value · at El Rancho!
Super Fresh Produce! Beef Brisket .................... 891. Boneless Pork Roast ............. 69f.
Boston butt .. boneleas, seasoned ••• oven ready I Fresh, lean, bonelessf \Vhole or half.
El Rancho Bacon .................... 59r. · Ground Round .................. 89~
Al\vays fresh ... bulk or precision patties!
Fillet of Halibut ............... 891.
l\Iild tasty white meat •.• always favored!
·~~~;"':>.. . ' 1BPBRUBB .. 8ML$/ (Hormel Old Smokehouse •••••••••••••••••••• 19c lft.
Jumbo Frog legs ............... l.291b.
So much meaty goodness to be enjoyed!
S1veet ripe Valencias .•• so juicy ••• and it takes such little e!fort
to squeeze out all the goodness! ~ Delicatessen Specials!
Artichokes ............... ~~.~~: .................... 4r0R s1 Rath's Canned Ham ........... :.~~ .. ~~:.~~·~······· s1.98
Really fresh to afford more flavor from every tasty tip! You'll love them! Choose Hickory Smoked or Honey Glazed ••• either i• so lean, so waste-free, 80 delicioual
Fuerte Avocados . .. ... ....... .. .... .. ... ....... ................ 3 roR '1
Compare the value ... see: that it's really in El Rancho produce I Oscar Mayer Bologna 73¢ Kraft Aged Swiss ....... 59"
Sliced ..• All Bee! or All Meat! 12 oz. Natural cheese at its best! Sliced. 6 o.,
Bon Bel Wedge .......... 79¢ Wisconsin Jack Cheese 49'
Creamy French ch .. se ••. 6 01. pkg. From America's dairyland ! 8 oz. pq.
Rutabagas .................... ~~~·H·'.'.~~~ ....................... 2 L8S. 25'
Add nourishment and robustness to meals with this old favorite!
Health and Beauty Aids! Super Liquor Specials!
Scope ......... s!·!! ~1~ ••••••••• $1 29 El Rancho Beer 6 ~ 79c
Kno\v someone who should use it!. . tell 'em.about our great price I 24 oz. . Light and tingl .. y .•• Dad will love cheese, crackers and a can of beer!
VI n Rose ....... f1FTH •••••• '1.69 Jim Beam ... HALF·GAL ••• '11.99 Toothpaste ...... R.~ .• a.3~ ••• -5 9c
Col1ate1 'fam.ily sized 5 ounce tube.. get several and aave even moret
PricC8 in effect Thursday lhl'ough Sunday,
Ma.r. £5, 26, 27. No sale.a to dca fers.
Paul Masson ••• Light, fruity, dry! Straight whiskey .•• areat a!ppln'I
IJzty your f•voritc brand> ••• at El Rancho , •• •n<l ••v• 10% by tile C<Uel Op•n daily 9 to 9 ••. Sunr1"11 IO :OO to 7 :00
0 ARCADIA: sunset and Huutington Dr. r/S/: PASADENA: r/iW. SOUTH PASADENA: '~/Nf;1I HUNTINGTON BEACH : /!/Nr; NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Newpo11 01.,1 1n11
• ill Ran cho Center) ,,,.. 310 West Colorado Blvd '"'"· Fremont and Huntington Dr. 1S11MP1 Warn e1 and Algonquin 1Board w,lk Cenlell "'""' 1555 Eastblull Dr 1Eastblull V1ll.1p,e Cen lOI '
< ' 1·
4% DAIL V PILOT Wtdntsdat. March 24, 1971
Butter, Parmesan Flavor Gnocchi for Company Dinner
' One of the most famous it's fine,. to use when com-wh.Jle you are serving that ~l cup(\~ pound sllck) bul· lemon color. Stir in blilter. l hen hour); or cover and grated Parmesan.
ttaJlan dlsbe!i is called Gnoc-pany 's coming. Yoo reheat 1he portion, heat the ne:st one for ter In a 3-quart Slluctpan stir Parmesan and eggs. bleoding refrigerate overnight. Bake in a preheated «IO-
hl Gnocchi in two large pans, "seconds." 1 cup finely grated together the farina, comsterch well after each addition. Cut Int 0 squares (about 2 degree ov"" untll tnoroughlJ
c · but lhey can be put in the GNOCCHI ALLA R0:-.1ANO Parmesan cheese and salt; gradUally sUr in Butter an oblong glass ). inch) or small rectangles. hot -about IS minutes. The word Is pronounced 1 E b 1 f t · milk. kin d.sh ncb art (Gnocchl will ft\read &lightly .) "nyok kff" and Its English oven at onl!: time on two 2 arge eggs xtra u ter or opp1ng quart ba · g t (lS~ by Place, about 1 i ap . on """
k · th. ou may ' •up far1·na ~-tra grated Parmesan Sf1·rr1ng constantly -k 3v. by 1u •-•-1 or ·'-Jfar butt·~ ook'• sheets or i·efi)' w1·th a wide metal .:rur.tula
lranslatioll is "dumplings .. , ~a:i,ts~ ~wit~b ~~ ~ns once ·~: ~up cornstarch .&:.,I.cheese for topping over moderately low htat ~;JI u~~nsil. Tu~h~., fari:1~-roll;~ "" -remove to serving dish~rvl
Italian cuisine has various during the baking, Or you can 12 teaspoon salt Jn a small miJ:ing bowl beat mixture comes to a boll; boll ture Into it, smoothing top. Dot each piece with extra piping hot.
kiDd.s of Gnocthl but the one put one pan in the oven and 1 quart milk the eggs until thickened and 3 minutes. Remove from heal Chill until fmn (about 1 butter and sprinkle with extra Makes 8 servings. concocted la~y features-".::~::...'.::::_:::_::::_:_:::_::::.:___::_::::=..:...::=::.~~~~~~:::::-=:__:__~:::_::__~~~-=-=-=-=-==--=.:::::._::::.:::._.::.:::_::::::_:__.:::::.::_::::.::::::.:::::._::_::...:::::.::~-=~~~.::_~~-
economlcal farina. Cornstarch
goes in, too. and helP5 produce
interesting tuture. The mon.'
lavish additions to the dish
are butter and g r a t e d
Parmesan cheese.
In Italy Gnocehi is ser\'ed
as a first c our 1e. and you
might like to follow suit.
Th.ls recipe makes a lot so
Snowy
Circle
Baked
As a party "Good Turn.,
here's a great billowy, snowy
circle of meringue brimmed
"'ith tangy canned apple
sauce, nuICed with whipped
cream and vanilla pudding.
The orange rind and the
strawberries and mint add
even more flavor.
lt1ERINGUE SHEU. WJTH
APPLE FROTH FILLI~G
Meringue Shell
g egg whites
I/• teaspoon salt
2 cups granulated sugar
1 ''i teaspoons vinegar
1 leasQOOll vanilla
1,, tea?poon almond extract
ruung
1 3-ounce package vani lla
pudding
1 package unfl avored gelatin
I cup milk
2 cups canned apple sauce
1 tablespoon grated ()range
rind
l,I,: pint heavy cream, whip-
ped
Strawberries or f r e s h
pineapple cubes
Mint
Have egg whites al room
temperature,· stir in sa!L Us-
ing an electric beater, beat
egg whiles until they hold
shape and are stiff but not
dry.
Add sugar a little at a time ,
beating In well at low speed.
Add vinegar and fl avorings,
beat at high speed for 10
to 12 minutes, or until mixture
is smooth, shiny and stiff.
Cover a cookie tin with a
piece or foil or brown paper;
make a 9 or 10.inch circle
on foil or paper.
Spread meringue in circle
to make a round about one.
inch thick; heap remaining
meringue around edges of
round, thtn 5mooth together
to make a ring leaving center
open. Bake in a preheated
low oven, 275 degrees. for 45
minutes. Reduce heat to 250
degrees, and bake an ad-
ditional 15 minutes.
Turn off heat and leave
meringue in oven for 3 to
4 hours, or even overnight.
if desired. Or meringue may
be removed from oven al end
of baking time, cooled on rack
and used at once.
In a saucepan in'ix pudding
and gelalin ; stir in milk. Cook
over moderate heat until mix·
lure begins to thicken slightly,
then stir in apple sauce. Con-
tinue to cook and stir until
very thick; stir in orange rind .
Cool mixture lo r o o m
temperature, then chill until
very cold fold in whipped
cream and fill center or mer-
ingue shell with mixture.
Garnish with strawberries or
pineapple cubes and mm\
leaves. Makes 8-10 servings.
New Idea
Relished
For Tang
This recipe makes a lol.
but it keeps v.·ell and the
navor improves on standing.
TANGY BEET A.ND
HORSERADISH Rt:Ll~ll
I card! pound I sliced beets
I Jar (4 ounce!) "'hite
horseradish. undrained
l /l cup light or dark corn
syrup
113 cUp cider vinegar
\; teaspoon minced onion
1 teaspoon oft
~• leaspoon pepPer
Dnlin beet.I; chop fine. Tnto
1 mMium mixing bowl turn
the beet5. horvradhh. com
syrup. \'lnegar, onion, salt and
pepper. Thoroughly stir
together. •
Store lo " tlghUy covered •
Jar in the rtfriger1tor. Makes
about 21> cup•.
I
U ll 519-1400 tor location of Ui:n
MOtlSf you. Coll coUtd if lo!
CHUCKSTUKS
lb.
USDA ::;.~ 59c
CKllCE '"'"" '" "o 11o
Boneless Chuck : 89~
Shoulder Ood ~ '1'!
Family Steak ~ '1~
Veal Cutlets :::....~ '1~
I Po!k Rib Roasts =~= 49& I ~·n End Roasts ~~ 59£
I Rib Pork Chops ~~;.. 79&
; Fresh leg O' Pork :.::=:::. 59~ I Rath Sliced Bacon ~~.\!" 58&
Pure Vegetable
FOii: COOIClNG,
MKINGOl
FRYING
LIQUID
BLEACH
Safe ...
II San itizes
GALLON
BTL.
~PRUNE
I L:-:.t:e__.~i' JU ICE
(V/o/N/!fmfill!HijtH1!1!1•
TUUOT
FILLETS
;59~
-·-Ha6bat Steaks.
Eaten Sole Fillets .... . .. 98~
79~
In. FrldaJ l!llded Rend Slnillp ~ •• 1121
In. FrltllJ Sl11lmp 1'11111 -............. Ill
lllplrlsF&llSllcks ...... --. ...... 1511
[v/o/H/SJiijlifiJlll·l·l·l:!itlW
iA.~ M~~N:.ES
-...lf...."',...""';....::. .. -'t..-=6=9411 ;:.$' ~ 23c
Ob loJ PapptrtnlP/zza """ ................ 891
Oh IOJ SIUllgt Pim """-. .............. 19f
VHa Pak! Cllllled On1g1 Jtdca ...,_ 1111.. ... W
Plcll1lell Snn Peu , ... -. .......... 21311
PlclaMI cat llus """"""'-. -. ... ZSI
Plclslllll llbJ u.w ,..., ................... 251
Rosarita MEXICAN DINNERS
• "• < ,,, 'I '•'! •"' 49' . . ... '" .. ' .. , ~""' . . ' . . ... . ' ...
at
. Salad Favorites VOCADOS
ii rAG
(i)
Fancy Tangelos ~ 19~
Fresh Artichokes .= 19~
Anjou Pears ~ ~ 23~
Fresh Daff oclils = 691
Vons Soft Margarine \! 29cli
Dole Fru}t Cocktail ""~~YOO 25c I
Green Giant Corn ~~~ 23c 11
Pillsbury Cake Mixes,~~35cl~!
Fido Dog Food ~";"~~ 7c · ,
. ..
SLICED BACON,7-t 48c
VONS COFFEE ·~;t~· 69c
LARGE . EGGS . .:!'~: 43c
FRESH BREAD ;:~ 23c
RATH FRANKS,~48c
ORANGES ~~CY 8 l~G sac
OHS
~flv\\ VODKA
~~-$3!! Save 40c
New! FROST 8/80
~~!!!°!!!'!ISIY $529
IN 5.LUONlO OM IAAUll. llml
Save 40
-
VONS FRESH SALADS " . " . ' ' 35 'V'"lU MACA~ONI ~01[\l<l.W (
0~ Gl~MAN '01ATO IS OZ CIN
Si'I I I \ i.S ,,,,. i'\SSI I\ l'.H
MANISCHEWtr% 1.'0SHEI fOOOS
a GEFILTI FISH
:;:;'.,.... 5149
QUAlt.... • •
BORSCll1' I MATZOS .,,.. .,,. . ' '*""""' u s n '~"""' .... Ql.39 ,,,.,., ... 5.;. 2
Dr. West Toothbrushes ~~ 44'
llufferin Tablets l:fJ.M..'l.~~t 771
Brede Creme Rinse .:l'.",:'l. &61
., @, S 5 r: Vo: ~!x1t11 Spet~s!JA
. '1 i,d( ~ENGLISH MUFFINS 290
• ~... VONS, PLAIN oa SOURDOUGH
~s:::;;:::~ I 6-PK I I.ME tyllSt ~",..,.m''lttrttuN r.zzalilir. _ _ BREAD , Apple Spice Donuts ~~ ss-r;;i~t'h~. 47 Vons Pound Cake ~,~ ... ~ 39-
VALUABLE COUPON
I
• W11~ TJWJ
Coupo"
0n1, .....
32 ~,t I-·----·--· I "'""_ ......... ._
""'·--------------
1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach e 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach • 801 El Camino Real San Clemente
• Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Viejo • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa • 1101 Pacific Coast Hwy. at Bolsa Dr. ,
,. .
e
l PILOT-•DVE RTISER N
Quick Knit
Quick-knit rug is cozy, col-
orful beside a bed, anywhere.
It's true! Knit pretty oval
rug with raised leaf center ,
for Jess than $.'!. Use heavy
rug yarn, big needles. Machine
washable! Pat. 7413: rug 28
J. '3 lncbe.s or any length.
FIFTY CENTS for each pat-
tern -add 2S cents for each
pattern for Air Mail and
Special Handling: otherwise
thlrd--class delivery will take
three weeks or more. Send
tG Alice Brooks the DAILY
Pll.oT 105 Needlecraft Dept..
Box 163, Old Chelsea Station.
New Yori:, N.Y. 10011. Print
Name, Address, Zip, Pattern
Number.
NEW1111Needlecrafl
Catalog -more In s tant
faahlons, knit!, c r o c h e t s .
quilts, embroidery, gifts. 3
frtt patterns. 5tl cents.
NEW Complete Instant Gift
Book -over 100 gifts for
all occasions, ages. Crochet,
tie dye, paint, decoupage, knit.
1ew, quilt - more. $1.
Complete Afghan Book -
fashions pillows, gifts, more!
11.
"11 JUty Ruis" Book. 50
cents.
Book of U PrUe Afg:bans.
IO ctnts.
Qallt Book 1 -16 patterns.
50 centl.
Maaenm Quilt Book Z -
patwns for 12 unique quilts.
$0 cents.
Book 3. "Qullli for Today's
U vtng.0 lS patterns. SO cents.
Shrimp
Versatile
MOVE OVER, MAINE CLA1tl·
BAKE!
Shrimp are No. I i n
popularity over all other fish
and shellfish in the United
St.ates. 'I'hi5 is not surprising
because shrimp have a
dist.inetive navor and are so
versatile they can be used
in appetizers, canapes, dips,
chowders, or many pleasing
entrees that will satisfy the
most delicate <lr lhe heartiest
of appetites. There are several
kind of shrimp available in
the United States. Among the
more important ones are tiny,
North Pacific shrimp, the Gulf
variety, and northern shrimp
found off the coats of Maine
and Massachusetts. Bureau of
Commercla1 Fisheries
research vessels have recently
located new resources in this
area.
Shrimp are all lean meat,
low in calories. and 1 com·
plete, easily digested protein
food a!I well as being a fine
source of needed minerals.
They can be served plain or
fancy and come in a wide
variety of market styles. The
tails of shrimp are the onl y
edible portion, and these can
be purchased either fresh or
frozen. cooked in the shell,
or cooked. peeled. and de-
veined-ready to use Shrimp
are al!o avai111ble in handy-
dandy, shelf-ready, 411. or 5
cunce cans, either packed in
brine or dry. Breaded shrlmp.
ready to fry, can be found
1t froien seafood counters.
Maloe Shrimp In Wine
Sauce, 11 new recipe from the
Bureau ot Comm e rcial
Fisheries, was created with
the moderate-sized northern
1b.rimp in mind; however, any
sbrlmp may be used. This
reclpt' features shrimp in a
subtJe 11uce that is irnsistibly
deUdws. Mushrooms a n d
chopped onion are cooked and
addicltc cbl(:k.en bOuillon, then
1our crtam and dry white
wine are added with the
shrimp just before servln&.
Serve it for hearty appetites
over bot, fluffy rice, or show
nff a little and serve It with
tout points or patty shells.
Either way, this recipe ls 1
year-round classic that can
be served whentver you want
Ibo -.i. 111 p>d .. tlJ>!.
I
Wtdntsday, Much 24, 1971
LIAN BLADI CUTI
CHUCK
< STEAK
c
• '·
FRESH NUTRITIOUS
'BEEF LIVER
LEAN SHOULDER STEAK
FAMILY STEAK
LEAN 0 -BONE CUT
SWISS STEAK
LISTERINE
SCHICK
7 -DAY
FOcii-iALE
P RICES
EFFECTIVl:i
THURS. thru WED .,
MAR. 25 t hru
' MAR. 31, 1971
Wtdne~y, March 24, 1971 DAlkY. PILOT 43
SHOULDIR PICNIC CUT CALIFORNIA GROWN ' FAMILY PAK 3·LBS. OR MORE •
f Rl lHWHOLIBODY ·J', GROUND PORK
ROAST '\ ,.
c
-
' lf-.... t-l
pollll
s1tii.ll , ''"' -
LUER SMOKED CENTER CUT RIBS PORK CHOPS
FARMER JOHN
LINK SAUSAGE
STEWING ~
CHICK-EN BEEF ' -
c ,c
---·-··· I I
I
I
I
l·lb.
pli.g. 59c DRUMSTICKS
STAR *'GLOW
4·PC.
PLACE SEnlNG
:
•• I
I
I
I
, BANANA
, ,110colA 1£
, cotOMU1
o ltNIOM ·
• MtOPOl11 AM
• DINNll PLATE
•CUP
• BllAD & aun11 PLAT
• SAUCll ·
PAY
ONLY
c
W i!h Thi1 Co11pon & $!1.00 P11n:hcue.,. ,.,_,..
(E•d vding flvril Milk, liql>Ot or Toboc10)
FOOD GIANT
FRANKS
ALLMEAT
12·0Z. PKG,"
GALLO "from Old San Fronciw:o"·3·0Z.
••
c
SALAMI 4ftc.
SLICED ITALIAN 6°11. 95c 7 .
FOOD GIANT
DANISH HAM
ILICID4-0Z.
IMPORTED AUSTRIAN ALPS
SWISS
CHEESE
BUDDlG'S ASSORTED
SllCEO
6·0Z..
,KG.
CHIPPED MEATS
FINLEY'S
ORIGINAL FORMULA
DRY GIN
,QUART' s36t
LIEBFRAUMILCH
IMPORTID 88 GIRMAN C
WINE . ''"
.· BAN 99c
0 SPRAY DEODORANT
-;AVE 36< 7-0 L SIIE
HONEYDEW
MELONS 1 ftc
YINI •IPINI D '7f 1b.
MUSHROOMS
LAIGE e9 39C
PIPING HOT BAKERY
1 1..4.YElt SQUARE ""' BANANA CAKE Reg.
89<
·COMMAND
HAIRSPRAY 99c • REG. • DRY •NARD TO HLD I SAVE 35c I 7·01. SII E .
EXCEDRIN
TABLITS
lsAVlllcl an.OF60
BIOWN 'fl•LB· STEAK GLARUC CHEESE BREAD ~;~·
AV.(ILAlll ONlT AT 5TOlllS WITH IA.Kii'!'
DELICIOUS It . &_ F 42 C RASPBERRY ROLLS .,~~<V ~ I 0 c I "0"""' .. ,,,, '"" 6• lb . ORANGE JUICE.~~:,~. 7,J
U.S. NO. 1 IUSSET PllEMIUM
Baking Potatoes
Flavor House Nuts, Blonchtd Peonvt~ • .,, oL .••••••••• 59c
Flovor Houst Nuts, Cashews ''~oL !!... . ·-· 77c
Flavor House Nuts, .¥.ixtd '"' 01 ••••• 8Sc
Jrffy Pop Popcorn, Pio in or Buller Flovor .s ~· ..... 31 c
Chef 8oy-or·Dee8ttfRavfGli1.so• ............... 4lc
T osier's Choice Instant Coffee' oi . $1 1 5
Eosy·Off Spray Window Cleoner 1f\>01 S9c
Atrowox $1 .4Y
Woolitt Powder 413 1>..it.M.11.391 ••-tt. ·················-····· 79c 8ertoll1 Olive Oilir,.,iow., __ ."' __ ._,._ ...... ---99c
la Roso Spo9hett1ni 11~ ··-············· ........................... 37c
Otl N.onte Cotsup :iooi ................. -..... , ........... _ •••. 35c
Ghirordelli Chocolate Chips 11« ............................. 49c
Dow Oven Cltoner 16°' ............................ ,. $1 .29
Rus·Ettes Frozen Ho YI Brown Potoloes12 or ........ 2Sc
Dole Pineapple, Shctd oo. '"-.... ---···· 29c Dole Pil'llOpple, Cruthtd orSlktd• • •---2/47c
Dole Pinto1>$>1e, Chunk. Cn.i1htd or Stlctd"' 2 ....... '"3c
Soron Wn:ip »foet nil .•. ...; ........................................... 39c
Pu11·N·Boo11 Cot Food, livtr or Kidney,~ ........ 2/39c
Ki fly Kore Cot lilt tr 1S.ll ............... --·-···· ... -99c
Nabisco Ritz Crackers 151otc• '-xlJ 11•-·----·•Sc
2300 Harbor Blvd, at Wllso11 St., llarbor Shopping Cen ter. Co1ta Mesa
,, ' 1
~ ·---,, r
I
s '
. -'
-44 OAILV PILOT Wti rdv, M•rcll 24, 1q71 S PJLOT-AOVERTISElt 2
•
: ... FRYING ·HICK.EN
ioiiiiiii°BONEROASTLB.67''
i'OLUDROAST .... LB.97c ;"
ROUNDLISTEAKBON~l'l LI. 93 c
flUll •OUIOWNCOUHmiTYU 39'
U.S.D.A. GRADE-A
WHOLE BODY
USDA CllOICIOl STATEl llOS.atlTlf11DllEf 93 C RUMP ROAST ............... LB.
USDACHOIQOISTATUllOS.CUllFllDlllf 93 (
' PORK SAUSACiE ........ LI.
IASTUN GIAIH 'ED nHDH SMOUlDU 69' PORK STEAKS .......... LI
MAfil4ATIANIO.Ol.CHUI 59' All BEEF SALAMI .. LI.
RIB STEAKS .............. '' ......... LB.
USOAOIOIQOISTATUllOS.QRTIFIEDlllf s 1 09
STEAKS lit':~'&~ ............. LB.
LB.
•If AHOllAN • MlA.T AHDIAT 59' ZIPPE BURRITOS ... LI
IJPlllHANDMEAT ANOIAT 79' HOT DOG OI • STICI ·-LI.
1STTHRUSTHlllS ••. Ll.99r 79 RIB ROAST ~~~~IBS ............ LB. c
U'DACMOICIOllTATUllOL S 1 ]7 IXTlAllAN•FlAVC>m.IL ' 93' T -BONE snAKS ...... _ LI. GROUND ROUND ...
. Sale Prices Effective
Thursday thru Wednesday
' March 25th thru March 31st
CUT-UP
FRYERS .. ' .... Ll.33'
USDACMOICIOtiTATllllOi. s 1 •J RIUH•LIAN•DIUCICM 57' PORTERHOUSE STK. LI. r.ROUlllD BEEF ··----·-···LI. '
ro·PsiRLoiisnAK Lis 167 SUcED°iAcOI .......... Ll.49<
CHUCK ,HAM SLICED BEEF BEEF POLISH
ROAST HOCKS BACON LIVER FRANKS SAUSAGE
USDA CHOICE OR STATER 'DELICIOUS· TENDER TABLE BRAND FRESH SLICED ROYAL BRAND FARMER JOHN 49~ 39! 3'9~ 59! ·59~ 79!
.t-.t-~ '?144 Ateu.
Otl.NCM 11.0l. NG. AU011m 6ftc • CHINESE DINNER ..... ............. .,
CAL~AMI-3 6ftc • ORANGE JUICE ... _ ...... 01. .,
l• 7gc MoRcToN"OiNNE"'Rs 11.oz 3f s J 25 01ElSE OR lAUSAG("' • 79' FISH STICKS _ _ ,..,,, JOHNS PIZZA _ ""
N:1SwtE1 23' MAS, FRIO .. VS BAU.OED s J29 ' SWEET PEAS ___ ,.,, ROUND SHRIMP --,.,.
l'ICTIWllT 2'7t .KHO'S 5nc CUT GREEN BEANS .. '" 1 PIZZA ROUS .. ~ "" l1
FRUIT PIES ... ..:"°'34c
Oll·IOA flOTATOli 4 5 FRENCH FRIES '"''''''"' '"'PKG we
Wf.Kf,,llO s143 JOMHSIOl'I 74 f'i'/8 SNOW CRAB '" APPLE PIES ,,, '17'
CHARCOAL STARTER r.Vi'. ....... ·°' 39'
KOSHER DILLS ~~.',',"''' _ .... oz 79'
KRAFTCH::EZ-WHIZ --TO-OZ 85'
PARMESAN CHEESE ~::::o •-oz 95'
II PEPPERONC1l PIZZA - -age jQHNST'ONPiES ~~VIAP: '"' 7 if•~~
l llTTlA Ill' QR V(AL 73' VAH Dl ltAloOPS 45' FLASH STEAKS _ '"' CHICKEN PIES ........ ,."
1 \CHUNK TUNA '"'"'"0
'""" 53' llGHT ..... lili C.AN
1W1! GOOBER JELLIES '"""" ..... ,; oz 65'
ALLSWEET MARGARINE --_ " 33'
CORNED BEEF HASH ~~~~ •• lSoz 75'
BOYSENBERRY SYRUP l~g8~~~· 49'
LASAGNA DINNER i~~6,',0".-,..oz 96'
TOWllOISIKIMIUI 8'~ J9' tAANf,f\OH TOWllOUSlllmlt•CJtU "''~ SOLEFILLETS --"
fOWllOISI POPSIWS ·-· e Pl zt' We fe1tur1 C1m11ion
tOWllOISI S.AIS 1 ,, •1·
ORANGES ~g~~
LA~Gf FANCY SWEET NAYlL
c LBS.
APPLES x~~:~~y
WASHINGTON D£LICIOUS
c LBS.
LUGl•ANCY•"''""'n 0 2 J9c BROCCOLI AVOCAD s .......... FOR 29 FANCY "'
LAIGlflUHTDfOll:QtsP 3 l •LI. C TINDll -GIHN
CARROTS _............. Pl(Gs. 19'
CANTALOUPES ... LA 19c LA.
PAMPER DIAl!ERS
OVERNITE ..... ___ _ ,,· .. 89c
• NEW-BORN ........... 30·,_51 .39
DAYTIME '"' ' -.... a9c DAYTIME .......... JOo-S1.S9
OELMONTEGOLDCORN w• _ ..... h ,,37'
DEL MONTE CREAM WHITE CORN ... 2, oz 39'
DEL MONTE SWEET PEAS -----2,"' 37'
OEL MONTE PEAS & CARROTS _ 2 "' 3r
DtL MONTE SPINACH __ lo " 39'
DEL MONTE STEWED TOMATOES , oz 19'
• • .. ...., > -~· , •' ' • • •
AJAX
WINDOW
CLEANER
tt-ot ·A19c
IUILL • I
LUX
BAR SOAP
BONUS-PAK
4· 39' '':,.i:r
CHIFFON
UNSALTED
MARGARINE
i.u . 43< 'KG.
~~.:8~:~~~-~ .. .,_ 3 9· -"""""' SWEETHEART SOAP 4 :::~ 52'
TREND DETERGENT ... 2 "'•-oz 41'
DOW OVEN CLEANER TOOZ 11.19
BRUCE DEEP CLEANER .. ..... ,, oz 89'
BRUCE CLEAN & WAX ,, oz 98'
BRUCE SELF POLISH WAX uoz. 89'
CLOROX BLEACH ,,,,,,, - ' G'LLON 58'
KLEENEX TISSUES ,,, ' zoo COU" 41'
KOTEX NAPKINS :\0u,., ... .,, 11.39
PURR CAT FOOD ASS> -·· 2 ~:~~ 37'
CHILI WITH BEANS r!~~",;",~" ... 61'
GEBHARDT TAMALES "oz 33'
JOLL YTIME POPCORN ~~ 43' h'f 23'
MACARONI f?,'8.!-"0"'" l8 25'
CIRCUS MIXED NUTS ----, oz 59'
HUNT'S TOMATO PASJE ... "oz 31'
HUNT'S CATSUP STEAKHOUSE "'' "oz 26'
MARGARINE ::~r.'ow" " 46°
SPICED SARDINES ;:~~~ •oz 31 '
CRISCO OIL _ _ _ "oz. '1.08
:1~~1u,¥:~ . ..,.~ .. 2 9•
COUNTIT snu 0111UTTUM1UC
FLUFFO SHORTENING "' 88'
CHILI WITH BEANS ~Ji~~gr 15'
MARGARINE :6~~!~~~:Ero l8 45c
RELISH WllSHIRE SWEET 39' OR HOT DOG 11·0l
CUCUMBER CHIPS w"s"'" "oz 37'
Hl-C DRINKS ASSO"'O .. oz 35'
FIDDLE FADDLE ~~~~~~?' "o 36'
RODS GARLIC SPREAD , oz 35'
PUSS-N-BOOTS ~~~g: 2,. oz 39'
VETS-OOG-FOOD ,. oz 17'
OVAL TINE S~C::~it~ 6-0Z 4r 12oz.7r PEN & QUILL TOPPING
SUPERIOR TAMALES 2 9.02 4~ PRECIOUS MOZZARELLA 802 55'
RODS SOUR CREAM IMITATION 16·0Z. 3~ PRECIOUS RICOTTA CHEESE LB 73'
DEL MONTE SLICED •CHUNK• CRUSHED• IN NATURAL JUICE 4 s1 PINEAPPLE . .... Ni.~r·
PILLSBURY ASSORTED FLAVORS 3 s1 CAKE MIXES .......... :::s
OSCAR MAYER 4 s1· SAUSAGE VIENNA ........... ~f:s ·
4 303 s1 ·
CANS
DlLMONTE
FRUIT COCKTAIL ....
GEOALTDCLONRN 3c:~s69c
DRlVE•DEALPACKAGE s21 9 ., DETERGENT ............. F.~~~,
AQUA• DfODORANTSOAP 2 4 3c ' PHASE 111 ......... Bs~I~
7-SEAS GREIN GODDESS 6 9· c , DRE SS I NG ........................ 16-0L '
We Redeem USDA Food Stamps in our Orange. Los Angeles & Riverside County Stores.
~ /
DIAL
'AOCAGI 1.s.or..
c;1LLETTE
nCHMATIC ,
RAZOR
EXCEDRIN
TABLETS
NOXZEMA COLD CREAM .. "oz 83' ~1.99 PEPTO BISMOL . _ ,,oz 11.27
PACXAGI 0Fl6 CUTEX POLISH REMOVER • , oz 39' gwm
AllJISTUU
Wot IA• -6 -7..'-VASELINE •ETROLEU M JELLY -• oz 39'
BAYER ASPIRINS ... .. so.55' s·s80< EN DEN SHAMPOO ASST OEAL .--0(~ 'oz 68'
14•00 So. lroo•l\11nt A•o .• WH.,,.hn tfl
707 W .. t NIAeM4111th SfTMt, C111t 11 Mf'H,
6162 Edln9fl A•"we, H1111tl119to11 Ifft.II ,
2603 Wnt S..•enfi!tlltll Street, io1110 AAo,
1111 ChopmoA A••A1111, Gord111 Gro•1,
2360 North T11•ti11 ••1111111, Sonto Al'la,
~ PRICES EFFEC. THURS. thru WEDS., MAR. 25-31
1100 E4Kt CollFA• A••1111e. Or•119e, 2564 W•1t lroodwoy A k l
1522 WHtl'lt!iUt•r 11¥11 •• Wesftt1ln1tfl, 2110 Newpo" 11 d (: ~· Ill Ill,
]4]0 Wnt LIACOIA .... RllO, A11DiMllPfl, 1171 .... , '"-~· ·c •• ~~ ~.: ..
26l0 ldlAVfl A.11•11110, 5111'!0 AAa, 14171 llfl! HUI A•Oflllo, t 111"11 '
12)0 McF11ddo11 ••011110, So11h1 ARO, 14212 Mlllft ...... lie, W'hlrtt ... :
' t
• . . ..
• '
i f •
•
.'.
' · ..
c • " ..
:,:
"
' • •
' !-'
..
• •
• •
• . '
WodM!doJ, Matth 24, 1971
'
NO. 1 •
. .
TllR REAL ESTAT&:RS 40 carnuUy selected, well tranied pro-
fessionals. These problem solvers will
work for yo1 •. First in sales, first in llst·
lngs, first in service! Give us a call 't-
You'll be glad you did. ,,.,,
ROOM FOR EVERYONE
Here's a real family home \vlth separate fa,mily
I'O()fJI, dining room. 4 large bedroonu and 3 bat!\&-Extra large yard with access for Qoat,
arnner or trailer. Walk to the beach all year
round! Only $42,000. Take a look! 546-2313
., _...,.,
NEED PRIVACY?
Beautiful home in the "Private Estates" near
the upper bay. Features new quality wall to waU
carpets and drapes throughout two separate fire-
places. Th1s prestige area home has 4 bedrooms plus family room, 21,\ baths and a (:ood 2000 5q,
Ct. $57,500. You own the land. Phone 646-7171
r .
" • ' J
' ' •
.•
$1500 BELOW MARKET VALUE
And we can provf' it!! If you 've been wailinJ:
for that RIGHT home at a RIGHT price with
RIGHT term!'> your wait.is over. 3 bedrooms 2%
baths, large separate fam.ily room with wet bar,
formal dining, hu~e wPJl landscaped rear yard,, &ood neighborhood. $30,500 -673-8550
PENDING FORECLOSURE
Divorce and pending foreclosure di ctate
immediate sale of beautiful tri·level Repub-
lic Home in ~1 csa Verde. 5 Bedrooms, 3
Baths, Formal Dining Room. Fireplaces in
Family Room and Living Room. Founda·
tion and all plumbing completed and
ready for 2·story addition if desired. Thou·
sands of dollars in extra features and im·
provements. Home must be seen to ap·
preciate! All realisti c offers \Vill be con-
sidered. Phone, but no\v, for appointment
to see. 546-2313
FAMOUS "DEANE" HOME
Once in a while you get to see a home like
this. It's just beautiful! A 3 bedroom & fam-
ily room. most tastefully decorated. Lovely
free fo rm heated & filtered pool with tbera·
peutic pool for relaxing. Be first in line.
$45,950 842·2535
A TOUCH OF SPAIN
Split level - 4 bedroom!! -3 baths -~ i;:ar
Jl•rage. Large family room and Iorm11.J d1n1ng room. 2200 sq. rt. home beautifully situated in
one of f\frsa Vrrdc'g most prestlgloU'l neighbor·
hoods. If you like Spanish design you must SCf'
thi!'i charming home. f or full perllcul11.rs ftnd
11.pp<?intmcnt to iru;pect call now! 546·2313.
$46,500.
FALL IN LOVE
'''ilh this fine family home In ?tfesa Verde. 5 big
bedrooms plus a den. Quality shag rugs through·
out. Attractive landscaping. Lots of extras. En-
joy ntany "niCf' days" in a nice house In a nice
neighborhood. Priced right $39.950. 546-2313
OWNER TRANSFERRED
JmmOO.ia~ possession available \\'Ith this nearly-
new 4 bedroom. 2 balh lovely. Swin1 in the 2 community pools, stroll in the park, or get to-
gether with neighbors at the clubhouse. You
own the l&nd. Unlqur.-location nl'llr UCI Fashion
lslan~and Big Canyon Country Club. All this for only $13.000. 546·2313
MESA VERDE l'OOL HOME
A large 4 bedroom, 3 batll fa.mily room, ~ing
room home with a 16x31 Blue Haven · pool for
great family living. Also for the man or the
house a fanl.alltie wet bar. This home Is worth
ev~ry penny, orrly $52,500. 546·2313
WANT YOUR HOME SOLD NOW?
OUR BUSINESS IS GREAT!
We 've doubled our size and we need your hnme to sell. So, if you've been thinking
of selling -let's talk about it. I guarantee , you'll rece iv e courteous attention end pro·
fess ional guidance. We are the only company that offer. complete coverage of the
entire Beach Area .•• More offices here -exposure where it helps you. We're worthy
of your confidence -ask any of our former clients or make us 'pr~ve it to you.
EASTSIDE
If you want a comfortable 3 bedroom and
family' room home with fireplace. conveni-
ence kitchen, shag carpets and low main-
tenance yard. 've have just what you've
been looking for.
$30,950 646-7171
• ON THE BEACH
Pride o! ownership oceanfront tr l p 1 ex.
Gross yearly income from summer/winter
rentals $20,400.
$110,000 646-7171
DISTINCTIVE
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
5 bedrooms \\'i th a sparkling pool. Kitchen
has built·i n refrigerator. freezer and blend·
er center. Large family room with fireplace
and bar-b-que. Entertain in a lanai room
\vith wet bar. This borne must be seen.
$39,500 646-7171
3 BEDROOM-2 BATH
51/• VA LOAN
Very sharp/trim in side and out. Beautiful
landscaping. complete sprinkler system.
lovely covered patio \vith ocean view, Y.'ater
softener. Full price ...
$28,950 546-2313
POOL TIME
Don 't \\'ait on this lovely pool home in Ne,v·
port Heights. Every convenience for family
living. Four sunny bedrooms, 2 baths with
outside entry from pool. Large covered
patio, carerree landscaping. Better hurry-
Call today to see.
$45,950 546-2313
NORTH COSTA MESA
HALECREST
See this 4 bedfoom, 2 bath pride or O\vner·
ship home and become enchanted by its
care and maintenance. It's had that tender
loving care you've been looking for. Beau·
tiful covered patio, neat manicured yards.
You'll be surprised !or only
$28,500 546-2313
$1500 MOVES YOU IN
Choice Huntington Beach 3 bedroom -new
carpets, large covered patio • assume 6% %
loan.
$26,900 142·2535
BACK BAY SPECIAL
Lovely home in the back bay area priced
at just S23,950. This home bas three bed·
rooms and a beautiful yard to go with it,
complete with a stone B.B.Q. under the
trees. Room ror a pool. Hurry on this one.
546-2313.
NORTH COSTA MESA
No down VA - 3 Bedrooms -2 Baths -
Built-ins -Corner Lot -Double Car Gar-
age -FHA-VA Terms-Call Now 546·2313
START A NEW LIFE
In thjs 2 story, 4 bedroom castle near the
sea. Your family will Jove :vou 'vhen they
see all the extras -Shag carpets, 3 bath-
rooms. separate dining room, laundry room.
plus the oversized manicured yard 'vith
room for boat or camper. Live now. A skin~
$42,000 546-2313
BLUFFS FANTASTIC VIEW
Call us to see this sharp ne\v listing in the
Bluffs. 3 Bedrooms, 2(L.: Baths. cul-de-sac
street, and terrific view. You'll love the
carefree fun rilled lire in the Btufrs.
$47 ,500 673·8550
CUL-DE-SAC
Convenient to schools in qu iet neighbor·
hood on a cul-de-sac street. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, family room and living room \Vith
large brick fireplace. Beautiful la<1dscaping.
Home you would be real proud to O\vn and
you can own it for ...
$41 ,500 646-7171
OCEANFRONT
\Vhere else can :vou find 6 u nit s on the
beach? Two 2 bedroom, one! bedroom and
3 bachelor units. Gross income $9,960 -
Net operating income $7,640. Give us a call.
$85,000 646-7171
FHA-VA
There's not manv homes In P.Jesa Verde
that will sell under government financing.
Here's One: 3 Bedrooms - 2 Baths -
Large Living Room -Nice size Family
Room -Enclosed aluminum patio -Room
ror boat or trailer. Call to inspect this sharp
home. 546-2313
BIG FAMILY
$1000 UNDER VA A!'PRAISAL
5 Bedrooms -2 Baths -Large Separate
Family Room -Eatin.1? Area in Kitchen
-Cul-de-sac Street -Now $34 ,500. It's
sharp and attractive! 546·2313
• COLLEGE PARK
Outstanding exp.anded Cinderelli-home. 4
Bedrooms. Remodeled with large ramliy
room & Master · Bdrm. New copper water
lines and heater. S34,900 with FHA or VA
terms.
$34,'lJO 546-2313
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
Large well arranged rooms. 21h baths,
\Valk-in closets. Beautiful stone fireplace,
pleasing features for growing family in
the best Newport Beach area. $41,500.
C1ll 646-7171
NORTH COSTA MESA
3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Built·ins. Corner lot.
Double car garage, FHA-VA terms. Only
$23,500 546-2313
LOOK AT THESE TERMS
10% Down -FIJA ·or no dO\Yn VA . 4 bed·
rooms, 2 baths. family 1 room and fonnal
dining room perfect condition throughout
in Newport's best area .
$41.SOO 546-2313 or 646-7171
NEWPORT SHORES
This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home ha s new car·
pets, drapes. paint and dish,vasher. Com·
pliment this \vith community racilities, ten-
nis court, swimming pool and clubhouse
and the total package amounts to total liv-
ing.
$29,950 646-7171
YOUR OWN PRIVATE SPA
Delightful College Park -3 bedroom plus
bonus addition. Large living and family
room. Heated and filtered pool 15x32
"Fiesta''. Cul-de-sac. Assume 6% VA Loan .
$33,900 646-7171
JUST LIKE NEW
4BR-21A
5 'I• 0/o VA Loan
This adult -occupied home ls in lmmacu·
late condition throughout. ready to move
in and enjoy. TasteruUy decorated. large
yard, concrete patio, large concrete drive·
"'ay, excellent location on cul-de-sac, near
schools, shopping and beaches.
$33,950 546-2313
NO DOWN TO vm
Mesa del Mar beauty • 3 bedrooms + fan1-
ily room • giant covered patio, new \Vater
heater, disposal and automatic \Vater soft·
ener -heavy shake roof and dandy yard
for kiddies· CRY priced at $31 ,000 · Home
alreadv appraised.
$31 ,000 546-2313 or 142·2535
THE REAL • ·::
NEWPORT BEACH
1700 Newport Blvd.
646·7' 71
COSTA MESA
2790 Harbor Blvd.
546-23 r 3
HUNTINGTON BEACH
1793 i Beach Blvd.
842.2535
CORONA DEL MAR
332 Marguerite
673 .8550
MESA VERDE SPECIAL
l\love in tomorrow in this freshly decorated' 3
bedroom A: f&mily room with fi replai:e--2 min•
ute ""alk to all store~n be ~een anytime. Call
now.-$28,000. 546-2313
MESA DEL MAR
2 story elega nce FHA-VA S bedrooms, 3 baths,
family room, large living room, walk to: All
:tchools, the park, shopping. Il'!I sharp -1harp.
Priced $39.500. Call ~6-:.!313.
BEAUTIFUL CLIFF DRIVE
Quality custom construction! Better than 1'1('11•
condition ? Truly minimum care yard ! l..ocatC'd
in much desired Newport Heights! 3 Bedrooms, :I
full baths. Huge Family Room, PricOO Right at
S49,900. -· Cll.11 646-7171. Let us show you !his
very special home today.
Retirement In . Corona del Mar
At a price YOU can· afford. Check into th it
charming one bedroom home plus income.
Call no\v for an appoint1nent to see.
$32,900 673.8550
EXCITING VALUE
Ir you \Vant a 3 bedroom home \Vi th warmth
and charm, this is it. Brick fireplace, shut-
ters with over-draperies in every room, wall
to wall carpeting. Extra large patio \\'ilh
built-in bar-be-que. Curved bri ck entry walk
and decorative brick fence. Two years old
and better than new -714 re assumable
Joan .
$30,200 842-2535
BUILDER'S CLOSE-OUT
S2000 UNDER Fi-fA APPRAISAL
4 Sedroom -2 Baths -Fanl;ily Room
\Vith Firepblce -J.Ot}-b Dov.·n or FHA .
Buijder says Sell at $35,750. Ca ll for show·
ing 541J.2313.
FEATURED BY~ LA. TIMES
Yes, this 5 Bedroom, 2 Bath Spani;h style
home was featured in the L.A. Times, It
has a large 20x40 heated pool with Span·
ish decor. The garage has been converted
into a fantastic ramily room for that good
life. Private front courtyard. 1r y9u like
Spanish you must see this for only '37.950.
546-2313
•
INVESTMENTS
2784 Harbor Blvd ., Suite 20 II
Costa Mesa 546-2316
•
·~ DICK TRACY
' " • • • "
' i
~ 1 .MBLEWEEDS
••
\, dnesd~y. Mzrch 24 1~71
"T05S M!:
TME HANDCUFF~ ANO
RAJK YQUf! HM«>S.
/' ,, By Tom K. Ryon
ltt15 IS GOING lb
JUDGE PARKER
'· I ' ' , ..
' ' '
HOW DID
)t)U MEET
BETSY?
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tl!O 01/E Of MV
tll'1TER PAYS .
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·---------.... "F"1ii•<srr., ME-'NWMILE.. YES, MIZ. KANE
By Horold Le Doux
WOULD IT BET I DOUST IT •• !UT
OPEN AT THIS I 00 KNOW IT'S S,..M, -'UNT M-'IZTl-I-' SEEMED 50 6E sure TELL ME, l=RIEJID.. ..fl.IEIZES ONE
CoNC.ERNEP -'BOUT HEIZ NEPl-IEW HE JrlEEOS IS THERE A USED C-'R -'!OUT THIZEE TIME .01= OPE>.! BV 861-!T OJ
l>.I TI-IE LETTER' SME WROTE AAD W-'NTS LOT ,t,.NYWHERE !LOCKS ~TM NIGHT? THE MOIZNING!
THAT I !=EEL A. COMPULSION HEl.P1 AROtJNP HEl('.E-? ON O,._K!
. • • ·-• ..
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" ' '· -
10 HELP JOHNNY IF I CAN! AB&~!
PLAIN JANE
•
~ I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWER I
;. ACR OSS 40 Pinoclll t Yrslerda1's Puizlt Solvrd:
~ p1ayrrs' e [ 11 1 A e B , G u 111 s
C l Rr crtatioo word o A • • ~ E A ""
l-5 Parent: 41 Ot prnd ~ • 1 • J lnlorm1I (uponl • "'t N
H ' Broad 42 Oll1cr R T ~~ !lat p!r ce wor krr : 1 R £
~.. ol wood ln!orri•I
14 Tr tr with 43 N. krntrtcan
, t vt19retn dtrr
., ltavts 44 Par! of
~ 15 Kind of thr body
•· strrl 45 L1!e: Prtf11
: girder 4b Glut
: Iii W1tcti 48 Participant
1' 17 Sin9I! In a trial
:: l.hin 9 52 Ally
"18 Heart 50 G1;in l ~ l lJ Wash p'rmisslon ~ ll9htly 57 0 \mlnlsh
" 20 "little 58 Grratest ~ Women" ln numbt r
' charac\tr .Slf Subsist
21 lmporlanl 60 J1bbtd
w1ttr body: til Ont or a
2 wo1ds matched pair
23 J1m10f fi2 U\\erancr
Gid Scout to 1t111t t
25 Away f1om attention
the wind fi) Prophrls
21J Business 64 Asian 9ulf
I abbrtviation fi 5 B1kr ry
27 Proprrty products
• given 1s
security DOWN
'" 2' Bas ic t1 cts
.;_;32 Lives in l lil akr
vertica l
7 -·-mutur ls
B Exte nt
of surface
9 Roll of
parchr.tnl
10 Cost
11 lilr.
l indbrri;h:
2 wo1cls
12 Hindlr
13 Num rric 1J
suff ix
21 Public
tod9in9
houses
22 Carpenter's
necess ity
24 Rub lti;htly
wlU\a clolh
27 Beautiful
woman
) 24/71
34 Non~enomcus
serptnt:
2 wo1ds
35 Studr nt
)Ii R ivrr of
Scotland
38 Gavt ii
a whid
42 Locat ion
44 Ssii1Htd
horsrs
45 Ha v1n9
been sh.m g
47 Brhlnd
in placr 48 Squander
49 Man's name
50 Number
51 Plant pa1ts
52 Ht ad
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
WU WANT
TO KNOW
HOWMUCl-I
I LOVE YDU,
FRP.NC INc!
Tl..!. TEL/.. YOU-
By Frank Boginskl
-EVEJ<Y
NIGHT
I KISS
MV
PILLOW.
U'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
_ .....
GORDO
......,,,.,., ~I<
MM'/
7.A/...ENTS,
7}EHUANA MAMA··
MOON MULLINS
~lfi
?;PP.I
Soc Kl
'CPNK'
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ANIMAL CRACKERS
By John Miles
J (l),bo
!rn. T•• .,Ill,,..
ood Tne.. .. •rMln"
By Mell
/lltTHIJR, IF lCU
7HINIC 6E/NG-
OISGUSTING
TuRN>MEON,
VOLJ'f{E
WRONG-•
,.,
'r~ the outdoo•
:: 35 Sm11I 1oom ~ JL E. Indian
2 Commrrcla l
shlp
3 F1iend ln
Mtt1to
28 Companion
30 Bre etrast
food
By Sounders and Overgord
:;: carprt ·~37 Nichols'
"' ,bero ~~ 3B° Ch1r9 ts ~ )9'H•vln9 • ..no CUlVtS . '
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"
"
4 St1\l
~ M,al tattn
outdoors
fi Owr l lln9
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Jl Rom an
statesman
JZ Arrived ·
33 Cain's
~ 1ctlm
11 tJ
" JO )I
PEANUTS
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-4!E~ll £ · 'iA\•ii1NiiiEf']!i!!!'!!'l!'!!''.:iJ:'.!!!l VOUIJG Mli'. Drli'K
L.\W'tE~ YOU ARE.'
LETTING ME )Pft.ID TME
1.!IGllT IN rtl.4T Cfll.MMY
I I LI JAIL .'
rM SO~R.Y, HUD.I
BUT 1 COULDNT
GET BAIL SET Till
THIS" MOR."fllrrlG.'
--.. -
By Chorln M. Schub
' . -
"MR. PERFECT''
GOITA 5TOP
E'KISTIN'(."
.~ =.:;...-:::. ... '
.. ' ..
MEY! I GUESS
I'M !>!'.ALLY
C,ATCHIN"1 oN
'101HIS NeWM/ff~ ...
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ri
By Al Copp
-AN'THAA'GC>olC'I ONE.
PERSoN AH'D TRIJST WIF TH'-sHu~-UC>eo!.:'-
By Charles Borsottl
!~No's
~~
~-''
By Gus Arrlolo
By Ferd Johnson
l FINALLY RAN OUT
OF PoNCIL. 8EFORI' I
RAN OUT Of ER,ASEOR'. !
By Roger BoUen
DENNIS THE MENACE
•,
~
•
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JI PILOT-AD VE RTISER Wtdi'lnd1y, Marth 24, l9n OAIL Y PILOT 'O
,,
Everyone Hes
Somethin 9 Thet
Someon e Els e Wonts
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS I .. J You Can Sel ltr
Find It, T rode Ir' ,
With a Went Ad : ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
l•Ge;;;;;;""•'•••';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;G•e•n~1-rll;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;l-G~•-•_•_r•_l'"'." __ "." __ :G-•_••_r_a~l-~'"'."--"."·liGeiini•iri•I G.n.ral Corona dtl Mar Cost1 Mesa
JlnJa Jj/e ******* * TAYLOR CO. * REAL TOR CAUGHT! EASTSIDE
Older 3 bedroom heme "'ith
3 C9r garage on ~~ acre
County R-4 land. Hurry on
this one~?
B/B
22 YEARS or
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
JN Tl-IE HARBOR AREA
CAMEO SHORES
FHA Says:
$27,500-
We Say: ~26,91>!11
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES BEAUTY
58 Lindi Isle Drive
Beautifully decor. 4 BR. & den, 4V.! ba. home
on laJ;?oon. Waterfront liv. rm. & fam. rm.,
"BROADMOOR" TRl·LEVEL
Saturday MESA VERDE REALTY'S Jim
\Vood held Open House on his new listing at
847 Sonora. The owners \Vere goneL the sun
\vas warm and the pool was inviting. About
4 PM Wood put on his trunks and \Vas run-
nin g from the sauna to the pool -when in
walked the owner! \Vood grinned, the owner
S\vore and Wood replied "I just love your
house~''
$23,9SG G rt a t family home: 4
bdrrrul., family rm., 3 bathl!
& lovely pool, Full ocean
view from this 3.iOO It. ol
value! Priv. beach gate~.
19'1.500
Anxi ous cwoer orders ua to
seJI? Disregard• FHA Ap-
praisal -just wan t& action
new! 3 Bedrooms, dinin&.
2 bathl!, built.in range "
oven, Jirtplace. Room for
boat, trailer, etc. Can't la.st
at this slushed price! Call
6-lXl303
Ntlwport
format din. rm. \V /dork ...... , .. $189,500
~1ost desired amenities in this spac 4 BR
home \\1/Cam rm & seµ DR. Ocean/Island
view & dream garden w/rare plants. $77,500 •I
Fairview
646-1111
"(enytime)
For complete information on all homes &
lots, pleasa call: 675-3000 ''Our 26th Year"
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suitt 3, N.B. 6424620
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hill1 Road You \Viii too! 4 Bedrooms, shake roof, sparkl-
ing pool, manicured grounds and large game
room.
--" m II.\\' ~ llE.\fll IORl\I L OL \II\ NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 '" llG~e:in~o;;r~ai'1 ""'""'""'""'""'""'~========;I General PRICE SLASHED! -L-El-SU_R_E_L-IV-IN_G_
WHAT DOES
$19,750 BUY?
Owner has reduced price Three Bdt;iis. Tu·o ~~!hs,
13000 •• 1 ,,_ d aJI electric Condom1nn1m. ""ow mar-=t an . 1 d' d. h ll th' ol Id 1ncu ing ra iant eat. must . se lS year o Beautifully carpf'!ed and
beautiful ho~ . .f Bedrooms, draped. Detached double
l baths, fireplace, blln:S. garage professional !arid·
patio. Close 10 ocean. FHA/ sca""d' thru--0ut Enjo bad-VA rcrrns $29 900 .-~ · Y · ' · minton courls, s h u f f J r
~COATS ~ WAti_ACE
REALTORS
ii 962-4454 •
Open Evenings
WOULD YOU
BELIEVE
boards, putting greens and
heated pools, \l.'ith 32 other
charming neighbors. No
maintenance -Rc-la.>c a n d
Live. ONLY $35,750 WlTI-1
TERMS,
2 STORY
PRICED AT ONLY $35,95GI STEAL General
llE.\1:1'\' li\I'. '
,EST~:!_'I~
Jl£AJ. T0~5
This fantastic bargain of only 2'299 HARBOR, COSTA MESA -~-Call Mesa Verde Realty 54&-5990 to see it. s~.950 includes 4 huge bed· *DUPLEX* D I SA STER stRUCK-this U Bring trunks and a towel ! ! roo1n4, 15 x 20 family roo:n, Spac. duplex; 2.2 BR. + Eastside Costa Mesa home
Choice Baycrest '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! formal dining room. 3 baths, encl. lanai. Elf'C. bl!n1. Sep. sold and cwntt purchased 1; carpet9 and drapes thru· lndry, rm. Xlnt cone.I. Pric· anolber, buyer unable kl
Large lot en lovely iitrect General General out PLUS ever 2000 sq. ft. ed to sell~ complete purchase -Rller
\\'ith 3 large bedroon1s & MARINERS SCHOOL No mistake or misprint. MORGAN REAL TY needs help Submit all
21,2 baths. Panelled Jamily POOL ACT NO\\'? Trade yours, 673--6642 675-6459 te-rms on ~ sparkling 3 roo1n -2 fireplaces -eat· Only Tu·o Blks. away. Re. bedroom home 'vith
ing area in ki tchen -UP· $26 950 decora!ed spacious Three Walker & Lee THE KEY hard\1-'00<l Doors. bltna,
graded carpets thru-out in· , Bdrm. Tv:o Bath home with to futurt' dt'velopment, 60 It. pa.th>, dble fireplace and
eluding kitchen, 16x36 An· extra large Master B<fnn. Realtors Next to commercial. Big 3 more. $33,000 or Best oUer.
ihony pool t1ith OLY~WJC The best U.,.t is the first per-closets and dreuing area. 7682 Edinger bedroom home \\'ith frpl., Call 54.)...8424, Soutb Coast
diving board & fun SLTDE. son 10 SE"e this absolutely All this Plus large patio and (TI<I) 842-4455 or 540-5140 etc., rented. $::il,500, Realtors
Professionally landscaped gorgrous 3 bedrm, 1 batb SPARKLING POOL. 1\1.'<l t ·M=ln_i_a_tu_r_o_H_o_r_s_o_R"a_n_c~h-1 Unlv•rsity Realty 0y~ou=·LL.,..-Lo'°"",-,-th""~-,..,=,°'utilul'"' ,,;I
yard \\'ith lots or ni~ lights home will be the new own-car garage~ Nice Jand11cap-3001 E. Cs1. Hwy. 673-GalO Cambridge Highlands borne
& oversi:red patio, Ai'll/FM er. Sparkling condition, cool Ing, Being offered at only $30,000. TERRIFIC VIEW on quiet cul-de.sac in Col· ..,,., 950 Situat~ in Costa Mesa on a throughout including patio. COVt'red patio, fully crptd .....,, . ,, 1 Th y0 .. own ~-land w•'th thl· lege Park. 3 large bed·
· ,1 acre of and. is home " """ ..., \Vould you believe, ONLY en great corner location. lg• 3 b•, 2 b• ~--+ .,.,_ rooms • 2 of them shut·
E I is reminiscent cl a seclud· -. • ,...,.. .. ., .. ,.-$.)3,900~ 1''irst come-Lllcky vc-rybody qua ifies to as· ed country retreat complete f;fa irs hide-a\\'&Y + doivn· tered, 2 baths, family room,
Jn time5 of rising costs. it's
fun to find a true \'alue
such as this beau1iful
ADULT OCCUPJED 2 bed-
room hon1e-l''ith format din-
ing room. H's L\1MACU·
LATE with carpets, drapes
,'=: paint only 6 mos. old.
Use of l!\\'imming pool, rec
hall and all outside main·
tenance included ln !he own·
ership. Easy term.oi; avail·
able, try $1000 down pa;-·
men1.
Tca.. co:Ts
·~WALLACE
one-. CALL 67:'r493(} sume this low interest VA r::...• I k stairs recreation rm beside l fireplaces, new lush .shag This great view? '4 Large loan . best hurry! C .1 11 \l.'ilh ootty pine paneling. ........J. 673-&Sl8 carpets. electric built-ins.
bedrooms, 3 baths, 111et bar; .COl£SWORll4Y&CQ. ;:tt~2.f. separate family roon1 and ...,..,.. Lovely backyard \\'ilh. pa1i9,
alt I U'. k.t 220 E l7ti..: REALTORS wid_.. """n cnaces. Zoned for "C,--tc-M..-------1 nd ho · e ec ic 1., sunny • 11 -f lUCll ""•'l1·•n• "v .. " u,. 01 a es• near scboo s a s PP1118·
breakfast room, formal din-J _,2E'°'''."'".ni'gng'1'''=Cal~l_,I ~646-4~~57~9-1 -.----;;-----; hol'lles and the price is right. ---------· I $33,000 \Vilh a 5 1,4 '%
· REALTORS Ing room; corner lot.. Com· I· * * * See it aod name your lerms, See & Aqree -assumable loan call ~741;),
munify s\\'im pool, $79,500 DUPLEX PAUL PEAVY. Evenings CaJJ &16-4579 5't6-8640 • Rlty ShowsUkea RARE VALUE -546-4141-
(0ptn Evenings) 5192 Edinger Ave. Wha • Th' 7 --~ -H • B h ts IS Model•. Chorming & boauWu1 ...,.. ........-............ $29 500 unt1ngton eac side home. 3 Large bdrn1'.
t You are Lhc winner or IN LAW SUITE 3 Bedrooms-Every so often A home com· large fa.:nily nn. k kite.Mn RUN Coldvvell,Banker "'-sts•·de I-ati·on neo• ("'"'· 2 tickets 10 the • $20,000.' es on the market that's sO with all bltrui, 2 Baths. MO~~"'" ,,..... ..,.. • v.... Royal Com(' see this c\t>\'er salution $23 950 1 · bla aJ I"" Oub. Big 70xlCr.i yaro, 1 • I to 11 •• d<'ff••"lt probl•m of IV• .,.,, .t and ... , mean 11, 1 c ean even our se s es· Lovely !iv. rm .• new 11\q DON'T WALK ·" nternat1ona "" "" " " ~ 1 • " · $137 A MONTH men ga.!IP! This is one! 3 carpets. Dbl. frplc, I: dbl block \\'all enclosed. 2 Bed-c· v.·here to put the folks and Costa t-.1e-sa bargain if you
TO .FALi.BROOK & !his :I
bedroom. 1 bath ho1ne on
lhl" edge of the Village. Has
good elevation for \'1e\v &
close to Fallbrook's 11e1rest
ele1nen1ary ~choo!. You
must move to the "Country"
at this price of $17,500.
Terms.
83.0700 u•7430 rms. each unit \\•ith sc-par-ircus . don't. mind • Iitti" fixing Less than rent. 3 bd1·m. big bedrooms, 17x14 panel-garage. $30,$0. ~ """'" al !hr still give !hem the prh·acy ... d•n •• ,. 1,·,;., •m olln;•g led dining or fam ily room GRAHAM REALTY 546-2414
:
======I ate gat·ages. GE they need. In addition 10 a Up! \\'e won't ,.,,a.~te space-'" ' "· ' .. , ' " "' I ORAN rm., entry hall, no do"11 w fireplace: bu ilt-ins, dish· BIG FA;, !!LY'. OUR HO'.' IE ----,~-,~-,~-h • N.wpo•t COUNTY tt>11ns available. 540.1720 was er; gcl'geous carpets IS WAIT""'G. 4 br, 2,, ba,
Macnab-Irvine • wcU n1ainlalnc-d home has ing in 10 KlE'al this gem in d •1 · 1 · "' n FAIRGROUNDS TARBELL 2955 Harbor rapto8• ••0 ve 1n & ive! lge cov'd encl pafo, good .ft boat acces~. 3 bedrooms, !ht-rough! Call • &\5--0303 Pri d 1,_ @ · 1 Saturday, April 3rd OPEN DAILY 1_5-Ce on ''C' nose u JUS c""t, fncd tront yard, or l~i baths. a dining room ",1 ~ Call "'""'°' ·• Fairview Plcasr call &J2.J6i8, ext. 314 and ls near schools and 2" Broadway C M ~ •"""· ~....,.,., 3 schools, A !'t'al buy b
be\\\'een 9 and 1 pm to claini South Coast Plaza. VA or S Bedrm. 2 ha, ige .living $20,9fil, 64G--8513 Owner.
Really Con1pany
SPECTACULAR 646-8811
"Come to Fallbrook Coun try"
Tho SAWDAY Co.
Realtor 714: 728-8301
70.1 So. ?11ain, Fallbrook
$22,900
3 Bedroom1, 1 V2 Baths
Only 7 years old, it has a
built.Jn kitchen forced air
heat. Can be Occupied im-
mediately, Hurry on this
one-. .:..IG-864() • Rlty.
HARBOR VIEW
A galaxy or lii:;hts by night. (anytime}
Charming &. comfortable 3/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bedroom, 3 bath quality
home with the JG\\', IOI'.'
priee or $69,500_ You must
see it!
SUPER BUY $17,850
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 675-3110
Fully lmprovc-d l bt'droom 2
bath. & family room. B!tns,
dble garage, crpt11 & drps.
S183/mo Pays everything ========~I with lo1v d-0\\'n payment.
Call 540·1151, (open eves. t HOME & INCOME
Enjoy the comforts ct this Q .!>ft KIRITAGE
very nice 3 bedroom 2 be.th -k u 1Snn
2629 Harbor, C.;\t. horn<' and let the 3 rentall ;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:,
BRIGl-fT & SH ARP _ P(X)L un its help you pay for thel!
Large 3 bt'drm, 2 bath, all property, Only ss9.500. $23,950
bltns, exlra lge lot \\.'Ith Arnold & Freud 3 BDRM.-FAMILY RM.
huge outdoor recreation 388 E. 17th St .. Costa !llesa No do1vn 1erms. prinle loca·
area. 2'6x3a H&F Pool 1vi1h ~7755 llon. Transrcrre-d 011·ner.
diving board. Pre-sum1ner Large rooms. fine qualrty
priced ~! $34,930. I-CANYON SJTE built in appliance.~. Di~h·
Larw1n Realty, Inc. 1\'asher, rangr, oven. Patio.
546-5411 anytime \Vith partial ocean view. 2 Elc-ctric door op£>ner.
Bedrm & den, 2 bath + ;H0-1720
REPOSSESSIONS beautiful family room !17x TARBELL 2955 Harbor
Sparkling clean homes, Mme 37) with flagstone tireplace, J---------
ne\\·ly painted & carpeted. 2, special panellln,t::, smoked EXECUTIVES
Z, 4 & 5 bdrms. Some with glass "'indows, $26.750. Live amid Juxury. W11•cst
pools. FHA-VA conv. terms, Roy McCardlt, Realtor
from S20,000 to $40.000. lSIO N I Bl tl C M
prier in prestige area. sel'
value i;:ro11\ hon1es priced
10 $,;3.000. \l/alk to schools. Collins & \Vatts Inc. 1 ewpor v " " •
SS43 Adams Ave. 962-5:i23 548-n29
$28,000
2 STORY HOME
4 Bclnn., den, dining rm.,
hugp fireplace, entry hall.
park like yard, No do"·n
1-1.S, 5~Q.J72Q
TARBELL 2955 Harbor
~1 ACRE-POOL-HORSES
3 br. 1'" ba, ccuntry-style
hon1e near ne1v park. 6~4 ~;,
loon. ~lay exchange.
Owner!Agt !.4$-9477
For that item under
try the Penny Pincher
EMERALD BAY
Owner transferred. n1us!
sell! Steal t.his one at
Fantastic white water view $34.500~
from this immac. 4 bdrm. Ellis-Schrader, Rltrs.
& fam ily rm. home. Com. 892-6606
munity pools, tennis cts.,1---~~~-~
priv. beach; priv. patroled BAY AVE. DUPLEX
streets for your security. Choire loca!jon. !\1int cond.
Sho1\·n by app'f. only. $93,000 2 BR. UP, l-BR. dO\\'n
Delancy Real Estate SiJ.000 Incl. fh(' land
2828 E. Co.as! Hwy., CdM Call : 673-366.1 &12-2253 Evrs.
641.7270
\\'E Loan-Buy-sell anything
Coos: Pa1vn &: Auction. 2426
Newport Blvd. 642-8400.
General
associated
BROKER$-REAL TORS
2025 W llcalboo 67l-l66]
General
your llcke!s. (North County 1 H T II BY ............ 3 BR den J" , A fl'ffi.'> available. A room, fireplace, new crnts/ U"' ... '• • • ?J toll·free nun1bc r is 5'10·12201 .,. BA JI II _,, born Crpts this for only SZ1,00D. Hllr· drpS, newly decorated, dblt · 1 c • ..-e. · * * * ry! This one won't lasri garage. Immediate posses· drps, thruout. Blt-il'l!I, pool
DIRTY BARGAIN at6-Z3Il 2'l99 Harbor, Costa Mesa . ~ size lot. A.o;!Nmt 6\-S FHA 11on. $,..,,500, P&l <•< ~·9
$23,500 $24,950 Leon Vibert. Rltr. 22i19HARBOR,COS1'AMESA · ~~~
Located in Eastside Costa 4 BDRM.-FAMIL y RM. Jl8-05M Eves: 673"6534 URGENT-owner bought ~w Owner 6¥4'¥• VA Loan Mesa th is 3 bedroom home "·IMn C"§h •BR 2 BA -2 ho E I hall Corona dol Mar home -mu sl sell im. ~ ..... • ,._ • • ........u has 2 baths, a double g.r· '-==::='==::===:=::==::== story me. n ry • ,. 1 sq ft I" 300 $210 mo ,. h ·1 4 · · 1---------me 1ate y. $31 ,950 or submit · · .....,, · · age, larg<' fenced yard, EXECUTIVE ugc famiy rm., tv.'ln siz-e BY OWNER $32,900 oUer -all terms available. P.l.TJ. Imm. Poss.Noqual.
lk. ,. 1 1 hool• ed b<lnns., built in range "•o ....,,,,., v:a tng is ance 0 sc " ENTERTAINMENT Furn 2 BR 1 BA con!emp. Manicured yani, 2 massive lfylng. 557.6,336, ~ and shopping. I1 needs l!OmC' & oven extra eating area FP B 0 Gl ·'I "r I 31 '·" I d.' . l \'· , m gs, AS!! .,..,.., '--' ep aces, arge ucurooms • .,.,.~. LO\V do•-lo b""'" pa:int and T.L.C. but at lhi.~ l.1esa Verde one-of·a·kind 2 P us ining rnt., r c ar LR DR d & 2 kl. bath Call .,.. .. oJON ·•• ..,,."' , N d 1 ms opens • 10 rear y . · spar 1ng s. w/good c-",·t & ·-u-price your total payment story, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, garagt. O OY.'O er R 2 I t t tutu · 54>-8424 9Juth Co t '"" _.., .. .., \\'ill be only $189.00 per 1ix2:> entcrtainmen! room, available. 540·1'T20 • 0 or re Unlf over Real~ •• F1-IA. 3 BR, good ~
TARBELL 2955 Harbor existing dbl garage-';;-====,,,.-==,,..--J\gt. 67;;..8989 or 675-4930 1nonth. Hurry, l'.'On't last. he-avy sh~$:: carpets. tree· 614 Goldenrod e 6-M-7908 1 For best results! 042-5678 {Ask for Anh Coats).
546-8640 shaded backyard 'rilh run-* MESA VERDE *
··i ng fountain, patio. For Lovely. immac. home. 1st
morr in form ation ask for oUering. Beaut. grounds.
Eltictt Kenyon or drop in Cov. patio. NC'\V copper
Sunday at 2039 N. Capella, plumb'g. Blk to golf course.
Newport Heit:1hts CMta "'"'· 138.500.
on Ho~ly ~n.-.. 3 .bedrm, 11.~ Walker & Lee George Willi•mson
ba nice size living rm w/ REALTOR fir~place. Extra lge back '.!0-13 \Ves-tcliff Drivl' 673-43:50 645-1564 EVE'S.
yard. good crpts & drps. 646--7711 Open 'tll 9 P:'lf VACANT VIEW LOT
Dble garage. CaU for more cus 100 ...... DOVER SHORES
information. J BR + POOL Very large. Great ou1look.
Lachenmyer Rlty Assume 63/, G.I. Loan Home Show Realtors
Call 64&.39'18 Eves: 673..J377 1 ~ .. Bath & family rooni l''ith "Annchair Househuntlng''
----------lropicaJ setting by the pool. 3.l3.'i E. Coast Hwy., Cdi\1
BRAND NEW 675-7225
lmmodial< occupancy, pri«tl Vinco RealtY CORONA DEL MAR below replaCC'menr. 4 BR.
3 Ba + pwdr room. Panel· 2079 Harbor, CM &lfr-0033 3 BR. & den. Priv. beach
led fam rm \\'/2nd frplc & STEPS TO OCEAN You o\\'n the land
hi • Sp kl · A F •-h ho XI t X!nt rerms. $~2.:ilO ln wet uar. ar in;; -rame ,,.,ac me. • n Home Show R•altors
pool! 10?.J t-.fariners Dr .. cond. 3 BR. 1'~ ha . 2 Car "Armchair Househuntlng·· Dover Shores. Roy J. \llard . .11;ar. Bltns, new cpl, $.13,900
Rlh'. 64fi.lfii0. Opc-n Daily. CAYWOOD REALTY 353a E. Coas! Hwy,, CdM
6306 \V. Ccias! Hwy., NB 675-7225
Immediate Possession 548-1290 $28,700
Owner says sell thi~ 3 bed· 8 UNITS 4 BR •• FAMILY RM.
room \Vcsl side beauty, New-Just li~ted~ Good area of Brall tHuJ homt'. En!ry halt:"
ly decorat('tf, vacant. Annheim. Re first to litt!
$23,500 p y r 11. m i d Exchangors dining rm., huge Can1!!y
PERRON 642-1771 6.,, .• ,~. rm., 4 bdrm"., dream kitch· .-oouv ~n. No dC.Wn terms. 5'1G-1720
We'll help you sell! 642-5678 Fer bert resuHs! 642-5678 TARBELL 2955 Harbor
General General G•ner-al
II c AN ET I f
• ~ • • "'My secretory 11 in love wit~' I I I I I ! An •xt<Ulivo ta1Rt1etllod, i
I 1 fourteen soldiers,.buf ahe soys
1
LOYROP r(•mently-.·
': 7 I I • I 1 • 1 · e Complel• ~ dtttd:I• t.,&t. . ~ • by filling In 111. mlDingi word. •
• you dewlop frOJT1 •ltP .No. 3 below. I 8 PRINT NlJ.\.WtfD r lETTf~S r r r r r ·r r r. 1
111111111
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700
General Gtnaral General
i'(/£11! :i 3 ;; 01 =4 =t ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS!!
Recent reduction of Interest Rates has released a pent-up demand for homebuyers. Walker & Lee sold 1, 150 homes during the month of February; an all-time record for the
company and the 1971 two-manth total almast triples comparable 1970 figures . It makes sense to .sell when the market is the best so we recommend you call !tie person
below in the Walker & Lee Office nearest you for that personal and capable counsel you have a right to expect from Walker & Lee. WE ARE THE LARGEST -BECAUSE WE
TRY THE HARDEST!!
Newport Beach Office-646-7711 Costa Mesa Office-
2043 Wtttcliff Dr. at Irvine Open Evenings 2790 Harbor Blvd.
DAYS 545-9491
NIGHTS 545-0465
CONGRATULATIONS!
•
ELLIOTI KENYON
"A Top l i1ter"
Elliott's satisfied clients "'ill
attest to this -He gets U1e
job done! Thinking of mov·
ing? Call Elliott for a free
Market Analysis on you r
home. Call him no'v -then ~il",,,,,.V_.relax .
VINCE ISHAM
''Top l ister''
Vincenf lsham. \Vho is start-
ing his fourth year '"ith
WALKER & LEE was a\vard-
ed a perpetuaJ trophy for
"Top Lister" for "Most Li st-
ings Sold". Mr. Isham has
over 20 years experience in
15elling homes. was former
owner-m anager of an escro'v
company nnd has been active
in rea l estate boards and co m·
munlty affairs.
"Call Isham for Action!"
Huntington Beach Offic-842-4455
7682 Edinger Opjtn Evenings 540-5140
OPPOSm HUNTINaTON CINTll
TOP OFFICE LISTER
MILLY DUNNIGAN
Tops not only in selling but
in listing your house to sell,
Milly bas become an expert.
lier up to the minute knowl-
edge of marltet condlllons
cannot be taken lightly, If
you are Interested in 1getting
lbe Best Results -Call Milly.
. .
'
Fountain Valley Office
Brookhur1t across from Linbrook Hardw1,..
961.J371 Open 'ttl 9,00 P.M.
JOAN GAFFNEY
"TOP OFFICE LISTER"
Jt has been said, "If you want '
sornething done, give it to a busy i
person". Also. "A body at rest.
lends to remain at rest and a body 1 in motion tends to remain in tnO:.
lion". The~e quotations certainly.
apply to our gal Joanie fur in adi-
dttion to raising 3 children (and_.
husband ). being a Den Mother, ~op
Scorer on her bo\vling team, ahi!
\Vas the "Top Lister'' and "Monc;y 1
Earner'' in her office for lhe montli i
of February. Call Joan today!
-·
'
. . ' ' . .. ... .. ... .. . ~ . • ' .. ' • • •
qAJl.y P!lOT WtOnfldQ, Mardi 24, 1971 WtdnndlY, Mvd'I 24, 1971 PILOT ·ADVERTIS(R 19
I ~~~ a---___,~ I -"'-I[!! I _, .... l~I -1"• l~ .__[ _·~_:r·__,l(i [ -I~ I -"'-~~
SVPEJ\ BUY, AU. TtR.tilS
j f,l:lllc;;•·t~ bl, A-l arta. Ck>6c
, tO ~ JOhn't l all scnoots.
1·1 Tbtrtt' don't 111.~t. $23,500.
OnrJt\81 ~116
·STEAL IT AHO RUN
BEACH-ONLY $16,500
,...BY OWNER $28,500 JUST LlSTED! Unhellitv-lf~ill.,. 2 b«. i>ln'1 nn, }o·a1n able. Clean Ill a pin and
rm:· Fbtt:td air, Lee pool, '"'ice a.t sharp. Modern
ltt~Sm;;;:ia.1~1:.,;®~'~'"~·~"""r..:::'"'7--"'""~ I charm. Huge roonu. Spark-MEil vERo¢:Loveb' 3 Br. ling all-e.lec kitchen with
2 Ba, Blhw. Bu,y from bar, Gold decorative mir-
0 w n "' r It ~ve! Days ror in dlning area. SJiding
RJ:>.lMl, eves MG-ml gla&¥ to huge patio. 2-<:nr
UST'F'..J>, E-51 de garag<' V.'i1h boat door.
1 ~~·'1jt'l(. ~9.~. GI M ct.11\·n. &hools and shops ne11r-by.
~l5on,.,.R1,lr 5-16-SJl!tl Jog to beach. Lo1v low do\\'n,
Point ~-~ hun-y, Ca.Ji t71~)
WHAT YOU SEE IS
,0 ,WHATYOUGET!
mlCl ;.ou get 11 1ot ol 1~.•P
io !hi!! .m1r.:ic.drt~ 4 BD-
R.l'f;:! RA , splil Jr,·el. l..argt
f'URISf E 01.,0\ '" NF.Al.TONS
I . famil)' n11, top i;r-.. dt car· I 19131 Brook:hursr Ave.
. Pt'I e.,J di'8p:!S. 700(1 !«J. It.! Huntin t Be C'h ~ OOEP to hl\.rtor. $.17,:iOO. l./!111 1 -g on a
r tioo'n. 1 $700 TOTAL CASH
POINT REAL TY Customized 4 BR Tov.'nhOust.
~ll.j(j Coast Hwy, Dana Point Like new, shag crpls, drps,
... • (714) 49&5323 cov pario. Pools, putting
11 gretn, tenniJI courts, club N.l"'W 3 BR Residence, ocean house. Walk to ,chools,
• view. 34051 Calllta Dr., S.10.950. Bldr 642-4905 shoppg, bank.•. CaU 847-8b07 EV!'S: 988-4377.
Dover Shores * UNEXCELLED
I VIEW
:' Picturesque European style ,
• · but conremporary & conven.
', f ient, for family & entenain. :~ Ing. 5 ba1hs. 4-car garage + ' • n1any stra features. Slii9,j(K}
~ :HS-7249 .::11.""':...:.:"" ______ _
• East Bluff
lx'ar1ng 1rees, lllf'):C' C'Over-
rd patio. sharp clean home
1n prrsogc neighborhood,
cul-dl'-sar lot. C&flM'lJi,
dl'aPf'~. dhlr gar., aswme
rx1s1111g t,IA loan, o<:~11n
v1e11· •bark yan1) S('t' today.
SUPER SH AR P-1 t '~ im-
maculn1e. 3 Bedroon1 homf'
in quiet rcsidrn1ial area -
clOlle to ~!'lool11 & !!hoppi~.
For $30,9ii0 th11 has to be
1 the be~I home lot the monry
'ln Huntinglon B ('a ch.
•Ca rpets. drapr~. hlt n<, plU8
'plus! plus! Call 3-l:Hll21,
, South Coalll Rt'<tlCOr'!I.
$100 Total Cost
Ct or low down t1lA. • 8'<1·
'rn1, 2 ba. wl 1Xl0l rhro\\·n in,
• 'A real OOy !n choic'(' lltta.
~ Vacant. l\lovp 1n NOY.'!!
WOWl-$30,5001-
Low VA/FHA Ter ms
4 Bedroomst Lge Deni
Crpts, drps, u·on'I las!~
Can assume Jou. int Joan~
HAFFDAL REALTY
Sl2-4~&s Eves: 541-2446
to cHg. \'eteran, payablf'
S2'l9.:>.l prr 1no,, fot 360
mos., "-ith an annu11 per.
ccnlitge ra1e of 71{ ~'. Call
now for appt.
MISSION REAL TY
~:; So. Coul Hv.·y .. Lagu na
Phone (7141 494-0731
Lovely 2 Br/Ba. Cond;-
Laguna Beach HotM
IDEAL fnr year round co1n-
lor1 & l[faclous relaxrd 1iv-
u11t. Ali exterior n1alntain-
arH'<' altrndt'd. Trnnis
courrs, only 100 1ttPt1 lo prl·
VA ie beach, also overklok11
:1 Adam:oi, lf\lnting1011 Bch. ~lnmorous heatNI pool. AU "'<--= 962~5522 ____ rlrr kl1. 1111•1: rt'frii;:. rAnj'.:tr,
C.ollin• & Watts
Iii di-'h"a.~IX'r I;, disp()S&I. Com-
PAIJ\'T I: &\VE SS plc1cly rarrw•lrd WAii to Wllll
Utrgc bt-flroom1. 1\. bath, thruou1. U.11\'<'t levrl JAun-
lir lamily kt1chen, ~OOrt dry ha:1 •1shr'dryl!r, 1tor-
walk 10 IChoot. handy man a~(' room ! douhle carport.
can buy at $25.200. Or mak,. This i& a rorne.r unll in
an offt.r, owner if'11\•lng bcAut, lndscpd, patroled
c.lll. next ..,..,,k, nrt.'a. C.lltt 10 market •
L•tun• ~ .. Uhlvorslti l'•rk Income Property 166 Money to L .. n W =·:;:c;;o;;,uNTR~Y..-· ~1 ;;~\i .. es;;T;;;;Bu;;;y=;;;leoTsRTA
1
.,LMExifA--Cas'" Fast'·
Houlff Unfurn.
LIVING IV• slncertly bol~'' lb" 10 I~
Fann il)ofe cottaae ~und-be the bett buy in Unh·.eni· The clot.est you can COlTlf: to
FA:\llLY Wanted : 2 br, fncd
yd, enc pr, kids, peUI. $140
ALA Rentals • 64~
$150 geciudtd l Dr. Fncd
yard I aar. Nice an:a,
Blue Be•con * 645.0111
SPAC. 3 Br, 2 Ba, all bllnl,
CJD. Kids • pets. $170.
ALA Rental• e 64~
J165-Spaclou1 3 Br, 2 Ba,
bltns, famUy or 1ngl1 ok.
Blue Be•con * 645.0111
L.AGUNA-2 Br I u x u r y
w/vlew, \\·alk to bch. $180.
ALA Renta!J: • Sl5-3900
JUG-walk to towri, 1 Br, w/
gar. StovP. Vaeant.
ty Park! 3 Bdrms, l d1nlna; 11 I f f f I II cd by tov.·erln; trff1, In ril'I. PLUS a huge "bonus \' 11J or l'M a ter an n • ~•ffiu.l arta, on 2 iou. room" (lS X _ n 1 Imma la.l 1.t1vt1tn1ent of onb' 20%
Main houle heated by C9· .JOI ' c. down (approx. $8.'IOO) la tll1i
book ,1ov•· wood deck & cond. & prl«d at juat $3!.450 \\tell localed wesf.llde tri-
private J*li~. Brick walka:. INCLUDING THE LAND, plex. Three roomy 2 Bed·
1-Btdroom In main houH, wUh xlnt tcrmJ available. room unit1 with Hparate
with attached double garage 1araies, hardwood lloon
& 1unt00rrt. Separate 1tudlo and private patio areu ex· "J i11l1 'I '1•1lil. houae, $26,7:50. CaJI • cellent for the OW'nl'.t OCCU•
pant.
$11,500 ---'i I 1·11 llnr ..A-Olan
REAL ESTATE "SINCE UM''
111 \\f Pstern Bank Bldg
1190 Glennl'yre St. Unlvertiry Park
'9M"3 5'>-0316 D•y1 13).0101 Nights
-. $46,500.
lmmac 3 Br home xlnl
area. i.oveJy irouncb." 2 Car l Rall Enate, j /Al
garage. 1'~ireplaee. _ Gener.i _ ~
• 562,500 • I';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ Fantastic Olde Engllsh borne. I•
\Voods Cove area. Xlnt AcrND• for sale 150
grounds w/kits ol ahnlbs. ............-..C PLACE REALTY 494-91G-I R-3 or -~ zoning, _I+ actt,
2969 S ,..__ H LB owoer v.1ll suboniinate OR
· ...... st V.'Y, !f.3 acres prime C'Orner ion.
3 UNITS nr beach, shops, ed C·l. Trade -Jong 1ern1
\'icw, lum. IO<;.. do11.•n or lease or sell. 011.·ners anx·
trade. $49,500, 49-1-492:> ious, try anylh1ng.
Lido Isl• Larwin Realty, Inc.
RUSTIC -CHARM
546-5411
•WANTED•
Real Estate Office
\Vill buy exishng busine.n
or adl'quatr officr in good
location. Call )fn;, Smilh,
&l>3900.
REALTORS
SL'ICE 1944
'early »ew :l bdrms., ranl·
ily rm. & ki1chen 1\·irh hllns.
2 Full baUis Lo\'C'lv nr11
carpeting. siont-fr°P k·. :i 673·4400
f7).15S0
· TH£: RJ:AL ,R_ l:STATI:RS . . . ,.
Lots for Sole 111 -FORECLOSURE
2~»: acrt borlo! ranch repos-
se!led from fonner aero-
space employee now avail·
able at developers cost.
SAVE $300)
on these fabulous, oak stud·
ded, ranch. size spt'l!ads.
Located in the booming
South Coa.11 area near San
Juan Capl!trnno. H lg h
above the smog, private
roacf"i~ed gate guar-
antee the natural beauly of
this"' former Spanish Gran!
11urrounded by beautiful
Oevelancl National forest.
All utilities available.
PRICED FRO~t $9,950
LOW DOWN.EASY Tat.'lS
'---'"'_"'_"_
1 __.ll •I
Busln•ss
Opportunity 200
DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED
HUJ\'T'S ''SNACl\-PACK''
New mul1i-million do 11 a r
adver1ised snack pack pro-
ducts. NEED N 0 W !
Reliable men or ,,·omen in
your area lo SPrvice fasl-
moving coin operated pro-
duct!! in company :tPcured
locations, commercial 01·
fa ctocy. Part or full time.
6 lo 12 hours per week.
Distributor of product only
loo atriliatrd \\'llh Hun1s-
ht l 2nd Trust Dood1
>'REE APPRAISAl.S
Cott_• Mesa Investment
541-7711 onytlme
1st TD Loan-
•% % INTEREST
2nd TD Loan
Term& based OD eqully,
641-2171 545-0611
Serving Harbor area 21 yrs,
S.ttl•r Mo"11eeo Co.
l36 E. 17th Street ------· Blue Beecon * 645-0111
~----"';--~]~[ l;il!~) 11.c_o_l'ONl __ d_e_l_M_e_r __ _ -• FIREPLACES * 2 BR. house, bltns ...... $22~
2 BR. apt., lar5e ........ $250 HouMs Furnished 300
General
• • • JOANN ROSENDO
499 C.1nyon Acres Dr.
L.1guna Beach
\'ou arr t~ v.·inflt'r of
2 ticke ts to the
Royal
lnternation.11
Circu1
4Jl W. 1 tt\. C.-. M ...
Un!venity Realty 6iJ..6510
CAMEO Highlania. 3 Br. 2
Ba. Ocean vie"" Priv.
beach. HOME SHO\V
REALTORS 67;.._j22,j
Costa Mesa
SPARKLING 3 bedroom, 2
bath OOme wHh large family
room, all bltns, f u I I y
carpeted, nice e n c I o s e d
yard, excellent location.
U-ue $250 per mo., owner
\\'Ill consider optJJn to purcha§e. Call 54 5-8 42 4,
South Coast Ret.ltors.
e CHARJ\.tlNG 2 br duplex·
Crpts, drp1, bltns, scrttned
patio, pvt yard Ir garage.
1 child only, no pets.
$170/mo. 210~ Cttil Pl. Un
~arl 646-TaJ.5.
SPACIOUS l-4 Br, 3 ba,
Fam rm, La:e fncd yard,
Frplc, $350. Call Jim at
645-1976 or 833.-2113
BUDGET SAVERS LEASE 4 br/2 ba, lg !ncd
STEPS to BCH-Sml yd for yrd, Chldm OK.
pet, encl gar, LAGUNA $115 * * 646--5714 * * ~'!NEST AREA·Lo\'ely yd, 1 =-c=~~--=---~ Br. child ok. UU pd Sl.20. 2 BR. Duplex. Garage, No
ALA Rent.1ls e '4S.3900 pets. Adul~. $144/mo. 733
YAJ\"J'ASTIC VIE \V ot
Neu·port Bay, Balboa Island
.t Ocean. Nearly new
:)panish. • style 3 br, 3 ba
exe<'Utive home. \Vill lease
furnished or unfurnished.
Live-in maid incl, $1100 mo.
113m2-Ieti4 or TI4 /645-1353.
PANORAMIC View Y!'hite
\\'ater & San Joaquin Hills,
Beach block, 2 br, Jge patio,
additional oU-strett parking:
Lease $397/mo. 675-29&1
Laguna Niguel
2 BR. View of Mis. Available
to end of school year. ?-.Ir.
Peterson TI4: 511-4573
Newport Be.1ch
WATE RFRO'"N""T_H __ O_M .... E
2 BR. + BR. on Jov.·er level.
Beaut bay view. Pvt. park
w/fiov,.·er1 Ir. trees. From
April 1 thru Aug. Li
Wesl•y N. Taylor Co.
REALTORS
2111 San Joaquin Hills Rd.
NE\VPORT CENTER &W-4910
HouMs Unfurn. 305
General
'V, \Vilson. 548-2802.
2. BR hse, no pel$, $160/mo.
$50 cleaning fee. 19 9 4
Pomona
HOUSE in court, 2 Br, cprt..s,
drps, patio. 976 \V. 17th St.
No. A, C)l. 54S-2&39
D.1n• Point
3 BDR.\t, 2 Ba, family rm,
cpts, drpe. Lovely l•iew,
$245. avall. Apr. 5, 496-5023
Fountain Valley
FOR Ise, 1mmac 3 BR, 1~'
ha, new shag cpts &: drps,
frplc, bltns. SUD mo .
968-9543 or 213/241-1588.
Huntington Beach
La Quinta Hennosa
Spanish Country Esta!~ Liv·
ing le. Spacious Apts. Ter--
raeed pQOI: sunken gas BBQ
Unbelievable Living • Only
l Br unf $1SO.furn $180
2 Br uni $175 furn $210
ALL UTIL INCLUDED
Special Bonw; a silver·
plated candlt> snuffer is
yours lt you brinr lhis 1d
v."hen you visit our models.
4 blk1 S. of San Diego Frwy
on Beach, 1 blk \V. on Holl
to lli111 Parkside Lane.
<n41 s.11-SHt
garages, rlec. floor. Don't ___ ... .,..,...., __ ..,
mi"'"'"" thi<' s:m .. iOO. I CUTE EAST-SIDE
CALL G .... ,. " DUPLEX A•~·-:-Oe11• condition. T\VO, on(' bed-
, '7':EALTY room unils 1l'ith attaehtd ~,:_!_!•Port Poit Offlt i garage~. Ch1'ner buiH, qual-
OCEANFRONT i!y conslruc!ion. $300 per
DUPLEX mo. incomr. Sre today -
Good InC'ome. ~J~.:.o/)
BURR WHITE
\\'on't tas1.
$34,900 Tums 64'-7171
"'euon t~OOtl~, lnc.) • no I ::-=:""'."".:-;c--,-0"'.--EXECUTIVE livin.g-7700 liq
selling. CASJI REQUIRED RENTAL 3 Br & dining rm fl. $450. Huntington Crest
$600 to sm:1. \\'ritt for morf' + 2 bath tZ"JO per mo 1st 4 br + family rn1 + lge
information: ln~1n11t food and last + $100 dep, Dial office/den, 2 frplcs, J ba.
Supply, P.O. Box ll~~'i. Tor-6-15-0303 Forest E. Ql!R:>n, Sp 11n i~h·stylt Inner
ranee, Cnl!!, 90.:i()j, Include Inc. Realtors, 2299 Harbor, courtyard patio. Near Beach
phonenumber. Costa11ei;a & Ga.rf lr.ld, Cal l
CAPITAL RE~Q=U~l~R-~ED 1..::::;:L::.en.::d:;,l::or'-d"s--.Owoc-n-e-r-1-I 213m:z.10M or 714 1962-3892
Sma.11 furniture manu!aclur-We will refer tenants to you • EXECU'rlVE 1-lome-4
inJZ" rompa.ny just rectlvt'd FREE ot charge .•. Many BR, 2 BJ\. 2,000 sq, fl.
2 major contracts. Need ad· dPsirable tenants on our Actl\ities rm, frplc, wet
ditional v.'Orklng capital et waiting list. bar, etc. 2 car gar. beet
Realtor 675-4630 once. \VIII consldtt hi-lntPr-Al.A Rental.Ii e 645-3900 space. S200/mo. 1st & last
est businf'&S loan or @'QUity + clean. fee, 8-16-5972 aft l901 NP1\'port Sl\'d., /'J.B.
EASTBLUFF, bra:.iti!ul ~ position in corp. Rspid FREE RE!\TAL BOOK -4 pm except v.•kllCIR.
growth projec1cd. Salf'• th is come in and bro\\·~ thru ~N~R~b<c--,-,h~.-,~~B~R-oo-odo~
rr. O\'er $2,j(),000, Phone our !K'rviCt"-3 & 4 beds, wldshwsr. W/\\' crpt, dbl
\Vill ian1s 538-057'J d I Y s. apts., mo. 1'0 mo. or lrasr garage It. patio, SI 7 5.
BR, J BA, f:1111 nn. 2100 --INCOME UNITS
!i<]. f1. Xlnt lo1::111on, .-ehool~ I I) 2 BEDROQ)f
830~16:>-I f'VE'S. \VALK ER & LEE' ~1802 11.B.
REALTORS ~--------
Fasluon Jslan1t & Crmn1r~· • 1 l 3 BEDROO)I
Club.;) l\fln lo OCf'an. Sfi.jOO O\\'NERS U~IT
Chi.Tier &U-ot!XJ."1 =~==~-~=~~~1fencrd p11li0s, closed gar· 64' "'ATERf'RO:'llT Dork, agt>s. 01\'nl!'r wiU linantt. TO BUY OR
boat incm, l BR, lo pn~ Nwpt lights area. Pete Bar-SELL A BUSINESS
hy 011·nr tor quick sale. rett Rl1y 6'12-4l'.i3. SH ""'"'°· JO ' SO U , HOLLAND BUS. SALES • On Canal -By Owner * fO ftlfS ''The Broker v.11h Empatlzy"
~ BR + c:onv, den It. ph1.yrm . urgently needt'd in the Colla 1n6 Oranfte Ave., C.~I.
] na·s. \Valk 10 beach. ~teaa area. \Vill purchase or &154170; :i40-0608 anytime
$1~.~l{Xl. 6.J::.-0114 At!, 4 P!\1 efre<.'1 a tax-free exchange. C1iAR:XllNGh°ill~irte home Farrow Rt' ;i l t y Corp .. Y.'ANTEO: Oranr:e C n t y
v.·/vlew, Newport Ht•, 540-217~1. 9 am to 5 pm. Eve' &eneral on i1e.le liquor
f•IS-I!lfiJ 96S·ti'71H. I icf.nl l!'. Bonaf l de ---11 "'"°'"""'"""7:"'.:":':C-:::'.:-I re1taU1"11.nl Cash. Courtesy Newport H•ights INDIVIDUAL h o use QJ!I. to brokers. 714/839-6770 pro)ect. East Costa },lesa. 1-~,;,:.=;;:_"'°':o.::_:c:;,~
f'uUy O<"Cupied. Low ren,als. ASSOC. with $100,000 to ht'lp
Open House Fri 1-S 6,~ tinics gross. Sl5-l ,OOO fnrm lrashig rompany. Ter-
2500 Holly Lane wJt-K),000 dn. Principal! rific profit potent I a I,
3 BR, 2 BA. beamed ctUin.11', only. 543-1674 ~cured. Great oppartunlt;y.
b I k r I I I I l.tr. Daw 714:&47-M62. r c rp "· P:.-tra i 0 ' OFFICE BLDG.
we111 n1an':t •-orll:Jhop '1t:ar-Net i.noom•e S26.500 \VRECKING ylU'd, xlnt loca·
Ai:r. S .. lion, Rea!'Onable. \\'ill sell JEAN SMITH, RLTR iriglc tenant "AAA all or part. Call 6~3-TISS
A"" f'. t71h ~t C\I £.JG..1·.-:s. Price S1i0.000 Business Wontttd 210 -----_ _ ~ RolumR 10% on cash Inv. Santa An.1 Heights \V. R. OUBOIS L"'IC. * 5-IS.7HiG * WANTED: Oran~t C n I y
ACRE for Comm'! S1nblp5l'L~1=00~~1s=L~E-~l20~-No~n!.~~, 1 pneral on salt liquor
or hOmt I:. 11ables. 67J.-2262 beach ap~. Fum, Gar. !O' I i c e n • e . Bon a t Ide
or 673-5723 beach. Leasehold yr. 21Jl4. re111irra.n1. Ca..~h. Cour1uy
(714) 842-445.:> 1 BR, patio, pool, natural
beam ceilings, Nr hospital.
3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, large A\'1.il April ~. $165 util pd.
kitchen, carpets, drapes, 17676 Camerun, 842--5192.
fireplace, double prage and
rreat back: yard. Fot ~nt 3 Br, 2 ha, trplc, fncd yard,
a.t $1 9i00 monthly. Call bltns, dbl gar. $215/mo. ~~
Broker ~15-9491 ml to beach. 536-3216
1'"'RESI IL\' painted .spacious SALE or ltUe, Lee 2 BR,
'l'wu &inns. Fencea yard, 1% ba.. condo. [rplc, Bltns,
garage, n <'a r school and Pool. Ov.'ner, 499-3464 eve11.
st:opplng. S150 1. month. ~J. LGE 3 br, 2 ba, csi>ts, drpA,
~1. LaBordt IUlr. ~ lrplC'. Near beach. $22;i,
COOL POOL + air cond. 846-5798 11.ft 5 or l\'knrl
2 Br bltn•. CID, kids/pets. 3 or 4 Bedrm, 2 BA, best
$Jj() .1tea, likP: tlt'~'. $260 lt. s:no.
Al.A Rentals • &IS.39IXI C11ll 962-5523 Agent, Ask for
Jl\.ck 3 BD&V., Family rm., park ,.,.~--~~-like yard. Costa P.letia. Kids Huntington Harbour
OK, brk., SDI a month. NO
FEE. ~1720.
3 BlJTUl. + Wnily nn., full
dining nn., buiH-lm .. brk.
$J9ll a month. NO FEE.
Kewport, ~1120.
BEST 1..0CATION-2 Br, sml
p:j(I tkaulitul "''tf'rfn1l 3
BR, 2 ba w/run<Wck &
dock, lse or option. 6-1 '-4132
6#-4221 •
Miss ion Vie jo
Larwln Real ty, Inc. I ~hp'mz:, Furn or unlum. Al· TIME FOR
~5411 anyllm• 110 ll\:t11 JM sumrntr rent.
R, 11, BA T(1u11housr, I al. Pncpd und~r markrt QUICK CASH
Asking S140,000. CoM\der lo brokE'rs. 714/83~
~d1 t'nc a:ar. ONLY fl25. 2 Stry S br/2 N, den, din's
ALA lt('ntali • &&5-3900 rm, ctpt/drpg, fncd yrd.
$Ut}.Prh·. lt\lf'll cottage w/ Swim club priv $300/mo.
tnidt-. 64.2-4097, 54S-2'lll ext MontJ to LCMn 240
"'
pool. Utii pd, Tot ok. 337-3452 aft 1 pm
--------· 1 Blue Be.1con * 645.0111 ''N"e_w_po_rt""Bec-'-o-o-ch ---
n1e 5'• ':'o FllA. pool, fur dlrt'Cf P.lt'. Phnnc: THROUGH A PVT party \\'M l1 16 to 20 Prh·ate money from t l:AIO
elc. O\lner, S21.000, ...!:'7-07'11 DAILY PILOT units (run1 011nt>r, !\t\\'pru'I/ up for lsi ,\ 2nd 101n1. +: ON THE-MALL * )IC's11 ar<'a. j.IQ.6i:i2 Trust D11d C1nt•r Inc.
;\ffl'lllri·h U:iy. 2 en. 2 Bit, WANT AD ifA:\'TEll, 2-u--;;lcail"unit.'J lJ23 N. Bro11dv.·ay, S.A.
l.\11'.IAC! NP\\' cpt1 .' drp&,
dv.·hr, 1IV/rt'f. Kids. tlJO,
ALA Rent11ls e 6-15--3900
Sl.f:i ~-sidt> 2 Br. v.'/ g11r, Jrg
~ct or kids & pPt~.
Adults Prtftrred
POOL AVAtLABl.f:
Buy a
Bargain
Border
to
Border
Every classilied want od in the DAILY
PILOT appears in every edition every
day. That means your ad will be seen
in papers delivered to ~omes and sold
from newsracks from border to border
ell olong the Oronge Coed •.• all !ht
way from
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All • • • •
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach
Laguna Beach
Saddleback
San Clemente
Capistrano
(Plus the daily
newsraek edition)
For One Price
With A
DAILY PILOT
Classified Ad
Phone 642-5678
B ~'tlf'r· To"' n hnuiq<, .'.l AR,
:i BA, fpl, v..,h1· dr):.'rclrl~SIUOO. ,,.,_....,
rond11111ln1u1n. S.i9.500 642•5678 for prlv11te party. l..nan Brokers S!nN" J9l9
BETHKE REALT\' 494~~ 1---------'---•-'-6'_2·_,3'_,>l'-'4-•-----"'-'-1'_"1 __ ••_Y_H_m_• __ Blue lleocon * 645.011 1
2 BR. 2 B•.; garage •. s22:i
3 BR.. 2·.~ BA.., pr11ar I
REAi.TOR ~8-6006 ··----------------
I
. I
%0 PILOT-AOVERTISER
Sl\'R I
£ASH!
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
WtdntsOly, Muth 24, 1971 Wtclnrid.iy, M.vch 24, 1971 OAILY PILOT 41t
305 Houses Fum. or Apts. Furn~ 360' Apt. Unturn. Houlff Unfurn. ..:.---------1 __ u_n_fu_m_. ____ 3_1_0_ 1 Costa Mesa Corona del Mar Aph.. -Furn. or Unfurn. ~
][~]'I "~,;'"'"..,i 1~ , ,..,m.oul"R"' J~ I -1or-Jft) ' ""'""'""'""' I~ .:;I .,.,;;'"";;,..,,. __ ~, ~f
Apt, Ud•rn. 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unlum. ..;..:....~~~~~~1-.;....~~~~~~
Newport Beach Newpor-t Heights
Costa Mesa Eatt Bluff Newport Beach
Unbelievably Bea utiful FOR lea!O, dehc, all C'ltt. TOWNHOUSE dtl.xe 2 Br, ,;;:;;i:i;;;:;;,;;;;;;io;;;;;;; ' LOVELY 2 Br, 2 bA hon1(', cbolce Bluff1 Joe. 2 BR. BBQ, relrlg/~icr,
Crpte/drps, frplc, 2 :Pat\ns, oven rotisserie, t re ll h I y
Avail end of April. 644-1623 twtlntcd. no chlldttn. $115
unf, $3'.lO furn. 54~261
VAL O' ISEllE G&.rden Apts. lgt!, ~w w/a vle1v 2 BR, NEW HEW HEW 214 Ba. bltns, frpl, pa~, MARINER SQUARE
Adu1t11 -no J>l'1S. Flo"·ers 1 BA apt. AU bllrha Incl e11e gar. Qulet. ~ APARTMENTS
f'\'t!-~....,.~-Stream Ir dbln~·w, dbl. gar, Adil.& VILLA CORDOVA 2 BR 2 Ba Din Rm fpl Announces the av&ilabWty ot. ,, '" ...... · · · ' ' 2 6: .S BR unil.I for adults """l•ll, 45' root R•<. Rm, only. 673-6992. J.l.owl. View, !200 Month I BR unllu• ........ $m«)
PALM MESA APTS.-
NEW Shill ho1ne tor 1 yr -'":'.:.:'.'.::...'.'°"::..:::::.=::....-1
leASe by O\ll'ner. o1 BR, 3 Ouplexn Unfurn. 350 Sauna, Sgls 1-2 ~rrn, Furn-* COROLI 00 APTS * Avail May 1. 644-ll33 Bkr. desirlnc to U.,. a.m1d1t beau. l BR dim •••..•••••• $10JO
Unfqrn. trun1 $135. SEE IT: 2 Br. at\klioe: &. street Jeve'4, QUIET-sAFE Huntington Buach ty by the tea ln tbs lftll-Bacbelon rurnwi.ct BA, fully c:ptd, drps, $385 Corone del Mar mo.892-1584 ;;.:::;:::;;..:;::..:;;;;;.. ___ aNXl Parsons, &1~70 $lgj & up. Pent.houses $220. (Neu Back Bay) tlafowl Weatclitt I.ft& ot from ~
BE.ST Newport Jocation, 3
BR, den, dinlng, incl lawn
maint. ws. CaU 646-4414
Newport Heights
FOR LEASE • 4 Br. 2 Bath
l\Ome. Lrg fncd ya rd .
Dining room. Frplc,
$250/mo. Call 642-768
Tustin
CLEAN 3 Br townhse, blrns,
air rood, pool, lrg patio
w/shadc tree. Children &
pets OK. $220 too. &32-5959,
838-4433
University Park
4 BR. & family rn1 ..•• S335
3 BR., lam. rn1. & din. rm.
Turtle Rock .......... S.325
3 BR., & din, rm ....... $325
-I BR., 2!,fi batlis ........ ;325
J]o b 1°P!lil,
---1R.eul!or
"SINCE 1946"
ls! \Vestern Bank Bldi:
University Park
Days 833-0101 Nights
3 BR. 2 baths •••••••• $300
3 BR., 2Y.i baths •••••••• $350
4 BR., 2 baths ••••••.• $325
3 BR. 2 ba. home ...... $325
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytime 83.1·0820
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Oassified INDEX Advertising
.___ .... _ ... _ ..... _._JI~
Classificefion 100-149
R"al E1ta1., j.AJJ General '--------'
Clessification 150-184
~------~
..____F"'oc-iol ___,J~
C lassifi caticn 200.260
..._ ...... __ ... _ .... _,, 11!)
Classification 300..355
LOVELY 3 bedroom SPAC~ Dshwht. lrpl, dbl carport. 40 Unit Adult $~ movilll: allow, New 2 Newport Beach. 2 BR IPts $175 mo.
NEW 3 Br. 2 ba, cpts, drps, JOUS. Nice lurnllurc, Car-. Pool. m.3378 Apartment Cooc;:lex Br from $135. Cpta/drp1, FROM $230 mo.Imo, OK
gar. $295 ltfo,, lse led B•1•k na •· •--1 r, 2 BEDR 5 bltns, tncd patlol, play For htfurmation ~ Mr. e POOL .,,. """'" pe ' . • .. I c.. ...... Cost• M••• ···-n .... , •• Corbin-Martin rutrs . .,.......,_ BeautifuJ k1(chen, C.1tild.ren Entertain!ng wW be .. pleu. area. ~7277. -~-rt M. OUCA ey, anaa:· • SAUNA
Newport Beech & small JM!11 "'1·lcome. Rea-ORLEANS APTS ure Decorating this lovely WALK TO BEACHI I er, at ln4) 645.0252 or write • JACUZZI
sonable rent. 357 V1c1oria, • spa~lo91 apt will be a joy. ' LOVELY NEW l 1: 2 BR'•· to The Ottice ot ~ ?\fan. lS6l Mesa Dr. Santa Ant
1 Br. unfurn. 248 Catali11a. • Special cabinet space Crpts drps dabwashers. ager, Mariner Square A11t1, """"""""'""!!!!!!!!.,,..,•!
$130 mo. ApL
4
· ADULTS ONLY e Lock garages w/ lg stor 709 Patm. • 847-39a1 1244 1rvine Avt!, NB, Cal. Costa Mesa Cell 673-2145 Dana Point 2 & 3 BR. Avail. Pnvate pa. 92664 :,:;. __ ,;;... _____ , ---==-=.::;."---· 1 tic., pool • lndlv. laundry tac. • Bm cell • Lndry • Patio!ll Children Welcome ' BAY MEADOW A~ Apts. Furn. 360 SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok. (Nr. Orange Co, Airport; Tus-e D\V/~ispl • HUge ~as 1tve Jmma.c, 4 Br. l Ba, Studkt PARK NEWPORT-care free 1
Gener el ~11~ ~i~. ~~ ~ tin at 17th St; nr. WestclitO . : ~PiaJ ::Or;':ling ~ 4-plex.bl Priv. paUo. livg o?ttlkg the water. 7 Beam cellinga, J)Me:li.nc, priY,
....., .,ts drps tns Lrg play poola, 7 ~nnis eta $150,00'.> patios recttaliori twcnttw
CUSTO).f FURNITURE Hwy. 1741 Tustln, Costa ~lesa carpets drapes area
0Cul..d; sac ai No pets Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 AU AdUlta no-· RENTAL S d I 810 H I i B -L GAS &'\VATER PAID 178TI. n .11 c··,-1,.· • .,-.' J k' ' """'' . ee a c ass unt ng on eall;ll Mgr. ~1rs. Thonipson 542.4&11 °" .~ ""~', aty Townhouses. ec. 1t., * Bachelor Apt $110 * * Call 54S.3481 * BEAUTIFUL FURN. AP'l'S.' ~-~~-~~~-Mo~ El'!'d•,·,FArvo•mCJl$1140.l~B-=E'°'A"C~H'°"B7l7U~F'°'F~A~pt-,-s-I pr. pat or bal subtrn parkg * 2 BR. from $163 * 1 -"-lL.l opt maid ser, cpts, drps.
Balboa lsl•nd
* 1 BEDROOi\1 *
Available 'Iii July 2d.
Sl·~l6:J. Quiet, priY. pario, Lovely Spanish Decor &_.c ?.1gr Ted '-'1doohead NEW 2 & 3 BR., 2 BA, dish-Just N. cf Faahion lsl at
2 \vardrobt>s, fl'p!c, dressing FROM $1SS ~32 washers, pool, patio. 8231 Jamboree &: San Joe.quin 387 W. Bay St. (btwn H.atbor
rin, lock(>(f st>p, gar. Pool. Gas and Wah•r inclutll'd I !!!!!!!!!!!!!iiiii!i!ii!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!LE~ll1~··~· ~·~·:··~'"~7~7~0~'~'"~'~""~·1:_ Hills: Rd. &H-1.900 1or leas. le Newport mvd. ~ mt N.
* 673-f,640 * Sauna. Rec. rnl. 2 Bedroom1 ./ CliEZ ORO API'S "l~o~·~'=nl~o~. ~~--~-~ ot l91h St).
11JOI KC<'!!lOn Ln. (l blk \V. Bt1ilt.ins e Air Cond INDIVIDUAL PRr;'ACY 8234 Atlanta. 1-2 BR. Pool. SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 21---CALL==-=-.::..:=c'---1
Balboa Peninsula o( Bcuch Blvd., on SlalctJ. CarpelS • Drapes ADULT LIVING Prlva1e Garage. Washer. B ts dt'pll bit I RING BROS. Announcu * 842-lS-IS Enclosed ""''""gl's Lg dlx 2 br 1~ b~ v.•/gar ~r:s. 536-8038 536-2727 p~v cpap tic, studio ~:...,"";',; Apta:. Now Available
2 Br.lurn, $200 & $185fmo.
inclues util. Yearly. Rltr,
507 E. Balboa. 673-6880
.. ~-& stor. Park-ltk" at· ' ..... ,,,.. J FUR.'ll 2 BR ap1, Frplc, 1 1 ~ PMl & Recreation Room nlosphere. Fncd patio, CJD, 2 BR. Closed garage, Patio Ba. Child ck. 543-2682 1525 MEDITERRANEAN
blks !o beach, B!tns, Avatl 160 W. Wilson 642·7373 w!r pd. 6364110 area. Chlldren ~ small pet Placentia. Ask &bout OW' VILLAGE ~;21 1. Call 111
orn's: * $13() UP * 667-K Victoria St. $155 ok. $140. 84Z-8365 _d~1="°:::"2"1~·-------I UOO Harbor Blvd.
GIANT ,.-1' & 2 BEDR00~1! J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J$125 CLEAN 2 Br, Crpts, FOURPLEX., ! ~. 2 BA, Costa 1.f"u.
Corona del Mar • 1 BDRM CONDO Gorgeous, park.like selling. * BRAND NEW * drps, bltns. Adults, no pets. DW, frplc, l.mmed cccupy. (TI4) $7-8YJD
1--''-""'cc"·c.l,_1_60'-. _00_2_.97:>68~~ I Closed g~es tor max· 180 Rochester. 54(}.8100 $225. Adults. lnq. 4l50 A NASSAU PALMS T~~~ ae:.r:°~m ::~~~~ • Bach apt, con1pl kitch imum security. Quiet st.reel. LA COST~ ~s. 1 & 2 BR. 2 BR apt, 3 blks from ocean. Palrl~ Rd. 642-4387 Summenlme near the bttch.
'Corona dC'I ?.lar. Near & bath 1 blk H.B. p\cr. Adulls, no per~. 2020 Bltns, swim.ming pool I:. gar. Sl65 n10. Avail Mar. 20th.. -"'='-~1"111=-·-------1 1 &: 2 Br. apt!. Htd pool. $85. Yr!)·. 1 adult. 6-t2-S520 Fullerton Ave IH<1rbor to age. All uW pd, $150 to $170 536.1no.
stores, restaurants. Ad 11 " I ""==~~~~°""",.-~ N rt HI ht Slogles can th.are. $140 to B • ho •-h 2 Ba>·, then "-. u11til 2 blks mo. u s no pe • ewpo • SI I cleaners. 114 Fendea!. $180 110 ILE n1e at =al' , .,,,, 'Clll ""9708 DELUXE 2 Br 2 ba Frplc +<= So. or NC\\'pClrt Blvd.) 3.).1 Avocado, . .,...... . I ' • ·~""· month. 5-IS.7983 Br. $160 mo pays all. .,,2_,6,.,, relng, bltm. gar, Ocean~·. 2 Br Upper. Ftl>lc, gar, 177 E . 22nd St. CM
536-7860 or 536-0J.17 '" "" S175 ·~ 0--11o· la nd~ Adu!'-...... "~" -~s ·~ -e LRG Bachelor, furn ulil CORSICAN · .,.,.,.....,,..,.,, ,,.. . u ·J· i.a, '"' ~ oJ'U-.......,
pd. 2 blks Big Corona, 1 AVAIL nov.'-2 br, all ('X!ras, Park·Like Surrounding NE\V 1-z..3 Bdrm. AU bltm, pets. U70 mo. 642-3781
Ad.it. $144. yrly. 642-8520 pooL Kids uk. $1~9 up. QUIET· DELUXE· shaa: crpfs, dtps, closed gar. Huntington Beach * LRG Bachelor, furn ulil 968.T;itO or 847-tSjG 1.2 & 3 BR APTS agei; frp!c in 3 Br. % mi. San Clemente
pd. 2 blks Big Corona. l Prv patlos * Htd Pools E. &,. Coast Plaza. Off Sun-OCEANFRONT Vu. Sondeck. BRAND NEW lux. 2 Br,
Adil. $120. Yr!y. &l2-S320 Laguna Beach Nr shop'g * Aduhs only flower at Ross. J\.1gr at 4Zl Beach, Smoglree. Newer 2 Ba, 1100 aq, ft. Quiet
2 BR, Avail April & l\1ny FOR lease, nl1.:<' t Br. 2 MARTINIQUE APTS. \\'. Steven!!. ~5-2321 dlx. 2 Br, bltns, cpts, drps, cul-de·sac. Panoramic view
Ba •·-h Al patio, lndry. gar, nr shop.s I Adu!~ _, S'~ only, All bills pd, S200 mo. · ;ip\. nr . ..,._·ae · so, 1771 San!a Ana Ave .. Cl\f HARBOR GREENS & pier. Sl65. AdlU, baby 0
4
...., ~n.. "" On•Y .I.OU,
Adul!s, no J)('ls. 61;}--3511 a small s,;Jr. \1•/kiJ . & ba. i\!gf-. Apt ll3 6-16-5542 GARD~' & STUDIO APTS 1 ~ok~.~5.J0-~~2;:JJ~l==~"°"-=--ll ;'~,~~ .. ::;;~~:-;;Pt;-;;;;;;:c;<;;e
Costa Mesa
* $130 UP * GIANT 1 & 2 BEDR00).f!
Gorgoous, park·like setting.
Closed garages for max·
imum security, Quiet street.
Adults, no pc!~. 2020
Fullerton Ave {Harbor to
Bay, then So. until 2 blks
So. of Ne11·port Blvd. 642·
8600
Bethke Really 1:.1, 2 BR, frplc, cpls, drps. CtO!le
1,"i}.J s. Cst 11"')'. 1...:ig-una NEW AITRACTIVE 2 br Bach. l, 2, 3 BR's. from roo. * FRESH AIR to mkt &. beach. Adults,
Lido Isle soundproofed duplex. Frplc, 2700 Peterson Way, C.M. Walk 3 blks tc Beach! no pets, $155. 492-7332
crpts, drps, beamed ceil· 546-0370 Beaut, big l BR apt. w/w Sant• Ano ./ BEAOi API'S, Bachelor · bl Ad J 1ngs, tns, patio, u ts 2 BR. Jo"'TI.Ol\1 SlSO crpfs, drps, bltns except
S200. 1 BR. $225, $2j0. 310 only, No pets. Refs, $l69.SO. CO~lPLETELY REDE C. refrlg. $2'25. No pets. 536-170
Nord. 642-1097 er s.tS-2'211 235-1 Santa Ana Ave, 673-0395 CLEAN & COZY FA\\IILY . VILLA MARSEILLES
ext 228 UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. N~ Hunt1n~ton Harbour BRAND NEW
Newport Beach e BRAND NEW e VILLA l\1ESA AP'l'S Triple:ir: • quiet atta. Lrg 1 SPACIOUS
1.z.3 BR. Pool. Bltns. Dish.. 719 \V, \ViJ90n &fG..1251 Br • $140, 3 BR • $240. Pets 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. e CUTE 81\ YFRONT Apt. ok ITI4l •·•0 oon So1table for sirn:!r girl, \\t.o "'asher. Ciu'J>C!lldrapcs. Util 1 mo's FREE RENT . .,...,. . Adult Living
likes swimmins,: & boating. pd. • $165. 2 Br. l V, Ba. Lrg, quiet, 2 .Br apt-"·/w, drps, bltlls, Furn. & Unfurn.
• LOVELY, 1re: 1 6 2 Bil.
Panel'g, patic, yrd, gartwtr
pd. Infant ck. 12:192 Edin&ft".
Harbor Blvd to Zodle'a, E.
on Edinger. 839-0959
EXCITING !urn 1 BR apt
JIJ5. Pvl de<k, pool, .,,. ...
drps, bltna:, walk tc lown.
145 E. 18ttl, C.M. 54&-99t9
eve1 btwn 5 & 6
2 BR $125 unfum; $145 turn.
Families welcome. BJ G
SUR APTS, 204 3-2049
Wallace St. P~ 54&-an
1250 aq ft lg 2 Br, 1% Ba,
utl nn tor wh/dr, patio,
gar, cpt/dp. $165. 516-8688
• 1 Br. Heated pool,. No
pets. CrpU, dri>e. 1'3 Monte
Vista Ave, CM. 642--5190
e BRAND NEW e
1·2 BR. 1 1 ~ BA. Poot Bltins.
Dishwasher, Carpet/drapes.
Util pd.
$150fnio. util pd. J.IS.J.202, 52':; Victoria St. ('lean, GE kit., 2 car gar. fhsposal. l~undry ~pa~. No Dishwasher . color coordinat. ~R-302·1 400 l\te1T1mac \\'ay Adlts 5 1.~132 pt•rs. 962-8578 tor i11ro. ed appliances • plush shag Hutrtington Be•ch
VJE\V apt, 1 la1l:e roon1, 2 BR. 2 BA. lrplr. Ups1a1rs. Mesa Verde carpet -choice of 2 color .;:;:;;;oi;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;I
523 Victoria SL
400 !llerrimac Way
frple, l>alh, k1tch~n. on(' LRG dL\: apts, S-140 2 Br, Ne\\' rpl, drps, aduHs, IJO•I:...----------~mes • 2 baths • stall ON BEACH'
adult only, Slij 10t:l util. l-l!d Pool. Newly dee. Play pers. Sl60. Eves 5-10-0896, 2 Br. New crpts, drps, closed 1howen • mirrored ward-•
&12-£889 yd. Cptd. Drps, Bltns, Patlo, Da)'s 540.2510. gar, near shop'g. Adults, robe dOOT'I • indirect light. .:::::..:=~-~I--~-Child. ok. DUPLEX, 2 B•, l" Ba, no pets. $14;,. 645--3515 ing In kitchen • brea.k:fa&t BALBOA Bay Cub bayfront 1993 T\taple Ave. 642-63-1.4 ' n bar • huge private fenced
HOLIDAY PLAZA ictTace apt. 14~ sq ft, •2 7214 College A\'e. 6i6-062'7 n~.tioSa, ,""',. 1,·~ drpAv:d· •. bl1
1
7"',,·, Newport Be•ch pa.Uo -plush landscaping -br, 2 ba, wr! bar, sep ding , ,,.. ... .-
DELUXE Spacious 1 BR rm. Furn or unf. &1~230 \VlLSON GARDEN APrS. Adults. $l6.5 mo. 548-n07 brick Bar-B·Q's -lar1"e beat. furn apt $135. Heated pool. 1 _.cc.c._cc.. _______ , 2 BR Un!urn. Newly dee. J cc::::::::..::=.=c..:==---12 BR, view or Back Bay, ed poo1a A lanai.
Ample parking. No children * $2:1 \\'EEi\: & UP * New cpts/drps, Spac SPACIOUS 2 Br. 1\~ Ba, CflllS, <!rps, all elec. Pool, 3101 So. Bristol St.
• no pets. 196:) Pomona, l{ :\I~~ l\lO~TL . grounds. Adi ts, 00 pets. New cpts, drps. Bltns. $160. tS~~i~ ~~red b Id g . (%Ml. N. ol So. Cout Plazs,)
C:\l. 1tchen, s, ma\{ service. $l4Q / mo. 2283 Fountain 546-17:>3 . . eves. Santa An•
Heated pool. 6-16-%81 LG 2 BR d I" BA * SUS CASITAS 1..:.===c::::.=:::...._ IV•y E. \H"ho'· rurn w. • STUDIO 2 BR. N•w . "" ''· • ' PHONE: 557.8200
BACHELOR ,apL \\•/garagr. on Wllson). car(>{'!, drapes, pool, 1 child crpl'I, drps, bltns & D\V; l.=:=:::i=:::i=:::i=:::i=:::i=:::i=:::i:Z:::
Lrg nicely furn Bachelor & Nr. bay. Xlnt neighborhood. * TOWNHOUSE * ok. Call 646-(}.100 near lloag Hospital. $185.
l Br. Furnished models Call 673-71 ~.'i 6'12-4387 642-lm CAN'T B£ BEAT 2 BR, 1 ~1 BA, Cl'P1s, drps, 2 BR duplex -Relrig, crpts,
O!)('n daily. l br furn-Pool, blk 10 ocean. patio. Adults. Sl60. IJ.I E. drps, gl!r, patio. Children * LIDO ISLE-Waterfronl
2110 Newport Blvd, CM Single adults. Sll5, 8l3-3i15 ,\fclody Ln. 5-18.1768 or & pet ok. $165/mo. 962-6379 LARGE 3 Br, 2 Bath .
$1SS-SHARP 2 BR. or 644-0637 eves 612.!J64j. e 2 Br. un(urn apt,!or rent. S425/n10 lease. 673-8886
Heated pool. Adults, no pels * OCEfu'\fRONT bachelor, 1 Br. duplex Sl2S. Freshly crpls, dfllS, bltns. $130/mo. WESTCLl1',F area 2 BR, 2 -'='l'='~"co"k~l-~&1:;::2-~9='""=----I wi.r, parlial kit., Sl30/mo. painted, pleasant garden Call 646-2'l70 -ba, [rple, bltns, adults only.
"" \\"" J / k't y,1.". f>.12-3-1·13 d' $200 mo 675-4562 ..,.... -... -per, "' 1 • surroundings close to NE~\ILY rrderora!ed slu ro, · ·
Sri. 1\1aid S<'r, llnens, TV WATERFRONT 2 BR. I BA, shop!; No. children/pets. 2 BR, 1'~ ba, nr shopping BEAUTIFUL PARK NEW·
& tele. Sealark 1fotel. 2301 "'/uHl's, yrly S275. 3601 a i!!-6920 & schools. S165. 546-175.1 PORT I BR apt. for 1ub-
Npt Blvd. &1&-744j Finley App! &1·1-2929 * $1 70 * 1 BR. used brick frplc, w/w, lease. Call &14-0901.
DELUXE 1 BR & Bach Apls. 2 Br, 2 Da. Close to Ol'r.an. 3 Br, l~~ Ra, palio blt·ins, bltns, beam ceil, patio, $140. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Crpt11, drpR,
$35 v.·kly & up. }'urn. incl S155 mo 'til June 15th. Util crpts, dflls, Ask about our 1 Adlt. Yl'arly. &12-8520 bl!ns, gar. 4249 Hilaria.
u!il. i\1o. rates terms av!. Pd. 962-8983 discount plan, 88o Center EASTSlDE 2 Br, bltns, S175, For appt. 540-0093
998 E. Camino. 5"16-04jl Sm-1 BR. SUNDECK. St, 642·8340 d1hwhr, crpt11, drps, encl GOLD Medallion 2 Br, 2
SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmol!!phere
2 BR, -2 BA.TI{
""""" & di-po Air Conditioned
Private PatiOs
HEATED POOL
Plenty ot lawn
Carport A-Storage
HIDDEN Vll.LAGE
GARDEN APrS.
2500 South Salta
Santa Ana Q 546-1525
2 BR ........ From $235
Furniture Available
Cupe,,-dn.,__
heated pool-aauna.s-tennlJ
tte roorn-ooet.n vie'Wll
patlo1-8Jnple ~
Se<:urUy """""'· HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE., H.B.
(TI4) 5.16-1487
Ofc open 10 uiMi pm Dally
\VILLIAM WALTERS CO •
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD $25 Per Week & Up DOCK. LEASE. -1=.=2-"'8"'n-. -1-1~5()-&-1-17=0. &:ar, prlv patio. 66-2939 Ba, cpls, drps, bltns, patios,
BACHELOR & 1 BR. 675-&IB7 It'ICldg util. Adults onJy, 2 Br Duplex, gar, patio, encl gar. $175. 5'18-3708 J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1-----------1
1V & maid serv avail. SUB Lease 1 Br garage <1pl l10 pets, 2.tl Avocado, CM. adll.$. 3.'1.1 16th Pi, C.i\f. ;155 Apts., Apts., Apt1,,
4:l() Victoria, <'.J\.l. furn. Immed, ~pa11cy 'til 64fi--O!li9 mo. Ye1tr lease. 5.fS.5218 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Fum. or Unfum. 27'0
1 BR. $125 • 2 BR. $140 June l SIZ'i nlo. 67;...2021·2 °~c"·,~,~.._c2_B-,-,-•. -1 ~.-,-. ~c-,,-,,-. ENJOY privacy! Deluxe l ..,;_;:__;::..,;;....;;:_;;,;;:_ ___ ..;_:_;;;,;;.:_..;_;;..:.,;;._;_.;;;.; ___ ;_.;..;.._,;;._;_.;;.;.. __ I
l'_ .. _'"_m_'_"_"_'_~_"_'"_'__, ~ Pool. Bltns, crpts, drp!:., no BEAUT. furn. 2 Br. 0cf'Hn· drps, b!\ns. sngl gar. 1 child Br, hHns, refrisi:, cpl/drp, -~N~e~w~po:;:;r~t_B::.;.H~C~h----N:.;.;•~w~po:.;.;rl;._;Bo:,;;•~C~h;.,. __ ;;.;N~o~wpo;;.:;.;.;.rt;;.;Boo;,;;;~ch;.,. __ _
children, l10 pets. 32a-J E. front Apt. Srocl/n10 Iii su1n· ok. no pets. $150 & $145/mo. gar, bale. 962-4180
C lassi fication 360.370 1 c1"7clh~P:..::l.~C~.M=. ~"'=S-_Tl__c_38_.__ mer. 645--0735 I;,.,..;.~· ~953:::'.7°"""~---~-LAllGE 1 BR, b11ns, w/\V
~ Sl4:J · BEAUTifilJLLY rum Newport Heights 7 BR, l': BA, !iharp. Crpts, crpts, drps, $115 mn. 98-1 El
Reruals J .& l Br. expandable n1obilc --'--------drps, 1200 sq. tt. Available Camino. Bkr &l2-4422 G) L------~ ,,_ home, 132 \IJ. W i lson. DUPLt:x apt, lrg Br. now, Sl6.l mo, S.1:)-(J718, if -'----'-'-------1
Cl.'''·r,·,,,,-00 400_4 bc 54~9577 fu111ished. v.·/w c r p 1 · 1:; , no ansv.'l'r. 83."i-4427 2
1
BRh"Td..,,·nhsck , I !'i Ba, P1a150t~. ~ drapes, disposal, tilr, nt>\\ly c 11 o , no pcrs. .
NlCELY furnished 2 BR deer.ruled. Adults. No JlC'ts. 2 Br studio-Pvt patio, encl l04S.A Mission. 51j...1882
[ ~nnounc:emef!IC J!•tJtl) up~talrs back apt '\'orkrng \\'oman prel'd, gar, l \~ ba, crpta I drps/ MODERN 2 Br, 2 Ba Sludlo
Tb w/sunderk. S160, 1.2 garage. o y I '"8 c t 1· bit N CM 11•~ Ad""" e $13 . ear y .. .., a a 1na ns. o. · ""' w"", apt, new cpl, nr schls, b!tns, Adult.~. 646-fiOO.J. Dr. 51&-7165 519.().133. P•t ok. $165. M\ ·~ C fa,sification 500.S I 0 ~;':;:::.:c:::;..:~~~:.:.c'=-~'-...,..-* Sl5 per week 11 P CLEAN 1 2 B Adil e QUIET Adu!'-2 BR '
Rentaus5 ·
l\partmenl and well .give you:
• or r · s, · ""· · 2 BR, hrdwd floor~ \\'3.ll'r I l[tQ-l v.·/kilchcns, S'2.'l per V.'N!k nri pets. Lg kit. SJ3:rS150. No pets. Drps, crp111, pd. SlJ:i.mo. 1093 Wallace,
I A I Ly l~ __ ._'_"_"_'_'' __ 5!~-~53.5•~ uri Ap!s. 1'10TEL, r,.is.97:,:; 2121 1:. 16th St. NB. 646-1301 dsh .... ·hr, hratt'd pool. $130. lror Hamilton) 1~~-----~ l Br. ,i;paclOUS, Adlls, $125. Apt. Unfur n. 365 ?19.l }>aeirlc Ave, Ci'il. 2 R l" BA rl Cla1sification Pool. Idea! for hathclors. 5"\S-6878 or 642-4429 B , ~ , cpls, fllS,
Pl LOT l..
_____ _,J~'--199_3_C=-h..:""::::..h.:.:>l::cg..::.911;c_,'3 General 1-"~~:;.1 ~=::._,_..,d-I pat~. oo "'"· 111l mo iocl e New y Decorate util. 339--A Cabri1lo. 548-8803 losl Mid foi.nf $9:1 NICE BACHELOH ,\PT. Qu iet 1 & 2 BR's. Gar &
132\\',\\'ilson. VENDOME pool. Crpts, dri>s. Adults l BR. apr. S135 w /stoYC.
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Classiiicafion 550-555 e Cnll 518·9577 e only, no pels. 642-&J.12 relrig. Util paid. Ad!L~. nn
If[!] NEAT l Br w/ gar. $110. ThTh!ACULATE APTS! 2 Br. Unfurn Ape. Stove &: IX'ls. R20 Center St. &IZ-SS:IS
Instruction ~ Back Bay Rt't'a. 280 Del ADULT and ~frig lncl'd, Ga.rage, Pool. • 1 & 2 BR. Newly carpett>d, '-------~ Mar. (213' GE 1-9568 FAMILY &clion All util pd. Adlt3 only, no drapes, elec. kitchen.1 chlld
Classificetion 575.580 '·ruc..cru"N'-.=,"e~,". =-,~,.-'5/~m-,-.-,-,-13 Close to shopping, Park pell. Mgr. No. 9, 383 w.1-'°"::·~P'.Ch:'.:._,&::l&-8::::.::l=53:_ ___ 1
I I~ Santa Ana AVl'. C i\1, * Spacious l B\'t'~. 2 ba \Yll:'Wln St. Dana Point
Services af'ld Repairs . 54'.l-857'2 or 646-4il0 * S"im pool, pu1 /grren 2 Br studifJ, 11~ Ba, cpt~, s PECTACULAP. QCefln!rnl
,/ AVL no"'·l ,"..: 2 Br Jur11. * Frpl, lndiv/Jndry lac'ls dl'JlS, patio, childrtn ok Nr virw, 2 RR, 2 ba, s!ove,
C l•,sificaticn 600.699 I' 1 ~ 1 ,. No 1845 Anaheim Ave. •mhl & •hop'g. 11~5 .• '~' •-• d •w oo. rec r m. "" oca. 1011. ,,.., ..,. ,'JVl,I,) refrh::. cp"' ~ r'l>ll· .., .. a.
l
______ ...Jll t' f I prt1' or children. 646-~ COSTA ~IESA GU.2824 ...:.''cil"lm~O"'::.:c""'~Y~·~>l(;.-0:::.-"'"c'--8~7-s170 ~ TO\VNHOUSE E-!:.ide 2 Br. Rt'DECORATED lge 2 br, East Bluff
I 7 Balboa Peninsula 1 & d hi---.;.;,;_,..;_ ______ I 112 Ba. Pool. No pets. 1 5. new crp R rp~. ....~. ~
Clessificetion 700. 710 Call b46-66IO ------Sl.50. Child ok. ti.\2-7315. 1~=:::..:.;:c::_:::_ ____ 2 BR., frpll', b11lcony, 31:)
l
rfl't...1 SPAC. l Br. Crpts, drps, E. Bay. \\1inlrr rale~. LRG-Altrac 1 & 2 Bt's, Hid
l __ "_""_'_'_""_''_' _ __, V pool, 11r shops, UtU pd. 1884 s17;,/mfl. Yrly $22;>/n'IO. In-pool. cp!s, <lrps, displ, util
-1\fonrovin Ave., CM. 548--0336 quin:-No. C. 673-1521 or rd 1~4 r.1onrovia. 543--0336
Clas\ification 800.836 J1"-7ii1. " B t• B d' I
NEWPORT BEACH
Villa Granada Apts.
Marketplace [ c~::·.::.:-:J~ E/STDE 1 llr. 1\'/w Cf7ll'g, tCO:.:....C'--·-----" r, 1 a s1u 10, crps,
b!tns, .~undrck. util 11\t. I Corona de f M ar f1l!~. hl!M. No pct~. 1 child
Adil. Silt Y('arl:o-. G-12-S.'i~ I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii ok. StiO. AF1 7, 5.i7-719:.
3 BR, 2 ba, nt'v.·\y ~l<'<'or • BEAUTil''UL 1 & 2 BR.
Nrw crpl"/drps, bl r n 11, ~ '"' -Contemporary Garden Apt11.
Four bedroom11 with balcon.
le'I above & "'t>lo\Y. Graciou!I
living & quiet 1PUT011ndlng
!(Ir fam\ly v.ilh .. 'hildn>n.
Near Corona del !\Tar High
School. Fireplace, we! bar&.
built.In kitchton 11.ppllance1.
835 Ai\ fl GOS WAY 644.2991
llRST
llllY S!
[ ...:=... Jl?j p!i!l<l. $165 nio. 64~7 ~ ~ PatlOI!, fr p I cs, pool.
Orf-$14&-SHiO. Call 546-5163
TIRED of th:1.1 old fur1Uture? Sl11\RP lg" 1 BR, Cpt, Drps,
l t'1 ttally nor I.hat hard ON TEN ACRES Bl1ns, quiet bldg, Ne pets.
to ~place. Just watch the 1 & 2 BR. Furn~ &: Unfum. $130. ~9722 Fireplaces / 11riv. p111ios. I "c0'~,C....:..::_=~-
turnt1un1 ' ml.$<:ellnnroas Pools Tenn\i Cot1lnl'J Bkl.~t. 'l BR. Unfurn. $1~/mo. Irr
I I •"-a '"ed fant 11k, No nnts. Joonn St .. co umns n ""' us.... !IOI) &R Lanl', Cdh-1 64-1.2611 ,,~ g,, io l C:\1 . :Y19-~ 137 t n. !~facAr!hut nr CoMi f 1vyJ -2 BR-UTIL'S PO-
Coldwt:li, Banker .l Co.
?tta.nnglng Agent 541-5221
e NEW DELUXE e
3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. Incl
spne. m<t~tcr suit(', din r m
& dbl )larngc, lluttt door
OJ)t"ner llV1'il. Pool & Jttc.
I J §] nuSJESJ' mar1<e1rtace In I ~ ••ill ~ AutoskrS. r_::.. !"Wt.. The: DAILY PII..ar 2 llR, 1 ha, }'l'p1l', Nr w $1.-.o. 5 111~1.1, SIQ.2.l-1 1 e S~i e
. .-qi Cl.1USifled seetion. Savo tlt't~or111Nl, ('pt~. !lqr1. !;to1r r or rast resuJtll .. Call "Thr • li6j An11~, \\';iy, NB
o Olymplc .. lzeSwlmmlngPool o lndoorOollDrlvlhgllo-
1] Tennl1 Pro Shop o Full-time Actlvltla DlrlCklr
I] Men'• & Worn.en H•afth ClubS o V/hlrlpool Btlha
I] R•sldent Tennis Pro a Vollerball/Bukttblll
o Sunday Brunches c Tennl• Lettona
a Tennl1Cour1• o S1unn o ColorTVLounae
o P•rty Room with dance floor •nd ••rvlce b•r a emt1rda
Here are some of the other nice things offered at South Bey Clubs
and Oakwood Garden Apartments:
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Sin9let, I & 2 Bedrcoms. Furnished • Un ..
furnished. All-electric Westinghcuse •ppli•nce1.
REASONABLE RENTS•: Single s from $115. One bedroom1 fl'Qtn '14S.1 Two bedrccm1 from $200. Two roomm•tes c•n t ent for ,, low •• Sis
each (and we'll help you find• roomm•t• if you n••d on•). Low move.
in cherqe1, No le•ie required. Stop by any day b•tween 10 a.m. •ncl
8 p.m.
Oakwood Garden
Apartments
(rwort IMrtg lot
a1r1111tt & mar1Je Mtulfl)
Newport Beech
On16tl't•tll'lll'le f1'1 ~) 6'2.f17tl
•Re11h Subki[ect to lotelio11.,
South Bay Club
Aptrtmenta u,., .. ..,..._ --lrtlrifl Mid Hllh
(1'14) J4&.0$6Q
Project• ot,. a I Dentopntnt Comp.nr ®'-~~~~~~~~~~~-" Cl•1sifico11tion 950-990 mcnt'y, time It rffort b~·j °": n•lrl~". '1()1 4»-.1Jif, r.r l !lot Line" Dally Pilo! {\flll1D1itC'd by !!!!!!!!!"~l 111J!!i!!!!!i!!liiloilo••""~'"~""~cih~,~1,__ . "f!1rr ;;•1.-;011 Cln~_·l~l•=-"'::.... ______ __::11~·1:LL:l~A~>~t.~\V~A~f~,T~•~:ru~s~.~CO=·-'-------------------------------
... .. ., ' ~· .... . ' . ' ..
DMLV PILOT
Our Whole Family
Invites Your Family
JIDMINISTRATION
Robert N. \Veed ,
President and Publisher
Jack R. Curley,
Vice President and
General lt1anager
E\·elyn L. Bell
Bonnie J. Gregory
t.1argarf\ Greenman
ACCOUNTING
Bernard Schulman.
Controller
Betty L. Allen
Reba H, Canelti
Bonnie S. Chauvin
Patricia Coe
Roland V. Hohn
Patricia C. Johnson
Helen M. Scott
Florence C. Levine
Dolores P. McPauJ
Tanya Palm
Wanda L. Spain
Terri C. Tank
CIRCULATION
f\.lilan A. Leavitt,
Circulation Manager
Tania Allard
Ric.hard E. Backstrom
Hal Bakke
Paul Bartlett
Ru ssell 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. Hutche11s
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. Foster Ouelett
James D. Mullen fV
Ronald Davis Myer~
James D. Parks
Donald W. Richmond
Blaine S. Roberts
Terry F. Ruetten
Frank N. Satalti Jr.
Marjorie M. Su\livaa
Hiram Harry Seeley
Charles L. Smith
James E. Seay
Linda L. Sl.inson
Tom P. Tate
Linda F. White
Benton G. Williams
Donald L. Williams
CLASSIFIEO
Horace Blanco,
Classified Advertising Mgr .
Delores Blanco
Jo Ann Bray
Margaret J. Davidson
Beverly Ettinger
Juanita L. Folsom
Peggy J. Hayes
Jean L. Jobst
Dorothy W. Joyce
.lacklyn K. Kravitz
Kandi Labbee
Phyllis J. Mohler
fi.1ary Beth Morto11:
Carol F. Robinson
Shari J . Slagle
Robert A. Seling
Gaye C. Tickner
Virginia S. Van Houten
Twi\la B. Young
COMPOSING ROOM
Herold C. Andersen.
Superintendent
Paul H. \Vard.
Day Foreman
David Gulierre1 ..
Night Foreman
Anne Allen
Robert C. Alley
Evelyn r-.·1. Andersen
Roy J. Barnes
Raymond R. Bender
fi.1arjorie F. Brov.'11
Robert 0 . Callahan
Carolyn A. Capalbo
Joseph f\1. Carney
Will iam N. Crawford
?i.filford E. Danley
Donald J . De.Fore
Frank Casey Duna
Gerald L. Goodner
Jesse L. Gutierrez
Frank L. Halley
Billy Pat Hah·erson
Robert X. Harper
Donald D. HohanshC'lt.
Robert E . Ho11·('
Marjorie J. Jackson
Harold E. Johnso 11.
Dorothea Jone s
Bernice G. Kunar
Carl A. Knapp
Willia m D. Lit rrll
James Luhrs
Jewel M. Lussier
Robert H. f\.1ac~
Arden K. r.1a l~bury
Gabriel f\fata Jr.
Oonald 1'.lcU>an
\Vi!liam D. Meek s .Jr
Charles L ri.1iller
Larry E. ri.1organ
Larry G. Morgan
Donald E. Pacot
Joseph A. Reed
John Routh
Seth Shenton
Paul E. Smaglik
Robe:-t 0. Stepha .-
Pa!rirk A Tool
lf&rold K. Turnrr
George \VHl111n1 .I Tn1h
John S Y.'aid
Jo~n 1' \\'ildtr
OISPATCH
Dudley B. Rich.
,,
Department Manager
John T. Bourpos
Susan Christopher
Corey P. Saget
.John A. Sperling
\Villiam M. Th omson
Richard D. Clements
DISPLAY ADVERTISING
Charles Pritchard,
Display Advertising ~!g r.
Charlotte F. Andresen
Joseph E. Davis
Arthur D. Dawson
Maurice J. Gardner
\Villiam E. Greene
Mary K. Henry
Roy A. 1-lenson
Jack K. Littleton
Leon F. Peterson
.James G, Riley
Norman Stanley
F'red W. Williams
Mi chael C. Wilson
Ernest Vitucci
EDITORIAL DEPT.
Thomas Keevi!;
Editor
Thomas Murph1ne.
fi.1anaging Editor
Charles Loos,
Assistant
Managing Editor
RJ chard Nall,
Assistanl
tiianaging Editor
Bea Anderson,
\Vomen's J:;ditor
Lucy Bell.
\Veekender EdHor
Albert Bates.
Editorial Page Ed ltor
Glenn \Vhite,
Sports Editor
Norman R. Anderson
Robert R. Barker
Thomas A. Barley
Francis P. Boyle Jr.
Jack Broback
Roger F. Carlson
Jacqueline Ann Combs
'ferry S. Coville
Barbara 0. Duarte
Ala111 J. Dirk in
Howard L. Hand}'
Pamela Hallan
Jodean Hasting!;
Cheryl Kravitz
Richard Koehler
Barbara Kreibich
L. Peter Krieg
George A. Leida!
Almon Lockabey
Margaret A. McAJis!er
John S. Mitchell
Rudi Niedzielski
Patrick O'Donnell
Jo Olson
Lee Payne
Joanne Reyno!d5
Phillip E. Ross
Willi am L. Schreiber
Craig \V. Sheff
Tom Titus
John Valter~.a
Arthur Vinsel
liosemarie \Vcsl
MAIL ROOM
George E. Ara u1,
Department f\1anagcr
\Villiam Eastman
Lorraine Andrews
Alice Dunigan
.\lariannr Shar[e
Marika Rae5
:O.la ry L. i)aum
Dorothy ~1iko\s
Gladys Bell
Parritia Domecq
.Janet Ford
illa ria Vic;i ri
ShirlC'y Robinson
Hcrnicc \V;igncr
Nancy \\'ilhcrspoon
MAINTENANCE
Eugene F. Laney.
Building Supervisor
John r.1artin,
Automotive ,.._1ainlenanl'P.
\Viliiam H. Hayes
Mi chael D. l\larquard'
:O.lichae.l A. Pfeifer
Raymond Roof
Richard Greco
NATIONAL AND
AUTOMOTIVE ADV.
Carl Carstensen Jr ..
N<itional and Autu1nol1\'C
~lanager
Jeff Stevenson.
1\.utornotive S:1lr~
'.\1anager
Dennis D. Landl'y
Hope C. Shutl5
PILOT PRINTING
\Villiam L. BrO\.Vn
PROMOTION AND ART
OEPARTMENT
Thomas fi.1cCann.
Promotion M<inagrr
Anne llan1blin
STEREOTYPE
Charles ,J. llaubrick,
l"'oreman
Gerald J. Hill
Daniel E. Kirkn1evcr
f:ordon M. Nielsen
Edward E. Qu inn
\lichael Raffer1 y
SW ITCHBOARD
l'atricl<i Bl&ckkrtttr
:O.lary I::. f''ncdourr
Pt'ggy J Forn<'y
COME AND SEE
EXPANDED,
MODERNIZED
FACILITIES OF THE
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa
. ' . ' ' ' •
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
MARCH 24 and 25
GUESTS RECEIVED 7 to 9 p.rif. BOTH EVENINGS
WHO AND WHY
Friends keep asking mem bers of our family when members of thei r family
can come and see the newly enlarged and remodeled facili ities of the
DAILY PI LOT al 330 West Bay Street in Costa Mesa . So ... by popular
demand, cis they sciy ... we're opening the doors Wednesday and
Thur sday, Mar ch 24 and 25 , from 7 to 9 p.m. to cJnyone and everyone
who wo uld like to see the "factory" where we produce eight editions a
day of your DAILY PILOT.
HOW TO GET HERE
Tho DAILY PILOT plant, at 330 West Bay Street in .Costa Mesa, is
"freeway close" to its readers all dlong the Orange Coast from Seal
Beach to San Clemente. 8C1y Street run s from Harbor Boulevard to
Newport. The pldnt is dbout rnidway between+ those two ma ior arterie ~.
It easi ly can be reache d via either Harbor or Newport from the San
Diego Freeway or Pacific Codsf Highway. The plant 's 175-car employee
par~ing lot will be open to the public both "open house '' evenings.
.,
. -2l PILOT-AOVtR!ISER Wednesday, Marth 24, 1971
Rellt~ls l~I Ren11l1 ~I~ -~'-""'"~l[Il] l'--l'_" '"'_''""'~I ~
Apts., I Rentals to Shar• 430 Business Rental 445 Found (free ads) SSO Lost 555
Furn. or Unfu,n . 370 :? flOO\J~IA'ff.S 11antt'd, yr-1 PRIME LOCATIONS F'OL':'l:D nlal<" pupp_1.
•• untlngfon Beacn / ty .;03 No. B.1)·fror11, B.11 E. 17th St, Costa l\lt'.sa possihly Spnngpr eross 11h
., . , 1 1~1and. C'lf'(ln cot. .\10\f' in 1120 ~I-11. roninit·n·iul bldg. 11 /rl"d 111urk1ng~. Flea •'Ul-
• RH. SJ . .,, ·• l31· Sli'il.J. up P.i. April !_Sill rn11 tii:->-()11.'3 ii•ith i.iikin •. $JOO ~to, hir \'1,· t:lth & ~lon1u1111..
nu l'oul. Chil•t1~·n 11!.:_ 1 · , . --1 ~ l1IS--ll•.i d;,s ~11-1891 evrs \Jt)Jt,\ KAI A l lki!lil \I SHAl.I· u1y 11J1r1•!tunt huui\• --1_ fl!l. ur.i 1-1/tlu~:k. ~l.u1, :1.o-tio )<'ili'l;. Bro,id"ay, 1...J~u·1a 8e<1<h fOl''\U long hairM ):rt.•y
h ,11 Ln, J blh E. i1r Be,1eh, ~r() 11 6-, l''! lfi."' Sn fL \IDl'f \\Jlh nJrKIU" i.n111ll !"1n;.lr t':d. ha~ uff t.;cu·ru.~ld. 9ti~-S9'JI. __ ·1 11'· 1,,. .., "' ., ,. " LADY to sharr her lGVPly 2 Nr. Coast llwy. $500 ~lo. 11ui.:110~1· Ln~lu1a Ni g u c I
Br. 'l Ba. apt. C./'ll. iv/sam" Rralonon11cs Bkr. 615-6700 _ar1•;1 !'l.-....:i:t~ ____ 1 Laguna Buc:h
L' '\l,·l: 1u«I ;.:t•) 1: ;.i I
I\ Ht->t i·u!lur, 'Srnn!.:•»''
1 .. ~r 11r llun1boldt l,l·1m!.
1J1~ l!.1t U(llll' n t' \I ii I'(! 1
li tti-t;'.JI t>l" lt 1:.'-'11 lfl
WtdillsdaJ, March 24, 1971
When You
Want it done
right ...
Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
•
DAIL V PILOT [Sl
I
Help Wa'ltf'd, M & F 710
Check Here
with the
SWEEPING VIEW
OCEAN ANO HILLS
:-i.1;,....s729 SUlTLS Available: 17612 f•~;:'llALE t;. ::il1"fl-Young.
Y:"l.C f, nal" ' 11 , 111ut1·d
~t''Y' 11l•r ~!I' I"" 11 • l~I"·
;.;1·n • )1 ~-l'n n.1111 Lo<;t
11(' lr\tur TC'1r. 1ij·:.~?..'I
•1!1 6 Beach Bl"d, }l.B. P~rking: l!lls A r1'.-I rolk1r. v.1c
435 i\ir l'Qrld. !lr<1l·\n\;: :\h·1\1·1hu1• i!.nd \l.11r1 SI RE ~ARD-OFF ERE D-
s'i"'"c";LcCc.--,"·1-c>_n_1,-,-G-,-,.,-,-.,-,,-r C1u·[J1•tu1i;. ,Janll1ll'llll bl't'I'. ~.-4).-20_ ---__ Losl·.•liu1·1 !1l;11·i; lu·,.,1111.111, I
G a r a ges for Rent
i'\'nl, ~2~ rw1· mo_ Cd~L J11quirr Suitt> 8 or call Yf)\l!\C 111:i1i;.:\' 1~1l,1rl'rl 111.dr ft1r 1.1r-krt 11 u1111I; 11)llu
Call 673-291~. j.Kl..jTll 1·al \'It· uf .'>t.1r·I i! \Juhilr-\.~1-IL'>ll
1wm :tflL, t11111 ber!s. nrw
p.11111. 1·.11·µ~·1. drape,_ \\._jlK
ro ht';1c•h & 1011n. i\lalure .al11i1~. nc) i~L,. l \C'Hr fOJ! 1nol(1r han1es, tra1Jc>1', :-::TOr:E bla,i,: ::::03 !\'p1 Bl~cl. ParK 111 J\:S -·lii--li~w t1H IJ ,\l.F ~C'l'n1dn :-hl'phPrd&
ss z •; -Jab Kings! 1 L I
I ~
)!' 1,,.. l!ll.;;.it~~l · I !urn , lx•al, ('IC', 16~2 i\pl
---8 h Hll1l, C:\1. t.i-t2-2.$2J, 6~2-5106 Newpor t e ac ,0,11..-.--.Rc-c-c~-~ ice e nla l 440
r,,\(.'llt_LOn & l br ;ip1..,. I . .
F\r li"I.1, E1cs. 6iZi-iSi6 or SLlPER·DELUX~ QUALITY 1~1:-:i'.!-:,Q 1-2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq
fl. o/Iice suites. lmn1ed. OC·
rupa11('y. Orange Couniy.
I~ /.irport ll'\·ine Commerc· ~ I Con1plex, a!IJ Alrpor!er
I ~;;;;;;;;;:;~ llo!el & Reslnuran!, bank-;, II I San Di('gj') & N'pl F11)'s.
400 UNCRO\\'DED P.'\RKE.~G
Relltals
I LO\\"ESf RATES
-----------1 U-.1-n!'r 1ngr. 21i2 DuPon! Dr .
R ooms
• Rn1. S, Ne1vport Bearh
I S:t':.:1223 Courtesy to Broker~
DESK SPACE
• • L. Z ITNIK
1625 W . Ba lboa Blvd.
Ba lboa
222 Forest Avenue
~:P11 ,, r. '.I: 30 l'lribrrn1an, ni:1I•'. lJ I at' k
67j...J(i()l or!\\ ~"'6-711 1 fOUl\U: BlJ... ,i;,_ 11·hl 1J 11ftan n1ki.:~. l\1u•"' \l1rh••y.IBabysitting
Industrial Renta l 450 ~1\}1111 innlr t·ai 111111'..J i·ol-n_,,,_,:i~ s.·,,i !f"l<)..~i:1.:_! ·'1~1 __ C_O_S_T_A __ M_E_S_A __ _
J.1r. \'i<' Bu..,l1.1rd .I. .\da.111~. \Ol :\G B I ------------1 · urn1''"1' nia" ··~i PRE-SCHOOL 1ng-. F1't't' 11lanu!ns: SC"rv. SMALL UNITS !11.;s •. !~l.; --------hlur C'·~~ ellooilalr •"l.1!. -· • ? •!. .t ~lonro1 i:i, 1,: cl:1.v + 1.;:1·nnr..ly & lli.iUSf', 63J.G210
COSTA MESA t"Ol":'\lt on l'n11t-.r111a A1• ., louf'I \"Olt'(', ,.c.,1r Oil •·:1r, h>~I d lnl! ri«y ~s.<.ion~. l'lanncd J~~/ES-6S~9
S''· & !!67. p,, •.lo•lh (\1\1. ~1111 \lilt moncrt-l '1oi.: v11·~,1•1b1t1rf.bH-2!,t ~-" " 1 & 1>rogran1, hot lun<-h(.'s_ Ai::es I Furn
Jn1n1rd1a1t-Occupanr y t.''1k1 :'.'°~~-3-f.l~xic 1~1'e!L!t,\~,\ 1\~111.1 1~,ll i;uld,·n, :!Ii, hr~ 6:30 A\l.GOO P'.'11.
Ne\\' 6j()() sq. It. unit, lSth .tr 1'1n1 <'-~-4 '1 sndr..i:"~I ··r111••1«r·', 111.di• S18 11k.Cll:\lPARI:.! 612-1050 1'URi'
\\'hillier, 110·2~'0 po11cr, ~l,\LE Ge lllhtn Shrph• r<i [ 1'"' 1 .,. C•l\1. f'h 11•111.1 t .. r $-:S-~:l~i. I ilY<'ra
plcn1,\' of p;irKtn~. 1' 1t"ln1 I~ · A<i.:n1s ,\ Ui.)-71.o.J slnp
'I I 11 I I o. h C:l!ILD C!tl'C In my hon1e. · Sec: Rob<.'.-rt J\j.itlrrs~ Rltr • agno 1a, un 1ng on 00.·,1\." -:-• . , .,-G d ., •8• · !J624i91J I Sl. B1·1 .... 1<1 I upp~, -~ Ul" lnl<1.nt l<l l ~rs o(d. Have a r
Cos!a t>lcsa 61--1·1 .J • I ulrl, J,1~1 1Jc· lln.1,.'. 110~1>. 3 ~1· old d.1u;;h1rr. ft'nN'd
;:m ~q ft-All 11011'('1', he.11, e:.ACh ,i:, hin11 n p;• "11 r.e11 ,11d r.1~::1-.;·1 1 ~.11,I. L~I>:<' t1(1il1''. t'.dl l1~hts, p.:uti11on.s .~ !loots Ch1hu ,1hu1 l'l't'~.?tl~ IL;1'.! ---~ .. 0-tl;ll, 111-. 7:';1) 11'1 li.llO for !:: fi111~!ird. 1-:,,::.·1 \lunl'oV1a, pupp1('. found\,_ I Oll1\Jll" l·.I 1'"t'<\ \\!,,inn V1<'1n .tr":i lanii•
N,B. C:1ll (il;}.-Ojjl) ,i:, C(·lller .51. ,';Jl\-:1[i,, ~ B .\BY SJ TT-! N\_;Jlo11rl1-; 5 ;~;,
··6\.1:\\ERCJAL-=-i:\DUSTRTAL G l ltL':.;h~l('--:?!i~ lnstnictioll I ~ d.1-l.v, 11KI~. Fenc1'd .1<1r~1: ;::~:.:
• :M--lj()fl Ml fl, l:lc ln 12c l!,_11n!llun -~ '.\l.1g11nl1<0, II B _ lint PJ'':ll•, pla) 111;t1r!'<.
Contractor
H00:'.1 .\ddi!!on.\ P..en1odcl-
('\(',,,
iture
"ITUHE S!r1pp1ng ·any ,, chair ~" rod«'
pl•rl s-. 1112-lll:i
ening
L.':. t;ARDE:-.'ING
ar.ic>niJli; & sin al I
,·,1plllf: S('!VlCf'~, call
198 Scrv1ni; Newport,
()·1qa l\!l'Sa, Ikivcr . ,_ \\ l!.!.{(•]1 f[ .
·.i::~::i!ONAL. Pru11111~. * ~an Cll•nirl1l<' l~i-IS I~;, ( ,1 I l I o l rl ell I 1 f y. 1 1 '1 1,,1 ... 11 :-0:( hi dl.,l. J,',G-7j3-I l'H.01• Lagun a Beach -·----!11.12.JJOS I ., ... 1. 111 :__ ' irre Re nta ls Wanted 460 ----------ruu1, 494-9466 ~ 1
1
0RANGF., b!.u-k Ii.· 1111111• · Schools & J :.\ll\ ~JTTING u1 n1y humc Royal
l\rirk, ~pr111klers, acru·
pc s1s. d1 seast', 11<'eri
I nte r na t icna I
Circus AVAILABLE for inunrr!ialc \\'.\NTED: Ycarl.11 l'i't11al r:1hro prrgn.inl c<1I fo11nd -nll ;i.;1·~. ;,in,\t1111r.
. ,,J. Clr:in <>r jobs . ('fill I!
Trn1 is. Grorgr, fi.Jf.i-.\~9:1
o<'C't1n;uu·y. Sublca~•· plr:•~-f1Y>n1 .\lny l:Jih. r rspon~ible 6-l.l--~1:ll:il I instructions S7S -.:·1-7f.11 ;11 111r ,. I I I • --~~ JO!!N an! .J 1'00111 ."Uitr. 20-1~ \\'c~1-r:.;rt· 11 1 a ui:: 1 lrr '":),\\'DY color fcrnalC' G. .\!·\ll'l:F.. rrlr1t1!e. Ref'.« Y:ird
OCORUANNTGYE 1·l1ff Dr .. Sui1r 200. Nr11p<irt hou~clq>r. 1'·quil'r :: Hn flirn ~her1 Vil' of D11·1('r N:hoot I Discover a G rea t N ew fncd ~aid . hut !undoes. 17th l
sQ~ S CARDENING
('are, clean-ups,
B l' ~ -h~e ur apt, nr \x";n·h & 11.B. 9b2-fi~1JO rtfl('~ -i:OO i Career W o'th The J C \1 -1~·~~ p t!\!111::-. sprink l e rs .
FAIRGROUNDS 1-l'dch. 6 2-•G!Klor :.ee built!· Alisn Sehl in La~una.1 . -.-.--.---.-_ I.'~~~--·-·_·' -.i.. %1-:!0:::i Saturd<i~. April .:ui ~~ n:anaf!rr. Details p!r;t'>C' le> aJ :-ltJ. 1'.~'l.:\D ~1 rl ' h1k{'. 1 ir: ! I I lllll.D i.:•u·r ni1 h'>n1r onlv. 1._:.;rt.l_t_J __ ,-1,-,-,.,-,-,-G-"o-m~o-,.-,-.
Income Tax
Smiley Tax Service
• l:>1t> YEAR LOCAW.. Y e
Qualilied • Rc:isonable
W. A. S.\llLEY
Ccrtibed Puhllc Arcour!'t
6-12-2221 anytin1e ., .. ,...
SKOUSEN TAX SERV:
Reas. Y1.1ur Hon1(". .>10.~i
Ironing
IRONING my home $1.2:1 r..•r
hr. Bring O\VO hangers.
~>r ... 7611.
J 1tnitoria l
SPARKLE Janitorial. \Vill-
do1\'s, floors, crp!s & ronstr
clPanup. ,\ complclc ("()n11n'J
!\('\'\ • t·or Free e~t c.ill,
9(i 2--06 i2 .
CIPar-Vu :'11ain:.,n:i.nl-C
~PRl:"\'G CLE,\:\'l:'\G
free appr:iisals.
1'-17-3319
Painting &
P a perhanging
P.e s id,
Pl"a'f' c"ll 612·;>U'i.~. f'\!. ::11 REAUTirUL 3 rtJOOl of11t·(' ~I. D;iily P1l1·!. r~. O Bn't 1.'.'1'1_ L.ill 10 idcnlif>-·· AIRLINES I ll;•l'Jl!'r &hi ·,h<.l!:t·L C~ll Cun1pl<'t(' l.s11·n srrv & I ,',' "', .. ,,, .... ,,_,, ld•·l 1 1--0 c ,, c l!I )l,fi-... >Hi :.·-:.ii;~·;: I " .. ,, 07'4 h•·l11t'•'n!l:inrl l_Jllll ln!'!-11111 ~ r TI " '"" ,. r. " """'· oslJ • c~1. a 1. _ <1l1·1~r:irnn:: ;,i • • ,
iotJr li•·k•·I~-1:'\orih ('0111111· fur ;crl•htl,~·:. 1n:.u ranre !l:JS2r. IS.\l.\LL !->h:i::::y hll; ting ••n .\ n .. :tll':il 1,,r )llUni:: fV"'p!rt!:\l:YSIITJ'\fi n1_1 hn1nr. ~.1'1-i!(:il\ No\\·,, .. r·~
.1ol1-lrrr· 11urnh1•r 1~:1lfJ·l~lli1 ;,;:rnl l('11i1or, ('\{'. On '.\,\:-.TED !() l\'111 r .. i· jl\I) IA'lgu~-·1 _,_.'")''" Rn_:"~· fir 1t·l1·• \\:Pit (''f'ltrmrn! pl11•' I Ir.: 1,1..:d ~rl. h'lt /IJ(';ils. day t .. '\PE--e~,,-,-,-.-"'-,,..-,-,-.,,-,-"-,-an *WALLPAPER*
• • • \1n1]1'01 lij. ~L i11 "\ n. I I L" "BI I rlfl'l. f1 .• !\-.~~o hrfnr<' _, :0 T ' ' I" A ,. h ' ,'· ,,,,n lil''--,·)(1'l I I I I I \Vhe• )"U oall '"lo•" o , unr ~urn .• r i·r11 io1111• _ _ _ _ :1, ·1·1 , ~en ·: 1r · r<'u~ 1 · •. ·~. • -. __:_ · --· i::. «r1 rner. <"'{ln1p 1' c ~01·.-C'll· " u » .. .. ----~;;.'~l/Si!OO f'l"I lllo Ii !~l~'iO Ill \('I' I "lS Jll i "1"17ll COLLEGE or iiurkin;: ;;:u-1 ---------111 r~tlll. rr,ulPn!1,LI ;trt'a. ·' \ ,1,1::2) •h•:: fnn11d S; 11.1111 ;i ~en t? n.r ... ·r\':1. L.\l~\:-IT, .oil ;1:;,,, 21 hr:-, 111~ ~Pt\1rc & cleanup . .r • .,..,..
Balbul• 1,1 ~~1r kit & TV I DESK SPACE i\pl Brh or 11l·ir111y \\"ri1" lil\111 Cri.1•1 1111) ,~ llill, 1··1~· J~1r11n or tr.11.1 h1.: .1.11-rf .t i:;;,111,., Hrh1nd "~!1--01.--1) LE~CO Paint1n~ Contr'ior
rn1, rrlc. s1~1/n10 & up. 305 N o. El C 1tmino Re1tl Cla~~•lirrl Ad i\o. -~" l~a1ly __:'1~~l!:_ R~:1'.',j>-~•'.!_ __ d\'.l'nl? \\'e'll tr;11n yQlL lnr I ~<1111'11\'• :-ir•hl. liil>--:·.~'ll C:\L A1.·c,-7L-,-m71,-,-,-,,-,-,-. -,Tc,-,-, I lntlext. 2 Story s:pcc10.l1~1.
67:.-::GJ:! I Su n C lemente Pilot, P 0. '""'' ljtj() Costa B!·:,\UTIFL I. ~pot 11 .1 ruppv ! Hlt'~t· ;u1.-1 n1or1._ d;iy or lll!l'. Bui Ide rs I rr1no1·al. Yard N'mocleling, Also. a cc o us I . ce1L
;o.tALJ.:: ~tlldt•nl, pr,1 fill 111 4924120 :0.1"~. Ca~r ~2G2G. founrl D1a11v,11rl /;.· Co;,~11 \\.--. 1ncludc placrn1rnt as-! Trash ha11li11.::. lot rlcanup. !'<pra~1ng. Ltc & ins.
kil pl'lvil s1:1 \ik, C,i!I e Tl!~: HuaJ Honl\ s' Urun1m1·r !ill'y, La~lltl;,i. ·!'.!l--~1;17__ .!.i~t;.int•c. BP.l(.'1.;:, h!uck. t' 11 n c r" _1 (', ~pair !'<pnr.klcrs. 673-1166 64~2.~ 612-~:ilO hfl\11 J pn) & o I \VILL sarnlic("·Low Ren· 11·auts '.! UH. house or a111 AUSTRAL!,\~ ~ h I' r hr r •I I {' 11'P1 nil)., holhr l··v('lln~, I E.'\Pt:f{. Jar:.i.111'.'e gnrdf'nt'r INTFJt~-~E-,-le-,-. "c",-,,-,,-,.c>l-,.,,-c>l
*Our 2 Offices Cov1ri_
All Of Orange County 1
FEMALE
ORO E R OESK
F rom $SS a wk
G<lod l)'piS L Go o d <>:
phOnt'S.
F /C BKKPRS
To $S2S M o
Thru Tri11l bal, !1nanr1a
,,iat•'m..:nts.
CR. ASSISTANT
From $425 Mo.
Exprr. Buul•Kl'~·r1ni; &
scarth \l~rk.
re-
RECEPTIONISTS i
F ram $350 mo t
Sharp 1-:irl. occur !ypl~! ' Sl-1 knCtl\'l,..di::c.
GEN ERAL OFFICE
1n'lrt ti'Tlr\
F rom $2 hr.
.\II around girl.
E XEC. SEC'Y
To $650 mo
To p Skills
••
pin pleoisr. I 1'd E~rc\!ll\e suil: of or-In l'l'!ll n11 a f>C'rn1.1n,.111 nib.ed puppy. J\l'l•llv ~1·;1;i-f:st :'J )T~. App!'O\'rd fnr ;dl 1 .1 Jlt-~ l'f'ln&!r•lin~ J>;n H1·l1ahlc ma 1n1 c nan cc. work. L1c'd & bonded. Wal
-~ ,, 1 n l~L·c~ .,;\~.? _ N~\ryxil t Blvd. l1:.ii.1s, Crl~! or N\l'pt Brh 1r/blark & !:in. ~~ir,..;:~os \'ci"rn.n~. Eligible in~lltulion l~h 1,00 ~ !'<niall. L!c. Cori1r. /:<':is monthly r n t cs. rrfs. Lnn1''s J n 1 e r in rs,
NICF. 1 Nnl, £:)(.!< Joi·, l'1J · ~R Call &l.>-1¥1J. I ou1"'a. 111 $2lJll ranj.'r. Slarl1nt; L 1111•lrr lhc f•·<ll·r;1\li· insured !"!h:!...fi,fli i;~~-·i;11!l CL ERK TYPIST i;:rn1al honH· k1lrh. p11\1I. CORO" "L R , •• ·n·· ost SSS ·• ·• ·-o~=,~=---fi1~>-:-i.~.jl). Hc>sid. 5-18-2i~1"! .~60. :.i.~-:ll!)~·: b1•fr 3 pn1,I ,~A DI'... i\lA _i\la~·~ 1/,1-i·"··.----_ shulcnllo .. nproi;r·;un. Busine ss Servic e BACKACHE? PAPER!-I ANCER, llork, foil $37S m o ,
,7-., "'-~'I I. -'.· 2 R~1,11 office ~pac".·' l 8GARAGE WANTEDelFE,L\LE ~,•;1lro1n1 ~·:un'""· · ~n \\' 1' \' 111 ~1 Exec ~Tu t •· " I Ol"ER * 6 3677 1 II A' I' S h I p ·1· TYl'lNG n1,v h•l''H•. TC'rin Call Jj7-GOG2 lor la11·n & gotr· vin)I, guar .. e.«timatrs, lhc • •· · • ~ ~ FUn:'l rni. nirilf' a~_ · ___ •_· ·1 .\pprn-.; 2·l'Al' ~11r•, r9r 1l1r l'l'I .l'o nr :1,i~h. ~\!Jr,11{! 1.1;::. 1r ine c oo s a c1 IC 1i.-11 earr. 11 a 11 i::ina 11 , 54 7 _ 5 8 4 6 • I h1• horu!~hle.
· '1"rping ::100 "\"f.\\'PORT BL\·n. NB I t>uildin::: 111 ll' f1h•·rgla-. !lun, Heh. ,, .. 11-,f!.~I 610 E . 17th, S a nta Ana p,iJ'<'I~. 111 ·~1"r ihi·~ii.. Cal! ----,-,-----,.---,-"""-,.1,11 " .. I' onl~·. Sli"l{} 11r1h. E1c.; & I · ---5 36596 l.1Tlfl.i x!S-1117
1
:\lfl\I' rr1gr, IR!'. frnl & rear ·"'-'" ..
''
"••I·. 'l"'."'IZ e 0;\ THE BAY • M111 ,\"red for !lit dt1)S at :J.r!ST :-;,·,.iJ: •. 11 l'-i;H'k 11.1!1•· 4 • ~--~---'"' ~ v-:v -• -"~" ------C .~d .. S~i a 11·e•·!.: PROFESS!ONr\L, :.0 yr!'< i;,~,_:!\lil or .111 ... , .. _, ir,,_1, \lt·~t1 lit! S.1\'-nn Jlni:.: 1,r • .-a rpc nter r:OO\I /I 1! 1 r I! B %-~ 73\R "'Jl. papcrhano;:1ni,: & pa111-~ant" ~" '1~~1,;111~11 1 ~ ~1~ l~ia S~"\"T."i A~A "::[-:-c,1-I .. lil6-hiG:__ ""---~1•· ri1.1i,~i. r.."''"1::_: -1 DAVID SHA R P NESS ---C-A-·R-P_E_N_T~R-Y ___ ---,,-ar<lfln;r;i:: ·.se,-v-"-,--11ng, from En~lanrl. n;;s..7~51
!o hrat'h. s;.·, ij7.'>-0j11 ~roin :JOO ~q. IL .,,w •q ft. 2 CAR Cat· .... c 111 Cu~!.1 Lo.~r 2/-\ h!li 1. 1:-ro1111 203 B 42nd St. :\11\011' J:E:l'.\IR:' :'\o J ob by eXfJC'fl•'n('('d Japanc~e -P.\-11\'TlNG/paprrlng. i~-,,-,
-------6i~1-2161 or ;,lJ.:ir::2 .\ft'sa. To ~ u~f'd fol Lal>1 t1dnr. 1 ;i· Eld<·'l .\ D·-1 Newport Be a ch T h
'.\JCI-.: roon1 for 11or.K1n~ m:in • i\E\\"PORT BEACH Cii;(: .<.lur.igc. Call Terr\'. The \l.,r ,\if', \'l (';ill :,1..._,,.20_1 '"",,,.•I>•,,,,,_.,. ol no Srnall. Ca inet In r:ar-e ~1&3 e in Harbor alf'a. Lie &
\1'/ or 11 /o rook i:: pnv1l. j _ " R 1 ·E t •1021·1-----" • ·~ a""" ,t nth er eabineis. L \\\';\ car(' .~ ua«lr~ bonrlt'd, P.rl's furn. &-12-2356
E·."<d", C\. l hl2 "3"" ('pn.•_<_r on Xpt nl1~. '.ll_O ~q. ea s alrrs a.,...· ·• LO~J· S11·i11~ or t·ulii:;-n'fl 2 1u·k•'l'4 10 !he ~15-Sl7J H no anS\\'t'r leave ~ ,_ ...,, £u f llilll fl\ -·AA-111 Light hanl1ni;. Ex:p'd, *PAINTING*
• SI-PER k / k 1
1
1. til.>-or -" ' · · PROfES."i. 11onu1ll, ;!lonr. [J1'<1rls. vie of La~una Ho!,..1. Roya l n1~:!-nt 6-16-2372. Jl O. Reasoniih!f'. Call S.!3-911; 111 ""·ality. Reas. P rices.
" \\ · up 11 '. • • -• \1ants lrg. unlurn apl or Jtl 1 '11, Rel\'ard~ :11:1-:!1.'l9 ln1e r nation al \lld{'r~nn. -.:u . $2J v•rek up Apls. MOTJ::L Business Rental 445 ('()l\llH Ill Cd.\! or Clurls -----c· ---=~~--~7. 51&-7:\j9:--LA\\'~-;\ta1--;;-t. Frf'r e<il. 646-0S6-I
<•o '·''·' •• 12 .,121 ·· 1r.1s11 S£-t1r1· frn1al<' ln•1 1 w 1rcus \Ar.rt:i\Tf:.'t'. r..1'"'lr. Ai! • d 1 Lit .,..,... ... .._ _,, ,_.,.. i.:,:<1."\J;•' "'yllr <' eanup. c ~·01t clean & nca! pa1nl 1ni;. ~-~-~~--~=I f':_-i.,n1·1a H1r.:h S{'hool. .il !l1r pll;i<P~. Jlon1c & ;ipt, J.11c h J ~ Rentals to Share 430 1 CO'.\l.\!ERClAL-Misc. Re ntal$ 465 f'h ,Jst'l'.illr.a~-SI!\ ORANGE hl\lthne. E\'r· 518 _62GG, ;1111ni:: • rrp;11r Jlllrrior & c..>i:terior, Call
I !NDL:STRl.\L I --------CO:\IPLE:TE ~ancl--cC~,-,-,.. J)1ck. !l6R-406'l 1----------,.,_ '1 Gf:AY ~ Blk t · 1 1 1 COUNTY P:.). :i~7-l~'ill E.\IPLOYEn l:irly !o ~hatr ~-,{~-1.".W "11 fl, l<l' ,10 J_r I L.OC!.:ED, fr rnerl ~111r;ii.;r for '. ,. ' _ "''fl' _ < "'f -----C!(';inup, t ra~h hault11~ h,\· -Ir PAPERHANGER *
1.r;11111fl1I oi:"a11 iicw ap1 l_""_·"an~1l'n1rn\c>~'l6-l~:.O ;,. Ihnat~ or •·an1pr1·~ . .'i(k r"r h:i1r r:i1 \\/11hil~ nr.• rnl F A IR G RO U NDS \IOl"iELI~<~ ,•, r:r1, .. 11· .i"hrirmn.,1197-2117.&l&-0!132 Prior 1nstn1,.tor. 6~6-2119
I-". "•'• nionth. Ca 11 II fl T:••1-.1rrl .ill.-!~'• .'1l~11d.1.1, ,\f'nl . r1! :'p••r1al1~t. Cnm1n'l l'l'~irlf'n· l·.".''I'. ·'''l''''"·n ,.,,.,1,,,., con1plr1f'ly furnish•"I 111111 STORI·: 2<I x ;,~ fu1• lr;i..,r_ •r ,. ' ·" .. , • ._ .., , , , -----~--
1 I bl 1 !'"II 3 .. ., "·~ """" Pio•:•"' ,. iii f, I~'-,1,j-; ••\I .,J l 1 ;11. Pan•·l111:.: rah 1 n,., 1 ~, PA!.~TING, pro!ession11!. All Pn1 .i1!' .. l,>n1_1,',· !!oa;; Hn~p11l1. I A_1 ai 11 ". ~l:iy . _ .,".. • .~, ..,.,_...,,,~,,., ___ .. ,, • r.·1.-l',-m 1. I · G"n. l'lc;111up !laul 111<• trees. ,,. " ,. k g ,, ,• r. . C 0 1 0 , '""u .,., ·nr D>td· 1i .. 11""'1!l!ir11f l p'T110 1·I1111n 111:1r l1!c,fQr111 iro 1,..11.1:i•),.;; " " "" " art'a. Gl.-0 .• :?7 !:.. 17th ~I.. C\!. tl:r-.4.1(} 1\l ·1inl. )ard li!G-061'l I II t 61•7"°l "7 l l'l ilv'', .. cle a n nut lh" .1ru11· 11rl:r·:.'. 1:"1,'orlh ('n11n1.v Carpet Se rvice !lpeca s .. ,,....,.,: .,., -·~
I I ~ ' 1ull·fJ('rnun1hrr1~.1J[).J220l CJ.E,\N t.:p S~cinli.<.!, haul-PAI NT I N G : 1-lo n e st, ~ Pet'~Ollilli. '\~., gar.i.;;c .. ynurtra"hisCASHI 11r 1r * J11 :1111nnd \arpC'I Cl••;11111 1;,: 1n~·. odr1 johs, 11rw fenrP g1i;u·;int!'crl w o r k. Lic'•I.
Apar1m,mt5f0<Re1lt [fa ] ~~'"" /lpartment~ for Rent 'W ~;;;;liiliiliio;;· ;;;;,iii; I . l • -Pl,\l\(J h·~.• .. 11·· 1n ,, 1n h 1· r ,\i·::-~11" 1:onm ~.~ t .. l'l'l1·11 r. n cas. 5IS-6!1J:i I.IX'~! ref's, Call 61~5740 \\Ith a Daily I ilol Classlf1ccl . I r:.·1jllll'l!l); & 1ns!allttllttllS nfr -:, I tr1·l1,1 On111.:rrn Pr11fr~"'i"1:.-+I . · . . .. General Services " v
Auto tran$portation S2S 11rl. Fra1 .. rnll'-'. Fo·1, ~:11 l!li-1~~~, t 1•1· l.•I 611•1-·17 PA INTcloNoGc/cp-,-P,-,-m-g-.~18~Y"-<
Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn.
Hunti ngton Beach
Apts.,
J7Q Furn. o r Unfurn.
Huntington Beach
at the beach •••
370
9 /10 of a m il e f rom the beach is (nsa "Recreat ion City" w ith 2 swimming
del pools, putting green, gym , volleyball
court, sauna, b illiard room, ctub-
Sol house. One or two bedrooms, fur-
nis hed and unfurnished, prlvate
, patio, fi replace in two bedroom. 0 elevators , dishwa shers, carpets
and drapes, no lease. adults only, all
utilities exce p t lights paid, pets
a ccepted. From $145.
~ • ~ ' • z
Victori~
21 66 1 Brookhurst St.
Huntin gton Beach,
(714) 962-6653
Ask for
Comm an der Retting
or Unfurn. 370
Newport Beach
~~
Brand Spanking New
In Beautiful
BACK BAY
1 and 2 Bedrooms
Furni1 hed and Unfurnished
Adult Living * l)ic;h1\a~hrr * Sto\r and nctr1i;erator * Shag Carpt'l!ng f4 cxl·1ti ng color•) * ~ound Proof('d * Billiard Tables * Jlool * Large Rcereation Center
Occupancy in M a rch
RENT STARTS S155
•
Vista Del Mesa ".:..'
Apartments t 11< I
Tustin & Mesa Drive ,--::;-_,
545-4855
LL:EE:iAolii'l/:N;(G;, ;;,.:;2;,,,-;:10;,~. cG,;,~;,~,T,i;;, ~,,,;l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•..,..,••·., ... ;..., •• .; I i:e rnenl, Concre~e * LABOR UN Ll :\f/Tl'.D * ir1 llnrbor area. Lie &
'6'l Dorlgr. Sh;11r r!nvini; & * * * * * * •• COXCP.J:.lf'.:. Floor!'<, Jl ,\'\'DY~tAN bonded. Ref's fllrn. 642-2356. r\flCn~"'· ~d~-!i.-17 p:ilios, (lrJvr~. ~iriew·alli.s, \\1'lrlini::: -Car1>l'ntry 67.1-1'122 !.'IT f.· Exlrr. Paintinr;
~1,11-.5. n (·:1"'. Dull &1:-s:.11. -H01;Q11dBU$)? Cnlf ~l;;)sc Lic'ri', in.~. Free ('S!. 30 yrs P e rsonals 530
Trader's Paradise CJ•;\JLX1' \\'OT:.K, no Jl'lb !oo
'•11:ill , n ··1,011ahle. Fr" e
r~hn1. IL Sturlirk, ;,1~8f>l.J.
:,ri--082!1 ;tltf'r fi--Hrnnir r>:f'lf'r. fhurk, 64~.~ ...-------filNiGHTATB!. l~ud•l-~riv .\lost Thi ng~ Pla st,,r, Patch, Repair
i rnt.1~ ut::"110NSTRATIO'-' I ------,\rt1~1il' Con<'l'l'll' 1!111{
Ha uling * PATCJI PLASTERJNG
All IYfWS. Free f'Stimates Yoga \\'orki; r·ro111 The Firs! , •
c1a~~. :'°('1rn111u· ,,1l'1hod I nos I For \'11,1h1y & Crr 111111y 1
Bi 1ri\ \\nrk hy \Id.'<
• f'i!l-06~7 1r
Tl'~ASll & Garn1:e clcan-ur, Call ~-1:1-6825
j d11,1s. SIO a load. Frrr 1 ,-,-,-,-~-,-,.-R-l--R--------
I ''•t::.;(···111ri-.11•t 1i111.-.1.1 ti"mes
CC1.!.l,1 :'<lrs;i , li!fi-~l'll. I Child Care
11 ill r;irr
.1 .~ c:.. , , £U )TS t''\pf'r. ~,f 1\n\!lol''. :11~-:.n:a__ 011n tool~. p/!1111r 11ork ok.
I I \t:l.!:'\Ci, .i.:rn'J rlt';irn1p, Call St<ln, ;--,.1.~712;;,
~ ,\1.;l'~ 12.7~·1
~
I • l'l'LLY LICE"t:D-.-, dol 1' ~rs (,,.'"Ill' f'h•lrl. li~r h<'!' 0111\. 11 ''" ~··r 11. !l:_ind)·inan Hca~. PL,\STEP. . p atch. H rn.
111r,..'.,'i ll.>. Atids. Ne\~' 11·ork. Fr(;e
g ,\IOVli\1..;, Gara1:c elcnn-up
J{t'no11r1<'•! l l1nd11 ~p1ntu;1l1~1 Contractor f;.. J11e 1111111 111~. l{r."i•onblc.
Adl'i('I' on (Ill n1<1l!rr~. '--------------------.../ I' 1· , "I' I"'' I II\' II','·'· .,,,,,1.r... ho•>• ,·,1'"".-r~ 1n110 r~_ . .,_.1· <~!-__ L1\1e, \1arriilA"l', Bu,1nc·~~ ., " • "
11 I. · 7" . _ r1·r1:i1r \\".JI, C<'lhn" floorsl/·l.J·,I, 1·l•'ill11r~1: !JC f:aragi•, -rn( 111::.~ g11cn 1111ys a \';ill trarlr. JrrP .i: l'i•'ar. JJ,\\IJ•,: g, . ., 1t1lu! 3 Br. /I.pl "\ i Ill("'·_ \JI Ior Jllnk
11,."k. 1oa.n1.10 10p.n1, 1.-,.,,,,1yh>ll••>rlp'"l'••.l·<JI.' 1. , 1 1 1,,,,, 1•1, u in1 ' ,n,1 . · ... , ' ,, It'' ]1,.:11 ,Ii 1'1 --•• u )II. :.i~ /Iii;'' 21 hr nn~. snrv C.'tll fili;-li'.}1:i
:H2 N. E! Cn1n 1nn lleol. J11tr n1od<'J C:ir. l;11nJH'I", J .•[tl!ty ~21,l!(ll/. \\.1111 In--·-----. -----
S.111 Clrn1rnlt' .\loior l1<inir. J:,,,.i. 1:,.,11 L.~· , . .,01,, c,1111 _ v,u ,,111 1.1, .. 1. 1l!!J!1 .• 1 .\ddit1on~. L . T. Ho u:oeclea n1n9
1~12-'.11'.:fi, ·1!11-<IOiG 11111• or.,.,., litJ.:.i:1:1 :\!.1l•·l111n lt;·:i11;i-. Ii!! 1~;711·.,n ln1<l11u1. ·"·ni:I'' ~1 .. 1·yor I* SAITfNG-VOYA G E ------. -~ l.'1'1n . 111<.ns & J,,;,-0t11. • ,..;J'J-CIAL ... \AltPt:TS * . 11 Vull~· !111;11 01 cl 1~·1 /1,i.~ GJI' r :-n11p i.:on11: bu.,111• , .. 1· .~·7 r,!1 I·· Sh u·1· •''.P"llsr~ on ii rom·u1 . 1 111 1 l"·n1••1I, ~11 "· s7:, ' · · . '. ' . "' Sl.;.uQ 1S211 ~{l(J• Clr,;r. C,0!1tl r11·;,!1on 111·.,,. f1ir1·-1-1-11 I' -•I Ill" Old \\<1rlrl 1.)(1 >CJlrn.rr 11 >II 1,,,,,,10 l"-·'"'f ,1,,,,,,. . r 1l1<)n~ * .rni·-~•" lllJ.: n111111n•1m _inh_ f'l".l'" ("all I ,. v"" , . .., lr;ul•• for !""1l 1'·,l 1tr>, II"" 1. k ,._ ~·n I ~I"'''''' olop~·,· 'h>p ( <Jl!n" . 1! t"\\ll" l.'!f ,.,n~, ,I<' :1.;ti-2~!7 ''I" .-.~~i-'.:'!2!) ..... ~. • '" ·_ ·' .. _,.·;irhr, 1\11·r•!Jnt·. 1:.,1.-· .. 1 ·h11•1l "~St!J!Jj!Jil 11'-1:.? countr1r~ & 17 porl~. hvniror lnc.17111 -11~1.:;111~ ,;~'. ·'·-· •!;,;,1:·11•,. . ' .,. 1.7::.1"(1il * :il't-2171\ lf\'t'-\\•--;;-11-hy-;-,p,r lo1dy
rli·11art1ni;:-111 2 111·,.k~ • .l::ri<· -----------i.c·.i c .. 1111'. nen1nUclin:::: 11/1.1r 1:"r~. Sli ,, dJy.
Norri, TfJ\\':'\1101'.;}:::Bn.21 H.\ ;.l.1U -dr t·u 1n :-1rn,1 :'<!:1· Add.lions, Pl.in~. L.:nout t','!':i f.ll-'.17'!1
'.:'1'.\ ';';'S.2f.(f, '\;1>11 pnrl BC";1rh. ~;i,.,. kll . 111 (' It 111• .• J .. iur ~i-O!ICI r11111-l\:irl !·:. l\('nrl.1.tl ~}1~-1:·':7 -~---
---. ---llrplr. f"'lll Pr1.1•-1lll) . .\';iJ. 1.1 \\11 11.utr 1 .. r 1:u,\1', J.-Xl•t;/:. J.a 1t>·· "11111 DREAMS! u,-. S?.2.000 Tak" T f) Tr.•il-1 \I: \:"\ J H-,tL !-. • .\, ,,, l1all'fH•!l.ilifJn, By Duy. '... ~ii\ 7~1 ;ill r, l'\1 \\'ha! mps,,ii,:es ;or,. rhry 11")'· rr or·: 0\l'll"r 6hi·ht.»! • * ldi·i'·,.,, • •
1ng to rrll you'.' Si"n.-1 na111<' 1!;1vl' ;.i(J unJh, luw 1•1c,,11;;:
.. t phon1• nu: L~n1burn Jn. Trade 1dl nr 111r-1 r .. · .. 11,. r
~!i1Ut(', fill 1~n. roo C.1n1pu\ 11111(, f;llTU\\ ll• ·ill)' ('"IP
,"\B C.1 ~2i>ill .i.".tl-2Ji-:>. •i ;un lu .i rn1:
DISL'OVJ-:H. nr.;{"(l\'Lr;y
Ftnrl Y•!ILl'"'H
Tn Som<'Onl' J-:1~" .ii C<u;i1Jl,1r 2 rtr. i:-ood n1n-
~12""";"11111Z"'11·r1nt-! ii.• ~_., 11,111,, i·n1nnu·r,·. 111-I
d11· . r f<1!,1hn.1 ){1·,,,'rn•·r I
I ~ I r. 1, 1 I·."· I 1.111;.;,.1·
' ./] .\1 1·r· !',\ (', '1 'I·
1w·,.t.1. 11".inl hn1t, ;•11pl.q1'
ntOhil" hnn1r. TD'\ nr i.uh·
ni•t. ;\Ir .. Jl•n,rn. 11(irn1
ti'i:1-:1i.?i; f.1:!·.~121'1 Lvr~
1 Yr. uli! (:n·al Danf'. ·'111('
hr1111!1r. l\111<'1-~AKC-":t .t:"n
p•·d ·<"I· '1)"1f' !••I 1, JJ11· d11:
IL·< T>rl lt11 0111 1·11r. ~1111.
Jlnu"f'work. S.:itunt1;1y 11niy.
J.xr,,-.r•rnrrrl. Rrfrrrnr('~.
• li\'.:'-Ci:?'l'.l .
CLt, \'.\!:\(; Par',-,,-,-l11H
11111!' H .. l .. ·1hl•1-0wn 'l 1•:111~.
• • ti 12.z::i1 • • ----, By IJ,\).
(}11 n Trar1~p11r1ahon.
.l\:i6-flfill;
/-<l-.U-1-CA-'I 1.,1iCLE1\i\ IN(;
\\" f]l'I rv<'r:t !hlni:: frrr
r<.1i111111 .... r~ll li7'.l-ll!i2
cstimalr<:. ~5--lJ.SS an ;,
Pl~mbing
1~Lll,\J/3l NG TtE:.:PAIR
No job loo .small
• 642-.~128 • -----------• f'LU~1BING e
Elc>elncal Repa1.t $S hr
fi.12-273.1 6-12-1 lfi1
Powe r Sweeping
PAJ:!\l~I; Lor Pn11•e r
,<.:ll l'('PlllL; f. :\!~int. A-I
Pn11 (•r SWt'.'t'ping. j!,J-1;7.~I.
Roofing
\\'J-~Nl::D \ Ht'IOl1n~. Authoru-
1••1 .\pphc,111'r for Snn-llulc
1:nt1r Sy~tcm!'<. 6-1~1691
Tfi1iYRriof1nl!". !Xal Direr!.
I 11'a niv 01111 work. {i.l~ .. 2780,
:~1~-9190 .
Sewing/ Alterations
I·~{ rr~tJPEAN Drcssmal-;1n;::
l.\p•'l!l'dly Cu~ton1 Fi!'r•d.
A"<'1u· \V o r k n1eo t;l11r1.
ll7J-1S\'I
==--~ ALT!·'JtATIONS, rr ... tyl1ni;-.
F.xprrt fitt!'r. 1'np f('I'~
N.li. Brt'3. 646-Z704 C11ll
Huth Call
A lte rations -642-5845
Ncn t, aceuratc, 20 years exri
Tile
i'~;r.A \llC !ilc new &
rrn1c11:lt·I. F11"'e r•L Smn!I
J<ll,.., v.·elc.umc. 5 3 6 • 2 ~ 2 6 •
T ree Se rvice
I.IC Uphols\l"l't'r -Q 1il11y
work. A!'\'h11ri1 ·~ L~p h.
Servicr 112-:i.l\21 N n
ED -* * * * * * . ' ---. . .... . --. . .
"•" ....... 'Yo> •• ,,,\·· .... ·~.··~.· '\• ,, •,, ,., '\ ''i.
M'(' St~rrly 11t hom", ~~. ,,.., ..... ,. • • ~· • (I
MALE
INVENTORY
CONTROL
$150 wk
Pt>rsonnrl. shipptng £:
chasing.
WAREHOUSE
$2.50 "'
pur-
F>.1'1·1· Dri1,. rnrklift. Cood
d11\1n;.. record.
ESTIMATOR
F rom $I 0,000 yr
Pr•H.'L~~ instrumen1:i1inri n
nintnr cunt1ol & Tclcmelrj-
e(]Uil•·
STRUCTURAL
CRAFTSMAN
F ro1n $750 mo
Hoo! des1.i;n1ng eXJ>t;I ,
INSTALLERS
Avg. $200 wk
E\f"-r 'lu~t ha'"
t<Jnb. lni.tallin1t patio
(.'!",!,,
GEN'L LABORERS
From $1 .90 hr
AUTO GLASS MAN
$195 Week
5 Years experience •
BLOWMOL D MAN
$2.75 hr
Exprr. \V1Jl1ng
tat111~ shifts.
to \\Ork ru-
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE &
REPAIRMAN
From $4.SO lir
FOREMAN
From $3.SO hr
Exprr. p!nshc inJcction
mold niachu1c~.
DIESEL MECHANIC
$4 hr
(lw11 tools
APEX
Employment
Agency
"TllE EASY \V,\Y
task Ull Y. hyJ
1873 HARBOR
BLVD.
f 1~ block So. or 19th\
COSTA MESA
548-3426
"
I
• • • • .. . . '
DAILY PILOT WedMsda)', March 241 l'Y11 Wedntsday, MiVth 24, 1971 P!LOT·ADVERTISER 2!
• ,,. '
SEE! * PONDEROUS ELEPHANTS
*DARING AERIALISTS
*FUNNY CLOWNS
*BRAWNY BEARS
HEY KIDS HERE COMES THE Find Your Name
ROYAL INTERNATIONAL 20 OF THE BEST CIRCUS ACTS IN THE WORLD If your name I• listed In a special ad-it could appear under any
cfaulflcation, so look at them all-phone 642-5678, Extension FREE ONE DAY ONLY,
SATURDAY, APRIL 3
2:30 OR 8:00 P .M.
.k' -, 314, between 9 a .m. and 1 p.m. to make arrangements to pick up your
tickets at any convenient DAILY PILOT office.
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS-COSTA MESA
• l~,1 .·, l •
Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT
\ • ·~,.... ..,,
~I ----~l[Il] I J[Il] .__I _.....,,_ ....... __.JJ[Il] • I,____ _ ............. _.__.JJ[Il] I ![Ill ~I _ .... ,""""'_·..:;![§]~~I
,.
Job Wanted, Mal• 700 l.t1lp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 _A_•_•i~q~"-"'-----80-.,.0 • • SERVICE Sta. Pump Ild. at-*
tendant. Lube room exp.
pretd. Not under 20. CdJ\.I,
675-4112 SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Polite -Poach -Enact -
Poorly -PLATOONIC
An executive commented:
.. ~1y secrelary is In Jove ~1th
fourteen soldiers. but she
58.Ys it's merely PLAT00:-.1-
lC."
ARE YOU satilified wtth COASTAL AGENCY l MIBIC!'S GBl!!"IS!" your present lnrome? Let The World's Largest ..J!.1 !I
YQU'Bbility.upp l <m<nt Profouional !!.!!!! !!!l~!!!I !!!I !!!I !!!I
your income. Husband &
tl'rview phone 6 7 S -4 l 4 S 2790 Harbor Bl, C:O.t &W-6055
*Siles Mutuals
WE 'LL TEACH YOU
SO YOU CAN BE
ASSOCIATED WITH US \\1fe \\-'Ork together. For In-'Employment Service '!!!I !KIL?
bel\\'fl 3-6 P:'vl Harbor Bh•d. at Adams
*
AFTER COMPLETING OUR
•AS ST. HELPER•* COUNTERGIRL . llTIBT!IIMll'I" TRAINING COURSE. e $3 75 HR e Part tm1t', 18 & over, avail -Y I \VE'W.. rnEN TEACH YOU
• • for wk & wk end. Apply al !!!I !!!I .JEii P!rmanent emp!oymenl. Full CHO\V BEU., 2570 Newport !!!!I ~ HOW ro BE A PROFES-
, '· _=:c.::_c.,::=---~-C'QUNSEL.OR. AND, \VHJLE
SERVICE Estab'd. F'Uller
Brush rte, il2~$175 wk. to
st .. a.lso pt. time J4&-5745
Sharp Girl Friday
HOLLY
SATTERFIELD
423 Broadway
Costa Mes~
Yoo are the 111 innt?r of
2 tickels to lh•
Royal
International
Circus
tobml e or part tune. Depend-Blvd., c.l\t i;~;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;~;.~~;;;;;;;;;~I SION"AL INVESTI.1ENT Cali l\lr. frank * 546-9862 CREAT(VE SALES~iAN YOU'RE ALSO ?t1AKING
CHAUFFER ·Driver· Com-A young man with men's BIG MONEY. YOU'U. DE-
panion, ,.tc. One par!y or Appraiset/LoanOfcr. retail sales experieoce \\'ho [ J[il]' 1 l ______ _,11.· ·11 II•'••] VELOP A CLIENTF.LE
Attractive, \vell groomed
"Llve-\Virc" with good tele-
phone voice to act as recep-
tionist in a busy, exciting
oUice. J\·Iust be exper '{!, in
dealing 1rilh the public.
Sales backgmd preferred
but not nee. Call l\1iss For-
rest 64.i-4l2L
at rile
ORANGE
COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS
Saturday, April 3rd
Please call 6-12-5678, ext. !1·1 several at diUere11t times, To$12K \\'O uld like n1ore _ Employment 't Errflloyment 'f E"1!1oyment THAT WILL REi\lAlN
673-5644 Orange County. Several open-r esp on s 1b11 i ty. Job ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.:~~I \Vmt YOU f"OR LIFE. between 9 and l pin to claim
your tickets. (North County
toll-lrce nuinber is S.I0-12'~J
Job Wanted, Femal• 702 ings. Responsibility: Se I I Ing• ~ )'OVR EARNINGS \VfLL
Oxford Employment Agency merchandisbig • boOkkeep-Help Wanted M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 BE AS GREAT AS YOUR * * • F 'd 3932 Wilshire 100% tree int:: & as~lstlng Buyer. Great ' DES!llE. GAL ri ay-J yrs exp, 21 Prefrr Psychiatrist ofliec. ( 3) 386-8290 opportunity for young man * E S I G MANICURJsr -$20 I d a Y
.......--------~·
ReC't'ptlonist medical ins. BA BYSITIER. 6Choplgirl, \Vho likE's people & retailin g ng. a es ENERAL HELP guaranteed. 4 days. Merrell
records, etc. \Vlll accept N.B. area, 2-GPM, Call aft ~~, ,
706
.,0
1
1.s: to learn more. Tell Us What You Want e $3.85 HR. e 1-lair Design, Cdi\f. 64.}..7727
Free Day/Night
Training
Plush Offices
Start Immediately
Top Compensations
Need Nc1v .Flowers \Vith
Good Typing & SH Skills. Second Hand Roso
ANTIQUES gen. offi('(', have all oflice ic'~"c.c"~·c67~5-Sl:,,,:,c75c:_____ ~·';-;:;:;.--,---,,--=--:I Large chain needs 9 men, i\1ATURE woman to care for
skills. Perm. responsible. BABYSITTER. housekeeper, DENTAL sec'y, diversified $$We Have SS To Give! full or part lime tor mer-my new inlant, permanent-5
Liz Reinders
Personnel Agency Maple chopping block.
large pine hutch table,
pine corner cabinet,
maple & pine tea cart.
v.·a!nut linen cabinet.,
pine dry sink,
Avail now. 546-1381, 9-2 P:-0[ mature, dependable, li\'t' duties, secretarial 15kills. chandising and service. day "'k. Call 962-8262 H.B.
ln or out. 968-8230 aft 5:30 ro.tnture, congenial. To P IT IS Of.~ NO SURPRJSE TO Call Mr. Day 546-9862 ?t1EN OR WOMEN, part or
4500 Campus Dr., N.B.
Call for Appointment
5'16-2118
~
AIDES For convale5CCnce,
t'\deriy can or family care.
Homemakers, 547~1
PRACTICAL NURSE
Local refs. Day or night
• 64&-182'2•
Help Wanted, M & F 710
A Beller Temporary
-Position
sa111ry 644-2456 US TI-tAT TIIE MORE YOU BEAUTY Consultants needed ' PAY A ro.1AN THE HARDER GENER.Al.. OFFICE typing,
by Gen. Foods., t each * DlSH\VASllER lfE WIW.. \VORK Ai'lD TI-IE filing-young co. S.A. area.
makeup artistry. \V/train. • .PO!tTER . MORE 1-lE wriL ENJOY Call Lorraine, We st c Ii f 1
Exec pos's avail Viviane Expenenced, Apply in person HIS JOB OUR POLICY IS Personnel Agency, 2 O 4 3
\\'ooclard Cosmetics 5#-1464 to Harold ALLEY WEST, · Westclifi Dr., N.B. 64~2770 2106 0t.-e8.nfront, Ne"'-port TO PAY BE'ITER TI-IAN
BEAUTICIAN, exp'd, for Beach across from pier. ANYOi\'E ELSE, SO OUR • GIRLS • GIRLS
busy salon w/xlnf clientele. ' i\1EN E N J 0 Y THEm E •abJJ hed II Phone eves, 497-1484. DISTRIBUTOR, . man a~ e \VORK. TI1TS ro.1 EANS s... s rm, cpening
your O\\TI busuwss \\'/111-GREATER QUALITY EF-new branches.. F'l. or pt. e BLUE
8
EDOLPHIN e come ~.tent~al of SICKXI per FfCIE!'o;CY AND J..AR.GER time •. $3•40 HR .•
full time, canvas local area.s OUR CO~fPAi'lY'S SUCCESS
-no selling. Call evenings JS SALES PLUS ?t1AN·
497-1817 AGEr-.fENT' TA L EN T.
Jl.1IDDLE AGED LADY
FOR LITE CLEANING
3 TO 4 HRS PER DAY
5 DAYS A \VEEK
Th& Five Crowns
Sr. Acct •.. _ •.. $18K
Controller • • $20K up
Technician .• S700 up
Skip Tracer
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Dr., N.B.
642·3870
& many other lovely pleces.
Open \\led thru Sat
ll A~f-5 Pl\I
139 \V, 1st St.
Tustin 838-0742
WAJTRES S .... EXP'D. mo. Initial investm~nt less PROFITS f'OR ALL.
URGENTLY NEE CED Over 25. 3355 Via Lido, N.B. than $100. Early retirement Call Mr. Grand * 5-16-9862
Restaurant
3801 E. Pacific Coast llwy.,
Corona del Mar. No ph. calls.
111DDLE aged couple to
manager Bay View Jlotel.
Li ving quarters furnished T
commission. 673-1440 aft 5
LEARN HO\V EDUCATOR,
PLUS LECTURER -DON-
ALD GOTIES:0.1AN, B.S.,
l\f.S., P.H.D., TJIROUGlf
ASSOCIATION wm1 TY-
COON DAVID B. LOOK-
INGLAND, COY!~1UNITY
LEADER. PLUS RENO\VN-
ED CALIF. R.E. BROKER
-STARTED ON T JI E
ROAD TO F lNANCIAL IN-
DEPENDENCE,
Appliances -,:,;.---~.-:----I TAPPAN 400 electnc range.
TELEPHONE advertising 2 eye-level ovens. Rolisserie,
from our pleasant Newport timer, cutting bo11.rd,
offices. Hrly wages. Morn-etc. 'l1JJV $50, 548-4987 &ft
ing or eve. shlft.s. &15-30JO i -='~P~M'---------1
33. i\1R. MADRID l\1UST Sell Must See! Like T'°"'E~L~E~PH=o~N7.E~-An~,-w-,-n~ .• -. I ne1v GE heavy duty 4 cycle
Serv, Exp pref'd. Fl or Pt "'ashing machine, white.
timl', \\I /train if qualfd, girl Both under 1varranty, Npt
• LABORERS
(Unskilled-Dependable)
\Vork when & where
you want!
Interim
:rersonnel Service
445 E. 17th St., C.M.
642-7523
Equal Oppor. Employer
ACCTG. Secy. Laguna Hills.
Call for a ppcintmt-nt
837-2020 ext 247.
;. L L-around maintenance
man for Bmail nursing
home. Call for 11.ppt lntv,
(Il4l 4M-8075
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
8 :00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
9 to noon Saturday
Adverti~ers may place
thelr ads by telephone
COSTA ?.fESA OFFICE
330 W. Bay
642-5678
NEWPORT BEACtI
33.13 Newport Blvd.
642 -5678
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17875 Beach IDvd. 540-lZ.20
LAGUN A. BEACll
222 F'ort'St Ave.
494-9466
SAN CLEro.fENTP.
305 N. El C!lmino H.cal
492-1420
NORTil COUN'i"'l
dial free 540.1220
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Deadline for copy & kills
Is 5:30 p.m. the day bc-
rore publication, excrpt
for Monday Edition
when deadlint' is Satur-
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Ad verliS('T'S
should check their ads
daily & report errnrs
Lmmedlatcly. Tl! E
DAILY PILOT 11ssumcs
liability !or the fln;t In-
correct lnscrUon only,
CANCELLATIONS:
When kill ing an nd hf>
sure to make a rcrord
or th(' KILL NU'?tlDER
givl'n you by your a.d
lAktt as rcct>ipt of yriur
caneella.Uon. This kilt
~ number mu.<it be pre-
M.'nted blili. the advrrliscr
tn case Ol a. dispute.
CANCELLATION 0 n
CORRECTION OF' NE\V
• AD BEFORE RUNNJr.;c;;
};very l!ffort is made tn
kill or corrf"Ct a new nd
that has been ordrl'C'd.
but we cannot gu11r1:in-
tce to do so until tht' :.id
has a.ppeared in lhc pa. per.
DJME.A·!.INE Al,_,
These ad$ ftrt :ttrletlv
cash In adv11.ntt by m11.n
or at any one o! our of-
Ooes. NO phone orders.
11-ff! t>An..Y l'ILOT ft•
srnrs tlit' ?'iRht to cla~
slfy, Hitt, C'l!fllOI' or rt"·
fuse any ad\·rrl!scmf'nl,
and to cMnii:t IU r&l('I
• ~irutaUons wi thout
prior nollet-.
CLASS IFIED
MAILING ADDRESS
P. 0. Bo.x 1560, Costa ,\1CtA
926'iefi
••• BOOKKEEPER
Unique, young, growing com-
pany with an extra ordinary
potential, seeks a vivacious,
above average F IC Book-
ke('pcr, This i! an excep-
tional opportunity for the
right person. (TI4) 530-6050
Anaheim,
BOOKKEEPER, part time,
experience req'd.
Call 833-1149 aft 5 pm
CAN YOU QUALIFY?
Need 2 women to assist me
in my business, not und 25,
2 hrs day, J days a \\·k. $65
per wk. for int 774-0380 bet
4 & 6 pm. •* CASHIER •• Car \Vash , Laguna Beach. * 644-4450 *
CLERK TYPIST
1 Yr. Gen'! Ofc. Some
bkkpng. Good head for fig-
ures. Typing 50-EIO.
MISS EXEC AGENCY
410 \V. Coast J-l\\')'., NB
&16-3939
CLERK -Lite typing, fl.
time, varied hrs, Personnel
Dept. Hoag Hosp N.B.
possible &12-2l50 IF YOU FEEL YOU ARE * HEAD \VAITRESS -6
OMV BOOKKEEPER \VORTH i\lORE THAN Da v.·k. Dinfl('r Housl'.
Must have six mon!hs re-YOU'RE MAKING, o NE Perm. Interviews 9 to 12
cent experience in auto PHONE CALL MAY START noon. SAM'S SEAFOOD
dealership, Paid vacation. YOU ON TI-IE PATH TO 16278 P acific Ilwy. Hunt. 1
sick leave group ins. bene-FINANCIAL SECURITY, Bch.
lits elc. 'Salary commen-HOU~E\\'JVES • 3 openings
sur3.te with ability. Call Ed SUCCESS IS BASED ON P/time_ Aver. $3 per hr.
Hacquebord, 5-16-8017. HARD WORK PLUS IN-No exp nee. \Ve -train. For
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC TRINSIC KNOWLEDGE. appt. call Mrs. J\tu!ler
Draftsman
ARCHITECTURAL
-DRAFTSMAN -
l\fajor Real Estate 1.1gml.
Co., seeks an individual to
assist in the coordination &
preparation of preliminary
& working dra\\·ing for ten-
ant improvements in office
and retail bldgs.
Position requires three yn;.
architectural drafting ex-
pcr. and an ln1erest in de-
sign/space planning.
This is a carel'r position \\ilh
a stable company, Please
send lettl'r or resume out·
lining qualifications and
salary his tory.
THE IRVINE CO.
5.)1) Ne\\'PQl't Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Call!. 92660
Personnel D!>pl. * DRIVERS*
COJ\IBINED \VITI-I THE • ~&-5770 *
VERY BEST SALES, PLUS HOSPITALITY ll 0 STE SS
?t1ANAGEMEN1' TALENT. SERVICE, has openings in
LEARN H 0 \V STifART Irvine area for mature
FOX, EX-STOCK BROKER v.·omen looking for in-
STARTED ON THE ROAD teresting, part time work,
TO FINANCIAL JNDEPEN-v.Tlcoming newcoment to
DENCE TIIROUGH HIS AS-your area. Sales e x p ,
SOCJATION \VI TH TY-desirable. i\lust have car.
COON, R.E. BROKER, CALL: 547-309j
COMMUNITY LE A DER, • HOUSEKEEPER wanted
DAVID B. LOOKINGLAND. for 15 days f o r elderly
Start Immediately
Full Fringe Benefits
Incentive Plan
Top Compensation
CALL NOW
OPEN J\10N.
THROUGH SUN.
}'OR CALLS AND
INTERVIEWS
ORANGE COUNTY
(714) 5'17-6771
couple. Live-in. Must be
good cook. No days oil.
Wage? $200. Apply in
person, 1032 Santiago, Nwpt
Bch.
HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee.
Georgt' Allen Byland Agen-
~7-01~8 E. 16th, S.A,
• INSURANCE GrRL *
ASK FOR j\ffi. PEARSON CHRISTIAN lady needed in
my home early \\'eekdays No Experience
for 8 mo old girl. $80/mo. • ENGINEER -Fiberglass
:i\[usl be ex)){'rienced. Auto
rater & uncll'rwriler or com-
mercial lines !5ttretary to
....-ork v.ith account ex-
ecutive. Salary open, health
plan & retirement plan.
Peacock Insurance, 401
Glenneyre, Laguna Beach.
494-1087. :i\1rs. Bradley
Vic Beach & Slater, 847-3051 Necessary! production. MacGregor
aft 4 pm ~lust have clean Cali!. driv-Yacht Corp_ 1631 Placentia,
A.JY Day is the BEST day tc Ing record. Not under 2'5. l ;oCo:c';"=·~•c<~•"'=------
1
'"'Un an ad! Don• t YELLOW CAB CO, Engincerini;
::d:;:cl;:;ay;;;. ::'c::all;;:;;;tod::a:;;y;;:· :;:&12-;:;:;;567S::;;.:.:;:;:1B6;:;:;;::E::. :;:l6;;;lh:;:S;:;t.;;:, =C·::":;:· :::;
1
c IVI L ENGINEERING -TECHNICIAN -
NO MAlTER
Wlr~AT
t.1ajor land development co.,
seeks a technician to per-
fonn various Civil Engi-
neering, drafting and office
tasks.
Posll ion requires High School
graduate \\·ith drafting/de·
sign and grading. Some col-
lei;e and public \\'orks e:>."JX'r,
in a sub-p1'0fcssionat ca-
paci ty is dcsirab!l'.
This is a career posltion with
xlnt gro1vth opportunity.
Plea~e send lcl!er or re-
sume outlining quahflca-
tions and salary history.
lNSUR.ANCE Agency Girl,
e:>i:per. periOnal l i n e s ,
p/time. c .ro.t l o ca tion.
&12-6500
IS MONEY
YOUR PROBLE:-011
Here's the ansv.·er
&>come an AVON
R.l'presl'n!ativr -earn good
money in your 11;pare time
n!'ar ho1nc. CALL NOW
5-16-jMl or 540-70-tl
i;.
" . -
e e NEEDED
CALL NO\V -OPEN
?.10N. THROUG H SUN.
FOR CALLS
T Off G• I ORANGE COlTh'T'l nor und JO. 540-2052 Bach 675-8812 wo ice • 1r s (7141 5'17-6771
l\lusl be 2a and able to drive ASK FOR MR. NEIGHBORS TYPISTS * KENMORF. au1o washer, -APPLY -late model, Xlnt Cilnd $6.5.
186 E. 161.h St., C.~1. Sa!Ps Register for Guar & delivered. 546-8672, , * PROFESSlONAL • a temporary job 847-8115
NURSES AU:~E .•• 7 to 3:30 *SALES CAREER * tod Exp'd or will train, FuU . ay KEN:0.10RE \\'asher, S35, i-x-
time. Park L id 0 Con-S!arLlng salary plus Cilmm. lntervv.·s: 9-12 cellent: Also \\lasher Ii
valesccnt Center &12-8044 First ye a r ear11ings of Western Girl Inc. Dryer set. 540-1095
PART/F1JLL TL\1.E $12:~. plus possible. 2 yr 4667 ?t1acArthur Bl\'d, KEN~fORE auto wuber,
St b . tra1n1ng program by century Ne.,vport Beach Good cond St5. Guar &
art u~iness ma~ement old national co. Business or 5'10--032j
cpaareer '-"~ t'alxpand1ng com-sales backg"round helplul. delivered. M6-8672, 847-8115
ny . .x:ver areas open. N -•ni * WAITRESS-EXP'O SEARS Kenmore Series r.oo
Will train qualified ap-. ~ trav.,.,,, gmt, opportun-Not under 21. NO PHONE electric dryer. Xlnt cobd,
plicants Call ~ ities. CALLS. Apply in person, $75. Phone 557-95-19 . RONALD A. S)fl't'H PART tinie trainees, male, Suite 815 Surf & Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast GE Washt'r/dryer, newet
l!S or Coll. No exp nee. 550 Ne\vport Cenler Dr. lhl)'., N.B. model in pert cond. Make
The Zoo Restaurant, Coast Ncivport Bch. 6-l4·2190 W0:0.1AN for J}()IJSC\\'Ork, 2 olr. 962-6372 aft 9pm
H"y & McArihur. Equal Opply. Employer days, 6 hours. Lge house. NORGE GAS STOVE
* PBX Operator/ lge family, lge job. Pay S·10 * 531-2439 SALES. $1.67/hr. starling adequate. Nr Beach & Recept salary. Also some part time Warner. Aft 6: 847-5810 Furniture 810 • f11r ll.S. seniors & college _::=::::::_:.:::..;::...:.::_='---I
Pleasant personality, front studt'n!s. 492-4422 WO:i\fAN terr g<""neral offic..'e
office lady with 3 yrs, ex-I~~~~-~----\\'Ork. Neat, meticulous &
perienc a switchboard SALES-P~iwnal or compa~y V.'eli organized. Typing skill. e s _ 0~ contacts in management, 1n-erator'. meeting the public dust or education. Ex-_S-:,..:t~p~m::..:>1~8-6800:...::::..:_~--~
and hie typing C a J J -•. ry YOUNG Jnternational O:l. KATI--IY 557_7475 .__ . 9 c:111ng concept. ~ull or part
::i v•:l\\n time. Leadership Dcvclop-
am & 4:30 pm. m{'Ilt Consultant~ &l&-$341
REC:EPTIONIST, gen. ol~ice SARAH C~vcnlry' needs fl.
duties. Xlnt opportu~ty. or pt time help, No in-
Preferably over JO. N pt. veslment \\'ill train min
Center. Call ~4 (9-5) age 20. 53a.-1407 & 54S.:9066.
RECEPTIONIST for Jon
Peters Beauty Salon Tues
thru Sat. 1610 \V, Coast
H"Y. N.B.
• SECRETARIES
\\'ork 1vhen &-\\'here
you \\'ant!
Interim
Personnel Service
seeks managemt'nl. Earn to
$1000. plus per mo. Ph:
833-1~1 be t 2-Jpm
YOUNG int'!. co, seeks
i\fgmt. personnel. Variable
hrs, unlimited i n C' om e ,
497-1379
Merchaodise J[§J
Antiques 800
RECPT. S•KIO. Front ollice
appearanee. Young co. T)p-
ing 40 1vpm. PBX. 6-t5-2770
PIANO teacher, over :ID yrs,
willing lo be trained for
part lime emplmt in music VERY ANTIQUE
school. S.IS.-7693 445 E. 17th St., C.M. SEWING i\lACH INI::, com· =~'=""'_,c~~---1 642-7523 pletely refinished & it
PROFESSIONAL phone Equal Oppor. Enip!oyer works! \VALL HAT RACK-
sollcllor • Dana Point, San1,...,,....,...,...,...,...,...,..,, I v.·/mirror. For added info;
Clemente, Capistrano area. * SECRl:7I'ARY ; Genl'ral &16·73.lJ, Work In your O\\TI home. Be~t deal ln area. Phone ofc. Dictation-m11nusc.rip1s. CHINESE rug-9xl2, beige
835-1465 betl\'een 9:00 a.m. Lyceum Procluctlons, lnc, w/sculptured pastel f\O\\'ers,
and noon. P. 0. Box 1226. Laguna Xlnt cond. Teak Tables,
Bl'ach. 49·ki253 • -p · •· •--·o S1\LES • 1.fen & \Vomen ...... mps. 1c1urt'S. ""--~""
DECORATOR Items of f'ren-
ch & lta.lian periods-2 gold
leaf pedes!als: nest of
tables; 'ving chairs-pastel
colors; go Id & crystal
scounce, etc. All ne"' &:
rea~ priced. 644--0117
BEAUTIF'UL King-s:i: bed,
Jirm. Never used, still
packaged . Frame Included.
SL10, v.'Crth $260. \VJ 11
deliver, osually ho m • .
0!2-<636
Decorators Furniture
11 pc white & gold bdrm 11et.
Hal!\\·ay mirror & consul.
6-16-733:}
DINING table & 2 captain's
chairs; 1·attan Jiving nn
furn--<:hairs. tnbles, • t c.
64&-356.i or &i2-9789
CA.Sil for furni1ure, ap-
pliances, 1ools, misc Items.
Open 9 to ;1, 612-7015
DREXEL Break rr on l,
n1ahogany_ t>xlnL Cflnd. $275
or best orfrr. 6•ti-:~117
DUNC,\N Phyft' 10 pc din
nn se1 & huffrl !.1ble, solid
mahoJ,'!: SI OOO. ~7-{;933 aft 5
IT IS
THE IRVINE CO.
!>.lO Ne\\'port Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Cahf. 92660
Personnel Drpt.
STOP!'.'· SERVICE Sta. All'ndnt, n FltENCH Crystal vase, pair or pl time, not und ]8. .Japanese porcrlain \'ases. · LOOKING & ACT Neat, gd appearanct>, Tllk1n1.'! bids, Pvt pty,
l'flYINE PERSONNEL Sales minded person, see for ~:°oo°:~~f Gd ref's, 3006 1 ...c"'.c'-~"":.:,::==~==~ SER.YICES•AGENCY '"""'"· a res] c'"" op.1 --"'::....:.c· -----*ORIENTAL RUGS
GOLD Hercu!on Tilt back
bed tlivan, 11ke new $50.
&1t-8!11
'· "' '
".
i·
\.
• • •
YOU CAN
SELL
WITH
IT
A
ESCROW OFFICERS
To $750
Ornnge Counly. Expcr. nius\
include sales.
Oxforrl Employmen1 Agrncy
3932 \\'ilshire 100'1~ tree
<213) 3?{t-S290
E)l.-P. couple 11·anted to
1nanage 20 unit molt'! 111
La Habra. ft·ee Afll . +
DAILY PILOT1""~,,_:c._",""i'~'-·'_'•_'_· _ .. _,-!_·"'
EXl''D Sn lesgirl for
WANT AD
For Fast Service &
Erpert Assistance
DIAL
642-5678
DIRECT
•
drui::store Sat's & Sun's,
!'ubmit resume to Box 365.
Corona de\ :i\1ar. Calif.
J>'"ACTORY help wanted.
Stcndy \\'Ol'k for stro<ly
\\'Ofker~. Apflly Rf 32972
Calle Pf'rlecto, S.in Juan
Capi<;trano
FE~tALE factory packagers.
5'6" or over. Sl.6..l {>E'r hr
to s1art,, n1t'rit r a i s e s ,
5'18-jllS
• FOUNTAIN \\'ORK -
f'X"pe:nence fl('Cf'S.~.
Call ~4-7402
GARDENER TRAINEE, M
expcr, nee. Xlnt opp1y. Ph:
~t"·n 10--l2 noon only. (71~)
4!U-5l27
General Office
t:-tping, !Jling. )'i"IUni:: oo. rail
l.llralnr, \\'t~rc:llf! J~cr~11nnrl
Aizency, 2(}1J \Vcslchfl Dr.
N.R. Q.15-2770
Secretary
lndu.~tries Ne\\ei11 Idea
The4DayWHk
Vita\ progres~ive local llnn.
l\tarketing backiround pre·
ff'rred.
4S8 E. 17th (111 Irvine) C.M.
642·1470
*LIQUOR CLERK~*
Not under 4(), Costa ro.1csa
1u-ea. i'.lust have retail
liquor Experlencr, Appllca-
lions confidential. Ph:
51:.1-3883
LAUNDRY h<'lp. \Vash n111n.
~lon-Yrl, P(·r1u. pos1tior1.
Berwt1rs. Std. U n If or 1n,
lnll Crabb l.n. II B.
LOOl\ING for ~f'veral l"\p'd
mature c..lt'anlng m111ron.~
for hi-<lcmond romn1erC'tlll
bldgs in s·n Org. Co., pl
" a timf' ev~s 546-S322
r-.t ATURE, refin<"d lady f()
slay v.·i!h 2 i,::irl!, U & 16,
2: 30 to 6: 30 !> dny11_ AIMl
lli::-t1! hcusf'\vork Ph.
11nytlmr. 5.1&-1900
P?r!unity. Xlnt ~uture for DON'T gl\•e it away, get Royal Kennin, 12x23, also
nght man. Earnings com-quick cash for u with a smlr siU'S. 675-3353
:O.IOD. couch. Green striped
labric, 1v1tlnut arm!. Xlnt
cond, $j.5. S.12-3480
mence imm~iately should DAILY PILOT Oauilled
be-In excess of S150. per wk. Call 64U.678 &-cha.rie it. House Hunting? \Vatch the HOUSE Hunting'! \VR!ch the
No canvassing or soliciting. OPEN HOUSE column. OPE:N HOUSE column.
Jntervie\Vs by appointmenJ I-;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;~~~=::~;:==========~§§:§~~~~~;.. only !l-1 \\'~kdays, 835-2771. I ~~~ELLENT INCOME OP· sm=sTAR GA'ZEE;I<~
PORTUNITY for ro.1An.JRE ARllS DyCLAYX.POLLAN---...-----1
MAN in Costa ~I e s a _ ~ HA#.. l J:/a. Your Doily Adivlfy Guiel• M Sf" L~~"::n.
Nrwporl Beach area. Dire('! :hM~ " J.ccorclirtg lo llr1 Slorr. Y ,-@i@
sales "x per i enc e JlQt ~17-lS.19-3. To develop message ~or Tliursdoy; ~~JO~
necessary, but must lun·e ~2-~6-i7 read words~o~~ingto numbers SS-59-81.a9U:
abilHy to deal \\'lth o\\iiers, {£TAURU5 ofyourZod1ocb1rths1gn. Al#. 10 l [.,0<1 Jl Of 61 Othttl' SCOIPIO
n1an<1Kers find purchasinii ; 2Roeri..g J2Wh6'• t.is.11..,. OCT.Ji~
n.gent.s !or co1nmercia1 and .. UAY 7e J P~u 33 T,.~ t.l ~""ol~ H0;., 11
I d I "il:;.un_:. 'B1 3~ Md 6~ R~V. n ustr1<1 Accounts. ri!en llJro.76:79.ii ~Con 35C~iOl'I' 6~ lth'a' Sl..sl-511-61,.
over 40 pN'fPITt'd bu! All 6 L•~e 36 Molo.1 66 ,..,~ M-67-!D-i?ll
inquiries tcC'C'h·e e(i-ual ron-GIMIMI "J f•nr J7 No 67 Con1•.fff
1ilderallon. \\'rite: Dept. &l, Qi l>'AY ll 11 S. JBV•""' 68 Niut0t• )>, ~. JU,;f 11 '}A l9W09f" 69TM" Cons:olitlalC'd lnler-Amt'ricn OO 100ov •01"'"'"""' 70Coll«t'°""
Corp., 912 E. Ohio Bldg.. 1-17-49 11 CM '1 COl!IX•ly 71 Sr•rg
Cle\"{'land , Ohio. 4~11~ -69.74 12fm '2Chf<.to.· nSuc,.-c
SALE Es('rov.• Of!icer • Sav-
ing_, & Loan Assoc, 1..iwJna
Brach Re~ion.'li Ole. Sal11ry
open, Equi\I Oppo r .
Employt-r. 5C'nd resume to
Classlrled Ad No. 5.1, O:i lly
Pilot, l'.0. B)X l::i60 Costa ~1r~11., Ctt 926~ .
CAHCIR l lfron< 'lOr' 73Rer•PI•.,.. I~ CO"\>dt1011 '' Yo.1' 7• Aw•oOf WJ11~~21 l!iShort •5Li~!y 75Chft.k
HJUtr 11 160t '61,. 16/!Aat ~ .,_ 170trlgef .. 1ro ni .. ta "..:J.~7'""'3 18 Of .(8 Gxd 78 Nn
V. l 9Mt1std •9Stt(.lo.~·;I 79 !!.
uo 'OCOllPM)ti"' ~Cl" IOA!I 'IModor 51Co 81C011't JUL: 21 12 S-~bolft' 52 Nrit 87 Ar19lrt
AUG.ll ]JYOll" ~3A1YIQ 8J Pt0J«ll
,,,, ••,. • ]' OIJ(!' "'' w,,. 8• 0.1/!yf'lf
AQUAl.IU$
JAii.it~ . .
ffl. '' 'lJ
-Ma11ageme nt T,:n--I,.---------]..,? . .,..$~ :l' L,,.. !i~ PtQITU'.lft 85 0f1••f'<f 7-10.lZ-it~ n.i~-Jll 1~ !"':.CC1·~7 .. "''-l 1&Tixr..-•,:,To 8!.An"'''""
\ll;GO ;1 S. !17 Lvclo 87 Ad>oroc• PJSCIS
AUG. ll •a Mov '~ w,,,. ea ~!r ,,,, 1, ._ ll.,1r1 or \[o1rl r~p. C'.t1U :\11~.~
!'n111h. \Vr~1rl1ff l'f'L'~'lnnel
A1:rn1')'. ZO.IJ \\.,~t1:l1ff Or .•
N ll, r.1j-2i70
\'ACANCIF:S Cos1 '11011(';-.'
R\·nt your fll)n~r. nrt , ~tor<"
blrlll, r!c, lhru a Dally Plkll
lla.!llliilied 11d.
. ~ (""' 50 'I',,.. 89 fulfill • /a ~un.11 30J.':. &i1o 90HG"'1•<0llPld"'A#.,~ ~~
I),)·,_ B·11 ·-~¢)Go>! Ad""' .:'INJ/Jl· I ~t<i<7il -68.7S-88 I'll u ' 12'-31.v..siO• -
.-
3 PILOT ·.lOVEMTISER
I~ [ -I~ I
J.urnlruro '10 M1 ... 11.--..
'""'t-· """wH=·y-euv-: -· -
111 TV, Radio, HIFI, H-. l$f Compo,.,S1lo/ltontnt Moiwr HomM 940 Truckt 961 Auto., Imported 970 Autos, Imported
* AUCTION * Storoo 136 STRAWBERJ\Y ...,. matt. CAMPER iiiiii DUMP TRUCK
1969 SPANISH s1yi. Cooaol• tno1nod tor Enall•h , * Kinas Coach * 1895 DATSUN PORSCHE
~ FURNITURE? FrldMoy 7h:0026 Ph.M. itereo: Am-FM itt~ " pltaaure; yr old, ..._, i,~ l 'o~-""Ho-· Anency 1957 GMC ore t """· u"" • m<H:oot l6ill) Anob Som! eolt. !500 eL CLEARANCE SALE M •~ 0-• c.........i bed 1: UNCLAIMED STORAGE Mill $210 or trade. 5'&-31'35 67l-6129 aJt 6 pm SuperlOr • * Landau Type uHd by City
'69 2000 ROADSTER '63 Porsche Sup•
1' Be Flexible I 1'"1\0M COLUMBIA GE st~reo. 4 tt. walnut REG Pinto Stal.lion. S Yrs~ Laree Hlectlon Pre 'Tl 604 N, Qarbor, Slnta An& ot Newport Belch 5 ~pd. dlr, Owi1ed by llnle
!-;: Re.nt mo. to 1no. with VAN & SI'ORAGE cabinet Good condition aentle, wtll ~haved, beaut Campen .Now Sluhed to Opeon dally 9 to 9 139-903\1 'Good operatina: condJUon <ild 11cho<>l t('a<:hl'r lrom La-
Cpt. Bahama yellow wtth
lnlcrior, Af.l/1'M, ~
wheels, recent a n 1 I n
!'X\V982 100°/• Purch••• Option Sealed baxe1, Dish pa.cJa, Sl!'lO. ~7'34 aft 1 PM ct maritlJ'CS, ride• wtll $395. $ See at Dally Ptlot auna Beach. (ZNS 159) Take ~· Jnd, Item selection Mlrmr padu, B<lnn 1ets, !itS-6351 ._516-~~ll~tt~~-.,,,----49 A~~L WANTED: BaJOO. Motor 330 Wen Bay Street oldt1r trade or small down.
24 Hr. Dely, '1ivans, Cbe1tt, Dinettes, •14 Yr Quarttr Hone, mare. f ACTOIY Ho~ Jn lood ehape, at C011ta Meaa , \VUJ finance: pvt. ply. Aft $2399
CHICK IYERSO
.·
CU.;TOM .Jcsks, Commodea. Mallrts• gentle. Xlnt for .tm&ll child INWOICI reu price, Write cluslf!ed or call 10 am M0-3100 or 6-1-7506.
Furnl tur• R•nta l SC!I, Vacuum cleaners, Sew-JI s $300. ~un Sl«lWCASE ad No. 43, Daily Pilot, P. htra. Greenman. DOT DATSUN • >l~J031 ~ 66 or 67 ~J -W in.g m.achlne1, Coknd TV's, F• to You DEALER 0. Box U60, Ca!ta Mesa, fH2-43Zl .-~ . 19th, c.t.1. ~-3'81 stereo., Lamps. 3M Copier, I ;;,;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~,;miiilYR-()ld Fllly for1 aale, pt FOR Ca.IU 9'l6"JS OPEN DAil y Aflilhelm 774-2*l0 Rel . . Fr . \V h Ap~. halter broktn. · Auto Lee1lng 964 AND UJ-labra 694-3708 rig •, eeu-rs, as • 83J.-OS52 aft 4 PM ELDORADO CAMPERS •n Horii.on deluxe 1nokll' -1970 HARBOR. BLVD, (
l'OSTA MESA > ers, Dryen., 01miw1111\er, Lovable yng adul1 female THEODORE coach. 26' fully equip. ee1. LEASE SUNDAYS
MUST sacritlce; Be au t Stovu and much mott! med slz.e wire-haired tu-. RO IN O 8:30 AM or aft !>, 61'3-lBM. A NEW 1971 11835 Ceach mvd. 1966 POR.SCllE 911; Bahan\a
Yello1v, ~ spd, 4.2,iq m)
Am/f'm, bl1upunkt radio,-a1 owner. Co.-nplt'te Servkt>
Log &46-2"'!6 d)'I, 548-8180 '
;';':;:;.':" V~co:!'v:,~:;,".'be~ WINDY'S AUCTION rloc .mix I'"' •"'rt-haired ,,_-... -.,-... --~,,.'JI' I I S F RD RENT :rr Winni $125/wk, PINTO Homt""1on lle"h
terrier mix, 10 lbs, male. ...,...(..,....C "' 3'JEOHARBOR BLVD. &lmml'r, 7c/ml. S200 ll $SO OO JG.7781 or 5'!0-0C42
& matching chair. Olive Good watchdogs, love child-. COSTA MESA 542.0010 reserved by 4J30. 545-1857 • mo. FIAT
barrel chairs, Coffee !able COME BRO\VSE AROUND ren. Need good homes w/ ** INVERTER. Heath Kit, 138 mo.)
& commodes, pe can & 207S"n Newport Blvd. fenced yard.ft. l·5l2-S181, 5-T Gtnerel 900 model l\iPl4, UVOC to 110 Treiler1, Trtvel 945 open end eve-s
oak. Beaut lanips, DiMllr, BL-hind Tony's Bldg Marls pm, or 836-'1493 3124 VAC, ft) cycles, 400 watts. 14• TRAVEL Trlr, SeU cont. RENT ~
6-pc Quf!'(!'n bdrm, Also 6-pc Costa Mesa * 646-8686 ShlAU... mother dog and 2 S~RING CLEA~ANCE NEW uaembled &: (hecked Yke ntw. Mltlng i950. A NEW 1971 ''THINK" '70 911 T. 5-spd, Bea11f
orange, 9US lnls. & w~
A~l /FM. Pvt pty. 644-5347 dbl bdrm set, Stereo 'QUip, OPEN DAILY 9 lo 4 puppies. Black and brown 20 Dyer Glamor Gni, inter· out by prore11sional electron· ~1237 P tNTO :~eel~~=· ::~w.:e to ap-POOL labltl, slate, old-pl. Chihuahua and doxle. ctptor power, outboard le engineer. Sacrifiee noo. I ·T~ro~1~1."",-,,"""u~t~ll~lty--... =47 $4 DA y Dllil SPRITE J I-'-----='----fashioned models, 7'. 8', 9'. 212 33rd St Newport drive, $2195. Call ~9845 after 6 P.r.f. /:ai :.. Ger19e Sale 112 Sacrifice. \Vill del!ver lree. Sch · 3/24 21' La(>!trakt utility, Volvo y,•eekday1 & al.I day wuk-14' Tandim Trallir AND ,.~ ',6-1-,-p-rit_e_co_nv ___ Cood __ "'_NI..,,.' • l:o-=,,...,,_-,_.___ 1442 Hayes Ave, Leng ~00=--------1 ~"''ered, $2'175. ends. With 4 wbeeb. AlJ atttl. weld. 4¢ MILE s.. S900 best u Pr"v pt
PATIO Sale: 2 niotorcycles, Beach, 213/ 435-8885. G 3 mo old black stan-3•'tlbt'rglalli dinghy_. u 111~~-'-,~--~-~-1 PUTAUTn..E or 0 er. 1 f". . _ dard Poodle, pupp)', thots ,~ • '69 Ford Camper Sliper Van. ed mn1trucUon. %" Slee! ''fRIEDLAHDfR'' 675:-0990 aft G •
car air conditioner, 2 1V's ?i-10VING, selling evtrything: pd, , for. Female. Moving, 1~6-_1 ..... No~•-rg •n-Fully equlp'd. CI ea n 1 deck plaUng, Will ~u or KICK IN YOUR TOYOTA
men's clothe~. mattresses, furn., 1,1·ashldryer, baby & cant keep. Great with kids . ..i~A ~:_ ~1 '~':'.' U • Sharp Rttscnable! M~ trade for plclrup. !166 Sicily, LIFE! 11750 IEACH llVD.
pressure cooker, electric kit. things. 49'Hl973, 483 Oak 6f6..7J04 3125 .,....,, u ... n power .-e-o lna:s bclore 12; eves aft (Meaa Vude) C.M. THEODORE (Hwy. 3'1
skillet, Ii.replace logs, lad· st., Laguna reduction gear. 10 6#-7818 ROBINS FORD 893-7566 e 537..Q24 TOYOTA NEW '71 :~
der. & various misc. ltems. WANTEO o 1~0 M~ull-h CHARLl.E Ml'ds good home 1 only-1 cyJ Litter diesel ) "'"'°""'==~.,,,--,.--1 2000 HAR.BO NEW·USEO.SERV. NO DOWN
2St> Europa Dr., CM Flying Scott"""oo HJ:. ~ w/lenced yard & children. 1 used Chrysler Crown w/ ·10 c~to.lP,~R,lu il~U.:OOver. ,--------,1 (~.J cosrA ~~VD.,
.fi,W-3283 att 6 weekdays, all rondltton. Will n•v up to Medium brown female dos reduction gear. ~"171Sw ""a1 3 kd, Au101forSalot 642-0010 ~ PAYMENT 4aY Sat-Sun. $50. 531-729-1 a"'J •payed, haebrkn, shots. 1% 1.32 volt heavy duty ae:nera-*=-t pm w YI I .,--,--=--~_,~-~Tl.~'°""'=~~
FISHING eqpt, guns, am· yrs. IW6-404l 3126 tor & S\\'ltcb panel. '62 DODGE Walk-ln Van: I••••••••-Auto Service, Pertt 9611 'TO ¥'IAT Spyder 8.50 Con·
munition, misc hunt in 1 SICK room supplies, Sears LOVELY spayed 1 yr old 2 used flshlng chairs. Reblt en&, 6 cyl, auto, turn, D 8 1 956 verl., Only 9000 mi· 11, $69.01 MONTH• ·:
36 mos. Del. pa,y prict": 'valker, roll-away bed , cat. Short hair silver Tabby Misc. boat davita. l;:642-;;;i'IW..i::'''-,;67;r3-3383.:;;'----l --u-no __ "_8_8_•_• ____ 1s cyl.1. roro ercine. Factory Radials R/H Sacrilice: ol-eqpl: executive .,.,.ood desk basketball hoop, 21" TV. rebuilt Yr1lh 3 af)ffi:I tTa.nt r ~S:OOS2 ' & uphol swivel chair, vinyl c.:.._1....., & lo~balred Calico. May be-seen •I Udo Ship. Cyc:le1, Bikes, ,10 "EYERS "lanx 1~ CC -u 1 M · er. ·
couch, 8 mm movie camera 1 =~~-~,'=0 =~~---546-7'308 3/25 yard, 900 Udo Park Dr. Scoatort J" u vuv :':""11 .,'"; ~. compete. u.st '69 FIAT 8:£1, gold Sports
S:Z.1St3G or c~h p r l c·t-
$2003.55 Incl , Tax & Lk
A.P.H ..
014..>i~. Serial No'.1
134341. '
Co,1MODORE lb~ 1 915 e-lne, 3,000 mi's. Many ..;,c .,..8--538:) C blk 1 ~ · 1w~ & projector, brand new: · ou au mo or FRIENDLY l yr. old male SAVE $3 SOQ '"" pt, ea111er int . .._..,,,., """ .. _.. ~HP $80. Sailboat fibet'glas1 w•-H · T 1 • 1 nll.l"U'V"I xtras. $'2300 10 build. Sell Autos Wanted ffl 492-7275, 4~9813 aft 6. ;mo-oa,., u... air err er mtx. 11150/be.t otr. ~ after over plywood, SaOOt m&llt N ~ ~ •· with J
FURN. Di•h & ghwware, • oall 1125 837-7039 c:ild:.,.•96i-1,;j7'"' 3125 CONTEST 27 DEMO 'IHAll 6PM WE PAY TOP AGUAR *On approved credil _
f&mp s, Trea11ure1 & 9~ CORVA IR CAS Trinkets. 3807 Inlet !Me Dr, • YAOIT CLUB TO qUal home. Miniature Holland Yachts·Nl!WJ>Ort HO•,.,.,., a 1 -Make Oller H JAGUAR
CdM. off ;\larguerite & San-MEMBERSHIP Schnauzer Tenitr mi xl.-,,,==~n_<-6#-0139=~=~~' 1 AW-
casUe. Thurs-Fri 9A~1 SAVE $300. f em a 1 e , F n c d yd \VANTED: 1959 r-.tcCulloch • 546-7817 After 6 P!o.t HEADQUARTERS
Bill Mi:ixey Toyota
111881 BEACl-I BL. 847-85.1.'i HUNTINGTON BEAC
, sr. John The Baplist School * 6#-0963 * 5'18--0813 3/2.i !-~lying Scott 60 H.P. any 1'fRfEDl.ANDER" Trucks 962 tor used cars &: tntclt1, just nie only authorized JAGUAR
j\uxi!iary Run1mage Sale in EXERCISE COUCH ADORABLE Easter gilt 7 t;>ndltion. Will pay up to w. alACll """'., _,..,.,....,.,,,,..,,.---:::=c-I call us for he estirn1te1. dealer in the entire Harbor $1871
""'"'"""'hall at 1021 Baker W/VIBRATOR llO mo. old caUco kitt.n. H•brk.1~$50-, "~'~-7294~---537-•824 • 893-75'6 '68 FORD 1L JON GROTH" CHEVROLET ""''
.St, Costa tl1esa. Sat, March * fi46.-0818 * has shots, grtat w/child. Botts/Marine NEW·USEO.SERV. l l · Complete SALES SERVICE PARTS
BAUER
19n TOYOTA COROLLA
2 DR. FACTORY EQtJtPPED
#987ll
;7, !b.m-3pm. Sun. ~larch BOOKS 5c-$L p\(tUres 673--7617 3/%> Equip. 904 ......... - -
<(,, ,;,;18,,:·~"~"'~-2--'-prn"-o-~~~-· I Sc-50c. Purses 50c. FREE 3 mo old puppy, v.·hite * * INVERTER Heath KH • - -...... I
• THRU Sat. ~. Antiques, 646-0818 w I black sPots. M Ix e d model MP14 u\roc to u0 500 cc VELOCETTE Thrux·
Avons, and much mo~. Mi1cella neous breed, remal~. 962..0744 3/26 VAC, 60 cy~le1 400 watU. ton, new clut(h, tires,
I ljll51 Edye Drl\'e, H.B. Wantitd 120 NEED good ho~ for lovable NEW asaembled le checked brakes, pl5ton and lower 1,,,-=.,,n-,.--~-~-'----~-;;;;;;:;;;;;:; Amber colored k i It i e. out by professional eleetron-end. Purist'• delight and
BiKES, !um, & misc .I ' Wanted To Buy 548--0813 3/25 k: enginttr. Sacrifice: $100. in perfect shape. Best offer
pqperback books. 822 W. NEED ~ •-rn• ,0, g<nU• Call 528-9845 aJler 6 P.M. over l95(1. 67~ alter 4 ' B·'bo N 5 67"389 2 or 3 Bedroom Mobile 5""" nv w a o. or ,,...... male Doxie, fuxl yard v1eekdaya &: all day "'eek-, ~•-·'"-·...,,====c---Home. Set up in FAi'iflLY 1-, I,m-s of furn, Beds, park. Must be 12. wlde. 548--0613 3125 ends. 1969 YAMAHA
J?ousehold goods. Bargains Less than $4000. Jn new NEED good home fncd yd Botti , Power 906 251'.1 c.c. twin. $395.00. 4,300
'. '!.,_a,10:;;,;,-,19763 Kesw·ick, li".B., condition. Call 642-3844 eves for beaut.itul. Australian 40' IV Ibo o· . miles. Very (lean. Call
' . .., ...,,.,,, & wknds. Shep Female 836-4493 3/26 i tesel Cnnser. 835-1492 days, nlte &U-4330. , Machinery 116 · · Ji"e"ld, galley, radio, bait Ask for Joe. }"'REE rabbit, caU tank, stereo, dinghy, G I ~~--------
1 TEEN girl wants used 10 54&-1730 bu"'··. C 1a,11 c Catalln• '65 YA:.,tAHA 250, New trans
ENGINEER'S ll' lathe, 24" spd OOy's Sch"•lnn. Price 3/26 boat~ ood -" $6000 It paint. $325.
" th b. l "" 0 9'5 ,.-==~~~~--'-'I ' g COuu, 1 Call 897 7941 II 5 f:trs., au1o. leng!h and cross 1_::cc'c.0='"'"'=·-~"'"-='-~= l BLACK Baby bunny 546-1401 l ===~--~·~-p-m_ 1 traverse 3' x 4' jav.' chucks. Pianos/Organs 126 493-3894 San Juan •69--18• Charger fiatbottom '68 BM\V Beautiful rond w/G 1 plu! lots ol attessories. $380 Calpstrano 3/26 boat w/trlr, 428 Ford e,ng, ~ ~1385ng_ tank. Sacrifice 1 • ~tfers. 499-3427 alter S p.m. WE ~,,.,~ ~IALE Beagle, AKC ~. 3 Day& 838--1564/aft 6: 30 pm, ! Mi setlltneous 111 yrs old, needs rood home. 968-7481 '68 Yamaha 250 Enduro dirt \ QUIJlll Ca.II 557-7648 3/2S11'gi;=7-32~. ~C-h-,-1-,-0>-rtn--I bike. Good cond. Must sell. * 1NVERTER, Heath Kit, ••• DARLING little 6 wk old thlan--twin sett~'. r u 11 y $465 or best oUe-r. M6-8717
~,,model MP14, 12VDC to 110 1 · kittenll need ........t homes ...... ui".....i , ,.,dy to ....... '70 YAMAHA 250 Enduro and After 5 years, we &re cosing f;VUU ~... l'Y"" ev VAC. 60 (fcles, 400 1,1·atts. 548-9697 3/25 548-2434 helmet. $700. our doors in Costa Mesa.
' t)!E\V assembl<'d & checked All . . p· , 0 2 '""''' •-, 10 ~ "·m•. 21• TROJAN: Grey Marine * 5-16-3181 eve1. * Out by professional electron--remaining 1anos "' r· ., "' 5 .......... ,.,
ic ellgineer. &tcri!lce $100. gans, new & used, to clear Mixed sm breed 8 wk.s old. eng, dbl tand/trlr. Needs 2--= ~~~ ~ ~:
'G.all 528.9845 arter 6 P.M. at auction prices. Savings 837..8803 3124 paint. $1000 or bst ofr.
1 weekdays & alJ day \\'eek· up to ro%. No dealers BEAUT. white friendly 8 wk 64&-3909: aft 6• 968-J92S Gttr.
nd please. old puppy, lovable & al· • 13' BOSTON WHALER • Mobile Homtl
t ,e s. WARD 'S BALD\VIN S'11JDIO fectionate. 494-5&87 3/29 40 hp-'70 Joh11!1011-Trlr-Xtru
' ~~1~~u~, :a~~a:!in; 1819 Newpon Blvd, &12-8484 FREE bunnies-Ideal Easter $1300. Eves only 495-5158 1--N-O_W_·_O_P_E_N __
$21i Braided nylon rug, 131~ CLEARANCE gifts. CALL AFTER 2, 41' CHRIS '59, trkabin, CONTEMPO.
x 101,, $60 Reirlg $50 Chest SALE 548-3917 3/25 New.,inter., Full equipment, LAGUNA HILLS
or draWt'n \\'/end table & l\ITI'ENS 2 female 1 male $20,500. G44-4lJ2, 6"1-422l 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR.
mirror $25. Single bt'd & Over 100 Pianos " Organs 6 weeks 847~ 3/.25 Boatt. R•nt/Chart'r 90I (CDrner of hfoulton Pkwy)
wal!ress & b"' sprg. $'25. Reduced for lmmed. sale. LAGUNA HILLS Crutches $3. 4c\2 Cambridge Buy Now & Save l 2 !ttt Guinea Pigs 1,1•/cage. 32' Tu.·inscrew Chris, fully
Cir. 64&-0339 Open Daily 10 ti! 6 557-7387 3125 equlp'd. Fishin&: or CrulJ. PrtsUge adult community ad. ~ l 9 S l2 5 BEAUTIFUL. Poodle pups. ing. 548-2434. jal!1!nt to Leisure World.
NEiii?. ne\v power Ja1,1·n-~·· 0· * un · Be tJlul ndl all
I 'TTIOv•er & JXl"'er ed~er COAST MUSIC r-.tother AKC. 497-1582 3/25 Bo.ts, Sall 909 l~ ap=en~' put-
j.10 ea, 1'fap!e! hutch $50. NEWPORT &: HARB~~ ~ HOBIE 14, 6 mo old. X\nt ling green, hobby Jhop,
Camera, lite meter & fiash C:Osta Meza * 64~~~ I I cond. Lime gm \\'/yellow much mo~. ;~. Old 78 rerorrls; misc WANTED: Homeless piano. ~t• lf'ld Suppflei . trampoline & sail. 11000 or -~=CALL~~~8lhl900,.;:,~"=---I
lumber; 12 gal fish tank \V!ll slore piano (grand I i:~::::~.:.~:'l~ll~>IO~~w:;/~tr~lr:·;_°":~-290'::2, THE BEST OF con1plrte \\'/fish & pump. preferred) in my homt-. No 494-316a BOTH WORLDS
543-7478. children. 541)..2279 alter 5 P•ts, Gen•r•I &SO
FOODS: Popcorn , p.m. Ne~=~ For a beautiful bo!Tlt', Jew
Soo\l.'cones, rotton canriy & ~H7AJ~M"°M"O"N"o'",-,s"t'"•-;1-,-.,-.-,-. KANGAROO rat and cage, SI.Ip & Financlng rn11ntenance and architttW"·
\'ending n1achines. Supplies, Yamaha. Ne\v & used SlS. Abo plgeoru;. Pacllic Yacht.I 673-1570 :;:: =~~e .. ulv~e!e•~~fu==
Rentali; & Repairs. pianos of most makes. Best =---*:...:"'cc"":..::2638:::...:*_"7.,, 1;0 ,;,.-";'"io,,.-T,-,o< . 15193 111oran SI. \Vmstr. buys in So. C&llf. at Schmidt Dogs 85-4 • 12' F 1 BERG LASS Hoo&e" by Uvltt ldobUe
'l'ony Capas90 714/531-3001 Musi( Co., 1901 N. Main, ---------) SNOWBrnD, w/dolly, xtra Sy11ern1 on display now ac
A GREAT ~-.Mat• Brindle. sail, Xlnt cond. 673-7933 BAY HARBOR L table, lull G ize Santa na. ..,..,.., \v/cu~s. bnlls, etc. Home -H-A-IN_E_S~b~ob-y-.,.-00~,-,a-no-, 1 YT. Papers-AKc-5 gen. e ALCORT CATAMARAN MOB)LE HOMES
beer bar ,v/relrig unit. Bar "·hite & gold, ~fffl site. pedigree champion liiock. w/tt-a.i.ler. Seit oUer over 1425 Baker St. Colla Mesa
& 2 hi stools, $45. Bowling Over 100 yrs old. $00J. Shots. e81'8 cropped, very $450. 837-7874 JUlt S. of S.D. Fwy •I Harbor
balls ""'/hags. CoMO!e TV 5.51-3331 gentle & h ~ u s e b r 0 k e ~ · CORONADO 25: I mm a c TI4f540..!MTO
$20. 2 port TVs $1!1 each. Sporto"nn Goods 130 Doghouse .~~· ~IXXI u'~ Cstm boet. All Xtru S'raXl :;s7_3331 • vestment. _or u.:sl o er or bflt ofr. G46-8303
or trade for ? 646--6!):12
MODEL MOBILE HOMES
in Cotta Meu'a Greenleaf
Park. 2-1."60 Amerl(ana
$15,900. :a>x52 M o n t e re y
$12,750. Complelely ae1up
w/1kirts, awning!, potth,
e1c.
GREENLEAF PARK
lr:JO Whittier Ave., C.~r.
Pickup. 6 cylinder, stick, ra·
dio, Look here. 116639A)
$1599
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 546-1203
'67 CHEVY ~ TON
AJk tor Sale:1 Manaaer
lB2ll Beach Blvd,
Huntington Beach
1(7 .9)17 KI 9-3331
BUICK WE PAY CASH IN
CHOICE 01' f '<.
..DeMt le.wi& 9 TOYOTA
FOR YOUR CAR c~~T~,. ~~A BILL MAXEY
548-7165
1966 Harbor, C.~f.
CONNELL "67 X"KE Cl>' '-•pd, '''""· ITIOIYIOITIM CHEVROLET lo ml, lop coml. """' .,u, ~
Pickup. 8' camper available 2828 Harbor Blvd. below book. Pvt pty 6#-8197 18811 BEACH 8\. VO.hi
if you want a cht'e.p cam)>-Costa Mesa 543-1200 165 Jag 3.8 ~lark II S('(\a11. Hunt. Beach 147.tSSS
•r. Look here. Truck CV-1 --~T~O~P~D~O~L~LA~R~'--I Xlnl mechanical, Original, I mf N. ot OluC Hwy. ooBdll ,
-7J $129!l. '62 rnod<i cob lll~'400~.~67"-4~1~77~==· I "ij~r.;;;;;;;;-u.;;;.u~I
;-.;:, "'""" $!l00. Total ,... 'KARMANN GHIA '68 Corona Hardtop ,.
$1799 CLE~ .l!?_E8D _ c.,A
0
RS ,67 GHIA COUPE Loaded, Black 1aod.o rop. ~ ,.,.,..., •v Automatic, radio, hea1erj
Buy one or both.
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD.
COS'l'A MESA MS-1203
'66 FORD SUPER VAN
"iii ton, g cylinder. Camper
conversion, auto. trans.
Right one. Hurry. (U58975J
$1599
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD.
COSfA MESA 5-16-1203
'69 Chevy Yz Ton
THEODORE (VWN 748J Take small do11.11.
ROBINS FORD Air condi1ioning, 4 !pet>rl ra· ~'r'ill finance pvt. ply. CAll
dlo, heater. 1UQV -l!E)' r 10 '" 1= 54D-206o Harbor Blvd. n 1 &m • JVfJ or . .._
Coata Mesa $1199 BEST BARGAINS ..-,w.
''""'"' BARWICK COME SEE OUR \VE PA y TOP DOUJJt SELECTION OF
FOR TOP USED CARS IMPORTS INC. roYOTAS
Ir your car b extra clean, DATSUN J im Sle mon1 Imports
see us ant 140 W. Wa rn•r
BAUER BUlCK 9'll So. Coast Hwy, Santa Ana
234 E. 17th St. Laguna Beach Open Eves. & Sun.
Costa Me.sa 5(3.Ti'65l--,....,,~~'-=1=.,.=""---I ;;u,..=s,.40-•4•1_2,.s==ol:I
IMPORTS WAh'TED LOTUS '70 TOYOTA CORON Oranae CounUe1
TOP $ BUYER
Btu. MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beacb Blvd.
H. Beach. Ph. 847.SSSS
WANT late model Ford Van.
6 cyl. no junk, pleue.
'69 LOTUS Elan Yellow
Conv., 1\g 111, xlras. $3,750.
49-1-3973
MERCEDES BENZ
VB, automatic, custom cab 1 .,.•-1'-,_"'-"'.,."-'-"-'-'o-•.,·m,.._..,..~ (32004E). Autos, Imported 970
Orange County's
Largest Selection
Nc-w & U ~e d
MPrcedcs Benz
4 Door. Au!oma!ic. dlr. I
maeula!e! (236 AQXJ \V
take !rarte. Call 494-17~4.
LEASE A NE\V ''il ToyQ.t
lor only $49.98 mo, with jl!S
$9'.J.96 + Lie.
BILL r-.tAXEY TOYOT
l 8&81 Beach Bl.
347-8555 Huntington Beac
SHARP '69 Toyota, bcinc
trans , Auto, AC,,
tape/1tereo, clean, prh~
ply. 495-5466 :.
' i
Jim Slemons Imps.
Warner & Main St.
Santa Ana 546-411 4
Kelly Blue Book $2673
°"' """ $2399
BARWICK AUSTIN·HEAlf_Y ENGINE 1004
U.IPORTS INC. Z39 C.C. 161.1 cu. in. Cut -
DATSUN iron head, intact, disassem•
bled and partlaU)' rebuilt. -------------------1 998 So. Coast Hwy, All P"" lnchxle<t .. ·""''' • ---..-....... '71 SPITFIRES Laguna. Bea.ch ator, etc. Call 540-2888, and ._....._....._. -,.. 546-4051 / -494-9171 leave your name and phone N NOW ON DISPLAY 'I ,69 CHEVY 3!1. TON , _n,_mh<_r. ~----t • THI I Corn• '" for a "" dnvel; 7• ,-BMW "M,n6" FRITZ WARREN'S ·; SPORT CAR CENT~
Van \lllth 1,uto., new Sun 1---------·I 710 E. 1st St., S.A, 541.m'Gf
Dial camper convenk>n. BMW'S NEW It USED, all "'FRIEDLANDER'' Open dail~ 9-9; cloeed Sundil
This 11 a beautiful camper. mod~ls, parts and service. TR l U ~I pH '70 TR-"
P • Oveneu Delive.-u \J7M ll!ACH !HWY. ,,, ..... assenger car convenience-, •.r· 893-7566 • !l3T-682'1 Roadster, Wire whee I s t
Get set for that vacation. C. BOB AUTREY MOTORS A.\l/FM Lo mi's $2'J
tm4.'!Gl 1860 Lorw Beach Blvd. NEW·USEO.SERV. &14.-Jl32: pvt pty &i4-.im '
99 213-591-8721. $36 ---=-===--1 ~ '64 TR 4, xi"° corn!, w DATSUN ""'· M"'' .. n ....,, •IN
CONNELL CHEVROLET '65 MGB $900 1775 or beot offer ff>lm I
AUSTIN HEALEY
MG TRIUMPH
-,-65_D_a_ts_u_n_W_a_go_n-1167 ey,,...,, u.'"oa Be"h YOLKSWAGEti i
• 1Pted, dlr. ReaJ Nice. tYCT MGB '68 BUG ' Ettrope~n. Cus~
33:1) F"ll ~1-.68 !GB Road . yellow, chrm whla, tach ·.'
,,. .. •• .. >-.. "•'•o .. • .. •.,." .. 5--04.,."'.,.. I a JIARBOR ai.vo. • COSI'A MESA &16-1203 W1nted To Buy
2 or 3 Bedroom Mobile Home.
Set up In family (chlldren
allowed) park. Must be 12'
\\'Ide. Lesli than $4000 fn
qew condition. Call l;U."3844
eve• &: y,.·knds.
DRJF'IWOOD Beach Club
SpeelaJ.. Lovely Parldane,
20x57, 2 Br, 1 'iii 8t.. Cf.pt.
Jo~rPo. P"t. 91463. Won't t..t. Un ited Mobllo HomH
&15-314(} 6J3.2961
'70 :uxro· mobile hOme, M.
~II $-1000 btlow price,
~1ov'i:r;. rompl w/all 1l\I furn
536-2194
'59 FORD Yi TON
P\ckup. Radio. 11ick. Cood
condJUon. tn29881
$649
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD.
COSI'A MESA 546.12)3
'62 FORD \.> TON P.U.
6 1tk, new ~ng. tn.n1, brakt1
A: bfl.lle:ry. $475 or trade.
645--4687
"5599.-'..... r. ster, wire s!~reo. Immac, $1400 Nr<
wheela, AM-flt r adio. Runs S.~7-2695 i "
BARWICK 5'11$)5 ... BUG • XlM. \Vhl/ .. J.
IMPORTS INC. OPEL inf. 4l.OOO ml. New urti
$850. 644-4126 or 548.3389." DATSUN e '69 OPEL GT-Now lireo, 1966 VW ·Factory ah', "'~
008 So. Coast Hwy. xlnt cond. $2695 or bell\ of-ti.res, Blue W/blk in1'"°"'
Laguna Beach fer, Call 546-1075 Xlnt cond. Coll 832-0512 ,.fr
516--iOSl I 4Bf..9711 PORSCHE '61 VW Bug w/1vnr
'69 DATSUN PICKUP •-----XIM co"d. ""1. 67">-l !1
r ::-:: '69 VW Sqbck, auto tra::l!i< PORSCHE-'65 C Su[M!rlor ~1v brak~. $1800
4 tpeed, ntdlo & heater. cond, stff:I col'ld, stetl Jrll.Y 67l-6182 ·
IWQZ 4051 w/~ inter, c:hm1 y,.·hl11. I ::-;:-ci;-;;;;;-===..,-;~! $1399 Judson Jgnltlon, full disks, '* * '67 VW S'luam>tck· •
Becker radio. Eur 0 p e Good CQndlUon. $1200 or be<
FORD 2 T. natbed. Tilt cab. BARWICK bound-$3200 , 1213) s.qs..JGoo offer. 646-8309 • •,
New rack. 4 lpl'.I. 2 1pd * 1968 PORSCHE 911 coupe V\V bui:r; 1960 SUnllne !!'
rearer.d. Flnt $1500 tJkes DATSUN 4-tpd, air, new 1100 ~nglnc, -new tires. &lcrillee SJ?=t{
it. 64fj..169l V rMPO!t'TS INC. ~ .. Cite$.
54
1
7
m.}!acudlately 67l-8174 ,.f
'69 OfEVY P.U. 8, 3 apt1. f>NI ~-"'-·-H ca1ni for. ....,.,1 ny1; '511 VW Van, New moto ,i
r/h, Xlnt Cond. $1950 or J;IO '3\J, ...ua.11t wy., 673-1901 nites I wknds. * L.e.guna Beach Good tiret, USO. ..
bit olr: 6C'2-0563 ~l I fM·9'77l PORSCHE 9ll '68, Coco 49M308 * 499--100.I '1i'5'.-CCH£VHEV.~l<i";,;i,1a1<;k.°ol1<rliu<ckk~. l-~~~.~~~!C.'.--1 bro1,1'n, Lo mi'11, Ori&" awn<!r, --~,.64 V\V Bur
!300. 1513 Orang< .. Jl7 New 71 Dahun Xl"l "'"'· ... ,,,. xtru, 847--0U4
E. 18th, CM ~2-5&66 1800 OHC. ptckup with camp.. $4850, 6'13-0052 ~UM Ptrfect $650.
l!M Chev tnlck. l.o~ bed, e:r. SaJe price $.2099 dlr. * '66 PO ri'SOi"E-Cooti cond. '69 V\V 8\ij(, r&dlo, heal~
fleelllde, Make ofler. Call (If PL521452270) WUt take New tlrr' & clu lch , 21,!m milei, Xlnt
anytfrnt, ~&9 car tn trade. Will nnance Mar • llf'W p a In t. $3000. S1395. 497-1037 ··fie FORD 1 ton cab &: prlnte: p111rt,y. Call 548.B'IJtl ~7-0018 ~V\V Bui. btl~.
ctw.ul,, $45(1, 951 \V, 17UI OC' '94·6811. ~II Idle: Items now! rond. pvt pty, Mult
fit .. C.M. We'll help you &tll!-S.2-5678 Cail &-12--5671 Nowl 61J..8556 alt I ------·
I •
I
)
' I
••
DAILY PILOT
Auto&, Imported 970 Autos, Imported
VOLKSWAGEN
* • G. F. KNORPP
328 E. 18th St.
Costa Mes•
You are tl\e v.•lnner ol
•
VOLKSWAGEN
'63 VW Bug
Radio, heater, 4 speed. (\\'AZ
l!H).
Full Price
$399
CADILLAC
• Largest Selection
OF LUXURIOUS
CADILLACS
CADILLAC
l!'Mi7 ti Dor-..do, 1 ownr,
Sil\'C'r, blk Landau, leather
buckl'l Sl'ats, S2900. 496-4392
CA MARO
'68 CAMARO, Xlnt cond. 1970 in Orange County • 427 <'ng. 30,ooo mi's, $2150.
. ... -· -.... • • . . .
W~l\Hday, Marth 24, 1971 PJLQT.AOV!ATISEA %(;
..... w.. l§l 1 · _,,,.. 1§1 1· ·~....... 1§1
990 Autos, Uatcl 990 Autos~ UMd 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used ~~~~~~~1 -~~~~~~--~-'-~--~~-
CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET
'62 NOYA '70 IMPALA '63 CORVAIR
2 Door. 6 cylinder. automa-
llc, raflio, good c."Ondltlon.
tDL.N241~
2 Door. Automatic, radio. 1
ownt-r, Choice or two. Rel!J
good cars. (UQJ79ll
CHEVROLET
'60 EL CAMINO
You should see. V8, P.S., 1a·
tHo, !!.Uto. Restorr this one,
it's 10 nice (R2Rl29)
CHEVROLET
'69 IMPALA
•I Dr. Sedan Au101nalH". 1a..
dto air t:ond. p!)\~·er stee,.
ing'. Nice ca1'.. Dirt che11 p.
$499
2 Dr. H.T, Cpe. Auto., P.S.,
radio, air. Low miles. Re-
maining factory warran~
Sell88tlonal value. Ext1't'me-
ly nU:e car. t053ASV) $499 $999 IYOS;lll 2 tickets to the
Royal
International
Circus
BARWICK e Pvt p1y, 645--190~ 19 Cpe DeVilles. 18 Scd. De· 1-'--'-""'~o..,,,-_,~=-
VJUes, 6 El Dorado.~. 5 Con-CHEVROLET
$2299
CONNELL CHEVROLET CONNELL CHEVROLET CONNELL CHEVROLET $2999 CONNELL CHEVROLET JMPGRTS INC.
at the
ORANGE
COUNTY
FAIRGROUNOS
Saturday, April 3rd
Please call 6-'2-5678, ext. 314
DATSUN vertib!es. 16 uther select Others, 1ame equipmen! with
vinyl roofs, some higher. "'%~3'thru 1970'• '66 CHEVY MALIBU 998 So. Coast Hwy.
2828 HARBOR BLVD. 2828 1-iARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 546-lM.l COSTA l\1ESA 5'Je.1203 282S HARBOR Bl.VO.
COSfA l\l"ESA .Wi.J20.1
'2828 HARBOR BLVD.
OOSTA MESA 546-1203 CONNELL CHEVROLET Laguna Beach
~6-40-jl I 494-9n1
'70 VW BUG
betv.·ttn 9 and 1 pm to claim 217 AG'f
your Ucketa:. (North County $1699
ib ;A. Au1omatic, JXIY."rr st~rlng • Cl~ brakes . w1nd0\~5 -seats, 2828 JlARBOR BLVD.
CADILLAC air conditioning, {SAA521) VS, 3 speed, radio. dlr. J~eat-
AUT..oruzw DWLR $1388 COSTA MESA "'6-1201 er, clean. \Viii takl' U'8de or
2600 HARBOR BL., fin!I~. Cali 4!N-TI44. '61 Chevy 2-dr (No. RVP374)
'69 EL CAMINO '70 MALIBU '70 EL CAMINO
COSfA P.IESA 1---=~==---1 $199, $10 delivers on ap-
5'tfl-9100 Open Sunday DAVE ROSS '70 NOYA proved credit. See at 1945
'64 vw BUG • PONTIAC H"'""' Bl•d, C.M.
toll-lree number is 540-12201
• • • CHICK IVERSON
2 Dr. Spt. Cpe, Low, low
10,000 milt's. l.!t O\\'ner \\'llr-
ranty. Show room fresh.
P .S., radio. au10., V8. (974)
$2999
Vlnyl top, VS, autohiatic,
radio, heate.r, po"'l'r &let•r-
lng & brakes, air rood., ton-
neau cover. (860'26EJ
$2888
'69 Impala 2 l)r hrdtp Save
$.)CO. 3:io roi:;inc. auro, p/b,
p/s, !act air. lo mi's. Xln'l
cornl. Nrw 1 ir es/brks,
strrro tape. $2195 }~or Quick
Sale. \\lill consider tradr.
642-9;,oct days, &l;)..-0962 evl"$
'68 BEL AIR 1>."agon-327 VS,
a ir P/S luggagr ratj<.
Rill. !\.lake orlrr. 496-1411
RO\V 399 ~9_3031 Ext. 66 01, 67 '69 Con\·t'rtib!e, Io ad e d , V8, automatic, power sleer-'''~65~C~h,-vy-2~-d~r~hnl~lp-.-.-,-10,
$799 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Sl.."00. Can ftnantt, priv. 2-180 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. ing. dlr. Loaded. (CVE369l (No. PJD610) $299 $lO
vw
CONNELL CHEVROLET DAVE ROSS
COSTA t.1ESA ply., San Clemente 714: Costa l\1esa 5-J&.8017 FUil price $2195. Cali 494-7744 delivers on approved ~redit.
CHICK IYERSON l ~--~=-~---.,.--l _'_"-_2800_· ______ 1970 El Caniino Custom 350 • IMPALA '67, AlR, P/S, See at 19'i5 Harbor Blvd, 2828 HARBOR BLVD. PONTIAC CHRYSLER
VW Lar9e Selection ·ro FLEET\\IOOD 4-dr . cu ln, r/h, air oood, p/s, P/B, $1295 OR BEST o~~-C.1\1'. Of YW Campers l\totor in xlnt rond, tires p/b, vinyl top. Very clean. FER. 642-9787 "195~7~c~ho-,-,~2~0~,-. ~,-,-,1~,-ti-.,-,,
COSTA MESA ~6-1200 2480 Harbor Blvd. al Fair Dr.
'64 Chevy 4-dr, r/h, power, Costa /'.fesa :>IB-8017
factory air. Xlnt cond. Sell the old stuff
'69 TO\.\'N & Coun try,
6-passengrr "'agon. 1..oa<led.
Ai'<l/F~l. !\Ir. Ron l\1cKen-
dry \l'eekdays only, &12-4000
549-3031 Ext. li6 or 67 • 1 fair, new paint. Needs seat S2850. Call 842-1694 aft 4 The "Yellow Page11" ol new seat covers, good coo-
1970 HARBOR BLVD. Vans, Komb1s1 rovers. $325. 5:17-3331 pm or wknds classifif'd ..• 612-5678 dition, $300. 642-4893 COSTA MESA ed .;::.=.c;;~---= ~~~~--=-~I~-~------1-~=-..=-=~--I Buses, New & Us Autos, New 980 Autos, New Autos, New '69 VW BUG Immediate Delivery ...,;..==---'--..;...---~.;.:.:.~;;;;,;.;..;=--....:.:..:..;.;.=
$550 * * * &12-39-15 Buy the new stuU
980 ~A"""'-'-oN~=:-~~
-"-------.:..: utos, ew Autos, New 980
CHICK IVERSON Dark green finish v.i th radio
&. heater. Under.25.000miles VW
(YQV 50-I) Take small dov.:n. 549-3031 Ext, 66 or ~
Will finarn:'e pvt ply. Sl456 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
full price. dlr. Aft 10 am COSTA MESA 1_..,._,_100=·~',.'"=·"="°'=· __ l·.~67~V'l=v~&d~.~Ra~d~ko-. ~"~i--ra-,~k. WANTED snow chains, luggage rack.
rn pay top dollar for !"Out Priced to St>ll. CTI41 ~~2631
VOLKSWAGEN tOOay. Call 1963 VW Bu~ ?o.lake Offer
and ask tor Ron Pinchot 191B Seadrift Dr, Cd:\t
549·'.ml Ext. 56.67, 673..{)900: 673-5556
'68 VW BUG
VfS."17
$1299
'68 VW Bug. Lots of xtra
goodies. $1400. 67~5738 bef
10 am/aft 4pm.
VOLVO
CHICK IVERSON 1-----
VW
5-19-JOn Ext li6 or 67
1970 HARBOR 3LVD.
COSTA MESA
'66 VW, sunroof, Good cond,
1'.lust 11ell by the 1st. Best
offer 548-1517
'66 VW GHIA
\IU'U'U'U
THINI ~'VO~o·
"FRIEDLANDER"
lmt IU(ll OIWY. Jtl
893-7566 • 537-6824
• Yellow, with Black landau
• top, new valve jrtb XNHG.:1
NEW·USEO.SERV.
$1199
CHICK IVERSON vw
5-19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR Bl.VO.
COSTA 1-lF.sA
'68 vw
WAGON
Radio, heater. (XEV457)
$1599
Harbour V.W.
13711 BEACH BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEAC!i
~
S3081
1971 VOLVO
Demo #2819
..t)eM le.wi4 9 VOLVO
1966 Harbor, C.1-t'. 646-9303
'SB VOLVO -Xlnt cond
SSOO. 644-&119 or 832.0671
'67 PllmS. 29,000 m i .
Leather, A'.\.1'-Fl\t. $2495
firm. Call 540-T.J..il. 9 to 5.
Autos, Used
BUICK
~ BI":~h ~'"~~~""' '69 BUICK ELECTRA t eogine has '68 seats & .
'.f. ... · S 'al I Jh 4 Door H.T, Vinyl top, P.S., uumpers. pec1 o e p B p rnr · ,.,"eek. (ZXU866) . · ., ·seats,_ air co 1uon-i S999 1ng, automallc trans., lo\V
~: 1niles. (ZAE62'21
•,
CHICK IVERSON $3488 vw
5-49-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA r.1ESA
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
'68 VW CAMPER 2.JSO Harbor Blvd. at F.=~~r .,~1r7.
Dtluxe sundial like new.1 ,""~"-•~'~''~sa=---·-~
Nrw tiger pa~ \\'1de tires, ·~ RIVIERA -Loadf'd.
: \ow miles on new eng. S2~75 A:O.t/F~I stereo, Be au t .
• 645-2633 alt 5 \l'k, days any-i;1lver Iv/black vinyl top.
time wknds. \\lkdys only, &12-4000 1'1r.
Ron McKeodry • '69 VW, R&H. Xlnt cond, .
•• lo mi's orlf: ownr. $1450. '63 Buick Le Sabre 2 Dr.
.. 54S-80;)8 aft 6 pm. xl~t mec~. Good tires, nu
• 1>111nt $350 or bst oil.
'61 V\V SEDAN -Top cond. 54£i-j986 aft 5
Loaded w/extraf;. Sunroof.1----~---$l200. 642-9M2 1970 CAD El Dorado-17.000
l o'-~=~~~=~-·I mi, fully equipped. Sliver e 1965 V\V BUG-Pri\'atc grry & \\'hite. AM: Call
party must sell. Only S795. a.JS-3486: P'.\.1: 6T>-7102, ask
3-16--1871 for Paul Henderson,
'69 VW BUG
zvc 708
• '69 R1viC'ra, :X1nl cond,
No air, S2:J.59. * 675-2422 * $1599
[ CHICK IVERSON e '65 BUICK WAGON
$850 ** 646-7010 eves \ vw CADILLAC ' ~9-3031 Ext 66 or 61
·"· l970~~~~~~vo. CADILLAC l--..;u.=.,...,..--1 '70 SEO. DE VILLE
VW '66 BUG 1'2.000 local miles. Only by
, MfNT CONDJTJO;.J geeing and driving this hkc
1• Attractive ~en hni~h ~·ilh new trade in can you ap-:~ beige in1erior. r.1dlo. heal-· 1 -•·u· E 1· prec1a e ... vuul on. xo ic
er. etc. Cherk this out ror green gold metallic finish
" price & quality. 1TFUl543\ "'lth harmonizing interior &
)• $9'l5. JohnSOl'I & Son, '2626 landau roor. f'ully pov.·er
Harbor BL, Costa l\1esa. equipped of course, plus
,.']..;,...="'°~c,· ,....,==~=c-1 AM /1'-1\1 stereo. tele • hi!
'.''f '69 VW FASTBACK ~trg. \\1Jeel, AIR COND.,
YWO 177 plus mucti l\10RE. ~ this
$1299 one before you buy. (290·
CHICK IVERSON BE.Ji. """" " "11· John· son & Son, 262.6 Harbor Bl .. VW Costa fl.1esa. M0-5630
~3031 Ex1. 66 or 67 '&I Cad Coupe DeVillr. alt
1970 llARBOR BLVD. v.'h ite. Po\\'tt .tr alr. $11JO.
COSTA MESA South C-oasl Car Uasi.ng, \h;:;-;;:o:-;:;:::-;:::;:;;:--;:;::-:M~2182 '61 Bl.l( blue/wtllte tnter .1..:::..:=::~-----
New tire1. Radio, WI\\', '69 Coupe DeVille
c:oco mall, $1250. Afl 5: Full power, good cond.
• lf.4-.fj()38 67l-2262 or 673--5723
~ '60 Kllnnann Ghia Convt, 1968 CAO convt -38.fXlO mi,
, X!nt cond belg! w/blk top, TNeher's nr. Xlnt cond. i red )Dttr:, Reblt f'OJ, JO $3050. C11l1 Zll: 430.fi981
M.P.G .. $575. &1~16 e l970 COUPE de Ville by
19' VW, Oean, 1unroof &: pvt PllMY, $51.85.
, radio, fiOOJ ml'& 1K'W eng, • 673-469A *
,I $800. fi'73..2L96
'61 VW Clun $1295
• 6"1s.-41.54 •
1967 El Dorado.
Priv.tf' j)llrty. $2600
Ca.II ;,,1&-t'2M
BUSINESS IS GOOD
AT THEODORE ROBINS
FORD ! THE REASON
IS SIMPLE ••• WE SELL FOR LESS
THIS WEEKEND
-ONLY-
B·RAND NEW 1971 THUNDERBIRDS
18 ST~CK
TO CHOOSE
2 DOORS
4 DOORS
HARDTOPS
LANDAUS FROM
$75 OVER
FACTORY
INVOICE
plus tax & license
NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD ON'S-NO ORDERS
~:-:' TORINO
NEW 4 DR. SEDAN SAVE
351-V&, AT., bit tir••. P.S., P-d i1c1 $60529
air, r•d, T·gl•n, whl ,..,,., bdy
moulding 1tc, 110l052l.
W-Stkr S4008.25 0 11t l'rke 5l402.t6
NEW 2 Dr. Hdtp. Brough.
)51 VI, A-T, blt fira1, vh 9rp, p.s,
P-di1c1, .;,, 1•d. whl cvn, 1lc,
{124l56J.
w.sn.r. S442l.2S Our Prlc• Sl741.7l
NEW 4 DR. SEOAN SAVE
VB , crui10 .. WSW, vi1, group. P.S., $60000
P.B., •ir, re1r window d1fo9, t•dio,
tint. gl1111, whl. COYltl. ( 1169421
W-Stkr. S40l1 .2S 01ir l'tk• Sl4l1.25
NEW 2 OR. HARDTOP
V8 , crui10. WSW, P.S., P.B., •ir,
r11d io, linl1d gl•11, wh1el covars.
( 1615981
W0St~r. $4116 011r !'rite 51514.42
NEW'71 RANCHERO
NEW RANCHERO
Em iuion control 1y1!1rn. E7•14
lir11, AM r•dio. (119 1111 .
W01tkr Sll96.8Z Owr Price $2712.94
NEW RANCHERO 500
35 1 VB, crvi1om•lic, vi1, group,
P.S., power di1c. br•kes, tint, i;la11,
H.O. 1u1p. 1t1564&!.
W0stkr 54284.06 0 11r l'rlc• SlltS.43
NEW'71 FORD
NEW L TO 4 OR. BROUG.
H.T. 429 VS, vinyl roof, ''uito.,
WSW, vi1. grp, P.S., dl~ .•Ir. whl,,
P-1h .. P·dr. loc~1, ai1, •ulo lamp.
control, AM.FM, P.W. •''· j 128·
7081.
SAVE
$1100
W-Srlr.r !6041 0 11r l'rlt • S4f41 --------NEW L TO 4 DR. BROUG. SAVE
•OO VI, cru'10 .• WSW, vis. grp., $93908
P.S.. •ir, AM/FM, tinl1d gl•u,
pt1war window1. 11 32276)
W·Stkr S4JJl.92 0 11t l'rk• Sll99.14 ---
NEW GALAXIE 4 DR. SAVE
Sedan. VS, crui10., WSW, P.S., p. $81200
di1c brk1., •ir, r•dlo, di•. blh ., lint.
gl•n, full wheel CO¥IO .t 100037 ).
W-Stkr. 54607 0 1u l'rite Sl795
NEW CUST. 500 SEDAN SAVE
151 VS, A-T. bit tir11, P·1l1er, P-$74595
di•c1, •ir, r1dio, T-gl1u, whl cYr1,
nylon cpt, aft. (100964),
W-~tkr $4]4J.7S Our l'rlc1 $]597.110
NEW BRONCO WAGON
va. ttlf banch 11el, bucke t 1h ..
H.0. pkg,, 2 skod pl•le1, H.O. tira1,
1p11ra lira c11<1iar, R&H, fr1a ran·
nin9 hub1, H.0. r•d., H.D, bit.
W-ulu S44]6.27 Our l'rl'' SJ79S.00
NEW BRONCO WAGON
va. buck et 1!1., traction lock R-
1xla, lid. 1lip-lront ••It. Spt. pkg .,
•u•. fu1I f•l'lk. 1•dio, fra1 ru11ning
hub1. Sik. ZT200 !IOt ~I
w•itkr. S4680.22 Our l'rlc• 53973,46
SAVE
5641 21
Stk. : 199
(056151
THIS WEEKEND
-ON LY-
BRAND NEW 1971 MUSTANGS
~A~~~~~~ T~~~~O~E $7 5 FA~~~RY
CONVERTIBLES FROM INVOICE plus tax & license
NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD ON'S-NO ORDERS
EL DORADO e CAMPERS e
Stl<. =0~66. I Ft. Ottow• c.•b ov1r c1mp1r, full y
f~clory equipped. I 1006771
SALE ~1065 PRICE
STK = 21aa -11 FT. SHAWNEE
4 cu. fl, rafrig1r•for. Ch•le1u r•nga 1 hood, hot
w•f•, ht•lar • .,;107 866
LIST PRICE $267:Z
SALE $21 0745 PRICE
STK =TC85& -11 FT. NAVAJO
St.inl111 1feel iteve. Seri•I ::a I 5246
LIST I'll.ICE 2120.57
SALE ~ 164798 PRICE
STK . .1:859 -11 FT. COMANCHE
4 c u. fl. refrig1r1!or, if•inleu 1la1I 1lo¥e IJ 0¥1t,
tSl52l6 l. LIST I'll.ICE S2J7t.27
SALE $186260 PRICE
NEW'71 F100 PICKUP
NEW F·TDO STYLESIDE SAVE
P.U, 240·6 c.yl. al'lg., 3·1pd. r1dio, $64397
l'nl. 91•11, H.D. Rear Sp., 9•u911,
ci9. li9hl1r Sl11. =T6) f26l81.
W-Stkt. Sllll.97 Our l'rlce 52695.00
NEW 1971
Fully equipped with 1600 C.C. engine, fully
1ynchronlztd 4 speed transmi11lon, heater
& d1frost1r, hi-lev1I "dlrectalr" v1ntll•tion
1yst1m. wind1hi•ld w•1h1r1, hi-back uf1ty
buck1t seats, •••t belts, -- -front & r••r,
padded visor & dash, locking st•er. column.
b•ckup lights. Ord•r Tod1y.
A LITTLE BIGGER ••.
. •• FDR A LITTLE MORE
MAVERICK
2 DRS.-4 DRS.-GRABBERS-V.85
NEW'71f250 PICKUP
NEW 1971 FORO F-250
C•mp1r 1paci11I, Sport cu1tom t•b.
C1ui11-o·m•lic lr•nuniuion, power
1learin9, pt1w1r di1c br•ke1, "]60" va, 11dio, ••Ir•,~. tanl<. =16, mo-
tor :2151. Retoll S48ll.01 -Sole $1167.70
NEW F·lDO CUSTOM SAVE NEW f .250 CUSTOM SAVE
Stvl11id1. VI ang., R•n91r pk9 .. $95389 DI•. 2 ton1, 360. VB, ••n,9er pk_g. $109100 •Int, •mp I oil q•uga1, tool bo•, cmpr. 1p1c., cru110, P-0<1c1, • .,,
crui.orn•ti c, opt. v1tuum boo1ter, AM.FM tlareo, P.S., 25 9•1. link,
AM-M 11ar10, P.S., G78•15 tir11. ate. IObSll •P•rt tir~. (8095tl. Stl!. =Tt5.
W-stkr S48SO.:ZO Our Pr ice 53196.ll W-1ttir S541S.t7 Our Price S4l24.97
RR~~1~: NEW CAR TRADE·INS .----------.\
Cheek Oar lokPal"'&8 4 LahorWarruty
... ........... ,.., trn .. , ...... •m. 11 .. , ,_ ............ ""' ... 1d1Mat
1\'11-hr 90 DAYS OR 4,000 MILES ,...;.----------------------~ MUSTANG SALE
tO to choc1• from . '65 th1u '70 modah. Coupe1, hardlop1,
con•erlible •nd 2+2 l•1lback 1, Soma with <I 1p11d., 1110
,.;, t onditionin9 e~d 1ulom1lic model1.
EXAMPLE : 1969 MUSTANG H.T.
VB ., 1u!o., P.S., r•dio, ha•l1r, 11ir, low mila1. W1rr•nty '""•ii·
1bl1. i)(XC&761
OUR PRICE $2296
'68 DODGE
Pol•1• 4 dr. H,T,. VI, •ulo.,
P.S., R&H, •<r. Gocd mil 1t.
!OU04651
$1296
--.~6~7 ~PL YMO_U_T_H __
Sp!. Fu•y 2 d•. H.T. VB, •ulo,
R&H, P.S., ¥inyl roof, gocd
mil11, !WCR890)
$1196
-~~ ---'69 LTD 2 DR. H.T.
'V8, auto .. R3H, P.S .... inyl roo4.
•Ir, w•n•nlv •v11il. IZKH57ll
'67 MERCURY COMET
Cydone. 2 Dr. H.T. Va,
P.S.-J!.&H, good mile1.
65!)1 -
$996
•ulo.,
I TXT·
'65 OOOGE DART SEO.
6, •u+o. ll &H. IRGV6071
$696
'66 PL YM. FURY III
4 dr. Sed. VI, •ulo,. r•dio,
lt11+1r. Good ,..;l•u. !CIS648 1
SALES DEPT. I AM Te t n1 MONll
I AM T1 •PM SAT
HOURS 10 4M Tt 6 PW $UM
CHEVY SALE
'69 lmp1111 H.T. IXOC l59) & '69 Malibu H.T, !&07BS!l VI. •uto.,
R&H, P.S., Ai1. '69 wa9on. Cancouri. VI, •ulo, R&H, P.S.
'66
'66
'64
YOUR CHOICE $2396
FORO GALAXIE SDO
4 dr. VI , •ulo .. P.S .. R&H, 1i'
cond. !T BXS ISI
CHEVY II •.
RIH, •ulom•lic, pow1r 1leering. (JtYS5ttil
OLDS 98 4 OR. H.T.
VS, •ulo., P.S., ll&H, •ir, I own1"
H0Zl29l
$996
$896
$796
151 1970 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOORS 151
Color ,,laclio11, fu lly recond itioned, good mila1, va. aut., l'.S., lt rt.
Some w/r.dio1. City ol Co.ti Me11 l111a r1turn1, t 104&28 ! 10412•1
(1048 251 (1051 24 1 1104827)
OUR PRICE Sl 696
fORD-lTD-GALAXlE-TORINO-WAGON SAii m.t ........ .._ .,, ,..,..,........i .. s,..n-11. ....... 2._ ...... _,.....
a..-.h11_.,.,,1rn111flt'-l.,.W,,..ll'fltl.-lt•~ .. EXAMPLEo 1970 FORD LTD
2 dr. H.T. Good ..,;i,,, V8, a uio., P.S., R&H, ¥in~I •oof, •ir,
W•rr. av•il. I 151AGBI
OUR PRICE $2896
'69 FORD COBRA
Spt. •oof, •ulo., R,H, P.S.
IZDV707l
$1896
'69 COUGAR H.T.
'VI, •ulo., P.S., ei•, R&H. vinyl
roof, watt ...... a. (XWYOJ41
$2496
'68 PLYM. VIP
4 ci r. H.TT. va. •ul, R&H , P.S.,
•ir. Wtu .•• ,a. !7S6CQRJ
$1796
'59 RENAULT
1m,,.1cul1!1 thru·o ul, ,ood
111ile1, 1 tp11d. lUCRt701
$296
'63 COMET S22
M1tao•. Recond, VI, rebuilt
a uto. tran1., ll&H. pwr. tlair,
IFLYSlll
$696
'64 CHEVY V2 TON
Pic~up. ] 1pa1d, h1•tar. !G65·
00 I)
$896
~-· . " ~ /!1_f
1
31/a ecr11 of the mo~t moderri Ford ••I•• and
.i/~ l "11' I/ T hservlco f1c1lltlde1 on tho Woat Co11t
.1,;~: ~~L· eo ore Robins Ford rJ~~JNG
PARTS-SERVICE
HOURS
eY _______ ,, ___ ,
Costa Mesa @:> 642-0010
7 AM To ' PM MON
7 AM To 6 PM TUI-RI
1
I PARTS DEPT. ONLY
I AM 11 I PM SA TlllDATS
I
•
rJ 25 PILOT.ADVERTISER
-. t AICV PILOT ~ ~·.· ·,,r .. :,1~.1 Wednt~y, Marth 24, 1,71 ----1§] I _...... l§l I ·~"'"'"' l§l I ._... 1§11
990 Autos, l1 :d 990 ::'~os, uW: 4 A~ ~u~os. UJed A
, .... r .. _-_ .. _ ... __,!§J ~' -_ .... _ ... _J§J ._I _ .. ,.._,~ ... _,!~ I !§JI l§J I ...........
Hi t ...
------·---· .. -1-_!!S 990 Autos, Us.d 990 Autos, UMCI ------990 Autos, Used Autos, Uffd
c·oMET JEEP MERCURY MEf:CURY MUSTANG MUSTANG PONTIAC P::>tJ'ill' C RAt.10LER
1·'s"'1"".eo"'m-,-,"",-o-,,-,-1.;;;;:-;.;..'---• ..,-,E-E_P ___ -,-9-70_MA ___ R_Q_U_ls-cPE.' __ M_E_R_C_URY -;5f~USl'~l:G-• '65 MUSTANG·:<ew .-;;;. -CAVE RC~S --·~4 D '.~eJR-1
,iopdltlon low ml. 1300. '""' RUNS WELL SllOWP.00'1 TYPE OF CAR '70 Montney 10 Pus. P• '1' '°""· 6 cyl. Molle ottu. 'li7 Af.ECIRD ., .. ,, ,f/.C L n. m ~74 S.12-2062 alt 7 1-'i\f 968-3098 • ..,,~ .. ---· --u.ooo MILES Sta. Wag. 2 (loo, c'""· vs, """ ..:c.:_o::::..,.. _____ , Com ..• s-· ... '"'vice C1J:SS[C 770 CONTINENTAL '45 JEEP $695 Attractive medlun1 turquoise 12,000 MILES steering, slick shift, Strong OLDSMOB ~LE Hardtop, Excell•nt condlllon. 2430 Harb~r E.lvd. •
Ca.sh. 5'16·2154, 8 At.1 • 9 Ai.'VI. mist finish v.•lth while Inter-Th.la beautUUl statlon wagon car, (TZU202i _____ ,.,. ---dlr. Full price-$1299. Tak• at Fnlt Dr. I
'SS CONT'L Cp. Immac. '62 JEEP pickup. 4 Whl. ior & l11ndntJ root, ln11n11cu-Is in Jlke new condition In $999 '69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H.T. sn1al1 down. (ZRW889) \\Ill! Costa Mesa 546-80l7 Automatic, radio, heater
, c;.QPd. Must see. 962--0673 a.ft drive, 6 cyl, big tlres, Mint lat~! P1'(!mlwn eqtJipped every res""ct. fOp'I"' pu-ONE OWNER 1·1,000 MI. tin. pvt. pty. Call M0-3.too or power 1tffring, power brak ~'--~!-·--w s, cond. $850 Finn. 64&-3693 atJ!o. trnna., am-fm 1tereo tel green finllh with saddle BeautiluJ .Uver milt finish 494-7506 alt 10 am. B:30 AM 10 9:00 PM ti. (.,_., ~1
CORVAIR MAVERICK ra<Ho, "'""" powor ''"~ l•ath" oolor "'""°'· "''' CONNELL CHEVROLET wltb burfundy "''""°'· ·~dro-PonUac, Ortr ...,.,::;::~;.;:,.=~'-I $588 I ing, power brake1, factory lHt throughout. Equipped Equipped with auto tran1., owner, Leu than 40.000 64 Ford Fairiane Wagon " air cond, Truly gpotless !, with auto. trans., ndlO, 2$28 HARBOR BLVD. radio, heater, power 1teer-mt'1, 4-rpd, Too m&l1)' can, '475. Good runnlnc oond. DAVE ROSS
'IP Corvalr Monza (EJG825), '70 MAVERICK like Ml"' 4 near oew Ure•, heater, power steering, COSTA MESA 546-l203 in&, pov.·u brake1, power No rtuonable ofter refuled, Needs paint. 646-294& PONTIAC 't ~Uto, $29'J,, $10 dellvers, Pvt pcy Best o[r 644-2470 etc. See & 1.$k for demon· powe-r brakes, factory air window1, air cond. If }IOU 673-6531 'M GJ'O.Extru. Drafted. ' ~~ ~;;,il· l.~ Harbor 70 MA~RICK, ~w paint stratton. (916 BEQl. John-cond. Center facing third '70 MACH I are hard to please, don't ~1968-, ~2-0-R.-Ba-one_vW_e_hanl_ mun tell. $795. j •
., job gd nd 11100 l50n & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., &eat, See &: drive today. PIS, air, 3 spd. auto tranl. miss w1 fine cu. (XL11l8l top. Full J>OW<, 1ne1, -----'Call"-------'----I 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. off~r. 5s~ ormAkel-"Coo='":....:.."c.',.::::.·.:."°:.:·..:5630=·--I <208AQS) Priced to seU. Eqpt for stereo. Will Sac! Juhnson1Son,2626Harbor AM/FM radio, nu1
' C.0.Sta Mesa ~11
1970 MERC. CONY, Jo!mmn & Son, -Hubor ~$2895,--,c.._Call--'-"'.'61Ul-,--!37-:::-. -,--..,.l_::B'.'.::l.,e,:C..::;:'.la:_::M:;•,.::·:.:51lJ.=::'"10=: callbn.tod polYl)au p .. m. RAMBLER
.65 CORVE'ITE 32'7, 365 hp, MERCURY 1llE SPORTY ONE Bl., Costa Men, 540-5630 '65 Mustang 2-dr, VB, 4--cpd, 1966 Olds Start.tr., tiiTi tiret. Xlnt cond., orlr ownr, !-----·----
--AM/FM •1000 This f1.u1. .. tulip y"low with (No. RZF487) $599, $10 po11"t"r, air-<"Ond, originft.! ,194179S,..:,..0R
0
e~s;" ~· Bus. '61 JAVLIN
CORVmE
...... s, '• · 1969 M •v MUSTANG delivers on apProl'ed credit. ov.'TlCr, good cond . .stt to -v•uo ..........,oro Automatic tn.N., 271 ercury Montego black top & ln!er!or aut~, __________ Sff at 1945 Harbor Blvd, appreciate 2l3: 592-5833 11 __ ,..R-, radio, JIO'l\'er
beater.
COUGAR AETI'RACONOCT!VMICALE &: mobile has been driven only 1 • • '63 Chevy Impala ..,.,.ll.I& 1',000 mUes &: must be aeen '65 Mu.slang C.?.t. PL"MOUTH-Fae air, Pih, FYS, va WAR 129. $1375.
LI New ~ulpt. Must 11tll '65 MUSTANG lldtp VS 1 VERY CLEAN * -Horboi". A'mericop ~~. :"-64b·Cl26\ • r I
;,6, HA,118011, CO~A MES't.'
. ght Ivy finish with gold in-& driven to appreciate. Ra-, auto -OT C'OUGAR. Popular green terior equipped with auto-d!O, heater, power 11eering, I --'-11.c95"-· -*-67;.."-;...;::1°'c.5:__ tran11, air, PIS, + Xtras. '53 PLYMOtrnt 2 dr, black. ___ *_.,.__..,.."'--*---1
'69 Rambler Station Wagoit
$300 under wholualt book,
Must 1ell th\1 week. $1Xl01 84:;..oo.lS eves &: wttkends. ·
'65 RAMBLER Cluslc 2 rit,
hrdtop, low mileage. Nelf
~11. 1 owner. S3G-439S
T-BIRD color. ext. &: int. Auto. matlc trans .. radio, heater, power brakes, factory air '68 P.IUSfANG 2+2, p/s, $995 ** 644-5892 ortr cond, 19 mpa $2(11) or TRANS?. car. '61 Pontiac
\r/1.11.S, Pl.S. disc brakes, power steering, etc. Priced cond., ett'. 4 near new til't"S. p/b, oir.cond. $1600. Call 1970 BOSS (302), FASTB'\CK Trade-. 645-4687. Sta. Wq. 4 rd. Tlrt1 •
..('ctory air. ~/H. Recent for QtJick sale. $1675. YCN-Ask for demonstration. (705-540-~. 4 11pd, P/S, P/B, Lots of '69 Plymouth R.oe.drunner. MZ..7674 '63 CLASSIC Rambler • 1970 T-BIRD. Law mlleL ~rye·up, .new tires. See. at 380. John.son & Son 2626 AZPl. Johnson & 0 -n. ""'"" Xtras -$3300. 645-3461 Aft• Now t'-•, clutch • polot. '11 FTREBIRD, formula ~-. PIS, !f!·*l*act:;r.!}f· FU1l power. Air cond. Prj, uulf Station, Bolsa & Spnng. }farbo 81 d "· ·,1 ""' -0 The fas1est draw ln the West .. .., "' ...,., ~ ...,......,,.... • e, HB, Call 897.8174 540·5630r v ·• ....... sta " esa. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. • , a Dnily Pilot ClasslJ'led A good want ad la a aood T.0.P. Days 838-1564/att hard to find, tull power, _ pty. 545-3261 between 8-4pfl}
es&: wkndJi. Best Offe,r! ~'---"""' ~----,54~t.5630---'~----=I Ad. 642-5678 invesbnent 6:30 pm 968-74.81 alr, disce, $!295, 988-1598 We'll help you iiIIl 642.5G71 Mon-Frt '
--------Autos, New 980 Autos, Ntw 980 Autos, New 980 Autot, New
• Cougar, air rond, vinyl
, new tires, lo bltJe book,
00. Call aft 4:30 pm R
3163.
COUGAR,.Lo ml. A/C,
I, vn, auto. Xlnt cond.
book, pri pty, 642-1020
DODGE
Dodge RT _ 440 auto
ns, gd cond. Mu;t sell,
00 or best oiler. f).16-2998
DART CONV; Auto trans
H. Xlnt Corxl. $550:
113
FALCON
Falcon 2-dr, 6 cyl, auto.
or best offer. Call
744 aft 5: 30
FORD
matlc, power steering,
WJ003l .
&elly BltJe Book $1185
: Our Price
: $999
:BARWICK
; n.WORTS INC.
·~ DATSUN
: 9911 So. Coast Hwy.
: Laguna Beach
· 54&4051 I 494-97n
4 FORD FUTURA
Peed transmission. radio
d heater. CJAE413)
. $588
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
'o Harbor Blvd , at Fair Dr.
ta Mela 546·8017
rd '70 l TD 4 Dr. Sod.
cellent local trade. Beau-
uJ dark ivy metallic fin-
with matching landatJ
,. l. Ivy gold in!erior.
" ulpped with auto. trans.,
~dio, heater, pov.·er steer.,
~·er brakes, tac1ory air.
Shows excellent care.
5CQS) Priced to sell.
hnson & Son, 2626 Harbor
' -., Costa l\fesa. 5'1(}.5630
'65 l TD
ST SELL. T-Bird l\totor,
,500 mi., 2 dr. hardtop,
power exc. v.·tnd., fac
. , auto. transm .. AM -Fr.1
• • dio, radial ply, clean, xlnt
'rn:I.. 1 owner. BltJe Book
,120. Make an offer. Call
Eves. All day Sat.-
... ;: .. '. ~! ~·
omatic transmiMion, ra-
and heater. fl58BBG)
$1688
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
D Harbor Blvd, at Fair Dr. ~ta Mesa 546.8017
N{64 Ford Gal•xle 500
Door Hardlop. Radio, heat-•• ~· power steering J>O""'er ~akes, factory air, ~utoma
<Jk: trans. $645. ORB 512.
iohnson & Son, 2626 lh1rbor
'Qlivd., Costa Me~a. 54(}.56.10
1'65 Ford Gal 500Xl
Bcicket seata, power st~rlng,
l!OWU brakes, automatic
ti'an!., 46,000 ot1i::. mUes.
}Von·t last Jong. NMV 268. J'175. Johnson & Son, 2626
Sarbor Bl., Costa Meu..
!.lo.56Jo.
, 1910 Ford Maverick
xfrft value. New w/w tires,
~vy duty suspension A
itlocks. Low mllt'age .
"4-2387 alter 6PM.
·-Ford CotJpe-V-8, arl&ina.l $nd. $'1!i0 Ca•h.
~: Call 642-4ll7
FAIRLANE, 2 dr. clean,
nt cond, P/S, tape deck.
ake I.air ofter. 646-9126
Ford LTD, lull power,
air. MAKE OFFER. I
•• 497-1376 **
1970 Ford RANCJIERO-P/!I
5,000 n\I. S2800. Cn.11 847.2884 1
af'ter 6 pm.
'62 rord GnlllXlt', RIH . P/S
Grod condtti-On. ~lake offer! j
548-1395 11!1er SPM
BAUER BUICI{ IN COSTA MESA
''SPECIALIZING IN
ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST INVENTORIES OF •
BUICKS-OPELS & JAGUARS!
RIVIERAS -ELECTRAS -SKYLARKS -BIG WAGONS-WE HAVE 'EM ALL!
UALITY''
OUR SAVINGS ARE AT THE HIGHEST RIGHT NOW! SHOP TODAY!!
OPEL HEADQUARTERS
JUST 4 REMAINING
NEW 1970 OPELS
LEFT AT
51 !! FACTORY
INVOICE!
MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK!
AUTHORIZED
JAGUAR
SALES-SERVICE & PARTS!
LARGE SELECTION
OF NEW & USED JAGUARS
TO CHOOSE FROM!
WE
LEASE
CARS
PRESTIGE CARS
AT
ALL MAKES &
MODELS
EXAMPLE:
NEW 1971 BUICK
SKYLARK 2 DR. H.T.
Fully equipped incltJdi n9 VS engine,
automatic, radio, heater, power 1teer•
ing & brake1, fa ctory air conditioning,
white wall1, tinted gla11,
tf1AUlli
PER
MO.
4 Door Sedan. Immaculate
thru-otJt. Low mileage, V8,
automatic, radio, heater,
power steering. CZL.1255)
'68 PONTIAC LE MANS
2 Dr. H.T. V8, au tomatic,
radio & heater, power 1teer-
lna & brakN, factory air,
bucket seats. Re-d with black
Interior. (VlS:KlG)
tt995
SENSIBLE PRICES
CUSTOM
Full power factory air con·
dltlonlngl AM-FM stereo ta·
dlo, vlny root, factory war-
ranty. (794AFB). Blue Book Prlc.54255
'69 ROADRUNNER
2 Dr. H.T. VS, automatic,
radio, heat.er, power 1tter-
Ina1 bucket aeai., low mile·
age with factory warranty
rem&ininc. (YPT37'2)
51895
'68 SKYLARK
2 Dr. H.T. Vll, automatic,
radio, heater, power ateer·
Ing A brakes, vinyl root .
Juat lmmaculate. (WEF197)
'69 OPEL RAU YE
4 speed transmlaslon, radto
and heater, low mllen.ge car.
Rallye Red with black buck-
et seat&. (YCN994)
51395
BUICK.1N COSTA MESA
BVICK 0 0PEL·IAGVAR
234 E. 17th St., Costa ~~esa
"SPECIALIZING IN Cj)UALITY" 5 4 8-7 7 6 5 WE LEASE CARS
ESTATE WAGON
3 seater, V8, automatic, RA
H, P.S., P.B., tacto'7: air, fac-
tory warranty. ZVE4321.
Blue Book Price $5065.
'70 PLYMOUTH Duster
2 Dr. H.T. AuU>maUc, ndlo,
heater, power slffrlnr. only
9,000 caretully driven mllet
and factory warranty i. •available. (317ALB)
(
I
" '
I
I
58 DAILY PILOT WtdnesdaY, lllan:tl 24, lm PILOT-AOVl'.RTISU lfl
DICK WILSON SAYS: l .T IS OUR CONSTANT GOAL 1'0 OFFER THE
HIGHEST QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT THi LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE
BRAND NEW
1971
$1998 FULL
PRICI
IMMEDIATE DEUVERY AT WILSON fORD
OR IF YOU PREFER OUR EASY TERMS
$68 TOTAL $68 TOTAL OOWN MONTHLY
PAYMINT 36 MONTHS PAYMENT
$61 I. lh• 1oto1 down po'f'T'""' -d l6t i. tt.. tolOI monthly pOymenl lnclud!11! ta•, '71 licen .. ond al;
flnarice c:horgn °" ~ll:l'l>'t'd c:redit fot' 36 monltlL O.ferrotd ~I price 1 S2516 1nd udln9 oil fl-
n.ance charge1, to11.e1, 71 llc9flH M If you pref-to paycod1o full c:cnh price 11 •21.sA.90 lncludl111t .ate1
to11, '71 licen ... IK<llU 1809+. AMMUAl Pll<lllTAGI un 10.75%
BRANDNIW1971 .
ELDORADO 8' CAB OVER CAMPER
._.....,..,......,...,_ .................. __ ....., ...... '"!'!"'!!"!!!~---t Complete camper package equipt. with 1tove, sink, icebox. dinette, 1i971w GALAXIE q"i'3/4&ioi .. FORD PICK·UP
IMMEDIATE$
DELIVERY
(IJ5411112413J
$N21W41971. ... 1008PIC::~
· . PRICE
FULL PRICE
'69 Ford eqpL with 300 cu. in. engine, custom cab, radio, heater, heavy
duty camper i;quipmeDt. ( 182000)
, $0MP IETE <:AMPEB PACK.4.GE
• IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FULL
PRICE
'65 ~ .. ~~~~.~~.~: .. ,,, ... .,......... $68-8 . (PIF4'4) I
BRAND NEW
1971
$1 '9,.19 FULL
PRICE
IMMEPIATE DEUVERY AT WILSON fORD
OR IF YOU PREF,ER OUR EASY·TER.MS
'64 Y.t.!!!~~'"1 $ 488 '6 7 ~~~~-~~.~.~~'''"'"'·'"'"· $988 '68 ~-:.~~"~-~!. '" ...... $148 ---------------...... '65 ~!~:~.~}!~.?.~ ... , $ 588 '68 ~.~~~~~~!~:~!.~?.'!~. $1288 '6'8 ~~~!!~~~~~.~~!~: ....... $178 ..
-~=-~-=.. (XMW•tt) lltf,MKllRlff'l.(l.MOJI) . '68 ~~O.~!~.~~~.~!!~, .... , .... ,,,, $78 XEW $148 8 TORINO 2 DOOR -,-6;;_7~..,;~~~~~-T!':'A~N~G~H:-::Ao:R':'D~TO~P~-~$'.'"8:--8'!:~8=f-/_6_7 __ r_;~_~ ... _:, D_ ... E_,~_~_, .. _,, _ ... _~!_;_ ..... _·_··-· -----it-
1_7_0 __ ~_~.___ .. _ ... _'r._~_.l_='_:i'_' "_"'_"'_""_'·-$_1_9_·8_.....,
1Hie.•tw,ll9ck11..na.(TYM111 l• __;;;_;;.._ ___ ,_.,..CH~E~R0~--$-1-2-8---t '69· ~?.~~.~~.~~t,~.~~~~ .. ..'. $19 88 '69 ~!Y,;,,~~!~~. ~!~.~~,$228 ,67 FORD RAN · lt11,rffi.,ht•ttr.(OOOIML) · •lttri.,.Me.m-111.
Alrc...i.,~wt9,rffi•,9tnltr.(V2331:1) -¥ __
'68 PONT. BONNEVILLE $138 8 '69 !.~~~.~~!!~!_!!.... $218 . '69 ~~~~:~ .. ~~~~~r~~'l~:t:~'. $228 v.a, A .... Pe .. ltteri ... 1941'-. ••tw, (l l•tS.D). (DC-Ml)
........ ., •• .,...,...... (116-ISY)
'67!~,~!!~.~.~~~~~ .......... $1· 38
MICli Mln.(SJl-lil),
'69 ~!~.~~?.,~.~~~~."~·-· $2288 ,.,. fl••· (011260)
' l \ ,• I
,.