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1971-03-29 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 ;. , .. • . ·-' '. ., . '· . ' . . .,.. -.--..__ Coast Woman Held •• lb Slaying Of Ex·hu~hand . . . •• l . ' ' • • Ji . . ·~. Return Tonight~ Burn To·JDorrow • • • DAILY PILOT ·rv1ne I S· * * * '10' * j.· * MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 29, 197 1 VOL ... , MO"!'· I setTIOflf$,. P,Ajfft J,-,fJati on A lert Daie ·Nixon to Issue. . . - ' . . w age-€urh :p '5l'(_ ¥·rttan Presldent Nixon and Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson huddled through the morning in San Clemente conferring ever "legislative problems'' connected with stabilizing wages in the construction in- dustry. Nixon was expected today lo sign and announce an executive order In an at- tempt to fight inflation in the nation 's largest industry. Nixon's Construction I n du s l r y Stabilization Commission h a s recom- mended an executive order that would let up general construction wage a\lldelines, establish craft-by-craft bo_a_rds ro oversee them and empower a stabiliza- tion board to take action if the gu idelines are violated. Jn a fol\owup action, expected Tuesday, the California White Hou se will take the wraps off its third "inflation alert." Administration officials promised it would focus attention on specific wage ahd price decisi ons made in the private sectOr during the three months since th€ last alerl. The President and Mrs. Nixon, who ftew bert Friday for a llkiay stay, li)¥nt a quiet Sunday at their oceanfront villa. ·~ides pictured the sojourn as a work~ng visit and said that, apart from acting on economic fronts. Nixon would review s00Jheast Asia developments. He bas siid be will announce plans for continued U.S. troop withdrawals from. Vietnam about April 15. . Here with him were key assistants including Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman., Domestic Policy Coordinator John D. Cout .. Weather Low clouds and local fog will keep the sun away on Tuesday. but lemperatures will heat up to near 80 inland and in tbe upper 60s along the coasL INSIDE TODAY A !though t h e government claims to bf: in control. Pakistani rebels a,.e still figthing. They clalm up to 300.000 have died in 48 hours. See stort1 Poge 4. " • ••• " " • • u .... " " • • -· n ... ,~ ....... ,,, Oreo111 Cou11tr t Srlvtl f'l"lr M s,.rtf 11·1S StlKt IMl'kllt •11 T11rrisll4' H n. .. ,.,., n .... '""' t Wflif9 W1• lt W-'I HtW\ 11·11 W•W H.W. ~I Ehrlichman and Dr. &nry. A. b,sin1er, assistant for national S«Urlty afbin. In trying to stem tnnationJb' trend! in construction, Nixon i! 1topp'ing s110rt of creating a national price-wag_i stabilization boa,rd. Bu& ht ls movine closer to the wage-p_riCe. guiCtelint ap. proach he once scorned: · Construction workers were alig~red Jut month when Nix_on suspended. jJhe Davis· Bacon Act requiring paymtnt af union ~ale wages on governmedr buU~iqi pr.; Jects. · As part ef his-new approach,, Nixon will res tori'! Davis-Bacon provisions. wbilt. holding out the thllat Jhat it mly be suspended anew if industry , and labor fail lo cooperate with .bis new' atabtliza· tion plan. Woman Aiie,sred In Gun • Sla,ying Of Ex-hushaiid ·. By RUDI NIEDZIE1$1 °' .... oeu, ,. .... llil1f' Police aaid th!# rnonUna they will seek a formal murder dli.rp-· tialntt. a 40-year-old Huntiqton: i..m · *6man accused of .gwutjna down~btr-u-husba&d this weekend. Detective Sergeant M9t1ty • ¥c~ said the complaint would be soUpt against Dori> Barnet~ 16!11 Sber'•LIM, . Investigators allege lhe Usect. a ::s&-cauti:er· .automatic piltol to . till James . Barriltt, 48. while he wu _ woriqpi· on .a coff~ table in 11is..son'11anige. The diminupve Mfi. Bln1et\. now held at Orange. County JaiJ. .• Ms refiped to discuss the charge with hoinicide . detec- tives .. Officers said she may be arraigned T~esc;tay at West Oranp ,~ty J*1lcial District Court. Police arrested Mrs. Barnett onlY 17 minutes after the· alleg~ 4:10 Jl.m. shooting in the garage o( 'Michael Burke, Barnetfs stepson. .•· Police were brought out to Bur~e'1 home on 16641 BarUett .St.,after Bui;~e had summoned officers. He A.id ht 1nd his falber had been . Mi'klnl .in · the garage on a coffee · table' w&nw'!Mt.a. .... Barnett arrived. . · • .. .• , • Burke told police thtt his · rflher ••s drilling & hole in Utt tab).. w,hen Mri. Barnell pulled ~ plotol oul ol ltet' purse and beaan flftn1. Others m· the garage thought U.. drill had maltw>c- lloned , police said. , • . . Orange County Coroner's inveaU,ator ~ •. Jim Belser aald today he bu not been able to .deletmlne how many bullets (Ste SI.A YING, Pase II - .... eac ercen Tate .Case ..•. i f ''·" ' . Signa~es ::m:ow Cre.t 'Atwrney'" Located .. By JACK V. FOX U,1 t..., a.,,., The badly.decomposed body of 1 man believed 'to be mis11iiig Tale tria1 attorney JlOnaJd Hughes Was rtport.ed today to have bffn··fowtd ·While 'U.. jury In the case deliber,tea wh~tht.r to ""tence Charlu MW<in ond hi! ,C<><lefendanb to -life in pri.son or death in tht aas chamber. · ne body. described u lqe tnd' ·..-jift one arm mi~inl, was ~vered durtpa: the ;Weekend• fact down in a pool ol water in a re.mote mountain area of Ve'n.t u r a County ·by two Glendalt- fiahermen, a~ to Ventura. CoUnt.y Senior Sheriff's Depu~)' Mlke Freeman. He ·nia, '.'wt feel It may bt ·Hughes siace ,tl\e only Jarie . pe.csdn miisinit:' up there is him .'' . · The %50:P90lld,_ beatded Hughe• <!Wp- peared last Thanksgiving 1feekend While on -.· camp int trtp· tn the · hlged SeSp1 Hot .Sprlna:& area northw81t of here. The .body waa found seven milea ea.st ol the sprint•. · · · · · !f\JCl>e.l 'WU preowped .drowned tn the tM~UJI ral.nt,tbat weekend. Filhernien Dort H. C11tum1111 and John Le wens· fouiid the body Saturday bul tt·;t\d -thelli .unw lite Simday to hilt• out ·" .. laleJihol!e. ' -. .>c.·to•Jll ii•· ·~Idled ·to the ., .. but ""iJ J'tOt expected to return until ti.te· T\aeiday~wttb the body. Fog con,red muc;b,'<lfi~ ,acea iPl'tvenuna .helicopters taking part Jn the .aearch. • When the · rmrnjngo. sessial' began, aevertl Or Ute·jutorl'lpp!ared with sWf.. catell: ~·:; .· ; i ... :· . ·! ., Courtroom ·observers rpeculated that the ai>.peir,.nti : ~ .. tbe ldgg;ige meant that the seven-man. 'live-woman ~nel upeded ·to, rUch: &~verdlct today and leaft 'tor· honfe ·diredly from the llfill ofJ~ ..... --:. ·>;,· 'thf 'J~ ~~n ~ts second day of d•li\J!"e~ . .Jbijr, QI .Mwon'1 female follOw!fl~;.tho~lntain-.:t rl ·vjgil outside the !>\!11dinl' <f!l'l/!C the, ~I, ~ppeared 'Wi~eir ilieods ilraved• completely. . They were appa)e11tly i·m it at In 1 M*'110n, who recenUx'bad Ni.lone locks ~ c!Me lo 1'Ji ~ : ' · 'l'hjo ·J~belP~ we!lhtng , ••idenco In . 0.. < pentlty Jlwe Saturday and cleli6'ral«I tor !Iv<: hi>urt bolore th•y wue sequestered. · Their decision "' the penalty must be \JnariJmoila,, IT !Mr ·cannot acree. · J,.qd~t Chul"· JI." Qlder must by law , 8'ioltn0t the cleftndanta to life Im· priaonmenl U that occur.a.. the District Attorney can call for a .new jur/ or •. penalty rtirlll. ' -. .,,, ""',.,,.. . • ' • ..j - City Support A saturation-type weekend cart1paip to obtain signatur~ urging ipcorporatioll of the. new city ol Irvine pushed tht volume of favorable response to 57 pet• ceni, leaden artnoUl1Ced today. · · · On1y ·25·percent iJ required to qualify: for an election under state law. · John Burton, chairman of the Cooncll of the"' cOmmunitles' of Irvine declared ~ number of sign~tures indicates overwhelriling support for the ·City of Irvine Now (COIN) subcommitiee. "We're. way over the top," Button aaid triumphantly. He said teams of 117 petition carriers circulated among the subdivision com- munities ,on Irvine Ranch land, slinin& up 1,545 property owners designated as fee bolde°rs. No persons lea¥ng homes are belrig signed, SinCe it dOes nOt appear critical due tG ree holden' response in the weekend campaign~ Burton aaid. He added lhat provi!ions ~blinl lessees to sign are being .considered. "Al it ii, we've already 'Jotten it.he signatures of about 33 perctnt · of evel')'.boQy in sight," Burton Jdded. He said at a press' cQnlereDce \Oday the campaign will continue 1on a .slow1 deliberate basis 'to as~~ ~ if an~ mtata_kes in the tally. . . Burton noted May 2r is the. deadline for submitting sigllatuus :to the countf coonsel calling for the Orange County Board of SUl)UvisOrs to set .an tlectiOD on the incorporation issue.· .., "It sl)ould OOW be ·abundanll)!' cJur that the ·people• in Irvine Want to bl in their own city.'.' Burton said.. • Janette Carroll, 20, makes a pretty picture as she soaks up the sun-~ . shine at Rose Bay Park in Sydney,·Australia. Janette, as one .migl'it imagine ... is a pbp't,Ographer's model. · ,_ · - "They · will not settle for,· or approve~ anything else. I am · ctmfident. • :.thit the · supervisqn' action will reflect· the. wil.1 of the people '°"dr~matlcally' ex• pressed in the put 48 houra,,.,-he·added~ . Andrew May, chairman of. COIN; said the petition~arrlers, themselyes fei holders of Irvine area bomes, Were -~ ned by the enthusiastic re~. • '\f'ully ts· pe·rcent Of 'the fee · no1aers coritacted signed the ,petitions," May 1aid. , May added Ulat the percentage held true in au the varioua communtU.. -·thllllld '• major aiMVV'•--ma1 __ ... within the pro{X>sed !\ew city of trvinie~ Mist:Clo ses OC ·Airport F~a: 1nd . low ·clouds wlll return to the orange • Coast. toni&ht to burn off •&•ln 1'Ue"!day in a repfat performance .. of the , misty dtaPt 'that harried early morning motorist.a and pilot! today. Fll.qhJI in and out of Oranf• County Airport were ciirtalled from I a.m., when the to•e.r opens, unUI 9:15 1.m. in Jfh!l .Jirport officials described as "typic1l1 March and AJlrll weather.'' 0!111 Ontario lrrternitlonal .. o/ U.. .,.,.. -r-· Mt • ., 1f1l:Q totaling about 4,500 aauft.s ell&ible to cpen to meom1n, fllghta . sOme ltrtlnd sign. • diverted ru1hta to airport.a 11 far1 away They include Turtle Rock, University as San Diego. Los Angeles lntemational Park, Village Park, TurUe Rock Broad- 1•--' 1 1 •• . to 1 08 moor, the Ranch, Caljfornla ~ was c UllGV rom :.a ·a.m. : .l:m.. Cutve.rdale. North Irvine, the. Colony and today when ·the: snn burned away the,·_ Sierra Bonita. • • foa:. Campaigners for cltyhood-' ·~ 'opr Harbor Department officials said !be tintlstlc also. that supevlaon wm C\'ll!Plt dM&e fog curtaUed most boating activity with. their wjshes, since the )oca) AJ!e:ric:i out of Orange Coast Harbor•, but caused Formation Commission bu endorsed' tfp no ritajor dilllculty., corporalion. · I .~ '• . , .. , I' l .. I i ' 2 DAllV PllOT s ~mgh Court To Decide On Gun Law WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme COurt agreed today to decide whether • , the federal Gun Control Law forbids anyone wbo has been convicted of a aertous crime from ever possessing a firearm. The coUrt wUl hear oral argwnents on tbe issue next fall and winter, then will balld down a written opinion in the case of a Bronx, N.Y., man. Kenneth Bass, convicted of violation of the 1968 Jaw. He won a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The JusUce Department petitioned the / Supreme Court to hear the case next , term. Other lower court opinions have differed on interpreting the sect.ion of the law which has been used by th e f • government . to prosecute about 150 " , persons. Jn other actions, Uie court: -Let stand a lower court ruling that a federally assisted housing' project may not evict a tenant without giving him a full hearing and an opportunity to answer complainta against him. The ac- tion came tn a case invnlving the Durham, N.C., Housing Authority. -Ruled in a MlnnesoU. case that state universities are entitled t-0 impose nonresident tuition rates on students who have not livtd in the state continuously fo r a year prior to enrollment. -Denied a hearing to Carlos Marcello, alleged New Orleans crime figure who has been imprisoned on charges of assaulting an FBI agent at the city airport. -Agreed to examine a series of Ohio election laws which have been challenged as denying the ballot to minority parties and independent candldates. The case will be heard next term. -Ruled, 5 to 4, in favor of a Louisiana inheritance law which was challenged as denying the rights of illegitimate children. The state argued the law was intended to encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. In the gun control test case. Bass was sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviction of two counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously of a felony -attempted grand larceny. The 1968 Gun Control Law has a section prohibiting anyone convicted of a felony from posse.osing firearms on penalty of a $10,000 fine or two years in prison, er both. The specific language of the statute, however, describes such a person as one "who receives. possesses, o r transports in commerce or affecting commerce." The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed Bass' conviction last Nov. 20, .on grounds the government did not specifically allege or prove that the possession of the firearm in his case was ''in commerce or affecting com· rnerce." He was convicted of having a sawed-cff shotgun on a night table in his apartment and a Beretta automatic pistol hidden under the bathtub. The government has used this section of the law about 150 times thus far. Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold told the court the intended effect of Congress in enacting the ban "was to make any possession of firearIJlS by a felon a federal offense." .Princess Anne H its Dust at Horse Show COOKHAM, England (AP) -Princess Anne \\'as thrown from her horse when it refused a fence at a show jumping event, but the 2Q-year-cld daughter of Queen Elizabeth II escaped injury. The princess remounted the horse and finished the course. but the accident Saturday cost her any chance of winning. 01.AMll COAST DAllY PllOT Hntl--........ .., s.. c 11a11•• OAAH~I COAST ..U•LISHIM!l COM,AHY a..•1rt H, W114 P'rfl!dtnt •lld l"ubll"1« J 1ck R. C url•v Vk1 PmldWll 1nd c;-11 M1111911' Thim•• K11•ll l!dltor Tho1111' A. M11r111hl"1 M111111111 Mita.' C:h1r111 H. Loos Aith1rl P. NfTI A.ltlll1n1 MIMOltlt 1:~11«\ CO.II ,,,_.u : DI W•r t1y ltrftt H"""'1 ll11c11: lW H....,,.... aou1...-.rd ~ 11Nd>: m ,_, .11,,..,va Hlll'lll"lli.ti llMdl: 1111' .. di llou!WI ,.. a..11 Cltll*llf: »S HOl'1ft El tllllltO ll•I DAll.Y PIL.<>T, wftlt ..... Id! k ~ ~ Htwt4"ntt, 11 pU9111htd ••111 ~ ·-... ... """~•It ..,.,.. ,.,. a...,.... ladl. NIWPOfJ ... c!'I, COOi ......., H1mll•'19fM hid!. .._111n ""lrft. S.n C~•I a•tnM lflll SIOClllOIOI. ele"ll Wllll -111*'-' edition. Pf'll'IClpll Otlfltl• flflnl II. •I -W.I &ly St,_I, COIN M-. , ....... (7141 642-4111 a.WW A~ .. '4l·l l71 S. C' 1•1 An D1,.w llfN , ... ,.... 4fM411 ~ 1'71, Or111'1H C..d P\*11111 ... ~. foll rww. '"""· 111vt.1r11i.w.. ......... _,,.. « edvtrt!--71 ~ """ • ~ wlfllclul .,.ael _.. fn...., ., apyrltfll ..-. .__. ... ,_"'91 p1Y If M..,..,. hldt .... ~· M .. , Cel~ ~ ..,. _,.. u.tS -•1Y1 .., -11 "·" f1Nft1t11)'1 mllltery ta~ tt.JS """!t.IY. r Monday, March 29, 1971 Fire Base Hit • 33 American Gls Killed by Reds ;; SAIGON (AP) -Enemy gunners level· ed a barrage Monday at a U.S. artillery base &till reeling from a sa pper attack that killed at least 33 Americans and wounded 76 in what may have been the heaviest death toll on a U.S. in· 5tallation in the war. The casualties were expected to go still higher from Sunday's attack on Fire Base ~fary Ann on the basis of still incomplete reports from the U.S. Com· mand. to silence enemy antiaircraft fire. Fog mixed with the dust created by the bombs hampered visibility. Field officers conceded that the America! artillery base below Da Nang was taken by surprise by the North Vietnamese attack Sunday, although the perimeter had been patrolled prior to the attack whlch began about 3:30 a.m. with a 5G-to W.round mortar barrage. The attacking sapper unit, the size of which was not known, moved in under cover or the barrage, taking ad• vantage of a moonless night. Twelve enemy dead were found later. GI FIRES INTO FOLIAGE OUTSIDE PERIMETER OF U.S. BASE AT KHE SANH Communications wlth the base were spotty more than 24 hours after the enemy attack, apparently because of damage to the command bunker. The artillery base, located in the jungle SO miles south of Da Nang, and manned by a battalion from lhe Americal Divi· sion, has reportedly been reinforced, however, and no additional casualties Were reported from the mortar attack Monday morning. The upsurge in enemy activity in the southern !st military region was al· tributed by U.S. Command officers to a period of moonless nights which makes night attacks easier. Wh ile Base for Laos Push is Dismantled, Nor th Vietnam••• Sappers Stri ke South of Da Nang Scheme to Free Hoffa Alleged by Government WASffiNGTON (UPI) -The Justice Department said today se11eral "in- t.ermediaries'' attempted to solicit up to $1 million from imprisoned Teamster president Jimmy Hoffa in a "far fet· ched" scheme to secure support from an influential senator to gel him paroled. The department said Hoffa , who is due for a parole hearing Wednesday~ turned down the offer. A department spokesman said the deal offered to Hoffa was that for a large sum of money, a man allegedly close to Sen. John L. McClellan (0.Ark. ), would attempt to influence the senator to intercede in Hoffa's behalf before the Federal Parole Board. The spokesman said the plan "died of its own weight" and McClellan v.'as never contacted. McClellan said he never \V3S ap- proached by anyone with such a scheme, and was opposed to Hoffa's release in any case. McClellan is chairman of the Senate Permanent Investigations Subco1nn1ittee, which conducted intensive hearings in the 1950s into operations of the Teamsters and Hoffa in particular. The Justice Department gave its version cf the alleged scheme following first disclosure of the matter in the New York Times. The FBI originally !earned of the scheme through an lnfcrmant, apparently inside the federal prison at Lewisburg, Pa., where Hoffa is serving an eight.year sentence for jury tampering, the J ustice Department said. The spokesman said the FBI kept the Justice Department informed of the progress of the negotiations, and that no arrests or prosecution of those in- volved was contemplated "because BJ>" parenUy no law was broken." The spokesman refused to name the Intermediaries involved, but said "we know who they are." Al least three men were said to have been involved -a man who was reported to have conlacted Hoffa in prison, a "middle man" and a man \vho knew McClellan and was supposed to be the contact man with him. However. the plan never reached the stage where McClellan would have been contacted, the government's account said. The Justice spokesman said that although he was unable to say for sure, it appeared the men involved were simp- ly out to make a quick profit. "You know." he said, "somebody thinks he's got something on somebody and they think, 'we can take advantage or this.'" He did not elaborate. Fron1 Page 1 SLAYING ... ·struck Barnett but said I~ died of multi· pie gunshot wounds. Barnett, who lived in North Hollywood, had come to Huntington Beach to participate in a family gathering, ac· cording to officers. Several relatives witnessed the shooting, according to the police report. Officer Roger Parker was the first policeman to arrive at the Burke household and ga ve the dying man mouth·to-mouth resuscitat.ion and heart massage. Parker's attempta failed. Barnett was pronounced dead en arrival at Huntington Intercommwlity Hospital. Acting on information supplied by Burke, Officer John Sanders spotted Mrs. Barnett's car in the parking lot of the East Street Bar, 7682 Edinger Ave. while on his way to her apartment. Sanders said Mrs. Barnett was sitting alone at the bar. He arrested her (ln murder charges. She was booked into Huntington Beach Cith Jail and transfer· Huntington Beach City Jail where she is awaiting arraignment. Judge to Asl{ Calley ~ury If Tl1ey Need Aid Tuesdari agree with the defense that some inquiry should be made but exactly what kind and the time it should be made , 1 am undecided at this point. "I should be in a position to rule sometime tomorrow afternoon," he said. Ford to Recall All 1971 Pintos To Prevent Fires DETROIT (UPI) -Ford Motor Co. announced today it \Vas recalling its entire production of Pinto minicars for modification to prevent possible ignition of fue l vapors in the air cleaner. A spo~~sman for the company said 1' a few" cars had been destroyed by fire in the engine compartment, but emphasized that there was no case where the flames had penetrated the passenger compartment. A total of 204,000 of the 1971 model Pintos were involved, starting from original production last July until March 19, when modifications were made on all cars coming off the production line. A spokesman said investigation or reported cases revealed that vapors in the air cleaner could be ignited by a backfire through the carburetor. t.1ost cases occurred when cars were started after having been parked. lie explained that the new evaporation systems on all new cars provide a can· ister for storage of gases while the engine is slopped. These gases are suck- ed into the carburetor when the car is started . He said there were cases where backfires ignited these fumes and caused a sustained flame.up in the carburetor aif cleaner. The spokesman said that in most cases damage was confined to the air cleaner and electric \virin g, and in some cases, scorch damage to the paint (ln the hood. Pat Drawing Up Wedding List First Lady Pat Nixon spent Uie weekend at the Nixon's San Clemente seaside villa working on a guest list for her daughter Tricia's forthcoming marriage to Harvard Jaw student Edward Flnch Cox. Mrs. Nixon drew from a list from her daughter Julie's wedding to David Eisenhower two years ago, but had new categories to add that the Presidenc>' includes, such as the cabinet and other government dignitaries. The date or the nuptials -June 12 in the East Room of the WhHe House -was expected to be announced formally this week. Tricia remained in Washington when her famlly came here 1''riday fo r a working vacation. The enemy also shelled a Vietnamese resettlement village about 25 miles north or Fire Base Mary Ann and followed up with a sapper attack Monday, killing 13 civilians aJ!d wounding 21. One hun· dred houses we.re destroyed. Sappers are specially traiaed infiltra· tors who are experts willi demolitions. North Vietnamese guruters also shelled Chu Lai, coastal headquarters ot the America! Division, and hit the Da Nang air base SO miles to the north. Field reports said several aircraft were damaged and !<>me Americans wounded at Da Nang. No damage or casualties were reported at Cbu Lai. Associated Press correspondent J. T. Wolkerstorfer reported from Quang Tri, that a U.S. supported South Vietnamese raid on a major North Vietnamese head· quarters on the Ho Chi Minh trail inside Laos was canceled at the last minute because of heavy antiaircraft fire and fog. The target area was about 30 miles south of the sector whlch was the foca l point of the recently completed South Vietnamese thrust into Laos. The strike was approved by President Nixon and President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam. Tl wa s called off when intensive B52 air strikes and smaller tactical fighter.bombers failed Newport Arrests Two Auto Theft Scheme Suspects Newport Beach police have arrested two persons on charges of operating a car theft scheme us ing counterfeit cashiers' checks to purchase used cars in Orange and Los Angeles counties. Booked in Orange County Jail is Vera Madge O'Neal, 46, of Santa l\1onica. Already in custody on auto theft charges from Los Alamitos is James Joe Pisciot· la, 39, of 11648 Beach Boulevard, Los Alamitos. Both are held on $12,500 bail. Newport Beach Detective Ken Smith said he entered the case in February when a Newport Beach resident reported his car stolen by suspects who bought it with a fictitious check. Smith sald investigation of the Newport theft disc losed cars stolen in Tustin, Los Alamitos and Garden Grove under similar circumstances. He said the investigation has included Garden Grove police, Los Alamitos police. the Orange Cour.ty Sheriff's Qf. fice, the National Auto Theft Bureau, the Los Angeles Sheriff's Office and the Los Angeles police. Investigation is continuing, he said, in an effort lo IOcate a third suspect and the people responsible for printing the fictitious checks allegedly used by the suspects. The death toll at Mary Ann, a b~e in mountainous jungles and occupied by elements of the Americal's 196th Infantry Brigade, was the highest in any such attack on a U.S. base, according to available U.S. Command records - allhough more have been killed in one. day running battles. The previous high for an enemy attack on a U.S. base was 32 An1ericans killed and 31 wounded at Fire Base Henderson: near the demilltarized zone on May 6, 1970. Nineteen South Vietnamese were killed and 40 wounded in U1at attack. {:( i:t {:; Canibodian Army Officer 11 anded Death Sentence PJINOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) A Cambodian colonel was condemned to death today for his role in the loss of the northeast provincial capitaJ of Kralie to the enemy l:lst Spring. A military court wound up its three-- month trial or Col. Cheng Sayomboan. sentencing him to face a firing squad. No date was set for the execution. There is nfJ appeal from · the court ruling and the colonel's life can be spared only by intercession or Cam· bodia 's chief of state. Cheng Heng. Sayomboan remained calm when the sentence was pronounced. But persons al\ending the trial were stunned, since it is generally agreed that Kratie, 100 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, is militarily untenable. No attempt was made to retake the city during the recent South Vietnamese drive in the area, because it was felt that Kralie could not be held against enemy attack. The defendant v.·as acquitted of charges that he had contacts with the enemY: and demorali7.ed his troops. Another defendant, Maj. Tim Naing, who had been ordered by Sayomboan to defend Kratie, was sentenced to life imprisonment. Naing had deserted to the enemy side before Kralie fell. Two Ancient Steel Spea1·beads Found ATHENS (AP ) -Two solid steel spearheads. said to date from the sixth or seventh century B.C., have been discovered at t.tycenae, the home of King Agamemnon, a Greek scientist an- nounced. Metallurgist George Varoufakis said archeologist George. 11ylonas gave him three spearheads found at Mycenae dur· ing recent excavation. ''Microscopic investigation proved that two of them were made of solid steel and not \\'fOught iron like other tools and weapons of the same era," he said. FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Judge Reid KeMedy said today he v;il\ rule Tuesday on whether he will ask Lt. William Calley's murder jury if it needs help in its deliberations. "Anything I do at this point certainly is dangerous," the judge said. The jury began deliberations today ======== The jury was in the 13th day of deliberations today and showing no signs or being near a verdict. "The government can sit here forever ••• business as usual, business as usu· al," defense attorney George Latimer complained. "But what about the a~ cused?" The prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey Daniel, had warned that to make any inquiries cf the jury would have the effect of coercing a verdict. "We have no indication this jury has difficulty in reaching a verdict," Daniel said. "What we do have here is that they are calmly and ration a 11 y deliberating all these issues as you directed. "They have not indicated they need any assistance. They have not indicated they are having any difficulty, They have not indicated they cannot reach a verdict." Latimer. 70 years old and for 10 years a judge on the thrce·man U.S. Military Ccurt of Appeals, said "if they are not having problems then 1 don't know what military justice is." He said that in no previous court- martial had the jury taken as long to make up its mind. ''I daresay It's five times as long as any that l c11n remtmber." JUdge Kennedy said he rotild find 11ttle legal prtetdent for a judge askin~ a jury whether lt needs help mRking up its mind. He aald he has asked the miUtary law library at Bailey's Crossing. Va., to check whether there is any prectdent and that he '-Xpe-tted the: rrsult of the research Tue!lday. "l recognize it's a decision I'll have to make," he said. "I'm inclined to I ' with a request to see logs made or radio transmissions on the day Calley's troops swept into My Lai. Camper Thieves Make Cleanup In Harbor Area Thieves made it rough for llarbor Area camper and mobile coach cwners over the weekend in a series of raids at Costa 1'1esa storage and parking lots. The hardest-hit victim lost his entire camper unit, worth $3,000. to thieves who simply drove a truck under it, yanked out the supports, fastened it down and drove away. Wilbur W. Hurst, of 531 Seaward Road, Corona de! 'Mar. told police the theft occurred In a storage yard at 2680 Newport Boulevard, between Thursday and Saturday. lnvesligators said two suspects were seen looking ever the camper earlier in the week, noting they arrived in a truck with nn aid camper unit lhat was not fastened down. Five other camper and Ir al 1 er burglaries were reported to p<>lice by victims whose vthicles were parked at 1963 Newport Blvd., but scme cwners ha\'e not yet been contacted ta determine loss . Leonard 1'1. llood, of 1701 Paloma Drive. and 0,scar S. Bean, of 1309 AMford Lane, bolh in Newport Beach, reported a combined total of $300 ln campifl1 supplles and clothing taken. coitAliRAL LOAN SHOP Collat1ral lo•n (Pawn) Spticl11ll1t1 Members of C11llf, Coll1t1ral Loan Aun. Savin9s like never before with unconditional 9uaran· tee5 on everythin9. CASH LOANS when you borrow CASH SAVINGS when you buy • Come in and see what we offer our customers. A new and unusual experience in shoppin9 en jay men t. Where people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LO.t.N, IUY, SELL, TU.DI n COME IN .t.ND BROWSE .t.ROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COST.t. MISA -1-H• H..t.or & ltood•ay ( 17 .. ,s., - Huntington Beae:J- ' I ,, VOL. 64, NO. 75 , 2 SECTIONS, JO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,-CAUFOltNIA MONDAY; MARCH 29, 1971 TEN CENTS Huntington Wife Held fu Slaying By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tlle G.llllY l'llOI S!llf Pollet said this moming they wi ll attk a formal murder charge against a ~year-old Huntington Beach woman accused of gunning down her ex·husband this weekend. Detective Sergeant Monty ~1cKennon 1a:id the complaint would be sought against Doris Barnett, 16162 Sher Lane. Investigators allege she used a .33-ealibt'r automatic pisUll to kill James Barnett, 48, While he was working on a coffee labl~ in his son's garage. The diminutive Mrs. Barnell, now held at Orange County Jail, has refused to discuss the charge with homicide detec· tJves. Officers said she may be arraigned Tuesday at West Orange County Judicial District Court. Police arrested Mrs. Barnett only 17 minutes after the alleged 4:10 p.m. shooting in the garage of Michael Burke. Barnett's stepson . Police were brought out lo Burke's home on 16641 Bartlett St. after Burke had summoned offie6s. He said he and his father had been working in the garage on a coffee table when Mrs. Barnett ·arrived. Burke told police that his father was drilli ng a hole in the table when Mrs. Barnell pulled the pistol out of her purse and began firing. Others in the garage thought the drill had malfunc· tioned, police said. Orange County Coroner's investigator Jim Beiser said today he has not been able to determine how many bullets etruck Barnett but said l.e died of mulli· pie gunshot wounds. Barnett, who lived in North Hollywood, had come to i Huntington Beach to partlcipa(e 1n 1 fatnily gathering, 1c-. cording to officers. Several relatives witnessed the shooting, according to the police report. OfJic:er Roger Parker was the first t>olicemaii to arrive at the Burke household and gave the dying man mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and heart massage. Patker's attempts failed . Barnett was pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington lnlercommunity Hospital. Acting on information supplied by Burke. Officer John Sanders spotted Mrs. Bamett's car in the parking lot of the East Street Bar. 7682 Edinger Ave. while on his way to her apartment. Sanders said Mrs. Barnett v.·as sitting alone at tbe bar. He arrested her on murder charges. She was booked into Huntington Beach City Jail where she is awaiting arraignment. Mesa Obscenity Case to Receive Hig h Court Look From Wire Services WASHINGTON, D.C. -California's Jaw prohibiting malling of obscene materials will come under scrutiny a!l possibly unconstitutional as the result 4'f a recent Costa Mesa case, the U.S. Supreme Court decided today. Arguments in the case of alleged obscenity dealer Marvin Miller, convicted in Harbor Judicial District Court on five counts, will be heard sometime next fall. t.1iller sent five brochures advertising various books and a movie, which the court found to be obscene. He and his atl()rneys appealed the verdict which was upheld Oct. 12 in Orange County Superior Court on grounds tht materiaJ is no more objectionable tha n that found in reputable Harbor bookstores. .They claimed some of the photographs he used are identical t() picture! en public displa y. Miller's petition lor an appeal was deniPd Nov. 2 and he and his legal couru;e\ went directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. ·Basing his appeal on 11 philosophy argued by many , 1-Uller says the stan· dards for obscenity llhould be uniform across the nRtion instet1d of being established from state to state. Otherwise. he argues. individual states with less-liberal legislators and citizen! can stop the free now of materials In interslalc mail and commerce. The the<>ry i~ that it could influence everything else adversely, whether obscenity is an issue or nol. Petitions filed by Miller also argue that founding fatbtrs and Cc>ngress intend for prosecution on distribution of alleged. ly obscene matter LG be h111ndled at 1 federal level. The Supreme Court test ef obscenity Js whether, liken 11s 1 whole the m.11teri1l apptala to a prurient interest in sex, 11JfronLI conlem~1u-y community su1.n· d~rds 11.mt h31 tbsoluttly no redeeming social value . Calming a Storm Vote to Decide Seal Beach Politics , Tliree Legs? ·~ ' .. ! I . : ·Some .or · the political tempest ·raging In Seal B:each ~ce Jut July may be quiet~ Tuesday as voters are given the cllOlce ol recalling one councilman and electing a new ona to !ill a vacant post. OnJy part of the city's residents will be allowed to vote in the election determlning the possible recall of Coun- cilman Conway J. Fuhrman and the man who will lake the aat of C:Oun- Aquarium in Philadelphia which imports thousands of African water frogs each year discovered this mutation with an extra leg. Normally a mutant lives only a few days. This one is one and one-half years old. Picture, with speciaJ lens, magnifies frog's size. Decomposed Body May Be Tate Lawyer Cani11e Caper County Police Dog Gets His Men By JACK V. FOX Ul'I l lltr .....,... The badly-decomposed body of a man believed to be mlssine Tate trial attorney A police dog had a· tale to tell today on how to capture a burglary suspect. "fuck," one of three dogs in the Garden Grove canine corps, was called in by Huntington Beach police early Sunday morning after a possible burglary was reported in progress at a large rflastic manufacturing plant at 7001 Clay Ave. · Det. Sgl. Forrest Lewis explained that police surrounded tbe large plant of Canbro Inc. until "Rick'' arrived. When the dog was brought in, one of the suspects leaped from 1 window and ran off through a field. but "Rick" chased the man and held.him.at bay, out a second 1us:pecl Ronald Hughes wa s reported. today to The two men were beinf be.Id· today have been found while the jury in the on suspicion of burglary and possession case deliberated whether to sentenct of dangerous drugs. The duo, Tony John Charle11 Manson and his co-defendants Catanzaro. 26, of 9422 Oasis Ave.. to · life ·In prison er death in the gas Westminster, and _Ray,mond Brewer ch~mber. Perez, 20, of ts09 England St., Huntington The body, ducribed as large and with Beach. are to be arraigned in West one arm nUasing, was discovered during Orange County Disll'ict Court Tuesday. the weekend face down in a pool of Sgt. Lewis said I.hat the police doc water in a remote mountain area of was used because of the 1ize ol the Ventur a County . by two Glendale building. fisherme n, accordln& to Ventura County "There were 1 lot of s4cked . bpus Senior Sheri H's Deputy Mike Freeman. inside and it might have been difficult He s11id, "we · fttl it may, be ,Hughe11 ~·!:nn~~--=~::ti':' si~ee. ~.on!! larce, peraaa mJS&1n1 up -~, .. ew.atu>W-"llR '·~and. t.4ea .lltit~"'"d111P:. cUman Lloyd. Gummen flbo rillaned several weeki 110. " The election lnvolYe1 voters ht ooun- cllmanic OiStricts 2 ·and 4, stretehina: over portions of the Leisure World· retire- ment community, and College Park East and West. There are 1pproximately 4,000 voters in each district. Fuhrman ignited a recall movement against himself last July 'l1 when he sided with Ma yor Morton A. Baum and O:loncllman Tbomu Hop.rd to fire the then City Manager Lee Risner. The ad· ministraLion's dismisql w11 loudly o~ posed by Councilman Gummere arid Councilman Harold HokSen. Risner, now employed in almlla! capacity In La· Habra. was · a popu1ar man with the recall backera who wasted no lime in announcing their intentlolt and served recall P.&pers on P'Uhrmu wlthin minutes after the firing. Baum and · Hogan:i. who conatltuted . !See RECALL, Pal • I} ltiflation Alert Due Nixon to Issue Wage Curb Plan President Nixon and Labor' Secretary James D. Hodgson buddied through the morning in San Clemente conferring over "legislative problems" connected with 1t.lbiliring wages in the co'astructioll in- dustry. Nixon was expected today to 1ip and announce an executive order in an at- tempt to fight inllatfn in the nation'• largest industry. Nitoo's Construction Indus tr 1 Stabilization Commission h a s recom· mended an execuqve order tbal would set up general construction wage guidelines, establish craft-by-craft boards to oversee them and empower &· stabiliza· tion board to take action if tbe IU1deli¥J are violated. Then the dog was taken tnaJde tM building witb an officer &fld ferreted these." . . ,.. .. Judge to Ask Calley Jury If They Need Aid Tuesday =:-Wt Thankagfving wttkeftd' w!\[Je 'Hol :::,~,J: ~a-:i .. rJ• The 60dy · w•s ·found seven miles east of th e springs. In a foUowup action, expeded Tuesday, the e&lifornla White House will take tbt. wraps off . ltl third ?Di.nattoe alert." Adminis\r1tion officials pmmised it w,Wd_ focu•. attention on specific w•ge and ~ dodJloaa .inado. !It tho prl\'ato •Odor &irlnl tht three . mont!iJ alnce the lilt alert. FT. BENNJNG. Ga. CAP) -Judge Reid Kennedy said today he will rule Tuesday on whether he will ask Lt. \Vi\liam Calley's murder jury iJ it needs help in Hs deliberations. "Anyth ing I do at this point certainty is dangerow," the judge said. The jury was in the 13th day or deliberations today and showing no signs of being near a verdict ''The government can sit here forever •.. business as usual, busineu a! usu· al," defe"'5e attorney George Latimer complained. "But what about the ac· cused?" The prosecutor. Capt. Aubrey Danie l. had warned that to make any inquiries of the jury would have the effect of coercing a verdict. "\Ve have no indication this jury has difficulty in reaching a verdict." Daniel said. ''What we do have here is that they are calmly anrJ rat io na l ly deliberating all these issues as you directed. Actor Given Decree LOS ANGELES (UPll -Film maker. actor Dennis Hopper, 34, and singer Holly Michelle Phillips. who separated eight days after their marriage last Oct. 31. have been divorced in Superior Court. ''They have Mt indicated they need any assistance. They liave not in<Uc1ted they are having any difficulty. They have not ind~e&ted they cannot reach a verdict.··· ' · Latime~ •. 70,years ·old and for 10 )'ears a judge on the thret·m•n U.S. MiUlary Court of Appeals. said "if they art not having problems then I don'l know what military justice ia." He said lliat in no preview: court- martial had the jury taken as long to make up ii.! mind. "I daresay It's five times as long 11 any that I can remember." · Judge Kennedy said he could find little legal precedent for a judge asking a jury whether it needs help making up its mind. He · said he has asked ·the milltary law library at Bailey's Crossing, Va., to check whetber there is any precedent and tbat he expected the result of the research Tuesday. "I recognize it's a decision I'll have le make." he said. "I'm inclined to agree with the defense that some inquiry ghouJd be made but exactly what kind and the time it should be made, I am uod~id~ at this point. "I should be in a position to rule sometime tomorrow afternoon," he said. The Jury began deliberations today with a request to see logs made of radio transmissions on the day Calley's troops swept into My Lai. flughes ·was ptesutned drOwnld 'In the torrtntlst rains that wetkend. Fishermen Don H. Chessman irid Jo~n L. Wells found the body Si turday but It took , them until late Sunday to hike out to a telephone. A team was dispatched to the area but was not expected to return until late Tuesday with the body. Fog ·covered much of the area preventiog helicopters taking part in the search. When the morning session began, several of 'tht jurors appeared with 111it- cases. • . GoW'trOOm observers, speculated that the appearance of the luggage ·mean{ that the seven-man,. live.wo~ panel expected to reicb a verdict tdday and leave for home dire~Uy fJtom the. ltall of Jwitice. AJ the jury began ill secoDd day o( deliberations, four of Manson's femaJe follower11. who maintained 1 vJgil outside the building during the trial, appeaie_d with their heaM shaved completely. They· were apparently Im.it at j n g Manson, who recently had his Jong locks cropped close lO his skull. 40..year Prediction For Man Comes True ST. CLAIR SHORES. Mlcb. <UPI\ - Forty years ago A /brtune teller told Pe.tt Kwaitkowskl be would win a fortune wbtn ht was about 65. Saturday, tht tU-year-<ild widower learned he had won $12t1.«XJ In the Irish sweepstakes. '"l'ht first thin& I'm going lO do is buy me a U.000 almond color Eldorado Cadillac, .. he 11id. Candidates' Night Slated Hunting ton Vote rs to Hear School Board Hopefuls They"re off and running ln the six M:bool board races in Weit Oranie Coun· ty . . And the Huntington Beach Leaaue of Women Voters believes ll la Ume for local residents to start chartina the form ()f the 38 candidates in the April · 20 trustee electiotis. The iequt has arranged the first "heat" -a candidates' night -for Tuesday night In the Octan View Elementary District. It will be held at 7:30 p.m. in lht Community Methodist Oiurch, 6662 ·,Heil Ave., HunUngton Beach. Tl wlll feature the three candidal.t1 In Oce11n View race and the l-7 candidates in the contest ror two seats on the ' ' board of tbe Huntiniton Beach Union High School District. Mrs. Ann Moreland of tbe LWV et· pl11ined that tbe Ocean View candk!atea w\11 !peak first. Each will be llmlted to a presentatloo o( tram. lbret to fivi minutes and then a brief question and answer period wW follo'f • , Loter· 11l<lf· ~lib 1<1M!ol district can- dldatts wUt · Ci"e...,:t6elr· presentations In a 1lmilar lorma( Mri. Joan Kats, .a former be.ltd of the LW\''1 S'pealter1 bureau. will be the moderator. The LWV also bas nt up 1 ACf'ffnlng commHtet to lOStft that questions ctrYer only school issuM. Mrs. Morel1ncf said lUl l'lml11r dldat" nigh!> will )loJd 'IQ, tht elementary acbool art.a. ...- "Tht program will be the nme at ea~ -Willi Ult elementary candidates apeaklna nr1t . and then the. higb school candld4\ea·follow1iJ1 ", sbe added. Ea~ me;U.1 H ocheduled lo be1in 1t 7 ~ao .P·?ll· with tbe tjmetable '' lollows : AprU I -Weatmlnater School Olsf1kt, Weetmtnmr Hilh Bcl>ool, ltm ·Golden Wnt SL, Westminster~ AprU 11 -Frontlln Vall<y Scbool llillrict. Fountain Valley Hlll)l School, 17318·Busbard St., Fount.In Valley. AJll1! " . -H~nUn&IOn Btach City School Di11tlct. Ape.s Smith Scllool, TIO 17th It .. Html!"""° Btach. , .\,,. 11'" SeltBca<,li School il!Jtrlct, ~ 11at.rmediato School, Ba1 lloilloyll'd arid Bob« AvOllUO, Sul ll<acb. On Dut11 Ens. Da'.vid ·Eisenhower reports for duty at .Fleet Training Cen· ter. Dam Neck, Va . Upon com· pletion of schooling, Eisenhow· er is to join USS Albany in the 'Pt1editerranean. The ship' 1 home port 'is Mayport. Fla. Fluoride Study Slated Tuesday In Huntington The Hunlington Beach Environmental Council will conduct 1 1pecl11 study 1ession on fluoridation Tue!day evening. It will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the 1dmlnlltraUve annex of city hall. Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, chairma11 of the council, _uid today that the group's wale quallty committee will make a lull rePorl on fluoridauon. •·11 wlll be a factual report on the environmental a!ipects or nuoridJtion," Mrs. Carlberg explained. 'the HunUngto11 Beach . City CoW'ICIJ rtttntly asked tht envirorunentll counclJ to study the . luue. Last Aug111l <XMJn- cilmen autbQrizt,d 1ddinc c b t mi C • l nuOrides into the city '#'attr aupplies, but lhla month lhe c:ounclJ ,delayod llM Implementation .Of .the l'l<>I"'"' untll 1ftir the' environmental ' CrouP : had •ltllliod the qun\lon. Mr1. Carlber& said that the en- vl~ntal c:ouncU wUJ not take a poll- lion, but will · prdeltl Ute lnlonnali<>n It bu gathered lo ~ city CIOlllldr (or con1lderl'Uon. · ' ,,.. ~ COtlDciJ WU tmtod by the dt1 la JmJ1t1, I ' /, .The Presldenf and Mrs. N·lxon, who flew here Friday for a lo.day stay. 1pent a quitt Sunday al their oceanfroot villa. · Aides pictured the sojourn as a working visit and said that. apart from acting en economic front!, Nixon would review Southeast Asia developments. He bu said be will announa plans for continued U.S. troop withdrawals from . Vietnam about April ts. Here with him were key 1Ssl$taatl InCJudlng Chief ol Staff H. R. Hilde:mm, Domestic Policy Coordinator. John D. E~rlicbman aod Or. Henry A. Kisstn1er-, a_asisllnt for national ~urity aff11J'S. Jn trylng to stem inflationary trends in · construction. Nixon is stopping ahort of cre.aling a national price-wage stabilizatlon tioard. But' be ia moving closer to the wage·price . guideline ae-- pr.oacb be once .scorned. Two Ancient Steel Spea rheads Found ATHENS IAP) -Two solid steel 1pearheads. &aid to date from tbt. si1th or seventh century B.C.. have been discovered at Mycenae, the: home ol King Agamemnon, 1 Greek scientilt an- nounced. ¥etaUurgist Geor1e ·Varoufakis said archeol6gist George Mylonu gave him three spearheads found at Mycenae dur- ing recent t1c.avaUon. "Micr01copic investigation prOved that two of them were made of solid steel and not wrought iron like other tooll and weapons of the same era," be.11id. Weatlter Low clouds and local fog will keep tbe sun away on Tuesday~ but temperatures will beat ~ t.o neu 80 inland and in the upper 60s along lhe coa..i. INSIDE TODAY Although. t k e oovernm.cnt elofmt to be 11\ control, Paki.,hlni rtbeL., art stiU flathlng. They claim. tip to 300,-000 have dietf. i" 48 hours. Ste '1tor11 Page .f. .. ' "! w • " ' • • u .... .. .. • • % DAILY PILOT H MQM,y, M'1th 29, 1971 Parks, Bousitag Valley Council Sets Study Meet Fountain Valley city coun{'ilmen \\.'Lil discuss parks, apartments and industry during a special study session at 7:30 p.m. 1'uesday. They'll be joined by members of the $1,000 Raised For Critically ' Ailing Girl, 12 "1ore than $1.000 has been raised in less than two weeks to help pay medical ei:penses for e 12-year-old Fountain Valley girl who has been .under special care al Hoag Hospital since March 18. Tina Kysella is still listed in critical condition. Doctors have indicated the illness that put her in a coma is a problem with the brain stem. Meanwhile, parents, children and teachers at Tamura Elementary School ·where Tina is a student. are still raising money to help her family pay the hospital bills. Mrs. AllisOll \l/essler, president or the Tamura PTO, said the $1,000 figure ·was reached Friday. A special account has been opened in Tina 's name at the Bank of America, 17430 Brookhurst SI. r-.toney ma.)' also be sent to the Tina Kysella Fund , Tamura School, 17340 San· ta Suzanne, Fountain Valley. Other <lrganizations helping with the fund raising are the Jaycees and the Fountain Valley Women's Club. Tina's father, William Kysella, Is a heavy equipment worker, but has been unemployed for three months. Frona Page 1 RECALL ... the other two-thirds of the new council majority, \vere not served Immediately with the papers. They had just been elected to office and had not yet served for 9<klays. But the recall backers are adamant in having them removed as well aod have begun seeking petitions calling for 1heir removal. An earlier attempt to file pettt.1ons for their recall floundered on a legal question. Jn Fuhrman's fourth district, voters will have the choice of either retaining the veteran councilman or voting for Frank Sales or Jim Neal. Sales has been extremely active in the recall, while Neel, an attorney, has declared himself against recalls but chose to run to give voters another choice. In District 2. voters will have the opportunity of choOSing from three can· didates for the replacement Clf LlC1yd Gummere. They are Thomas ?tfcKnew, president of the College P a r k HomeC1wners Association and a recall backer: EdY.'ard E. Smith, a retired plumber and frequent critic Clf the Baum- Hogard-Fuhrman triumvirate: a n d Petrus J. Roelofs. an environmental biologist who is a backer of tbe present C<1uncil majority . Gummere, a city councilman of eight years and former mayor of lhe city, voluntarily left his post last fall because he said he felt his political withdra\\'al could help heal the city's political \\'ounds. OUM•I COAIT DAILY PILOT OltAHGE COAST PUILISHIMG COM"AJrlY aob•rt N. ""••' Prnld..,t 11111 Pllbllol>tr J1c:\ •· Currw Vk9 '"*'""' •1'11111 C.-.1 "''......,. n."' •• ic •• .,ir Ecll!OI" Tho,,.11 A. Mwr,ht111 MIMllnt l:l!llW Al111 DirlrlR w .. 1 Or1119e '-11' ldlltf' Atb,rt W. l1t11 Alto{i.kl ••11w H•lltlttt .. ,. leeclt OHie• 17171 ••• ,i. 11111···'4 M1lli111 Addr.11 ; r.o. a.. 7tO, •1641 .._ ....... L1111111 a.dt! m ,..,., ,..,.,.,.. c.o." M111: I.JO W•r l1y Sir"' H""1JllrT IMdl; Im H._.,., lou:w1nf kn c11rncntt: .J0$ Norm fl tlmln. ltall DAIL 'f .. ILOT, with wtlldl It ~ tlle "-'"'• .. !Mfltllal •llr ...... s--"' llt .., ... ie eillllOM "' L.tfl#ll a.di. M-.ort hKll. Collt """' """""' .. -.di. ,._....... V1tlly, iM °"""'"""' c.,.i.tt.,. .,_ 5"111i..m, ........ -r.....,_ .ntM. Prtnct,el ,.,,..,. .,,. • et -w.t .. , Strwr. C." ,._., T .. •r••• rn-41 u1.4m Cl.afflH A'-tk ... '41.U71 city's planning and parks and recrcauon commissions. A proposed 17-acre central park will be the first ilem for study. Several councilmen have asked for a chang~ in the city's masler plan of parks to Include a central park. Last week, the parks commission went along with the council SU88esUon an(j asked for a public hearing on parks. The public hearing will have t.o be held by the planning commission. The prime site considered for the 17· acre park is on land ne:xt to Fountain Valley High School. Councilman Al Holl inden has for a central park that would totaJ recreation area including spots and ball parks. asked be a picnic Councilman John Harper also sug- gested bullding a recreation cenl.er on the park site. Df:tails of the central park will be worked out Tuesday night. After they polish off the parks. coun· cil.men will tackle the question of how many apartments should be allowed in town. Members of the planning staff are recommending apartment reductions which would eliminate a potential 004 apartment.sand 1,003 condominiums. "This would reduce our potential population by 4,232," Clinton Sherrod , planning director, said today. The ultimate population of Fountain Valley is oow figured to be 71.786. Ir Sherrod's apartment cuts are accepted, il would be 67 ,)54. Last April. the city council removed several areas in the city from possible apartment use, but residents and coun- cilmen bave asked for further cuts. When all residential construction is completed, apartments will comprise 28 percent of the population according to curren~ figures. A change in apartments, as recommended by Sherrod, will reduce that figure to 21 percent. The third major topic for Tuesday's study session is wes of the industrial land near the Santa Ana River . Sherrod is recommending that the city retain all land master planned for in· dustry. Some property owners are seek· ing Ul have their land changed to residen- tial or commercial uses. Fountain Valley has ,.3 acres of vacant land left to develop. All but 23 of those acres are between Talbert and Warner Avenues, and Euclid Street and the Santa Ana River. ~ncilmen and p 1 an• Ing com- nuss1onen may also discuu methods for speed.illg development of lhe in· duslrial land. A special citizen1 com- mittee ha.s asked the city to hire an industrlal coordinator Ul do the job. No other items are set for discuuion Tuesday, but commls.sioners may bring up other subjects. 'Ibe meeting is open to the public, but no Jtem1 are public hearings. Medical Prober Tells Warning To Hartelius By TO~f BARLEY Of ~ OlllY ... .., lllH A State Board of Medical Examiners investigator today testified that he warn- ed Dr. Ebbe Harte Ii us of "possible disciplinary action" by the board six months before the physician's Corona del f\.1ar offices burned. Agent Leo J. Roth told an Orange County Si;pe.rior Court jury that he discussed with the doclor in October of 1969 the circumstances surrounding the physician's relationship wJth a Wanda Melendrez, Roth said his investigation \vas based on events that took place in March of that year. Roth was not allowed to elaborate on the nature of the charges but Deputy Dist rict Attorney Al Novick today repeated his allegation that Harte\ius planned the burning or his offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway last April 9 to insure that records relating to Miss r-.1elendrez were destroyed. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins has testified that he did the burning for his sister's lover and that nine da \'s earlier he helped Hartelius, 50, fake the theft of the doctor's car. Blevins said Hartelius promised him the vehicle for conversion lO a dune buggy once the doctor had collected Ute insurance money and the in- vestigation inUl the apparent theft was closed. County Woman Killed by Auto An Anaheim woman w:is run over by 1 car and fat.&lly injured in Fullerton t>ar\y Sunday but police are still haiy today on the details. !i.!rs. Linda K. England. 72, died In Anaheim Memorial Hospital U!tt! hours after she w1a run over by 1 car driven by Berry C. Seedorf. 19. of Buena Park. Police were certain of one fact in lhe case. Seedorf was not Lo blame. They sald they had been able to determine that Mrs. England had betn arguin& with htr husb•nd Haven , 21, bul didn't know how 1he happened to be lying on the street on. W, Or•nJe· thorpe Avenue near Brookhurat Street. The fa1n1\y car was nearby. ) DAll.Y "ti.OT St1tf PMI,. , I Low Clouds' Returning To C~ast Fog and low clouds will retum to the Orange Coast lon1ght to burn oft again Tuesday in a repeal 1>erfo:111ance of the 1111sty drape that harried early 111orn1ng rno1ons1s antl pilots today. Flights 1n and out of Orange County Airport were curtailed lro1n 6 a.nl., whl·l'l the t<n~f.'r opens. until 9·15 a.m. !n \\'hat airport officials llc.!itribed as •·1ypital r-,.1arch and April weather.'' Boostitag the Ba1ad Onl\' Ontario lnten1at1011al of the Suu!lllantl's major airports remained OJJt'n to incon1ing flights. Son1e airlines d1l'erted flight s lo airports as far away as San Diego. Los Angeles Internationa l \\'as l'loscd fron1 J .26 a.in. to 8:08 a.in. today 11 hen the sun burned av.•ay the fug. Harbor Oeparlmcnt <lfflcials said the dense fog curtailed 1nosl b<lating actirity nut of Orange Coast Harbors, but caused r10 n1aJOr difficulty. Edison High School students Leslie Shane, Steve 1-lolmes and Joyce A1aibille (from left) round up items for garage sale to benefit school band. Edison Band Booster Club is sponsoring the sale, set for April 16-18 at the home of Mrs. Allen Shane, 19292 11ickory Lane, 1-iuntington Beach. Sale iten1s are still needed. Anyone 'vis hing to donate items can call U.lrs. Shane at 968-2143. A 10;1· tonight of 54 degrees and repeated low clouds will make the oullook sH111 lar. A high loinorrow of 70 is prrd1eted for the Orange Coast. lrvit1e Cityl1ood Campaign Valley Fluoride Foe Will Battle After Tuesday a warn1ing trencl may t·hange things. offering nighlly Jows from 60 to 70 and daytime highs of 70 to 80. the National \\1eat her Service says. Pushes Petitions to 57% Against Voting Since Jan. J, Sollthern California has received only 1.65 inches of rain. t\ormally 8.65 inches fall during the firsl three months, of the year. A saturation-type weekend campaign to obtain signatures urging incorporation or !he ne1v cily of Irvine pushed the volume of favorable response to 57 per- cent, leaders announced today. Only 25 percent is required to qualify for an election under state la\\·. John Burton, chairman of the Council of the Communities of Irvine declared the number of signatures indicates overwhelming support for the City of Ir vine Now (COIN) subcommillee. "We're 1vay over the top,·• Burton said triumphantly. He said teams o! 117 petition carriers circulated among the subdi\'ision com· mWlities on Irvine Ranch land. signing up J,545 property ov•ners designated as fee holders. No persons leasing homes are be ing signed, since it does not appear critical due to fee holders' response in the \\'eekend campaign, Burton said. He added that provisions enabling lessees to sign are being considered. "As it is, we've already gotten the signatures of about 33 percenl of everybody In sight,'' Burton added. He said 3.t a press ~onference today the campaign v>ill continue on a slo"·· deliberate basis to assure few if any rnistakes in the taltv. Burton noted ,.,.laY 21 is the deadline fer submitting signatures lo the counly counsel calling for the Or<1ngc Counlv Hoard of Supervisors to set an r!ect1ou on the incorporation 1:.sue "It should no111 be abundanlly clear !hat !he people in Irvine "'ant to be in their 011n city," Burton said. ··They \1·J]I not se\l!e for . or appro\·e, anything else. l am conl ident. .. thal the superv isors' action \\'iii reflect !he will of the people so dramatic;1lly C),· pressed in the p<tst 48 hours," he added. Andrew May, chairman of COIN. said the petition·carriers, themselves fee holders of Irvine area homes. were stun- ned by the enthusiastic response. ··Fully 05 percent of the fee holders contacted signed the petitions," J\lay said. h-!ay added that the percentage hcld lruf! in all the various communities v.·1thin the proposed ne1v city of Irvine, totaling about 4.500 adults eligible to sign. They include Turtle Rock. University Park, Village Park, Turtle Rock Broad- moor. the Ranch. California Homes, Culverdale. North Irvine, the Colony and Sierra Bonita. Campaigners for <-'ityhood arc or- t1mistic also that supervisors will comply \Vllh their wishes. since the local Agency J·'ormation Commission has endorsed 111- corporation. An anti.fluoride leader in Fountain \"alley will ask the t'll} lilUncil Thursday not to sel a .June 8 spC'c1al eleclton on fluoride. "There's no emergency now. \\·e l'Bn s;,11 c the taxpayers' money by holding 1! until the Apnl, 19i2, general election,'' George Lindegrcn said t~is morning. Lindegren leads a group of residents 11ho collected petition.~ calling for a ~pecial election on the fluoride issue. Mis group fell just 113 names ~hort of forcing the election, but two weeks ago councilmen agreed to call an election because ii was clear Lindegren could gel enough nan1es in another month. The council is meeting at 7:30 p.n1 ., Thursday , to formal ize the fluoride elec- tion. The Jone counr1I opponent of the June 8 special election is John Harper. \\'ho \\'as also the only vote against putting fluoride in city water. Harper also wants the issue on the April, 1972 ballot -the sarne time he is up for re-election. Beach's 'Nav)·' Gets Ne·w Vessel For the season. the ra infall total !:ii 11.411 inches compared to ii seasonal average of 13.17 inches. \Veathermen credit the early rains in November and l)ecember for bringing the seasona l total closer to a\·erage. The driest Jan. I to !\larch 31 period on record \\'as in 1635 when only 1.06 u1ches ol ra in fell. Free Hof fa Plan Alleged by U.S. \\"ASHINGTON CUP!) -The J ustict Department said today several "i~ termcdiaries'' atte1npted to solicit up to $1 miUion fron1 imprisoned Teamster president Jim1ny Hoffa in a "far fet- ched·· scheme to secure support from an influential senator to get him paroled. The department said Hoffa, who i5 due for a parole hearing \Vednesday, turned dO\\'n the offer. A department spokesman said the deal offered to Hoffa \¥as that for a large sum of money, a man allegedly close to Sen. John L, l!lcClellan {O·Ark.), \\OUld attempl to influence the senator 10 intercede io Hoffa 's behalf before lhe Federal Parole Board. The spokesman said the plan "died of ils ov.•n weight"' and t.1cClellan v.·as never contacted. Supreme Court to Decide Vincent f\.loorhouse, director of Hun- tington Beach's Harbors and Beaches Departrnent, has taken command of another ship. t.1cClellan said hr never \\'JS ap- proached by anyone with such a scheme, and was opposed to Hoffa"s release in any case. r..fcCJellan is cl1airman of the Senate PC'rmanent ln\'esti,i:at1ons Subcomn1ittee, \l'hich conducted intensive hearings in the 1950s into operations of the Teamsters and Hoffa in particular. h1 Gm1Possession Case The new boat. a 30-foot r-.1arshall powered by two 250 h.p. engines, was hoisted into the water Fridav. It is the city's secund harbor patrol bOat. f\.loorhouse said the b<Jat \\'ill be able to cruise between 30 and 50 n1ilcs per hour, carrying two lifeguards <1nd one fireman. 11 ~·as purchased for $16.000. but other equipment brings !he tolal cost near $20,000. \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed today to decide 11•hether the federal Gun {)intro! Law forbids anyone who has been convicted of a serious crime from ever possessing a firearm. The court \\'ill hear oral arguments on the issue next fall and winter then \viii hand do\\·n a written opini~n in the case of a Bronx, N.Y., man, Kenneth Bass, convicted of violation of the 1968 law. He won a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The Justice Department petitioned the Supreme Court to hear the case nexl term. Other lower court opinions have differed on interpreting the section of the law which has been used Uy the government to prosecute about 150 pPrsons. Jn other actions. the court: -Let stand a lower court ruling that a federally assisted housing project may not evict a tenant without giving him a full hearing and an opportunity to ans:v»er complaints against him . The ac- lion came in a case involving the Durham, N.C., Ho~ing Authority. -Ruled in a Minnesota case that state universities are entitled to impose nonresident tuition rates on students who have not lived In the state~inuously for a year prior to enrollment. .L0enied a hearing to Ca s ello, al!eged Nev,. Orleans crime ~ gure \\•ho has been imprisoned on charges of assaulting an FBI agent at the city hirport. '\..:.Agreed to examine a scrieii; of Ohio election laws Y:hich have been challenged as denying the ballot to minority parties and independent candidates. The case will be heard neJ.t term. -Ruled, 5 lo 4, in favor of 1 Louisiana inheritance Jaw \\hich \\'as challenged as denying the rights of illegitimate children. The st.alt argued the law y.·as Orange Contractor Gets Widening Bid An appsrtnt low bid of ll,236,ll08 for widening a porlion of Beach Boulevard has been announced by si spokesman for the State Division of Highways. The bid was submitted by Sully Miiier Contr1ctlng of Orange and will be for the widening from four to ii;lx lanes In a 7 1 mile stretch or the strtet from Huntington Beach to Stanton. ' intended lo encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. In the gun control test case. Bass l\'as sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviclion of two counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously of a felony -attempted grand larceny. The 1968 Gun Control Law has a section prohibiting anyone convicted of a felony from possessing firearms on penalty of a $10,000 fine or two years in prison, or both. The specific language of the slalute, however , describes such a person as one ''"·ho receives, possesses. or transports ln co1nmerce or affeclu1g commerce.'' 1 ' It is equipped "1th radar. ship-to-shore and Coast Guard communications systems. a de"plh recorder. a flre pump <1nd enough hose to reach the lop of a two-story house in the Huntington Harbour area where ii will be stationed. Also on board. according to Moorhouse. is a pump capable of circulating 300 gallons o[ "'ater per 1ninute. The pump, he added, could be used to draw \\'Bier from a sinking vessel. The new boat joins 1he already e:icisting harbor patrol boa\ and two ocean rescue boats in Hun!lngton Beach's ··Navy." The Justice Oep<irtment gave its \·crsion of the alleged scheme follov.•ing first disclo'>ure of the mailer in the l\ew York Times. The FBI originally learned cf the scheme through an informant, apparently inside ihe federal prison at Le .... ·isburg, Pa . where Hoffa is servin,i: an eight-year ~cntence for jury tampering, the Justice Oeparlment said. The spokesman said the FBI kept !he Justice Department informed of the progress of the negotiations, and that no arrests or prosecution of tho~e in- \'O]\'Cd \Vas cnntemplated ''hecause ap- parently no !aw y,·as broken ." The spokesman refused to name the inll'rmediaries involved, but said "\\·e know who lhey are." Collateral loan ('•wn} Spec:iali1t1 Mamber1 of CaHf. Collateral Lnn A11n. ; i t , Savings like never with unconditional guaran· tees on everything. CASH LOANS when you borrow CASH SAVINGS when you buy o Came in and see what we offer our customers, A new and unusual experience in shopping e n joy men t. Where people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT fROM • FIND IT HERE FIRSl COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SELL, TRADE COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD, PHONE 646°7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lofwten"llarbor & lroodw.., I • , Mond4y, March 29, 1971 H DAILY Pilaf 3 Reds Hammer U.S. Artillery Base Court Date Today Fugitive Broker Back By TOfol BARLEY 01 rft• D•ny ,1io1 si.u • Ill Joseph Dulaney 1s today back 1n Orange County, just one year and three months after suspicious investors 1n his \Vorld Financial Trends empire lcarnetl that the former Nrwport stockbroker had abandonerl his Laguna Ji.ills '·Taj ri.1ahat" and takrn !us v.ile and three children to \Vest Germany. Orange County investigators today learned that ~1rs. J\.1arlene Dulaney had been located by authorities in the Brilisll Island of Bern1uda. Deputy district attorney Joe Dickerson !iaid immediate efforts are being made to have Mrs. Dulaney returned to Orange County to face embezzlement charges. Santa Ana ~lunic1pal Court Judge Paul 1i1asl today set April 6 as the next court appearance for Joseph Dulaney. Dulaney, :J7, was booked into Orange Ford to Recall All 1971 Pi11tos To Prevent Fires DETROIT ru-,,ll -Ford f.1otor Co. announced today il was recalling it.s entire production of Pinto minicars for modification to prevent possible ignition o( fuel vapors in the air cleaner. A spokesman for the company said "a few " cars had been destroyed by fire in the engine compartment, but emphasized lhat there was no case \\'here the flames had penetrated the passenger compartment /\ total of 204.000 of the 1971 model Pintos were involved. starling from originaT production last July until 1i1arch l!I. when modifications were made on all cars roming off the produclion line. A spokesman said investigation or rP.ported cases revealed that vapors in the air cleaner <.i>uld be ignited by a backfire through the carburetor. t.losl cases occurred when cars were st.arted after having been parked. He expla ined that the ne,.,. evaporation systems on all new cars provide a can- ister for storage of gases while the engine is stopped. 'These gases are suck- ed into the carburetor when the car i.~ started . /-le said there were cases \\'here backfires ignited these fumes and caused a sustained flamc·up in the carburetor air cleaner. The spokesman said that in most cases damage \\'SS confined to the air cleaner and electric \\'iring , and in some cases, scorch damage to the paint on the hood. County County jail during the weekend and \\'il3 scheduled to leave his cell today to appear in Santa Ana f.1unicipal Court on charges of grand theft, forgery and Li>nspiracy. His bail is set at $.112.000. Orange County investigators brought the globelrotling investment counselor back from the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao during the weekend to face charges that have ;;ilso been leveled against his \\'ife , Marlene , 31. and his \Vorld Financial Trends vice president James Shipley. Shipley, 38, of tti9:il Lo\\'Cll Circle, Huntington Beach, goes lo court /\pril 21 for his arraignment. He is free on $250,000 bail. Investigators are concentrating their search for l\1rs. Dulaney in the t.1ontrcal area and are pursuing reports that Dulaney's attractive wife recently took lhe couple's three children to the C3na- dian city. The Dulaneys returned to the United Slates from \Vest Germany early this year. Despite a hunt by FBI age:nts and Orange County invest igators. they then returned to Munich. FBI agents, cooperating \Vith Interpol, v.·ere warned that Dulaney was schedu!ed to visit Curacao and the former stockbroker was arrested there last week. Jnvesligators hope to consolida!e court action against the trio and it appeared likely today that court officials would alten1pt to place Dulaney and Shlpley on the same calendar April :!I. 'Lw1g' Campaign Ends Up Being 'Just a Hoax' KANSAS CITY (AP I -The victim of a hoax, Jack Dollard has bec.n offered l\\'O iron lungs. But he can·t find anybody "·ho needs them. Someone told Dollard, a restaurant operator in suburban Lee 's Summil, Mo .• last year that a little girl in Kansas City needed an iron lung and one could be obtained by turning in a lot of emp!y cigarette packages. Dollard, with the help or Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, collected an estimated eight million empty ciga rette packages in six months. Then he learned it was all a hoax. There was no little girl, and no market for the packages But a Texas doctor and an Ataba1na hospital heard of Dollard·s plight and eacll offered to give him an iron lung. However, Dollard learned that iron lungs aren't needed much .since polio was virtually erased . GI FIRES INTO FOLIAGE OUTSIDE PERIMETER OF U.S. BASE AT KHE SANH While Base for Laos Push iJ Dismantled, North Vietnamese Sappers Strike South of 01 Nang On1aha Line Cuts LA Run Of\1AHA, Neb. (AP) -The Union Pacific Railroa d said ~londay 1l \vill halt all passenger service ef· feclive May J, the date the National Rallroad Passenger Corporation, Railpax, is to assume responsibility for intercity passenger service. Gov. Reagan to Restore Drug, School Benefits Affected are daily runs of the following trains: City of Los Angeles, bet\veen Omaha and Los Angeles; City of Kansas City, between Ka nsas City and Los Angeles; City of Portland, between Omaha and Porlland; Portland Rose, between Kansas Ci- ty and Denver. Sr\CRA,\1ENTO IAP) -Gov. Reagan has agreed to restore drug and school f\ledi·Cal services he cut last December, a Republican legislator said today. Thr governor also wit! provide $8 million lo re1n1bursc the counties for hcallh care costs they absorbed due to the Dec. 15 cutbacks in tile state's 1ncdical program for 2.4 million poor and nf'ed.v Ca lifornians, sai d A.~semblyman Gordon Duffy. Duffy !R·Hanfordl. announced he \viii amend hi s bill mandating the Medi·Cal service restorations Jn view of the ad- Bee Dee Spurgeon, 84, Pioneer's Widow, Dies Bee Dee Abbott Spurgeon, 84, became the third member of Santa Ana's foun· ding family to pass away in the past year \\•hen she died Saturday in a Santa Ana hospital. She was the wife of the late \Vill iam ~I. Spurgeon Jr .. son of the founder of Santa Ana y.•ho died June 22 at 85. lier son, William H. Spurgeon Jll , founder of the Boy Scout Explorer pro- gram died Sept. 13 in Newport Beach . 'The Spurgeons had been married 61 vcars and at the lime of her death Mrs. Spurgeon continued lo live in the family home at 1617 t.1ain St., Santa Ana. It was built b_v Mr. Spurgeon in !910 the same year the couple married and they Jived !here the rest of !heir lives. t.1rs. SpurgPon said that when the hon1c wa.~ built it was a mile out of town but !he ci!y grew up around it. She came lo California with her family in 1900 ::ind \vas a classmate and fellow graduntc of Pomona College with her husband. ~1r!I. Spurgeon is survived by a rlaughter. Mrs. William A. Bagley or Stinla Rosa. srven grandthildren and three grrat grandchildren. Private funeral services were held th ii:; morn1ni; at \Vaverly Church with burial at Fairhaven Memorial Park. ministration's reversal o( posilion. "I've reached agreement with the ad· ministration.'' said Duffy. Duffy said Reagan will put education liervices and an adequate drug provision back into the program by regulation within lwo weeks. Cosl impact o( restoring the drug formulary -lo be approved by the California J\.1edical Association and the California Pharmaceutical Association - was put al $1.2 million. 'The education services, including pro- vision of eyeglasses for youngsters, would cost about $800,000. Gov. Reagan reducca r;ome services and imposed fee cuts of 10 percent, saying the program was expected to run $140 million beyond budget limits. Duffy said the service.s would resume "within two weeks." meaning the service cul!" would be restored after a total of about 14 weeks. Quake Insurance Bill Proposed SACRAMENTO (U PI) /\ssemblyrnan Jack Fenton (D·MOn· tebello ), loday proposed a bill to require any company that writes rire insurance 1n California to also provide earthquake insurance . Under the measure. no such company could refuse lo write quake insurance :ind th e company's policies and ra te.'J for such y.·ould have to be filed with lhe state. ·Americans' Death Toll Reaches 33 SAIGON (APl -F:nemy gunners level- ed a barrage ~1onday at a U.S. artillery base still reeling from a sapper attack that killed at least 33 Americans and wounded 76 in what may have beert the heaviest death toll on a U.S. in· staJlahon in the war. The casualties were expected to g1> sLill higher from Sunday's allack on Fire Base Mary Ann on the basis of still incomplete reports from the U.S. Com· mand. Commun1cations with the base were spotty more than 24 hours after the enemy attack, apparently because of damage to the command bunker. The artillery base, localed in the jungle 50 miles soulh of Da Nang, a111d manned by a battalion from the America] Divi- sion, has reportedly been reinforced, however, and no additional casualties were reported from the mortar attack Monday morning. The enemy also shelled a Vietnamese resettlement village about 2S mile!i north of Fire Base Mary Ann and followed up \\'ith a sapper attack Monday, killing 13 civilians and \\'OUnding 21. One hun- dred houses were destroyed. Sappers are specially trained Jntiltr1- tors who are experts with demolition!!. North Vietnamese gunners also shell~ Chu Lai, N>astal headquarters of the America] Division, and hit the Da Nang air base SO miles to the north. Ca1nb,odian Army' Officer Handed Death, Sentence PHNOftl PENH. Cambodia (AP) A Cambodian colonel \\'as condemned to death today for his role in the los!I of the northeast provincial capital o( Kratie to'"the enemy ISist Spring. A military court wound up its three-- month ~rial of Col. Cheng Sayomboan, sentencing him to face a firing squad. No date was set for the execution. There is no appeal from the court ruling and the colonel's life can bt spared only by intercession of Cam· bodia's chief or state. Cheng Heng. Sayomboan remained calm when the sentence was pronounced. But persons attending the trial were stunned, since It is generally agreed that Kratie, 100 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, is militarily untenable. No attempt was made to retake the city during the recent South Vietnamese drive in the area, because it wall felt that Kratie could not be held again!lt enemy attack. The defendant was acquitted of charges thal he had contacts with the enemy and demoralized his troop!!. Another defendant, Maj. Tim Naing, \\'ho had betn ordered by Sayomboan to de.fend Kratie, was sentenced to life imprisonment. Naing had deserted to the enemy side before Kratie fell . • El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Pepper Steak .... $1 49 ,b Oven rPady , .. delightfully s('asoned ••• just cook and enjoy! Pork Cutlets BREADED 89~ • • • • • • • Lell.n, close trimmed ••• ready for you to cook and serve! Sliced Pastrami ........... srRYE SIHOWICHES ........... '12: Pile high nn rye or hol rolls! 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PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Ncwporl Blvd and Sunset and Hunhn1lon Dr. (El Ranc ho Cen lei) 310 \'le.I ColotJdo Blvd. f1emont and ll untinglon Or. Warn er and Algonquin (Boar dwalk Ccnlci) 2555 Ea.lblulf Or. (Ea stblulf Vrllage Center) I • 4 CAIL T PILOT Mondly1 Marth 2fl, 1971 Bloodbath in Pal{istan ' Rebel Radio Reports Deaths of 300,000 ~ NEW DEL!U, India (UPI! -The Pakistan government said today it was restoring order in East Pakbt.an and that life was returning to normal in Dacca, But the rebellious forces of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman said Uv!y fought on despite enormous losaes in the four-day· old civil war. • • U~I TtletltOlf Free Bengal Radio, a clandestine rebel radio monitored in Shillong in India's border state of Assam, said the Pakistani army, navy and air force have killed at least 300,000 East Pakistanis in the past 48 hours. There .was no way to · check the reports. All India Radio said 5,000 to 7,000 persons had been killed in Dacca alone WOMEN VOLUNTEERS IN EAST PAKISTAN TAKE MILITARY TRAINING Radio Reports Sty Vill19er1 Are Battling Tanks With Spears, Clubs Jordan Troops Open Fire On Crowd of Women, Girls By United Press International Jordanian troops killed two women ln Amman Sunday when they fired on a crowd pf several hundred women and school gif'ls they said were being used as a "human barricade" by Arab guer· rillas trying to attack police positions. Three other civilians were wounded in the incident, which touched off a day of violence in the Jordanian capital. Guerrillas denied they were involved and said the crowd was demonstrating against three days of fighting between government troops and guerrillas in North Jordan. Libyan Premier Col. M o a mm a r Khadafy said Sunday in a speech monitored in Beirut that the Jordanian Army should overthrow King Hussein and form a "liberation front" wilh the guerrillas. He said Libya would be ready to support such a movement. made a prisoner of war exchange Sund'lly at Ismailiya on the Suez Canal. He said Israel returned an Egyptian officer captured last t.1ay 30 in exchange for an Israeli sergeant held in Egypt since January, 1970. Members of the crowd that was fired on in Amman said the Jordanian troops initially fired in the air but lowered their rines when the crowd refused to halt. "All of a sudden there was shooting all around us," one woman said, "shots seemed to be coming from everywhere. Then the girls began falling." The outbreak in the capital came as other troops opened up pockets of guer. rilla resistan~ in the northern town of Irbid. Army officers in the area said their troops were conducting a house·t-0-house search for guerrillas. The civil war broke out Friday when Rahman proclaimed the independence of East Pakistan which is separated by the 1,0QO..mile.wide lndlan nation from West Pakistan. President Agha Moham· mad Yahya Khan ordered his 70,000 troops in East Pakistan to crush the insurrection with their superior troop strength. air and naval power and tanks. Wilh the civil war raging at the Indian border, the government of India was showing increasing concern. Opposition political parties asked Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to recognize the East Pakistani government though no appeal was known to have come from Rahman or his Awami League political party. India also expressed concern at possi- ble overflights of Pakistani military planes flying supplies to the civil war. Foreign ministry sources said India has contacted U.N. Secretary General Thant in an effort to raise the civil war issue in the Security Council. The Press Trust of India (PTI), a group of Indian news agencies, said East Bengali "freedom fighters" drove Pakistani army troops out of the Kushtia District bordering India today after a daylong battle that began Sunday. PTI, in a report from Calcutta, said the Kushtia District commander told the agency by telephone that Rahman's followers also had overrun Jessore city cantonment and that all government troops there had surrendered. Kushtia is about 60 miles northeast of Dacca and 20 miles from the Indian border. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said Sunday in a speech at Khartoum, Sudan, that Egypt had done all it could to achieve peace with Israel in the p a s t month. ''But a!l our efforts have been OOstructed by Israeli arrogance and in- transigence and the coming days will be decisive in the batUe of destiny," Sadat said. Tito Hails Pope As Ally In Jerusalem, official sources said Premier Golda Meir briered the Israeli cabinet Sunday on latest contacts with the United States, but details of her report were not revealed. An Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv said an army patrol killed three guerrillas and captured three others Sun· day in a clash on occupied territory lll the Jordan Valley. He said there were no Israeli casualties. The spokesm~ said Israel and Egypt Wicks 'Wonderful, Wonderful. Now gice me the good news!' In World Freedom Quest VATICAN CITY (UPI) -President Tito of Yugoslavia, the first Communist chief of State to pay an official visit to the Vatican, hailed Popt: Paul VI today as an ally in lhe fight against colonialism. Tito told the pontiff hbw much he appreciated his efforts for world peace and added he also was fully aware '"of the support which Your Holiness gives to people under colonial domination in their just fight for independence and Viet1uin1 Troop Strengtli Drops SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. troop strene:th in Vietnam dropped by 6,400 last week bringing it to a total of :106,500, the command said today, The withdrawal · of troops whose "standdov:n" or preparations to leave have been announced sin~ the figures were compiled will bring the total to just over 300,000. Military spokesmen said the weekly reduction figures can be expected to lnc rease over the next few y,·eeks to meet the published goal of 284,000 troops in Vietnam on May 1. The figures announced today were the lowest troop level numbers since Sept. 3. 1966, when there were 30S,000 American servicemen in Vielnam. the end of all forms of racial discrimina- tion." The Pope in turn called for col· Jaboration between the Vatican and Yugoslavia in the search for international peace. Unlike the Pope, Tito confined bis speech to international affairs and made no mention of internal cburcb·state relations. Tito expressed strong concern about the Middle East situation and said Yugoslavia was doing its utmost "to contribute, within the limits of its possibilities, to the peaceful solution of that crisis so that the consequences of the war of aggression of June. 1967, can be eliminated and so that the people of countries of that region can live in peace and security." Tito also expressed serious concern about the Southeast Asia situation. He stated his policy as one of the long-lime leaders of the nonaligned world. This was, he said, to stamp out colonialism, discrimination and racism, to reduce the gap between rich and poor nations and assure the independence, and sovereignty of all peoples. These were policies shared by the Pope, he said, and added: "[ am happy to be able to state that the points of view of the Holy See and Yugoslavia on major international problems. and the necessity of resolving them on the basis of peaceful c04;.xistence, are close or identical." Rainstorms Drench East • North Ut Most of Nation Fa.ir, Dry; Some Snoiv California Te111peratures Foo tnd low tlOU0$ 111re1d O•!' l'n<l>T of 1ti1 ~ouTll1•n <:111•0'""' ccn•· •I 1r11 1od1v wl•~ • II•••~ ''"" b!•nktr clo<in9 lo1 An911ei. In!.,~•· tlontl A.lro>Grl tor •bou! ,,;M noo•1 o" 1 dlY wnlch Clfd not clear ~n111 •f· ler"°°'1. Hlth \.OW l"l.C. 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" S.•!llt " -·" W1llll"etot1 .. • W!11111-" .. He sald ·thousands of men. women and children roamed the streets of Ku.shtia and danced in jubilation at the "victory." He said army reinforcements pushed into Kushtia and that lhousands of civllian.s carrying every available weapon swarmed in across the Padma River despite rockets and cannon fire from Pakistani planes. The Kushtia C()m.mander said at leasl 100 rebels died crossing the river but that the army finally withdrew after inflicting heavy casualties on the civilian population. Meeting In Paris Army controlled Radio Dacca, which normally broadcasts in the afternoon . was off the air today. Free Bengal Radlo the clandestine station whose loca~ tion ~as unknown, said Radio Dacca had been recaptured by liberation. army for~s. but this was not confu:med. Censorship was total from Eas_t Pak1st~n. All India Radio did not menlion llghhng in Dacca but said tliere was fighting elsewhere. It reported the 5,000 to 7,000 death toll in Dacca and said the radio called earlier for street cleaners to help clear the bodies. Sadat Warns Next Few Days Will Be Decisive By The A5sociated Pre11 With President Anwar Sadat warning that the next few days will be "decisive in our battle for destiny ," Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad and a score of his top diplomats gathered in Paris today for a meeting their government hopes will generate new pressure on Israel. En route to the meeting, Riad stopped off in Italy for talks with President Tito of Yugoslavia, Italian Premier Emilio Colombo and Foreign Minister Aldo Moro. Today Riad was meeting with French Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann. Riad begins a three-day session on Tuesday with 21 of his diplomats sta· tioned in Europe and America, including U.N. Ambassador Mohammed Has5an el-Zayyat and Ashral Ghorbal, Egypt's representative in Washington. Egyptian sources said the conference would map a vigorous campaign IG demonstrate to the West that lhe current no-peace, rnrwar stiuation is extremely dangerous and that Egypt already is on a genuine war footing. The hope is that the various govemmcnts will bring more pressure on Israel to agree to give up all Arab territory captured in the 1967 war. Speaking to newsmen on his arrival from Rome, Riad praised the French government for its "just appreciation of the situation in the Middle East." "We are going to work so that all the capitals continue to put pressure on Israel," he said. President Sadat told a rally in Khartoum Sunday that Egypt had done all it could to achieve peace in lhe Middle East. The official ri.iiddle East News Agency's report of his speech did not elaborate on his remark t h a t the next few days would be decisive Deaths of Yank Workers Claimed NEW DELHI (AP) -The United News of India said today that some Americans work ing on an irrigation pro- ject in the Kushtia district of East Pakistan were killed Sunday in a bomb- ing raid by Pakistani planes. The agency in a dispatch from Calcutta said its report came from across the border. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said no such word had been received in New Delhi, but he added that such a report would be sent direct to Washington. The spokesman said there were Americans working on an irrigation pro- gram known as the Kobadak project in the Kushtia district, which is 80 miles west of Dacca and 20 miles east of the Indian border. He said it was assumed that they were employed by the American Agency for lnternationat Development on tern· porary contracts. I I I ----¥' • • l for the Arabs, but he was warned before that the unofficial truce along the Suez Canal cannot last unless there is progress in the peace talks. Sadat asserted that Egypt's efforts to achieve peace have been blocked by Israeli "arrogance." Linking the Israeli stand with U.S. support for lsrael, Sadat said: ".It's amazing for us to see that the United States, which supplies Israel y,·ith Phan· tom jets, is exposed to tremendous pressure from Israel whereas it should be the other way around ." Russia Reported Studying Arms Treaty With U.S. VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet Union ls considering proposing tha t Russia and the United States sign a nonaggression pact, Communist sources said today. In Moscow's thinking. negotiations for such a pacl would take priority over the current Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), although SALT would con· tinue to meet, the sources said. The Kremlin's increased interest in nonag- gression talks stems from its growing reluctance to sign a SALT agreement with America, they said. The pact would be along the lines of the agreement recently signed by the Soviets and West Germany, which obligated both to forego the use of force in relations with each other, they said. The sources said a final decision has not been taken yet to approach the United States with the proposal. But they said it is being considered because it would hel p stabilize Soviet-American relations, without affecting Russia's abil· ity to respond to the Chinese threat. They said Soviet fears of an attack from Communist China, and worries about Peking's growing nuclear power, are making Moscow increasingly reluc- tant to sign any SALT agreement with the United States. China would not be a party to such an agreement, they said, and Soviet military men fear that any cutback in arms caused by an agreement wiUi the United States would leave Russia vulnerable to a Chinese attack. A nonaggression treaty, on the other hand, would not affect Russia's rivalry with China, they said. But, they Rdded, it would provide a basis of trust for future arms negotiations with lhe United States -including SALT. SALT, now in its fourth round here, has appeared to slow down. Russia so far has not replied to a U.S. proposal for a "compfehensive" agreement on both offensive and defensive nuclear delivery systems. But in the last round of talks in Helsinki. the Soviets suggested limits on Ant.iballistic Missile (ABM) defenses. - Yoga in the Pork YANK SOIL EXPERT Claud• Fly Returns Rebels' Hostage Returned Home In 'Good Shape' FORT COLLINS. Colo. ( API -Claude L. Fly, recovering from a heart attack suffered while a captive of Uruguayan terrorists, was reported in good condition at his hometown hospital today. The 65-year-old agronomist was hospitalized for observation immediately after he .,.,·as returned home Sunday by the U.S. Air Force. Despite his years and the tiring 23-hour journey from Montevideo, Fly was suf- fering no ill effects, his family said. "His spirits are high, and he was reading the local newspaper," Fly's son John said after visiting his father late Sunday night at Poudre Valley Memorial Hospital. "He's in the intensive care unit for a continuous 24-hour cardiograph," the son explained. "He may remain for several days." Fly was stricken Feb. 23 while held as a political hostage by Tupamaro guer- rillas. Seven days later he was released near a British hospital in Montevideo where he was kept witil Saturday, when physicians decided he was well enough to make the trip home with his wife and son. Fly left here last January to become an adviser to the Uruguayan soils office. He was taken from his laboratory near Montevideo by a band of hooded terrorists who held him hostage for a futile demand that the Uruguayan government grant permission for news medla to publish a manifesto. Battling Erupts Between Rival Canadian Groups TORONTO (UPI -Right-wing demon• strators, armed with pipes and a mace. like substance, fought Sunday with mem~ bers of the audience that came to hear Quebec separatist lawyer Robert Le- mieux and labor leader Michel Chart· rand. A janitor was injured by the chemical, a bystander knocked unconscious, and five of the demonstrators were arrested. The group of about 20 demonstrators, members of the right-wing Edmund Burke Society, threw the mace-like chemical into a crowd of about 1,000 at Convocation Hall al the University of Toronto. Members of the audience threw out the outnumbered demonstrators, who were armed, along with the chemical. with lead pioes four feet long. and stones which they hurle1 at the crowd. The demonstrators attacked Jong- haired bystanders outside the hall, and one was knocked unconscious. Five demonstrators. all Toronto resi- dents, were arrested and charged with "possession of a volatile substance and passession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace.'' Police identified the chemical used as "Protect-H," an ir· ritant similar to the riot-control chem· ical "mace" which they said is com. mercially available in the United States for individua1 protection. -. ' i I j ·This young lady Is amused as two young men form these unusual positions while practicing yoga in an Omaha, Nebraska park. Many Omahans took to the outdoors over the weekend a.s temperatures hit an unseasonably warm 50. • • j . ' Fonn1ai~• Valley Today'• Fln•I N.Y. Stocks EDltlOH . VOL. M, NO. 75, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, ~ARCH 29, 197 1 TEN CENTI Huntington Wife Held In Slaying By RUDI NrEDZJEL.SK.l 01 llM oa,,.,. .. 1i.1 Sltlf Polite said this morning they will seek a formal murder charge against I 40--year-old Huntington Beach woman a~cused of gunning do'vn her ex-husband thl! We:ekend . Detective Sergeant Monty McKennon 1aid the complaint would be sought against Doris Barnett. I61G2 Sber Lane. Investigators allege she used a .33-caliber automatic pist.nl to klll James Barnett, 48, \Vhi\e he was working on a coffee taOle in his son's garage. The diminutive Mrs. Barnett, now held at Orange County Jail, ha s refused to discuss the charge with homicide detec. tivel!I. Officers said she ma y be arraigned Tuesdsy at \Vest Orange County Judicial District Court. Police arrested Mrs. Barnett only 17 minutes after the alleged 4: 10 p.m. shooting in the garage of l\1ichael Burke, Barnett's stepson. Police were brought out to Burke's home on 16641 Bartlett St. after Burke had summoned officers. He said he and his .father had been working in the garage on a coffee table when Mrs. Barnett arrived. Burke told police that his father was drilling a hole in the table when l\1rs. Barnett pulled the pistol out of her purse · ahd began firing . Others in the garage thouR:ht the drill had malfunc- tioned, police said. Orange County Coroner's investigator Jim Beiser said today he has not been able to determine l!bw many bullets struCk Barnett but said l..e died of multi· pie gunshot wounds. Bartlett, wbn lived ·in North Holly91·ood, tiad come to Huntington Beach to participate In a faritily gathering, ac- cording to officers. Several relatives witneased the abooting, according to the police reporl Officer Roger Parker was the first policeman to arrive at the Burke household and gave the dying man mouth-~mouth resuscitation and heart massage. Parker's altempts failed. Barnett was pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital. Acting on information supplied by Burke. Officer John Sanders spotted Mrs. Barnett'!! car in the parking lot of the East Street Bar, 7682 Edinger Ave. while on hlS way to her apartment. Sanders said Mrs . Barnett was !lilting alone at the bar. He arrested her on murder charges. She was booked into Huntington Beach City Jail where she is awaiting arraignment. Mesa Obscenity Ca se to Receive High Court Look Fram . Wire Services WASHINGTON. D.C. -California's faw proh.ibiting mailing of obscene materials will come under scruliny as possibly uncon!llilutional as the result of a recent Costa Mesa case, the U.S. Supreme Court decided today. Arguments in the ca~e of all~ged obscenity dealer Marvin Miller, convicted in Harbor Judicial District Court on five counts, will be heard somet ime next fall. Miller sent five brochures advertising various books and a movie, which the tourt found to be obscene. He and his atLorneys appealed the verdict which was upheld Cot.. 12 in Orange County Superior Court on ground:!; the material is no more objectionable than that found in reputable Harbor bookstores. They claimed some o( the photographs he U.!led are Identical to pictures on public display. Miller's petition for an appeal ·wa!I denied Nov. 2 and he and his legal counsel went directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Basing his appeal on a philosophy argued by many, Miiler says the stan· dards for obsctnlly should be uniform across the nalion instead of being established from state to state, Otherwise, he-argues. individual state~ wiLb lus-llberal legislators and citizei;is can. stop lhe free now of materials In 1Dtetsta1t rrlail aid bxnmel'ct: The tbe<>ry is that it could innuence everylhing elst ;idversely, v.· he the r obscenity is an is!lue or not. Petitions filed by Miller also argue that founding fathers and Congress lntend for prosecution on fl i,trlbullon of a.1\eged- Jy obscene matter to be handled at a federal level. The Supreme Court lest -0f obscenity ls ,1·hether , tsken as a whole the material appeRls lo 8 prurient interest in :i;ex, affronts contemporary community stan· dards and Paa absolutely no redeemln& social value . I Calming a Storm • Vote to Decide Seal Beach Po.litics Tlaree Legs? .<\quarium in Philadelphia which imports thousands of African water frogs each year di~overed this mutation with an extra leg. Normally a mutant lives onJy a lew days. Tbis one is one and one·half years old. Picture, with special lens. magnifies frog's size. Canine Caper County Police Dog Gets His Men A police dog had a tale lo tell today on how to capture a burglary suspect. "Rick," one of three dogs in tile Garden Grove canine corps, wa!I called in by Huntington Beach police early Sunday JOOrning after a possible burglary was reported in progre!IS at a large plastic manufacturing plant at 7601 Clay Ave. Det. Sgt. Forrest Lewis explained that police surrounded the large plant of Canbro lnc. until "Rick'' arrive.9. When the dog wa!I brought in. one of the suspects leaped from a window and ran off through a field. but "ruck." chaaed t.be-:maa and-heht him at bay. Then the dog was I.Aken inside the building with an officer anfll ferreted oul a second suspect. The two men were being held today on suspicion of burglary and possession of dangerous drugs. The duo, Tony John Catanzaro, 26, of 9422 Oasis Ave .• Westminster. and Raymond Brewer Perez. 20. of 2509 England St., Huntington Beach, are to be arraigned in West Orange County District Court Tuesday. Sgt. Lewis said that the police dog "'./BS used because ol the size of the building. "There were a lot of !!lacked boxes lnside and it might.. have been difficult aod dan&erous lo ~.fUS~. !ll!ide," he-IOl!4' .,,,,..., "Ve lratiiid" to find IOOlf!OM in ·dttumst.ances like; these." Judge to Ask Calley Jury If They Need Aid Tuesday FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Judge Reid KeMedy said today he will rule Tuesday on whether he will ssk LL William Calley's murder jury if it needs help in its deliberations. "Anything I do at this point certainly is dangerous,'' the judge said. The jury was in the 13th day of deliberations today and showing no signs of being near a verdict. "The government can !lit here forever , .. business as usual, business as USlJ- aJ." defense attorney George Latimer complained. ''But what about the 1c- cused?" The prosecutor. Capt. Aubrey Daniel. had warned that to make any inquiries of the jUiy would have the effect of coercing a verdict. "We have no Indication lhls jury has difficulty in reaching a verdict," Daniel said. "What we do havt here is that they are calmly and rati o nally deliberating all these Issues aa you directed. Actor Gi ve n Decree LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Fnm maker- actor Dennis Hopper, 34, and singer Holly Michelle Phillips, wbo separated eight days after their marriage last Oct. 31, have been divorced in Superior Court. "The.y have not indicated they need any assistance. They have not indicated they are havil'lg &ny difficulty. They have not indicated they cannot reach a verdict." Latimer, 70 years, old and fQT 10 years a judge on the three--m3n U.S. Military Court of Appeals, said "if they are not having proble.ms then I don 't know what military justice is." He said that in no previous court· marhal had the jury taken ag long to make up its mind . "I daresay It'! five times as Jong as any that I can remember .'' Judge Kennedy said he could find Jillie legal precedent for a judge asking a jury whether it need!! help making up its mind. He .said he has asked the . military law library at Bailey's Crossing, Va ., to check whether there is any precedent and that he e.1pect.ed the result of the research Tuesday. "I recognize it's a decision rll have to make." he said , "I'm inclined to agree with the defense that some inquiry should be made but exactly what kind and the time it should be made, I am undecided at thi.5 point. "I should be in a position to rule SomeUme tomorrow afternoon ," he said. THe jury began deliberatiorut today with a request to see logs made or radio ·transmiuions on the day Calley's troops swept into My Lai. Some of the political tempest raging in Seal Beach since last July may be quieted ·Tuesday as ·voters are &lven the choi« of recalling one councilman and electing a new one to fill a vacant post. Only part or the city's residents will be allowed to vote in the election determining the possible recall of Coun- cilman Conway J . Fuhrman and the man who will take the seat of Coun- Decomposed Body May Be Tate Lawyer By JACK V. FOX UP'l Stiff lllNftw The badly-decomposed body of a man believed to be missing Tate trial attorney Ronald Hughes was reported today to have been found vthile the jury in the case deliberated whether to sentence Charles Manson and his co-defendants to life in prison or death in the gas ch:tmber. The body. described as large and v:ith one arm missing, was discovered during the weekend face down in a pool of water in a remote mountain area nf Ven l u r a County by two Glendale. fishermen, aceording to Ventura County Senior Sheriff's Deputy Mike Freeman. He said. "we feel it may bf: Hughe!! SW. .1111,o"iJarJ• PV~~ up ~fi1'1um.· Tb< ·•pound. bearded Ruane• disai> peartd ,last Tbanbgivin~1 weekend while on ~ eamplng frlp Jn tne rugged 5tspe H.ot Springs area northwest of here. The bofiy was found seven miles e.ast of the springs. Hughe! was presumed drowned in the torrenti.!111 rains that weekend. Fishermen Don H. Chessma n .!Ind John L. Wells found the body Saturday ~ut It .-Ok them until late Sunday to hike out to a telephone. A team was disp&tched to the area but was not expected to return unlil late Tuesday with the body. rog covered much of the area preventing helicopter• taking part in the search. When the morning session began , several of the jurors appeared with suit· ca·se!. Courtroom observers speculated that the appearance of the luggage meant that the seven·man. five-woman panel expected to reach a verdict today and leave for home directly from the IIall of Justice. As the jury began ils second day of deliberations. four of Manson's female followers, who maintained a vigil outside the building during the trial, appeared with their heads shaved completely. They were apparently i m it a t l n g Man.son, who recently had his long Jocks cropped clO!le to his skull. 40..year Prediction For Ma n Conies True ST. CLAIR SHORES, Mkh. fUPJ) - Forty years ago a fortune. teller told Pete Kwaitkowski he would win a fortune when he was about 65. Saturday. the 63-year-old widower learned he had won $120.000 in the Irish i;weepst.akes. "The first thing I'm going to do is buy me a $9,000 almond color Eldorado Cadillac," be said. Candidates' Night Slated Hunting ton Voters w Hear School Board Hopefuls They 're. off and running in !ht •ix· school ixlard races in West Or&n&e Coun· ty. ·1 And the Huntlniton Beach Le1tpe. o( Women Voters bellevea It Is ti.me for local residents 11'.1 start ch1r1in1 the form of tbe 38 candidate!! in the April 20 trustee elect.ions. The league has arrsnsed the first "he;it'' - a c11ndidates' night -for Tuesday night in lhe Ocean View Elementary Oitlitrict. It will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Community Melhodlst Church, 6662 Hell Ave ., HunUnaton Beach. It will fealure the three candidates in Ocean View ract aod U1e 17 cand.ld1tf:s ip the contest for two seat.a on the I board of the HW1Ungton Beach Union High School Distiict. . Mn. Ann M<niml oVtlle LlfV ... plained 'tlyll, lN ~ View Cl~Jdat .. wlll· '1Jeak t1,.i :· ~ wffi 'lit. lhnHed to a pre.5enlaUoQ ef -from three to five minutes and ~ a lirief questie.n and answer petlod wilf folklw. • Later their bi.lb ~I dbtric\, can- didates wUt glve1"ttleft presentallOlfl.s In a simUar format..... , .- Mrs. Joan Kati\ ~ former lltld of th• LWV's !J>'*9nr'1bmiiau. wjU fie lhe mOOerAtor. 1'f,t L.wv abo bas ttl up 1 screening ~mlttee lo lntllrt that questions cover Mly school IMues. Mrs. Moreland said that similar can· didat.es nights wilt be held In each ef the elementary 1Chool areaa. ·' "The program •ill be 1.be same at each ~, wftb !he: elementary catJdldates 1peaklnc lint .ond than the high .cbool ..ndld .... ro11owmc." ·Ille added. E11<:~ m..tlnc la ll<h""'1ed -lo bcpJi'. at 7:30 p.m. wtth ihe Uinebbte a1 follow&;. • Ap<IL I -Weilmlmter SChocil District. "'.estmlnster HQ:b School. 1C25 Golden West St., Wellminattr. · • Ap<ll 11 -· FOWltaln V.U.,O School D!Jlrlct. FOlllltaln Vallty High School. 17118 Bushard St, Fountain Valley, ', .l prll ti -Huntingt<A> Belch City School District, . ~u Smith School, 7'111 17th St., Huntington Beach. Aprll IC -Stal Beach School District. McGaugh Intermediate School, Bay Boulevard and Balsa Avenue, Seal Be•..f:!l· cilman Lloyd Gummere who resigned several WefiS ago. . The election Involves voters in coun- cilmanic Oi1trict.s 2 and •. 1tretchin& ._.over portians of the Leisurt World retire- ment community, and College Park East and West. There are approximately 4,000 voters in each district. Fuhrman Ignited a recall movement against himse lf last July Tl when he sided with Mayor Morton A. Baum and Councilman Thomas Bogard to fire the then City Manager Ltt Risner. The ad· ministration's dismissal was loudly op. pclfied by Councilman Gummere and Councilman Harold Holden. Risner. now employed ln almllat. capacity in La Habra, was a popular man with the recall backers who wasted no-time in announcing their Intention and served recall papers on Fuhrman within minutes after the firing. Baum and Hogard, who constituted (See RECALL, P11e I) ltaflation Alert Due Nixon to Issue Wage Curb Plan President Nfxon and Labor Se<:refary James D. Hodgson hudd1ed through.the morning in San Clemente conferring over "legislative prqblems" connected with U'I Tl lll'IM!t 011 Duly Ens. David Eisenhower reports for duty at Fleet Training Cen· ter. Dam Neck, Va. Upon com· pletion of schooling, Eisenhow- er is to join USS Albany in the Mediterranean. The sh i p ' s home port is Mayport, Fla. Fluoride Study Slated Tuesday l n Huntington The Huntington Beach Environmental Council will conduct a 1peci1l study !lession on fluoridation Tuesday evening. It will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the administrative annex of city hall. Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, chairman nf the council. said today that the group's water quality committee will make a full report on fluoridation. "It will be a factual report on lhe environmental aspects of fluoridation," Mrs. Carlberg ex.plained_ The Huntington Bea'ch Clly Co~I • recent.IY. asked thi inviron~mental ~ lo study th6 ;lllU•., La<\' ~Uillll\, # clln\eii · iuthci12td add~ c·h •m I~ ~ l· fluor.idea info ' the city . 'lt.'.ater IUPl'l*. but tlliJ -th the CO<JJ1c1i deliy~ tbe lmplemenieUon or Ult 1progr9m ~ ~w ' . ' after: ' the environmentaJ &J'0\11) bad atudled the que!ltion . Mfa. Car!Mr1 11id that the ~ virOomental COUj!cll wlU not ~Ice ~ pot~ lion. bOt will pre,.nl the lnlorm.1U911 It baa Jathered t.o the; city council ror ronalderatlon- The environmental council wa1 created by the c:Jty in Jariuiry. stabilizing wages in Ult construction in- dustry. Nixon was expected today to .sign and announce an exetulive order in an aL- tempt to fight inflation in the nation's largest industry. Nixon's Construction I n d u g t r y Stabilization Commission h a s recom- mended an executive order' that would set up general construction wage guidelines, establish craft-by-craft boa rds to oversee them and empower a staQiliza- tion board to take action if the guidelines are violated. In a followup action, expected Tuesday, lht Califoraia Wbilt House . wtll take the -wraps off its third "inOatlon alert." Administration offJclals promised it would h:>cus attention on specific waga ~ price declaJOna made Jn the private lectbr during the three months since the last alert. The President and Mrs. Nixon, who flew here Friday for a 10-day stay, spent a quiet Sunday at their oceanfron t villa. Aides pictured the sojourn as a working Visit and !laid that, apart from acting on economic fronts, Nixon would review Southeast Asia developments. He has said he will announce plans for continued U.S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam about April 15. Here with bJm were key assistants iRclud ing Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman, Domestic Policy Coordinator John D. Ehrllchman and Dr. mnry A. Kigs lnger, assistant for national security affain. In trying to stem inflationary trend! in construction. Nixon Is stopping short of creating a national price-wage sLabilization board. But he is moving closer to the wage-price guideline ap- proach he fJnce scorned. Two An cient Steel Spearheads Found ATHENS (AP) -Two &0lid steel !lpearheads, said to date from the airtb or seventh century B.C., bave been discovered at Mycen&e. the home of King Agamemnon, a Greek scie.ntist an· noun~d. Metallurgist George Varoufakis said arche<>logist George Myton.as gave him ttiree spearhead& found al Mycenae dur- tng recenl l!XcavaUon. "Microscopic lnvestig&tion proved that two or them were made of !Olid steel and not wrought iron Uke other tools and weapons of the same era," he uid. Orange Weather Low clouds and local rog will keep t.he. sun aw8y on Tuesd11y. but temperature!! will heat up to near 80 inland and in the upper 60t along the coast. · JNSIDl!l' TO~~ l' MViough ' t-h • 'fi.,b<},.MI claim..t to bt ht control, PokiJto"i rebel.r are st ill fiQthing_ The:y claim up k> 300,000 Mvt ditd in 48 howrs. Set s&or11 Pagt 4. ... ™. " C11lfltl"ftll I C!Mtlllet tf.,. CM!lcf u CPM,_,, U Dt•fll Ntllc.. ' ltH19rlll .... 6 ll111'1f"l•lll111111t lt ,. ..... _ )t.fl "~ .. """ u..... ,, MtllllfJ • ,....... t _., n 111........ 111.... w Or-C..:.11" • ,,.,. .. ...,.... . ._... 11'-IJ ''"" ..,,.." •n T"'°'"*" n Tllt•tt>A n WM"'-r I WlllMWW! 11 ._., .._ ,,..,, WwM lllNI. H • Z DAILY PILOT H Morlday, Mlt"dt 29, 1971 Parks, Housi1a9 Valley Council Sets Study Meet Fountain Valley city councilmen wilt discuss parks, apartments and industry during a special study session at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. They'll be joined by members of the $1,000 Raised For Critically Ailing Girl, 12 ~1ore than $1 ,000 has been raised in less than two weeks to help pay medical expenses for a 12.year-old Fountain Valley girl who bas been under special care at Hoag Hospital since March 18. Tina Kysella is still listed in critical condition. Doctors have indicated the. illness that put her in a coma is a problem with the brain stem. Meanwhile, parents. children arid teachers at Tamura Elementary School where Tina is a student. are still raising money to help her family pay the hospital bills. ritrs. Allisorl Wessler, president of tbe Tamura PTO, said t,t1e $1.000 figure v.·as reached Friday. A special account has been opened in Tina's name at the Bank of America, J7t30 Brookhurst St. Money may also be sent to the Tina Kysella Fund, Tamura School, 17340 San· ta Suzanne, Fountain Valley. Other organizations helping with the fund raising are the Jaycees and the Fountain Va lley Women's Club. Tina's father, William Kysella, is a he:avy equipment worker, but has been unemployed for three months. From Page J RECALL ... the other two-thirds of the new council majorily, were not served im~ediately with the papers. They had Just been elected to office and had not yet served for 9(1..days. But the recall backers are adamant in having them removtd as well and have begun sttking petitl~ns callinC for their removal. An earlitr attempt to file petitions for their recall floundered on a legal question. In Fuhrman's fourth district. voters will have the choice of either retaining the veteran councilman or voting for Frank Sales or Jim Neal. Sales bas been extremely active in the recall , while Neal. an attorney, bas declared himself against recalls but chose to run to give voters another choice. In District 2. voters will have the opportunily of cho0slng fr om three can· didates for the replacement of Lloyd Gummere. They are Thomas }.1cKnew, president of the College P a r k Homeowners Association and a recall backer; Edward E. Smith, a retired plumber and frequent critic of the Baum· Hogard·Fuhrman triumvirate; and Petrus J. Roelofs, an environmental biologist who is a backer of tbe present council majority. Gummere. a city councilman of eight )'ears and former mayor of the city, voluntarily left bis post last fall because he said he felt his political v.•ithdrawal could help heal the city's political v.·ounds. OU.Kii COAST DAILY PILOT CUHl)E COA$l '°U•LISHINli COM1'4"'1" Jtob•rt N. w,,J f>rnldenl 11'11111 l"vbllllltl' J1clc R.. Curit '( Vkl '""..,.,,' •1'11111 GtMr-11 Mtnfft( '1\111111 K11wif EdllW', lft111111 A. Murphln .. #M""inll EdlJOr Al111 Dlr•i" W•f Oronoa C-ly Editor AU11rf W. t 1t11 AHOCJtto Edi- Hml11ttH '-c.~ OMe. 17171 l11ch l111l1w1r4 M1lll111 Acldr111: P.O. 111 7f0, '2•41 .,_.,.,,... L"""9 a..o: m ,. ... , .a.- eot11 Miii: J.JI Wftl Illy ~t""' N"""1 l•d!: #JI N•wpttrt &ou:.,.1rd :I.WI Clerntni.; as NOtth El Cimino Aul 1.1., .... r114J UJ-4m Cl..tW A~ '4l•l67f <onr1t1tt. 1m, o...... CMM ....., .... ..,. '-n1', ... -. ,,.,., 111vttrtl......_ O!'lllKlrlll _,,.... ... """"""-"' --.... , .. .........llU9 ....... : .,... ,.. ... -.i.i .: ~, ....... . 'IC.ftl tit ....... lllkl .. ~ l'9dfl; ,,,. C•I• M9I, Clll""'ll. kt I D"lf'IM bf c..rlW •:t.». -.111111 W nitll P,11 "-llllv1 Mlllt•ry ... tlfllt"""'-U,tt -'111'1'- city's planning and parks and recreation commissions. A proposed J7.acre central park will be the first item for study. Several councilmen ha ve asked (or a ctuingd in the city's master plan oL parks 10 include a central park. Last week, the parks commission went along with tbe rouncil suggestion and asked for a public hearing on parks. The public hearing will have to be held t.y the planning commission. 'l'he pr ime site considered for the 17· acre park i! on land neKl to Fountain Valley High School. Councilman Al Hollinden has asked for a central park that would be a total recreation area including picnic spots and ball parks. Councilman John Harper also sug· gested building a recreation center on the park site. Details of the central park will be worked out Tuesday night. After they pollsh off the parks, coun· cilmen wiU tackle the question c;f how many apartments should be alloWed in town. t.1embers of the planning start are recommending apartment reductions v.·hich would eliminate a potential 1184 apartments and 1,003 condominiums. "This "''Ould reduce our potential population by 4,232," Clinton Sherrod, planning director, said today. The ultimate population of Fountain Valley is now figured to be 71,7~. If Sherrod's apartment cuts are accepted, it would be 67,554. Last April. the city council removed Beveral areas in the city from possible apartment use. but residents and coun· cilmen have asked for further cuts. \Vhen all residential construction is completed. apartments will comprise 28 percent of the population according to current figures. A change in apartments. as recommended by Sherrod, will reduce that figure to 21 percent. The third major topic ror Tuesday·s study session ls uses of the industrial land near the Santa Ana River. Sherrod is recommending that the city retain all land master planned for in· dustry. Some property owners are seek· ing to have their land changed to residen· tial or commercial uses. Fountain Valley has 343 acres of vacant land left to develop. All but 23 of those acres are between Talbert and Warner Avenues, and Euclid Street and the Santa Ana lUver. Cooncilmen and pl a n 1 I n g com· mis.sianefs rnay also discuss metbods for speeding development of the in· dustrial land. A special citizens com· mittee has mked the city to hire an industrial coordinator to do the job. No other items are set for discussion Tuesday, but commissioners may bring up ~ther subjects. 'The meeting is open to the public, but no items are public hearings. Medical Prober Tells Warning To Hartelius By TOJ\f BARLEY 01 tlte Dl l,,. l'lllt S!llf A State Board of ri1tdical Examiners investigator today testified that he warn· e~ .D~. Ebbe Hartelius of "possible disciplinary action" by the board six months beJore the physician's Corona del Mar offices burned. Agent Leo J. Roth told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he discussed with the doctor in October of 1969 the circumstances surrounding the physician's relationship with a Wanda f.1elendrez. Roth said his investigation \1·as based on events that took place in f.1arch of that year. Roth v.•as not allowed to elaborate o~ th~ nature of the charges hul Deputy Distnct Attorney Al Novick today repeated his allegation that llarlelius planned lhe burning of his offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway last April 9 to insure that records relating to rifiss ]tlelendrez v.·ere destroyed. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins has testified that he did the burning for his sister's lover and that nine days earlier he helped Hartelius, SO, fake the theft of the doctor's car. Blevins said Hartelius promised him the vehicle for conversion to a dJne buggy once the doctor had col\eckd the insurance money and the In· vestigation into the apparent theft was closed. County Woman Kill ed hy Auto An Anahtim woman was run over by a car and fatally injured In Fullerton early Sunday but police are still tiaiy today on the details. r.tra. Unda K. England, 22. died In Ana.btlm Memorial •lospital three hours after she was run over by a car driven by Berry C. Setdorf. 19. of Buena Park Police were «rlain of one foct ln the case, Setdorf was not to blaml!'. They said Uley had been ablt to delermlne that Mr1. England had been arguing \\·ith her husband lla\Cn. 21, bul didn't know how she hAppencd to be lying on the strett on. W. Or Mg~ tl1orpe Avenue near Brookhurst Street. 1be famdy CIT "'IS nearby. 041LY l'ILOT Sii!! l'ftot. --:-r Low Clouds" Returning .To Coast Fog and low clouds will retunt to th~ Orange Coast tonight to hurn <Jft again Tuesday in a re~at perfo:manc11 of the misty tlrape that harried early 1noming motorists and pllols today. Flights in and out of Orange County Airport \\'ere curtailed from 6 a.nl., \~1hen the tower opens. until 9· 15 a.111. in what airport officials described as •·1.rpical March and April wealher." Boosting the Botuf Only Ontario Jntemational of the Southland's n1ajor airports remained open to in("(lming flights. Sorne airlines dt\·erted flights lo airports as far away as San Diego. Los Angeles lnten1ational "as closed from 1:26 a.m. 10 8:08 a.m. loday \\hen the sun burned away the fog . l!arbor Department officials said the dense fog curtailed most boating activity out of Orange Coast Harbor~. but caused no major difficulty. Edison High School students Leslie Shane, Steve Holmes and Joyce ?\1aibille (from left) round up items for garage sale to benefit school band. Edison Band Booster Club is sponsoring the sale, set for April 16·18 at the home of lilrs. Allen Shane, 19292 Clickory Lane, Huntington Beach. Sale items are stUI needed. Anyone 'vishing to donate items can call Mrs. Shane at 968·2143. A low tonight IJr 54 degrees and repeated low clouds will ntakc the outlook :.iini lar. A high tomorrow of ?O is predicted for the Orange Coast. Irvine City hood Campaign Vall ey Fluoride Foe Will Battl e Ag ainst Votin g After Tue sday a warming trend m:iy change things, offering nighlly lov>'S from 60 to 70 and daytime highs of ?O to BO, the National \Veather Service says. Since Jan. I, Southern California has received only J .65 inches of rain. f\ormally 8.65 inches fall during the first three monlhs, of the year. Pushes Petitions to 5 7% For the season, the rainfall total I~ 11.40 inches compared to a seasona l average of 13.17 inches. \Veathermen eredit the earl~· rains 1n November and December for bringing the seasonal total c.:loser to average. A saturation·type y,·eekend campaign lo obtain signatures urging incorporation o( the new city of Irvine pushed the \·olume or favorable response to 57 per· cent, leaders announced today. Only 25 percent is required to qualify ror an election under state !av.·. John Burton, chairman of the Council of the Communities of Irvine declared the number of signatures indicates over\11helming support for the City of Irvine Now (COIN! subcommittee. "We·re v.·ay over the top,'' Burton said triumphantly. He said teams of 117 petition carriers circulated among the subdivision com· munities on Irvine Ranch land. signing up 1,545 property ov•ners designated as fee holders. No persons leasing homes are being signed, since it does not appear critical due lo fee holders' response in the weekend campaign, Burton said. He added that provisions enabling lessees to sign are being considered. ''As it is, v.·e've already gotten the signatures of about 33 percent of everybody In sijlf,'' Birton added, He said at cf press conference today the campaign \~1ill continue on a slow, deliberate basis to assure few if any mistakes in the tally. Burton noted 1t1ay 21 is the deadline for submitting signatures to the county counsel c<1lling fur the Orange County Board of Supervisors to set an election on the incorporalion issue. "It should now be abundantly clear that the people in Irvine want lo be in their own city,"' Burton said. ··They will not settle for, or appro.,·e, anything clse. I am confident. , .that the supervisors' action will reflect the \Viii of the people so dramatically cx· pressed in the past 48 hours," he added. Andrew May, chairn1an of COIN, said Lhe petition-carriers. themselves fee tiolders o( Irvine area homes. were stun· ned by the enthusiastic response. •·r~ully 95 percent of the fee holders contacted signed the petitions," ri1ay said. May added that tht' percentage held true in all the various communities \Yithin the proposed new city of Irvine, totaling about 4,500 adults eligible to sign. They include Turtle Rock. University Park, Village Park, Turtle Rock Broad· rnoor. the Ranch. California Homes, Culverdale, North Jn•ine, the Colony and 1 Sierra Bonita. Campaigners for cityhood are op- t1n1istic also that supervisors V.'ill comply \\'ith their wishes. since the local Agency Formation Commission has endorsed in· torporation. An anti-nuondc leader in Fountain Valley "'ill ask the city council Thursdat not to set a June 8 special eleetion on fluoride, "There·s no emergency now . \\'e can save the taxpayers' money by holding ii until the April, 1972, general election," George Lindegren said this morning. Lindegren leads a group of residents v.·ho collected petitions calling for a special ,eli:ction on the fluoride issue. His group fell jt1st JJ3 names ~hort of forcing the election, but two v.·eeks ago councilmen agreed to call an election because it was clear Lindegren could get enough names in another month. The council is n1eeting at ?:30 p.m,, Thursday, to formalize the fluoride elec· tion. The Jone council opponent of the June 8 special election is John Harper, who v.·as also the only vote against putting fluoride in city water. Harper also wants the issue on the !\pril, 1972 ballot -the same time he is up for re.election. Beach's 'Navy' Gets N e'w Vess el The driest Jan. 1 lo r.1arch 31 period on record voas in 1885 when only t.06 inches of rain fell. Free Hoff a Plan Alle ged by U.S. \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Justice Department said today several "in· termediaries'' attempted to solicit up lo $1 miUion from imprisoned Teamster president Jimmy Hoffa in a "far fet· ched" scheme to secure support from an influential senator to get him paroled. The department said Horla, v.·ho is due for a parole hearing \Yednesday, turned down the offer. A department spokesman said the deal offered to Hoffa was that for a large sum of money, a man allegedly close to Sen. John L. 1'1cClellan tl).Ark.), \1ould attempt lo influence the senator to intercede in Hoffa 's behaU before the Federal Parole Board. The spokesman said the plan "died of ils own v.·eight" and r.tcCle!lan was never contacted. Supreme Court to Decide Vincent Atoorhouse, director of Hun· llngton Beach's Harbors and Beache!I Department, has taken command of another ship. t' The new boat, a 30-foot 1'.larshall powered by two 250 h.p. engines. v.·as hoisted into the water Friday. lt is the ci1y's second harbor patrol boat. McClellan said he never 'vas ap· proached by anyone \\"ith such a scheme, and \\'as opposed to Hoffa 's release in any case. McClellan is chairman of the Senate Permanent Investigations Subcomn1ittee, which conducted intensive hearings in the 1950s into operations of the Teamsters and Hoffa in particular. h1 GunPossession Case · Moorhouse said the boat will be able to cruise between 30 and 50 mites per hour, carrying two lifeguards and one fireman. Jt was purchased for $16.000. but other equipment brings the total cost near $20,000. \\'ASHJNGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed today to decide v.·hether 1he federal Gun Control Law forbids anyone V.'ho has been convicted of a serious crime from ever possessing a ftrearm. The court v.·ilJ hea r oral arguments on the issue next fall and v.·inter. then will hand down a written opinion in the case of a Bronx, N.Y .. man. Kenneth Bass, convicted of violation o[ the 1968 law He won a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The Justice Department petitioned the Supreme Court to hear the case next term. Other ]o\\·er court opinions have differed on interpreting the section of lhc law which has been used by the government to prosecute about 150 persons. In other actions, the court: -Let stand a !ov.·er rourt ruling that a feder.ally assi~ted housing project may not evict a Lcnant v.ithout giving him a full hearing and an opportunity to ansv.·er complaints against him. The ac· lion came in a case involving the Durham, N.C., Housing Authority. -Ruled in a Minnesota case that .sta\t universities .ere entitled to impose nonresident tuition rates on students who have not lived in the stale. continuously for a year prior to enrollment. -Denied a hearing to Carlos ?\larcello. alleged Ne\\' Orleans crime (igure \1·ho has been imprisoned on charges of o~saulling an FBI agent at the city ;urport. -Agreed lo examine a series o! Ohio election Jav.·s v.•hich have been chal!en~e<i as denying the ballot to minority parties and independent candidates. The case \1•ill be heard ~xi term. -Ruled, 5 to 4, in favor of a Louisian a Inheritance law \\·hich \1·as cl1allenged as denying the rights of illegitimate childl"t':D. The state argued the law v.·as Orange Con tractor Gets \Vid ening Bid An apparent lov.· bid of $1,236.808 for v.•idening a portion of Beach Boulevard has been announced by a spokesman for the State Division of flighways. Tht bid was submitted by Sully ri.t11ler C.Ontractlng of Orange and will be for lhe v.·ldenlng from four to six lanes In a 7 I mile stretch of the street from lluntlngwn Beach to Stanton . • intended to encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. In the gun control lest case. Bass v.'as sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviction of two. counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously of a felony -attempted grand larceny, The 1968 Gun Control Law has a section prohibiting anyone convicted of a felony (ro1n possessing firearms on penalty of a SI0,000 fine or two years in prison, or both. The specific language of the statule, ho\1•evcr. describes such a person as one "who receives, possesses, or transports in commerce or aHecling con1merce.'' It is equipped v.•ith radar. shi p.to-shore and Coast Guard communications systems. a depth recorder. a fire pump and enough hose to reach the top of a two-story house in the Huntington Harbour area where It will be stationed. Also on board. according to Moorhouse. is a pump capable of circulating 300 gallons of water per minute. The pump, ht> added, could be used to draw v.·ater from a sinking vessel. The nev.· boat joins the already existing harbor patrol boat and two ocean rescue boats in Huntington Beach·s "Navy." The Justice Department gave its \'ersion of the allfged scheme following first disclosure of the matter in the New York Times. The FBI originally learned r.f the scheme through an informant, apparently inside the federal prison at Lewisburg, Pa .. where Hoffa is ser1·i ng an <'ight.year sentence for jury tampering, the Justice Department said. The spokesman said the FBI kept the Justice Department informed of the progress of the negotiations, and tha t no arrests or prosecution of those in· valved v.·as contemplated '·because ap- parently no Jaw was broken." The spokesman refused to name the Intermediaries involved, b4t said ''we know who they are ." Coll1t•r1l loan (Pawn) Specl1U1t1 M1mben of C11if. Co1l1t•r1I L01n A11n. ! l • Sa•in9s like never with unconditional CJUaran· tees on everythin9. CASH LOANS when you borrow CASH SAVINGS when you buy • Come in and see what we offer our customers. A new and unusual experience in shoppin9 e n j o y m e n t. Wh11r1 people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT fROM • flND IT HERE flRSt COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY, SELL. TRAD E 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND PHONE 646·7741 letw•H Harbor &: lroocfwcry I , Newport Beaeh EDITION - VOL. 64, NO. 75, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' '' • I N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Voters to ·Meet Coast School Post Hope£ ul·s Voters ln the Newport-Mesa Unified and CoUt Community College districts will have an opportunity to meet the candidates for the two school boards in a program scheduled for 7:15 p.m. Wednesday at Estancia High School. Costa Mesa. The American Association of Universi- ty Women and the Orange Coast League "1 'Women Voters have arranged the forUm for c1ndJdates running in the April 20 e:lection . Three seats ari each ef the two boards are up for grabs this year. In both districts. all voters decide on each ract, although candidates must reside in specific trustee areas. There are five candidates ln the Newport-Mesa race and eight hmning for the Coast College board .. During Wednesday's progratb, each candidate will have five minutes le speak. After 9 p.m., written questiens from tbt floor will be answered. A two-minule time limit for responsell te questions will be set, with one minute to be granted to candidates wisttlt11 to ret>ut. The Newport-Mesa candidates invited to participate are : Donald E. Smallwood, an attorney, of 1981 Kornat Drive, Costa ~Jesa, who is running unopposed ftlr the area ene seat; Incumbent Mrs P.larian C. Bergeson, a housewife of 1721 Tradewind$ Lane, Newport Beach who is opposed in the race for the area three seat by Donald T. Bull, a busi ness coordinator of 2548 Westminster Place, Costa Mesa: Incumbent Board President Selim S. '"Bud'' Franklin, an attorney of 1928 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, who is opposed in the area six raCf: by Herb Stricker, a sales representative, of 44& Redlands Ave.1 Newport Beach. Coast Community Colle1e district can- didate.s include · ltK:umbent Donald G. Hoff •f 14142 Harper St., P.1idway City, opPoRci iD area two by Charles Dagion, a student ef IS22S Jackson St., Midw1y City. lncwnbent William Kettler, of W Seventh St., Huntingtoa Belch. who ls opposed by two e1ndidal.el •seek.inf JUI area lhr.ee seat. Tbey are ,Miu Barbara Bell, an advrrtlJ!nf ttpnstftt&Uve el 5!)31 Quail Circle, HunUrtiton Beach, azXI Mr~. Enriqueta Ramos, a teacher, ef 17294 'Peppertree St .. Fountain Ve~!i Incumbent Robert Humphreys. u at~ tornty, of 1500 Ad1ma streel, Cqfta P.i~ face.$ two candidates In the race for his area four seat. 'Ibey are Ricbard Oliver.' 1 sYstcmJ analyst of 141 E. Bay St.; Costa Mesa, and William T. Uiigcr Jr,, 'a atude~t, o( 22111 Rutger! Drive, <mta Meia. Irvine City Bids 57 Signatures Reflect Support for Incorporation Mmkie Man Gas pumper is Ernest lr1. Allen, son-in·la\\t of Sen. Edmund S • .Muskie t~Maine). Bearded youth, who is married to Muskie's d.augbter. Ellen, earns $160 weekly as gas station manager. He said he thinks Muskie's election as President would be good for the country but is not sure it woul d be good for him (Allen). Boat Sinl{s Off Newport; 2 Persons Aboard Saved Two persons were rescued Sunday •hen their IS-foot inboard runabout ap- parently 1wamped and sank aboul one mile off the Newport Harbor jetty. Kidney Patients Satisfactory After Operation Kidney transplant patients Ma r y French and her mother are reported progressing in satisfactory condition lo· day at Orange County Medical Center, m days after the delicate surgery. Miss French, 18, a Corona del ~1ar Orange County Harbor Department of· ficers monitored a radio call from the yacht Captain's Lady at 4:11 p.m. noti· fying the U.S. Coast Guard it had picked up two victims of a boat sinking. Harbor Department patrol \'essels escorted the Captain's Lady to the Harbor Department dock. The victims were identified as William Harmon, 25, 24 Fleet Street, Marina del Rey, and Judy Gentry, 25, 150303 Comuth St., Bellflower. Neither were injured. The couple told Harbor Department officers they had launched the boat at Bayside Launching earlier in the af· ternoon. They abandoned the crafl when it began taking on water from an un· determined cause. A Harbor Department fire boat search- ed for the craft but fourid only two seals and an engine hatch. The craft was christened Ship of Fools. A saturation-type weekend campaign to obtain signatures urging incorporatio n or the new city of Irvine pu.shed the volume of favorable response to &7 per· cent, leaders announced today. Only 25 pereent is required to qualify for an election under state law. John Burton, chairman of the Council of the Communities of Irvine declared the number of signatures indicates overwhelnting support for the City of Irvine Now (COIN) subcommittee . "We're way over the top," Burton said triwnphantly, · He said teams of 117 petition carriers circulated among the subdivision com- Nixon Eying • Constmetion W ag~-Control President NiJ:on and Labor Secretary James 0, Hodgson huddled through the morning in San Clemente conferring ever "legislative problems" connected with stabilizing wages in the construction in- dustry. Nixon was expected today to 1ign and announce an executive order in an at- tempt to fight · ioflation in the nation 's largest industry. Nixon's Construction I n du 1 try Stabilization CommiMioft h a s recom. meaded an executive order that would set up general construction wage gWdelines, establish craft·by<raft boards fo oversee tbem and empower a stabiliza· tion board to take action if the guidelines are violated . In a followup action . expected Tuesday, the California White House will take the wraps off its third "inflation alert.'' Administration officials promised it would focus attention on specific wage and price decisions made in the private sector during tbe three months since Jhe last alert. The President and Mrs. Nixon, who new here Friday for a 10-day stay, spent a quiet SUnday at their eceanfront villa. Aides pictured the sojourn as a working visit and said that, apart from acting on economic fronts, Nixon would review Southeast Asia developments. He has said he will announce plans for continued U.S. troop withdrawals from Vi~tnam (See NIXON, Pa1e II mwtilies on Irvine Ranch land, signing up 1,M5 property owner! designated as fet holders. No persons leasing homes are being signed, since it does not appear critical due to fee holders' response in the weekend campaign, Burton said. He added that provisions enabling lessees to sign are being considered. "As it is. we've already gotten the signatures of about 33 percent of everybody in sight," Burton added. He said at a press conference today the campaign will continue on a slow, deliberate basis to as sure few if any mistakes in the tally. Burton noted ·May 21 is the deadline Stamp of Donor U.S. Postal service wil1 issue this stamp honoring the late Ernie Pyle. the WW n. corres· pondent whose writing brought the common man's war to mil· lions of American readers. Pyle was killed during the battle for Okinawa in 1944. Slight Earthquake Jiggles LA Basin LOS ANGELES <UPI) -A slight ,arthquake registering 3.3 on the Rich ter scale jiggied windows ln the Los Angeles area Sunday but caused no damage. Sciintlsts at the California institute of technology said the. 9:16 a.m. temblor was one of a series of more than 22S aftershocks of the destructive 6.6 magnitude earthquake Feb. 9. · High School M>nior. had losl one kidney due to a birt.i1 defect at age 4 and her other organ began to deteriorate last year. She received a healthy kidney from ber mother, Joanne, Tuesday as a last resort. Jobs in Home Face Review Mary had been confined to her home at 20291 Kl ine Drive, Santa Ana Heights, until March 10, when a sudden kidney failure forced hosplt.aliuition. The family operates French's Pastry at Balter Street and 'Fairview Road in Costa Mesa. but the years of intensive medical care and supervision h0ve depleted savings from the bakery business. Burglar Takes Church's Take Newport Beach police are looking for 1 burglar who stole Sunday·s collection from the j.. u t h e r a n Church or the Mash!r. Olurch officials told po l i c e between $300 and $500 had been collected during servict! In the sanctuary at 2900 Pacific View Drive. The money wes in a cash bo,; In the unlncked church office when the burglar)' took place late Sunday morning. police 11Jd. ) Newport Law Now Forbids Enterprises in House A man·s home may be his caslle, but it can't be his place of business, at least nol in Newport Beach. Under current zoning regulations, lhe neighbor who moonlights in his ac- counting practice or even the lady next door 'IA'ho takes in ironing are breaking the law. The Planning Commission b movlng to liberalize the code, which now technically but absolutely forbid.I any type of commercial enttrprile ln a residential tone To some degrtt, city offlcla\1 have been ignoring the fiercely rtstrictiVfl ordinances and have issued some business hctnses lor ·ho •occupaUona. · "But y;e've itctually !Id snme O'Jtn- pliunts from people a t some euY acrolis the :o;.treet lWlr ng on income taxes lo pick up so e spare cash," says Jim Hflwlcke city zoning ad· ministrator. Hewicker had UI double chttk to see if a tttna~ girl would be violating the code by babysltUn1 for a couple of kids down the block. ., And he had to stretch a point to say that It's legal. "We could call hiring a babysitter 'incidental' to residing in a single-family home," he said. ln the stalf proposals to loosen the rulei; that the commission will get Thurs- day nlght -and then schedule a date for a public hearing -Hewicker i! oot sugge3tin& lbe city be excessively lenient. ;'JuM rtasonable," bt aays. Entitled "Home Occupatiom," I.he zon- ing amendmenl wooJd 1el down specific ground rulea for Avon ladies and part-__ sal._... II ~Jtil"'ioJ!a ~ ti!< b1l!ines1 may empJO)' no mart thaa one employe on the premises. "Right now, a ,bU&ine.wnan couldn'l even bring a secrttary home to take dictation or do typin& or anything," Hewlcktr aald. On the other hand, he point! out thAt the one..employe Um.tt Is deslJfltd ta kffp the wraps on nouriahlng maU.ordu businesses and the like. ·• "Some. of these home occupations can be quite lroublr'!:::ime,'' he said, "they become successful and start hiring employes. "iecting a sign out front, and 1tarl receiving large numbers of deliveries. "They can turn a neighborhood topsy· turvy." Prohibited under the proposed' amend- ment would be such things "mercban.. diz.ing and mall order se.rvioes whel't! commoditle.! art dUplayed or stored oo the premi.ea, e1cept ump~. "-Building, paintlng, plumbing and e.lectrlc•l contracting where· materta.J or equiP1]1enl ls displayed or 1tored. "-Beauty, barber mop., or tailor ah~ and similar acli\'ities. "-Prepared food hand.ling of any sort. "-Rta.J estate saJes or listings. or Insurance offices." -And, for special measure. "any oc-- cupallon whi~ constitutes a nuJaa.nct." llew)cker stressed !hat the amendmtnt 11 oq.Jy unper con&kie.ratiot1 and could t'Mta in for conslderable modificaUoo btforo rea<hln& I" final form. for submiUing •t&nab,lres to the coonty counsel callinC for the Orange County Board of Superviaon to aet lD elecUpn on the incorporation lisue. "It sl:toukl· now be abundantly cltar that the people In Irvine want ·to be in their own city," Burton Slid . "They will not settle for, or approve. anything else. I am confident. •. that the supervisors' action will renect the wlll of the people so dramatically ei:- pressed in the past 48 hour s." he added. Andrew May. chairman of COIN, said the pelition-carriers, themselves fee holders of Jrvine area homes, were stun- ned by the enthusiastic resPonse. "Fully 95 percent of the fee bolder~ Verdlet Nearing? cont.acted signed the petiU0111." May said. . May ldd<d that ti!< percentafe held true . in all the varioua , communities within U,. propm<i DeW city of Irvine, totaling about 4,500 adults eligible ·to sign. They includ~ Turtle. Rock, University Park, Village Park, Turtle Rock Broad· moor, the Ranch, Calllomia. Homes, Culverdale, North Irvine, the Colony and Sierra Bonita. Campaigners for cityhood are op- timistic also th.al supervisors will comply with their wlshu, since the local Agency Formation Commission bas endorsed in· corporation. Manson·Lawyer's Body ~ . Reportedfy iJiScovered -' . By JACK v: FOi U~I lleff l•rter The badly-decomposed ·bc><b' of a mll'l believed to be miasin& Tate trial attorney Ronald Hughes wat reported today to have been found while the iurY in the case deliberated whethu to sentence Charles. Manson · and his co-defendaoll to life in prison or death in the ca• chamber. 'lbe body. described as large and with one ahn misa:ing, was discovered during the weekend face down in a pool of water in a remote mountain area of Ventur 1 County by two Glendale fishermen, according to Ventura County Senior Sheriff's Deputy Mike Freeman. He said. ;'we feel it may be Hughes slnce the only large person mininit up there is him." The 25G-pound, bearded Hughes disa~ peared last Thanksgiving weekend while on a camping trip In the rugged Sespe Hot Springs area northwest tif here. The body was found seven miles east of the springs . Hughes was presumed drowned in the torrential rains that weekend. Fishermen Don H. Chessman and John L. Wells found the body Saturday but it took them until late Sunday to hike out to a telephone. A team was dispatched to the area but was not expected to return until late Tuesday with the body. Fog owe.red much of the area preventina helicopters taking part in the search: When the: morning JtUlon began, several of the jurors appured with 1Wi.. cases. Courtroom observers speculated that the appearance of the luggag e meant Corona del Mar Concert Slated Mfisic studenll from CorONI de1 Mar High School will sing and play at a benefit conctrt tonight jll the Orin&e Coast College AudiWriu.nt. . Ticketa are $1 for . the f:30 p.m. con- cert, with procffds ltl!dlng .tudenta lo summer music camps: · . · F .. turi!d will be ti!< Modt1pl Slopr<. the Symphonic Band, tho Concert Orchtstra. the Stage Band ond Ille Concert Cbolr. Actor Given Decree LOS ANGELES !UPIJ -.Film moker· aet~r Denntil · Hopper, 34, and lliatr Holly Michelle Phllllp1, who "pan.led elgbt daya oll<r their : 1111JT!ol•· !ail Oct. 3t, have been divorced In Supuior• C:OOrt. thtt the seven-man, live-woman ' pane! upe.ct.ed· to reach a vtrdJet today and leive for home directly from the. Ball of .JuaUce. As the jury began its second day of ·deliberations. four of Manson's female followtta. who maintained a vigil eutaide the building during the trial, appeared with their beads shaved completely. nity we.re apparently i m it a t I n I Maqson. wh<> r..,..uy bad hi< ioni ·loc:u cropped close to bi.a UuU. Newport Arrests Two Auto Theft Scheme Suspects NeWport Beach police have arrested two person1 on • cllargt!s of Of>'ratini a car theft scheme using counterfeit cashiers' chcclta to purchase used cars in Orange aod Lo! Angeles counties. Booked in Orange County Jail Is Vera P.fadge O'Neal, 46, Of Santa Monica. Already in aJ&tody on auto theft charge1 from Los Alamitos is James Joe Pisciot- ta, 39, or 11641 Beach Boulevard, la Alamitos. Both aro held on IU.500 bail. Newport Beach Detective Ken Smith said be entered the case in February when a Newp<irt Beach resident 'reported bil car stolen by IUllpecta who bou(bt it '!itb a fict.iUOUI check. Weather Low clouds and loca.1 foe w!ft keep the sun away on Tuuday, but temperatures will heat up to near IO Inland and In tho upper IOI aJGna the ...... . INSIDE TODAY Altllolig'h. t he gOVl'rnnt.ent claitnf to bt *" control. Pakiatanl rebel$ ore still fiaihino. They elai,. upJo 300.~ ha~• die~ In 43 hown. Ste 1t0Tt1 Page 4. -" Cef""11M I Cle~· U.Jt '-le• n c,.........· i1 ..... Hetkft , "$1 ,,•M t ' -n , ... ,, -" =.;..u.n '! -. ( '· r t: DAILY PILOT II Little Lobbyists Voice Their Thoughts on Bay By L. PETER KRIEG 01 1141 Olllr ~l"I '"" A PRESSURE GROUP ll lobbying vigorously agalmt high rise develop- ment along Lower Ne~l'Clrt Bay. Disclosure of the intense political effort has surfaced in a Jetter-writing campaign directed at the 1.Alwer Newport Bay Civic Dis- trict v.·hich Js 1tudying new building controls along the "'aterfronL "I am writing about the con!ideratlon on building higher bulldings along the bay. Well I think It la downrta:ht 1tupld," says Kim Morrison, a apokeaman for li1rs. Brad· bury's filth grade class at Newport Elementary School. "Usten,'' she continues, "we have polluted the air, we have polluted the world and I don't stt why you have to pollut.e the bay anymore than It 1a by hlJher building•. · "I DON'T CARE about the stupid people that want to see e bay. They can get up on their little old feet and walk over to the bay to see it. That's what they (feet) are for ." Kim's feelings are echoed by the other 21 pupils who wrote Councilman Carl Kymla, study committee chairman, after a recent class discussion on the civic district concept. Stan Hutchin.son cilea some other problems. "I don 't like tall buildings because when an earthquake comes It could fall over and It will pollute the water and the boata will crash into Jt. And what if It fell on the hf&hway and the cars?" TOM B. MAY not have his degree in architecture yet. but he had some specific thoughts. "I think high rise buildings are not very smart because of earthquakes or tidal waves. I think the buildings should be a dome shape .and kind of (rounded at the top) with acryllc glus for doors and windows. Thtrtfor' It "·ouid be aroudnomlc and earthquake proof. "If you build them. make them airtight when you shut the doors and \lo'indows and supply each apartment with air tanks." And Pat put the finishing touches on the ariwnents, concedin1 hl:s slde 11\igbl not be victorious. "IF VOU PVT up your building make big windows to view the bay. "PS," he wrttes, "The taller they are, the harder lh'Y FALL." Councllman Kyrnla, when confronted for a reacUon to the youthful lob by· l1ll, aald, "I am going to answer them. They think I'm the one who wants to bulld the buildings." BV THE WAV, reading through the letters we came across a number of rather bizarre spellings along the way, but the messages were blalanUy clear. Murder Charges Sought Against Beach Woman By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille 0-ltr Pl .. I Sllff Police said this morning they will seek a !ormal murder charge against a 4{).year-old Huntington Beach woman accused of eunnini down her u-hueblnd this weekend. • Detective Sergeant ~1onty Md'::ennon said the complaint would be 101Jght agJiru;t Doris Barnett, 161&1 Sher Lane. JnvestJgators allege 1he used a .SEkaliber automatic pislol to kill James Barnett, 'Fun Night' Set By CdM Chamber The annual "Just for Fun" night of the Corona del Mar Chamber of Com· merce \\'ill take place Tuesday beginning at 6:30 p.m. at the ~1utual Savings and Loan 2867 E. Coast Highway. The party will proceed across the gtreet, to the Corona del Mar Community Church, for dinner at 8 o'clock. C.Omedian Glen Stevens and Paul "1cCara and his band will provide the evening's enh;rtalnmenl. DAILY PILOT daAHGI COAST PUaLISH1Nct COMPANY ••~•,t N. W11rl ..... i..n1 .... NlllllW J1<k •• c'111r.y \tick p~ .... Gtlllr"•I ~MfW Tli•1111•' 1(•1¥1r a11tw The11111 A. M11rplllRe M ......... ltil.,. L p,,,, 1(,111 Newporl llMdl Ct1y •t111w ffnrrt ..... Offtc• ]JJJ N1wp1rt loul1v1r41 ... f.nift1 Arlcl1t11: P.O. lelt 1115, 92 •• J OttlerOMcn Coi.11 Mftt: »0 W•I ltY S~ L19UfM IN~I D2 ...... , """'"' '411"111"9!0i l .. th; 11'1~ INch kvltvtfd Sift Clcll'ICl'ltt: JU H""" 11 Cfl'll,.. R11I p,t..ILY PILOT, wtlt! ""Id! II !;:On..._, Wll' ,._Pre&, .. ..,...... ,..,,., --...... .. ., "" ....... ,. . -~ ,., ._.,._ •..m. "'""""' tt>dl. C:-1' Miu, """1iril"" a9dl. ll_,.111 V1IWy, kn (.........,. '"""~ 1'4 ........ ,k. ....... wt• -rtOilllll ltltnM. ~I '"°'""' ~ II 11 -W.I ltY ·~ C.tl ,,,,.... ,,,.,., •• fJ1ol1 141-4121 C1.wn..I ............ 6"1·1671 C.....,...lfht, 1111, o...nt1 C..M l"Wlilfllrll C.-..11r. Nt -,,.,.... 111111 .... I ....... .. 1 ... , ,.,."... .,. Mll"WTtwi•4 '" llertill _,, .. ~-""""" ""'... ,,,,. 1!'111•*-II ~1tltlll __., 48, while be was workine on a coffee table in hb 1on'1 garqe. The dJminutlve Mrs. Barnett, now h'ld at Orange County Jail, has refused to discus• the charge with homicide detec- tives. Officers Nid she may bt arraicned Tu'aday at West or1nge County Judicial District Court. Police arrested Mrs. Barnett only 17 minutes after the alle1ed t : 10 p.m. shooting In the garage of Michael Burke, Bamett's stepson. Police were brought out to Burk,'a home on 16641 Bartlett St. after Burke had summoned officers. He said he and his father bad been working in the garage on a coffee table when Mrs. Barnett arrived . Burke told police that his father was drilling 1 hole Jn the table when Mrs. Barnett pulled the pistol out of her purse and began firing. Olheri in the garage. thought the drill had reaUunc· tiontd, police said. Orange County Coron,r's investigator Jim Beiser said today he has not been able to determine how many bullets struck Barnett but aaid I.e. died of multi· pie gunshot wounds. Barnett, who lived in North Hollywood, had come to Huntington Beach to participate in a family gathering, ac· cording to officers. Several relatives witneased the .thooting, acco rding to the police report. Officer Roger Park'r wa! the first policeman lo arrive at the Burke household and gave the dyi.ng man mouth·t~mouth resUicltation and heart massag,. Parker's attempt&: failed. Barnett was pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunlly Hospital. Acting on Information supplied by Burke, Officer John Sanders spoilt<! Mrs. Barnett's car in the parldnit lot of the East Street Bar, 7'82 Edinger Ave. while on hls way to her apartment Sanders said Mrs. Barnett "'IS sltllng alone at the bar. He arrested her on murder charges. She was booked into Huntington Beach City Jall where she is awaiting arraignment. Boatyard o,vner Services Today Funeral H.rvicea were held today in Ne\•:port Beach for boatyard O\\'ner H::ir· ry Mellor, Jr., who died Friday night at the aee of 42. Mr. Mellor succumbed to a heart at- tack in his home at 909 Cedar St. An 18-year resident of the Harbor area, he was the owner of Mell°'"• Marine PalnUnc. whocll operate.1 In tM Larson and Mellor Boatyard, 2'103 \V. Coast Highway, Newport Stach. He leaves his v.•ifc, Patricia. and three sons. Bruce, K'lth and P11ul, of the fam ily home; his parent!, 1'-fr. and t.ira. JI. K. t.fellor, Sr. o( Caplstr:ino Be11ch, ~.nd one tlster. The family has suuested memorial contributlona to the Harry Mellor &:holarslllp Fund, Newport Harbor-Hl&h &:hool j Low Clo*1-s Returning To CQaSt Fog and low !:loud! will return to the Orange Coast tonight to burn off again Tuesday in a repeat perfo:manc• of the misty drape that harried early Jnorning motorists and pilots today. Flights in and out of Oral\(le Count)' Airport were curtailed from 6 a.m., \Vhen lhe tower opens, until 9: 15 a.m. 1n \I hat airporl -Officials described a31 •·typical t.larch and April weather.·• Only Ontario lnternallonal of the Southland's n1ajor aLTports remained OPfn to incomin~ flights. Some airlines diverted flights to airports as far away as San Diego. Los Angele:i 1ntematianll ,.,,as closed front 1:26 a.m. to 1:08 a.m. today when the sun burned away th e fog. Harbor Department officials said the dense fog curtailed most boating activity out or Orange Coast Harbors, but cauaed no n1ajor difficulty. Pushing 011t the Walls A lo1v tonight or ~ degrees and 1·epeated low clouds will make the outlook similar. A high tomorrow o( 70 is predicted for the Orange Coast. Workn1an breaks concrete as $1.8 million expansion project continues at Corona de! Mar Hlgh Schoo l. Plans call for expansion of the school to accommo- date 800 more students by next !all. Current enroll· ment stands at 2,200. When built ln the early 1960s, the school won national recognition for architectural excellence. It \Vas designed so it could be expanded. After Tuesday a warming trend may change things, offering nightly lows from 60 to 70 and daytime hlghs of 70 to 80. the National Weather Service says. Camper Thieves Make Cleanup In Harbor Area Thieves made it rough for Harbor Area camper and mobile coach owners over the weekend in a serJ,s of raid! at Co.!ta Mesa storage and p~rklng Jots. The hardest-hit victim lost his entire camper unit, worth $3,000, to thieves who simply drove a truck under lt, yanked out the suppart!f, fastened it down and drove away. Wilbur W, Hurst, of 531 Sea .... ·ard Road, Corona del Mar, told police the theft occurred in a sto rage yard at 2680 Newport Boulevard, between Thursday and Saturday. Investigators said two suspects were seen looking over tbe camper earll'r in the week, noting th'Y arrived In a truck with an old camper unit that \vas not fastened down. Five other camper and t r a l I e r burglaries were reported to police by victims whose v'hicles were park'd at 196.1 Newport Blvd., but soaie ownars hav' not yet been contActed to determtne Joss. Leonard M. Hoed, of 1701 Paloma Drive, and Oscar S. Bean, of 1309 Ashford Lane, both In Newport Beach, reported a combined total of $300 in campln& su pplles and clothi.D& taken. Medical Prober Tells Warning To Hartelius By TOM BARLEY 01 1111 t11nr f'li.t 11111 A St.ate Board of Medic.al Examiners investigator today testified that he warn- ed Dr. Ebbe Hartellus of "possible disciplinary action" by the board six months before the physician's Corona del Mar offices burned. Agent Leo J. Roth told an Orange C.Ounty Superior Court jury that he discussed with the doctor in Oclober -0f 1969 the clrcumstances surrounding the physician's relationship with a Wanda t.telendrez. Roth said his inve1t1gatlon was based on events that took place in March of that year. Roth was not allowed to elaborate on the nature or the charges but Deputy District Attorney Al Novick today repeated hi1 allegation that Hartelius planned the burning of his offices at 2.145 E. Coast Highway last April t to insure that records relating to Miss Melendrez were destroyed. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins has testified that he did the burning for his sister's lov'r and that nine days earlier he helped Hartelius, 50. fake the theft of the doclor·s car. Blevins said Hartelius promised him the vehicle for conversion to ::1 dune buggy on~ the doctor had collected the insurance money and the In· vesligation into the apparent theft was closed. E. Gern1an ' Dies In Mine Blast MUNtC». Germany (UPJ \ -A border palrol today fOW'ld the body of an East German who..qianaged to flee 350 yard• into West Germany with his right foot blo"n off by a mlne. a B1varlan border police spokesman said. l~e 1aid the patrol found 1 badly mauled root near the: border line 1nd rollowed a blood trail into a field near the Ba\•arian village of Sondheim to find the corpJe of a 30-yrar-old East Gtrman . The man apparently stepped on the mine while fleeing across the border during the night. He carr1td papers Iden- tifying him as Karl-Helni Fischer of Roemhldld, East Germany, the 1pokeam1D uJd, I , Parking Lack May Snag Cannery Revamp Plan Unger. Pacltic's pla111s lo r'build the Western Canners building . into a restaurant may be stalled because of inadequate provisions for off.street park· ing. A public hearing on the project is scheduled before the Newport Beach Planning Commission Thursday. but the Mesa Obscenity Case to Receive Higl1 Court Look From Wire Mrvlet• WASHINGTON, D.C. -California ·s law prohibiting mail.inj of obsceiie mate rials 'will Come under scrutiny as possibly unconstitutional es the result cf a recent Costa l\1esa case, the U.S. Supren1e Court decided today. Arguments in the case of alleged obscenity dealer Marvin Miller, convicted in Harbor Judicial District Court on five counts. will be heard sometime next fall. 1'.1iller sent five brochures advertising \•arious books and a movie. which the court found to be obscene. He and his attorneys appealed the verd ict which was upheld Oct. 12 in Orange County Superior Court on grounds the material is no more objectionabla than that found in reputable Harbor bookstores. They claimed some of the photographs he used are id,ntical to plclur'! on public dbplay. i'oliller's petition for an appeal was denied Nov. 2 and he and his legal counstl went dlreetly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Basing his appeal on a philosophy ar1ued by many, Miller !Jays the stan· dards for obscenity should be uniform across the nation inst,ad cf being established lron1 state to state. Otherwise, he argues. individual states \Vith l'ss-llberal legislators and citizens can stop the free flow of materials in interstate mail and commerce. A Modn-1' Up-to-Mt• city staff has recommended withholding approval until add itional areas to park customers' cars can be found. William Unger, a partner in the development company, said this morning he will attend the 8 p.m. hearing to press for approval. "The staff concurs with the concept of the proposed use and supports the effort of the applicant to preserve and enhance the area," said James Hewlcker. city zoning administrator. But he added that approva l should be withheld until the parking problem ls solved. Hewlcker explained that part of the problem will result from established city plans to widen Lafayette Street. the road running between the Cannery and a Int that y,•ould be used for customer parking. Curr,nt plans call for the street lo be widened from 20 to 84 feet and Hewicker 11.11id while ''it may be possible to reduce." thl1 width. "it is esllmated that as many as 24 spaces could be lost" by the widening projecl. Fro1u 1•a11e l NIXON ••• about April 15. Here with him were k'Y assistants including Chief of Staff H. R. Jfaldeman. Domestic Policy Coordinator John D. Ehrlichman and Dr. J1enry A. Kissinger, assistant for national security affairs. In trying to stem inOalionary trends in construction, Nixon Is stopping short of creating a nat ional price-wage stabilization board. Bul he is moving closer to the wage-price guideline ap. proarh he once scorned. Construction "'orkers were angered last month when Nixon suspended the Davis- Bacon Act requiring payment of union scale wages on government building pro· jecls. As part of his ne\Y approach. Nixon \1•ill restore Davis-Bacon provisions "'hile holding out the threat that it may be suspended anew H Industry and labor fail 1o cooperate with his new stablliza- tion plan. } COLLATERAL ·\ ; LOAN SHOP Col111ter11I lo•" (Pewn) Specleli1t1- M•mlter1 of C•llf. Coll11r.ral LOii" Aun. Savings like never befor,. with unconditional guaran• tee1 on everything. Since Jan. l, Southern California has t'eceiv'd only 1.65 inches of rain._ Normally 8.65 inches fall during the first three months, of the year. For the season, the rainfall total Is 11.40 inches compared to a seasonal average: of 13.17 inches. Weathermen credit the early rains in November and December for bringing the seaaonal total closer to average. The driest Jan. J to March 31 period. on record was in 1885 when only 1.05 inches of rain fell. Newport Police Arrest Three On Drug Charges 'J'wo Newport Beach resident1 and a Bell Gardens man are in custody today after police claim they found a variety of narcotics in their possession. Booked on charges or possession of dangerous drugs for sale was Jerald Frederick Bond. 21, of 115 381h St., Newport Beach. In custody for suspicio n or possession of dangerous drugs are Jeffery Doug.las Kind, 2.l of Bell Gardens and Vicki Maureen Miller, 26, of 20412 Birch SI., Newport Beach. Newport police said the trio was ar- rested at &Ind's home after officers ("!aimed a search turned up small quan• lilies of marijuana, LSD and am· phetamines anr aproximately J,300 barbiturate tab\els. Patrolmen Lee Roberts and Dougla.!1 Stoddard s::iid !hC'y spotted a car at aboul 5 a.m. cruising the neighborhood in a suspicious manner but lost the v'hlcle. A fe\v hours later they assertedly spot- ted the car parked in front of Bond 's home. Transportation !\feet Scheduled Tuesday A public mreting of lhe Newport Beach Citizens Advisory Committee o n Transportation ill scheduled Tuesday at 7:15 p.m. at the Nt:wport Harbor Chamber of Comn1erce office on East Coast l~ighway. The comml!lee will continue its review of the outline or the city-wide traffic study lo be carried out by the consultinl firm of Alan r.t. Voorhees Associate• of San Diego. CASH LOANS when you borrow CASH SAVINGS when you buy • Corne in and see what we offer our customers. A new and unusual experience in shopping en joy men t. Where people in the know save money evl!ry time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADE COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MIM -1 .. wtM Hot~°' • lftoefway • ' ' . --• . ' f ' ~osta Mesa . VOL. "4, NO. 75, 2 SE.CTIONS, 30 PAG6 ORANGE COUNT)', CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 29~·1971 ' . • • • a e u1. Ill Tate Case ~ttorney Located? By.JACK V. FOX U,1 lttfl ._.. .. The bl!ldly-decoqiposed bOdy of a man bellev~ to be missing Tate trial attorney Ronald Hughes wa1 reported toda y to have bttJ1 .found while tht: jury in the case. deliberated whether to sentence Ctiarle1 Manson and his ro-de!endantJ to' lift in . prison or death in the gas cltamber. ~ .bod.Y. described as large and V.:ith iine arm missing, was discovered during the weektnd face down in a pool cf water in a remote mountain area or Ventur a County by two Glendale fishermen. according to Ventura C~nty SEinior Sheriff's Deputy Mike Freeman. He said. "we feel it ma y be Hughes s.ince the only large person missin.( up there is him." The 2SG-pound. bearded Hugb~ dis~p pearetl last Thanksgiving weekehd while on a Cf.Tnping trip in the rugged Sespe Hqt . Springs area northwest of here. The body Was found seven miles east of .the SJ)fi,ngs. Hughe! was presumed drowned in the tDrrenti.al rains that weekend. · Fimetmen Don H. Chessman and John L. Wi!!lls found tht body Saturday ~ut It took them until late Sunday to hike out to * telephone. A team was di Spatched to the ares but was not expected to return uritil late Tuesday with the body. Fog covered much of the .11rea preventing hel icoplers taking part in the search. When the morning session began, 1everal of the jurors appeared with sui~ cases. , Courtroom observers speculated that the ap'pearance of the luggage meant that the seven-man, five-,woman panel upect.ed to reach a verdict today and leave for home directly from the llall of Justice. M .the jury began its s~nd day of deliberations, four of P,1anson's female followei:s. who maintained a vigil outside the buikiin'g during the trial. appeared 'fVith their !'leads shaved completely. They were apparently i m i t a t i n g Manson, who recently had his long locks ttGpped close to bis skulL Kidney Patients Satisfactory After Operation Kidney tran1planl patienl!i Mary French and her mother are reported proiressi.ng in satisfactory condition to- day al Orange County Medical Center, m Clays after the delicate &Urgery. Mbs French, 18, a Corona de! Mar High School atnior. had lost one kidney dtie ta a birth defect at age 4 and her other organ began ta deteriorate lut year. She received a healthy kidney from h6 mother, Joa1n1e, Tuesday as a la.st re~orL Mary had been confined to her home at 20291 Kline Drive, Santa Ana Heights, Until March IO, when a i;udden kidney failure forced hospitalization. "rhe family operates French's Pastry at Baker Street and Fairview Road in CO!ta Mesa, but the years or intensive medical ca re and supervision ha ve dtpleled 1avings from the bakery bu$1ne.s&. Burglnr Takes Church's Take Ntwport Beach pollct are looking for a buralar who &tole Sunday's coll~tloo frqn the L U"t her a ri Church of the Master. Church orf!cl.als told p 11 1 i c e be1wee.n SDI and $SOO had been collected during 1ervicea in the ,anctuary al 2900 Paclf\c View Drive. The monty was in a cash boz In the unlocked church office when the buralary took place late SUnday morning, police said. • Ul'ITt~ Muskie Man Gas pumper· is Ernest M. Allen, son· in· law of Sen. Edmund S. Mus~ (D-Maine). Bearded youth, who is married to Muskie's daughter, Ellen, . earns $160 weekJy as ga! station manager. He said he thinks Muskie's election. a& President ·would be good for the country but is.not sure lt woJtld be good for him (Allen). ~ ,. . . . ltVhte Cityhood Campaign Pushes P~titions to 57% A• saturation-type weekend campaign to obtain signatures urging Incorporation of the new city ot Irvine pushed the volume of .favorable response ta 57 per- cent, leaders announeed today. Oni, 25 ~rcent is required to ,q1;-1alify (or aD election under state law. John Burton. chairman of the Council of the Communities of Irvine 'declared tl\e number of signatures indicates overwlielming support for the City of Irvine Now (COJN) l!lllbcommitte,. "We're way over the top," Burton said triumphantly. He said teams or 117 petition carriers cii-culated among the subdivision com- munities on Irvine Ranch land, signing up 1,545 property owners designated as fee holders. No persons leasing homes are being signed, since it does not appear critical due tG fee holders' response in the v.·eekend campaign, Burton said. He added that provisions enabling lessees to sign are being considered. "As it is, we've already gotten the signatures of about 33 percent of everybody in sight," Burt.on .added. He said at a press conference today the campaign wUI continue on a slow, deliberate basis to assure few ll any mistakes in the tally. Burton noted May 21 la the deadline for submitting 1ignatur'1 to ·the county counsel calllni for the Orange Cowity Board of Supervi!IOI'! to set an election on the incorporation issue. "It should now be abundantly clear that the people in Irvine want to be in their own city," Burton said. Pat Drawing Up Wedding List First Lady Pat Nixon spent the 1o11eekend at the Nixon's San Clemente seaside villa working on .11 guest list for her daughter Tricia's forthcoming marriage to Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox. Mrs. Nixon drew from 1 list from her daughter Julie's wedding to · David Eisenhower two years ago. but had new categories lo add that the Presidency includes. such as the cabinet and 'other government dignitaries. The date of the nuptials -June 12 in the East ~m of the White House -was expected . to be announced formally this wee.k . Tricia remained in Washington when her family ~e here Friday for 1 working vacation. Building ' Wage Curb _,, Order Set Presiden~ Nixon signed today in San Clemente an executive order aimed at gtabllizing wages and prices in tht con· 1truction industry and reported that "cOftlractors and labor leaders have in· dicated their willingness to cooperate." Nixon signed the order after ronferring at the Western White House with Secretary 'of Labor James D: Hodgson. In a statern,'ent, Nti:on said construction wage Increases negotiated last year were more than double those won by factory workers while unemployment in the in· dustry reached a level nearly double the national average. "Continued excesses can lead only to less building. to continued unemployment and to further distortions in the practices of the Industry and in the economy of the nation," Nixon said. The President ordered Hodgson to set up a 12-member committee with seats for contractor and union representatives, revie1" all collective bargaining agree- mentJ to determine whether they fall within broad wage criteria. Hodp:in &aid the new syste m provides for enforcei;nent -hilt wit.bou.t w~t lit-""1ntd ll<l'1 handed hdml lft. t.e-vention.. In a._ _ con:i.n.anJOn mov~, -~i? allo relnatlt.il· ~-o.~ ~!illlll~ for payme11t of union scaJt wages on government buHding projects, which he had suspended Feb. 23. In a followup action, eipected Tuesday, the California Whitt HoUse will ·take the wraps off 'its third "infitiilon -alert." Administration officials promised it would focus attention on specilic wage Ud price decisions made in the private Metor during the three months 1ince the last ale rt. , Tbe President and Mrs. Nlxol'I, who new here Friday for a 10-qay stay, s~nt a qu.iet Sunday at their oceanfront villa. Akles pictured the sojourn u a working visit and. said tbat, apart from acting ol'I economic fronts. Nilon would rev iew Southeast ."..sia developments. He baa said be will announce plans for continued U.S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam about April 15. Here with him were key assistant! including Chief of Stalf H. R. Haldeman, Domestic Policy Coordinator John D. EhrliChman and Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, assistant for national security affairs. In trying le stem infiationary trends In construction, Nixon is stopping short of creating a national price-wage stabilization board. But be is moving closer to the wage-price guideline ap. proach he once 1corned. Construction workers were angered last month when Nixon suspended the Davis· Bacon Act requiring payment of union scale wages on government building pro- jects. As part ef hi.s new approaC!b.,_ Nixon will restore Davis-Bacon provisions while holding out the threat that It may be suspended anew if industry and labor (See NIXON, Pa&e Z) Mesa Leaders Set Talkout Councilmen, Plnnners ·Will Review City Issues Faced with a fifth Monday sltuaUon and hence no scheduled meetings, the Costa Mesa City Council and Planning ...COnuniMion will git down tonight to informally review municipal matters in a joint study session. The meeting will be at 7:31 .• t.a. In the council conference room dttlt{ty bf:hind regular chambers. Mayor Robert, M. Willon 1ald the primlll'J topics will be the unexpectedly controversial East Side Sb.ldy Jll;port. plus discussion .of a rev\Jed city general plan. He also offered a few remarkl on the east side zoning guldelint, plu..s the revised gener-1 plan. A public hearing on the \i1itter Is scheduled for next Monday when the eouncil meeta in ugular lltUion, while nothing ha1 been aet on the East. Sldo Study l!'l'Ofl. "In my estimation. there Is no reasan why there has to be a dl!!C!lslon one I way or the other," Mayor Wilson said tn regard to the east side zonin1 pro- posal!. · · Prepared 11) .1969 by the PlaMing Deperttoent, the document evaluates a 260-aae section of the older -part of tatm, breaking 1il ·down into geographi ctl bK>cks _for simpler rtferencc. 11'M1 package was submitted to coun- cilmen only recently. after plaMing com- missioners recommendtd ltl flndings - th!lt Mure developmtnt wjll tend to multiple density resldentiil use -be sdopted aa a policy guide. Maym-Wilson says this isn·t particular· ly necessary. A group dcslgnated the East Side Property Owners· Aasoclation h t1i ' organized to back a campaign for outright rejection of the proposal . 'Mley fear 1 In essence, that tts adoptiow u policy will begin 1 olow, bul l!le¥ftab1e ~s or gqul!!eztng out exltlfJ\f C. t and C·2 commercial propert\~ Unin& ')', Newport Boulevard. City leadu1 aay this simply isn't so; that economic and other factors ~I Influence · future redevelopment and trlllt!formaUon of the land area involved. Coullcilman WlW~ L. SL Clair i. amona the ea.it side properly owners oppooed, but be has rulglled II I member d the group to avoid any mllw>- derst.andlng, due to bil rol& u an e:leded civk: leader. "I havtn't gottftl as uptight about It as aome members ol the council," the mayor said in refer~ to St. Clair. HJs colleague ara:ues that many .firms funotloning along the exlsUrt1 com- mercl!ll strip cannot afford bl~ ren- tals deman~ by urban 1bo9ping cto- ,tc!r1. the builncs1 property St. Clair main- tafns at 2.'\40 Newport Blvd .. b6me1 hit birberahtlp. • book bindery, gunsmith (Set TALKOUT, P11e I) JURY FINDS GUil TY Lt. Wiiiiam Calley Jr. Mesa Obscenity Case to Receive lli.gq .~q~~ ~]~ 1 • From Wire 6ervtcol· •. · , . l'l~G'.J'ON, D,C.. -' la'ir~ pioblb!Un1 ma!llili mi!etllla wUI com• under -oenii/il1 ·u J>O.!Slbly unconstitutioDal 11 tbe resnlt of .a reaent Costa Mesa cal!ie, I.be· \{.!. Supreme Court decided 'today. • \ 1 Arpinenta in the Case of · alkged obscenity dealer Marvin Miller, convicted in Harbor Judicial District Colll't ·on five COUDts, wlD be beard sometime next fall. Miller sent' five brochures adverti!ing various bodes and a mavi1 , ·wbicb the cpurt found to .be obscene .. . i He -.. Ilia aUprneys appealed • t.be verdict which "Wa~ upheld Oct: a· in Orange C:OUnty Superior Court on· grounds the · material Is no mofe objectionable than that lound in reputable Harbor bookstores. They ct11med some of the. photograph! he used are identical le · Pictures en public di!piay. Miller's petition for an appeal was denied Nov. 2 and he and his legal counsel went directly to the U.S. Supreme Court Basing hi~ appeal on a philosophy argued by many, Miller says the stan· dards for obscenity should be uniform across the nation instead (I( being established from stale to state . Otherwise, he argues, individual stlltes with less-liberal legislators and citizens can stop the free now of materials ill interstate mall a1td commerce. Camper Thieves Make Cleanup In Harbor Area Thieves made it rough for Harbor Area camper and mobile roach owners over the weekend in a aeries of raids at Costa Mesa storage and parking lots. The hardest-hit victim lo.!it his entirt camper unit, worth . $3,000. to thJeves who simply drove 1 truck under it, yanked out the supports, fastened it . down and drove away. . . Wilbur w. Hurst, of s31 St award R~ . COrona del 'Mir. told ' police Utt · thttt . occurred ln a· storag&. yard •t 26IO' Newport Boulev•td• between _.., and Saturday, • I • J -. lnVMlij)J.n Uk! hVO. ~ _. &eel! lookinl ewtr: the cafnper earner . to tho w .. k. D011111 they arrived bl 1 truck 'wiUI an old c•tnper Will tbit was 11ot fastened down. Five other camper and l r a 11 er burglaries were reported Lo pol~ by vlctims whose vehicles wert parked 1t 1983 Newport Blvd., but some owners have not yet betn conllcted lo determiot 1 .... Leonard M. Hood. ol 11111 Paloma Drive, and ~ ·s . Bean, ol l:llW '..ubford Lane. both In Newport Beach, roportod 1 0>mblned total of l300 to camirina supplies and clolhlna taken. • TEN CENTS • a1 Lieutenant Convicted As Charged FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPll -LL Wil· liam · Calley was found auil't.y today of premeditated murder in the My Lai ma.s- aacre. ~ jury reached IU! verdict thlt af. tunoon .in the .lath ·c1ay ol d.Ubaatton. and Ulit judae held off unW 1:30 p.m. (PST) to·announce the·findto1•. The .·Jury paased • ll<lled mariUa en- velqpe : from its deli~raUon room at 12:28 p.m. (PST) moments later, Col. Reid"W. Kennedy, the judge, was calltt into his chmibeni to 1ee what the message was. An. aide · to the judge called newsmen togeJ.ber in a press room courthouse building and announced the verdict had been reached. The Jury's announcement came after '19 houn and ~ minutes of deliberation ln the longest court-martial in U.S. military hisLory. Calley was summooed to the courtroom ta hear the verdict. Callty arrived al the courthouse at 12:48 p.m. red-faced and out of breath. While striding down the·hallway toward the red, white and blue courtroom where he btard lht ••rdlcl. Cilley wu uked how be felt now. '.'The ume," bo replied. m sluiie Rink Petition Gets Warm Reception A rezonin& petition allowing an tee skating rink is in the works at Costa Mesa _ City Hall aod, initially, official.I are aiving it a wann reception. ~ge B~y. one of the prlnclpeta In Glacier Fall1 lee Rink, 211 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim., discussed Ole project with Planning Director William Dwm Friday. Proposed site of lhe l"l!!gulation-siie !Ce skating arena ls at Baker Street and Paularino Avenue , just east of Bristol Street ln an R-4 multiple ap.art- mtnt zone. "What we have here 111 a private recreational development as opposed to a public one." aays. Dunn. indicating it would be a commercial rather than !See RINK, Pace 1) E. German Dies In Mine Blast MUNICH, Germany (UPI) -A border patrol today found the body of an East German who managed ta flee 350 y.11rds into West Germany with hit right foot blown off by a mine, a Bavarian border police. spokesman said. He said the patrol found a badly mauled foot near the border line and followed a blood traO into a field near the Bavarian village of Sondheim to find the COrp!e of a 30-year-<ild Ea1t German.· Coa•t Weather Low clouds and local fog wtn keep the sun away on Tuesday, but temperatures will beat up to nur IO lnl.tnd a.pd in the upper 6<W along the coasL INSIDE TODAY Althou!1JI. th t goWTnnteftt cl.(Jimr to be htCOJ1lrol1 Pckista11• ,..b<b 4r< Slilf fighting, 'l'h<V claim up to 300 ,000 have died in U .ltours. See story Page 4. ...... ,__ ........ ._, =.--:.'"' ....... i.1 ''" ·----... .._ ---- .. I .... .. u • • .. .... " .. • ' -. ... ,llMI "-... o.-..... C:"!•" ' twl'rlt ,_.. • s-1t lt-IS I~ IM..nt. :Jt..h Ttttvl.... tt -.... D ........... . Wllllt WMll tt ............... ,,. .. WWM N-.. • •, . ------ Z DAILY PILOT c Fo1·um Set For Scl1ool Candidates Voters in the Newport-~lesa Unified and Coat Community College districts will have an opportunity to meet the candidates for the two school boards in a program scheduled for '1 :15 p.m. Wednesday at Estancia Jllgh School, Costa ?\1esa. The American Association of Universi· ty Women and the Orange Coast League 0£ Women Voters have &ITanged the forum for candidates running in the April 20 election. Tbree seats on each of the two boards are up for grabs this year. In both dislricts, all voters decide nn each race, although candidat.es must reside in specifK: trwtee areas. There are five candidates in the Newport-Mesa race and eight running for the Coast College board. During Wednesday's program, each candidate will have five minutes to spear.. After 9 p.m., written questions from the floor will be answered. A two-minute time limit for responses to questions will be set, with one minute to be granted to candidates wishing to rebut. The Newport-Mesa candidates invited to participate are: Donald E. Smallwood. an attorney, or 1981 Komat Drive, Costa Mesa, who is running unopposed for the area one seat; Incumbent Mrs. Marian C. Bergeson, a housewife of 1721 'T'radewinds Lane, Newport Beach who is opposed in the race for the area three seat by Donald T. Bull, a business coordinator or 1.S48 Westminster Place, Costa Mesa ; Incumbent Board President Selim S. •·eud" Franklin, an attorney of 1928 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, wbo is opposed in the area aix raCi! by Herb Stricker, a sales representative, of 445 Redlands Ave., Newport Beach. Coast Community College district can· didates include: Incumbent Donald G. Hoff of 14842 Harper St., Midway City. opposed in area two by Charles Dagion, a student of 15225 Jackson St., Midway City. From Page J TALKOUT ••. and art gallery. Mayor Wilson, however, claims many ciUzena misunderstand the East Side Study Report as a ruoning program instead of merely being a policy guideline. No rezoning will be accomplished by it and any antlcipated nwst go tbrou&:h normal channels culminaUng in public 'bearings before the planning commission and city council. Mayor Wilson compared the general plan revised from its 1957 version and the East Side Study Report, adding the more detalled master plan concept to the same discussion. "The majority of them are just good planning guidelines," he said, noting that &lrict adherence is not nquired and rarely followed, due to other influencing (actors. Each land use proposal for a given area must be considered on its own merits and in light of these factors, with financial climate often predominant among them. be noted. Mayor Wilson also cited a primary example of general plan vision as op- posed to actual development. "Takf! the Mesa Verdf! are.a." he said. "\Vhen it comes to the general plan, that was once planned for industrial development.'' He concluded by saying no tentative dale has been set for a public hearing on adoption or rejection of the East Side Study Report, hinting it n1ay just remain in ils current status forever. DAILY PILOT OllANC.E CO.UT l'UlllSMINC. COMl'AXY llob111 N. w,,d l"rtl:O#rl! •"" PvOll•l>fr J1~1!-R. Cvrl•v Vic• Pr~ldtnl t r4 CO-ti Mltlfltr Thorn•• Ket-ii £41~or Thom11 A. Mvrphint M1nt11•nt t:oo!or Ch"1l1i H. locu Richt rd I', Ni ll ,.Hllttn: Mtn•11•n11 Ed•IOr1 C•Po ,_.,10 OHlc.t )JO W11t 81v Slr11t M1iling Addr111; P.O. Bor 1560. IJ261' Ottt.r Offlcn NrwPOrt a.tcl1: lll:I Nrwport l~v'tv•rd Lttun1 l11do; 7r. l'ort)! Avtnv<: ,_.u1111ngl01 111(11: 1117~. l11cll loult~t•d S•n Cltmenll: JOl Nor!ll E! Ctml110 Rtll DAILV PILOT, wl1" ""'Id! I• combfntd It.. ,,._..p,..,.. 11 w;.tlth«I 111ny ntt•t s""" Cll'I' "' iqo1r11t ld111oM tor UOun1 l 11>tll. He._.; IH(ll, (1'111 Nl•I, MUlll""'°" SU<ll, !'-!Mn Vtl...,, Stn Clt,_1t f Ctpltr••"O '"' ltddltlt1c!l, ...... wu11 -,_,19,11 1dlllOI\, l"rlMIOll ..-lnlU'IO Clltlll II ti l~ v.u ~ Bay SIA9:, C..11 Ml'lt. T.W,IHoN (7141 •42 ... UI . Cl9111flt4 .A4wtrtlll-. •42·5•71 C011'1•19"1, 1111, Orl'Wt' CtUJ 1"11lllJ1ll"'f Qotrlol~'I'. "'" ,..... .~. llkll"-lleM. Nlltt '-1 n1111 .... .,. ._d~lulnl<ltt ,...ht nMy I.a ro..-Olll..c.. •lf!<OV I IP'(lll ,_.. ...._IOri eo: ~Yr11t!t --· l«o.-A cl111 .,_, ... Ptld •I N"'""" .. ~ .... Cot•e Mn1, Ctll...,.lt. SUMCtll"'• .... 11rri1r $1 H -1111\'I bY !NH Q,,, rlllflltl!" 11•llll1ry .. tllNlllM'll. 5:1 21 ll'*llfllY· - ""'1d41. Mitdl 29, 1971 Ul'I T11t,...t11 Magnified Monster This is the foot of a spruce bud worn1 magnified l,100 times by a de· vi:e called a scanning electroni~ microscope. The insect belonging to this foot causes severe damage in forests in the U.S. and Canad.a. Boat Sink s Off Newport; 2 Persons Aboard Saved Two persons were rescued Sunday when their 16-foot inboard runabout ap- parenUy swamped and sank about one mile off the Newport Harbor jetty. Orange County Harbor Department of· ricers monitdted a radio calf from the yacht Captain's Lady at 4:11 p.m. not!· lying the U.S. Coast Guard it had picked up two viclims of a boat sinking, Harbor Department patrol ''essels escorted the Captain"s Lady to the Harbor Department dock. The victims were identified as William Harmon, 25. 24 Fleet Street, Marina del Rey, and Judy Gentry, 25, 150303 Comuth St., Bellflower. Neither \\>'ere injured. The couple told Jiarbor Department ofUcers they had launched the boat at Bayside Launching earlier in the af· temoon. They abandoned the crart when it began, taking on water from an un- detenhined cause. A Harbor Department fire boat search- ed for the craft but fou1d only t\\'O seats and an engine hatch. The craft was christened Ship of Fools. Ft'om Page J NIXO N ... fail to cooperate With his new stahiliza· lion plan. On Saturday Nixon flew by helicopter to Beverly Hills and presented to 88-year- old movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn the Medal of Freedom, the country's highest civilian award. He saluted G!>ldwyn for turning out a product that was "great box office. entertaining, exciting, not square and not dull -and still was not dirty." With Haldeman riffing with him, Nilon drove back to his home without police escort. His small motorcade attracted almost no atlen ion a.s it rolled through seacoast cities crowded with Saturday traffic. Mesa Official Lashed In Golf Club Shakeup Despite a swift, smooth takeover and formal city explanation of the latest management shakeup at the Costa ~lesa Golf and Country Club, one course critic remains unhappy today. Theodore C. ''Ted" Bologh, ol 286 Del ~tar Ave .. is calling for Vice ~1ayor Willard T. Jordan to resign. He makes the demand in a letter received by City Clerk Eileen Phinney just seven days after marshal's deputies padlocked the clubhouse and creditors placed liens on merchandise. Unable to meet a $26,000 escrov; pay- ment agreed upon 11 months ago, clubhouse operator Earl Atkinson had already given up his contract to Harry S. Green. The takeover was speeded up lo allow Green, concessionaire at Los Angeles' Griffith Park since 1949, to assume private management duties under an agreement similar to Atkinson·s contract. City officials predict the suspended bar and restaurant service at the publicly-owned clubhouse and course will soon be back to normjil. Bologh's letter dated today reminds councilmen Greea·s takeover is the fourth time a private ope:rator has assumed the management in which three predecessors failed. He picks Jordan as 8 target because the vice mayor v.·as a primary initiator of the bond-financed course v.·hich is paying for itself through greens fees alone. Bologh. however, a self-appo1nted tax· payers· watchdog. contends there is more. to the golf course financial picture than meets the eye and \vanls lD sec the records. .. In February of 1971, 1 requested a profit and loss stale.men!.'' he charges. "Your silence obviously did not fulfill your obligation to the taxpayers." He asked again March I. with City Manager Fred Sorsabal saying the rf!cords arf! public, but claims the city Finance Departmfn\ dfd not release them based on the fact they weren't conclusive. "On 1o1arch 8, I requested for the third ti mt a profit and loss statement." Bologh contends. ''Mr. Sorsabal said the: escrow would be closed within a v.·eek, at which time J would get the profit and loss statement. None of lhfse action5 took place." Bologb -who failed last yeer to persuade: Or•nge County District At - torney Cetll A. •licks lo probe the golf course situation -went to Police Chief Roger Nf!th l15t Tuesday. Detective Captain Robtrt Grten U:i:ten- ed to Bologh's complaints nnd charJ!f!S of money mismanagement. A city-released statement Friday dis· counts anything more than private mismanagement. Inability to absorb in· itial lack of business profits and factors beyond control in prior club closures. Bologh contends that his own attorney advises city police would conduct any probe of golf course problems where taxpayers' funds are involved. His Jetter urges that Vice ~fayer .Jordan be prohibited from negotiations or matters involving finance if he does not resign es Bologh demands. He also requests the city to eulhori2f! a county audit ()f golf course financial transactions since its 1966 inception. Councilmen are expected to merely receive and file the Jetter next Monday v.·hen they meet in regular session. Fro1n Page J RINK ... institutional and recrf!ational zooe. He. said the city is receptive to !uch investment in community recreaUonaJ f3cilities. The property V.'BS originally rezoned to the apartment designation, but !he developer's plans fell through, according lo Dunn. Baney could not be reached for com· nient today on the scope of his ice rink project nor its construction timetable. A management represent.ali\·e at his popular Anaheim facility said such in· for1nation would ha\·e to con1c from Baney . lie did explain that the Glacier Falls lee Rink is 185 by 85 feet. regulation size, adding that the Costa Mesa arena v..·ould presumably be no smaller. He also said recenL trends are taward larger facilities with increased spetlli.tor seating and, in some cases, somewl'4 t larger ice rink areas. P rincess Anne Dust a t Horse Hits Show COOKHA~f. England (AP) -Princtss Annf! v.·.as thrown from her hor~ when it refused a fence at a show Jumping evt'nl. but the 20-ycar-old daughter of Quttn Ellzabtth Tl escaped Injury. Tbt prince!! remounted the horse and finished !hf! coune, but I.he accident Saturday cost her any chance of winning. Fall Terna Court Puts Gun Bill on Do·cket • WASHlNGTON IUPI) -'l'he Supreme Courl agreed today to decide whethf'r the federal Gun Control Law forbids anyone who has been convicted of a serious crime from ever possessing a firearm. The court will hear oral arguments on the iasue neit fall and winter, then will hand down a written opinion in the case of a Bron1, N.Y .. man , Kenneth Bass, convicted of violal.ion of the 1968 Jaw, He won a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The Justice Department petitioned the Supreme Court lo hear the case next term. Other lower court opinions have differed on interpreting the section of the law whlch bas been used by lhe government to prosecute about 150 personJ. ' In other actions, the court: -Let stand a lower court ruling that a federally assisted housing project may not evict a teaant without giving him a full hearing and an opportunity to answer complaints against him. The ac- tion came in a case involving the Durham, N.C., Housing Autborlty. -Ruled in a Minnesota case that state uni.verslties are entitled to impose nonresident tuition rates on students who have not lived in the state continuously for a year prior to enrollment. -Denied a hearing to Carlos Marcello, alleged New Orleans crime figure who has been Imprisoned on charges of assaulting an FBI agent at the city airport. -Agreed tc examine a series of Ohio election Jaws which have been challenged as denying the ballot to minority parties and independent candidates. Tbe case will be heard next term. -Ruled, 5 lo 4, in favor of a Louisiana Inheritance law which was challenged as denying the rights of illegitimate children. The state argued the law was intended to encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. In the gun c6ntrol test case, Bass was sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviction or two counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously Medi cal Prober Tells Warning To Hartelius By TOM BARL£Y 01 1111 0111'1' l'llel Sti ff A Sta te Board of Medical Examiners Investigator today testified that he warn· ed Dr. Ebbe Hartelius of "possible disciplinary action" hy the board six: months before the physician's Corona de) ~far offices burned. Agent Leo J, Roth told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he discussed with the doctor in October of 1969 the circumstances surrounding the phy sician·s relaUonship with a Wanda Melendrez. Roth said his investigation was based on events that took place in 1'1arch of thal year. Roth \\>'as not allov.·ed lo elaborate on the nature of the charges but Deput y District Attorney Al Novick today repeated his aUegalion that Hartelius planned the burning of his offices at 234~ E. Coast Highway last April 9 to insure that records relating to 1'tiss Melendrez \\>'ere destroyed. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins has testified that he did the burning for his sister's lover and that nine days earlier he helped Hartelius, 50, fake the theft of the doctor's car. Blevins said llartelius promised him the vehicle for conversion to a dune buggy once the doctor bad collected the insurance money and the in· \•estig.ation into the apparent theft \\"as cl05ed. A Mod.,. Up-to-date of a felony -attempted grand larceny. The 1968 Gun Control Law has a section prohibiting anyone ronvicted of a felony from possessing firearms on penalty of a $10,000 fine or two :rears in prison . or both. The specific language of the statute, ho\j,·ever. describes such a person a~ one ''who receives, possesses. or transports in commerce or .tfectillg commerce." Police Hold Two In Half Moon Rape, Murd er SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The bullel- torn body of a girl found on a lonely road near Half Moon Bay Saturday night was identified by the San Mateo County coroner today as that ()f Char\eyce Whalen, 17, of Sacramento. San Francisco police were holding l\vo men arrested Saturday night on com· plaint or another 17-year-old Sacramento girl . Capt. Charles Barca, chief of in· specters, said the girl reported she and MW Whalen were abducted at gunpoint on a sa,cramento Street about 8:30 a.m. Saturday, driven to a Bayshore Boulevard motel, raped and forced to use narcotics. She said o~ of their kidnapers left with MW Whalen and returned later alone. Pollet! booked Lawrence T. Fontes Jr., 39, a Sacramento clerk; and Andrew S. Leonard. 32, a Portland, Ore .. seama11, for investigation of kidnaping, rape. possession of firearms and possession of narcotics. Leonard also was booked on a holding charge for Half Moon Bay. Coroner Paul Jensen said lhe dead girl's mother, Jean, in Sacramento and the other girl both confirmed the iden- tification from the physical description, clothing and her apartmfnt house key No. 17. found beside the body. Dental charts also were being sent, but the coroner said there was no ques· lion of the identification. Some men exercising their dogs found the body shortly after 9 p.m., Saturdav. There were bullet v.·ounds in the righl eye, at !he base ()f the skull and in the neck and chest Police at first thenrized that the slaying might have taken place in San Francisco but said discovery of four expended .32 caliber shells indicated the girl was 1bot where her body was found. Boatyard o,vner Servi ces Today Funeral se rvice s w~re held today in Newport Beach for boat rd owner Har· ry Mellor, Jr .• y,·ho d. d Friday night at the age of 42. Mr. Mellor succumbed to a heart at- tack in his home al 309 Cedar St. An 18-year resident of the Harbor area. he was the owner of Mellor"s ~1arine Painting, ~·hocb operates in the Larson and Mellor Boatyard. 2703 \V. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. He leaves his wife, Patricia, and three sons. Bruce. Keith and Paul, of the family home; his parents, Mr. and ~1rs. lf. K. Mellor, Sr. of Capistrano Beach, and one sister. · The family has suggested memorial contributions to the Harry Mellor Scholarship Fund, Newport Harbor High School. COLLATERAL LOAN SHOP Coll•t•r•I IMn ('•wn) Spitel1ll1h M•mltet-t of C•llf, C•lt•t•rll LMn Attn. Savin9s like never with unconditional 9uaran· tffs on everythinq. .'ilnlllp o'f H OHOO' l1.S. l'ostal Service ,\·i!t Issue this ~tamp honoring the late r:rnie Pyle. the \VW 11 corres· pondent whose ~·riting brought lhe (·omn1on 1nan's \var to mil· lions of American readers. Pyle \ras killed during the battle for Okina,,·a in 1944. House Approv es Nixon Authority1 In Wa ge Control \VASHJ:-;GTON (UPI / -The House approved and sent to the Wh ile House f\1onday an extension of the \\>'age and price control :iuthority that President l\'ixfln needf'd lo 1ry to halt inflation in the construction industry. The House·s voice-vole approval o( the two-month extension. already passed by the Senatf', came just a little more than an hour before Nixon 's an· nouncemen t of his construction industry, action at San Clemente. House men1bers arproved the measure ;ifter rejecting on a 183 to 14S vote a mo\'e by Democrats that the Republicans said would undermine the President's n1ove against skyrocketing ('onstruction costs. Sponsored by Rep. Henry S. Reuss fD-Wis.), and other Democrats on the banking committee, the move would have precluded presidential use of the wage- price controls against a single industry. Reuss said he supported Nixon's elforts lo win a management-union agreement to restrain wage and price boosts in the construction industry. But he said he opposed an attempt to enforce such an agrf'emenl by Jaw. He said it would be unfair lo curb \\'ages of construction \rorkers alone-\\'hile olher segments of the economy continued on their upward spiral. Congress passed the wage-price la.,. Ne,vport Police Arres t Three On Dru g Charges 'IWo Ne....,port Beach residents and a Bell Gardens man are in custody today after police claim they found a ... ·ariety of narcotics in their possession. Booked on charges of possession of dangerous drugs for sale v.•as Jerald f"rederick Bond. 21, of 115 38th St., Newport Beach. In custody for suspicion of possession or dangerous drugs are Jeffery Douglas Kind, 23. of Bell Gardens and Vicki "1aureen l\liller, 26, of 20412 Birch St .. Ncv.·porl Beach. Nev.·port police said the trio was ar - rested at Bond's home arter officers claimed a search turned up small quan· lilies of marijuaria , LSD and am- phetamines anr aprox1malely 1,300 barbiturate tablets. Patrolmen Lee Roberts and Douglas Stoddard said they spotted a car at about 5 a 111. cruising the neighborhood in a suspicious manner but lost the vehicle. A few hours later they asscrtedly spot- ted the car parked in front of Bond's home. CASH LOANS when you borrow CASH SAVINGS when you buy • Come in and see what we offer our customers. A new and unusual experience in shoppinq e n j o y m e n t. Where people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY. snL, TllADE COME IN AND U OWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646°7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MW .__ H-& ltoadw.vf I I l J I I I ' - Saddlehaek T.._,,,• Final. N.V . Steeb , • VOL M, NO. 75, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES 01\ANGE COUNTY .;CAtlFQRNIA MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1971 '· TEN~S . . ' ' ' ' San Clemente Firm Cu.is -Polluti,on at :Source A new dust-collecting system attached lo the end of 1 whirling, ?00-foot.Jong kiln has begun its second week of opera· tlon at San Clemente's Cresllite Ag· gregate plant -a large piece of hardware wh ich the management hopes will stem a sea of pollution comp laints. Tht device. which cost about $65.000 to build and install, traps nearly t'Very particle af dust emltled by lh e huge kiln. It then runs the dust into a v.·ater flow. The mixture then is channeled lo a large lake nearby. • Spokesmen for the large plant located in the area of the Forster Ranch said testing by official.! of the Orange' County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) show the control of the brown dust exceeds the APCD requirement!. The problem, which has nagged residents of portions of that area of the city. and Crestlite officials as well, has persisted for many months. It usually occurred at night. 1a id CresWle President Ken Teel, when the land breezes lifted the dust anc1· blew it se.award. During the """"al daytim•o.i••un tbe du.st blew inland to Unoccupied irea:i. ..· The machinery, which w11 installed and tested for a week ht.fort "recently going to work around the clock, Is a rmmd brick cylinder with a stack al lhe top. Inside. iUi lining is made of 5pecial epoxy material and is studded wiUi hun- dreds of water jets which trap the exap- lni dust and setUe It inlo· plpa whm lh<"muddy mixture b channeled <if. "We deaigned and boilt thlJ one ~ves, even tbouih thm ~ ti-aP, Uk! thi1 on the mai'kel," Teel uplaiOed. ,,,. production models ""' -three times matt: than the Crestlite verakln, and are not tuaranteed to work. The home-made one works be~. Teel said. · 1'1\t only emission from Qie, kiµ-i "."""" slna: the filter was pUf into· use · - is a piume oI clean st.earn, IXOll oves on Tate J u ry Out Missing Lawyer Body Recovered? By JACK V. FOX Uf'I 5!1ff ll~rt., 11ie badly~ecomposed body of a man believed to be missi ng Tate trial attorney Ronald Hughes was reported toda y to have been found wh ile the jury in the caK deliberated whether to sentence Charles Manson and his co-defendants tn life iD prison or death in the gas chAmbtt. The body. described a11 large and with Me arm missing, was discovered during the wttkend (aa: down in a pool of water in a remote mountain area of Ventur a County by two Glendale fishermen, according to Ventura County Senior Sheriff's Deputy Mike Freeman . He ~aid , ''we feel it may be Hu ghes since the only large person missin,ll up there is him.'' The ~pound , bearded Hughes disap- peared last Thanksgiving weekend while on a camping trip in the rugged Sespe Hot Springs area northv.•est of here. The body was found seven mile! ea st of the springs. Ray Campbell Pulls Hat Out Of Board Race Long-time San Clemente. businessman Ray Campbell ha.15 withdrawn from the race for the Area Three seat on the Capistrano Unified School District Board. throwi"g his support behind another can· did ale. Campbell . nne of the first to challenge tncumbe.nt trusltt Stan Kelly for the seAt representing south San Clemente, uid he gives hi.I wholehearted iUpport to 11wyer Gordon Peterson. Despite the withdrawal. "however, Campbell01 name will still appear on the April a ballot. Praising the lawyer c a n d i d .!I I e . Campbell said Peterso11 ·s election would "Add new leadership and perspective'' to the school board. The withdrawal from the raa: leaves only Kelly and Peterson still ruMing. Oru ge Ceu t Weathe r Hughes was presumed drowned in the tnrrentiaJ rains that weekend. f ishermen Don H. Chessman and John L. Wells found tht body Saturday but it took them until late Sunday to hike out to a telephone. A team was dispat.ched to the area but was not expected to return until late Tuesday with the body. Fog rovered much of the are• preve"tirit helicopter's taking part in the 1earch. When the morning leSsion ,began, geveral of the jurors appeared with su.it· cases. Courtroom observers 1peculatee that the appearance of the luggage meant tha t the seven-man, five-woman panel expected to reach a verdict today and leave for home directly from tht liall of Justice. As the jury began it3 second day of deliberations . four of Manson·s female followers. who maintained a vigil outside the buHd.ing during the trial, appeared with their heads shaved completely. They were apparently i ~ i l a t i n g f\1anson. wbo recently had tµs long lock! cropped close to his skull. The jurors began •weighing evidence In the penalty phase Saturday and delillerated for five houri before thty were sequestered. · Their decision on the penalty must be unanimous . If they cannot agret, Judge Charles H. Older muat by Jaw sentence tht defendant& to life im· prisonmen t. If that occ urs, the District Attorney can ca ll for a new jury or a penalty retrial. Pat Drawing Up Wedding List first Lady Pat NixOl'I spent tht weekend at the Nixon's Slin Clemente seaside villi working on a auest lilt for her daughter Tricia'• forthcoming marriage to Harvard Jaw student Edward Finch Co1 . Mrs. Nixon drew from a list from her daughter Julie's qdding to David EiSl!nhower two years 1go, but had new categories to add that the Presidency includes. such As the cabinet and other government dignitarie.!i. The date or the nuptials -June 12 in the East Room of the White. HoUse -was expected to be announced formally this week. Tricia remained in Washington when her family r,ame herf: Friday for a working vacation. Easier Warning Renter s Ca uti oned by Police Despite predicti~n.s Of 1 smaller turnout of ~ster W~ revt ler'1 . th.ls year in San Clemente, pallet oHlcials Ulis week said the hard and fa.!t rules and 1uggestions to local renlli property owners 1till should be heeded. POiice Chief CliUOrd Murray said the problem ar ises ·with luge ·gf'b\lpa or young persons who rem rooinl and apartmenl3 for the week 's ltaJ at the beach. ''It has been ouT e~iera that some of these groups can become unruly , and in 110me cues d.~ seriOU11 dainlge to some · of the plAces they rart..'' he aaid.. ·.,,; ~ .~ , · Ht 111ggesteil eautlcit W <are In ·•leO- ling persom who rent dwtlliJ1&..Jpits and promiled enfciu:ment ol tlle state holilJlll !aft,~ total aettptM ... cupancy for a:i*'ifi6quarters. He suueal<d the .. binti for JandlordJ: -When renting, be sure of lhe e1act number of persons who will be living in the quarters. -If you rent to juveniles, be certain that competent adult supervision wlll actually be present at all times. -Use 1 standard rental form available at 1tationery storu which states the rent.al agreement c:ooditions. includiiig: the total number ol oc c 119 an ta. Remember to have a competent adult algn. Ally quell.ions will be 1ladly ai'lnrertd by pollct pe.r.mnel through . · t h e departmeal11 buaJnesl numl>er, ·4~5101. Emeqency * tbia YU{ will i.o> ~ new JU. · · ·== .foilelo~'~ tho Glprdi>. . llWdenta. Olln(· the ell¥1'.J'l19' ""' ali,,ufiicf.fo Ml "" IL b'. 'rtittlat buaineu CaJj& not of an lnillfediate emeraet)cy naturt. Fog :to Blank;et Coast Again Tuesday Morning .. Fog and lo~ clouds will return to the Orange Coast tonight to bum o!f again Tuesday in 1 repeat perfo~ of the misty drape. that ha~ urly mor,ning motorists and pilots today . Fligh~ in An.d oul of Orange County Airport we~ curtailed rrom I a.m.., Free Hof fa Plan Alleged by U.S. WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The Justice Department 1aid today several "in- termediaries" attempted \o 10licit up to $1 million from imprisoned Teamster prts?dent Jimmy Hoffa in a "far fet- ched" scher;ne to 1ecure support. from an influential ~Ator to get him paroled. The department said Hoffa, who i.5 due f0r a parole hearing Wednesday, turned down the offer. A department ipo'kesman aaid the deal offered tO · Hoffa ·was that for a large 1wn of m~ey, a mu 1Utaedly close to Sen. '.John L. McClellan. (0.Ark.), would attempt to ·influence the senator to' intetctde · in Hoff;i 's behalf before the. Federal , Par.ele Board~ The spoktsman said the pl1n "died of ~ ~ :w~gbt ... and'. McClellan w1s never contacted. McClellan said :he never was ap- proac~ by K!'Yone w\t.4 such a scheme, ind wu"opposed to• Hoffa'• rele1se in any case. .. when the lbftr oPeris. W1Ul ' 1:1S a."1. in whit .airport officill! ducribed u "fypical Mirch. ·.nci Aptil w:either." Only Ontario Inte.rnalional of the Southland's major · airports wnalned open to int:Qming ffil:hts. 'Some airlines dive~d fllahts .to . .airportl' as far away as San Diego. Los ,\f\Je~ea lnttmatlonal was closed from 1:25 a.m. to ·1:08 1.m. tod1y when the 1un burned away the fog. , Harbor Dep&rtment officials uid tqe dente foa: curtailed mqst boating icUv.ify out of Otanre Coast HJrbnrs,, bqt ~au.sod · no.-maj~r diUlculty. · ' County W ornan Killed by Auto An , Anaheim V'orNln was run over b,-a car ind fatally injwed in Fullerton eATly Sonday but polk:6 are: still rwy tod1y ort the details .. Mrs. Lindi K. Eniland. 22, died In Anaheim Memorial Hospital three hours alter she was run over by a car driven by Berry C. Seedorf, 19: of Buena Park. Police were certain of. one fact in the cue. 5eedorf was not to·.blame. ~Y 11id they had been· able to determine that Mr1. England had betn a.re'Jing with her husband Haven, 21, but. didn 't know how she h1ppened to be lying on the street on. ·W, ~Orange· ti)orpe Avenue ne•r B.rqokhunt .Street. The fanuly car was nearb1. Lnw clouds Md local fflg will keep the sun aw1y on Tuesday, but temperatures will heat up to near 80 inland and in fhe upper 60! along the coasL Saia Joaqui n Distriei : INSWE T ODAY Although th t poventment cla1m.r to bt i-n control, PCJkrsla ni rr.btli ort still /1Qthing, They clnim up lo J00.000 hove died 1n 48 hours. St e. story Page 4. ...... 11 C1!1....... I CJfttllMI! ... C:.ICt n Cm-' tJ DM!trl Nfll(fo t ltf11eri.I f'•M 6 ·-·•-t II ,., • .u ,. ti ..__ 11 "'"' u .. ,, " M1llller • -· ' Mtftt~ H H•t"""4 ...... 1,j or~ c_.... ' ,,..,,. ,........ lt ~ 11·11 Sllld: Mllneth Jt.'1 .,.,.......,_ H TIIN llf'I H Wttllltr • Wlll'9 W•• 1J W9fOltft'I ,,.,_, !t•I' ... If ,,.... .., 2 Bond Meetings ~lated ' Two met.tings are 1ehedu1ed w~ week to acquaint voter1 wlUI ·the April 6 school bond election for the San Jatquin Elementary School DistricL Both will lake place: Thlirtdsy It 7:30 p.m . Ralph Gates. Superlntende"t., -wit.I be Rurst spc!aker at the gener:il metlint tif the Atgtan Hills Homeowners Auocht~ t1on at La Par. Intermediate Schoo~ 251~1 Pradera, Mission Viejo. I Rer f-,ferinl. Allittant Superinlendtnl for · Busintsa 5erv1ct1 Will ~k tp. a. group 'Of · Pamt·tneller ,,_litlon memben at AU.0 SdJool, 22ic lmmlllt Drive, ·El ·'roro. -..... ' 1'it $1$.( · mlllk<t bond election Is d!<Jjgntd \n lll'OVide funds for aehoob foi-the neli five. y~s. FaJrur. ·to pasl' the issue will halt achoo! tl>nstQICl.\oll, according to 1dmlnl11r1UOn ol~lla., · The dittrict was · autOOrb&t ieeentl1 1 ' to aell I~ remalnin( .If-In .bocJ<b. 'these fund• will probably be uaed tor • U.. ..,. in1ttme411te -1 which will 100n· be oom.tructed · in Irvine.. . • Willl UH! Nl<·of ·the>e llonds the·dpiel hu M1>1ual<d Its 1upply, aehool o(flclal• Nici. , Stste aehool lnllldina lundl • r • avallablt, ttowever. but in ordtt 10 qual~y for a state. lolll; the dlatrlct must bt bonded to Capedt,t. ''We've &one lo 1;loc: of trouble and eipenae. to dean lip the qperaUon," Teel &aid, "n0w let's hope. we don't have ~any moce· compllinta:11 ··~· Qthlr recent mea.sui'ea . -keyed. to ettheUcs Gd envlronme.nt •t1t.he larte mining ind prodtiotion·oper1UOrt _J are the--p.ving, o~ P?t .enttz:e·· a·~· road, onct another aoua.ot dust .. ·.. . .• ~ • Soon, 'I'.ee,l explained,, the . firm . •ill start a · program:·· of tree._ lplanUng · and other esthelic projec!t1 : to restore' the ' - ' • DAILY .. u.1sNli~..;. Pa.t;s ;B,e~ , ': , : .1 ·, -,' ' Mrs. Patricia Nixon, bU•)""'1llt • · piest list dor. 11rtcia:1 'WN dini• · LS shown after Friday evening , arrival at El Toro. The watch· ful eye upon her is presumably .that ot the !iec:ret.Setvlct-· · '' M •.•. ISS.lOD ' I ' • ' Trai·t Candidate. Night . . . ·slated ·in · Vieja · MISSION . VIEJO· ~· Candida .. , for trustee posts in the· TUstin. Ulllan Kiah School District will be presenting tlleir views during an "lntroduclioo to Your Candidate Night" on April 1. · The event, 1pontbr-ed by the Parent.- Teacher Organization of Mission Vltjo High School W'ill be&ln at T:3& p.m. in the mullipurpost room. , Twoh1eats are al stab Ind nine can- didates are vytng for them. Howard Stlleek, incumbent setklrii r•f"UOn. r«ently withdrew from the race bteauae of. busineu prfSSurta., · e Girl of Jtlonth • MfSSlON VIEJO -L~ EM. M.is5 Saddieback Valley, bu received anolh~ honor. · · ' ' ,,,. tenior It Mlialon Viejo Hilh Schoel ha1 been named "a:lrl ot the month'' by' lift member• of the Rand»' V~jo Woman·a· Club.: Miu Exner i1 the ·dlushttr o1.··Mt. and Mn. Wl1ll•m P .. Exntr·Jr. of ·Mls!lon ViejO. She i8 i .v1~slty chetrleacter. and w1s a homecorilini p~. ' e Cl~ "e /ll~fle MISSION· VJt.JO ~ Variolls Clii<o·do MJ)'O Fjiuta commltte.el netd 'help. I Volunteers 11e bein& .:iughC ~~ "'10. lht t11qU1l fiesta. feed -,, iob is 1 tr1dllional ,"1e1kan d\Mtr ,,.. mJ)"Cl I Mrs-Ruth,J,NdN at 13t-~: ,,,., ent.,..1n.,.•t ·C011111\iltae : js, .. · lookll>c lor h<!P. 1•1 .... ~ ~ loV call 8Ud Gooufea II 117·111! Jo< ii- . fom'itUOfl.' ' ' I The f<1tlv1l ·It · pi)lnned . fO(· }ilay , I at •M,lsskln V.ie)o -Hlch ~l. It 1i1 QOllll)t"td by the ,P~rent_·l;tAeihe~r Organization of Mlalon Vi1jo> l;lillll Sdlool. lud>eape deauded by the s!We-eollecllJii operatioJu., , . The firm produces a special, c:erltl1Jo. tile pellet T(hiell b Uled in • "!"<"!8 to lwen wejght · and ·increase '•1tffdgth, lt is in ·use· primatily for high-rise con- 1truetlon. · Shale h · the 0 prhile compOnent of . the proctsa,' 'the · execulive uplaIDed. It rJI mined, ' crushed, extruded into pellets, .then fired · jn ilie huge' ·rota Una: 'kiln . •I, temperatureao( ~000 dell',..· · ~nr ' ' ' ' .... ' j ••• . Wms· . ign Inflation . Bill Today . Pre!ldenl N~n and · Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson huddled throogh the morning in San Clemente conferrin1 ever ''li!gi!l1;ttve. proble'm~" connected with st.abiliiing wages in the construction . in· dustry. Nixon was expect~ today to sign·and announct a.n execuliv~ order in an at- tempt to fight 'intlaUon in the n1Uon"1 1.ra•st fudusiry. · 'Nilbn11 · ComtruCtieri 1 d'dllia t'r 1 Sttbi.JiUtioa' ('Nnmllrlal b a I :reoosft.. meitdell .. executive otder tll!t *'14 . ~t~, 'µp . lt:m;ra) CQTISlructlOft , waje auideli~. e1tab~ ci~t·~y-craft boar~ , to oversee Uiern and empower a stabillu· tiOn board to take action if the.· iukitlines art violated. lft·a·foJJowUp actlrin, expected Tuesday, the C1lifomia White · Hou~ Will tde the wraps off its third "lnllation alert." · Admini.!ltration offk:laJs promised it would focus attenti.on on · speeillc ·wife and Prlct d«:isions midi!: in the private 'sector. 'daring ' the thref: · monllu: .alnce ' the last alert. · 1be · Prtsident' and 'Mrs. N11ort~ who 0~ here . F"rid1y fer I 10-day stay. . spent i Quiet sunday at Uieir· «ye-anfroot vi!Ja. ' · ' ' · A.idea picture'd "the 1ojout'n 1s a working visit 'and said that, ape.rt from ·acting en economic fronts. Nixon· would review Southeast Asi,a ~velopmepl$. He · has said"be will announce plana for continued. U.S. troop Withdrawals from Vietnam about April 15. Here' with' him were key asslsbrita including Olief of·Staff H. R. Haldeman. Do,mestic . P.olicy Coordinator John D. Ebi'liclunn and Dr J Henry A. Kinin&er, miistant for national .aecurtty.affairs. Jn tryJQg to Jtem inflatio,nary trench: in conSUVction, Nil'on· is stoppin1 short of creating a naUona1 price-wage sta.biliia:Uon board. But he it 1n9"l1!1C clOsU to the V!age-pric.e . guidellM apo p-oach be once scorned. Construction workers were an~red last month when· Nixon suspended the 0.vfs.. Baam Act requiring payment of unitn scale wages Oii aovemment building p(.. jects. As part ef ·Ilia oe.w ·appmach, Nllon will restore Davis-BIOOll provisiOnJ wbRe ~dipg , out t1!e lbreat . thot· U ll1'1 be suspended lllf.Alr it in4ustry · and l1ber fail to copperatt· wiUI .tu nt:• 1tabillza. Ucill plin. , . ' Cam;bodian Army (ffi icer · ii anded i ' I Dea,th Sente nce • • 2 DAILY PILOT SC HighCom1 To Decide On Gun Law W ASHJNGTON (UPI ) -The Supreme Court aireed today lo deeide whether the federa l Gun Control Law forbids anyone who has been convicted o( a st:rious crime from ever possessing a firearm. The court will hear oral arguments on the issue ne:itt fall and winter, then will hand do•TI a written opinion in 1he caJe of a Bronx, N. Y., man, Kenneth Bass, convicted of violation of the 1968 Jaw. He won a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The Justice Dtparlment petitioned the Supreme Court to hear the cpe next term. Other lower court 1Jpinions have differed on interpreting the section of the Jaw which has been used by the government to prosecute about 150 persons. Jn other actions, the court: -Let stand a lower court ruling that a federally assisted housing project may not evict a tenant without giving him a full hearing and an opportunity to answe r complaints against him. 11\e ac- tion came in a case involving the Durham, N.C., Housing Authority. -Ruled In a Minnesota case that slate universltles are entitled to impose nonresident tuition raLes on students who have not lived in the state continuously for a year prior to enrollment -Denied a hearing to Carlos Marcello, alleged New Orleans crime figure wbo has ~n imprisoned on charges of assaulting an FBI agent at the city airport. -Agreed to e1amine a series of Ohio election laws which have been challenged as denying the ballot to minority parties and independent candidates. The case \Viii be heard next term. -Ruled , 5 to 4, in favor of a IAuisiana inheritance law whicb was challenged as denying the rights of illegitimate children. The state argued the law was intended to encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. In the gun control test case, Bass was sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviction of two counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously of a felony -attempted grand larceny. Camper Thieves Make Cleanup In Harbor Area Thieves made it rough for Harbor Area camper and mobile coach <lwners over the weekend in a series of raltls at Costa Mesa storage and parking lots. 'Jbe hardesl·hlt victim lost his entire camper unit, worth $3,000, to thieves who slmply drove a truck under it, yanked out the suppOrts, fasteoed it down and drove away. Wilbur W. Hurst, of 531 Seaward Road, Corona de! Mar, told police the theft occurred in a storage yard at 2680 Newport Boulevard, betwetn Thursday and Saturday. Investigators said two suspects were seen looking over the camper earlier in the week, noting they arrived in a truck voith an old camper unit that was not fastened down. Five other camper and l r a i I er burglaries were reported to police by victims whose vehicles were parked at 1963 Newport Blvd ., but some owners have not yet been contacted to determine loss. Leonard ~1. Hood. of 1701 Paloma Drive, and Oscar S. Bean. of 1309 Ashford Lane, both in Newport Beach, reported a combined total <lf $300 in camping 6Upplies and clothing taken. OJ.ANGI c;O.UT DAllY PllOT OIUMOO::: COAST ru•LllHIHO COMll'ANY AoMrt N. w •• 4 l'r•IOtnf •1'111 1"1.11111.i.r J •ck k. c~rt.., Vic• PralOt!lt •1'111 ~II MMleilr' lh•"''' K •• ,11 fGllW ,...,"''' A. ,..,,,1ri1 ... M-•W. l!'lllor Cht rl" H. lo•1 Als'°•" r. N~JI ,._,1,11n1 MMl.tCIN IEllllton a...--....OMN 212 For•1t A••nu• ~ ci ...... Offk. 105 Nortlri ll C1111i"o A•tl .,_.,,... c:.g """" lJO Wen hy ''""" HfWPO"f a .. c~: lU3 Newiiort Bou:..,el'llll 11vn11,,.1°" a .. cil: 1111s 1..cr. aov19V1..- DA.tLY "l\..OT, Wtttl wllldl 11. ~ lhO "_.,,_, ....... ~ ... ..., ---'-•• , Ill ..,..,..,. .. u. "" 1....-it lioedt. H-1 19'd1. C.M ~ HWHlltitlM ~ "--""' v11..,.., s. ~ ~-.... .at•ll".cK,. ......... -"9111111111 tflllM. .... lrelfilil """""9 ,... II •I ·.Al W•I .., llrool,, C... MoM., ,...,..._ CTI 41 '4Mm ClaaJIW .UMll'11 '41461' '-'C'1•1 .. Al D .. I antti T•h pf ale 4tt.44n a...-. ..... .UDJf I ••1 T1l rpt • 4'4ot4M °"""""'" Tt'l'I, 0-.-QMlt ,.._,. ~ .... -..... "'-"" ..... .....,,. 1'111"... fll ................ ...,...,. _, . ~ ....... """"' ,... ...... " <llll'll'illlf -· a-"-'* ........ ,, .......... ...- .... C...te ""-'· (• ......... ~ ... W tetrlW R.ll '"""""11 .., .... n an -"''" Miii!..., ·-'"'-'-..,.. ~. - Mondly, Marc.II 29, 1971 Fire Base Bit -;11 33 American Gls Killed by Re'-& ..... SAIGON IAP) -Enemy gunners level· ed a barrage ~1onday at a U.S. artillery base still reeling froin a aapper attack that killed at least 33 Americans and wounded 76 in what may have been lhe heaviest death toll on a U.S. in· tilaltation in the war. The casualties were expected to go still higher from Sunday's attack on Fire Base ~1ary Ann on the basis of still incomplete reports from the U.S. Com· mand. Communications "'ith the base were spolly more than 24 hours after the enemy attack, apparently because of damage to the command bunker. The strike was approved by President Nixon and President Nguyen Van Thieu of Sou th Vietnam. It was called olf when intensive Bfl2 air strikes and smaller tactical fighter.bombers failed to silence enemy antiaircraft fire. Fog mixed "'ith the dust cre1ted by the bombs hampered visibility. Court Se ts S niut Mail Cas e S tudy Intramural Wint1ers The artillery base , located in the jungle 50 miles south of Da Nang. and manned by a battalion from the America] Divi. sion, has reportedly been reinforced, however, and no additional casualties were reported from the mortar attack Monday morning. ' From Wire Senictl \VASHINGTON, D.C. -California"s law prohibiting mailing of obscene Jnaterials will come under scrutiny a!I possibly unconstitutional as the result of a recent Costa Mesa case, the U.S. Supreme Court decided today. The top three-man intramural basketball team at Saddleback College receive trophies for defeating 12 other teams in the college. r~rom left are Mlc:.hael H. Barnett of Laguna Niguel; Allen P. Benjamin, Dana Point; physical education instructor Vincent D. 1ifcCullough, and Richard Ebel of Tustin. The enemy also shelled a Vietnamese resettlement village about 25 miles north of Fire Base 1fary Ann and follotA·ed up with a sapper attack Monday, killing 13 civilians and wounding 21. One hun· dred houses were destroyed. Medical Prober Tells 'f arning To H~~telius By TOM BARLEY 01 !tit Dfll'f' PIM! Slllt A State: Board of Medical Examiners investigator today testilied that he warn· ed Dr. Ebbe Harteliw of "possible disciplinary action" by the board six months before the physician's Corona de! Mar offices burned. Agent Leo J. Roth told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he discussed with the doctor in October of 1969 the cirt'1lln8tances surrounding the phyaician's relationship with a Wanda Melendrez. Roth said his investigation was based on events that took place in Mardi of that year. Roth was not allowed to elaborate on the nature of the charges but Deputy District Attorney Al Novick today repeated his allegation that Hartelius planMd the burning of his offices at 234$ E. C.oast Highway last April 9 to Wure that record:1 relating to Miss Melendrez were destroyed. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins has testilled that he dld the burning for his sister'• lover and that nlne days earlier he helped Hartellus, 50, fake the theft of the doctor's car. Blevins said Hartelius promised him the vehicle for conversion to a dune buggy <lnce the doctor had collected the insurance money ilnd the in· vestlgatlon into the apparent theft was closed. Newport Arrests Two Auto Theft Scl1eme Susp ects Newport Beach police have arrested two persons on charges of operating a car theft scheme using counterfeit cashiers' checks to purchase used cars in Orange and Lo! Angeles counties. Booked in Orange County Jail is Vera Madge O'Neal. 46, of Santa 1'1onica. Already in custody on auto theft charges from Los Alamitos is James Joe Plsclot· ta , 39. of 11648 Beach Boulevard, Los Alamitos. Both are held on $12.SOO bail. Nev•port Beach Detective Ken Smith said be entered the case In February when a Newport Beach resident reported bis car stolen by suspects who bought it with a fictitious check. Murder Charges Sought Against Beach Woman Dy RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 !ht D•!IY ,Ill! Utll Police said this morning they will seek a formal murder charge again~t a 4Q.year~ld Huntington Beach ...,·oman accused of gunning doY:n her cx·husband this \.\'eekend. ~tcclive Sergeant Monty McKennon said the complaint \\'OUld be sought against Doris Barnett, 16162 Sher Lane. Investigators allege she used a .3!k:alibcr automatic pistol to kill James Barnett, 48. \.\0hile he was working on a coffee table in his son's garage. The diminutive Mrs. Barnett. now held at Orange County Jail, has refused to discuss the charge "'ith homicide detec- tives. Officers said she may be arraigned Tuesday at West Orange County Judicial District Court. Police arrested Mrs . Barnett only 17 minutes after the alleged 4: 10 p.m. shooting in the garage or ~tichael Burke I Barnett's stepson. Police were brought out to Burke 's home on 16641 Bartlett Sl. afler Burke had summoned officers. He said he and his rather bad been working in the garage on a coffee table v.·hen 1'1rs. Barnett arrived. Burke told police that his father \\'as driiling a hole in the table when !\1rs. Barnett pulled the pistol out of her purse and began firing. Others in the garage thought the drill had :r.alfunc· Sappers are specially trained infillra· tors who are ei:perts with demolitions. North Vietnamese gunners also shelled Chu Lai, coastal headquarters of the Americal Division, and hit the Da Nang air base 50 miles to the north . Field reports said several aircraft were damaged and some Americans tA'ounded at Da Nang. No damage or casuahies were reported at Chu Lai. Associa ted Press correspondent J. T. Wolkerstorfer reported from Quang Tri, that a U.S. supported South Vietnamese raid on a major North Vietnamese head: quarters on the 110 Chi ~1inh trail inside Laos was canceled at the last minute because <lf heavy antiaircraft flre and fog. The target area \.\'as about 30 miles south of the sector which was the focal point of the recently completed South Vietnamese thrust into Laos. Ford to Recall All 1971 Pintos To P revent Fires Dog Hero Helps To Arres t Pair In Huntington tioned, police said. DETROrT tUPI) -Ford f\.1otor Co. Orange County Coroner's investigator announced today ii "'as recalling its Jim Beiser said today he has not been able to determine how many bullets entire production of Pinto minicars for A police dog had a tale to tell today struck Barnett but said 1.e died of multi· modification to prevent possible ignition on how to capture a burglary suspect. pie gunshot "'ounds. of fuel vapors in the air cleaner. "Rick,'' one of three dogs in the Barnett. who lived in North Hollywood. A spokesman for the company said 1-.1 had come to Huntington Beach to Garden Grove canine corps, was cal cu 1. · . "a few" cars had been deslroy-• by · b H · 8 h r 1 par ~c1pa!e in a family gathering, ar-= in Y untington eac po ice ear Y cording to officers. Several relatives fire in the engine compartment. but Sunday morning after a possible burglary witnessed the shooting, according to the h · d \1•as reported in progress at a large emp as1ze that there was no case 'A'here police report. Argu~ents in the case of alleged ?bscen1ty dealer ~larvin f\.1itler, convicted 1~ llarbor Judicial District Court on five counts, will be heard sometime next fall. 1't.iller sent five brochures advertising various books and a movie. which the court found to be obscene. He and his attorneys appealed the verdict whiC'h \.\'BS upheld Oct. 12 iri Orange Co~nty.Superior Court on ground!I the material JS no more objectionable than that found in reputable tlarbor bookstores. They claimed. som~ of the photographs he ~sed. are identi cal to pictures on pubhc display. f.~iller's petition for an appeal was denied Nov. 2 and he and his legal c.ounsel ~'en l directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Basing his appeal on a philosophy argued by many, l\liller says the slan· dards for obscenity should be uniform across the nation instead of being established from slate to slate. .Otherwise, he argues, individual states "'1th less·hberaJ legislalors and citizens ~·ai~ stop the free flow of materials in 1n1ers1ate mail and commerce. The t~eory is thal it could influence everyt~Jn~ else adversely, whether obscenity 1s an issue or not. Petition~ filed by f\1iller also argue that found1n~ fathers and Congress intend for prosecution on distribution of alleged· ly obscene m.atter to be handled at a federal level. . The Supreme Court test or obscenity IS whether, taken as a 'A'hole the material appeals to a prurient interest Jn sex affronts contemporary community stan: dar~s and Uas absolutely no redeeming social value. plastic manufacturing plant at 7601 Clay Officer Roger Parker \\'as the first the flames had penetrated the passenger Ave. policeman to arrive at the Burke compartment. Q k J Del. Sgt. Forrest Lewis explained that household and gave the dying man A total of 204,000 of lhe 1971 model 113 e D SLII"ance police surrounded the large plant of mouth·tcrmouth resuscitation and heart p · •-Canbro Inc. until "'Rick'' arrived. inws were involved, starting lrom massage. Parker's attempts failed. . B"ll p d When the dog was brought in, nne Barnett was pronounced dead on arrival original production last July until 1'1arch I ropose OI the suspects leaped from a \\'indow I H t. 1 1 1 H 19, when modifications were made on a un 1ng on n ercommunity ospital. and ran off through a field, but "Rick" Acting on information supplied by all cars coming off the production line. SACRA 11 E NT 0 I U p I ) chased the man and held him al bay. Burke. Officer John Sanders spotted ~irs. A spokesman said investigation or Then the dog "'as taken inside the Barnett's car in the parking lot of the reported cases revealed that vapors in Assemblyman Jack Fenton \0.Mon- building with an officer and ferreted 'East Street Bar, 7682 Edinger Ave . ...,·hile the air cleaner could be ignited by Lebello), lod:iy proposed a bill lo require out a second suspect. on his way tn her apartment. a backfire through the carburetor. Most any com pany that "'rites fire insurance The ttA'O men were being held today Sanders said Mrs. Barnell was sitting cases occurred when cars were started in California to also pro\·ide earthquake on suspicion of burglary aod possession alone at the bar. He arrested her on after having been parked. insurance. of dangerous drugs. The duo, Tony John murder charges. She \\'as booked into He explained that the new evaporation Catanzaro. 26, of 9422 Oasis Ave.. l1untlngton Beach City Jail 'A'here she systems on all new cars provide a can· Under the measur.e, no such company \'iestminster. and Raymond Brewer is awaiting arraignment. ister for storage <lf gases while the could refuse lo write quake insurance Perez, 20, of 2509 England St., Huntington engine is stopped. These gases are suck· and the company's policies and rates Beach, are to be arraigned in \Vest ed into lhe carburetor when the car for such "'ould have to be filed v.-Jlh R b I " • R I" is started. He said there were cases the state. Orange County District Court Tuesday. C C S .:>CIZe 3 { J(> ...,·here backfires ignited these fumes and F t h . Sgt. Lewis said that the police dog en on, c airman of lhe Assemblv was used because of the size of the COR caused a sustained flame·up in lhe Flna~ce and Insur;ince Committee. !!aid DOBA. Argentina (UPI) -A carburetor air cleaner. tha~ 1n t.he wake of last month's Southern building. group of urban guerrillas took over an """e spo kesman sa,·d that ,., most C 1 f h Th 1 I l I k d b 111 a I orn1a earl quake, his committee " ere were a o o sac e oxes Argenline television statioo late Sunday cases d0 m0 ge "'as conl•'ned to the ,,., J d h t k . Id d ·t . h h b dlfl' 1 u u .. earne t a qua e insurance "'A'BS not ins e an l mig t ave een 1cu t to read a revolutionary proclamation cleaner and electric w,·,,·ng, and ,·n ""me always a a·1 bl d h d d t f . d 1 · ·d " "" . v 1 a e an I at many people an angerous o in a suspec 1ns1 e. \Yhile showing a photograph of the late cases, scorch damage to the painl on e1the h d t bl h · he said. ''These dogs are trainei.l to Ernesto ''Che" Gueva ra . the hood. r . ~ rou. e pure asing it or just find someone in circumstances like J liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil1l0lunld~•t~•·m·po~ss·•~bl~e~t~o ioibilaiini.ii"iii( these.'' J11dge to Asl{ Calley Jury IfTl1ey NeedAid Tue sday ' f coilA l'fR°AL LOAN SHOP FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Judge Reid Kennedy said today he \ldll rule Tuesday on "·hether he \\'ill ask Lt. Willlam Calley's murder jury If ll needs help in its deliberations . "Anything 1 do if this point certainly is dangerous," the judge said. The jury was in the 13th day or deliberations today and showing no signs of being near a verdict "The government can sit here forever • , . business as usual, business as usu· al," defe1tse attorney George Latimer complained. "But what about the ac· cused?" The prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey Daniel. had warned that to mike any Inquiries of the Jury would have the effect of coercing s verdict. "We hive no lndlca.tion thlJ jury has difficulty in reaching a verdict," Oeniel sald. "What we do have here ls that lhey are calmly and rationally delibtralln& all these j53ue1 as you direcltd. "Thty hive not Indicated they ltffd any aulstince. They have not lndlc1t!!d they are having any difficulty. They hive not indicated they cannot reach 1 verdict." Latimer, 70 years old and for 10 years a judge on the three·man U.S. Military Court of Appeals. said "i( they are not ha,·ing problems then I don't know \.\•hat military justice is." He said that in no previous court· martial had the jury taken as long to make up its mind. "I daresay it's five times as long as any that J can remember.'' .Judge Kennedy said he C'Ould find litt le legal precedent for a judge asking a jury whether it needs help making up its mind. J~e said he has asked the military law library al Bailey's Crossing, Va., to cheek whether there ia any precedent and that he expected lhe result of the research Tuesday. "l recu11:nize it's a decision I'll ha,·e to make," he said. "I'm inclined to agrH 'A'ith the defense th1t 30me Inquiry should bf' made but cx11ctly what kind and lht' time it should be m1de. I arn un~lded at this point. "I should be In a po11ltlori to rule. sometime tomorrow aflttnoon," he s11ld. The jury began dellb<'ratlons today with 1 request to see logs mt1de of radio transmissions on the day Calley's troops swept into My Lal. ' \ I . f I ' l ' ' i i ' \ l ' Collat1ral loan (Pawn) S,-clallot1 M9m1Mra of C1 1lf. Coll1t9t'1I Loan A11n. • Savings like never with unconditional guoran· tees on everything. CASH LOANS when you borrow CASH SAYINGS when you buy • Come in and see what we offe_r our customen. A new and unusual experience in shopping e n j o y m e n t. Where people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT fROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SELL. TRADE COME IN AND HOWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lttwt ff Harbor & lroodway I II ' I. 1: I I I '' • Lag1111a Beam-Totl•y's F in•• • VOL. 64, NO. 75, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES t.itqNO-AY, MARCH 29, 'Jt71 T~N OENTs SF Firm Ma y Get Lagµna Traffic -Stud·y Joh By PATRICK BOYLE 01 lt!t O.Uy "lie! U1H De.spite 1 growing number of citizens' objections, the engineering firm of Wilbur Smith and Associates will be recom· mended April 7 to the Laguna Beach City Council as a committee 's prime choice fr--11 traffic study. The San Francisco firm. U the council hires it, will be asked to find ways of. red.being traffic congestion and of better using 'city streets under the federal 'traffic: Operations Program to Improve Canacity and Safely !TOPICS). City Public: Works director Josenh Sweany said the purpose of the study ' ate Cambodian Colon el Get s Death PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (AP) - A Cambodian colonel wa!I condemned to death today for hill role in the loss of the northeast provineial capital of Kra tie to the enemy last Spring. A military court wound up ii& lhroo- tnollth trial or Col Cheng Sayombmln , sentencing him to lace a filing squad. tJo dJ:t.t wa:a set for the execution. Thert is no appeal from the court ni.Hnt and the colonel's life can be spared only by intercession of Cam- bodia 'a chief of state. Cheng Heng. Sayomboan remained calm when the: sentence wall pronounced. But pe rsons attending the trial were !!tunned, since It is generally agreed that Xr atie, 100 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, is militarily unteaable. No attempt was made to retake the city during the r~nt South Vietnamese drive in the area, because it was felt that Ktatie could not be held against enemy attack. The defendant was acquitted of charge!! that he had contacts with the enemy and demora lized his troops. Another defendant. Maj. Tim Naing, who had been ordered by Sayomboan to defend Kratie, was sentenced to life imprisonment. "Naing had deserted to the enemy side before Kratie fell. Greenbelt Film Premiere Slated The fir st showing of a color film 00 the Laguna Greenbelt project will be at the chamber of commerce breakfast Wednesday morning at 7: 30 1n the Hotel Laguna. . Representatives of clubs and service groups who might be interested in pro- ~ectlng the film at .their_ own meetings are invited to preview it at the Wed- nesday breakfast. ~ Produced by Bill Verner and narrated by Roy Holm, the film offers unus~al footage of the canyons surround.1ng Laguna which the Greenbelt project bope:o; to prestrve. The Wednesday meeting is open to the public. for reservations call the C'bamber of Commerce, 4M-1018. Parking Sunday? Feed the Meter There will be nn more free Sunday parking in Laguna Beach until October. BegiM.ing Unmediatcly . parldng meters Jn the Art Colony wlll be operative 1even days 1 week. this policy to con· tintlf: through Sept . :Kl, the police depart· ment ha• announced. The special 1ummer p.arlUng charge provision was put into effect by the City Council in 1963 in an effort to encourage turnovtr of limited p.!lrking &p.ace.s during the busy tourist season. Actor Given Decree LOS ANGELE:S (UPI) -Film maker· at;tor Dt:nnls Hopper , 34. and ainger H"olly Mlchelle Phillips . who separated etaht days 11.fh~r lhelr marriage la~ ()cl. 11, have been dlvorad in Superior Court. • ; 1· is to single out and isolate specific traffic prob!f:ms and find 'Ways of eliminaling thwi. F'or example. Sweany uid. if the firm determiaed an intersectkwt w a 1 dangerous or highly congested. it could recommend inslallation ol a traffic signal. 1 The hiring of the enginHrlng C!fnllllUng firm has been officially opposed by the Citizens Town Planning AliSOClatlon (CTPA) becaUse --says the CTPA• - of the firm's automobUe-orfent.ed nat~. "Traffic engineers just · t h I n le automobiles and traffic confroJ," CTPA spokesman James OUJ!y nld. "What Foro1n tbt town need5 is 'a core of pl&Mel • to think balanced trtnsportaUon." "Also. it woold' seem Lo me that the city council wou1d -JM)t want lb be em- barrassed by bl.ting Wilbur Smith again,'' Dilley · added. · · . The firm waa hi.red by the ·city Jn 196'· to do a long-range traffic study for the: Art . C.O)Ony taking · lnto co"°' sideration much ol the sWTOUDdins,area. The· .company ~a!I ~lli~llr. ~¥1 ~-~: but Uie original report_ of ~ I~ requi.Jed · re.vWon ·when the ·d>tnpa~Y.'s long range ·traffic ptan 1eliminai.ea part or the downtown area with lfilfor arttrlal roads . The revi5ion co.st the cify an T~night All Laguna Beach voters are invited to attend an open forum tonighl dur- ing which the 12 candidates for election to the board of trustees of the .Laguna Beach Unified School District will discuss the sch0ol 1ystem. The ''Meet the Candidates" forum, sponsored ·by ·the Coordinating Coon· cil. is scheduled for 7:30 p.µi . in city hall couneil chambers, 505 Forest Ave. Tl!.e 12 men and women are in contention for three seat& on ·tbe five-me~·boanf of trustees acd the election will be 'held April 20. · Each candidate will give a five-minute talk on subject& Which include curriculum, use of computers in educaUon. vocatiOnal traiftiilg and '.ctiool financing . After all 12 pert0ns ha•e 1poken.'.membtn of·tbe aodience Will.be allowed to ask questions of the po_ttntial scbool bQa.rd members., . ' lrvine .City4~ · • • '.J."; : ' I 'fi!j.• f • Puslres Petitions -t-0 5 7%. -' . A saturation·typt w~kcnd. campaign to obtain signatures urging incorporation or the new city of Irvine pushed the volume of favorable response to 17 pet· cent, leaders announced today. Only 25 percent i1 required to qualify for an elecUon under state law. John Burton, chairman or the Council of I.be Ccmmunitles of Irvine declared the number of 1ignaiure1 indicates overwhelmlng support for the City ol Irvine Now (COIN) subcommittee. .. We're way over the top," Burloll said triumphantly. He said teams of 117 petitiofl carriers circulated among the subdivision com- munities on Irvine R.tnch land. signing up 1,545 property owners designated as fee holders. No persons leasing homes are being signed. since il doe!! not appear crilical due to fee holders' response in the weekend campaign, Burton said. He added that provision1 enablin& lessees to sign are being considered. "As it is, we've already gotten the signatures of about 33 percent of everybody in sight,·• Burton added . He said at a press conference today thl' campaign will continue on a slow, deliberate basi.s to a:ssln few if any mistakes in the taUy. Burton noted May 21 i1 the deadJ ine for submitting signatures to the. county counsel calling for the Orange County Board cf Supervisors to set an t.Jection on tbe: incorporation issue. "It shoo.Id now be abundantly clear that the people in lrvioe want to be in their own city," Burton said. "They will not settle for, or approw:1 anything ell!e. t am contident. .. that the supervisors' action will renect the will of the people so dramatically ei:· pressed in the past 48 hours." he added. Andrew May. chairman of COIN. said lhe pelition-carrier1, themsel ves fee 111 Conf er eJWe bot~"' of irvm~ ~·;. bo111!'... were llWI· ned by the enthwiiutic response. '"F'uny 9S 'ptretnt Of the fee .holders contacted signed :the petition~." May aal~: ' May added tba.t ·the perctntage held true in 'all th!. v&r!OUI communit.IU within the pro~ new city Of Irvine , totalln& about , UOll adult& tli&ible to 1ign. · They incrude; Twtle Rock. University Park. Vill.ae· Park, Turt)e· !loci Broad· moor, the Ranch , California Homes. CWverdale, Nortb· lrvine, the Colortrand Sie rra Bonita. · · Campaignf:rs for citybood are op- timistic also that iupervisors Will comply with their wishes, since the Joell· Agency Formation Commission -has endorsed in· corporation. Omaha Line Cuts LA R un OMAHA. Neb. (Al'l -The Union Picific Railroad said Monday it will halt all passenger service ef- f~tlve M,•Y 1, ~ ~a\e the National R.ailrOad Pasaenger Corporation. Railpu, ii to auume re1pon1Jbillty for intercity ~enger aerv.ke. Alfoc\ed are daily runs of the following trainl: City of ·Leri Angeltl, between oniahl and Lo8 AJ!gele1 ; City of Kansu City, between Kansas City and Los 'Angeles; City of Portland, between Omaha and Portland ; Portland 1to.$e,,between Kansas Cl· ty and ~ver. add!Uonal Sl5.I»>. . It WU lhie 1965 WilbtU' Smith ltudy which led to tM formation of the CJ'PA ln a clUzen'1 eflort to biock the com- pany'• trafflc pfupouls. Blsed on offiCi.al population prmictianl lvr Oranp O>unl)'. Wilbur . Smill! i4 1"5 tttlmaled" that about 55,000 motor vehicles would travel to LalUfla Beach daily, ~ulrlnc a· eompltt mtem · of OM way It.reels and ~rja] hi&bwap to 'bandit U?e b'•fflc. In recommending the·ftrm·for'another traffic study. city offielals have. em· phasized the TOPICS undertakina: is to be a "do now '' attack on traffic problems 0 Low Clouds Ret.urning ToC0mt Fog ·and k>w clouds will -return to the O!:lrli• <:Wt tol\iil>l . to:, burn oU 11aia Tue!dly in 1 rePeat•pertorfn&DCe ... .-.·,111a1 • ..... WIJ ll'f'liDC moi<rUl(lild pDOll todajl. · -~ la aM' Oii! of ~~11 ~~·. 1 cdrtaJted • ··tt'l11tf, trben Ille -opeiu, WJtlJ ,_..~ a.'m.- ia · wh1;t airport . otflcWs r d4scri.~ a1 ''typlr.,at. M,1r,ch and. April , w~a&ber ~" · Only ~ Ontario Int.ematlon.al:. ·or :th! Southland's' major. · 1irporb remajned open ·to .. incomln& fllghta. -alrliooa djverted~tl to airport.I I.I far 'IWIY ts San . Loi Angele! International waa . ·from · 1:2' a.m. to J :<l .a.m. to4ay when the 111r1 burned away the fog . · HarbOr Departinent official&\Uld the den&e fog curtailtd most .,.Uni ldivify out 61 Orange Coast Harben. bnt caulied no major difficultj. A low tooighl <i. >4 degreeo· llld rtpeata:1 low clouds wlll mike tba -1ook limilar. A high tomorrow of ·78 ia predicted ror the Orange Goa.st. After -Tuesday a warming trend may change things , offering nightly lows ·from 60 to 70 and daytime highs of 70 to 80, tht National Wea ther Service uy1. Since Jan. 1, Southern Californ ia hu received only l.M inches of rain. Normally 8.65 inchea fall during the . first thret months, of the ye ar . For the season, I.he rainfall total iJ 11.40 inches compared to a uasonal average· cf 13.17. inches. Weathermen credit lbe early ra ins in November and December for bringing the 1ea&0nal total closer to average. The drie1l Jan. I to Marc.h 31 period on record was in 188S when only 1.!)6 inches of rain fell . Slight Earthquake Jiggles LA Basin LOS ANGELES IUP!} -A alight earthguake. registering 3.3 Ol'I the Richter 1cale jiggled window1 in the Los Angeles area Sunday but camed no damage. Scientista at the , Ca.lifomia iMtJtute of tedmology said the 9: 11 a.m. temblor WI! one of a serie1 of mOrt than 225 aftershocks or the destructive e.6 ma&:nilude earthquake Feb. I. Nixon Eyes·· W ~ge .Curb President Ni1oa and Labor !ec:tttary Jamu D. Hodgson hoddlld lhrOUCb the morning in San Clemente oonlerrtna over "legislative problems" connected wltb stabilizing wages in the conslrud.lon in- dustry. Nixon was expected today tG slrn and announce an e1eo.ative order ln an al.- tempt to fight Wlation in lbe naUon'1 large.1t Industry. NixOn's Corutruction Ind u 1 tr1 Stabilization Commlulon h a 1 ~· mended an executive order that woo.Id set up general con1truct1on watt gulde:linet, t:3labl11h crart-by-cra!t board• [O oversee thtm and empcwer t 1llblllu· Uon board to !Ue l<tloo U the suldtllnea are violated. · · In a followup tction. expected Tuesday, the California Wbite. Houle wW take the· wraps off Ha .third "inOation alert." Admmiattat.lon officials · promised it would f'bco.s attenUOl'l on specifk: wage and price. decla)ona made in the ptiv1te sector d•· tbe ' tbret motflb,s al nee tbe last alert. The ~lidtnt and Mta. Nixon, who new here , Friday for a IO-day stay, spent a qultt SUnday at their ectanfroat vUla. AldOI pfclun!d Ill< sojourn u a workl111 visit and uld thrt, apart · trom adlnJ • I • I • cu ~-fronts. -Nb:Ol'l 'WflUld reView :loqtbetll Alia 4mioprnen11. He baa said be will announct plana for ccotimJM U.S. · ttoop Wlthdrawala from Vietnam abotit April 15. Hert with him were key autstanta lncludin& O>lef of Staff H. R. Ha)ijemon, DomerUe. Polley Coordinator John D. Ehrllchman and Dr. Henry A. Killin1er1 astl1tan1. for national .turtt.y 'affaJn. In trytnr •to item. lnnationlfY" trends tn .eonstrucllon, Nixon· is doppir11 · ahott. tir · cre1tln1 a 01tional priwwagl at.a~lllz.ation board. But he la movin1 clooer to Ille wag~prlce IUlddlat ap. proach ~ opce ocorned. ,,. ''" "u Oppolfd to tyilie&J &enera.1 st.\ldtes and long ranae plal\I." Sweany said ' TOPICS 1tudlu rt authorized by tbe fedt?al JOV • nt to create a ~11 for' 1aa ~ use. He 1ald lf'the study Is tom~td. La.iuna Btacb will be lot ~aw frortt ·the •as &al' .program anti . UH ctt)'-money for street t'nalnttnanae.· · -,"Wilbur Smi~ has the 4dvan,llge of befng familiar _with With dty.'" ·sweany said . "They know OUr"probl~ms."1 Sweany nc;ited the upcomtng tt:aJfl!=! 1tudy contract will be funded primarily with federal funds and, althou&h the city_ will pay 29 perc'11t of the eest, It can 1be met with caa tu ap- propriations. .Dilley said the CTPA jg. oppoeed.' to hiring the ~ring 1 fil1ft prhiw-Uy because of I t 1 aut.omobile.«lented phil-phy. . "Wilbur Smith · is very cloae • to the High.way. Comrilisaion~and la ·vety aufo. oriented, .. :Dilley said. "Thty•tellly won't have any consideration ·for I.be town." sweany stressed that no: decilion to hire .tf'le firm has been made yet, ctty Council_ apprc;ial being reqwmt • befcn tbi.~tract C'&D· be'aigntd. · oun I ' • ' ? • P•t!• .Bae · : ' . Mrs.. Patricia Nixon .. busy with guest Jisl for Tricia'1·weddlng. ii 1,J1own after Frjday ,evtninf 1rmt1·1t El Toro. Tlje'.Wat~h· ful eye upon her la pr.,uniably' tl)at of the Secret Service. Reagan Agr~es • 1 : To Res tore . Benefit Cuts. SACRAMENTO •(AP) -Gov., Rlacan has agreed to restore .ct;u, and1 sehool Medi.Cal 1ervict1 ht cut last December, a Repubncan legl.slatOr said today. The govlirn<ir aJ:o;o will provide $8 million to reimburse the counties for hea\lh care" co&t:o; they absorbed dtie to the Dec. IS cutbacks in the state-'1 medical proeram for 2.4 million poor and nefdy Ca I If or n I a.n 1, said Assemblyman ,.G«don Duffy_. Duffy fR-Hapford). '.~be will1 amend his · bill n\andatllit ~ Melfi..Cal service restorations in view of t.be ad· mlnistratlon'1 re.venal of po&jUon. . "I've reached 11feeme~t witll tbt·td- ministration," said Duffy. Duffy said Reagan will plit education services and an adequate dru1 prov1sion back into the progi;am by rqulation within two weeks. · Cost impact · of restorilig the dru& fbrmulary -tn be approved by Utt California Medical Association ind tbt California Pharmaetutical ,\ssociation.- w11s put at $1.Z million, The education services, lnclu4in1 p'ro- "i.~ion of eyeglass~ for yoimg1~r1, v,:ould cost about $800,000. . ·Gov. Reagan reduced . aotne _.,ntJC.:1 and 1111wsed ftt cuta of 10 ·pe,roeni. saying the proaram w-' upccted to om 1140 mjlllmrbe~nnd·~t lllliltf. '. · · Du1fy·11td Ille wvt<U -W ltiuqie .. within 'lW"o wef.k}, .. me·anfn1 $e at"~ c•ll would be "11o(ed l/ltt ·• · toiiJ ' of aboul ·14 weUI. · · Visit by Stork SAL 'r L<AKE CITY (AP) -MN.' Billy Tr""'r and hti' claug!M;. ·Pamela MorJan, eadeid up u roommata SuodQ at a local hospital. Mn .. TRsher WU 1drrdt.ted to Ute tioopltll Friday !ti 11•• blrlh to ll!tlr toth chlld. Vllllch • lurnid · oul \to ·be a Ptl• . I ' • Duffy 1aid be rl•ns lo cOntinut . t. J'lush for p1ssa1e e his bill. 'f Deeomposed· Body Might. Be .Hu·ghes By J'ACK' V.-FOX . "',. ............... Tbt bad1y-d.ecorn})O¥d body of .a -man believecl1o be m!ssinc Tate 1(111 aUorney Rooa!d Hughes WU reported today to ••.-fol!M ,wllllo 'tba JUry'la,lbo cut dellberai.ed whether to -.ntax:e Ch 1 ... ~-'!'d .hi!. co,deleodan!& i\' pr~ Gt ' dealJl . ID .. Ilia 111 ~y, ~ a! l~ae and ~ilh Me iarm 'ritilsb:ig; waS 'discovered dminC tbe 'wet:keb.d . f*e: down In a · Pool of water 'in 1 a remott rilountaill area ' of V.eAtur11:· County by tWo . Glendale fishermen, according to Ventura Countf ~Dior Sllerilf'a ·Deputy Mike Freeman. He , said, "we feel It may. be · Hugbel lince tbe only Jarae pu10D milaint up there ia him ." The 2SO-Pound, bearded llu'1>el diJaP' peared ·last ThanbgiVing· weekend while on a e&1mping trip in the .rugged Sespe Hot ·Springs .,..,. . norlhwest al •b«e. 1be· ,body· was found seven miles eut of tbe springs. . Hughea was pretNmed drowned In •U.. torrealial rains thlt 11reekend. . FiSherme.n Don H. Chessman and Jobn L. Wells found the body Saturday but Jt; took them · until late Sunday to ~bike out to a. tel.epboqe . 'A · team was . dispatched to . the a,rea ~t was not expected to return unUl late Tuesday w,M the body. Fog covered much of 1he ·ana preventint bellcopter1 taking part in the search. When the morning session begin. Hvtra) :Of the jurors appeared with suit- cases. C.Ourtroom· observers tpeculatcd that the appearance of the luggage meant lhat the seven.man, five-woman paqe l experted to· rtach -a verdict today ahd leave for borne directly from the Hall of Justice. Al the iU!Y began' Ha 1econd day of deliberafioru. tour of'Mamoo's female. followers, who maintained a vigil outside the bullding during the trial, appeartd. will! tbeirhoada obaved completely. Tbey were apparently I m It at i n c M~n. :who recmUy had bis' Iona 1ocb cropped clGSe to his skull. Orug~ We ather Low cloud• and local IOf will keep the IUD U"ay on Tuesday, but temperatures will btat up to •nur i!O' l!liand and"in· the .upper 11111 ' a1cJoi tho coast. . INSIDE TODAY Althouo1' th 1: oowrmnrnt· claim.i tq bt' ill control, Pakkton' reb,lt ar1 atiU Jiothlftg_ Thew • claim vp to 300,000 Mpc df.d h• · fl hour•. St:t 1toru Pagt. 4. .._.,. '• MMM n C.11...,.,. ...................... CIH•#fkll U.• OrMM C-tr t ~ IJ """" """" • c........... .. ti s-ta """ ~~ .. ,.....,_,. .. ,, ........ htt ' ,._....... • .............. " .........,.. •. ri:,·,:;, W-11 ...... • 1• Wtlll• ..... 11 ... ~ ,, ~·· ..... ,,.,, Mfl.... ' ... .... .. MllrltiWI ' ' I • • • I • 2 DAJL '1 PILOT SC High Cou1·t To Decide On Gun Law WASHINGTON <UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed today to decide whether the federal Gun Control Law forbids anyone who has been convicted of a serious crime from ever possessing a firearm . The court will hear oral arguments on the .is!ue next fall and winter. then will hand down a written opinion in the case of a Bro/lJ , N.Y .. man, Kenneth Bass, convicted of violatio n of the 1968 law. He v:on a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The Justice Department petitioned the SUpreme Court lo hear the case next term. Other lov.·er court opinions have differed ()n interpreting the section o! the law which has been used by the government to prosecute about 150 persons .• In other actions, the court: -Let stand a lower court ruling that • federally assisted housing project may not evict a tenant without giving him a full hearing and an opportunity to answer complainb against him. The ac- tion came in a case involving the Durham, N.C., Housing Authority. -Ruled in a fi.tinnesota case that st.ate universities are entitled to impose nonresident tuition rates on students who have not lived in the state continuously for a year prior to enrollment. -Denied a hearing to Carlos Marcello, alleged New Orleans crime figure who has been imprisoned on charges of assaulting an FBI agent at the city airport. -Agreed to examine a series or Oh io election laws which have been challenged as denying the ballot to minority parties and independent candidates. The case will be heard next term . -Ruled, 5 to 4, in (avor of a Louisiana inheritance law which was challenged as denying the rights ar illegitimate children. The state argued the law was, intended to encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. Jn the gun control test case, Bass was sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviction or tv.·o counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously af a felony -attempted grand larceny. Camper Thieves Make Cleanup In Harbor Area Thieves made ii rough for Harbor Area camper and mobile coach O\lflers over the weekend Jn a series of fl.ids at Costa Mesa storage and parking lots. The hardest-hit victim lost hls entire camper unit, worth $3,000. to thieves who simply drove a truck under it, yanked out the isupports, fastened it down and drove away. Wilbur W. Hurst, of 5:H Seaward Road, Corona de! Mar, told police the theft occurred In a storage yard at 2680 Ne.,,,•port Boulevard, between Thursday and Saturday. Investigators said two suspects were seen looking over the camper earlier in the week, noting they arrived In a truck with an old camper unit tha t was not lastencd down. Five other camper and t r a i 1 er burglaries v.·ere reported to police by victims whose vehicles were parked at 1963 Newport Blvd., but some owners have not yet been contacted to determine loss. Leonard M. llood , of liOl Paloma Drive, and Oscar S. Bean, of 1309 Ashford Lane, both in Newport Beach, reported a combined total of $300 in camping supplies and clothing taken. • OJA.NOi C:OA.lt DAllV PILOT OUHGo! COA$T PUILl$HINC. COMPANY 111•~•'1' N. w •• ~ Preldtftl •nd 1'111111~ Ja1k Ill, Curf1., Vlc:t ProldW .,., "-•I """"""'" TlloMat K,,.,n """ 1'110111•• A. Mur,\i11• Ml ...... ~11111" Ch1tft1 M, lo•• 1111,lri•rl '· Niii ~ ... i.n: ,......,.,. l!dl*' ut•• .... Offk• 22 2 For•1t A'r•11u• s. .. c.....,.OMc. lOS North ll Ca111i~o lt•tl ,,_ °"""' Cotl• Mn1: m Wnt ltv St•Mt NfWPD"I IMclH llD Nl'lfllPOl"T IOU1"11 .. Mloll'lllllll~ llMdl: 11111 tetc11 lhu1ew1.- OAn.Y PllOT, writ. ""let! It ~ tt9 .. __,..,__ .. J!Ub!ltlltll .. ltf --.... tl•r Ill ••not. adllicn w UfllM -..0. .......... i a.di, °"" ~ =~": e9'dl. P-111111 V1l11¥, ... ~ ........ .,..1"td:. .......... -,........ ·'*'· Pl'lfK'-1 °""""' """' ii ...... ..., $1rw1. C.tt .... ,, .. , •••• 1714) '42o4U1 ctwtM Utwtllll1 MW?I S-Cl•dt Al D•&I 11CN T ..... ,. 4H""°' .................... hi T1Mp•s11 4f4.t4U ~ lt'Pl. °'"ft C-H Llwb!M .. ~-Ho -...... l•hltW"tflMI. adi.Mf ... tttr ., .--.~ -- -· ...... -.. wllflOut ..... ,... ...-.. • °""""' ..... . "'*" ct.& ....... ,. .... """""' ... .... C:..I« M41M~ C•llfir'llt. t•t:elllf• .., "'""' et.ll ... ""'"' ..,. -:.:..e ftmltfll\'1 11111...,,. ""~ .. lntram11ral Winners -., Fire Base Hit 33 American Gls Killed by Reds SAIGON I AP) -Enemy gunners level- ed a ba rrage ~t onday at a U.S. artillery base still reeling from a sapper attack that killed 3l least 33 Americans and v.·ounded 76 in what may have been the heaviest death toll on a U.S. 111· litallatlon in the war. The l·asualtie~ were expected to go still higher from Sunday's attack on Fire Base fi.1ary Ann on the basis of still inconlplete reports from the V.S. Con1· mand. Communications with the base 11.·ere spotty more tha!J 24 hour~ after th(' enemy attack, apparently because of damage to the command bunker. The artillery base, located in the jungle 50 miles south of Da Nang, and manned by a ba!talion from the America! Divi· sion. has reportedly been reinforced, however, and no additional casualtie3 were reported from the mortar attack f\1onday morning. The strike was approved by President Nixon and President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam. It was called of( when intensive Bf>2 air strikes and smaller tactical fighter-bombers failed to silence enemy anl iaircraft fire, Fog mixed "'ith the dust created by the bombs hampered visibility. Court Sets Smut Mail Case Study From \\'ire Services The top three-man intramural basketbaJI team at Saddleback College receive trophies for defeating 12 other teams in the col!Ege. From left are Michael H. Barnett of Laguna Niguel; Allen P. Benjamin, Dana Point; phys ical education instructor Vincent D. l\1cCullough, and Richard Ebel of Tu stin. The enemy also shelled a Vietnamese resettlement village about 25 miles north of Fire Base Mary Ann and followed up "'ith a sapper aUack Monday, killing 13 civilians and wounding 21. One hun- dred houses \~·ere destroyed. WASHINGTON, D.C. -California's la\v prohibiting mailing of obscene materials will come under scrutiny aJ possibly unconstitutional as the result of a recent Costa Mesa case, lhe U.S. Supreme Court decided today. Medical Prober Tells Warning To Hartelius Murder Charges Sought Sappers are specially trai ned inliltra· tors \\'hO are experts with demolitions. North Vietnamese gunners also shelled Chu La!, coastal headquarters of the America! Division, and hil the Da Nang air base 50 miles to th e north. Argu.ments in the case of alleged ~bscenity dealer f\larvin Miller, convicted 1~ Harbor Judicial District Court on li\'e counts, \'lill be heard sometime next fall. Against Beach Woman Field reports said several aircraft were damaged and some Americans wounded at Da Nang. No damage or casualties were reported at Chu Lai. P.~lller sent five brochures advertising various books and a movie, which the court found to be obscene. He and his attorneys appealed the verdict \Vhich 1~·as upheld Oct. 12 in Orange Co~nty_Superior Court on ground! the material 1s no niore objectionable than that found in reputable Harbor bookstores. By TO~I BARLEY 01 11>1 Dill~ 111191 $1111 A State Board of Medical Examiners investigator today testified that he warn· ed Dr. Ebbe Hartelius of ;,possible disciplinary action" by the board six months before the physician's Corona de! Mar offices burned. Agent Leo J . Roth told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he discussed with the doctor in October of 1969 lhe circumstances surrounding the physician's relationship with a Wanda Melendrez. Roth said hLs investigation was ba!ed on events that took place in March of that year. Roth was not allowed to elaborate on the nature ()f the charges but Deputy District Attorney Al Novick today repeated his aUegation that Hartelius planned the burning of his offices at 234.& E. Coast Highway last April 9 to tuure that records relating to Miss Melendrez were dutroyed. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins has testified that he did the burning for his sister's lover and that nine days earlier he helped Hartellus, 50, fake the theft of the doctor's car. Blevins said Hartelius promised him the vehicle for conversion to a dune buggy once the doctor had collected the insurance money and the in· vestigalion into the apparent theft was closed. Newport Arre'!ts Two Auto Theft Scheme Suspects Newport Beach police have arrested two persons ()fl charges of ()perating a car theft scheme using counterfeit cashiers' checks to purchase used cars in Orange an d Los Angeles counties. Booked in Orange County Jail Is Vera Madge O'Neal, 46, of Santa Monica. Already in custody on auto theft charges from Los Alamitos is James Joe Pisciot· ta, 39, of 11648 Beach Boulevard, Los Alamitos. Bolb are held on $12,500 ball . Newport Beach Deteclive Ken Smith said he entered the case in February when a Newport Beach resi dent reported his car stolen by suspects wbo bought it with a fictitious check. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 1n1 Dairy Pli.t Still Police said this morning they will seek a formal murder charge again~t a 40-year-o\d Huntington Beach \\"Oman accused of gunning do'.1-·n her ex-husband this "'eekend. Detective Sergeant Monty fi.1cKennon said the co mplaint would be sought against Doris Barnett, 16162 Sher Lane. Investi gators allege she used a .31l-calibrr automatic pistol to kill James Barnett. 48, while he was working on a coffee table in his son's garage. The diminutive Mrs. Barnett. OO\V held al Orange Coun!y Jail, has refused to Dog Hero Helps To Arrest Pair In Huntington A police dog had a tale to tell today on how to capture a burglary suspect. ··ruck," one of three dogs in the Garden Grove canine corps. was called in by Huntington Beach police early Sunday morning after a possible burglary was reported in progress at a large plastic manufacturing plant at 760 1 Clay Ave. Del. Sgt. Forrest Lewis explained that police surrounded the large plant of Canbro Inc. until "Rick" arrived. When the dog was brought in. one ol the suspects leaped from a window and ra n off through a field, but "Rick" chased the man and held him at bay. Then the dog "'as taken inside the building with an officer and ferreted out a second suspect. The two men were being held today on suspicion of burglary and possession of dangerous drugs. The duo, Tony John Catanzaro. 26, of 9422 Oasis Ave .. Westminster, and Raymond Brewer Perez, 20, of 2509 England St., Huntington Beach , are to be arraigned in West Orange County District Court Tuesday. Sgt. Lewis said that the police dog was used because of the size of the building. ''There V.'ere a lot or stacked boxes- !nsidc and it might have been difficult and dangerous to find a suspect inside ," he said. "These dogs are trained lo find someone in circumstances like these." Judge to Asl{ Calley Jury If Tl1ey Need Aid Tuesday FT. BENNlNG. Ga . CAP) -Judge Re.id Kennedy said today he v.'ill rule Tuesday on whether he will ask Lt. William Calley's murder jury ii it needs help In its deliberations. "Anything l do at this point certainly ls dangerous,·• the judge said. The jury was in tl1e 13th day of deliberations today and showing no signs of being near a verdict. "The government can sit here forever •.• business as usual, business a1 usu- RI,'' defe'lse attorney George Latimer complained. "But what about the ac· cused?" The prosecutor, Capt. Aubrt:y Daniel, had warned I.hat lo make any Inquiries of the jury would have the effect of CGercing a verdict. "We have no indication this jury has difficulty in reaching a verd lcl ," Daniel sai d. "Whal wt: do have. here is that they are calmly and rationally deliberatinl all I.heat Lssues all you directed. ''They have nal indicated they nttd any assistance. They havt not indicated thty are having any dJfflcuJty. Tbey ha ve Mt Indica ted thty cannot reach • verdict." Latimer. 10' years old and for 10 years a judge on the three-man U.S. Military Court of Appea:s. s;iid "H they are not having problems then J don't know y,·hat military justice is." He said that in no previous court· niartial had the jury taken as long to make up its mind. ''I daresay it's five times as long as any that I can remember ." Judge Kennedy said he could find little legal pre«dent for a jll,dge asking a jury whether it needs help mak.ing up its mind. He said ht has asked the military law library at Bailey's Crossing, Va ., lo check whether there is any precedent and that he expected the result of the re Starch Tuesday. "l recognize it's a decision 1'11 have. to make," he said. "I'm inclined to agree "'ith the defense that some Inquiry should be made but exactly what kind and the lime it should be made , J am und ecided at thL~ point. "I should be in a position to rule sometime tomorrow afternooo ." he said. The jury began deliberations today with a request to set logs made or radio transmissions on the day Cllley'1 troops swept into My Lal. discuss the charge \vith ho1nlclde detec· lives. Offictrs said she may be arraigned Tuesday at West Orange County Judicial District Court. Police arrested f\1rs. Barneu only 17 minutes after the alleged 4:10 p.m. shoaling in the garage of t.1ichael Burke, Barnctrs stepson. Police v.·ere brought out to Burke's home on 16641 Bartletl St. afler Burke had summoned officers. He said he and his father had been working in !he garage on a coffee table \vhen Mrs. Barnett arrived. Burke told police that his father was drilling a hole in the table when ~!rs. Barnett pullerl the pistol out of her purse and began firing. Others in tbe garage thought the drill had ~f!.alfunc· tionerl. police said. Orange County Coroner·s inveatigator Jim Beiser said today he ha!!: not been able lo determine how many bullets stru ck Barnett but said J.e died of multi· pie gunshot wounds. Barnett. who Jived in North Hollyv.·ood. had come lo Huntington Beach to participate in a family gathering. ac· cording to officers. Several relatives witnessed I.he shooting, according to the police report. Oificer Roger Parker v.·as the fir st policeman to arrive at the Burke household and gave the dying man mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and heart massage. Parker's attempls failed. Barnett was pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington lntercommunity lfospital. Acting on information suppl ied by Burke. Officer John Sanders spotted 'fi.1rs. Barnett's car in the parking lot or the East Street Bar, 7682 Edinger Ave. while on his "'ay to her apartment. Sanders said f..1rs. Barnett v.·as sitting alone at the bar. He arrested her on murder charges. She was booked into Huntington Beach City Jail where she is awaiting arraignment. Hehels Seize Hadio Associated Press correspondent J. T. \\'olkerstorfer reported from Quang Tri, that a U.S. supported South Vietnamese raid on a major North Vietnamese head· quarters on the Ho Chi f\1inh trail inside Laoa was canceled at the last minute because of heavy antiaircraft fire and fog. The target area was about 30 miles south of the sector which was the foca l point of the recently completed South Vietnamese thrust into Laos. Ford to Recall All 1971 Pintos To Prevent Fires DETROIT (UPI) -Ford 11olor Co. announced today it was recalling its enti re production of Pinto minicars for modification lo prevent possible ignition of fuel va pors in the air cleaner. A spokesman for the company said "a fev.·" cars had been destroyed by fire in the engine compartment, but emphasized that there was no case where the names had penelrated the passenger They claimed_ som~ of the photographs he used are 1dent1cal to pictures on public display. I\~iller'~ petition for an appeal was denied Nov. 2 and he and his legal counsel went directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Basing his appeal on a philosophy argued by many, Millet says the stan· dards for obscenlty should be uni form across ·the nation instea d of being established fron1 state lo state _Otherwise, he argues, individual st ates \i•1th less-liberal legislators and citizens can_ slop the free flow of materials Jn interstate mail and comme rce. The theory is-Iha! it could influence everyt~in~ else adv ersely, v.· h e t h , r obscenity is an issue or not. Petitions filed by f.1il!er also argue that founding fathers and Congress intend for prosecution on distribution of alleged· ly obscene matter to be handled at a federal level. . The Supreme Court test or obscenity is v.·hether, taken as a v.·hote the material appeals to a prurient interest in sex- affronts contemporary com munity stan: dar~s and has absolutely no redeeming social value . compartment. Q k I A totol of 2Q4 ,000 of the 1971 model U3 e nSUf3llCe Pintos were involved, starting from original production last July until fl.larch Bill Pi·oposed 19. when modifications were made on all cars coming off the produclion line. A spokesman said investigation of SACRA fit E NT 0 ( UP I ) reported cases reve aled that vapo rs in Assemblyman Jack Fenton {~f.lon- the air cleaner could be ignited by lebello), today proposed a bill to require a backfire through the carburetor. Most any company that writes lire insurance cases occurred v.·hrn cars were started · Cal "I after having been parked. ~n J orn1a lo also provide earthquake He explained that the new evaporation insurance. systems on all new cars provide a can-Under the measur_e, no such company ister for storage or gases while the could refuse to wrtle quake insurance engine is stopped. These gases are suck· and the company·s policies and rates ed into the carburetor when the car for such v.·ould have to be filed v.·ith is started. He said there were cases the slate. where backf ire s ignited these fumes and _Fenton. chairman of the Assembly caused a sustained name-up in the F111a~ce and Insurance Committee. said CORDOBA. Argentina 1UPI) -A carburetor air cleaner. t?a~ 1n t.he \Vake of last month's Southern group of urban guerrillas took over an The spokesman said that in most California earthquake, his committee Argentine television station late Sunday cases damage was confined to the air learned that quake insurance "was no• to read a revolutionary proclamation cleaner and electric wiring, and in some a~ways available and lhat many people v.·hile showing a photograph of the late cases. scorch damage to the pain t on either had trouble purchasing it or just Ernesto "Che" Gue1'1'1"1· iiiiiiilheiihioodii. iiiiiiiiiii~f~ou~o~d~;~t ~;m~po~ss~ib~l~e ~toiobitaiii"i-..... A Mod""U,........ COLLATERAL , 'l LOAN SHOP ' Col11ter1I loin (PIWTI} S,-ci•ll1ts ' Me1T1b•r• of Csllf, Coll1t•r1l loan A11n. ~ ~ Savin9s like never before with unconditional CJUaran· tees on everythin9. CASH LOANS when you barrow CASH SAVINGS when you buy • Come in and see what we offer aur custome~. A new and unusual experience In shoppin9 • n j o y m e n t. Where people in the know save maney every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT fROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA ·JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, Snt.. TU.DE COMI IN AND llOWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MW ---Hcsbor ' 1<-.Y I San Clemente Capistrano VOL. 64, NO. 75, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES .. • EDITIC?_N ORANGE COUNTY, ~llJ;q_R!-!IA ,, TOday's .i'.taet N .. Y. St.eeks ' MONDAY, MARCH fl .. 1971 ... ' . San Clemente Firm Cuts Pollution at Sott.rce A new du!t~ll~ing system attached to the. end of a whirling, 200-foot-long kiln has begun itJ second week of opera- tion at &in Clemente's CresUite Ag- sregatl!: • plant -a large piece of hardware -which the management hope:i; will it.em 1 sea cl pollution complaints. The' devltt, which cost about Slili,000 to buDd and install, traps nearly every particle of dust emitted by lhe huge kiln. It then runs the dwit into a water flow. The mixture then ii channeled to a ~I~ lake nearby. • SpokeslllfJl for the large plant located in the area of the Forster Ranch said testing by officials of the Orange County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) show the control of the brown dUJt exceeds the APCD requirelnenta:. -. The problem, which has nagged resideata of porUons of that · ma or the city, and CresUite officials u well, has persisted for many months. It usually occui'red at night. aa.id Crestlite President Ken Teel, when· the ' land breues Uft.ed tbe dust and blew It &ea.ward. During the normal daytime hours the dust blew Wand to \moccupied ll'UJ'; - The machinery .. which wa:i installed and lested for a week before rectntlj going to work around the clock, is a round brick cylinder with a 1tack at the top. Inside, its lining ls madt of special epoxy material' and is studded with hun- drM.s of.water jets~whicb trap the esca~ lo& dust and settle it•into pipes where the muddy rnj.Uure is channeled oft. "We desiCned and built this one ourselvo, elleD thoU&h there are traps Ulce .this on the market," Teel explained. Tbe production models can cost three tiqles-inot~ than. tM Cttstlite venkin~ and are~not cuaranteed to: work. • ~home-made qnt workl better, Teel 1ald. The cfnly emission from the kiln - since the filter was put into' use - is a plume of clean sleam. IXOll oves ·on_ Tate lury Out M'iss·ing Lawyer Body Recovered? Easier Warning 'Renters Cautioned by Police Despite predictioRJ of a smaller turnout of Easter Week revelers this year in San Clemtnte, police officials this week said Ole hard and fast ru.1es and suggestions to local renlal property owners still should be heeded. -When renting. be sure of the exact number of ~raons who will be living in the quarters. -lf you rent to juveniles. be certain that competent adult supervis.lan will actually be prea:ent at all fuJl~. By JACK V. FOX U~I Iliff ..,.,,.. The badly-decomposed body of a man believed to be missing Tate tria1 attorney Ronald Hughes was reported today to have been found while the jury in the cue deliberated whether to sentence <llarlN Manson and his co-defendant! to_life m· prison or deith in the gas dit!iiber. ~ bqdy, described u large and with one arm mi~in.g. wali di.scovere.d during the weekend face down in a pool of water in a remote mountain area of Ventur a County by two Glendale ·fishermen, according to Ventura County Senior Sheriff's Deputy Mike Freeman. He gald, "we feel it may be Hughes 1i11ce tbe -cnly large person missln,r up thel'e is him.'' . The 250-pound, bearded Hughes disap- peared last Thanksgiving weekend while on a campinl trip in the rugged Sespe Hot Springs area northwest of here. The body w11 found seven miles east of the springs. Ray Campbell Pulls Hat Out Of Board Race U>ng-time San Clemente businessman Ray Campbell has withdrawn from the race for the Area Three seat on the Capistrano Unified School District Board, throwing his support behind another can· didate. Campbell. one of the first to challenge Incumbent trustee Stan Kelly for the seat represenUna: south San Clemente. a.id he &ives bi.a wholehearted support to lawyer Gordon Pelerson. Despite the withdrawal, however. Campbell'• name will still appear on \be April :Ill balloL Praising lhe lawyer candidate, Campbell aaJd Peterson's election would •'add new leadership and perspective" to Ille ac!lool board. The withdrawal from I.be. race le.aves only Kelly and Peterson aUl1 running. Coa1t 1''eather Low clouds and local fog will ketp the sun a'way on Tuelday, but temperat.w:es will heat up &o near 13 inland and in the upper 60I 11.., the-l INSmE TODAY AlthoMgh the govtrnmtnt claim.t to bt t1' control , Pakistani rt bel1 art still fig thing, They claim up to 300.000 have died in 43 hours. Ste itoru Page 4. ...... " -n C•l"""'ll • N.1111911-1 -••• , ........ .... .._ ........ • '-"• n IJ"'1• '*1tr • , __ u ._.. 1).11 DNllll Mtll~ • li.tt M#Jbll 11-21 ·~"'"'' , ... • TtlWkJltl D ... ,.,, ..... _, D -n ·-.... ·-• --" Wtdtt With " .. .,..u ...... " ._.,, ..... 1,·lt ,_ ..... • ..... ., ... ... -• Hughes was presumed drowned ln the torrential rains that weekend. Fishermen Don H. Clieuman and Joljn L. Well! found the body Saturday bol it took them until late Sunday to hike out to a telephone. A team w"! diapttn!Uod . )o Ille ,iea bu! was not · up..tiP-18 rttUrn ilntll late 'l'uelday with Utt bo(ty. Foe rovcred mucll of. the aru prevenl1q btlicoiWs taking !!I!' jA !JI• uari!t. Whtir tl!I, INlrning . ,.ssi<>n -began, several of the jurors appeared ,with suU.- cases. Courtroom obeetVers specula,ted thll the appearahce or the luggage meant that the seven-man, five-woman panel expected to reach a verdict today and leave for home .directly from the Hall of Justice. As the juty began its second day of deliberation!, four of Manpon's female followers, who maintained a vigil outside the buttding durin& the trial. appeared vrith their heads shaved completely. They were apparently i m it a t l n I Manson, wbo rece.ntly had ma· long lock.a cropJjed close to his akulL The jurors began weighing evidence in the penalty phase Saturday and deliberated for five hours before they were sequestered. Their decision on the penalty must be unanimous. U they caMot agree, Judge Charle1 H. Older muJt by Jaw Eenttnct the defendanl.5 to life im· prisonrnent. U that occurs, the Dlsll'.ict Attorney can calJ for a new jury ar a penalty retriil. Pat Drawing Vp Wedding List First Lady Pat Nixon gpent tht weekend at the Nixon's San Clemente seaside villa working on a iuast tfst for bet daughter Tricia.'1 fortbcomin& marriage to Harvard laW atUaent Edward Finch Cox. Mrs. Nizon drew from a list from her daughter Julie's wedding tO D1vid Eisenhower two years ago, but had new categories to add that tbe Preaideney includes , such u the cabinet and other government dignitaries. · . The date of the nuptials -June 12 ln the East Room of the White House -was expected to be announced formally this week. .. Tricia remained in Wuhincton when her family came here Friday for a . working vac1tion. Police ·Chief Clifford Murray said the problem arises with large aroups ·of young persons who rent room_ and apartm~nt.a for the week's atay al the beach. , "ll bis been our e-rperienct that aome .~ti>-. '""'I" cu .,_,,, :"""')!" Ir .!:?":"1::1?'!'.~.1~'C 1aid. • -. -~Uilatt~ tinS ~. '.'!~ :rent dwtllllif .-UbJf, and •P/oilliied izi!Otce~I of tile mu houtil.ng laws aWtring total. act.ep~ oC- dl!p.rtey for l))eclfic quarten. He •111i"""1 ll>eee bintr for landlord" -Use a standard rent.al form available at stationery stores which states the rental 1greement conditions, including the total number of occupantz. Remember to have a competent adult 1ign. Any quuUo.ns will be. gladly, answered by police peroonnel lbroup t be ~="""* ~.:m be 1trumlined 111 the••~:~ 1ft~'irl' .. tel• • . • .~~~otr · uslna !lie emeiainq µO. are urced 'kl not uH It for re1ular buaiJie:u. cal~ not of an ~editte emtrien,ey nature.. Fog ·to Blanket Cotut Again T~sday Morning ' F6M:. aiwf ·1ow clouds · ;cwill .re~ to the Orange Coul !!>night to llom .off again Tuesday in a repeat perfort!!tnce of the misty drape that harried ·early morning motorists and pilots today. Flights in and out of Orange County Airport were curtailed from 5 a.m., Free Hoffa Plan Alleged by U~S. WA.SffiNGTON (UPI) -The Justice Department 1a.id t.oday several "in- termediaries" attempted to solicit up to $1 million from imprisoned Teamster president Jimmy Hoffa in a "f11 fet,. ched" scheme to secure support from an lnfluenOll Rnator to 1et him paroled. The depatlmeJ\I &ald llollo, who ls due for a parole bearln1 Wednesday, turned down Ille off«. A ~i spomman said lbe deal offered to· Hoffa was -that for a lar1e IWD ol money, a man allegedly cbe to Sen. Jobo L. McClellan CD-Ark. l. would al.tempt to influence the aenator to intercede· in Hoffa's behaU befOre lhe ~edeial ~1rote &µct: . 'Ille spokesmen said the plan' "died of its own weight" and McClellan w1s ne.ver contacted. McClellan uid be never was ap. proached by anfone with such a scheme, and w11 .opposed td Hotfa'1 re.lease in any case. when the tower .(!pens. unW· t:tJ a.m. in what airport officials detcriMd as "tyj:liCal' March J.nd April weathfr. '' Only Ontario International of the Southland's major airports remained open to inc'oming flights. Some airlines diverted flights to airports as far aw1y a1 San Diego. Los Angeles International was Closed from 1:21!1 a.m. to 8:08 a.m. today when the sun burned away the fog . · · Harbor Oepartmeril officials said Uie den~ fog curtailed most boating activity ·out or Orange Coa,st Harbors,'but caui~ no majo'r d~flculty. County Woman Killed by Auto An Anabelm wol'ftlfl was run over by a Car and fatally ifljured in Fullerton urly Sl!Aday but pail!:e ar• aWI ho"!'l' today on the detalli. Mr'· Unda K. England, 22, died In Ana~eim Memorial Hruipital three houn after ahe was run over by a ~ driven by Berry C .. ~orf.19, of Buena Pack. Police .were certain of ' one fact in lfle case, Seedorf wu not to blame.. ·· They said . they had betn able to determine that Mrs. England had ~n arguing with her husba11d · Haven, 21, but 'didn't know how she h.91pperied to be lying on the street on. W. Orange. tborpe Avenue nesr Brooktlurst Street. Th•Uamlly car waa neirby. -. San .Joaquin District · 2 Bond Meet.ings · Slated Two-meetlnt:s .re..lcltedu1ed1tillt ·-..i to acquaint voters with the April f scbool bond electJoa for Oie San J .. quiD Eletne11\arY Sc)iool Dlslrfct. Both will tan place Thurad>f at 7::111 p.m. Ralph Gates, SuperloUoden~ will be 1uest 'peaker at the ~nl meetm, of thi Aegean H11l1 Homeowners AaocMI· tion at La Par lntermfldt1tt Sdlaot. 25151 Pridera, Mlul1111 Vlojo, ' to oell !ta ·l'emllblnc 11 ,ICll,llOll"ln bonds. TheK fWldo will probably .be .med for Ille new )Dtcr~,tt. ld>oo! wblcb wm a6on be ""11truc!M ID lrvloe. With the aale of, flitao bonds the diatr!CI hu n!IOUl!M Ill l!Jppl)',. acbool.'oW~J!J llid. r ' ~ rcllool • b\llldlJ1c.. ltuldl ..... ay,al~e, bowtvl"• bu1 In order , to qili 111r ·a 11a1eo 1o11 lhe district a1u.t .lloadOd to upactt;'. "Wt!'ve l'Ol')e to a• lot of trouble· and n:pe.n&e. to clean up-the opetatlon, ·· Teel said, ''DOW let's hope yte dOri't have many more complalnll." Other recent meapa ~ keyed to esthetic.s and envJninment at the large mining and producllon. -atlotl .-.,.. the pavillg pf the enUre a~ss l'Ofid, once ano~ .souroe· ot ®st ' Soon, Teel ezplained, the (trm 1'111 start a program of . tree 1plantin1· .,id other e.stheUc projects to restore the ... P•t?• .Bere ' · ·¥ri Patricia N"IXo~. liusy . with BUt•I 11!1 for 'l)'lcifl -~eddin{• .,, shown atter·Frt~as evening arrival at El Toro. '!'be witth· fuLeye upon her ts presumably tha~.o.f the Secret_Se.rvl~•· .. 'Dowit' the I• • . ,'ii•~ I -~ ~·: lTIISSIOn. ' . Trail Candidate Night Slated in Vi~jo ~11SSION VIEJO -Candidate.& for trustee' po&ts in the Tu&Un Union High School Distrlct' will ·be presenfmg their views during an "Introduction to Your candidate Nlghr' on April 1. The event, spcin!Ored by the Parent· Teacher -Or1anizatl<>n of • Ml.alon• VltjO High School will be&ln 'al 7o30 p.m. ln the multipurpose room. Two seita ire at stake and olne cin- dldates · are vYtni for them. Howud S-.lliek, lh<ombenl .... king reelection, recently withdrew from the race because ol buai~ ~ssurea., e ·Girl ef "lo11tlo MlsS!ON VIEJO -Ljru! Erner. MLU S1ddlf:back Valley. hls,recelv'td another l19nor. . , . The senipr at Mission Viejo High Sc~l has been named "a:frf of .the mon~" by· tl)o . mernb<r• of tile !l&ncho Viejo WOfl\lp!'1 Club., ·, Mls1 Exner ls the .. dau~r of ·~· and Mr• .. Wlll!ai" f .. ~r J,; !I Mi!eion Vie~ Sbe i•·• var~ ~l;>eeclead~ .~d Wft I homec:om1"' .P-· · . e Cluo de llf•u• . , . ' MISSION VIEJO -Varloui Cinco de Mayo Fioota commll..,. need help., Voludteen 'are bOlill Mih! 'lo help will> _ \11( annual fieala !..<I •bk~ ·Ir a tradlllonal MexlCl!l dlnn«. lle'1>m may call Mrs. Ruth Jenklnl al l30-209l. 11)'e enttrtalnment commiUee is '•f,lo tooldng" for help. lnteruled" pinoos m•y call ' ·l!u<! ~ .. •al 117-ilil for "It> form,atton. . . . Tbe re.Uva\ ts planned tw· M11 2 1t . M111lon Viejo llllh Scbool. • n :11 1po1Wored by ,Uit P1reil~·te1~,h~r Or(all!tltl\m 'of M!Jalon• VlejO Hllh ScboOl • fJ . la~dscape denuded by \be &balHolleellq: opera lions. The firm p~omx;e~ _. special, ttrlmlc- Jike pellel ~hicb is used in c:oocrete to lessen weight m(I incteue ltrtnatb,. It_ is in U&e primarily for bl.lb-rise a:a- structJon. Shale ix Ille ·pr1me <0mponent of Ille process, the executive ·espl&ined. It la mined, cruslied, •ztruded Into pellel., then fired In Ille b111e rotating kiln at temper_atUre& ·of 2,000 de~ .. Wills· . . ign . Inflation- Bill Today . President Nil~n and Labor Stctttlt)' Jamu D. Hodgson huddled tllrougb Ibo morning in San Clemente conferrlna: over "legislative· problems" connected , with atabillllnC wages in the construction ln· du•lry. Nixon WU ~ toda)' 16 af&!l .lltd annou.nct u ·ezecutlve arder in in a\. \olllpt.<jo . fip! llQliU. ta lllo utloll'a latgul' Industry: -·Nixoll:p, i'-1~..tinn I a du t tr y ii.. .....,.,.---• blll•U..~lm la• ~ .... ~ an Mr oraer 11>11 woold ~· -up ,Wfi1 construcllon wage zuldenites, csiabJWi cralt-by-cr1ft boardl to !)v!:ne·e them apd empower a 1ta.blllza· Uon board to take · action il the guidelines are violated.' . Jn a· followup·action, expec.ted Tuesday. the Cllifornla Wl)ite . House will take the wraps off ita third 'inn1t1on alert." Adminiitr1tlon of(iciala promised it would fOCWI altt.Dtlon on . specific: wage and prloe decltlons made in the private s«tor ·durlnf· !be three months 1i.oca Ille last olerl The President and Mrs. Nncon, who flew btre Frid11y for a tt).d11Y • stay. · IS*Dt· a qulel -SWlday al their ocu.nfron.t villa. Aides pictured the sojourn 1s a working visit .and said that, apart from acting en econorl}ic fronts, Nixoa wOOJd .review Southeast Asia developments. He bas taid be wW announce plans for continued U.S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam about AprU 15. Herei with him were key asslstanta including 01,ief of Staff H. R. Halde1111q. Domestic Policy Coordinator Jobn D. Ehrlichman and Dr. Henry A. Kissincer, a!sistant for national security affairs. ; In b')'ing" to stem innationary trends in construction, 'Nixon l! 1toppln1 short of creatin1 a national price-wage stabili:atkm board. But be is moving closer to-the wage-price iuidellne •Po proach he once soomtd. · Construction worker• were angered las\ moolb when Nixon suapended tbe Dav\1- Bacon Act requifiOg payment of unlbn scale wages: on government building pro. jecl!. Aa part of bis, new approach, -Nlun will restore O..vis-BacOo provialoos wblle bpllfii!& out \he · tbrut !Ila\ It. 111'3' ·ba sospeiided aoew if. fndllstry and tabor fail Ir eooper~i.-wltll bir """' rtablllia· Uon plan~ · · : Ca:mbodtan Army Officer Handed · Death SenteffCe -p~ · PIOOI, Cambodia .. (~"P.) - A Cambodian . c:olooe.I w11 oondtmrffd to death. today for h~' role In the 11'1 ol Ille noc<hwl provincial capllal ult Kt1Ue1o·lbo '111"'1 lut-Spr\nl, ' , A~ ~wound' up.Its~ !ODl1)ll trial of Col. Olen&-Say9mboia. aeoltnclllc him .. !•co .~firing squid. No dito"'&a aet flit tile ei«\illon. I Tiiero is no appeol from lllo coirt ntli•C and lb< . c;olonel'1 Ille can bo apart<! only by ioi.rceulon " Clp>-lfodla~ d>i<f cll 1tate, Cheng HAm1. ' llf10mboen mnalned calm when h stnlal!Ce ·wu prot10Ul1C0d • .::r.!'i"I ~~Ylr~~.:d" ui!t Kraut~'l: mlllo ~-of Plmom l>enii. Ii dllrll1·UD1tmbl•. • • ' \ I . . .., .I DAILY PILOT High Court To Decide I On Gun Law \VASHJ~GTON IUPl) -The Supreme Court agreed today to decide whether the federal Gun Control Law forbids anyone who has been convicted of a serious crime from ever possessing a firearm. The court will hear oral arruments on the issue next fall and winter, then \'.'ill hand do'ol1n a written opinion in the case of a Bronx , N.Y., man, Kenneth Bass, convicted of violation of the 1968 la>A'. He won a reversal in a Federal Appeals Court. The Justice Department pelllioned the Supreme Court to hear the case next term. Othtt lower court opinicns have differed on interpreting the section of the law which bas been used by the government to prosecute about 150 persons. ln other actions, the ccurt: -Let stand a lower court ruling that a federally assisted housing project may not evict a tenant without giving him a full hearing and an opporlwlity to answer complaints against him. The ac· tion came in a case involving · the Durham, N.C., Housing Authority. -Ruled in a Minnesota case that state universities are entitled to impose nonresident tuition rates on students who have not lived in the slate continuously for a year prior to enrollmenl -Denied a hearing to Carlos Marcello, alleged New Orleans crime figure who has been imprisoned on charges or assaulting an FBI agent at the city airport. -Agreed to examine a series of OhiG election laws which have been challenged as denying the ba11Gt to minority parties and independent candidates. The case will be heard next term. -Ruled, 5 to 4, in favor of a Louisiana inheritance law which was challenged as denying the rights of illegitimate children. The state argued the law was intended to encourage marriage and to discourage illegitimacy. In the gun central test case, Bass was sentenced to 15 months in jail on conviction cf two counts of illegal possession of firearms. Bass had been convicted previously . of a felony -attempted grand larceny. • Camper Thieves Make Cleanup In Harbor Area Thieves made it rough for Harbor Area camper and mobile .coach owners over the weekend 1n a leries ~ tlids at Costa Mesa storage aad parking IGts. 1be hardest-bit victim lost bis eatire camper unit, worth $3,000, to thieves who simply drove a truck under it, yanked out the supports, fastened it down and drove away. Wilbur W. Hurst, of 531 Seaward Road, Corona del Mar, told police the theft occurred Lo a storage yard at 2680 Newport Boulevard, between Thursday and Saturday. Investigators said two suspects were seen looking over the camper earlier ia lhe week, nGling they arrived in a truck wilb an old camper unit that was not fastened down. Five otber camper and t r a l l er burglaries were reported to police by victims wbose vehicles were parked at 191)3 Newport Blvd., but some owners ha'"Ve not yet been contacted tG determine loss. Leonard M. Hood, ()f 1701 Paloma Drive, and Oscar S. Bean, of 1309 Ashford Lane, both in NewpOrt Beach, reported a combined total of $300 in camping supplies and clothing taken. OIAll•I COAST DAllY PILOT OJWCO.:S COAST PUaUIHINO CO#."Nl.Y a.Mrt N. w.,, .. ,..,... -PubLW!lt' J1e\ k. c.rt.., va ,,. ...... .._.~....,... ,,.,,,_,, w;,,,n Ellllor Tli•M•• A. M1r-'it111• IMWlll!f lldl .. Ct.1rt1t H. t..u li~t.1'4 P. N.UI A»ftttn: ~i.,, lllllen l.et•H a..eJI Offk.e 222 For1st "''""' 5" C._...OHIN 305 North El C111'1in• ~t•I ............. 01111 Mes.1: DI w .. 1 h 'f Sw.t '41"""'1 llN<ll: lW HrNf*rt 1..-1 .... 1,,. 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"""""Ir' ........ ,., .............. tus """"""· - Intramural ll'in1ae rs Fire Qase Bit 33 American Gls Killed by Reds SAIGON (AP) -Enemy gunners level· ed a barrage r-.1onday at a U.S. artillery base still r!!!ellng from a sapper attack that killed at least 33 Americans and \\'Ounded 76 in what may have been lhe heaviest death tGll on a U.S. in· stallation in the war. The casua1ties were expected to go still higher rrom Sunday's attack on Fire Base P..iary Ann on the basis of still incomplete reports from the U.S. Com· mand. Communications wilh the base were spotty more than 24 hours after the enemy attack, apparently because of damage to the command bunker. The artillery base, located in the jungle 50 miles south of Da Nang, aid manned by a battalion from the America[ Divi· sion. has reportedly been reinforced, hoy,·ever. and no additional casualties were reported from the mortar attack l\1onday morning. The strike "·as approved by President Nixon and President Nguyen Van '11lle11 of South Vietnam. It was called off when intensive 852 air strikes and smaller tactical fighter-bon1bcrs failed to silence enemy antiaircraft fire. Fog mixed v.'ith the dust created by the bombs hampered visibility. Cou rt Se ts Smut Mail Case S tudy From Wire Services The top three-man intramural basketball team at Saddleback College receive trophies for defeating 12 other teams in the college. From left are Micha'el H. Barnett of Laguna Niguel; Allen P. Benjamin, Dana Point; physical education instructor Vincent D. 11cCullough, and Richard Ebel of Tustin. The enemy also shelled a Vietnamese resettlement village about ZS miles north of Fire Base Mary Ann and fGllowed up \11llh a sapper attack Monday, killing 13 civilians and wounding 21. One hun· dred houses were de stroyed. WASHINGTO~, D.C. -California's law prohibiting malling of obscene 1naterials will cGme under scrutiny a:!ll possibly unconstitutional as the result of a recent Costa Mesa case, the U.S. Supreme Court decided today. M~dical Prober T ells Warning To Hartelius Murder Charges Sought Sappers are specially trained infiltra· tors whG are experts with demolitions. NGrth Vietnamese gunners also shelled Chu Lai. tDBStal headquarters of the America! Division, and hit the Da Nang air base 50 miles to the north. Argu!""ents in !he case of alleged obscenity dealer hlarvin h1iller convicted in Harbor Judicial District 'Court on five counts, wilt be heard sometime next fall. Against Beach Woman Field reports said SC\'era\ aircraft v1ere damaged and some Americans wounded at Da Nang. No damage or casualties were reported at Chu Lai. ~iller sent five brochures advertising various books and a movie, v.•hich the court found IG be obscene. He_ and .his attorneys appealed the verd1c1 y,•hich was upheld Oct. 11 ja Orange CG~nty_Superior Court on grounds the material is no more objectionable than that found in reputable Harbor bookstores. By TOM BARLEY Of tllt 0.11'1' ,., .. , 11111 A State Board of Medical Examiners investigator today testified that he warn· ed Dr. Ebbe HarteliUI al "J>=ible disciplinary action" by the board six months before the physician's Corona del Mar offices burned. Agent Leo J. Roth told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he discussed with the doctor in October of 1969 the circumstances surrounding the physician's relationship with a Wanda Melendrez. Roth said his investigation was based on events that took place in March of that year. Roth was not allowed to elaborate on the nature of the charges but Depu ty Dislrict Attorney Al Novick today repeated his allegation that Harte\lus planned the burning of his offices at ~ E. Coast Highway last April 9 to JMUre that records relating to Miss Melendrez: were destroyed. Prosea.IUon witness Jim Blevins has testified that he did the tiurning fGr his sister's Jover and lhal nine da ys earlier he helped Hartellus, 50, fake the thefl of the doctGr's car. Blevins said Harte\ius promised him the vehicle for conversion to a dune buggy once the doctor had collected the insurance money and the in· vestigation into the apparent theft was closed. Newport Arrests T wo Auto Theft Scl1 eme Suspects Newport Beacb poli~ have arrested two persons en charges of operating a car theft scheme using cGunterfeit cashiers' checks to purchase used cars in Orange and Los Angeles counties. Booked in Orange County Jail is Vera iladge O'Neal, 46, of Santa h1onica. Already in custody on auto theft charges from Los Alamitrni l! James Joe Pisciot· ta, 39, cf 11648 Beach Boulevard. Los Alamitos. Both are held on $12.500 bail. Newport Beach Detective Ken Smith said he entered the case In February when a Newport Beach resident reported his car stolen by suspects who bougbl It with a fictitious check. By RUDI flri.'IEDZIELSKI Police said this morning they will seek a formal murder charge against a 40-year..old lluntington Beach woman acc used of gunning down her ex-husband this weekend. Detective Sergeant 'f..1onty McKennon said the complaint would be sought against Doris Barnell. 16162 Sher Lane . tnvestigatGrs allege she used a .33-calibcr autom11tic pistol to kill James Barnett. 48. while he was working on a coffee table in his son's garage. The diminutive Mrs. Barnett, now held at Orange County Jail, has refused to Dog Hero Helps To Arres t P air In Huntington A police dog had a tale to tell today on how to capture a burglary suspect. "Rick," one of three dogs In the Garden Grove canine corps, was called in by Huntington Beach police early Sunday morning after a possible burglary ·was reported in progress at a large plastic manufacturing plant at 7601 Clay Ave. Oct. Sgt. Forrest Lewis explained that poli ce surrounded the large plant of Canbro Inc. until "Rick'' arrived. When the dog v.·as brought in, one of the suspects leaped from a window and ran off through a field , but "Rick'' chased the man and held him at bay. Then the dog v.·as taken inside lhe building with an officer and ferreted out a second suspect. The ty,·o men were being held today on suspicion ol burglary and possessi on of dangerous drugs. The duo, Tony John Catanzaro, 26, of 9422 Oasis Ave .. Westminster. and Raymond Brewer Perez, 20, of 2509 England St., Huntington Beach, are to be arraigned in y,.·est Orange County District Court Tuesday. Sgl. Lewis said that the police dog was used because of the size of the building. ''There 'vere a Jot of stacked boxes inside and ii might have been difiicult and dangerous to find a suspect inside:' he said. "These dogs are trained to find someone in circumstances like these." Judge to Asl{ Calle y Jury If The y Need Aid Tue sda y FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Judge Reid Kennedy said today he will rule Tuesday on whether he will ask Lt. William Calley's murder jury if · need s help in its deliberatio nylhing I do at this point ce inly is dangerous," the judge said. The jury was in he 13th day of deliberations today and showing no signs of being near a verdict. "The government can sit here for,ver ••• business as usual, business as usu· al ," defense attorney GtC1rge Latimer .. complained. "But what about the ac· cused ?" The prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey Daniel. had warned that to make any Inquiries of the jury would have the effett of coercing a verdi ct. "We have no Indication this Jury ha s difficulty in r'1chlng a verdict," Da nlel said. "What \\'e do have here is that they are calmly and rationally deliberating all these issues as )'OU direc ted. "They have not Indicated they need any asslstanct. They have not indicated they are having any difficulty. They have not indicated they eannot reach a verdict." Latimer, 70 years old and for 10 years a judge on the three·man U.S. P..tilitary Court of Appeals . said "if they are not having problems then I don't know what military justice is." Ile said that in no previous court· martial had the jury taken as long to make up its mind. •·1 daresay it's five times as lGng as any that 1 can remember." Judge Kennedy said he could find little legal precedent for a judge asking a jury v.·hether it needs help making up lts mind. He said he has asked the military law library at Bailey's Crossing, Va., lo check whether there is any precedent and that he expected lhe result of the research Tuesday. .. I recognize ifs a decision rn have to make," he said. "I'm inclinfil to agree \\'ith the defense that $Orne lnqulry s.'iould be made but e:iu1ctly what kind and th e time It should be made, I ant undecided at thls polnt. "I should be in a position to rule sometime tomorrow afternoon ." he seld. The jury began deliberations today "Ith "' requrst to see logs made of radio transtnlssions on the day Calley·a troops sv.·tpt lnlo ~ty Lal. discuss the charge with homicide detec· tives. Officers said she may be arraigned Tuesday al West Orange County Judicial District Court. Police arrested ~trs. Barnett only 17 minutes after the alleged 4: IO p.m. shooting in the garage of Michael Burke, Barnett's stepson. Police were brought out to Burke's home on 16641 Bartlett St. after Burke had summoned officers. He said he and his father had 'been working in the garage on a coffee table when Mrs. Barnett ar.r.i.ved. Burke told police that his fJ.ther ~·as drilling a hole in the table when Mrs, Barnett pulled the pistol out of her purse and began firing . Others in the garage thought the drill had mal!unc· tioned, police said. Orange County Coroner's investigator Jim Beiser said today he has not been able to determine how-many bullets struck Barnett but said l.e died of multi· pie gunshot wounds. Barnett, who lived in North Hollywood, had ccme to Huntington Beach to participate in a family gathering, ac· cording to officers. Several relatives witnessed the shooting, according to the police report. Officer Roger Parker wa s the fir st policeman to arrive at the Burke household and gave the dying man mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and heart massage. Parker's attempts failed. Barnett was pronoun ced dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital. Aeling on information supplied by Burke, Officer John Sanders spotted Mrs. Barnett's car in the parking lot of the East Street Bar, 7682 Edinger Ave. \\'bile on his y,·ay to her apartment. ' Sanders said Pttrs. Barnett was sitting alone at the bar. He arrested her on murder charges. She was booked Into Huntington Beach City Jail where she is awaiting arraignment. Rebels Seize Radio CORDOBA. Argentina (UPI} -A group of urban guerrillas took over an Argentine television stalion late Sunday to read a revolutionary proclamation v.'hile showing a photograph of the late Ernesto "Che" Guevara. A Modon u,..-. Associated Press correspondent J . T. "'olkerstorfer reported from Quang Tri, that a U.S. supported South Vietnamese raid on a major North Vietnamese head· quarlers on the HG Chi Minh trail inside Laos was canceled at the last minute because o[ heavy antiaircraft fire and fog. The target area was about 30 miles south of the sector v.•hich was the focal point of the recently completed South Vietnamese thrust into Laos. Ford to Recall All 1971 Pintos To Prevent Fires DETROIT <UPI) -Ford hiotor Co. announced today it v.•as recalling its entire production of Pinto minlcars fGr modification to prevent possible ignition of fuel vapors in the air cleaner. A spokesman for the company said ''a few" cars had been destroyed by fire Jn the. engine compartment, but emphasized that lllere was no case where the flames had penetrated the passenger compartment . A total of 204 ,000 or the 1971 model Pintos were involved, starting from original production last July Wltil March 19, v.•hen modifications were made on all cars coming off the prClduction line. A spokesman said investigation or reported cases revealed that vapors in the air cleaner could be ignited by a backfire through the carburetor. Most cases occurred when cars were started after ha ving been parked. He explained that the new evaporation systems on all new cars provide a can· ister for storage of gases while the engine is !lopped. These gases are suck- ed into the carburetor when the car is started . He said there were cases where backfires ignited these fumes and caused a sustained flame-up in the carburetor air cleaner. The spokesman said that in mGst cases damage was confined to the air cleaner and electric wiring, and in some cases. scorch damage to the paint on the hood. COLLATERAL • . ! i ~; LOAN SHOP CoU1t1ral loa" (Pa wn) S~lall•h Mtmlt9 r1 of Callf. Collat1r1I Loon A11n. Savings like never before with unconditional guaran· tees on everything. They claimed. some of the photographs he ~sed_ are 1denllcal to pictures en public display. ~iller's petition for an appeal was de rued Nov. 2 and he and his legal counsel went directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Basing his appeal on a philosophy argued by many, r..liller says the sta n· dards for obscenity should be uniform across the nation instead of being established from stale to state. _Otherwise. he ar~cs. individual states V.'Jlh less-liberal legislators and citizens ~an_ stop the free flow of materials 1n interstate mail and commerce. The theory is that it could influence everyt~n~ else adversely, whether obscenity lS an issue or not. Pelitio~ filed by Miller also argue that founding fathers and Congress intend for prosecution on distribution of alleged· ly obscene matter to be handled at a federal level. . The Supreme Court test f>f obscenity IS whether. taken as a whole the material appeals to a prurient interest in sex. affronts co~temporary community st.an- dar~s and nas absolutely no redeemin& social value. Quake Insurance Bill Proposed SACRAMENTO (U PI) Assemblyman Jack Fenton (0.Mon- tebello), today proposed a bill to requirt any company that writes lire insurance in California to alsG provide earthquake insurance. Under the measur.e, no such company could refuse to y,·nte quake insurance and the company's policies and rates for such would ha\'e lo be filed with the state. _Fenton, chairman of the Assembly Fma~ce and Insurance Committee, said tha~ 1n ~e wake or last month's Southern Cahforn1a earthquake, his committee learned that quake insurance "was oo• a!ways available and that many people either had trouble purchasing it or just found it impossible to obtain." Jl ! j l . j CASH LOANS when you borTOw CASH SAVINGS when you buy • Come in and see what we offer our customers. A new and unu sual experience In shopping enjoyment. Where people in the know save money every time they buy. 1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY. SRL. TU.D E 'COMI IN AND HOWS! A~OUHD 18)8 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646°7741 · DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lllW-Harbor l ._.., I ' I ' t Santa Ana Rites Cathy Stanfield Wed Calvary Chureh, Santa Ana. was the setting for the evening ceremony linking in mti:rriage Cathy Lynn StanUeld and Bruce Allen Binnqu1 st . Reading the double ring rites was the Rev. Michael Samsvick. Atft11 Plitt. MRS. B. A. BINNQUIST Ari1ona Hom• The bride is the daughter of Mr. and ~1rs. Wayne Dee Stanfield of Costa r-.1esa and !hf' bridegroom is the son or r.1r. and P.trs. Robert Binn· qu1st of Glendora. Mrs. Wayne K. Stanfield was her sister-in-law's matron of honor and Miss Anita Parnakian was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the P.lisscs Dorothy Pamakian, Ruth Ann Johnson. E r i n P.1cKim and Barbara Binn- quist, sister or the bridegroom. Flower girl and ring bearer were Andrea Bell and Brett McKim. Duane Putnam performed the duties of best man and ushers ~·ere Stanfield, Rich Binnquist, brother of the bridegroom, David Binnquist, his cousin. Bill Walls and Keith Peery. The new Mrs. Binnquist is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and Orange Coast College and her husband, an alumnus of Glendora High School and Citrus College, Is serving in the Air Force. They will reside in Chandler, Ariz. Pair Exchange Vows In Morning Ceremony M o r n i n g wedding <:t!te- monies were conducted in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Newport Beach, by the Rev. Dr. Charles H. DierenfJeld for Jinx Lanae Thomas and William Randall Hansen. The bride, who is the daughter of Mrs. James W. Thomas of Costa Mesa, was given in marriage by Frank Mello. Miss Judy Goodell was maid of honor. Bridesmaids in- clud~ Mrs . John Tomlin. Miss Vicki Palmer and Miss Vickie Shulda . Richard Barker was best man for the brklegroom, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs . W. C. Hansen cl Exeter. Ushers were Hugh Nelson, George Geronsin and Russell Givens. MRS. W. R. HANSEN Wed in St. Andr•w'1 • , ·The bride is a Newport · Harbor High School graduate Her husband. who w as; • and a senior al UC! where graduated from Exeter Higlt .,. !he is majoring in art llistory: School, is a UCI ~umnus. 'I -----------------------------~c---~~ AN EXTRAORDINARY VALUE! SHAG OTHER DURAllL! SHAO Prtcet from on)J 3.11 '° 24.tl FPIEE EST1MATES--CALl 547-3993 ' 99 sa. YD, LIVINGSTON'S ---CAllPET • CUSTOM DRAPERIES 14SI SO. MAIN ST. COf. Edinger• SANTA ANA HOURS; DAILY I TO 5;30 P.M.-FRIDAYS 'TlL 1:00 P.11. ------------~-------~------ CJill Crowning Glory beauty salo11i'i ;Jhe now longer look! Beautifully curled by our carefree perm. Complete Bl>DGET PERM ..•••• a1wav• •sss (Normal Hair) SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT SOUTH COA.lT Pu.IA .,..,, l•••t-N1.+ fo s,,,. rtri•IW 14,•7116 Op111 E•1"i1191 M•~f~t1W•I l.iffWn t 2" , .. 341 200 267 I 17tt. ST .• COSTA Mil.SA rti ........ ,,,, ¥If CAJll thvt YtU! l-.,.., bnll Peering Around RETURNING FROM LON· DON is rttiss Ann Hereth Lynch , daughttr of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Lynch Jr. of Costa Mesa. She has been a student at the United St.ates lntematlonal University, Lon- don campus. lier stay included a tour ot I re I and, Scotland and France and a week in Rome. Miss Lynell iYI\ _sophomore at the USIU-1ian Diego cam- pus. ~USS CHRIS SHARP has been initiated into the Gamma Kappa Chapter of Gamma Pili Beta sorority . She is a freshman at Kearney Slate College, Kearney, Neb. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. James T. Sharp of Cost.a Mesa. Toast of Party By ERMA DOMBECK The productrs or The Odd Couple televlslon series art asking the public how they feel about "canned laughter." I thought they'd never ask . I owe my entire sense of humor to canned lawihttr. Before laugh tracks, I used Io think Bob Hope and Don Rickles were funny men. Whal did I know'! One day several years age I was watching the Donna Reed show. Donna bounded into the room. looked at her son, Jeff, and said, "Dofl'l forget your hat." Out of nO\\'here came 500 people laughing so hard I thoughl they'd have a hernia. Thinking I must have miss- ed something I sat uprigltt in my chair and devoted my entire efforts to vihat was being said on the screen. I found Donna could get laughs with such provocative lines as "The doctor isn't in just no\'J''. "I'm in the kitchen" and "Hi the re." The next weekend at " party I went up to the hostess and AT WIT 'S END .. ' ATfENDING the !Ith an- nua l Artists' Ball in the Shadow Mountain Palette Club were Gene and Lue l he I Houston of Palm Desert and Newport Beach and Reginald and Wanda Pegram. also of Newport Beach. ,.1rs. Houston is a former president of the Palette Club and initiated the Dollars for Scholars program during her term. Architectural Group Seats New Officers JODllNG FELLOW adven- ture-seeking passengers tour- ing the Caribbean aboard the SS Stated am were Mr. and Mrs. Paul O'Leary. The ship provides a 23-day cnli~ with disembarkation points in nine different countries. Members Wanted A spring membership drive is now under way for the Fountain Valley Woman 's Club, according to Mrs. \Val- lace Short, president. New members of the club. which emphasizes cultural and pb.ilanthropic endeavors. are the Mmes. Barbara Gardner, James Gillis. Robert Greeley. David Klugman and David Schneider . Pro.visionals are the Mmes . Emma Creighton. William Wakeham, Arthur Legan and William Vornhold . Toastmistress Charter Sought The Orange County Cltapter of the Women's Archil~.:tura\ League has seated r-.1rs. David Klages of Lagul'la Beach as president for the coming year. Other officers include the Mmes. Thomas Moon, Costa 1.1esa, vice president; Arthur Danielian, Irvine. secretary. and Gordon Ensign, Hun- tington Beach, treasu rer. The group, which is af- filiated with the CaliforJ1ia Council Women's Architec- tural League, welcomed new members during a coffee hour in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. Walter Richardson. Honored were the r-.1mes. Chapter's President To Speak DTERY THANK YOU HUNTINGTON BEACH! GRAND OPENING THE IEW WEIGllT WATCHERS CUTER n32 EDINGER(Oot> .... ""'""'""' c ..... 1 IH T IODUCTOIY OPEii MlfTIJfGS Wiii Of Arlll ~ 1 a. ,...._w-.n..n..s.t.11~ ..... W.t.&n-t.7:JOP.M. FREE WEIGllT WATCHERS FOOD KIT! Blair Dallard. John Deck . Don Hadley, Richard Jones. Joseph Smisek, Dale Hansen and John Trutito. The purpose of the league is to promote unificatio• and advancemtnt o( the architeC· tural profession and t o stimulate g r e a t e r public understanding of the pro- fes:Sion and its capacity to be of service: to the com- mun.ily. Crepe Flexible APRIL'S BIRTH.STONE 1h.i Ozdfll(lnJ. Let us bring out the gypsy in you perm an d cut,17.50 I .i,hion :io fJvOn1f" .... lhc t"tCl'°in.i: gv~v lnril. ,\ -ti~ y 10 .. .; or \V1ntl ;,\1,o('pl (.urJ..,, Our .. ,, t1 .. t will t 111 1n11r hd 11, lhrn l.ud 1t with., 6.i!.,,1n1 Phi .. l"lf'rnt 1\ 1th \.\-f)nrlP11tJI Ol'\V <onrli1ion"'"· Y•l11'!1 "" 111•\V~YfhYYOllt•1r-.1"··1<:: (11t ,111 •r>f" 11 111 f,,. ... ,111 ,1,,,-J.n Mo .. ., ~ " ( '" Tllu11., ~•I. 10·00 till t:lO~ 0111•~ cl•v• 10;00 till S:JO ........ ,,,,, :i I f•1hion hl, .. cl, N•'*'IJO•I c.ft •• , ... ,-.. Mond1y, Mire~ 29, 1~71 DAILY PILOT J 9 LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N<1l'ICE 20 DAil V PILOT SC T·llnt IUP••10tt CCW•T Of' T"• STAT« 01" CALll"O•MIA l'O• TH• COUNTY 01" CIANCI Ne, "°"'"' JllOTICI Ofl MUltlNO 01' l"ITITION POI l"ltO .... TI 0 1' WILL AMO il'Olt llTTlll TllT .. MIMTAllY Etl•le of CHA•U .. ES S l EC HT A, ......... NOTICE 15 HEltEIY G1¥EM lrl•t Allolillfl llfeh•• •fllll Jot"'11 SIKlll• ... .,. fllfd her• !n • 1>1111111<1 tor 11r~!f 911 will -tor 1uu1nre !JI l t!lt•t fftt•m1111terv ti! ii.. NlltloM1 1tlt1fntt to wtilch It m.o. tor h1rlbfr ttt•!lcul1 ... • .., ""'' 11\e llrn<I -p1..,, of l'le11lnt1 ""9 -N t ~ .. , Ill'" ,..,..,; IS, 1t71, 11 f :lll a.m~ 111 tM court~ .. DeNrf-1 Ho. l of ttlO CO•"'· .. '1'00 Cl"lc Cetit« Drlvt Wt1!, In 111• City el S..l'da A,.., c:.iuornl1. Delecl ,,.,..,di t~. lt11. w. E. ar JOHN, Covnl'y C141rk WILLIAM MAL .. lllN ,.., WIW.lre •l'fo1., l1Uo flt l.tl ,,_..._ c1n,.,,.1a JMt.t TM: 17111 "'·f»S tl'Mtd AlfwMY tw: "9Hllefl1ra "ublt"*I O••nk C<Ntl DlllY' Pile!, Mtl"<h 1', JI, AIN'll t. 1t11 4'16-11 LEGAL NOTICE ••• JIN NOTICI TO CltEDITOIS IUf'lllOI COUltT 01' TMI ST•TI 0" CAl.r .. o•N•A PO• THI COUNTY 01' Oll:ANOI ... A ... 1'1 1!11··· GI WALES G JACICSON, ~ •. MO ·e IS HEll:E•V GIVE1'1 lo lh• c•tdl • ol 1"4-•bov• l'I•"'"' .S.Ctdent lh•I I 1 ,.,lOIU h•~l... tl•I"" tl•l"t t tilt ll " dKt<lenl ••t '""lrtd lo !!11 lllern, wl!h lht nKttM,., WllKhtrs, In !ht oll~~t of IM (ltr-or !ht •llov' t n• IUled -~·Jr!, or lo pre .. •tr lh•m, wllh RKIH..-V 'IOIKM••· to i~ uMt,,ltrMd •I m.t ottlct or !!>fl• •11.imtv: NOllM"N E. RUDOLPH, ltlO Soltlll 01• Vlo11, S.n C~te. Colllorn11 t,.n, Wl'llth II 11141 Pla<O of bu1Jnt11 el tht Uftdtf'l"rwd In •II mt ll•f'I o.r- ltlhl.,. to tlle flltlt or Mid c1«ec1.,,1. ""1111111 fol>r l!'tfltltrl1 ol1tr llllt llrtl PYD~i;orlort et rhlt llOlk•. Otlwd Morch 1,, lt11 ETHEL G. JACK£0N t rMI "ll:THVll A. JACIC&ON C•E•KUJO.r• ot ,... wm ol 111<1 tbaw n•moo fte:tOtnt NOll:MAN I!, •VOOLPN 1M Moul~ Olt YIU& SIR ci.-... C1Hlft'nla tun Tfl1 tU•tllt .till.,.11&'1' ... , .... ""',.,.. Pubtlt-Or&rtft Co.11! Ot llr l"Uol Ml'l'h 22. it 1nd Atrll J, 12, lt71 '21•11 LEGAL NOTICE ....... , Clll:TllllCATI 01' IUllNl.IS PtCTITIOUI HAMI Tht ""'""11..ect clon c1rllh ht 11 C-11<11"' • Mln.11 II 19)4 NtwOMI Blo'll., Cotlt MIM, C•lllt>f11!1, u/lfHr Ille fkt1llou1 llrm Nft'M ot COSTA MESA Tlll.E CENTEll •Ml tfltl Mid flrtn 11 comPOMd IOI 11141 fol_l,.. atrton, ... _ n•me Ill lull t..O OIK• of rnl~~t II 01 follow>: Lt• E. BoylM, 1tl1'1 11.sdlt , lrvlnt. C1. n.... D•!H Ml•(h \I, 1t11 L" E. I DYl1n it•lt ol Ctlltornt1, O•a,.,e COIHllV! 0.. M1•o;fl 17, 1'11, 11110<'• mt, I N&llN Put>llt ln ..... tor .Mid ~••ta. PttOOlll llY •-•ad Ltl E. BIYllll -nown 10 '"' It IM lhl .,.,_, ~ n•mt t1 •uO«flbtod It ""-wlll'lln 1 .. 1rvmat11 &NI oc;k.-ttdi9H M t•KUl<ld lllt i.llT>t, fOF,.tCIAL SEAL) Loul11 E. Geltt•d•m Notorv Publlt.C..!lforn!1 Prlnc:l•ll OtfJu ln °"'"'' c-tv MY C...mlnlort E•llrtt AutUll •• 1tn llublltl'lecl Ort,,.t CN•I OlllY Piiot, M•rch 11. 2t, ,1,prll 5, U, Jt71 676'1 1 LEGAL NOTICE . ...,, .. !CT!TIOVS IUSINES1 MAMI ITATEMl.NT no.. folro...h.. H'lont t rt dolnt ktlntH •1· HILLSV IEW Sa.DOLE CLUA. 1Ml' Sa H•rl!Or l lvd,, ... n!& ,l,nt, Ct lll. tJlo.I W, F. Hlcoc:-. 16<1:1.i Sa H•rber 11~11.. S1n1• A.flt, Ct lil. "'°'· T. J, HkCl<k. IU:M !lo. Htrbor lllvO., Stnlt Ant. Ct lll. t17Col TM1 buslnu1 11 !Mino canducttd bY o o•rtM'IMo. W. F. Hl(oc:~ Publl1ht0 0•1n11e Co.st 0111>' Piiot M1tc~ n. 1', Ae rll 5, n. !t11 61,·71 LEGAL NOTICE ,....., C••Tl•1< ... TE OF I UllNl11, ,.!CTITIOVS N•ME Tht Uncltt1ltl'fd do C••tl1'¥ th.., '" andvell ... 1 bu1lnn1 .i UI "C" E11t Utfl, CMlt Mtuo, Ct lllo,,,lt . vncltr lht flell!lout firm ntme ol NEWPOltT BAY lNTEllllOlllS t..O 1'111 i.11<1 llrm 11 com· ~ ot t~ Jollowlnti i>et1ont. "'ho1t 111m.t 111 ruu 1..0 Pl•cn ot rHldtnc• a rt •• follow1: """'Id Gti.. "' v;e1orl1, Co111 AW1•. Ca. Thomtl Elle-er, lt" Mt n• do,., Co11t Mt1t. C1, Dt!ed Mirth 11, lt l! Rontlcl Gtll T!'>Orrlt o Elltker ll•!t ol C1llfor"lo, Ortnt• County• 011 ,,,.,.,ct> u. !971. IM!Ort mt. • Nolt.,. Publ!c !" '"° !or 1•lt1 s111e. -Ml!'ILIY tPPCtrf'd ltOM~ G•lt t no Tllonw1 Elldlt• k,_n 10 m• lo IM flle "'""' ...,..,,, ,....,., trt 1uboc•!- "' 11\t w11!1111 l111!rvmfnl •Ml oCkno'NIMt• eel 11141Y bKUltd llW M-· COl"FJC!oll. SEALJ MAllY !SETH MOii.TON HolltY P"bllc • Ctlllornlt Prlr1<IN I Ollk:t '" °''"'' Covnl'¥ MY Commlulon E••lrt• AJ•ll t. 1,11 ,.ublltl'lecl 0!'•"9• c ... ,, Ot llv Pl!ol Mt rch 11. 1' & M•lf J, u , 1111 61•·'1 LEGAL NOTICE IU,.••10• COUllT 0,-THI. ITATt 01" CALl,011.HIA ,-olt THI COUNTY OP 011. ... HOI lie. A"ff .. flOTICI OF NIA•IN• Ofl ,.l!TITIOM flOll. l"ltOIATl 01' WILL ANO 11011 L•TT•11$ T&ITAMINTAll.T' •••• ,. ot WILHELMINA H. conoN . ........ NOTICE IS HElllEISV GIVEN 1~•1 ltt'flNl"CI I! Coll"" htl lllod l>frtln o tMflli... tor r.rvhflf ot wilt '"° let lttu~t ol Lf'lt•" Tt1!.,..fll!trv to l"tlll~r tfitrtnct lo wt11(1'1 II ,.. •• for W•l!>tr pt'1ICUltr1. •ncl 1'111 ,.,. 11-'"' 1tlt(• of htt •I"" '"' --~01 ~ Ill IOt ,1,l'!'ll 11. 1t11 , ol t 1Jt 1.m,, In th• ceu1tr_.. ti o-r1..-1 No. J ol 11fd e911r!, ti l'OCI Cliric C9"ttr cw1... Wt1I. In lht C11Y t!1 ''"'' AN. Catllfltnlt, O•Hld ...... rc:l'I H 1111 W. l , IT JOt4N. '°"'""' , ..... llNftl L l'r•lltt. .,, .... ,,. ..... <..,. IMla. ~ ""' Tlhlft•I~ ,.,....... ..,., '""'"'•"' P"9Hlhtd Cit"-c .. J! Dtl" Pltol MMdt 21, 2t, tflll ..... II J. 1'71 i'1 11 NO. I ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT Mond~1. M.1rth 29, 1971 Fill-er-up Yourself New Trend NEW YORK IAP) -In 1omewhat the same manner as sel(·&ervlce 11 u n d r I e • caught on ln the immediate post-World War II years and automallc car washers some year~ later, self.service gasoline stations now show signs of growing popularity. There Is little evidence yet of a business boom -although critics fear that a smoking motorist might cause a boom of another sort -but the statistics are beginning to look: very bullish. In 1969 there were about 2.500 such stations, according to industry sources. Now the figure ls estimated to be at least 5,000 and probably as high as 7,500, out of a national total of 220,000 stations. Jn addition, several big name companies now are tak. ing lhe development more seriously than just a few years ago, when most of the stations .... ·ere manned by small pro- prietors, including m a n y grocers. Now Mobil has 26 self. service stations under test and Humble 18. In Boise, ldaho, Shell is developing two units. To provide equipment. well known controls manufacturers have entered the field, in· eluding Wayne, Gilbarco, Ben- nett, AMF Tel Tron and Tokhiem, which is owned by Standard of New Jersey. The greatest activity so far has been in the West and South, and the chief reasons given for acceptance there generally i n v o I v e the availability and co.st of labor, remote locations and en· lrepreneurial spirit. These factors often are lhe ingredients required for in· novation or automat ion, although it should be noted that self-service stations really ar~ distinct r r o m automated stations, of which there are few. For the proprietor. you must understand, self-service is a Jabor·saving device, but for the custome r it is hardly thal. More 'accurately, the self· service stalion is 1 labor· transfer device, relieving the seller or chores by passing them on to the buyer. This concept. ingeniou.s in its simplicity, already has rewarded many thousand!-of small businessmen who note that while labor for hire costs money. customer labor often is plentiful, inexpensive, un· complaining and easily e1· ploited. Consider t h I s suggestive copy that AMF Tel Tron uses lo sell its story in the rapidly growing Southern California market, and then judge for yourself it customer labor pays of[: "About 35 percent of in· stallations are convenience stores with a couple of pumps or more outside as an extra business. Some of these stores are pumping enough gasoline to clear $500 profit per month. This rate .,.,·ould pay for equip- ment in less than a year. "The only work of the owner or operator is to fill the ·water squirter once a day and install a fresh supply of wiper towels." Broadly speaking. two types are being used. Jn one. the flow of fuel is controlled from within the ~tore by an electric device. The customer fills up and then comes in to pay. In the other, a money counter is attached lo the pump, restricting the flow to the amount paid for . While this sometimes ir.vites thieves at unsupei:vi.sed stations. it also permits late night atten· danls at remote stations to remain .safely behind locked doors. Two serious drawbacks In· volve the law and social custom. Some fire marsha\!s have objected to un attended pumps, especially with vlolenct erup- ting ln many areas. And lhtre Is always the chain smok~r who forgets the cigarette 1n his mouth when be has the hose in his haod. At last c:ounl, 18 states ~fuse to permit self·serv~ce stattona. althoulh no ma1or fire. have so far resulted. PRIVATE SYNDICATIONS 11,oot .. Sit.too T•r lh.t· ...... .... lbt9t• ,., ... _ .. ,., LN. ,........., I"'-" n"'I· .,, t• ........... ~ .. llfy. c.n tw ~t.hMtit '• 4tK ... t\h ,.,.,. .. ~'· to• """ I .. IRtCOh .... wfttl I Pflfet• ...... 101111 M. AIMSTlOMG- ''1""71 • Aa..c.YiU ... '-l ...... NEW V-12 JAGUAR -Joining the $12.000-plus Ferraris and Lamborghinis as the only V-17 engined cars available, Jagu1r introduces tbe ne w V·l2 version of its six cylinder E·type cousions. In High Gear New Jaguar Slwwn in U.S. By CARL CARSTENSEN 01 IM> DtltJ il'Oll lltff PALM SPRINGS -The Jaguar V-12, the first volume produced sports car wllh a V-12 engine, was introduced here to the press and Jaguar dealers from across the coun· try by Sir William Lyons. deputy chairman of British Leyland Motor Corp. Lid, BLM, the world 's eighth h1rgcsl auto producer also manufactures Austin, ~tG, Triumph, and Rover cars. The new Jaguar, available in botb convertible and 2 + 2 coupe body styles .,.,.ill go on sale this week. The in· lroduction was the first time a new Jaguar has been an· nounced and shown in the U.S. before being seen in Europe. The decision was based on the fact that about 95 percent of V-12 sales will be in this country. V·l2 exterior features In- clude a chromed g r i 11 e mounted in the car's bullet· like traditional E·lypc Jaguar nose ; a wide air scoop under the grille which feeds air to an enlarged coOling system; flared wheel arches which ac- commodate a wider track, and Dunlop Aquajct p r e m J u m radial ply tires : and a chrom- ed four port exhaust outlet. From Eiither end. the V-12 Jaguar ls readil y distinguishable from its six cylinder· forebears. The new V-12 convertlble is built on the same IOf>.lnch whee lbase a.s the 2 + 2 coupe. It is ten inches longer than the six cylinder convertible and overall length of both con· vertible and 2 + 2 is 184.5 in· ches. The new cast aluminum, single overhead c a m s h a f t engine has a displacement of 5.343cc (326 cubic inches) an d develops 272 net horsepower at 6,200 RPM. Ma nu a I transmission models cover 0. 60 MPH in 6.8 seconds, ac· cording to-engineering reports. The new engine .... ·as derived from an experimental pro- totype l'f!ported to ha v e developed 500 HP at 8,000 RPM with fuel injection. The production V-12 uses four Zenith Stromberg carburetors instead of fuel injection because tests showed that lower emission levels were possible with carburetors. Another exclusive feature of the V·l2 engine is a f u 11 y electronic distributor t h al e Ii m i na tes the usual , trouble.some dist r I b ulo r "points" and timing problems of most cars. Distributor pro- blems are the cause of many complaints about loss of power in high performance ca rs and are also the cause of much auto-induced air pollution. Santa Ana Firn1 Names Manager Wiring Services Company has appointed Edward J. Empero 1s marketing manager where he will be responsible for nallon-wide marketing. Empero was f ormt:rl y employed by lnter·Pak. a division of Lltlon, as progr11m m~nagcr and Viking Industries as a part o[ the sales marketing group. \Vlrlng Services Company is a soflware 11nd automPted ma;nufa cturlng proceu organiz.alion in Santa Ana. 1,000'1 Oil OIL ,AINTINGS WHOLHALI W,All HOUSI Ol'IN TO THI l'UILIC 50°/o OFF Ult I. IOINGlil, SANTA ANI. ,._. t»-.... out.••• WAJiTIO c::::a The new Jaguar distributor has no breaker points to get dirty or pilled and requlres no adjustment. The electronic distributor was developed for use in Formula I racing cars. Jaguar is the first production car to use it. As in previous Jagtlars, lhe V·l 2's suspe nsion is com- pletely independerit on .all four wheels. An important addition is anti-dive geometry, a feature first engineered for the Jaguar XJ6 luxury sedan. This limits fron t end dip on hard braking. At the same time, it allows softer front end springing for a more com- fortabl6 ride. Fr.on! track is 54.63-inches, "4 .63 wider than sii: cylinder E·type1. Rear track i.s 53-inches, a gain of thref Inches. Power assisted ra ch and pin· ion steering is standard equipment in the V-12. New steering mountings i n s u r e virtually complete elimination of road shocks and vibrations. The new mountings reduce the turning circle from 41 feet Jn previous XKEs t.o only 36 feet, making the car easier lo park and maneuver. itlotaey's Worth Average U.S. Family Scared of .Squeeze By SYLVIA PORTER Are you so frightened by the relentless upsurge Jn your cost of living, Mr. and Mrs. America, that even though you have a record amount of in· come. you are cutting back your buying of big.ticket items and spending not much more than you have to o n necessities? Do you feel so unfairly squeezed by the peak totals of all sorts of taxes you are be ing forced to pay that even though you remain a member of the Silent Majority, you hale the very poor and the very rich for robbing you of your buying power? Are you so depressed by the unemployment you see around you that even though your job or business seems secure, you instinctively want to keep adding l'l your nestegg of savings? "Yes," to all three ques- lLons. 'says John R. Bunting. president of the F I r r; t Pennsylvania Banking & Trust Co. and formerly econom.ist- vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. You, America's cruci11lly im· portant consumer, • ' a rt shook," Bunting d e c 1 1 r e d emphatically in a long Jun· cheon interview last week. "Thus. consumers will not fuel the boom thal the Ni1on Administration has been forecasting for 1971." There's absolutely no doubt that the extent or 0 u r economy's recovery In 1971 depends on you. Compartd to the impact of your total apen· ding on the speed and site of 1971 's economic comeback, the impact of both buslne:ss and government s p e n d I n a shrinks to minor s1t:nltlcanct. But if you are typlcal. you arc . as Bunting cl;iims. IC8f'f:d abou1 the climb in your living cosL'I monlh after month. 'You show this In your disap- pointing buying or big-ticket durable goods pa rlicularly: a u t o m o bllcs. appliances, household goods. If you are typlcal. you feel terribly squeezed by tai:ts, tspec1ally at this time of year . You don't $&Y it openly, bot ynu detest the poor who 11~ crowding the welfare rolls and the rich who arc cscaplng tsx· es. "The middle-class -peo- ple m•kina tto.ooo to $75,000 . . ... . . . . . Complei.;-New Yori{ Stock List I l I II-"" ,, ... •t,• :.r. di '"' "·U ~ '·n ~i·~ ~~:f.'1.. ::i ,.., •• ! ... t .. "1l. flttM I M fDjihl ... 1'9etr I.JC • • • • • • • • • • ' ..... ' # . . . . . # • • • • • • ' • • ' • • • • • • # • • MondAy, Matd1 :9, 1•71 SC DAILY "LDT %l Monday's Closing Prices Complete New-York Stock Excliaiige List ., ..• .., ______ ._ ______ , ( .... , ....... °""' . ' ' ' ' ~ . . . ' . _ ... · .. ·~ n "IL V Pll.Ol Golden West Sets 'Gypsy' Delayed. Original Comedy Everything wasn't qulle coming up roses ' for the South Coast Light Opera Association Saturday night. Actors T ea1n HOLLYWOOD tUPI) Brian Keith has joined Dean f\iartin for a starring role in ··somethinc big" during his hiatus from "Family Affairs" television series. Golden \Vest College will present an original comedy by GWC drama instructor Charles Mitchell as its spring theater production, "Claude and Marion," which will open April 23 ror two weekends, is described by its author-direetor as •·complete insanity -total l y un· believable." Mitchell, who has a num~r of plays to his credit, describes the current project as '"a different kind of writing than I've ever done. The plot is ridiculous; the scenes are short: the actors are in and TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening MARCH 29 a:oa 1J Ill ,._. J1rrp Dunph1. Lec•t· ited 11mbllnr in eam. is utmined in 1 sl)td1t livt·Ptrt report sltrt· in1 ton!1ht. 0 kNBC N.....-..ict Tom S•ydei. 0 nt Allt11 She• fJ Sil O'a.dl: Mov11: {C) (90) "llltW £.de•" (western) 'sti -Rorp C1lhoull, Y\IO/ln1 OtCtrlo, Mira Cor•I d1J. The wife ti t ruth1111 sell· . st)olld blran of Utt Or11on hontitt !tits.,, old pionetr custom .tiereby 1 widow lotS to th1 tirst m111 who d1i1111 lier, btcaLBt 1111111 men hM 1'1!-.om; lo kill hw husband. 0 Diet y.,, °"' m n. FlilblDMs m ~(J)bTnk m Mirfll1!1"4 "Smoky Mounl1iM #I." ED turrnt &lftb @:) M• If Ybitn fl) Mnlca J EltrtU11 1:05 GI!) Aqlri Tm P1tin11 l :JOIJ ®1 (j) Htrl's LllCf (R) Luq convintU d1um upert Budctr Rich lo 1in Cr1ir ffM lts10!IS IV help him win 1 Kholariliip In 111 1m1teu1 conttst. ONYPO o @ rn m mmm • q,.. .... Sllrvivll "A looll It ltle Pllthl of I~• Amtrit1n 8'1d Ell!• end the Prom1st of our Gr11t Mi111tory fliel!h." This prl!Wfttation IN "The Americtn Sports.min" is holt1d br Curt Gowdr i nd fe1tures Bi1t1 Crosby Ind W~lilm Sllatner. m David Frist S!low Guuts: John Marley, O.wid Douflas Dufltln, Frt<l1 Payne, Gtorit W11l1e1 Jr. Ill'"'"'""' Ci) Ptt!ln for LM111 GiiJ Mlptlltt Y1ldtz Show 19 ()) Ntn/W•lll11J!.poib fI'i) Fllfllf F111llJ fJ) Noticitf'9 34 Q;) W111P II Achtnllllt EI!) LI Hort Ftmililr con ton1utl1 E!) Ntn Jim H1wtho1nt. 9:00 II ~ 00 MIJtlttTY RJ.D. Emmitt Is VllJ proud and e1clled wh1n 1 l1ree industri1l lirm writes i nd w1nts to buy his p1tent lor 1n old, lor· 101ten invention. l;l5fnlArtStMlit "Puppets #J." t :JO 0 c...did c....-. m nt flyi111 """ II) IIJMIC -El> KM,..Mct LN11 lllCIJ COS -l[i) SlllctM Fll1111/Music1!1 m ni. Dnttt 11.,.rt 0 @ (!I m WIMM P'1"1111i9'1 Mw- lt; (C) (Zllr) "'l1lt I ii CountrJ"' Plrt I (westtm) '58-Grerort Peet, Ch1rlton Knton, .lt1n Simmons. An Ustemer 1rffla lo m1r11 1 r1nch· 1r's d1u,nter ind btalmes lnvol't'td ill I dutl OWi Wllll' rifhl5. OTMF1fltin u 1111 rn m"" • ..., -(C) (Zin) "TM L1n1 RiM Kn! ... (dr1m1) '67 -Glenn rOld, Geor11 H1mllton, lnltf Stewns. A t1!1 of w1r 1!1d wn11.ncc fcied out In 1111 out rapidly " Set during the Renaissance in 1220, the comedy deals with mistaken identies. O e b b i e Chester plays Claude Deceiver, a woman whose famJJy is next in line for the throne-but in her country a woman cannot becOme queen, so Claude has been dressed as a boy s:lnce birth. The second major character is Marion Montfort, played by Rick Wailes, the champion of the courts who is ashamed or his name. Claude and Marion become involved y,•ith each other while the latter still thinks his friend is a boy. Others in the cast are Roland Barajas, Ren at a Scheduled to open their production of tbe m~ical •·Gypsy,'' the San Clemente musical players were forced to cancel Sa l urday 's performance when Carol Stanfield, who plays the leading role of Madame Rose, contracted a throat infection and was unable to sing. The temaining t h r e e performances -Thursday through Satun:lay of this v.·eek -will be presented as sc!teduled. according to Ruth Yielding. director of the SCLOA show. Curlain time is 8 o'clock in the Art! Pavilion, 105 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. Florin, Bill Panza , Sonya';~~~~~~~~~~. Newburg, Don Poland, Oon1~ •1ayes, Bill Land, G u y Cockerum, John Yeiser, Mike Leddy and Cherie Boal. ~do "IW'JOtt NM:M -•t .... --M l•MIMo tW. ltlo -Of. )·l>SO EXCLUSIVE ELllOn GOULD OOH SUTHERLAND MARCIA RODD "THE LITTLE MURl;>ERS" IRI -ALSO- JASON ROIAllDS "THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE" CRl EXCLUSIVE '"' ... "' ................. _,, ............ .. ~ FIAY STAN:·l'EAllERT llOSS """,,_ llarllra Strr.isald Gearge Segal ffiOwl ml ALSO "SUDDEN TERROR" R ALSO PLAYING e Peter Sellers in "THE PARTY" . . . ' ' . ~ 'Sound of Music' Casth1g Revealed Casting has been announced Five evening perror1nance1 ror the fo~ullerton Foollighters' are scheduled in t h e fllOfl ambitious production, auditorium of Wilshire Junior Rodgers and Harrunerstein's High School on April 16, 17, "The Sound of Music ," which 24, 30 and May I. will be presented next month. ~-~~~~~~iii~•[ Pat Warner, best known forll her wo r k with the Westminster Co m m u n i t y Theater, has won the le.ding •£fWrf•"', P.•.I 11: role of Maria, the convent ~ postulant who be c o m e s governess to seven motherless children . Robert Cannon will portray the children's father , the stern Caplain von Trapp. Other major perrormers in elude Gent:v:eve Fowler as the mother abbess. V i c k i e Saunders as Elsa , lt1arvin Coller as ~1ax and Scott Bylund as Rolf. The children will be played by Beth Gibson , Randy Mandigo, Wyne t t e Cook, Linda Edison. Sally and Wendy MacKain and Richard Slocum, while Harriett Dasher and Eugene Wendel play Uie Von Trapp servants. I Eill:lm!i~ Jan Duncan is directing thel. musical, with Stephen Pearson conducting and K a t h I e e n Melcher choreographing the show. UTTU FAUSS AnD llG HA~SY Alio plarln, - 673-4048 -Open 6,45 Now -Ends Tuesd1y H•nry Fo111ht-Klrlt Oa11tl111 9 .1\TI'LE OF l\GlfRS -ALSO- "AN IMMENSELY ROMANTIC MOVIE WITH STYLE ANO CRITICAL INTEUIGENCEr _._, __ ~. ,...., "THERE WAS A CROOKED MAN" • NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT Fastest in West ·1 Buy It. Stll JL Try the fastest response In th!! Wtst against your 1 own clock. Test Dime-a-line Ads, where th!! action ls, in S.1turdq'1 DAJLY PILOT. I "T>."li."Lawrertce's TIIEVIRGIN AND TilE GYPSY FOR EASTER VACATION * STARTS WEDNESDAY-MARCH 31 * AT ALL 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS C:.Pi...i,M-i. A ~ P.-Rrlmt-..... Jc-c.i-- i!!J<D> IN MISSION Vll!Jc);· EDWARDS flnal d•rs or !lit Ci•il Wn. \'=====================:".':=========='II m nM ln\'ldtn (Ji) Los Ohid"91 &) AIC Nftl CINEMA VIEJO 7:00 II CIS NIWI Walter Cton-ltt. CJ m NIC .Ntws Onld Brlnklty,I .lohn Clttnctll<H'. Fran~ McGet. fJ Wl!ars Mr Unt? m (fiJ (})I LM l uq G)Dr1p1I 9 (l)Juli1 fD Tiit Wll14 Wt Lin 111 "Surviva l in lhl Se.a." Tetls ho" lish IUrvivt In lhtir fish .. lf·lisll world. 9 (I) Tntll • Coti.,q11111C11 @ri) a.rtsl tllt Lirin1 Wtrd m Ml Alllf ,., n ED lltd .to1n1I Sammy D1vl1 Jf. discusses his unlQue ureu. tll) 30 Min.tit a>"°' al) Natadt1 ' t:JO& IS (j) Dom O.y (R) Doris la aiven the 1ssi1nm111t to 1et the m11azlnt ri1hts to 1 militant fem- inist's boot when the autllot ([f'wl1 Allman) rwfuses to dt1I w;tti th1 men In the office. 0 C.d'lll CIJHl'I al) Si•pl11111111t Mu11 m ... , ... €ll) Mlllic:ll1/hst«'1 Ont !El CidMI de Anplliff 110:00 0 tij (I) Ciro! l1t11ttl Show 1'1ul ! l)'lldt Ind /'llnettt r1brlJ l\ltSI. 7:30 IJ IS(]) 5111MIOll1 (ft) !ht s1111ll1 0 Qwi11•1 5 flews Kevin St nd111, son end d1uJl!ter of 1 poor, h0111sl1 Buney Morris. dirt !armer (IUISl·Sllr Ch1r1ts Aid· Q Butlf Wlfd Nf'llll m1n}-lnd their lo'o'ablt do1 A•mtd Poor1t1-1et thtir ftlhtr into trouble m News Pllln1m/Fishm111. lfhen flier ste~I an ell't'elope lu~ o! aJ 111111 Trap Al Hi mel hosh. monty lrom their UIN:!e's bank tfler ffi WMkl P'rm ht deniet their lither 1 btdlr needed al l.JIC1Cita loin Oii ''flit Money Store" 1pisode. 0 Qi (I) tr1l l'ltDllEJE f19111 t Cl) Hit 611 MMtnl• l lrd'M,Jt Yitw (C) (30) '1~1 Oilfi· lO:lO 0 Mn Welt Wtff: Mowit: lht cult P1uen1er." In this new tomed)' .tSm) "l:o W11t, Yo11111 M11" (Id· Htlts. Mewt rdtss Mi11it Grover v1nlure) 'l6-J.111 Wtsf, Rtndolpll {Millictnt M1rtin) and htt fellow Scott. sltwtrdeu M111i1 Ralston (Patte Q) Blh )olo111 """ nl'!ltY) find IN)Ubt1 whtn they 11kel iil lnmtldnfllbrt rw1ntt Oii 1 troubl1.somt 111wn1e1. D Yifli Ril Cira1!1111 Show Scheduled ll:OOf) i8 00 m ,..., ttM.sts art Ph!l Ford, Mimi Hines. Q fD (j) m News .loll Rubensttin, Jttl!flit 81rll1 ind !lrKk Sttvens. 0 (llJ CIJ aJ lt4'1 Ntkt I Dttl Monty Hall hollts. CJ 1111nlitil S MMlt; (CJ (2tir) ''ClnMtl JIMI" (dt uic) ·~arrp ltltlontt, Dotothr, Dtndrid(I. P11· tlon1 ""' bttwltft ti'! 111111 (Ulld It 1 pt11diwt1 pl1nt ind one of his co-1!0Btrs in this modem dq .,.,. sion of Bil'ef1 "C1rmtn." fJQ)N.., O Mmt: "lttlilirt" fcomtcly) '64 -JNn·Pau1 Belmondo, .1t1n Stbtrc, m Mewit: .,"' ...... Wll Ctt y,.• (mystfl')') ''2-Bori1 Kil· toll. m .. 11e Old: llllill""1- tJ:JO 0 9 (J) MttY l ritti• m Trdl • Coil*f•1nut 81rllw hosh. ""I 0 @ (i) m t.fl1111 CtrMn T on1 R•ndtll is sub111tut1 llo91. ID II Ttk" 1 Tllitt fl) CitJ Wltdttn m an1m1 )0 m La D111111 7 .55 m c..tit11 41 St111ndo1 0 a> Did Clrrtlt Ql Mnlt: '1h Wqnnl Ciir1" (drt· 1111) 'S7-Mucl1 HtndtBOn, [ l 1:0D tu. Cf) Did" tawtl ll~ m Ml'lie: "Th Frmft CM«" (myt;• 1:(1 D D (I) tD ll•lfl·I• (R) Q~ l«J) '45--lon Clt1nl)'. stat Wiiiiam r. !l11tllltJ 1111k1s 1 11rt l'lriltll flDllll tomt111t1!1tin1 to Cl)!!!· .... D aJJ CJl Ill -,,., "" [ublfllb lloll&. mTtTtl .. Trvtll l :<IOIJ Mtwis: ''Cul • L•l SllldW' (mftm) 'S~dil Murp1t1 • oo- 1:JO I) MR'lt: ...._..,.. (dr1m1) '.tl-Roblrt ay111, Pt! o·llrllL Tuesday m {C) "f"fPW Atlld.~ (tdtlll> lure ) '5' -StffllrtJ Ht)'dttl, Jet \ Dhil. Ctorp Brt•I. Het1JY rOllllt. --,='"""""""""E"S:.-P•11. DAmME MOVT I 1:00 m "Chiu , ..... (df•m•) '51 - J·OO IJ "nt .wt c...t Ho!M'" (drl·! Gt111 fttrfr, Ntt "Kin1" Colt, At111t 1111) 'lS-ClaLIMtlt Colblff, frtd DiUJMOll. . MtcMlllfl'I, "KW M111ll ,,, ..... j 1:00 Q (C) "Wt M1Hd 1111 N..,.. (dr111111 °S2-ll1uc.e Cabot. (eo11df) ·a -LloJd Hiiiin, .IOIR t:JO 0 (C) "frttdlle'" (d'1mt) '51 -D'tr111. $hlllc1 Wint111, .lot! MctrN, '•Ill 4:JO I> (C) "'Oar If th IHiu.- ktlly. (waJtetnl '58 -f1~ MteMPmy. 0 "kllbtf" {d11m1) 'll -Stitt lol'lft [ricson, M11it Wlnlbof, • • SA"i tl•!GO ""' Al ll PA, l>JW~ q ~ l '.l ' 'I'll) 7 Academy Award Nominations-Best Picturt Ifft Actor -Rro11 O"N"I hst Actreu -All MacGftlw I} rliMllm l'tnlRl'rlm ::; ~· Alia lorbara Hlf'Shy 111 ''THE IAIY MAIER" (l) ' DUSON HOH'MAN'\ .umf 816 M.\N. FW181oi9oll""i!d•li0olcw• ~ Chief Don George • Faye Dunaway LAST WEEK-POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY, MARCH 30 .... TM• WRST•NllTI':• cewn:lllt Academy Aw•rcl Na"d ... fer ... , Acter ' Actl'fte 201h Ceol"'Y.fO< P1esenls JAMES EARL JON ES, o JANE .ALEXANDER . =-:-.=-.-.. -.... _ l!IB "TheGreat •. -, P~tnt tn·U'l h" ' "Mc~:~z~:·~~.~E~;~<GP> Color W lie Hope".~' ~ -k· STARTS WED. 3/31 WALT DISNEY'S "BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE" (G) ACADEMY NOMINll llST ORIGINAL SCRIENPLAr ''IAe'' ~ ., ••• ,, OH \:.# ..... ~'·' ' "' KAll90lt ll¥lt. Kf ftSON fT, CCSTA 91SA -64 .. 0!n 2 lllW IOUlll SM OlltOO FWY. ll •ctUlf l10t••J£tSC STARTS WED. 3/31 WALT DISNEY'S "BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE" (G) ii'i:u:".;..-:-.=.-... ;: ...... -.: P'l111 MAllC LESTER 111 "SUDDEN TERROR" Al RUBAN -SAM SHA\.Y ,,.,.,. G•·· FD c•aa1u .• , I .. LAST WEEK-POSITIVELY ENDS THUR., APRIL I .. •--.: - • • •t'..C .. 94.VO. llT •U.tS • • ~. CU•T _..,, 6 ..... ---· M7.,._. • MU"n -TON ....c;N lnl P,.IMt" "DARLING LILI" Sta rts Fri., April 2-Rod Steiger, Christopher Plummer in "Waterloa'' (G) • dlar'-' ... •: madho .... wlfe .• I Cl'OMl"~J~~ 6D ............... , .c- a lrtri: perry f.tm ........... , __ _ St1 rt s Friday Ap ril 2-Walter M11tthau--Ela lne Ma In ''A Naw Leef" fG J • Monday, March 29, 1971 s DAILY ,ILOT :J Effect of Cabinet Reorganization Detailed WASHINGTON fAPl -President Nix· on'l! proposed federal reorganization would, if adopted, converl the lntert0r Department rron1 an agency traditionally rooted in Western land to a manager of the nation's vital resources. Land, water, rnincrals and fuels, the sciences or oc-ean, atmosphere and earth : All would become the responsibility of the proposed Department of Natural Resources. The Interior Departn1cnt already has a hand In these areas but il would, in the reorganization, annex huge areas now governed by other agencies. giving Interior truly national scope and authori. ty for the first time in its !~year history. Absorbing the en!ire presenl Interior Department, lhe proposed Departnlent of Gay Group Hits Stand By Cleric COLLINGSWOOD, N . J . (UP £) - Members of the hompoh1/e action leaguf', angered at \'.'hat they cal l lht> "anti· homosexual bigotry" of t!1e flev. Car l Mcintire, picketed his church Sunday . "Gay love 1s beautiful," read the sign of one of 17 members of the Philadelphia- based league pacing before the Bible Presbyterian Church. ··Ho, ho. ho1nosexual. :\1clnlire i:s in- effectual ," read another. lt1clntire faced the group led by Paul Long, presitlent of the Board of Trustee.! at the Philadelphia Christian Homophile Church. and sald: "There is nothing in the Bible aboul a homosexual church. llomosexualily is a denial of the creation ordinance and the teachings of Jesus.'' Long responded by saying, "lloniosex· uality is not sickness or sin. It's a v.•ho!esome sexua l development, not a lesser form of sexual outlet." 'There are at least tv.·o churches in Philadelphia that havr opened their doors to homosexual worshipers, Long said. Met er Bandit Strikes Again A Laguna Beach parking palrol oHicer went out to en1pty the downtown parking meters Saturday mcming and, when he got there, the meters were bare. For the second lime in six mcnths friday night , the token bandi!, armed only wilh a rnastcr key, cleaned out I 13 parking n1elers located in city-owned lots. City of· ficial!\ have been unable to determine how the thief obtained the key, although a similar theft occurred last fall. Aulhflrilics ·could not estimate the dollar Joss to lhe bandit as the n1cters hold various amounts of coins and parking token s. Natural ResourceJJ would receive: -The Forest Service: Soil Conllt'rVl'- tion Ser\'iCe; agricultural and economic research scrv1tes: and watershed loans prcgran1, all fron1 the Department of Agriculture. -Planning and funding or civil func- tions fron1 the Arn1y Corps of Engineers. -Civilian aton1 ic energy development functions fro1n the Aton1\c Energy Com· mission. -All functions of the now-independent Water Resources Council. -Oil and gas pipeline safely programs from the Depart1nent of Transportation. -The entire National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, created on· ly last year as a branch of lhe Commerce Departn1ent. ln the process. the Interior Deparllncnt • • 30 YEARS SERVICE Phillip H. Norris Laguna1t Cited For 30 Years With Pltone Co. A Laguna Beach resident has been honored by General Telephone Company for his 30 years of service Wlh the firm_ Phillip H. Norris, of 1617 Hillcrest Drive. began 'A'Ork with G e n e r a I Telephone in 1941 as a commercial representative in lhe lirm ·s Santa f.1onira office, He once served as a manager of the company's Laguna Beach office and is now sales manager of the lirm 's Long Beach headquarters. Norris is a former president or the Laguna Beach Ch.amber of Commerce and of the Rotary Club. lie is also former chairman of the local An1erican Red Cross chapter. Boh Cununinµ:s Weds LAS VEGAS, Nev. ~UPI) -Actor Robert CummiTYJ:s and his former ~ecrc\ary, Regina F'ong, honeymooned today. Cummings. 00, and ?o.fiss Fong. 32, \\"ere married at 11 :34 a.m. Saturday, thr. lime the tv.·o astrologers assured him 'A'Ould be best for the cercmcny. would swell from 1ts 1971 size of 57.920 employes and a $2 blllion yearly budgel to some 110,708 employes and an aru1ual $5 billion budget. The Agriculture Department alone - slated for dismantling under lhe Nixon plan -would contribute over 37 ,000 employes including 2I,43tl in lhe Forest Service and 14,419 in lhe &>ii Conserva- tion Service. Some 12 ,422 employes would join the ne"A' department "·ith a transrerrcd Na- tional Oceanic and Atmo s p ht r i c Adrninistration. The department itself also would be reorganized, realigning its pre.sent func- lions and aCC(ln1modating new ones. Operational acitivities would be divided among five branches : -Land and Recreation Hesour(..'tS, absorbing funcllon.'i or the present Assis- tant St<!relary for fo'ish, Wildlife and Parks; land responsibilities of the present assistant secretary for Pubhc Land ltfanagen1ent : and such. newly ac- quired areas as the Forest Service. -Water Resources, based on the present a.ssistanl secretary for Water and Power. -Energy and lt1ineral Resources, enlarging th.e role of the present ·assistant s~"retary for Minreal Resources to C<1ve.r th~ broadened responsibilities in energy, especially atomic development. -Indian and Territorial A ff air s , assigning these responsibilities 11 separate division of their cwn and separating them from land management, where they are now consigned. --O<:eanic, Atmospheric and Earth Co11rt Date Today Fugitive Broker Back Bv 'TOl\t BAR I.EV OI 1111 0 1llr l"ilel Sl•ll • Ill Joseph Dulaney is today back in Orange County. just one year and three months after suspicious investors in hi.; \Vorld financial Trends empire learned that the former Newport stockbroker had abandoned his Lal:una Hills "Taj i\iahal" and taken his· wife and lhree children lo West Germany. Dulaney, 37. was booked into Orange County jail during the weekend and wa.:; scheduled to leave his cell today to appear in Santa Ana ~1unicipal Court on charges of grand theft . (orgery and <:onspiracy. His bail is set al S312.CMXI. Orange County investigators brou ght the globctrotting investment counselor back from the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao during the weeken;;l to fate charges that have also been ievclcd against his wife, Marlene, JI, and his \Vorld Financial Trends vice president James Shipley. Shipley, 38, of 16951 LowcU Circle. Coun.ty Huntington Beach, goes lo court Apr il ~I for his arraignment. lie is tree on $250,000 bail. Investigators are concentrating their search for lt1rs. Dulaney in the Montreal area and are pursuing reports that Ou\aney's attractive wife recently took the couple's three children to the C3na- dian city. The Dulancys returned to lhe United States from \Vest Germany early th is year. Despite a hunt by F'BI agents and Orange County investigators, they lhen returned to Munich. FBI agents, cooperating ~vifh Interpol, v.·cre warned that Dulaney was schedu!t"d W \'isit Curacao and U1e former stockbroker was arrested lilere last v.·eck. Investigators hope lo consolidate court <iclion against the trio and it appeared likely today that rourt officials would attempt l.o place Dulaney and Shipley on the same calendar April '.!I. Bee Dee Spurgeon, 84, Pioneer's Widow, Dies Bee Dee Abbott Spurgeon, 84. became the lhird member of Santa Ana's foun- ding family tc pass away in the past year when she died Saturday ln a Santa Ana hospital. She \Vas the \\'ifc or the ]ale \Vil1ian1 II. Spurgeon Jr.. son of the founder of Santa Ana wllo died June 22 at 85. Her son, \Villlam H. Spurgeon Ill, founder of the Boy Scout Explorer pr(}- 1:ram died Sept. 13 in Newport Beach. The Spurgeons had been married 61 years and at !he time of her death i\1rs. Spurgeon continued lo Jive in the family home at 1617 f.1ain St .. Santa Ana. It was built by Mr. Spurgeon in - 1910 the same year ~ couple married and they lived there the rest of their Jives. Mrs. Spurgeon said that wheQ the home \VIS built it was a mile out of town but 'the city grew up around it. She came lo California with her family in 1900 and \Vas a classmate and fellow ,i::raduate of Pomona College with her husband. Mrs. Spurgeon is survived by a daughter. Mrs. William A. Bagley of Santa Rosa. seven grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Private funeral services were held this morning at Waverly Church with burial al F'airhaven Memorial Park. Sciences, ('(lffibinlng Interior's present geologic activities with the octan·at· mosphere role to be transferred from the Commerce Department_ In his message to Congress, Nixon indicated that Indian affairs might be as out of place in his proposed new department as some critics say it ls /today in the Interior Department. Indian programs, Nlxon said, would be administered by the N a t u r a I ReStiurces Department "until such time: as an acceptable alternative arrangement could be worked out with Indian leaders and other concerned parties." In calling for the new department, cne of four to be created by melding seven existing agencies, the President Three Legs? sald lhat as It now stands "v1rlous paru of the interdependent environment are still under the purview of ftl.ghly independent federal cfficea. "As a result, federal land policies, water programs, mineral p o I i c I e s • fcrestry practi~s. recreation activities and energy programs cannot be easily \ coordinated, even though the manner * Jn which each is carried out has a great Influence on all thJ others. "Again and aglin we encounter in- tragovernmental C<lnfiicts Jn the eD- vlronmental area." Nixon added, "We cannot afford lo C"Ontinue in this manner. The challenges in the natural resource field have become too pressing ... government must perform at its very best if it is to help the nation meet these challenges." I ' I Aquarium in Phjladelphia wh ich imports thousands of African water frogs each year discovered this mutation with an extra leg. NormaJ1y a mutant lives only a few days. This one is one and one-half years old. Picture, with special lens, magnifies frog's size. Boat Sh1ks Off Newport; Two Perso11sAboardSaved 'Two perStins were rescued Sunday when their 16-foot inboa rd runabout aJr parently swamped and sank about one mile off the Newport Harbor jetty. Orange County Harbor Department of· ficer!I monitored a radio call from the yacht Captain's Lady al 4:11 p.m. noti- fying the U.S. Coast Guard it had picked up two victims of a boat sinking, ~farbor Department patrol vessels escorted the Captain's Lady to the Jiarbor Department dock. 'The victims were ldenUfied as William Harmon, 25, 24 Fleet Street, Marina dcl Rey, and .Judy Gentry, 25, I5030J Cornuth SL, Bellflower. Neither were injured. The couple told Harbor Department officers they had launched the boat at Bay!lide Launching earlier in the af· lernoon. They abandoned the craft wh.en it bega n taking on water from an un· de!ermined cause. A llarbor Department ·fire bcat search· ed for the craft but found only two ~eats and an engine hatch. The craft was christened Ship of Fools. Contest Slated For Raft Surfers The Laguna Beach Recreation Depart- ment will sponsor a raft surfing contest during Easter Vacation cpen to area youngsters . The event will be held April 7 at 10 a.m. on the Main Beach with trophiel"I and prizes going to the winners. The contest will be held in two divisions, boys aged S-12 and boys aged 13-16. The entry fee for the event is $1 and participants must register al the Recreation Department prior to April 5. Entry form s may be picked up at the department, 175 N. Coast Highway. or at any of the schools in the Lagwia Beach Unified School District. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Pepper Steak .... $1 49 ,b Oven ready ••• delightfully seasoned ••. just cook and enjoy! Pork Cutlets BREADED 89~ • • • • • • • Unn, close trimmed ••• ready for you to cook and serve! Sliced Pastrami ........... SERY! S.1Now1C11cs ........... $1~ Pile high on rye or hot roll~! Bl THE PIEC£ •...••.•. 1.09 lb. Buddig's Sliced Meats ............ ) OL PIG. ........... s;e Choose from a ,,·idc varirty of \\"afer lhin favorite:s ! •••••• Each a delight ••• TurkPy! Beefl Chicken!,,. chunks o( yo ur favorite mea~.,. lean, delicious ... in a. tender la!ty crust. '"ith rich gra"y ! Simply thaw ••• ser"e piping hot ••• and enjoy eight ounces of goodne&!! Romaine GARDEN FRESH 15' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Crisp leaves ••• f or a colorful salad .• , the difference is Fresh ! PricrR in rffrrf ftf rni., T11r.~ .. U'rd .. Afa,r, 29, 30, 3 I. No sa.le8 to dealers. Dressing .. w!s.h~~~ !'~~~ ... 5 9c Flavor U1at pleases almost everyone! Big 16 ounce bottle. Read's Salads ...... 39c Serve right from the No. 300 can •• & you have a choice of varieties I Corned Beef Hash ....................................... 49' fl\ary Kitchen ••• from H ormel, the meat people! 15 oz. can. Janitor in a Drum .............. . .. .. .................. 69' Sensational household elcancr at a sen.sationa1 price! 32 oz. ARCADIA: PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA : HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH: 1117 Newp or t Olvd and Sunset and Huntington Dr. (El Rancho Cenlei) 310 l'/csl Colorado Blvd. Fremont and Huntrnglon Dr. Warner and Algonquin (Boaidwalk CcnlCI) 155) Easlbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Cen lei) ' .. ' DAILY PILOT • Bloodbath in Pal{istan Rebel Radio Reports Deaths of 300,000 IJPIT ...... WOMEN VOLUNTEERS IN EAST PAKISTAN TAKE MILITARY TRAINING Rtdlo Reports Say Vill•g1r1 Are Battling Tanks With Spe•rs, Clults Jordan Troops Open Fire On Crowd of Women, Girls By United Pre11 International Jordanian troops ,killed two wom'tn In Amman Sunday when lhey !ired on a crowd of several hundred women and school girls they said were being used as a "human barricade" by Arab guer· rillas trying to attack police positions. Thrtt other civiliaru were wounded in the incident, which touched off a day of violence in the Jordanian capital. Guerrillas denied they were involved and said the crowd was demonstrating against three days of fighting between government troops and guerrillas in North Jordan. Libyan Premier Col. Mo a m m a r Khadafy said Sunday in a speech monitored in Beirut that the Jordanian Army should overthrow King Hussein and form a "liberation front" with the guerrillas. He said Libya would be ready to support such a movement made a prisoner of war e1ch1n1e Sundlly at Jsmailiya on the Suez Canal. He said Israel returned an Egyptian officer captured last May 30 in exchan&e for an Israeli serge.ant held in Egypt since January, 1970. Members of tbe crowd that wu fired on in Amman said the Jordanian troops initially fired in the air but lowered their rifles wtlen the crowd refused to halt. "All of a sudden there was shooting all around us," one woman said, "shots seemed to be coming from everywhere. Then the girla began falling ." The outbreak in lhe capital came as other troops opened up pockets of guer- rilla resistance in the northern town of Irbid. Army officer• in the arta said their troops were conducilng a hou.se-to·howe search for guerrillas. Loll NEW DELI!!, Jlll!la (UPI) -Tiie P1kla:tan government aald, today It wa1 re1torlng order in Eut Pikiltan and that life wu retumln& to nohnl1 tn Dacea. But the rebellious forct1.of Sheikh Mujlbur Rahman said lhey 1...;1>1 on despite enormoul loilel' in· the four-day- old civil war. Free Bengal Radio, .i clandeallne rebel radio monitored in Sblllon&. In lndla'• border 1tate of Assam. said tbe Paklat&ni army, navy and air force have kllltd at least 300,COO Eut Paklltanis in .the past 48 hour&. Tbt.re wu no way to check the reportl. AU India Radio said 5,000 to 7,000 persoM had bef:n kllled in Dacca alone The ,civil war broke oul Friday when Rahman proclaimed the independence of East Pakistan which b separated by the 1,000-mil&-wide Indian naUoo from Weit Palriatan. Presidtnt A&ha Moham- mad Yahya Khan ord<red h~ 7<1,000 Lroops in East Paklstan to crn11h the in.surrection with their superior troop strength, air and navaJ power and tanks. With I.he civU war ragin& at the Indian border, the government oI India was showing increasing concern. Oppo1iUon political parties asked Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to reoognlt.e the East Pakistani government though no appeal was known to have come from Rahman or his Awami League political party. India alao erpreased concern at poasi- ble overflights of Pakilltani military planes flying 111ppliea to the civil war, Foreien minl.!Jtry sources sa1d India his contacted U.N. Secretary Gentral Thant in an effort to raise the dvil war iasue in the Security Council. The Press Trust of India (PTI), a group of Indian news agVl<:iea, said East Bengali "freedom fightert" drove Pakistani army troops out of the KushUa Dlslrlct bordering India today after a daylong battle that began Sunday. PTI, in a report from Calcutta, said the Kwhtia District commander told the agency by telephone that Rahman's followers also had overrun JeSJOre city cantonment Md that alt government troops thert had surrendered. KushUa Is about 60 miles northeast of Dacca and 20 miles from the Indian border. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said Sunday in a speech at Khartoum, Sudan, that Egypt had done all it could to achieve peace with Israel in the p a s t month . ''But all our efforts have been obstructed by Israeli arrogance and in- transigence and the coming days will be decisive in the battle or destiny' .. Sadat said. Tito Hails Pope As Ally In Jerusalem, official sources said Premier Golda Meir briefed the Israeli cabinet Sunday on latest contacts with the United States, but details of her report were not revealed. An Israeli military spokesman 1n Tel Aviv said an army patrol killed three guerrillas and captured three others Swr day in a clash on occupied territory in the Jordan Valley. He said there were no Israeli casualties. The spokesman said Israel and Egypt Wicks 'Wonderfu~ WonderfuL Now give me the good new1!' In World Freedom Quest VA TI CAN CITY I UPI) -President Tito of Yugoslavia, the first Communist chief of state to pay an official vi.sit to the Vatican, bailed Pope Paul VI today as an ally in the fight against colonialism. Tito told the ponliff how much he appreciated his efforts for Wt>rld peace and added he also was fully aware "of the support which Your Holiness gives to people under colonial domination in their just fi1ht for independence and Vietnam Troop Strength Drops SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. troop strength in Vietnam dropped by 6,400 last week bringing it to a total or 306,500, the command said today. The withdrawal of troops whose ''standdov•n" or preparations to leave have been announcM since the fiaw-ea were compiled will bring the total to just over 300,000. Military spokesmen sajd the weekly reduction figures can be. expected to increase over the next few weeks to meet the published goal of 284,000 troops in Vietnam on May L The figures announced today were the 1ov.·est troop level numbers since Sept. 3, 1966, when there were ~.000 American servicemen in VietnaJD. the end of all fonns of ratt.l dilcrimiAa· lion." The Pope in turn called for col- laboration between the Vatican and Yugoslavia in tbe search fW' int.ernaU011al peace. Unlike. the Pope, Tito confined his speech to inlernational affairs and made no mention of internal chW"Cb-state relations. Tito expressed strong cotlctm about" the Middle East situation and slid Yugoslavia "as doing its utmost "to contribute, witti.in lhe limits of ita possibil!Ues, to the peaceful sOluUon of that crisis so thal the consequences of the war of aggression of June, llS'l, can be eliminated and 90 that the people of countries of that region can live in peace and securl.ty." Tito also er.pressed serious concern about the Southeast A!ia situttlen."He slated his policy as one of the Ion1-Ume leaders of the nonallaned world. This was, be said, to stamp out coloniallsm, discrimination and racism, to reduce the 11p between rich and poor naUona and assure the imtependence, and sovereitn\Y of alt peoples. These were policies shared by the Pope, be said, and added: "I am happy to be able to state that the point! of view of the Holy' See and Yu10llavla on major International problenu, and the necessjty of nsolving tbtm en tM basis of peatefUl cetJ.istence, are. close. or illenUcal." Rainstorms Drench East Most of Nation Fair, Dry; Some Snow in North, California T11111puat•re• All>ltllV " " All!ll<!Vfffl\19 " " He -said thousanda of men. women and cblldr•n roamed tilt strteta of KlllhUa and danced In jubilation al lhe "Vitt6ry." He satd army reln(Ol"'Cemeftla pw1hed Into Klllhlla and that lbouunds of clvillaDJJ carrying evuy available weapon awarmed ln acroas the Padma Rlvar deaptte rockets and cannon fire from Pakistani planes .. The KUlhUa commander said at' lea.at 100 rebelJ died cros1in1 the river but that the army finally withdrew after lnfllcllni heavy cuullll" on tilt clvWan f>Ollll]Atlon. Meeting in Paris Army controtled Radio Dacca, which normally broadcasts in the afternoon, was eff the air today. Free Bengal RacUo, the clandesUne slallon whole lo.;a- tioo w11 unknown, aaid Radio Dacca had been r9Captured by liberation army forcts, bul thls was not conflrmed. Censorship was total from Eut Pakistan. All India Radio did not mention fighting tn Dacca but stkl there was figtiUng ellewhere. It reported the 5,000 to 7,000 delth toll ln Dacca ind said the radio called earlier for street cleaners to help clear the bodlea. Sadat Warns Next Few Days Will Be Decisive By ne Astodated Press Wlth President Anwar Sadat warning that the nett few days will be "decisive in our battle for destiny," Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad and a score of his top diplomats gathered in Parts today for a meeting their a:ovemment hopes will generate new pressure on Israel. En route to !ht meeting, Rlad stopped off in Italy for talks with President 'nto of Yu1o.slavla, Italian Prel'1'\ler Emilio Colombo and Foreign Minister Aldo Moro. Today Rla.d was meeting with French Foreign Minister Maurice 5chumann. ruad begins a thrf:May sessiOn on Tuesday with 21 of his diplomats sta- tioned In E\ll'GJ)e and America, including U.N. Ambasaador Mohammed Hanan el-Ztyyat and Ashral Ghorbal, EOPt's rapruentaUve in Washinaton. Egyptian sources said the conference would map a vigorous campaign to demonstrate to the West that the currtnl no-peace, no-war stiuation is extremely dangerous and that Egypt already is on a genuine war fooling. The hope is that the various governments wlll bring more pressure on Israel to aaree to give up all Arab territory captured in the 1967 war. Speaking to newsmen on his arri\!al from Rome, Rlad praised the French government for its "just appreciation of the situation in the Middle East." "We are going to work so that all the capitala continue to put pressure on Israel," he said. President Sadat told a .rally in Khartoum Sunday that Eaypt had done all it could to achieve peace in the Mlddle East. The offlcill Middle East News Agency's report of his speech did not elabOrtte on his remark th a t the Dill few days woUld be decisive Deaths of Yank Workers Claimed NEW DELHI (AP) -The United News of India said today that snme Alftericans working on an irrigation pr°" ject in the Kushtia district of East Pakistan were kllled SUnday in a bomb- ina: raid by Pakistani planes. The a1ency In a dispatch from Galcutta aaid its report came from across the border. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said no such word had been received in New Delhi, but he added that such a report would be sent direct to Washington. The spokesman said there were Americans working on an irrigation pr°" gram known as the Kobardak project in the Kushtla dl1trict, which is 80 miles wist of Dacca and 20 miles east of the Indian border. He aaid it was assumed that they were. employed by the American Agency for lnternation11 Development on tern· porary contracts. for the Arabs, but he was warned before that the unofficial truce aloftg the Suez Canal cannot last unless there is progress in the peact talks. Sadat auerted that Egypt's efforts to achieve peace have been blocked by Israeli "arrogance." Llnking the Israeli stand with U.S. support for Israel, Sadat said: "Il's amu.lng for us to see that the United States, which supplies Israel v.ith Phan- tom jets, 1s exposed to tremendous pressure from Israel whereas it should be the other way around." Russia Reported Studying Arms Treaty With U.S. VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet Union is considering proposing that Russia and the United Slates sign a nonaggression pact, Communist sourctS said today. In Moscow's thinking, negotiations for such a pact would take priority over the current Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), although SALT would con- tinue to meet, the sources said. The Kremlin's increased interest in nonag- gression talks stems from its growing reluctance to sign a SALT agreement with America, they said. Tbe pact would be along tbe lines of the aareement reeently si&ned by the Soviets and West Germany, which obligated both to forego the use of force in relaUons with each other, they said. The 90Ul'ctS ,aid a final decbion has not been taken yet to approach the United States with the proposal. But they said it Is being considered because it would help stabilize Soviet-American relations, without affecting Russia's abil- ity to respond to the Chinese threat. They said Soviet fears of an attack from Communist China, and worries about Peking 's growing nuclear power, are making Mosoow increasingly reluc· tant to sign any SALT agreement with the United States. China would not be a party to such an agreement, they said, and Soviet military men fear that any cutback in arms caused by an agreement with the United States would leave Russia vulnerable to a Chinese attaok. A nonaggression treaty, on the other hand, would not affecl Russia's rivalry with China, they said . But, they added, it would provide a basis of trust for future anns negotiations with the United States -including SALT. SALT, now in it.s fourth round here, has appeared to slow down. Russia so far has not replied to a U.S. proposal for a "comprehensive" agrtement on both offenalve and defensive nuclear delivery systems. But in the last round of talks in Helsinki, the Soviet.s sug1ested limits on AnUbaillstic Missile (ABM) defenses. Fee 1...i .,,... t;IOl)(h U>•ted l!Yt• ft'Oll t:J Ir.I Soul~•" Ctll!omi• CO.lf. •I 1 r11 !Od•• wl!~ • 1111~v ;••• blll'lkfl clo1I.,. los """'fll'l lntt•"•· llontl Al,,_, lot' tboul rltM ,,.,.,,,, an 1 dlY wf!ld'I did no! cl1u uMll 1•· ltr..-i. Al!t"I• .. " ·" LOI A"""IU hid 1 ortitlc1td 75 11 ~ CIYk (..,!tr tomol'!'d "'!111 II $.UndJY 1"41 11 1~0«'-0 lutldtw. Tl'tt low tanlt111 will IHI 5'. The Air J'Dlhlf!on (Ol'll'lll Dltlt'kl ..-1MI Utll! ID mOOtfllt •mot I" ftlt ballll wltfl vl1l~lll!¥ llmltl'CI ta from tw. tti -1"41 • 11111 m!l11 bf. Ull .. If"""'· _, llHCf'ltl wt•• 11111 u'ld..-1 ._..,., .,._ tfl(I 11!1 tot 111.irnH ell •llf'lllllt h .-,, .. , wt•• ,....n., _, 11 111e 111tt1 11a.cl'lid n . Tl'tt ""''-' It J6. -19\M wwt l•lfWI' Ind Wlr1n •1!11 "'""'°'° hllfl <touch 1nd 11!91'11 ... "" ... '" Ille ~I .,,. ltlfl wt t!MCI ll'tt _.. ¥1111VI lllto IM ... 111d tlll ._ ¥1111'1'1 lttto tlll tk. Hltlll Julld1• llld •f'lllll.C:IMI ~191>t -., l!ICWf. 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Hit~ TO< • • ., ""' IJ . , .. ,,,1 •-•!u••-''"" '""' .w ID Ill, lllltfllf llMNrttuttt rt "OI lrOM » 10 .. Wt!« 1-trlhin '1. S11", Moo", Tides MONOAY Siwllcl ~ltfl . 11 4 •·"'• J.t $1(11\4 tew •.111.lft. 1..t TU•tDAY A11tl'llll'IM llolu 901111<1 tv!f11(t CMtlfO (l..el~MH ''"''""° Otllto1 ..,.,,. Du~,,.. Dllrolt Hatllllu!u llldll"l"Olll ,_, II:•"''' (llV ltl Y-t M...,,,.t\11 Ml111'tl Mll"'l\fl<., M1--'I• HtW °'""" .,.,, Y111t ~ci.. ...... 1'1ltfl *""""' ..... 11 ... 1-.11 ,_., ·-l'w111M, °''' ...... '"" ·-·-· Vo. litn~ St.~ SIN Ltkt Crtr ,. " .. " n .. ~ " " " " • ~ ~ .. " " " • .. " .. .. tt .. • • .. • -.. .. " .. p " Q " " " " " M H n " " " " " n • "' " ,. .. " .. " .. 4 M " • " .. n • n .. T .N ·" . ·" •• .. T Yoga in the Park YANK SOIL EXPERT Claude Fly Returns Rebels' Hostage Returned Home In 'Good Shape' FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) -Claude L. Fly, recovering from a heart attack suffered v.·hile a captive of Uruguayan terrorists, was reported in good condltioo at his hometown hospital today. The 6S-year-0ld agronomist was hospitalized for observation immediately after he was returned home Sunday by the U.S. Air Force. Despite his years and the tiring 13-hour journey from Montevideo, Fly was suf- fering no 111 effects, his family said. "His spirit.s are high, and he was reading the local newspaper," Fly's son John said after visiting his father late Sunday night at Poudre Valley Memorial Hospital. "He's in the intensive care unit for a continuow 24-hour cardiograph," the son explained. "He may remain for several days." Fly was stricken Feb. Z3 while held as a political hostage by Tupamaro guer- rillas. Seven days later he was released near a British hospital in ~1ontev\deo wbere he was kept until Saturday, when physicians decided he was well enough to make the trip home with his wife. and son. Fly left here last January to become an adviser to the Uruguayan soils office. He was taken from his laboratory near Montevideo by a band of hooded terrorist.s who held him hostage for a futile demand that the Uruguayan government grant permission for nev.·s media to publish a manifesto. Battling Erupts Between Rival Canadian Groups TORONTO (UPI -Right-wing demo~ strators, armed with pipes and a mace- like substance, fought Sunday with mem- bers of the audience that came to hear Quebec separatist lawyer Robert Le- mieux and labor leader t.1icheJ Chart· rand. A janitor was injured by the chemical, a bystander knocked unconscious, and five of the demonstrators were arrested, The group of about 20 demonstrators. members of the right-wing Edmund Burke Society. threw the mace-like chemical into a crowd of about 1.000 at Convocation Ha ll at the University o( Toronto. Members of the audience threw out the outnumbered demonstrators, who were. armed, aloag with the chemical. with lead pipes four feet long, and stones which they hurled at the cro"·d. T h e demonslrators attacked long- haired bystanders outside lhc hall, and one was knocked unconscious. P'ive demonstrators, an Toronto resi- dents, were arrested and charged with "possession of a volaUle substance and possession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace." Police identified the chemical used as "Protect·H," an ir- ritant ~imitar to the riot-control chem- ical "mace" which they said is com- mercially available in the. United States for individuaJ protection. U,I Ttltlll!N S1u11mcr11 ....,_ ~..,_ •-' At1111lk CIMl"I , .. ,.. fNrll M<l'Yltl'l(I lrtte 11111 .... -"' ....,. wf!lll ,,,.,..." •lld e1twr lllllllllerltom'lt lllW!dM l"IO ...... Oii ... 11'111 Cttu111, T•J~ ...,.. 1111 i'IOll•t -'1 I" ltlt Mlllll luf'llllV It 111 ..,,... Tiit cwtr11ltlll IOW .... llD\lr ...,._ 11 Grttrtvlti<t, Ml!M. ,.lnl ~ltt. • • , • • • It:••·"'-I.! l'lrll 1cl<w • • •• •:11 •·'"· ..... ~ ~lfll . . ... ll! •. II\, J,J ....._. ltW . 11• .. ..,. , .. Slffl •t1•1 i :U f ,1'11, .... 1111 .. lft. S.11 Ditti • .,. "•1..CIKI ... fl .. " .. n .. .. .. --This young lady ts amused as two young men form these unusual positions while practicing yoga in an Omaha, Ntbruka park. Many Omlhans took to the outdoors over the weekend as temperatures hit an unseasonably warm 50 . ..... -MOO!! ~..,. 1:111.m. Ith 10:•~· w111111•• • • I I ( Oil Tanke1· Lost; Survivo1·s Hunted Fire Sweeps NY Hotel; Four Dead CANANDAIUUA. N.Y. (AP) -Police said four persons were killed in a fire w h i c h destroyed the 117-year-old Canandaigua Inn early today. At ledsl 12 others were in- jured. · Detective Anthony Decerc said the fire broke out on the top noor of the four-story brick and wood building and enguHed all but the ground floor within 20 minutes. Occupants of the 70 rooms included students al t he Finger Lakes Community College and patients rtt:ently discharged from a nearby Vet e rans Administration hospital. Five hours after the blaze was reported, at 12:25 a.m., the building conlinued to burn, preventing firemen f r o m checking for bodies. "I'm afraid there are vic- tims buried beneath the rub- ble," Decere said. "There must be bodies in there,'' a witness said. "They couldn't all have gotten out." A spokesman for t he hospital said a staff member al the scene made contact v.·Hh most of the former pa- tients and reported them "okay." A number of persons wtre . rescued by ladder from the toJf" floors and others were led down fire escapes to safe- ty. l'ORTSMOVTll . Va. /UPI) -The •Cout Guard said It \lo'OUJd renew the search today for other possible survivors -from 19 to 31 men still are missing -Of the oil tanker Texaco 0 k I a h om a whlch broke. apart in heavy seas Saturday. Eleven men were rescued from life rafts Sunday. The survivors said the Mt- fool long tanker sank so quick- ly they don 't think anyone had tlme to get on a dlstre~• signal. A Coast Guard plane searched fruitlessly Io r su rvivors at dusk Sunday. Tht 34.994--ton ship, owned by \Villon Steamship Company and chartered by the Texaco Oil Company, was en route to Boston from Port Arthur, Tex., with a cargo of oil. The tanker, according to the survivors. sank about 125 miles northeast of Cape Hat- teras, N.C. Coast Gua r d planes and the c u t t e r Escanaba were to sea rch the area todax, along with the Tex· aco Nebraska, whiCh was rerouted by Texaco. Texaco personnel in Boston became "concerned about the ship Saturday because it was out of radio contact." The 13-year-old ship was due in Boston Sunday afternoon and relatives of crewmen waited for hours on the dock. "There was a runaround going on," said Joseph Dinunzio of Boston, stepson of Texaco Oklahoma crewman Charles \V. Parker. Fairchild Dead at 74 NEW YORK IAP) Sherman Mills Fa i r c hi I d . millionaire manufacturer and pioneer in photography and aviation, died Sunday after a Jong illness. He was 74. Fairchild was chairman ef the Fairchild·Hiller Corp., an aircraft manufacturer and designer of satellites, and of the Fairchild Camera and Equipment Co .• prod ucer mainly e f semiconductor devices. Born in Oneonta, N.Y., he studied at Harvard and Columbia Colleges, but never graduated from either. While at Harvard, he invented a flash camera. Pair Doomed Father Needs $9 ,000 AUSTIN, Tex. <UPI) -H. V. Holl needs $9,000 right 1 away to keep two of his children alive. After lhat bill is paid , he still owes h.is doctor $9,000 and the hospital another $6.000. And lhe chemical used to pump life into his children costs $360 a month. Three of Holt's 10 children have died from nephritis, a rare hereditary kidney disease. Five other children are in the a~e bracket during y.·hich the disease normally strikes and two of them. Gary, 2{1, and Paula. 17, have the disease. They must spend 15 hours a week pumping their blood through a machine to keep alive. An Austin church has sta rted a fund for Holt. a sales- man, and he is receiving money directly by mail. -"I can 't say I'm optiJnistic," he said Sunday. "I'm $20,000 behind right now and so much goes out each month. t'tn a bread salesman. T donl make that kind of money. It'!! all I can do to keep up y.·ith the daily bills." The machine v:hich processes Gary and Paula's blood consumes a non-reusable chemical which costs $360 a month . There is a six-week supply of the chemical left and the company which supplies it says Holt must pay his bill before they Y.'ill send any more of the chemical. ''On our last bill thev had an article tacked on I.here thal they wouldn 't sell U!I. any more supplies until we settle our bill." Mrs. Holt said . ''It looks As though our supplies will nol continue to come in until we pay tour bill up there." Holt said. ''That bill is $9,000. We OY.·e the doctor $5,000 and y.·e owe the hospital over $6,000." Gary and Paula v.·ill die if they can"t use the machine. The only alternative is a kidney transplant but Mrs. Holl said a transplant is not possible ror two or three years. "If we can keep them alive until that time," !he said. LEARN TO PLAY THE ORGAN THE FUN AND EA SY WAY Beqlnners Tue1d1y, Ma rch 30th at 1 p.m. • Intermediates Tuesd1y, M•rc.h 8th at I p.m. REGISTER TODAY Cl111es run for six wHkl '"elk• Tllllt .. 01'J•R lltftfllt A•llY''-TUITION -$12. HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIO 2854 E. Co111t Hwy. Coron• del Mir 644·8930 UPI Tfit•IMM Monday, March 29, 1971 Solution Sought SST Post Mortem Sparked in U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -"On Tuesday, the U.S, will be out of the SST business. That's the day the money rWtS out." The speaker is William M. Magruder, director of the of- fice of supersonic transport development for the Depart- ment of Transportation. The SST development package was killed by Congress last y.•eek when the and the Middle East. He Iden- tified only the Japanese firm, Ataka , a small trading com- pany which has requested t.M State Department set up a trade mis!lon visit en the mat- ter. Last week, Magruder wu not too optimistic about a foreign reprieve for t he development package. DAILY PILDT $ - UPITf ....... ASKS MORATORIUM S.n. Henry Jackson TONY WINNERS -Among the victors in Sunday's Tony awards presentations \Vere (from left) Rae Allen, Hal Linden, Helen Galligher. Patsy Kell y, Maureen Stapleton and Brian Bedford. The awards were telecast by ABC. Senate followed earlier House action and rejected $ I 3 4 million in subsidies. That put the federal government out of the SST picture. There may Concorde Plans Ma y Hit Delay be private financing of the NEW YORK (UPI) -The program but, McGruder says, British and French firm! that talks so far ''have not been Ban Sought On Missiles Two Miners 'Could Be Alive Still' 'Company' and 'Nanette' Head. Broadway Awards very encouraging." plan to make the Concorde Even though his office won·t supersonic a'irliner have asked be working on SST develop-Pan American World Airways, ment. ii will operate, for which already has paid awhile. Closing oul the pro-deposits on orders for eight gram may take up to two of the planes, to e1tend years. "No one has ever Wednesday's deadline for final WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Henry M. Jack11on (D-Wa1h.), proposed today temporarily freezing furth er development on most AmerJcan and Soviet offensive missiles. NEMACOLIN, Pa. (UPI\ - The smoky tunnel 300 feet below the surfa~ where ty.·o miners have been trapped since Friday by a coal mine fire apparently can sustain life. "From the data we have received and analyzed so far, the atmospheric and tem- perature conditions are such that if a man is barracaded he could still be aHve," a source close to the rescue ef· fort told UPI Sunday. Sensilive instruments were lowered through bore hole!! Sunday into the section of the Buckeye Coal C.O. mine where Richard Randolph, 6.1, and Charles Gibson, Sr., 64, were trapped. A vacuwn pump to take air samp\e.s and a "thermo couple'' to measure the temperature went down the nine-inch holes Sunday. The samples and readings were sent to a atate laboratory in Pittsburgh, 55 miles north of here, for analysis. A full report on the tests was scheduled th.is morning. Microphones dropped down the bore holes during the weekend brought back no sounds of life, coal company officials said. Officials said five drills were Jn position today over "strategic locations'' where the two miners might have sought safety in the mine. NEW YORK (UPI) -The Broadway theater's annual Tony Awards for best play and best musical were given Sunday night tc, respectively, "Sleuth" by Anthony Saffer and "Company." "Company" won the most silver medallions, getting &ii in various categories. The revival of the 47-year- old musical, "No. No, Nanet· te." was second with lour Tonys. 1'he awards covered the period from April 7, 1970, to March 15, 1971, and were revealed in a two-hour pro- gram in the Palace Theater before 1,350 11pectators as the proceedings were na tionally colorcasl on the ABC-TV Network. Best acting honors for musicals went to Hal Linden of ''The Rothschilds" and Helen Ga,llagher of "No, No, Nanette." The "Company'' Tonys were voted to Harold Prince as pro- ducer and director, George Furth as librettist, Stephen Bids to Open For Convention WASHINGTON /UPI) Five of six cities bidding for the 1972 Democratic National Convention open arguments today be fore a selection panel of the Democratic National Committee. Miami, Beach, Chicago, Sen Francisco, Houston a n d Phoenix are scheduled t& present their arguments to- day. Louisville. Ky., was ex· peeled to be beard on Tues- day. Sondhelm as composer and termlnatrd a $1 billion un-design plans by six months. lyricist and Boris Aronson as fin ished business before," There were reports in avia· scene designer. Magruder said. tion circles th at the Besides the award to Miss Ending lhe federal role may Congressional veto of further Gallagher, "No, No. Nanette'' include helping sell the funding of American plans for !cored in the supporting ac-American SST development an SST designed by the Boeing tress ( Patsy Kelly), chorea--plan to a foreign bidder. Co. might make Pan Am grapher and costume designer Sunday, ti.1agruder said In· cautious about more delay!! categories. quiries have been received in development ln the Eurt> He said he had in mind a 12-month !ou r ·p a rt moratorium "lhat would at onc.e have the effect of slowing the strategic competition and adding to the immediate security of the stra te1lc missile balance." This year's awards marked from Japan, West Germany pean plane. their 25th anniversary. and the ----'------~-'---'------------------- theme of the show ap- propriately was a review of highlights of winning musicals during th.al period. Eastern City Pier Swept By Big Fire ATLANTIC CITY, N. J . (UPI) -Atlantic City's se- cond suspicious fire in 12 hours destroyed a e<1mmercial fishlng pier and at least five waterfront buildings, including an abandoned tild hot e I , following a series of explosions early today. There were no injuries reported. Officials said that the blasts and the fire.broke out around 1:30 a.m. By 5 a.m. the fire had been coritrolled .11 n d "broken down" into a series of smaller blazes in the in- dividual buildings. The explosions r i p p e d through the Will iam Pebler's and Sons dock setting It ablaze. The Coast Guard quickly arrived and towed away three boats. cne of which, the 85-foot dragger "Dutchess," had caught fire. Its damage could nol im- mediately be estimated. Thcrt's no be:uerway to welcome yout ilJCSlS than with a h.alf-pllon of Seagnmi 7 C.rnwn; Drink after drink, the navor cJ 7 Crown always comes through. So get 7 Uown in lhe big half-pilon. ltW\ sa\"e a trip as well as make a piny. SaySeacram'• 7Crown anil Be Sure. Crime Rise Slows Down HEY KIDS HERE COMES WASHINGTON (UPI) The nation's crime increased 11 percent in 1970, the lowest rate of increase since 1966, th' FBI reported Sunday. Attorney General John N. Mitchell, announced l he• results of the preliminary FB ij Crime Index, polntlng out that 22 major cities r'port.ed an actual reduction in the number of crimes in 1970 as compared with 1969. The cllles he listed had a total reduction In crime but slatlstics showed that in several the reductions came in such categories a s burglaries or larceny while more serious crimes like murdrr continued to ri~. lliE ROYAL INTERNATIONAL * COSTA MUA 1 DAY ONLY Sat., April 3 SHOWTIME 2:30 & 8:00 p.m. CHILDREN $1.50 ADULTS $2.50 Only one or the 22 cities Mitchell cited, Seattle, had an across-the-board decline in every category or crime listed. * FAIRGROUNDS * Sc.gram Ilistilk11 Co.', NY.C. Blended W!u.lcey. B6 Prool 65% Grain Neutral Spiri<>. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: *MAIN Ol'F)Cl:VU\ & Hill, loeAn;tilea •823-1351 • wt\.IHIRI et QRAMIJICY PLACE: 3933 Wllahl,. BlwJ., L.A. • 388-1285 LA. crvtc C!NTl:A: 2nd & Bro1dwly • 828-1102 * HUMTINQTON llACH: 11 Huntington center. (71 -4) 107-10-47 &AHTA ANA LOAN l!~CI AQIHCY: 1005 H. Mtln SL• (714) 547.t2!7 * IANTA MONICA: 711 Wll1hll'I Btvd. • 393-(1741 *IAN PE>AO: 10th & Paelnc • 131-23-41 * WllT COVINA: !atland Shopping Ctr .• 331·2201 "* PAHOMllA CITY: H 16 Van HllYI Blvd.• SOZ..1171 .,. TAAZANA: 11751 Ventu ra Boulevard • 34$-1814 ii: LONG llACH: Srd & Locwt • 4'7·7481 ·~~-1 .. 1o1 ,,. I/ti~--'"''''"' ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION I. With a $2,500 balance In your 11vlng1 account, you are ellglbleto become •member. Subltanllal aavtnga are avallabfe when pu rchaalng m.11ny Item• Incl uding automobllea, fu rniture, appllancn , Jewelry. Plua m1ny ''" u rvlcea -money o,de,._ 11fe deposit box-. etc:.. . ------=---~~ COAST HERN FEDERAL SAVIN --~~-~--- Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMl'OUNOl!D DAllY AND PAID QUAllTIRLY.• 5.00°1°-5.13 .,. Paubook; No Minimum. 5.25 •/0.5,39•/o Three Month Certificate; No Minimum. 5.75°1°-5.92°/o o n ... Year Certlftcate; $1,000 Minimum. 6.00°/o-6,18°/o T~Year Certificate; $5,000 Minimum. •Entctlw Annu1I E1mlng1 • INSURANCE TO $20,000 t DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE -Tax Battle Is Joined Assembly Oemocnt.s submitted their package of tax nform bill& Jut Thursday, naming it ''Tax Equity." Everyone will like the proposed 65 percent reducUon in the property tax, but lhey won't like the huge in· crease in income taxes, the higher sales tax and the other tax boosts included in the plan. Gov. Ronald Reagan predictably opposed the Demo· crats' plan and stood firm against any tax increase this year. He would seek to accomplish this through cut· backs on welfare and Medi-cal benefits. The chances that the Tax Equity package will be· come law are considered slender. 1t1ost of the bUls re· quire a two-thirds majority in both the Assembly and Senate and the Democrats have only simple majorities. Even if enough Republicans support the bills to get them passed, it's a good guess Reagan would veto them and bis veto would be sustained. The fact is the Democratic legislators know the package they propose is too far out to pass the Legisla· lure, let alone get by the governor. And the governor knows the .state probably cannot operate \Vilhout .some kind of tax increase this year, but he wants the Legisla- ture to take the heal The game of tax reform poker has begun. The trouble is, it's your money they're playing with. Tl1e SST Defeat The shock waves from the decision of Congress to ground the SST will be felt around the nation -and in the halls of Congress -for a long time. Quite possibly for the rest of the decade. For a long time to co~e there will be debate and nagging questions as to whether the United States gave up on a problem before it really knew the answers and bugged out of the game too soon. The most disquieting aspect as of this moment is that members of Congress have no way of even guessing the impact of the decision, and they don't know where U:iey go from here. The action has created problems -both short and Jong range -with which CongreM has not the foggiest notion of how to deal. The talk of "putUng those trained men and re· sources to work" on rapid tr•nslt, ecology and other grave .national problems is.largely political window drus- ing, uttered hopefuUy but without a basis ln fact. Any thought that Orange County will be unaf.fected by the SST shutdown ts wishful thinking at best. There are projects here which, if not directly part of the SST project itsell~ are indeed predicated on our SST develop- ment. The grave danger now Is that Congre55 wtu jerry· btiild a number of ill·pl~nned crash programs and pollti· cal boondoggles in eagerness to appear to be "Doing Something About Il" And we will wind up squandering everytblng that presumably wu "saved" on the SST -and more - and have neither the technological breakthroughs in many areas that would spin off the SST prototype, nor anything else to show for our money and energy, Separation of Po,vers. Jf Orange County's freshman Congressman John G. Schmitz, R·Tustin, believes in our Constitution's pres- cription of separation of legislative, executive and judi- c_ial powers as a major key to the viability or our repub- lican form of government, he ha s taken a litrange way to show it. He has introduced a bill to take out or federal court jurisdiction a host or cases ranging from pornography to public school prayer and Bible reading. He calls it a short cut to curb the federal courtli without a constitu· tional amendment. It comes as a shock, and a sadly revealing one, to see one of our self-proclaimed great protectors or the Constitution make such a crude effort to circumvent and weaken that venerable document. \ Expression Vs. Deceptio11 Of Ourselves Dear Gloomy Gus: Voucher Systent Would Bring Baek Pauper Schools Wt-were walking down the avenue, on our way to lunch, when this enormous black man passed us, wearing boots up to his knee$, a flowing cape, a large bow-tie of rainbow colors, and a hat that would h a v e done glory to Sc.ara- mouche. Passers-by tuned around to stare at him, and some o( them to laugh. He was indeed a sight- one that I could take or leave alone. But I wondered 'Why so many persons found his attire objection- able. JUST UKE HAIR these days, we !tem irritated by clothes far beyond their importance. This means that both the hair and the clothes have some emotional importance to us, that goes deeper than the surface appearance. The trouble, 1 suspect. lies in us, not in those who wear the long hair or the olrtre .apparel. 1 have my own criterton in such mat- tm, and I think It squares wllb the American creed of "individualism" more than most people's. In the first p\ace, it make& absolutely no difference to me how anyone chooses to look, ei:- temally -If aomebody wanted to wear a flower-pot on his head, or .a ved constructed out of parchment lamp- shades, I couldn't care leas. IT IS NO USE pretending that I don't How come some paper doesn't list the salaries of the military ao the 1eneral public knows what each branch of service pays for each rank and rating -and what about retirement pay and benefits? -L. R. 8. Tltb ,..,,,,, ~IK"ll ,,........ •II-wt. Ml -·-11, tlM• ....... --· ttoMI """' "' ,...,. " Olllofttf O•lo o.llJ Piii!, make private judgments, howev"', we all do. My own private judgment is based on the difference betv.·een "self.ex- pression" and "self-decepUon," and it ts not always easy to telf the one from the other. True individualism -if we believe in it -meam that each person has a right to dress in a way that expresses himself, or conveys his self·image to the world. This is a good and laudable thing to do. Ir what you wear is what you are (actually or polenUally), then you are just seeking for authenticity in your sartorial life, and more power to you. WHAT IS JNAtrrRENTtC, however, ls dressing up in a costume merely to impress othen or to create an image that 1s based on fantasy rather than on the basic truth of one's personality. Most "hippie" costumes, in fact, are artificial and conformist more than "sell· expression," because the wearers have simply put on a uniform they are not entitled to wear. To be "conventional" in clothes is to do what others are doing -whether the others are being prim or flamboyant. wearing a suit or a leather jerkin and beads. There is little more Individuality among the hippie types than among the straight.a:, for the true Individualist is a rare animal in any group. And one to be respected, not laughed at. Aliens' Equal Obligations To the Editor: Rather than an article to inform people · where their lax money is going, as suggested by Mrs. Phillip E. Woods in Mailbox (Msrch 11 ), J would propose an article on cltir..enship. Allens bear the same obligations as citliens to pay taxes, and bear arms. without the voting privilege. ~ great majority eagerly await the passing of flve yean of residence in thil! country of tbelr choice, to become citizens and equals amon1 those more fortunate becauH of 1 birthright. That 10n'lfl(llle should que11tiori their right to welfare and Medi.Cal ls un-- forlunate : but why stop the rt, is that &ood clt.lJeo not awart that an 11ien who btcomes a charae of the state mil' be dePorted? JACK R. DASH\\rooo Cltiun C..p•t.,.. Dal.a Banks To lho Editor: Ol late thttt has been much discu.ssicn ' r---•• G....-fe Dear Geor1e: Coold you tell me ff Iller< .,. one or two i•r• '• 111 DustJn Hof· rman·1 Jiil name! \l1e hive • bet. GUYS AT BILL'S Dear Guya: No milter what I uy you ICM. 11111 I 11111<11 you llal't ""ntlng 1round 1nothe:r saloon -this one ii ooftonil!f your brain» ' • ,Ma~x &.t'lt«9 ''"' ,.....,, -.... _ -"' Wfltwn .....,.. ""'"'' llt91r ..,.._....., • * _.. ... 19t1.. T ... ritfll .. ~M 111'19n .. Ill Wini ... tll1111Mt. ...... .. ,..,.,....., .... ...,.,.. _, i. d\Mle t"l>l19rt 1• fMlll.... ....,_ 11111 M-• ""''' 11111 IWltllMM M ,_.. M Mlflkltllf ,_._ .. ~'*"· l"M!ry wlft 1191 "' ........ on the pros and cons of government use of computers to ketp tabs on the citizens of thi11 country. The data available to those having access to the computer could be 1vallable to the user in 1 very short time. These d1ta could Indicate such things as how one feeb polltlcalty, his medical history. how much ht earns, how ht-spt:nds it., his sexu1l lncllnatlons, his religion, how many times he has been married, aU aourcea: of lnt0me, and on and on. J THINK TlUS ls .an e:rtr1ordin1ry idea! Howevtr, ltt's not forget that the use.rs of UWI system will also be cltiutis and that 111 the data concerning them ahoukt also be 1t.ortd ln tht d1ta banks and that It should be av1llable to any ind all citizens who care to review it 1t any time. Afte:r 111, the public Is payJni for iL With thil in mind, perhaps the public should push for Just a:uch • aystem with the stipulation that If a politician would Ji.k.e t.o f"l!Vlew your persanal history, then you, as as Individual, should de. mand the rl1ht to review hi.s. E. C. VAN HOOK, SR. A New Threat to· Public Education Whence came our public schools and whither are they bound? They were not around during the time known as the Dark Ages or the Middle Ages . Martin Luther was among the first to come up with the idea or public education when he demanded that all children be taught in schools, that the state maintain and support the schools. and that children be compelled to attend the schools. This was a radical departure as, up to that time. education v.·as largely in the hands of the religious orders and only a select few were exposed to an education. IN 1142. FOR TUE FIRST time in the English-speaking w or 1 d , a Massachusetts legislative body ordered that all children should be taught to read. This was further Implemented in 1647 with a law passed that r~ulred every town having fifty householders to appoint a teacher of reading and writing and make provisions for his wages. This was the first or sit battles lhat v.·ere to lake place over the next 250 years, a batUe and victory for which we are forever indebted to our forefathers. and one we are no1v obligated to preserve. The second issue was to eliminate the stigma of the pauper school idea. Our early so-called public schools were really free only to the indigent. Those who were able to pay tuition were ex- pected to do so. This status undoubtedly caused many to keep their children in private: schools, thus hampering thi! growth of public school!. <' ' I ~·t• ·~.,?·>,·~·1ti ,,. '"'.· . i/1 . ., ' G'Delit i,Ecfitoiii;ll·,.; • • ' , f .. . . ., ,·."· f 1 ~ .. ""',~ _t.~V BA TI'LE NUMBER THREE was won when all student.a: v.·ere accepted free of tuition at the public .schools. From then on, progress could only be forward, for this system made our country strong, and the strength of our country, in turn, made the public school system even stronger. At the 1tart of the nineteenth century, the states started to gain a foothold in the control of education, and put in a system of regulations such as teachers' certification, courses al 1ludy, and the number of d1ys schools must be in session. nu.. was victory number four, and further insured a strong public school system. With this came the elimination of sectarianism. b a t t I e number five . With a solid'"elementary school syslem there was one more goal, one more victory to be won . That has been ac- romplished now, the addition of the high school and then the junior high school between the two. Btrr THE SAME forcts which so stub- bornl y resisted the development of free public education are still solidly en- trenched. and are ever watchful for opportunities to discredit our system of pubUc schools. This is hard to believe in a country, such as ours, that owes so much to this system or education. One such batUe ii now on the horizon, for foes or the public scliool have been marshalling their forcu and developing their tactics for some ten years. This is the coming baltle ror the voucher system of education, a sy1tem that wouid let the parents select the school cf thelr choice for their children. The funds nonnally channeled dir'eCUy to the public school from the state would now be put through the parents and then to the school. In our fret enterprise system, on the SW'fact and at first thought, it mlght seem a plausible idea. A far different view, however, come• into vision upon reflection. Just like the trap in the jungle, the bright covering of leaves and jungle-growth cover a pit of darknel!. THEREIN LIES the "wh.ither are Ulty bound" part. of. this lltUe story. The most obvious of all victories that would be erased would be the fifth, that to eliminate sectarianism. Would not BapUsts attend Baptist schools, Methodists attend Methodiat schools, Seventh-day Adventists attend Sevenlh· day AdvenUst schools and (blank5) at- tend (blank) schools? You can fill in the latter, for there are over 250 more to go. What better way to generate religious intolerance and divide the people! Would private and parochial schools be willing to accede to the terms of our batUe number four and accept teacher certification. courses of study, handicapped students requiring special training, drop-outs, building specifica- Lions, and the host of other special duties constantly being given our public schools by our letislatora:? Hard to be- lieve that they would, BATfLE NmtB.!R three, won onl)' after the hardest of fights, wouJd now be Jost for students would now be paying for their education directly, even bt it through vouchers . With this com- petitive system, think of the advertising, t~ hucksterism, the baiting to attract students, the conniving of some students and parents to obtain concessions before enrolling at a particular school. After the parents and s t u d e n t I thoughtfully chose the school according to their standards and their religious backgroWld and ethn ic background and their financial standing and ability, wt wou1d undoubtedly have one unhappy result 11lose of less fortunate parents, those with handica~ requiring special training, the children of migratory parents (a surprising number ol these outside of agriculture), the problem child, etc .. v.·ould be found in the public schools. What would the public school• be then? The second battle victory reversed and the pauper schools would once more be with us. WOULD WE THEN be able to convince the voter to maintain and support such a public school system? Under present circumstances and the temperament ol the voteri, this is dilflcult to believe. All this would be a radical departure. from our present system of public schools. Education v.·ould be largely in the hands of the re ligious and private organiz.ations. Impossible! No! But - as in the case of our forefathers - the battle must be fought and the batUt must be won -decisively. Newsette Publlsbed by United Amerleu1 for Public Scboolt Loi An1elu Playing Black Game o·f Mau-Mauing There ts a hilarious account, In "Radical Chic and ~1au-~1auing the flak Catchers," by Tom Wolfe (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), of the black game of "mau- maulng," more commonly known as cun- rrontation. tn ~ent years Negroes made two lmportant discoveries about whites. First th e y disrove red white liberal guilt, and how easily it caa be exploited to Ne- gro advantage. Secondly, as Wolfe writes, "Black ~ pie began to realize for the first time that the white man ... bad a deep dark Tarzan mumbo jun- gle voodoo rear of the black man's muculinlty, This was a revelation. For 200 years • • • mot.hers had been raising their 1100s to be meek, to be mild, to c:heck their manhood at the front door In all things th11t had to do with v.·hlte people. for f~r of incurring the wrath of the Man. The Man v.·as the white man. lie 1vM the only man. And now, when you got him up close and growled, thls all· powtrful superior 11nlmal turned out to be terrified. You could rtad it in his face." HENCE THE t.1AU·1'1AU llct.ics. Hence ~ pradice of descending on Quotes Rtclutrd A. Jone1. Redlancf1 -" 'I i m my brother's keeper ' does not mean lorklng him up In a prison for the rest of hl.s life." • • white officials in delegations of 25 or more, scaring the wits out of them: .;If you were outrageous enough, if you could shake up the bureaucrats so bad \Jleir eyes froze into iceballs ••• they knew you were the ~al goods. They knew you were the right studs to give the poverty grant.s and community organizing jobs to." The blacks got their instructions from their own selftaught masters at the game. Wolfe quotes one of I.hem: "Now don't forgel When yt>U go downtov.·n, y'all wear ghetto rags .•• see _ .. Doa't go down there with your Italian silk jerseys on and your brown sut!de and green alligator shots and your Harry 13cllafonle: shirts ••• You wear combat fatigues • . . and your shades . • . You go down with your hair stickln' out and slU1n' up! Looking wild !" THUS ONE 4'MrLTTANT" organization alter another got dramatic news and television coverage, black "leaders" were cre1tted overnight, funds wtrt found by poverty officials and fOWldaUons for pro- grams -community organlzallon, man- power training, }Ob c:ounstllng, whatnot. No matt.tr that Uttle that was suppQSed to get done by these proarams ev'r got done. To the mau-mau plnyer the Important thing was to get hiftd on a program ~ that as "counselor" or "coordinator " or "consultant" he could rontlnue to bane aroWld the streets. but with lofly 11tatu11 1s well as a good aal!lry. f\1tanv.•hile aulhentic and rr~pon.'lible Negro orQ:anizations with dccadt.s of ex- ' perlence in education, jch training, neighborhood service and the likt are left out In the cold, waiting in vain for supp~menlary funds -or even 30 stcands of attention on TV news. BUT THEY DON'T get il They don't rtaUY represent the ghetto blacks, say Ult TV people. taking the malt-maus' word for • iL White bureaucrats say likewise. Such is the unconscious racia1 condescension of many white liberals: If a black man dresse! IOberly and talks reasonably, he cannot really be repre$enlatlve of his people! Tom Wolfe's essay, based on San Fran-- c:isco experience. throw111 much light on the strike at our college in the winter of 1961-69. So does 1nother book, "Blow It Up! The Black Student Revolt at San Francisco State College and the Emergence o( Dr. Jlayakawa," by Dikran Karagueuilan (Gambi t, Inc.) "Blow It Up!" provtdes: ample evidence that the strike at San Francisco State. far from being • demand ror educations! reform , for Black Studies, for more generous admission policies towards black at.udent.s (sll of which had bten granted by my Pl'~uor1), ~·as in actU1.llty a clur cast of mau.mauing for evuythlng that could be milked out or the public purse or 1tudent a.s.soclation fUnd! "'"hlcb amounted to ltOUOd S400,000 • year ). KARAGUEUZIAN RAS done , rem1rk•ble job of getUng bt:hlnd the Ktnes of Blick Studenu Unk>n pl11nning and nctivllies. Everyone pull on an act. "Varnardo took great palns not to be caught In public ~·Ith 1 smile on his fnct." Ge"~"'° Murray ttowls, grinds his I<'<''~ .,, for tilt. ass.a8Slnatlon nf ~1<1~ llonald Reagan ;lnd Presldcnl UYI> S1nlth. Befort meeting ( with the administration, BSU members hilariously rehearse th~ various militant roles they have assigned to each other. In dress and speech and manner, the. S.SU played out the mau-mau game almost exacUy as Tom Wolfe describes it. . Guns and explosives were brought on campus not·really to be used a·galnst anyone, but rrmtly to serve as theatrical props. Everyone was taken in by the 1et -or almost everyone -administrators, v.·hJte radicals, liberal professors, newsmen. Ind~. newsmen were not only gullible, but tage-r to be gulled -a fact that the BSU was quick to take advantage of. No wonder the strJke lasted so long ! ITo be continued.) By S. I. R1yak1w1 President San Francisco State Collea:• ..... ~ Monday, March 29, 1971 The editorial page of the Dailt1- Pilot 1ttk1 to inform and 1tim- 1.1laU rt'Cders by pre1mting thiJ newspapc:r'1 opfnioN and com.- mtntar11 Oil topics of in~rtst and sioni/icanct, bv providino a forum for the tzpre1.rion of our renders' opinion.s, and by prtsenting thr. divrr1e of110o pohitl of Informed. obsnwra and spoktsrnen Oft topks of the da11. Roberl N. Weed, Publisher • ' • • g • • y c • d h ' I c n • • • • Is • ' • • • ' ' t " • t • • • t ' ' J " ' I ·! ,I Florida To Make Own Rain MIAMI (AP ) -Ralnmaking will be tried in the Ever1Jades Jn an effort to save wild\l fe threatened by brush fires and the worst drought in 15 years in south Florida. About 82,000 acres have been burned in the 7 ,500 gquare mile Everglades where only . LS Inches of rain htve faUen this ye ar. four inches less than normal. Slow.inovirlg animals. such as turtles and snakes, already are dying as the swamps dry up. Fish and alligators have found temporary saJely in the deepest canals but may be en- . dangered when the , nesling and fawning season sta~ts .•. soon . ., When turkey ;ind quail are 1 on the nest and deer are . dropping fa\vns, fire is bad," : . said Lt. Jerry Girvin, in- formation officer for the 3 ~ Everglades region of the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission . ; · Starting April t -if condi- ! • lions are favorable -the Na- tional Oceanic and Atmos- pheric Administration will seed clouds north of L a k e Okeechobee. If rainfall results. the water will drain into the lake and from there to the ~ thi rsty Everglacles. Dr. William. Woodley oi the experhnenta] metecirolo;.ical laboratory, said. however. "we can't work miracles. We can't m;:ike clouds. We have to have suitable clouds. The months of April and May are ex- tremely variable.'' Suif1bte cloods have been rare in recent weeks. On ~ many days, the sun is vei\M only by smoke from the bum- • '·ing sawgrass. ~,, The fires are blamM on careless c A m p e r s and •·.:.fishermen. and on arsonists . •. They are difficult to quench -,as the swampy terrain is in- ,, ·accessible to ordinary Ur~ fighting equipment. 1 · A bulldozer was used this • ·week to bury smouldering logs ·:. ~nd stumps to keep names 1··trom spreading into the 11a- tion's last remainin~ stand of virgin bald cypres~ in the northwestern reaches of the i;vergl11des. A ban on outcloor burning liow exlsfs in JR south Florida <'ountie~. But some who live in the Everglades have been • ·lgnoring it Thev bu i I ti ;,·"backfires tn ket:p lhe hungry Oame!I from reaching their • ' homes. ·~ '" ',Mesan Gets Babcock Desert Post · A ~ta Mesa Industrialist ., tt3s beeri appointed to heed B new Babcock Eleclronics Corporation plant In Coolide. Ariz., drawing many employ- .e~' frt'lm the Pima Indians' ,".~ii• Riv er Rellervation. •· lie is Leonard Ash. rur- _unUy chief relay des1g11 engint:er at the firm's ph1nt ' at 30$1 Hsrbor Blvd .. which r l.i...,a subsidiary of Esterline COfp0rstlon. ' Bsbcock Eltctronics Presi- dent Stephen N. Donahoe ssid a s1udy of domestJc snd some attractive foreign locations mui; mitde before the Arizona planr sitr was picked. Coolidge is midway be:twee11 ~nix and Tucson and the Bureau of Indian Affair5 and !bf Regional 1 n dust r i a I OO>elopment Director Ed Mlelan wert involved In site st!~11on . Speclalliel'I will be Industrial relays and electronic asM!mhly components used in the 'industrial aspect of 811b- ~ Electronics' total pro- ,<luction. DAIL V PILOT f • • ,It still means something at Penneys. 41x~·· "Riviera" drl'J)eries, expertly tailored of the fintst rayon/acetate antique s&tin. Fully lin'ed to hang in deep luxurious folds. White, gold or olive. Terrific value! 48 x 5_4", ·~ x 84" $5 96 x s•·. 96 x 84" s12 144 x 84" S11 244 Crew-neck acrylic knit shirts for boys in f1shion stripes or cable front solids. Machilie washable. Sizes S (8·10). M (12-1 4), L (16-18). 21or s7 Bo yg' fashion pant special. Penn-Prest• polyester/cotton ii'\ solids or fashion stripes. Fl1re-leg, Western· back styling. Sizes 6 to 18, regular or shm. . : .... ,,_ • i " fl' -1 t, .. / :1 .. . 399 Blouse specials! Tailored and dressy blouses and sh irts. Knits and wovens in the group 1n patterns and plains. \ All long sleeve, sizes 32 to 38. :~ 299 Special! Men's crew·neck shirt. 100".4 acrylic, fancy links stitch, in spring .fashion colors. Sizes S-M-L-XL 599 twin or full Special! Throw style bedspreads in an assortment of distinctive jacquard woven patterns. Penn·Prest® cotton in decorator colors. ennelfl CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! ' 199 Girls' knit top special. Comfortable raglan sleeve, crew-neck styling in cotton knit. Fashion colors, sizes 7 to 16. 299 Special! Girls' stretch jeans. Nylon/cotton strt1tch denim in prints and strip~$. Ftare·leg styling. Sizes 7 to 14. • i ' f; DAILY PILOT 1.:or1day, Marth 29, 1971 One of Kind I Cranston Say." Anti-SST I Vote His Toughest Task APJ'OS (AP) -Sen. Alan Cranston (0.Calif.), calls the vote against the supersonic transport p r o I r a m the toughe1t be has made in the Senate -partially because it means 3,000 CaUfornlans will lose their jobs. But be told a Jefferson- Jackson Day dinner here Saturday night the real cause of California's unemployment problem lies with President Nixon and his ecenomlc policies. Nixon Is refusing te release $11 billion already .ap- proved by CongreS! f or various programs, Cranston said. If the funds were released. Cranston said, they would pro- duce new jobs nationwide and in California. -not Cambodia and Laos." "GetUng into the war was a Democratic mistake, but it is now a Republican mistake to keep us there," be added. Cranston promised to seek a timetable for wilhdrawing Amer ica n troops from Viet· nam, but dJd not mention a dal.e for complete withdrawal. He also said he would be Jn the thick cf the effort to end the draft this year. "If the draft is not ended, then J will fight for a law that prohibits draftees from fighting in an undeclared war anywhere in the world," Cranston said. Despite his objections to the Vietnam War, Cranston said, the United States should sup- port Israel in the Middle East and praised Secretary of State William Rogers ' report on the situation there . Cranston stated th a l America has strong interests in the Middle East, that Israel rtquires no manpower -only equipn1ent -a11d pays for everything it receives and that Israel is a democracy, unlike the government in South Viet- nam which he described as a military dictatorship. .QUEENIE By Phil lnteriandl "Oh. just a moment, .. would you return my .... pen, pl.ease?" Dr. Warren Keterer, chief o( Venereal Disease Control Sec~ion ~f California Health Dept makes ready for state's coming ''Venereal Disease Awareness Month (April\ in his own way. His license plate, naturally, reads "END VD." The vote against the SST marked "a turning point on priorities" in Congress , Cranston said, and proved that Nixon lost heavily in the off. year elections and has no ideological majority as he claims. Reforni Package Crackdown on Forest, Coastli11e Tracts Urged SEUJNG A HOME ... FHA ·VA? Heiress Death Laid To Laxity in Jail TULARE I UPI) A pathologist says a Connectic~t heiress died from a fall 1n jail because she didn't receive prompt medical attention. Dr. Jude Hayes. Tulare County pathologist, reported Mountain Lion Ban Proposed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The State Department of Fish and Game wants to give the moun- tain lion 71h months of freedom a year f r o m California hunters. The department is proposing the state's first mountain lion hunting season, roughly 4Yz months from Nov. 18 to March 31. 1972. Al present. the lions can be hunted year-round. 'I'be department.'s proposal, to be submitted Friday at the State Fish and Game Com- m1ss1on meeting in L o s Angeles, comes at a time of concern that the lions may be threatened with extinction. Noting that here are now only about 600 lions in the state, Demo c ratic Assemblyman John Dunlap of Napa is carrying a bill to ban mountain lion hunting completely. , Ray Ametl, state fish and game director, said h is department's lion hunting season proposal "would mean that hunters would not be able to take mountain l i o n s anywhere in the stale during about 7!fa: months of the year." Sunday on the death of Marina J, Maguire, 27, daughter of the late Russell Maguire who served as board chairman and president of several cor- porations. The physician ' a i d 11iss Maquire, "1'hose home was in New York, bled to death from a ruptured spleen after falling from an upper bunk in a cell at nearby Porterville. Miss Maguire, who ls being buried today at Greenwich, CoM., had been arrested last \Vednesday for investigation of cha rges of drug possession and defrauding an iMkeeper. A jailer found her lying on the floor of her cell Friday mominJ:: and she died en route to the Tulare County Hospital. Hayes said her life might have beeJll saved if her falling blood pressure and. rapid pulse had been detected a n d a transfusion administered. Miss Maguire had been tak- ing daily dosages of methadone, a legal substitute for heroin which is ad- minlstered to addicts, Hayes said adding that she could have' been goin( through withdrawal when she fell. Porterville POiice said they had been called to a motel because Miss Maguire and a traveling companion, Ran- dolph Boone, 22, also of New York, tried to 11ay for a room with an expired credit c11:n:I. Jn the couple's chauffeured limousine, police said they found mariiuana. Boone, who still faces mari· Juana charges. said he was an employe of Miss Mainiire. The victim's fa the r established a foundation nam- ed for himself. ~ Spectacular Fire Hits 21st Story Res.:taurant LOS ANGELES IUPJ) - A spectacular mid-afternoon fire erupted in a fashionable restaurant on the 21st floor of a Westwoot! office building Sunday and caused more than a quarter of a million dollars damage. The blaze destroyed 1"1on· ty's Steak House where it is believed to have originated. The restaurant ~'as schedul- ed to open an hour afler the fire broke out. Flames were contained to the eatery but buming debris that fell from the windows ignited three smaller ·•spot" fires. One of the spot fires caused minor damage to the roof of the Bank or America on the building's first floor. At least 130 firemen from 26 units of the L<ls Angeles Fire Department battled the flames that created a spec· tacular sight above Westwood village. Three firemen were injured in the blaze and were given first aid at the scene. Division Fire Chief Robert Radke said that smoke and water damage to the 19th and 20th floors would raise the damage estimate "consider· ably higher.'' Three fire department helicopters were used to ferry firemen to the roof of the building. An arson squad in- vestigated lhe cause. I See by Today's Want Ads e ANTIQUES GALORE!?!! Cabinet with original glass sliding doors & adjustable itMlves for books, China - or just \Yhatevtr!! ! An- tique Clover (drop) Leaf occulonal table, Gtt:at BU)'& for you all!!!! e 1966 VW SliNDIAL CAMP· ER -Complele with ca• bhna. Excellent condition. Misc campini ge11r includ- ed. TerTi!ic price! Ck 970 e Bachelor Apa,.tmt'nt in a private Newport St'ach home. You will have your o"n private entranC#. This Is fnr employed man ONLY! Call -Go over • ~ • &: thvl n:nt. • • 1-fa\'e 11 N"lce Day! 3 Stabbed At Soledad, S. Quentin SOLEDAD (AP) -Sole<lad Pris o o officials cautiously relaxed inmate restrictions to- day as they questioned one man in the stabbing of two black convicts during a movie Saturday nighl on policies, however sin~re, Cranston said Nixon's Cranston said Nixon's anti· inflation policies, howeve r sincere, have afi!ed. Nothing but getting out of Vieb'lam wUI halt inflation, Cranston said. He accused Nixon of widen- ing the war in Vietnam and added: "The path out of Viet- nam is to the United States SACRAMENTO (AP) gram the subdi\'ision might Legislation has been proposed necessitate. to keep California's scenic Consumers wou ld be pro- mountains and coastline from tected by giving the state real becoming dotted with poorly estate commissioner t h e plaMed subdivisions. authority to halt a subdivision Assemblyman Leo T. lot sale if he determines the McCarthy on Sunday revealed sale isn't "fair, just and a get-tough refonn package equitable." to require 1oca1 government In addition, the McCarthy to reject plans for a rural proposal would allow a lot subdivision if it would be buyer to cancel his purchase harmful to the environment for any reason up to 30 days or economically unfeasible. aft« the purchase date. To spur local agencies into McCarthy's reform p I an Compare the low rates and ~specially the low loan fees available at Home Savings. Call the lming llnder See why Home makes more loans than any other associa· tion in the nation. You a1e given all the facts, and on qualified credit and property you me given an actual loan commitment. PhOM sny office of Hom• Saving• America's Largest flJll.,., A similar incident took place Saturday night at San Quentin, also during a movie. One of the victims, Ira King Jr., 23, a convicted robber from Los Angeles, remained in serious condition after two operations but was conscious and pro- gressing, a prison spokesman said. $1 Million In Bogus Bills Found act.Jon, the San Francisco resulted from a six-month Democrat's proposal would study by his Joint Committee cut off state gasoline tax funds on Premature Subdivisions. for local roads to any local -=-~~~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii;~--government which d o e s n • t haveanadequategeneralplan THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE covering such subdivisions. A five percent property transfer tax would be levied RT LOS ANGELES (UPI) -on the seller of land in such ~ IN THE CAROUSEL COU ' ' • U.S. Treasury Agents seized a subdivision. The revenue HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN WITH HIM a green sea chest containing would pay costs of planning r_OUfh (tOlsf '2>taz:l In Costa Meu $1 million in bogm currency consultants, improving the cJ \I JI The other man, \Villie A. Colbert, 22, also serving a robbery term from Lo s Angeles, was treated at the prison hospital for a minor arm rut.. during the weekend and said 1-~a~r~ea~'~• ~g~en~er~a;J dp~Ja~n~o:r1•;ny:'._ __ ::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=---they broke up the 12th major environment-protection pro- counterfeiting ring found here The lights had just been put out for showing of a film to about 200 inmates in the North Facility gym when the stabbings occurred, t h e spokesman said. Three stiletto type weapons were found near the scene of the attacks. Prison officials declined to release any in- formation about the suspect. The 1,007 inmates in the North Facility v.·ere restricted to their cells except for meals Sunday, and were released at mld-day to go to ;dining halls in groups of only a few men. Larger groups were fed al the evening meal, and the spokesman said the institution was "relatively stable." Further relaxation of the restrict.iOJlls were expected 11onday, but the spokesman said "we're going to be cautious." in the past four months. Robert E. Powis, chief treasury agent here, said the bills in the latest case were purchased for $25,000 and believed destined for distribu- tion in the New Jersey Area. Powis also said five men were arrested o n coun- terfeiting charges in the latest seizure -bringing to 130 the number of persons in the Los Angeles area taken i n to custody on such charges since Dec. 1. This year Los Angeles has become "the counterfeiting capital nf the nation," Powis said, with the ·volume of bogus bills seized "far exceeding" New York and Chicago com- bined. Arrested were four Califor- nians, Albert Colendo, 32, San Jose; Albert Fierro, 4 1 , Alhambra; A. T. Holt, 37, Los Angeles; and Louis Sogoian, 43, Pico Rivera; and Anthony Colango, 36, Paterson, N.J. • Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Ta!<e 3® Perm by Helene Curtis The wave that not only gives your hair body, but lively texture and condition as well. Shampoo, cut, set Included. *15. We'll clean and style your wig, human hair or synthetic. ,.ULLlltfOllf Oc-sl•lr Ctt1i.<- Jnd '*". 111~ MUNflNOfON l•ACM Hunl!P"OICl1 Cl'tltf!'" ll'ld ,_, m.1111 Or•"'9 "Tllto Cit~., Uf·Jttf I HaW,.OlllT 1•ACM F•t~ .. n lll•l'lll tll't 11oor, •o1+2JIJ --. - Now! 20% off our woven wood collection. This week only. New, exciling and <iii sale now. Window treatments in wood to match any decor. Our woven wi::>od collectiOn is available in Roman shades, spring roller shades and 1l1l\lefSe draperieG. Color combinations to change the entire look of yaur home ••• or enhance your present one •• .all al 20% savings now. EEEE EBEE can collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop:at-home service, free. Matching ntances In 10 styles are IVliilble. Decorate now. Use Penneya tlm• payment plan. ( • • For The Record /tla rriage Licenses ~tdl 1)111 NESTFALL ... Hl!GLi!:Y -Doutllt I ,. J) ol 4J H...,Uton, C.0.11 M•w •lld 11.,,1 L., 21 DI ((1111 M•tl. D ... Vll-STOCK•• -RDQ<erl o .. 11 ol 1021 £111 f'tlmyr1. °''"" •nd MIMI• A •• 17 of 7114 Srtrlln1 A.,_, Co1!1 Me11. N1'VA,Jl0-ALVAJtADO -Mt-I, J6 ol • ' tk11n ""'" LHun1 BtKh tnd Gl-"'t H,, ll ol 11l1J \IOlk'fl'GOd, G~1r1 o...,_ MOORE·EOA.H -Mkll .. I C., ti ot 111$ South CotSI Hlllhw11, L .. u ... lddl itllCI J-C,, 20 of LltulWI ....... lllNl!'LlA-WILHELM -L_,.,.,_,, 23 af 7M1 Corn"'°°6rt Circtt , HUfl- t!lltlOll IStldl tnd f'-U. K., '1 ol Hu1111 ... 1on BtKI>. PETEIS.HALLOWELL -fl-Id E., 20 ol f'Hf PlltMlll ........ , (D5tt M~ tnd l1dl1 J., 10 or 450 Etlil o\W., Ptlnlda1t . Tllt ... VIS.-DtJNCAJll -Me<"lort A., SJ o! 1S2G ~ fle.U. lll\ld .. Lot11 Btkft Ind Gt.a I. St DI tS1t Unlvt,,llY Ori~•. Ntwporl Bqcfl. McKNIGHT-SMITH -Jernr L , ?t ol Xl!l MaclOOl< D•lvt . Hunnne!on llttcn •l>d Lturlt> D. 10 ol 1llJ CorMll Orlv1, C11tt1 MIU FRIESEN-JONES -Brue• w.. 3t Ill 'lt05 Almt , Mtnhtll•n Bracll •nd l.rt>llrt 8., l5 of 121 S1pphlrt Avt., ll1lbol l'llnd. MERRITT·CUSTEll: -Ja1!11 E., 21 ol 1090 MacArthur 111\'d .. S•11t• An1 and C1rol A., 11 of lOtt VlltflCll , Cot!1 Mt,1. M!LLER·HARRIS -J1mt' R., 21 of 1122 51, .O.nc!•-•, Wtl!m!11,l•r and 511111\f\e L., lt af l33G Llrd'I· m011I, S1nl1 An1. THOMPSON.(ASEV -Jalln E .. )J ol 210'~ Ott.11n Front, N1wPGr! ll1ec11 1"'1 Linda L .. JO at 1753 S•nt1 Ana, Cosl1 Mt11. SOLAN·C ... LLAHAN -St•n F .• 11 of J2f1 l"0<1nt1ln WI~ E11f, Co,!1 Mttl Ind Klfhlttn T, 26 af ltS9 MIPlt, Cost• Mn1. MMCll ltlfl MATTINSON·DURA20 -LH E. 10 of Ill Catie Puente, San Cltmtn!e tnd PtK\1111, 17 ol 16Jt? (allt Luc11'11, S..n J111n Ctpl11r1no. WHITFORO·WllHITE -St"°""" C., lt of M11 su .... r\a O.lw1., Hun!lneton BtM:fl Ind Mar1uerlt1 E , 11 al 5101 N1v..:I• Drive, Huntlneton Btltfl. OOFFENllAUGH·WAl_SH -Jo~ M., n al Sl• tlll. StrHt, H11ntln1ron l!ltlcfl ll'IG Al\M M., 10 ef H11ntln1ton 811dl. l!IARTLETT·NUNAlf -.t.rltlur O., 11 of 22U Wttf lroadw1v, An..nelm I nd 011111 '" ll of 1"11 De11w1re, Hlff'ltlt11ton Bfft~. SMITH.SMITH -•-rt C., .. af 6UI 1 1Wrc(11111, Corona dtl Mar and lnllt E., 11 of •:W Selon Rd .• lrvlne. ROSES·MclNTVRE -letrlCt l .• 21 of 10141 Ml>rto L1n1, Wtltmln•ter and G•~ll 5. l t of Hltr Kln11t0<1 Lint, Huntlnoton llt1C11. FISHER-FROCK -Wlllltm II ., 1' af 2010 FulltrlOfl, CO'l!t MtJ• •lld R.t>eu t A,, " of Cat11 Ml••· COX·~TIHGl!:R -Danlld W., 'l et R.. •. a Rldtevlll!, IMl•n1 • ..., Miry E., 22 el 2.uJl Vlr•UI•• MIUIOI! Vl•la. Mlrdl 17trt ' U.S. Labor Grant OK'd for Jobless SANTA ANA -Orange County supervisors ha\'e ap- proved a $375,000 federal grant to provide more county JObs and training for the poor. Funds provided by the U.S. Labor Department also will ~ used to train and upgrade 1ob qualifications Of low-in- come citizens already on the county's payroll. During the 21-monlh pro- gram, 100 enrollees wiij be signed up. They will get medical coverage, transporta· Uon lees, plus child care, uniform and related expenses. Some of the money will go to hire a project director, four personnel analysts. a \"OC8· tional counselor, re s e a r ch assistants, a job coach the three clerks, acrording to coonty officials. CSF Repo rts New R eco rd E nrollrnent County Personnel Director Wiiliam Hart said the system will include an overhaul at job requiremenlS which im· pose high educational stan- dards oo certain positions. 1'1any of the poor have been denied even menial jobs in the past due to Jack of a high school diploma, v.•hilt others calling for higher education need nothing, but a high achoo! dlploma. Hart said. Leatherneck Disc Jockey Wins Award EL TORO -Corporal Clark Anlhony Burlingan1e of the 11arine Corps Afr Station bas won honors in the 1970 Thomas Jefferson Awards competition for his half-hour radio pro- gram "Within-Without." The program dealing with drug abuse was judged the best o( entranlS from all five branches or service in the FULLERTON -Cal Stale special category for broadcast Fullerton reports a record en-media. rollment for the spri ng The compe tition is semester of 14,2n students. sponsored by Tll\.1E magazine The number of persons tak-and the department or defense ing courses at the campus with calegor~s for bolh print this spring is 1,387 higher than and broadcast media. a year ago and 128 more "Within-Without " is a morr- lhan the fall term, according tage of ideas from several to school administrators. nien who have studied the The number of lull tinte problem of drug abuse and e q u i v a I e n t st u d e n t s its possible connections with represented by record enroll· drug-oriented music, C p I . ment is 10,681 compared with Burlingame said. the 10,470 students for which The program will be t~e coll~ge budget.ed; Full repealed at 11:30 p.m. Sunday time equivalent slahsllcs are on radio station KWIZ. based on a 15-unit course load ,-'--'-=--=======~! per FTE student. Many students do not take full class loads, thus the 14,277 figure represents the actual number af persons taking courses. TH E BEST Ra1d111lllp polh preve "P1.1• nvh" i1 011• of tll1 world'1 most popul1r cemic 1trip1. R11cl it d1il~ in th1 DAILY PILOT. New College H~ad Named ORANGE I 11 i n o i s educator Dr. Donllld C. Kleckner. 50, will replace t""':- John L. Davis as president of Chapman College. Kleckner leaves his post as president of Elmhurst College in Illinois to became the four· year, private liberal ar•!ll col- lege's fifth president. Ut{fl Davis, Chapman presidcnl l I I for 1-t years, retires at the ;cc=-=:=:=:=:==:====-..; end or this academic year. STARS Kleckner is a speech arls I graduate of Heid e [ berg Svdn1v Om•rr i1 one of 11,, College and earned h j ~ werlcf1 q•••I 1strala91n. Hi1 master's and doctoral det;;:-~es I column is ona of th1 DA ILY PILOT'S gr11I f11tur11. al University of Michigan. _ Motl(f.iy, March 2'1, 1'171 D•JLV PILOT 9 111 Bar ltft1rde1• Seal Beacl1 Suspect Slated Fo1· T1·ial, Sa1rity Hearing SANTA ANA -A e-0mbined murde r trial and sanity hr.:ir· trig is set for Ap ril 7 for a Seal Beach 1nan accused of murdering !he bar patron who intervened \1hile he scuf - fled \vith a third n1a11. Depending upon reports by two cou rt -appointed psychiatrists. John S. Bur-- ro\\·s, 54, of 1201 Marline Ave., could be sent to Atascadero Stale \!~it.al for an in· determinate period. Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered psychiatric evaluation for Burrows at an earlier date when the defendant waa to be tried in Orange County Super ior Court. He 1-t accused or pumping three .38 caliber slugs into Claude J. Labean. 39, of 459 Galleon Way, last Oct. :3 outside the Red Candle bar in the Seal Beach Shopping Center. No one inside the slnce-elos· ed tavern heard the sbot1 and Burrows lhen sauntered ln - the gun held close by his side -evide ntly huntlng the other patron, accordina: to police reports. Shag carpet sale. Step ·on it. , You save sso on so sq. yds,.. ~ enough lo cover a 12 x 18' living room. 12x9' dining room, 6x5' foyer, 3x30' hall and stairw ay; reg. $325. Sale $275. For 50 aq. yd1. 'Intrigue' deep, lush shag pile is luxurious and practical. Polyester makes it tong wearing, easy to care for. Choose from 9 decorator solids or tweeds. llOWLES-GDUKLElt -H1reld R .. St 1--------- ol 111\'t C~lc111a S!rnl, Hun1ln1tan l!lt~ •nd M1ttllldt, l6 of JIJ C1 llfflrnl1 Awe., Huntl"910fl 81acr.. lEOllETTt:ll-RAMlllEl -RIC11trd G., II of llltll .t.11tr, Wtstm!nster Ind L•na L., 11 of IOX\6 Morning Glorr, Founl•ln Vt lMr. Dea t h No tires •1110 Runrll E. l lrd. IOJ l""l1n1PO-ll~ H11nl· lnttan le1c1>. Ottt ol' O•llh, M1rch 23. su,..,.lved tw wli., !ltrtll.1 ...,.o -· Dl'Yld incl R1111111 lllrO.; Clt11tl\lff'S. 0o<-- ott1r Qvlnn, Ewr!Yn 5ch•11lh lefty Wlllt- mlre; Dolorn Cwnm~1 G•r•ldlne t-lt1th1 ltrofhtn, L1nc1, St1nl1y Incl l.rw!J l lrd; 111111', lltrnlce Ind Ct1r1 Gr•PI l!'Y•l't'n R~Pk•. SWY!cn, T~J dtv, 2 PM, Srnl~ Chnel. h!ltrment, Goad Sl>tPhttd CtmttlrY. 5m11hi Mat· tu1fl', OJr.t/4!"1, IUllHS M1r9<1t11T M. llurn1. 5200 Htll, SP. 11, tiuntlMlcn !lt1cl\, 0.1• "1 dtllfl, Match 'J. 511,..,lvtd by l\u1b.lncl, Cf11rl11; d•Ultl\- ltr. Mr1. illfl .. S1bell1. Raurv w11 re- tlted 511nd•V, 7:30 PM, PHI< F1mllv Cool611111 Funtr11 Hamt . Recwltm Men w11 ctlebrt!td 11111 mornlM, MM!d•v, • ,.,M, ti St. 8on1ve..1ur1 Cttl\l>Hc Cl\\lrch. OlrlCltd tw Peel!; F•mllr Cal· on111 Funeral Hom•. MI LLOll, Jll t-11rrv M~IOr, Jr. 31)11 Cedlr, Newoort l!l••tll. 0111 ot ruth, M•"" 16. Sur· Yl•ed tw wife, P11rlcl1; thr~ """" llruc1, Kei!I\ Ind Ptul:'°Nr1nt1, Mr. 1nd Mr1. H. I(. Mellor, Sr .• flf C•p11lrlM llNtth; ont JllTff; two nlKtli lhrH ne~I. !\.ervlcn were held lodar, MOn· .:t•v, l!:lll AM, st. AndrlW:I Pr11tvtrl1n Church, with Or. R•vmaf>d, I. Br•llltf11 0111<111in11. lnttr~r. P•tlllc IVrw Mt· """'111 Park. F1mll'( 1u11111111 Pho•• w/$11· •~t lo mt~• mtm<>r lal canlrlbullor11, D'''" Cfln!rlbut1 to •ne H•rrv Mtllor Sch01•'1tllP Fund, lirwPort Harbor Hl9h ~ttiDol. Wl'lldlll Ch•Dtl MgrlulrV, "'"" 48U, Olre<;tort. . ,.LUMLIE Pt'5v1n~ M•rlt Plumltf. 1161' llrcdt· t'l!if'll, Founllln \11111v. D.it ot dt•th, M1rd1 21. 5urvlvld bV l\u1b1nd, Tom; ..,.,, Ro91r Aldtn Pl11mltt; da111ht1t1, Ptmtl~ Jt•n .t.lu1nder; Olan• Lvnn Pl!imlH t $h1wn Mlrlt Pluml1t; !lee LH Plumlee. S1rv1ce1. Wlldnt1d1v, lO·JO AM. PH~ F•mllv Colonltl Funeral Home. SHllTlll w~ner R. Sn1e1tr. 6l0l W•rner Awt .• Hunllntlcn l!lt1cn, 011• of df•th, Mt•ch 11. Surwlvld ltv wit., lrtftf H. $hH!tr; ._ 10n1, Gor•IO II .. ol' LI H1br1; Oavld w. sneelf•, Ct rrllat: motllt•, Mr1. Eerno L. ShHI••· onto; 1w~ lt•otrl•r1, Vernon H. 5net1er. We11 Cavin•: Alwin W. snider, Oh!c. 5trvlc11, Wtdnnd1r. l ,.M, Mtmorltl Chloe!, llo11 t-!ll11 M .... .,._111 Park. wnnrl1t, 1!111t1 CM!• Mtu MOrt111ry, Olrtdor1. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLfFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St .. Co1ta Mtu l!M!SI • BALTZ i\10RTUARIES Corona dt l Mar l'JS-Nst Costa Mesa . . . . . . . . 14f.%ill • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY JIO Broadway, Costa Men. LI S.SU3 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 La1un• Canyon Rd. 4H-141$ • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemekry Mortaary Chapel 350I> Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, CalHond• .... ,.,. • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL JfOJ\I E 7101 Bol1a Ave. We1lml111ltr ~%5 • SMITH 'S MORTUARY C2'1 Main St. 13~ HunUngton Beach LAST 7 DAYS l i tiilill .. ~---··''··~"' . One Large 8x10 and Six Lovely Wallet-Size Portraits of Your Child 5aa Hurry in now for the mott spectacular ponralt event In town! You'll get a big, beautiful 8x10 for you and six charming wallet.-slze for family and friends. /\ fine portrait of your child la atways a warm and wanted gifl Remember ••• you can charge it at Penneysl t\nne1f1· FULLEllTON Or1n0tfelf te..111' 2ncl floor, 11\·dd HEWPOR1 le1c~ l'•lfllon hlllnd ?n4 !loor. 14'1-UU HUNTINGTON IE.t.CH Hvnllflt!M Ce..1tr 1nc1 1toc11-. ni-1n1 I • You save S100 on SO sq. Jds.. enough lo cover a 12x 18' lim'tg room, 12x9' dining room. 615' foyer, 3x30' hall and stailway; reg. $575. Sale $475. For 50 .eq. )'di. 'Tropic Isle' is the ultimate in carpet drama ••. toe·tickling 3" deep shag. Nylon p}Je cleans easily, stands up to wear. 16 stunning tr)..co lor tweed combinations. Sale prices eflecllve through Saturday. Special 3~.9. 50 sq. yds. just S175 'Chateau' gi1Jes the beauty ol shag at an easy price. Pl\Jshy nylon is sturdy as well as luxurious. Bounces back. easy care. 6 fashion so lids or tweed. Bring in your floor measurements for a no-obligatk>n carpet estimate! Padding and professional installing la avallabl•. Value. It still means something at Penneys • l>llRl>lfl , For carpet e•timate call lod•r: FASHION ISLAND, Newporl Center jb44-231l): HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Buch 1892-7771) Use Penneys time payment plan . ; J Q OAILV PILOT MOlldA.Y, Mardi 29, 1971 New Look in Newport BofA C:Uh Awards 12 Coast Students Score Twelve community college Fountain Valley, ln science Elden Ave ., Costa Mesa , Artificial Te.eth Never Felt So Natural Before sophomores from the Or1nge and engineering. science and engineering. C-Oa1t have been awarded at Or ,.A C Saddleback Colle1e1 Robert least $150 each in the Bank •n.ie ""11' olle1e: Jane De Bech, l~ Mira Mar. San Now , , • Plastlc Cream Dlscevtl')' Revolutlonlzes Denture Wearlnl ol America $85,IOO competition E. Mande , 328 Bowling Green, Clemente, bu.!!ineu : Mike Def· ~~.~tu~.!i ~t ~:f".: :.~ among atudent.s from 4 4 Costa Mesa, business: Charles fley, 28000 M a r g u e r i t e u lhey'vt nevu beetl btld bclort- partlclpatlna tw~year colleges A. Clegern. 171111 Gillman St., Parkway , M\Mion VleJ·o . fonn1ant111t1tm.1n1btanethttlul,• I So .. _ Calif I I, .. ,· ·-~ . I U I "'"'to"' '""'"u,. i.w ,...,..,111,. n uu111:rn orn 1. • ne, l.C\;l.ln1ca • voca or.a ; technical-vocational; De a n 1..n ~ ""11• • .,... All are ellgible for seml·flnel Robert L. Money, 124 Del Mar Robert Honnette, s 0 c j 8 I 1 t'• • r1volution1rr ri•.covcrr competition March 23 in which Ave., Cost.a Mesa , social science • hu manities, a 11 d e&Jled Piiao1WT"' t0t d~!r home • C ' . enc h -,1 d u•. cu.s. Pat.ant IJ,OOJ,96111 . . •-' _,, i•"lf°'"~· YDll m.ar b1 tt harder, chew better • .at mar. ll•twaur. F1xoor,..,.111t1 for houn RMJ1ll lll01Jtllff Dftt!utU dlll flt ll'e ..,_ te11lill 10 ll.-Jth. Set your dent11t reiul.rly. ~ u17-to-111t FIXOOl1''T 01n1tue Adhe11v1 Ut1lll lt 111 dru( COWi ten.. two students from each of e · uman1 es, an Lawrence Pomatto, science F1xoo1.NT bold• dentur• !inDer four study areas will be,-:Th::•:m:•:'::T:. :Th:::•:m~p:'•~n~.~26!~7~~"';d~e~ng~l~nee~rl~n£g·:_ ___ -,':==========::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::= 11elected for the finals and I receive ~ each. Students will speak on a topic related to their field of study for judging by 11 panel of busineM and civ ic leaders. Their scholastic r e c o rd . citizenship. leadership and service 11lso will be con- Con struction has begun on Newport Cen ler's second medical building foUowing groundbreaking ceremonies on the 4Y.z -acre site last Wednesday. The 100,000· square-foot facility is valued at $3 mil lion. sidered. The area studenl!i, by col· lege, are: Golden Wttt C<IUe1e: John P. Sanger, 7621 Volga Drive, Huntington Beaeh. competing in busi ness: Ma.rk Wh!Uield, 513 Geneva Ave,, Huntinglon Beach, competing in technlca l- voc1tlonal studies; Glen R. Burch, 13771 Jefferson St, Westminster, social science. humanities; and John Charle!! Spero, 9710 Talbert Ave ., You Work Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tub rings Huntington Poli ce Win DA's Praise SS Hike Precludes Soap and clothing last longer • Balanced U.S. Budget Tht H u ntin~tnn B e a c h Police Df'parlm cnt has bPf'n praised by the Oran,l!f' Count y District Attor ney·s off ice for it!> preparation or crimiAa) ca~s. In a le11er lo Chief Earle Robllaille, Roberl Chatterton, a deputy di~t.rict attorney, c.1lled the work of Hunt ington Beac h policemen of ··~uperior calibre ." ''Many poli ce departments arf' slip-shod in their ap- proachc!i In major crimes. of!en leaving to our nffice lhe responsibility to c.o mp le t e ! heir investigation,'' Chat· terton wrote. '•f'ro m my ex- posure to Huntington Beach I know that when I go to trial everything possible has been done to assure victory." By NORMAN KEMPSTER WASHINGTON (UPI) Presidenl Nixon's last link with his ''balanced budge!'' Rep ublican heritage-the full employment surplus-is fading a~ Congress prepares to pass a 10 percent increase in Social Secu rity benefi ts. The Social Security measure approved by a Senate House conference committee and he11d~d for certain passage later this week will add more than $.1 billion to the $11.& billion deficit the President projected in his budget for the fiscal year beginning July I. Unless off:tet by cost cuts in other parL" of the budget, the Social Security measure will swap the thin $100 million full employment budget ~urplus which Nixon predicted for the coming fiscal year. Some government ec<>OO- mists are not overly dismayed by lhe prospect by the wa y. The economy's recovery from last year's recession has been slow al best and some s l r a leg i s t s--particularly Federal Reserve 8 o •r d Chairman Arthur F. Burns-have called for a tax cut nr other measure lo stimulate consumer buying . Nixon has inveJ1ted large amounts of his rhe tori c1I capita l in maintaining a fu ll employment surplus. In his budget mes.!lage lo Congress. Nixon outlined li5 philosophy : '"A't times the economic situation permits -even calls for -a budget deficit. There is one basic guideline for the budget , however, which we lax Mon~"?---. 'WJ ii APRIL • n0 We'd like to help. This yea r, pay all your tax es with a loan from Morris Plan. Then schedule payments to flt your budget. On approval, you can borrow from $100 to $5,000 or more for taxes, bill consolidation or any good reason . And you 'll get our Money· Back Guarantee (U you find you can do better, return the money within 5 days at no cost to you). Ta lk to the fr iendly people at Morri s Plan about money for taxes or any worthwhlle purpose We 'd Ilk• to help. Morris Plan 673-3700 N•wport 8t1e'1 -3700 Newport Boultv1rd shnulrl never violate: except for emergency conditions, ex· penditureL must never be allowed to outrun lhe revenues that the tax system would produce at reasonably full employment. Wh!n the fede ral government'! spend ing action.!! over an extended period push outlays sharply higher, in· creased tax ra tes or inflation inevitably follow ." The fu ll employment budget \1 an economi!!t's concept of what federal income and ootgo would look like H the economy were operating at full steam. It figures revenue on the basis of what the lax system would raise if unemployment , now at 5.8 percent of the work for ce, were reduced to the full emplll)'menl level of about four percent. For the coming fiscal year, the budget Nixon submitted to Congres.!I projected spending at $229.2 billion and actual revenue al $216.fi billion for a deficit of $11.6 billion. However. full employment revenue w1s projected al $229.3 billion. producing the $100 million full employment surplus. The budget figures included a !i.~ pertent increase in Social Security retroactive to Jan. I. The bi ll now awaiting fina l San Joaquin Marsh Set For Study UC lrvine Eite:nslon Satur· day began • IO-P1rt. Wee-- credit course of the Sin Joa- quin Marsh. Saturday mornings from 9 a.m. to noon, atudent.s will visit the ~acre outdoor laboratory recently purchased by the Univer11ly. Up to ~ studenls can participa te in the course coordinated by Kenneth Ab- bott. doctoral candidate In the department of popul1tlon and environmental biology at UCI. Topics to be covered In tl'le course include a general In· troduction to the marsh, study of general ecological prln· ciplt.$, a s u r v e y of the vertebral.ell found in the marsh. study of ve.rt.ebr1te behavior. collection of aquttic insects. and study of basic physiological ecoJogy a n d predator-prey Interactions. Fee for lhe course. In· eluding some supplies. is '53. It may be taken for thrtt units of credit. action, however, increases ;::=========:;; benefits by 10 percent arid adds almruit 12 billion to the cost. Check the Most Popular New Column Al ive ..• 'Checking Up' ALL THE ...... ....... Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Co mplete Installation Available! Just As k ! ""' I Sears J ....... -"'°'-- So. Cout Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Pb. 540.3333 Buena P a rk 8150 La Palma Ave. P h. 828-4400 Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Pb. 547-3371 SPAGHETTI~~~ EAT WITH OUR DELICIOUS GENOA MEAT SAUCE AND GENEROUS AMOUNTS OF FRESHLY GROUND BEEF I TUES. 30th WED. 31st THURS. 1st WE SERVE LOW CA LOR IE SPAGHETTI SPECIAL ... LET'S GET ACQUAINTED OFFER ADULTS 9S~ CHILDREN SS¢ UNDllll: 1 Z PLU.SI nlfionyi SPAGHETTI HOUSE •• :~:;', .•. CluH Met1d•y MODEllN All CONDITIONID. 210 SI.AT ,AMILY RE5TAURANT LOCATID AT ... HARBOR BLVD. AT McFADDEN SANTA ANA •.. 839-2281 Acrou fro111 H•rti•r Drl.,.·111 n.er.r In 11ddition, Nixon asked for an Increase in lhe wage base on wh ich the Social Security !Rx is p11id from $7,800 to $9 ,000. retroactive to last Jan. \. The bill enacts the increase but the effective dale is push·1i::=========::!!l!!'!llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'~lllll-111l"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'llll"'l!JJI ed forward to next Jan, I. Nixon's budget said the In- creased tax base would pro- duce $2.B billion in added revenue during the liM"SI ye11r beginning July 1. However, the !;!ructure of the Social Securl· ty tax system wlll result in much of th11 t revenue being Inst for the coming fiscal year although, or course. collected in the follow ing one. Both e m p Io y e rt and employes pay R tax of 4.li percent rs( income up lo the bRse ceiling in each calendar year. With a $7,800 base. 11 worker e;ar ning that much or mnre pays 11 m8ximum nf S4a5. With I $9.000 b11se, thr. miix lmum for 11 worker earn· in!'! that much would pay $468. Since workers eaming more th11n the base ~lop paying Social Sec urity taxes in the 1a ~t p11rt of 8 calendar ye11r. a b11!>e incrf'ase will produce mosl of it!> aclrled revenue bC'twern July 1 and Dec. l1. Nixon"!> plan would have h11d the hif:lher b11M in effect dur· Ing the crilicAl period this ye11 r and would have addt.d In revenue in the upcomina f~cflll year. The Congrt.s11ion1l b!H postpo ne.-: mni;t of the 11d· dtori C<11lf'clion!I unUI the 11173 fisc11l yt1r wh\eh begins July 1. 1972. Employment Tips Slated · W1111ter Young. the tmplny- menl manap:er for MrDonnell Dougie~ Corp .. wlll nffer tips on empleyment 111 !m•ll business owners next Tuesday ni~h1 . He will !1.pr3k on employ~ selrcllon, rrlt ntion. mottv1· !Ion anct frlnl[e btneflts at 7:30 p.m. in lhf!. r.olden West College Community Center . Yl)UnR will hring tfl hi~ ~Uh· jl"Ct 29 yf'11rs I'll experif'net. with thr 11erospace eomp11ny. Tht st-mlnar I~ ('lp!'n t.n the public There Is no rtgistrstion lee . I NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTiiERN CALIFORNIA J :::s ~ ClDwtCyt Long Beoch to Los Angeles (0'3nge Counly. Palos ~ J"D'I SJ..10 San Francisco $18 Ver des. Wilmin~ton, Torrance, etc). -round~ to S.~ Includ ing tax. l ?ng Beach ls hke having your own prhf!lfl leave Long Beach: airport. You don't have to fight !he free- Now you ca n lly PSA rrom long Beach 7:40 am wey traff ic to L A 1nlernationa1. Th ere'• Airport 10 San Francisco. rour limes a day 10.45 am e,11sy perking. And the crowds haven'! More on weekends _ More ll1ghts than 1 :30 pm found it yet. Ne xt time you heed north eny other 111rli ne. Connections 10 Sacra· 4:30 pm (or south), head for Long Bea ch Airport ml'lnlo. Or. avoid the lraeway and fly to Mon thru Thur.! & Sat. by we y of your !revet agent a.nd PSA San Diego. If you live any piece soulh of .__'-'_•_••_1_11g_h_••_F_''_•_s_u_n._J PSA &t-yio&1 a lft. • I \ i" • ' . r < I l 1 y . • ;, ., ·: • • ' ' i ·: { • . ' ' . t'AMll..Y CIRCVS by 811 K e ane 'I' J is naughty -he wi pes hi1 mouth on his tt-afi. A...,t NCS>cy ki-hi m.• Democrats Squabble Over '71 Convention WASHINGTON I UPI) - The Democra ts are pasting enough potential disputes to their 1971 convention plans to keep it going for four weeks instead of the customary four days. But by the time convention assembles . the party managers should be able to pound sweet reason into the heads of the S,000 delegates and alternates to persuade them to keep close to a normal schedule. The latest prospective con· troversy, still in the talk stage, would . reorganize the Democratic National Com· mlttee to deny an equal vote to each slate and to give the states votes roughly equal to their strength at the nat- ional convention. Thb proposal will get at- tention from the Convention and Party Rule,, Commi&!ion headed by Rep. James G . O'Hara of Michigan. The National Committee, the guardian of party affairs between the quadrennial na.· tional conventions, now bears a relation to the convention like that of the United States Chittenden Ne'v Chief Of Officers Tustin resident Lt. Cmdr. Eugene H, Chittenden (USN- Ret.) has been elected presi· dent of the Orange County Chapter or the Retired Of- ficers Association. The associa tion meel.9 the second Saturday of each month at the El Toro MCAS OfOcers Club. Elected to serve with Chit- tenden were: Maj. Eugene Spencer, USA, Orange, first vice president: lLl. William E. Black, USMC, Orange, se· cond vice president ; Maj. Matthew R. Kenney, AUS, Corona del Mar, secretary, and Maj. Marie L. Edson, USA, Costa Mesa, treasurer. Retirees elected to serve as Board Governors were: Lt. Col. D. E. Garrard and Col. L. F. Zimmerman of Santa Ana: Capt. I. C. Boyle, Capt. W. H. Peterman, and Col. L. M. Bogard of Tustin; Cmdr. C. C. Hitchcock of Orange; Capt. W. P. Caruthers or Dana Point ; Lt. Ctndr. C, F. O'Hara " 1.1idway City; Col. 0. A. Baldinger of Laguna Beach: Lt. Crndr. W. Dukin of Fullerton; and Maj. C. A. Krauchi or ta Mesa who will serve as hairman. Senate to the House of Representatives. Each stale has two votes in the com- mittee wbereu its delegation to the convention is more in line with its population and Democratic voter turnout. The advantage given lo the s mall states was demonstrated in a Feb. 19 vole of the national com- mittee. The committee re- jected a formula from the O'Hara Commission to give equal weight to population and the Democratic vote · in the last three ,:iresidential elec- tions. Substantial gains in delegate votes would have gone to the heavily populated states at the expense of the sparsely populated slates. Compared with the 1!168 con· vention apportionment, the formula adopted still would enlarge the delegations from the densely populated st.ates at the expense of the small stales, but with less drastic $hilts than the O'Hara Com- mission recommended. Thirteen party officials and members -mosUy from New York and California -then filed a lawsuit March 15 to requitt that delegates be allot· ted to the states solely on the basis of the Democratic presidential vote in one or more recent elections. Their proposal would hurt the small stat.es -and the South - even more than the O'Hara Commission plan. A vote on restructuring the Nationa l Committee presumably would come at the second session of the national convention. The principal item o f business at the convention will be the nomination of a presidential candidate. Both parties have found this task less time consuming since fiut ballot nominations have become common. At least six Democrats, all Senators, are now getting at- tentioo as prospective can- didates. S t a t e presidential primaries, public opinion polls and campaign styles can easi- ly cut the number to two or three by convention time. Contests over p I at r o r m planks and the seating of rival delegations may jam up a convention program. These often involve the competition for the presidential nomina- tion. The Democratic National Committee has .a p p r o v e d nearly all of the guidelines writteo by a refonn com- mission, fonnerly headed by Sen, George S. McGovern of South Dakota, on the selection of delegates by the states. Sears Slauffle Harold Ward Oeft), former soft lines merchandise manager al Sears, Costa Mesa, ha11 been promoted to Los Angeles retail group merchandise manager. Marion Page (right) will move from Scars Long Beach to replace hin1, according to store manager J. R. llfelcalf. The Page family lives In Seal Beach the Wa rds in Huntington Beach. I Monday, MltCll iq, 1971 DAILY PILOT JJ Dusty fiamlet Key to Future of Libya? SEBHA, Libya CUPI ) - Sebha is 1 'lll'ide spot in a road from nowhere. It appears as quickly as a mirage in the Sahara sands 300 miles south of Tripoli and to a parched desert traveler look.s like Paris, New York lad London combined. Now it also looks like a political finger in the wind. Like ,hundreds of other dusty oasis ham1els and Saharan crossroads, Sebba was far out or sight and mind until Premier Moammar A I • Khadafy decided to involve Libyans in an embryonic graS!roots political er:· periment. Al·Khadufy is wooing the Li· byan -.nrtachables" b y carefuUy putting together the Popular Organiiation (POJ, a one-party ec.>Utical structure modelled on the Arab Socialist Union formed by the late Abdel Gamal Nasser in Egypt,. The Popular Organization is likely to be more a sounding board for AJ.J(badafy and hi s fellow ruling colonels. ma1ors and captains t h an 11 democratic political body. But s~ most Libyans outside Tripoli and Benghazi. the only big cities. have never been asked how they fell about anything , the process o f developing even 11 m i t e d LIN·BliOOK llARDWARE ~ _,_,,_ WOOD·GRAIN SHELVES "Ml"' Th J~ce l' .. H...il" •1•9 •1•9 10''1141" •2•9 .J6'' Wlil• z 80'' H11• FOLDING DOOR "'•rf•ct ,.,,,..,. •w ,, •• , ... o..,....,.., .. • fe1hl•-•I• entl fllftcrie-._lch, . ....... -..._ ... ,. •'-'•· •Oii••• ..... ••f-1 tr.di: ... _ ...... . .. ,. ...... ~,... .... $7.29 '5!!,._ ... , •• c ...... PATIO SCREEN DOOR • All •l-l1tW1t1 fn-H lwh I• ftt _., 111•1,., '"" .. ,, ... '-"· • 1 •• ,. ... 11. .. y1 ....... . _,,. .. IM .. 11. W'••• '12~.9 , ...... $t4.99 ....... 517.99 to'' .. -$19.99 ,.,.kl• _,.., WOOD 8LOCK FLOORING • ~ ,,._ ........ _ ...... l!l ltef ~ ""'"" '""'ttw.. • '"•9" 1ln ".,,,,... .... ,. • ..., n,.1,i-. -•Y t• IMttlll . ..... -..... ,, ...... 11 .... .... 10c 7:. .. ....,._, WATIR HIAHR ENCLOIURI • w ........ ,. .. ,.__...,. ........... _ ................ ............... • M1 24"a2Va76" ., ... •••·•it.ts ~ '1999 A'/-•I• WOODEN SHunlRS ,. .. ·~ 99• •1•• .... '"" •12• •1'' .... .. , . •1•• •1" 7it14 , ... , •12• '1" ... ,. l•Jt •1•• •2" .. ,. ••J1 •1•• •22• poli11cal participation is slow and somet1m~ baffling. The people of Sebha stood in the town square recently to hear M11j . Kheweild.i Al- Hemeydi , the minister of the interior, tell them about their future. He \explained the benefits • comln~ thei.r way as soon as 1\1-Kbadafy and his fellow of- ficers can finish planning them, then announced the government plans to use CQm- p u t er s to speed up bureaucratic work. Nobody in Sebha has ever seen a co1nputer and few knew what Al -Hemeydi was talking about . But they knew what LIN -BROOK HARDWARE • ANAHEIM J 1'1ll W llN(OlN 1.700 ..,ARO<; fA!>T O~ HltOOKHURSfl PttONl 774 flJOO they wanted mor~ lban t.'01n· also is coming, politicians say, tlonary credential•. He binned puters. but they do not know when. alcohol, minl·skirl.f. hippie- , ' W he n do ,.,e get In the meantlme, the rule is length hair on men, night television?" asked a woman. out and out military, clubs, foreign names o D "When do we get a clinic?" Al-Khadafy and the other streell and shops and con- 'I'hat a woman spoke up ofUcers who have run Libya nscated or nationalized bank-1, seemed to surprise t h e for 18 months through the domestic oil cumwanies, ln- minister n1ore than the ques-Revolutionary C o m m a n d surance companies and ltaJl&o Lions. Women are still very Council appear solidly in con-and Jewish property. much secluded and qui el trol. Now diplomats !tay, he is outside the big cilies. But Al· Diplomats say none of the th.inking about an elecUon. Hemeydi quickly replied. men who surrounded exiled, j:;;;8.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiw.1"9iiiifii "The government wants you King Idris until his overthrow 11~ • to have television." he said, Sept. 1, 1969. nor any rival 1,00t't 0 ' OI L PAINTIN•S "and it wants you lo have military factions pose threats WHOLISALI WAl l HOUll a hospital. But these things to Al·Khadafy. OPIN TO f HI PUILIC ( take time . Do not worry. They A ruggedly good looking l 50°/o OFF ii are coming." former signal corps o(0ctr, l 16U E. l:DtNO&ll, SANTA AHA It is the . same way with Al-Kbadafy, 29, has moved ~ 0.=:;:::,::10 rt the PopOlar O(ganizalioo. It. • carefully to establish revolu· e -IANllAMEl lCAAI • 0.-M·Y-lf c1 ... "LO·YOLfAGE GARDEN UGHFING" W•tl., Mer. 3 1, 7•1 ""AfNIMIM Thiw.., A,ftl 1, 74"" ••1t1t1.&n v.1i.,. o.., Pr1H---'e,,.1hment• • .. , ..... TRI· LOUVER FENCING • l 1t 1'Wllty, tn.11111i.rlr·c11t d ••r ,.11 ... .,. •full 2" wllle ,.11 ..... ,. ,,. tell·-t• In•-• -11.lltlllM ef prlvel'(. . i2~ .. ,/~ 6 ''· , ... , 2x4 REDWOOD • o .. t1. 101111 ........ .. 2114'1 .,.. ,.,,.,., •• .......... " . trimMe"' with ............. • Y•w'll fl""' "•.1•111 ., •.•.. •... ,,, 25~. 4' s 5' PEGBOARD PANELS • b.!rtl ltr•l'll ri1\ .. fM'Mlt ... 1/1" '"''"'· • O,...t f•r 'revM fl•--4 --.... ,... ... ,.,l'll•ltl• __ .,. '•111 ltrl911t. a.,."' 77.:. O'a f I' Rell 8AMBOO FENCING • rim lt."'lt•• 11011 .,. w•••" wtth • •• 1,.1 ••• ., •• , • f•r •fl •••tic •ff•d '""'"'" .,. eur. •••. $J.•• .1'' r ~ O' TRAILER SIWIR PIPE "W• (••'J' • '"" srcoclr of "'''"••" • L•n1 1 .. 11 ... ,, MMI rl1I"' "'""" • l111y I• ""' •H ll'IJlell. •••• $1 .ff 90 u,. •• , CONCRm MIX .,,.,. '•'"• ,..,., ... ,, •• , l td" .... "' 77~ .. ao , •. ••• MORTAR MIX "''•• L•yfn1 l rltk1, l lodu , ltd" •... "' 79~ .. -'''"'" #1'11 - •ou ..... ASPHALT PATCH . ., ....... , .. , ., ,..,,,., ... , ... .... $1.1• 89~ I • ff DAILY PILOT Historv ON"J' ARIO -Remtmber tht driver who cra!hed a ract car before the 1969 Indianapolis 500 and dttpilt burm, came back to ~n the big ra~ alld &o on to lht United States driving diam· plonship? ., The same ~tario Andretti has done II again. captuMl\i I.ht $288.900 Questor Grand Prix Sunday, only four days art•r be and his Ferrari hit 1 wall durln1 practice at the $2S.~mlllion Ontario Motor Speedway. Andrelti. who hed to ny back Saturday after competinj: at an Indy-type race Sru1ta Ana Driver Hurt , In Sn1ashup UPLAND -Swede Sav •ge, Santa Ana auto race driver who cr1shtd hjs Fonnula A car into a wall at lht Questor Grand Prix, remained in serioUll C9fidition at San Antonio Hospital today ~h head injuries. The 24-year-0ld protege of veteran race driver Dan Gurney was reporttd ''doina; better" by his wife Sharyl. He was semiconscious and responding to ques- tions with hand signals. No surgery was planned pending observation, a spokesman for the hospital 6Aid. Savage's Eagl~Plymouth Jost • fronl spoiler, which is used as an air denector, ad!i spun wildly on the ninth turn on IId No. 12 Sunday during the Qut11tor cf18.nd Prix at Ontario Motor Speedway. J'he car whipped around and rammed irtf9 a retaining wall backwards. It ap-Pilred the driver's head came into coo· i4't with the wall. !H,e was rushed to the hospital conscious aJ!Fr being pulled from his car un- ~scious. He lost consciousness again ~le undergoing tests at the hoipllal. , • Shocked Monroe Bot ~ALTIMORE -First, Earl "The P!lillrl" Monroe v.'ent into shock. Thw, h{put the Philadelphia iliers to sleep. . pte Baltimore Buiiets' guard was klfM:ked unconscious in the second qiiart.er Sunday when he received a sharp blow on his already injured rib cage. "After being revived from a state of shock and helped to the locker room, Monroe returned after the halftime in· tennission and scored 23 of his 29 points in leading the Bullets to a 111-103 victory. That put Baltimore ahead 2-1 in the National Basketball Association's but-of- 7 Eastern Conference semifinals. "Earl didn 't know wbo he WIS, or where he was," said Baltimore tr1iner Skip Feldman. "He didn't even remember how he got to the locker room." e f'ro%ier Steals Show ATLAJ\'TA -Walt Fr1t.ier came home, i ot psyched up and stole tht: show Sunday night as the New York Knicks took a 2-1 lead over Atlanta in their best-of-7 National Basketball Association Eastern DiVision semifinal playoff series. trazier turned in six second half steals, cooverting three into lay-ups, u he ig- nited a New York comeback in a 110-95 victory. "I get psyched up," F'razier said. "It's just like making a basket. You st.e•I ont and you feel like you c1n steal another one . That firsl one also has to affect the other team. •'f spent the day at home with my mother,'' said Frazier, whose home is with in three miles of the Hawk11' home court. ··1 took the phone off the hook so I didn "t d(l a11 much socla\iiing as 1 like to. I never eat al home, though, because they jusl sturr mt .. , Frazier poured in 29 points. 17 in the final half when the Knicks ove~ame Atlanta·s 54-47 halftime le1d with 1 sizzl- ing 37-point third quarter that left the lfav.·ks behind by seven. e Wlrlu Top Pln11er LOS ANGELES -Quick, muscul1r forv.·ard Sidney \\1itks of nation1l ch1m- pion UCLA was n11mtd Sunday as the player of the year 1n college bt9ketball by the U.S. Basketball Writers Assoc:l1- lion. \\'icks. a 6-fool-8 senior, led the Bruin9 9.'ilh a 22-point scori ng average and 13-rt· bound average this season as the Bruins raced !o a 29-1 season and lhe national tilll". iL~ fiflh consecutive and se\'enlh In the last eight years. e Sur11e1·y tor Budt SAN DIEGO -John Hedi "Is going tn be as good as new.'' says his San Oie10 Olarge:r coach after the veteran quarterback underwent surgery to relieve pressure on his left eyr:. "E\·erything came out wonde rfully," Sid Gillman. coach of the Nationai Fool· bell League club, sRid Sunday. Charneil Had! uld her 31 -year--Old hus· band will be "per(ect" and a Grossmont Hospital spokum1n said he w11 in serlous condition but "doi ng very v1ell." Hadl wa1 horseback ridln1 S11urday v. hen the horae stumbled over a 101 and !lad.I apparently struck hi• head on a tree, 1ufftring a skull fracture, concussion and fracture of tht bone btlo'v hi." left eye e Tor lleeb Win l\·11· NEW ''ORK -North Carollnl, behind Bill Chamberl1in'1 S4 pcinta, deft1ted Georfil Tech. 14-M, to win tht: N1tlon1J Invitation ba•kttblU tourney Sltu.rd1y . • Repeats: Andretti Wins at Phoen!I ind then qualify 11 Ontario, won bolh of tht 102·206-rntle he1ts in the grand prll, beatina ScoUand'a Jackie Stewart each time. The wiMer 1veraged IOl.400 milea per hour in the optning heat and JOI.IOI in the second over t.ht 3.IH-mlle r o 1 d courH with IL! 20 turns. "My car was just fabulous ,'' Andretti declared after the raet. "There was no trace that it had been d1m1ged. 1be I111i1n ferrarl mecllanlcs worked flat out to get it ready, and I h a v e never driven a C1lT that handled 111 well." Andretti , the 31 -year-old driving ace rrom Nazareth, P1., who •lands just 5 feet 5~ inches ind weighs 16.1, won hil first grand pri1 1t South Afrka e1rller this year. He will compete on the European circuit this summer in addition to racing in the United Stales. Mario beat Stewart by about five car lengths in the firat be1t, after atartlng l!lh of the 30 star1en ill hi.I 12-cylinder machine. He was 12.S secoodl 1head of Stewart in the :secoDd beat, in 'A'hich he st1rted first of( hli victory earlier. Victory paid $311,400 with the Scotsman gelling $25,250. Stewart drove a Tyrrell-Ford. an eight· cylinder machine , with third place going to New Zealand's veter1n Denis Hulme in a McLaren f'ord. His countryman, Chris Amon, took fourth in a Matra-Slmca , with Tim Schenken of Australia fifth and Jo Sif· fer! of S'fl-·it.zerlan<l sixth, finishing \Vllh. the right rear wh.eel of his BRM 153 at I rakish angle. l'lllal ....... Its cit 5.,ndt'f'I Qulitw G••llO Prlit. , ...... 11 lllllWI wl1h lot•I .-..y i»kl to etch or1111•: I -Ml •IO Af\011111, N1t1r.itl, Pl., Pwrarl, 11',0()C) i -Jac1<11 s11 ... 1rr, scorl..w. Trrttll-flo1d. U$,l.IO J. -Dtfll• !iulmt, Ne.,. t.N l•l'lll. McL.,tn-r~ro, '''·'°° i -(~"' AmcHI, Ntw ZN llnll, Mt!,,·5lmct, 114 »O s -Tim k"9n ...... A ... 1r1U1, e r1Q111 .... fGfd, lll.1~ ' -Jo Sll!ul, 5*1'1.,11/ld, lllM UJ, l lf.UCI. I -llo.. Gt bie, M~l11" View, Ctlll, ltll· [l•••v, \8,0CIO. I. -1>1!..-Gtl!Wn, Entl•llC!, M<L•rt~·FDrd. Ill.ISO. ' -Mowa ... G•<llt1, EMJll ....i, BllM, 111,uo. JD -Pt<lro ll11<1r19u.,, Mo•lto, 811.M llCI, 112,UO 11 , -Jt <kv tck>., Btltl!~m. F"'rtrl, 111,250 ll -JOl\n Connon, C....U., STP Mire~. W,JSll. ll -L"" Sell, f ull ...... lci..ClltVr, W,000 l•. -M•rli; Oonclllue. Mtdlt, Pt., Lolt·Oln"Y• U,1XI. MARIO ANDRETTI HOLDS A LEAD .OVER SCOTLAND'S JACKIE STEWART IN SUNDAY'S QUESTOR GRAND PRIX AT ONTARIO. Bulls See Red Tarnished Victory After Ejections; NCAA Finals Slwwed Dump Lakers Need to Outlnw Stall CHICAGO (AP) -The Olic1go Bulla are back In contention in their National Buktthlll AllOciatiop playoff series with Los An1ele1 and they did it without their coach or capt1in for · a 106-98 triumph Sunday. Coach Dick Motta wu ejected by referee Mendy Rudolph at 7:09 of the first period with the Bulls tr1illng 13-6 and captain Jerry Sloan 1ot the technical heave-ho from Rudolph with 2:33 le.ft in the third quart.er. With the Bulls trailing 13-ti, Motta drew two technical foul call1 -for stepping out Jnto the playing area - from ufertt Mendy Rudolph with 7:09 Jeft in the flrat period. P.fott.a had gone to I.be fioor to question 1 televlllon Umeout in the g1me. "I really thou&ht be bad hid it v1hen Jerry wu thrown out," said Motta, "especially when they went to a -five- p;Jint lead." "We juit aritted our teeth and got mad," said 1cting coach Jim King, "etpccially when Slown went out'' "I can't und1r1tand it," 1aid Motta. "We play 32 games to get this far and something lite thi1 h111 to happen in the playoffs." Motta 's reference was to his ejection. "I kn~w it was 1 commercial time out but 1 wanted to know why he /Rudolph) w1s talking to Wilt Cham- ~rlain when the .Lakers hadn't called time. But he never gave me a chance ." LOS AMOfLIS CMICAOO • • T • • T Cti•mt>tr!••~ ' , .. • .. _ • •• • Erlc1t1on ' •• " IMrwlf>ltl• ' .. • Goodrltti 11 U-11 ~ ·-' » ' 111lr1!0t> ' ,., " ..... • .. • Hwhtl • .. • .. ~ ' ,. " MtC•rt..-' .. • l lYt u . ' " MtM!!'itn " ,. " Sl•n • ••• ' llo~non • ., • Wtl~tr • " " W1l11 ' '·' " lat1I• H H-l.J " l l!tl1 ..., »-2l 106 L" Ano.i" " " • " -" C~IClgO " " • D -'°' If S1turday's NCAA finale showed nothing else, it clearly demoruitrated the uraenc:y for l•gislaUon to use a 24 or 30 second clock for college basketball. UCLA 's control game may be called good 1trategy . • . supposedly UHd to break up Villanova's zone defense. And perhaps it was tactically sound. But it has no place in basketball and --------WHITE WASH ·--------• e LIMN WMITI surely coaches will get together and bring that facet of the ilme to an end so we can see the sport as it was meant to be and as the pros play it. Basketball ha s high emotional pitch and action g1lore. But, the stall is a putrid pie~ of strategy that to thi~ corner brings no ilory, no credit no merit b1dges to teams which employ it , regerdll&!I of whether they v.·in or io.e. Condotence.s to Villanova and USC - two teams victimized by UCLA's abuse of the stall. And another thought on the NCAA tourney at Houst')n -it appeared the officials generally leaned toward UCLA on margins! calls and general officiating. Goaltending calls and alleged traveling and three-second violations cost Villanova the game. And Kansas was denied four baskels on travtling and three-se:e-0nd calls in it.s 68-60 loss to UCLA. lnlere1tingly, television commentators WaltonEraNexton Tap For Wooden's Dynasty HOUSTON (U PI ) -UCLA·s basketball dyn111ty c1n now be chronicled in 1r1s -sort of like EopUan k.1na1 or rock formations. First it was the Alcindor era and then camt the Sidney WicU-CUrtia-Rowe- Sl.t'vt P1tttr10n ere. Now. ii UCLA i~ to continue to dominate coUe1e basketb11l for the nt.xt ftw years -and v.•ho i1 aolna to bet against lt -whit ~·Ill the n11t era be? It will moat likely be knov.·n 1s the \Vallon era. \\'a.lton ii William 0. "Bill" Walton, a 6-IO"hi, 21S-pound center who ltd tht Bruin freahman te1m to 1n undefeated stason while II.I varsity counterpart was busily extending history'ii moet one-sided stretch of colleg\ale baaketball dcimiri1· lion to five yean. UCLA rnadt it an even half decide of supremtcy Satutd1y by downln1 Vil11nov1, IM1, In the NCAA cham· pion11hlp b11ketb1ll 11me. That title: viC'tOry made it !leven n1· tional cro"·ns in I.he past eight ye•rt for cot1ch John Woode n -whost' 11nly r11ilurr: lately CllT\e In 196e 'A'ht:n the Bruins did not eve:n capture their con· remtet champlon1blp, Terry Sehofield and Kenny Bonker - hive played their list game for UCLA. The only star ofr thi9 season's club to return next ye1r will be Henry Bibby, the llghtning-qulck guard ''ho was unpleasantly inconsistent with hill outside shot tbiJ year. but who got hot 1n the semifin1I game against Kansas last ll'etk to help tht Bruins jump into a comfortable first half le1d. The losa or all those players, however, setmi to be onlv a temporary i~ convenience. Something 1kln to Eliubtth T1ylor losing an ea.rrlng. She just reaches into the jewelry c1se ind pulb out another set. The subject of UCLA 'a sudden ICM of a huge number of key players was mt:nUoned more U11n once to \Vooden during hl1 11weep through Houston last "'eek . His reply 1lways "'ent aomeUiing like thl1: "Thtre will be three starttri; on our team ne1t year to comt off our freshm1n team -m1ybe. four. \Ve are flptlMl:slic 11bnut 1hese pl1 yrrs. but you never know Rhout so phomnres until you sec them play. .. , don'I th ink we ~·I ll be on the apot ntxt year like wt h11 ve betn, but we will have 1 tint le1m, I beUevt." Saturday pointed out how odd it wa9 UCLA could be pressing yet be called for only four fouls in the firi;t half again1t Villanova . UCLA is officially the national cll.1 m- pion and nothing will change that. Bul something can be done to wipe out stalling teams and thus make futur e championship teams winners of a bona fide tiUe, not one with a coat of tarni~h . * * * Bruce Gelker. owner of lbe Sadrlleback Inn 111d proDrlrient Newport Harbor High booster, aends tbe column postal cardR fram Poland and Russia, telling oi the bitterly cold weather. Gelker pens from !\1oscow that he witched swimmers worldng out outside wblle it was snowing. * * * ~flke Solomon, ex-\Yestminster H i g h. track star. missed :sun<iay's dual meet betv;een Kansas and UCLA because of a knee lnjury that has hampered his tr1ining. The University or Kansas senior might have gone under four minutes Sunday, had he been fit. informed sources told me. Solomon ran 4:03.8 last year and his coach, Bob Timmons. told this corner that ~like could have broken four minutes this season. In fact , Timmons still holds out hope I.hat the problem will be straightened out and that ~1ike can resume grueling training procedures. ''ll isn't too late for him to get io top shape. although he does have a lot of catching up to do,'. Timmons SAVS. "~like has made a lot of firie contrihutions to the team and it's tou~h to see a senior and someone with his kind of talent to have these pr~blrms. "It 's been exasperating for all of us.'' .ffimmons was RI a lOJs to explain "·hen nr how the injury occurred and specialists are v.·orking on the proble m. '"Mike is able to train £ome. evrn now . Aul he can"t handle the volume of v.·ork. he: needs lo run the times we are shooting for,'' Timmons con- cludes. Bruin Ju1nper Sails 26-3 3/4; Kansas Bows \Vhen track fan s allend UCLA track meets this season, they start out a bit earlier so as not to miss the fir st action of Lhe nicet -because if they miss even a minute, they may miss the highlight. Freshman James McAlister, a sturdy long jumper, doesn 't waste time in his specialty: each we ek his first jump of the competition is his best. And Sunday he proved that early season reports of his potential weren't exaggerated. With one niighty, first-up leap of 26 feet 3:1,~ inches, P..1cAlister eclipsed the t;CLA long jump record of 2&-3 which had stood 19 years after being set by Oly1npian George Brown. It \\'as also the world's best outdoor perforn1ance th is season and stamped the youngster fron1 nearby Pasadena as a potential Ol ytnpic participant himself. He 's on a UC LA football scholarship, hO\\'ever, and the 1972 Olympics are late in August. just about the lime football season ~tarts. UC LA used the leap to jump over Kan sas 84-70 in a rare Sunday dual meet. ·d .. e~~~ll;s~gl -;,:11 ~~AJ~~tr IUI 16-l'~ 1 ...... Pal• vaulr -I Tr•ca1111IU CU) 11~1'> 2. Htrdl· ion 1U1 15"<1 l. M•lchfr (I() ru s""r W1 -1 SAib (IC) ~J.) .. 1. Ottcidl IUI 61·10'• l. W<lnelm {It\ ~110' ... Jo11•lln -I Cai.on (II() 2SJ.I J. Jo"" \VI 1t5 6 l Schil•r t U I 101.s SlttPll!<:n~•• -I Callen fl(I ''°'' 2. Mfilt (UI 9 19,Q l. sv~•·I IUl l l'I U(I rel•~ -I. l(on'~' (Sct \IUUO, Lull, E" w~rd•. F, Johr,U<1) i1 J UCLA ""gullitlt'd, f'IUlng cut oj 1ont, eruln• ... an In ci • Miii -l Sm•!ft (kl •:Dll 2. Cti1pp\n, (UI 4 DSS l. Ande'IPn lk1 • cttO 1119ti ftur<ll•s -I 81!n fl(I 1• l 2. V1nd111M• (K l U ! l . U<N~<I (Uf l• 7 l~rgft lu"'P t Hull IUJ •I 1, Flt'!t~er tU! &·• l G, Jon~•"" 11(1 t-t .UC -I Sm11ft (U) ~' 2 Et"°ll (Ul '1 I l. Wllll"'"' IU! 4 l 100 -l. Wtlc~ IUI t s J. Col•r!I IU) ,, l . St•VUUD (Kl 91. 0 1.cus -1 SAib l K) llJ.O 2. Wll~1lm (I() 1191 J Q11o;<ft IUl \IJ., T•ipl~ lu"'G I 8.,..,1,,,, (UI .,.1 I. lloq•" jUJ 4 .1 l Stull I Kl ii 1.._ U0 -I J•t Q\ll> !Kl 1:$01 2. NlthO<l11 !kl I ]I 1 l l~nq<lon !UI I SI t •.ICI fto•nl .. -l Callen (UI 11.1 2. lor~-•nel 11os11J.eaie>lK1 u •. no -I Sm<!~ (U! 11 0 l, Wtlt~ (U) 21 I J. l~ll (1(1 ll l Two.m1I• -I M11a~ (Kl l "Sl,• 2, Smllft 11(1 tD.IO J ElhOlll K.lt07• M1lf. •fl~V 1 UCLA ll•ntshl~ 4' '· Glb1an ii J, (OOPt< "8 J, W1lll1mi •.• ) J. 1•.t 2, K•Mll l 1l l FlnAI ><Ctr -lJCt.A lj, k•flHI 70. Weekend Playe1· Rich MIA!o.11 (AP) -Gary Player has earn- ed $75,643 i n fivl" American golfing v.·eekends. and the incredible South African is thinking of moving here for a fullt ime shot at the $7 million t.our. The muscul ar, lillle n1an in black shot a closing 68 Sunday for a 14-under· par total of 274 to capture the $200,000 National Airlines Open. It meant anoU1er $40.000 for him . ~·in· ner of the $25,000 top check the previous v.·eek in the Greater Jacksonville Open. "It's the first time I've won back-lo- ba ck tourna1n ents in America:' said a smiling Pl ayer . "\Vhen I showed up for the PGA Championship four weeks ago I told everyone I v.•as playing lhe finest golf of my career,'' Now everybody believes him. Player strung out rounds of 69-67-70-68 on the 6,970-yard Country Club of Miami course, smashing a five-man mid round deadloc k with lhree straight birdies Sun- day to whip Mexican Lee Trevino bY two shots. "l limped home with bogeys on th e 17th and 18th holes." admitted Player. "but if I had needed a par four on the last hole I wo1rldn't have played safe, missed the trap and been home free." Plaver's brunetle wife, Vivianne. ar- rived. in time for the Nationa l Airlines event and admitted, "we ate still kn ock· ing around the idea of moving lo America so Gary can play here a]J the t i m e ... where the money is.'' ··1 could break Billy Casper's one-}·ear money ree-0rd ,'' he said. "In 15 U.S. tournaments. I usua lly top $100,000. Thin k if 1 played 25 or 30.'' He's right, you know. Casper pocketed $205,000 two yean agG and Playe r. if he roaintained his 1971 average of $15,128 through a full sthedule of 30 events. would win a cool $453,840. Player's 75th career trium ph and 12th on U.S. soil represented the further comeback or pro golf·s "Big 'f'h.ree." The milli onaire tandem of Arnold Palmer. Jack Nicklaus and Player havr now v.·on fi\'e of the last seven tour events. .. we·ve all been playing well in recent years, but with fewer victories." said Gary . •·There are many fine golfers here in America and you can be sharp and still never get to the winner's circle.'' The 149-pound physical marvel wil l defend his title in lhe $190.000 Gre ater Greensboro Open this week and then it's on to the f\.laslers to shoot f'Jr a. second Augusta success. ~•n5' "'0'" 1nd m""tV w1nnlnl)1 Su"111y I" tnt N•l1a<11I Alrllnt1 0 1><1n golf tournom~r, G"'V Pl&yor, 100 0C0 19·&1 IO·f>l-11• lH l••11lr>a, 121.!tlO ~l-6•-11 69-716 JfHV M<Gtt , 1U,:"(IO /l~l·ll.U· 111 8•utt CromPIOt>, U.toO 1>1'611·10.ll 111 cnorl" cooa1, H toO 706.'i n .10-111 Jury Me..rO. 11.UJ 6'6-10·1'-'J-171 JOhnn1 PDll. 16.ns n.~t·IM•-21' A•nald Ptlmtr 16 ns m.••·11-tt-111 Ct1•r Si n""°. 11111 11·11-tt67-11t Brutt Dtvlln. 1• )Oil ••·''·13-ll-1'0 Don Sol,.., 1•,1'11 lt·M·/l.10-1'0 Jnnn Stnrot'flt•, 1•.HO 11 IJ ... -tf-1'0 Bo~ Smit~. 1•.14() 11-Af 111t-110 D••n• 81m~n, 1•.1•0 1l-68 11 ---HO"·• lom sn1 .... 1l,l00 '' ll-tt /1 n1 O•vt Mill, \l,)I)() 6t 11 II 10-1'11 G~rQt l(n1.1<11on . ll.100 11)10 1111 -711 Lorry 11 ;noon, IJ,1(1(1 10 IJ,.lt·ID 111 ~ •• ,.-BN•~. ll ,100 ~I 1ff·10 1'-1'11 P~;i l!11<10er1, 11.100 ••·11·••-n -1'1 Mubf•! Grtt n. 11,960 ll·ll 1110-1'11 °""' FlnOll •"'&!O, "·"'° 111-11 IJ.11-lll l •antl 1101orrr. 11.W.O /i./I M-10 111 l!rll" All in, !l VtO 11).ll 1•'47 lll S~m Snffd. 11.llD IJ ll).716t -11( 1111an Jonn,1on, 11 .110 111111 11)-11• Bobby Ml!cn111, 1\.510 11).lllJ..6'-ll• J t"Y A~bl)U, 11.JIO 11IJ11·1A-H' Pt!r ercwn, i 1,n1 Ot 1J.11·11-1U l!ad Fu•nrtft, 11,111 •• n .n.n-111 l ony Jlckfln, 11.U! ll 11 IJ.61-711 1'1ve ol the sit players Wooden relied Oil the moll during the st"'°" just compl1ltd -Rowa. Wlcb, Patt.eraon, And Wilton shollld be the key 10 the club. BILL CUNNINGHAM (32) HITS DECK IN PHILLY 'S 111·103 LOSS TO BA LTIMORE. I Mon6ay, Marth 29, 1971 DAILY PfLDT J;J Beach Cities Crown to Coronai By PHJL R06S Of ltM 0.llY P'lltl Steft Corona del Mar'• Sea Kln11 recon:rtd suffklenlly eoouth f r o m Thursday'• lrvlne League dual meet I0$1 at Fountain Valley and put together a concerted team effort to cart off the vanity team trophy in the sixth aMUal Beach ClUes invitational track and field meet Satur- day at Newport Harbor High. Coach John Blair's Sea Kings p:>sted 45 points to 40 for runnerup Marina and :it for Fountain Valley, laat year's &econd place squad. Newport senior Mark Stevens turned in a commendable double win In the weight event! with meet records of 11-4 (Jhot put ) and 117·1 (discus) and was accorded the DAILY PILOT trophy as lhe meet's outstanding aUilete. In addlUon to Stevens' record-smashing: perfonnances, four other varsity meet standards fell while another was equall- ed. Fountain Valley's PhU Mau was upset by Corona'• Carlo TOlti In Uil bu< came back to tcore a mee rd in the 220 in 21.2, three-ten a second ahead of Tosti and ntrui under the old mark set by rina 's Dave Lacy in 1919. The final varsity meet 1tandard fell to Marina dista~ star Dave Lockmin, the two mile winner In t :29.I, who bet- tered the old clocking or 9:3:>.2 ac- complished by Westminster 's Neil Sybert in 1966. upsets as Keathley (50.5) beat ,Eltancl1'1 Eric Ollon (50.9) Jn the ffO and Brickner (4o23.0) handily dumped John Mullins (t :2S.9) of Huntington in the mile. While many spectators paid alteotion to the varslly competitors, 1 o m e lightweight athletes turned In amazing performances. • Huntington Beach was fourth with 3S Multiple thrtat Garth Wise Wll! edged by Steven.s for the c;iul!tanding athlete honors . Wise broke his year.old long jump mark of 21-8314 with a 22...f.'ls leap while also lying the meet record in the 120 high hurdles at 14.9. Favored Nick Rose of Corona was a big catalyst for his victorious school as the Sea King 880 ace toured his s pe- cialty in I :SS.a, a mere two-tenths short oC the meet record set la.st year by Foun- tain Valley's Steve Christiano. In the Cee division, bespectacled Estancia sophomore Bruce Glrasole broke three individual meet records and anchored the Eagle 440 relay quartet to a meet ,standard ts. l clockin&- Girasole tied varsity sprinters Tosti and Maas for the day's top century time with a 10.2 and smashed hb own, year~ld meet record of 10.J in the process. DAILY P'ILDT P'holo1 by P'•lrlc~ O'Detlntll LOCKMAN BREAKS RECORD -Dave Lockman of Marina wins the two mile Saturday in the Beach Cities meet at Newport Harbor High in the meet r ecord time of 9:29.6. The Viking distance ace helped his squad to a runnerup team finish with 40 points, five behind victorious Corona del Mar. RELAY RECO RD -\Vcstminster's Jim Keathley gets ready to break the tape with his head down in anchoring the Llon.s _lo a meet record 3:26 .2 mile relay clocking Saturday at the Beach Cities meet. After 9.4 Loss Anteate1·s Battle 49ers By HOWARD L. HANDY • Of fllf Dt lrY P'llll Slit! ., TVs back lo normal after a frustraling we4k at La Palma park in Anahtim for :i coach Gary Ad ams and the UC lrvlne baseball team as il hosls Cal State (Long Beach) Tuesday afternoon fln tfie campus field (2:30). 1)e Anteaters ran into Uie ~uzz-saw Eastern Michigan NATA champions for the second time in a week and were coasUng along on the strong righl arm of Dennis Nicholson when the roof caved ln tn the seventh as the boys from Ypiilanti copped a 9-4 win. The victory knocked Irvine out of the ronsolation championship of the touma- ment an d may have been more cosily than appeared on the surface. Nicholson was breezing along with a :i.o lead going into Uie seventh. He atruck out the llrsl baller and after a hit aflld a forceout, appeared in good 1hape. John Roe. first sac k er , drilled a Hne drive directly back al Nicholson and the ball hil lhc young righthander on the left leg and caromed off ror a base hit lo bring in a run. , Nicholson remained on the mound and gave up a single, a walk and a double before being replaced by Tom O'Connor. The title was won by UCLA in a 9-6 victory over Olapman. Third pit~ went to Southern Illinois as It downed Cal Poly (Pomona ). 8..0. Cal Sta te (Fullerton) defeated California , 8-6, for its only win of the week and seventh place. l , Mld11ft11 0 1 UC lr'l'N 141 tit r 11 r-.1 ... th~ 8011, " ' • ' ' l'ttrt r, " • • • • Colli~. u ' • • • Sylio•t , lb ' ' ' • McLIUQl'IUn, 111 J ' ' • Crt ig, cl ' ' ' • Vff9 .... rt • ' ' • Sl*ICI, lb ' ' • F~\lt<!'\. lb ' ' ' • T.0..c•, •I ' ' ' ·~. " • ' ' ' ~ ... n ... 1, pr • • • ,_, " ' ' ' ' s.,~ •. " ' • • ~ ... 19ls1okl, ' ' ' • • ~•nUl'I, II • ' ' M!ll1, p ' • • • Coron.OO, " • • • Con1111, ~ ' • ' ' s~eu.,., < • • • S•r•, " • ' • • Nldlol'611 . • ' ' • .:;,, ...... ,, ' • • • $<"""'· ,,, • ' ' O'C0t>110r, • • • • Mlllnotl, ... ' ' • P..,~inoton, o • • • TO!ll• " "' ' TO!l ll u • • J(llt bf '""'"'' • ' • f'~1!er~ "'ICMOI~ .. .. ~JO -tlJ ' " ltVlnt .. .. 100 -• • point.a while defendinJ champion and host Newport came in filth with 29 mar kt rs. MWion Viejo captured the Bee crown with 36lf.r: pointa and Ea:tancl1 swept to the Cee title with 53 point.a. * * * Beach Cities Summaries Vtn lfy lDCI -L Too!I (Coron• d•I M•rl 10.2 J. M••• fl'01111l1ln Vtlltyl 10.2 l. Mlln CC•-dtl Mt rl 10.3 0, MIUloy tM1tl"'l S. Vtnllmlfll .. (Mir!"')• l10 -1. Miii (FovnH!n Vllleyl 22.2 (M ... r1«1rd) '· Tot!I lCOl'Onl dfl M1•l n . .s l .. Mllel ICOl'Olll dtl M••l 22.1 o. v~•lmlflll• (M1rl"'l J. Mtlltly (Mtrlntl. 0-IO -I. IC.•lh .. y tW•lmlnsffi'l 30.J J. DIMft CE1!11><l1! liCI., l. S1ttY {WulmJmHrl JI.I <l. ~ 111! CNtwpOrl) i. CIJt (CorDN dt l M1rl. NO -l, lltfll• fCoront del Merl !:ii.I 2. YOlll'l9 1wes1mln1ltr) l:il.O J. !>tylo-l (FOllntlln Vtlleyl l:if.l 4. Hoy tWntmlraMt) i . lltudy !N•wpOrU. Mlle -I. Brkk~r tM.l<IM ) 0:21.G 2. Mulllns IHunt11191on Bffch) •:2J_, l. Coltmln {Westmln11w1 4:Jl.1 I . Al~1tfl (EdllOll l J. MltLffn (COl!o MtlO). 2·M!I• -'· Lod<mln tM•tlntl t::n.6 IMwt record) 1. 0.y tCorOnt ffl Mt rJ t : ... l 1 Llldl CFoun!1ln V•ltty\ f:Jl.I I. MtClvrt (fdi.tnl J. Fleming {Ntwpor1). 120 HH -'· Wise IHunll"llWI I Mdl) H ' (Tin meet r1«1nll 2. Pk:ktord 01un11nttot1 Bffcfll lS.I ?. Kclo•tll JNt WflOl"ll U., •. AftrYT (Mt rlM) J. T1ylor (MlrlM). 111(1 LH -I. Ttylor (M1rll\t) 20.1 1, Anryt (Mt rlnll 20.1 J. Pickford (Hunlll'l9kwl BM()!) 20 .1 •. H1rrl1 IFD11nt1ln Vtlltfl S. Mortis (S6n Ci. m.n!tl. '"° RlltY -I. Co•DN dtt M•r 41.t 2, Mtrlnl 44.G J. F111111t1ln Vlllty ... 1 I. Mluloll Vlelo. Miit lltt!IY -I. Wntmln1ltr J :i6.J CMttl r«- ord) 2. Cor-dtl Mt r J ;H.1 l . H!lllll1'19flltl IH<lt J :Jl.I •. Fovn1t ln V1!11y. HJ -I, K•lmtr (NfWpOr1) 6-2 2, H1rr!1 (FD\/,,_ !tin VtlltYI 6-0 l, MCGtrry (5•n Cltmtnl•) ~·o " YDllnll (COl!I Mesi) J, Ktnt (Coro111 dtl Mir). LJ -1. Wiii (Hunll"!l!(NI Bt•ch• f.l·•Vll (MMI rtto•al l. H1tmlnl•k CM•r!"") 11-10'/ll J. Htrrll (Fount1ln V1llty) 21 -1 I. NlllkOWlkl (Ht.oflllnglOfl e"chl .5. G•ov1r !E1t1ntl•l. PV -1. Ptrklni.on iFounl•ln '1•1111'1 1).t 1. '°'ndt lln !Hunll1111two &Nth) IJ.0 J. S-, ILi• gun• s ... ch) U-li '· 5prD\ll• (5t n c1-t1J J. V1uglvl CCOron• dtl Mtn . SP -I. Stevens iNewoorrl '1·• (M"' rt<:Of91 2. Alllirlnan (N-rl) Jl-4\io J, Dtrv!l1 (l1t1nci.1 Jl·I •. Dr•lll1111 (Hunllnotor'I 8MCh) $. Tlmmwmln tEali.onl. DIKon. -'· sr ......... !Newi»rn 1'1·1 (MMI rec:· ordl 2. "oy1ter tCoron1 Cltl ""'rl 152·11 J. Hftltller IFoun!•!n V1!1tYl 146-t\io •· Frlulllt (Cor-dfl M•rl J. Kur1y'k1 IEdllOll!. l"lnll tttm 1torn ; Ctr-ht M•r -d, Mtrl111 .Ill. Founttln Vtlley :rt. Huntlnl!on IMdl 15, lrttW. pOrl H1rbor 29, W•lmln1111' 2<l. Ellt Mle I. (olllln tnd Sin Clmott1lt 6 ttCll, MlulOfl Vltf9 '• Cnlo MtlO tnd L'9UM lffth l N dl. '" 100 -I. Amit1 (NtwpOM) 10.( 1 ~lry (Miio 1lon VltlO! 10.J J. Lflro (MlulOll VMl1l !1.1 '-Hungtr!lfCI 1cesr1 Mt ••! J. M•lcOlrn cw .. trnl11•ttr1. :m -I. Arniel (Nt-"l n .I IT .... rnMI rK- ordJ J. Ltlro IMIHlon Vltl9J 22.• J. M•lcOlm {West· mlMltrl 23.t I . Giiiin (u.urMI ... di) J, Ll11M (Ji•wp0f1), MO -l. Vll><t {M\Hlorl VleJo) J;21.J 2. Kt rroll fEdllOR) 1::!1.1 l. Howtr iMIMi.t Vleje) 1:2'.l 4. kt11ttr (Ellt r><:lt ) l . HIMD!l (flllawi). llJO -I. R•dtr"'llCht r CMIH ltrl Vltlol J:U.J 2. POii (Wu1m ln1'9r) J:J0.4 l. "'1"'1rei (Wftlmlr.. •le•) J:Jll.t •. G1rcl1 (S1n Clt l!Mflltl J, TfMlm11 tMlulon Vitlo>. no HH -I, Stl!lbo !Mt rln•) 11.S J, K•v• 1wn1m!n11tr) 16.1 l. KellV (Co111 M••I 16.1 4. Mlll1 (Edison) j, N•I...., (Lii-I MCh). no LH -l. S!tnbo CM•rlM) IJ.7 2. Colllnw• (Edl1010 l U.O l. Mesi (E:dl1D11) 14,1 '· k1y1 IWbt- mln11u) J. Ktlly (C01!1 Mftl). MO Rtlty -I. Wt1lmlMl•r l ::U.• 2. Cot!• MIU 1:3'.2 J. HtWPDrt H•rtlOr 1:1'.7 •. MlulM Vlt /o S, L111un1 Btach. HJ ~ I. Colll1>111 (!"dllOft l J-11 2. HOlllywtlt (NtWPOr!) ~10 J. Tl• bt!wt tn Lt dlle IMlulM Vl•!ol and H11-ltlrd (Costt Mtu) J-1 J, Trl MM (Hunllnglon BHCll). LJ -1. Colll1111• (EdiSOfl) n -1:i..:. !M•I record! 2. MOhuhkl (Founl•ln Vt llrt') IJ-111.l. J. CoufMy fM1dn1) 10-•'I. '· Amit• (Newpc1<1 J J. Kins !ColH Mt••>-PV -1 Tolhlhtrv f(C1!1 Mesi! 11-li l . 5111.. "fr IWt1lmln1lt<I 11-li l . Robuck IFDUl"llt ln V•lltYI ll~ • Wt bbtr !MIH;,,,, Vielol S. lull iCOllt Mn.t). SP -I. HU! {Cot-de! Mor) ,7.5y, 1. Hotrll'f· well (lrttWflOrl) 40-P.-• l. Burd• (Mlu lorl Vl•lo , ... ,,., ~-Bffd CE1l1nc:lll J. l()O,lterm1n CL•Oun• l"ch!. Flrot l ltt m 1.:orn; MlHIM VII)• 1'\11, Wftt• mln1ter 11, E~bon Ind Nt~ H1rbor 2' 11ch, Cotti Mfll lll\lr, M.lrlnt U, l'OWlllin Vt ll t y I, Corona del M•r I, L1gun1 ilHdi J. E1l•~cl1 4. Sin Cltmtfllt 1, Hun!l"lllOll Bt•ell I. '" 100 -I. Gi••Mllo (E111ncl1! 11.2 (Mfff rec:onU 1. Lilldl1 1E11tncl1l 11.• l. GI~ IEdl1onl 10.7 • Wll1on (Coron• de! M1rl J. AlldnlO!'I (L11un• Bfft~L 190 -l . Glr1M1l1 1E1lt ncl1l 11.t (MQI rt.:ordl 1. Lllllli. tE11tncltJ 11.4 J, Glron tEdl...,1 11.• 4, Alltln.on tL11u11• Bitch) S. Kllthntr CMl111ot\ Vltlo). 640 -I. Hewer (Mlulon Vlt lol l :H.J J. Al--w1r~1 IHUfl!l/l\lton 8ffch) 1:21.6 l. Hf\111 IEll•llCll ) 1:11.1 I. Bt utr ifdltOlll J. Ttll""~ !Mt tlr!t l. 1370 -1 A09t r1 (M1rl""l l :ll.1 2. J . 011-no ICO•tl Miit) l:1'.• l. T. 011 ... no (C .. 11 Mn•I 3:10.S •. lhD"IPIOll (Hurtllrlf!'ln I MCh) J, Vt rtll !EdllOl'll. 1JO LH -1. Hlrt ll (Mt rlr>t l 1'.1 1. Adi ..,. f£11tncl1J l•,2 1. P'•ltl (fdllOlll "·' 4. Get• ~•11111-- 1on) J. Wl'lll~rnti CP'91111111n V1l1tYI. ,. "t11y -l . l!llt ncll .U.1 CM"' •l<.l nl) 2, L•tUM ltec:h OJ J, FIWlll lll Vt lley ... _, 4. M• r!M J. NtWllDrt H1rtl0r. HJ -I, Tro•1tl {l!:dllOl'I J..I t. Wutlnll'llm f!:IHr><lll U J. ~ (C..._ 1111 Mlrl U '-Am~lfl (Lt tll"' l •dll J, CMflr (IJltMlll, LJ -1. GlrtMlt !l11tft(.lll ~ CMMI rK• onO 2. P'l ul (EdllDl'll ;!141,j, l, Mtl<•lfl CCMIM dtl Mir) ;!0-(I '· Hlt•I• IM•rlnll s. LW<llt c1 ... ltr><l•). f'V -1. HIYI (fllt Mll l 1'-1\11 2, GrtlM"' fMt rlnt l U·JlA. l Gtlflll (fdllO!ll 11 .. \'o 4. V .. • (Wn .,nl1111trl i. Edwtlrdl CfdlMnJ. $1" -I. Jennll'I' tEdllOtll Sl·tin J. G'"'" l•oll-- Mnl ... , J. Shvll CL•I-lllcfl! •N 4. Jlyco (et11Mlt) J. Bowmtll CFIWl!1ln Vl lll,I. 'IMI '"'" H-: •tntKll $1. •llllltll'I JI. Mtrlnt :n, LIO-IMcfl 12. Ctr-ff! Ml'P' I. COllll M-Ind MIU!on Vltlt 7 N dt, HUllll""*' IMth ,, F....,,llin Vllll' S, WftlllllMlff 2, Nt W- 11trl Hl rbor 1, .... JO -I. 11:...,,.... llrtlwoortl •.1 1. Mttdl (l'- llin V1lltyl 1.6 l. Hlltren CNIWPClrll •.• I, c111- ber1 CNtwtl•O S. Tit btTWMll Wtltr• (N...,...11 tnd HllOl•I (l•-ltlll Vl lltyl. 600 -J, Mfflll (F-11111 Vt ll1y) T:ll.I 1. °'"" CFounllln V1ll1Yl 1:21J J, ?titler '""'rln1I 1:.)t.t I. Pl/If (CO<Oftt dtl M•r S, Shlf•r tNtwllltO. llO lll•l1y -I. NtWIOOrl HM1111r 1:11.1 1. C'MOM dtl Mir 1: ... 0 l . E1!1ncl1 l :J.1.2 I. N ........... Hl l'W 11 S. Fllll!lll ln V1lltY. JVllllJ """ IOO -I Shl•lil (0.vlll ,,,.,. 1, WI N rr. Wlftll.11) 1:21:1 J. D'Hlr• (l{t .. l t) 1:14.7 '· Nt vl!I (OIYlt ) J, Cltrt.t CKll1t rl. SP -1. Gfl(I (Lll'Dinl Ut\lt 1. Wlflty (En· llft'I Q.J\lt l. Simi COolvl1) 4'·1"' 4, Vtlllnl (Ol~IJ) $, C•_..,. {l(a!llr). 1-ma11 uo tl11ty -1. l(•lllfr 1:•.1 CMnl rK· 0111) t. T.WIMll l!lt.t J, l)tvlt l:U.). Area Calendar He also ran a leg on Huntington Beach's third place , 3:27.8 mile relay combo, which finished behind record-set- Ung Wesbnln.ster (J :2&.2) and Corona (3 o2U). Westminster's Jim Keam.ley and Bob Brickner ol Marina · rtgistcred mild He also aceounted for Cee ffi:Ords in the 180 (17.9) and long jump (~). • r ».r UNCORKS A CORKER -Voled the DAILY PILOT'• outstanding meet performer trophy after breaking the meet shot put and discus records, Newport Har· bar's Mark Stevens Jets go with his 61·4 shot stand· 0 Diagnostic Center .... rr7 for c~e~ne?s~i~~~:~Pe!; ~/ can help to po int out weak spots 0~0~ in certain vital areas of your car. ~ In less than one hour we put you~ car through a -series of scientific ~ tests (212 of them). Steering, engine, brakes. transmission, :;' electri cal and cooling systems. You watch the results come out on an electronic typewriter. The written report shows the results of the tests. It indicates what tested parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong. A trained diagnostician . will go over ltre report with you . If you :Nish, he'll give you an estimate of any necessary repa irs costing big money. There's no obligation to have any of the work done. You deci de what to fix and where to fix it. The cost? Only g 88 Nol bad for a check·up the&e days. Penneys Scientific Testing Center ll.n11tt11• Charge it at any of these Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PARK (Orangethorpe at v1111y View) CA RLSBAD FULLERTON HUNTINGTON ~EACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH OR ANGE "THE CITY" Diagno1lic lan11 open Monday throug h Saturday. ..:: '• Gyi11nastics Result8 Knights Nab Swim Games A.-1"' '""11•119MI F••• ... e,C•k 1 ltul•C• IW•S"· ...inst..,.!. 1. 8•..cn (Soulll lD<•.ttK•I• J. JUC~I !~fl G.D<l•U W•M•llU ........ 1.03. Sick t.or"M -I Sf'•motl< (WH1· ,,.1,..rer), 1. Eclburl U .. B Wilton!. 1. $.e"ne !(O•i,...). Wlnn1n• a•e••lll 1 l L~ "°'"'--1 11e IM!tw"n Moo. t (Sfin G•br!•il -8••fleo (fl Rl1\o cllO\, l . LICOf ( ~•tmonllor), Won. 11ln11 ••e••ll" 1.6 Hlgl\ b¥ -I F1u1lc& lWtl1mln'1~d . , 811c11 !So~•n lotf1ncti. l. Sc<11I (S.n G•l>'lolJ. Wl11ni11g 1ve1a;t. l.l P1r1llel 1141" -I Muni.on IWt1I· m1111t1~rl. l. BN<ll (Scutll Torr1r>e:el, J R~ZiC> \We..!mlnsle•). w1nnl1111 ........ \le .•••. Rin"" -! Jolln'°" (We<lmlnO!t fl, 1 B1r!)1 \El Raroc:l><JI. l. C'*ih (Ntw part Harbl>r) W1nn1n11 •v•r1ge I I .-.1!-r011fld' -1 R1n icli 1w.,1min•1lll. 1eam 'IU>'IM We•Tm•nlle• .i, Soon Gall"el 1.1, SOltlll l <!trl...U H, El R111CnO 10'~. "'""""°" Ha•OO< t i .. (°"'nl de! M•r 1'1· "'"""'"" 6'1, (OY"\11 •. W1'1m111•t.,. 11:14.111 IM.111 AMl>lim Frtt •~trdw -1 Ru1k.• !WI 1. IHler fAI l-Jonn!oOn (W). Wlflf>lng t Vtr69'!-l .J. L-IVM -I ltulOc• !W) 1 ~°' (Wf l. Piiie•-IWI. W<nn1.._ av.,.ttt I .JS By ROGt:R CAllLSON 01 I~• ~HY ,.lllH ll•ff League RfClims, finals and CIF competition 1s the next rnajor order of business for prep swimmers today follow· ing Saturday's running of the inaugural Orange Co unty varsity swim games at Foothill tligb. The host Knights, behind the one-I" o punch of senior Steve .Furniss and sophomore Rod Str<lthan, proved to be loo much [or the opposition as coach Tom DeLong's crew swept to the team litle with 24~ points -78 more tban secund place Corona de! P,tar. (·orded a second place tie in lhe event by judges who were handicapped when the official shot off his gun al the end of the race, rather than at the six-lap mark. Krumphotz proved the class of the 100 free with a 43.5 and mate Greg Loitz was third v.·ith a 51.l. Other high Orange Coast area team finishers were P,1arina (fifth) and Newport Harbor {eighth). Costa Mesa, without Ron Misiolek (nu), was out of the running early. Foothill's other victories came in the 50 free !Bill Miller v.·ith a 22.7) and in both relays. Other individual champions were Santiago's Gary Hidle in the 100 fly (54.5) and Valen- cia's Da...-e Duffie in the 100 breast (1:04.1). t m.1 ! --(lilllCM) 2:09.t H!(lle ($.anti..o) !C<IMJ I.Gt l 2 OI• 6 D1•l1 1 IM 1 I ) 1100 !Fgglfl•lll JO lrM -I Mllltr lfOO!llltl! 11.1 1 Ol1011 IR•llCll<I) JJ,O l Grff• (N~· POrlJ 2JO •. WtlOlll (Lowell) 71 • ~. Fii" CM1tlM ) :O.l • MllDf> lFOD1t>lll) JJ s. 100 l!y -I, Hidl (S1nll•110) ,...5 1 Roblni.on (SonortJ SS.) J. Sttc~tr (RtntllO~ "·J I Ptthl>onl (Foo!nllll S..J S. £ .. tn• (Hunling•OI') 51.0 t . Ro.• !Rtnd>oj Sl.J. 100 lr•t -!. l(rumpl\oh !COM! 4 .S 1. r.mun (Foothill) 50.) J LOl1l ((<IMI 31.1 1. Olwn (Ra11tho) Jl.S !. 5P'1n,. ..-(S1n Cltmtn!f) Sl.5 6. 5.a"'6tt IRtnclll>I 51.!. ..co !rH -1. STr•Chtn rF001n1111 J;41,4 ), 6-hlY l(dM) J ~ t J Sodaro (Footlllil) 4;00.! 1. Sul!o• ($onort ) •·01.• s. HoOow•Y 4M••l,...J '·°'·I •• AW !NtWPoftl 4:10.S. 100 !wock -I F11'1lt• CFoolf\111) U • f Jone• t~•n•1190l ~)1,0 J. c;, .. ,, lfoo!llllll t .01.0 l W1I~•' l(GMI 1 01.l ! MOoM !F !nllll I 02 I ._ l~OIY<W~I {C<IM ) I 02 100 D<•t>t -I 1111 c1111...,.c11I 1 011 1 w 11111m1 IM rontl 1.0.f J, l'l••OY IM .. l<lf) 1 • • 0.VLI 1Footn<lll LOO.I S. l•l<tve• !Low1!il 1.0llO No 11atn. "°° ''" rr!•• -I Foolftlll l ' If~ 1 (Ol'O!\I GOI Mir l 1,.1 l Ri<t<l'IO Al1mllM l JO• l ~In (IO'f'llln!t l . ~ I s. lo• "ml11<1• l :M • I lowtll J l.I O. Flnol •corln9 I Foolf\111 (!il) I. '°"""" O•I M1r (1111 l. litn<f\~ Al1mllCM> (147'•1 I. S1Ml111<1 (fl) I. M1rm1 (691 f. SOno•~ 1611 I \lt!tn• ell Ull I. Newl'Orl H1rllor 14 ) t, Lowo•I ('11 tO. ~•n Cltmtn•• ('51 11. (Mii MUI (jJ) II. H11ntlntlO<I Beien t?lJ ll. e o;1on 1111 t1. An•· ne1m cu·~I is. FC<Jn11tn 11111•• 011 11. L<11 AmillOI (f) II El Oo••<ID Ill. L""ll roor ... -I Ru!k' (Wl 1 J°""'lM CWl J. 1 .. .1er \,t,I. Winn.,19 t verage: 1.l. Side l'IOtV -\_ Sofyfr\OU< IW) 1 E."trt!t \Wl J. S•Olt11 (W). W1nn•no ...... !II', 1.l Strachan was impressive, winning the 400 free 13:48.4) and 200 individual medley !2 :1l'2.3). His conquest in the latter came when he overcame Huntington Beach's Clay Evans in the final lap of the freestyle . foothill's 200 medley relay --~~~~~~~~~~~i!i! lriumph camll: on the strength of Bob Smith's anctior laps Par•l1e! !>.)fl -I Munwn tWl 1. E"''"" {W) J. bile• (""l. Winning tVt<t9t: t ·lS. Furniss eased to a 55.4 100 back but wasn't credited with a winning lin1e in the 200 free because of an official's blunder at the end of the eight-lapper. He won by three feet. of freestyle which overcame a Santiago advantage. Hlgn btr -1. RUIOt• (Wl '· IWI 3. RUl'{I \WI. wlnnlMI ••t••~ •• Cll•m•IOn•hl• f'ln.1111 200 meo•t, rtitY -1. Foolhlll 1:13.S ... ll·••ouna -l. AUl!t, \WI. Goldln WHI Cl~.00) 1. S•n•i•11<1 1:41.1 J. Sonar• 1:"-.1 •. M•rlna l :d .2 5, ll•ncho""l•mlto1 1:17.1 i . Coron1 <ltl Mtr 1:49.l. J DAILY ,ILOT ,.llOM ., '•fl'kk .. Dpntll VIKING TANDEM -ll1arina's Gene Taylor (left) and Dennis Averyt zip over the fourth flight of hurdles en route to a 1·2 finish in the Beach Cities rneel 180 lows Saturday at Newport Harbor High. Both were timed in 20.0. llnstling Player Sheline Sheline Fulfilled Analyzes Pitchers A1iteate1·s' Image How does the man \Vho handles the piching staff for the UC Irvine baseball team analyze his teammates on the mound corps~. Ry HO\\'ARI> L. HANDY OI 11\t Ot ll'I ,llCll lltll When coach Cary Adams beg a n moulding the UC Irvine baseball team two years ago, he spent many hours watching high school and junior college games in a constant search for someone to fulfill his image of a hustl- ing ball player "'The first player 1 made my miocl up about was cat- ching for Golden West College at lhe time," Gary recalls. ··1 liked the way he huslled and the way he handled himself behind the plate. lie was my type of player and I went arter him in earnest." The player In question is ~1ike Sheline who caught the ~arly season games for ~Cl's first team last year until an injury forced him to tm sidelines and freshman Joe Anderson took over. Monarchs Lead Grid No111inees !\later De\ and Edison lead lhe tis\ of nominees under consideration for the 12th ::in- nual Orange County North- Soulh All-Slar football game y,•ith 13 of the 74 candidates coming from that duo. Coach Phil Broy,·n 1 Estan- cia I ol the South team y,•ill selccl a S<;uad or 30 I roin the list to be announced later ~1ater Dei provides seven candidates y.•nile Ed i son' 5 CIF AAA chatnpions h a u e six possibles. \\lestminsler. F o u n I a i n \'alley and Saddlcback have five apiece and Ney,·port and Brown's Eagles have four can· d1dates. The North leads 1n the senes. 9-2. SOUTH NOMINE•~ 80LSA GRANDE -JOI\" 111''"· Din l(nn,e. L.,_ Etll1. Ot •• B•otll. J""n (h'l\fft, EDISON -J•"Y Hol'Mllo... Jim MO•I•'· Tttr• McNt ... Jann Fl!lle•. Crelo MorltnH<>, l(•n Fun•• FOOTHILL -Bob t-loYI, llOCMV Schiel, BOI> K•""I•. LAGUNA BEACH -61<t 111>Dt MARINA -Sit~• Monon•"· o~-~ Jat~.on. Jflt LOlnH, 8"" W·T! NFWPORl t-l"'A80R -Al•on W~•" <:;••n! G•lkf'r. Ron ld1>1>, !1<011 ~11••1 le~ ... N CLEMENTE -II•• (~nnl•<!, 1100 MtNtm•r•. l1m 0~••1 TUSTIN -Mork Padl>U'" WESlMINSTfll Douu Moill•, W~I! M•<IOOtkl, Todd N11n•n'°"" J«l• lhon"ll>'°"• Mo~t Ood<I. COlilONA OEL Mllll -K••I lfoll~!•t. Ale< rtam•••· Jt!f II"<"''' EL MOOEN..._ -Klm C••1Kl"I FO!JNTAIN VALLEY -M.t" Sl\i btl•. l!lltl tc.r!tll"•'· J im !ion ... - Wtl'.ft. ll:ldt Htt11lletrl. LA QUINlA -V1uon" O~"•'>d•• MATER PEI -9d> 1-!tuDtrl. Stovt K~H•. 8oC DrLtflC•llol!I, P•I H•ttPr Mn .. Mt•io Mel~. Dt""'' wultkl•Wl<I. J im "•"'' P.ACtFl(.<o llt!'dY (-, St••• ........ !.ANTA AN ... -100 llt11!l. ""CO"'* l'loYd. Kirt I •"''· 8CIO (en!f" (O'IT A MES" -l(lm Woll. J•"' MUltt, •11 ~ .. •,llt1!d ESfANCIA llOll l(tl"'" Cutt ThOml•• L~ fril'dc<ldft<L (ol V.00•• HVNllNGlON llf_A(M G1t111 W1H" 11111 T""I". Gtltr> Gil!•l•»d MISSION V!E.JO -llOfl Oull<~ ~I• aou.11~ S,t,OOLEIA(K !J•!~ll M•ra<:I•, Cl!•r1tl lllll•~•. G~r• "~"'"· O••...., Trol'l1n. Al L-1~ SANf l..,GO -1111 • II •~• lto"' Wrlflll, Sheline returned to split lale season games wilh Anderson and has been lt\e mainstay behind the plate this year. Perhaps it is a mutual ad- miration society Ula! has been formed between coach and player. '"There is no comparison between coach Adams and some of the other coaches at schools I considered berore deciding on UC!," Sheline says. "He 's a great coach and a great man. He works with you as an individual as well as a team. "The l.rvine way of playing baseball is to hustle. That 's coach Adams' philosophy and it's also mine. I think this makes us a stronger team this year because everybody is back and we are all familiar y,•ifh lh!! system.·· One thing tha1 has bothered Sheline over the years is his hitting. "Coach Adams and Lee Fisher worked with me quite a bit lasl year after I came back. It v.'as ob vious that I needed a change. I wasn·t able to see the ball too y,•ell the 11.•ay I was balling and my average sho.,.,·ed it. ""They had me choke up on the bat y,·hich gare me a more compact swing ," he recalls. "I get 1ust as muth power as when I was a free swinger and l 'm more con- fident now."" Sheline has been catching for close to 1~ ~·cars and the tnan y,·ho started hin1 wa.~ his father. Bob Sheline who also served as his first coach 1n Little League. "V.1hen 1 y,•as growing up. I never really had a sport~ idol like many kids do.'' f\.1ike recalls .. ··11 was always my rather." he savs with pride and a deep satisl3clion that is so lacking 1n many youths in this da.v and age -a leslimonial that should SY.'ell the chest or the cld2r Sheline .. Mike Sheline says he is cur- rently in the process of evaluating lhe group and feels that if the Anleaters have a weakness this year, it is in depth of the mound saff. "Dennis \Nicholson) has been around more than any ol the others and he has a cocky attitude when he goes out there to pilch. "I think you have lo be that way aod that's what makes him as good as he is. He isn't overpowering bul he's smart. He mixe.~ up his pitches very well. ''I like to catch when Dennis is pitching. I confer y,•ilh him as much as possible. on the rield and off. l y.•ant our pitchers to have confidence in me'' By way of backing Sheline's expert analysis of Nicholson, he pilched a three-hit game against the UCLA varsity al Anaheim recently and the only run SC-Ored against him v.·as unearned .. During that nine inning game, Nicholson had only one strikeout -the first batter he faced. But the Bruins \\'ere helpless throughout the con· test and had few fly balls to the deep part of the out- field, The only other pitcher Sh('linc touched on w a s sophomore Tom Dodd. "He is a good pitcher. bolh psychologically and physically and he i:;; sn1art." Sheline declined to go any rarlher until he has completed his personal evaluation of lhe entire staff. \\lhalever that evaluation. it is obv ious the pitchers have complete confidence in his ability behind !he plate and his hustle on every play to back up the first baseman or be in position to take a throw from the outfield. In hip:h school al Garden Grove P,1ike was a fullback They also know they hRd and a defensive ~arety man better slay out of the line but he in}\lft.d a shoulder and of fire if an opposing player ~ave up the gridiron sport is attempting lo steal second in favor of baseball. base because Mike has a rifle orcd arm and oncl' struckout 16 •Golden \Vest coach r batters in a ID-inning ga1nc Hoover put h\rn 011 a physical as a Colt League pitcher. therapy and weight training But catching is his forte prograrn and he pursues 00\h and like all high school and with a fervor at UC!. l'Ollege players, he ha.~ a Mike is the eldest or four secret yen tn try the pro· Sheline children and I hf' ressionRI game before he set· ~'oungesl. Pal, is only 1 lies down to a career in sophomore at Garden Grove teaching art and coaching high. Ile is a second base1nan baseball. and basketball player but 31'-,- cord.ing to Mikr, " already YOGA CENTER leaning toward UCI because of Adams. Adams Isn 't adverse lo anolher Shehne or two on the Antea1er team and sum~ up ~l1ke's play in this manner· .. I rate his arm as strong :ilthough he could improve a l111le on quickness in release. I le 1~ working on that now :ind l k no w Iha! he could h111r lx'en a startln11: ca1cher for :in\' team in Iha Basin Lca&ue. last ltumrner." YOU CAN DO YDGA- IT 'S GREAT! OtfMllll•lh.,. T•~•'• 11 l~t YH~ Co~!tt 445 E. 17th STREET COSTA MISA '''·IJll ~--~-------- I tltl.,UI Rl9 Horift Floor e-ertii.e. MtFl<ll (Gt I I S•<lt Hor..,: SI"°""' (Al 1.IJ Ring,, Smith (GJ I, Lgng ho,.I: MtFtul (Gl 11 Patalltl l>.)ro O'Ntlll <GJ IS A11-~1ouna Mtf'lul (GI 6.:10 Hien bit•. Von Wtld IGt 1.s Corona del ti.1ar's Kurt Krumpholz and Torn Saecker of Rancho Alamitos were ac- 200 ''" -J, Furn111 (Fooll\1111 No Hmt ?. l•e !Crum-Ii (CdMI fMj S&ecker tAanchof 1:'1.1 •. f'•lllbon1 \Foo!nlll) 1:111.6 S. BOl.llll>•Y ((dM) No I'm• I. lolti ((dMI No !lmt, XIO lndlvldutl mtdlt• -I. Strec~111 (Foothill) 2:0"/.l 2. 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BRAKE OVERHAUL DL...-Ilrakt'll £.l:l'f'LJIPd. 81'11-adjusllnr; Brak<ei'i S-1 mur.e. l!l01<t Amerir11n and rompact rB/'5. HERt;'S \\"HAT "'E DO : e Replace linings-all 4 \\"h('f'l.~ e Rebuild .... ·heel cylindrr.~ e Tum all drums and re-surfaC(' lining e j\.1a~trr cylinder and P'Jl''er cylinder inspcclion • BJC'C'd and flush hydraulic syslf'm • Road tei;1 for brake performance e FreC' 1.000 mile inspection and .11djuslmen1 WHYWAIT1 USE YOUR Km.,t CREDIT CARO OR YOUR BANK AMERICAAI SJ BUENA PARK BUENA PARK t.eclll •••• et t.if·-il•H 1)01 lffclll l l•L IJJ.J040 • U•col• .t v.ii.y \'loow Sll5 Ll11c1I• A\'O. 12•·1100 COSTA MESA H•t1Nr II••· .t w11 .... 2Jff Hwtlei-11•4. 141-2012 SANTA ANA llfl•,.r Sttw.t .t Mttol 1,00 l.tl•9fl 1'46-7112 WESTMINSTER e 9-lri 11"'· et Mc,_ .. 15•~0 lfeclri 11-•. ••1.1011 Swim£ est Smashing Success AMES, Iowa (AP) -Tbe 1971 NCAA awlmming and dlv· ing championships were billed u an Olympic preview for many American swimmers, .. and if record! are any in- dication the meet was a smashing success. \Vhen the three--day swim carnival ended Saturday night with Indiana taking it3 fourth straight title, 10 American and 14 NCAA meet records hsd been broken in the 11 events. "There will be a lot of 1wimmen from lb.is meet who 'Will comprise our 1m 01~ pie team," said wiMing coach Jim (Doc) Coun.silinan, "and aa you can set by the times they will be of high caliber." Counsilman added that some of the swimme rs here notably Tennessee's 0 ave . Edgar -probably wouldn 't do as well In a longer pool. The Iowa State Beyer Hall pool is ~ yards Jong. com- pared to the Olympic and most pre-Olympic meet pooh; which are 50 mete.rs long. ''But overa ll I think this meet speaks well for America's chancts in Munich in 1972," said Counsilman. "We came here with the idea that this would be the fastest meet, Olympics and olhuwi!e, ever , ' ' said Qiwisilman, "and it was." Host Iowa State coach Jack McGuire, a member or the U.S. Olympic sv.·imming com· mJttee, agreed: "This waii a great meet 1 think it shows that our Olympic chances in 1972 will be awfully good. We could have very easily had new America n records In all IS of the swimming events here." Daily Pilot Falls, 56-55 Estancia's Faculty b~keL ball team withstood a last half surge and a mi ssed bucket \•dth three seconds left to edge the DAILY PILOT, 56-M. Saturday night in a benefit game at the winners' gym . 'The Faculty had rolled to a 32·25 halftime lead. mainl y due to the driving shots o{ Wally Chute and the countless turnovers by Glenn White of the losers. However, the tide turned in the closing 20 minutes with Craig Sheff wheeling and deal· ing the losers back into con· tention. 1~ Sheff paced all scorers with fJI. While had five, Roge r tarlson four, Phil Ross fi ve d Arden 1'falsbury hit two · tbe DAILY PILOT. :r Estancia scoring was not vallable because the score- eeper took off with the re· ::eords. TllE GOU' SWING IS mLL A "SWING." Evtrfetl lhotyou'll never loarn lo ploy 1ott w1Rl Does th• pm1 seem to b1 1n 1ndlt11 1tr11m of ".Do'11' and "Don'ts?1' Did you ever Identify with tho aofer In lhl llhmraflon? I'm sure lhot moot'!IOlf1rs m1k1 thl pm• much more compllcalld thin it nally 11. We think about so many dlfftrtnt ch1ckpolnt&·1nd k1ypo1ition11nd b1sic moves that we tend to forset that the &olf swing ls, indeed, stlll a swin&. Don 't ltt yourself get trapped into 11p1ralysis.from ·analysis.'' Make it your first and foremost rule to never, •bsolutely never, think about more than one thing while swinging a golf club. This may be the best, yet most difficult piece of advice I've ever given in tftis column. •o l'11tcAn....,_·.,.._- For Coast Area Net Summaries UC lr'lino (11 Ill "ftllln•1 Slnlltl Ch•Pot'l1 (t) """"•1, 6-J. Ja~o<0skl tn lo•I u, 7-5, ,_, Newbrov9h (f) won 6-J. 1-6, ... J. Paya" li) WCI" 6-1. 1·5. C<l!le' 01 IOU ....,, 1 ... Nacil•lld (I) •on 6-1, 6-l. ""'"' Ch•POtll Ind Cripe (I) won .. J, '"'· J1Dlo<01kl i nd H1th111d Ill won 6-J, ,.,, Ntwbrou91\ 1nd P1v1n (11 •<I" 6-4, 7-J. Feothlll 0) {l) Or•n•• CNll 51"''" Ro•tlll (0) 101! lo Sel•nlkl IF} ,.,, ,_., 6·1. Caro (0) der Havs !Fl 6-L 6-1 . Em'rv toi def Hul11r1" <Fl 6-J, ,,,, 6-1. 01vl~ CO) 1011 to Ft!lon <Fl 1-6. .. .Sl•nson (0) lost to Scot! !Fl 1 ... •• 11.ol•t lOJ lotl lo (1th man [F J 0-6. o ... '""' 11.0ltlll-Caro COi Gd Sel•n;-··H•r• {Fl M , 4·'-1 ... Emerv-O•vlel IOI loll lo F•llon- Hul1•rtn !Fl 0-6. 1 ... SlotnM>n-Rol•• !Ol loll lo Scot!· Cl•hm•" CFJ J..I, 1 ... cv•rn• en 111 ~M11n w111 Slllflp 9111 LDM ICJ Cltl. Kirt Or•hDOCI (GI 6-l. 6-1. Wtt>er !CJ dltl. Crtw \G) M , 6-l. Hi ley CC) dlf. Orr (GI M t-4, '"lc.1111' CCI Cite/. Ktllh Or•hood CGI '·~.,:-;.xk !Cl oet. P l ..... IGJ l ·I, '"1Si11m1n !C) dt f. G•brvcn (G) i-1, ••• DOUDlt• Kirt Orthood and Orr fGf Gel. K11nr •nd Hilt! fCJ 6-l, 1-6, 6-l W-r ln<I OP<>Oek !C) di!. K1l!h Ortrnx.l &r>d Crew (GJ 6-0, 6-1 Lang 1r>d $lgm1n !C) dtl. PIPl!tf •r.:I G1br¥eh IGl 6-l, 6-1. V1nltv Ml1tl'11 VlllO (I) 01) TM•lln SIMIH Nlbe'ckef (M) lost , .. , 2•6, M, ,. McO-ld !Ml lost 1-oi, 1·1 J-t , ,. Walker tMl IO.I 1 ... 14, 1..6, l4 T11n11 (M) lost 0.6, 1-6, IH, 1 .. Doulllt• 0. Hebel• and G. Hot>e!1 (Ml loll °"'N~t~~ .. ·.~· Knltt lMl lo11 0-6, 0 .. '"'· S-1, . Etllntil (~) (I) Mttllflll Son1J11 Mauon (El def Holl~ fM1 6-7; clef Ramlrl I (Ml 6-1; de! 11.ll!IUI (Ml 6-G; Clef~ (Ml t.f. Hfl!'M•tud !El 1011 1-6; won 1-l, '"~.trr !El 1011 H. ... ; ... Of! •• J. '"~eCrtlln !El lo•I M : won i·I: lo•1 t-6 ron 6-1. ...... G1rr>0r-Stan!On EI def ,orltt-H•nn IMI 6-J. 6-J: 1plll with H-vDOr.,. F1rh111cn CMl 6.J, t-6. Wll-·Morrl1<1" CEI 101! ... won 6·J, .... Vtnlni 1-•; won f'ootlltl (ll\lol ll\'tl ~'" Cll"'tfUo 11.•ll• !SI lost lo Wt !"btr• (Fl 1--ii Iott 10 McCormkk !Fl .1-6; 1011 IO !Mt" !Fl :H lall to W1"l1u (Fl 1 .... LlmMrt IS) lotl 1 ... : WOii 7-S; IOtl 4 .. ; WCI" 6·1. SlttlY !S) loll IH , .. , ).6, 2 ... W•entr ISi Iott M , S-71 4-6, 4-1. """"" C1!!>•Kln1 (51 Iott to 8 IOfn•on . .t11rn !Fl J .. , M l 1011 lo H•rrl1on-S1tv1n1 (F) IH, M . Ml dllo•-Oowll"I ($) 1011 14, 1-6: IOI! 2-oi; WM 7•5. F1t11ftlll1 VltltJ lt\'o) llt'llol Cl ..... lltl M•r Sln11n V1l1n1utll (F) lo1! lo Mlllt r tCI 0·6, Ovt < !Cl S·I, H1 rrl1 !Cl 1-t, Guile• (Cl 1-6. T•,,,,al (F) 1011 lo Mlllt • tCI o .... lied Over IC) 1-1, 11n1 to H1rrl1 CCI 1 .... d~I. Guile-CCl 6·1. All111 CFI loll to Mlll1r CC) 04, d•I. Dv•r 1(1 ,.J, G~I. Htrrl1 lCl 6-•, lent lo Guile~ IC) 7·6. SClllldhtUtr (Fl k,.I lo MIM•r (Cl 0-6 011. Oyer !Cl 6-1, lo•I ro Ht rrls \CJ l..i. lo•l lo Guild< l() W . Devtiln Miiier •nd P-(F'I lost 10 fll1lu tr •ncl Kllltflf" (Cl S-1, l .. ; kn.I to \/,rmund •NI ll.1111ell ICI 0-1, $-1. Kr•wtrY~ 11'1d 5h1w (Fl splil Wltto Nel .. Pr •l'ld Klltf'f1r (Cl. l4, '"1' <Ill Vtrmund 1rwl lluuell IC I 1-5, !Piii 7.7, \/1nltv Edllln tH .... J ll"ll S•nlt Alll Yell•Y llnt!ti Orlltood IE! won 6-3, 6-1, 6-2, '""· ll!c1 (El Iott l• "'; wen •-J, .. ,, MeKlllfllV IE) lo1l '"'· •on •·1, 6~. 6-0. llov1rd !El won 6-t , •·•· 6-1 , 6-1 01uble1 Andi""' end Htmllle" !E) 1·$, •·l, •·l, 6·7. Fr!fflt • •nO Sle""•n•On IE) los1 j.6, 6-1, J-61 won 6·2 L11un1 111ell 11•111! CU\ol Sono•• l ln1 l1$ llt"yMll (l I 1P!ll 1-1, """" 1.5, •·2 6·1. Oavl1 Ill ~ 1·5, •·l. 6-J. '·'· laylor (Lf !011 :k\, w"" 6-J, splll 1-1, _,, 6-CI. ll•o!h•rlon ll! won 6-1. hnr 0·6, 4·6, WO'l 6-4. Double• .s111"1 e!'ld J1c<ltl1"" ILi 1011 s.1, J .. , ,,1, 10!1! 1·1. M<C1rtl"r •"<I P11r1ol (LI lost 2-6, 1-1, M . won l·I M•rlM OIJ C17' S1nt1 An• Sl"lln P1•~•r CM) lied I I; loot J .. ; won 6·1, ,., Monarchs In 5-2 Triumph Mater Dei's 1'1onarclu are right back in the thick of lhe Angelu.s League baseball flag chase aner defeating Servile lUgh Saturday, 5-2, at Boysen Park. The Monarchs gained a big assist from St. Anthony Hlgh of tong Beach as the Saints topped previously unbeaten Bishop Amat. I--0, in a brilllant pitching duel. St. Paul ·TOse off the noor of the cellar to defeat Pius X, 6-5, to leave only two gamts separating the six teams. At the moment, Bishop Amal and St. Anthony are tied for the top spot wllh ?.1ater Dei and Pius X one game back. The Monarchs journey to Pius Wednesday to break that deadlock with Servite at Bishop Amat and St. Anthony at St. Paul. Gary Simpson went all the way on the mound for Mater Dei in Saturday 's victory, limiting tile host Servile team lo four base hits. Afler spotting Servile a run in the first, ti.later Dei came back to knot the count in the second on an error, a stolen base by Tom Cottage and a Bingle by Jerry Linnerl. A four-r un uprising In the sixth completed the Monarch scoring for the day. The first two Monarch bat- ters struck out but succt.Ssive hits by Ray Sa\uar, Bob Haupert, Tom Coll ag e , Simpsol! and Linnert gave the Monarchs rour runs before the side was retired. Mlltr Otl ti) .. ' ' ' I AG1m1, 1" Stl11•r, If H1u1>11rt, cf Coti111, lb $1mOICln, a LOONrd,n KtmmtHT, ff llrotd • .ii Clough, c ST•nlMu1n. pi, Sh1IC1on, 1b Kilty, "" win, ,h lot111 ' ' , ' ' • I ' ' .. ' • • • • • ' • • • ' Strvllt IU G""ltr, lb W1\1Nrn, cl Ctm1>11n.1ro, rt T•l!l1r, u S~lllv•n, U Sll11do. 1b Wltlo<0. Jb Zlmrntrm1n, t l•t ll•. , ll.1mod1nsk!, o lot111 .. ' ' ' ' . , ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' . ' . " , sc ... 1 ~' lftnlnt• ' '" • • ' . ' . ' ' ' • ' ' • ' ' • • ' ' ' • ' ' ' • • ' ' . "' ' . ' . ' ' I I ' . ' . • • ' . • • • • . ' . '. OIO OCM0 -5 t l 100000 1-2•2 Pro Cage, Hockey Wlo\ Pl1-,.llt S•twrlMY .. 1111\llhl E11ltrn COl!ftl'l"Ct ltmlHlllll Allen!• 111, W1w Yori! 1CO Wnlll'f! CG•llAl!CI S1"1ffln1l1 Ml1W1ul<et 101, Son Frln<IKO tl, Mll><l• ..... H 1~1<11 btll~·7 .erlu 1·0 S\llMllY'I 11.SUlll e•1ler• C•nt .. t11C• s ..... 111n1I• New Yor~ 110, All•nll I S, "'""' Yor~ lMdl bttl-<if·$11'Vt n 11rl11. 1-1 ll•lllmort Ill. Phll•O•lphll 1m, Bii· l!mor• !1•0~ bul-ol·1 1frl11, ,.,. Wftttl'f! c1n'-t 1 ..... 1nn111 Clllt•90 106, Lot A11g1ll1 H, Loo AnlH!ll• IPllOI Dlll-of·7 •«I ... 2-1. ,. ..... ,., ....... w,,,.,. c.,,.,_, •• .,.u1"'" '•" Fr•ncl1to ~•· Ml!w•uk" 1 t M1dlK1n, Wit. ... W!Jflrmon IMI lost , .. , 1... 4·1. ,., WOUI !Ml IOll 4-6 4-6, 3-6. 1-6 lhur/Tl IM) loll 4-6, 1-6; wen i.11 •011 , .. Exhjbition Baseball c-Vitllln;1 !(~'""-~ Ntw Yori< Florldl•n• PillS~ .... 11'11 C1ro11~1 1!•11 Ol•hlffl w ' " n • • 1'<1. ... .Sil ••• . ~ .n1 •• II \ '}!! l1llllolltM1 11w•11I r ,., ........ l..9t1JU• (',ft Wt n lOll ,<I. ~J'l!tlbu,gh " ' .111 . "'l• Mt1ln 11 4 .641 tiw Yorlr H t .6ll Sin !'rancl1co lt I ,m , ' b\lc111 11 .HO .;"""°" 17 10 .s.s .. ~ ... 1 11 10 .51• :• t"-.Lwl1 11 11 .sn ,., *"nt• 10 n ·'" -. (plllt ' 12 ·'" ·!~r..fl 10 11 ··" .•1101-1 1 .111 ·>.' CtoK not !nclllCll 1-d "" Dll90-~lltd 1tmt . __ • 1 Won ltl! .. <I. 'E . """"'" Lfl- : .Qlctto u , ·"' ""'-'-"'" lJ , .612 t 111!<1 10 10 JOO 11 11 n ... 11 ••!ttrnort 10 II -'" ''""'""'""°" 10 11 .116 ' Baseball Standin~s AMe•LUI l•AOU• w ' ' ' , ' .. ' •• ..,.,.. k-• ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ... .ll&tw Doi S. W'olli. I -'. ~ .._,........,. 1, f l"'°' Amil o .,. \II,' , ..... " "''" It • . ....,....."._ Mlll"r l>tl •I Plul )I 5.,...111 11 111-Am•! $!, """""' 11 $!, "•Ill PlllWAT LIAeUI F 11lltrton s. ......... Lt H11><'1 Sulll'IY Hlll1 ·- w ' ' I I I l.\ltnl l't •k I • '"""" L.-H • lttv,...t"t kWI "'~'""' 1, lllfll'J "1111 1 ' .. ' • I I I ' , ' SOUTM COAIT co111t1•••NCll ' • W L T GI "~··-Mt. $tn AnlOnlo t•rrll .. 0r ..... Cll•1t $M01ttOMttl St " 01- . ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' ' I ••t1 M 1 t I ' l•lvrflf't ·-" 111!1 ,,,,._ , .. , 11" OI-SJ ' ' ' '" .. , l ''I ' •n OlftO Mtll •-'• Ml, SAC 1' Dou bit• Monntto1• 10 1J .4!S MeOowtll ll'ld T11I• !Ml 10111 1·1, Bo.ion • ll .4'l9 6·•; IPll! ,.], 3-6 Clll!ornfa e ll ,•00 ll.0$11•1 Ind Hlmbllrg !Ml won 6-J, • • " . )) .. JJ •• ll·Oakland 1 n ,Jll 1-1; •P'll 6-J, 1·6 Wtl! Dlvhllfl K•n111 Cl!Y 7 ll .lJll Wn1 .. n C14\'I) 01/J) H~nll11tl0fl w L 1111><1 Yor~ 7 l~ .JU Sln"11 c·l.,,,ltnl :.I U x·Oon no• lndude 1teond .Stn Dlevo· L1Tln• (H) dtl, 0111 IW) 1-5; losl Ulln ~ 'II o.~i.rio 11m1. to 011<1" (W) ,.,, 1011 to Y~'"' Mtm1>11i1 "° '' Sllurdty'I lltwth IWl l .. 1 dtf. CDl/rll• (W) '·1 Off\Vtt 1f l-1 Clllc•llO (Ill) 1, lokvo loltt o,11>1'1 ~ Cow,n !HJ IO•I 1·6; !ltd 1.1; l~•t T•~~• a 5~ •-6; WOii 6 ) O•kl111d '· ~n 01.-ao J l(OCh (HI 1011 1•6, 1 ... J-6, 24 c-cllnchf'CI dl~l1lcn llHt Mllw•~ktt 9, Cll¥tl1fld I ...._.Mii"' {H) loi! o-6, 0-6, 0-6, •. , TNtV'I G1 mt Detroit 11, SI. Louli 1 Ken!uckV •I M1mDlll1 Chle1go !Al •• ComDl!IH MUlth DtuDln 0111., ,.,.,,., Ktlflluled, Ph!l~lltlohit '· ClnclnNll l ll011<htr-61llty !H) loll •o Yunt-NHL ·"" .. 11'> ,,,, " l'cl. GI .107 .Ill ••• ,,, " " x Plttoll\Jr9'1 1, 1(1nw1 Cl,., 0 1.-<•l!ro (WI G..6, J-61 lcal lo llll•V· E11I DIYl"MI M!nnHO!o j, 8otlOll J Mllltr !WI l ... t·t W L. T !>ti. GI~ GIA llt !Kh·Wtll"e CH) lot! O·I 1).11 Wt1hi"tton '· Ntw YM (A) ), n 1611 °"'· ,.. llo1t011 u 14 1 llS ,,. , .. _,ffl t, lltl!lmor. l Ntw Yoi-lt t 1 11 11 10$ 1•1 ltl Ill-Yort; (N) s, -'!lo/Ill S H..--t tHl'JI Ullo! W.stml1!$1t1' Monlr1t1 t1 JI IJ •s Vt 201 L01 An~ .. $, Hou1lot1 I Sht1le1 Teronl'D J6 31 1 1' ?tl 211 Dtlt 11111 Ht, Johnson IWI Mi llvff•lo JJ )f n " Mil 211 51n0tv'• •-Ill d,!. !Itron 6-1 1 G#f. TroJ 6-01 ff!, All•nl• t, Blllfmort J W1llh 6-0 e:~o!v.r : : I~ ~ : ~ Ntw Yorlt (N) $, NfW Yerll IA) t, 111 ...... , IN) dtl. Joh/lltllfl (WI f·JI Wnl Dl¥1llltl U !11nln.. dtl. l••<I" 6.f; dtl. l roJ 6-1 ; dfl, w L. T ..,., Gii' Ml ..... •ukH 1, TOlr.¥0 lollt O•IOl'll l Wtllh I·! Chi • 11 ' HIS 2'f W•1hlnt110n •· K•nt11 Cltv 1 O'll1Ulv IN) kn! le Joh11110n (WI Cito Clnclnn111 s, Pll!tDunin 4 l -f1 dtl. ll•r011 6-!: dt'I. T•O'I' 6-Cll SI. louls :a 25 u 11 !IJ Los A"g•ln ], H""'""' 1 elf! w,,.., •·• MllVlttO!I H Jl ,. n 111 lo.J'On s, °"'"'" J OulM (NI Iott le Jol!nMlll lWJ P!'o!l1dllpt,!1 ,, JJ 11 •• )CG COfT'lblnt:d Hu•O• 1, Montrpil O 1'41 lltl. l1ron M l Otl, Trev .. II Plltsburll'I :fl JS 11 llO 1\0 F>hl!10flolli• 7, Chk•!IO (it.l • Tied W•lsll 1·1 lot AMlfln 1J )f 12 .Y 1?• !I_ Louis !l, Minne.al• ' Dw•IM C1tlfernlt lt 51 I 'l 1ff (hlc190 (fll l lS, Clev1l1n<1 • l'orl..., 1111t 1!111m1n INI dff. ''""'''' 11111•1!1 58" Dleoo 6, oa-loM • Gr•11b•111h 111111 l(rw1r CW) .. ,, I.fl flltw Yori! f, llosliln I 5.., F .. nc!0<0 '· C•lllOr"I• 0 dtl. khro!I tnd Smllh 6-J, u V1ncouY..-ll, C.!lfoor/1(1 I fllleho!1 I nd l1Mll (NJ »Ill Wllh Mont~•• '· Chl<•oo I T1d•J'$ Gll1ftlt 1ir1ub~u.tl t rod Kl'e¥1r (W) U , 6-li 81/fUto t, Mln-!1 ' Morl!rHI "'· 81Ulmor1 It M!t ml, -0111 wl!h kll,oll 1nd Smllh •1, Phll1C1e1Phl• 1, P!lllburgh •• "' ... '" "' "' »' "" Fl•. I·• O•troll 2, Teronto I lk!lilo<O 1¥. Hoir11on 1t Cocot. f l•. r•-------------------------;;,I PHl1111Jrgft v1, CMetto (A) 11 58r· j1 .. ~~;.:.",,,, ... '"N"" ,....... Why It Pays to Know St. Lo.iii YI, Mln"no!1 •I Orl111do, '" W-York (Al "'· ""'"'' 11 W111 BOB PALEY Ptlm llt~h. Fii . "''-'"''' '" "~l•N" •I T•~ I"!, F!I Chlc100 41111 .,,, Sin Fr1ncl1co u Phoelll1, Arl1, 5•n 01"° ¥1. 0.-l•NI 11 M111, NII. Ctllfot"" vt, Mllwlll~H II Ttmlll, Af Ir. TM ... J'tG- 91Hlmort Vt. M1-.0ll 11 Orl•lldll, Fl1. Chlt•fO (A) n . PllkDur.tl •t lrff.. ... ion. '""'· 0.1roC1 "'· PhH1ottonl1 1t Clf1r• w1trr. Fl•, St. Louis v1. Ktn11s Cini 11 "'· M1¥tf1, Fii, W•1ftlft9lon ''· N"" Yortt (Al •t Fr. l1U<l•~l1, Fl1. Monlrt1! "'· All1"1• 11 WHI Ptlm llNcn. f'I•, Clncl~ .... ·1 "'· Wt><I Yort (NI ., $1 P•11tlbu<t, F1~ Los ,..,.,, •• YI SI~ Fr•"tl.c:o 11 Al• IM.l<illt!'OUt. N,M. C•Hlot~i..o .,,, C!'ole1eo (NJ •' $(ollt· da!•, o\rlr SI" 01190 ¥1, (ltvtl•M t i T11t.-. Ar ff Ml1w1..tf;ff YI. 01-11nd •! .Y.tW, ~ •AFECO INliiURANC• .. ,.,., ...... ,,.., ~.11 star ,...,., """"' ... ,....hi '" ,,.~,, ....... ,,tc_ " ..... ... .. ,.. ......•. ,,... ... """" ........ -,.. h ......... llt ,..,.., ... "'-' f..-..,.: H '" IMIYe • .,.......,,...w.. ...... 1 ...... .............. ...., ...... .,.. . U"'9. I• fat, • ll!•k• ...... w}t• w ,_,.. a&tM Int ,.-w, "" '" •p wltti th '"1t .._.llC• ,,..,.. '" c• ..,. .. -. WW..., "''"' Med, lie It ..,._, ft,., tlleft, IW.nlty, tel• It "9f ... fer • ,_,., f,hr,., Whof _.,, .-yl .. 11: If ye"'~ ,.,1.. bit ...... 4eHt1rt fe, 111lter .... " ,, ... ,, •• , , ••• ,. ht .... .,. ... Mii ,.,., T•I\ It • .., wltti IN. Hit d ... vt h 9t 414 I. 17ftl It., CMtti Mna. c.i1 '42·6100 ,.di. '"--------------------------·· Monday, March 29, 1971 DAIL V PILOT 15 Prices Effed.lve Sua, Mir. Ztllra Tue1., Mir. SOtla s239.95 Super Air Conditioner • Pre-cooled setting ... cools your sun-baked car in seco nd s. Automatic thermo sta t •Features 3·speed blower. Moun ts under da sh •Expert installation available \\ 4· """•'I'' j,.,. ~t11cl l:qo;111 \lo•I l·a1·lon l11-1all1 ·d and I Ii 1:.:i11al Fq11ip111<'11I \1110 \ir l 1111tlilit1111·r .. 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Quick-Fit Scat Covers Regular $24.!19 1999 Stretchable reinforced nylon tricol trim for easy installation. Easy to clean. In colors. Installation Ext r.? IJurable Slution Wagon Pad11; 41172-in. sln1le mat. Folds for storage. Plaid vinyl top. #6194. '"' 1-"inc Opaque Vinyl Auto Floor !\l1tllfl r;ne $299 Quality F1nt Qua Illy pUabl~ v1nvl floor mtll. For front only~ Terrific! IHOilll"'I fllCf IOt••"ICI '"'1lltl ~•l.llf • ..., ..,...... ,._ tt.. lef, MO A.M. t. 9tSO l.M.,......,. 11 ,._,MI 'Jll.. l -lll(lt ..... ," O(l"O' 'U&Dll<l POllONI l&llT• " ,. .. 111101 10111 1110111(,l IOUTll COIU 'Ull ~lllllOWI I • i I JQ DAILY PILOT i.4ol!diy, M.arth 29, 1911 Brushfire Keeps Cup in San Diego CHINESE FIRE DRILL ON FORDECK Attorante Failt. to Get Chute Two-Blocked Kialoa Takes Race, But Protest Leveled John 8. Kilroy"s Kialoa 11 may or may not own another elapsed time record in a Whitne y Series race . The 73-foot yawl was first to fini sh in LA \'C's 133-mile Tri-Island Race Saturday, but a protest is pending between Kialoa II and Ken DeMeuse's 73-foot Blackfin from St. Fran- cis Yacht Club. in the race after slanding by the .damaged catamaran to see that all hands v.·ere safe. Sea Smoke abandoned her race and put in at Marina del Rey under her flWn pov•er . No one "'as reported injured on either boat. The light airs over the enlire course were in contrast to the first two Whitney Series races when strong wind \:nock- ed most of the starters out. By AIMON LOCKABEY •u1h11 l!dii.r San Diego Yacht Club still owns the Lipton Challenge Cup. The club ~onfirmed that ownership Sunday by defen- ding with Gene Trepte's '49- foo\ Sparkman & Stephens sloop Brushfire. The selection of Brushfire was credited with reducing the challenging fl eet to three boats, the lowest en try since 1940. There were· originally four c hallenger s, but Herb Johnson 's New Zealand-47 Vector 11 from Oceanside Yacht Club was ruled cul of the race at the last minute when it wa s determined that she had undergone a rating change within six mcnths of the challenge. Under the deed of' gift of the Cipton Cup a challenger or defender may not have changed her rating within six months of the challeng~ date. The confusion arose aver whether the date was that of the challenge er the actual race. As yacht races go, Sunday's race was ancther parade - albeit a short one, with only four boals. The boatll got off to a fa irly even start with Southwestern Yacht Club'.s Don Bevar tak- ing the eight-meter Albatross across the line first al lht' leeward end ·with De a n Brown 's 5 I· I o ll t sloop Sandpiper on her weather quarter. Brusllfire to weather of Sandpiper and B u r k e Sawyer's Ca I · 3 2 Altorante from Newport Harbor Yacht Club up to weather o I Brushfire. It appeared briefly \hat At· torante was controlling the starb<lard tack, but Sawyer chose to give up his weather berth and tacked off to port and headed far the ,beach. Brushfire followed s u i t about two minutes later, followed by Sandpiper and then Albatross. Brushfire arrived at the first weat h e r mark 5.1 seconds ahead o( Sandpiper ar.d Attorante who rounded overlapped 'vith the NHYC en· try O'l'I the inside. But the brisk 15-18 knot wind fil led Attorante's chute before the crew could get il two- blocked , and in the ensuing "Chinese firedrill" Sandpi~r .. rode over Attorante and ensconced herself in second place. At the reaching mark it was still. Brushfire by one minute and eight seconds ahead of Sandpiper w it h attoranle nibbling away at the latter's transom. .--. On th.e tight reach to the end ct the triangle Sandpiper had cut . Brushfire's lead by nine seconds and increased her lead ovfr Attorante. On the second beat ta the wea ther mark it began t<l look like the expected mismatch when Brushfire held a two minute. 46 second lead over Sandpiper. But on the ensuing run Sandpiper reduced the time split to I: 43. On the fin al beat Trep1e cho se to go [or the double- head rig on Brushfire and it almost prcvcd his undoing. Sandpiper pullM close enough to engage Brushfire in a lively tacking duel and when . the two OOats crossed the finish line BrushriN?'s lead was only SO seconds. Allor ante finished 1 :34 off the pace and Albatross wa s 2:35 behind the winner. There was a slir of puzzled excitement in the spectator fleet when it wa s noted that Sandpiper was flying 11 prof.est flag and indicating that her DAl~Y PILOT l'N ... "°AW-.~~ RACE HORSE START -Brushfire <No. 7469} moves out sharply .at the.start of the San Diego Lipton Olallenge Race Sunday to take an early lead wli.ich she never lost. From left -are NHYC's Attcr ante fNo. 7026), Brushfire; Santa Bar· bara Y~'s Sandpiper and Southwestern Yacht Club's Albatross. - protf'st was against Brushfire. But before the boats arrived back at~ dockside Sandpiper's skipper Bob Grant indicated that he would net file the protest He said he (le.w the · protest flag when he thought he saw Brushfire's spinnaker touch the weather mark while being hoisted.' Neither the judges nor those in the spec· tator fleet observed any in· fraction. Passage 1st Across MONTEGO BAY. Jamaica (AP l -Windward Passage, a sleek 73-foot ketch, \fas first across the finish line Monday in the 811-mile Miami·to- Jamaica yacht race with an incredibly swift 10.7 nautical mile pe r hour average speed. Mark Johnson·s ketch at one point ski,mmed the ocean water at helter than 20 knots. making the trip 'in three da.ys, 40 minut.es and 50 il!:COndii. The speedy dash by the New York Yacht. Cl ub sailboat left favo red Ondine still 45 miles in the Caribbean. Ondine, own· ed by S. A. "Huey" Long and also ll 73-(ooter, gave a tim~ handicap to all 29 bOaU In the ·race. Both yacblS v.•ere over the slarting line early Friday nigh! and in returning to restart there apparently was contact betv.·een the two boats. Both skippers have filed prtr tests "1.'hich will be heard Tuesday, according to the LA YC race committee. Winner in the Eagle Rock Race for MORF yachts in the Little Whitney ~ries was Roy Cundiff's Finale from Cabril\o Beach Yacht Club. ~Sears Final results: But regardless of which boat comes out v.·ith the elapsrd time record, it v•on '\ be one to be particularly proud of. This vear's Tri·ls1and race was Over a new course of 133 miles. Kialoa's elapsed time was 24 .6610 hours. The record for the old course of 152 miles .,..·as slightly more th;in 20 hours. OVERALL -(l) Lightning: (2) Slar: iJ) Kialoa 11 - pending prolest.. CLASS A -Ill Lightning: 121 Kialoa 11 !pending pro- test \; 13) Blackfin \pending prolest l. Overall hand icap winner \\'as Theo Stephens ' Lightning from St. Frances 'i'acht Club. Llovd Powell 's Slar from Long Be~ch Yacht Club was second and Kialn.a II. Pending results of the protests hearing, was th ird. Light airs and fog made it a slow race from the start. The fng contributed to one collision nff the Wf'St end of Catalina Island Friday nigh!. The ~·achts that tangled were Irving Loube"s Columbia-~7 Concerto from R i c h m o n d 'i'acht Club. and the f>S-foot c:-alamaran Sea Smokl which "·as in a sepi1rate race over the same course. :'\either y;ichl was seriou~ly damaged. Concerto continued CLASS B -I l) En core. Lawhorn & B\alterman. BYC: l2l ~!ue Streak, Tom Corke\\. NHYC : !3l Blue Norther, Sullivan and Gordon, LA YC. CLASS C -ti ) Star . 12\ Rlue Orpheus. Dick Johnson , LBYC; 13! Summerwind, Dick Me ine, LA YC. CLASS D -!I ) lndepcn- dcnce. John Linskey, WY C: tZI Whimsey 11. Hugh Rogers. LA YC: 1 :ll Centurian, Larry Folsom. SI BYC. Eagle Roc k Race !Little Whitney) OVERALL -(\) Finale : (21 Puffer. Rod Palmer. CBYC: (31 Laissez Faire, Rod Schapel. BCYC. CLASS A -ll) Jo~inale ; !21 Puller: !3) Laissez Faire. CLASS B -~I f A' Te. Homer Meek. CBYC: l2) La Souris. Jnhn Coleman. WYC: 1 3\ Bay Bee, Lee Thompson. LBYC. BYC's Easter Regatta Sailed i11 Light Winds Li ~ht "·ulds J!r1'1E'led the 11>7 bnal s in 16 cl;is~s "'h1ch turn· f'd nut Satu rda y and Sunday for Balboa Yacht Club 's Eas- ter Ref;alta. Largest cl a.~s v.·;i~ thr Lidn- 14 A 'A"ith 21 r ntrie!I. The v.·inner ""as Da\'e Ullman of BYC. Trophy v.•inners in a I I classes: PHRF j I $ 1 Cl 1 lntt"rmrlZO , Argyle Campbell, BYC: 12\ ~1h:tv . A11en Heller. BCYC: 1:tl tie. amon.'1 Sunda . Colttn C.ihbon~. BYC: Nikt' TI .. John Kinkf'I. AYC. and 8o11i1a. Goldie .ln~f'ph. LIY C. I.10RF 1101 -111 Pan dP Kwa i. Den nv ~1 a .'! n n , SCYC ; 12l E~p(.ro:in?a, Rna1. & Kerbsey. RCYC: 1 :t l Avenger , Bnb Cnrine. Anat;ipa YC. RHpDES :t.1 1101 11 1 Mislre.'!~, Bill Taylnr. R'i'C: 121 Impulse. T. n . Clrvidrncr. NHYC : IGl Folly Tl , B\l~i r B;irnetl. BYC. PC /Ii) -(!) Larry Pin· chinR. VYC. SOLINC. 112 1 -'1\ r:nld Oi1zizer, Roji!er Wal~h. NHYC: 121 RAft Ryder, Rnbcrt Uip;an .Jr .. WYC : t ~\ Teal , .J . I,, Reynolrls. l.A YC LUOERS·lfl (If) -II\ Prt· F.rn11t . LP r n \' Suth,.rlant1 . NHYC ; r21 Haiku . R i r k <iantner. NHYC: Ill Adf'h1ntr . R11rrv f'rnn. VVC. P.CAT (13 J -(II f>P 11 d 'Y.nrt Kit!. R. Paul Allrn. BCYC: f21 Tn11d, Nlrk Sti'f"le, 1.Ah&lna VC; 1~1 Ht11rlrt. Ron JtM;c, M11l+llt1 yr·. MF:ff('tffiY r71 -Ill Tiit . r.""'r'" P11u,.,~, ... ,_ f'nvr . 12) Blt1 Som, P1rk Ofi ns moreo . cove. SHIELDS 161 -Je11n , Fred Simonds. NHYC . INTERNATIONAL-14 ( 1 0 ) -111 Fox. Tim Murison, v·vc: 12) Pur~uil. Charles Stark. PVSA ; !'.ti \V h i 11!: Tornado. Pett'r Gale~. BYC. LI00-14 A ~21 \ -(I l Magic, Dave Ullman , BYC : !2\ Ditto. Bill ~1C'Cord. B Y C; ~ ~) Ca rl' less Lover .. Jon Baldwin, NHYC. tl00-148 17 \-11~ Oesque. Preston ZillJ!ilt. BYC : 12) Wishi-\\"ashi, Dick Hayden , BCYI. KITE 19l -( 11 Pip, Phillip Ramming , NHYC; (2\ Kitanic. CraiJ! Uhl. BYC. SABOT A 1!1) -11) llilrin~ ~1 achine. Mark r. a u d i o . NHYC: t2) Ocean Toad. Marc Hinshaw. LIYC. SABCYr 8 (61 -(11 Kart'n K. Karrn NuAent. BYC. ~A BOT C l 13) -! I) No. :t!lfi.1. ~11 Simpllon, LTYC: 121 Nnnn''· Brad Blaes. SS..(jC : ('.tl Tuki, Janice Johnson . BYC. . 4-H Club To Ex hibit Ten member~ o{ Huntington Re11ch's Tri.City Challen~ers 4·H Club will exhibit i:everal project~ S11turdAy at Perall a Juninr High . Or;inge. Thl'y're tRkin g part In 11 ro unty·wide 4-H demonstrnli on rl11y to show the types nf ac. tivllrll \'A rlous 4·H clubs art lnvol vtrl in. Some nf thr Huntin~trni 8f'l't h pr!ljf'ct~ inrlt1df' rab· bit ll. photography and s11.·in,, , • 1Sears J "" t ++ c~<•!Ho. Hurry, Hurry ... SA VE 20% to 40o/o ! Off Sears Regular Low Prices Depending on the Size of Tire You Need! WHITEWALLS • BLACKW ALLS AIJJF'ULL 4-PLY QUANTITIES LIMITED Prices effective Sunday, March 28 tbru Wednesday, Man:h 31 IUIMO ... ~ •1 l •UM, 111 .. 1.111 ........... ~ ,. ...... <<!<•"'""' ... •UU. W •·.n''1 te<oe ... .,. .. 1-e•11 Ol~•P'O< I ..:rtO •N l •tttl -· ....... " IOCAI WI ._._. ............ ,..,,, ·-·"---' -·~--.1 .-...c1uttJU.U~ -·•••n-.tWol -·-.. ,.,.,, •tUl'l' .. l·°"''·-.............. 1 .. • •• ' •:• ·ril- .• , . !' t ;. I I Wives· Sh .are ' . ".;:~r-.H.')t .i.: • M . - With Big A Pluyers _ .. ~ By BARBARA DUARTE Of "'-°'"" "'"' Sl1ff There's a man standing in the middle of a diamond 60 feet, e inches out winding up a fa st ball. And there's another man standing in a chalk-lined rectangle waving a stick. The scene indicates a battle -and the name of the battle ls baseball . Thus, Don \Veli s. affectionately known in inner circles as the "silverlipped" voice of the California Angels, iAtroduced Southern Cali· forn ia women writers to a desert version of probably the most physic. ally and emotionally demanding professional sport. Wells headed a lwo-day Palm Springs lineup for basebalJ figures and their di staff side designed to give ''the little woman" a preliminary introduction to base ball -and a future chance to make such enlight· ened comments as "This one should be an inside breaking ball." or "f think Torborg just sign aled for one far and away, where it's hard to hit." "EASY TO UNDERSTAND" With facts and figures ca.re!ully recorded for the right oceasion, hemline journalists discovered baseball is "easy to understand. but the fine points make it interesting," according to ~sporll'icaster Dick En berg. Enberg. addressing lhe group during a pregame workout at the Palm Spring.s stadium, explained that each player take.s two bunts and seven swings during batting warmup. And pitches are thrown without the usual deception in order to give the batter so me good hits, he added, psychologically giving him a boost for the game to follow . From a total of 40 to 45 players in spring training. the club will be pared to 25 on opening day -10 pitchers, three catchers, six out· fielders and six infielders. \Vith only 19 off days. the Angels roll into a rigorous schedule of 100 games on Tuesday, April 6, until the season ends Sept. 30. (See ANGEL WIVES, P•go 181 IT'S CATCHING -. .\ngel catcher Jeff Torborg and wife Susie join so ns Gregory !left) and Douglas for a discussion of the finer points of catching. Knuckleballs are the hardest to catch, Torborg noted. because the ball flutters into home plate and is Lough to handle. r ~,,.,..v,_, ··-~···•<> W ~ ... " • ., •• "' ,. . ' '. ~ '\ i'. t 9'-..· -:;;: .. . 1 •.. • \ . ... • • , . • u. ·~ •.. ::.: ...... _ . ....,.....r~ , ... _ .......... _"' ·-·~""'"::e'!i.:-=. ......... -~l , • ......-- "-·. ·-'"~ ~ ·-" ·-• . -·--. ·-~-" ... . -·. ··-• • • • .. •-., . -~-~ ---· •• • , --l • P R E TT Y BABY - Cal cher .Jerry Moses ad· mires his 9·month·old daughte r Kristin who accomranied her moth· er Carolyn to the Palm Sprill.'?"S stadium for a sunn y session of spring training . STRATEGISTS -An· nouncer Dick Enberg and Angel manager J .cfty P h 1 l I i p s give women writers a pre- game workout on the field before putting on a sc rappy exhibition wit h the Padres. ~~-. ~-!· BEA ANDERSON, Editor IMflt•~. M••cto ,., nn ""' ir • -· ·.·· .. 11, · . . ' .... .. , t ' '·Wife Subtracts From Marriage Game by Tallying Score DEAR A.NN LANDERS: I've started thiJ letter five timee since Januarr 2 and thrown ii Away because I Jtlll cooldn'I fi.nd the right words without 10Unding coarse and vulgar. Today I decided to expre. myself as bellt I can and I Mpe yOll will forgive me . Jn. 1970 I marked a Sttrel calendar. keepina count of now many timu my hlJfibaftd made Jove lo me. Tut grand ~>tat nn TJecember 31 was 22. T'his "f ldn'.t be so bad if he were 80 yeart , t.t we are both 25. hen I started to keep eooat, I made 1 ~w l.o myse lf lhal I would never ·~ make the first move or try to talk hldt into making love to me whkh, 1 am 1sh1med to ~AY. 1 had done on everal occasions. I re<r.ed I had ANN LANDERS been degrading myseU -like 1 woman of the street.. J decided if he didn 't w111t me u much ,11s I wanted him , our lovemaking would ha ve no real meaning. My husband 11nd I aet along well ntherwiH. Our friencl..: oonsider our mar· rlage one of tilt best. They keep referring to us 11i; a model couple. t Little do they know !) l a:ni serio115ly considering divorce. We have no children and att both young enough to make a new Jife with another partner. Please advise . -DEMAND-- SUPPLY CRISIS IN SAN MATEO DEAR I).: It IOUnds to me 111 If you wanl your marriage to fall. A wife whn would play this numbers ••me h1 ennKlootly nr subcon5clou•ly hoping her husband'• perrormance •Ill be l)f)Or 110 the will hflve a re180n tn dump him . \'our itollon that a wife who Is 1exually aggressive degrades hertelf ''Uke • woman iif the tlrttlt" rtve1 me 1 sma ll clue as lo the rool of Your prnblem. l\11rried love sboold be just •~ excllinl to a woman 11 lO a man and a wife should not be ashamed In lnlUale I( -In facl. 1ome husbands find tMs Im- mensely flal~rl~I· You need cnunselinl, hnnty. You consider your5eU a very ~txy lady whn isn't letting enough , bur my hunch Is tbal )'GU don't know whit it'1 all about. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 want kl thank yo11 i,,r taking a strong stand again.,I hitchhiking. True , lhere are some nice kid~ thumbing t~ir way. but a driver cAn 'l tell by look ing who is "nice" 11nd who ls going to stick a gun In his ribs. Aside from the danger lo lhe driver there is also danger to the hitth- hiker. I would like to quote an editori1I wh ich appeared recenlly in the Hartford Courant. "A J111rvey by lM Angeles police revealed th11t 222 girls who hilched rideti were \. icllms or forcible rape In th8l cily alone. In New Jersey the stile police rt.vt.Aled thal 302 of 385 known runawa y!! in 11170 traveled by thumbing rtdes. A 11pot check m that same stile done nn 100 perSOll.!I picked up on the highw11ys showed thf!l one out of every three hitc hhikers had 11 cri minal record . About rive percent were wanted by the police. Everywhere dcgencratt& are amoog both hitchhikers and those who pick them up." You did a real service by pr il\llng that l'(llumn . Thank you . -CON· NECTICUT YANKEE DEAR YANKEE: And you did a rtal 11en-lce by iendlq lhat npponlve matulal which cave me a stCQnd op- portunity to make the polnl. Tbaak )'o&. Orinking may be "in " to the kids you run with -but It can put you "out" for kee~. You ean cool It and stay popular, Read "Booze and You -for Teenagers Only." Send 35 cent.t In coi n and a long. self-11drlressed1 al.Imped envelope with your request in care or the DAlLY PILOT. I : J 8 DAILY PILOT From Page 17 Angel Wives Happily Keep Hubbies' Halos Shined Up One or ttle more exciting rnoments in baseball is the perfectly exeeuted double play ~·hich Enberg describes as "poetry in motion." "Or, there's the triple play :· 1nanager Lefty Phillips added. ··we only had one of those y,·iU, the bases loaded going from third, to SttOnd to first." h... boasted. "But we lost the ballgamt.'' Everyone kno...,·s how men feel about tht game. but how do baseball wives survive a career that makes them either temporary widow s or gypsies? "We've moved at least 13 times in the 21h: years we've bttn married,'' a n s v.· ere d i::atcher Jerry ~1oses' Carolyn. a former airline stewardess. And the last house hunting job u·as more dlfficult since many Orange County apart· men! owners d o n ' t want children. Proud parents of 9-month· old Kristin, the couple admits to onl y one slump. "That's when 1 got to the 6 a.m. boltll"." Carolyn said. "and Jerry got up.'' "The kids are more 1n· terested in popcorn than the playing field ." reveals Judi Berry. p re t t y . dark-haired wife of center fielder Ken Major item in the junior Ber· rys' day is Captain Kangaroo GAl1E OF CllESS "The other kids d o n ' I belie\'l' Doug and Greg have a father who plays baseball ... said Susie Torborg, wife or catcher Jeff Torborg. The former Miss N e w Jersey added the family always goes to spring training but malntatns a permanent residence in New Jersey where they spend six months of every year. Torborg, a Rutgers graduate. outlined his role as a catcher, one of the most demanding positions on the fleld . "It's like a game of chess," he e.xplained. ''with the catcher trying to outguess the batter." An addition to the Angel roster after seven years with the Oocliers, Torborg has been learning pitching signs and personality trail\ oC each pitcher on the staH. \Vhen he calls for a fast· ball by kicking dirt out of his shoe, scratching hl.s knee. removing his hat or waving his finger, Torborg likes lo have the pitcher shake his head to try to "psyche out" the batter. Then tM pitcher throws a fastball. One of Fran Spencer's jobs Is to keep the calories down for first buem&n J 1 m Spencer. In addition, 1bt. Ute many other wlvu, involv• herself in charity wort: and tries to keep tbt bou.etide morale up. "No matter what happena, we know we can't cban1e It, so we try to b e tm- derstandin&," Fran explained. "But we'rt u prejudiced as any wives." Her husband fee)J the ele-- ment of surprltt ls the greatest influence in any sport, and though players 1et tllcl< el UM sport .... 1Umc1, they ttlll know it'• worthwhllt , Dick Enbtri'• wU1 -to make a study of rporU to keep up with her husband. Hu study wu ao thorouah, lhe became a 1port1wrlter. And En&berr let ber llibt her own battles to 1et into the pre11 bo1. Wells' lovely wife Jackie never tries "to ucond 1uess u 1 wilt," She added since her huaba.nd Ii pie ao much of the Ume, 1he mates a specl.a1 efforj when he'a home. Between tr1veUn1, house buntinr, belnf a wUe and a mother, a bueball wile would agree to Lefty's demand ''you hav-e to thin) your husband ii a:ood and alao learn when to keep your mouth shut." The main thing to rtmembtr, cautioned t be An.tel manager as be saun- tered onto the field before a 5 to 4 lou to the San Diego Padre., ls do what yeu think ls best at the time and rtmember tomorrow's another day. Horoscope: Libra Take Care TUESDAY MARCH 30 By SYDNEY OMARR Leo lad1vldua ls are sea- timental, but teldom admit It. Tbeae persons a re showmen. have flair wblcb makes other1 thtak they are happy.' Leo Is ~ entertainer of the todl1c. Leo nttds love. Without love , there 11 little chance or happiness r 0 r ptrson1 bom under l h I s 7.0dfacal sign. Some famous Leo Individuals include Robert Mitchum, l\.lae West and l'tlelvln Belli. ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Not wise to stray too far from familiar ground . Mixup in reservations. directions is very likely. Avoid scattering rorces. Base actions on facts. not speculation. Steer clear of senseless disputes. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May IOJ ' Be cautious in money affairs. Remember resoluUons, obll1a- tions. One who advocates carefree attitude does not have your interest at heart. Know thJs -respond 1c· cordlna:ly. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Acct:nt on compeUtor1. You make adjustments now which are beneficial and necessary. Stress on marriage a n d business partnerships. Be aware of public relaUons. Get meanings across clearly. CANCER (June 2J-July 22): Steady pace Is important. You could get new uslgnmenl, challenge. Welcome fresh con- tact.\. Member of opposite sex pays meaningful compliment. Avoid extremes. Keep feet on ground. LEO (July 23-Auf. Z2J' Mary Landers Weds Roger H. Genereux Mary Kathleen Landers, daughter of ri.1r. and Mrs. Charles M. Landers of Costa Mesa, became the bride of Roger H. Genereux, son of Mr. and J\irs. Reginald N. Genereux of Buena Park, in St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. Costa ~1esa. SPRING HAPPENING -Fresh spring flowers will be in the spotlight Wednesday. March 31, when Orange County District, California Garden Clubs. Inc. sponsors a flotver show in the Saddleback Inn. Santa Ana. Making a selection for an arrangement are (left to right) the Mmes. George St. .Jean, Paul Silvius and Andy J. Antosik. The public is invited to the show. The bride was escorted to the altar by her fa ther for the late morning ceremony conducted by the Rev. James O'Brien. J\1rs. Karen ~1cGlinn was her sister's matron of honor and Miss Cindy Schmarch her maid of honor. Bridesmaids in cluded the Misses Jean kids! have brea kfast with the Easter Bunny Come join 1he cele- bration honoring the Easter Bunny. There'll be tots of excitement with fun entertain- ment, candy and a cha nce to win free tickets to Ice Capades. at the L.A. Sports Are- na. Don'I miss it!. 9 'til 10 a.m. Apnl 3rd and 1 Oth. Call Execu- tive Sec retary, 54b· 9)7 I ext. 20 I for re- ~at.ions. ch ildren 1.25 adults 1.AS may co res1,iur.1nt. m MAVCC> Spring Doing s Flowers In Spotlight • Wigmore. Suzanne Genereux, Mary Carolina Scaglia, Mary Van Loon. Nelda ~fcLear and Peggy Cantlin. tfichael McGlinn and John ...,, .... MRS. R. H. GENERIUX Morning Rites 1n the Saddleback Lnn, Santa Ana . Luncheon, a! a cost of $3.50. v.•ill btgin al noon with Atkinson, South Coast. McGllnn 11 1 carried the Each club will have a floo.•:ers and rin&s. special entry but members The bri degroom chose The bride was graduated may take part in individual \Vi\lia m Yocum to be his best from Miter Dei High School arrangements. Entries, by man . Ushers included John and attended Oranae Coul Spring Doings. a11 annual fresh flowe r show presented by the Orange County District, California Garden Clubs, Inc .. y,•ill present a bright picture on '\'ednesday, March 31. The event. under the diret" lion of Mrs. Andy J . Antosik of Laguna Beach, will begin with a 10 a.m. district meeting reservations due by Saturday. reservation 1n the artistic McGlinn, Charles Landers J r., College. Her hwband allO is ~larch 27. Shoy,· hours are category. y,•ill be accepted Paul l\lenke, George \Voll, Jim a Mater Dei High School from 1 to 3 p.m. and it is from 8:30 lo 9:45 With judging \Varner. Larry Smith and graduate who has completed to b<gin at 10 a.m. 1'.flke Langan oerv;•e 1·n tbe US Anny open to the public al no --"-----------·----''--· ______ :::_.,:-:::..:::_=..::.:.·::·..::.:::.:.·_ Tortugas Officers Elected ~!rs. Lte \Vildennan ha.o; been elected president for the coming year of Las Tortugas. a women's social group in the Turtle Rock area of Irvine. DI.her officers in the club. ~·hil'.'h M'l'ks to promote and lost.er interest in home and culture and to promote com· munily relations. are the ~1mes. Rabert Collett. \'icr president ; Robert Hook. secretary; Court Campbell. charge. Presidents of the eight clubs participating are the f\fmes. \\'i\liam F. Robb, Laguna Beach: Edwin H. Oleskiewiez, Lake Forest: Ralph Martin, San Clemente; \Vayne Perry. Fullerton: Earl Richison, Rambling Gardens: Pa u 1 Stick, Santa Ana Junior Club Counselors: Kenneth Sloop. Year Round and l\tiss Jean HB Auxiliary Ame rican Legion Auxiliary of Huntington Beach gathers in the American Legion Hall at I :30 p.m. the first Thursday of each month. On the fourth Thursday members may call Mrs. Arne Jensen, 536-2777, fct' location information. treasurer, and George Huettl .,;=====-=====--,I hisloria n and p u b I i r i I yl chairman. The membership a n d telephone committtt include.o; the Mmes. Richard Sernkn. David Keirsey and Charles C'.olden. Oamolic . FOR THE SWE ETEST WATER The Stitchery Noo k (lflW•l & NEEDLEPOINT IC 111 a. s..,,ii.1 e P•r ...... l lKUI• • l•mll • U ....... Ct!vmtlMlllM .... e e DMC y•l'Jlt l1t E. l71!1, C"I• Mt .. MILLGllEN SQUAltE YOU EVER TASTED. Isn't it time you tried it? Rent for one mon1h or os lonq as you like. Just $6.30. No lease to sign. LINVIRON CORPORATION PHONE 645-0520 Is today the dav you're going 10 do something about your weight? WEIGHT WATCH~·-more new and exciting ways lo tielpyou k>se 10, 20 even 50 Pounds or more and keep 1f oll for life. A program that'• llO utlllfJlng Thal ii will get you through lhe year without the usual temptaUonL N9W recipe• and food ldeasl To lempt and salisly you, lresh trorn the We ight Watchers kitchens. Our very own gourmet chef has created new and ta nlalizing Wefght Walcllers rec· ipes ... a variety of dishes that will sur- prise you! You'll never have to eat another dull meal while you're losing weigh t I Lifetime membership plan- We've gol a plan to help you keep your weight down for life! New program Id•••! Makes every meel ing an exciting event as you slead1ty lose weight Cooking demon- stralions, interesting guest tpeakers and presentations. N1w awards! Mark your 1ucoesa- lur weight Iota. ln••P•n•i,.el No glmmlC:ks, no S2 WllKlT SS llGITTIATIO• vo COlllTIACTS TO Sltll I Don, wtlt enother day. Start now. ROBINSON'S FASHION ISLAND INTRODUCTORY OPEN MfrTING! FRI. 7 PM. APllL 2 ll081NSON'S AUDITOllUM Cl.ASS OPENINGS AVAILABLE MONDAYS7PM TUESDAY 10 AM WEDNESDAY 10AM 'Fw F.nliw ltrf-li.w A 1111 • FR.EE.. 'FEJG1" FATCHER.S UT CALL (7141135-5505 WEIGHT@e WATCHERS" .......... _.....,_,,~-.. -.- Friends could try to involve you in ariument. Refuse to be mldQle peraon. Means know that by 1etlin1 steametf up your basic purpose I s defeated. Trust hunch. Share knowledge in diplomaUc way. VIRGO (Aug. 23-S<pt. Z2 )' Attend to business. Numerous distractions are evident. Ker is to attend to basics. Be flezlble without bein1 foolish. Stand fast on principles. FamJly member could be mlllnlormed. UllllA (Sept. 23.Qct. Z2), Communications tend to be confuled, misplaced. B e ls planning. Avoid Jell-decep- tlon. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2 .. Feb. 11): Emotions Und to dominate. Laver's q u a r r e l could be featured. Avoid bas· Ing acUons strictJy on impulse. Think -be analytical. Know your own worth. Don't sell yourseU short. PISC~ (Feb. l~March 20): Obtain hint from V i r I e message. Be wiry of one who advocates impractical pr1r cedures. Stick to what yo11 know. lmprove domestic rela· tlons. Check home, property v1Jues. Finish major task. thorough; check details. An Tci rind oul W11•'1 10K11;, ,.,.. vou appa~nt minor matter could ~m•~~,.,~1.1, ~1-c.':'i"•H1,J:4~ be of major importance. Know ~11 ~""'c.,.'1:-n-i:·"0..,5:~ ::r..::i:.': th1s and act accordingly. Dou-$t(:tfll, ,~. OAILV l'ILOT,, lo~ :nto. ble check. Or1...:1 c ... tr11 st111on, rnw von. . .. -~.Y~·~·~·~'"i;;;;;-.,-~~~~ SCORPIO (Oct. 13-Nov. 21), 11 Ava.Id tendency to be ex- travapnt. Member of op- posite 1er may not be best adviser. Heed your own counsel. Numerous chan~es are featured. One in position of authority may uk special favor. it's the "KNIT"ural thing to do! ,.. c ... '""' ,. l111t •r cNd•.t wltlo-IN • _.,... flf '"'""'ft ... l!HI II ct~ IHI fllttl C-19 ,...., ,,.. h1v• -,,...,. It. . SAGmAlllUI . (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): What occurs now could detmnlne much af im-1'" ____ ..., ____ ,. mediate future. See clearly. Take orr rase-colored Jtlasses. Be practical in financial , fami-The ly affairs. Study unusual •greement. KNIT CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan . 19): Obtain valid hint from Cucer message. Look behind setnes. Realize surface in- dications could be deceptive. Be aware af what compe:tltion It. CNll ...... CtlU MIU ·-JU.Ult \ • . . . Restor helps dtmaged h1;r, IHps lo•ely heir hH~hy Bee uti ful he;,.tyles slert with h eolt~y heir. 1'nd spl it, broken, demeged heir is revitalized with Res tor treetments. Mr . Dev id Connelle • our s1ylist-men ager, will be qivin g compli. mentery consultations to demonstrate the newest in hoir des ign and introduce you fo the restorative qualities of Restor cond ition. ing treatment. Do call for an appointment. sh•mpoo, set, And Restor treatment 6.00 may ce haauty salen · may co touth co1t1 ma5• co••t pl•t• 546.9)2 I -' ; ; ' .; ' Santo Ano Rites Cathy Stan/ ield Wed Calvary Church . Sant<1 Ana , was the setting for the evening l'eremony hnkini.: 111 rnarrh1gc Cathy Lynn Stanfielri and Bruce Allen Blnnqu1 !it Reading !ht: double ring riles \fi·as the Rev. M 1 ch a e I Samsvick.. 1'hc bride ls the daughter u! fl1r. and Mrs. \Vayne Dee Sl<1nfleld of Costa ~1esa and the brldegroom is the son of fl1r . and Mrs. Robert Binn· <1u1st of Glendora. r"'"' I Mrs. Wayne K. Stanfield was her sister-in-law's matron of honor and Miss Anita Parrrakian was maid of honor. Bridcsn1aids were the ~\Jsscs Dorothy Pamakian, Buth Ann Johnson, Er in f\1cKirn and Barbara Binn- quist, ~ister of lhe bridegroom. I Flower girl and ring bearer \\-'ere Andrea Bell and Brett fltcKim. Duane Putnam performed the duties of best man and ushers were Stanfield. Rich Binnqulst, brother of the bridegroom, David Binnquist. his cousin. Bill Watts and Keith Peery. .,_ The new !\1rs. Binnquist is a graduate of C-Osta !\1esa High School and Orange Coas~ College and her husband. an alumnus of Glendora High School and Citrus College, is serving in the Air Force. MRS. B. A. BINNOUIST Arizona Home They will reside in Chandler, Ariz. Pair Exchange Vows In Morning Ceremony M o r n i n g v.·edd1ng cere- monies were conducted in St. 1\ndrew·s Presbyterian Church, Ne"•port 13each. by lhe Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierrnfield for Jinx Lanae Thomas and Will ian1 Randall Hansen. The bride. \vho 1s lhe claugh\er of r-.1 rs. .I am~s W. · · Thon1as of Co!!.ta r-.1 esa. was ~iven in 1narnagc by Frank Mello. r-.1iss J udy Goodell v.·a~ niaid Of honor, Bridesmaids in· eluded ~1rs. John To1nlin. Miss Vi cki Palmer and ~liss Vickie , •• ~hulda . ,: Richard Barker was best ~ man for the brfdcgroom. \vho is the son of ~1r. and l\1rs. \V. C. Hansen o{ Exeter. Ushers were Hugh Nelson , George Geronsin and Russell Givens. The bride ts a Nc1vporl Harbor 11 igh School graduate and a senior al UC! where ·"she is ma1oring in art history. MRS. W. R. HANSEN Wed in St. Andr•w'1 Her husbanJ. who w a s graduated from Exeter High School. is a UC! alumnus. ,----_________ --------------·----------~-~- AN EXTRAORDINARY VALUE! SHAG OTHER DURABLE SHAO Prlcu lrom only 3.H lo 24.11 99 ••• "(O. FREE ESTIMATES-CAU 547.3993 LIVINGSTON'S ----CARPET • CUSTOM DRAPERIES t4St SO. MAIN ST., Cot. Edll'ISltf • SANTA ANA HOURS: DAILY I TO 5;)0 P.M.-FRtOAYS °T1L t:OO PJI. ------~ -------------- qtp C1·own1ng Glory IJ eauty ~alo11~ SHAG CUT ... SHAG PERM The new longer look! Beaulifully curled by our carefree perm. Complete s995 BUDGET PERM ....•. oiwov• •595 (Normal Hair) lllt1 l"" 'lliri llltfWM' SHAMPOO·SET STYLE CUT SOUTt4 COAST PLALI. ,...,, U••l-N1'i lo Se~n PlloPM: SC•· 111' Qp1ll fvflli~q• 295 , .. JU 200 Z,7 I 17th ST .. COST.A MlSA f'llo..-541·tt1 t O pen ~v •flifl91 I Swrut•1 Wf (All: •&o~! YIWl L.alc y..ir 11111! Peering Around RETU lli'ilNG FR0,\1 LON· DON is Miss Ann Hereth Lynch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J . Lynch Jr. of Costa Mesa. She has been a student at the United Staleli lnternatiooal University, Lon- don campus. Her st.ay included a lour of I reland. Scotland and France and a week in Rome. Miss Lynch is a sophomore at the USIU San Diego cam- pus. !\ti.SS CHRIS SHARP has been initiated into the Gamma Kappa Chapter of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. She is a fN!shman at Kearney State College, Kearney. Neb. Her parents are !\1r. and ?i.1rs. James T. Sharp of Costa !\1esa. .Toast of Party By ERri1A BOri1BECK The product"rs of The Odd Coople television series are asking the public bow U1ey feel about "canned laughter," I thought they'd never ask. ·J owe my entitt: se nse of humor to canned laughter. Before laugh tracks, 1 used lo think Bob Hope and Don RlckJes were funny men. What did I know? One day several years age I was v.·atching the Donna Reed show. Donna bounded into the room. looked at her son. Jeff, and .said, "Oon"l forget your hat.•• Out of nov.·here came 500 people laughing so hard I thought they'd have a hernia. Thinking I must have miss· ed something I sat upright in my chair and devoted my entire efforts lo what wa!!. being said on the screen. I found Donna could get laughs with such provocalive lines as "The doctor isn'I in just now", "l"m in the kitchen" and ""Hi there." The next weekend at a party I went up to the hostess and AT WIT'S END A1TENDING the 11th an· nual Artists' Ball in the Shadow Mountain Palette Club v.•ere Gene and Lueth e I Houston of Palm Desert and Newport. Bea~h and Reginald and Wanda Pegram . also of Newport Beach. Mrs. Houston is a former president of the Palette Club and initiated the Dollars for Scholars program during her term. Architectural Group Seats New Officers JOINING FELLOW adven- ture-seeking passengers lour· ing the Caribbean aboard the SS Statedam were Mr. and Mrs. Paul O'Leary. The ship provides a 28-day cruise \vith disembarkation points in nine different countries. Members Wanted A spring membership drive is now under way for the Fountain Valley Woman·s Club, according lo Mrs. \Yal· lace Short. president. New members of the club. which emphasizes culturaJ and philanthropic endeavors. are the f\1mes. Barb"'a Gardner, James Gillis, Robert Greeley. David Klugman and David Schneider. Provisionals are the ~1mes. Emma Creighton, William Wakeham, Artiror Logan and William Vornhold. Toastmistress Charter Sought The Orange County Chapter of the \Yemen's Architectural League has seated Mrs:. David Klages of Lagu11a Beach as president for the Cilming year. Other of ficers include the l\1mes. Thomas Moon, Costa r-.1esa. vice president: Arthur Danielian, Irvine, secretary. and Gordon Ensign, Hun· tington Beach, treasurer. The group, which is ar- filiated with the Califor"ia Counci l Women'!t Architec· tural League, welcomed new membl?rs during a Cilffee hour in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. Walter Richardson. Honored were the Mmes. Chapter's President To Speak DTEl\Y SMOIS 'Oil WllMEN & CMILOllN ttJ I . 1'11R It. Ct1lt Miit · 141-2171 THANK YOU HUNTINGTON BEACH! GRAND OPEN I NG THE NEW WEIGHT WATCHERS CENTER 7732 EDINGER c0pp.'" """"'""'°""' IN!'liODUCTOIY OPEN MEETINGS WlllOF I.Piil s.10, TM ... Wt4. Th•n... S.t. 10 A.M. MeL. .... & , ... ,... 7:JO ...... FREE WEIGHT WATCHERS fOOO KIJI Blair Dallard, John Deck, Don Hadley, Richard Jones, JG.Seph Smi!ek. Dale Ransen and Joho Trutilo. The purpose of the league is to promote 11nificatio111 and advancement of the archileC· tural profession and t o stimulate greater public understanding of the pro- fession and its capacity lo be of service to the com· munlty. APRIL'S BIRTHSTON E 1he 0fr1.rn()n.J. Crepe Flexible let U!> bring ou l 1he gy psy in you perm and cut, 17.5 0 l .1 ... hi()r1 \. l<1V0ttt<" _ • ~ 1f1" t>-rr itini:: ~r~v Tml. A ~•lly In~ ... oi '"•nrl (.wt•pr ,..11d-... <Jur _,rvl"r v.·1H 'ut \1111r hJH, !ht•n 4 url 1t w11h ,, H.il~.1111 Phr.., !"'l"ll!l 11 11h \v•>ndPr1ul nt"'1v r onrlir1(n1t•r,, You 'll IW" " 111 •v. gyp,y ~"u 1n• 'I'll ''~ < 111 .d11t1'' J tilt ';• .urv 'tu·•·11 ·"' :-''" (o· Mol'!., H1wr.., Fd !O•DO H!I 9:10; Oth•r ''"' 10 ~00 tilt N1wporl, 1! I F11hlo11 hltnd, Ne,..po•I Cenl1r $.10 Mond1y, March 29, lq71 DIJlV PILOT J9 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE NOTltl 01' MAllllNAL•$ $ALI: H•. U 511 Tr~11scon11~111t! Crtdll S.<¥1ce. 11><., 11'11111!;11 vt. C••I lltt dle'/, Lorent 8rtdltv. O•l•lldtnL LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NrvrICE '·l~t .,._,, lh virtue of tn execull°"' ls.s~ "" Mtrcto ~. 1•11 by Ille Munlclotl Cour1, l-------------- 0r•nte County ~••ti« Jvdlclt l O!ttrlcl, ii' Jtf Counrv of °''"~· Sttte DI c~utornlt, ,,CT!TIOUI IU$1Nl!:SS 11...,.. t 1Wtmtnl enltttd ln favor ol HAMli ITATIMINT Tr&nKonl1,,..11ta! Crt<lll S."'lce. Int .. •• Tht lol!owl'lll 0tr.on It oolnt h1d•menl crtdllon •lld •••ln11 C•rl '" 8rtdlev. Lort!lt 8r1dleY as ill(l1menl ZINOS. Jllf NtW1>0rl 81\'d., No~ dtbto,., ~ln1 • '"'' btllnct. of Ul1.l! 8t•Cll, (•Ill. tf6'0 •c!INlll1 due "'" 11111 llf(l•me"I on Ille lltvmetnd L1r11v Alc""v I. Oonn• dt te Ill' "'~ 1uu1nct ol ••IO execu!IOfl, lte lllchev. Jflf Oc.t•n Front. NtwPOff 1 ll•v• levltd uPGtO t ll lllt rlv111, 11n~ ll•tch, Ctlll. t'/6'0 incl lnlertil ot 1•111 l<Hltmenl debtor1 Thi' Ou1lllf!11 11 btlnt cend11cttd bl' In 111.-Prooe•tv In 1~1 Cel/nlY ol Or•nae. '" lndlvldu•I. lltlf ol Ctlllornlt, dt!Clltltd II lllllowi: Rtvmonct LfTOV l lcl>•Y Tht Northu •lttly 11!<1.00 lttl ol Lal Pufl!lthl!'d Ortn~· '°'"'' D•llY Pl'nl ll. o1 TtKI No. JOO Cltv ot C11tlt Mt tcll I, 15, 22, :rt, 1'11 ~71 Mt••· C<>11n!v of Ot•noe. Sitt• ol C1lllornl1 •• Hr .., • ., lhereol rece1dtd In 8ool<; U, P~"' 11 1"11 U o1 LEGAL NOTICE Ml1t. Mtot, •K<>rd1 111 lt!d Ortnllt'-j-------------- County, tXCIPllnt Ill~ N1rthwt1t1rh' IAlll nu JIQ.(I) IHI tfld t~CtDllnt •lt.o '"" IUll'lllOI COUIT Oil' T"I s .... 11\t•slttly lU.00 '"' llltrlCI': STATI 0, CALl,O•NIA 1'01 il'r1111trlY It com"'°"IY klWIWf! •• 115 THI! COUNTY O' 01.lNGI MGn!t VIJlt, C11tlt Mt l•• C1lllorflle Mt. A ...... 1 NOTICE II l'ltEIE8Y GIVEN 1!111 NOTICI 0, "IAIOIG 01' ,l:TITION Oii ~rldtf. Aptll 11. 1t11, t t lO•)l l'Ott il'IOIATI. 0' WILL ANO ll'C!DC~ A.M ti f'11f'll ol CllU<lloouM' USUANCI 01' LITil.11 TllTA/lolllN• !.ii Wt tl 11111 SlrH I. (11¥ ol CMll TAlt'Y MHI. C1lllen111. Coun•v of O••nte. Sttte IEUl!t ol CHllSTINA HENllETTA ef C•lller ... lt , I will Miii ti PVllll< llES, Oeo:t•lt'd. t1,11:llon ff 11'11 l'ollllett Ill-. !..-call NOllCE IS MtEllEIY GIVEN 111•1 In ltwM """"' ol "" Unlltd llt tfl, CAAL l Jl:IES htl llleG IMr•lfl • tll I.... rl.,,I, Ullo tlld lfllfft J'I of H llllcn IOI" Pr°"'"lt OI W!ll •nd 10t wld 1""'9f'l'ltlll II"""'' 111 """ •bo'lt 1is11~• ot Llll•rt 1•t••menltrw to .S.Krlbfd ••olllfl•, « .. ""1dl llltl'IOf '•1111-r, Tl!'letfl'ICt It wtildl t1 - •• m•v IM """''""' ~ ••l!•f• ... Id tor """''" ot<ll<ult". ,,... 11111 ~ fJKw!IOIO, '"'"" t ccrwtd lnttrQI tnd !!"'" t nd 111•<• l'f 11t•rl"9 11\fo •tm• COflt h•I tttlll Jt t kit A,,.U U. !t11 •I Otltd '' '°''' Mtu , Ctltl«nlt . Mtrcl'o t :lO 1 m , '" 1111 ~r1ro.?1 •f o.C.•tr· 17, 101 "''"' Na I q1 '''' cour1. •• ,.,, Olll•rd 0 Wll~lrton, Cl¥1C C•nlft Orlvf Wnl, In 9t'le Cl!f M•• .... 11 M11"lclHI Cou1!. o1 StnU An•· Ctll!llrn!t, Ortn" Clll.lfllY l1•tbor" Otttd M1•cl\ '5, ltTI Julllcla l Olt!lf(! w. E sr JOHN. '' (, A. OOOClwl"' ((11,jnl" ('9rk SlltMfll lt'OlllTSOM, MOWSllt & eAIUlll'IO MAK "AIA. O• Ctff'lfon OtlYI tolllfltlll'' A"'"''"' N""""' lt11.1t, (:11!,.,flle tMtl II .. ( I . C•!llMlllOMl!ft, Tiii._: 4'141 ~ '•lltr'9.,, Ctlllwf11r. Alltrn•n ,.,., il'ttlli.nt:r t"ulllllhfCI 0.l"to C1111! Otl!f '!lor toubllll\P<I 0•1nto COo111! lh\l'I 11'11111 Mt rch )t 11111 AP•ll I, ll Jtll •n·ll M1rU1 I/, 1' tnd Apr!! I, I'll lt)..11 I ' I ' DAIL V lllLGT s Fill-er-up Yourself New Trend NEW YORK IAP ) -In somewhat the same manner as seU·ttrvice laundries caught on In the immediate post.World War 11 years and automatic car washers some years later, s e If · service gasollne stations now show signs of growing popularity. Finance Briefs PJ'M'SBURGH -Jones and Laushlin Steel Corp., w1a aued In federal court by Harold Perl!lman, a Beechwood, Ohio lawyer who opposed t h e merger of J, & L. lnlo Ling· Temco-Vought, Inc., of Dallas. Pen!\ Board Chief Quits PHll.ADELl'HIA (AP) -• Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwell There is little evidence yel of a business boom -although critics fear that a smoking motorist might cause a boom of anotber sort -but the statistics are beginning to look NEW V-12 JAGUAR -Joining the $12.000·plus Ferraris and Lamborghinis. as the only V-17 engined cars available, Jaguar introduces the new V·l2 version of its six cylinder E-type cousion.s . ln hls new suit, class action Perelman, demanded dsmages of $88.5 mi 11 io n for shareholders because of alleg- ed violations of securities laws in the merger. All J & L's directors and some paat and present offictrs are named co. defendants. ln particular, the s u It charges J. &. L. concealed material facts from shartholders in a letter dated May 16, 1968, especially that it was intended to sell all J. & L. treasury shares not accepted by L-T·V on the open market. very bullish. In High Gear resiped Wednesday as board chairman and chief ereeutlve of tM Penn Cenlral Co., partnl firm of the fin ancially troubled railroad. Harnwell said in a state- ment he and four other d!rec- l«s who submitted th~lr re1igna lion1 fulfilled l heir ''obligations to the company and the shareholder" by ar- r1nging a plan to refinance a $59 million loan from Swiss banks after Penn Central Co. fa ulted on initial payments due last month. In 1961 there were aboul 2,500 such 1tallons, according to industry sources. Now the figure is esUmaled lo be at least 5.000 and probably as high as 7,500, out of a national total of 2211,000 stations. New Jaguar Slwwn in U.S. The parent company negotlattd the loan in 1970· to help reinforce the dwindling finances of tht railroad, Penn Central Transportation Co. The railroad is rtorganizing under bankruptcy laws. ------------LEG AL NOTICE .... ,.... lllOTIC I TO Cll01T01ll SUf'll lOll COUltT 01' THI STATI 01' CALll'OlllllA 1'01: Jn addition, several big By CARL CARSTENSEN Of llrt OlllY llllf! ltt tf name companies now are tak-PALM SPRINGS -The ing the development more Jaguar V-12, the first volume seriously lhan just a few years produced sports car with a ago, when roost of lhe stations v.12 engine. was introduced were manned by small pro-here to the press and Jaguar prietors, including m 8 n Y dialers from across the coun-grocers. . Now Mobil has 26 Mlf-try by Sir William Lyons, service stations under test and deputy chairman of British Humble 18. In Boise. Idaho, Leyland Motor Corp. Ltd. Shell is developing two units . BL~1. the world 's eighth To provide equipment, well known controls manufacturers largest auto producer also have entered the field . in· manufactures Austin, MG. eluding Wayne, Gilbarco, Ben· Triumph, and Rover ca rs. nett, AMF Tel Tron and The new Jaguar, available Tokhiem, which is owned by in both convertible and 2 + Standard of New Jersey. The new Jaguar distributor has no breaker p0inl3 to get dir1y or pitted and requires no adjustment. The electronic distributor was developed for use in Formula 1 racing cars. Jaguar is the first production car to use it. The new V-12 Jaguars are available with fo u r -spee d manual transmissions or with Borg Warner Model 12 three speed automatics ·with manual selection of ··n," ''2" or "1'' possible. Manual transmission models are equipped with limited slip differentials as standard equipment. Disc brakes are used on all four wheels. They are ven- tilated in front. A servo assist is standard. Interior appointments are in the Jaguar tradition with gen. uine leather seats, and an aircraft style instrument panel with over 20 dials, gauges and switches conveniently grouped and well illuminated (or in· slant recognition and ease of TKf COUlllTY 01' OIANel Ill• .... ,~, l!"tl1I• of WALES G. JACKSON, The greatest activity so far 2 coupe body styles will go has been in the West and on sale this week. The in· South, and the chief reasons lroductlon was the first time given for accept ance there a new Jaguar has been an· generally in v 0 l v e the nounced and shown in the U.S. As in previous Jaguars, the V·l2's suspension is com- pletely independent on all four wheels. An important addition is anti-dive geometry, a feature first engineered for the Jaguar XJ6 lui:ury sedan. This limits front end dip on hard braking. At the same time, it allows softer front end springing for a more com· fortable. ride. Front track is :>4.63-inches, 4.63 wider than six cylinder E·types. Rear track is 53-inches, a gain of three inches. · operation. Drctt1td. NOT ICE IS HEJll!llY GIVl!N to !ht cr,.,llor\ of lht tl:lovt """''cl <IKtdenl !ht ! 111 p1rl0fl1 ht vlnt d1lm1 •••ln•I lftt u ld dactdtnt trt rtc1ulttd to l!lt tn1m, ,.Ith !ht M<t Ut n' vouchero, In ;.,. off!ct ot t!lt clolrl< ol "" 1bov1 tn· t \Utcl COi.Orf, or 1'I! ..,.111111 ,......,, ._.Ill "" M<tlMn' -..1, to 11'\e Undtfl\tfle<I tt If..-""l(t of tlltlr 1!1'11.....,: NOJIMA.N E. ltUDC>i.PH, JOO Sovl!I oi. V11t1, '"' Cltmenlt , c1u1<,,nl1 I U!"l. wlllch 11 tllt t lK t of ttu1IM11 el rrw, und•nlt,..., In 111 ... 1nen "'· ltlnlnt lo Ille 111ttt of u !<I <lte:edttrl, within lour fn<ltllftl '"" lftt llf"ll Mllt.11- llon or ffll• l'Glk•. Dtted Mtrch "' Hn ETHEL G. JACIC~N tnl AllTHUlt A. JA.CICSON CD-E•tc:Uk!ro ir1 t11t \111111 of tr.. tbvw! n•m4111 NUlftnl HCltMAN •• JIUOOU"M availability and cost or labor, remote locations and en· btfore being seen in Europe. trepreneurial spirit. The decision was based on These factors often are the the fact that about 95 percent ingredient.s required for in-of V-12 sales will be in this novation or a u tomation . although it should be noted country. that self-service station s V·l2 exterior features in- really are distinct f r o m elude a chromed g r i 11 e automated stations. of which mounted in the car's bullet· there are few. like traditional E-type Jaguar For the proprietor, you must Power assisted rack and pin· ion steering is standard equipment in the V·12. New steering mountings i n s u r e virtually complete elimination of road shocks and vibrations. The new mountings reduce the turning circle from 41 !eel in previ ous XKEs to only 36 feet, making the car easier lo park and maneuver . The only other V • 1 2 ' s avallable today are the Fer- rari and Lamborghini both priced at over $12,000. The Jaguar V-12 carries a base list price of $6,950 for the convertible and $7,325 for the 2 + 2 at all U.S. ports of entry. Local dealer for the new cars is Bauer Buick.Jaguar io Costa Mesa. IM SWlfl Ole Vkll S•• c:ie-11t., c1nftnN "'n 'Ttl: .n-tJn Attor"'" .... C:••1tc:wt ... 1 Publllhtcl Or1!1tt CHll ~llf' l'llot M•rcl'I :12.,. ,,... .Urll J, n , un 111-n LEGAL NOTlCE P·4"tJ CIJITIPICATI 01' I UI Utlll l'ICTITIOUI NANll 'T1't undtriltM4 dM1 ctr!lfy M 11 cOMucllno • !tu1IMH ti lt)I N.,.l>Orl lllvd.. Cost• Melt, C1lllon1!a. u~r !ht flc!ll!ou1 firm n1me ot COSTA MESA llRE CENTEJI tnd tht! U ld firm !1 com1>01..0 ot l"t fotlovflnt Hr..,,., '""°'' ntme In !UH t rtd P~t ol 1t:1IOe"'• h fl IOllDWI! understand, self·tervice is a nose ; 8 wide air scoop under labor·saving device, but for the grille which feeds air to the customer it is hardly that. an enlarged cooling system: More accurately. the sell· flared wheel arches which ac· service station is a labor· oommodate a wider track, and transfer device, relieving the Dunlop Aquajet P r e mi um seller of chores by passing radial ply tires : and a chrom· them on to the buyer. ed four port exhaust outlet. This concept, ingenious in From either end, the V-12 it.s simplicity, already has Jaguar is readily rewarded many thousands of distinguishable from its six small businessme n who note cylinder forebears. Money's Worth Average U.S. Family Scared of Squeeze Ltt E. llovltft, 1'11'2 llllcllt, lr•lne, Ct. nM• Otlfll M1rc11 11, l•n ltt E. loYlt n llttt 01 c11ltornl1, O.•ntt c-tt: On Mt•cll U, 1t71. btlort mt. t Noury PubUc In '"" IQf Uld ~!tit. Nnont llY tPl>H•ed LH E llovl•n kncwn 10 ,,,., to lit tht "'".., wl'lott n•mt 11 1utn<1llltd lo tltt .. 11t11n ln1trumenl 1nd 1cr ...... tPOtH tie t llt•:it!tcl ll•e 11mt. JOF FIClill SEAL} Loullt £. Gtltt•cltm No!tN Pl/llllt-Ct lltornl1 Prlnrl.,.I Of!l<t In O.t noo Coun!Y NI¥ (....,..,!ftlon f:•plrH ""'vs' 1, 1tn Publ!•llfll O•tnte Coot! Dtlly Pnot, M1rc11 !"l. n , A..,n 1. n. 1'11 61l-71 LEGAL NOTlCE l'--lllll l'ICTtTIOUI I U51Nll l NANll: ITATl:MlltT l ht tollowlll9 ""°'" 1r1 do!"' "-'1intH 11: HILLSVI EW 3A00LI!" CLUI , 16.'M So. Htrllor lllvd .• ~tnlt Ant . C•lll. tll~ W, F. H!cOCll. 11•l' kl Htrbot 111~0., 5•ntt Ana. c1111 n100. T. J Hlcock. l._.:11 So Htrlle<" lllvd,, 51nr1 An~. Ct lU. t1100 Tl>l1 b1nlntH lo lltl"f ~ut1td b¥ t P•rlnerlll1D. W. I'. HlcKI P ub!11t>e<I Or1nt• Cw1t O.•t• .-11"' M1rch n. n . .Uri! s, 11, 1911 1n.n LEGAL NOTlCE ~~~~ -~~~) ·-CIJITl .. ICATI 01' I USllll ll. PtCTITIOUS llAMI: 'Tr.. """trlllnt<I OD cro11f¥ "'"' t•t cond..c!IM I 11<11l"'q II !l>o "C"' 1!"111 1111>. (11111 ~u. Ct!llonllt , ,.,..,,, l!\t flctlllltUI llrm ntmt !JI NEWl'OltT IAY INlEltlOltS trld \tit ! uld llrm 11 <ill"'· Povd ol tl'le folla•lnt Pl'*"· wllfltt """"' Jn tvU tncl ,11cn ol rulclMcl ,,, •• k!tlfM· Ronald Gilt. U l Vlc•ID<'lt. Cottt Nitti. Ct. '"°"''' £1kl t r. :1941 Mt11-0D11, COllt Mnt, Co. Dtlt'd Ml•dl 11, 1"1 JlONlld (;116 '"""""'" l!llcl t r 11111 ot (1tlforn!1, O•l ntf Cauntv; On Mt•C~ 11, ltll, llttort "''' t .. "'''' P\1911< In •nG !or otld Stitt, --!If 111"1r!'CI Jt-lcl Gi lt I ncl Tr.om•• l!llcltt r k-n I'll mt !e bt tllt ""°"' wlldtt n1m11 1ro 1ub1erlbMI to !flt wltllln lnotrvml!nl 1...r 1c•...owltdt· lid tlltv 1xecute<I lht ''""· !Of'"l"ICIAL SEAL\ MAltY 8ElH MOit.TON Nott ff l"ubllc • (lllfOr~I• l"•lMlN I Olllct tn O•t"ft CO.ml~ Mf COfl'll'"lHIGI' E••lro1 A••ll f, lt11 •ulllltl'>td Ort"'t Ce.11t 01Uf l'f!ot Mt rdl n. 2" &. ~11 I, lJ, 1~1 ~ LEGAL NOTlCE that while labor for hire costs The new V-12 converlible By SYLVIA PORTER t mer l.bor Oft•n is bu ilt on the same !OS-inch money, cus o ~ Are you so frightened by ls plentiful, inexpensive, un-wheelbase as the 2 + 2 coupe. complaining and easily ex-Jl is te n inches longer than the relentless upsurge in your ploit.ed. the six cylinder convertible cost of living, Mr. and Mrs. Consider th is suggestive and overall length of both con· America, that even though you copy that AMF Tel Tron uses vertible and 2 + 2 is 184.5 in· have a record amount of in· to sell its story in the rapidly ches. come. you are cutting back growing Southern California The new cast aluminum, your buying of big·ticket items market, and then judge ior single overhead cams ha fl and spending not much more yourself if customer labor engine has a displacemenl of than you bave lo • n pays off: . 5,343cc (326 cubic inches) and necessities? "About 35 percent of in· develops 272 net horsepower Do you feel so unfairly stallations are convenience at 6,200 RPM . M a nu a I squeezed by the peak total!'! stores with a couple ol pumps transmission models cover 0. of all sorts of taxes you are or more outside as an extra 60 MPH In 6.8 seconds, ac· being forced to pay that even business. Some of lftese stores cording to engineering reports. though you remain a member are pumping enough gasoline The new engine i,.ias derived of the Silent Msjority, you to clear $500 profit per month. from an experimental pro-hate the very poor and the This rate would pay for equip-totype reported to ha v e ve ry rich for robbing you t)f ment in less than a year. developed 500 HP al 8,000 your buying power'? "The only work of the owner RPM with fuel injection. The Are you so depressed by or operator is to fill the water production V·l2 uses four the unemployment you see squirter ·once a day and install Zenith Stromberg carburetors around you that even though a fresh supply or wiper instead of fuel injection your job or business seems towels." because tesLs showed that secure, you instinctively want Broadly speaking, two types lower emission levels were to keep adding to your nestegg are being used. In one, the 1>0ssible with carburetors. of savings? flow of fuel is controlled from Another exclusive feature of "Yes,'' to all three ques· within the store by an electric tions. says John R. Bunting, f II the V-12 engine is a f u 11 y device. The customer i s up electronic di stributor l hat president of the First and then comes in to pay. e 1 i m in a 1 es the usual, Pennsylvania Banking & Trust In the other, a money troublesome dis Ir i but or Co. and formerly economist· counter is attached to the " · .. d · · bl vice presidenl of the Federal point!'! an l1m1ng pro ems pump, restricting the flow to of most cars . Distributor pro-Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. the amount paid for . While blems are the cause of many You. America's crucially Im· this same times invites thieves complaints about loss of power port ant consumer, ' ' a r e at unsupervised stations. it in high performance cars and shook," Bunting de c I are d also pennit!'I late night atten· are also the cause of much emphatically in a long lun· danls at remote stations lo auto-induced air pollution. cheon interview last week. remain safely behind locked "Thus. consumers will not doofs. . fuel the boom that the Nli:on Two serious drawbacks in· Santa Ana Fi· rill Administration has been volve the law and social foreeasting for 1971.'' custom . There's absolutely no doubt Some fire marshalls have Names Ma nager that the extent of our objec ted to unattended pumps, economy's recovery \n 197 1 especially with violence erup· Wiring Services Com pany depends on you. Compared to ling in meny areas, And there has appointed Edward J. the impact of your total spen- is always the chain sr.i:oker Empero as m 3 r k et Ing ding on the speed and site who foraets the cigarette in manaatr whf:re he wl\I be of 1971 's economic comeback, his mouth when he Ms the responsible for nation-wide the impact of both business hose In his hand. marketing. and government s p e n d i n g ~~:~:•:: cc.,,O:::J.:i,., ~:: Al last count. lfl state~ Empe.ro was f 0 rm er I y shrinks to minor slgnlflcance. ™' couJ1TY oP 01:A1101 refuse to permll self·servl.ce employed by Jnter·Pak. a But if' you are typical, you MOTK• Of "":A:~ 011 ,.,,1,1011 stations. althouih no m11or division of Litton. as program are, as Bunting claims, scared "°' PJto .. ,• o, w1LL A110 Po• fires: have so far resulted. m • n, g e r a n d v i k in• about the climb in your living Ll1Tlll• nlTAMlllTA•Y )~i00i00iiii:00iiii----·--'il th f h y Ett••• • w11.MELM•N• H. conDM.11 Industries as a part of the costs mon a ter n1ont . ou DK~i 1, Mr1t••• G111111 "'-' PRIVATE sales markeling group. show this in your disap-••~ •· c..-.,., ir1e11 -•111 SYNDICATIONS Wiring Servlce11 Q:lmpany iS pointlnl!; buying of big·licket 1 "'"'""' ""' ,..,. "' w111 ,,,. d 11ble goods tic I I ,., ,,._ ,, Lttttn Tnt._.,.,,.,. ' 'oltwart and aulomated ur. par u at y: ,. •ttt""*' ''"'"""• t. -:W,ld't ... ~ s1,00t" 110,011 T•~ Shi· manufa cturin g process automobiles, appliance!>, "'"°' ,.... ~ 11rtkul«t. ' ........,_,. .... bt9N 1 .. ,.,.,..11.._ hou,.hold noods. -ntlW '"' .itc• 11 ,..ltl'4... "" .......... · t' in Santa Ana " unw ,... """ "" .., Nflt 1 .. ltM, u.i. ,.n.rtM, l1m.tn ... 11. organiza Jon · If you are typical. you fttl •t f ;lif 1.1'1'1 , If> t!lt CtuMf'°"' flf _.1.., ........... II... 11 ~~;;;~;;~~=;;;;;;~~1 Dtell,.._. ""· 1 .. Miki -'· 11 "'' " • terribly squeezed by tax es, ~-~1.n.?t:. c~~1:"1.. Ill IM C•N fM .,,........,... .. 4kc• 1.000·. OF OI L , ... INTINGS ·4 e~pecislly at this time of ye1r . •• , rd! n "" "" ..,,. ef IH'eftNtlli. ,.., ...,.. r You don't say It openly. but O•"'w"'. e. >T -••. 1., --wfn • ____._. WHO LISALI WAllMOU SI ' h -~--you del••t t • poor who ar• G""'111Y C\itl'I Ii NI OPI N TO TH I PUILIC " '" " """' I .,,_::.. • • I ' so•' OFF crowding the welfare rolls and ~n .~ ,,. s t. IOllWT M. AlltllTIOJllG 10 the rich who are esc~plng tax· CftM ,.._, C.I ...... ,..., ... 2"4471 I HI• •• 10111411t, SAllTA T~' '"" .,,_nM es. "The middle-class -pro. AH.,,.,"'' .... 11...... •·--Yl-.... ....... ~ltitflt IU•+tOI ~<Alllllhed °''"" CM•I o.irrr P!IOI ,.__-.;.-_ .. _______ _,1 _ OIAl.lltS """NflO p.le making JI0,000 to J75,000 -· "· tt ..... ...-« l. ,.,. .., " .. a year -are being victimized by both ends of the spec· Lrum," Bunllng remarked. "They are carrying an undue burden in our society." And if you're typical, you're worried aboul the rise in joblessness. This is one reason for your extraordinarily high sa vings rate: 71h percent of your afler·tax income. "This will be the last time any government will attempt to cure inflation by a delibera t ely Induced rece11sion," Bunting believes. In fact, '.1is fear now is that in its effort lo redu ce unemployment, the Nixon Administration wil! again in- tensify inflationary forces. On top of these depressants, your spending is being in· hibited by your frustration and despair over the Vietnam war: the conflict between blacks and whites; your con· cern about crime and, in Bun· ting 's words, "your recogni- tion that the flower <>f our youth is being turned off from our society." The administration is pretty worried too, although it doesn't admit it -which is why additional steps to spur the economy are being taken or are under serious con· side.ration. Acceleration into 1971 of $4.S billion of tax cuts slated for 1972·73 is being actively weigh· ed. This would involve a hike in your individual e1emption and liberalization of the stan- dard deduction. Social Security benefits have been boosted 10 percent. retroactive to Jan. t, but tax increases to pay for the boosts &re being postponed. This is an openly stimulative move. The federal budget deficit is growing by the day, and even at this date it appears probable that the deficit in the year ending just before the '72 elections may be dou· ble Nixon's fortcasl of $1 1 6 billion, going down as one t)f the lar&ett of all time. And credit ls becoming in· creaslngly available and cheaper. Nixon Is moving more tow11rd effective "j11wbonlng" on w11ge·prlct In· cresses. \Ve're on the w11y back up. .Joblessness wlll dttllne, In· n11t lon will moderate II bit. Bui no wonder you 're squeamish now! Perelman said the con- cealment of facts caused him to fail to tender all the shares he then owned and that ac· cordingly he eventually 5Uf· fered a loss of $37 ,260. SHREVE PORT, La.- Barnwell Industl'ies. Inc., has found both oil and gas in its third well drilled In the Zama Lake area of Alberta in Canada. The oil zone was found at 4,800 to 4,800 feet and produced a flow of 960 barrels a day. The indicated gas now was 3.5 million cub ic feet daily. CHESTNUT HILL, P.,fass. -AIT, Inc., the former American International Travel Service, has engaged Regent Hotels International to manage the new 690-room ocean front WakUti Hotel in Hawaii. WASHINGTON -Lockheed Aircraft Corp. won $10.8 million in new Air Force con· tracts. One is for $7.5 million for wing modifications on the C5A transport plane. The other award was for modi fications on a special purpose aircraft. NEW YORK -RCA Corp. has obtained a $7.3 million Army contract to provide radar equipment at the White Sands, N, Mex., missile range. FORT WORTH -Bell Division of Textron, Inc., has l'lbt.ained a $6.1 million Army contract f o r ~placement rotary wing blades for UHl helicopters. LOS ANGELES -Pacific Lighting Corp. 's subsidiary, Southern California Gas Co .. will spend $46.5 million on capital improvements t h i s year, $2.4 million more than in 1970. CLEVELAND -Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co. said it will register an offering of 200,000 shares of new common stock and 250,000 warrants to buy common at $66 a share through Dec. 31. The new of· fering is being made ta effect settlement of court action between Cleveland Cliffs and certain shareholders of Cliffs· St. Clair Corp., the former Detroit Steel Corp. ELMSFORD, N.Y. -Unlttd Nuclear Corp. said Its subsidiary, Adams-Western, Inc .. will acquire fro m f\.fadison Properties, Inc., an option to buy 73 percent of Summit Mortgage Investcrs, a Massachusetts trust, and will milke a public tender of· fer for an additional 7 percent of the stock. The 73 percent interest now is held by Drew National Corp. which optioned the shares to Mad iso n Properties. WASHINGTON -The N1° lional <anc:er JnaUtQt.e has contracted to buy $400,000 worth of Jive. vir u s e s associated wit h cancer from E Je ctr o ~Nucl e onics L ab orato r i es , Inc., t)f Bethesda, Md., for use ill cancer research. sen. Hat· rlson Williams ( D • N . J . ) , chairman of the committee which h1ndles M e d I c a I Research Legisl ation, said thei ability of electro-nucleonics labora tories to m11ke highly purified tumor v i r u s es resulted in part from the development by Its parent firm at Fairfield, N.J .. of a zonal ultracentrifuge. NEW YORK -Stau ffer Chemical Co. announced it will develop a 32-acre industrial tract at Vt r non, Calif., prekntly occupied by a chemical plant 1h•t ts to be r1ud. Stauffer hu engaged Coldwell. Banker & Coit to make feasibility studies for the developmtnt of an In· dustri1l park "that wlll bf a credit bolh to Slaufftr and the city of Vernon." Stauffer \VIII move production from the plant to bf rated t<i its WUm· ington, CaUt.1 works. • • Who Listens To Landers? • SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN 1N AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does That's Who You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers D1ily in The QAliY,l .ILOT ; I .. · - : ____,, . . ' l • • • • • • . .. • ' . ' ' ' • . • . . . . . • • ' ' ' ' • • • ' ( i l • I ' ' ·: 1 t ! l ' ' i ' ' l • • ' l : I j : \ • . l • , i ' I ' ! , . ' i ) } ' • j l ' '• , • ' • ) ' ; ; ' I I ' l , WHAT'S YOUR HANGUP? ... I '='.''·~~-...... ,,,, D 4,, , If mountain climbing is your thing, we can't help you much. But if your real "hangup" is looking for a broad view of the news that in· eludes a good, hard look at what's happening at home, the DAILY ' PILOT has the line you should grab. We give you a broader view of the world than you can get even 12,000 feet above Chamonix in the Alps. Mont Blanc, over there in the background, is the highest peak in Europe, which reminds us .... Our local coverage is hard to top. When it comes to piling up infor· mation about local schools, sports, social events, entertainment or crime and calamity, we 're king of the mountain. We're your home- town newspaper. We make keeping up with the world, the nation, the state, and the county, your town and your school a lot easier than climbing a mountain. Just grab our line. No more hangup. The DAILY PILOT will take you where you can see the view from the top. ' DAILY PILOT I • • Actors Tea111 HOLLYWOOD 1UPll Brian Keith has joined Dean Marlin for a :;tarring role ill ··something big .. during his hiatus from "Family Affairs·· television series. . . r.•olldJy, M,~rch 29 1971 Golden West Sets 01·igi11al Comedy Golden West College ¥.Ill present an original co1nedy by G WC drama instructor Charles Mitchell as its spring theater production. "Claude and Marlon.'' which \.\-'ill open April 23 for two weekends, is described by its aulhor.director as "complete insanity -totally un· believable." Mitchell, who has a number of plays to his c red It, describes the current project as ··a different kind or v.Titing than I've ever done. The plot is ridiculous : the scenes are short; the actors are in and out rapidly " Set during the Renaissance in 1220, the comedy deals with mistaken identies. D e b b i e Chester plays Claude Deceiver, a woman whose family is next in line for jhe throne-but in her country a woman cannot become queen, so Claude has been dressed as a boy since birth. 'Gypsy' Dela yed Everything wasn't quite coming up roses for the South Coast Light Opera Association Saturday night. Scheduled to open their production of the musical "Gypsy," the San Clemente musical players were forced to canctl Sat urd ay's performance when Carol Stanfield, who plays the leading role of ~1adame Rose, contracted a throat infection and was unable to sing. TV DAILY LOG The second major character is Marion Montfort. played by Rick Waites, the champion ol the courb who is ashamed of his name. CIBude and Marion become involved with each other while the latter still thinks his friend is a boy. Others in the cast are Roland Barajas, Ren at a The remaining t h r e e performances -Thursday through Saturday or thi1 week -will be presented as sc!leduled, according to Ruth Yielding. director of the SCLOA show. CUrtaln time is a o'clock in the Arts Pavilion, J05 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. Florin, Bill Panza, Sonya';~~~~~~~~~~' Newburg, Don Poland, Donr;: Monday Evening MARCH 29 1:00 I) 111 Mtws J11ry Dunphy. lttll· ized 11mblln1 In talif. Is u1min1d iii 1 spte:ial li'lt ·p•rt 1eport stlrt· in1 tonithl. 0 MIC N.....mct Tom Snyder. 0 TM Allt1 SlllW Q Sil O'ctodl t!lwir. (C) (to) , "lh' u,1• (wut11n) '56 -Rory Calhoun, T't'IW!nt O.C.rlo, M111 Cor· d•J. Tiit wile of 1 ruthless self· slyled b111111 of IN Ortpa frontie1 furs 111 old pioneer custom wllffebJ 1 widow ioes lo !tit tirJt min whol Wlims lttr, blCIUSt many men hl'lt reasons to kill hw llll1b1nd. 0 Didi Vlft D,t• m Tiit 1lifl"lsten1s m@rn st. 1r1t fD Mulff1d1M' "Smoky M01.Jnt1lfll ;: I H 9 (j) HllWl/'#utitr/Spotb eI:)Flsjiw f1111i1J fD Hotidel'9 34 fD Winp » Airtlthrr1 tm) LI Hm F1111ilitr eo11 C.111111Jt a) Ntw1 Jlm H1wthor111, l :IS ErJ Alt Stfiit "Pul>JMll! ;;: I." •:JO 0 C.•11• c.-· m Tiit flrin1 Nu• Q} CIJ MIC 'ftWI fl!) Hodl'P'dlt Ltdtt ~(I) CIS Ntn Ill) SrMctM r~lll/Mu1iult m TM D-.1 l.,.rt eD Crunnt E1tnb iSM• If Ybien mJ MMtlcl J btrlll .. 1:05 ~ A1111i T111 Palinu 1:30 8 a (j) H1r1'1 luCJ (R) LUC) COIWineet drum upe:rt Buddy Rich to r ive trait fru lmons w htlp him win 1 ldlolarsMp in 1n 1milrur ""' ... omo fJ @CD &) I SJIC1AL I A Qutst l1t Sc1Mr1I "A look 11 tilt Pll1ht of tht Amt0t111 Bild £•&1• and !tie Promist of ow Grett Mivatory flitflb. .. This pruentatio11 of "Tht Amtritan Sportsmlnn is llostld by Curt Gowd'y 111d futures Bini CrosbJ and William Sh1tner. m hM frtsl SO.. Guests: John Marley, David DotJ111s Duncan, rrad1 I Payne, Geor11 Wallace Jr ID Faloay Squad Si) Pattern lor L.iriti1 El'i) Mifllllitt V1\4ti Show 9:00 U 9 ([) M11bttrJ U .D. [mmett is \'el}' proud and u ciled 'lll'htn • l1r1e industrial firm writes and 'NlnlJ lo buy his p1!1nt fOf 111 old, lor- 101ten invention. 0 Ci) (j) m Wwltl l'TllRi•t M..,. it: (C) (fir) "'TM Iii Coti•try" Put 1 (wutem) '53-Grerory Pt&, Charlton Heston, Jean Simmolll. An [11lr1ner 111ives to marl)' 1 ranch- er's d1u1hltr alld becomes lnwlvtd 1r a duel o'o'tr ntet rilhb. 0 flit frimt Hayes, Bill Land, G u y Cockerum, John Yeiser, Mike Leddy and Cherie Boal. ~do tf1W'°°9f 11.U:W -...... ·-............ r.u. ...... 01. ,,..,~ EXCLUSIVE ILLIOTT GOULD DON SUTHllU.ND MAICIA llODD "THE LITTLE MURDERS" IRI -ALSO-- JASON IOIAltDS "THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE" IRI EXCLUSIVE ALSO "SUDDEN TERROR" R I 1 ALSO PLAYING "THE • Peter Sellers in PARTI'" ' < 'Sound of Music' Casting Revealed Casting has been announced ror the Fullerton Footlighters' most ambitious production, Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The SoWld or Music ," which five evening performanctll are sched uled in t b e auditorium of Wilshire Junior High School on April 16, 17, 24, 30 and May l. will be presented next monlh. ';;ilii~iii!'~~:¥,~01111~'91j Pat Warner, best known for ll her work with the Westminster Co m m u n i t y Theater, has won the le<iing t&.TW11w • tM.I 1:z.; role of Maria, the convent --==: postulant who be c o m e s :-- governess lo seven motherless children. Robert Cannon will portray the children's lather, the stern Capte.in von Trapp. Other major )1erformers in clucte Genev:eve Fowler as the mother abbess, V i c k i e Saunden as Elsa, Marvin Colter as Max and Scott Bylund as Rolf. The children will be played by Beth Gibson, Randy Mandigo, W y n e t t e Cook, Linda Edison, Sally and1-===:::::::::::::::=.=:=:=I Wendy MacKain and Richard1· Slocum, while Harriett Dasher and Eugene Wendel play the Von Trapp servants. J.i:llmQi Jan Duncan is directing the musical. with Stephen Pearson conducting and Kath I e e n Melcher choreographing ,.the show. l :r.!YJ :r • 1-!1 673-40-48 -OP"n 6:4S 111\lTLP: OF l\ilf RS "llJ.UlllT"1- -ALSO- '"AWOO.MENSEJ.. Y ROMANITC MOVIE Winl STYLE AND .CRITICAL ImBJ.JGENa!" -~-~·-·- 'J)."fl."La\""Cfl.Ce·s LITTU FAUSS AftDllG HAI.SY "THERE WAS A CROOKED MAN" f • • \ ... -• ~,.--... t .. NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT wa---··~ ,. .. JULIUS CAESAR No-1erea ... 1 ••• No~cut1 !ID ~Cb-artto-;n~n"'.'i~lllds ·John 01ei¢ · 'ANAVlllON~-.,-nc.ttNCO!.Oft", _ _, NilUllCAN INl!llMllOl!Ai. "'-' WMk 0011 7.,:JO P.M. .,,,. ___ ..... ,wifa#fm-~0 ~·.::::·· : ~ 7 & 11:JO ,.M. &-66-211 1 ~ A STORY OF YOUNG LOVE ·-··· g~~ . ····~· = --. INOSTUUOAY ~ w••kDllY$1 7111 & t ilt-SAT .. IUN •• a:•s. 4:1J, 1111, l:U, 11•11 .. 'lbrclJ. RESERVED • 11Ct1'11,, SEAT ra ENGAGEMENT Fasted in West Buy IL Sell iL Try the fasttsl rtsponse in tM Wtst against yOtlf' own clock. Ttst Dfmt~·llne Ads, whtrt the action Is, In Saturda(s DAllY PILOT. TIIEVIRGIN AND TIIE GYPSY FOR EASTER VACATION * STARTS WEDNESDAY-MARCH 31 * AT ALL 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS ' ., C.'-i.,,M-i. A C~ ................ r1r-c.,.... I!!)«& IN MISSION Vll!JO ~ EDWARDS tm) lH Olrid1•111 a)AIC N..s Q @ (I) a> AIC Mllldly Movir. (C) (Zltf) '1lll l•111 licit ....... (dram.i) '67 -Glenn Ford, G!Oflt Hamilton, ln&tf SIM M. A tall ut 'flo11t i nd wtn1eu1t1 aded out ill !ht final days of the Crril Wer. 1'=====================::':'==========~11 CINEMA VIEJO 7:00 I) CIS NIWI Wttter C1on~11.t. I 0 m Nllt HIWI D1'1'id Brinklay, 11 John Ch1nullor, Frank McG11. Q Whlf'1 Illy LiM! m @ {])I LMt Lucy IDD11111tt @@Jlltia ID TH wori. We Lift I• "SurYiv•I in !ht S•." Ttlls how fish IU!Yivt i11 their frsh••l·fi111 world. ~Cl) Trlllll tr C.t1111tt11e11 fll) Dlrist lllt llwi11 Wtr• (DMi AMr,.11 Q'i) SiMplHIMlll M1r11 a)MwitC ... 7;lQ I) l2j (]) 'H...U {R) The MMll IOll 1nd daulhltt of 1 poor, llont)t dirt f11nMr (fllQl·sl•r Ch1rlts Aid· m1n)-1nd their lovablt doc Mmtd Poorely-11! lheil' l11h11 into troublt when !her st11I 111 envelope fuM of money lrOf!I their und1'1 bank 1hl!f ht dtn1es their lrther 1 badly needtd loan on '1ht Mone1 Stort" eplwdt. o flli@ mmM1u:c FrM •1 (!JJlltlmdtJI fl!.l 11act .kNirwal Sammy DaviJ Jr. diSCUDN his uniqu e carert. EE) 30 Mi•lltls !EHoJ ail Natadl1 t :30 fJ tit(() D.m Dly (R) Doris is &iv•n ttie Hllfnmtnt kt 11t th• m11uin1 ri&hb 10 1 militlnt fem- in~·s boot wti111 the allttlor (EIYll Allman) rlfuses to tlt1I with thil 111111 in IN offtct. Oc.dWCa..,. @i'.)M_./,.....1W m.-.. - 10:00 0 9 ()) Canl ....... '"' LJllde and NIMH• F•btlJ' pqt. 0 a.Ill 5 NWl KMI Stndtn, B1r111y Monis. 0 ..... WanlMttn m ... Putn1m/nstim1n tD Mltl T11p Al Htl'l'ltl holll m--!?i"""" l 1rd':.-[J! Vin (C) (JO) '1111 011f1.110:JO 0 U11 \'int Wtel Mo,11: lhr cull P1sstn1ei ··In this new comed1I 4Sm) "C• West. Jo11n1 M•n" {Id· ur111, slnordtss Mrth1 Grcwer ~enture) 'l~Mae West, R1ndo\ph fM1llictnl P•hrtin) and Mr le!lo• S«ilt. sltwlflltu M1u1t Ralston (P1tt1 (!) Bill Joli111 N-. rinl11) line! lroublt whtn they bke m lnCll"tld11111bi1 rNtn11e on 1 1roublMOme Plutft(lf. 0 Yirsinia lir1ll1• Show Schadulrd 11:00 e IS rn m "''" lllfth 1r1 P!1~ ford,. Mlmf _HmH.1 Q @CII m """ .lofl Rubensltlll, JNlll'Ut Btrh~ Ind Breck 51..,.111. 0 CiD Mtw1 0 (fi, ~ Q) Ltr1 MM:t 1 Dt1lj 0 Mnit: "l!Kt.lirt• (eomrdJ) '64 Mol!IJ H•I "°"" -Je1n·P1ul Btlmondo, Je•n Srberi. 0 lllilllM $ ..,,.: IC) 4211r) m Moftt: "nt IMr\e Mt1 Wiii ·-c.-.,... (tl•uic) ·~11111 lift TM" (iny.slrf)') '42-60111 Kar· Bllat01111. Doroltiy D1ndrid1t. Pas-I lotl. SIOl\S l\lft Mrntfl HI lrmJ lfl,llfd l (D 1111 tflt Qed: .ti 1 PlfldMll ,11111 and OM of his t O·woBfrS i1 ftl11 !llod!l'll dlJ wer• @ (i) PlfYJ' Ml .. sion ol lir11'1 '"Carmen.~ jll :300 Q!((}Mll"f lrifh~ m Tl16 • c...i....w lob 11 k holl I 0 @11.l m Mllnny Clf1011 Tony •r 11 s. Randall b substitull host. mu r ..... n11r m C1tr ••Wien. (Elefntu )0 fJ(I)Did:Cmtt (!) Mowi« "flit Wayward tlfr (drt· 111.11) '57-Muda Mtnder1on. 11 Z:DD @ CIJ Did Ct'lfll IZ:lD m Movie: ''flit rr1an llltlt" (my:.- 1:00 a ID (J) m llll(li·I• (R') t u1tt ftlJ) ··~on ChlnlJ. sl".air Wllll1m F. Buc~ley mikes 1 ,.,. i:OOf) Mttil: "'Cllt 1 ltni Sll•ftw" ~ fmm comm111t1U111 It com· (ll'ntlln) 'St-Audit Mirrphy, 0 ~CV ED lfntrnd c1n11 Bob D 0 "'" [uQlnti hem. I Z:JO e Mtrit: ...... n1itr• (d11m1) m Tt Jilli 11t T111ttt ·•l-Robtrt ly1n, Pt! O'Brien. Tuesday * • • " SA N 01(1;'• <\\• >1 l~ ~Al ,~· SJO ~ 1•1,1 7 Academy Award Nominations-Best Picture. lest Act# -aya1 O'NNI ... t Actren -An MocGr.w Al10 lorb•r• Herdley I• "THE IAIY MAIU!I'" 111 ~ ACTOa-CHIEf DAN GIOaG1 DUSON HOffMMI '~'!. ·mru BIG M.\N" fll•o&uc1•"ilict1 ....... ~ Chief Don George• Foye Du noway LAST WEEK-POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY, MARCH 30 '" T1'11: weSTMINSTl:R calNTl!R Acod1111r Aword No111ln•1 for htt Actor & Actrt'St 20th Centv,,·Fo. '""'" JAM ES EARL JONES, ..,. JANE ALEXANDER llll ''TheGreat ~ "McKenzie Break" IGPI Color White Hope'1 ~ STARTS WED. 3/31 WALT DISNEY'S "BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE" (GI LAST WEEKI POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY 3/30 IJll HAR!IO!t S~ CEllTO: DAYID NIYIN .. ACADEMY NOMINlf ;~~i!Q STARTS WED. 3/31 WALT DISNEY'S "BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE " IGI Pl1• MAlll Ll5Tla lt1 '"SUDDEN Tl!RROR"' AL RUBAN -SAM SHAW,,., ... GP.·u FAA.· ~S&IU ·11 a· • LAST WEEK-POSITIVELY ENDS THUR., APRIL 1 '*"1~ ~ • • CIE.AC;H Cl\.VO. •T •U.10 • • . ... ,_ .. , ............ --'"-· t<l.l'·-• "u"n_,_ O..CH LIU Pallllef" "DARLING LILI" Starts Fri., April 2-Rod Steiger, Christopher Plummer in "Waterloo" (G) (l<(l.• .. •111.·•!,', _,,~, ,,. dleryot• 1 med hou-wtle "• r ... a traric peny flm ., ........... -...,.... ·- Starts Friday, April 2-Walttr Metthau--Elaine May In "A New Leaf" (Gl DICK TRACY ' TUMBLEWEEDS ~: .-,-H-IS-l<'O-Nf_H_T_H_E-CO-V-ET-E-D,-!j!.-A-CK_, !! : FEATHER GOES TO THE nll!lE'S ' S00'1MSAYER!:D1AT P£AR Sl'HEI'!'· PEER IN' SEER! 11JAT ACE ALJGUR OF APOCAI. YPnc ANONNERY!. ... PllOVNOSTIC PIGEON, I NAMf YOU INl71 AN OF1l\E.MONTH! •, I I I ............ ,_ ... ....... e. .............. ..... JUDGE PARKER Tl-!At.llc:S, JUDGE .• I W"WTEt> TO ~ECK Tl-IESE OUT &E· ~RE TME BRIEFS WENT .. INTO PRINT ! Jr"'-.' I CON6AATS, PROO! WHATTA YA SAY, OOY?! : I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R • POWER I I I ACRO SS ' .j. ····Guevara: Cuban rtvolut1on1sl 1 • Sttuthoust I 9 0191n1c , compo und i l~ Smoktd salmon : 15 rake 11 t a1y • lb On91n1ted : 11 Pro~\DI \ '. ]If. Htaltd • 10 Mod els. I for mak ing J mo lds i 11 Evergreen (2 Owns 1 23 Sna•' • 24 Put off ' lb lair I 29 /util1c1al ~ IAngua{ft • 31 "----Oinq :. Oong .) Oaddy": '~words .; i2 An l s1~n J} Rtgul ar • c ~sto111•r I 36 B~tf''Y : ...... section ; 31& Eng 4 "'°lountrv ~ :·~i,s11 va1 • ~<Sloe ~ o• i wtap on\ .. 41 lil or r vilr • ~M old ' f YOltliv p ' •~ M~l r an1111 al • 111 "81brs ' ' • I • • • . . . • -· --" ll!J7 l!IUSt,a l. t words ' ' l J " ,.,. " lJ• " ~ ~ ' ' " I ' l ! • . J9 •) -: "' " i " I . ! ' " I ' ' .. • .. , • " " ' .. ,. • •• 47 Social in\<'cts 4q T1mt or day 50 Evrr: Pot!. 51 Port Ogdtn ····- 52 Givt~ a vocal 'onc ~rt 54 Un'1dy ptrson; Slang 58 Turnin 11 poin t bO Sta!•onary: .Abbr . l:ol La111rst a11oor1 ol th ~ US A &< Not oual 1litd b4 As ian rangr bli La ·--•• : Frrnch t1plor~1 In Amrrica &7 Crtam of th! tfOD &8 Summtr 1n P~ris bq Lllwurious mndt of llvl1111 10 N otch"~ 71 Rrt •r rd· Abb•. DOWN 1 Soll!" 0 111. 2 Glory 3 ~dd 1!1Grill ~ Ma~es a m1sU.~r· • ' • " 11 • " '' ,, JO .. .. ,. .. " I " , . llJ .. ,, '° ' 5 Man's nlckna1T1 t &"Alifr for-··-·": 2 words 7 An octan 8 Fl adica Is 9 "To •·••••• His Own" 10 H ookty PllY!' 11 Kind of s turdy 9lossy fabr ic 12 lnhab llan t: Comb. rtwni 13 Man's nickrnm• 18 Po l1tlc 1! unit 24 ContributPs 25 8 rino s 11110 ordtr aga in 11 City in Ort9011 28 layrrs 30 Puts on JJ Not rtl1gious • ' " . " ll 3 29171 J.I Plac r or action .35 ldrrca n lnsrct: 2 wo•ds 37 Row of pr lnltd words 40 Gavt forth unslintlng!~ 42 Actrt•s •.•..• Hunt 45 Christian 48 High In pitch 5} Wail 55 J(Jnd of cakt 5/J Hara11g ut 57 Auack fio"' all sidts 5qTo······-: Ptrft ctfy: 2 words 61 Si.an ish chtt•s b2Naval insignia b3 .•••• Col t 65 Lawy t1. Abbr, " " " " ,; " ' 16 " qf. " '~ ll J6 " ~ " " " ' ., ' " " 1.~.; ' , ... " i/l ,, " " " ' ~ ,, " .. ' t " PERKINS By Tom K. Ryan ~ y LI'!: ABNER ~04 AH TELL'S 'IO' Wtif'I AH !!!ASHED "JOFtE HAID IN I AN'CRJ6'i0' MERE-'IO'LL I.AW/I SALLY BANANAS ~ ~- GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS !JI\ OH! >. fl.4 BAIJ- CCf.\tij& loll{ WA</! •• I ' ~ •e""~-¥ By John Miles .----------------.. :;;n;:,.;;n_;;, l"';;;_;;;i:::;;-.-i J 19"J,.a... s·.z ' MISS PEACH FuTiJ!'E }JRLINE. 1'1LoTS Of A~ICA ...... .... , r"'" STEVE ROPER J"rEVE I/OPEil. fortJR-n.l·CHIEF ~A Gli!'Ol.IP OF WIDE! Y·RfAD JfA6AZIWES. HAS RETUllN£0 Fll'O*f VACATION "7V FIN'!> A DELEGATl(}ll/ QC f!MAJ.£ 1'*"'1Y!ES IN THE Pl/8'.IJIEKS ()FFfCL.I , ... PEANUTS D rl5 c : -~ --_·_-_ : . ·. ~~-· ......... -..... --- Gffl f.E, Alt1J.IUlt., P/itOVIONli TMt: WIN'15 OF MAN! By Mell Wlfl.I . ~8AAIN OF 1&11W ? ly Saunders and Overpd ~'!J.!!J\J1(Dr:J:f:JID~ TWO DAW, ~!-EW:R s1wci' 1 • • flCAJOI: W'Cf/( 800TED ~TE ~Piii: AS lltStNESS MAHA6S Of. ·~w~· Mt flVf" • A MAN / EDtSOM V'T0,1 ly Charin M. Schub -· M!f(f I AM A6AIN ... Slll.L i.OOKIN6 Fai! ll\E ANSWW! ... . . "" . .;~ DAIL V PILOT 23 By Al Capp AM KM&'W"IO'WAS mo l..O'iAL. TO 05-AA' TO TME.M MATTA.ESSES, TO TAKE A P.ESTC».ILES~ AA l"Of\Ceo v:;· ro:: f"AN' MAY . !l ·t' •::;.::..--- ~ HE.WIN FO'GIVE 11£.RJ' TJiAT" •.J LIE.'r!..) r Vl"h.,,.-~ • By Charles Barsotti rr-""T--r You .JUST t>ON1T KNOW WMERE "TO 1"UNe: IN .• MR.MUM By Gus Arriola By RaCJer Bollen W6~11EA!?· :I'M 0011.llllb A~ 1..EAG<JE.. 0 0 • DENNIS THE MENACE • • ' i 1 'JM fEEUN' eml:Jl 1'k:JW. 6ooo EHOU6ll TO SIT UP MO WA LITTLE l<!m"HUF'!" I " . 'tJ DAJL'Y PltOT Monday, Ma,ch ~. 1CJ71 In Brazil she's a 11brolo"-flower bud. Girts from lpanema ••• .• ' . ' .... --~ .. , RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)-Swee4·lis.<ome,'J,lridcly,pa1 oll<l<fioethod&111:1e< of the girls of Brazil, where nature ha> been prodipl with beauiy. In Rio de Janeiro, the slim, Sun·tanoed girls attract more stares than Mount Sugarloaf. In Sao Paulo, the dressed-to-kill lovelies soften the-impact of that cav- cmou.~ metropolis of concrete canyons. Call her the girl from lpanema-and what better iospiratiOn·for,a world-hit samba?-or any other name, the chances are you.11 find !ihe's .an elegant beauty 'vith a talent for fun. Jlrazilian girls:, no longer tied to Victorian.stmdards, love the, outdoors by day :ind the swinging indoors by night. \Vherever they are, they display an c<1ual flair for sharp dressing ancl for casual elegance. · Daytime life revolves around the lovely beaches o(Riode Janeiro or the smart shopping streets of Sao Paulo. At night, it's the discotheques that snap to life. On ,\·cckencls, the \veil-to-do prefer exclusive clubs or <llitant, secluiled beaches. 'fherc's al\vays intense rivnlry betwen Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paula. It's there in girls, too. No\\•here el~e could claim ta have fathered lovelier girls. But in Rio de Janeiro the youngslers seem to have a more casual style, whereas in Sao Paulo, perhaps, sophistication has the upper hand. No one is more a\vare of the beauty of Brazilian girls than the country's men. ·rhcy Rptly call young gi,rls .. brotos: the Portuguese word for Bower buds. And invariably the "brotos" later blossom with the tiroberanee of·all·lropical gn>wth . • ,.or Rlod• Janeiro, or SaoPMllo_..oranywhtn In Brull ••• .. r---• . . \.-" . . . '~~'11<:}1 A awinging 1hreesom& in Sao Paulo. • •• coma young and allm and tanned and lovely. ~~,'*~~ ' ffl , 1 ~ ·=L .• j Thia Werk'• PJCI1Jll SHOW-AP N4'Wt/a.u&rM.. Monday, Mll'dl 29, 1971 DAI LY PILOT 25 Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trode It Wit h a Wont Ad Ttre Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results General General General oflnJa Jjfe General Generel POOL $26,950 I~ l -... ,,... I~ Gentral $23,500 4 BEDROOMS Cost• Me111 $22:,500, LOW down to buyf'r w/i()Od credit a: usume FllA. 3 BR, good street. Sharp &: clean. lwtovt In con-Agt 67>8989 or 61:.-1930 dition. Rear livln; room, (Ask tor Ann c.o&tsl. Huntington Btac.:h PRIME MESA VERDE 3-LEVELS-4 B.R. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 984 Grove Place, CM ANYONE QUALIFIES For lhl1 sharp 3 bN!rm home ~ lt111h carpeting & drapes & tOdi covered patio. 7~% 1n1ereiu. no loan fees, 101;: d<H4n. Hurry, this 11o'On'I !M:sl! NO OOWN TO VETS ior,.:. Down to others, larg., 3 hc'drm w/hrdwd fits, bltns, OO.x20 rumpull rm, blck wall erK:I rear yard. VA apprala- td at •. * * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * The bl!st bl!t is the tint pe-r. dining rm., entry ball, built-* B'i O\VN ER $28 500 In!. No dov.'n terms MQ..-1720 . , ' PLUS POOL 8 Linda Isle Drive Spacious 4900 sq. ft. 4 BR., 41h bath ho1ne. Dining rn1., lam. rm .. study & 38 ft. water- front living rm. 2 Fireplaces. Carpeted & THE BLUFFS .an to 1tt this absolutely TA"BELL "9SS ·H bo 3 BR,? ba, D1~g rm, Fam ~· 3 bedtm. :l bath -""'-'~:.=.:::.::-=-~':.::~ •~__!: rm, forced .air, Lge pool, Chnl('e Jlll·;it10n' C':olf eour~ rti•r >'iUYI 1~·1u1 !Ilk!' v1e1v, 1.u:o.u11at1!-. -I Rlt i fu·rp!aC• <':. :iunkt'fl !anuJy ro-•:'tl • hra111 cr1lln,>:g _ v.·cr Ii.or. Ur1;.:IH :;tnUl'llt!I l,il!h<'U ~·on11.;J 1hn1ni:: room, S11n~1·1 mount11n lake 1.100L Coor· d1natC'd IJnd~•·1tp1ni;:. Pn.·~· IL~e <1rl'll. Cl~ 10 hcoac:1. t'lt>Xlllll' 1ern1s. Sellee anx- 1ttus. ~lu.~t ~ce lo apprecl· ate_ Call 1octay !71-lJ 952-5.>ti Very sunny & inviting! Popular Linda model with 3 bdrms, beam ceiling & lovely pat· ios. Convenient location. $45,950 loom• will h< "" ,.. own-BEACH UNITS Smotll dowo. 543-821'1 er. Spa.riding condition, cool 11 unit apartment only 8 yn. !\1ESA VERDE-Lovely 3 Br. covered patio, fully crptd old. Close 10 beach Nt"w-2 Ba, Blt.ns. Bu~ frorn on ire.at corner Jocalion. port Shorei, full title. Sl600 O _w ~ e r ,i:, aav<'. Days Everybody qualilles to as. mo. income. $13S,5DO. 30% &3.'>--3551, evf's ft.ID..9752 stune thl.s low inff'ttst VA dn. BIG ~·AMILY? OUR HO.'.IE: loan " best hurt)'! Ca I I GRAHA!\f RE.ALTY 646-2-114 IS WAITING. 4 br, 2112 ba, Ja11dscaped .... , ....... , ...... $167,840 For complete information on 111 homes & ''Our 26th Ye1r" Iota, please call:· BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR $24,600 CORONA DEL MAR WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Sin Joaquin Hiiis Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 56-8424. lge cov'd encl patio, good Balboa Island c11>t, lncd front yard, N' 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642--i620 Genera l [General 1.-...-EV-ER;;;;;;;;;;SE:;;EN=..: El IMINATE THE CHAUFFEUR 1\-lom gets a break with tlus NEW JERSEY? lo"<IY location. loc Harbo' High School. 2100 Sq. Ft. \\'hai we really 1ncan is, New Jer.,sey 51., in the lovely 111esa Verde arta of CoSTA J\li'.;SA. l!'s a fine. street 11 llh impressive hon1er. 1hal orrer great value !or the n1oncy in spaciousnC'ss and t'"lin sizes. Th is SH,\RP 3 bf'droom, lge faintly room n1odt>l \\'itl ~tnke ynur frin· cy .• JUST :'l:E\VLY LISTED 101· $21),950. COtTS fo'our Bdrms. wi!h high beam ceiling and \Vhlle mar· ble fireplace. Just rederor· aled, open and spacious. 1vt'U planned central kitchen "'i th au the extras. Detach· ed garaite "'it/i outside snow. er for the surfer in the fam· , ily. Call us now tor an ap- pointment. DUPLEX Cur .. older nome and 2 s!ory hid.: 11o·ith guest apt, \Valk to l1J11on & beach. r<i'e11o/y re· det:ora!rd • priced rigbt at ... $45,000 VA REPOSSESSION 3 BR, 1\o. ba, closed patio, new!y ck>roraled P.fes.a del P.far. $Hion Oo .... '11. $31,950 REALTY COMPAN 642.1n1 Anytime $1500 BELOW MARKET VALUE _G_._"_•_•_•_1 ______ j General DRAMATIC FLAIR ,. -=====-I lnlerior designed by LLOYDS I or LONG BEACH accents lhi.• Four Bdnns. Two Bath, Spanish style, shake-roor home nestled in J\.lission Vlt'jo. Cardt'n style kitchen opens into a tropical rn- clOSC'd patio play llrt'a com- plemented by prolessional landscape, terraced and ft'nced yard in slumpstone design. All ol the extras have been added lo coni· plete the "True Essence" of luxury living. Purchase now by inquiring this even· in.: at. UllWIVUI: t1()Ml:S l'!etl ~. 11$«1GO DOWN $1000 What's This? lledrooms- $20,000! We u.id it. and V.'t' mean It! Cosla Mesa bargain If you don't mind a little fixing up! We won't waste space· Don't you waste time corn· ing in lo steal this ger;n in the rou&ti! Call • 645-0303 fORISf E OlSO~ '" 11r A tro,qr; 2299 Harbor, Costa Mesa DUPLEX 3 Br., din mi, 1% 3 St·hool!!, A real buy k.r ba. & 1 Br. $57,500. fix \25.950. 6-16--8513 Chvner. I ii. Pyramid Excha.rlgors 675-Dana Point """' Corona d•I Mar NE\Y 3 BR Resid<"~e, ocean I THROW AWAY ,1,w. 34().11 Calhla o,.,, $30,950. Blrlr &U-4905 YOUR CAR KEYS! EHi Bluff Becatti;e you can walk to,1---------- EVERYTHING !rom lhi• YOU'LL LOVE 1ha~ home plus income. OUR ''TRINA'' ( A nifty 2 Bedroom home .,.,ith Swedish fireplace and Just listed a sought after separate yard with a roomy "Trina" plan in the Bluffs. 2 Bedroom rental over an 3 Bedrooms, 2"11 baths allfl oversized garage. An excel· a park & playground at your Jent investment whether doorstep. you're' just starting out or Only $44,500 getting set to retire. A south· Call 67J..3550 of-the-highway "'inntr fo1· only $49. T;iO, Call 673-SS50 19131 Brookh11rs1 Ave. HuntlngWn Beach ASSUME 51/4 °/o VA LOAN . WALLACE REALTORS And .,.,-e can prove it!! II you've been waiting for th11t JUGHT home at a RIGHT pirre wHh RlClIT terms your \vait is over. 3 bed- rooms 2',J baths. large St'!> erate family room with wrt bar, forn1al dining, huge well landscaped rear yard, good neighborhood. The price on this 2 bedrm v 1 e w Condo?:tinium on Vista Caudal in the Blulli has just been reduced $1000 to a rock bottom ot $34,950. ft '! clean, it's spacious it's vacant. Backs to a green belt, Di:1!l!tige loca~ hon. Phone today! $34.950. ANXIOUS 2 BR, 2 BA, gardn nn, 2 Own•'r h<1s !.ll'f'n fransfen·,.rf anil Lh1s \'Cry n<'al 3 bed· room • 2 b3!h h()1!la ls va· c11nl. w11.111ni.: fer a new fam· Uy ro mnYe 1n, Beautiful !andscap111,g, 1· 11 mp I et e spn11kler .1ys1t'm, lovrly eovrrtd pat1n and yard W1th e.'ilra. pri\•11')' anr! OCf!an vLPw, l ncludr~ 1\at<>r soft<'n- • r and rxpPni,ivc rotary TV color u.ntt•nna. )iay aL<,0 be pul'('h'lsr<! wllll ne"· lOJn S?~.!\:iO, f'ho11<> 51&.'.!313 lnr 1n rnrm:11inn. -5464141- (0pen Evenings) Evenings Call S.1S.3265 OWNER DUPLEX patios, 2 c gar w/elec rlrs, I ..;======= J pool. All in pk ltk• "'lting. Euts.lde near shoppine. DUPLEX Dbc xtru 644-1498. L&rge 60xl35 R·2 Lot. Ois- DUPLEX 3 & 2 Macnab-Irvine Evenings Call S.18.3265 UllWIVUI: t1()-'\U tom buUt 1 bedrooms. Pri. OOUTH-OF'-THE-HIGHWAY Fountain Valley RIJS J Bedroom houS4' and a 2 berl room rental located Easlsidt>. Costa l\lesa, Jn· come $325 a n1on1h. $36,000 EXCLUSIVE Newport at Fairview 646-8811 (anytime) . • • • W.R . SCHOOTMILLER 8T7l Evelyne Cr. Huntington Beach \'ou are Lhe v.inncr of 2 tJ \•kets 10 the Royal Rl'alty Company MASTER OF All YOU SURVEY Turne Rock Hills Castle. 3 Bedrooms, den, family room. Large pool w11h ja. cuzzi. An unusual Z.slory \•.-i1h spectacular view. $82.500. Please call 67:'">-3210. Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 675-3210 * 5 BEDROOMS * Beaut. Harbor View llome11 res. w/1A't't bar, lol'l'ly carp.; sell-cleaning ovens; vacant, q u i ck possess. $59.500 lncludlng the Janel. CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 WEST CLIFF Only $30.500 VA • F1lA -CONV, Call 673-8550 B/B 22 YEARS OF' REAL ESTA1"E SERVICE IN THE HARBOR AREA Exceptional Duplex In best Corona del Mar area. 3 BR & 2 ba. each. The kind ol rental units always in demand w/a huge dbl. HARBOR VIEW r:1e11 e.wi.. 11M000 2U1 E'. Co.it H.,...,. Co~ Dlf ... ,, Cllt. HOMES Immediate possession avail-I!!!!!!!!!!!--!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!! able 1vith !his nearly-new EASTSIDE 4 bedroom. 2 bath tovt'ly. COSTA MESA Swim in the 2 community CHARMER vate garages. Exceptionally 1'h&rp._ 10% Down. SM.900. 646-TI71 '-O' THE REAL \"'-ESTATERS ' • "! '. , tjfll 1·r.• $21,900 FULL PRICE pools, stroll in' the park, or 3 quern·sized bedrooms. get fogt'lht'r 1vith tlf'ighbors Very lovely bath, Brand at the clubhouse. You own new carpets aM drapes. t~ land. Unique location Huge kitchen for mom. for this great 3 bedroom near ucr. Fashion Island Freshly painted. Extra beauty. Loi. of carpets with and Big Canyon Country large double~-GI and. rnatcttine drapes. Modern Club. All this for only F1lA terms available. CALL bulll·lns are ln th.is country $42,9JO. ~-2313 NOW alld we'll qmlity YOU style kitchen: also • dish· at $23.~..00. washer. Move-in condition, Walker & Lee ~J'"~ i:i~~ 01 and w~·n qualify you. garage for f'R. apt. Can be l •iii-'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• seen by app't. $79,500. ,.,,., ~~~~Iii·;~~· Walker & Lee 675-3000 --------" m llA\' ,\ lll!ACH , UE1\U'\' l:\'C. fSl ..2_~,'._q ___ 675:_!0~_?j $21,950 2 SJ'ORY EASI'SIDF. COSTA MESA BEAUTIFULLY DECORA'I'ED JUST LISTED SEE TODAY!!! NEWPORT HEIGHTS Realtors 1790 Harbor Blvd. al Arlems 545-9491 Open 'ttl 9 PM FHA-VA 2 Roomy 2 Bedroom units In the 400 block .o! Fernleat. Top Income, top location and easy to sec. ONLY $45,950 CALL 673..s5.'i0 IR'. THE REAL 'C ~~!~!,~.~~ D•sperate Owner I Reduced to $30,500 4 Bedroom + lge den~ Low int. or VA/F1-lA terms. Near park, golf, school! HAFFOAL REALTY 842-4405 Eves: a41-2446 GI $lO down, F1-lA m in do1o,·n. CONDOMINIUM -Conrlo 3 BR. 2 BA. all A La San Francisco bltns, community pool, 2 flrrc-·.~ 1h1· a.n.'!11r1· tor you. This •I hedr,..-,m 21 J h 1\h, fully c-arpt 11· I C.-ni''l !Ii ~ll~rp, c-le3.n, .in•! 1e:uly tn ti..• JTJl'l\'rd 1u10. F1•mu1;1•i- )'1,•tr 11'{?ekl.'111l yard v.·flrk ;11ul slar·t 1'nl•Jyu1:;-11!1, PnC"l'd a 1 $~.oou. $91,500 car gar. John Irwin & 811\conits. fireplaces, ba&e· A~soc. 6.16--4470 men!Ji. 2--3 bedroom view 4 BR, FAM RM l' illage ,Rear ~~tale nets, spac, 2 .h<irm. +. 1• Corner !or. 54{).60.18 962-4471 ( .·~.·.) 546-8103 bdrm. furn. First otfer1ng.1""-C.--'-'-~-~-'--· Call for your appointment Huntington Beach Pool Sida Paradise today! l'M UNlnUE ~urrnunds 1hr 1.li'<:;2 pool 1\·/ University Realty ,,. Jot5 of deck1n,:.: T ~ BR, 2 3001 E. C.st. Hwy, 67l-€'110 And I'm looking for thar par. Ri\ art>a horn.: \l frplc. --siLIT-[EVEL--ticular oo~ple who. needs Cl'J1ts, drp~. bltnl'. nt'll' pa1nl charm, privacy, sWlmming Lnsidr. Clo~" to ~hnps, Lovely 2 BR. 2 Ba.; terTiflc l)C(.'.fln view trom each level. Marble frplc. Lots ot stor- 11ge. 1-!Jd. & li lt PoOI. or. ferf'd fo1· S,S.1,900. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 and easy maintenance. 1 ~r·!ino!s ,t hl',1ch, S'.!7.900. lulve 3 bl'drooms and a Al: 1"rn1~ ~17·1;".11 large family room. ~1Y SEYMOUR REAL TY kitchen overlooks my pool. ITI·U 13f't1c-h Blvrt, Jlt,;:n Bcb I have a nice atrium o[f n1y Open ·111 9 P\f livin~ roon1. Come up and 1 --o-~~ "" m• • I'll ,.11 my.,11 10 HAVE A LARK International \\'1th summer months com-BOAT LOVERS Circus ing the lanai at This lovt"ly lfunting1on Harbour 111·ater· ASSUMABLE VA LOAN S!66/J\.10. PAYS ALL freshly painted two story on t'Ul-de.sac • Excellent neigh· borhood. 3 bedroom, 2 bath family room and llving room with brick firepl.ace. Land· scaping, 3 car garage. Something lo see. $41,500. &f6.TI11 Ell!ganl S bedroom, 3 beth, two story home in Fabulous Mesa del J\.tar. YoUI" family can walk to all schools -_c_•_•_••_M_•_••-----· you for $45.950. 842-2535 Anti 11\r in a -1 &>droom :-0'1<"ado1v Lark Elilatc hon1e. Professlon:llly landscafll'rt • m i n i m u m ma1ntena.ncr yar<l. Acro:<s 1he street fro n1 th<-i;::olf course, $39,000. Cull :rlfi-2313 for detail~. at thl' 3 bedroo1n V.t bath home front. li.2 Feel on Devon CAl.L S.10·1151 open eves. Elt'mentlll')' through college, A beautiful park with many ff'atures tor you. even tc-n· nls facilities. It'• sharp! Call now for • nt'W way of llfe $39,500. 546-2313 ORANGE .,.,·ill be ju:;t the place for Circle wilh ro loot dock, COUNTY w;:i rm 14'eather t'f'la.'<ation. with spacious, single levC'! I ewn HWTAGEJ \:R. THE REAL 'C ~,~TATE~? FAIRGROUNDS Arnold & Freud < bd,m., ·I bolh homo. ~ """"" Sal urda~·. /\fin! :lrd 388 E. J71h St .. Costa Mesa f108,TJO. , ~ Plcs.<.r ('all 6~2--5678, ext. 314 ~7755 I - hell\l'en 9 end 1 pm to claim .........---~ -~-BUILDERS REPO your uckr1.5 <North County I EMERALD BAY 1 CokfweD ,._,_ LJ toll·h ec number 15 ~0·12201 Jr·an1as11c while wa1er view ,Ddluu::n-NEWPORT HEIGHTS One ruan'8 Jou can be your ro:ain. READY FOR lM- ;\IEOIATE POSSESSION. 3 * * * from this 1mmac. 4 bdrm. .......___MID~~ "RUSTIC'' DUPLEX & family rm. home. Com. -QpC'n hc'am ceiling charrnf'r'. Large bedrooms & family. EXECUTIVES munity pools, tennis els., 833-0700 644-2430 2 be<lroom8 -dining room tdeal location. Crpts, frplc Live amid luxury, Lti-..11est 1~ B!O('k trnm hay or oc.·r:i.n-prlv. beach: priv. patroled with built-in BBQ. Laii::e k shake roof. Avail no down price in prestige area, see stret"ls for your security. $l8~ TO yard fnr ou1door en1rnain· lo veterans. Hurry! Full value grow, homes priced fron!. ChniC'I' NrWi)flr\ rl'n!-b "" price $28,:i!!O. Call 540-1151, to $53,000. Walk to tchools. ::il ;irra. linmaculatP condi-Sho1o,·n Y app't. only. $93,000 ASSUME lni; 11.nd overl'iZl"d garage linn -L.11·~r 3 & 2 hf'<lroom~. Delancy Real Est.at• subJect io gov't loan and I f(IT· Dad 's "'01'k5hop. Only (open eves.) ~~r st:'1sf~~~ne mu!: (;ood income. 10';, dnv.n 2828 E. Coast Hwy. Cdllt move right in, 3 queen-sized I S:!ti,!ftO. Hurry on this one' 1-~·· -IT'G!I 644. 7270 , Call 675-4930 ..._ ,_ "'" " $34,~? $.17.;,oo 616-7171 , ~=~=~~ bedrooms, lots ol carpels, "" llM mAn Elll1-Schradar, Rltrs. READY TO EXPAND-ramily room, all on ovC'r·, ~&CQl l ~=~~~===~l~~~~8~9'l~-6606~~~~~ Come see this 3 BR + rum· ~illl'd 101. $2·1,990 and no • ....,2-T~~ pus nn !panellC'rl &· crpldl, nC'ed to qualify~ ....., ... -111·tt>1 * MESA VERDE * TRANSFER ;::;·~~,~~'~." 1~ ~."~ Walker & Lee Moving to Vancouver NNe;~~~·~9iv":' i:.;;r..1m~~;L ""'"~' + Dougtiboy pool. Reduced On !lolly Lan ... 3 bedrm, 1 ~ Cov. Pillo. New copper 'l'OUR PROBLEM 10 $.~1 .300 Cf or F'HA term.\. fkalrors i\1 I II' Ad I ·-• 3 ho, •late ent...,, ni-size plumb'i· Bik to golf course, ll4i-1721 7682 Edinger ~ us ~ . u t ('CCUp1...... ·~ '"" $38 500 to SPECIALISTS Property Management Real Estate STEPHENS & KAYE &15-0122 ANYTll\IE •7141 812 ·••·· ~10;140 bedroom. 2 bath & ramily livingnnw/fil't'pla~.Extra ··,; SEYMOUR REAL TY .....,...._, or ~ • 1_ bo"k ya~., ....... ,.....,,,. & Georne W1lll1m1on room. Beauuru1 go!d shag .. ~ '" '" """ ... ,..,. • 17l'11 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch RARE CHARM carpel!!, ht'avy shake roof, dl'flll. llt>me Is SU1T0Unded by REALTOR .......,,n 'ril 9 PM . . .......... 1 673-0SO 64;..1564 EVES ~-=v~·-==~= -I Charm1nr, Newport lits. I covererl p11tio & bloc:k wall Ct"mcnt block fence . ...Wu e · 12 Aq}E--POOL-lfORSf~S hc)lne. 3 BR ., family nn f, fence. Located in quic! area jtllr. Call for more Jnfo. INEXPENSIVE 3 br, 1 ~ ba, counlry-sty!e 1 kitchen b!tns. 2 full heths. I of Mesa dl.'1 1\far, 2 Blocks Lachenmyer Rlty BEACH LIVING Rt.:POS., 2.5 BR. all ~rm11 hon1e nf'ar new park. 6~i:~ LovC'ly new carpeting. S!Ollt' I to St. Joh11'11 Catholic C11ll Pal Wood ~a-mi loan. l\.tay e x ch an I e 1 3 1 d Church. No oo .... •n VA or low Ce.II 6~6·39'28 Evt!: 673--4Sn We are proud to ofler Nf'w· •-1 ~ ~· ,-,-;7-1 0 .... _,1Ag1 .,. ".' 77 · rrp r.. garag.e, c C'rt oor. ~,,....''-'-"~"""-"-"-'---~-= .... , ""',...,... Don r miss this al $39,500. rlown fllA terms. Call port Shores be 1 I buy. Ge neral General CALL ';'\ •••·2414 / &16--5880, HerHage Realtors, LEASE-OPTION $29,950: 3 Bedrooms, 2 lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i 91~~ 1open t'Ves.). The largest ~ for the Baths, New dishwasher, """"" ... -. .... -.-----• money in Costa Mesa. 5 bed~ carpel• and paint. Fire· RfilTY UNBELIEVABLE! rooms, a big family room place, 2' palios, and spacious 2629 Harbor, Costa Mesa 546-8640 Thinkin9 of SELLING? Let us help, we will buy your hous e today for its full value. The only ad- ditional charge is 1°/0 of the sell- ing pr;ce. No additional expense. We n ~ed houses I It doesn 't cost anytlc'ng to call and find out-you mioh{ r "'" save ! ! ---------· Nt•r Ntwporl Po1t Ofrlct Bii;:, big 4 Br., family rm.. 11nd kitchen, 3 larre baths, double 1arage. Total use UNIQUE d in. rm. Villagr? home w/ complete landscaping with of community pool and ten- BACHELORS' HOME valley & mt, view. Comm. 40 lttt of patio. As1ume a ni& courts. And only 2 F'un 2 btrum den homt in pools, tt'nnis els. & school& big 63 VA :.o.an. 646-nn bJock1; lo !he beach. 646-7171 beach area for person who close by. Terms )UU won 't wants 10 enjoy th" plea.Mire s I belleve & only S37.000. Home Show Realtors i-O THEREAL '"\. ESTATERS or life. S29,500. \O ' THE REA!, "'-ESTATERS ' •'I ·. ~ , .. . •,·' .. ,. PETE BARRETT ··Armchair Hous<'huntin1t .. RL TY ~ 1-:. Q)a.'1 nwy .• cdM Sn,soo eRrGHT 3 • SHARP 2 • POOL 642.52~ 675-7225 • ·-•··•rm b Jh •ll -:--------·I WHAT A PRICE ._.,..e """ • a • ~P~R~E=s=T=l~G=E~A~D~D~R=E=ss= And whit ,.. home with 3 bltns, extra. Jae lot with HORSES OK 2 huge Ql•tdoor recreauon Designed to tnkr ndvantas:e oversl~ed bed~mt, baths area. 26xJ5 H&F Pool with of !he VIE\V, Pool, 4 BR, A·I l'!O~ near UCI, 3 bed· on quiet trtt·hned street, dlvinl board. Pre·summer :i Ba, t11m rm "''/ffl)lc 1.r room home on 2'6.0CIO 11q. fl. oversized lo! a!,\d more. 'priced at $34,95(), 11;e1 bar lot '37.900. Tctn1J, w lk & L L I R I I ROY J. WARD RLTR. Roy McCordle, RHltor a 111r ee •rw n "ty, nc. 'lo N B ..,. 546-5411 1nytlme !ll.t't !\111.l'lners, Dover ShON's 1 • t''t\'f!Ort lvd., C.M. "--• 548-m9 ~~••rs OPEN DAILY 1-5 &i&-15.'it'l Open Daily j 7682 E:dlnier " B d REPOSSESSIONS <1141 8424t:Xi or 540-5140 '" roa way, C.M . Sparkling clean hOm,1 90me STEPS TO OCEAN 3 Bedrm, 2 b11, Ir;' Uv lng newly palntrd & CJltt>Cted. 2, A·frame beach ho~. Xlnt LIQUIDATION SA.le, open room, tlrf'pl•~. new crptii/ 3 4 & 5 bdmui Snme with cond. 3 BR, 1~ ba. 2 Car house rl•lly at 20372 drps, newly deconi!ed, dblf' ~It. FllA·VA Conv. 1,rms, I llllr. RlfnJI, new Cf)I. $ll900 &yview St, S.A. file. Al-a t•ra,irf'. Immediate pru;se1· from S20.COO to S·to,000. CAYWOOD REALTY tntorm11tion on 163 E. 22nd 1ion. P3,500. C"lh11~ ~ Wn.tts Jne, 6306 \I/. CMii! Hwy., NB St. r ~. & ml2 Birch, S.A. l.on Vibert, Rltr, 1~·1 ;.•1 '• /l,1't', 002--\.'i21 548-l290 111" &4&-05S8 Evf'a: 673.6.)34 FHA Says: $27,500- We Say: $26 •900! STEAL IT AND RUN Aru<io"' own" orom " JO r.ell! DLvega1'ds FHA ap- P••i"l • j"'l • .,,, ""°" BEACH-ONLY $16 500 new! 3 Bedrooms, dining, ' 2 balh11, built·in range & JUST LISTED! Unbelicv· oven, [ireplace. Room for able. Clean as a pin and boat, trailer, etc. Can't last twice alt sharp. Modern at 1hi11 !lashed price! Call charm. Huge rooms. Spark- &iS.-0303 ling all·elec kitchen w11h IORtSl E OL~O~ '"' P C A LrO N S bar. Gold decorative mtr· ror In dining--area. Slid ing glas~ to hu.ge patio. 2<ar I garage with boat door. I School11 and shops near-by. 2299 HARBOR, COSTA MESA Jog to beach. Low Jow do..,,·n. Beller hurry. Call l71~) TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS s.. HOLLAND BUS. SALES "The Broker with Empathy" 1716 Orange Ave., C.M. 645-4170: M£1.Q608 anytime VACANT 3 Bcdrn1 + fam mi. 2 b11., bltni;. Crpts/drps, !)62.5585 HlRl\T E OL~ON. "' REA L TOR S · l9J3l Brookhurst Ave. Huntington Beach $1500 "'"· '"" ""'·· 2 Y'"' MOVES YOU IN old l.ood location. Take PAINT.~ SAVE $$ 3 l.argl' bedrooms, 1~ ba th. l>:e fnm1Jy kuchen. shori walk 10 !'ChOol, handy man r11n l)uy at S2.'i.~. Or m;i!<,. aC' 011, r. n1vner le1tv 1n~ Cali f nf'~t ""~-·k. Larwln Realty, Inc:. 546-5411 anytime Don't Live 1;-r.;nt ·Buy Like Rent 5r" this v;u·ant :: RR, 2 SA To11nhou~•'. w /C'l'Jll~. llrp~. rt"fng , bltn R,VO + lots of rec al'l'a. FP, S\11,9!).). Sulr ml1 lW7~:tJ\ SEYMOUR REAL TV 17141 Beach Blvd., Hlgn Bch Open 'tH 9 PM 3 Br, bcnu1. lndscp(ld, frplc. Bea11!lful !'is.id . area. Oosi• m heh. 9t)g..36.l-I ovf'r fr%% VA $215 per Chofc, lfuntington Brat'h 3 mo. rotal. owner I Ag 1 bedroom . ne\v carpt't!I, Huntington Harbour 636-4470. large covered patio • as· Ow 6:y. ~ VA L sume 6'*7'> loan. SACP.TFJCF. • $ 88, 00 0 ner • o oan $26 900 842·25JS i\la51:nlficcnt I br. ·l b.J WXXJ cash · 4 BR, 2 BA, 2000 ' \Vaterfront ho1nr 1n Hun. I(!. It. $11,300. $270 mo. tington ll11rbvur. 1()1 ' P.I.T.I. Imm. Poss. NoquaJ. w1tterlront, ~7' dock. Call ifying. 5.'i7-65.16, 548--0588. 213/ :..!)2.JfiOJ for appt. Prm. See & A9ree-$700 TOTAL CASH ~'-'"'7"1-·'_0_'''-·----Shows Like a Cul!tomb:ed 4 BR Townhouse. Irvine L'ke new, $hag crpu, dtj11, :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;I Model! oov patio .. Pools, putting! FOR SALE Every so often a home com· green, tennis courts, club ! e• on the market thal's IO house, Walk lo ,gchools. OR LEASE clean ev'n our blltk Wf'I• sOOWI. bank.~. Call S.17-83071 Or lease/optio:i men gasp! Thls is one! 3 EveJI! 968-1371. I Th~ 3 BR, 2 Ba to.,.,.-nlyou~., bl51: bedrooms, t7xl4 panel· nfh•n•d urk"\"l' !hl'i. C'OO\"tl\. led dining or family room a :11:11· il•rir purcii.av-pbtn. Brini: w/fireplaCi!; bu11!-ini1, dish· 11'1 I p{;1 1 yo~1r u•rms k !rt'< l<llk1 wa!her: gorg~us carpets le '....... tUUt Ti'!t'y v:u·y in. pnrc from drapes. Move In & live! $.'JO,(lOO !o $.1-1 500. Priced on Ule 1l08C @ ju.it CUS'l'01>1' 4 BR. 2 ba $3! 500 Call G45-030.1 tnwnh<l\ulc, 1111 1ppl., Pool ' · trnnl~. Ell!)' pytnn!R, $24,000. 962-1680 ~red hill IORl\T [ OtSO\ "' PE/ft ro.or Gl.EN!\tAR-Ow~r. Clean 4 Un1\' P.1rk Ci'nt .. r, frvinr br. AMume 6% F1tA nr C1J1 An)'tlmfl ~ new loan. Cov'd palio, sba~ -------... ..,~/ crpt. Principals 0 n I Y '}_ srY 1 RR r"111r1n 21 i 2299 HARBOR. COSTA Mts.A 1='96;:>-..;7;::096::..:-..,-,c-:-:--o-=:-ba. 2 frfl/r ~. Landscp'd, MESA Verde<: by QWnel': 3 BY o"•:ner·Tuwn houSt', 3 e n. undt>r ' nu~ lrom UCI. bdrm, fmly rm, 2 M. patio. 2 BA, tpl, wshr/dryr/refrlg. A\11.11 July l.11 US,500, Open dally S'29,950. 54>-2075 Sl ~ .. JOO 962--l!l':JO ~·~-fl~'7 ,.\·r '· 1~k~~ --- " '.Jll,, ..... ·." .. . . .. ... -... ·:s o.Ul.v PILOT f 1 _,,, .. I~ I _, .... l~ I ·~~" I~ I I~..___! -_ ...... __,1~·1~! -~ ...... ~,~~ie1 ~l -~ ... -~,~~[ .,. •. -...... 1[!][ -·" ..... J~ l L•gun1 luch N1wport Height• Income Prope:rty 16' 8u1lne11 HouMI P:urnllhld 300 Houtet Unfum. 3051 1 ~H;o;..-;;;U;n;f;u;rft.;;;:;;~3;0~5 1 :Aplt;;;;;_F;u;rn;.;;;;~;360;1,;A;p;ts;.;F;u;r;n.;;;;~~l60~1 : --------' __ ;._ __ ::.____ LlOO ISLE-320 Nt'lnt. 6 Opportunity 200 =G:-:.-n-.. -.-:1 __ ...;;:.:....;:;.:.:1.;,;.:::::.:..:::::.::.:.::.._= ~ Lo1tely2Br/B1.Condo HOLLY LANE beach apta, !Um. Gar. m· -AM--------Gtner•I Newport Be•ch Coit• Me•• S•n Cl1ment1 : L1g.un1 811ch Home beach. UaM>Mi<I yr. :l'.ll_., CANOY AN ---------·i·---------1 --:-~o--:::--:--:--" IDEAL !Or year rou.nd coni-3 BR. 2 BA, bnmed cti11n1, Alkin&: $140,(0). CoMlder SNACK SUPP~ y LARGl!!l 3 bed with carpet. Adults Pr•ftrrtd CASA de ORO NEAR heh,· Br .. frpld Sl!JO ;: b-1 .6: crae1ou1 relaxed J1V· brlek frple, extn Ii }of, trade. 642-097, ~~2211 ext &nd tU'apta thruout, ft.need POOL AVAILABLE Ll"inl StudlO, 15: kl! SllO , uUl, pd :: Ins. Al.I exttrior maintain-rreat man'a \11oriahop/pr-228 WE ESTABLISH RENTAL FIND&RS yard, wnlly room, will taU 2 BR. 2 Bl.; raraa:e" S22!I CASUAL c~tir. ~ in " 1620 t.a.. Bolu, Alao 1 Br. .... anct altend!'d . Te ,in I a •re. I c:::..,O~F~F=IC~E~B~L-D~G-.-ALL ROUTES Froo To Landlords elrtlc1roen 6 ptlt -1210 PI M. 3 BR. 21.0 BA., raraae warm Mediterranean atmoa· vu. Dan.11 P1. 49'1-4225 ~ rt.I ti 100 1 · JEAN SMITH RLTR (No 11!.llina lnvnlva1) WALKER & LEE REALTOR !'>43-856 phtre. Spieloua color en-1~::...:;:..::,c_c..;:__c...=,) cou • 01 Y •ti'& to pri· · • Net incom• $l6,500 ,.. "'H REQu~•n 645.()l l 1 , UNIVERSITY Pa~. ,,_ 3 ontinated Apts • deslint<I & Apt. Unfurn. 365 '"' vate beacl:I, alao overloolu 400 E. lilh SI., CM 666-~ Single tenant "AM" '-IW ,,.._..., I ,,.. ...- ,:. :::Cm~tnc~·~e;!;ir~n:. ~S.;.•;.n;;l•;..;.An;;.;;:•...;.;H.:;•;.:lg:..h;;.to;__ I "''""' "';'.";. ':,'~·~aah in,. ~:; ';::, • : ::::: ::: : , ,:::~ OJ w., ,,. .. ,.,,. M... m<J !:!::,rs'40-51'0 :~:.1>11\:. 't:'~ ,!'' ';'~~~ :::'~"':,:;:. ~f : ~:;;,: Go nor al • 1 ,"' dishwashf'r & disposal. Com-ACRE for Comm'! Sta bits w. R. DUBGIS INC. Plan three ••• .•.. · $3250.00 • WEEK. END Special $50 off 1 BR furn mttar• , : .... ;i;;; =·~'~"="="~-~~~~-en w/ IDdlreet lifhling • 1--------- l t U ·-JI I -f f ,,, mo I 'B 'B ~ DeluxrR/0. Adulu.No-ta. * * * I!. p ete y ca~ted waU 10 wa or home & 1table8. 673-2262 ' ., 545-TIM * """ce en in .. "mt or a ew ·~ a ren . r.,, a, 1 BR vacant tot/pet OK $115 BLUf'F'S condo, 2 BR. l ""' , thruout. l.o'>''tr level laun-or 673-5723 noun \.\.'eeklywork.( Days & stove, retrla:. CID. Kida & 2 BR alngl~ OK ......•• $95 b&, den, poola, comer loca· I BR...$17';; f1.1tn. HAROLD BREAM ri dry ha.a mhr/dryer. itor-Lots fqr S•I• 170 Evrningsl. Rffilling and col. pets, Avl today. Sl50, 2 BR fncd fur kl.d Sll5 tlon, $3%5 mo. 644-l39S UTILmES INCLUDED 212 41•t St. '.[! ae,e room I:. dollble carport. R••I E.tate, l l•I FORECLOSURE t«ting moo•y from roin •P· ALA Rental1 e 645-3900 3 BR """'/",,:;.;".'.' 1140 'U""n"'lv-o~r-•"'lty,-~P-•-.rlr""--~ W. Wilson 642-1971 Newport Beach Th" to • "'"'" untt m ""''"' ZI; ''" hone nncb ,. .. ,. '""'' di•pen,.,.. whrun • • BACK BA y • Sm! 1 Br. 2 BR ho"' raneh .... 1175 * $1.lO UP * Yoo •re th• wonnec ol , btaut Jndsc.pd. patroled . aessed trom former sue-qualified a r er,. (Handlrs Nice yd. Pool. Child ok. UU STAR.LET n6-7l30 GIANT 1 lt 2 BEDROOM' 2 urktl1 ro the •',",,~~ .. C~~ •'or uma<nlurnk•JAJ& I space employe<e now avail· 1 ,":,~~-)brF~ord -r•,.n~:, 1n't~: ApdL.AllR20 I e 64,.. 2 In Hunti11.oton Beach . both 3~ief~k~: .• ~.~'.": ~ ~'!:u!·,:..=:~:ik~or&etmli~~ lnt•Rrn•aYt',·ol nil IO ~~"a:11~f'o~ iummer ~nt· Acr .. g• for 1ale l50 able at developera coal v'i~:.ua~nd n~e.''::ddr;; enta • .rl900 3 bedroo~-;: one at S195 and 4 BR .. lam. nn . .;, din. rm. imum se~ii;. Quiet strttl. Circu• al. Prteed under market COLORADO SAVE pm and phone: numbtr to Multi· 1 BR !urn house-S130. Adult.II. one at $2'25. Stop by and Brand new, Turtle Rock J.31~ Adults, no prta. 20l0 al lhf' tor direct sale. Phohe : $3 Do\\n, $3 mo per Acre State Diatributina:, lnc., 1611 Stone Villa Trailer Parle:, look rhru our Rental Book. 3 BR. I< din. rm., lmmac $325 Fullerton Ave !Harbor to ORANGE .• 837.0191. Owner liquidatina btaut on these tabuloll!. oak 1tud· West Broadway, Anaheim, ll1 W. Bay, C.hl. WALKER & LEE, 4 BR. & tam rm, 2% ba $.WI Bay, then so. until 2 hlks COUNTY foothills aettage Tree1~ ~· ~sn~h ~Ee ::a.da. Ca. mO'l <n4) 778-S060. e ON The Braeti.. Le l Rr. R11ltort WE AL90 HAVE :oo of Newport Blvd. 642· FAIRGROUNDS Virws! Elk & Deer huntinz a lil e mmg DISTRJBU'J'ORS NEEDED Stv/rTfrii, CID. Yrly. Sl85 27!IO Harbor Blvd. al Adams f'URNISHED RENTALS S turd.a rl 3rtl .. COUNTRY LIVING Farm atyle cottq:e surround· «. by towrrlnf treea, 1n peaeetul area, on 2 lots. Maln house heated by ca· booae-stove; wood deck & private 'patio. Brick walks. 1-Bedroom In main houu. with attached double a:araae &: sunroom. Separate studkl hou~r,. $26, 'TSO. Call • .AO tan area. Fishlnr: nearby. Full South Co&at area neu San HUNT'S "SNACK-PACK" ALA Rent1l1 • 645-3900 545-9491 Open 'til 9;00 P.M. FURN. /'lf':W paint. C'.tpt.s. lux· Pl • a ~;2 A'6p781 314 ,., nly " f $10 Juan Capistrano. Hi i h L d urioos. l rooms w/wM bar. eaiwe call "" · · ~XI, P ce o S 70 or Ac. ,__ . New multi.million do J J a r $15-Utll pd, nice 1 Br. nr In lord..OWMrl 1 ad·"t. ..•nt for •tud-nt berwer.n 9 and I pm tn rla1m $30 dwn, t <M mo (98 auuve the amos, pnvare t I N W will t w ~ • ..,., road and Jocked eate iUV'· advertised snack pack pro-wa er. Avai c.w! ! e rr er tenants to you (lr bacMlor. Garage or your ticket~. I North County pymnts) NO INTERFST. &ntee the natural beauty of I duels. NEED NOW? Reli· Blue Be•con * 645-0111 FREE of ch.trgf. , ,Many carport, ample atorqr. use toll·Jrtt number 11 540·l2'l!'ll For picture!. into &: this formtr Spanish Grant able men or women in yOur e VACATION YR.-RND. drs.U:-ble te.tw\1.1 on our of fenced back ya.rd. lintns • • • g:uaranttt, writr: Owner, surrounded by beautifUI area to aervice fut·movina: Kid.~ &. pets ok. uu pd. U30 w:uting list. "SINCE 1946" fumlshed, uW pa.id. $125 Box 1i043 T.A., Denvrr, Cleveland National Forest. I coin operated product.s In ALA Rentals e 645-3900 ALA Renl&ls • &t.>3900 1st Western Bank B1d1Z mo. 548-3890 or S.16-5319 for VEN DOME R~l: ~~7.:wnin,g, 1+ actt. All utilitiea available. I :~~';~~~~:c~r;:i_ $90-Utl pd. Bach at heh. Yrly. Coron• del Mir D11y1 u ~3~~~lPar~lght1 appt. 261 Brentwocxf Circle. !MMACULATE APTSI owntr will subordinate OR PRJCED FROM $9.950 ' nr full time. 6 to 12 bours Hurry for lhi1. Av\ l'IO\v: • Slnclr,a Ok·l Br. Stv/l'fl, Ld~~ ~~ ~:~ :~s:::. , ADULT and 8.3 acrea prime rorner zon· I.IJW DOWN·EASY TERMS per week. Diatrlbutor of Blu• Be•con * 645-0111 CID, avail now. SlSO. elec rt.ave, l c gar. Close FAMILY ~ctlon ed C·l. Trade • long term Circumstances force the im· • product only <no affiliated •RARE INDEED. Lagun11. ALA Rent1lt e '4S.3900 3 BR. 2 batha ........ $300 In. $185. Adlts, 00 pets. 381 Close to shopping, Park lease or sell. Owners anx-mediare diapoaltion of these with Hunta-Wesson Foods, Wa.Jk heh. Sm! pet ok. Sl l5 CAMEO Highland.a 3 Br. 2 l BR., 21iii bath•········ $350 16th Pl. 54&.1424. * Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba ious, try anything. few ehOioe parcels whose Inc.) • no selling, CASH ALA Rentils e 64>3900 Ba. Octan view. Priv. 4 BR .. 2 baths •.•.•.•. S.125 SPECIAL Low R.l.!Ps from *Swim pool, put/grf'f'n Larwin Re•lty, Inc. formrr owners LOSS i' your REQUrRED $600 to $2995. $50-Utl pd. in prl home. E/ beach. Realtor 67~7225 3 BR. 2 ha. home .. ·· · · $32.l S2fl wk. Klt. avail. Maid * Frpl, lndiv/l~ry fac·11 546-5411 GAlN!! Call or wnte for Write for more. information: i ae.rv TV & Ph Sea Lark 1845 Anat-lerm Ave • . 1190 CltMeYTe SL . complete details and color Jmtant Food SUpply, P.O. side Joe. else lo shp'g. e Steps to BCH·2 Br. 2 Ba . · ... , red h1·11 Mot~!. 2301 Npt. Blvd, CM . COSTA ~lESA 642-2124 f9'4-!H7l 5'*9.0316 15 AC: l ,000 fL frntz, El on·site photo~. B1.1y direct Box 31f6, Tarran~. Calif. Blue B••con * 64~111 1tv/!'etrl1, CID. pr. $195. C-~~l4'~s~;_~~:=:i ~~i"i:~~::f.:"li~fi:'"I • QC """ VI", • * Toro Can)On Hwy. See TV from the develo-r: 9a\Cli. lncludt phone num· Co-• dol Mar ALA Rent•I• • '4S.3900 J t lo S'n I Ad )t ~· w.-film, Home Show Rltrs. .-her. "'"'' CLEAN 3 Br, elec bllnB, HOLIDAY PLAZA u1 r I SI• u I REAL ESTATE Ne1\', olde .,..'Orld de1ign: 1 67>7225 RANCHO CAPISTRANO FANTASTIC VIEW o! 2 trplc, aundeck, nr. ihpg. REALTY DELUXE Sp.aciou! 1 BR SOUTH BAY CLUB Br den & rec. rm. Din. 40 ACRES Northern Calif. 2172 DuPont Drive, Rm 8 RESTAURANT Nrwporl Bay, Balboa Jsl&nd 531...()53.t. alt 4:30 wkdayz. Unlv. Park Center, .lrv1na furn apt SlJ5. Heated pool. APARTMENTS an!a . frp!. Kitch. w/range, Nr. river, hunt, figh only Newport Beach, C&l. ~ + 4 BR. HOME & Octan. Nearly n r w C t M Call Anytimr 833·0&20 Amplr parking. No chil~n Newport Be1ch o.,.rn. dishl\'flsher. SJll,000 S5r8 down , S58 a mo. i6S-0047 8J3..3223 Spanish • style 3 br, 3 ba 01 • •H -no pet.II. 1965 Pomona, 880 Irvine Avr. full "pr t,m.-er dn PYt OK on busy C·Z Harbor Blvd. · HoUMI Furn. or CM. flrvinr and 16th~ · · · · Apartmont1 for sal• 152 4 LOTS. cor Miramar & location. exttutlve home. Will leue MESA de! Mar 4 BR 2 ?>1ISSION REALTY 494--0731 turn'·h-.. _ ... _ ... .a..:i B ' Unfurn 310 1714 ) 64'0550 !O::'.:'.:'.::::C~:,;'.:'.:,'-~:::::~1 ...:..--,.,-.;;...c-..,..._c-I Capistrano Arch Beach . "'cu or U•uwut9•=-· A. bltna, crpts, drps, Ire • Unbell•vably B11utlful ;,- BR k farry.Iy Room-2 ••* 14 very charming Hts, Laguria B. $19,00J. $19'.l VJnCO Realty Live-In maid Incl. SllOO mo. tned back yard, dble 1ar. N H I h VAL D' !SERE Garden Apts. Balbo1 Peninaula Batlul . shake roof. Upper I unitJ, rood location. Prin· dn, lllll mo. own, r --mm2.1084 or TI4/645-135J, Walk lo all schools lncl ewport • 9 ts ,,,.., ,,,,.,., Adults -m petl. Flowers•---------· I Temple Hilla. $35,900 . cipala only. Owner 644-0315 213.968-3318 21.'29 Harbor, CM ~ PANORAMIC View Whlte tathollc l OCC. $235 mo. 2 BR. BBQ, tttri&:/frttzer. everywhere. Stream & 19 2 BDRM. Yearly, Like SJ.3..-0192 Bu1In111 Property 154 1 Golf Falrwiy Lot WRECKING yard, xlnl loca· Water & San Jo&'quin Hills. I & lut + S,50 cleaning. oven rotisserie , 1 re ah ly Watrrlall. 45' pool Rec. Rm, new. Maturr arlulu.. ~191.., Lido Isle •By Owner 642 -43&1 tlon. Reuonable. Will sell Beach block, 2 hr, J1Ze patio, Childre~n la pets UK· painted, no children. n 15 Sauna, Sgla 1·2 Bdnn. Furn-E. Bay. Cidl 67J....4l7l all all or part. Call 673-7185 additional oU·street parking 546-3585 unl. U'.lO furn. 54M3fil Unfurn. from S135. SEE IT: fi pm. wknrii; • WANTED • I Mobile Hom•/ lnv11tm•nt Lease S,397/mo. 675-2985 2 BR. rar.aa:r, Jae fncd yard, Duplex•& Unfurn. 350 2000 Parsons, 642-867() 1,,c-os=R-'-. ~f,..--"l.-... ~,co--ny-.-,-15-E-.I TRIPLEX Real Estate Office Trailor Porks 112 Opportunity 220 CHARMING coTTAGE • " c h;i,,.., & """' OK w.ik sHs BEAUTIFULLY r ~-.,,,.. uni"-.. to Nwprt Harbor Hi. 1175, Corona dal Mar • um BAy, Wint11r rate, $175/mo. ''"'"' 1 """ .a EXCELLENT opp. 25% of br, furn. Nr beach. Lge 111 &: tut + S50 cl 1 1 Br, expandable mobllt-YeAr!y. $225/mo. Jnq No. Will rross $12,000 \Vil! buy vci.stina: buiiness two 5 Star Fam. M. H. NDEEVAERLOPMEB I NTL LI? NMus~ trplc. Mature adull.'5. No ~ ean ng. NEW 3 Br. 2 b11., cpta, drp11, home, l.3l W. W i Igo n . C. 67'.l-1521, 54R-7771 81!11 location &: in Parks for 6.5M. Total spaces pela. $225. 613-7796 $295 M I 548-9!'!77 Corona del Ma• ! . •-·t 1 --• $'"""""' or adequate oftlce 1n rood sacrifice 160 10..-....•s ac 2 BR G p tiO' r--gar. 0 ·· 114! mm ..... s r .. vuu. uu,........ · Cal 312 C142 sp. ready to atut ·&---N rt B h · ar. a · ..... ,,.ta. Corbin·Ma.rtin Rltn. 644-7662 * ns per \.\.''-"ek up location. I Mrs. Smith, w/ 1antutlc artesian ~ll. •wpo eac drp1. amve, refri1. Quiet 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\ bowaRb lowson jr:z. 645-3900. co.nstr.l Limited Partnrr. Pa.rtly while fenced w/ pie· 1 al w/kitche.na, S25 per \.\.'eekp ReoltoA ship. Net return the lst LU>..1.JRY l Br home on trap c se.ttinr for adults up Apt1. MOTEL. 548-9755 '"6 v·,. L•'do 67~ ,~, Cemetery year 3M per mo. For details tu.re ~ol k "ttlnabd: .T,e~c channel. April 24 thnJ June. only. 1 blk to shops. $160. l-~---~---'l /9 11 B . Adi I'°' ~v~• '""' .>'LIO" all 682-1.35 7 potrntJ to !U JVl e into S500 entire period 10 6464430. p•rtments or Rent r. spa_e10W!. ts, .u.1. .., • *REDUCED* Lats/Crypts 156 c · sml ranchol!i or hold for responsible persorui. SPACIOUS 3-4 Br, 3 Ba. Pool. Ides.I for ba~belors. .• tmmac. 5 BR., family nn. 2 LOTS in Harbor Rest I Reil Est•t• W•nttd 184 ~f~~cie3~~ EZor te~:i 642-3.'173 Fam nn, Ice tncd yard. 1993 Church. 548-9633 ts Ft, Lof street.to.. h1emorial Park, Cypress 30 to 50 Unih 3Zi~TI9 anyfime. LARGE 2 hr, 2 ba, 2-atory frple. $350. C&ll Jim at Apt1. Furn. 360 $~2N~~~l~~~LOR APT ON TEN Actu:S itreet .. By app'L only Section. Call 545--0T28 home wlfrplc. $ 2 7 5, 645-1976 or 833-2113 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unturn. .. : $93,r:iO urgently needed in thr Costa Money to Loan 240 6'75-4354' aller 6. General •Call ~9577 • Fireplaers I Pnv. patios. LIDO REAL TY INC. Condominiums Mesa area. Will rurchase or 1;;:;;;ii;;;i;;;;;i;,;i;;;;.;;;;;;;;i;;;; 1----------'3 Br. 2 Bath. Sl4-0/mo.1--=======--D•n• Point Pools Tennis Conlnt'l Bldsl 3377 Vie Lido 6 7 3- 7 300 for 1al• 160 e.tfec.i a tax·frre e.xehangr. c h F t f Unlv•ralty P•rk Crpt'd. Orp'd. Chil<hl'J ok. CUSTOM FURNITURE I :::o::.,..,,-::=--.,...---l 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26ll LIKE TilE; OCEAN? Farrow R,. a I I y Corp , I as as • 3 BR. & atrium. 2 Baths. ~~388c:cc. 54.5-4988, or RE~~&.l~ .. ~A!~la~s 810 SINGLE, 'IV, pool, ptts ok. (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) Mis,lon Viejo Y' . -•-·· 530-2li0 9 am lo 5 pm. Evrs F I & bl I -=-----'-'--~~.::,,;=...;___ S25 k up. \\•kly. DaM ou cs:nt rtt """""'r than """'"767. Tit&. 2nd Trust 0Hdl rpc. tn1. S300 Mo .. 1--==..,.,,-~--C M . I tha. BLUE LAGOON VIL-...,.,..., Avail. April S to SepL 5. Lovely 3 Br. Home. oron• dtl M11r anna nn, 34111 Cout DELUXE rlownstaini 1 BR. LA. ri.rht ·.on a private FREE APPRAISALS Bob Prttlt. RJtr 833--0101 133 E. :nth St. CM . ITW::=::::O-bo,...,_--m-. """'.ru_r_n_t•-h«l"' Hwy. <lupll'x. Frplc. WAshe.r/ SELL or LEASE Drane home 3 br, !rt lam I , nn.. fully crpt/.drp, ,ite ,. patiO; $2S.90J. w/coM1der :: 2nd TD. Oivner; 830-1168 l M11a V•rde ' 1.,.1------1;'LO\'.E~LY ~ BR, many :. cuslom teaturea. A.ume J,' Sl9.900. 5% FHA. '31,900. : Prlncipals only. 546-5017 ~ ~ Newport B•ac:h beach, three bedrooms. I~ Costa Me11 Investment H U I 305 548-82169 or Ml-2417 apt. Blocks from beach in Huntington Beach riryer. Carport. Util lncl'd. thrtt batbs, . beautiluily Fin.1nclal 541-7711 •nytlm• OUHI n urn. LEASE 4 br/2 ba, 11 fncd Corona del Ma.r. Near -;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:; NPar w111Pr. Arlll•. U:aR turnished . blJ¥ st today's . G•ner•I yrd, Chldm OK. 11.tore1, re1taurant1 • Sl~. nay~ &:LS-9390, t ves priC< and ... ""'' y .. ,... 1st TD Loan •• "~"" * • c1 .... , .. 714 r.rn1 .. 1. 1180 La Quinta Hermosa fi1J.5J20. increased value, all for only Business 4 Br. f~ hln, cpts, drps, HOUSE in court, 2 Br, crpts, month. 54&.1983 l;f'"O"Rc--cl,-,-,.-.~,,~,,-,-,1~1 -,~,,-,, $'79,500. Also others tram Opportunity 200 6%. '1.i INTEREST bltns, kids & pets wel e. ;210 drps, patio. 976 W. 17th St. I :c•0-,-0-n-a-d'a"°'l,..M~•-,---Spanish Country Estate Liv· lge, nrw w/! vif'w 2 BR. $4.5,000, 2 d TD L Blue Beacon * 645-0111 No. B, CM. 548-2839 ing k Spacious Apt1, Ter-I BA 11.pt. ALI bll·ina incl BJue la9oon * CANOY SUPPLY n oan 3 BDRM., Family rm., pBik 2 BR hse, no pets. S,160/mo. FOR man-Apt w/rookini;: raced pool ; sunken gas BBQ dishw8hr, dbl. gar. Adlts .Realtv DISTR. * Term 9 based on ..,.,,lty, like yard. Costa Mi!l&. Kida S50 cles.nin&' tee. 1994 tacU!tiea. Cloae In 1hops_ &: Unbtlievablr Living_ Only only , 67~-6992. • r fPART .oR ~LL nMEl 642 • 2171 $4S.0,tt OK, brk., S:Dl a munth. NO Pomona beach. Call for •PP t. 1 Br u.!'f $ISO.furn $180 * COROLIDO APTS * 30804 South Cout Hwy. No1v availablr 1n your ares. ! Se . H bo 21 FEE. 540-1720. l *:c-"•-'-;3-;;B:cr.""'H°'O°"U"°SE.-. -,1=200 I ::6#--'-.-.:17iool=..,,=,,.---cc---,, 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 2 Br. studios & street levels, La.iUna Beach 499-2206 All locations are rommer-l rving ar r area yn. $1.J).Lg I Br. bHns, nu cpl!, per month. No pets. l!MO + LRG Bachelor, furn util ALL UTIL lNCLUDED $185 & up. Penthouses $220. CHEAPIEll cral or fa ctory turn.ished by Sattler Mo~ttgage Co. drps, all r,.drc. tor ok. Pomona Avt. pd. 2 blks Big Corona. l Special Bonus; a silve;r. Dshwhr. trp1, dbl carport. -JRAOE UP TO Only .$18,000 tor the cutest, us. Qualified ptrson will be· 336 E. 1 h Strttt I Blue Beacon * 645-0111 t BR. Duplex. Garace Nr> Adlt. S120. Yrly. 642-852ll plattd candle 1nufftr is Pool. 67.1-3378 , cleanest 2 hr, li,j ba you'll comt di1tr ibu1or for our I Private money from $1500 3 BIJRM. + l&mily rm., fUll pets. Adulta, si.44/mo.' 773 Cost• Mes• )1'1Urs It yOll bring this 11d1 ,,~B~R,....~l "B~A~.~N-,-.,-p-,;-ni·.I • WATERFRONT 'r'HA", liGndI . .;1 FHAwon't 221Dtut 2 , candy I Nestles, Planlers. up for 1st &: 2nd loans. dlnin& rm built-Ins b k w. Wilson. 54.S.2802. I ::,-,-:,-o--=------when you v1~il ()Ur models. SZ2· /~n Brwn h !().~ ... u• Tootsie Rolls, ~I1lk Duds. Tru1t Daed C•nter Inc.. $390 e ~~nth. No''dE'lcE.--,t~B~luff~--"''----I SPAC. 1 Br. Crpts, drps, _.bib S. of S~n Diegn f r.vy 6.~2062: fllll ~ n ' ~ . . ' terms see It now. rte.). Vrry high income po. !323 N. Broadway, S.A. Newport 50-1720 ' 11 pool, nr shops. Util pd. 1884 on Br11ch, 1 blk W. on Holl :,gs..1719 pm, 213 ; · .. ln Ne:wport ~ach are1 in 3 Bednns. '?)-.bath in tip top 8 h". per 11eek spare time 543-8381 anytime 1 d Br: Jee bltns, cpls, "THE BLUFFS'' FURN. 2 Br. S145/mo. 1613 l 1714) 847-.5441 Cos ta Mes• ~;: LOOkllir for off water home I FRENCH QUARTERS trntial. You mu~t hs\·e 2 ro Loan Brokt!rs Since 1949 I ~2 ' E · 2147 VISTA LAREDO htonrovta Avt.., CM. 54s.ro36 to 16211 P11.ri<side Lanf'. ~ era.de for onr ot our 1100 condition. A:5SUme 6% int. lt:!ays or evesl. M t Blrps, children ok. 2 Sty t ho ho 3 Santa Ana Av,.. CM . i ~T.;~~~~~~~ l!iii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\ •: &erlt1 witertront homes. FHA loan or buy no down $2100 CASH REQUIRED or gages, ue Beacon * 645-0111 • . own ust mr. 543--8572 or 646-4710 BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS. NEW NEW N ;: Th" horn• h" 4 h<drooms, GI. ""'"'"' Co•~ ""' F" mo" intonnation wrl"· Trust Daad• 260 llOO utll pd. On wa"r m ::"~'" 2 11> ~lhs 1850 Sq, ./ AVL 00w.J • 2 Br furn. S1 4Jl.lt65. Q"i•t. pri,. P"io. £W •! 3 bath1 ....;th dock. land-location. "DISTRffit.rrOR OtVtSIO~ $23,000 DISCOUNT Laauna. Child & pet ok. A~aUac~' c ~an & ~3:i· Pool re-c rm rd Jocatio No 2 wardrobes, trplc. flress1ng :: 1capl~ I: aprinklen al· L•rwin R•alty, Inc. #23", P .. o. Box 1739. Co· Blue Be•con * 645-0111 wlll '1ra~~1::onatf'lr ;vr~ pet~ or chUdren. 646-~4 I rm, Jocked iep. gar. Pool. VILLA CORDOVA :-ready 1111talled. Pltaae call 21562 Brookhurst, H.B. vl,,.na, Cahl. 91722 • Include Emergency· Sacrif'lct choice LAGUNA-$135, utl pd. Nice atraight lease 11.t ~ per TOWNHOUSE E·side 2 Br. J~uln~e~l~·n rLm~. 11 blk \\', ~: PHhU T 1 a)'1or forHdo1bou1U1, 546-541\ anytime P ne number. $83,000 TD, pays S2.674 per bach nrbch, Avl now? Yrly. month. Submit your plan. 1~ Ba. Pool. No pets. $175. of Beach Blvrl .. on Slateri. QUIET-SAFE :: unt ngton •r r !ATTENTION--EST~LISHED 11.·ie. lihop 111 n10, at 9o/o . Sell with full 1"· Blue B•acon * 645-0111 Call loday 644·1133 Bkr. Cal! 6~6-6610 + ll42-f&4S !Near Back Bay) :.. Sales Corporation Shp r Cntr Moderate ren1 course; Strong buyers. (7141 40 U 't Ad It ;, 714: 146-1361 GOLFERS! Top Loe. Near many apts 32'5·2039 or ITI4l 327.g77~ e FAM ILIES Welcon1r-2 Br Fount•ln V1ll•Y LOVELY 3 bedroom SPAC· ~ BLK to Bellch. htllted A ni u l"'.'ll!!!"'!'!!!~'!f!!"""'"""' I 40 min from Lon& Beach 11.d-&. homes 673-6574 anytim1>. lncd yd. Encl rar. Pe11 ok. FOR isr 1 3 BR 11 IOUS. Nicp furn\tul'f!. Car· pool. Adult~ Only. No Pt-t~. partment Complel( .> e JUST LISTEDI jacenl to Sl.n Juan Capi&-$140 ' mmac • ·2 peted. Brick snack bar. Agt : 536-8874 Owntr : l & 2 BEDROOMS ·:{ • ,.~. 0 b A Business Business. ALA. R 1 I e ,.,3900 ha, new shag cpti & drps, Beautiful klrchtn. ChlldrPn 536-1",.., Enter111ining will be a pleas. ~ Oceanfront Oupl•x trano >-..VUntry u ' Opportunity 200 Opportu 'nlty 200 •n a 1 -frple. bltns. S240 mo . ....~ ''. 2 BR. ea.eh unit. N1~ly car· be11utilul 2 hr or 1 br .+-ROOMY Elalde 3 Br. 2 Ba, 968-9543 or ]13/241-1588. b !mall ptl~ wrlromf'. Rell· I BR, patio. p(l(ll. natural ure .. Decoratin~ this lovf'ly, , d•n ior-·• '"t 2 "· ~ 1 ~onahtt" ren!. 357 Vh:lori11, "·•m , , ·, 1 ·, n,,. N••r spt1.c1ou .. ~ apl \\:.'ill be a joy, peted " draped; lower unit ' •~"y "'' .,., ,.. b tns, 1ar. yd. kids/pets ok. Huntln•ton Baach "" .. • ~ wt•'-ic. Dbl, '""'· X!nt pie. patio, ,..;m pool. Only 111' • Apo. 4 hoopil•L S!Co "'"· ""'· "~"" "'"''' '"" -• -~ Good t•-· or ""ll 81 B 64 EXECUTrv II . BAYCLIFF MOTE-L 11616 C•m•ron "'2-'192 • Lock g.aragc.~ w/ Ir itor ' renlal hl.atory. ST7,500. • .. .,.U\N. ...... ... u• e1con * S.0111 E \'ln&·2TOO aq ' "" -., • Bm Ct'll e Lndry e Patios ,!, tf'Mfe tor Lonr Beach home . e \" Ilk K'd 2 B C t fl, $450. Hunti ......... n Crest I BR pool c port Utll'1· Raphael Realton &135 E. ·Ye e I I· r. p s, 4 hr .+-lamily"~ + lie *' LOW WEEKLY RATES "' . • • ar · 1 te~ e D\V/d1spl e Huge ga8 ,lvl' Sprln11:. Loni Beach 213; drpa:. stv!lra: yd. Pets. Sl ~S oUiet/dtn 2 trpl 3 b Kitchen, TV'a, mald servicr. pa!~. aose 1~ Be 1 ch · • Special sounclproofine, HA ~17 collect. You can get out of the RAT RACE. now~ You ALA Rentals • 645-3900 span i 1 h •1 ty 1 ~··i n n ra~ He11ed Poal. Sl 4 :>/mo. 536-l~ • Dee.p 2 rolor shag associated . ' ' '. BROKE RS-REALTORS :o?S W Balboo 67J0J66J ' r Q~!ANFRONT . DUPLEX 1 ciOod Incornt. J&:.5IXI ,' BURR WHITE ! Roaltor 675-4630 • •. 2901 ?-Jc vd., N.B. BY 01.1.· ·, ,.1rbor Vlt''>'' .. home, fioor p1a.n 3. l atory, · t BR. 2 bl, dln'is rm, lrplc, · own land , $43.950. 644-4218. ,..-OCEANFRONT DUPLEX $41,500 FOR.TIN a>. 61HOOll \VA TER.ntONT 3 BR. ' BA. . hbme, newly redec., on san. df beach. ,1,cm Month Bill I GrundY. Rltr. ·642--46J> I' 64"0 WATERFRbNT. Oocl<. bo&I lncm, 3 BR, lo pr\cl by ownr for quick ...ie. 6'&1900. * On canal • By OwMr .. C BR. + conv. den A: playnn. 3 Ba '1. Walle to beach. $48.~. 64~114 Alt. 4 PM CHAR.MlNC hilllk!e borne. w/'1ew. NitWpOt't HI a, Ca g t t t ! th t . t f th um· 2 ~ -~ · N 646-..126,'; Lagun• B•ach "an>CI~. drapes EXECUTIVE n e ou par o e une, mos o e e, + ~nor 3 Br. 2 Ba. bl1ns, courty .. ,.. patio. eu Beach CONDOMINIUM orallofthetime:lt'suptoyou. '""d"'"'""'·l"5. • Gartl•!d. C•lf *SUS CASITAS SWEEPING VIEW M':A1So.&MWoA,TEFrRomPAm$1'• Blu• Beacon* 645-0111 ll.1m2-l08ol or n4196l-389l OCEAN AND H LS -ln rtlesa Verde. Nrxt to Golf Bu.y your first U.t.1. Snack Shop vending ma~ Lrr nicely tum BAchelor & IL 2323 Eldt'n Avr CP.t · course. l story J BR, 2~ I chine ... and suddenJy you're in your own •RENTER'S DREAM 2 Br. •BR ~IVE Home-4 1 Br. F'umi.lhed model• Decorator furnished 1 bed· Ste Mgr. Ted \VOOcihrad baths, Int«rCOm. Spac.iou~ business. You can s tart with an investment 11c1~~,' fncd yd . Kids " pets. Activi:ies A;,,,~·~1:~· \,\.'~i optn dally. roopai~. ~~'.:;...~w. ~ra~s'.· ~;lwk 646-0032 dining lt livi nr room. ti's of $700 to $7,000. Give a few hours of con-<N b&r t l boll 2l\O Nt~'POr1 Blvd, °'1 .,.,.. """ Yours for U1e prier $3S,5IXI. . . ALA Rent11l1 e "45·3900 ' e c. car gar. t $25 Per We•k &. Up to be ach k 1own, Mature. INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY ·--· - \.\'Ill iell furnished. "'·-,, sc1ent1ous service each \veek. stocking ma· ipace. Sl90/mo. lit & last adult8. nn !)('ts. 1 ytar ADUJ.T LIVING ~ ch· d • th l h I $120-UU pd. Gurst cottqe + clean. fre.. 846-5972 alt BACHELOR & 1 BR. 3024 Club House Circle. • 1hn~s : •• 1' San ykoSuhre on e way o a w O e w/ pool. Nier area. Pet ok. 4 pm rxctpl wknd!. 'IV k mald aerv avail. leatt. 494.3839 11ft 5 pm. U: rtlx 2 hr Ii,. ha w/11:ar !'M-8199 for •PPt, Art Adi.ir. ·c a 1n o nae ops. Bl B * "'Ol l 4• VI · M Lid I I & 11tor. P 11 r k -11 k, 111. ue ••con -..-I TNHSE<pt, drp, ref, whr, 50 etorta, ('. . o I• I P rty 1 " Th It' ood b h IJ I ----------mosphen-. Fnct1 pallo, C/D, ncom• roJM -en s g · y r at race, e o extra n· • Fresh & Clean . 2 Br. 2 rteyr. rn&e. pool, Z Br Sl&I. * STUNNING GARDEN t/ BEAG!H AP'TS. Bache;lor wtr pd. 6.~fi...41'2(1 come a nd independenc e ! You will work with BA. fll>I. walk oce1n. s:m. 3 hr. Sl*>. 5"48-1405. APT · ll'J[ 1 & 2 Br. Pool. s200. l BR. S225, S250. 3201i67-K Victoria ~1 S I~ I UNITS COSTA MESA Only $11,700 dO'Wll Clean as a whistle Exa!llent rental arta Oou: to ah:>ppln.c t..ow vacany faclor nt7,000 ruu Price REALTORS stNCE 1944 673-4400 Attention Doctors:I a company that hes one of the most amazing ALA Rentals e 645-3900 &fG..6762. lnlant·smr dog ok $1~ k Nord. 642..4-091 or 548-l211 CORSICAN growth r ecords this country has ever seen. In l!JS..anrae. 2 Br. stvt-r. 1 BR. pa.u.o. pool, natural up. &15-5530 f'xt 22R · h th •• bo il $155-S R l ;o--~,-~---INEW 1·2·3 Bdrm. All blrn! a time w en e nation's economy has cpts/drpa. snrla ok. a'!! ct '"'·'· Nr ho~pital. HA P 2 BR. Newport Beach sha.s:: crpts, lfrp~. r!n!rd ,11r'. slum ped, Ussery Industries. and their dis-Blue Beicon * 645-0111 Av"il April•· S165 util pd. Ht11t~ pool. Al\l.dts, no p!ls t 'b t h d bl d I ) d dru 11676 Cameron 84~. ft kl 642 ~20 NEW 2 Br. 2 ha. fully c-tf'd, llitl. frpl c lri J Br '111 ml. rt uors as ou e, trp e, then qua • e LONGHotrok.lBr.,Ba. L B • ernn · .,,..~ ... E Soc Pl o lrg llv m1, eltt kit, sundk. · · nast aza. II ~un- pled their business and it's not even close to lfV, CID, ptt.s. Sl80. •gun1 ••ch I BR. $125 -2 BR. $140 Closr tn heh & •hOpa, s:m nower 1! IW<1s. ~1i:r at ~:z:i leveling oU! ALA R•nt•ls e 64$-3900 BRAND NEW 3 Br. 2 h•. ! Pnol. Blint. c.rpts. drp11. no mo. ~j10 l'olllttua. fi73-l4&4 . W. Steven!i. fl.J;1.2121 You can beat Lhe rat race for a profitable 2 + Den, pool. frpl, magnill.. ll\Jl top Homf'IOcffn View. rhlldrf'n, no peu. ll>"F" VTF.W apt. 1 lar.:f' room, DUPLEX. 2 e--r-. -,~,,-.-,-.1 business y,•lth TI~fE that's your own. ~nl Ot'tlan \'U, l..qun11. $17~ Crritldrpt. bllina, n pen I E. 17th Pl., C.M. lrplc, b11th. kitcMn, one p11.tio, crpr·n. flrp 'ri, hltns. Blue Beacon * 645-0l I I be.am•. frple, wet blr, ram DELUXE 1 BR I: Buh AptJ.. adutl '1nly, llTh incl util nr. SantR J\nll A\'r & lith Machine locations are secured for you; toll rm. 2-dtckL s.350/tnn m SJ..'i wkly & up. "1m. Incl 642--6889 Adulr1. Sti.i n1n :.1,11,.1101 free \VATS lines are available to discuss day-• otrrcH Girl Oean-2 Br. La. Mirada oc Owner: uttl. Mo. rAtes 1"rms avl. l hr tum-Pool. hlk lt'l octan. 2 BR. Up11airs g11rd~n ~pl to-day operations with U.l.l. p rofessionaJs; CID, kida ok. Sl40. 49W'm !198 E, Camino. ~~t Sln1lt Jllfuhs. SL~. 83.1-35.15 cpta, drp!i, nn Pf'I$ lArlry helpful financing plans are available to ex· ALA Rent ii• • "45-3900 lMMACULATE 3 BR, 2 BA . * * NICE 1 br duplex. nr &.4-~7 eve~ f1c1J. t\r. occ. s \ 3 o. pand your operation. S15.>--l Br. bltn1, lg d1n rm. '285. f'ire:pla~. yard, 1ar· adulti1. Sl15. \\'ATERFRONT 2 BR 1 BA 96]....lASfi gar. nice yd. Tot /prt -'ge. 499·1331, f94-..47~. Phoot S.l!Ml83..i w/util's, yrly mi 360i 2 BR. ul\f\Jm rlt'lwce 1011.'Tlh~. lf you're sincerely Interested ln something Blue Beacon * 64S.0111 Lido lilt • 1 BR. Garden •Pl. SW. Finley Appt M4-Z929 pvt p11.1 '" ir•r. l)('wty rtPr l11'. much better than the. usual rat race, write e OWNER p r 2 B 2 Encl iar. Quito! m1tul'! 2 Br. 2 Ni. Cloee to ocean. 11.dlrs. prt OK. S\65 mo. 3009 today. Include telephone number and refer· a. all b1tn?1 c;~· k~s/ CHARMING homt tor cplt" Adult. ~f~. MS-aOO':' s15.5 mo ·tn J u-"'". un·r Coohdg,_ ;i1~13.3 · · • or 2 bathe.Ion. One )'tar '"' J...11.Jl -"---ences. pet~. S160. or lonsf'r le.1H $37S mo 11 YoU ail tn Uw claJsuttd ~P.,.d_._>;_i..'98.1_7.'--,.-,----I • 2 BDR~t ['JUPLEX .-~, ':~:::.;r'"~ ~ Ussery lnduslrles. In<. e 1195 Empire Cen· ALA Rontals • 645-l900 K" Brllttn<..;,,, R11r: SECTION! Someono 1, Nowport Holghts CPTS ~ ~,1;;i ,; 1i" MO. DAILY PILOT Cla.ulftfd For Fut resuJtl .. Call ''The lral • DaUas. Texas 75247 e $11G-l Br. •10\'t, retr!r. cp11. 67 5--0 111 · M<:tion fl;rW'I Hot Une'' pally Pilot I I drps, l !'Ilk hrhl DAILY PILOT fOr •ction! wttetl!nc for It. D ! a I CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Acllt~. l BR. u~rrl l'Jr1 rk frplr wlw , _________ ,_Oualfied !1••••••~•1£!:1.~•~4a8~2A~·-·•••l llu• Beacon * 645-0lll Call 6"2$71" Saw.! ~ toda_yJ no prts.. Lg kit. $13!"1-Sl!iO. bltn~ bt'111n rt'll pat~ i1m' 548-7il&1 f"or Wt. 5 Medic&J Suite .. c.~f. ror desalt• .•. call Dlnta ~a1ty Co. 6'2-6560 .• 2421 E. 16th St. NB . ~1801 l Art!.! Yr~rly 6.t2-1i~ • .. Monday, March 29, l.971 D.111.Y PILOT SEE' * l'ONDERQUS ELEPHANTS *DARING AERIALISTS * FUNl'fY CLOWNS • • *BRAWNY BEARS HEY KIDS HERE COMES TiiE Find Your Name. 20 OF THE BEST CIRCUS ACTS IN THE WORLD FR E E ONE DAY ONLY, SATURDAY, APRIL 3 2:30 OR 8:00 P.M. ROYAL INTERNATIONAL If your nomo 11 llllo<I I~ • spoclol N-tt could oppoor under ony cl1111lflc .. lon, so look at them al~ 60-5'71, Extenaion 314, between t a.m. and 1 p.m. to make arranoement1 to pick up your tlckoto ol •ny convenient DAILY PILOT office. ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS-COSTA MESA Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT ~ ...... Room• Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 1-'-------365 Apt. Unfum. Cost• M••• Costa Mesa * $170 * ORLEANS APTS. 3 Br, l~ Ra, patio blt·lns, I crpts, drps. Ask about our ADULTS ONLY rli5COunt plan. 88o Center I 2 & 3 BR A all Pri St 642.8340 . v . vate pa· • tk:.I, pool -indiv. Iaundry fac. 1 &. 2 BR. $150 & $170. (Nr. Orange Co. Airport: Tus- lncldg util. Adults only, ti~ at 11th SI; nr, Westc.tillJ. oo pets, 241 Avocado, CM. .......,, 1741 Tustin, Costa Mesa 1.fgr. f.tn. Tbo!Dpsori 642.4641 !Ml!Ic!'S Glll'lglST 1610 SANTA ANA AVE. CM · 2 BWROOMS w I b a th• • From 300 sq. ft. 35c Ml tt. cook i n1 &: I au nd r Y 675,.2464 or 54.1.-5032 MODERN 2 Br, 2 Ba Sl""'° !!!I !!!I !!!I !!!I pr!vtlog,., 10< co 11 e <' apt, new ept, nr 9Chls, bltm, l'!!!I !KILT atudents. Univ Park, Bu1Jne1s Rent•I .44.J Pot ok. $160. 84~l"6 13>/wk. 833-2I4' PRIME LOCATIONS D•n• Point COlLEGE or wotkin&: Fri E, 17th St., Coala Mesa •••1n !11!!1 •1•'lm1 •T Ba1boa bl., 1ht kit " TV llal Sq. lt. commercial blda. s~r.~l~ £.~~ •M I A I A M Bl M ~CE tele. $65/mo • up. with parkina:. $XKl ft.lo, 837-5370 NI roo111, rood loc. con-Bmadwa.y, l.qu.'11. Beach Cott• Men East Bluff $60. 54&-5998; betr S pm, Nr. Coast Hwy. $500 Mo. 673-0289 Realonomlcs Bkr. 615-6100 2 Uni}-5:-2 Br ea. l Ba, Crpts, citi>s, bltns, sngl gar, 1 child ok, no pets. $150 &. $145/mo. 516--9537 ~::::~:::==i~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~ii~;;;;;;;;~lrgearu~al~homo~~·~k:ltoh~.~p~rl~v;U;.1 1850 Sq. ft. store with parklna: -L-.-.-,-,y-Spo_n_l_s_h_D_o_c_o_r_ NEWPORT BEACH I I~ I J[W) ~ roRN. sleepina: rm, ma.le SUITES Available: 1761 2 THE fabulow: Symbra•Ettt bra ii now in )'Ot.lr ..,.... E~ tht small without peddlna: -beautifttl a.net rnodlfin u. bill 1ll\lft while te'lievfns lhouJdn' •trap attain. In tad t}w; Symbra•Ette bra t. • 1upremely comfortah&t yu.i don 't even feel that )QI haV4! a bra on! You won't kmw )'OUJ'lleit -)'OU will be more attractiw , more proportioned-an fllttnty new )'OU. Aak to be titted today! Call f or ap- pointment. 540-2999 CLOSE , TO beach & shop- ping. Blt-in range, w/w crpting, drps, adlls, no pets. 548-42-lfl. FROM $155 VIiie Granade Apts. Ap.rtrmnt1farRd w ~fwfWlt ~-'•''•"•~•"•"•'•~-· .... ~~~ ~s$.~~;ek. Eves & Beach Blvd, H.B. Parkin;:: Gas and Water included FOUf' bedrooms with balcon·l'·mmmmmm;:;· ~';; Air cond: Heat In 1: 2 Bedrooms le-. above & -.1ow. Graclouaj l ••••••••• FURN room in prlv. home, Cal'(letJn&: J anitorial ~rv. * FVLLY IJCENSED *· Built-ins • Air Cond living &: quiet svrrounding Apt. Unfum. 365 Aptt., Apts., Costa f.teu; kltch. privU ~;:;,. Suite 8 or call Renowned Hindu Spiritualist Carpets e Drapes lot family with llhildrf'n. · __ F_u_'"-·,.•_r_u_n_fu_•_•_._3_1_0 _,;F::_u::r::n::·.,;•::r:,:U::'.,'.'.nf~u'.!m!::,. ~3~70'./~P'o1"0';;;· ,..N_r.;;OCCJbi~·,-"-""'-;1~"':;-'--;,;: ==~-----Advice on all mattttt. Bach. apt, pUy fllrn'd. util's Enclosed garages Near Corona del Mar }ijgh Newport Beach :: ROOM w/bath pvt en-SMAU. grocery 51Dtt for Love, Marrlqe:, Bulnua: pd. Pre.f single. r.12. ~8-3623, Pool & Recreation Room School. Fireplace, wet bar &/,;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= General Coste Mesa trance. No cooking. ~-blk rent Grocery equip for 1ale. Readinp fiwn 1 dlyll a· !112-9197 160 W. Wilson 642-7373 built.In kitchen appliances. MARINER SQUARE ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;; ·;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;/~'°;.-;":bo~a~c~hi;;. ~l'IS~-~61>-0~~m~;-;:;:-$65 a mo. ll.B. area. week, 10 Lm. tD 10 p.m. 2 BR, ll,fl BA, sharp. Crpts, 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-29!11 APARTMENTS • e $15 PER wk up w/ kl!. ~-61-T1, ~1983, ( 213) 3ll N. El Camino Real, d ,~ * II30 UP* Coldwell Bank" & Co. . PALM MESA APTS. * * * * '" k ..:-==::;,===--San Clemente rps . .uuu sq. ft. Available GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROO~t? u ...... ....1n .. A-nt 54.1-5271 Announces the ~vail,abillty of El p M • ......, wee up Apls. f.10TEL now, $165 mo. 545--0718, il Go .,_,..,.. •• '& .. -2 & 3 BR units tor adultii; uerto ••• Apt1 548-9755 COMMERCIAL--·=~'=9'-='9'°1311",""'.......,,.==::.::=~ no answer. 835-44Z7 rgeous, park-like setting. e NEW DELUXE e • • • * !,',::.::=------rN'DUS'TRIAL o··-Closed garages for max-desiring to live amidst beau. 1 BR unlw.1 ··•••·•• $135.00 d NICE room tor work.Ina: man ""'-'vVER DISCOVERY e QUIET. Adults. 'Z BR. lmumsecurity.Quietstreel. 3BR,2BAAptfo~leud~-Incl ty by the sea in the ptt• lBRfurn ..•.••.•••• $149.50 1 Ba room Apt•. w/ or w/o cook'1 prtvil. *~~i!"e~~~~* In ~OW:!. No peli. Drp.~, crpts , Adults. no pets. 2020 spac. master swte, ID rm tiaious Weslclilf area of Bachelors Furnlshe<i I & . £.gide, CM. &ll-0326 ~ dsh\vhr, healed PQ"I. lill>. Fullerton Ave (Harbor to & dbl garagc, au!o door Newport Beach. from Sl.35 130 up incl. utilities Also G H Sl'ORE 20 :it 54 for lease. Call Now • No ObUptlon 2295 Pacillc A\'e, C~f. Bay, then So. until 2 bib opener avail. Pool & Re<:. FROM $230 2 BR aplll t;l75 mo. furn. Pool & Recreation U.lt ome 4l5 Available ?.1ay 1. $230. 333 (n4) 83S-Q3S 5-ls-6878 or 642-4429 So. of Newport Bl\'d.) area. For lnfonn&tion phone Mt. mo.Imo. OK area. Quiet Environment.I---------E. 17th st., CM. 645-2450 The Award Wi:nnlns Sav . • Newly Decorated 642-8690 e $265 e Robert M. Buckley, f.lanag-e PCX>L Off street parking. No Qill. PRIVATE room w/bath In STORE bld.<t 3303 Npt Blvd. Voge 0.monstrUien Quiet l •· 2 BR's. Gar & Park·Lo'ko Surround1'ng 86.) Amigos W~. NB er, at (n4} 645.02.ll or write • SAUNA dren, no pets. lleensed KUegt Mm• tor &m· 96o 1/f. (No rt.. .. -e). Profn&lonaJ ~ M···~ b e JACU""l bulatory senior citizens. ....._. pool. Crp!s, drps. Adults QUIET. DELUXE l"lLL!AM--WAL-TEYRS CO/ to The Office ol the Man-~ l95S-l96l Ma..,, .. Ave. Also iteml-privatl! room tor 67'>1601 or (1) 286-n44 teachers. Sun Ii: Mon •I 8 onJy, no pets. &l2-&>t'Z 1-2 & 3 BR APTS • a.fer, Mariner Square Apts, [l!!56l!!!!M!!!!.,.!!!!O.!!!! • ..,.,San..,•.,•,.•,.""., Costa r..ft':a lady, avail April lsl, Lge Industrial Rental 450 PM. Yoea Center, 4f3i .E: 2 Br. Unfum Apt. Stove & Prv patios * Hid Pools TOWNHOUSE delxe 2 Br, 1214 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal. yard &: patio, good food, 17th St., C.M. &lli-32SL relrig incl'd. Garage. Pool. Nr shop"g * Ad\Jlts only 2~l Ba, bllns, trpl, patio, 92664· Coron• del Mer e 1 Br. Heated pool,. No amgenlaJ atmosphett. C.M. SMALL UNITS SINGLE? WIDOWED? All util pd. Adlts only, no MARTINIQUE APTS. Henc g 1 _ar. Quiet~ 6T"':>-5033h PARK NEWPORT-care tree fURN. 1-Br., frpl. patio. p!!ts. Crpta, dtps, 126 Mocte area. 548-5225 COSTA MESA * Divorced Over 21 ;I pet~. f.fgr. No. 9, 383 W. 1n7 Santa Ana Ave .. CM un 1ngton uuac llvg overlkg the v.iater. 7 Close to bl!ech. Sl85 Mo. Vista Ave, CM. &U-5790 Rentals to Shere 430 ;95. & $167. Per Month Oklest k Jaraest. For a , Wilson SL ~1gr. Apt 113 &IS.5542 WALK TO BEACH!! pools, 7 tennis cts $7fl0,000 UN1''., new 2 t!!R., bltns., Huntington Beech -FREE RM & BOARD Balboa Immediate Occupancy explanatory meuqe 24 brw 2 BR apt (4-plex in x!nl LOVELY NEW I & 7 BR's. Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 Uc~~~~ dis~:· hot~~:· extra ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;I I~le in exchangl! for a;ood New 6500 llJ. tt. unit, !8th A a day. 5'1l-9991 Mesa Verde loc). Responsi-2 BR, 2 ba • Crpts. drps, Crpts, drps, dshwashers. sty Townhouses. Lee. kit, sharp, fpl, nice yd. :$250 ON BEACH I, cooking cook'g & good com-"(11tUer, ll0-220 power, IS"P"I"RlW='°AL~"'&-cw-,-,.-..,.~,..1 ble party can rent for blln range & lreezer & 709 Palm e 847-3957 pr. pat or bal subtrn parkg Don Franklin, RJtr. S7J..2'lZ2 pany. Widow will share hm P enty ol parking. Giv-e advice on love, ma.r- $140/mo. Ph: 962-9541 aft refrig. Tri·plex, front apt. ---------1 opt maid ser, cptJ. drps. w/older "''">man who doet1 See: Robert Natttt!s, Rltr. rlqe A buslnni. 137...gne, 6 pm No children. Free rent until Children Welcome Just N. of Fashion Ial at Coste Mes• 2 BR •• .••••• From $235 not need pay. Employment =='°"=ta:;,,:M::;•:,;•,::•...:.642-=-:11;;85~..,. I 1133 &uth.wmem A•·•., 2 BR east _ side, walk to April 1st. $UIS, SfiO cleaning lmmac. ' Br. 3 Ba. Stndlo Jamboree & San Jooquin Furniture AvallabJe elsewhere OK. Rel'a req'd. 7500 gq ft-All power, heat, 1.,,L,.,.A.,·===-=---I i;hops. Crpls, refrig, stove, deposit. 2089 Garden Ln, apt. 4-p!e:ic. Prlv. patio. Hil!s Rd. 644-1!0> for ll!as-BAY MEADOW APTS. Ca1:pets.drapes.dishwasher 675-7273 lights, partttiona • 1loon ALCOHOLICS A11orQrrnou1. pool , gar. $150. 5'~l565 C.f.f. Apl A. Ctpts,Cdrp.s, bllns. Lrz play, _iog"'7i 7 n_ro_. =-=-~-heated pool-sauna.s-tennil 1-.~~.~S~IN~G~L~E~y-oun_•_m_•_•I llnlsbed. 1535 Monrovia, Phone Ml-771.T or write to LRG d" 1 2 8 area. ul-de-sac st. No pets.1· rec room-ocean views • ...... N.B. Call 645-(1770 10X42 lurn trailtr, i..'C apts, 140 r, 17871 Bell Circle. 842.3677. A New Way To Liv• Beam ~ilings, paneling, prlv. to share 2 BR Lquna Sch P. 0 . Box 1223 Colt& Me1&. in park on Bristol. Htd Pool. Newly dee. Play in Newport Beach patios, ttcreation facilities. pa~;1~i:,n£: v \ e w h 0 m 4! w / u n. Rent els Wented 460 DANCE le1110n1: Lat1n • * 548-0465 * yd. Cptd. o,... BllM. P•tio, BEACHBLUFF Aph OAKWOOD GARDEN AU Adu!~. oo pot" HUNTINGTON dentandlng umo, 1100 mo. Amulcan. Inbod0Cla!7 oft. 2 BR. hrdwd floors "'aler Child. ok. NE\V 2 &. 3 BR., 2 BA, dish-APARTMENTS * Bachelor Apt $110 * Rkhard, 497-1549 It no WANT 1 BR unturn house er•• -•hr. ~ ~-• 1998 1-1 1 A 642-6344 washers pool r 8231 R. or duplex, l story. Mlddll!, .--.~,..,_~=.-·-·~-·---=I pd. $135 mo. 1093 Wallace, 22 ape ve. Ell;•. ,,'A.,0~·0,"84~1:-=.7 On 16th Street btwn * 2 B from $l65 * PACIFIC ~all ~~:.'•.ave message, wUI aa;e lady, Adulta only, oo'Socl•I Clu'-,., (cor Hamilton) 14 College Ave. 64&-062'l "" o-u...,..,' ....-J Irvine and Dover Dr. 711 OCEAN '" .,...... children. 642-3486 -- 2 BR, l~; BA, cpts, dt11s. Wll.SON GARDEN APTS. I OIEZ ORO AP'I'S (714) 642.8170 387 ~·Bay S~1Cbdt~ ~; (TI4) ~~87 H.B. 2 ROOM~1ATES wanted, yr. PROFESS. woman, alone, ...._,E n!ff'n .. 1 ....,. GROUP patio, no pets, $17.5 mo incl 2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee. 8234; Atlanta. 1-2 BR. Pool. SEACLIFF !of A ts 2 &: ewport v · ,., • Ole""""" 10 am-6 pm Dally ly 403 No. Bayfront, ~-10 ..,,,,., ..... ,.,. ti! ·~A ca rlll "•" oon~ New cpt&/drps. Spac Pnvate Garage. WB.liber. · anor P · of 19th Sll. -... ~ Island Cltan cul M \\'anti lfl. untum apt or ot contemporary people .• u · <>-l>r-b o. ;,no-oou.) grounds. Adlt&, no pets. dryers. 53&-a03S ~2727 Br,. cpts~ drps, .bitng, pool. CALL 64&-007l \VILLIAM WALTERS CO · · ove tn oondo ln Cd.1\1 or Btutts. Partiei eve!')' Frl A Sat. 1 BR. apt $135 w I slove, 1--'---"--"=' =-'-'"'--' pnv pat)(), studio type 1\2 • April 1. $l35 mo. 675--0853 84Ul21 $l41) I mo. 228l Fountain 2 BR. Closed garage, Patio Ba. Child ok. 548-2682' ~~"" RING BROS. AnDOunce1 z BR 11·· 3 B "ml p WORKING girl would like i;'';ii=-=--;=--:,.-,.,..-· I Non-members welcome n4! l"l!trig. Util paid. Adlts, no Way E. (Harbor_ turn w. ChlJ•-& ll ~ · ;>;!, r, ~ up. a. 1 ha Working a;irl age 22, looking 539--1185 pets. 820 Cen~r SI. 642-SMX area. w"C"n sma pet PlacenUa. Ask about ouc Apts. Now Available tlo. Pool. Otlldrrn ok. o 1 . tt apt w/11ame. Call [~~~~~~~~~~I on Wilson). ok. ;140. 842-..8300 discount. MEDITERRANEAN MORA KAI Apla, 18881 !-Iota Nanci 642-496Q ext 241, 9-5 for same to !hare ipac. 3 BR I; ~~~:. ~[;~:i~~~e~fc~~ci HARBOR GREENS 2 BR apt, 3 blks from ocean. 1 BR, nr beach, year Je&M, VILLAGE Kai Ln, % bJk E. of Beacb, i='p"m=~--~---I =~;·:,;,.Ph Linda, 6ts.m22 ok. Ph. 64&-8153 GARDEN' &: gnjo10 APTS $165 mo. Avail Mar. 20th. No pels, immed occupancy, 2400 Harbor Blvd. o!f Garfield. 962-8994. SHARE my waterfront home ............. Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. lrom $110. 536-lno. $135. 5-18-7840 btwn 5 &: 7 Co~ta Mesa. 1----------1 wfdock. Man 30-f,Q years. SINGLE GARAGE LRG 1 Br. Apt. Garage. 2700 p t W CM DELUXE l & 2 Br. walk pm (714) 557-8020 Legune B•ach S150/mo. 6'1S-4331. FOR ~RAGE Lndry. t;125/ mo. furn $13."i. e erson ay. · · 'l='~=--~~~~-l -~="""~=~=--1 • 548-0152 • woman pret'd. Inq. 1922-B 54S-0370 lo bch. Adults. $135 & up. BRAND new 3 br. 2 ba NASSAU PALMS FURN BachtJor apt. ~an LADY to share her Joval.t' 2 Found (frM eds) Wallace. a.18-6518, 838-0038 2 BR. FROM 1150 220 121.h St or 219 15th St. duplex • 6 doors lG ocean. Summertime near the beach. view. $175. Unfurn 2 Br. Br. 2 Ba. apt, C.M. w/aame _M_l_•<_. __ R_•_n_t•_l;.,• ___ 46.;.;;5 :::::°"':-.,.-,--.,.,,,,.,,.,,.1 / $210 Oce GREY • k1&'e cat V SPACIOUS, clean l Br. 2 COMPLETELY RE DEC, Huntington Beach Yrly$300 mo. 675-8231 1 l< 2 Br. apts. Hid pool. Dr\· ,,,~n~~ew4.~1005933ctUil-54-5-0_1'9c_ ______ LOCKED, fe~ ltonp for PaJoma Dr. C.M. Ba, crptz;, di..-.s, encl CLEAN & COZY FAMILY LG 2 BR studio 11h BA Singles can 1hare. Jl40 to ve, ..._ · .,...... G f R 435 boe.t1 or campen. 50c per ·--o • UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. 3 BR townhouse wftrplc, . . ' 11~ N I •-h areg11 or ent U'fO"VU• gara~.S175.Adulls.E.18th f 1 &: 1. ~!s Blk crpts, drps, bltns & DW, ""· ewpor .... ec foot, per month. Call =ru=JL~---.-~=-,,~•--v-~-~-·I St. 5'16-3776 or 540-4431 VILl..A rt1ESA APTS pa 10• poo re ng. near Hoag Hospital. $185. 1T1 E. 22nd St, CM LOCK.ED 1arages It pav~ 642-6560 -v-.....,..,. .: •"'Y' n 9 w. Wilson 646-1251 from Brookhun;~/Adams 642-4.387 &42--tm 642--3&45 :>41-95Ei6 VISTA DEL MESA oil-at. park'&' •p•ce. -'.-:7."::":::--==""'--·I PY Jn OIM LG 2 BR, ltt Ba studio Shopng Cir. 5 mtn trom A t t calJ away -64i-5678 ~1 apt, No pets, families only. AVAIL Now -2 Br. all heh. Adults or over 10, baby * UDO ISLE-Waterfront EXCITING furn t BR apt par men 1 Suitable for 1ml boat Fut results: are Just a·-::-,=-.-,==-,--~--! Priv patio. 726 Joann St. extras. Pool. Kids ok. Sl3!1 OK. $195. da)'! 547-5406 eves LARGE 3 Br. 2 Bath. $125. Pvt deck, pooJ Crp!s, 1 & 2 BR. Fum & Unf. Dish· camper, or personal p,.;_ DAILY Pn.or 1t1r action! $140 & $150. Furn avail. 17431 968-9319. $425/mo lease. 6'7?r8886 dt11s. bltns, walk tO town. washeT • Stove and Retrig • perly. A & B Keelson Ln. 9fiS..'1510, 2 B 2 Ba ,.._ ..1-r 145 E. lBlh, C.M. 548-!1949 Shag crpt'g·Lrg Rec center. 177 E. 22nd St., CM. * * * * * * l mo's FREE RENT OCEANFRONT Vu. Sundeck. r. · '-''t'ts, ..... ,,.,._ Occupancy in March 642--3645 e 675-6044 $165. 2 Br. l'i Ba. Ltg, quiet, 847-4856 Beach. Smoglree. New~r bltns, gar. 4249 Hilaria. eve11 btwn 5 & 6. RENT Starl!l $155 ,.------------------.! t'lean. GE ku., 2 car xar. MODERN 2 BR with glass dlx 2 Br. bltns, cpb, drps, $175. For appl. 54t)...00'33 2 BR $125 unturn; $145 furn . Tustin & Mes• Drive FOR motor home•, trailer, Adlts. ~32 walled liv rm, beamed cell-patio, Jndry, gar, nr 11hops GOLD Medallion 2 Br, 2 Families -...·elcon1e. Bl G * 545-4155 * furn .• boat, etc. 1652 Npl . 2 BR. 2 BA, trplc. Upstairs. ings, very large patkl, $150. & pier. $165. Adlts, baby Ba, cpts, drps, bllns. patios, SUR APTS, 20 4 3-2 0 4 9 <:'.:O'.:";c:c:---'-'--·l.,;B::_:t;:vd'.!,_:C:;•:::t._:6'::"::;:21m~,_::6'~,_::S'.'.1~06 New cpt. drp~. adults, m On E. 16th St. See Mgr ok. 536--2131 encl gar. $175. 54&-3708 Wallace St. Phone 54&-1301 Santa Ana Office Rental 440 Trader's Paradise pel'I. $160. Eves 540-0896, at 124 E. ~St., CM. * FRESH AIR Newport Heights l2aO sq II lg 2 Br, l~S Ba, LAS PALOMAS-· D "'" 25"0 2 B tud ' 1" n. l utl rm for wh/dr, patio, SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY a)'! .nu-j • r s JO, ~ °"'• cp I, Walk 3 blks to BeaC'b! • S16lJ.2 BR. 2 Ba. studio • BEAUTIF'UL 1 & 2 BR. drps, patio, children ok Nr Beaut. big 3 BR apt w/w triplex. Patio. Gar. Bltns. gar, cptldp. Sl6.'i. S.16-8688 Contemporary Garden Apu.;. schl & shop'g. $l63. J003 crpl• drps bllns xce I c d ,,. 3 APARTMENT'S l-2-3 room, Up to 3,000 IQ. Brand new trom S140 ft office 1ultee. Immed. oo- 1 & 2 BR. fllrn.-unlurnished cupancy. Orall&'.e County. w I ! h dishwasher. Heatf'd /.lrport lrv1nt Commere- pool & lanai. Cenlral ps Complex, adj. Alrporter healing & air-conditioning. Hotel &: Restaurant, banks, Ga.~ & water paid. Private San Diego &: N'pt Fwys. patiOtl. Color choice shag UNCROWDED PARKING Fillmore \\'ay. 54&--0714 · ' ' e P pl!, rps. r 708 Patios, fr p 1 cg , pool. retrig. S225. No pel'I. SJ&.1n1 2 8 U F 1 ;145-$160. Call 546-5163 2 BR UTIL'S PD r pper. rpr. gtll', 1 $lj(). 548.8333, 646-2544 N~ Huntington Harbour patio, laundry, Adults, oo SHARP lge BR, Cpl, Drps, Triplex • quiet area. Lrg I pets. $170 mo. 642-3781 Bltns, quiet bldg, No pels. NEWLY redecorated studio, Br • $140, 3 BR . $140. Pets San Cloment• $130. 540-9722 2 BR, 11h ba. nr shopping ok. ITI4) 846-0071. _,::c;..;;;;.:;.:.;;_ __ _ 2 BR, 1~¥ Ba. Studio. D1-ps, & schools, $165. 546-1753 2 Br apt-w/w, drp&, bltnt1, BRAND NEW lux. 2 ~r. cpts. bltns. No pets. Nr. * NICE lrg 3 Bdrm • redec-dis ....... 01, laundry •p•-. No 2 Ba, 1100 sq, ft._ Qu_ <I OCC. $145. 557-7195 orated. 657 Plumer St. pe~z-.8578 for into~" cul-de-aac. Panoramic view EASfSIDE 2 Br. bltns, * Call 642-5392 * of ocean. Adults only SUIO. • LARGE 2 Br, c:rp1s. drps, 492---2259. dshwhr, crpta, drps, encl 3 BR, 2 ba, newly redecor. RIO, child ok. $135. Nol's'°"""'""------ gar, priv palio. &l:J.-2939 New crpts/drps. b It n a. pets. Call 968-0064 •nta Ana ENJOY privacy'! ~IUXe l patio. $165 mo. &1H647 M1s1 Verde Br, bltns, tt.frig. cpt/drp. 2 BR duplex • Rettig, crpt5, I :...;;;;.;;...:;.:...;;.: _____ I , ""'::';.· ..:bal:..c"-962-l:c..:.c':::ao:._ ___ 1 drps. gar, patib. Children 2 Br. New Cl1'f1, drp1. c\O!ed 1-& pel ok. $Hi0/mo. 962-6379 gar, near lhop'g. Adults. 1 Br. Frplc. Beam (!{'ii, no pet1. $145. 64>-3515 patkls, ut\I lncl'd $1'18. • •. a Daily Pilot Clusifl@d Sell the old atuft Ytar\y, l adult. 642-SSro Ad. 642--56i8 Buy the new i;turt S©~lA-'£"B2rS" The Punle with fhe Built-In ChucHe •r='°=rnb~~:: ,., ..... ~~--'°"' to form four $l'mpl• words.. I iyi"i·Et1 I ~:_.:;lc.=Ec.-"K_:;E..;;Hc.,...11 ~ . I I I I _ ~1 I CAHKK Ii • I I I I • Wisdom: 1r1 useless to·get tnto a spraying contest with L ATS U E 3·14 I~ -,a-. • I I I' I I 8 c-• .. '"" •h""'· q;oood by filling ,,, tfHt mining WOl'd you ~·'°9 tRlfl\ ltep No. 3 bebt. $ Pl!NT NlmEUD UIT!RS IN lHESE SQUARES A UNICRAM111£ ABOV! lEffiRS W 10 GfT ANSWEt 1·rl'rr1 111111 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 CAN'T BE BEAT SlNGLE STORY South Sea Atmosphere 2 BR. -2 BATH carp.tg • .i,.. Air CbndlUoned PrtvUe Patiol HEATED POOL Plenty of lawn Carport I: Stora&e HIDDEN VIl.LAGE GARDEN APTS. 2500 South Salta San.ta Ana ~ 54!).1S25 VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn. Dishwaaher • color coord.lnat- ed appllancea • plu5b aha& carpet • choice or 2 color .cheme1 • 2 bAtha • 1tall &bowen • mlmlttd ward. robe doors • Indirect tJ.a.bt. ln£: tn kitchen • breaktast bar -huge private fenced Ntt\O • plush landscaplna; • brick Bar-8.Q'1 -tara:e heal- ed pnnlJ A llu1aJ , 3101 So. Brlotol 51. (%Ml. N. of So. Coast Plalll S•nt• An• PHONE: 557-8200 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT carpeting. WWES'J' RATES Santa Ana ~ Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr. 1400 W1!11f Warner Ave. Rm. 8, Newport Beach North ot: South Coast Plaza 8J3.3223 Courtesy to Broken Shopping Center & near San AVAlLABl.E for immediate Diego & Newport Freeways. o c c u p a. n c y , Slibleue Conveniently located corner pleasant 4 room 1ulte. 1>43 36:5' lllndy beachfront be- twttn San Clemt"nte &: Dana Pt, priced 50% below mkt., tr. equity for ind ., conun., inc., or TDs. 4944125. P.0.0. l'IOU' + 8 U apt. Nr. Forum in Inalewood. $140000, Trade for Orange WANT AD 642-5678 Warner & Bristol. \Ye!tclllf Or., Suite 200, West llff Newport Beach. &IZ-7690 or c see bu!ldl~ manager. DELUXE ' Br. w .. tcl .. loc. DESK SPACE Co. Quinlan! R•alty 6'2-2991 Pool. Bltns. No leaM. Unt 1871 Harbor Bl., Coata Mesa sno. Furn $245. &12-627.r. 222 Forest A venus Cal 28' 111.ilboat, racer, Joad- ApFt,., U 1 370 ApFts., U " 370 Lo gune Beech ed, outboanl, diniby, boat urn. or n um. urn •. or n111rn. '9f.!H6& bath, pier avall. $9M vallH!'. H ntl ... -n --L Huntlnnton Beach Want sell<0nld travel tnil-u .. .,.on ~•llOll .. ., BEAUTIF1IL 3 room oHlce er. Owner 49t-046l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iuite w I ktlehenell~. Ideal tor archilecl, t n s u ra n c e 19' F1eetwood trailer, stove, agent, realtor, 4!tc. On Icebox. hot water heater. Monrovia St. In N. B . wllll heater. Sleeps 5. ;goo at the beach ••• •i-'-350~/llOO==pe-'="'°~·-o..,_.=-""-1 valu-e, will take. car or G 9/10 o f a mile from th• beech 11 DESK SPACE truck Jn trade. 8'12""'8 ,ClSCl "'Aecreetlon City" with 2 ewlmmlng 305 No. El Camino Reel 27' Chris Craft cab. cniJg,, del pools, putting green, gym, volleyball Son Clement• twin 11Crew, ll.llly eqpd, tor u na, b llllard room, club· C9J.4QI camper bUl! or late mod. ear Sol house. On or two bedroome, fur-1050' 6 ROOM IU!te, New ~ ~h.~' ::~~4 nlshed and nfurnlehed, private drps, Paint, Crpt, Atr cond, All utll &: cl~anlna; tetV. 8 patio, fireplace In two bedroom, Lota of alau. 40c per n. Equity, Or Co. Raw land ti: elevator1, dl1hwe1her11 carpet• 6T"~ randt, ll1t' Westun ranch. d d I d I 1..:.c:.,:::::,=~~---I A!Jo portion for c1un die._ en rapes, no eeae, a u ti only, ell a:>RONA DEL MAR ert • Jl<IM N. Mkhwa:t. utllltle1 except llghtt paid, pet1 1 & 2 Room ottice •paca Prtn only ~. ~ •cceplod. From $145. • .. 11. OWNER • 613~ ---'----- j 3700 NEWPORT BLVD. NB 3 BR hon'14!, Mua Vmlt. 1 S., 1-1 8 k e ON TilE BAY e S'lCKO equity. Want view lot ~ ~. t 2 -roo hul'lt St. 67>2464 « 541-5031 in l.quna Beach, Country· ....... Hundngton Bt1ch, * NEWPORT BEAOI CIVIC' mar11 preferred. 4x l (714) 982..-&3 Center on Npt Blvd. 310 sq. C..11: 545-fi084 A•k for It. 675-1601 or fl> 286-TI4t Whaldo)'OllbavetotndeT ,....-+.., Commander Rettlng 01'"F1CE •pace tor rent • Wit II beni -tn On.nee 'lldcNfl m W. 19th SI. Cofita ~fe1&. County'• lalPf{ rtad tracl Phone ~3971 lor appt. lnc P»t,.su.56il Si!LLING Your bol\IT "List" with ...... 11 It fut. o.JJ, * * Pl.lot Cl .. ltied. fU.6671 * lines times dollars Trade 3 BR, 2 t., Cotta Me1111. house, $9COl equjQo. FOR unlmproved &pt er commerclal lot. * 56-7885 * I Yr. old Great Dant. Male brind14!. Papen-AJCC.S ien. ped.--c:hamp. atock. Inc. doc hse. Trd. lot old car, lml. boat, turn. or 1 646-fl9C Oean '69 Fonl 2 Dr. Low- low mil1 ae. Will take Pkt Up truck or Van. cau * 642-4610 * Will trade lovely 3 bedroom CoUege Park hc>rna for Jt-1 lot in On.n&e County or SeaJ Beach attL <>wner 54&-0002. 1975 18' Men:ury tralkr w/cw.l)()py. Good eon d . value $700 FOR c.bovtr camper. * 54a.1050 * Twin bed1. like MW, cam. with moblle home. We hate 'mi. Nftd double bed or 1 Call ..,._ Trade 25' Crulstn1 'f'rt-ma· ran 100 Z...nd on water aeywhttt: or Wba tt?U. Want I cyl dtf:Ml enctnt. • 842-379t • Haw UM eq ln ~ 2 BR hornt. E-llde JM ktt. lncm $1~ Want 1. 2 or I f\xer uppt_r anltl, amt area. Stantlal, ~rm mt'3Ntl'71. • * * * ----- • DAILY PILOT J 'ound (froo odal 550 SMALL puppy, • I •ha&:· &Y. "''hlte 1-:i.• "''earln( collar. Found '''C. D'l!'nny'1 Rntaunnt, &ach BJ,-d,, H.B. Call & Klent1ty, 213: "'-'"" Bl.A.CK al'lapy do( w/rray streak, maJe. "Jic 14th & Coot. Hunt. Bch. 53&-8781 STINGRAY · bike vie. Pre1idX> School. Jdentlty. ,.._.n, SMAU. black poodlf' found ''ic. Victoria ~ J1arbor, c.~t. 6£.2.»1 Lost S55 ' + * WAYMAN CARLSON 11831 Los Leones Fount1in Vi1lle y You are the wlttner of 2 ticket& lo the Royal International Ci rcus at 1he ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS Saturday, April lrd Please call 642-5678, e.xt. 314 between 9 and 1 pm to claim your ticke!1. (North County toU·tree number is 54C-1220l + * + WNG-ha..ired '1''Y cat w I flea collar, ''Smokey" lost vie Humboldt 11land, Htg Harbour. Reward, 846-4391 er 642-9440 WST: Black Leather wallet (ehttk typel No mo~y. Credit card!. &:. C'hecla. 67>-5072 HALF Gtrmsn Shepherd & Oobe-rman, male, b Jack w/tan mkgs. Name r.tlckey. Re"'·ard S5Q. 499-2632 aft 4. 11..0ST on r.ten!o~. Lido Isl. Sml bro'A'n territ'r mixed dog. Ft>malt'. Boys J>l!I. Re- "''ard. 673-9577 LOST Ft>b. 26th, N.B. or Cd..t"f: Antique gold pin, S25 R\\'ard. 673-9020 lnE,VARD! Lost male cat, •·Sam". black & white, vie Univt>rsity Park. 833-2346 'VH!TE podd.le, vie Yorktown I.: Magnolia, H.B. Wed 24th !>;0-1034 I~ School• & I Instr uctions 575 I Discover a Greet New CarHr With The AIRLINES A m.turaJ for )'OW1J" people who want excitement plus! Ticket Aaentf Air Frei&ht? Station a r e n t? Reserva. t!Om1 Ramp ot travel a,aentf We'U train you fol these and more, day or nite. We include placement u- J wtance, Est. 21 Yl'S. Approvt'd for Veterans. Eligible institution under the federally Insur~ student IO<&ll pro~ Airline Schools Pacific 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana 54US96 • ., ... . . . ' llilJ I llfl1llo)nat l[IlJI .__ _~ . ..,_ ..... __,J[iJJ I ... .., ... , l[ll) ;;I __ ,_"-~I ~1i1 Whan You Wont it done right ••. Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M It P 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M It F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 !:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;I-=::===""',....,,,_..,-I--------HOSPITALITY H 0 STE SS BROJl.£RMAN-E•p'd. ... * DRIVERS * SERVICE, ""' Optnl"I• In Call one of the experts listed below!! ACTION HERE Ca rpenter CARPENTRY l\tINOR REPAIRS. No Job Too Small. Cabinet in gar- ages &: o t he r cabinelli, ~5.8175 ii no answer leave msg. al 646-2372. H. 0. Anderso11, CARPENTRY ~ Repair. All phases, Home & apt, Lill' haulinr. Eve; 548-6266, Ha uling i•·p...o; Muling for salvaa:able items. Free pick up on furn. & appliances. 557-4151 5S7-2005 eve.,. TRASH & Garllie clean-up, T days. SlO a load. free est. Anyllme. 54&-5031 H • .\ULING, f!n'I cleanup, ttte serv, Handyman. Reas. ~&-5848. Day: 537-isro Housecleaning REMODELING & Repair Specialist. Comm'!. residen-EXP ER. Lady. own tial. Paneling. cabinets, transportation. By Day. n1arlitc, formica. 644-7598 S.IS-7801 aft 6 p,yt e CARPENTRY • CABI· By Day. NE"l'S, f(LRi\IICA. First Own Transportation. class \vork. ~1326 S36-1)648 Cement, Coner•~· I DEDICATED CLEANING I \Ve do every!hlng. Free CEi\1ENT \\!ORK, no job 100 estimate. Call 673-4072 small, reasonable. Free CLEANING Part or full Estim. H. Stulick, 54S-8615. ' timt>. Reliable-Own Tram. Artistic C.Oncrete and * * 642-2398 * * Brick Work by ?.tax LADY wishes "day work" * 644--ai87 * ;-.;7';'=~"-,:::,C..::'-,.-70 ·1 G o o d & R e I i a b J e , QUALITY cemenl \\"Ork. lt't \\'/rE'ft'rerx·es. 541-8029 George do it. Lic'd., Bond- ed. 645-169j. PATIOS, \1alks, drives, in- stall new la\\'M, saw, brtak, remove. Ms-8fi68 for est. ee CONCRETE. Floors, Bay & Bt'ach Janitorial Crpt.s, windo"'·s, floors t"IC. Res. & Comm'!. 64&-141..1 HOUSE OF CLEAN Complete House Cleanina: 642-6824 patios, drives., sidew'llks, I -1.-,-0-m-0-T-.-.----- slabs. Reas. Don 642-8514. c_._"'-"_c1_., ____ 1 Smiley Tax Service Plumbing PLUMBlNG REPAIR No job too small • &t2-3128 • e PLUMBING e Electrie&l ~pair $8 hr 00-27:,;) GU-1403 Roofing WENEDA .Roof'Ulg, Authorit. ed. Applicator for Sno-Hide Roof Systenu. 645-16!11 T. Guy Roofing, Deal Di.rte!. 1 do my own work. &15-2780, 54&-9590. Sewing/ Al t•r•tions AT THE 540-6055 WE PLACE PEOPLE EUROPEAN Dressmaking e SECRETARIAL Expertedly Custom Fi~ed. e OFFICE Accur. 'Vorkmansh1p. '7;.18-19 • CLERICAL ALTERATIONS, rrscyling. E11pert titter. Top rt>f's. e SALES N.B. ""''· """"°' Call e ADMINISTRATIVE Ruth Call Altorotiona -6"2·S845 e TECHNICAL Neat, accurate, 20 years exp. Tree Service TREES, Hed,zes, Top, Trim, LEGAL SlC'Y cut, rem<lved, hauled. Ins. Fantastic oppor. for the 642-4030 Bl&: John person 1\•/gd typlna: & SH U h I I skills. Start $550. CU.I p o s ery Jean Brov.·n. LIC Upholsterer -Quality \\·ork. Anthony's Up b . Service. 642-5827 N.B. EXEC. SIC'Y ply ln pertOn, no E. N rl 1rvtne &tta tor mature Katdla, .....,Im O Expe •nc• women Jookl"I Jn< m. ,~~:~· Secretary Purchui°', MuM have per. SH 80, type 60. Sec'y Acctng .,. AbUlty to work w/numbtni. Operate 10 key. SH !Kl, typ- ing 60. Clerk . Ty pist Research dfpt. Type 60. 1·2 Yrs work exper. Acctng T r.1 lnee 10 Key addinr, lite typinr:. ad w/f!cur~•. ~tature wo. """· FHA/VA Pk9r. Escrow co. Stveral bldrs Neceua~! t.ere•ttns, part tim• worl<, nl..comin& ntrrcomen l'O Mu.t have cltan it. drlv-)'OW' arts. Sa.lei e x p , inl record. Not undeT 25. deal.table. Must havt: cu. YILLOW CAI CO. CAI.Lo !41-3095 186 E. 16th St., C.M. lJ.Lagency 8l3 Dovtr Drive Newport Beach 64.2-3870 HAIRDRESSER. Exp'd, w/ l!vtr t .. nk ,.,.tlal following. ruu "'"" Conotr Soc'y t o $600 Ph: 962-7'812 Escrow Ofer to $650 you'd b• good l.H.:.O;:;STESS..:::c:..::.=w-.-,TR~E~SS~.-N-oI 1 Sac'y (FHA/VA) $500 at HllllllJ """" 21. Pm time. E>op'd. Acctng Clork $390 only. 642-0714 Rocopt/G.O. $425 life insuranc• 7 HSKPRS Emplyr ..,. '"· p ART /f'IJLL TIME Mutual fund17 Gl!Of'l"I' Allen Byland Aren-Stan buslne11 manapment cy 1()1)..8 E. 16th, S.A. carttr in "xpa.ndtnc com-Investment at7-o.195 pany. Severa.I att•• open. COUnselin97 HOUSEWIVES 3 optninCS Wlll train qualllled ap- 0 did P/ttme. Aver. S3 J)f!r hr. plican!s. Call 546-5856 r you •v., N w -;" Fo· 0 exp nee. e ..,_ · ' * PHA.Rl\fACEUTICAL wish you could ""'" "" Mn. ""1~' wEIGH!NG * * M&-5770 * sell all three? Asli&tant to Wei1h Muter. Local area re1ldent. Ent;lish Wt"rt one of the few who la speaking w1th prior exper. now in all thrH. And wt:'re in pharmaceutical m r r , ready to otte.r the tirhl man pref'd. CaU M&-3931 fM a.n t""Xecutive aa.ie• opportun-appr. " ity. Selllnc broad-&pectNm LABORATORIES e finandal pl&Mint to lndl· e UNWILCO viduall and bu1\ne111e1. Rep-rell'ntill( a fi.nt-ra~e SJ.bU-Costa Me8&, Calif. I •«U. lion company. Wlth a train-!PROFESSIONAL ,Phom: in 1alar.i up to SS50 a solicitor a Dana. Polnt, San month p!ua opportunltle1 for IRVINE PER.50\INEL ' Clemente, Capiatrano area. &ddltlona.I income. And pros-SERVICES•AGENCY 'Vork in Y?ur own home. I Sec'y Escrow 1 Yr1 exper, no SH. Receptionist Accur. typist, acctne: back· around helpful, rood apell· '" Ole Mg•/ Bkkpng Const:r. ba.ckcround. FamU· iar w/phuea or coMtr. bk· kpna:. Moll/Stk Clerk Deliv. maU to other facili· ties. Able to operate mul- tillth ma.ch. Mgr/Cupot Retail store. Ex~r ln mc:mt ' ca.rptt sales. Will handle purchuinc, adver- tislna" &: personnel. Xln't &&1ary. pectl hlgh in the five-fi&ure Be~I deal in a.tta. Phone range. SlS-1465 between 9;00 a.m. lt thll 90\J/1ds intettstinr to Sec'y • to $600 "'""::,,,~""""==·==~--~I you call us a.t 542-!l623, Ext. Excitin& local firm RECEPTIONIST. Immed . 321. We"d like ID hear from Girl Frld•y to $550 Openin&•· Top P.ty. Cali you. Lite bldcpni Z. SH ~Ow. ESCROW OFFICER, sale Sec'y c 0. Wttk exper. Sa.vlna• & Loan Y 9AM-9PM. Sat 9AM~PM $500 O. C. Employment A.Jeney 124 Broadw.ty, Cftf 645--3lll Auoc., Laruna B e a. c b Branch. Salary open. EqU&l Blckpr/Co~t to $550 Opper. Employer. Send Cott&: r en 1 accma: expu resume to Qaultied Ad No. • 0 53, Daily Pilot, P. o. Box Bkkpr/Glrl Fri to $55 lst.O Costa ~teu, Cali.I. 1 Girl olc/constr. F'Osta.l Cani.en Wanted 897-5951 15972 Spri.nida1e, H.B. RECEPTIONIST for J an Pti:ten Beauty Salon Tue• thru Sat. 1610 W, Coast ,,.,. ---~- Gen'I Ofc $433 1 _H_wy~·-.N.-•-.wp'"""t.~lk~h..,.:---l Ma.ture/1table/fi&'ure ap e R .N.'a e EXPANDING . Opportunity for 4 lictnied Clerk Typ1~t1 $400 Inttnaive care/cardiac cue. Itta.I Estate Sales People Brlfht IU' /'C':lfle &Cl Full time, l l 10 7:30 am. e HUNTINGTON rNTER.- MY Way, quality home repair. Walls, ceiling floors etc. No job 100 ·small. 547-0036, 24 hr ans. serv. ROOM Additions. L . T . Construction. Single st'Ory o.r 2. Estim., plans &. layout. e 13th )'EAR LOCALLY e Qualified • Reasonable \V. A. S:.11LEY Cer!Jfied Public AC'COunl't 6-12-222'1 anyt ime 646-9666 Central Bus iness ServicP1 (Ftt rrimbursedl. YClur top skills .... 1u land this fantastic job w/Vtce Pre!!. Housing gackground help· II iJ l ful. Type 75, SH JOO. Start 410 W . Co••t Hwy. $540. Call Helen Haye1. 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;i~[ Newport B•ech !:'me ~~~Emt~:~%~;~ Acctng ~l•rk_ Recapt COMMUNITY HOSPITAL• ty, land development, re· Phone/typinr, firurt work Personnel ~l 17T7'2 Beach Blvd., HunUnrton Bea.ch, saJea on ho"'."'• may con· Resumes ONLY on tollowina or Call 847-7807. Job Wanted, Female 702 REGISTERED NURSE 8-17-1511 Additkir11 * Remodeling eTHE TAX ADVISORS Perm. orfice-Reas Rates 328 No. Ne"''POr! Blvd. Opposite Hoag Hospital For Appr. Call &lj...0400 + * LARRY STAUDT 1995 Arnold Co•t• Mesa * ll PM-7;30 A~1. S32 a shift. call Sally Harl. Gen\•ick & Sons, Lie. 673-6041 * 54~2170 ROOM Addit1on&/Remode\. ing. Free planning serv. Kennedy & Hause, GlJ.6270 days/5J8.-6&49 eves. Furniture FURNITURE Stripping • any average chair or rocker &tripped $5. 642-3445 T AX SERVICE $4 UP App"! available day1, eves, \\"knds. 548-0588. JS42 Nev.'J)Ort, CM SkoUSt'n Tax Service your home, compl audit pro- tection. 5'1&-4j28 SKOUSEN TAX SERV. You are the 11,•1nntr of 2 tickets to the Royal International Circus at t ~ ORANGE COUNTY FAJRGROUNOS Saturday, April lrd DENTAL RECEn. \Vorkina In plush surround- ings. Lite bookkeepini; &. typlnc knowledgt' v.ill land thit. job. start $4.25. ca11 Jean Brown. SALESMAN Gardening * LANDSCAPING * Reas. Your Home. 540.3894 Ironing Ne1v la11,·ns. tree renioval, i;prinklers, drains, arbors, ffiONJNG my home Sl.2.5 ~r patios, fences. Lic"d CQMtr. hr. Brini;: own hanger1. Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 H&.\'e a green thumb? Ex- between 9 &nd I pm to claim per. in Jandscaplnr: v.ill your tickel1, (North County 111.nd 1his job. Start $8400. loll-free number i.s 540-1220) call Helen Hayes. + * + 13 yrs Joe. exp, 536-1225. S45-7&ll. IRONING $1 .25 HR AJDES For convalescence, AL'S GARDENING 5'1S··l·l39 elderly care or ta.mily care. for gard@ning & Im a 11 I ~-~~~-----Homemakl'rs, 547..fi681 Doctor needs sharp per1on landscaping services, call Janitorial 540-5198. Serving Newport, I ocO"'.=---------PRACTICAL NURSE to type insurance forms. Cd:O.f. Costa t.tesa, Dover SPARKLE Janitorial. \Vin-Local refs. Day or night bil\inf, phones & ..... ·ill train Shores, \Vestclitt. do\\'s, lloors, crpt11 & constr l --~~•:....;"""c::.~"~"=·-~--~~~P~. te st;!~~ ~.26 c;!'U 0 cleanup. A complete comm'! PRACT. Nurse -Housekee"-Sally Harl. PR FESSIONAL. Pruning, .,. k . '·' serv. For Free est call, , •• ~-•·. Full 0 , p-"' •;me tree wor , spnniuers, atra· • VJU1'. '"' " tion, pesu. disease, \\'ttd •96r'"";;;;;12;::i· ;;;--;c;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;---\~-~L~;,~,~""'~"~&1~2~-3~18~1~-~ control. Clean up jobs. Clear-Vu :.1a1ntl'."nance EXPERIENCED cleaning Terms. George, 64&-58!13 SPRING CLEk"lllNG Jadie-s, excellent r?ference!, free apprn1sa.l s. Res Id. 536-2442 or 536--09G2 All shift s av11.il. $1.75 hr. RECEPT. GEN'L OfC NURSES AIDE By Appl. 646-3'39 CAN YOU QUALIFY? Nt"ed 2 11,-omen to assist me In my business, not und 25, 2 hrs day, 5 days a. wk. J65 per wk. for int 774-0380 bet 2 kl 4 p.m. Coshiw /Hosms App ly in penon • No phone calb. March 29th., 3 to '4 pm and ~11lI'Ch 30th., lQ.ll .am e TIIE AIRPORTER INN HOTEL e (oppositti: Orange County Airport) 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Ne...,•port Beach. ** CASHIER ** C.ar Wash, Lquna. Beach. * 644-4450 * Clerical RUTH RYAN AGENCY SPECIALIZING JN OFFICE PERSONNEL 1793 Newport, Costa Mesa ......,. 17931 Beach Blvd., HB 847·9617 sldtr part time. Call for 1 -----~-----l appt. W. ~· Lachenmyer, Prod. Mgr to $11.K * 646-l9Z'I, 54..,..3¢83. Sheet •tttl fabrication r:rp ROUTE CARRIERS Work in your own arta ].2 F;~R! ~~kAl~d;,:~~ Ph•r'!1· C~em t_o $14K !~~~I.:~~~=~·~:~~ machine ope rating. lnuMd. rits. BKI or tnorp.nu:: chti:m. Blvd., G.G. 6J6..07(X) openinls. Top pay. call ShHt StHI 1 's~AL"'ES"'°-.~,71,-,-.~W~om-,n--l ~~~-t-9P~I. S&t 9AAt-4iPM Layout MKh•nic I STOP!!! 0. C. Empk>ym'"l A"""Y LOOKING & ACT 124 Broadway, c~1 645-lW Pres• Brake Opr Sales minded per30n, art tor FACTORY LABORERS. Im-488 E. I7fh (at !rvinf:J C.~f. yourseU, a r@a.l career op. mat openi.nJ"a. Top pay. 642-1470 portunlty. Xlnt future tar Call Now. rl&ht man. Earnlnr1 com. 9A1tt-9PM. Sat 9A~t1PM mence imm~iately ahou.ld 0. C. Employment Acency J. w. ROBINSON'S be in exct.11 of .$250. per wk. 124 Broadway, CM 645-3lll NEWPORT BEACH No canvu&in& or 901icitin1. FASHtON SHOW Dlrecton Jntti:rvlews by appointment • earn SS to S8 hour. No hu immtdiate only 9.3 w~kday1. 835.2771. i n v t' s I m e n I . Bee lint> openini' for a SALES GmI..S, ace 18 to -! FashioM. Car nee. 633-~74 Earn $300 to $500 mo, ln or 539-5435 e MAINTENANCE your 1Pare time. For appt. Fiberglas Molders ENGINEERS e call J im Ha.niAOn 49'-!JM.C. E:.:per. only apply. Willard SARAH Coventry needs .8. Boar Works. 1300 Loaa.n FULL TIME A.."IO XLNT or pt time help. No tn- Ave .• C.Osta Me1a. COMPANY BENEFTI'S vestment. Will tra.in, min F LJQIG BOOKKEEPER. qi! 20. 53G-l407 Ir. SU-9066. Interesting, challen(ing APPLY in perxin lO.:i pm SECRETARY -Full time. position. Xlnt co. btnetlt.a. Some b o ok k eep In i ex- Movina: &:: l\Of3&"t exp. Perxinnel Dept. perle~. C.M. 546-283> helpful but not ntt. Call •2 Fashion _Isl., N.B. SEC CREATIVE SALESMAN for appt. c.~t. 540-3880 Equal opporrunuy emplo)'l!r RETARY A )'OUlli man with ml!n'1 Xlnt clerical 1klllii, pn:v'1 retail sales exptrience who GENERAL help. Pickup, * LAB ASSISTANT * exp. es.<Je.ntia1. Dayi, fl time. would like mor e de.livery z. odd jobs in the to "'Ork In Rubber Develop.. PersonneJDtpt,HoagHoep, r ti: 1 p 0 n1 ib11 i tt. Job shop. a»-2860 ment Laboratory. Req: 1 N.B. .,,,,,_... ..-. ----Regponslbil!ty: Sellin a:, GENERAL OFFICE yrs of.colltae. Op~rtunicy ~----MEDICAL TRAINEE merchandisinc. bookkee~ Good typina: e.'<p. excellent xlnt with rrowing fllTll, F_or SERVICE CENTER EXPER. Japanese gardener I &-17-3319 Call Jean Bro\\'T\. Rehablema i nlenanc:e --.-.-------HI W t d M&F710 Reas. monthly rate s: Pa1nt1ng & e P an• , 892-3219 Paperhanging EXPER. Japanese Gardener Complete }ay,·n serv & landgcapln&. 5 4 6 · 0 7 2 4, 5-18--7958 No \Vastini; Lil Reinders ina: &. &!Iii.sting Buyer. Gnat co. Call u;raine, We1lcliU interview apPI. call 492-1153, Employment Agency * WALLPAPER * Personnel Agency \Vorkini:; 4 day11 _w /time opportunity tor young man Per80nnrl A&:ency, 2043 Mn. Gonu.lez * Auto ~·0 i~e1n you caU "t.f,,a.~"1ru 4500 campus Dr., N.B, ~~~~in~or ~~~ur~~i.ng Qill who likes pecple .&: retailing \VestcliH Dr., N.B. 645--1170 LAUNDRY help. Wash man. Mechenic $200 wk 8•by1ltting EXPER Japanese-Amenca n 1---,-0-S-T_A_M __ E_S_A--· I gardener, complete gard('n- inl': service & cleanup. PRE-SCHOOL 893--01.IO ...... o-..... ..._ Call For Appointment Helen Hayes. & wants to learn more. GIRL FRlDAi' 1 d Mon-Fri. Pemi. _position. EX})l'r on brk in1tal!a- LESCO C wms 642-7061 . · mm e · Benefits. Sld. Un t f or m, Painting ontraclor __ -~-_ _ _ i.,:..,:,,,;.;..:,...~~-=~=-I 0Npen1ngs. Top Pay. cat! 17711 Crabb Ln, H.B. tion& frntendalirnment, In!/ext. 2 Slory ~pecialist.l :=-~~~-~~-~~-~~-~~=-~~'.I CREAT IVE ARTIST. ow. *Escrow Ofe r $700 Also. a c co us t . cei!. ADDRESSING Chemical etchinz e x pe r 9A?.1-9PM. Sit 9AM-4iPt-.l LOOKING for several rxp'd Bckgrnd w/land devel or 00. le r..1onrnv1a. 1A dll.Y + full day sesGiona. Planned AL"S Landscaping. Tree removal. "l'ard remodelint;. pro&ran1, hot lunches. A&;e1 2-6. hn 6;30 AM·6:00 Pl\i. Trash hauling, lot cleanup. S18 wk.CO:.fi>ARE! 6-U-405() Repair sprinklers. 67J.lJ66 "' 83Mo237. BACKACHE? Call 5.i7-6062 for lawn & gar· CHILD care :n my homt. clen care. Infant to 4 yrs old. Have ,.,,=-C'---~~,-l yr old da1Jihler. Fenced ~10\V, edge, \1ac. trnt & rear yard, lara:e home. Call )iis, $5 a "'"el'."k . 830-4370, hrs 1:30 to 6:00.l --~"~·"~·-"""~'~"-'~-- EI Toro, Mission Virjo &rel Gardening Service BABYSIT my home, l\te&a del ~1ar. Babies ...,·clcome. Xln't play facil, bot lunches. Cttt. tHcher, rer~. &19-0726 by expti:rienced Jap&llt'.se • 96S-0183 • LA '"N" care & garden .... ·urk. Light hauling. Ex p' d . Rea50nabl,. Call 543-9735 Ot!LD care for morhl!rs "'ho ha i. a, d · ~7379. LA\\'N l\t a int . Ve to wor.., . on I 11,·ant garag1' & yard cleanup. Lite to leave tht'1r ch!ldrrn just hauUn & ttp11oir. llll)'"Where. 646-8662 g . . BABYSITTING in ho I c.LEAN Up . Spec1ahst, hat1l- all " . my me 1111 olid JObs new fence -aaes any me. ' · n& • "'1"'9 .. 545-7641 & l"t'pair . ...,.as, ,, l>"'I> JJ Builders BRICK. bioc:k. co nc re i e , r&J1)tl1b'y, boUle leveling, aD type& t'l!lnCIMlittc. No jclb too small Lie. C.otlt:r. -Bu1lne11 S.rvlc.e l.A\\'N care, cle&nup. beds. Free est. Call 847-580'2 Gtner•I Services Oowt'r • LABOR UNLJl\-11TED * 1L\NDY?l{AN "' ng • Carpentry 673--1922 Ki Bus)'? Call 1-.loose ·11 Alttr &-ltl'palr ~ Most Tht~ Ha'Ulu ..• BOOKKEEPING, Part tirM. Variooa bualnnaea. 673-7198 TREES lo an 4pm do evtryH1 a.nyttme. 6-1~ !EXECUTIVE TYPI~ F'RE" d"'""'" of ,.,...., Mt home. 6f6.. fer JUnk. Co.,.., Servi.. Call 640-694' Diamond Carptt Oti:a.niDc Avs 1Ue n>0m $8 •·WEED It & rt'ap''. .clean out the tttuUttll A: tra.sh - tUTn lnla cash thru a D11.lly Pilot. Oaaitio-d ad, 642.-6678 · L • · y ho EXEC. S!C'Y •·-1 · -~praying. le « uu. our me-. req'd. Jmmt'd openina:. Top 0. C, Employment Agency m&•o.u" c eaning ma .. .,ni EAcrow en. proce11ina; &l5-'.239'J ~...,..*.:.cC&l=!:.;:558::.:·1~19=2ccc* __ 1 fF'ee reimburi;f'dJ. Start p11y. Call Now. 124 Broadw11y, CM 64fr.3111 for hi-demand commerciaJ resid. Escro1>.'1/m11.1! be INTER • E~t<'r. Guaranteed ALL-around maintenance $585 mo. Top company 9Arif-9Pr-.f. Sat 9AM-4iPM l --~~-"'.:,,.C-~.,:...:=:1 bide• In S'n Ore. Co., pt fa~t. aecur. lypl1t. wo1~. Lic·d & bonded. Local man for timall nun:lng ivants -~hllrp perion w/ 0. C. Employmenl A~TIC"Y GOOD JOB & 11 time eves 546-5.1Z2 * Sec'y Personnel $600 1"t'ls.Larcy's in1erior1, home. Ca!l_for 11.ppt intv. ~C::n:Hin& rZ_~~r~ct~~f~i: 124Broad"'·ay.C..'1 64~3111 PENSIONERS MAIL CLERK Admln. po!.!tion tor c11· 645-53,j(). Resid. 5-18-:.'"Th9 1714) 494-80i"J ht>lpful. If this ls you Ca.II No se.llinf. Must have car, 2 H/S grad. Warehouse. exp. reer individual w/bck- p A INT ING : 1-1 0 n es I, ASSEMBLERS. Sheri metal Sally Hart. day1 prr wk. No drinkers. helpful. Excellti:nt co, Call gl'nd in per50nnf'l/mu.-1 .i;;uaranlcl'd ,,·ork. Llc'd or \\'ood fabrication ()r c: ' Gd 1teady men • rtferenc-Afi11 Smith, \\'estcliH Per-be gd typiit & exec. aec'y J..oc111 ref's. Call 67J...5740 cabinelry. Immed. open-t'S. 673·2289 sonnel Agency, :zo.i3 Weal-caliber. all j, ings. Top pay. Call rio11·. . /C IKKPR OCO j GUARDS cliff Dr., N .. B. 645-2770 * Housekeeper $400 9AP.1-9PP.1. Sat 9M1~PM ...... ,.rl• A ComPA"Y •,,,·,-• ~ • l\!:ATURE. refined lady to Xlnt 1un.rvi10rv nn1iflon/ PAPERHANGER. ilock, foil, •' " • n Immtd n & t U Jo '" .,.-,·inyl, guu., esfr:nales. lht' 0 . C. Employment Agt>ncy bookk!'tpeT ,v/kno1\''I thru lll1 Westcllff Dr. P me posil ns stay with '2 i'irls 12 & 16 live in/plush 1urround· J~ 11 n gm an , 5 4 7 _ 58 4 6, 124 Broad,vay. Cl\1 645-3111 tri11I balanc:r. Start $•150. Newport S.ac:h avail, San Juan Capistrano 2; 30 to 6:30 5 day1. Al~ lngs/pvt qu11rten A: TV. &h11,arli ASSE:i\.olBLER TRAINEES. C811 Jean Bro,\n. area.Unifonns&:equipfurn. light hou1rwork , Ph. *Legal Sec'y/P.T. $l ·~~~~------1 MORNING BUSBO f'rin1e bene!ltt. Cart. 1e1e-~ytime. ~1906 PROfESSIONAI., 30 y r s tmmcd openinss. Top pay. Y phone ron'd A pl 13912 Exper. only-Ca.Hr Law/rd OVER 18 •• ., · p y: 'IEDICAL l•bo••<o<y •-0·01 & o-a,···· f'XP. paperhans;:ini:: It. pa in-Call No11,·. DR"PE"Y TABLE• Ponde S lt F "--1 " ' . .,.. ·• i .... ,, _... "" " " APPLY JN PEl!SO." ro&a u e • .,,..,, a ····-1or····· ll·•"••d. *Cu to s ~·o lint:, ft'Om Englauu. 96&-7461 9Al\1-9Pl\1. Sat 9Ml-4iPl\t. , -~ Ana "'""' .. S mer erv. - HANG 0 C E I l "" $2 Ptr I-Jr ,; Ell.°""r tablf'r !~~!'!~!'!!"""'""""'"""I E '1 part-time. 3 '. 3 0-7: 30 . f"'l'nl ofc poi1e/env..· *PAPER ER* . mpoymen ....,,ency · ., .• · I qua opportunity ti:.mpioyP.r Nel'!'J>Orl Bch. S44-2.'W3 ""1 P1•lor instructor. &16-2449 124 Broadway Cl\-1 64;,...3111 (or dra1">4"ry finn. Call DISTRIBUTOR, man a. g e --.;;;;;';;;;:;;;~-:--1;'""-·1-';.~~~~~~:'_.,.... I meti:ting pl'Ople/~ lyplsl ' Sally Iiart your o\l·n business 1\•/Jn. lnspecton. Jr. Mechanlca1 MalntenanCf' /&eme 1\'knd work. PAINTING. proff'sslon.-.1. All EAPT. PAINTING con1e pctential of $100l per mM tor private rountTy * Recept/Sec'y $450 W(lrk g 1111.rn . Color 11t'rl:;c1h: youn2 men n10. Initial investment ltss c · l ~fW'Cllllis!. 646-70St: 5-17-1441 willini' ro learn. Pan llnle. DENTAL RECEPT. lhAn $lOO. Early nti.rtnient Varian Data M1chine1. club. Must be all around reaflVti: fie d/gd lypina:; Join our team of nellt. iharp possible 64.2-2150 lr.cated in lhe INlne Jn. mechanic & &encral handy. &: tran5Crlptlon. 1 .... .1,, 1 l1"Ll/paperlni;. 18 yrs look "Swll ·hmf'n" i\o Arr you n.n unforgl'tlable. · ,;:::::;='----..::.~:.::: duArrlaJ Compl,.x, is 8r-man ror plumbing, elec... * Exec. Sec'y $650 in Harbor area, Uc & Jnl'; t: • ll"onian? Htrl' 1s 11. chanc,. Dra!t1m11n repling appllca!lon.-for r.a.11M?ntry. etc. Apply Tues. Frnt ore pci~l'/grl skills ! bonded. ft.era furn. &12-2356, long ha ir. l\fu~t ha\"(' car. lo n1·nvl' it \I df'nlal l'X· ARCHITECTURAL Jr lnspeclor posJ!lons. Mar. 30tti.. bt'll'n 2 & j pm, lite record ke-eptng, lr\T ,t· Exter. Painting. Rental Rt"adler 64>4820. i:r. X-ray, 1y~ing A: lf lr -DRAFTSMAN -OLD RANOI 500 Newport Centtr Dr., NB I.!t·'ri. in~. free t'.~I. 30 yrs BABYSITTE.R, part lime eaJ1k~~j;~~1gi·la~::rt $~. :O.Tajor Real E3tate Mrmt. Rcquiremcnli include 3 COUNTRY Cl..UB. SUl!e 535 I 6-14-4981 exprr. Chuck. 645-0&!9 morhl_ngs, in t'X change for I Co., attka an individual to 1('16 months exprrlt>nce ln 3901 Laml)!On Ave ., Stal I ~~~~'""""""""""'"" PAl;\'TING/paper1114:. 18 )T5 rtducu1g proi;:;am + sma.11 a8~ist In the coordinalion & printed circ:ull board ll,. Beach. (1 blk N. ot S.O. SERVICE Sta. Att 'ndnt, (I 1n Harbor a1ea. Lie &. lncomr . Gloria ;\\arshall s F/C IOOKKEEPIR preparation or prtlimlnll;' I sembly or inspection. ~'Y at Sell Bch Blvd. or pt lime, not und t~. bo 642-3630 -~-. L . . tumorn. N••• ~ ndc-1. Ref"~ !urn. 6-12-2356 k "'"'"u•&: drawmr for ten· I 11e 1ntthan1ca.I 1nspec-• "" a P JI t' ll r A ti<"~, -* PAINTING * BABYSITIER. houseketpl'."r, Thr~' tri11I balatlef'. ltte ant Improvements In ottice tlo11 t"Xperie~ 11 deslr-~tOTHERS Helper, ll\'t-\n, personabl~. Gd l'l'l's . .300& ma!urt, dt>pcndabll', Ji1·c Call,. ·I .,.!1 1 1 1 1 1 1"l·la.Sttart S4M. and retaU bid<&. Able, v.•Hh use of N:la!ed J11vely home 1n Emerald If arbor Cf lh Quah!y. Reu. Pru:·es. 1 ~ "238 ,.... • • 1C1a.. I & b & ===~~~~~~-! n or oul. .,.,.,..., alt 5;30 Po1l!1on requltt1 three yn. inspection 10011. ~ "'. OV.'11 nn a SERVICE Eatab'd fUlll'r Frtt est. 6-16-~ 11&5 m!'.I MllU)' otfe~ for B BABYSl'J'TF.R. In my home. architectunl dratting ex· J"Ullh rte. 11~175 "''k, to FOR clean & rw:a! palnhfltl, Hun lini.t(ln &ach 11 r l' ll , ptr. And an lntert•l in de· Good ~tarting aalary and cuw of l6 mo old bny & It., &l&O pl. tlm,. 546-5745 inteor1or &. ti:xlcrior. Call T\\•o boys, i; & IO. Aft,.r-•Im /space plaMlna. benefit p~am. ltti: hskpf dutie11. R!f'& Di<'k. 9611-4065 nooM only. Please rall ·,r ~40-6055 This i• a carter po1ition .. 1th f'f'q 'd. •~93ll P l.1ste r, P atch, Repair appolnt~nt aftf'r 6.P:.I and v a 1t11ble company. Pltue v e rien date • • NEEDED wttkt'rwi8, 89i-8174 81'nd lener or resume out-* PATCH PLASfERING II . Ill I d mA chin•• All t)~. Frtt esthnates BABYSl'M'ER. I chilrl . PrPf 2790 Harbor Blvd. S:1 1:,,i i:r.~,,1~·10111 an A VARlfl~ SU'BStDlARV call S.IJ.-6825 mature \\00111.11, Livi' out t:;\Sriit-:-p,Tcjj;jitm~l ~"""~":;·9pl"m~C~"'.:!.~6<~;..:0'~"'~~ THE IRVINE CO. 1722 Mich elson Drive PLASTER· Palc h-Rm . (H.1rbor Blvd. ~ Nf'W))Ott Ctnlf'r Dr. !San Dleno freew.1y ,\dds. Nrw wrirk. }"ree BEAtrrY Consultllnts ll('l'df'ri C If • by Gen. roorb, 1,,, h ,1 /\damol Ne"'·pon Beach, al . 92660 •t Jamboree off4ramp) estimlll'S. $-l:>-4588 a.ft 5 ' p I ~ I • Two Office Girls ~lu1r be 25 ind able lo drive -APPLY - 186 E. 16th Sr., C.~t. S~up Girl Friday Rfp1trtrc ' tm:taJJadon1 FrH Ell. &U.U17 . --m11ktU1'1 11rt1.~1ry. \\l/h·1un 1 -~~'~"'°:.c.:""~'::,,,~,,,.;'~·~-Irvine, Celif. tl664 Attrllct1\·,., ~·,.u rroomed "Llve-,\"lr@" wl!h 100<! rel~ phone voic. to a.cl ai not'l'p. tionl~t in a. bu•y • .t":llc1rtnr otflct. l\tuat be exper'd. in doalln& w\th thl' puhl ic. Sa.lei h•cka-rnd prefrm-d but nq1 nf'C. Q!;U t.1is, ror. ba.U1 PDot Wa.nt Ada hlYll buplnlploN. . . VACANCIES Colt money! Rent your hou1e , Apt .• 1tott bldt .. et~. thnl I Da.ily PUot Cla..t1U!td a.d. EJl;cc l't(I~'• ava!l V1viaflt' Coit• Mt•• , ,\NY Day \s tlw BEST day to An equal opportunl!y \\'oodard Cosmetics 544-1464 run an ad! Don't eniplOJU 1'1kF -=.c=.:...::::=c:.::.~.:.:::1 -~~~~~~ --'-...::.;::..=,.:..;_;___•~------·-------' --.J a Ii: DAILY PILOT %1) , [ li;lSJC:&tt Ill] I ..... ,, ••1•• I~ ~[ ;;;-.. ;;;y .. ~l~fl ;ml ---;;;-;;;I~;;;~ :! -~ I~ ! 111 Ml1coll1.-1 111 >w.E, podl&rffd -HorM1 15' Bolts, Sllp1/Doclct 910 Mobile HomH 1----------sf• n d a rd P-. od I e, _________ ...., Ji][~ __ ... _ .. ~,§]~",1:;;1 ;;'"t";;'" .. ~'~§] tu Autos Wonlod 961 Autos. Imported 970 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Geroge Sole s £RVICE ST.;, A l Ind 11 ,, 1 ~; "so"°'w"WN'""'°'c-bl°"1"'1.-,-.-.u •• VACUU?.1 TUBE VOLT HOl.&Mbroktn. aood wUh ltld& AQHA Re1 Ba,y Matt, 11 SLIP 116@ lie, ideal for 22' Dcp'd mah.1r. lor 2 IO JO al S25. 3 Hts J21 ea. 3 METER, 11ewlctt Pac~, -.w•lebdor. To a rood~ yr,k ~ ",::u ... ~lyCh ~ boat,$.» mo. pm lhltt. lllt.H SHEU. l9Ui P\lrc TV's blk I. wht z modt!:I 400 IJ, xlllt condlC'lll: wnh a fe.need ya t lat: • . ,....,.. 11: n * &12-a9J6 • TV ~1,',, dintt~ 1t>i I: $15 or ma.ke oUrrl ! Call 8~ 3/29 Filly 3 yrs, &T'ftn brokt, THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS TOP DOLLAR For 1 btauUM bomt, JoW tor malnttn&ne .. >td archllecut-CLEAN USED CARS ally lmp~lllive dt•n &o. See Andy Brown !he .xclllnt now "Vilta&O THEODORE FIAT '68 124 Sport Cp. Lov1nt owner1 pnde & Joy. Beaut. rond, Jo mi'•. pvl pry m.1111 M!l1 , &W--0803 ews. . . Ir. Plact.ntlli, C.M. • i.:hn, 1 hMall!Ji: lamp, 528.!&) lifter 6 PM wttk· U)V ABLE male tetrler niix top show quality $1000. Bo•t1, Spud & Ski 111 • SHOP JANn'OR • lAlhn 6.i yrda gold crptng, eylon dit.y1 & a1l d~ wekend1. JO lbs. & trlendly )'OUfl& 557-7394, 633-6856 'SS-16~ Wltl'llln 340 H.P. bt Co, 1181 P!act'ntia, 501 $2 per ,td, l yr old. IRVINE COASI' COUNTRY female wire lw.lr temer Sl'RA\\IBERRY rot.n In&.r't, Chevy eng~. Berkley jet Coala l\lesa, Calif. I C11mpina equip, tent tlC. CLUB MEMBERSHIP, mix to f(IOd homes. tl'l.l.ned lot En I l I 1 h drive. Wall Stong trailer. SPORTSWEAR MF'GR-Nted ~tl&c disht-1 I< alum ware, 67lh307!i 83&-4493; 542-1096 3/29 pleaauf'I!: yr old, nor %o Equipped tor iklln&. $2600. 10 exp'd. Q per at ors_ bl!.liy. buggy •ronvcrt, ~t'i WE Joan-Buy.Seu anythllll'. OUR 1 yr old malt' wire Arab Sorrel co.It. $500 e1.. 646-2384 Steady-Vac. fW'Y. 64'.l-3472 clo!hlng to~ ladlf'.s r.i:· 4&.~. Cout Pawn._ Auction, l426 hair terrier ml.Jt needs a 67;µ;129 &ft;; pm l·l-F'T. OlJl'BOARD. 40 HP ~~~.!,'d•~~~,"'~0:.U-ROBINS FORD JAGUAR ~ 1-~~-~-~-1 -BAY HARBOR 206o Hact>oc Blvd. TELEPHONE Answering gt1·l~ cloth1n~ 12-14. ladies Ne!NJIOrt Blvd. 642-8400. iood home & sheller, Doa: REG Pinto Stallion. B Yrs, r..1 trail Serv. Exp prd'd. Fl 01· Pt llhoes lrg lilU', coUee tbl house included if needed 1entle, v.-ell behaved, beaut trt'. elec, starter, er, I .1 Ir 1i. end tbl& Several other BROWN mink Jacket, 1ize ...,,.1_ • 31,.· ma.rkino,, rides \\'ell $395. Yo'atu skill, tow rope, 2 an-tin1e. \V/tra n i qualfd, g I misc. ltem.9-. ll3J Corona 12. Like ntw. $500. Call 1 ~-~0-oo='=-~,...,,---,-54~uTi chars misc equip. All lor not und 30. 540-3)52 Ln, C.M. &12-4749 alt 6 \\'kdys 3 PUPPIES -Medium to .,:;.:...:::.:.:.~----= $325, .96'2 6363 TRAINEES. Sheet metal or M i II small, blond dog3 • Llve1tock ISi l-.-SA-C-Rl-Fl_C_E--16-.-c-.,,_ w--' fa b r i c a 1 i on or PATIO Sale : 2 motorcycle1, see aneous Cocker/Dachshund ml x, ----------~ Ir Wanted 120 ,.,.,ICKEN< d ,__ tury-gray marine en1, Steel cabinetry. lmmM. open-car a conditiontt, 2 TV's 2784 Albatross, C, M, ~n. • . uc.... care1, '"••· T-pay_ Call now. men '1 clothes, mattres~s.1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-;;;;;; 540-2040 3130 fertile egp. Also Manx trlr, cover. Xlnt cood, ~lake- ... vy d t.Aj\ ll333 OtfeJ'. 673-6635 9.Ul-9Pl\1. Sat 9Al\t~Pl\t Pf'ellllln' cooker, electric Wanted To B1.1y EASTER n.bbit -be&u! cats. """"" o. c. EmploYfllent Ageni:-y skl!Jer, fireplace logs. lad-2 or 3 Bedrootn Mobile black & \\'hlfe, ip'O\\il &. Boats, Storage 912 J24Broadway.C?ll 64>-3111 der & vanous misc, ilt>ms. Home.. Set up ln FA.\!lLY heaJUzy. C. included 28-IJ Europa Dr., C 1.f park. l\tuat be U ' ..-.·Ide. 968--0012. 3/30 l '°"''"" ][-C ) OPEN Boat yard, repaini TRAINEE ASSE1.1BLERS. 540-3283 ~ 6 \\'ttkdayi , all , -~, th•" •-. 1 ... new k'N~ & storqe. ~ per it. Motor Homt1 I -• T ....,~ .... .,.......... " " PURE b!WI Huslde ?i.fal. . 6il-OSO'J eves 962-6U1 mm~. openlllgs. op pay, day Sal-Sun. condition. Call &12-3844 e\'e! ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i:;;;;; ' · '11 llo"••n dol"•• -tor ,.._,. puppy, fe1nale, abl S mo'1. il ,.,_, -""' ._... noYo'. GARAGE SALE -Antiques, & 'A'knd s. Good with childttn. 968-00l2 FENCED storage area, o roach. :l6' tully equip. Bet. 9AM-9Pl\1 . Sat 9Al\t~PJ\f cloclui, rommodes, h 1!. l II!~~~'!!'~~~~..,,. General 900 rurfa1.:ed; Costa ?ifesa. Call 8·.30 AM or &fl 5, 613-J-·. 0 C E I A urgently need1 home. 3/30 I ~"~-;~~-~-~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~: I · · nip oyment rency 1rees, round tables. desks, w EST l N G ll OU SE auto &1,,...,,<01 or """'" 124 Broadway, C1'.t 64>-JW prirnitivt's & lamps. 468~). \\·asher $40. Kenmore combo ~~ SiameSlf', black kitten, ! Trall1r1, Trav•I MS TELEPHONE advertising E. 17th St. c .r-.1. 646-3524. wuher-dryer $50. Bo1th iood ~r:ther-~~-mes~' 4!W-~rt~ SCRAM-LETS l ll•J 18' TRAVELEZE; Beaut from our pleasant Ne\t·porl Hou~ in rear ot Wherehouie cond, guar & de ivered. Tr111JP(lrlltlon cond aho..,,~r, to 11 et, oHices. Hrly Yo'ages. t.torn-Rerord Shop. Sat & Mon ~72, 847-8115 =~=~~--~37129~ 1 ANSWERS ';;;;;;;;;;;;~:: gas/el~ ~frlt TV, jack•. CONNELL MOBILE HOMES Coit• Mn• JAGUAR J!s~~,.,_~n:',~ -~=-'612~-00,.10'=~-' HEADQUARTERS • -1 WE PAY TOP The only authorized JAGUAR nf/M0-9470 CASH t:1:.r 1n the enUre lla.rbor Wanted To Buy 2 or 3 Bedroom r.-toblle Home. Complete SALES Set up In fan1\ly (children tor used can &: trucks, jUJ! SERVICE allowed) park. M111t be 12' call ua for tree estimates. w;d,. Le" lban $41XNJ, In GROTH CHEVROLET PARTS new condition. Call 642-3344 BAUER '"' • wkndc. BUICK Ask for Sales ?itanaa;er IN ~~~_,:,• ,,'!;,~ COSTA MESA 847-6087 Kl S.3331 2J4 E. 17th St:reet 54&-i165 WE PAY CASH '67 XKE ,,. 4-•pd, """'" lo mi, top cond. Must 5ell FOR YOUR CAR below book. Pvt pty 614-8197 KARMANN GHIA in& or five. shifts. 64>-3£130 from 9 to i...---e WANTED: l GORILLA TO QUAL home adorable 1 awning, easy-IUt hi l ch CHEVROLET 33, ?!IR. MADRID EARLY American couch, irom GI Joe'.s Jungle set. ma.le and female poodle mix S I /R -o incld . $1300. 54G-8986 · !nd d 548--0813 nd Plenty -Kn~/ -Knack -C•mpers, • e int 74 2828 Harbor Blvd YOUNG y,·oman y,• anted chair & ot!Oman. 2 v.'heel \ViU pay. 673-&39 puppies Y • a Salute _ SKUNK ·sg.1711• Terry, Comp. self Coata Mesa 5'16-1200 Air condl .onlng, 4 speed. ra· between the hours or 7 & !rai!t>r iv/cover. V\V seat.ii CASJi for furniture ap. 546-7308 3/29 \Vl1dom: 11'£ useles1 lo rel CAMPER contained, llke new. Sl!l.50. J -=:c-'~~=~=~=--I dio, heate1·. IUQV 495) 4. Arpy 's Cortee Shop, 3021 (~usl ., g7irl'Ts clo!60h"s·koda!! pllances, tools, mlsc '1ten1s. TO QUAL home miniature !nto a iprayin .. contest with 536-3137 WEFO PTOAYPTOUPSEDOOCARSLLAR $1199 '67 GHIA COUPE ''B" tlarbor, C.J.1 . sizes o · oys. a Open 9 to 5 642-7015 Schnauzer & Terrier mtx --. 14' TRAVEL Trlr, Sell cont. R '°""· 11'1 Buoy SI . -. . f•mal• "-. F-~ Yd ... •~S-K_OJN_K. __ ~~-CLEARANCE SALE II ~"· car •---a clean W CK WANTED to b"y •ki cloth•" -• ·~-" like oow, A•klng 1950. ,--~ =• ' BAR I ][§] Antiques 800 Old Time Wurlit1er JUKE BOX Red.lly \Yorks!! Records & All! $200 or Best Otter * 645-1446 * e ROUND OAK Pedl'stal tab, Xlnt conct. $100. Early table, Xlnt cond. $1.00. Eal"l y Victorian dressl'r & n1irror, perfect cond ;1so. also matching nl!e s ta n d , 64&-7335 • "'" ~13 3129 BOAT. motor & trailer, elec. ... u 1,·-1 * * ch.Udrens. Warm. Boys sz .... <>-VD S4>-I237 ....-e s •;> • RONAlO E . ROBISON 12 & 16. girls u 8. 540--0260 LOVABLE male wht husky tric itart $400. 1169 Dorset Large ielectton pre '71 Trailers, Utlllty 947 BAUER BUICK 11\fPORTS INC. 3812 Sand1.1ne Ln WANTED; A 6 rtlan l!fe ra1t mix 4 mo. Lclves children I ~La~"'-· _co7s~ta-c-'71•c"~·---Campert Now Slashed to 234 E. 17th St. DATSUN You are the winner o! 673-3153 4 l/29 Service 902 ACTUAL With 4 wheels. AU •teel weld-\VANT late model Ford Van. 99S So. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar \\"/hood. and cats etc. 776-2388 at! Boats, Maint./ $49 OYll 14' Tandem Triller Costa ?ifesa MS-7765 2 ticke1s to the l-=~-.,,,-----,8-.2~6-J TO GOOD homes 2 k>vable PACTOIY ed construcl1on. %" Steel 6 cyl. no Junk, pleaae. Laguna Beach Royal P lano1/0r9ons do&'I. Beaj'.le 9 mo. and LIC. Skipper &ttks penn. IN't'OICI deck plating. \Vil! ••ll or 1 ~'~1~5-5~-·~"'c..;."-'-'-'-'~P_·m~. -,=,l ·--•-1_&-<0~5~1~/=4!=>l-9771 ___ 1 mail b ~ r --•-Do · P<>Sil1on. Power/sail, P.O. International WE s f'l!cu euUia" Xle Box 495 Bal Ill NB SHOWCASE trade 1or pickup. 3166 Sicily, Autos, Imported 970 LOTUS Circus 7 mo, ~7181 3/19 ~'---;=~~----DEALER (Mesa Vt!rdc) C.M. at the OLDER, gentle, beautiful Boats/M.arine FOR AUSTIN HEALEY ORANGE QUIJ!!! colli• -sp•fod !omal•. Woll Equip. 904 ELDORADO CAMPERS §] COUNTY trained . 968-0012 3/~ **INVERTER, Heath Kit, THEODORE l A11to1 lorSll• J Q AUSTIN·HEALEY FAIRGROUNDS Afl<e 5 Y'"" W• aro cloolng DOGS-Cocker-Doxl" 4 mo, modol MPH, J2VOC to 110 ROBINS FORD ENGINE IOI>-' MERCEDES BENZ Saturday, April 3rd our doors in Costa J\Iesa. &. doxle tt>rrier, l 'it Oii.Tier VAC. 60 cycles, 400 watt&. 2060 HARBOR BLVD. 2639 C.C. 161.l cu. in. Cut -========== Please call &,12-5678, ext. 31-1 All remainln1 Piano• & Or-, abandoned 836-4493. 3/30 NE\V assembled &: checked COSTA 1'fESA sa.0010 Antiquei/Classlcs 953 Iron head, Intact, diaassem-..: '69 LOTIJS Etan Yellow Conv., stg III, xtru. $3,750. 494-3973 bet\veen 9 and l pm to claim illlll, new &. used, lo clear KITTENS, I 0 n i ha i r & out by professional electron. bled and partially rebuilt. ~ur rickets, (North County at auction prices. Savings shorthair. Avail Aprll 1't le engineer. Sarritlce SIOO. * * INVERTER, Heath Kit, FORD '34 3-wlndow coupe, in AU part. Included. , .gener- toll-lree number is 540-12'20) up to 50%. No dealers 836--4493. 3/30 Call 528-98-tJ aflt>r 6 P.!\1. model l\IP14, 12VDC to 110 storage since '51, all orig, ator, etc. Call 540·288S, and * * * please. v:eekda,y1 & all day Y.'ttk· VAC, 60 cyelei, 400 watts. trin1, no mtr, tra111. $500 leave your name and phone --====c-""""""""--"°·I WARD'S BALDW1N STUDIO FREE palm Ines, date e-•,_ NE\V assembled &. checked · 1 y d" t k "" flrn1. 316 Poplar, Lagu.na l~";"~m~be~r·~.,,---,-=;:-,"' ArrENTION C. B.ers -23 1819 Newport Blvd 642-8484. pa m~. ou ig • you a e. out by professional electron- channel Messenger tr, · 64~986 3/XI l\JERCURY pl'ops; control le engineel·. Sacrifice $lOO. Beach. 494-9992' '64 AUSTIN Healey 3000 MI< telescope base antenna, also • FIELD'S \VAREHOUSE BOsrON Tettit'r AKC, male. cable&, single lever control!, Clll.1 528-9S4;, atter 6 P.i\I. Trucks 962 111, R/H, 0.d. 56,000 mi's, 8 ch an n e 1 Haliicraft"r SALE Free to gd ho mt!. many instruments, I jack •"••kdoys & "" day wo•k-1--------,,,--Superb 1hape, A 1teal at " . • I • ! ' ' l VERY ANTIQUE SEWING i\lACHINE, <."om- pletely refinished !: ii work.s! \VALL HAT RACl\- w/mirror. f'or added inlo: &W-7335. Announcing the Opening of Jonathan's Antiques Fine Porcelaln & Gills \\'/cab mount antenna . All 300 pianos & organs. New, 968--4528 3/30 cole bucket seat, 2 inboard :nds. "'ll '69 Chevy 1h TOR $1400. 835-6646 2'10 Sedan '61. Air. Beaut., for $95. XJnt 10-key adder used. Spinets, grands, going gas tanks, heavy wiring 1 ~~"-~--~-~~ BMW cond. Prlv. 01\'ner. Sae. :, S35: like new qu i J t e d out for busine1s, rentals $8 CHIHUAHUAS, part of my cable. Steering wh"el1 y,•ith '69 Ford Camper Super Van. $995. J\fust see. 6Th-5l27 red -gold couch value $600 mo. option to buy. Sl"in-thundering herd. 1169 Dorset ride &Jide. Call ~9-0530 Fully l'qulp'd. c I ea n ! VS, automatic, custom cab "A Gem 01 a Shop" 2535 \V. Coast Hy,•y, Nl!'NJ)Ort Beach, 645-5150 BEN'S OLDE COUNTRY STORE -furn i rure, primitives. deroralor items. ~ \V. 17th, Santa Ana. 531-9ll1 or 839--8927 Appliances 802 II h. ' h """ ' Bald · ~·ck · Lane. C.J\f. 3/30 BO T !lotat" . tall·-' ._0 Sharp Reasonable! ~lorn-(32'004E). $135; ' lie \eat l'r c,, .. 1r way, win, '"""' er1ng. A ion ins ~. ""' II Bl Book ·~ & hassock $50; Reel-type COSTFIELD 'ESS J PUPPIES y,·ho lost U!t!ir lbs tlotation per cu ft: ;~g.s~':; 12; evea alt Ke Y o: Price .,...,,, mO\i·er, like ne\\•, Ui. A ?>1 A mothtr. Terrier, cocker, $3/cu fl, 4 cu fl min. Lie $lJ 99 &16-4041 (TI4) 645-3250 and poodle. ~1877 3/29 contractor (714) 77S.2046 CAMPERS--ll) 6 monthl old, *AUCTION* Fill(' Furniture GARDEN GROVE S.\1AU. Poodle puppy, black, RATHEON radio telephone, pam top S2 25 · fl) BARWICK t114) 638-2770 mal•, 2 mo's old. Needs 7-w d 2 1 1 homemade shell $ 3 5. CLEARANCE SALE ,, • use mo. nc an-S4S.lQ;,o I~IPORTS INC. good home. 64:>-2303 3129 tenna, whip, mounts & DATSUN NEED JOOd. home ror lovable crystals. Best otter. 91;S-5729 Cycles, Bikes, amber colored kit t Y. 25 Hp. light weight inboard Scooters 925 998 So. Cout Hwy. Over 100 Planot & Oriar11 548--081.3 3/29 marine engine. .$150. Ph: LaiUna Beach Reduced for lmmed, W e. SEVER.AL cats & kittens 613--4158 ~ 546-4051 I 494-9771 KENMORE washer, $35, ex-Buy Now & Savel nt'ed special homes. Boats, Power 906 THNCI '59 FORD IL TON cellent: Also \\'a&ber & Open Dally 10 tiJ 6 54&-3J66 before .. pm. 3/29 ,,--"::':-:--'.:'.".".""""""'--:-"'.'"" HO' ... ,._... n Dryer ~t. 5-ro-l095 ** INVERTER, Heath Kit. Ft: I0 -9 * Sun 12-S 8 ADULT rabbits J lreckled ('69) 23' CHRIS C, lrbg!s. ~"W.&1..C"a, &. Appliance Auc1lons Friday, 7:00 p.m. Windy's Auction Barn 20751h: Newport, c:-.1 l>-J&.8686 Behind Tony's Bldg, j\.1at'l •LARGE REFRIGERATOR mOOel ?.IPl4, l2VDC to llO COAST MUSIC 3 while 2 Jack rabbits. Great day boat/overnlter. !Ill • .,~ VAC. 60 cycles, 400 watts. NEWPORT le HARBOR. 536-4921 3129 Head, 185 hp V-8, bait & a'fRIEDLANDERN $45. DBL OVEN STOVE -.. NEW assemhled & checked Costa Meaa * &42-28.Sl fish tank + xtras. Jmmac. 1 ~646-;;,182~0;,*===""""",.--,,-I out by professional electron-. BEAUT. white friendly 8 wk Bst otr over $5000/tenns. ,,,.. •aAat tHWT. l'1 REFRIGERATOR 14 cu. II. ic engineer. Sacrifice .$100. HAMi\1'.0ND, S!e1n\l•ay , old puppy, lovable &. at-67~2781, pvt ply. 537-6824 • S!l.'i-'1566 Admiral, ':.n. 714: 827-4190 Call 52'8-9845 arter 6 P.M. Yamaha. New & used f"ctionate, 494-S887 3/29 I I d NEW USED SERV Pickur. Radio, 1tlck, Good condltJon. (F3:2988) $649 CONNELL CHEVROLET _., weekday, &: all day week-pianos of most makes. Best GER.i'd.A.N Shepherd pups 13' fiberg &11 skiff, tr r, 01 • • • alt 6 P.lvl nds buy• ln So, Calif. at Schmidt 8»-3608 t.ferc outbrd, Good tor ........ - - FRIGIDARE 11 asher & <lt"yrr. e . Music Co., 1907 N. Mair;, fishing & iCuba dlvlng'. Not • - -..... I 28:28 1-IARBOR BLVD, Xlnt cond. $ij(} ~1 or will HOOVER portable wuhina: Santa Ana, 3129 much for looks but does 500 cc VELOCE'TTE Thrux-CO~A MESA S46-l203 !plit. &12-0846 machine, STO. 9' ~hinesel:KIM~~BAL~~L=-c~.~""=:1~,1~1,:-p~;~,00:: 1,i German Shepherd, % Box-the job, $250. 494-3nl ton, new clutch, tirei, '69 Datsun .11take bed truck, Building Materials 806 modern ro.ich !: chair, Sl50 and bench Excellent con-er pup, 6 mos. old, free 1958 26' OlRIS Connle, twin brakes, piston and lower long whttl base, R/H, or will trade for hide a dition. $450: 6TH59:i to good home. 531-5917 3129 screv.·. Xlnt cond, $3250. end. Puri.5t'1 delight and Make oUer. &12-7015, alt 5: - BMW'S NEW & USED, all METRO • models, parts and service .. 1---=---o:=.,.-..--·I Overseu Delivery. • 1958 i\'IETRO * .. : C BOB AUTREY Mffi'ORS Real Sharp 700 Lido Park , '1860 Loni Beach Blvd. Dr . No. 4. Newport Beach '• Zl3-591-87Zl. DATSUN '65 Datsun Wagon f spttd, dlr. Real Nice. CYCT 333) Full Price $599 BARWICK IMPORTS INC . DATSUN 998 So1 Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach MG ~ &THINK "MG" sn "FRIEDLANDER" IJ7Sd ll•ACM ftfWY, 2'1 893-7566 • 531-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. ~ °'""~"~~=OS~l~/='""~'m==,-l'963 Jli!G Sedan, $325. or best '69 DATSUN PICKUP 011"· C.'"k..I!llJ1. .f speed, radio It heater. (WQZ 405) $1399 i\1G-TD's. Both 1951'! . J\Iake Q[Jer * 837-4494 * MGB -· YARD SALE: Everythlng In bed in good cood. Kng aize].,:::;:::::;,_'-''=-'-'-o---=0 BEAUTIF1JL black botail Dys.: 547-5466: Eve. in perft>ct shape. Seit oUer _54=8-4=2'l1=~~~=~~ construction m a I c r i a I . bed, trd for queen IZ bed. Sporting Goods 13 "'"'o:'·,,64'i=:>-O-C136"".;:"',:;';.-,;.,,.--;3=:;/;:.29: r,,;.";:3-_:125.::";;1====== over ;950. 67~5954 alter 4 '62 FORD V2 TON P.U. Harbor & Baker, fAIJey Ever Y th i ng like new RIFLE: ?itARLIN Golden 39-U PH 0 LS TE RED Sofa, 11' TJf UNDER BIRD I ~'~"-"-·~====.,---6 •tk. new e""· trans, brake1 l-• ' k B k t• 64" 1265 · 22 al • ~ '• e '68 MGB rdsll'-Yellow. heh "" i•lar et as e . ,,_ A 1\.tount1e, c ., ....,ver 540-9241 3/29 l/0-EnVne needs s:>me 1969 YAMAHA & battery, $47;; or trade. BARWICK DATSUN -~ , Furniture 810 JAKE'S selling all elec-action, \\'/4 X Bushnell y,·ork. Boat & trlr $1100. ?511 c.c. twin. $395.00. 4,300 ~64-!>408=~7=~~--~~ IMPORTS INC. :~~:i~.~t~~:m::. i~~'. Ironies cheap. Examplf! -r....-. $1:i. Call 528-9845 54.>-8148 ll Vo cloo" r-" , --•· J[B m es. ry ,.. ......., '69 BRONCO W•"'"'n R le 673--488-J ~' transmitter SZJ", Diodes 25c alter 6 p.m. \\'eekdays & all I ~ ~ 32 ~'ll92 d --998 So r-t H 'c=,-.,=~="°""~-:c--· I Pits~~· ];1117 ' Ch r I 1 Corin-a....-ay1. H hub&, $1995 pvt ply, · ....,as wy., i; & !;Oc, Lois more Give day \\'eek ends. _ thian-tv.·in settw, f u 11 Y 1 -L=IK=E-'-"=,.-w::::=1968'--Y-AJ-MAHA~-642-7781 or 67>8680 Laguna Beach '69 ?ifGB-GT Cust. Sle~. me a bid .on the w~le SURFBOARD S -7'4" t! I n-A d to 00 546-4051 I 494-9771 0-drilll', "11."ire spoke v.·hls, WHY BUV FURNITURE? :-< k J -" ,1 ,_ __ _, qu P~, rea Y · 250 1treet bike, e '11 CllEV" VAN-E•· ---:~=-====~'=""''°"o--1 xlnl oond blue -er s-~lo7r ~.' 18tl:l's~ . .'c~~-'-"'1se, :~~~Gs~~. $~6·~·1~;n ~:~ Oog1 454 1 :0"'~""~"="=.,,-~--,.,--,--$395 • * * 645-1848 lended, V8, aut;, l.&H, s.oOO DOT DATSUN 839-67W' ' .. uv . ~~. E IN Got~-39-21' TROJAN: Grey Marine '69 Yama•a 125 Tw;n miles. 673-9403 OPEN DAILY "GB '67 °--d t bl RlFL ; ~!ARL ..,.,n $30. All in ).1nL Cond. dbl tandltr! N d '' ... '""' s er, re t eng, A M " 22 al ' -GREAT~-•1-• Brindl eng, r. ee s 11"'-fi-. * 644-1033 1960 FORD \' Ton P.U. 8' ANO ne I lr hi $1'-Rent n10, lo rno. v.•ith ounue, C ., ...,,·er 4~1886 or 4!16-2928 1.n1.ne. :• 111" e. paint. $1000 or bst otr. ";, "" ~ w op, w e \V s. ~ Be Flexible! 1009/e P1.1rchase Option action, \V/4 X~ Bus~nell1 SURFBOAR D / Chuck den l )T. Papers-AKC-5 ren, 646-39()9; aft 6, 968-J925 I970 SUZUKI TS 00. VERY bed, gd eng, new brakes. SUNDAYS Pvt Pry 968-3797 Ind. i1ein selection scope. $75. Call ;,28-984;, al 5•8 ..... .,,·n 1.,, $6'. pedigree champion stock. CLEAN Low mile&. $350. l~R~/~H~-~1_'775~. ="~>-Mc-;-_14-:--,-;,--18835 Beai:b Blvd. '&I MGB, new lop, 1vfrc whls, 6 kd • 11 d '" • Sh 1 -...i ...., e 17' GLASPAR-New 8~ hp 24 Hr. Dely. p.m. \lee ays « a ay 67a.66lO afte l' fi pn1 ° 1• ear8 cropv=, \•e._, en<>ine. Tilt trlr. Ready to ~.,,--C~al_I =968~·"='°,--'"' 1 1963 Ford FlOO 6 C)1 pickup, Huntincton &!al'h Original owner. $500. "TOM weekends. genUe & housebroken. ·• :.. 8. "-d 4'1MI> n-•CM N2-'l?81 or ~Q..-0442 8 33-'= CU.> Q B l 000 go fl5hing & skllng.Priet:d 'SS Yamaha 250 Enduro dirt .,.. , ~ mon:s. """"' l -=--=-=-c·=--,---~,, Furniture R•ntal FOR Sal~: Old Brass strlk-l!utom:!~:.e rull ~:'io~,e~ ~~ ~:i~:~. s~'~r ~st ot~; ~lo_ .. _u_. ~548-5205,_~="-'-'c" ~= bike. Good cond. l\fui;t sell. 494-1781 New '71 Datsun ----o=r=E~L----1 517 W 19u C :'It S.IS 3481 .,~ ""'~ • $465 or be!t oUer. 646-8717 I c,61~C~h--I ~\~1-,--l~k-• 1, ·' • -ing Ships Clock. 200 Victoria ';'B;'_' ~V~k~'°;'~;·~·,:C~-;;,M. ___ 1 ,:o~c~tra:;:d~•~fo='~~'-~~CC-=~~·--,, Boats, R•nt/Chart'r 91)8 evro et on Pc up, 1600 OHC. Pickup with camp.l ljjii ____ jjiiiijjiiiiiijjiijjj I ~~bi~ ~t= A"e. C.i\f. A1t 9am Sat or TV, Radio, HIFI, J\IALE Sllky & 9 mo. fem!.le '66 Suzuki 150cc g fl bed, rack & box, •pllt er. Sale price $2099 dlr.11 Sun. Stereo 836 •pricot loY Poodle. Both 32' Twh11crew Chris, fully Good cond. '71 tags, rtms. Recently rebuilt. $595., ( • P1$14522"70) WUJ take '69 OPEL RALLY[ BR.AND new, ne~·er u59d l !!!!\!!!!!!'!!!!l"'~!!!!,!!!!!'!"'~jj _~~=-----..!~ brauliful! 646-014 2' or equip'd. Fbhlng or Cruis-• ~-~$"10:c,.~•~*=*~64&-.:..,~1858~c,.,~ priv pty 496-3938 car tn trad", Will finance II I II RATTAJN I n 2 C.. ;ng. A!IO '59 Twinscrew 1·1 I ~~---;-'-~----= sofa & loveseat. se 1 re a ur · oc · ** V1cuum tube: VOLT 54S.1022. 333 E. 17th St. .., TRJUl\1PJt CHOPPER Auto L1a1ln• 964 pn,.lo "•..tu. Call 546-8736 . . -• h 1 ~-~ 1 blk Ov.·ens. Xlnt cond. 54&-2434 • .--•v l d '" 1 $525 special S235. Al:1a usni c a ~. gan1e LJU<U us, 1.lETER, Hewlett Packard, C,\1 m or bsl ofr. :0-.1ust Stt --------or 494_68u . spee .. ansm1ss1on. _ra( IO Zenith combo cnlor TV. sold male poodle \\·/all shots, model 400 H, Xlnt condltJon: I-=.,-,,,-=""''°"==-= Boats,. S.11 909 to appreciate! 54X.Sl1 LEASE "°="=,_:.,~====~I and heater, low mileage Jl.23S, special $~j() -j\,laplc antiq ChilX'Sf' c1rved $75 or make oUer. Call BLACK i\1ALE p000LE A NEW l9n '69 2000 ROADSTER car. Ral!ye Red \\'It h blat:k dirllng rn1 set, rt"la1!s $5!1j, 1creen, 4 funeral plot!. 528-9845 after 6 p ~1 ,\Jinia., champion AKC breed-HOBJE 14, 6 mo old. Xlnt 70 HONDA Cl.r350 gd cond. PINTO bucket seals. (YCN9'J.1) special $300, a.nd misc 6-iG-3565, 642-9789. weekdays I: all day \\'eek.. ing. 9 \\'ks old, $125. Call cond. Lime F"" \\'/yf'llow SS40, :\tan·1 10 sp. Peugeot S spd. dlr. Owned by li!tle $1395 Hems. 968-5806 or 539-ZI71 TAPE 1't'a>rder, washer, gas endi_ 6+1-059-I. trampollne &. NU, $1000 or ~$~3S-c·~·~13-=5'68,,'-,~-~-~ $50.00 MO. old &ehool t~aciier trom La- dryer, rtfrl~rator, carpet,lo!969,;;:,:=:SP=AN=1SH=~s~1y~l•:c-;C~o~noo=1e l\!INIATURE poodle puppy, $1200 w I trlr. 644-2'902, • SCHWINN 26" girr s 2-(38 mo.) iUna Beach. fZNS 1~) Take ~AHOGANY Duncan Phyfe lelther-trop coUee table, mahogany •t"P end table. !ge 11quare walnut corner 1able, grffn brocade chair. can bt1'.·n 8 .r. 4 • 962-1148 •w~p<r, 14 TV. 10 lo 5 •to-·, Am·Fm ,1,_ & "1.-hite, 11 Wttkl old, i 35. 494--3165 .speed bike, Excellent con-0 .... n end d ·-•--.,-,,,===,.-=-=:o-:--,,-d" · •<>~ ~•a ""31 '"' ol "r trade or small do11o·n. Sat & Mon. 132 E. l!th, moce. Uled 4 mo-Cost S600 2676 Oranct Ave, CM a.ft 22' COLUMBIA and ~Ip, in-I ••'1~~~"~· --=·-~-~-"--"°""= RENT WU] finance pvt. pty, Aft BAUER BUICK C.i\,f. sell $2'10 or tradP. 548-373.i 1 ~'=P="===~-,,---eluding ecce!8°"'eti & Mobile Hom•s 935 A NEW Ult lO am S40-3100 or 494-i;i06. Costa 72 Yards CARPET. b!ue, ZENml Remole-conlrol TV IRRESISTIBLE poodle pup1 motor. MB-1263 alter 5 PM 1--N-O_W __ O_P_E_N__ PINTO 234 E. 171.h St, 548-7765 BEAUTIFUL King-!lz berl, firm. f\'e\·rr U!led, !Ill! packaged. Framr inclur!erl. $130, \\'Orth $260. \VJ 11 de.liver, usually home . 842-6636 Jl.40 yard. Hard wearing 175 or oiler. • Black mlniatul"f!, 6 \\"ks, • O'DAY DAY SAILE.ft, $4 DAY \..ood cond. See lo apprec! e 642'-9Hil e AKC. $55. !>49-0344 MOTOR, $1100. CONTEMPO-AND 615--4859 POODLE pups, beaut, little * 536-7787 * LAGUNA HILLS ZENmt 21 "' ports bl", tiny toy & toys, Stud serv. PC SLOOP 32• B lit b 23301 JUDGE ROUTE DR. 4¢ MILE remote c."Ontrol $49, 6 x g [ Ill All colors. 893-9119 Keitenberg, XI~! ~o nd~ <Corner of Moulton Pkwy) PUT A l.ITI'LE F",.a to You UZE Pu 1 l.AGm'A HlLLS KICK IN YOUR blue/green shag $35 , SCHNA R ?$, a •o Pr!«d lo tell 673--J{JIO '"''" LIFE! 847-7591 rare blacks. Male at stud. 1970 17. Rainbow S 8 11 PrestJ&e adult community ad. YOUTH Bed, Step Tahlc, ED 9,jg 1 h _G~roo=m,.,,;n~·~· ~T='='"~'=''=-=,...,,_,.-I Cat-fb11:ls, 2'0+ knot~. Cost jat-enl to Leisure World. THEODORE Stop Tab!t> \~'/C t1h i nt>t. \\'ANT : 1 i\leC!ul oc G. SHEP I year old black;: BeauUful tWTOundinp, All ROBINS FORD Dreuer. 2 \,l vin& room F'lying_ Scott 60 H.P. any and bro\\-n, 1142-732~ 3/29 WI.RE FOX TERRIER Pups $2000; Sac $1550. 548--0143 luxury appointment•, puf. 2060 HARBOR BLVD., ~ndltio11. \\'ill pay up lo AKC res:, Champ line $65. e Al.CORT CATAMARAN ~OsrA MESA cha.Jn. &IG-0092 Ul 531_7294 NEED good home for gentle All shots. 557.9953 w/tt11ler. Be&t offer over ting green, bobby shop, Decorator• Furniture · male doxie lncd Yd . 00 _,_ much more. 642-0010 CO;\fi\1000RE oulbrd motor 543-00.3 :lt?9 TOY P OLES-ARC, m......, $t150. 837-7874 CAU. 830-3900 11 pc while & gold bdrm v t. ~HP sso. Sailboat fibcf'ilasi &. fl':male . Brown ,,_. black. J .,;-7'.,===~A"T"""°'==T; Auto Service, Pert• 96' I-lallw11.y mirror ilt consul. O\'l'r ply'MJOl'l. Sa,bot mut MOVING : Big BhllW dog Call 968-3925 CAPE COD C BOA JUODEL MOBJLE HOMES 646-73.lJ & sail $125. 837.7039 ma 1 e, need ?t h oy -,=11=N=l=P~oodc.cl~,-pu-pp-lo-,,-o4 JS', lbrtils. (2U) 8J4...3Ml. in Calta Mesa's Gf'l!enlea.f 6 cyts. Ford tnatne. Tactory SPANISH dinini,:: room set,• Mnn.~ STOLE, Autumn 545-5175 3129 mslts.S~·Uold.Take""ur Bo.ti, Sllp1/Dock1 910 Park. 24x60 Americana rebu ilt \\'l!h 3 1pttd trJN. · 75 '"" · -'¥ $15,900, 20xS2 Mont tre y 7000 mlle,, oomplete. ~tiat exoellent condition $1 · halt!, ~lust 5tt to ap-CHIHUAJIUA male 3 mo 1• plck $20 ea. 897-21164 BALBOA Island moor\ng & $12. 750, Completely serup SeU S48-5380 96ft..5697 pTPCiale. Make o t J e r . •ho ta. GenUe d 1 1 P 0 1 · DAC!lSHm•o pu-min., 21' \nbol,nl crulaer for 1ale. -;;:;:;,.,~,.:.:c:,,-::-::-::-0::-:--; 2 ..• ......., 543-2311 3/XI v.. ..R \\'/Skirt!, awning1, poreh.. ENGINE c h an g In I &. G.'e•e Sala 11 .>-....... AKC Blk &. l&n &: Sleep1 2. Gray marine 6 etc • ORT · I I k"t · · overhaul, our 1pecla.lty, 4• ROCK '""pie dil\l'!lr se1. 2 SH hairt'd em.a e 1 -m•ho,.ny red. n•lfi.33..4011 ...... , eni\nt. $2100. Located GREENr r~.,,. PARK 1 5 CM UT 1 2 ""Id 6 ,__ I d ~_, ~tu p ragr, 1974 Char e I, · . sq · IM'W arxe pc ,.v nrnls nofin1rnm~ $'20. 9X6 ttn1. \\C!eiu O • &S6 in north Bay oU Sapphire 1750 Whittler Ave., C.:'ol. :ilf'dll1'1al D!nl1';. baby luyrn, oval bnudl!d r u r $20. 646--0793 3/30 H--"-'",...'------_Sc;t-~644-5836'=~~---~.,-64$..-2S10 ** 645-0450 645-44Zl lam,., other fum ou 1 s.&4-tl:;iB 2' DR.AKES, I )T old. YR.-old F'llly tor II.le, pt ~. DOCK Autos Wanted ti&~ 1 , we have It 880 '"-~• "2'34 J/>l b !or JlOWtt boat: '70 2'4x60' mobile home, ~f. W. 1'th 642--45511 JRVINE Coast Cou.n!Ty Oub J9<t-'\I App&)oou., halter roken. tn 30', $1.50 ft. Elec. • llell $4000 btlow price. Lm>ORTS WANTED mc.mbenhip for aale trom GREY tabby Manx, 8 mo 333--0~ aft 4 PM wb' free. 673-6707 Mov 'f . comp! w/aJJ no turn Orange Countle• 961 Sele • l pc l("C\, box ipf1• .It mall , r!(. 716 Colla Meu. SI. C.:'11. Sat A &in member. 6#-4559 old fema le. 5'46-730& 3/l) 14 Yr Quartrr Horst", mare, 26' sl ip, $M/mo. Private 536-2494 TOP i BUYER IT'S A bl'l'eze .• 1ell your BORDER Collle ? 1 fl\IP. S'"ntlt , Xlnt [or &mall ch.lld bath. No. 2 Bal boa Cove1, J960 VESPA·Good conditio n, BlLL ~IAXEY TOYOTA t!tm! with ease, 11~ Dally 4 mo. 54&-i30S l/XI $ll0. M&-lln _____ N.B, Call 6Q..4331 S50, ll20 \Vestmin11er. Cos ta [ ~l Beach Blvd. Pllo! Cliwlfled. 642-~78 ~Ve'll help yoo sell! 64~7& For bc1t ~~uh.s! 642--9i78 Stll ltlln ltem1 nowl 1\ft'I'.'\ Jt Beach. Pit 541-3..CSS ---- • DATSUN 7()."240Z. Lo 1\llles, 1lr, maa1, green, 4$XJ. Pr. e '69 OPEL GT·N<'w rrl't's, Pty, 646-6419 xlnt cond. S2695 or best of- ENGLISH FORD '"· c,u >1&-io75 PORSCHE 1967 ENG . FORD 1;tatlonl,,--::---:o---,,--,,-- waaoo. Auto, "'"'" radio, '63 Ponche Super extra nice cond. Owner going to Europe, must sell. Cpe, Bahama yellow with bik 833--1157 interior, A.J\1/1-'llot, chro.ne FIAT wheels, recent e n c I n e p~ ------1 $2399 ftil'Uvt.l'I CHICK IVERSON "THINK" vw /:Ii 'J 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Dmfl 549-30ll t:>ct. 66 or 67 ,,.~ COSTA MESA S-PORSCHE 911 '68. C0<:0 ''fRlfDLAHDfJI" b,.wn, Lo ml'•, Ori•°"""'• Xln1 cond, i\fany Xll'M, $4850. 6n.ro52 1J7JO llACH IL'ID. IHwr. ltl 193--• 5'11-m< NEW-USED-5ERV. * '«i POitSCH&Goocl cond. New tires & .-J u !c h, ntar -new p a. 1 n f. $3000, ~557-~13 _ _ --f,Tl~li;E;-'-'F~a=,7..,=,71-d~ra:-cwcc1~n-..,1h<-I Sell !he old atutf Buy the W"I ... A Dally P 11 o I new 1turt Ori?t~ifled Ad. ~2 5678 ., " " . l ' " ' ' ' . i I • . ... ·' DAii. Y PILOT .. ·-.. ~-;;"';;""~1§1~1;;-iiiiiiiiiim"' .. ..:;l§l.;.1 ~1 ;;_;; ... ;; .. ~1~§1 1 _1 ---tor--_1~_.,.1 :;;-I ;;--."' .. ;;-"'"";;;;-;;;.:l§J~1.;;I ;;·""';;;;"';;"" ;;::1§]~~~1.:.\-;;;·,-."."".-;.: ~-l~~ .. :1.____ ...... _ ....... _l§J I1.;. I ~~-I Autos, Imported 970 Auto1, Imported 970 Autos, Osod "° Autoa, UMd 990 Autot, UMd 990 Autos, Uotd 990 Autos, ul!J 970 Autot for S.I• '69VW SALE 25 '69 VW BUGS ,ON SALE!! All 100°/o Guaranteed!! Parts & Labor EXAMPLE: VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC CORVAIR MERCURY OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC '63 YW Bug .Radio, healer. 4 speed . (WAZ 1041. 1'Ull Price •$399 BARWICK tMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. Caul Hwy. Laguna Beach 5-16-4051 I 4!M-9m '68 vw WAGON Radio, heater. (XEV457) $1599 '67 vw SEDAN Radio & Healer. IUUV$12) $999 Harbour V.W. 18111 BEACH BL. IM2-4435, HUNTINGTON BEACH '65 vw SEDAN IRlZ 3061 $825 '!~~~G.,,~:n:;,,.~~~ I 'r111-68111.111PrO ... N111rT .. _IA .. -C .. _l .. E-·~•l!l!ll!!sl Cut.lau Conv, big eng, r/h, MM~ CADILLAC .. '63 r.o..vfu ~ (EJGIJ25J, MERCURY '70 SEO. DE VILLE Auto, $299, S10 de11vttw, 110 Mont•rey 10 P•11. OnI TUma avail. a45 Harbor S W air. ssro. Peninsula Point : 673-1916 17.000 local mllea. y by Blvd CM. ta. •I· seelfii •nd drlvlnt thls like · ·• -· ll,000 MILES new trade ln can you ap-CORVmE Tllis hf'auti ful 1talion w1.1on '64 Olds Cutlus V-R preciale condition. Exotic Js In Ilk~ new condition In auto, r/h, taeh. $550 areen gold metalllc tinU.h ·~ COR.VFM'E All A·l .._.every respect Popular pa1-Call 84&-1198. with harmonJ&Jna: Interior A ipd r.itbaclt.' 350 engine !cl green finish with saddle 1 -,70-0-L-'os=c=-,=-11:::.,,...:..::5::_.-,~ .... -,. Jjndau root. Fully power Air,' P/S, $3400. 673'·2292 ' leather color Interior. 11pol· 7300 mlles, many extru. equipped of eour-ae, plu11 COU A leu throuahout. Equipped $32'50. 64&-9740 aft 5:30 pm AM/F'M stereo; tele -tilt G R with auto. trans., radio, Itri', wheel, AIR OONO., ,6 . ." . healer, power 1teering, PLYMOUTH 2 Dr. 11 .T. VII, f'.utomat1c, ra- dio k heater pnwer 1tffr- ln1t & hrak@~. !aetary a ir, hucket 6"at1. Red with blll<ik Interio r. IVIS506) • $1995 BAUER BUICK ... • • plua much MORE. SH this 9 ~· AU' oond, vmyl power bn\kes, faclory ai.r I ijjjjj-jiiiijjjjj-jijjjjiijii I 234 E. 17tti St nflfl be!ote )'OU buy. (290-top, ~w fu'Ql.lo blue book, cond. C"nter fa ci ne third II Co!la Ml'Sll 548-7165 I BEJ\. Priced to 9ell. JoM-~~~all an 4:30 pm -seat. See k drive today, '70 PlYMOUTH D j . >1 heater, powE"r steering, only pass •In wgn. Metallic 1111 COUP.~ D~VILLE 'M DART CONV; Auto l1'I1!:5, 1969 Mercury Montego 9.llOO carefully driven mil es wlgrn inter. Thi11 tw..auty II P,RICED FOR QUICK SALE R/H. )Ont Cond. $550. A'ITRACTIVE It and factory warranty is loadtd &. i ust broke11 In. ·Alttactiv, dark blllf! moon· 536-4l7l ECUNOMICAL available. flt7Al.B) Movi ng lo the Orlet1f forcH du.st ~taJic JlniM with ALMOST Cluaic DodKe , Light Ivy llniAh with gold tn-(2095 sail'. At !his price lt won't ~:;~~·Bl. """'.""DotiGE ;:':!'. ::;;'.'t".,.';,,~; 2 o, H T. •"'•m"k·U'~'~:. i 10 ~,~.~\!,;~E~. 9. 1967 CADILLAC BI., C..to M"'· 5411-5630 white landau root' Ir leather 1950. 63..-100 actuAI miles. terior equipped with auto-f Jl\SI! Pvt ply, C'all 833-l'TM interior. f'\llly power equ.ip-1150. Call 67l-Sl17 matic tranii:., radio, he11 ter, or see at 13071 Red Hill, •• ped AM/FM 1lereo radio FORD power steering, etc. Priwl BAUER BUICK Tustin. I' '69 VW BUG Harbour V .W. Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH BL. M.2-4435 $1399 18711 BEACH BL.. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEAOI '69 YW BUG . HUNTlNf;iTON BE;Ac;:H '63 vw camper. Reblt 1600 r.ng &. trans. Radial tire11 w I wide rlmg, AM I FM 1e1e:t11t· wheel factoey ak for quick stlie. 11675. YCN-234 E. 17th St. '68 Bonneville 1 f a ti 6 n conA Phu ~uch more. '66 R ch W 380. Johnson -': Son, 262fi Co!!la Mesa. SotA-7765 "'"·ii &J nd r &ai.°tituUy . -"'m&!ntained an agon Harbor Blvd., Costa. Mesa. wagon-r u power, r co • thl'Ouchout. fUTB R91) 54{)...56.10, M mi. S2215. 543--9463 . , , $2'115 Johnson le Son 2626 Automatic, power 1teering, 1..::::..;::M:::._U_S_T_A_N_G__ • '69 GTO • ', 1 • zuc 708 Dark green fini11h with r11dio NaturAl wood & crpld inter. le ht'ater. U.1der 25,000 miles Xlnt cond. 520 Orchid , CdM. ! YQV 50-1 l Take 11mall down. 67~2909 H,,.;,;,, Bl., """ . :...... (l'\VJ003). '69 ROADRUNNER • SPEED. BEST OFFER J Kelly Blue Book S•y1 Averag• R•tail $1720 MG-S630 Kelly Blue-. Book nias * 496-3938 • OVER Will fJnance pvt ply. t1456 1968 Volkswagen. excellent lull price. dlr. Alt lD am condition. private paJ1Y, . 1961 CADILLAC--Our Price '65 Mustang 2-<tr, V8. 4--tpd, 1967 GTO, 4 speed, tully , Coup" DEVILLE $999 fNo. RZF487) $599, $10 2 Dr, H.T. VS, automatic, ra-equipped. Xlnt condition. By 1 , 110 USED VW's FROM PRICED roR .QUICK SALE BARWICK :!iv:~ ;:~i:~dr c:~: :~~k::·:~~·,:,07:~ !~~~~:; _0_~~'~'·_c_._11_"~g..(XW)~--=c<- Be•Utiful glamour brown me-IM!'ORTS INC. C.M. with f11ctory warranty re-'65 PONTIAC 2ooddr ~· 1 talle ex!.erior wirh black DATSUN m&ining. fYPT3721 Clean, nlllll I • au , I '66 MUSTANG "1i Cyl. Auto. .....,.,. /-" ~..:: -' $399 540-3100 or 49-l-1506. Many extras. Ill~ 536-1010 e 1969 VW BUG • MUST sell '68 VW. new tires, Radio. pin atripping, wide " x I r, a s • SllOO/OFTER. . tra.ns. Lo mile11$1:e. Very gd CHICK IVERSON vw oval tirea, coco mal, woOO 673-2715 trim. Real 1hazi>. ~ tor --------- my r.q uity It take over VOLVO payments. Cllll 551-6796 or --------- 6.18-<>18' $3093 landau rool and leather in-$1895 pwr. ,.,M}. ""er ,,.. ...... ,on "'"'· "'Uy powor «";,_ 998 So. ""''' Hwy, RAMBLER ped. Air cond., AM-FM Laguna Beach C'OOd. $800. 6ll-65P.O 1leno radkt. Tele·tilt alter. ~l / 494-9m 1970 BOSS CM2J, FASTBACK wheel t (VRf !K>I S2975 4 spd , PI S, P/B, L<lls of · e e. . Ford '70 LTD. 4 Dr. Seel. Xtras -S.3300. 645-3461 Aft 4 John110n &: Son, ~ Harbor Ex~'! 1 1 d B BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St. Cos la l\1P.M M&· 7'IB5 * * GEROLD HOFFMAN 3165 Tryol Lagun• &.ach 1970 HARBOR COSTA MESA S~031 Ext. 67 or 68 445 E. COAST HWY. NEWPORT !!EACH 673·0900 WANTED 1911 VOLVO I'll pay top dollar for !'OW' DEMO 7360 VOLKSWAGEN today, Call We Specia.liz.e In and ask for Ron PincMt, Ove~as Delivef'l' S49·:.l31 Ext. 66-67. 673-0000 . u-... ... -.:.. ent oca tra e. l'a.u-Bl., Coat a Me-.. 540-.-..,, ti'ful d k . ,_ ,1. fi '65 Mustang ar ivy meuu 1c n· N . 1966 CADILLAC i1h with ma~ching . landau e~7;iu:t. 6~1~5aell '69 Sport Suburban SEO t>EVILLE roof. Ivy Cold interior.I-.--"=·_:;__::::_:::::__ !I Pass. waion. Air cond. PRICED r<1R QUI~ SALE Equip~d with auto. trans., 66 Mustang conv.-V-8 auto New tires. $2395, 675-7689 Beautiful ebony black finish radid, hea!l!r, power ltel'.r.,-ri:ans, new paint, $1050. with black landau roof & power brakes, factory air,i,·="~'--7'0~8==~~~-'53 PLYMOUTH l dr, black, You are the winner of 2 ticket~ to the Royal International Circus ac tht> Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 '66 vw SEDAN ..Dwleoo W VOLVO I bl4ck I e ':I I\ er interior. etc. Showa excellent care, '68 MUSfANG 2+2, p/s, ;r;:de~sJ~7~Pi $200 or Equlotd: with · all the Jiu:-· (J'lSCQS) Pric:ed to st-IL p/b, air-rend. $1600. Call i .CC.:::0.:,~~=7'=---1 ury 'r~arurea:· .Full power, John110n & Son, 2626 l:farbor1_541>-_2585 __ . ------PONTIAC ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS S1tlurday, April 3rd Pl"ase call 642-56111, ext, 114 PORSCHE TOYOTA 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 radio, heater, factory air Bl., Costa ,Mesa. 540-5630 '65 MUSTANG, V8, Xlnl I---------- 1964 PORSCHE "C" coupe -Sunrool, nu disc brakes, Cadillac Briarwood misl paint. Beautiful car v.r/a super strong e n i I n e , 64G-2885 1966 PORSCHE 911: Bahama Yellow, 5 spd. 42,00'.l mi, Am/Fm. blaupunkt radio, 1 owner. Complete Service Log 646-2486 dys, ~S-8180 ROLLS ROYCE BENTLEY '54 R.--SaJoon, auto/anrl. Blk: I irey. Doc. History. 84~ l()Sj TOYOTA $1B71 1971 TOY OT A COROLLA 2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED •987S OiOICE OF S .J>erutleoo 9 TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. &.16·9303 BEST BARGAINS COME SEE OUR SELECTION or TOYOTAS Jim Slemons Imports 140 W. W•rner Sant• An1 Open E v•s. & Sun. 540-4125 Bll.L MAXEY !T!OIYIQIT!A! 11111 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. Buch 147-1.555 1 ml H. al Cr1Ut HWJ'. cm Bcll '70 TOYOTA CORONA TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN (VIN 6721 $888 PAYMENT Harbour V.W. $69.01 MONTH' 36 mos. Del. pay price. 18711 BEACH BL. 84.2-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH 12484.36 or cash P r 1 c e Large Selection ~.3R:·14~~. r:n!i ~~~ l Of VW Campen, rn341. Vans Kombis •on approved credit ' U ' • .1 - -...... ..._ cond., f'tc. ISBO 15.il $1675, . '65 LTD . . cond. Lot., of !!Xlra!I, Pvl • ...... --I Joh~son & Son, 2626 Harbor MUST SELL. T-Bird· Motor, ply. Musi i;ell. 644--0857 lNtHI BL, Co!!la Mesa 540-5630 57,flO:) mi.; 2 dr. hardtOJJ, '65 MUSTANG. S1eal Must YOL .. VOi1 ~ '69 Couoe DeVille all power ..Xe, wind._ fee s~ll thill wknd, New tires, Full pow!!~, (OOd cond. air, auto. transm., AM·FM air. SOOO or bst ofr. 968-.1098 673-2262 or 673-5723 radio radial ply clean xlnt OLDSMOBILE "FRIEDLANDER" CAMAiio eo..i: l • .,,.,, 'Bl"' .Book Sl.~. MAke an offer. Call -, ---------111M suctt IHWY. •• ---------·I 644-«iOS Eves. All day Sal.-69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H.T. 893-7566 • 537-6824 '68 CAMARO, xtnt cond. mo Sun, ONE OWNER 14,000 MI. NEW·USEO.SERV-. · 427 eng. 30,000 mi'1, SZ150. Beauoful silver mist tini~h DAYE ROSS PONTIAC C.Omplt-te Saleg le Service 24&0 H•rbor Blvd. al Fair Dr. Cost• Mes• 546-8017 Open 7 day1 a week 8:30 AM lo 9:00 PM '67 FIREBIRD • ----~.-':It _Pvt"'-'_,p;::ty"'.::64>-.:-=-190=7=---~-I 1965 Ford Gal SOOXL w Ith bUJ"iUody in1erior. ~ CHEYl9,_QLIT Buc:krt ieall, power ireerinJt, Equipped with aulo trBns., H.1rdtop. Ex-~.llent condition, '67 P18JOS. 29,000 m J. power brakies, automatic radio, bl'ate:r, JK>Wl!r steer -dlr. f'uU price Sl29'J. Ta.kt bl'rwet-n 9 arwl 1 pm In claim your ticktt~. (North C<>unty tf'.lll·free number !11 540-12'20) * * * '68 JAYLIN Automatic trans., stef'ring, r ;:i d i o, \VAR 129. $1375. "°""' heatu. Harbor American 646·ll<l! 196<1 HA ll!OR COSTA Mf~t. till Maxey Toyota Buses, .New & ,.., 18881 BEAQI BL. 847-8555 lmmecl .... O.llvery HUNTINGTON BEACH CHICK IVERSON 1..1!1.tbl!r, AM-F'M . $2495 ,•69-lm_po_l_•_'_°' __ hnf_tp_Sa_V<_t tnris.., 46,000 orig. mile1. ing, power brakes, power small down, IZRW889) Will firm. Ca.11 540-7551, 9 to !i. $500. ~ encine, auto. p/b, Won't last Jnng. NMV 263. windows, ·air cond. If you fin. pvt. Pty. Call 540-3100 or '63 ciNlc lla.mhltr sm. Johtw.tn ls. Son 2626 h rl •· I do 'I 494.7506 aft ID am. PIS, P/B, factory air, 'G.1 P-lIOJ. Xlnt rMdl., nu p[!, fact aJr. )o mi's. Xln't H-..... -Bl ,..._ · •~ ar "" J:I eul', n brka, cl ch elc, JnL p!!rf. cond. New t l r 41: 1 I b t k 1 • IL1 uur .,. ~tta Meaa. miss this fine car. fXW118) '6!1 Le Mans 2 DR HT, Tm-$..100 * * 962-ls« Sacri. 846-9518 3l"r"M t&pt!. $2195 For QUick ~-JohnllOn &: Son, 2626 Harbor mac. vin. rf .. AT, PIS, '6.i RAMBLER Clusic 2 Dr. Auto•, U"'4 990 ~le. Will consider traM. •:;7 Ford, sood runnins eond. Bl., C.OSla M"1a. ~5630 P/B, T/G, AM. 1 a p,, hrdtop, low mlleaa:e. ·New '68 Corona Hardtop -= ~ 111 .,. ., Loaded. Black landau top. Automatic. radiO. beater. (WIN 748) Take small down. Will finance pvt. pty, Call afT 10 am 49-1-7506 or 540-3100 ~9500 days, 645-0962 "" Bl!at otter. Fut re1UU1 are just a phoM m11.g11, air, $2300. 557-4686, tires, 1 owner. 8J0-439S BUICK '70 NOYA c.IJ 842-36ll .,.u away· &<2-S6'11 644-<l!14 ''" be•t "''"II>! 64U6!8 •n VW Van bus, A/C, R/H, iiiiiji~~~~iiiiiiiiii ''4 Ford G•la11:Je 500 Auto• New 980 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, New 9IO lie, tic. Total nrice new ~ "'--H'ant+-Radio •--' --==..._ ...... ...,.....;=====-,, VS, automatic, pow"r 1tffr· ~ ..,.,, . • ,,,...,,.. 1S70 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA S-1018. ';aR Will take S300 ,68 SKYLARK Ing. dlr. IA&ded-(CVE.lfi9) er, power 1t~n1, power TRIUMPH k you l>k• "'"" pymot> Full rl Ul95 c.IJ 494-174' ., .. , .. 1"1''>' •"· '"1"'"'' or $3500 cash. 64&-9108 P ~ · lie trans. S645.-ORB 5ll. '71 SPITFIRES VW K. Ghl• '64, 43,000 ml'•. 2 o,, H.T. VI, '"Imnati<, ,,_ '69 [l CAMINO Jolmooo • Soo; 2626 """'°' Pvt pty. Xlnt cond, $750 dio, healer, power ateerine; Blvd., Costa M"sa. M0-5630 NOW ON DISPLAY cash. 67>-5505 Ir. brake1, vinyi roof. Just YR. 3 speed, radio. dlr. Heal* 1i6 F6rd LTD 2-dr hrdtp, Come tn for a test drive! '68 VW Camper, F u 11 y immaculate. IWEF1!7) er, clean. Will take trade or PIS, P/B, A I r, Auto, FRITZ WARREN'S equip'd, pop-top, Tent, All $1925 bna.nce. Ca.U ~94-774t Radio, Vlnyl top, 390 eng, SPORT CAR CENTER new 6hoclui &. brakes, FM ·ss Chevy 2-dr hrd!JI auto Xlnt st.ape, Pvt owner. 710 E. ls! St., S.A. 547-0764 gterN> tapt' deck, 9 titts, BAUER BUICK {Nl'I. PID611)) $299, sui lll.95. 67~735 Open daily 9-9; closed SUnday beige, >..1n! oond In '-out delivers on 3pproved credit. 1970 Ford Maverick TRIU!\-lPH TR-' Road6ter, _,,S26:~""-~· ~"~""'~"-'-~~~= 234 E. 17th St. See •t 19t~ Harbor Blvd, Xlh't value. New wtw tires, :: Coat& Mesa 54s. 7765 .. __ d ty · u.•ire u.·heeil'i, very good con-1970 VW Square-back 11.000 C.M. m:avy u suspentuon le dition thruout. Sell or trade miles, air-cond, AM-FP.1 1970 El Camuio Custom 350 1hock1. Low m i 1" •I e · tor pick-up truck or CBmpt'r radio. Luggage n ck. Bto ige. 1970 CAO El Doral»17,000 cu in., rlh. air cond, pis. 644-2387 after GPM. truck. $945. Call 549-0530 Mint condition. $2250 tirm. mi, fully equipped. Silver p/b, vinyl top, Very clean. 'li6 Country Squ.i.re, A/C. VOLKSWAGEN Aft 5:30 pm. 830-884!1 ~y & white. AM : Call $28.J(I. Call &u.-169'4 ah 4 R/H, PIB, PI S, Rack, lD- '66 BUG • Xlnt. Wht/red 54s-3486; PM: 67~n02, a.ak pm or wknd1 pa11, 1 owner, $1000. 644-2491 ;.t " 000 J N •;-for Paul Henderson. 0 '67 VW SEDAN - Top cond. "' · ...,, m -ew ...... a. '61 Chevy ~ (No. RVP374) 'fi6 f' RD Q)untry Squire Loaded w/extru. Sunroof. $850. 644-4126 or 548-3389. '68 RIVIERA -Loaded. $199, $10 delivl!rt on ap-Wagon. Xlnt cond. New $1200. 642-9942 vw bug 1960 SUnline top AM/FM stereo. Be au t . pmved uedlt. See at 1945 tires, Sll5(1, 833-1480 VW '6' BUG -11flw !ires, Sacritice $375. ailver w/blacl! vinyl top. Harbor Blvd, C.M. .61 FORD Galaxil' r.tINT CONDITION 673-8174 Wkdys only, E4.2-4000 Mr. • '63 Chevy lmpa.h1 XLNT RUNNING CONO Attractive green finish with 1963 VW Bus-New ena: k. Ron McKendry t'ac air, Pih, PfS, VI * 541}.!1241 * b•ok••. M-'·• oJ!e•. 619 • '69 Riviera, Xlnt cood, VERY CLEAN * $600 beige interior, radio, heat-..,.. ·n Ford Van. 00)() mi'a, Ch -" th' f Poinsettia. CdM. 67:'1-5556 No 11.ir, $2550. * fi46..1880 * E200 A' VI ~·-I l!r. etc. e"" 11 out or * 675-2422 * _ . 1r. , .... ~tm nt"r .. price & quality. {TRH5431 '68 VW Bug, beige . Good WANTED: '•v, '71 Nova or Loaded $3695. 67!'>-8794 $925. Johnson & Son, 2626 cond. pvl pty, Musi sell '68 Buick Wildcat HT. '41'. Plym, Scamp, f6 l PIS, AT'l---------- 4 Door. Automatic. dlr. Im-Harbor Bl., CO$\a Mesa. $1005. 67J..1f.i56 a.It 6. factory &ir, I<> m!. Saeritice &: disc braks, lo mi's nee. JEEP maculate! {236 AQX1 Will 5-ID-5630. • '611 VW 9,_ PASSENGER 11600. 54.8-3002 ~6~1'.\-:'., ~1~7'4~--------1·---;;;-;;:::;::----take trade. Call 494.7744_ I ~~~-'----=c----=--1 VAN. I ~ ... ~ru°'·v~;.-,-,~G~S,-.~f\l~U,_y-J~.,-.,-.. ~. 'Em Chevy K1ngiwood Station '43 JEEP '60 Karmann GhJa Cotivt. . .. ~ kl" · RUNS WELL LEASE A NEW '71 Toyota Xlnt cond, ,,..;,, w/b\k top, Make offer. ~70 $3400. Call Wgn, Air. "'"' .1, llfttr1n11:. .,,2 _, 7 nly "9 98 It h J t * ~1461 * Xlnl. Make <1fler. 645-0446, '" . ....,....art PM for o P • mo. w us rf"d inter.. Reblt eng, 30 ·59 vw, + Baja Bua Kit. $99.96 +Lie. f'.1.P.G .. $j7j , 644-6316 ?o.laa: weela & tires, All for 1968 Buick Deluxe s t a 645-~ '45 JEEP $695 8UL ?-.tAXEY TOYOT A .56 KARMANN GHIA $400. 6r:>-6340 wgn-Air, Xlnt cond. f.llOO. '70 EL CAMINO, :117 cu in, C'ash, 546-%154, 8 AM· 9 AM . • ,1 _f!"'H,':"u~ .. cgh•-~l."-•"h SlQ .69 Karm11.nn Ghia Conv. ex. 642--4749 alt 6 wkday11 ttnt/wind., PfS. P/B. misl ·70 Bmnco, fully equipped , ft"Oi""" "" w .. """"... C DIL' AC gm, T.0 .P. ~45-1212 . 9,IXX) mi's xlp't cond mWlt 1 • 540-9759 alt 6 * cond. 22,500 ori. miles. A "'""' 540-4550 ,.11. Pvi pty, ·~ =• ,11 l . SHARP '69 Toyota, bema S209j_ 673--flQ .,............., ''""'· '"'"· AC .. '68 VW Clean $1295 '67 IMPALA 2-dr, gold, PS, alr·"A Beauty: Mu1t Sf'U" lll-lJ'.>6 tape/ate~. clean, priv. * 675-4.154 ~ VW '65 Ghl• 1500 S. pey. 495-M66 SELLING Your boat? "Liit" Low milt s. $950 491-2008, Fut results a.re jull a phone with us .. sell It fast. Daily Sell Idle Items mw! call •wa.Y • 642-5678 Pilot Classified. Ml-5678 Call 642-5678 Now! . I • L•rgest S•l•ction OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS CHRYSLER MERCURY 1970 MARQUIS CPE. SH~WROOM TYPE OF CAR jiijijjjiiiiijiiiijjjijjjjjiiiijiiiijji ll,OOO MILES In O••ng• County ,65 CHRYSl£R Att..aottvo m•<fatm '""'"°l"' • 1 mist fi nish with white in~r- 19 Cpe DeVillea. 13 5'-d. Df!. i(lf A: landau roof., immacu· Villea, 6 El Dorados - 5 Con. 4 Door Sedan. lmrii1.cula.te late! Premium equipped v1trtll::le1, 16 other 1elect thrU-out. Low mUl!'age. V8, auto, trans., am-fm 11ten!O u·ade-ins. 11.utnmatlc, radio, heater, radio, heatl!'r, power steer· 1963 thru 1970's power st•ering. (ZLllM) tng, power brakes, factory ibe~ $995 ,;, "'""· Truly ''°"'" " like ne'"' 4 near new tires, etc. See '-ask tor demon· CADUAC BAUER BUICK 1tntioo, (916 BEQJ. Joho-AUtHOAIZfO DV.WW 2600 HARBOR BL.., 23' E. 17th S1. 1on « Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., COSTA ME8A CMta Mesa 5'13-7765 Costa Meaa, 540-56.10. '"1·9100 o,., '""""I 1970 MERC. CONY. e '69 TOWN ik C 0 u n try nfE SPORTY ONE '65 CAD. Cpe De Ville, air. 1 &-pa.uenctr wQQn, Loaded. 'Illll flashy !Uh~ ~6W with rulJ p~T. Hi mi., but tOJI AM/FM. Mr. Ron McKe~ black top It intenor au~ nd ' Lo book dry wttkday1 onl y, 64l-«l00 M6blle hu been driven only "'MUST ~t:LL! '"'"""'° CONTINENTAL 12.000 mil"~ mo" b<"'" =--=~===-·---&. driven to appreciate. Jli. 'fill Fl.EET\VOOO 4 dr. d)o, Mattr, power 1t"'r1nt, Motor in xlnt. mnd, tino& 1970 MARK Ill COii S9600 power hnikes,, !Actory Jilr fair, Tlf'W pain!. Nttd1 ff:41 new. Sac. SM99. Undtr ~:u·-CGM ., e tc. 4 Mar new Utt~. mvl!r!. ~7:). :»7-3331 nnty. DL.R. OY89A800501. Ask tor df'monstration. (7D.\. '6!1 Convertible, Io ad~ d , phOO" 6J6.4(lln AZP). JnhnMlll It Son, 26'6 S4Dl. C..n fil\8.fl«. priv. '68 CONT'I. Cp. .tmm11<". Harbor Blvd., Costa Mr:aa. pty.. San Clem@ntt Tl.f.: con<!. Mu1t 1tt. 962-0673 11ft 54().56.30 4~~2800. !i It wlmdll. l·,.::68.::.;M;.:•::n:_"_'>'_M_o_o_tcl-,-;-,-,..-, '69 El Dorado, All xtras. "6.1 CONT. ~ dr, fly. pwr. hrdtp. Air o:>nd, Lolu11"d, Mwit aelJ lmake ofr. Ph. an $495. or best nffer. Na reuonsble offpr 1"1'fUlt'd . :l pm, .>16-0500 ~1'.'-25'..'·1 ~~7-6413 • 2 DOOR HARDTOI' Deluxe alt vinyl tnterior. automatic transmission , power steering, wh isper air conditioner. AM radio. Dual rear seat speaker11. Decor group, remote left hand mirror , tinted glass, etc. • IZ46K5778. Immediate delivery. RETAIL $5029.80 DISCOUNT $ 829.80 54200 JOHNSON & SON UNCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR 2626 HARBOR Bl YO., COST A MESA 540-5630 642-0981