HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-01 - Orange Coast PilotI ·
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Sex Rook Dealer
Fa~ing ·High Cenrt
IDlprisoned Again
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Federal ·011i~ial
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.S.ays Easie~ Hoek · . -.
F / . ·o . ~ -est · ang·erous~._
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-IXOll ens an . '
THURSOA Y AFTERNOON, APRI~ ·r, ,I 971
VOL. 6'. NO. 71, S SECTIONS, .. ·PAelS .'
Calley Protest ·. / ..
... . , , Deeision . . ~ ......
March on DC
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-By United Preis hteroatlo~
Three local draft bOMdl resigBed. at
least three mass marches on Wasfiington
were being planned, and the White House
wa:t swamped with telegrams and
telephone calls as Americ;rns expressed
their feelings about the conviction of
Lt. William Calley.
Calley was convicted of t h e
premtiditated murder of 22 Vietnamese
civilians at MY Lai. •He was sentenced
WedlJes'ciay to life in·prison. ,
R'eaclion confinued to mount ai-0Und
the · nation as ·calley waifed in the ·rt.
Berining ·stockade for a transfer to
fedtral prison.
The White House, according to Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, had receiv·
ed more than 5,000. wires and 1,500
telephone ca)l.s concerning the conviction,
They were running almost 100-l in favpr
of clemency for Calley; he said.
Jn St. PetersDurg. Fiil... real estate
man Walter J. Dilbeck said Wednesday
he and JOO "coordinators" around the
nation were laying Plans for 'a miss
•fnlJ'Ch on ~washington July 4 on behalf
of all Gls charged in the My Lai incident.
"We intend to have one million people
In Washington that aay and we intend
to stay there until these men are-releas·
ed," Dilbeck said.
E. Thomai:· ·cammarota, commander
of the , Pennsylvania American Legioi,,.
called on President Nixon to heed thoSe
urging clemency.
"If Presidtnt Nixon sees fit. not t~,
listen to the thousands qf te./egrami
that already have been .sent to him,.
Oruge Coast
1''eather
It may not be quite so we.rm
along the Coast Friday, but the
morning fog will still be with us.
Look for temperatureJ in the 67
to n--Oegrte range.
INSIDE TODAY
A modtrn Flyfng Dutchman,
in the form of a &unken Germon
submoTine. repor:ttrl.Ly threaten.t
Florida Coast. with its deadly
World Wa.r 11 cargo. See 1wr11,
Page S.
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H1ri...11 Hl'ln •·I Ori"" ,_.,. 11
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we are · J)l'eP41"¢ to marM t1'n
Washin.gton," Cammlri>ti uid.
'Robert Cadle., 1 'retired· Army sergeant
who says the ver<licl was "a lot or
bull," said Wednesday he BJ)d a "Free
Calley C.Ommitlee" 'with branches in all
states but Hawaii will lead 50,ooo· people
in a march on Washington after a petition
drive.
''This whole iliinl!; has boomeranaed
all qui of proportion." Cldle .said. ~'Peo
ple CBIJ in · and' they' c\Jss; ciji!, .cuss.
Are they mad .. I've never. s.een anY,thiDg
like tpis verdict in my ljfe,."
All the members · of )'oca.1 Selectjve
Service . Boards in Elizabethton. Tenn.,
and Athens •llfl Blairrv!De. Ga., reSi~.
Membe(s of the Qultm8n. Ga., board
(See CALLEY, Page %)
S~x Book Dealer
Facing Appeal
In Jail Again
Special to the DAILY PILOT
LOS ANGELES - A sex book publisher
whose Costa Mesa ceoviction. is 1 due
for re'tl.iew by the ; U.S .. supreme Court
on consUtutional grOunds was .ded
another one here iniederal cotirt. ' • ' T •• ,_ Marvin Miller,· ol·Covjna, was s)IPP.etf
With a.1$45,<K» ·fine;~nd 1 two-year"te.i:m
in £ederal prison Tuesday,by 1U.S. District
Court Judge Williatji ·r. Grey.
The bead r4'f Covtna Pubfishing lnc:,
was convicted 01 15 counts of malling
obscene materiall, , the same charge
upbeld 51 wee.U 110 In Costa Mesa:
Ch 1 I I e n I i n g constilutionaiity of
California law e.tabllshing atandards of
obscenity . and other Tellted aspects,
Miller appealed tAat cue in Or~·
County Superior COurt.
His convict.ion wa1 upheld, buf his
attorneys went right t.o the U.S. Supreme
Court with ~ appeal that it aareed
to bear this faJJ during Jt.s ne:rt n!!gular
session.
Miller'• contenijon Is' that obsctnily
cbarge1 are intended Ln be heard at
tbe federal level and thU1 defendants
are treateil•on an unequal basis in 1late
cases.
By establi.lhlng· oblcenity · aad com-
munity 1Undards er good taste from
state to state, he further argue., the
now el ' material.I thniugb the mails
CID bt hampered .
This, Miller 1rpu, J>OlM!.• possible ef·
fec::U on even the most innocent
materials, auch 11 mail order catalogues.
His Colla Men coovictlon involved
&dvertisin& broc}luru Jor sexy bqoks
and mevlea which 1ttomey1 argue are
'"'di\)' -l!ld rtod by repuiablt book
atore patrens.
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BY ~OJIN VllLTIW,,A • ' • ~ fllt ~11.Y. "'~·J''" ... : - -.
With a stt'Qke of his pen. W~~;y .
Presiden£ Nixon shook Jjle sanctity ~ the~ ea'mp 1 ·Pendteto.Q, .lands, oPeninf'ap -.
'six Wies of ~bea.cl\,eJ and more than
3,000 a;.res cf, a prime vaU~y for Pi!.blie use. .. ·· . ,..,. r "'
And iater ·the chier' executive declatec;l: .. ,
the landmark decision :Jn f!tf.pr of. ~ '·
space was only the beginnirig of a V~
· federal ·pr9gram for housecleaning ·o'f
11urplus government real~tstate.. . ·
The affected area 'is .wilhin &iibt ·.cit
the Western White Hou&e.. '. '
The bloc.kbuster decision ·mvotvis a
coveted enlistld man's beach club aruf
a private surfing club-long the •objecil· ~r~4~.;~~"l:i.:...-.®"~i.;..· of criticiSm, ,.along with the shore1me in · front' of ',~e Sa.tr OnOfre nuctea.ii . "t: ... ...... 't generat41g co Pl~x: :and; the ' ne.w •.Sad-
1, •• ~ •.•. r,...., j ~~~:»hgf~· ~t~ Be.ach-:~h ef'thai9.f·
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,-' ' ~ · 1· Btsid'"es tlte pr .lme coasta/li
land-described by the President. as "one f
1 or tHe ~CountrYs~18stfar ·swlmmhi't-
. . •. • beaches" -the 'direc cove.rs 3,@t
, • acres of 5'11 h1~ V , ey iJ:nmedtate;fy {
&0uih of Jhe San· Cleiru:nte City lllllils .:
and· the Orange-San Di~o Comity IJne:" i j
The new publi~ beacli WlU 'Stai-t al:ioltt
i. 1.000 feet south .of the· Presidential c.'bTJi.. •
., ,; • ! plex, bounded <fowncoast by the . countv t-
.;,,, !< .; • :J _ 1 boundary. The '·Trestles, beach Win IJ;e
the buffer zone requested by the Seer•~ i
t! ' DAILY l"ILOT ~Nie'""""'"' V1ttwt1
PRESIDENT IN HELICC'fTElt SURVEYS NEW )!EACH ,T)IAT ,IS TO BECOME PUBLIC •
Service-a no-man's ·!find for securitJ, ,
purposes. ~\· ' '• ~
Immediately south 0£. that area U. !
boundary begins for the new publi: '
beach. · . , __,,.-' ~ .
Arf:i 11 South ef W!ter~ White Houu; BuUding1 · Stiown Are to Be.come Publlc . ., )
I .. . . . . . ' .. MITl<>Ot adjacent to .that )o\llfdarY' iit /1
the enlisted man'~ club, f ~!flplei qt ii.
Spanish-style· buildings and permanent ~l'
beach use structures -all of which will ·,~ ::;;~i :~'!X'!, ... c~~~!Y_.fJ..1.!~£~~~.,
. A Montyey Park man is in cuatody ;: Have Re.straini_'rig Or, der
+ ~· il,Vj!J, !p,tl>l,!l!te..Jlf.c./j~kp .. ·1 ~ creetioDel oiOTbce use i.S It 1eei fft.
The San -Onofre Surfhlg Club area .
today in Newport,' Beach following hil!I ~ •.
• • •
Is ~xt, &itu'lted <n a poilj well knowb ,
for its excellent surf. · ~ ·
TI1f"" next 'downcoast t8ci1ity ls tll!
San Oriofre 'Nu~lear ·.reactor comple:r, ~
with its one existing atailon (two mMt .. arrest· in connection with a two-year-old ,
credil card case. ~ : ·~CRA~NTO (AP), -A rederal of.
. 'f fi~l said tod1y a planned r.oclc festival
Detectives arrested Jerry. Rlcharcf . in Abe C&lilornJa desert could cause both
McClard, whom they claJm ii Also kno-wn j' !m*tan 1~ferit1g and..,. environmental
as Terry McClard. Wednesdoy ofternaon ,d•~'8'· . . . • l}le caution catne h:om J. R. Penny,
in Monterey Park. i Cal\fornia director tor \ht U.S. Bureau
DetectJve Robert Brockle said he hn of 't Land Management which ls the ~ofcl for 1 most· ,of · the 1 Southern ~ "/>rkiDJ on tht CU<! 1lnce I~ ' Clffrol'l'la cJeterl region:
wheo M<Olard, II, allegedly Uled I l!<>lu " llelldy Hid BLM · olficiols bad been
credl>, ""'1rl9 PJITCh,,. more ih_., 050 ; idv~ lil!I ,300,~..Jo .• l.OOJX)I), YiiMpg. • , ' " ,. · • peijpl•-rriJgh.l ga~r tn iht-Pabamint worth ol sooda from Newport !nm-._ ')1'1)~7 wcif o1 Qealh Valley for Ille
"I've been JOoklna for hinf Der. 1l9te,'' · lestlvat over. Easlei-Weekend.
Brocklt a&ro, "&nd .U wu Juel rt<eDt\)' . P•MY , l~I~ Inyo Coun\y olricials had ol)tJJned a 'tein]k!Pary restraining. order
that we wue _able to..6lrace. blm to ·tn In .effoi-t ·lo halt the "festlval , but
!he Monterey Park addna." lb•l nelibei:Jlle county nor lb• BLM
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had the forces to stop large n'u.ribers are·propostd for·next-doar). The. reaciifp
of people from going into the area. land area w!O be closed to the -publl~, ~
SoQ'Je-young peof>Je. irom a.'s far away but the. shoreline seaward of the toweril\I ~
as New York and Chfcago, ·already had sea Wall will 'be open. _ ~
begun, cariiping on \he scene, BLM of· Direc,tl)' SOJJtl} • of that complex ~ •
ficlals ·said today. ·'Law officers-and the line where the new San CMofr.e •
federal ofticials were to .Jneet · In the Bl\lffs ,State Be8ch begin!. It will 1f :·
Inyo County town of IndependenCe to dedicited Si,turday. , ',
map strategy. '' · That section. leased to I.be state of :.
Penny cautioned that young people c:aJifornia last year a.fter tougb ~go~
ruke4.,. a. thr4µ1t to .their h.ealll'I by .at· •tiont with .the Marme. Co~ps. 111 1f' .
Mmding \the. ,r.,uval.~,if. it come1 oH"· !!nilea •tong.' ·•
es · p\1nn~d. He cited . poor aeces1 to Computing the 3.~ miles of that be•~
the ~rea pver 2$ miles of poor desert and blufltop with the new artas--4>-pentjd
roads. ~l<l\Vlng aand. _ e.xlreme tem-up' by the Presidential order. the ltn&m
peratures and the lack of water and or tM oew pubUc beach wUl bte I
ibelter. • miles tong~tactly one-third of tM
"The sheer numbers nf -pP,Ople alJO lire Camp Pendleton coastline whrd1
!Stt DESERT, P11e ll (See BEACHES, P111 U '
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I DAIL V PILOT s
Mtersliocks
Jiggle LA
Tlasin Today
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
.. '9lf Cltl!Y ,Utt lllH
Jwt two years after variow visionaries
, predjcted a great earthquake would
tumble the whole sinlul SouUtland into
the RI, two more • aftershocks or the
major February trem~r s ck early
today.
They were preceded ednesday by
a temblor that rattl up to 4.0 on
the Richter Scale and caused heavier
damage in some San Fernando Valley
areas than the Feb. 9 quake.
Today's aftershocb: came al 3:48 a.m.,
With a 2.7 rating, and at 7:03 a.m.,
. With a 3.7 mark .
Some Orange County residents reported
noticing the later. stronger jolt, which
was strongest in the Northridge and
Devonshire areas of the hard-hit San
· Fernando Balley. ·
The heavy aftershock that came at
1:54 p.m. Wednesday, about eight miles
from the epicenter of the disaster two
months ago, was the worst yet.
The epicenter was dirtctly under a
heavily populated area, according tG
Caltech seismologist Dr. John Nordquist.
Sii: persona suffered minor injuries,
while canned goods and bottles twnbled
fro m store shelves, glass windows shat.
tered and plaster !ell (rom ceilin,R:s.
Tbe Los Ange1CJ Police Department'!
Devooshire Di vision 11lffered extensive
damage.
"lf it had happened five minutes later,
we might have had some injuries," said
Lt. Dan Sullivan, noting the roll call
room would have been full of patrolmen
at muster.
Sil: minor fire! were also reported,
along with some new but minor damage
to the county's 43-inch Granada Trunk
Line carrying waie·t into the area.
One of the hardest-hit h o m es was
that of Hal Sanders, who escaped with
minor damage in the Feb. 9 quake
tha t killed 65 persons and caused millions
C>f dollars in damage.
"Whal we didn 't Jose then was pretty
• well totaled today.'' Sanders remarked..
"1bls tlrrie the · Inside C>f the house
was wrecked. It toppled over three
television sets and broke them all. The
glass doors broke. A china cabinet full
C>f my wife's crystal feU over on the
dining room table."
The Feb. 9 earthquake was recorded
at 6.6 on the Richter Scale and has
been followed by well over 200 af.
tersbocks1 some loo mnall for humans
to feel. '
Such tremors in the wake of a major
quake are almost alw ays lesser in in·
tensity, bnl several have been recorded
over 3.0 on the Richter ScaJe.
Precisely two years ago to t.hb week
uthem Californians were moved to
ct witlJ everything ~rom panic to
am~t when a jolt cenlertd in an
uninhabited part of San DiegD County
ratUed the earth.
The jolt came one day off one of
aeveral dates set by assorted soothsayers
who claimed C&llforni a and its bot·
tomlesa: bars would crumble and fall into· the aea.
From Page 1
DESERT ...
pose a real threat lo !he fragile
ecological balance of !be desert itsell,"
Penny said.
'rbe feslivaJ is plannied Ol\ an SO-acre
plot ol priva!e land near the historical
ghost mining town of Ballarat Penny
said. "but in fact would be' largely
held on publie land because of the
11umbers of people expected."'
The injunction was against t h e
landlord, a promoter Jdentified only u
"Zamora" and 15 John Does.
DAILY PILOT ·----c-·-·
Hntl..,._.._. -·-s.. 1=1• ••••
OAANGm COAST 'UILISHING COMl"AHV
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1i•urSdA}', Aprill, 19 71
DAILY 'ILOf ....... W 11"°"1 1>111ne
f;rlins Captured
Viet Fire Base
• .
Overrun by Reds
SAIGON (UPI) - A North Vietnamese
regiment ovemn a South Vietnamese
fire base in the central highlands today
and sent the defenders fleeing. leaving
thtir arlillery behind, nlililary sources
reported. Field dispatches said seven
Americans were killed, one a helicopter
a-e-Wman.
Military sources said l w o American
helicopters were shot down in the attack
on fire base 6 near the junclioo of
the borders of LaOfl, Cambodia and South
Vietnam and that one crewman was
killed, aoother wouod~ and that t)Vo
Ame ricans were wounded .
The Viet Cong news agency, in a
• report issued in Paris, said guerrilla!
••wiped ollt" an entire South Vietnamese
battalion and captured !leveral Saigon
troops and a U.S. mililary adviser.
The government rushed in rein-
forcements lo fire base 6 and 11poke!lmen ·
in Saigon said fighting continued there
late loday. Tbe spokesman also reported
the South Vietname.se had disabled their
artillery pieces but front dispalches said
the Communists apparently captured
them inla ct or had repaired them
because ihey were fired against ,the
South Vietnamese later today.
having suStalned heavy tosses ln the
South Vietnamese operation in Laos.
The renewed North Vie ln am eae
assaults came as the U.S. Navy formally
ended its direct role in water combat
in South Vietnam by turning over com-
mand .of its: last oper1tional a r e 1 in·
the Mekong Delta area lo the South
Vietnamese Navy. .
Fighting last week in the area just
below the demilitarized ~ (DMZ) also
increased American casualties (or the
fourth ~utive week. The U.S. Com-
mand said 58 Americans were kllled
and 542 v.·ere wounded. Another 2l
Americans died from other causes, in-
cludi'.ng accidents, driigs and non·
battle(ield incidents.
The South Vietnamese base attacked
by a: uni! of North Vielnamese regulars
was the first ever totally overrun by
the Com~unists in the area near where
the bord s of Laos: and Cambodia tJlte~
halfway b tween Saigon and the DMZ.
Calley Sympatliy
Calls Pour In
To Wh.ite House
CALVES BELLOW FOR THEIR MOTHERS AND MOMS BELLOW BACK DURING ROUNDUP
Tradition Practiced For More Than 100 Years Continues As It Did in Old West
An elite Soulh Vietnamese Black
Panther commando group ended a 24-
llour foray into Laos today and returned
lo South Vietnam. Gov ernment
spokesmen said it had a c h i e v e d
"remarkable results" in killing" one North
Vietnamese and destroying several tons
of supplies deep Wide LaOll. 'J'be raidera
said they found the bodies of 85 Com-
munists killed by U.S. alr (orce "strikes.
President Ni.Jon bas ttceived thousands
o( telegrams and telephone call s runaing
almost 100.tcrl in favor of clemency for.
LL William Calley.
Tradition of Old West
Continues at Roundup
By BARBARA DUART E
Early Wednesday morning as the sun
began to warm gently sloping h_ills still
green from spring rains, lhe sound of
a lone bird mingled with the shrill cry
of a cowboy.
Following the sound to the hills to
the south, spectalOrs watched several
dots mulUply as trainhands from Rane.ho
Mi5sion Viejo herded cows and calves
toward corrals nestled Jn a canyon lined
with shade trees and • long-dry creek
bed.
And the old West came to life again
-almost within earshot of trafric travel·
ing the San Diego Freeway to the west
and Ortega Highway to the north.
But civiliziW._on seemed far away a!
more than ~cows and calves halted
in mldstride, en r o u t e to e-0rrals. tc
record a guttural protest at a group
of photographer! and reporters perched
on ~ canyon hillside.
In a tradition practieed for more than
100 YeJJ'S on the 50,000·acre spread,
cowboys soon were busy roping. bran·
ding, castrating and dehoming more than
200 calves.
Cows bellowed at their offspring and
offspring bellowed back as they were
wreslled to the ground for a two-minute
session ending with a king-size shot of
antibiotics and vitamins.
Cowboys, including movie personalily
Monte li-1ontana who joins the roundup
each year. swung lassos over hind legs
of game 300-pounders and dragged them
to small bands of wranglers.
ln a quick ceremony, a hot branding
Iron stamped the ranch logo on the
calf's rump, an ear was clipped for
identification, homs were lopped off by
a hacksaw, the castrated area was
smeared with creosote, and the unhappy
youngster disappeared into the herrl for
mothetily consolation.
Participating in morning activity was
Gil Aguirre, ranch superintendent who
has posed ror Marlboro ads; t.1rs. Ali ce
O'Neill Avery. a partner in O'Neill
Properties, and her hard-working rancher
sons. Jerome and Tony Moiso.
Singled out for recognition Ind a
lifetime slot en the ranch by ttlrs. Avery
were SJ.year-old Cec!I ttiartinez who was
born on the ranch and lassos with the
best of them, and Joe Tew · 'A'ho has
been with the operalion 40 years.
From Page 1
BEACHES ...
strelche.s 18 miles from San Clemente
lo Oceanside.
The upland area involved in the
declaration of surplull is acreag e. known
as San ~1ateo Canyon, an area used
for years as leased agricultural land .
Chrislianitos Creek runs lhc length ilf
the valley, sometimes flowing to Lhe
11ea during wet months.
The property, under terms of the r:<·
eculive order, would ha\'r to rema in
1vailable for suitable public uses. said
the President's Domestic Po I icy
Coordinator John D. Erliclunann1.
The initial offer will be to !he Stale
of California 11nd the c11y of San
Clemente. Curiously, the county of San
Diego, \\'here the land in question hes.
""as not mentioned in the offer.
No charge would be made if either
or both of lhe named entities took the
lerrllOry.
If neither decides lo m::ike it.
Erl.!chman explained. thtn thf' federal
aovernment would sell it to pr ivate
Jntere~Ls nnd plttee lhf mriney 1n~o a
1pecial trust fund to pax for purchal>t!'
of other land in the t·nitrrl Slates suu.ible
U>r_Jll.lbt1c rccreat1onaf u.se!l.
-
Calves from O'Neill Ranch, mainly
a steer operation, will be weaned in
July and , shipped to feedlots for 200
days to gain market weight.
Cattle buyers for the new herd already
have selected lots, Aguirre disclosed.
And in the true tradition of the \I/est ,
buying and selling is done by oral agree-
ment.
l'ro1n Page 1
CALLEY ...
wired Nixon they would DQ~ induct any
more men.
''This is the worst thing that's ever
happened in the United States," said
Robert E. Caldwell, chafrman of the
Blairsville board.
Sam Mottern. chairman of th e
Elizabethton Board, said after the Calley
verdic t he could no longer perform his
dulies "without a complete surrender
of principle and conviction."
In Richlands, Va .• response to a rad.Jo
slation 's poll on Calley's guilt was so
heavy Wednesday that telephone clrcuits
broke down temporarily. Some listeners
then drove to the station to vote. Tte
total showed only three of 688 votes
favored Callt!y's conviction.
A Davenport, Iowa, television station
conducted a 90-mlnute poll on the verdicL
Twenty-three o( 981 persons responding
favored the court martial decision.
The Indiana Holl!e or Rep resentatives
passed a resolution Wednesday calling
for steps "to correct the injustice that
v.e firmly believe has been perpetraled.
. . " a reso\ulion asking the President
for clemency was before the Illinoi:s
legislature and the Salt Lake City Com·
mission approved a resolution, wilb '
copy to the President, condemning the
conviction.
High school 8tudents in southeast Ken·
lucky began circulating petitions pro-
testing !he conviction and 250 Belleville,
111.. high school students marched five
miles with signs romdemning the verdict
Veterans organizations around the na·
lion protested the decision and requested
various aclionll, including clemency and
an invesligalion of the court martial
\'Crdlct.
In \Vashington, the nation's elected
rep resenlalives joined the chorus of rom·
ment. •
Nixon's Oldest
Relative Dies
r-.fcARTHUR. Ohio (AP) -President
Nixon·s firsl cous in, Roy B. Nixon, the
Prcsidenl"s oldest living relative, died
here today at the age of 90.
Roy Nixon was the son or Hiram
Nixon. brother or the Presidenl's father,
.frnncis Anthony Nixon.
Roy died \\'h1le sitting in a chair in
his home The cause of death was not
rmmediately known. He su(fered a severe
heart allack l"·o yev:s ago.
He 1~ survived by his widow Dora,
and fl\e children. Funeral services will
be held Saturday.
Aut o Glass Shattered
BERKELEY. 1'1o. (AP) -Glass in
thrtt autM "·as Jihallered by projectiles
and a section or lnterstale 70 was closed
for five hours Sunday while police hunted
for a sniper. No one was hurt Police
ChiC'.f Terrance Sloehner said Wednesday
nn investigation showed the projectiles
.,,·ere rocks.
Daily Pilot Sets
Special Listing
Of Church Rites
The DAILY PILOT is planning a
special .story to run Wednesday an-
nouncing apecial services scheduled by
Orange Coast churches and tem ples
marking the primary days of Holy Week,
Easter Sunday and lhe Passover.
The fin al deadline for all material
to run in t~is story will be Monday
at S p.m. Aily material received after
that time will probably not be Included.
The items should include name of
the church, address, service times,
pastor or rabbi's name, sermon and
any other material essential lo the
services. Please be brief.
Tt¥I articles can be submitted to any
DAI'-Y PILOT office. Addresses include:
330 IV. Bay SL, Costl Mesa; 2211 W.
Balboa Blvd., Newport Beac.h; 222 Forest
Ave., Laguna Beach; 17875 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach; 305 N. El Camino
Re al, San Clemen te.
Paralyzed Man Saved
From Ravine Bottom
HAYWARD (UPI) -A 21·year-0ld
paralyzed youth was rescued Wednesday
after spending U hour! at the bottom
of a ravine yelling ror help.
Je.ffrey Langley was en route to mail
letters late Tuesday v.·hen his wheelchair
rolled down an old hiking trail and
ove r a 25.(oot embankment into Sulphur
Creek Rav ine. A passing high school
student flnally heard Langley 's cries and
summone~ firemen, who hauled !he youth
lo safety in an hour-long operation,
The Com munist attack near the Laos·
Cambodian border, 160 mile! below the
recent Laotian operation, was the fourtl\
major Communist attack in the south
thiJ week. A .spokesman refused to say
whether jt was the beginning of a Red
offen!live but 1ald good weather rould
bring more 1ttackll. He uid the North
Vletnameie appattntly 1taged the at-
tacks to offset the bad propaganda ()f
Salt Creek Open
To Beachgoers
On Trial Basis
Sall Creek beach will be open to the
public on a trial bas.is from Saturday
to April 18.
Through an agreement arranged by
county supervisor Rnnald Caspers the
public wl!J be allowed lo use the muc h
debated strand between Monarch Bay
and Dana Point from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
each day during the Easter vacation
period.
Supervisors approved the agreemen~
\Vednesday with Avco Com m unity
Developers Inc. owners· or the prone'rty.
A four-acre dirt parking lot on the ililand
side of Coast lligh way with an access
path to the beach will be graded by
Avco.
The county will reimburse the rompany
for the rost of lifeguards, sanitary
facilities and beach maintenance and
will operate the parking Joi. Safi
Clemente li(eguards are expeded to man
the beach.
The county will charge $1 a car for
parking which will be used to /roveNil.
the rost of operating the beach.
The agreemenl provides that if beach
use "becomes hect ic" it can be closed
down.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler aald
tn San Clemente that as.of noon Pacific
Time Wedaesday the White House wa1
swam ped with some 5,000 wires and 1,500
telephone calls.
Asked whether Ni1on would have tht
power te give clemency, Ziegler replied,
"that woold not be a ~ur1 that
would be taken at this time.••
He said the President could eventually
be lnvolved tn a Calley appeal, but not
Ill thi!I stage.
Ziegler decli11ed lo give the president's
personal reaction to the verdict or the
sentencing to life imprisonment.
Asked whether it was an unu sual bom-
bardment of publie sentimeat, Ziegler
said wit.h a smile : "It's .a very large
number of te:Jegraqis for the White House
to receive -alml'.lSt as high· as the Pre,.
idential address."
Sliark A.ttQck?,
No, Porpoises
Some surfers out for early morn-
ing rides today at Newport Pie r
in Newport Beach though t they
were being attacked by sharks.
Police units were rushed to th1
scene armed and prepared to pro-
tect !he surfers from the denizen1
of the deep.
"When we got there, we found
out there weren't any sharks at
all," said Lt. Kelson McDaniel
"It was just a small school of
porpoises having a good time."
·P.tcDaniel said !he mammal•
• frolicked in the surf -charging
the sur(ers, then veering off -
for several minutes before movlna
on.
luxurious spring down sofas
This h1ndsome Sof1 was designed tc give you the ultim1te In ... ting comfort wlth d1cron
'"d down hick pillows, dHp spring down seat cushions enveloJ)9d in down end fe1th1rs In
wo fotrn-fllled 1rm pillows. ChooM from a Wide selection of fine ftbrics.
8' length, reg. $599 NOW 399.
'"~"~ .J. GAR~E 11 J.~ ~~flll ~t,~.~ !\:~.
INTERIOR DESIG NERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGE M6-0275 646.0l76
. A
•
7
\
·-
Huntington Bea~h Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks EDITION
YQ L 6-4, NO. 78, 3 SECTIONS , « PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRIL I, 197 1 TEN CENTS
Calley Verdict Prompts , Wide ·spread Protest
By United Prr1s International
Three local draft boards resigned,. at
least three mass marches on Washington
were being planned, and lhe White House
was swamped with telegrams and
telepbone calls as Americans expressed
their fee~ings about the conviction of
Lt. William Calley.
Calley was r.onvicted of the
premeditated murder of 22 Vietnamese
civilians at My Lai. He was sentenced
Wednesday to life in prison.
Reaction continlltd to mount around
the nation as Calley waited in the Ft.
Benning stockade for a transfer to
feder.al prison.
The White House, according to Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, had receiv-
ed · mOre than 5,0Cl!t wlres and 1,500
telephone calls concerning the convicUon.
They were running almost 100-1 in favor
of clemency for Calley, he said.
In St. Petersburg,· Fla., real estate
man Waite' J. Dilbeck said Wednesday
he and 100 "coordinators'' around the
nation were laying . plans for a mass
march on Waihington July 4 on behalf
of all Gls charged in the My Lai incident.
"We intend to have one million i)eop!e
In Washington that day and we intend
to stay there until these men are releas-
ed." Dilbeck said.
E. Thomas Cammarota, commander
of the Pennsylvania American Legion,
called on President Nixon to heed thos1
(See CALLEY, Page !)
' ' . .. • '.
• -
Fluorides Urged
~ ,
Environment Unit Endorses Action
The environmental Council of Hunt-
tington Beach is recommending that the
city go ahead with the plan to fluoridate
the waler supply.
The recommendation and the reporl
of the environment.al group's study win
be considered by councilmen Monday.
The council already has authorized
the addition or fluorides to the water
r . •
supply but delayed implementation or
the program to allow t h e en·
vir"onmentalists time to study it.
But another call to delay the program
and submit the question to the electorate ,
will be made Monday night. Jerry
Bogart, head of the Huntington Beach
Citizens for Pure Water, ~id today he
will ask for a public vote.
•
OAILV P'ILOT II•" l'n ...
THEY'LL TAKE TO THE BOARDS FOR TINA'S BENEF IT
Andrew McClure, Vicky Scavo and Margaret McC lure
Kids Perform
Benefit Aids Tinn K ysella Fund
A benefit performance or "Fractured
Fairy Tales" will be given nert Thursday
by the Fountain Valley Community
Theater for the Tina Kysella Fund.
The children's musical comedy w 111
irtarl at I p.m. In the community center,
10200 Slater Ave. Tickets are 50 cents
v.'ith a\1 proceeds helping to pay hospital
expensrs for the J2·ye11r-old Tamura
School girl.
\Vhile the: special hospital fund is
grov.·ing -it's now over the $1,500
mark -Tina is still listed in ditical
condition at Hoag Memorial Hogpital.
She was hospltallzed Mlrch IB with
a hemorrhage near the brain stem. Doc-
tors at lhe hospital said she came out
of her i:oma this wetk, but is still
under intensive care
For llcket informalion on lhe "Frac-
Wred Fairyta1e" performanct phon1
t.{rs. Richard Gl!l1um, 847-147$. Ticket.
can also be obtained at the door .
The Tina Kysella F'und was set up
by the Tamura School PTO, I.he Jaycees
and the Women's Club . The money will
help lhe famlly pay heavy medical es·
penses not covered by health insurance.
AlOEO BY BENEFIT
Stricken Tina KyHll1
His group. collfcted 4,480 signature!
on a petitioll requiring a referendum
2n fluoridalion. The total was mo{e than
the 10 percent of the electorate required
to pur the issue on the general elec~ion· ·
ballot, but the petition was declared
invalid because it did not · meet a legal ·
deadline.
''I still believe l'e have shown that
a sufficient number of people want to
vote on it,'' Bogart c.ommented.
He also digcJosed that the pure water
group has filed an intention to circulate
pelilions again if the request for the
referendum is denied by the council.
M". Marga"t ea,lbetg, cha"mao of ACROSS THE NATION , PROTESTORS GATHER AGAINST VERCl!CT ON CALLEY
the Environment Council, said that her/ Ou~lide' Fort Benning, Hildagard Crochet R1 ius Her Arm in Bitter Gesture group considered the merits of fluorida·' -------~_.~ ____ _:._ __ ....:_ ___________ +-------------
tion outweighted the disadvantages. -(
She explained that the Environmental
"Council had not planned to take a position
on the issue, ~l a{ a . meeting thla
w,.k llt\ James hell! gf, Uit
water qualitY co · · askeif diif obt
be ma'de and the rec:qmmendatioa fof
the go-ahead waa approved by a majority
vote. Among the ptwi factors,'-the councll
learned, were that increas.lng the nuor ide
content in city water from its present
level of .45 part per million to one
part per million would bring nearly a ao percent improvement in the reduction
of tooth decay ·in children.
Eff~tlve fin Jul~
, ... Sb 1W~i ~~uperinw~nt
Outlines District c'u·ts
' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI One unit or credit ls given for each
Police, Firemen
-T
B¢iicli L~wsuit
~HearingJJeltlyed ·
,Ao-Orange 'Q>unty Superio~ Court hear-
ing into lawsuits filed by the HUntington
Beach police and firemen's assoclafions
was delayed Wednesday until April ti.
Mrs. Carlberg said that the council
.11)so found thaf mottling from fluoridation
occurs in less than one percent of the
cases where the re is one part per million
In the water. and that mottling does
not harm teeth. The council also founci
that fish life in the ocean would not
be affected by the addition of rluoride
in lrical !!Upplies.
Of l~t 0•11~ 1'11&1 51111 hour a week a class meets within one !='residing Ju die William C. Speirs
he negative aspects were that care
would be needed in handling the chemical
and that because of the nature of the
city's water system. injection of the
nuorides would have to be monitored
.11£ 12 points rather than at one central
point.
President ~eets
With Aerospace
Industry Chiefs
Jack Roper. superintendent of the 52·
squj\re-mile Huntington Beach Union
High School District. today outlined cuts
that will go into effect this July if
the district is unsuccessful in passing
a tax increase by then.
Ht said students at \Vestminster, Hun-
tington Beach, Fountain Valley, Edison
and Marina high schools will have to
go v.•ith as many as eight fewer srmester
courses and face a reduced choice of
electives.
By Jaw. the school district's tax rate
will revert to the state minimum of
85 cents unless volf!rs approve the $2.08
rate in an election scheduled June 15.
The district has already twice failed
lo gain voter approval of lhe $2.00 rate,
up 69 cents from the current $1.39 tax
rate.
Roper further said lhe 85-cent rate
would compel the district to cut to
five the maximum number of class
periods a student may take .
President Nixon ~et this morning v.·i~ Undev the curre.nt budget._ stud~nts
more than a dozen leaders in t~e ) are al!n.,."ed a maximum of six periods
aerospace industry and members of the per day. with some able to take as
scientific community in a concerted ef· many as seven periods' by combining
fort to !!lave off the massive unemploy-classes with work-i!xperience hours.
ment which has hit that profession in Lov.·erlng the maximum of daily
recent months . periods allowed each student means that
No immediate results of the meeting the graduation requirements also will
were available at mid-morning from Nix· be lowered from 220 uoils to 200 units,
on aides. ' said Roper.
Included in the group which met with "If we're forced to operate on the
the President in his San Clemente office 85-cent tax rate for much lime. I can
were members of large western colleges easily see our having to reduce still
and universities, tJ1anufacturers, and further the maximum number of periods
representatives of the hard-hit aerospace a student may take t.o 190 units,'' Roper
industry Itself. predicted.
6 of 8 Tell Views
semester.
Yet another move the district plans
to make if it is forced to work wjth
the 85-cent budget. is to eliminate current
requirements of three years of Engli~h
and one year each of mathematics and
science.
Jn addition . the four-year social studies
requirement would be reduced to a ye8r-
and-a-ha\f. fl would then consist of one
year of U.S. history and one hair year
of U.S. government.
Both U.S. history and U.S. government
are required by state law, as are four
years of physical education, according
lo Roper.
"Without this reduction In specific
course requirements. students would be
left without opportunilies to t;ike elec·
lives in olher fields ," the superintendent
explained.
"A student seriously interested, in say,
music or graphic arts wriJld be
frustrated in his attempts to pursue
such an interest in a meaningful way."
in addition, Roper said the students
will have fewer courses to choose from.
He pointed out that the economics of
running the district with an 8!kent las
rate would require culling out courses
which do not attract a substantial enroll·
ment at any of the high schools.
"Exactly what the minimum enrol)...
ment would have to be, we don't know
yet. but some courses are bound to
be dropped," said Roper.
Colle·ge Candidates Speak
Six of the eight candidates for three
seats on Lbe Coast Community College
District board of trustees Wednesday
night addressed an audience· of about
70 in the Estancia High School Forum,
Costa Mesa .
The Co.a.st College candidatee joined
a panel of hopefuls in tbe Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee race ln
a candidates' forum arranged by the
Orange Coast League of Women Voters
and the American Association o I
University Women.
Each candidate was allotted five
minutes to speak. ,.. ,
A questlon period followed UR! prepared
remarks. · '
The Coast C6mmunlly Colleae District
Is made up of the Huntington Beach
Union High and Newport-Mesa Urufied
School Districts. It operates two. two-
year college campuses, Golden West
College In Huntington Beach aod Orange
Coast College In Costa Mesa.
Three of the district's fiYi! trustee
areas a~ listed on 'tbe April 20 ballot
-area two (Westminster Elementary
School District) area three (Huntingfon
Beach and Fountain Valle)' Elementary
districts ) and area !our Ctbe city o(
Costa Mesa).
While candidates must reside ln the
area they seek to represent, trustees
fire elected al lar1e by au voten in
the district.
The two candldall."! not In attendance
were Barbira Bell . an advertising
repre5entatlve of SOJI Quail Circle, Hun·
T
Ungton Beach. who is challenging in·
cumbent Wiliiam KetUer In .11rea three
• (Huntington Beach-Fountsin Valley) and
Willlam T. Unger Jr .. a student. who
list.!! his address as 2211 Rutgers Drive.
C.OSta Mesa. Unger is lel!k.ing the area
four 9eat (Costa Mesa) held by Robert
L. Humphrey!!.
Here ls some of wt(at tbt candidates
bad to say :
Richard L. Oliver, 45. of 149 E. Bay
SL, Costa Mesa, a systems analyst and
evening CQ)lege instructor Is challenging
Humphreys. .
Oliver said the community college
1.lmuld provide "general academic core
programs for twD-year training in a
trade to match the I n c re 11 s In i 1 y
ISet COAST, Pa11e Zl
•
ordered tbe de lay after leamlng that
Judge Robert Banyard could not work
what is expected to be a lengthy hearing
into his limited law and motion calendar.
A courtroom will be assigned for the
bearing April 12.
Both associations want the court to
set aside a City Council resolution of
last Sept. l in which an 8.25 percent
pa y hike was ordered for all city
employes. Both police and firemen want
an 11 percent raise and they argue
that . the cily should hav~ continued
discussions on the issue.
Both writs of mandate claim that City
Council action violatts a long standing
agreement between the city and both
associations and the PoliCTi Officers
Association also asks for "650.000 in
damages.
150-year Sentences
On Pusher s Defeated
CARSON CITY. Nev. fUPI ) -A
measure which would have provided ISO..
year prison terms !or drug sellers on
a seeond conviction was killed Wed·
nesday by the Nevada assemhly.
"Pushers should be put away com·
pletely." said sponsor Dave Branch. ad·
ding that 1,700 years wasn't loo long
in jail for someone who would "sell
drugs ro our children." The measure
was killed on a 19-15 vote.
Orange . ' Coast
Wencher
Il may not be quite so warm
along the Coast Friday, but the
morning rng will still be with us.
Look for temperatures in lhe 67
to 77-degree range.
INSIDE TODA l'
A. modern Flying Dutchman,
in tht form of a !Unktn Gtrrnan
s11bnt(lr1ne, rq>0rttdly threatens
. Florida Coast wi!h its deadly
\.Vorld War II cargo. Set !toru,
Pagt 5,
c,1~ ..... ,, ,
Clltctll/141 tJ• 11
Clllttl'*f J1-11
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IEf!,.,..111 "'" I
lnl1rllln"""'t M •t
1'1,..nr• Jf,JI
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2 o.iL Y PILOT II Thursd•y, AprU 1, 1971
.Planners Ru·sh Revise Project . WESTMINSTER
:5QIOa. Dl51711CT + Campaign to Slow Huntington Apartments Pushed
BJ ALAN DIJUllN Ot ..... o.llr ,.llot , .. ff
A vast project to revise the master
plan and slow the spread of apartments
1n Huntington Beach is being hurried
along by the planning commission.
'The change wUI involve reclassifying
numerous apartment zones in the city
to single family home areas and slashing
th! maximwri densities in apartment
devtlopments.
The mater plan revision could reduce
population (Dlla for the city, presently
proJectod at 300,000.
The commlaslon alrtady has adopted
new standards for apartment zones that
\viii cut the numbet of units that can
be built per acre by about one third.
The standards als are designed to im·
prove the appearance of apartments by
increasing setbacks and open space.
In the R2 apartment zone the max·
imum units per acre has been chopped
from 21.8 to 14.S and in Ute R3 zone
irom ~.9 units per acre to 24..9.
'tbllt new ..,.,.4' cover all com·
plei:ea ln non-ocean oriented property.
'Ibey also apply on1y to the larger com·
plexes, those over lS,000 square f e e t
or about six units.
Assistant PlaMinf Director Dick
11arlow said today that these standards
are presently being used as "guidelines"
ror apartment development.:s but the com·
mission has lillked for them to put Into
ordinance form.
"They wlll come up for a publlc bear·
Ing and 'posalble adoption on April 20,''
he sald.
TilC new standards and promised
review of the master plan grew out
of recommendaLioru of the city's multi
density committee, headed by Planning
Commissioner Henry' Duke.
They also follow months of pres.sure
from homeowners at cow1cil and planning
commission meetings who have steadily
protested new apartment developments
-J/unbilg/r;I Btrrl. Un;,,.
J/igh Schoel /!i#pcf .
--El<mettlory /)iJ,;c{,
C:lassroO'm Staffing From Pagel
COAST ••.
and high density problems.
Residents in east and southeast Hun-
tington Be a ch have been the mos t
vocal. Thb sectar, called the Talbert Ocean View Selected " technological society llld general courses Valley, will be the first area studied
of interest to the O)IIUllWljty at large." in the master plan revision.
Oliver urged bilingual counseling for Revision of the master plan has been
To Test New Concept culturally dl!advantaged students, ex-adopted as the commission's priority
panded programs for returning student project for 1971.
veterans, i m p r o v e d administrative services for the eveninf division, develop· For the moment, the commission is
ment of sbGrt coorses leading to job excluding a mile-derp ocean-oriented
ELECTIONS COMINIP UP IN THESE AREA SCHOOL OfSJRfCTS
C1ndld1t1 Sorin St1rt1 Fridoy With Ocain View (Shedtdl ,,
Ocean View School District officials
today learned that they are among five
California school districts chosen to test
•a new concept in classroom staffing.
~ The five-year study, approved by State ·
Superlntendent of Public Instruction
·Wll&on Riles, will allow four of the
scbooll· to use comblnaUona of teachers,
·teacher aides and persons from the com-
munity to reduc.e the adult-learner ratio.
D~trict Superintendent Clarence Hall ·wct the pilot program will actually allow
the participating schools to di!1pense with
atate-mandated staff requlrementl.
other districts named to participate in
the uperiment are Newport-Mes a
Unlfted, san Jose, CuperUno and Fresno.
"With the waiver of these restrictions.
we will be able tO place as manY adults
in the classroom as we consider ef·
fectlve," sald Dr. Hall. "At the moment
we do not know uaeUy bow many
per averige clUll'OOm."
'Ibe new syatem will allow these
schools to u:ceed the at.ate required
raUo of 30 student. per teacher by
making use ol add!Uonal help.
ThlJ may be done by ualng part.limo
teachers, teacher aides, aide coord.lnators
and volunteers.
Volunteer duties will range from im·
plementing teacher·planned activities to
making up specific lessons for people.
Dads Slate Visit
To Kindergarten
Some awfully big kids are g<>iilg ta
llJJ tile tiny chairs tonight In tile kin-
dergarten classrooms of LeBard School
in Hunt:ingt.on Beach.
Fathers of the school's 109 kin·
dergarten toll will lake their places
at the chalk boards far two hours to
see If they can fill their children's ahoe~.
Clau starts at 8:30 p.m,_ and the
dads had better be on tlme. Three
kindergarten teachers are going to put
them ibrouP the pace1 of a regular
clusday. From finger painting to group singing
tile dads are gohl& back to school -
way back.
It's an experimental program to let
father know but. bow his ion or
daughter feels In clae.
Slain in W. Germany
HAMBURG, Germany !UPI) -Tbe
outgoing Bolivian General Consul in
Hamburg, Roberto Quintanilla Pereira,
was ahot to death ln his office today
by an unknown assailant, police 1ald.
They sald the consul was hlt in the
cl1est by two bullet!. 11'1e assailant, who
escaped, could have been a woman,
police said. They declined to give further
delails.
OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
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lltUM I"'~: n: "or•t A"""'llt C.• lrA•u: »& W•r ltY "'"" Htw00" l•dl: ml N"""P"'l1 •ou:1Y1..., ~ O-t.1 301 Hort!'+ II Cam .......
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Cl•tnff .. ...,.., ... 641-1471
One school, already has a volunteer
father who comes In twice weekly to
instruct a seventh grade drafting class.
Another school plays h~t to sprightly
82-year-old grandmother who comes to
school two hours a day to tutor fifth.
grade math. Also present are college
students who work with teachers in
preparing classes ranging from physical
educaUon to drama.
"What a wealth of talent we h a v e
found in our school community," said
Ocean View Trustee Robert Zinngrabe.
''Being able to bring these people into
our classrooms In increasing numbers
will be of untold benefit for our children.
"Our Call!omla school districts have
been operating under rather rigid staffing
requlremenl.!I. For four Ocean View
schools the waiver of these requirements
will allow them to enrich the curriculum
wtth people as well as subject matter,''
he added.
Supt. Hall will announce the schools
to participate in the program this June.
From Page 1
CALLEY. ••
urging clemency.
"It President Nixon sees fit not tG
listen to the thot.1sands. of telegrams
that already have been 5ent to him.
'we are prepared to march o n
:Washington," Cammarota said.
RObert Cadle, a retired Army sergeant
who says the verdict was ''a Jot of
bull," aaid Wednesday he and a "Free
Calley Committee" with bribches in all
states but Hawaii will lead 50,ooo people
in a march on Washington after a petition
drive.
"This whole thing has boomeranged
all out of proportion," Cadle said. ''Peo-
ple call in and they cuss, cuss. cuss.
Are they mad. I've never seen anything
like lhill verdict in my life."
All the members of local Selective
Service Boards in Elizabethton, Tenn.,
and Athena and Blairsville, Ga., resigned.
Members of the Quitman, Ga., board
wired Nixon they would not induct any
more men.
"This is the worst th ing that '1 ever
happened in the Unltrd States," said
Robert E. Caldwell, chairman of the
Blairsville board.
Sam Mottern, chairman of th e
Elizabethton Board, said aft.er the Calley
vercUct he could na longer perform hls
duties "without a complete 21urrender
of principle and conviction."
In Richland!, Va., response to a radia
station's poll on Calley's guilt was so
heavy Wednesday that telephone circuils
broke down temporarily. Some listeners
then drove to the stalinn lG vote. The
total 11howed only three of 688 voles
favored Calley's conviction.
A Davenport, Iowa, television station
conducted a 90·minute poll on the verdict.
Twenty·three of 961 persons responding
favored the court martial decision.
The Jndlana House of Representatives
passed a resolutiol\ Wednesday calling
for steps "to correct the injustice that.
we firmly believe has been perpetrated.
, , " a resolution asking the President
for clemency was before the Jllino1s
legislature and the Salt Lake city Com-
mlft:lon approved a resolution, with. a
copy to the President, condemning the
conviction.
Hlgh school 1tudents In southeast Ken·
tucky began circulating petitions pro-
testing the conviction and 250 Belleville, n1.. high school students marched five
miles with algrui comdemnlng the verdict.
Veterans organlzatlon1 around the na·
tion protested the decision and requestrtl
various actions. including demency and
an investigation of the court martial
\'er di ct.
In \Vashinglon, the nation ':o; elected
representatives joined the chorus of con1·
ment.
skills and retraining and career counsrl· area stretching !rom I.he adoPted route Voter Service ing for the unemployed. of the Paciric Coast Freeway to the
Robert L Humphreys, 44, an attorney, Coast Highway and from Be a ch
of 1500 Adams Ave .• Costa Mesi i5 seeking his third term. Boulevard to Huntington }!arbour [ron1
He noted that the di!trlct'I 1tate aid the revision. Pilot to Present Profile
share has Wunk since 1948, when he But the commissioners have 1et up
was a student at· Orange Coast College a list of other areas where the land
and when the district was the wealthiest use will be revised. .,
1n California. First \\'ill be the heavily populated
"The statewide property tax proposal Talbert Valley east of Beach Boulevaid
certainly gets our support ln view of a~d from Garfield Avenue south; second
Series on Board Hopefuls
the facilities and school finance problems \\'Ill be the land west of Edwards St,-t ' f d · •• t JO " ~oeo As a service ta vote1s, the DAtUY we ve ace m u1e pas years, and north of the Coast Freeway route Humphreys said. "It's difficult to cut a.u.d third will be the area east o[ PILOT wlll publish profiles of candidates
costs without cutting quality." f?dwards Street and north of the freeway in the local school board elections.
Enriqueta L. Ram.01, 38, a Fountain line. The coastal zone will be looked The special, ''Know Your Candidates''
Valley Hlgh School teacher, of 17294 at alter the other studies have been com-series will represent a cooperative effort
Peppertree St., Fountain Valley, called pleted. ,.;"" between the DAILY PIWf and the
for a "more diversified board" -one The commission wi'll hold a study th t · cl d Sb Ia cball · League of Wamen Voters of Huntington a m u es a woman. e enging eesslon on revising th! master plan for Beach.
incumbent WlllJam Kettler in Huntington Talbert Valley in tile "very near" fulure Be ch F •·fn Vall , The league, a nonpartisan organization, a • oun.. ey. possibly Apn'l 13, acC<lfding to Harlow. She said the most important goal of The . . -ls h asked the candidates in the high school
the college dlatrlct ls to bring' the college commission a a as drawn up and elementary district elections for a wlf?Ie range of projects for 1971. their views on four topics.
closer to the community and find ways They include: The series wil l cover the races in
to "stretch the dollari to serve everybody -Sett.mg up provi··•ons for 8 spec·ial th F t · v ti H · B h In th uni! ,, .., e oun ain a ey, unltngton eac e comm Y· use perm1·1, instead of a -nd1.t1·onal ,,. c · d O v· I d. · M Ram ed d I f .. v 1ty an cean iew e emenlary 1str1cts
rs. os urg eve opment 0 ception, lo cover applications for and the Huntington Beach Union High
child care centers on the campus v.·hirh. churches. day schools and zero sideyards School District. Separate analyses of the
would allow young mothers to enroll. <ln apartment complexes. contests in the Seal Beach and
Donald G. HOff, 52, quality assurance -Reviewing and replanning the central Westminster elementary districls and the
specialist of 14842 Harper St.. Midway industrial area. Coast Community College District will
City, said the colleges "sh.ou!d prepare -Establishing multiple family stan· be published before the April 2{I trustee
students sa that he or she is equipped dards and traffic patterns downtown. elections.
to meet life's problems as he knows -Improving the street scene with new The series will begin Friday with pro-
them." Hoss ls the incumbent represen· appearance ta d d f II I files of the three Ocean View candidates. ting the Westminster area. s n ar S or wa s a ong
He cited the education code strictures trac~: It will continue Monday and Tuesday,
the board must Jiv~ within cortctrniag -n4vi~wing·rUie future role of "factory April 5-6, with the answers of the five built" modular housing m· the ctly Th candidates in the Fountain Valley race finance. Despite these, th.e district has · ere are presently no low-""! hous1·ng followed April 7-3 with. a -breakdown "maintained a low per Uudent cost but ..... zones In Huntington Bea.... of the sir contestan1-;,. the Huntln°ton built an educational program that has =· ~ ... 0
attracted national attention and is a -Studying new guidelines for housing Beach Clty district. tracts to avoid "ste t•-• 1 The series <ln the 17 runners in the model for others in the nition," he reo ,,.,.......eve opmenl'' 'd and grid street patterns. Huntington Beach Union High School
sai · ' Establish! g I I District race will begin Friday, April Charles Dagfon, 24, a Golden West . -n areas or arger, RI single family Jo•-9 and continue through Friday, April student, of 15225 Jacksan SL, Midway "'3. City, said the calleges "are not setvicing -Studying the mobilehome zones lo 16· see if changes ar d d Ari average <lf three candidates a day the students or the community aor well e nee e · -O.term1·n' g Jdelln •• 1 'ti will be presented. The series will not as they could." He ls chaJlengi1g Haff. -gu es 1•118 wi en-run <ln Saturdays. Although he is "an ecology nut", courage "beneficial" commercial . th. d dev.10 'in ••-•t In addition to is etailed coverage, Dagion said the district could not afford pmen t.1:ie CI y, h Est bli h' 11· f I e DAILY PILOT is alsa reparting development <lf an environmental work· -a s mg an ° ice-pro essional the Issues that emerge at the several
ing model, a job he said should be zoOthne. candidates' nights being held in West
handled by state colleges or the universi· er changes in the commission· Orange County.
ty system. adopted apartment elandards will ln· As the campaigns near their close,
Dagion said "taped Jectui-es" don't crease the number of trees on local the editorial board of the newspaper
allow students to ask questions. He urged streets by 25 percent, and increase th.e \\'ill weigh the information gathered and
combining the day and evening ad-APen 'M~e in apartment complexes. The endorse candidates. Th e s e recom4
Moreland, wha headed _the project this
year.
The questions which candidates were
asked ~o answer in 500 words or less
are:
-What specific changes in program
or policy would you like ta see un-
dertakea by the school board during
the qext four years?
-What are your feelings OD unifica·
tion?
-What are your feelings on teacher
tenure?
-\Vhat are your feelings on how either
the voucher system or statewide property
tax or both of these financing proposals
would affect local school districts?
Unification means combining elemen·
tary and high school districl.!I into one
administration and board. School district
territories not in a unjlied district must
hold an election on ihe reorganization
of boUXJdarles for the purpose of willica·
Uon by June 1972.
Teache,t..J\?nure relates to the system
whereby a teacher can become a
permanent employe after serviDg a pro-
bationary period pf three years. Tenured
teachers may be dismissed for cause
only.
The voucher system refers to a pr().
posal in which the federal or st.ate
government would give the parents of
students a check to be spent only on
education but at the school of the
parents' choice, either private or pubUc.
A proposed statewide property tax
would be levied equally between all pro-
perty taxpayers to be distributed to
school districts on the basis of need
ta equalize support between the rich
and poor districts.
Auto Glass Shattered
ministrations, changes aL!o increase the aelback from mendations to vo\ers will be printed
The district's television station develop-8 public street from IO or 15 feet at in editorials on Page 6. BERKELEY, Mo. (AP) -Glass 1ft
mcnt also should be handled by lhe present to 20 feet and raise the minimum The League of Women voters does three autos was shaltered by projectiles
!itale colleges, Dagion said. distance between buildings from 10 feet not support or oppose candidates, or and a section of Interstate 70 was cki.:1ed
William Kettler, of 623 Seventh St ., to IS feet. "Political parties. It pnpared the ques-for five hours Sunday whlle police hunted
Huntington Beach, said that compared A.nY master plan revision and the tionnaire simply to give each candidate for a sniper. Na one was hurt. Police
to the 68 community college districts o~dinance on apartment standards also the opportunlty ta state his virws and Chief Terrance Stoehner said Wednesday
in California in 1969-70 whose per student wi!I ~ave to be adopted by the city to promote citizen participation in an lnvesligatlon showed the projectlles council.
costs average $806, oCast College District lf==============~g;ov~e~rn;;m•;n~t·;;;';';";r;d1~·n~g:;;;:to~M~u~.~A;nn~;;;w~e~r~e~r~oc~ks:;. ==::;:======; spends $755 per student. Kettler Is the II
incumbent in area three (Huntington
Beach -Fountain Valley).
He cited the value of hi.'! having grown
up in Huntington Beach. as belng or
Importance "particularly since financi•I
decisions affecting the college are largely
political. I have come ta know moat
of the people making those decisions,·•
Kettler said. . 4
The two teacher candidatrs, Mrs.
Ramos and OJlvrr both agreed tenure
should be abolished, The three In·
cumbents noted that finding a way of
instituting accountability for
performance Is difficult.
Bank Lowers Rates
LONDON (AP) -Bril.aln today relax·
ed Its tight money Policy and lowered
the Bank of England'• lending rate fr<:lm
7 percent to 6 percent. The rate had
been the second highest in Europe, ex.
ceeded only by Denmark's 8 percent.
The British rate had stood at 7 prrcent
sinte last April I~. The reduction \rAS
srrn a~ An attempt to stimulate the
flagging economy, "-'hich ha! resulted
in nearly 800,000 unemployed.
luxurious spring .down sofas
This handsome ~f1 w11 dtslgnM to give you the ultlm1te In se1tlng comfort with dicron
1nd down b.ck pillows, deep •prlng down ... , cu1hions enveloped in down ind feathers in
wo fo1m·fllltd arm pillows. Choo11 from 1 wide seltction of fine fabrics.
8' length, reg. $599 NOW 399.
Vets Aid Calley '
Fund Started in Orange County
Orange County veteran organltalions &rt rai$1ng f1ltlds to lid in the de--
fcnse of Lt. \l.'1!1iam Calley wbo was convicted Monday ol 1laylng civilians at
My !Al, South Vietnam.
Andrew J. Callanan of Santa Ana is acling 115 chalrma.n <if the combined
veteran organizations epootorlng the drive. lte 11Ud money aOOuld be sent to the
Ll. Wi!ll11m Calley Fund, United California Bank. 1018 N. Main St,, Santi Ana.
U Calley should be freed by presidenUat order or ht.I convkOon reverted,
Callanan aaid 1111 funds collected v.·ould be given to veterans hospitals in South·
em Califorrua for the purcha111 of telt!vilJon 1eta and other recruUonal itema:.
l'ollr fouoritt de1l tr ioi ll bt happ11 to G11i1t ~ou
H.J.GA~~E fURNrpJRE
PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR BL VO. OpH M ... , Tllm. • r.f. IYtL COSTA MESA, CALIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARG! 646.0276 646-0276
-----...... --
I
..
Tftursd.I}', AP'll l , l9n H DAILY '11.fl' a
on Beach _Spawned Decisi~n by Nixon
I
DAILY PILOT PM19 ~1 Jiii!~ ¥11i.n.1
PRESIDENT PREPARES TO TA~ AERIAL VIEW OF BEACH
Chief Executive Aired View1 On Land for Th• Ptoplt
Waikiki Gift?
Nixon Considers Freei1ig Beacli
Presidenl Nixon "'as reporled \Ved·
nesday in San Clemente to be preparing .
shortly lo open for public use a strip
of \Vaikiki Beach in Hawaii, \Yhich i:<1
now run by the Navy as a recreation
area for Vietnam servicemen.
The beachfront, owned by the federa l
government at an estimated cost of
$100 million, is located at Fort De Russy
and lies between the }lawaiian Village
and the Reef Hotel.
John Ehrlichman, lhe Presidenfs
assistant for domestic affairs, said the
federal property review board of v•hich
he is a member is ready to declare
the faroow beach area in Honolulu as
"e1cess" and to work out an ar-
rangemenl ror "multiple" use by
servicemen and the public.
But he said the Navy is opposed to
the move. "There's a lot of bureaucratic
barbed wire around it,'' he said.
"It's a very tough issue because the
Navy feels very keenly it should remain
as .11 rest and relaxation area for per!On•
nel comin&Jp Hawaii. We think it's com-
patible to wOi'k out multiple uses.''
The move is in line with Nixon's
determination to loosen the federal
government's hand on property he feels
• could be better used as public park
and recreation land.
Ehrlichman !iald the President is giving
the board "!iuperb backing In moving
this ball down the field ."
* * * * * * Big Questions Follow
Glee at Beach Turriove1·
Reaclion from the city of San
Clemente and the sta.t.e or California
to President Nixon's offer of six miles
of new beach and an enlire valley
amounted to surprise and glee followed
swiftly by some vexing questions.
City Manager Ken Carr termed the
offer of the 3,000-acre San Mateo Canyon
to San Clemente an "excitinf! idea ."
But because of no prior knowledge of
the Presidential order offering the prime
Marine base land.· Carr could not
elaborat.e much farther.
The offer from the Federal Govtm-
ment is good only if either the city
or the state use the land for public
use.
A~ for the state reaction to lhe offer
of the r<1nyon and the huge chunk (lf
Camp Pendleton beach. it is one c.r
pleasure mixed "'i th a tinge of bitterness
11nd uncertainly .
What the President has done. said
one lop !late parks 0Hic1al. 1s give
.!I. larj!e chunk or obviously prime beach
land to an agency whose budget is being
decimated year by year.
''Ifs wonderful, but. .. " said Mervyn
Filipponi. a slate parks c<lnsultant from
Sacramento.
"All of a sudden 'lli'C tiave six miles
of beach. some very attractive buildings
11nd absolutely no money from the
governor to use 1n it..s developn1ent,''
he said.
He stressed the irony of new windfalls
or land from the federal governmenl
"'hile state officials are cutting the parks
and recreation budget to the bare bone.
State parks spokesmeR repeatedly
have said that money does not exist
for the initial 3.5-mile San Onofre bluffs
beach.
Jn fact, next week's seven-day in-
augural use of the beach is the only
~·ay to raise enough funds to keep
the park open.
Campers are being charged fees to
use the virgin beach-the fund s to go
into a special account to cover e.xpenses.
If the stale "'ill have its fiscal pro-
blems with the six miles of beach, San
Clemente would liod itself, 11pparently,
in a heavyweight tangle or legalities
if it v.·f>re .lo accept the San P.leteo
Canyon land.
Carr Pxplained that under r.~deral lav.',
:innex.ation!I'. of land across county hncs
are forbidden .
"'lf v.·e v.·ere to fry to annex lhe
land, even for public use," Carr ex·
plained,"' U1en it would take an act
of the State Legislature to make it legal."
Judicial boundaries, and c<lunty boun-
daries would have to be changed .11
well.
Both Carr and Filipponi said the news
of the Presidenl'a decision came a.s an
"absolule, total surprise."
Local Parl{ Pla11 Okayed
Aller more than a }'ear or discussion.
rounly s11pervit0r!I Wednesday adoptfd
a plan for the establishment of local
neijlhborhoocl parks in developing unin-
rorporated area! but admitted Iha! the
ordinance lhey approved could stand
tonle future changes.
The plan fundamentally calls fr)(" roor
acrea of local park.3 per 1.000 population
but J .5 acres can be provided by schools.
-The developer is requirt"d to provi~
the other 21~ acres or money to purchase
the property .
Principal ObJect1ons to the plan came
from Laguna Hills Leisure \Yorld and
~l ission Viejo developer.i;, They main·
lained that they should hr given credit
!or prl"<tte racilitics prO\ 1ded In their
planned cnmn1un1t1e."I.
Such credit is not provided for 1n
the ordinRnC'e and will probably be: tile
!lubject of future changes.
Supervisor David L. Baker said ihat
where priv<1te recreation facilitit.S are
provided Ir the county require~ an iiddl -
Lional public neighborhood facility it
would amount to a double burden on
the property owners.
Supervisor Ronald CaSQer& agreed this
was true If it was 100 percent mandatory
that properly owners rinance and main-
tain recreational facilities "but where
it is 1 -2.5 percent membership factor
I don"t lhink It suffices."
J\.1ission Viejo ex.ecutive Phil Charlton
said his organi7.ation had three voluntary
recreaUon rac1lihes v.·1th about a 25 per-
cent membership and in addi1ion had
inslalled seven neillhlx>rhood parks which
average about 12.5 acres Jl<'r l.000
population.
He said hr fell hi~ company should
have credit for theSt facl/ili's in assess·
Ing the 21,; acres per 1.000 formula .
----.... ----. -..
President Nixon saJd fondly Wedne.tday
that a walk on his · beach at Cotton's
Pelot spawned his decision to open one-
lhlrd of Qi.mp Pendleton shoreline to
public use.
''I remember that walk, and thinking
aboul the millions of residents of
California who don't have enough beaches
to walk on," he related.
Then, he sqid his mind turned
dov.'tlc<last to Caitip Pendleton-a stretch
of shoreline clearly visible frOm Cotton's
Point.
"Here is a beach v.·ithin an hour's
driving distance for 10 million residents
of Southern Califoniia, .. he addtd.
A year a g o, he related, his office
launched a plan throu&h the General
Services A<lmi.nistraUon and a property
review board ·which be established after
taking office to. sift over the thousands
of d,eeds of federal land.
The land better used for public recrea-
tion, he said, wou!d be turned over
to public use.
And the Camp Pendleton decision, he
said, would be the first gJ many similar
oots he added
President Nix.on, and bis aides joined
a pool of press representatives for a
roi.ininute flight by helicopter O\'er the
new public beaches Wednesday morning
and termed the area "simply wonderful ,''
During the flyover he offered sug-
resUons that Perhaps some parts of
the blufftopa involved in the trarufer
could be used as sites for reslaurants
lo provide visitors "with that spectacular
view."
But he also gave some opinions on
the environmental preservation of the
tideland.! and beaches themselves.
The President turned to domestic
policy coordinator John Erlichmann and
asked about the prowess of the California
Department of Parks and Recreation
in the field or environmen~I preserva·
lion.
Erlichmann responded that the reputa-
tion of that agency was good.
"Then I'm sure they won't clutter
ii up ," the President said.
Looking over the area of the ·new
San Onofre Bluffs State Beach, M
predicted thouaands or visitor• lo lb•
rough, undeveloped area durina thil
weekend's dedication riles.
1'he beach. which forms more lh1n
half or the land planned for public u~
at Pendleto11, will open for o n e week
only during Easter Week .
The Presidoot 's decision Wednelday
marked what easily could be the most
significant deed hnmediately affecting
the San Clemente area coastline ~ince
he bought the old Cotton Estate in 1969.
"Just lhink," he mused, ··u I hadn't
taken that walk, maybe !¥)thing would
have happened today."
Beach Giveaway Just the Beginning
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of the Dilly Piiot lltlf
With a stroke of his pen Wednesdav
President Nixon shook the sanctity Or
the Camp Pendleton lands, opening up
six miles of beaches and more than
3,000 acres of a prime valley for public
use .
And later the chief executive declared
the landmatk decision in favor or open
space was only the beginning of a vast
federal program for housecleaning or
surplus government real estate.
The affected area is within sight of
lhe Western White House.
The blockbuster decision involves a
coveted enlisted man's beach club and
a private surfing club-long the object
of criticism. along with the shoreline
in front of the San Onofre nuclear
generating complex and the new San
Onofre Bluffs State Beach south of that.
Besides the prime coasta l
land-described by the President as "one
of the country's last great swimming
bea ches" -the dir,clive covers J,000
acres of San' f\1at.eo Valley immediately
~uth of the San Clemente City limlts
and the Orange-San Difgo County line.
The new public beach will start about
1.000 feet south of the Presidential com-
plex. bounded downcoast by the county
boundary. The Trestles beach will be
the buffer '.one requested by the Secret
Serviei!-a no-man's land for security
purposes.
Immediately south of that area UM
boundary begins for the new public
beach.
Alm06l adjacent 1 lo that boundary is
the enlisted man'!! club, a complex of
Spanish-style buildings and permanent
beach use structures -all of which will
be given to the state of California for re-
creational or office use as it sees lit.
The San Onofre Surfing Club area
ts next, situated on a point well known
for Its e.tcellent sw'f.
The ne.tl downcoasl facility is the
San Onofre Nuclear reactor complex,
with its one existing station (two more
are proposed for next door). The reactor
land area will be closed to the public,
but the shoreline seaward of the towering
sea wall will be open.
Difectly south of that complex lies
the line where the new San Onofre
Bluffs State Beach begins. It will be
dedicated Saturday.
Thal section, leased to the state of
California last year after tough negolia·
lions with the Marine Corps, ii 3.S
miles long .
Computinr the 3.5 miles of that beach
and blufftop with the new areas opened
up by the Presidential order, the length
of the new p•blic beach will be si.x
miles long.
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Life Saver
Pretty Paula Holt, 17, poses
with boxes of supplies that
will keep her alive for the next
two months. Paula and her
brother Gary, of Austin, Tex.,
are afflicted with kidney
disease that has taken the
lives oC three in the family.
Paula's father has been warn-
ed that unless current bills are
paid they won't get aoy furth·
er supplies.
Nixon Barely
Wins House
Draft Vote
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Ni•on
Administration, by a razor thin margin,
has won House approval for a two-year
ext.emion of the draft, but backers of
a volunteer army hope to approve a
military pay package that will speed
up the President's· timetable for e'1ding
the draft.
The $2.7 billion pay and quarters
allowance iqcrease is three times more
expensive than Nixon requested. It would
crant in one year starting July 1 the
raises Nixon had planned to extend over
two years to achieve a zero draft call
by mid-1973.
As an indic1tion of the sentiment for
ending the draft, the House Tuesday
came within two votes of limiting the
President's induction authority to just
one more year.
The 200 to 198 vote was also an
Indication of increasin& impatience in
the House for ID end to the Vietnam ·
war.
'Fox' Crusader
Strikes Agai.n
BATAVIA, JU. (UPI) - A clandestine
antipollution crusader known as "The
Fox" wants a local soap plant scrubbed
clean.
Stickers si&ned by "The Fox" have
turned up on bars of Dial soap at
local stores. police said Wednesday.
The stickers read: "Armour i>ial
pollutes our air" and "Armour Dial
pollutes our water."
Police said a clerk remembered a
tall, slim man asking where the bar
soap was stocked but could not give
a more complete description .
In the past, "The Fox" has con·
centrated on plugging factory drains and
etherwise harassing those he feels are
cullty of fouling the environment.
Fulbright's Charge·
War .Crime Laid
To White House
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. J .
William Fulbright (D-Ark.). said "unles11
we are wllllng to go all the way''
tD the White House in seeking to anign
blame for any Vietnam war atrocities
by Americans, there is "a very seriom
question of going down this road."
Fulbright said "we are now being
caught" by the same principles applied
in trials of some Nazi and Japanese
leaders on war crimes charges following
World War II.
Many defendants in those trials con·
tended they were following higher orders,
or that they were unaware of atrocities
committed by subordinatfS.
Lt. William L. Calley Jr., in his trial
at Ft. Benning, Ga., on murder cruirges
for the slaying of civilians at My Lai,
South Vietnam, relied largely on the
argument that he was following order s.
The military jury convicted him and
sentenced him to life imprisonment
Wednesday. _
Fulbright was asked about the Calley
case and its implications today.
He was interviewed on the CBS morn·
in&news program on CBS-TV.
''The princpple that we applit:d to'"'
y;amashita should be applied here,''
Fulbright said.
During further queslioning, he
r'emarked: "I'm saying there 's a very
seriOWI question of going down this road
unless we are willing to go all the
way .•. that means bringing in the com·
mander in chief."
He said it was "quite questionable"
to pick out one man -"if he's going
to be the only one'' -to bear principal
responsibility for actions such as My
Lai.
"If we're going down that road, we
Bolivian Consul
'
Shot to Death
At Hamburg Post
HAMBURG, Germany (UPI) -An un·
identified assailant, believed to be a
woman, shot. and killed the outgoing
Bolivian consul general in Hamburg to.-
day as he sat at hia office desk, police
reported.
The shooting took place about IO a.m.
Occupants of the building aaid I.hey saw
a woman dash dowa the stairs and out of
the consulate immediately after the at·
lack.
. Police said they found a gray wig. be·
lieved dropped by the assailant, on a
landing on the staircase.
The outgoing, consul, Robert Quinlan·
ilia Pereira, about 40, died from two
pistol bullet wounds in the chest shortly
after his admission to a city hospital.
The Brazilian Embassy in Bonn said
he had served as consul ge11eral in Ham·
burg from May 19, 1970, until Feb. 28,
1971. He was continuing to carry out
consular duties at the consulate. which
was also his residence, pending · Lhe ar·
ri val of a replacement.
Quintanilla was living in the consulate
with his 36-year..old wife and three chi!·
dren.
Soviet Party Leader
Rips Into Chinese
MOSCOW (UPI ) -A Soviet Com·
munlst Party leader, in a speech to
the 24th Party Congress released today,
condemned attempts by non-Soviet Com·
munisl.s to modify t~arxist theory or
set up "models" of socialist states dif·
ferent from the Soviet Union . •
Pyotr M. Masherov, first secretary _
of Byelorussia's party organization, men·
tioned only Communist China by name.
"Particu1arly repulsive is the anti.Soviet
line of the Chinese leaders \vho calling
themselves Communists have made their
principal occupation the defamation of
our Leninist Party and the Soviet ex·
perience of building Socialism.''
ought to consider whue lt oulbt lo
go," Fulbright said.
Mked if he meant including in any
inquiry of ultimate responsibility Gen .
William C. Weslmoreland; Vietnam com-
mander at the time of the My Lai
killings and former President Lyndon
B. Johnson and President Nlxon, as
well, Fulbright said be did .
Egypt Units
Fire Salvo
Across Suez
By United Press lnternatlonal
Egyptian troops opened fire across
the Suez Canal, . Israeli officials said
Wednesday, but there were no injuries
and Israeli troops did not fire back.
Il was the first shooting along the truce
line since Aug. 12.
An lsraeli spokesman said the Egyp.
tians opened up with -abort bursts of
machlnegun fire Monday across the canal
near the northern end of the waterway.
There was no comment from Cairo on
the incident, but only the Aug. 12 shogting
has been reported since the Arab-Israeli
cease-fire began Aug. 5.
In Amman, Jordan's King Hussein call·
ed for an urgent Arab summit conference
to discuss the Palestinian issue and the
overall situation in the · Middle East.
He cabled his proposal to leaders of
the Arab nations Wednesday night as
Jordan recovered from six days of
renewed clashes between government
troops and Palestinian guerrillas.
In the message, Hussein offered Jordan
as a meeting site to discuss ''the gravity
of the situation and the serious
circumstances besetting the Palestinian
case." He said the conference also should
be used to make a thorough study and
to define responsibilities in the Middle
·East.
In Paris. Egyptian Foreig n Minister
Mahmoud Riad ended his official ·visit
to France by meeting President Georges
Pompidou. Egyptian officials Stiid he
was happy with the results of the con·
ference held with 18 Egyptian am-
bassadors to Europe held in Paris during
the week and waa encouraged by Euro.-
pean support for Cairo's Middle East
policies.
The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram said the conference agreed on
the importance of improving economic
relations with West European nations.
Al Ahram also said Egypt has accused
~he Jordanian government of violating
its peace agreements with the Palestinian
gu~rrillas. The Egyptian viewpoint,
dehvered to Jordan by Egyptian am·
bassador Osman Nouri in Jordan, al~o
urged an immediale end to bloodshed
belween the guerrillas and the army,
Wicks
·--~-
.,
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'Hey Honey! You forgot
your gun!''-
Winds Lash Midwest
Gusts Vp to 73 MPH Storm Through Kansas Town
Cal.lfoM1ia
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FountaiD Valley Today's Flnat ·
N.Y. Steeb
VO L M , NO. 78, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE CO)JNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRl l I, 1971 TEN CENTS
Calley Verdict Prompts Widespread Protest
By United Press International
Three local draft boards resigned. at
least lhree mass marches on Washington
were being planned, and the While House
was swamped with telegrams and
ti:lephone calls ae Americans expressed
their feelings about the conviction of
LL William Calley.
Calley was convicted of the
premeditated murder of 22 Vietnamese
civilians at My Lai. He was sentenced
Wednesday to life in prison.
Reaetion continued to mount around
the nation as Ca11ey waited in the ft.
Benning stockade for a transfer to
federal prison.
The \Vhite House, according to Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, had receiv·
ed more than 5,000 wires and 1.500
telephone catls concerning the oonviction .
They were running almost 100.-1 In favor
of clemency for Calley, he said.
Jn St. Petersburg, Fla.1 real estate
man Walter J .. Dilbeck said Wednesday
he and 100 "coordinators" around the
nation wer~ laying plans for a mass
march on Washington July 4 on behaU
of all Gfs charged in the My Lai incident.
"\Ve intend to have one million people
in Washington that day and we intend
to stay there until these men are releas-
ed ," Dilbeck said.
E. Thomas Cammarota, commander
of the Pennsylvania American Legion,
called on President Nixon to heed those
(See CALLEY, Page Z)
Urged
Environment Unit Endorses Action
The environmental Council of Hunt-
tlngton Beach is recommen~ tha~ the
city go ahead with the plan lo fluoridate
the water supply.
The re com mendation and the report
c)f the environmental group's study will
be considered by councilmen Monday.
The council already has authorized
the addition of fluorides lo the . water
•
supply but delayed implementation of
the program lo allow t h e en·
-vironmentalisU time lo study il.
But another call lo delay the progr11m
and submit the cjuestion to the electorate
will be made Monday night. Jerry
Bogart, head 'of the Huntington Bea t:h
Citiz.ens for Pure Water, said today t.e
w.ill ask for 'Ii public vrite .
l>AILY P ILOT Sti ll P1111!e
THEY'LL TAKE TO THE BOARDS FOR TINA'S BENEFIT
Andrew McClure, Vicky Sc1vo and Margaret McC lure
Kids Perform
Benefit Aids Tina K ysella Fund
A benefit performance of "Fracturtd
Fairv Tales" will be given next Thursday
by ·th! f ountain VallQ: Community
Theater for the Tinn Kysella Fund.
His group cotlected 4,430 signature.!!
on a petition requiring a referendum
on fluoridation. The total was more than
the IO percent .Df the electorate required
to put the issue on the general election
ballot. but the petition was declared
in\'alid because it did not meet a legal
deadline.
"I still believe we have shown that
a sufficient number of people want to
vote on it," Bogart commented.
He also disclosed that the pure water
group has filed an intention to circulate
petitions again if the request for the
referendum is denied by the council.
Mrs . Margaret Carlberg, chairman of
fhe Environment Council, said that her
group considered the merits ol fluorida-
tion outweighted the disadvantages.
She explained that the Environmental
Council had not plarlfled to take a position
on the issue, but at a meetil]8 this
week Dr. James Mason, head Or Uie
water quality committee~ asked that one
be made and the t~mendaUon Jlfr
the go-ahead wa1 llPPi'IYid by a majority
vote. ,
Among the plus fact4rs. tht council
learned, were that lncriwsing the fluoride
content in city water from it& present
level of .45 part per million to one
part per million would bring nearly a
30 percent improvement in the reduction
of tooth decay in childre n.
Mrs. Carlberg said that the council
also found that mottling from fluoridatil)n
occurs in less than one percent of the
cases where there is one part per million
In the water, and that mottling does
not harm teeth. The council also found
that fish life in the ocean "rould not
be affected by the addition ~ fluoride
Jn local supplies.
The negative aspects were that care
would be needed in handling the chemical
and that because of the nature of the
city's water system, inj(!ctlnn of the
fluorides would have to be monitored
lit 12 poinLs rather than at one central
point.
President Meets
With Aerospace
Industry Chiefs
President Nixon met this morning with
more than a dozen leaders in !he
aerospace industry and members of the
scientific community in a concerted ef·
fort to stave off the massive unemploy-·
ment which has hit that profession in
recent months.
No immediate results of the meeting
v.·ere available at mid-morning from Nix·
on aides.
Included in the group which met with
the President in his San Clemente office
were members of large western college~
and universities, manufacturers. and
representatives of the hard-bit aerospace
Industry itself.
6 of 8 Tell l'iews
' I .: !
• -
I
ACROSS THE NATION, PROTESTORS GATHER AGAINST VERDICT ON CALLEY
Outaide Fort Benni ng, Hildagard Crochet Rai ses Her Arm in Bitter Gesture
Effective in July
SehooL, Superintendent
'
Outlines District Cuts
By RUDI NTEDZIE~KI
Of l~t Dlllr Piiot l111f
Jack Roper, superintendent of the 52-
squart-mi!e Huntington Beach Uninn
High School District, today ou!lined cuts
!hat will go into effect this July if
the district is wisuccessful in passing
a tai increase by then.
He said students at Westminster, Hun-
tington Beach, Fountain Valley. Edison
and !\1arina high schools will have lo
go with as many as eight rewer semester
courses and face a reduced choice o(
electives.
By law, the school district's tax rate
v.·ill revert to the state minimum nf
B.l cents unless voters approve the S2.08
rate in an election scheduled June l5.
The district has already twice failed
lo gain voter approval of the S2.U8 rate,
up 69 cents from the current Sl .39 tax
rate.
Roper further sa id the 85-cent rate
would compel the district to cut lo
five the maximum number of class
periods a student may take.
Under the current budget. students
are allowed a maximum of six periods
per day, with some .'Ible to take as
many as seven periods by combining
classes with work-experience hours.
Lowering the maximum of daily
periods allowed each student means that
the graduation requirements also will
be lowered from 220 units lo 200 units .
said Roper.
··1r we're forced II) operate on the
85-cent tax rate for much time. I can
eo:isily see our having to reduce still
further the maximum number of periods
A student may take to 190 units," Roper
predicted.
One unit or credit is given fo r each
hour a week a class meets within one
semester.
Yet another move the district plans
lo make 1f it Js forced to work with
the 8Xent budget. ls to eliminate current
requirements of three years of Engli~
and one yea r each of mathematics and
science.
Jn addilion. the four-year social sLudies
requirement would be reduced lo a year-
and-a-half. It would theo consis~ of one
year of U.S. history and one half year
of U.S. government.
Both US. history and U.S. government
are required by slate lav.·. as are four
years of physical education, according
to Roper .
"Without this reduction in specific
cQurse requirements, students would be
left without opportunities to lake elec·
tivrs ln other fields," the .!iUperintendent
explained.
"A student seriously interested, in say.
music or graphic arts would be
frustrated In his attempU lo pursue
such an interest in a meaningful way."
In addition, Roper sald the students
v.·ill have fewer courses to choose from .
He pointed out that the economics of
running the district with an 85-cent tax
rate would require cutting out courses
which do not attract ll ,;ubstantial enroll-
ment at any of the high .!iChools.
"Exactly what the minimum enroll·
ment would have to be, we don 't know
yet, but some courses are bound lo
-be. dropped," &aid Ropei;.
Police, Firemen
Beach Lawsuit
Hearing Delayed
An Orange County Superior Court ftear-
Jng into lawsuits flied by the Huntington
Beach police and firemen's associations
was delayed Wednesday until April 12.
Presiding J u d g e William C. Speir!
ordered the delay after learning that
Judge Robert Banyard could not work:
~hat !s e.x~cted to be a lengthy hearing
into his limited l~w and mnlion calendar.
A c~urtroom wlil be assigned for the hearing April 12.
Both associations want Uie court to
set aside a City Council resolution or
last Sept. 1 in which an 8.25 percent
pay hike was ordered for all city
employes. Both police and flre~n want
an II percent raise and thef argue l~at t~e city should have continued
discussions on the issue.
Bot~ writs of mandate claim that City
Council action violates a long standing
agree.m~nt between the city and both
assoc1.ali.ons and the Police Officers
Assoc1at1on also asks for $650,oo:> ln
damages.
150.year Sentences
On Pushers Defeated
CARSON CITY, Nev. <UPI) -A
measure which would have provided ISO.
year prison terms for drug se ller:ii on
a second conviction was killed Wed-
nesday by the Nevada assembly.
··Pushers should be: put sway com
pletely." said spomor Oave Branch ad~
ding that .. J.700 years wasn·t too 'long
in jail for someone who would '"&ell
drugs to our children." The measure
was killed on a 19-15 vote.
Orange Coast
The children's musical comedy w 11 l
start at. 1 p.m. In the community center,
10200 Slater Ave'-Tickets are 50 cents
with all proceeds helping to pay hospital
expenses for the 12-yeaNJld Tamura
School girl.
'Vhile the special hospital fund is
1ro\1·lng -it'1 now over the 11,500
mark -Tina is still listed In critical
condition at Hoag Memortal HO!lpilal.
(
C_ollege Candidates. Speak
1''eather
ft may not be quite 'so warm
along the O:iast Friday, but the
morning fog will &lill be with us.
Look for temperatures in the 67
to 77.<:fegree range_
She was hospilAlizt!:d March 11 with
a hemorrhage neAr the brain stem. 1Joc.
lor1 at the hospital ,;aid she came out
of her conla this wet!:k., but is atiU
under intensive care
For ticket Information on Ute "Frac-
turtd Fairytale" performance phone
Mrs. Richard Gilllum, 847-1 475. Tickets
can also be obtained at the door. •
The Tina Kysell a fund was eel up
by the T.11mura School PTO, the Jaycees
and the Women 's Club . The money v.•11J
help the fam!ly pay hea vy medical ex·
pt!:nsea not cove.red by health inrurance.
'
AIDED BY BENEFIT
Stricken Tin• Kyt1ll1
-------
I
Six of the eight candidates for three
,;eals on the Coast Community Ciltlege
District board of trustees Wednesday
night addressed an audience of about
70 in the Estancia High School Forum,
Costa fl.1esa .
The Coast College candidAles joined
a panel or hopefuls in the Newport-~1esa
t:n1fied School District trustee race 1n
a. candidates' forum arranged by the
Orange Co.Isl League of Women Voters
and th~ American Association of
Universi~ Women .
Each candidate was allotted five
mihutee to gpeak.
A question period followed the prepared
remarks.
The Coasl Community College Oistnct
ts m3'1e up· of the Huntincton Beach
l
---~ ----··-
Union High and Newport-Mesa Unified
School Districts. It operates two. two-
year college campuses, Golden West
College 1n Huntington Beach and Orange
Coast Colle11:e 1n Co;;ta Mesa.
Thrte of the distr1cl 's rive trustee
,areas Are listed on the April· 2tl ballot
-area two (Westrnlnster Elementary
Sclioot District J area three r Hufi Cington
Beach and Fountain ·Valley Elementary
distncts) and area four (the •cny of
en~ta ~1esa)
While cand idates must reside In the
area they !eek t" represent. trustees
are elected at large by all voters in
the district.
Thf' two candidates not In attendance
v.·ere Barbara Bel[ an advertising
representative of 5031 Quail Circle, Hun-
f I
_._ __ --"
lingtoo 8Pach. who ls challeng ing In·
cumbent Wil iiam Kettler In areA three
/Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley) and
Will iam T. Unger Jr .. a student, ,who
hsts t\is addre.o;s as 2211 Rutgers I:tive,
Costa Mesll. Unger is seeking the area
four seat (Costa ~1esa) held by Robert
L. Humphreys.
Here i! some of what" the candidpte$
had to say :
Richard L. Ollver, 45. of 149 E. Bay
St., Costa !\1esa. a systf'ms analyst and
evening college instructor Is challenging
Humphreys.
Oliver said !he community colleg e
should provide "general academic core
programs for two-year . trai ning in a.
trade lo match the 1 n c re a 5 i n g I y
!See COAST, Pa11:e ZI
' / --
INSIDE TODAY
A modern Flurng Dutchmnn,
in the form of a sitnken Goel'f11(&n
s1tbmor1n~. rtpartPdlJI threatens
F'londa Coost with its dead/"
World War 11 cargo. See story.
Page S.
CtYfo"'ll ,
CJMc•I.., U• 11
C!lt111l14 Jf·'I c.,,.iu u c,...,.,,.,. 1•
Duttl rr.i.llc•t 11 o•wrc" 11 E•11ori11 '1'• • lllffl'lllllmfll! )4~11
'IMllC• 1•11 Merotc-u
l.1111 L•JM11r1 11
Mt~IQ )4.J)
'
M~llNI ••11W1 H
N•llilltl NO!Wt .....
Orll'IM C.U11" 11
SJ,.,.11 'trlw 1t s-11 1t-n
lled1 Mlr1lth H-IP Ttll~ltllft J•
l1H11t111 M•U
WtlllMlr t
Wllllt W•1ll l't w,_., 1t•Wl u.n
W1rlt JlllW• t I
'
,.
% DAILY PILOT H Thursday, Aprft 1, 11171
Planners Ru·sh Revise Project 1
S&4L lll>OC# I liltSrMINS!fJI. ScN0a. ()IS11tlCT ~ DIJT'll/t:T
I
Cf!-mpaign to Slow Hunting ton 1'partments Pushed
1
8)' ALAN DllllQN
Of ... Dalt( 1'1191 ll•ll
A vast project to revise I.he master
plan and slow the spread of apartments
in Hw1Ungton Beach is being hurried
along by the planning conunlssion.
The chafl8e w111 involve reclassifying
numerous apartment rones in th.t city
10 single family home areas and slashing
the maxlmum dena!Ues in apartment
developments.
The mater plan revision could reduce
populatloll goall for the clly, pcesenUy
projected al l00,000.
The commission alrtady has adopted
new standards for apartment zones that
v.·ill cul the number of units that cao
.be built per acre by about one third.
The standards als are de11igned to Im·
prove the appearance of apartments by
increasing setbacks and open spact.
In lbe R2 apartment zone the max-
imum units per acre has been chopped
from 21.8 to 14.~ and Jn the R3 zone
from 3U unlta por acre lo 1U. nue new •tandlrdl cover all com-
pltus tu non«t&D oriented property.
llley also apply -Only to the target com·
plexes, lhose over 15,000 square f e e l
or about six unit:s.
A!fsistant Planning Director Dick
llarJow said today that these standards
are presently being used as •·guidelines"
for apartment developments but the com•
mission has asked for them to pul into
ordinance form.
"ni,y ...W come up ror 1 public hear·
tna: and pos&ble adoption on April 20,''
he aald.
'The new standards .and promised
review of the master plan grew ~ut
or recommendations of the city's multi
density co1n1nittee, headed by Planning
Commissioner Henry Duke.
They also follow months of pressure
from homeowners at couoc.il and planning
commission meetings who haY~ steadily
protested new apartment de velopments
and hlgh density problems.
-llutt/,;,gf.,, &rr/. /ln;611
/ligh Schal f!irlrid . __ E:J.,..., lJidn'ob
Classroom Staffing E'ro1n Page 1
COAST •..
Residents in east and southeast }Jun·
tington Be a ch have been the most
\'ocal. This se:ctor, called the Talbert Ocean View Selected technological society and general coursts Valley , will be the first area stud.ie<i
of interest to the commw:Dty at large." in lbe master pla.o revision.
Oliver urged bilingual coo.n.w.llng for Revision of the master pla11. has been
To .Test New Concept culturally disadvantaged students, ex· adopted a.s the commission's priority
panded programs for returning student project for 1971.
veterans, i m p r o v e d administrative services for tbe evening division, develop· For the moment, the commission is
ment of short courses leading to job exc luding a mile-<leep ocean-0riented
ELECTIONS COMING UP IN .THESE AREA SCHOOL OJSTRICTS
C1ndld1t1 S.ries St1rt1 Frfd1y With Ocon Vi1w (Shachcij
Ottan View School Dbtrict officials
today learned that they are among five
callfornia achool dlstricts chosen to te.st
a Dew concept in classroom staffing.
1be five-year study, •.P..Proved by State
Superin tendent of .PUDI!c "l.mtruction
Wllaon Riles, will allow rour of the
schools to use combinations of teachers,
teacher aides and per50ns from the com-
munity to reduce the adult.learner ratio.
District Superlntendent Clarence Hall
u id the pilot program will actually allow
the participating schools to dispense with
state-mandated staff requirements.
Other dlsbicll named to participate in
the e:1perlment are Newport-M e s a
Unified, San JOR, CuperUno and Fresno.
"WUh the waiver of these restrictions,
we will be able to place as many adults
in the classroom u we consider ef·
fecUve," said Dr. Hall. "At the moment
we do not know uacUy how many
per average classroom."
Tbe new ayitem will allow these
schools to exceed the at.ate required
ratio of 30 student.. per teacher by
making use of additional help.
Thil" may be done by ualng part.time
leacben, teachtt aides, aide coordinators
and volunteers.
Volunteer duties will range from im·
plementing teacher-planned activities to
making up specific lessons for people.
Dads Slate Visit
To Kindergarten
Some awfully big kids are going to
fill the tiny chairs tonight in the kin-
dergarten claMroorru: of LeBard School
ln Huntington Beach.
Father• of the &ehool's 109 kin·
dergarten tots will take their places
at the chalk boards for two hours to·
see if they can fill their children's shoes.
Class at.arts at 6:30 p.m. and the
dads had better be on time. Three
klndergart.en teachers are going to put
them through the paces of a regular
class day.
From finger painting to group singing
lhe dad! are going back to school -
way back.
It's an experimental program lo Jet
father know best, how his son or
daughter feels ln class.
Slain in W. Ge rmany
HAMBURG. Germany (UPI ) -The
outgoing Boli\•ian General Consul in
Hamburg, &berto Quintanilla Pereira,
was ahot to death in his office today
by an unknawn usa1Iant, police said.
They said the consul was hit in the
chest by two bullets. 'Ille assailant. v.·ho
escaped, could have been a v.·oman,
police said. They declined to give further
details .....
OU.K•I COAST
' DAILY PILOT
OIU.HOI CO.UT PUIL.UHIM~ COMll'M'f
l ellert N. WeM
PrtitJMftl W Plllll....,.
Jee" I , Cvtl..;"
~ '""!HW ... 0-.1 MlnltW"
lli•"'•' ic., .. 1c 111111or.
T1io11111 A. M"''-'~" MeMlllllO 1•1~r
Ale11 Dir~i11
Wml ~ co.,.nif 1!41111"
Albert W, 1111•
AlldCla!O E.O•IW
H•l'tt..._ IMclio Offko
1717.li le1~h l oul1v114
M1ll!n1 All'r•n: P.O. l1ir 7t0, 916•1
.,_ Olfl ...
Ll(IU'MI llMdl! 12: Fottsl ... .,.,.,,.
eo.11 ....._., JJll W•t 01y lit ... H....._., 1'9(11: :am NIWi>'lrt lkN:.0-1 ...
.. ll CMT!ltltt: ~ Horn! El Clmlnt bll
,..., .... (714) •42""4JJ1
Cl-'IW ~ "4W671
c.,,..1liM. ttn, Or.,... CMd "'-tll1'1'olflt ~-... -,....-, ,...,,11~ edl-~ """-' .. """""""-" ,...... _,. .. ,.... ' .. wrlthM -lit ,.,.
'911MIDn M ~I -·
a.c ... ct•• ,..-.o ....... ~ hedri ..... C:-1• M-, CIUfOntll. lilllKflfr!l1"
.,... c-"'9r n .u .....,1t11v 1 11y INll u .ri
-.thl'tl 1!'!11"41'Y tn!llll!lono, •J H -"'lf.
One school, already has a volunteer
father who comes tn twice weekly to
instruct a seveath grade drafting class.
Another school plays h~t to sprightly
82-year--0ld grandmother \\'ho comes to
school two hours a day to tutor fifth
grade math. Also present are college
students who work with teachers in
preparing classe1 ranging from physical
education to drama.
"What a wealth cf talent we 11 a v e
found In our school community," said
OCean View Trustee Robert Zinngrabe.
"Being able to bring these people lnto
our classrooms in increasing numbers
will be of untold benefit for our children.
"Our California school districts have
been operating under rather rigid staffing
requirements. For four Ocean View
schools the waiver of these requirements
will allow them to enrich the currlculwn
with people as well as subject. matter,''
he added.
Supl Hall will announce the schools
to participate in the program this June.
From Pagel
CALLEY. ••
urging clemency.
"'lf President Nixon sees fit not to
listen to the thousands of telegrams
that already have been sent to him,
y:e are prepared to marcl1 o n
Washington,'' Cammarota said.
Robert Cadle, a retired Army sergeant
who .says the verdict was "a lot of
bull," said Wednesday he and a "Free
Calley Committee" with branches in all
stales but Hawaii wiH lead 50.000 people
in a march on Washington afler a pedtion
drive.
"This whole thing has boomeranged
all out of proportion,'' Cadle said. "Peo-
ple call in and they cuss, cuss, cuss.
Are they mad. I've never seen anything
like this verdict in my life ."
All the member! of local Selective
Service Boards in Elizabethton, Tenn.,
and Athens and Blairsville, Ga ., resigned.
Members or the Quitman, Ga., board
wired Nixon they would not induct any
more men.
"This is the worst thing that's ever
happened in the United Slates," said
Robert E. Caldwell, chairman of the
Blairsville board.
Sam f\1ottern, chairman of th e
Elizabethton Board, said after the Calley
verdict he could no longer perform his
duties "without a complete surrender
of principle and conviction."
In Richlands, Va .• response to a radio
station's poll on Calley's guilt v.·as so
heavy Wednesday that telephone circuits
broke down temporarily. Some listeners
then drove to the station to vote. The
total showed only three of 688 votes
favored Calley's conviction.
A Davenport, Iowa, television station
conducted a 00.mlnute poll on the verdict.
Twenty-three or 931 persons responding
favored the court marlial decision.
Thi! Indiana House of RepresenUitives
passed a resolution Wednesday calling
for steps "to correct the injustice that
v.·e firmly believe has been perpetrated.
• . " a resolution asking the President
for clemency was before the Ulfnois
legislature and the Salt Lake City Com·
mission approved a resolution, with a
copy to the President, condemnlng the
conviction.
Higb school 1tudents In southeast Ken·
lucky began circulating petiUona pro-
testing the conviction and 2&l Belleville,
Ill.. high school students marched live
miles with signs comdemning the verdict.
Veterans organizations around the na·
tion protested the decision :ind requested
various actions. including clemency anrl
an investigation of the court martial
verdict.
In \\'ashington, the nation·~ elected
representatives Joined the cborus or com-
ment
skills and retraining and career counsel· area stretching from the adopted route Voter Servke
ing for the unemployed. of the Pacific Coast Freeway to the.
Roberl L. Bumpbrey1, 44, an attorney, Coast llighway and from Be a ch
of 1500 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa ii setking his third terln. Boulevard to Huntington Harbour fron1
He noted that the district'• state aid the re\lislon. Pilot to Present Profile
share has shrunk ainoe 1M8, when he But the commissioners have set up
was a student at Orange Coast College a list of other areas where the land
and when the district was the wealthiest use will be revised.
in California. First will be the heavily populated
''The statewide property tax proposal Talbert Valley east of Beach Boulevard
Se1·ies on Board Hopeftils
certainly gels our 1Upport in view o( and from Garfield Avenue south· second
the facilities and school finance problems will be the Jand west of Edw~-.. •• s•-t "' r d · 1•-p 1 10 ye " a.ru.s .. ~ As a service to voters, the DAD.. Y we .e ace m 1i.:: as ars, and north of the Coast Freeway route Humphreys said. "lt's difficult to cut and third v.·ill be the area east of PILOT will publish profiles of candidates
costs without cutting quality." Edwards Street and north of the freeway In the local school board elections.
Enrlqoetlt L. Ramos , 38, a Fountain line. The coastal zone will be looked The special, ''Know Your Candidates''
Valley High School teacher, of 17294 at after the other stud.Jes have been com-series will represent a c:ooperalive effort
Peppertree St. Fountain Valley, called pleted.
r " di ill~ bo d" belv.•een the DAILY PILOT and the or a more vers c:u ar -one The commission will hold a study "al In 1 des Sh · ·• JI In League of '~·omen Voters of Hunlington "'' cu a woman. e 15 ,..,a eng g 1esslon on revising the master plan for Beach.
incumbent William Kettler in Huntington Talbert Valley in •i.-"very near" ruiure. b I
B b F I · v ll "'... T e eague, a nonpartisan organization, eac • oun am a ey. """S!bly April 13, a-dm· g lo Harlow.
Sb "d "-1 · rta t 1 r r-'"""' asked the candidates in the high school e sa1 uic mos 1_mpo n gos o The commission -•-0 bas drawn up d 1 " 11 d. 11 t · lob •••" ll 4JOI an e ementary districl elections for 1o11e c.o ege 1s r c u r .. '6 ure co ege a y,·hole range of pro1·-1s ror 1971. 1 · ·
1 1 " ·1 d rind .... t 1e1r views on four topics. c oser o u1e :commwu y an ways They Include·.
lo " 1 b .i. The series will cover the races in
j lb
s retc uienidol~s to se rve everybody -Sellin~ ~p provisions for a special Ille Fountain Va!ley, Huntington Beach
•M e coRmmu ty. eel d 1 use permit, instead of a conditional ex· City and Ocean View elementary districts
rs. amos urg eve opment of ceplion, to cover applicat'ions for and the Huntington Beach Union High
chil1d care centers on the campus ~hich churches. day schools and zero sideyards School District. Separate analyses of the
wou allow young mothers to enroll. on apartment complexes. contests in the Seal Beach and
Donald G. Hofl , 52, quality assurance -Reviewing and replanning the central \\'estminster elementary districts and the
specialist of 14842 Harper St., T\-11dway Industrial area. Coast Community College District will
City, said the colleges "should prepare -Establishing mulliple fam ily stan-be published before the April 20 trustee
students so that he or she is equipped dards and traffic patterns downto\Y"n. elecliona.
to meel life's problems as he knowa -Improving the street 'acene with new The series will begin Friday with pro-
them.·• Hoss is the incumbent represen· ting the Westminster area. appearance standards for walls along files of the three Ocean View candidates.
He cited the education code strictures tracts. It will contlnue A1onday and Tuesday,
the board mU!l live within concerni•... -:-~viewing the f~ture role of "faclory April 5-6, with the answers of the five
a. bwll modular h-·s1ng ih "e c1·t -.. candidates in the Fountain Valley race finance. Despite these, the di.!itriCt has "" ui Y-1•11:re are presently no \ow -st hollSUI' followe d April ?..a with a breakdown "maintained a low per student cost but -..... g zones In Huntington Beach. of the six contestants in the Huntington
built an educational program that has -Stud · . Beach City district. attracted national atten11·0n and ,·, a ying new guidelines for housing tracta to av "d "~-t d I The series on the 17 runners In the model for others in the nation,,. he 01 .. ...,,eo ype eve opmenl" .said. and grid street patterns. Huntington Beach Union High School
Eslab\1-"·g are f 1 R District race will begin Friday, April Charles Daglon, 24, a Golden West -,,.IU, as or arger I single fami"ly \ols ' 9 and continue through Friday, April student, of 15225 Jackson Sl., !\-tidway · City, said the colleges "are not .servicing -Studying the mobilehome zones to 16· · see 1·r changes ar n d d An average or three candidates a day the students or •l.e commun1·ty as well e ee e · . "'' Del · 'd 1· "· \\•ill be presented. The series ·will not as illey could." He is challengiRg }~off. -erming gui e ille! 1.uat \\'ill en· Alt.hough he Is "an ecology nut", courage "beneficial" c 0 mm er c i a 1 run on Saturdays.
D I
.. developmenl i·n 1he ci"ty In addition to this detailed coverage. ag on said 1o11e district could not afford · Establish· re· lhe DAILY PILOT is also reporting development of an environmental work· -ing an o ice-professlonal ·
10 lhe 1ssues that emerge at the several
ing model, a job »e said should be On~~ h candidates• nights: being held in West
handled by state colleges or the uni\·ersl· uier c anges in the commission-Orange County.
ty system. adopted apartmenl standards will in· As the campaigns near their close.
Dagion said "'~ped lectures" don't crease lhe number of trees on local d" ""' tr t b 2 the e 1torial board of the newapaper
allow students to ask questiona. He urged !i ee s Y 5 percent, and increase the will weigh the informaUon gathered and
combirung the day and evening ad· open space in apartment complexes. The endorse candidates. Th e s e recom·
Moreland, who headed the project this
year.
The questions which candidates were
asked lo answer in 500 words or less
are:
---\I/hat specific changes in program
or policy would you like to see UD-
dertaken by the school board during
the next four years?
-What are your feelings OD unifica-
tion?
-What are your feelings on teacher
tenure?
-What are your feelings on how eilher
the voucher system or statewide property
tax or bolh of these financing-proposals
would affect loca1 school districts?
Unification means combining elemen-
tary and high school districts into on1
administration and board. School district
territories not in a unified diatrict must
hold an election on the reorganization
of bpundaries for the purpose of unifica·
tion by June 1972.
Teacher tenure relates to the syal.tin
whereby a teacher can become a
pennanent employe after serving a pro-
bationary period of three yeara. Tenured
teachers may be dismissed for cause
only.
The voucher system refers to a pro-.
posai in which the federal or state
government would give the parents of
students a check to· be spent only on
education but at the school of the
parents' choice, either private or public.
A proposed statewide property tax
would be levied equally between all pro-
perty taxpayers to be distributed to
school districts on the J1asis of need
to equalize: support bet.Jeen the: rich
and poor districts.
Auto Glass Shattered
minist rations. changes also inc.reaae the setback from mendations to voters will be printed
The district's television station develop· a public street from 10 or 15 feet al in editorials on Page 6. BERKELEY, Mo. (AP) -Glau h•
ment als<t should be handled by the p~esent to 20 feet and raise the min imum The League of Women voters does three autos v.·a~ sheltered by projectilts
state colleges. Dagion said. dtslanct between buildings from 10 feet not support or oppose candidates. or and a section of Intersta~ 70 wa! closed
\\'illiam Kettler, of 62.3 Seventh St., to 15 feet. political parties. Jt prepared the ques. for fJve boors Sunday while police hunted
Hu ntington Beach, said that compared A~y master plan revision and the tionnaire slmply to give each candidate for a sniper. No one was hurt. Police
to the 68 community college districts ordinance on apartment standards also the opportunity to state his views and Chief Terrance Stoehner said Wednesday
in California in 196~70 whose per atudent v.•i!I ~ave to be adopted by lhe city to promote citizen participation in an investigation showed the projectiles
costs average $806, oCast College District L::c::ou::"::'::'l.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~g~ov~e~m~m~e~n~l.~a~c~co~r~dl~n~g~lo~M~rs~:~A~nn;::w~er~e~roc~ks~. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=, spends $755 per student. Kettler ls the II
incumbent in area. three (Huntington
Beach· Fountain Valley).
lie cited the value of his J1aving grown
up in Huntington Beach as beln& o(
importance "particularly since financlal
decision! affecUng the college are largely
political. 1 have come to know most
or the people making those decisions,"
Kettler said.
The tv.~o teacher candidates, Mrs.
Ramos and Oliver both agreed ltnure
should be abolished. The three in·
cumbcnts noted that finding a v.·ay of
instituting accountability for
performance is ditflcult.
Ba nk Lowers Rates
LONDON (AP) -Britain today relax·
ed ita tight money policy and lowered
the Bank or England 's lending rate from.
7 percent to 6 percent. The rate had
been the seC{)nd highest in Europe. ex·
cecded only by Denmark 's 8 percenl.
'fhe British rate had stood at 7 percent
since la st April 15, The reduction was
s!X'n as an attempt to stimulate the
flagging economy, .wJtich has resulted
in nearly 800,000 unemployed.
luxurious spring down sofas
This h1nd50m1 S~f• was designed to give you the ultimate In seating comfort with dacron
•nd down ~c k p1llov.:1, d1ep spri ng down Hit cuahions 1nveloped in down •nd feathers in
'WO fo1m-f1llld 1rm ptllows. Choost from 1 wide sel1etlon of fine f1brics..
8' le ngth, reg. $599 NOW 399.
Vets Aid Calley
Fund Starte d in Orange County
Oranae County veteran organii.allons are "Tai!lng funds to aJd In the de-
rense of Lt Willlam Calley who was convicted Monday of sla)·lng civitian3 at
'-fy Lal, South Vletnem. •
Andrew J. Callanan of Santa Ana Is acling as ch11:irman of the combined
veteran organization• sponsoring lhe drive. He aau:I. money should be tent to lhl
Lt. \Vi\liam Calley fund. Unlttd Cali(pmia Bank, 1018 N. Main St .. Santa Ana.
lf C.llty should be fr~ by ~rl'Sldential ordtr or his convkllon reverted,
Callanan sa id 1111 funds collttted would be given to veterans hospittils in South·
em C.Womla for the purchase of television &el.a and other recreational items .
. .
"~""'"~ .J. GARRETT f URN 1111 ~~ "'"'"'~
OpH M ... , Tloun. • Jlrl. Int. COSTA MESA, CALIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHA RGE M6·0275 646·0276
\
....... ..,_, -
r
17
I.
Newport Beaeh Today's Fbull
EDITION
,VOL. 64, NO. 78. 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRll I, '1971 TEN CENTS
Calley Verdict Prompts Wide~pread ~rotest
BULLETIN
Prr.sident Ni~ori 1eor a personal order
te offlcial1 at Fort Btnoing, Ga .. lhia
afternoon orderln.: Lt. William Calley
takt.n from the base stockade and con·
fined 10 quarters for a period whlcb
could last for a monlh.
Prtaidenlial Press Secretary Ron Zieg·
kt said the measure was DOI a .. legal
1tep" but instead was a persopal choice
made by the President at 1%:30 p.m.
By United Press bternatlonal
Three local draft boards resiKned, al
least three mass marches on Washington
were being planned. and the Wtiite House
\.lo'3S swamped with telegrams and
telephone calls as Americana expressed
their feelings about the conviction of
Lt. William Calley.
Calley was convicted of the
premeditated , murder of 22 Vietnamese
civiUans at My Lai. He was sentenced
Wednesday to life in prison. ·
Reaction continued to mount around
the nation as Calley waited LI\ the Ft.
Benning stockade for a transfer to
federal prison.
The White House, acC()rding to Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, had receiv-
ed more than 5,000 wires and 1,500
telephone calls concerning the conviction.
They were running almost 100-1 in favor
of clen:iency for Calley, be said.
In St. Petersburg. Fla., real estate
(See CALLEY PROTESTS, Page Z)
LA Basin Jolt·ed
•
Two Sharp Afterslwcks Recorded
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
Of lfte D1llY l'lt.I S11H Just two years after various visionaries
predicted a great earthquake would
tumble the wfiole sinful Southland into
the sea, two more aftershocks of the
major February tremor struck early
today.
They were preceded Wednesday by
C::oast Community
Six School
a temblor that rattled up to 4.0 on
the Richter Scale and caused heavier
damage in some San Femando Valley
areas than the Feb. 9 quake.
Today's aftershocks came at 3:48 a.m.,
with a 2.7 rating, and at 7.03 a.m.,
with a 3.7 mark.
Some Orange County residents reported
• ,"Jiran ts
noticing the lat.er, 1tronger jolt • which
was strongest in the Northridge and
Devonshire areas of the hard-hit San
Fernando Balley.
The heavy aftershock that came at
5:54 p.m. Wednesday, about eight miles
from the epicenter of the disaster two
months ago, was the worst yet.
The epicenter was directly under a
heavily populated area, according to
Caltech seismologist Dr. John Nordquist.
Six persons suffered minor injuries,
while canned goods and bottles tumbled
from store shelves, glass windows shat-
tered and plaster fell from ceilings.
The Los Angeles Police Department's
Devonshire Division suffered e1tensive
damage.
Give 5-minute Talks "If it had happened five minutes lat.tr,
~·e might have had rome injuries," aaid
Lt. Dan Sullivan, noting the roll call
room would have beea full of patrolmen
gix of the ei&hl caDdidates for three
seats en lM"& 'CommwUty C:Ollege
District board of trusteea Wednesday
night addressed an audience of about
70 in the Estancia High School Forum,
Costa Mesa.
The Coast College candidates joined
1 panel nf hopefuls in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee race in
a candidates' forum arranged by the
Orange Coast League of Women Voters
and the American Association of
University Women.
Each candidate was allotted five
minutes to speak.
A question period follov•ed the prepared
remarks.
The Coast Community College District
11 made up of the Huntington Beach
Union High and Newport-Mesa Unified
School Districts. It operates two, two-
ytar college campuses. Golden West
College in Huntington Beach and Orange
Coagt College in Costa Mesa.
Three of the district'!!" five trustee
areas are listed on the April 20 ballot
-area t~..-o \Westminster Elementary
Balhoan Nabbed
In Pot Seizure
A Balboa man is in cuslody today
after Newport Beach police allege 1hey
found 20 pounds of marijuana in his
home.
John Guy Tremblay, 19, of 201 E. Bal-
boa Blvd.. was booked on suspicion of
possession of marijuana for sale.
Detectives said the arrest followed an
111onymous lip.
The ronfiscated d r u g, police claim.
was packed in bricks and in baggies.
They estimated the value to be about
$2.000 on the illicit drug market.
Orange Coast
Weather
School District) area lhret (Huntington
Beacb ind Fountain Vallty Elem"entary
d.Uitricts) and arta four (the city of
Cosla Mesa).
While candidates must reside lri the
area lhey seek to reriresent, truslees
are elected at large by all voters in
the district.
The two candidates not In attendance
were Barbara Bell, an advertising
representative of 5031 Quall Circle, Hun·
tington Beach, who is challenging in·
cumbent Wiliiam Kettler in area three
(Huntington Beach· Fountain Valley) and
William T. Unger Jr., a student. wbo
lists his address as 2211 Rutgers Drive,
Costa A-1esa. Unger is seeking the area
four seat (Costa Mesa) held by Robert
L. Humphreys.
Here is some of what the candidates
had to say:
Richard L. Oliver, 45, of 149 E. Bay
St.. Costa Mesa, a systems analyst and
evening college instructor is challenging
Humphreys.
Oliver said the community college
sh.Q.uld provide ''general academic core
pr~rams for two-year training in a
trade to match the increas ingly
technological society and general courses
of interesl to the community al large.''
Oliver ur,i;ed bilingual counseling for
culturally disadvantaged students, ex-
panded programs for returning student
veterans, i m p roved administrative
services for the evening div ision. develop-
ment of short courses leading to job
skills and retraining and career counsel-
ing for the unemploy1td.
Robert l... Humphreylii, 44, an attorney,
of 1500 Adams Ave., Costa ~1esa is
seeking his third term
He noted that the district 'g stale aid
share has shrunk since 194a, when he
v.·as a student at Orange Coast College
and when the district was the wealthiest
in California.
"The statewide property tax prQposal
certainly gets our support in view or
the facilities and school finance problenvi
we've faced in the past 10 years,''
lStt COAST, Pa1e ZI
,., mu.star. ........ • r • ·'"
Si1 minor fires "1"t a lso rtported,
along with tomt fte'tJ·btJt minor dam.q;e
to the county's · 4&.iitch ~ranada Trunk
Line carrylng water into the area.
One of the hardest-hit b om e 1 was
that of Hal Sanders, who escaped with
minor damage in the Feb. 9 quake
that killed 65 persons and caused millions
of dollars in dainage.
"What we didn't lose then was pretty
well totaled today," Sanders rema rked.
"This' time the inside of the house
wss wrecked. It toppled over thret:
television sets and broke them all. The
glass doors broke. A china. cabinet full
of my wife's crystal fell over on the
dining room table."
The Feb. 9 earthquake. was recorded
at 5.6 on ·lhe Richter Scale and has
been followed by well ovt:r 200 al-
tershock.s, some too &mall for humans
to feel.
Such tremors in the wake of a major
quake are almost always lesser in in-
tensity, but §everal have been recorded
at over 3.0 on the Richter Scale.
Shark Attack?
No, Porpoises
Some surferl'i out for early morn.
ing rides today at Newport Pier
in Newport Beach thought they
were being attacked by sharks.
Police units r~re rushed to the
scene artned and prepared to pro-
tect the &urfers from the denizens
of the deep.
''When we got there, we found
out there weren't any sharks at
all," said Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
"ft was just a small school of
porpoises having a good time."
~1cDaniel said the mammals
frolicked in the surf -charging
the surfers, then veering off -
for several minutes before moving
on .
Newport-Mesa Race
.. , '
--
·--
• -
ACROSS THE NATION, PROTESTORS GATHER AGAINST VERDICT ON CALLEY
Obtsidt Fort Benning, Hildagard Crochet Raises Her Arm in Bitter Gesture
Bollbtg Mad
I I . ..
~ ·u:s~ Aciion on SeafoOd
Ban I res Outlet Owner
The Crab Cooker's Bob floubian ls
boiling mad at the U.S. Food and Drug
Admlnlstrallon.
But he says it's not because they seized
nearly 35,000 pounds of his swordfish
Tuesday allegedly because it was co11-
tamlnated by mercury.
"That was no big deal," says Roubian,
proprietor of the popular Newport Beach
restaurant. "I wrote off that stuff last
December when l voluntarily quaran-
tined it."
He says he's perturbed "over the lousy
job the government's doi11g about getting
the rest of the tainted fish oU the mar-
ket."
"If the fish is 50 dangerous.'' he said,
''why hasn't the sale of l\ been banned
throughout the state."
He said he called 21 other seafood out-
lets in Newport Beach wi thin the past
two weeks and 19 or them ttad swordfish
for sale.
On the other hand. Roub1an points oot,
"Its sale has been banned up and down
the East Coast. from Boston lo Florida ."
Roubian was one of two Harbor Area
seafood outlets hit by the second major
Police Chief Hunting
Wise Guy on Radio
DALLAS, Tei. (AP) -Police Chief
Frank Dyson use.:i the police radio
network Wednesday night to announce
to officers that he had promoted Director
William Fulgham to assistant chief of
the de;iartment.
A voice from out on the network
replied : "God help us all ." Dyson,
furious, order"-i an immediate search
for the culprit.
Southern California seizure thiJ week.
The FDA ordered U.S. marshals to im·
pound nearly 2,400 poun~s of swordfish
owned by the Paclfic Fish and Seafood
Company, 2285 Newport Blvd., Costa
~1esa.
Last January the FDA had seized a
smaller quantity of Crab Cooker sword-
fish and about 2,300 pounds or swordfish
owned by the Bayside Fish ~1arkel, 2800
Newport Slvd .. Newport Beach.
In all instances the fish had been in
storage at warehouses in Los Angeles
and Long Beach.
Roubian .says the dollar loss to him
will total about $75,000 whe11 the FDA
gets through impounding all "50,000 or
60,000 pounds I own."
President Meets
With Aerospace
Industr y Chiefs
Presi~nt Nixon met this morning with
more than a dozen leaders in the
aerospace industry and members of the
5clentific community in a concerted ef-
fort to stave of[ the ma53ive unemploy-
ment which has hit that profession in
recent months.
No immediate results of the meeting
were available at mid -morning from Nix-
on aides .
Included in the group v.•hich met wilh
the President in his San Clemente office
wtre members of large western C1:11leges
and universities. manufacturers, and
representatives of the hard-hit aerospace
Industry itse lf.
Petition Drive
To Free Calley
'Huge Suce.eM'
The one-day-old "Free Calley" PetftJon
drive is "an instant, astounding 3UCCess.''
I.he Newport Beach e1-soldier who atart..
ed it said today.
"We already have mora than 2,000 sJg.
J11atures on the 200 petitions we~ve beta
able to distribute so far," said Ron Hick·
man, a 2tl-year--0Jd Balboa Island liquor
store clerk.
Hickman said he star~ the petition
~rive after Lt, William J, Calley, Jr.,
was ronviC"ted Of 22 counts of prtl'J\edl~
tated murder in a decision he 1aid "that
makes me and every ~lean 1klt."
Hickman said ht has also been In con-
tact with represenlltivt:1 of Orange
County's association of patriotic orgaD-
izations, the Democratic and Republic111
State Central Committees, lhe Orange
County Youftg Repubilcans and the P'ed·
eration of Republican Women .
"All have promised their all-out help,"
he says.
He said U.S. Rep. John Schmitz (Jt.
Tustln) has agreed to personally deliver
the pet.ilions to President Nixon. Hick·
man said Rep. Schmltz will be given the
petitions at a dinner climaxing the drive
Aprll 24.
"B_v then we hope to have more than
~i~ signatures on l hem," Hickman
Hickman said that a number or other
organizations have also expressed inter·
est in helping. but said "J just haven't
had the time to talk to them yet."
He <isked that. any other groups Inter·
ested contact him at the Island Liquor
Store, 22tl Marine Avenue.
He said 20 individuals and orga11iza.
tions came to the Blatt just last night to
get cnp1es of the petitions.
"Youn~ and old . allke cam~ In." he
said, "loniz-halrt:d hippies and old estab-
lishment t_vpe!I".
"Thi<1: thin~ ha,o;n't touched just any one
group.'' he said .
It may not be quite 50 warm
along the C.oast Friday, but the
morning fog will still be wttil us.
Look for temperatures in the 67
to 77-degree range,
All .Five Candidates Show
Dr. Ruben Mettler. president of TRW
Systems, which owns a plant near San
Cl'!mente, was among those attending.
Secretary of L3bor James D. Hodgson
sat at the Presidenl 'g side during the
lalks.
Hickman ~11id the petitions say mJy,
"frep Lt. Catlev" 11nd are so written "to
,elve President Ni1on 11\l the latitude he
needs to carry out lhe wlahee of the
American people."
Under military law. the prealde111t h11
the aut.horitv to reverse a decision of a
court mar!ial.
INSIDE TODA\'
A modern Flvmg Dutchman.
in the form of a iunken German
s11hmar1n,, repoirf PdllJ threatens
f/orirl.<i Coo5t with 1l~ deadly
'Vor/d \\'or JI coroo. Set story,
Pngt 5.
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Wtrlll H1W1 t·I
\
All five candidates for the Newporl·
Mesa Unified School District board of
trust.ee.s appeared before an audience of
70 al a candidates forum Wednesday
night i• Estancia High School. Costa
Mesa.
The candidates for the thr!f Newport-
1'.1esa board seats joined with six of tbe:
eight persons vying ror three seal3 on
the Coast Community College Board. 1111!:
program was 11el up by the League of
Women Voters And the American A~.~o
ciatlon of U111 tver11ily Women.
Each c11ndidare was granltd five m1n-
ute11 to tell why he h1 n1nn1n~. to ot~.line
quall!ie11 he would 11eek for 11tudenlJ and
detail vitws on sou 111rt., buslnf'ss manage·
men!.
Amona issues d1M:ussed were account·
ability and how to achieve it, 5chool u.
nance and the s1atew1de property tax,
the need for board continuity i111 the face
of the administration change due to the
resignation of the superintendent end the
need to provide job skills to all grad·
uates.
Newport-Mesa Unified School Distric t
Jervet the dtiet of Costa MrAa end New·
port Beach. It operalet • tltmentary.
1!11 intermediate. four high schools. a
C01'tinuation high school and a school
for the mentally retardtd.
Three nf the district'• • .ee.vrn tnJstee
11re11,o; 11re on the April 10 ballot; area
one is northwest Costa Meu1 11rea three
is made up of portion11 of N'twP$1rt Be11ch
and Cnst1 Mt:sa northtot lit""Dnvet
Drt\tt, list Street and the. Ntwport Frff:.
way, ~-d area sl1 contains portions or
bolh cities haw~ Pacihc Coast High-
way. Dover Dnve, 11n Street and New-
port Boulevard.
While candidates may reside in· the
area !My seek to represent, trustees are
elected at larllle by all voters in the dis-
trict
Here, 1n the order of the candidate's
appearance, ire some of their view1 :
Herb Stricker, 41, 1afety equipme11t
salesman. of «5 Redlands Ave .• Newport
B!!ach, who described his platform 11 a
call for "flwl respanfllblllty .and feon
omy." Stricker Is seeking to repre11ent
truslff 11rc11 six .
Ue Cited a 75 J)e.rc!'Jlll 1ncre11~e in the
district'• budgcl in the l.=1st four ycart
!See FORUM, Page Ii
Vets Aid Calley
Furul Started in Orange County
Orange County veteran organtzations are raising funds to aid in the cl&
fen5e of LL Wilham Ca.lley who waa convicted l\.1onday of slayins civillam at
My Lai. South Vietnam. • -•
Andrew J. Callan ail or Santa An• 11 acting as chatrma.n or the combined
vettran organizations sponsoring the drive. He sald money should be aent to the
Lt William Calley Fund. United Califomla Bank. 1013 N. Main St., S.ntl Ana.
If Calley shriuld bt fre:ed hy prt!sitlential qrder or hi1 cnnvlctlon reversed.
Callanan said All funds collected would be given to veterans hospitals In Soulb-
em California for the purchase of televi!iion 1ets and other recreaUon1I Ile.ma.
-•
~ IWl.Y PILOT ll'lursdq, April l , 1971
I
•
Bettencc 'rt Newport's
Pick for City Manage1·?
By t.. PETER KRIEG
Of 1M O.U' l'llot Slttt
NOBODY, BUI' nobody, is committing himself on the story, but insiders
are saying that Phil Bettencourt can have his tx.ss' old job If he \l·anUI il
Phil Bettencourt is assistant city manager. Harvf'y L. Hurlburt is his
boss, or will be until t.londay when his resignation becomes
effecti1Je.
It i! kr.O'A'fl, however, that several councilmen ha\·e
privately expressed their liking. and more than that, their
respect for Bett.encourt's ability, and his performance
with the city the pa!t two years.
ONE PROBLEM is that he's only 28 years old.
But that may be all he has going against him.
There. will be support for him if he applies for the
• job. And that is something he first said he would be re-
Olctanl to .
Al of the weekend, he had insisted he wouldn't.
FOR THE RECORD, he said this morning, "I can only say th~ I have
not ruled out the possibility."
Bettencourt is personable, and as important as having the respect of the
council, be has the respect of those be works with day-in, day--0ul and city hall.
IN DISCUSSION with various councilmen, they s!Dp ()ne sentence sh()rt
of saying they would give Bettenrourt the job. But they admit they have urged
him to apply (or il.
Their reluctance to commit themselves il understandable. They don't
want to discourage other candidat.ts, to keep them Crom applying by makiJ'Jg
It took like the job is locked up. •
But in reality, at least a majority of them, in the opinion of this observer,
want the kld to take a crack at it
Negotiations to Begin
On Coast Freeway Fate
NegotiaUons on the (ate of the Pacific
Coast Freeway through Corona del Mar
\\111 begin Friday In Sacramento.
Thret Newport Beach city coun::ilmen
will be in the state capitol for a 2 p.m.
meeting with James A. Moe. California
director of public works, and the only
man authorized to say the state will
amend or cancel the existing route agree-
m.nl
Pifayor Ed Hirth, Vice Mayor Howard
Rogers and Councilman Donald Mcinnis
will carry a single potent weapon with
them Into the talks.
Newport Beach voters three weeks ago
said flatly they d!t not find the ooastal
alignment o! the Pacific C<Jast Freeway
acceptable.
By a £.l vote, with a record number
Calley Sy1npathy
Call,s Pour In
To w ·hite House
Preti.dent Nixon has recrived thousand!
of telegrams and telephont calls running
almost 100-to.1 in favor of clemency for
Lt. William Calley.
Pre.s.s Secretary Ronald Ziegler SJ.id
1n San Clemente that as of noon Pa!!fic
Time Wednesday the White House was
swamped with some 5,000 wires and l,51XJ
telephone call!.
Aaked whether Nixon would have the
power to give clemency, Ziegler replied,
"that would not be a procedure that
would be taken at thi..5 time."
He said the President could eventually
be involved in a Calley appeal, but not
at this stage.
OIAMel COAST
DAILY PILOT
or residents voting, they asked the coun·
cil to rescind the existing agreement and
at the same time approved a charter
amendment requiring city-wide votes be-
fore future agreements coul d be signed.
The charter amendment l:}as been for-
warded to lbe state legislature for rati·
fication.
1.fclnnis, who arranged the meeting,
said the councilmanic committee will not
take any staff personnel with it fof lhe
opening session.
"They \\'ill undoubtedly enter inla the
talks at a lat.er point in time." he said.
Mcinnis said he does not know who
t.toe will bt'Ing to the meeting with him.
A spokesman in Moe's office had indi·
cated last week that Haig Ayanian, chler
engineer of Highway Division Distrtct 7,
would likely work with the committee
throug1iout the har~aining period.
By resolution of the council. the neg().-
fiating committee has until J\.fay 21 to
get the state to agree f() joint cancellaion
of the route agreement.
The resolution stah!s if bllaler:il tE'S CiS·
sion is not acrnmplished by that lime,
the city will unilaterally repeal !he pact.
Lido Isle Bikers
Ride to Del Mar
Bicycling enthusiasts from Lido Isle
will be setting off Friday for a GS-mile
ride to Del Mar for the Seventh Annual
Great Western Bicycling Rally.
Dr. Hugo Black is heading up the
groop which includes his son Kurt and
teenagers Ron Reno, ~tall Dabney.
Laurie Parrish, Stephanie J\.foran and
Steve Ball. Lido Isle residents Donald
Dabney and Tom Parrish \Ylll also cycle
to Del Mar.
The rally is an annual weekend gath-
ering of bicycling clubs from throughout
California and includes rides into San
Diego, hill climbs, accuracy courses and
races. More than 2,000 enthusiasts are
expected to participate.
* * *
•
Soto1. Tees Off on Course
Spedal lo U.. DAILY PJLi>T '
SACRAMENTO -Stat. Sen. DrMla E.
CarpeoteLlR-llewport Bw:h)_ lodoy
lauoched what you might call a SelJ
American,. r1tber tban a Buy A.merieaa
c1mplllp.
Ho l4olllltd • bllolarlni blVldllde stat.
ment on purchase ol COsta Meu'• Mta
Verde Country Club from Boise-Cascade
Corporation by a Japanese firm .
\Vha!, he asks, does a company half·
way around the world in the land or
Surukl Motorcycles'"and Little Honda
Cars v.·anl with a small suburban golf
<.'ourse? ·
Carpenter's statement charges that
noise-Cascade .sold &e course on Identi-
cal terms to the foreign interest after of-
Frona Pagel
FORUM .•.
rerln& to Jet the Mie:sa Verde lf.omeowners
Assocllllon bUy tt.
"Afll!r negotiations from January
through FtbNfl')', the mtrnbers bad-put
toaetber a IUUlcient number of people
and p~ed llUfficlent monies to meet
the offer,' Carpenter charged.
He emphaaiztd the fact the picturesque
course ls entirely surrounded by the
Mesa Verde development, whose mo re
co.stly homes directly border the greeM.
Calling the !ale to Japanese interests
·appalling, unneccessary and uncalled-
for. Sen, Carpenter accused Boise-Cas-
cade of acting in bad faith and without
regard for the community.
He said he conferred with both the
mammoth land development comp.any
and the Mesa Verde organlz.a.Uon but of-
fered "' ..,;,,,,.;,, "' Bol>e-Oa>cadc's-
l'<MOll i... I~ ,.1 ••
1'Tb1t tJpe cf activity by a major our-.
poralion •is mosl iw:alled-!or and un.
necessaty when, today, in.any people are
attacking our capitalist system as being
in!ensitl\'e lo the needs or the people,"
Carpenttr charged,
He said the American Company gained
nothlnglmore-by Jel.ling to lbe Japanese '
than to 'the citizens directly al(ected by
and generally using &he course.
"A golf coune of this type ls logically
for the use and benefit of the people
who surround It and this has been Ible·
I
Coast Baptis1n
intent and history of the ~1esa Verde
Cquntry Club over the years," Carpenter -· ~ uid Bols&Caaeade ifu pnibably
Wllllin lta·lepl ril!hla, but totally lgt>or.d
the mor~l and public relations aspect
of the appareot changu in choice <1f
huyers.
!=arpent.er said he learned through Of.
l.lttrl they bad no idea wby ~ Japan·
ese corporation-owner of·several other
golf courses -wanted the Mesa Verde
club.
He said he has concluded there was
no justification for its. handling of the
matter nor its wanton desregard for
community interest.
Fron1 Page 1
COAST ...
wuh only a 1,400-pupil in<reas•. "m06l Ritual Set for 1,000 at Beacli Humphreys said. ··1r1 dillkull I• tut
of which," he said, "was due to raw land costs without cutting quallt)'."
anneulion." E.arlqmta L. Ramos, 38, a Fountain
Last year the district gained only four Ba pjism In the sea, nO longer an City Council requesting a pennlt to use Valley Hlgh School teicber. of 172M
uncommon spectacle at Corona del Mar sound amplification for the ritual, ch.arch students but increased the budget by $7 d ara,.;als "''d, "Inasmuch ., we •ave Peppertree St .. Fountain Valley, called
I · 11 City an State Beach Park, nevertheless ""' _.. !' mil io1. Stricker ca ed for easing the not had a baptl!mal service since for a *'more diversified board" -one
b ~ th b \Yill become a sight on Saturday, April ber be u, uen on e property taxpayer Y Novem , we expect the num r in that Includes a woman. She is challenging:
''sound money management." 17· attendance to rapidly increase." :1 incumbent WUJiam Kettler in Huntington
!\tartan C. Bergeson, 4.3, housewife and On that date, Santa Ana's Calvary lie said that, besides the l,000 !teach. Fountain Valley.
Chapel will bring 1.000 of its congregation participants, he expects another ·~,000 former teacher, of l72l Tradewinds Lane, to the shore for the ritual the Bible to watch. She said the most important goa l of
Newport Beach, wants schools that in· says represents w'5iking ''to a newness ''Therefore, to inform, give sing'enes5 the college district is to brlng th• College.
still in students a "high regard (or rt· in life." of direction and to centralize, becomes closer to the community and find wa}i
8ponsibility and the value.s -0! good cili· The scene of ceremonies is a familiar paramount," the letter said. lo "stretch the dollars to serve everybody
hi " Sh · "· in be l one for the church that has won national "It is not our intent or desire to zens p. e 1s i.ue cum n repre-in the community." . !hr r~cognillon for captivating the young circumvent or seek special permission
senUng area ee. people and turning them on to Christ. by virtue or our organization, only that Mrs, Ramos urged development or
Besides helping student_, to master There were monthly baptisms at the we feel the need and occasion are child care centers on the campus which
basic skills such as reading and com· beach lasl spring, summer and fall v.·ith singular in nature.'' \\'ould allow yoo.og mothers to enroll.
putatioo, schools .should teach children participants often numbering as many The Rev. Charles Srnilh, pastor and Donald G. Hoff, 52, quality assurance
dh?w . to hlearn. l\frs. Bergeson said the ass-:~s a church spo'kesman e11:plained, ~:i~g ~e ~~3Zt ~~I.ifs~: !~i3Y •pee~·alist r 14842 Harper St., Midway 1str1ct as taken steps to. guarantee ''On each occasion, the numbers grew." would grant the amplification permit. City · the colleges "should prepare every graduate a .saleable skill. Th h bee ere as n no «remony !iince "If the Lord wants us to have it ." students so that he or she is equipped
She said the planning, programming November when the weather turned cold. he said, "we'll have it. If not, we'll
budget system adopted by the distric t And in a letter to -the Newport Beach go without it." to meet life's problems· a.s he knows
v.·ould lead to fiscal accountability 111 , them." Hoss is the incumbent represen-
ting the Westminster area. time. F "A new superintendent must possess rona Page 1 He cited the education code strictures
management skills including skills in fi· CALLEY PROTESTS the board must live within concernilg
nance. Since the district is now in an · • • • finance. Despite these, the district has
era. of evaluation he must possess a keen "maintained a low per student co!l but
perception to evaluate the programs al-ma~ Walter J. Dilbeck said \Vednesday Robert E. Cald\vell, chairman of the built an educational program that has
ready d' .. eloped." h d 100 .. d. l " atlracted national attention and is a • e an coor 1na ors around the Blairsville board. Donald E. Smallwood, 42, an attorney. model for others in the nation," he
of l98l Kornal Drive. Costa Mesa . called nation were laying plans for a ma ss Sam Mollern, chairman of l he said.
for improved speC'iaJ education and coun· march on Washington July 4 on behalf Elizabethton Board, said after the Calley Charles Dagion, 2.f, a Golden West
seli ng. He is unopposed iri area one. or all Gls charged in the My Lai incident. verdict he could no longer perform his student, or 15225 Jackso,1 St., Midway
He urged programs that •·teach at an "We intend to have one million people duties "without a complete surrender City, said the colleges "are not servicing
age when a child is ready lo learn'' in· or principle and conviction ." the students or the community as well
elud ing readtng instruction at an earller in Washington that day and we intend In Richlands, Va .. response to a radio as they could .'' He is chaUengina Hoff,
age. The district should not be satisfied to slay there until these men are releas-station's poll on Calley's guilt was so Although he is "an ecology nut",
\'ith an eighth grade reading level or ed.'' Dilbeck .said. heavy \\'ednesday that telephone circuits Dagion said the district could not afford
skill for its graduates but should seelt E. Thomas Cammarota, commander broke do\\'n temporarily. Some-listeners development (If an environmental work-
an I Ith grade reading level as a mini· f th 1 then ~drove to the station to vote. The ing model, -a job he said should be mum. .. 1 ° e Pennsy vania American Legion, total showed only three of 688 votes handled by stale colleges or the universi·
Smallwood urged the district to seek called Otl President Nixon to heed those filvored CaUey's conviction, ty system.
"the best for the least amount of mooey" urging clemency. A Davenport, lowa. television station Dagion said ''taped lectures" don't
and cautioned against .. building ne"· "If President Nixon sees fit not 10 conducted 8 00.minute poll on the verdict. allow students to ask questions. He urged
school facilities if we ca11. ~ existing r 1 h h Tv;enty-three of 981 perwns responding combining the day and ev.ening ad-raci!ities.'' 1sten o t e t ousands of telegrams m;n;slrati·ons. favored the court martial decision . "" Donald T. Bull, 28. business coordina-that already have been sent to him. The district's television station deveJon.
r "" v I The Indiana House or Representatives " tor () MIW \ eslminster Pace, Costa l\'e are prepared lo march 0 n ment also should be handled by the •r II d I · I passed a resolution Wednesday calling " esa. ca e or improved vocaliona \Vashinglon," Cammarota sa i·d_ state colleges, Dagion said.
l · · ll · · f h h -for ste~ ''lo correct the in1'uslice that raining. e JS running or l e area t rec be "" WUllam KeUler, of 62.1 Sevenlt1 St.,
1 Ro rt Cadle, a retired Army serge3nt \.\'C firmly believe has been perpetrated. sea . h the d' . . . " a resolution asking th e President Huntington Beach, said that compared He noted that only 15 percent or h!Rh w 0 .says ver 1ct was "a lot of to ~e 68 community college districts
sc hool graduates go on to college. He bull." said Wednesday be and a "F'ree for clemency was before the llliooi.s in California in 1969-70 whose per student
urged continuing education of vocational Calley Committee" with branches in all legislature and the Salt Lake City Com-costs average $806, oCast College District
teachers and use of persons from busi· states but Ji awaii will lead 50.000 Ifeople mission approved a resolution. with a spend! $755 per student. Kettler i.s the
ness and industry to provide up to date in a march on Washington after a petition copy to the President, condemning the incumbent in area three (lfuntington
information to vocational students. drive . conviction. Beach. Fountain Valley).
Bull urged there !s a need for account· "This \Vhole thing has boomeranged High .schoo1 students In southeast Ken-He cited the value of his having grown
tibJli!V for leaching performance and all out of proportion,'' Cadle said. "Pe<r tucky began circulating petitions pro-up in Huntington Beach as being of
that it could be measured by getti rig "in-ple call in and they cuss. cuss, cuss. testing the conviction and 250 Belleville, importance "particularly since financial
' puts from staff. parents and students." Are they mad. I've 11e)'.er seen anything Ill.. high school students marched five decisions affecting the college are largely
Selim S. "Bud'' Franklin, 41, attorney, like this verdict in my 1i1e.•1,,,_ miles with signs comdemning the verdict. political. J have come to know most
()f 1928 Santa Ana A\·e .. Costa ?\fe~a. All the members of local Selective Vete rans organitations around the na· of the peo I m k' g tho d · I " stres~ed thP. need for continuity ort the Kettler sai'dp.e a in se ecis ons, board in li~hl of the superintendent's Service Boards in Elizabethton, Tenn., llon protested the decision and requested Th
resipnalion. He is the incumbent board and Athens and Blairsville, Ga., resigned. various actions, including clemency and e tv.·o teacher candidates-, Mrs.
prr<;iden t and represf'nts area six. Members of the Qu itman. Ga., board an investigation or the court martial Ramos and Oliver both agrttd tenure
Franklin received the onlv spontaneou<; v.·ired Nixon they would not induct any \'erdicl. should be abolished . The three in·
applause or the evening for his stand more men. In Washington, the nation's elected cumbents noted that finding a way or
on accountabtlitv. "This is the \10r~t thing that's C\'cr representatives joined the chorus or com-instituting account ab i 11 t y for
He said educa'tion is a long way "from 'rh=a=pp='="='d===i="==='"='===U="=itc=d===S=ta=t=es='.'=' ='~'~'d;,=m=•":;':,· ==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:p=erf=o=nn=a=n=ce=is=d=if=l=ic=ul=t.======= havinii: the tools to e\·aluate teacht'r or II
student performance. Not all ~ood teach·
l'rs can teach e1·erv student Yi'ell."
Franklin said. Admittin~ there is Plt'cd
to "eliminate those teachers who don't
rare'' he sugRested a svstem to shjft
"students to teachers with whom they
can relate and fro1n whom they can
le:ir11 " might be preferable.
"\\fp are still in a subjec1h'e '-''Orid,"
Franklin concluded.
luxurious down • sofas spring
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CfAAKGE COAST l'UILl ... 1NV COMl'AHY .
a,i-t H. W • .4
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Tliousands of Bicyclists Poised
Behveen 3,000 end 5,000 bicyclists nying
the banner of "cycology" v.ill converge
on the streets of Nc"·port Beach and
Costa r-.fesa in a mammoth Earth Day
bike ride.
A meeting to outline plans for the
e ven t is schedule d tonight Ht
Ne"l)Ort lfarbor lllgh School. The event
itself may lake place Earth Day April
24 or one week after on J\.1ay 1.
Originally proposed by students et
Newport Harbor Hi.i:!h School. the event
quickly mushroomed lo the four llarbor
Area secondary schools under lhc
lead,ership of Robert Fry, a Harbor 1!1gh
science teacher.
"But it's gone way beyond that no'"·.''
says Bob Hemstrt'el, 11nolher org11n1zcr
~·ho o~·ns Balboa Hikes.
"Almost nobody is gnlnit In miss it."
he said, noting that JUSt about every
bicycle club in Orange County has l'X·
pressed interest in participating.
"And people b<ivt told. me that they
don'l ha\'e blcycle.s, but they are golng lo
gpt them ."
He said the idea has also expanded
to include other, long.range goal s.
"It hlL'J become 11 full-fledged 'cycology'
movem,nt th 11t wUI U11lle bicycli sts in
common causes such 1s uniform cit}'
hiryrle laws and the creation of ad-
•
ditional bike tra ils."
The focal point ror the momPnl,
however . is the Earth Day event which,
as yet according to Hemstreet, has no
name or designation.
"\Ve "'ill ride from Corona del Mar
l ligh School lo Costa Mesa High School
tllen clo"·n to the Newport Pier v. here
\.\'P'll spend the rest of the day cleaning
the> beach," he said.
Hemslreet said the exact routt will
be deter mi nt d at tonight's meeting.
to "·hlch represent.1tives of a number
of police departments have bttn in\•ited.
lie said the riders will definitely take
Pacific Coast Highway for a part of
the route. however, so motorists can
reel the lull impact.
The Thursday meeting will also involve
police and cily officials from Laguna
Beach and Huntingtoo Beach, Htm.street
said.
Their prt'~nce would not b e
specifically aboul the Eitrth Day ride,
he said, but "thtre 11rt. theui other
4illgles that concern them.''
Talking about tbe need for uniform
btcycle regulallons, Hemstreet po!nt'd
out that Laguna Beach has no llcensing
law "hut you get 1 ticket if you ride
Into Newport Btach without ont," be
said.
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PROFESSION~.J I GARRETf f URNITLJ ~~HARBOR BLVD.
Opr<l MOft., Tllun. & l'ff. ln•. COSTA MESA, CALIF. f~TERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGI 646-0 275 646.027' .
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Today's· Final -
EDI JI ON N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 6'1, NO. 78, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRI L I, 1971 TEN CENTS
Nixon Orders Calley Freed From "Stockade
SAN CLEf\1ENTE tUPll -President
Ni~on today ordered that Lt. W1!11am
Calley be removed from the stockade at
f'I. Benning, Ga .• and confined instead
to quarters while a review of his Ille
sentence is under way.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said
the President called Adm. Thomas
Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and ordered that Calley be re·
moved from the stockade 1n which he
was put following his conviction on
char~s of murdering c1v1lians at My
Lai.
"'This 1s nol a legal step. It 1s a step
taken at lhe President's discretioo,"
Ziegler said.
"He just personally fell Lt. Calley
should not be put in the stockade or
sent to Leavenworth while the review is
taking place."
Ziegler confirmed that the White Howe
has received an unprecede11ted deluge of
communications on the Calley convlc·
uon. virtually aU of them seeking elem·
ency for the young lieutenant.
Ziegler, however, gave no indication
of whether the President would person·
ally re view the Calley case.
Three local draft boards resigned, aj
least three mass marchell on Washington
were being planned, and the White House
was swamped with telegrams and
telephone calls as Americam expressed
their feelings about the conviction of
(See CALLEY, Page !)
18~year Vote Ol('d
Asse1nblymen Burke, Badham Say No
SACRAJ\tENTO (UPI) The
Assembly today over~·helmingly ap-
proved a proposed Slate Constitutional
amendment to allow 18-year-olds to vote
in state and local elections.
The measure by Assemblyman Willie
L. Brown Jr. (D-San Francisco). was
sent to the Senate on a 60-9 vote, which
has approved similar legislation. All nine
''no" votes were cast by Republicans.
Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R·
Ne\.\-port Beach) and Robert Burke (R·
Coas t CommUDity
Huntington Beach) cast two of the dissen.
ting votes.
Before approving the proposal. the
Assembly defeated amendments which
also would give 18-year-olds all the rights
and responsibilities of adull!i -including
drinking liquor.
Opponents of lowering the legal age
of adulthood argued that most of the
changes could be made without amending
the Constitution.
They also said that the effect of
Six School Aspirants
Give 5-minute Talks
Six of the eight candidates for three
1eats on the C.oast community College
District board of trustees Wednesday
night addressed an audience of about
70 in the Estancia High School Forum,
Costa f\.1csa.
The Coast College candidates joined
a panel of hopefuls in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee race in
a candidates' forum arranged by the
Orange Coast League of Women Voters
and the American Association of
University Women.
Each candidate was allotted five
minijlcs to speak.
A quesJion period followed the prepared
remarks.
Presid ent Meets
With Aer()s pace
Industry Chiefs
President Nixon ntet this morning with
Jnore than a dozen leaders in the
aerospace industry ancl members of the
scientific community in a concerted cf·
fort to slave aff the massive uncmploy·
ment which has hit that profession in
recent months.
No immediate results of the meeting
were available at mid·morning from Nix-
on aides.
Included in the group ~·hich met with
the President in his San Clemente office
were members of large western rolleges
and universities. manufaclur!!rs. and
representatives of the hard·hit aerospace
industry itself.
Dr. Ruben Mel11cr. president of TRW
Systems. ~·hich owns a plant near San
Qemente, was among those attending.
Secretarv of Labor James D. Hodgson
11at at ihe President's side during the
la I ks.
1be Caa.st Community Collqe District.
Is made up of the Runtlngton Beach
Union High and Newport·~tesa Unified
School Districts. It operates two, two-
year college campuses, Golden West
College in Huvtington Beach and Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa.
Three of the district's five trustee
areas are listed on the April 20 ballot
-area two (Westminster Elementary
School District) area three (Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley Elementary
districts) and area four (the cily of
Costa Mesa ).
While candidates must reside in the
area they seek I& represel'll. trustees
are elected at large by all voters in
the district.
The two candidates not in attendance
were Barbara Bell, an advertising
representative of 5031 Quail Circle, Hun·
tington Beach, who is challenging i;-
cumbent Wiliiam Kettler in area three.
~Huntington Beach·Fountain ValJey) and
William T. Unger Jr., a student. who
lists his address as 2211 Rutgers Drive,
Costa Mesa. Unger is seeking the area
four seat (Costa Mesa) held by Robert
L. Humphreys.
Here is some of ~·hat the candidates
had to say:
Ric_.hard l... Oliver, 45, of 149 E. Bay
St., Costa l\1csa, a systems analyst and
evening college instructor is challenging
Humphreys.
Oliver said the community college
should provide "general academic core
programs for two.year training in a
trade to match the i n c re a s i n g 1 y
technological sociely and general courses
of interest to the community at large."
Oliver urged b1linguAI counseling for
culturally disadvantaged students. ex-
panded programs for returning student
veterans, i m proved administrative
11ervices for the evening divi~on, develop-
ment ef short courses lel!l:ing te job
(See COAST. Page 1)
New11ort-Mesa Race
universally lowering the "age of ma·
jority" could eliminate certain benefits,
sucb as financial aid to college students
whose fathe rs were killed in wars.
The opposition votes were cast by
Republican Assemblymen Bad ham,
Frank Belotti, Eureka; W. Craig Biddle,
Riverside; Burke, Jphn L. E. Collier,
Pasadena ; Charles Conrad, Sherman
Oaks ; William Ketchum. Paso Robles;
W. Don MacGillivray, Santa Ba!..bara;
and John Stull, Leucadia.
Mesa Studies
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Tough Fire
Safety ~.aw
A new city ordinanee cpnalderably
toughening fire safety hf all public
buildings and requlring 1prink1er 1y1te.m.s
in any over five stories -such a.!I
Bethel Towers -is currently under
(9sta Mesa study.
The Jaw is-a direct result of a longtime
probe of the 18-story r e t i r e m e n t
skyscraper built with aid of the U.S.
DepartmeQt of Housing and Urbap
Development. J
Councilman Alvin L. Nnkley conferred
during a 're<:ent Wasliingto~ c0nvention
with HUD officials on Costa MesA Firt:
Department findnngs about Bethe I
Towers.
City leaders do not wish to cause
undue alarm to residents of the senior
citizens' facility at 666 W. 19th St.,
but the 1961-occupied tower has cert'ain r
hazards: · · •
-No sprinkler system was required.
-EleVator service is not sufficient.
-\Vindow construction poses a danger.
"Our biggest worry is fire,' .. Coun·
c1lman Pinkley sa1d upoPI his return
from a less·than·satisfying inlerview with
William Hughes, chief of HUD's senior
citizens project division.
He said Hughes agreed in principle
with Costa ttesa's urgings that greater
fire safety factors be buill inlo HUD
projects. ·now numbering 316 built or
under construction across the nation.
But he indicated 'during the 91).minute
discussion that the philosophy of low<ost
housing for the elderly may go up in
smoke if HUD construction costs rise
as a result.
"There should be some safety built
in for lhese old folks," Pinkley said.
•'\Ve feel 1f the gcvernment is going
to finance these things, they should build
in some safety.''
Fire Department Battalion Chief Ed
Lewis has been conducting a study of
Bethel Towers since even before C{ln·
struction began in 1966. leading to the
recent conclusive findings.
Sprinkler systems should be mandatory
!Set SAFETY, Page 2)
All Five Candidates Show
All five candidates for the Newport.
Mesa Unified School Dislncl board of
trustees appeared before an audience of
70 at a candldales fdl"Um Wednesday
night in Estancia High School. Costa
Mesa .
ability and how to achieve It, sc.hool fi.
nance and the statewide property tax,
the need for ~rd cootlnuity i11 the face
of the administration change-due to the
resignation of the superintendent and the
need to provide job skills to all grad·
uates.
way, and area six contains porUons of
both cities between Pacific Coast High-
way. Dover Drive, 21st Street and New.
port Boulevard.
While c~n<lidates may reside in the
area they seek to represenr. trustees are
elected al large by all voters ln the dil·
tricl.
l:Iere, in the order ol the candidate·s
appearance, are some of their vieW'I:
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ACROSS THE NATION, PROTESTORS GATHER AGAINST VEROICT ON CALLEY
Outside Fort Benning, Hil daga rd Crochet Ra ises Her Arm in Bitter Gesture
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' -Vets Aid Calley
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Fund Started in Orange County
Orang! County .veteran organiza1ion1 are raising funds to 'lid in 1M de-
Cense ef Li:. William Calley who was convicted Monday of sklying civilians at
My Lai, South Vietnam. ·
Andrew J. Callanan of Santa Ana is acting as "chairman or lbe combined
veteran organizations sponsoring the drive. He said money should De sent to the
Lt. William Calley Fund. Uni.ted C<ilifomia Bank. 1018 N. Main St., Santa Ana.
1f Calley should De freed by presidential order or his cnnviction reversttl,
Callanan said all funds collected would be given to veterans hospitals in South·
erntCa/ifornia for the purchase of television sets and other recreational Items. •
Watered-down lnju11ction
Issued to Firehouse Bar
Distt'lct Attorney Cecil Hicks today
got the preliminary injunction he asked
for against the Firehouse bar 1n· Costa
Mesa but Orange County Superior Court
Judge Robert L. Corfman's ruling is
watered down considerably in what was
sought in thP .'3tate<nunty lawsuit.
Judge Corfman's order. issued at noon
after an ovemighl study of a televised
performance of the Firehouse company's
"Joy to the World.', specifically bans
lewdness and "definite sexual orien·
talion'' from the bar's activities but
it docs not ban the type of da_ncing
demonstrated Wednesday in the
courtroom.
That dancing, suggests the judge,
should be .. erect dancing with the hands
One of Many
On Police Log ?
He was passed out on the bar
stool at 11:15 a.m. Wednesday,
in 11 not·too.fancy Costa Mesa
Lavern.
He didn't wake up for a ilong
time after Officer Gary Barwig
began shaking him from 11 stupor
caused by too rr~:iy belts too early
on Rn idle. empty day.
His problem has been widely
discussed recet)Uy by autborltie1,
quoted at l'flith in print, but hill
drunk·in-publkl booking snp told it
11'1 mere terte, toberin& teftrig.
Age: 48.
Occ11pation: E8tlma.ltt'.
Pia~ of Ec[u>loymmt: Nont -
last job in ~ce.
' Ball Js $31. bUt the la" allow•
and arms extended from the torso or
where the hands are held away from
the hips and !highs."
He makes it clear 1n his written order
that "Hawaiian and Tah itian" and
"bumps and grinds" styles of dancing
are perfectly acceptable lo him.
But he also warns the tavern's
operators that he will not permit any
female entertainer at the Costa Mesa
b11r to get within three feet of a patron
whatever her performance might entail.
Judge Corfman's ruling today left
district attorney's officers convinced that
they will have lo take their lawsuit
to the trial court to effectively close
the Firehouse
Hicks had asked for an order that
would allow him to sell the premises
and its content! at public auction -
an a~tion that had Deen successfully
apphed lo two Santa Ana taverns.
But Judge Corfman issued today's rul·
ing after hearing testimony to the effect
thal entertainment at the fire.house was-'
not lewd anti obscene and bore com·
parison wi!h suTiilar entertainment being
ofrered al taverns and roadhouses
throughout California.
Anal1eim Cyclist
Ki.lied by Auto
' An Anaheim bicycle rider died early
Utis morn in& of Injuries received when·'
be was struck by a car driven by
ii Huntington Beach. man.
Girl Suspende~
For Lt. Calley
Rally Attempt .
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SAN DIEGO (UPI) -An IB-year~ld
girl organizing a rally to protest the
conviction of Army Lt. -William Calley.
was suspended from school Thursday.
Kathryn Armstrong. one of nine
children of Mrs. Sarah B~ugler, said
she 10Jd Midway ·adult achooJ principa l
Vance Stewart of her plans rather tha n·'
''be sneaky about ii." He told ber a
rally on campus would disrupt classes
and cnuld not be a!lo~.
\Vhen she said she would do it anyhow,
he suspended ber until such time "as
she could abide by the schOol rules."
Miss Armsl.rong, who pr 1 v Io us 1 y
received police permission to hold a
prolest march ih the downto~n Area
Sunday. said the planned rally at school
would include a television interview with
organized support.
After the principal's decision, she said,
"if f called off the interview It would
tell people and 5ervicemen that 1 wasn't
truthful. People go so far vdlh their
btliefs and then get talked out of backing
them.''
The girl's mo!Jler told newsmen that
a cousin of her daughter, Johnny Myers,
was killed during the Korean War.
A son·in-law, Curtis Fountain, is in
the Marine Corps at San Pedro.
The girl criticiz~ President Nixon and
urged more cards and letters be Sent
to the President protesting the Calley
action,
''We hope to accomplish with the voice
of the people that LL Calley wasn't
the man, as the court said, who killed
aJJ those people." Miss Armstrong said.
Orange
Weather
Coast
<'.
It may not be quite so warm
along the Coa.!lt Friday. Du!. the
morning fog will sti ll be ~IUt u~.
Look for tempuatures in the 67
kl n-degrce range.
ll'W~IDfi TOBI\ l'
A. modtr"' .P111riig l>u.tc.ll.111an.
in tht form Of !l sunken German
11Ubmarinr, Tl'portedly threattn.f
Florido Coast with it& dtad/11
lVorld War II cargo, Ste $tory,
Page S.
C•Hltnl~ J
(loft .. .., u. " Cl•Ulll9111 • )J~1
M11~I ,.""' N Nlllllltl fll.n 4-41
Ot'1"" C-t'f' n
The candidates for the three Newport·
~1e sa board seats 101ned 'A'llh six of the
'liht persons 'y1nii; fnr lhree scats on
the Coa~t Community Colle.Ile Board. The
program 1-1as set up by the League of
\Vnmen \'O!('f~ And thr An1cr1can Asso--
clat 1t1n of l'ni,·ersil)' Woml'n.
Earh candtd:.te was gr11n!<'d five min·
utes to tel! why he is runn1nJ,t, to nut!ine
qual1llE's he wnuld 11rek for g·tudents and
detail v1E'W.!l on sou11d business manage·
ment.
Ne'A·port·Mesa Unified School Dlstrica
serve.!I the c1t1es of Costa Mesa and New·
port Beach. It operalf!s 2li elementary.
six infermediate. four high schools. a
ro11tinu11tlon high school and a school
for the mentally retardrd.
Thrtt of !he district's st"ven trustee
llreas are on lhe April 20 ballot, area
one is northwest Cos1a Me.~a. area three
Is m.iide up of portions of N«"wport Beach
and CostA Mesa northeast of Dover
Driv,, 21st Street and the Ne~·port FrC1!·
Herb Stricker. 41 , ulety equipme11t
sale11man, ol 4.45 Recjlands Ave.J Newport
fJ.each, who described his plattorm ., a
t'all for "fiscal responalbillty and fil:Of1
om.v " Stricker is $ttklng to' .ffipl"f:!ent
trui;lcE' ,11rea si:<,
· ucep~ la cer&lin t:nes. His
lddr'!I' la II\ a ·IO!id tOCtioo ol ,~· • ljo.·~JlielyJJo ' •Id ........
, 11 1 Wu tttl~lflled on hb: written
The driver, Llny G11lvln, 34, or-11t52
Tradewtnda ibircle. Huntington Beach. '
• not ~'in the accident ln whlch
hll car (Olng Wtal. on Lemon Street
1tnd Ball Road strucJt bicyclist Chester
\Vnfford, 64.
(.tml(i " C>l'lti<lftW'll H
DMI~ Ntll(tt 11
O!wtc.. lt J~!IMlll '"' I l:•IUlll-1 M·U
l1h11 "'"""' M '-ts tt-n
llllf.f' """'" ,..,, Ttlnh..., :M
Tl!Ht.n. ll•>S
Among issues disc ussed l\'tre Account·
I "' ... ~ .. ___ ..... _ .... ·--
He ci ted a 7& ptrcent increase.Jn the
d1str1Ct'I bud~ct In the las! four Jeirl
!Set FORlTh-1, Page ZI
~--
promi1e to 11ppe11r in court nnd
enter R plea of innecent, or guilty
as charged , ...
-'--~-·~ ............ ~ ...... -·
Wafford ,was laktn to the Orange Coun-
ly J\.1ed1ral Cenlrr follnv.·1ng the 7·40
pm 11cc1dent. He died at 1 a.m. of
head 1n1uries and fractures
•lttll!CI 16.tJ Hefltc•" 11 Atttt Lt11C11r• 11 M&YIM M·U
I
......... ·-~ ' '• ·-... _ L .. _ ..
W11!1Mr I
Wlllll W•\fl 2t ·-·, ,,. .. , ""' 'Ntrlf Ntwt 411
..... -· .... ----·-· \..-
'
•
Z DAILY PILOT c Thursd•y, April l, 1971
Fron1 Pllf1e l
COAST ••. Shark Attack?
No, Porpois es
Solon Tees Oii on Co11rse
sk.iJls and retraining and carer counsel·
lng for the unemployed.
Robert L. Hlmpbreys, ... an attorney,
of JSOO Adams Ave., Costa Mesa is
... kin& his ~ Lenn.
Be DOied that the dislrtcl'1 olat< aid
share bu ahrunk since IHI, when he
was a student at Orange Coast College
and when the clistrlct was the wealthiest
in California.
"Tbe statewide property tax proposal
, cut.ainly gets our support in view of
the taclliUes and school finance problems
·we've faced in the past 10 years,"
l!umphreys ·said. "It's difficult to cut
cost.a wiltiout cutting quaij&f."
~ 'L Ramos, 3al\ a Fountain
Valley Hlgb School teacher, of 17294
Peppertree St., Fountain Valley, called
for a "more diversified board" -one
that includes a woman. She is challenging
incumbent WWiam Kettler in Huntington Beath~ Foanfain Valley.
She said the most important goat of
the college district is to bring the college
cloeer to the commuajY and find ways
to "stretch the dullars tO serve everybody
in the community." ~. Ramos urged development of
chlld care centers on the campus which
Would allow young mothers to enroll.
Donald G. Roff. 52, quality assurance
speciallst of 14842 Harper St., Midway
City, said the colleges "should prepare
students so that he or she is equipped
to meet life's problems as he knows
them." Hoss is the incwnbent represeo-
ting the Westminster area.
He cited the educaUon code strictures
the board must live within concernitlg
f~. Despite these, the district has
, "maintained a low per student cost but
built an educational program that has
attracted national attention and is a
model for others in the 11ation," he
aaid.
Chark:1 Dagion, 24, a Golden West
student. of 15225 Jackso11 St., Midway
City, .aa.id the college.a "are not servictng
the students or the community .as well
as they could." He ls cballengi.Jlg Hoff.
Although be b "an ecology nut",
Dagion said the dfstrict could not afford
development of an environmental work·
ing model, a Job he !laid should be
handled by state colleges or the univetsi·
ty system.
Oaglon said "taped lecture." don't
allGw studenta to ask que1Uons. He urged
combining the day and evening ad·
minJstrationa.
The district's television station develop-
ment also should be handled by the
state colleges, Dagion said.
Wllllam Kettl er, of 623 Seventh St.,
Jluntington Beach, said tbat compared
to the 68 community college districts
in California in 196~70 whose per student
costs average $800, oCast C-Ollege District
spends fl!ia per student. Kettler ii the
Incumbent in area three (Huntington
Beach -Fountain Valley).
He cited the value of his having grown
up in Huntington Beach as being of
importance "particularly slnct linanctal
decisions afi~ college are largely
poliUcaI. I have eo!ne to know most
or the people making those decisioru ,"
Ke!Uer said.
The two teacher cand!dates, Mrs.
Ramos and Oliver both agreed tenure
should be abol111hed. The three in·
cumbenta noted that finding a way of
instituting accoun.tablllty for
performance is diffi<:u!L
Santa Anas Hit
Coast Tonight
Warm, dry SaD.ta Ana wind! will warm
tlie Orange Coast tonight and Friday,
driving temperatures up to 77 degrees.
Winds gusted inland to 47 miles an
bow: today as the typical Santa Ana
condition blew smog out to sea, brought
clear sunny skies and warmth to
Southern Cal\forni11.
The National Weather Service says
the northerly winds will continue lbrough
the -night with winds exPected to gust
below the coastal canyons.
• The low tonight will be near 67.
T
011.A.N,Cif COAST
1 l11Jl\1~!(1ll
011.A.NC.e COAST PUllLISHlNG (OMPAtN'
Robert N. W•1d
Pre.Ider>! ancl Puollshet
J1di: R. Cur!1v
Vi!:t Prt1'""°1 .1n'1 Gtr11"! l"•"";v
Tho"'•• K.11vil
Edllor
1!10,.,11 Ji,.. Murphi"•
M•"•~•lltl f~•tor
Costo MH• Offlc•
l)O Wed !ty Sh••t
Mtili11g Addr111: P.O. lot 15~0, 9262&
Other Oftlus
t.1 ...... f!<>rt &.11c11; lll~ Nr .. roit e 1111•rv1fd
L-O-BHc.11: m F~nl "~""Ut M1111tl""l'O• f!tlcll: 11'1;, &ti(~ 8ov\1~1•d
$111 Ol<Nn!t: .aDJ t.111rr11 ti (1..,1no F111I
DAILY P!LOT, wl!ll """!eh !1 (On'lb!P>td lhti N~·Pru1, ll Pul>llal>t(ll 01111 t•(fJ)I iv ...
Cf1¥ Jn 1Ult'I'• tdltlo'I> to• llll<ll'll t 11e11.
1'0 . ..,.,1 8t1V1. (Ot1' ~I, l'lYfl!il'l(llOll r.1K~. FOUll!li" ll•IJf'V, ~Ill C .. IN!ftll f
Clil1'1!-~ Sr.sdlt~t<•, •'°"9 wll~ -
r.1;101111 ((Ill!-. l'"r.clo1 I """''"II ttl•n1 II
.If »Cl W';*l •·r Slrft., Ci:l>T• Mrt•.
t.1.,11 • .,. t71') 442·4121
CIOfllflH ,-11.,...-titlltf 442·5471
c:e.wrlfllt, un, 0-Hlllt' Co111 PVbJIJ11111t1
COn1P1nv. No ,..,.., •'Ofl~. l1lvt!rll!O'lt.
c•ttorllt ""n"' or '""'""1.,....,..1, lltr•W. mlV be rlOtOducd ,.l!,10\h 1~tl1I I*•
mlMlen o: c:.pyrlf"I ownl".
$1C01'.d tf.111 "°"''""" ~It" fl Nrwi»tt ll•ltll .. ,.. ec.1.1 Mnl, Ct\110'"1111 ~~l)ftrlo•1,,.,
• ctrt"\lt" ll..U mt!.'f!'llVl llV "1•1! U 11 "*"ll'llv1 11,nllllrv cl111IMllltlt. ,t.t! '''°'"~Iv.
'
Some surfers out for early morn-
ing rides today at Newport Pier
1n Newport Beach thought thty
""" belna attacked by shark<.
Police W'lll4 wtre rushed to the
scetic armed and prepared to p~
ted the surfera from the denizens
of the deep.
•·when we got there, we found
out Utere 'o1:eren 't any sharks at
all,'' said Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
"'lt was just a small school of
porpoises having a good time."
McDaniel said 1he mammals
frolicked in the surf -charging
the surfers, then veering off -
for several minutes before moving
on.
Jury Retires
To Mull Fate
Of Hartelius
Eight men and four women who must
rule on the guilt <Jr innocence of Dr.
Ebbe Hartellus of Corona del Mar were
locked into their Orange Count)' Superior
Court jury room today tll mull the arson·
fraud charges debated in four wetks or trial.
They got their final instructions Iale
Wednesday from Judge James F. Judge
after hearing more than five hours of
final arguments from opposing lawyers
in the bitterly fought action.
The jury must now decide if Dr.
Hartelius, ·so, actually planned the burn·
ing of bis offices at 2.145 E. Coast
Highway last April 9 and if he faked
the theft of his car nine days earlier,
They were warned by defense attorney
Matthew Kurilicb that they should put
litUe reliance on the testimony of two
key prosecution witnesses: blonde Reba
Vaughn, the shapely Costa Mesa woman
who shared her home with Hartelius
for more than four years, and her brother
Jim Blevins.
Both in testimony pinned responsibility
for the fire and the auto theft on
Hartelius and both testified th~ t
Hartelius later bribed Blevins to leave
the state wben investigation into the
offenses mounted.
Deputy District Attorney Al Novick
agreed that both witnesses were con·
victed felons but he reminded the jury
Wednesday that Hartelius' attacks on
Reba Vaughn's character only began
when his mistress rejected the physi-
cian's pressure and decided to testify
against him .
"H~ never at.,.any time before th at
decided that her reputation was so bad
he cooldn 't Jive with her," Novick !ala.
"Whatever Reba was it didn't persuade
Hartelius to move out of her Costa
Mesa borne."
Each lawyer delivered personal attacks
on the other in what many court
observers feel has been one of the
hardest fought Orange County trials in
ree£nt years.
Kurillch bitterly complained to the jury
that Novick called hlm a "mugwump".
Novick denied the accusation but in
turn accused Kurilich of making "a
series of misrepresentations" in his ad·
dress to the jury.
Daily Pilot Sets
Special Listing
Of Church Rites
The DAILY PILOT is planning a
special etory to run \\'ednesday an-
nouncing special services scheduled by
Orange Coast churches and temples
marking the primary days of Holy Week,
Easter Sunday and the Passover.
The final deadline for all material
to run in this r;tary will be J\-tonday
at 5 p.m. Any malerial received after
that time will probably not be included.
The items should include name of
the church, address, service times.
pastor pr rabbi's name, ·sermon and
any olhtr material essential to lhe
services. Please be brief.
The articles can be submitted to any
DAILY PILCYr office. Addresses include ;
330 W, Bay St., Costa J\iesa; 221 1 W.
Balboa Blvd .• Newport Beach; 222 Forest
Ave .• Laguna ~ach; 17875 Beach Blvd .•
Huntington Beach: 305 N. El Camino
Real , San Clemente.
Bpeclol to the DAILY PILOT
SACRAMENTO -Stat< Sen. Dennb E.
Carpenter (ft..Newport Beach} today
launched· what you might call a Sell
American, rather thati 1 Buy American ,
campal80.
Ht l1111fld a bllaWlna ilfoa1!sldo state-
ment on purchase of Costa Men'• Meea
Verde Country Club from Boise-Cascade
CorporaUon by a Japanese firm.
What, be asks, does a company half·
'vay around the world in the land of
Suzuki Motorcycles and Little Honda
Car! want with a small t5uborban goU
course?
Carpenter's statement charges that
Boise-Cascade sold the course on identi·
cal ternlS lo the foreign interest' after Of·
-l'r'om Pnge l
CALLEY • • •
Lt. William Calley.
Calley was convicted of 1 b e
premeditated murder of 22 Vietnamese
civilians at-My Lai. He was sentenced
Wednesday to life in prison.
Reaction continued to mount around
the nation as Calley waited In the ft.
Benning stockade for a transfer to
federal prison.
The White House, according to Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, bad receiv·
ed more than 5,000 wires and 1.500
telephone calls concerning the conviction.
They were running almost 100.l in favor
of clemency for CaUey, he said.
In St. Petersburg, Fla., real estate
man Walter J. Dilbeck said Wednesday
he and 100 "cOC'rdinatllrs" around the
nation were laying plans for a mass
march on Washington July 4 on behalf
of all Gls charged in the My LaUncident.
"We Intend to have one million people
in Washington that day and we intend
to stay there unUl these men are releas-
ed," Dilbeck said.
E. 'Thomas Cammarota, commander
of the Penmylvania America11 Legion,
called on President Nh:on tll hetd those
urging clemency.
"If President Nixon sees fit not to
listen tG the thousands of telegrams
that already have been sent to him,
\\'e are prepared to march o n
Washington," Cammarota said.
Robert tadle, a retired Army sergeant
who says the verdict "''BS ''a lot of
bull," said Wednesday he and a "F'ree
Calley Committee" with branches in all
states but Hawaii will lead 50,000 people
in a march on Washington afte r a petition
drive.
"This .,.,·hole thing has boomeranged
all out of proportion," Cadle Yid. "Peo-
ple call in and they cuss, cuss, cuss.
Are they mad. I've ~eve,i;: .seen anything
like this verdict in my life."
All the members of local Selective
-Service Boards in Elizabethtoti, TeM.,
and Athens and Blairsville, G•,. resigned.
Members of the Quitmah, Oa., board
wired Nixon they would not induct any
more men.
"This is the worst thing that's ever
happened in the United States," said
Robert E. Caldwell, chairman of the
Blairsville board.
Sam Mottern, chairman of th e
Elizabethton Board, said after the Ca1l~y
verdict he could no longer perform his
dulies ''wit!lout a complete. surrender
o[ principle and conviction."
In Richlands, Va., response to a radio
5talion·s poll on Calley's guilt was so
heavy \Vednesday that telephone circuits
broke down temporarily. Some listener!'!
then drove to the station to vote. The
total showed only three of 688 votes
favored Calley·s conviction.
A Davenport. Iowa, television station
conducted a 90-minute poll on the \•erdict.
Twenty-three of 981 persons responding
favored the court martial decision.
The Indiana House of Representatives
p:ised a resolution Wednesday calling
for steps "lo rorrect the injustice that
\\'e firmly believe has been perpetrated.
•. " a resolution asking the President
for clemency was before the Illinois
legislature and the Salt Lake City Com-
mission approved a resolution, with a
copy lo the President, condemning the
conviction.
High school students in southeast Ken·
tucky began circulating petitions prcr
testing the convictio~\and 250 Belleville.
Ill .. high school stude'n,ls marched five
miles \vith signs comdemning the verdict.
Veterans organ\zations aro~the na·
lion protested the decision and uested
varie;us actions. including c\e cy and
an investigation or the court martial
verdict.
In Washington, 01e natioo'1 elected
representatives joined the chorus of com·
menL
'Cy~ology~ Boom
Thousa.nds of Bicyclists Pois(}d
Bet ween 3,000 and 5,000 bicyclists (lying
the banner of 1·cycology" will converge.
on the slrttts of Newport Beach and
Costa ~lesa in a mammoth Earth Day
bike ride.
A meeting to outline plans for the
event is scheduled tonight at
Ne"l'·port Harbor High School. The event
il'\elf may take place Earth Day April
24 or one ~·eek after on May 1.
Originally proposed by students 1t
·'Newport Harbor High ~chool. th!:' event
quickly mushroomed to the four fiarbl'lr
Area secondary ~chools und{'r the
lf:'adership of Robert Fry, n ll11rbor High
sclenet teacher .
"'But It's gone wiy beyond th11t now,''
~ay~ Bob Hemstreet, another organ\7.er
who o.,..·ns Balboa Bikes.
·· Ahnost nobody is going to miss ii,"
he said, noting that just about every
bicycle club in Orange County has U·
pressed interest in participating.
"And people have told me that they
don·t have bicycles, but they are going to
gel them."
He said the idea has also expanded
to include other. long-range goals.
"It has become a full-fledgtd 'CYC<JlogY'
movement that will unite bicyclists In
(.'Ommon causes sucti as unllorm city
bicycle. l11ws and the crtation of ad-
dit ional bikl' lr:iils.''
1·1ie foeal point for lhe moment.
hov.'ever. Is the Earth Day t"Vent which,
:is yet according to llemstreet, has no
name or designation.
--.. __ . ~--.__ -·-... _ -----~ ---'----------.,._ .... ----
ferlng to let the Mesa Verde Homeowners
Association buy Jt.
"After negotJaUons 'from January
through February, the m.mbera had put
toftlher 1 sufficient number of people
and pledged 1Ufficient tl"IQnle:s to meet
the olfer," Carpenter charged.
He emphasized the fact the picluresque
course is eoUrely surrounded by I.he
Mesa Verde development. whose more
costly bomes dir'ectly border the green.!S.
Calling the sale to Japanese interests
appalling, unneccessary and uncalled·
for. Sen. Carpenter accused B-Oi!e-Cas-
cade of acting in bad faith and without
regard for the community.
He said he confened with lxllh the
•
mamnlOlh Jand development (.'Ompany
and the Mesa Verde organization but of·
fered ~ comment on Bolse.CaSCJde'•
~ for romp aale.
:'Thi&;type ol activity by a major cor·
wratiori is m<>lt uncall~for and un-
necessary whee, today, many people are
attacking our capitalist sysltm as bCJng
insensitive to the needs ()f the pt<Jple,''
Carpentu charged.
He said the American company gained
nothing more by selling to the Japanese
1han to the citizens diredly affected by
and generally ~g the course. • ·
"A golf cow-~ of th.it type is logically
for the use and benefit of the people
who suiround It and this has been thf:
Sex Book Publisl1er Gets
Fine, Two Year. Jail Term
Special lo the DAILY PlLOT
LOS ANGELES -A sex book publisher
y.·hose Costa Mesa conviction is due
for review by the U.S. supreme Court
on constitutional grounds was banded
another one here in fede ral court.
Marvin Miller, of Covina. was slapped
"'ilh a $45,000 fine and a two-year term
in federal prison Tuesday by U.S. District
Court Judge William P. Grey .
The head of Covina Publishing Inc.,
was convicted on 15 counts of mailing
obscene materials, the same charge
upheld 51 weeks'ago in Costa r.1esa.
Ch a 11 en g in g constitutionality of
California law establishing standards ()f
obscenity and other related aspects.
Miller appealed that case in Orahge
County Superior Court.
His conviction was upheld, but his
attorneys went rigbl to lhe U.S. Supreme
Court with an appeal that It agrttd
to hear this fall during its next regular
session.
Miller's contention ls that eb!cenity
charges are intended IG be heard at
the federal level and thus , defendants
are treated on an unequal basis in state
cases.
By establishing obscenity and com-
munity standards of good taste . from
state to state, he further argues, the
fl~w of materials through the mails
can be hampered.
This, Miller argues. poses possible ef·
feels on even the most innocent
materials, such as mail t:1rder catalogues.
His Costa Mesa conviction involved
advertising brochures for sexy books
and movies which attorneys argue are
readily seen and read by reputable book
store patrons.
From Pnge J
FORUM TURNOUT .•.
with only a 1,400-pupil increase, "most
of which," "he said , "was due to raw land
annexation."
Last year the district gained only four
students but increased the budget by $7
million. Stricker called for easing the
burden on the property taxpayer by
'·sound money management."
J\larian C. Bergeson, 43, housewife and
fonner teacher, of 1721 Tradewinds Lane,
Newport Beach, waits schools that in·
still in students a "high regard for re.
sponsibillty and the values of gOOd citi·
zeoship." She is the incumbent repre-
senting area three.
Be11ldes helping students fo master
basic skiJls such as readiAg and com-
putation, schools should teach children
how tG learn. Mrs. Bergeson sa id the
district has taken steps to guarantee
every graduate a saleable skill.
She said the plaMlng, programming
budget system adopted by the district
would lead to fi sca l accountability i•
time.
"A new superintendent must possess
management skills including skills in fi·
na11ce. Since the district is now Jn an
era of evaluation he must possess a keen
perception to evaluate the programs al-
ready developed."
Donald E. Smallwood, 42, an attorney,
Of 1981 Komat Drive, Costa Mesa, called
for improved special education and coun·
seli1g. He is unopposed in area one.
He urged programs that "teach at an
age when a child is ready to learn" ln·
eluding reading instruction at an earlier
age, The district should not be satisfied
with an eighth grade readi11g level of
skill for its graduates but should seek
an 11th grade reading level as a mini·
Jn um.
Smallwood urged the district to seek
j.lhe best for the least amount o{ money"
and caulio11ed against "building new
school facilities a v.·e ca• use existing
facilities." ~
Donald T. Boll. 28, business coordina·
!or of 2548 Westminster Place, Costa
Mesa, called for improved vocational
training. He is running for the area three seat.
He noted that oily 15 percent of high
school graduates go on tG college. He
urged cGntinuing education of vocationtl
teache rs and use of persons from busi-
ness and iadnstry to provide up to date
infor.mation to vocational students.
"Bull urged there is a need for accounf.
ability for teaching performance and
I hat it couJd be measured by getti11g "in-
puts from stafr. parents and students.·•
Selim S. "Bod" Franklin, 41, attorney,
of 1928 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa·,
stressed the need for continuity 01 the
board in light or the superintendent's
resignation. He is the incumbent board
preside111t and represents area six.
Franklin receivltd the only spontaneoos
applause of the "evening for his stand
on accountabilily.
He said education is a lo.ig way 11from
having the tools to evaluate teacher or
student performance. Nol all good teach-
ers can teach every student well.'' .
Franklin said. Admitting there is Jteed
10 "eliminate those teachers who don't
care'' he suggested a system to shltt
"students to teachers wit4 whom they
can relate and from whom they can
leam" might be preferable.
"We are still in a subjective world,'1
Fral'lklin concluded.
tntenl and l\iSlor)' of the 1'.1esa Verde
Country Club over I.he )'ears,., Carpenter
cOfltinued. Jl• !Aid BoJse.Cascade was probably
wfU>!D Ila legal r!Bhll, but toially· JiJ>Or•d
the moral and public relaUons aspect
of the !!pparent d!.ange in cbol~e of
buyers. r Carpenter soiid he learned through o •
firers llify ha<l no )d•• "'1Y the .JaplJli ese corporation -owner -0( several other
101r courses -walited the Mesa Verde
club.
He said he has concluded there WI$
no justification f;r i~ ~and!lng of the
matter nor its 'Willlon. desrtgard for
community interest.
Fron• Pnge 1
SAFETY ...
in all 1truct.ures over 60 feel, or five
stories, as stipulated in the fire safety
l.'ode revisions now in the works.
Pinkley Rotes tbe 11tudy shows reduced
fire insurance rates through sprinkler
installation would be 2.5 percent of the
total comtrltcUon costs.
Experts caJculate the investment In
a Bethel Towers-type facility would pay
for itself within a five-yea r period based
on the insurance reduct;on.
A second finding is that windows rising
vertically 1:1tOry by story are also con·
ducive to rapid spread of names, but
sprinkJer instaUation would eliminate this
hazard.
One critical point on elevator service
is now being remedied in Bethel Towers
by city demand, through installation of
a go.called demand key.
Firemen resi>onding to a blaze or
rescue call with oxygen for a senior
citizen stricken by a heart attack, !or
example, have beazl required to wa.lt
v.•hile one or both elevators were m
transit. '
Quite often tn Bethel Towers history,
the passenger elevator has been out
of order, Pinkley noted.
"One elevator is out of order and
the other is on the eighUt floor.~· he
said as an example. "You have a five-
minute wait and the heart attack victim
doesn't need oxygen anymore. •
Installation of the demand kPy ap-
paratus v.·iU enable firemen to summon
the elevator automatically without itJ
stopping al other floors and go directly
to the victim·s own floor.
An application is. currenlly in the works
for the Western Association of Baptists
lnr.. of Anaheim , to build a nearly
identical tower. adjacent to Bethel
Towers.
Certain other critical issues en·
countered with Bethel Towers -such
as a HUD prohibition against local pro-
perty tax payment -are still being
discussed at lhia stage.
But Rev. Harley Murray. spokesmen
for the Baptist layman's group promoting
the project, pledges that it will .include
a sprinkler system whether reqwred by.
new city law or not.
City officials say the proposals e.f·
fecting virtually every type of pubhc
building in Wwn, based on the Bethel
Towers study, are designed to cut ge•
eral costs as well as promote safety.
"We wa11t to put the burden of 1olving
these problems on those who cause
them ," says Battalion Chief Lewis, sum-
ming it up.
One of those burdens -besides an
estimated $7 ,000 spent in responding to
Bethel Towers fires and rescue calls
alone -is purchase of a $55,000 fire
truck otherwise not needed.
During the period since the 27<Hinlt
skyscraper was built, it has experienced
three major fires totaling well over
$2S,OOO in damage and on Feb. 26 killing
an elderly v.·oman.
luxurious down sofas
This handsome Sof1 w•s d•signed to give you the ultim•t• in H1tlng comfort wlfh d1cron
•nd down b1ck pillows, deep spring down ... t cu1hlon1 envelOfM'd In down ind f11th1rs In
:wo fo1m-filled 1rm pillowi. C~Ol>H from • wide HIKtlon of fine f•bric1.
8' length, reg. $599 NOW 3·99.
i•our fnvoritt designtr ioiU be Mpp11 to 4.lsi.st 110"
"'""'°'~ .J. GA~~ 'f U RNll1J ~~ ""W• ""
Op'" MDft., lllurs. & Fri. fut. COSTA MESA. CALIF.
INTE RIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGE b<6.0275 b<6 .0276
-------~ .,...---..
7
7
·• Saddlehaek
•
Today's Fln•I
N.Y. St.eeks
• •
VOL M, NO. 78, 3 SECTIONS, 4'I PAGES, ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRIC T, ·1971 TEN CENTS
•
City, State Surprised Over .Beach Giveaway
Reaction from the city of San
Clemente and the stale of California
to President Nixon's offer of six miles
of new beach and an entire valley
amounted to surprise and glee followed
swiftly by some vexing questions.
City Manager Ken Carr termed the
offer of the 3,000.acre San ~1ateo Canyon
to San Clemente an "exciting tden."
But because of no prior knowledge of
the Presidential order offering the prim•
~larine base land. Carr could not
elaborate much farther.
The offer frotn the Federal Govrm·
ment is good only if either the city
or the state use the land for public
use.
As for the slate reaction to the offer
of the canyon and the huge chunk: Clf
Camp PendletQn beach, il is one c.f
pleasure mixed with a tinge of bitlerness
and uncertainty.
What the President has done, aaid
on!! tnp state parks official. ls give
a large chunk of obviously prime beach
land to an agency whose budget is being
decimated year by year.
"It's wonderful, but. .. " said Mervyn
Filipponi, a state parks consultant from
Sacramento.
"All of a sudden we have six mile!
of beach, some very attractive buildings
and absolutely DO money from the
governor to use in its development,"
he said.
ore eac
He stressed the lrony of new windfa\1!'1
of land from the federal government
11'hile Stille officials are cutting th~ parks
and recreation budget to the bare bone.
State parks spokesmen repeatedly
have said that money does not exist
for the initial 3.S-mile San Onofre bluffs
beach.
In fact, next wee.k's 11even-day in-
augural use of the beach ls the only
way to raise enough fun~ to keep
the park open.
•
Campers are being char&ed fees to
use the virgin beach-the funds to go
into a spe<:ial account to cover e1penses.
If .the state will have its fiscal pro-
blems v.·ith the six miles of beach, san
Clemente would find itself, 11pparenUy,
in a heavyweight tangle of legalities
if it were to accept the San 1\-leteo
Canyon l~'I~·
Ca{T explained that under federal law,
annexation$ of land across county lines
are forbidden •
en1n s·
''lf we were to try lo IMl!X the
land, even for public use," Carr e1•
plained," then it would take an 1t"t-
of the State Legislatllre tc> make It le.gal ...
Judicial boundaries. and counly boon·
daries would have. to be changed as
we!!.
Both darr and Filipponi said the news
of the President's decision came as an
"absolute." total SUiprise.''
een
DC March Nixon Tells Vast
To Support
Calley Seen
Federal Progra~
By United Preas International
Three local draft boards resi gned, at
Jeast three riiass marches on Washington
were being planned, and the White House
was swamped with telegrams and
telephone calls 1s Americans e1pressed
their feeling 1 about tht conviction of
Lt. William Calley.
caUey wu convicted of the
tiremedit.ated murder of~ 22 Vietnamese
civilians at My Lai. He was sentenced
Wednesday to life in prison.
Reaction continued to mount around
the nation as Calle y waited in the-Ft.
Benning stockade for a transfer to
federal prison.
The White House, according to Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. h.ad receiv-
ed more than 5,000 wires and l.500
tele~hone calls concerning the conviction.
Thef"Were running almost 100-1 in favor
of clemency for Calley, he said.
In St. Petersburg, Fla.. real estate
man Walter J . Dilbeck said Wednesday
he and 100 "coordinators" around the
nation were laying plans for a mass
march on Wash ington July 4 on behalf
of all Gls charged in the My Lai incidenL
"We Intend to have one million Peo ple
ln Washington that day and we intend
to stay there until these men are releas-
ed." Dilbeck said.
E. Thoma5 Cammarota. commander
of the Pennsylvania AmeriC'an Ltgion.
called on President Nixon to heed those
urging clemency.
··1f President Nixon sees fit not to
listen to the thousands of telegrams
that alr~ady have been sent to him,
v.·e are prepared to march on
\Vashington.'' Cammarota said.
RoDert Cadle, a retired Army sergeant
who says the verdict was "a lot of
bu ll," said \Vedne§day he and a "F"tee
Calley Commitl.ee" with branches in all
r;tates but Hawa1i will lead 50,000 people
in a march on \Vashington after a petition
drive.
'"Th is v.·hole thing has boomeranged
all out of proportion," Cadle said. ''Petr
pie call in and they cuss, cuss. cuss.
Are ther mad. I've never seen anything
like this verdict in my life."
All the members of local Selective
Service Boards in Elizabethton , Tenn .,
and Athens and Blairsville. Ga .. re signed.
1'fembers of the Quitman, Ga., board
wired Nixon they would not induct any
more men.
I
OA ILY P'ILOT ""'-"' Jo~n V.ihln•
PRESIDENT IN HELICOPTER SURVEYS NEW BEACH THAI IS TO BECOME PUBLIC
Are• Is South of Western White House; Buildings Shown Are to Become Publi c
Salt Creek Open
On Trial Basis
Salt Creek beach will be open to tbe
public on a I.r ial basis from Saturday
to April 18.
Through an agreement arranged by
county supervisor Ronald Caspers the
public will be . allowed to use the much
debated strand between Monarch Bay
and Dana Poinl from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
each day during the Easter vacation
,period.
Supervisors approved the agreement
Wednesday with Avco Comm u n i t y
Developers lnc. owners of the pror.;rty.
A four·acre dirt parking lo~ on the inland
.side of Cciast Highway with an ac~ss
path to the beach will be graded by
A""°.
The county will reimburse 1.Jie company
for the cost of life.guards. sanitary
fa cilities and beach maintenance an d
will operate the parking lot. San
Clemente lifeguards are ei:pected to man
the beach.
More Quake A£tersl1o~l\:s
Jar San Fer11ando Valley
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 I~• O•!IY P'llet lllff
Just two years after various visionaries
predicted a great earthquake would
tumble the whole sinful Southland into
the sea. two more aftershocks of the
major February tremor struck early
today.
They were preceded Wednesday by
a temblor that rattled up to 4 0 on
the Richter Scale and caused heavier
damage in some SAn Fernando Valley
areas than the. Feb. 9 quake.
Today's aftershocks came al 3·48 a.m.,
with a 2.7 rating, and at 7:03 a.m.,
with a 3.7 mark.
Some Orange County residents reported
noticing the later, slronger jolt, which
was strongest in the Norlhridge and
Devonshire areas of the bard-hit San
Fernando Balley,
Tht heavy afte rshock that came at
5:54 p.m. \Vednesday, about eight miles
from the epi~nter of' the disaster ty,·o
months ago, was the worst yet.
The epicenter was directly under a
heavily populated are.a, according to
Caltech seismologist Dr. John Nordquist.
S1x persons suffered minor injuries,
while canned goods and bottles tumbled
from store shelves, glass windows shat·
tered and plaster fell from ceilings.
The LO! Angeles Police Department's
Devonshire Division suffered extensive
damage.
Restraint Ordered
"If ii had happened five minutes later,
y,·e might have had some injur~s." said
LI. Dan Sullivan, noting the roll call
room would have been full of patrolmen
wt muster.
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of 1111 0411y P'l .. I S11!1
With a stroke of his pen Wednesday
President Nixon shook the sanctity of!
the Camp Pendleton lands, opening up
six miles of beaches and more than
3,000 acres of a prime. valley fJr public
use.
And later the chief executive declared
the landmark decision in lavor of open
space was only lhe beginnina: ol 1 vast
federal program for h(Jijsecleaning of
surplua.1overriment real t1llte.
Th• auected area ii within •i&ht o(
the Western White lloUM.
!bf! blockbusler decision lnvolve.s a
coveted enlisted man'• beach club and
a prfvate surfing club-long the object
of ttillcl1m. along with the 1horeline:
in front ol the San Onofre nuclear
generating comple1 and the new Saa
Onofre Bluffs State Beach south of that.
Besides the prime co a stal
land--<ie.scribed by the President as "one
of the. country's last great swimming
beaches" ..JI the directive covers 3,000
acres of San Mateo Valley immediately
south of I.he San Clemente CJty limit.s
and the Orange-San Diego County line.
The new publ ic beach will start about
1.000 feet 10uth of'"f.he Presidenlial oom·
plex. bounded downcoast by the ooun ly
boundary. The Trestles beach will be
the buffer rone requested by the Secret
Service-a no·man 'a land for .!iecurity
purposes .
Dow1a the
Mission
Trail
Board Hopefuls
Discuss I ss ues
MISSION VIEJO -Candidates for
election to Tustin Union High School
District &ehool board are to speak at
7:30 tonight in the Mission Viejo High
School multipurpose room.
The candidates · rorum l.s sponsored
by the school PTO.
e .\'ew Snforl Hours
Rock Fest Ecology Peril? Six minor firei; were also reported,
1long with some new but minor damage
to the county's 48-inch Granada Tl1,ln.k
Line. carrying water into the area.
One of the hardest·hit homes was
that of Hal Sanders, who escaped with
minor damage in !ht Feb . 9 quake
LAGUNA HI LLS -A new spring
schedule for Lion Cciuntry Safari goes
Into effect today with gates to the. 50().
acre pre.serve open at 9 a.m. and the
last car admitted at S p,m.
The wildlife preserve Ls open eYery
day.
e Childhood Cla11e1
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A lederal ol·
ficial said today a planned rock festival
in the California desert could cause both
human suffering and environmental
d&mage.
The caution came from J. R. Penny,
California director for the U S. Bureau
of Land , l\fanagement which i.s the
landlord for most of the Southern
Callfornia desert region .
Penny 5a1d BLM officials had been
•<Wi~ed that 300.000 to 500,000 young
people might gather in the Panaminl
Valley west of Death Valley for tbe
fel!lival over Easler weekend.
Penny said Inyo County official.~ had
obtained a temporary restralnin& order
In an effort to h11lt the festival. but
that neither !he ceunty nor the BLM
had the forces to stop large numbers
Qf people from going into the area.
Some young people, from as far away
as New York and Olicago. already bad
begun camping on the scene, BLM of.
ficials said loday. Law oUicers and
federal officials were to meet in the
In yo COunty town of Independence to
map strategy.
•Penny cauticmed that young peop\i!:
risked a 'tllreat to their hi!:alth by at·
ttndlng the festival . if It 't<>mes off
as planned. He cited poor access to
the area over 25 miles of poor desert
road.Ii, blnwlng 11nd. e:ictreme tem-
perature5 and the la ck of water and
iheller.
"The sheer num bers f:lf J>'Ople also
post • ri\J thn1t le th• fra811e
ecological balance or the desert itself,"
Penny said.
The festival is planned on an 80-acre
plot of private land near the historical
ghost mining town of Ballarat, Penny
said, "but in fact would be largely
held on public land because o! the
numbers of people ei:pected ''
TM injunction was against t h e.
landlord. a promoter identified only as
.. Zamora" and 15 John Does.
Penny said the nearest ho,,pit.al is
50 miles 11 y,·ay and "oblaining treatment
for ill or injured persons would be
virtually impossible if a crush similar
lo those of similar • fesUvalJ a t
Woodstock, N.Y. or Altamont, Calif.,
were to develop." "\
-· .!.
that killed. 65 persons and caused millions MISSION VIEJO -Saddleback College
of dollars in damage." will offer six differen t classes in
"What we didn't lose then was pretty childhood education during the spring
well totaled today," Sanders remarked . quarter piat begins April 5. ~
'1Thl5 time Ule inside of the house . Childhood education i1 one or 15 t\410-
was wrecked. ll toppled over three year occupa.Uonal career programs at
• televlsioo let& and broke them all . The .. the college. Lale registrati on is possible
glass door! broke. A china cabinet full April 5 from 9:30 1.m. to 1 :30 p.m.
of my wift 's crystal fell over on the and 4:30 to 8:30 p.m.
dining room table."
The Feb. 9 earthquake was recorded e SprltlfJ V acat lol&
at 6.8 on the Richter Scale and has
been followed by Mil over 200 af ..
tentlock1, some too small for humans
to fr:el.
Such tremors In the wake of a major
quake are almost always lesser In in-
tensity, but several have been rtcorded
1t over 3.0 on the Richter Scale.
MISSION VIEJO -Mission ViejQ Hi~h
School students begin their annual 11pring
hiatus frGm the pencils and books routine
at the end of school. Friday.
Next week is officially spring vacation
with claS&es due to resume Monday,
April It
tmmed.iately .south of that area th.?
boundary begins for the new pubUc
beach.
Almost adjacent lo th.at boundary Is
the enlisted man 's club, a complex of
Spanish-style buildings and permanent
beach use structures -all of which will
be given to the slate of California for re-
creat.iona,l or office use as it.. sees fit.
The San Onofre Surfing Club area
ls next. situated on a point well inowu
for ita ip:cellent surf.
The llerl downcoast. f1cllity 11 thl
San Onofre Nuclear reactor comple1.
with its one e.xlstlng station (two more
are proposed for nttt door). The nactor
land area will be closed to the public,
but tht thortline seaward of the towerln&"
sea wall wUJ be open.
Directly south ot that complex lies
the line where the new San Orwfre
Bluffs State Beach begins. It will be
dedicated Saturday.
That section, Jea.sed to the state ol
California last year af!er tough negolia·
tlons with the Marine Corps, Js 3.S
miles long.
CompuJ.ing the 3.5 mlles or that beach
and b!ufttop with the new areas 6pened
up by the Presidential order. the .length
of the new public beach will be sis
miles long---exaclly one-third of the en--
tire Camp Pend leton coastline which
l!itretches 18 miles from San Clemente
lo Oceanside.
The upland Itta involved in the
declaration of surplus ~ acreage known
as San Mateo Canyon, an area u1ed
, for years as leased agricultural land.
Christian.itos Creek runs the l~ngtb of
the valley, somt:Umes nOwing to the
l!iea during wet months.
The property, under terms of the ex·
ecutive order, would have lo remain
available for suitable public uses, 15aid
the President 's Domestic Po 1 icy
Coordinator John D. Erlidimanm.
The initial offer will be lo the State
of Califor"ia and the city of San
Clemente. Curiously, the ~ounty of San
Diego, where the land in question lies,
was not mentioned in the offer,
No charge would be made if either
or both of the named entities took the
territory.
If neither dec.i~ to make it,
Erlichman e~plained, then the federa l
government would sell it tG privat1
interests and place the money into a
apecia l trust fund to pay for pu rchases
of other land in the United St.ates suit.able
for pubUc recreational uses.
Orange
l\'enther
It may not be quite &o warm
along the Coaat Friday, but the
rooming fog will 1till be with us.
Look for temperatures In the 67
to n-degree range,
INSmE TODAY
A modarn Flying Dwtch.ma11,
in. the form of 11 sun.kt n. Germon
submarine. reportfdl11 threatt:n..y
florid.a Coast with it.! dtndly
\Vorld \Var It c11rr10. See storv,
Page 5.
c •• .,.,.... 1
C'*"lltt Ujj 11 CltHlllM ,,.., ""'le.• t• C..-i~ t• °""' "'"'"' 1l 01¥91'C.. 11 '""°"'" .... ' f~l•tltlhf'll•M M·lS
1'1-t H •lf .....__ lf
AMIL. ..... ,.. 11 ,,...... ....
,......, 'llllft " N1llN1I Htw1 4oJ <lrtll9t C../f!f1 11
Spl'111 hrt•t N -· .... lt.d1 MltlMlt M--tl' Tt1tvl1... M
T"-llwe tt.11 ""''"""' . Wlllt. Wttll Jt
W-""'1 NIWI ll•lt
WWM1 Nt '#"I H
•
•
I
: J CAIL V PILOT SC
_SD Freeway . .
Widening
.
Begins Soon
A freeway widening project along the
San Diego Freeway near San Juan
Capistrano will begin six months ahead
()f schedule, according to James A. ~foe,
1tate director of public works.
The project calls for the widening
.of a J.S.mOe secUon from ais: to eight
lanes between De La Camino Estrella
In San Clemente to Camino Las Ramblas
·In San Juan Capistrano.
The estimated cost of the construction
ls $4. 4 million.
The project will be paid for with
part of MO million the Federal Highway
Administration made available to the
state this week. The funds, which are
matched by the state, will be used on
State Highway construction i11. areas
such as Orange C<lunty, where a high
unemployment rate exists.
The projects funded with these monies
bad already been identified by the state
for construction, Moe said, Funds
earmarked for these projects will be
used in turn to advance other projects
now further off in the construction
•6chedule.
The San Juan project was scheduled
for advertising in January, 1972. Bids
will now be sought in June 01 thi.s
)ear. ·
"""'.'" April I, 1971
DAILY PILOT P~olt b1 81rbtrl D~•rlt
•
West fll'eli~ed
.Cq,ttle Bra.nded in J;iejo
By BARBARA DUARTE
Of "* 0"'1 l"l\of 11111
f
Eifly Wednesday morning as the tun
began to, warm genUy sloping hills still
green from spring rains, t~ sound of
a lone bird mingled wltb the shrill cry
of a cowboy.
Following the sound to the hills to
the south, spectators watched several
dots multiply as trainhands from Rancho
Mission Viejo herded cows and caJves
toward corrals nestled 1n a canyon lloed
with shade trees and a long-dry crtek
be<I.
And the old \Vest came to life again
-almost within earsbot of tra[fjc travel.
ing the Sail Diego Freeway to the west
and Ortega Highway to the north.
But civilization seemed far away as
more than 500 cows and calves halted
In midstride, en r o u t e to corraU!, to
record a guttural protest at a group
of photographers and reporters perched
on the canyon hillside.
In a tradition practiced for more than
100 years on the 50,000-acre spread,
cowboys soon were busy roping, bran-
ding, castrating and dehoming more than
200 calves.
Cou·s bellowed at their offspring and
offspring bellowed bac~ as they were
wrestled to the ground for a two-minute
session ending with a king-size shot of
antibiotics and vitamins.
boin on the •rancb and Jassoe with the
be$t of them, and Joe Tew who has
been with the <ij>eration 40 years.
Calves from O'Neill Ranch, mainly
a steer operation, will be weaned in
July and shipped to f~lols "fer 200
days to gain market wM:tit.
CatUe buyers for the · new herd already,
have selected lot.s, Aguirre disclosed.
And in the true tradition of the West,
bl(fing and selling is done by oral agree·
ment.
President ·Meets
With Aerospac.e
Industry Chiefs
President Nixon met tlilil morning with
more than a dozen leaders in the
aerOspace indus~ and members of the . ' scientilic community in a con~rted ef·
fort to stave oU the maSSive unemploy•
ment which has hit that profession in
recent months.
No immediate resultS of the meeting
were available at mid·mornlng from Nix·
on aides.
In addition to the freeway widening,
. the projed includes widening of Pacifie
Coast Highway from its connection with
the freeway to the Camino Ca11istrano
'µndercrossing and construction of an
·tnterch&nge to connecl the'highway with
Camino Las Ramblas.
CALVES BELLOW FOR THEIR MOTHERS AND MOMS BELLOW BACK DURING ROUNDUP
Tradition Practiced For More Than 100 Years Continues Ai If Did in Old West
Cowboys, including movie personality
Monte Montana who joins the roundup
each year. swung lassos over hind legs
of game 300-pounders and dragged them
to small bands of wranglers.
In a quick ceremony, a. hot branding
iron stamped the ranch logo on the
calf's rump, an ear was clipped for
identification, horns were JoJ)ped off by
a hacksaw, the castrated area was
smeared with creosote, and the unhappy
youngster disappeared intG the herd for
motherly consola!ion.
Included in the group which met with
the President in his San Clemente office
were members of large western colleges
and universities, manufacturers, and
representativ~ of the bard-hit aerospace
industry itself. .
Dr. Ruben Mettler, president of TR\V
Systems, which owns a plant near San
Clemente, was among those attending.
Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson
sat at the President's side during the
talks. Ralph Williams
Property Carve
Begins in Court
An Orange Co u n t y Superior Court
judge today began what is eipeeted ID be
a two-weet carve up of the Ralph Wil-
liams financial empire.
Both sides of the divorce action filed
by the multi-millionaire auto dealer's
wife AJmabelle ended coortroom testi-
mony Wedntaday and agreed to allow
Judge Walter H. Steiner to rule on re-
maining ls.sues in the Williams dissolu-
tion,· .
He wu asked by Mrs. Williams, 38,
0( Linda ·hie ii Newport Beach, to re-
ject an agreement which gives her $4,000
a month personal support a.Del $500 a
month each for the couple's two children,
James, 11, and Kathukie, 6.
That agreemeai .was condemn~ by
Mrs. W"Jlliams' llt<iney during thi trial
as "unrealistic." Judge Steine~ was
urged to include more generous provi.
slons -pending a setUement that could
give Mrs. Willams half Of the substan-
tial estate.
Assets · listed by Williams in the court
file Include his Ford dealerships at En-
cino and Clovis, property holdings
throughollt the Southland and the cou-
ple's ~,000 home in Newport.
Willi ana. his wife married March
9, 1957 d parted Dee. 4, 1969. Mrs. Wil•
liams bu custody ol the two children.
,.
Yale President's Son
Hurt in Auto Crash
BOOTON (UPI) -The 23·year-old son
ol Yale President Kingman Brewster,
Jr., is nported in fair condition today
after Wldergoing surgery for a fractured
tkull.
Authorities at Massachwetts General
'Hospital said Wednesday Kingman
Brewster III was a passenger in a
car which struck a telephone plle in
Oak Bluffs earlier in the day.
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'.Archaeologists
Find Tustin
Indian Grounds
Archael~. both amateurs and pro-
fessionals, were swarming over an apart-
ment house site in the Lemon Heights
area north of Tustin today after attention
was called to an ancient Indian burial
ground on the land Wednesday.
Numerous graves, s o m e containing
complete skeletons, were uncovered by
bulldozers.
Roger J . Desautels, president of
Archaeological Research lnc. head·
quartered in Costa Mesa, said it ap-
peared that the site "'as a village that
covered about one and one-hair acres.
William Zink, president · of Zink
Construction Company in Tustin, the con.
tract.or on the site, cut down operations
and ~wed digging today.
DiSeiltels admitted the find was ~n-.
itially ~ported several monlhs ago ·btJt
nothing was done tG protect the site.
He eaid a similar site unearthed three
years ago during work on the San Dlego
Freeway dated 2,000 to 3,000 years ago.
Mrs. Pat Sperry, a member of the
Pacific Coast Archaeological Society and
a resident cf the neighborhood said she
noticed rome signs on the site a.bout
three years ago. She said she had been
following the bulldGzers around for two
weeks picking up whatever they turned
up.
5 Art Students
Granted Laguna
Scholarships
Five Orange CowHy <irt students will
be launched in their college art studies
with new scholarships established by
the Laguna Hills Art Association.
Funds accumulated by the association ,
along \vith memorial gifts and donations
by interested Leisure World residents
will provide five $300.a-year grants for
graduating high school seniors who have
been accepted as art majors in colleges
of their choice.
Seniors from high schools in Laguna,
Orange, San Clemente, Santa Ana and
Tustin are eligible to apply for the
grants.
Applicatio'n deadline is May 15 and
the winners, chosen by a jury of artists.
will be announced by June 1. Details
are available from high school counselors
or art teachers. The cash grants will
be deposited in the scholarship fund s
of the colleges selected by the winning
students.
Laguna Savings
Marks Birthday
r.1emtx>rs of civic organizations tn
Laguna Beach, San Clemente and Laguna
Niguel are helping the Laguna Federal
Savings and Loan Association celebrate
its 36th anniversary this month.
In Laguna Beach, members or the
Business and Professional Women's Club
sror\'t'd refreshments to villitor!I al the
firm's tr.sin office from I to 3 p.m.
tOOay and will continue through April 9.
At the same time . the San Clemente
Arts and Crarts Club will host a daily
open house al the rirm 's San Clemente
branch and llie Laaun3 Niguel Art
Association wl1\ perft'lrm lhe same
service for the Laguna Niguel branch.
Color reproductions of an oil painting
titled "Laguna 1926" by the l;i;te Joseph
Kleltsch will be gl~en to guests at the
open house even ts. TI1e orig inal oil ls
on display ln the 11ssociation's rotunda
art gallery In Laguna Beach.
Brig. Gen. Leslie Brown
Takes Reins of Air Group Participating In morning activity was
Gil Aguirre, ranch supe"rintendent who
has posed for MarlborG ads; Mrs. Alice
O'Neill Avery, a partner in O'Neill
Properties, and her hard-working rancher
sons, Jerome and Tony Moiso.
Nixon's 01.dest •
Relative Dies
Brig. Gen. Leslie E. Brown will take
command of El Toro's 3rd Marine
Aircraft Wing in ceremonies Friday
afternoon at the air station.
He is relieving Maj. Gen. Robert G.
Owens Jr. who is leaving for the Far
East where he will assume command
of the lst r.1arine Aircraft Wing.
Gen. Owens, who bas commanded the
wing fGr the last 22 months, bas served
as assistant wing ~ommander of the
lst Aircrafl Wing while in Vlelnam,
During World War It, he was
designated a Marine .Corps ace for
shooting down seven enemy1 planes. His
decorations Include the Navy CrGss, the
Legion of Merit with Combat .. V", the
Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air
Medal and the Purple Heart.
His successor has served at El TorG
for the past seven months as the assis-
t.ant wing commander. He begaa his
career as an enlisted man 31 years
ago and earned a batUefield commissiGn
during World War JI.
During the Korean War, he was the
first Marine tG fly a jet in combat
Flight Records
Found in Probe
Of Jet Rubble
and in Vietnam be flew more than
100 combat missions.
His decorations include the Silver Star,
the Legion or Merit with Combat "V",
the Distinguished Flying Cross, the
Bronze Star wilh Combat "V", the
Air Medal, the Vietnamese Cross ef
Gallantry and the Purple Heart.
Daily Pilot S81:s
Special Listing
Of Church Rites
Singled out for recognition and a
lifetime slot on the ranch by Mrs. Avery
were 63-year-old Cecil Martinez who was
Calley Sympathy
Calls Pour In
To White House
President Nixon"bas received thousands
ot telegrams and telephone calls ru.naing
almost 100..to-1 in !avor of clemency for
Lt. William Calley.
The DAILY Pn.or is planning a Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler 1aid
special stGry to run Wednesday an-in San Clemente that as of noon Pacific
nouncing special services scheduled by Time Wedaesday the White House was
Orange Coast churches and temples swamped w{th some 5,000 wires 8nd 1,500 marking~ primary days of Holy Week, telephGne calls.
Easter Sun?tty and the Pa~ver. Asked.,. whether Nixon would have the
The final deadline for all malerial power to give clemency, Ziegler replied,
to run in this story will be Monday ''that would not be a procedure that
at 5 p.m. Arly material received after would be taken at this time."
that time will probably not be included. He said the President could eventually
The items should include name of the church. address. service times. be involved in a Calley appeal, but not
pastor or rabbi's name, sermon and at this stage.
any other material essential to the Ziegler dec!Uted to give the president's
services. Please be brief. personal, reaction to the verdict or the
The arlicles can be submitted to ::iny sentencing to life imprisonment.
DAILY PILOT ollice. Addresses include: Asked whether it was an unusual born·
330 \V. Bay SL, Costa ~1esa: 2211 W. bardment of public sentime11t, Ziegler
Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach; 222 Forest said with a smile; ''It's a very large
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) -President
Nixon's first cousin. Roy B. Nixon, the
President's oldest living relative, died
jlere today at the age of 90.
Roy Nixon was the son of Hiram
Nixon. brother of the President's father,
Francis Anthony Nixon.
Roy died while sitling in a chair In
his home. The cause of death was not
immediately known. He suffered a severe
heart attack two years ago.
He iS' survived by his widow Dora,
and five children. Funeral services will
be held Saturday. ~
Shark Attack?,
No, Porpoises
Some surfers out for early mCJm.
ing rides Wday at Newport Pier
in Newport Beach. though.t they
were being attacked by sharks.
Police units were rushed to the
scene armed and prepared tG pro-
tect the surfers from the denizerui
of the deep.
"When we got there, we found
out there weren't any sharks at
all ," said U. Kelson McDaniel.
"It was just a small school of
porpoises having a good time."
Ave ... Laguna Beach ; 17875 Beach Blvd ., numbe~ of telegrams fGr the White House
McDaniel said the mammals
frolicked in the surf -charging
the surfers, then veering off -
far several minutes before mGving
on. National Transportation Safety Board Huntington Beach : 305 N. El CaminG to recei ve_ almost as high as the Pres~
examiners today probed the ruins of 1j=R,:eO;al~. ~S~ao~C~le~m;e;"~'·~· =======~id~e;"~tia~l~a~d~d~re~s~s.~"==;..-==~==~=============: a Boeing 7208 jet transporb. which claim· ll
cd the life of a Newport Beach man
'1'hcn it crashed \Vedncsday at Ontario
International Airport.
Richard E. Schumacher. 53, of 1501
tl1ariners Drive, u•as among five \Vestern
Airlines pilots killed when the plane
crashed in a fiery ball.
Funera l services for the Newport
Beach resident are pending today at
Pacific View Mortuary.
Federal examiners also checked the
flight recorder which was foun~ ~ndai:n
aged in the niible of the $5 m1!hon air-
craft which .Yas scattered ever 10,000
square yard area. It will be used to de-
termine what caused the crash.
The fatal crash at &:31 a.m. was
lhe first involving a commercial airlirf'er
in the 42-year history of Ontario Interna-
tional Airport.
The four-engine jet was on a routine
training n1ission "·hen it came do"'Jl in
a vineyard about 3,00> feet short <if
run"'ay 25.
The victims. all \Vestern pilots w i th
al least seven years experience, were
t:tking one of the airline 's periodic pro-
ficiency check flights. The dead w e r e
Raymond E. Benson, 49, Palo:ii Verdes
Estates; Schumacher; llenry L. Coffin,
:\9, Pa\O!f Verdes: Kent M. Dobson, 32,
Canoga Park; and Harold A. McMillan.
48. South Gate.
Paralyzed Man Saved
Front Ravine Bottom
l{AYWARD (UPI) -A 21·year-old
pAralyzed youth was rescued Wedne.1day
after ~pending 12 hours at the bottom
of a ra\·ine l't'lllng for help.
Jpffrey Langley was en roule to m11ll
letters late Tuesday when his wheeJchair
rn!!~d do\\'n an1 old hiklnir trail and
(ll'('r a 25-foot embankment into Sulphur
C'ft'ek Ravine . A passing high school
!l!tldent finAlly heard Langley's cries &nd
"ummoned firemen, who hauled the youth
to safety in an hour.Jong operation.
)
luxurious spring down sofas •
Thia h1nd10m• Sofa w11 designad to 9ive you thl ultim1te in 111ting comfort with dac:ron
1nd down hick pillows, dHp spring down Hit cu1hion1 enveloped in down and f11th1rs in
rwo foam-filled arm pillows. Choosa from a wide Hlection of fine fabrics.
0 8' length, reg. $599 NOW 399.
Ynur 1nvoritt ditigntr wi U bt happv to c:sist uou
H.J.GARRETf fURNrfU~E
PROFESSIONAL OpM Mon., Tluws. • Fri. hn. Jb~~ AH~~~~~ ~~~~F.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARG! 6~6·0215 M6·027'
• I'"'(,-•
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7
I
•
•
I TodaY's Final Laguna Deaeh
' EDITION J
THORSDAY, APRI~ l, 1971 TEN COOS
(
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIK>RNIA • VOL b4, NO. 78, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES
Lagun~ School Board Hears Growth Report
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of IM O.U' "Ml lt1H
Based on the present growth rate .
the Laguna Beach schools could operate
with existing facilities until Hm. ac·
cording to a special report presented
Tuesday to the school board.
. The growth anatysils was prepared by
the staff of the Laguna Beach Unified
School District under the direction of
Superintendent William Ullom. In making
the analysis, Dr. Ullom not only made
his own predictions of actual stud~nt
increases. but also included for com·
parison past predictio[lll made by hired
consulting finru;,
Board or trustee mf!mben lauded the
school district staff for the high quality
of the report.
"'I'be city would pay $.50,000 for this
type o( study. and not get as good
a job," Dr. Norman Browne told Ullom.
· The growth predictions for school
enrollment a~ based on U'le three per·
cerit yeBily growth rate which the district
has experienced for the past 18 years,
Ullom said.
Using a serii! of graphs and tables
to explain the implications of this three
percent increase, the report said the
three elemtntary schools will not reach
capacity enrollment of 2,050 students
until 1983. Likewise. Thur rt on
Intermediate schQol, which now haa 455
students, will be filled ~ 198$ with
slightly over 700 students.
Laguna Beech High School, which now
has just over 1,000 students, will reach
its-1.350 capacity in 1979. However; In-
struction superintendent Dr, Robert
Reeves said another 500 students could
be "squeezed in" by having eight periods
rather than seven per day and by wiing
all available space, such u: having
classes in the 1uditorium.
The report noted the past studies C">f
district growth bas been ' ' t o t a I I y
unrealistic" in I.heir predictions. The 1959
Laguna Beach General Plan predicted
a atude::t population of 14.7QO by 1990,
making It oectssary to have 13 elemen-
tary, four intermediate and three high
schools. Ullom 'a report forecast only
5,221 students by 1990.
Another study. done by Melbo and
Associates In 1961 (for the district).
projected an enrollrnent of almost 10,000
students by 1970, which the writer of
tbe report called •·conservaUve." The
report based ill prediction on total
ore eac
Thief Nets
Five~Rings
In Laguna
Laguna Beach delcctives are in-
vestigating the theft from a jewelry
designer's studia Wednesday of five
custom-made &old rings. each stt with
a different type of rare diamond.
Authorities said the (ive rings, valued
at $5,300, were taken at about 11:45
a.m. Wednesday from the LitUe Ingot,
• small shop in the Ari Center at
145ll S. Coast Highway. Owner Heri Hoff
told investigators two men had come
into his store and while he was waiting
on one, the second apparently lifted
the lid on a glass display case and
removed the rings.
Hoff , vislbly saddened by the loss
of the rare stones. described the suspect
to police and provided officers with color
photographs of four of the five rings.
He said he did not notice the theft
until several minutes after the suspect
had left his shop, as he was distracted
while showing a necklace to the second
man, who later was questioned by police.
He described one of the rings as having
an "explosion of ma rq u is -sh ap~d
diamonds." Another was a rare cinnamon
pink diamond set in a gold floral desi~n.
A third ring \\'as described as having
seven elongated or rectangular diamonds
set on end in the gold pattern.
Salt Creek Open
On Trial Basis
Salt Creek beach will be open t.o the
public on a trial basis from Saturday
to April 18.
Through an agreement arranged by
county supe rvisor Ronald Caspers the
public wilt be a\loy,·e<f to use the much
debated strand between Mona rch Bay
ind Dana Point from 1 a.m. to 7 p.m.
each day during the Easter vacalion
period.
Supervisors approved the agreement
Wednesday with Avco Com mu TI 11 y
Developers Inc. owners of the property.
A four-acre dirt parking lot on the inland
side of Coast Highway with an access
path to thl!: btach will be graded by
Avco.
Orange Coast
Weather
It may not be quite ao warm
along the Coast Friday, but the
rooming fog will still be with us.
Look for lemperalures in the 67
to 77-degree range,
INSIDE TODAY
A. modern Flytng Dutchmon.
in 1he form of a .sunken GtmUJn
s11bmarine. reportedly threattm
Florida Coa.~t 1oith. its deadly
'Vorld \Var II cargo. See itory,
Page 5, ·
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PRESIDENT .IN HELICOPTER SURVEYS NEW BEACH THAT IS TO BECOME PUBLIC
Are1 Is South of w,stern Whit, House; Buildings Shown Are to Become Public
Lagu~a Gals Outlive Guys?
Census Count Shows Women Outnumber Men in Town
The theory that women outlive men
is borne out by 1970 census figures
for the Laguna Area .
In the general population. women
outnumber men by only a slight margin,
but that margin increases as age levels
go up. with elderly women &utnumbering
elderly men by fuon! than· two to one.
The census gives Laguna Beach a
lotal population of 14,550, of whom 6.896
are male and 7,654 remale. 1 difference
of a mere 758.
However, in the age bracket of 65
er over, the census takers countti:d cnly
886 Laguna men, as opposed to 1,736
women .
The plethora ol women, especially
elderly women la ct1nsiderably more
marked iii the Laguna Hills area. which
encompasses Leisure World.
Of a total Laguna Hills population of
13,676, the cen1us takers counted 8,149
females and 5,527 males, the ladies
leading by a tidy, 2,622.
In the over~ bracket the difference
was even more pronounced, with a count
of 3,834 males and 5,638 femalts .
Both areas are predominantly white,
the census figures show. Laguna bas
a count of 90 Negro inhabitants and
170 of other non-wbite races.
In Laguna Hills. the census man
counted only one Negro and 23 members
of other non-white races.
Laguna has 7,628 housing units for
For~e Beefed Up
Laguna Readies for Easter Week
Laguna Beach police will go onto the wilh other beach communities .
UJUal l:Z.bout Euler Wffk 5hilta begin· In earlier years it was customary
nln& thil weekend, bul the Ion( working to beef up the locaJ police force ~th
hours may be reduced if the holiday Sheriff's ·deputies for Easter Week, but
ttJTIUI out to be as peaceful as anlicipated. this has not been deemed nectasiry Police Capt Frank Schopen said this week that local authorities "don 't an· lately. Last year the holiday was so
ticipale anything big" !or Easter Week peaceful 12-hour police shifts were
this year, but the force will 11:0 onto canceled in mid·week.
extended hoUrs just as a routine precau· The fact that colleges and different
lion. school di!tricts are on varying spring
Easler Week In Laguna has been vacation schtdults this year is helping
r@latlvely quiet for !hr. pR~l few years. to spread out the holiday traffic, Schopen
Strict enforcement of curfew and other noted.
rule~ and reluctance or land!nrds to Promotion of an tasler "happening"
rent to unchaperoned 1tudenl groups in the Death Valley area also is e1pe.cted
have helped CQOI the Easter holJQ!L to ease Ult preuure on coa3tal ~
f'vl!:r that once plagueJ Laguna alOila: · munltles.
its residenl and transient population,
the census takers noted. and about half
of these are owner-occupied. Of units
occupied during the 1970 census. 3,388
were occupied by owners and 3,209 by
renters.
Only 99 of these housing units were
found to be deficient .in plumbing, the
remainder chec]tjng out as equipped with
"all plumbing facilities."
Value of owner-0ecupied homes in
Laguna Beach averaged an impressive
$38,600. Only four homes in. the com·
munity were valued at less than $10,000
and the largest number. ·1,133, c1me
into the $35,000 to $49,999 category.
By comparison. the median value of
&wner-occupled homes in rnglewood is
shown at $25,000 and at La Habra at
$24.900. However, the La Crescenta·Flint-
ridge dislrict outstrips Laguna · in hous·
ing with a median value of $43,400.
Sur;prisi~ly, average rents p.aid in
Laguna are not e1tessive. averaging
$144. compared With· 111.l in Jnglll:Wood,
$134 in La .Habra, $201 in La erescenta
.00 t:2M la Laguna. Hills. More lhlln
300 units in Laguna rent .for Jess U\aD
$80, the figures reveal.
Police Chief Hunting
' Wise Guy on Radio
, DALLAS. Tel'. (AP) -Police Chief
Frank Dyton used the polict radio
network Wednesday night to announce
to offleers that he had promoted Director
William Fulgham to assistant chief of
the department
A voict from out on the network
replied : "frod help U! aiL'' Dyson,
furious, ordered an immediate. starch
for tht culprit. , r . .
·-~ '--..:;.. ~ ,. ~ ~ .---='"' •4 "-•• ---~J....·~ . ., -------'• -. . ... ,, . ·· .. · ~~ . --·"
''saturation" of the land with a popula-
tion or 75,000 housed in "multi-storied
apartment buildings of considerable
height."
Although the district will not grow
at a phenomenal rate, Ullom's report
did note that the increase could be
greater than the annual three percent
of past ~ars. He said one indicator
of art increase in growth was that in
the last 10 years annual school enroll-
ment increases have been about 50 per-
cent greater than the increase of new
dwelling units.
In discussing the report. school trustees
s
voiced concern about finding open land
on which to build new schools. Based
on the growth figures , the board in.
dicated another elementary school would
be needed in the next 10 yeara and
probably another high school.
But board president Larry Taylor noted
that in 1958, the high .school waa: only
supposed to last for five more yea.rs
and he urged caution in hurrying to
construct a new facility . He alao pointed
out that a new high school would cost
about $7 million.
een
Nixon Tells Vast
Federal Program
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of !Pit D•llV 1"1111 SllH
\Vith 11 stroke of his pen Wednesday
President Nixon &hook the sanctity of
the Camp Pendleton lands, operiing up
six miles of beaches and more than
3,000 acres of a prime valley for public ....
And liter tbe chief executive declartcl
the iandmark deci.alen ln f•YM .of open
apace wat only lh1 bet.n: of a nit
federal -program for uninC .,of
wrpllll SlfVemment real utatt.
The affected area ill within 1iJ:bt of
the Watern w.hite House.
The blockbuster decision Involves a
covet.ed enliat'ed man's beach clab and
a private surfing club-long the object
or criticism, along With the shoreline
in front of the San Onofre nuclear
generating complex and the new San
Onofre Bluffs State Beach south of ·that.
Beslde11 the prime coa'stal
land-described by the President as ''one
of the country'.s last great awimming
Desert Rock
Fest Danger~
Revealed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A federal of·
fl cial said today a planned rock festival
in the California desert could cause both
human suffering and environmental
damage.
The caution came from J. R. Penny,
California director for the U.S. Bureau
of Land Management which is the
landlord for most of the Southern
California desert region .
Penny said BLM officials had been
advised that 300.000 to 500,000 young
people might gather in the Panamint
Valley west of Death Valley for the
festival over Easter weekend.
Penny said Inyo County officials had
obtained a temporary restraining order
in an effort to halt the f~tlval, but
that neither the county nor the BLM
had the forces to stop large numbers
of people from going into the area .
Some young people. from as far away
as New York and Chicago. alttady bad
begun camping on the scene, BLM of·
ficiala said today . Law officers and
federal officials were lo meet in the
Inyo County town or Independence to
map strategy.
Penny cautioned that young people
risked a thre,t to , their health" by at~
tending the festival , if it come1 off
as ph1nned. He cited pdor aceess to
th.e arta over 25 miles of poor desert
roach, blowing ' sand, extreme tem-
peratures and the lack of water and
shelter. ' i
"Tbe 'lheer numbers~ tH people also
pose a real threat to the fragile
ecological balance of the desert ttseU,"
PeMy said.
The festival is planned on 1&-IO-acre
plot of private land near ' the h~l
ghost mining town of 8aU1r1t, ·Penny
said, "but m fact would be larg11:ly
held on public land because of the
numbers of people expected."
The inju9ctlon was against I b e
landlord , a promoter ldti:nUfltcl only 111
"Zamora" and 15 John Does.
Penny 1ald the nearest hoapital is
&o miles away and "obtaining trtatment
for ill or Injured persons would be
virtually impossible If a orUl'lh 1imih1r
to thOMJ of 1lm\11r finsuvals at
Woodstock, N.Y. or Altamtlnt, Calif.,
'I\' ere to deve.lop."
·.
beaches" -the directive covers 3,000
acres of San Mateo Valley immediately
south of the San Clemente City limits
and the Orange-San Diego County line.
The new public beach .will start about
l,000 feet soutn of the Presl.denUal com-
plex, boiJnded downcoast by the county
boundary. The Treaties beach will be
the buffer zoiie requee'ted by tbt Secret
Service-a mrman'1 ·land for aecurity
purp>m.
Immediately aouth of that area thl
bot11dary begins for the new public
beach ..
Almml adjacent lo that boundary !1
the enllsltd man's club. a complex (If
$P.an]sll-style buildings and permanent
beach use structures -all of which will
lie given to the state of 'California for re-
creational or office use as It sees flt.
The San Onofre Surfing Club area
is next, situated on a point well known
for its excellent surf.
· The next downcoast facility Is the
San Onofre Nuclear reactor Complex,
with il!i · one existing station (1-.fo more
are proposed for next door). The reactor
land area will be closed to the public.
but the shoreline seaward of the towering
sea wall will be open.
• Direct1y south of that complex: Iles
the line where the new San 011ofre
Bluffs State Beach begins. It will be
dedicated Saturday.
That section, leased to the 1tate of
California last year after tough negotia·
Lions with the Marine Corp!, Is 3.S
miles long.
Computing lhl!: 3.5 miles of that beach
and blufftop with· the new areas opened
up by the Presidential order. the length
of the new public beach will be six
miles long-ex;actly one-third of the en-
tire Camp Pendleton coastline -which
stretches 18 miles from San Clement.e
to Oceanside.
The upland area involved In the
declaration of surplus is acreage known
as San Mateo Canyon, an area used
for ' years as leased agricultural land.
Chrisliariitos Creek runs the length of
the valley, sometimes flowing to the
sea during wet months.
The property, under terms of thl!: ex.
ecutive order, would have to remajn
available for suitable public uses. said
the President's Domestic Po 11 c y
Coordinator John D. Erlichmanm.
The initial offer will be to the Stale
of Califor.-ia and the city of San
Clemente. Curiously, the county of San
Diego, where the land in question lies,
was not mentioned in the offer.
No charge would be made If either
or both of the named eritlties took. the
territory. , .
IfJ neither decidts to make· It.
Erlich.man expfained. ·then the federal
JOVernment wouki sell It to private
interests and plact the money into a
special trust fund to pay for purcha!es
of other land in the United States suitable
for publiC' recreational uses. ...
Man Hit by Nudie;
Files Huge Lawsuit
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPl) -Alvin
Glasky says he was hit by a fall ing
nude and wants $403,TOO in damages
for internal and external injurle1. Gla!ky
filed a suit in di.str ict court againat
the Stardu!t Hotel on UM! Las Vegaa
''strip."
lie said he WAS at the "Lido de
Paris" show April 5, 1969, when a toplti:M
showgirl was. lowered from the celling
In the gambling 8pa 's show room. Thi
suit uid the toplti:u show1lrl fell from
the plo~m 1ndia111led-on GlllK)'.
t ---
•
-
•
. J OM. Y PllOT SC
SD Freeway
Widenit1g
Begins Soon
A freeway widening project along the
~ Diep Freeway near San Juan
Capistrano will begin six months ahead
of schedule, according to James A. Moe,
state director of public works.
· The project calls for the widening
"Of a 1.5-mile section from six to eight
lanes between Dt La Camino Estrella
ln San Oemente to Camino Las Ramblas
in San Juan Capistrano.
The estimated cost of the construclion
.is $4.4 million.
The project will be paid for wittt
part of MO million the. Federal Highway
Administration made available to the
st.ate this week. The funds, which are
matched by the state, will be used on
State Highway construction la areas
such as Orange County. where a high
unemployment rate exist!.
The projects funded with these monies
had already been Identified by the state
for construction, Moe said. Funda
earmarked for these projects will be
used tn turn to advance other projects
now further off in the construction
·schedu1e.
The San Juan project was scheduled
for advertising in January, 1972. Bids
will now be sought in June of this
·year.
In addition to the freeway widening,
the project includes widening of Pacific
Coast Highway from its connection with
the freeway to the Camino Capistrano
undercrosaiDg and construction of an
1nterchange to connect the highway with
Camino Las Ramblas.
I
Ralp9 Williams
Property Carve
Begins in Court
An Orange C o u n t y Superior Court
judge today began what Is expected to be
a two-week carve up of the Ralph Wil·
llams financial empire.
Both IJdu of the divorce action fil~
by the multi-rnilllooaire auto dealer's
wife Aanabelle ended courtroom testi·
mon:y Wednesday and agreed to allow
Judge Walter H. St:tlner to rule on re-
mainlng issues in the Willia.ms dis.solu·
tion.
He wu asked by Mrs. WJlliarm, 38,
al Linda hie bl Newpc!tl Beach, to , ..
ject an agreement which giveJ het $4,IXKI
a mmfb persona.I support and $500 a
monlh each for the couple's two children,
Jamea, 11, and Katherine, e.
That agreemeii. was condemn!<f by
Mrs. Wiiliams' ~ey during the trial
u "unrealistic." Judge Steiner was
urged to Include more generous prov!·
sions pending a setUement that could
give Mrs. Williams half of the !Ubsta1·
tial estate.
Assets listed by Williams in the court
file Include his Ford dealerships at En·
cino and Clovis, property holdings
throughout the Sbuth1and ,and the COU·
ple's $27S,000 home in NeWPQrt. Willi~ and his wife n\8rr:ied March
t, 1957 and parted Dec. 4, 1959. Mr1. Wil·
llama bu custody of the two children.
Yale President's Son
Hurt in Auto Crash
BOSTON (UPI) -The 23-year-Old son
of Yale President Kingman Brewster,
Jr., is reported in fair condiUon today
after undergoing surgery for a fractured
skull.
Authorities at Massachusetts General
Hospital &aid Wednesday KI n gm an
Brewster 01 was a passenger in a
car which struck a telephone pole in
Oak Bluffs earlier in the day.
OJ,ANel COflT
DAILY PILOT
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•
Tll'""'1. April ~ 1971
DAILY ,ILOT ,hoN br ..... ,. D\llttt
W f'St 'Relived
Ct;t.ttle Branded in Viejo
I
B.r-BARllAl\A DUAl\TE
Of "" °'41Y '!Mt S1'1t
Early Wednesday morning as U1e sun
began to warm geoUy sloping hills still
green from tipring rains, the sound of
a lone btrd mingled with the shrill cry
ol a cowboy.
Following the sound to the hills to
the south, spectators watebld several
dot.s multiply as trainhands from Rancho
Mission Viejo herded cows and calves
toward corrals nettled 1n a canyon lined
with r;hade trees and a long-dry creek
bed.
And lhe old West came to life again
-almost within earshot o[ traffic travel·
ing the San DiegG. Freeway to the west
and Orteg• Highway to the north.
But" civililation seemed Jar away as
more than 500 cows and calves halted
in mldstride, en route to corrals, to
record a guttural protest at a ~up
of photographers and reporters pertiled
on the canyon hillside.
In a tradition practiced ror more than
JOO years on the 50,000-acre spread,
cewboys soon were busy roping, bran·
ding , castrating and dehomlng more than
200 calves.
Cows bellowed at their offspri,ng and
offspring bellowed back as they were
wrestled to fhe ground for a two-minute
session ending with a king-size shot of
antibiotics and vitamins.
born on lhe ranch and laMOI with the
best of them, ind Joe Tew who bas
been with the operation 40 years.
Calves from O'Neill Ranch. mainly
a steer operation, will be weaned in
July and shipped to feedlot!l for 200
dax1 to gain market weight.
CatUe buyers for the new herd altea.dY:
have selected Jots, Aguirtt disclosed.
And in the true tradition of the Wes!,
buyfhg and selling is done by oral a~
ment.
President Meets
With Aerospace
Industry Chiefs
President Nixon met thiJ morning with
more than a dozen leaders in th•
aerospace industry and members Of lhi
scientific community In a concerted ef•
fort to St.ave off the massive unemploy·
ment which has hlt that profession in
recent months.
No immediate results · Qf tbe meeting
v.·ere available at mid-'rnorning from Nix·
on aides.
CALVES BELLOW FOR THEIR MOTHERS ANO MOMS BELLOW BACK CURING ROUNDUP
Tradition Practtced For Mor• Thin 100 Years Continues As It Did in Old West
Cowboys, including movie personality
Monte ~1onlana who joins the roundup
each year, swung lassos over hind legs
of game 300-pounders and dragged them
to small bands of wranglers.
In a quick ceremony, a hot branding
iron stamped the ranch logo on the
calf's rump, an ear was clipped for
identification, horns were lopped off by
a hacksaw, the castrated area was
smeared with creosote, and the unhappy
youngster disappeared into the herd for
motherly consolation .
Included in the group which met -with
the President in his San Clemente oWce
were members of large western colleges
and universities. manufacturers, and
representatives of the hard-hit aerospace
industry itself.
Dr. Ruben.'Me.Uler, president o( TRW
Systems, which owns a plant near San
Clemente, was among those attending.
Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson
sat at the President's side during the
talks. Archaeologists
Find Tustin
I ndia1t Grounds
Archaelog.ists, botn amateurs and pro·
fessionals, were swarming over an apart-
ment house site in the Lemon Heights
area north of Tustin today after attenlion
was called to an ancient Indian burial
ground on the land Wednesday.
Numerous graves, 1 om e C<1ntaining
complete &keJetons, were uncovered by
bulldozers.
Roger J. DeSautels, president of
Archaeological Research Inc. head·
quartered in Costa Mesa, said it ap-
peared that the slt.e wu a village ttlal
covered about one and one-hall acres.
William Zink, president of Zink
Construction Company in Tustin, the con-
.tractor on &be site, cut down operation.!
and allowed digging today. 1 Dt$1Utel! admitted the find was 1n·
ltially rtported several months ago but
nothing was done tG protect the site.
He said a similar site unearthed three
years ago during work on the San Diego
Freeway dated 2,000 to 3,000 years ago.
Mn. Pat Sperry, a member of the
Pacific C.O.st Archaeological Society and
a resident of the neighborhood said she
noticed some signs on the site about
three years ago. She said she had been
following the bulldozers around for two
weeks picking up whatever they turned
up.
5 Art Students
Granted Laguna
Scholarships
Five Orange County art students will
be launched in their college art studies
with new scholarships established by
the Laguna Hills Art Association.
Funds accumulated by the association,
along with memorial gilts and donations
by interested Leisure World ·residents
will provide five $300-a-year grants for
graduating high school seniors who have
been accepted as art majors in colleges
of their choice.
Seniors from hi&h schools Jn Laguna,
Orange, San Clement.!, Santa Ana and
Tustin are eligible to apply for the
grants.
Application de.ad.line is May JS and
the winners, chosen by a jury of artists,
will be .&Mounced by June 1. Details
are available from high school'counselors
or art teachera. The cash grants wHI
be deposited in the scholarship funds
of the colleges selected by the v.·inning
students.
Laguna Savings
Marks Birthday
Members of ci.vic organizations in
Laguna Beach, San Clemen te and Laguna
Niguel are helping the Laguna Federal
Savings and Ulan Association celebrate
its 36th &Miversary th.la month.
In Lagun1 Beach, members of the
Business and Professional \\i'omen·s Club
served refreshments to visitors at the
firm's main office from I to 3 p.m.
today and will conUnue through April 9.
At the same time, the San Clemente
Arta aod Crafts Club "'Ill host a claily
open house at the flnn 's San Clemente
branch and the Laguna Niguel Art
Association will perform the same
service. for the. Laiuna Niguel branch.
Color reproductions ol an 011 p1inling
titled "Laguna 1926" by the h•te Joseph
Kleitsch will be civen to (UC5ts Ill the
open house events. The. original oil is
on diapley in the assocint1on'1 rotunda
art aaller:y in Laaun• Beach.
. .... -
Brig. Gen. Leslie Brown .
Takes Reins of Air Group Participating,in morning activity wrui
Gil Aguirre, ranch superintendent whG
has posed for Marlboro ads ; Mrs. Alice
O'Neill Avery, a partner in O'Neill
Properties, and her hard-working rancher
sons, Jerome and Tony Moiso.
Nixon's Oldest
Relative Dies
Brig. Gen. Leslie E. Brown will take
command of El Toro's 3rd Marine
Aircraft Wing in ceremonieJ Friday
' afternoon at the air station.
He is relieving Maj. Gen. Robert G. -, OWens Jr. who ls leaving for µie Far
East where he will assume command
of the 1st Marine Airccaft Wing.
Gen. Owens, who has commanded the
wing for the last 22 month!, has served
as assistant wing commander flf tbe
1st Aircraft Wing while in Vietnam.
During World War II, he was
de.sipated a Marine Cgrps ace for
shooting do~ seven enemy pla!le~. His
decorations Include the Navy Cross, the
Legion of Merit with Combat "V", ttle
Distinguished Flying Cross, tbe Air
Medal and the Purple Heart.
His successor has served at El Toro
for the past seven months as the assls·
lant wing commander, He begaa his
career as an enlisted man 31 years
ago and earned a battlefield commission
during World War II.
During the Korean War. he was the
first Marine to fly a jet in combat
Flight Records
Found in Probe
Of Jet Rubble
National TransportaUon Safety Board
exiiminers today probed the ruins of
a Boeing 7208 jet transport which claim·
('d the Ufe of a Newport Beach man
\1·hen it crashed \\i'ednesday at Ontario
lnternational Airport.
Richard E. Schumacher. 53, of 1501
Mariners Drive, was among five Western
Airlines pilots killed when the plane.
crashed In a fiery ball.
Funeral servitfs for the Newport
"Beach resident are pending today at
Pacific Vie'v Mortuary.
Federal examiners also checked the
night recorder which was foun~ ~ndam·
aged in the rubble of the SS m1lhon air-
craft v..tiich was scattered over 10,000
square yard area. It will be used to de-
termine what caused the crash.
The fatal crash at 6:31 a.m. was
the first involving 111 commercial airliner
in the 42-year history of Ontario lnterna·
tional Airport.
The four.engine jet was on a routine
training mission when it came do'\\'Tl in
a viney1rd about 3,000 feet short of
runway 25.
The victims, all \\i'esle.rn pilots w i I h
el least seven years expirlence, were
taking one of the airline's periodic pr~
ficiency check fiights. The dead w e. r e
Raymond E. Benson. 49, Palos Verdes
Estates; Schumacher; Henry L. C.Offln,
39, Palos Verdes: Kent ~I. Dobson. 32,
Canoga Park; and Harold A. McMillan,
48, South Gate.
Paralvzed Man Saved ,
F1·om Ravine Bottoni
ltAYWARD (UPI ) -A 21·)'ear-0ld
paralyied youth wa1 rescued Wednesday
after spending 12 hour1 at the bottom
of 1 ravine yellinR for help. '
Jelfrey Langley was en route lo mall
letters late Tuesday when his wheelchair
rolled down 111n <lid hiking trail and
ovrr 1 25-loot embankment i.nlo Sulphur
Creek Bavine. A passing high rtehoo l
student finally htard Lanaley·s crle.1 and
summoned liremtn, who hauled the youth
to a11.fety In an hour.Jong operation.
and In Vietnam he flew more than
100 combat missioM.
His decorations Include the Silver Star,
the Legion ol Merit with Combat "V",
the Distinguished Flying Cross, the
Bronze Star with Combat "V", the
Air Medal, the Vietnamese Cross tf
Gallantry and the Purple Heart.
Daily Pilot Sets
Special Listing
Of Churcl1 Rites
The DAILY PILOT is planning a
special story to run Wednesday an·
nouncing special services scheduled by
Orange Coast churches and temples
marking the. primary days of Holy Week,
Easter Sunday and the Passover.
The final deadline for all material
to run in this story will be h1onday
at 5 p.m. Any material received after
that time will probably not be included.
The items should include name of
the church, address, service times,
pastor or rabbi's name, sermon and
any other material essenthd to the
services. Please be brief.
The arlicles can be submitted to any
DAILY PILOT offiei!. Addresses include:
330 W. Bay St., C.Osta. ~fesa; 2211 \V.
Balboa Blvd., Ne\vport Beach; 'til Forest
Ave., Laguna Beach: 17875 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach: 305 N. El Camino
Real, San Clemente.
Singled out for recognition and a
1ifetime slot on the ranch by Mrs. Avery
were 63-year-old Cecil Martinez who was
Call.ey Sympathy
Calls Pour In
To White House
President Nii:on has received thous4lnds
of telegrams and telephone calls runalng
almost 100.to-l in favor of clemency for
Lt. William Calley.
... Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said
in San Clemente that as of noon Paciiic
Time Wed•esday the White House was
swamped with some Sl!OO wires and 1r500
telephone calls.
Asked wh~her Nixon would have the
power to give clemency, Ziegler replied,
"that would not be a procedure that
would be taken Bl this time."
He said the President could eventually
be involved in a Cal!ey appeal, but not
at'this stage.
Ziegler decli11ed to give the president's
personal reaction to lhe verdict or the
sentencing to life imprisonmMit.
Asked whether it was an unusual born·
bardment of public sentiment, Ziegler
said v.•ith a smile : "It's a \'Cry large
number of telegrams for the \Vhite House
to receive -almost as high as the Pres·
· idential address."
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) -President
Nixon's first cousin, Roy B. Nixon, the
President's oldest living relative, died
here today at the age of 90.
Roy Nixon was the Son of Hiram
Nixon, brother of the President's father,
Francis Anthony Nixon.
ijoy died while sitting in a chair ln
his home. The cause of death was not
.. immediately known. He suffered a sever•
heart attack two years ago.
He is survived by his widow Dora,
and five children. Funeral servicu 'ft'ill
be held Saturday.
Shark Attack?,
No, Porpoises '
Some surfers out for early morn-
ing rides today at Newport Pier
in Newport Beach thought they
were being attacked by sharks.
Police units were rushed to the
scene armed and prepared to pr~
tect the surfers from the denizens
of the deep. ~
"When we got there, we found
out there weren't any sharlu at
all," said Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
"It was just a small school or
porpoises having a good time."
McDaniel said the mammals
frolicked in the surf -charging
the surfers. then veering° off -
for several minutes before moving
on. '
luxurious sprip.g down sofas
This h•ndsome Sofa was designed to give you the ultim1t1 in seating comfort with daeron
ind down blck pillows, deep spring down s.eat cushions enveloped in down and feathers in
wo fo1rn-fllled arm pillows. Choose from a wide nlection of fine fabrics.
81 length, reg. $599 NOW 399.
Your favoritt. dtiiantr wi II be happ~ to cssi.tt ~ou
H ,J. GARRtfT f u RN lllJ ~~HARBOR BLVD.
PROFESSIONAL Opt• Moo., Thun. & ffl. (v,., COSTA MESA, CALIF .
INTERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARG! M6 ·0275 646.027 6
I
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San Clemente -' Capistran~ EDITION
VOL M, NO. 78 , 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. -,
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THURSDAY, APRI~ I, 1971
Today's Final -
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
City, State Surprised Over Beach Giveaway
Reacllon from the city of San
Clemente and the slate of California
to Pre11ident Nixon·s offer of six miles
of new beach and an entire valley
amounted to surprise And glee followed
1w1ftly by some vex.ing questions
City Manager Ken Carr termed the
offer of the 3.000.acre San Malec Canyon
to San Clemente an "exciting idea .·•
But be.cause of oo prior knowledge of
the Presidenlial order offering the prime
Marine base land. Carr could nol
elaborate much farther.
The offer from the Federal Govern~
ment is good only if either the ell
or the stale use the land for publi
use.
As for the state reaction to the offer
of the canyon and the huge chunk of
Camp Pendleton ~ach, it is one uf
pleasuit mixed with a tinge of bitterness
and uncertainty.
What the President has done, said
one top state parks official, is give
a large chunk of obviously primfl beach
land to an agency whott budget is being
decimated year by year.
"It's wonderful, but. .. " said Mervyn
Filipponi, a state parks consull.llnt from
Sacramento. •
"All of a sudden we have six miles
of beach, some very attractive buildings
and absolutely no money from the
governor to use in it.a development,"
he said.
ore eac
He stressed the irony of new windfalls
of land from the federal government
while state officials are cutting th~ park!
and recreation budget to the bare bone.
State parks spokesmen repeatedly
have said that money does not exist
for the initial 3.5-mile San Ono[re bluffs
beach .
In fact. ne;i:l week's seven-day in·
augural UM! ol the beach is the, only
way to raise enough funds to keep
the park open.
Campers are being charged fees to
use the virgin beach-the funds to go
into a special accounl le cover expenses.
If the state will have its fiscal pro-
blems with the sur miles of beach. San
Clemente would find itself, ;ippArenl!y,
in a heavyweight tangle of legalities
if it were lo accept the San ~leteo
Canyon land.
Carr explained that under federal law,
annexations of land across county lines
are forbidden. ·
s
"If we were to try to annex the
land, even for public use," Carr U•
plained ," then ii would take an act
of the State Legislature to make it legal."
Judicial boundaries, and county boun•
daries would have to be changed a.t
\l'ell .
Both Carr and Filipponi said the news
of Lhe President's decision camg as an
"absolute, total 11urprise."
een
DC Marcl1 1-Nixon Tells Vast
To Support
Calley Seen
Federal Program
By United Press tnter11allonaJ
Three local draft boards resigned. at
least three mass riiarches on Wasbingl cn
v.·ere be.ing planned, and the White House
was swamped \l'ith telegrams and
telephone call! as Americans ell:pressed
their feelings about Lhe conviction of
Lt. William Calley.
Calley was convicted of t h e
premeditated murder of 22 Vietnamese
civilians at My Lai. He was sentenced
Wednesdiy to life in prison.
Reaction con tinued to mount around
the nation as Calley wailed in the ft.
Benning stockade for a transfer to
federal prison.
The While House, according to Pres.!
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. had receiv·
ed more than 5,000 wires and 1,500
telephone. calls concerning the conviction.
Thl!y were running almost 100-1 in favor
of clemency for Calley, he 11aid.
Jn St. Petersburg. Fla., real e11t11te
man Walter J. Dilbeck said Wednesday
he and 100 ''coordinators'' around the
nation were laying plans for a mass
march oil Washington July 4 on behalf
of all Gts charged in the P.1y Lai incident.
"We intend to havf one million people
In Washington that day and we intend
In stay there until these men are relea s·
ed ." Dilbeck said.
E. Thomas Cammarota, commander
of the Pennsylvania American Legion,
called on President Nixon to heed those
urging clemency. ··u President Nix.on sees fi! not to
listen to the lhousands of telegrams
that already have been sent to him.
we are prepared to march on
\Vashington ." Cammarota said.
Robert Cadle, a retired Army sergeant
who says the verdict was "a lol of
bull." said Wednesday he and a "free
Ca!ley Committee" with branches In all
states but Hay.·aii will lead 50,000 people
in a march on Washington after a petition
drive.
"This whole thing has boomeranged
1\1 out ol proportJon." Cadle said. "Peo-
ple call in and they cu.ss. cuss. cuss
Are they mad. I've never seen anything
like this verdict in my life."
All. lhe members of local Selective
Service Boards in Elizabethlon. Tenn ..
end Athens and Blairsville. Ga .. resigned.
Members of the Quitman. Ga .. board
wired Nixon they would not induct any
more men.
~
• • ., ' . 't l • f: '" ., ; '
'o
By JOHN VALTERZA
or ,.,. DlllY l"llel Sti ll
With a stroke of his pen \Vednesday
Presidenl Nixon shook the sanctity of
the Camp Pendleton lands, opening up
six miles of beaches and more than
3,000 acres of a prime valley for public
use.
And later the chief executive declared
the landmark decision in favor of open
space was only the beginning of a vast
• . federal program for housecleaning or
sµrp)us goveriimenl real estate.
The affected area. i.s .within •i&hL o! ~ '!'estt;i-11 White koU~. ." . '
The, blookbuster decision , 1nvolvu ••
coveted enlisted man's ~ach club and
a private surfing club-long the. objtct
ol criticism, along with the 1horeline
in front of lht San Onofre nuclear
generating complex. and the DeW San
Onofre Bluffs State Beach sautb of that.
Besides I.he prime coasta l
land-described by the President as "one
of lhe country's last great swimmi ng
beaches" -the directive covers 3.000
acres of San P.1at.eo Valley immediately
south of the San Clemente City limits
and the Orange.San Dlego County line.
The new public beach will start aboul
t.000 feet south of the Presidential com·
plex, bounded dnwncoast by the county
boundary. The Trestles beach will be
. PRESIDENT .IN HELICOPTER SURVEYS NEW BEACH THAT IS TO BECOME PUBLIC the buffer zone requested by the Secret
Service-a no-man's land for security
purposes. · Area Is So1:1th of Western White Houae; Buildings Sliown Ar• to Become Public
Salt Creek Open
On Trial Basis
Salt Creek beach will be open lo the
public on a trial basis from Saturday
to April 18.
Through an egreement arranged by
county supervisor Ronald Caspers the
public will be .allowed to use the much
debated strand between Monarch Bay
and Dana Point from 7 a m. lo 7 p.m.
each day during the Easter vacation
period .
Supervisors approved the agreement
Wednesday with Avco Com mun i t y
Developers Inc. owners of the property.
A four.acre dirt parking lol on the inland
side of Coast Highway with an access
p<1th to the beach ~·ill be graded by
Avco.
The county will reimburse the company
for the cost of lifeguards, sanitary
facilities and beach maintenance and
wtll operate the parking lot. San
Clemen1.e lifeguard.i; are expected to man
the beach.
More Qual{e Af tersl1ocl{s
Jar San F er11a11do Valley
By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL
tit IM Ol!IJ l"Uol St1H
Just two years after various visionaries
predicted a great earthquake would
lumble the whole sinful Southland in!o
the sea. two more aftershocks or the
major February tremor struck early
today.
They were preceded Wednesday by
a temblor that rattled up to 4.0 on
the Richter Scale and caused heavier
damage in some San Fernando Valley
areas than lhe Feb . 9 quake .
Today's aftershocks came at 3:48 a.m ,
with a 2.7 rating, and at 7.03 a.m,
with a 3.7111ark.
Some Orange County residents reported
noticing the later, stronger jolt. which
wa1 11trongest in Ult Northridge and
Devonshire areas of the hard-hit San
Fernando Balley.
The r.cavy aflershock that came. al
~:M p.m. Wednesday, about eight miles
from the epicenter of the disaster two
months ago. was the worsl yet.
The epicenter was directly under a
heavily ~pulated area, according to
Caltech seu;mologist Dr. John Nordquist.
Six persons suffered minor injuries,
while canned goocls and bottles tumbled
from store she lves, glass windows shat-
tered and plaster fell from ceilings.
The ·Los Angeles Police Department's
Devonshire Division suffered extensive
damage.
Dotvn the
Mission
Trail
Board Hopefuls
Discuss Issues
MISSION VIEJO -.-s.andidales for
election to Tuslin Union\ High School
District school board are to speak at
7:30 tonight in the Mission Viejo High
School multipurpose room.
The candidates forum is sponsored
by the school PTO.
e New Safari Hours
Restraint Ordered
"If it had happened five minutes later,
Y.'e might have had some mJUries,'' said
Lt . Dan Sullivan. noting the roll call
room would have been full of patrolmen
at muster .
LAGUNA HJL11i - A new spring
schedule for Lion Country Safari goes
into effect tQday with gates to the 500-
acre preserve open at 9 a.m. and lhe
la11l car admitted al 5 p.m. Rock Fest Ecology Peril?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A federal of·
ficial said today a planned rock festival
in !be California desert could cause both
human suffering and environmental
damage.
The caution came from J R Penny,
California direclor for the US. Bureau
of Land Management which ls the
landlord for most of the Southern
California desert region
Penny said BLM officials had been
11dvi11ed that 300.000 to 500,000 younR
people might gather In the Panamint
Val~y west oJ Death Vall.ey for the
festival over E11ster weekend.
Penny said lnyn County offie111ls had
obtained 11 lemporary restratnlnit order
in an effort to halt the festival. but
that neither. the e1)Unty nor tbe BL.VJ
I •
had the forees t(l stop large numbers
ef people from going into the area.
Some young people. from as far away
as New York and Olicago. already had
~gun camping on !ht icene. SLM of·
ficiala aaid today . Law off1ctrs and
federal officials were to meet in the
Inyo County town of lndependence to
map 11trategy.
Penny caulioned that youn~ people
risked a tbrtat to tbtlr health by •l·
tending the fe!tival. If It comes off
as planned. ~e cited poor 1ccess In
the are11 over 2S miles of poor de~ert
rnads. blowing sand. e:rtreme: tern·
peratures and the lack of wfler and
shelter.
"The shttr numbers t1f people al50
pose • real threat le the fraaHt
•
' I
ecological balance (If the desert itself,"
Penny said .
The festival is planned on an 80-acre
pint of private land near the historical
ghost mining town of Ballarat, .Penny
said, "but in fact would be largely
held on public !and because of tlM'
numbers of people expected.'' •
The Injunction .. w11~ 1g1Aunt t be
landlord, a promoter identified eoiy u
"Zamora'' and 15 John Does.
Pe:nny said the nearest hMpilal is
50 milts away and "obtaining treatment
for 111 or injured persons would be
virtually Impossible II a crush similar
In those of aimilar festivalt .at
Woodstock. N.Y or Altamont, <;!Ill.'
Y.'ere to develop."
-1
Six minor fire.!. were also reported,
along with some new but minor damage
to the county'11 48-inch Granada Trunk
Line carrying water into Lhe area.
One of the hardcsl·hil h o m e s wes
that of Hal Sanders, who escaped with
minor damage in the Feb. 9 quake
that killed 65 persons and caused millions
of dollars in damage.
"What we didn't lose lhen wQ pretty
well totaled today," Sanders remarked.
''This limfl the in1ide of the house
was wrecked. It toppled over three
tele-Wilon 'i;e(ii and broke lfle.m. all . The
gl•!!ll'' doors broke. A chine cabi11et run
Of m$ v.;ie~, crystal · rell over on tbe
dining room table ."
The Feb. 9 earthquakt wu recorded
al 6.6 on the Richte r Scale and has
been fol lowed by wen over 200 af.
tershookll, some too small ftlr humane
to feel.1
Sucli trtmors ~ the wakt of 1 majOr
ql&lb. tre al.molt a\way1 Jtt,ser In In·
'leo1Jb', tin. av~r•~ have 1>een ~rded
It Ovtr 1.D OD the Richter Scale.
•
The wildlife preserve iJ open eve ry
dey.
e Childhood Classes
1\.1ISSJON VIEJO -Saddleback College
will offer six differen1 classes In
childhood education during the spring
quarter that beg'"5 April S. ·
Childhood education is one o( IS tw~
year occupalio(lal career -programs at
th~ college. Late. reailtratjon· is possible
April 5 from 9:30 a.m. to , 1:30 p,m,
an~ 4:30 to a:.JO p.m.
e Sprl119 V acatlo11
~llSSION VIEJO -Mi"ion Viejo High
School studenl3 Milin their annual sprln&
hiatus from the pencils and booka routine
et the end of .chool, Friday.
Next week is officially ftpring vaC4lion
with classes due to resume Monday,
April !l.
• ·1
Immediately south of lhat area tM
boundary begins for the new public
beach .
Almost adjacent to that boundary II
the enlisted man's club, a complex of
Spanish·style buildings and pfmanent
beach use structures -all of which will
be given to the state of California for re.
creational or office use as it sees fit. :
The San Onofre Surfing ClUJ? are.a.
Is ne:ii:t, situated on a point well kna't'n
for its excellent surf. ·
Tht ne:ii:l downcoast facility ii fta
San Onofre Nuclear reactor compl!r.
with lts. one ex.isling station (two more
are proposed for ne1f~\,~reactor
l1nd .area will be cl~tO 1he publtc.
but the lhorellne seaward of the towering
aea wall will be open.
Directly south or that comple1 lies
the line where lhe new San Onofre
Bluffs Sta te Beach begin!!. It will be
dedicated Saturday.
That section, leased to · the state of
California last year after tough negotia·
Uons with the Marine Corp!, is 3.$
miles long.
CompLtting the 3.5 miles of !hat beach
and blufftop with the new areas opened
up by the Presidential order, the length
of the new publlc beach will be sir
miles long-e:ii:8ctly one-third of the en-
tire Camp Pendleton coastline which
stretches 18 milt! from San Clemente
t.o Oceanside .
The upland area involved ln the
declaration of surplus is acreage known
.as San Mateo Canyon, an area used
for years as leased agricultural land.
Christianitos Creek runs the length of
the valley, sometimes flowing to the
sea during wet months.
The property, under · terms' of the ex-
ecutive order, would have tti remain
available for suitable publie uses. said
the Presidenl's Domestic Po I i c Y.
Coordinator John D. Erlichmanm.
The initial offer will be to the. State
of Califor11ia and the city of San
Clemente. Curiously. the county of San
Diego. v.•here the land in question lies,
was not mentioned in the offer.
No charge would be made if .either
or both of the named entities took the
territory.
If neither decides to make it,
Erlichman erpl,11ined. then the federal
government would sell it to private.
interests and place the money intn a
special trust fund to pay for purchases
of other land in the United States suitable
for ppblic recreational uses.
Oruce Co••t
1''enther
It may not be quite so wa rm
along the Qia1t Friday, but I~
morning fog will 11till be with us.
Look for temperatures in the 67
to 77-<lcgree range.
INSIDE TODAY
A modtrJ' Flyir19 Dutt'llman,
'In' lht Jo"" o( o ··~""' G<""4• submari,nt:, ,rcPol'ftdly th.rtattM
Florida Coru:t with its dtadlu
World War ll cargo. Set itory,
Pa gt .. S.,
I •
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• DAILY PILOT SC T "' . Thurw.y, April l, 1971
West Relived -!JI ~SD Freeway
~
Widening
:Begins Soon
, A freeway widening project along the
.San Diego Frenoay near San Juan
Capistrano will begin six months ahead
of schedule, according to James A. Moe,
.atate dl.reclor of public works.
• • 'lbe project calls for the widening
-..of a 1..S.mile section from slJ to eight
lanes between De La Camino Estrtlla
in San Clemente to Camino Las Ramblas
in San Juan capistrano.
The estimated cost of the Cilnstruction
la $4.I million. The pro}ect will be paid for with
part of $tO million the Fed.era\ Highway
Admlnlstration made available to the
state this week. The funds, which are
matched by the slate, ~ill be used on
State Hlghway construction i11 areas
such as Orange County, where a high
unemployment rate exists.
The projects funded with these monies
'bad already been identified by the state
for construction, Moe sail!I. Funds
··eilrllWked for these projects will be
;t1Sed in turn to advance other projects
now fur ther o[f in the construction
.schedule.
· The San Juan project was scheduled
for advertising in January, 1972. Bids
will now be s:>ught in June <1f thl.s
year.
In add1tion to the freeway widening,
the project includes widening <1f Pacific
Coast Highway from it,, connection with
the freeway to the Camino Capistrano
· undercrossing and construction of an
1nt.,change to connect the highway with
Camino Las Rambla.<. -
Ralph Williams
Property Carve
Begins in Court
An Orange County Superior· c.mat
judge today began what Is expected to be
a two-week carve up af the Ralph Wil·
Iiams financial empln. .
Both sides of the divorce action filed
by the multi-millionaire auto dealer's
wife AAnabelle ended courtroom testi·
mony Wednesday and agreed to allow
Judge Walter H. Steiner to rule on re-maining issues in the Williams dissolu-
tion. He was asked by Mrs. Williams, 38,
of Linda !Jle iJ Newport Beach, to re-
ject an qreement which gives hel" $4,000
a month personal support and $500 a
month each for the couple's two cb.Udrtn,
James, 11, and Katherine, 6.
'Ibat agreemeat was condemned by
Mrs. Wllllams' attorney during the trial
as "unrealistic.'• Judge Steiner was
urged to tnclude more generous provi-
sions pending a settlement that could
give Mrs. Williams half of the subsla•·
tial estale. Assets listed by WilllamJ In the court
file Include his Ford dea1ershiPs at En·
cino and CJovlsL property holdi ngs
throughout the SoUOtland and the COU·
pie's $275,000 home Jn Newport.
Williams and his wife married March
9. 1957 and parted Dec. 4, 1969. Mrs. Wil·
liams ha! custody of the two children.
Yale President's Son
Hurt in Auto Crash
BOSTON (UPI ) -The 23-year-old son
of Yale President Kingman Brewster,
Jr., is reported in fair condiUon today
after undergoing surgery {or a fractured
6kUIJ.
AuUlor ities at Massachusetts General
Hospital 6aid Wednesday K 1 n g ma n
Brewster Ill was a passenger in a
car which struck a telephone pole in
Oak Bluffs earlier in the day.
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Cattle Branded .in Viejo
By BARBARA DUARTE
Of 1111 ~ .. 1111 "'"
Early Wednesday morning as the sun
began to warm genUy 1loping hills: still
green from spring rains, the sound of
a lpne bird mingled with the shrill cry
o( a cowboy.
Following the sound t.o the hills to
the south, spectators watched several
dots multiply as trainhands from Rancho
Mission Viejo herded cows and calves
toward corTalS nestled i.11 a canyon Hned
with shade trees snd a longs(jry creek
bed.
And the old West came to life again
-almost within earshot of tralfi~ travel·
ing the Sall Diego Freeway to the W,Sl
and Ortega Highway to the north.
But civilization seemed far away as:
more than 500 cows and calvell halted
in mldstrlde, en r o u t e to corrals, lo
record a guttural protest at a group
of photographers and rtporters perched
on the canyon hillside.
In a tradition practiced !or more than
100 years on the 50,000..acre spread,
cowboys soon were busy roping, bran·
ding. castrating and dehoming more than
200 calves.
Cows bellowed at their offspring and
offspring bellowed back as they were
wrestled to the ground for a twr>minute
session ending with a king.size shot of
antibiotics and vitamins.
.born oo ~ ranch and 1-wllh th<
best tJI them, and Joe Tew who has
been with the operation 40 years.
Calves from O'Neill Ranch, malnly
a steer operaUon •. will be weaned in
July and shipped to feedlots for 200
days to gain market weight
CatUe buyers for the new herd a.lready
have selected lots, Aguirre disclosed. ·
And in the true tradition of the West,
buying and selling is done by oral agree-
ment.
President Meets
With Aerospace
Industry Chiefs
President Nixon met this mornin& with
more than a dozen leadera ill tht
aerospace industry and members of the
scientific cori:i.munily in a concerted el•
, fort · to stave oft. the masSive unemploy•
menl which has hit that profession in
recent months.
No immediate resuJtj of lhe meeUng
were available at mid-morning from Nix·
on ;pdes.
CALVES BELLOW FOR THEIR MOTHERS AND MOMS BELLOW BAc;K"Ol.lJR1'~(; ROUNDUP'• OW•n•
Tradition Practiced For More Thin 100 Years Continues As It, Did In Old West
Cowboys, including movie personality
Monte Montana who joins the roundup
each year, swung lassos over hind legs
of game 300-pounders and dragged them
Lo small bands of wranglers.
In a quick ceremony, a hot brandiflg
iron stamped the ranch logo an the
calf's rump, an ear was clipped for
identification, homs were lopped off by
a hacksaw, the castrated area was
smeared with creosote, and the unhappy
youngster dist1ppeared into the herd for
motherly consolation.
Included in the group which met with
the President in his San Clemente office
were members of large weitern colleges
and Wliver.sities, manufaciurer1, and
representatives.of the hard-hit aerosj)ace
industry itself.
Dr. Ruben Mettler, president of TRW
Systems, which owns a plant near San
Clemente, was among those attending.
Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson
sat at the President's side during the
talks. 'Archaeologists
Find Tustin
Indian Grounds
Brig. Gen. Leslie Brown
Takes Reins of Air Group Participating In morning activity was
Gil Aguirre, ranch superintendent: who
has posed for Marlboro ads; Mn. Alice
O'Neill Avery, a partner in O'Neill
Properties, and her hard-working rancher
sons, Jerome and Tony Moiso.
Nixon's Oldest
Relative Dies
Arcbaelogi.sts, both amateurs and pro-
fessionals, were swarming over an apart...
ment house 6ite In the Lemon Heights
area north of Tustin today after .allention
was called ·10 an ancient 1ndian burial
ground on the land Wednesday.
Numerous graves, ! o m e containing
complete skeletons, were uncovered by
bulldozers.
Roger J. DeSautels, president ()f
Archaeological Research Inc. head·
quartered in Costa Mesa, said it ap-
peared that the site was a village that
covered about one and ()ne·half acres.
William Zink, president of Zink
Construction Company in Tustin, the con-
tractor on the !Ue, cut· down operations
and allowed digging today.
DeSautels admitted the find was In-
itially reported several months ago but
nothing was done to protect the site.
He said a similar site unearthed three
years ago during work on the San Diego
Freeway dated 2,000 lo 3,000 years ago.
Mrs. Pat Sperry, a member of the
Pacific Coast Archaeologica l Society and
a resident of the neighborhood said she
noticed some signs on the site about
three yea rs ago. She said she had been
following the bulldozers around for two
week! picking up whatever they turned
up.
5 Art Students
Granted Laguna
Scl1olarships
Five Orange CoWlly art students will
be launched in their college art 1tudies
with new .!lcholarshlps established by
the Laguna Hills Art Association.
Funds accumulated by the association,
along with memorial gifts and donations
by inlerested Leisure World residents
will provide five $300-a-year grants for
graduating hi_gh school seniors who have
been a~pled as art majors in colleges
of their choice.
Seniors from high schools in Laguna,
Orange, San Clemente, Santa Ana and
Tustin are eligible to apply for the
grants.
Application deadline Is May 15 and
the winners, chosen by a fury of artists,
will be aMounced by June 1. Details
are available from high school counselors
or art teachers. The cash grants will
be deposited in the scholarship funds
or the colleges selected by the winning
students.
Laguna Savings
Marks Birthday
~1embers of civic organizations • in
Laguna Beach, San Clemente and Laguna
Niguel are helping the Laguna Federal
Savings and Loan Association celebrate
its 30th llllniversary this: month .
Brig. Gen. Leslie E. Brown will take
command ot El Taro's 3rd Marine
Aircraft Wing in ceremonies Friday
afternoon at the air st.ation.
lie is relieving Maj. Gen. Robert G.
Owens Jr. who is leaving for the Far
East where he will assume command
of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing.
Gen. Owens, wbo has commanded the
wing for the last 22 montM, hu served
as assistant wing commander ct the
1st Aircraft Wing while in Vietnam.
During World Wa.r JI, he was
designated a Marine Corps act fer
sh.ooting down seven enemy planes. His
decorations include the Navy Cross, the
Legion of Merit with Combat "V", the
Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air
Medal and the Purple Heart.
His successor bas served at El Tero
for the past seven months as tbe assls·
tant wing commander. He bega11 his
career as an enlisted man 31 years
ago and earned a battlefield commission
during World War II.
During the Korean War. he was the
first Marine to fly a jet in combat
Fliglit Records
Found in Probe
Of Jet Rubb'le
National Transportation Safety Board
examiners today probed the ruins of
a Boeing 7208 jet transport which claim·
ed the life of a Newport Beach man
when it crashed Wednesday at Ontario
Interna!ional Airport.
Richard E. Schumacher, 53, of JSOl
?-.1ariners Drive, ""as among five Western
Airlines pilots killed when the plane
crashed In a fiery ball.
Funeral services for !he Newport
Beach resident are pending . today at
Pacific View P.1.ortuary.
Federal examiners also checked the
flight teCW'der ¥.'hich was found undam·
aged in the rubble of the $5 million air4
craft y,rhich v.·as scattered over 10,000
square yard area. It will be used to de·
termine what caused the crash.
The fatal crash at 6:31 a.m. was
the first involving a commercial airliner
in the 42-year history of Ontario Interns·
tional Airport.
The four.engine jet was on a routine
training mission when it came down in
a vineyard about 3,000 feet short or
runw ay 25.
The vicUrns. all \\'estem pilots with
at least seven years experience, were
ta\<ing one of the airline's periodic prr>
ficiency check nights •• The dead w e r c
Raymond E. Benson, 49. Palos Verdes
Estates: Schumacher: Henry L. Colfin,
39, Palos Verdes: Kent r.f. Dobson, 32,
Canog11 Park: and Harold A. McMillan,
48, Soulh Gate.
Paralyzed Man Saved
Fro111 Ravine Bollorn
In Laguna Beach, members of the
Business and Professional Women's: Club
served rrfreshments to visitors at the
firm 's main office from l lo 3 p.n1.
today and will continue through April 9. At the same time. the San Clc!:mente HAYWARD CUP!) -A 21-year-old
Arts Md Crafi., Club will host a daily iiaraiyzcd youth ~·as re.1cued Wednesday
open house at the firm's San Clemente af\er spending 12 houn at the bottom
branch and lhe Laguna Niguel Art of a ravine yelling for help.
Association will perform the same Jeffrey Langley was en route to mall
service for the Laguna Niguel branch. leUers late-Tuesday \\hen his wl'lttlcha1r
Color reproductlons of an oil painting rolled down an old hiking trail llnd
titled "Lar,una 1926'' by the late Josrph> o\'er a 2.'\-foot embankment into Sulphur
Kleitsch will be given lo guests at the Creek Ravine . A passing hl.gh .cbool
open hnu~e events. The orl~1nt1l nil is student finally h('.itrd Langley's crie3 and
tin diiplay In the .association's rotunda .summoned flrtmt:n, who hauled the youth
art gallery lo Laguna Beach. to safety In an hour-Jong operaUon.
t •
and in Vietnam he new more than
100 combat missions.
His decorations include the Silver Star"
the Legion cf Merit with Combat "V",
the Distinguished Flying Crass, the
Bronze Star with Combat "V", the
Air Medal, the Vietnamese Cross ef
Gallantry and the Purple Heart.
Daily Pilot Sets
Special Listing
Of. Church Rites
The DAILY PILCYI' is planning a
special story to run Wednesday an·
nouncing •pecial services scheduled by
Orange Coast churches and temples
marking the primary days of Holy Week,
Easter Sunday and the Passover.
The !Ina! deadline for all material
to run in this story wilf be ~tonday
at S p.m. Any material received after
thal lime will probably not~ included.
The it.ems should include name of
the church, address, service times.
pastor or rabbi's name. ·sermon and
any other material essential to the
services. Please be brief.
The articles ca~ be submitted to any
DAILY PILOT office. Addresses include·
33() W. Bay St., Costa Mesa; 2211 \V·.
Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach; 222 Forest
Ave., Laguna Beach; 17875 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach: 305 N. El Camino
Real, San Clemente.
Singled out for recognition and a
lifetime slot on the ranch by Mrs. Avery
were 63·year-old Cecil Martinez who was
Calley Syrnpathy
Calls Pour In
To Wliite House
President Nixon has received thousands
of telegram!! and telephone calls ru111ing
almost 100.t~l in favor of clemency for
Lt. WiUiam Calley.
Press Sec retary Ronald Ziegler 1aid
in San Clemente that as of noon Pacific
Time Wed1esday the White House was:
swamped wi th some 5,000 wires and 1,500
tele phone calls.
Asked whether Nixon would have the
power to give clemency, Ziegler replled,
"that would not be a procedure that
"WOUid be taken at this time."
He said the President could eventually
be involved in a Calley appeal, but not
at this stage.
Ziegler decli1ed lo give the president's
personal reaction to the verdict or the
sentencing to life imprisonn1ent.
Asked whether it was an unusual born·
bardment of public sentiment. Ziegler
said with a smile : ''It's a very large
number of telegrams for the White House
to receive -almost as high as the Pres·
idential address."
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) -President
Nixon's first cousin, Roy B. Nil:on. the
President's ()}dest living relative, died
here today at the age of 90.
Ri;iy Nixon was the son or Hiram
Nixon, brother of the President'• father,
Francis Anthony Nixon.
Roy died while sitting in a chair 1n
his home. The cause of death was not
immediately known. He suffered a severe
heart attack two years ago.
He is survived by his widow Dora,
and five children. Funeral 1ervices will
be held Saturday.
Shark Attack?,
No, Porpoises
Some surfers out for early morn-
ing rides today at Newport Pier
in Newport Beach thought they
v.·ere being attacked by sharks.
Police units were rushed to tht
scene armed and prepared to pro-
tect the surfers from the denizens
at the deep.
"When we got there, we found
out there weren·t any 11hark! at
all," said LL Kelson McDaniel.
"It was just a small school cf
porpoises having a good time."
McDaniel said the mammalJ
frolicked in the surl -charging
the surfers, then veering off -
for several minutes before moving
on.
luxurious spring down sofas
Thl1 handJOm• Sofa w11 designed to give you the ultimate In seating comfort with d1cron
•nd down back pillows, deep spring down seat cushions enveloped in down and fe1th1rs in
:wo foam-filled. arm pillows. Choott from e wide selection of fine fabric1.
8' length, reg. $599. NOW
''our favorit t deiigntr tDi II be htJPP1' to GUist you
/
399.
H.J. GAR.R.ElT f URN ITU~~ HARBOR ILVO.
PROFESSIONAL Op .. M..,., Thun. & kl. lv1<. COSTA MESA. CALIF •
INTERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARG! H6.02 75 646-0276
''
"Artistry in Moving'' for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call: r r •
•. •. .•.
494-1025
580 Broadway
Read the DAILY PILOT
For. Top Spo rts Coverage
lhur~ar, Aprll 1, 1q71
Ho111e-indostry Bow Flares
Joh!> llllfPU tried to
homestead 343 aetts of Foun-
taln·Valley land lhb: week.
He lost when fellow coun-
cilmen refused to take the
land out ql the master plan
where Jt ls now labeled for
1ndQstrial deve.lopment.
"But homes will bring a
greater profit to Ille city than
industry," Harper argued.
He was offering a counter
proposal to Planning Director
Clinton Sherrod's r e p or t
reeommending that the land
next lo the Santa Ana RJvu
be refaioed for industrial con-
struction.
Sherrod's report showed tax
revenues from industry or
bamu u bein& .nearly ~ual
with a slight advantage to
homu over ~e short tqm.1
"But the dUference oomts
in services the city and
1ebooll must provide," Sher-
rod e1plained. "Hornes .requr
more services from the c[l5i,
thu.. ct1St more. And the
school• would realty b8 hurt
by hemes because they'd have
to build fadliUes for the:
children."
"Now that's an old argu..
ment," couatered H a r p e r.
''The Carden Grove School
'District it so large, that our
industrial revenue would make
UtUe dlUerence to It. They
can provide the 1 c h o o I
•
aervlce&." on land use and probablr
"But they can't build schools make more mistakes than
now," interjected James Dick, developers in a system of free
chairman or the planning com-enterprise,'' Harper s a J d,
mission. pressing his point bngrily.
"Your proposal would In-"We ought to give U>tm
crease our population by 4,000 tax relief for farming. That
to 5,000 people... M a y o r would help property owners
Edward Just added. · and preserve a litUe more
"Tbal's the school's concern open .space for awbile," Dick
not oun.," Harper retorted. offeted.
"The property owners can't "But the.re art problems in
do anything with Uleir land." that tax relief too," Harper
"Then we <lUght to spend replied.
()(Jr lime finding interim uses He was overruled, however.
for the. land,'' suggested Car-by the other foJr councilmen
rol Mohr, a planning com-wbo asked the staff to bring
missioner. ' in an expert on tu relitf
"We can set ourselves up for farm land for future
as the epitome of intelligence discussion an it.
So Dependable: it's BONDED
FRESH
FRYERS
:;r FIDDLE FLAKES ~ ... -25'
.READ tunnTDA11""W9CUWllUT "J' 1••z.lMI-· _ _.,
~RAISIN BRAN:::;.._~,.._43•
IAISIN BREAD ::::.r:;:;" 3S'
:_,...KRAFT DINNER~":r_.19'
fASTEI GOODIES!
EASTER BASKET ~:'.:..-11"
SOMBRERO ~.~::., ~
EASTER BASKET ~:':..-13"
,-.)ELLY BIRO EGGS ~... 45'
· JELLY BIRD EGGS:::'.._ __ 81'
SOLID EASTER EGGS :!'.::::'.~.-72'
INNER W/MEAT?:~::.' ..... __ 57•
f.. FROSTING MIXES~:_.39• 7 MITT CHCtll
;llFFY POPCORN nu 29' ~rlDWfJWOWAWAYrOIPl'f
.~CHOCOLATE CHIPS ~:l'.:a42'
LAWRY'S MIXES:=.L20•
PANCAKE MIX :,~.:,-42'
1J Mltrlh1lc1 c11tltltn llrr, ~
"'· ''""'' ";r. $]39
12 OUNCISIZf
SCHICK 4's
INJEOOR
BLADES
::::ii~tw 74c i1Jtcttrnm.
. \
GROUND
BEEF
lUtnlOIDID
fOlfU.VOI
57! __ )
fi"PANCAKE~~~45'
,;.. MUFFIN:r.'.,'r.M'~-45'
.,. ROYAL PUDDINGS::'.~:_ 11'
<I" SHILLED WALNUTS=:o69'
rr POTATOEs ... , ... __ 59'
ttaUl'S <Ol1111' ltnl lllfAlff DilTllU.UO
r IlA BAGS~~:.'..'."" 61 '
r KING VITAMIN ~:t•:.. 48'
~ PIZZA MIX:::~~~:~ 35•
ti"' TAMALE PIE :::r:,:, 65'
... K;y&t;t.;......_-
WELCHADE DRINK 32c
460UNCE
CAN
i {'f~Niijii 109~ _;..,.,'.)
.,. STRING BEANS:."l'l~i::'.J9'
BABY FOOD:::~:::""" 9'
...-s&WCORN ...... ., ...... _25•
BABY FOOD ~~::~~-.............. _.13c
J & J BABY SHAMPOO
.._.. t11rs" Da-.11 wn't s11"1. tr Nrt $] 41
IJIS; Slltfll' U•r-tiH bif.12JWZ. Tiii[
LISTERINE MOUTHWASH $) 19
11111 Htr.uulll Nct«la. 20-0?.. stZI
PRELL CONCENTRAn SHAMPOO
S1pH-rlc~. Dita, 111-
1111 ............. ,..
•1ktl NII' lub't•I ........ .,., ..
70UNC! 99c SUPllSIZ!
GLEIM II TOOTHPASTE
FAMILY SIZE TUBE
Tlt htt ... tl Oat bl ...,-ttlql fi•tfffn 11 flllt
tlYl!ltS.,. I .. SAf[ n !t ... n ti tu, Int• tltalta:
aH •Ntt1111; u• 1 re••
"'"'
T-BONE STEAK
IUCITTOPQUAUTJ $]38 IOIDIDIEEf
TAllSUMOYED U.
CROSS RIB ROAST ___ a.19'
STANDING RIB ROAST ~.a. IJ"
CHUCK ROAST ......... _ •. a.59'
TOM TURKEYS=~-.. 36'
HEN TURKEY :::~11111.. ..... 39'
HAM ::S,;.r.:=:~m._._ .. •)tt
UNI< SAUSAGE:::::..-::,. __ 28'
CUT-UP nms ___ ... 32'
POIK5AUSAGE----.79'
FULLY COOKED HAM
~u:~:LP sac
IHKKllMOYID LL
~!!!.~~c.!!'-55c
RATH.1. WllSON, ARMOUR 59c
SUCEu BACON ••---
OSCAR MAYER BACON 73c IUCD1.ff9PACUMI ___ _
-.._68c
TODDLER MEALS:~~~23'
.,. BLACK PEPPERl::::'.J.w35'
CARNATION TUNA :::l. ... --34•
.,. HEINZ REUSHES:= ... -29'
ti'" REFRIED BEANS ='.~22'
SPAM:.'1a":t~.-Stc
~ YAMS:'1:r'CM 39' comE ~ ..... ___ '2"
ComE ....... ..,.., 'I" 1101..Ull ..... -
.,. SHRIMP:l'.~~.-52'
'lllT PMI Olil.UI llWI.
DOLE PINEAPPLE ....... _ 39'
CllUlb,lllCll.cn!S ... Jiy&f t,,___
MUSTARD
MOllHOUSE
24 OUNCE JAi
It" S&W PEAS u ... w ....... -25'
. rDEVILED HAM= 26'
DOLE PINEAPPLE '"""'·-20' Uftla, suu•
<I" SPREAD:':='::."""' 28'
DOLE PINEAPPLE, .. u"'""'--27' cnsuo. Dini."°'"' .
.,.. TACO SAUCE~~~-·~·
BEEF HASH:'i':I.~~~~~-451
ti" SAUCE~:t"J.~~22c
JUICE ::9.':.~':.~~~.~.~· 49c .r A-1 MEATSAUCE111un .... 63'
NIBLETS CORN """""---25'
.,. SMUCKERS SYRUP :\':.~39'
CAMPBELL'S SOUP:::'.I.~ 20'
,Fi()l8({0JO$c_. -·-
""' FISHSTICKS:l':~':':'.'.~.~-73'
ZUCCHINI STICKS:':;.'i::."'_ 47'
1.lD.l,., srm I COUPONS
Gladly Aetepted
,:::.~~:::;~:YOUR MONEY.BACK
Everyone knows that all b ~.PLETE SATISFAalON
our expert meat bu e ee '' not the same • • • Th ,
mHt our strict stanla,'J1 ~:;•hinh//y se!•ct only those b:~f ~~ ~~~ ~: c.'.'..s'v.,m•,. count on ,~is ~0~uo~!i[;yd•;n ... s and flavor paclca~. • guarantee it with. our written ~.~QcNIOro,~, and you
· on •"•ry ~~Ofea~&;lor3Qood~ QUl!Jnr~NDED HDll...,,e '"~ ·-·r· ··c;-Bruo DISC~·IC[D
TAm' UlfTEISUffUflOMS
~.E.!..~! .. 5.~.~~ $J !!
2!~.!!r~!!~s 78c
!'-L!8-~!-~!~._KS_ 98~
!!1.!!9JJ.!~~!!..~. 58~
-ZEN:fOODSW "' I
---·-• .>. '~i
.,.. CHINESE DINNERS :;:l~'::...59•
BABY OKRA '"""'"'~' 32' 1111,,.,., ... , ............ _
""""WAFFLEs::r:~~~~~42c
PIOSWEET PEAS"'u" .. --42'
o-' TURNOVERS~:~:i:,~~51c
SNACK TRAY::l::'ii:~--.-~91•
MARKE'S BURRITos:::::.~:r._.55'
REAL WHIP TOPPING l.'.t ... -45'
MRS. SMITH'S PIE:.'i'~t~'...~89'
SIRLOIN TIPs:::.::'~--.45'
..• Jiy 'fkt/.~.;...
PRINCEllA YAMS 29c
GOLDIN
2t0UlllCI CAN
[""''ff!l.1!,SEHQLD .iJEMS.'li
.,.. THE UN-POLLUTER!.~~.78'
BIZ PRE-SOAK~~::ro •1•1
tr""°" BORA TEEM r:.r:~~ •111
GAIN DETERGENT ........ _ as·
ti" CLOROX BLEACH~~._ 55'
TIDE DETERGENT'"" ............... 12" -' FORMULA 409MIHllOtOaJAllll 1" llT -MOZ,fTL ........ ,, •
... K;y&t;f.--.
SCOTT TOWELS 31 C JU COUNT
IOll
IVORY SOAP:\'::~ ...... _ •. __ 88'
.,.. POT SCOURER ~~::._32'
JOY LIQUID:l~~'o\:'.. __ •. , .... --82'
.... POT SCOURER:\~.~-19'
SPIC & SPAN::::'~':.~--99'
.,.. DELSEY TISSUE ~~u'.°:-27'
llS
Coptright • 1'71 by Wtky S'°"9lo tnc..-
All lightll '-d
. OISCOUllTP•ICEOOEll.ITEMSI
~!'l.!llfn~~~.~.~~~ .• R .. 44c
GALLO ITAUAN SALAMI a·Qeoik1 a'"'-·---·---·-•m.1'11.
GALLO ITALIAN SALAMI 49c
Ill.WI 'Mlm ... -... --.. ·-·--J tlflL
~S£~~ .~~JR .. ~1.E.~.~.R,~, .... 73c
~~.i:t~.~~'!!.~.!OLOB~~ ... 73c
~J!~~,E.!,!.N_KS nR,,. 79c
~~~EJJJ:.A£~~ .... 111tP1L 99c
; 11-lfOilt-m .~.n .-.iJ.-u.-,... .!'~'l :.!.!
BRILLO PADS= 43'
SANI FLITE NAPKINS::':'i.~73•
fl" NAPKINS :=,..::~_51 •
.,.. PLEDGEWAXl':t:U 77'
PERSONAL IVORY :wou .. _30'
.,.c LADY SCOTT ~~.r'.':!..-.27'
-" VITA-PAKT"'"""''._ 79' llT. MOl.tn. ... -
BIG DIP ICE MILK• .... .., · 59•
LADY LEE MIUG:~>t::~ 17'
SOFT MARGARINE ey,~ •. -33'
TOP QUAllTT PRODUCfl
Bananas
l 00% CHIQUITA
G~:~:N 1oc
BUNCHES lb.
Potatoes @ U.S. N0.1 IUSSITS
"'"I O'c~~:37c SJIU IAG
_..,._ AVOCADOS •••
talll1nll'1 ll111t fnit ••• ••Ucatt ••I·
ftfJ 11111 11.,titl fllNf ••• 111 It •1,s
t r 1111•1.
•
--
DAILY PILOT %lf8
Co~plex
Dwelling
Land Cut
Apartments have become
the problem child of Fountain
Valley.
City councilmen 1pent near-
Jy three boara baulln1 over
them in a 1peclal sludy
session Tuesday night.
The result WM further reduc·
lions in the amount of land
which will be allowed for
.apartment construction.
The cooncil agreed o n
muter plan cuts which could
eliminate as many as 984
potential apartments and 1,003
condominiums.
But lbey also agreed to be
fie1ible on each individual
parcel in the e•ent good plans
are drawn for apartmenta or
condominiums.
Mayor Edward Just opposed
the reductions, but Io st .
"Tbere's nothing magical
about the new figures ," he
said. "I can buy part of these,
but part I can't."
Councilman Al Hollinden, a
strong supporter of the cul!,
sa1d, "J'm only dl!appointed
that it will reduct the city's
ultimate popu1ation by a mere
4,000."
Clinton Sberrod, the city's
plannlng d.inctor, .said it
wouldn"t make a great dif·
ference to tbe city's balance
whether the cuts were made
or current planning was ke.pL
Hollinden, however, de·bunk·
ed the idea of a balanced :
community. "I dan't believe ·
all thl.s balancerl stuff. We've
followed the planners' rules
for years and look what a
mess the world is in."
Councilmen George Scott
and Ron Sbenkman bolb sup.
ported the apartment cuts,
though they disagreed over
one piece of property.
John Harper, the fifth coun·
cilmen, opposed the apartment
cuts on lbe grounds the city
was getting too ape.cilic lD ~
it!! planning. •
"We're forgettin&: tbe pro-
perty owner tµid the free
enterprise system," Harper
charged. ••we shouldn't take
such a mercenary atUtude ·
about planning." ·
Councilmen spent an hout
ef their discussion arguing
over a 48-unit apartment pro-
posal at Brookhurst and La ~
Alameda streets. i
Two weeks ago the council
<1n a 3-1 vote reversed plan•
ning commissi<1n denial for the
apartment.!. Hpllindea wa1 the
lo11e anti-apartment vote on
that one and Scott wasn't at
the meeting.
~ott, however, opened the
tssue agaiD Tuesday. "The
people have asked us lo
reduce apartments and that
one ought to be commercial,"
be said.
"It's an are.a we have
agreed shauld be
apartments." Shenkman said. •
James Dick, chairman of
the plaMlng commission, ex·
plained why the oommlssion
had opposed the ap11rtment.s.
EYES RIGHT
'1 ..
1 DI. LOUii J, ,,;
H.l.llLllLD o, .. ,.. .. ht
You'v• h111d 1bout 9l1uc.orn1
• , • the 11co11d moll d111911ou1
lhr11I to our 1y11i9ht. lhi1 dit-
1111 build1 up p•111u r1 011 th1
1qu1ou1 flu id i111id1 lh1 1y1b1ll
1..d d1droy1 lh1 "'"'' c1tl1 i11
th1 r1tin1,
Tf11 l1rrifyin9 thi119 1boul 9l1u-
com1 i1 !hit th1 d1t1rior1lio11
of 1y11i9hl m1v be 10 9r1du•I
th1t th1 victim will b1 un1w1r1
that 111vthin9 i1 wron9. c;.l11.t-
eom1 c.111 u1u1Uy b1 '1'011t.ollM
if it i1 d1l1cl1d 11rly 111ou9lt.
If you 1r1 ov1r JS, you
1hould h1 .. 1 periodic 1y1 •••rn·
in1lio111 for tltit dh1111 11
well a1 for 11ti9m1ti11n, hyper.
opi1 ••• f1r1i9ht1d.,..11 end
myopia or 1111r1i,ht1d11111. W1
will 9i>'1 th1 n1 t11i1ry 1•1rn-
in 1tion1 1f your conv1ni111c1 f•r
•II condition1 th•t c111 b• c•r•
r•cl1d by p111cription of f~e
proper le111•1. Stop ii'! t...cl•y 11
our affice i" the Fl~• Po i11h
Shappi119 Center, M1i11 St. 11
l11d1 l lwd, We C•ll fit you for
co11t1cl '•"••• or p111cripfio11.
9rou11d 1un 1111111, 110. C11I
147 ·~1for 1111ppol11tm 111! 1r
drop 111 .... h111 1111r·by.
THE BEST
ll:11d111loiJp pollt P••V• "'••·
nuh" 11 on• of the wotlli'1 lftOlf
popul•r com;c 1tri p1. R1.4 it
••lly i11 the DAILY l'ILOl •
' -
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J
I
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•
I
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2f OAJL Y PILOT SC
OVER 1'HE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List Your Money 's
Autogi·aph H11nte1·s Making NASO Listing• for Wedneod•y, Ma rc h 31, 1971
lt.,.._ltll" loli. ....... 1tt ""'''*'-It t ..... l!nfflly t t.M. ·-NASO.
• ,,k .... tMt !Al ... , ... 1r1 ... ""'~!rt. 11111 ... .._ ... t91111111illtll.
Big Business £01· Collecto1·s l'-""111 .... lltlll!:lllllll .. llllll .. lllBllllllll!"'lll'"!!"'"''"''""''"llll'W~'F !Ot ,. !Lb ! lf
"""' """ ~"4~ l: ... "*-' .... • .. ~ ...... an.Ct ,"
Hf'W YOfllt. (~I l .. 1"-Mw11 C~ I'~ """' $ lrl'111 th fl•=~: .;: -TM ~ Ill{ 2tl1 ltl'J ..,..., 4 ~ US 111.11~• 1th ~ Adnllr1t
By SYLVIA PORTER
A mtre JO years ago a
d ocument signed by President
Thomas Jefferson and hi!!
Secretary of Stale James
Madison sold for $25 'rtus
)'tar the same documenl
fetched $400
Also 10 years ago 1 com·
mission of an Army olf1cer
111gned by President .Lincoln
sold for $75 The same docu
mtnt recently brought $450
In the late 1950s a letter
wntten by ~rge Washmgton
saymg that lhe President
should be the • sla~e" of lhe
people rather lhan the 1 r
master sold for $500 A decade
later this letter was auctioned
for $25,000 an all bme
record for a letter
Utterly fascmat1ng has been
the upsp1ral over the years
in prices paid for autographs,
JeUers, manuscripts and other
documents signed by famous
people The rises, in fact, have
dramatically outpaced gains
m many other tradihona1 in·
vestment!.
Est1mate1 Charles
.Ham11ton, head of Charles
Hamilton Gallenes, 1nc , 1n
New York, the nahon's largest
dealer 1n autographs "Tins
year alone, Amencans w1l\ 1n.
vest and gambit somtth1ng
like $50 rrullion m autographs
Prominent among the buyers
will be major hbranes and
un1vers1ties Buyers will pay
a full 20 percent more than
the p rices they paid last
"'" ..... -......... S.-.-ke, T n _. -' ...,. .. 9'I .,, ... .n..
year " And he 1s cerlain ..
they'll reap big pror1ts later.
when they sell 1f they buy
11,ell k)day
Today letters signatures
and related malenal or a
startling range of notables are
being bought and sold by col·
lectbrs To illustrate, the list
includes H L Mencken, Rube
Goldberg Andrew Carnegie,
Helen Keller. Ameha Earhart.
Max Beerbohm, Jane Addams,
Harr} Houdini and Pat Car·
rett the sheriff who shot Billy
the Kid
Among today's most sought
alter autographs and letters
art those of Presidents
\Vasb1ngton and L 1 n co In
authors Mark Twain Edgar
Allan Poe, llerman ~1eh 11le,
Emily D1ck1nson and Walt
Y.'hltman modem authors
Ernest Hemmgway, Wilham
Faulkner, James Joyce T S
Ehot, Thomas Wolfe, Eugene
ONe1lL
11 • MIKIW U ttl'I Sl-\'fl »\lo,._.. Ui Trt.l.11 .. \It d\& Al'fMLl f 1 M • m • n .. t h e r I r t_ s l H•lloti<ll ~~rUIM ,.. I 11• R"IJ 211'1 2:1 nlY Air "" n. AMtftrl (O " Ill 0.ltra AJ)tl. OYt<" ltl\J"' 11111 HPt :W lll'I , Piii po 2• 2•11 Ailltfl IM
I •-d th .t 1111 '°"""' •Mii. 11.... • 191'11 •tr IW. ''°"' !W Ind 111'1 11\11 "r. PrOd 10b au ograpu" -an er-=-iore 111tUr•11a , hldia-2111 21'111r1w11 c1 a...""" v.1...., G' 1p,, 11 ~1~PR7,r •1;;,.s
I th I I bl. !tlll •toc:ko '" 11'\ S.Uti.c; l!Y ~ N llW 1.0 Rio Hi A.J lncl~1!rl•I a 50 among e mos va ua ll•llk 1<111 Tn.o11 ov EF l11 )1~1 ,,.,., s.u.a11 F 11-lol u111 ... o Air , ,.,. ..,•ton• 1•
a1 r UlOse of explorers ::: ::~ .;.:: .,:~ G~:,....,~r J:: ,ll: l\m ~ ?~ ~~ v~~~ s ~tt ~ ~~s1c":11~"!' lolEm~ s 2!\o 2no G tA Mr1 U 'h 21 '-~ 250 U2 Vtntrl)tl 11\.'o 1J\lo "llllrfl>C 12
Christopher Columbus Ponce bl v, 11~ 11~ " '"" Mt Hitt 11111 ''""' n1t im w..,. Pw 2~ 11i... ..,hrt1M x
de Leon and Hernando Cortes ~~ ~;_ lit; i:~ ~~td :.,; fm f!l'l 1:~r ~. 1l1t .:l'I ,i:,!: 1i" 1~ !1~:s,:~m~
d I n. J hn d U V1 lk1 JOo )4f'I riMI P ll'I )fo K~ P\111 •lit "° Wlll NG lS\li ll'io Altxnd" JOI' rama 1sts ucn o son an v1 N 111>11 !11'1 21 111111 •l'I' ' «""" P 1t1 201 .1., Tr 10.., 1~ 1.11A"'{' ,.,
Christopher Marlowe Capt Fkl u~-t'/''mr, 17,,. :::; A. 1~ 1~ 1~i.c= :=: ,~ w=:11111~ /;~ l;:: ::=:u..: 1~
John Smith and POC'abontas llMW&ll'ltlt Httll~I 7'o tl'o t11Nnl !l\'o :H\lo tldlrn .,,. ""'Allftlud r" i..~ Ml (p ~ 1\\ Htnrtd , )N ~ t• AmO W. l\\ t-11119 M 2t'Ai 21Wi l.11<19Pw 3t And, so rare are autograp1i,, 1.Ff, Prs 20 JI wit Jon 1•v. 11\k 'l'ltrm A t m w1111F M 1t\.\i ,,h .0.11 t.i ~~ f '°
alld lel'·r• by W i i JI am•,>, ,'~o-•,.•• •,s ..... !',,11 f! ~ )tll T!lnv Co ll IJWI Wtlt G•r 14\0 u,1~ ~\1111,~1•00• ,~ ••
Le: ,, ·--.. .,.. ..,.. ~,,•, ... , !',",,",' ,,., t\li Mio lfCtl P lli f :I. AIU .. '" ,, ••
Shakespt_are that Hamilton :~\ ~fwt 1f!~ 1~~ ~=.,:n , '"" lo1i e UL• ~ !it w.l~ :i~ '~ I~~ A1t1ec1Pc1 Pl J believes a letter by this Acu.i.n P JW J•'4 Hoove• 11~. ~ Tr.cor c JlO •V. w11n Pub 17'4 11\o l.lllfOS1r 1111 Ad .... r J Jl'I HO!'•l 1101. 10 IOV. Trr.c:nl G 11'0 111'11 Wsl $1 Ur 11\0 l't Allltd SUP•• hter8"" giant WOUid brtng It Mcllsn W II~ II\, Howrd Gi '"" 9" TrtnM O 10 ~ 01.lle! JJ~ Ill.I. Alll1 Cl! IOI 'J Ad~ Roo I 0 ~ Howmo 2~21\lo TrlMoll H ~ '"'° tlfmcl "5\lil ~ Allrl11IAUI 60 least Sl 000 000 Only five or ""., s1~ u 11" H11ek Mt• s S\'o Trko "" :w,.,. Jl11o kit w111 s1ot ~ ~:! ~ ~.,,.
Sh k I S "!• I"° Jlo ],. Huell P .. JI"' Jllolo Trkla!r "-Jliji 11111 Mii 11\ot :n ...,,,,, •..• O. six a espeare s1gna ure ... i_ Ho 110 '"' Hwi11 P •'-.:ii Trllft oo ""' '"" 1.-; PL ~ -
k t l '°""' I>" I> 11n ~. 29\lo -, >o" o> ._. f - -AM84C .50 .re .own o .... ·->" "'"'''' ,-. .... '' -~ E 1 ... ...... " 12'1o '"" u111r.: "'-s11o •kt<o "" 2"' Am E, ',11 6i Also very rare are Alean Lb 50 >1 11111t1 sr 11 12 Uft c Ho1 >Va •v. rlt111 "' •2 1l AmHM• 01'1 AIClell El JV! • 11111x CP 3;:, ~Un lll~m 11"" l?'ii rdn1 E l"-..... ArntH l'fJ :!O a,utographs by Joseph Staltn Allul Lnd lS UV.. M NIK1r ml »I.ii Ull MtCll .wt1 :.ZklnUI • lJll '•'A MlrFH!r IO
I ned All ff(ll J'• I\• lntor Ire ""10\olo Am Alrfln 90 not ong ago a menu s1g All• 11.... ,._ 1b 111to Dito •,~ ,'". AB•ke• , .....
Ch ch II d Alld EOU! t\o 10 1111•• 11\d •• ' ' ~ by Stahn, ur 1 an Allvn a.c u 1.,,., 1n1" con 1•1'1 1.th ,,,.., 2 20
Truman sold for $5 250 -~:-~m ~~ m :~:~~~II l~~ I~ MUTUAL ~:::a~~ 217010
Primarily because ti conta1Md A!Pln c;.., Sl'I '"' roek w111 ..., 1v. ~c'C',:!.~s Am 8"'' m o ~ lrol.th CP Ill'! llto "cCl\filn i 60
Stall.n'1 1lgnature. !E1 c~: •rt •f4 :~: rri'1~ ~Yi t i· ~ci.~ 112"!
By contrast doc u men ls A"" Exp ••1o1 tslJt. tonk• 1,... " 11~ FUNDS Am 0111111 1 "' J th Am F111I :JJ\io lt'4 !•Sou lit Jl1>:1 .1Jl'o ADJ IT Signed by .. apo eon are wor Am Furn • Mii JKW Ft. l'ro 1 , •0 •1 1"
relatively little today -not :"'M~rc; Rv. ~1~ J!:1'W!i 1~~ 1~t ~~~~.:'1~-i
more than $100 for most ex ~::: ~~~ lf\'.tc?~ 1:::~1" ~~~ r~.1 ............................. 1~ ~~: ~~
amp\es Reason Napoleon :=1· 8 s;. ll;. J:::r.,:~ 1"' '" ff!W 'YORK API INTG1'1 '" 10.JI AGnBFd ~
Signed a to la( Of SOffil! 500 000 4nlc•n lro 10. 10\lo KOi Co ~ 21"' TM loflOWlnt fl-Inv Co.t. ll tJ U '2 ! 8:'~11:,l.IO
N d i..a .t.r(I hid R'o Ill! KMS ltld 11'\l 11°"' .i1oto1 .._iled b'I' 111¥ Guiel '11 t.1• Am HoJ11 IO document! or o autograp"" Ard ~, 1N n"I K111r sn 1m *" N11i-1 A.nod-111Y11 8ol 1uo IJ" 4 Homt 1 1,
by most movie stars have !:~:f& ~~ 1~"' ~l!~~ Pf ~ ri:, 1i..r.,,ot 1~111'1~i;: 1nl61'°',,!.1 ~"';{ ,,.,. ~Hif1'" 2
SpeClal value there simply .,,,..., 111 J.:o •11o K11111n A 11'" 1m !ht ,,kn. 11 w111c11 Nwt lo 1a 10" Am •=• 1: • A,, ow H !O"' lS\• K1t1 Grt l"4 l'O "'-•~url!les Plot 1 So4 ~ n A Nlt<llctl 12 a re too many oI them around Arv 1c11 u 1. 11•1< K•rum •V. s c1 h1v1 -.. ~IQ(~ 1' t2 21M A MHC•~ I IO Alf'*" Sy 6 l'lt Ktlr Tr 1 .... lS\\ tokl (bid) or """9111 S.lt(:! '21 't2 Al"'I Mo!aori Among tht excepbons Greta •ttc llo1 61v • .ii. KHnt C• 11'1'1 llV• (11ktc1l Wldl\$dr \111 P'I' 1 JO • 1s AN11Gis 1 :io
Garbo, w c Fields, Rudolph ~~~·~~I I~~ I'~ ~=I~'. A ~~ ~Ila •it Alll rz1.1 ~·lh 22 ~r-n•,:J ~~~G .J'
V I I Btlrd ... , , ... i.s l<.e!twcl ' .iov. I t'" rlfn 2 " 'ID IYl' • 51 1..51 """ ~' ,; a en 1no B•~~M ''"' '°"' ic.i1, s .. c 1nil JlV. Acrm1r111r F\ltld1 J Hncoct • 11 1 n ""' s111p IOb
Among living peoplt the: t111t Pn!C 11.0 1 ICwlf Eu iov. 11 Grwlh 7 21 1 to J011oJ111 2:1..11 21-'1 A Smtlt 1 to • BIRI HY lt"i<lt ""• Fib llV. ll>.lo IMOlll 'I) , .... 1tev1•on1 f~lld$ AmSaAfr 10
highest price paid to date was :!~:"119 11~ '~~,,. ~!:,ctr l~" ::.. 1~::';, !1I '%1l t:~, ~::: l~;: ~i::s~~d f" 1t
$3 000 for a letter by Jae. l11s.se11 F •S•· IP4 Kint Int ,,,. Jll A1t111 F 10 10 l 1 ~ CUI 112 20 03 21 .. A s~ "1 "
K d 0 I Bt~mrll .0, •I Klnin El • •'h ll!llttd 1 U &.10 Cul llr I !1 t 36 ~m, ltr I II quehne enne y nassis o B1~11 Mt nVJ JJ Kirk CP tilo ·~ Atulurt , t t1 'ti cus Kl 1 01 111 4 & ,•,•
I •-BI h8MCtwn JJ>.lil.fllKN111V"~J\li36'411A'l'\Fd 1290CusK2S:l6S""' 1eo an tmpor unal.C: r 1 I I llH!I,.. F UV. lilt Unct In 31 ll\I 1111111 II 0911 t2 Cut SI 1• 2' 21 OJ ~tz·1~, ~$
stranger explaining why she B0•,•,,' ~!,', ',',~ •.• !-',~ w'"• ,~, JV. IPh• n n ll cut s2 10 n 11 n Am zioc n ., .. ,~ t>;, 10 mtlP 6 .\S I 11 CUI SJ I 16 tl Amtto" 60 cou\dn t send htm th• $20 000 Btl• L•tl •1 IJ'h Lu.on 1" • lllo Bus l ll l 11 Cus s.. J °' s s. Ametflt 60 1111>11 Ml t\'o tV.Leodv C• 1'\\lNAm 01,.._r 11111111 Poltr lff •llAMF Int,\ he had requested on the BUIOXo• "' ll\li u L•h '°'' n, '"' E•lh s 11 J"'4 K11lckD 1 ss 121 .t.mt_1t IO ~--~ b l lllrd Son -""' Liii GfO lS\'t 1, ,,,., EXPr••• Knick VI UllolVlll AMP IN; " grounUli tu~n s e spen as 11ri,11r 111o J L ... 11 llF 11;. Ul':i c1,rr tll ''NL-• Fd '" 1u.t.mg1>gn 1111
mucb" On a .Ingle P.rly. •8~~-HI•"•' ""•••"",,_~!~~.~~•II 13 1Jllo lncmt '1110 JO Lt~ G•lh 1000 10 n Amotx CorP ,,,,.~ ,. ._..,. ,,, 71/o 11':1 lnvtU t 1J 'fl LtX RK~ 16 10 11 60 ""'• •ltr 1 70 Boo!h ( 12\':i 11 LODllW 1Vt 1Vo Sotel '3' Llbtrtv • SJ 1 It m•tff pf" Booi Ali It 191'1 Lot! Cl'MIY 21\ 7'11 ~loc:k t 29 10 u Liit Sit s n 'JC Am11ec1 I 60 8o•t C1• 11 lWILltl Elr11 111~11V.4m Gr111 6H l«Lllt lnY ltl 1'1~mlt~ JJ TILIPMOHI
ANSWlllNlo IUIUU
835-7777 James Felton to Head =~tnd:." ~v: ~: ~7i~n (G ?~~ ~t. z:: ~:u ~fl I~~ ~~ NII 1 ~ ... ~ 12 5' /t,~~o;r..:k 1
1 9rkt k• l•Y'J ll Mt PIOOI )"lo lX. AmN Giii l 51 l lj Looml1 Stvltt An. <Orp ~~c I llrwnt At l)V. 111\ Mtl RHY 10\'I ID't AllCllor GrDVD C1l\old J244 :J2M nd Ci6Y I'° Br$h Ser n , 70\o M1llkrt """ 11 , C••ll I 15 t ~9 C1011 11 14 ti I• ~:~~!:(tC0•, " Bu,ktl M 16>11 llloM•nor C t t>o t..rw1~ 117912'2 Mui 1412UU ........, 9! llWCktVt 12., lll• M1r1t Mt ~ 2Qt, IMmt t lt t l• L~!h Bro IJ » u q ::t S"",•1 • Bu~ntl" l • l~ Ir-• M ltR Fd lnW t 2l 10 11 Mtg111 111 '0.. t U APL p'.j II • II urn SI.., ?i\lo ll•• aul LP' 11 > U Ven! •J IO ~1.5' Mtllhtn J :W. JN AR (ICLtO• 1J\,11>1Mc:Cor Sl\'>$1 '"°" •KJ()Mlt!Grt~ 70..1~ArAISYc0;.~ ~1rws~ 2/'l• ,. .... McOu1y ll'IO 27"' Mt Houtklon MtfHdlUHll Co ... ~:,•,., nl' t1mbr N l\o l"MtdlC: H t tV. Fl'ld A S&.I IU Frltd ltJ tl61.rcn 60 n,
(11111 Miii 11 U l':i Modic: M lS\~ 2''4 Fncl I I 11 I It.I lncltP 1 •t 1 J1 ArlJ Ps'"r OO
Newport Center Group HAL ESTATf
SYNDICATIONS
SS,000 t9 S10,000 Tn Sii"· ,_, ... , htaflo • ..,....,,, ....
LN. ~p I...,_. .... u.
•b'9 '9 ..... wM 41•0lify.
C.ft hr .,,,..,.._, HI dlsCllM
tttb ty,. ef ptdlNltl• to .....
I.. l•ftltMetlt wltti • pfofft•
eloMI.
&OlllT M AllMSTll.ONCi
14641 OJ ,,Z.JIOl
As-. VIII ... l•I &t ....
USE COMMON SENSE
FOR O.T-C. MEDICINE
br TlllT GIANT, I rtr
J ames P . Felton, vice presi·
dent and director o[ a d
verhsmg and pubhc re\a!Lons
for Avco Financial Services.
has been elected president of
the Newport Center Assoc1a
lion
The association represents
developers merchants and
professional people In Newport
Cenler, ()rgamztd to maintain
the beauty and pleasant work·
Ing conditions m the mul!1.
m1U1on dollar c o m p I e x:
overlooking Newp0rt harbor
and the Pacific Ocean _.
Felton former Los Angeles
newspaperman a n d ad·
vert1s1ng executive, succeeds
Lloyd 0 Johnson commerc1al
marketing manager tor The
Irvine Company the assoc1a·
lions first pres ident He will
continue as a director
Also elected was Llewellyn
r.oodf1eld secretary Goodfield
1s manager or Newport Ce1ter
for The Irvine Company
Other officers of l h'
\\hen a medicine dOl:'s not
requ11e a prescr1pt1on \1e
commonly r.all 1t an O T-C,
or over the counter drug 11;:;:;;;;:;-~::::;:::::;;;;;:;:-c:;:::;;;;;I
However th1i; does not mean ~. ~ao-7 ; OIL PAINTINliS
that It <"annot 11{' harmful 1( i;.t WHOLESALE WAllHOUSl
taken incorrectly or to ex· ~ OPEN TO THI PUILIC
'"' 50°/o OFF
Thl' mo~! important con• l11t I l!'OINGl:ll S.t.NTA ANA
s1dC"rat1011 for any di UJ.': 1n
this cac,.gory 1s common
sC"nsr Da not cxpecl 11 to
cure ilnylh1n!: but s1n1plr All·
menls Br aj\are that 1! thr
symptom~ 01 \\ h1ch ;ou
ta:kr such a drug recur that
, ou should seek the 11dv1Cf'
of )OUr ph)SIClan \Ve stock
and srll a gN'al many 0 TC
products and l'IN' pleased lo
gnr )OU i;1udance !or their
safe USC
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US "hen you
need a delivery \Ve will dt"--
hver promptly \\llhout ex·
tra cbarP."' A great m11ny
Pffiple relv on u~ for lhrlr
htal!h n.-ds \Vr '""!come
rrqucsts tor drlr\cry servtce
e.nd charge 11ccnu11ts.
PAll LIDO 'HAlMACY
l S 1 Ho1plhll lollll
Newport 1Hc• 642°1511
,.,_ O.lh-ftt
doubl• ~rid
fltr•~
J.111.1ll'lt1•t•'4 • ... .... ,
J f1.llt•• it1.1H1, ..... ,.,, ~.~, ...
C•~non B IO 11\1,,...,dtrn l3\l>:U Sloclt •» '" M1u l1J712161.r11"" Ds1 assoc1ahonareReedBauman, CJnr1d P ~~ S\'a rid tft llV.lt'\ Sclt11 1 1l 52JMt11 loc lJlll•st..,-ren 1111,,0' CIP Miit 21 • 26>,;. IC• En lllo "• ltDlon t"' • "' Miu Gth 12"' n M A s T y ef the Ah son Company, vice c., sw.1 • • 1•1 Mc1l1• w i•v. 10~ a11roc1c: 1 s.i ''"Mau Tr 1• .s.1 u" A~~o P/11 :0 president Frank A Rhodes1 l::1T~1' ~·; ~i! M~::l '1 '~ 1: l!:~°"ic.,, 1f !! 1: !! ~;:i., 1~ ~ ,; ~ "'"'' ~1115
J f C d Rhod (tre Co O'o Jl'o ldw Gt ll :12 8trk Glt'I 1 00 1 "5 MldA M11 J fj 6 19 :~1110"1 •• r, o ausey an es, t•r•• 1111 1 . l ~ M mpr s1 u'.4 11o11c111k ''° 113 Mocc11 c, 11.ff u" Ar c
VICe prestdent and Bill D Ctrl GrP ?O 24'111 lit Mui U IS kit~ Sit l:M t11 OO<l'f'S U0111llA,.:lft or~:o C11c NG II fl•• lnt• In ll 11'0 Bot! Fein 11 1l ll ll IF Fd I" 'n Ashld OH T 7G \Vhllman or Security Pac1f1c '••nth c IS IJl> Pll Cl li'•<~&os• Fnd 1•1 t20 IF G!h ~n lllAUd 8 ' Cenlt~ I•~ 1~'o -.llu RT 15\.J 1$~ 8rwn Fd l ll •It MUUS GY 11OJ11 XI A.JSd oG'~ JO National Bank, treasurer ttnvt PS II'• "'~ "1111 v1 a. 11-\ii 11"' a1111oc:t c11Y1n M<J omc s 11 112 Asd s, I lOb
Other duec'-cs include Jack ',~~~•"•' ',',',', ,",. 11:1~", 1•h 1'\lo au!!<k u H 16"' Mu 0m111 10 1t n '2 A1sc1 r,."5P W ,,.._ .,. .... /\, ,,. C1ncl11 lt tG 21 10 Mut Sllr1 U tJ 1, IJJ Allllo111 ll>d
Barnell Newport Harbor th1•1 011 • t\o,,.,_k ll 2J1>:i'761'1 01~1c1 '" •2l u1 rru 200 200.o.11cvEi 13.1 (htm 1.1'1 IO'o 11~ Mon! Col 10 lO'A N11W s 10 71 11 II NE" Mui 10 n 10 tS Al! 11.ltMld 1 Chamber 0 f Commerce CIMW •11 1'\lo '"'Moor• p 11~. 11v. NY Vllf 1• '51145 NII I"" 11:M11 :M AHRch Pll 1! • Clllia u1 11 11 Moon s 11\'o l~ tu1 Mot 1 '' 112 N11 S1cur $er au Rl'h ct J James Edwards Jr of E,d..CM Brio• u " Morr.,, IC 11~1o11 tG Fu1>11 1ou 1o•s B•l•n 11 •112 11A11Rth 1>tlao ' ' Chll1on UV, lS MIM Tr A 21!'o 21\~ (11 .. m I 23 t 01 ·-SOS S S1 41111 (h1m I wards 'rtieaters CtrCUJt, l nc' C~•I•~ Ill,,. M!•l• wt I-lhCtpU Vt!\ J 6'1 '" oi.ld ~ .. •11AllA• Ccrp
T F h C f d 11 C~rl1S pf llM IOI otc~ M S.... 6'1JC11>1! 511 15t 1:12 G<W!ll t7J106'ATO Inc: Git ony renc • 0 we ' :11111 Miii 1! 1~ Mol C!U{I 11'1> 11\lo c .. ,,, Sh 12 tl It I] Pl $!Ji' 1 JI 111 AU"O!'I Prod
B k d c c 1111\lt ... 11'-2t\lo Ullllf l!'IO no.;, Cl\IMl119 Furoct1 IMOl'l'I s Sol I.OS "uklm 0111 an er an o m P a n Y , c11111u1 11 21111 "" ~•Pio ~ Jl'o Jl'I 811111 1111 13 Dl Stock 1 41 , 16 :u'°"''" 1t111 Douglas A Ross of !he c11r~ Ml ll'-11 :Mt.-. M1tr LI! l6 :Wl'I com sr 1 n 1" N11 Gr111 •.111 10 fJ 'KO Corp (ltusnt I ~ 1\<o NCC hid /\o l 'lo Vrwth J-51 6 0'1 Nww Ctl I lt 6 91 Avco CP WI Ne\vporter lnn and Al c11n1n o 1 • 11>o Ht••• C• 16 , 11 1ncom 1 n 1-" N-Fd 1111 u,, :vco "" 10
Weinert O ( Weinert-Clark ~=r c.. !:'~ !f'" ~::c~'&Jl 1r" 1rn c1151":1Gr 11~:· 2 os ~::Z,0:1" lf ll J: :f :~~~ f'..~ )II
F J I Collin Fd 16 /,16'4N HOIP Sh'"' C1pll 79' 15'Nlc~ Strt lSOIUlll.t.;t°.'!o'<?',','o 1ne eY.eS Colon Sir Jl\•Jl~Nll ll!> .. ,.,,, Fund 10011091 Nor•••I lSUU~ ·~ Com Cir St to Ntt Mtd JS"' 36\lo Fro"I 19 1~ tl 1l Qcngph 7 61 7 u Corn! ~n 11;< ''"' H Plltnl llll Ill Shrhtd 11 90 U 01 Clm1111 I 1' 'n 8ttK;~W SO Com C.11 11 1l N St<Rs~ 11;;, 11'\ SPtcl tl'tll0.0100 F~rld 11.JSlSJ<rB&krOuT 65 comw P• ltl4 27~ Nt t $how ?'i'o '~Chem.ct 11 21 Jt 90 \DI FUlld t IO 10 11 B111 GE 11! Com Hiil! U'-lo 11"' Ntl Sll~r Wo sc;, (olonl•I °"' WmS ll il 13 '3 Bait G pl Cl Com PIY 15\':i 11 N l!ntGE It lfllio EQUl1 4AS 4 U nh I JI t ll Bar.;ior Pu"I Cmol (m ll~.cl1\loNJN1I G lt\'o It~ F~nd 11«111M Nell ll'31J'3B1ngp Df1 (mo IMI •I\ S .... Nkl'>lMI F JC1o l0l4o Grw!~ '.J1 1110H AIM 177ilJ31llkofC1I Ill (mo! TfC t,;, t!'toNlt1111 " 45 ·~ lnctm tU10110TC St<: 10tJ11J181tnkolNY l (ornr~ ,.,, l'\4 Nlfl1n B IJ '5"" Vttot S 36 5 N Ptct Fnd 17' t.o6 llank Tr 111 Con PtD ll,,. 2l'll NoCtr G1 IJ ltto City Grth ll 71ll11 Ptlll lie¥ t 26 10 11 ~111() 2 Jlt (1111 Roell 19Vt ]1 1/j N E~r OU J l oms Bd s 21 311 Penn Sq •• , I IJ B6rll CR ~s. Con!rtn l JV. NW N"G 10\lo lim 1111 AB I IJ l lJ P'I Miii ~ 72 511 Bllslc Inc 10 COOP• Lb 1lO.'I NW Pu~v 21 ,,,,, with c 110 lt5PM1t 1Sll16toBa11c Pl250
Escrow Talk
Scheduled
Corenco Jllilo Jl\14 1«11x11 (p si lo s1 Com• Af 10 01 10 97 Plltrl111 10 1t 11 ;5 B0•1•• Mio "Your 1nher1tance laxes and corp s •'• J N111:1 111c 1 T 11.,., comp co 111 1" Pint st "1111' 111 "'" M1 ot 1 Cotm Yri '"" la 0.llVJ M W/1 Jl'Ho Comp lld '4110 29 Pion Ent 1 n I" Bl1hlnd 211 other aspects of property cr1wtr11 1J 1s"' °"'° ..,., t~c1ov. omP Fd 10 n 11 n PI011 ,,,.. 12 70 n 31 ,.B•mi" P12 JO
sh " II be d d Cron (O 31\, ll'• •O Ftrr 20''> 21 \o om•lk 'JS I ti 1'1111 llTY 1110 n n UW:hl!> to owner 1p w1 1scusse ''~' II.•• •'• iM\ 11 Sh111 '" J•• concord u ... Y•ll Pllgrth 13 lS 1, Jt l:;L. L~P U by Lucille Boston attorney cwur F~ ti'> ID• Ocot Sein li!o 111. -111y n n 1211 ''<• FIHllll 8..,,1...,!" 1 (YO (om 11. ti\ tic Tee J. 5>lo ........ G 11M 112 Grwtl! " .. ,6 .. Btl!Fd1 1" and Cal1fom1a State Inher1 01"• LP$ ' ~'"Mn •• .i, onu Ml 111 121,. E•• 10'610'6eealFd• 1111 Otnly M 11~<1J\) fll'IOl\1 II 11\11 on! Glh 10..5110 61 N HD!' 21 •12111 Bo.;~ 50 tan Tax appraiser at lhe 0111 CP t"4 10 tiff TP 2l\Kl11o Corp Ld lS ll 11 lS Pro Fufld 10" 10 n B~ orc'k lO
monthly meeting or the 8::: g:~ "'~ :w"' ,,, ,•,•, '"' •'I CM'I' C•~ 11 •1 1150 Pro PDrll u111v111 Bttti..1.ir 1J IJ>-. II\\ rro WOIY I 1J I '2 Provdnt I fl JAl 891c11Pt1 SOb
Orange County Escrow g:::1n"~' ~~; Ll,",,"•"•'• .S•~•551'c'" wo11 11t , .. Pru SIP 1G11111Jeeioen 160 ·~· 1t 1. '° O•Vg/I M 70 IS 10."5 p,.,".... Funds B•ld~'H 60tl Association to be held \Vednes-0•"1' Fd 5\• • "••co "0 •'"' o.11w1rt Group f'Qu11 t 1• 1 tO B111 How 60 °'[111 lrn 19 70 P111<ol '""™ Otl:1t 12.IOllSS Gl'Pfl 11.015ff 8oll 1Mr<o.. day at !he Atrporter inn 18700 De u1 ( 15\.'> 16\'t P1noll 0 3 lV• C>elwr 11IO11 U Grth 10 5' 11 St Btml$ co •O
MacArthur D 0 u I ' v • r d g~~~ 1,·. ~ ... I~•. ,','•"• O"r ] I>, l'Ao Dell• '19 • 51 '"Com I :JO t 01 Belll11• l ~o ,_, ·~ •~ t odt Co• lsn1sn tn•nt I Ol 11laendlx "4l
N le h Ot!hlOU l7 121•PtrkvC1 21 •1H~ t•t'l 1•9JljfJ V!st1 I S6•XBonefl(~l lO ewpor eac \_ o t CtnT 11" 111, P1rkw H l\o 1 , r•l'I I'd n SJ u 11 vo1~• 1 q 1 09 Bentll ~1s 1o
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bury College She served for Ebff1n 111 ,,... )"IPl111t111 11•. ll"llF&rm Bu 101310 Shear ~ J?DnH•1Bor~n 110 Ec<!fl Ltb l~llo 1111. Porl HI( 714 :tl\\ 'kl Dell 131 Sh Ott" t~ 16 11 76 BQ1'11W8r ! 11 15 year~ as a merchand1s1ng Ed11C1 s1 ,...._ ,,,., Pon11 M •'• •' F1<1t111v G•-s1c1e 10 11 11 H 11orm&11 1op EIP6t Et ll\>IJ"" HIC Pl 11~,IJ'o CIPll \1!11l11Slt"'" Funds 8nsEdl• 116 execultvt for reta1I firms 1n E10~ sv•• 11. 1.1.iiPro Golf 3'• ... COl'tr ,111061 c,.,1 ,,110 ueo,Ed pj111
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'
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CIVIC and political organ1za E"Yt1 ( JC JI·~ PvlO (t• l ~ S1~ F~ •• ~:: 21 °' ~~; .. '"" I~~ 1::;i; ::.~1 ~~~
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Factory Set
DURANT , Okla
Marathon li1:inufactur1ng Co
annouoced its subsidiary, R
G l.eTourncau Inc v.111 hu1ld
a htclory here lo makr elec
tncal comppnents for hen\y
earth moving inach1nery al
a cost or $;, m1lhon It 1Y1ll
have an 1n1llal \\Ork1ng force ar Jti"Ti'" 100 and this could
rtach 400 on a two shift opera
hon some lime nexl ) ear
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' .. " ••-•• ''' I• ""'N••cvr.. NEWS QUJZ "'tdb OOf' 111 t14W••h '"u t•(IPUJo"CtnllP5 I "'" " ~ Ht!Htt 11n1111 W•tll"'t" r.'"'"' Ct"!l~EI l nlvt~Mp OI' ''°"'"tutlOll1 Ul CA111tt•I Hl'flllt 2 6t 1 "t """'' ,. , ... .,,. C111M•w 1 11) Otltrlllutlon1 (•) ew-dl¥kN""' lwU H Minn IA n 11111 l~UI ,, "' •• " ~fnl$~! \
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Thursday's Closing Prices ·Complete New Y ~rk Stock Exchange Llst I
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D,llLY PILOT rt
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f8 DAILY PILOT Thursday, April l, 1971
l
~5-f\C ~~-r~ GS
'\\\\\"\)\;\\~ ~ e
'J,0°/0 ;11f11-Yl ot'tt~l1
EARLY AMERICAN SOFA
Authentic Detailing ••• Wing Back. •
.Quilted, with Birch Trim.
REG. '369
EARLY AMERICAN
SWl\'EL ROCKER
Luxuriom Foam Cushion in delight·
ful Prints or Solids!
REG.'75 $3 8 NOW
DEtORATOR HEADBOARDS!
Variow Styles a: Colon! Only 10 to
choose from!
VALUES TO '54.95
YOUR CHOIC:E s 11
~ ---
SWlfEL CUAlllS
UJtra Comfortable! Assorted Styles
&. Fabrics! Additional Protective
Arm Covers FREE!
REG. '169
YOW $78 C:HOIC:E
French Provincial Bedroom
Exquisite Antique White/
lnelade11 Triple Dresser. Mirror &
Full or Queen Size 1-Jeadboard!
Decorator Wall Plaqnes
Spanish 4 Mediterranean
40%oFF
.. -....... _,, --___ .!""---
. . .... . ~ . .
.
PLEASE READ! . '
OWNER DIED .•. WE MUST HAVE CASH NOW!'
CHFC IS FACED WITH SATISFYING ITS MANU-
FACTURERS AND THE FAMILY ESTATE, AND'
CASH MUST BE RAISED FAST! TO DO THIS WE
HAVE SLICED PRICES TO THE BONE ON EVERY
SINGLE ITEM IN OUR STORE! EVERYTHING
GOES TO RAJSE. THIS MUCH NEEDED CASH!!
YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN SUCH INCREDIBLE
VALUES! NO DEALERS PLEASE.
BEDSPREADS
ONLY
Twin, Full, Queen & King
Size! Solids, Prints,
Quilteds!
$ 00
While They La•t!
LAMP BONANZA
Gorgeous Decorator
Lamps Tobie and Swag
Type .. All Colors. .All
Styles
ONLY
$ 00
FAMOUS SEALY"RESTGUARD"
Mattress & Box Springs
Limited Quantity! REG. NOW
King Size!
· 3 Pcs. $199 $118
KING SIZE RECLINER!
In Easy Core,
Leather-Like
Vinyl!
REG. NOW
$189 $77
THE SOFA WITH A SECRET!
Beautiful Sofa by Day. REG. NOW
•• Full Size Bed by $399 · $144 Night! In practically
indestructible Hercu·
Ion!
3731 W. WARNER -SANTA ANA -PH. ( 714) 546-6730
..
~IAGNIFICENT CONTEMPORARY SOFA! REG. NOW ~::::d:~:r::~·~i $299 $13":.<·. Gold or Ql;vc! · \JJ,
YOUR CHOICE! ..
MEDITERRANEAN REG NOW a.:~.~~~~~M $2.79 $15Q' Jn~ludes Trit>le. Dresser, '
Mirror & Full or Queen
Size Headboard! 1
THOMASVILLE ININGROOM
~~?i::?~:~f}j:,;t,. $E,G.795 $5ow8
China, Extension Ta·
hie, 2 Arm &: 2 Side
·Chain! I ONl,ll'
8'VINYLSOFA
Sf ORE HOUftS MON'.'l:tii!JLSAT. lOA.M. 'TIL 10 P.M., SUN. 10 A.M. 'Tll 6 P.M.
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Thursday, April 11 1q71 s OAIL Y '8.1'1' 3
on Beach Spawned Decision by Nixon
DAILY l"ILOT !"Mio toy JeltR V•lh'rll
PRESIDENT PREPARES TO TAKE AERIAL VIEW OF BEACH
Cliief Executive Aired Views On Land For The People
Waikiki Gift~
Nixo1i Considers Freei1ig Beach
President Nixon was reported Wed·
nesday in San Clemente to be preparing
shortly to open for public use a strip
of Waikiki Beach in Hawaii, which is
now run by the Na\'Y as a recreation
area for Vietnam servicemen.
The beachfront, owned by the federal
government at an estimated cost of
$100 million. is located at Fort De Hussy
and lies between the Hawaiian Village
and the Reef Hotel.
John Ehrlichman. the President's
assistant for domestic· affairs, said the
federal property review board of which
Pe is a.-member is ready to declare
the famous beach area in Honolulu as
"excess" and to work out an ar·
• rangement for "multiple" use by
servicemen and the public.
But he said Ute Navy is opposed to
the move. "There's a lot of bureaucratic
barbed wire around it," he said.
"It's a very tough issue because the
Navy feels very keenly it should remain
as a rest and relaxation area for person-
nel coming lo Hawaii. We think ifs com-
patible to work out multiple uses."
The move is in line with Nixon·s
determination to loosen lhe federal
government's hand on property he feels
could be heller used as public park
and recreation land.
Ehrlichman said the President is giving
the board "su(>erb backing in moving
this ball down the field."
Many Residents Remain
In Homes Hit by Quake
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Homes
gerious:y damaged in Ute Feb. 9 earth·
quake are not being abandoned in large
numbers as feared, say officials for
two major savings and loan firms holding
mortgages in the badly shaken San
Femando-Sylmar are'a.
Only three of about 800 dwellings his
company holds mortgages on in that
area have been abandoned, John S.
Fuller, secretary-treasurer of the San
Fernando Valley Federal Savings and
Loan Association told lhe Los Angeles
County Earthquake Commission on
\Vednesday.
Of the 800. Fuller said, about half
1;ustained some damage but for only
40 to 50 did it exceed $5,000.
Fullerton speculated that m a n Y
homeowners facing massive rebuilding
and heavy debt following the quake
"have now realized that th ey don't like
living in a trailer. an apartment or
with their cousins and are moving back
in."
fuller and Kenneth D. .Johnson. a
\•Ice president of California Federal Sav-
ings and Loan Association, .said most
Joan coinpanies are automatically allow-
ing owners of damaged homes to defe r
mortgage payments three months.
The companies also are refinancing
Ecology Trip
Site Changed
A charter bus taking La gun a
housev.•lves on an "ecological" shopping
trip to the San Fernando Valley Friday
\\'iii leave from the Festival of Arts
grounds rather than the Chamber of
Commerce otllce as stated earliu.
Luisa Hyun, chairman of Pr~n
vironment-People (PEP) \1:hich is
spon~ring the trip, said that although
the PEP office is located al Chamber
headquartrrs. the bus will leave from
the festival grounds because of parking
riroblcm11 in the Chamber a r e a •
Departure is scheduled at 9 a.m.
The ~hopping trip will take ecology
minded Lagunans to Alexander 's Market
tn Encino. first major chain to feature
environ1nentally acceptable goods
througllo11l i1s storell.
Cost rif e rnund·lrip excurllion ill
$2. For fu · ln(ormalion call the PEP
office, 497 ·· _,)
existing Joans over a longer period so
h<>meowners can meet m o r t g a g e
payments in addition to a 511l percent
Small Business Administration loan for
repairs .. the two men said.
Johnson also noted that his firm is
making "interim" loans at lower-than-
normal interest rates for persons \Vho
wish to rebuild at once and don't want
to wait until their SBA money comes.
When the cost to repair tiuake damage
exceeds what a person already has in-
vested in a home, the two men said,
the loan companies in some cases are
absorbing part of the Joss as an incentive
to keep O\vners from merely allowing
a foreclosure.
~fayor Sam Yorty, meanwhile, at hi~
weekly news conference \Vednesday, said
he has asked state Atty. Gen. Evelle
J. Younger if the state could legally
subsidize disaster insurance and make
it retroactive to the first of the year.
If Younger says yes, Yorty said, he.
will submit such a plan to Gov. Reagan.
Yorty also said Utere is "some sun.
stance" to the federal government's con-
tention that since it is paying for ~
million to repair damage to public
facilities, Californians should finance
repairs on private property.
The Democratic mayor said, "We·re
not gelting very far " in requests for
outright grants, from the state or federal
governments. Yorty said Reagan hall
rejected the idea of grants for earth-
quake victim~ because the state then
\YOUld have to provide the same kind
of assistance in all disasters.
Fuller said the average homeowner,
hoping for federal aid in the way of
grants and three percent loans "has
been sitting back w a i t i n g to see what
was going to happen:' With the uncfr·
ta in pro.spec l of grants. "\\'e are
no\v ~ncouraging t h e m to go a h ea d
and seek assistance from the SBA so
we can gl!'t down to solving these pro-
blems," he added.
The Grrater Los Angclts Chanlbt.r
nf Commerce ha~ C'omplained that SBA
loan~ are not being proct"i1ed fa~t
enough. or 4,000 applications filed since
the earthquake. thr chamber said, only
314 residential and nine business loans
h&\·e been approved.
A chamber spokesman said lhat
Thomas S. Kleppe, national administrator
of the SBA. in a meeting in Los Angeles
today, wa~ lo ask banking and savings
and loan f1n11s to provide loan officer!!.
loan clerks. appralserii and othtr 1taff
to help processing lhc federal loans.
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Prqldent Nixon said tondly Wednesday
that a walk on his beach at Cotton's
Point apawned his decision to open one--
third of Camp Pendleton shoreline to
public use.
"I remember that walk, and thinking
about the millions of resident3 of
California who don't have enough beaches
to walk on," he related.
Then, he said his mind turned
downcoast to ~mp Pendleton-a stretch
of shoreline c~arly visible from CoUon's
Point.
"Here is a be8ch within an hour's
driving distance for 10 million residents
or Southern California," he added.
A year a go, he related, hi,n office
launched a plan through the General
Services Adminisltation and a property
review board which he established after
taking office to sift over lhe thousands
of deeds of federal land.
The land betler used for publlc recrea-
tion. he said, would be turned over
to public U":.
And lhe CamP Pendleton decision, he
said, would be the first of many similar
ones he added.
President Nixon, and his aides joined
a pool of press representatives for a
20-minute flight by helicopter over the
new public beaches Wednesday mornjng
and termed the area "simply wonderful,"
1 During the flyover he ofJered sug·
'
ge:stions that perhaps some parts of
the blufftopa involved in the ltansfer
could be used as sites for restaurants
to provide visitors "with that spectacular
view."
But he also gave some opinions on
the environmental preservation of the
tidelands and beaches themselves.
The President turned to domestic
policy coordinator John Erlichmann and
asked about the prowess of the California
Department of Parks and Recreation
in the field of environmental preserva-
tion.
Erlichmann responded that the reputa-
tion of that agency was good.
.. Then I'm sure they won't clutter
it up,•• the President said. ..
Looking over the area of the new
San Onofre Bluffs State 'Beach. he1
predicted thousands o{ visitors t• lhe
rough, undeveloped area durin& thl1
weekend's dedication rites.
The beach, wt\icb forms more than
halt ot the land planned for public use
at PeodletoR, will open for o n e week
only during Easter Week.
The President's decision Wednuday
marked what easily could be the most
significant deed immediately affecUnt
the San Clemente area coastline sinct
he bought the old Cotton Estate in 1969.
"Just think," he mused, "if I hadn't
taken that walk, mar.be nothing would
have happened today."
County OKs Plan for Local Parks
Afler more than a year of discussion,
county supervisors Wednesday adopted
• plan for the establishment of local
neighborhood parks in developing unin·
corporated areas but admitted that the
ordinance tbey approved cauld stand
some future changes.
The plan rundamentally calls for four
acres of local parks per 1,000 population
but 1.5 acres can be provided by schools.
The developer is required to provide
the other 21/a acres or money lo pllrchase
the property.
Pl'incipal objections to the plan came
from Laguna Hills Leisure World. and
Mission Viejo developers. They main·
tained that they should be given credit
for private facilities provided in Uteir
planned cun1munlties.
Such credit is not provided for in
the ordinance and will probably be the
subject of future changes.
Supervisor David L. Baker said that
where private recreation facilitie s are
provided if the county requires an addi-·
tional public neighborhood facility it
would amount to a double bl.irden on
the property owners.
Supervisor Ronald Caspers agreed lhis
was true if it was 100 percent mandatory
that propertv owners finance and main·
tain recreational facilities "but where
It is a 25 percent membersh ip factor
I don't think it suffices."
Mission Viejo executive Phil Charlton
said h.is organization had three volunt.ary
recreation facilities with about a 23 per-
cent membership and in ~ddition had
·installed seven neighborhood parks which
average about 12.5 acres per 1,000
population.
He said he felt his company should
have credit for these facilities In assess·
ing the 21,). acres per 1,000 formula.
Robert Linberg, Rossmoore Leisure
\Vorld executive, said his firm provided
2.20 acres of developed recreation
facilities for 14,000 residents and felt
they should have credit for them.
Discussion brought out the fact thnl
once · the park land was acquired by
the county it would be developed and
maintained through assessmenb on local
cuunty service area residents.
County Administrative Officer Roberl
E. Thomas said no supervised playground
activities were planned.
Ten of Orange County's 25 cities have
similar park ordinances with most re-
quiring a donation of land or equivalenl
cash for 2.5 acres per 1,000 persom.
The C1J5t of such provlsiona b
estimated at about $1,000 per home on
lhe original cost.
* Reconditioned TV and Appliances
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f,lte SOlltt"
Pretty Paula Holt, 17, poses
with boxe5 of supplies that
will keep her alive £or the next
two months. Paula and her
brother Gary,..or Austin, Tex .,
are afflicted with kidnt:Y
di&ease that has taken the
lives of three in the family.
Paula'J father has been warn·
ed that unless current bills are
paid Ibey won't gel any furth-
er supplies.
Nixon Barely
Wins House
Draft Vote
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The NllOn
Administration, by a razor thin margin,
bas won House approval for a two-yur
ertenslon of the draft, but backers o{
Ii voluntffr army hope to approve •
military pay package that wiU speed
up the Preaident'1 timetable for ending
tho drlll.
The $1. 7 billion pay and querter1
all owance increase is three Umea more
Opensive than Nixon requested. It would
grant ln one' year rterti.ng July 1 th~
rmlses Nixon had plamed to extend over
two years to achieve a zero draft call
by mid-1973.
As an indication of the sentiment for
ending: the draft, the House Tuesday
came within two votes of limltlne the
President'• induction authority to just
one 11\0!'e year.
The 200 to 198 vote was also an
indication of increasing impatience in
the House for an end to the: Vietnam
war.
'Fox' Crusader
Strikes Again
BATAVIA, Ill. (UPI ) -A clandestine
antipollution crusader known as "The
Fox" want.s a local soap plant scrubbed
c:Jean.
Stickers signed by "The Fo1" ha ve
turned up on bars of Dial soap at
local stores, police said Wednesday.
The stickers read : "Armour Dial
pollutes ou r air" and "Armour Dial
pollutes our wat.tr.''
Pollet said a clerk remembered a
tall. slim, man asking where the bar
soap was stocked but could not give
a more complete description.
In the ,past, "The Fox" ha s con-
centrated. on plugging factory dralna and
otherwise harauing those he feels art
guilty ot fouling the envirorunent.
'
Fulbri9lat's Chat'ge
•
War Crime Laid
To White House
W/.SHINGTON CUPll -Sen. J.
William Fulbright (D-Ark.), said "unless
we are willing to &o all lbe way"
to the White House In aeeking to assign
blame for any Vietnam war atrocities
by Americtns, there ia "a very aeriow:
question of going down this road."
Fulbright said "we are now being
cauiht" by the same principles applied
in &ii.Ls of some Nul and Japanese
leaders on war crimes charges followlng
World War 11.
MJny defendanta In those trials con-
tended they were following higher orders,
or that they were unaware of attoc!Ues
committed by subordinates.
Lt. William L. Calley Jr., in his trial
at Ft. BeMing, Ga .• <ln murder charges
for the slaying of civilians at My Lai,
Soulh Vietnam, relied largely on the
argument that he was following orders.
'I'he military jlU'Y convicted him and
sentenced him to life imprisonment
Wednesday.
Fulbright was asked about the" Calley
case and Ua impllcatlon.1 today.
He wu interviewed on the C~ morn-
ing newa program on CBS-TV.
"The princpple that we applied to
Yamashita should be applied here,"
Fulbright uid.
During further questioning, h e
remark!<!: "I'm saying there's a very
serious question of going down this road
unlus we are willing to go all the
way .•. that means bringing ln the com-
mander in chief."
He said it was "quite questionable''
to pick out one man -"lf he'1 going
to be tht only one" -to bear principal
responsibility for actions aucb as My
Lai .
"U we're going down that road, we
Bolivian Consul
Shot to Death
At Hamburg Post
HAMBURG. Germany (UPI) -An un-
identified assail ant, believed to be a
woman, shot and killed the outgoing
Bolivian consul general in Hamburg: to.
day aa he sat at hls office desk, police
reported.
The shooting took plact about 10 a.m.
Occupant.s ol the building said they saw
a woman dash dow11 the stairs and out of
the consulate immediately after the at·
tack.
Police 1aid they found a 1ray wig. be-
lievecj dropped by the as11ailant, on a
landing on the 11taircase.
The outeolng, consul, Robert Quinlan·
illa Pereira, about 40, died from two
pistol bullet wounds in ttle chest shortly
after his admiJSion to a city hospital.
T1le Brai.llian Embassy in Bonn said
he had served as consul ge11eral in Ham-
burg from May 19, 1970, until Feb. 18,
1911. He was continuing to carry ou t
consular duties at the consulate. wttich
wa1 also his residence, pending the ar4
rival of a replacement.
Qulat&nilla wa1 Jlvin1 in the consulate
w:lth bis 38-year-old wife and three chil-
dren.
Soviet .Party Leader
Rips Into Chinese
MOSCOW CUPI) -A Soviet Com-
munist Party leader, in a speech to
the 24th Party Congresa released today,
condemned attempts by non-Soviet C:Om·
munisUI to modify Marxist theory or
set up "models" or socialist states dlf·
ferent from the Soviet Union.
Pyotr M. Masherov, first secretary
of Byelorussia's party organiiation, men-
tioned only Communist China by name.
"Particularly repulsive is the anti-Soviet
line of the Chinese leaders who calling
themselves Communists have made lhelr
principal occupation the defamation of
our Leninist Party and the Soviet u·
perienct of buildine Socialism."
ought to comjder wbert lt ought to
10," Fulbright said.
Asked if he meant including In any
inquiry of ultimate responsibility Gen.
William C. Westmoreland, Vietnam com-
mander at the time of the My La i
killings and former President Lyndon
8. John!IOn and President Nixon, u
will, Fulbright aaid he did.
Egypt Units
Fire Salvo
Across Suez
By United Preu lntenaUosW
Egyptian troops opened fire across
the Suez Canal, Israeli officials said
Wednesday, but there were no injuries
and Israeli troops did not fire back.
It wu tht first shooting along lhe truce
line since Aug. 12.
An laraeli spokesman said the Egyp-
tians opened up with short bursts: of
machlnegun fife Monday across the canal
near the northern end of the waterway.
There was no comment from Cairo on
the Incident, but on1y the Aug. 12 shooting
has been reported since the Arab-Israeli
cease-fire began Aug. 5.
In Amman, Jordan's King Hussein call·
ed for an urgent Arab summit conference
to discuss the Palestinian issue and the
overall situa~iop in the Middle East.
He cabled hU( proposal to leaders of
the Arab nations Wednesday night as
Jordan recovered from six da)'1 of
renewed cluhea between government
troops and Palestinian guerrillas.
Jn the message, Hussein offered Jordan
as a meeting site to dlacusa "the gravity
of the situation and the serious
clrcumatanceii besetting the Palestinian
cue." He said the conference abo llhould
be used to make a thoro1,1gh study an.d
to deftne responsibilities in the ti.fiddle
East.
In Paris. Egyptian Foreign J\.finister
Mahmoud Riad ended hls officia l visit
to France by meeting President Geora:es
Pompidou. Egyptian officials said he
was happy with the results: of the con-
ference held with II Egyptian am-
bas,,adortto Europe. held in Paris during
the week and was. encouraged by Euro.
pean support for Cairo's Middle East
policies.
The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram said the cofiference &freed ()ft
the importance of improving economic
relations with West European n&tions.
Al Ahram also said Egypt has aC{:used
the Jordanian government of violaUng
its peace agreements with the Palestinian
guerrillas. The Egyptian viewpoint,
delivered to Jordan by Egyptian am-
bassador Osman Nouri in Jordan, also
urged an immediate end to bloodshed
between the guerrillas and the army.
Wicks
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Gusts Up to 73 MPH Storm Througli Kansas Town
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APRIL 1°2-3-4
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HUNTINGTON
BEACH
-. .
I
'
•
Deadly _Cargo
Nazi Sub Poses Peril
ATLAN1'A, Ga. (API - A modem Flying Outcbman-
a sunken Gerrnan submarine wWch apparenUy has drilled
under \li'aler for nearly 30 years and 400 miles-reportedly
is threaterung the Jo~lorida coast with ..a deadly cargo of
mercury and munjtions, federal officialJ say.
The vessel is believed to contain nearly 200 tons of
mercury. a potent contamlnant. and explosives including
TNT. torpedoes and other armaments.
Howard Zeller, Southeastern chief of wate r quality
standards for the Environmental Protection Agency -EPA
-said he was ordered to investigate the situation after a
rommercial salvage operator reported find ing the sub in
25 to 50 feet of water near Tampa Bay Ofl Florida's West
Coast.
The salvage operator was identified only by the last
name of Gaddy from the Bahama Islands. .
Zeller said be notified. the government that the sunken
hulk bore the number Ul66.
Another federal olficiiJ said military records indicate
that a U·boal of that number. reported1y a model lXC,
was sunk off New Orleans in 1942.
"It's apparently the same submarine," the official
said. "The only explanation we have is that it, like the
legendary Flying Dutchman, just drifted aimlessly with
the ocean currents." •
The Fl.ving Dutchman. a traditional sea story, involves
a captain doomed to sail a ghost ship et.emally.
Zeller said the EPA concem stems from the fact that
the model !XC submarine. built in the late 19306, report·
edly ca rried some 200 tons of mercury as ballast.
The F'ood and Drug Adminislration has recognized a
mercury concentration of .5 parts per mi llion as the danger
level in fish and seafood A federal spokesman said how·
ever. lhe govl'mment, had "no wav to estimate the effect
if 200 tons of mercury were suddenly dumped into the
Gulf of ~1exico."
"All I can say is that it's damn dangerous stuff," an
official said.
Price Boosts for Milk,
So111e Beef Anticipated
WASHINGTON (AP)
Retail milk prices, already at
their hig hest level in two
years, are likely to go up
even more bec ause of
government dairy price sup-
ports going into effect today.
Government economists say
the increased price suppo rts
also could boost price' of
hamburgl'r and other in·
expensive types of beef.
T h i s new increase 1n
21 Felled
By Cl1lorine
DENVER (UPI) -Leaking
chlorine gas Wedne s day
overcame 21 persons and forc-
ed Denver police to halt traffic
in the area around the Sec
Corp. Plant just west of
Downtown Denver.
The plant operales dry ice
production fac.ililies which use
the ga s and firemen said the
chlorine apparen tly c a me
from a copper line which had
been broken.
the go~nment's guaran·
teed price to farmers for milk
used in butter, cheese and
other products is. 1ust under 6
percent. A 9 percent boost
was approved las t year.
The latest increase came
on th~ heels of a White House
meeting between President
Nixon and dairymen urging
higher price supports. The
Agriculture Department in·
itially resisted the increase.
A gr i culture Department
economists decline lo estimate
how much the latest price
support increase will raise
retail prices.
Last year's dairy price sup-
port boost resulted in re(ail
price increases of 2 percent
for table milk and 2.8 percent
for butter. five and seven
times the ,rise in general food
prices during the same period.
Farm economists said the
dairy support boost might en·
courage farmers to hold off
butchering older or marginal
dairy cows. That could reduce
the supply of canned and
ground meats and drive up
prices.
IN-SINK·ERATOR
THE NO. 1 DISPOSER
W~y clo ... ori-tn buy mo"• ln·Si"li·Er1+ort
thin •~Tot~•• di1po1111 lf1 ulif~j corro1icn ·
proof 1!1inl•U 1!1•1. Erclw1i••1 likt !ht
"Wrtnchettt" th1l Ith you d11t j1m1 t 1•i·
Iv. A~d mcrt. No wo11dtt ih1 "'oncltrful
Modtl 77 h11 1 lil1timt corro•ion w1rr1nty.
Ar.d 1 5·yt1r p1rl1 warr1nly, teo. Tht ~u1li·
ty ih1t m1d1 ln-Sin•·Ertlor !ht N~mbtr On t
d~po1tr btlon91 in your kiich tn.
MODEl ll J
MODEL 77 SALE SALE s4999 s2599
a1Go. SS7.t5 llEG. SJJ.11
REPUBLIC "GEMINI"
WATER HEATERS
20 Gal. • • •• s47,99 ,
30 Gal. • • • • s49,99
40 Gal •••• • s59,99
50 Gal ••••• s74_99
Thi1 ~u1I<!¥ 9u11 1nl1•d 91111 lon1d WI•
ltr h11!1f ol tquipptd with tlftly
limp, 11 rt(lu~rtd by 1 .... W1 ho ••
••mt dtv inot1!11 t;.,n 1•1il1bl1, ii yeit
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~twdtd. c .11 by 110111 -;,., •• 11 th at
d~y. All worl. don• bv m11 ftr pluf'l b.>1,
INSTALLATION AYA IU.ILI
•
OPEN MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-9 P.M.
SAT. -9 A.M. -6 P.M. -SUN. 10 A.M. -4 P.M.
Drug Abuse
Films 'Can
Backfire'
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Drug abuse films (or school
children, military personnel
and television audiences often
do more harm than good, a
National Drug E" d u c a t i on
Council has told the govern·
menL
Drug educators in and oul
of schools should think twire
before using an,y fil.ou , said
Peter Hammond, executive
director of the National
Coordinating Coµoci1 on On.lg
Abuse Education and lnforma-
tion, Inc., Wednesday.
DAILY PILOT 5
Denial of Paro~le May· End
.
Jimmy Hoffa's 13-year Reign
WASHINGTON (AP)
James Riddle Hof!a's 13-year
reign over the & I a n t
Teamaters union appears all
but ended after the U.S.
Parole Board denial of bis
appeal for freedom.
· Hoffa. serving ao eight-year
Jury tampering sentence. will '""
retain the title of union presi·
dent for several more months.
but Teamsters sources said
he will almost certainly be
replaced at the union's July
convention in Miami Beach,
Fla.
A new Teamsters president
also could mean early negoUa·
tions for a return of the 2·
million-member Teamsters to
the main body of Amerlcan
labor. the AFL-ClO which ex·
pelled Hoffa's unlon in 1857
oe corruption charges.
FREEDOM DENIED
James Hoffa
!)residency. Presidential terms
Acting Teamsters President
Frank E. Fit.z.simmons. Hof·
fa 's old Detroit sidekick and
hand-picked stand-in, is rated currently are for five years.
the frontrunner to succeed Hoffa at the last Teamsters
Hoffa In his own right.
Hoffa will not become ellgi-
ble for parole again until June
1972, when Fitzsimmons, or
some other successor will
have had nearly a year to
consolidate a hold on the union
convention in 1966 managed
to rey,·rife the union con·
stitution to make it virtually
impossible ior o!..l:er union
leaders to oust him. But the
parole denial appeared to.dash
lloffa 's last hopes of retaining
•
control of the union after more
than four years in prison.
The parole refusal Wed·
nesday crushed Hoffa 's pledge
to union members shortly
before £ederal mars h a Is
whisked him in handcuffs to
tbe penitentiary in 1967: "I'll
be ti.ck. God willing, sooner
than our enemies would have
you believe."
The board didn't divulge it&
vote nor its reason for denying
parole.
A parole would have almost
certainly pul Hoffa back in
tbe driver's seat of the world's
largest, richest, most powerful
labor union, in the view of
mosl Teamsters sources.
"lf he is out of prison, there
is no argument he will be
rttlected president," said
Team5ters V i c e President
Harold Gibbons recently. But
Gibbons added that if parole
were denied, he and most
other members of the union's
15-man Executive Bo a rd
would oppose Hoffa's running
from behind bars.
Most Teamster national and
local officials were not
available for comment on l{of-
fa 's parole denial.
Is there a principle for
solving life's problems 'I .
lkereis.
This Principle is called God. And fib perfect la'""
are available for each of us to use in our lives.
In our Sunday School, childmt have fun learning
how to solve problems of all kinds by turning
intelligently to God as the Principle of perfection.
And they find that this divine Principle is just as
available and provable as the laws 0£ mathematics.
We welcome your child to our Sunday School
classes this week.
OIRISTIAN SCIENCE SUNDAY SCHOOL
CM!• MIU -Plral Clllltdl tf Cllrltt, kl.ilJt
:1110 ,,,,_ V•nlt Orlft -J1U A.M.
Hll~I......,. IN<ll -Plral (lllll'dl 9f (llr1sl, SC....,..!
1111 & Ollvt, H11lllJ.tholl tlNdl -,,. & 11:• A.M.
Ntw,_., tMdl -Plnr (flWt'dl 1111 ai.1tt, kltiolht
J.)Ol VII Lillll, .,_,.., a.a -t1U. n :• A.M.
N ... "'1 SM~~ -~ UWdl ti' Ctlrltf, k*"'U
JIM 1'1dfk VI-Drtve, C-•t1 ~' -tt:• ~
' ·rr yoqrmoney
cotild talk,
it would ask to work at
California Federal.
"Ben,
howdoyou
like your new job
at
California Federal
Savings?"
"It's very
rewarding Ulysses.
Very rewarding"
\
Put your money to work at 5% or higher.
California Federal Savingi1 bas a wide variety ofhigb·payingjobs for money.
We call them Moneymaker aa:ounta. Here's an aample: Mpney
working in a Moneymaker passbook acanmt earns 5% current annual rate.
If it all stays on the job a year or more-and all its interest, too-
wc'll pay 5.13% annually. Higher int~ Moneymaker certificate acaiunts
arc also avaiJablc. Please ask us about them. No savings and loan
association pays more. Naturally, since we're the nation's largest federal,
your money has great job security. Accounts are insured up to
$20,000 by an agency of the federal government •
ALSO S.15% AND 6% CERTtFICATE ACCOUNTS • S.7S% ACCOUNT: I-YEAR
"1GHDolUK TERM, $1,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT • 6'11> ACCOUNT: 2 TO S-YEAR TERMS, $10,000 MlNDlUM DEl'OGIT.
WITHDRAWALS MAY BE MADE ;,NY TIME BEllORlt MATURITY WITH SOME LOSS OF' INTEREST.
QWfumiaR:deral.Savings and Loan Association. NatiomiLargtstR:deral
Held Ol&a:: 5670 Wilohlftlloulevard, Loo Angeles. Aa:oantaan: imurtd up to $20,000 by an 11ency of the Unittd Sta to GoVcmmeot.
Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300 Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave •• 776-1222
• Orange Office: 4050 Me1ropolna n Dr.· 639·3033
-__._ -....... . . --~ -
• '
'
'
.I •• ~,.~\l :r • ''· • ' .
•
-I
• DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
The Calley
Th• My Lal cas1 can only be termed a notional lng·
edy. .
Americans reacted in disbelief when the ?ity 1A1
•·incldenl" was first revealed.
Now a great many Americans are reacting with
disbelief that one man. Lt. \Villlam Calley Jr .. apparent·
ly h: to c1rry the primary burden of guilt for the sorry
affair.
As Lt Calley himself has suggested, the My Lai in·
cident br~ught together in one place ind dramatized
for millions all the horrors of war in a way never seen
before.
This is the first war that the American people saw
literally first-hand through the lens of the TV camer~s.
And yet it is the least understood of any of the wars m
which America has participated.
Part of the problem is the nature of an enemy to
whom human lives -those of his own people as "'ell
as those of the enemy -mean little or nothing. The
atrocities so routinely and systematically committed by
the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese were big new!
in the early days of the war some eight years ago. But
they became so frequent and_ so routine t~at they have
long since ceased to be anything new or d1~ferent. They
have been relegated to the backs o! our minds as \\"hat
is to be expected from this kind of an enemy.
Even ·when the mass graves of victims of Commun·
1st terror were oj>ened at Hue in 1968. there was. mo·
mentary revulsion. But that, loo, faded ~ut of consc1ous-
n;SJ 9uick.1y -perhaps because the victims were not
Amencans.
Conviction
and children of all age s all loo often have become deadly
guerrilla kilters when backs were turned or when dark·
ne111 fell.
Jn modem wars, civilians -men, women and chit·
dren -increasingly become the creates\ vi ctims. But
this is the first war for us in which the civiU1t1s have
alSO bad to be regarded as active enemy combatants.
In these circumstances, and more that co,uld be re-
cited, the conviction by a military court _of Lt. CaUe y and
his 1entencinl to Jife imprisonment raises a hard ques·
lion that is still to 1w answered:
In wars against guerrillas is it possible to draw a
meaningful, understandable distinction between ·:right"
and Hwrong" killlng. of civilians~ The men who Judged
Lt. Calley, all combat veterans themselves, apparently
felt that such a judgment could be made.
There is the inescapable feeline that so meone above
Calley shares responsibility for Calley's actions that
bloody day and that Calley alone should not bear the
whole burden of guilt. ~
There also is the ine!capable reeling that there a.re
extenuating circumstance! in this case \vhich make the
lift sentence imposed upon Calley too harsh.
Considering the great lenience shown convicted
murderers in our civilian courts when it can be shown
that they were under the liast bit of emotional stress,
and considering the emphasis placed on giving them an ·
other chance, it seems clear that the sentence against
Calley is more severe than warranted.
-~ ~It Easily forgotten, too, is the fact that this is our first
real encounter with guerrilla warfare in which not mere-
ly the peaceful-looking rice farmer but even the women
The whole episode will long hang heavily on the
conscience of a nation which prides itself as humanitar·
ian and as the defender of the right of the individual
of whatever color or station to life. liberty and the pur•
&uit of happiness. 'YOll TAKE ll!E UIGH R~ Mt> 1'1.1. 'fAKf THE L.oW ~~:
New Social
M echanisnis
Can Erid War
Doa1kt1 •t Laree:
To suggest that war will end only
when "human aggression " is subdued
b to fail to understand both the nat~e
of man and the nature of war : aggre~1on
lJ bloklgical. but war is social, aod.
new aocial mechan·
ilml can e\imlnale
war, just as the old·
u mechanisms el·
tminated cannibal·
ism, slavery, and
the b ur ning of
witches. • • •
Bad horsemen use
the "·hip because
they have no skill in
U&ing the rein1, the same is true of par· .....
• • •
The man -y.·ith the ability to make
thina:s happen is rarely lhe one who
tan foresee their resul ts. while those ••ho can foreset the results art rarely
listened to: thus, the spectacle of
mankind is that of the blind driving
the deaf. •
Everyone kno\\ s that love blindJ. us
to I.he loved object's faults, but it ts
harder to accept the opposite truth lhat
liatred blinds us to the hated objtct'1
virtues. • • •
It is an embarrassing commentary
on the egocentricity of the Engli1h
language thal the only letter we v.'tlte
with a capital 1s ··r• -and no other
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Since the Kennedy$ were murder·
eel, their dreams have gone out
one by one -eiploraUon of :tpace,
freedom in Vietnam, peace in oor
time, aid now the SST. From •
nation of dreamers and doera, are
we becoming only lo.sera?
-Diogenes ·11
Tllit tMtw. rttlK?w ....-.' "'---lllM-"' ,.... ..... -...-...... '"' ,., ""1'9 • eltffftr •111. 01111 •ltff.
major language in the world capitalizes
the first person singular, though some
are courteous enouih to capitaliu
"You.·· • • •
The little investors in lht market, who
Imagine that they can ride to affluence
on the coat-tails ()f the financial titans,
would do well to ponder tht sardonic
old Yiddiab proverb: "If you rub elbov.·s
with a rich man, you get a hole ih
your aleeve." • • •
Women will achieve Sisterhood far
faster than men have managed to altain
Brotherhood; for all minority groups
(and ""'()men are a social and
psychological, if oot numerical. minority)
form deeper and more permanent
alliances than the majorities that rule
them. • •
Yow:ic radicals :should read the
memolfa ()f Emma Goktman, one or
lhe earliest anarchist.a, whose di11llusion.
rnent with the movement waa summed
up in thia warning: "No revolution can
ever succeed a11 a factor of llbtratlon
unless the Meana used to "'further it
be Identical in spirit and tendency with
the Purposes to be: achieved." . ... . .
Tl'• odd that the person who doean't
like himself very much sUll keeps naa·
ging and proddln& other people to become
more Uke hlm.
Burns, Schultz Disagree
WASHI NGTON -President Nixon's
attempt to shift economic gears from
reverse into lor"ard has produced a
biUer connict ~v.·een two ()f his clOSt:st
•dvisrrs. Federal Reserve Chairman
Arthur Bums, formerly lht President's
chief domestic 11dvi5er. has urged
positive 1tep1 to bring wages and prices
under control. But
George Sch ultz. the
former Labor Sccre·
t.ary V.'ho has be-
come the gray em·
inence behind the
Preaident is oppo'-
ed to holding down
wa ges. The irony ii1
that Bums rel'Om·
m e n d e d bringing
Shultz, formerly lln ob~ure University
of Chicago dean. to Washington . Grump-
ed Bums to friends the other day, •·r m
mrry I pushed for him.''
MEMBERS OF the subcabinet. prod·
ded by their "ives who v:pect.ed to
be swept up in the White House IOCial
Quotes
flt•• J•lla• Bar1Jtfl, s . f'. Prmtstll•l
leader, .. tod11'1 )llKltlt -"It is tht
fir1t generaUon in history that has said
11 a ne1r-enUty: 'We must not have
war.'!!
MJt.lli.el A. BellestleJ. Woodlaod Hiits
-"We must oat for1ct tne pa~; for
II ... do It could .,,..k up on "' md
reput lti<lf."
sv•irl, have grumbled that they ;·•
been excluded from Whitt House parti .
At least one aubcablnet official co
plained tha t he hadn't even lttn Pre•_i-
denl Nixon except on TV. Word ()[ their
disconlent reached Bob Haldeman, gutr·
dian or President Nixon's door, who
tipped off the Prt~ldent how they fell.
Immediately. tM. Prt&ldent ~ummoned
his subcablnet member& t() the White
House for a personal briefing on h.l1
government reora:anlzat.ion tind revenue·
sharing pl11ni. Some of them hav.e 1190
been put on the invit.atJon li1t for future
\\1h1te House solrte$ .
THE A R\IY HAS decided not to ltl
the Interior Departmrnt freez.e to death
three million blackbird& th•t have plll•i·
rd grain on land near the MUan, TeM.,
.Army ar.senal. The bir dt l'OOll 1n trees
on Army land. 3nd the Interior Depart·
mtnt "'antrd to spr•y dettr1ents on
tht birds.. This v.·ould remo\'e the birds'
protective olll, JO they would fretir.
W()rd of the plot iicalrat lhe blackb!rds,
minakenl y attributed to the Army, leak·
f!d out. The Ptntagoo suddenly was
deluae<1 with hate man frorn btrd lo\itrs.
The Army. which h•• enouch troubles
without alJ~nallng bird lovers. decided
the blackbirds couldn"t be froun with
Army pern11s5lon aa Iona as lhty ire
roo5Ung on Army property. ''The
pumiaslon h•& nevu, been rranted,"
a spokesman told us emphatically.
•
Criminal Acts Preceded Exposure, Prosecution Then a1ul Now
Facts vs.
WASHINGTON -It wu bound to
come aooner or lat.er. The-political left
is eaaer to pin the McCarthy (Joseph
R.) label m the Nixon administration
and tries to do so at every opportunit y.
A scholarly author. who was 17 years
old when Senaklr McCarthy flourished ,
ncrw ccmparei the red-huntlna Wisconsin
s e nator to Vice
President A&new
in manner and style
because both adopt·
ed a flat and un·
emotional tone in
presenting their ar·
gument.s and accu-
salions.
That is far off the
mark to those-who .
knew A1cCarthy's wild and careless
nature, his stnister scowls, and ()iJy man-
nerisms. But, never mind, it serves the
intellectual community's interest lo make
Agnew and Nixon appear as latter day
McCarthys, insensitive to all hwnan
freedoms , hounding C1>1lege students on
the campus, intimidating the news
media , and persecuting rebel Catholic
priest! .
BErt10ANJNG THE "1ttcCarthy era,''
and comparing it to lhe present, will
not change certain historical facl3 with
whi ch P..tcC&rthy had oolhin&: to do. A
brief reference to tbta facts mi&ht
Fiction ·on 'McCarthy Era'
, • ~v --
f'_r IN"-L ' ,,;,,u ... ...,.~aftl·.· ;w • 80tt ' ' ' • ....... ..._._··'""-··---· -
be helpful to budding authors who were
in their teens in the late '40s· and early
'SO:s.
An influtntial Stale Department ad·
viser was convicted of lying .in denying
he had supplied a Com munist courier
with significant do c u me n t :s for
lransmission to Mosc()W. C rit ic a I
American atomic secrets were stolen
an<t. banded over tO the Russians in
a 'plot'-first. exposed by • thorough-going
and lo this day unchallenged royal Cana-
dian commission. A Ju.slice Department
stenographer was found to be turning
over documents to a Communist CQurier,
and convicted in court.
There was convincing evidence of
Rusaian collaboration by a prominent
sub-cabinet offictr, who denied it bul
died before lhe evidence could be tested
oul A Communist cell with links to
Moscow admittedly existed 1n one
government department. A high official
denied thiJ, recanted and publicly con-
fessed be had betn 1 Communist and
member or the group all along.
McCARTHY HAO nothing to do "'ith
any of thla. He pll}'ed a different game
in congressional hearincs. Television car-
ried the terrible monstrosity of it to
the public , leading lo his disgrace and
death.
But lhat does not change the fact
that there were established and signifi-
cant instances of C()mmunist penetration
and espionage in which American ()f.
ficia\s participate.d. as well as terribly
bad judgment on the part of o t h e r s
"'ho were duped and used.
So, there was a lot more to the
"t.lcCarlhy era"' than f.>lcCarthy. and
that should not be lost sight of now
"'hile the Nixon administration tries lo
cope with young revolutionists who blow
up campus buildings, kill innocent people,
claim they bombed the U.S. Capitol,
and raid FBI offices to steal significant
classi fied documenU conctrning on-going
invesligations.
These are criminal acts. Tl is also
a criminal act to try to immobilize
the operation of government departments
and kidnap a high White lfouse official
as a hostage.
THE STOLEN FBI documenls,
ho"·ever. are being presented to the
public as revealing a sinister plot by
,J. Edgar Hoover to repress justifiable
public dissenl. The criminal acts wh ich
Hoover is investigating. including the
theft of the documents. are excused.
The doctlmenls in fact show a lively
.. regard by Hoover for avoiding in-
timidation and repression. He was after
those who were planning riols and born·
bin gs.
Certainly by now it should be admitted
that Hoover also has ample cause to
investigate Black Panthers \\'ho kill each
other and police ()fficers in line of duty
more often lhan police ()fficers kill them.
The point is raised that Hoover ha!
been investigating any organiiation con-
taining the name "freedom" in a militant
context. And why not? Such organitation~
have a long and unenviable reCQrd nf
creating civil strife.
IF THIS IS "i\.1cCARTllYlSi\.1" then
it also was "McCarthyism" to expose.
prosecute · and convict those inside the
government and ()Ul for what amounted
to participation in Commun ist penetra·
tion and Soviet espionage.
Today's Jeftisl does not like to be
rtminded that the ''witch hunt" a score
of years ago turned up spies, saboteurs,
and informers for a foreign power, duly
tried and convicted.
Nor does he like to be rem inded today
that scores of bombings and extensive
violence have preceded the investigations
the FBI is making.
As for Agnew, his political expletive11
are no more McCarthy-like than those
of opponents who are currently trying
to rival him.
Pe_rspective Needed on SST Project
T() the Editor :
As you wtll know, Mr. Prtsidtnt,
Rnilroad carriages are pulled a.t the
~normous spted of 15 m.p.h. b11 e-11•
gines which in addition to tnda.noer·
ing life and limb of pa.ssn-iotr$, Toa.r
and 511ort thtir wa~ through tht C()Url"
t7"J1sidc. lf:ttino /irt to tht crops, sea,.
ing tht liw1tock and fright~n.ino
womtn and childr111. The Almighty
ctr~inly nt ver intrn.dtd th4t ptoplt
ahou/d tr n v t l at .such brtakntck
spted.
.i\fartin Van Burtn (\Vhilt Gov,..rnnr
of Ntw York }
'llltre seems to be some similarity
bet"·een Van Buren in his letter to
President Andrew Jackaon and the rectnt
action on the SST by the U.S. Congress.
Too many of the arguments againi;l
the ssr came out sounding like "there
m.i1ht be • PJ'Qblem."
It seems to me that a key element
In the great progress that has betn
made in this C1>unlty haa been the will·
incneM to :wive problems . . . nol
to avoid them . If «!very flOISlblt in-
novation in the past had bttn prevented
in the presence of so mt risk or po1slblc
problems. v.·e certainly would &tlll be
hvlng literally in the darlc ages.
THE ANTI.SST ARGUMENTS
regarding effects in the upptr II·
mosphere, skin cancer. tht boom kllllng
all the fish. etc .. should be viev.·ed as
lechnlctl queaUons to be inve&Ligaled
and ansV1ered bul not as reasons to
kill IM project.
Another anti-SST argument and l'ne
that is ustd frequently against aer1>1pace
pro~ 1n general. 1a that we should
spend the money on tarth to solve our
many human problems rather than
""asling our resource$ on airplanes or
~--B1t George
(5end your problems to Gtorae.
clo thl5 ntW$plper : tf you have
no problems. wt would be more
than hippy to atnd you Geor1c.)
i.ipace programs. I think some perspet·
Uve is needed on where our money
b g()ing.
Ln the pail 10 years, our r.ntlre space
proeram has cost S38 billion. In the
sarne periQd of time we "ve spent $340
billion on health and welfare (JU.St at
!he federal government level).
IN FISCAL ttll. we"re spending ~3..1
billion on all sp.11ce programs and $77.2
billion on social programs. In other
v.·ords, we could take all the money
v.·e're spending on space programs and
add it to the social programs and 1t
()nly adds 4 percent. The SST ap-
Li1nits on Inspection
lnspc?ctors used tC1 go from c:loor lo
door checking bui ldings for health, firr.
or other violations. Until recently, they
could enter buildings without a warrant.
But now, if the occupant refuses entry,
our courts require them to gel a warrant
to look ar()und inside. But to get a
w11rT11nl is fairly simple . An inspector
merely tiles an 'affidavit stating \vhy
he w11nts it. He need not show why
he believe5 there .are violations inside.
Unles.'i lhe owner consents, even after
a fire. say. in one part of a house.
the inspector. "'ho might find evidence
or ti.rson . must get a warr1.1nt to inspect
the plact.
OFFICERS INSPECT .!Orne businesses
such as pawn shops every day. Their
owntt& keep records open" and '"conunt''
to inspection as a condition for staying
ln bUJiness.
An emergency alw;iys allO\\'S •n·
spectlon withoul a warrant for example,
where there la not time for a ·warrant.
en intpeetot may sclu: unwholesome
food ()T ma ke a heallh quarAntine wh ere
he1lth and safety dtmand action at once.
\'PUbUc interest may justliy replar
lrl'spectlons for fl11!, ht.11th. and safety.
but not entry into one'!' home to
"lnspec-1." Our Olrutitulion for bl d s
"unreasonable" searches and seizure~.
THE LAW P£Rl\IJTS random in·
spe.ct1on of cars 1l roadside to detect
Law in Action
--.
safely violations. Sut thr officer may
not search the car without a warrant.
He c;innot look Into tt\e: glove com.
partment. under the seal. or elsewhere
'.l'ithoul permission. Should he do so
and find illega l items like narcotics or
a gun. no court could admit such
evidence. But an officer can see what
1.oi in plain sight or can follow up on
suspii;:ious behavior by people in the
r11r and look for the illegal items. Thu~.
suppose the driver stopped at a safety
check. and moved furtively to hide
something. The polict may ask about
Lhe action. and. if In order, can check
10 find "'hat was hidden . But lhe police
ca nnot &t()p cars al random to search
U1tn1.
f'O R EXAi\.1PLE, the pohtt. may not
legally stop a car to check Hs rC!g1st ration
H its licPnse plates arc o.i . Out if
a car h11s broken lamps. is speechng.
or there 1s other "gOOd cause!.'" the
poller. mAy slnp the car and ln vrsllgatc
lor these reasons.
Nott: Cnli/ornfn la ivytrl offrr this
tol!onn so 11011 nuJy know about 011r
Wtti$.
propriation amounts: to les$ than J
percent of the federal socia l programs
budget.
I think it would be hard to deny
the many advances in medicine, metals,
plastics, power sources, communications
and many other field s that have directly
resulted from the various aerospace pro-
grams. The SST as a research \"~hicle
might v.·ell a]SQ have made significan t
contributions to our overall progress.
T HOPE THAT THIS action by
C-Ongress doesn't mean !hat "'e are afraid
to face and solve problems and tha t
"'e are content to leave the leader~hip
in aerospace lo someone else. There
are few enough :ireas left in this \\·orld
where '"e arr the leaders. \\'e should
bt seeking to ~lrengt.Jien these positions,
not \\'taken them. It would be 1ragi e
H "''e sacrificed progress and our nationa l
vitality (or -ecological paranoia.
DOREN CU RTISS
l t ltef"• ,,...., '"""" lrl Wtll;9rt1I. N1r..,1llY wrl!tn ffll11loil t••~t'I' fll•lr -01111 In Jot -••
., ..... T ... rltM .. c•"" ... " ""''' .. I!! ""'' tr tllmlnU1 1!1111 It nt1n 1•. All ltlltn '"ull ....
c111•1 •1••1111•1 '"" m1lllll1 M•reu, kl nul'ltl
"''' ff •11~~11111 .., '"""°' If 111llltlt"I rte-It IPN~t. "'"'"' •Lii Ml .. llllH ......
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Thursday. April I, l971
Tht editoria l pagt oJ the Dody
Pdo t seeks to inform onrl st1m-
11late readers by prcsl!!ntiug l/11.~
11ewspaptr's opinions and com·
111t1~tar11 on topir.., of interest
tnid ~igniftcan.ct:, b11 providingi n
forum. for tht tzprcs.llion of
our rtaders' opinions. trnd bu
pres,1itin11 rit e divcr!r. vitw-
po1ul1 of informed observers
011d spokesmen on topics of the
day.
Rob<lrl N. Weed , Publisher
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Now 'In Chaos'
Riles Boosts Tax
ForSclwolFunds
SACRAMENTO (APl
Stale schools chief Wilson
Riles says a statewide school
property tax proposal now
before the legislatlll'e cou ld
ease the plight er California
schools "in ch3os and on the
verge o[ financial collapse."
Riles said bot~ he and the
State Board of Education fully
supported a measure in·
'Hot' Zinc
In Tunafish
Soitrce Told
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Mysterious radioactive zinc
,,.,.hich has been found in tuna
fish off San Diego, may be
from a plutonium plant 1.200
miles a v.·ay in Hanford, \Vash .,
the American Chemical SoCie-
ty was told loday.
Dr. Theodore R. Fol10m,
oceanographer at the Scripps
Institute of {)('eanography, La
Jolla, told lhe .90Ciety an
alternate. bu t very unlikely
theory was that the zinc
resulted from Chinese atom
bomb tests.
The researcher emphasized
that the znc presented only
a mystery, not a health pro-
blem.
troduced Wednesday by Sen.
Albert Rodda (D-Sacramen-
to ), to crute a flat state prop-
erty tax of $3.75 per $100 of
assessed valuation.
"I don't have to tell you
that the schools art! in chaos
and on the verge of finan cial
collapse," Riles aai.d at a news
conference after R o d d a ,
cha irman ef the S e n a t e
Educ a li on Commltltt, in-
troduced his bill .
Assemblyn;ian Leroy Greene
(0-Sacramerlto), chairman of
I.be Assembly Education Com·
mittee , sakl he and
Assemb\ym.a. James Dent ([).
Cone<1rd). would introduce a
bill to match the Rodda pr•
posal. ( The measure would in effect
force wea\th.v districts wilh
low tax rates caused by higti
assessed value to a subsidize
poorer distrlcls who must
charge higher tax rates to
make up for lov.•e r property
values.
The tax would be collected
by counties and sent ta the
stale, then w e u I d be
distributed to districts with
a guaranteed base amount per
student.
Each elementary p u p i 1
would get $667 in state money
v.·hile a high school student
would get $874 and a com-
munity colleae st.udent, $917.
The cost to the owner of a
$20,000 borne would be about
$160 yearly.
newest
trends
to take a
fashion foothold . .
l" this,Springl !
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THE
SWASHBUCKLERS I
99 c01npara6~
shoes sell
el1twhere
for$15
Today's front-stepping styles \\<ith the
added pluso( never-repair Pema-Tred•
soleJ and heels! Ch005C the leather
deml-boot in brown with gold-tone buckle
or black with silver-tone buckle .••
or, the wipe-clean, scuH-proof Corf am•
plain toe in black or brown. Perfect
complements to a new Easter wardrobe &nd
the low price Is a happy IWjlrisel 7 to IL
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GARDEN GROVE-12372 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
L
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Ex-DA Rips
Tate Trial
As 'Circus'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Th<
California attorney general
says the Sharon Tate murder
trial ahou1d have Lasted six
weeks, not nine months, and
was •·a circus."
•
Southland Could
I
Gain Senate Seat
SACRAMENTO t A P I -
Southern California \li'ill gain
at least one Stale Senate seat
U this year's reapportionment
rollows actual population
gains, a Democratic legislator
predicts.
derpopulaled w h 11 e the
Southern Senatorial distrlcts
ha ve generally Increased in
slze,'' gaid DymaUy Wed-
nesday.
Sen. Mervyn Dymally (D-F
Lo• Angeles). produced census ound Body
data showing that the eight
counties south of t h e
Tehadlllpl Mountains have J dentified
58.5 percent of California's
population and should, on a
one-man. one vole basis. get As Lawyer
23.4 of the 4{) Senate seats.
Dymally. chairman of the VENTURA, )AP)_ A OOdy
Se nate Elections and Reap-portionment Ccmmlttee, said found in a rugged wildernets
that the April, 1970 federal area v.·as pogilively ldecUfied
census figures establish that Wednesday as Sharon Tate
if all districts were to be murder trla.I defense attorney
equal they each would have 498.828 residents. Ronald Hughes who vanished
Using that as 8 yardstick mysleriousty four months ago.
figure, Dymally said 13 Senate The Ventura Co unty
As Alty. Gen. Eve I I e districts no)Y are ove r -Coroner's office said lhe body,
Youngfr made his comments populated while 'Tl are under-found in a creek at the Sespe
in Sacramento Wednesday, the populated. Hot Springs area, was iden-
Tate trial's i·u,y foreman, "As expected, the Northern
Cal ·r n·a Se a t e d•"st ·cts tifled through comparison of
1ferman Tubick, said he would 1 or 1 0 ri generally are currently un-Hughes' dental charts.
hold a news conferecce bere1.=''==='::====='===='========
A SUPER EXTRAORDINARY VALUE I today lo clear up misun-
d.erstand.ings created b y
jurors' comments to the news
media.
The move by Tubick came
after a juror said on a TV
show th.at he was writing a
book on the sequestered jury
life which he &aid won't please
other members or the jury.
Some other jurors have aaid
they were hoping to make
large sums of money selling
the stories (){ their Tate jury
duly.
DRAPERIES
UNUSUAL 5ELECTION-
Decorator Fabrics
Prlc:u from ••• 1.95 to 10.95 yd.
Frn lrtlmatu-<:oll 547.3993
95
YD.
lnclud.d
L1bor
Mle. l.Mttlll .. , .....
LIVINGSTON'S
---CARPET e CUSTOM DRAPlllll ---
1431 SOUTH MAIN ST., Comar Edln9ar e SANTA ANA
HOURS: O.lly 9 to 5:30 p.m. -frlday1 'tll t:DO p.m.
Thuf'lld&J, A11rll l, 1117t DAIL y PILOT I
r
ONLY A FEW LEFT OF A
THREE BOX·CAR PURCHASE
MELVIW CLARK :::s -·-···········-··· $59 5
BRAMBACH CONSOl'.ES
::?;5 ......... -···· $827
GRAND PIANOS
JUST ARRIVED!
FARFISA HOME ORGANS
Th ... low prlc•• open• • n•w world for th• entire family. All mocl•I• Include
reput percuulon, Wh.1-Wh•, four faml·
Ile• af ort•n ton•, 1u1taln reverb and
m&ny other featur••. C••e• of ltallan
hantlrubbed walnut flnl1he1.
St9lnway, M. Ebony
Ritt. U.ltt ............. ·-·-
Story & Clark (MW)
by Yamah•, W•lnut ·-··
Fl1char, Ebony
Ra9. $1 ,145 ......
Georg• Stock, Walnut
R•9· $1,199 .................. M
Roq.
$595 SPINn ··········-····
Roq.
$695 SPINET ............... .
Roq.
$895 SPINET ............... .
$427 ::1~i.~~·:· ..
$497 $1299 $597 I
R99. S10fS FEURICH
SPINET Ebony Flnlsh
$647 . $1·:299
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Phone 540-3165
$2,999
$2,39!j
$1,490
$1,499
20'ro to SO'ro OFF
•
EVERYTHING IN 17,000 SQ. n. OF SHOWROOM & WAREHOUSE
Stately William IV C'ha\rs tnspirrd by th• 111ally sailor
kini; bring the rnmanl'P of faraY.'ay pla,ces into your
home. Rich mahneany hand polished Y.'ood !~ darkened as
If by saJ I air. Bold metal c-orner plates accent the !iplrlt
or intrigue. This ~"' "'"ill make you a little more adven·
turous to Jive .... ith.
Add lmf.IACl tn your entry way \\llh a superlatively 1tyled
l!:ntry hall table. The rich meJJow tone of pecan wood ii
accented by t"·o tuftPd ottoman• y.·ith coastf'r5.
Three convenienct!' dra\\'Prs make this a variable a1 well
as 1trlking addi tion to your home.
.... ·'· •• .-Ii:
~.~ .. ~
·~\'::.: :'• , ... :
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Sevf'n fr.el ot ve~atlle •«lionlll lihe lves blend a delight-
ful touch to llvlng and family rooms. All adjustable
shelves make liUCh &ood use of extra wall !pace, providing
you y.·ilh vanabl• heii;-hl~. t..a.~tini; tx>auty ln decorator
carved naturaJ ""oods in a choice Of three finishes.
.. ,
Stretch out , , , y.·ay out. Even It you'rt over 5i.x feet taU you still
can't touch the othf'r end of this 100 Jnrll IPalh,.r sofa~ Comfort you
can't belit!'ve , .. rich leather, not lmn11.1v.n anythln1. Fttl the dif-
ferencf', and you won't settle fnr less t h~n the QU8.lity, 1tylini.-: and
luXllrlous comfOf't of th i11 gorgeous sofa. Addi; the subUe sophi8t1ca·
lion only rt:al leather a!Iords.
Opett Delly f·5:l0 Monday Oftd l'fl. Tll f P.M. h•olvlng Chargo e Liberal Terms
Open This Sunday 12 • 5
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'f . ~AIU PILOT • .. •. ---
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TCP/2/ h"1ps keep your car in tune.
Tlil,$.·b,~lp~ hold down exhaust emissions
in newer cars, reduce emissions in
many older cars-and helps keep your'
mileage up. · ·
. "• : ' .
TCP/2tis sh~ll's name for a new com-
bination of ingredients. It's not just
an additive, but what petroleum
chemists call an "additive package:' It
is an improvement over TCP,
the famous gasoline ad-
ditive developed by
··Sh~ years ago.
:. ' . . 'J:~,7:.,,. Les'S than a half-
. ' tea;ipoon pe:r galwn
is enough TCP/21
to do the job.
your exhaust are unlmrned hydrocar-'.
bans and carbon mmwxide. Both are
undesirable, and both can go up when
your car goes out of tune. In fact, it
would not be unusual for these emis-
sions to soar as · much as 50 percent ,
before you even suspect it. And by
the time your car tells you it needs a
tune-up, emissions can be extremely
high.
By helping your car stay in tune,
TCP/2/ helps stave off that serious·in-
crease in emissions.
HowTCP/2/ can affect
'Thday almost your gasoline mileage.
allgasolinesco~ · · TCP/2/ can also have a favorable ef-
tain additive pack-· feet on gasoline mileage. When your
ages. They differ car goes out of tune your mileage
somewhat in what th~y do . tends to go down. TCP/2/ works to
and h~w ,well _th.ey do_ 1~ "f'CP /~/ is an keep that from happening.
• e~ctive. additive pac~ge that pro-· TCP/2/ can also actually reduce
VldeSanlIIlprove~entmtheperform-emissions fro!T\ many cars-and im-
_ance of Shell gasolines. prove their mileage. These are older
HowTCP/2/ can affect
two major pollutants.
The overall effect of TCP/2/ can be
summed up as helping to keep your
ca1· in tune.
'IWo pf the main pollutants in
(
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cars that are, in effect, out of tune as a
result of deposits that have built up in
their carburetors.
Read on to find out how driving
regularly with TCP/2/ will help re-
store mileage and reduce exhaust
emissions from these cars.
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TCP/2/ keeps new
carburetors _clean, and
helps clean .up dirty ones.
Works to hold emissions •
down and mileage up .
'"
When excessive deposl'ts build upon the"throat" of your
carburetor, your engine is no longer in tune. Emissions
can rise dramatically, and mileage usually goes down.
If your car is several years old or more, deposits
may have builtuponyourcarburetor"throat:' Although
most of today's gasolines contain a detergent that keeps
clean carburetors clean, not all of today's detergents can
· cut down on these deposits once they've formed. TCP /2/
does have that ability. It contains anew detergent combi-
nation that can start to clean up a dirty carburetor with
just a few tankfuls of any Shell gasoline .
This can reduce exhaust emissions substantially.
And it generally helps mileage, too.
New TCP/2/ is now in Shell,
Super Shell, and non-leaded
Shell of the Future:
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TCP/2/ in both Shell and
Super Shell helps extend.
·spark plug life. This helps
hold emissions down and
keep your mileage up.
When your spark plugs misfire, a lot goes wrong. Emissions
go up, mileage goes down, acceleration is reduced-and you
have to buy new plugs.
One of the components of TCP/2/ ·works to prevent
spark plug misfire. It combines chemically with certain de-
posits that buila up on your plugs, and keeps those deposits
1 frominterferingwith the normal spark. Result: no misfiring
caused by deposits to send emissions up and your mileage
· 'down. (Not to mention the good effects on spark plug life
'and acceleration.)
Shell pioneered compone)l~sof this type and Shell gaso-
lines were the first to .contain t,!Jem.
TCP /2/ also helps smooth out rough running in many
worn engines that have lost compression. ·
And one of its components is a special anti-icing ingre-
dient. It helps prevent an annoying form of stalling caused
by carburetor icing before your engine is fully warmed up
on cool, damp days.
· TCP/2/·in non-leaded
Shell of the Future helps
protect against valve wear.
'
One reason Shell of the Future can be made with no lead at
all is a chemical element in TCP/2/. This element works to
' protect your engine against possible valve wear. Shell could
have left some lead in Shell of the Future for the same pur-
'pose. But thanks to TCP /2/ Shell has been able to remove
all the lead.
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Ttriurtd11, Aitril 1, lt71 ,
lSSlOllS.
DAILY PILIT ~ •
•
. _ Good mileage arid .fewer·emissions
-· ·· · · -~ they ·can go· hand.in.h~~
When you bunf gasolfue more
completely here ..• r--:::!!~._._
•. :you ·use le8s · · · ·
gas014le from here ...
I
... andless pollutants are
left over to come out.here.
' • Probably the most important thing you can do to help is ·get·
a tune-up.
' ..
Over half of all cars on theroad need a tune-up. lf theyaUgotone, total.exhaust
emissions in the U.S. would be reduced significantly (and in· most casesithe
effect on mileage would be favorable). You pr.obablyshouldgetatune-upif~
car is hard to start, runs rough-or if you ha vent had one 1in.l2 moriths. ·
J • . .
. •Tu help your car stay in tune, use Shell, Super Shell,.or·non-
leaded Shell of the Future-all with newTCP/2/.
This will work to hold your emissions down-!llld to keep yoUMilleage up.
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OA.IL.Y PILOT Thursday, April l , 1971
For the Record
:Dissolutions
;ot Marriage
IHT£RlOCUTO•Y oeCRlll
• '
SA Votes 'Yes' Supervisors
Job Freeze
Goes lo Dogs
Chamber Endorses Rancho District
SANTA ANA -The Santa
Ana Chamber of Commerce
SANTA ANA Coun ty has unanimously endorsed a
supervisors "unfroze" 10 Jobs "yes" vote on the proposed
T~sday. hut kept three others Hancho Santiago Community
areas with three board seals
tG represent Orange and Santa
Ana un1f1ed distri ct voters.
and one seat represenlLng a
joint trustee area.
Voiers 1i.11l also decide
v.hich of 42 cand idates run·
n!ng for the seven board scats
will represent them
Should the trustee area
auLhorizat1on proposal fall In
rhe Apnl 20 eleel1on, the
merger proposal also fails
despite voter approval F~b.
2 of financing for the merged
district. 1£111 ...... Maf.:" u l,fim•••lntn, 8tvtfl¥ "-.,,. D"" ( Slt1t !k•. Auou•I• Al'-and Whl,.m ~ ~ert, J""• Arif> Ind 8111 81r~~. DtllV lH -H, R, • l;;ir-. Pe!rlc:i. Ei.I,,. e<>d Ja"n ... D~ Center
Can Apply
For Grant
in the deep freeze. • • College District.
A week ago, supervisors The final approval of the1---:::;11mmmmmmmmmmmiiimiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilimmmiiil;~---
lifled the county }ob freeze on•llG[ COllll'N. expansion of the old Santa
E Ul1 Htl..,, M ana LOlilt from 66 positions. MIJ 9"J I Ana Junior College district to
On March 2. the board froze include thhe Orange Unified THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE A\cAllt•••• Laurlt A. ano OtM<• l tt Melo••<· w1111""' D. •"" l •nO• -rlt fQ<IQI'. c;,.... .. , K. •I'll Eciwer" i.< G•-· c .. o1 Few .,..i J-Freotrlc~ B••~hl, A \l~le and Ocnelcl Ee•4
R•>tr. Mar. end G_,,l•t• W
700 county JObs lo avoid 2. -===========:; School District would come
deficit in the county budget. r with voter approval cf a IN THE CAROUSEL COURT .. ,
It was a11r1ted al that time LOCAL seven·niember hoard April 20. ~ HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN WITH HIM (,0'""· Mt •V •n4 K..,,Mll> J C~•frtllo. F•eo:la E. t nil A.-.u>•u1
W~Dll~on. ~ .... ,..,., M••Of anO M.o>H I
H:::!::n. .. • .,,,.,,, H onll Borin"
l ;~r• (Rellft <,cot!, Jr, .trod JN,,,,.
no new positions would be No oftt•• n•w•P•P•• ••1!1 .,.,u The existing district has a C' ft. 'D1 in Costa Mtw
filled and that vacancies mo••· ew•rv div. 1boul wh1r1 five member board. cJDUfh ~OISf 111ZI
Pa•,.clt '>t-· 0..-.1 P•ul •ncl l o•t\.O Jtfll "~"'"' ~ .... ..,., D. •n4 ,,,,,,,,..,.1 E. '"""~ A•"'"' R '"" l.ole J
The Creative Day Care
Center in southwest Santa Ana
was given pennissioo by the
Board of Supervison: Tuesday
to apply for a $97 .Ml federaJ
grant.
would remain unfilled until 1l~·~·~"~'~'"::;'"~'"~·=G~,.~·~1·~·~0;;:"~"'~·J....:.~T~1";· t~~b~a~ll~o1tiw~i~ll~}co~n~ta~in~--.::~~~!!!!!!!l!l!'~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~=----co••I th1" th e DAILY PILOT. June 30. authorization for three trustee
Jobs approved Tuesday in-
cluded 1wo temporary clerieal w~,,.., J tnt c1 ... rr •"" l '*">a1
11-ro S,o:ll•• T-• LH aM Hello~ M
6••...:"fno R_, l """ -.11.1..._
... ~~:·c~•IOll l -.......,,.,. l. v~-~l•r Jc '"" ~--l _n . N1...:• ancl ROdM't C £0,..,.,,..,,, !Ital,.<• E t rd Etrl Jo•'~ I•"' J aM Pe1,ol l ~-,.1• Ca•o<>n 1 ..... .,.., Gt•1'CI W .,....,~ Ji.,.., "' anti ,.,.ll«1m A u.n,.,., a,.,,1 ~·-·• •"" w 1111...,
s·~~a"";i' .• 1~"" ...... •rd , ..........
C!oCtia•O
" ....... Ma"'-Jl .; f> ~"f· Al·<• 0 1r•-•"" Goor"
w+~~JI"'" e 1 r>d 1ne1,.,.. Joi.ePl'l•M
N t(I " c ••• ~.1 An• '"" f """"41
(1~1~;;:· C:INll JH n &"II l-.,1 >
l•s~~~·:~~n LOii &nil R...,. lltl!'l<I
11<-<tt ·-L~<o:!t V f"° Gtn•! v, .•• ,.,, Mf'-'" l ff •no.B•ITY J o1<1 C·~'""''· 0....,.,, G '"" l •le M tani••" Jt•"""t l•"' 1...t ltY•entt
w~"'Ja(au1 D ind J1•,.., L.,. ~"A'P El"'rw ( aNI R-R ll•ll~' Jantl l . """ ,,_., 1-1 ~"et Rav Cu'111 tnd Ednt ~"• C ~•nt•o. Vl(IOr •rd Ht"ltn L. .... ' .,._,,..oon. ,,,,..,,,..., It. ano M•~·-•
Ul•!(h e-· OUvtt '"" t<P1•·· t r~t': £•!....,, 1..,o.1 -V•tlC""' ,..;,~:.'t...,.w a -Jal'i" t
l!&urN!•, °"""'' l r>d Ma,.., T .... rpy o ..... P•lrlcf• ...... I"" T"<'mlf Eoc• l•N>;h , & .... Ntwtot> tNI GloM• JO.Ct S."""" M•r>i•tt1 Ro .. man e'>d Doti o ....... ( o "•fll 00<ntJ\y R encl ROl>f'•I • ''"'!~n (,.,.tvl I< aM llon-<1 W•Y"" C:•LN ty (&,,,...;nt 5 Ind P1trJ(l M
l\~•ri.. Nike J-""" Su••n,.. K•'""'" G.o!Mn. Su••n and Geor9t! Pl•• Pa!tl<' Joll" tnd llnclf ltt .,.u•I. "'"'""" """ ...., lllc,,••d Wltllem (;~tMr. ,,,.,.,.If .... ,,. 11'd l 1 •ry l 1Ylft
t ""'''"· Sar<nlt K i"<I Arlvll K y n•lo. J•tllvn H 1"° R-r1 C K••l•1 G..,..te F, t1•d Fie•""' L
tftolh 'O<llOt" M. ~ncl Gerti1rd Pnllil• "'•"<eht r, Jodv ~g-end JDl'ft .......... r~u •. !l"I~ Dal• •nd Shi•~ M1t 1-'rll•~ <•nd•• J -~~ )OIM>~ P. l •NI Ell•n J •M Fh"..oCI H l<'.•·•n•r, Mld1t!I Vlclo•l1 Ind l1'omu
'" O•Y'D"'b, Rao,e Marv e<>d !licht•d
L•'qh '°'"''· ~'•"• G 1"<1 R••m<>r>rt lvle '"'•¥••. 01~1 .. 1 s •n<I J•~lc" c W l<••S"" W•<>Clv """ f)f~,,1, 8 ~··~•!, IC•v Fii.,-" .,,.. H~r~ld
~"•~. ~l!!"•v L •nrl p, .. 1 Iv' W•"'•¥ M•t • tc111H l(~lu •n<I P1ul W'<<I•"' ll•'"•••hl. Vlrglf\\• "'"''" Rn<I Jct>" ··~ "'"'••. Jo<..,., L 11\d ll•~hot L """"OOI' ,..,.,1 M •nd lknm•• W C"'l•· M1rtlrtl • .,., '"" 111'1~ ' .. (',,.,._,,, •. Pufh T l"rl Vnt..r1 J "·~ !le"'" M1rl..., ~..., "-..f••v C i-.. ~h. ,.,..~A. •M !'>••othv R.
C•nlu. R11•1o •~d "'a""'
ElltlrH Mtrcll ,4
Min.II. Clare'!Kt R . 1roo J uelll11 Annt ~"roll, E1l11Dt-tn I 1"<1 Pol~ 0
Wollh Donni KAY I nd i1Uch1•d llovd :~!11'..:~·-~~=.cK ltd J,:•t_T• .\ri:,
V;.•11<>n, J<>enM H l"d 0ctn:fd [.
lloc11. MOHll S. II trod lllldl ~ °""'"·· Miry lttlhttlrw •rid. Jtld11rd Jiii n ~~r::n.1ri'~oi· :::: ;~r~ .• E T1n!Wt. l . 5••nlt• Jr. •nd rn':
Mrs. Sade Reid director of
lhe center said the funds are
being sought to financr an
18-month experimental center
capable of caring for children
between Ii weeks and 2 years
of age.
She said that if the grant
is approved it would be the
first of its kind for a com·
munity-based center.
The center is operated by
the Parent Involvement Coun·
cil headed by Mrs. Reid and
partially financed by the coun·
l\'.
• The federal funds, being
sought from the Office of
Economic Opportunity would
provide support for IS ad-
diltonal children and provide
for training of additional
mothers v.·ho are on welJatt.
Marine Gets
Prison Term
empktyes neeessary to install
a new systern for processing
dog hcenst-s; lWO Junior civil
engineers for flood control :
one associate real property
agent, four public defender's
office posts and one position
in t h e alJdilor-Ollltroller's
department.
Not allowed were requests
for two clerks in the road
department and one computer
training specialist in flood con·
trol.
Love, Sex
And What?
Because or the temporary
closure of the Costa ~1esa
Golf and Country Club. Orange
Coast Chapter No. 2b of
Parents Without Partners will
·hold its regular monthly
meeting this Friday at the
A1eadowlark Country Club.
Huntington Beach.
Guest speaker for the 8 p.m.
mffting will be Dr. Alan W.
SANTA ANA -AN El Toro Levy. a clinical psychologist ~1arint ""'ho pleaded guilty lo at UC Irvine. His topic will
reduced charges after being be • • L 0 v e , Sex and
accused of sexually molesting Smorgasbord".
an 11-year~ld Santa Ana girl Dancing will follO\.\'.
was sentenced Monday to six,-;:==========~:, months in Orange County Jail.1,
Judge Byron K. McMillan
also ordered Paul Henson, 22,
ol 8741~ Midway Drive, El
Toro Marine Corps Air Sta-
tion, to serve two years prcr
bation vn the second degree
burgarly conviction.
Hensoa was arrested Jan.
IS, 1970, after be allegedly
for~ his wa y into a Santa
Ana home and · .auaulted hl5
y0W1g victim who was alone
at the time.
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
II you hav<' Til'\V uciJ!;hbors
or know or 'snyonr movinJ!;
to our area, please tell us
so that \\'t may cX"tcnd a
friendly welcome and hrl11
th•m to be(:ome aequalntrd
ln their new :surroundings.
So. Coast Visitor
s1~::. P•lrlco• l •"" •nd J..:-i. ;;=======:::;===;II Gu;~,",....,v tnd J1Yotr J.
4'4-15n 4M-t3'1
~talt•O. JN.,..111 Marlt • ..., RonllCI
le ~;;;:~ CIONI• Ru!~ •"d Gle~ W.,ltv
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Tho Ono Th1t Cores
Harbor Visitor
646-0174 "· Hale, Ma•lln !ills.oro and Rcbt'rl Cll"t"" Herrho~. IC1fhv 1r>d R1vmofld l .
~ ~
EARN 253 TO 503 MORE
Most banks have now reduced savings passbook rates
to a low 43. At Pacific you still earn the same
high rates as before.
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN, BALANCE MIN.YEARS
"'6.18\ 6.00\ 5,000~ TWO
5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000~ ONE
5.39\ 5.25\ 500~ %th
5.13\ 5.00\ ]2! ONE DAY
----~ FREE
SAFE DEPOSIT BOX
for maintaining a s5QQS!2 balance in any of
our high rate accounts -take your choice.
AN IMPORTANT EXTRA
Your money earns interest from the day you deposit.
till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day.
ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE
~~\ FREE ~lllll~ 1. Income Tax Service .,'f ~~~ 2. Traveler"s Checks
""'"'s ,,.,, .... ,,
::Q;Q'1Qii . '
3. Collection of Notes ~;' ;J.l
4. Many other FREE Services
·.
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday·Frlday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
ll3J IRISTOl STflEET • COSTA MUA, CALWO"NlA • '"°NI f.tMOM
. eg. $148
TTRESS l 2 BOX SPRINGS ~ , .... d in tha rhere•s no fooling ar .....
nr tniction dep.artzeot at Ortho? A co .. it
•turdy t empered sleel innerspring Ull ~l ~rt .. t he ser i ou~ work, then Ortbo ~dds ~l sn L i nsulator, tben cottonit11lt ~o r c~mrort and ~u pport and tops \
~!:~u:o ~i,bly qu,lltoid cov1or. ,
Orlho~Pnk ~ ·
;'lont:le R11nu'".
I ... _0 ... ..._mattreuesatOrthostor 'You canon y.,,.,., ru""'
158
•'fou can only
' ,
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS
LAKEWOOD
4433 Candlewood A venue
Candl•wood Shops
{across lrom Lakewood Cenrer)
Phone: 634·<11 34
SANTA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
(corner
16131 Harbor Blvd.
ol Edinger ) N ex t to
Phone : S J Q.4 570
Zod y's
ANAHEIM
1811 West Lincoln Avenue
Between Eur.li c1 ~nd 8r ookhu 1 ~t Al'"r> ,p~
Ju&I East 01 Frd M;l!t
Phone: 7 76-;i~rio
OPEN DAILY 10·9 •SAT. IO 6 •SUN 12 6 •IMMEDIATE DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE• BANKAM£RICARD•MASTER CHARGE
---~--------· -' ·-
CHECKING •UP•
W.I1y W 01nen Tall{
More Tl1an Me11
By L. I'd. 80\'0
A~1 AS KE D TO NM1 E last
year·s 10 fastest grov.·ing
counties nationwide . I.
~1ohave, Ariz. 2. Ve rnon, L<1.
3. Pitkin. Colo 4. Campbell.
\\')o. 5. Collier. Fla. 6. Prince
\\1illiam. Va . 7 Clark, Nev.
8. Sarpy, Nebr. 9. Charlotte.
Fla. 10. Clayton. Ga.
IT WAS THE COM.\10N
CUST0~1 in Abyssinia some
years back for a husband and
his wife to sleep in the same
nightgown. Each took one
sleeve. Don 'l believe they
make nightgowns like that
now, or hardly any.
YOU KNOW THOSE
giveaway qulz shows on TV?
When the stopwatch boys
make a study of the tapes.
they discovered the women
contestants generally we re far
s~edier than the men with
their ansv.·ers. And n1uch
more accurate, too.
llE KISSED HER 152 times
In rapid succession, that's all.
Trn-n his lip muscles got too
tired. And he lost the bet
that he could kiss a girl 200
times without stopping. He
v. as a young actor, the name
slips away, of a few decades
ago. And she was the widely
renowned actress Anna Held.
How many consecu!lve kisses
could you deliver before your
lip muscles bee am e ex-
hausted , young fellow? Say
the subject were Jane Fonda
()r Eliza beth Montgome ry or
Lois Nettleton.
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q.
"\Vhal's a half-minute and
ClTI !he Flip \Yilson show cost?"
A. $40.noo. . Q. "Don't most
cnmpan1es gil'e a full hour
fnr lunch?" A. Not quite
About 45 out or 100 do. Another
Drath Nnlices
ILAI•
Fl~renc• twDel Bt•ir. llt'I B•rlOn Orlvt,
Hun•i"910n B1ecn O.tt or cle•tn. M&r<n
JO Survived l>Y '-•on•, Bon 1nd Oo/I·
~Id; d&UIMer, $~!rl1Y Bltl•; !Iv• o••~
cnl!drl!<1; -vr .. 1-or&ne1cnaa 5.,.,,ce•.
l'rkley, 1 PM, Ptt-FtfT'•IV Coloni&I
F~ Home O!(I(
M1rv Blelr 01<~. 11&\I Koletlo S! , Hunt.
l"glon Beien. Date of ct111n. Mtt<n ll
Survov-.1 l>Y IWO dau9M1•1, Suun Mc-
K..,v1r fll(! J ill Olck; 1Mft ~c"" J•'Tlft,
Sttonen end D1vld 01(~; IWO "''""-cnllar1n. Grnvt•ldt !t"'lct,, Mond1y,
11 :1'1 '-M, Gon>< <n•cn·r~ Ctm•torv.
F>••!( F~milv (•'·-•-1 Fune"I Home.
Olre<:Tor1.
t\'0<111
· • •1 I'"" 10 N ''1 L•drol!
SI., \.•Runt Beach !turY>v~ b• h11s111~d. vTnc•M c Kino. • •o d~11~Mer" Mro
J•ann• ICu.,els~y. cf L10<•~• B•acn: M«
Poler Ovt>o•o. Nortn ~011vwl>04: !our
""'•""cnlldr•n Prl.,••t 1e•vlcu, toaa•.
,.~u.,••v, McC~•mir~ La~una !!.•ech
CMP•I IMt•mon!, Ocbb•n• M111~oloum,
E•" l iu••I Hill!. Pn l•d1lon!~ Mr(o•·
mlc~ LllllM Beat h "'O•tuery, OlrKIOrl.
LANDI
!1"1uef...Jr, Lindi A •H•d•nl c• ~unlln•·
1on B•ttn O•tt ol d••'"· M•<en )t
'"•vl !f ••"'it•• w•r• t\fld woln i"'••·
monl el Ila•• H 111 M•'T'C"•I p.,._
1111Cl'lt H111t Mn""'"' l'l>tft!Or>
THO RNTON
ll!uth o. ,.no•nlcn 938 Be\tl• 51 • N•"'1>0rl
Bt 1th. 0111 cl dn•n. Maren 70 Su•
yJvf<I II• nu1111ne1. H&tr~ M. T""'"'on;
<llu~Mtt. K•"' .cl l"e "om•: bro1n1r.
W1•tt r S O•v~""· 5..,1~ G1!0; "''"" Mi.. M•rY Or.d•n, Ntw<>Gd Bt•cn
S1rvlc•1. Fd•U•. 1 PM, Ptc1llc v, • ..,
(nao•I tn1ermrnl. Cat•llt V ""' M•m0<-
111 P1rk Pttll•< Votw Mertua•v, Oirot·
tor! TOWNSEND'
Jann ~ Town .. nd 7"'-B .t.venldt St•lll1.
L11une ttlll1 n~i. of do.tn. ~'••en JO
Su,.,,.lvtd by wolf. E:. Lou"e Tow"'"""' n'O'~"'· Cr&•9 Town•tMr, o! S&c r&mtnto:
5 Jt~· M". C~•''"' O&d•n9lon, NorH•-
1Td9e.' ~0<vlc•i. S••~r~v. 7 PM , P•<i!i<
View C~actl ln!frm•nl, P1(Jllc Vl•W
M1mo•i•I Pork Pod !lc y ,,., Mortua<•.
Oltecto•s WlllTSOM
ll !t~•rd L wnlt\On .t.ot ll, ol ?U• Mon l•••v Avr . (01le Mtll Survlvtd II• ~ortnl•, Mr •NI Mr1. 0. E Whlho,,, c..,.t1 M•••: oro•ne•. Oc,,, cf t~ homo:
!•lie", ""''"' w nillon end M•I M1r•O" ftlt n• ,::.,,,, MeJ."t 01tornol ••and· fT'Ol~~r. Mro . Lt nnll Wni"O"· llll"D.it:
..... 1 .. n~! •·•""mo'"•·· M•I M•"O" (ni ml>lrllin, F'O"d• !trrvtcu, '°"dtV.
t ,.M. Bell B •o~<1w1v cn,...,1. '"'" 0•v Metvl" B Ta•!O• of•ic•1hn9 Bell B•..,d
"''" Monuery, 01fl!'Clon
ARBUC KLE & SON
WESTCl,IFF !\10RTUARY
427 E. lllh Sl.. Costa l\lesa
"'"488' • BALTZ f!IORTUARI ES
Corona drl rtlar 67Z.945fl
Costa l\1esa 646-%4%4 • BELL BROAOWAY
1\10RTUA RY
110 Broadway. Costa l\tes•
Lf 8-3433 • J\TrCO lt:'lllCK LAGUN A
BEACll J\10 RTUARY
I ;95 Laguna Canyo n Rd.
494-H1$ • rACIFTC VI EW
;\fE:'llORIAL PARK
Cemeterv J\t ortuary
Chapel
3500 Paelfle View Drtve
Ne"por1 6each. Calllornia
144-!700 • Pf:EK FAl\tlL''
COLONIAL FUNt:RA L
110:'\IE
illDI Bois• A\'t.
'°''estminstcr 393.JitS • S:'llITH'S J\IORTU ARY
I!')' l\laln SI. -tlunlint ton Dtarlt
•
26 out of JOO make ii '5
minutes. The rest allow a hall
hour. .Q. ''Hov.• many rivers
m Egypt?·· A. Only one, the
Nile, but H's a dandy."
EARL V RETIREMENT is
really taking bold. A scholar
v.·ho is looking into this sad
situation says more and more
younger men are getting
squeezed out. As this trtnd
among men in their late fifties
goes on, he figures. one in
every s i x will be ou t of work
by his 65th birttlday ..
MAYBE ANOTHER REASON
women tend to talk more than
men is merely physical. Tht:i r
vocal cords are shorter. Re·
quire less effort to agitate.
A m~ical specialist conten.is
most credibly thal men get
tired far more quickly than
do women by the exercise or their voices.
IN THE FOR E IGN
SERVICE, it's commo n I y
said : ··A happy diplomat ha s
an EnJ!ish rountry house. a
Chinese cook. a Japanese wife
and an American salary. An
unhappy diplomat has a
Ja}lanese country house, an
Eaglish cook. a Chinese salary
and an American wife."
That's cutting.
WHILE DRIVING ALONG.
say you see a stalled car
with a red balloon flying over
it. Means somebody therein
is sick . And needs a doctor.
A blue balloon means the car
is sick . And neerls a mechanic
Such is the signal syslein
along the New York State
highways. Understand other
st.ates now are toying "';!h
the notion of putting out these
balklon kits to all thei r
registered motorists. Do you
get the feeling somewhere
lhere·s an e n er g etie im-
aginative balloon salesman
lotaling up his ex p ense
vouchers at this very minute'!
I do.
Your auestions a11d com-
ments aTe welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP wherever possible. Ad·
dress letters to L. M. Boyd,
P. o. Box 1875. Newport
Beach, Calif., 92660.
Druggists
Consider
Smoke Vote
SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) -
Representatives o{ the na-
tion's druggists "'ere schedul-
ed to vote today on \.1-'hether
they should slop s e 11 i n g
cigarettes.
The vote in the American
Pharmaeeut ical Association's
house of delegates wilt be
purely advisory and has no
enforcement power.
The proposal is that the
APA reeommend '·th a t
pharmacists not sell cigarelles
in their pharmacies.''
Several of those w h o
discussed the matter Tuesday
as the APA policy committee
put the matter on the f~oor
wanted even stronger wording .
Donald A. Dees. a SL Paul
pharmacist. urged that the
wording be p panded to cover
aU tobaceOS. not just cigaret-
tes. \Villiam P. o·Brien of
New Orleans. "'anted it 10
also include \'ending machines
in pharmacies or by such leas-
ed operations as drug stores
and food and refreshment
counters.
Italy Hi jack
Figure Gets
Operation
R0~1E IU Pl l -Former
U.S. Marine Cpl. Raff aele
~1inichiel\o. jailed last year
on eharges stemming from the
v.·orld's longest aerial hi-
J&ck1ng. underwent an opera-
tion Wednesday f o r 11p-
pend1citis.
Doctors said the 21-year-<>ld
Italian-born P.1ar1ne was
operated on in the Relil1na
Coeh !Queen of Heaven )
Prison. where he has lipt"nt
most of his time sintt the
Nov. I. 1969. h1iacking of a
Tran~ World Airlines (TWA )
jet from Los Angeles to Rome
~1inichiello wa!'l Jailed for
711 years \a5t November on
six rharges stemming from
thr hijacking. which the Sell-
tie, Wash., resident said he
carried out lo see his tlderly
raiher in Italy .
T~11rsd1.y , April l , iq71. ' DAIL v PILOT 1 l
Solon Tells of Tuna Boat Controversy ..
WASHINGTON 1UPll cording to Pelly , was refusing
to enforce laws passed by
Congress. laws which 1 n
Pelly's view were aimed at
halting the seizures.
a m endrnt·nt to the
Fishermen's Prolcl't1vc Act. of
which he "rote, to provide
the amount of lhe flnts will
be deducted fn.11n U.S fo rt1g11
assistance to lhe nation that
1n1pose11 lhen1 .
avoid deducting from foreign
;ud by not filing a clain1 with
the offending count.-} 111 the
first plact." Pelty said . ...,
than ont.' rntlhon dollars lhls
year alone and she will still
rettlvt' a full 35 1nilhon dollars
111 US aid this year "
The State Department hi~·
flc1ally s~ud in the past"i.t
hoped to !!Olve the fi.!~'81«
right s C<>ntroversy throllgh
ncgotialioM.
Rep. Thomas M. Pell fD-
Wa.sh) charged \\'ednelday the
State Depar1ment was helping
to perpeluale the fi.!hing
rights controversy 111 which
American tuna boa ts are seiz·
ed by Ecuador and the ir
owners heavily fined .
The State Department, ac.
Pelly made these charges
during a luncheon of the AF'L.
ClO Marilirne Trades Depart-
ment. One of the laws he
referred to was the 1967
"State Oeparlment lawyers
have played word-games with
this amendment, and they
Ile added, "the facl of thl'
matter is, no cla1n1s have been
hied for reimbursement su1ce
my amendment was made Into
law. And oow, Ecuador has
colleeted lines totalling more
Through such acl1ons. l'clly
charged. "The Stale lkpart ·
1nent encour<1.ges seizures {by
Ecuador) while adm11ling it
has no plans to end them."
Sinct• Ja.n . l I of th1_, year,
Ecuadorian naval vessels have
seized a tot.al of 26 AmerlCan
luna bot1ls.
uaraafee ''
•rti c. ....... cw.-.t' ........
••• (OUR PRICIS SPIAK IOR 1HIMSILVIS) •••
"So!i•/11ctionGtu1mnt~rd" \•41
SUPER SPECIAL :JJNl~J
Wild! Uniroyal
DOUBLE·
BELTED
MARKC.
BLOOME
s 95
TUBELESS LAREDO l E h 650x13 (878/13) Bl1tkw11\ ... Elch." 11.ilf•d. Et. " "
Belted or UNlllOY AL
Whitewalls LAREDO $295 Extro 1. •Sx l 4{D71/14) 7.7S114{f11f\ 4}
7 .JS114{f71/14) 7.7SJr1 S(f71/1 SJ
TUBELESS
VW's
DATSUN • OPEL
TOYOTA & Others
129~
[(«f
UNIROYAL
BLACKWALLS
(!I WHITEWALLS
FORD-PLY-CHEV SIZE: 7.7Sx15 (FlBflS}
BRAND
NEW
FULL
4 PLY
UNIROYAL TUBELESS
BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY
6.SOxl 3
(878/13)
7.75'14
(F78/14)
7.75x15 7J011l 1.15114 1.15115
( F78/1 SJ 7J5114 {Cll/1411Gll/151
. ..
\$
814'5
'"'"
995 US•14 l.1S.1S
. {fi71f14J(G71/1S)
7.00.113
(C71/13)
1.55114
Ot71fl41
l .SS11:1 S
(H71n5)
OPEN 7 ~ .•
a.ssxl 4 a.ssx1 s 9.00xl s a.asx1 s :r
1.15114
(J71/14)
1.15115
tJ71/1S)
$2695 , ... ,, .... ,, 1L11n s1
DAYS
Daily 8:30-9
SUN. 9-6
(H78/l 4) (H78/1 S) (l78/l 5) (J78/l 5) I :::
\'.{"·WH,~!;.~ ... ~~.~!:!.~~ ES *GI B-1 . s19's -:: ) .'" ' 1 PIICISIO~WH£El_ll,NlrlENT rt11nsartii11~111rdll•it•O•c1.,lt11111• SUPERVALU ass 't ''FASTRAK'' ·: '~
" Jr''" 111c1t111te 11111lr1Rt·•••11d sterri•1 •arh;~-1rtltr1, w1r.1r 1111r FOR All CAR S, * ORIGINAL EQUIP 0 7.7511.s :: : f: •~rts ,,. Jrt•l•it JtlCIH ·••1l 1t111me11 srttil(l lrt• hll111 t•t!I Clfllt l TRUCKS ' CAMPERS -Millions of '70 c·.,," .::~~l~ /.: ~
'
11iti1111i 111111 •e •otri. · I>':
"' h . '" ·:· ,.,
CORNER OF BAKER AND HARBOR
COSTA MESA· NEWPORT BEACH AREA
557-8000
.. --·· ..
'oz,•.;.;.;.;.:-:·:•:·:O~:·).!A'« < :-;• •• hll llltho!/ :;: j
·-.• '• ., ...... ;.~;.;.~:-.. : .. ~~:.:.<-.. ·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.-;-;.~;.;.·.~:: )~
FAT MAX RADIALS
2 SUPER
BELTS Of SJ6~~ RADIAL
PROHCTION! hf h . hi ••• SPECIAi on AU SIZES
SPECIAL 10 POI •••
BRAKE RELINE
'FREE
REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE ...
11tlNING1! 1! WtJn 01t l1l11t
1tl 100 M1lt1
Pl11 St tf!Ct C•''!t
•15!l~ZE U.S. CARS
I, IRAND N£W" 2G,DDG M1L£
CU1RANUfO IONOlO lOllNC
1, 11111~ ANO JNSULUT!~N
INCUID£0
l lrUCIO·MllSUll All • OIUMS
• ADO IRA•E flUIO AS Nt!O(ll
S AIC l:l lND llNIN&
' I! E!D SYSHM 1 CL(IN
BACKING PLA!l IS N([D(D
1. CIEISl l PACK WH[Il
I EAllNCS
I. Ill CYUHll£1S INSPiCl(ll
lllClUDINfi MASUI
tYUNDEI
f. IOT.ITE Wllffl S 1110
ADJUST IMKES
If, IOAD TBT YIHICL( lG
,.. SlAltllllDS
Mork(. Bloomf' Will Not Do ltJJ lli•n AS•ltlr•l-•1••!
IN"'J '111r•llr IHtlllllltltiti u,.1 "'' "* l 1l11ff W•til CJIHftrl 11 NEEll!D 111f $3.t) ''· * DIUMS ltnH 11 NEEDED lllJ •••••. $1.1511. * flONI 51£15£ SULS II HffDED 11tf ,. SI.SI 1l11I '* 1£1\llN SPllHGS 11 NEEDED 11tr .••.• \111 1l1tl
• tiblltr tf!, lllUt. W•t 11111111 U llJ (Ill ii ltt•tf
GARDEN GROVE -14040 Brookhurst -SJQ..3200
ANAHEIM · BUENA PARK
6962 Lincoln Blvd. -826-SSSO
FULLERTON -1321 Euclid St .-870-0100
'
*. ------.------~ ----
• • .
. t '
' ' ~ ~
l
' •
J
•
!
I i
.! DAILY PILOT Thllrsday, Aprll 1, 1971
Army CJ,apla iu Sla ted a l OCC
Ed Kane. a veteran Ar1ny
Chaplain, will speak J."'riday
~ .. ~at Orange ~ast Co11ese as
.,r pasc ef llehg1ou.'i Awareness
ti~.Y.'eek.
;.•: Kane. V.'ho was wounded on
,;r;duty in V1elnam . will address
sludents at noon 1n St1eoct
Building room 25
Religious Awareness Week
ts sponsored by the OCC Lat-
ter Day Sauits SI ude n l
As.soc1atton to p r o m o t e
religious awareness
Police Helicopt er Co-op
Groundwork Under Way
ATIENTION LONG-TIME RESIDENTS
AND USERS Of THE llACH BETWEEN
LAGUNA BEACH AND CORONA DEL MAR
HELP!
r ' ' ' • ~ ' • • • • •
l I j
' .
'
HOT PIZZA!!
"FASTER" DELIVERY 5 to 9 P.M.
. 675-3375
~ I ALIOA ISLAND AND BEACON BAY AR EA
"!!_ SM"ll. MIEOIVM L.•ltOI! ~CHEESE , .75 1.25 1.75 ~MUSHROOMS .90 1.55 2.30
'SAUSAGE . 90 1.55 2.30
ANCHOVIES .90 1.55 2.30
PEPPERONI , .90 1.55 2.30
COMBINATION 2.00 Z.90 3.75
2S EXTll• Cl4•1tGf 1'011 COMIOS 01' t tTl!MS
a lEll-COOllS I aUt>-SfX ~&Cl( JI ...
THE HEAD BAGEL
305 Marin~ Ave. Balboa Island
Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI llM IHllJ P l191 Stiff
Groundwork on a joint pro-
gram linking four Orange
County agencies now using
police helicopters !fl cut crime
and improve pubhc safety is
solidly under way and may
be operational by summer.
The long-di5cussed routual
operation designed to
streamline individual depart·
ment efficiency and reduce
total costs will be financed
by a large cash grant, if cur·
rent plans work out. ·
Representatives of the four
departments involved to dat e
2221 HARBOR BL VD.
Girra
4~· I;
•£· 3.
Boy>s
•£· 8;
·~-3.
COSTA MESA
Hours: Weekl y & Saturdaiy 10 · 9
Sunday 11 · S
LADIES' 'N' TEEN'S FLATS
HANDBAGS and
CHILDREN'S SHOES
Ladies• ••d
THn'a
4£•10.
Girls Dressy Crinkles Country Bumpkins
in Auortld Styles, Colors
2 $7 PAIR
lbny other
atyM similar
to illustration.
in Shiny, Crinkle Pat111t
699
SIZES
4{·10.
BOY'S DRESS BOOTS
499
Wfor"-ot
casual wear In 1l1n
3~· •.
MEN'S SIZES
6\· 12 999
met Tuesday in joint iession deterrents and one crew alone
with the Costa 1i1es1 Aviation can do the work of six
Committee. patrolmen in the same time ~~~~;;_;t"""f'i'
No s p e c i I i c recom-period.
mendalions came fron1 the Newport Beach's program
municipal panel established a headed by Capt. J a m e s
year ago, but they will in Parker will 5ave an estimated
the ~uture. '469,000 over five years and
Costa Mesa City Manager $1.89 million over 15 years,
Fred Sorsabal said today the in terms of man-hour costs
proposed helicop cooperative saved.
is entirely feasible, except in Orange County Is .. con-:.::. ·~··':~.:~'.i.~;.:~;~(.;;;.::sr-::. _ . .. ;.;_:;
one key aspect. sidering a sherirrs office
.. , think the Olle problem helicopter system patterned
they are going to have is on that In Los Angeles County.
in joint use," he explained. whUe Santa Ana was forced
Various cities or law agen. to drop the concept due to
cies now receive ready municipal cutbacks recently. Voyage Sh own
response by Costa Mesa, Besides Sorsabal and Chief "Yankee Sails Ac ross
Newport Beach, Huntington Neth, representatives included Europe," a 51-minute film of
Beach and Anaheim police Anaheim Assistant "Ci t y the brigantine Y a n k e e • s
helicopter crews in crisis Manager Bob Davis and voyages 1n tHe Mediterranean,
situations, under mutual aid Police Lt. Robert Zippe!; Hun. produced by the National
pacts. tington Beach City Manager Geographic Society, will be
ORANG£ COUNTY is INVESTIGATING
whether there has been public use of the beach
between Lagilna Beach and Corona Del 11.ar, from
Pacific Coast Highway to the ocean, without charge
or permission of the landowner. The purpose of this
investigation is to find out if any public prescriptive
rights exist in this area. Any persons who can
testify to use of this beach area in years past please
contact
OFFICE OF THI COUNTY COUNSEL
SIS N. Sycamore, P.O. Box 1379
S1nt1 Ano, C1lilomi1 92702
or phone 834-3300 Experience in Los Angeles Doyle MWer and Sgt. Bob · shown free at 7:30 p.m., Fri-
County, where the sheriff's of-Morrison plus New p ort day, in the Huntington1 Beach
fice pioneered Southland police _:Be~a~chi_'s~Ca~p":t.--P".:a~r."'ke:'.r:... ___ Illlib~r~ar~y:.., ~525~M~alllin'_S~l:.. _;_• -~-'=======~~~~~~~~~~:;=:=:'. helicopter use, has indlcated 1·
that individual communities
have speciali,zed needs.
Geography, for example.
must be virtually memorized
to best patrol a given area.
"The other racet3 are ex-
treml'l.y feasible ," Sorsabal
said today.
Great cost reductions tQ the
cities now operating choppers
are fore.seen in three areas:
-Helicopter maintenance
and repairs.
-Replacement parts and
supplies acquisition.
-Pilot and observer
training procedures.
Police and city management
representatives left the con-
ference at Costa 11esa City
Hall with a rfquest for pro-
gress reports on their in.
dividual helicop programs.
Law enforcement of(icials
are particularly optimistic
about financing such a county-
wide program.
They are looking to two
crimefighting agencies for
money to implement the
cooperative, \nto which other
cities could easily be admitted
as they adopt similar systems.
One is the Law Enforcement
Assistance Act, while the
other is the Criminal Justice
"(oP 60~
QU,O.LIT'/ ~
SECONDS 2.9~
• Sooti.t AMEllJCA~ ~"'.!' ~595 PEASANT SHIRTS ~:.-::; ~650
FlSHERMAN SHIRTS ~895
~295 e IK A \'A~IET'i oi::: COlORS
PANAMA STRAW HATS
F110M SIA••
jf ondmode
2-Pc Cotton
HotPsnts
SUITS
e fJRtLM-._Nf
.rt,1t.rrs
~~t.=¥,-
-c~s~~-Mesa Police chief 2loa1ions SANrA ANA i::: ~E~,~~R-~ &\5-66\bl BALBOA ~·iti:T::
Roger E. Neth, t>ne of thei-~~~~~~~~~~~~····~··················-~~-Orange Coast's most en-
thusiastic helicop proponents,
was the only chief present
at the Tuesday session.
He said it would b e
premature at this stag~ . lo
apply to either source for 101nt
powers system funds.
City Manager Sor s ab a I,
however. said the CCJ has
$33 million allocated to pro-
mote crimefighting and im-
proved health and safety pro-
grams of all t)'Pes.
He said the LEAA program
also has an estimated $1.5
million earmarked for various
Jaw enforcement grants just
in Orange County's jurisdic·
tion alone.
"You can ask ror almost
anything," he said.
Huntington Beach has the
largest and oldest police
helicopter p r o g r a m func-
tioning, with six pilots trained
and a January. 1969 starting
date.
Costa P..1esa followed just
one year ago. with Anaheim
and Newport Beach both
recently putting their own
Hughes Aircraft choppers,
costing $53 .000 each. into
service.
Pilots undergo I 6 -we e k
training periods al Long
Beach Airport . with
designated departmental in-
structor candidate! continuing
in 80 more hours' flight and
classroom work.
Statistics are still being
compiled by most agencies on
cost and other factors. but
helicopters are proven crime
Newport Boy
To Compete
For Grant
A Newport Beach High
School senior is among 11
Southern California studenls
selected to compete for a
$6.000 grant in the Southern
California Edison C e l 1 e g e
Scholarship program.
Shawn J. Bisso!Ulett.e. 17.
son of Dr. and ~1rs. H. Ward ·
Bissonnette of 1006 Somerset
Lane. Newport Beach. will
face a panel of community
leaders. Thursday for con-
sideration as one of thttf!
finalists in the competition. I
The thrtt "·ill then appt:ar
before anotht'r judging board
in Leis Angeles and one will !'
"'1n the $6,000 scholarship.
Among pane.I members are
Edgar Hill. rellred vice. presl-
denl of United California
Bank, Newport Beach. "nd
\li'iHiam 8. Zogg, Tustin Union
High School DI st r I ct
superintendent.
------.__ -
~Ilooo and we love it!
Join us in celebrating our
36th ANNIVERSARY
Aprill through April 9 · Refreslimentsserved from l P.M. to 3 P.M. daily
Get your Souvenir Gilt of Old Laguna
A 15x20" frame-size replica jn full co1or of "Lagmia,.1926" by renowned artist
Joseph Kleit.sch. jg yours for the asking at all 31..agnnaFederal offices. You are invited
to view this original oil. together with the complete Laguna Federal art collection m our celebrated Laguna Beach main office rotunda galleries.
•• t
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Orange Counly'1 Largcll, First and Strongeat independenl Fedual
3MonarchllayP!aza 260 Ocean Avenue 601NorthEI Camino Real
laguna Niguel ' Laguna Beaclt, California San Clemente
499-1840 496-1201 4!14-7541 49Z-ll95
I
-----• --'--·-
•
DAILY PILOT Jp •
QUEENIE By Phil tnterlandi' Know the Way to Santa Fell Hipeies Do
Laguna Honor Students
Named for Fall Term
School pfficia~ have releas.-
ed the name:!! of Z88 Laguna
Beacb Hlgh Scbbol student&
who have been placed on the
honor roll for academic
achievement during the fall
semester or the 197G-71 school
year.
Stephanie Boyle, Mike Byron,
Randy Henniger, Thom as
Houts, Andrew Hubbie, Lisa
Nunis, Dominque S h e I t o n ,
Debbie Simmons and Sandra
Winieski.
Fre1hmen -Richard
Bryson, Robin Buck, Francis
Jumbo
Spray Paint
E11y •pplic1tio11, l11t
m•11. Choo11 from
1n•m11i, l1cqu111,
nv colora.
39¢
Of the students, 3 3
youngsters received all A's for
their course work. The A
students are :
Dubau, Doreen Hagiard. Eric i,m•lm•••••••••••••••"'!!I Orlowski and Marc Spitaleri.
Seniors -Mike Barrios,
Linda Bauer, Linda Burrell,
Bron E!hell, Michael Lackner,
Debbit Lund, Larry Miller,
Mike Newcomb, Kare n
Robert.son, Lisa Syfan, John
Urtaustegui and Jan Waugh .
Juniors -Jolie Bernstein,
BUI Bird. Maggie Davies,
Jeremy Kuhn, Kim Lokan.
Sherry Satterfield, A 11 i s o n
Sykes, Kristin Thiene and Lee
Wandel.
Sophomores -Ned Blurock,
Revenue
Sharing
Discussed
Federal revenue sharing is
much in the news these days
and Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew is hard at work pro-
mot in g the N i xon
Administration's concept of it.
The philosophy was first ad·
vanced se rlowly during the
Administration near I y a
decade ago.
Capitol Hill observers in
Washington are pessimistic
about Congress passing the
prog ram that will channel
funds back to cities with less
control over how they are
spent.
Costa M e s a ' s represen-
tat iv es to the U.S.
Cong r essiooal·Cities Con-
ference in the Capitol this
week returned with their own
observations.
Vice President Agnew was
primary speaker at the twG-
day conference of about 1,000
municipal managers a n d
leaders from throughout
America.
Mayor Robert M. Wilson is
a staunch proponent of the
program but hiis expressed
doubls Congress will approve
It. for several reasons. .
Co.delegate Councilman
Alvin L. Pinkley, a local pollti·
cian and civic leader since
193J., holds a different view.
"ln my opinion, we will have
revenue-sharing -but not in
the Nixon Administration,"
gays Pinkley.
The remaining students
named to the honor roll
received grades of eilher A
or B for the course ·work
completed. TheY are:
Stnlor1 -Ellffn, Mord, E!lr1belh Almon, (ll!dY A..O.r\C!'I, Je!f Al'lderton, Ed Au1tln. Seti! 8111, Bonni. lltlkn111. D1m1r1 8t11rwell! S'-ldoft, lltrm1n, LU'CY l!IO'f(I, lndY '11Wer.
D1vld l!lrook1, Jin C1uertv, M1r1ot C•lhtr, Stevt Cn1mllerl. M1UnG1 Chtnowt!h, Arthur C:olUnl. D1v1 CrMk. C1rolvn Croc:ktr, T~I Ol1rck1, 1u11n Dorri$, Donn• [)vtty, Jttf EleM 1edt.
CarolYn FM.
C1rlos Flores, Rick Hlll1, M1r1I. Hemll!Gn, Kelle Httlr. Jim H11Ct, &r\IC.t Hn-11, Dlt ne Hott, C ... lldllle Humphrl11, SMU JKOl>I, I : t n I Jimison, Ln J1n11on. Mlrll J1<»ltt.. 8obo Jonn1, llr1d Jone!,, N1dl0t: Jorie$, K1!hy Kihn, Grtt K•Hler, Dtbblt Lt llmoir, Mtrll\t LlodHY, Devy Lloyd, 01vld MtCut, 811trl~ Minn,
Cllhlffn Mlr'l>I•, J1nl1 Ma-Y. Lti
Mlklosr.
JIU M!ltltt, Brtd Mllll~tn, Mtrk Moore, Jlnrl M<.lmtord, Gwen Nfll, ~:;:, ~:~"::";.~!~. ~~:-:· p::~~
J. 11 p h I n. ptgrum, Mldtlllt Pnvoue..-i, Chrltl!no R..,.11.
C1rl1 Rtn~ln, Moriict Rkh1rM, Bobo RUdoloh, Jtn Sll..flove, Cindi Smll!I. Ken Snyder. Shtli...,t Sulton, WtnOr T1ylor, Judith T1n1tt!dl. Greo Up!on. Ch~ Viv11ni, O<>n Wirt. l Im While,
llevtliY Z.ller, Dltlbit Ztut, JtMI Zllrilll.. Junlon -Gll<ldll Acord, J1r.e All·
lnvhtm, Me!iut Arman, ""''"'" Am.ad...,, G1rv ANltrson, Alli"°" t~~. K.0t;'C"'_;~~~ c~f,.~
K1thr CrgwlfY, K1r1n Cutkom11. P1v11 Dl1mond M1rt: Di1rd.I, G.trv Flst!!e, Ell1n fo1;111, Ltu!11 Fr111r, Debblt Frit1, Chrl1 Fro1t, Lllld1 Gom11, Pllmtlt GrHn, Anllt Miro, V1lerle Me•rd, Niner Meflderion, JtlOfl Mlllcwty. ~u•lln J1cki.on, V11trle J1Cob1Qn, Llnoa Jlll\ni.on, J1m11 K•nM, LlncMo K1w1rat1nl, LP!'I K1111, Le 1 I I e Knowllo11, ar0<k Ly11tr, VI n ct McCellt, :kolt MCC1rt1r, Mt r l 1 McClrtv, MldMle McRae H¥nl,.. MICPl'leroon, N1nr:I Nlci'loll,
NHI O'Conlll!ll, Ntn<;'I' P1r(sh, Jin
P1r1ln-, Wtn4Y Pe1c0<k, l1rb1r1 Pll'· r\111, Ann Prl10. P1m Purclt1y,
Ml•d t lllllkln. K1m't' Reid, Ja,.,. Rtll'llthtn. TIO RloHer, Shtrrv Rlngtr, Mlcf\111
ll&b9rt1, LISI 11.obtlilOn. Cindy Smith, Jo't' Sog1wa. Suun Sowul, Jtmn !tln-IWl't, Ow.n s1u1rt, A11n Sum<111r, Jon Ten1ltld1, Becky wood. <.oc>11omore1 -Sheri AnOrrtWI, Solkt All;lnson, SJMrrl Btnl, D1bble 8t<k, JU<ld llnl11, Eltlne l ove, MlcMllt Burke, Liu C1nnon. IHI Chrl1!11n11n, ltoby11 Coonrld, Lori DoMt, AnNI
Do~bi,i, E1rl, 5..., Eckhlrl. Tim Fo111r, Mle1'111t Gtrbctl, Pa1 GINIOll, Vkkl H111, W1.,en H1r•l1. M1rk Hott, Glllllt Mowt ll, Jiii 1-lvnl. Gwtn JOhfUOll, P1v! JOMIOll, John IC!rlllln, P111I Krosttrm1n, Jcwoh Ko, IC•r•n KU\flfllll<'t', Frink LllmCerl, Toni Ltnr:e. connlt L..IPP!'lt, Anne Ltbtl. 81rrv AM Lel1t1r, 8renl LlUn1rom. Ott>t>Y Mtrolt, Jofln Mlo<rlfl.io, Sher· rv MO<rl1, $u1l Mud9t, TtrTV Nor1ord. Miry O'Contnll, P1lrkk O'Connor, JV<tY Patr, WIYlll P111. Lind• Penney, C•ndr Pawtri. Ntn.;l Prkklll. T~ Rt'dwltr, fll1ndY ltllty, Sheron Rotwrt1, Mlch1er Se1t011. sr"'" Smltti, ~~-=. 5T,,\•:•· r~";,~.~Tn':'~';_ nGr:
Thomp..,.,, L111r1 T-nwnd, Otbt11 Vtn Oe111tro. Jtmn Wtllt<t, Ch1r111
W"'-''· Beth W~m•ld, Fre1hmen -K1l1r Aklnt.. Teri Andtr..,11, J1m1' A.rm1lront, llrvn 81rn1rd, Otbtllt !11r1! Annt !luMl1, Clout C111, J04P (11 rg.l10n. Ktrtn Clttk. C!f!dy Colt, Pelte Cu!~omr>.
Moll Ortver Mtrto l't•nbio••· Cllrlt GttlOWIY, Mlc-.V Gtrri.on, Lllld• M111, "'lien t+1r11tr. Tom Htrrli, Lindi H~vt11, Eric Hetrd, $u ... n HH1. K1rt11 Hum-"'tl, Ol1n1 Joll110011. S"'•" Jol!1t10n. Helln K1l1lyl1nnl. Sutl1 McC1J11,
MoJIY ,t,lcDorlollvrt. Sll1wn MCGulrt, Jieronv MtcM11if.n, Robert Mal-, C1trl1 Mehe,,...,., Htllk Mllltr, Slll!d1 Mlnfwr,
CilfY ""°'1!11, Toni Nill. ~nnlt Ntll. Su!tMt P1I....,., Mil'll l'onct. N•n<'.'J' Por!tr, Ol!ltlY OUIM JMn 11.lntor, Nino Robtrh, Llll ltoOtr'-· Jon1rll1~ Rv1n, !lr11c1 sdlOotnlfber. LIM Shlokey, ""'"'" t1rlo!', llC.tfldtlt W1Heet. Adr11n1 Wt!!, ...,...., w....,., Shtllt w ... tworth.
ENJOY A FINE
QUALITY BRUNSWICK
TABLE IN TIME
FOR EASTER
THE
WINDSOR
..... $395 ,,,, ,Ion s_, a o.uv...,
If'• oil Hw, tret11 lr1..wtc.k. TN N11aW 1 H-11 lllllti,.._
If b c .. '94 "-WllHltM •" tt It PM lewnt pr&M lrnt•lcli
tlet9 ~ -rn. Wehker ,...,_. 1 ~"41 _. reth._.,
l/J" tfllU ..... brf4 fet I ~·"1tfy l..,.f ,..,. .. •rf-.e, JK9° t"''""' 111111lif'f lntnwk• cletfl eN .... ..-.. -' tt ce-.
cempi.t. wltti ,...i.. lr1 .. wlc!I: ~ IKIMI .. : IMlh frt.
.,.. ... ''" ,..., '""· '" It tetky!
CHUCK'S
BOWLING, BILLIARDS & TROPHIES
2750 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
HA•10• Af ADAMS
540-7303
' _,_
2,500-Sq.
Ft. B119
Scotts Bonus
Str11n9th111t d ichondr1
prevtnft 1polt1d 1pu191
ind cr•b9r111. Controlt
9rowin9 ox•li1, ,hiclo:•
w11d, 111111y other
...... c1 ••
9.95
Scotts Super
Turf Builder
Hith 1re1nin9 pow••
f1rtilinr for C1lifor11i1
l11wn1, R1le1111 nulri-
11111 DYlr prelon9M pe-
,:od1.
2,500 Sq. 435
Ft. lcHJ
S.IOO l<lt. l'I. • ••• 7.9&
'
11Petite11
Antique Kit
E:11.,.1 Ju1i 1pplv b11•, wipe 011 9l1r1.
ND need to remove old f;11l1h.
Choo11 from
I 2 co Iott.
99c
Drain Snake
Go11 dt•p into dr11i"1 ID
unclo9. H111dy ID hive,
11>'1 ft'IDlllY Dlt totlly
Jl!u mbint b ill1. I /~" ll
1S'.
.•-
BARBED WIRE SHOW
Door
Viewer
!1• c1l!1r. frDm h11d·
to-lo• -th1v c:1n'l
111 >n. Fih 111 door\
I l/t' io 2" thiclo:.
1.19
3-Piece
Brush Set
H111dy t", t 1/2" end
2" 1i111 lo h1ndle 1nv
nu"1btr of jobo. H1•d·
wood h1ndl11.
3 for 59c
1'N~UAL
SA Le
Long Handle
Push Broom
SliH brittl1t 111lly pic:lt U!J
·~d mov1 d1bri1 -ttell
far t•r•t• end p1tiD, Htrd·
wood h111u~le.
88¢
2,500-Sq.
Ft. Bag
Scotts Plus 2 ',
Control• l:il•ck rn.d!"
d$nd11lion, chickw11d,
w~ile clo .. er, 'olhtr •••
novin9 91owlh1,
S.OM l•. I'!. l1t. 9 && • 11..,, '11.tS .... 1
Ends Mondey, April 5th. Don't mi11 tJ,i, fenlas-
tic opportunity lo stock up on ell fine quality
Scotts lawn 1nd g1rden care product1. Hand Mower
Latex
Antique Kit
Gt>'t VDU• furnihirt
11n 1llr1,liv1 1nliqu1
fini1h in ju1t twD d•o"
~lllV lo do, ,;..,pie in-
1truclion1 included.
3.49
I
ALmiP , =-
Hurry over to take 1dvanta9e of these
Spring Bla1t-Off price1/ This 1eJe
doesn't last much longer, 10 don't
wait!
!Nole: S11nd1y, April 4 io the 1111
dey !ht Scolh con1uh111t will b1
on hind to p1rion1tlv 1111w1r
your qu1.tion1 eboul l1wn
•nd 91rden c1r1. H1'1I bt
hippy to •d~i11 youlJ
Swin9
Lock
E•tr• prolclion
1v1n if •O"'•one Ii"'·
mi•• 'fOllr re9ul 1r loc~.
door c111nol be open·
1d . E11v lo in1l1ll. ln-
cl~dt• 1cr1w1,
Jonny Brite
Bowl Cleaner
Tinh w.0!11 b!111 •.. 1u-
tom1Hc1lly d1odorir11,
P!1t1 in11d1 11111h l1nl· tD
pr1•1ni herd w1t1r rin<jt.
49¢
39¢
P'rlcH 1H.cth·1 tllr111 Wed .. ..,,,11 J
2666 HARBOR BLVD.,
COSTA MESA 546-7080
\Neekdays 9 to 9
Saturday and Sunday 9 to 6
-•
C l1111 cuHil'lt 111ow•r hit ~
di•I oeulti119 h1itht -•'·
Ju1h 1/2" to 1 l /4". Ne
"'et1l to "''''' co11!1c:t,
P1rt1 9u1r111l11,
54.95
s r
Window Lock
S1Cv,ify loc ~ •tCUfll winflDWI ffOl!I
forced entry, E11v lo in1t1ll. lock up
fo, 11f•lv.
Gardenin9
Tools
Yeu;r thoic1 of thti• hind
91•d1nin9 10011: trow1I,
tr1n1pl111ter, w1ecl1r, cul·
t i•1to, or cuhi11ler -hoe
co"'bin11l]D11.
•
.~ .. -.....
• ---· • ·--j •· . ·-1 ,.
. ,
;J4 DAILY PILOT Tllursda1, April l, 1971
' r • "
JIM SPENCER WITH CORRINE SNIPP, 11
P11ir Discuss "W1lk-a-thon" for April 24
• • r ~ A11gel Ji11i Spe11cer
f.
' • Na 111 ed ~1arc1i ·Cliief
...
. An~rl b:i.S<'b.111 s13r Jim
:; Sprncer has be..•n named
;: honorary cha1rinan of lhE'
:· Pilarch of Dunes \\'alk-a-thon ~ by Art ~lcKenzie. Orange ~ County chapter chairman.
: The \\'alk·a-thon will be held
' l April 24 !o raise funds for
~·larch of Dimes programs in
~ [1gh11ng b1r1h defects.
~ l;oltlen \\'est Co I I cg e
~ Athletic Director Fred Owens,
;; general chairmnn of the \\'alk-~ ;i-thon s:iid a goal of $50,000
: has been set.
; Funds will be raised by
: \'Olun\C'er walkers who receive
: donations rron1 sponsors who
: pledge a sum of money for
:: every mife the "'alker rom-
~; pletes.
: The cour~e laid out for lhe
~ April 24 event covers 20.~
~
miles lhrough A n a h e i m .
Orange and Villa Park. II 1'.ill
begin and end at Anaheim
Stadium.
The \\'alk is open to all
"'ho would like to participate
in '"'hat March of Dimes of-
ficials hope will be a total
community effort.
The Orange C.Ounty chapter
uses the funds to help support
national foundation research
projects, such as the one that
led to the discovery of the
polio vaccine. as \\'ell as pro-
viding services to crippled
children and their families in
Orange County.
Anyone interested in walk-
ing or in sponsoring a walker
is urged to call the P.iarch
of Dimes office. 1303 S. Main
SL . Santa Ana, 92707. 547-8124.
' ' ' :
~ Democrats View 1972
,
; With Confidence High
,
·~ By RA \'1\10ND LAHR
~ \VASllINGTON j UPI)
ti Drn1ocra1s already starting I&
~: pl;1n for their 1972 c;unpaign
~; ;ire finding the c 1 i rn a t c
f, f:ivorabl~ for their sunburst
-: of confidence al1ou1 their
;; f'hanccs of reclaiming the
~ "'hite House.
~ Bui they are watching
i.: political barometer.<: which in-~ dicate !he political "·ea1he r
~ IS subject to sudden changes.
~ The 1970 elet·iions gave the
:. Democrats a hit by main-
;; taining their n1ajorities in the
:: Jlouse and Senate. giviRg them
:: a nel gain of l I governorships
:: and increased po'.l·er 1n the
·! state legislatures.
~ \'ow they are reading public
,. np1nion poUs 1nd1c;l1111g that
~ Prestdrnt N 1 x o n ' s ad-
,: min1strat 1on is 1n trouble .
:. The late~! Harns Poll show-
: ed the percentage of voters £ rat111g his p<:rformance at
~good to excellent had dropped
· lo. <\~ pcrl'enl. the lowest point
:: s111ce he took pffice 1n 196!1.
.-And the sarnc po 11 i n g
". or~ani1rtt1on 1ndica1rd that
·:Sen . Edmund S ,\lusk 1e of
'. ~laine at least was f<iv'tlred
~n\'t'T thl' Pres1den1 bv a st>.:· ~; po1nt margin. up thr~e points
, lrnm Januar\. --.-At the san11• lime. !he ~Callup Poll ~hn"l rd Sr n.
~l!ube1t II llun111hrey of ~1 1n
;. tll'"Ota. th<' J9fi8 lo"Cr to 'iii.on.
n10,·1nf! ahead of Sen Ed11 ;ird
-:1-1. l\t•nncdy of r.las!"acl\usetts
11~ lhc fa1·orrte among
llrn1o<·ra!s and l ndepcndPnl~
but st !ll tra1hng far behind
: r-.1usk1c .
F1nd1niz~ of 1he polltakers
have long indicated that public
opinion is fi~kle. Harris Poll
ra1ings of Nixon as i;iood-to-ex-
ccllent fell from 58 percent
in Februarv. 1970. lo 48 in
August. !hen crept back to
54 in October. a n1onth before
the elec1ions.
The Democrats st ill are
banking on eco nomic issues
to help them \\'in in 1972.
However. their meetings la st
'o\'eek suggested that they feel
lhe Vietnan1 \\'ar issue \\'ill
be \\'Orking for them if lht'ir
principal spokesmen sueceed
in moving the party I 8 0
degrees from the position oc-
cupil'd 'o\·hen Lyndon B .
.Johnson v.·as President.
Control of Congress also is
at stak e next year and this
is the season for I h c
Republicans to talk of winn ing
House and Senate majorities.
a goal they have attained only
l\\'lce in the past 40 years.
When 25 Democratic and 10
Republican Senate seats were
!n be rilled last year, the
GOP could sho"· a net gain
of only one. They go in to
19i2 with 19 Republican and
14 Democratic Senate seats
at stake.
Republican realists 11 re
cla1n11ng no n1ore than a
rhaoce to "'in control or the
Sena1e next year 11le1r early
<ho1ce of targets includes
scats held by Democr:it1r
. Sens. Da\'id Gambrell . (ia .
!.('(' ~letcalf. r.1ont . Clinton P
Anderson. N ~1 , B Evl'rett
Jordan, NC . Thomas J f..l c-
lntyre, r\.11 . Fred Harns.
Okla. and \\"illiam B Spong,
Va
HEY KIDS HERE COMES
THE ROYAL INTER NATIONAL *
,
"
~ • • • • • :
~ : • ' • ~
f COSTA MESA
1 DAY ONLY
Sat., April 3
SHOWTIME
2,30 & a,oo p.m.
CHILDREN
$1.50
ADULTS
$2.50
·* FAIRGROUNDS *
••
•
Peking Seen Frustrating U.S. Feelers
•• By STEWA RT Hi:NSLE\' known 1n two recent In-trade and removill u( all m1t1nen t Is embodied In a
niutual• security treaty con-
1.:luc14!d in 19f>4, and President
N1.'<on has stressed repeat~Jy
that he will honor that pledge .
******************* ut1 oi.1t .... rk (•r ... ,.._ncllA
\VASlllNGTON -Pres1drnt
Nixon's efforts to ilnpro\'e
relations with Peking are
doomed to failure, at least
for the Immediate future.
judging from re<.·ent
statements attributed to
Premier Chou En l~HL
And if Chou 111e<Jns what
he said. it will m<ike little
difference \\'hether the United
Nations voles lo admit Red
China to the world organiia-
Hon next fall since his con·
ditlons for Joining are not like-
ly to be met.
J Chou 's posltion was made
terviews with an A1nerican
author, Edgar Snow. Thf'
statements to Snow "'ert' put
together in an article publish-
ed in the magazine Ne1v
Republic. Snow is a Jong time
retired friend of Chou, having
known him and Mao Tse-'l'ung
since 1936 when the Com-
munists pulled back t o
northwestern China lo build
their strength fo r the ultimate
takeover or the country, which
they accoinplished in 1949.
Nixon's moves to try to im·
prove relations with Peking
during the past 18 months
have consisted of removal of
some of the restrictions on
LIN-8/iOOK
HARDWARE
~
GIJffdert
SPRED SATIN
H•m•t•nlucl, •••)'
t• apply--clrlat
In 20 mlnllf••·
lcrvbllabl•, cfvrabl•,
BONUS!!
l11y th• paint • 1•t a ••II•• &
troy ••I.
4 ''· lr .s ''· PEGBOARD
HOODED BBQ
24" r•ll-abo11t
1•111 with 1plt 510!! ... •ncl U.L approY•cl .... ,.,,
--BONUS!!
10 lb. bog •f Kin91lortl
brlqlHlll wfth th• llQ. .... "'
Only ,,.
%''. 25'
RUBBER HOSE
BONUS!!
I lly th• ho1-
lnu·•dlbl• IOYIAfJ on th•
nord•I
ll t g. St e
Only ..•
lell A .. uf
IRONING BOARD
••11-•b•llf $ 5 99 . ........... '" .
fvll th• odj11tloltlt .... , .. ,
BONUS!!
T• t• wllh tht b•or4--
•pod ....... ,
Only ...
restrictions against travel to
the mainland by.U.S. citizens
These steps were desi gned
to persuade the Communists
Lhat the United Slates wanted
to n1uve toward a less
acrimonious re!atlonship, but
there is no evidence whatever
that they h<ive soflened al
all the tough attitude of Chou
on th~ big issue separating
the two nations: The future
of the Nationalist Chinese
government on Taiwan.
The Uniled States is com-
ntitted to defend the Na-
tionalists against attack from
the mainland. This com-
Chou made it clear, in his
talks with Snow, that the
United States must end its
•·armed protectorate" over
Taiv•an before there could be
any real diplomatic com-
m uni cation between
\Vashington 'and Peking.
The !ftiited States. 'If aced
"''llh mounting U.N. sentiment
fur the admission of Red
China. is moving toward the
adoptjon of what i3 called1 a
"'Two-China" policy.
JUSJ 'CAUSE 11'5
APRIL f001'5 -
DOESN'r MEAN WE'RE
PULLIN' l'OUR UGI
Sal• Prlce1 Honcwacl lllrv y,.., .. April 6
W• R•••rY• Th• Right to Limit Q11on!ltl•1
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association ...... ~~·
BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., Valley View et lil'ICOln
HUNTINGTON BEACH MerctifY Savinp Bldg., Edinger 1t Beach
TUSTIN Mercury Savings Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Av1.
*******************
"WORKING
Wl1H CEMEN1"
Wed., April 7, 7-1 pll'I Anahalm
1'h11r1., April I, 7-1 p• f•11ntaln Y•ll•y
D••r Prlqa-l•f,.th-nt1
·-DICHONDRA &
LAWN FOOD
,,.,,. 1ure~ ...
h•ahhy lawM.
:)000 .... h. ............ '5!~ ...
s-P_.t:: a .. ·.'
BONUS!!
A 2nd ltag •f ttt. 1•m•I
lt•t• $S.9S
Only •••
BONUS!!
Ivy the chlorlna fff
fonto1tlc IGYl1191 •n
1 101. •f odd.
lt•t· lfc
Only •••
"•"•'•• 9 11 PLANTER
0.tall•cl, 411,.ble pl•1f'lc hltftf·llP s1 99
In 111m'"'r llrlglrt col•r1-
BONUS!!
A•" patted plant
fr•m •w 1re•11-11p
fll'f•·
Only , ••
It n•ot1I With i.rtt
rlnt •n"
•
11nll .... kebl• •••••
BONUS!!
2 1l•l'ldanf b•tt•rl•1
I• "1• w lthl"
R•t· tr
Only ..•
••• %''
POWER DRILL
1!1 o/1" wit" 2
amp -••r onlll ,.,,.., ch111k &
k•y •
SJ99
BONUS!!
1.i ,,.,.. •r1n 111t
.._. ... .,. 1/16"
,. 'I ... . •... ,,,
Only .•.
l
FAMILY CIRCVS. f>lf Bil KeatMt
\
~· ® ~
'Billy I Dolly I Come -"Nobody. will l1t 1111
qulckl Theie 's a big Aprll Fool them I"
TIGER In the kitchen I
Probe In to Coast
Be£Jch Use Opened
Ap· I nvestigation to
determine if the public has
prescriptive rights to the
. Irvine Company coast Ii ne
between Laguna Be;ich and
Corona del Mar was launched
this week by the County
P counsel's office.
"We are seeking information
from the public to find out
if the area has been con--
sistently used by the public
without permission of the
owner,'' Thomas Conroy ,
deputy county CQUnsel said.
He said advertisements have
been placed in a r e a
newspapers asking people who
, have used the beach areas
·to come forward and fill out
· affidavits.
Conroy said the probe y,•as
' ordered by the Board of
Supervisors about three weeks
, ago.
The investigation w a s
greeted by a tough stance
on the part of the Irvine Corn-
pany.
Asked for comment , com -
pany spokesman said \Ved·
nesday, "If it is the desire
of the county board to pursue
Priests Ask
F or Choi ce
LOUISVILLE, Ky. \AP) -
A survey shows a majority
of Roman Catholie priests in
the Louisville / Archdiocese
favor giving priests who are
about to be ordained a choice
between marriage and
celibacy.
the question of prescriptive
rights through lengthy, ex-
pensive litigation, the Irvine
Company respects the county
board's authority to make that
decision.
"By the same token, lire
Jrvine Company would expect
the county board to respect
the company's right and
responsibility to take every
legal recourse open to it to
p re v e n t governmental ac-
quisition of its property
without its consent and/or
without just compensation."
Conroy said the In-
vestigation will likely take
about two months.
•·1f enough people claim
usage of the beach area
without permission," he said,
"then there will be an in-
di cation that prescriptive
rights have been obtained."
He said the board could go
to court to obtain title or
could seek a negotiated agree-
ment.
lie pointed out that similar
probes involving shoreline in
the Salt Creek area or Laguna
Niguel and Upper Newport
Bay y,·ere conducted last year.
The Salt Creek investigation
resulted in a negotiated set-
tlement. on public access,
Conroy said.
Final determination of usage
of coastline along the Upper
Bay is still a matter of study,
and heated controversy.
Conroy said the probe could
determine all, or a part of
the coastline between Laguna
and Newport Beach is subjet::t
to public access.
Dmible·duty Ct•aft
A workman launches Huntington Beach's new $20,·
000 Harbor Patrol boat into the ocean. The city-
operated boat doubles as a fire and rescue vessel.
Associated Students and the OH;c e
of Studen t Affairs, U.C. Irvine
present a lecture by humorist
ART BUCHWALD
"lite fttobll.t.""'"' It AU•e o"d W•ll in WGMh19to11"
April 2
University of California, Irvine
Crawford Hall, 8:00 P .M.
Tickets $3.Sa •I 111 TICKETRON ovtlots
(VCI i h,id..,1, f~tu1ty, 11~!1 Ollceu~ll IY~ll~bl• Pl'IV I" ASU(t Olllcftl
OA)l y PrLOf M
Italy!)s Rightest Post Gains
By PHIL NEWSOM
\1,1 l'tnll• Htws AMll'91
Back when Benito Mussolini
was top man in Italy, any
discussion ef him usually end-
ed on some such note as "at
least the trains run on time."
It was an important
observation because it implied
erder instead (If chaos and
stability instead of instability.
And it is a longing for these
qualities, a revulsion against
the violence and the suc-
cession 1! unstable
governments which b a v e
characterized Italian life for
the last couple of years. te
which is attributed the sudden
prominence 1! the Italian
polltlcal right wing.
It is an almost incredible
situation since for so many
years it bas been the political
left as represented by com-
munism that has been regard-
ed as the greatest Utreat to
Italy's democratic ill!ltitutioru.
As opposed t• the Com-
munist Party, the largest in
ihe West outside the Com-
munist bloc, for example, the
rightwing nee.fascists have
been among the weakest ef
Italy's potltlcal parties. That
there could be a rtturn to
fascism, Mussolini style ,
seemed unthinkable.
Yet it was a reported plot
against the government by
This ADD(JUQCClllOll is nc:ithet
mdlet10 ldl oora idiciutimd anollcs
10buy tbeNoc... The alb is made
mly by the Offering Cin:ular,l'flillhlc
atauyC.libnja bnodidllankdAmaiaa NI&SA.
Dated:April!,1971
..
ultr• rigbtist3 and the current
inve1tigation into it that led
Premier Emllio ~lombo to
warn against e remists of
both left and rig t and in
effect to . call down a plague
against both their houses.
The excessive nationalism of
fascism and nazism, he said,
"ends up devouring freedom
and humanity."
Subordinated
Capital Notes
e1978
This $100,000,000 offering is being
distributed directly to tlie public at
all California branches of Bank of
America N.T.&S.A. It is issued in
denominations of $1000 and multi·
ples thereof. Interest will be paid
semi-annually. The Capital Notes
do not constitute deposits and are
not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
On the other hand, he sald,
ttte Communist3 sought to
take advantage of tho anti-
fascist sentimenb aroused by1
World War 11.
Both, be said, ~cl
j'te replace a free society "1th
a closed society in wll:b
justice is p rtblemat.fF,
freedom certainly JtiOed."' · ~
• • ' l
' !
j'
i
"
I : • • • • i • l
!
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i ' l L--------~-----------------------------------------------------------1 • ..
----------. -· ......... --··· .......... .. '
. ........ ,.... .... ______ _.. __ ____
..
' '
• • •
• • • • • ,---
Th e lady wins her chevro ns, And how wo nderful
they look with color-cued pants. Bot h of sup er-
fine polyester. Mad11 in Eu r ope, import ed by
HQop er Associates. The t op , 54.00. Pants, 32 .00.
WISTCLl 'F PLAZA · 17th & IRVINE · NEWPORT BEACH
THI NEWPORTER INN · NEWPORT BEACH
. ---·--
-t
'one-stop' shopping
at its finest!
OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS
·~no-Ute'"
By
HOLLYWOOD
VASSARETTE
$18.50
Fitted By Bra. Size
Veta's
tllllllATt APPAIEL
........... JNil ....
.......... taill ..
Bore yoLJT neckline os
low os yoo dare, with
I !
e~-~
PHONE
'642-1197
Wh it• e nd Black. 8 and C Cup1,
32.38 $7.00. D '"P· 32 .JS $7.50.
WJll YOU SPEND flVE MINUT ES IN OUR
FITTlNG ROOM FOR .. BEnER FIGURE FOR Lm
iw
E~ Boli hos c bow
Veta's
llltftUTt APPAllQ. .................... ---PHONE
642·1197
-
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------------·---···
HALLI DAY'S
•
THE CLASSIC: MODEL OF ·
THE TRADITIONALIST-HALL!a,.AY'S
HALLMARK · ~
Our thrf'r button natural shou'ider sport coats
t1.re tailored in thP ju~t right Halliday's manner.
For summ('r a CRISP blPnd of dacron and wool
tha! bespeaks comfort on the warmest of days.
A good selection await.s you now in .c~nserv_at1ve
plaids, quiet checks, and subtle str1p1ngs.
S port Coats from $65.
t'Jf:~,. • . ,
'
17th i IRVINE AVE. -WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT IEACH PH. 6'45-079!
· Hours: 10..6 Mon. il Thurs. 10..9
~ i~n.
*
emorrs
SPORT.SWEAR
' ,,
' " . ;. ~ ··' "! ••
-~ ..
vkstc liff Plazct
17t h ar\CI Ir<.vin~ NewpoRt t?eacn
I
-----~ .. '\··
l
'
l
•
---~
• • • • ' .
•
,,
~ .
FulUre FOretOld: .F. air Weather Ahead
I
It's a transformation in name only. •
The new.Junior League o! Newport Beach will continue the record oC
outstanding volunteer service it established whe.n it was known by its more ~
familiar title of the Newport Harbor Service League. . .I!:~
Today the incoming officers of the Junior League -which bas ~
come the 218tb member of the Association of Junior Leagues of Americ "
formerly' were installed at a luncheon in the Newporter Inn.
Headed by Mrs. Jdhn Killefer as president, they include the Mm_
Lee Sammis, vice president;. Timothy Haidinger, recording secretary; •
Meri-ill Brown ill, corresponding secretary, and Philip Doane, treas~rerf.
Chairmen of the standing committees complete Lbe board of duect
They are the Mmes. Don R. Adkinson, \Veltington Bonner Jr., Robert
Davis, James M. Dodds, Sydney Lucas, Bradford Miller. L. Kent Want ••
Lionel M. West, John M. Wilson Jr. and Dona1d Winter. f,."
NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENT ~
During its four-year orientation period after applying for mem
ship in the Association, the Newport Harbor Service League has enlarged,.
programs to comply with the Junior League standards across the countr
Notable among its achievements was the supplementary art app
tion program deveJoped in 1966 for the fourth and fifth grades in tlif-N
port-Mesa School District. In 1970, more than 300 community. vol,ante.
from all over Orange County met in th·e Anaheim ConventiQn qenter1\o le
more about the assem~ng·~f visual" kits and lectures for Proj~t.s¢001i ' .co.mmun~ty yol~'nte~s and league· rne.rs __ now are givjftg t~,
appreoat100 -sen es m Sl,X Orange· C6unty ·school distftcts. /.
Volunteers al so are continuing to lead information session s on d
abuse for students in several area school districts. a project be gun in 19
The 1eague also has sponsored even ing forums on the drug situation fea
ing experts in the fields of law, medicine, psychology and counseling.
OTHER EFFORTS
Past efforts of the league to contribute to community service
have included such accomplishments as the forming of the Volunteer Bur .'
of Southern Orange County, a Philharmonic Committee and the Childr ""
Art Workshop.
Mos t \vell-known among the league's activities is its Coffee Gar~.
and Art Gallery, \vhich this year is to be changed in name -appropriatij"
timed with the ne\v Junio r League name change -to the Sherman Faun(
tion Center Gallery. Funds for its support are provided by the Sherni'an •
Fou.ndation.
CONFIDENT OUTLOOK -Enjoying the sun-splashed surroupd·
ings of the Junior Lea gue's Coffee Garden and Art Gallery, soon
to be known as the Sherman Foundation Center Gallery, are (le{!
to right) blrs. Timothy Haidin~, recording sec retary, Mrs~..Lee
OAtLY PILOT 1'1191'5 ltf iltkhlrl IC..iMr Sammis, vice president, and Mrs. A. Merrill Brown. corresponding
secretary. The newly installed officers formerly were the affiliates
of the Newport Harbor Service League.
BEA ANDERSON, Ed;1.,
Th11rid1y, A'rll I, lt11 P111 17
,.
!
i I
L ~
Setting their sight15 · qn
futur• proj•cts for th•
ben•flt of th• commun·
ity ar• <l•ft) Mrs. Rich·
ard Cramm, outgoing
president, and Mrs.
John Killefer, newly
Installed president of /
the Junior Le1gue of
Newport Harbor.· .
The Junior league's
Coffee G1rden and Art
Gallery is th• sourc• of
funds for its commun·
ity philanthropies. Pie·
tured b.side a striking
batik are (left io right)
Mrs. Philip 0 o a n e,
treasurer, and Mrs.
Bradford Miller, public
relations ch1irman.
'<'•
Wife Skirts Issue by Not Accepting Name of the Garn~
DEAR ANN LANDERS : J,ast May
my husband asked me if he could wear
one of my housedresses while painting
Lhe kitchen. He said it would be more
comfortable. I said. "OK " He did look
aw fully cute and I told him so. Ever
since thal time he has been wearing
my. dresses and wigs and makeup when
we are alone. He has asked me lo
call him Linda when we "play girl
friend!," as he calls it.
I can truthfully say I don't mind.
The only thing that bothers me is that
he is pretlier than I am, If we went
out in public together he would get
more whistlei. Yesterday I read an arti-
cle on sex deviation. It said men who
enjoy dressing up in women's clothes
are lraasveslites. I do nOL consider m1
·---·-----
'
ANN LANDERS
husband abnormal. }le is very manly
in every way. He just ha~ns lo enjoy
playing this little ganle . Is there anything
wrong with it? I'd like your opinion
-HAPPY WOMAN WHO LOVES HER
HUSBAND
DEAR \\'O~IA N : l\ly opink>n 11 of
no consequence. The only O.lng that
matters Is wb11t you think, ind ap-
parently you think It l1t jusl f111e. If
yo11 and yoor tiu11b1ad enjoy "pleyln&
girl friends," It"' nobody's businesii, Ju i1t
make sure the doors are locked and
the shades down. And say hello lo Linda.
DEAR ANN LANDERS· I'm a
secretary who shares a lovely apartment
"'ith two airline ste\\o·ardesses. Lai:.t night
the lights went out suddenly. We knew
it was a fuse because two of us were
ironing. the electric coffee pot was on,
and when I plug ged in the mixer to
make cookies the whole place went dark.
---"-' ... ----_.___ _____ -
r went down and told the landlord.
He very nicely said he'd put In 1 new
fuse if I would accompany him to the
basement and hold the flashlight. To
make a long story short,, he made a
pass at me in the stairwell and I belted
him in the chops. I cannot ge.t over
the nerve of him -with his lovely
wire silting upstairs i11 the living room !
This morning we received a note say·
ing the rent would be raised $40 a month.
What should we do? -SAD TRIO
OEAR TRIO: Write him • DOte 1aylnc
YOU are not April FooU11 -tb111t Ir
he Is se rlou11 . about the raise f@ll'll
be glad to dl1cus1 the ma&ter wUb llll
wife -In detail.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a boy
16 "and miserable. I have terrible acne.
For two years 1've been going to a
dennatologist but the acne is "ot belier.
My dad is sick of paying bills and
I am sick of looking at mysel f.
The other day some kid mentioned
"sandpaper sur~ery." Can you tell me
what it is? Will it help me? Is it
expensive? Is it dangerolLS? Please, Ann ,
check this out with your experts and
let me know -BARNEY FROM BOISE
DEAR B1'RN : Sandpaptr surgery (or
abrasive planlngl will oot help 1 persen
who has actlv! acne. II is useful only
after the acne ,bas been cured. This
surgery removes the lop layer of 1kln
and with U ~ blemJshes, pltl1ng and
1car1 . Planing 11 not dangerous whtn
dont by 1 com~tent dermatologl!it. In
incompetent hands. however, it cal'I be
a mess. But lbl1 is true ol any 1ur1ery.
•'
The price varies, dependln& oa tM
doctor. A io~ooCeb dermateloglst bl
Washington wbo serves a1 oae ol m7
principal consuUant5 charges flQI, T1te
operation can be performed ID tbe doc-
tor'1 office bot It 11 advisable to llaY•
it done in 1 hospital . ,
. Remember ibis procedure i blo'f rtt
acdve acne. In your case, per\lps yoU~
doctor should try some type of radlttidlt.
-ultra-violet or x-rQ.
''TI1e Bride"s Guide,"' Ann Landen.'
booklet, answers some of the most frt-•
quently asked questio03 about wtddlngi.
To receive you r copy of thbi, com•
prehensive guide, write to Ann t.anderS,
in care of the DAILY PILOT; enclosing
a long. self-add~ssed, stamped eovelope
and » cents in coin.
I
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,
Thursday, April 1, 1971
'.,,,,Clinic's Sized for Shape
"' lly JEAN WILLIAMS
.. ~,)' ..... Dt~ ,.."' .,..,
l"en of all h•lfhls, J•, shlpes -a n d
M" out of ahape -had
• ~ to pick up a panty
hqoe Prescription during a
l.h!eNay clinic in Huntington
Cfnter.
"Too many women buy
qmplelely the wrong size in
s.nty hose,•• commented Miss
Sllly w,pod, wbo was in charge
of the:~-on clinic situated
hi a sporty blue and white
ttnt that resembled a beach ,,t
wT)O paused often
rprlsing customers -
qd l;lCtived surprising aid
--Utt "ftte ~year-old lady who
..._s looting for maternity
~ ~ty hose to fit he~lf bee~ she had such •n am-
ple llltllection.
\'She simply didn't know how
~put pantyhose on properly,"
Mi8'f1Vood explained . After
a 1 ftdon in fitting. I h e
C11stomer went away with an
ate~sized pair.
PR~ll TECBNlQUE
What is lhe proper way to
pbl onpnty hose? The technl--
qpe e@s only one vital in·
gred1enl, and that is the one
practically no one likes to hear
1boL&l -time. ... .. •·wer-'thini nothlng of spen-
ding 3'.> minut~ or more put·
lilg make up on oor faces,
Mi~ Wood commented, "using
per~ 30 cents wortb of our
cosmeti~. and yet we'U take
ool}'...~o or three minutes to
yank on a pair of panty hose
which costs two or three
do
everyone is in too
rush. "Some people
and pull on panty
a pair or trousers,"
said indignantly.
n shook! always ~it
put oo panty hose.
is to roll one leg
nty ho5e OOwn and
i-JllUg fit first oo one
proceed to the other
leg. Alternate from
~oot, ankle to ankle,
hose out and up.
To avold &nagging tbe panty
hose, • woman rully ahould
wear either bo.~iery glovu «
an old pair of white cotton
gloves.
As far as fit is concemtd,
many women wear too large
a size in panty hose because
they are not willing to take
the care and Um• aeeded for
putting the.m oo snugly.
Also women sometimes err
by following charts for length.
One short woman w h o
measured 5 feet 3 inches tall
took the same ertr1-lon1 llize
in panty hose IS the tall
wt1man who measured sit feet
one inch. The re1.son? The
short woman weighed 15.5
pounds, 1 Jot more for her
height than the taller woman,
who tipped tbe scales al 165.
Tall, extra thin people
should siie down the panty
hose that they buy, while
women witb heavy legs might
profitably choo6e a bikini
style.
Ot.DER CUSTOMER
What about the ages of
women panty hose wearers!
The young women w e r e
present. of course, but Miss
Wood had one customer
dashing in to buy a pair of
panty hose for her 50tb wed-
ding anniversary party .
M for care cl the panty
hose once they are purchased,
tifiss Wood advocated laun-
dering in a smooth bowl
rather than the wash basin
-even there, a rough area
could lurk. Also, she
discouraged hanging panty
hose over the shower rod to
dry -advice which some
husbands may be happy to
hear.
Not only should panty hose
be towel dried and placed on
a flat surface, but the wearer
should consider owrilng two
pair and alternating them -
the yarn benefits from a dly's
rest after washing and dryln,.
All in an, the clinic, at pei,..
ney's, advocated ffJr pant1
hose what the doctor might
prescribe for any patient
care and aimmon sense.
uy Your Children
citing Soft Bunnies
. !~~~~'"' '~
Betrothal Announced
During Family ·Party
·~11arlum1 •"" f,..pic1I fi1k
• ._ '•t FooJ, 0119 l ru1h11 ,
,.,,.,..,. De91, all to fJl1k1
'Ea1t.r for yo11 r youn91t1r1.
PROFESSIONAL
~ DOG GROOMING
plMMCI to 'nnounce Donn• Larsen of S.lbN
now grooming at Plc+Pet. All breeds -
bothod, htnd dried 1od groomed to por·
A·PET
1000 ADAMS AT HOOKHURST 962-eooo
Fullorton Open Sun., 12,.S p.m.
alf Sizes
Champ•gn~ glasses were
raised In a toast by members
of both famille.s when the
engagement of Judy Kirk to
Gary Lee Richards was an-
nounced by hi!: parents, Mr.
and Mr.s. John Richards' of
Fountain Valley.
Prt3ent for the engagement
party in the Rlchards' home
were the gandparenb of the·
future bridegroom, Mr. and
Mri. F..cl Burkhardt ol Faun·
taln Valley, and bll uncle,
Dr. Fred Burkhardt of San
Fnnciaco.
The brid,..lect. who la the
daughter of Mrs. Eva Kirk
of Venice, was graduated from
Venice High School and at-
tends Sanll Monka Clly
College.
Her fiance,1 also a Santa
Monica City College student,
wu graduated from Maryvale
lfigb Scbool in Pboent..
POWs Topic
For Mermaids
P0w and Milslng In Action
will be tbe topic explored by
Mrs. Donald Lyon as she
speaks to the Mermaids,
Womm'a Division of the
LalUJla Beach Chamber of
Ccmme.rce, •t noon on Mon-
d•)', April 5.
JUDY KIRK
Eng aged
No date has
the wedding.
been set for
Students
To Marry
Gail Ann Yates and Howard
N. Rogers, students at Hum-
boldt State College, will ex-
change wedding vow s in
September.
"""'$11.00
Mrs. Lyon, whose husband
Is missing in action in Viet·
nam, will lalk following a
luncheon meeting in Hotel
Laguna conducted by J\Irs.
Lloyd Jl,1i\ne.
Their engagement has been
announced by her parents, ~1r.
and ti-frs. John V. Yates or
Costa Mesa.
SIZES uv,.22•;,
~sHALF-SIZE SHOP
II
• -
1805 NEWPORT BLVD.
COSTA MnA tVt •. N .11tti St.I
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNnN•toM I I.ACM ,....., ...................... ,
------· •
Reservations may be made
at the chamber ofOce.
Both Miss Yates and her
fiance. son of J\1r. and Mrs.
11oward N. Rogers of Newport
Beach, are graduates of
Newport Harbor High School.
• OTERT
Qoudllt1 Footwe a r
F or WoMen and Children
225 E. 17th STREET
COSTA MESA
548-2771
Kids Like to Ask And y
·-·-... ~ . ~ ...
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
A,ries: Perceive Meanings
FRIDAY 1Do1 n't 'ttll!.\':'.."~tal on apecula. Leo individual. :;.,;~,"'..=.. "'1~,ll"'r.,l"'!t
APRIL 9 Oll. lr.o"'&"t 5'.lf-uteem. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. = .:n11 c.:t.°"'f'·":li~ Alt:i Realiu your worth. 19): SpeclaJ honor Is due. Ac-s.cr111, {;,.. o'.Ati:Y PILOT, 1u: By SYDNEY 01\t.ARJ\ LIB • Gr•nd .. lral tl•lloll. H-.... RA (Sept. 23-0Ct. 22): cept wJth pride. Communicate -,ii'·iiv.;;i'miiiii. ______ "i
ARIES (March 21-April ll); Cycle bJgb; you can tn.lllt ideas, Your opinions now are!"
Accent on marriage, buslne.ss judgment, intuition. Take in-&Ought -present t be m .
partnership, ability to com-JUative. ·Stress tr.dependence Member of opposite sex plays
prebend views of opposition. of thought, action. Strive for significant role. Be dynamic
Be fle.l.ible. Gain 1 how n originality. Give full play to in approach to problems.
TRUDY'S FASHIONS
through written word . creative efforts. Lead ralher AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
Promote great.er degree of than follow, 18): Good lunar aspect now
Th• l••··· STYLES
Oir•ct
FACTORY-TO-YOU! self-expression. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21}: coincides with ability to get
TAURUS (April »May 20): Some degree of seclusion may acrou major points. Travel Prlc11 Unbellnobly
LOW! Give special attention to pet.a, be nectssary. Protect in-Is on agenda -so art special
dependent.s. One who performs terest.a by being dl.screet. communications and I o n g -
special services deserves ad-Don't reveal all you know. range plau. Be receptive. Ac-
ded recognition. Be punctuaJ. Vi&U one who ls confined to cent nexibillty.
Check appointment scbeduJe. home, hospital S t r e 1 1 PISCES (Feb. If.March 20):
FREE Gin ....
IYlllY PUICKASI
Improve relaUons with co-chatftable projects. Money from others is em-
workers. SA.GnTARitm (Nov. zz.. phasized. Be pos!Uve of what
GEMINI (May 2l.June 20): Dec. 21): Accent on fuUillment special documents cootain,
Sense of drama dominates. of important desires; by bellg Imply. Avold any tendency to TRUDY'S FASHIONS
You shake oU lethargy. The.re thon:,gb you get what you substitute whihful thinking !or 121 W. 1M sr. C.t. ,. ..
is opportunity for lneaningful want. Friend w b o It act~ty. Key is to be fAc,... ,_ vt:tt• c.twJ
chlllf•· Travel II abo on ageJ>-haphazard In methods ~Id reall!tlc. 646-0385
da. lplprove ways of com-0 be:.:._::.b::cypa'.::s:sed:::.. _:Lls=t::en::_:w::ell:::_.:to'....-'':!.'-'"~"'!...'"'"'...~-~·-'"""~'~"'!..'""~~ ................................................ ~
munJcaUng. Cbeclt with Libra
individual.
' THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE CANCER (June 21.July 221 o
Emphasis on ea r 1 y ex-
periences and bow you utilize
them. You go back to past.
you transform what you know
into current action. Me5.!8ge
IN THl CAROUSEL COURT •••
HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN WITH HIM
South Coast ?Iua In Cost• Mesa
But important factor is how ~
will be clear.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)o Be,~f:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::::~::::~-"ll clever in eIPressing lde'as.
You know what it is you need.
Key 15 to make your intentio!l.!I
clear. Relative attempts to be
helpful. Ultimately, however,
you must be able to assert
requlrtmenl.!.
1'1RGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Earning or spending power
is emphasized. Stick to wba
you know. Refuse to be
tempted into unkno11m arw.
Exchange
Students
To Speak
Vi.siting American F i e I d
Service students will describe
their native lands for
members of the Laguna Beach
Panhellenic at l p.m. on
Wednesday, April 7.
The meeting, in the home
of Mrs. Mildred Sillstrop. will
begin with a short business
meeting conducted by P.irs.
John M. Shea Jr. Dessert will
be served by the Mmes. W.
L. Piguet, Everett Waters, C .
Stuart Lewis and John Valen-
tine.
Members of national Greek-
lettered sororities are invited
to attend by calling Mrs.
William Beatty.
In May, members will stage
a bridge party u an AFS
benefit.
~
HAIR
BEAT
'C;4/VAMPO
HAIR STYLIST
CURLING IRON
an d
HOT ROLLERS
9 unt1011: I h•"• b.•n 1ulng
il<ie Hot Rolle,. on my heir q11a1
often. •r• they cf1m19i119 to ttio
h1ir? MrJ, LC.
Senti An•, Cal,
...... ..,: It d1p1ncl1 on wh11t
yow mo1n bv hot. If yo11 fPIO••
1tol1n, tl,ey could b• very elem·
19in9 fo your r1p11f1tion encl
dryin9 to your h1ir. On tho
other hend if you mo1n hoefod,
lhe" th1y er• only dryi"g to
your heir end you 1hould 1,111
conditioner' lo off·11t th1 Jj.
,,,t h11 t on the h1ir.
Q untlo11: h tl<i1r1 tom• w1y
lo \:11p f1om 'bur ning tho 11ri
when curlin9 th• 1id1 of 011 h1ir
witl<i the curling iron1
• Miu l urnl E._r,
Co1t1 M11a , C.sl.
Ainwf't: A 1 • yo11 o n • of
S1ndr•1 p•lron1 11 Heir H1111I·
er S1lon? If 10. yo11'ro In tro11-
bl1. If not, you ffti9ht try bend.
!n9 th• ••r, or u1in9 1 bi9
lebl• 1ooon lo 'o~•r th1 •••·
9 w1t!011: 11 • curli ng iro n
1•1 better or •• 9ood 11 • r19-
11 l1r 11t ?
Miu W. T., Mo11 Vordo
1.....-ef: It d1p1nd1, by 1om1
indi~+du1l1 "•;I~ • r 1r1 a11y
9ood: l y • prof•uio"•' l.1ir·
1lyli1I ,;i~,. ont will 1••~• th•
p11rpo11. d1p1ndin9 on 1111 ,f.
"'ight wen!,
11 f ASHION ISLAND
NIWPOIT C-INTll
644·2111
'
Frigidaire! Jet Action 1·18 Washer.
Better rinsing.
Flexible capacity 1 piece to
18 pounds-without attach-
ments. Jet Circle Spray
System rinses better, gets
clothes under water faster.
Jet Action washing. 2·posi-,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,;
lion Speed S~Jector. ({
Permanent Press Care.
Automatic Soak cycle.
Detergent. bleach, dye
released underwater.
FRIGIDAIRE Jet Action
1·18 Washers are backed
by a S·Year Plvtection Plan
1..,._ W.nrttj b NJ*t of.,.,, Oeffcl In l'le .-ill,. product, pllll 1 4<yur ProMctlon Pl#\ {J*tll; only} tor
fumllhll'lg ~ fOI' any delectlft per! • lhe ~ 11-.ilnioll (UClllPI boll). OrM Molot' Ind Water Pumpe. ._... bJ 0-.. .._
0
This Frigidaire
Built-In gets dishes
shower-clean.
• SUper·Surge w.shfllJ tctJon tums the
trick. Dishes need little or no ~rinsing.
Soft.foods pulvmzer.
• 4 cydes. Even • F'tat• Wenner
• Rinse condltlon•r dispenser. helps.
Ji:eep glasses and cl!wr from spotting.
• Order lnterchange.1ble front i-n•ll
uparately, Colors or Bnnh9d Chrom.,
• Option•! designer door fr1mtns kit.
OTHIJIS AS LOW AS SI 6f,fl
RADIO DISPATCHED TY & APPLIANCE SERVICE
FACTOl'r AUTHOllUD
SEIYICI FOii :
e STLYANIA e fl tGIDAJU
e MAnAG> e I CA
* w. '"'" our 11w11 flffl •f llotM Mnic• tntclr1 1hrffM
with fCICtMY trol•ff Mf'Yk• .,.clollJh t9 4-flfff •llcf
MtYk• tM prod11c.h --'11 FOi Dl,ENDAILI
Flll NDLY Sf.R.VICI CALL 548-3437
lntegrlt11 and De p endnblllt11 since 1947
COSTA MESA
411 E. S.ventff')th Street
646-1684 Doily 9.9, Sot., 9-6
•
EL TORO
l19un1 Hills Pl•a:•
tN•rt ro Scw-0111
837-3830 Dolly 10-6, M/F, 10·9
\
---
!
Another Aid Acquired in the Saving of Lives
~1embers of the Hunter Chapter, Auxiliary of Hoa~
Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian, (left to right) Mrs
Lois Albright and Mrs. Charles Hollister are espec·
ially interested listeners as Dr. Maurice M. Rice. di-
rector of laboratories. explains the function of the
automatic cell·washing n1achine donated to the
hospital by the chapter. The equipment matches
blood for patients with far greater speed and effici-
ency than hand processing can accomplish. •
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wearers Sought
For Glass Slipper
Cinderella's glass slipper will be sported
on the links at Irvine Coast Country Club
fl.Ionday, May 10, when a Shotgun Tournament
takes piece under the sponsorship of her
namesake guild.
Invitations have been issued to many
women golfers in lhe county, according to
l\trs. John Sigrist chair1nan . but any woman
holding an established handicap 1nay enter.
Included in the first Glass Slipper Tour-
nament will be a Better Ball , of Partners
event.
The $20 registration cost includes green
fees, luncheon, prizes and a golf cart. The
CindereUa Guild supports Children's Hospi-
tal of Orange County.
Excursion
Intrigues
Peering
Around
•
A venture into Cajun Coun-
try awaits members of the
f\.1yslick Krewe of Komus
Saturday, April 3. including
a tantalizing reward of Creole
cuisine.
The men and their Cajun
Queens v.•ill row their boats
down the Bayou to the Santa
Ana home of the King of the
Mardi Gras, Nick Pao\isso and
his wife. Co-hosts will be f\.1r.
and Mrs. Len Dietz.
A FOUNDERS Day party
sponsored by the Laguna
Beach Women's Golf Club
brought the !\Imes. Donald
Hurlbut. Idal\-lay Schomaker I
and Richard Whitaker into the
limelight. Tribute also Ylas
paid to the late Mrs. Ida Trot-
ter , a founder and active
member.
Preparing the Creole feast
are Dr. and l\1rs. Harmon
\Vard and Mr. and 1\-lrs. Dietz,
former New Orleans residents.
Rounding out the· evening
will be dancing to New
Orleans Dixieland jazz and
modern sounds .
GORAN BENGSTON. chief
editor of cultural programs
for television in Sweden, was
a guest of l\lr. and Mrs.
Nathaniel Bliss of Newport
Beach. The Blisses a re
members of the Los Angeles
World Affairs Cou n c i I 's
International Visitor Volunteer
Corps.
THANK YOU
HUNTINGTON BEACH!
-GRAND OPENING
THE NEW WEIGHT WATCHERS CENTER
7732 EDINGER 1<i,. """""'""'"' '"''~l
INTRODUCTORY OPEN MEETINGS WiEK OF APRll s.10,
r .. 1 .. Wecl .. Tlt•n., S.t. 10 A.M.
Moll., W•d. & T"9n. 7=30 P-M.
FREE WEIGHT WATCHERS
FOOD KIT!
fol' further infonnotion Coll {7 14) 835-5505
Kids-Like_Jo Ask Andy
Outstanding Students
Receive Club Honors
An all-youth program
focus on education and
will and Janet ZitAik will receive
con-
scrvalion v.•hen members of
the Patience \Vright Chapter,
Daughters <1f the American
Revolution gather al noon 011
Tuesday, April 6, in Hotel
Laguna.
Janet 1\1 u m ford , the
daughter of Mrs. Gloria Mun1-
rord and a Laguna Beach 1-ligh
School student, will receive
the DAR Good Citizen pin.
fellow seniors Joan Parker
Orchids Bud
Gathering at 8 p.m. l\tonday,
April ~-in the Wardlow Park
Clubhouse will be members
of the Long Beach Amateur
Orchid Society.
Judge Lawrence E. Drumm
v.•ill speak. He is chairman
()f the Cymbidium Society of
America. \Vestside Branch.
certificates of award.
The annual award has been
made since 1935 with the state
winner receiving a $100 bond
and the national winner earn-
ing a $1.000 scholarship to
the college of her choict.
Gary Rogers. a Senior from
Newport Harbor High School,
will speak on conservation, a
club program since 1909.
Complementing the youth
program will be talks by
Beatrice Mann of Switz~rland
and Chico Senna of Brazil,
exchange students at the high
school.
Also honored duri11g the
meeting will be Miss Jan
Pritsen, high school counselor.
Hostesses will be the Mmes.
B. Dean Cl;inton, John S.
Helmken. \Villiam Carrillo,
Erwin 8. J\farks and R. \V .
Deilke.
don1•h coffee gOTden
.. .,, u,qo E.CoAslll11•.l-> Corona dol Mor
D1ily f:lO to !'.:30
Sund11y1 It to 5
Tel: 644-7340
Sol,. -Mutv~horsio
PROFESSIONAL WATCH REPAIR
Cornpl•t1 w11ttll r•peir '\'~ice for OMEGA ,ACCUTRON,
ROLlX thi1 i11dude1 cllro1109r1pll1, Jtop w1lt~e1 •"d tllro110 ·
"'•'•"· Wt 11p1i1 w1tcll11 of 111 lvp11. Co,,.pltt• ditl fl·
f;11;11>;n9 fro,,. IS 1r.d w1t•rproof try1t1l1 froll'I I I.
PROFESSIONAL JEWELRY REPAIR
' Rln91 1il1d ind r1p1ir•d. Oi1mond1 ••t •nil t i9hl1n1d. C<irn·
pltl• t11tin9 f1cilitv fer cu1loll'I d11i9111d i•w•lry. P11rl 111d
b••• r11tri n9in9. w, do 111 lyp•1 of i•w•lry ••P•ir.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. Till 9 P.M.
H.t.lllOlt
SHOl'l'tHG CIEMTlll
UOO HtrMr l!vf.
Co1l1 MIN
l<e!-'4ti
HUMTIMOTOH
CIHTlll:
IMCll I ldlllfltr
Hwftllllfll.,. 11.c~
"1-tMI
-----.._.._~,
•
'!l
Tt111rsda7, April 1, }q71 DAILV PllOf!O;.<t ! II~ . •
Silver Spoon for Thin Gravy-· ·j
By ERMA BOMBECK At 10, I cltinned myself Ml this time my bat.hrobe was
In trying to rationalize my AT times on the guard rail of hot and the coUage cheese
flab the other day it occurred 1
the bunkbeds. At II a.m. I had worn off. Then ~aw
to me that the high cost of WIT'S jogged to the garbage can, it. A half of an Oreo . kie,
dieting is keeping me portly. END followed by a luncheon at noon in the carpet. I leane.r. t collage cheese) and beauty and popped it into m)' ~ ~h.
Think about it. Did you ever treatment at 12:30. ([ rubbed and smiled my fat little · ,
see a fat Ford sister? Or hand cream on my elbows .) Money may make yo}f.i! •
an obese Rockefeller socialite"! I lasted until I p.m. By but it cannot buy ecsia4¥. '?~c ·
Or a tubby in the White ercised, sunned and rested onlr;;;;;:::;:;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;::::::;:;;;;;;;;;;~~-=\
House! face it. The good life a schedule that is carriedl11
begets a slender figure. The around in their white terry s
truth is they can v.•ell afford cloth pockets.
t.he dietary food products, the E FOOD fresh fruit out of season, lJ\e The lunch was simple. Cot-I A ::a~~:~k!~esh fish and the ~:e ~~=~·r!~:sh F:~~ ag:~ :
<')Jtl'°
1.lJT"
LENTEN:::i:~
SPECIALS:;\11
· •
They can absorb the cosl more by pt'ckm' g her teeth. 1 Of new d bes d THROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL 10th war ro an ex-Kate Smith drooled more
tensive alterations to the old down her chin. 1 ii'
ones. But mostly, they can "I wish f could afford not . DELANEY BROS. SEAFOO °" go the health and spa routes to eat like this ,., I said sadly, -
which C<lSt anywhere from $2 "But 1 come from a home · .JLJ b 1
to $1,500 a pound. where gravy is a beverage." 28th Strut-On the Bay-NEWPORT IEA.'tf.ltt~i l ·
Actually, I have seen onlv "Don't be ridiculous,., said , Phone: 67J.J450 Phone: 549°1933 ;_'; 2 · r;
one plush spa in"my life. it my friend, "You could nrorHEl"OUNo
was the Elizabeth Arden spa dupLicate the spa in your own !
in Phoenix. A friend of mine JUMBO SHRIMP was spending a week there home ... schedule and all."
At home, I slipped into my 1 ----------'---------~"";;"·· · jnd called me and said, "We'd chenille duster with the button 1 LA1to1: -•ROKEH ··1 Juq ~.
ike to have you for lunch." over the stomach missing and I SHRIMP 5 LI. S& ·.-.'A" .·. "You are desperate for consulted my schedule in the . ""'" •11d De••'""' •ox ~
roughage, aren't you?" I said. pocket. At 8 a.m. 1 ate the 1
''l mean v.·e'd like to have leftovers from breakfast. At u 1'1t1:.1.t.TT1Jteo '' te.i
you" a guest." she said. 9 a.m .. f sat on the wash ' ICELANDIC COD 6 "· s3 RA" t It's a beauhful, incredible i •1· "'"19111 eox •lfllf1 • place . To begin with. it is during spin which did W<lnders --------------------;"11', for my hips but dissolved my · ,,, I · lousy with mirrors. (I '1ad breakfast. INDIVIDU .. LLY QUtCIC FROll!H ' •10 j
the good sense to take an _______ , CANADIAN SCALLOPS 1 ,'.'; St ,CICI,, ., ,, ,·. mine down when f pas"d itl~"'-·"''"-'-"' <'4 l'll\.
one day. sucked in my \:! 1,000·, OF OIL PAINTINGS t;,.
stomach and nothing moved.) J WHOLESALE WAllHOUSf ~I TO COMPLIMENT YOUR fASTEI MEAL
All the dietees wear white ~ OPEN TO THI PUILIC ') ' CRIBARI 50." OFF . "~ "·~· terry rloth robes and scuffs 10 • and 1vonderful smelling cream '"' 1. eo1No11:11. s.&.NT• AN• .r ------------------4'.-o ·.
I ·-· > on their faces . They are ,, l'IMln• UM601 1 HOUJlS-Mond•y thru S•turd•y 1·5:10-Su11d•y l"~::t · ,
massaged, pampered ,ex-~ c•.&.L•1tS WANT•D ~.J •. ~----,.,,-_ ----_-._---~ •• •
; ·{fnf
5 .... , s11 JI',
FULL V:t GAL.
' 'I ~
•
..
Fa1hion l1l•nd
Newport C•n+•r
OualiCraft shapes the you-show•ng, breeze seeking.
utterly female sandals. The sun is just waiting for you
to come out. In broad twin straps of soft white kidskin
with big brass ring. And a multi strap panel -front look
of shiny white crinkle. Both on lofty heels.10 99
Both from Italy Both so delectably priced . •
., ;'IT"
• '
' ' :1 • •
' • ' ' ' ' ?.; : ~1~-1
• r ' ~,:J :1 I
1
----·· I ' '" I Now Yoll(\'~r" i
South Coe,f Pl•t•
Cost• M11•
Huntin9ton Center
Hunfin9too Beach
•
BankAme~ J i
Welcome H~11 ' ~ i
~ I
Falhion Squ•r•
S•nf• Ana I ..J. _,,
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Thursday, Apnl 1, 1971
Happier Days Ahead
Members of the Wednesday Morning Club and guests \Vil! be crying the blues
tomorrow when a Crying Party is s taged in the Ne\vport Rivie ra C lubhouse.
With taxes paid and money gone Mrs. Gale Dalmann Oeft ) and li~rs. Fred John-
son will try lo "'ear their bes t rags . ll1usic for dancing will be provided by tlie
Angle of Indents.
Huntington Couple
Choose June Date
Mr, and Mrs. J ames C.
Smith of Huntington Beach
have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter Kerry
Smith and Thomas L. Dawson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William
C. Dawson of Huntington
Beac b.
The couple both graduated
from Huntington Beac h High
School w here Miss Smith was
1 cheerleader and her fiance
was a member of the football
team.
Presently enrolled al Golden
West College. they plan to
be wed June 5 in U1e Church
of Jesus Christ of Latte r-day
Saints, of Westminster.
The Tee
Tattler
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
•OTte• Of' TaUltl• .. IALli ,,,.._ ......,,. Out c.u• "°· P.-d .... ,,.,. c•&Tll'ICATI ., •ut••••• CllTtrfCATI ., ....
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,cor•$ tor "'t ...... -. PIHM mt!! Hr:r.r:,.d N IJ, 'lf11Uo.Ctt«/ltff irt Me'l'llllr A-. ~.,.._, C1llf9nll1 Ill Nlhorr l"Uitllc: In 9N lit .. Id•-~"' ITA11! 0' (ALll'01tHIA tMm lO P.O. &O>C H~. Cot11 MtM. .._ L ."!! ........ ,,._, · r1l1'111 fltW lid Int.,.. ~ " •-•ll't' ..... , ... H•r"*' •• W..-offn ORANOlf COUNTY!
Thl't mull.,. •-lw.d liv MOMl't'-l ""w •~.....,., .... ..,,...,.._1.._ W -he1o9 ..,. " "'* ..... ..-"' -ffl .. "'' """" wMll On Me!'C!I "' lf71 IMlfo,._ tna. • LA•~:C 1~CJt. t..= ~~ l:7m!n.~1 ~· or .. 111 lNll 111 "'-~ 11tuafl4 ~ ,....,. '' .,..,,1.., ,. ""' wtttiin : Not•,., Ll'ulllk In _,• "' ••If '''" F;~~~,~~~ -oor..:~:;i~ ,.~ io: ...,.,., .... H ....... IUCD °'4 ll•'t' or,, It-. Cl"" " N....-1 ~ In u "'""*" -~ "' Cl.IQ,! ,.,.,..,..1 .... .....,.. Jim ~ ...... ..
11r1)U' MIH Grttl• -'°· ..... r.n11 All• C1lllwftl1 County •NI ... ,. WM:r1Moll H I ~r· . ,/tlM • t,..,._ llN\llfl fl ""' .. .. net; i. Fl~I. Mr1. I 1-.u.... Clr'IMll ."""" 1Hin °" lll't' or Llf I ., Trltd ..... "111. .. ,..,,_.. ( l(IAL 11.,AL ... "" """"' ........ lltlMI ••• 111MUIM' 11. IOw 1r1111< Mn. """"d bi•C· ..,.t, AM C.llflrfllt.. ·• en • Mff ....... 111 .,._ IM Merr th ...,.rtoft tw !flt within 1Ntn,111'1Mll t""1 Kt!MW....,. W .. ""\ C F 11111, #le · lrvce AA.co-Id. 2tM A~ Cllkll, P ... I' II MIM:tlltN!Mo Mtp .. ~ Nttitn' ~k>Cllllttl'lfl .,.r 1M'f' ~ fM Nm'· vf"'r Ch•I• ''"""' ,,, low ttOlll ,.._. aMdl, C•llfel'fllt. ., Or•• c.MT. (tlLllorfllL -Cimo .. rv.JMI Ollk• In (Ofllcl•I ... ., Wlllllm (151>1rll. ST, lint IN Mt1 Do'9l'ltY Mlc:OO...N. 10M Aveftlt9 IMfllY II ..... M ltl:J IMfl-Drift, OrlllM ~ Alb E. CrMl•tll
llvcl T•ld'IOUI, SI. MC•nd IN Mlt Chico ~ lttch C•ll~ "'--' .""°" c1n'9nil1. Ne wt•'•""' ,,,.,. (amn'llMI.-. .,.1,.. Nllll"I' l"ll'>llf . C111"'111•
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Sl!YTl:I. NINI -Ftl9hl, lhf Ana. Cllllomf.9, 1 •TJtl OraM• -.. Mmtt. Ouln Wr1tiht, l 'hi L1,..tford Anlll Kirt(. 1221 W. C-1 Hlthwtor, SIN NW wltl .. mldt, Wt wtthlUt Mlffh U INI MrU 1, I, lS. lt'1 • H\'t' Comml11IM Eulr• Jonr.1, 31; Her.rd S-L Jll; I Fll9hl, N.-1 aeKll, tillforT!i., ~nl W WltTlllty ....... W lnll'fl9. Jul't' t. 1112
fl>oo Mmr<. J. L. W•lbil~. l7hi Dllld Jl-1"1' 2', lt7I ~.. tlll1. ...--.. w M-LEGAL NOTICE P'ublli.htd o.._09, Ct11I D1ll't' P'lltl (1ry_L 0'5ke1 l!li C l'll!';1~h Mrt, ~ff'bfrt IC!tk ~Ilda. '9 H'I' lh9 nifNhllM ~ Mlrcll 0 , 25 tnd -"'rll J, I, lt71 IM-11
J E. WIPl'l.olL, »'"" D II• t, IM o·-· , Kl"" dNI ....., of .. -· ·--" ··--M,nn, 1.oberl TM!dle<, P l Mertl ..,,,. '-•K ,.., --1..., M\illltr. ll'h. Rldllrd N""'ls tilol DMll el TNll, fO.Wtl : tJ1.t9,.n, C•ITif'ICATI! Of' SUlllQtt Ll!AST P'UTII -A FH1M, fM J""" Hunk WI.. 111..,.... ft'-tHI~ 1, l lfl'tr, fll<flTIOUS fCW LEGAL NO'l1CE
Mmts. RoDm Griffin, tri ~· F. lrvce ~Id lof 111 flM Mfe ~ ...,.,.,,... 1"" ~ di anlfJ 11'11¥' 1,._ ,..,.11• ti=-rd~·=l=~ F=111
tM .::!: ~w.:0-111 ~~~""ct...':' ::..u:::::; anclllctllle • .i-et 11 PIClnc C..11 •••T•P•CAft OP cO«POIATtOll H• ~~r!..J'~r. "wm~M:A.·~; : •• "*" .... ., ... r;. ...... ., .. trwtt ~ ... n'm. ~ c::~~Lrr; TRA•SAC;~"~"'~=· UMhl. lo:f~t ........ co1't:'·w~ ~~ !...:. ~ "'r:"..=ci'!J""V:... ... .,... .. = ... ~Ill-= ::..... ~::! :: THE UNDERllGNIO ~OltPOltATl?N
121 P FtllM, IM Mnltt. Dl'llG ITATI! QI" CALll'ORNIA. Tnift, W ,.._ fll I llrtMlt flt dtlwtt Ml lftd '*-If ,_lftflol .,, 11 ............. ~\:, ~ ~ r-1C.:: ~::,f:;"'Mo,1~ ~choLM Ad 1111 •' COUNTY 01' OllAHOE I P. Ill; ltlil .olltst... MCllrM "**f, ftlltrwl! ~l::.,.!Nt•C;::. dtl Wt cillfWr!l1 ·------------ii On J1nv1ry tf. 1m. ~ "'-I ~I-~ llld ·.:::-,. WUlllll'I l. ....,,..,., -l!lo '''"'· ~,,.. flciltlw1 flnn ,...,,.. ., \JNltuE • Nol•tT ,ubllt 111 Ind fir ..... CCIUl'llY el ~ :: ~ .... ll'ltlM ... I lltdl. (1. l#MY fl, l.lllfftlOn, HOMfl RMI Elt1'9 1nd llllt .. Id end It.It • ...,._rl't' ,_,.,. Hwbfff . i., Hill '°'1 lJlll llrlll, ktl '4llCl'I. Cl. ,,.,. 1, •_,,.Id ., tl'l9 fll.lloWllll ur-
AP!tRAISALS
di111'10Mlt
911111ton•1
•1t1l• i•w1lry
South Co11t "''' Co1t1 M111 540-tO••
lri1lol •t tlie S1R Oi11• Fwy,
968-2863
CAll YOUR
NEAREST GRANTS
STORE FOR SHOP
AT HOME
SERVICE!
Klrk. ktt1t L, Klrtl, lt ld\1>"11 Nut1I .. wl'fMlil nifb fJf llf'tfdl I~ Ill' lflkflltt Dll'lll i\Mrdt n,, "71 lltrl. ,.._ l'l'lflclllll 'llee 1r J-NUl'llt. A~ ~ (ltmlll H"'f'I, le '-.... Ullilllll'tl..,.. '9 MIL H ltl Wllll1m L. II...,._. =:Ml, II •I f911oWt•
'lruc:.• Mtc!MWld. Dw1lfllY MACO-kl,'"""' tr. 11tlffy Niii Ml'llMlllll .. Intl NMy IL R~ MEM. 'llfRDE tllALTY, IN(., 'ia!O
JICt 0..... aftd Alllfl 101'11, II-'9 "*-ftlr, M Dlafftllw 17, 1'111, Ille 1111• af (11!*1'11 .. OPllltil CwnTY: "'"" 'lllrdt Pr,.,. c11t1 M•••· ,... to bl lt'lt .....-. Who6' -vncltnltMd <......., u ld ...na et Wudl 0.. Mlrdl n. 1m, """' mt. • ciUtornl• ' ,,. tUbtulllld M IM ,Wllfllfl lllltrwMM, Ind fJf IM<tlon 1'o IM _..Id Ill NltM'V l"llbllc Ill 1ftd lw Uld llltl, WITHt•s° 19 ... ,.,.. 11111 JHh h't' tt
MUI ~iMIU II m• !Mt IM'f lloM 9"" ~ 5IO. el Hiii Olfld91 Hl'llOrllllV l~Ntl WllHllll'I t.. Re.rttlfl Mlrdl. ltfl
.. lltUIM thf 1-. It--.. •1111 Mirr f. Jl-.,ttln lulOw'ft .. PN CCOlPORA-flf llALI
IOP",ICIAL ll!AL.) "Dll1: Mlrdl la. 1t11, II M Ille IW-~ fll1'lll ,,. Ml!IA \llltOE al.AL TY, INC. llDl11 J Hllll STAN-SHA.W CORP'Dl!ATION, tub1crfbld '9 fM Wllllln IMlrvlftlflt llld Jimfl I WOOd
Not1ry ltuMk Ill find fw • C1lllornl1 cor••lllll •dlnowl.,.... thf'f utaited 1119 11,.,.. Prnkltllf
ukl,C-ty ltld tl1te II Mild Trvrl" (OFl'ICIAL llAL) STA"IE 01' CALIPOlllNIA, Mw CommlnlM E:ic~r• • .,. Me11rittt. sti..,,,, Jl•n L Jobrt COUNTY OF ORANGE st.
A...,, ''· l•n Stcr1r1ry Nolll'\I Publlc.C11liar11l• 011 fh L• :llMll d•J ot Mlrlll Ao ltOMALD N. P'l!•MM•lll IPI MM, P'rlndNI of!ICll lll ltfl bttorl Mlr't' ltlh 'Mlrfari
111 WHt TJllrtl J.,.... PublllJ>ld NfWWI Htrtoor Htwt P'rtll M't' CG!nll'iLlflon El!Jlol..., Ho1 ..,. Pubt~lll •nd ,... 11111 C.U11tJ """ .tne, C•H ... 1'111 '2111 mrnblnld """" D•llJ ,.,..,, Ntw1>111 I "4.al'dl , lt71 • •
Tll. M1 .. nl O I Otl P'llof StKlt Clllforftll Metdl H tlld April P'u•Ulltftl Or~ni,••. CYrl O•ll't' P'lllt, ~ .. .::.:·.:•~~"'n. ~ll:w:H~~
P::lt"l:S ''"::II~~· 1'71 " -'"·11 J, .. '"' IMl:l·n M1tdl "· Ind """\!: .. lJ. Im '61-71 Jlflltl •. WNlll -.-n I• ,.,. to DI Me I Ind r ' ' 1119 l'r11ld9nl ot 1119 e«-lllClll lt>ll LEGAL NOTICt utcvt«t t111 w1tP11n 1111trum1nt °" 11er.111
LEGAL NOTICE LeG~ NOTICE ot lfM c1<...,1llotl ttttr1111 111m1t1. 1nd f·-------------1-------=~-----l •di.-llCl9td t. mt tlllll tlldl C1<-1llOt1
11--------------1 '·JUlt P'......S lillltlortld tM ....... In Wiln"' Wll-ftlOI, I c•llTIP'ICATI! 01" •ullNIU Cll!Tlf'ICAT• OP ll.ISINIU. ........ Mr .... ntl .. , ,,..,. hind 11111 1n1x..:r CASI! NO. P'4'41 f'l-CTl"llOUI NAMI l"ICTITIOUS NAMI ll'l't' otfld1I .. 11 IN d•'t' 1M 't'llr
•All _, r~-Uf'.d•-••·-' daolt clNI... 111 11 Thi unoenltflH dOtl C9fftly h1 11 In thl1 Clrllflc•tt flfll 1blv1 wrln.n. c:~~~;f:Js• :1~:u~=s ~':.c.1,,. -.· b.,";,,.. 11 11°'" N...._1 c..,..ud ln1 • bvsl-11 •10 Sl\lldv tOfFJCIAL S!'At.I
r111 IH'ldtr11tllld 11o e1rtttY 1tw1 ttw'f' •1"'·· <os11 ""'"" <•111orn11, ,.,.,. ~i11~''11~,:;:°';"~~ "~ ~zrv•:~1=ornl1
1•1 COfld1.W.tlntl I rlll lllltt fll'flfll IM llclllleuto firm ntmt ., DDN OUUI CONDITIOfflNG SERVICE •nd Ille! ... Id Prln<lPll Office In
l11ulne11 11 Co-fl1rm11"1 ti Jin W"1 O'fE MOTEL IM till! ••lol fir"' Is 11,....., 11 comPOud ot tti. lollowl!lll persoro. Or11191 Cou111Y
Cotit HlellWl't', Hewit0'1 ••• c". c~ ~11"" .!'~ ... ':'IOfl ;::· wMll ........ lft fljn ..... .r•i:. OI' ···~ MY C11nml111M EJl'lrn C1tlltlf'lll1, undtf' lh• flrtltlouil firm Mrnl M n 1 ,._, • ll 11 lollowl' A.,.11 '· 1t11
ol NEWP'ORT TO'NEAS •All 11\11 Mild II• .. • folio'Q:_, '''° N I "· 11.W. c: t11rt, ''° lllld't' Dr .. (0$11 P'vblllMd Or1111• Colt! 0.ll't' ""'" 11 COll'IPOMd ot ,...,. follow\1\11 .,.,_,, •••Y ' ewPOrt ..... ,,,..... C1tlf Mrll 1 ... u. "· lt11 w11o11 MIMI In tu!t •l'ld 11l1cH II <0"''' M"' .,, 0.1.d Mird. 10, 1m
,..11d1flC:1 ••• " tollow" -it: •* M••dl 2a. 1 11 c H rt LEGAL NOTJC• Htrbtrt l(lrk. 3111 W. Coa•I HltllWllY, MurTIY f.Mld Net • ~ ( , ~
New11<1rl 11 .. ~h. c111i.,.,,111. ~"'' ot C1lllornlll. Or•"'lll Coun!Y: ll1t. ol C1Ulomll. r1n1e """"· •-· llll!lt L l(lrk. )UI w cout o .. ""'•di JJ, lt11, Mtort m1, 1 °" Mtrch 10. Jtn ~·• me. I •• HlohWiY, HtwPort llttch, Ct.llfornlt. NotlrY P'ubllc 1., 1All ftr Nld lltt~. Noliry PubUe lfl lf'ltl for Slid Ii.tr, ClltTllllltATI OP' IUllNl!SI
'llol ,,.,.
A:ld\I d Nu II :1f1 C•tKtflt ll't' H.-MllY IP-rid MurrlY Mtld kne"'n MrlOM11'1 lltlllrlld ltUCI (. H6rt knl'ollll l'tCTITtOUI NAM•
t r n ' i. ,,., I• bl "" """" -ntme to "'' to bl 1111 1tr1011 whott n1mJ Thr uridu1l11ned do urtlfy tllfo'f If! 0 'j' L•'N"' 1
11''g'7 ~itlfmr"~'· 1 0 L• wbicrlbf-d to 1111 within 1n1tn1m1nt I• 1ub1erlMil to t/\1 •ltftln !"•lrumt"I C011ducll1111 1 001lne11 11 '121 $. Grtrld
L ""' ,u"..!. c 11~~11 ,.,. '" •l'IO ia.-llllttd II• ntcllllll 1111 "rnt. 1nd 1ckMWllCl9ed hi .ii:KUIN th• ume. Ave .• ~1111 A111, c1n1 .. C1lllornl1, un-tr aiunl .. ..,. • '"'" 1• (OFFI SIA I jQFflCIAL SEAL) lhl llc!Ltlou1 firm n11n1 of CLASS "A'" Arthur HIWS. 12JOJ Gel Rt't' Dr.. CIAL L MAl.Y !IETH MOlTON 00011. DllTl.llUTORS 1nd ft11I tlld !11.,!1 AM, C1Utot.,l1. Mlf't' !lllh Mortell N I P' bl! C ltlo I 1111 folWI
S C~rn_rn1 ~~J.,,11~!5G2 Dtt Rt't' Dr.. ~~:C7,..t~~::c~Ulot"!I P'~l~7Nt uorrrc; I= m 1 ~I cn:"1:' lull 1MI ":1:'C:-.t •;,!c, "M.cO<lnild :io2t AvanUo Chi((! Orin" Cwntv Or1n11 Count't' rHliMnct ,,._ 11 IOllowl : N_,t Ille~ ciilfor I• • MY comml.llltn !~llftfl My COll'lrnllllon Etltlret AUtft Lew11, 1Sl02 11,,ill Hnl Clrtft, D«otllv ~ Do Id n ·l'Q2, AYitnlto Atorll t ltTI April t, 1911 !t~tl Anl, CIUI.
CMco NtWPOrlt •• :i.' O lllornl i Pubtlll'lld ,j,1,... Cot1! 0.U't' P'li111 Publlshld Ortl>fl Cots! Otll't' Pl!OI Aobtrt C. V•nlCtlnb.ik, not N.
J atk 01...,, JTI~ H. 01"9, 's.1111 M1rcll ll. ind A.Mil 1, t. 1$, 1t11 iu.11 Mirth 11• 11• ll •IWll ""•II 1• 1111 Sll·7l Wrl .... t St., S1nt1 NII, C1tlt.
An1. C1lllornl1. O•lld Mirth J, 1111
"-""• l(Jrk 1n 1 W CCIII! Hllhw1J. LEGAL NOTJCB LEGAL NPl'JCE 1.obtr1 C. V1nlC1!•1btlll
N.-t St.do. C1:1foi.n11. STATE OF ~'.tt'1F~~IA. Dilt<1~1~':~"'1(~.j, tfl T·13U' ORANG!! COUNTY:
a11111 L l(lrk """"° IUP'l!llt!Olt ceu .. .,. 'TNI! On Mire~ J, 1t1!. tlliv• mt, • Rldl•>"ll .N11nli ClflltTl,ICAT• ., tU111Ml!tt, tTATI! Of' CALlf'OlltMLA Not1rv Publlc 111 1M tor 1tld Mite,
Ju111 N""I' "1e'fl110Uf NAMa POI. T'41 COUllfTT Of' OllANO• ""°"'II" 1PP11rtd Allitn Ltwh 11111
llruct MicOOlllld TM Ul'IGtrl.......,. .... Ctrtlfr lie b ""-""""' illoblM C. VenlCtfnbllk kno-11 ,_ Dorothy MKO-ld (Ollducll111 • kr1lnt11 II ,..,, H1rbor NOTICI Of' H!'AlltlN• 0, PlltTITION 19 bl ..... PtflON wltoM n•mH ....
Atll>ur H""' !llvd~ COtll ""-''' (llllcrnll, ut'lcltr !hf f'OR PRDIATE 01' WILL A"D l'Ollt IUblcrJbed lo lt>e •llhfn l"llrvmtnl Inf Ctrmtfl H1W1 llclltklul fl,,.,. lltml d FAT JAX INI t.•"l!RI Tl.ITAM•NTAlltY 1t1t..._i~ lhl't' flKUfld lt'lt Hmt.
Jtc' Olllfl lhlt wld fir"' It C'Ofl'llNilM of !ht E1t1l1 Ill JOYCI: D, ROP'IEOUfT, {Ollldll S.111 Mil• kirk lolloMM Ptrlln, ""'-Pltltfl• In full Dec1111d. Hlld.,trd l . Sdlul11
STATE OF CALll'OlllNIA, tnd ''K.I fl'I' ra-,lclfflet II 11 fellows: Notlc1 h htl'ttr't' •lqn !1'111 Frtd Nt11ry P'ubllc • C1Ulwnl1 COUNTY 01" OlllANCE I 11. John J. Cl·W91', lltt \llr;tOrll, C.11 (. A11Plt<111tt. Jr .• 1111 fllld llertln 1 P'rtnclp1I Office In
o.. Jinuirv " 1t11 ~ me 1 Me11 Ptrl!IOfl fol' '"*'' cf •In •nd "" Or1M1 Co•mTY Hot1.-, P'uflllc 1n' ,,,.. '1er ••Id c~n,... OetM M••dl t, ltn • 111u1nce or Le1t1r1 Te1!11••~"t1ry 10 My c-111IOl'I 11••1•• •nd $t1lt perl(lfll ltY IP!le••lll Httbt Joki. J. DW't'lf 1/\1 pet!!~· r..,.,llfl(. to whkn h JUM 11. 1111
IClrk, stt't11 L. l(!rk, Rlc!Mrll 111111111. &1111 11 C1111om11, Or1n11 Ct11nl'I: mldt for lvrlhlr perl!cul1r'I. ind fhll Or1n1• CouMY
KERRY SMITH
Summer Bride Association
Plans Exhibit
CUSTOM DRAPERY FABRICS
INCREDIBLE PRICE CUTSI
J-Nunli. ""11'our Hewt, c1,,.,,.., Hew1, Oii Milrch f, lt11, bl'lor• m1, • 1111 time ind pliu of h••rlnt1 lllt f'ubllshtd Or1n11 CG11t D1l1Y P'llll
ln>e• MicDonlld, oorolll't' MecDo/\lld, Naltr'Y ll'ubllc In •114 for 11ld Stiff, 1trnt "'' ~ id 1or A~rH 1$, 1t11. ••di 11. U A,rrr 1, I,"" ll01•7l
Jldl; Obi" tr>d Anlt1 IC!rtl, ,_ to ...,...,1ttv •~i>e•r..:I Jllhll J, °"'"9r t09wn 11 t ::IO 1.m. In th1 aiuttroom ot
m1 t1 bl tlM Mtlotol wllow n•mes "' ,,,. 111 119 lht "'"" """°'' n•m• Otp1rtrnH1t No. J of 11ld uiurt, it LEGAL NOTICE 1r1 tllblcrlbtd 111 "" wUl'IJn 1 .. 1t.urMnl, 11 wbtcrlbld It Ill• wlfh111 ll'll!rumtflt TilO Clv!i: C111te.. DrlYt Wtsf, In fti•
ind idlnowltdtld '° ,,., lhll ""1 •1111 1c1u111wlld1..:t ht tlltcultll 1111 .. ,.... en.,. o1 Sinll AN, c11ifornl1. l--------------t:icleutld ltM n-(OF,ICIAL Sl!ALI O.IN Mlrcfl 7t, 1t71 NO"lltl 0,
Wllne11 "'" t>1nd •fld 1e1I. MAllY BliTH MOlll"ION W. E, 11' JOHN IHARIHOl.011.I' Ml!ITINe ··casement Collection" of Tntuttd ElcPncC" (Ol'f'ICIAL SEAL) Hof...,. P'ubtlt -Cilllw.,ll Cwntv Cltrk TO ACT OH P'l.O,OtlO Rumma·ge
Offered
EllllM J. Htln ~~.~:·~~: In "'""'II •• c,·~,.11 M••••• 0' ••NII
Nolll"I' P'ubllc 111 11'1111 tor M't' COll'lrnlHkln ll!x,lrn lfU l!d1Ht1 UI ftl "IW,ORT MATIOlllAL •A•R Paintings. crafts and other ••Id county 11\d s11t.. "••ll, 1m u1 Wnt Jflrl 11rwt •HA••HOLDliltS' Ml!ttj111•
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"or•-w1"JI be exhibited Satur-My Comrnlnllln Explrts P'ubllthld ,j,,,,., Cw1I Otll't' P'Uot, Ltl Aflltln. Ctlltnll fftll Notltt 11 htrtt>y t lvtn lh1t, 111ir1u.nl . ~ A L A ' ........ H. 1'11 I I _,, Toi : ltUI .., .. 1111 • ' '' • lh ., --· I '' day and Sunday, April 3-4. S OW S S•I• RONALD H. P'ltlNn•R. M•rdl 11• 1 • 25• "''1 1• _.. """"" "'' l'lllU•Mt of ~. 9llirl/\o/;;;:"~1 N1i;,.'0R';"N~
. kh F ' $175 •-LE NOTICE P'ubllthed Or1..e Coalt O.lly Pllo! TIONAL llANK will bt ~tie! 11 Btlbot at 1721\ Broo urst. ounlam wirii •••i"'"' •• n% ' 111 W••t T~W strttt 1 _____ G_AL ________ +"-'c'c"'-"-'-'"-":...''-' -'·...:'·-•_»_• ___ "_•_·>_1
1
.. .,. Club. 1121 west CM•I Hlfh'W•v. Valley . .... •• ,_.,,...... .. •• All•, Ctllfl ..... ,,,.... In tl'4 Cll't' of NtwPOrt ... th. '"'•
I •·I ~:;_.-7 Tit. Ml.tu! I A wide assortment of rum-The eJ:hlbit.is sponsored b y 'C.1• .. •l'•,..11•rv •-'1 ... l"ubllo!Md 0r1r111 c°''' 011rv P'llfll ,..11.., LEGAL NOTICE l'::oa'!.1!.°'':' .... "!' .... ""',...!'. ,.2t.-2.m.,.,,!! Co1uollook1•nl•t •h,1ynn,colo11ordoo p llf. ...--.11 •• -•-•II I I >In ~n OT C ., l"•IHI.. ··~ """ .,v -~-M ,..,. moae 1"•·-· Will bt offered the Fountai" Valley Arts ..... ~,. '., , • .., ..,. • ' __.. Cll IPI ATI' ,. •l'IO 11tttrmt11lr19 lt't' vot1 .,,.tlltr ,,, ··-~1u ·~ ""'"'· 1""°"'0<••010/<D""" wown ""th"'"' $1.51 'l("llTIOUS NAMI f'_....J ,,,_,,, to ll'llrtt "" 111111 Mnlt (or sale by members of the Association . A show also will P•o<•n·w•n'• oh .. nk o• •h•><h """'~•tau• YI. LEGAL NOTICE Tiit ut'lcltrol9Md llMI c1rt1tv "-11 CllTll'ICATI o, 1u1tNU1 1nd soull1e:RN CAL1 ,0ll!NIA FIRST
u·-tin"'"n Beach p 0 I ic e take place May 1·2 at the buv•I 1--------------'(conclutll"11 I bu•lr>HI ,, lli 2Jrd st .... !, l'l(TITIOUI NAM• NATIONAL IANK, kx:1led In "" (ll'f
,....., &"' "PLUS LAIOI T-TJIM N""""'°" llt1d'I. C1!1tomL1, llNtf' lt'lt n.. """'"lrMd den c1MI"" hi I• ot S111 01..o. 11111 o1 C•Ufornli, undtr
\Vi,es Guild 00 Saturday, same place. IUPIR!Olt COURT 01" THI! ntt1t1""1 firm nlrM ... THE CMlhlClh-. I W.lnH• II .... , Olflct IM,., ... , .... ol Ille llwt of 11\1 Unl!M -.......i-STATI 01' CALll'OflNIA l'OR Ol!LIGH.TFUL OUA(ICIEL'llEltllY •1'1111 lo:c 17'1. Huntlftlflfl B11d'I. Clllfornlf. Shift. lht~ bt r1tlllN incl '°"flrmld, ·\prU 3, with p1V\.~ to THI! COUNTY OP' DllAlllGll 1hll ••id lltm 11 corT'IPOltil "' -SCORt•OARD ANIMATION aYSTEMS Mollet to 1111 ''Pf'OYll ot !hi Ctm.t,.ller · fit the' acbolanhip fWld STARS t11.. .... .,,, loll-I"' .. ..-. wtoooM -In IV!! 1nd tl\lt Mid fir"' II cOll'l.aHCI ot Of fflt curr•MV. W1slllnttQ11. o.c .• Inf oene l U' . lllOTICI! 0, Hl!AllN• Of' P'llTITION Ind pllU of rnl~ ll "fllllowl: ulldtr llM flc!lllOUI nrm 111.... Of tor Ill• PllrJll .. "' 11ec11 ... dlrtcter• The sale will continue from l'Otll P'ltOSAT• OF WILL AHO ,01 ll•rbt•• Hin, 1N1 Sr111T11r w,, t11t iottowl119 """'" wllol• M..,. In ,,... YO!IM 111 •nv o1t1tr mttttn ••w11>t · the H Syd111v 01111rr i1 0"' of the UTTIRS TllTAMll'ITART Newport lltKll. C1lllornl1. lull -11IK1 of ~ld'tftCt 11 •• lotiowt: bltot1 1111 mttfln1 FncludlM wdl IMlltrl
:.. a .m. lo 3 p.m . m un-w11d.l'1 9r••t ••frolo9,,.. H l1 Ell•I• at &ELLE MYERS, 0Ke1sed. 01111<1 Mlrch 1~. 1•n Thlmn I'. P'1nd~h111, '-'SJ Glorl• 11 ••• lncllltflt•I to 1r11 ., __ '"''"r
linll'fnD Beach Odd Fellows c11lw111n ;, on• of *"• DAILY NOTICE. IS HEREllY GIVEN ttl•I B•rba•• HI!! Ot1v1. HuntlnltOtl •••di. CIHt. nu1 ol ,~. ""'-b•l'llls. A C•'t' ., ftit •"" Eltwtnl lllovc• 1\11 111..i h''''" • Pl:litioll Sl1tt o1 C1ll10m!1, °''"'~ C-ty: 011111 Mirth u . tm 1fortlfld ••r""""'· 11 111oroYlll llY HaJl. PILOrS 9r11t f•1fwr11. for ,.,... o1 •Ill 1nd ,.,,. luutllft On M••dl M. 1m, blfM'• m .. • Thomls F. P'tndt,.11111 • m•lorltv ot !hi t11rtcror1 ot Nirww1
Profits from the Sale also''========>======'----------------------------·1°' Lttltri Ttll•mmllty t• lht Hllllorllt' Nmf•rY P'Ubl!C 111 lrld for ulcl St1t1, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Ntflon1I ll1nk. prov1dln1 1., 11'4 ..,.rffr, •• rtlwlflc:I to which ,, mtd'e lo• lvt lhlr PlftOMW't' IPPll•rod a1rb1t1 Hiit k-ft ORANGli COUNTY: 11 1111 1111 It ~ t..nk llld m•r br will go toward a Oagpole fund .. r11cu11r1. •nd t~•t "'' lime ind ot1ee I• "'e to .,. !hf M•Mlll ..._ 11•"" Of! Mirth 11, 1tn, blf1r1 m1, • 1111Ptetlld dur1,.. 1x111n .. 1 "°""·
d H o1 h11rln1 tht 'ame h11 been HI 11 1ub1erlbtd 1'o Iii. •llhln ln1tru!M<ll N9'1P'Y f"vbllc In 11\d lot 11kl Sllte, GEORGE L. WOOOFORO.. JR. for the newly opene un· ..,. ""'u 15 1tn, ,, t :.111 '·"'·• 111 •rid Kk,._.ldhd JM ..-ecutlllll lh• '''"'· ..,...,.,,1iv •llf'l•rtd Thomes F. "'"' Prt1ld1nt •nd Chi lrmin =e~ Beach Police Firing IS IOd8¥ lhe d8¥ ~::~:Fi~~~ ~~~·'J1z~ .. ,.~;~~~ COF,IC~;::~i~:1:c~~'°'n!· =~F:J.~~e::1Joh~-~~ M:;:1::~:2~!rr~ •• ~o;~ttn"•!IY .~11!ri (llllornle. Prlncl11L Oftlc1 In l~t 11 .....
0.ltd M1•c1'1 "· 1'11 O••ntt CO!m!Y (Offlcllll Still w. E. ST JOHN, Mv Cllll'lml11lon exolrts Mtr'Y !Ill~ M~rlo" LEGAL NOTICE Counl'I' Cltrk A11rll f, 1m No11ry fl~Dllt -C.1lllOrnl1 Artist-writer HILl..IR & THC)MAI, l"C. Publllh..:t Orll!ll Co.o•I Oll!'t' l"llat prf.,clo11 Offlct In "1·7\lfl UH Wllslll,._ 1Ntn1,_, 111119 1M1 M•rdl 2S ll!CL A•rll 1, &. IS, ltrl •1s.71 Or11111t Cou"tw IUP'.lllOlll COUlltT Ofl THI
LH A•"'"' C1lltlrRl1 MMa MY C""1mlultn IE~•lr" STATI OF CALrjtOINIA l'OR
C ft
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• I d Toi• UlJI 6JS.1UI LEGAL NOTICE ~rlt t. 1'11 11111
Portrays ra ¥OU re I 010 I . 0 0 ·=--~~::-.::~'"7 ......... '"'' ..::.o::·~~ .. a::.~ti~I~ .... ,:,·~· • ., .... ,'0;:.:::;tf·:~·:.:.,,g. M1rdl JI tnll A..-11 1, 1, 1111 111•11 .._,..,, NOT!-l'Olt .. ROIATI DP' WILL ANO F R
Artisl-writeT Mrs. Bernice LEGAL NOTICE c••T•,•CATI Of' 1u11Ne•1 LEGAL ".:. L1tn•• "lll'tAM•NTAltT Slmmons will address fellow -l'ICT'ITIOVI ,,.,.,.. E1lttt ot A\IRO c. PLANTE, 11 ..
Tiit uncl1r1lenfilf ""' c1rtlf'f hi Is SU,llt!Olt COU•T Of' THI! k,_n 11 AUltA COLO P'LAN'fE, AUll:A "ltmbers of the La gun a ... tlllt COl'ldllcl!n• ' IMIMllt ., »11 .... , STAT• ,, CALIP.I.NIA ,.. COLO ltA.SNER, AURA c 0 I. D
B ch f '"• N . l Le th• b I Clll:Tl,ICAT• OP' IUllN•IS.. $1 .• Sant• APll. C.1!'°""•• uPMltr tlot TNI! COUNTY OP' OltAMel DtMERSCHMA", Ind 11 AUit.A C.
.. [~me~ic= r!~'00~ome~gu~ some ID I a OU Tile u~~~:.:Z.:~!es ""c':::'i ........ Is ~t~1l~:Nd1~1:R~~ -:,. M n.:,nc1 •• ~ NOTICI ., N":..:.-::1., AMIMDl!O °=~~JiH~H~:~·GIVIN flrl•t A rl\ 5 c~lfl"9 t bu11nf~I 11 ol.IT\'J 11t~ 111'1'n ts com-.111 _, 1M ltl1'WIM "''°"' PlTITIOM Ill• P'•Oa.t.TI OI' WIL" LOUii A. OeMIRICHMAN h11 flltd \1ooday morning, p · SI .. ~11 Mttl, C.111., Undor lttl tkll· wholt n-lft fl/II 1111111 11111:• If rffldtnc1 ANO l'Oll t.ITTIRI TISTAMI .. ll«t ln • "tlllotl for Pnlbelt _, wHI Mrs . Simmons will speak lloul llrm M,.,. Ill THI ELEGANT II" foll9wl~ .,., llld "' IHlllllCI Of Lf'!ffr• Tt•l•J'nl'll!•r'I
.,,, ··-"art~alts" pha·· of I.ARN INTERIORS '"" "''' 11111 Ii"" Gtr•ld RoOHI Murtof!Y, Kn ltt.1 -=·' It .., IM.llLLE ST~AIT, to Ille H IUlontr ,.,,,,net II wlllcft Ul'C ,,_, -""' !I C'!fll'°'lld el IM lol-ntl --· St .• Stllll A"'· Clllfonlll. II m9tlt lot llirtlltr Nrllttii.n. J!ft'J i... profHSional activity and """" """' ln "'' •nd 111K• o1 r••LIHtlu D1ttd Mire~ '" 1fll ND 1cE 11 Hl'l••v GIVliN Tfllt 111ot lt!t ""'-1nc1 ,,_ " hl•rl1111 . hi' It •• follow1.: O.rlld R. Mt>P'9/\Y crtc11.r.cn1-Nt!llMI 11/\111 NI fUttl 11\f -1111 """" •• , Ill' AiM'H IJ, rill demonstrate 5ptcia1 vour we1 I • MlllOf Goodm1fl, "''~ 17th SI .• $111'9"' C•"toml• OrMlt ce..tnl'I': hll'tlft 11Mftdid •lllllon l'l:Jf' .,...,. "''"'· II ,:,. t .m .. '" "" CllllM ...... ,.~ ' du ' • the sess1'on C111t1 Mt11. C•Uf. °" MM'dl '" 1"1, brtort,.... I Jrtohr'Y "111 61'1111 tor Lttt.n Tltll-•r'Y .. ot °""'"""" Ho. J ot 111111 ffl,lrl. ~ruques rm,., DllMI Merdl ~s. 1'11 l"llbllc '" •nd tor 11w "'"'· •-ttv ""'llillltf• ,..,_., 1'o wltlttl i. ,,,..,. It 1IO Civic C•ntv Olive """' lfT ''t 1" Laguna Btach School Mlrllot Geodm1n 1_,111 c...itd Robtrl Mllfllll1t ~ ,.,. tw..-, ••rltailin. nd ""' "" 1119 CITY ., l•ntt ""'· c.11,.,1111. ·1.riri fl' i c l Administration Sltlt ot C1Htoml1, Los Allfflls CIUlll't': "' "" lo bf "" "".-i ~"" n• ..... 11.... .... lllkl "' M1r1':. ... , II-01ttd Metcfl ta. 1"1 Ort M1rd> 2!'1h, 1t11. bH!trt me. 1 11 iubW"°"' lo "'' 'llfh/fl 1n1'"111'11"t llll llieM .. t 1111' AerH If l'71 11 W, E. ST JOHN, 1 ~-Nlll•rT P'llb11c 111 •l!CL tor u ld Sitt•. •l!CL •ctl-llldltd lie e11IClllH 1111 ••""' ' ' or Coun"" C:ltrt! • • HIWlll!IY -•rid Mttt-o! GllOdm1n (OFFICIAi. SfALI • ~JO rl t.mj' .:on J "':, ~rt~ I KUl!U.NOll, SOLOMON & HAltT °" 9 knawn to mt to be 11\to H'90fl wtlo•e Mlf'V It"" Mor!Orl ~Nci"l'n (; 1· D t l'w l~n' ,,:. IJ! Clllrtlt R. NIM,''· ' WEIGHT WATCHERS has more Don't wait another day. "'""' h 1uti1crlbtd to "'' wlthl" 1... Nllltrv Pullllc·Celllll'lll• CITY or"s~, -;,,.er <•J'1;~, •• • •est I . WHMn.iM 11 .... l11lt• l••
Ch I G newandexcitfngway1tohelpyoulose S lartnow. 11n"'1"'' •nd 1c1t""wlfdtfll st>e '~feu11c1 Pr1nc1011 OlllC11 !11 0 tt<tF:i.~,.;·H ,,, •· L11A111•111,c1111r11111,...
ora roup 10, 20 even 50 ""unds er more and 1t1t 1"'"1· O••n•• cou"t.,. 1 w E sT JOHN Tt1 : 11111 m..,.,ll, m-Mtt ev 0 \01'1'1 CIAL SEAL) MV Commlnlon E~llrtPI c..:U f,, Cltrk ' AlttrHTI WI hfllttMr
keep 11 off tor lite. R BINSON'S STEVEN L. STERN Aorll ,, ,,,1 A Lii AOAIR~ · 'ublltntd Or•"" to.olt 0.11., P'll4'1 Every Monday al 7:30 p .m . A program lhal't 10 aallafying No••111 Public -C•11""111• Pvbl!lllld or'"'' ca.11 can.,. P'll01 Abi1R. KOre.MIC~AllY AHO •lllllllL Merell SJ," •ntl A11•111, lt11 ""'1
nen1bers of !he Prospecli\lf' !hat ii will gel you-lhrOugh lhe yeaf r~~:::~1~1~!.,!';y M1rCfl U •M ,_H 1. '· lS. 1t71 '''°" Ull Wkkllll Ot1ft,
\li!IO Valley Chapter or Swet't without the usual temptotions_ FASHION ISLAND ,,.,.,. cornm•uron E•lllres ".....,.,, 1••Kll. <•Ul9tlll•,
Aul. 11. H1• L~GAli NOTICE i~ ::.:.'-' Adelines convene Ln Mission New recipe• •nd food Ideas! To INll!ODUCTORYOPENMEETINGI P'ublllfl..:I OrlMt (M51 Ol!IJ P'llol P'llbllshfd Ol'aM• Cottf 01fty 1"1!11 lllf'l!RIOI! "c~~:, OP TM•
LEGAL NOTICE
VieJO High School tempt and satisfy yo u. fresh fro m lhe FRI. 7 PM, APRIL 2 A••11 1• •· lJ, n. "" n..n Manh JI 1nd ,..,11 ,, 1, n11 11$-7• sTAT• OI' CAL1l'OltllllA l'Oll
Weight W1.tchers k1tchen1. Our very P....... TN• covJtTV o' OltANa•
PRIDCE
·~ES
RESTAURANT ··---... , r.111., Tllllr, 0,.. I II"' ,,.~ "" '411. _. II tfll IQelllll ....,,...,
~·" .w.: 11m .,..,, ...._"' ano
(I -IC. ti ui,.tl
I h f h d ROOINSON"s AUOITOOIU... CllltTlfllCATI! 0, l!UJIMlll. LEGAL ~OTICE ......... ,1'2 o wn gourme c e as cre11e new '" LEGAL N011CE fllCTtTtous NAMt r'I wor1c• ofl HIA•111a OP' "•r•rt.,.
a nd tantalit1ng Weight Wa tchers rec· ClASS OPENINGS AVAILABLE Tlll u1111oPnF1MC1 *' C111MV 111n ,,. PM oan11t 0111t•cr1Ne c.ot1-~pe1 ••• a variety of dishes that will •ur· P'-4"41 tW!Chletl ... I IM.l .... t ,, m '111tlm•• P""411ft VIT.\Ndl 0' 11.IAL l"RDPIRT'I' TO · I y 'II CllllTll"ICAT• OP SUSINl!SI Or.. N'" .. C111t1 .AA.It, C1lltwrtllt, C•llTH'ICATt Of' IUllNISI COMl'Ll!T• DICl!b.lllT'• COlllTILlCT
nse you. OU never have to eat 0 YS7P ,ICTITIOUI NAMt: u"*' "" flrtllivon r1 ..... "'"" ot 'IC"TITtwl llAM• Elllll of WILLIAM F. SALYllll. anolher doll meal while you"• I-Ing M NOA M Thi -.n1t<1111 Oriti CtMlfJ Pie II lllSAl\ARK LIMITED Ind ""' .... """' TM u"°"'""" ...... C«llf'll ht II Otcei'tN.
.... TUESDAY 10 AM C9MllCILnt I bvlfne1t ,, 1111J Stv b al~ ot lllt lolklwln• .....-. tWilellnt • lit.I•'-•' m ""' Str111. NOTICE II NIRESY GIVEN "'-' weight• Peril Clrdf, Irv! ... c •. ,,..., .,...... wtlo. """"' I" ""' 111111 •1-., N ....... I lkltfl, Clll'-1111, llrldor .,,. Hufll J. Rlldlll, •Rlr\!1$-ot ""' •ttt.
Llfotime member•hlp plan-WEDNESDAY lOAM t11t tk1111wt 11rm -or t:oco rwldtfttl .... ,1 folltWI· fll:l111ou1 """_,,.«SIG lAD BOAT.,"'' •bov• ,,.,,.111 tlludlfl!. 1111 lllM
We've oot a plan to help you keep P!(IALTY Pll:OO\IC'TI •iod 11111 w141 '"' koll v ........ 1'1 lt\lllt'Mt O•~ IUILDl l!.I .,., ......... """ II -hftol11 I"''""" Ill' lfl 0..tf' lllllt>orltl,,. "v ,1 _, H"" h ,_..., o1 ,,,. toi1aw11111 ""°"' No. • '· Cnl• Mn1. canr. _,.,..k ~ of 1M fllillooWlftt --· -• llfllll d!rtrtlllt ""' w;MUlw " c-m1i.i. your weigh! down fo r lile1 I orl 1or1Mrl11Ja,..,.110.,A11.,_ wMll "'"-1" fllll •111111 11i.c. 01 •••kl•nct ""' c"""', m IM!lm•' ~ •• Ht."'"" 1n 11111 91111 11\tc1 ., t9tldlllff "'-..,,,.,, ., 1 ""'"lkl "" .. .,
New pr09ram ld•a•I Makese ... ery"' I Nl.L ., EIGll1'1rATCllFRS l\ITCAl.I_ 11 .. fol ...... , .. (•It• MtY. Ctlll ". '' .. !T.:. ""' ........ ln ftll llrtlt .... "' CM....., · lfddll L. Mllltr, >•1 l llllOftWlocl, Dllld Mltcft t, lt11 All•11 ' ~ 2'10 l'Ml•'t', certlln ffl1 Ill'_.., lecl'ltll '" the meeltng an exciting event as ycu C.114) 13.S-SSOS l rlL c1. .i-lhffl ,,111 c;rubV ,.., .....,., •llfrlrl'll•. -rrtr ., Dt-M9t. 1111, ., Ctltfonll••
steadily lose weit)hl. Cooking demon-Otlld Mtrth t . irn l"tu1 S<ott Ytunt1 oatMt ~ a. 1t11 " HltTY ..,_ Mimi. JP., •fllll A•lhllf'
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, • t t ' t Eddlt L. MUii<' tt1f.1 el C1U ...... t1, O•tr111 Cw""' Aa.11 W, Jfli'IMOl'I J, l'rlnb ,.,..._ te Wlllch II r11 ... s ra ions, 1n eres 1ng gues speakers st•••., c1111wr1111, 0r .. ,,, COllf'l'I': °" Mart~ ,, ""· bet~ mt, • ltttt of C1t111t1111. Dt-•-cwntJ: ,.... ft.lrttllr -.rtklllln. ""' 1111t """
and presentation•. WEIGHT~ 011 Ma rch t. lf11, 1>ttur1 fllf, , Nof•rv Put111c 1 .. ,,.,,, ,.,, ••ld st11,, o.. M1rdl ii ''"· btMf"• ""'· '''"" ,1111 '41c. ., 11Mr'"9 !ht .. ,,.. How 1w1rd•I M•rk your success-, . ., Nllf•,., llublk 1 .. 110Ct '°' Mld s111a, Hrune!tv ·-•rHI "'~' seon v....,. NollfY l"UllllC 111 111111 11r ••Ill S111., l'llt "" "' ,.,. Ari '· 1,,1, •
'ul Weight lo'.' ..,.....11y ••••I'd EiNi. L. Mtlltr Ind J-11\11'1 P'1ul C,..ll't' knew" tt --•llJ .,....,.. All"" Wl'(lW J-.1\1111 t1lCI 1,1!!. 111 Ille ~ Ill DtH,.
It_., lo mt 11 bl IN "'"" wMll ml lo It 1111 MtlOfll wt!Mt ftlll'IM '-lo 11'11 fo bl Ille ~ wflotll _.,, .... ~ II Mr. cairt, It 111
lne1p•n1lwel N o Qlm•icks , W~JiCHERS® -11 wbsctlbld te "" within '"" '"' •ubtc•lbtd 111 111t w1t11111 1n11ru"""' """' r1 1UbHrlbM to !ht trTlfll~ ti\. CFYll\. e.,.,i.r Dr.,.. wtu. 111 lfM c"' .,,,,,,,,..,, ""' 1<11_11111.., M IJM;ll'lld ft!lll ll(kl'Hl'Wledlld !ltt't' •~tc.ultclJ !flt 1trWO>t nl ..... ldl-lldftld "" .....,,.. ., ''"'' AM, C•llfltrflll,
'2WllnY SS llGISTIATIOlll 1111 H!l'lf. ''"''· !ht''"''· Dlltd M1fth tl, lt7l,
•;o(ONTIACTS TOSIONI (01',:l(IAL 56.ALI IOf'FICF.-.L SEAL! !Ofl,ICIAL SEAL) W, I . It JOH"· MAlltY lltH MOl:TON MAIV ee'fH MORTON N"••v •• ,,, MGrtlll' Covhl( CIOPl •
NOllty P'utll'IC -Cl ltlor"ll Net•r'Y ,ullllc -C1rtf0r11t• No11ry Put;ll(.(1t1F1tnll JOHN C. M~lLL
P'•lnclll•I OltJc• 111 r 11ncr111t Oltlc• In Pr nclMI Olflct I~ '9M Wllifllr• SI"" hl1't "' Ot-1..e c-tv Or•111• c-tv Otll>f• (Ollft!J ~ AN .. fll, (1!...,llll .. H
Mv Commlf'lotl l•o1rH Mv C°'"""IUlon Exl!'°" Mv CommlOllM EJPfrff T=IUU! lCll•liSI Atrll ,, 1tn Aitrlt f , 1J11 A"11 t, ltn ,I, fWI "'""""'
Pu&tli""I 0''"'' Cottl O•ll• PllOI, P'~bllthld Orl119t Co.o'I 0..tl't' P'l!el, P'ubll.,_td O.•n11 (Mt! Diiiy •llol , Ublllllfd Or111 .. c .. ,t DUIY P'IN!f,
Merell H, II. 'S. ..... rll I, 1111 S,1"'1 Metell 11, 1t. 23 Intl ""'U \, U71 $»11 Altrll I, t. \.I, :ti. 1'71 {Z.J.11 MIWI U. )16 W ~14 11 1'71 •·11 +
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AMERICA'S L ARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN
special
purchase!
1
ir ·~ -n KNITTUNICS ••• TOPS IN
FASHION AND VALUE!
New, dilf erent and specially low priced!
Acetate an d nylon knits in wide
only
and narroWstiipes •.• one with
high-up collar, button-front. •. the other
with grommets and shoestring tie ... and
still another, not shown, with zi p· front.
All wi th self-belts; sizes32 to38.
99
. . -.
. ........ "
MEN'S
SPORTIME•
SPORTCOATS
AND
BLAZERS
AVEOVER$7 S roble sportcoats compCI $SO selte!sewhere for
' I
2288 COMPLETE
ALTERATIONS
INCLUDED IN TIME
FOR EASTER !
Stripes, plaid&, geometrics., linen· look blen& •..
.~ingle·breasted model with military·Oap pockets,
bi·SV1ing belt hack, wider lapels. Double.breasted
shaped solid hopsacks. Regulars. longs.
LOTS OF PATTERNS, COLORS!
FLARE OR STRAIGHT LEG SLACKS
Permanent press Dacron•
polyester, Avril-rayon
blend. Straight leg soUdt.
29-42 ... !Weleg
stripes, patterns or
solids. 29-38.
795
ALTERATION S
INCLUDED
compCLrable sf.acks
sell elsewhere
for$12
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OPEN
9:30 _.,m'°" ~~·~~it.'1-:r.";;;r<..;·------.... ,;;:
../.''°"b..J.l....:~-..;;;.:"""<L-~,~ .......... _ .. _ .. , " .~ .. ~
~·
~" '
}' = ,r
' ' '
BOYS' EASTER
SUITS
New Sprinl fabrics in
ringlo-btouled model with
mfiltoty.llap pod<"' ... or double-'
muted model With ilared
trousen. In stripes
with coonlinaled lininp.
IN SIZES
8T020
1595 .
yoiL'llCLgree they're
worthupto$!5
ALTERATIONS INCLUDED PLUS
WI: ALTll:R,Fltll:ll: AS Hll:QROWS
..... . ............ ~· ... ~
' ' .. .. .,, ...
••
r '
special
purchase!
IMPORTED
POLYESTER
PANTSUIT
WITH FAMOUS
EMBLEM
only
99
A tenilicloolcand a tenilicvalue! Ou r
imported from British Hong Kong
pantsuit •.• solid-tone pants \vith
subdued Hare legs .•. topped by a striped
tunic top with the famous status
symbol turtle emblem. In !~polyester,
the washable, wrinkle-sheddir.g fabric
that's more in demand these days
than ev'er! Misses' sizes8 to18.
,
J ., '
GIRLS' HEAVENLY •
EASTER DRESS -
" OR PANTS DRESS
••• both tiny priced!
Charmlng flocked and
printed party duss in
:todel" polyester, nylon
and cotton with pleated
floatinl sleever. Darling
2-pieoe pants dreu
with flare.leg pantJ.
striped tunic-dress top .
Sl2u7tol2.
., . • ..
COSTA MESA-1601 NEWPORT BLVD. AT 16th e GARDEN GROVE-12372 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. OPEN SUNDAY 11 -5 -
·-·.... ·-.. --..-..,._... "··
~.H
. •M . ·""'" I .1·11
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;-DAILY PtLOT
;Recycling
!llusiness
~
an Boom
By LOUl!I CASSELS
UPI Sul• Editor
WASHINGTON -The lrash wt>Jch piles up In American
4 ctua at a rate of 200 million
toM a year can become an
ecooomlc asset instead of a
coat)y Jlability.
This ract, Joog a g o
~vu«! by European citles.
Jli.'"at last galning widespread
~lion in the United
3tt'-that's good news for
tup.yers, for all concerned
the reckless speed with
m are depleting oor
at resources. and for
thoee who hate to see a• ever-
gfwtng portion of our land
~ered with unsightly refuse
clumps.
The collection and diSJIOSal
of !Olid wastes is one of Ult
tnore expensive c h o re s
porfonned by the modem
JDUJ\k:lpality . A 1 together
upw•rdl of $4 billion a year
• this one functio11.
r :tnclUded in our mountaiM
ef, trash are many types of
mat.eriBls-includlng g 1 a s !
(frun boUJes), a I um in u m
(from cans) and celluoise
!It-om paper)-that can be
"'lalmed and reused.
Tbb "recycling" of refuse,
u ttth11icians call it, can
al)arply reduce the cost of
truh handling and may even
enable citites to begin making
• profif on the operation.
. l,{oreoever, it will relieve
~ drain on our mines and
~t.11 resulting from our pro-
flllate habit or using a
material once and then throw-
~ Jt away.
Glass bottles. for example.
.P,.n pulverized. may ~ used
tither as a raw material for
niating mol'f! glass. or mixed
wUh asphalt and used as a
p,'1nf material.
The aluminum in cans can
ti, melted down and reused.
·;Pa per-which con.stitutes
about 80 percent of all urban
trash-can be processed into
fer:tbr or burned In speciaJ
loclnerators as fuel for elec-
/ Irie power generatinR stations.
Many cities in t b e
Netherlands are now making
qrlcultural fertiliur from
ccnverted wastes. R e r u s e -
burning power plaats are in
o peratJon in FranC!,
Gennany, Sweden and Den-
mark.
··Jn the United States, Chi-
cago and Atlanta recently
have inllt.alled larl!'e seal,
plants for seoaratiol'I and
reeycJJng of trash. Other cities •re preparing to follow suit.
'•To encourage the trtnd.
COhJfrlss la~t year enacted thP
'INIOtJ.rce Recovery• .4 nf
1,.,," which authorizes $400
mtllJon in federal RTantll tn
btlp clUes devise less wasteful
me1.m of handllnir waste.
,..One American firm. the
combustion power Co.. i~
developing a unit that will
ecmsume 400 tons of R•rbaJ;!'e
• day. and from it produce
emugh electrfclly to suonlv
Uw needs of about 25,000
pa'tonS.
Jn Brooklyn, another private
eomoany e11led Ecolorzy, Inc ..
la operating a plant which
11dJrests .. trash and turns it
Into a crumblv powder which
)'!lakes an excellent vehicle for
ahemicid fertilizers. Its of.
flolals think they can do this
at a profit. purely as a com-
mercial operallon.
The recycling movement
also could be the answer to
the problem of what to do
Hout ugly graveyards of junk-
ed automobiles now burden-
tna: the AmeriC811 landscape.
1be Automobile Manufac.
tum-s Association reports that
t mllllon cars were dismantled
and converted into useable
steel scrap in 1968. Since
only I million cars were junk-
ed that year, we seem to
havt taken a modest bite out
of the huge backlog that ac-
i:umulated durlnJl the ye:irs
wMrt U.S. industry rouldn't
be bothered with reclaiming
lteel for reuse. Now that
ruJly b progress.
Bank P ledges
Olyri1 pi c Aid
'NEW YORK (UPll -Bank
W America tw announe«I tNL. beg:tnnlng today and con·
t&ouln& for a period o( 18
lnonths. a percentage of tht'
commlukln it rteeive., on alt
domestic s:alet of it.II traveltrs·
~ will be dooated to aPt United Stal.e3 Olympie
~::;o:;·~~-= .;!/'.he
;J:rnest J. Young. vice pre!I·
~ o/ Bonk of Amttlc.o and !lead of Its world -wide
tranltn' cheques operation ,
-Jd that an Initial con·
-ol $130,000 h ••
1JrudY been 1ubmltted to the 1f!>C to tneet part or IL•
op.roting -· in tho aea.ctJon or athlelu for the
Jflf .......
,,
•
Tllul'\d.iy, Apr11 l , l97l
WHITE
FRONT
SAVE 25% to 33% • MATCHING
WEBBED PATIO FURNITUR
ALUMINUM FULL SIZE BIG CHAISE
SAND CHAIR CHAIR LOUNGE
4x3x3 colorful vinyl Post legs, rnultk:olrr Adiostable fra me wl~
webbiilg, sturdy frama we~hing and alumi-sturdy center post
folds tlat. Great !or ~m frame.12306. leg• 11207.
beach.1363.
COMPAIEAT19t C0MPAREAT5Jit (OMPARI AT1 1.9S 299 399 897 ~
NYLON REINFORCED
VINYL BEAN BAG CHAIR
6 FT. REDWOOD 3 PC:.
SET & VINYL COVERS
~:~·~~1491 ID frt yo'.'ny
way yuu sit
CM'U"Efl'SJt
SAVE 62% WILKINSON
SWORD RAZOR BLADES
TONI ADVANCE
LOOK PBIMANENT
~.~:L i:l!'.11 s super or 1errtle ftl-
l!lllas. Big savingi.
COMPUE AT %.2t
AQUA NET 13 OZ. HAIR
SPRAY • 3 FORM ULAS
CHARGE YOUR PURCHASES TODAY!
• SAVE *40-WESTINGHO .
FROST ·FREE REFRIGBIATOR
• Big 16 cu. fl size with 137
lb. freezer • 7 day meat keeper,
r::rispers and cantilever shelves •
!Jeep door shelves and dai~ bar
• RGlls on ca~er; • Jleliveiy
wi~in area included
OUR IEC. DISttlClllT PllC[ 339.91
HOUSBIOlD
PlASTIC BUYS
Uselul heavy gauge flousewares
in choice ol colors. Pails, waste-
baskets, vtility tubs 11nd much
mare. Get yours at savi11gs!
DUR R!G. DISCOUllT
PRICE Z FOR 1.78
F
0
R
CIAIROL
HAIR SEllER
Custom hair styler with 20 '
rollers. Trim line case with
mirror in lid, on-0ff switch & f
c:11mpartment for clips. K-20 1
NOW ONLY ·
1 97 .,
•• • I -
97
BIG BOY 24"
BARBEQUE
Best value going 011 1 full feature
barbecue. Revolving chrome grill,
hood witll rmtori1elk'Otisserie and
sturdy tripod legs. #243~
OUR LOW PllCE ONLY
Deluxe Hi-Lo grill. l egs dis-
assemble for use in a con·
fin ed area wilh "Big Boy" ..
features!
4101
PHILCO 15.8 ~~:
NO FROST 2 OR.
• freezer mids 131 lbs .• lndcr -
pendent lellll'faMc conlrols •
Jleliveiy wi~in area ard noimal
installation include<I.
8259
~: 2 YR wP~.!.lAo~!!t!.~~!~ COST • lllUllVI 11 lllllMAL H!IUS£HtllD US[
PLmGEWAX
RrgllWr or le!lllll scented; 1 01.
S(Rf cmi by Jolumn •• •lli. ll'SClllll PllCf11t
KlfARWAX
~gl !"'' """"'':I!: •a. 1 az. '1ia'; by
Mlll.llSUINl'm:t: 1.21
~
SAVE 13-GE 4 WAY
LIGHTBI MIRROR
Willi ~ •tr .-.i!tl
lle1ular, rn1111ifiU
fl'lirrnr.lM I. oua R[;. orsmrr
P•ltE 17.IJ
1497
BIG BOY TABlE
MOOR BARBB:UE
Re••M•1 idj~l•b~ in~ 399 1eml·tircol11' wiod3hield.
#214.
llil lll llSUlll? nm: .,
ADMIRAL
352LB. LOAD
FREEZER
• 3 double·grid shelve<; • Bulk irem
storage shelf • Slim·line design •
Temp. control • Dr-livery within area
& installation included.
OUR LOW, IOW PRI CE
8149
1-~1 ·~~
!~!!!!~.~ ,~,!i. G7C
aod 2JCS3Vl~~.1
1111 l!C. DISC DU!« PllC[ Ht
SAVE 83-NEW LADY
SCHICK HAIR DRYER
w.1~ 178 a'r 1•t\ !Jr
h~tte1 a•r d•llvtry,
faster d!')'1~g. ;, ' '.
Gal .£,.DISCOUNT
PRICE 19.SI
1697
BUDDY L MASTER
CHEF BBQ WAGON
Watmmg '"" motoouol 2 I 97 rntisserll!. stielvei and
WlleelS. 669 I.
~ COMPAlt:Afn.M
50 FT. x 1/2" 2 PLY
VINYL GARDEN HOSE
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE .•. USE OUR CRED IT TERMS
OR JUST CH ARG E IT WITH YOUR CREDIT CARD TODAY ... !
;
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p
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MOTOROLA UASAR
18 INCH !1i~i C LOR TV
• Deluxe walnut grain cabinet• Mble wllll famous works In a
drawer chassis • Built-in antennas for all channel reception.
Includes walnut 1V cart.
SAVE $30 -ORIGINAllY •369.97
ATlfO 1$4010 I IXllA $SS
CIST VAL YR COLOR TV SERVICE PARTS * 3 AND LABOR WARRANTY e ON ALL COLOR TV'S YR TV PICTURE TUBE REPLACEMENT
• . WARRANTY ON ALL TV'S
·EXCLUDING LABOR
RCA 1B ~COLOR
PORTABlf:l:CART
RCA Dll11PU\er al!ftat excellence,
onll-set VHF fine tuning; built in
antennas & caiy handle.
97 OUR CHOICE EACH PHILCO 8" =t, AC/DC
SOLID STAft 1V
WEBCOR AM
HITACHI SOLID STATE
DRUXE CDlOR 1V .
100% solid state television
delivers instant action picture
and sound; ~nd-forget mem-
oiy line tuning. Walnut finish
veneer cabine~ complete with
eaqJhone.
COMPARE AT 339.97
• c~ lightweight 1V plays anywh!Jll on
electric ctATel1! « optioml battery pack •
All channel VHF/UHF tuniit lluilt-in antennas
• No waiting for picture, sound.
COMPARE AT 109.97
97
POCKET RADIO e"'""co,,
• Neat little size for packing to
ball games• _Solid state instant
on chassis • With battery, ear·
phone and wrist strap • 2 YR.
PARTS & tllBOR.
'°MPAR£ AT 7.97
4e1
'
SAVE 13-AC/DC
PORTABLE RADIO
• """".AC .... ""' I 97 ~11"1 ... ,~
COMPAUAT12.17
MOTOROlA AM
TABLE RADIO
;,.;~:..;: 897
COMPAll&T14.t7
BIG RADIO VALUES TO OPEN THE BASEBALL SEASON
SAVE *7-AM/FM
PORTABLE RADIO . "" ..... ""''"' ]91 ' dtaf tone • Pockd
J.•lt.
COMPAi[ IT 14.t7
AM·FM AC/DC
PORTABLE RADIO
: s~::. :.,;_ lfC 1297
COMP All A j 1 t.ti" ~
SAVE '10 liWI
3 BAMI RADIO
AM/FM AHO SHORT WAYE
Solid state cliassis • DPeral!s ow
llttl!)' or eltctrk • llU•K• st)~
wr,swi'ldon\IW.
c:.PAll At 2'.t7
97
_fill
•
WHITE
REGUIATION TENNIS TABLE
WITH FREE 4 PLAYER PING PONG SET WITH PURCHASE
Folds for storage. Official size
tennis table and 4 playe[ set.
Table has 11'2'' tubular steel.
legs. 4 paddles, net, brackets
and balls included. ·
COMPAR£AT29.9S
ISRACIEr
ORCANOF3BAU.S
full sim racl<et with ny~o strings.
delu!e wrapped balld"-can ot J
perfect balance balls.
~~g~E ggc
SAVE sao
BRINKTON
8 FT. POOL TABLE
129 ~U?.K.
DISCOUMT
Pll((15t.t7
ALEMITE CD-2
OIL ADOmVE
:•:.':.."':.:': I 1c m smoother.
1111 l(C. llStlGlll 'tlC[ 1.11 IA.
97
DROXE 2 PC.
POOL CUE
57 illth pool CllO lhal'll il11)llll't
your game instantly! Well bal"1C1ld,
gleaming llanloood. ., ..... 5s1 DISCOUNT
PllCli.97
RADIATOR
ADDITIVES
~nr ... w~.~' 19c
-~ ":"" IA.
• WIBCOR Siii STAil CAR RADIO
. Designed for easy installation.
Slide rule tuning. 2 year. parts
and labor warrartv included •
COMPARE AT 19.97
97.
COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYE. e JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. ~~4
BRISTOL & SAN DIEGO FWY. y~~P' CHARGE IT TODAY
DAILY NOON TO' PM
SAT. 10 AM TO ' PM
SUN. 11 AM TO 6 PM
. I
OAILY PILOT %:J
Israel's
Demands
On Map
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Forelp New1 An.aly1t
...
When Israeli Premier Golda
Meir drew her "peace map"
for the London Tlmea In her
March 13 interview, it was
lee a map lhan an ei:prwion
of maximum territorial
demands, mort of which had
been es:pressed before.
Uppermost in her mtnd, It
is believed, were two con-
slderations. One was the
pressure being brought on
Israel by the big powers to
soften Israel's stand or risk
diplomatic isolation. Another
WllJ the pressure from the
bawb at home who realize
that any final settlement must
contain certain compromises.
1bese conslderaUons remain
valid as she considers her
reply to U.S. Secretary of
State William P. Rogers'
reported request for a niap
of what Israel wants as future
borders with her A r a b
neighbors, pre!Umably ln con-
siderably greater p l n p o i n t
detail than supplied in her
Marth 13 intervJew.
In her consideration of max-
imuma and minimums, Israel
is said to have set up three
committees to work on details.
A senior army officer
reportedly beaded o n e .
Another was made up of
government of£1clals and the
third of international law ex-
perts.
Under study were five
specl!ic areas : the Sinai. the
Golan Heights, the Jordan
west Bank, the Gaza Strip
and Jerusalem.
Israel regards EgyPt as her
chiet foe and the Sinai and
the Suez Canal as her chief
batUe Hne.
Three main highways
originate along the canal, issu·
ing: from Suez. Ismallia and
E, Qantara. The road from
El Qantara ends at G818. The
other two eventually find their
way into Israel.
A fourth highway runs from
Sharm El-Sheikh at the bead
of the Gulf of Aqaba, running
along the coast to Elat. Israel
bu.ill the road after the. cap-
ture of Shann El.Sheikh in
the 1967 war. Its value is
both strategic and economic,
since the Israelis intend to
develop the coast as a tourist
attraction.
Pressed, Israel could give
up control or the first three
but will insist upon retaini•g
the fourth .
The Golan heights: Israel
is willing to give up part but
~efinltely will insist upon re·
taining Mt. Hermon overlook-
ing lhe border with Lebanon.
The fact that L!raells plan
17 new a g rl cu It u ra I set-
tlements in the heights and
an '8 million skJ resort on
Mt. Hermon indicates a
substantial portion is to be
retalned.
Gaza Strip: The Egyptians
wUJ not be allowed to return,
nor will it be retained by
Israel. Present plans call for
it to be turned over to Palesti-
nians but with close economic
lies to Israel. New induetrles
are to be developed and Ratah
turned into a deep-water port
'Mle West Bank: two plans
have been proposed . One
would give Israel control or
a narrow strip running along
the Jordan River with all ma~
jor towns being handed back
to Jordan. The second would
keep only the peaks of the
Gilboa range in the north and
the Jude.an Hills running down
the center.
Hospital
Expansion
In Works
Preparatory planning and
Unancial negotiations to near·
ly double Costa Me 1 a
Memorill Hospital in a $2
million expansion program are
now In progress.
Construction on the BG-bed
addition which has been an-
ticipated since th e lnitial 99-
bed facility opened at 301 Vic·
torla St., In early 1968 should
be&fn by the end or the year'
Ad mlnlstrator Ralph
Culleton said today t h e
timetable st this stage l.!J a
bit uncertain.
"But I believe v.·e can make
11,·· added the Be v er I y
Enterprbes Inc. t xecutlve
budif1a lhe staff of 200 physi-
cians and surgeons and IW
nunlnt personnel.
Simultaneously wtth t h e
hospital expansion, 1 team of
.20 staff doctors who oft811
· practice thert a n n o u n c e ti
plans for a medical complu
on 111djact!nt property.
Worll: on the related project
Is anticipated to begin durln1
the fall mont.hs .
•
I
I
f ,.f DAILV 'llOT
DICK 11lACY
TO~,IT
50UWD@O 1-.ll<IE
.tr. DOOR 'Sl.AM.
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
I GAVE YOLI
FOUR SHIRTS!
ONE IS
f\11SSING
JUDGE PARKER
'
Th11ndc1y, Aprtl 1 1971
WMEN 'l'Ol.J HEAR~
MAO POUCM A.LR
DISAPPEARED?
ONE FOR HIM1 ONE FOR ME,
ONE' FOR '(()IJ, ONE' FOR HI~ 1 ONE
FOR ME1 ONE FOR VDU, ONE F
q.f
ITS A PINK
SHIR"TWITH
RED
SUTTONS!
.-.aeev SPENCER COME IN, JOMNMV.' THEY
t'~ .t.FllAID .t.N ACT O~ c.ot4GRESS
WOULDN'T HAVE TOO MU~ EFFECT OM
GETIIN' OLP SMEBA MOVll<I' AGAIN,
MISS 5PENCER .• 8UT t'l.L SUllE &E
08LIGE0 FOR At.IV HELP YOUR
MECHANIC CAN GIVE M.E!
•• TH15 15 CALLED ~ ™E GATE AHD
J'OMMNV KANE~ TOLD .li\E-Arodf YOUR <.AR
BREAKING POWN! OllR MECHANK
IS GOIN6 lO c.MECK IT CWBl!
PLAIN JANE
HI t-IOM!GLA.OYOU
CALLED! W'l-tAT~ UP~
~EN ARE YOU 6ETTING MARR\E:D,DEAR~
l DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
AC RO SS
1 Become
rl1stas ttlul
5 Cut
10 L1i!rds
14 D1>h
of many
1n9rtd 1tnt~
15 ··•·· Hau\t
lud.ana
l& T IJVl'I
~ul~IO!ll·
,111or1
17 COllPC\•On~
o! w• Id
~8 Bt!ltr
arrangtd
SO Stille of
unct1\a <n!y
52 Ta1llt SS
ampt11b•an
S4 Btyond .
Pttloi
55 YounlJ
c111c kto
sq···· span•tl
&J F102tn dtli
b~ Ad<11Hl'I
of Ital y
bb A I on• t+m,.
b7 At no !1mr
Yest~rday's Pu1zte Solved
S~[OS P l C ~[l P
'
PERKINS
By Chester Gould
TMIS TWIG, CAUGMTON~ ~EVE.IS PLASTIC.
By Tom K. Ryan
WOW! HOT
l?IGG-ITY· 17AWG!
'l'AHOOO!!
By Al Smith
By Harold Le Dou
Gl 8BOM5 Will I JUST CAN'T IW'OSE
TAKE VClllll THINGS OW VOU THl5 WAV,
UP TO TI-IE 6UE5f M!5S A&BE'I! LIKE I
ROOM., JOMN NV.. 5.\IP, t JUST STOPPEP
'i~~ &Y TO PAV M.Y J li!E5PECT5!
By Frank Baginski
Jtl H11JI., b8 r1ot1 n tndinq
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FPO!t Al<H<Ur<:_
HE MA5N'T
ANSWEl<ED
A SINGLE
QUE5TC..i
ALL YE.All:: .'
STIL.L ,
WHE!<E
THEl<E'S
LIFE,
THEl<E'S
HOPI;.
STEVE ROPER
=
MEN ANO WOMEN SHA~E
PEANUTS
6-~--"!"'°'£"':::SA G.li: .. i)..": iME c~ T
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Ll'L ABNER
SAU Y BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
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ANIMAL CRACKERS
. . . . . .. . .
TH' MOft.E
YO'·'IVM~r
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SCHOO~ ...
By John Miles
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•• ~ 'l'tfllO•• ',..I*" J (Tl;hn ,.,
By Mell
YES, 8LJT
HAVE YOU
TESTED
FOil: LIFE
L>U'ELY?
By Saunders and Overgard
M!KE.' WAIT/ I
WANT ')\'.)\J TO
..,,'.....,-:fTi' nr: MEET
II SOMEONE /
.· I "' . I
By Charles M. Schulz
APRIL FOOL! t(0\1'11:~ WI. c~ I 1AJl.6€~ARUE ~ I 1!1 BR . .. J r " .
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By Al Capp '
'?'P-TMMS 000.'!
n.IE5E PJtv..lTS
NEVAH DONE.
TMAT1'f.FO'···
ME66E. IT'S TIME
TO 60 MOME., DEAR-
'10' SEEMS lO DE IN
SATIS-F1'1CT'KY'
SHAPE-
By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriol
I
By Ferd Johnso~
DoN1T GLAf'E, M,AMlo ·-
'THE i<ID NEEDED SOME'
)(IND WOf'DS, ,AND THOSE
/IRE THE i<IND1'5T WOR~D'=S_,¢:~
I !<NOW-
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By Roger Boljl?rc .·-
..:i: sru .. i.. sAc.> we sHOOw . ·/
l<'ESEIM:'. 1tJe. RI GHr ; I
'TO Et:>rr AU. F'RlllTS ! • t ...__~__,, ___ _, I
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MR.MUM
DENNIS THE MENACE
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Thursday, April 1, iq71 DAil V PIL01 .ZS:
_!.::War Su1t1t1ain9 Vp LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
l"Utll(: lo!IAIUNGS WILL., 81! HELO • 11t 1"KI SVl"lllOI COUit OP
:·-Laos 'Victory and Defeat'
IV THI .COST" Ml!M l'LAIOHNO TKI! ITATI 0111 CALll"O•NIA
COMMltSIOH 11 11111 CllY Hiii. 11 l'OI TMI COUNTY Oil OIANGIF
l"tlr OrlV9, CO•I• MtM, C•lllot11l1. C1TY Of HUNTINOTOM ll•ACH, t
ti 7~30 111,M, Ot t• -&l POttlblt m1111ltl1>ll (Ol'POf'lllOfl, l'l111t!ff on
ttier11n1r on Moro1111v, AIH'll 11> 1t11. MARJE I!. 8lAllt, 1 wlclOw, IANIC
•"1rcll"" l!lt lollOWIM IPPlll;:1!Kl111. OF AMERICA NATIONAL TltUST A'IO '· It••-l'lllMM ,. .. 1·11·S. IOI' -5AYINOS A5.,0CIATION, I n1llofl,fl 1!4ink· INlnt CornHllY. sse MtwPO•I Cen1-' Int 1-.oc:1.ti.n. Trv.IM. OANICL c. Drl~f, !.:--' h•tll, Cillt.. rer LEl!DY, Admlnl1tr1l0t of tti. l'1l1!1
f191"11!Hloll to rtl01'141 Jt-llv Ot..:rll)M of WUH1m (. Hul:ltr, FIDELITY SALES •• '°" •. 10 find 71, ,,,,, .v•ti COMPANY. I tooPl•!ownlllP, II ''""'"· Lof 2 TrK"I '2.M encl Let ) Trf(1 C. It. llEALE'Y en ~,,,.,...,flld l'Mllo
6"11 'loetlM Ill f11t -··1 are• l\RTALEE Gl\YLE MILLER. •l.O know"
"''""' Ille ~ .. ,...,..1.,. •'Id 11 All:Tl\LEE GAYLE KIWELL, ~1'1\N· .... 'Hiii AWrtuf IOI(! "'"'""" Fl<d'I..-DARO 011., COMPANY, I ~lllorlo A"""" /lrrd ~ttmldl Attn.a COS1' Jl\MES L. CltOWTHER, Fll:ANIC D.
•MIJ.t C1lll., fttll'l'I Ml to Cl-CP.' RINl\LOI, SftCURITY T t TL E IN·
By MICHAEL PUTZEL
QU ANG TRI, Vietnam IAPJ
-Lam Son '119, the u.s .. sup-
lld invasion of the Ho Chi
trail complex in Laos,
• t the Saigon command's
; unit.q against an enemy
tough~r. perhaps, than any
-compa.rable allied force has
. ~ed in South Vietnam.
The South Vietnamese threw
-• tlielr Isl Infantry Division,
;. ttfrborne division, rangers,
., ),piarines and armored
cavalary -all topnotch units
...... and backed by formidable
'American air power -against
five se&!;Oned North Viet·
namese divisions using armor,
heavy artillery and a
de va stating antiaircraft
defense system. The ent!my
r
... ...
•
had occupltd the area for
years so 1t was his battle
ground.
"It was victory and defeat
in om?," a ranking government
military officer said in assess~
lng the 4~ay drive. ··u would
not be wise to call it one
or the other, but, of course,
it was not a standoff."
It may ~ weeks, or months
bt>fore allied officers can fully
analyze the invasion's effl'Ct
on Hanoi's capacity to make
war.
For the time being, the of-
ficer's o"'n assessm~nl
made on the last day of Lam
Son 719 -appears close to
the mark.
Responsible American and
South Vietnamese officers
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agree that clal,ms of nearly
14,000 enemy dead may be
~xsggeratcd, but there is no
doubt the incursion inHicted
serious manpower losses on
lhe North.
This, lhey ex.plain, i s
primarily because the Nortll
Vietnamese repeatedly mass~
ed to attack South Vietnamese
fircbases and other positions,
and exposed themselves to
U.S. air power.
Just how the loss of men
will affect North Vietnam's
military moves cannot be
predicted. But man power
losses are one thing that North
Vietnam has always
demonstrated an ability or
willingness to absorb.
The operation succeeded in
destroying some caches Of
enemy supplies but apparently
fell short cf expectations in
this respect.
Whatever the result, the
path of Lam Son 719 has led
once again through Credibility
Cap.
Such fluctuatlons abo were
a characterlstic of l a 1 l
spring's Ca.rµbodian incursion.
They hove the effect of
casting doubt on other figures
rtPor!ed.
The South Vietnamese chief
spokesman, Col. Tran Van An,
summed up by saying govern·
ment forces had destroyed
Ne.th Vietnam's supply
capability for one year.
More than half of the 4,tK>O
individual an<k 1,800 heavier
wea)Xlns that the South Viet-
namese claim to have CI P"
tured or deslroyed were found
on the battlefield, according
to reliable militilry sources.
But they point out that one
reason for this was that "the
enemy needed the weapons
to fight, and took them from
the supply caches."
Religious Rock
Ul'I Ttlt!IM!t
t. ....... """"" .... ..n .... Jar $ SU RANCE COMPANY, I cor-lllOll, . 0 · Tru•lt1 , Cll:ESE111$1A HO $, Y. HllNllkft, Jr., F, · lo;c Jl2C, HERNANOEZ, 9-lltl1tY, 1.AUREM M. f\illlrtOtl. , C•lll,, for 1>11tml1•I°" to HANDLEY -.'4 llONNA G. MA.HOLEY nniniri "-rtv •1 dtlctlt>ld In lnt hit w!I•. AL OONUiLES 11M JlOS!E 1•1tll'-".· 1"4 touttd II "6 ... er GONZ..,,L1!$, h!I •111, SECURITY 1'111:'1.T Str111. COlll Mn•. Ctllf,, from Jl.CP lllATIONAL 81\HK,. corP0•1lla11.
tit CJ.al. • TnottM, ELIZABETH G. LIMDLEY, I J. ll-r.tt11ot11 No. Jl.l'I .. , tor H•rold wlO-, JO$EPH fo. FERM 1nd JEANNE T. Se9t.r1!rom, ~1 1!, 3'1J F1Jr11eW M FEll:M ~ Mid wt.. o M. RN<I, CO•I• MIU, C1111 .• for Pl!ftn!Hlon cALL1$, Jill. •Old LOU ISE Cl\LL15. h.,..
to ru-Pl"OPe•IY IS Oetc:rl~ In bar>d anCI wife. BeMllCl•rles, ROBERT
Thi ,.tllloll •nd 10<,,!td In fh1 ,_.,,! JAMES WARNER and J""N IS E, ltN cA tl'lt ntll°!llWIHI COtMr of Adlrflt WARNER, l\v1blnd •nd wll9. LOWELL Avtnut end F1ln'lft Rffd, (°'II MUI, ASHLEY Intl MARLENE l\$HLEY. llU5-C1llt., lrotrl Ml IO R4-CP. bllld •fld wll1, HOWl\RO RIC l'lE'Y .•
4. ,., ... l::ll<Nfitol .. _II NI. z.r.n .)I, ,1 ... 1. man. STATE OF CALIF'ORNIA,
for Al J1cOO. IOI' Mcso P10Clu<1, ALF'RfO ROBINSON. Tru1!ff JU01Tlt las.I N""ovrl Blvd., C<>tt1 Mey, C..111.. FllEEMiliN. (l\LIFORNll\ PETROLEUM
lo< Pormlulon lo ~llow -n dlq>ll'I' CORPORATION, R. W, MCCLELLAN, foul,lcil mlln b<.1Hdlnt1 If Hl90f\11 JR., tnd ELIZABETH MA RY M!CLEL•
fn.o!lt al'ld Ut9t'l1bte1 1"1:1r1Ml•I "' I Ll\H, hllltlllld Ind wH1, !IESSIE L. pt'O<lu<t buil.,.u, °" "'°"'"' tout"' GOTHARO, 001':5 I tn<outh 100 Jnclu-11 las.I Ne_.i Bl'l'll., COlll Me,.., 1h•1 1fld •ii 1ter>1Gn1 unknown cl1lmlng
Ct!!I .. In. Cl Zone. t l\Y flll e or l11le•11I lo '"" P•OPe•IY, o. a. z.-•"'941H '"""'" 1111, Z.1·714', 11'1dan11, IOI'" M1!Yltl G1n1 ... S!pn (Mn.,.nv, THE! PEOPLE OP THE STl\TE Oil'
.\nl Vll'llC1NI, HOl'"th Holl~, Cell!., CALfFORN1A SEND GREE1'1NGS TO "'~ Plm'llHloll lo conJlnut to malnl•ln DEl"611101\N'rS NAMEO IN TH II! -fllltllnt 1!11111 IKe 10 n . x HEl\O!NG OF THIS PROCEEOING. to n. dl•ectlon•I 1kln to ..,,...,11se You ,,. hfr•bv dlr11<tcd lo 1pp11r TtlCI 6JOI (Miid\ fl lol:oled el In 1 -1•1 .,.,.OC:...,!M brouOlll b\t P•lludn alld Ntwl>Ot! lll\ld.,J. ~tld -Pltlntlff ... , ... , yOU 11'1 Tllf 5-l'kll'
tltn It lol:tled 11 U6' llleWPOrl lll•d., Court of 1~1 Sllle ol' (1lllornl1, ! .. Cost• Mt••· Calll .. In I CJ Zon1. 1nd for lhe: Cou111Y o! Or1"11•· It L z. .... Exc11H111 '"'""" No. IR·n·•· con(l~n tor the PU•PO•t a! • llbr••"
for "'""'" P.001.m Cl!\ltr, Inc .. 333 flltl Ind pubUc ~rte PY•POM~ •"" u~ E. H1h S!rMI, (011a Mew, C1Uf,, lnclden!•I lhtrtto, the lollawl1>11 det<rlbtd tar P1rm!nlcn lo <lOl••te • Youth re11 Prwertv sHua!ed, lyln11 11'1d be111•
Preblem Cen!er (mev1111 from E. 17111 In Ille City of Hu11lln11to,. S.1cll, C""nl'I S!tMI lo lhe new lddru•l by 1r<>vldlnfl ol Or1n111, St1!1 cl' C•llfornl1, to wit:
The South Vietnamese have
produced several claims or
success that are difficult to
believe: the 176,000 tons of
enemy munitions asserted to
have ' been captured o r
destroyed '=an only be a guess
that includes enemy losses to
air slrikes as well as ground
action.
The effort to cut the Ho
Chl Minh trail even tem-
porarily, and disrupt North
Vielnamese movement of men
and supplies~ was less suc-
cessful than American plan-
ners of the operation had hoped. Teenagers dance in the main aisle of the Old South
Although the South Viet· Church in Boston during a "contemporary service".
C11Unte11nt IUVICH. T~e (tnter will .. .llRC•L 1: Lots I lhrouph 11! °""'" flYI dllYf per --" !l!O bolh lnc;lutl\ll ln 81odt A cl Tritt S..turd•v1 or Sund1v1) lrMn •:OO l',M. No !'ff, •• show,. on • M1P •KO•dfd to t:XI P.M., on P•OPerlv !ota!td In Book U, "'90• lt ol Ml1c1lltllt0\IS 11 lJU Fulltrlllf' AvtliUf, COSll Me•I, M•PI, rt(Otdl of Or1ngt County, C•!ll .. 111 111 R2 Zone. c1111or ... 11. 1, t-1....,tltfl .. _It Mt. ta·lloll, .. .llRCl!L ~: Tl'lt ~rlh flt\f af 1n.
for Mlrll. How•rd 1nd 0111 Artl'lole" IOUlh two--lhlrds ol lht -•I Tll•H< 111f Ortnoe A•tnut. Sulle "C", Centi foutlhs al the north hill al 1"41 M•N, C1IU .• for IMl•mlulori to dtvelOlt wv!hwHI quarl1r of SedlM 16. thtH loll c:Ol'lllJ!lnt of 4 1p1rlmtnl TOW111hlO 5 Soulh, RlllPI 11 Weit viii" a.r tot 1\lllltt! lo tl'lt "CF" pertly In lht ll1nchO L11 8oltf1 ind
POllCY tlatK11•d1 1nd ta 1llow 111 Partly In Ille R•r>Cho LI 8oh1 Chica, eocrOKhtnenl of .S II, ln!o tht re<iulrtd ,•• tl'lown on • Mio rtcOrded 1" 10 ft. rt1r ~•rd s.etti1ck on Ill'-rnotl 8ook ,1 ., 11oe 1! of' Ml1«U•~ -l••lY IOI, Ofl P•-rlY loo;1tfd ,, Mws. l'KOrOI of Otlft!ill Cou111Y, tflr NW corntr of Canvon Ortvr ind C1ttfornl1, said t1nd bll"9 1lto ~rlbVl<Wf la Sltotl, (OSI& MtH, Calif., ed It the ce11lf1! on .. !Mrd t•ltndlnfl In Ill R4-CP Zone. t•ll Ind W•lt of 1'1'11 west lhrff-10\ltlM
namese did ultimately reach An increasing number of American churches are be-
the IJ'ansshipment center of ing filled with the sound s of rock music, modern
sepone, 25-.miles west of the drama and rap sessions on topics ranging from mar-
border on'ltoute 9, they could riage to politics.
not stay long enough to con· ---"---'-------------------1
Last weekend the U.S. Com·
mand said 60 enemy tanks
had been destroyed. Next day
a high-ranking cfficial said 55
destroyed tanks had been con-
firmed. In the next four days
only one more destroyed tank
was reported by the U.S. Com-
mand. and on Friday the
South Vietnamese reported a
total of 120 destroyed.
featuring
duct a thorough search of the
area -or to prevent the
North Vietnamese from shif-
ting farther west.
T"·o weeks after the opera-
tion began. military sources
said truck traffic on the trait's
JOO.mile lengUl had in fact
doubled, and that the North
Vietnamese were using
alternate routes to circumvent
the South Vietnamese drive.
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Autom•lie Tint Gu•rd Control
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Full-scale Probe 1. z.o,.. 11xc.,11tn ,..tntll HI. tl!>)t.1', ot th• "°"" hill ol Ir.. touthwnt 1,.1en1lonl, tor cti1r1" s. l!rOWll, ciu•rler of Nld $1C!IOll 211. 20S 01rtmoulll Pltct, Coot1 Mesa. ..ARCliL I: Thtl '"°'l!cn cf tti1 C1llf tar pe""!Hlan lo tonllnut. lo 1nl :JO &C'rft of lhr west 'O 1crts. ooer~'t• 1 HI Ol'lofotrip111e il'ldlo, of lhl •OUth naff ot ff>• tout11w1d
11 " .._ 8(t\lll lJOl1, OI' • 111'!'11\td <llllrltr of SlcilOI' fd, T-n1hlp 5. bell!. tor 1 11utdrupl"lc on 11tO!>lf'IY Scvfll, Ra11111 11 WHI, Plrlfv In lllt lotetod 11 'JOS OtMmoulh p .. cr, Cml1 Rantho • .LI 80!11 Chlea •I'd 11rl1Y M.,., C•lll., ln an 11.1 zone In lllt Rancho Lat llolUl. It sh-Of War Acts Urged
f, Z.tiol •itc.wtkln ,.....,,,If He. z.11.11.n. on • Map •11<ordtd 111 Book n, He said Prest.dent Lyndon tor H. M. Holtff, 1D1s c111Y1t s1rp1, 0•11• 13, 01 Mll<•ll•""°"' Mao1. rK"Ordt NEW YORK (UPI) -A
New York Time s COr·
respondent who spent three
years in Vietnam says that
increasing documentation of
alleged war crimes by the
U.S. military and tbelr civilian
superiors should in d u c e
Congress to undertake a full·
scale investigation that might
prevent such incidents in the
future.
llurbellk C11ltornl1 1or perml.,lon to cl Ort"llt C0\1111'1' (1!1IOTT1!1, lyl,,. B. Johnson's Deren s e ••<Md ff,, ht!thl. Hmlt -Jtttlan tlOrlhlrlY ol lhl Bel ... Dr1ln1oe Ol1trlct t:ieG I• ol' fllr Munlcfpal Coclt lo boundtrY 11111 IS dt.JCrlbed 111 !ht
secretary • Robert s. I ;,.;.Jlmum or J storltl lOf' tnt lnstrum..nt •tcord..t JulY 11. 1tlf '" cOl'1tN(!lon cl' 1 20 Uftll 10..rtment 8oclc \J, 1191 30J ol' Ml1c1lll"""""'
McNamara. repeal~ty s a Id c:omPll)( wl!h I 10 It ''"", ., •• d lltcordl. Or111111 Cou111Y, C11!tonol1. = -~ .. 511 " t Tht w•ll••lw 336.00 IHI c• !hit tnetOldlmrnt ln1o reciu1,,,,. · "'"' paf!lon of the 1111 30 1cr11 cA lht
the United States was trading c:1n,.•ll111 of st•ffl •tld • 11 3 "' "'"' 60 tcres of 11>e ,..,.,,n n1ff of . n1r v1rd fncrclCl'lmtnl me11urtd tram ltle iouthwrsr q""rter cl section M,
firepower for men. ctn!trlln• ol 11t1v tar nc:Dnd !lorv, Town$hlo 5 Soulh, ll1rlf!e 11 Wt•f• " f the , Ofl p..-rty loe•I~ ti 2\A ltlh l'llte, p1rt!"I' I" the Rl!ICl'IO L11 Bois& ChlCI l generaJS did COmmlt (Diii ~. Ctllf., In en ll::KP z-... •nd Plrllv In 1M R1ntho Lii Bols11,
. . . 11. ltM l!lU,11111 ,_11 NI. 1~·71 • •• stiown °" e MIP t-eelltdtd '" war crunes in Vietnam, they tor H1r11n<1 c. 1>no:1tr1on. 1t1s Dlt111 Boak 51 , o•11t 1J of Mbclll•l'll'!O\ll
d.d Ith h L111e, Nrwoorl ll11ct1. (1111., for Mtot rtc:otdt of 0•1t101 COlllllY l SO W t e knOWJedge and .-rmltt!on !O COftllrllcl t 1rlplu Oii Ctlll~ll IVlnll tol'lller!"I' (If !NI 8"!.; In RJ·CP 1_.t IDI contafflll'lll $11'\.IO ' baund
consent of the civilians," ..i. "· "" 11nc1 1r•• 11111~~1!. 01 mt ~;:~1~ ,~1·~~!' 1 ... ,1,wm~r:.. :,~d:
Sheehan charged. re<1ul•l'll f,OOO 111· 11 15;""' i 51.t11 Jutv n, 1t1t In B<>Dlc 13, P•oe 30J • • 1q. II.I o,. Dr-1tv lo!:• I'll II ru of Ml•Ctllin-... Record1. Or11191 cau~ For this reason, he said, <>vii s""'· Co•" Mn1. c1111. 1.,., ci!lfelrn!a
the Nixon Administration can-11fA}O~,!i~f.~11o,n.J~=~ N•;~~·111{~ PA11c•,1-•: ,.~, -•,' hall of IM
corresPondent N e i I \.A • . "" ' • 1 ~•st ~· e1 1111 sou "-"' Q111r11r not ~ expected to 1nst1tute E. 111n St•"'· Senta ""'' Ci\ 1 · ol the noMl!1nt 11u1rt1r o1 the norlhta1t Sh b f the T . . I I . . . tor permlulon la d1Yel011 Leh n, ou1rter o/ Section U Tow,.,,hlp S
The
ee an o Im e :s any meaning u 1nqu1ry into ll. 1s. ·16, 11 •M 11, 1'•1c1 No. Soul" lftt"9• 11 w151 · .,,,,r,. in ,.,.
Washington Bureau, wrote war crimes. Nor can the Army "14 •11n lhr 1011ow1n• devl•tloni: R1f>Ci.o L• Boll" cnic1 •nd oarll'f , (Al mllllmum fro"' ~••d st!beck ti Ill !tit Rer>tho Les Boh11, 11 1liow,.
that if only a fraction of the be expected to sit m judgment 10 11. 11111 iez m1n1mu"'-n•• Y••d °" , MtP rw<;ordecl 111 Book s1,
on its own conduct especially ae!bect 0' 10 11· •1 thown, "", 111~ pave ll ct Mtu:tn1neous Mt0•. r.co•dl informa1,·on ;n 33 r-ently ' pr.cl•• ,....p mad• 1 oe• ''"° · "' Or1nff cou111v. C•llfo•nl•-...... when they are a pt to become •NI 1oc:1tt0 •' 1631, 16'9. 1u1, 1u2. rA•CEL s· Th• s.outne•IY 1u '"'
published books on tht conduct th ts f bl" 1UO '"" tut i,,...1 St•ee•. Co•I• Mn•. cA ine • .,, . n,11 of '"' ncrlt'r.w.sl e scapegoa o any pu IC c1111 .. 1n .,. R...C.P zon•. overt.,. o1 1nr .. or111 ...... 1 ou•ri•r o1
of the U.S. military In Viet· wltchhunt for war criminals 11. R-nt ,,_ V•11 Olf911 RuMlll" 11\f 11ar111W1u ou1r11r o1 s.<.llon ~' , . ' CM'lll'llW Inc., 'J(l.f £. 8raa(!WIJ, 'l'ow,.ghlp S South, Ran~e 11 Wfsl1
nam is factual, "Tilen the The current climate 1n the Mltltfm, c1111., tor r11111 '"""' Nlb•d< in int Rancno Liu 801 .... , Mao '"
leaders of the United States nation tends to limit pro-°"''-Ho. 3" wtitm nii •111011"'.., Book J1, P11t• 13, M11c1111-. "''""' . Tltt bul!Cll"' Jflb•ck llne 1101\f Tltt rteGrrh of or1nge covntv. C1llfornl1,
for the past six years at least secutlon for war crimes to wtJ!•rtv 11dt "' H••bor eivd .• tram l"AtClEL •: Th• "''" 11111 Cf "'9
II •-lit I le II" T•lbt:rt to Huntrlngl!f, ti uo.oo f~t N>'1t1~11 qu1r11r "' lhl no.r11'1wr1t ••• may we ~ gu Y o sser O 1cers. from 1'1'11 c11111rt1ne of H•rDor l!ll'l'd.. ouirt•r "' Tit• norlh"'"t ou•rler of war c rimes." He said th ls to 1llow • ltlb•<-"' II) 11· Ir~ $1C!lon "· TOW!lllllP s Soult!, R1n11
Would l·nclude Pres,·dent Nix· LEGAL NOTICE "" centtrllllf of Harbor !llYd., for II w.11 In ,.,. Rancho L•• ea!11s. P•OPlrlY IOC1led on '"' ........ lldt •• shown on • MIP tKOtdtG '" () of H~rtar Blvd .• bltl,.n!llt 151 ft 8ook 11, p .... 11 of Ml1<tll.a...0111
n, HOTICI! Cl' .. U•LIC HIA•ING TO 1outh ol Tlte 1outl'lwe,1 eorn" ol' Ht•bor M1PS rircordJ of Or11191 Counly,
Sheehan said he was not •R Hl!LI) ..... THI ORAHGI COUNTY Blvd., •lld Mltl\rll!V• 9IYd., COllt CllllorTtl1.
t
, · · I .. LAHHIHQ COMMISllOH ON PllO· Me••• C.llf., lot I dllllf\Ct of 1'2 EJctl>l1nw lllertfrom 1ht sou!htrlY
sugges mg war crunes ma s PO$EO l\MENOMIENTI TO THI Z.OH· fl, TU let!. with prison sentences and ex-ING CODE IJ. An Onllln••Ct of !tit ClfY of Cnl• .. ARCIL 7: Tiii! toulll ont-lhlrd "' p 11 1 io 1hr Pl nd z 1 "'"'' C1Ulw1111, •mtndlnt Stc:!ton '"' w11t ttlrt11-fourlltt ot lh• nortlt ecutions but ''social judgmenls L•,:,"u1," emended, !~'"~,:~, 01on,~: tl5!1.I eel 01 Ch••'•• '· ,1.r11ci. 3. 11111 at the 1ou!11We1I ciu1rtt!r of Sec11.,.,
SOberJy arrived at SO that Orantt Countv Pl1nnln1 C0111mlu1e11, Ol•ltlOll V ol lilt Co1t1 Mt$1 Mullltlp•I 2f, Tow°""to 5 ~ull!, R1r111t 11 We,1, ·r ' nollct 11 h..-ebv •lvtn 1rw.1 a 11\0bllc Code, rtletTno to t•r•t•• ind ofl·llretl 1>1rtlv In the lla,.cho L•• 8olsa' •nd
1 these acts are war Crimes. 1!t1rln1 will bl ~1ld ttY 11ld Cammlulon P••tlllil. p1rlly In Rtn<llo 1.8 !lolsa Chlc1.
I I A · I d 'JI "" P•O!>O•ed 1mondm•nls le lhe Oringe 14. l:Jltlntllll If V1nn1rlll WIY i.ouf!lrrlY 11 lhoW!I ort 1 MIP rtcordfd In U ure mertcan ea ers WI counh z""1"9 c-. 11 •mttldtG, Orin•• '"" cur .. 1n1 In 1n •••'••IV dftKIJon eoet Jl, Nite 1i of Mltcell1n1tOUt not repeat them." He said (O\ln!Y. Clllfornl8. fo lint \IP wl!h Sen!I l11btl. MIPl. rtcorcll "' Or•l'lll• Countv, · ,_ d S~ld emllldrnent II dtslQMi.d t:XNll1T For 1urth1r lnfol'm1tlon on 1111 lbo\11 C1llfarnla. If Congress VUt:S not un er-11·2 Ind P•-H IO """"' Stc!lon 1pollc.i1.,,,.. tel~· ll4-1l'5 or c1ll YOU AHO EACH OF YOU l l'tl her@b'I take 8I\ inquiry then "hy· 11.tmO bY 8ddlnt Secllon 11.0110,1. The II 11>1 Oll\i:I of lht Pltnn!nl Dtp1rtmft!I, nQ!lfl.,t lo I OOtll ll'ld thaw CIUle, . . • Pr""°'"' 1mtndmf!1t wo..1111 •PPIY ,~, lloom 200. 11 P1!r Orlv1. Costa MMf, ti 111y you h1w. w~v ltit 1roo1rtv poa'lsy WJlJ be added to OUr 5R "Sl1n Ru!rlc!lo111" Ol1!rlcl R1•u11. C1lllor11lt. dltcrlbtd 1hoUld not bt COllClernllld II
SI. " lions lo 111 dli!tlc!• wlttlln lftt Ortnlll C05TI\ MESA Fl.ANNING or1vtd for In lhe Com1l1!nl, wl!Mn ns. c .... nty lonln• Cod• COMMISSION 1111 (lD) cit¥• 11191" '"' 11rvf(I on
Sheehan said there is moun· S1ld oubllt htt~lnf on "'' llMIVI CHARLE$ BECK, CHAIRMAN vou cf thl• S11mmo11t. II Nro>ed Wllllln
t . 'd r h I I prOl>Oie<:I •mendment •Ill be htld 11 W!!llam L. Ounn, SKrt!lfV 11\d '"' C.ounlY ol Or11111. or within tMtlY Lng ev1 ence o W o esa e l ·XJ ~ m or "' IOI th ,.. 11.,. 01rec1or of Pl111nln1. nol day,, 11 ""'"' •I-here, •nd
violations of the Hague and .Pu1b1;, ·;,,, AP•il u" ni1 • in ~! Publltlltd or1ne1 co111 0111, Piie! vou ••• notlfl«I 1111t unltu vou w k 1 d ti ' ,· 0 April 1, 1'11 121·11 IDl>Nf •lld ensW91" 19 1bovt rgiulrt'CI, ro~neva conventions which are •••nu ~n mer nt raam of 1 • rangt tl'I a111n1111 wlll 11k1 ludem1nt fow Vt: , C""""' P!1nnlng Commlulcn. Eno!neerlng ' 1
U S law through S e n a I e !lulldlng ..00 Clvle C111t•r Orlv• w~1 LEGAL NOTICE !hi CO<mPltlnt " ••It "' \IOOl'I (Ofl!rect, • • ' •• ' Of Wiii IPillY fo IM CO\trl for 1n ..
1.1. 1. •tb b d . Rocm 168. 5tnlt An1, C1!1lo•nl1, II O!h ti!~ cit inded In 11\f Comcl•lnt r~ l ICB 10~, e roa pr1n-wft lck llm~ ind pla~t 111 1trson1 ellhtr P-411&& -iOJ MAY "SEEIC THE A0VICE 01'
CLples Ja.Jd d own by the ltverlng or """"""' 11ld pr11p111td C•JlTl,ICATE O' CORl'O•ATtOH l\N ATTQRNEY OH ANY MATTElt
N
tmtndmMt wl!I bl ht1rd. fOJl TllANIAC'rlOH 0' aUtlHlll CONNECTEO WIT H THE COMPLAI NT uremberg and Tokyo war For furthtr de1•111 rtotrdlnp llld pr,,. UMOI• fl(TITIOUI NAME OR THIS SUMMONS. SUCH AT'fOll:lllE't
crimes tribunals and the POl«I •m•ndm•nl, •II lnltt•Jttd PlflOlll THE UNOl:RSIGNEO CORPORA1'10M SHOULD BE CONSUL TEO WITHIN THI! , . ' lrt lnvllf!d to till ti th1 ol'll<t OI lfoel htrltiY ctrtllv lh~ II 11 condtJCll"9 TIME LIMIT STl\TEO IN THI~ SUM-Army.! field manual, Qne Of 1'1'11 Or1nv1 Counl'I Pltnnlnt CammlHkln, 1 11u1l111u loctled 11 207$ 5tn J'oequln MONS FOR FILING A WRITTEN
th I lol
. I the Er.Dlnterln9 Bulldlng, ~ Civic Ctntt• Hllll •Old, NtwP«l llflCft. C1tlternl1, PLEAOING TO THE COMPLAllllT.
e ear Y V aUOns 0 Orlvt Wt1t. Room 1!1, St~ll A111, uMer tnt tltllllous firm a11mt of OINERS Given under mv hind end ''"' ti
manual was the U.S. bombing Calllornlt. """"' •tld Pt0001f!d emend· FUGl\ZY TRAVEL 1P>d lhl! ttld firm !hi Suiierlor Covrt o1 1ht St&t1 of
r ho
. al . N rth v· tn mtnt It on 1111 IP'd 1v1!11lllt tor Pllllllc I• (ompo~ed of 111e lollowln• corPO•t11on, C1lltornl1, 1... Ulcf fer the Coun1y ol' o spit S In 0 1e am 1111~c11on, wno11 prln<IP•I PllC• o1 bu1ln111 IJ 0•1nv1, 1M1 rtn d•v cA Ju1v, ltdf.
which were routinely rePorted Stu••' w. 8•11•1• 11 1ona ... 1: tOfF1c1AL SEl\LI . • , , Au l1t1nt Pl1nnl119 Oh'"tc1or NEWMAR TRAVEL. H~C .. 107J Sin W E. ST JOHN
at military press br1ef1ags, he and ~1cr111•• JD1 Quln Hlllt ·11to.ad, NewPGrl ee1<11. countv c1erk 111d Clerk of'
S •. ,d Ofl,l.lllGE COU NTY c8111cvn11. '1660 tftt svoer!ar Court ti lht . · PLl\NNING COMMISSION W11'NIEU I" htnd lhl1 2"11 dlY cl' St1!1 of C1llfornl1, In
"President Johnson kept two 'ubllll!"' O••<>M Cuti 0111v Piiot Merth. 1t71 •tld fer int '""""' of Or""'' , . 1 . . l\P•ll 1. 1t11 m·n tco•*•'• Seti! av Ell"" ie. soitm w1re-serv1ce le etypes 10 his NEWMl\R TR ... VEL. INC. OON ... llONl"A
office and he read the LEGAL NOTICE e11r1blt~ o. 0·0on ... 11 cit, AllOmt'f
• ' ' J .. retldenl LOU ANN MARSHALL
newspapers like • bear CHANGE 01' ION E . TAtE Of' CALIFORNIA A11l1!111t CllY l\ltl'lltr
Sheehan said. "There are thus HOtlCI: OF PUBLIC HIEARIHO TO COUNTY OF hOllANGEol' Ml~~. D Cll\' ti Huntlnllon Otlt~
\.A • !llE HELD OY THE O•ANG• COUH'T1 0" "111 16! dlY A. ' Poll Offlet lb ltll grounds to ~heve that he '"Ll\NNING coMMllSjON ON ,.°' ltn. 1111or1 "'' Frink L. $<11mt11r, Hunll"9IOll ttteh. c11no,..1•
may have known his Air Force l'OSl!!D LANO Utl o 11 T •I c' !,,,,"0~~'.J. P~~'fd1~g ·~ •• ~r,,, .. J~1.,.c':~ T11r 11u1 SJMSJ1 , l!•t. 211
d ll bl
CH.llHGl!S ' II ed AtlOf'fltYJ for Plllll"lllf
an art! ery Were Owing Up Putsuant 1o tNr Pl1nnl1>11 11\d Zonlnt 'f111U!:r.: ·~d ~":O"' ~rsa~~!,.tP~oe•r;..1 Publl•htcl 0•1nur coast Oalh< Pilot
enem[. hospitals did his 0t.1"'· 11 ,8'"!';<11<1,., 11111 ordt~ °', 11ht .... 1:. 1111 i'rtit~•:"",,i' ttit <onior111cn M••d'I 11," •nd A1r111. a, 1971 ns.ri • · • •~ntt oun., inning Comm Hon, '" know edge make him 8 war ~!Ice 11 ht•tbY lllttn !hit • 11\0bllc lhtl tXIC\lltd Tiit within lntlrumfn! ..,.,, LEGAL NOTICE · · !'>" l'ltlrlng w!U br held ttY MOid Cammlnlon b9h1ll ol 11\t carPOrll!on therein n1med, cr1m1na . Ofl 1 ~l•n ~•-•Irie to imtnd 1 '"" ack,,_ltd11ed 10 m• 1'1'111 tuthl ---------~~--=
Sheehan said 8 minimum lll'O•lm1lely 1" saCTIONAL DllTJllrr corooritlOtl tXeCU!ld ""' .. ,.,.. NO"flC• 01' PU•LIC NaAJl lNO TO .A .. S within • ,_ milt (lMfldOr OI ln Wit-WholrlOI, I hlYt MrWf!lo •• Hl!LD av TMI! OllAHGI! COUlllT.,
of 150,000 Vietnamese civilians dt•IOn&!ed l(tnlt ••llr!•I hlllh'll'tYi •tld H1 ""' lllnd Ind 11/lted mv otrlcl•I '"1 1"1.-AHHING COMMISSION ON P•Oo
h •-k'll d d t I t frHWav1 ol 1111 Dr1nte Countv z..,lnt 1'11 dav •"" ~•It 111 lhli e..tnlcite first '"OSEO o~SIGHATIOM OF s,ECIF1C ave ~en I e an a eas COiie ,, imerc1ec1, Or•nt• couni 11M1Yt ""'1"'"· 1>RT1:1t1.11L H 1 Gt w A Y s AMO
3511 000 I ·u h bee ' 1' \Ol'FICIAL. $EAL) I IC <O 100" , C Vl ans &Ve O C1!1/arnl8, FR,ANK L SCHMl!Hq Flll!!l.WAYS AS IC RJl
wounded 0 r permanently $1ld Pl•n• I• detl91'1'1ed CASI' NO. Hol•rv Pvb!lt.Ctllla<nll ,urw111t '° th• Pl1n11lnt 1r.c1 Zomln• I C 10-11 •~d lnclvCfe• •P~ro~lm1t1t1 L1w. 11 1m11\ded. 1nd ord1r 01 th1
maimed Jn South Vietnam tot SECTIONAL 011TlllCT MA .. $ within ~r!ncll&~i:.,.ct Ill Qranff Coun!Y PltMl"9 Comml1slo11,
I b Ir d ill
' • two mile corrlJor cf lht tollowl"9 M'rlin't 1 Ion E 1 notice Is herltlv 11lvl!fl ln11 1 1vbllc siost y y a an art ery 1rt~r1a1 n;~11 ... 1v1 1tld trMW1v1 "'" N v 14 ";1:, •P ••1 1>11r111g w111 bt nttd br 111<1 comm1ss1ort
bombardments of hamlets that ~ Wen des111n1tfd •• 1ct111c -Otlff• ICMM•H;-·ANO •OWA.Rot Oii , '*'" or11P01ln• to 11nl11n1t• •1>«lflc . w1onw1y, El f(lf'O R-. S•nl• Alll Atttr!IO• ,. 1r11rl11 hlghwtyt Ind ll'llWIYI II 1c111lc
were not m11ltary tar;;ets, con-C.nv011 Rold -AIYenlde Fr-•v ... 4 *"' T•ll"lll '''"' (orrklQrs. "lul" ·l-A•1..A · I I' f L•tun1 C1ny111> Jl01d -Ll""'I F•-•Y, 20t Stld Pltn 11r_..i to dttl11ne!t !hi 'SW mg Olll!JUll:I° VIO 8 lOO ? Sllllt l\nt Fr-ty, S•n Ditto FtllWIYo :::.,t.nlt, Cttltor11li t21'1 un!nc;orpor1ted ltffl of Ort1g• Hl11nw1~, l~ rules of war. He said "'d P•cllk Co.a" Hllll'>w1v irom &.11 "vlllhhtll orlflt• c0111 0,11, p11o1. lit Toro Ro.cl, 5•~•• l\n• Ca11Yon Rc-4 th~re is ample doeumentation ::,•,c,n ,!0 1!:"111~'T11:""·~·111~·~ .. ~11K'tt!'1~: AorH 1, •· 1s. n u11 m.n ~o.!1v.:;~~,u"~"";!~;;~uh"'~'"1::
lhat it was 8 camn•ign of O!strlcl Rtv ulltloll1 lo etctl ff 11>1 LEGAL NOTICE FrHWIY. s .... ()]ftO F~ew•Y, Ind Pacl!lc•
pl ~::.:: "tlk!<i•1 dl1!rlc1 m11• lncl'ldl'll wllhln .c;a111 Hl,hwtY lrotn S.al Bud! II f('ITOr tO "em Y un:; COUfi• 1111 iVb!ecl _,. 0>1"9t, S.n (l .... tnle •I Kini< totrldort ,
lrys ide " lltc111etled bv; Or1nff County 8o.ard ,....,tsC Recn111t<td bl<; Or•"PI Counly P11nnlnt
• of SVl>trYlllOn CllTl .. ICATI! 0, IUl•NISI comm111 1on.
"If you deJLroyed the rural Stld Mlle h••rln1 on lh• lllo¥t ,K:TITIOUS NAME St!tl Pvblft 11e1rll\f on 1111 t boVI
ZENITH/The quality goes in befo10 the name goes on8 · d •• th P•-td p11n Wiit t>t lttld 11 l:JO TM wlldt,.ltlllll -ur-111¥ 11\tY tr• aroPOttd 11!1n will bt htld 11 1,:111 society, YQU estroy= e 1.m .. or II -lht•tallt• fl POttlblt. {.Of'ldlKlll!t • Mi•fnttl "' ffl 5rQuH, o.m .• Of" ft -ll>erfflltr ., paulbl1.
resources the enemy needed °" Tu1Jd1Y, l\Prll 1i. 1t11, In "'' twwPort h•th. Cotrfof"I•. ~r 1tt1 on Tuesd1r. APrU IJ. 1t11. 111 ""'
t
N
,.ACIFIC
COLOR~~
TELEVISION
SALIS & SERVICE
9021 Atlanta ot M09nolla
HUNTINGTON BEACH
968-3329
'ormetl1 In tN AIC Ito,. Sorvlnt Or•"V' County for 20 ye1r1
Flllfftl•t ,,.,,. to D., Cath ,. Ji M111tk elld H• o ... O.A.C.
...
. ., " 11ter1,,, •net mM11nt roon'I of 1,.. or..,te nclltlclvt ~ 1111nt 8f OAll:WOOO TEN· hHtlno 1nCI mMll1111 rocim ol' Ille Or11noe
to fight. he wrote, You Couf!IY P!1n"ln11 CornmlHltn, Ent!Mltl"t HIS SHOP t!'ld ~I Mid firm II comPOOHI CounlY P11nn!l\lit Comm!ulDrl Enel-•I"'
deprived him Of recruits In IUlldll\11, <4(.11) CIY!e Ctnltr OtJVI WH!, Of 1111 folltwllll ,....on, whPte n1m• Bulldlnt, .tOC1 Civic Ctnl1r Otl•• Wes!, Room 16', S-• Anf, )=•l!lornl1, 11 111 lull tnd PllU of rt1ldenc:, It 11 Room UI, s.1111 AM, C1lltnr1111, 1t
the SOUlh, Of the food Ind W'l!lth llmt 11111 111<1 111 P1r'°"' tlthtr fllllowt: ..mleti !Im• llfld olltt 1!1 11trsot'll ll!fttr '"-· ILi I t1vorl"'ll or 0Pl!Otln11 u ld prOPOOl(I 1tlt,. l\nlhol'IY M. ~C111n. 115 s11tull No. favor!"' or -Int ''kl l>f-•od p\1n
llK: 1nte gence the peasan ry w111 "' ""••d 11 11 '""""'" "''' 101, N""MH '''"'' c.uwnl•. wu1 111 1111n1. 11 11 rt11ues1ei1 11111
provide· you reverse Mao 111r wrllltn ,.....,,... " t111t IM.lllllc 0.1111 M1rc11 '" ltn ~""' wrllttn rttPOl'll• "' 11111 ou1111c . ' , !'IOll(t IMt 1ubmllltd to th• 'l•nnlnt """"°"" M. '"f"lld•11 nctkt bt tubnollt«I to tt>• Pltnnl"' ·m:.ruh~ axiom hr :lr.)'1."-3 up c.mm1u1on ••1« to "" htf!l"I. .. ''· s111p or c1uttr1111, Dr1ntt CINlllY: comml1sior1 tH"lor to 1tt1 nt1r1"' d11tt. ·
the sea (peasantry) In whJcb Fer turtnfor dtt•U• rff••illM Ml4' ~ "'On MtrO'I 24 1t11, ti.tor• me. • For 1w11ttr $11111 r-.•rdl"9 ••Id P,..
-td p11n 111 lnttrnltd pereon1 1rt Notef'I ,uftllC r" -for 111d ''''"" _.,. Pi61l. •~ 1n1.,.1111d ptr-. '"' the guerrilla! !WQm," lnVllld IQ t ill ti 11\.t oll!Ct of 1111 oeri.ontllY ll>Mtrtd AnlllO!IV M ... rocltn ...... lftd 10 <Ill II lht oflklt of !M
Sh h Id lh Or11111 Countv ~•'""1"9 (°'""'lt•'-"• know11 to mt lo bl 1111 1>1r•on '°'""' Ortnoe Coun!v P1111nlnl CO!'llmluio.. ee an Sa Cre tre Entlt>l'!!•ln~ Oulldll'l(I 400 (Nie C1111't!r llflllfW II tul»Crlbo<! tn !ht w!IMn 1.,.. ll'lt!""rlM 8ulldl1111, ¥111 (Nie Ctn"" """"'nd& for believing the wie l)r1v1 Wnt. Room 111, 18111• A111. •'""''""' •nlll ec~_.ltdt«I hf w.1t11tfd Orlvt Wtt!. lilocm 1)1, s1nt• An1, ••-I Ctllfol'"ft1•. Wl\ff"I ttld propotrlll Piii\ IM!......, C1llfornl1( wh••• •tld Moooi.ed 11111 of the II r weapon ln the south 11 °" 1111 arid 11111.t11• fw ~~ 1011111c1A1-seALl 11 °" t i.. tll!I •v•lll!)tt for .utiJ1c
was not a mlllttry n-•lly lt1tHCl1on. Ml..,. il•lh ""°''°" lntllt(llon. ....... ;yo Sl111rl w l1ll1Y NOl•'Y' ,11bl1C·C•l+tor11I• s1u111 w. a.ir.,,
but "a political convenience, A11111a111' o trKlor "''"''"'' 0111ct lft Au11t~ft' Olrtetor 1N
bstlt •-I Ill I l · •nd s.c,ll••v to 1111 °'""'' COUlllY StcrtUrY 1c "" fl SU Uu; or SU c en !TI· 011.AHGI COUNfY Mr '"""'1Ulol'I E••lre• ORANGf!'" COUNTY
fantrymen to hold \be COUD· '"LANNIHQ COMMISSION l\11rll t, l,11 P\.l\Nlll llllO (OMN\ISSI°"
Ir Sid 11 .. llbflllll'll Or111t1 (Oonl DlllY ,l~. 'l"vb11'11td Ort"fl c-.1 Dtftf 1'11CI . Publl,htd Or•t'ltt C.otsl 0 11'111. -~not Y e, AMII J, lt11 1Qt.?l MtfcJI 1S, .A.Hit 1, ft71 •7>11 April I, lt11 '{'J1·11
-
I
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I
HA DAILY PILOT lt111rSd1y, Aprll l, 1971
Commitment by Officials .
To Central Park lfinted
Fountain Valley sttms com-
mitted. to building a 17-acn
central park.
Although no official action wu taken during Tuesday
night's study session, cour>-
cilmen encouraged city staff
members to complete finan-
cial studies for po 11 i b le
purchase of park land.
"J think we need this mucll
more than an expanded com-
munity center," &aid Coun-
cilman Ron Shenkman.
NUTRITION?
/ QUALITY NOT PRICE
WE STRIVE TO EXCEL IN
WELSH'S
NOT FOR EVERYONE •
JUST THOSE DEMANDING THE BEST
WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS
494.3512
PARENTS
Prelimin1ry 1tudlt1 btdicate
a 17-ecrc park next to Foun-
taln Valley High School would
be. tbe best location. nus bu been recommended by tbe: city
parks commWion.
"l don't' think wt 1bould
call lt a central park tbou&h.''
warned June Boykin, parlcl
commissiOn chairman. ''We're
really suggesting more ot a
recreaUonal ctnter.''
Mrs. Boykin also outlined
a fiv e-step priority 11 at
developed by her commission.
She said the number one
priority is to buy the land.
The next priMity is to develop
th1t land.
1be third item on her priori-
ty list is construction of
a multi-purpose gymnasium on
the 17-ecre site.
"It would not be built along
the lines of the current com· 0A1L'I' f'JLOT .St•ll ""o"
munuy center," she "'P1•1ned. Pre-race T1•111011ts "It would have gymnasium :I
facilities, space for theater
Four Frot11 Area -·· ..
. Prep Speali:ers Vie for Title·
Four Huntington 8 e a c h prehensive high schools hold quirts Jts rnembers to have
Union High School District charters from the National al least 60 students in active
students have successfully Forensic League, which re-competition.
battled their way to a btrthJ;-;;...-;..;;--.;;;;;-•;;;;;;;;;;;•;oi;-;;;;;;;;;; ... _.;;;;;;;;iOii
in the California S t a t e
Forensic Tournament.
The tourney, scheduled for
May 1 and May 2 at Cal
State Fullerton. will host local
students Robin Dodge, Foun-
tain Valley High S c h o o I
dramatic interpretation: Jim
Jacobs, Edison High School.
humorous interpretation; San-
die S i rn p son , Westminster
High School, program reading.
and Ken z.,.,•ick, Marina High
School, mixed original oratory.
Each 1vill compete with onlv
three other contestants for th"e
state championship in his
category.
All of the district's five com-
Sw·f Mishap
:Fatal lo Man
ARMOND'S
COIFFEUR
EASTER
PERMANENT SPECIAL
by Professional
Beauty Operators
Includes Haircut, Shampoo, $995 Set, Permanent Wove.
ALL FOR JUST . . . .............................. .... · •
SHAMPOO and SET $3.00
in LAGUNA BEACH
• .
Is there • youn9 person living in your home whose
behevior is uneccepteble to you or the community?
Is it effectin9 their heelth end welfere or thet of
other femily members?
programs and a large area Roy Hanley Oeft) and Frank Gilblock, both of Pack
for commtDlity dances. 506 in Huntington Beach, ·'test drive" their pine-TORRANCE I UPJ) -Jerry
"If we can move all ef wood racers prior to the 1971 Scout·O-Rama sched-W. McCulley, 23. Lawndale,
no .appointm•nt
necei1.ary
IF SO CALL 499·4233
We offer• positive course of ection designed to le1d
you out of the pro~lem into e solution.
~~I • ' . •
CAMPBELL QUITS,
SUPPORTS PETERSON
..
Ray Campbell, a candidate for Capi-
strano Unified School District #3, does
hereby withdraw from the race and sup-
ports candidate Gordon Peterson, At-
torney.
The election of Mr. Peterson will add
new leadershlp and perspective to our
Capistrano Unified School Baard.
In District #3, "South end of San Cle-
mente", 3 names will appear on the
April ~o Ballot.
PmRSON -Attorney I x
Campbell I
Kellv -Incumbent I
VOTE PETERSON
our recreation-oriented pr~ uled May 8 at the Orange County Fairgrounds in was dead on arrival Sunday
grams Into it, the c<>mmunity Costa Mesa. Tickets for the day-long scouting activ-al Harbor General Hospital
center could then handle all ity go on sale Saturday. following a surfing accident 494•6139 ~
211 A BROADWAY
the meeting commitment!." -~~~==~~==~~~~~~~~~~~-1 ~i~n;P;a;lo;s;V;e~r~de~s=. iiiiiiii:;;::~~;~~==~=~=~~ 'Ibe fourth priority would
be total development of the
recreation building. Exparuion B loodmob;le Slated of the current community "
center -once considered a
necessity -is on the bottom T A , M d , u~ith• c•rnm1'•1on'• priority o rri ve on a y
"We also want to get away
from the idea this is just
1 big park," Mrs. Boykin ad-
ded. "We need a concentrated
recreation area."
The city is looking for
mon'y from the federal
department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD)
to help develop the park and
recreational facilities.
Tw• public hearings will be
held -one before the planning
commission, ene before the
city council -to place the
central park on tbe city's
masl.t:T' plan of parka . Neither
bearing has been set yet.
The Red Cross Bloodmobile
will visit Huntington Beach
Monday, according to Orange
County Blood Program direc-
tor George. Hyde.
"-rhe Blood Bank \Viii be
located at St. Francis of Assisi
School. 20400 fi.1agnolia Ave.
from 3 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Hyde said a change in donor
requirements now allows do-
nors to give blood every eight
weeks, but no more often than
five times per year.
"With the continuing popula-
tion growth of Huntington
Beach, it is contemplated that
•an additional bloodmobile visit
will be scheduled this year,
bringing the mobile visits to
thtee. Additional sites for
bloodmobiles are being sought
and organizations interested
can call the Red Cross," he
said.
Foundation
Given Casl1
Friday Last Day to Get
On List for Parl{ Trip
The Orange County Foun-
dation for the Preservation
of Public Property has receiv-
ed $3,000 from the National
Izaak \Vallon League Endow-
ment Fund.
Foundation spokesman Allan
Beek of Newport Beach said
the money would be used to
pay costs incurred in the
Friday i! the last day Hun-
Ungton Beach children can
1ign up for an April SI Easter
vacation bus trip to Irvine
Park.·
Youngster1 In kindergarten
through sixth grade c a n
register With the Huntington
Golden West
Registering
Registr1tion for 11 nine-
week classes at Golden West
Evening College will be held
in the adll)lnistration building
next Monday night.
Registration hours are from
6:3\l p.m. to 9 p.m. The fee
is $5.
Classes. ~inning April 12,
include the following: Good
grooming and personality
development for secretaries,
secretarial review, typing
review, first aid, pant! fitting
for women, stretch sewing
with knits, basic writing
review, explorations in com-
mwUcaUons, reading for speed
and comprehension.
Beach recreation department. litigation of the U pp er
17lh Street and 0 range Newport Bay land exchange.
Avenue, for the all-day trip. The Foundation has as its
Cost of the excursion is $1.75 prime project the preservation
which covers the bus trip, of public land! in the Upper
insurance and soda pop. Bay.
Buses will leave at 9:45 a.m.lp;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;m;;;J
on April 9 from four locations
in the city and return at 4
p.m. The day's activities will
include relay races. softball
games, bicycle riding and
boating.
There will be one adull
supervisor for each IO
ch1ldren. f\1ore than l.000
youngsters are expected to go
on the trip.
Huntington
Hospital
Accredited
Huntington Intercommunity
~lospital has \VOn approval
from lhe Joint Commission
on Accreditation of l~itals
for another two years.
'SWIJlU1Alil
SHOW llMES
~· ·!
nnhtom's plus
easter animals
' • ;;
189 •• 411 empty
easter
baskets
,.,
; ' ' I 'I\ . ) '. ' , ...
2 , /2 irtt:h
plastic
easter eggs
pkg. 39~ of 12
Fill 'em wo!lt goo<ire1 ond svr-
prii.e all your fova•ile people,
wha1ever oge. Ass!'d colors..
garden gloves
99¢
Dor,-t ~ cavghl red-horicledl
let our grime fighteo. •eep Yat1l
hor>W 1a...dy. Streich ~i1e~
l _:::;
!iG ANDY
:::.'.;,',';': ~ .. -... ·J!I. _.,,._ ~ ..
~
"big
ondy"
fertilizer
sprayer
93~
Sf.oap lu<ky for
Ea1te• gilts and
fa<,h•OM of lo"'"
d i1.<-ount prl(es..
biotic
mo git
bar-b-
que base
66~
Ouic• siorting, ~ chorcoal,
rellech heot upward fa• loiter
cooking, absorbs drip'l, !osh
all ~wn. S1op1 bawl b..ornaul.
floral shovel
263
Comes to the poi or .•• "'ak& it
eo\ier to dig around yovr flower
gorckft! Rugoed ~tl'lldion.
21~ .. 1 2 ~: . ~ Choose from o huge ossortment
of attractive fa.lter bo*ets, ...
and kave the fun of filling theM you~!. AnsiziKondstyles •• ~ • ~r
P•o<ees fo fit every podetbook. ,;.
wagon
bar-b-
que
2747 ~ ' .~ i • " ., Hon.,same block ond gold ""
wagon 'l.os r.ee-thru glas$ door,! '
si0<·posi1iao fire box, 51/2·in. "! f-
eosy·roll wkeels, bottOfl'I shelf. • ~l
rake
84~ ~ -..s'/ ,,~ . ,,..
,,\\\• ' .. -lighi....eight, eosy to horde
leaf rake with o nke, wide
~sweep'' ta~ your deo• •
"P or01Jnd the yard jobs;.. .,
S''"'" .,
gorden twlne ...••••••. 44~.
' '
:~
mitred stripe top
lhi1 laps everything! lOflg p<Mll'!..,
• :· • • ttol pants, skirts! ie.Uured poly-
e~ter mitre-itripe1 .,..;1h cantra'A'-
ing neckline sir ipe1, bock tip.
Grecll colon. 1izes 36 ta AO.
5a1 -' "
Supermarket at home:
The commission chec k s
hospitals each \\\'O vears to
insure that they n1airit;i.in cer-
tain standards of services and
cleanliness in their daily
operation.
Huntington is a 141-bed
general and acute patient
hospital. Irving S. Cassini is
the hospital adr,iinistrator.
SHOW TIMES
Mo" .• fri. of 1 :00 P.M.
Sat1ird11y-Suwdoy
2:00-5:1 S-8:30
The quid, emy way ta spray
io~eclkldes ond l111r11l1left
f•ll glcni bottle, ottoch it
to gorderi ho\e arid !>pfoy!
fit and flare
pants
· 5a1
Fresh and frozen foods side-by-side!
21.4 cu. fl No Frost
Refrigerator
e Only ll" wide and
66 Y• .. high.
• Full-height freeI•r
holcla up to 232 lb1.
• Adl'u1t1bl• ''ntilever
she ......
e 7-cl•y M••f Ke•p•r.
e l ig i'e 1tor1ge bin, 2
mil'ti-cube treys.
e Rolls out on wheels for
e••Y cdeen ing.
e Autom•tlc lcem1ker,
1 only-Color, Snow \Vhite
T h e accreditation com-
mission represents the
American ~tedical Associa-
tion. American College of
Physicians, American College
of Surgeons and American
Hospital Association .
WINNER OF 8 AWARDS
"MY FAIR
LADY"
AUDREY HEPBURN
REX HARRISON
THE NEW
SAN CLEMENTE
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
.. ----ANNOUNCES·-----NEW HOURS
Monday _ ......... -....................... 10 a.m •• S p.m.
WeclnHCIGy .............................. 10 a.m •• S p.m.
Friday ................. ............... I 0 o.m. • 12 p.m.
2 p.m. • 7~ p,m._
Tuesday and Thursdfly
Office receptionitf on duty -'4q2.)Sl2
Se Habkl Espanol
K. C. GERMA~. D.C.
Do<tor ef Chlropr1tlc1
146 Avenldo Serro
Scm Clem•nt•, Calif. 492-3532
• blotk
~r mogic
planter ~-mix
f,30 66
Scientifically lormula!ed mix:
foi indoor or outdoor pion!!>;
giVft them needed oulrienh. .. '" .. --
0 I IQ1wn. ~
--
Svmmer....tiihi: wnk·
.. ~d111r1 in ottomon-
ribb~ cotton fly
fraril, (oo!ral o,eam
at batk of let;1 for
wperb lit. Wa1h·
able.~it~810 18.
peasant top pantsuit
lhe ever papvlar peamot loolt
lake~ a po.r of pool~ ond be·
comes your la~oole go-ever ~ ] 2 9 3
wher~ pontwit. Many ooy
1prin<.j tOlol"I, ~;ill!} <I IQ 1 • •
,./!>" .. ,..4
r
<
,
lubrlderm / "' 249 "/
lotion i~r
allercrume 2 .19 hairspray
queen
ann
mirror
87~
A lo.-elyorid
useful oddth01t
liquimat 1 33 lo!~ d•e•"rw;i toble, ,80111.,,
lotion 1., ot
arid maon•lyong "'"'O•. de·
c0<011,,.. patcelo,n bo ... Noc•
• g•h for any r><Co<>on
...... " .. ..., •• ., lllMWJll ldt.fs
1ti101 CHAPMAN AV! ORA NG{ lJ?IO NIWFORIA l/f oihi (f Ttl\llN 1J07S IU Cll0 GAR WH HHfll ol \OWIN~(N Wl!llTll!l DIN C.ROVI
IA MIRADA \liOl'PINt CINllP ~A NIA Fi ot l.l MIRADA Wl!llH(R IJOll ~R!NGOAU wr~IMI N\trl!
ll(liQA!O NOl!A UlVf\ NO~Wl\I~ 81\NO Wll{OI MONl!Ull lt:l •OSI Alli\ NII\ H INllNG!CJ N u:.c11
•
I
;
I •
• '
i' . ,
" o;
/
I •
"Artistry in Moving''
'
for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-1025
580 Broadway
: ~ Read the DAILY PIL6T 'J • i · For Top Spo rts Coverage
/
• Thu1iday, April l, lll71
Home-industry Row Flares
John l4rJler tried lo
homestead M3 acres or Foun-
tain Valley land Uli! week.
He lost when fellow coon·
cUmen refused to take the
land ou~ of the master plan
vthere it is now labeled for
industrial development.
"But homes will bring a
greater profit to the city than
industry," Harper argued.
He was offering a counter
proposal to Planning Director
Clinton Sherrod'! r e p o r t
rec<lmmending that the land
next ta the Santa Ana River
be retaiMd for industrial con-
struction.
Sherrod's report showed tax
revenue! from industry or
homes aa being nearly equal
with a slight advantage to
homes over UH! ahort ttrm.
"But the diffttence comes
in services the city and
schools must provide " Sher·
rod explainec!. "Homes require
more sef'Vices f~m ttle city,
thus cost more. And the
schools would really be hurt
by homes because they'd have
to build !acilitles ror the
children.''
"Now that's an old argu
men!," countered Harper.
"The Garden Grove School
District• Is so large, that 01.1r
industrial revenue would make
little difference to ii. They
can provide the s c h o o I
services."
"But they can't build schools
now ." interjecled James Dick,
chairman of the planning com·
mission.
"Your proposal would in-
crease our population by 4,000
'" S,000 people," Mayor
Edward Just added.
"Tbal's the school's concern
not ours," Harper retorted.
"The property owners can 'l
do anyUiing with their land ."
"Then we ought to spend
cur llme finding interim uses
fer the land," suggested Car-
rol Mohr, a ptanni(lg com·
rnis.iioner.
"We can set ourselves up
as the ep itome of Intelligence
on land use and probably
make more mistakes than
developers in a system of free
enterprise." Harper s a id,
pressing his point angrily.
"We ought to give them
tax relief for farming. That
~'Ould help property owners
and preserve a litUe more
open space for awhile," Dick
errered.
"But there are problems ln
that tax relief too," Harper
replied.
lie was overruled, however,
by the other four councilmen
who asked the staff to bring
in an e.zpert on tax relief
for farm land for future
discussion on it.
:.Quality So Dep~ndable: it's BONDED
FRESH
FRYERS
u.s.D.A.GRADll
WHOLtBObT
CHICKUIS 8!
AD ~~;.nJ:t.~.~~-~.~~~.--31 c
.RAISIN BRAN~~\~..,-43'
SIN BREAD ::~.::,n 3S'
KRAFT DINNER\\:':~:',_1 9'
--"1--usnt GOODIES I
STER BASKET :1',~::,-'I"
QMBRERO:t\\:::... 89'
TER BASKET ::!~::.-'3"
Y BIRO EGGS::':.. 45'
LLY BIRO EGGS~ .... _._81'
OLIO EASTER EGGS ::::.:~ --72'
D NER W/MEAT""'"·u•u 57' 1 •1'11 DL 101 ... --
FROSTl NG MIXES::.~'.:-.39' 1nnaoa11 POPCORN ,..,. 29'
rm W/TMOW •WAY rorr11
CHOCOLATE CHIPS \':~:! .. 42'
LAWRY'S MIXES :::'.'t'.~ ..... 20'
PANCAKE MIX~:!~-42'
~ '
SCHICK 4's
INJECTOR
BLADES
S1Jlf·1•u• • 74 •t1•1111111 !tr C
l•Jtellr nnr.
NtltJllM· 88 ••t1ltfl 11111. c 60 OUIKl,IR
HONEY TUMBLERS
"1·'111 $) 18. h••ltn.
i1 OUMClSllt
ICOEA ficASSES "
~.\,~~.-$] 18
l60UlfCISIZE
.
GROUND
BEEF
lUCIT IOMDID fOlfUYOl
[ ~;~A~~GJO~S __ :~
ct*4 PANCAKE:W-::.-::~45'
o""' MUFFIN~1c:::r.:'.~~-45c
0'4 ROYAL PUDDINGs::.~:--11'
.,.. SHELLED WALNUTS~=.69'
0'4 POTATOES,.,.,.,_·---· 59'
flllKl'S (OllllTl:l snu llllTAlfT OllfTDUTlO
f1""J TEA BAGS:!~~~:.~~~~~61c
0'4 KING VITAMIN :~t•:.,_48'
00"" PIZZA MIX~;~~~.~~~. 35c
~TAMALE PIE ~=l~~~~'"-65'
~· ..... kiy&jf.
WELCHADE DRINK 32c
460UNCI
CAN
i;, ·· CANNED FOODS ,,.-' ' ·~--"-'1---"-· • .. • """ o-4 STRING BEANS=.'~::t1=._J9c
BABY FOOD:::~:z.uuuD 9c
rr S & W CORN ...... ,, ...... _25'
BABY FOOD ;ra~:::.·~~ ......... -......... 13•
J & J BABY SHAMPOO
-,i, tam"' A1.,11 "''l surt er ••rt $] 41
IJll; Siii ftr •1~111 Uir.12Y,..DL TUI[
LISTERINE MOUTHWASH $) 19
lllls 1hr-casl11 •xttrta.20-GL Sill
PRELL CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO
s1,1r-rlc•. t'lek, 1111·
1r1l•1r111 S11111•••
••-tl '•Ir lrll1t11 11~ ••••ccttilL
70UNCE 99c SUPER SIZE
a1c
~
T-BONE STEAK
lUCllYTOP QUAUTY $] 38 IONOtD lttf
TAILS llMOYID LL
CROSS RIB ROAST-....... 89'
STANDING RIB ROAST :::'.'..o. 'I"
CHUCK ROAST amtm ........... 59'
TOM TURKEYS :::::E ... _ .. 36'
HEN TURKEY :::~11L11. ...... 39'
HAM ::::S»=:=~m ... ~.-.. '1"
LINK SAUSAGE :::::..":'un.-28'
CUT-UP FRYERS ,......,._ .. 32'
PORK SAUSAGE _,_..,.,._79'
FULLY COOKED HAM
.:u~~o::ll sac llCKXlfMOYID 1&.
2~~~.~N BA~~.M,._ 55c
RATH, WILSON, ARMOUR 59c SLICED BACON , .... ,.... ... _
~~~,!!RBACOM. __ 73c
THIN BACON 68<
... m.m<llltlHt.~-·-. ···klt"""!i-......
TOMATO JUICE 27c
SACIAMMO
46 OUNCE CAM
~"''~ E!.TlfOD-' · ·J
TODDLER MEALs::~ru~~~23'
r:I" BLACK PEPPER::::::~~ ... 35•
CARNATION TUNA::::; u•--34'
0'4 HEINZ RELISHES~~",..-19' ,r REFRIED BEANS~~f:,_22•
SPAM,.......... 59' 1°'*1. 1 l OJ, CAI·-
~ YAMS:.~~1:"'C:Uw 39c
COFFEE :";';~ ... ·--····-'2"
COFFEE '"'O'l ""'" '1" JtOLl,lt .•.•.• ,_. rr SHRIMPl~~~ ... -52' WU •1<&01\IAlllS.UU
DOLE PINEAPPLE ••«"··--39'
UIUIO,IUQl,Cllllm %7. ... ... tiy.__,!,--
MOREHOU$f
240UNCIJAI 21c
.r S&W PEAS ""'"'·······--· 25' ./4 DEVILED HAM::::.'::'_26'
DOLE PINEAPPLE '""·"'-20'
CIHllUI, KKlll
~ SPREAD~=.'r~Li::~ .. ~ 28'
·DOLE PINEAPPLE ,.,., • .,._27'
O'UlllD,QUlllC, lllDllTS .r TACO SAUCE~.-:."~.~25'
BEEF HASH!'f:i~~.~.~~~-.. -45c
~ SAUCE:::t~:~~~~.~~ .... 22'
JU ICE !!~~~':.~~~~.~~.~~.~'.~.~.·~·---49•
.;" A·l MEAT SAUCE,. ........ 63'
NIBLETS CORN '"•'-'•--·--·-25'
0'4 SMUCKERS SYRUP:\'.~~39'
CAMPBELL'S SOUP:::r.~~:~_ 20'
! FROZEN FOllDs._· _..
O"""' FISHSTICKs;::i:~.·.~~-73'
ZUCCHINI STICKS:"::.'::~_ 47•
•
OUR ''BOND'' IS y GUARANTEE OF COM:UR MONEY' .. BACK
Everyone knows that all b f . lETE SATISFACTION
our expert meat buyers :r~ 11 no_t the same • • • That's wh
:n••I our strict standards ~or h;nf,//y so/eel anly tho11 beef Iha~
c • • Our customers count on tllis groiual1ty, tenderneJs and flavor p~~lc~°;. -We guarantee it with. ou~~~i~~ ~~10ocNllO·o,~, and you
• · on every
~~Ofea 'Be!tu&t; lor3Qood~ QU··-~NDED HON....,c '"~ ..,,,, --G"BELED DISC~•ICED
TASTf !INTI# su;GfJTIO#S
~~.E.!.~!.~.~.~~ $J '!!
~~.!!?'l~.~~.-.78<
~p~~!..~!E.~~~--·· .. 98~.
J.!l.!!!9J.f.!~.L.~~ ... _ 58 f.
._~· FROttff FOOD_S ~ ,
.r CHINESE DINNERS :::~~:~ .. 59'
BABY OKRA~~-::.~.~~~.°!:.~ ...... _ ..... _32c
WAFFLES lYn llMIMA lllTTllMILI 42' o-"" t0I.•l5 ............. ,, •. __ _
PICTSWEET PEAS•auu ..•. -42'
fJ"f' TURNOVERS~;';~'r.ro:o'l~-51 •
SNACK TRAY :'!1.'~:~·--·~ .. --.. ~·91 •
MARKE'S BURRITOS ~;~•o\~:~~.55c
REAL WHIP TOPPING ~.~ ... -4S'
MRS. SMITH'S PIE:!':i2'ti:~~--.89c
SIRLOIN TIPS:~::i:... ____ .. 45'
... kl/&ft.--
PRINCELLA YAMS 29c GOlOIN
290UNCECAN
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS ' •
i • ' • .r THE UN·POLLUTER::':~'i.'i 78'
BIZ PRE-SOAK~~:~:.~.--t 1 °'
O""' BORA TEEM ~~~·i~~'i. . t J"
GAIN DETERGENT'"•"'·-·· 88' ~CLOROX BLEACH ~':.'.~n-.55'
TIDE DETERGENT m ................... '2"
t:r FORMULA 409~°!~'.:~~.~~~!1 11
... kl/&f~-~
SCOTT TOWELS 31 c 161 COUNT
IOll
IVORY SOAP :i':~"'···········--·88'
Cf" POT SCOURER~~~~:~~~··--··32c
JOY LIQUID ;:~~~,it~ ................ _ 82c
rr POT SCOURER :\~'.'."..~.~.'..'..--19'
SPIC & SPAN=~-.:~.0o~~ ... -99'
<r DELSEY TIS~1 JE ::::i<:.:._27•
-
Copyright" 1971 h1 lw.ky Stor9to 1-.-
All l i,htl R~d
. DISCOUNT PRICED DEU. ITEMSI
P!~.~c"-~E_s_~-"''"· 39c
~!~~~.~~,C,~EE~.I!'!~~!~,,. 33c
~ ... kiy&ff.
7·lb. CANNED HAM$598
DUBUQUE
IOYALIUfFn
~~.~~~f!:S~~~~-s_.,,,., 44c
GALLO ITALIAN SALAMI 89< SUCOH. __ ., ... , ___ ,., ......... -1 IL •IL
~~1~2,!J~~,~~~~~~! .. ,.. 49c
~s.~~~~~.!.fR ~!E.~.r.~¥ •.••. 73c
~~,~~~-~~~~~'~'Ol~.~~iPG. 73c
!~1!!H.E~-~~.-utt•a. 79c
!~1~!t1A:l~~~ .... ua.,.. 98c
tJO(!SEfiOLD]Ill!...,.;.J
BRILLO PADS:~~~~~~·--·'""'_._43•
SANI FllTE NAPKINSl!':'.'~73'
f7'4' NAPKINS ='\:~'t.-51 c .r PLEDGE WAX :•:th. 77'
PERSONA! IVORY :':'im.-30'
~ LADY SCOTT Lo:!!',r::._._ ... 27'
DAIR,Y PRODUm . ' ]
.... VITA PAKT OUHl l•KI ..... 79' llT T -140LITL ..... ,. ... _,_
BIG DIP ICE MILK .. o.m .. 59•
LADY LEE MIUG:~~._:;~· .17'
SOFT MARGARINE :1~~~.__33•
TOP QUALITY PRODUCE!
Bananas
100%CHIQUITA
:J~~~s 10~
Potatoes @ U.S. N0.1 RUSSETS
t11c1 I O 'c~f::' 3 7c
SIZIS IAG
-.-;. .. _ AVOCADOS •••
'
C&llltnla'1 ll111t liwlt., ... lle1I• •rt·
lllJ tasU: ll••ll•1 l!Jnr ••• •U: I• •1'1
tt Sil I'll I.
DAllV PllOT Z!JB
Complex
Dwelling
Land Cut
Apartments have become
the problem chlld of Fountain
Valley.
City oouncilmen apent near-
ly three houn haggling over
them in a special study
session Tuesday night.
The result wu further reduc·
lions in the amount of land
which will be allowed for
apartment construction.
The council agreed on
master plan cuts which coul d
eliminate as many as tM
potential apartments and 1,003
condominiums.
But they also agreed to be
nexible on each Individual
parcel in the event good plans
are drawn fcir apartments or
condominiums.
Mayor Edward Just opposed
the reductions, but I o s t .
"There's nothing mag I c a I
about the new figures,'' he
said. "I can buy part of these,
bu't part I can't."
Councilman Al H_ollinden, a
strong supporter of lbe cuts,
said, "I'm only disappointed
that it will reduce the city's
ultimate popuJation by a mere
4,000."
Clinton Sherrod, the city's
planning director, said it
wouldn't make a great d.if·
ference to the city's balance
whether tbe cuts were made
or current planning was kept.
Hollinden. however, debunk-
ed the idea of a balanced
community. "I don't believe
all this ba\ancett stuff. We've
followed the planners' rules
for years and look wllat a
mess the world is in."
Councilmen George Scott
and Ron Shenkman both sup.
ported the apartment cult,
though they disagreed over
one piece of property.
John Harper, the fifth coun-
cilmen, opposed the apartment
cuts on the grounds the city
was getting too specific ln
its planning.
"We're forgetling the pro-
perty owner and the free ·
enterprise system." Harper
charged. "We shouldn't take
such a JTiercenary altitudli
about planning."
Councilmen spent an hour
of their discussion arguinc
over a 48-unit apartment pro-
posal at Brookhurst. and La
Alameda streets.
Two weeks ago the council
on a 3-1 vote reversed plan•
ning commission denial for the
apartmeots. Hollinden was the
lone anti-apartment vote on
that one and Scott wasn 't at
the meeting.
Scott, however, opened the
Issue again Tuesday. "The
people have uked us to
reduce apartments and that
one ought to be coJlllJ)ercial,"
he said.
"It's an area we have
agreed should be
spartments," Shenkman said.
James Dick, chairman of
the planning cominission, ex·
plained why the comminkl11
had opposed the apartments.
EYES RIGHT
.,
,j
·1 DI. LOUIS J, ~ H.&SllPILD
"1;) Op~
You"·• he•rd •bout ,11ucom•
•• , th• 1•cond moil den9•rou1
lhr••I lo our •v•1i9hl. Thi1 di1·
1111 builch up p11nur1 on lh1
1qu1out flu id in1id1 th1 1v1b11I
•nd d11ltoy1 the "''"' c1ll1 In
th• r1li111.
The f1rrifyl119 thln9 1bout •l•u·
com• ;, ff11t th• d1t11io11lion
of 1y1ii9ht m1v b1 to t t.Gu•I
th1t th1 .. ictim will b1 u111w1r1
ff11t 111ythi119 i1 wro119. (;1111·
com• c1n u1u 1lly b1 co11froll 1d
ii it i1 d1l1ct1d 11rly 1no,.9h.
II you 1r1 o"'r lS, you
1houlcl h1v• p11lodit •v• •••m·
i111lio111 for thit di1•11• 11
will 11 for 11ti9m1li1..,, hypl!·
opi• , •• jt1iqhl1d1111~ 111.I
mvopi1 or 111tni9ht1cl11111. W1
will 9i"t th1 111c1111rv •••m·
i111tion1 11 your conv111i111c1 fer
111 conclit:o111 th1I c111 b1 cor·
r1tllfl by pr11c1iptio11 of the
prop•• 1111111. Slop in lod1v 11
our offi<• in 1111 i:;.,. 'oi11h
Shoppin9 C111t1r, M1i11 St. 11
l11ch 11"4 . w, c1n fit you lo•
co11!1cl 1111111 or pr11cripti111-
qround '"'" q111111, 110. c.11
147.1171for1111ppoi11tm111t •r
d1op iri wh111 111•r·bv.
THE BEST
lt11cl111hlp potl1 pre ... "'••·
nuh" 11 0111 of th1 wo1ld'1 mo1t
popul•• co..,ic 1trip1, A11d It
dilly In .... DAILY' ,llO'Y .
•
-
•
'. . ... . . . .... .,. .
'
21 DAll.V PILOT s Th11r><l•1 . April 1, 1';11
Your Jtloney's 11'ortfa
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
Autog1·apl1 H1mte1·s Makit1g
Big Business f 01· Collectors
NASO Ll1tlng1 for W.cfnetd1y, Mlrch :11, 1971
l:~11in ~-........,._ .. ..,_i_,..,. t a"'· ,...., NAiii, ""'-..... ~ ,... . ., ....... _.... ... ~ ........
1 ...... ,. ............................................... ,1>.MC!ltF JOI AOOIU 110 ACF lno te Pl'# AcllltCle~ ...
MEW 'YOltK IAl"l
-Tiii IOl'°""il'le llll "'"' l&INll
•1111 AIKllll alof ~Miii :Ill Adm.I!>: "-
)\I, ;M.S.W...t• 1~111\UI •'*1K "'•11o AdMllll1 ,ioo
By SYLVJA PORTER
A mere tO yr11rs aigo, a
document signed by President
Tbo1nas Jerferson ~nd his
Secretary of Slate James
?o.iiidison sold tor $15 This
year the same document
fetched MOO.
Also 10 years ago , 11 com-
rnlssk>n of an Arn1y officer
signed by President Ltncoln
sold for $75, TIM! same docu-
ment recentJy brougbl $450
Jn the late J950s a letter
~·rHten by George Washington
saying th<it the President
should be 1he "slave' of the
people rather than I he 1 r
master sold for .$500. A decade
later this letter was auctioned
for $25,000 an all-time
record for a letter
Utterly fasc1na1tng has been
the upsp1ral over the years
in prices paid for autograph!,
JcU.ers, manuscripts and other
documents signed by fa1nous
people The rises, in fact, have
dramatically outpaced gains
in many other trad1Uon11.I 1n·
vestments.
Estimate! Charlrs
Hamilton. head or Charles
Hamilton Galleries. Joe . In
New York, the oat1on's large~t
dealer Ill autographs: "Thi!
year alone, Americans will in-
vest and gamble something
like $50 million 1n autographs
Prominent among the buyers
will be major hbrar1es: and
univers1hes. Buyers will pay
a full 20 percent more than
the pnres they paid last
H '" .... Mt llli .. A--"119
5-Yke, T .. •• Ht .-ffl1t •II ., , ••• ta.
Ttllf'HONI
ANSwtRING IURUU
835-7777
REAL ESTATE
SYNDICATIONS
SS.lot .. s11.ooa Tn Shel·
~ ·-latmte IJ1ft'lt1Mrti'I. lt4. P..........Wp 1....-.i;ts • .,.11.
9'1• t• tii•M wlle til••llfy.
C•ll fer ep,.lt1l1Mt1t t• diKUU.
ttih t<f P9 et p1oftt•bl• tu Mn·
i"'I l"ft'llll9'11t wltll • p1•fH• P•••I.
ROllllT M. ARMSTl.OMCO.
146·11 DJ 96J·l•GJ
Aawc. VIII ... Ifft ~_...
USE COMMON SENSE
FOR -O·T.C· MEDICINE
~ TIRIT GRANT, R.n
\'ihcn a medicine d(){'s not
requlrto a p1 ('Scr111t1on, \1 r
commonly call it an 0-T·C,
or O''et the counter drui;:.
However, this does not mra n
that it cannot be harmful l!
taken incorrectly or to e.x-...,,
Thl" most lmportan1 con·
~lderallon for any drug In thls category 1< rommon
scnsr. 0.-. not f':IOpt'Ct ll to
cu rC' anything hut simrll' tiil·
n1ents. 81' 8\\A.re thal il lh""
sympton1s ivr \\ luch yott
tallc i-uch a dru~ re<:ur thBt
\O\l should st'f'k thl'" adv1('(> Or )•our phy"1c1an. \V"" i:;lnt k
and 11toll a ~N.'at many O·T.C produ!'ts and Bre pl!'BSl'd 1n give you gui dance for their
safe use.
YOU OR rOL'R DOCTOR
CAN PHOr\E US when you
nf!ed a delivery. \Vr \\ 111 de-
liver prompUy '' 1tl1out ex-tra charge. A grent many
"""r.le relv on 11~ for their
hen th nl'Nis \Vf' \\C]C"on1c rt>Q_uests for del11•rry iervice
and charge accoun ts
PARK LIDO PHARMACY
351 ""'ltot ·-Mewpeff ..._. 642•1 SIO ""o.11_,
,ear.. And he b certain
itiey'll reap big profits l:i.ler,
"hen they ~ll. JI they buy
\\'ell today.
Today. letters, signatures
and related material of a
;;tarlhng range of notables arr
being bought and sold by col·
lectors. To illustrate, the hst
includes H. L 1'ofencken, Rube
Goldberg Andrew Carnegie,
Helen Keller. Ameha Earhart,
?o.iax Beerbohm, Jane Addam!,
1-larry Houdini and Pat Cat·
rel!. the sheriff who shot Billy
the Kid,
Among today's most sought·
alter aulographs and JelteM
are those of Presidents
Washington and L 1 n co In .
authors Marlr-'J'wain. Edgar
Allan Poe. Herman 1.ielvllle.
Emily Dickmson and Wall
Whitman . modem au I hors
Ernest Hemingway, w·ilham
Faulkner, James Joyce. T. S.
Ehot. Thomas Wolfe, Eugene
0 Neill.
lt • Ml..:1.0
Am.ng the rarr:slH•llONI s.c"'"* Oelll'f"1 ..... tll , -h d lh .ror. IPW (-1..-hllk. aulograp s -an tor 1nwr•tl(• " 1nc1 .....
.. MW -· old CKI u
also among the mosl valuable 1'~n~~~ Trvst e1Ei1..
Ill 811'1Cf1 ... ~ '-" (11 art' those of explorers hi et S¥ ,..,., 1t11o rpfl kl
h!Efl'lfl ~ Jfl;o bit •IA Ml• Christopher C-Olumbus, Ponce h• .,,. et """ 11 ,_, Mt
d rt !'41rrt NC U'. 3'" rntd llE de Leon and lfernan o Co es. ~· eo. SS\\ .w \4 '" Adv
dramatists Btn Johnson and ~."~ :!:. r,::: l:'' ':"',11f.r
Chr1stophl!r /.1arloll'e, Capt Fkl u~~,,.~ ~\lo 7 JI
John Smith and Pocatfintas .u.i ~':"""~ ,,.. .... ~ F
And so rare are autographs AFA P•s JO t1 H J6ll ' 1. 11101nc l'l'>U ... 11c1 and letters by W 1 l 1 a 1Ts 1"' ~ '" 1 ,,,.
th t 11 It AVM Cl 10\'o l~ Hldoc II\ Shakespeare a arru on AbWl .,... ~ ,b o1-
beheves a letter by lh1s ~= P 1r" ';~ ~.,"'' literary giant would bring al AIS4l$1> w 11•1o 11111 1Wwn1 GI Ad~ ROI 4\o ~ ... -"Id ' least $1 000 000 Only five or Arte-s1-11 11 .. tluct Ml9 ' • Air lflO l'• J\lo HWt P11 six Shakespeare signatures Albff ~ ,,.. 11111ut11 P
L Albf.ttt 11v; 11 r1n C1 are known to e:us Akoi.c. s ~ "" '"'
Also very rare a r ~ != '£~ ~"" '! ::::::-c!"
aulogr.phs by Joseph Stalin Alico lllCI l! 1sv. ""' Nuclr ti Tedi Vii •Ill lnlor lftC not Jong ago a menu signed Au, a... ~ oM\ 1nta 01 .. · d Alld e""' '1• 10 Infra '"" by Stalin, Churchill a n AHvn BK 1• h "1 1n1" con
Truman sold for $5,250 -~~.., ~~: ~ :~:= b"
Prlm.'tly .. -cause II contained A11>ln ~ s~~ ~ lnB• w111 ""' Am 8111P ~ '°"" lnUll c. Stali.0'1 slpal11re. !'Ei c~ 1~~ 1:11o :~ ~~~'.:: By contrast doc u men ts A.., e~• t.-i; tsv. 1 .. k1 'ftC ' h A"I Flf\I ~ :M\4 leklll Ut signed hv Napoleon are wort A"' Furn , "' .coll Fl. . ' , I od tAmG"' S3 "" eoWlnC relatively hit e I ay -no A Mie~:Uc• nv. »Yr ..., w11
more than $100 for most ex· Z:: ~·,~ ri~ J!;::::,,F
amp!es Reason · Napoleon -011. ~ m 11ry F111 t.dwtn fl Im ~IE ~ M 5'gned a total of some 500,000 ..,..., In 10.. 1~ 1eo1 c., .. _ Arcs 11'1111 SI-. ._ ICMI Ind document! Nor do autograpnl) AA:I Miov lNt 1:N. 1ea11r s11
t h ArkMGP l~ !•I.lo kll'5H rf by most movie s ars ave "'1i:w1c 1ru u 1e11var
special value; there simply ~= :.:" :u~ J~ ~=~~ are loo many of them around. A.Nin 19-'o 11111 Ka.,_.. • ,\SPefl SY 6 •V. ICMr T• Among the exceptions, Greta A.Ct u 61\lo ""'•it-c.
d I b AHGal I.I IS lSYr ICaH.i-t Carbo. W. C. Fields, Ru o p Auto sc. ,,,_ 7\'i 1Ct110M A
Valentino ::U;:.MA1 1~\:o~1;. :~~s~c
Among living people, the Ban Pn•C 1~ 1 w...,,11 EH Barie H~ 11+.clf ICt~t Fib highest price paid to dale was B••"' 11:11 21Vtdll I(·~ C111" Birr"" " •11 •V, 1t..,.1 PC $3,000 for a letter by , Jae· Bau .. " F •s•;,, <U"1t. 11:1,,. Int B•11mr11 .01., 61 ICI""' El quel1ne Kennedy Onassis to &•1'11 Mii n'" 2s 11:11~ c.
I 8 · t · h Bl«'lm ~ )4" ICM& vo. an 1mporluna e r l Is B-.fltw F 11\IO 1w. unce 111 •
stranger explaining why she ::.n:_ ~' !-m !:"" t::i: ::-
couldn't send him the $2.0 000 fl"• u~ ~ '''"I.anon In ' flltlb Ml ~ '''l l.Hdu t• he had requested on tbt e1•..,... w 111'1 1• 1.ie11 co.1 Bl•O S.... ~ •1~ I.tit c;..,, grounds that she spent as e1.1c11• ~ > L...,1, 1F
much a3 en a srngle party. ~H~11 ~ 1;: t~~~"'
11ooi11 t n~ )j Lot111w
Boor AH It 1t\'i Loft Cndv Bofl CtP U lN L1>1 Etrn
James Felton to Head llraoen •V. 1\lo LYnch t Brink.I 50,,. ~ Madllln G BrM$ $(.e , • .,... H Ma Plool
Brwnti Ar ll\oli l•V.. Mal Rlf'f' 11r.h a... 1t11oo ~ Ma111<.rt !UC~b M 1~ I,,,.. Manot C
lt(ll.evt 17'!. U\'o Ma••I Mf
llwl'!r>e!fl !.,.. '" Browr awn ~ ll'" """'Maul L,. :1t Le11 111.o 11\9 MC:Cor CtlW5V 27~ 21\lo Y
Camor ,. I'll "' le H :11vo Ill.hi tJ UV. le M
Ne,vport Center Group
James P, Felton, vice presi-
dent and dtrector of ad~
vertislng and public relation!
tor Avco Financial Services.
has been elected president of
the Nc"porl Center Associa-
tion.
The assoc1al1on represents
developers. merchants and
proless1onal people 1n Newport.
Center, organized to maintain
the beauty and pleasant work-
ing conditions in the multi.
m1lhon dollar c o m p I e x
overlooking Newport harbor
and the Pacific Ocean
Felton. former Los Angele~
newspaperman a n d ad·
vert1s1ng executive, succeed!!
Llovd 0 Johnson. commercial
marketing manager for The
Irvine Company. the assoc1a·
tton·s first president He will
l'Onllnue as a director.
Also elected \\'SS Llewellyn
Goodfield, secretary. Goodfield
is manager of N('wport Ce1ter
for The Irvine Con1pany,
Other officers of th'
•
1.000's OF OIL PAINTINGS >
WHOLlSAlt WA.RlHOUS( ~
OPlN TO TH( PUILIC
50°/o OFF
161' E. EDOIGEJI, Slif'ITA ,t.NA
1ssoc1at10n are Reed Bauman,
•f the Abson Company, vice
president . Frank A Rhodes.
.Jr., of Causey and Rhodes.
vice president and Bill D
\Vhitman, of Security Pacific
:1nnon I «I 11'11 -''" :1nr.O P A I'll kl '" Cu Mlla )ti., 2~ t:" Cap 5wtl ,.,, th "I YI
Ca•ln Alf' J>.io "" ldlO c, Cap TK JI• ~ ldl-.i Cart CP .«1 ~ ldW GI Ca<te Bl• l'-J\\ Mllllpr (1<1 GrP 2• 1H4 Ill Muo t11c NG II H"-I,,... !fl (11111111 t I) U"7 Mp11 Ct tmle• ?l •;. ~Ok '-\(n AT National Bank treasurer. c ... ,.., PS 111• 1''"" "'1"' vr G ' c..e.,y I.a~ 11\'I U A1cll Other d1recU>rs include Jack than« A 2n. 2''" sci
Barnett, Newport Harbor ~~ ~:~ 1~1 1~ """"' ~e~
Chamber of Commerce; ~= t;i, ,~%. 1r"' -: t
James Edward!, Jr. of Ed-~\,~'" ~......, n ~"t,1
wards Theaters Circuit, Inc.· ChrkSt 1:u '" 1tT• WT ' CllrlsS J>f llW la ltll M Tonv French, Col dwell, :11V1 M1t1 15 1~ , c1u1:1
B ;_ d C ClllnUt A 2,... lt°"' Mlll'L!11' anAer an om pan y ; c1tinu1 B 21\1 21\1 Mu•pl\ ,.
Douglas A Ross of the ~::~~n.e"'11 ~ 31~ ~tr .~ Newporter Inn and Al Cllntn O•I • ·~ N., •• Cp Cl<>W CP 19\fo l~ N1tC11 At Weinert. of Weinert -Clark Cw•• "' 4 Nil GM! Ce>llln Fd 14\1, U~ 111 HOll FulC Je\\·els. C<>lon si. JJ\'o Jl'h Nat lib
tom Cir St .0 Hat ""'"
Escrow Talk
Scheduled
toml ~ IU/, l'~ N P1l...t
Com G11 U IJ N S«Jlll! Comw Pa 1611 21:\11 NII S-Com Hllll U"" 1~ Na! SllYr Com P•Y lJV. 11 N EnvGE"
CIT\PI t"I ltlilicUI!. NJ PU! G
(mp llUI ..... ,,,. Nk lllMI F
t.....i Tee .... flit Hlt11n A tomrft 2\lt 1~ Nlthn I
con PaP 11 .. n n NoC1r Go
Con Al>(k 7'1'1 Jin Eur on ton1•an J Jiii w Na!G C-• lb 13'1' 14 P11Sv c ... enc:.. Jl"' l4''" Mo~ll C• "Your inheritance taxes and toni s '"" s Muct 1t1e C.0.m Yr. N 10 llV• M Other aspects Of property tr1wlrd IS lW. lo An
h " II Cr<>11 Ca 32\'J Jl'lo lo Ftrr O)l'ners Ip \.\'] be disc ussed trYI Rt• 1\.1. MO II Sh•I•
by Lucille Boston, attorney ~~~rt~ ::t 1i~o::1csc.::C
and Cahfornia State lnher1-g:~~' '-;!-1~,1m o.~~11
tan Tax appraiser at the o ... CP '"' 10 1..-TP ' Oat• 0.1' IV. 6tlo 0...11' NA monthly meeting of the oat• Giet1 n v, :i. o., c.11 ~ C E Oita Pk1 '" 9V. Pal>tl Br v1ange ounty ~ s crow oata1n P '"' ,..., PK c; 1111 Association to be h•ld Wedne .. -o.vi. Fd S\t ' P1kuo "'" Oa'tfn lfn '' 20 Pancol day at the Airporter Inn 18700 OtLuc t JJl'I 1•\\ !'aroon o ' Ot<or I" 10 lfM.io P1rk O< f\facArthur Bou I e v a rd , o.1t1b A• ""' JO'lo Pe••• H
N B h Otlhl O•I ll 11'~ Per~v Ge e\\')>Ort cac o ' tanT 11"' 111.1o "'""' H
Dinner at 1 30 pm "'Lll ge~~;·t~ 'l,,. '~~ "!~1:,••; follow the social hour al 6 JO Do1m Crv 11" !Mio 1 .... 11e • Oovttl "1> 11.oo Hll •Yl Or p m Q,,l!rori ·~ l1~ ~ffrl Ml ~11ss Boston earned her J D g::c,, ~~ ,?'• ,:J!. ::.''~.~
(Juris Doctor) l11w del!:ree at =plu l~i.. l'r.! ,.:,,:;':w
1he Un1vers1tv of San Fer11an· 8::1o J~ ~~~~ ~ ~::~~ do Valley College of Law and Ovnllln o n 1'~ 1111 .klO 0vP1•P II~ l 'IO lllllo GI has studied JOUrnahsm at USC O\lrlron 16•.r. 1~ 11q1on
nd h d Wood El Pain! II~ l"lo iaom1 A a mere au 1s1ng at · Eat1n sn l•I\ 1•"-m11r1n
bury Coll~e· She ~rverl for ~~1"L~~ in: J 1., !:.':''Ht<
]5 years .is a 1nerchand1sing ~lr.i: i) 1~~ ,!~~ ~,,:",.,M
executive for rel:ul firms 1n Elba ~"'' ''• Mt ro Goll
Lo I Elatr flt I'~ Ill. Pruct Min s Angeles and also ias ex· E1K Nll(I "'• l'"" ubs NM
perienct in selhng real f'Sl<lle. ~::1·~ ~:: ~ ~::;t.~Ht
Currentl 11 shP •~ actl\I! in £1ec:t• en "• s·~ P11••P•
civic
11ons.
• • • Em11$ Ool 11' 1 ll"o P B..,Mt and pohllcal organi1a. i;,,..,l'Y c '° i1v. Pu10 ca•
Factory Se r
DURAN T Okla.
11-laralhon f\lanur:icturing Co
announced its subsidiary R
G LeTourJM"au , Jnc , 1o1 i!I build
11 factory here to makt rl('r.·
lrici.11 component~ for heavy
r.ar1h moving m:i<:h1nrry at
a f'OSI of $.) m1lhon It \\•111
have an 1n1t1J;1! \\'O tking force
of 75 to 100 and this could
reach 400 on a l1o1 0-shi fl opera·
lion some time next year.
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t
' .. Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
, -.. ,------------, CW..I ..... l .. atw o,.
•
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
I
I
:f8 DAILY PILOT
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REG.175 $38
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'
MICHIYO ARITO OF THE TOKYO ORIONS BARELY MAKES IT SAFELY BACK TO FIRST BASE DURING WEDNESDAY'S GAME WITH THE ANGELS. THE ORIONS SCORED FOUR IN THE IOTH TO WIN, 5.J,
•
Benefit's fo-r but Angels Need ·Help
By ROGER CARLSON
Of 1~1 O•llY Pilot Sllfl
It was billed as a benc[il exhibition
game between the California Angels and
the Lotte Orions of Tokyo to aid stricken
ex-Angels relief ace Minnie Rojas.
But cunsidering the shape manager
Harold "Lefty" Phillips' Angels are in,
pe rhaps it's the Halos who are in need
of help.
"We were in belier physical shape
last year at this point and we really
ha ven't hit a lick th1~ spring," lamen!ed
the Halo skipper follQ"'i ng his team's
5-1 IO-inning loss before 8,085 at the
Big A.
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
Deaf Player
1' op Scoring
1
Kentucky Prep
DANVILLE. Ky. !AP) -Ernie Epps
averaged 37.7 points a game this season
-tops tn Ken tucky prep ranks -yet
no cullege bAsketball scouts are knocking
at his door.
The handsome, 18-ycar-old blond ls
going lo college. however, and continue
to do the thing he loves most -play
basketball .
~rnie, who also has been a high Jumper
and a shirting quarterback for the past
t"o seasons. attends the Kentucky School
for the Deaf.
This fall he plAns lo enter Gallaudet
Olllege in Washingt0n. D.C., only liberal
arts cullege for the dear in the world.
Totally deaf since birth, he is a top-
notch sl udcnl and president of his class.
Hitting 56 percent of his field goal
atlempls and ~rabbiniz 20 rebounds a
g1me. Ernie. a j?uard, was the No.
1 player nn his l<'am .
"Ernie could play college ball easily."
1ays Edward Hyden. his coach. "He 's
smart and he'i; easy to ('f)ach."
"Bu1. it would be just about impossible
for Ernie to play ball at a regular
coJ\eg! and get his education. too."
Hyden i;aid. "Ernie and hrs parent.s •Mr.
and Mrs. Ernes\ Epps of Renton. Ky )
feel \hf' s.<1me way. He wants lo I:et
an education.··
"A few schools expressed 1n1crest 1n
hlm," said Hyden. nam1ni:: Tennessee,
New ''ork Un1vers1ty . Mary I and,
Oklahoma, Memphis St11te alld Ohio
University.
"But he 's J{oing In 11t!enrl Ga11.:iude1."
HJden st1id. "JI has a full-fledged athletic
ptpgram and F.rnie probably "'ill get
a.schol.:ir:rihip on h1i; gr11dec;.
Nearly all the 330 sluclcnL~ at ErniP"s ~I 'turn out for games -cl.<1pp1ng,
yelling and s1p;nalling encouragemPnl to
players In sign languaize.
''Th<'y cheer all the lime." Hyden
said, ":ind. Clf ('f)urse, they J{et excited
every lime Ernie does something."
Ernie scored 56 p<llnls 1n one J{amr
He has spent the better part nf 12
"'18 al 1ne 148-year~ld institulirm
located in this "lurgrass 1nwn of 13 000.
~ slarled pla~·inf.: basketball when he
•;is nine. Sfn('e then. h!:' hl'l!i practi('(>rl
'-' avtrage of lwn hours a day, every
l•y
''Ht'.'! up here at I.hr RYm practicing
t ll the l!mr." sa1rl Hvc1£'n, "\Ve h11ve
l'l chase him away before we can close ~ ..
The major problem of late has been
the flu. v.·hich has hampered Jim Fregosi,
Syd O'Brien, T,ony Gonzalez and a cuuple
of others, according to Phillips.
They'll try again Friday night at
Ana~im Stadium when Clyde Wrighl
opposes Los Angeles Dodger~ hurler Don
Sutton.
"We'll start Tom Murphy and Andy
Messersmith Saturday and Su n day
against the Dodgers, bu1 nn one will
go over six innings," says Phdlips.
Wright 's start Friday put.s him in
rotation to take the mound in the 1971
opener Tuesday night against the Kansas
City Royals.
Same Old Story.
Despile the loss Phillips Wl.!1 pleased
wiIB the pitching of Rudy May, Lloyd
Allen and Dave LaRoche.
"One of the few good spots tonight
was from our first three pitchers. They
pitched well -as good as I've seen
this spring,'' said Phillips afterwards.
May toiled six innings and was
responsible for one run on rive hit.J
while Allen pitched two innings of hitless
ball and LaRoche faced three batters
in the ninth.
The, Angels appeared to have things
going their way in the bottom of the
Everything Looks New
--Everything but Halos
Nev.• year, new unHorm~. new players
here and there and new lights al
Anaheim Stadium.
''et 1971 for the California Angeli;
Tooks for all the world like most of
the Halos' other 10 major league seasons
at this juncture of the embryonic cam-
paign.
They are next lo last in Cactus League
(exhibition ) standing~. Pitching'.' Well .
it looks like the bat boy has done most
of that so far. The Angel mound staff
'
01.EHH WHIT•
-Jf'HITE
WASH ---
has given up an earned run average
of 5.02 per game for the exhibition
season.
Batting'.' That's .251 for the team -
hardlv what you'd call healthy. The
guy the Angels swapped the potentially
great Aurelio Rodriquei for is a g a i n
looking like he needs a lrans£us1on of
hitting fluid .
Ken McMullen is hilling 11.1 a .217
clip and probably is ~oinj;l to be' watching
a lot of games from the dugout w i th
Syd O'Brien his replacement.
Defense'.' The Angels should be much
better. what with Kfn Berry in from
the White Sox and a tremendous out-
fielder. But even the multi-talented Berry
can't save Alex Jo}lnson.
~1aking one befieve lhe '71 A. n g e I.~
are going to have to fight for their
lives to stay in the first division was
\\'ednesday night's game with the Tokyo
Or1ons as .Johnsnn dropprd 11 fly hall.
"A'as nearly p1ckeri off base I a t e r in
the game and also got the Angels'
first 1971 hit In the A1g A.
* * * Whatever the Angel~' desliny this
11eason, they surely de~erve a second
hel pin g nf credit for pulling on \\led-
ne11day night's bene fit j;lame for :\Honie
Rojas.
And sn dn A numher nf nlhtrll. The
Angrls kicked in the 11ate receipts lo
the Ro jas cause. The Orlons cnntrtbuterl
Sl.000. Sixteen Anaheim po 11 rt' m e n
donated th eir wages for the nl11:ht to
Roja11.
A Japanese manufacturer 11:ave i\tlnnie
a rorlable rolnr lelevlslnn 11el. And the
8,~ fan s on h11nd gave Roja& a standing
ovation when be was helped off the
field In the wheel chair.
It was a touching slcht lo behold:
A man wbn once drf'W the m1r of
Angel crowds ror his magnificent rellef
"'ork in 19'7 now barely able to move
his handir as the aftermath of lhal ac·
<'ident that killed twn of bl1 children
and left him paralyzed.
Seeing him wheeled on and nU lhe
diamond must have left 1 lump lo more
than one throat.
* * * &!sides the dignitaries who sho"·cd
up for the game -basfball com-
missionfr Bowie Kuhn and Angels owner
Bob Reynolds -was someone who has
to be labeled the most eager 11rson
in altfndance.
Someone left a car in the parking
lot with the doors locked, lights on
and engine running. That surety offers
food for active imaginations.
Laver Breezes;
E1nerson Wins
MIAMI (AP) -Unseeded Nikki Pilic
of '\''ugoslavia laced sixth seeded Cliff
Drysdale of South Africa today in Ille
$50,ooo Aventura World TeMis Classic.
Ninth !feeded Dennis R11lslon of Bak-
usfield, opposed eleventh seedfd Tony
Roche of Australia.
In evening singles competition Wed-
nesday, Roche beat third seeded Ken
Rose wall of Australia 2·6. 6-3, 6-2.
Anoiher si ngles match saw ei~hlh
seeded Roy Emerson of Newport Beach
slop Fred Stoile 6-4. 6-4. Rod I.aver of
Corona del Mar upended Dick Crealy
6-4, 6-2.
F'iflh seeded Tom Okker of 1he Nrther-
lands came from behind to beat Andres
Glmeno of Spain ~7. 6-t. 6-4.
Top ~ed John Newcombe of Australia,
former Wimhledon champ. defeated un-
llC('ded Marty Ric~.~en, fi-4. fi-4.
L::ivcr and Rmfrson riu!l11~te<I the un-
~<>eded l('am of South Alrica ·.~ Fred Mc-
f.1illan 11nd Bob Ma11rl 7-fi. 5-7, 11nd fi-4.
Egypt's Tsmarl F.1-Shafei. a crowd
plcasrr ;ifler an rarlier upset v\clory
over Arthur Ashe, dropped a hearl -bre11k-
tI In Pi!ic .
Pilic dropped the Egyptian 6-7, 6-2,
~2.
~lillio11aire Stars
' DAYTON, Ohio <AP J New
millionaire Art1!! Gilmore of Jacksonville
and Dave Robi!Ch of Kans11s are among
hfadl1ners rounding oul the East 11nd
\\'est team<; for the all-star basketball
gamf here Saturday artfrnnon,
t.ilmnre, Austin Carr. player of the
year from Notre Dame. 11nd .Jim
McD11niel.~ nf \\1e.!'l lern Kcnturk.v are the
all-American contingent on thr E:ast
leani. Thf! ,\lame will be telecast al 11
a m on Channel I.
Gilmore recently signed a multi year
contract with the Kentucky Colonels of
the American Basketball Association that
Is valued at 'more than n million .
The teams:
East -Austin Carr, Notre Oamf': Jim
rleamons, Ohio State: Charlie Davis,
WBke Forest ; Kenny Davis, GeorgelOwn,
K.v. Artis Gilmore'!, ,JackMnvil/e;
('.eorge Jackson, Oaylon : Jim
~lrDaniels, Western Kenlucky , John
Roche. South Carolina. Blll Smith,
Syracuse. Charlie Yelverton, Fordham;
ninth against the Orions.
But a leaping slab by second baSfmao
Hiroyuki Yamazaki stopped \\'hat ap-
peared to be a game·\\'inning rbi single
by John Stephenson and Sfnt the game
into extra innings.
lU!y Jervis, the fourth Angel pitcher,
was unable to stem the tide in the
extra frame, allowing four runs on three
hits .
Alex Johnson appears to be on hi!
way to repealing last year, reaching
first base safely five times (three walks
and a pair of singles), and committed
the only ~rror of the nighl.
.\
Lakers, Upstart
Bulls Collide
In Fifth Game
INGLEWOOD ~AP) -The Los Angeles
Lakers and Chicago Bulls meet here
tonight for the advantage in a strange
Nalional Basketball Association playoff
M!ries in which the home team has
won each game aftfr trailing al the
11.arl or the final quarter.
The Lakers. 11s the home team. draw
the fa vorite's role and most of the
pressure, since the te11ms tflurn to
Chicago Sunday for lhf sixth game in
t he best-of-seven ser ies that now stands
2-2.
Thus far the Lakers have relied ori
the rebounding, shot-blocking and in-
t imidating of Wi!t Chamberlain and the
shooling of Gai l Goodrich and rookie
Jim McMillian.
The Bulls have countered with the
medium-range marksman~hip of Rob
Love end the ell-round play of Jerry
Slo11n and Bob Weiss.
Chamberlain, the 7-foot·I center whose
scuring has bttn modest but whose board
"'Ork and defense have been awesome,
credits Weis11 with leading Chicago back
from a two-gamf deficit
"Weiss has been !hf difference,"
Ch11mberlain said after Tuesday night's
112-102 Rulls vic!ory. "He has had two
ex<"'eptionat games"
The balding 6-fool·2 guard. nQrmally
a reserve, 1s a llke!y starter toni~ht
aftfr his 19·pnlnt , 13-assist take-c harge
pcrrormance Tuesday.
Meanwhile, thP Lakers must cont,.nd
"A•ith Love, the 6-root-8-all-star forward
He ha~ avfraged 30 points in each
of the four g11mes. mostly by Laking
his m11n in close, faking him off balance,
and releasing a head-high jump shot.
The Laker with the most success in
stopping Love has been reserve Rick
Roberson . but coach Joe Mullaney has
felt the Lakers would sacrifice too much
speed anrl ~hooting if Roberson st.arted.
Rull11 roach Dick Motta. also aiming
for more speed, h;:r,s elevatfd cent('r
.Jim Fox to the starting lineup anrl
;ilso used former Lakfr Jim King at
guard. J
King wa~ also 11 parltime coach after
Motta was kicked nut 1n the third game
for arguinR with the referee and refusing
to leave the court. On Wednesday, i\'BA 1
commis..,ioner Walter Kennedy fined Mot-
ta $1,500.
Nil Pl.lYO,,S AT l 01.AM(ll
T1.,i.,M
It•!-C•"l1rtn<1 i •mll!f!ll•
rfl1l•d.il)ll11 11 1111umoro,
Atl•nll "' H•w Ynrk WHI..,., Cenlortf!CI i1mlllfl1h
MllWIUkff VS 5•n ''""""0 •t Oe-l11'1d, (II•'· Cll!clllfl 11 l.01 Anoe1~
l'rl41y, A•rl! 1
Ha ,.,,.,.. ICl!fl<lu~
l1hlrt1y, .ll'rll I
llotltni C1nf1rt1W:I lt.,.,lflfl•ll
10.l!lmort ~I ~hllefltl~ll.
Hew Yc.r~ If All•n••
Wnl••n (lllf••-• litrnlllfll lt Ho t•mn scht'll111«1.
to Battle
Rich Yunkus, Georgia Tech.
Wes! -Willie Humes, Idaho State;
.Jim ,Irving. SI~ Loujs; Stan Lo\/e,
Llnivtt1ity of Oregon: Charles Lowery,
Prlgel Sound; CI if f Meely, Universitf
of Colnrsdo: Mike Newlin, University
of Utah ;
r.ene Phillips. Soulhern Methodist
Univer11ity : JBckie RirtRle. Universily of
Californi.11: M.11rvin Roberts. Utah Stall!;
Dave Robisch, Kan11es : Willie Sojourner,
Weber SI.ale.
JIM FREGOSI WHEELS MINNIE ROJAS TO SIDELINES.
Anniversu1·y of Deatli
Successor Calls Rockne
Motivato1~ Witl1out Equal
\VEST PALM BEA.Cir. Fla. (AP) -
It was 40 yC'ars ago Wednesday that
a tiny Airliner crashed in a Kansas
cornfield k1ll1ng lrgendary Notre Dame
football coach Knute Rockne .
"News of Hock's deal.h shocked lhe
"·orld." says forn1cr Rockne as~1stant
llunk Anderson. "It was like the Presi-
denl dyin,i;:. ''
Anderson , now 72, succfeded Rockne
as Irish head coach. Now ' retired, he
talked Wednesday about the man whn
was the cornerslonc of Notre Dame's
golrtcn football tradition
"Notre Damf h11rl JUSI won l"'O na-
l111nal championships in 1929-30.'. he said.
"Rockne was at his pinnacle. The workf
was al>out set to give hnn just f1nane1al
reward~ ··.
Rockne was flying fron1 South Bend,
ln California lo take a movie offer
v.·hen the p1onct!r Fnrcl Trimotor ptun!(cd
into the quiet of th.at Kansas countryside
on March 31. 1931.
"Rock had a IO·yl!-ar ('Onlract al ·
$10,000," recalled Anderson, who started
a.~ a S500-a-year parll1mer on the Notre
Daine slaff in 1922.
Anderson and his wife . ~1ene, live ..
In A lakrs1de ap11rtmen1 He golf'\ almost
P\'rry de~". shooting In tht' low 80s.
Hunk -h1.~ re11l name I~ Hfartlry -
JUSI got over havin~ 11 Aonmalignant
tumor removed from his bladder
"The legendary George Gipp got me
to go to Notre Dame as a 170-pound
guard," he said.
"Th11l was 1918. I played one year
or high school rootball with lhe Gipper
in our hometown of Calumet, Mich."
Rockne's greatest coaching asset, 11e-
cording to Hunk 's active memo ry, "was
his abihly to handle men. He knew
v.•hen to pour on !he heat or pat lheir
fannies: He knew what il look lo motivate
every man."
Anderson , who won 67 percent of his
Noire Dame garnes aflrr Rockne'll death,
went on to coach lines at North Carolina
State. Michiga, Cincinnati and in the
pros with Delroil and Chicag.o.
"I think Rock would win big today ,''
he said. "Hts fiery speeches turned Ull
Stare, Mictiigan, Cincin11atl and in lhil
on back lhen . He'd rind the right method
today Ill' 11.•ai; brill•ant and a m11n with
his mind iust doesn't become a loser."
Anck-,.~n l'lflirl Rockne, a wiry 170-poun.
dt>r. w1uld "show his ends how to p\aj
by ,..,;ng into the S('rimmage htmselr.
\ti\ : halfb1u·ks try to block him . They
us11nlly m1sSf'd."
''K.(}('kne w11s toui:th," s a Id Anderson.
"R11! ht fl('Ver r11~sed murh. HP wasn't
likP Vinti' Lombardi. but hi~ wnrds still
~rt to the Notr" Dame p\11yer1 , • _
he u'as a motivator "'•lhout equal.''
I
' ' ' • • r .
PETE PIJL
;Hard Work
·Keyed Pijl's
ln1proven1ent
By CRAIG SREFF
or!"'-01nw 1>1,.1 s11u
Two years ago Pete Pijl was Just
an average baseball player at Estancia
High.
And when he matriculated at Orange
Coast College last season, things didn 'l
change. As a part-time outfielder on
the Pirates' freshman-dominated squad,
Pijl (pronounced Pile ) batted a meager
.192.
But Pijl's batting and fielding has
been vastly Improved in the last year
-and OCC coach Barry Wallace says
it's mostly a matter of hard work.
Pijl currently leads the Pirates in
hitting with a .449 average, and also
paces the Bucs in runs scored £15),
hits (32) and is second in the rbi category
(12).
"He1s 100 percent better than he was
last year," says Wallace, ''and it's due
lo extreme hard work and dedication.
"He's spent a lot or time in the
battlng cage and he has wor ked real
hard with weights and improving hiit '
throwing arm. Since last season he's
concentrated on baseball nearly 100 per·
cent, working real hard in the summer
and winter months.··
The >11. 165-pounder has gone hilleS!
In only two of the Pirates' 17 games um season -and that's one reason
why Wallace has made him the leadoff
batter.
"Actually he should probably bat se-
~nd or third, but he give3 us such
a big lift by getting on base so much
that we've left him in the leadoff spot,"
says Wallace.
Although Pijrs biggest improvement
tias been in the hitting department,
Wallace says his outfield play has also
been great.
"We've moved him from right lo center
field this year becau.se he's such a
take charge guy out there. He's a great
leader in the outfield and he's always
la.lking. Plus he's got the strongest arm
of any of our outfielders."
One added factor for Pijl's overall
improvement is his attitude.
"Thars why he's improved so much.
He decided lo become a better ball
man and he's a real winner . He's half
the reason why "·e're playing bell.er
ball this year ."
Pijl is plaMing to attend Cal State
(Hayward), but that idea couJd change
if lhe right offer comes his way following
the 1971 campaign.
20-gaine Stars
Boswell, Tia11t
Out to Pasture
ORLANDO. Fla. I AP1 -Oa\'e Boswell
end Luis Tian\, a pa ir of former ZO.game
winners, y.•ere given tne1r outright
relealie \\'ednesday \\·hen they didn "t
measure up to e-xpeclat1ons a1 lbe ~1in·
riesota Twins baseball training camp.
"I tried to makr a deal for bolh
of thern but couldn "t,"' said 'fy,1ns Prrsi·
dent Cal Griffith.
lie added thal all other American
League clubs had passed on Bosy,·rll
~·hen y.•31,·ers y.·ere asked earher 111 the
week. 1
Bosy.·ell sa 1d he planned to try out
\l'ith Detroit : Tian!, y.·i th Boston,
&swell is 26 and T1anl 30.
&th are righl·handers y.·ho had injury
problems la st season. •
Boswell, who posled a 20·12 \1on·lost
re('(lrd <ind 3.2.1 earned run averaRe y.•ith
the Twins in 1969. slipped to 3.7 last
season. lie had painful SY.'elling~ of tbe
ankles in spring lra1n111g and nagging
arm and back troubles during the regular
6ea50D.
The temperamental 6·foot·3 fastballtr
also slit a tendon on his hand while
f1leting a fish and lost some pitching
time for that.
During his top season two years ago.
he Y.'3S out about 10 days afler a fight
by then ~1innesota P.1anager Billy P.1artln.
Tiant pitched for Cltveland 1~9 and
posie<t a 21-9 re<'Qrd With i 60 ERA
JD 1!168. He dropped to 9·20 the follO\\'tng
year and wu acquired by the Twins.
'1be atocky Cuban 1tarted wilh a blaze
in 1'70, running up five victories without
lols before he felt his pit<:h1ng shoulder
.. pop" In a May 28 game-. He returned
to actioo Aug. 3 but touldn't find his
former tffectivere:s and was 7.3 f or
the year. Tne Twins also recalled p1td1er S<ll
Campi.Ii from the minor leagues Y.'ed·
ntad1y, raising their r05ter to 25, tht
rr:gular aeuon limit.
CdM's Ro ·se Combines Desire, Tale~
By PHIL ROSS
ot "" C'lllJ 1'1111 ltltf
A guy can work for years as a high
school track coach and only find the
mediocre type flf alhlcte y,·ho 'll give
Much extra effort.
Occasionally, 1hough. thal sarne coach
will inherit the kind of high school runner
who 1s not only ded1catC'd and willing
to exerl what he has in reserve but
(!,•ho is talented to boot
A fan1ihar face on the Orange Coast
area prep spike scene who falls 1m· •
rnediately and di rectly into this category
is 880 ace Nick Rose or Corona del
1'1ar.
And hilt coach. John Blair, will attest
to Rose's desire and competitive edge
al tbe drop of a feather.
Says Blair. '"Nick is the very good
type of self-disciplined athlete who
always gives it that something extra.
"lie runs his workouts very strongly
and always runs faster than what we
ast. of him or his particular group."
Blair should know, for he's been tutor·
ing Rose on the finer points of middle
distance running for the past three years
or so.
However, lhe amiable Sea King mentor
shrugs off any of bis own leaching
prowess and gives most of the credit
for Rose's success to Rose himself.
"Lei's face ii. a good athlete makes
a good distance coach," Blair says, "and
it's quite amazing what a good kid
will do ror you.
"Nick 1s very quiet and doesn't say
too much. But he certainly gets the
job done well. ..
A job well done in Rose's case is
running the 880 in the vicinity of I: 55
or lower.
The native of Etlgene, Ore. who has
his sighls set on the track-conscious
University of Oregon in that city. Rose
has yet to be beaten in 1971 and hr claims
first place [JICdals in the half frotn
both the Southern Counties meet at Iiun-
tington Beach and the Beach Cities in-
vitational at Newport Harbor High,
Y.'here the Sea Kings won the team
title.
Blair doesn·t foresee Rose losing '{o_
DAILY l'llOT Stllf Phel'I
anyone (b&rring injuries or other dif·
ficulties) al leJUt , possibly, until the
CIF semifinals or fina.11 ln May.
"The only kid ln our league who's
really close to Nick is the one from
Santa Ana Valley aad Nick already has
beaten him badly in our dual meet
with them," Bl.air mtntlons.
Although his '71 best of 1:55.8 is 1.1
seconds slower lhan his lifetime lop
clocking, set last season, lhe bespec-
tacled Corona senlor is hoping lo dip
down into the l :52 range in time for
the ClF fiaal!.
Last year, Rost finished seventh in
the sectlon and jwt missed making the
atate finals lo Berkeley by two plaCt.S.
Al a sophomore two years ago, he
didn't necessarily set the world afire.
r~.-
But Rose was able t.e go below two
minutes (1:59.7 to be exact) in varsity
880 competition before dropping down
lo run the Bee 1320 in CIF confabs.
He placed third in the section in the
1320 at 3:08 and has been a con.1istenl
varsity sparkplug, both in track and
cross country, ever since.
Apparently the type who also gives
the extra effort in the classroom, Ros•
boasts a B·plus average in a rugged
college prep curriculum and has even·
tual aspirations of going into the medical
research field.
However, in spite of his shyness, Rose
makes no secret of his next immediate
ambitions -the state 880 crown and
then a four-year stay from whence he
originally came in green Eugene.
Rowe With Dodgers
Anteater Baseball Team
Thrown Out of Tourney.
Jt"s definite -UC Irvine will nQl
be invited back to participate in the
Anaheim spring tournament because of
the ban by CCAA schools against the
Anteater institution.
Cal State (Fullerton), as one or the
hosts with Chapman, cannot invite UCI
and consequently the Anteaters will be
forced to look elsewhere for six games
to make up for lhe tour111ey dates.
Bob Pomeroy, head roach at Chapman
College. says invitations have been sent
HOWARD
HANDY
to at least 15 shcools to participate
next year. This means that UCI \vi\l
not be the only school unable to return.
"Arizona State has indicated a desire
to play Jn our tournament'' Pomeroy
says. ''And Stanford is ready to switch
to Anaheim from Riverside.
"\\'e also will probably add Cal State
I Los Angeles I and L<iyola University
as area teams.''
fessiooal experience as a southpaw hurler
and bas pitched batting practice. ior
the Dodgers be.lore.
* * * The name is the same and if fans
do a double take every now and then
y:hi\e watching the L<is Angeles City
College baseball team perform, it isn't
a mirage or a ghost they are watching.
The Cub shorlStop is none other than
the young son of former Chicago Cub
and Philadelphia Phillie Infielder of 10
years duration. Roy Smalley.
* * * Harold "Doc" Anderson , former
trainer for the Dodgers. was a regular
at tbe Anaheim collegiate tournament
last week.
Doc spent many years In tbe training
room, working oo such greats a1 Sandy
Koufa.x, Don Dryldale and other pitching
stars of the Dodgers before hanging
up his livery in favor of a more relaxed
(?)professio n in public relations.
Currently be is a resident of Fountain
Valley and spends his time. as a PR
man for Carroll Pallet Com pany. Says
he would like to get back into training:
on the college level .
* * *
CRACKLIN' ROSE -Corona de! ~Iar's Nick Rose
!left} and coach John Blair admire the team
trophy copped by the Sea Kings Saturday in the
sixth annual Beach Cities invitational meet at Ne\r·
port ~l1rbor J·ligh. Hose has <t c:areer best of 1:54.7
1n the 880 and has toured the half in I 55.8 thus
far in 1971.
This means that Cal Pol)' (Pomona)
is out and under the format of the
tournament, Eastern Michigan will not
return after being here two successive
years.
Ed Newland, coach of the CINA A.Au
\Valer polo teams from this area with
UC Irvine players as a backbone. v.Mll
be without the services of one of .fiis
top players from last summer.
S11orts Clipped Short
Bill Leach, a graduate of UCI and
one of four CINA team members to
tour Europe with Newland and a U.S.
all·star squad last summer, has decided
to forego water polo in a bid to n1ake
the Olympic team as a kayak specialist.
Asher Holds Bowling Lead
"The y arc such nice guys.'' Pomeroy
says, "we probably will invite them
back again in two years time but \\·e
feel y.•e must give the public different
teams every two or three years."
This means. of course, with exception
of the two host schoo ls. every other
school that enters has no more than
a two-year longevity period.
Don't shed too many tears fo r
Ne\\'land. however. as the CINA tea1n
has Ferdy Massimino and his brother
John Henry (Stanford~. Mike f\1artin,
Bruce Black. Rich Eason, Dale Hahn
and most of the other member1 of
AKRON, Ohio -Handsome Barry
Asher or Costa 1.1esa took the earl}i
lead in the $100.000 Firestone Touma·
ment or Champions Wednesday with a
218 average for 16 games.
Asher had a lll·slick advantage over
1'.1ike Durbin of Dayton, Ohio. with 3.383.
going into today·s fmal eight-game quail·
fying round.
Durbin 1s a former Costa f\1esa resi·
dent.
In third place v.as sou thpa"· Dick
Batllsta of Astoria, t\.Y .. with 3,379,
followed by Dave Soutar of Gilroy, Calif.,
3,3.13.
Billy llard\\'1ck of IAJut~\ tile, l\y . \\"tn·
ner of this event In 1965. rounded out
the top fi\·e v.·1th 3.322 pins
e Blrtr1•·l1a1·rl Hcfirt'~
ACSTI:\. Te:i: -('o! Felix "Doc"
Blanchard. the All·An1erica fullback on
the great Army football teains of 1944-46.
has reured from the Air Force
Blanchard's mo:-it reeenl assignn1ent
"''as at nearby Bergstrcm Air Force
Ba5e. His ret1remm1 Y.as official Tues·
da)
Blanchard "'on !hf' l!Hii Jle15n1an
Trophy, y.·h1ch 1s g1\"en each year lo
lhe best college football pla~er 1n the
nation
Known as ··:o.ir. Inside.' Blanchard
and halfba('k Glenn Da\ is. '' ~1 r .
Outside," led Arm y to three undefeated
seasons.
Blanchard fley.· 113 jrl fightf'r m1ss1ons
in the-Vietnam \Yar. 1ncludmg 84 O\Cr
:\orth \'1etna1n .
e .4'C~s l .. a~1ir11r ."ifar~
HALEIGH . !\ C. -Th!' South College
/\JI.Stars defE'atcd the North All.Stars
114·99 Wednesday rught in !he "Million
Dollar Classic" behind the 30-point scor-
1ng of Southern Cahfom1a·s Dennis
Lavton.
The teams play again tonight in eolum·
bia, S.C.
e itliller 1\e1r ""'
TE:'>iPE. Ar11 Fn•1l L. !-tiller.
athlet ic director \I h!le Cal State j Long
Beach) \\'as b11ild1n_1! into a msior college
~ports power, has hr-rn n:1mrd 10 direct
the alhlrt ic proi.:ram al Arizona State
t:nh·ersity.
ri111\er. 39. \,·a~ narnrc1 \\edl)('sday to
~ucceed Clyde Smith. ASl! athletic d1rr<.-....
tor for 16 y~ars, "ho retired July I.
e Dodgers (i pended
PltOE:\IX -\\'1\1](' ~tcCo\CY scorPrl
rhe tv~ng run an'1adrlcda1~0.run hon1er
a.;; Ul( San Fr1111risco Giants heal the
•
Los Angeles Dodgers 9-1 in an exhibition
baseball game Wednesday night.
,\1cCovey doubled in the second inning
off Dodgers starter Claude Osteen. then
scored on a sacrifice ny by Tito Fuentes.
e Kings, Canuck• Tie
LOS ANGELES -\Vayne Maki scored
his second goal o[ the night y.·ith 6· 13
left lo play to gi\•e the Vancouver
Canucks a 2·2 tie with Los Angeles
in a t\allonal llockey League game
\\.ednesday night.
r.laki 's second goal. his 24th of the
season. can1e just 17 seconds after the
l\1ngs had taken a 2·1 lead on f\1ikc
Byers'. 27th goal of the season. Byers
deflected a shot from the point by
defenseman Gilles f\larottc.
e Fit1t1ero1a 1\1obs Tille
\\"EST POINT. "11".Y, -f\1 ike Finneran
and Cynthia Potter. with victories in
\\"ednesday·s competition, can gain r.e11'
di\•1ng titles lon1g ht in the National
.•\mateur Athleti...· l!nion indoor Chanl·
pionsh1ps at the U.S. i\1Ll 1tary Academy
pool
Finneran. an Ohio State s e n 1 or
representing the Santa Clara SY.'lm Club,
won the three·melcr e1·cnt.
The 22·year-o\d student gained 552.i8
points in the thr ee-meter competition.
w:ell ahead of Craig Lincoln, of the
l!ni1ersity of Minnesota. "''ho srorcd
533.79.
~l1!,s Potter scored a victory in 1he
\\Omen's one-meter y,·1th '427.20 points.
JI y,35 her third straight cro.,.,'Tl 1n the
t\AU event.
Former Olympic diver Air Force Capt
ri11cki King y,·as second with 412.68. She
is sponsored by Phillips 66. Christine
Loock ol the Panthers Boys Club, Fort
\\'orlh. S('(lred 40'J 97 (or third place.
e U.S. Tenm Falb
C.E;\EVA -Finland handed the Ln1terl
States its eighth straight defeat "' lhe
1971 \Vorld Jee llockey .Olampionships,
7.3 \\'cdnesday night and the Yanks must
now win 1he1r final game against West
(ierm;iny by al least h\e goals to avoid
relegation again to Dil'ision B.
e J'lo Slo1v Mollon
~!LA.'\. Italy -The Italian Soccer
ftderetion y.·ants the state-run television
network LO stop showing filmed game
<lction in sloY.' motion.
'J'he rea~on: lht' 5low·motion cm·
barras..'>es referees by re\ rahng the
rnislakes the-y make on the heir!.
Thi.s undermines confidence in ref ertts
• ·-
* * * and often endangers !hem \\"ilh physical
violence. the Federation says. It schedul·
ed a n1ceting later this \leek y.·1th the
tele1·1sion net11·ork RA!, \rhich shows
filn1s of all important Sunday games.
Don ftoy.·e. defensive backfield football
coach and tennis mentor al Golden \Vtst
College, will serve u a bahing practice.
pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgtrs
again this season.
the NCAA championship team. .
\Vorkouts began last week and continue
seven days a week until the Pan
American Games tryouts May 28-:.W.
• ;jQQlll VielUl"!I
TEJ\IPE. Ar11 .. -Heavy lulling by
Gary Aty.·cll. Clint f\1yers and Al Ban-
nister presented Arizona Stale t:etach
Bobby \Vinklcs 11 i!h his sooth career
\\'in as the Sun Devils dropped \Vyoming,
10-1. \Vedncsday afternoon.
"They asked me to come back.'' Don
said this week while warming up "'·itb
a GWC catcher prior to • Southern
California Conference ~ame.
Area Calendar
Rowe is no stranger tG tbe m a j or
leagues having btto a member of the
New York !\.lets in their early formBll\•e
stagt!'I. He bas bad considerable pro-
Sale -Odds & Ends
50 Pr. Athletic
Shoes -Values to 12.95
-On Sale At 3.95
Limited to stock on hand
Pennsylvania Xtra -
Duty Tennis Balls. Doz. 7.50
Wilson Xtra Duty Tennis Balls Doz. 8.35
Wilson -Dunlop -Bancroft
Davis Tennis Rackets
Badminton Rackets
Squash Rackets -Paddle Rackets
Tennis Dresses
Mens & Boys Tennis
Shirts & Shorts
Adidas Converse -Jack Purcell
Tennis Shoes
· Open 9 to& Closed Sundays
•
•
Baseball Mitts -Bats
Balls -Caps -Shoes
Sox -Score Books
Speedo Swim Suits
Champion Handball Gloves
Ace & Seamless Handballs
Puma -Spotbilt
Adidas -Sperry Topsider
Converse -B. F. Goodrich Shoes
Adler -Wigwam -Magic
Fleece Sox & Ladies Peds
Bikes-Parts -Tires
Tubes -Accessories
Racket Stringing
Bike Repairing
538 Center St., Costa Mesa
646-1919
•
•
Area Jaycee, Prep Teams
In Baseball Tourney Action MAKE THlN CUT F~ WET SAND
Case11 Stengel
' Orange Coast will face Los
Angeles City College and
Go~n We.!lt battles East LA
in the first round of the annual
Ca.sey Stengel baseball tourna.
ment WedneSday.
The affair is co.hosted by
CerritM and Golden West.
Orange Coast's game with
the Southern Cal iforn ia
Conference leading Cub$ is set
for 10:30 a.m. at Golden \\'est.
The East LA-Golden West
game will be played at 2:30,
also on the Rustler diamond .
L<isers of the two tills w;JI
meet at 10:30, Thursday, April
3 with the winners battling
al 2:30.
In two other first round
games al Cerritos, Wed-
nesday, Allan Hancock faces
Chaffey at 10:30 and Citrus
duels Cerritos at 2:30.
The consolation and cham-
pionship rounds will be played
Friday (April 9) at Cerritos.
If another game is needed
to decide the title, it \vill
be played the following Satur-
day afternoon.
Cerritos L!J the defending
champion.
Oreanslde
University High draws host
Oceanside High in the first
round of the Oceanside Easter
baseball tournament beginning
Monday.
Laguna Beach draws San
Dieguito and if successful in
the first round, will meet the
winner of the Poway-San
Ma~ duel.
P.fonday
Poway vs San Marcos.. at
Oceanside 10:30
Carlsbad bye.
San Dieguito vs Laguna
Beach at Oceanside 1 p.m.
Oceanside vs University at
Mira Costa College 2 p.m.
Bolsn Grat1de
La Quinta Slaps Trojans
In Baseball Clash, 12-3 .
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ""' 0.11., l'llel Sl•ff University High 's Trojans
felt the effects of a back-lo-
back situation Wednesda y
afternoon at La Quinta High
where Jhe host Aztecs flat-
tened the Trojans. 12-3 .
Coach Ken · Tratar"s
-..seniorless Trojans had just
come off a sparkling 3-1
triumph at Cantwell Tuesday
night. But the quick return
to competition Wednesday
took its toll early as the win-
ners took advantage or some
Mater Dei
l(eeps Pace,
Wins, 6-0
DOWNEY -Coach Bob
Wig mo re' 1 Mate r Dei
~1onarchs chalked up their se-
cond Angelus League bas~ball
\\'in in succession with a 6-0
gJapping of the Pius X War~
riors Wednesday on the losers'
diamond.
The Monarchs (3--21 remain
a game behirKI co -leaders
Bishop Amal 14-1) and St.
Anthony (4-1). victors \Vednes.
dav over Servile and St. Paul. ~fater Dei posted single runs
In the second, fourth and
seventh innings and enjoyed
its biggest explosion with
th ree tallies in the sixth.
Tom Cottage led off the
sixth fo r the \\'inners \l'ilh a
single but was Prased as Gary
Simpson 'got aboard on a
fielder's choice.
.-After a single by Jerry Lin-
; nert advanced Simpson one
: base, Mike Kem!'tlcsal socked
a base hit to score the latter.
Both Linnert and Kemmesat
\\'ere chased across the pla!e
on a double by sophomore
t-.1ark Stanbra.
ri-tater Dei 's initial run , in
the secood. was produced on
Linnert 's double and a single
by Simpson.
Simpson powered a homer
for the Monarchs' fou rt h in-
: ning M:oring while winning pit-
• cher Chuck Adams was knock·
• ed in by Bob Haupert's safety
· after walking and stealing se·
cond.
Adams and John r-..tcElwain
combined for a four-hit mound
job.
Mater Dei hosts SL Paul
on Saturday .
Prep Golf
•
shaky pitching and fielding to
build up an 11--0 lead after
three stanzas.
Reliefer Bob Patterson
finally restored things for the
Trojans in the bottom of the
third but by then the verdict
was safely tucked away for
the hosts.
Tratar's crew hit we 11
enough to win in most in-
stances. popping for a dozen
safelie s off La Quinta hurler
Tom Benkovich.
However. Benkovich stifled
the invaders for the most part
with good control, walking on-
ly three batters and was aided
by a dependable defense.
The Trojans had t h e i r
chances to gel back into the
game in the fourth inning
when they loaded the bases
tY.'ice, but could come up with
only a single tally.
Ed Call, Patterson and Tom
Walker singled to load the
sacks and Call came in to
score 011 an infield out.
Doug Bolter drew a free
pass to load the bases again
but Benkovich forced Mike
Bue to ground out te short
to end the uprising.
The bases were jammed
again in the sixth inning after
Tra tar"s nine got a pair on
a singled by Patterson ,
Walker's triple to righlcenter
and Matt Manriquez's single
to left.
Ph il Hancock and Steve
Fargo followed with base hits
but the threat ended when
second baseman Mike Ortiz
speared Call'!i soft liner head-
ed for right.
La Quinta's six-run third in-
ning came about with the aid
of a single, double, three er-
rors. three walks and a pair
of marginal infield hits.
Earlier Brian Vernoy had
gotten the winners out in front
by a 5-0 count with a three-run
homer in the second.
Univers ity's weary armed
mound corps gets a rest now
witb the nexl action slated
for April 13 against visiting
Rancho Alamitos.
Unl'l'trill'Y Cl\ .. '
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-··
.. ~-. -.
When the nnd bunker Is
damp, the forward and down·
ward movement of theclubhead
meets resistance. Consequent·
ly. it is necessary to ••skin''
the ball out of wet sand. Too
deep a cut would cause the
ball to remain in the hazard.
To make • thin cut beneath
the ball, be certain that your
lees sHde forward toward the
target during your downswing.
This tends to ktvel the bottom
of your swing arc.
When the sand is dry, the
cut of sand should be . onlt
slightly deeper. Unless your
ball is really sunken, never try
to "blast" it out with a h.uae
"divot." Remember, the sand
shot p, easier to control tt you
minimize the depth of your cut.
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FISK Salli-WIDE
TRACK WIDE OVAL
•GUARANTEED FOR THE
LIFE OF THE TREAD
•70SERIES-
·•flAISED WHITE LETTERS
24 44 .
010.u +~.95• W~·-•11, T~i.o/-
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FISK PREMIER
BATTERY
070-14 (6.95)
E70.14 {7.351
F70·1417.75)
F70.1517.75)
G70-14 (8.25)
G70·15 (8.251
H70-14 IB.5&)
H70-15 (8.55)
24.44
25.44
26.44
28.44
30.44
BUENA PARK BUENA PARK
• Ll11c.ol• •• Y•l1-y Y'9-. •
IJO\ h~k llYcl, Sii! lhtc•lt1 A-
!JJJ.JO~I
lh11rsdi)', April 1, Jq7l DAll V PILOT 3J
Vanguards
In 9-1 Blitz ,save$2~6
Souther n Ca l lfomla , 71
C-Ollege·s baseball t. am• RrAI n1PPIN Wll'nKIY . ,,_;. P~.pared f?r the spring bre.ak I tKl ~ IS ·~~ which begins next week with
Baptist Wednesday at Costa a !>t 'out o"' 'isiting LA IN~ OALLON~
Mesa's 1't Winkle Park. I 2
Coach Ken Moore 's
rLUSFE.D,
[lr. TAX
'"'"
2.38
2.5 1
2.64
2.69
2.84
2.86
3.05 ,
3., 1 I
Vanguards unleashed a 17-hi!
barrage on their unknowin g
visitors 11-nd improved their!
seasonal mark to 3-9. 1
Vanguard r1ghth1:1nder Tom i
Higgins became the f i r s t 1
Southern Cal pitcher to log
a con1plete game as he struck
out 11, walked four and scat-
tered but four singles while
allowing only an unearned run .
The \V1nners put the contest
rar out of reach by piling
eight runs into the first five
frames and then added an
insurance run in the eighth.
WMYWAIT1
\.9f YOUl'I ·-· Cf'llDlf
"'" ()fl YOUl'I ....
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'1l!i
c1a.13 11.001
C78-14 (6.95)
[78-1417.351
F78·14 (7.751
g~::~; !::~~l
H78-14 l8.551 H78·1" Ul.'i.51
J18·14 IS.85)" I
Jll-15 II.IS!• I
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16.00
20.00
20.00
20.00
22.00
24.00
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WHITEWALL 18.44
Wt4~£WJl.Ll r LUS fEO. ~~~ IX. TAX '"" 18.44 2.00
22.44 2 .15
22.44 2.37
22.44 2~4
24.44 ~·~!
26.44 ~·~~
28.44 3.0S. 3.12
30.44 3" ---~: .Allllflc<Kplu1 ..... .&l.Hlo9T .. , -. 'Wlllt.wal eiiv.
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MUFFLER
HEAVY
DUTY
Fttd!, (~IYtol1h, Phn\O.lt~• t.t?
0.-Cn. Oldott>Obll ... , P..,llott H ,11 ll•!rt1, c"";u.c,, en .. ,.... 11.11
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ALL MA.IOl
llANCS 797 ::.:..-::'."
Fo!co•n lf-6', o.,,. .... . MOTOR OIL
1 ... 1to1101 .... •~.i .... .
l{MQrf MUl'F~Fll fiU.lllAMTl!f
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COSTA MESA
1;200 H•rbor ~IYtl,
141-2011
•
SANTA ANA
14111 .. t SfTMf •f lfl.".i
1400 .... ,.. ...
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WESTMINSTER
•
111-1011
·.I
I
l tS! DAILY PILOT Thursd.11, April 1, 1971 /
Area Links Snow Outlook Good Martinez Nabs
ICCC Tourney For Vacation Skiiers
j
Richard M1rtlnei of Mission f Viejo Country Club, fired a
1J to win the pro portion or
1 pro-amateur tournament at
lrvJne Co1st Country Club this
week.
I Martinet, TCcently returned t from the pro tour to h1ndle
r 1 teaching assignment al
Mission Viejo, defeated host
pro Rllph Evam by one
t at.rokt.
I. A total of 10 PGA pros
and 40 amateurs participated
ln the event.
Bob Blum malched Martinez
to win the amateur segment
of the affair with a gross
score of 73 followed by Arthur
J;>oherty with a 74.
In the pro-am best ball -0f
partner's competition, Howard
E. Smith of Diamond Bar
teamed with Irvine's Forrest
Smith for a score of 63 while
Pinky Stevenson of Virginia
CC (Long Beach) teamed with
Bart McHugb for the same
&core.
/ti esa Verde
; John Farrow is the new
. president's cup champion at
: Mes. Verde Country Club but
~ not without a struggle.
Farrow and Kevin Wheeler
look 22 boles lo complete the
~ match before a winner was
determined.
In the only other match
completed over the weekend.
Bob Littleton defeated Dick
Mieste for the vice president's
flight crown.
In a best ball of foursome
tournament at Mesa Verde
Country Club of Costa Mesa,
Jim and Peggy Henderson
teamed with Paul and Doris
Buckles on one squad to tie
with Julie and Mike Rapport
witb Darlene and Tom Bouse
for top honors. Both teams
had SOs.
Rancho SJ
club at Meadowlark Country
Club this week.
Dottie Mulligan wa s the B
winner with Jean I-light the
C flight victor.
Next big event on the men's
club calendar is a member· ,
guest shotgun affair April 17.
The next day the group will
travel to Rancho Bernardo by
chartered bus for a da y-long
tournament.
El Toro
Jn a women's golf associa·
lion three-ball match' tourna•
ment at El Toro Country Club
recenUy, a tie resulted f-0r
first place honors.
On one squad were Mrs.
Chuck Abrahams, Mr. Everett
Vaughan and Mrs. Ralph Max·
fie ld with Mrs. Floyd Haxton,
Mrs. William Lear and Mrs.
Alfred Dibella on the other.
A tie also resulted for se-
cond place between one team
composed of Mrs. Len Saks,
Mrs. Al Tunnecliffe and Mrs.
Richard Martin with Mrs . Carl
Metten, Mrs. J _ S. Remy and
Mrs. William Cauther on the
other.
19tl• ll6le
Designer Robert T r e n t
Jones is well known in this
area as the designer of
Mission Viejo Country Club
'lalO< AJJD 7<0U, STVU
SINGER, 7lJWY CUT ~ 'R£CCR/JS
WRING TUE CJFF-5EJtS041,,-.~'
By ESTHER BILUNGS
OI fll9 ~ltr '1ltl 11•11
Easter week Is the holiday
of the year for many families
and studenl.5 . For sll:lflr1 there
js plenty of snow. Storms
dropped new powder list ~ek
to add to an excellent ski
bast!:.
Though the ski areu were
not favored by the storms,
the rest of the West has a
bounty of mow for vaca·
lioners.
At Mammoth Mounta i n
skiing is rated good to ex·
cellent. Trail crews (new this
season), shovel ramps, groom
snow , side sl!p the cornice
lip, trim branches, lill in
holes. ..chip ice ofr steps,
regulate lift access a n d
J!!eneratly try to do everything
they can to make skilng more
enjoyable.
June Mountain just north
ls an especially good area
for family skiing, with short
lift lines a special feature.
On the western Sierra
Nevada al Badger Pass in
Yoseniite National Park the
runs are groomed and packed.
Big Ea!f.er events are planned
to end the seasoo.
among others. He is_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ America's foremost go If
Charles N. Proctor, member
of the National Ski Hall of
Fame and recently retired ex·
ecutive of Yosemite Park and
Curry Co. after 32 years, will
be honored there April 8. course designer and his latest
venture into layout is tak·
ing place at Murietta H 0 t
Springs where an 18·hole, 7200-
yard course is under con-
struction.
One group that will be on
hand for completion of the
course is the Hollywood
Hackers who visited the spa
for ground br eaking
ceremonies and a tournament
at Rancho California Suoday.
Golden West Swimmers Bid
For Circuit Dual Meet Title
Farther north Dodge Ridge
has spring snow for its Sunday
NASTAR races.
Bear Valley has groomed
and packed the new snow for
a fresh · spring snow surface.
Janet Leigh, lmtess of the
recent pro-am race at the area
.r placed first with partner Jim Hermstad's crew Is un . T .. 10111t11111• ~c swim M•r1Q defea'·' in ci'rcui·t competi'ti"on 3 toOO mac111v r111v -1. Lo"' auc11, Heuga, former 0 I y mp i c ....u = 4' 1. Pisac11n1. 3:li.Ji l. medalist and direc'Ar of with a 2--0 mark. Friday's r111 ~rl010, l :l7.l; •. Cltr u1. J:~.21 ...,
meet is the last in conference 1ime ~n~:.,1~1f~,1.1~:s.1.o. T.,. NOC.ti winter sports for the Sierra
1,000 Ir•• -1. P111n1m CL-resort. aclion, prior to lhe Joopcham. Betcl\J , t :U .7; 1. N1 rco wlc 11
run throughout the day.
On the eutem alde of Lake
Tahoe Tannenbaum, Mt. ROlle,
Slide Mountain and Ski Incline
hive groomed, new snow.
Slide Mountain features ladies'
day Wednesday and Thursday
and baby sitting too. Tan-
nenbaum offers night skiing
Wednesday and Friday.
South Lake Tahoe ski areas
are Si~rra Ski Ranch, Echo
Summit. Peddler Hill and
lfeavenly Valley, the latter
holding NAST AR r a c e s
Fridays and featuring couples
day Th ursdays.
A toll-free number f~
Sahara Tahoe reservations in
South Lake Tahoe is available
by calling (800) 643-3341.
Lee Canyon has packed
spring snow and the ad·
vantage of all t h e en•
tertainmenl features of nearby
Las Vegas.
Just inside the Utah border
beyond Las Vegas is Brian
Head with an 85-inch snow
pack. This is one of the many
excellent Utah ski areas,
where the theme for the
season is Heroes Ski Utah.
The ne xt big Utah area
north of Brian Head is Sun·
dance just -0ut of Provo.
Formerly Tymp Haven, the
area is now owned by a cor-
poration -0f fOUJ including ac-
tor Robert Redford , hero -0f
the ski movie, Downhill Racer.
South and east of Salt Lake
City in Little Cottonwood Can-
yon lies rarned Alta, a higher
area where skiing is available
until long after interest in
the sport has died for the
season .
A powder haven during the
winter, die· hard skiers move
to slopes beyond the lifts for
equally fine spring skiing as
the season wanes.
AllP Is only about 11,) hours
from Southern California by
• plane to Salt Lake City.
Even closer is Solitude in
Big Cottonwood Canyon, wll.ll
Brighton just beyond. Alta has
120 inches or anow; Solltude,
116 anct nlgbt skiing; and
Brighton, 120,
. Just east of Salt Lake Cily
1s Gorgoza, which features
night skiing, on Interstate 80,
with Park City West and Park
City jUJt beyond.
Park: City ski arta J!I at
the edge of the historic mining
town of Park City, loaded with
atmosphere, entertainment
acccmmodations and night
skiing every evening but Sun-
day.
Snow Basin Is noM.h of Sa ll
Lake City, just ea.st of Ogden ,
and well worth a visit.
By staying in Salt Lake City
a visitor could ski one day
at each of these nearby
re110rts, Snow Basin , Gorgoza,
Park City, P11rk City West,
Solitude, Brightoo, Alta and
Sundance -and take another
day to tour the historlcal
landmarks of the capital ol
Utah itself.
Jackson Hole, Wyo., has
nearby Yellowstone National
Park as an extra attraction
to lts 15 inches of new sno\f
over a 139-inch base and spec·
tacular skiing in the Teton
Mountains. Easter studenl
rates are now in effect.
"FREE"
Sailboating
FRll YOUlSIL'
O' THlSI COSTS1
8 l1 r9• lnv11tm•nt e Hi9h Moori1t9 Co1h e R1p1irs I M1i"l•n•nc1 e Cl••11in9 Cho1•1 e ln1ur•nc1
IE A PU YIOYI
Yo u1 F1mily ot Girl Frit"d
Will lov• The lcl t•
Jn a women's club least
putl.5 tournament at Rancho
San Joaquin, Jeanne Griffin
was the winner with 'n follow ...
eel by a three-way tie for
second b.e tween Zola
Bartholomew, Sue Ewers and
Virginia Ide at 32.
The Green Acres television
!!how was well represented by
Frank Cady (Mr. Druckers)
and Alfy Moore <Hank ). Curt
Massey and Claude Akim tied
for first pla~ among the
Hackers in the low gross com·
petition.
Golden West College at.
tempts to wrap up the South·
ern California Conference
swim dual meet championship
Friday when coa ch Tom
Hermslad 's Rustlers engage
Cypress and LA Harbor in
a double dual meet a t
Cypress.
IP•111G1ntl. 10:00.0; l. s u 11 r" t" M ey I th k' I · pionships at Rio Hondo, April PtuG1nt . 10 11.11 •. wuton CLA on rom e s I c ass1c
c v111111. 10:>0.J; J. J1co b1 0" was •·nated •·wards pa y•'ng CALL LIDO lo1·17. t,P11td1n1), 10:32.1. TOI> NoCtl time: U\I ..., ..,..,on 1Amer1c1n RIY•r>. 10:11.1. costs -0f deaf youngsters who Lt• ktA '"'I'"'" • Good s11or1
GOLF TIPS
In the B night, Millie
Stevens was the wlnnet with
29 followed by Leila Brande,
.Jeanne LemaP and Vi Saxton,
all at 31 . Vivian Troutman
won the C flight with 30
followed by Charlene Collins
'and Pat Lackner at 32.
The D flight competit ion
'was won by Esther McNamee
with 32 followed by Barbara
Adamo and Nora Morales at
3.1.
Jn a low net tournament,
Fern Sproul was the winner
with a 74 followed by Dorothy
Wright at 75. Phyllis Stafford
won the B division with 75.
Betty Wallhall came in with
a low net score of 64 to -0ut-
dis tance sec-ond place Laura
Rasmussen (76) by 12 strokes
in the C competition. Marge
Thatcher won D fligh t with
75 followed by Anna Lee
Shetler with 78.
Meadowlark
Kandy Bransford and Anita
Apple ton tied for firsl place
Jn A flight in a least ~putts
tournament for the women's
It begins at 3.
Knight Duo Sets Marl{s
In Crestview Prelims
As expected. defending
champion Foothill's Knights
will be heavy fa vorjtes to hog
most of the spotlight in
Friday's Crestview League
swimming and diving finals
at the Knight pool.
Wednesday at the same
location, Foothill's Steve
Furniss and John Pettibone
set league records in the 50
(22.4 for Furniss) and 100 (50.5
for Pettibone) freestyle events
In the C restvi ew
preliminaries.
Foothill also Cflpped the t-Op
qualifying spot in the diving,
the third varsity event con-
tested in Wednesda y 's
prelims, as Mike Hastinss
rolled up 256.95 points there.
Tim Springer of S a n
Clemente quallfied for the
finals in both the varsity 50
and 100 frees while John
Leogue -0f Mission Viejo earn·
ed a finals spot in
and mate Joe Behm
JOO. V1nllv
the 50
in lhe
50 l•fl -1 Fur~lu (Foo tllll ll tl ~ jLltOu• <tcord) J. MUltr
rFoot~un :n.J ). J011~10I\ CFoo1111u1
l 3.J •. Sorlngitr !!tn Clem•ntt l '1.1
J. lllo11w ITustl"I ?3.t J. LfOll~ IMIH!On Vl tlo) 1~.I 100 !•~~ -I f'ett ibonf !Foathllll
.SO.S lLo•gue record \ 1 Smltn (FoPl!'lll!)
SCI l J011111or1 l Foot~llll !t.O 4. Sprl"'"' (Stn Cl•mt"lt ) !'I 1 J, Bel\m !MIHIOIO \/!ttol JJ I ' S.C:fllitr (Tu11inl •• 01¥1"11 -I M\~1 H11Ung1 {Footll/111
?Y 'S 1. M1rk Ht•lino• f !"oo•~lll l 721.fO l , Hobbl !MlulOIO Vltlo) 1'1 40 •. McCtr!llv (Minion Vltlol Jd.JO
J Ml!ttr IFoatnllU 115 JJ t s .... rr !l11stlnl !OJ.JO ·-100 trte -I Wllien (51~ Cltmtn•el 1:'6.J l Lvl• !Mlulon Vltlol J:JO S
l P1lcnlkc1I f!"oorhllll J·Gl I •. Coll•" tFoalnllU 1·04.4 5 Talco!! !~•n Ci.menle) 1.01.D 6 Prtmmltr {Tustin)
l :U •
100 lrodl~ldual medley -I Vo<1el (F0<trn1111 1:01 .J t Slr1cno n IFooth•ll l
1:07,J l. Wll1on !5•n Clfm~nl•! l:Ol.J • Grttn CFoolftltl ) 1:D! J S Jo:;tro (Minion v1,101 l:OSt '· SPtt• iTu•hMl 1·()6.7
JO !tot -l . MoCorll" ISJn (ltmtn!tl 141 ! ST\lrVO'O" IMl~•lon Vl•lo) 'II.! J, Bontb•t•~ (Foolft•lll
1•.6 •· Me~"' !Tu•!lnJ 'I! J J. \/Ir~
!~an (l•m•ntrl 16 l 6 All<ler>on !Tu1T1nl 76 •
100 !rec -1. Wlhon IS~n Cl~menT•l
SJ,6 ! S111ro11or1 (Mlulon Vltlol 1:11.6
The RusUers are led by Don too lrH -1, su111v1n !Pt••.W.•l 011 ... -Prtclk• •I 1111 ... Lippoldt, Ross Mcintyre and l: ... 11 t . N1 rcow1c11 IP1uG1ntJ.1:,..ti represent th.is ~untry in in-NEWPORTER INN SAILING CLUB
J. Pu1n1m ct-11e1c;l'IJ. 1:'9.1, •· tern a t Ion a I compe11·11·ons Greg Feinberg. A•~n 1P1w11tn11, Mtk ut• is.011 PAR 3 GOLF COURSE Monk•). 1:J.o 1. Tw Noe11 11m.: 11;,,... among deaf athletes. 675 0827
Lippoldt. Golden W f's t • s Yori IAmtric•11 1uv1rl, 1:50.0. 1,~s~t~.O~O~w~lt·~·~'";"~~-~~·~·~"'~;;:::::":::::~~ mosl versal•'le swi'mmer, has J.o '"' -1. T"<lm11 ILAcc1. Sugar Bowl on Interstate 80 72.$1 !. Powers \Cl!ru1!, 12.7; l. t f Lak T •-h the second top 200 backslroke W•dloll 1a1k1•sll1t+:1 . erOllUlrd ll OIOt wes o e a,""' as new !otttll), 72.1: J. €!111, (S•nl• Montc1> " t"l4 f t b clocking in the stale (2:07.l) Mtlher 1c1tru1>. Gron• 1s..,tt An•>' snow o.er a .,.. 00 ase. Ntr-cow1c11 CP11•d•n•>. n.t. TOD Noc1i The area leatures le luo b e h ind Fullerton's Byron 11me. N1v1row cs1cr1men101. w11111 eag Reidenbaugh 12,0S.SJ. cFooiMui. n.j. races Saturday and Sunday
700 Ind. m«I. -1. Fltlc!tnbaugh d · hi k"' Wed esd rFulltr!onJ, l :Ol.O; 2. M1~u!i ISanla an n1g s ung n ay, The Rus tler so phomore also Mo111t11. i .o.i.o; l. F 111 u er c • Thursday and Saturday.
has the 11.fth best Southern IFu!ler1onl, J:Ol.1; •. N1rcowlch
•(PtstGtn•I. 7:0l.J1 ~. Brou wrd (Long I Cal•'forni·a mark ·,n the 100 ••chi. 2:0t.J. Tep NoC11 ume· Borea Ridge, Donner Ski H1m1nn IStn M111<1 J. 1:05.6. · A d Sod S free (50.5), the eighth top 1,000 loo 11¥ -1, F1eu1•oa <FullertonJ, rea an a prings are 2:aJ.11 1. r.,..,, !B•ke••'''''' ,.,, ,. m· the same location free time (10:49,0l. the ninth l. M(Mull•" !L010o 11e1c11J.' 1~tl9:s; •
be I., Gtmmon (Orenge Cc1111 . 1:10.7; O H' h 89 ! th I st 200 free clocking (1:52.5) 5. Ro11K1 ILA v111ey> i·io i. To n lg way n ewes
and is No. 9 ·in the ~ free ~'~~'. lime; Grieve coi1b10 v:.11e1r. Tahoe region are Squaw
(5: 13.4). .100 lrtl -1. Pu!ntm llono lleachl Valley and Papoose Ski Area, 0 ll rl1n !E l Ctmll>CJ. loO,O; 3. A1po1! Mcintyre's best e"ent i's the IP•••d1n1). so.11 •. Thom11 n.ACCJ, Powder Bowl and Alpine • ».•; 5. Gtmm010 ior1"0• CO••ll M d G ! 200 breastst roke. He's done L1PD01a1 !Golden we11J, ems c!>lnti ea ow s, ran ibakken. !lllkeril!ekll loO.J. ToP "loCtl time· H ood d T h Ski 2:24.6, th ird best in the Mcn1u1. s1111iv1n tPtwd•"•). oi wsori omew an a oe w;u• lfooThll ll. Schtdl (Foot11110. •9.1, Bo I ·
Southland. He al so has a 2: 13.1 w1Fuuui:~r. 1705_1; 1~ t110:.,~d~ D1~~13.~ w · in the 200 indo I 14th best esri. 1·01.11 :i. Woedmtn ll!I Homewood offers n lg ht c1mfnol. 1:01.1; •. F1lnbt:•o !Golden sk>'1'ng Fr1'days and Sat rda s mark ). Wtsll. J.lO J; J . Lt Peru !Ptwdent ) U y
Feinberg has a cloc king of ~~%:r1,~Jf,ver~0f•i:..t. u,..., c1oH and every night th r o u g h
2.10.3 '·n the 200 back (lourlh .soo
1
'
1' -1· N••cow1c11 101woen11 Easter week. Papoose Peak I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "·"·'' 2. P11tn•m ILon9 Be1c"\, i. 59.I;
l·n SoCal) and 2 .. 14.1 1·n lhe J.. SuH•v•n IP11101n•l 5016· i. will hold its annual Easter r~(SM (L". V1llev l. Jl;O}_,, ! 0J1'c~rno.i I
200 lly (l•th l. •••dent). 5·01.0. toe> HoCa1 lime · S alom for juniors Wednesday. Jon•w11c1 10111110 Vt!ltYI. •:5.1.0, · At Al . ,1 ad M d Go lden West rigures to han· M1001 D•ea,r -1. M•k~11 cs'"" pme "e ows -0n ay on ,.1. 1:2J.,; !. Gltl litr (Gren-th third I s·· c . I die LA Harbor with-0ut too mo"u, 'i• 2: l. Mctnrvrt rc.1>1dtn e annua ~1 am1va
much trouble. but Cy press ;-:~;1~; '11• ~1,.,.;\1,:t11~~"9fcvs";::~:· will benefit children with
poses a big challenge. ~~~!;1,:~PRlv~~.·~,~rT" F11r111n~i cy11stic fibrosis. The events will
R I.ch Chang paces Cypress. l 111001 ''" ''11~ -1 LOii! a,,,~ o er snow fun for everyone W 1; 1. P~•8Gtn1. J :;1 ,5, . Gold..; h f
He has the ''
.,th best SoCa l '1 · J n.,, •. en,,,, 1·1•6· J wit our special races for Jsf 1V•ll•v. l 2J.I Ta,, 0NOC1I · rimt .' k' I d "]'
clocking in the 200 back,;;;;;;':'~';;'~·~'"~'~· ~';";';·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·,.is~ie;irs,ii,oii;;a~l~l;iaiigiie:::s~a~n~;a;b~1~1t~ies
(2 :12.0) and the ninth lop limcl
in the 200 indo 12'10.8). Team-GET MORE FUN OUT mate ~l a rk Ba uner has don
2,2.1.9 in the 200 brea5t. OF LIFE!
FREE SONY TV
WHEN YOU TURN
WINTER HEAT
TO SUMMER
COOL
Area Net Summaries
l Bo ... b•••• IFootnlll) ~ 6 • Mttlft (tu1tln) JI.I !, Pl•!ICI> (Mls11on vlelo)
'9 l t A"Gtrson tTu1t1n) Jt 1
'" 700 '"' -1 Flldo1 fM lsslo" v1e1ol Standings
GOLF INSTRUCTION
Clo11 "A" ln1f'f'uctor1
GROUP LESSONS
Tuesda'fl et 10 a.m.
•
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Sfll9111 fFOOTl!llll 1 01 0 l Htnd ITuU!fl) 1·07 1 S•lutdtr • Otmu BH1-f !$1 IMI IHI _, 1 J, l ,\l!m1n IM~1ion Vltlol 1 a.../ •. PlU"> X II ll l•l>OP Amil L. l(l"C•ld lSl 1011 1-<I. J-4, At-ln•c11 (Stn Cl...,•ntrl \·Cl' >. St. Ptul ti Mttl ' '"
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Mtnn1,,..)(,11y (51 loll o.t. 2-4. 100 !tH -1 Andrew• (Mluloo. W '-01 Lun•·Mltlltu• fSl 1111 '"· 1-4. VltlO) i!.4 1 lltlltv (Tutti~) $6.I ~cc I 1 J~'~ Vtf'"llly l Llntbl(• I!•~ (lemen•tl JT • • IOtf'I Wt~t j '• ·"-1111, ,','•'•'' Alt"llt.. Out~lt I Foo!~ltl) J HudM>n IMIHlan lf.l~~"tndo • J Vitia) JI • t. Chern•• tFoo!nltl) 1.01.1 0, .. Pe•e,1on (E! won t·I 1.1 narbor l 6 HUMfr \El WO/\ 1-l ; \IH 1•1 SO bro11t -1 -Oa~ll IFool"llO 11! LA 8 t Clcll (f WOii 6.4, 1..3 ~1 0 llt•e"-rlt(ord! 1 CtmPbt-11 Wtlll'lttcllv'• Sc:or. fl:loi;k {[)won "1 I !lttl 7•1 lMlulon Vlt10) J1 l l Al-lnM>" IStfl LA H1rb0r I. LAC(• O..O~lfl Cltmtn!•) 1110 • Cc•m~ck /Tinlin) N••I 0•-• !A1rll It) •11110 • ...., acc1 '" • ' 111.1 J W1~tnlkO"• (Mlllloo. Vlt!O) Golde n Went •I LACC 61 "''" WOii ·' J.1,I I. Gtmmtll (S1n Ct1••11nltl l$ s ll:lo t10f>(!O 81 L..11 11trbar
,,{'•rd tnd Ellmore !El _., -=======::c===='..'._ __ .='Etsl LA II tvoreu
WUlmlntter !U) /01 A"thtlm L•tuftl lttch OJ\lol ill II Dlr1•1
llnti.1 T•llcr IL) w0<0 t.), ,,,
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fl""" M<Ovl!lt ll!:l ltot J-4. l • l urrtll l') loll 4-4, )-4 (hr•••m111 !Elie-.• o..i 0....
Ott"nbtdl (IE ) loll '"' '" o ....... "'•"fl trod M<Crt"" !IE I .,
' .
INSTALLED .
CHAIN-LINK
FENCING
L ·-.
Thursdays et 3:30 p.m.
FREE USI 0, CLUBS
AND A GA.Ml 01' GOLF
$9 FOR 6 LESSONS
Golf Gloves
SpKl•I Gr••P
All 19.th.r
Y2 PRICE
PRIVATE LESSONS -$,.00 ta. or $30.00 for '
Golf Equipment Sale
BIGGEST EVER
CLUBS-25°/o to 50°/o off
LADIES SHOES VIEW YOUR SWING Values to $3 2.00
NOW $14.95 SEE YOUR FAULTS
ft! .. 1 .. 'stilll'' M9' °Wp ,,. ;;ag COnftt rhflllt, 9'111~'7 ftl9
lleW IMtollll'ric St1p ctl•• .. ""' ..
SKIP MAY'S
COSTA MESA GOLF RANGE
2717 NEWPORT ILVO. 54.S·m> At tM Or•nfl Ceunty l'alr Ground•
-A LSO-
SKIP MAY 'S
NEWPORTER GOLF COURSE
1117 JAMIOREE RD. 144-ffll
At the NWWJ1orter Inn
•urchase any DAY & NIGHT air condltlonlna
system, and ttt thl1 $110 Sony portable TV.
If you have forced.1ir heating, chances are we c1n
1dapt your furnac~ a nd existing duct-work to
s~read cool, clean 11r to e~~ry room in r,our hom1. 1! 1 ~n 1asy m e~t~r t~ add day & night' air cond·
t1on1n9 , air pur1f1cat1on and humidity control ..•
A real boon to housewiv1s who lik1 fresh, clean,
dust fr.ee, odor free ftomes. We hav1 Electric mo-
dels with S year guarantees and g11 models with
I 0 ye er guarantees.
DON 'T SWELTER THIS SUMMER, BE LIKE THE
PACIFIC BEAR, ENJOY YOUR ARMCHAIR.
day &night
® .------
Call today for a
frff, no-obligation
estimate .
Pacific Heating. Co.
Air Conditioning Speclalbts
2175 LAGUNA CANYON RD.
Call Us For Prompl Service and Repair
LAGUNA l lACH U.GUNA HILLl-YllJO
494.9745 837-2000
. . . . . .
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• •
' • •
• • ' . . ' • .
Price• Effecti•e
Beginning Today
Wed., Mlll'ch 31
1 thru Sa!., April 3
Sears
FANTASTIC
VALUE!
Silent Guard II
4-PlyNylon
36-Month Guarantee
•Four full plies of rugged nylon cord for
strength~ IOng wear
•Contoured safety shoulders
F.E.T.
TUBELESSBLACKWALLS
6.50xl:f 17.87 1.76
7.75xl4 22.87 2.14
8.25xl4 25.87 2.32
TUBELESS WHITEWALLS
6.50x 13 21.87 1.76
7.35x l4 24.87 2.01
7.75x l4 26.87 2.14
8.2ox 14 29.87 2.32
8.!l5x 14 :!2.87 2.50
7.75x l 5 27.87 2.16
8.l5xl5 30.87 2.37
8.45xl5 33.87 2.48
Sears R egular Price
1' Guaranteed For As
l ,ong As You Own
)'our (;ar
e J.'i t ~ nlO~I. . .\.n1eriC'a J1
t·ar s an(I Volkswagt•11s
II"""'" Du11 J\tufO•·r-1,;f,.Liml' Gu11 r-an1 ef':
11 muftll'r iai l~Jue10J~
IC'CIS in ma 1C"r 1a l ~ o r
w<>rkman1hip or blow-
•ll"H, ru~1-ou1 or wear--out
while nri,1:1oal pur!iuui:r
<>wn~ fhe 10.r, 1t wil l be
rrp l~~r<l upon f<'tUm ,
lrt•1·nllhdr).:~" [f1hede-
ll.'cl1ve 1nurtkr "''~-~ in-
'''lll'd hr :-.e~•~. ·we will
1ns111ll 1he O(<W n1uftler
"Hh no (hJr,1.'l' f9r l~bor. • EXPERTINSTAL·
J,ATI0:-1 AVAILABl.1':
_,
HEAVY
DUTY
MOTOR Oil
Rf'g. ;)9' Qt. Ca n
Heavy Duty
Motor Oil
29 ~
' '"
~l eets or eXl ('t:J, all new c~r
manufacturers u.·arranty 1c·qu1r~·-
~STOP
At Sears for a II
COMPLETE ~
BRAKE ,-:?'
JOB ,·
h
Passenger
Tire Guarantee
f:u•n•u~ As•in~rr All tire
bilnttS or <kfec1t rn 11121c1ill «
t oricnull"bir .
For How Lnna: fur fhe life of
1h.,or1.o;in~1 Ue;<t
'l'b•I :-.-•n •'id D•.: lo n-
, h•n.11~ Jpt lhe "re, r~pl...-e ir
1h.,J:>O!I h>r 1M-p111rouio" of
'urrcm sell•"<!. pripe r l<u fcdcn.I
Es<iM> Tn lhat !"f>l".,....d" rread
u.M. Rqi.o.ir om pUDtu.•n::s ..c no
,h:,i'1:e,
1; ...... na.eeJ A,:ai11•: 'I te9d --•·01" Uow IA>t&ll l Tile llWllbu of'
mombssrecified.
'l'h•l :-;~.,.. wm Den '" ~·
t,h•ni:e ft>r 1he t iff, "'Pl •r"'"
,tr .. r~1>,11. rhc c:urrrn• •ell"'~ "'"c
11lu• Fe,!, i:~ci'e Tu k"" tht rul·
lowu1gallow1<1Cr-:
""71' All-aeie
!><10 .'1 10"' ..
27mil JO"'°
"'' ~,~
Disc or Drum?
Here's What Sears Experts Do:
• 1 :areru ll~ r<'l1uild li )dranlic whcel cylinden
• Re1uove a udreplace brake !S hoe relea~e
i;pringt1
• Rep lace hold-tlo1• n :-1lrinf,!r;;.
• Remove and rCJlJacc both front grease seals
• t:arefnlly repack f rout wheel l>Mrings
•Torn and true brake dmn1s orref~ee discl'i
• Fit new brake ~hoes nr disc pad~
• l<'lt.ish aod add hyllrauli.c brake fluid
as needed
• J nspecl mb ter cylinder and emergC°ncy bra\.e
• f 'inally, we lest your bra keg out on the road
.
COME IN NOW FOR YOUR FREE
BRAKE INSPECTION ..• No Obligation!
I 2-Tnch Tire SAJIE $2 Jack Pump Grease Stand Gun 99c 199 Rtg. S5.99
399 •Solid hasf".
1t ec l b arrel
J .'.in. jack and handle • Develops 1000 pres· wit h 3 e S c r e w·o n
heig hts; valve ~t e rn ~ure
•I .oail J-waycartrid11:c a.J justable. r,anocr.lor d i11pen11r,r and bulk. •Air ehf'lek
•a Ive in bO!!f! • E-Zventcap mcn1s. (I JJ.===::!u
ba~e •Use a ny IYJlf'l greai;e
IUINA ,,..I( l A 1·4400, ,,, .. sio fl MONTI GI 3491f PICO wt 1-4.262
Thursday, April l, i q71 DAIL V PILOT 3iJ
Guardsman
4-PlyRayon
30-Month Guarantee
• Full 4-ply rayon cord for smooth rid~,
long wear
F.E.T •
TUBELESS BLACKWALLS
6.!lUx t:~ 23.9!;. 17.87 1.76
7.35xl4 26.95 20.87 2.01
. I 7.75xl4 28.95 22.87 2.14
8.25xl4 31.95 25.87 2.32
TUBELESS WHITEWALLS
7.:l5xl4 30.95 24.87 2.01
7.75xl4 :~Z.95 26.87 2.14
8.25x 14. ~95 29.87 2.32
8.55xl4 :\8.95 32.87 2.50
8.25xl'1 3<i.95 :itt.87 2.37
39.95 33.87 2.48
ltf'place your worn-out
hattery with a Scars
Al lstate Battery. 1199
Wilh
Tr.de.I• '
Nos.4333.4.19
~\
SAVE SJ.52!
O.E.R.® Sho«ks
Regular $4.99
Fies me>$t cars
~;0Ti1tinal Eq uipment llcplilCNk.ill
Sears Gl lNDAU'. CH 5-1004, Cl 4-46 11
HOllYWOOO NO f .Sf41
INGllWOOO O• 1•2521
LONG llACH HI s-or:i
OLYMPIC & IOTO AN l·S211 SANTA ANA IQ 743"11
TMOUSANO OAkl 4t7.otS66
TOUANCI S42.·1J11
COM,TON Nl 6-2511 , Nr 'l·S16T
$!AR$, AOE8UCK AND CO. COVINA 966·0 6 11
Shop Nights Mon. fh ru Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Svndar 12 Noon to S P.M.
'AIADlNA 611 4 211. i Sto42t f
l"OMONA NA t.J 111
SANTA rr SPlttNC1S M•·•O' 1
I ANlA MONICA rJ( 411-'7 I 1
IOUl'M C.Oil.lt Pl.AL\ S404Jll
UP\AND •IS-1 t11'
YALUY PO 3~141161, fM·22t O
vtlMOHt K "9·1911
..
•
34 DAILY ,.!LOT
TV Review
Off Night for 'Music Hall'
By CYNTlllA L0\\1RY
NEW YORK ! AP I
Producers or NBC's \1·eekly
"Music Hall " Wednesday
nlaht starled with the idea
of kidding the annual presen·
tatlon of the movies· Oscar
' awards, a subject which in·
, vilts satire.
.. Somethl!li. obviously , hap-! pened between the idea and
: the execution -probably
: 90melhini: like the fact that
; NBC will be broadcasting the
.. awards show 1n about two
: week!.
" At any rete, Oscar survived
without a bruise and the pro.
gram was a tong seril'S of
sight gags. 1nostly about ac·
tors and the Hollywood life
~·as eht"wing 11 "a-.: aµp\e.
A leading lad y r<1n up !u <i<'·
cept the star's Oscar for his
perforn1ance 1n ··or. Jrlyll
and Mr Hyde,'' and suddenly
turned into a Mrs. Hyde -
'.'"> fangs. fright wig and all
" ENlJl'fAINME!IT -...... -...
style. For instance. an actor
v,oas declaiming about hating
phoricyness, all the while
chewing an apple. A colleague
interrupted lo inform him he
&>Ile Davis, rarelv seen on
television except lfl ~ld movies
or a l:1te t'Vt'n1ng talk show,
actt'<1 as hostess but beyond
introducing the sketches and
musical interludes contributed
lilllo.,to the hour.
TV DAILY LOG .
Frank Gurs.h1n , best known
as an impress1on1s1. turned
song and dance man for the
evening. One or the best spoui
in the show as a medley of
Oscar.winning songs. ~11chele
Lee. Gorsh1n's partner in the
number, has an attractive v.:ay
with a lyric. a reeling for
comedy and reminds one of
Mary Tyler r..1oore Jerry
Stiller and Anne Meara. a
bright comedy team. 11.·ere
largely wasted in the soggy
skits. II was a decidedly off
nighl ror the long·playing • p1it purse-sn1tctiln1 Burr DeBtn·
n1n11utsh 1i her ntphew series. C1•011iped Qua1·ters
'Selln1g Preside11t'
Opens as Musical
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -chche. mousy \.\lfe and \1•111·
"The Selling of the Presi-Jngness to a c c e p t en·
denl." a red, white and b!ue do r s em en ts any un1e,
nu1s1cal spoof based on a book anyplace.
about the 198& presidential Through much of the pro·
campaign, opened in San duction "the Rev . Norn1an
Jo~rancisco Tuesday nighl with Billy Emerson," touted a!I
hopes of rnov1ng to Broadway. ''America's spiritual
Thr production bore a cheerleader." boomingly uses
caricatured resemblance to his connections with l he
J o e McGinniss' best·scller Almighty in behalf of the can·
with the same title. a non-d1date.
fiction account of how ad· The critics v•ere in sharp
verlising and television techni-disagreement about Lhe play.
ques were used to help elect The San Francisco
Richard M. Nixon. Kni ckerbocker found th c
The show. produced at the musical ":it once saline.
Geary Theater by John Flax-sardonic and surprisingly fun·
man and San f'rancisco·s ny as it turns the unblinking
repertory company. l he bright light on tele¥ision's
American Conservatory seductive hypocrisy."
Theater. is a vaudevillian mix -------
of songs, political hackney.,_.~ .....anc ~ _.,..., ~ "·
filmed effects an d
pseudupatriot1c speech-n1ak· ~ j
1ng
M•cGllllvr•y-Freem&ll
Fllme Pre1•nt Thursday
Evening
APIUL 1
l;t0 8 Ill Jlltws Jerry Dunpllf.
0 MIC NIWI Tom Snydu .
• TM Alli• Slltw
IJNYPO
0 @(]) Ei) l1witC~ld ""Slm'1
PJ1chic Pshp." S1m1nlh1 dtvelcps
1 1tr1111e cast ol hiccuoi 11\u
usinl ll)r!)idden w1tct1cr1l1 10 clean
up htr •itchtn.
"Music H<1ll," rarely a
flashy pe rformer In ! ht'
Neilsen races. comes lo a final
end al the close of this season,
one or 10 variety hours being
canceled bv the I h re e
Cast me1nbers of South Coast Repertory's •·ri.1other Earth" depict a family nr
the future crowded into a !i1nall cubicle. From left, back row, are Toni Sh<'i'll'·
er, .lames dePriest. Saundra ~iathews-Deacon; fron t ro\v, Cam Young, Elaine
Bankston and Bill katt.
The show is set in a
television studio in 1976 \vhere •
"George W. Mason" makes l
his pitch for the presidency.
Actor Peter Donat plays the I
candidate, replete with ready --1 ''SKI
MOVIE 0 Iii O'Cltcll M .. : fC) {tO)
"iilr. ~ TU.11 J1 V1t1tiff• ''"
I (oomtdJ) '62 -J1mes Si.111111.
M1ur1tn O'HllJI, l 111ri P•!tfl, ftb
i111. An ~1r1rart" l1mi1J et II
VtUtion! •I I m1d·Yicl oriln bllCh
hov• in hoPls of ..M111 1tt per·
IMll p1ob!tmJ.
IJ ENd: Vin DJk•
m n. nmtit"'•'
t8 t17.1 (]) Sttr Trtk
fD Mll"inlad
IBCIJN .... cm 11111. r111111,
E Nttici1r1 3'
81'! Tll1 Dt•rt ••,.rt
Em l• Her• f1111Hi1r cen Co•11ttl1
SI lhwl Jim H1wlhorn1.
l :IS U!l Art ltud1•
l :lO O Canlllll Ca111r•
CD n. FIJlna Nu•
ID Cil MIC Kew
m Dwkf frd Skw
dJ Olyll,k. lt1i111
Ii) P.U.rw i. LMn1
1:00 I) S (fJ CIS Tinrr~aJ lrlM1t :
(Zllf) "lffill""91H (1USP ell51) '65
-!Ill Hunter, An n• rr1nc~. D1n1
Andrtws, Vl'l'ttt linittou. Research
11;ilntisl falls lor Ille w1f1 ot his
ly11nniul emplo)'fi i nd dtcidts lo
•111 him 11Jin1 • 1.;1111d Khf10·
ph11nlc plot.
Blll• f•P•
o @rn m ... ~, ltatm t11
Gr1n~d1dcl1 "M1k1 Room for Gr1nd·
1011." (R) Dinny ind Kath y Wilham'
welcome 1 M• 1ddltion lo their
home.
fl) Nfl r!ir,Mrne "Reddic~ " A11
inntl'·citJ m111i1tu 1tt1mpts lo help
1 jlOUP of tlien1!td leen12er1.
Ci) a..ti.1,.
Ill Los 1"'"1 d1 Pe:i .1110
al) N1lldl1
t :)ll Q Q1(1)ltlMi•·12 "R11ton It
Run." ll:od C•m•on, Ho•m Croil>y,
neh~·orks. Ai one point th is
season 16 hours of variet \'
were shown each "eek. Ne~t
season. there will be one-third
as man~'·
* !!arr) l\1organ. formt·rh·
Jark \\'ebb's po 1 i cc in an
partner in "Dragnet," 11.ill
return next season playing an
assistant district attorney 1n
"The 0 A." with Robert
Conrad. He will still be
associated with Webb who 1s
producin~ the series for NBC.
Pannie F'lagg. rarelv seen
on !elevision since "C<lndid
Camera" folded -sht• "'as
one of Allan Punt 's practical
jokers -has been added to
the cast of the forthcoming
''New Dick Van Dyke Show."
In this series Dick v>'ill play
the host of a TV show and
Hope Lange. late of ''Thr
Ghost and Mrs 1'1uir," has
been signed as his wife. m HMpP91111 lM(t
9CIJCIS lltwl
fll)Uertld r~•/M1J1Cllt
$ lie OMllNM
EIJAIC,....
Lindi 1(1y1 Hennin1. rr1nciftt Yoik.Jll _____ ..,..,,_.,..,.~JI
Si ndy de Bruin 1nd Di<k Wh11iin t· II
~,u 1ue$I.
0 [U) 00 ED o .. Autnl ''Prot · 11io--:::,~-
110•1: Homlciclt." A bot!Ls of Poll·
ontd whlsi.l'f p11pirtll 101 1 promi·
11tnl iur1111n 11\11 inlo 1111 hands of
!wn $kid ro w dt1ellds. fritz W11v1r,
S1u111 Oliver ind J«')' AyfH JUUi.
7:tlll 8 CIS NtwS W1!!1r C1onk111.
omN1CNtw1
llJ 'Mitri .. , Li111?
m@ (])l lM1 LKJ
lll@CIJ .......
Qtlndid C.•tl'I
Ci) Mitliu\1/l'MW'• DIM
m c.d•• "' 1.n1inti••
fl) El<Mll Wlldlftl 11111 Mtffnl .
lll• "8uddhi1m •nd Seitnc1." Coll· 10:00 0 ID (1) m 0.111 M•rti• Guesb
du1ion ol series. 111 Ernttt 8orrnin1. Dom D1Lui11 r
QI Cl) Trvtll ..-Ctn~IMll, ..
G QNt 1llt U.ill1 Wwll
•nd PtUY l u .
gCUR1111.5 "-"
0 tldlr Wirf "'"
CD News Puln1m/fh.hm1n.
tEI ElllllaN 41 L.-
mi Aqtli r, .. hti11t1
7:301J fa (j) ,111ily Atr111 (RJ ld1
Lupino 1un !1 11 l1dy Marcllwoo4,llO:l0 IJ M11 West Movir: (1111 ~5#1)
• dtu lri~nd of Mr runcJI. who "I'• N• Antef" (mu:r..c1I) '33 -
i:omts 11 New York lo wllttl h11 M11 Wut, Clf}' G11111.
111t11n1tiOMllJ ft1no1JJ llU tlof!I. ! fJ (ll'.I CIJ aJ Tlris b ftUI lift
DID (I) m fllf' w~-G~•tsl R1lph EdW1rdt ho1t1. Surp1ii1d
u1 Tim Conway, S•"'1 Ount1n 1M 1ulll is .klM ftlici1110.
}Bilrlf!J •~•n i11 • spool Ofl rKluK: OJ l lH ,1Mn1 Ntwl
b1lhor111irtt. Amtric.1n history. Ind
pirw1tt tclloo\1. I
0 Y.1p.i1 C111!1• Shtw Gut~!~
1r1 Norm1n liar. Jt1n St1plt1on
Gtortt GibbJ, Dr. l•t1r Co11man. I
Et) W1alli11st111 WHk ill ltwi1w
ill l•t'll'ticf11111br1
0 (J}l 00 m o\1111 S11itlrl •n• 11 :OD IJ IS CI> ID"""
i..n ''Tht rlflh Victim •• Q aJ@ It:) Jll .. 1
Q MilliN S lllwit: (2111') '"!... 0 a> Nl'ft
MielnM"" (dr1m1) '52-M1cJl11I
Rt11n1t, Robtrl Newton. O.b11 Pl&•I.
[d11111nd Gwtnn. Filmtd 1tory lrom
V•dor Muro'4 cl1uic: nottl ol hu-1
min 1.Ulfui~c
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Friday
DA'i1TIME MOYIES
t:008 "Mu ,,.. WptMlll(' (dr1rn1\
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"t11er T1~a All," 1/ld "l itter Vlt-
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"'ltrtlll Tt .. "'9" (t1"!11y) ·40-I !tomMY) 60 ~ Rr11~11 ltr4Scl.
ftlchlli Ctrl1on, C. Aubttr Smi1-1,tqu11 Chu<iu
t:>OBoiJlelMltl"' (tin111•) '!i1 -Va~
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BALBOA
673-4048
OPEN
•:45
7" t. a.n.o.
a.1111N ,."l"sul•
NOW-ENOS TUESDAY
WINNER OF 4
ACADEMY AWARDSI
& ACAOEMY AWARD WINNEI
-IESY ACYIE5S-
r.
,~
Orifl~ll Unc!tll V1ni.Ho
••• M1rrl...,_ .. uc1,.-,. MIPll\lr"
e .. -se :-:.., .... see::-......
See=::-...... ICCllIUllU
lfTIUI
I''
see~---liDOD ua fWI
Ce>-~•OIU••
"MOSQUITO SQUADRON" fl EE (G)
"VALDEZ IS
COMING"
... ---·--· ;;·;·;;·;'";';;;;;;;;;.' . ' "'''"'~:ji"!''
IXYIA ADDlD AY11AC110N ·"TAKE Ofr
DOOli?S OPEN 6;45 DAILY
lftd f(ATUll SATURDAY & SUNDAY Al 12:45 P.M.
.At Hwy J' Only
•• i;. .... ,r. .... ....... &en Off.<• On-. 3 )0
S~o,.o•6l0PM
'>ol 611J
''D . . '2'' o you la,;e lh1s woman .
ll V f . h ' 1es, or ever·::r.mg ~ cs go!
•
~~ ................ ,_...
I HOWIRD W. IDCH·HILLARD El!lllS PRODUCrotl
Waner Matthau
Elalne t1ay.
·A new Leaf"
Jaek CIJeslon _,. .... --.... -..-;.,"W., :::.:.::w.. ..
!GI·:.=:·.,,,.~·':' ___ ...._ ... s 'ii\Ji'rsToMoilnow
I
On Broadwai
English Comedy
Fails to Amuse
By WILUA~1 GLOVER
NEW YORK IAPI
Another of those innocuous
after-dinner trines that thrive
In London but rarely survive
transplant herf', "How lhe
Other Half Loves" arrived
Tryouts Set
For 011e-act
The Irvine Community
Theater will hold open read-
ings Saturday for an original
one-act drama entitled "TGo
Late," which will be presented
ill the Riverside Tournament
(If One-Act Plays.
Director Richard Dow an-
nounced that the tryouts wiU
be held from l to 5 p.m.
)n the Island House at
.Newport Center. Roles are
open for two men and women
in the 25 to 4.5 age bracket.
i The play will be presented
at Riverside on the weekend
()f May 7-9 by the lrvine
group, which won the Southern
California festi val "''ith Its pro-
duction of "How Tall is
Toscanini?" last season.
Monday night al Broadway's
Royale Theater.
Phil Silvers, whose 1peclalty
Is clowning hysteria, and San-
dy Dennis, wbo practice11 com-
edy with adenoidal ferocity,
are chief participants in the
confusions and gags about e•-
tramarilal shenanigans. Love
them and you'll probably en-
joy the show.
The staging gimmick upon
which Alan Ayckbourn hangs
the whole barmle~ time killer
is to have separate scenes
overlap or even • c c u r
simuJtaneously in a single set-
ting.
While Couple A -that's
Silvers and Bernice Massi -
skirmish. say, about breakfast
and where she was until 3
a.m., Couple B -Miss Dennis
and Richard Mullig11n -swap
empty coffee cups and insults
about whom he was out with .
Events happen on fpur suc-
cessive days, so 'the op-
portunities for c r o s s • f i r e
nonsense stretch endlessly
before the curtain comes down
for the last time.
Caught in the shuttle
between the other duos, Tom
Aldredge and Jeanne Hepple
provide more complications
with bewildered neighborly in-
competence.
' J I
Al10 Playlnge2nd Ilg Footur1eR1n Moody, Dom 0.Lvl_..
"THE TWELVE CHAIRS"
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
································~····
fOUNTAIN
VAlllY
DRIVE 1r1
AM Celor PAmle"' E•l--l w.n DllMY P._tt.
"THE OAllEFDOT ax•cUTrva .. (8)
'"" $M;Md Jl•mllf F•W. "SAVAGE WILD"' ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Ah Qlef' EJ:tllrll.,.. Drift.Ill ,..,_..,
Donll• "-" • c.IM' HLITTL• 010 MAM" CWI ""' . .,_ . ._ "lllO LOIO"' (01
)A .. IA """ HARBOR BLVD
DR IVl·IN
-----U1·1171
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-~)
AH nlor ,rtmlffe •ttl••-11
l11rt U!OCHIW
"VALDi! IS COMINS., (I,)
'1115 Elkt s....,,_
"THI INYINCIOL.E SIX"
••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Al~l"......,.E...,._....._..t
......... '•1.t.Ul'OA. IAST OP JA\IAM 181 a• -,._ "CUJTll OP Tiii: WW-ST'' MZ-tm ,.,,_ Ti. ,.,........_., .. tilM "' th c ......
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
X Era Over
Ribald Movies Failing
N£W \.ORK 1AP) -The cd an X-rated hl1n.
day of tDe X-rateftil.lilm ;ap.-"We do not crltlci11 those
who have," he said, ''but au pe.an t.o be over, at le.a st
'Thursd.&f, April 1, iq71
HELD OVER
die~s. as a n~sult are for the ma)Or ... American film staying away in d r 0 v es, · .... .-................... _,. . .,. ... _ • 114¥ ITAM·HEN&l'T llOll-COmpanies. particularly the family au-larbra S&niJald
Some have publicly vowtd diences. The whole industry r---•i:ri
not to produce or distribute is paying the price." "1lm~
Jaffe said Columbia will em-Jmli
restrictive tag, which bars it "because the c om p a n y • ..... J~
DAILY PILOT 35
~do
llllWPOl!Y lfAOf -et --.. l•"-'I-• U4• hi. -CHI. l4lH
'-, HELO OYER
ELLIOTT GOULD
DON SUTHERLAND
MARCIA RODD
IN
"THE LITTLE
MURDERS" films which might get that phasbe G aod GP pictu•es IE. . .?=."· .. •t
t.o viewing by those 17 years believes it is the right thing
old and yrunger. Others have tG do ... The di(ference I ALSO I
no such announced policy, but between the 1&-to-26-million JASON ROBARDS
say privately they "probably ourreot weekly admissions of Also "R" "THE BALlAO Of
woukfn't" now make a picture the fifties can, in our opinion,
that would get thal kind of be broughl back to the mo•i• "SUDDEN TERROR" CABLE HOGUE"
rating. _lh~ea~t~e,~.'_' ______ __:'i:==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::l'!~~~~~~~~~~
The apparent trend is aided·-
by two slgnificant facts .
TITLE ROLES -Dana Lawrence Oell) and Victoria
Fairhurst play the tiUe roles in the children's pl.ay
"The Girl and the Golden Bird" .at Huntington
Beach Hlgb School Salurday.
-X-rated films, by their
very nature lot.s of nudity or
rough language appeal lo a
minority sudience and aren't
making 1 lot of money. Only
two of the top 30 grossing
films of 1970 were rated X.
Children's Fantasy
'Golden Bird' Slated
"The Girl and the Golden
Bird," 1the third production of
the Children's 'lbeat.er of Run.
tington Beach, will b e
presented for two
two sisters will be played by
Karen Niffenger and Lisa
Domeyer.
-New interpretatiorui by
the Motion Picture Association
of America rating board as
to what constitutes an X film
leaves the classification pretty
much to the out.and-Out nudie
rilms. Even ''Midnight
Cowboy," one of the first
tt91>"Cted major films to get
an X, hQS since 'been re-rated
R making it okay t o
youngsters if accompanied by
an adult.
It must also be noted that
~ . ' li!eltt
·-rw:!I• INl OC IAURENTI5 fRESENTS
ROD STEIGER·CHRIS'JDPHER PWMMER
"WATERLOO"
ORSON WEU£.S AS Louis XVIII . ::.._~·-1.Wl<HAWKlNS·VlRGlNIAMcKf.NNA·Q.\NOHf.RUHY ~ .
..,,,=----~ O·HIT I HANG EM HIGH CO·HIT All THIATll I PIOGIAM
QINT tA~TWOOD IMt:
performances Saturday in the
Hunllngton Beach High School
auditorium.
Other principal rc>les are
taken by Jim Blair, Kathy
Day, Scott Tuttle, Eileen Reed
and Kathleen Reed. Perfc>rm·
ing in the chorus are Nancy
Mauk. Jennifer Day, Cindy
Scbettkoe, Peggy Mansperger,
Lori Wilson, Ulren King, Mark
Snell, Kathy Peterson. Claire
Wolden, Sylvia Espinoza, Lori
Scbettkoe, Lori Tuttle, Lori
Lawrence, Lori Beckett and
Douglas Sanborn.
the majors never really opted --.. Oll<oo,. ~~kind~-M-= --
U.U. lHEATllf
---JOll SHOW JIM£
Directed by Hild.a Nauman,
the yoong people's fantuy will
be staged at 10:30 a.m. and
2 p.m.
ed for the larger rl'WlSS au·1._1~~~~~~u~''~"~'~~-~-~~~·~ .. ~~~~~i~~~~~~~~ dien<:e.
When the rating system
began in November 1968, the
The story cmters around
a visit by Merlin the magician
to the cottage of the king·s
forester on his search for a
golden bird and of the young
girl Margit who befriends him.
Dana Lawrence will play
Margi\ with Cathy Wilson ap-
pearing as Merlin. The girl 's
Admission is flO cents to
both adul ts and children, with
youngsters under 3 years ad·
milted free. Further inform a-
tion may be obtained by call·
ing Dona Day at 847-6463.
majclr companies w o u I d
release X·rated product s
under the banner of a quickly
created subsidiary, such as
Universal Pictures' Regional
Films, which released the X-
ed "Bi rds of Peru'' and
•·neironymus Merkin.''
Orange Coast College
Wins Own Jazz Festival
necent X-rated prOOucts
made or released by the big-
ger companies include "f\.,yrn
Breckt"nridge" and "Beyond
the Valley of the Dolls," bolh
from 20th Century-Fox, "\Vhat
Do You Say to a Naked Lady ,"
frc>m United Arlisls, and ''The
Body ," from Metro-Gol.dwyn-
Mayer.
Orange Coast C<>llege invited
76 bands to ita third annual
Jazz Ensembie Festival last
weekend and then won lhe
whole thing itself by being
voted the outstanding college
band in ttie field by a panel
of professional judges.
Tbe festiva1, biggest in the
Play to Film
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Fred Zinnemao 's next movie
will be a film version of the
Ronald Millar play "Abelard
and Heloise" for John Woolf's
Romulus Films
Graffiti is
A Joke ••. Really
three-year history or lhe The recent pronouncements
events attracted 800 to the by studio executives show
Friday night band playoff s their discouragement with the
and aoother 1,800 Saturday sex-Oriented product which
night to hear Woody Herman was such a strong boxoffice
and his Thundering Herd. lure just • few months ago.
The OCC Jazz Band , According to James Aubrey,
directed by Dr. C h a r I e s president of Metro-Goldwyn-
Rutberford, swrpt the college Mayer, ''Everybody was
field and picked up a pair caught In the n e w -f o u n d
of individual awards along the freedom. The indust ry wallow·
way. Trumpeter Mike Paulsen ed in it. But while permissive
of El Toro won a trumpet rilms migtit have been suc-
"gig" bag for his work, and cessful six months ago, they
saxophonist Tom Kubis of aren't oow.
Huntington Beach won a "The whole country has
varilevel pickup and octavoice undergone · a big reverSal of
unit. taste one of the l'1l()St remark-
The best elementary band able in recent times," he said
award went to Seal Beach. in an interview.
nt9 -·TtM ... ,... c..:-•
_____ .. __ . __ ·-··-·-----·
Stwrts Fri., APIL 2
NOW AT ALL 3 CINEMAS MATINUDAllT
APRIL J.11
WALT
... ~,
• CllHT
"' -S!urr.1100 STflGfll • CH lllSTOPHfR PLUMMER "KAN M HIGH' ti-------STARTS FRIDAY
APRIL 2 M e et Henry & Henrietta ...
the laugh riot of the year.
.. A neC1J Leaf
l(;I ""'°' by MOVIELAB
":Qii A Paramc>uflt Picture
o ltO'• a. ftoin• a. Jo el
""
with Borel Middle School Gf Le<> Jaffe, president of
San Mateo being voted the Columbia Pictures, told a
top junior band. The most group of theater owners tn
outstanding High School band February that his company
::::::::::="::::::::::::::::::::".,,,,=:cam:::::•:.:lro:.::::m:_::R.sed:::::•::·=---oc°'::::v.:er:,,:b•:;:•:_P::rod::: uced or releas-
FRIDAY, APRIL 2 - 9 p.m. ONLY * ANOTHER IMPORTANT *
MAJOR STUDIO
SNEAK PREVIEW
FROM PARAMOUNT PICTURES-IMPORTANT CAST
Rated IGPI
ll'•IDAY, AP'R:IL 2
SCHIDULI ONLYI
Deot-1 Open at i:ao
"LOVI STORY" .... 7:15
"P'R:IVll¥;·· ...... t :OO
"LOVI STORY,. .... 10:40
stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor • _r
~d.~~7youve never h~.ard it so good
-
•• • --••
I
I
I
\\
• IO t ~ • ' '' ..
~ DAILY PILOT Thursday, Apnl l, 1971
' AID FOR PAKISTAN
Supplies are brought Into the stricken areas by helicopter a'1d' truck-
but the final stage of distribution is often by ox-cart.
llllter•te farmers leave thumb print as a record of receiving rice durtng
distribution ol relief food In community centers.
Unloedlng ol aupplla~ flown In by U.S. helicopter painted with Iha Amiri·
can flag ao lhlf Dolta paoplt could Identify Ito nollonallly.
The cyclone \vhich
struck East Pakistan
. on the night of No,;, 12·
13," 1970, caused one of
the greatest disasters in
recorded history. Fifty
countries responded \\•ith
emergency help, the U.N.
Secretary-General ha ~
cal1ed for further helJl
and the World Bank has
planned extensive recon-
struction.
U.S. assislance has
played a major role in re-
lief work. The Agency for
International Develop·
ment (A.I.D.) had al·
ready been at \Vork in the
area, and A.l.D.·flnanced
W. PAklSTAH
coastal embankments 11nc.I C'}'t:lonc _,hchcrs, for exa1nplC',
saved thousands of live.~. Aflcr the cli~aster, A.l.D. provided
emergency relief, inclutling the u~e of ten helicopters \vhich
in 25 days fle\v more than 1,250 ~ortie, and delivered n1ore
than a million pound5 Of supplies to the helpless survi\"Ol"S.
The emergency nJief phase is now over. Looking ahead, to
help Pakistani farmen to recover from the loss of rice crops,
the U.S. has allocated 200,000 tons of 'vheat and rice. A.I.D.
airlifted 21,000 pounds of fast-growin,i: ve,i:ctable seeds to the
area in time for Janu lanlini:, and :\.l.D. fin ancing i.~ ex·
peeled to help \\'i 1 ~OlllC of the 1nnior \\"orks or the Paki stan
~overnn1ent'~ re nl>ilil ation plans. Alto~c tl1er. A.I.I). has nl-
locatecl $28 1nillio11 in U.S. rlollars nncl food In help the peopl e
of Ea~t Pakistan in their recovery fron1 the crc:lonc ."\.
1'/1is Wrr("3 P-ICTU RE Sl/OIV 1'v Cnrr f 111·rcl/
-
Dr. Willey Mosley, an American doctor usually attached to the SEATO'
Cholera Research Conler In Dacca, tests drinking water in the Della-
The b1ckw.,.h or th•. tld1I wevt c1u11d by the November cyclone h11 eroded rich top1oll ol Bhola l1lani:t in the Della region of East P1kl1t1n.
• '• •
•
. . . . .
Thundill:f, Aprl 1. 1971 DATL V Pll.O'T :r.f
Everyone Has
Something Th at
Som eone Else Wants
DAILY PllJ ·if CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Finl! It, Trade It
With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results .
* * * * * * I -........ l~I _,.,.. I~ I ~ ... ,.. I~ -...... I~ I _,,, ... -I~ I _,,,.. I~ r _...... I~ * TAYLOR co. * General. .G•:)lr•• •. Gonor1 I G•n•nl Coat• MHa Dovor ShorH Huntington BHch
CORONA DEL MAR
Spacious 3 BR near ocean. Beautiful wood
paneling 4i: gourmet kitchen. For the dis·
criminating buyer. Vie'v of ocean! $87 ,500
LIDO NORD-70' BAYFRONT
Perfect family home for luxurious living! 5
Bdr:ms, 4 baths & guest apt. Lovely court·
patio \v/complete facilities. 4-car garage.
Pier/slip plus sandy beach. By appt. $260,000
1;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;~~~~:;;;;;;;;~=
oflnJa Jjfe *
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
* *·* * TAYLOR CO.
BAYFRONT WITH POOL-$ISO,OOO
* FRENCH QUARTERS
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$151 MO.
e LOOK e
Water skiing, Boating, Crew·
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from most rooms in this
spaoious hOme unmarred
by ugly rooIS, $169,500.
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Spotless 3 BR. shag cpl.
962-39ZI, 9391 Portsmouth Dr
OWNER, 4 BR, 2 Ba, f"rpl,
Bltns, Crpts, Drps, Patio,
$29.500, 536-3406. 968--9923
TREMENDOUS VALUEI
Lo\vest priced 4 bdrm "Broadmoor" home.
Richly,.panelled fam rm & formal DR. 2 cozy
fireplaces. Really sharp. $61.500.
CHOICE LOTS-PRIME LOCATIONS
DOVER SHORES & BAYCREST
90' Fr.ant, level. fer $27 500
85' Front, level, corner. fee $281500
80' View site, level, lease $29,500
75' x 180' VU on Galaxy, lease $39:soo
57' Front, pier & slip, lease $53,500
72 Linda Isle Dr ive
Traditional 6 BR., 51h ba. home on lagoon,
w/dock. Furnished, decorated & lndscpd. 2
master bdrm. suites . , ........... , . $200,000
For Complete information on all homes &
lot1, please call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
5 (o r 6) Bedroom borne with pier & slip.
Formal dining. Oversized patio. By appt.
''Our 26th Year';.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
211 I S.n Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 •
* * * * * * * General General
ECOLOGY ENTREE 984 Grovo Place, CM
fresh air, sunshine and ANYONE QUALIFIES
SUPER SHARP
Unbelievable poolside custom
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free. 4 huge BR's. 3 FULL
baths. Deluxe buill·in kitch·
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lighting, walk ~ in pantry.
Rea.I circular stairs to up.
per 3 llUites. J.lls & hers
wardrobe closets. Oub·
house, F'un filled open air
pavilion with fireplace. P•-
tio. Great location. Only
$23,500 with low dn. Why
rent? J-lurry & call cn4J
962-5585.
Dover Shore• Bayfront
BEST BUY, REDUCED for
Quick Sale. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Oen.
Bar. Pier. Slip. $110,500.
Trade, 54g.1936 or 644-46&.t
East Bluff
• EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e
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Huntington Harbour
SACRIFJCE • iss.ooo.
Magniflcent 4 br, 4 b&
waterCront home in Hun-
tington Harbour. 1 0 1 •
waterfront, 51' dock. call
213/ 592-1601 tJJr appl. Prin-
cipals only.
fast n.J,J(\ Irvine ~ I ;Y:;;;O:;;;U;;:;;;C;;A;;N;;H;;;A;;;V;;E;;.-.='
BEAUTIFUL LINDA ISLE
56' \Vaterfront. Lease
45' Waterfront. Lease
$69,500
$73,000
$75,000
$125,000
RANCH STYLE · 4 BR.
FHA-VA OK· $28,900
~ •. a world of )'Ollt own In
Tuttle Rock Hills? Quality
thruout, from the lush .shag
carpt'g. & drapes to the top
of th~ line appliances k •
private run for the deli':!
This home has everything
&. is in immac. cond, O\Vtler
has been trans!. & wants
action! See thi! 3 BR. 2 Ba.
hOmt! in ttie prestig~ area of
Irvine. Only $55,000 & you
own the land!
green grass arc all yolll'S. For this sharp l bedrm home It's imm'lculate. 3 Bedroom
Almost % acrr youngster's • lush carpetiog & drapes & home in quiet residential 2-124 Vlsta Del Oro
playground protected by 10x25 cove~lf patio. 71h% area • close to school11 & Newport Beach 644-113.1 HIRISI E Ol.S01\ " 45' \Vaterfront. Lease. Plans incl
108' Waterfront. Lease ·
JUST LISTED. Choice 11.rea.
Doi[ hollse · curb appeal.
Split rail fence 4 queen
sized bedl'ooms. Fan1i!y rn1.
Deluxe built-in kitchen. 2
full baths. Loa' burning fire-
plal-e, Wall of glass to rear
patio. Heavy shake roof. Ex-
quisite landscaping. Sec-
onds to beach and shopping.
Have a GI eligibility? Must
st1l!'dy block wails. Escape interest no Joan fees 10% shOpping, For $30,950 this
h 1·1 d f h. · · I ,_ ,_ ho ! 2 BR, 2 BA, gardn nn. 2 to t e so 1 u e o t is se· down. HurrY, this won't last! ias to vc the uo:st me or patios, 2 c gar w/e\ec drs,
, .. , .
''Our 26th Year''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro•d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
* * * * * *
eluded cul.cJe.sac bordered NO DOW,. TO VETS the money and an ab5olute pool. All in pk like setting.
with a gentle forest al 10% Down )) athers large 3 mui;t to see. carpets, drap-19131 Brookhurst Ave, Dix xtras 644-1498.
shrubbery. Move in and bed.rm wlhrdwd fl~s bllns es, bltns, plus, p\111, plus! Huntington Beach
turn on the lights, this own· ""-"" Pnmpuo rm. bl~~ wall Sul7mit -tHms. c a 11 Fountain V1lley w~ •• , STEAL THI~ ONE I er made all improvements encl rear yard. VA apPraU~ 545-8424 •• , , $2l.950 Westside Beauty. As· Gr $50 down, FHA min down.
for you. New antique gold ed at. • • sume $l9,100 FHA 71,',% Condo 3 BR, 2 BA, all
shai; carpet and frc>sh de· $24,600 int., w/w crpt, cu;t drps, bltns, community pool, 2
cor thrll-OUI. Come & be CORONA DEL MAR 10x20 cov patio, vacant. car gar. John Irwin ·&
RI' Al TO R S
charmed. Three bedrooms OUPLEX Owner/Agent Assoc. 636-4470
+ Dining Room -1~ Baths. CUtc older home and 2 story 642·1T11; eves: 646-7365 Huntington Beach
VETERANS SUBl\.!IT: NO bldg with guest apt. \Valk to I"'"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"'" ;;;=7;;::::;:--.:::-:::=::::-• l---"'--,,-_,-.,,.,..-
G"°e::n::e::r::a•i -------G~on_e_r_l~l ------1 see to apprectate .• l·h1rry
and call (714) 962-5085. ired hill -
Mesa Del Mar Beauty
NE\\IL Y LISTED so com I'!
and see this big 4 bedroom
home v.•ith family room,
heavy shake roof and bcflu·
liful gold shag carpets. As·
sume 5~ 'ih loan at $Z'l...O pt>r
month including taxes or NO
DOWN PAYMENT to vet-
erans. Ho1Y about $32.900??
rc;,,,,.. co:Ts
-~WALLACE
. · REALTORS
-54MI41-
( 0p1n Evenings)
$21,900
FULL PRICE
for thls great 3 bedroom
beauty. Lots of carpets with
matching drapes. Modern
DOVER SHORES cusror.t BLT, NE\V ENG-
LAND near NEWPORT
BAY. Elegant enlry, large
llvina Rn1., with marble fire·
place, formal Din Rm., all
electric K1L including clcc· 19131 Brookhurst Ave.
Ironic oven and breaklast liiiiiiiHiiu",.',.'";0•,.10,.",.8,.',."',.h..,iii
room. Fam. Rm., with used
brick firepl.ice, large .ser-
vice porch and three car
garage. FIVE BEDROOMS. 3093 MADEIRA
3!1 BATI-IS plus large 800 One Block trom Golf Course
Sq. Fl. all pllrpose rumpus
room. The periect answer in
a perfect setting: for a large
family, Priced below market
at only $79.500 • Shown by
appointment.
4 Bedrooms
Large Trees
Copper Plumbing
N.eat Yard
Try 10% down
~':1'/& Loan
$34,500
BUY J'r!!!
"ln"il\"ir6c:Rcaftt
546·5990
00\VN 770 ln!etelt ONLY town & bt'ach. Newly re· TODAY ?>1ESA Verde by owner; 3 $1.00 MOVE IN
$29,950. decorated • priced right is the day to see this East· bdnn, fmly·rm, 2 ba. patio. VA no no down. 4 Bedroom
al ••.
$45,000
r--'I VA REPOSSESSION
3 BR. la..l ba, cloi;ed patio,
ne\\'ly decorated Mesa de!
?>Iar. $1600 Do1vn,
Evenings Call 612-7438
B/B
Z'2 YEARS or
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
JN THE HARBOR AREA
E xceptional Duplex
$31,950
REALTY COMPANY
642-1771 Anytlm•
Tn best Corona de! Mar art>a.
' •• .• ' b .. "'h. The Apr"1I Fool kind of renlAI units always
in demand w/a huge dbl. ~ot !O!! This is not a joke
garage for ea. apt. Can be ••• a modern 2 bedrm
seen by app't. $79,500. home on an Eastside Costa
675-3000 ~1esa 60x140 R-2 lot, 3 car
-------
$ide 2 BR & den, near c.&th· Open daily $29.950. S4!>-ro7S 2 bath, existing 6% VA
olic chllrch, ;600 Down • WESTCLIFF loan. Modern, large bltn
FHA, no down VA. $20,000 AREA kitchen. Huge living room
Sa.le price. with fireplace, dining area,
PERRON REALTY $28,950 oversized bedrms, flag.
1797 Orarme, c.M. 642-lm HArbor Hi Dislrlct _ Walk stone patio, heavy shake
READY TO EXPAND
Come see this 3 BR + rum-
pus rm {panell~ & crptd).
Spanish decor in kit & din
rm, brick frplc, 1900 sq ft
+ Doughboy pool. Reduced
to $31.300 GI or n:IA terms.
847-1221
SEYMOUR REAL TY
171~1 Beach Blvd., Hlgn Bch
Open 'ti! 9 PM
DELUXE FOURPLEX
Jn best Huntington Beach I°"
cation, H8-ii large O\\•ners 3
BR, 2 Ba 1tpl. + three 2
bedroom apts. Excellent fin.
encing. sn.900.
to fantastic Westclitt Sho~ roof, dble garage, priced
ping. 3 large Bdrms -Just under market, $29.950.
redecorated. new carpeting,
drapes. Brick patio, boat/
trailer parking. Financing?
Owner very flexible -Fast
~session -Don't tarry on
this one! Call • 645-0303
IORISI E 01.SO\
'" RE I'l l TO AS
I' 1llJge Rea l EstJ te
'62-4471 ( ::::1546-llOJ
VACANT
$27.900 GI no down, FHA low
down, 3 hUge BR, 2'.1i ba,
best crpls, customi1.ed kit.,
lge fam rm, new paint in·
1\de/out. Po.~~sslon upon
credit approval. 847-8507;
2299 Harbor, C.osta Mesa Eves: 96S-43T1.
v!',E~ ,; o~ ~eo": '•,71=1111# .. i,,'i!
Lovely 3 bdnn. & ronv. W .. _... • •
REALTY
Unlv. Parle Center, Irvine
Call Anytime 8.13-<E20
2 STY, 4 BR condo, 21~
ba, 2 frplc's, Landsep'd,
under 2 mi's from UCt.
Avail July 1st. $35,500.
833--0S17 eves &. wknrls
Laguna B••Ch
* FAMILY ESTATE *
2-Story 5 bdrms., 2:ii bathl.
Lge. lcitch. w!brkist. area:
formal dining rm.; lge. liv.
rm. w/!rpic. On cul de sac
stre(>t, in good neighbor-
hood. $39.500.
buill·ins are in this country E · CnTI 644-7001
slyle kitchen; also a dish-I ;;;;"";;;";'";;;";' ;:«=:;;;;;;;;;.;ol
washer. l'-1ove·in condition. I'
EASTS I DE
COSTA MESA
CHARMER
f}j llA\' ,\ llE1\fll
UEAI:t'\' li\I'. '
garap + a hi g &torage
bldi. Full price ••••••••
$20,500. Coy Hester, Realtor den -2 baths -master
bdrm . -din. rm -new Don't Live In T•nt
* CUSTOM BtnLT •
Spilt-level; 3 huge bdrms.,
2'h baths; lge. living & fam-
ily rms. Formal din. rm. All
with beamed ceUings. Maa:-
give stone frplc. Wet bar.
Roman bath in mstr. suit..
Lots of extras; Good !inane~
Ing. $48,000,
644-5902
EST 19·11/ 675 J()f,n I --------"-' Newport
•t At this price YOU CAN'T
AFFORD T() RENT. Ca.II
us and we'll qualify you.
Macnab-Irvine 3 queen·sized bedl'ooms.
Very lovely bath. Brand
Realty Company new car]X'ts and drapes.· KID STUFF Fairview Balbo• Island
Walker & Lee
Realtors
1700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
5-1:>-9491 Open 'Iii 9 P!\1
REMEMBER MAMA Huge kitchen for mom. This 4 BR, cul-de-sac bomt
She loved the country. tig Freshly painted. Extra has Jarge yard for playina,
trees, covered patio&: m111t large double ~~l'ilt!'.''-GI and 21,2 BA and separate laun~
646-8811
(1nytlm•)
o! all, the kitchen wi!h a FHA k'rn1s a\;11lalllr. CALL dry area. fl.1ove in on credit1-;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;
place for you kids to W. NO\V and 11c'll 1111(1.!1(y YOU appl'OVal. GI or FHA. Take Ii
Company usf'Ci the diniJt: at SZJ.500. time to look at this one -
Golfers Deli9ht 1 rooin. You Jumped in t!Je Walker & Lee only rn .. 100.
pool • you used to warm Collins & Watts
Newpart Hei9hts
3 Bedrm, 1 ~4 b11th, slate en-
try, nice .size Jiving rm w/
fireplace. Good crpts &
drps. Service porch. Lovely
landscaping. Lge back yard
for children. $Z7,35o.
Lovely _5 bedrm French Re-
gency home along 1\l!esa
Verde Country Club's 15th
fairway. Beautifully improv·
ed "'ilh 40' CU!tom pool, and
wel bar. A great setting for
enterlainment or relaxing.
By appoinlmenL Cal l
$.16·5880 <open eves. I
yourself in Iront of the big: 2790 Hal'bor Blvd. at Adams 962·5523
red hearth. $30,250. Call """' '"S5 r.,,.,.._ 'fl 9 Pil-t I ;;;;;;;;;;_;:;;~;;;;,;i;;;;;; Lois Miiler, 675-3210. .,..,,...,... v'""" i · I•
Last Ye ar's Prlte
Owner wants fast sale! 4
Large bedrm!'l, with expand·
ed family rm, heavy shake
roof. step saving kitchen,
nicely landscaped. close to
BOAT LOVERS Macnab-Irvine Huntington Harbour water·
67.S.3210 front. 112 Feet on Devon
I ~==~~~====~ I Circle with 60 foot dock,
URGENT v.·ifh l'pacious. ,;Ingle level
642-8235 Lachenmyer
Realtur
all schools. ffiA!VA Term~. 1860 Newport Blvd., CM
A5k for Leg Luymes, Hf'ri· CALL 646-3928 Eves· 642-2237 tage Realtors, :>40.1151, " ·
(open t!Ves.)
4 bdrm., ·l hatb home.
f:;iiAi~•-. ~·~·j;:~~~Rii~~~.~~n I Owner bought new honie • SI08.
7
j{I· ~ mus1 s ell immediately. ~
* NEWLY LISTED * Ne"lJOrt Heigh0;. Charming
2-.sty. 3 bdrm., din. rm. Ex-
tremely large walled patio.
Great f.imily home! $34,000
Call: 673-3663 673-8086 eves.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W Balboa 673-366]
$30,000/VA appraisal. All ............-------.......
term,, available. Manicured Cokfvvell,'Bmlker'
yard, 2 massive fireplaces, ~·~-Y .
3 large bedrooms & 2 spark-
~~~,-~$23,900
ling baths. Call 545-8424,
3 Bdrm. + o.n FOUR PLEX
Sharp & clean. Owner trans-Sharp • Sharp 2 bedroom, 2
644-2430 fe1Ted. Built-in range & ov· bath ,gpacious apartments.
l ~=~===:::z= en & dishwasher&. relriger-Extra large step.down llv-
11 ator. 540-17.lO ing rooms with fireplaces,
8:13-0700
DOWNTOWN TARBELL 295S Harbor Built-ins toor No vacaney
-=~=~===-I factor. Close to shopping &
Newport Beach Tim1I Ellilsidf' Costa ~tesa, excel· POOL HOME freeways. Priced right at
()pton Sat/Sun 1-5 lent 2 Bedrm & dining, fire-13 BR, family rm. clean thru-$63,500, Call 615-4930.
*Waterfront Dupl•x
Wl'm PIER. 30 Ft. frontage,
Move-in cond. 3 BR. 2 ba.,
2 BR, 1 Ni . Very nice prop-
erty .\ priced to sell for
1150,(X)), Sho1vn by app't.
()n]y.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
DUPLEX 3 Br, 1* ba. &
1 Br.: sundeck. $57,500
Pyramid Exchangors 675-8800
Cor ona d•I Mar
STARTING OUT?
••• Or slowing down?
In either case we have the
home fo r you. 011.Jy ~.950
for this solid 2 bedroom
siucco, R·2 Lot, room to
add,
University Realty
3001 E, Cst. Ifwy, 673-6510
DOLL HOUSE
2 Bdrm, fireplace, range &
refrig., crpts, drp~. $35,000
or "-'ill lea.~e. RHr &48·7711
Co1ta Mesa
B Bed Rooms -8!
I 5300 River plate. b1i: R-2 lot. I block !O out. T1Y1pica1 setting by !he .C<USWOR'llff&CQ.
I---------Great location, 2 shOrt blocks all .1horping. A~k1ng S24.9jf), pool, A..sume 6~ GI loan. REALTORS
to beach. Belong to private Call 510·1151 lopcn eves.I. Priced Al S31.Zt00. __,_ "-11'·41Jt
THINK BIG-
HUGE HOME!
Over 3000 .-;q, ft. of could be
luxury liYing. Pool, hadm1n.
ton co u r t, shuffleboard,
study, nursery, office -
name It! This property has
ll !or the one with active
imagiruttion. Necd11 some
paint & fixin -Priced .11r..
cordingly. Call now for full
dclalb! Call 645-0303
SECURITY
to:xcellent Newport Beach lo--
cation, Large pool, newly
crptd, indoor/outdoor kitch-
en. Spac, 3 BR, din rm +
den/oflice. Complete ~ecur
lty system. $89.500.
PETE BARRETT Riiy
642-5200
$23,500
4 BEDROOMS
Sharp & clean. lo-Jove 111 cQn·
rlition. Rear hving morn,
dining rm., entry hall, built.
ins. ryo down terms. 540-1720
TARBELL 2955 Harbor
POOL TIME!
~ Bil, 1%. BA, w/1v crptg
thruout_ B!tns, fre~hly p111nl·
rrl lntcrior. GI or FHA
ICt'ITUi. SJ0.50().
Collins & Wotts
962-5523 l-~S~P~E~CTACU L AR
B EACH HOME
,\.frtln1fl, 11tcpi; 10 oe,•a.n l
BR, 2 ba. Onty $.tl.900.
CAYWOOD REAL TY
6306 W, Con•! Hwy., NB
548-1290
REPOS., 2-.'> BR, a!! trm5
CAil Pat Wood 54,.-.,2:!0(1
Scenic Pmpcrt~A 61>5726
''" thal ;,.m u"d"' 15fl,
try th<' Penny Pincher
d"b; ,w;m, ,.,,;,, "'-3 • f>. VI R I * 5 BEDROOMS * BR A·f.rame home, top con-HEIJTAGE nCO ea ty Be11ut. }!arbor View Homes
dition. ~ llAl m•n ll29 Harbor, Cr-.r &iG-0033 Tf'Jlj, w/wet bar, lovely ~~E~A~N~S~M~l~T~H~, ~R~L~T~R~· 1.;iiii~~V,iijj~ ··'f cl . CORONA DEL
MAR-carp,: M:.< -eanmg ovens;
400 E. 17th St.. C.i\1. 646-3255 PANORAMIC VIEW vllcant, quick possess.
PARK LIDO CONDO of jetty & main cMnnel. 3 , 3 B~.o~ 0~~· t~;~~:acb $:t.l,r«! Including the land,
Lovely. spllt level 3 BR., 2 BR., 4 ha. hon1e w/formal REDUCED to $41 ,500 CORBIN
ba. Kitchr~ bhns. New cpl / din. rn1., sJ udy : 2 frplcs, Home Show Realtors -
drps, patio, POOL & 3 \\·et bar. N('1vly 1'('dccor. . A1'111rhuir Househt1n!in11:" MARTIN g1trage11. $31.000. On ~ancly ~1!.('.h, $16!1,;;oo. 3JlJ E. Co11~1 H"'Y,, CriM
CAL9!L l!\d-'e 646-l.4 14 2001 Ba:.s1di· Dr. By app'!. '7S..7225 1.1.1.1.,2 \'.I .,~ Bill Gr undy, RH l!or ==~-ii;riD.,..<l'R:::E~A:;L:::CT;.;O;R;S;,,,_--REA L~..., 833 Dover Dr .. N.B. 642-4620 PRESTIGE ADDRESS DOVER SHORES-
fORlST [ OLSO~ "' PE A l TOlllS
$28 950 Designed to take advanlage View home. ll48 Santiago Dr,
Nt•r Newport Po11 Offlft , of the VIEW. Pool, 4 BR, Best buy . sp.ac. 5 BR. 4 ba. 2299 HARBOR. COSTA MESA
S BEDROOMS 3 Ba. fam nn w/frplc & Adaptahle floor plan for BY O"•ner: 3 BR/2 ba, 2
Hug*' family rm., entry h111l, .. vet bar. couple or Jge. fam ily. Newly car gar, frplc. Clo~ to
A·I zone near UC!, J berl. elegant 2 ~tory, dining n >1., ROY J , WARD RL TR. dticorated. By app't. $91,CXKJ. Schl'll & shp'g. ( 114 l
HORSES OK
mom home 011 26,000 ~q. fl. park hkf' yard "Ith l1uit 1~3 .'.'!n rincrs, Dowr Shores Bitl Grundy, Realtor ~i'i--63.14
lot. $3i,900. Term~. 11't:"ell. No down t t> r 11 8. it16-J.J:i0 Open Dally 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-1620 -w-,~.Jl-h-,7Jp_y_o_"-~-J7,,-.,7,~_756~7!~
Roy M cCa rdle, R•altor :H•-1720 REPOSSESSIONS I ISIO Ne1vpon 131vd., C.M. TARBELL 2955 Hirbor Costa·Me1• Cos te Mesa 541-n2• ''"""'"''"'""'"''"'--.•!Sparkling clean homes, some 1"".:;;;;::;;::;=============:::::;:'" 7 1• newly painted & carpetf'd. 2, I """"""'~~~"""'"'I BA YCREST LOT z. • & s bdnns. Some with $28,000 Bes! street _ larg1 lot. pooli;, F'llA-VA conv. terms,
4 BR.+ l BATHS Not L(·a.~·hold . ~1 1rry' from $20,000 to $40,000.
B ·r ho A Id & f d Colltns & \Vatt.& Inc. eaut111J mf', large room!, rnO t eU 88<1~ Adllms Ave. 962-5523
2 story, dining rm., entry ~"" ,. 11 I -c 'f -----·~=~-I
hall. built-in~. tirep!Ace. .MIO 6'6-~.J551
•• • * NEW LISTI NG *
J10-17'1u 2 BR. duplex . xh'll Joe. Per·
TARBELL 2955 Harbor E·SIDE c.;o..I. tri·plex. Xlnt mll f()r 6 paylna 1ue.~t8.
1h: ACRE-POOL-HORSES Joe 2 hr <'ACh, ,tncd yard11, $3.'i.OOO.
3 br, t"'• ba., country-style 1tar11.~e~ lnroi11e $415/nio. G eorge W illlamson
home 1'1('8t new park. 6~ % S.18,.'iMI l)r trade up In 1an1e Realtor
J03n, Mfty e xc:hance . area. By own"t . &12-.\fi.'il 67)..4350 64.S-1564 Eves.
Owner/Agt :a.IR-9417 Woo.~e Hunttns;! Walch the I fa.-;t l'f'llUll$ nm just a phone
For bes! ttsult1! 6-'2-5678 QPF:N MOU.c;E C'Olumn. I et1!l av.·a.v · 642-5678
Move to the BEACH/
Poract thOllC Ions driws to your fAvorito
buch or Wiiier :iru.. New l or 4 bedroom,
5ina1e or two story llomet io CIOtCt-i n Co~ta
M.... from $30,!JOO
~~e:.:dWMWtrA>"., il'i(_ COJta M~$a
)\~~ 'SllH0tficoPl>onoo{714)54 g.():137
----------~-----------------~
kitchen & new detached Buy Like Rent
dble. gar. + nice se<:luded See this vacant 3 BR, 2 BA
cul de sac st + big !ol Townhouse-, w/crpts, drps, ID"ID~
• A·l • shape in & out refrig,, bltn R&.O + lots ol
• imm('(j. possession -leav-rec area. ·FP, $18,990. Sub-....,...* -,99=c..*
~50IJJH v.ot.NA. c:MJI.
Ing lllate -must tiell at mit. 847-12'21 ~
;:e~. P~~11~~~~ ~~~ SEYMOUR REAL TY Lovely 2 Br/2 B•. Condo
points .. hurry' to Quintard 17141 Beach BJvd .. Htgn Bch L•9una Beach Hom•
Realty -rlgtit this n1fnute l-=~°'"'-.",'_H,1 .-9_P_M'"" __ IDEAL for year round com.
-1871 Harbor -Costa Me5a Pool Side Paradise fort & gracious relaxed liv·
-642-2991 .Surrounds the 1Gx32 pool w/ ing. All exterior niaintaln-
VACANT 3 Bedrm + fam Iota of decking + 4 BR. 2 ance attended. Tennia
nn, 2 ba, bltns. Crpts/drps, BA area home w/frplc, courts, only 100 steifs to pri·
frplc, Jari,-:e yard. 2 years crpls, drps, bltni;, new paint vate beach, also ovuJooka
old. Good location. Take inside, Close to .shops, glamorous heated pooL All
over 6%% VA $715 pe r schools & beach. $77,900. eleekit,incl; retrig,range,
mo. total. Owne r / Ag t Al: tenns. 847·1221 dishwasher & disposal. Com·
636-4470. SEYMOUR REALTY pletely carpeted wall Jo wail
LOVE NEST
. $23, 950·FHA/VA
2 years new a: 8imply
glean\8! Xtra large bed·
rooms, dining, work-saver
kitchen, much. much more!
J.[AS to be one of the be11t
buy9 in the whole beaC'h
area -First looker abou!d
be proud new owner! Call
&tS.0303
IORf Sl E 01.SON "' fft'Ai,TOPS
22911 HARBOR, COSTA MESA
4 BR·FAMJLY R~1.
1 % 13A, wlk to all sch IA
&: churches. Lg fncd bk
yd, on cul de sac 5464253
wk days a.ft 5:30
Sell the old stuU Buy the
new tl"tuff
ln4t Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch thrUout Lower level l&~
Open 'til 9 PM dry has w9hr/dryer, swr.
UNDERPRICEDI 11 age room & double carport.
$22,9001 This is a corner unit in
0 NI beaut Jndscpd, patroled
G I NO D W area, Close lo market &: or low FHA terms. 3 BR, shp'ng. Avail turn or untum. fncd, lg yard w/fruit frees. Priced under market for&.
Don't wail!!
HAFFDAL REAL TY reot ..re. Pho"'' 837.am.
842-4405 * OCEAN VlLLA *
Eves: 54J.2446 New, olde world design: 2
Br, den & rec. rm. Din.
BY OWNER: 3 Br, 1% ba, area. Frpl. Kitch. w/range,
2 car gar, crpts, frplc, hltn oven, dishwuher. $39,000
stove, dbl oven & dshwahr, full pr. Lov.·er dn. pty. OK.
lrg cul-de-sac lot. $28,000. MISSION REALTY 494--0731
Call for appt. (2131 764-8091 LOVELY ocean view h:ime,
CUSTOM 4 BR, 2 ba sparkling. 2 Bdrms, den,
townhouse, all appl., Pool frpl 2 · d k 7 c, patio~. ec . SJ ,500.
tennis, Easy PY m n Is• Owner 499-2094 eves ~
$24,000. 962-1680 wknds,
3 Br, beaut. lndscped, frp!c, Save your Cid' • 1t's nor
Beautiful resid. area. Oose far! J u.st reach for-your
~"'="'-h~-~-=-=~--~· 1 phone A call D&il,y Pilot DAILY •PILOT for action! tassified 642-M18 Owp
Call 642-5678 & Savel yom ad -today!
$@\\Q\l~-.lG£tfS"
•
The Purrle with the Built-In' Chuckle
four xrombled words t>.
low to form four almple wonk
I GOP ENS
. I I 1 I I
l-'T'-U_._F_._A _L._.I ; I ~~ _ 'I I I · I . l -
1
F I T 0 s I !. _.,,,..... __ ......__,,
-• A 'Dear George• lnqulryr ~ I I I I '"Does o mon hove grounds ..-------~ for divoroe If his wife makH I K A T P E C I lousy -r
0 Compi.t. ~. "'"""' ,t;.lt I II I I' I bv filling In the mluing WOfd.
_ _ _ • • _ • 'IO(J d-fop from stfl) No. 3 btiiow-
8 f'RINT NUM8ER[O lEITElS lN I
THESE SQUARES
e u~~R~~B~N~~~~E L1T1ERS I ' I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800
I
I
' I
I f
. -. ' .. . .
38 DAllY PILOT Ttiu~, April l , 1971
1
;;;! -~ ...... ~1~~1 ~! ___ ... _ .. ;;]~;;;1 ._l -~-"1'·__.I~ .__I _·:.:.::_: ... __,!~I ...-I~ l _,_..., J~I -·--I~ .;;ml -~·--~]~;;~
L•gun• 8Mch Newport Be•cft Condominiums Lott fw S.te 170 Business Houses Furnllhtc:I 300 Hou1M Unfurn. 305 HouMs Unfurn. 305
SAYE
tASHI
1--"5-B_E_D_R_OO--M-S-·l--BA-L_B_O_A_c"'o-v"'E"'s-· I for ••I• 160 LA""'c"u"'N-A"'N"iau._1,....."'""--'r -:-,., 1-0-"ppo_rt_un_1_1y'-__ 200_ s=-.-:1:-bo-.-:-1,:-1.-nd-:----l·G=.-.-.-r.-:I----=
WATERFRONT WKE Tiit~ OCEAN! M X ll7. All iml'Jl'OYHMnts \VRECK1NG yard, xll1t loca-
FURN 2 Br bow. .t apt 4 b 3 b -1 I ~ L.a.rct tamlly home In • rood
nriJ"hborhood for chiktrrn. Tt'uo:den'ed • Must se.U~ La"'"' & patio tor pl&ymi Prune ~-3 BR. 2 b.a. sincle
&. entert.ainu11.. Prlvaie pa· ~:wr. ?\ewly decor. Fenced ''° ott muter bedroom. )'d. Jl ft. boat afip. $75,500
Easy care built-in kitcllen 801 Grvndy, Realtor
With a dishwuh'r It bre•ll:-&ll tlo\'U Dr., N.B. 642-4620
You can't aet clo11er 1.han in. Owner 495-5505 rlon. RealO"able, \V!U .-U
this, BLUE LAGOON VII, Golf F•irw•y Lot all or pa.rt. Call 613-TIKS
LA, ri&hl on a private By Owner &ti.4364 Investment ~ach, lhrte bedroom .. M bll H I Opportunity three bath~. beautlfully o • omt 220
Now thru Junt 30, Winter •Avail. lodl.y. 2 Br, lncd yd, r , a ... ., c. F'Tom $350, 9 am to noon, 615-4656: Aft -, . . , rale1. 67$-5074 encl R'll.I'. k!dJl/peta. $140. 6• 644-tl:iZ7 ' -
Corona del Mtr ALA R•ntela e '4S..l900 I :C;;-0-1-,18-,Mco-•s-.-----_ ----------1$135 VACAN'I' 2 BR. Stove/
1"1 ""'· Fonnal d<runr OCEANFRONT room . 3 BathJ. Larre double
''"•'· $39.900. Call -DUPLEX
.AV tan
REAL ESTATE
Good Inconu·. SEr .!"JOO
BURR WHITE
Realtor 675-4630
2901 :\'"'POn Blvd .. N.B.
U90 Glrnneyre St. BY 0\\Tlf'r. Seil or lsr/opt ~9-4-9413 S49-ll316 3 BR -t fam. rm. Ir din. nn. 2 Ba . Ne\\' drapes &
Leguna Niguel carp. Spnnkler&. Westclift
l--"----''-----1 atta, nr &chtOls. 5.5% ~IUSI' 5"11, beaut. 3 bdrm. assum. loan. $43,500 ~ Incl. ho~. zi.s Baths. l..€e. tncd. the land 642-8839
yard, beaut. lndscpd, with1-.~-~·~==-~-cov. pa.lie & ias BBQ. Cptd. $5000 REDUCTION. Custom
&.: d~r. thruout. $31,500. 3 br. pool home. Write
CAU. 10 SEE Cia5'ilied Ad No. 111, Daily
OWNER 49>~ Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, C.M.
BY (}.l•ner • lmmac. 3 br, '•"'="'===-~~---2~1 ba. tam rm , Jdry nn, CHARMING hillside home
frplc, J~ deck, SJ0,000. w/vie"" Nrwport Hts.
195-5338 -548-79&3
LOVELY 4 BR, 2 &. tam h rni, view ot vaUey. close Newi::ort Helg ts
to f>hopping, $45,000 . Exclusive. spectacular view,
492--0422 (3 bdrm, 2 bal. 425 RMlands
lido Isle
Avr ., Nwpt Hgts. $49.500
Open daily, 10 to 5. Rltr. •--Vl_EW_OF-BA_Y __ , ..._,.,,, •"""'
San Cltm•nf•
furnuhed . buy 81 today's Treiler P•rks 172
price and gel next year's EXCELLENT opp. 25% of
incJ'eastd value, all for only two s Star Fam. M. H.
S79,500. Also others from ParkB for 65M. Total spaces
$45,000. 312 ll42 sp. ready to start
NEAR BILLION S
DL--VELOPMENT • !'trusl
saeril.ice 160 roraeous ac
"'/ fantastic artesian well.
Partly white frneed w/ pic-
ture hook ~ning. Trrr!l!c
poteallal lo subdividt' into
sml ranchos or hold for
appt'l!Cia1ion. E1. tPnns.
{714) , 325-m9 or 1714)
321-87'9 anytime.
FANTASTIC VJ EW of refrli crpts drp& Tot OK OWNER '4 BR, 1% BA, tnc:d •Ne\\~t B&r,NBalboa Jsland Blue B.ac~n * ,645-011 J ya.rel, c11l-d~ac st ..
vcean. ell!\y new/--.-""'°~"""~-....:.---ch!Jdff!n/pets OK. N "w
Spanish • sly le 3 bT. 3 ba L•ndlords~Owners crpts. pe.int. lmmac s~
executive home. W11I lease We will refrr tenants to you nio . ~J..-7359
Blue Lagoon constr.) Limited Par1ner-
__ 1 ship. Net retnrn the lat
furnished or unfurnished. FREE of charie. _ .Many
Live-in maid incl.. $ll00 mo. dealrablr tenanta on our VACANT AND READY -3
213m2-IOM or 714/64.)..1~. w'l.ltlng list. bi.1: bP<:irooms. big roveff.'d RtrU41ty year 3.'it per 100. For detail£ paho, BAR-8-Q arra. \\'s.lk 01AR.\1JNG COTTAGE 2 ALA Rent&.ls • &1.j..39()() 10 stor@s. $250. Per month 30IDl South Cout H\1y. ra.11 682-1357. ' br, furn. Nr Mach. ~ • S/eps 10 bf'ach. l Br. stovr lo families only. Call agenl Laguna Beach 4~2206 Mountain, o .. ert,
Income Property 166 Resort
lrplc. l'tlalure adults. Nti refri1. child ok. $100. · ~141
peu S225. 673--7796 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 174 240 Money to Loan 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crp\11,
Dupl•x-N•wpcrt B•ach
Beautiful, brand MW (2) 3
BR with many elCtra&.
Prime locatlon. Block to
beaC'h. f.faximum d~r«"ia
tion. Four Star Realty,
835-4122.
LIDO ISLE--320 Nord . 6
beach apts. Furn. Gar. 80'
beach. Le11.sehold yr. ))14.
A.siring Sl4D,000. Conslder
trade. 642-4097, 543--22ll ext
228
OFFICE BLDG.
Net income $26,500
Single tenant "AAA "
Price $270,000
Re!Ul'l\11 10% on C&lih 1nv.
W. R DUBOIS INC. * ~5-7166 *
LAKE ARROWHEAD $135 LAGUNA 1 BR. stove, drps, stove, retrig. Quiet
3 :R ~~~n ~-E!re• with Cash Fast ! -::~-,,,-:,-. -=e"R....,tur-n'"i•"h<'<l _____ I si~r~ge;::n°; '45-0111 :~'.c~ b~t':g ~;s.a~i~~
a dock. Fania.soc view. 1st & 2nd Trust Dffds ..,..-'-"-'-',.· -=""c'--Si",_c_._M_._13 BDRM., Family rm., park 64&4430.
f'll rn"d. $39.:.00. 548--8641 FREE APPRAISALS N•wport Beach like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids SPACIOUS 3-4 Br, 3 Ba. =A~•~'~·-,---=-----I Costa Mes• Investment """":::0:"".:-".::-"':'---1 OK, brk., S200 • munth_ NO Fam rm. lge fncd yard. LUXURY 2 Br home on FEE_ 54B-l"raJ. Frplc. $350. CaU Jim at
Rancht1, F•rms, 548-nll anytime channel. April 24 thru June 1-:--,,., -,~-=-~~~~ 645-1976 or 833-2113
Groves 180 l "~""~~~"!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!I UIO entire period 1 ~ • lresh &Clean 2 Br. 2 ba, -==------1st TD Loan rrsponsible pe:noN bltnJ, gar. K!ds/pel~. $150. LEASE -4 br/2 ba, Ji lnc:d
AVOCADO RANCH &12--3573 . ALA Rentals e '4S.3900 yrd_*C~d~~~4 * *"
Jn e:cclusive estate uea. 6* % IN'I'ERESf LARGE 2 br, 2 ha, 2--story $l2o POOL, 1 Br, Guest rot-1 '2"""B~D~R=M~.-,"P'-'--~,~.~,~.,-,.,-,.
CI'OP. management available 2nd TD Loan home w/lrplc, $ 2 7 5. tage, IOI OK. ' S250/monlh.
Beautitul home site 6T.:>-4354 after 6. Blue B•acon * 645-0111 * Call 67f>.269S * \\'~5-::'de Term., based on eqully. Univ•rtlty Perk • Pool +-2 Br. 2 ba. crpt/ 2 BR. House. no peta.
642-2171 .54S-0611 3 BR. & tr' 2 Batra drps. bltn.,, kids/pets. $150 $160/mo. $:ii cleaning fre.
Serving Harbor area 21 yn. Frplc. & ab!~~-$300 Mo: ALA Rentals• 645-3900 1 ~1~994=Po~mo-""_A_v_•~·~""-·-·--
Sattler Mortgage Co. Avail. April 5 to Sept. 5. 3 ~J?RM. + ~ily rm., full J-IOUSE in court. 2 Br. crpts.
336 E . 17th Street Bob Pettit, JUtr ~101 dlllllli: nn., built-Ins., brk. drps, patio. 976 \Y. 17th St. ---------1 $300 a month. NO FEE, No. B, CM. 543--2839
Costa Mesa
~tr& larie loc BY OWNER: Lovely 2 * * 2 BR. House + tour
5 Bedrooms • 3\i Baths Bedrooro home w/!Ome l BR. apt.s. + mom for
Monty Wanted 250 Houses Unfurn. 305 Ne'NpOrt, 540-1720. 1 ·.,--~.-c,,~B~r.~H~a~u~sF.= .. ~1=>10
REALTORS WANTED to borrow: Local ::---;-------1• Corona del Mar near heh. per mon!h. No pets. 1940
$111500 view & guest house. Xlnt more. Income $6,500 yr.
LIDO REALTY INC. location. .. Assume 7%. S 55,000.
SINCE 1944 builde r has R-2 lot. prime General 2 Br, 2 ba. yrly. $200. Pomona Avr.
673-4400 area, needs prlvare tundin~ . ALA Renti1ls e '4S.l900 z BR. Duplex. Garage. , .
713 3377 V3e Lido 673-JlOO 148 \Y. C.Ornil10 Ewa: 492-1.236 _;;_·_1-_2360 ______ _
1---------Sant• Ana Helghta • Hunti1t9lon Beach
• !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! fur constructioo ot quality 2 ln Huntington Beach· both l""===o-o===-~ Ari··' SJ"/ 3 ~-m,·, o-al~~ a--' $775 OCEAN' VIE\V 3 Br, split pets. wts. ..., mo. rluplex. 54s--Oi69 u=uuu '"" •i= '"' w 1v·1 "'S-~"2 Real Estate
Exch1nge
one at $225 Stop by &nd levrJ, avaU now. · L son . ...., ~ .
M_•_•_•_d_•_l _M_•_r ____ 1ll6 acn, 2 BR home w/pool.,
BY Owner: Lrr 4 br/2 ba, detached rec room & $hop,
lrscpd'. Priced to r;ell! At Jdral Jot homs, doga:, etc.
$30,!M. 968-7963 Aviary set up in back,
S48.00J, 545-8148 M••• Verde ACRE for Comm·1 Sta.b!es
1----------or home &: stables. 673-2262
BY O\l.ner: 6-X % assumable or 673-5723
Joan. 4 br. 211, ha. fam~1~"!ii!!!!i!!!!~\i!!~ 1m. 2 trplcs. $44 ,000 . ~ [j]
545-1781 Real Etlat•. I .a
3 Br. 2 ba, high :rHA. Jowl ~;;;;;"';;;;";";';;;;;~~-;;;;~ down or l&tfoption possible.JI
Bkr. Eves: SJR.6341 A fo I cr•age r ae • ISO
N_•_w_,_po_rt __ Bo_•_c_h ____ e ri.tOBILE HO)fE PAR.Ke
NEEDS TEENAGERS 60 Acres. Potential mobile
Community pool. clubhouse home park site. Smog free,
&: putting green with thill Just minutes from
immac. adult occupied 3 Rivrnide. Pr" I i m i n a ry
BR I il .__ r .... engineering incl. p a r k .• am y rm. uume. ""6"· 1 bdrms. & hi.lie encl_ patio design competed. S3340 per
makes thi& r great home for acre. Submit your terms. For f u r t he r information a family v.•ith teenagers. please call R. E. KNOX
t;e,500. wilh ECKHOFF' &
Del•ncy Real Estat• ASSOCIATES INC. 1818 \V.
2828 E. C.oast Hwy. CdM "'-n--,..RI"
644_mo . ._,,apman, .., .... ...,... ......, u .
l =,-----,,,-,--,~-I 54J-2Sll/Eve& & v.·k ends,
BY owner, Harbor Virw 538-9435.
home, floor plan 3, l story, 1---~co=w=RAD0==---
4 BR, 2 ba, din'g rm. frplc, $3 Down. $3 mo per Acre
1~own!!!~land!!!~·~l<~3~,~950!!!. ~6'4!!!-4~218~.~I Ov.'l'ler liquidating beaut r foothill• acreage Trees!
[ )
Views! Elk &. Deer hunting
Cfassffied INDEX area. Fishing nearby. Full Advertl1ing pri"' oruy $2970 for l10 A,.
$30 dwn, $ll mo (98 I Holwfor.s.I• ll~J pymnt.s) NO INTEREST. _ . For pictures, info &:
iuarantee, write: Owner,
Box 17043 T.A .. Denver, Clas1ification I 00-149
Reil Etlate, l/Jl)l~Co-lo~. _8021~'~·~~~-~~ I Glneral 15 AC: l,000 ft. frntg, El
I Cl ••• ifo'<•l ioo I SO 184 Toro Can~n Hwy. ~ TV
II I ~ :;1~imHome Show rutn.
. financial ~ 20 ACRES Northern caJlr.
Nr Rh·er, Main hiway~.
Cl1111ssific1111t ion 200-260 Take ovrr, $29 down. $29
mo. 968--0047
HouMs for Rant Jl fl!) Apartments for sele 1_52
Cl•ssifie•tio n 300·355 **.* 14 very .charm1~g units, good location. Prin-
l IJQ'] cipals only. Owner 644--0315 """rtmtnh for R.!rrt Cemetery
C1assific•tion 360-370 lots/Crypts 156
112 Mortgag•s, look thru ou~ Rental Book. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 &SIDE, 3 BR. 2 ba. D1n'g (21 Fourp!e>:es. Pride of own-
ership. Ideal owner llve in.
Each with Ill 3 BR, (3)
2 BR. 2 Block& to shopping.
Four Star Realty m.-4422.
Lots for Sale 170
Trust D•tds 260 e HILLSIDE LOT in Sierra I -.,.,.-,,,-.,..,-=~---
]11adre Have .about $3.00'> $23,000 DISCOUNT
WALKER & LEE, e l.Alng Hair OK. 3 Br, 2 ba nn, Crpts, drps. Dbl gar ..
R•1ltors rncl gar, pets. Sl80. S2l5. 557-76Z7, 642-{;737
-FORECLOSURE
2~ acre horse ranch repos-
se!lsed from former aero-
space employee now avail-
able at developer, cost.
SAVE $3000
on the~ fabulous, oak 11tud·
equity. Will trade for less
equity in other properly or
BOAT. CAR. ANTIQUES
etc_ 646-7335
Reel Estat• Wanted 184 ==:o--,.-,-.---\VANTED: 3-4 BR. home for
family in CdM from
O\VNER. Fee simple, prin-
cipals only. 1-213/~7318
ded, raneh siu spreads. [ 11 • l Located In the booming F.inancYI
Sout h Co&st area near San I ~-------'
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ALA R•ntals e 64S-3900 Fountain Valley
Emrrgency. Sacritict choice S45-S49l Open 'tiJ 9:00 P.M. S150 W/lITIL, L(:"e 1 Br, Pvt FOR lse. lmmac 3 BR, 111..
SSJ.000 TD, pays $2.614 J!t'r' e 3 BR, 2 BA, quiet street. pa!io, Walk to storeg. ba, new shag cpts k drp&,
mo. at 9 ... o. Sell with. :ult N'• CJ·pts, drps. blt:ng, [rplc, !gr Blue Beacon * 645-0111 frpl c, bltns. S240 mo.
course; Strong buyrrs 1714) lncd yard w/room for boat e Families Welcome. 2 Br, 96&-9'543 or 213/241-1588.
325-2039 or !71-tJ 371.ST19 or trlr • 5 BR 3 BA I 1,.-,,..--.,.--.---,---. • · crprs drps. Pets OK . S1:15. Huntington Beach ~'~"=Y=li_m~·-· ~-----·I crpt.s, drps, bit~. frplc, a ALA Rentals • 64S..3900 1 .. -....,--------NEED 2nd Trust Deed i:JOOO. great home for a lge family ./~==-===~~=~~ EXECUTIVE living-2700 sq
Westcliff, prime loc:ation, Properly Management Div., $175 SPACIOUS 3 BR, 2 bl\, ft, $450. Huntillflton Cregt
. Aft 7 pm. s12-I067 South Coast R. E. 545-8424 Family or singles, pt'! OK. 4 br + family rm + lge
LIDO ISLE 1 BR. compl LARGE 3 bed with carr :ts Blue Beacon * 645-0111 , office/den. 2 trplcs, 3 ha.
and drapes thruout fenced Spanish-st~l e innr r furn, Stereo, color ":V, , C d I M rt d 1· N "-h yard. family room. Will take orana • ar c9u yar pa io ear ut::a<' lint'ru;, etc. Respon. ac:tt. . & Ga r tie Id . _ Ca I I
$165. 642-1169 chlldren & i>ets • $Zl0 P/M. DOLL HOUSE 21317'12-1084 or 7141962-3892
WALKER & LEE, 2 Bdrms. firepla ce. range & TNHSE-c-itl, dC'p, ref, whr,
Realtors refrig.. crpts, drps, S250 or d 1 2 8 11= will sell. Rllr 5-lS-7711 ryr, rnge. poo • r ""· 171~) 842-4455 or SW-5140 .l br. i180. 548·1405 •
'
·REoc1LY . _ _, . WATERFRONT 3 BR. 4 Ba. 646-6762.
Juan Capistrano. l-1 i r h I••·-------above the smoi:'. private Busin•ss [ )~
road and Jocked gate i\l&r· Opportunity 200 L_-__ 1_°'_"_"" _ _, ~ antee the natural beauty of -.
this former Spanish Grant BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
surrounded by .. beautiful
Cleveland National ForesL
All utilities availabJ,.
PRICED FROM $9,950
LOW DOWN-EASY TERMS
Cin:'.1Unstances force the lm-
mediale disposition o1 these
few choice parcels wbose
tenner owners LOSS lg your
GAIN!! Call or wri!e tor
complete details and color
on-site photos. Buy direct
from the developer:
RANC110 CAPISTRANO
2172 DuPont Drive, Rm 3
Newport Beach, Cal. 92664
833,3223
CHOICE lot. 100 x 135 R-2
paved -alley. J..18 E.
Rochester SI. CM close to
17th St shopping are a
A chaTll'e to join one al
Ame rica'& fastest gro\\'ing
industries.
ri.lOBJLE H01\1E SALES
Invest in & going es1ablish-
mrn1, move in loda y .
Investment only S 2 8 , 0 0 0
req"cl. Have your invrstmenf
relumed lo you in 4 months.
You are buying fixed asset!>
& deposit assets only. Only
interestM persons apply
please. Jomicra Inc., J!J26Jl
Beach Blvd, H.B. 5."h-6511
TO BUY OR
SELL A BUSINESS s ..
HOLLAND BU5. SALES
"The Broker with Empathy"'
1TI6 Orange Ave., C.r.1.
&15-4170: 540-0608 anytime
cl_'27.~000=67_3-_9_509~~---i \VALK·in antique popcorn
4 LOTS. cor ~l u·amar & boolh-Cuslom awn ing s ,
Capistraoo, Arch B" & ch glass windows. valu $2000+.
Hts, Laguna B. $19,!0l. $199 Trd for car, jewelry, boat
dn, Sl99 mo. 0 w n "r prop or '? Att 6:30, 494-4977
213:968--3318. Sc.ll the old stuff
For best result&~ 042-5678 Buy the new stuff
Houses Furnished 300
G•neral
' . •
1-RENTAL FINDERS
::: Free To L1ndlords
.:::. 645.0111
:;:: 4JJW.1tttl,Cott• M ...
e LAGUNA SPECIAL
Stepg 10 water. 2 Br. encl
gar. $15().
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
e ON THE BEAC11 l Br.
Child OK. U!il 's ?d. SUO.
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
S80 OCEANFRONT Bachelor.
util paid, student OK.
Blu• Beacon* 645-0111
e GUEST CO'ITAGE w/pool,
hne Joe. Child OK. $ll0.
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
$120 INCL lITIL. l Br mobile
home, pool, mature adlts.
Blue Beacon* 645-0111
= paint.,.. 8P8CIOUS ,__ ·I d ~=----~--~ 2 bedroom, (new cpts. & ,""~~· neh•1Y1 000re ~c,., on .sa.n,-~ 1 BR, patl". pool, natural
LR & Bd whe Y urac · · ' o. beam ceilings Nr hospital f~~ed Y~ g~~n~~ Bil l Grund~, Rltr. 642-4620 Avail April :." $16,j utU pd:
i;chool & shopping. $150 pr. CAMEO H1ghla"?t 3 Br .. 2 17676 Carr.eron, 842-5192.
mo. ,\1. flt. La Borde RJtr. Ba. Ocean view. Priv 3 BR, 2 BA, vacant beauty. ~16--05;);, beach. Realtor 673-7225 Bes! are11 of H.B. \Valking
$lti ?<.tOVE TODAY! 2 BR, CLEAN 3 Br, elec bltns, d is!. to beach. $2611 mo.
RIO, Kids & J>e}S fine. 2 ftJ>!c, 6Unde-ck, nr. shpg. 962-5523 Ask for Jack. Ag!. iB~liju~eiB~e~•;<;•~n~*~64~S.0~~1~11~[l5.1;;\--05;;J4;;. ;''•';;';' 3ll;;w;k;d;•~ys;;.;;;il [3 Br. !Im den. crpts & drps, 2 ba on cul-<:le-sac, cov 'd 1 BR cottage, singles OK $75 p11.tioi ls! & last mo +
1 BR furn cottage ·•· $19.SO CLASSIFIED cleaning fre. S22S. 892-1:157 2 BR ~1ngJes or eple OK S9'S
2 BR aar, kids OK •••• $120 HOURS Huntington Harbour
3 BR gar, vac11nt/lncd Sl~O
2 BR Hllrse ranch .... $175
3 l!R horses, 48 acrs .. $350
STAR.LET 771>-7330
e HEAR THISI
SlePl'. to water. Laguna
Beach. Encl gar. $140
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
$150 NR BEACH 2 BR, 2 ba.
gar., Child &.: pe! OK.
Blue Beacon* 645-0111
-4 BR. 2 Ba. C811>1'ls. drapes,
Lncd yd. $225. 19072 Stingray
in HB 6'13-6578
DAILY PILOT for action!
8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday thru Frida;t
9 to noon Saturday
Advertisers may pl11.~
their ads b)• telephone
COSTA 1'1ESA OFfl.CE
330 W. Bay
642-5678
r..·E:WPORT BEACJ-r
3333 Newport Blvd.
642·5678
HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd.
540-1220
S550f EAUT lFUL waterfrnt
3 , 2 ha \11/sundeck &
doc . l~e or option. 644-4132,
644-1221
La9una B•ach
IMMACULATE 3 BR. 2 BA ,
$2'5. Fil't'pla~. yaTd. gar,
bl tlnc;. 499-1331. 494--4746
Da~y Pilot Want Ads have
Mr-ga ins ga.lore.
USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE!
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
LAGUNA BE.otC!l
222 Forest Ave.
494-9466
SAN CL"F:~1:ENTE
305 N. El CeminD Real
492-4420
NORT!i COUN'r'l
dial Jree 540.1220
I I~ CE~tETERY lot, Pacific
Rent111 ""' Vie\\-, l'tta.sonic i:ection. CLASSIFIED 1~------' St 75. 494-S1.:t1 ----DEADLINES •11
• 11Ml5 • TIMI$
7
TIMIS " 11MlS
Cl•ssific•tion 400·465 Condominiums Deadline for copy & kills
for .. 1. 160 $4.50 $6.80 $10.65 $15.90 is 5:30 p.m. th' doy be-
[ Announcemt11ts JI iiJ14) COZY "Bachelor Pad" 2 eR.1 -----11 -----l·-----1-----1-----1 --$-5-.1-0-·1--$-8-.2-l-·1--$-1-3-.-10-l--S-2-0-.1-0-l l:~~ P~~~~d!~"· tftif~1~
2 BA, s111glr story, au-cond., \1·hcn deadline Is Satur· C l1ssifie1tion 500-510 euy care patio, cu5\om 1 ·.-----1-----1-----1-----1-----·l-----1----1----I--day, 12 noon.
& Lar I $6 00 $9.76 $15.SS ' $14.30 I l ~ crpts · drps thruout in • ' CLASSIFIED
Per$.Onal• win's pITstige Tiburon. ~ REGULATIONS '-=-cc~~_, --PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 ERRORS ' Ado.rtiwrs
C l•ssifle1tion 525-535 COVETED 3 BR. 2 BA &ingle TO FIGUll COST shou1a check lhcir adi I~ story "Grttn Valley" to11·n-r ul 61111 •n• 'we1d ;11 •icli ~aily & report errors I Wt and FOll'ld hoUSf'. Excellent "!a k" ,,,,. .i...... 111cllt4e veirr _ Immediately. THE r utli1h fet •••••••••• .li1y1. b•ti•u1i119 ••·····•·•••••••·••••••••·•• -DAil.Y PILOT 111ssumes
I'·-:,.--,,,.--,.--,-' over" loan. No qua.Jll)1ng • .ic1,,1, •• plio111 11ull'lliu. liability for lhl' first ln-
Cl•s1ific1ticn 550-555 nf'C't'Ssary. Lew do"·n ·ask-1 Tho •••I of,.,,•'·,,,, t'o COITl!Ct insertioo ooly, : 1uific1tie11 •••••••••••••••••••••••••········--••••••••-•••••••• '" "
r l ~ JI\;: ~.9:iG. encl •f tl11 Ji11e 011 whicli tlit CANCELLATIONS:
ln1truc1io11 ~ "pO(lDJ.,E PALACE"'. Extra N•"'• •···•···-········••••••••••·•·······•·•••••··•··•••••••••• 1111 ...... cl ol your 1d ;, -.,a. When killing an 11.d ~
• -1111. Acid $2.00 ••*'• a voir sure-to make a record Cl 'f t• 5J5 S80 SPf'Ci&J l BR Condo • Cot-of the l<lU.. NUMBER
•551 1c1111 ion -tage + separate enclosed Atld,,1, ••••·••~·····••••·••·•••••••·••••••·••·•················ d11iro u10 of DAILY r1Lor given you by your ad
r :_..,. •"" R•po'-1~ pt'I quarters tor gamf' lo• 11rwle o w:th flltil1cl r•· tAker 8..'I t'f'ceJpt ot your
-· •• -ml. A , •• , P•••· ol ,-•y r1y -pl+•1• c11..ncellation. This lcill ·~ .... '"""' •u .,.., •••·•••···················•••• r11•11• ••••••••···············• number mu~t be pre.
cl f Sl6,900 on !.peciaJ lerms. , -------------· CUT Hiii-rASn ON 'l'OUl IHYILOrl ~------------1 1 ~ented by the advertiser l fiSi ic ation 6 00-699 Larwln Realty, Inc. 1 · -111 ca!K' oC a. dispute.
I lli'l 21562 Brookhurs1, H.B. ("ANCELLATTON OR
. f.n1)f~ment . ~ ~5411 anytime CORRECTlON o r NE\V
lATTENT_l_O_N__ AD BEfo'ORE RUNN[NG: C l•11ific1tion 700-710 · Pos Ne E\~ry effort is madt" to
" .,
. . ' ;. ·., . '
I I
'
.c •
L
A
5
5 \
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
c1.11ific•tion 850-858
GOLFERS I tate PM1.a&t Stui k!JI or com-ct a new ad
[
~is• J ~ '10 min h'()JT! Lona Beach 11d-Will S. Paid Nla:IM.rr th11l has been otd!!red _ V jacent to San Juan Ca.pis-by u NU ... bl tlli• but "''e cannot .~a-ran: '-~-~~-~J , axm•-o b A Addrnmee thtllff: .St•tti ttt 1,, do so unlU the ad C l1ssifie.•fion 800.836 rano .. ~ u · has appcarOO in the pa-bcaut1ful 2 br or 1 br + Ptr.
Qen. ~rgtoUs kit, 2 ba. tr-
plr. pat.lo. swim pool. On!:,i OThfE-A-LlNE ADS: These 11.ds at'f: stricllv $26.too. Good tennll or v.-ill I US IN ES S ll EI' LY MA IL cash in adwnee by mail
trade for .l.Alng Beach komf'. Ant ci .. ,.....,.. It, c.. .. .,__ c.na-i. or at arv 0~ ot our or·
I
I
l .. \., .
/
leading
Marketplace
Raithat'.I ReaJton 643.\ t:. Ciett. NO phone orders. I
-~-D • ~~~-HA 9-$17 coUl'<'t. scive11 the ri~ht tn cla11• ;r;::i ~
R•ad Cli11s1ficafion1 ci ... m •• tioo 900•912 EXECUTIVE Oran91 Coot DAILY PILOT '"'· "'11• "'""" """'" fv.cr-11 ny Advert.IRmtint,
f ll•J CONDOMINIUM 11.nd to change its rates TrlmPOl't•llon ln Mtsa Vtrde , Nf'xt to Goll I'. O. lox 1560 &: tt~ulatlo!'ll without
1-· .. Courie. 2 ~tory 3 BR, ~i.. prior notice.
For Expert
Assistance
6500-6900
llEST
llllYS!
r
c1.,,;fietfion 915.94, b&tl\i, lnltrrorn. St>ICIOllS Coste M11a, Calif. 92626
d~run1 & hvina roon1. Jrs
YOUN; for The !'lfll'C $3l,!IOO
Will r.ell turn1&hed. S..e •I
JOU 09b }louse Clrcl~.
Clonlflff °"!". •
~ ior 11ppr, AM Ad111r
\ ' • '
CLASSIFIED
MAILING ADDRESS
P. O. Box t.560.
Co&ta. ~ttsa
92626
In tha l
Houws Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Furn. 1--------360 Apt. Unfvrn. 365 Apt. Unfvm.
L•oun• B••c.h Coat• M.a• B•lbo• l1lo1nd Cost• Mis•
BRAND NJ:::\¥ 3 Br. 2 b..
Iii!! top Ho1ne/Oct'an Vif'1\',
Crplldrps, b!tlns opt. 11
bf'1.1ns. frpl r, 11tt 'ti.r, lam
rm, ~eeks. $.1!'JO/mo 972
(.JI. )1Lrada or 01\Jl<'r:
494-5200
Lido Isle
CASA de ORO
CASUAL Cal!!. Livin; In a
v.·arm r.ledJterranean al!nOs•
phere. Spacious color ro-
ordlnaled apts -designed It
fumlshed for style &: com-
fort • Heated pool e Kitch·
Pn 11o·1 indirect llghlin& e
LEASE, 2 BR, 2 ba, slov(', 1----------
n-trig, Crpt1, dl'P•. ffeat. Lovely Spanish Decor
f\1.lture adult. $215. m-4000 FROM $·155
Cu and \Valer Included
B•lboa Ptnlnsul• 2 Bedrooms
e 2 BDRM. Yearly, 1..tke BuiJt.Jr11 e Air Cond
new. l\tature adult,, 4191s Carpel.I • Drapes
E, Bay. CaJl 67:i-4172 att Enclosed garaLts
; Br, 3 bf., .ep. din rm, Deluxe RIO. Adults. No pets.
6 pm, wkncls Pool & Recreation Room
i BR, trpl, b<lamy. m E. 160 W. Wiison 642-7373 clOIM! lo club, Avail Tn1n1ed 1 1 BR .. $17!> furn.
Yrly lse. S400. 673-8244 UTILIT1£S INCLUDED Bay. Winter ralf', Sli5/n10. * S130 UP *
Newport Beach ] 365.\V. \Vllson 642-1971
* Sl30 UP •
Yt1trly, $225/mo. lnq No. GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROO:'lf!
C. 673-1521, 548-TITl Gorgt"Ous, ptu'k·like setting.
Coron• del Mi1r CIOM-d 1araa:e1 for max-
imwn security. Quiet sttttt,
Adult1, no pet&. 2 O 2 O
Adults Preferred
2 BR. 2 Ba.; iatali:e ... S22j
3 BR . 2 Ba. 3 cat· garai;-f'
HEAL TOR 548-6966
NE\V Bluff homt by owntr.
4 BR. 3 BA, fully cptd,
drps. ~1a1ntenance.1ree. ;385
nio. 7141891-1684.
University Park
GIAl'IT I & 2 BEDROO~f!
Gorgeous, park-like 1etting.
Closed garages !or max·
1111um security. Quiet street.
Adult!!, no pe!s. 2020
Fullerton Ave (Harbor to
Bay, then So. until 2 blks
So. of Newport Bl\'d. 642-
86!'1
GARDEN LIVING
n.,C,, ~:: "-''1.!!!!. ON TEN ACRES
Fullerton .Ave (Harbor to
Bay, then So. until 2 hlks
So. or Newport Blvd.) .. ,.,..,
Park-like Surrounding
QUIET • DELUXE
1.2 &: 3 BR APTS
3 BR. fan1. rm. &: dtn. rm. I Quier, attrac, pleasant. Util
Turne Rock .......... $32.J paid. Heated Pool,
4 BR., !am. r1n . .:: din. rm. 1 Br $1-40 • 2 Br $175
l &: 2 BR. Furn, &: Untum.
Fireplaces I prlv. padoa:.
Pools Tennis Cantnt'I Bkfll
900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611
(MacArthur nr Caut Hwy)
Prv patios * llld Pools
Nr 11.hop'g * Adulu only
MARTI NIQUE APTS.
BraDd new, Turtle Rock S37j Adults, no ptls. 1777 Santa Ana AVt.., C?tf
DELUXE downetalni 1 BR. "tgr, Apt 113 646-5542
dupltx. f'rplc. \Vasher/ i::::::::::;: dryer. Carport. Util incl'd. ii
3 BR. & din. rm., immac S32j 740 \V, 18th St., C.M.
4 BR. &. fam rm, 2\2 ba $3.'>0
\VE ALSO HAVE
FURNISHED RENTALS
'l lob'-f \,llil ,
---'ll l'u hor
"SL'ICE l!M6"
Jst \Vestem Bank Bldg
Universily Park
Do1y• 833-0101 Nights
Unbelievably Beautiful Ntar \VStf'r. Adlts. Le11.se * BRAND NEW *
VAL D' JSERL Garden Apts. Sl~. Days 63.S-9300. eves LA COSTA AP'l'S, I & 2 BR.
Adults -no pets. 1-'lower:s 673-5120. Bhns, &\\'Imming pool &: gar·
everywhere. Stream &: FOR lt'ase, deb;, a.ll t'itt. age. All utU pd. $150 to $170
\Vaterfall, 45' pool Ree. Rm, Jge, new w/a view 2 BR, mo. Adults, no pets.
Sauna, Sgl1 1·2 Bdrm, Furn-1 BA apt. All bH-lns irn:l 3i)4 Avocado, C~I. 6-12-9708
Unrurn. from $13.i. SEE IT: dlshwshr, dbl. rar. Adlts
2000 Parsons, 642-8670 only. 673.-6992. \VILSON GARDEN APTS.
HOLIDAY PL~ * COROLIDO APTS * 2 BR Unfurn. Newly der.
DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 2 Br. studios Ir street levels, New , cpts/drps. Sp a c
furn apt $135. Heated pool. $lS5 & up. Pentho11$tS 1220. grounds. Adlts, no pt'IS,
Ample parking. No children $140/mo. 2283 Fount a l n
-no pets. 1965 Pomona, Dshwhr. trpl, dbJ CaJl>Ort. \Vay E. lflarbor, turn \\I.
Apt. Untum. 3'5Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt1., Apu., 5·-.n~t-.-An-.--~~--s~.nt:....•~An-.-~~~-1~~F-•_•n_._•_•.,...U~n~fu_•_n_._3_10~-F-•_•n_._•_•,,_u_n~fv-•_n_._3_7o
,.,_
Ind IWt pa!Wib"
A_.. _. ClClltelllpt ..
4*'b••Mlil.~--.
i:w;dl.Miwtkioi_...
-.-th-.t.t_.,..
_.., ....... er.._ .... brtnt:h ..... 1 ,'~'fi0~\ .._..... IA&UCH<-.r Cl!lll1ll
Nnwport lae•ch Newport Bl•ch
FROM $135*
Olympic t iie pool-Bllli•rclio-S•un•s-T ennil
r.ro •horColor TV loung.-Health Cl11b1-
ncioor qolf driving range-Party Room--F1J1t
t lm• Aetivitiet Director.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Singles, I & 2
Bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished.
REASONABLE RENT': Singles from $135.
1 Bedrooms from $145. 2 Bedrooms from
$200. Low move in charges. No lease req'd.
Modnls Open Delly 10 i1m to & pm.
SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN
Apartment•
(Just tor sln1le peoplf)
Ir&~ • l61h
714: 645-0llO
Apartments
(ttsort Jiving for
1tn1le I: married adults)
16th btwn Irvine Ir Dover
714: 641-8170
'Rent subject to Joea.Uon I :;...m I·---I • I @ to"'~' '"'"'ttl . ---~' 1 I I '!'"""!"!~"""""" ..... ~ ........................... '"!'~ '~:.:::' E:~t.i:t.Z Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 Apt. Unfurn. 365 ....... ....~--~~~-~ L."!:'. ~ :=-.;..: ! 1 Newport Beach S1nta An•
.,._.. Si.!' a l,tlk u..I
A GMo.) Mt• fl"'''* • Air~ •EIH>leo. t1t1111W:·s.it......,,..o-. ! MARINER SQUARE
l.._,_, ...... ,,__ APARTMENTS
hoptlrtt Lo"1111 OlfQ T...,._ ·-1--~>.....lt!m"" I c1ui 5574XI ' Announces the availability of
..... ~-.1 .. •.t.,ntt t ''"' a-~ ...... ..._... 2 I: 3 BR unit. for adult.a
Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 des.lrin& to live arnidat beau.
ty by the sea In the prea-
Co1 till Mes• E•tt Bluff ttitou1 Weutclltt att:a of
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
----------1 Ne-wport Beach.
FROM $230
NEWPORT BEACH For Information phor>e lli
Villa Gr1n1d• Aptt, Robert 1.f. Buckley, Ma!llli:
CAN'T BE BEAT
SINGLE S'IURY
South Sea .Atmoe:phere
2 BR.. 2 BAnt
Carpetl Ir drps
Air Conditioned
Private Patios
HEATED POOL
Plenty ot lawn
Carport & Storage
Ill.ODEN VD..LAGE
GARDEN APTS.
DAit Y Pll.OT S9
Apt1.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Coit• Me••
2 BR $12S untum: S14S turn.
1''1unihe1 \\'el come. B I G
SUR APT'S, 2043-2049
\Vallau St, PhoTW! 54&-4.JJl
1250 aq fl I& 2 Br, l~i Ba,
1111 rm for <A'h/dr, patio,
&ar. cpt/dp. $165. 546-8688
• 2 Br. lleated pool, No
petl. Crpu, drp1. 126 l\fonte
Vista Ave, CM. 642-5m
Huntington Beech
ON BEACH!
Z BR •••••••• From S235
Furnl ture A vallable
Carpets,drapeJKil.sbwasher
heated poo!.saunu·tf'nnis
rec room-ocean view1
patios-ample parlrina
Securi~ guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN A VE., H.B.
<U4J 538-1487
Ofc open 1{I am-6 pm Dally
WILLlAM WALTERS CO.
Children Welcome!
Mo\'e in now. 2 BR's, all
Xtras. Pool, pvt patios. Pets
OK. From $139. Nr school1
I: shopping. 17431 "B" or
"D" Keelson Ln., 968·7510,
847-4856.
2 BR, SISS. 3 Br. S1801up. Pa.
t10. Pool. Child~n ok.
l\!ORA KAI Apts, 18881 Mora
Kai Ln, ini blk E. of Beach,
C'.\1 Pool. 673-J.378 on 'Vil!IOn'
'Bil 'bot» ........ '300 -o.B'""A.'"'Y""c=L'"'l"'F=F ~M~Oc=T~E,--L ' BR. l BA. Now oa'"" 1 ...... ...,...,...,...,...,_,.
3 BR., 21,i baths········ S350 S22:itmo. Bt .... n hni 10.5, GARDEN LIVING
2 & 3 BR's
Private patio, pool • indtv,
Jaundry fac .
Four be?lroom1 with ba.lcon-er, at (TI4) 645.0252 or write
les above le: ~low. Graclouai to The Office of the 1.lan-
llving ii quiet IVJTOUndln& ager ?o.fa.rltler Square Aptl
for family with QhlldrPn. 1244' 1nt1nt Ave, NB, ea.i'.
Neu Corona del Mar Hia'h 9&4,
2500 South Salta orr Garfield. 962-8994.
Santa Ana Q 546-ISl? Lagvn• Be•ch
4 BR .. 2 baths ........ S32j * LO\V WEEKLY RATES* 630-2062: aft 5 pm, 213: Quiel, attrac. pleasant. Util
3 BR. 2 ba. home ••..•. SJ25 K,·t·h• TV· ·d · ' 5~1719 Near Ora nge Co. Airport &
UCI. Adults (Inly. School. Fireplace, wet bu •1~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~1FURN Bachekir apt. Ocean built-in kitchen applillllcea. PARK NEWPORT ~ ;::; view, $175. Unfurn 2 Br. ~ ... n. s, mai servLc · I 0~~'°"',CC~~~~--~ paid. Heated Pool. 2 BR.
i . d h·11 Hrated Pool. SUNNY 2 Bdr. bltns, rel. $165. Adult,, no pelJi. 740 ' re I 646-326.'i cpts, drps, &ar. adH1, no \V, 18th St., 0.f.
' ~$2~5~P~.-,-w~ .. -k-&_U_p_. 1 pets. S17S lse. 615-4275 I !!!!!!~~~"!"!!!!!!!!"""
BACHELOR & 1 BR. Cost• Mes• 2 BR. FRO~f S150
2{)122 Santa Ana Ave.
!\!gr. l\ln. Joachim, Apl J.A
~215
ORLEANS APTS.
835 illlGOS WAY 6f.l.2991 . -ea.re Apts., J O $210. Ocean View. 100 Oiil
Coldwdl Banker & Ca. hvc overlka' . the water. 7 Furn. or Unfurn. 7 Drive, Lai Bch. 494-5933
r-.r . A 1 .,~ • .,_., pools, 7 teM11 ct1 S750.000 ~--·.-------/ N;;;;jj(;rtsO.Cil----1 anagin&: if11 ..,.,....,..... Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 -: Nnwport Beach
TOWNHOUSE deb:e 1 Br, aty Townhouses. Lee. kit., Gtnnrnl VISTA DEL MESA
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytime 833·0820
Townhouse Unfurn. 335
Huntington Be•ch
•3 BR. '2 Bath, frplc, refrig,
pool. S210/mo. Ca11
002-4584.
Duplnxes Unfurn. 350
Coron• del Mar
,'\/E\V 3 Br. 2 ba, cpt.s, drps,
gar. $295 ~fo., lease
Corbin-~lanin Rltrs. 644-7662
Newport Hnights
DELUX duplex, 3 BR. 2 ba,
CrpL~. Drps, F'rp!C' &
garage. No pets, .$185.
5-l5-8395
TV&. mald gerv avail. CO~lPLETELY REDE C, 2~1 Ba, bltns, trpl, pa&, pr. pat or baJ 1ubtrn parkc 1:::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;:; I enc gar. Quiet. 67~5033 opt maid aer. cpts, drps. Ap•rtment1 450 Victoria, C'.M. _..,. CLEAN & COZY F'A~11LY
UNITS. CONV. LOCATIO~. ADULTS ONLY J " N I F "' l·' t PALM MESA APTS 1 & 2 BR. Furn&: Unf. Dish·
D.,o Point NEW NEW NEW VILLA ME5A APTS
719 \V. Wilson 64&.12j1
2 & 3 BR. Avail. Pnvate pa.
Uu, pool -indlv. laundry tac,
(~'r. Oran&e Co, Airport; Tus-
tin at 17th St; nr, \Vestclilf).
Huntington Bt•ch u.~, · o asruon 61 a __ .;..... ____ ! J•mh<rrtt & s., Joaqui" • w"h" ·Stove•"" R•lri1 •
* FRESH AIR H!ll1 Rd. 644-1900 for leu-Shag crpt'g-1.rg Rec ~nter. SINGLE, 'IV, pool, pets ok.
$25 & up. wkly. Dana
?tlarina Inn, 34111 C.oast
Hwy.
Huntington Beach
La Quinta Hermosa
Spani.!ih Country Estate Liv·
lng & Spaciou1 Apt.s, Ter-
raced pool; liunken i&I BBQ
Unbel!evable LiVin& -Only
1 Br unf $150.furn $180
2 Br unf $175 furn $210
ALL UTIL INCLUDED
Special Bonus: a silver·
plated candle 1nuHer is
yours ll you bring this ad
when you visit our model~.
4 blk& S. of 5&n Dlero Frwy
on Beach, 1 blk \V. on Holl
to 16711 Parkside Lane.
(714) 847·54~1
VILLA CORDOVA
QUIE'I'·SAFE
(Near Back Bay)
40 Unit Adult
Api1rtment Complex
1 & 2 BEDROOMS
Entertaining w!U be a plea1.
ure. De<:0rating thia lovely,
11pacious apt will be a joy.
• Special cabinet r;pace
• Lock garage1 wl la: star
• Bm cell • L.ndry • Patio•
• D\Vl dlspl . Huce iRS 1tve
• Special soundproof.in&' e Deep 2 color sha.i:
carpel.Ii, drapes
~AS' & WATER PAJD
Mo. to Mo. From $140.
2323 Elden Av~. CM
See Mir. Ted ''-'oodbead -32
LRG dlx apUI, $14D 2 Br.
Htd pool . Ne\\·ly dee . Play
yd. Crpt'd, drJ!s, blrm.
patio. Child ok.
1 l f 1 BR unfurd ••••••• , $135.00 Occupancy in March
Walk 3 hlkl to Beach! ng n o. l BR furn • •• •· • ·• • • • $149.50 RENT Starts $155
Beaut. bi& 3 BR apt. wlw DELUX CONDO 81.cbelon Furnlabe-rl Tustin & Mes• Drive
crpts, drp1, bltn1 ex«pt 3 BR + den, 3 Ba, Dbl far from $135
1998 r.laple Ave.
17-11 Tuslin, Coata ~fesa
!'IIgr. l\lrs. ~mpson 642.4641 relrig. $225. No pets. 536-1711 Beck B•y 2 BR apts $175 mo. * S4MIS5 *
Children Welcome S285 Month mer.Imo, OK We1tcliff
S . h El Immac. " Br. 3 Ba. Stud.lo STEPHENS & KAYE • POOL 1'o"'E"°L"u"x"E"2"=s'","'· w,,,... .. .,.,cl,,l"U..,klc-.1
P301$ egance apt. 4-plex, Prlv. patlo, Prope:rty Manacement e SAUNA Pool, Blint. No Jealie . Unf
GARDEN & STUDIO A.PJ'S Crpts, drpi, bltn1. Lri play '*' 6-f5..m22 * e JACUZZI $210, Furn $245. 642-6274
2214 College Ave,
HARBOR GREENS
Bncb. l, 2, 3 BR's. from SllO. liel.s the mood !or al'ea. Cul-de.aac st. No pe ts. SEACLTFF r-.1anor Apls. 2 1561 ?o.leaa Dr. Santa Ana
Z700 Peteraon Way, C.l\f. Quint Adult Living i78n Bell Circle. 842-3677. Br, cpts, drps, bltn~. pool,
5'16-0370 Sha& crpt e dri>5 e bltns SPARKLING NEW 2 br 2 JlriV patio, 11tudin type, l,1i
VACANT -RP de co r a t e d Beautlful Pool. ba, near beach. Shai c~t. Bal · Child ok. ~B-2682 15.25
thruoul 2 Br. 1 Ba, cpt~. 2 Br S170 incl all util. d1'J)1, bltn1, encl caraa:e, pi:eenUa. Alk ~ut our
drps, l't'frili:, bJtng, 2 yng Adults only.no petl. auto li:&r door opener. 216621-'-"'-"-"-'·-------
ctuldren ok. No ~ts. Sl45. 241 AYOCado St, CM 646-09?9 Brookhunt St. OCEAN view, 1undeck, 3
590 Joann St. Info 642-1467 1 mo's FREE RENT 1 BR retrt&. bltns $135 mo B.R., 2 ba., ~i blk. to water, $16~ 2 B 111 B 1 -· t · 1 ' il 2 BR I~ bl•-fam. or teacMn pref'd. e LRG 2 hr, 2 ba triplex-.:i. r. ' a. ""'5• quie' 1"1"~ ",·~~I uUl.· "'Adw"'1,' onl"'y''. S.295. mo. yrly. 673--74~2
bl-d •• d h h clean, GE kit., 2 car illI'. .,,,, '"' -u,s, rps, crp .... , s Wll r, Adil.Ii. 548-6432 '1'rade\\'ind1 JUty MT-3511; DF;LUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, crpts, 2-CAR GARAGE. Cl<l~t:
in. Adults, no pets. 318 16th 2 BR. 2 BA. ttiilc. Up1ta.in. Eves: 536-7G6I t,rp•, b~t;;s ~w, $~ Hoer
PL 548-1424 Nf'1v cnr, drps, adult1, m Nr Huntington Harbour osp. mo.
'
d. l 1 pets, $160. Eve1 540-0896, Triplex • quiet area. Lra 11 1=":c:,2-'.c;;38~7-------
""'"" I~
FURN. l·Br., frpl, pa.tio. l~iiiiiiiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiijjiiiij~-
Cloae to bes.ch, $185 Mo. Rooms 400 UNF., new 2 BR., bltns.,1 ----------
cpt.11, drps; nr. beach. FURN room in pvt home.
UNF. 2 BR house, extra Hunt. Bch.•Nr Brookhunt
1harp, fill, nlce yd. $250 &: Coflst Hwy. MaJe: only.
Don Franklin, Rltr. 673-2222 $65 per mo. 962-201.1 a.It
e BREATiiTAKING VJE\V 4 PM
• 1 BR I: convert den. S300.1co•=I~I~.E~G=E~,-,-.-o-r=ki"i~-ilr~t 1
6f.l--0906 for appt. 237 Cuna· Balboa Iii, shr kit &: TV
lion. rm, tele. $65/mo Is up.
Apts. Furn. 360 I J BR $135 per mo. incl utU.
'G-.-n-.-,-.-1 ------2 BR. S150 per mo. incl
ulil. Adults o nly.
Br stu 10, 1,11 Ba, cptll, Day~ 540-2570. Br • s140, 3 BR • S:UO. Peta BRAND new 3 hr, 2 ha
INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY drps, patio, C'hilclren ok Nr -*~B~E=A=u==11=,=u=L~l-.~,~B=R. ok. ITI4) 846-0071. duplex. 6 Door1 l.o oet"an. Cott• Mel•
ADULT LTVING schl I: shop'g. Slli.'i. 300J 1 ..::7.:;:,ii;ii;~~wr;;--/_:Y~r!!ly~l~300~~m~o~6,,_.~~2JO:!!'.___ SLPG rm for steady ~'Ork'i
'
·11 "" <>< "714 Contemporary Garden Aptl. ·1 CHEZ ORO • .,,,..... . /;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Lg dlx 2 br l \ii ba w/car ==' =m='="'="-'-Y=·-~--~-,. IU'l.3 older man, no cook!""· by -:: Patios, tr PI c •, pool. 8:lJ.4 Atlanta. 1-2 BR. Pool. Newport H1l1ht1 .,.
I: stor. Par k-like at· SPACIOUS, clean 3 Br. 2 S14>S160. Call 546-5163 P11vate Gara&e. Wa1htr .. ,__________ * * * '* mo only, $35. 1543 Orange,
675-3613.
* CUST0~1 F'URN11'URE
RENT AL. SPe ad-class 810.
• C1ll 548--3481
Coron• del Mar
Trade"·inds RJty 847-8511;
Eves: ~71i61 moi;phere. F)l("d patio, CJD, Ba, crpts, drp~, enc 1 Ito., on38 1· El Puerto Me1e Apt1 CM tr pd 636-4120 SHARP lge 1 BR, Cpt, Drp1, dry~rs . .....,.,...,.., , 5SS-1T27 2 Br Upper, F'rple, pr, * '* * * 1=~-~~~~=~~-t 1~ BLK ro Beach, M-a1ed "' · garage. Sl75. Adults. E. 18th Bit . 1 bid ,. '· 0 I "" Adul" $12 a wk, Olol H.B. Men, ~1. Adults Only. No Pets. _66_7_-_K_V=''=''=M=.'="=·~--'-'-"_--SI. ~3776 or 540-4431 ns, qu1e i ••• o pe .... LGE unf 2 br, 2 ha, l1e pa o, au ry, ' no 1 B~room Apls. Pvt entr&Iltt, upto..,,, nr """' S13ll, 540-9i22 pvt fncd p.&.t.io, 1M~ crpt, pets. $170 mo. 6.f.Z-3731 Ac;t: ;i3&-88i4 Owner: CORSICAN e 2 BDRM DUPLEX e bch. 507Ca1lfornia, 53&-0391,
5JG..J.122 NE\V 1·2-3 Bdrm. AU bltns, CPTS I: DkPs _ SI<O MO. 2 BR, 1 1~ Ba. Studio. Drps, l ~lk to !tcrres. 7731 Ellis San Clementa $130 & up Incl. utUlt!e1. A110,,,,&1~&-=IIH=9~-~=---rp1s, bltns. Nn pt'I!. Nr. S16:i. Furn apt a.Ito avall turn Pool &. Re ti " FURN J b,. urilities in· 1 BR, patio, pool, natural shag crpts, drps, closed iar. * MCHJ178 * --. crea on SLEEP'G rm S60/p<r mo. · OCC. S145. 5!17-719) 2 BR d_uptex, close to beach BRANO NEIV I"•. 2 B•, att• Quiet Envlronme t eluded. I adult preferred. beam c e i 1 in is. Neii.r &ges, frplc in 3 Br. ~-mL. ~=-~~~~~-~ _. • ' n ' Priv entr. I: ba. Adults, ;lli. 67:>-2440 Broker h<}spiti\l . $165 util. pa.id. E. So. Coa~l Plazi. Off Sun-1 BR. used brick frplc, .,.,.,.,,., EASTSIDE 7 Br, bltra, k do\\ntown. Crptl, drps 2 Ba, 1100 gq. rt. Quiel Oft stttel p1rking. No Chi!· no pe!J. 71J5 Elden, t.lrr
.l7GiS C11.meron, 842_5192 flower at Rosa. Mgr at '21 bltns, beam ceil. patio, $140. dshwhr, crpts, drp1, encl k llO\'e. No pe!J. $140. cuJ-df'·sac Panoramic vlev.· dren, no peta. apt 6
LRG bachelor. u!il's pd. 2 1 ====-=~'-=--~ \V. Stevens. 545•2321 I Adll. \'early. 642-8520 gar, priv patio. 645-2939 53&-3507 of ocean,· Adults only ;uio. r--==~------· I Blks from bch. Lady only. DELUXE Bachelor u n It, ----~-~----1----------i=,O,~--'"---'-c'"-",_:;c::...~ 1-"1961 M•"I• Av•. LUXURY itudio, completely
R 85 2 BR t ·o alk t ENJOY privacy? Deluxe 1 LARGE 2 br • 3 blocks from 492-2259. ,,,_ ,, H ·• I Pri U SlOO yrty. 494-7853. turni.!hed, $100 p!r mo. UNF'. 2 B , SJ . Dr&mat1c eas • 11 e, w o b h C 1 d 1..:::..;:::.:... _______ ' Costa l\lesa pv1. eat.,,, PCIO. v e,e1.
Co.t. Ml.. Call 646-2687 2-sty. Jiv. nn. w/frpl., shops. Crpts, retng, stove, Br, bltn5, refri&, cpt/drp, 11:,•,' ·c_,'1 ~ ... s ,:..,,, r P• · Santa Ana ,,....,.,.,,. • ..,,,,,_ .... ,,L~N~.B~. ~<M=;_-7~9:;l9:..__~-~-1
I k · · -• 1 $140 u31~ g.,, bale. 962-ClSO iBi~l;m~oc.Ji~;i;;~;-b~~:-;;;;~./:;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;=:=;;;;;:::;;;;;;; l BR, pool, carport. Utilir1es over 00 ing tropic .... poo, gar. · .n."""" BAY MEADOW APTS. R00'.\1 for "''Orkin& tirl,
paid. Cl<>!!e to Be a ch, lndscpd. s\\limming pool &: '* NICE Jrg 3 Bdrm • redec· 1 Br. Frplc. 8"8m cetl, 2 BR apt, 3 blk8 from ocean. kitchen privileges. * SUS CASITAS S14 j/mo 53&-1956 paUo. 145 E. 18th, Cl\f. oratf'd. 6:-i7 Plumer SL p11tio~. util lnrl'd $148. $165 mo. Avail Mar. 20th. VILLA MARSEILLES * 642-6776 * 1 -°'~~==7~~==-<•s 9949 "'tw 5 6 5.16 lnO BRAND NEW Be1m cellin11, pane.Jing, priv., c==--~--~---I Lrg nicely furn B&chelor k e 1 BDRM (()NDO ,,.. • eveg een t. · 1 ~~~•~C-•_ll=64~2-_53~92:;.__• __ ,~Yc'~"=ly~·-l_•_d_,_H_._&1_2-&2ll~-~. · · patios, l'!CJ'eation fa.cililles.1NICE room tor v.·orking man
I Br. furni!fhed models furn, S16.i 962-9568 * $170 * 2 BR, 1~1i BA, c:pts, drps. NE\VLY ~decorated 1tudio, OCEAN view delux 2 BR, l SPABCdlOUS AU Adult1, no pels. ' wt or w/o cook'g pr1vll. o~n dally. l Br, 1 1~ ~. patio hlt·ins, patio, no pets, $175 mo incl 2 BR, 1~ ba. nr shopping 2 ba, Frplc. Garare. Bltn.IL & 2 rm. Apt1. * Bachelor Ap• * E-side. Cl\f. 642--0326
2110 Newpor/ Blvd, C~! Bo1chelor Unit C'rpls, drps. Ask about our u!il. 33!).A Cahrillo. 54HB03 & schools, S165. 546-1753 & relrig:. $115. ~720 Adult Living * 2 BR. from $165 * FURN room 1·" p·,·v. horn•.
SIOO l\olonth. 646-2687 ,. 1 "" "· " E ·~~ 1 2 F n & U f n " ' SPECIAL Low Rates from iscount Pan. ""'II ....,n r JOX42 furn trailer, Dena Point D Lv AL & Br. walk ur · n ur • * 1 Bedroom • Costa Me1a; kitch. privll
S2j v.·k. Kil. avail. r.taid L•gun• Bench St 642·8340 in park on Bristol. to heh. Adult!. $135 .\ up. Dishwasher -color coordlntt· 387 w. Bay St. (btwn H&rbor ptus. Nr. occ. 549-1061
serv, TV & Ph. Sea Lark SWEEPING VIEW CLOSE TO beach &: shop-'*' 543-0465 * 22012th St or 219151h St . ed appliances. plush .aha& I.· Newport Blvd. \4 m1. N. EMPLOYED lady, lie room
i\-lotel, 2301 Npt Blvd, CM. ping. Bit-in range, w/w 1 -2-B=R-h-~~d~fi~---SPECTACULAR oce&nfmt 2 Br apt·w/w, drJ!s, bltni, carpet • choice of 2 color of 19th Sil. •·/p·• "-th • •"•--_
OCEAN AND HILLS • n.1W onrs water v1·•w 2 BR 2 b• •tov• -h•m•1 • 2 bollll • •t-" v <""' "" " ......... _, 646-7445 crpting, drns, adlts, no pets. ...:a $1" 1093 1·v-•1 • • ' ' dlspo1al, laundry •pa«. No ... .u CALL 64&0073 t C '1 &12 5076 ' De-cora.tor furnished t bed-.,.. •"'· ,).> mo. ""ace, refrig, cpts &: drps . $22~. 1how•r• • mt-,.d w....,. ·,;;;;;;;-;m;i<"-;;;;;,:;;;;;;~-1,~m~o~.c.::_"c::.·":C· ~=-~~-~--1 $155 SHARP 2 BR 5-48-4245. (ror Hamilton) petri. 962-8578 tor tnfri. ••u RING a·~ A -' room apt., twin beds, new ----------1 ~~=~~-----837-5370 robe donl'I • Indirect J11ht· nu». nnoum:es LGE roorn, kitchen & laun-
Heated pool. Adults, no ~ts pa.int, carpet, drapes. Walk 2 BR, 112 BA, sharp, Crpts, ~IODERN 2 Br, 2 Ba Studio -E-.-,-t-B-lu-ff------12 BR. New crpt, drp1. ,R_ 1" ldtcben • brea.k.tut Aptl. Now AvaJlable dry privileges. Female. $70.
(ieen okl 642 9;,:io drps. 1200 sq. tt. A\'ailabl~ Children k •mall ~t OK ... ,. " MEDITERRANEAN · • to heach Ii 10.,.,'n, Mature apt. nt"W cpt, nr schl.~. bltns. $l40. 84.__., 96,76J7 bar • hug, -·oto t1nc.d ~130 C'VC'!I now, S165 mo. Ms--0718, if P 1 ·-., ~ ~ ,... VILLAGE • STUNNING GARDEN adultJ. nn pets. J year no ansy;er. Sl.'i-4427 et ok. l:i:i. S.1496 e NEW DELUXE • pall~ . plUJh landscapln1 • e $15 PER wk up wf kil
APT lrg I & 2 Br. Pool. lease. 494·3839 •ft !i pm. DELUXE 1 Br wf aar, quiet 3 BR, 2 BA Apt lo• l•u•. l·cl 1_N_•_w_po_r_t_B_•_•_•_h____ brick Bar-B·Q'u . tara:e heat. UOO Harbor Blvd. • S25 week up Apll. ?rlOTEL
l"I•ol•ml dog ok l'" • • QUIET. AdultA. 2 BR. • " Co1ta Mesa 1t•o97,-,· · · ......, Lido lilt No pell. Drp1, crpts, aJ'f'a for adults C>nly. Sll}. spac. master 1uH,r:, din rm HOAG HOIP Arei. 2 BR ed pools• lanai. .na-
up. 1 l\10. Free. 6'&5530 dsh"·hr. Mated pool. $130.1 -l-"'~E-. -'"-'-_646-<0 __ 16__ &: dbl garage, iu!o .door 2 BA, crpt1, drp;, blU111: 3101 So. Brlttol St. (TI4J 557-8020 Guest Home 415
DELUXE 1 BR A: Bach Apt:t. !/ BEACH APTS. Bachelor 2295 Paciflr. Ave, CM. REDECORATED 2 br, 11;, opener avail, Pool I< Rec. gAr. 54()....0093 (%Ml. N. of So. Coa1t Plua) l BR. furn S140. l Br un!l :c~,-,,,--------1
$35 \\•kly & up. Furn. incl S200. 1 BR . $225, $250. 320 !l48-6S7S or &12-44~ ba itudlo. Crp!s, drp!f, hltni. BUSIESI' ark: .... •· Sent• An• $135 w/stv/I'f'f, uUJ pd. PRIVATE room w/b&th In
u!il. Mo. rates terms av!. N•·.'t"'m· 642-4097 or 5tS-2211 Chlldrt'n ok. Sl5S. 642-5297 area. town, The mO~Y ... ;'n.OT PHONI: 557 .. 200 Adlt11, no petl. 820 Center licensed iuest home fnr am--003 E. Camino. 546-0~51 .. • Newly Decor•ttd -• S265 • St. 642--5848 bulatory senior citizens.
N •-h Quiet l & 2 BR'•· Gar ii SPACIOUS 2 Br apt, qultl, '865 AmiiOs Way, NB Claultled Mdlon. .!lave AJ.50 semi·private room for QUil"I' a!trac studios $115,
I Br. Sill. Adlt1, no ~ts.
213.) Elden, Mgr Apt 6.
twport owAC pool. Crpb, drps. Adul!J pleasant, no pets. S 7 4 r.Tanaged by money, time • enort by Apta., Apts., 370 lady, avail April ht. i..
CHANNEL hi:int ha ch only. no pets. 64Ul042 Hamn ton. 548-3846 'VlLLIAM WALTERS co. armchair. -';..";;.':.;n;;·,;•:.;•_U;;.n:.;f;,;u:.;m;;;,.' _3_1~o __ F_•_•n_._._._,u,..n_1_._•n_.;;;,._ yard & patio, good food,
w/!loa1. $200/mo, yr IBe. 2 Br. Untum ApL Stove 6: Huntington 8e1ch congenial atmogphere. C.M.
1 BR. Trailf'r Slotl+ · 2 Br. i\la:\ 211' pv.T cruiser. U!!I refrli incl'd. Garare. Pool. are11. ~8-S225
!railer. s120.+ l\f at u rt turn. Artult1, no pea. 3304 j ·.,·ms· T:AR. GA:"'E..:air11:~ LOVELY room &:: bath in persons only. 646-1809 aft 6. l\lllrcus 673-2li6l All util pd. Adlta only, no ·~ .~ ~ ... pet•. r.1'1'. No. 9, 383 W. new pvt home fot' the
• S15 per week up ON THE BEACH wn~on St. "1111 Br0.AT1 P01.LA usu at th b h retired. Xlnt food. 24-hr v.•/kitchen.~.OT$25EL '!'I.,~!_ek 2 Br/7 ba, Spin ltvcJ \\'tlh 2 BR. Upstairs &ardtn ap!. ~ W.4-.11 ;::.. 'Y-Dollt .A.ctMPy Gulcla Jt. sm. U J:'h. · e eac e e· e ~rv!ce because \\o'e care.
up Apls. l\f , .....,... jJO !Jreplace. Lors more 'too~ Lnd :A,.,in Atc orclll'lgl•tll•Sfots. oci D~ Ne•r Leimre World .
I BR, furn, No children or Call: 673-15..il cpI,!1'1'. '"'Nr.' "°occ"_u .l llO"'. le.,... ... .,~ To d•v.lop m•••og• for Ftldoy, J.16..21~ .,,/10 f I f ,,...,.,. I " ¢: S.76-11 J«ldwordse«respondlngtor&aTOars •11:1-~~LI G • o a ml• rom the beach 11
petg Sll5. * OCEANFRONT ba<"Mlur, 962-3886 ~TAVl.US ofyour Zodioc:blrthMgn. s::. ,...,,,., ••R1cre1tlon CIW' Ith 2 I I * PRIVATE ROOM * 645-1&48 * . I k" I '"/ I Oilld,.... 31 ToOor,o fl lu•attN.. ~ •r W IW mm ng I Id I d B . gar, part11 11.. 1""' mo. 2 BR. unfurn dtluxe 10 .... ·nhat, ~"\. .41•. 10 2 Olttln.rlflfrl 3l '°" f l wrn pool•, putting green, gym, volleyball or e C'ry a Y · tlii:ht
SPAC. 1 Br. Crpl1, dfll~. 1 Yrly, 642-3443 pv1 pat & 111r, Mw\y de<-or, 1~wAY10 31._i.. 3J Ul"UIUll! Q ,_,.. del court. aauna, bll/lird room, club~ cheery Ea.rrlen surroundinrs.
pool nr AhoPI Util pd. 1884 H 1 h 1.dtts. pet OK. S165 mo. JOO!) 1:22.J3..U :g:lllllng ~~~NAii ~~ NutritiouJ' meals. C ii 11 r.lon~via Ave.". CM. 548--0336 Nawport ea t1 Coolidge. S49--04l3 s 11 ,... 31!0.-C. "°'"' Sof hou11. One or two bedrooma, fur.. 54s-1r~.
!/ AVL now·l & :l Br furn. CLEAN l or 2 Br. Adhs, LRG 1 Br. Ap t. G•rA~"· ~~ ~~ ~~ nlahed ind unfurnllhtd, prlv1te•l''R;-a~n:.:ta"iC',-,t'"o-S'°'h'a-.. --~430=1
Pool, rec rm. rd location, No no pell. Le kit. l'.13H150. Lndry. Sl.25/ mo. Fum 1135. •~u J9l"9Jll1lrlf 'M':;::!1 Pltlo, flrepf1ce In two bedroom,
Pl'U or ch ildn!n. 646-SUI 2421 E. l6fh SL NB. 646-1*11 \Vom11n pref'c1. lnq. um.a ~~~ ~Zt.., ~~ 8 el1v1tor1, dl1hw11her1, carpet• EMPLOYED lady kt •lww
1'0\\'NHOUSE E-sld~ 2 Br. Apt. U"furn. 3'S \Vallace. 548--6.llB, !:Q-0038 11c.. A2W1fh 71Attoa.. and d,.pll, no lease, adult.a only, ill beautiful ocean view apt. ll At• .q w,rt.,. 7J At'°"""' completely furni.Ahed with 1•, Ba. Pool. No pets. Sli~. 2 BR. New crprs. drp•. clOI· 14To ,.,ApptoOdt ,,,,.. utllltle1 e xcept llghte paid, p1t1 private ... th. H~• ~-pl'-'
Call 646-6610 Gener•I f'd car, nr •hop'&· Mull1, 15J.ooll'lloll"' -''51.w 1ln. i d. f *145.. .... -nuo ~
;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;; no .... ,, $14.i/mo. 64~351~ 1,•,!".'., "".,~~ 771,,,_w..... icoeptt rom 'f arH. 64~2'7 .. 1r NICE I br duplex. • ,~ ,,_ ...__ VENDOME 110oy 4Yau'H 71 WORKING ;:lrl \\'O\lld like
adults. $115 Cj)UICK CASH '<:!~l!:IJL.j ,.,~ ... T~ '9Y-1 ·-2t88f Brookh·-s• lo •Ile.re lpl "'/same. Call Phont ~9-0S:U ... '°Ho-.. !JOO.,. .or, .... , "' IMMACULATE APTS! 21 T-ll 0i.-.. It.._. Huntington Beach, Nanci 64J-4960 tXI 241. S-5
• t & 2 BD!l\l'S ·• ADULT'"" THROUGH A ""' "" .,,....,. pm UTILITIES PAID FAl'.!ILY Section i!~ ~~ ~=--<714> De2..ea53 1's=H~A=R~E~m-,-w-.-.. -.,-,,,-,,-,,.-m-,·t
24~ NEWPORTbtBLV~~-Closetothoppln9, Park • l i:J!l:!!illl-J!I ~~ ~~ =~ C A1k for "''/dock. ~13n, 30-60 yta.rs.
2 Ar, rrpt1/drpl, tna. c ..... '* S~CIOUs 3 BR's, 2 ha ' DAILY PILOT 'P 21-....,. 57k~lftd l7""r ommandar Ratting $1S()1mo. 67S4331
et! IAr + parklli.-Adil•. * S11o1m pool, put/1rttn I ~~ i:~ J:¢!°"9 o.r.l'I., for Rent ClS
ni.o R.ulrtn Dr. 6~19 • Frpl, Indlv/lndry fac·ta WANT AD utT. tt .JOWhaf '°"' fOl.aMcY ..._....,,. • ~ICE 1 .\ 2 hr tra!ltn. 1&45 Aneheim Ave. \'0.11·19-ll .0.Gotid /O\~ {)N'~ SINGLE GARAGE for ttnt
A\1at.I .Af'lrH 1~1 13.1 r. 16th. COSTA l\tESA ~2.2#14 642-5678 '9-67.Gf!O '' ~l~==W========~=~---.l~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!i!i!~I Harbor &. Baker, CM. ~._\! IH~~1'..'f·, ------_t __ _ , $25/mti ~~7J
·-• ,
I
j
•
I fl DAILY PILOT Thur5da1, April l, 1971 l ~~~l ~~~.1 ~~~1· !....__.,, .. _, ... _.~][II] I ......... ll ill l-_" ... _, ... _. _,!,[)]
LOCKED Pl'lltS I pawd * FUU.Y UCEi'lSED * s:..1AJ..L dark Poodle type dog
oH-aL park'i apace . Renowned Hindu Spiritualist found mid M•rch. nr. Fitz
SWtabl• for aml boat. Adviet on all maltrr'$. SchoOI. Santa Ana. P\eaM"
camper, « j>enonal pro. Lo\~. Muriaae, Buslnes.s <:ll4lm or "'Ill place in Frt:e
ptrty. Rtadings gh-en 7 days a Tn You. SJS-5532
1n E. 22nd St, CM. week. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. MENS black horn rlmn1ed
6Q..364S • 6'l5-Q)44 311 N. El Camioo Real, J:l1l!i!l!ll. found in Harbor
FOR motor tomes, trailer, San Clemen!e SHopp111g C<.'nter. 545-8820,
turn., btw.t, etc. 16fi2 Npt I ---•~9~2-~9;136~· ~·~9><0"'~"=--I "A~-~l,,:S~h~""--"'0::-o-lf~i<'-'·~-~~
8.lvd, CM. 642-1811, 6-12-~106 OVER\VEIGH't' FOUND small Poodle mixed
Off On you sutler rron1 la!lgue dog, lenui.lr. blk W/\\•hitc
ice Rent•I 440 & hunger pans;' on y~1~r lrf'L 'f:vrs \714) 847-7().13 or
SUP£R..OELUXE QUALITY preM-nt diet? \\'ould you l1kt 8~7-5306
l-J..! room, tip to 3,cm sq. I{) lose y,.·eigh! easily & have I -8~o=x=E=R~l,-m-'1~,-.~000-~, ~,,...,..,,
ft offtce aulte1, lmmed. oc-energy to spa.re! 1'"or 11 fret' 7 mon1h& old. Vic of College
-· ~--Co ty ,ample'. Call Doris 549-2376 p "· -00 H "-.... pancy. .... .... 16.. un . ar" beh1 arbor .....,nter.
/Jrport Irvine O:irrunerc· ews, 54s-6671 days. ~7-6S42
Olm.plex., adj. Airporter DISOOVER DISCOVERY h llotel •-fte.'4·-·t, •--•-, S.\1. tan and "' t Be-sle type • ........ ~ find Yourself male dog. Vic 22nd and
San Diep I N'pt Fwys. In Someone Else Santa Ana A\'e in CM
UNCRO\VDED PARKING Call Now . No Obligation &16-S357
LOWEST RA TES ( TI4 l 835-6.S85 t>wner/mg:r. 2172 DuPont Dr. The A"·ard \\'inning Se.nr. !'II AN' Prescript lo n Rm, B, Newport Beaeh ---sunglasses found nr Harbor ~ Courtesy to Broken SINGLE? WIDOWED? View School. CdM. 6-1+-15&1
AVAlLABU: for immediate * Divorced Over 21 * Lot t SSS Oklest & largest. For a sell occupancy. Suble-ase pleasant 4 room suite. 2043 explanatory message 24 hrs
WestcliH Dr., Suite 2 00. a day. 541-9991
Newpru1 Beach. 642.--7690 or ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
iff building manager. Phone 542-7217 or write to
DESK SPACE P,0. Box 1223. C:O.ta M•u.
DANCE lessons; Latin &
222 Forest Avenus American. Introductory oH-
Ldguna Beech er $4 per hr. 673-7185
C9f.!M66 Soci .. 1 Clubs 53)
FEMALE dog, Colli" X, gold .r. \o\'hite. Vic. Slater &
)1agnotia. {Cin na n1on)
Wash. State rabies tag 2369.
Family broken hearted.
847-9963
When You
Wont it done
right •••
Call one of
the experts
J ( / listed below!! ~,--~ ..... ;;._~,~~[~-~~~-]~ [ .,_. ..... .._ ,~
Babysitting Gardening P ainting &.
--'-c,..o'"s"T;:.A__,.M-E'"s'"A,---1 AL'S GARDENING Paperhanging
PRE·SCHOOL for garden~ k am.a.11 No wunng
18th & Monrovia, ~ day + landscaping services, call * WALLPAPER *
fUU day 11essions. Planned 540-5198. Serving Newport, Whea you call "Mac"
program, hot lunches. Ages Cdti1', Costa Mesa, Dover 548-1'"4 646-lm 6 Shores, Westclitt. 2-6, hrs :JO AM-6:00 P~t. IN't'ER -Exter. Guaranteed
$18 wk-COMPARE! 642-4050 PR01',ESSIONAL. Pruning, wori<. Lic'd & bonded. Local
or 838-5237. tree \\"Ork, sprinklers, aera-. d _ _. refs,Larry's Jnteriors,
VACATION mother will caI'f! tion, pestll, isea.se, we~ R 'd 548-~ control. Clean up jobs. 645-5350. esi · ~'""'
for your children while you Term.s. George, 646-5893 p A J NT IN G : H 0 n e s. t ,
vacation, r-.tatutt depen-dable, drive. 11 , X Jn t E:\'PER. Japanese garOener guaranteed work. Lic'd
references. Call alt 4 pm. Reliable maintenance. Local ref's. Call 67:>-5740
;,48-4987 Reas. n1onthly r a t es , aft 5.
CHILD care !n my home. i-,:89~2-~l2~!~9-,,-~-'"'"'~-PAPERHANGER. flock, foll,
Infant to 4 yrs old. Have AL'S Landscaping. Tree vinyl, guar .. estimates, the
3 yr old daughter. Fenced removal. Yard remodeling. tl11..n gm·an, 547·5846,
yard, large home. Call Tl'a.sh hauling, lol cleanup. Schwartz
Job W•ntod, M•lo 700 Help W•ntod, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710
EXP. 1twlng mac~J)ptrator BookkMper/Acct clerk lJSKPRS Ernplyr paya IH.
Slnglt. needl.e uph. items. need~ by Nwprt Bch dt'vel-Geora:e Allen Byland Al:en-6~7952 opment llrm. Exl)i!r w/con-l'Y 30?-B E. 16th, S..A.
Job Wanted, Female 702 struction or developmenl 1-"::::_7-0395~;,,====-c--c:-I Jinn desirable. Salal')' range * HOUSEKEEPER, live-in,
GOVERNESS: Relined y.eJI S550. Send ttsume to: P.O. 1 rm apt. School-aa:ed &trl!s.
educated Canadian 'lady, Box 1880, Newport Bch, l.i:'16-<l4~:;;i93i-0ii0ii0ii0iiOiiOii
Jatt! 30'11 available !or po1l·1~"""='~,~~=~----I
lion aa governt'aa. Speaks B 0 0 K KEEPER, exper
fluent English & £y.·edlsh. W/Sttrelarial akJUs Io r
Will live In & travel. l n t e r n a t I o n al school
714-728-2117 organization, N.B. location.
AIDES For convalescence, To S550 mo. Call Dick Neu,
elderly Clift or family care.1 ,,,~""""'~'==-~-~-1 Homemaken, 547-6681 BOOKKEEPER, Part-time,
Jobs w .. nteci M & F 704 for bWliness & legal ottioe. , 833-3622
!;: -·
1™NE PERSONNEL
SERYICES .. AGENCY COUPLE WRnla: apt t o BROlLERAf.AN-Exp'd. AP.
n\anage, C.M. Willing to do ply in P'ra:'n. TIO E.
lite plumbing, elec, clean-Katella. Anaheim
Ing. collection. yard & lawn CLEANING girl for nev.· Dra ft1man t o $690
('are. _Need 2 BR, 2 bath mother, 2 days week, Sl.5ill Mm. 2 Yrs. elec. plmg exper.
apt wiU, gara~. 64>1052 to $2 hr. Own car. Call Position will incl fiOllle' tecb·
Help w .. nted, M & F 710 4-8 pm only, 5-ls-6616 nician dulle1!i.
COASTAL AGENCY ~ ---... W• Pla ce People! F /C Bkkper $650
Accoun t .. ntlf.ff e Clerical Sales Adminis-Laguna ma
Young, dl'gree, 2 Yrs lndu.s-trative, Technice,j .•.
trial exper, To SlOOO. 1790 Harbor Bl, CM 54G-6{)Xi Gen'I Ofc $433
Liz: Relnd•rs 1-larbor Btvd. at Adams Mature/1t11ble/accur type
Personnel Agency i"'""""""""""ii.iiiiiiii'-;I
4500 Campu11 Dr., N.8. 488 I::. 17th {11t Irvine) C.~t.
CalJ .For Appointment c. 1 642-1470
546-2U8 ~ OC03
Adm. Sales
2131 Westcliff Dr.
Newport Beach
J. W. ROBINSON'S
NEWPORT BEAOI BEAUTIFUL 3 room office
suite ~ I kitchenette. ldeal
tor arcbll'eci, Insurance
agent, reallor, etc. On
lofonrovia SL in N . B .
$350/SlOO per mo. 64.5-0TlO
TiiE INTIMATE GROUP
of contemporary p e o p 1 e .
Parties every Fri &. Sat.
Non-members welcome 714/
53>-U85
LOST Female Ba.i;se t
Hound, main color blk,
South beach area, San
Clemente. Rew11rd 492-8717
LONG-haired grey cat
w I Dea collar, "Smokey"
lost vie llumboldt Island,
lltg Harbour. Reward,
846-4391 or 642-9440
830-4370, hrs 7:30 to 6:00. B.epair sprink!en;. 673.-Uli6 PROFESSIONAL, 30 yrs
El Toro, Mission Vlejo area EXPER. Japanese Gardener. exp, paperhanging & pain-
BABYSJT my home, Mesa Complete lawn serv & ting, !rom England. 968-7461
de! Mar. Babirs welcome. landscaping. 5 4 6· O 7 24, PAINTING, professional. All MORNING BUSBOY
Xln 'tpl•y l••il,bot lunc ... -11. 5';8-7958 wo rk guarn . Color d
JR. EXECUTIVE
TRAINING PROGRAM has immediate
openin& lor a
ios0J:.~ ~~;~,.1 r '°"..,.""" jinl
Son ~nte ~-----;;;~DJ;;
lQ;iO' 6 R001'1 aulle, New Found (frff ads) 550
Wsr: Black Leather "'aUet
!check type) No money.
Credit ca.rd.a &. checks.
.. •It'.' To meet the e xpa n -OVER 18
Cert. teacher, refs. 54g..0726 EXPER Japanese-American i;pccialist. 646-7081: 547-14--11 f ing nHdS 0 our com· APPLY IN PERSON
gardener, complrle garden-You Supply The Paint.
CHlLD care for mothers who ing M>rvice & cleanup. Room• -'"'-~ 110 ''· pany, w• have just . h.ave to \.\'Ork &. don'I wan! ,........ "" _... J · E CoUNTER HeJ ..... r for Italian 893-D15ill Call 540-7(}4t; starteu a unror X· ,.... to leave their children jUl!t •CUtivo t . . Deli. 18514 Beach Blvd.
SMALL reddish brown anywhere. 646-8662 BACKACHE? PAINTING/paperifli. 18 yrs ra ining pre>-Huntington Beach
female-dog, Vl<:: Bushard CHILD catt for mothers who Call 557-6062 for Ja1vn & rar-' in Harbor ary.. Lie & gram. DISTRIBl!I'ORS ~ Organize
675-5072
drp&, Paint, Crpt, Air cond,
All utll &. cleaning senr.
Lota of 1lau. 40c per ft.
~~mil ton, Rewa rd . "'ork. Near 4 elem schls. den care. bonded. Ref's furn. &tl-2356. your own sales force to sell
KEY case found on Heil Ave, ' 548-0523 C0'.'.1PLETE la1vn & garden-FOR clean & neat painting, THE MEN \VE ARE LOOK-Sh.akley naturally organic
e M°AINTENANCE
MECHANICS e
FULL TIME AND XL.NT
COAU'ANY BENEFITS
APPLY in person 10·5 pm
Hlg Sch. Identify. e LOsr IRISH SE'ITER,B __ AB_Y_S-IIT_l_N_G __ m_y_ho_m_•_. ing service. interior & exterior, Call TN'G FOR NEED N 0 T products. IT or Pr. SJG.9464 Personnel Depr.
SU.295'1 REWARD, CHILD GRlEV· lrg fncd yd, hot meals, day Jim 548-0405 Dick, 968-4065 HAVE AN'i PRIOR MAN-or 83&-0522. •2 Fashion Isl, N.B. * NEWPORT BEACTI Civic JNG. & nite. 642-5299 ?.10\Y, ('dge, vac. lrnt & rear INT & Exter. Painting. AGEMENT EXPERIENCE. l-''::i:=-~iiriii'8r":>-::-l~Equ~'1~-~~rtu~n~;~ty~<~m~p~lo~y~"'.\
C.enter on Npt Blvd. 310 sq. SMALL solid black femalr '~=,-,*~&!6-_6_7'8_*~-~ vds. $5 a week. Li 'd . r--t 30 OUR PROJECTIONS ARE * DRIVERS * JANITOR • couple over 30.
pood,, found ,·, c M " ClllLD ea-, I c.-• ., F • t·l,B. ~1m c ' Ul! .... ·= es . yrs GREAT, so !JERE'S A
675-5023
ft. 675-1601 or (1) 286-7144. 6'1
2
_
1489
· · LOST: Siame.~ cat, fen1ale, • ._ · '"'· 1" · ' ""°" exper. Chuck, 64:i--0809 • No Experl"enc:e Night 1vork. !\lust know how lite color, $5 reward. Vic: lg fenced Yd. hot unch, --,,,-=;=:...:::.,c=c_--1 ,""~.:...:::::::::...:::..:::::_ __ I OiANCE TO JOIN A 'VIN-to strip & wax floors &:·
OFFICE space for rent • FOUND • Beagle, male, No, end .of Laguna Sch. Iola of love. 64:.-3487 Gardening Service PAINTING/papering. 18 yrs NTNG TEAl\, RIGHT F'RO!'l-l Necessary! general. Tnaintenancr. Own
mW. 19th St, Costa Mesa. w/black collar, Frid11,y nite 49'1-3220 Builders by cxp«rieneed Japanese in 1-Iarbor aiea. Lie & Tl-IE BEGINNING. Phone 646-3971 for appl. on Bayside Dr. 673-1489 e 96&-0183 e bonded. Ref's furn. 642.2356 Must have clean Calif. driv. transportation. Permanent.
BIFOCALS rending glasses. BRICK bl--" LAWN R... ing record. Not under 25. 4~1' hrs. -per night, 6 days
1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM FOUND • Te?iU drivei"s Sou!h Coal!! Plaza, Bristol · """· c 0 n c i•e t e • care & ga.uen work . * PAINTING * a Plush orflces YELLOW CAB CO. week. $225 per mo. to stal'I.
From 300 sq. IL 35c sq ft. license, l /30. entrance. 6"2-IDl4 carpentry, house leveling, Light hAul1ng. Ex P 'd, lh Quality. Reas, Price!. e Liberal fringe benefits Cail 642.--196.1
675-2464 or 541·5032 642_J362 I ~~~~~~~~~~~ I all types remodeling. No Reasonable. Cal l ~13.973;; Free est. 646.0864 e Drive 1971 Cadillac lB6 E. 16th St., C.M. LANDSCAPE in.~taller &:
CORONA DEL ~IAR joh too small. Lie. Contr. 546-7379. LA\\'N Malnt. *PAPERHANGER * Start-1mmediately * E~. SECRETARY """~1ble foreman Must
1 & 2 Room oftl.'"-spaets BOXER frmale 8 months.
1
~ _'6"'-2-6>1"'--'-~-~---g·-,. & yanl •t•a·up, L,.1, * New offices e A•""'rt Loe ,,.,..,., · """ v · J H Road · I · I I'm' -;;;; !""u ...... " Rea.son11ble. 646-2449 . ~,..., · have exper. Full time req'd.
avail. OWNER * 673.6757 a~a ~~ in rvine lnstnictlon ,....,.... Business Service hauling & J'('pair . TALENT IS 'rnE SOURCE Good opportunity fo~ alert 644-4I51 aft 5
3700 NEWPORT BLVD NB I===-=~-~~~ · LA\VN c11.re, cleanup, Oower Plaste r, Pat ch, Repair Of STRENGTII OF AN Y secretary. to v.-ork lll fastl--,d--W-'---'------1
• ON TIIE BAY .
' FOUND 3171 .small bla£k EXECUTIVE TYPING ._.. PROFITABLE COMPANY. pac ed N.B .. •d.verUsi_ng Mai s anted $1 .6.S..$2
P d I ·--M ... _ """ UC\.IS. Free es!. * PATCH PLASTERING "2-'M• M ., 6'1>2464 or 541-5032 o o e nr Busu ... u I.: Schools & y nume. ~~ Call 8l7·580'l All types. Free estimates EDWARD G 0 L K A JS ~~All sk~llsd mcluding V't .,.,.,,, • rs. "asters
Adams, H.B. 962-2631 Carpet Servic• I ACHIEVING FlNANCJAL s rt require · MACHINE operator, male.
Business Rental 445 FOUND a set of key.i; in Instructions 575 ----------Genera l Se rvices Call 5-1~ lNDEPENDENCE IN AS-* DUREL ADVER1'.SING Some mech. exper. Apply
PRIME LOCATIONS street near Bakir and Dian10nd Carpet Cleaning * LABOR UNLl:..llTED * PALASTER • Patch· Rm. SOCIATING \\'lTii ONE OF ZlN72 Durtpo'!!. Dr./SU1al1~ 4 32972 Ce.lie Perfecto. SJC Harbor 5-l>-8129 Avg size room S8 dds. New "·ork. Free C" ~RN!AS RENO\VN· ewpo ,,.,.ach, C if. !'>.lANICURIST, •"p'd, T•k• E. 17th St., Costa Mesa I·IANDYMAN estimates. 54>-4588 alt S ,, .. 1.. .. u·v FACTORY"-' s d k • mo Sq. fl commercial bldg. YOUNG pregnant cat, white IT'S YOUR MOYE Repairing & inst.allations \Velding -Carpentry 673--19221 =~==:...:.::..c::=:.:::c..:_ ED COMMUNITY LEAD-nr:ip, tea Y ""·or over :<lnt c Ii en I e I" ,
with parkifli. $.300 MD. with spots, found in La.guna Free Est. &J5-ll17 1-fusband Busy? Call t.1oose Plumbing ERS, R.E. BROKER TY-for .. ~,adCay tlwoprkers, Apply r.1anicurist retiring. 49'3-3165
Beach. 499-3863 INDUSTRY CAREERS Car-nter ----------t COON DAVID B LooK at........ e erfecto, San M T r-J..15-$20 11..lter &-Repair LE\V Takas & Son's Plum-INGLAND · • Juan Capistrano ana gement rn.
Broadway, Lagu'la Beach FOUND A ,;um of money CARPENTRY Build-Scnr Mosl Things bing Repair Re Pi P e . f"ASJUON SHO\V Directors to $900. ":.~~tst~~~i~~~'."" :a~~~':.i!~;:da, Newport AIRLINE & RAVEL l\tlNOR REPAIRS. No J ob H a uling Remodel Free Estimates • PLEASE CAL L • • earn S5 to $8 hour. No Strong adm. background,
Realonomi-Bkr. 675-6700 ~--~~-----Too Small. Cabinet in gar---~~===~~~~-547 6771 Investment Beeline property management for
... 0 FOUND: Child's prescription ages & other cabinets, ffiEE h~uling fnr salvagablc PLUMBING REPAIR • Fashions. Car ne'c. 633-9574 young dynamic ~· Single,
SUITES Available: 17612 glasses. Vic: Monteeello t OPERAT S AGENT 5'15-8175 if 00 answer leave items. Free pick Up on furn. No job 100 small ASK FOR MR. TATE or 539-5-1.35 call Mrs / Schmidt, West-
Beach Blvd, H.B. Parking: area. 545-0198 e Ti S sa&2J72. H 0 & appliances. 5 5 7 -4 151 e 642-312S e ADVERTISING A r t i s t / , cliU Personnel Agency. 2().13
Air cond: Heat in g : 1 ,=~E.~M~A7L~E~.~B~Bo::....,-,,-o~T-,-"-,.-,-. I • R IONS ~~~rs:~. . . I ~5577=-=""°-;~'-"-"-·--~----------'----Productkln Managrr for hot Fiberglas Molders Westclilf Dr., N.B. 645-2770
Carpeting: Janitorial M'rv. on 7SOO block on Bolsa i" e AlR IGHT-CARGO , YARD, Garage, cleanups. Et • PLalUMRBING • Newport .Beach age"' y Exper. only apply. Wi!Jard MEA~-ER JOU. '"•yma•
I · SH 8 call " .. CO"l'lUNICATIO CARPENTRY • Repatr. All R · ectr1c epa\r $8 hr · ' Boal Work5 1300 U>g •c v " " " nquire u e Of' \\'es!minsl<'r. 557-638() " " NS emove ~re l' s, dirt, &12-27:)5 &IZ..l403 ?.1ust have good board ' an with Calif. exPer. tor quaJi·
!'r40-5724 i\1ALE 0 ~--> •TRAVEL AGENT phases. Home & apt, Lile skiplooder backhoe, 962-8745 skills, Know printing, pro. Avr., Costa Mesa. ly, small market, Mot"-
LL f 1 range 11.uu white Airline Schools Pacific haul ing. Eve: 548-6266, Re mode l & Repai r ..... S~1A grocery store or tiger cat. Vic. of Callf. and Dll,)': 537-1860 MOVING, Garage clean -up duction and scheduling, Xlnt FOLK SINGERS & pern1. 673-3510
rent. Grocery equip for sale. r.tinnesota in Cr.I 540-6761 610 E. 17th, Santa An• RE!'lfODELING & Repair & lite hauling. Rea!!One.ble. CUSTOM remodeling, &Item.· opportunity, DUR.EL AD-Singles or groups, auditions ?liEDICAL 1 a bo r a tor Y
$65 a mo. 11.B. area. F ,.._ 543-6596 Frtt estimates. 645-1602 lions & additions. David VERTISlNG, 2172 Dupont for CBS Special. Cont.Act t•<hoologo·s• I I., 0 ,, d,
847-8177, 536-1983, (213) EM uo:rman Shephe r d Specialist. Comm'!. residen-D S "' .... 0~9880 sh 0 rt hair, 1 m
0
s , tia1. Paneling. cabinet 1 , TRASH & Garage clean-up, Ste1vart-8uildcr. 673-1235. r., Newport Beach, tcve Johnston, 646-0742 all part-lime, 3: 3 0-7: 30 .
.,.,.,. VIRGO Swim Schoo I * ""~ 1670 6 thoroughbred. 494-2441 marlite, fonnica. 644-7598 7 dayR. $10 a load. Free Roofing 0
""-* · Newpon Sch. 644-2343
CoMl\1ERCJAL-J..A.>ssom, 6 mo'& lhru adull11. t A 1· 5405031 INDUSTRIAL COCKER Spaniel, male, on Also, S\\<im learns. Garden e CARPENTRY ~ C\BJ-es · ny ime. o-
' 500-1500 •q It, 13c to l1c Noria, Laguna Be a e b . Gro1·e & Balboa Is I e. NETS, FOR1'o1JCA. First TREES topped, cleanup. "'<' \VENEDA Roofing, Authoriz-* San Clemente 496--1840 * l•i4ii94-ii;52;4iJi-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1Jii6.l&-i;,2jj;;oj;·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii class work. 546-1326 do eve1yrhing. Handyman eel Appl icator for Sno-Hide anyt1ml'. Rl'as. &15-07118. Roof Systems. 64:>-1691
STORE 20 x 54 for lease. Cement, Concret e
* * * * * *
HA ULING, gen'! cleanup, T. Guy Roofing, Deal Direct.
Available i\fay 1. $230. 333 I do k .,-27-CE.i'\1:ENT \YORK. no job too tree serv. Handyman. Reas. my own v.-or . .,....,.. ou,
, =E=. =17~t~h=S=t·~· =C~M=-="'~'-='~'="°=-~ I i-------------------..... I o .oo oo•g 548-~. 1-.small, reasonable. Free ""o-"""' ·
STORE bide:: 3303 Npt Blvd. Estim. H. Stuflick, 548-8615. Housec leaning Sewing/ Alte rations
!{,(] &If. T d Y Pa d • 1 QUALITY ct"ment "·ork, let ~...,-.,..,--,-"----67>-160! °' II) 2ll6-n44 ra er s ra JSe HOUSECLEANING & ;roo-EUROPEAN Dc.,,mak;og George do il Lic'd., Bond·
lndustri•I Rental 450 ed. &.15-lG95. ing $20 full day, St! for AExpertedvly Cusrom Fhit~ed . 1i rlay Thorough Job. crur. \ orkmanr; t p . * COSTA MESA * Ii" nes PATIOS, walks, drive!, in-675-2569 673-1849
$% & $167 Per mo., immed I stall new lawns, sav.1, break, _A_L_TE_R--0-N-5-----remove. 548-8668 !or est. By Day. ' ATI ' , restyling.
occupancy, 110·220 powt>r. O\i•n Transportation. Expert litter: Top ref's.
R. Nattrei;s, Ag!. &t2-1485 ti mes ee CONCRETE. Floors. 836--0&IS N.B. area. 646-2704 Cafl
Art Gall<.'ry FOTOMAT
DRIVE-TH RU
~IOVlE Producer, needs girl
half-days, "'eek of April 5th.
Type, file , smile, phone.
Non.smoker. $3 hr. 675--4271
Laguna. Aggressive Sales. 5
Days & wk. incl ~at & Sun.
~1ale or Fem. Salary + comm. . NEED part tin1c, RN 7-l: 30
MISS E X EC AGENCY rmmecl. openings for !11.les-am, LVN's 3-11:30 pm &
4lD \V. Coast Hwy., NB girls, not'1.lnder 17. Apply in ll-7:30 am, AIDES '-au
646-3939 P<'rson Th.urs & Fri, April s h i I I s , e " p ' d 0 n 1 y .
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,...1 1 & 2, bet 9 am & 4 pm. NEWPORT HARBOR CON-
ASTROLOGY studcnt wan!ed FQTOMAT VALESCENT HOSP . 714-&16-776-1. to interpret horoscop<'s in 201 E, 17th St., C.rit.
home part time. 644-4359 FURNlTURE mill man. • • NEEDED
ALROSPACE & ~lgmt: Earn Exp'd_ Full tim!' 1,1·ork. , •
$1000 per mo, pl or fl. time ALSO: \Voman 1vanted for Two _Office Girls
in Salt'!! Mgmt. Variable hrs. ca.se covering. Will train. l\1ust be 2j and able lo drive
833-1681 Apply 875-C. \V. 15th S1. -APPLY -
7500 _ fl-Ali power, h.eat, patios, drives. tt.idvoalks, I-;===:;;,.:::;::_=== Ru1h Call .,., slabs. Reas. Don 642-'!514 DEDICATED CLEANING light!. partitions & floors d 11 \r e do t'VPry!hlnR free Alterations_ 642-5845 BUSDRIVERS $3.10 per hr.
fin ished. 153;, ~1onrovia, 0 ars Child Care esti1nate. Call 673-1072 Neat, accurate, 20 years eXP. Apply Mon th.111 Fri, 7am-GENERAL HELP NITE \Vatern1an. Ir v i n(' N.B. Call 645--0770 4pn1 at Bull Glll'age. 600 ~oast Country Club. Apply
LICENSED child cal"t', \\'01v Bay & Beach Janltorlt1l Tile Irvine Ave. Ne"·port Beach. • $3.85 HR. • i,.'"~l" ... "°i;,;;;"~· ~A~M~o~o~tY~----1
Newport Bch. 186 E. 16!h St., C.M .
look al 1his, nursery school Crpts, 1vindo"'S, (Joor& etc, G42-7007 Large c:hain needs 9 men, 1"'
atmosphere, a c 1ivi1 i es, Res. & Comm'I. &16-14t.l CERA:O.l!C tile ne"' & =====~-~--I lull or part time for mer-OPPORTUNITY
365' sandy beachlront be· Trci.de 3 BR, 2 ba, Costa linger painring, etc. Proj-!JOU C E remodrl. Free est. Small BABYSITI'ER Grandmother· chandislng and service
tween San Clemt'n1e & Dana. r-.1esa house, $9000 equity, eels daily, indvidiuaJ care SE 01'" L AN jobs \1:elcoml'. 536-2426. ly lady. tree to babysir, to Call i 1r. Day 54&.9862 For 4 licensed ReaJ Eslalc
Pt, p1iced 50% below n1kL, FOR unimtiroved apt or Coniplete i-lou~ Cleaning ._,.mot .. -, 1-oc• •hoppo'og Sales p-...ie lo' growtog 541).2571 and a!lenti-On, any hours. 642-6824 TrH Service .... '". '" .... G RL FRI y ·-.-Ir. equity for Ind .. <'On1m , commercial loL Ho! lunch & sn;ick, plenty & Dr appt. etc. Golden1,1•est I DA ronC'l'm. Income & commer-
460 I-;~"'=·~· =~'-'T~°'~'~' ,,:'~"='~8=2.;=,--• 5-l:>..7R!l:J "' of play equip. frflC{'ri yArrl,I _n_•_•~m-•_T_•_• _____ TREES, Jle<lges, Top, Trim, & EdingC'r area JlB. 10 assist recreation director. C'ial propeny, land devrlop·
Storage 455
F'ENCED Storage Y a rd
w/11hed. Z-:ilO sq. ft. Harbor
& Bakrr CM .
S5.'i mo.
1----~-----~u1ty, Or Co. Raw land & TradC' 2:1· Cn1ising Tri·nla· $20 JX'r 1o1·k. 968-5182 Ellis .... cut, remo\.°C'd. hauled. Ins. 847-9569 NO EXPERIENCE NECES-ment, resales on hon1e1, r
RESPONSIBLE. mature ranch. lor \\'estern ranch. ran F"OR Land on i1·atcr and Bushard Smiley TaX Service 642-4030 Big John BABYSIITER for girl, 2. SARY. Apply in person only, may consider part timf',
couple "·ill I a 'k f'. over. A\§0 portion f..1r clean des-any"·her<' or \\'h.a!cve r. Cont ractor Upholst•ry Prelrr our home or l\Tesa Club Crccnbrook, l\Iagnolia Your own desk & phone.
pymnll & OC'C\IPY your horrw ert & poss N. :O.lld11est. \\'ant 1 cyl d1cwl engine. ----------• 13th YEAR LOCALLY e Verde Sehl area, 545-:;ll6 St., btwn Talbert & Elhs, Cali for appt. \V. E. l.achen·
lemporanly or "·ill t't'nt a Pnn only 838-4651. • s.12-3798 * t.1Y \Vay, quality home QJahfl<'d • Reasonable LTC Upholsterer -Quality eves Fountain Valley, hlon btwn myer. 646-3928, 54J..3483.
sm. house on yrar'11 ll'11se b ;i'ii;-;<STi'TEie-;:;o;;:;;l ~'~~-4'd':~-.,=-==~,J"':'"i:i'i''ii'~~<'i:"~ shlrllnR Jul'le 1st. 546-3496 3 BR hon1~ .. l\lcsa Verde. 'Mavr 12t.I eq 1n charming repair. \.\'alls, ceiling floors \V. A. S:\1lLE)' ii·ork. Anthony's Up ' B ABY S ITT ER I pm pni.
$7000 <'qu1ty. \\'ant i•irw lot 2 BR /10n1,, E-side R-2 lo!. ere. No job too , small. Cert1!1cd Puhhc AcC'Ounl't Servi~. 642-5827 N.B. transportntion neC'd-~ 01,1·1~ • GIRLS e GIRLS • PART TIME •
2 BR t..>u.se, Apt or mobile 547--0036 24 h 6 2 "'2 1--~ home. furn. Rrply 10 898 in LagUni Ekal'h. Country-incn1 $16.1. \Vant l, 2 or 3 • r anl'!. serv. I -~~. l any!1n1e 646-9666 day, Mon-FrL Call afl 6, Established tinn. opening Clerical, Delivery with sales,
San Franci!co Dr. mans prt'lerrt'd. f111er vppcr units. saine R00:\1 Additions. t ,T . Crr1trnl Bu11111ess f:(-rvicrs 54S..1547 new branches. F'J. or pt. General help.
Hf'mel. ea 92343. Call: 54j-6()S4 ari'11. !'ll1nual, 543-1722. Constniction. Single s!Qry or eTHE TAX ADVISORS BABYS. Livc·in for 3 ~h time. e W E WILL TRAIN e
SINGLE GARAGE l!f..17 18' :.lt>n:ury trailt'r 21l ~39-:lli77. i11~~~i;11·· plans & layout. Prrm. orfiCT'·Reas Rates
11
i +l "' ch;Jd. RcU•bl< ,.,, oo e $3.40 HR. e ",11st I.If' neat "-11J;,;trC'tiliLY>,
FOR STORAGE
1v/C81'!GPY. ~nod c n n d. \r lk · I 328 No. Nl'wpor1 BlYd. I •-,, .... , bch , 642-1343 Call r.1r , Grand• * r..••-9862 or lnten.rie1,1, call t.IR. ~ a -in anr1que popcorn AddHlon11 • Remodclin .. .,... J"f BRANDON e 548--0152 e value $700 FOR cabov11r hnolh·r·us!o!1' 11wning-!I, glas~ Gerv.ick &. Sons, Lie. G Oppo~ile llOl'lit llospitnl BABYSl'ITER. houaekeeprr. GOOD 08 · • 89-\.j.')8;) •
Mite. Rentals
465
camper. "'11ldows, \ah1 s:nx:i+. Trd 673-60-11 * 549-2170 For APPL Call &1;;.C»OQ mature, dependable, Jive J PART-Tli\1l-: secretnry hgh1 * 548-1050 * for 1·111-. JC',1rl1y, bo111. prop I~'-=-'--~~-~-"'-"-"' TAX SERV ICE $4 UP J ob Wanted, M a le 700 in or out. 968-8238 aft 5:30 PENSIONERS typing, t1hng, some banking
LOCKED, fenced i;lonige Jor .\lodern Eastsidr duplr:< <l( " Alt G.30, 494-4977. ROOl\i Addllions/Remodel-App'r avallable day:i-. UARTENDER exp. apply in No selling. Must have_car, 2 dutic11. Send Resume lo P.O
bot.la or campe~. 50c per S36,9";i(I jnrome S32.l mnnth 7 Older unit.s. Prime loc. ing. free planning serv. e\'tli, wknds. 548.0588, BOATS person alter 4 pm. The Blue daya pe r wk. No dnnkers. Box ll17 Newport Bch. Ca
foot, per monlh. C 11 I l lrade Sll,000 ''"''Y for .10 bc'ach arra. lneom• 11•,-. Kennedy & Hause, 633.6270 1842 Newport, c:.t •:xec. availablf' for boet Beet 107 2lllt Place NB Gd steady men • referenc-_9_"63-c-==,,_~=~--1 GU-6560 .oou da)~/:l.'18-6849 eves. company. Perform boat es 673 2289 PllARM
I lo 35' t"11 eng cabtn cruiser. F.ri. Sll·.\1' \Vant house. Skou~l'n Ta11 &rvlre calculalion, modifications' & BABYSl'ITER "'ante<!, my ' . * ' i\CEU1'1CAL ~ CORRALS for rent, 11610 Erl Riddle 64(;..58jj T O.'.s or subrnl! Electrical yoor lll'.lmr, ('nmpl n11d1I pro-d t 11 d ft ' At •-1 ho 1 ~ ..... , N. I GUARDS \\'EIGIHNG * Camemn. nr Beac:h k . i\J<:'"nl 642-7(0) l('('lion :)iG-4:'128 e 11 ra ing. so "" P me, ......,; .. na igue area. • • • AsSist11nt lo \\'r\i;:-h i\l11sler.
Slater, Hu.nt. Bch. I ~~·~;~ ~m:c~~.t)~.::~.~/ CH-.-.. -~"~,-,-.. ~.~,,-.~. ~ .. -.-• .ic ' Es7!~~;~1.A~,p.i~11:;:: i SKOUSEN TAX SERV. rn:.uc~·l~n~ \~~u~~~sifi~ Aft 6 pm, 495--0789 Imm~ ri' pl time poiltlon.• Local Rl't'll n'Sidcnt. English ad l2!l Dally Pilot, P.O. BEAUTY Consultants needer! av&il, San Juan CapiJltrano ~aking "'ilh prior rxper '\.
or Counry ~1r1p f'OR home unit~. s:,1 i\t rqu11y • wan! l'l'Pfl~ Sol&-5203 Reas. Yoor ltome, 54~ by Gen. foods, 1 ea c, h area. Uniform_ s & equip furn Ln phannacrulil'al m 1• · ~ • -k ~ V't ., D nd Bo-.: 1560. COSIA "lesa. Cal1r. k _,_ \V/ ~ '
I I 1n......, e\\VlJU 1 lage or , • T . .'s a I or smalltr Furnitu re Ir oning !r.!llG ma <'UP a 1·1..13try, train. l-1·1nge brnefil.$. Car Ir tele-pn>rd. Call 6-i&393J f """*'* I Pvt pl y, s.t2..:-i766, unn1. Exec po11'11 avail Viviane pho~ n-q·d. Apply: 13912 11pp1 . or
'.}l i\1il. Jttri. On1t;. corwll-Agl'nt s.12-7000 FUR."llTURE Str1pp1ng • any PERSONABLE Enll':lishmA.n \\'oodard Cosmf'Hca 544-1464 Pondcrosa Sui~ f, Santa e LIN\\'11..('0
Oon. ~r t(I appreciall'. 47 1-"ully lmprnv'rt R-1 lots A.VPral{t' chair or rocker n:oNJNB'C my hOme $1.2;; ~r S1nglr 25 )Tl. BS degrtt .• BLUE DOLPHIN • Ana. LARORATORlf:s •
530
strip,....d S5 6-12-:IMS nr. rini o"n hangers. Car. Con.'llder any th ! n g, Equal tu i'" ,_ Costa •t c It $1100 ''alue. \Viii tr11dc lnr fl1 StiOIJ 1S2!1.j001 Clru. ,.~ · 54"7'tl \VATTRESSES .... £..'{P'D. oppor nv emi:1ivyer "rsa. Ill
G rd . • ,,.. "' · Prefer NB IU"eR 6-16-4;,12 Val1an1 or Oodi;:r Dart ln a \\'1Jl D1\·1rlr \Yan I Mo1or-• en1n9 App ly 33.;,:, Via Lido. N.B. HANDYMAN • M&in1cnance, PR 0 FE S STONAL phone
SPIJUTUAL ' card reader. coodioon. ~1;)..5221 <'Vl'll. yach1 , Airplane., BAY5ide Bud-t , •. .,, 0• 110 _ .... Jinitorl1! E>..'PER. all rormll Procl. BOOl\KEEPER. !\ill-"ba~. ""'rk a couple hrs R day, ~licitor • Dana flolnt, Nin ... ....... .,.,rv "~J Control, sbop li8.9'.ln. mla.. "' I t ~1 ~1 ti--' Ormtlll"' C I Give 1dv1rt Oii lo\~, m•~ 14' Spredboat. 40 HP John-home "r lnr t111l 459-.3103 fml It beck ~ rdge sharp. ncMed for cxpa.ndin' pr va e 8(',......, · r1..-re •TIJ "· ap ll!t""Rno 1u·•11.
riRp • busi.nc'll. 731-871.8, 1on Elcct. J!Arll'r, dual 'Vhal do you have IO Ira.de' k vac 84~20 .. 6 ft;· SPl\RKl.E J11n 1tor1al. \Vln-~.~ .. !'!81Y51. after {i p.m.. c,-,,in1pNny. h1u11 have n1lnl· or olrler man. 8"1&-6287 Work In your O\\'n home.
I 33
... ate A · · ' 11 · dov.•s., f\oon, crpta & l'(ln11lr "" ,_,., HOST De I deal in lltca f'h I SOUu1W 11'1 v~ •• t.anks, f"tc. 1,1·1th trailf'r. I.1st \t bent_ In ~!CLEAN Up Specialist, hBUl·I cleanup ACQmplctccomm'I muu1Svniexp.Sc1111cknow. ESS.lWArrn.ESS.Nol 83~~1465 bet · one
L.A. Ukl' nf'W. Tr;1rif' for V1ll· County'• 111~11 read trnd. !ni:, odd job5, new fl'n<:f! I ~rv. for Free er;t ca.II, The f<t.llest draw In the \\le.!ll ·lf'd~e oi publis-hlng bu11inc11s under 21. Part time. Exp'd. 111~ noon. ~:een 9
:00 a.m.
F'OR <!.......+ ,l O>nfkif':net ani, Dart. MS...52'21 t ve. iii• l>Oll &U-5671 helpfl1I, $41111.1')' ol)f'n. Ctun-1 ~oo~l~y~. ~6l~2-827==~"~~~----1:-'---'=------,,. .... • · & repair. Re11s. Ms-6955 !!62--0672. , , 1t 011lly Pilot Classified I; Larn Kara!•. A l k l do , * * * l-p11ny henellta. Call for In· BUSIEST mark~lplaer. In TI1t" riuittst ,1r.11iv In lhl' \\'1'51
Sav1ile, Judo, Ke ndo * * *I ~ Ad. 6-i2-S6nl ll'rvlew: A!X'O Ad\ler1i~1ng, town. Tht DAILY PILOT . a 0311} P ll1'lt Cl1t~slfi _
_ &-17::• :=::;•II>--:·=-_:-=~---~i!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!i!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!i!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Jiii!I!!!!!!!!!!~ ----------, Int•., Laguna N\Jnlel . 4~3,"~0 Cl•!!lfled ~~!Ion. .At! 612-56ift /
, : f -l. • ..,, c. --
Rentals Wanted
PeNOnolfs
'
,
TlmrMi•Y, Apr)! l, 1'71 DAILY l'ILOT 41
[ l[fi] I -I~ I -f.-.a to You Ill I ........ --I tt I !~1 .:;;I ;;; ... .,;;;-.;;;:!~~!._I ... ____ ~l~~I [
ll2 MlscollonMUt Ill TV, Radio, HIFI, 2 yr okl Wei.manner nted1 Bo.ts, M.lnt./ C•mper•, Sale/Rent 920 Motor Home• MO Help Wanted, M & F 710 Applli1nce1 102 Gerap Sale ....;.;;._. ____ _
Rei1I Esti1te S1le1 IXJ.n'I Or&llnlzatiou hD.s 2
openln&s !or proveu brack-
ifOUl'ld.
NEWPORT
Per1onnel Agency
133 Dov•r Dr., N.8 .
642·3170
CLOSlNG out aalf': StoYeA, BE.'1WN 22nd A. 2lrd OU
.:as & elec, bltns. self· lrvuic. Back Say. 2300
cleaning, <.-on1bo oon,pact Pr11,1ate Rd, N.B. April 2nd,
klfche/1$. 01!rhwa.shers &: 3l'd cl 4th. Kng11 &-aly
'ol:f.!t'r .af1net1. Al'11 Ap· Ortho mallr, like ntw. An·
pHant~ $C'1v 1ce, 159 9 t1q1, old 5h1J)I. lantern. oJd
Or11.n1::e, C.:-01. 6 4 2-6 515, Japanese "Mh;les, sew
646--1121 :>. mach, 1pinning v.·hl, rugs,
RECONDITIONED nun1erou.s olker artkle:s.
""'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""~I r 0 RT ABLE Dishwasher&, PRE-GARAGE SALE
RETAIL hostf'S S·I::a rn 1 \Va a her1, Dryer1 & Trundle bed 'ol'/pillov.·s L
1 money at lxln1e. CivP 8 f flelrigf'rator&. _$40 & \Ip. covers $35: 20 g1!.I & 50
Koffee Kl11tch. Call ~G-:!910 S1tlcs: and service, '4.92-61$3. g&I aqua.riun1 & tilters,
R ,... l.11.rsou·~ AppJ!alK.'CS 212 N. pumps & XI ti1h, $75 or
.ec,.,. El Canlino Real, San 1>e111 offer. Also many other
Front offu;I' i!Jlpl'arantt<, ClP1ncute . item~. 3141·) E. Bay,
good 1yp1n.1t. l>1>kCh .1rt>1t. "°",.,CC..CC,.,~-----Peninsula. 673-22511 Call Loraine, \\e.~ll·llH Per-C 0 L D SPOT relrigerato.rs 1-=-===c.:.::.:=;.,,.~~
Sonnel Agency, "°43 \\'ei;t-& Kenmore stoves, slightly LIDO ISLE GARAGE SALE
cliff Dr . N.B. 6,l;,.:n1a.. freight damage<!. f u 11 y WED-SUN : Ca n1 er as , guarani~. Reduc!ions up bikes, couches, desks, e R.N.'s e 10 $100. Ph: 962-7781, Sears tables, chairs, linens. beds,
Jntens1\'r> carercardiac care.
Full llll\1', 11 to 7:30 an1. e HUNTJNGTO'.'l INTER-
t"O:\tMUNITY HOSPITAL e
Personnel Dept . 17772 Beach
Blvd., Huntington Beach,
or Call 847-7807.
SALES GlRLS, age 18 to-'.'
Earn $300 to $500 n10. in
your sPare lime. For appt.
call Jin1 Jlarrison 49'1-9fl44.
SALES -l\fen & \Vomen
STOP!!!
Roebuck &· Co. !K}59 Ad&.ms, children'• furn, 1 ! a i n e d
Huntington Beach. glass doors, f' t c. ID Via
\V E ST I N G H 0 U S E auto Crenoa, 675--8248
\\"asher $40. Kenmore combo GARAGE Sale: The Orange
\Vasher-dryer $50. Both good Coun!y Associated \Yomen
rond, guar & delivered. for Pepperdine Uni~·,rsity
f>iG-8672, 847-8ll5 have been Spring cleaning.
KEN~fORE automatic Come lake a look •I the
v.'asher, excellerN condition. ba.rgainst, 10688 ~forning
reconditioned Sti. 968-6..'iSl Gloiy, r.v.
aftrr 6 PATIO Sale -1''rl, Sa.I &.
*LARGE REFRIGERATOR Sun, 12 noon to Ii p.m.,
s-i;,_ DBL OVEN STOVE $li 620 1 ~ Iris, O:>mna de\ Mar.
646-7820* Miscellaneout BIB
LOOKING & ACT REFRIGERATOR " "· fl.
I Adnural, $50. 71-4: 827--4190
Sales minded pet'!On, see for aft 6 P.1'1
ANTIQUE spinet desk, sn1
leak tab!ea, \"Cl)' old rare
Chinese bl11.ck'11.'ood chair,
studio bed w/11.ttached desk,
IS83 colored lithos of Amer-
ican yachts, Jge collection ol
1out-0f-prlnl! books on sail-
ing .. Bone & ivory ship's
model, Chine.roe porcf'lain,
Japanese carved ivory,
soapstone. -4'X2' Oriental
screen, ~teersehaum pipe1,
lge Australi11.n tAmphoral
vase. Toby mup, German
steins,
.Yourself, a reaJ career op. C::C.:..:.CC:...-~---
JXlrlunity. Xlnt turure for FRIGIDAIRE DRYER
right n1an. Earnings conl· .Xl.nt cond. $65. 642-0646
mence immediately should Cameras &
be ln exef!ss ol SZSO. per \\'k . ~!luipmi1nt
No canvassing or soliciting, 1--'--------
808
Intervie\\'s by appointment
only 9-3 weekdays. 835-2111.
135mm TELEPHOTO &
35mm v.·i<le angle lenses,
Spiratone telxtender, a11 fi1
SLR. Argus i\!540 automatic
slide pmj & magazines.
5-15-6321.
Salesman $600~
Exp. only. Call ~1rs. Schmidt,
\\'estcliff PerscrtlMI Agenl'Y,
2M3 \VestcliU Dr., N.B.
&i;...mo Furniture 110
SAR.AH Coventry needs fl.
or pt time help. No in-
vestment. \Viii train, m!n
age 20. 530-1407 & 54.3-9066.
* SEAMSTRESSES *
Exp power 1nech oper~.
NORTH SA.ILS, 913 Elec-
tric, Se a I Beach. 1213) ,_
SERVICE Sta Sa I es men,
part time, neat in ap·
pea.ranee. Apply 2 ~ 9 0
Newport Blvd., C.:-01.
SE\\'lNG i\1achine Operators
Wanted. Exper. necessary.
Al!IO Rl'CrelRry '\'l'Lnled. Call
after 9A:-01 4~1236
WHY BUV
FURNITURE?
Plus, Plus, Plu1111
\Yestcliff Villa, Ap1 3 tup-
stairs on \\'estcliU Dr. bc-
tv.•een Dovtr & Buckingham l
\\'liEELCHAIR $20 Sewing
n1achine SIO Wool braid!'d
Be Flexible! n1.11;s, 2-9' " 12' oval $i3
Rent mo. to mo, with each r x 6' ovo.! $20 2-9'
100°/o Purchase Option x 12' sq. f25 & S20. 7'
111d. item selection x 9• sq. $23. 642.-1249. 470
24 Hr ... Dely. Cambridge Circle, Ci\1
CU3TOM F'ULL size 8' pool table S55:
Furniture Rental Zeiss Contafiex Beta. s ingle
517 W. 19th, C.M. 548-3481 lens reflex 35mm camera
A"l.aheim 774-2800 w/I 2.8 lens $50; Bell &
LaHabra 694-3708 Hov.·ell 500 v.·att 5llde pro-
jector V.'/4 .. I J.5 lens S:!I. DINING room ~t. Bclnn set,
V'•t••• b-•kla~ room '"· 548-3159 e SHOP JANITOR e Luhrs • " ·~ Boot Co. 1781 Placentia, matching divan & chair, RlFLE: MARLJN Golden l 9-
Cosla ~lesa, Calif. TV, dishes, pans. t>\C. 227 A r-.1ountie. 22 cal ., Lever
2·1th Place, C.M. '5-18-5032 action, \V/4 X Bush.ne.11
SP'ORTSWEAR MFGR-Need aft l2 . .scope. $75. Call 528.9345 Alt
m exp'd. operator1. 6 pm ""••kday, & all d•Y ~., ANTIQUE Vic.to rian · ·"'
Steady-Vac. PBk 642-3472 what-not v.·/brass claw ovr 1-w~'-'~''~'~"oc,· =~=~== r E LEPHONE adverti&ing g!ass ball. Wainut extension ** VACUUM TIJBE VOLT
lrom our pleasant NeWJX>rt table, both perl cond ·i\tETER, Hewlett Packard,
oftlces. Hrly waaes. !\.lorn-673-12~9 alt 5 model 400 H, xlnt condition;
1 ..... or eve. shills. 645-3030 1..:co.,::,,:..,:"'--'-=---~ 11,· o' m-•·e oil•'" Call '"'6 SACRIFICE. Elegant Kifl!: ..... ~ .. 33, l\1R. MADRID l\1ed1t. Bdrm suite. King 528-98-15 after 6 PM \.\'Cek·
PATIO Sal*: 1 rnotoreycle1, Stereo
car Air coadltloner, 2 TV'1'1----------
men'1 clothes, mattresae.a. * * Vacuum tube VOLT
preaaure coo~. e.lf'C01c M!."TER, Htwlett Pacbn:,
Uillet, fireplace )op, lad-mode.1400 H, Xlnt condition;
der ! various misc. lten11. m or make oner. CaJJ
28-lS Europa Dr., c M S28-9M5 Uter 6 PM
S.fQ-3283 alt 6 weekda,yi, all weekda,ys Ii all dl,Y week.
dlily Sat-Sun, end1,
**INVERTER, J-leath Kil, ZENITil'Stereos-Floor
model MP14, 12\IOC to llO clearance. AU new, Coct
VAC, 60 cycles, 400 watts. plus $3). Fu.II lcty "''?-rrant,y.
NEW aucmbl~ l check~ ABC Color TV !!Ott AtlanU
out by professionll} ell!Ctron-(at Ma.a:nolla) Hunt Bch.
ic engineer. Saailict! $100. 968-3329
Call 528-9845 after 6 P.~f.l'RA=D~J~O--tu-,,.-,.-. -S~.,-,-,-o
\Oo·~kdays & all day week-am/fm. comp. York model
erxls. MPX-23, 60 Ml.It w/plug
* AUCTION * "' • '' ""°"' i"" • ""' monitor. $110 or be 1 t,
Friday 7 P.M. 673-4191
April 2nd 1·CAS--SETIE---...,,--nl-,-,IP-Ja>-,-, 1
~'1rn, Appliances, Colored, Stereo. B&ll auto load, t.to-
iV's, Stereos & much m0tt. de! 337 Pia 6 tapes con-
Windy's Auction Born secut1v~ly. N!arly ntw. Paid
20151t Newport, CM 646-8686 S200. ~ll $100. 67l-tl91
Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'I TRANSCEIVE{t, 23 ch. ~n
KNGSZ bdnn r;et. antiq cheat eral MCll-A. Pa I r CB
or drawn, mirron & misc. 11dmobil & b11.~ 11ntenMe
84U121. 17676 A Cameron, + extras. Complete Rt
J-1.B. $350. 546--64.88
Miscellaneous ROBERTS 9!.Wl 4-tra ck
W•nted 820 stereo, Dyna.co F'~f
--~-------1 ttceiver, dual dust cover. RE1'~RIG. LATE MODEL. 545--6..121
USED BRlCKS, ANY' AMT 1 ..:.c".-=1.=r::,T_V_C_o_m_b_o~$l_O_O
REDWOOD 2X4X4·s * 9S8-027l * * 646-8226 *
home 'ol'/lie yard. t.ove1 S.rvlce t02 CAMPE"°Ol' mon:;::-old.
childrt!n, Good hurtter & n.:>-"""'" * K' C * ~trelver. Call bt'A'fl 9 6 UC. Skipper lffla perm. p&m top S 2 2 S. (1) lngs oach s. $3&-8732 4.13 position. Power/a.11... P.O. home1na.de 1hell $ 3 S. Motor Home Agency
&x: 495 Bal Jal. NB S43-1Mtl SM,..Ll. terrier, white .;:.:..::=-~------1 Superior * Land1u
w/blo<k •po~ on ''"'· Boats/Morino CyclH, BlkH, SLIOW SPECIALS
\Vonderful w I ch 11 d re n. Equip. 904 n Nf'l'd.s a:ood home. _....;c....;c...------1 Scooters 92S Newn's5KW,roolalr,en&:
83.1-0114 4/1 * *INVERTER, Heath Klt.1 ----------air. AM·ll·M stereo.\ tape,
FNCD Yarcla. 2 lovable dogw model r.1Pl4, UVDC to lJO - -.. .. .. c1'\l:se control, 413 enatne•,
belie pup 3 mo and Golde:i VAC, 60 eyclea, 400 watts. I .... - -• dual holdln" tankl, water
Watf'r Spaniel mix. male NEW assembled & checked THINI pur1flen1. loaded!
with' freckles, 8 3 6-4. 4 9 ;1 out by profe1sion11.1 electron-HOND· a Thia Weekend Only
S42-7096 413 le engineer. Sacrifice SJOO. ~ &M N. llarbOr, Sant& Ana
Call 528-9845 altrr 6 P.M. Ill •-9030
LGE decoratlYe c•nary kd • -11 d k -r ,... .,,, • ~ ., w.. . "FRIEDLANDER" o,,., ' lo ' dally l~::.;od type da!e pa.ln1 trees. ends.
You di&: & haul. Also l l ~='==-----~,1 MERCURY props: control tn allAQI ntWT· •t 8 ~· ""' SPARTAN -All lge pampas grass. ..~7-682-4 893-'F.166 " ..w 64U986 412 cables, slni::le lever C<>ntroil, ~ • set up in Adult Parle. No
many iMtrumenlll, 1 jack NEW-USEO.SERV. -rs. Immaculate, tw I" LOVABLE brov.•n and "'·ht -1 b k 2 1n~-~ ~ "'""e uc et seat, """''u ~ bod•. quiet &!l'fft. "'"' Cocker-\Vitt Jtair Terrier •--· gas tan .... , heavy winng bath &. w:torage. Real eom-mix shots, loves children bl s ] "-] ]•" ca e. teer ng w,..,... .s w ...., W T k fortable l!1,1lng with ocean
;-.....d watchdog. Mi-7096 tide a:llde. Call 54~ e a e view. Yours for S2::JOO Cash.
days 1 538-1228 alt 6 4/l -~~-------I DACRON sails, maln 38' luff. Motorcyc es See at 1660 Whittler Ave.
2 DEAF cats: 1-6 mo's old, 16' foof, main 26' lull 10· Sp. No. I. ~7
long hair, n1ale ; 1 • 11' loot, jib 18' lutf, 9' loot, In Trade ir 1967 WINNEBAGO Motor
yr old,. n1ale. altered. Both spinnakers 25' llllf, 16' foot. On VW's Home. Only 19,U> ml'L
white, 897-~4.80 or assorted marine hardwue. Lots of xtru. $-4850. Eves ,.._,3!1!1 413 ,.._,814 BILL YATES 1 "ti! 9PM, .n '" s.1
FREE lo good home - 3 =B=-OA~T~fio~t.~tio~ .• ~,.,-lall~•~d.-Sll~I VOLKSWAGEN • Suo. 646-4ti(](]
yr old female Colliellrish lbs notation per cu tt: Tri1ilers, Travel M5
Setter. Housebroken. Loves SJicu ft. 4 cu ft mln .. Lie 32852 Valle Road
children. 'Veil tr a In ed . contractor cn4J 77&-2046 San Juan Capistrano BY ~r _ 31• tardem ule.
1!4i-4854 -4131-----'------1 837-4800/493-45ll/499-mt Tub w/ibo~r. h I ate r , 60 WA 1T ?.1arlne radio-tf'I.
FEMALE brindle eolor ter-US<'d twi~. s9:;, ronip. wHh '69 TRIUMPH 250 refrig, completely aelt-oon-
rlrr mix. 6 mo. hsbrk. !hots, crystals, ant. & mount talned. Sac r it Ice. 71-&/
f~e dog lood. 642--0349 or 642-0342 531-7800.
".
< p ·11 A c•• 4/1 ElCcellent cond!tiOn. (8377G7) .. ac1 c ve, '" B P 906 1~ APA~E •amp -1•-, oats, ower $495 :"v ..... , .. u .. 1e ---'--------1 -sips 6, b11.ttef')', spare tire . CASH for furniture. ap-21" COLOR TV $150 plia~s. ~ls, misc items. 19" PORT ABLE $30 I ~O~p<~o~9~1~oTo5~. ~64~:t-t7~0~1S~::''::ll~~~·~"~S-'529~~~·~~~ I Pets 1nd SUpplles \VA~'TED to buy 1ki c!otM1,
l[E] ('69) 23' CHRIS C, frbgls.
Great day boll.t/overniler.
Head, 185 hp V-8, ba it &
fish lfnk + xlrU. tmm11.c.
Bst ofr ovrr $5000/tenns.
675-2781, pvl pty.
BILL YATES o .... $950. 8JM!l79
VOLKSWAGEN Trail.,s, Utility 947
childrel1!5. \Vann. Boys n 3l8S2 Valle Road 14' Tandem Trailer
12 & 16, girls sz 8. 540--0260 I 11 1 Cogs 154 San Juan Capiltrano \Vith 4 wheel&. A1111ee.l weld·
837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 ied COMtruction. '.4" Stffl Fret: to Xou \\'ANTED: Lge trunk or,, _______ _, AUSTRALIANS hep herd,
shipping crate. Ask for l\tr.I•••••••••• pureJ::red, blu~yed pup.
Savage, 8:30-6:30, 968-8(M{I pir!. Blue ~1l'rle.s, some
Musical Instruments 822 FREE to aood home 4 spotted, some solid color.
---_._...,-.,-,...,..---1 or~. cuddle kittens, must Your choice S 2 5-$6 5.
1958 Z6' OIRIS Connie, twin
screw. Xlnt cond, $3250.
Dys: S-4. 7-5466; Eves
673-7Z37
1!<7 32' ELECTRONIC , orga.n. hav" new homes . 673-2427
Baldwin Or1[asonic model 675--1979 413 -----~----1 lhlan-hvln
Chris
screw,
.... dy
' ·• Kaw".lsaki *
l hll l Ah ·\ "fl< 11~-~Ultl ON
~ill'~. Si·,, 1'.1rt". In~
Champion Motorcycles
!II"! llartMlJ Rlvrt L .\1
... 1..l'J.J"!ll • 5\P Xlnt cond. \V i 11 1.,1 "'B •-,. 1 OUR Easter buket has for equipped, sac~Uice $500. 545-l4&9 Alter " u1ter oivwn yr sale lovable Lab Ret {obe-I c"'~ .. ~2~'3~4~---~--I;~~:;;;;;:;~~;:::;;~ GP:\I old • Owner low!!" me, but dience tral°"d). l.ovesome 1965 31. FAIRLINER Twin 500 ~ VELOCETTE
' ha1 lo move • Nd. lr1[ yd. ~.~:n Schnauzer & lovely Express Cruiser. Low hours. ton, new clutch, tires,
FLUTE. Professional wlid 53&-85M 4/1 Wl'~ts. ~tartincrest Ken-b •·-· t d J
I ~ h ~1 /I ""'" EKtras. Days 646-6154, Alt ra""'s, p1.s on an ower st ver, r 1enc m ....... ., w ow 2 YOUNG t 1 net. 546--0989 d Pur" t' d ll ht nd B foot joint. 1 yr old. d f ca s.1 blora'!:; -"'-'-'-,"'=~~---6, 64&-0174. en · a • e i a ~962 !J»l.Ye em, ue..e.Y~ pOQDLES! ln perfect .shape. Best oUer
----------1 a It e re d be i I e m 1 I e Black Standard. Intern'tl 24· Ferro-Cement 0011.t mold. over $950. 675-5954 alter 4
LUD\\'IG 5 ~set, XJn1 cond. 49-1-1586 chanip, 1 )T. old male. 3 Trawler hull. $500. 515 17th p.ln. :~ldjia~ cymbals. G~i' • .IL-O~V~AB-"'L~E~-p,-,..-bred~-,,-,-,al-e ·Toys, 2 black male & St, Htg Bch BSA 6511 Dirt bike. Xtra
3-68 \Veimaraner 2 yrs. Shots female, l silver male. • ll' BOSTON WHALER • v•hls tires etc. Can be
NOBLET Wood clarinet Loves children 008-5386 aft 646--0142 333 E. 17th St. Ci\( 40 hp '70 Johnson, 20 hn; ma.de stree
0
table with little
Xlnt con<!. $100. 3 4/1 RING-A-DING ding ty,.•o more Trlr. Xtras. 495-5l5S v.ork. 54s-6306 eves.
deck pJatlnr. WU! sell or
trade for pickup. 3166 Sicily,
(Mesa Verd•) C.M.
Auto1l~S.~ ][~I
Antique1/Classlc1 9S3
l!Ml BUICK Coupe-78,(Q)
orlginal m!lf's. Thoroughly
restored. Xlnt cond. Runs
beautifully. $2500. Call 714:
557-4202
Dune Buggies 956
VW DUNEBUGGY
Call 54&-0420 J\IALE cat has been fixed .starts Novice Obedience ;B:•:•~';':• :R~o~n~l~/C::,:h:•:rt~·~r~908..:.;li,,...-'ii.ic-'i~d~.,,'ii.,;.,-;n-;;;c
Office Furniture/ and al.so fema.le dog. Shep Dog training April 6 & 7 32, Twinscrew Chris, tully 1970 KAWA~KI 90 trail Comp, with flbeJ'glaaa body,
Equip. 124 mix and .!ipe.yed. Owner -7PJ\1. ~lartincrt'st Kennel, equ\p'd. Fishing or Cruia-b~e. 800 miles~ only 10 $575. or be.st otter.. Call
EXECUTARY IBM portable leaving area. ~9087 4/1 a4&-ro89 Ing. Also '59 Tw1nscrew mile~ off road, With bumper after 4 p.m. 54D-380J.
dictating machine & DESPERATELY need temp. AKC SILKY PUPPIES Owens. Xlnt cond. 54&-2434 carriers, $295. Call after '70 Super Sport body, wkie
transcriber 1 yr old perfect or penn. Mme for female Nan1e your ov.·n terms. 6 p.m. 494-5808 ti res, top. $1800 ln1,1e1ted.
cond S400 • 642.-6500• Poodle. hlbrkn ( 7 14 l They're delightful, have Boats, Si1ll 909 SAC. Yamaha 180. Elec l\lake oUer. 962-4547
' · 832-5174 aft 4. PM 4/2 shols and can be bought ----,------1 start. & xtral!. Undr 1400 mi. FIBERGLASS Dunebuggy-
Pianos/Organs 826 FREE (l l Guinea Pig (2 1 ~·~'='"'='-"'~Y=. =,..... __ 95~-',--~ CORONADO 25 sloop, Roomy $300 or w/trade for ? Trade for &QOd runninll: VW ........ rats and 1 very unusual 2 YR old fem shorthe.ired sips 5, Good ipquip, Com· 646-7892 van or $550. 540-5310 e FIELD'S \YAREHOUSE cat. 5'Mi-154.7 -4/2 min collie: 5 mo old male missions 'S9, Popular alll-'"-='-------I =T7r_u_c7k~,----'----9=1~2
SALE Chihuahua pup, Both lov' weather Sailer. 714/MS-3350 LIKE ~ Honda ~1oto
:tOO . • N FREE Ger. Shep. 4 years chUd-o, must ha•-~ days, or 544-l866 eves. S~rt SLlOO. Xtru. 375 total • pianos .,. organs. ~w, old. Blk. and iiilver. Loves '" ~.. .,. .......... c:.:o:.:::..:::..:c.:..::::..:.c=. __ I m1. $-195 value, $375 takes
used. Spine~. grands, going child~n. 1.l&le S4H99l 413 homes. $15 ea. 645--00n 10' Fiberglass by &hock, It. G46-2807
out for business, rtntals $81---'--=.-'---'--'--'---'-' REG. German Shepherd, alum mast, etc. "Fast",l,L~IKE:..:.:::..:='-1=968--y=AMAHA---1
mo. option tG buy. Stein· 2 yr old Weimaraner. Good fl'm, J yrs, blk/v.·ht, good S2&i 8~276 or 493-4333, .,.,,. .~wt b",k•. Pickup, Radio, stick. Good
B Id · Chi k · "'11.tch dog. 8462 Slater, Apt 1 , •~ u-v.·ay, a F~~D'S c ennr. B, I-fig Bch. 842-3158 412 w/chlldren, x nf watch dog. ev · s395 * * * G45-l3-4S condition. {FJ29SS)
0 ol I =4~92~-ll~>J""'3=~---~~ 22' COLUMBIA and 1lip, In· 'r.6 Suzuki IJOcc $649 COSTA MESA 7 M . d part-Siamese male DACHSJIUND pup AK C, eluding acce1sor:le1 &
1714) 645-3250 cat, silver grey rur, yellow minia. male & female. l~mo-fl~o'i·u"5 .. 6"126.1"i;''~"i'~'~'itP_MiWl--Good~~~ro~o;_d~. ~;~11'"~"~·~·-· -GARDEN GROVE eyes. 833-3116 412 S200 *** Vt<>-
1858 CONNELL CHEVROLET
'59 FORD Yi TON
(n. ooom• FD '"'"· Wire°' •mooth coaL p C. SLOOP 32'. Buil t by l9'9 YAMAHA TYPISTS ) u.X>" " UNO 2 wits ago, remale 633-4018 Kettenbef'i. Xlnt con d. .
CLEARANCE cockapoo, blk, to good home I AK~'C;,..:::~O.-nn--=si..,-p--s Priced to sell 673-3010 Z"~ c.c. twin. ,395.00. 4.300 2828 HARBOR BLVD.
R•giliter for only. 548-7223 412 · ' pup ' ·1 V I Call
TRUCK driver lor L.A., niattress set. Sv.·ag lamps. days & all day wekends ..
Orange, Riverside countle~. Alt lOam, see at my home, LGE stand-up freeze r
delivery area. Apply 37972 13071 Red llill. Tustin w f locking door, Reas;
Calle Perlecto, SJC. I ="'"=~E~bed~~,~-~.~ Cop""'r color elec. dryer. TRUNDL s, arge .size1 .,-* "''Onder!ul condition in-like new, reas: Lge mellll
eluding bolsters & covi:.r $60. olfice desk & chair. All in * champion line, M & F, 11 SCHOCK Udo 14. full racln• m835-"i'm· daery c ean. COSTA MESA 546-1203
a !empornry job SALE 5 •10 Id •--k Y• iooay TRUNDLE beds, large size, SELLING art collection! '' o male '-UC -a-poo. wks., Blk, I Tan I Silver. gear w/au1o trlr, $875. · 63 fH SCOUT ltema by: Malcolm Moran, Over 100 Planos &: n-.,.,_ Housebken, all shots. Call 842-7279 673--aft 4 BIKE Schwinn 11.pple crate. Jnlt'l"V\\'S: 9-12 \\·Ond!'rful con di Ii on in· '"'•6""'00 S93.-63f.6 I ~~.;;,~=-,---~ ~=~• Short cab, new !rans. &: rear ~stern Girl Inc, eluding bolsten: & rover S60. Clarence r-.1cGrath, Ralph Reduced for lmmed, sale. eves. 4/1 DALMATJON 4 mo's old 24' Col . Challenger 192 O/B. 5 ap. cos~ 5S100. Sell $50. end. "50. or oUer. 546-3763
4667 MacArthur Bl1Jd. &;2-7213 Lo\'t', Psul Lauritz & other Buy Now & Savel 1 S.\1ALL dog good v.ith AKC p11pers. F'ine mark-Beautifully maintained. Pvt1,:=673-<l538~:::::..:•~I ~=~,-..,-.,.--af!er 6 pm.
l 3 bl Calif artists. 701 Narcissus, Open Daily 10 tiI 6 children. Xlnt watch dog. lng.s. Healthy, Xln't -t for pry. S3750. 644-1836 "69 Triumph TR6R. Red. Low ---~------1
Ne11.·port Beach LITE map e pc set ta rs Cdl\t 675-20-!2 H b k ~ U'ftO I 4/1 r-'69 DaUun 1ta.ke bed truclc, :HG-032.'> S55, match. pie crust tbl Fr. 10·9 * Sun U-5 s r . a....,~ eve on y. child. S75. 673-4191 LIDO 14-Xlnt cond. Incl mileage, good conditl~n. long wheel base, R/H,
S:b, vanity benches .$4 ea, \\'HEELCHAIR & \\'alker by COAST MUSIC HELP ... inventory overstock EASTER Poodles AKC .. 3~ ~alls, trlr & °"w ccover. Excellent mech. S795. Nile Make otter. 642.-70lS, aft 5:
'YOUNG v.·oman iv an t ed TV stand $-1. 673-1~31 E\'l'S. Everest & Jennings. Ne w 1''EWPORT & HARBOR 1) loving kitten& all 1ize~. mo. old. We 11-Ir a in e d Lie for '71. $900. !>16-8739 543-6306, days 543-4600 548-4227
between the houn; ol 11 cou~ 2 h . . 1 cond, Cos! $137, sell $75. Costa ?a-fe58. * 6'2.-2851 shapes, eolors. 548--0127 4/1 S.'l()...$75. &12--0326, 673-9357 CAPE COO CAT BOAT GOT drafled, must sell, 1970 & 4. Arpy'l\ Coffee Shop, ~-"· c al r!'i, misc urn. Call Sa\ 11.fter 7 pm or '62 FORD Vi TON P.U . :'.OZl "B" Harbor. C.l\-1. all xlnt cond. $i0. 2299 "B" Sun A~I, 644-6057 WE GERMAN Short ha I red IRRESISTIBLE poodle pups 18'. fbrbls (213) SJ.4-3883. Honda SL 350, $550, 84~5932 6 stk. new eng, tranii, brakes r~ountai n Way East, C.~f. pointer, fem, 1~ yr. Loves ... Black miniature, 6 v.·ks, .' '65 250 Yamaha Big Bear,
'YANTED, young. t>x· an 1 pni POOL tables, .slate, olrl-QUITlll kids. M&-0306 -412 AI<C. s5i 549--0344 Boats, Slrps/Docks 910 good ~nd. sm or orfer. &64= '!'-_!t7ery. ~75 ot trade.
-serviceman, \ntere.sttrl in · · fashioned models, 7', 8', 9' 64 ..........., !teaming the grocery & meat DARK green r('clinin~ chair, Sacrifice. Will deliver tree. ••• ADORABLE female puppy, POODLE pups, beaut. little 2.-l!Y.Kl ,69 BRONCO \Vagon R &
I business, full lime Si rerm. Like fl<'\\'• $80 no1v $63. Sm 14~2 H A Lo 3 mo. Mixed breed. While tiny loy &: toys. Stud serv. BA~~OA Island moorina: & Moblli1 Homes 935 "-1 r d · ,... ayes ve., ng After 5 '""· we 11.te: closlng v.·/black spots. 962-{174-4 412 All -lo••. 89:t-9n9 21 inboard crul5er for u.le. H hubs, $1995 p1,1t pty. j 6'73-3.'itO c1"'s o 1·111\crs, unpa1n •:u Beach, 213/435-8885. '"" • '--,"'°''°""'~:::--::-::,....-642-7781 or 6la-8680 $12. 673-4099 our doors in Costa. Mesa. 2 Year old G Shep female AOORABLE part-Poodle S5. Slttps 2· Gray marine 61· WAITRESS -Exper1Pnced NE \V lG-spd bike $.'». 4 & All remaining Pianos &: Or· lo a good. fa m I I y . 5 k Id U3 8 d <'Yi engi~. $2100. I..ocalt'd THE BEST OF '61 Stude % ton truck:
Over 21. nli;thls. Apply in TRUNDLE Bed~ & bolsters 8 track car stereo w/home gans, new & used. to clear 892_3217 4n wee s 0 · roa way, In north Bay off Sapphire BOTH WORLDS Camper shell. $600. Eve11
I
person 529 Pico Ave . S.40. Oriental leak planter. conver5ion unit & 16 tapes a: auction prices, Savina.: . C.!-1. 642.-48l8 St. &14-5836 For a beautiful home, Jow 67.l-4374; Day.!!: 646-4491
DENNY. ·s I• Sa· Clom•"'' Car ... ed console table· llO o'" "89 •· 2 Id r al Dal 1 AKC S -•] ml•latu Poo al and h' " " " • o.><..-n up to 50%. No dealers year o em e . ma ion mill " re . SLIP Aide lie, Ideal for 22· m ntena.nce arc Jtecur. 1963 F'ord FlOO 6 cyt pickup,
\\IAITRESS Exp. apply in 1 ...:'·~,;..~39=59'-==--~~ SUNBEA.\11 electric mov.·er please to a good family. Loves die, male, coco. boal, $55 mo. ally impressive dealgn, See 8' bed, 42,000 miles. $800.
person after 4 pin. The Blue CONTE~!PORARY sofa-9', and Power Trim Edger, us-\\'ARD'S BALDWIN STIJDIO child~n 968-1551 412 call: 968-3925 * 642-4936 * the exeltlTii new "Village 494-1781
Beel 107 21st Place NB good conditltn. ~tr and :-Olrs ed only 1w\ce, like new. 1819 Nev.ll(lrt Blvd 642-8484 GUINEA Pig Peru v I an, SCHNAUZER Pups, also,; --.-,-11-p,-$65--lm_o ___ p,.;_·v-,-1,-1 House" by Levitt Mobile
WIG S
ALES ~!~a.ii;_s~1 0~Y to recover. $100. 642-6078 IV'NT'"D· 11 • 1 v.·hile & brown, fem!llf'. rare blacks. l\lale at stud. bath. No. 2 Balboa Coves, System, on display now at 1950 Ford% Ton '·~·~~~~~~--~~~l ~AiiLJ.&i'it;;;Vi:i:s:Si<;;;; " . .i:..: sma COl1!5oe or 494-1332 4/2 Grooming. Terms! 84fr-0839 BAY HARBOR Pickup. S200 Full Time ~loney-:-'art Timr ....: PAIR l4X7 Chevy U.S. Sprint Kp1net piano: full keyboard. N.B. Call 675-4331 MOBILE HOMES * 645-Z633 *
Call Chrii: 846-4092 HIGHBOY dres~r $1); 1V, mags w/IU5:: bolU $50. 41•" Prefer Baldwin, comtider 4 KI'ITENS, ~ v.·eek~. old, \~'IRE J<"OX TERRIER Pups Bo S _, & Ski 911 1~=:::'.'='"'-'::C.:':-C,-c:;:::;-: I \\'ork~ good Sl5; room nflector telescope S 4 O. other~. r-.lust be In •ood all black. 1 \nnghair, 3 AKC. reg. Champ line $65. ats, pe..-g 1425 Baker St. Co&ta l\1esa '59 CHEV 34 TON
\YOYIAN lo sew fiimple <l i\·idt"'r $10; bdrm chair $3: 494-:1118 rond .: l't'a80nable. 642-3589 shorthalr. 847~990 -4/3 All shots. ~7-9953 ----------1Just S. of S.D. Fwy at Harbor VS ** 646-2849 garment~ 11! hon1e. J\1u.st foo t.stool S2. 645--0127 14-!'J, OUTBOARD. 40 HP TI4J540.9470 ~~~-~---~~I
ha ~ 1 k" 84' "'59 ~=-"'~-'--~-'-~=~ (21 PORTA-CRIBS, LJKE E''es, '"kt'nds. 3 KrITENS. 6 v.'k old, ready, TINY toy AKC poodles, 6 Auto Leaslnn 964 ~ "v"eroc · .,...,,,.. "• 'lELON COLORED Alerc elec starter trailer • NEW $20 EACH. ltA.\t~lOND, S \ e j n way, to go. Mtlther is rare wks. Xlnt Easter gilts. 113 -. · • · MODEL ~10BILE HOi\fES
DAVENPORT, LIKE NEW. * * 673-6286 * • '1."amaha. New &: used Tonganf'M!. 673-7155 4/3 Broad,vay, C.M. 64i...4818 water sk1ls, tow rope, 2 lll\.. in Costa ~iesa.'s Greenleaf ~ $95. chor5, misc equip. All for Park. 2"x00 Americana LEASE I~ * '~I°" * AIR compre.sMr, $60. Good pianos ol most makes. Best SILK\' hal!'fd Callro -10 :;LACK MALE POODLE $3~ ~ 6363 A NEW 1971 u-"--'.. · -----=-~~:::.~~:::....:.____ · So Cal" Schmid ~. ;11)£ $15.~. 20x52 ~I o n t e r e y tnaUNllU• oondltion. Plell.!oe call after buys JJl • u. at t mo old, ~ Ir. lovable. i\linia .. champion AKC breed-"'N PINTO l,;;;;iiij:•:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~~ YOunt Bed . Step Table. 5. 968--49M l\1uslc Co., 1~ N. ?.fain, 546-7308 4/J Ing 9 v.·ks old, $125. Call e SACRIFICE 16' Cen-SU,750. Completely setup f:tep Table WI Cabinet . Santa Ana. "·'t' ""n• tury-gray marine e.ng, Steel w/sklrU, awnings, porch, $50.QQ mo.
IRVINE Coast Co··•lry Cfob ' PUPPIES -1-labrk 3 mo--6 """-u ....... 800 Dresser. 2 Living room "'' ====~---~~ trlr, cover, !\1nt cond. Ma~ etc. (38 mo.} cMin_ 646-0092 membership for sale from LOVELY old Ch I c k e r In K mo. Llk~ pets &: child DACHSHUND pups min., ofter. 67J..ai35 GREENLEAF PARK
AM LETS member. 644-4559 Grand Plano l bench. 1.111.-836-4493 4/3 AKC, B!k & tan & i= Whl I A C 'I open end SCR FURNITURE? ""-· -..i __ .. 1s· GLASS .!ikl bo&I. 100 HP '.A.I tt er ,.e.. ·" · RENT
• lla\·c you checked Pe.nney'1, 3 C 0 RPO RATE mrm-,..,,..Rn)', in wry 6""" ... ..,.,u. TO a good OOme Springer mahogany rtd. 714/633-4018 l\fere. ~ady lo go, Sl:ol &1~2510 ** fi.15--0450 A NE\V 19?1
ANSWERS
Fo..shion Island N.B. bcNLhip~ ln BaJboll. Bey Club $600. 830-9338 Spaniel livrr cl v.·ht. Loves AKC Afi;:hnn, F'., Blk., 11 or best offer, 5-11--0865, '70 LUXURIOUS Americana PINTO
at N!duced price1. 546-4670 Sporting Goods 830 child. 833-2847 4/.1 mo., moving, mu~t M!ll $100, &12-7227 11ner 6 pm 2'1..X60 11.t Drifhr."OOd Beach $4 DAY
0 SPANISH OAK hedroom IRVINE COAST COUNTRY __.... FEMALE min. Podle, black, Rd. nalured. !'i36-7Z44 911 & Golt Club. Cu1tm upgrad-
.'ipong£' _ F"1iul1 -F'oisi -set iv/queen i!ize ~d. Sl50. ct, u R • 1.1 EM BERSHlP. frre to good h om e . Horses 856 Boeta, Stori1ge ed model. Fully equipped. AND
Packet _ l.'Of~'EE 549-7526 67:>-30Tj C 0 1.1 PtETE backpe.ckinir 847.3029 41'.l Owner relocated, Must sell. 4¢ MILE
A ''Dear Grorge" lnqulry: * 5-p!e~ double. bedroom \\'E loAn-Buy.Sell anvthlng. 1,t,IX'. New ston-: Located BASSETT, olde.r do&, nf't'O! AQHA Reg Bay Mare, 11 OPEN -Boat yard, repaln Contact Jomlcra. loc., J9'261 Ptrr A LITrLE __ , set. $40. ...., Y'". xlnt 1how quality + & 1torqe. ~ per tt. Be h Blvd H B ·-'"11
''Does a man have gmu ..... s * StS..Sm * Coast P11wn &: Aut'llon. 2426 44.1 Netvporl Blvd. Suite F kids or 8Jl0tht>r dog, Paper~. tack, $2000. AQHA Reg Chnt 1;6~71rW19~~·~'~"'~'~962-<~~l~J~l.'-~lfu~"'~-'j;jii'''-ji~· ~-;f.~~;'fu; KICK IN YOUR
(ot divorce if his wife makes 1---.::...:::.;:;.:.:._.::..___ Newport Blvd. 642-8400. Open Every day 3'6. Sat iG-6. 673-45&4 4/J Filly 3 yrs, green brok~. CUSTM built 24'X53'· Mobile LIFE!
loUsy con-EE'.''. 8. l\fEXICAN dinln& nn table SINGER OPENING SPECLALS: 2 3 Pt. Lab P'JPI, S wklll. top show quality $10((!. FENCED atoraae a!'f'a, oll home, fully crptd &. drpd THEODORE
d I f & 8 chalrs w1-1-seats ~t .. • ~11.ced; C.oata Mesa. Call wlblt• k;1,~o, ounken llv'g 0 S RARE maholtany rop-ea c..oa ""''" _... · SEWING l\!ACHINE 252·2 Man plutic tube tentJ Sl 831--0~ 413 S57-7JM, ~8S6 " ""' R BIN FORD 1 """'""'J.6 1"'7,':;;;;C.,.-,,--:--,,-7' I~:;::._::::::_;=.:..:::::.. __ ="! 646--0281 or 96Z..7813 " rm, dinette, fam rm, 2 BR. dining tablf'. desk, cut g ass, I
112
e ~71 e each, pocket fluhllghts MALE Labrador. 3 mo'• oltt Livestock 858 2 ba. Lndscpd. 'Prlnkler 2060 HARBOR BLVD.,
bronze ltgure. dolls. Gari1ge5rae BJCYCLES. Schwinn $1.95. ~4-1102: Far \Vest SlJ-42-43 4tl l.;...;.:_;.;;;,:;; ____ _;_ ~-----~ COSI'A MESA
E -•l•I" t..\\·rl'""" ~1 1 ,,,_ C BOX ~ALL * SI d r lil system, C.1tf. 6 4 6 • 3 .f 2 3, .,,., ,,,, .pergllt', po.... " J" "J Stinfl'tl)'S $18 tG S24. 2-4" I 1' oun aint' . .,,, 0· 7 MO. old 1•:hlte male kitten "' a •Y T-•tlon ~ 548-2473 """"'"'10 box. New Relf Bni.ndt pain-AIR C.OndMioner, Blc g&mt! It 2l6" Sl-4 $28 6-4Z..l272 ()rang(' Cnty F'airground.s ·~..,.-• 1,,:,;..:::.:.:__~-~--· I •-hfll:'. Pvt. 837-4608. ~pe.ar gun, Tool.a, Art ilemi, to.. . 1 RIFLE: ~!ARLIN Golden 39. 546-7308 413 * 5Jl.2374 * BEFORE yo11 Buy, Se!!, Lllt Auto -rvlce, Parts '66 i\nn()uncln~ Ille Opi>nini: of ere. April 3 Ir. 4. lOAM...WM. F'ISHER GEIGER COUNTER A 1ttountie, 22 cal., Lewr GLASS hottlrs or Trade .. Call T£D
Jonathen'• Antiques 3.lt5G Camino Capistnoo. LIKE NEW CONDITION action W/4 X Bushnell 64fi..59M 4/2 Ci1mpers, $.tie/Rent 920 645-3140 VW 2 bbl. Chrome manlfoid
r inc Porcelain & Gitt.s ~C::'.''l''~""'~c'.'"'!16-334~~''._ ___ l ru;:n;;;;;CA;:-';U.;;;;;;;:'-1;;.1-;;"";i;;,--;;;;; ~cope.' sn. Call 528·98-156 Adorable kittena.-.tll colors. 1r~ . .>e j United Mobil• Home• IJtJ: -40 hp, uted one month
""A ~m or a Shop" NEIGHBORJfOOD Car II. g e BR,OIL\'N mink eal"1"'641 . ., ~1'49' &dfu~r 6 pk.mnd. weekdayi &. •11 6~2672 4/2 MlriM~~-~ I ·.-.-,-N-VE_RT_E_R-. -11-,-.,-.-K-l-t.I> ==11'7;:.~··:.:A_··~,~·p:;l~B:;I.:;.· ..:C:::-':.:'·:..., i,,;Sl~S~. =~-',,,.C,-----1
25.15 \V . Coas1 Hv.·y, !Ill.le. Furn.Appl i ances . 1 · ike fl('W. 1 -. 11.y wee e s. Kl'M"'ENS -S wk1. old. 1;miliiiliiiliiiliiiliiilii;;;;;;;'1 model MP14 t:WDC to 1101XTRA clellll 8xZS Shasta w/ MJSC. '6J Sunbe.&m Alpine
Nf'wpon Sfo.11.ch, 66-5l50 t'lo~~ &-misc. f'ri, Slit 1111 6 wkdyi. RE:-OIJNGTON model 1100, 1Z ~5205 ~/2 VAC, 60 cy(lca, -400 w•tts. Ira cahli.na liv'R rm, 11~ pa.rt! for s11.le.
GOOD palntln!l'.s fro rn !: sun. 1589 RJvtnide Pl, SIGNS; Slorefl'ooll & win-g11. .. , Full choke, 28", vent DO Generi1I 900 NEW &HC:mbled I< c~ked yrd ~!Otagf, adlt prk, Cl\1. h~-~=64_2-44189.,,.e;;:_--=•; E•-. 3 small antique I CC~-~M~·--------dov."1, boat.I, truck11. For rlb, ntl\r new, Xlnt cood. ~~·~ks 0~ ~gdem~;i out by prole1sk>nal electron· &M~3T02 aft 7. Autos Wanted ff& •v....-e1\imate call: 962,..3887 A~k1ng $140. 548--8579 • rug1: F:llahsn !lllk 12900: GARAGE Sllle:: 2 Good BUMPER
1
bl " SCUBA & tank •"" 5 AKC fcm&lf' 10 good home. ll F'T BOAT romp. \\'ith le engineer. Sarrtnce $100. Sx-42 Nol'lt, beantlful eond .1 A-====--·_
Kauk $2800: Keah11.n Pryf:r couchea, match, chair, Ira: ....... ··-~i!!' _1t~ ,•
10
.,,•.!e_ HP ,·oh~.,. O.B. -15.". Lab retriever. 992-S!lll 411 lO lt.P. Wizard outboard Clll 523-9845 alter 6 P.M. furn, $2100. 2191 Harbor, IlitPORTS WANTED sUk $3200. 4!M-.'950 new braided rua. Misc. 964 ..,,, .....,.,. ..... v.. ..,., " " u moltlr SOO. Call alter 4 p.m. weekdays !: aU day 'lllffk-CM. lot 61. No children or OranKt Counties
ANTIQUE-ANTIQUE Grove Pl, C°'ta Mesa 548-3153 M8-67l l LTK"E To tnde! Our !l"\l)..Wl3 end11, pets TOPS BUYER
Round Oak pc<itstal table GAR.AGE SALE! 832 * BASIC-H 'ii liOBIE twin rin 6', \11hi!r, Tr1lder'1 Par11.dllf! coulmn ts BOAT, motor & trailer. C!ll!c-8' CA.:\1PER. leo:i box snd 82fl ~q fl, 2 BR, at beach, SIU~ ~1AXEY TOYOTA
41" r!lameter. CompleteJy Pn1idlo, C~\I. FRI k SAT. AU Shacklftt Product1 ;w:lnt, cond. ft'll' you! 5 Linea, 5 Da.ys for Irle 1t•rt $400 .. U69 I:lorlel bunk beds Sll5, or best of. ArluH~. llQ 1\o(rl, $6500. 1.88$1 Be•ch Bl1,1d,
rtftnlshed $100. 646-7335 AU. DAY .ti &In P.M. 17141 t62--36M S6i 548·5168 SS. Call today .•. 642-5678. Lane, Coll.A liifeu. fer. &47-4739 :ia&-1674, 536--0347 R Beach. Ph. 847.cllllli
642-7213 :.:Int col1d. 642--0127
Antiques
~·-----~--1
------
I
•
41 OA!I. V l'ILOT
l§ f .......... l§JI -..... l§J I I· .......... 1§1 I ·~ .. ~. l§J I 1§1 1
1
!.__ _.__ ..... _,]§] l ......... l§l
~~;;1 1§1 1
970 Auto1, Imported
TOYOTA
""10s Wonted Ml Autos, Imported ,_..._ _____ _
TOP DOUAR JAGUAR
ctEAN USED CARS Xlnt mechA.nical. Original, TOYOTA NEW 71
s.. ,..,.,. Bro~ """· t154Jn NO DOWN
910 Auto., UMd 990
CHRYSLER
e '61 VOLVO 2-ttr Redan '69 TOWN .tii Country
Xlnt cond. AM/}'M radio, &-pu9en1er wagon. lAaded.
AD:l.oa: $..1195. 654·1711 AM/FM. Mr. Ron McKen-
Autol, Used 990 dry weekdays only, &Cl-4000
COMET
Autos, UMd 990 Auto1, Used 990 ;....,,,,~...:....--~
FORD
'66 Ranch Wagon
Automatic. po111'e.r •teer1na.
<~WJ003).
$999
·-OLDSMOBILE
klr '6' JAG 3.8 Mari< II""'"" ----'69
Ro~i:5°:0RD !KARMANN GHIA PAYMENT ~arbo,i!~· [A" ~~•Go~~. ~!E ,,. "' ~~:010~0~,H*•"" SALE
l--~W~E~P~A~Y~~T~O~P--d10, heater. !UQV 495) $2484.36 or cash price
BARWICK ~•"·,.1~~ r:ri!1 ;;;'. CASH !MPOR~ !NC. ~7 25 '69 vw BUGS
BUICK
'&4 Comet Sta Wax. 6 pa.11.
'68 RJVIERA • Loaded. V-3, r/h, elr, P IS. Well
AMlt'M stereo, Be au t. 1.-rv. Gd cone!. $575. or bsl
1il\'er w/black vinyl top. ofr. 67~191
Wkdy• only, 642-400) Mr.t. ·,-,-ST-A-T-10-N'-----... -ftl)n McKend~ w1n; .auto, g
BARWICK
JMPQRTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. Coast Hwy.
'69 Oldt. 442 2 Dr. H.T.
ONE OWNER 14,000 Ml,
Bt>autifuJ ,uver mist finllh.
with . burwundy Interior.
Equlpptd with auto trans.,
radio, heater, power 1it>l!'r·
ing, pav»er brakes, power
\\•i ndnw-', air cond, If you
are hard to please, don't
nliss lhls tine cu. (XlJUSl
Juhnson & Son, 2626 JluW
Bl., Cos1a l\.1eM. 540-!ib.10
LEXVJNG Country! Mu1l
Sell, I woman owned, '66
Ctilla:t.S Conv, bi.11 ena:. r/h,
11ir. SRJO. Pt>ninsula Point'.
673-1916
=~-~,,.;-~~~-I tires XJnt runn1nr cond, '68 Buick Wildcat HT, <kb', S250.' 64>-4038
Laguna Beach
5'&-4051 I 49t-mt
for used can Ii trucks, ju.st
call UI for free estimates.
DATSUN BiljoM~;;~"'y;;~ta ON SALE I. I. 998 So. Coast Hwy. 7 855' Laguna ~ach 18881 BEACH BL. 84 •
~:'."~mt s.cri!i.,. CONTINENTAL
'69 Rivil!'ra GS, full)' loaded. 1970 MARK Ill coat $9600
SlfOO. Call new. Sac. $&199. Under war·
Ford '70 LTD 4 Dr. Sad.
Excellent local trade. Beau-
tifUl d1trk Ivy mel&llic fin.
lah \vilh matchutt landttu
roof. Ivy gold Interior.
EquipPf'd with auto. trans.,
radio, ht>ater, power steer.,
power brakes. factory air,
etc. Showa ex~IJl!'nt ca.1'1!.
!375CQS) Priced to sell.
John~n &: Son, 2626 Harbor
Bl., C011ta Mesa. ~5630
'65 Cu11om 500 2 Dr. 6 cyl.
R/H . :l new ti~s: $450.
GROTH CHEVROLET >J6..l051 I .... 9171 HUNTINGTON BEACH All 100010 Guaranteed!!
MERCEDES BENZ '69 LAND CRUISER
... 646-1'461 * ----------1 tanty, DLR. Oi'8!lA80350?, • '68 RIVIERA' -Air, ste~. phone 636-4010
'64 Olds Cutlass V-3
aulo, rlh, tach. S550
Call 846-1191!. Alli: Jar Sain Manae:e.r
182ll 8e&ch Blvd.
HuntiJl&ton Beach Oran9e County· ..
L.'!rgest Selection
Ne w & Used
Mer<-ed('~ Benz
Sauon Wagon. 4 \\'ht't>l drive.
tSMR 491'll
Parts & Labor ~~~167~ full power. •. '63 CONTINENTAL. New
..c..;.c-'o~~=~---1 llre1. Pvt pty. $700. Call '68 OLDS Curliw 2-dr HT.
Air, PIS. 27,000 m1, rkh,
Clean S\550. 64&-2305 MT.m87 KI 9-3331 EXAMPLE: -'5' BUICK 6*-4941
Good trans. $99. 646--0742 l-'-""-~------'69 VW BUG WE PAY CASH $2799
.BARWICK 1988 ""''' °"""" •f• CORVAIR
wgn • A;r. XI "! oornl.t --,6-6_C_QR-YA-IR--PLYMOUTH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
Jim Slemons Imps .
Warner & M<11n St.
Santa Ana 546·4 J 14
JMPDRTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. C.ruut Hwy.
.$1399 642-4749 11fl 6 wkdays
CADILLAC 2 DR. H.J. -'69 Sport Suburban
9 Pass. Wa~on, Air rond.
New flrt"!;:. S239~. 675-76119
•• Laguna Beac~
546+.4051 / 4M-9771
zuc 708 CADILLAC JEEP PONTIAC
~ Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 546-UOO
Kelly Blu1 Book S1ys Average Retail $1720 ~10 SEO. DE Vllt.E Automa tjc, radio, h!1ter.
12.000 local miles. Only by (SUA ~) '70 Bronco, fully ¥.Quipped, '70 FIREBIRD £SPIRIT * 1958 ME:I'RO *
Rt>al Sharp 700 Lido Park
Dr. No. 4. Newport Beach
OVER seeing a nd driving this like $699 9,000 mi's xln't cnnd, must 110 USED VW's FROM new trade in can you ap-9ell. Pvt pty. 546-2568 aft 3.
preciAte condition. Exotic BILL YATES MERCURY -4 ~p<'f'd, VS, llir c:ond., power
$1871
1971 TOY OT A COROLLA WE PAY TCJP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS MG
If )'OUJ' car lJ extra clean, ---------
2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED .,,,. $399 g'l'ttn gold metallic: finish steering, rally group, AM/
with harmonizing interior k VOLKSWAGEN FM. wide ovlj11 \11th mag 32852 Valle Roa.d 1970 MARQUIS CPE. wht>els. (777 BQll CHOICE OF S see ua first. • ---------.. BAUER BUICK ......_...._----...
234 E. 17th St. • THINK ..DeM le.wi& 9 TOYOTA
CHICK IVERSON landau roof. Fully power SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR $2999
equipPt'd of oour~. plus Sa.n Jua.n Capistrano 11 000 MILES
AM/FM st.e~o, •telt> • tilt 837•4800/4S3-.fSll/499-2'l61 Atlractive' medium turquoise BILL YATES vw '""· w1-I, Affi COND., CORVmE mi•J 'fi"i•h with whito IDJ... VOLKSWAGEN
plll!I much MORE. See this ----------J & I -~ f · or a1K1au roo , 1mmacu-837-4800/493-4511/.49!1-~
COfitll Meu. 548-7765 ''M ... G"
Autos, Imported 970
BMW "FRIEDLANDER"
BMW'S NEW & USED. all
modeh, parts and service.
Overseu Delivery.
tJJ'• IU.Ck INWY. JJI
893-7566 • 531-6824
NEW-USED-SE RV.
1966 Harlxlr, C.M. &16-9303
BEST BARGAINS
CO~IE SEE OUR
SELECTION OF
TOYCYrAS
1970 HARBOR
COSTA MESA
54(,.3031
Ext. 67 or 68
445 E. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
673-0900
one belore yoU buy. (290-19&5 CORVETTE • 3.,..,/365 J t t ...__;, _,. -~ "' a e . r1..: ...... m '"" 1p~ San Ju11n Capistran& BEJl. Priced to sell. John-hp, 4-spd trans, AM/FM. auto. tr!lll3., am·fm •tereo 32852 Valle Ro11.d
son & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., SlOOO. 846-4271 radio. heater, power s!eer· l --~·==~=~--1
Costa Mesa. 540-5630 COUGAR ing, power brakes, factory DAVE ROSS
1966 CADILLAC-1---------air cond. Truly spoUess ~ PONTIAC
SEO DEVILLE '70 COUGAR XR7 like ne.,.. -4 near new tires, Complete Sales & Servic.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE l!'!C. See & ask for demon. 2480 Harbor Blvd. C. BOB AUTREY MOTORS
1860 Long Beach Blvd.
Zl.3-591-8721
~
1962 MG Convt.
Jim Slemons Import•
140 W. Warner
Santa Ana Bl!'aut:ifut ebony black finish . atralion. {916 BEQJ. John-at Fair Dr.
with black landau rool & VS, auromallc, air. cond., son & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa .s.46-tOl 7
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported -V-0-'-L-K~SW-A~G-E....,N.,-
970
DATSUN
'66 DATSUN WAGON
-4 speed. radio. heater.
{SRY 52.1)
.BARWICK
IMPORTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. Cout HW)'.
I.,azuna Bl!'ach
~ / 4!M-9ffi
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
ANO
SUNDAYS
1J835 Beach Blvd.
Hunttiwton Beach
SG-7'181 Cl' 5'!0-4«2
'69 2000 ROADSTER
Two tops, special wheels.
Panlh titts. ll:ti AVBt
. BARWICK
IMPORTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. Coast Hwy.
Laguna Bea<'h
546-4051 I >194-9771
New '71 Datsun I
lfiOO OHC. Pickup with camp.
er. Sale price $21)99 dlr. r• Pl.521452270) \Yi.II take
car in trade. \Viii linanc:e I
private party. Call 546-8736
or 494-6811.
'69 2000 ROADSTER
5 spd. dlr, Owned by 11!1!t>
old school t~acner trom La·
guna Brach. (ZNS 1591 Take
older tradt or small dov.•n.
\Vil\ finance pvt, ply. Aft
10 am 540·~100 or 494-1:506.
'&I DATSUN ro11dstf'r ron\'I·
lmmar rond. 4·~fld. R.~+t. w/w !1Tl!.! 40.000 art mi.
546-9562
Good cone!. S480. Ca 11
6-12-2347 or 558-1616.
MGB
MGB '67 Roadster, rebll eng,
new to p. \\'ire whl&. Sl52.j
Pvt Pty 968-3797
OPEL
'69, NEW tires, Blk vinyl
top. A.\f./FM radio, Good
cond, l owner, $1200.
532-2374
'68 OPEL 1500 Rallyl!' Kadf!t. sa.ooo mi'&. yellow w/lbk
inter. Good rond, 53&-1832
anytime alter 6 pm.
PORSCHE
Open Eves. & Sun.
540-4125
BIIL MAXEY '63 VW Bug
ITIOIVIOITIAI ~~~·heater, 4 !peed. (\VAZ.
1118l BEACH BL VD. Jo~ull Price
Hunt. Buch 1474555 $399
1m1N ... ,,,...-.... """ BARWICK
TRIUMPH
'71 SPITFIRES
NOW ON DISPLAY
Come In for a tf!s! drive!
FRITZ WARREN'S
SPORT CAR CENTER
IJ.IPORTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. Coast Hv.'Y.
Laguna. Bl!'ach
5'6-4051 I 494-9m
---------710 E. 1KI St., S.A. 547.(1764 Ltc a YEV927. $72.95 tor.al
Open dally 9-9: clo~ Sunday dov.·n payment, 36 monthly
TRIUMPH TR-4 Rnad&ler, payments of '66 912
Dark Green with Black tntee.
ior, AM/FM, 4i Spe~.
<NOS421) Real Nice~
BILL Y*TES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Vallt Road
SAn Juan Clip!stra.no
R37 -4800/ 493--15111499.2261
wii? wherli;, V('ry good con-$53 45
dition thn.iou!. !',ell or trRde •
for p1ck-11p truck or cRmper Annual percentate r a I e
truck. $945. Ca.II MS-0530 J7.92';h !OACI. Total cash
TR ~ 3 Engine for A 11 J e.
Oversz pis1ons & 11leevps .
Compl rebll. M-11er than
ne\lo'. SI75. 642-2399 a f! ~
'68 TR4A-IRS. Xlnt paint &
price including tax & }ic.
$1471 .95.
Harbour V .W.
enl;line, 10,00J mi, AM/FM !8711 BEACH BL. MZ-443.S '63 Porsche Super radio, Sl5.j(}, 675--56116 HUNTING'J'ON BEACH
CP'. B•ham• yollow w;Jh blk l VOLKSWAGEN VW '66 BUG
1ntf!rior, AM/Fr.1. .chro1ne l ---------·I f\f!NT CONDITION wheels, recent e n ii n e ..
PXW982 $2399 I '65 VW SEDAN Al~""" '"'" fi"ish with l>P1ge intl'r1or, r.'!d10, heal~
er, etc. Check this out !or CHICK IVERSON Lie. • VJ\' 6."...0. Tnl8l rlown pr1M' & quality. (TRH5431
VW I pa)'ment of $47.95, 36 month· S9'15. JohnMin & Son, 2626
' ly paymPnls of H11rbor Bl., Coste Men.
!Hr\..311~1 Ext. 66 or 67 $34.]8 540-56..".0,
1970 HA!:!RO:l BLVD. Annual Pf'rcentage rat" nf l--.~,"',.~,~v=w~B~U~C-e~-
COST,\ .'IJESA 17 92""' 10ACl, Tot11.I cash R.<ld1ri. pin ~!Tipping, y,•\de
'fij PORSCHEi:i-C.~ prire includ ing tax & he. oval hrt'Jt, N'J('() ma1, wNld
1 n''""r. l~.00<\ ni 1 · •, S946.!fa. trim. Rl"a\ sharp. S350 for
A~1/f'~1 Bla11punk1 r;irho my l'QUity h tttkl' ovl'!r
r F: Rf EC T throughnul, J>l'lyment~. Cttll 557-6796 or
6'!!k14'2 Harbour V.W.
WANTED Rt'C'll. nr1~· eni::inr. brakr.~. 187\l BEACH BL. ll.~2-4435
f'lutrh. p111nT factory m11~~. I HUNTINGTON BEAQt I'l! p11y top dollar for ~ur
Al! fi pm. ,).\().-0617 * 6S V\Y Bug l Ov.•nf'r * VOLKSWAGEN 1oday, Call
ONF: of C'11liL rinr~t ":-ill" fl.1ust ~f'f' to apprl'ciate And ask for Ron Pinchot,
Carrrra, L!!rqurr rrrl: 'li!l pri<'<'d to :<-f'I! ra~l 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673-0000.
ENGLISH FORD Pn1;1n" On dispJ11y. :""t\\•f10r1 fi7:l-1131 aft Ii pm. Large Selection r ryclrry, 21\fi :-Jrwpor! Blvd 'h.i vw Squareba.rk -Xlnl Of vw Campen
196 ENG .• FORD sta!ion 'fi!l qll T Tar~a. In mi'~ Rrhl1 en~. nf'I\ t11't'~. 1;ipr • t
wagon. Auto. trans radii). 1.11; .. nl'11 \\'111 hnanrr I. rlt>ck. $87;, fi73-fM3.q "'' fi Vans, Komb1s, extra nif'f! rond 0'11 ner tradP s:.ro hrlnll' txiok SH RP hl '68 B 1 B N & u d going In Europe, mu~! H>ll ,1,,., ·.·II '"•"· , ~t. A UI' usz:, U5e$1 eW Se 83J.-l7S7 ' ,...-.>--<L,:o nv.nrr mint Nlnrl Ne11 , ,
1----=o-==---r PORS<'Hf. 911.S. late 1969 f lf'f'~ $99997. :14µ;n lmmechate Delivery
FIAT I flll.' i11r. F':\f radio. al! f'lf· 'fi>I V\\' Bu~. paint .)(lb. nm~. CHICK IVERSON
---------Ira~ f'l"rl cond. pr1. party. , nrw rn~llli' & tran~. SlJOO. VW
- - - - -S74.ill f714l 62.1-3962 Call fii3-93.J2 • .. ... .. ... I .:-.....,,-~~°"=~'-~ ""'"OC'-""'-~~~~ ~~~n Ext. M or 117 "THINK'' . • '60 PORSCHE l'pP. Blk .• 'fiJ V\\', REBLT ENG 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
"""' saddle 1nt Tlt'"' !\res, & TRANS. $l()(). COSTA MESA
mf/ <"hrm 11·hl~. Blau A;\1 'f';'ll • tii:Hl:l.11~ * D Xlnl 1hn.Klu! Rra.s. :'>.Ji-7261l V\\' K Ghia '64, 43,000 mi'll,
'!>9 V\\' Sunroof. 11n\/fn1. f'v1 pty, Xln! rond, S7::.0
• 'Sl PORSCHE f' 11 ~Jtn f'v1 pty n111st .~ell. r11.~h. li75--.'i~:i(fo
s.. GOOD f'ONn * $2201 s1:1.'10 or ntr. &1-l-fi027 'f.6 BliC: • ::-..1nt \\'htlf'f't'I
"FRIEDLANDER" • "'·"" * '~8 VW x ln't cond \111 4l00o mi. Ne1\' !il't!:s.
IJ7SO IU.CH ILYD. ROLLS ROYCE Ui mi·~. iiHi-12 19 S!GO. f..14-4126 nr 5~8-:i.JAA.
(Hwy. Jfl --.-.57 VW * '6!l Kl\rmRnn Gbi11 Cnn1·. rx.
gg.J.7S66 • ~17..6'24 BE/\'TIAEY ·54 R-Sa.Joon, 11l'st of!C'r * ;,.i;i.&l\:1 N>nrl. 22,!\00 org. ml!rs.
NEW-USEO-SERV. I R~1tnl1.11rl Blk / grey, Doc. I ·~ Vi\'. AUTO. S209.J. 673-.lf&ll
~ Jlu'l10lj'. ~~2-1004 i:'>i A HURRY SlT::iO V\\' 'li9, lmma('ulatio, .\tany
-~~~~~---. TOYOTA • "46-0i~2 • xtra~. ~1u51 ~fill. $1650 or
'63 flAT 1600 Oskll Sp1ck>r· 1 ·64 v \\' bug, R/H, runs makt> Ol!flr. 5.16-2:?_2!_ __
Good corid £11 Rnd 1n Rd borly Mnrl . '68 VW 'Bug·Xlnt cond.
Call af! 6· ~ '68 Corona Hardtop t S601 nr Df'~I nff<"r 1'47-652:1 SllOO or offer 613--02:i9
'JAGUAR l I.oadl'rl Black l~ttu 1op.: '66 YW SEDAN--1~nr1;~~~~sw~~~lerx<'~~;'
JAGUAR Auromarir. nd10, llf'arer. ! _ . r.111ny extras. Slt1S !i.l6.10ln l\.\\IJ\' i4.il) Take ~all down. L1r;. • .-.KD 6.13 S.1:i'.!t1 tntal . . HEAD~UARTERS 11, II fl "·II Mw." p11ym~nt 36 monthly 1111!~ iw>ll 61! V\\ • nl'"'' tlrt~. 1 ~ i nll.ll('e pvt, PIY. ,,.... · 1 $1100/0ITF.R ---_ .. , •• author\Ud JAGUAR .. 10 •94·7""" ~ 31"" paymtnr:t t1f '~' r !:. s · ·
,,. .,.<q "" am ""°or,,.,, uu SJS,ZO fi•.l-2:lrn ~~In tht entire Hubor 170 TOYOTA CORONA Annu~ p!'rrf'~\A8f' ra1 e nf "·~7',-,,vwo'0,~1-,.~:'-,:;,-,,.,-.~:':·_Loo_k-,~.
Oxnplett 17~2 ... jO,Af', Total (t~h Sill> :)t~:...'ii
SALES 4 Door Auton\ttllr. rilr. lrn-prt<',. 1nclud1nr !Al: le He. ==~~---~-
SERVICE m1cul111e! 1 236 AQXJ \'o!tJJ SlDbl 9.j. '69 \'\\' Ru11. P"' ply ~111ny
PARTS tak1: trAd@. C.dl 494.774(. I xtra~. $2250 or lws! OffE'r
I fi4&-6.l27. !)4~208(l SAUER ''69 Toyote I..anderulfof'r ~ l''ICK "'tlf"l nr1\F A-1 f'nnd.1 VOLKS\\'AGEN 1!1611 . vrry
• ~ \fakf nlf-r ~~!II A:nn<I ahap.-S1275. Call
IN M S nn; ")'~Uow Pa"e•" ,1 l~7i 1 Bf:AC"H BL ,11~2-~1JSl..;...,_..c..,.,;:...::·~~=~--COSTA E A ('J,.,lil:~<1 . Dally P !l11 1 HUVTIN(;TON BEAOI rontpll'lt' V\\' So>rviC"f'
234 [ 17'~ !ttrMt ~t'\~~ (11r1"rfol')' Qlfor't I' HO!'l;'F Hun11n2• "'•!rh !he 1n,..~ f"11~M11n1 "'l!h11 11rl
~3-_D6l ~·ICC you ntt:1 0Pt.:O. H~:SE.co.IWWL-M-l'l il-:+~'I"!' -• ." o=="'~=---~-"-~
VOLKSWAGEN
'68 VW SEDAN
black J eat h er int•·,.· •. power ~tef!r1ng, radio, hf!at· Costa Mesa. 540-56.~. ' ' 'L ~~:.;:=::..:~;='7---1 Open 7 days a week Eqwp..-i with all th• Jux-er, vinyl mo!. (.• Ml44) 1969 Me M nt •• ~" $329 rcury o ego 8:.)\) AM to 9:00 PM
Ury features. Full power, 9 ATTRACTIVE &
r di h t f t . ECONOMICAL SACRIFICE '70 Pont. Stn a o, ea l'J', ac ory all" BIU YATES 5 Id 9-
Lic, • \VX.E 8:17. STI.9'5 1otal cond., etc. lSBD 155) $1675. Light Ivy fJnL~h with gold In-;~~;· ·.;o ~i,', ~~~ls, ~::
down paymen1, 36 monthly Johnson k Son. 2626 Harbor VOLKSWAGEN terior !!'Quipped with auto. R.<tdio, Luii: rack, Auto. Pvt
payments of Bl., Colita Mesa 540-56.10 32852 Vall@ ROll.d matic trans., riadio, hf!a!er. ply. 1:1071 Rrd Hill, Tu:rtin, $57 .26 '69 Coupe DeVilfe San J uan Capistrann J>OWf!r 11teenng, etc. Priced aft :'!pm, 11.ll day wknd~
Full power, good cnnd. ~37-4800/493-4511/400-2261 for quick sale. $lfi7S. YCN-1 "''9'""u-;,M~.-,.~2-0o'R~HT=,~1m-.1
Annual prel:i?ntage r,11te 673-2262 or 67:\-5?2.1 :p;o. JohnMin J. Son, 2626
li.82% (OAC1. Total caM cl97~0~CA=o~EJ~~-~~ ... -""11-.ooo=l ___ F_A_L_C_O_N ___ H11rbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Pm/Baf'. vTmC. rf. MAT.I P/S,
price including 1;u: le. he. ooA" =~" . I · A · a P e mi fully equipped S'l .,...,..,,.,...,, S $1:)76.9'5. • . · 1 ver l.961 F'alcon Station Wiu~on =~===~~-~ mag,,, 11.ir. '209:>. 5.57-4686,
Harbour V.W.
'69 YW BUG
4 spttrl, radio, healer,
jTAZ 142J
.BARWICK
T!'.TPORTS INC.
DATSUN
m So. Coa11t Hwy .
l.aRUna Beach
MS-4051 I 494-9771
LEASE A
NEW '71 VW
$51.89
Per. Mo. + Tax
AT
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Va.lie Road
San Juan Capistrano
837 .4800/ 49.1-45ll/ 499.2261
'68 VW SEDAN
Au101natic. r;irho, hC'lltl!'r.
(WQD AA2J
$999
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
grey & white-. AM : Call SXIO. 1991 Newport Bl d '68 MERCURY Colony Park 6-14-6714
5@....'Wll6; Pri.f: 675-1102, ask CM Space 47. v ., wagon -Full pwr , air, I ~,~=~~-~---f
for Paul Henrlel'Mln. luggage rack. ht''<'' tires. '6 G'TO, A llteal for t1295,
BEAUT '62 Co " v·11 FORD Xlnl cone!. Mui:t SC'll. Day11 Mull s~ lo apprttia!r, . upe ne 1 e, &15--03JO; Eve~ 499-ll36 Must ~I'll, nw~r in Viet
mech. xlnt cone!, full powt>r,1---------Nam 549-0040
S595. 492:-9706, must 11ee. '65 L TO 'foll l\.1ercury l\.1ontclair 2-dr I ~~==~~~~--1 hrdlp, A'ir roncl, LnlldP.d, '64 GRAND Prix, 2 dr, HT,
'fiO FLEETWOOD 4 dr. ~1UST SELL. T-Bird Motnr, Nn l'f'aM>nab!e olfer iv-tu.~d. xtr11s, fine cond. $550. Pvt
Motor in xlnt. rond. tir,,s :i7,50(! mi. 2 dr. h11rdtop, ,:i97_6413 Pty: 5-18-4211
fair, new pain!. Needll seat all power' exc. wind., lac
roven. S275. 557-3331 air, au!o. tranllm., AM-FM
'69 El Dorado. Alt xtra11. radin, radial ply, clran, xlnl
Mu.~t .. u/m11.ke c ir. Ph. alt cond., 1 ow"f!r. A~king S900,
5 pm, 5'16-0650 S220 below currt>nl Blul'
MUSTANG RA,MBLER
'69 MUSTANG CONY. '67 RAMBLER WAGON
CAD '70 Sed. De V ill e .
lrmded. Beautiful bl has
mi's. Sac. whsle. 493-4473
Book. Make an offf'r. Call
64-4-0605 Eve!!, weekl"nrl.
1965 Ford Gal lDDXL
'62 CAD. Sede.n de Ville P'ull Buck"! Sl'al1, power 1teerln.t,
(>O\\'er. S500. Eve n in r: pov.·er brakes, automatic
;,.\~2318 trans., 46,000 orig. milts.
CAMARO Wo,·1 la.I Jo"-'. NMV 263.
Auto., Rildio 6t. Heatrr, Pnw.
er Steerinst. Lie. XUt' 3~
$1699
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
sm. John.'IOn k Son 2626
HarOOr Bl., Cos!a 0i\fe.s11.. S::in Juan C11p1strann
lOA" .\17 .4MCJ/4!13.-4.">1\1499·'2261
Aulomatic, powf'r sleelinr,
radJo, heatrr. IWBJ 952)
$999
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Valle Rmll'I
!';in Juan Capi~lram
837 ·4800/ 493-45111499-2261
'68 CAMARO. Xlnt cond. 1970·t..:.''.C.C~5631l-'=''-' ~~----l =""''-"'-"~~=...;:::..,.1 • 427 eng. 30,000 mi's, $2150. '64 Ford Galaxia 500 '6.' :\1ustii.n.c :Hfr, VI!, 4-spd. '6.'\ RAmblrr 2 rlr. 327 C'U.
Pvt pty, 645-1907 2 Doo H dt Rad h (No. RZF48iJ S599, S10 in 3 :r.pd. ~·lmr 1hifl,
r ar op. . '<>, t'at-d!'livers on 11pproved CN'dit. I !l\'errfrivt>. 4 11 rrarend • CHEVROLET er, powt>r ltt't':Mng, power Sr" at 1945 Harbor Blvd, 10.'1de ovals with maii:s. F"M
b.ra.kes, factory 1..1r. autom,11. C.M. rt1d10 1.11th tape deck, S800
be tran11, $&IS. ORB 512.
1
0 o. t fl °'8 mo ,, 5 .Johnson & Son, 2626 JI arbor '67 ~1UST ANG f 11. :r. t b a c k . r 00::5 0 !'r . .n ...,,,.,.. .... 1
Blvrl., Co.~ta l\.fesa. 54G-56.'l0 Red. Perr. cood. $1200 · ,,P,>_l.=7.0=c-;"""""'--I . Bi's! nlft>r. Or1.i;:. 011,.ner '63 CLASSIC Rambler • 4 speed, radio, po\\'er ~lf'f!r· 1~7 COUNTRY .o;QUIRE: 644-4686 P/S P/B fa ctory 11.ir
1n.£. \\'fdP oval~, c:hron1e Vl'ry clt>an 42.00l mi. Brand 1 'S.100 '• * 962-JW4 · 1.1·ht>rb. iQ750461 nt>W tires & bartery. s1450. '66 Mu5lanir conv. V-8 11u!n ' 1
$1499 644--0.176 !~~n~. ™'""' p11.1n!, $HJ5j). '65 RAMBLF:R ClRssic 2 Dr.
1ii"JFaJmo;;;;;~"'S;;;;;:;; 1 ~'":'~":7'''°!0'~--~~--hrrl1np. lnw milrARr. New !'66 FORD Country Squ!re I 1 BILL y ATES Wagon. Xln! Mnrl. New '68 MUSTANG 2+2, c•.''11' tire~, OTW-"a"1·R'""'o 10'.!8 p/h, 11ir-cond. SHiOO.
VOLKSWAGEN '""· 11150
"'·"" "'"''""· 3"":'12 Vall• Ro;o;.1 • GOLD J!l611 Bronco, 20.fl()O '6' MUSTANr. VR XI t I e ... "'RIRD IN 0 G £o; " 11c1ual mi. All Xlr11.s :i " · • n .l."l·•· RI INAL
San Juan Capi$trano 646-3702 llfl 7 pm rond. Lil!~ of f'Xtraio. Pvt 1 CONO, S12!li
~'":'.'.:'.·•~800:"'.:/'"':':3-4C'5'.'.ll'.'/~49!J.'.":'226:".'.1_17lv;;;;i\;;;;;iiiiii-;;Jo; pty. Mu.s1 ·'t'll. 644--0857 • 642-7056 ,11f1 fipm ,.. -'71 Ford Van, f,()00 mi'K, '70 NOVA E200, Ai r, V.11, Custm inter., 'iO Mach I Jjl, PIS, P/R. VALIANT
'67 EL CAMINO
32852 Vtt11~ Road
San ,J11an Capistrano
R.17-48001493-451 v 499-2261
LoadM S36!f.i. fi"5-879't Auto. Air, O!her option5,
I
~1-217.1 all 6 pm & wknrl:; ,,,c:,-oV'.'"':'.'I ______ _
V8, autom11tic, powt>r steer-'"6 Country Squire. A/C, e 1anl. At1!n. 1ran~. 50000
lng. d.Jr. Lo11ded. CCVE3S9) R/H PIB P/S Riirk lO· 'fi6 Mui;tan,i:, ori2. owner, mi . Onr ownrr. Extr11 good
Full pri~ S219i Call 494-7744 .. ~,,,· 1 O\\ ~r. 11000• <'A.•: ~.91 Nrw brk~. nins xln't. S995 ('(lnfl S.l.'11 646-19611 ,~ ... ~"' or b~I ofr. 67:J....16M c1T=·s~~A~h-re-,-,,-,,-,~11-,.,-,,,.-I
'6.'i , Chevy Z-dr hn1tp, aulo, Tum those White E'lephan~ 1%6 :v!USTAi\'G -22.000 mi. ilf'm11 \l'llh f'll<;t. u~P Dally
Comp. "ith fihfi~la.ss Oody. IN~. PTD6lOI S29!1, SlO into cash Ihm a Daily Pilot I Like llf'W, $117:l Pilol Clai;s1f1ed. 642-J678
VW DUNEBUGGY
s;>i:i. or hf'.~I olfrr. Clill drlivPr11 on approvM cndil. Dime-a-line ad! I • C11ll fi7~:i621 * Clas."lifirrl Ari Str at 1945 Harbor Blvd,t..==c::..=_c:;,.::=.;. __ ~ ---= ·C::-='-~= ~~~~~---~I
11.trer 4 n.m. 540-380.l C.M. Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 ~~~~~~~---! '59 VOLKSWAGEN Bu R .
Ovt'r SJOO mechanic11.J work
done. SculplurPrl seat~. t'M'w
acrylic pain! S.395. 54~3641
'6!'1 Chevy Kinggwood Srauon
Wgo, Air. brl'lkf's, ~f'tring.
Xlnt. 1\fa.ke-offer. 645-0+tfi,
&i:;....2025
SOULFUL 195fi VV.' nf'f'ds [ ,.~~-~~~~== ~ homr. Cassettr !ape. 61 Chevy ~r .<No. RVP374l
Ve clf'an. S400. 4!J.h't.llR7 I Sl\Y.I, SIO rlrl1vrn nn 11.P: ry provl!'rl rTedit Sre at 19ki
1963 VW 8u~Nrw '""8 f., Harbor Blvrl, CM.
hr8:ke~ Mekf' olfrr 619 'lil lr..1PALA 4-<lr, R/H, Po1n~e-tlls, CdM. 67J-5$4i j P/R 1 t 0
VOLVO
n.n.nrLI'\
{HINI ~lo~o·
"FRIEDLANDER"
1J1N l•A(Jt /KW'!'. JU
S!IJ. 7!166 • 537 ~
NEW-USED-SE RV,
~
$3093
1971 VOLVO
Df.;,.\fO 73fiU
\Ve Sf)f'c\11117.1' In
f'l\'rr~ra~ 01'!1vrry
.JJeM L e.wi4 \Tl VOLVO
, ran~. K l"t'r1ng, rig
ownrr, Xlnl cond, S295.
~,ll-7:\li6
• '&.1 Chevy Impal11
FRr ~ir. P/b, PIS, V):I
VF:RY CLEAN • SGOO
* 646-1380 *
'70 EL CA:.11NO, ~7 cu in,
lin!/w1nd .. P/!\. P/B, m1~1
~n. TOP. 545-1282 ,
,}<l(}....l:if.O
'67 Ti\!PALA 2-dr. Rold , PS.
•Ur·".'! &auty; Must Sl!'ll"
S.1.l-JXl6
'tij 2 i")Q()R Malibu, nnf'
(twnrr. lully equipped. Likl"
l'lf'W. S700. 4!n.-9746
'&1 IMPALA, 327. Po~r &
air, Original n\l•nrr * ~-1676 *
'65 IMPALA 4 dr hn11p. (A C'I
air. pit\, pl~. kl ml'11. Pvt
pty. 67J.-lR11
BRAND NEW
1970
ROAD RUNNER
30 To C~oo1e
Fram
1 DOOR HA,:io.
TO~. JIJ VI , •u·
fe..,•lit , lint•d
91.,., r1lly1 In.
•lru..,•nl p 1,.11,
.... .,V duty OUIP•"•
''""· +.•••v e~tv br.~11. t•dio. F70
Jl 4 fAi 11d whi!f
l•!t•r t i111, wit•
whe•I c'"'"·
1.:RM1JN0E·
IJ,60!.l.
$2695
I
..