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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-02 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • ree Newport Mother Files ·Lawsuit On Broker • • C:harge· B-.x Two Coast Solons • Hit Y O·uth Vote SpeclaJ to lhe DAD.. Y PlLOT SACRAMENTO -Giving people the vote at 18 and still denying them rights to marry freely, drink and sign contracts would be a cruel hoax perpetrated on their maturity. Thi$ is a fundamental reason why tWo Orange County legislators joined dissenters Thursday as Ca\ifornla's con- g!itutional amendment passed by a 60 to 9 margin. Assemblymen Robert Badham IR· Newport Beach) and Robert Burke (R- Huntington Beach) wanted full rights and privileges of adulthood contained ln 1.he amendment. A similar Sena~ bill passed Wed- nesday. but without the full-fledged reduction to age 18 of drinking. among other over-21 rights. "Some of our phony liberals are saying we want to make our young people equal -but not entirely equal," Badham 6aid when reached Thursday afternoon. "I think that is a cruel hou on our young people." Badham said what the Assembly did. Oraage Coast Weather Cooler temperatures will mark the first April weekend on the Orange Coast. with low clouds and fog in the morningl'i and tempera- tures running from 68 to 78 de· grees. INSIDE TODAY Donning makeup Jor o play fnvloves more than a pc11nt 1ob. Colden. w,..~t College theotPr· arrs student.! make an interPst· ing prn1ec1 of 11. See tod.ay'1 Weelieitder. BMll•• U C..lllen11t ' CMckl"' U• 1 ci.1t11lft "'" tom1t1 ,, Creti""'•d tf l>tt!ll Melk••... I l)twrct• I ltl119!'111 l'ttl f l'llltll(I 1•·11 ~KOM 11 "'"' 1.tlltltri 11 M.111"'• ' ......,.., )4·1" M11'111I '¥!1dl tt M111t111t M"" •S °''"" CtUfltJ I .......... "'' b·til S.lwlt ~ U ~ ,,.,. l!Kk "'•11C1!1 ic.1j T11t'llU0" 1l Tlltlllrl U·I' Wtl1~<r 4 wa-11'• MtWI !hl2 WerMI Ntwt 4.J W .... flld'tl" lf..n r in effect. was put the issue on the ballot to allow citizens to decide whelher 11 will be the voting age. "And at the same. time they advocated ratificaiton of an amendment to the U.S. Constitution Which would preclude the expression of opinion by California vOters'i" he added. Assemblyman · Burke joined . his col· league on this point. "One of the problems is that this action will place it on the ballot neJt year,'' Burke said. "In the meantime. if that federal change is put on the ballot, the voter will be asked ' whether to allow the , IS.year-old vote when it already has been." . "It is really a confused picture In terms of what in the world is going on." Burke concluded. Assemblyman Badham noted he has encouraged and supported the tB·year-old vote. plus making 18 -the complete. age of majority. He says this should bf. a full package of citizenship and 'responsibility, not a token concession on voting in Itself. Burke noted Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) tried Thursday to get the majority at 18 issue inserted back into the amendment before. the vote. The. full majority clause. involving mar· riage without parental consent, full responsibility in courtJ of la)V, ability to enter into legal contr1cts, and other factors was deleted in committee hear· ings. Evangeli st Okay In Plane Mishap Evangelist Oral Roberts, his wife and son and 25 otheni escaped injury Thurs- day afternoon when a plane carrying them skidded to a lurchi ng stop at Orange County Airport. Officials said the brakes on the plane'• huld.lng gear apparently locked and caus- ed the craft to skid for nearly a half mile and . come to rest in the grass off the main runway. The runway was closed for about an hour until the plane could be towed away. The group was en route from Tulsa, Okla.. to. Burbank &o !'!cord some televillon abows. I Fir•n MY LAI DEFENDANT Col. Orin Henderson Dulaney's Wife Back in County To Face Court By TOM BARLEY Of !lit DtllY fl:lltl ltt ff Marlene·Dulaney, looking pale, strained and visibly apprehensive., was hustled into Santa Ana"' Municipal C.ourt today to face charges linking her to the alleged $3 million defraudins of investors in the World Financial 'l'rendJ empire ad· ministered by her husband. Mrs. Dulaney, 32, was flown in from Bermuda late. tut ni1ht after agreeing tn return to Or1tnge County with district attomey·s investigators and face grand theft and cbnspiracy charges already filed against her husband. Joseph; 37, and his vice president James Shipley. 38. of Huntington Beach. All three say they are innocent. Stie stood up before-Judge. Paul Mast wearing the yellow pajama suit Issued to Orange County~jail women pri&oners and confirmed for the jurist that ahe did not have an atLorney I?) represent her. Judge Mast appointed the. public defender, ordered the blonde defendaiit to return to his courtroom Monday for prellmlna,Y examin1tlon .and 111t her bail. at 131U®. . Dulaney'.! nex;t court appe.arlDCe la also scheduled for Mnnd1y. The 37-year· n!d ;nve~ .r.'.:'.:ilt counselor. who wa1 ar- rested last ""eek in the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao, i1 also held in lieu of $312,500 bail. Mrs. Dulaney bas been confined tt !lee DULANEY. Pace 11 ' " ev .. --~-.. . ... i • Marlene Dulalley Baek • •n County • For Fraud ·Tria-1 -.'fiial Set . ' . Oii ·Death 'Coverup' From Wire Services PT. MEADE, Md. -The civilian· at· tQrney for Col. Oran K. Henderson, highest ranking officer charged with My Lai-connected crimes, said loday his client would plead innocent to charge& o( covering up the 1laying of South Vietnamese civilians. Henry A. Rothb!att, a New York at- torney, said prior to the pre-trial hearing on the court-martial of 'Henderson,· that the decision and sentence in the case of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. would ''ob· viously have an effect" on the outcome Of. the Henderson trial at this Army base between Washington and Baltimore. "The American public has taken a very strong feeling on Jt." Rothblatt said the charges against Henderson - one cbarge of dereliction of duty and two charges of making false statements -"are totally unfounded in fact and the. Army knows it. "I cannot fielp but wonder whose reputation is ~ing protected at C.ol. Henderson's expense, but we intend tl!I find out." Rothblatt •said. A flood of public protest has arisen over the convlc'tion and .life sentence given Calley after hi.!i court-martial trial at Ft. Berinlng, Ga. Hende"rson , howevf!r, woul d not face so severe a penalty II convicted on the charges against" him . Required under the military code of justice, today's hearing before military Judge Peter S. Wondo lowski will consider Jnstruction's for thf! conduct flf Hen· derson's court.martial. Henderson, commander of the 11th Infantry Brigade when one of its bat· talions swept throujh My Lai. is accused specifically with "willfully failini to con· duct a proper tn9 thorough in- vestigation" Into reports of "excessive killing of n::::!combatants ." Now attached lo the 1st Army at this· base midway between Washington and Baltimore, Henderson. 50. ls charged with dereiiction of duty, failure to obey a laWful regulation. false swearing al)d making a false. offici.tl 1tatement. He. IS the only officer still racing court.martial on ch.arges of covering ~p the alleged massacre at My Lal. Charges •1ainst 13 others were dropped. The. charges ag,lnst the Indi"anapolis officer resulted form a three-month in- veslliatfon by a panel htaded by Lt. Gen. William R. Peers. lf ~vie~ on all counts. Htnderson could be sentenced to a TM:xln1um term of sii years at hard IAbor Henderson 'b: represented by civilian l1wyer P.enry 8. Rothblatt and a three· man military defense team headed by IS.. COLONEL. P11e II 1 t .DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERlilOON, ·APRIL: 2, ~1971 VOL. '4. N0.•1t, 4 SIC:TIONI, 42 l'AHI , ·Lt.· Calley ·~-!) ., Ul'I T1"""911t· LT. 'CALLEY IS ESCORTED FROM FORT .BENNfNG STOCKADE My Lai Otfend1nt .11 Now , Under HoUM· Arrat Durini His .Appell ~ '. Nixon Move Gives Calley Limited Base Freedom F:T. BENNlNG, Ga. (AP ) -On Mon- day U. William L. Cll\ley's future was at stak'e.' Tuesday 'his life was at ·stakf. Wednf!Sday· he wa.!I spared . ·Thursday he· fa~ . life in jlriso!l. Today he.' was back in his . quar~! with : limited· freedom . Thus-ran the· draiila -~of 'the. 21:ye:ar.:Old Calley'a life during the past five days. By order of President Nllon from the Weatern, White House. in San Clemente, Calley was taken from artnl!:d cW1lody behind the barbed wires of the post 'lOC'kade 111utsday and returned to his b*:belar quart.eta. . : , . Only a. .day afie r he. was • sent'enced to life LmPrlsonmenr for muraerli:ig 22 Vietnamese. civillana , at My LaJ, the boyilh·looking lieutenant was ordered released by the President pending tl\e completion' or a1 full review aritils ccm. victlon by an Army court-martial. the White House directive took most o!Mervers by surprise. The President had once sakt of the maS!lacre.· at My Lai that "under no clrCumBtan<!t1 ww · it justified." AnnOlincement of the Prf!Sident's in; tervention was made at San Clemente by &nald L. Zieglef, White HoUSe press aecretary. Ziegler &ald Nixon hid telephoned Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chainnan of the Joint Chiefs. -or · S:t&H •. I& ,dlNtt Calley·s release .. The presidentiil Oj.der-wu aot•a.Jeaal step, Ziegler· ~ald1 , • . • . ' l}1 response to 1qutitt.on1,. the praa IS., CU,U:Y·RELEAO!>. P11e ·~·, ' . '.Newport . Woman . ·Says 'Romance'· ' : PrQmpted Suit A Newport Beach ·woman . who cl1ims that her, broker uUd "In affectJonate and romantic intetVl" i" her to pe.rauade her U> 'moV1!. Iii~• thin l300.000 wonli of blue chip atoCb to mutual fllDds haf named him atid his company· U defendants ln a ne'ar SS00,000 ll.w1Ult. Mrs. Jane p,. Carroll claims in ibet Orange .County Superior CJoiirt ad!oe that broker John H .. Hoyt, llllt '!\I.Un Ave.. CD:;ta Meise, and C&llfom~ i;:,;:, ~· ~·:; of Orange h•ve i~ demand.i; Jor tbe return: of $.11t.m lit loans made to Hoyt. · • She wants fl0,900 in dllnl.lt.t sustained by the transfer of \!lue chill 1totb IS.. BROQJll, P111 I) \ " • :! OAILV PllOT > U.S. Troops • Pull Out OflilieSaun SAIGON IUPtl -Wllhdr&wlni U.S. troops all but ablndoned the Khe. sanh base Friday two months after opening lt as the springboard for South Vietnam's Laos offensive. American jets attacked Communist truck and Unk lr&ffle in Laos which had been plnpolnt.ed by a commando raid. U.S. headquarters in Saigon declined. comment on RacUo Hanoi reports that five Americans were captured by Com- munist forces ln a batUe at Fire Bue 6 near the point where the borders of Soulh Vietnam. Cambodia and Laos meet. But field reports listed sil: Americans killed or mLssing in combat Wednesday. South Vielnllfllese. headquarters 1aid Saigon troops reoccupied Fire Base. ' alter losing It in a Comm.uni.st usault that coat 20 South Vietnamese killed and 2$ wounded. North Vietnamese losses were placed at 2'0 men killed. One American was rep6rted killed and one wounded when Communla:t gunners ehot down two hellcopters trying to reacue. South Vietnamese .dtfendera of the base 280 miles nortbea.it o( Saigon Deir Oak To.' Spokesmen reported the troops made "very Ught contact" with the Com- munists when they moved ba.Ck into the base. However, U.S. S-$21 dumped 100 lofts of bombs in the surrounding are.a to stem the possibility of another North Vietnamese attack. Military spokelJllen said the B52 strike was the fourth in two days around Fire Base g. Corresponde.nll 1aid Khe Sanh, 12 miles Inside South Vietnlm from the Laotian border, was almost a wasteland Friday as the last American forces pulled out. They aaid the only ~gns ol life at Kbe Sanh Friday were two companiH of U.S. armored unit. manning about UPI Ttlf'1\919 Laugh Time Cathy Tracy ·and Flipper laugh it up at Marineland as they ~el~ to launch National Laugh Week off to a merry-and pretty-beginning. V.S. Vnemployment Rate Jumps to 6% in March 20 tanks and -armored personnel eaniers WASHINGTON {AP) -Unemployment and an occasional South Vietnamese bed back to rutu 1 te bracket. Many jobless persons were new- ly entering the labor force but could not flnd work. soldier ruaunagtng tbrou&b piles of traah. cllm up an a 8 ra The lut-tranlPott fllaht of the teveral of. six percent in March after a two- hundred p11nta that Iana.ct on the plateau month decline, the Labor Department ba.w durtng the hilghl of the Laos cam. announ<ed today. The jobless rate compared with 5.8 percent in February, and 8.% pereent in December - a nine-year high. paten Jef\ Tbunday alon& with the mobile ni.e figures were not accompanied by control tower"Whtch had been mounted ~ an oWclal interpre.taUon by the Bureau On a jeep. r •'"--sta~-'I d th ad AD that remained, a newsman report· of .&.ilUUl iuwCll, un er e • Last month's declien was described by Secretary of Labor J. D. Hodg~ as an "indeed heartening'' sign of im- provement in the economy, but the assis· tant BLS commissioner. Harold Gold- stein. said the figures showed a mixed picture. It was this discrepancy of in· terprelation wbicb prompted the ad· ministration's decision to dJICOll linue briefings on the monthly report by Gcld· a:tefn or other BLS officials. td were the ntsted and burned bulk1 ol. mlnlstraUon'1 new policy of handling ~ean bellcopten, motor vlhkle1 and the monthly announcement, but members steel-lined bunlten. Bilcl: clouds .of of eo.,,... called BLS erooomlsta for smoke from burning fuel damps covmd -~·-•-• th ~-~. . e artL There were S.2 mlllloo unemployed Daily Pilot Sets Special ti.sting Of Church Rites The DAILY PILOT ii plplnlng a special story to run W~ay an- nounclnl special oervlces IChe<luled by Orange Cout chwthes ood t<mples maridng the prlmll)' daya GI Holy Week, Easter Sundoy ond the Passover. The !in.al deadline for all material to run in lhls story will be Mood1y at 5 p.m. Any material ~lftd after that Ume will probably nol be Included. The beml should lnclude name of the cburt.b, addreal, 1ervlce tiJnes, pastor or rabbl'a name, aermon and any other materlal essenUaJ to the &ervJces. Please be brief. The articla can be submitted to any DAILY PILOT office. Addresses Include: 330 W. Bey St., Cosio Mesa: Zill W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach; 222 Fon!st . Ave., Laguna Beach; 17875 Beach Bl~d., Huntington Beach; 305 N. El C&rnino Real, San Clemente. DAILY PILOT "---·-s-Cit• •••• Oiv.HG• COAST rVlt.llMIMG CCIMPNIY ••\•rt N. W--' rr•INllt .,.. ""'*""""' J•t\: I, Curl•y . Vic• rr..IMll W OtM!'tl #,Mlfll' Tli•111•• Ktnll ..... lke11111• A. M"'"'"'•• MMllll'll 141*' Chatlet H. lee1 IUclri1t4 ,, Nin Att111-'11 ,,..__~ E•~ men and women in March, the report di.scloeed. This w11 270,000 (ewer than tis February, but the decline. was less than usual !Ir Ws'1euon. Alter .Uowtni fer the meuonal adjustment, joblessness roae by 150,000 on the annual basis. Employment was about unchanged al '18.S million, seasonally adjusted. Ezcept for a temporary rise in January, total employment has stayed virtually level since last May; it Is 500,000 below the record high of March a year ago. ne increase. in unemployment oc· curred largely among teenagers and those 1n the 20-to 24-year-old age f'rom Pagel BROKER ... from tht trust lhfl inherited to mutual fwxll suggested by Hoyt and ahe also demands a further '100,000 in punitive damagea from the defendant!. Mrs. Carroll 1~tes her first contact wllh Hoyt was In late 1966, shortly after she received the portfolio a! blue chip stocb she Inherited from the estate cf a Las Angeles woman. Mrs. Carroll, whose mioor children Valerle and John P. Roberts are co-plain· tlffs in the action, states that she was "naive and uninitiated" In business af· fairs when Hoyt and California Investo rs manager William Heiden approached her and was eully persuaded that it was possible to Increase her 3.4 percent in· terest rate to the 10 percent guaranteed by mutual funds . She indicates in the lawsuit that her association with Hoyt was ~anced by roman<'e and that she "came to rely on him entirely'' -to the point that she sold her entire holding of blue chip stocks. She accuses the defendants of "churn· ing" in tran1ferrlng her stocks to other sources - a practice whereby brokers create commlsslons by switching stock:i for no good financial reason. Senate and House members of the Joint Economic Committee called the experts before. it today. f'rot11 Page l DULANEY ... the hospital in Bermuda with whal has been described as a gall bladder con- dition and a possible heart ailment. But her illness was described by ln· vesligators today as "nothing more serious than a bad case (lf nerves." Hospital auth(lrities in the Brilish Qilony declared her well enough t(l travel pro- \'ided she was v•illing to accompany investigators, they said. Mrs. Dulane.y\'!i arrest now sets th@ stage for the trial of what investigators describe as the three principals l"n a series of alleged frauds that first came to light with the complaints of many elderly residents (lf retirement com· munities in Laguna Hills and Seal Beach • ~ey accuse the Dulaneys and Sllipley of bilking them of substantial sums of money invested in the corporate complez administered by Dulaney. The Dulaneys go to court1 Monday. Shipley, also free on $312,500 bail, goes to court April 21. Shipley took over as chief! of the W!rld Financial Trends combine short!y be ore Dulaney and his wife flew with their thret? children from Orange County to West Germany and what investigators describe as a year-long "life of Riiey" in 1i-1unlch. They returned to the United States a year later but were not arrested by local Investigators and FBI q:ents until federal officers and Interpol agents picked up Dulaney's \rail in Curacao. Investigators today said the couple's three children are being cared for by relatives Jn Colorado. Budget Sho~ks Sheriff, Welfare Ask Hikes The flnt two county department.I to ouUine the.Ir needs for the 1971-72 tl.scal year bave uted for increases totaling 'S million. The abtrlff.coroner's department was the first to explain Ila needs lo Orana:e County's 1dminiltr11Uve staff Thursday .. Sheriff James 1i1usick said the cost of operallng hb depMtment would be up 'l million next year. This moml11g, County Welfare Director Granville Peoples said costs for his department would be up about M million. Peoples eatlm1led that the. total welfare budget would be up to $98 mll· Han from the current year'• '63 million. or the $98 million the county will bs.,·e &o pay about P6 million. Peoples bl1med the. !altering economy for mo5t of the lncrtase. MWlkk aaid Thursd1y the cost of operating his department will ht higher becauae of the prea.sure or population. He said lhe county jail ls now over· crowded. Orange County ~upervi:sors who ht1.vt been eyeing ruts Jn county exPf.Tidl- ture1 for the comln& year were not on hand to hear the bad news . They'll get It officially later this month. ' / ( -•' Trial Agony Bared Calley Massacre Juror Reflects on Case From Wire Suvlcu FT. BENNING, Ga. -If v.•ar i!: Jlell, the aftermath ls sometimes a double torment. Army Maj. Harvey G. Brown, 3.1, a Vietnam veteran 1nd ane of six jurors who sentenced Lt. William L. "Rusty" Ca ll ey. 'll, to life in prison for the My Lai massacre knows. lie Jet down some or the stiff, military demeanor displayed throughout the sensat.iona1 court martial Thursday, -(:; nnecUng on the agony or decision and the heavy factors that weighed 1t. None of the others have. "lt'a not the Amuican Army ... ifs this country that was really on trlal there," the Amarillo, Tex. career man remarked. Maj. Brown said he would hate to be in President NIJ.on·s place now - with a nation of emotional people deman- ding Lt . Calley's pardon -and the Commander-in-ChJef faced with the choice. From Pagel CALLEV RELEASED . • • ge.cretary said the President was a~·are ol widespre8.d pro-Calley sentiment that has been expressed in thousands of telegrams to Nixon. But Ziegler added that U1e action "was taken at the President's own initiative." Under the President's order, Calley was aranted the status of an Army officer confined to quarters under "light guard ." He can go to the laundry , to a movie, lo church; but always -even in his. quarter• -an armed military guard muat remain with him. Calley c8Jlllot leave the post without permission. He cannot talk to newsmen. He will be allowed the vi.sit of friends. He will not be allowed, however, the privileges of the officer's club or lo attend official social functions al the post. Burke Votes No On State Gas · Tax Proposal' Assemblyman &be.rt Burke (R-Hun- tlngton Beach) cast the only dissenting vote in Sacramento Thursday as a pro- posal for an additlooal tax oo. gasoline passed its initial test. The proposed new tax would average one and one-half to two cents per gallon on top or a present slate tu of seven cents a gallon and a federal tax of four cents a gallon. All present gasoline taxes an earmark- ed for highway purposes exclusively. The new tax, prop<Mled in a bill by Wadie Deddeh (l)..('huta Vista) and 12 co-authors. would raise SIZQ million a year for state support of mass transit systems. "What we art re.ally doing is putting a sale.a tax on a necuslty that is already the lUghest tued commodity .,,:e have in the state of California," Burke said. He pointed out to his colleagues that "all we have done is talk about how we are going to spend the money rather than considering the question of whether we should raise the mooey at all ." Eight Democrats and five Republicans voted for the measure in the Assembly Transportation Committee. There was no opposition to the measure from ciUzem ar lobbyist.. et the hearing. Labbyl.!t.s for the automobile clubs of northern and Southern California -who opposed Prop. 11 last fall because it diverted gasoline taxes to mass transit -endorsed the Deddeb measure. Publisher Succwnhs NEW YORK (UPI) -Alb<rt E. Wlnger, former president and chairman of the board of Crowell-Collier Publishing Co., died Thursday after a brief illness. He was 87. Three hours arter the dramatic in- tervention by NixOn, Calley walked from the stockade to a walling car. Blinking from the glare of television lights, he was accampanied by his Army defense lawyer, Maj. Kenneth Raby, and military police. . About 75 persons, mostly young people who had walted from afternoon sunlight into a windy night, broke into cheers when he appeared in uniform. He gave a slight smile. When he arrived al his base quarters, his attractive, red-haired girl friend greeted him at the door. Two anned military policemen patrolled throughout the nigilt in front of the four-room apart· ment. J\.filitary officials said the delay in Calley's release was necessary to work out details of his confinement to quarters. The Defense Department in Washington said the young officer would continue to receive full pay unUI the appeal procedure b completed. In addition to sentencing him to life imprisonment, the court.martial jury ordered that he be dismissed from the ser.-ice and forefeit all pay and allowanCf:s. Calley had been kept in the red brick stockade under heavy guard since a six·man miitary jury cconvicted him Monday. Appeals fron1 the life sentence are automatic in the initial stage of the military court process. Later they may be continued higher In the military and federal court systems. Suspect Nabbed In Laguna Theft Of Costly Rings Laguna Beach dete.ctives Thursday afternoon arrested two suspects in the Wednesday theft ot five eJ.penslve rings, claiming one of the men admitted the $6,300 shoplift, Police identi fied the pair as Jasper Eugene Smith, 23, of 2190 College Ave., Costa Mesa, and Michael Robert Osborne, .29, of Bellflower, Authorities said the two nien were lo be arraigned Monday on grand theft charges. Police claim the two entered the Lillie Ingot, at 1450 S. Coast Highway, shortly before noon Wednesday and, while owner Heri lloff was "'ailing on Osborne. Smith allegedly removed the five rings from a display case. Investigators said the five gol d rings, each set with a different type. of rare r1iamond. were recovered Thursday when the men were taken Into custody. Detectives arrested the two mea after questioning Osborne, who had remained at the Little Ingot following the theft, ostensibly to act as a ''witness" for Hoff. Osborne assertedly admitted the conspi racy and told detectives wbere the suspect could be found. "It would be so easy for hlm .•. to Jet Lt. Calley go free ... " He added that many Americans are letting their emolions take cuntrol ol their minds Jn the fierce outcry for the President to intervene. "But what would that do to the laws. and .iusti('e of this land '/ They haven't ... heard the facts," Maj. Brown con· UnueO. "They bave.n•t been able to scrutiniie the evidence as we have." 1be evidence reviewed Included the Image of a llitng platoon leader riddling screaming civilians with slugs. shooting off half a Buddhist monk·s head and hurling a baby headfirst into a ditch. "I have nothing but compassion for Lt. Calley ." ht! added . "I was looking right at Calley when the verdict v.·as delivered. He looked like he had been hit in the head with a sledgehammer." "He didn't·ask for his life or freedom . 1 admired him for that, I almost cried mystlP.' . Maj. Brown described the trial as a mental Hell, but said he fell the panel's verdict was the (lnJy alternaUve. He made it clear the jurors had no recourse , saying they were unanlmoUJ on the first ballot. "They had 110 rei;ourse:• he added In reference to 102 My Lai villagets. Following his: interview, a reporter showed Maj. Brown an editorial cartoon from the Atlanta Constitution by artis! Clifford Baldowski. The drawing shows the ghost of Gen. Do~as MacArthur with a comforting hand on the shoulder of a soldier by the name of Jury. The soldier is grief-stricken, a hand over his eyes, while on a shelf behind him is a closed book labeled : Calley Court.Martial. " "Duty. • .Honor. • .Country'" uys the capt.ion. Sudden tears welled up In Maj. Brown's eye.s and he abruptly turned his back. the about-face maneuver marred by shaking shpulders. "This says it all .•• " he sobbed. Fron• Pagel COLONEL .•. Army Capt. Carroll J. Tichenor. Rothblatl served as defense counsel In two other cases stemming from tbe Vietnam "'ar: Green Berets accused last year of killing a reported Vietnamese double agent and the trial of two soldiers charged ·witb shooting · a Vietnamese prisoner. Jn the Green Beret case. the charge.I were dropped . In the other the defen~ dants were convicted of manslaughter. A slender man with glaS&es Gd t light brown crew cut, Henderson was a witness in the court-martial of Lt. William L. Calley Jr., convicted at Ft. Benning, Ga., Monday of killing 22 civilians at My Lai March 16, 1968. Henderson told the Calley court-martial that as commander of Calley's parent unit he had stressed aggressiveness in - a combat sweep through My Lal. But he denied receiv ing any cf£icia1 report cf an incident at a drainage ditCh near the village in which 70 civilians were reported killed. Henderson began his military career at 18 as a machine gunner in the Jndiana National Guard. He later served as a rine platoon leader in World \Var II and an Infantry regimental commander in the Korean War. He holds degrees from Maryland and George Washington universities. Henderson completed two tours of duty In Vietnam, the second as commander and deputy commander of th e 11th Infan· try Brigadr. Glass Top Tables ••• On Sale Now! 30x60 GLASS TOP TAILI-¥•" THICK SPICIAL $154 UCO. $171. ltautlfully 1tylM and hondaom1ly d•talhtd, this Js th• utmDSt In a tlol• top toblt. Don't ml11 an .,.. portu1dty to OWft quality at a rtmonablt prlc1. AwalJabl• 111 the foUowfnCJ finishes: Antl"u• Gokl -Oki Sponllh -Dl1tres1d Olive -ltack -V«da Grae111 -A1tlq11• 'fdow. • DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NlWPOllT STOlll OPEN P"lltlDAY 'TIL t NIWl'ORT llACN 1721 W"tellff Dr., M2·1010 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ProfeulOfMll' '"'"'°' DHlgner> Avollabl......,.ID-NSID INTERIORS LAGUNA HACH 145 No"" c..,1 Hwy., 4'4·6551 orlH FRIDAY 'TIL ' ' 7 • ' . -I Bunibtgton Beaeh· EDIII •N Today's Fbtal N.Y. Steeb VOL 64 , NO. 79, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C~tlFORNIA • FRIDAY, AP,Rll t 1971 JEN CENTS I five.-day Drama End·s With Calley Release 7 • FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -On Mon· day LL William L. Calley's future was at 1take. Tuesday hi! life was al stake. Wedne5day he was spared. Thursday he faced life in prison. Today he was back in his quarters with limlted freedom. Thus ran the drama of the %7-year-.old Calley's life during the past fi11e days. By order of President Nixon from the Western White House · in San Clemente, Calley was talen from armed 34 Years Service custody behind lht barbed wl~s of the post stockade Thursday and returned to his bachelor quarters. Only a day after he was sentenced to life imprii.onment for murdering 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai, the boyish-looking lieutenant was ordered released by tht. President pending the completion of a full review of his Con- viction by an Army courl-martial. The White Hoo!e directive took most observers by surpri!e. Tbe: Presictent ·school Pioneer Elliott Succumbs R1ymond M. ElliQtt. one or the best known 1chool figures in Huntington Beach, died Thursday at the age of '17. He roae from a math teacher al Hun- tillglD!! Beach High School in 192.'I in Hanoi Reports 6 Gls Held After Battle SAIGON ·(UPI) -Withdrawing U.S. troops all 6ut abandoned the Kht Sanh bue Friday two months after cpenitig tt u the ~ird for South Vie.tnam's Iaos offensive. American jell attacked eonimunlst truck . and· tank tr1flic in Laos whic.b had been pinpointed by a Commando raid. U.S. he:adqu~rters in Saigon declined comment on Radio Hanoi reports that five Americans were capturtd by Com· munist forces in a battle at Fire Base i nur the point where the borders or South Vietnam, Cambodia and Uio9 mee·t: But field reports listed six Americans killed or missing in combat Wednesday. , South Vietnamese headquarters said &aigi:in troops reoccupied fi~e Base 6 alter Jo.sing it in a <Aimmun1st ass.ault \hit coat 2:0 South Vietnamese: killed *M 15 woonded. North Vietnamese losses ~r~ placed . at 280 me~ killed. One American was reported killed Arid one wounded when Communist gunners 1hot dqwn two helicopters trying to rescue Souijl.. Vietnamese defenders of the base 280 miles northeast of Saigon near Oak To. d seokesmen rtported the troops ma e ''very light contact" with the ~m­ rnunist.s when they moved back mto the base. Beach Scholars First in Line A.t V ot,e Signups Students at two Huntington Beach hign tchool campuses lined up this m?ming to become the first 18-yea r-olds Ill the area to register to volt. Miss Florence Boosey. 11 member of tht Huntington Beach League of Women Voter•. said the now of students pa.st her desk in Room 107 al Huntington Beach High School was steady. . superintendent of the union high school district. retiring in 1957 after 34 years al 5ervice:. He was also a founder of the Orange Coast Community College: District Memorial services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Monday in the First Christian Church in Huntington Beach. Mr. Elliott. who is remembered by current Huntington Beach High School Principal Woodrow Smith as a "dignified, charming and highly respt:cted scholar.'' came to Huntington Beach by way of Utah in 1923. He began by teaching math at 1 time when the school district had an enroll- ment of only 200 students. A reserved person, he was known as "Silent Ray" to his contemporaries and witne:ssrd the construction of tht present Huntington ~ach High Schoc;>l al ilJ current locati~ 1n 192' ind 1927. He 110on became vice prlnci~I and In 1941' took over u prlnCipal and 1uperlntendent of the distcict, a dual role be held until his re:tittment in 1'57. Principal Smith 11ald the scholar often took walk,, from his home .at 1715 Maln St., past the high school campllll In his retirement to Lalk with 1tudents and teachers. He was fond of music and once entertained a PTA meeting by playing his mandolin. He W&.! a member or lhe: American Legion and a charter member of the Huntington Beach Lions Clilb and a me:m- btr of the Orahge Coast Association. Survivors include his wife. Margaret and dau.ghters June Elliott, of the home, Carolyn Cook. Seal Beach and sons Norman of Austin, Texas and Frank of Riverside. He also is survived by sisters .Dorothy Cole, Huntington Beach and Jnez Loly, Anaheim. three: gr11'ndchildren and two great grandchildren. The Rev. Thomas W. Overton will conduct the Monday services at the church, 2721 17th SI., Huntington Beach. School Grounds Become Runway A pilot landed his p!ane on thl! playground of the Post Elementary School in Westminster this morning without mishap. The pilot, Monte Davi1 of Long Beach, told police I.hat the light cran started to )-0.se power and the playground was the only open space: ln the vicinity for a landing. Davis brought the plane down at 6:45 a.m. He: had taken off from fullertoo Municipal Airport Police said that Davis would probably have to dismantle part of the plane to move It from the 11chool. at Ward Street and Hazard Avenue, on a truck. had once said of the musa.cre at My Lai that "under no drCWJUt.uiw .wu It justified." Announcement of the President's In· tervention w1s made: at San Clemente by Rona.1d L. Ziegler, White House pr'us secretary. Ziegler said Nixon had ttlephoned Adm. Thomas H. MOore:r; ebalnrtan 9f the Joint Chiefs ot Staff, to dl.rect Calley's release. The: presidential arder · wu Mt 1 legal atep, Zie1Jer uJd. . ln rtsponse to queJtlMJ, I.he pres.a secretary u.id tbe Prt:sldtnl was aware or widespread pro-Calley sentlment.th1t has been expressed ln thousands el telegrams to Nixon. But Ziegler added that the .action "wu taken at the President's own lnillal.ive." Under the President's order, Calley was granted the statua · or an Ari;ny officer conflbed to quJrten under ''li1ht 1uard." He can ·.;o to tl\i laundry, to a movie, to church; but always -even lh bla quomrs -IOn &m"'4I military iuard mt11t remain With him. Calley <:&Mot leave Ole post wlthou.t permission. He cannot talk to newsmen. He will be allowed the visit. of friends. He wm not bt· allowed, however' the privlleces of the oftlcer'a club ar to 1Uend ofnctal1 IOCl&l functions at the p'oot. Tbret: hOun alter· the dramatic in· tervenUon by Nixon. Calley walked from the. llOtkade to a W1llln1 car. Blintln1 from the glare of televilion ligbti, he wu accompanied by hil Army de.lenae lawyer, Maj. Kenneth Raby, and mllltary police. AbOut 75 persona, moaUy Youn& J*Slle wbo hid waited from ·afternoon aunUght into a windy rill:ht, broke into cbetra: when he appouod lh Wli!Dfl'I. He &Ill• I lli1ht Im"'· ·-Fiuorid·e Vote ·Set r 11 MY LAI DEFENDANT Col. Oran Hendtraon Col. Henderson · · · •ft A , ·~ 1, Says Inrurcent In My Lai Hiish f"tom Wire Service:• FT. MEADE. Md. -Ttle civllil.l'l at~ torne:y for Col. Oran K. Henderson, higbest rankinJ officer charged wilb My Lai-connected crimes. 1ald today hi9 client would plead IMocent l.G cbarges of covering up the &laying of South Vie:lname:se: civilians. Henry A. Rothblalt, a New York at· torney, said prior to tht pre-trial hearing on I.he court-martial at . Henderson, that the: deci.sion and ~ntenae in the case of Lt. William L. Ca.Uey. Jr. wwld "ob- viously haYe &n effect" on tbe outcome of the Henderson trial at this Army base between Wuhington and B•ltimort. "Tb&---A.mer!can public has taken ' a very strong feeling on jt," RothblaU •aid the charges against Henderson - one charge of dereliction of duty and two charges of making false statements -"are totally unfounded in fact and the Army Dows it. "T cannot help but wonder wh05e reputation ls being pro~ted at Col. Henderson's expense. but wt lntend ~ find out," Rothblatt said. A flood of public protest has ariJen over the conviction and life .sentence given Calley after his coort-marlial trial al Fl. Benning, Ga. Henderson. however, would not face so severt a penalt)' if convicte:c:I on the charges against him. Required under the miUtary code of justice:, today's hearing before military Judge Pefer S. Wondolowski will consider instructions for the conduct of Hen• derson's court-martial, Henderson. commander el the 11th Infantry Brigade when one of Ju bat· lalions lW'tpt throuah My Lai , i.1 accused speci!ically with "wilUully failina: to con· duct a proper . and !horough in- ve:atigation'' Into reports of "excessive ki1liD& ef noncombatants." • Op.ponents Fail to Block Election By TERRY COVRU and you could save the llxpaye:r1 money ot ttie Nlh' l'11t1 SMtf by w1Jtin1 on lhe: elecUon." Fountain Valley ~uncilme:n moved Eugent. VanOask, leader of the: suc- iwlfUy Thursday night to set a Junt ce:asful retail campaign in 11169, aent a letter ·to the councll pralli111 it for I eltttion· o• fluoride despite alltmpts setUng the special election. by anti.nuoride leaders to block it. ''I favor fl®ridation of clty water," Councilman John Harper suggested VanDaak wrate. "But J do feel It's combining the fluoride election with the a question wlUch ahoukl be dttided by June 15 tat override election of the lhe voters. And delaying it to the general HunUngton Beach Union Hi&h School election would only make It an overbear- District. ing political Wue." His motion fell dead when other coun-Unde1ren, however, wggeste:d the cilme:n refused to 5CC1>Dd il and tbe council should wait because of several city aUorney said it would be tecl\nically acUons which could.invalidate the elec- difflcult to do. tion. • George Lindegre:n,.lhe man whose peli-"Aasemblyman Bob Burke <R-Hun· lion campaign nearly forced the special tington Beach) hu • bill that woUld election anyway, Asked the cmmcll to require all cities to hold fluoride ele:e- delay It until the April 1972 ieneraI tiom," lhe anti-fluoride leader caid. "It electloru:. WQ\\1-d wperl!de any city · replaUon Ii Lindecren ~pe1ted tht stand he took ~" · lut week. '"l'b•re ~ no CU)''l~,Y !"'.'.'. :..~!· iw., Nld be it ~~ -Ill· ff)ltraf • :'it·"-l i.:· .... ~ .~ 'M.!"~';. ~ !. 1 ··~)i'' \ .. · 11-1·· c1.e•.'J..vJ*:.frmi•!!• · . - • • • j Labor Secretary ·Opens . Drive for Aerospace Jobs Secteta.ry Of Llbor James D. Hodgson latt this week aMOunce:d t.be: launching of 1 ne• effort to bring aeroapaoe specialists back into· the world .of the • employed, then pointed toward an e:.t· perim,ent.al program 1t UC Irvine 11 an elample of the idea. Hodc1101>. 11peakina afltr a ·conlonnce at the Western Wh~te HOUie 'J'hu~ay morning ·~lied by President Nlion., said the new program at UCJ was working very well. At that campus, he explained, unemployed engineers, tcienUsl.3 and technicians who lost their j0b1 in aerospace are bWlg retrained in the field of environmental technology. Hodgson said the new plan would apply M3 mUUon In federal .fUnds toward !If· f~inf out-of·work l trotpace 1peci1ll5ta retralnln1. · job opportunity llsUn11 md eVen 10me fintnc:ial heJp to cover movinc ffJ)ellSd to Uvt near a new jbb too far for comlnutina. The c.abintt membtr nld more tpecific data on tile opport.wtltiet of. the 'PfOgram would bf made available: to the state departmenll of employment within the next few weeks. · Despite t.he aJ/ocation of tN money, however, the plan it e1pected to .make. only a dent in the rank& ()f unemploy~ 1ero1pa.ce engineers, scienlilta And technici1111, who total about 100,000 n•· tionwlde. U.S. UnemplOyment Rate Jumps to 6% in March WASHINGTON (AP) -Unemployment climbed back up to an aMual rate of six percent iii March after a two- month decline. the ~bor Depattment announced today. Th!: ticures were not acrompanle:d by an officlAI interpretation by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. under the ad- mlnlslrltion's new policy of lwJdUng the monthly annourtcerritnt., but members of · Conereu e1Ue:d BLS economists for que1Uoi;iin1. There were 5.2 million unemployed men and womu in March, the. report disclosed. This · was 270,000 fewer than in February, but the decline was less other areas to obtain state.and nation.al recuI•Uons on water fluortdation. The ballot propo.sitlon which will be put to voters June 8 does not 1sk for a simple "yea" or "oo" on whether fluoride should be put in eJty water. instead It asks U the populace wants a city ordinance which would require an electJon anytime fluoride is proposed. for city water.• Harper called the ballot a "freedom of choict" Issue rather than a fluoride issue. Harper lost another battle on • J.1 vote over hl.s motion that councilmen be allowed to write ballot arcume.nta for and against the propouL If 1llowe:d, hi.I proposal would have provided free ballot argumenll under the council's name. Now, citiuna IJ'OUps will have to pay about t300 to put t'~''" on lb~ b'!llol ' Central Park Proposal on June 8 Balwt A proposed ~ntral park in Fountain Valley will co on the June I election along wlth the i&!ue of water fluoridation. , Co11ncllmen Thursday night . agreed unanimoosly to a suggestion by Mayor Edward Just lhat voters be 11ked ti they w1nt the park. One change was made in JU1t'1 re- que:sL The term central park was changed to re'creational complex. June Boykin, chairman of the parka and recreaUon commlsaion aplaine<l why: "We're not really trying to establish a park. but an overall recrea- tion area." The ballot question wlll 11k voter• to say "yes" or "no'' u to whether they want such a ~cre1lional comp)e:r. The VOte la to advise the council of th8 people's feelings, and tlou not obligate or forbid the clt.y on 1ny acttori rerardlng a recreation eomple:r or cen. tral·park. according to city offic:l1la. Just'a recommended wording includes the term' "at no increase: In tuea," and also ii11cea the approximate cost of the project at S750,000. The money would come. from reserve funds which have been buiJdlng up for expansion of the eom7nunity cenUr. The recreation complex would tllte the place of a second community eent'er. Registralion also was open at Edison High School . Only those who are alreadY_ 18 .11nd those who will become 18 within the next. 9'k1,ays were registered. Miss Boosey sakl . She-signed up aboul 25 1tudent.s between 8 a:m. and 10 a.m. Cou11ty Lawttuakers Affected than usual fer this 1eason. After allowing IOr the .e:Asonal adjustmtJTt. joblessnm twe: by 150,000 on the.annual basis. WeatJJer C.OOler ttmperatum will mark the first April weekend on tht Oranie Cout. with tow clouds 1nd fog in the mornings and 'tempera. tufes runnlnc from ~ to 18 Ge-Members ol the league: plan to .be oh both campuses after Easter vacation to rqister any students who may have rnl1sed today 's slpup. Soi1ne of the Huntington Beach H~gh School students. saifl they would be u.smg their ntw rlght1 to vote for or against specific measures. "I would pay partlcular attent ion to cand.ldates who are aware of the war in Vietnam And ec:ology." said Brandon Gentry an 18-year-<ild senior. Debbie GreenWood. ifiolhtr tT-year old senior, said 1he would vote for. pollutiol} law s. . A third student, Kttt M11nsf~\d, 17. added. "I llke thin1i1:s the way they a.re. 1 don't ••nt to chlnJe anythini d. Uy .. r• 1ca . . The new reaistrant! currently art thgl· bit w volt only In fedtral electlon! since S,cramento lawm11ker1 hive not yet r1tifie:d tht 18·year~ld vote Uniformed Solons Illegal? Enwloyment wai about Ut1chinged at 11.5 mtJlion, 1e.al0nally adjusted. E1cept for a lfJnP9TVY rt1e In January, total employment bu stayed virtually level al~ last lfa.y; it· is 500,000 betaw the record hiJb of March' a r'ar 110. ' From "'ire Service:• WASHINGTON -T"''O Orang~ Coun~y cangressmen fsce the lO!iS of thelr reserve milit11ry commissions tocl!1y In light ,,f a ruling by a fed,ral judge here thal it i.s unconstitullon11l for members of Co~eu to bold such com· mluiOM. Rep. Craig Hosmer-<R·Long BeRcbl is a rear admiral in the Naval Resarve: 1;nd ..Rep. Jol\n G. &hrr\itt · <R·Tu1ti1t) Is 1 lie:t'ltenant colonel ill the Marine Cofl)s R.es~e. Rep . Rldhard Hanni ID-Anaheim) dQeg not hold • rtse:rve commlMk>n. .1~ is the case with both California SMators Altn Cranston and John TuMt)'. U.S. DIJlrlct Court Judf!e Gerhard A. C'.esell, whe made the rullng, reflu ed I., ' to iuue 1n lnJunctiM1 l'lfderinl 1enttors or represent1tive:s te resign their po1i· lions. HI!! 1aid he expected the rulint tt be appealed to higher courts 1;nd that there was no urgent ntttssity for sudi an order, GeaeU uld 117 senators aod reptesen- Latives l'IOW hold. oorptniNions in itmy, navy, aiT force tnd 'Maitnt: Corp1 re:strves. Gea:el1'1 decision came In 1 suit agalnat .Defense Secretary Melvin R. Lllrd brought by a group called The ReservifU Camm ittee to Stop lht War. Gesell uld he based his de-clsion Oft A,r11cle: I. Sfo:r.tion ti, Clausa 2 ef lhe ConsUtuUon whicb uy1: ---· "No •nator or repruentaU"e lhall, during the time for •hkb be waa elected. be appointed to any civil office under the authority of the United Slatea, whleh The lDcrtaSt , tn unemployment oc- cturtd -J.arRJy amonc te:en11en and lhoU In · ilie 20-·to '4-year-old age bracket: Many jobleu penong were netr· ly tnterin1 the l1bor force but· eould shall ~•ve been creeled er •th t J10C fln<f w:or'lt': - -- e~1;1giem.. w~reor lhtU hive JieQ l'bt joblUJ nlc. compar,ld wttb ti 1 r~aled during . 1)1Ch ·ttme: and · ne : ptr~n~~· • Rebf'uary, .and ~ ·11trunt-l "'"""' btldlna any, oJl\c<, I"'!«· th< In. DeaJ11 :..._a.•-h14!!:., , Unlf<d St>lesc j)iall b& a '""1'i>er. ol • l.ait ' ~i. dtcl1,iq ,;,,.. ~ :•ib1'r: liook dur1n1 "his' i:oott~y~nit . ID · by ~•lli'l' 'ot r.ibor J." .D. ljodam • offl(J." • , · aa •• "ind&ed.,llearto!llnt" s1fn ol ln>- Ohtl1'1 rulin( held lllll a commlnlon pcoVem111t In Jl)e _.,, •. but tile aailo-· ·jn tile mllllary """" fell wl~ID' 0.. tanl Ba c•ininf11i<ier .. f!&rold . Gold· • ai:ea .af 1 civil office ~ tbe :Uo.ited attln, uld ~ filUl'et a.bowed a miied States. plqufe. ft w-u thla dlsertp1ney d In· Ht note<! In hb rullna.lll•l ·:the mun-luprtlliUon which ptorilptod lilt ad- lnl and effect ct lh.it constitutional ~ mlntltritton'a decl.!lon· to Jflacbntinue vl1ien have never bt.forf been 'determihed biftfifll1 on the rnonlhlt'repott tiy Gofd· b)l a court." 1ttla or cthu 813 oUicf&ls. • I , -----~------~-------· ..... -··-· ---- . ,,.... INSmE TODAY ·Donning molceup 1or 11 plov 1,.vnlvt.t more thaii c paint ;ob. Goldtn \Veit CoUaQt theottr-. art.s studtnt.s make on intcr11t,,. : Jn~ PfOjeCt of. it.;--.Set .lodG(.i~ .. i W tll<tnd<r. ' """" . ,, I t.llfwlllt 1 Cll;«llt• u. ' --..., ._ " ·-" OHtlt Mltkft I -· . ' •••IM'ltt ..... • .. .. _. • ... u "_...,. u ,,,,. '"""*"' I I "4M .. ~ ' ,..,... '~" \ ( • • \ .;:.f'.:D;A;ll:Y:P:ll:O:T::::;;;;;H;;:;;';"~dl~j~, ~Aptl;;;;l~t;l;'11;;;;;;;;;;;;;. .. ;·~·~-;·..;~-.;-;;~;;; .. -~~;;;·;-;·;.;~;;;:;;;;;..," Candidates Air Views , o~ean Vttew fandidat~s 01ll7 thnt candl dtle1 .,. \'Yllll for the llvo school board seats on the April 20 ballot in Huniington Beach's Ocean View School Dlt- lrict. Two of the three are incumbents. The Ocean View district covers n1ost or northern Huntington Beach. Currently, il serves more than 13,000 children in grades kindergarten through eight. They are housed in 22 district schools. Following are the candidates' vie"'S on a number of current issues in education. The questions were posed by the Huntington Beach League of Women Voters. The answers came from the ,candidates for lhe League's "C.andidate Questio11Daire." • INCUMBENT TRUSTEE Robert J. Zlnngra bo CHALLENGING INCUMBENTS Viuthn Ed1ward1 Teacher Tenure Idea Questioned J.::: •.·,- • ,, INCUMBENT TRUSTEE Ralph H. BaUer _Jf'.est~inste~ ~lementary Hopefuls Speak AH. ftvt CIDdkklM contesting two stall on tM boud of tM Westminsler Elemtn- tary ~hool Dl!trlet spoke befo-e an audience of 50 at a <:andldates' .orum Weduetday night. The forum at West.minster Wah School \\'as sponsored by the League of Women Volers of Huntington Beach. Each can· dldate spoke far three minutes. They epoke in the following order, a:s thelt names were drawn in a lottery : .Mn. Ada Cleg1, Midway City, a housewife and incumbent, said she faV()red the best possible educational program with both the board and teachers cooperating. She said abe believes all organi1ation1 Burke Votes No On State Gas Tax Proposal Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·H1.1n· tinston Beach) cast the only dissenting vote in Sacramento Thursd-.y PS a pro- posal for an additional tax on gasoline passed its initial test. The proposed new tax \\.'ould average one and one-haU to two cent, per gallon on top of a present state tax of seven ttnts a gallon and a federal ta:z of foW' cents a gallon. All present gasoline ta1es ·are earmark- ed for highway purposes exclusively. The new tax, proposed in a bill by Wadie Deddeh (D-Chula Vista) and 12 ~authors, would raise $1!0 million a year for state SUpJ)(lrt or mass transit systems. •'What we are really doing is putting a salea tax: on a neces.!!lity that is already the highest taxecl <:ommodlty we ha'e in the state of Calf!ornia," Burke said. He pointed -0ut to his colleagues that •·au we have done 11 talk about bow we are going to 1pend the money rather lhan conaldering the que1Uon of whether \•.-e should ralae the money at all.~' El&h( Democrats and five Republicans voted for the meuurt. in the Assembly Transportation CommJttee. There \\'as no opposition to the measure fr om citizens or lobbyisli at the hearing. must work together and that the district should always be ready for any changes in re.sources: Joseph MJzrabf. Westminster, a retired deputy shttiff, attacked "!Ccret" polling places in the last override election and said that jf he were elected he would '~atch the laxpayer's dollar. He said he wants a 12-month school year "so teacher1 can earn their money." Frank Sa.s1'*ood, Westminster, \vat.er superintendent and incumbent, traced hi! background in Westminster. "A tot of smoke was put up" o\·er teacher tenure, he said, 1·because only S percent of teachers netded it." Dewey LeRoy Wiles, Midway City, a ahertffs deputy, u.ld that new hfe "'aS nttded on the boJtd to bridge the gaps between the board , teachers and students. lie said federal and stale aid lo educa· lion should be greater. Rodµlc.k Cruse. Huntington Beach, an administrator in marketing publlcalloru;, pointed out lhal a new popu]ation had eome into the district in reeent years, but there bad been no new representation on the board. He said the schools must adapt to the changing needs of society and thal the 1tatus quo could no longer be matn- lained, 100 Residents Protest Restaurant for Valley: Nearly 100 homeowners tuined out 7hursday night before Fountain Valley councilmen lo protest plans for a restaurant. near their homes in a major sfi'opping complex under c:on.!!ruction at Brookhursl Street and EdJnier Avenue . It took three and one-half hours for the public hearing. t.tost of the citizens seemed to b~ objecting to the proposal for a 24-hour Sambo's restaurant 1n the cente. Some. ·however, had objections to other reMutes of the complex . After considerable debate on legalities, the coulicll rulfd that it would hold another hearing aimed at issuing a con· ditional use permit for operation Of the restaurant. It was likely that the use permit hearing would consider limitations on Sambo·s <1perMing hours. AH Sambo's restaurants save one now stay open 24 hours. City Attorney Thomas \Voodruff told the council that Fountain Valley has no laws restricting operational hours of a restaurant. However, he pointed lo a quirk in approval for the center \\'hich allows the council to require a condition.al u1e permit f9r the re1tau.ranl . lton1eowners also attacked the council over the year-long battle on development of the center. "The fa ct that this restaurant is open 24 hours should have been C<lfllldered long ago." aaid Nell Rog.era, one of two men who appealed the planning commission approval to the cnuncil. "It's just 87 feet from my bedroom," added 7om Stears. the other appellant. Much of the night's confusion was caused over what was up for appeal at Thursday's hearing. Homrowners felt the entire site plan was appealed and the CC1uncil could ea.sUy stop Sambo's and other problems by disapproving it. OIAN•l CO.\IT DAILY PILOT O~ANGf. COAST PU I LISHIHQ COMl"AN't Robtrt N. 'N1•l Pre.kl .. r i nd l"uti1J111ef J1clr R, Cvrl1'( \tlco Pr•ld1nt •noil o_.11 Mt,.... f 1horn11 K11¥i l' Editor Th1m1i A. Mwtphin1• Ml lllOlntl EdllOt' ~By Zinngrabe Race Challenger Edewards Seeks Quality Learning Incumbent Bauer Seeking Precise Cost Controls Lobbyists for the automobile clubs or northern and Southern California -who opposed Prop. 18 last fall because it diverted 1a10line taxes to mass transit -endorsed the Deddeh· measure.· "You could then condition that permit to restrict the re1taurant hours," \Voodruff explained. Councilmen 'unanimously took that ac- tion by approving the precise ..plan. bul requiring a conditional use permit far any .restaurant.s. in ll Al1n Oir•i" W•t ono,..e COl.nly ~d!ltt I lllcumbenl -J. Zlnngr1be bu served on lhe Ocean View board for 11ix years. He owru and operates a convalescent hospital Jn Huntington Beach. Q. What prOlfam. -or policy cbaq;ea would you llh? "AJ a member of the Ocean View board, I am eilremely proud of changes made in the Administration. policies, and educational programs of our district. 1 Cully support these changes and believe the improved level of pupil performance, staff excellence, responsi· ble management and community support ha1 come as a dlfect result of theAe chan1ea. The emphasis on program e1- cellence and fl.seal responsibility must continue." Q. How do you h~tl about unlflc1llon? ''Continuity or educational programming and financial advantages of unification bring it lo the foreground as a possibility for our community. Additional benefits In terms of providing our schools witb community identity. a staff with ad- ditional flexibility and school programs with wider latitude for Individua l at· tentlon to each child makes unification attractive. This compler iasue cannot be solved, however. by the mere resolu- tion tbat it is right for our children. Fluctuating tax bases among the five elementary dlltricb; the dividing of materials, bul\dlnga, and resources and the wllllngneu of individual school com· munities lo absQrb others or be absorbed maJr.e it a most difficult issue to unravel to everyone's aatlsfactlon. 1 am in com· plete accord with the continuation of inW-dillrlcl mettings to arrive at pro- poul! 1ultable lo lhe districts involved, and will contin~ working towardli this end. It i.9 important that we arrive at a workable solution, rathtt than have one imposed upon w by an indifferent state a1ency." Q. How do )'Oil feel about ttacber tenure? "While I have always supported the need lo protect the job of the able teacher , it has become increasingly ap- parent that the tenure system tends to protect the lea1 able teacher. thus preventing professional teach Ing organizations, school districts, parents and our children, from receiving the best qualified teachers. Certainly, in today's competitive market, we are t>n· UUed to the very best and we should have the right to remove or replace those teachers who are not competitive or compatible with our mcthoda: of teaching children.·• Q. How 11·ould a voucbtt 1)·1tem or !!llatewlde property ta1 afftet local 1cbool flnance1? "In the past two years Ocean View has 1uc00isfully bid for lM tax- payer's dollar. Other districts not as fortunatf are courting bankruptcy. The voucher S)'l\.em on a curaory alance, appears'fu bf' a ~'orkable solution lo tilt Hnance dilemma ; Mv.·itver, this syatem also has questions and loopholes Ocean V~w taxpayers must con&.ider. JU main danser ii tht llmltlf\I of board effeetlvenea and the consequent ION . of local control. Additionally, the vouchtr aystem now under dl&cuss lon would not suppQrt the e11fttn, Oct11on View Pfl)- gram. llow would our dl1trict auament Its revenue? By tu!Uon? Many quti«t.lons r1ust be answered clearly befcre I could support the proposed voucher !)'stem. Ot'tan Vit.w school board candidate Vaug.tm Edeward! Is the challenger in this three-man race. He i1 chief opera· tions officer for a management con- sult.ant firm. Edewards did not ans\\'er the specific questions posed by the League of Woi:nen Voter1. Jrutead, he submitted the followlng: ~1r. Edewards' first concern for l he Ocean View School District is to Insure that each child receives every benefit in preparing him for bis higher education. It Is his conviction th1t the type or education each child receives at the elementary level may affect their suc- cess in higher education and ultimately their future as adult!. It is hJs goal to make sure tnat the children of Ocean View rttf!ive the best education possible. Mr. Ede wards hu expressed his deep concern about the way Ocean View School District is financed. He feels !hat ii i.s time to make a change. It Is his conviction that the district !hould eJjamlne the constralnt1 upon It, define its priorities and requirements, and con- struct a plan whereby the taxpayer can be relieved (If some of the burden and informed as to what hla financial role will be in the future . Vaughn Edewards feels that the cssen· 11al purpose of Ocean View School District, ls to educate and train your children. It is his conviction that this should be a combined effort on the part of the trustees, administration, teachers, and you, the parents. It is hll desire to encour1ge and offer decisive leadership In this area . Mr. Edewards offers to the voters of Ocean View School District a choice. ll is his desire to offer to you the resource <lf hil clear thlnklng and lm· aginalion to a N!!p(lnslbllity that demands this attention. Hann~ Bill Asks -. Boost in Loans Rep. Richard T. Hanna (D·Anahelrn) has introduced legislation aimed at boosting by nearly $1 bl!llon Small Business Administration funding for Joans to unemployed aerospace workers \\-'ho want to set up their own businesses . Hanna is also lntroduclnj a blll that \1-'0uld permit the Small BUJ!ness Invest· ment Corporation, an SBA 1ubsldiar}', 10 guarantfe loans to the unemployed per$0ns up to 90 percent. He said there are from fl0,000 to 75,000 aerospace executive level peraoontl out of work nationally with about 16,000 of them in the Les Angelet-Oranl' Coun- ty area. Oct1n View. ln our status a1 1 low IAx base achoo! dilttlct would perh1ps benefit from addlUonal monle1 under the 1tatewtde property tu. But our neighbors ln Seal Beach Ind HunUn(tOn Beach may be required to rain their property tu. or make substantial cuts in e:ri1t1n1 programs. 'nil! pr(lpotal may &OUnd good on the surface. but I feel it nttds more public trpo1ure and furthtr objfCtlve study bf.fore more definitive oplniotll WI bf: reached." Incumbent Ocean View Tr11Stee Ralph H. Bauer , also serves on the board of trustees of the HUDlingtOn Beach Union High Schoel D.lrict. He is a research chemist. ' ' Q. What prognm or poUcy changes woald you like? "I would like to see a more precise method ol measuring cost.effeclj_veness of school programs. The citizens and educators both need to know exactly how effective a given program la as measured by performance against specific objectives. and these evaluate the rost of achieving those obje<:tlves in terntli ot the real value to the community." Q. How do you feel about unlflcallon? ''I believe the Huntington Beach Union lfigh School Dl!trlct shoold be unified in thrtt sections, which adhere as cl~e to the following boundaries as the law and educatklnal e<>mmon sense dictate: -City of Westminster and City of Seal Beach. -City of Huntington Beach. -City of Fountain Valley." Q. How do you feel abo ut te aeber tenure? "I believe int.he basic phlloS<lphy of tenure to protect teache ra from capricious or politically mot Iv ate d dismissal. However, I al!o believe that the present tenure law make~ It ~o difficult to remove an Incompetent teacher that the incompetents are seldom di1missed. I believe lhat dismllSfll pro- ceedings &hould be removed from a formal court hearing and be given to the boards of ltustees of the district." Q. How wollld a vo ucber sy1ltm or 1t.atewlde property tu •fled local scbool finances? "I am unalterably opposed to the voucher system. If \\'e inslitute it ~·e ~·ill destroy public education. All school children in California should have the same basic level of financial support. A low wealth district should receive help 10 that ita expenditure per child ls equivalent lo that of a high wealth district. The property tales should be equalized throughout the state such that people with comparable properlY\ should · pay the same for education no matter where they live. If local citizens \Vish to lax themselves to impro,·e their school system they should be a110,1·ed to do so.·· Wind Ense mble To Play Tonight The Pacific \\'ind Ensemble from the t:niversily ol Pacific guuta at Huntin1· Ion Beach High School tonight for a pro. grim of claulcal music:. Ticket. to tht c<>nctrl. tchedul«! fQr 8 p.m. 1111 the auditorium, are availablt at the door for $1. Tht »coember group will perform works by Beethoven, Glanrunl, Joio, Groa1, Dabl and Smllh .and other ~m­ posers. Also Included In lhe Pacific "'Jnd .En- aemble's tour ls a clinic for iastrumental . . . ~ Budget Shoeks Sheriff, Welfllr e Ask Hikes The flr1t two county departments~to outline their needs for the 1971·72 fiscal year have asked for increases totaling "5 million .. The lheriff-coroner'1 departtnent was the first. .to explain Us needs to Orange County's administrative staff Thursday. Sheriff James 1'1uaick said the cost or operating h!J department would be up $1. milllon next year. This morning, County Welfare Director Granville Pt!(Jples said costs for his departmf!nt would be up about $4 million. Peoples e1timated that the total "·elfare budget would be up to $98 mil- lion from the current year'a $63 minion, 0( the $98 million the county will have lo pay about $28 mlJUon. Peoples blamed the faltering economy for most of the incre<1se. ~1usick said Thursday the cost of operating his department ~·ill be higher because of the pressure of population. He said the cowity jail is ngw over- crowded. Oran1e County Supervisors who have been eyeing cuts in county eicpendi· lures for the coming year were not on hand to hear the bad news. They'll gel it officially later this month. --·--· .A!b1rt w. l1t11 M.1od1re EdllDr H .. tl .. t9• .... 0Mce 17t75 ••• ,, ••• 1 • .,.,4 M1lllRf A4clr1t1t P.O. 1011; 790, t2&4t O,_, Offket Ltt\llUI l•ch : 122 F«•t A-C•ll Mn1: ill Wat .. y llrMt Hlwport l11c~: JUl N..,.Po:lrt 11111~ S.n C""*"": )'J:S Horth !!I Ct"'lnt Alll DAILY l"ILOT, w!I~ Whldl It ~!NI '9111 H-.l"r•o, ls pWjlllled dilly PU,t S- d 1y 1r1 Ul>lfl lO lllltioo.. foO' L""°'1 aMClilo Hewi:w; 811ch, eti.11 ·M••• Hvntltll• e .. c11. FOl/flllln Vllley, Stn C'-"/ C.pi11T1no •nd S1oa1tt11c•, tir11 wllll - TIOierll l nlUlorl, l"rlrw:l«NI pr1ntlll9 . .i.nt • 11 »O Wnt l i t ltneL CO.II M-. TMpH• (714J '42-4J21 Cl...m-4 A4"rthl .. '42•1671 eo,y.1'f!r, lf71, Or1ntM1 CNIJ .-UMl1Pllllf C.O....ny. Ho MWt. 1~. l\M1r1t.,.., edllerlel """"' « •d'Vwth-h ......... '1'11Y llO r~U<~ .wllllolu/ ._Ill ,,.,. mlulon er copyrlftl; .-. !ICO!'ld CLl11 -tloc OIJd 1t H~ ltldli •nd a.r.11 ~. c.u,..,,... ~ ... tiy c1 .... i.r IJ.JS ....,.,1111,; 11y mell Q.11 mon1111.,, mlllt•rv <1atn.11om, 12.2! .._..,ty. Glass Top Tables • • • On Sale Now! SPICIAL $154 H4J. $171. -•llwlly ..,..., .ood ...._.., 4 .... no4, ""' h !M -I• a •'-..,. !al.la. Don't mlos .. op. porhllllhy to on quaUty et 1 r•••c:llble Pfkt. A...n.t.le lo rtia foltow!IMJ llnloha" Alltl11•• Gold -Oki SpcmiM -DllfrosHcl OUn -lklldc -V.rdt Grffl -Antlquo Yllow. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAG E Nl WIJORT aTOlll Ol'IN PlllDAY 'TIL t NIWPORT llU.CH 17J7 w .. 1eAH Dr. MZ·ZOIO OPIN fltlDAT 'TIL t rr.f'IUIMGI lltwior DKl .. an A""1olll-ID-NSID INTERIORS LAGUNA HAClf". J.45 N°'"' C-t Hwy, 4t°'"'U1 OPIN FRIDAT 'TIL t ll'hot!• Ton ,,... MNf~ef Or•l'lf• Cfff!ty J40-1 26l iludenu at Fountai.a \'alley JUlh ScbooL ·---------------------------------------- • ' My Lai Ent pty I Potatoes Gr01v at Massac re Site By ROBERT E. SULUV AN UPI l M" Wrltw l'tfY W, 8AMLET t1, VlETNAJ'tf -Nobody lives •t ~fy Lal 4 now. 'lbt center of the town we.re villagers were ma ssacred three years aao ia now a potato field. A pile of bricks that was once a home Ls overgrown; a;ra~s covers an old bunker. A TINY BOY from a nearby hamlet walks through My Lai 4 undisturbed by thouihts of what happened tbert. He grins at an American vi!ltor and says ''Okay. No sweaL'' -the only English he knows. The boy lives in Tu Cung; a grass but resettlement hamlet surroonded by sharp wooden spikes about a half-mile [rom My Lai. There, tome ol the survivors or March ts, 1968, talk freeJy to an American rtporttr. Maj Nguyen Kht.lm. 3$, the rtlaUvely new d.l!lrict chief, translates in his halUng Engu..b. ?tfo!l or the people In the hamlet have already learned by radio that U. Wiiiiam L. Calley has been coovlct.ed of murd~ for leading hia patrol through My Lai 4 that day three years ago. NGUYEN KHOA, 38, now a mllitia leader, says ht ran out of My La! just before the American commander led his men in. but hi! five-year-old son was killed. He has oo opinioo on wbat. justice should d!!al Callr:y. "It's a vr:ry old story and I don't like to remember,'' he says. "I don't know anything about that lieutenant." Khoa adds, "We had communists in the village then. They fight against thr: Americans. That's why it h&ppened. U I was angry with that lieutenant, thr:n I would be angry with the communists also because if we didn't have com- munists in the hamlet it would not have happened." MRS. HA THI QUY, 46, who says she was wounded in the back that day and Jost a 24-year-old daughter and !ix·yr:ar-0Id grandson, rec&lls, ''That hap- pened a long time ago." She sa ys she was angry with the Americans for a short lime just after that day. But she v.·as too scared to be very angry. And now? "I don't have any opinion or idea at all." An older man, Phung Tiet, 65, says he hid in a bunker during the shoot- ing and ran away immediately after. returning three days later to find his granddaughter. Phung Hue, now six years old, still in 1 My Lai bunker. He Is angry, but he allows for much doubt. ''IF THE STORIES arr: right. ii il's trur:, then that Amuica.n commander is a very violent man and he shouJd go to jail," he said. Tl et 10.!lt six members of his family that day. The children in Tu Cung village shout "okay" and flash the peace sign they leam!d from an American Anny engineering unit building a new road past 1'.iy Lai. There are very few Viet Cong around. says 1'.laj. Kheim, and there are no problems bet\\•een the Americans and thl! villagr:rs. "Could Lieutenant Calley come back here and work for you, major, ri1ht here 1t Tu Cung and !\1y Lai?" "No swr:at." -Nixon Intervention Met With Worldwide Suppo11 - From \\'ln Services Response to President Nixon's In· ·tervr:ntion in the case of Lt. William L. Calley Jr., a name to remain engraved in ' Amr:ric.an hilltory -ooe way or another -was being voiced around the world today. The remarks were generally in support of Ni:icon's decision to free from the stockade the officer convicted of murder· ing 22 Vietnamese civillallll pending ap- pl!al of his case. Some were against it, even among Gls in the field. The voices heard from Vietnam to Washington, D.C. also i n di ct e d the system and leadeMJ that sent Lt. Calley to war to kill and then prosecuted him for IL For the first time, the Calley family also spoke out. ''It is our hope and prayer that the decision of the court can be overruled in some way, for Rusty's sake and the sake of the country," said ihs sister, Mrs. !\iarian Keesling. "We v.•ere hr:arlsick at the verdict of the court,'' she said in Gainesville, Fla., adding thanks to Preiident Nixon and millions of American sympathizeMJ. Legislators in 'Yashington largely cheered the President's decision to Jet Calley move about Ft. Benning under light guard. "Clearly it is unjust to prosecutr: a man for the acts of a nation," said Sen. William B. Saxbe (R-Ohio). "Fighting means killing .. .'' North Carolina Gov. Bob Scott declared in • telegram to the President. He also urged him to grant executive clemency and hasten withdrawal of all troops from Vietnam. · Controversial Dr. Benjamin Spock, speaking in Pueblo, Colo., bitterly criUclzed the system as hypocritical. Attorney General Ramsey C11.rk, •d· dressing a group at Brandeis University in New York, said an officer who kills unarmed civilians in warUmt should be tried Jor murder. He uid he seu no grounds for clemen· cy. A large proportion of UM: comments heard indicated Lt. Calley ahould not bear a martyr's role, but the proaea1tion should be borne by the highest com· menders of the war. Frequent references wtre made to the post-World War ti Nuremberg trials and the hangings of lr:aders who had totally lost contact and control ovr:r their men. New men in Lt. Calley's old platoon now at Fire Support Base Liz, lar1ely supported him. "We are over herr: to do a job,•• said Spec.14 Robe:rt Peteshl, 20, of Yonkers. N.Y., "you can't describe it. It's terrible." The response differed in othtr unlts. "This deal with thr: President shows he can do anything he wants," said helicopter pilot John Glisky, 22, of Seat. tie, charging Nixon can ignore law and the people's w111. The spectre of My Lal still haunts and influences the Vietnam War more than three years later in different ways. "Hell no," remarked Spec./4 Petesh1 when asked if the Calley verdict changed his attitude toward opening fire . Exposure of the massacre has been benr:ficial in another way, 1ccordlng to Sgt. Carl L. McClafferty, 19, of Los Angeles. "We get the people out of the villages and tell them if they don't tell us where the booby ltaps are we're going to pull another My Lal," Sgt. McClafferty said. "It works ." 'Spiritual, Not Hoek' ~WO Coast Solons Hit Youth Vote Special t• lff DAR.Y PILOT SACllAMEN'l'O -Giving people the vote at 11 and 1Ull denying them ri&hta to marry freely, drink and siln contract3 would be a auel bou perpetrated on their maturity. This is a fundament.al tellOll why two Orange County leglslaton joined dissenters Thursday as California's con· sUtutional amendment passed by a 60 to 9 margin. As5emblymen Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach! and Robert Burk< (R- HunUngton Buch) wanted full rlghta and privilegea of adulthood contained in the amendment .. A similar Senate bill passed Wed- nesday, but without the full·fiedged reduction to age 18 of drinking, among other over·21 rights. • ORAN&E \ . COVNT't • \ -\ • \ • • H bAJL Y PfL1il' S 5~ DIE.GO COUNTY t!uip Pent!ldon . . .-J-_.i,-3'/a Milu ,/ Siate 6eW!~ Nuclear R.wcr Pt111t: DAIL T f'ILOT frMWI ,.... SHADID AREA INDICATES BEACH RE LEASED FOR PUBL IC USE BY THE PRESIDEN T Action Includes Land Extending Up Si n M1teo Creek lnl1nd of Coast f rHw1y Jn Sin 0 1990 County Nixon Land Turnover Riles Coast Ranchers Nixon, Reagan Meet on HEW, Welfare Views "Some of our phony liberals are saying we want to make our young people equal -but not enUrely equal," Badham By JOHN VALTERZA for years. The leaseholders recently won President Nixon mel with Gov. Reagan said when reached Thursday afternoon. ot tM o.11, '11" It•" a five.year renewal or the.ir lease, but at the Western While House In San "I lhink lbat is 1 cruel ho•• .., Presldr:nt Nixon may have scored 1 1 Clemente today to hear his views on ...... apparent y are uncerta n as to it.s \'alue. our ~ung -pie." points with open sn,.ce champions in T k ll . 'd d toughening up work requirements for ,, v ,.--"-o ma e ma ers worse , m1sgu1 e Badham said what the Assembly did, his historic opening of beach and valley land developers have besieged the welfare recipients. in efiect, was put the issue on the lands near San Clemente Wednesday, Austins for information on Ute land, The meeting also gave Nixon.a chance ballot to allow citizens to decide whether but several long-time ranchers in the under the false belief that lt will be to iron out a long smoulderlil& feud affected area are hopping mad. belw R and lb De -~ l II will be the: voUng age. I ed r 1 · edi 1 1 een eagan e pm Wien Sa.n Mateo Canyon, the 3,400-acre Pac up or s• e unm a e y. ......_ of Health, Education and Welfare. "And at the u.me time they advocated agricultural area included in the land "We don 't even own it, yet all thOse HEW has lhreatened to cut off '700 raWicalton of an amendment to the deemed surplus to Camp Pendleton developers have call!d us and driven million in federal welfare fund1 to U.S. Constitution which would preclude needs, iocludea: several busy ranches, us cruy. I Ilnally took the phone off California wiless Reagan b r in Is the expressJon of opinion by California including poinsettia and vegetable farms the hook at midnight Wednesday. We payments to needy families hlto con- voters," M added. whteh have used leased acreage for had enough;" she said. formily with federa l regulaUom. ..... years. Ee key, who Is on his other ranch HEW Secretary Elliot L. Richardson Assemblyman Burke joined his col· What compounds the matter thi.IJ week at Encinitas, was not available for im-was l!lcheduled to sit In on the aeulbn league on this poinl Is that no specific boundaries have been mediate comment. His aides there said along with Caspar Weinberger. a chief "One of the problems Is that this announced by a Navy department assign· he was studying the Presidential order. Nixon budget manager and domulic ad· acUon will place it on the ballot next ed lo set the borders on the surplus Ironically, each Christmas E c k e y viser -who formerly served a.s Director year," Burke said. "In the meantime, land. decorates the Western White House with of Finance in California. if that federal change is put on the And ranchers like Paul Eckey and his bright flowers. Reagan, who said in J anuary that ballot, the voter will be 1sked whether his staff, who have farmed the area San Clemente city fathers learned of Nixon appeared to be "out of touch'' to allow the l1S-year-0ld vote when it sincr: Ult late 1930s really don't know the offer or the 3,400-acre canyon and with the naUonal feeling on welfare, alrtady has been." what will happen to a $300.000.plus in· six miles of prime beach late in the has suggested the current welfare crisis "It is really a confused picture in vestment. afternoon on Wednesday. could be eased by turning the acrews ttrms of what in the world ls going Eckey's foreman Ivan Austin raises Meeting In a study session late r that on eligibility requirements for recipients on," BW'ke concluded. 1cres of poinsettias for the Christmas evening (talled for other matters) coun· and forcing all able-bodied recipients Assemblyman Badham noted he has market. · cllmen expressed keen Interest in the lo work. encouraged and supported the l8-yr:ar-0ld ''We're so mad." said Auslln's wife, Pres.idenrs offer, even examining the Nixon 'made It clear Tuesday ln a vote, plus making 18 the complete age 1'-iildred, "that we want to call the Presi· legal methods In acquiring the canyon. lelter to Chairman Wilbur Mills of th• of majority. dent personally, but I am alraid of Several councilmen said the canynn House Ways and Means Committee he He says this should be 1 full package what I'd say." would make an ideal county regional favored proposals that "strengthen the of cllli..enship and responsibility, not 1 The Austins have run the San Onofre park or golf coune -even a wilderness 'mployment and work incentive pro- toftn concession on vot.Jng in lbelf. hi"biiraniiiichiiiioiiriiiilbiieiiiiEciiiike~y;;;i;poiiinseiiiiiilliii.aiiiiriiaiinchiiiiiiiiioprii•iiseiirviieii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiviiisiiioiinsii'ii' iiiniihiii'iisiiwiieiilliiariieiiriiefiioiinn.ipiilaniiii.iiiiiiit Burke noted ·Asaemblyman John V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) tried Thursday to get the m1jority at 11 issue inserted back into the amendmtnt before I.he vote. 'Ille full majojtty claUJt: Involving mar· riage without ·parental consent, full respollllibility in courts of Jaw, 1bllity to enter into legal contracta, and other factors was deleted in committee hear- ings. Daily Pilot Sets Special Listing Of Church Rites The DAILY PILOT is planning a special story to run Wednel!lday an- nouncing speciaJ services schedu1ed by Orange Coast churches and tr:mple1 marking the primary days of Holy Week, Easter Sunday and ~ Passover. The final deadline for all materi1J to.., run In this story will be Monday at 5 p.m. Any material recr:ived after that time will probably not be included. The items should include name of thr: church, address, service times, pastor or rabbi's name, sermon and any other material essential to the services. Please ·be briel. The articles can be submitted to any DAO..Y PILOT office. Addresses include: 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mua; 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach; %22 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach; 17875 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach; 305 N. El Cimino Rei l, San Clemente. ANNUAL SPRING SALE STEREO IQUIPMENT SALE DAYS-APRIL 2 Thru APRIL 9 All Equipment Offered Here-in Is Priced Incredibly Low .To Insure Sale! All Prices Are Below Discount or Special Sales Seen Elsewhere . RECEIVERS-AMPLIFIERS-TUNERS 11 • •1~ • Will COIT ... CLAR ICON 1S w1H At'flp.-Pr1 '"'P , ••••• S it {"tw l HAll.MAN.KAROON 12~1 4 0 w1tt ,,, •• , S26t FM R•cur. l~1wl IOGEN ;.f.400 Amp-'r••fflp •••••••••• SJOO lh1ll•·in) DYNACO ,,A,T.-4A ''•·•mp ••••••.•• , SlJI (d•mo ! OYNACO ST.110, 120 ..... 11..M.S .•••••••••. $205 (f11d•·in) FISHER l<·IOl·O Amp, ''''"'P •••••••••• SJ2t (tr1d1 i") FISHER )(.101 .c lnf19r•f•d At'flp •••••••• Sl't (fr1d1°inl SCOTf lSO·I , i:M, M'X Tu~•r •••••••••• Sift llt1d1°inl MclNTOSH MX I 10 l1111•r • , • , •• , , , , , • , • S4ft pr1·1m, (tr1d1·i11) HARMAN·KAROON Clt1tio11 II •••••• , , •• SJSO 100 w1tt1 RMS Am, ltr•d1·i11) --) ;:.....__, ll"lllNO lALI $35 $138 $49 $98 $142 $85 $46 $49 $99 $99 TAPE RECORDERS-DECKS COIT ... SONY 560 Avlo·r•'+'•n• p•rl•bl• r•cord•r • , S44f ld•l'flo) NORELCO 450 C111•H• t•cord•r ••••• , •• Sl71 (tr1d•·inl SONY TC-I 1.Tr1ck R•cord1r ••••• , ••• ,, , SIJS (d.,"ol SONY 650-4. 1 l'!lotor J1ci: •• , • , , • , , • , ••• S44t ld1mol SONY TC.II C11 •H• r1cord•r •·•·•··••• S 10 jd•l'!IOI SONY TC-110 C1111tf• 1•cord1r •••••••••• Sttt w/r1mot• 1pkr1. (d•t'flo) HARMON.KAROON C1111!11 Oeck •••••• Sl60 !dtt'flo! SONY TC.t04A 'o•l1bl1 ···•·••••••·•··• S14t R1cord1r !iiltl'flol SONY TC.70 C•n•llt ll1cord1r ••••• ,, ••• S 10 l1t1d1·in) ---- SPEAKERS I $226 $51 $79 $299 $38 $138 $113 $50 $62 . Happening Aides Adamant TUJINTABLES GARRARD 30 .....•.....•.•.......... s Jt I new I GARRARD SL f5·1 ••••••••••••.•••• ,, , $12t !d1fflol $27 $78 ~~ AR·2X (dtmol ••••••••• •••• , ••••• ••••• $114 $69 EMPIRE tOOOM 6 r1n•di1r11 , ,, •••••• ·• • Snt $199 l"tw d•mo1l By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of Ille 01111 P11't 511ff Laguna Beaclf organizers of an Easler 1pirltual festival in the Inyo County desert denied Thursday they were putting on a f't'Ck festival, and said they v;ould not \\'Ork with 1nyone \\'Ith such in· ten lions. The disclaimer came In t~ wake or ;in injunction by county officials against Los Angeles organizers of 1 r()(.k festival, v.ilo have retently advertised that the "top fifty rock groups" within the coun- try were invited to pr:rform. ··The idea ·that we·~ putti"i on .t roct festival is simply not true." said Dion Wright. 1 Dana Point artisl. "\Yr: were -and still are -planning a spirllua'i' pilgrimage and we do not want a rock festival ." Wright said lhe festlvlll will be he.Id on... 80 acres of land near the ghost town. Ballarat, which lies jll,l out.side the :tOUthwest border of De11th Valley N1tional Monument. · Beth Lteds of t.a1una Beach sald the spiritual pilgrimage will foster "onr: to one eommunlcatlon" and will be a "swap meet of knowledge." Officials have warned the tvent could be disastrous. She noted that no stages will be built and that 1ny music aL the: gathering would be from personal Instruments brought by participant.I. Wright detailed facllltle11 that, he said, •re being made available 1t the desert site: -A spring on lbe land delivers 19 gallons of water .per leCOOd. and arganizen have rtnted two 10,000 1allon v.·ater storage tanks. -Medical fac:IUUt:r will be coordinated by Emle Veg1, adminl1trator of lb• Laguna Beach Free Oink:. Vea• Jttuaed that he ns orisnizlng • medical unit on his own, ind not with the: partlcipallon of lhe tnUre Fr~ Olnlc starr. -SAnltaUon facilille1 are now btin& prepared. Two skip loaders ire dlga:ln( latrines on the site, Wright said. Wright r:ncouraged all fuUvalgotrs to brine some form or l!lhade, wat.tr, salt tablets, footwear, snake hilt! kits, foods that do not require cooking, and plenty of gas for automobiles. Noting that plants and animals in the desert area "are as. alive a1 you are," Wright asked people to disturb the land u lltlle a• poaaible. "We c&n create peace by Jivint It and respeclln& all life," be added. Wright said that 1 few people hsve already arrived at Ballarat and L-00-- slderable numbers should arrive Thur&- day and Friday and rema in U\rough Euttr SUnday. MW Letds saJd thl.t cooperation by local residents and officlala In the llAUarat ma had been ''very good." '"Ibey att.rn to be excited about a 1plrltual f..UVal," she added- Inyo COunty officials, even though they have. a court's temporary rtstralnlng l'.lrder against a rock festival, said tarUer this week not much could be done to at.op any largr: tnflui of people. "And If It h1 a spiritual festival, we'll .lust have to tte whit Mppens and hope ll goe1 well," one official added . . EM,IRE 4'1 .......................... Sitt fn•wl SONT TIS lOOOA w/,l'l'I• 1,m 1•<1rl • , • , •• $407 ld1mo l G.ARRARO SLSSI • •• • • • • • • •• •• • •• ,.,.,. S St fdtMO ) '" Mi 11ic~'"''' lir1d1·!11) .....•...... s '' STEREO CONSOLES SCOTT JSOl St1•1• Co,,,p11.t ••••••••••• , $Jlt 71" cusroM"'tAAFTED S•~·· Con11/1 •••• SJ9t ' $95 $286 $41 $25 $127 $122 l ~ all antic IOSE tOI '• w/•q111 1;,,, ··•·•··••·•·•••• S47' $345 I n1w d•fflo1) IOZAKT1Mpol •••••••••••••••••••••••• Siii $125 {n1w d1mo1l AR·l I n1w d1mo) , • , , , , •• • ·, • • • • • •• • • • SJJI $ 150 \.ANCEii: S/C5 12" J·w•y , , • , , , , , • , •••• $110 $85 I n11w J 1mol Jll C•nlury lJtOO ••••••••• ,, ••••••••• SlM /lt•dt·lnl ALT EC V1l1"cl• Veic1 11 Th11l11 , , , • , , , , SJ4t I lr1d•·in1) OYNACO A·25 ••• , •••••••••••• , , , , , , • , S 14 EV 12"' )•WIY '"''''"' •••••••••••••••••• s 17t ltted•·inl • music $210 $248 $50 $42 445 E. 17th St .. Costa MoN . Open Sund•y• 12·5, Salurday• 9~, DaUy 12·9, Closed W.tlnosd•y• Du11/G1rrard/Shuro/T eac/Fishor /Harma n-Kardon/Piclering/Shorwood/ A~oc/Maranh Wharfdolo/S oundcrofhmon/Sony /A. R./Boul/Mclntosh/Scott / JBL/Empiro ' • • DAILY PILOT \ \ •· I ~ps W eather1ne11 Play the Odds By THOr.tAS MURPHlNE Of .... 0.UJ l"I... Slttf W h\sker Assault WEATRERWIRE CALLING ' The Clll" radio droned along v.'ith report.! of th• ne~-s until finally, it came time for the word on ICOnditions of the day. The -weather. A new voice chattered aver the. airways: "Clear inland with little 1mog and a light Santa Ana wind condiLion prevail4 Ing," the voice intoned. "Slightly cooler along the coast with our only problem right now being dense fog along I.he aouthern section of the coastline ... " Barber Guy Mudd of Kirk wood, ?t1o., is caught in action as he tries_ to break world speed shaving title. He shaved 83 fac es in hour, fallmg short of record of 130 claimed by English barber. Heavy Fighting Shakes * Egad, thought I. I'm driving right In lhe middle of our only problem aru. Dense fog right here along the Orange Co.Qt. I rechecked the rear view mirror. The motorcycle that had been puttering along up Coast Highway 1 mile and one-half behind w11 sWI visible. You could read the "Honda 350" labt.l on Us gu tank. Unstable Jordan Peace LOOKING TO SEA, it w11 obvious thai three gnat.a were circlln& li11Ueaaly over the Caalno 1t Avalon. other sect.ions of Catalina Island were fairly \lisible. Indeed, if this w1s fog along our coast. J waa driving in a moat unu.ual weather pocket. * Of course, that could be. The vq:aries of weather predicting along the Or1n1e Coat 11e well known. You can drive out of sunshine in Huntington Beach southerly and abruptly strike a blanket of the stuff in Newport thick enoua;h to stuff pillows with. Then from Corona del Mar on farther south. you might again be basking under Old Sol. As you drive down the dip al Emerald Bay on the edge of LallJna, your head ornament may suddenly disap- pear from view. SELDOM 00 YOU get much fog for too long at Dana Point. The wind usually takes care of that. But at Dobtny or San Clemente. maybe yes or maybe no. Fog a;ets whims in those regions.. * Indeed, weather predictina in cur By United Press lnttniaUonal Jordanian government spokesmen said today the Palutinian guerrillas had open- ed an offensive and that heavy fighting was reported in several parts cf the country. Jordan 1lso reported the border town of Ramtha came under heavy Wicka 'I declare free apuch for all!' machinegun, rocket and mortar attack a1ain from Syrian territory. Reporta from Amman indicated that the guerrilla offeniive appeared to be puahing Jordan toward another civil war. The Jordanlan army and the guerrillas fought a nine--day civil war last Sep- tember and there have been frequent clashes since then. The charge that unidentified troops were firing on Jordan frmm Syrian ter· ritory wu the second in 24 houri. A spokesman also said Thursday infantry forces based in Syria attacked govern· ment position! in Jardan and wtre beaten off. but he did not 1ay whether they were guerrillas or Syrian. Syrian has pledged full support for the guerrillas in the fighting that ha' split the Arab world. King Hw1ein of Jordan has called for an Arab summit conference to try to end the dispute. But an Egyptian call for a lower ranking conference to try to end the fighting appeared to be getting more support. A spokesman for the Jordanian lnter1or Ministry reported that Palestinian guer- rillas blew up and set ablaze the lrans- Ar ab i an pipeline (TAPLlNE), an American-owned line which carries Saudi Arabian crude oil lo the Lebanese coast via Jordan and Syria. The spokesman said the blaze, 11 miles - northeut of Amman, was brought under con trol eight hours later. A military rtgion is t1 cbancy game at be1t. I envy \he radio weatherman. He mai:u a strong and clear prediction. Then if he's dead wrong, he can jump right back on the radio "'aves v.·i lh a new "updated'' weather report. Never mind 1poJoglzing for hit earlier inconsistency v1hich caused the crepe paper floats to fall apart under a wet deluge jUlt before the homecoming parade. NEWSPAPER WEATHERMEN usually lack the advantage of the radio update. They get cne shot at their predicting and then it'.!i bun& out there for everybody to s«. Irs the soggy paper on the porch. folks, that always predicts, ••sunny Tomorrow." •chi11a on Mars" Europe Goes All Out for April 1 LONDON (UPtl -The British Broad4 casting Corp. ~BBC) paid a 30-min~te tribute lo a man who does not exist for y,•inning a prize that does nol exist. divlduahi cbserved April Fool's Day with tr1clitional hou.es. I've alwa ys had a pet theory that the best Y.'ay to predict y,·eather along cur Oran ge Cout is to stick your head cut the window. And if you really want to be safe. predict only where the window is . The Jtalian state radio network in4 terrupted a program ,.,.ith the news China had landed two men and a woman on Mar.s. The BBC'1 radio tribute to •·Gerald Burley" for winning the •·Ettore Savini Memorial Prize" was one of the most elaborate. Espeetally ii it's foggy out there. A. West Berlin ne\\·spaper said the go\·emment had authoriztd late night television sex films to help curb the falling birth rate. Four months in the planning, the pro- gram included taped tributes to the sup- ix>.sed anthropoligist and philanthropis t from a numb~ of well known persans, including violinist Yehudj 1t1enuhin and tht bishop of Southwark. ..\\le taped 1 piece from each con· tributor. \\'ho knew what it \V85 to be u.sed for , and il is remarkable how '''ell the.y romplemented eacll other with no conflictlng bit!!: or imagined facts." said Leonard Pearcey who con~ived the program. Chevalier l\lending PAS.IS (UPI) -Entertainer f',faUfiet Otevalier, 82, waa released from the Americll1l hospital or Paris Thursday after 13 days for treatment of laryn&il.iJ and for a series of tests. The state-run French radio network said the six Common Market countries , had decided to change their traffic laws and introduce Brit.iah4 style left side of the road driving. Throughout Europe Th u r s d a y , ne>A'Spapers. radio stations and in· ............... eK.k.-~·......,..,. Cold Front Hits Midwest Mercury Drops 40 Degrees on Plains; Fair Elsewhere 11.S. Summarv ' Sk lM ,..., .. ft_. llLr !~y '' ,...,. \ -·"''" "'""""' 11i ... 11v ,,..,., f .. Jlll "•'ti--..l ot(l•Olll '"° rou !n tom• ,.,,,"° ''"" " ... ~ Soii.,..,,, (1l dPtftl. T~•tt .... 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" •lt~-..f. v. .. " S1t•tMt~l1 • " It \.Wll ~ " .... l••• ,,,.,. • " St n 01-" " !f t l'tlM Kii " • W11lll"9~ " • Winn!-" II Co1n1nunal Gt-aves Pakistan Rebels' Slaughter Told JESSORE. Eut Paklst.an (AP) -Vic· tima of Pakistan's civil war were being buried in communal graves today in this sunbaked city 25 miles from the Jndian fronlie(. Olficers of Sheik Mujibur Rahman's Freedom army of Bangla Desh -tbe new name they have gi.ven to East Pakistan -claim government. troops stormed out of their cantonment on the out.skirU: of town and killed scores of unarmed men, women and chlldren. Many Punjabi merchants from West Pakistan have b e e n slaughtered in re- prisals. Troops of the Freedom army maintain 11 tenous control in Jessore, a city of BOme 25,000 people. Only at the expense ol hundreds or even thousands of casualties can they overrun the heavily defended cantonment where about 800 of President Agha Mohammed Yahya Kl)an's soldiers are dug in on the outskirts of town. Reports reaching a rebel command post here say the situaLion in Jessore is repeated in dozens of towns throughout the breakaway province. Yahya's troops, safe behind their can- tonment defenses. maintained desultory mortar fire against Jessore's rebel army throughout the day . A trickle of refugees is leaving, car- rying belongings tied in bundles on their heads and making for the nearby Indian border. The body of a young mother. her dead child sLill clasped in her arms, lay in front of the charred r u i n s ar her wood and mud brick home. Several ether bodies lay nearby. BS.eked by armored car.s, a column of Pakistani troops swept out of the ir ·cantonment through the outskirts of town two nights: ago and destroyed rows of peasant homes and shot anything that moved, the rebels said. Whole families were machine gunned as they ned from their burning huts, rebel oUicers claim. Other bodies, lying in fields and dit· Ecuador 'Revolution' Ends; Officer Quits QUITO, Ecuador {UPI ,) -Gen. Luis Jacome, head or Ecuador's war colle&e: and instigator of a brief revolt to protest his discharge, has turned himself 111 to the army as ''solely responsible" ror the outbreak, authorities said Thurs· day_ The brief revolt involved some 30 war college faculty members, most of them colonels, and about 180 paratroopers sent to subdue them, but who joined them instead. ches, showed evidence of bayonet stabs. T~e East Pakistanis, armed for the most part with old World War II rifies and a few .!Ubmachine guns. can do little lo stop these sorties and seem increutngly apprehensive of a major attack on Jes.sore. In their fury, the sheik's supporter!! rounded up 14 Punjabi merchants and butchered them on a field near Jessore'!I bus staUon. The young son of ant of them fled in terror from the scene but was caught and killed. Today. a mass grave is being dug for the Punjabis. "We have all the men we wanl but Yahya's men have all the weapons,'' said a rebel commander. Capt. Abdul Halim at the headquarters of the ~as)_ Pakistan Rifles. To a man, the rune, have joined the secessionist forces and. together with the police, make up the backbone of the Freedom army. "All our people are taking i)arl in the light," said Halim. "There have been many casualties but we shall Ught on until the end. The Pakistan army cannot defeat 75 million people. They cannot hold out for ever in a hostile land. Eventually v.·e shall starve them into surrender." ft {:r ft East Pakistani Leader Prisoner In W. Pakistan RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP) -Sheik Mujibur Rahman, leader of the uprising against the military regime in East Pakistan, v.·as being held in army custody in \'-lest Pakistan , informed sources asserted today. President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan has called Mujibur. 51, a traitor and said be must be punished. Sources said Muj!bur was Hewn from East to West Pakistan a week ago, the day he was arrested in Dacca as the army crushed the movement there that had virtually ruled the . 70 million Bengalis of East Pakistan for 25 days. Sources speculated he v.·as being held in Rawalpindi, near the headquarters of the army, in Quetta, capital of i!alated Baluchistan Province near the border with Iran. or in a centuries-0!d fort on the banks of tht: Indus Ri ver 60 miles west of Rawalpindi. The army was reported to be holding at lea.st 24 other members of the warking committee of Mujibur's now banned Awa- rni League. which held 167 of the 313 set1ts in the twice postponed National Assembly. IJpr T•Ml,_lf COMMUNIST DISSENTER Rum1nl1n't Ce1u1e1cu Two Communist Leaders Seeking Autonomous Rule MOSCOW {APl -Soviet Defense Minister Andrei Grechko told the Com· munist party congress today that tht Soviet army "has in its arsenal a v.·eapon of huge destructive power capable or reaching any poin.t on the globe." Excerpts or his speech distribu~ by Tass did not make clear whether Marshal Grechko was referring to some new development or a known weapons system . But he accused the United State• of increasing preparations for war and \1·arned that the Soviet Union, if ever attacked, would "punish the aggressor" in his homeland. 1\vo leading critics of the ··Brezhnev Doctrine" that national Communist parties and governments have only limited sovereignty within the warld Communist movement used the congrf!!ll Thursday as a platform for new ap~al! for ruU autonomy for all Communist parties. The dual attack on the concept thal grew out of the invasion 0 r Czechoslovakia in 1968 catne Ir om Nicolae Ceausescu or Romania and Enrico Berlinguer of Italy. Ceausescu devoted nearly 2Q percent or his speech to his often stated refusal to submit comp~etely to Moscow'• domination. He said the only "safe way'' to overcome difficulties in the Como munist movement is by discussion based on mutua l respect, national sovereignty, equal rights and noninterference in in· terial affairs. VIKINCiS FOUR, Inc. -LIQUOR DEPARTMENT - FIRST ANNIVERSARY SALE VIKING IV PRIVATE LABEL LIQUOR • SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT 80URION GIN FIFTHS ltf. Pti&• SALi 3.65 FIFTHS .... Prk• IALI 3.30 4.19 'llCI J.19 PltlCI QUARTS 11: ... '•k• IALE 4.49 QUARTS ltit41. ,r1,. SALE 4.15 1.19 'IUCE 4.lt 'ltlCE l/2·GALS • ltt. Pri~ SALi 8.89 1/2-GALS. •... ''"• SA.Lf 7.59 10.45 PllCf 1.49 PltlCE SCOTCH CANADIAN FIFTHS R9f. '•lui SA.LI: 4.25 FIF-THS .... ,r1,. SAL! 4.50 4.99 'llCI I .JO 'ltlCI QUARTS a.,. Prlc• SALE 5,25 QUARTS lt•t· Prlct SA ti 5.35 6.19 'ltlCE 6.JO 'llCI 1/2-GALS. It ... ,,i,. ~:~~. 10.19 1/2-GALS. .... ,,1c. ~:~~. 10.19 11.•9 11.99 VODKA RUM FIFTHS .... ''"' iALf 2.95 FIFTHS 11.•t· Prit• SALi 3.39 ).45 PllCI ).99 'llCI QUARTS .... ''k• SALi 3.69 I QUARTS It ... Pric• SALE 4.15 4.JI PltlCl '·'' PJllCI 1/2-GALS. l•t· Prk• SALi 6.95 ! 1/1-GALS. .... Prk• I ALI 8.25 '·'' PRICI 9.lt • ralcr Cash or Checks No Credit Cards Fine Wines ..:Gourment Foods-Candy-Gifts-Beer (Visit Our Win• Tasting Bar) 56 FASHION ISLAND-NEWPORT CENTER ~pposite Broadway -644-0991' WE DELIVIR IN THE AREA ' I Four Critical Fumes /(ill Five In Tanning Plant B~RWICK. ~1aine t UPI 1 - Five workers were killed and seven injured today \\'he• fumes leaked out \\'hi I e chemicals were being loaded into a tank at the Prime Tan· nlng Co. factory . A do:r.en workers were in the tanning room when the mi:shap took place about 6:30 a.m. EST. offiC'ials reponed, as I.ht chemicals were being loaded into a lank from a truck. f<'ivt d1td , four were cntically injured, a fifth wu admitted in !e5!1 serious con- dition to a hospital and two v.·ere treated and released, stale police said. • --- CALLED RACIST Jud9e Lind11y • School Principal Victi111 F'our of the de11d were iden- tified as Ronald Hayes, 21. of Rochester. N.H., Arthur Webbtr of Berwick, J1mes Royce Sr., 48, of Fannington. NJI.. and Richard Nadeau of \Vesl Lebanon. The firth victim was not immediately identified. Attorneys For Angela Clai1n Bias YPSILANl'I, Mich. (A Pl - The principal of Willow Run Hi&h School, which w11 the 11ctne of racial incidents lai;l month,. was tarred and feathered Thursday night by a group -0f hooded men who forced his car to the road side. Stile pohce said Wiley Brownele, 42, suffered mi nor injuries in the incident which occurnd as he was on his v;ay home from a meeting of the Willow Run School Board. Brownlee said an auto "'ilh 1 lone occupant forced his car off the road . The hooded driver. armed with a shotgun. got out and told Brownlee, MAN'S PSYCHOLOGY NOT BASED ON SEX WAS FREUD WRONG? ... Probably nol, but then hr. never had to con:sider that th,re would ever be a Volks· wa1,n. My ad two w''ks a10 f,atured th' psycholoa of the Volks\l.·aal.'n drh·,.r. Granted. t may not have been out of con· lf':ocl offering frcr p&ychiatri1• messaae~ 1n thElt 1 a1n a HatK-r- dashcr by trade. But apparent- ly, F'reud ntvtr g&\'t a ~C'rond thou1ht to an alternate of sex •.. the Vo\kJs...,•agf'n!! That"1 richt ... but it only happcn:s when I decide to throw one of my super 1ntak :sale.11. 1'.ly ad drew the lar&cst collec· lion of V'V ld:s and Egos ever u 11embled in /\'""'port Beach "xcept for tht' 1rand openin& or Chick Ivenon·s local dealership. "Turn off your hcadlghl..!i and' get oul of the car." He said a second car con- taining sevtra1 more hooded men then pulled up and the groop ordered him to walk to a roadside ditch. "I \vas hit on the head \\'ith something -I think it was a gun butt -and fell into the ditch." the principal said. "The neict thing I knc1v . they were pouring tar oil over me from out of a bucket and then they threw a lot of chicken feathers on mt'." he said. He told state police he was CQnvinced the assailants, who numbered about five or six, "'ere adults, not high school pupils. After the attackers drove off, Brownlee drove back to his school and telephoned Pro Grids' TV Ban Hit WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. William Proxmire 10. \I/is.). claims the airwaves belong to tQt public . not te professional fbotball leagues. He said he woul<= introduce a bill in the Senate to forbid a television blackout of home professional football when the game is sold out. tylore than 90 percent ot seats in Nallonal Football League stadiums were sold out last year. he said, and on the average 50,000 rans or more paid their way into each regular pro game. Tens of thousands y,•ere turned away, he said. SAN RAFAEL tUPI) -At. torneys for Angela Davis in- sist that somewhere i n California there must be • "'hite judge who can overcome his bias to insure a fair tria l for the black militant. They challenged Judge Alan R. Lindsay Thursday on grounds he is racist and askl'd him to disqualify himself. Aoother out-of-county judge disqualified him.self last month on a motion by ~fiss Davis' codefendant, Ruchell Magee. who said be was biased. The defense said as 11 member of the white upper middle class. Lindsay, 54, was so crippled by bias he could not be fair. police. ---------- Linday has 10 days t.o decide whether to disqualify himself. If he decides to remain on the case. the defen~ can ap- peal. Asked bv ney,·smen if he knew anv· reason for the assault, Brownlee said, "f\.1y mind would of course ha\"e to go back to the racial tensions at the school and the fact that the school was closed for a couple days last month." Ar111slrong 1-1 as ·Bad Night' J\E\V YORK (UPI I -The condition of 1azz trumpelrr Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong, \lo'ho has been under hospital treatment for a heart ailment, took a tum for the worse Thursday night. ii w a s reported today. ··Mr. Armstrong spent 11 restless night, with increased respiratory difficulty." a spokesman for Beth Israel Asked if any judge could be fair. Howard Moore Jr., Mlss Davis' chief atlornf'v. said, ''I think the answer ·is going to have to be ye1. Somt> white persons obviously are more capable or dealing wilh their prejudices than other!." "There must be some judges likt' that in California." f\.1oore said. "I don't think therf' are too many. but Tam sure lhere must bt some."' Unions Delay Auto Walkout DETROIT I UPI) -The United Auto Worke~~ .aa:reed today to continue 1 contract u'' 111""'19 talks with American Motors 1\1e1v Q1aee1i Corp., tittle more than six' Sarah Rippon, 21-year-hours before a threatened II \1 as \\"Ort h rV<'J"Y nit·kle nf Medical Center said "Ills my m1sspl'nt money beca use in· general condition has weaken-dttd the V\I/ Drlvt>r shops Jn a ed." old daughter of Bri-strike deadline. tain's chief Common The move came after the, union rejected two contract! most bargain-hkr m11.nnrr.l""=="---=-=--=~---'"---I Quality and service for the le&St amount or "moolah." 1-.i oolah J.S money for those of you "Y"hoi>I' prr1onallty is not besed on the Volks"'•iPn. l\1arket negotiator, will proposals by A1\-IC and had r eign as Queen of the a counter offer or its own l Who Cares? Norfolk, Va. Azalea turned do~·n by AM C1 No oth•r 11,..,.1P•P•• ;11 !ho Festival in honor of negotiators. Talks we ref w•rld (•••1 •bout your c:ommu• NATO. I.ady Arabella, recessed at 1:05 a.m. and it 11ity Ii~• v•u• ~omm u11ity "•''" Sir \Vinston Churchill's is up to American officials 111w1p•p•• 4°0•· 11·, iho DAILY granddaughter. refused to decide when negotiations l P'ILOT. To 10 on. I had onr lady \\•hol'-_:::::-=-=c:;c:;-::::;=:;=:;::;=:;=:;=:;=~~th~e~h~o~n~o~r=i~n~p~r~ot~e~s;t·=--==w~ill~re~s~u~m~e~. ===---'=-..;; arri\•ed in an irr1descent hmtl1 ~een Bur \\'Ith a portrait or C.orge \Vashlni;:ton stamped on her hood , .. She krpt t hank· In; me O\'t'r and over for thl' •ooth!ng relit'f Thal my $4 bar· i;:ain tablf' gave hf'!". I had saved J,rr from !hr drrnhs of rl'tail defeatoma.nia. Then there ,,·as th,. Chap in thl' hlack Su]"lf'r Br('tlr \\'hO mis- judgt>d !hi' ~pcrdbump and landed in thr Lido Thf'alr<' philodtndron pl8nter. I-Ir. made up his \\"aY\\"lll"d direction b~ purch11sinr a $125 Top 0 J\lart 11uit for $40. Very i;ood .1udg· m"'nt! He drovr orr and di~ap· pea.red bet\\'ern 111·0 i:;old Cadil- lacs. Obviously,· he 11·11.s beini:; controlled by the handling characteristics of his V\V! Ll&lt11 , If you think you are 1uffl'rin&: from an inntr dts1re to savl' somr moolah don't i:O out •nd buy 1 n,.w Volk'"M'ai'" Drop 1n S11urda;., April J 11.nrl 1t'f' \\hi t hypnotir hyprrsalr~ ,,.;u arain be pr<':o<.C'nltd in a rr• fl"'At ~l'ssion of thtraputlr !1.llV· ini;:~ ho~ted hy i;:llt>~t ~tar. Vl'nus ~ Mont>y '. • Deansratl'. Tu>vonshirr ind Top O ~fArl suits up to :114~ no"· S40. Enio and Gant ~hirt ~ v1l- 11ed at $11 no"' S4 or 2 fol' S7 Cactu1 Cai'lull JPans. Jh1rri:oi and Corbin traditional slacks up 10 Ill now 14. B1lt"-"l'll and 1..a· Jolla Slack'S up to 540 no"· $10 Cadi1\8r. I.ln<'Clln, frn-arl dnv· rr:oi 1\tlmmf' to 11 ttt'nd. Ch r\'Y dr1vt r1 arr ""lc!'mr nh1n . I llon 't \\'ant lo r\c\udr 1n~,,.I( BIDWELL OF NEWPORT 34'7 Vlo L14o lo Ntwport leac.h 6'1~10 rl1nt1 .t fr11 parklnt In th• r11r. VW 4rlw1r1 pl1a11 ,.fr1ln fr1m 41111111 1M1rkln1. SATURDAY SPECIAL TOMORROW, APRIL 3 WOVEN DRAPERY PIECE GOODS REMNANTS IN A MULTITUDE OF FABRICS AND COLORS 2 ycls. 2 to lp yard ltn9ths FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY STORE HOURS: Menffy •1tll Frilllcry, 10 •. m. t• t:JO p.m. Tun., Wtd. and Thurs .. 10 a .m. te t p.m. Saturday, 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. -Sunday, 12 t• 5 p.m. DAILY l'ILOf § Military Pay Boost Uncertain 3 Seizecl in Bank Rohhe1·y, IGdnap <.:HICACO tUPl) -t'our WASHINGTON (UPI) -A person11 h1vt been charged Hoose-passed bill boo 1 li ng with bank robbery and aidlfll military pay and allowances and abetting • bank robbery by a record· $2 7 billion laces Jn connection wllh a $118,000 an uncertain future in the eitortion plot in which tht Senate whtre a coalition 01 wife of a bank president wa.s conservatives and liberals is held al gunpoint 1n her unalterably opposed 1d the 50% in Poll suburban home. volunteer army i.-uch 1 pay The FBI announced three raise would mike possible. Back Nixon arrests late Thursday night, The pay raises and quarters about II bour! Iller the bank allowances -the tiighesl PRINCETON. N.J. !AP) lilngle increase in l tie President Nixon's po 11cIe1 pre1ldenl, Lawrence W. republic's history _ were tied have lht approval Gf 50 per-Norlrup. turned over tht by the House Thursday to 1 cent of the American public, money. The fourth arrest was two-year exlen!ion of the draft tht lowest level of support announced early today. and el1minahon 0 f un-since he took office, according The lirsl three smpecl'I dergraduate draft deferments. to lhe lalesl Gallup Poll. were identified as Frederick Prtsidenl Niioo had r~-However. Gallup said tht W. Pl-1arschkt, 31, Homewood: ed I I"° ·1r SO percent indicates 1 his wife, Joyce, 34. and Robert I • UPIT• ........ quest on y ":107 m1 ion a~ "lanley. ". Ch,·cago. The rt <i t l t l downward trend in Nixon·~ 1' '" pa • wo-s ep Pan o ro,,th sus~ct was idenllf,·ed t rd 11 ~pularily may be leveling off ,...~ $111,000 RANSOM Oorun Nortrup move owa s an 8 "y as John Carmen Starble. 25. "volunteer army by mid-1~73_ The poll said Nixon's approval Berwyo. The House combined his rating was 56 percent 1n recommendations into 0 n e January and ~I percent in Neither the FBI nor local what roles the four were su!pected of playing in lht plan . package with the increases to _F_e_b_ru_a_r_y_. ________ oo_li_«_agencies would dt>ta!I start July I. Final passage, 293 lo 99, came after !nti-war critics soujhl unsuccessfully to limit U.S. involvement in Vietnam by Sl!lting a deadline for l'.'ithdrawal. or by prohibiting use of draftees in So11theast Asia after the end of this year. Plllne Rider Sparks Panic CHI CAGO t UPI I A flame-throwing backfire from a 1axi1ng Jet liner at O'Harr lnlcrnat1onal Airport frighten· ed 23 passengers into leaving !he plane through an emergen- <'Y exit Thursday night and left nine of them injured. A spokesman for Tran~ World Airlines said the re- maining 30 passengers then alighted from the p I a n c through a regular exit. He said one passenger. who \\'SS not identified, opened a window emergency eiil V.'hen onl! of the Boeing 727" s jet engines backfired loudly and rele11sed a ball of orange (ire. h ( Psst Ol •tp Countyt) San Franc'5co S1 B:Sacramento: $2-, • 1Ns UV: r ~ Sen Diego SS (all ioclude lax). Mor;:li~ raund at S.I\. than a ny olher a irlin e. PSA 1fvm y<D&l • llft. iewels by ioseph CONTINUES IMPORTERS , Jowtl1 ~Y JH.,h hu ~tn St)M'lC°d u r xclusivt u lt1 reprfttf'IUtiv-1 ol 1enu1nt llllr sapphires In hnt Jl'Wf'icy. !tt&UM 1.1•r rt«lved 1n un,.xpt!rl,.d and O\'t'rwhrlm1ni; reaponst In our star •&pphil'f' u l• Jut 1.1•rck, 11·" h1vl' pt'rsuadl'd our im)')Ort"'r lo 1·ontinul' 1he tal! f(lr nn• morl' ''l"f"k. Don't mi» this opportunity to buy & ~&uli!uJ star 11pph1~ !or 1 low, low pnl't. MOUNT YOUR ST AR SAPPHIRE IN A IEAUTIFUL SETTINCO ONE WEEK ONLY. MARCH 31 ·APRIL 6 .. •"· ·_._-(. -f·".• ·~~ -,, \ .. -(;. -:, .' '• i ''. ;:'' .. ,.. .'!' \' ' , . ~J· .I~'-' • ~ I ' ... 0' , ·...--. '• "\• -) ,_,.. t ... -!' () jewels by JOse ph South' Cool! Pl111 llll Briatol C.1t1 ~ ... " ) DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ·. :· ,. ! ' ' ' .. ' ' ,, ... : '· '· '· • F ir e Insurance Saving Within the year. businessnltn and homeowners in Huntington Beach \Vill feel the benefit of improvements in the city's fire and water services. 11le Pacific f'ire Rating Bureau, an agency which classifies cities for insurance companies, has reduced l'luntington Beach's rating from grade 5 to grade 3. A drop of e\len one grade usually means about a 10 per· ceot cut in the premium on a straight fire insurance policv. Premium ('Uts '''iii be most \Velcome to taxpayers \\'ho until now may have fa il ed to appreciate full y the wisdom of building a ne\v reserv-0ir. increasing the man- power of the firl' department. constructing ne"' stations and buying f\\'O "snorkel" units. ft can't be pretended that the 11ew classification \\'ill automatically produce sizable sli ces in home insur· ance premiums because most residents have package policies. In the city as a whole. nearly $200,000 a year may be saved. Policyhold ers \Yill know how they are affected \rhen rene\val tintes comes. The new classifi· cation al so 'viii be an extra incentive in luring industr~ since it shO\\'S that a company's plant investment 'vi\1 be protected and the ongoing costs of the premium reduced. At tend Cap.didates' Nights The 17 candidates vying for l\VO seats on the 1-lunt· ington Beach Union High School District April 20 have already foun d a ready-made campaign issue -school laxes. Some fav or a major increase while others suggest the district economize by making cutbacks. Yet another segment \vould fa.,.or something Jess than the 69-cent increa~e proposed July 15. Voters living in West Orange County may gain some insight on how the candidates feel about these and other Importan t issues by attending the "candidates' nights" sponsored by the Huntington Beach League or Women Voters. Attendance of these events \Viii not only allow vol· ers to meet U1eir high school and elementary school candidates but also to make a more intelligent choice at the polls. The next candidates' nigl\t will be held in Fountain Valley, a "'eek from today. It begins at 7:30 }i.m. at Fountain Valley High School. 17616 Bushard St. Other meeting dates are April 14, Agnes Smith School, 770 17th St.. Huntington Beach, and April 16. ?t1cGaugh Intermediate School, Bay Boulevard and Bolsa Avenue, Seal Beach. Both begin at 7:30 p.m. Choosing Names for Parks A ticklish problem that has vexed Huntington Beach officials -choosing names for parks - seems close to solution. Residents might \veil wonder \Vhat the fuss was about, but there were strong feelings. The question \Vas "'hether parks should be named after the location or to honor individuals, such as former mayors and school board presidents. Neighborhood parks next to schools have been named after that school. presumably to help find it. Councilmen felt that because there are so rnany schools in the city the school name \Vas no real aid in finding the park. Recreation commissioners stuck to their UJeory that these parks should keep their present identitj"but came up with a compromise that the council has indicated it \1•ill accept. A commemorative plaque will be put in each park to pay tribute to a community leader. The park name will be unchanged but the honor will have been paid. Wiant Candidate Would Have Done H ~· fF rom Humphrey to Nixon Mo yers ' Book Is Gen era lly De pressing ·,: '• '· ·?:WASHINGTON -If Hubert Humphrey and the President must be lhe leader ,...,,.--. .,-, T ,,.. ,_....,.,.., -,. . ....,~ . ...,' I ·' ~d been elected President, he would 1'tve sought a standstill cease-fire in !Vietnam, stopped sending draftees to • !Vietnam and appointed a Negro to run *' draft. in try ing to fulfill th at objective. 1 have heard all the argwnents against the cease-fire· proposal, and from a military point of view they may make sense. But the problem that fa ces thi.s country is not military ; it is political." Tlie Ba'oll:.nian ~He offered his ideas back in October. ~969, to the man v.·ho had defeated him for the presi- dency . Humphrey met 1n the White House V.'ith Presi- dent Nixon and his national seciirlty ad- viser. Henry Kissii.- ger. Afterward. Hum· phrey sum marized his suggestions in a confidential memo. dated October It. 1969 to Kissinger. We have obtained a CQPY of the memo. which has been shov.•n by both me• . only to a few intimates. "1 GUESS PEOPLE expected more action in a shorter period of time than President Nixon has been able to ac- complish:· Humphrey ·wrote bluntly. "In other v•ords, tht' election raised their hopes. The people do not sense or fully understand the unbelievable complexity or the situation in Vietnam. They just v.·ant out. "The President has taken some. steps lhal are constructive and should bt recognized as steps towards peace and reducing American involvement . TheSf: are good steps but not enough ... "l think I appreciate the difficulties that the President faces , but it \viii only get more difficult if 50mething more isn't done. H.is concern over the rtsing tide of isolationism, both in Congress and in some areas of the public, is one that l share. But I am afraid Jt will get v.·orse unless v.•e find some way to get out of Vietnam. •"fHE LONGER WE are in Vietnam. the more the sp irit of neo-1solationis m grows. Vietnam is sapping the spirit of this country ... To hurry our v.·ithdrav.·al from Vietnam has risks \\'il hin it. but not nearly as much as the risk and danger of hanging on and hoping for someth ing better." Humphrey called for .. American in- itiative in seeking a cease-fire and SO· called standstill of all combat forces. I kno w this iS difficult but we should press it. The military doesn't like it. but our oplions are not very many or very good. "The public v.·ants an end to the kill.in&, HIJ~IPHREY STRONGLY urged the President to announce "that no draft~es will be sent to Vietnam for combat purposes. Now. I underscore the words for combat purposes. It v.·ould be. better if no draftees would be sent to Vietnam at all. but I am not sure that would be feasible for at least the next few months." The former Vice President praised Nixon for retiring Gen. Le.\\'is Hershey as tbe nation's draft director and recom- mended as Hershey's replacement "a top-grade, well -informed, a rt i c u I a t e Negro \\'ho has the respect of the black.1 as v.·ell as t.he whites. someone between the ages of 35 and 45. v.·ho looks good. \vho has a sense or public relations and \rho can communicate \\'ilh young people." Humphrey . noting that he had of· fered views "in confidence and in a spirit of helpfulness ," concluded: "I want to help the President, and I am prepared to defend him as he moves on his peace offensive, but it must be a peace olfensive." For Male Sanity: Realhoy ' ' l \\1hen it comes to the gra\'c probleins America faces, the gravest is neither pollution. urban sprawl nor excess stomach acidity. It is Playboy magaz ine . Never since the i\.tarquis de Sade has 21ny literary ligurc spread more pain and misery than Playboy's publisher, Hugh Heiner. Statistics show that 68 .3 percent of young American n1ales study one or m o r e centerfold "Playmates of the ~·lonth .. durin~ their for mative ye a r 5 . For hours on end. "Aha." cries lhe loung man. "so this is \\'hat young ladi<"S look I i k e withool their clothes on! I'll hnd 011e for me." And he litarts hunting The problem . ol course. is trut 1::n t ~·hat young ladies look like without !heir C'lothe~ on at all. Not e\'en young Pia~· mate ladie!I. AN ARTICLt.: 1n the ne11 magaz1n1:. 'Friday. April 2. 1971 The ed.itorwl pogt of llir Doily Pilot seeks lo infor1 n onrl $lim· uto.lt readers by pre sc11tn1g t/us ne1ospopcr's opi1uo11s nnd ro1n· ~ntory 011 top ics of 1nt1rr..~t ond $ign1f1a111cc. b!J providing a forum for tl1t tXrJTf'~1uon nf our rtadcrs' opin1011.s, c11d hy prtstnting t.he diverse t11r10· points of infonned obsrrvt>r s ond 1pokt.smt11. on topics of lhe da~. Robe rt N. \Veed. Publisher I Art Hoppe Audience, points out that afler the. painstakingly-selected Playmate is paid $5000 to take off her clothes, she is carefully posed so she doesn't wrinkle. :;ag or droop. Thousands of studio sho~ are taken under ideal lighting conditions. One single. print is chosen. Then e\'en this best ol all possible photographs is - heaven help us -doctored ~ For at tbis point. the article says, Heiner steps in wlth his retouchers: "Take off the hair on her upper lip!" he orders . "Clean up the shadov.'s around her under·arm11~" It ls th~~ blal:tnt dishonest:,.· that causes such untold suffering. There is our young man He has found Ilic girl of his drea1ns. She looks with her clothe~ on 11kr a Playmate v.·ith her clothes on. EAGERLY 11£ mo.rries her. Ex- pectantly he swoops her off on a honey· moon -only to discover that she. like all human beings, occasionaHv wrinkle.'!. sags. droops and/or exhibits ·downy lips or underarm 5hadow ~1oreover . llhC doesn't even have a stn ple in her navel. I~ it any v.·on<ler that 66.J percent ol Amrr1can 1nales go through llfe feeling C'heated and lrus1rated? Is it any v.·onder that 17 9ut of 18 marriages today end in uxoricidc, divorce or shouting mat- ches. f"\Vhy can·t )'OU take the hair off your upptr lip ? Clean up your un- der arm shadO\\' ~ · · ) To save America from slowly dnn,•ning in this St'.a ol do1nesUc acrimony. A group of w humllnil.a.rlons has brought out 11 ntw maga1lne called Realboy , THE CE~TERFOl..J) .. Realmate of lhl' '1.lonur· 111 our first L,sue ii Ml~:1 Elvira McGotkle, a 41.year-old unemployed fry cook from Bixby Falls, fl1ont. Miss fl1cGorkle. who is )-foot·2, ,1·elghs 175' pounds and has led a hard life , is depicted standing against a brightly-lit wall in the Bixby Falls Medical Clinic, all prepared for a free chest X-ray, As we say 1n the caption. "lt 1s a Realmatr like ~Uss fl-tcGorkle who makes American men appreciate their wives." We are convinced that once Realb<.ly replaces Playboy Is the leader in 1\S field, American ma les wH! grow up ra· tional and sane. NO LONGER WILL they be obsessed by unattainable visions of perfection. No longer V.'ill they be pandered to by books. movies and advertising that prey upon their frustrations . At last they will accept marital sex for the good thing it is -an act of love between two imperfect humans. At last they will accept reality. \Ve. the publishtrs of Realboy. ask no high rewards fro!T) a grateful nation for restoring its sanity. We \\'lsh v.·e could rind some guy who'd buy 1 copy. Dear Gloomv , Gus: The recent ttction of the liunt1n~· Ion Beach 11\gh School 01~1 rict lrustees serves t-0 tmphalli1.e the often heard saying. "The majority Isn't silent. It's 1he i;oven1n1en1 that is deaf " -T t;. N, Tftn i.a111'1P ••l1tn• r.'4tl"I' •-l. ntt -.c:•OMi•Ur IMM •I ..,_ -1••••t. s ... -•Wr ,., -•• ,. 01-r 011• Din, ,.lloll. -· lt was a different country when John Steinbeck and his poodle roamed the United States in a camper. The findings of that voyage of red iscovery appeared in 1962 as "Travels With Charley." Bill Moyers did much the same thing last year, traveling some 13,000 miles by car, san1pling the mood of the nation 1n such places as Bondurant, Wyo., Mathis. Texas, and the tough steel town of Ea st Gary, Ind A fonner special assistant to President Johnson, a former deputy director of the Peace Corps, later publisher of News. day and a skilled reporter, Moyers reports on these findings in a Jong and generally depressing book , "Listening 10 America." !\10YERS HAD, he tells us, listened to America from a distance, living and ~·orking for some years in a narrow strip of the East Coast. "l learned that it is possible to \'lrite bills and publish newspapers v.•ithout kno~·Jng \\'hat the country ls about, or who people are.'' Generally he fou nd a confused and rearful country out there, one v.'ilh little humor, sour over Southeast Asia. !earful of unemployment, searching for some political guidance, or n1oral guidance, and finding no Moses, not even an Eisenhower lo comfort it. As a one.man Gallup Poll. Moyers seems to have tou ch- ed all bases. youth culture to hard·hat. r-.tost everyone he talked to \\'as edgy about something -crime. inflation. pollution, racism, drugs, America "'as not a happy place "YOU CAN TAKE 1ust so much kill· ing," a legless Army captain. bitter about Vietnam, told him. He talked \\'ilh Groucho fltarx in Hollywood about the decline of humor in An1erica. Wyoming ranchers were bitter about big cor- poratioi.s grabbing up the old familv ranches . A Quaker professor o'r philosophy viewed the Kent State stude nts as "aggre ssors," therefore \\Tong. In Sa n FrancLSco, attempting to trace U1e missing daughter of a Washington friend, Moyers became fascinated by fresh notices of run1nvays posted on a bulletin board in Golden Gate Pa rk. '.'Li~tening to America•· i.s one long ed1tor1al by a concerned and articulate reporter-if anything a little too long . for the sustained thetne of depression and frustration in it is wearying. THE U.S.A. is a Space Age country \Vi\h lots of Cadillacs and country clubs but almost no narcotics-addict ion pro- gram worth a damn. District of Columbia children are taught in lov.·-grade slums. and the capital's General H.ospital had just run out of penicillin. "The District should be a n1odel for the country," a police man told Moyers. but added that Washington Is nlerely· a mode.I ot what's gone v.•rong "'ilh the country. "Jlardl y a day passed that v.·ou ld be free of ~ome den1onstrations of our \1·oes," ~1oyers note., of hi~ odyssey. One rn isses Steinbeck's gentle optimism here. And Char!ey (Harper's Mai::tazine Press. $?.95 J. "'illiam llo gan Quotes f\lrs. ll:irry Gerber. Oakland, on mnderu fa5hlon~ -"When v.·HJ so me deslJ!;~r deem it important rnoui:h to m11rkel dlgnJfied clothes for 46-ish v.'01ne11 ·•1 '' 'Facts,' 'Truth~ Are Not the Same What is a "lie"? What does •·tell ing the trOth'' consist of? These are seem- ingly simple questions, but there are no simple answers to them . This is \vhy parents, and educators generally, have such a hard time explaining lies and truth to children. Stonn Jameson, the novelist, has published her au tobiography this spring, called "Jouriiey From The North." ln her introduction to it, she writes : "I am an accom· plished professional novelist and nothing would have b e e • easier for me than to draw a self-por- trait which, without telling a single lie. would be dishonest from beginning to end, intelligent, charming, interesting -and a lie.'' ON THE SURFACE, a "lie" is a statement that does not correspond to fact, or to v.•hat we believe to be a fact. But "facts" and "truth" are by no means the same thing; as Miss Jameson reminds us, a book of memoirs can be absolutely truthful in its facts and yet be a total lie. Truth is the inner spirit of a statement, not jus.t its outer shell of facts . Of course, if tht facts are falsified, the inner spirit is injured; but the opposite does not hold -a report consisting of nothing but facts can be totally dishones t in its intent and effect. IN ONE OF Bonhoeffer's last un- finished essays twriUen in prison), he takes up the subject of the "always truthful" man, and reminds us that there are evil truths as well as necessaTy and healing truths. The man ~·ho always says what he thinks. under the guise of '·candor." is not living in the 3pirit of truth, but in the spirit of hate. · He tells of a teacher who asked,·1 ~young pupil in fro nt of the class whether his father usually came home druf\k in the evening. The father. did, but the boy was within his rights in ly~g about it, since the teacher was absoluti'.ly without his rights ia asking the questiOn -and the boy was not mature enough to give an answer that rebuked the teacher for his impertinence without either admitling the truth or lying. THE HARDEST metaphysical thing· to grasp about the truth is that it is both absolute and re1alive at the same time: in one sense. the truth is always the same for all men everywhere ; in another se nse, it is relative to the person , tbe time, the place. the situation. \VisdGm consists in being able to distinguish between lhese two , and to know when the spirit of universa l truth is being served, and whe n not. Both the absolutis ts and the relativistS> are dishonest in this -the absoluti!U v.·hen they in sist that circumstances de) not alter cases: the relativists when they insist that truth is wholly subjective.; No wonder our children are confused, wnflicted and cynical about it. 'Lac k o f Vnderstanding1 To the Editor : Your allack on Congress \The SST Defeat -March 29 editorial) for dropping !he supersonic jet project displayed a clear lacli of understanding the issue. There nlay not be absolute proof that the SST \vould destroy man's en· vironment, but there are serious ques· lions about ii. Do we buJ\d the SST. ny it. then years later declare it I menace to man? On the other hand, "'hat would the SST do for 1nankind'! It seems it would quicken the pac;e for a few wealthy jet setters \\'ho like to whip back and rorth between New York and London . If big, fast jets are needed . why did one recent 747 fl ight from Chicago In Los Angeles carry only s c v e n passengers'.' THE SST CERTAINLY \\'on't i.lp up my trip from the Orange Cnast to Pomona. And are you suggesting \\'C support a bad project just because it 1:t:ives jobs to people? At least the ecology and rapid transit projects you call "political window dressing" ha v r justifiable f'Oals and e-0uld benefit more than v.·eekend travelers. Your editorial says Congress didn 't know v.·hat it was doing when it cut S..<rr funds. Did the builders v.·ho allowed the Jet's budget to skyrocket so high know what lhcy were doing? And why hasn 't the bird nown yet? Come on. gcnllcrnen, v.·r.·ve been ln the jet age for sonlt. time now. ll's lime we all entered tht>. age -01 ecology. TERRY S. COVILLE Letteri from rea ders ore wtlcomt: Nor111al1y wr1ttrs should convey theil 1nessages rn 300 u1ords or less. Tlte tigllt to con.den.~t ltUers to fit spacf or eliminate libel is reserved. All let~ ters 11iust incl11de signature and 11U1!lo nig address. bt1t Tu111ies 111oy bt with: held. 011 request 1/ sufficient reaso11 1s npparent. PoetMJ 1oilt not bt pu~ lished. Be o111ir111. Loce Stor y To thr. Editor : l{O\V ~autiful and moving! T hav e just v.·atched "Jane Eyre" with George C. Scott and Susannah York and I was shovon again whal a ~autilul love story can be. Also v.•hat a great actor Georgr C. Scott is! -L. J. LEEg B!t George Dear George: You know everything . tto1v can I find out for surr lf my husbBnd Is being faithful to me'.' SAP.AH Dear Sarah : Gee. Sarah. I don't know -l've never had 11. question like that ttnd therr's no ans"·er In the back of the hock. Jlowever, if you ever wonder how to tell if your husband Is bf>init lJNfaithful ro you. I'm 8 whiz on that one! ,. .... ---........ -• • BEA ANDERSON, Editor H 1'19S II Senoia rs Benefit 'Border' Fun Styles , Fiesta The stars are foretelling an auspiCious day on Thursday, April 15. The day will be auspicious for fun , that is -with the profits going to the scholarship fund -when the Newport Beach Ebell Clu b presents its South of the Border Fiesta. A fortune-telling booth will be part of the colorful scene, and rows of fiesta-style cubicles will be stocked wilh a variety of foods and goodies, according to Mrs . Ray Nielsen, president. The event will take place in the Newport Beach American Leg· Ion Hall beginning at 10 a.m. and continuing until 3 p.m. ~lrs. Jack Frank, ways and means chairman, also has announced plans for a variety of contests and games. A snack bar will be open throughout the day. • • • • • . • A STROKE FOR SCHOLARSHIP -Mrs. Neil Williams lright) puts final touches on her still life in oils 'vhich ""ill be donated to the Newport Beach Ebell Club's scholarship fund and offered among other varied items for sale during the South of the Border Fiesta, Thursday, April 15. Holding boutique va se whic h also will tempt those attending is Mrs. Fred Loakes. An intriguing assortment of boutique items will be particularly tempting to visitors, along with jewelry, books, puzzles, "treasures and trash," baked goods, clothing -and last but not least, an original oil painting by Mrs. Neil Williams which she is donating for the day's cause. Awards Take Center Court It's time for tournament awards -in duplicate. ·r\.\•O tournaments -in round·robin bridge a~d tennis -innovated by the Assistance League of New- port Beach Junior Auxiliary last fall and concluded in ~larch will be headlined during a "Shuffle and Serve" av;ards luncheon on .Tuesday, April 13. t.-JOre than 200 Harbor A1'ea women \Viii gather iO the 'fustin home of r.trs. 1i1ichael Heli n for the luncheon and the shO\.\'ing of tennis fashions to follow. Junior Auxiliary members will model the latest in center court wear from the Balboa Bay Racquet Club, \'o1ilh the cl ub's Glen Turnbull providing the commen· tary. Co·chairincn of the lunch eon and also the tennis section are r.trs. Brenton Ogden and Mrs. William Du· Bois, with Mrs. Gene Sullivan as luncheon assistant. Mrs. Albert Pizzo se rved as chairman of the bridge portion of th e tournament. Proceeds from the benefit affair \vill aid the League's philanthropies including the Dental llealth Center, Social Service office and scholarship loan grant fund for university students. ~trs. 1-larry C .. Johnson Jr .. chairn1an of the .Junior Auxiliary. has announced plans for a second "Shuffle and Serve" tourname nt lo begin in the fall of 1971. READY TO PLAY -Eager lo "Shuffle or Serve" are members of lhe Junior Auxiliary,· Assistance League of Ne\\'port Beach, \Vhose tournament win· ners \Vi\l be noted on Tuesday, April 13. 1i1rs. Harry C. Johnson. auxiliary chairman , hands over trump card to Mrs. r..1ichael Ffelin \vhile r.1rs. Brenton Og- gen (behind the net) displays tournament form. Teenager's Typographical DEAR ANN LANDERS : ti-1y 14•1fe is a nervous wrttk over an incident which J feel has very lltlle signiricance. The poor wo1nan is in analysis lher s1x!h year) and she has come lo beheve !hat EVEftYTlllNG means SOi\1ETHING. !Yoo know . lhe old frcu· dian theory that there are no accidents. I {)Jr 18-year-old daughter went away to school for the first lime last Sep- kmber. She writes us a long typewritten 1elter every week. Yesterday a letter arrived. ll started "Dead ~1othcr and Dad :'· ~ly wife went to pieces. She is 5iure our daughter wlshe5 her dead. When I told her It was a typographical errQr she scrtamed, "No, ii wa:o; 2 sub-con· scious vrlsh, You'll notice she didn't ANN LANDERS say 'Dead Dad' -it was 'Dead Mother.'·· Plea~. Ann what I! your opinion of thi!? Hurry your answer. A aupportive comment from you mighl lift my wife oul of her depressioo. -BELL AlRE DEAR BEU: Anyone who u1es • typewrite r wlll ltll you that one of the most common typographlcal error1 lkcause of relallve position or t.be key11 ls the lransposltloe of "d" ror "r''. After six year11 of Rn11ly1 ls. ·It's too bad your ,,.lfe Is 1tlll M:I paranoid. DEAR ANN LANDERS: t am a 26- year·old girl who needs to know where the limits of friendshil> end. Two year! ago Lotus and I decided to share an apartment. She has lo1L jobs off and on, but always managed to pay her share of the rent. grocerl11 and ulilitiea. Eight months ago Lctus was out of work for five wee.ks. She was arraid of cracking up and. cisked me to lend her $:lXl so she could visit her folks in Arkanses. l borrowed the money from the credit union. Jn ten Trouble Trips Mom's T rally days Lotus was back -no money, no job and no prospects. ,. I don't want lo throw her out because she has no place to go. Yet I can't afford to keep her here if she doesn't pay her share. What should I do~ - TROUBLE DEAR TROUBLE: Look for another roommate -some«1e yO\I can move In wllb, or tomeoae wlto wUI Uare a place wlU. you elsewbere. ~ 11vt Lolu1 her ootrct. No need to reel gallty. You have proveo your frlemtsblp aod laid It on lk line -'300 worth. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A member oC . our family who ill very wealthy has cert11ln areas of che1pness well known to all of us. Last year our aon was married . This rela tive 1aid 11he knew just the right wedding prese111l but it would have to be obtained frQm an antique dealer on her next trip abroad. Thrtt weeb ago the wedding gift arrived from Paris. AUached lo the girt w.as a handwrlHen nole from the relati ve stating that the gift wa!I a rare find. daina blck to the 18th century "although it lsnt signed." The ·brtde'a brother ts associated with lhe art museum in Chicago which everyone knows Is one or the world's finest. He examined lhe gin and declared It a fake. Just to make IUff:, he offered to have it examined by a friend who la an established autOOrlly on that period. Yesterday we heard the evaluation. The piece Is not authentic. There is a chanet, Ann, that the relat ive pal~ a big price for it. ff so should she be told she waa: rooked? The bride would like your opinion. -YONKERS DEAR VONK: Tiie bride 1ilould .., "thank you" and nothing more. It wo..td be I.II. poor Wte to iet tbe: re.lattve know htr sift bad been a,,ralled and U is a pbooy. How far should a teenage couple pt Can necking be iafe? When doe1 It' become too hot to handle? Send for Ann Landers' booklet, "Neckln1 and Pel· ting -Whal Are the Umlts?" Maj\ your reque!t to Ann Landers in ci:re- of the DATLY PILOT eocloslng 50 cents' in coin and a long, stamped, aelf.a:d dreSAed envelope. • • • • • I JI DAILY PILOT ,,Idly, A.ptll 2, 1971 ,_Your Horoscope I I New Group Forming Pisces: Clouds Vanish Workers Wanted j SATURDAY APRIL l By SYDNEY OMAllll Adle" Belle' Davlo lo load ot pohlt out &hat. .. , ·am u Arleo lllld oo I like to be tint la evtl')1btaa I do--a leader." Mis• Davll I 1 bowled1e1ble •boat a1troloo lllld lo a delllbl to Wk to .. lblo •ubJecl. ARIE8 (March 21-Aprll 11): Past. investment.I now can bur fruit--flpplles to time as well u money. Elperlenct will pay dlvldendl. Some lam!· ly rnembers may ·prove Ir· ritable. Go with the tide. Be ldlpllble. TAUl\U8 (April »May 20): Some oblt.ael•• are rimoved. 'there 11 greater freedom of thouehl, action. Ideas are developed, eontaeta are made. You are able to up&nd views and publlcl.ie projects. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Spotlight on Income, personal pouea:siona. One born under Leo proves a delight. Bllt heed your own countel. D o ft ' t permit another'• charm to ateer you in trronflOUI dlrtc· lion. OANCER (June 21.July 22): Cycle moves up; you let what you go after, but be l\lhl Counselor to Review Results of Research •, you know what It 11 you ac- tually need. Improve ap. pearance; purcbaae appartl. LEO (July II-Aug. 22): One born under Geml.DI can he'» you fulfl11 some hopes, w11he1. Aceent on glamour, clande- lt.lne arrang~ni.. Have fun but don't drown out voice of conacience. Mwage wUl be clear. VIRGO (Aug. 2Utpt. 22): Emphull on dt•1re1. Romance ls in picture. But try to rtmember bu1c com· m1tmenb-to other1 • n d youraelf. Cbeck delalll of uto- pl111 plan. Tbert could be a The call bas been sent out for women to uslsl with fundraising and support for the Crippled Children's Society of Orange County. Mn. William Eytchison will host a coffee al 10 a.m. Monday, April 5, in her Newport Beach home to which all interested women are invited. Gu .. t speaker will be Pra!Jn Singh, exe· cutive director, who wUl discuss fun ctlona and plans for the Euler Seal RehabllltaUon Cen· tar. The new group wllI encompap. the Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Corooa de! Mar and Laguna Beach areas. bulcflawc i.. ................................................ .. LIBRA CS.pl. 21-0d. 22): A change now could enhance rtputation. If you WI.st on adhering to outmoded concept. you will lose. The choice ll your own. Tbls also appliea to pusonaJ relaUonabipa. SCORPIO (Oct 23·Nov. 21): A change in domestic situation iJ indlcated. St.rive for greater harmony ; make baaic con- cession. Open communlcaUon lines. One at a distance may have important news. Engagement Revealed During Family Party ' Mr. and Mr1. Robert D. l White of eolta Mesa an- nounced the engagement ot their daoghter, Debra Lyn .· White to Vard Beecher Wa1lace Ill during a dinner 11 1!ARD AT WORK -Mrs. Ralph Davies, Incoming ptesidenl nefl) and Mrs. Nor-:€ '.JJlan Branovan, vice 'president', prepare· table decorations for the installation ::• dinner-dance Sunday, April 4, of the University Chapter, B'nai B'rith Women. Fact and Fantasy About Human Sexuality will be the topic for Alexander P. Run· clman, PhD, lormer Master• and Johnson 11~ reaearcher when he addresses members and guests of the Woman 's Auxiliary Id the Orange Coun- ty Medical AuociaUon. The luncheon meetl!1g will take place In tbe OCMA bulldlng, Orange, beginning with a social hour at 11:45 a.m. Tue!day, A~rll I. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): One you respect has special requeat. Grant tt-lf within reason. Money or legal area may b e m. volved-lo are emotions. See facts as they exist. You. are in better poaltioa than may be Imagined. party in their home. Among guests were Mr. and Mrs. V. Beecher Wallace Jr. of Newport Beach, pa.Nnts of the future bridegroom and Mr. and Mrs. John C. 'Beach of Costa Mesa, grandparents: of the future bride. •• ~ ~~ .. ,, ,, '· ';· (. Meeting Planned ::. J.-frmben of the Sisterhood ~ of ·, Ci~"'lit Ellet of El Toro :~ Will gather at 8 p.m. on Tues- :" day, April 6, in the Mission :E Viejc> home of Mrs. Elliot .. Levenson. ;S Currently under way ll a 1~ Sunday school poster contest :11 publlciz.lng a fall hay ride, :~ bl:rbecue and square dance · ~ being planned by t h e ,, •I-Sisterhood. ~ . Mrs. Joel Brody and Mrs. 1~ Levenson will judge entries :,-following the June l deadline. :~ Awards will be given at grade '-lavels1U..Ugb9. ... •' ·) University Chapter Dinner-dance Marks Premiere Installation The University Chapter 1407, B'nal B'rilh Women hM planned its first .instaUatl<11 of officers and institution C1f chapter -Cln Sunday, April 4. The ceremony and dinner· dance wlll take place begin- ning at 6:30 p.m. in the Inn Place, Qirona del Mar. Mrs. Lawrence Klein and Mrs. Robert Teller are installation co-chairmen. Mrs. Ralph Davies has ac- cepted the position of presl- den~ AaslsUng her will be the Mmes. Gerald Birnbaum, Norman Branovan and Harold Spivock, vice presidents. Other officers Include the Mmes. Te 11 er. treasurer; Klein. Edward Miller and Barbara Gumbiner, secretaries, and Herbert Dale, counselor . A naUve Californian, Dr. ! Runclman earned his BA, MA and PhD degrees from the f Univeraity of Southern ~· California. He WN a producer. 1 host for CBS. 'IV for nine years , " .. .uJ and has been a faculty t member at USC, Washington l. ~ Unlveralty in St. U:luis and FANTASY OR fACT? Dr. A. P. Runchnan San Fernando Valley State College. Now head of a psy • cholherapy ln!titute, he Js a licensed family, marriage In Tau Epsilon Phi honorary. and child counselor. He is listed In "Who's Who Dr. Runciman is winner of television's Sylvania Award, an Outstanding Instructors award and holds membership in A m e r i c a n Education," "Who's Who in the Midwest" and "American Men of Science." CAPRICORN (De<:. 2Wan. 19): Lle low; let others show their hands. Be diacreet. Give special attention to mar· rta1e or parlJ!erah.lp situation. Legal adviser needs your cooperation. You get nothing for nothing. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Be IW't to praise those who perform special services. Basic morale is an important factor. Your general standing improves. One who h as criticized does an about-face. PISCES tFeb. 19-march 2tl): Some emotional c Io u d s evaporate. You see more clearly. Issues are properly defined. Give full play to creative processes. New at- titude leads to greater op- timism, independence. DEBRA WHITE Future Bride HS Auxiliary Twice a month the Ladles' Auxiliary to Huntinglon Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 7388 meets at I p.m. The first Friday cf each month they gather In Odd Fellows Hall for a business meeting and th~ third Friday the socialize In various loca- tions. F u rt h e r infonnation may be secured by calling ~lrs. LeRoy Hermann at 536- 3580. Miss White is a graduate of Estancia High School and attends Golden West College. Her Hance, an alurnnUll or Newport Harbor High School, is serving with the Navy. No wedding date has been &et. Peering Around B o a r d members are the Mmes. Jeanne Feldman, Robert Meltzer, Karl Ressler, Sam Rosenbaum and Murray Sperber. Pertons lntere1ted tn membershlp In the chapter should contact Mrs. Splvock. Coast Groups Win Star Roles in Show THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE Th.e spotlight of the Greatest Ebel! Club at Newport Beach Show on Earth swung to one won one first. ~ IN THE CAROUSEL COURT ••• HAVE YOUR PICTURI TAKIN WITH HIM ' ,. " •: A MEXICAN POTLUCK :~ DINNEJl hotted by the Leon ·~ Axelrods of Laeuna Beach for ... '! Orange County Lion Club op- •: tcmetrllta: kicked off plans for !~an April 17 eye cllnlc in . .,: En.senadL '; Project LOOK ( LI o n ·t Optometriltl of Orange Coun- :: ty) ls 1n Its 11.lth year of :~ a people-to-people program to :~help visually and flnancially :: needy school cbUdren, 11> :• ~rdinf to Axelrod who Is :; general chairman of the clinic. :t. Alleodlng tbe dinner were Bottles Uncorked Members of the Pl Pl Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi "ill gather in ~e Westmlnt1ter borne of Mn. Harold Proctor for a champagne brunch Sun· (lay, AprU 4. · The following Saturday Mn:. DeMls Parker will host an Easter eq bunt for m1mber11 and thdr chlldren, and the chapter will contribute Easter decor1Uona lo Ch 1ldren'1 Hospital of Orange County. A rltual of Jewels will be given lo the Ptime1. Jim N'a don, Wiiiiam Van Zant and Proctor Tuesday, April 11, in the Sanla Ana home of Mrs. Richard Lodwick. New offleers have been elected for the C{lmlng year, tncluding the 1'.1mes. Phillip Wakefield, president ; Nadon, extension oUiccr; \ran Zant and P r o c t o r , secretaries. Lodwick, treasurer a n d Parker. civil defense chairman. Oil Pa inting Demonstration A demonstration of oil paln-Unc by Laguna Beach artlst Ktn KntJtten will hlgblight the meeUn11 of the Huntington Bach Ari League on Monday· I AprU 5, at 7:30 p.m. Thtra will be no admission char1e. and the public la In· Tiled to atltnd the 1athering In the R«rtatlon Center. 1 Jtnutten, who will b e prea.ented by Miu Or.a' Brimer, 11 a life member of die Laguna Beach A r t Auoch1Lion 11nd h111 for seven )'tars exhibilt"t Al the l .. 11~una p .. ~,.ti F'r~lll'~I of thr Arl 'I. Orange Coast woman'a club ln the lar1e clubs cate1ozy, undw11n0ne~~_, IO 1 first dpla~es thw• 1 wd oman'• Club of Leisure . South Coast 'Plua In Costa Mell Dlstrict Gov. and Mrs. Homer Briggs of Ontario, district chalnnan Dr. and Mrs . Cal Chamberlain of Pomona, and Dr. and Mrs. Norman Wiley of Placentia, president of the Orange County Optometrist IOCiety. a lle<.-...ru p aces unng or , Laguna Hilla won one the Orange Dirtrlct convenUon;1 1ir~in~l~end~~lh~rtt~~•econd~~··~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$~~jiiii Other area doctors and their wives enjoying lhe fare were tbe Wllllam \ Buethes o f Laguna Hilll; Ivan Cedys of San Clemente and Ron Cralgs, Martin Dales and Louis Prl· jatels of Costa Mesa. Travelln1 from Ensenada to give the party an au~nUc touch and coordinate work of Ensenada Lions were the Carlos AvUu and SanUago C4mpbells. Sorority Gathering New officers will greet memben of the Upsilon Omicron Chapter of B e t a Sigma Phi sorority at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, April 7, in the borne of Mrs. Hugb Davis in Orange. Mts. Robert Glomboske bu been named president, as!lsted by the M me 11 • Lawrence 0Ude1rui, vice presi- dent ; Tom Torrence and Hugb. Davls, secretaries ; Dennis Kennedy, treasurer, and Grant Olson, civil defense and coun· of Callfomla Federation of Woman's Clubs. The Fountain V a 11 f: y Woman's Club, competing 1n the medium clubl category, was heaped with accolades which were accepted by Mrs. Wallace Short, during a ban· quet In the Airporter Inn, Newport Beach. + Other area clubs bringing home honors werel Westminster Woman's Club, one first and one second, and Laguna Niguel Woman's Club, two seconds, both ln the small clubs category. ell repre.sentaUve. E~RL Y SPRING visitors at The Mmes. Kennedy and the Santa Barbara Biltmore Davia will present a cultural In the medium c 1 u b 1 category, the Woman's Club of Seal Beach won four fir1t1 and seven 1econds1 and the were the Jess Fender 11 , program entitled Tools for the 1,000•1 OP OIL PAINTIN•I Howard 0 . Cunningham1 and Art of Life. WHOLISALI WARIHOUSI Thomas Greens of Newport OPIN TO THI PUILIC Beach, Mrs. c I a r. n c. r==========; so•;. OFF Rtnouard of Laguna Hills end The DAILY PILOT-,,,, •· IDINGlll, SANTA.._.._. the Geoffrey C, Beaumonlsl~~T~h~e~O~n~t~T;h~1~t~C~•~rt~l~~~~~'"~"~'"~-~~~~I o1 Laguna Beacb. 1 : 01AL11111 wANTID Fashion Show To Highlight Club Meeting ~fembers of the Fountain Valley Newcomers Club will gather for a noon meellng and luncheon in the Airporter Inn on Wednesday, Apr il 8. Fashions from Gwen's Bouliq~e in Costa Mesa will be modeled (o\!owing the luncheon. Mrs. Albert G\icker and Mrs. Don Wyrick are t1kln1 reservations. Babysitting wlll be avallsble. THINK EASTER BONNET THINK THANK YOU HUNTINGTON BEACH! VVEl(;l J l \\/\TC~ if ~S C';.' is here. At last. -GRAND OPENING- THE NEW WEIGHT WATCHERS CENTER 77 32 ED IN GER 10,,. "" """"""" c"""' INTRODUCTORY OPIN r.lllTINGS wtllOIAPllL~lO. T•t• .. W.;..T-...,,.ht.lOAJL M-.W..i.& TlMtn.1~P.M. FREE WEIGHT WATCHERS FOOD KIT! ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS CIUTSTANDING l'INI! IUICl,.IAN CllL ,.A1NTINOI NOW OllP'lllO TO THI "UBLIC AT WHOLIEIALI llltlCll 1'0111 THI llUtlT TIMI IN THI H.t.lllaOll AltlAI DIALlll.S WILCOMll Grand Opening Sale! $ 00 • 24"X36" ON CANVAS eech s500 EA. UNL!·MITED SELECTION OF 8" X 10" OILS ................................. . Huge Selectio11 of Old World Fitte Art All Si:es ••••• Budget Prices! llmoorted Carved Frames . .. from !LOOK PO• THE LITTLE YELLOW COTTAG!l 369 I. 17th St. Costa Mesa Optft s.t .. 5.,,.,.Mott .••• 11 a.m. • 5 p.m. Ml-5J60 LEE'S ORIGINAL OILS 7 • Fo11nia.i11 Valley :·~ E DITI O"!~ • .. • . Today's Fl•ill • N.Y. Stoeb VOL 64, NO. 79, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COJ.:JNTY,. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APR[L·2, ·197j JiN <;ENTS '· ·Five-day Drama End·s W.ith Call~y Release · F"T. BENNING, Ca. (AP) -On Mon- day Lt. William L. Calley's future was at stake. Tuesday his life was at ·stake. Wednesday he was spared. Thursday he faced life in prison. Today he was back in his quarters with limited freedom . Thus ran the drama of the 27-year...old Calley's life during the past five days. By order of President Nixon from the Westeni White House in San Clemente, Calley was taken from armed 34 Y ears Service custody behind the barbed wires of the post stockade Thursday and ·returned to his bachelor quarters. Only a day after he was sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai, the boyish-looking lieutenant was ordered released by the President pending the C-Ompletion of a full review of his con- viction by an Army court-martial. The White House directive took most observers by surprise. The President School Pioneer Elliott Succumbs Raym.oad M. Elliott, one of the best known school figures in Huntington Beach , died Thursday at the age of Tl. He rose from a math teacher at Hun- tington Beach High School in 1923 to Hanoi Reports 6 Gls Held After Battle SAIGON (UPI) -Withdrawing U.S. troops all but: •11-n®n·ed the Khe S~nh base Friday two months after opening it as the springboard for South Vietnam 's Laos ()ffensive. American jets attacked eonimunist. truck . and tank traffic in Laos which had been pinpointed by a commando raid. U.S. headquarters in Saigon declined comment ()n Radio l-tanoi reports that five Americans were captured by Com- munist forces in a battle at Fire Base 11 near the point where the borders of South Vietnam, Cambodia _and La~s meet. But field reports listed stx American! tilled or missing in combat Wednesday. . South Vietnamese headquarters said Saigon troops reoccupied FU:e Base S after losing it in a Communist ass.ault that cost 20 South Vietnamese killed and 25 wounded. North Vietnamese losses we~ placed at 280 me~ killed, One American was reported killed and one wounded when Communist gunners shot down two helicopters trying to rescue South Vietnamese. defenders of the base 2M miles northeast of Saigon near Dak To. de Spokesmen reported the troops ma "very light contact" with the C?m· munis~ when they moved back into the base. Beach Sch ola rs First in Line At Vote Signups Students at two Huntington ~ach h~gn tcbool campuses Jined up this m?m1ng to become the first 18-year~lds m the arel to register to vote. Mlss Florence Boosey, a member o( the Huntington Beach League of Women Voters, said the flow of students. past her desk in Room 107 at Huntmgton Beach High School was steady. . superintendent of the union high school district, retiring in 1957 alter 34 years of service. He was also a founder of the Orange Coast Community College District. Memorial services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Monday in the First Christian Church in Huntington Beach. Mr. Elliott, who is remembered by current Huntington Beach High School Principal Woodrow Smith as a "dignified, charming and highly .respected scholar," came to Huntington Beach by way of Utah in 1923. He began by teaching math at a time when the school district had an enroll~ ment of only 200 students. A reserved person, he was known as "Silent Ray" ·to his CQntemporaries and witne3Sed the CQnstrocUon of the pr....,. llJlnUngtoo Be@cb 'HiJb Scllot!I at its current location in 1921 aftd 1917: He soon became vice principal and in 1948 took over as principal and superintendent of tbe d.i!trict. 1 duaJ rote he held until his retirement In 1957. Principal Smlth said the scholar often took walks from his home 1l 1715 Main St., ·past the high school campus in his retirement to talk with students and teachers. He was fond of music and once entertained a PT A meeting by playing h.is mandolin. He was a memtier of the American Legion and a charter member of lhe Huntington Beach Lions Club and a mem· ber of the Orange Coast Association. Survivors include his wife, Margaret Md daughters June Elliott, of the home, Carolyn Cook, Seal Beach and sons Nortnan of Austin. Texas and Frank of Riverside. He al.so is survived by sisters Dorothy Cole. Huntington Beach and Inez LOly, Anaheim. t b rt e grandchildren and two great grandchildren. The Rev. Thomas W. Overton will conduct the Monday services at the church, 2721 17th St., Huntington Beach. School Grounds Become Runway A pi!ot landed his plane on the playground of the Post Elementary School in Westminster this morning without mishap. The pilot, Monte Davis of Long Beach, told police that the light craft started to lose power and the playgrOWld was the only open space in the vicinity for a landing. Davis brought the plane down at 6:45 a.m. He had taken off from Fullertoo Municipal Airport Police said that Davis would probably have to dismantle part of the plane to move It from the 11cbool, at Ward Street and Hazard Avenue, on a truck. had once said of the massacre at My Lai that .. under no circumstances wa.s it justified." " Announcement of the President's in· tervention was made al San Clemente by Ronald L. Ziegler, White H~ press secretary. Ziegler said. Nixon had t,lephoned Adm. Tho01as H. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to direct Calley's releue. The presidential order wu not ailegal MY LAI DEFENDANT Col . Orin· Henclerlon ' Cu.l. ,ff~ll'htstnl .... Sq ys /n.nocent , ' In jtly ;Lai 'Hush From Wlr• Servk:el FT. MEAD~: Md, -The clvililll •~ torney for Col. Oran K. Henderson, highest .rariking officer charged witb My Lai-connected crimts, said U!day his client woWd plead innocent to ·cbarges ()f coverini _up the 1layin1 of Soutlt Vietnamete civilia111. Henry A. Rothblatt, a New York . at. torney, said prior to the pre-trtaJ hearing on the court-martial of Henderson, that the decision a.nd sentence in the case of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. would "ob- viously have an effect" on the outcorn~ of the Henderson trial at this Anny base between Washing~ and Baltimore. "The American public has taken a very strong feeling on it." Rolhblatt said the charges against Henderson - one charge of dereliction of dufy and two charges of making false ftatements -"are totally unfounded in fact and the Army know1· it. "I cannot belp bot wonder whose reputaUon ii hieing protected ·at Col. Henderson'~ txpen.$@, Qut we intend to find out," Rothblatl said. A flood of ' public protest has ariun over the conviction and life sentence given Calley alter his court-martial trial at Ft. Benning, Ga . Henderson, however, would not face so severe a penalty ii convicted on the charges against him. Required under the military code ol justice, today's hearing btlore military Judge Peter S. ·wondolowski will consider instructions for the conduct of Hen- derson'• Ci!url-martlal. Henderson, commander or tbe lltb Infantry Brigade when ooe of its ba't- talions swept through My Lai, Is accused s~Jcally with "wi.UluUy failini to con- dUd a proper and thorough in- vestigation" into report! of "excessive kilUng t1f ooncombatant.s," Registration also was open at Edison High School. County Law1nakers Affected step, Zie1ler ·said. In response to questions, the prw secretary said the President was aware of widespread pro-Calley sentiment that has been expressed In thousands of telegrams lo Nixon . But Ziegler added that the action "was taken at the President's own initiative." Under the President's order, Calley was granted the status of an Anny olficer confined to quarters under "light auard." He cao 10 lo tho laundry, to a movie, to church: but always -even in his quarters -an armed military guard must remain with him. Calley caMot leave the post without permission. He cannot talk to newsmen. He will be aUowed the visit of friends. He will not be allowed, however, the prlvilege3 of the officer's club or to attend official aocial functions at the post. Thrff hours after lhe dramatic ln· lt.rveotion by Nlson, Calle)' walnd Prom the stockade to a waiting car. Blinking from the glare of television ll&btf, he was accompanied by his Army defense lawyer, Maj. Kenn<th Raby, and military police. About 7S per50ns, mosU;y youq: PfOPle •ho ,had waited from lftellWUI aunllclll lolo a windy oflhl, 'bt'al\• Iola chem when.lie appeared In millorm..Jla.11J1• • olilht amiJe, ' Fluoride Vote Set Opponents Fail to Block Election .. By TERJ\Y OOVD..LE and you could aave the taxpayers money Of tM °"'" '11" s11ff by walting tl\1 the election." Foutltain ValleJ councilmen moyed Eugene VanDask, leader of the We· awifUy Thursday night to set 8 June eessful recall campaigo in 1969, aent 1 letter to the council praising it for ll elect.ion ()" fluoride despite attempts setting the special election. by anli·flooride leaders to block it. "I favor tfuoridatlon of city water," C.Ounclbnan John Harper suggested VanDask wrote. "But I do feel it's combining the fluoride election with the a question which ·should be decided by June I~ tax override election of the the voters. And delaying lt to the general Huntlngton Beach Union High School election would only make It an overbear- District. ing politic&l issue." His motion fell dead when other coun-· Lindegren, however, suggested the cilmen refused to second it and the council should wait betause of several city attorney aaid it would be technically action.s which could invalidate the elec· difficult to do. tion. George Lindegren, the man whose peti-"Assemblyman Bob Burke (R·Hun· lion campaip nearly forced the, special Unaton Btacb) hu a bill that would election anyway, aaked the ·council to require alt cities to bold fluoride elec. delay lt until the April 1972 1enval tiona," the anti-f!Uo[ide leader said. "It elec:;tion.s. · would supersede any city regulation if Lindearen npeaM!d the stand be took passed·." lut t'!I,, "Tbu I> • Ha al d -· ,.. """~.rfr · "'l !P~-... ,,.,,,...w-tti ••·ii wpr1'il>&-lt.;~flf<I , Cit"a.,lrvln,e . P.t-.!Br!tta Labor Secretary Opens Drive for Aerospace Jo'hs Secretary of Labor James D. HOdgaon late this week announced the launcbtng of a new effort to bring aerosplct apeeialisl! back into the world of the employed. then pointed toward an n- pe.rimental program at UC Irvine u an example of the idea. Hodgson, speaking after a conference at the Western White House ThundiiY morning called by President Nixon, said the new program at UCI was working very well . At that campus, he explained, unemployed engineers, scientist.s ·and technicians who lost their jobs in aeroapace are being retrairw:d in the field of environmental technology. Hodgson aaid the new plan would 1ppty "3 million In federal fuiid! ttiward of· ferin& out-of·work aerospace specialist& retratning, job opportwiity listings and even .Mmf! financial help to covtr moving expens~ to live near a new job too far for CQmmuting. The cabinet member said more epecilic data on the opportunities of the program w()uid be made available to the state department.a of employment within the next few weeks. Despite the allocation or the money, however, the plan is expected to make C1nly a dent in the ranks of unemployed aerospace engineers, scientist! and techniclant, who total about 100.000 na· tionwide. U.S. Unemployment Rate Jumps to 6% .in March WASHINGTON (AP) -Unemployment climbed back up to an annua l rate of six percent la March after a two- month · dt(line, the Labor Department announced today. The figures were not acCQmpanied by an official interpretation by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, under the ad- mini,t.tation's new pOUcy. of handling the monthly &Molincement. but members ()f Congress called BLS economist. for questionin1. · There were S.2 million unemployed meD and women in March, the report disclosed. Thi.!1 was 270,000 fewer than in February, but the decline was less than wual for this season . After allowir:lJ: for the susonal adjustment, joblessness f03e by 150,000 on the annual basis. I other art!as to obtaln Ila~ '1t4 l\ltlonal regulations on water fiuoridiUoa. The ballot propMltton' .. which wlll bti put to voters June 8 dt.i!a not ask for .a simple "yes" or ~'no" on whether fluoride should be put in cJty water. Instead it asb if the populace wants a city ordinance which would require an election anytime fluoride ia proposed for city water. Harper called the ballot a ''freedom of choice" issue rather than a flooride issue. Harper lost another batUe on a J.2 yote over bis motion that. couneilmtn be allowed to write ballot argumenf.JI for and against the proposal. U allowed, his proposal would have provided free ballot argument! wader the councU'g name. Now, ci~111 J!'OUP.t wlll bave to pay about '3()0 ti-pu\ .,._nu ... the ~al\ol. Central Park Proposal ·on June 8 Ballot A propoU<I cenltal park In P'eunlaln Valley will a:o on lhe June I tlecUon along with the issue of water fluoridation. Councilmen Thursday night-agreed unanimously to l suggestion by Mayot Edward Just that voters be aiked if they want the park. · · One chanj:t was made lo JUll'a r• quesL The term central park wis ~~ to recreation.al CQmplex. June Boykin, chairman of the parks and recre1tion CQrnmiasion oplatned why : ."We're not really trying to establish 1 park, but an overall rtcrea.· lion area." The tiallot question will ask voters to say "yes" or "no'' 11 to whether they want such • recreational .complu. The vote is to advise: the ctJUbcll of the people's feelings, and does not obligat! or forbid the city on any action .. regarding a recrtatiorr complex or cen. tral park, according to city officials. Just'~ recommended wording includes: lhe term "at no . increase: in tues," and also places the .approximate cost of the project at $750,000. , The money wpuld come from restt"Vt!l runds which have been buildini up for expan!lon of the communi,ty center. The recr~\,ion coip.~u w.ould take the place of a: aecond commµntty «nter. . Orulfe , Weather Only those who are already. 1.R and those who will be<:ome 18 ~·1th1n t.he next 91)-days were registered. Miss Boosty said . She signed up about 2S students b(!tween 8 a.m. and IO a.m. Members of the league plan to be on both campuses after Easter vacation to register any students who may have Uniformed S9lons .Illegal? Employment was about unchanged at 78.5 million. seasonally adjusted. £xcept f<r a temporary riae in January. total employment has stay'ed virtually level since last May: it is 500.000 below the record high of. March a year ago. ' Cooler temperalUrea. wlll mark the first Aprit weekend on the Orange: Coast. w:tth low clouda and toa in tht mqminp and tempera- turu runnlni from 68 to 78 de- lrett. mi~ today's signup. · Some of the Huntington Beach High School students. said they would be using the ir new rights to vote for or against &ptc:ific measures. "I would pay particular attention I.ti canr!idate3 who are aware of the war tn Vietnam and ecology.'' sa id Brandon .. Gentry. an 18-year.()ld senior, Debbie Greenwood. anolher 17-year old ! aenlor, said she would vole for pollution 'laws. c A third student, Ken Mansfield. 17. ",dl:led. "I like things the way they are. · don't want to change anything 11 d. II " in.a 1ca y. . n.e new registrants currently a.rt eligi· Ill. to vote only in Federal elections an~ Sacramento lawmakers havt not I ; r1t1fled the 1e.year.()id vote. "' .. From Wire Servlee1 WASlilNGTON -Two Orange County congressmen face the loss of their reserve military commissions today in lighl or a ruling by a federal judae here that it is unconstitution1l for members of CQngreu to hold such com· mlsstons . Rep. Craig Hosmer C·R·Long Beach) Is 11 rear admiral in Ole Naval Re&erve And Rep. John G. Schmitt <R·Twtin) is a lieutenant colonel In the Martne Corps Reserve. Rep. Ri<ihard Hanna (0.Anaheim) does not bold a reserve commlulon, a5 is the cast with both California Stnatora Al•n Cranston end Joh.n Tunney. U.S. District Cnurt Judge Gerh.ard A. CitHll, who madt th• ruUna. refwtd I \ ' ' The increase in unemplqyment oc~ curred largely amqng teertaters .and those ln the ' 20-to 24-year-old age btack'el ·Many jobless persons were new~ ly enterto.s the labor force but could nOl fl'M woik~ • - The joblea' rate compart.d wllh 5.a percent ·In l'tbruary, a.ttd :8.2 'ptreent in December. -a nll!o-yeat hliP. Last month'.1 declien .)"IS de~ihed by Secrejary ef L¥>or J, o. l(odgaoo 11 an "\ilde.d . ht•t'ttning.'\ ·.i,n of 1,,,. 1'WJmtnl l;~ tCfl'l>m)'I • 11>e,.lc'!.lo; iii{~ .,...,., '!llrold ~Id-· ~ ........... mllred I~ ~ 11' ~ ..... o,ldcy. of in. \erP.rela1loi> ' "hich promplea ·the ad- ttpn\'1ra~on'1 decialon to dl~tinut tirlefi'n«s on the monthly report by Gold· at.tin or other B~ officials, ,fNSmE TODAY 'DOrinina m4kt"up )or.: 4 fx4v· 1 · involve1 more than O paili.t jOb. Gbftltn WeJt College thetJ.te,_ q:rtt .studtnt.t mokt an (nterc•t- lfig. project of ~ Ste todo~'I Wiefctmder . ' ' H .J DAil V PILOT _.,, Ft!d11, A,,rl l, ltn t -I c --,_ ... -· Candidates Air Views: o~ean View Candidates ()lily lllM• candldatea aft V)'ln1 !or th• two school board seats on the April 20 ballot In Hunllneton Beach's Ocean View Sthool D!J. trict. Two of the three are incumbents. The Oceaq View district covers most of northern Huntington Beach . Currently. It serves more than 13,000 children in grades kindergarten lhrou&h eight. They are housed ill 2i dlslttct schools. Followin.& are the candidat.el' views on a ~ number of c:urrent issues in education. The qu'btions were posed by the Huntington Beach Le11ue of Women Voters. The answers came from th• cand1datea for the League's MCIDdldate QuesUonnalre." INCUMBENT TRUITEI Roller! J. llnn1r•llo ·Teacher Tenure :Idea Questioned 'By Zinngrabe .' ll1Cllml>tnt _. ·J. · 2!ftngrabt"'11n arrved qn the Ocean View board for ail: years. He owns and operate• a convalescent boipltal ln HwiUn&toa .!leach. : Q. Wbat procrm or p01Jcy c1i._ llfOllld you Ua.t "Al I dDfl!l.blr of the :0Cean View board, tarn ttlremely pfOlld , of chanses made in the AdmlnistraUon. .policies, end 1111 .. aUooal programa ·of <>ur district. I fuJly support these changes and btllev1 I.be Improved level of pupil 1performanct, staff excellence, rt1ponsi- ·ti11 man1g1mtnt Ind cdrnmunlty •upport .bu oome u a dJrtct rttult of the•• ichanaes. 111• emphu il on 11roar1m U· celltnce and fltcel r1•pon1lbllhy mua\ 'continue." Q. How do yo• feel about UAlllc1Uo11? ''Continuity or educational proiramming ·and financial 1dvant11e1 cf unlfic1Ucn 'bring it to the foreground as a rsalblllty lor our comnnmity. Add.1Uona Mntflts ln terms of provldln& our achool1 with community idenUty. a staff with td· dlUO..I flealbUlty and school programs -wtth Wider latitude for lnd.lvldual at- tenUOn &o each child makes unl.ficauon 1UtacUvt. Thia comple• issue cannot be JOl\red, however, by lhe mtte rt 10lu- Uoo thet it i1 rliht for our children. P'luctuaUnc t11 tiases amoni the five element.try dlltrlctai the. dlvidln& of materials, bul.ldtna1. and reaourcea and the wlllln;nt•~ of lncllvldual 1chool com. mW1ltlt1 to abwb othera or be abtorb~ ~ make It I moct dllncult IUUI to utu'IVel to tvtr)'Onl't 11t1tf1ct1on. I am ln com - plete accord "'Ith the conUriuaUon of · lnttr-dlltrtct meeunt• to arrive at pro- pouh: suit.able to the d.11trlcll lnvolvtd, and wUI continue worklne: t.owardt th1s end. Jt i1 important that we arrive at 1. 'f!Wklble 1oluUon, rather than hava one lmpoat4 up0n us by an ln4ifluant t tate ll•DC)'." Q. Bow do YOI IHI aboot t .. cbtt tease? ••WhJlt! I havt! always supported Ill< noe4 to protect tlle Job of th• •bl• teaicher, lt has become increasin&l)' ap- partn~ th1t tht t'nure 1ystem tends to protect th' lt11 able tea cher . tbu1 preventing proft11lonal I e a c h i n a organitations, school district.I, partnlJ aOO our children, from receiving tht best qualified tt!achert. Certainly, in today's compeli tive market. "'• 11re tn· tiUtd to the· very btst and we 1hould have t.hl rtaht to rtmove nr replacl) thoe• tfachtrs who are not compettUv• or eompeUblt with our methods or Wchlnl children." Q. How would 1 \·oacber 1y1tlm or 1t..tewlde properly tu afltct local 1cbool DDlllttlT "In tl'lfl put two ytm Ocean View hat succtssfu.l.lf bid for tht tax· paytr'I dollar. Othtr dlttticl.$ not 11 lonun•I• are "'1rlln1 bankruptcy. Th• .. voucher 9)'1t.lm On I C\U'50f)' 1111\Ct, appears io bt 1 work.Ible solution to tbt flnance dilemma ; howtvtr, this 1y1tem also has question1 and loophole• Octan View ll•r.yera must QOtllidtr. Ila mala danlet 1 tha limthnl of board t:fftdJvenMI and lhf consequent lou of Ioctl CODtrol. Addlttonally, the voucher 1ydem now under di1C:U5llot1 woWd not oupport tht ••~Unr Ocon View pro-aram. How ~d out 41tlrlct aurment ltl rttelUI? By tu.iUOft'l M~y q11t•Uon1 1111111 l>t aneft'tcl cletrly belort f could 1upport U.. ptopot<d voucher ay&ttm. . ' CHALL!NGINO INCUM8!NTS Vaughn 1id1w1rds Race Chal'len ger Edewards Seeks Qualit y Learning ocnn vtew !thOet Mat'd candidate - Vaughn Edeward! is the challenger in this three-man r<ICe. He is chief ope.ra- tions officer for a management con-~ aultanl firm. Edewards did mrt an.!Jwer the specific queatiOJll posed by the Le11gu1 of Womin Voters. Instead, he 1ubmltted the followlng: Mr. F.deward.s' first concern for l he Ocean View School District is to insure that each child receives every benefit in preparina him for his hiaher educalion. II ~ lift '°'1vlctlon that the type of education each child receives al the elementary level may affect their suc· ceu in hiehtr ldu.cation and ultimately their future as adults. It ls his goal to make eure tNt the d\lldren of Ocean View ree9ve \ht belt 1ducetlon po11tble. Mr.. Edewarda haa exprused hil deep concern about the way Ocean View School District Is financed . He feels that it is time to make a change. It 11 hll conviction that the dlttrlct should examine Ute constraint• upon II. define Jtt priorltiaa and rtqulrements, and con· 1ttuct a plan whereby the taxptyer can be relieved of some of the burden and Wormed as to whi t his flnanclal role will be In the future. V1u1hn Edeward1 feels that the es1en- t11l purpose of Octan View School District, Is to educate and treln your children. It is his conviction that thlt should be a combined effort on the part of the trustees. administration, teachers. and you. the parents. ll is hi• desire to encour111e end offer deci.llve le1dership In this area. fl.Ir. Edewards offers to the voters of Ocean View School District a choice. l l is his desire to offer to you the resource ol hi! clear thlnkln1 and Im- agination to 1 re1pon1lbUlty th a l demands thls attention. Hanna Sill Asks Boost in Loans Rtp. Richard T. Hanna (O·Anaheim) has lntroductd Jea:tslation aimed at boosllna by nearly SI bllllon Small Buslrttlt& Admlnlstr1tlon funding for lo11ns to unemployed aero1p1ce worker• \\'ho want to sel up their O\l'n buslntssea. Hanna Is also Introducing a blll that would permit the Small Business Invest· ment Corportllon, an SBA subsidiary, to guarantee loans to lhe unemployed ptrsom up to 90 percent. lie said there are from 50,000 to 7&,000 aerospact e1taJtlve: level personnel out of work nationally wllh about 16,000 of them ln I.be Les Arla:eles-Orange Coun- ty lnl. Octtn View. In our 1tatu1 as a low tax base achoo! district would perhtpa benefit from addlUonal monies under th• etatewide properly tat. But our nelahbort In Seal Stach and Hunun1ton Beech may be required to rtlae their proptrty tax, or make 11ub1llnllal cul.I In exl1t1ng program1. This propoul may sound fO()d on t.he surfsct, but t fHI It needs more public exposure and fw1ber objective 1tudy before mote dellnlllve oplnlont can be rucbtd." + I ,, INCUMBENT TRUSTEE Ralph H. B1ue r Incumbent Bauer Seeking Precise Cost Controls incumbent Ocean View Trustee Ralph H. Bauer, also serves on the board of tru1tee1 of the Huntinaton ~-Beach llnion Hi11h School District. lfe i.! a research chemist. Q. Wbat program or policy changes would you lllle? ••r would like lo see a more precise method or measuring cost-effectiveness 0£ school programs. Tht citizens and educators both need to know uactly hOw effectlve a given program Is a! me111ured by performance against specific objectives, and these evaluate the cost of achieving those objecUves Jn term! of the real value to the cornmunlty." Q. How do you fetl 1bout unU\catlon? "I believe the Huntington Besch Union High School Dbtrlct ahould be unified In I.hr~ sections, ·which adhere 11.1 c\09e to the following boundaries as the law and tcluc1tlonal common sense dictate : -City of Westmlruter and Clty of Seal Beach. -City of Huntington Beach. -City of Fountain Valley." Q. How do yoa fee.I •bout ltacber tenurt? "I believe in the b11ic philOlophy of tenur• t.o protect teechers from caprlcloua or politically mot iv• t e d dl1mis1al. llowever, I also believe that the present tenure law makes it so difficult to remove an incompetent teacher that the incompetents are seldom dism!Yed. l believe that dismlssa! pr0= ceed.ln&s 1ho\lld be removed from a rormal court hearing and be given to the boards of trustees of lhe district.., Q. How would a voucbt-r system er •tatewfde proJ141rty ta affect local school noances? ''I am unalterably opposed to the voucher 1ystem. If v.·e instilute it v.·e will destroy public education. All •ahool chlldrtn In Callfomla should have lh• aame basic level of financial support. A }ow wt1lth diltrlct should rectiv1 belp IO that ill expenditure per child Is equivalent to that of • hi1h wt1JUt district. The property taxes should be equAlt:ied t.hroughOut the state 11.lCh that people with comparable. properly should pay the same for education no matter 1vhere they live. If local citizens 1~·ish to tax themselves to improve their school syste m they should be a!Jo"·ed to do so., Wind Ensemble To Play Tonig ht The PaeUJc Wind ElllMlblt Crom I.hi Cn.lvtr!lty ol Paci!ic tutlti at Huntin1· Jon B<•ch H\lh School Jonl&ht !0< a pro- ar•m ol cleulcat.mu1 ic, Tickets to the ronctrt, !Cheduled for I pm. h1 the: aud11orlum, are 1vall:tble 11t the door for $1 . • . W estmin_ster Elementary Hopeful,s Speak , If ·' All five eandldata tontestlng two seall Oil lbe board of the We1tminster Elemen· tary School DI.strict spoke before an awiitnct of 50 1t a candidates' forum Wtdnesdlly nigh!. The forum at We1tmin1ter Hijh School was sp0n!ored by the League of Women Voler1 of HWllington Beech. Each can· didate spoke for three minutes. They spoke In the follov.-ln1 order, as 1helr namu were drawn In a lottery; Mrt. Ade t1e1g, Midwa y City, a housewife and incumbent, said she favored the best possible educational program with both the boMd and teachtr! cooperating. She said she believes 111 organizations must work togelber and that the dlstrict should always be ready for any changes in resource s. Jostph 1\-UirabJ, Westminster, a retired deputy sheriff, attacked "secret" polling places In the last override election and said that ir he were elected be would "·alch the taxpayer's dollar. He said he wan!J a 12-month ~chool year "so teacher• can earn their money.'' Frank Eutwood. Westminster, waler !Upttlntendenl and incumbent, traced his background in Westminster. '"A lot of smoke was put up" o\·e.r teacher tenure, he said, "because only S percent of teachers needed It." De11·ey LtRoy WUe1, Midway City, a ahlriff's deputy, uld Ul11t new life l\·as needed on the boud to bridge the gaps between the board, teachers and atudents. He aaid federal and elale aid to educ1· tion should be greater. Roderick Crus,, Huntington Beach. an adminl1trator in marketing publicatlom, pointed out that a new population had .come into the district in recenl yean, but thtre had been no ne..v representatloa on the board . He said the schools must adapt to the changing needs of soci1ty and ihat the status quo could no longer be main- tained. Burke Votes No On State Gas Tax Proposal 100 Residents Protest Restaurant for V alleri Assemblyman Robert Burke CR·Hun· tlngton Beach) cast lh1 only dissenting vote ln S1cramtnto Thuraday aa a pro. po1al for an additional tax on gasoline pa11ed Jts lnlU1l test. The proposed ntw ta1 would averaie one and one·half to two cent1 per gallon on top of • pruent state tu of seven ctnll a gallon and a federal t.11 of four cents a aaIIon. All present 1asoline taxes are earmark· ed. for hl&:hw1y purposes exclmlvely. The new tu, proposed In a bUI by Wad.le Deddeh CD-Chula VI.Ila) end 12 a).luthort. would ral.ae 1120 million a year for 1tat.t 1upport of mats transit sy1temt. "Whit we are reelly doing ls putting s s1le.1 l11 on a nectsslty that 11 already the hl«Nat taxed commodity we have in the atate of Callfornla," Burke 1ald . He pointed out to hl1 colleaguea that "all we have done I! talk 1bout how we ere 1otn1 to spend the money rather titan conalderln& the question of whether we should ral.ae the money at all." Elaht Democrata and five Republicans voted for the mwure ln the Assembly Tran!porl.aUon Committee. There w11 no oppo1llion t.o the measure from citliens or lobbyists at the hearing. Lobbyists for the.;iutomobile clubs of northern and Southern California -who opposed Prop. ll last faJI because it diverted 1atollne ta1.ea to mast tran1it -endorsed the Deddeh measure. Nearly 100 homeowners turned out Thursday night before Fountain Valley councilmen to protest plans for a restaurant near their homes in a major shopping complex under construclion at Brookhur1t Street and Edlnger Avenue. It took three and one-half hours ror the public hearing. 1'.1ost or the citizens seemed to be objecting to the proposal for 1 24-hour Sf.mbo'a rtstaur1nt In the center. Some, however, lad objeclloM to other feature s of the complex. After considerable debate an legalities, the council ruled that it would hold another hearing 1lmed at luulng 1 corr dlllonal use permit for operation of the restaurant. It was likely that the use permit hearing would conJid'r llmltallon1 on samb0'1 -<>-perat1n1 -hour1: All Sambo's restaurants 11ve one now stay open 24 hours. City Attorney Thoma1 Woodruff told the c:ouncll that FoWJlain Valley has no laws restrictlng operational houri of a restaurant. However, he pointed to a quirk in approval for the center which allows the council to require 1 conditional uae permit' for the re1taurant. "You could then condition that permit to restrict the restaurant hours," Woodruff explained. Councilmen unanimously took that ac- tion by 1pprovin1 the precise plan, but requirtna: a C1lndiUonal ue per-mi\ for any re1t1urant1 in IL Budget Sho~ks Sheriff, Welfare Ask Hikes The flrst two county departments to outline their need! for the 1911·72 fiscal year have tsked for lncrea!es totalini $5 million. · 'I'h• lherilf-coroner's department wu the flr1t to explain Jts needs t.o Orange County's 1dm.lnl1trat1ve staff Thursday. Sheriff Jame1 .Musick 1ald the co1t of operating hit department would be up $1 mllllon next year. Thll mornln&, County Welfare Director Granville Peoples said costs for his dtp1rtment '''OU.Id be up about $4 million. l>eople1 estimated that the total welfare budget would be up to S98 mil· lion from the current )'elt'a $&.S million . Of the $98 mJIUon the eounty will have to pay abo1.1t $26 million. · Peoples blamtcl the faltering eco~my for most of lhe increase. Mualck tald Thur•day the cost of operating his department wiU be hi1her because of the pressure of population. He said lhe county jail 11 now over· crowded. Orenge County Supef\risort who have been eyeing cuts in county e11:pendi· lure1 for the com!na yeer were not on hand to hear the bad newa. They'll get it officially let.er thla month. --- Homeowner• also attacked the councll ovtr the year.Jong battle on development of the center. "The fact that this re1taurant Is open 24 houri should have been comldered long ago," said Nell JWgers, one of two men who appealed the planning commission approval to the council. "It's just 87 feet from my bedroom.'' added Tom Stears,. the other appellant. Much of the night's confusion was caused over what was up for appeal at Thursday's bearing. Homeowners felt the entire site plan wa1 appealed and the council could eu11y st.op Samba's and other problema by; dlsapprovlnl it. OUNel COAlf DAILY PILOT OIUJtOI COAIT PUILISHI NG COMPAM't Ro~ttf H. w,,, Prtt!Otnf Mid Plllllw.tr J11l R, C11rftf Vic• PralHnt ,,,. o-•• MtMffll Tllo"''' K•t•i' Edtlot'. 1"11111 A. MwpJ..i~I Mt!MtMI •"*" A!.,t Oirli11 w..t °""'° ~ t:flW Al!,t rt W, l t ftt AsMClllo Edl!W Mlllltl ........... OMM 1717$ lttdi ltllltYtr4 M1lll11 AJlrtn: P.O. lt1t 7f0, t 2&41 .....,Ollktl lfsll.llW ••di: tt FOl'•t A...,. (Ollt MtH: DI Wal 11'1 lll'tft New,ort .. du Jan H~ loul_,., lel (lfl'Ml'lft: W: Hor111 I I Clft'llnl ll•I T.i.,..._ l7141 642-4JJI C._.. A'""""-t '42·167, Gla1s Top Table• ••• On Sale Now! JOx60 GLASS TOP TAll.E-~<" THICK SPICIAL $154 RIG. ,171. ~lvly "'"" ............ .,, -! .... ltlf• fa ... -lo 0 ,. ""' --Doo't '""' -.,. ............ ,, ,. ... Cfl'Clllty •• , ..... ,. ,... A.Nllable 1'1 ... foflow1119 flnidln: Aotlqoo Gold -Oki SJ-bl! -Df"'.....r OtlH --.i, -Ylnle GrHo -Alllicpe T-. DEALERS F.OR: HENREOON -DREXEi: -HERITAGE NIWPOaT IT'Oltl OP'I N PllDAY 'TIL I NIWPORT HACH LAGUNA HACH . l The 50-membtr 1roup will ptrlorm workl by Beethoven, GlaMlnl. Jo/o, ~ Qrot1, DabJ and Smll.h and other com- ?'.l•e:rs. 1711 W""llff Dt .. MZ-2050 OPEN FRIDA T 'TIL t l'rof...i-1 loteriot Dnl'°"' A,.lloble-AID-HSID INTERIORS :Ml N-c-t Hwy. 4'4-6111 OPIH FAIDA T 'TIL t Alao Included in the Pacific Wind En· 1tmble's tour Is 11 clJnlc for l1strument1l ltudents at Fountain Valley HJah School • • l I ' Ne :rt Beaeh EDITION VOL 64, NO. 79, 4 SECTI ONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,. CA(IFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1971 TEN CENTS Five-day Drama End·s With Calley Release FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -On Mon· day Lt. William L. Calley's future was at stake. Tuesday his life was at 11take. Wednesday he was spared. Thursday he faced life in prison. Today he was back in his quarters with limitt{I fteedom. Thus ran the· drama of the 27-year-old Calley's life during.the past five days. ·By order of President Nixon from tht Western White House in San Clemente, Calley was taken from armed custody behind the barbed wires of the post stockade Thursday and returned to his bachelor quarters. Only a day after he was sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai, the boyish-looking lieutenant was ordered released by the President pending the completion of a full review of his coo· viction by a.n Army court-mllrtial. The White House directive look most observers by 1urprise. The President lnno~ent Plea Set Colonel to Deny My Lai 'Coverup' From Wire Services FT. MEADE, Md. -The civilian at- torney for Col. Oran K. Henderson, highest ranking officer charged with My Lai-00nnected crimes, said today his client would plead innocent to charges oI covering up the slaying of South Vietnamese civilians. Henry A. Rothblatt, a New York at· lQrney. said prior to the pre-trial hearing on the court-martial of Hender son, that the decision and sentence in the case of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. would ''ob- vioualy have an effect" on the outcome of the Henderson trial at thl!'I Army Tideland Fees Not Assessed Until Ruling Tidelands rental fees on private docks bi Newport Harbor will not be assessed until the county coun~l's office renders an interpretation of an attorney general's opinion. Supervisors this week. a~ked Coun.seI 'Adrian Kuyper to give his interpretation of a Feb. ~ opinion by the Attorney General that the fees may or may not be imposed dependent on whether l~e private mooring has ·•some public benefit." Kuyper had ruled last year that the county must make a fair market valu• rental charge on all county tidelands. Effective Jan. 1 the county has been collecting a 6-cent per square ~oot fee from commercial landings and tidelands users in the harbor. Real Property Services D i r e c t o r Stanley Krau.~e told board members that lbt Reuben E. Lee floating restaurant and Swales Yacht Anchorage have been unwilling to sign rental agreements. He said the Bayside Village Boat Launch and the Newport Harbor Yacht Landing bad signed up. Krause expect.I the holdout duo to sign so0n . • Supervisors gave him an April 20 deadline to gel the signatures. A decision on the private docks and piers Will not be made by the Boar~ nf Supervisors until mid-May and 1f fees are decided on they will be assessed beginning July l. Quake-wrenched Valley Shudders Five More Times ... base between Washington and Baltimare. "The American public has taken a very strong feeling on ii." Rothblatt said the charges against Henderson - one charge of dereliction of duty and tw0 charges of making false statement.! -''are totally unfounded in fact and the Army kJ.ows it. "I cannot help but wander whose reputation is being protected at Col. Henderson's expense. but we intend ta find out," Rothblatt said. A flood of public prGU!st has arisen 11ver the conviction and llfe sentence given Calley after his court-martial trial at Fl. Benning, Ga. Henderson, however, would not face 10 1evere a peQ.lllty it convicted·t.D U,. (bltstf aaal.n!t him. Required under tht military code ef justice, today's bearing before military Judge Peter S. Wondolowski will ccmsider lnstructJons for the condUd tf Hen- derson' s court-martial. Henderson, CQmmander ef the 11th Infantry Brigade when one of its bat. talions swept through My Lai. i!'I accused specifically with "wiHfully\l'ailiniz to con- duct a proper and ·thorough in- vestigation" into reports of ··exct!'lsive killing of noncombatan ts." Now attached to the 1st Army at this base mid.way between Washington and Baltimore, Henderson. 50, is charged with dereliction of duty, failure to obey a lawful regulation. false swearing and making a false official statement. He is the only officer still facing court-martial on charges of covering up the alleged massacre at My Lai. Charges againSt 13 others were dropped. The charges against the Indianapolis officer resulted form a three-mo«th in· vestigatil"ln by a panel headed by Lt. Gen. William R. Peers. Fonner Lagunafi Dies in Vietnam A 1967 Laguna Beach High School graduate Otis week. became the 382nd Orange County !'lerviceman ta die in the Vielnam war. Army Warrant Officer Steven Michael Larrabee. 21. son of Mrs. Barbara L. White. ~361 Seton Road, Irvine, w a 1 killed March 24 when hi!'! helicopter was shot down over Cambodia. the Dtfense Department announced Thursday. Larrabee went Into the service in 1!168 and had been in Southeast Asia for almost a year, attached to the 25th Infantry division. He was a he.licopter pilot .. Following his graduation from Laguna High, he attended Saddleback College for a time before joining the Army . had once said of the musacre at My LaJ ·that "under na circumstance& was Jt justified." Announcement of the Preai:denfs in· tervention was made tt San . Clemente by Ronald L. Ziegler, Wblte House. prtss secrttary. Ziegler said Nix.on had telephoned Adm. Thomas H. ·Moorer, chairmati of the Joint Chiefs of "Staff, tG direct Calley's release. The presidential order was not a legal ( ,, MY. LAI DIFINDANT Col. Or•.n Htindwson . t:><"fl.O•· ODS · ' ,. Khe Sanh Base; Reds Hold 5 Gls SAIGON (UPI) -Withdrawing U.S. troops .all but abandoned the Khe Slnh base Friday t:wo months after opening it u the springboard for South Vietnam's Laos offensive. American jets .tttacled Communist truck and tank trafnc in Laos which had been plnj,oitlted ·by a commanda raid. · U.S. headquarter• in Saigon declined comment on Radio Hanoi repGrU that five Americar11 wert captured by Com. munist fOrces in a battle at Fire Base 6 near the point whert the borders of South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos meet. But field reports listed six American!'! killed or missinc In combat Wednesday. South Vietnamese headquarteri 1aid Saigon troops rtoCCUpied Fire Base 8 after losing it in a Communi.!Jl assault that cost 20 South. Vittnamese killed and 25 wounded. North Vietnamese· losses were placed at 280 men killed. One Americtn was rtported k.illed and one wounded when Communist gunners shot down two ·helicopters trying to rescue South Vietnamese defenders of the base 280 miles oortheast af Saigon near Oak To" Spokesmen reported the troops madt "very light cont.act" with the c.om. munisb wnen they moved back inta the base. However. U.S. &-sls dumped 100 tof'ls of bombs in the surrounding area ta stem the possibility of another Narth Vietname&e attack. Military spokesmen !'laid lhe BS2 strike was the fourth in twa days around Fire Base 6. Correspc>ndenta said Khe S11nh, 12 miles Inside South Vietnam from the LaoUin border, wu allMlt a wasteland Friday as the last·AmertClll forces pulled out. They said the only signs ol Ufe (See INDOOllNA. P11< II County La1v1nakers Affected step, Ziegler saJd. In n!spcmse tti quutions, the preu secretary said I.be President was awan of widespread pro-Calley senttment that has been expressed in thousands of telegrams to Nixon. But Zlegler added that the action "wu taken at the Pres!dent'1 own initiative." Under the Pn!sldent'1 order, Calley was granted the status of an Army off~r confined to quarters under· "light guard:' He can &G to the laundry, to a mavle, to church; but alway1 -even in his quarter& -an armed militaj.y auard must remain with him. Calley . cannot leave the post without permission. He caMol talk tti newsmen. He will be allowed !he JJislt of friends. He will not be allowed, however, the Privileges of lhe officer's club or to atlend oUicial social functions at the Jl"L Three hours after the dramatic in· terventlon by NiJon, caney walked from the stockade to a waiting car. BlinkinS from the glare of televialon llghtf, b.• was accompanied by his Army ~fenM lawyer, Maj. Kenneth Raby, and military pallet. . . About 7S personS, mostly youn1 people wt:io.~ walted ·from aftemoan 1unl1ght into a windy nigtit, brake into •cheetr when he appeared in unif<>rm. ·He save (See r.ALLEY, Ptp I) Parking Ban Eyed Newport Studies Street Congestinn By L. PETER KRIEG 01 IM Oallr r u.i 11111 Newporl Beach ha!'! launched a study of fees for overnight parking on city 1treel.!'I -or an outright ban -in an effort tO relieve conge!'llion that oow plagues almost every section of ttiwn. The planning cammission Thursday night ordered the City Attarney'!'I Office to explore legalities of requiring a permit, costing somewhere between $50 and $100 a year per car, to park all night on the streets. A.Distant City Attorney Dennis O'Neil Aid today that there i& doubt abou' the legality of a pa1d permit requirement but the ban itself may be legal. "Many other cities do it," he said. Planning Commissionei: William Martin proposed the ordinance as his panel reviewed recommended mning reguJa. lions that would increase the off-street parking requirements for new homes, apartmenl.!'I and hotels. "If we are going to solve the problem that exists now." Martin said, ''we've go tti do something more acrogio; the bQard. There is a great parking problem. but it is created by all duplexes, not just those that will be built. Cites l~vine Program taltor ~etary ~Opens ' . . ' Drive £or Aerospace Jobs Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson late this week annot!heed tht launching ()f a new effort to bring aerospace specialists back Into the world of the employed, then pointed toward an ex- perimental program al UC Irvine as an example of the idea. Hodgson, speaking after a conferenCe at the Western White House Thursday morning called by President Nixon. said the new program at UCJ wai working very well. At that campw, he explained , unemployed engineers, 1cientisl.5 and technicians wha lost their jobs in aerqspace are being retrained in the field of environmental technology. Hodgson said the new plan would apply $43' million in federal funds ttiward ("Of· fering out-of-worJt aerospace speciali!'lta retraining, job opportunity listings and even e;ome financial help to cover moving · expenses to live near a new job too fir for commuting. The cabinet member sald more ·specif le data on the .()J'portunitiea _of the ·program would be made available to the state departmenta of employment within the next few weeb:. Despite. the allocalion of the money , hawever, the plan 11 expected to make only a dent in the ranks of unemployed aera1pace engineer!'!, scientisl.!'I and technicians, who total about 100,000 na· ti on wide: , The new pr:ogram would only be able to help perhaps 10,000 of them. Hodgson said. The secretary. him sell a California aerOsJ)ace executive before reeeiving his appointment Ill the cabinet a few monthll ago. had grim forecasts for the unemployed in that industry. "It seems doubtful that the industry would restore itself soon enough to be ot any help to these indivtduals out of work now," he said. U.S. Unemployment Rate Jumps to 6% in, March WASHINGTON <AP) -Unemployment climbed back up to an annual rate of six percent in March after a tw~ month decline, the Labor Department announced today. The figures were not accompanied by an official Interpretation by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, under the ad- mtnlslration's new policy of handling the monthly announcement, but members or Congress called Bl.S economists for questioning. There were 5.2 million unemployed men and women in March, the report di1closed. This was 270,000 fewer than in February, bul the decline was less than usual for this seasan. After allowing for the seasonal adjustment, joblessness rose by 150,000 on the annual basis. ''We should prohibit overnight pMking In the city of Newport &each ~cept through a parking ~mit purchued troht the city -at a stiff fee ()f '501 $71 or even $100 a year." Martin, said the fee system •1would force these people to clean out their garages they use for storate and'opf:D up other garages used for other things:" He called it the only fliir way ti attack the problem. The most controversial aspect of the regulations already under 1tudy 1 pro- vision that two off.st.reel parldnc plaets tSee PARKING, Pap ll Dzdaney's Wife · Back · in County To Face Court ~l TOM BAJILEY ' Of !M DlllPJ Plltl lt•lf , .. Marlene Dulaney, looking pate, •trllned .tnd visibly apprehensive, was bua't1e<1 iota Santa Ana Municipal Court toda.t tG face charges linking ber to the alleged $3 million defrauding ot investon in the World Financjal Trends. empire ad~ ministered by her husband . Mrs. Dulaney, 32, Was nawn in frain Bermuda· late last nisht alter agreeing to return to Oranae County wftb district attorney's investigator• and fact grand theft and conspiracy charges already filed against her hus~nd, Jose~. 37, and his vice presilil!:nt James Shipley, 38, of Huntington Beach. AU three 111 they are innocent. She stood up befare Judge Paul Ml!t wearing th.e yellow pajama suit i&sued to Orange County Jal! women priJClne~ and cGnflrmed for the jurist that ,aq.e did not have an· attorney to represent her. Judge Mast appointed the publle defender. ordered the blande defendant to return to his courtroom Monday . f0r preliminary examination and set her blil at $312,500. Dul~ney's next court appearance 11 also scheduled for Manday. The 37•year- (1Jd investment counselor, wba was ar~ rested last week in the Dutch Caribbean calony of Curacao, is alao held in lieu or 1312.500 bail. " Mrs. Dulaney baa been c:Onf!MCI t& the hospital in Bermuda with what ba1 been described as a gall bladder Ctlb.o dition and a po'saible heart ailment. But her illness was de!'leribed by in-- vestigators today as "oal.blng more serious than a bad J::ase of nerves.'' HO!'lpital authorities in tbe British Colony (See DULANEY, Pac• I) " Orange LOS ANGELES (AP) -The earth 's crust, badly wrenched in the Feb. 9 killer earthquake, shuddered five times Thursday as it continued settling back. intti place. The aftershocks rallied dishes and wiridows and caused a brief power crutage but no !'lignificant damage was reported . The sharp .. brief temblors were felt most severely in the San Fernando Valley, where the initial jolt killed 64 persons And did hundreds of milllon11 of doll,.rr; worth of damage when it slmck just beff'lre d.1r~·n nearly two month~ ago. Uniformed S'olons Illegal? Employment was about unchanged at 78.S million, aeasonally adjusted. Except for a temparary rise in January, total employment has stayed virtually' level llnce. Jast May : It is ·500,000 below the record high of March a year ago.' The increase in unemployment oc- curred largely 'atnOJli: ~eenagers and lhOflt in the 26-to 24-year-old age bracket. Many jobless persoos were new· ly entet:lng the labor !Orce but could nGt.find·wnrk. • Cooler tt.mperatures-will -mark Iha flrst AprlJ weekend on the , Orange Coaat, with low clouds and fog In the mornings and temper•· tul'e!'I running from 68 to 78 de- grees. Seismologist~ at the Cahftirni• Institute of TtthnOlogy Jn Pasadl'nll' ~aid the latest 1hakers registered frl"lm 2.7 to between 3.S and 3.7 on the Richter scale. The orlg!n11I quake was gauged at 6.6 magnitudr. . Cal Tech offiCialr; ~ay thl!re hive been over 230 altersh()('ks of 3 rnagnitude. Including ont Wednesday th:it injured Jix persons anti damaged some 300 homes and the Devnnshire Po!Jce Station. Tht !Ast jolt 1bunday CAU~ cr•ck- ln the. police station to widen, "fficers •aid. from Wire Ser,'ice1 WASHINGTON -Two Orange Co1.1nty cnngress~n faee the loss of their reserve military eommissions tnd;i:y. in light of 11 ruling by a federal judge htre that it is unconstitutional for m~bera of C.Ongreu to hold such com- mission~. ., Rep. Craig Hosmer tR·Long Beach) is a rear admiral in the Naval Reserve end Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·Tu.sthi1) Is a lieutenant colonel in the Marine Corps Reserve. Rep. Richard H11:nn11 (D·Anaheiml d°'' not hold 11 re!trve CQmmission, as ts the CllR with both California Senatort Alan Cranston and John Tunney. .S. Oi~trict Court Judgt Gerhard A. Cese.U. who m:tdt the ruling. refused •• tn issue> &11 injunction erderina: sen1tor• . or ~pre.sent.adv~" rnian the.ir pol). tians. ... . ' · He said he expect~ the ruline to be appealed to higher courts and that there wa1 no ur1ent nece1sity for 1uch an order. .. Gesell &aid 117 aenaton and rtptf'stn· tatlve!I now hold commlssion1 lo . army. navy. air farce and MJrini Corpt reserves. Gesell'• decision came in 1 S.fl.q:t\ii"~ Deftnse SecMary Melvin ·'ft. tiird brought by a group called Tbe Reservists Committ.M to Stop the War. Gt&ell aald ht Maed bis decision 011 ArHcle t, Section 6. C11use t of the Con11tlwtion which ill)-S: "No Mintlor nr representatille shall,. du.ring the t!me for which he was elected,.. be appointed . to any civll office. under tht authority of the United Stat.el, which shall have betn cre.11ted or i h • emoluments ""!where(){ 1hall have tieen lnfreued durina· · auch time: and no pefsari boldini a.ay offict under lbt Ui\lted Stat.ts. shall be a member of either house durina his continu1nce in of(ice:· . Ves.ell'i rulloc be-kl that a commi11ion .bi lthe m~illry ~strve1 feD within the lrfa of a civil ofllet cf the Unitrd States. He Doted in hi# ruling that "the mean- ing and effect of thla constitutional pro- vision have never before been determined by a court." The jobless rate compared with S.8 perceni. In February, and 6.2 percent in December -a nine·year high. Last month's declien was described by Sccr•tan ol Labor J. D. Ho<lgt.00 · ••' a.n' "indetd beartebing'" 1ign of Im· 1provemem :io the economy, hut the au.i$- tant 81.S comml.uiOner, Baroid Gold- stein. llid 'the, figures 1bowt4 1 mixed picture., ,, was this di.ScrepaDey ot lD- terpretatkln which prompted the ad- ministration's decision ta diseontinUt briefings (In the monthly report by Gold· stein or other BLS olllciala. Senafe and House member1 of lht. Joint Economic Committee called the e.xperta before it ~ay. \1. r. INSIDE TODA 'W· Donning makeu.p for a pl.av inpoliu:s more tMn. o po:il\e job. G~l.tien West ColleQe thtater· arts studtnU ,make an interest- h1lt project of it. Stt toda11~1 Wt.tkt.ndtr. ... fl... 11 (11\fftR!I 1 C"tcll"' U• ' c:1 .. 1""' """' Cnll'ikt rt (f'WUwtN l'J "*"" Htllfft I OIWN:t' I '''"'tlN ... ,. f ''"""ff , .. " M-tc-11 ..... l.aMtr1 11 Mtll'JeJ I ,_.,,.. ,...,.. -. t DAil V PILOT N F'rldlly, Aiflrtl t. im ··----- Juror~s Hell Fron• Pn9e l PARKING .•• Calley Trial forme_'!~ Told be reqWred per unit in a duplex or tr iplet. Now , on ly one is mandated. The commission indicated it ma,y com· promiae. roqulrlnl one and ooH>all p1>r unit. nolinl thlt serious d6ign hardlhlps are created for ne"' duplexes on 31).fool lots. ..... --FT. BENNING, Ga. -Jf war Is hell, the afterll\llh Is sometimes a double torment Army Maj. Harvey G. Brown, 33, a 'Vttlnllm veteran and one of six jurors wbo 1tt1ltrad Lt_ William L. "Rusty" caue,.. 27' to ltfe In prison for the My Lai massacre knows. Ht let down JO me of the atUf, military -dlaplaytd throughout the --oourt martJll , '11111nday, ntlec:Un& "" Ibo .,.,.,Y of dtclakla and lhe heavy fod<n lhat wtlghed It. None of tbe others have. "ll'a not the American Anny ... it's th1I <»11ntty that was really on trial there," tht Amarillo. Tex. career man nmorlrtd. Moj, Brown Nld he wOtlld halt I<> be 1D Pra.ldent Nixon'• place now - wt.th • naUoa ot emoUopal ptoplt deman-d!JW IA. Callay'1 po1'lon -and the Commander-ln-O>lef foced with the dlofct, "U would bt IO UJ)' f« him ... to ltt IA. Clllay ,. free, •. " lit odded Iba! many Amer!Cllll aro ltWng their emoUom take control of their mlnda 1n the fierce outcry for tbe President to intervene. •·But what would that do to the Jaw1 and justice of thia land? They haven't . , , bwd Ibo facta," Maj. Brown c<in- u-d. '"lbeJ blven't been able to scrutinize the nldence u we have." 'Ibe .evidence nvlewed included the image of • youna platoon leader riddling tmamln& civlllant wltll 1lup, ll>oollnr ot.f half • Buddhllt monk's Miii and burllnl a btby hudfirll IJtl<> a dlkh. "I have noihlng but compauton for Lt. Calley," he added. "l was k>oking right at Calley when the verdict was delivered. He looked like he had been hit In the head with a sledgehammer." "He didn't ask for hia life or rrttdom. 1 admired him for that. 1 alml>!t cried myself." Maj. Bro"n Mecrlbtd the trial as a mental Hell, but said he felt the panel's verdict was the only alternative. He made it clear the jurors had no recourse, saying they were unanimous on tht first ballol ''They had no recount," he added in reference t.o 102 My Lai villaa:m. Following hil interviev.·, a reportrr showed Maj. Brown an editorial cartoon frnm the Atlanta ContUtution by art.lit Clifford Baldowakl. 'Mit dra'Yl'lng ahowl the ghost of Gen. Douglas MacArthur with a comforting hand on the 1hou1der or a soldier by the name of Jury. The soldier ii grtef·atricken. a hand over his eyes, while on a sheU behind him is a closed book labeled: Calley Court· Martial. "Duty ... Honor ... CoWllry," says the caption • S\lcjden Sean 'fi'elied up in Maj. Brown'• eyes and he abrupUy turned bl! back. the about.face maneuver ma.rrtd by shaking shoulders. "This says it all. .. " he sobbed . D"l\.Y ,tLOT Iliff l'Mlt Trashy· Debate Bits Upper Bay Citizens Wednesday complained that building ma· terials "''ere being dumped belov1 t\l.'O homes under construction at 1021 and 1027 ~1ariner's Drive "ln Newport Beach. Construction Foreman Ken Smith of Ivan \VeUs & Sons, Jnc. declared debris is \vork of vandals. City has ordered contractor lo clear mess on the sheer 50-foot bluff. Soldier Returns 'Home~ Martin , in proposing the parking fee ordinan~. acknowledged there may be a "question of legalit y." .. But I doubt that it is thal far out of line as to preclude this as a possibili· ty.'' be said. Upon rteeipt of the attorney's opinion, lhe commission said it would then determine if it or the city council should consider il first. J\!ayor Ed Hirt h this 1norn1n g called the proposal "difficult and controver• 11ial." but said "there are deflnite ad· \•antages if it can be made to QPerate. "It will fCll'ct people to u.w gaf.wges for what they are suppo1ed to be used for and It will help our parking situation,'' he said. Martin also disMsed the pending stonn of controveny. "Politically, the idea of on-1treet park· Ing feet may be shot down, either here or at the council," he said, "public reaclion V.'ill be great and maybe thal is as it should be. 'l ti.t~ "If there is tremendous public react.ion against solving a problem, that is as It should be," he said . Virtually all other commission members said they relt Marlin's proposal may be a good one and Dr. George BroWJ said it may even eliminate the need for any parking restrictions i.1 the building code. From r_,,e I GI Lost in Laos, S. Viet Jungles for 12 Days J Newport Woman Says 'Romance' CALLEY RELEASED •.. • 111&1>1 amlle. ~ be arrt...i at his base quarters, his attractive, red-haired (lrl friend ~ hbn al !be door. Two armed mWtary polleemen patrolled lhn>ugbout lba nlPl In fr<>nt of the four-room apart. mmt Mllltary ofllclall Mid the delay In Calley'• release wu nece11ary to wori. out dotalla of his coafinement"' quart.rt. 'l1le Defmae Department In Wubln(l<>o Ald the )'OUlll olllcer would conUnue to """"" lull pay until lhe appell procedure b completed. Jn addition to sentencing him to life imprisonment, the coun.martial jury ordered that he be dllm1ued from the 1trvke and forefelt an pay ltld allowances. Calley had been kept In the rtll brick stockade under heavy prd alnce a •lx·man mlltl?y jury cconvlcted him Monday. Appeals from the llfe tenlenCe are ·automatic ln the lnlUal staee of the mill~ court proctll. Later they may be continued hlgber tn the mllltary and ·ledttal court l)'llenu. · Kil trial record alone, according to hlJ clvUlan lawyer, Georse Latimore will take alx months to prepare before Realty School Has 'Cheater' A pop qulJ' ls due for the sprin& clul of Colla Men's Lumbleau Realty School. Someone broke into lht sales academy at 145 E. ltth st., and stole $3 in va1uables -test booklets contain.inc aniwers t.o lbe atatt's tfflty salesman's Ii c e n a e ex. amlnaUon. Spokesman Dianne K. Qaln told· Officer Leo Jones Thursday that she c:ould suggest no clues to a luapt<I. "Due to a lar1e enrollment and a great percentage doing poorly," he notH Jn his report. DAILY PILOT dMNfl COAST PUIUSHIMO C:O-'A.ll'f ln.t H. We-4 ~ ........ lllMt J•,• t. c.,r.., VMr ,,......... ........... N.liMfW' "-·' r • .wr .. -n..-. A. M.,,.1111• ,,.,.,.. ..... ltllllW L. ,, .. , x,;,, NCWllWt ,_,. c1rr 111111w ft.wpeott .... Offke- JJll ,...,,.. .... ,, ... ,,.. M'eUI., .... ,, .. 11 P.O. le• 1111, tl••l --Clitl ..... : • W.l .., • .,.. u.-. hedlo1 2tt "'"'' ·-............ , ,,,,. ..... ~ -~-..... ,.~ .... Dtt.tl.Y 'n.of, _.. •ldl .. _....., - ·-,,.., Ill """",.,._. H llY -~ .... .... .. ....,... ..., ...... ~ 9'""" ......, Nldl., Clitlt #MM, ........... .... ,..,_.... Y•llort. S. C ....... C•I WWW .,.. llM1t11i1. ..... wllll -........ """"" ,.,_ .... , ""'""' .... . .. -,,.. .., '"""' c. .. ....... ,.... 11 f7t•• '41 ... 111 Cl ......... , .... , 641-1671 , presentation 1n review. "1be Pm:ldent or the United States can pardon Lt. Calley any time he want.," Latimer &aid after the jury pronounced sentence. But even Latimer apparenUy did not expect the direcUve from the President. Latimer new hotne to Salt Lake City before: the order was llrued. * * * Lt. Calley Rally Set for Newport A public rally in support of Army Lt. .William Calley ii scheduled for I o'clock toru,bt by the Newport Harbor Americu Legion Post at their head· q~ 215 15111 St., Newport Beach. Commander J. B. Murray said e1- preulona of support for the convicted officer led the Legion to sponsor the rally. The platform \\.'ill be open to anyone Interested in speaking out on tbe Calley affair, 'Murray said. Delegates and members of the Legion's executive committee wlll vote on the st.and to be taken by tbe membership. From Page I DULANEY ... declared her well enoueh to travel pro- vided she was willing to accompany investigators, they said. Mrs. Dulaney's arrest now set.s the stige for the trial of what investigators describe'>as the three principals in a series of alleged fraud! that first came to light wilb the complaints or many elderly residents of retirement com· munities in Laguna Hilla and Seil Beach. They accuse the Dulaneys and Shipley of bilking them of substantial sums o[ money invested in the corporate complex id.ministered by Dulaney. -The Dulaneys go to court ~tonday. Shipley, also free on $312,500 bail, goes to court April 21. Shipley took over as chief of the World Financial Trends combine shortly betore Dulaney and his wife flew v"ith their three children (rom Orange County to West. Germany and what invutigators describe as a year-long "life of Riley" in f.funich. They returned to the United Stalt11 a year later but were not arrested by local Investigators ilnd FBI agents u~til federal officers and Interpol 1gents picked up Oulaney's trail in CUracao. Investigators today said the couple's three children are being cared for b relatives in Colorado. PHU BAI. Vietnam (UPI) -For 12 day1 an American 1erviceman wandered lhrough the jungles of Laos and South Vietnam, living on rice and leaves and dreaming of an ice cold orange soda. When Spec. 4 Paul A. Lagenour, 21, of Odon, Ind.. finally reached an American unll be let out a wild "yahoo," and uld, "You guys are the prettiest sight 1 ever saw." Lagenour met lhe press at the 85th Evacuation Hospital in Phu Bai today, wearing blue pajamas and sandals adorn· ed with silver star and Purple Hearl medals. Hil left arm, hit by shrapnel. was bandaied and in a sling. But doctors said he would be all right "The most fr ightening time was all ~.time." Lagenour told newsmen. H'ow does it feel to be a hero? "It's a pain," he said. On second thought he added. "Oh. it's okay." Lagenour's story began March 19 while he \\.'IS flying over Laos as a door gunner aboard a UHi Huey helicopter gunship. Crash Victim's Fu1ieral Rites Set Saturday Memorial gervices wiU be conducted at 9 a.m. Saturday at Pacific View Chapel for Richard E. Schumacher. the Newport Beach pilot killed Wednesday in a crash at Ontario International Airport. Mr. Schumach~ was one or five \Vestern Airlines pilots v.•ho died when their Boeing ms crashed \\'hlle on a training flight. Investigators for the Na I ion a I Transportation Safety Board said today the men apparently had "little or no warning" of the impending disaster. The investigators have recovered the plane's voice recorder and the flight data recorder and have sent them to Washington for analysls. The federal investigators also said lhe backfiring witnessed by people v.·ho saw the plane go down \\'flS probably lhe result of oxygen starvation caused by the attitude of the jet. Five ten-men teams -both federal and private -are probing the v.Tecka ge ()f the plane in an effort to determine the cause of the crash. Mr. Schumacher. 53. lived at 1501 1\fariners l>rh·e. He leaves his wile EUiabeth, of the home; a son. Carl S, Schumacher of Newport Beach: two daughters. J\1rs . Sally Chidester of Pi~mo Beach. and Susan Schumacher of Newport Beach: a sister, Mrs. Dorothea ?\liehle of Ross. and one grandchild. The family has suggested memorial ('(lfll.ributions to the Newport Harbor Spastic League. ~11dget Sho~ks Sheriff, Welfare Ask Hikes • Tbe•first two county departments to outllnt their needs for lhe 1971 ·72 fiscal year ha\·e asked for increases toLallng $$million. The shtriff-coroner ·s department was the first to explain its needs to Orange County's administr1Uvt ataJf Thursday. Sheriff James t\1usick said the · .cost of oper1ttng his departmtnt would be up $1 million next ytAr. .. Thia morning, County WeUare Director Cr.nvllle Peoples said costs for bis department would be up about M mllllbn. Veoples estlm1ted that the total •elfaN!: budget woulrl be up to $1111 mil· Uon from the current ye1r '1 US million. Of the $911 million the county will have I<> pay about $2& mlllton. Ptoples blamed the f11lerlnR «'M<lmy for most of lhe incrt>ast . f.tu1lck said Thursday !be coat of optrallnlj: his depArtmtnl will bt hiRhl'r because or the prrssurr of popul1tlon . He said the county jail Is now over· crowded. Orange County SuptrvillOT'I who have bten eyeing cut! 111 coun ty f'Xpendi· turrs for the coming year werr not on hand to hear the bad ntws. They'll get Jt offlcltll,)' 11trr lhls monLh. ( "We started Laking small arms fire,'' he said. "The pilot said we Ylere hit, and he aet it down at a nearby South Vietnamese posilion.'' "We no sooner got dov.·n than mortars started hitting w." he said. "I jumped out and ran for cover.·• Lagenour linked up with 'troops of the South Vietnamese 2nd Airborne Bat- talion and volunteered to help call in U.S. air strlkeJ on !urrounding Com· munist posilions. "The South Vietnamese were reallv fabulous toward me," he said. "A couple even gave up their foxhole for me.'' Despite the attempts to protect him . shrapnel from ~ nearby Communist mortar blast hit him in the arm \l.·hile he was directing the air 1t.rikes. ''One South Vietnamese sol di tr gave me his last drop of morphine ," he said. "Anoth.er gave me his last bandage." Lagenour traveled with the South Viet- namese battalion until he was separated the next day with four Saigon soldiers dW"ing a battle against Communist troops. for lhe next three days, Lagenour and his South Vietnamese companions traveled on foot 11cross Laos. ·aiming ror the Vietnamese border. They walked through the jungles by day, keepiJlg of fmaln roads, and rested at night. .. I ate 'only rice and leaves with a little bit of dried fish we found ," he said. On March 24, they came \\'ilhin an inch of being rescued and then saw lheir hopes shattered. They spotted two U.S. helico pters nying over the area end used a parachute to form an "X" on the ground. However, darkness fell before they could be picked up and they had to move on to avoid Communist patrols. "The thing f thought most about was an orange soda , an ice cold ()range soda, and my family of course," he said . Lagenour's most dangerous moment came the next day . The group mistakenly was attacked by a U.S. AHI Cobra helicopter gunship and v.·hen they dove for cover. they ran into a North Viel· namese unit. Lagenour and one of tbe South Viet· namese soldiera escaped but the other three were captured by the Communi.its. They continued trudging through lhe jungles for the next two days until they showed up with •tranded South Vietnamese marines. ''I was more worried about my mother hearing about me than anything else," he said. "We're kind or close and I knew '"'hat it would-do to her ." The trio moved east. follo11>'ing the rising sun, into South Vietnamese ter· rilory. Last Wednesday afternoon, tbey finally ran into a U.S. unit -an armored patrol operating a few miles west of Khe Sanh. "I screamed out 'yahoo' as soon as T saw them," he said. "I said 'you guys are the prettiest sight I ever saw.'•• From Page 1 INDOCHINA ... at Khe Sanh Friday were two compan ies of U.S. armored units manning about 20 tanks and annored personnel carriers and an occasional South Vietnamese ~ldier rummaging through piles of trash. The last transport flight of the severa1 hundred planes that landed on the plateau base dur ing the height of the Laos cam- paign left Thursday along ~'ilh the mobile control tower which had been mounted on a jeep. -- • Prompted Suit A Newport Beach woman who claims that her broker used "an affecUon1te and romantic lnterest" in her to persuade her to move more than $300,000 worth of blue chip stocks to mutual funds has named him and his comp•nJ' as defendants in a near $500,000 lawsuit. Mrs. Jane P. Carroll claims in her Orange County Superior Court action that broker John H. Hoyt, 2189 Tustin Ave.. Costa Mesa , and California Investors of Orange ha\'e ignored demands for the return of $318,67!J in Joana made to Hoyl She wants $10,000 in.damagu sustained by the transfer of blue chip stocks lrom the trust she inherited to mutual funds suggested by Hoyt and she alao demands a further $100,tm in punitive damages from the defendants. Mrs. Carroll states her first contact with Hoyt was in late 1968, shortly after she received the portfolio or blue chip stocks she inherited from the estat1 of a Los Angeles woman. Mrs. Carroll, whose minor children Valerie and John P. Roberts are co-plain- tiffs in the action , states that she was "naive and uniniliated" in bwineu af- fairs when Hoyt and California Investors manager William Heiden approached her and was easily persuaded that it was possible lo increase her 3.4 percent in- terest rate to the 10 percent guaranteed by mutual funds . She indicates in the lawsuit that hu association with Hoyt was enhanced by romance and that she "came to rely on him entirely" -to the point that she sold her entire holding of blue chip stocks. She accuses the defendants of "churn-- ing " in transferring her stocks to olber sources -a practice whereby brokers create commissions by switching 1tocb for no good financial reason. Glass. Top 1,Tables • • • On 1 Sile' Now! l016D GLASS TOP TAll.E-'>''<" THICK : ~:=.Dy .. lfyted ~. hcmdsomoly .i.tollod, ttil1 h ,.. __ ... 9lols·twp """°· Doo't ....... -_.,,_. ., owa q-ty at a reaaca.,. ptlc•. • ~~ Sl'ECIAL $154 REG. $171. I ~I A..ilable lo Hie followln9 flohhs: Antique G-okf -Old Sponlst. -Distressed Oli•• -lktck -Verde Gt.a _ Alrttqte Y .... • ' • \ • Four Critical Fumes Kill Fiv e In Tanning Plant BER\VICK, Maine (UPI) - Five workers wert killed and seven injured today ·whc• fumes leaked out w h i 1 e chemicals were being loaded intO a tank at the Prime Tan- ning Co. factory. A dozen workers were in Ow: tanning room when the mishap took place about 1:30 a.m. EST. officials reported, a!I tht chemicals were being loaded into a taqk from a truck . r•ivt died. four were critically injured, a fifth was admitted in less serious con~ dilion to a t1ospit.11 and two were treated and rtleased, stme police said. CALLED RACIST Judge Lindsay Tar!! Feathers Four of the dead were iden- tified as Ronald Hayes, 21. of Rochester. N.H., Arthur \\'ebber of Berwick, James Royce Sr .. 48. or Fannin(ton. N.H .. and Richard Nadeau of \\'est Lebanon. Attorneys For Angela Clairn Bias School Principal Victim 'T'he fifth ''ictim was not imm\diately identified. YPSILANTI, Mich. IAP) - The principal of Willow Run High School, which wa1 the scene of r acial incidents last month, was tarred a n d feathered Thursday night by " group of hooded men who forced h.is car to lhe road side. State pohl:e said \\liley Brownele, 42, surfered minor injuries in the incident which occurred as he was on his \1·ay home from a meeting of the Willo w Run School Board. · Bro11;nlee said an auto with a lone occupant forced his car off the road . The hooded driver, armed with a shotgun, got out and told Brownltt, ... ~~·"''""' .... MAN 'S PSYCHOLOGY NOT BASED ON SEX WAS FREUD WRONG? ..• Probably not, but lhen tu~ nftver had to consider that thf're """ould ever be a Volk~­ waren. l\ly ad t'>''O ""·eeka ago fe:1turtd the psychology of the Volks'>'·a11:en dr1vf'r. Granted. I may not ha1.1e bet:n out of con- t ext offerina; free psychiatric mer.1af~ in that lam a Habt:r- duher by trade. But apparent- ly, Freud nt'ver rave a second thouii;hl to an alternate of Je.x •.. the Volks""'*ien!! That'• ,.izht . . but it only hapJX'nA whtn I decid,. to t~row one or my super snf'ak salt's. My ad drt-w thr. l1ri;:e:1t coll,.c-- t.ion of VW Ids and Egos t Yl"r a~srmbled in N t11'port Beach f'X cept for tht-grand opcnini; of Chick Jvenion"11 local dealcr~hi p. "Turn of! yoW' headl&hls and get out of the car." Pro Grids' TV Ban Hit He said a second car eon- taining several more hooded men then pulled up and the group ordered him lo ""'alk to a roadside ditch . "I was WASHINGTON (UPI) hit on the head with something Sen. William Proxmire ( D· -I think it "''as a gun butt Wis. I. claims the airwaves -and fell into the ditch.'' btlong lo the public. not to the principal said. professional football leagues . •·The next thing I kne\\'. He said he woulC: introduce they were pouring tar oil over a bill in the Senate to forbid me.._!rom out of a bucket and a television blackout of home then they threw a lot of professional football when the chic ken fft.thers on me ," he game is sold out. said. t.1ore than 90 percent of He told state pohce he was seat! in National Football convinced the as!ailants. voho Uague stadiums were sold numbered about five or !ix, out last year, he said, and were adults. not high school on the average 50.000 fans pupils. or more paid their ""''Y into After the attackers drove each regular pro game. Tens off. Brownlee drove back to of thou sands '>''ere turned his school and telephoned _•_w_a~y_, _h_•_•_•_id_. _____ _ police. Asked by newsmen if he knew. an y reason ror the assault, Brownlee said, "My mind \\'ould or course have to go back to the racial tensions at the school and the fact that the !Choo! was closed for a couple da yl'i lasl month ." Arn1 slrong Has 'Bacl Night' NEW YORK \UPI) -The condition of jatz trumpeter Louis "Satchrno" Armstrong, who has been under hospital lreatment for a heart aliment , took a tum for the worse Thursday night, it w as reported today. SAN RAF AEL lUPl) -At- torneys for Angela Davis in- sist that somewhere i n California there must ht a white judge \\'ho can overcome his bias to insure a fair trial for the black militant. They challenged Judge Alan R. Lindsay Thursday on grounds he i! racist and asked him let disqualify himself. Another out-0f·county jL-dge disqualified hirruielf last month on a motion by Miss Davi.!i' <.'Odeft'ndant, Ruchell Magee. who said he was biased. The defense said as a member or the white upper middle class. Lindsay, 54. was so crippled by bias hf' could nol be fair. Linday has 10 days to decide whether to disqualify himselL If he decide.!i to remain on the case, the de fense can ap- peal. Asked if any judge could be fair, Howard Moore Jr., Miss Davis' chief attorney. said, 1'1 think the answer is going to have to bt yes. Some white persons obviously are more capable of dealing with their prejudice! than other!." '"There must be so me judge5 like that in Cal!fo rnla." Moort said. "I don't think there ate too many, but T am sure there must be some.·· Unions Delay Auto Walkout "Mr. Armstrong spent 1 restless night. with increased respiratory difficulty,'' a DETROIT .1 UP!l -'T'he United Auto Workerl'i 11greed today to continue contr1ct 0 "1 Tti."'"-" ta lks with American Motors Neav Queen. Corp., little more than six .&pokesman for Beth Israel It "·as ~·orth ,.very nickle of Medical Center said . "Jiis my miss~nt money becaUMI in- dttd the VW Driver shops in a :~~ral condition hM weaken- Sarah Rippon, 21-year-hours before a threatened old daughter of S ri-strike deadline. tain's chief Common The move came after the . union rejected two contract m o 1 t barga.in-likf' manner.'===========-=;\ Quali ty and 1ervict" for theh Market negotiator, will proposals by AMC and had reign as Queen of the 1 counter offer of its own least amou nt of "moolah.'' Moolah is mo~y foT thost' or ~ou "'·hose perwna.J1ty is not hued on the Volk1""·aa;en. Who Cares? Norfolk, Va. Azalea turned doy,·n by AMC N• •'"'' ,.,.,,.,,, in +h i Festival in honor of negotiators. Talk1 we r e[ werl4 c1r11 1bout your co!llm11-NATO. Lady Arabella. recessed at 1:05 a.m. and it 11ity like yo11• co111mu~ily d1ilv Sir \Vinston Churchill's is up to Amtrican offlcia]sl n1w1p1p1r do••· li'i th t DAILY granddauohter, refused In ~cide y,·hen neootiationsl PILOT. • e To 1o on. I had onr lady ""'hol':;=:;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:;=:=:;:;..;;:~th~e~h~o~n~o;r~i~n~p;ro~l~e~s;t.=;;..;;;.;:;w;;ill~re~1~u~m~e~. =='---..::; 11rrived in an irr1de~cent liml"!i: gre:rn Bug ""1th a por lrait of Gffirgf' Wash1n~ton 11.tampt'd on her hood ... She k"pl thank- ing me ovrr aod ovf'r for the toothing relief that my $4 bar- i:si n t.11ble iza~·c hr-r. T hsd ll3\'f'd hrr from the drf)th.!i of retail defeat omania. Th,.n thtre V."llS th,. Chllp in thf' b!!lck Supl!r Bretle 11·ho mis- jud~r"d the :ipt:C'dbump and landed in lhf' Lido Thr"alre philodf'ndron planter. Ht made up hi!t wayward direction by purchasinr: a $125 Top 0 !\tart !tJit for $40. Very good judg- mtnl ! Hr. drovl" off and dis1r1- peared hfot'>'·trn 1110 irold C.dil· lac1. Obviously, hi" 11-As being 1·ontrollt-d by thr handling 1·harartcristics of his VW ! I.i~trn. If you think you a rr s11ffrnng frnm An innPr desire tn sal"t-~on1!" moolah don't go f'llll a nd buy a nl"w Volks1va.gen. nrop in $11.turda y, April 3 and s"'" \1•h11t hypnotic hyper1alell "'ill agai n ~ pr.11ented in a ~­ peat ~r~sion of theraputic sav- ing:. hmtl"d by gurst Star. Vtnu!t DI" 1'1onl"y' Oran.,aate. t>evonshir,. and Top n M1rl auit~ up to $14,') no""' S40. Enro aM Gnni ~hir l .• v1l- 111'd 1t $11 ngvv $4 or 2 for $7 rartu~ Oi<11111tl Jt11m. H11rri.! and Corbin tra(tillonal ~!11cl.:, 111' II) $22 no11 $4 BLlt11ell 111nd IA· Jolla ~l11rlo.& up In !40 nn\\" 10. C1d11lar, Lint'11ln, t·,.rrarl dnv- r-r11 welcom,. to attend. Chevy dr1vr " u r ""'"lcomr also .. I don't want In t'Xcludr-my,el(. BIDWELL OF NEWPORT 3467 VI• Lide h1 H1wport IHch 671 .. 51 0 'l•"'T of fr•• p•rki111 'i" th1 .... ,. VW dri¥1tl ,11•11 r1fr•i11 from fouil• ,.rkl11 9. ~---- t\nne111 SATURDAY SPECIAL TOMORROW, APRIL 3 WOVEN DRAPERY PIECE GOODS REMNANTS IN A MULTITUDE OF FAIRICS AND COLORS 2 yds. .. ~144 2 to 1 0 yard len9ths PASHION ISLAND STORE ONL y I STORE HOURS : Mend.y •1ttl Frlffy, 10 •.m. t• t :lO JI·"'· Twn .. Wtd. encl l hwn ., l O •. m. t•' p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m. to ' p.m .. -Sul'ldey, 12 to I P·"'' .• Military Pay B6ost Uncertain WASHINGTON (UPI) -A House-passed bill b o o s I i n g military pay and allowances by a record $2.7 billion faces f!J uncertain future In the ~nate wht:re a ooalillon of 1.:onservalives and liberals is unalterably OPJ>C?Sed to }j;' volunl~r army such a p raise would make possiblr.. The pay raises and quarters allow&i•C'CS -the highest single increase in t h e republic's history -w~re ·ed by the Hou~ . Thursday a tw01·ear extension ol e rart and elimination o f un- dergraduate draft deferments. President Nizon had re- quested only $987 million as part ol a two-step plan to move towards an a t.l ""volunteer army by mid-1973. 1'he House combined his recommendalion:o; in10 one package wilh the increases to start July I . Final passage, 293 lo 99. came after anti·war critics sought unsuccessfully to limit U.S. involvement in Vietnam by selling a deadline for withdrawal, or by proJlibiting use of draftees in Southeast Asia after the end or this year. PlC!n e Rider Sparks Panic CHICAGO (U Pll A rJan1e·lhrO\\'\ng backfire from ;i taxiing Jetliner at O'Hare lnlernallonul Airport frighten· ed 23 passengers into leaving the plane through an emergen- cy exit Thu rsday night and left nine of them injured. A spokesman for Trans World Airlines said the: re- maining 30 passengers then alighted from the p I a n e through a regular exit. He said Ollt passenger , who wa~ not identified, opened a window emergency exit when one of the Boeing 727"1 jet enginel'i backfired loudly and released a ball of orange fi re. ' " DAILY 'ILOT 1 · 3 Seized n1 Bank Rohhe1·y , l(idnap 50% in Poll Back Nixo n • CH ICAGO (UPIJ -Four perwns have been charged with bank robbery and aiding and abetting a bank robbery In connection with a $113.000 exto1·tion plot In which the wile of a bank president was held at gunpoint in her suburban home. The FBI announced three arrests late Thursday night. about 11 bourl'i alter the bank PRI NCETON. NJ. IAP l President Nixon"s p e I j c i e 1 president, Lawrence W. have the approval of 50 per· Nortrup. turned over the cent of the American public. money . The fourth arrest was the lowest leve l of support announced early today. since he took ofhce , aecording The first thret suspects to the latest Gallup Poll. were identified as Frederick • UPI Tt~lltl9 $118,000 RANSOM DorMn Nortrup • However." Gallup said the W. ~1arschke. 31. Homewood ; SO perce nt indicates a his wife, Joycf'. 34 . and Robert downward trend in Nixon ·s Manley, 34. Chicago. The popularity may be levelin g off. fourth suspect was identified The poll said Nixon"s approval as John Carmen Starblf'. 25, rating was 56 percent in Berwyn. January and 51 percent In Neither the FBI nor local February. police agencies would detail what roles the four were suspected of playing In I.be plan . "~~~~~~~~~- iewels by ioseph CONTINUES IMPORTERS J•;'ll llr J•••'h h•~ l>N-n tl'lrrtPd u "llclutl\'r salt~ represrnt.1tiv1 rot 1ttonu1nl" 1t.ar 1apph1r.-s in f1nr Jl!'\\"Plry. Btt•ulf' \\'f r~JYl!'d 1n 11nl'.~pec-1"<1 and O\'rr.<.h~lmi nt rr~Jl<l"~" lti nut slRr tapphirr U lt" l~~l """k. ""' h11I' pl'r~uadrd nur impurlrr to t"On!!nu .. thl' lair for nnl' mntl' •1rrk. Oon ·l m1~~ 1his oppnr111n1ty 10 Duy a bl"autifu! 1t1r 11pph1rr for 1 lo", 1011· prur. MOUNT YOUR STAR SAPPHIRE IN A IEAUTIRIL SITTING A fOO'lplf't• ttltc:l!on or n1•n"1 •nd womrn t moun1ln11 .,. 1v1.1l.1.bl1 in W"h11r and y•lloll· 1nld. <".old pt•f">N 111r! 1t $~ 9S. Pfl'ldlnl 1a 14 lune )'f llOW or wl'll1• 11>ld arr 111il1t>I• lrom 19.r. 11>'lthoul tl\tllL .i--1• ~ 1_,ii. •In v t ynur d11mnnd 1n I mnunttnr t'of )'(111r ("h"1~ tr1th )'l)Ur !'\!Ir ~~~Ir, Jl'll''"fl"'n '"' n1•~• ~n•1 t n r1•n tin•r nnc. Ylnri,.,..,brr. ~11 '1 J .. ,.ti do.. all lb •or~ on lh• Jlff'mb .... )l.'olh• J1t1 J .. 1K lht JIOrt. • ONE WEEK ONLY. MARCH 31 ·APRIL 6 So utli Coos! ,Pl111 llll 8ri1tol Co1t1 Mew Phone: S<0.9066 • • • DA.RY PROT EDITORIA.L PA.GE Teacher's Pay Problem .. fnforn1ation on teachers' salaries, gathered by the Orange Coun ty S(·hools oft1<:e and released recenUy by Newport-Mesa Unified School District, helps put into perspective reccn1 pay requests of the Newport-Mesa Education Asso1•\a tion lions-have asked only that salary increa!es be on 1 parity \vith neighboring cities. There are some "demands'' that are guar1nteed to be rejected. but that is no more than standard op· erating procedure at cont.ra1·t bargaining time. • The data indicate~ the Nl'wport-l\1esa district 1s clearly the leader aniong county unified districts 1n its allocations to attract high quality teachers. It further shO\\'S that. contrary to popular opinion. the district ill not the \\•ealthiest nor the biggest spender among the unifie d districts. It is the less·than·militant attitude that signifies a relation ship that is n1andatory in progress of any labor· n1anagement relationship, be it in big business or public .service . •• 1'here have been undercurrents that the hard·line approach to co ntract negotiations \vill con1e to the city Half of the di stract '~ teachers earn more than SI I.· 150 the median -or 1nidpo1nt -salary paid by the district. This compares to the median salary of $10,987 paid by Garden Grove \\•hich is the county's poorest dis· trict. and $10.575 paid by Laguna Beach. the county's ··,vcalthiest" district of Ne~·port Beach. sooner or late r , --• ;.: \\lealth is determined by relating the assessed val· uation of property in the district lo the number of stu- dents to be served. The economic situation. the real financial bind fac· Ing the state and local governments and the uncertain· ty of legisJati\'e action on school finances make lt likely that most school systems including Ne\l'porl·Mesa \\'ill be lin1 ited to much more modest adjustments in lhe teacher compensation program than even the board tnembers and administrators -Jet alone th e teachers -might olher\\1ise believe desirable. Realistic and Reaso nable A realisti c and reasonable approach to contract negotiati ons is bein~ taken by the Ne"'POrt Beach city employes. Cooling it. it's probably caJled. Taking full cognizance of the frugalities imposed on government by the economy, the three city associa· There are those in the employ of the city who want lhe1n to come ROY.'. Consid er ing the composition and philosophy of the c.urrent city coun cil, it's not very likely lllat this is a time to pursue that hard·line approach. The Great Rematch Fair \va rning to those innocent souls who might inadvertently venture with their vessels into the North Balboa Island Channel Saturday afternoon. l\1ake way for the Michigan and the ·rrojan . Not that those l\vo tired old tugs are fearsome un- to thctnselves, it's just that there's no forecastin~ the frce'"heeling tactics of th e frolicso me fellotvs at the re· spective helins. For Saturday 1s the day of th e Great Rematch. Tht!: San Diego Rest and Aspiration Societv \Vill be in town seeking a repeat triumph over the Balboa Punting and Sculling Society in \\•hat has beco1ne th e i r annual Southern California tugboat championship. The grueling l,000-foot (or thereabouts) contest begins at three o'clock, after an equally grueling three· hour preparation period at the Balboa Bay Club. Serious sailors \vere last seen packing for Palm Springs. N ,, ,, ~ ~ ll'hnt Cn1tdidate tl'o1ald Bove Done Moyers' Book ls Generally Depressing ~ ~rom Humphrey to Nixon ~: .. -:WASHI NGTON -If Hubert Humphrey bad been elttled President, he would ba ve sought a standstill cease-fire in ~ietnam, stopped sending draftees to YJetnam and appointed a Negro to run the draft. '.;.He offered his ideas back in October . 1969, to the man \vho had defeated him for the presi· dencr Humphrl'y met ln the \Vhite House v"ilh Presi. dent Nixon and his national security ad· v1ser, Henry Kissia- '" Afterward. Hum· phrey summarized tiis Euggestiollll in a ~onfidential memo. dated October 11, 1969 to Kissinger. We ha ve obtained a copy or the memo. y,·hich has been sho1,1•n by both n1e111 only to a fe w intimates. "I GUESS PEOPLE expecled 1nore action in a shorter period uf time than President Nixon has been able to ac· l1lmplish.'' Humphrey \Vrole bluntly. •·Jn other words. the election raised 1heir hopes. The people do not sense or fully tJnderst.a nd ttie unbelievable complexity o( the situation in Vietnam. They just "''ant out · "The President has taken some steps 1hal are constructive and should be recognized as steps towards peace. and t . -. '' ../ ·Jack Andel'llOu '. reducing American involvl'ment. These arl' good steps but not enough .. •·J think I appreciate the difficulties that the President faces, but 1l will only get more d1Uicult 1f something more isn't done. His concern over the rising tide of isolat ionism. both in Congre:i;.s and in some areas of the public, is one that I share . But I am afraid it will get worse unless we find some ""ay to get out of Vietnam • "THE LONGER WE are in V1etnan1, the more the spiril or neG-isolationism grows. Vietnam is sapping the spirit of this country. , To hurry o ur withdrav.'al fron1 Vietnam has risks '' ithin it , bul not nearly as much a.~ the risk and danger of hanging on and hoping for something better " Humphrey called for "American in· itialive in seeking a cease-fire and Mr called standstill of all combat forces I know this 1s difficult but \'le should press it. The military doesn "t like it, but our options are not very many or very good. ··Tue public v.·ants an end to the kilhng, and the President must be the. leader in trying to fulfill that objective. I have heard all the arguments against the cease-fire proposal, and from a military poinl or view they may make sense. But the problem that faces this country is not military. it 1s politit.<ll ·• HL1~1PHREY STRONGLY urged thr President to announce ··that no draftees v.•1JI be sent to Vietnam for combat purposes. Now. t underscore the v.·ords for combat purpOses. It v.·ould be better 1f no draftees would be sent lo Vietnam al all. but I am not sure that would be feasible for at least the next few months.·· The former Vice President praised Nixon for retiring Gen. Lev.·is Hershey all the nation's draft director and recom· mended as Hershey·s replacemen t '"a top-grade, \Vell·informed, a rt i cu I a t f' Negro .... ·ho has the respccl of the blacks as well as the whites. someone between the ages or 35 and 45. who looks good. who has a sense of public relations and v.·ho ca n l~mmunica te with youn~ people." Humphrey. noting that he had of· fered views "in confidence and in a spirit of helpfu1ness," concluded; "I want to help the President. and I a1n prepared to defend him as hP moves on his peace offensive, but It must be a peace offensive." For Male Sanity: Realhoy \Yhen it con1es to the grave problems America faces, the gravest 1s neither pollution. urban sprawl nor excess ston1ach acidity . It is Playboy magazine. Never since the ~1arqu1s de Sade has any literary figure spread more pain and misery than Playboy's publisher. Hugh Hefner Statistics show Iha\ 68.3 percent of young American malc.'i study one or mo r e centerfold '·Plavmates of the ~lonih·' durin~ their formall\'t' ye a r s For hour5 on end . "Aha."' cries lhe ,·oung man. '"so this Ii; \\'hat young ladies look 1 i k r \\'1 th0111 their clothes on: I'll find one for me " And he s\arl~ hunt ing The problern . OI ('OU!'S(', 1:-111.:1! lsn·t "'hat young Indies look li~l' \\ 1th<n1t their ('lothes on at all . f'iot even young Play- tnate ladies AN ARTICLE ln the nrw 1nag;11.u1r. Friday. \pr1I 2 1971 Tiie ed11orral f)Oflt 01 Iii,. Da1/11 Prloi seek$ to inform and sr nn- td.ate readrr:f by prrst11r1ng 011$ ntu.•.tpaptr'$ op1111on$ nt1d cur•1- mentoru on 1np1cJ of 1utrrrsi and lligni/1conct , by rror11dzug n forvm for the r rprl'.ts1nn 1'1/ our rl'OdtT'I' opinions. Ollc/ tJU prt!tnfi11g the diver.,r t11"u. poi11U of informed o/)stri·rrii and spolc.esnten on topics of rl1e dqu. ~ Robert N. \Veed , Publisher I Art lloppe Audience, points out that alter tht painstak1ngl y·selected Playmale is paid Sf,000 lo take off her clolhes, she i:!i carefully posed so she doesn't \\Tinkle, sag or droop. Thousands of studio shots are tak~n under ideal l1ghllng rondil1ons . One single. print is chosen Then even lhis best or all possible photographs IS - heaven help us -doctored ~ For al this point. the arlLcle says. Hefner steps in with hls retouchers : "Ta ke oft the hair on her upper lip!" he orders. "Clean up the shadO\\'S around her under-arms''' 1t is this blalant dishonesty that causes such untold su ffering There is our young man lie has found the girl ol his drcanis. She looks "·ilh her clothes on like a Playmate v.·1th Iler clothes on. F:.\Gt:RLY Ht: 1narrles hrr. Ex- pet·lantly hc swoops her off on 11 hone\· moon -onlv to discover that she, like all human bC1n:;:s, ()('t·a~ionally v.rinklt>!\. sags. droops and/or exhibits do1,111y lips ur 11nderarnt shadO"' MorPOver . she d°":in "t ,,·en ha\"c a staplt in her navel. Is 1t any v.·ondcr th.'.lt 68 .3 percent of Amencan malts go throush life f~llng "heated and frustrated' Ill it any v.·onder thal 17 ou1 of 18 rnarri11gc!' today end in uxoric1de, d1\'0rtc or shQutini;: mat· <:hes. i "Why can't you take the hair off your upper lip~ Clean up your un- clf'rarm shadow'"\ To save America from slo\\l)· drownini;: In this M"a of dome~lic acrimony. a aroup of us humanitnrill.ns has brought out a new maga:une called Rtalboy. TllE Ct:l\iTERt'OLJ> Rea1matt or thl' .ltonth" 1n our first Issue '' Miss EJv1r11 ~fcGorkle, a 47·year-0ld unemployed fry coo k from Bixby Falls. Mont. f\1i~s f\1cGo rkle, who is 5·fool·2. weighs 175 pounds and has led a hard life. 1s depicted slanding against a brightly-hi \\"all in lhe Bixby Falls Medical Clinic. all prepared for a free chest X-ray . As we say in the caption. "It 1s a Realmate like r..1iss ~lcGorkle who makes American men appreciate 1he1r \\'i\"eS." \Ve are convinced that once Reatboy replaces Playboy as the leader tn 1ls field, American males will gro\.\ up ra · t1onat and sane. NO LOJ'oiGER WILL thtv be obsess~d by unatt3 inable vi~ion~ Or perfection. No longer v.·ill they be pandered to by books. movies and advertising lhal prey upon tht1r frustrations. At last they v.·ill accepl manta] se.t for the good thin~ it ls -an act of love betv.,een two imperfecl. humans. Al last they will accept reallty. \\1e, the publishers of Realbov. ask no high rewards from a grateful · nation for restoring its sanity. \Ye wr~h we could find some guy v.·ho'd buy a copy. Dear Gloo1nv ' Gu s: t v•onde r H for my $6 a }'Cti.r thr c1t.v of Ne\\·port B<?a.ch t'Ould adtf Cahfnrn1a to my dog tap: I .spend 1nany d~ys in other states \1 Ith my 1naster and none ha\·e a r{'('ord \'cs. I spent 11n1e in lhe poliv 111 Ne"·port. Oregon -Srh1111i, Nt\\"l>Ort Do.1: T:ii:: No t~ll ltf!Utf rfllt(h ,...ftrt' l'I,,,..,., "•I -tl\•rll• 1i..w t i tltt MWU!t~tr ''"f ,..,r ••! -~• 19 Gl•r!IY 0 111, 0 111, ,.lie!. , __ ...... ............... The Bookiuau -It was a different country when John Stei nbeck arld his poodle roamed the United States 1n a camper. The findings of that voyage of rediscovery appeared 1n 1962 as "Travels With Charley." Bill f\.\oyers did much the same thing last year, lra\'eling some 13,000 miles by car, sampling the mood of the nation 1n such places as Bondurant, \Vyo., f\1athis, Texas. and the tough steel town of 0!rst Gary, lnd. A form er special assistant to President Johnson, 8 former deputy director or the Peace Corps, later publisher ot News. day and a skilled reporter, Moyers reports on these findings in a long and generally depressing book, "Listening to An1erica .·· f\.IOYERS HAD, he tells us, ll.stened to America l r o m a distance. living and working for some years in a narrow strip of the East Coast. ··1 learned that it is possible to write bills and publish newspapers without knowing \\1hat the country is about, or who people are." Generally he found a confused 11nd fearful country out there, ooe with little humor. sour over Southeast Asia, fearfu l of unemployment, searching ror some political guidance. or moral guidance. and finding no J\1oscs. not even an Eisenho\1·er to comfort 11. As a one-man (;allup Poll, Moyers seems to hal'e touch· ed all bases. you th culture to hard-hat. f\.1ost everyone he talked to was edgy abo ut son1ething -crinte. 1nflalion. pollution .. racism, drugs, America was not a happy place . "YOU CAN TAKE JUSl so n1uch kill · 1ng," a legless Army captain, biller about Vietnam. told h1n1. lie talked wilh Grouch<] ~iarx in Hollywood about the decllne of humor in America. Wyoming ranchers were bitter about big cor· porations grabbing up the old fam ily ranches. A Quaker professor o ( phi losophy viewed the Kent State students as ··aggressors," thererore wrong. In San Francisco. attempting 10 Irate the m1ss1ng Claughter of a \Vash1ngton lriend , J\1oyers became fascinated by fresh notices of runa"·ays posted on a bulletin board in Golden Gate Park. "Listening lo A1nenca" is onr long editorial by a conct?.rned and articulate reporter-jf any thing a little too :ong. for the sustained theme of depression and frustration in it is wearying. THE U.S.A. is a Space Age country "'ilh lots of Cadillacs and country clubs but almost no narcolics-addicllon pru- gram worth a damn. District of Columbia children are taught in low-grade slums. and the capital's General Hosp1tal ha<l JUSl run out of penicillin. "The District should be a n1odel fo r lhe ('OUntry ," a policeman told J\loye.rs, but added that \\'ash1ngton is tnerely a model of whaf~ gorie wrong with the country. "Hardly a day passed lhtit would be free of some demonstration~ or our \\·oes," f\.1oyrrs notes of his ody!l~y. Qll(' n11sses Steinbeck's gentle opllm1~m herr And Charley. (Harper's 1\-iagazlne Press $7 951. William Hogan Quotes • ~lr~. ll Brry . Gtrber, O:i\.J:ind, on n1odem fashions -"\\hC'n \\1111 some r:irs1gncr deem it important enough 10 rnarkct dignifitd clothe~ for 40·1Sh \\OlllCn?" 'Facts,' 'Truth'· Are Not the Same What is a "lie"? Whal does •·telling the truth" consist of? These are seem· lng\y simple questions, but there are no simple answers to them. This is why parents, and educcitors generally, have such a tiard time explaining lies arld truth to child re n. Storm Jameson. the novelist. has published her autobiography this spring, called "Journ ey from The North." In her introduction to it, she writes: "I am an accom. plisbed professional novelist and nothing would have b e e JI easier for me than to draw a self-por- trait which. without Jelling a single lie. would be dishonest from beginning to end, intelligent, tharming. i11teresting -and a lie." ON THE SURFACE, a ··He" is a statement that does nol co rrespond to fact, or to \\'hat we believe to be a fact. But "facts" and "truth" are by no means U1e same lhing; as J\1iss Jameson reminds us, a book of memoii-! can be absolutely truthful in its facts and yet be a total lie. Truth is the Inner spirit of a statement , not JUSt its outer shell of facts. Of course, if the fa cts are falsified , the inner ~pirit is injured: but the opposite does not hold -a report consisting of nothing but facts can be totally dishonest 1n its intent and effect. IN ONE OF Bonhoeffer·s last un· f1n1shed essays (\\•rilten in pnsonl. he takes up the subji?ct of the "always ,. f . ' ' } ~ Sydney ).' Harri '" r truthful" man, and reminds us that there are evil truths as well as necessary and healing truths. The man who always says what he thinks, under the guise of "candor,"' is not living in the spil-it or truth, but in the spirit of hate. He tells of a teacher who asked ... young pupil in front of the class whethtr 'his father usually came home drunk in the even ing. The father did, but the boy was within lfis rights in lying about it, since the teacher was absolutely without his rights ifl asking the question -and the boy was not mature enou~ lo give an ansv;er thal rebuked the teacher for his in1pertinence -withoti t either admitting the truth or ly ing. THE HARDE.ST metaphysical thing let grasp about the truth is that it is both absolate and relative at the same time:: in one sense, the truth is always lhrl same for all men everywhere: in another sense, it 1s relative to the person, Ui.e time, the place, the situation. Wisdo'm consists in being able to distinguish between these two. aJ1d to know when the spirit of universal (ruth 1s being served, and when not. , Both the absoluli~ts and the relativists are dishonest in this -the absolutist.J · 1vhen they insist that circumstances do not alter cases: the relativisis when they insist that truth is \vholly subjective. No wonder our children are confused, conflicted and cynical about it. 'Lack of Understanding' To the Editor· )"our attack on Con g res ll (The SST Defeat -~1.arch 29 editorial) for dropping the supersonic Jet project displayed a clear lack of understanding the issue. There may 001 be absolute proof that 1he SST would dest roy man 's en· . I v1ron ment. but there are serious que~· lions about it. Do 1,1·e bu ild the. SST, fly 'H, then years later declare 11 a menace to man'.' On the other hand , what would the SST do ror mankind? It seem~ it would quicken the pace for a few wealthy jet setters who like to whip back and fo rth between New York and London. I{ big, fast jets are needed, why did one recent 747 night from c:1icago to L<is Angeles carry only s e: \It n pas~engers? TllE SST CERTAlNLY wo1f 1 zip up my 1r1p fn)ln lhe Orange Coast w Po1nona And are you suggesting we suppo11 a bad project just because 1t g1\e~ jobs lo people' At least the ccolo~y and rapid transit pro1ccts you call ··polltical v.'indow drl!!'!iing·· h a v e justifiable goals and could bc?nef1t mort than \Vtekend travelers Your editorial says Congl't'~ didn't kno\v \\'hat it was doing when it cut SST funds . Did the: builders who a\lo\\·ed rhc Jet 's budget to !ikyrocket so h!~h know v.·hat. lhl'y v.·ere dcung ~ And \\'h} h11!1n·1 the bird flo\\'n yet? (Qrlie On, ilentlefncn, W!f\ l' bf'tll Ill the 1e1 a~e for sonic l1mr now. H's t1n1e we. all entered lhr ARe of ecology. TERRY S. COVILLE ' Ma.ilb()X i te•l•ro t,.m r1111lll'" ••• w1lcem•. loltrrntltr wriltn -Ill etro.,., l~llt me11-tt1t !ti JM _,... t r I"•· Tiie rltltl .., c1nc1 ..... llHt<• .., fil U«I er 11imh1•!9 lllMI h ,.,,,,..,._ .1.11 1111«1 11111tt l"" cl116t lllftJl\I,.. tlMI "'•llioltl H dtttl.. kl ~I""' rn1Y H wUltllel<ll Ill r..,11111 II tullkltfll ~ .. ft II UPtftfll. PHI ... WU! HI H Mlh,,M. Botal Lt11111chi11g To the Editor : tf E. C. Van Hook Sr. (f\.1ailbox, ~1arch 26) were observant . he would see ont of the best boa t launching areas for many miles around located at the Coast High way bridge on the Back Day. i\1any boats can be launched. at the same time so there is very little waiting, and sevl'rfll acres of very valuable land ~re avtiilable for parking the towing rars and trailers. The pnt'e is so low as.,..to nearly fall in the ca tegory of puo1ic SCJ\ict! \Vhat more could a person ask for~ \\'1Ll.1Af\.1 T. SPRAGU~ B11 George ---· Dear George. You kOO\\' everything Ho1Y c•n I find oot !or llure if my hu~band 1s beinF faithful to me~ .J. SAR~ll Dear Sarah : Ge~. Sar;ih, I don't know -l'\'e ne\"cr hnd 11 question like that and thcrr·~ no an!\1\·r.r in the back of lhe OOok l\01,1evcr, If you ever \l"(lnder hO\\' ta tell 1f your husband ~s bring UN faithful lo vou, l'rn A "'hiz on that one; 7 --• I Costa M~sa Today's Final N.Y. Stoelu EDITION ' voe 64, NO. 79, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES FRIDAY, APltll 2, 1971 TEN CENTS .. . . Five-day Drama With Calley -Rel:ease· Fr. BENNlNG, Ga. (AP) -On Mon- day Ll. William L. Calley's future was at stake. Tuesday his life wu at stall. Wednesday he was spared. Thursday he faced ·life in prison. Today he Wa1'i back in his quarters with limited treedom. Thils ran the drama of the 27-year~ld Calley'i· life durin1 the past five days. By order of Prt5ident Nixon from the We.item White House ln San Clemente, Calley wu taken from armed U.S. Troops Pull Out OfKheSanh SAIGON (UP!) -Withdrawing U.S. troop& all but ibandol'led the Kbe Sanh b8se Friday two months after opening it as 'the springboard for South Vietnam's Laos offen!ive. American jets altack.ed Communi!t . truck and tank traffic in Lao.s which had been pinpoin~ by a commando raid. U.S. headquarters in Saigon declined comment on Radio HanoJ reports that five Americans were caplured by Com- munist forces in a battle at f'ire Base 6 near the point where the borders of South Vielnam, Cambodia and Laos · meet. But field reports listed six Americans killed or missing in combal Wednesday. South Vietnamese headquarters said 6.aigon troops reoccupied Fire Base 6 after \osing it in a Communist assault that coat 20 South Vietnamese killed and 25 wounded. North Vietnameae losses were placed at Z80 men killed. One American was reported killed and one wounded when Communist gunners &bot down two heUcopters trying to rescue South Vietnamese defenders of the base 280 miles northeast of Saigon near Oak To. Spokesmen reported the troops made "very light contact" with the Com- munists when they moved back into the base. However, U.S. &-52s dumped 100 tOM of bombs in the surrounding area to gt.em the possibility of another North Vietnamese attack. Military spokesmen gaid the B52 strike was the fourth in two days around Fire Base 6. Correspondents said Khe Sanh. 12 miles inside South Vietnam from the Laotian !Se< INDOCIDNA, Par< l) '· County Medi-Cal Recipients Can Join New Plan LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Orange Coun· ty recipients of Medi·Cal benefits will have the opportunity to enroll in a prepaid health care p r o g r a m , Assemblyman William Campbell (R-Ha· cienda Heights), said Thursday. lMovative Health Services. a private firm. has contracted with the state for one year to provide health gervices to up to 20,000 Medi-Cal recipients. Campbell told a news conference the pilot prnjecl was a volunt.ary program from which participants can withdraw if they are diseatisfied. Tht: care offered includes hos:pitaliiaUon . convalescent home care, laboratory services. X-rays and medica- l.ion. Jnoovative Health Systems 'Will receive one monthly payment for each person enrolled and lhe rate will be renegotiated each year. J Campbell said that similar pro1ects have been operated at , a 30 percent leS! cost than the normal Medi-Cal opera- tion. Realty Sc hool Has 'Cheater' A pop quiz 11 due for the spring class of Costa Mesa's Lumbleau Realty School Someone. broke into the 11ales academy at 14~ E. 19th St.. and stolt: $3 in valuables -tt:sl booklets containing answers to the state'• realty salesman'• 11 c en 1 e u- aminatlon. Spokesman DiMne K. Crain told OHicer Leo Jones: Thursday that !ht could suggest no clues to a suspect. "Due to 11 large enr111lm,.nt And a great ~rcentage doing po<>rly," he noted In his r~port custody behind the barbed wire.I of the post stl'lckade Thunday and returned to his bachelor quarters. • Only a day after he was sentenced to life imptlsonment for murdering 2Z Vietnamese civilians at My Lal, the boyish-looting lieutenant Wh ordered released by the PrtSident pending the completio(l of a full review of bis con. viction by an Army court-martial . The White House direcll•e took · most observers by , surprise .. The Presidept bad once said l'lf the mus:am 1t My La.i th.t.t "under no cirC\Zm.StlnCes was it J""lilled." . Annnuncement of the Pruid~t'a in- tervention was made at San Clemente by Renald L. Zie&Jer; White HOUSt pres.s secretary. • . Ziegler said Nixon had telephoried Adm. Thomas H •. Moorer, chlinnan of tilt Jnint Chiefs ol staff. to dirttt C.ll«!y11' release. The' Rft'1denUal order wu not 1 legal 1ttp, Zie1ler uid. In responae to questloos, the Press secretary said the Preskient waa aware of wlde!prtad pro.Calley sentiment that ba1 been upreased in thooSIDds of telegrams to Ntxcin.' But Ziegler added that the ad.ion ""as taken •t the Pruldenl's own initiative." Undef the Pre!i~enl'1 order. Calley wu 1ranted the status of an Army officer cc;K'lfined to·quartera under "U,bt guard." He can. &o to the laundry, to a movle., to church ; but always -even in his quarters -an armed milit.ary guard must re.main with hlm. Calley c&Mot leave the poat without ptmrisa.lon. He cannot t.&lk to newsmen. He wij1 bf. allowed tbe visit cf friends. He will not be allowed. however, the privileges o( the officer's club or to attend ofnclaJ ioclal functions at the post.. Three hours after the dramatic In· tervenlion by Ntxon, Cl.lley walke.d 'frlxn the 1tockade to 1 W1itin1 car. BftntiDi from the glare of teleVl!ion llabtl. be was accompanied by hit Ariny deftnae lawyer, Maj . KeMtth Rlby; and tl\Wtlry police. · About 75 persons, mostly )'OW\I people who had waited from 1ftttnoon· sUnU,bt into a windy night, broke lllto cheert when he appear<d In unifQrlll.. He ·P .. a SU1ht smile. · · Innocent Plea Set Cownel Denies Coverup Speaks "if ell Bill Landers. 19-year-old Orange Coast College pre-law 'student. 'C0V· ered himself with gloJ!)' recently in the ·Califomia .Sta,te Forel\Sics Championships at Santa Rosa. Voted the top male speaker. Landers ol Co5ta. Mesa contribut~d 35 5Weepstakes pOmts to the OCC team. U.S. Unemployment Rate Jumps to 6% in March ,. Fram Wire SUvk:es f'T. MEADE, Md. -Tht: civilian at- torney for Col. Oran K. Henderson. hi1he1t ranking offietr charged with fi.1y Lal-connected crimes, said today his client y,•ould plead Innocent to charges of covering up the slaying of South Viet.namt:se civilians. Henry A. Rothblatt, a New York at· torney, said prior to the pre-trial hearing on the CilUrt-martial of Henderson, that the decision and sentence in the case of LL William L. Calley Jr. would "ob- viously have an effecl" on the outcome of the Henderson trial at thU Army base between Wasbingtoo and Baltimore. ''The American publlc has: t.aken a very strong feeling on it." Rothblatt said the charges against Hender&on - one cbarge of de~liction of duty and twe charles •llf .making false 1tatements -''are totally unfounde.d bl. (Jct 1.9d ¥L,1~ b\11 ,olll!ll!IJi,,_ reputaUo.n i1 beinl prottcted at Col. Ht:M.eraon·s 11:pense. but we iritend ta find ou~,"' Rolhblatt said. Barmaid Seized In Mesa Motel On Drug Charge A short, 180-pound barmaid today facts prosecution, after state and local narcotics agenta purchased lOI table.ta ol the dru& psilocybln for . AO at a Coab Mesa motel . Vicki S. Bradner, 26, Long Btac.h, WM booked into Oran1e County Jail M chargu of sale of dangerous drugs and pouesslon o{ marijuana. Costa Mesa detectives Bob LeMert and Don Casey 11id the sale involved an unidentified state Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement agent late Wednesday night. lnvea:ligators 1a1d Miss Bradner came to their 1Uentlon as the result of another recent case. WASHINGTON (AP) -Unemployment climbed ·back ·up to .an annual rite of aix percent in fi.1arch after a tY.'O- month decline, the Labor Department announced today. for tlle sea&0nal adjustment, jobles:sneas Th 102 drua tablets being analyzed The figures were not accompanied by an official interpretation by UM Bureau of Labor StatiaUcs, ·under the 1d- mi.nlstration'1 new J)olfq of hand1ing the monthly announcement, but members of CongreS! called BL.S economilb for questioning. There were 5.2 million unemployed men and women in March. the report dis'cloeed. TbiJ was %70.000 fewer than in February, but the decline was less than usual for this season. Alt!r allowing rose by 150,CIOO on the aMual ba1i1. were ;:-:esented 11 LSD, but detectiv,1 Employment wa5 about unchanged al s they are psllocybin, a non-organic 78.5 million, seasonally adjusted. EJ:et:pt ....___ '1lucinoged which causes Ji1gly semi-- for a temporary rise in January, total hysteria. employment has stayed virtually level Some u.sera refu to it u 1illy-cybin. since last May; it is 500,000 below the 1*card bigb' 1of March a year ago. ne increase in unemployment Of· rurr~ large.t,. am<ing teenagers and those in the ~ to U-yearo<>ld aae bracket. Many jobleu persons were new- ly entering the labor force but could not find work. The jobless · rate: compared with S.8 percent in February, and 8.2 percent in December -a nine-year high. Prisoners Strike SAN LUIS OBISPO (UPI) -Nearly 200 inmo1tes at the California men'• col· ony were confined to their cells Thursday after they went on strike demandin& a Sl.M an hour minimum w.i:ge for prison work. Coulaty Lawmakers Affected l]niformed s ·olons Illeg~l? , . Ftom Wire ¥rvlce1 W~SHINGl'['()N ....:. Two Orange Caunty . congraSsinen . facie °" Jou of their reserve military aimmlasion1 1od1y in light of a ruling by a federal judge here that it • ii unconstitutional. Jor member1 of Conare11 to hold such com- misgjoos. Rep. CraiK HOimer (R·Ll'ln& 8t:ICh) is a rear admiral la the Naval Reserve and Rep. John G. &chmltl <R-Tustin) is 1 lieutenant colonel In lhe Marine Corps Reserve. Rep. Richard Hanni (0.Anahelm ) does nol bold a re$t!rve commlulon, as i1 the -case with both California Senat.ors Al•n Cranston and John Tunney. U.S. Di1tttct Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell. v.·ho made the rulina. refu!ied - lo iuue. an injunction order1111 senators or 'representatives t& resiJn their poll· lions. He said be expectea tbe rulina to be appe11led to bigber OJUrts and that there wu no argent neceulty for such 1111 ~r-, · '0.0.lt ~114 Jl7 B<Dotorl and """,."" lailYes now hold commlulona In army. navy. 1tr force ad Marine Corpa re!trves. Gesell's deeisioa came in a !!Ult acainlt Defense Secrtltlp' Melt~n R. L111'd brought by a group called 'fbe R-.rv11tJ O!mmlttee to Stoj>-tlJI War. Ge•ell said lie bQed ~Is de¢.lon on Artlcle I. Se:etton 6, Clause 2 OJ the Consti tution whk:b. uYS~ . : ' "No senator or re-prese.ntative 1b&1l, durln1 Ow: Umt for whith be wu elected, be appointed to any civil offtce uodtr the aulhl'lrity l'lf tM United States, which shill have been created or . t b 1 emoluments •hereof shall have beta increJstd during sucb time : and l'll'I person boldini any office under I.be. United 8tate1, ahaU be. i member of elthor h"""' during his eontlnuaJ1<e 111 olllce." GeN:ll'• Nltn1 held tbar a cotnmls1lon ln tbt mil1tary ruerves re.u withln the area of 1 civil office. If ·tht United Stales. HI noted Iii his rulin& thit ~the mti& 1J11•and eftect of thia•«iastlfuUonal ·p~ Vision· bave never before been detennined by • court.:• A flood of public prl'llest l:W arisen ever the conviction and life sentence given Calley after his court-martial trial at Ft. Benn.tng, Ga. HendersoD, however, would not face 5l'I severe a penalty if coiivicted on the charges against him. Required under the military code or justice, today'• hearing before military Judge Peter S. Wondolowski will consider instructions for the conduct of Hen- derson'• courL-martial. Henderson, commander of the. lllh Infantry Brigade when one of its bat- t11lions swept through My Lai, is accused specifically with ''willfully fa\lini to con- dUct a proper and thorough in· vestlgation" Into reports of "e1ceuive killing of noncombatants.·• Now attached to the 1st Army 1t thJs base midway between Washlnit<>n and !altlnwe, Henderson. Ml. Is charie:cl with dtrellctlon of duty, fallurt te obey .._l~Wful ~platlon, lalse 1wefrln&. ud • OIDlllW .-"* oUltllll tl'olimollt: , IY He la the only offlct.r 1WI fWa court.martial mi ·ctl~a of COvtrinl \IP (See COLONEL, faae Jj . MY LAJ DIPINOANT Col. Oran H1nftrt0n Cites Irvine Program Labor Secretary Opens Drive for Aerospace Jobs Secretary of Labor James: D. Hodgson tale this week announced the launching of 1 new effort to bring aerospace specialists back into the world of the tmployed, then pointed toward an ex· perirnental program at UC Irvine as an example of the Idea. Hodgson. speaking after a conference at the Western While House Thursday morning called by President Nison. sa id the new program at UCI was working very well. At that campus, he e1p\atned. unemployed engineers. 1cientisls and technicians who lo1t their jobs in aerospace are being retrained in the fteld of environmental technology. Hodgson said tlle new plan would apply Quake-wrenched I Valley Shudders Five More Times LOS ANGELES. (AP) -The earth's crust, badly wrenched in the Feb. 9 killer earthquqke. shuddered five times Thursday 11 It continued 1etUing back into place. The aftershocks rattled dishe& and windows and caused a brief power outage but no significant damage was repohed. The sharp, brief tembtor1 were ftlt most Rffl'tly in the San Fernanda Valley, where the initial jolt killed 64 persons and did hundreds nf mllllons of dollara worth of damage when it slruck just before dawn nearly two montha ago. Selsmologi&ts at the Callfornl1 Institute ol 'fechnology in Pu•dena u.ld the: latest ahakerJ reei1kred from 1.7 to between 3.5 and ·3:7 oa tht • Ricbt.er acale. The ortainal quake w11 puged at 6.& m1lnUude. Cal~ Tech ·o{flclala 11y tbtrt have. been ~r 230 1ftenbocks ol J mqnltude, lncludlnf """ Wl<fne1<11y tlllt lnJur<d six pefson1 anctdama,ed some 300 homts and the Dtvonihlrt Police St•Uon. ' The lo~t Jolt , Tllund•y ca~ cr111:ks In the police 111Uon lo wide.ft, -eUl0tr1 1ald. S43 million 111 f~e:r1t funda toward of. feting out-of-wl'lrk aerospace apeciallst1 retraining, job opportUnlty ll!tlnl• and even &0me financial help to cover mavtn1 expenses to llve near a new job too far for commuting. The cabinet member said more apeclfic data on the opportunities of the proeram would be made available to tbe state departments of. employment within the next few ~ee~. . . 1 Despite the allocation of the money, however. the . plan is upected to make nnly a dent in the ranks of unemplayed aerospace engineers, aclentist1 · and tethnicians, who total about 100,000 · na~ tionwide. The new program would only be able to help perhapt 10,000 of them, Hodgson 1aid. The secretary, hirqte.U a Calrfomla aerospace executive before receiving bis appointment to the cabinet a few montba 1go. had grim fOrec•lta for the · unemployed In that lnclus!n'. "It seems: doubUul that the Industry would restore itsc.lf soon enough to be of any help to theM inditiduall out of work now," be 11..id. Weather Cooler temperauuu will mark the flr&t April weekend on. the Orange Coast, with low clouds and fog in the mornin1•.IJ'ld tem~~ tures running from 68 to 78 de- grees. INSIDE TODAY DoMing mak~up for o: pln11 involve1 more than 11 paint job. Golden West CoUeot th.tcitt,.. aru ~tud.1mt.! mnkt an in£erc1to ing project of 1t. Se• toda~'• \\l'eekendtr. IH!lltt II c.n,.,..... 1 CMckllll U• 1 C.l•Klnclf ...., C.fflftlel ,, ('lftt'-'11 ff OM!tl l'Mtlc11 I ......... ' ldl ... i.I f'IM f .. lftlllCI l"IJ "--" 11 41111 Lt.,.I"' II MMlllew I IM•let l .. >f Mutv.. ...... 1d Mt!llMI .._. U or ..... ~ a • .,,_... IMt ..... le .......... 14 ...... .... llKll MME.._ 1•\I T•lt'lll... M TllMtww , .. » w"""" • w-·· ""'" 11.11 w...w ""' ... WMfl....,. .... J I ., 2 DAil ¥ PILOT c Juror~8 Dell Wife Back: l Calley Trial Torment Told In Coast ' • """' Wirt · -FT. BENNING, Ga. -If war is btll, the aftermath ls sometimes a double torment. Army Maj. Harvey G. BrO'>''l1, 33. a Vietnam vetuan and one of si.x jurors who sent.cntfli Lt. William L. "Ru.sty'' Callty, 27, to life In prison for the My Lal massacre knows. He let down aome of the stiff, mlUtary demeanor displayed throughout the serisational court martial Thursday. reflecting oo the agony of decisioo and the heavy factor& that '>''eighed it. None of the others have. "Jt'1 not t.be American Army .• .it's th1a country Ulllt wa.s really on trial u.e:r,," the Amarillo, Tex. career m:in r!marked. Maj. Brown uld he would hate to be: in President Nlion's place now - with a nation of emotional people demtn· din( Lt. Callefl pardon -and the Commander-la-Chief raced with the cbolCe. "It would be so easy for him ... to let Lt. Calley eo fr ee ..• " He added that many Americans are Jetting their emotions take control or thelr minds in tht fierce outcry for the President to intervene. "But what would that do to the laws and jusUce of thls land? They haven't .•. heard the fact.I," Maj . Brown con- tinued . ~'They haven't been able to scrutinize tbe evktence a1 we have." The evidence reviewed lncluded the image of 1 Youn.& platoon leadtr riddling scn.amln& civilians with 1lu11, 11h00Ung From Page I COLONEL ••• the alleted m1111cre at My Lal. Cbar1es a&llnlt 13 other• were dropped . 1be cbar1es 1galnat the Ind.lanapolls offtcu resulted form a three-month in- vesU11Uon by a panel headed by Lt. Geo. Willl•m R. Peen. If coo:vtcltd on all counts, Hender1on could be untenctd to a maximum term or •ii: yem at bard labor. Hendtrton ll repre1ented by civilian lawyer Htnry B. Rothblatt and a three- ' man mllltl.ry defense team he1ded by ·Army Cap~ Carroll J . Tichenor. I Suspects Nabbed · 1 ii illgitna Theft :Of Costly Rings Laguna Beach dell.<::Uve! 'Iburtday afternoon arrested two suspects In the Wednesdar theft of five eipensive rings, claimlna; one of the men admitted the $6,300 zhoplln. Polict identified the pair as Jasper Eugene Smith, 23, of 2190 College Ave., Costt Me11, and Michael Robe r t Osborne, 29, of Bellflower. Autborllle! .said the two men were to be arraigned 1.Ionday on grand theft cbarges. Police claim the two entered the Little In1ot, at lUO S. Coast Hijhway, lhortly before noon Wtdnuday and , while owqer Hert Hoff was wa!Una on 01borne, Smith allegedly rtmoved the five rings from 1 display case. Jnve11tigator1 said the live sold rings. each ~t with a d.Jffe.rent type of rare diamond, were recovered Thursday wbtn the men were taken into cwtody. DetecUves arrested the two men after que&tioain1 Osborne, who had remained at tbe Little Ingot following the theft, ostensibly to act 1s a "witness" for Hoff. Osborne auertedly admitted the conspiracy and told detectives where the su!J)eCt could be found . OIANGI COAIT DAILY PILOT OUJCGI COAST P \JILlSHING CCMPAN't lteb•rt N. w.,~ P•n t119111 ,,,. htll...., J ,t\ R. Cur1•v \lkl PmWtfll erld G_.11 MaM.., Thom•1 K,,..,;i 1!"11• Thc-"'•' A. Mu1phi"t MtMGl"'ll f"llOf Ch1o1!r1 H. lool R;<~rrd P. Nr ll Au•1•1"; Ml"lllntJ Ea.1or1 CHt• M .. • Offlt• JlO Writ Irv Sl•ttt M1 ilih9 Addrtu: P 0 . 1011: 15&0, IJ2&26 ptt1tr OftlcH Htw,,.,, ••.ch; m' IOwrtrt •~: ....... UIUM lrlt?I: 17'. "°'"' A.,.111/t Mut1tll>glo.~ llt<h. 11'7: l t l(h 1 .... 11v1rd $.ti\ (lt""'"ltl JDS Ntrl!I .El Ct"'l"O lttll C),t.llV lllLOr, wltll """ld't 11 CM'\l>i..., ti-. ,,.,,....,., .. ,, )I •ubll1h•G a1111 1rttP' ...... 111 lrl MIU .. lt ... 1119:'\t fw UfU"I ltlUI. H1""°'; ltttll, Cot•t ,,.,..,, "'"""""'.,_ ltt<ll, "·-11111 V111t1, J 111 (ltMt<Ht / (t p!t!t•,.. trG ~rdcll<81(K. , .. .,. .. n~ -•r~te~•I tdltll)ft ,..,,<!I'l l ••lntl"f t ltnt h. t i JJ0 Wt.1. It~ !oi•tt , (Olli MUI T.,..M 17141 •42-4121 , Cl.WfW ,t4r"ll .. •42·1671 c.,vrlflll. ltl1, 0••-conT l'w.,11111..,. ~y. Ho -~ 110tt1•. lll1Mtr111o ..... u11ori.1 l'!Wlltfl' •• •4vMl•-ll 111.a111 -y 1JO ,..,..,,.i;td W1IFIOlll 1PO(\tl Jtef• mlnlOn el .,,.,i;.. •"'""'· hc .. 4 t:I-'"life Hl<f ti H1""""1 l .. dl ~ ..... Co.II Mn1, e111i-11. $1,fbttri,.i1.,. !-----+-"' _,...,. tt• ~-"Y ... 11 n 'I _.,,,,, ft•t!lllry 4t1!1ftlli..1, 1~21 "'°"11111. <ti hall a Buddhllt monk'1 l\lad and hW'linJ; a baby be1dllrst lnto a dl~. "l bavt nothtna but compusloo fot LL Calley," ht 1dded. _ "l was looking right at Calfey when the verdict was delivered. He looked like he had been hit in the head with a sledgehammer.•' "He didn't ask for his lift! or freedom. 1 admired him for lhat. I alm ost cried myself." Maj . Brown described the trial as a mental Hell. but said he fell the panel's verdict was the only alternative . He made it clear the jurors had no recourse, saying they \\'ere unanimous on the first baJlot. "They had no recourse;• he added In reference to 102 ~ty Lai vlll1gera. Following his interview. a reporter showed ?daj. Brown an editorial cartoon from the Atlanta Conttitutlon by arliat Clifford Baldowski. The drawing shows the ghost of Gtn. Closing In Stock Case By TOM BARLEY Of lflt O•!IY lllltl 1!11! 1'1arlene Dulanty. looklng pale, strained and visibly apprehensive, was hustled into Santa Ana Municipal Court today le face charges linking her to the alleged $3 million defrauding of investors ill the \Vorld Financial Trends empire ad- ministered by her husband. !<.1rs. Dulaney, 32, was flov.•n in from Bermuda late last night after agreeing lo return to Orange County \\'itb district attorney's investigators and face arand theft and conspiracy char1es already, filed against her husband, Joseph, 37, and his vice president James Shipley. 38, of Huntington Beach. All three say they are innocent. Douglas MacArthur with a comforting hand on the shoulder of a soldier by the name of Jury. The soldier is gi'ief·sllicken, a hand over his eyes. whlle on a shelf behind him is a closed book labeled : Calley Court-Martial. Members of Harbor Area Boys Club flock to\!1ard police helicopter Thursday at Costa Mesa park. The demonstration of the police chopper was part of law day during boys club week. Youngsters became familiar with police equipment, problems and tech- niques. She stood up before Judge Paul Mra!t wearing the yellow pajama suit issued to Orange County jail women prisoners anti confirmed for the jurist that sh& did not have an attorney to represent her . .. Duty ... Honor ... Country," says the. caption. Sudden tears welled up In Maj. Brown's eyu and he abruptly turned h15 back, the about.face maneuver ma rred by shaking shoulders. Soldier Returns 'Home~ Judge Mast appointed the public defender, ordered tbe blonde defendant to return to his courtroom Monday for preliminary examination and set her bail at $312,500. "This says it all. .. " he sobbed . Newport Woman Says 'Romance' Prompted Suit GI Lost in -Laos, S. Viet Jungles for 12 Days Dulaney 's nexl court appearance l.! also scheduled for Monday. The: 37-year- old investment counselor. wbo was ar- rested last ·week in the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao, is also held in lieu of 1312,500 bail. A Newport Beach woman who claima that her broker wed "an a!fecUonate and romantic intereft" in her to persuade her to move more than $300,000 worth of blue chip 1tocks to mutual flllldJ has named him and his company as defendant.I In a near '500,000 lawsuit. Mrs. Jane P . Carroll cl1lms in her Orange County Superior Court action that broker John H. Hoyt, 2189 Tu1lin Ave., C01ta Mesa, and California Investors of Orange have ignored demands tor the return of $.118,679 in loana made to Hoyt . Sbe wants $10,000 in dama1ea 1111tained by the transfer of blue chip 1tockl from the trust she inherited to mutual fwlds 1U1ge1ted by Hoyt and ahe also demands a fUrther SIOO.OIXI In punltl.vt damages from the defendants. Mrs. C1rroU 1tate1 her first cont.act with Hoyt waa in late 19M, shortly after she received the portfolio of blue chip stock.s she Inherited from the estate of 1 Loll Angele• woman. Mrs. Carroll, whose minor children Valerie and John P. Roberts are co-plain- tiffs in the action, stales that she wa.! "naive and uninitiated" In business ar. fairs when Hoyt and California Investor• manager \Villiam Heiden approached her and was easily persuaded that it was possible to increase her 3.4 percent i1,1- terest rate to the 10 percent iuarantetd by mutual funds. She indicates in the lawsuit that her association with Hoyt was enhanced by romanct and that she "came to rely oa blm entirely" -to the point that she aold her entire holding of blue ch.Ip 1toclu. She accuse• the defendanta or "churn- ing" In transferring her 1toclu to other sources -a practice whereby brokers create c<>mtnisslons by awltchln& &tocks for no good financial reason • Hartelius Jury Still Undecided An Orange County Superior Court jury went to lunch today with no verd!r.t to offer in the arson·rraud trial of Dr. Ebbe Hartelius of Corona del Mar . Judie Jame1 F. Judge has not yet decided whelher he will order the panel lo deliberate througb the weekend jf a verdlct 11 not retched by later today. Court officials have Indicated thal the jury may be allowed lo take the weekend oft and resume dellberatlon1 Moll.day if they cannot decide on the guilt or innocence of the physician by 4:30 p.m. today. Hartelius, 50, Is accused of burning his olflces last April i and faking the theft Of bis car nine days earlier. He vigorously de nied the chara:es throughout the four-week trial. PHU BAI. Vietnam (UPI) -For 12 days an American serviceman wandered through the jungles of Laos and South Vietnam, living on rice and leaves and dreamlng of an ice cold orange soda. When Spec. 4 Paul A. Lagenour, 21, of Odon , Jnd., finally reached an American unit he let out a wild ••yahoo," and said . "You guys are the prettiest sight I ever saw." Lagenour met the press at the 85th Evacuation Ho!pital in Phu Bai today, wearing blue pajamas and sandals adorn· ed with !!liver star and Purple Heart medals. His left arm. hit by shrapnel , was bandaged and in a sling. But doctors said he would be ell right. "The most frightening lime was all the tlme," Lagenour told new!men. How does it feel to be a hero? "It's a pa.in," he: said. On second thought he added , "Oh, it's okay." Lagenour's story began March 19 v.·hlle he \V3S flying OVef Laos as a door 11.lfllM!r aboard .a VHl il1My helicopter gunship. "We started taking small arllll fire ,'' he said. "The pilot s1id ~we were hit, and he set it down ~t a rie'trb1 South VJetnamese position." "We no sooner got down than mortars Crash Victim's Fu1ieral Rites Set Saturday ~Iemorlal services \\'Ill be conducted at R a.m. Saturday at Pacific View Chapel for Richard E. Schumacher. the Newport Beach pilot killed Wednesday In a crash at Ontario Internal\onal Airport. Mr. Schumacher was one of five Western Airlines pilot.a y,·ho died y,•hen their Boeing 720-B crashed while on a training night. Investigators for the N a t I o n a 1 TransportaUon Safety Board said today the men apparently had "little or no warning'' of the impending disaster. The investigators have recovered the plane's voice recorder and the flight data recorder and have sent them to Washington for analysis. The federal investigators also said the backflrlng wltnessed by people who saw the plane go down wa! probably the result of oxygen starvation caused by the atUtude of the jet. Five ten-man teams -both federal and private -are probing the wreckage of the plane In an effort to determine the cause of the crash. Mr. Schumacher , 5.1. lived at lSOl Mariners Drive. He leaves hi! wife Elizabeth, of the home; a son. Carl S. Schumacher of Newport Beach: two d1ughters , 11-frs. Sally Chidester of P.lsmo Beach, and Sll!lan Schumacher of Newport Bea.ch; a sister, Mrs. Dorothea Mlehle of Ross, and one grandchild. The family has suggested memorial f'ontributions lo the t\e'>'')Xlrt Harbor Spastic League. Budget Sho~ks Sheriff, Welfare Ask Hikes The finl two county departments to outllnt their need.a for tht 1971·72 Uac.al year have asked for increuet totallnt ~ m11Uon. The sbtrlff<0roner'1 department was the flr1t to explain Jt1 needs to Orange County's admlntatraUve stiff Thurlday. Shtrl!l James Musick Hid the cost of operatinl his dtpartment l'Wld be up •t million ne1t year. 111• morning, Count)' Welfare Director Granville Peoples said coil.I for hit deJ)llrtment "·ould be u.p about $4 million. Peoples esllma1td that Lhe total y,·t}fart budgtt would be up to $98 mil· lion from the current ytafs $43 million. Of the $99 million the county will have to pay about $28 mllllon. Peoples blamed the falterinC economy for mo1t of the increase. ?tluaick said Thursday the co1t of operatlna his department will be hlJher becauae of the prwure of populaUon. He said the county jail Is now over· crowded. ...1 Oranae county Supervl~rs whn hAvfl been eyeing C\Jtl in county e.xpendi- turea for the comma year wert not on hand M> hear Ute bad news. They'll get It ofllclalJy Jater thla month. started hilling us." he said. "T jumped out itnd ran for cover :' Lagenour United up with troop! of the SOuth Vietnamese 2nd Airborne Bal· talion and volunteered to help call in U.S. air strikes on surrounding Com· munltl positions. "The South Vietnamese were really fabuloll!l toward me," be said. "A couple even gave up tbeir folhole for me." Despite the attempts to protect him, shr1pnel from a nearby Communist mortar blast hit hlm in the arm while he was directing the air atrlkea. "One South Vietnamese soldier gave me hl8 last drop of morphine." he said. "Another gave me his last bandase." Lagenour traveled with the South Viel· namese battalion until he wu separated the next day '>''Ith !our Saigon soldiers during a battle against C:Ommunist troop•. For the next three days. Lagenour and his South Vietnamese companions traveled on fool across Laos, aiming for the Vletnameae border. They walked through the jungltt by day , keeping of fm1 J111 road1, and re11tec1 at nisht. "I ate only rice •nd leaves with a litUe bit of dried fJlh we foond, ·~ be s1ld. On March 24, they came within an Inch of being rescued and then 1aw their hopes shattered. They spotted two U.S. helicopters flying * over the area and used a parachute to form an "X;'' on the ground . However, darkness fell before they could be picked up and they had to move on to avoid Communist patrols. . "The thing I thought most ;1bout was Bn orange soda, an Ice cokl -0range soda, and my family of course," he said. Lagenour 's most dangerous moment came the next day. The group mi!takeirty- was attacked by a U.S. AHi Cobra helicopter gunship and when they dove for cover, they ran into a North Viet- namese unit. Lagenour and one of the SouUt Viet- namese soldiers e.!lcaped but the other thret were captured by the Communists. They conllnued trudging through the Jungles tor the next two days until they showed up with stranded South Vietnamese marines. "I was more worried about my mother hearing about me than anything else," he said. "We're kind of close and l knew what il would do to her." · 'l'he trlo moved east. followlng the rising sun. into South Vietnamese ter- ritory. Last Wednesday afternoon. they finally ran Into a ·u:s. untf .i... an armored patrol operating a few miles west of Khe Sanl!. ''J screamed out 'yahoo' u soon as 1 saw them ," he 11ald. "I 11aid •you guys are the prettiest sight 1 ever saw.' " From Page I INDOCHINA ... border, was almost a wasteland Friday a! the last Ameri can forces pulled out. They said the only signs of life at Khe Sanh Friday were two companies of U.S. armored units manning about 21J tanks and annored persoMel carriers ~nd an occasional South Vietnamese soldier rummaging through piles of trash. The last transport flight or the several 11undred planes that landed on the plateau base during the height of the Laos cam· paign left Thursday along with the mobile control tov.•er which had been mounted on e jeep. All that remained, a newaman report· ed. were the twisted and burned hulka of American helicopters, molor vehicles and steel-lined bunkers. Black clouds of smoke from burning fuel dumps covered the area. Publisher Succumbs NE\V YORK (UPI ) -Albert E. Winger , former president and chairman of the board or Crowell-Collier Publishing Co., died Thursday after a brief illness. He was 87. ~----- Airs. Dulaney has been confined to !he hospital in Bermuda with what bu been described as a gall bladder con· dition and a possible heart ailment. But her illness was de&crlbed by in- vestigators today as "nothing more serious than a bad ease of nerves.•• Hospital authorities in the British Colony declared her well enough to travel pro-' videa she was willing to accompany investigators, they aald. ' ti.frs. Dulaney's arrest now se\a the stage for the triaJ or what investigators de!cribe as the three principals In a series of alleged-frauds that first came to light with the complaints of many elderly residents of retirement eom- munilie! in Laguna Hills and Se al Beach. They accuse the Dulaneys and Sh.lpley of bilking them of substantial sums of money invested in the corporate complex ad ministered by Dulaney. The Dulaneys go to court 1'.lond1y. Shipley, also free on $312,500 ball, aoe1 to court April 2L Shipley took over as chief of the World Financial Trends combine shortly before Dulaney and his wlfe flew with their three children from Orange County to West Germany an d what investigators describe as a year-long "life of Riley'' in Munich. Bu~glary Victim Offering Reward A Fountain Valley tire dealer whose Cos1 a Mesa home ~·as burglariied or more than $1,000 in jewelry and coins recently i1 fed up with crime. Newlon Wilbers, of 1M4 Boa Vista Circle. is offering a $200 reward for informaLion· leading to arrest and con viction of the intruders provided eithe~ to himself or police. Some items taken in the f.larch 22 break-in are untraceable, y,·hile other• -such as a rare penny worth f4()I) -could be tracked down . Withers may be reached at 839-9100 in Fountain Valley. ··- Glass Top Tables • •• On Sale Now! lOdO GU.SS TOP TAIU-~•" THICK SPICIAL $ I 54 REG . $178. -It.Ry styled aad --·ly dotantd, this 11 ........... I• • , ..... '°f> rable. Dco 'r mlu ....... . porhUllry to OW11 qMDty at • r1•attebie price. A.,.llolole lo ,.. followflMJ flohltot: Aorlquo Gold -Old Spool"' -DI-OU.t -llack -Ytrdt Gnto -Aeriqtlt T ....... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXE.: -HERITAGE NIWPOltT STOlll O'IN PltlPAY 'TIL t NIWPOIT IUCH U.•UNA IEACH 1727 w .. r<llff Dr. MZ-2050 O~EH FRIDAY 'TIL t rm .. aleMI lorlfl« Dnl91m Avatlolile-AID-NSID l4S "°"" Coasr Hwy, 4'4·'551 OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL t INTER I 0 R·S - • • ' . Foor Critical Fumes Kill Five In Tanning Plant BERWICK, Maine tUPIJ - Five workers were killed and seven injured today '1•he,. fumes leaked out while chemicals were being loaded Into a tank at the Prims Tan· n1ng Co. factory. A dozen workers were in the tanning room when the mishap took place aboul 6:30 1.m. EST, officials reported. as lhe chemicals were being loaded into a tank from a truck. Five died. "'four were critically injured, a fifth was adn11tled in Jes.., i;erious l'On- dition to a hospital and two wt-re treated and relea~ed. stale police said. ---· CALLED RACIST Judge Lindsay I Tar!l Featl1e1·s Four of the dead were iden- t1f1ed as Ronald Hayes. %1. nf Rochester. N.H., Arthur Webber or Berwick, James Royce Sr., 48, ol Farmington. N.H .. and Richard Nadeau of West Lebanon. Attorneys For Angela Claini Bias School Principal Victini The fifth victim was not immediately identified. YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP\ - The principal of Willow Run Htah School, which WIS I.he acene of racial incidents last month, was tarred a n d feathered Thursday night by a group of hooded men who forced his car to the road a.ide. Sta~ police said Wiley Brownele, 42, suffered minor Jnjuriea in the incident which occurred as he v.·as on his ~·ay home from a meeting of the Will ow Run School Board. Brownlet said an auto v.•ith a lone occupant forced his car off the road. The hooded driver . .11.rmed with a shotgun, tol oul and told Brownlee, MAN'S PSYCHOLOGY NOT BASED ON SEX WAS FREUD WRONG? ••. Probably not, but then he nevt:r hlld to consider lht:t there v.·ould ever be a Yolks· Wl&en. My ad t\\'O v.·eek1 ago featured the psychology of thr Volkll\\•a gen dril'f'r. Granttd. I may nof. have bef'n out of con- ff':'l:t offf'ring frre psy1'.hiatric messa&:C!I in that I am a Habf'r- du:hf'r by tradi!'. But appari!'nt- ly, Frf'Ud ntvf'r ga\ e a S('('ond thou&ht to an altrrnate nf srx , , . the Volk~wagf'n!! That'• 1•i;hl ... but it only hapJll"fll! '4'.hf'n I df':cide to thro\.\' ont of my 1uper sneak salt'!. "Tw'n off your headl&hl! and get out of the car." Pro Grids' TV Ban Hit He said a second car <.'On· ta.ining several more hooded men then pulled up and tht group ordered him to walk to a roadside ditch. "I was WASHINGTON tUPJ) hit on the head with something Sen. William Pro1.mire (D· -I think it \Oo'as a gun butt \Vis.), claims the airwavf'! -and fell into the ditch.'' belong to the public. not 1• the principal said. professional football leagues. "The liexl thing I kne1''· He said he \\'oult: introduct' they were pouring tar oil over a bill in the Senate to forbid me from out of a bucket and a television blackout of home then thev thre"' a lot of professional football when tht chicken feathers on me." ht' game is sold out. said. Mort than 90 perc·ent of He told state police he \\'a~ ~cats in Nat ional Football convinced the assailants, \Oo'ho Leagut stadiums "'ere sold numbered about five or si1.. out last year, he said, and were adult!. not high school on the a"eragt 50.000 fans pupils. or more paid their way into After the altackers drove each regular pro game. Tens off. Brownlee drove back to of thousands \1:ere turned his school and telephoned _•_w_'~'-' _h_•_•_•_id_. _____ _ police. Asked by newsmen if he kne\v any reason for the assault. Brownlee said. "My mind "'ould of course have to go beck to the racial tensions at the school and the fact that the school \Oo'as closed for a couple days last month." Arn1slrong Has 'Bacl Niuht' "' NEW YORK (UPI) -The condition of ia1.z trumpetf'r Louis "Salchmo" Armstrong, \Vho has been under hospital treatment for a heart ailment. look a tum fo r the worse Thursday night, ii w a ! reported today. SAN RAFAEL IUPll -At- torneys for Angela Davis in- sist that somewhere i n California there must be a v.·hite judge who can overC<Jme his bias to insure a fair trial for the black militant. They challenged Judgl' Alan R. Lindsay Thursday on grounds he is racist and asked him lit disqualif~· himself. Another out-of-county judge disqualified himself last month on a motion by ~1iss Davis' codefendant. Ruchell ~1Agl'c, "'ho said he v.•as biased. The-defense said as 11 member or tht' whitr upper middle class. Lindsay. 54. wa~ so crippled by bias he could not be fair. Linday has 10 days to decide whether to disqualify himst'lL If he decides to remain on the case, the defense can ap- peal. Asked ir any judge could be fair, Howard Moore Jr .. ~tiss Davis' chief attorney. said, "I think the answer is going to have to be yes. Some white persons obviously are more capablt' of dealing with thrir prejudices than others." "There must be some judges like that in California." Moort' s;iid. "I don't think thert' art' too many. but T am sure thl're must be some." Union~ Delay Auto Walkout ).!y ad drf'\.\' the \1ri;:cst collrc· tion of V\V Id!; and Egos cvPr ai11embled in Ne\1!port Brach ~xcept for thf' grand opening of Chick lverson's local dealt-rship. "Mr. Armstrong spent a restless night, with increased respiratory difficulty," 11 It was worth every nickle of spokesman for Beth Israel Medical Center said. "His my miSIPf':nt mone-y bec1.ust1 in- DETROIT t UPIJ -The United Auto Workers agreed loday to continue contract Ut>I 1•1••"'19 talks with American ~1otors Neav 111uee1i ~ Corp., lit!le more than six Sarah Rippon, 21-year· hours befort a threatened old daughter of Bri· strike deadline. tain's chief Common The move came afttr the M k . union rejected two C<Jntract l ar et negotiator. will proposals by AMC and had d•td tile V\V Drivtr shops in 8 ~~~ral condition has we:akcn- m 0 1 t bargain·likf' manner.I;============;! Quality and 1ervict' for the Jeut amount or "moolah." 1'-foolah is monf':y for those of you '\.\'hose ptrsonahty is not ha.std on the Volkswa1en. reign as Queen o{ the a c<iunter offer of its own I Norfolk, Va. Azalea !urned down by A Mc N• •th•• 11 1w1p1,•r r .. th e Festival in honor of negotiators. Talks we rel w•rlc:I , ••• , •b•11t yowr 'omm11· NATO. Lady Arabelh1. recessed al 1:05 a.m. and it Who Cares? 11ify li k• yo11r '•mm1111ity J.,1., Sir Winston Churchill's is up lit American officials ...w,,.,., ••••· it'• 1h. 0A1t Y grandd ht r d 1 "· d I ,.JLOT. aug er, re use o tK:Ci e when negotiations To co on, I had one lady whol':;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;~=~lh~e~h~o~n~o~r=1~·n~p~r~ot~e~s~l.==='~'~il~I ~re~su:;:;m;•~·====-=;' arrived in an irridescent lime Ii f?een Bug \11th a portrait of ~rae \Va1hington 1tamPf':d on Mr hood ... She kept thank- lni:: me over and over for tht 1oothing relif'f that my $4 bar· i::ain tablt rcavl" hf'r. Thad savrd ht':r from th ... df'plhlt. or ~~11 dl!'fc11tomania. Then thf'rf' "a~ •hr Ct1ap in lhP black Super B~ttl'"' 11·ho m1s- judi::ed lht !+pt'rd bun1p and landed in thr Lido Thf'Al rr philodendron 1>lantrr. Hr made up hi11. wa)"'·a rd direction by purchasing a $125 Top 0 JI.tart lluit for $40. Vl"ry good judg· ment! He drove of[ and disllP· peared between t\\'O a-old Cldil- lact:. Obviously, he "'AS beinc Mntr'Qlltd by the hand.Una: chttacteriatics of hi• VW? Listen. if you think you llrf': sufff':nnr from an inni!'r dl"llre to save 1omf' moolah don't go nut and buy a ~w Vo\kswaa:tn. Drop in Saturday, April J a.nd ~ \1 hat hypnollc hyperSAlt1 \1·ilJ 11ain ht' prMlcnttd 1n a rt· neat it~sion or tht'raputlc sav- lnr~ host~ by i;:ui!'.,t Su1r. Venus D,.. r.1nnry: Oeansr11tt'. Orvnni;hirt 11nd Top n f\.1 11rt 1t1lt!l up 10 $145 n o\11 140. Enrn and Gant 11hirt~ v11l- ued at $11 now $4 or 2 for 17 C1ct.u1 Casu11l JP11n11:. Harrill and COrbin traditional slacks up Ill $22 M\Oo' $4. Bilt\111 \1 and I~· Jolla Sla.eks up Ir, S-40 now $10. Cadillac, Li ncoln, Ferrari dr1v. •rs '\.\'eleoml! lt"J attend. Che11y drivt!"$ ar• '-'l'lcom,.. 11110 .. I don't wane In t'Xch1dr myllrlf BIDWELL OF NEWPORT 1461 Via Ll4e ht Newport IMch 6)1-4510 fllenty .t fr•• ,arlcl"t '" the r .. t. VW·4rlvet't ,11a1• rafreln frMt 4eulll• ,arkl"f· l\nnelfJ SATURDAY SPECIAL TOMORROW, APRIL 3 WOVEN DRAPERY PIECE GOODS REMNANTS IN A MULTITUDE OF FABRICS AND COLORS 2 , .... 2 to 1 0 yard len9th1 FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY ST 0 R.E H 0 URS: Mo11doy •n4 Frld.y, lO •.m. t• t :JO ,.m. Tuet., WH. and Thun., 10 e.lh. to t P·"'· Saturday, 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. -Sunday, 12 to i p.m. • Military Pay Boost Uncertain WASHINGTON !UPI) -A House·passed bill b o o s t i n g military pay and allowances by a record $2.7 billion faces an uncertain future in the Senate wht:re a toalition of conservatives and. liberals 1s unalterably opposed to the volunteer army such a pay raise would make possible. The pay raises and quarters allovninces -the highest single increase in I he republic's history -wert' l1t'd by the House Thursday to 11. two--year ex:tension of the draft and eli1ninatiol' 0 f Un· dergraduate draft deferinents. President Nixon had re· quested only $987 million as part al a two-step plan to move towards an a 11 ''volunleer army by mid-1973. The House C<Jmbined his recommendations into one package with the ;ncreases to start July I. Final passage, 29J lo 99. came after anti-war l'rilics sought unsuccessfully lo limit U.S. involvement in Vietnam by setting a deadline for wi!hdrawa!. or by prohibillng use of draftt'es in Southeast Asi a after the end of this year. Plane Rider Sparks Panic CHICAGO IUPJ ) A name-throwing backfire from a t;ixi ing jetliner at O'Hare lnternalion;il Airport frighten· ed 23 passengers into leaving the plane through an emergen· cy exit Thursday night and left nine of them injured. A spokesman for Trans World Airlines said the re- maining JO passengers then alighted frorn lhe p I a n e through a regular exit. He said one passenger. \Oo·ho was not identified. opened a window emergency exit when one of the Boeing 121·s Jel engines backfired loudly and released a ball of t>range fire. l1nkAmt riurcl 50% in Poll Back Nixon PRINCETON, NJ. 1AP 1 President N1:-;on's po Ii c i e 1 have the approval t>f 5(1 pt'f· eenl of the An1encan public, the lo111·est level or support since he took office. according to the latest Gallup Poll. Howt'ver, Gallup said the 50 percent indicates • downward trend in Nixon's popularity may be leveling orr. The poll said Nixon's approval rating was 56 percent in January and 51 percent In February. OAJLY ltlLOf I 3 Seized in Bank Robbery, l(idnap CHICAGO (UPI) -Four persons have betn charged with bank robbery and siding and abetting a bank robbery in ct>nnection with a $118 ,000 extortion plot in which the wife of a bank president w:as held at gunjXlint In htr ~ubU'rban home. Tht' FBI announl'ed lhree arrests late Thursday nigh!, about 11 hours after the bank president, Lawren('e W . Nortrup. turned over the money. The fourth arrest was announced early today. The Orsi three suspe<:ts were identified as Fredtrick W. ~1arschke, 31. Homewood; his wife, Joyce, 34, and Robert Manley, 34, Chicago. The fourth suspect was identified as John Carmen Slarble, 25, Berwyn. Neither the FBI nor local police agencies would detail • Ut>l lt .......... $111,000 RANSOM Oornn Nortrup what roles the four wtre suspected <lf playing In lb& plan. ·--------------~ iewels by ioseph CONTINUES IMPORTERS Jtw1l1 lly J1u,h has blofon ttl,.rlN'i u r.xclush·t salts rei,il'fll,ntatlve of cenuint 1tar 11pphires In ftn ,. Jtll'!'ll')'. kllllf' \Oo'f' receivtd 1n untxpt'("ll'd i nd ovtrwh!'lm1n1: rt!Ponst to our •tar aa pphirt u.11 la~l iwN-k, \Oo t' hl \f' po!nuadtd our 1mpor!,.r In ronlinut tht at.II!' tor on,. 1nort .,.~,.k. Don't mi!!!! this opportunity to buy a be autiful i t1r 11 pph1r~ for 1 101.-, low IJrlrt. MOUNT YOUR STAR SAl'PHIRE IN A IEAUTlfUL SETI'INIO ONE WEEK ONLY. MARCH 31 ·APRIL 6 Seuth Coul Pl111 )JJJ Bristol Co1ta ~•1• •• h ' , , I ' • • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE ) Teacher's Pay Problem • .• ,. lnformallon on teachers' salaries, gathered by the Orange County schools office and released recently by Newport-J\1esa Unified School District. helps put into perspective recent pay requests or the Newport·Mesa Education Association 'l'he data indicates the Newport-J\1esa district ls clearly the leader an1ong county unified dislricts in its altocalions to attract high quality t~achers. IL further sho,vs Iha\. l'Ontrary to popular opinion. the district i.~ not lhe \Vealthiesl nor tht-biggest spender an1ong the unified districts l·lalf of the d1slr1ct's teacher~ earn n1ore than $11.- l 50 the median -or 01idpoint -salary paid by the district. This con1pares to the median salary of $10.987 paid by Garden Grol'e \\ hith is the county's poore~t dis· trict. and SI0,575 paid by Laguna Beach. the county's "weaJthiest" district. \Vealth is determined by relating the assessed val· uation of property 1n the district to the number of stu· dents to be served. The economic situation. the real financial bind rac- ing the state and local governments and the uncertain· ty o[ legislative action on school finances make it likely that. m?sl school systems including Newport-A1esa \vill be hm1ted to much more modest adjustments in the teacher compensation program than even the board members and administrators -!el alone the teachers .-might otherwise believe desirable. Tig htening Up on Sa fety I ... ong a seeker of community improven1ent, Costa fllesa has embarked on a mission that has nation\vide impact although the outcome remains to be seen. The aim is better safety in loY.•-cost housing. The target -a big and powerful one -is thf: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) • whose funds built the <'ity's Bethel Towers on West 19th Street, Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley y,•ent to HUD recent- ly on a \Vashington visit. with documents ~mpiled in a long study of the 18-story retirement skyscraper's sate· ty factors. 1'he probe 1na1'es three nole\vorthy points: -No sprinkler syste1n was required. -Elevator service is inadequate. -Window construction could be conducive to rapid up\vard spread of flames in case of a 1naJOr fire. Bethel To\vers has experienced three serious fires. the most recent resulting in death to a 74-year-old '''Oman. Pinkley said 11UD's senior citizen project chief cau- tiously agreed in spirit with the city's recomn1ended changes, but offered little encourage1nent that they \vill become policy Costs or design for added safety factors 'vould pos· si bly negate the philosophy: that of low-cost housing, by leading to :in increase in rental fee s. And it is note· \vorthy that HUD no\v has 316 such projects built ol" goinJZ uo across the nation. Pinkley added also that 'vhile HUD took the basic recommendations under study, the implication is clear that it \Vants to keep construction costs down . ''The thing we hoped to accomplish was nnt just to n1ake it safer !or our O\vn senior citizens. but for those all across the country." he remarked. \Vhether llUD complies or not. Co.~ta ?l'lesa is tak- ing the lead \Vilh a ne\\' citv ordinante requiring stiffer fire sa felv in all t\'pes of public hui!dings. A similar HUD project adjacent lo Bethel Towers Is also no\v being proposed and -if various olher prob- lems can be solved and the city allo\\'S it -major fire safetv improvements \Viii be imposed h1ean\vhile, other cities across America "'ill be \Y1se to folio\\' Costa A1esa's lead and tighten up their indiv1· dual safety programs. \ c ~: ~: ~ What Candidate Would Have Do1ae Moyers ' Book from Humphrey to Nixon· I~ Genertilly ;~ASlilNGTON -If Hubert Humphrey ( ~ and the President must be lhe leader Depressing ~ been eletted President, he would e sought a standstill cease-lire in J £ ~l~.' l.'nd~e•Q,f"'-'i In trying to ru1r111 that objective J ha\e il\;flt. 4 1 ~U heard an the arguments against the --· loam, stopped sending draftees to , ' cease-fire proposal, and from a military lnam and appointed a Negro to run point of view they may make sense. ~ drart. ~e ofrered his jdeas back in Oclober. But the problem that races this country JD69. to the 1nan 11·ho had dereated reducing American involvement The~ l! not military: ii is political." him for 1he presi· are good steps but nol enough .. dency Humphre y "I think I appreciate the dilficuh1e~ met in I~ White that the President faces. but it will House with Presi-only get more difricult if something dent Nixon and his more ISfl'l done. His concern over the national security ad-rising tide of isolationism. both in viser, Henry KissiA· Congress and in some area! of the ger. public. is one thal I share. But I am After·ward, Hum-afraid it will get worse unle.ss we find phrey summarized some way to get out or Vietnam. liis suggestions in a conridential memo. dated Octobtr 11. 1969 to Kissinger. We have obtained a copy of the memo. which has been shown by both men only lo a few intimates. "I GUESS PEOPLE expected more action in a shorter per iod or time than President Nixon has been able to ac- <.,'Qmplish," Humphrey Y.TOle bluntly. •·in other v.·ord.5. the election raised their hopes. The people do not serTSc or fully understand the unbelievable complexity of the situation in Vietnam. They just \\'ant OUI. "The President ha!'i taken some steps that ere conslructh·c and should be recognized as steps toward!! peace and .. TH E LONGER WE are in Vietnan1, the more the spirit of neo-isolationism grows. Vietnam is sapping the spirit of this country ... To hurry o u r withdrawal from Vietnam has risks within it, but not nearly as much as the risk and danger of hanging on and hoping for something better." Humphrey called for "American in- itiative in seeking a cease-fire and so- called standstill of all combat forces . I know this is difficult but we should press it. The military doesn't like it. but our options are not very many or very good. "The public y,·ants an end to the killing, Hl1,\1PHREY STRONGLY urged !he President to annouJJce "that no draftees will be sent to Vietnam for combat purposes. NOIA'. I underscore the \\'ord~ for combat purposes. It !A'Ould be better if no draftees would be senl lo Vietnam at all. bul I am not sure that would be feasible for at least the next few 1nonlhs " The former Vice President praised Nixon for retiring Gen. Lewis Hershey as the nation's draft director and recom- mended as Hershey's replacement "a lop-grade, well-informed , art 1 c u l a I e Negro who has the respect of the blacks as .,..·ell as the whites, someone betv.·een the ages of 35 ~nd 45, \rho looks good. \vho has a sense of public relations and y,•ho can communicate ,~·ith young people.'' Hurnphrey. noting that he had of- fered views "in confidence and in a spirit of helpfulness." concluded: "I want lo help the Presidenl , and I am prepared to defend him as he moves on his peace offensive, but il must be a peace offensive ." The Booktuan It was a dtHerent country •,•:hen John Steinbeck and his poodle roamed the United Slates 1n a camper. The findings of that \•oyage of rediscovery appeared in 1962 as "Travels With Charley." Bill ~1oyers did much the same thing last year, traveling some 13,000 miles by car, sampling the mood of the nation in such places as Bondurant. Wyo., Mathis, Te>Cas, and the tough steel town or East Gary, Ind. A funner special assistant to President Johnson. a former deputy director or !he Peace Corps. later publisher of News- day and a skilled reporter, f\1oyers reports on these rindings in a Jong and generally depressing book, ''Listening to America." ri10\'ERS llAD, he tells us, llstened to America fro m a distance, living and working for some years in a narrow strip or the East Coast. "I learned thal it is possible to write bills and publish newspapers without knowing "'h..at the country ts about, or \1'ho people are.'' For Male Sanity: Realhoy Generally he found a confused and rearlul country out there, one with little hun1or. sour over Southeast Asia. fearful of unemployment, searching for some pol11ical guidance. or moral goidance, and rinding no l\ioses. not even an Eisenhower to con1rort il. As a one.man Gallup Poll, Moyers seems to ha\'e touch- ed a!I bases. youth culture to hard-hat. !\lost everyone he talked to \\'as edgy about son1elh1ng -crime. 111flation. pollution, racisn1, drugs. Aincrica 11<1s no! a happy place. \\'hen it comes to lhe grave problems America faces, the gravest is neither pollution·. urban sprawl nor excess st omach acidity. It is Playboy 1nagazine. Never since the i\larquis de Sade has any literary figure spread more pain and misery than Playboy's publisher. Hugh Hefner. Stalislics show lhat 68 .3 percent ol '°oung American males study one or mo r e centerfold ''Playmates or the Monti;" durin11: their rormat1ve ye a r s. for hours on end. ··Aha." C"rie.s !Ju~ young man. "so tfus is what young ladies look I i k e wilhoul 1heir clothes on! I'll find one ror ml' ·• And he starts huntln~ '111e problenl. of ('1luri:c. 1~ 1h.a1 i~n'I \1hat young 11:1d1es look hkt> \1111\nul their rlothes on at all f\01 rven ~·oung Pla~­ rriatc lad1c.c: AN ARTICLJ:; In tin· nc11 1nl'l..':fl.Git1C, Friday, April 2. 1971 Tht edlronol papt oJ tlic Dody Pilot 1eek.$ to inform and st1m- ulatt rtad.tr1 by prt1cn1111g Otts ntw1po,Ptr'1 opi11ion1 1u1d com- '1Y!ntsry on topics of 111lrrrsl and 11g11ijicart(e, by prov1d11jg n Jorum for lht expressiq11 of our reod,rs' opi11 1ons, and by prtitnting the divtr.,t ''ttu~ poinll of inform.td ob.!t>rri>r' and 1poke1men on lopr<.~ of tilt: ""~· Robert N. \Veed. Publisher Art Hoppe • Audience, points out that aller lhe painstakingly-selected Playmate is paid $5000 to lake off her clothes, sh e is carefully posed so she doesn't \Yrinklc. sag or droop. Thousands of studio . shots are taken under ideal lighting conditions. One single. print is chosen. Then even this best of all possible photograph::: is - hea.,e11 help us -doctored! For at this point. the article says. He iner step.<: 1n \Vilh his retouc~ers: "Takt oH thc hair on ht'r upper lip!" he orders. "Clean up thc shadO Y.'S around ht'r under.arms"' 11 1s this h1Btan1 d1~honcsly lh<1\ c:ause!I such untold !itlffenng Thcrr 1s our youni; in:in llr has found lhe girl or his dreanis She looks \1·ith her clolhes on like a Pl11yn1:1t(' with hi'r 1·lnthcs on. t;AGERL\' HF. rnarries hf'r Ex- \'ICCUtntly he s"·oops her oH on a hone}· 1noon -only to discuver lhi\1 ~he. like All human beings. occasionally \\'r1nkles. sags. droops and/or exhibits dO\\'ny llps or underarm shadow ~lorcover. she docsn ·1 even have a staple in her navel. Is it :1ny 1o1onder th.'\I 63 .3 percent of American malf'S go through lire feeling cheatl'd and frustrated'! Is it any wondt.r 1hal 17 out or 18 marr1ageli today end In uxonc lde, divorce or 1houtina nut- chcs. l"\\'hy can't ~ou takt the hair off your upptr lip~ Clean up your un- derarm shadow'") To sa\'t Amei-1ca rrorn s\o"' ly drowning In 111111 set1 of don1t1stic acr.imony. 1 MrOOp of us htij111tnit11riens has brought out a ne"' mag1u:1ne called l\.talboy. THE CE1\TERfOl.0 "Rf'almflle of the ~tonlh" 1n our fir11t is.sue 11 ~ti55 Eh•1rlil McGorkle. a 47-year-old unemployed fry cook from Bixby Falls. i\-Iont. ~liss ?>.1cGorkle, who is ~fool-2. y,·cighs 17$ pounds and has led a hard hfe. 1s depicted standing against a brightly-ht !A'alJ in the Bixby Falls ~ledical Cli111c, all prepared for .a rrec chest X-ray. As '"e say in the caption . "It 1!1 a Realmate like ri.liss McGorklc \\ho makes American men appreciate their wives.'' We are convinced thal once Realboy replaces Playboy as the leader in 1\s field. Anlerican males will grow up ra- tional and sane. NO LOl'\GER WILL they bf' obsessed by unattainable: visions or perrection . No longer \\'ill they be pandered to by books. movies and advertising that prey upon lhe lr (rustrations. Al last lhey will 3l'Cepl marital !ll'.X for !hr good lhing (t is -an ac1 of lo1·c between two tmperfect humans. At last they will accept rea1il~·. \Ve. tht publisher!'! of Realboy, ask no high re.,..•ards fro1n a graterul n!'ltion for restoring its sanity. We 1\•ish wf' could rind some guy "'ho'd buy a copy. 1r writing Dear Gloo1uv • Gus: letters to lhe No~! \ 1etn.imese \1'111 per:111i:ide thf'm lo release prisoners. then .... hy not 11n!t leller.; demanding they not shoo1 tJ S !0ld1trs~ -S C I.. '"" !••tu•• ,..flo(" 1••ttft' ui.-,,., ~.., .... ,,1. ,,.... ,, ,,,. ,........... ,.,,. r•u• ,.., -•• " Ol(lllmf Oyt, O•lll' f"llol. "YOU CAN TAKE JUSt so niuch k1!l- 1ng," a legless .'\n11y captain. bitter about Victnan1, told h1111. He talked with Groucho ~1arx 1n Holly11'ood about the decline of humor in America . \Vyoming ranchers were bitter about big cor- porations grabbing up the old ramilv ranches. A Quaker professor o'r philosophy "ie\\'ed the Kent State students as "aggressors," therefore wrong . Jn San Francisco. attempting to tract the missing daughter of a \\'ashington friend , l\:loyers became rascinated by fresh notices of runaways posted on a bulletin board in Golden Gate Park . '_'L1~ten1ng to An1erlca'' i~ one long editorial hy a conccmed and articulate reporter-ii anything a little 100 :ong. for the sustained theme of depression and frus!ration ln 1l 1s wearying. THE U.S.A. ls a Space Age countrv \\'Ith loLc; of Cfldi\lttcs and eountry club·s but aln1ost no narcotic.<:·addict1on pro- grain worth a dan1n. District of Coh1n1bia children are taught In low-grade slums. and the capital's General Uosp1ta! had just run out or penicilhn. "The Distnct should be a model for the cdunlry," a policeman told r.1oyers, but added thal \\;ashington is merely a model or what's gone y,·rong with the country . "Hardly a day passed that 11·ould bt rrte of .c:ome de1nonstrations of our ~ot.s," liloyers notes or his odyssey. One misses S1e1nbeck's genUe optimism here. And Charley. (Harper's lilagazine Press S7.951 "'illiam Huc•D Quotes l\lrt. tlarry GerMr, Oakland. ou mOOrr• faJhion5 -"\\.'l1~n \\'111 .SOOit dc~igner dtcm 1t lmporta.nl i>nou~h tn market dignified <:lolht?s for 4()..ish WOITIP.n ?'' • ' ' • .. , i: . . . , ' . ' - 'Truth~ Are Not the Same \Vhat is a "lie.'? What does "telling the lrulh" consist of? These are see1n- ingly simple questions, bul there are no simple answers to lhem. This is why parents. and educators generally, have such a hard time explaining lies and truth to children. Storm Jameson, the novelist, has published her autobiography th.is spring, called "Journey From The North.'' In her introduction to it, she writes: "I am an accom- phshed professional novelist and nothing would have bee 11 easier ror me than to draw a self-por- trait which, without telling a single lie, woold be dishonest from beginning to end, intelligent, charming, i111terestlng -and a lie." ON TllE SURFACE, a "lie'' is a statement that does not correspond lo fact, or to what we believe to be a fact. But "facts" and "truth" are by no means the same thing; as r-.liss Jameson reminds us, a book of memoirs can be absolutely truthrul in Its facts and yet be a total lie. Truth is the inner spirit or a statemenl, not just its outer shell' or facts . or course. if the facts are ralsi fied. the inner spirit is injured; but the opposite does not hold -a report consisling of nothing but facts can be totally dishonest 1n its intent and effect 11'1 ONE OF Bonhoeffer's last un- finished essays <written in prisonl, he takes up the subject of the "always truthful" man, and reminds w that there are evil truths as well as necess~y and healing truths. The man who alway• says what he thinks, under the guise of "candor,'' is not living in the spirit of truth, but in the spirit or hale. He tells of a teacher who asked · a young pupil in front of the clast whether his father usually came home drunk in the evening. The rather did, but the boy was within his rights in ty,log about it, since the teacher was absolulely wit.hoot his rights i11 asking the question -and the boy Was not mature enoii.g:h to give an answer that rebuked the teacher for his impertinence without either admitting the truth or lying_ THE HARDEST metaphysical thing to grasp about the truth is that ii is h!c)~h absolute and relative at the same time: in one sense, the truth is always the same for all men everywhere: in anotHer sense, it is relative lo the person, Oote time, the place, the situation. WisdOm consists in being able to distingtltsti between these two, and fo know when the spirit of universal truth is belng served, and when not. Both the absolutists and the reJaliv~-' are dishonest in this -lhe absolutlstl' .,..·hen they insist that circumstances"~ not alter cases: the relativists whel) they insist that truth is y,·holly .subjective; No wonder our children are confuse~ conflicted and cynical about it. : 'Lack of Understanding': To lhe Editor · \·our attack on Congress \The SST Defeat -March 29 editorial) for dropping the supersonic jet project displayed a clear Jack of understanding the issu'\ There nlay not be absolute proof that the SST would destroy man'! en· vironmenl, but there are serious ques- tions about it. Do we build the SST, fly it. then years later declare it a menace to man? On the other hand, v•hat would the SST do for mankind ? It seems ii would quicken t.he pace for a few wealthy jet setters who like lo whip back and forth between New Yot'k and London. rr big. fast jets are needed, IA'hy did one recent 747 Olght rrorn Chicago to Los Angeles carry only ~ e ,. ~ n passengers? THE SST CERTAINLY won't zip up n1y tl'lp fron1 the Orangt Coast to Pon1onn. And are you suggesting \\'e support a bad projtet JUS1 because it 1;i,·cs jobs to people? At least the tcology and rnpid transit projetl.s you can "political window dressing " h ave justifiable goals and could benerit mort than 1.1•eekend lravelers. \'our edllorh11l 5ays Congress didn 't know what ii "'as doing when ll rut SST funrls D1d the builder.! who ,11o"'t'd the jet'~ budget lo skyrocket so high know \1·hal they y,·ere doing? And why hasn't the bird nown yet? Comr on, gentlen1rn, .,...e·,.f' tK'en 1n the irt age ror ~Qmc t1n1e now It's time we all entered the lltt' of ecology TERRY S. COVILLE ~tailhox Boot f,a11t1chi11g To the Editor : .. • v 1 Ir E. C. Van Hook Sr. 1Mallbox. March 261 1o1·ere observant, he would Set ont of the best boat launching areas for niany miles around located at the CoasJ High"·ay bridge on the Back Bay. J\lany bo.ats can be launched at the san1e lime so lhere is very little wailing, and several acres of very valuable land are available ror parking the towing cars and trailers. The price 1s so IQllf' as !o nearly fall 111 the category m. public service. "'1hat more coold a person ask for ? \VlLLIAM T. SPRAGUE .---B11 Geo r ge Dear George : You knn'A' e"er~1hing. Ho\Y can I find out for surt II my husband is btJog faithful to mt" S1\RAH Dear S:irAh · Get. Sarah, J don t know -l'vt ne''tr hiid a question like thet and there·~ no nn~~cr 1n the back of !he book. llowevcr. if )'ou ever wonder how to tell if your hush,'\11d i~ being l'r-;fa1thful to you. I'm a "'hiZ on that onr' . ' • Saddlehaek •.. • VO~. 64, NO. 79, 4 SECTIONS·, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~Rlt>AY,:';tJIRIL 2, 197f Tustin Di·strict Candidates Debate Six candidates ror two available school board seats In the TustiJl Unifitd High School District debated lopics from dress ~e.s io stale and federal aki lo educa· lion programs in a sparsely attended forum at Mission Viejo High School Thursday night. "The taxpayers own the school." declared incumbent Robert Bartholomew. "The job of the school board ill lo tvaluatt what the taxpayers Vt'lnl We try to give the student the most with the available money." BarthGlomew said the district must puriut •·•trict discipline policy, ltating, "permissiveness ls for the birds. It hasn't worked." The incumbent said that th~ school board must continue to practice "strong teacher hiring practices" and "not be an administration rubber stamp." He urged also that schools not waste time •·experimenting with new programs lhat haven 't proved userU_l." Stephen Fabula. 33. an instructor to educationally handicapped students in the Huntington Beach Unified School District, stated that existing program "must be librratized to be effective.~· "We need W approach new Ideas with an open mind. We must give student.s what they need , DOt what the t.upayen thlnlt they nttd. And we'v< go! to be willing to eiperiment with new pro- gramJ. By the time they're proved. they're old," be said. Fabula noted that th! TUHS district bas not taken advantage ol federal and state aid to education programs which could help bettet district facil.itiea. He abo condemned the district f.Dr oot developing programs to accommodate edllcalionally handicapped students. Fabula co:ncluded saying "th• day is over when schools can act as a police agency for dress codes. lt's up to Ute parer.it.! to decide what their children • &hould wear.'' Dick Botanian uJd ~":at studt11tJ &boUld' "be involved in the decisions an<rpquc1• of this district aQd i.l't the development of curriculum." Charging that "three-fifth! of an ad- ministrator's time is spent with · dress code disputes." Boranian said dress ma\. ten are "the reapoll!U>.ility of the parents," ··we must also seek to invo'lve the whole cllrllUTlunity.\ We can do that if we all start . buildtng brldgea towardl one another," he aaid. Howard Eaton, member of the U.S. Air Force for 21 years, said the TUHS dl&b1ct must "dfec:tivtly'Utlllu available resourCfl1 throiJgh p I a o n I n g , com- munication and aca>Un~bility." · "We mU!t have JO'Tle rD.ethod of measurillg bow well OW' aludenta are , achieving," he stressed. . Dana Carkey, an engineer, u.ld tbe d1strid mu.st develop a strong vocational educat.ion program. "Rl,ght now we are tu;rnina out lot& of high IC=lf.ad.uates who are not trained for a . employ- ment." He suggested that the diatrict ,..k ••reements with Orange ·County firms fer vocational education programs. · Carkey also alreued the need. for _a Today's Flne l 1EN CENTS Issues strona drug abur;e prccram within the dl1lrict. slatinf: that "iuch 1 Procram mwt be-receptive to all concvne.d." FUlal speaker ·Clifford Boehmer aald that the .TUHS district must· ·contlnUe to strive for '!Strong public support. lf the . voter1 lose confidence in w, then we'll atart to lose money. "TIJllS does t!llJoy public support, and to keep It tha t way. ~ board mUJt be reaponslve to the ele:etorate,•t Boehmer added. Voten In the TUHS district will 10 to the polls April 20 to decide upon their choices for the two vacanclea. • e eac_ 1on WI Acreage Leased Ranchers Assail Beach Turnover By JOHN VAL TERZA OI "'-Dllllr PllDI ll•lf President Nixon may have scored pointf with epe.n. 'spa.ct champlom in his h1Jtoric opening of beach and valley lands near Sall 61.ente Wednesday, but several long-Ume ranchers in the affected area are hO'pplni mad. San Matto canyon, the $,4()0..acre agricultural area included in lhe land deemed surplus to Camp Pendleton needs. includes several busy ranches, including poinsettia and vegetable farms which have us~ leased acreage for years. \~llat compounds the matter lhis week ~ that no specific boundaries have been announced by a Navy department assign· ed to set the borders on the aurplll.! land. And ranchers like Paul Eckey and his staff, who have farmed the trea 1ince the late 1930s fFally don't know what will happen to a 1300,()()().plus in· vestment Eckey·a foreman Ivan AUJtin raises acres of poinsettias for the Christmas market. "We"re so mad,'' said Austin 's wife, Mildred. "that we want to call the Pre.si· dent personally, but I am afraid ol what I'd !lay." The Austins have run the San Onofre branch of the Eckey poinsetlia ranch for years. The leaseholders rectntly won a five-year renewal of their lease. but apparently are uncertain as to ill value. To make matters worae, misguided land .<tovelo-U\'f bt1iOl!•d ~ Austina for information on the lan<I, under· the false belief that It will be pla~ ~p for salt imm~iately. "Wt don't even -,wn it, yet all tnose develCIJ)trS have called us and driveii u.s crazy. J fitlally took the phone off the hook at midnight Wednesday. we had enough.'' she aaid. Eckey, who i5 on his other ranch at Encinitas, was not available for im· mediate C<>mment. His aidet there said he was studying the Presidential order . Ironically, each Chrislm1U E c k e y decora tes the Western White House with bis bright flowers . San Clemente city fat~rs learned of the offer of the 3.-400-acre canyon and 1Jx miles of prime beach late in the afternoon on Wednesday. ~feeling in a atudy session later that evening (called for other matters) coun· cilmen expressed keen Interest in the President's offer, even examining the legal methods in acquiring the canyon. Several councilmen said the canyon would make an ideal county regional park or golf course -even a wil derness preserve. But any such development, il was confirmed today. would lake years of bureaucratic wheelr;pinning to become reality. San Mawo Can yon Land Di,stribution Explained The state or California, undoubtedly, .,·outd ha;'e first call on snapping up an. additional 2.5 mi les or prime beach llOUth of the Weslem White House. And th~ wu little doubt In offici al circles that the coveted Marine Enlisted ~1an'a Beach Club and private aurfing facilities at San Onofre would eventually fall inW state hands. But what of the 3,400 acres in San Mateo Canyon included in the "gift" by Presidtnt Nixon'! Spokesmen for the San Francisco Regional Office of the General Services Bicycle Th ief Rides Again He1vy ch1ins and locks. rt seems, don 't sway the :r:eal of •-bicycle thief In San Clemente. A bicycle belonging to Debr1 LyM Muuachia of 222 W. Avenlda fifarqutta ls a case in point. Pollet Aaid thieves found 1 way to 1te11I the girl's cycle late Thursd1ty night even though it had been chained to a fence. They took lhf: bike by detaching th< whttl. Tht only rtmaining part .,,.,, still cha.ined In the fence . Admin latration (GSA) -"''hich will ad· mlniater the granting of Lhe surplus ~ands -outlined the several stel>! in· volved. They are much more rompllcated than those which the Pruident and hiJ a.ides ex-plained to the pres& on Wednesday. The progreuion of "offers" goes like this, accordin1 to GSA spokesman Tony Pace : -After N&vy specialists draft the precise boundariea of the r;urplus C~mp Pendleton land. the first olfer from the GSA will be lo other branches of the Department of Defense. -If rto valid military use by tho.1e branches can be made of the: canyon, Oien the offer goes ·to the State of California. including state-adminilliter~ educational instituUona. The land couJd be anatched up by tht higher ~ucation &ystems &nd tteld 1n reserve u an ultima te lite for 1 colleae. -If there are no takers, at the slatt level, !hen the offer fllter1 down to San Diego County. -The rules then r;tate thal 1f gn Diego County begs orr, Orange County and the city or San Clemente w o u I d have a ch11nc:e to take the property. The flroC'e$1, P1ce said. woold take mort t.bNI 1 year l.o complete. • . . '.~' DAIL'I' 'ILO'fJl llM PMMi PRESIDENTIAL CONF~RENC E IN SAN CLEM I NTE TO AID AEROSPACE UNEMPLOYMENT To Left of Pr••it.lent I• L11for· S.Crttary· Hodglbn~·To Right ' Dr. D1Wd, k lencl AdYIMr. • I • ~ . Vi~jo Home Hit by Blaze ' . Cites lrvin~-'r,rogra.,. , Fire, posiibly starttd by 1 smolde ring cigarette in living room furniture, did $10,000 damage to a Mission Viejo home Thur1day nighL Lahoi" Secretary Opens Orange County firemen uid the blaze in the Monty W. Ruth home, 25231 campina Drive, broke out about 10 :30 p.m. ll wu controlled in 30 minutea by 28 men . Drive for Ae1·o space Job s Firemen estlmated that $5,000 damage was done to the $40,000 home ,and $5,000 to the contenta. Watch Burglars Hit -and Run Thieves using an empty wine botUe to amuh through a front window m1de off with three men's wrist watches from a downt.own San Clemente jewelry store Tburldly evening. · The thieves · Oed m;m Michael's Jewelry Start If 165 Awnlda Del Mar. de,,pite a police respon.!e within one minute of a silent buralar alarm. Officera said the 1larm came into headquarters at 11:39 p.m. and a minute later the first patrolman arrived. Other officers stationed themselves at strategic point.s nearby but could not locate suspects. The watche! Were stolen. polict said, from a 1torefront display window. The loss was aet at $338. Secretary of Labor James D.· Hod&soo . . late this week announced the launching of a new effort to bring aerospace apecialiSts ·back into ·lhe world of I.he employed, then pointed towl!rd an ex .. perlment..l program at UC Irvine 11 an e1ample of the idea . HOOpon, speaking after a conference at the Weatern White House Thilr1day morning called by Prelident Nixon, ajlid the new· program at UCl· y.-aa working very well . At that campus, he explained , unemployed engineers, 1cient.ista and lechniciana v.·bl> I01l their joba in aeroapace are being retrained in the field of environment.!] technol~gy, Hodgson said the new plan would apply S43 million in federal. funds toward of- ferin1 out-of-work aerospaC9 spe<:lallata Recyclin g Van In New Lo cation San Clemente's newspaper recyclln& van wUI be moved frtlm Its locatiofl in a Shoreeliffs parkln& !'JI. to • new locaiion in central , San C I e ~en f e someUme next .week . . . The Sateway Market parklni lat :on Prisoner& Strike, EL Camino. R•al will be th< ll!W rminc • place ftr tbe large coverecf trailer w&Jcli Seek Mi nimum Pa• ' Jlb.,..,.111.20•1on1 o1 '""'bl< otwapdzrt .111 I 1_ "r' •l_-..~it ' . ~ :~~~. SAN LUIS OBISPO !VP1l ·~~·e'lf,ly l, I :pit ...,,.;, of· the Match recycllh( 200 lnmatos 1t lb1 CaUJl'!J!1• , ( ettoft fed to th• utra inonth'1 time ony wf!re confined to ~¥'. ceUa 'l'Kijr ;1 • • afltr they went on 1~e demanding ' for the ,Vlll, donated by. the Garden a 11.M an hour in~ ,~ge :, for Stat• Piper C.Ompany of Pomona. prison work. Sf;lkeamen for the Backy~rd Eco\ogy OHicl1dg aald th • rs. delcrihd ;; w{\iCb his coordlnaltd U'I~ project as "mosUy bl1cl 1'1Wtan~." •lso ' d<m8"d!d a "'"' li'w . llbrar)o , Wllh S~IJI!• nsld!nll nol t. deposit 1mlimited prtvlleKetJ and lep! tountel " • • b~ndtea at ·the Market at prlaoll dltciplinary hwJn&s. Iller tilt ~u ~.- r. ' retralnlng. job opportw'l.ity listings .and even·some financial help to cover moving e1penaes to •live near a new job too far for commutin&. · The oe.Qipet member said more apecilic data on the o'pportunitiei of•tbe program would be made available to the atate: deparlln~nta of employment within the next few weeb. · Despite the allocation of the f\lOOl!Y, hqwev,er, the plan 111. ~cted to make cinly a · di!nt in the· ranb· of unemployed ae~ospace en1ineers. scientists and techniciaru, who total about 100,000 na- t.ionwide. The new program would only be abl• to htlp perhaps 10,000 of them, Hodgaon 1ald. ' ' ' . The Sectetary, himself a C8liforn11 aerospace 1:1ecutlve before receiving hi1 1ppobitrtN!ni lb the Cabillel 1 'few tnontha aio. bid gri.Jl forecasts rfor the unempJoyed in tha.t indu11.try. "It seems doubtful that the Industry woo.Id restore ltaelf aoon enough to be. of an~. help tb • these: tnd~vidual:s out of war.k now," he aald. Leatlers' Wives Will ' 'Be Briefed SAN CLEMENTE (UPI) -·Firll Loil! Pat Nixon, wtvta of cabinet and IJOVetn-- -l' olficer1; ll>d·lqp•WOIM" in,, ...... mtnl win ho hl'llfeil .. w~. on <jooieatic A(!a1ra. · , ' · ~. \ill,pf1Ctd"11A!d ni..i111g ' ;.m "' oond!lc~'I• 'the~ room .of ."the Whit• llous• by 'John D. Ehrllchmtn. the '. J?r4&ideit'1 H&lftant for 41!>Rlellle ~oir ~ "'tarl1 n hft 1dmlnlatratloc, NI.Jori 1atd ht wa}tted the wlvts to be Involved ..net to atlf!nd ,cabinet mHlir(I! at tlmts. r-o cabinet wives. Marth• Mitchell and Mt9. •Geo:rae · Romnty. keep up on na- llooill alJalrl Ud Ip!~ O\lt OD tbem . Nixon Move Frees Him From Jail F"r. BENNING, Ga. !AP) -On Mo .. day Lt. William L. C.Uey'I futu,e wa1 at 1take._ Tuesday bia lift wu •t 1take. Wednesday he was spared. Thund•Y be faced life lri prilon. Today he was bod< In hil1 qlllrt<n will> llnlited lntiloln. . ' , • Tbus ran the dr-~~J( lh• 17-yur~ld c;,uey·~ life d~!lt five day1. !Ji'. ~· dtr of ~tdent Nizop from tM W ateni Whllll.' Housi la '·San Qfmen , c.\11•1 w.ll taken from. ann!d • <Uito<ty bdllbt! the barb<d wire• of the pO<t stockadO Thursday and rtturned to 11.ls bachelor quarters. Only a day after ht was aenltnctd to life imprisonment for murdering 2:l Vietnamese civilians 1t My Lai, the bc;>Yiah·looklng lieut.ena.nt was ordered r1Jtast.d by the President pending the com~tion of • f\lll .review of hit con- victioii by an Army oourt·martial. The Whi~ House direclive took most obaerveri by 1urprlse. 1be President bad once said or the muaaere at My Li.I tJiat "wider no oircumltanca; was It justUi!d." Amiouncement of the Prealdenl'I in· ttrvention was made at San Clement. by Ronald L. Zle1ler, White House press secretary. Ziegler said Nixon had telephollf!d Adm. Thomas H. Moorer. c.tialrm'an of the -Joint Chiefs of Staff, to direct Calley's release. The pr:esldential order was not a legal ste.p, Ziealer said. ln response to questions, the prf!M secretary said the President was aware of widespre1d pro-Calley sentiment tl\at has been expressed In thousands of telegrams to Ni1on. But Ziegler added that the action "was taken at the President'!! own in itiative." Under the . Pruident'c order. Calley wag granted the status of an Army officer confined to quart.erg under "li&ht guard." He can go to the laundry, to a movie, to church; but always -even in his quart.rr1 ""ll' an armed military auant m\lll rernahl witb him. .C.llry cannot leave . Q)e post without ptrmi&slon. He caqnot talk to newsmen. He will be alloWed the viliL of friends. Oru•e Cooler temperaturta will mark the first April 'lftl:kend on the Orang• Cbaat. with low clouds and fog in the momings 1nd temper&• turea running from 68 to 78 de- grees. INSmE TOD.4 Y Donnlno makeup for a pla11 jnvlouc1 more. than a po.int Job. G<>l<W1' Wt1t Colltgt t,lttote,.. arts 1t~tl make an i,.ttrtlt- ing j?roject, Qf it. Ste toda~'t \Vtclctnd.cr. ..... Ill lJ C•llfoHlll• 1 Clttdlllll u, 1 Cl•UIAeill tt>•I COMln tf c,..,_,., '' Dl.,it "'91cK I -. lflfltrl.. ,.,. ' PIMllC• 1 .. 11 ..... I(_ 11 AMI l.•llltl't 11 Mtl-.W ' -.. u Mllttltl ,._... It HatlDMI Mtwt •• Ofn" CwRtr .J ... •-•"" n I Jl'fll ...,,_.. l. '""' , .. ,. INCtt Mlftm 1 .. 11 f tlt¥b*I ti 'nltt"" "'" w .. lf« t w.......n .._ i1.11 .,.,.. ..... .... ...... !Me % DAIL V PILOT SC Lt. Calley Juror Tells Of Torment From Wire Sf:n1ce1 FT. BENNING, Ga . -U war Is Hell, the altermatb is sometimes a double torment Army Maj. Harvey G. Brown, 33, a Vietnam veteran and one of six jurors who eent.enced Lt. William L. "Rusty" Calley, rl, to life in prison for the My Lai massacre knows. lie tot down oome ol tho aUll, mllllary demanor diaptayed throulhout tho oensalionol court marUol 'l'huraday, rtOectln, oo the qony of decWon and tht beovy flld<ln thol wet1hed It. None of the otbera havt. "lt'a not tbe American Army ... It'! this country thlt wu really on trial lhart," the AmarWo, Tu.. career man remarked. Maj. Brolvn 11ld ht would hlto to be ln President Nixon's place now - wUb a nation of emotional people deman- dlnf Lt. Calley'• pardon -and the Commander~Jn.Chle( factd with the choice. "It would be so easy for him .•• to let LL Calley IO free ... " He added that many Americans are ll!ttina: their emotions take control of their rnfDcll In the fierce outcry Cot the PrelJdtRt to 1ntuvene. "But whit would thot do to tht lawa and JuaUce ol tbia land? They haven't .. , heard the fact!," ~1aj. Brown con- tinued. "They haven't been able to scrutinize the evidence as we have." The evidence reviewed includ~ the tmaae of a younc platoon leader rtddUng screaming civilians with slugs, shooting off half a Buddhist monk's head and hurling a baby headfirst into a ditch. Board President Asks Opposition To State Taxing t..,una Beach echool board pnoaldent Lorry Taylor todoy urged all Lqunans to join In opposition to tht statewide sdloo1 tu propooal tntroducod in :c~e::~~~ Al~ s. ~~~ "Statemeola ue belnf made which indicate that llO percent of the school districts ia the 1tate of CaWornla would benefit u a reau.lt of Ulla bill," said Taylor. "However the 1tatewld1 tu1nl concept would ra11e only $100 rnWJon. repreaenUng an increut of only $12 per student. The balance of the needed money, $400 million, would have to come from Increases in income tax, sales tax and other meam." U this new educational support money \\"ere simply placed where Jt l! most needed, that I&, divided among the poorer district.I, 100 percent of tht school dislriet.s would benefit, Taylor em· phul>ed. ,.. It Is, 10 perotn~ La(Unl included, would be d1.magtd by the pro- posed ototewlde !Ox. 1be propoul. Wd Taylor, "Would add $142 a year to the tax bill of the Laguna owner of 1 $40,000 home with an useued valuaUon of $10,000. I urge Lagunanl to contact our repreaentaUves in Sacramento asking that they support lilddiLional state funds for education but nol support tht lilatewlde I.axing pro- poa.al." Taxpayers should not be mlsled by the low tax rate in Laguna, Taylor added. "With our higher auessed valua· t.lon," he eiplaine<ti "lht homeowner'a tax bW for education is comparable to or ereater than that of most of. the oommuniUes In Orange County and the state." • DAllV PILOT OltAMGll Q)MT ,l.l•LllHINO CllM"IMY ••Mori H. 'Wtt4 ,,...... ..... "'*w.r' J••k a. c..t.., VIOi ,...... W °"*' .. MeMfW n .... ic • .,.n .. - '1\•1111•• A. M1111,l.l111• M•,..... 1.tlMr C\1tft1 H. L••• kith•f4 P. Nnl AMII"'°': MtMl'"9 l!tlllon ............ °"'" 2J2 ....... A"111"'' s..--lOS H•rf\ II C•1t1l111• lt1I .,_.,_ Ctt" ~~ ~ W•u ••'I' lt!'tlt .. ""'"" -..ct'll ii» """'" -~ .... """'""',_ l•d'lc1 IWJ. 1tK11 lwlw1Ni r>All.Y •!\.OT. Wftlrl wflltll .. ~ -. "'~ .. ,..iw..i HMy ~ SW.. .. , Ill .... ,.,. 111"'-w .., ........ lhtdt. ......... l ~ "'"' ............. .... ~ '-tlliJI v.,..,. ... """-"" ewoi.--.,.. ............ ...... wtlll - neltMt ""....., "1tftti,tl """""' t1..r • • ·• ,,.., .. , lmotl. C:.tl liMM. T•I••••• ITI4) '41-4111 O•NW U...W.. '414111 hi Cl1m11 .. Al D.,•111e•1 fat utr• 4t2"'44H i..,.e: .... Al ltpzl•Mla , ... , .... 4t+t4U ~I, "11, Ot'tntt CM1! ,,_. ....... C-.111r. Mt ,_.. '""'"-111o11,,..,.._ .. "'"'4 ,....., ... """"~ ....... _, .............. """" ..-i.i,... "'*-"' ...,_I -· ...... dMt ...... ,.111 •I "'-" hMll """"" CMtt ••. C•.....,.11. l11.,..... tL aon"llP U.11 _....,, "" -It OJI ~I .aitwr .. tlM"""'-It.JS _..,1,. 'Briglat Group' PR Unit Head Cites Employes By PATRICK HOYLE Of l'l'lt Dlll'f 1'1111 lllfl Following a daylong sen1inar in gelling along with the public, 34 Laguna Beach city employes were told Thursday they were the "most intelligent, perctptive group '' the Instructor had ever worked with . The public relations training, offered by the U.S. Civil Service Commission. was direcl.ed by Dick Broderick and Donis Wellman, both of whom spoke highly of the public servants in the Art Colony. The group, which also inc luded a few employes of Newport Beach and San Clemente, spent the day listening to lectures and discussing ways or im· proving their public image. In answering a aerles af questions posed by director Broderick, t h e cmploye!I ~·ere led lo examine their own public actions. One of the questlons V>'as "What irritates you most about your customers?" Broderick told the city personnel to "turl\ the coin. because that is the w11y thl public often sees you." Follo1ving the day's presentation, City ~1anager Larry Rose addressed the group brie(fy and told them his reasons fot' setting up' ·the seminar for the city personnel. "I sent you all here to get a better work product out of you, frankly ," Rose told them. "But l also did ii to have you understand how important you are -to everyone else here, to your city and to yourselves. "If we can keep the imp0rt11nce of the individual, then ~·e will know ho\f important we are to each other," be added. Rose said he hopes to be able t1> have additional training sessions for' those city employes who did not attend Thursday's session. Waiting Bis Turn? 01' Paint appears to be waiting his turn, but a closer Inspection of the 'MEN" sign on the slightly ajar door shows be was waiting for his rider attached to a break in the roundup of 365 Herefords at Rancho 'Ibe answers were varied, but most en1phasized the impatience or many residents and their unwillingness ll~ become involved in city matters. "Their problem is often important enough to gripe about." a city employe gaid, "but it ls not important enough for them to do anything aboot." Greenbelt Week Artwork Donated Newport Woman Says 'Romance' Prompted Suit A Newport Beach woman Who claims that her broker wed "an alfeetJonat1 and romanUc interest" 1n her to per1Uade her to move more than $.100,000 worth of blue cbip 1tocU to mutual funds has named him and h1J compaiy u defendant.a in 1 nut '50(),000 lawsuit. Mra. Jane P. Carroll clallill 1n her Orange COunty Superior Court action th&t broker John H. Hoyt, 2189 Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa, and California Investors of Orange have Jgnond demands for the return of $311,979 In loans made to Hoyt. She want.a $10,000 in damages austa.lned by the trw!¥ of blu• chip atocka from the tnllt lbe Inherited to mutual lut>da ....-by Hoyt IDd abe ollO demandl a lurlhtr 1100,000 la pWJ!Uve dornqe.o from lbe,defendonta. Mrt. carrou states her flrat contact with Hoyt was in late llM, ,lhortly after she received the portfolio tJI. blue ' chip 1tocb she inherited from the eatate of a lA:la Angeles woman. Mrs. Carroll, whose minor children Valerie and John P. Roberta are co-plain- tif!a in the action, states that she wa1 "naive and uninitiated" In bll.lllness af· fairs when Hoyt and California Investots manager William Heiden approached her and was easily per1uaded that It was po6Sible to increase her 3.4 percent in· terest rate to the 10 percent guaranteed by mutual funds . She indicate1 in the lawsuit that her association with Hoyt ~·as enhanced by romance and that she "came to rely on him entirely" -to the point that she sold her entire holding of blue chip stocks. She accuses the defendants of "churn- ing" in transferring her stocks to other sources - a practice whereby brokers create commissions by sv.·itching stocks for no &ood financial reason. Evangelist Okay In Plane Mishap Evangelist Oral Roberti, his wife and son and 25 others escaped injury Thurs· day afternoon when a plane carrying them skidde<I to a lurching stop at Orange C-Ounty Airport. Officials said the brake• on the plane's landing gear apparently locked and caus. ed the craft to skid for nu.rly 1 half mile and come to rest in the graSJ off the main runway . The runway was closed for about 1n hour unW the plane could be towed away. The iroup was en route from Tulsa, Okl1., to Burbank to record some television showt. Baby Rattlesnake Found in Area Another baby ratUesnake, bearing a full don of venom but not old 61'10Uth to have rattles, was discovtred at the home of a San Clemente resident Thurs- day. It wu tht second youna: viper found near local ruldencts In rectnt weekl . Pollet c1ptured the s.aake at the. home of J. E. Herman, 41$ E. CorOOb•, before noon Thuraday. The small ~n11ke ~·a5 ktpl altve !O that Police officer Bobby Scrugas. an e1pert on the species. csn use It In hi1 safety present.aUona to school •tu· dents . Scruggs speaks to atudents on the danaers of rattlers. ?¥fission Viejo. / 2 County Legislators Term 18 Voting 'Hoax' Another employe chided residents for always ezpecUng preferential treatmer.t because "they know someone." · Turning the question around, Broderick asked the city ~·orkers what irritated them most about serv ice in a stale or federal office. The most frequenl answer v.·as the indifference of the government employes to the problem of the person at the counter. Laguna Beach arUats and craftsmen are responding generou11Iy to an appeal for donations of artworks to be ao\d far the benefit of the Laguna Greenbelt, artist Frank lnterlandi said this week. The appeal is yielding donations a( paintings, scu1pture. pottery and jewelry created by local artists for a Greenbelt \Veek art exhibit and sale, April J9-25. The ~·orks are being assembled at Greenbelt headquarters, 216 Forest Ave., where the show will be bung. All pro- ceeds will to to the Greenbelt land acquisition fund. 8peclol to Ille DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Giving people the vo~ at 18 and still denying them rights to marry freely, drink and sign contracll would be a cruel hoax perpetrated on thetJ: maturity. ThlJ is a fundamental reason why two Orange County legislators joined dluentera Thursday u California's con- atltuUonal amendment passed by a 60 to 9 margin. Auemblymen Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) and Roberl Burke fR· Huntington Beach) wanted. full rights and privileges of adu1tbood contained ln the amendment. A a1m11ar Senate .bfil """'4 Wed· neodoy, but without tht lull-fledied reducUon to age 11 of drinking, among other over-21 rlgbta. Daily Pilot Sets Special Listing Of Churcl1 Rites The DAIL V 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 llld the Pl.S80ver. The final deadline for all material to run in thb: story will be Monday at 5 p.m. Any material reetived after that time will probably not be included. The it.ems should include -name or the church, address, service times. pastor or rabbi's name, sermon and any other material essential to the services. Please be brief. The articles can be submitted to any DAILY PILOT office. Addresses include : 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa; 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach: 222 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach; 17875 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach; 305 N. El Camino Real, San Clemente. Penalty Leveled For Late School A Pasadena construction finn has been assessed a $fi.600 penalty fee by Sad· dleback. College after the company was two months late flnl.shing a project at the school. W. J. Shirley, Inc., wu authoriled payment of only $18.103 for work com· pleted on a campw building after billing the school for $22.703. School officials said the penalty clause of the contract \1•11s invoked after the "contractor failed to complete the work in the stated period of time." The WQrk, v.•hich in\'olved an addition to building S at the Mission Viejo school, "-'as scheduled for completion in November of 1970 and was not finished until January of 1971, college officials noted. The amount of the penalty was determined from a formula based on a givtn number of dollars for each day late, the official u.ld. Speedy Alioto Trial Pro1nised in Seattle SEATI'LE (UP!) -A ledenl judge promised a speedy trial Thursd11y lor ~iayor Jostph L. Alioto and three former Washington state officials who ple11ded Innocent lO ·bribery and mall lraud C:harges . U.S. District Judge \VilUam T. Beeks 1a1d he would try lO set ll lrl1l date In late f\.1ay or early June. although he couldn't guar1ntee the case would be heard that aoon. "Some of our phony Uberala are saying we want to make our young people equal -but not entirely equal," Badham aald whtn reached Thursday afternoon. ''I think that is a cruet hoax on our young pe<>ple." Badham 1aid what the Auembly did , fn effect, was put the issue on the ballot to allow citizens lo decide whether 18 will be the voling age. "And at the same time they advocated ratlflcaiton of an ame.ndment lo the U.S. Constitution which would preclude the u.pression of opinion by California voter•," he added. Assemblyman Burke joined his col· league on this point "One of the problems is that this 1ctJon will place It on the b,lllot next year,'',Burlce 1aid. 11.ln t.he meantimt , if that federal chan~ ls put on the ballot, the voter will be asked whether to allow the 18-year-old vote when it already has been." "It is really a confused picture ' in terms of what In the world is going on ," Burke concluded. Assemblyman Badham noted he has encouraged and supported the 18·year-old vote, plus makJng 18 the complete age of majority. He !lays this should be a lull package af citizenship and responsibility, not a token concession on voting in itself. Burke noted Assemblyman John \1• Briggs (R-Fullerton) tried Thursday to get the majority al 18 issue inserted back into the amendment before the vote. The full majority clause involving mar· riage without parental consent. fu!I responsibility in courts of law, ability lo enter Into legal contracts. and other factors was deleted in committee hear· ings. "They don't feel they have to be nice to you," one man said in reference to the Post Office. "l..et's face it, there is nn place else you can go to buy a stamp." Another said he was disturbed by the "hurry up and wait., altitude of lhe government employes. After all ans1\'Crs to the question had been voiced, Mental Health Link to Vitamin Prompts Grant STANFORD !UPI) -Nobe l Prize-winning chemi1t Linus Pauling. who believe.!! Vitamin C preventa tbe common cold, ha1 received a $325,255 grant to investigate v.·hetht'r it also may be a factor in n1ental health. Pauling said in announcing the grant to his research group from the National lnstitute of Mental Heallh that he has already determined some mentally ill people need unusually high levels of niacin and Vitamin C. Pauling first proposed the concept or "orthomolecular psychiatry" in a 1968 article in tbe professional journal "Science," lie has bee.n working under previous grants from the NIMll ltt develop biochemical methOds of analysis that can distinguish some mentally ill persons from healthy subjects. Pauling's Interest in dietary defi· ciencies as a possible cause of mental illness led him to lurther investigations into Vitamin C and the conviction that it i;i.·ould prevent the common cold. His book, "Vitamin C and the Common Cold," became a best-selling paperback. -- Artist lnterlandi is coordinatila the art exhibit and persons wlshing to donate v.·ork! may dellver them to Gretnbelt headquarters or call 494-9797 for pickup. The corporation has tax emcmpl status and will ackno1l'ledge gifts according to their value. Teacl1er Aides' Class Planned A new teacher·aide class to p:ovide a nucleus of trained personnel for the San Joaquin and otMr South County schxil districts will be offered during the sprlnl quarter by Saddleback ColleJe. The three-unit olf-campus class will be taught from 7 p.m. to Ill p.m. J\.ionday1 in the Instructional Media Ce.nter of the San Joaquin District's administration of- fice, 14600 Sand Canyon lload, East Ir· \'ine. The class is designed to enhance the district"s volunteer teacher-aide program and to provide trained personnel for a possible paid teacher-aide program. Students receiving credit for the clas!I will be eligible to participate in othe;1• • school districts' progr:ims . The course was offered by the college during the fall quarter in cooperation with the Laguna Beacti Unified School District, wh.lc:h em- ploys teacher aides. Publisher Succumbs NEW YORK !UPI) -Albert E. Winger. former president and chalrman of the board of Crowell-Collier Publishing Co., died Thursday after a brie! Jllnt.ss. He was 87. · Glass Top'Tables • •• On Sale -Now! 30.60 GLASS TOP TABLE-V•" THICK SPECIAL $154 aEG. $111. leelltlfwlty 1tylM •d hecfsonisty fftai1M, thk Is tt.1 Mtnto&t I• • tlou top to.,... Do.'t 1nfu Olt op. ,.._lty to owa eptollty ot • rlOIOMbl• price. A.,.Uoba. I" tli• fol'lowJ119 fiftfsJ.n: Allri'I"• (kid -Old Sr-Jalo -DlllT ...... OGve -ilecl. -Vonl• c;,"" -AotiqH T-. ----------------------.t DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEi: -HERITAGE NIWPOIT aTOlll OPIN PllDAJ 'TIL t NIWPORT IEACH 1727 W"tcllff Dr,, MZ-ZOSO OPIN FRIDA T 'TIL t ProftisJOMI l•terlor Dnl<J••n Amlabl ........ ID-NSID INTERIORS LAGUNA IEACH 34S North c .... Hwy., 4''4-6551 OPEN UIDA Y 'Ill t Ptt.M Toll ,,... M9ff et Ortfll,. Cwnty 540-12~ • ' . / Lag1111·a Beaeh EDITIO~ ·, N.Y. Steeb . ' VOL 6'1, NO. 79, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,. CAClliORNIA ' , . ,. f -~RIPAY,.~PRIL,2, 1971 TEN CENTS ~ Dulane y's Wife FaCes County Cout~ Hearing 'O • ..:.,. ' I • By TOM BARLEY Of ll'HI Dtlh' PllM JllH Marlent Dulaney . looking pale, strained and visibly apprehensive. was hustled intn Santa Ana Municipal Court today 111 fac,e charges linking her to the alleged SJ million defraud ing of investors in the World Financial Trends empire ad- ministered by her husband. Mrs. Dulaney, 32, was flown in from Bermuda late last night after agreeing le return ttt Oriµige County witb district attorney's lnvesUgalors and face grand theft and CQnspiracy charg!!s already filed against btr husband, Joseph, 37, and his vice prt;sident Jame3 Shipley, 38, of Huntington Stach. All three aay they are innocent. She stood up before Judge Paul Mast wearing the-yellow pajama suit issued to Orange County jail women prisoners and confirmed for the jurist that she did not have an attomey to represeol ber . Judge Mast appointed the public defender. ordered the blonde def~t to return to bis courtroom Monday ·for preliminary examination and set her ~ at $311,500. Dulaney's next court appear.aOct is also. scheduled for Monday. Tht fl-year~ old investment counselor, who was ar· rested last week in the Dutch Cllribt;lean colony of CUracao, is also held in lieu ef $312,MO bail. Mrs. Dulaney has been confined le the hOipitaJ ill Bermuda · wilb what bll • been dt1Cribed 11 ' 1111 llladdtr ..._ tilioll and • pMsibfe ite&rt aibnent. • But her illness wu desc;rfbed ~ ~ ve1tif:aton today as "ootbin& more seriow than a bad c8se of 'ntrve1/' H~llal authorities in the Brtlilb OOony declared her well enough to. &r1ve:l pro. vi~ she wes willing l& accomptny investi1ators, they aaid. Mrs. Dulatiey·s arrest now sets the stage for the: trial o! what invesUaators describe u the three principals In a aeries or alleged frauds that .fint came e eac-ion 3 ,400 Acres State First Call Seen for Canyon The state of California, undoubtedly, •ould have firsl call on snapping up .an additional 2 5 miles of prime beach south of the Western White House. And there was litt}e doubt in official circles that lhe e-0veted Marine Enlisted Man's Beach Club and priva~ surfing !aeiliti.es 1t San Onofre would eventually fall into 1tate hlJ>dl. But what of the 3,400 acres in San Mateo Canyon included in the "gift" by President Nixon! Spokesmen for the San Francisco Regional Office of the General Servicu Administration lGSAJ -whicll will ad- minist.tt ~ gantlnc of the 1urplus rJ&Olt -P'jllined lhe: ae.veral 1tepa in- \'Ol\tt([ They are much more complicated than t~ which tlit President and bis aide.s explained to the press on Wednesday. .. ' . Or' ' ' . ' ' : ,:; three chlldrtn from Ora.nae County to V{_tst Germany and what iijvesti1atars describe as a year-lone .. life tf Riley" bi M.~ch. , . They returned to Che United Illa""' a ·year later lll1 w:ert not IJTtlted by. local . lnvnU,atort, and FBI agents 1111tll federal officers. and Interpol aaenU ptcked up Dulane7!1 lrall,in OJacaO. InvuUgator;, today nid the couple'• lllree• chlldr.o"•re ·.belnJ· wed for by r1l1Uves in CoJorado. ' - Reactions Favorable For Calley Fntm Win• Services Response ID . President Nixon'• In. terfention in the Caae -0f Lt. ·William L. <!:alley Jr .. a name to remain engraved Jn American hisl.ory -one way or another -was be.Ina: voiced around the 'lfOrld today. ' The _remark& were•gener1Jly In su~rt o( .NiXon's decit:ion ~·tree ,from. the afockidi tht o!liier c!On~ of-·· iq.zi.vi.•---....... _.,__,,_ .~ '·"pUJ"I. Jib7U,-:-.., . ...,... ~·..,..,. r ·Some we.rt~ qfiul jt, ~-M1011f Qlt.iu 'tht fialcl. &I . beard lrolll Vlttnaal to 'D,C. ill6 1 n d le t~d Ibo · li!ader1 tllat oent u : Calley to "ar~to kill •and then proilacutfd him ftr it~ , Sus pect Nab bed I n Laguna -Theft Of Costly Rings The progre9sion of "offers" goes like this, according to GSA 1pokesman Tony Paole: -1 After Navy specialist,, draft the precise boundaries of the surplus· Camp Pendlel.on land . the first offer from the GSA will be tn other branches of the Department of Defense. .For. tQe first time, the Calley family ; · tbo spoke out. Laeuna Beach det.t..ctives Thursday afternoon arrested two suspect.s in the Wednesday theft of five expensive rings, claitning one &f the men admitted the '6.300 shoplift. Police identified the pair as Jasper Eugene Smith, 2.1, of 2190 College Ave .. Costa Mesa, and Michael Robert Osborne, 29, of Bellflower. Authorities &aid tbe two men were to be arraigned Monday on grand theft charges. Police claim the twn entered the Lillle lngot. at 1450 S. Coa't Highway. shortly before noon Wednesday and. while owner Heri Hoff was waiting on Osborne. Smith all egedly removed the five rings from a display case. Investigators said the five gold rings. each set with a different type of rare diamond. were recovered Thursrtay when the men were t11ken into custody. Detectives arrested the two men after questioning Osborne. who had remained at the Little Ingot following the theft, ostensibly In act as a "witness" for Hoff. Osborne assertedly admitted the conspiracy And told detectives where the suspect could be found. Bill Seeks lo Ban Anto Road Flares SACRAMENTO (APl -Pr Iv a I e titizefl3 would no longer be able to carry or use emergency road Oarea under legislatioo p r o po s e d by A!sembl yman Larry TownSbld . The Torra nce Demoa:at said Thursday that many people get burned while lighting flares and their flames often Ignite gasoline •~lashed on the road In 1 crash. -If no valid milita ry use by those branches can be made of the canyon. then the offer goes to the Slate of California. including &late-administered educational institutions. The land could be Matched up by the higher education S)'llems and held in reserve as an ultimate site for a college. -If there are no takers. al the state level. then the offer filters down to San Diego County. -The rules then &tate that if San Diego County begs off. Orange County and the city of San Clemente w o u I d have a chance to take the property. The process, Pace said, would take more than a year to complete. 3 Hippies Throw Acid at Boy, 11 Buena Park police today are looking for three Jong-haired youths who tmsed a gallon jug of acid at an 11-year-o\d boy Thursday. John Harvey told police he was riding his bicycle along Melrose Avenue when the three hippies pulled alongside in a car. Ht aald one of the youths shouted. "hey, kid do you want IOme acid,., as the botUe was thrown. The boy suffered minor burns when the plastic jug hit the pavement and · splashed on his left leg. He was treated by a school nurse. · Plan1ai1ag Director Fonner La g unan" Dies in Vietnam A 1967 Laguna Beach High School graduate this week became the 381nd Orange County serviceman to die ln the Vietnam ~·ar. Army . Warrant Officer Steven Michael Larrabee, 21. son of Mrs. Barbara L. White, 4361 Seton Road, Irvine, w a 1 killed March 24 when his helicopter · was · shot down over Cambodia, the Defense Department announced ThurM!ay. Larrabee went into the ~rvice in 11168 and had bf!en in Southeast Asia for almost a year. attached t.n I.he · 25th Infantry division. He was 1 helicopter pilot. Following his graduation from Lagun11 High . he attended S11.ddleback College for a time before joining the Army. Beach Concession Bid Opening Slated Bids will be opened April 26 for a package conce!aion deal for operation of Aliso Creek beach and pier in South Laguna. The package proposal offered by lhe county calls for the successful bidder to handle the parking lot. bait and tackle sales and rental1, food and beverages and beach equipment rental . Moody on Deck Monday New Llguna Beach Planning Ofi1ectnr Wayne Moody. who assumtd his duties April I. will be l}fficially elected wecretary of !he Ari Cnlony's Planning Commission at I.he comm1uion'1 regular meeting Monday evening. Moody . corhes to Laguna fmm the northern California city of Tiburon v.'here. he also served AS planning director under City Manager Lawrence Rose.,.now city m1nager of L&gu,na Beach. At the Monday meeting, commi~ioner~ a.re e1pected to defer action on revised 1tand1rds for conditional use. permits, ' . pending establishment of dates for public hearings on proposed change.' in variance procedures, a related Inftler. . The commissloh will receive from the F'rlends of the Library a request for abandonment for use as a mall or walkway the portiOn m' Park Avenue eitending -to Coast Highway that .. wlJJ remain after construction of the new library. The commission also will lnttruct tht staff to forward to th,. cily council the records of hearings that IPd up to its grantin1 of a permit for lnstallatk>n of a new Standard OU 1ervlce statkin al 12.Sl N. Coast Highway. The action has been appealed to the council by a property owner objedJ.111 to the proposed use. , A staff reJ>9rt on conlinulnr vlolaUDM 1 .of the: 1i.gn 1ordinance ... ru be pmentied i to the cdmmissMn. ~· riJ)ort was r• quro;trrl tiv commislioneri Carl Johnaon at a rec al meetin g when be •lleged rhe city 1s lcsing thousa nds of d!>ijars by not prosecuting ovrnet11 of '..non· conforming signs who 1hot&ld be llabl1 for flnts up Lo '300 1 day tot violation of the law. • ,( . , ... c~te• lrvi~e . Program t ' • . : '''' '' ''I ' Labor S~cret~y· Opens I ' I. J Drive for Ae1~ospace Juhs . . . . ' ' Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson late this week anno~ the launching of a new effort to bri.ig aerospace specialists back Into 1 the wor!'i of the employed, then point<...: toward an 6 · perimental program at UC Irvine as an -e1amp!e of the idea. . Hodgson , speaking after a conference at the Western White: House Thursday morning called by President Nixon, .taid the new program at UOJ was working very well. At that campu1, ·he e1pliined, unemployed encineers, scientists and technicians who lost tbe'ir job1 in aerospace are . being retrained in the field of environmental technolc;y. Hodgson said the new plan would apply $4.1 million In le.dual funds !Dward of- Reagan Rejects Bridge Ban Bill SACRAMENTO <UPI) -Gov.,Ronald Reaaan lodaf \le.toed 1 bill. prohibitln& construction of a Southern crossing oVer San ·Francisco Bly without le1islattv1 aj:ipr'O'val and ·issued an order stopplnc further work en the prpject pend.Ina I public vote. , "Because I.be divei'geoce of opinion la ao crut and the maltu 10 important.." th_e aovernor uld in bis veto 'tr?USaae. "I am convinced that-the citlztns who live In . t6e 1 aru . must 1be .Jtv.tn .,t.be OJ)pOl1tlnlty to m'ake , the: d 6!c-tct oi11- . themselves -at the biiuot box::•· ' . Notina: that·lbe li•)' Area Rapid '{'ra(\!1t project was submitted to a vote 1 o! the people, Reaaan aaid: "SUrely, their Judi;menl can be , no less vital In makina 1 decision cf -this ' mairUiude.'' I fering nut..cf~wori 1erCM1paC% . spe'Cialist.! retrainin1. job opportunity Wtlngs and even some financial tielp to co11er mov lna expef!HS to live near ·a ' new -job· too far for coznrputlng. .The cabinet member 111d ft11?r~ ~~ific d.ta on the opportunities of the proeram w011ld · be made available 1 to the: atate department! ol employment within . the neit few weeka. Despite the •allocftion of the money. however, the plan iJ Jezpected to' make anly a dent ·ln the rankl Of unemployed aer°'p~ct en1ineer1, IC.le.nu.ts and tecluili:if.Ds, who total a~t toq,ooo M· tioriwiit1. · · 'I'M new P~am would only be able to help perhaps 10,llOO of them, Hodpm ii id. . The secretary, himstlf a 1 California aerospace eiecutive.belcn receiving hia appointment W the cab,inet·a-f1w monttb aco. had gr!J11 forecuta , for the unemployed ln that industry. · "It aeenui doubtfu1 that the lllduJtr.y would rutore ltselt IOOll enough to be of any htlp to these individuals out of work now," he 11ld.: ,J ohn Townsend Rites' Saturday · Servlce1nrill be held at 2 p.m, S&IUrd1y ln Pacific View Chapel for John s. Townaend of 2t9B Ay~nl~a _ ~villa~ La~ Hilla\ who .died ~ay 'at:South Coll! Communhy Hoopltal. II< ril a . Mr.1 To~:-~ 1fntved. ·b)I hi1 ·WfdoO' ,:E..:Lool ... ' 'lb~ c •. Jlro!ller' Ctali l "Ownsend of ~O"ln>e11to: A\)d I ll~1, M(a.. Chatlel Darlil!Jton , of 'NoiW!dge.--· A· neUve ..t Iowa. Mt. Townltnd w111 ·• ret!Jed nlanuf1ct~1a t11lea repre.sen- ·latlvtlhandllnc 1t.ltjoneryi 1nd.o(tic1 1u~ ])Hes. • Burial w.111 be. at P1cij1c Vltw M"emortal P1rk. I ---. . . . , "It ii Oil!'· ho Pe Ind prayer that the declaion 'of the. court can be overruled in some way, for Rusty's sake and the s a It e of. the count,ry," 1 a Id lhs listw, Mra. Mar.WI Keeallng. "We were heartaJck · at the . verdict ol ttle court," she nid'. in Galn1111vllle, FIL, adding 'thanka to Preiident Nlxoo and rilillion.! of Ame.Hean sympathizers. Legislators in Washington Jar1ely ebttttd the Pmiden.t's decilittn tb Jet CaUey move about Ft. Benning undu lilhl·flllld. ''dearly it i& unjust to prosecute 1. mllil for the acts of 1 nation ," 11kl Sen. William B. Sa1be..1R-Ohio). "Fighting means killing •. .'' Nortti Carolin1 · Gov.' Bob Scott declared in a telegram to the President. ~ alio ur~ed .him to grant executive- clemency and ·hasten withdrawal of all troops from• Vietnam. Controver9ial .Or.i Benjamin Spock, speaking' in · l'utblo,. Colo., bitterly criticized the system as hypocritical. . Attorney General Ramsey Clark, ado ~sing a g?IOUp at Brandeis University in New York, said an officer who kills unarmed civilian• in wartime ahould be bie.l for D)urder. H.e uid Ile .sees no IJ'O\lllda: for cltm,en· cy. , A large proportion of the comment.I heard indicated-U . Calley 1hould not bear a martYf'~ rple, but the prosecuUort ahould be born. by ·u.. hlfhell com· manden: of the war. 'Weather • Cc. er temperatures will mart tbt · first April weekend on-the Oranae Cout. wl&h low.clouds and fog in the mornings and tempera· lures runninc from 68 to 78 de- 1rees. • INSm E TODAY Donning makeup for 11 plar/ tnvlovts Mort than o paint job, Goldtn Wt1t CoUtge thtotcr- nrts &tudtnts ntoke an fnttrtat· · 1ng pro)tCt of it Stt todo~'• Wtekel'l.dt'f'. > ' I ... 11" • ' 1) ,Mill)! ... ,,.,,.., l ,. (•ltftnll• , . .. ...... , '1HWt' .. (Jwdlilll U• 1 tr .... ~ f C~IW lf.'l •Ht-tllh , b>N COll'lln rr l'Mf ,..,.., 1t f'.1'9t'WO.., tf ........ 1'•11 !'••'\ •1•!1r1t I l'Mlt Methlt 1•11 • O!wrc•t • T.twttlM n ,4,,.,.,. r:" • """''-" "'44 ''!'l~lltl lt.U w..-. I ""'"'-11 w..,_-. .,..,. 11-11 Allll .. Hdert 11 WWN M.... W r , Mll""ll I W....... tf·• """'* 14·M ' .. . --I ·, ,, Z DAil Y PllOT SC LL Calley Juror Tells Of Torment Froro Witt Strvlct1 n '. BENNING, Ga. -If war is Hell, the aftermath ill sometimes a double tonnent. Army Maj. Harvey G. Brown. 33, a Vietnam veteran and ooe of. 11% jurors who sentenced Lt. William L. "Ru.sty" Calley. 2'7, to life in prbon for the My Lal massacre knoW3. lie let down tome ol lhe atlll, mllltary demwlor displayed tl\rouahoul lhe ..... 11ooa1 court martial Thunday, refloctln& 00 the IJODY of decl.slon and ""' heavy !actor• lhlt wtl&hed JI. None of the others hive. "Jt's nQt tbe American Anny .•. It's this country thlt wu really on trial th<re," lhe Amarl1lo; Tu. carttr man remarked. Maj. Brown said be would bate to be In President Nlxoo.'1 plact now .... with a naUon of emotional people deman- ding LL Calley's pardon -and the Commander-1.n-Odef factd with the choice. "It would be IO euy for him. , .to let LL Calley 10 tree .•. " He added that lllllli' Amtrlcan1 are letting lbelr mnotlOllJ take control of theJr llllnds Ill the fierce outay !0< the President to Intervene. "But what would that do to the laws and jwUce of this land'!,~y haven't ... heard the facts," ~faj. Brown Con- tinued. "They haven't been able to la"Utlniza the evidence as we have." 'Ibe evidence reviewed included the image of a young platoon leader riddlln& screaming clvlllana with 1lq1, sbootinl off hall a Buddllbt monk'• hud and hurling a baby headfirst Into a ditch. Board President Asks Opposition To State Taxing 1-Beach school board pruldenl I.any Taylor today urged all Larunans lo join in opposition to the statewide ICbool tu propooll llllroduced In Sacremento by Senator Albert S. Rodda as Senate BUI IOl. "Statementa are being made which lndicate that 90 percent of the M!hool districU: in the state of California. wouJd benefit as a resuJt of tbll bill," aaMI Taylor. "However the statewide twnc:. ....,.pt wotlld ralao"4>111y flllO lllWlon, · 1'pnM!lting on tncreue ol ooly f12 per 1tudenl The balance of the needed money, $400 million, would have to come from lncruaea lo Income tax. sales tu and other means." U tb1a new educational support money were limply placed where It la moat n«ded, that Is, divided &mO!ll ll>e poorer dlslrlcta, 100 percent of the ·-1 districts would benefit. T1ykJr em- pluulud. Al ii Is, 10 pereent, La(una locluded, would be daml&ed by the pro- pooed llatewide .... The propoaal, laid Taylor, "Wotlld add s1a a year to the tu bill of the Laguna owner of a $40,000 home with an URYed valuation of $10,000. I urge Lagunan! to contact our repreaentativea in Sacramento asking that they support additional state funds for education but not support the statewide tuing pro- pou.l." Tupayen ahould not be milled by the low tu rate in Llguna, Taylor added. "Wltb our higher uaeued va1ua· tion," he explained, "the homeowner'• tu: bUI for education Is comparable to or greater than that of moat of the commwtities In Orange County and the slate." DAil V PILOT OllANGI! c:o.uT MtlL""IMO aJMPNff R•Mrt N. W.M _ ... _ Ju• I. Cw{_,, va,,_..... ... ._.,M...- n ..... r...,1 ..... '"'•"'•• A. M•r-"!111• ~t:4Hw C\1tf" H. l..e1 Rlcl1t4 P. Hi11 A•ltt.Nll .......,. t:•n.a ..,_ __ 212 ........ ..,,..,._ s.. C' ••• Offki9 Jiii Herfti ll Cell'llM J•1I bo\t\. y t>ll.OT, Wlfll 'Mlldl ,. _....... .. ...... ,, ............... .,,. .... ~ .. , ill .... ,.,. 1111111•'4 .... ~ ..... ~ ....-. C.11 ..... ~ e.o. ,..... .. v •• ..,. ..... ~ CA .... ~ .,. ~ ..... 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Q,H _.,,.,, 'Bright Groaap' PR Unit Head Cites Employes By PATRICK BOYLE 01 ,,,. 0111'1' PUii 1r1tt Following a daylung seminar in getting ;itong with tbe public, 34 Laguna Beach city employes were told Thursday they were the •·mosl intelligent, perceptive group'' the instructor had ever worked with. · The public relations training . offered by the U.S. Civil Service Commission. was directed by Dick Broderick anci Donis Wellman. both or whom spoke highly of the public servants in the Art Colony. The group, "'hich also included a few employes of Newport Beach and San Clemente, spent the day listening let lectures and discussing ways of im- proving their public image. In answering a series or questions posed by director Broderick, t h e cn1ployes were led to examine lheir own public actions. One of tbe questions \Yas "What irritates you most about your customers?" Broderick told the city personnel to "turn 1he coin, because 1hat is the ~·ay the public often sees you ." F'ollo\\'ing 1he day's presentalton. City Manager Larry Rose addressed the grcup briefly and lold them his reasons for setting up the seminar for the city personnel. "I sent you all here to gt!I a better v.·ork producl out of you, frankly," Rose told them. "But I also did il to bave you understand how important you are -to everyone else here, to your city and to yourselves. "lf we can keep lbe impOrtance or the individual, then we will know bow important v.'e are to each other," be added. Rose said he hopes le be able to have additional ,training se!lsions for those city employes who did not attend Thursday's session. Waiting Bis Turn? a break in the round up of 365 Herefords at Rancho Mission Viejo. Tbe answers were varied. but most empllasized the impatience of many residents and their unwillingness l1 become involved in city matters. Greenbelt Week Artwork Donated 01' Pallit appears to be waiting his turn , but a closer !hspecUon-of the 'MEN" sign on the !ligbUy ajar door shows he was waiting for his rider attached to "Their problem is often important enough to gripe about," a city employe !aid, "but it is not important enough far them to do anything about." ' Laguna Beach artista and craltamen a re respond.log generously t• an appeal for donations ef artworks to be sold for the beoefil of the Laguna Greenbelt, artist Frank lnterlandi said ~ wee.le. Ne,vport Woman Says 'Ro~~nce' ' Promp!ed Suit A , Ne!!J>011 Beach woman who clalnu that lier 'broktr wed "10 1ffectlon1te and ~manUc lnternl" In her to persuade her to move more than $300,000 worth of blue cblp 1tockl to mutual funds has named him and hls company aa delendanla "' • near '500,000 lawsuJI. Mn. Jane P. Carroll claims in her Orange County Superior Court action that broker John H. Hoyt, 2'189 Tustin Ave., Coll.II Mesa, and CaWomia Investors of Qrange have Ignored demands for the return of $.11J,67t iD loans mode to Hoyt. She wanti 410,900 in d1mages sustained by tbe trillller .'{! blue chip 1tocks from the trust she inherited to mutual fund! 11111tllled by Hoyt and she al!o dealanda a ~ 1100,000 In puniUvt da.migea l'?<>m tbe ~elendanll. Mrs. Carroll atattll her first contact with HO)'t Wll in late 1968, shortly aftet ahe received fhe1 portfolio of blue chip .-abe lnberlled from the eilate of a Un An&elea woman. Mn. Carroll, whose minor children ".'•Ierie and John P . Robert_, are co-plain· tiffs In the action; states that she was ''naive and uninitiated" In busintD a f· fairs when Hoyt and Calllornla Investors manager William Heiden approached her and was easily persuaded that it was possible to increase her 3.4 percent in· terest rate to the IO percent guaranteed by mutual funds. She indicate! in the lav.'suit that her association with Hoyt was enhanced by romance and th1t -she "came to rely on him entirely" -to the point that she sold her entire holding ot blue chip stocks. She accuae1 the defendants ot "churn- ing:" in transferring her stocks to other sources -a practice whereby brokers create commissions by sv.·itching stocks for no iood financial reason. Evangelist Okay In Plane Mishap Evangelist Oral Roberts, his wife and son and 2S others escaped injury Thurs· day afternoon v.·hen a plane carrying I.hem skidded to a lurching stop at Orange County Airporl Offlciall uid the brakes on the plane's landing gear apparenUy locked and caus. ed tbe craft to skid ror nearly a half mile and come 1o rest in the grus off the main runway . The runway was closed for about an hour untU the plane could be towed away. The group was en route from Tul,a, Okla., to Burbank to record some television lhows. Baby Rattlesnake Found in Area Another baby rattlesnake, bearing a full d05e of venom but not old enough to have ratUr.s. was discovered Ht lhe home of a San Clemenle re51dent Thurs- day. It wu the second young vl~r found near local residences in recent week!. Police c1ptured the snake •t the home of J, E. Htrman, 415 E. Cordob1, before noon Thursdsy. 'Jl!e small snake was kept alive so that Police officer &bby Scrug&s. An expert on the gpecles, c•n u.~e it In his . safety pre~ntations to school stu· den Ls. Scruggs speaks to studenli on the dangers or rau lers. 2 County Legis"lators Term 18 Voting 'Hoax' Another emptoye chided residents for always ei:pecting preferential treatme•t because "they know someone." Turning the question around. Broderick asked the city workers what irritated them most about service in a state or federal office. Tbe most frequent answer was the indifference of the government employes to the problem of the person at the counter. Special to the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Giving pe9I1le the vote at 18 and still denying them rights to marry freely, drink and sign contracts would be a cruel boal perpetrated on their maturity. Th1I is a fwidamental reason why two Orange County legislators joined dissenters Thursday as Calilornia'a con- stitutkJnal amendment passed by a 60 to 9 margin. lssemblymen Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) and Robert Burke (R· Huntington Beach) wanted full rights and privileges of adulthood contained in the amendment. A similar Senate bill passed Wed· ne.sday, but without the full-fledged reducUon to age 18 of drinking, among other over-21 rights. -Daily Pilot Sets Special Listing Of Church Rites "Some of our phony liberals are saying we want to make our young people equal -but not entirely equal," Badbam said when reached Thursday afternoon. "I think that is a cruel hoax on our yowig people." Bid.ham said what the Assembly did, In effect. was put the iss~ on the ballot to allow citizens to decide whether 18 will be the voting age. "They don't feel they have to be nice to you," one man said in reference to the Post Office. "Let's face it. there is no place el se you can go to buy a stamp." Another said he was disturbed by the "hurry up and wait" attitude of the government employes. After a ll answers to the question had been voiced, "And al the same time they advocated Mental Health ratificaiton of an amendment to the U.S. Comtltution which would preclude :e:;,?.r:Si:~d~. opinion by California J,jnk to Vitamin AS!emb\yman Burke joined bis col- league on I.bis point. p t G t "One of th• problems ~ that this romp s ran acUon will place it on the ballot next year," Burke said ... In the meantime. STANFORD (UPI) -Nobel if that federal change is put on the Prize-winning ·chemist Linus Pauling, ballot, the voter will be asked whether wbo believes Vitamin C prevents the to allow the 18-year~ld vote when it common cold, has received a $325,255 already has been." grant to investigate whether it also may be a factor in mental health. "It is really a confused picture in f h · h Id · Pauling said In announcing tbe grant terms o w at 10 l e wor 15 going to his research group from the National on," Burke concluded. Institute of Mental Health that he bas As11emblyman Badham noted he has already determined some mentally ill encouraged and supported the 18-year-old people need unusually high levels o[ vote, plus making 18 tbe complete age niacin and Vitamin C. The DAILY PILOT is planning a of majority. Pauling first proposed the concept of specia 1 1 story. ~ ru~ Wednehed!dal~ anb -He says this should be a full package "orthomolecular psychiatry'' in a 1968 nounc ng specia services sc u Y of citizenship and responsibility. not a rt" I · t•· f · I · I Orange Coast churches and temples a ic e in ·~ pro ess1ona Journa marking the primary days of Holy Week, token concession on voting in itself. ''Science." He has been working under Easter Sunday and the Passover. Burke noted Assemblyman John V. previous grants from the NIMH t• The final deadline for all material Briggs (ft-Fullerton) tried Thursday to develop biochemical methods cf analysis to run in this story will be l-.1onday get the majority at 18 issue inserted that can distinguish some mentally il1 at s p.m. Any material received after back into the amendment before the persons from healthy subjects. that time wJll probably not be included . vote. Pauling's interest in dietary defi- The appeal is yielding donalion:r o[ paintj:ngs, sculpture, pottery and jewelry created by local artists for a Greenbelt Week art exhibit and sail~, April 19-25. The works are being assembled at Greenbelt headquarters, 216 Forest Ave .• where the show will be hung_ All pro- ceeds will to to the Greenbelt land acquisition fund . Artist lnterlandi is coordinatl1g the art exhibit and persons wishing to donate works may deliver them to Greenbelt headquarters or call 494-9797 for pickup. The corporation ha! tu emempt status: and. will acknowledge gilts according to their value. Teacl1er Aides' Class Planned A new teacher-aide class to provide a nucleus of trained personnel for the San Joaquin and ot~r South County school districts will be offered during the aprin& quarter by Saddleback College. The three--unit off-c.ampus class will be taught from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday• in the Instructional Media Center of ths San Joaquin District's administration cf· fice, 14600 Sand Canyon Road, East Ir- vine. The class is designed to enhance the district'! volunteer 1eacher-aide program and to provide trained personnel for a possible paid teacher-aide program. Studenl"i receiving credit for the class will be eligible to participate in other school districts' programs. 'The course was offered by the college during the fall quarter in cooperation with the Laguna Beach Unified School District, which em· ploys teacher aides. Pulllishe1· Succwnhs The items should include name of The full majority clause involving mar-ciencies as a possible cause of mental the church, address. service times. r iage without parental consent, full illness led him to further investigations NE\V YORK (UPI) -Albert E. pastor or rabbi's name, sermon and responsibility in courts of law. ability into Vitamin C and the conviction that Winger, former president and chairman any olher material essential lo lhe to enter into legal contracts. and other It would prevent the common cold. of lhe board or Crowell-Collier Publishinc services. Please be brief. factors was deleted in committee bear-His book. "Vitamin C and the Common Co., died Thursday after a brief illness. The articles can be submitted to any 1 _1_.:ng'...s_. _____________ c_o_td_.:·_"_b_ec_a_rn_e_a_be_s_t._se_ll_in..:g:..p:..•..:P"_'b_a_ck_. __ H_e_w_as_~_. _________ _ DAILY PILOT office. Addresse~clude : 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa; 2211 W. Balboa Blvd ., Newport Beach; 222 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach; 17875 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach; 305 N. El Camino Real, San Clemente. Penalty Leveled For Late School A Pasadena construction firm bas been assessed a $8,600 penalty fee by Sad· dleback College after the company was two months late finishing a project at the school. . \V. J . Shirley, Inc .• was authorir.ed payment of only $16,103 for work com- pleted on a campus building artrr billing the school for $22,703. School ofricials said the pena!Ly clause of the contract '4'as Invoked after the "contrector failed to complete the work in the stated period of ti mt." The work. ·y;hich involved an addition to building S at the htission Viejo school, wa s scheduled for completion i n November of 1970 and was not finished untU January of 1971. college officials noted. The"'lmoul'lt of the penalty "'as determined from a formul11 based on • given number of dollars for each day late, the official said . Speedy Alioto Trial Pro111ised in Seallle SEA'M'LE (UPll - A federal judge promised a speedy trial -'l'hursday for r..1ayor Joseph L. Alioto and three former W•sb1ngton gtate officials who pleaded lnngcent to bribery and ma U fraud ch11ri::es. Glass Top Tables • • • On Sale Now! • 10160 GLASS TOI' TAIU-Y•" THlCI S~ECIAL $154 H<;. $171. leoutlfurty ltyted and hcutdsomety dttalltd, this Is ttie utmost In a tless top table. Dol't ..,111 • op. portvnlty to DWll qvallfy ot a rectSOftQble ptlce. A•oiloble tn tt.e foUowiJHJ fl•I .. ": Aatlqu• Gold -Oki Spanidi -Dllf'resNcl ORYt -lktc:k -V«tle GrHW -Aflflq•e Y-fow. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE Nrwl'OIT llEACH 1727 Westcllff Dr.1 '41·2050 OPEN fRIDAT "TIL t NEWPORT STORE O,l:N ,RIDAY 'Tll t rmonl-1 1...n .. DHlpon A..nawo-AID-NSID INTERIORS LAGUNA HACH J.45 Nonto c-Hwy. 494·6551 O~EN fRIDAT 'TIL t US. Distrirt .Judge William T. Beek! so1d he would try to set a trial dale In late Ma y or early June. althou~h he ('()Uld n·t guarantee lhe case would be he~rd that soon. ------------------------------------------~ -. ' San Clemenie Capistrano voe. "· NO. 79, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' -· EDITI O N ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA ... -----r - ' ' FR,IDAY, >.PR!L 2, 19.~I . . . . • Tustin Di·strict Candidates Debate Si.I candidates for two available school lii>an!' ... u Jn the Tu!till Unilled High ~I Olstrlt1 debated topics from dress codq ta state·and federal aid to educa· lion pr<>&rarns in a sparsely atttnded forum at Mission Viejo High School Thunday night. "~ t°'.1.payers own 1he school," declared incum'btnt Robert Bartholomew. ''The job ol the school board is to evaluate what ·tfle taxpayers want. We try to give the student the most with the available money." Bartholomew said the district mu.st punae a strict discipline policy. st1ting1 "permiuiveneu.i! for tl)e birds. It hasn't worked." The incumbent said that the school board mutt continue to practice "strong tucher hir}ng practices" and "not be an 1dministratlon rubber stamp." He urged also that ichools not waste time "experimenting with new programs that haven't proved useful.., ·stepben Fabula, 33, an instructor lo educationally handicapped students in the Huntington Beach Unified School .District, slated that ei.isting programs "must be llberaliied to be effective.'' "We need to approach new ideas with an open mi.ad. We mwt give students whal they need. oot what Ute taxpayers think they need. And we've got to bt willing to uperiment with new pro- grams. By tht time they're proved, they 're aki," he said. Fabula noted that the TUHS district has oot taken advantage ol federal and state aid to education programs wblch could help better district facilities. He also condemned the distrk:\ for not developing programs to accommodate educationally handicapped student.'J. Fabula concluded !a)'ini "the day ls over when schools can act as a police agency for dress code!!. Ifs up tG the pareJ1ts to decide what their children ahould wW." Dick Boranilln 1111~ that student> llilould "be involved ln lhl dtciriollJ and POiicies of thia district and Ur-the devefopmui of curriculum." O>arging thal "three-filths of an ad- ministrator 's limt ii spent with dress code disputes," Baranian said drm mat- ten are "the responsibility of the ~rents.." ·, ''We mU!t also seek lo, inV'91ve the wbole comm Unity . We can d1f that if we all start building briQgea· towards OM another .'' he as.id. Howard Eaton, member of the U.S. Air Force for 21 years, said the TUHS ' t ' district must "effecUvel)"utillze tv&ilabJt resourcta thNlugh p I I 11 n l n s. 1 com. munlcation and accoun&alllltty." ... "We mu.st have •. method , of meawing how well our lludioto .... achit:vlnJ," he 1treued. Dana Carby, ... engJneer. Wei the dtotrJc! musl develop 11 •lrool:voc;aljanal edt&caUon procram. "Right now we ... are UJmlJlg oul lob of high xho.ol tr"!'°"., who art not trained for g1lnfuf.,emP.14>y- ment." " He 1uagel!tlld that °"' dittrkt. ~k agreements wJth Orln11 County " flrm1 for vocational ed.ucauon proirama. Carkey also streMed the need for a e eaction Acreage Leased Ranchers Assail Beach Turnover • By JOHN VALTERZA Of ... Miff P'li.t II•" President Nixon may have scored poilitl lrith oj>en 1pace -champiom in bll hi!"":ic OPf'l\"I ~. beicb fJ!d .,ii.~ 1ajidii ..., Su Cl"""'te Wednesday. Dut teveral Ion1-Unie rancherJ in the al(e<tec( area are "?J.!>illl mad. J4in ka(oo ~. ii\<· J,@.acrt' etricultural area 1nduded in the land clttmed llUl'p)U! lo Camp PeOOJ,lon needs, ~es aeveral bully ranc~. including polmiettia and vegetable farms which have used lu!ed 1cre:.a1e for years. . What compounds the matter this week ts that no apet:ific boundarie3 hav• bttn anhounce<I by a Navy department al!sign· ed to set the borders on the surplus land. And rancheri; like Paul Eckey and bis staff, who have farmed the lf'ta 1tnce the late 1930! really don't know what will happen lG a $300,~plw in· vestment. Eckey's foreman Ivan Austin raisea acres nf ,,oinsettias fnr the Christmas market. "We're ICI mad," said Austin's wile, Mildred. ''that we want to call the J>resi· dent personally, but I am afraid of what I'd say." The Austins have run the San Onofre brlllch of the Eckey potnsettia ranch for years. The leaseholders recenlly won a five-year re.newa1 of their lease, but apparently are uncertain as to it.'J value. To make mattmi wt'lru, misguided land developers have be1ie1ed the A¥Jtina for ifltO(ln•t;ion on the land, under lhe flllo belief thal It will bo. placed up for nle immediately. "We don't .even awn It, ~t all those d,evelopers hav1 called Ull and driven ul rrazy. I finally look tht pbone off the hook at midn.i1bt Wednesday. We had enough," ahe ••id. Ee:: key. wha ia on his at.her ranch at Encinitas, was not available for im- mediate comment. His aides there said be wall studying the Presidential order. Tronically, each Olrlstma:t E c k e y decarates the Welllern White House with his bright flowers. San Clemenle city fathers learned of the offer of the 3,400-acre eanyan and ' six miles of prime beach late in the afternoon on Wednesday. Meeting in a study ·session laltr that evenin1 (called for other matters ) coun· dlmen exprused keen interest in the Prtaident's offer. even ex1mining the legal methods in acquiring the canyon . Several counc::ilmen said the canyon would make an ideal county regional park or golf course -even a wilderness preserve. But 1ny 1uch development, il was confirmed today . -would ta.kt years of bureaucratic wbeelspiMing to become reality. San Mawo Canyon Land Di-stribution Expla~ned · --The state ol Califonrla, undoubtedly, would have first call on snappin1 up an 1ddiUonaf 2.S miles of prime beach IOUtb of lbe Western White Howe, " And there was little doubt in officia1 llfcla that the cowled Marine Enlisted "lian'1 Beach Club and private surfing [aclliti!I at San Onofre would eventually faU Into 1t11te b1ndl. {kit what of thie 3,«XI 1cru . in San Mateo Canyon included in the ''lift" by President Nixon? ~pokesmen for the San FrllflCisco Reiionll' Office ol the General Servictt Bicycle Thief R ides Again Heavy chtiM and locks, It see.ma, don't "''Y t.ht z.ea1 of a bicycle thie[ in Sen Clemente. A bicycle brelonginc to Debra LyM MusuclUa of Z22 W. Avenida Marquita is a cue.in point. Pollet u.id thieves found 1 ws.y to 1te1I the 1irl's eycle lat• Thursday night even thou&b It tfad been chained to a fenae. They took the bike by detachin1 the wheel. The only rem.tlnina part w11 sU ll chained to the fenct. Administrat.lon (GSA) -which will a4· miniJter the granUna oI the aurplus . lands -outlined the several steps in- volved. Tbty Art much more romplicat.ed than those which the President and his aidea explained to the prt:ss on Wednesda y. The progression of "ofleNi" goes like this. accordini to GSA spokesman Tony Pact: • -After Navy 1pecialislll draft the precise boundaries of the surplus Camp Pencileton land, the first offer from the GSA will be to other branches of the Department of Defense. -Jf . no valid military use by those branches can be made of the canyon, then the offer g~ to the State of Califoc:nia, lncludin1 st.ate-administered educational instltulions. The land could be snatclled up by the hlghe:r educalion aystems and held in reserve as an ulUmllt: aite tor • colle1e. • -If there are no takers, at the state level, then tN offer filters down to San Dieao County. -The rules then state that if San Oieao County bep aff, Orange County and the city ol S11J1 Clemente "' o u I d have a chance to take the property. The process. Paee 1aid, would lake mGre than 1 year to complete. ' '_..• 11 _.,·i DAIL T .l"IL!OT 1lfJT\Plltfe1 PRESIDENTIAL CONFERENCE IN SAN CLEMENTl TO AID AEllWACI. UNIMPLOYM&Nii · To Left of Pre1ldenf 11 Labor S.Cret1ry Hodgson,·Te Rl1ht •Dr. Dtv14, Sd1nce.Al'Mier .. ·~ 1 Vie jo Home Hit by Bim;e Cite• lrvitae ProgrG... ' Fire, possibly started by a smoldering cliaretu in living room furniture. did St0,000 damqe to a Mission Viejo hbme Thursday Labor Secretary Opens night. · Orange County firemen said the blaze in the Monty W. Ruth home, 25231 Campina Drive, broke out about 10:30 p.m. It was controlled In 30 minutes by 26 men. Drive for Ae1·ospace Jobs Firemen estimated that SS,000 damage was done to the M0,000 home and SS,000 to the c::ontenl..s. Watch Burglars Hit-and Run Thievea usina an empty wine boU.le to smash through a front window made off wi.lh three men's wrist watches from a downtown San Oemente jewelry store Thursday evenllt&. The Lhleve! ned from Mlchael"s Jewelry Store a.t 165 Avenida Del Mar, despite a police response within one minute of a silent burglar alann . Officers tald the alann came into headquarters at 11:39 p.m. and a minu~ later the first patrolman arrived . other officers staUoned themselves · at strategic poinU! nearby but could not locate suspeclll. · The watches were &tolen, poliOI!: said, from a storefront diaplay window. The loss was set at $3.11. Secretary of Labor James D. Hod1son l•t.e th1a week announced the launchJni of a new effort to bring aerot1pact speciali1ta , back into the wor.ld of the employed. then pointed toward an e1- perlmental program at UC Irvine as an e1am~le of the idea . Hodgson , speaking alter a conference at the Western Wlllte HOl.IR Thursday morni! called by Prflident Ni.Jon, said the n1 program at UCI was working verx, ell . . At that campus , he e •plained , unemployed en1ineers, scientists and technicians who lost their jobll in· aerospace are being retrained in the field of ~vironmenLal technology. Hodison said the new plan would apply SO million in federal funds t.Gward of· !erin& out-af-work aerospace specialists Recyclin g Va n In New Location San Cltment.e's · newspaper recycling van will be moved from ita location in a Shorec::liffs ·parking lot ·to a. new location in central ·San C I e m e n le ' , sometime nul week . The SafeW1y · Markel parking lot on Prisoners Strike, El Cll!ftlno !teal will be the n .... , .. uni plaQ! fOJ the 1ar1e covered'lrailerwttich Seek Minimum Pay holdl.ug to 20 lon1 of reusable newspflnl In One loid.. . . -• SAN LU!li OBISPO <UPI) -Near!y 'Os< of tht M • cl' 200 tnmates at the Califtt'nia men's ooJ.. · IUC(!e8 arc,. 'f«Y ~f ony were c::onfihed to UM!l"tell• ThursUy erfcrt led to the extra nmUl'r-·.ttme after they went on strike df:tnandinl for the van .' donatedl. by tM-1·Gtf6en a Sl .M an hour minimum wa}e for Stat• Paper CompA(ly' of Potnoda. prison work. · Spc>keimen tnr tM t\ackylM! WaY, Officiala 11aid the prisonera, deseribed. orou' ..,.hicb has coon:lin,attd tlrfi :t 88 "mostly black mdlli'nts." alto d'manded a new law library with utied 'Sborec:llff1 re1ldent.a.<not to : unlimited privil•g., and legal coW!ael . \l<>l>•ttd ' pal'h' bu!!<jlO.. •l' the ·fllti~• at prison di11ciplinary h~lniJ. .Da~,t iot '1ttr"uirVan la ina.vecC ' ' • . -- retralnlq, job• opporturUly~liltlni• l:fld even some financial help to cover movin1 ex~1es to llve near a n1w job too far for commuting. The cabinet member said more specific data on the opportunities of .the program would be made available ·to the 11-te departments of emplciymenl within ·the neii:t few ' weeka. De:Splte the allocatioft or the mon.ey, however, the plan is expected tO make e111y a dent in the ranb Of unemployed aerospace ena.&neen. aclentilb and ttt.hniclana, who total about 100,000 na· tlonwlde. The new proifam would On!f be 1bt1 Jn help perhllPI 10,000 of them, Jlodison saki. The secret.aty; himstlf· 1 California aerospace executive before receiving hla 11ppolntment to the cablMt. a ·few moalhs a10. had grim fortcaata fpr . the unemployed in that lndulltry. ''It seems doubtful thilt the Industry would reatore .lt.'Jelf soon enough to be of lily help to theae indivkluall out of work now," he said. · .. ... lssJ1es . ,• ' ,.. I . '. ' Nixon Move . . . .... '' ·• . Frees .Him From Jail ~··· ....... .n..i_ . . ... ,.-, .. . C'.oolu ..,..,..._, ... w · ~ tht .'!Int '.April; wee~. 'oi>'tlil . Or11n1e·c.ut1 "'111 -cleuda·..C. · !of Jn the · inorniJlil and tell!JIOI'• lures rwmlhs li:WD ea Jn 'II 'do'. ·-· tNsmE· tob~Y ' .. , .. • I I . Z DAil Y PILOT SC LL Calley Juror Tells Of Torment From Wirt Suvlca PT. BENNING, Ga. -If war is Hell, the aftermath is sometimes a double: lorm<nl Anny Maj. Harvey G. Brown, 33, a V1otnam. veterari and one of llr: jurors who sentenced Lt. WUU.m L. "Rusty" Calley, 27, to lire ln priaon for Ult My Lal massacre knows. lie let down oome of the stlff, military demeanor dlopla)'<d lhl'Olllhout the sensaUonal court martial Tbunday, reflectln& on tbt agony of deciaion and tbt heavy factors that weiahed il None of the ol.hen have. "11'1 not the American Army •• .It's tb.la country that wu really on trial I.here/' the Amarillo, Tex. carttr man l'mlal'Ud. Maj. Brown Aki he WoWd bate to be in President Nb:on'a: pl.ace now - wltb a nation of emotional people deman-dtna Ll Calley's panlon -and lhe Conunanller-il>Oltef faced with the choice. "It would be so easy for him .•. to let U. Calley ao free ... " Be added &bat many Americans are letltoJ their emotions take control of their minds tn the fierce outo-y for the Pmidellt to lntemn~ "But what would tblt do to the Ian and justice of this IMd! They haven't ... heard the facl.9," Maj. Brown con- tinued. ''Tbty haven't been able to scrutinize the evidence as we ha\oe." The evidence reviewed IDcluded the lma(e of a YOUlll platoon leader riddling screaming civilians wilh slugs, s!tootlng oU half a Buddhist monk's head and hurlJni 1 baby headfir11 ln!D a ditch. Board President Asks Opposition To State Taxing t..guna Beach school board president Larry Taylor today w-1ed all Lqunana to join Jn opposition to the statewide school tax proposal Introduced in Sacrtmen!D by S.oator Albert S. Rodela as Senate BUI 8Cl1. "'Statementa are be:tna: made which lndJC1te that IO percent ot tht acbool diRrlc:t.! ID the .Ute of California would benefit as a result of this bill," Hid Taylor. "However lllo -1utewtde tuJn& """"Pl """1d raise only 1100 mlllton. re~ing an lncnue ot only Ill per student. The balance of the needed money, $400 million, would have to come from increases In income tu, sales tu and other means:," It this new educatlooa1 aupport money were slmply placed where Jt ls mort needed, that lt, divided amone the poorer dWJ'fcta, 100 percent of the school districts would benefit, Taylor em- phuh.ed, As it Is, IO ptrcent, Laguna Included, would be dama1ed by the pr<> po9Cd statewide tax. 1be proposal, said Taylor, "Woo1d add SIU a year to the ta:r bill of the Laguna owner or a $40,ID> home with an assessed va1u.ation of $10,000. I urge Lagunans to contact our repruentaUves in Sacramento asking that they aupport addlUonal state funds for education but not supp<rl the statewide tuing pr<>- ~x~yen should not be misled by the low tax rate in Ll&una, Taylor added. "With our higher asaessed valua· lion," he explained, "the bon1eowner's tu bW for education ii CC1mparabJ,e to or greater than that of moat <lf the communities In Orange County and the state." DAllY PILOT CllAMN CC>AIT NIUIHINO ~IMY l•Mtt N. w •• 4 ,.,....,. _. ,. .... J ..... Cwt.., \lltt ,,......,. Ml 0-•I ~ 1\.-.1 ICenR """ 1\eM•t J.. .... , .. ;,.. MMe9lftl E•1'9t Ch•rltt H. Leet Ric. .. 1rl P. k•R Mltttft: ...... 1111 Elf-. ..,_ __ 222 ,.,._. A""" s.. Cl ?t OM&. JOS N•rtli ll C1 .. i11• l•1f ...... _ C.19 ~i • wttt a.t Sll'elt ~Midi! Im ,...,...... ... ...,.,., ....... ... ltl4I ,,.,.. ._,. .......... bAll Y "IUlT. wllll ._..kit It ~ ltle .._...,_ ....... •ll'f ---....... .. , "' ........... """ ..... ~ ...... .......,, ...._.. c.. ...... """k•• •~ ,._"' v.1...,.1. 1.,. c--.., c.a.,,_ .... ~ ... -. ........ - ,......, """ ..... """'Ifill ""'""' """' • •t ·• W.I .. , Mrwl, C..19 M.u. '•"•'••• r1141 &U-4m c:«•lfJM MMst ht '42-Wfl S. a1a11t1 Al D•pat ullltJ 1t' It 111 4tl-44M ........... Al ..... Illa T ,,, I 4M-t4" ~ .... ~ C0.11 ..... .... ~-... -............ ..... •ltW'lel ,..... ., .............. ... _, .. ·--·~ ......,, ..... ,... ........ ....,......)-. ..... ( .... ,.. ........... ,._,,.,,. hid! ..,. C.ft "-•· (•I.,..,., k••• a IMM lrt' ""'"" .. -"'"' .,, -11 a.n ............ , ~.., ............ ., ... __.,. ' Waiting Bis Turn? 'Bright Group' PR Unit Head .. Cites Employes By PATRJCK BOYLE Of tilt O•llY 1"11111 lltl't Following a daylong sen1inar in getting along with the publie, 34 Laguna Sejich city employes · were lold Thursday they were the~ "most intelligent, perceptive group" the instructor bad ever worked with. The public relations training, offered by the U.S. Civil Servit'e Con1mission, was directed by Dick Broderick and Donis Wellman, both of whom spoke highly of the public servants in the Art Colony. The group, which also included a (ew employes of Newport S"each and San Clemente, spent the day listening ta lectures and discussing ways of im- proving their public image. In answering a series of questions posed by director Broderick, t b e employes were led to examine their own public actions . One of the questions ·was "What irritates you most about your customers?" Broderick told the city personnel to "turn Che coin. because that is the way tht public often sees you .·· Following the day's presentation, City ti.tanaser Larry Rose addressed the group brieOy and told them his reasons for setting up the seminar for the city personnel. "I sent you all here lo gel a belltl' work product out of you, frank.Jy," Rose told them. ''But I also did ii to have you understand how important you are -to everyone else here, to your clly and to yourselves. "IC \.l·e can keep the importance of the individual, then we v .. ill know how important we are to each <llher," be added. Rose said he hopes te be able to have additional training sessions for those city employes who did not attend Thurs9_y's sesslon. Ql' Paint appears to be waiting his turn, but a closer inspectio n oi the 'MEN" sign on the slightly ajar door shows he was waiting for his rider attachtd to a break in the roundup of 365 llerefords at Rancho Mission Viejo. The answers were varied, bul most emphasized the impatience of many residents and their unwillingness to beC'ome involved in city matters. "Their problem is often important enough to gripe about," a C'ily employe said, "but it is not important enough far them to do anything abou!." Greenbelt Week Artwork Donated Newport Woman Says 'Romance' Prompted Suit A Newport Beach woman who claims tbat her broker \lied "an affecUonate and rOmanUc lntereat" in her to pqsuade her to move more than '300,000 worth of blue chip atocb tG mutual fund s has na?lltd 1ilm and h1I company as defendanta iD a near $500,000 lawsuit. Mrl. Jane P. C&rroll cla.ima in her Orange County Superior c.ourt action that broker John H. HGyt, 2189 Tustin Ave., Costa Meaa, and California Jnvestora of Orange have Ignored demands for the return <lf $311,m in lo.ans made to Hoyt. . She wanta flO,<MXI in damages sustained by the trlll.!fer of blut chip stocka from the trust she inherited to mutual lunda IUlielted by Hoyt llld 8he abo demandl 1a fRrtller $100,000 In punJtlve damag., from tbe defendeou. Mra. Carro!J atatu her first contact with Hoyt wu in late 19M, lhort1y after abe recetved the portfoUG cl blu!> chip stoW she lnherilacf from the eatate of a Los An&elea woman.. Mrs. Carroll, whoae minor children Valerie and John P. Roberta are co-plain- tiffs in the action, states that she wa1 "naive and uninitia ted" in business af. fairs when Hoyt and California Investors manager William Heiden approached her and was eas:lly persuaded that It was possible to incrtaae htr 3.4 percent in· terest rate to the 10 percent guaranteed by mutual funds. She indicates in the lawsuit that her association with Hoyt was enhanced by romance and that she "came to rely on him entirely'' -to the point that .she sold her entire holding ot blue chip stocks. She accuses the defendant.s of "churn. ins" in transferring her stocks to other .!iOUCCes -a practice whereby brokers create commissions by switching stocks for no good ft.nanclal reuon. Evangelist Okay In Plane Mishap Eva ngelist Oral Roberls, his wife and son and 25 others escaped injury Thurs- day afternoon when a plane carrying them skidded to a lurching stop at Orange County Airport. Officials said the brakes on the plane's landing gear apparently locked and caus- ed the craft to skid for nearly a half mile and come to rest in the grass Gff the main runway. The runway was closed for about an hour until the plane could be lowed away. The group was tn route from Okla., lo Burbank to record televis.ion shows. Tulsa, :some Baby Ratt'lesnake Found in Area Another baby ratUe:snake, bearing a full doae of venom but not old enough . lo have rattles. w11s discovered at the home of a S&n Clem~nte resident Thurs- da y. It \lo'IS the second )Ollnl viper found near local residences In recent weeks. Police captured the 1nake at the home of J . E. Htnnan. tlS E. Cordobl, before noon Thursday. The small snake was kept al ive so that Police officer &bby Scrugea. an npert on the ~pecies, can wie it in hi1 safety prestntaOons to school stu- dents . Scrugg.s 1peaks to 1tudentJ on the dMgers of rattlers. 2 County Legislators Term 18 Voting 'Hoax' Another employe C'hidcd residents for always e:rpecting preferential treatment beC'ause "they know someone." Turning the question around. Broderick asked the cilv workers what irritated them most 8bout serv iC'e in a state or federal office. The most frequent answer \.\'as the Indifference of the government employes to the problem of the person at the counter. Laguna Beach artists and craftsmen are responding generously to an appeal for donations of artwGrks to be sold for the benefit <lf the Lapna Greenbelt, artist Frank lnterlandi said this week. The appeal is yielding dcinalions 0£ paintings, sculpture; pottery and jewelry created by local artists for a Greenbelt Week art exhibit and sale, April 19-25. The works are being assembled at Greenbelt headquarters, 216 Forest Avt.1 wbere the show will be hung. All pro-- ceeds will to to the Greenbelt land acquisition fund. Special I<> the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Giving people the vote at lJ and still denying them rights to marry freely, drink and sign contracts WOUid be 8 cruel boa.I perpetrated ()D their maturity. This is a fundament.al ~aton why two Orange County Iegl.stat.ors joined di!.!enters Thursday as Cal lfcrnla's con- stitutional amendment passed by a 60 to 9 margin. Assemblymen Robert Badham CR· Newport Beach) and Robert Burke (R- Huntington Beach) wanted full rishta and privileges of adulthood contained in the amendment. A similar Senate bill paued Wed- nesday, but without the full-fledsed reduction to age 11 of drinking, Am®' other over-21 rights. , Daily Pilot Sets Special Listing Of Cl1urch Rites The DAILY Pn.oT is planni ng a special story to run \Vednesday an - nouncing special services scheduled by Orange Coast churches and temples marking the primary days of Holy \Veek, Easter Sunday and the Passover. The final deadline for all material to run in Utis story y,·ill be Monday at 5 p.m. Any material rec.eived after that lime will probably not be included. The items should include name of the church, address, service times, pastor or rabbi's name, Rnnon and any other material essential lo the services. Please be brief. The articles can be submitted to any DAILY PILOT office. Addresses include: 330 W. Bay St ., Costa Mesa; 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach: Z22 Forest Ave .. Laguna Beach; t787S Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach; 30S N. El Camino Real, San Clemente. Penalty Leveled For Late Scliool A Pasadena construction finn has been assessed a $6,600 penalty fee by Sad~ dleback Collese after the company was two months late finishing a project at the school. W. J. Shirley, Inc., was authorized payment of <lniy $16,103 for work com· pleted on a campw building after billing the school for $22,703. School officials said lhe penalty clause of the contract was invoked after I.he "con tractor railed to complete the work in the stated period of time." The work, which involved an addition to building S at the Mission Viejo school, was scheduled for completion in November of 1910 and was not finished until January of 1971. college officials noted. The amount of the penalty y,•aa determined from a formula based on a given number of dollars for each day late, the official said . Speed y Alioto Trial Pro1uised iu Seattle SEATI1..E (UPI) -A federal judge promised a spetdy trial Thursday for Mayor Joseph L. Alioto and three former \V11shington state officials "·ho plraded Innocent to bribery and mail fraud charges. U.S. District Judge William T. Beekl said he would try to set a trial date ln late ~fay or early June, although he couldn 'l guarantee lhc case \.l'Ould be heard that soon, "Some of our phony liberals are saying we want to make our young people equal - but not entirely equal." Badham said when reached Thursday afternoon. "I think that is a cruel hoax on our young people." Badham said what .the Assembly did . In effect, was put the issue: on the ball<lt to allow citizens to decide whether 18 will be: the votlng age. "And at the same time they advocated ratificalton of an amendment to the U.S. Corutitution \.l'hich would preclude the eIPCession of opinion by California voters." he added. Allsemblyman Burke joined his col· leagut on this point. ''One or the problems is that this act.ion will place it on the ballot neit year," Burk~ said. "In the meantime. if that tedefal change is put oo the ballot, the voter will be asked whether to allow the IS-year-old vote when it 11Jready has been.'' "It is really a confused picture in terms <lf what In tile world is going on," Burke concluded. Assemblyman Badham noted he has encouraged and supported the 18-year-old vote, plus making 18 the complete age of majority. . He says this should be a full package of citizenship and responsibil ity, not a token concession on voting in itself. Burke noted Assemblyman John V. Brigss (R-FulJerton) tried Thursday to get the majority at 18 issue inserted ba ck into the amendment before the vote. The full majorit y clause involving mar· riage vdlhout parental consent. full responsibili ty in courts or law, ability to enter into legal contracts. and other factors was deleted in committee hear- ings. "They don't reel they have to be nice to you," one 1nan said fn reference lo the Post Offi ce. "Let's face it. there i~ no place else you can go to ~y a stamp." Another said he \.l'&s disturbed by the "hurry up and wait'' attitude of the government employes. After all answers to the question had been voiced, Mental Health Link to Vitamin Prompts Grant STANFORD (UPI) -Nobe l Prize-winning cheinist Linus Pauling. ~·ho believes Vitamin C prevents the common cold, has received a '325.255 grant lo investigate whether it also may be a factor in mental health. Pauling said in announcing the grant to hi s research group from !he Nationa l Jnstitute of Mental Health thal he bas already determined some mentally ill people need unusually high levels of niacin and Vitamin C. Pauling first proposed the concept of "orthomolecular psychiatry'' in a 1968 article in lhe professional journal "Science.'' lf e has been working under previous grants from the Nl ~1H to develop biochemical methods of analysis that can distinguish some mentally ill persons from healthy subjects. Paulins's interest in dietary defi· ciencies as a possible cause of mental illness led him to further investigations in to Vitamin C and the conviction that it \vould prevent the common col d. His book, "Vitamin C and the Common Cold," became a best-selling paperback. Artist lnterlandi i::J coordinatiAg the art exhibit and persons wishing to dcinate works may deliver them to Greenbelt headqij.arlers or call 494-9797 for pickup. The corporation has lax emempt status and will acknowledge silts according le their value. Teacher Aides' Class Planned . A new teacher-aide class to provide a. nucleus of. trained personnel for I.he San Joaquin and other South County school districts will be offered during the sprina quarter by Sadd.leback College. The three-unit off<amPIJS cla!! will be taught from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday1 in the Instructional Media Center or the San Joaquin District 's admlnlstration of- fice, 14600 Sand Canyon Road, East Ir· vine. The class is designed to enhance the district's volunleer teacher-aide program and to provide trained personnel for a possible paid teacher-aide program. Students receiving credit for the ciao will be eligible to participate in other school districts' programs. The course \Vas offered by the collese durins the fall quarter in cooperation with the Laguna Beach Unified School District, which em· ploys teacher aide s. Puhlishe1· Succwnhs NE\V YORK (UPI) -Albert E. \Vinger. former president and chairman of the board or Crowell-Collier Publishing Co., died Thursday after a brief illnw. He was rl. Glass Top Tables • •• On Sale Now! 30160 GLASS TO, TAILE-V•" THICK ' Sl'ECIAL $154 REG. $171. •-1vn, "'fltd ...i ......... tly , ... ntd, ttils pottlinlty to o .. qnlity et a rto1-.oble price. 1, "" -.01 lo • 9t.s ...,. lablo. Doo't 11la • .,.. ANllablo to "" lellowfOIJ 11a1 .. ,., """•• '""44 -01c1 s,....1 .. -0111 .. , .. , on •• DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NI Wl'OllT STO•I OPI N ,lllDAY 'TIL t NIWPO•T llACH 1121 w .. rctlff Dr, M2.2oso Ol'IH FRIDAY 'TIL t • '""""'-'"'""" Desl'J'lon Amlobl>-AID-NSID LAGU¥J. IEACH J45 NOftlo c-H:"(• 4'WS51 OPEN FAIDA Y TIL t INTERIORS --Pf.ton• Tolf ''" Mo.at of Or•"I• County 540-ll6J -• - ... NO DINGALING -Dan Rowan of NBC's "Laugh-In" prepares Santana·27 sloop for departure from Marina del Rey on 2,500·mile voyage to Hawaii. From left are George Millar, Phil Stangeland and Rowan. The voyage will be a trial run !or a new do wnwind sail by Stangeland. • '"La11gh-In' Comi~ at Sea Dan R owan Sailing Sloop to H aivaii By AU10N LOCKABEY •Nlln• l!dilDr Dan Rowan of NBC' s "Laugh·ln" television show went .. yachting'' Thursday. It wasn't the first time. The genial straight man half of the Rowan and ~1artin team has been filling up his spare time for some 15 years by sailing a JS.foot ketch out o( Marina del Rey to such places as Catalina Island. Thursday he set sail in a Santana·Z7 s lo op from Marina del Rey with two male companions. Destination? Lahaina, Maui. That's in the Hawaiian archipelago -. some 2 500 miles from ~1arina del Rey. At a hastily called p~css conference Tuesday, Rowan tried to e:<plain to l he Hollywood press and two yachting writer! -this one included -~·hy he chose to go to Honolulu the hard way. After all. Pe was reminded, the jets still fly to Hono and there are plenty of boats in the island on which he could go sailing. "That's just the point." the bearded and tflnned comedian explained. "I want to get away from all thal noise and all those people. Just think, on this trip all \l/e'JI hear Is the wind in the rigging and the hiss of the sea against the hull.'' And v.•hy a 27·fool fiberglass boat? "It's the challenge, I guess," Rowan replied. The boat belongs to Rov.•an. He bought it second-hand after selling his 35-foot ketch to buy something targer. '"I asked Bill Schock. the builder, what he thought or the boat" said Rov.·an. "Bill said it v.·as a fine boat.'' "Then I asked him If he v.·ould go to 11ono!ulu in it, and Bill replied: 'Not in a million years.' ''Bill hastened to assure me that the boat would take it alright, and I just as hastily informed him that I had no notion of getting off the boat. Besides the challenge, the !rip is being made to test out a new sail designed by Phil Stangetand. v.·elJ know n sailor. professional skipper, ~omctime boat dt>s·r,ner and sometime sa1Jmakcr. Phil is one of Rowan 's ship- mates. The other is George ~iiliar, a sailing friend of Rov.·an's and Stangeland. The sail looks for all the world like an inve rted spin· naker. St.angeland describes it as a horlwntal luff sail. It is triangular and luffed lo a large aluminum yard '>'lhich is c~ntered on the headstay and hoisted to the truck of the mast. The ya rd is braced from each of its ends lo the cockpit winches. The sail clew is single sheeled off the bow. The sail is designed primari- ly for running dead downwind, but can also be sheeted for a beam re ach. ''On this trip to Hawaii we will fly twin headsails un. derneath my new wing sail, thereby obviating having to use the main downv.·ind. and the attendant dangers of ac- cidenta l gybes,•• says Stange\and. "It will also aid in steering, in conjecUon with oru wind vane." Rowan is no ''dingaling" when it co mes to sailing. He appears serious about the \.\hole thing. speaks the language, and ls not deceiving himself about the hazards on such a trip. A 1-lollywood type asked him if he had ever been in a Transpac race. "Hell, no,'' said Rowan. "I've ne\•er been in any kind of a race. I get enough com· petition at NBC. I sail for fun and relaxation." Asked v.·hat !he studio thinks abnut his adventure. Rov.·an said : "Well , when I signed the contract, they wanted to know v.·hat my hobbies \\.'ere. They grinned happily when I tok:l them, sailing and tennis. You know. no motorcycles. no mountain climbing -happily married and obviously not a faggot." A.nd his partner. Dick ~larlin? "He's never said a word to me about it. But I've heard some of the remarks he has made to others." And his wife? "She wouldn't think or trying to stop me." When it was all over, Dan shook hands all around. When it came my turn, I could think or only one thing to say. I said it: "Goodnight Dan." ..... Regatta To Open Season Soulb Shore Salling Club kicks off il.! racing aeuon this weekend with the Grand Prix Regatta. DI.her races this season in- clude Tri-Port, Triangle, One- Design Fleet Championship, Pomeroy Perpetual and the famed Wednesday n I t e Hibachi Serles. The Grand Prix Is open to all boaf5 tn SYRF, MORF, PHRF, Tempest, Luders 16, Endeavors, Cal 20, Snipe and all other claMes with five or more entries. Two races will be held Saturday at 12 noon and one race Sunday at 1 p.m. Races start off Balboa Pier, Entries accepted up to 10 a.m. Satur- day at SSSC office. Trophies will be awarded Sunday at 6 p.m. at the S&5C Clubhouse. Sailboat Show Set In October The So u t he r n Calllornla Marine Association has set the dates for the third annual! Sailboat Show for Oct. %2-31 at the Long Beach ~tarina, II according to Dave Goodwin, SCMA president. The Long Beach Show Is l the nation's first all·sal\ ex· position. Home for the event is the modernistic Long Beach Arena. located on the "!aterfront in downtown Long Beach. It has an 85-foot high ceiling with a clear span across the entire exhibit area. "Our association has long recognized the need ror an independent sailboat show," 1 said Goodman. Since taklngl over sponsorship of the event three years ago, we have been most pleased v.•ith the re.' suits." Kialoa OK For Record Kialoa II's elapsed time[ record in last weekend 's Tri· Jsland Race will stand. A protest and counter.pro- test filed by Kialoa 's Jim Kilroy and Blackfin 's Ken DeMeuse was decided in favor of Kialoa 11 by the Los Angeles Yacht Club protest committee. Klaloa's protest against Blackfin y,·as sus· tained. The decision makes Kia loa officially first to finish in the J3J.mile race and gives the big yawl her third elapsed time record in the LAYC Whitney Series. FrldJ.1, AprU 2. 1971 DAILY PILOT Ar The SARGENT • C2994W Beautiful Contemporary styled compact console. VHF/UHF Spotllte Dials. s~ x 3~ Twin-Cone Speaker. A sensational value! • Chromacotor Picture Tu be • Titan 80 Handcrafted·Chassls • Super Video Rang e Tuner BUY NOW! ZENITH/The quality goes In be/ors the name goes orrt • featuring AFC Automatic Flne.twunv' Control . electronically firnt-tunes the color picture at the flick of a linger ATG AutomaUc Tint Guard Control keeps lace tone!I tuned when there are slgnal variation• ~en~afiona/ly Priced! $537 11 19~ SUPER-SCREEN COMPACT CHROMACOLOR The DEQAI. C4030W Grained Walnut eolor. Chrom1color Plelur1 Tube, Titan Chuala, AFC. Aulomallc Tint Guard Control, VHF/UHF Spotrne Pinela. COLOR TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE 9021 Atlanta at MoqnoUa HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-3329 PACIFIC COA r y Form•rly In th• AIC Store S•rvlng Or•n1• County for 20 y .. rs tO Doy C.i. hi l • Me11tk1 •lld N• Dow11 O.A.C. .. • ., ' ' • " ' Personal service at Mutual $.syjngs • The Big M is big enough (over $400,000,000) lo pay the nation's highest interest on insured savings ... 5°/. to 6 ~ •. But equally important~ares enough to give you very person el service. COron1 dtl Mar onlc•: 2897 e.11 Coa11HighwayI875--5010 O\her offices in Covlntt West Arced!a, Pasadena arid Glendale • J 4 DAIL V PILOT SC Your Jtlon~y's Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List How to Guat·d Against Being NASO ll1tlng1 for Thursd•y, April 1, 1971 ... ...,tllflf• ....,._.tAIW .............. 11 ,.,,.,dlM"I' t a 111 '"'"' "ASD l'f-............... ref•ll W mlr11~J, ll\fl/11 .. Wll ., (li'llftlJ.NlllA. American Innocent Abroad •• •_,.,. ....... 1 ... "'~"'" '°" "" Abbtt.~ 1 10 A,C~ I~ :lolO •MC1t .t,c..,.ci.v 10 •ltl AM .. II• M:m• MIU lb "!TJE" ~ Br SYLVIA PORTER A reoord 1 ,000000 Amertcw are now Uvlng and workJna outside the U S not Inclucbng hundreds of thousands ()f U S Government employes, military sev1cemen and women ln mountlng num hen, Americana m fleeing or lhreatenmg to nee our bor· elm: -and for retl$OOS which go far beyond their deep di). illusionmenl with our frantic pace of hfe cur problem,, o( pollution crime. urban decay To Illustrate a not so spec tacular but potentially much rnore import.ant factor is a developing reversal 1n the ••brain drain • Whereas only a few years ago the drain was Jurmg large numbers of forel;n sc1enllsts teachers phys1c1ans and engllleers to our ahores now the reverse drain Is luring large numbers of our sc1enUsts elec:tronlcs !J>CClalists engineers etc , to foreign shores Agatn not so newsworthy. but more stgruflcant has been the explosion of multinabonal corpcralions and US com pan1es which are br1ng1ng U S workers overseas as they establish and expand their branches and sales operations m other lands And certamly a 1htrd basic factor 1s the normal cur1os1ty of many young Americans about Ide and Jobs overseas and their normal desire to f.ind reasonably gracious hvmg at lower costs than here Are you among t h e bo first getting a Job with a multinational <.'Orporalion In the U S then aogllng for reassignment overseas Among promising oc- cupaUonal areas for overseas Jobs now are teaching the travel tcurlsm l n d u s t r y management consulting advertising U S Government JObs m engineering math physics mechclne agneullural services volunteer service electrorucs United Nations agencies such as the W()rld Health Organization UNICEF Follow up these very broad areas by checking the want ad sections of trade publieahons m your field na t1onally c i rculated newspapers overseas EngllBh language newspapers Sludy the U S C1v1l Service Comm1ss1on 1 NIEW YOflK (.Ir.Pl •r OIM ..._.,\lo :5n!O~ lri t I U11 c; I 01 4 ~ A~Mll1 70 -Tiii foll<I*' I'll Ii" If! Altf; II>. 4"'i ~!" TI 3S\, J.ol >Un I him Sl \lf )2 !c.m1~:i )Clo II • ~«!td l(lnaliC lh ?\lo~ C.i Wt! I~ Ifft Un MCGU ~ )\la -"'11t1tlt 1.0 pamphl.l. F·•·ral J 0 b Ii N.tllOMt '-" l!IK ~ lllE• ... JO SoNE Tel ~. I ~. us lnknl lh t \4 All•ll I DI 2 !;\I'll 0..1 ... 1 Aun ov.,G1n.., 3~ )l'JSwG1Cp 16,.11 Uj ErwlP ltl'o~~'"' ta Ov.rsw for cluu on US I"" touni.r ••"" 1.i1111 2s '' iw E• ~v 11 1 ' u 1'rkt.n ~.._ •9\\,. "" '"' 111\l!'tll(t lo lndu.. lttt~ W 2$ 1)'11 Sovrn Cp U U:W. Univ A f ~ 71• Ar P od tot> Gov-nment Jobs abroad rr111 t1ocu '*Re 1\.'I jn SP«"r ' '"" u~ •~n ,. 11tw !',.,., P•ct p11 1J ... f Cytl l!lol I Ii 1 tr>drn HI;. J4-lo Ut I l/IG 11 I Air llt<i 20Q lnvtstlgat. private l•llk 1no Tn.i1t LS 11T11 s1" •ttl• 11:wno.v111"" G1 11"1' JU 1Mu•"''' hi ttl'KI .... ~ oo4wy JV. 21'1 S!1n jiPd :l6 31\'l Vtllll. 1.D n, HO ~~ It 1 ent ag"""I" which 1 I ' ...,,. 10lio d IT ~ 111 s11r1 srr ll'> 11 • VanD Air ''' M; Ala Oat ~ l• emp_oym ..... .,. h 1!ler::.i J ;;\.~Gov IEF-h\ 31"' ltl'I s ••wb c1 •l\.o 4'I , Y•...:• ~ n 1• n1, Al1lkt 1nt•tt •peclalu:e m ma l c 1 n g hi..,. •-u~ lt" 'if·~n '" ' ~ut1.c Tl¥ ,,,. '"' Y•lcro :io :io\I\ ... c..1oe ,,, m l!l! r xi ,.,,. 7"I Slltd•I F 11\1 U Ytn1 on 73,._ 1• \ A to.rl•nt .~ OVetSE!U jObS With StlteStde r.::: :;; ,. ' Gr A M11 2'1o 1"" ""'-' El ?l ~ U Wld• Pu 2)14 2• lo o\l(an Alvm 1 JOb seekers But steer clear ~.Y: :~ ~ ~·· &i:.id te Jo~ i~ ... ~~~i.!" J,r14,~ :z·~1.!.! 1n: 1~ :~:S...:t~ ~ h ch tri to I t ftC Orty Ad¥ lj1" It T1Ul'lt 1JX 13"' Wth NG l:Ali I~ Aj Amll 1'<1 or the agency W J CS F14 Un~I 1 ti' A214 Grow P 111 ~._Ta~ Ot I 1 1:1o Wa et Tr 10 IQ\1 it. le9 (p lDo! Cb.rg. You. S'""P 1114Ytlrla~ C.ulllnlll j ll!liT1yrW! ll'loll._WtDl>Rt 1J .. tl31'1A!l""t~.!..*, K"C Ml Cp '"-1 (,yroon I,(! ™Tire~ Pub ~ l'\O Wit1vn1 W 1m 11!o A "p"" "" "rei-'~aUon fee of hundreds AFA "'' 20 " Kar",,!, ll u11i ll'AI Tecum P 1'3 IN w1 di n 1w. 'I Allf!Q w i 36 ou bof the b AIO Ill( l•YI JS tiH " 1-h 1h Telecom S'~ 5'• Well"V M JI,. 1~ ~\1ilf~~~ l _J8 Or liar• -ore JO .,., 1~ Mio ... ti111r..t " JI.lo ll;o TV Com 914 !GI,\ W•~IF M 21*1 ll'lo tSI> '"" 1-tt<tt J 1'V. ll\I TINWlnl 'I~, 12"' Wtll Gar 1•14 1$'h "lle:-IJI hunl even begins. The more ::;:.~, '~o 1~ 'rit Hult c:" :i. >"' T~ ,i.m0 ,.~ a w1tcs P 11"a '"' ~ u..isfrd 1~ 1 h A ... p 2)1... z•°" Htn N> )\'o ~ Thtrm A 2 7" W1ln NA IV. l\.o '''ltd Super usual arrangement s a c arge J~'~ 3 1,,. Hid« in )¥. ,,;; 11t11Y co 11 i~ w.,,, M11 '"' • ..,11 1 c11 108 to You or a Oat commi.s:non Aad1,,. w 1n1o 11 ., !:!olobm ,.,. "'r111ny 111 "• ~ 1111 P11b i'" 1• Al ri11..,..,, 44 Adv Roo .i. ·-,.,oo....,. ... A1" Tl"" Gu> 4 r •!. W•I $1 Ur 1'• 1~ All'hl p c.m once a suitable Job has been "', ~ ~ Ullo IMii or-ii 1tu ,,,. 1ou. Toi E Le l) • • w ... ,,., uv. uu Aitoe Liil h Al• 1~<1 1\1 l " 21-111 ''~ Tr Kor C Ju • • w,11mc1 ti .Ult Amal~ l .., found -per aps a percentage Albee Ho • s .. 11¥<,d,.G1 t ~-. r ncnt G U\o 11. w1119 w~• s s11 AMllAC ..so fl t th' Alt>trtl 12 K ll .,..e ._.J.i-1 S ,,,.. Tr1nl<l 0 19'1o 10 W nl! Mil 70\~ 21~ AIYl#lf Ea 120 Of yoUr rs IDOn S pay •lcol•C ~ SV. Hlldi f'•ll l1V, ')I.VI TrlMOb H •\o s.lo WK PL ~ :!2\o AmHIU 011 Alcon lb 30 Sl Hufll P ~\4 i,, ~ ~·~:I Pd 311~ l~~ ~~id.." i 1;~ 3;\o -.maH ~13..SO Make 1•1urhe you ht1ave ~~ ._% 1~ • 1:i! H~:n ftr l1h n\lo rrnn oc. .,., •tow l•M w -'2\~ lJ"< ~~:~" 1: answers to a t ese ques ons An Tech ,.. •l• 1ma" SY 11 n 11..,,,s " 11 , 11 vro~y £ J • • • .., llmd• 1.'° •'" I .. ,. Imo• (p l l'il Un rt 4 o S\• lGflU! 8 1' I~ AmBdc:ll 1111 before you accept an overseas A ia E!~1 .... 10'' 1no N1K1r lOYo lll•• Am ''", 70 lob A fYft tltt JJ • H l11for l11t 10 ltl'lt A Ctn oil IS Aloe (rm )\0 :M\ t,,.o D ti> t'.11. 1 ~ .o.m Ctmen Will your employer pay the :1:r:~ ~ ~ 11~:~ (~ 1• '"\~ MUTUAL !c ~~~~in l : Ir t ft ... u Am 81111'-'20ll ~ nlrmk •rt ll~ ,.,, ACYlft 1'1" ent e COS o ranspor...,,g yo Am cm~ lH< ISi(, l""m' o 11v, 11" ""' o .11 1 and your possessions to and ~~1 E'-.'i. .~ ,n: 1~~~1wr, 1~ ,~,: ~~ •rul111,~ from Your new location'> Am F1111 Jl\i 3'1•• '"' MulrH 7S14 11 A0o111 ni "' Am F1,1rn t tlllo Int Sr•tm 4S N FUNDS AmE Pw 1 10 Wlll 1yo1u be required to take :mM:;~ ~~ ~i? l:"~ Ul" !J~ 11°vi ~ ~(;'n~~g 17! _,..,,.Ja anin1J1ge C 0 UT ll e S Am T•'IY 2~ 251'> JtCO!I I' )!lo • ~ A Genin• ~ "r~-i-d ho 11 ""' Wiid 1 1~ 11 J.tc1u111 C llV.-n ~ A <..n n Pl 10 before you eave an w w1 An.odl!• ,., m J'"' w,, ,~.! ..:,,.. ~ ""?Fl'iM .. 7Z'CS'I ~m ... ~~1 1 ~ Y for thta mstrucllon'> Afllltut l M\l.J ,."° Jamn F "' •• A Homt ot 2 pa Mkln Jn 1~ 10\loJ•m•bY IGl/o lG'io YORK lit.P)~NTGN tllOlO'Cl ...... i'IOlP ,. Will you get a special houa :~~· ~ 1~!'.; 1;~ 1!tJYrnF~ J~ 1~'Z !1Eh": 10 ow n9 011~1!0••• Am tl -· !• t AmM~·,•: }01 Ing allowance if Tent! are A kMO" 11'4, U\!o 1<<0•'• c,~_, ?>.,, ) ti 0<11 IVPP led bf! nv (;II d 'l• • l• ~ M IC Ix ! <Q h A•~WI(; ,, ... ll ... ll l 111• Nttlo~•I ... ~-In··· 801 JI llO ll l't A M (.DI j much higher 1n t e area to Arnov 111 5"-6i.o. 1<111t sn , 11 2"-• "" DI St<vr!llr• nvt1icrs oup Am Mo 0 , Arrow H ;it • l5 K11'St pf 10 10'1oi Oe1lo ' Ir>< I t IDS nd 1 1 '$ J JI ANott.•• :I 10 which you are gomg Arvkl• n , u K,• var 3? , Jl io r~• o c~s • ... ~ ch Mutl o 1l I t1t1 Am P~o o i. I I ..,,.,.11 sv , '"' •rn•n A n U\.\t~••e ~•cu 1rs P,·.~, 1;:',,t"•"'Re10• 0411 Wli your emp oyer arrange Aacc eot .,1Q .,.., K• , o • l l'4 ova '""' been Am se1t n lo '.cure a Wor'· permit for A11Gtl LI 1S U\.l ",,','", '· • ill !Cid Ibid! ... t>cullM SI Kl 'll '9l Am s~ p 600 • •o•O "' I'" 1,., , \l 'o !ul!t<l) Thi.I ldY ' YI Py 7 S3 I I \ SM<!I 1 !10 '" " K ( l"o "" Rtlfl S ID 5 11 AmSg... 10 You'> Will you get a paid vaca ••1td "' •¥< s K=-:, .. ll'a ., ••k t1ei 1111nn..,m Mc1 l lltlr.•rM Ith 'Ill\ ' 'l>ffdn S JI ! '9 Y'! I 51 I Sl A S d 11U 15 tion" How much' When ' 1111 Pnte 7'4 l\lo ~·:1"1 A , Ill ..,1 1 y fvnd• J ~•nc• • 11 1.u Am s erll • Where' ::~"iri, ~~~~J:1<~1;"°s-..: 31 c;rwn 111 1t1Joi.n1 n 11 11211Ar&r w h d •irr-R. 4'llKIVHE11 lncom •'6•.ltKtYS-Fund1 AmT&T160 Of course t ere Is an a ven 9111111 F 15~,·~ ""' Fib 11 aoW. ln•u • 5~ 1G u •?<)110 10 n 11 s• AW11w• '° I nd I'• ( j rk llt...,,,r11 .0 ~Kt1C111F '• ldY!IS 51'l i?S Cu~ 91 1t15lt99AW Dtlll! urea eXC<.emen 0 WO ,,,,, ... -·-·K•n PC: 111.1. lll':tAelnl F lOOtHOJ CV\ IH lf7l11i:IAW 11pf l ll ""' " " IC!lll 1111 J~ 1 't!lld 141 1119 Cv• II• 157 9l$Am Zrw; ing overseas But to assure •,.-,,~F :u,, .. ',,s,,11:1"'' El 1 1,,.,,1.,.,re F t91 ttl c ... 1<1 10t 11iAm1on 60 U '"' .. ""K k C 8 llt'IAm Fd 11 P C11' tt.:2 5J7 Jl/Am~e~ ~. both for yourse be com ''"' .std """ 201,:1 1c!., :.,, 35 ~ liV." 11 , n 1• 11 n cus s1 n J• 2 o t>.M inc 91 k Hi t 4 1' 50~ '• ll ' :iav, a. p'h• 1123 IJ 31 Cui 52 10 10 1111 A.mlat iO pletely prepared II•'• L•b "2 ""'I t:~· J:S ~ sn lmteP , o 1 ~ cu~ ~J • l• 111• AM' •,1115 ,•., lllbl>MI ·~ tll L W ll>C10llo~mflul J'3l1l (11>~ SOt JSI mpg,, 11 llUP• W 13 1111 ll!I d • 1 l \lo l.m Diver 11 IQ l2 l Pol•r J 'I • lS ~mPI• ~010D ::;fell~ ·~. ~ .... t:.:i r!; I 11\fo a.m E'tl v 5 32 S II IC" <-b unav• I ... ~: :r DI l>I Americans thinking of JOb hunttng overseas1 Are you searching for gu1dancc on bow to go about 1t1 Then -Don t get on a plane fly across the ocean and start hunting Rather warns CurlJ! W Casew1t m a new paperback ' How To Get a Job Overseas '' (Avco Publ1sh1ng Co $1 45) bne up and assure your foreign Job 1n the U S before you go ln fact, your best route may Broadway-Hale Reports Record Sales, Profits .''. "'' "'"' 'li-'C lell Coal ! • 1\\ 'mer EllP,t•• IC.II c~ (,! U"IVI I ... I ed I"" .--. -l•• (;rp S 1 i"-CIPt t\1 '"l'""' Fd .S•• 1.lt ,m,, '' lotw£l 11'> 1o ~cl'~ lncmc •6110Xll••G•n lOOl'I Ol A~cond•l ''~•'"",~ r.i:n::tT:~t::i 1111,. 1~vu• •1• '"Le• R•n 16101 1 60A~chHot~ 1 -"' Ucidnk: I 1~ .Sff' tO llb R•n 6•1101•<-o !•<' tlOll C.tll' 11 U'll 1 ~ II\ ~to<~ f ll 18 IL ff ~ k .S !'9 6 ll A~iti:le• I JO :,~:." sf l Jfv; t~1'Cnc1v ) , 1"o ""' G lh i 11 11• L ft l~v 195 I '9 APatllt-Co 2.> ...... Set '~ 10• LOii Er " 1 •• 11\\ .. ,,, !nY s ll s ll L l>C l'O'll l lJ l1 'Cl APCoO 1 191 t rw111 Ar 11'4 1• lYr'l(h C 15 • 26'1o l.m MYll t 1110 J6 L "' ~ 91 A Pl pl CI 06 9"11 eer '°"' 11\.\ Mtdltn G li, 16 AmN G II l SJ JM L<>Qm s io.y es APL pf 9 50 Bll<kb 1¥'1 lt\(o 16"' Mfl Pocol 1 I 3 ,ji Anchor Group C•nod J) 15 ll 15 ARA Svc t 06 ."' •• '. '' '"OJ Ml llt ly 11)'1ol~1 CtPI Ill t6l CeDI lll61116Arci!I Ol~ " Miik' 11oll" Gwt1' 111?12 95 Mut 14Ml4MA ch Dtnl LEGAL NOTICE p 1Ct71 C'fltTl,ICAte OF •USIMlll ,ICT ITIOUS NAM• Th• und1"l1nfd dou <~",., thf 11 (""~vet 119 a bulll'llu at 111 W Htm tto" ST Co•ll Mtu Ct llcrn 1 lo"<ler Ille f!ctlllovs I •m n1m1 of ,t,l $ TMOM-'S S-1.FIETY SERVICE 1fld "''' » d I m It tomPO!e<I "' ~' fol ow noi ~e wn ~t n1t'M " lvH •rid Plott ol tf!.lde11ct II 11 lellow• f'•I"' C.1ud•nll ,,ill M net SI Coo a IJru C1 ! 01 tel Ml Ch H 1911 E1lh• G1J1Jdenl STAT E OF CALI FORNIA ORANGE COUNTV 0• Mil <II II lfTI Mio,.. ml' I Ngl1rr Pub c I" ""' l(J u d 511 t .... IO"I! V 1111111 "3 EOI•'' G1udcnll ~~OW" ID .... IO !It lhl ~I ID~ Wh<fll name 11 1ubtcr!tofd lo 11'e w TM" ln-•lrv,......,1 tfld tcknowltdlt<l .tit tX•Cu td "'·"'-IOf!!tl•I .St•!) Ml"' It!~ MO !O~ ND!ln" Pvtl t t1 l!O•nl1 P lnclco.I O!l!ce in 0!1"111 (OUft!V N'-v COIY!m uic>I\ E•~l•tl lo~ II ' lt71 Pull!""°" 0,tnt• C1>11•I 0• IY Plot N• c1' lt H Apr I 1 t 1'71 '•11 ~~;;-,Of ~-;;,;;;NGS i~ WHOWAll WAllHOUSf ,\ OPIH TO THI PUIUC ~ 50°/o OFF " l"t L IDINOl!R SAHT,t, AltA ....... llS-Mtt DIALElltS WANTED REAL ESTATE SYNDICATIONS SI 000 t• S10 000 T111t Siie! ,..... l.ol &t~ 111"9ftM!lh. Lhl rllftMnMr 111m.s" ...i1 .i.t. .._ th-w!M .. vollty C.tl fM eppolllt-llt ta 4h<"" ttlk iype of proftt.tilo hl' MT llf l11tt1tlftetrt wftti e prof1Y ...... lOllll M AlMSTlONO, 5'46-llOJ 962 JIOJ ...._Ylll ... lMll.,._ WA ENOUSE SALE KOi CARP HllQI •h p_,,I OI <iolorlul 1w mm no ewt 1 1 mual fl)f t \ Aqv.< 11ah FROM s1.so VISIT US •1tOM 11-S-Clftffl Tut1 Pacttic Goldfish Farm I 1-.U Elfwlf'lll S! Wn!"' n1ltt Oft l'llc Sin 0 eg.o F •IWIY u C.Oldtriwur " 110 .. "•71H • LOS ANGELES -Record sale.s and earnings for both the company s fourlh quarter and the fiscal year ended Jan 30 were reported March 23 by Broadway Hale Stores Inc Edward W Carter pres1 dent of the nahonw1de retail merchandls.ing firm a f s o reported the fonnat1on of a new credit sub s1d1ary, Broa dw ay Hale Credit Corp to finance customer accounts receivable of the company Broadway Hale !I r111al 13 weeks of the fiscal year ended Jan 30 recorded $235 413 000 1n consolldated sales up 5 6 percent from the ct>mparable per1od last year Net earrungs in the fourth quarter rose 6 9 $11806 000 previously Earn lngs per common share for lhe quarter were $1 16 'VS $112 last )ear tn the same Firm Hires Consultant Gtor_le B Storer J r , New~ Beach a fonner president ()f Storer Broad casting Company has been retained as a consultant by Hughes Aircraft Company Storet will work on a con ~u!Ung basts with Dr Albert D \Vheelon vice president and chief executive of the company s space a1td ct>m mun1cations group and with other executives in the areas of tele\ 1s1on and cable TV as apphed to Hughes' pro- posed domestic com mun1cations satelhte S)stem I ast December H u g h t s Aircraft filed a proposal with the Federal Communications Comm1ss1on for construction of a domestic satelhtt com mun.lcat1ons ~ystem costing $50 tn SMl m1llio11 to provide a multiple d/\ers1ty program to c;able telev1s1on operator$ nation"' 1dt Storer 4S 11erved as prts1 dent of Storer Broadcastin~ from 1961 to 1965 Jn 1966-67 ht' was chairman of the board of Northeast A1rllnr-s HIGH TECHNOLOGY STOCKS lN THE MARKET NOW A. tal'lt. ~pon~cred by SUTRO & CO JNCOR PORAT ED The speake1 w11I be RoU Wlnterle,lt formerly Group Orrector of Res.tarcb 1or High Tec:h rt0lo1Y at Hayden Stone, Inc. and now a Rq1steted Reprnentlti'ft ot Sutro & eo. Th$ mm111& will be held at F.a&hlon Isl.Ind Newport Beach l1l1nd Hous-. In Bid&. ~81 Ceater W.11 •t 8 P W. oa Monday ApcU ~ 19 7 l SUTROftCO tn~~£ID 210 w~ ~street. t.L.. ~ • (113') 6'25.n1 i l11n111tr1 l li1 9 w, ln<m• I 31 •,,Luth llro n la ll •9 A 1, P$• 1 ot r 11 lurn 5111'1 ).tV,1' /IN.fl/Jt Cf 10o11~ Fd n't •1l10 1MflMI In 9ot f9?A an5 OS penod or assuming U con c c L••' 11'4 1111 M• 11 M ll"' l•V. Yen• ~1 ii 11 s1 M•nh n s 31 ~".., '" R hOv version of the preferred stock ~!~i!¥ H 2!~ '!\oo ~.~ 0lP 11 , 1• '"' o~ .._1 •" s 15 ~~' Gt~ 111, 112 Armco s 1 1 C111n M I ll\'I IS McCo ),t S6V. .... Wi n gn '36 ~•MC Ult Q "' me pf 2 10 $1f1/ a .Share Compared tO C•ntoOn ll l1 Ii McCu1y 76)1/ FndA !IS Free~ 16Jf'6it.m•IC-IO 1 '."''' O '" I'~ Mid c t-t 9 ~ 91/o Ffld I I ? Ill lm!ep 6 it 1 ll .i. mC-pl] IS 1105 astyear " "''"MtdlcM ?S\76"' Stotl< 6 3 6~ M111 lllill•!AmRv ~O Cfp Ml" 11\\ 21.. 3i ~ ll"-Sc on • M S 16 Miu l ne 1J ll 16 J9 A 0 co 0 YQ Consolida\ed sales for the CtP Swtr • 'r • • ::::~1;" n 11 , 19 41aab•on t && 'fMI Mt'• G1!\ n 10 1111 Arvin Ind i d J CH>,,Arl••• ll llil"°~a•o<~ li593'M1nTrH5SU'IOAs•a&1w f1scal)eare11ed an 30rosec•ole<: 3~ J\\~~1'~wn 11 .,,0 .,~tacn t1 llJSllJSMaei •M 1s.,,.1.,oc; 20 35 t t $662!66()()()C•1CP •• ~I I c 10~1~J~acnM l•Ul•U/\Jlhf 1'071 •0'A9dSpl10b f pe$6r39ce66n J 0000 th e OUS c',',,"G'o' lol ,' Ill ::::~,:,, I ? 1 1'°"(ie t K•n t •6 9 ''1M d A.M S 98 6 S<I A.ua T ln~p rom tprv1 Md GI '~n~lo l<G!\ .w 7MMoo<h1 161 A CvE ll6 (IC NC. II• !l"o W 5)\.<S)l,O.l)O"d'!~ 610 I OMooc!Y• llOI All R'MOl Year while net earnings gain ttvneh c s Hb ::::1 P MY\ 11 , ~a• n sik 'll ' 4 M F Fd 1 9' ''' ... 11 11 011 Pll '° Ct""' 141,U Ml I 11 cl? ~o• Fdn I 1•1114MIF Gh Sil I 'Alas Corp ed 42 percent to $23087000 tnYI ~s 1' ""MG"iG~ lS 1J'43D• Fnd 1•3 t11MuUS "" llOll l ~ ..... ,.Ot Pod $22 I•• 000 J t CtnY Ltb 11'-!; U •Ml RT H 'lo 8rwn Fd l 15 4 11 Mu Om G Ii 6 :n A1,1tomtn lod VS 'tO as year Ch1nct A 21 \ 21'o M :~ \/ G ia \ II._)~ lot~ (1 v n Mu Omln 10 69 11 62 AYeo (g p E h CllertOll I~ l '>M R 1 1 71, Bu e-l19U «Mu!Sh> U'5"HAY<:opl".ll'O amings per common !I are c""'" L" io, 1 ••Mo ~f 11~ ~ ''""" 19 !IO 1 1' Mui r " 1 oo 'oo Averv Po 20 for the 52 "eek year Were ~~:~: Uni 1!"" 1; • M:gw~ Iii 'r-~ i~"" ~-·~ S 1J ~ i: J; ~;,A l~ul 1~ n i; ~ :~~ ~"'i Id $2 Of compared to $ I 9 9 c111 erldt NI(, atv. =' e c~i 1 1 fl NY 11n1 • 11 11 •I N•' secu St• Az"c 0 1 ni CMllgn 141,111-tM s " uv,8u1 MGI 111 Ill 911an 11'2114 previously or fully diluted Chr•S• 11 ns Mcit~in K tltll'lt c. Fund 10111ou Bond soj ss $200 this year vs $197 last~h~:sMc~ 1~ 1~~'~:;,1:~ ~1•2~111 ::•mG111 ~!; ~~ f~f~ ~~,~~l!~~w1 ~1 B th f I t d { lnUt A 11 ~ 71 1 5 6U, op Sh I Jt 111 Pt Stl: 16G I ll llo I GE l S1 \ear o tna quarer an c 1nu111 11.11•.:::;g,'~,% 11 ,1,.,centv Sh 1?96 1•16 ncom 5U 1011i.n110 Punt fi scal year results are based ~i!u~n~' ll"' i;,, :::;ve ~ P 3'! 1~ ~ h:::;;v ~~~~'u 01 Ni'~t th ::: 1~l: l:~:P~fi' 11 on 10 013 000 a1 erage common c, ,'.',", 1 ,•, ,•,~ M~•P LE lo\ 31 c ..... s' 1 it 1 •s Ntuw ce1 6 11 1 01 e• orc11 l ii ...,NCC ln.d 1 1 11~ (lrwn SJ? ~OlN111w fd 1121llllB1n~of_liV ! shares nutslanding this year Cog• •• 'i>'h N•ra; CP 6., 1 1ncom , ,, t •• Ntw w d ll l• H., 111n• lr 1 tj d Jo 009 000 l t Co n F<I U • 16\1; NI Car l't Q 10 ~ Scee t'O 'OI N...-DO U (.] U '1 fla !10 l l an on I as year CD on s' lt ll\'i N•1 V&O 11 !1W ~ •• , G l o• ' ... Nk~ SI ' is Ot lS Ot 81 "CR B• Come JI !t'I N!-1 '~~Caci Ill ""NO<tll l ll lJH li 61$C~tlG Coml S~ II~ lt~'Na ts~ d 4 0,1 Fund 100• Otl0cn1ph ut1•~•I BI•< on xi Com C.•t 11 ll N" Ml!<I "'• ll\t Fr""' 19 11tl11 meta I IS 611 Ba rs Mfg Co"'W Pa 1'1<'1"'N P••I 1) 116 Shn d 1 'tlltl100 Fund 115Uf0Bte•Ml pl Com.., n U l•l'IN Se<Rsn l!o 1 ~DtC ti\ 061101 Fufld ttol011B•~'l<I 10 Corn P•v IS~ l6 Nat Show ? 0 ~ ntm d 1111 lt ti Ont WmS U j..115 So6 111 ~" oil 50 mo! Cm JS l!\l)N• s y ltS~~Cg"'"~ •• ,.oNe U6!ll!SB•~•chlb 10 Cmo> Int fttsJ\\ N EnvGE: 10 ~• Eo~ v •• Ooornh I Jl 110 B••l lftb (mp T«: , ~ t'-1 NJ NI (, 1• c "" Fund l ll 1?., OPO .i.rM 1121 ll ll BIY~ c I 50 Com es 1 l l "" Nlch sn F JO 0 JMo Grw h 6 11 1 ll TC Sec 10 'f I • llo~r "'' I (gn P1~ ?l'H :ttYI Ne sn A •I ,, l~com t ~6 lg~~ P•<f Fnd I JO t 01 lle•!Fns 1 U C!>I\ Rock 1' '1 ll'h N ts" B •S •S>Ao VenG • I~~~'' 1' P1ul Rov t !1 10 12 9tCkma~ ~ Con1r1n 1 o 3\/0 NoCar G• 11 ll"o 0 u ~ Pen" So I IQ I .IO llKI Olck JO Cooo lb 1J~)j NEU OH l w. oms Bd 521 566 p. Mui S11 l JllPeCflAr n Cc ...CO JI._ ll •NW NotG 10: lllllt wit~ All 0 l IS Ph A lJ U 111 llt coPll ~b (D•P S •-'II! NWP S ??•11,,.wthC ll019Sp 1 m I0361Jl llt dngH 60ll co,mVs ''~lO'No•r"c: S) sJ>;,xMlDA• 999l09Splnt S 12111 lle!How6CI Insurance Firm Sales Revealed CtwCo 11 ll•Nu!~lc lO l'ilo~....,PCD 72S7 9l p0n En! ltol6JB•ll~lrctl" co•• Co 31'!, J1~0o lvy M 30 ' li'o omo l!d 901Gl9p1on F"d l?701llJll'!ll' Co •O Cru! Rn I\\ I\\ OMo ,t,rt t•~ 10i.o. omP Fd 10 ?l 1 11 p •n '"v 1 n lJ lS !lend• 1 ~O New York Life Insurancc '"''"e.r '"10 'oho Fe r 10 •1 • ~~~ 1;:=1;::P•" 13 1'1t S1~i~K::1160 " 5~~acIT, :1~ ;;'tg~,s~.~ 1;· 1~1~ on1 Inv 11121111 P oc;.,,~ulld' Ufll\ll lBene11 11!510 Company sold $1 058 717 669 cf O•"IY M 1i"" ll It OJfllt T•c s ~ ~~ ~~~t~u~ { ~ ~ ~ N E , """"' 1 g:~~' 3:, \3~ 01u co lD\~lOl\o tti M! ~.., '"'~ Glh 101~ 061 N Hor """"'l11en1.,., life insurance to Cahfom1a 0111 o.n N 6'o•mon in .. 11-. ont L~ 158111 Ja Po Fund 10 19tO"serk•! ,~ de d Of11Gen ~3•1~ !trTP 2\•11orPc'11111j11"0PDll 1l'07119,1h 1 ;o res1 nts ur1ng 1970 ac 0111 Pk• '""•~°"''NA 61\ '" rvwOpv 1 1 6t0P•ovt1nt '" so 11 ~lhr.• 60 01r1tn P ''" 21'1oxvCt! 11• u ~ "woi 721711 Pru.'.I P lO*"ll U s~<~OkU cording to Wilham s Cosen 0fY. I'd $'• t P•bSI B• S•l.4 ''" r: h I IC"' 10 .. Putnam Fuf'ICI• II. rJOf!" • DtY" lrll 9 70 Pac c; l'tO JO) 11 1tveit C. Eou 115 I'' Blln Lt111t 1 1 General •tanage f th 01lu• c 15hcl6-,P•~co ..., 7'hcie11w1r1 01111 Geo•t 116111 .,11 ockHll .l6 1no n r, () e Df.cor In 10 10Joo Pineo 2~1~ Ctc•I n • ll J.6 C.tth 10 s111.ss Bl~e e11 110 ·~ rl 8 h O.Klb "'}(I 50~,..,io1 o 1~ lv. D•r" 1~;:1~U 1ncgrn 111 tOleobb• ark~ company S lll:Wpo eaC Oelhl 0 I l? 11'-'o Pe k o~ llh 12"' oft ~Ok (5 il l5 91 Invest I 01 I 1't llo. "'Co •G G.ner.I Off 'CO Ott Ctn1' 11"ill\'p1 ~1 H Pio lh> 9l li,l 1'9l \11111 I SS 014BclsC1' ?!.ti ' 1>91 lnlll• n 1l>tplk\IGI 11\~n ••• , llOYlt ,,. 1011....., 1"'1 D-y E1 :J'/o olllplkW H l\'1 t Orey! Fd 115Jll1J R•Yll lt1012:UeDC>l<Mlh ,. Total life jnsurance 1n force o •m c v 11 l• 1t Pai F1111 21b ,,.,., Dr•v1 LY 11 :i&11 1• R1ntre 16 02 11 :11 Botll•n 1 :io 011111 AP ~ no PaultY ,. t\t 1v. •81on:Howr0~111 , kh111tr u lO 1111 &or11H•r 11s with New York Life 10 o G' Of! •t o SI\ P1Y•lle u 1te1• G' ~ ll 11 1, 11 Scuddtr F11fl(lt llwm1n 10. Dist Inc • l IV, P•vl or 11\li 1• rw In lnY Vft.1¥1 &ol;,IEll I 1 l6 Call'·rn•a reached J high Of Dlxn ( U 11 ui.. PHtl Ml U ll~~ lt'IC~ ; !i I~ n SDd :UJO :MJO 8M l'd Oii tt IU • Oocvtitl 10~• 100.0 P"'1t• T l2 31 ,,pe l OI H JI lltl U ()<I 16 ()<I &wr111 111,. 17865867606 at th. end Of Oontl lJ 17 11°"Ptnn Pot 14 1Vr :totd~ 1!5,,$,$ (Ml SI 1G~1l0.1111re"I Alrw Oow Jon• ., I " Pl o .. w 11-..a111i ", C.t I ) II 1' I! S.cv !ty Fl.Ind• ,, nSt l 00.. l t OCI'(!• 06 1•~, )! ' Ptot ew • • Eciuly l" 1.oi II Ill My 1 '10 as year ounk ln o 1• ltllo Pt 01 1 51 _uv, mt SK ' st 7 20 lnvttf I .11 '1t 8•j11Mv cl 1 I 1970N Y kLf d o.tftll'P I~ 13'p~lb0t! U\11 111,\j::nta• 1Jff 1Jlt Ulrl 1Ml'111r1Ptl 30o n eW Or I e pal Our Iron 1~, 16 o PhH Sub 11 , ])41, ~lllOfJ• I /1 I JI Sele< Am 10 00 10 12 llrP1! '" JOI ll.3 M•21otoCal1forn1aEZl>1 nt .... ''Ph ll!>GI ,,,1~ aulv t!Jlo,os. S11'CS lf..•JllSl9'1WrH•t ;o>,11;1 Eitlll $h IP11Cltl'oph<fon JOii 10'-fQut Gt~ tl•l ll Senl1 0111 17] fltec!wvMel pl, policy owners and I h e I r Etitrln 111 p., ' Plldm! " 6,,. 61\ au,' dP 0 1 • ~ i ~ Sllell'I Fd n 11 1111 er•w.-Gh 1fl l!"<OI' Lotl 11~Ul1p ~1rr1n 11 n ~·• a IO!QIO!fs.r.tar Al> 31H :U'21111;fvnUG 112 fam1heaunderl1feandhealt.bE,,uctsv ,., ''~P1111" 1>1i1•\lo '"' u 111 O.•n 11111•111trownco I £Pat £1 19• lJ ~ Por ..,K 11"" 71~,. dt Oel I l5 ii<lt 10 H 11.lO llwnSIYP '.)(I UlSUrance po 1c1es £f!>j1 S••I , ~ 1'\ Pou 1 M u, t ~ ""•ctotuv Gl'Ollf.i ',,... FuncH 11w11~1>o1 1st 1 b N Ekler 9e '' l\loProt p li"-lS°" CtDI l) 1373 C1pt tt1!0to11run1wl< 11 Life insurance 93 es Y ew Ei.t N11tl Ul't H Pro c;;011 1 , •14 con;~d 1! ~ l~ ~ 1nvnf 11 '5 n n 8uc.Y Er 1 :io Y kLU.lnlb.untedst.tes Eltcltm • '"'P•\111 Mii ~~ 1~ EIS ,.,.,,, •v101•eudcl Co Or I £1't Mod •'r S P1,1bS NM tt\t 'J ~vrs lln U"sm h II 10111C'ltl\ldd (aofS Puerto Rtro and Canada £1iret Ch "• s Pubs NC ''"''1"~ Plctct ~::i::;=swu '"" t111e11 wuF p1.10 EmpS 0 ! 11U, l•"o Publlht 1 ~ 7'4 11' n Swlnv GI 711 111 ludDet 11'111 reached an all lime b1gh of Ent•.., c :io Jl't P1.1r.... '""to\\ s.i.m 1" 4 u~....,. 1nv 1)111~ne11ttFo Q 111 Enttf¥ R 1 ., , \ p llellntl 11~ ,. Tr~"d 'A n,, (II S...elrl 1 .... 1111ul0¥•W '° $7 blllJOn 6{ m1Jhon In 1970 £ntw 1J! • 0 l'lo P1,1!0 Clo> t\1 Siii ln1ncl1I p~l • ff S Frm GI \IMIVI I unkt ll1mo ed h u bit 57 "Ptco In • ., •'.11.o...1 CM. u 11111 Pd~~' ~ff ~3,s111c s1 •7tJ"'111~11 °','.!' compar Wit TV I ion "•uh< 011 1 , ,, 1 RT s~• 1 o 1, ~ 1'.16 , u Steadm1n F11n<110 9u .. '"" - mllllon In J"""' New York l'•I• T..: 7 ' '" R•.-" Pr 10>0 01i1o t11~''f' ~ 11 • ,1 Am I/Id 1" ..,,. '"'l~~· ~~ lftH' FPA (~ t 'tt "1ollahatC llo I nv l!J01J 7' Alto F 13611/1911 oro Life. as'etS reached $JO Fl (KO ? ~·? t ll1~1tit !" 11 ?I SIFd 1 F!duc 1 .S I Ii llutnd• J'O f1brt (Ir 1 ~ 1' ~ ll•~c~ (p 110 l ~ 51 l~v~s"' ' S t " llDll Fd•G 9urrth~ ,~ b!lhon 741 mJllJon In 1970 and Fob T.it 1>o 3"' 1t1ymfld ll~ ltV. g,!!o~ : ~: ,~ s: !111 70 U lO ll 1"911 Un" 1 f '-"• •lfY I[ 11 111 Rttot E o llV.cl? Sloe• 10 ll 1 1n C•~ Col • 61 t '1 the compRny I t e 1nsurance "• r 111 ~ ""'""• 11 'n ~ '•' Mu , , ., t n ~toe~ ,, .. u • ~abOI ,, 1o 'n fore. reached an all time I' f\111•" l~, 1 Rt .. E°"V I o I\\ 0,1 Na 1 11 t y SV!I •Ml ln1• .. I. Odll!CI Ind ~ "' 0t1 1 ' l l Rtl C•Od '° S "'' 5 e , •~ • ~ 65 urlll _,. 11 fin.on! hl•h Of <U b1lllon ""'"'' 1J~11 R~r Pu 1• !f lt t "'" ~ 1 Su"'! 10'911!M 1111hn Mno • ""1 c" tin• .. I• !loo~ E• 11 11 ·~ ct! <= d 1 " Tttl\ 'I 151 lfn(llt~~ .~ r1u•~lli '•"ll obnM 11 1l'l1ac:•~ '"67,S¥n<rGllDUHClic1mpSe 10 .. , .. "''• '"''''"""'o" t\ l '>~nd r:~ •61 se1Tl>ll AP nn110Jc.on erirw .:i '-"JPMt 11~ :in )' l!ous• ., ~ ,,,. Fr ""• , r ... e Tt1ch • 10 n 1 ll Cdn Pac l JD Ftl'M ... , Ulo '"""C>W'" In ''.,.. C.rwtn UI) ''1l1Khntl l lG '"cdn P tf\l30 1'!Wn'-" '4 l llus 510¥ """" lntOIYI 1l fl1S20ftmc Gt flS6'1'2~1n1IR 11C Flcl(""t .,~.,... S•dlll l • J>~ Mu!ol lti 9 17~owr Mii 161) 6lt IP (lld(" "1T•I t•1?• Sc1n01+ 1~ 1'' SP!CI 10H1100T1nC11> 71615' l'bN~l~ F!aW~1 t -> •"'k•nn (I !-11 $Vt!'ou 1<1_ 169111 .. •••Ell lGIOlllO 1 1111 iG """"' f P • • \ ~ctioll In J•• I F •n~lln GrwP TVO&r I'd 12 4 ll M troC&Oh $ ""'"' 0 1"•1~~Stle (D~ ,, 1~ DNTC t26\CUTw..C: Gt lOS l.31 1•0 \Ll 1•6 ""'" •••Seo Son Jll.,) (,w~ 6J1 1111 fw~C !"C l a.t 1'-l 1rn r< ioO ~B r "' )'1 1' Sc P"• M ~ II U ~ 6 o IM Un ! Mvt IC IS 1 60 a erCP 60 Laguna Banker Takes Reins "" ....... • • • ~rlD 0 • • • nco"' ' ' ',. Un 0 10 .. 11 6J C~rlW• IOA Robert H P\ kc wa:\ elected " "'I c~ 1 , 11 1oc1 Pn 'I\•" 11 For Oen o 60 o 6t u"~ ~., " P ~·~ eC~ llOb bv the board Of dl -ctors of " nkl .. "I 1 '''' Se• 11 " ,, ' ,~ .. r~....i ~< c. p 11 o•~ i. n ls 11 ,","cT' i in '" ""'" • '"$1 •Conl •loo l• ,~,..m t\1101• N•l"\1~0115( OP th. O'angc County E••row .. "'<! .. JI'\ l" ••ne<• F '~ 6•1 tmPtC 1 l) '11 u" ,,. IO" ll u CCI CJ' pl ~ "" <'• .-..,,. ..... i'loS..~lt'" l_, 1 ltllf l d 11'11•.§ol Wll1~ l)ll tJl C:9UCorp I A Ill d t f t'\ .. """ ,. "" \...: Gro l 14-p 0 ltl 1n IJolld funcl1 SJllflt•K• s,oc a on 1s pres1 en or ... : 1~~1 '"' ,, ~.,, 11 61 ~ 11 .,,,, ~m , •1 , ! "''"' 1 15 • ~ ~· '" ,., .... .so 197) r;.JSVC 111i1'*"~""' RIP 11~1} lllW~ OOfl\010 (Coot 10 a~1 ·,~;(:~~0F~~· )I) d -~ n..,, ••r l"'''"~• °" nc c HUOl .. He 1s Ilic ccrllfit senior •-~ •1bA l ll«l it "corn u1$111,:~Hlt!~ I ~ "" ttln "'"vno:rr-fd• tOGI °"'""' ,. • ~tc St M ~ O IUC IL! Pl•50 t~cro11,1 off1«'r for \Vor d ,,av ,,(tot '°' 'llO•• 1111 '"' .., r11 wh ch ~,.,.. ~ 1 t •• Vt"' • 01 10 • c';,-1 ,.~ 1 10 1nas and Loan ASSOCl:lllon • ' I •llrd ~ 0 ~h•r• IOI\ •nd '' •l<'d ~~..!" • " • "r~=?.e (t"rr 1 :~ t IC (~n 1£ j e !n I t 01V10ENOS t •inn •I ra!f ( r" .. 1_. : 1 \/f tn r l 111 CPn.Y.Pw 110 t f!gunii. Brarll "here Ile ha ~ ""''~·~ 0 ~ ........ ldrn• flftl 11 D "l ~ nd ? "" " n,c.... I I-ii ~Ill ~;~:s~~!, 1 ma1taged their escrow de pf!. rt .. 1• 1bf 1111<l1l'ff .,.. ~le 10 ll "'" ~ • ~ 1 16 ~ ,~ •1 sc ~"' '" 4 l) C•nl e u tab yoor flC rn~ t ~, (C) ""vrn•rtt Of' -t•-Vn •~ I~~;~ (trro CP lG ment ror the. past sill' years 1c~umv11tM 1ovl!lf'l'llh1 <JI •1d ••' "~ "~1 •,. • 4 1~~~.,~ ,,1 s11 Ct 11~ .., JJe hU had OVer JS COn "'"'I It~ (ISh ~V' t1ocll (O l•~Ull r~~ ;;•: v: e.<IP ~~· $~11fr.\"t1~llO •••D •ll°"'llv<Stnd !M.,.ldllll•,,.r fd 1 111,.,v~ .. ~ 4SI I Sc.~idbn l~( !':CCUtlve yearll exper1enct' 1n ''''-''"'' 01v1.,,,...,, oml11•<1 ii,,. 1 r 1 1~· i n ~ 1w~1s 1~ 1•1 '"lcn~11b<'t~ ·~ the: escrow held w1lh bank c.n t In •toe• 1111a 111 r•• 1-1 " ~ ..... c:or i'. ,•.: :Z: t f>fr"nu c.~: ... • 11 C~•"'o' ti ~G' Ind I t t'"'' !ft nOt:t nl n """"rvpnor.-.,..,. ,., •• r.~., 1 <11•••~,.~:.'~.~~ 1 epen( en CS<:rOW eomp~n\ er •tflh p Of r~1tn I• hi~ \ utD Ill -I ~ ! I !vPI U ' 'C. ~l>•Ml I O'lo ~nd sa\ ings :.ind loa n :issoc1a a u•!bv11on t•1 ••'(!Iv t1on111 •w 1 .. ...-"' "'~ • i 1 ~ n ;ICh• .. , 1• wi.•n u"ld Jwll "'•tr•"' "' "' Ir~ 1 U ~t(hV 111•• 11 01 ci.~,... on tl(lnS " .. •Cl ON! ... nOl•ltt IO OW fMf~ ;-~ ~ Wot•• 50 l&<r"~""~y l lt f \ ~C S\re~St'S the gnal!r. (If n911 t II I ~I on " l2n~1 l ~ l'Od c1t,1 ,.~ v,,.;: 1 •v• W• I~ 1' .... !1" ~::wv;;•~ I' th I '' t f h loll10n"Mlo11rt11lrtc10111n1•~1 !•! .,. , ~ , W'l(I 10"1 l"~"'' (l~• e a!IS/IC 3v0n ~f(' () Urf er to low1~I f IU,.. I• 1,.c! Oii II\ jj61"1 T V 11 IWo\! NI • :: ';, ~~1·r.~ 1 ~I tfeveJop flrQre!l$HlMAh~m hi ior....-1"'111\r,..ltfrletletlll!lttlhll _,,;" ;:.1 :••;,::11~:d ~A• t oir.,1M 8\hl> lhrou•h cduc11t1on ;ind li lan 10 loldk•'-• 1o111N,,. '.,.,, 1• •••dlol\ ""'· • ':, 1 w 1t Fd a • .. '~ / ~h ~, ti! 1t111t.. r ."'I , , ... """ " J"' J~• 1tlr'lt~' 2 dardll:lllon ~-..ci....... ,, •A1 ltt1lff' 10 .. 1111 """" u• JG iOJ940 --l o SJ 5•"• 51 • -11 , .. , .. 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'~ :~. ,,•, lit ~'· l '<1110 •Iii lQr 01 ll"'t J6li 31 ... ¥<\Ol2t12 l' .. ni.JtJ\~J ??< IC~ lf•o 00 -l 1Q ll'O ;>O l •S •• ' •• OloJ 1 '7 •l • •• n 10 ," •02'1 l3 1 l 1601.cee O!t'~lf o $1 7 3141 ,,,. ..... + s• u~ u .,1i• • .1 n. i., 11 , _ ll ll JJ Jl l<ll lJ'I s • """ )IUU 1 36• !111)$7-1 II ]I 11 JI~·~ -ll •• " ' n ,l . n ,_ n~1 .n"-"' 1 o f 11 ! .. J~ l• J4 .. •• I l\1 ., •l 1 5• !• )< > I l ~ ' " 1 .. •1 n 11 I o ~ ., . t 11 )I OJ h 1 I 8 Ill l!t<• ~ • 1 1)69r ~ ~t: ;: 1 _JI • lUC ll ll , •• u 16 1•\o ) Jt • ,. IH 'I 2 o " l • JC • JJ 11! 'l ' , . .. ' ' Jl • 11 )1 0 ~ •jl:J J 1 • ' h • '3Jflr~' j 0 •• I ('(I 10 '" " " " '" .. , " ' . ' " . .. ' -?• • _. 1~·· ~ ~·­" ' " .. ' -~ '" ., I ,,,, ... , .. " " \ J1\t •• " ' " " •• 1C r~t'-C11 I l(l/1.1 , lll lo;nt~ H ))9 IO.Qoell "' l(OPIM 1 00 lo:.01 •COf• !>d " •• to 1 io lo\ n••S~ " I( Ofl'llt I( Olt • l~ G•• •! am•n ~~' l • •ii n 61 ltn•I!: 61 • on• ~ l•• set so l••~gpf71) I •fl<O (11 P •• (0 Dl?XI l•nt,.•• !.Cl l fll'ChN )0 •• °"' •O LrnPCem al) .,,v. llG 1nr. n 1~ l •nc~ nc so Lr•' Fd c~o l••F..: I» Ll'E CP L bOFd loOtl l ~ 01' p. ll l LbMCN t I 0 v(p 10• l"" I• Ln l ll<Ln p!I 'l Lll9 Mv ISO ''" , ... pf 7 l ~Ell 1 «1 Mol~ Nt ' l"tH ~ll l nl Tiff' V l ~tlV 4 • n1TV pl I on• Co P lto..l"<l 501 L l onPt Pl llonp9) lox~~tr<I A loew1 (0•11 I lonOOf'lwn IOM ~Ctrn I l OMSC.t l )f t on1l1l! ! ll I.or• Co P l•ltn<I I ll O<l•G E 16l ctj No•~ •• to"'"'" 'II l11111' IP 10 Luck~ St 'OD LU'lllow 1 OI l.u-... •11 10 l um• Inc LVO COIP l Ykt> Yngi l Lvkt• Yn11 or rr!dir April 2 t m SC DAllV I'll.Of JS_ Frida)'~S Closing Prices-Complete New Yor k Stock Exc hange List >IN> ... , I ·-... , tM•' "•• l•• o.1•"" Stoek Leaders '"'"' ""' L-c-.. °""[••••••••-••,.. .................. [ 1t, 1~ ~r_ H ~ Pt10ST SHARES ~11111 Do.o11 v, ' 1 • r,. T11con 1 1 n !lo u i.tt·: l<\ldCh' "'' .. ) ,, • ' M k M" d Tl ltY "" • II • .. ITOClll IM TMIJ ll"OTLIOHT ID(L In ''° ., .... . •l. -ar et IXe 1•111~"'8 I .Iii• :i,. )Uo 'lo NEW ¥0111( t,.,_•l-Stloi llOtl ... p (' Soctwor -. Ar IN J 11~ jl:W -, ~t .... E '° J' ti• II , 11 , -._ '"° .,., """" of ll'lt fll •l!'ft mo• I( "•.,vt '°" ,,• ,,',"" 1t , 11·,• _-•,, ll'odw COf1 ll 41 fl •'"-+ o _.. I OCkt. IOfd Oii ,,,. NY SIOC~ ~ k l I GD I le i' o 611 l •...,Co *) If? S /Slo ~ 1 tjl~'"" Stl" 11 ! :io. J 1 to! , h'°" M" + 'lo TKl\Mtr Off n! n ' ~~"' 41 t 1 ; fe':,~'~or1 r'J1: ~· t ~ l'~fo11"nc"'10: 1!~ n: !,.~ lf\' ~ •i t:=: ci -l -N1 11m11 11 fOO •' +•'-Iott""'! • ll lt'o JD s;_, + , Tt l.,,._ tlll Unv1y(mP tlO)OO JD ,• _.IV\Sll<tlOl f.-0 •1 1•0 SG'o5t \-Vi I L" I T d. Tll..i-9*' lo )l 7)" 1' 1 -1 UnM Coro U lDO 1t + \~ 5111 T• I 1k I Jl, Z1 1 U I t lo g t T.it .. (J 1 ~ ,1 ~ ~:'"~,, J', 111!: :::. ~ ( tr:"trG"' ~ 1~ ~ • ti ..: ~~: n 1 1 1·a mg ~:=c~ 1'L 1\ 'j• '• ' •k Co• 12!_"°00 •I ~•• Slle KO p ll i li I Jo o 2•~•-• T-w!A 91 t ,Co~mC.t• •• ll _,,.S~ttw Wml ~•'Ho •llo~+.+o Tt """'«JIJ541 ''! fl l lllo + o $Pe "I R/\a 'IAOO 31 o, 1 1 $""'W pl(.0 !'10 H &~ W l tlll<.'O l tO )9, "• Mol>w~ 01 ""°° 36 ~$Pllllt0f' eQll ti )Ol't 1' 30•+1 Tt ltl!TrR 11' 6S • '. !t . ··1(omPU S(! 19 »1! ll t ... $let• H l '. ,,,. llV\ -• T::&••l l n ' •, • i1 • J1... E~" ~ M ~ n )tlO ll , • • ti '"'• • • it11 + • NEIV YORK (UP I) -1he stock mark el closed • "' ~ •7 ~l• Jl .+ 1,.lldt ll•tl 14 )00 2'1 j"" •rt•rK u• 11 11 1 111.1 -i ·'° :?t "' ,. 1• • • • •0 • 0 a 1• 100 ,,,,, 1 • ~1:~:1 c: r ~ u *) ,..,. r.10 -" mixed 1n moderate trading Friday +•x<>cSlit / / l•\o I~ 'l Sl•r>Odt I 10 , d •I\ 4i\ -l r:::1!';1 u "1 "i"• 1$•,-~ ~mm t>K ll I 1 1 f tXO lO•• ·~ ~· '"' t••• • li~~ ..... '"tb ;i: 1f~ ,:: 1tli:! _," Analysts said thal for lhe most part \Vall Street }:;"~~, ,,, " 7 , , ~. s ...... c. 100 i" n 1 '''' ~s -,"" appeared to be awa iting the first batch o{ nuarterly Tti.1...., t0 • 0 1 11 , 11 Nwl"" • •) J It , It II -1 'o I nH p!J )Cl I I& ' 1 -ts h h h uld -~ Te~lf" ll'1 !II ,, 1 .. 11, 1 1, : N .. "o ~1cs 11 " 11, n , _ ~'"co .oo 11 lO • »'• )0 -• earnin gs statemen w 1c s o appear in about T'"~.I"•'' •1 .,...., "°' ,1 ,.i. Nw11n1>1•JO '",'" ~-• S~t/\I O t I I ot&.o n o"~' I k Th ts I d I d '"' 1•1 11 11 t Nw.s1w1>Q JI•,,, _,5~11cor• .11 , ... ,,,_~ \vo wees ese repor areexpece oprO\lt: Tt>omt•1 1•• 7• , .. ,, ,, '-"'on so 1 3 1 11 -\'ISl<Y ..... '10 1l n o :n'o n o ~'' Tl>Om11'4 1~ In " ' 11 • Nor s-~ /J ~ SJ\, J11.o -• sm n,to.O '•o • so . so .. .so .+-1 an 1n d1cation or whether President Nixon s game T"t>omJW .. ,, '° 7c.> XI • 70" \, ~!':, ',,• • ' l1" n 57 -• s,., ~ 1~ 1 '° u ''' I!; ~, plan for an economic recovery 1s on target Th• rt Of ' 0 l lO o 10 o 70 1 • IO ... lli.. 11 .. -f"'nSm ~I(~ l OI Sl ',__ ,'/,,'.',,'.'~ l' SI o 111> S. -"'P Smuck~ XI J 7• ~ 1' 1 --I 10 IO~ 10 \I '°'"' --Sol~ 11•• ~ ll 1' H o IS 1 -' T <flt n< 1 IO 111 111 1i• n11<1 ... "i~ E"' 4 • 10 11 10 ~·" 1 • ~ • • 1 -• Shortly before the final bell the Do\\/ Jones T rnt1M1r ~ rll It 1 111 4 ~ ckl Pt! b 101 :10 1 t\o 1th -'4 Sonr <o ; lOll 141.< ''"' '"' T m•1" lM 1 ,, ,1 ~ ,,.. _ • cidPt pf , l u 12 1, _ , ~1 1,,. , 1 1 •u ll'-:iw... 1ndustr1al average sho,ved a los! of O 28 at 903 61) ""'""' .40b Ill ll o U> U o -cklP pfl.a 70 62 ~ 11 11 _.,.!o0$Con• •II 11 U +4' S d p k d h Tob ""'clt 60 .. l•• 11 , 11 _ • <;.I!! ,llf2 ' • 1• ~ lJ'--1 SC•r EG , u 111 '"' """ '"" '• tandar & oor s 500 sloe 1n ex owever w as Tt1..,0E 1 eo i " ' 21 . ,1 .., ;;:;; J:'r, ll uu i.,.. i1\-. SoJ~r1no1 i s1 s '' llZ: 2J'• -\' ahead 0 21 al 100 60 Too11iu<11 "' ;t: ,:,: ~~ ,; ! + ~ loElll! 1 ~ J ~ ~\: ~ _: ~ t::..OW:n ': '; ~ D \I ~lt: =1~! l~~ '\!o ~ 11 l5 1 ll l! ll::EO DI l tO >«I 51 ll 51 -OkSOll•11•5 121 o lf 11 II y _.,,U 170 1~ 71 ' 71 .. 11 to GE I?• ~ 61 21 • 2Po 11~• + (o $....Cl E I~ 1'f4 ll'o ll>t U« Q ( the 1 643 JSSUeS ('f0551ng the tape 728 ad T • .,, W Ali l• , ' n .. itJ ' '~•GE oi 10 '"°, n~ n ' 11\.'il -,.. ~lh c. i ,. sn ,. 2m isu -' vanced while 610 retreated Tr"wA r •' "°° .. u •S·-~· lt~GI ,,. l'l n 21.\ n +"'s-i1 .. uE II) 11 lS'o JI "' ~ ... WFln...,. ! l1li ~ II'• n (MO U 2201 1'2 • )l•o 71 o Sol;N(;ll ! 00 1S $-110 !I \ SO o -o Tr1-r1 SJ • 11 t tt " 21 1 •k n "1 l1l• 17'• l1 • Sou Pie 1 IO 1• 0011 40\\ 00 ~ -' Trtf\Kon 70 121 ,,~ , •• , ... _ • 11t1a1L1 10 u u,_ ,. • l'"' $0U hrt1llY ,. s.i ,. n\lo '' +1 ~ Electronics showed scattered strength \I h1le T •111t 1 1"~ 5 )6, 16 16 4 Pflllt.1 I • ll o 11\o l o Soul~llY • / 1<o \!~ lJO -lrf.,.lr., J , ~ 1., 1 , + ~ •it1t 110 ~ n VI 3°', 2-], ~ = i s....uu .~ 1 u , 1l. :11~. 111. -~ome oils also attracted good demand Chemicals T •~11" ·• ., 111 ts ,,.., _..,,,. ~ t~ ' ~l " l·n· + ~ sw Af,.., ti ' u ~ I!~ .,.._ I I d lo II d d I T ·~~"'' ~~ ~. 1,. 11, + l~ ~:· u ''{ ffi! ~ ,,~ + \, swo Ps " •; l~'· :~'· \~,,., -s ee s an mo rs genera y tra e narrow y l,iCon 1•,J,J ' 35 n 'o n"~ + ... MT,"' •,, ..! JI 36h 3'!io -"' .~r::~Hu:i 1 ll .. •S , 66 + • I d f T I•~• nd IO '' "'• .... 111t _.. e~ na135 ,~ :IY> !ni! :m .t \; s';' yR "" "' 11 • li•• 31 • + .. Rad s air 1nes an a1rcra ts traded 1n both di ~-'!N 'i~ 1, l 1 4l •l•o '3 + t. O>lllA 60 1D uv, 11 ll'lo + \\SPrnut Ef :10 I>• ll'I Ill.~+ • \ hil d d ( I l Tll.V pf<.SO :10 16 1~'• '"' -ii• P•cG •• tDi ,,... n" ,, , s~u•r•O '°' 1G1 11 , " ~ ,,v. -• 1 ec ions w e copper an epar men s ore issues TllW ,u 00 1 w. :io. 2010 -P•ctn "" '° 11 71v, 11\1 21"ll -••S11~bb 111 so 1u n . rr;, """-" moved ov•• small price ranges r11w au 1J to 6>, •• ·~-..,,•1c llll l 60 5'16"\l61,\ol6\\+1Saulb0 8 pl? J1' It It -I ~ 1u(1~GE 72 Sl 611 6 o 6'1lo \ P•c•t I JOe )6 ~ 2'V. 2'" I"'""' j IO I li lO • 34 • w•nt Ct~! Sl •~ I I 1 +\ P1c•wl 121 61 '1'1 1•\ 21~+ 't ll•nd1 •• 1G do •1 ~ d + ~ p ( d d l I d h tyl,rCorv s1 'o 1n1 10 t +. P•< lw" ,..,, 71 11 111~ ,,111 _ , s11111rd "" 50 ',', ','," •,•, ', '•'• "'"+ ', ric es were s ea y 1n mo era e ra 1ng on t e -M--PK & 1" 70 90 70 • in o 201.0. + • ~ !!.•••Int 60 A Stock E h ' P1c T&To1 4 i», ''• ,.,"' ,.v.+ ~s1e1 1"11,. 11 10 ·~ 1••-• mer1can xc ange 1t l ,, " _,~ "•c TI" '°' n n "\SI~ ICollfl"•• , t ' ' ,:~[•••••••••••,. ..... .,.,.•a•••••••amlO••I '' 17 t>o' I• "'•lm9c/\7S •Oll o ll o ll .. -\l ~IO IC1 l llO lffUl Y.'li 51~-" u ... l"c- .. 1 "'-11 l .. -• 1'111,to.mS 1011 tt 12 ~ JI ~ 11 , -o ~10 II"" 1 !O 3 1 i", 5' ~ ~" +1 UA~ ?j '° OS '5 ... o I) +1 1'1nAm WA r Jf• lP IP O 1!'' + ~ SICIO JIJ ff\41 OAt It 7' • ~ -o ... , UG• C 11'° JO 11 l 11 !I , -~ Pl "/\ E• 1 Ill "6S JJ 0 37 3 10 + v, '"'° Oii •I~ !•t UJI; 71' H•~ + S!1wW•f I IO ) '3 3N 1..., -Suno/\ IM tt fl li'lo lS o l•tt +\II U 1 C• 1' ,1, !.. '. J -• •11 .. ircn '° .. ~. Jt• ~. -~ ~>O ('~ ~•l ll 1 ~ •• " .... .,. ~ • 5toktV1nC 15' 14111 lJ . 1'\'o ... \,5.....,v, u I 0 • n ll\ 31•• -\IMC 111d 12 lD! 16 1 '"'11>1 .;t.(lol't pnol:I'° • U" so SO'h-IG \d"'tU "'I" t'1 p 1 .0 10 Si<>k•\IC.i' 1 :1100 U .. IO"" 1•">+ 5"'r'O I l.IO ll lfO 111 Ito +I Untr(O .. , u •I• •! 1 •! .. + , •• kM•n 1 SO t• .,,., • t '! -"t ~ •nfl" fO " 1, , 1'•• 1• l -+ $1..,,t W 1 t0 25 01\o ioi 't U\. +I $111>m~G 60 •l ll ~ :W , 11 0 + ~ Un lid •lt I •• .. ••• ~ -"'"' ••n '° Ill l ~ '1t ' "' + ~ ~,,, ..... M 14 ! ' • l• 11 st .... .COf'I 36 • !1 10:W. " + .s..,.,.Fd "• IJ l\o ! • s l ~~11,",'C,' 'i' 11 '1 , '• 1 ., _<Ill Ptnn c"'t 1" , i t i , "/\I w~ 160 J1', ,,. -. ""~ _,, .._ !tori 9 d SO lJ 71 17'" ll'*ll + !win\ IOt 3' 11 o lS • ',..'" +_ ,. iJ11 <•"bidt 1 IOI !!; 71 l It l .+ " ••nn 01~"' 1J U ~ 11 > lJ 1 1 '• ~!trr~tt tlO l 1 • 1", ..i. StudWor I ?0 \JI W I.I ltl• +I 1$wl!ICt HI HM fO 21 o , .. •• .. ,. ,. • +1 • p...,, Ff',111 11 22 • ,,,. ,.., • ~ 1111 Clo 'to ·~ • •• • ••• • •• ' -_ • "",._...!~'-111,, JD II I • SYl><Of> '° -.s 11:i,., lJ • •'", I + •• ~n.nie1ecc.~.,,.;, • ll l6, ]l .0.1 t •en"" JC I )(J .. "'"-4l'• tl•o ->~ < iu<• "4! IO ~ • .,..._,,..,, 'I 'aoN ,llo '1 + 'Sl'b<"" P'1 411 1 11 SI ., F.I 1 .IC t i JI 3' 1 JI\_ 1~ Pt.....,Co DI S ~Ho !A"-5'!o -~<tr ~ 11 " lM 1•; I• • _.. h $un011 l b » !A • !Al\ Sol\' -tSYllrOll °"'1~ It 11 1 111>. 1111< + "-Un011Ct l J.IO I& 3.,, Jo ,. ••PWLI l IO Q lS'~ l••~ 24'' -"' ' • """' "" .. •• ... ~ ... .+-SIHIOll • ., u !1 01.i .... •1 .. •• T OOC• Jtl 11 6f 0 II ~ 611, _ P1•Lt oll ilO 1100 llld\oi lOI 108"1 \••IO .rlj,11 J 1 " 1 , 1 1 Sunt>ttm IO IO H~ ~ )ti.I;.. --U" i:".c~' S4 16 " lS 1 lS'o -lo l'I •tl Dfl 00 1120 IOI .... JOii.;, I~ + 'lo )1tYtnlJ 1 IO -· ll • H I\ lS lo + \\ SUftdll nd If •1 1' • .. ,. 2•"--•ol t l! 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"f('l°"' "' , I"' l"' '"" -" 111 ~'"''•1111' 6 t i i f t ... ~ Swt!Alf WI If ' 11' 1]0 -'' If ~· M :IO )f • >611 ilia -t Dtll CO<• lo 'j '!" jl\ 1 .. t -\ 111 rfd ;a;. 10 t) 4'1 -1 "' omtr "'"' l I I '' lt11 -• •-i:.•' "" • .u .. ~ .. -\\P1mlr!1 '"' 1! m \ IO .M _,, 111 K C•r• I 4 ol • 111> .. ,..,,.,.to • 1• •\~ •Ill 4\\ -W 14 ~II l~r • • JC D.,LY PILOT Friday, April 2, 1971 ~ ~! • . r ... • ' -:> ,_ • 1~ ~··-•· {'.. ,.._, .. •r. ,, 1· , -• U'I Tt ltpMlt CHICAGO'S TOM BOERWINKLE BLOCKS JIM McMILLAN'S SHOT. Sixtli Ganie i11 Chicago LA Puts It All Toge tl 1e1· h1 1 l 5-89Wi110 ve1·B11lls B.\' GLf..\'.\' \\'HITF; OI lfl• Dtilr Pll•I $t1tl INGLE\VOOO -Thursday night they put ii all logclher to smother U1e Chicago Bulls. ll&-89, and take a 3-2 lead in the Na lion a J P..askelball Assoclatlon playotrs Thus rhe takers. a !cam counted out Of the playoffs before they t\"Cn began \•:hen they lost surer stflr Jerry \resr. ere one viclor~· a11ay from \l'rappin;: up the series with tile up and do11;·n Bulls. However. the~· now S\\ilrh to Chicago Sunda~· for gan1e No. 6 and as coach Joe ti.lullanl'S put it \\hen asked ho1v hts Lah.er~ mi11ht 11 in in the \\"indv City · "81 p!:iying 111 an empty building.:, The Lakcrs lost t•,1 ice during the \\Ct•k In Chicaj!o -a 111:.ice Y.hcre fans ll·l their prcscnrc and fa1ori1ism of the Bulls be kno11 n r..fullanc~ ~ th;1ps put on a comu1tH• ghow Thur~da1· as 11935 Forum la1t llful \\'atch<>d !ht·· L;.~rrs hfJ!d Chic.1~11 In less than JOO potn1s for Ilic third con- scculil'c g;une 111 the Inglewood <ltn (lf basketball. Offcnsil'rh the L1kcr~ did ii •II 111th C.ail Coudrirh ~lamn1i11g in 3:\ poi111~ on evcr.1 !,l !X' of shot 1ma;;1n:ihle an·t from about t•1cry11hcrc ll"ithin a perimeter uf 20 f Cl'l And. Happy ll a1r~lon and Kc11h Erickson eat•h f)Ol1{'d 2:!. But the staLst1c thal 11;is ~rh,1ps the kt·~ tr1 thl' lnumph 11as \\'i!lic t.tcCartcr"s 13 points. f.lullaney told the press that 11 hen Pro Ca oc Pac t ~ Signed by Wicks PORTLA~D. l>r\•. -All-An1eric.111 rorward S1dnc~· \\ icks has rc1>0rH'1111 signed a contrat·L 1111h the Portland Trail Blazers of lhl'. 1\at1onal B<ilikl'tb:ill As60cialion. 0The report \\al\ publi~hcil In lotlay's editions o( lhc Orc.i::onian :iftt'r a Los Angeles iclev1sion station s:11d \\ 1c:ks \\'as flying lo PortlBnd to sign a mu!11- ye:1r contract. The Portland nc\1spapcr said 11 h.1rl learned that 1h<' <1llual ~1;;111ni.; h<ii.I already t.aken place 1n Los Angell'S. ?ilcCarter came off the bench and 11 <i!I able to hit so well in the second a n d third quarters ii gave a chance to rotale personnel and give key players a breather. i\1ullaney says Goodrich has become such an offensive factor for the L:ikcrs that he is rorcing the Bulls tn play overly cautious 11·hcn he has the ball. And while the Laker coach v.•as indeed enthused about Thursday's offensive ef· fort, he said he believed the offense \\as actually belier in the two losses at Chicago. Ho\\'ever. 1he combo or offense and defense Thursday night \\as lhe Lak~rs· best overall of the series. he admiltcd. · Defensively we forced lurnovcrs ... \'.e \\'ere more alert and a1\arc of •·•:hat the Bulls \\ere doing. Thcr simplified their offense and went \\'ilh v.·hal 111•as 111·ork1ng. "The~· \vere going lo Bob Lo\'e much mnre than bl'fore. Before "'e planned our defense but no1v it ha s bcC'lme niorc a case of indi,·iduals adjusting lo different situations. "\\'ill. (Chamherla1nl blocked s1.x or seven shots early "'hen they tried lo \\·ork !he ball in !ow and they .i!opped lr~·ing that.'' Ch01n1berlain. by the w;i~·. pulled the Jl li'i.\' of the game early in the third quarter 111!h the Lakcrs leading. ia.62. The Lakers stoic the bal! and th,•rc \1as \\'ilt, fast breaking and alone at 1nid·court. He lOok the pass and dribbled 1n for a dunk Jti,1t just about turned Vorum fans inside oul. The last half \las a rrustrat1n~ ex· perience for the losers, 11·ho trailed only »5--1 at half time . They had eight turnovers in the third quarter and 21 for the night llhe i..,akrrs h:id 12 1. The Bulls cut the g;:1p to 00-73 111· it h :\·2~ lefl in the lhird stanza but afll.'r !hat 11 11as ne1er close and finally \1nen 11 11as 107-86 ~1ul!aney pulled the horses. CIHC .. GO LOS ANGELI> ' • T ' ' T W•""' • " " ltM'<tO~ '" " " l ovr ' " " M<l.,,1111$" ' " " '" • 00 " (••"'<>" 11Tn ' " • 11 o"' ' " " Ci<)O<!ro(n 11 11 '• " "'"''" • " " '='"~ "'~ • ,, " flQ•· wi"O I• ' " ' ,...,,., r' • " " ,.. .. ,~ ' " ' ~Ol>f'•O" ' .. ' Gv;• ~1 0 .. 0 '11l~v ' 00 ' Collir;, • " ' ll.illU'1'1 ' " ' Q<1!lnp' • .. 0 Mot."fl 0 .. • ll•-'U"' • •• 0 lo'~'\ .l6 11 XI " lQlal1 •S I• l1 Ill C'-'·<•<>o " " • " " ' ' A~9~I" " • " " '" f oul"ll O•" 'M' loT~I •ovi. -(~.t~lj<l 21. '~ ,lt.'l<jtlt• " o\1'•..0ln<e -1l 9ll. Angels, Dodgers Open Series Regardless of who wins the cross· freeway baseball series pitting the Los Angeles Dodgers and Calilomia Aogels, guys on both benches will be hoping {or a 1971 rematch. The reason is quite simple: t.he (lnly way a legitimate rematch can be staged is if the Dodgers and Angels each win pennants and meet in the World Series. Springtime pipe dream? Yet there's more realistic optimism this time because both clubs have ap- parently strengthened during the off season and tonight the story y..·i.JJ unfold a bit more. The Dodgers have added power in Bantan1 Title Up for Grab s In LA Fight INGLEWOOD (AP) -\Vorld ban· tamweight champion Chucho Castillo and Ruben Olivares, the young man J:e dethroned as kingpin of the 118-pounders, renew !heir biller feud tonight in a IS.round title fight. Favoritism has flipped from one camp to t1le o ther the past v;eck. They"ll probably rate about even lll'hen they climb through the ropes at the forum in suburban Inglewood. It marks the lhird time in le.is than a year these two fighters from r..lexico City have met. Both enC(lunters were scorchers. Olivares, now 24, sucCt'sSfully defended the title here April 18, 1970, by unanimous decision. It was Castillo, 26, winning the title in lhis same forum last Oct. 16. Tile referee slopped the match in the 14th round because of a deep laceration over Olivares' left eye -a cut that originated from an accidenlal butt in the first round. ''I would pay my own money to see this rematch," declared the promoter, George Parnassus, who expects more than 16,000 to pay their own money -more than $225,000 -to see No. 3 in the series. 1'he trend toward Castillo stems mainly from Olivares' history or eye cuts. Castillo is a slashing puncher. Olivares assured his supporters he 'vould take care of such trouble this time and promised he Y..'OUld knock Castillo out inside 10 rounds. The voluble Ruben. hoy..·ever, in 29 rounds had been unable lo deck Castillo \vhile Chucho owns the only knockdown in the series -once in the first fight . Oilvares, notoriously lighthearted, has impressed gym observers with his serious training routine. Castillo has never been anything but impressive 1n his seriousness. Casti!lo predicted he would retain the title but indicated he figured the fight \vou\d go the distance -unless he c11n a~ain carve up Ruben. The champion. who fights for an il!0.000 guarantee, has a 37-5-1 record. including 22 knockouts. He has been stopped four times. most of them on cuts. Olivares, guaranteed $30.000. is 5!}.1-1. \Vilh an astonishing record of 56 knockouts. His only loss y..·as the one to Castillo. Olivares first 111·on the championship v.·hen he bclmbed 3Y.'ay Lionel nose of Auslralia in the forum in five rounds Aug. 22. 1969. The match is slated to begin about 9 p.m. PST. Scoring by the referee and t111•0 judges gives the winner of a round one or more points up lo five, the loser none and an even round none. Laver, En1er son 111 Quarterfinals f\11AMI (AP) -Third seeded Rod Laver of Corona del ~1ar and top seeded John Newrombe faced each other today in quarterfinal pairings in lhe $50.000 Aventura World Tennis Classic. Firth Seeded Tom Okker of Hollan<! took on eighth seeded Roy Emerson of Newport Beach Australian Tony Roche, eleventh seed· ed. and Ney..·combe took on unsttded . .o\ustralians Ray Ruffels and Bob Carmichael, while the second-seeded American duo of Tony Ralston and Arthur Ashe faced unseeded Australians John Alexander and Phil Dent. Sixth seeded Cliff Drysdale of South Africa Thursday night defeated unseeded r\"ikki Pi!ic of Yugo!savia 6-3, 6-2 in a quarterfinal match. The victory pits Drysdale in a semifinal conte~t Saturday with Roche. 1iochc gained entry Into the semifinal Thur~day night by beating Ralston. In doubles action. Laver and Emerson hnnded a 6-3. 7-5 defeat lo Okker and An1erican f.farty Riessen. .. the ba~ of Rkhie Allen and Duke Sims : The Angels have acquired two superb ootfielders, Ken Berry and To n y Conigliaro, and hope U1e pitching o( former Cincinnati ace J!m Maloney will help. The teams clash tonight at the home (lf the Angels. Anaheim Stadium, with Clyde Wright going for the Californlans. Dodger righty Don Sutton will start for the Dodgers, who hope to narrow the gap in the series between the clubs \\'hich now stands M in fa vor qf the y(lunger Angels. Wright won 22 ga1nes last year after winning one the year prior. He was the comeback player o( the year and gels lhe nod for opening day next Tues- day on the same mound when lhe Kansas City Royal! invade. Sutt.on, 15-13 with an unimpressive 4.08 earned run average last year, has been good and bad this. spring. lfe figures to be the No. 2 Dodger slartl!r this year back or no-hit artist Bill Singer. AUen will start for the Dodgers, as \\'iii Berry and Conigliaro for the Angels,. gi\'ing diehards or this series a look at new faces right orf the bat. After lhe first game of thi!I series "'as played in Palm Springs before 5,000, an ;iverage of more than 24,600 fans have C{)me out to watch the team1 with 49.473 attending an April 7. 196.1, encounter at Dodger Stadium. "'hat wat lhe attraction'? Sandy Koufax was on the niound for the Dodgers and Bo Belinsky for the Angels. The tean1s collide again Saturday and Sunday at Dodger Stadium, closing out the 1971 spring schedule. Saturday's probable starters ~re Messersmith for the Angels vs. eilhel' newcomer Al Downing or rookie Doyle Alexander. On SWlday. the malch-up will be righthander Tom Murphy against the Dodgers' Sandy Vance. PHILADELPHIA'S BILL CUNNINGHAM HITS FOR TWO IN 104-103 WIN OVER BULLETS. Sports i11 Brief Asher D1·ops to Fourth; Warriors Sliock Bucks AKROX. Ohio -Costa lofcsa's Barry Asher captured on\)' three of eight n1alch ga111cs and dropped from first to fourth Thursday c1·ening in the SI 0 0 , O 0 O Firestone Tournament of Charnpions. Asher, the leader through the fir.st 24 games. dropped 240 points behind Brooklyn lefthander Johnny Petraglia. Mike llurb1n of Daylon, Ohio holrls the No. 2 spot \\'hile Dick BalliS\a of Astuna. N.Y. is in the third position, 63 points ahead of Asher. Another 16 games were scheduled lo· day with the field being cut to f11 e for Salurday's nalionally televised (ch:in· ncl i) finals. • l t'nrri1)rs T 1·i1r111pl1 OAKLAND -Jor Ellis threw in a 40-root jump shot \\•ith one-second lo pl ay Thursday night to iji1 e the San Francisco \Varriors a 106·10~ victory 01cr the Milwaukee Bucks and keep thcn1 alive in the National Basketball Associa· lion \Vestern Division playoffs. The 111·inning shot came three secon1l'i afler the Bucks' Oscar Robertson htl a shorl jump shol to give ~iihraukcc a 104·103 lead. Jeff f\lullins of the \Var- riors. fouled while Ellis' shot was 1n the air. made a free throw for lhe final point. e K11itks tn11 l'ln!J"ff NEW YORK -•·Al the starl of the last quarter it looked bad for the hon1e team," Walt Frazier said again. Ile 111·a~ beginning to sound like a broken record. Frazier has been saying things looked bad In the fourth quarter for the Kn icks in four previous playoff games against the Atlanta Hawks. and four times out of five everything turned Oul just great for the Knicks. The final timi? came Thursday night \\'hen the defending Nalional Basketball As~ociation champions came alive agiiin in !he final 1ninutes lo beat the Ha11"ks 111-107 and close out their best.of-seven garne playoff series four games lo one. e 76t•r• S t ill .41i l'e BALT1i\.10RE -Archie C1ark·s free lhrow in the las! minute was the 111•inning J>Q1nt as the Ph1liiriclphia 76ers sur1·ived Bal111norc's closing rally in Baltimore, 104·103 The i&>rs now hope to even the senes at 3-3 by lx'at111g lhc Bullets 1n .Philadelphia Saturday aflernuon. 9 I Ji11e 11f11 1\'nl1s Tiile \\il':ST POINT. N. Y. -Craig Linc<i!n glided but l\1l<:ki King had to scr1111ble to victorv in their events in the Nation:il A.AU indoor Diving Championships al the U.S. Military Academy pool. Lincoln. the national AAU outdoor 1hret .. mcter springboard champion. icd throughout the preliminaries a n d semifinals. Thursday and chl'lmed the on<'-mcter springbnard title with three nrar-perfecl final dives. He was awarded 546.72 points. \1iss K in~. a U.S. Air Force captain. \\'ho competes for Phillips 66, trailed Clirisllnc Loock, o( the Panlhers e..iys Club. Forl \Vorth. Tex .. entering the finals but the former Olympic di\er S('Ored high to win 393.45 to f.tiss Loock 's 388.11. O A li De rls io11 D11e \VASlflNGTON -Muhammad Ali. lhe former v.·or\d heiivy111·eighl boxing cham- pion. is expected to l!!arn in June whether he \\'ill have lo serve his rive )'l'<1r sentence for refusing induction into the Armed Services. The Suprerne Court announced Ttiurs· day ii will hear arguments April 19 on Ali"s ap1)(!al thiit he was cn!illrd to an exemption on religioos grounds. Trevino Fears Pla yer Despite 8-strol{e Lead GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Lee Trevino held an eight stroke lead ()Yer Gary Player going into today·s soo::ind round in the $190,000 Greater Greensbon> Open Golf Tournament -but was far from confident. ''Eight strokes?" he sniffed, "r..1an, that"s nothing with that little man. I'd feel a lot better about it if it was the last round and I had eight strokes on him. "But ri~hl now. 111·ith him, that's nothing. He can make it up in one day ... Trevino fired a four-under-par 67 in Thur!'day·s first round for a share of the lop spo t 111·ith veteran fi.liller Barber and New Zealand lefl-hander Bob Charles. Player, the doughty li11le South African \\'ho is the defending champion in this louman1ent and who has won !he last 111·0 tour events. struggled in with a fat 75, four o\·er par. "That's golf,"' the obviously disap- pointed Player said. "You have som@ good rounds and you havr some bad one". /\o one ever played the .game 111·ho didn'l have some bad rounds. •·r just had a bad putting day. But I can't blan1e anything. The conditions are the same for everyone. It's just my 0111·n fault .·· Player drove one out of bounds and look a triple bogey seven. He once found the water and had to drop out. And he three-putted four times. Trevino. Barber and Charles held 1 one-stroke lead over a group of five tied iit 68. They were Australian Bruce Crampton. forn1er l\.1asters chiimpion Art \Vall , tour sophomore Jack Lewis, Pete Brown and Dave Eichelberger. National amateur champ J, an n y 'Vadkins topped a big bunch al 69 and U.S. Open King Tony Jacklin of England had a 70 in spite. or a double OOgcy on his final hole. Banl's Placed on 21-day Disabled List e H'e•t Cage r• lt'l11 r..IKi\1PillS. Tenn. -Utah State's Marv Roberts scored 23 points Thursday 1·11?ht to leitd the \\1est to a 137-110 victory o\<er the East in the Senior All-American College Basketb11ll Classic. Masters champ Billy Casper, just back from an extended vacation. matched Play!!r"s 75. Both niust improve to make the 36-ho\e cut for the final lwo rounds Saturday and Sunday. Trevino cut lhree strokes off par on his last four holes but, in characteristic fa shion pointed lo a 25-foot par-saving putt on his fourth hole as the key. lly 'rile ASSUCIATEO PRESS Just like money in the bank. tf1e Chicago Cubs never ~·orrn:d about one ltarter ror 17 opening da)'S. But lh!J year will be diffcrent - lhia year Ernie Banks will be m1s.o;1ng. The aplrit b willing, but the knees 11ren't, doctor1 uld Thursday as the Cub!I pul their gilt.edge slugger on the 21-day disabled li11t The 40-ycar-old Bank.!. tortured by arthritic knees, hasn't responded as CX · prclC'd to lrl'litmen! 11nd workouts \his Sj)rlnj.! "1"1n ~ra1t•£u1 lo U1e Cubs for muk1ni:: il possible for me to eKtend the con- dihoning of tny knees >A'ittiou1 putting pressure on !hem 1h11.! would bl' nec('ssary in rrgulur se11son ~1t111rs. ·• said Banks, the 1tll·tlme f\1r. Cub. "Therr was the chanre the~· v.ould b1· slra1ncd and 1 would he nut even longrr "I feel. howf1•rr, th<il Ill) knees arc siron)."!;er now And that If I kr.ep up iny rxcrcise~ T can hL1lld lh<'m up su thal T "ill be of some value to the learn later on ." Banks said hi~ main concern was "not 10 hurt the club. I don·l want to embar- russ the team, making it IOok as if !he Cubs y..·ere playing someone wh<l ls hurt." c;eneral Manager John Holland a1>- proached &nks with the idea of remov· 1n~ him from lhe active roster and the Cubs' ~real first sacker agreed it 111·as bel!L Holland said B:ink~ would be restored to Active duly April 21. Drspile his painful knees. l'specia\ly the lrft one. Bnnk.~ wai; able' to hit for average this spring during limited Cactus League seryice. He had It hits in 27 al·bals for .40'7 . After coming on the disabled list last season. Banks batted .326 in 18 games and appeared recovered from the Rrlhrillc condiUon. He finished with a 252 average, way below his lifetime mark. Banks wnS the Nallon::il Leaguc·s mn~t valuable player in 1958 and 1959 ;i.nd h11s a curecr tot1tl of 50!I home runs. ' Roberts got assistance from D a v e Kobisch of Kans::is. who scored :!2. and Drake's Jeff Halliburton, who had 21 . e H'e lb Fh1e d 8 125 OAKLAND -Clakland Ro idcrs \\'ide roceiver \Varrcn \\1ells v.•as hned $125 Thursday for drunken driv1n1? f\hmicipal Court Judge Robcrt Fribl'rg dismissed A Charge of speeding 1hal followed Well!!' arrest Feb. I on a frerway he.re. ··1 ~·as one Qvcr at that lime and thought if l bogeyed th1t1 one 1"11 miss !he cut. I'd just brought my wife to this tOumament. It cost SJ60 round-lrip. · I( I mis.s the cul I've go1 to send her home tomorrow and J've just blow.11 1100. Bui he made the putt. !urned one unrler, then closed in a rush. He sliced ~ 11 three wood oul of the trees to within ri1!hl reet of the nag on a par fivt, m:ide the pull for an e:i~!e three then knorkerl ln a 15 foot birdie putt on 1hr final boll'. • \ . ORANGE 'COUNTY \ . \ S4N DIE.GO COUNTY . \ \ ---~P Rnt!fe~on--- • • l ~ Wn!em!Jhile llovie~f ~ T~sllcs -1-_,__3 ~a Mifu rf Sttfe Bet.eh~ Nutltar Riioer Pt •• ~ ' PUBLIC BEACH TO BE -DAILY PlLOT news map above shows the beach area that caused a sensation in Southern California this week when the President announced he would make public additional Camp Pendleton land. The new coastal area, about 21h: miles, is the cross-hatched section below Pacific Coast 1-lighway. The 31,1 miles already leased to the state is at right. 1'he Trestles sho"'D was formerly a famed surfing spot. DAILY PILOT aerial photograph at bottom shows the \Vestern \Vhite !-louse that President Nixon owns. Former President Franklin Roosevelt used to spend time at the estate and played poker there. 'Spiritual, Not Roel'' •• • -- Happening Aides Adamant By FREDERICK SCHOE!\1EllL 01 lhtl 0111, ,., .. , ~1111 Laguna Beach organizers of an Easter spiri tual festival 1n the Inyo County desert denied Thursduy they were putting on a rock festival. and said they would not ,.,.ork with anyone "'ith such in· t.entions. The disclaimer came in the wake of an injunction by counly officials against Los Angeles organizers of a rock festival, ·who have recently advertised that the ''top fifty rock groups" "'ithin the coun· try were invited lo perform. "The idea that we're putting on a rock festival is simply not true,'' ~aid Dion Wright, a Dana Point artist. ''We were -and still are -planning a spiritual pilgrimage and "'e do not want a rock festival." Wright sa id the festival \Vil! be held on 80 acres of land near the ghost town , Ballarat. which lies just outside the southwest border of Death Valley National fl1onumcnt. Beth Leeds o[ Laguna Beach said Ban on Tobacco Sales In Drug Stores Pushed SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -The American Pharmaceutical Association has urged the nalion"s 54 .000 drug stores to halt the sale of all tobacco products. The association 's JOO-member I-louse of Delegates approved the resolution without dissent on a voice vole Thursday lln the final day of the 37,000.member association's annual convention. A spokesman for the organization said the action establishes association policy "'ithout a general membership vote. The meeling drew 4,000 delegates. Last Rites Held For Bessie King Private ~erviccs ""'re held Thursday for Bessie King, 241 Ledroil, St ., Laguna Beach, ·,•;ho died Tuesday al the Laguna Beach Nursing lloTTIE! following a Jon's illness. She was 71. Mrs. King. who had lived in Laguna Beach for 38 years, IS su rvived by her husba nd, Vincent C. King; tw o daugh· ters. fl.trs .• Jeanne Kuwalsky of Laguna Beach and Mrs. Peler D}'berg of North Hollywood: and by four grandchildren. Burial will be al Dobbins Mausoleum In East Ph1ladelph1a, Pa . McCormick. fl.1 ortuary. directors. Las V cgas 'Sinking' LAS VEGAS 1UPIJ -A scientist 11t th t. Un1versltv or Nevada says Las Vegas l!I sinking. falling apart and portions m8y someday wBsh away . Richard \\'yman, a lecturer i n engineering science. ~aid Thursday mttny of the problems were due to depletion or underground wnter sources (ind building prncb~s "'hich disregarded the laws of nill ure. The association said lhere is a "grow· ing pubhc concen1 about th is public health hazard" of smoking. The druggists also urged n1cmbC'r.~ to become personally involved in "educating young people on the health hazards of smoki ng." Slate associations and the organization's student arm also should mount anllsn1oking ann health education efforls, the resolution says. A con1m1ttee report approved by the House of [)()legates notes the pharmacists in 1969 resolved that cigarette sales in phannacies are "inconsistent with their funct ions as health institutions." Last year the pharmacisl.3 voled to be{'(lme active in antismok1ng educati on. · Since then "an increasing number or pharmacisL<; have discontinued the sale of cigareltes" with favorable reaction from the public and other heallh prac· titioners. the report says, "In the committee's view, the ma~s display of cigarettes in pharmacies is a direct cont radiction of the role or the pharmacy as a public health facility,'' the report says. The committee noted "concern over the growinE: trend of tobacco companu~s to compens<1le pharmacies who pro\'1de space for self-service cigarelle racks." Rail io E''angclist. Bcuins Jail Tcl'lll " SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Curtis Ho"·c Springer, 74-year-<1ld r 1d1 o evangelist began serving a fiO.day sentence 1n the San Bernardino county jail Thursday affer pleading guilty to eight counts of false advertii;injt. Sprnnger wni; accu!ed or mnking fal~c C'laims for health and h:iir preparallons on his radio broadcasts. which art. heard on station~ throughout California and the soulh~cst. Uie spiritual pilgrimage "'iii foster "one to one communication" and will be a "swap me et of knowledge." Officials have warned the event could be disastrous. She noted thal no stages will be built and that any mu.sic at the gathering \vould be from personal instruments brought by participants. Wright detailed facilities that, he said, are being made available al the desert site: -A spring on the land delivers 19 gallons of \1·ater per second and organizers ha ve rented two 10.000 ga llon v•aler storage tanks . -~1edical facilities will be coordinated by Ernie Vega. administrator of the Laguna Beach Free Clinic. VC!ga stressed that he was organizing a medical unit on his oy,'n. and not with the parlic1pallon of the entire Free Clinic staff. -Sanitation facilities are now being prepared. Ty,·o skip loaders are digging latrines on the site, \Vright said. Wright encouraged all festiva!gotrs to bring some form or shade, water, sail tablets, foo\"'ear. snake bile kits, foods that do not require cooking, and plenty of gas for automobiles. Noting that plants and anitnals in the desert area "are as alive as you are,'' Wright asked people to disturb the land as little as possible. "\Ve can create peace by living it and respect ing all life," he added. \Vr igh l said that 8 few peoplr have already arri\·ed al Ballarat and con· s1derable numbers should arrive Thurs· day and Friday and remain through Easter Sunday. Miss Leeds said that cooperation by local residents and officials in the Ballarat area had been "very good ." "They seem to be excited about a :spiritual festival," she added. Inyo County officials, even though they have a court's temporary restraining order against a rock festival. said earl.ier this week not much cou ld be done In stop any large influx of people. "And if 1l is a spiritual fe!!Uval, we'll just have to see what happens and hope 11 goes well," one official added. Easler Dance, Light Show Set An Ea!:ler vacation dance and light show 1t Laguna Beach ll1gh Sch()()\ will double as a fund-raiser to help buy uni- forms for the Babe Ruth baseball league. Two bands, including the local group ''Tao and Fritnds,'' will entertain at the dance to be held in the girls' gym from 8 p.rn to midnight April &. Hefreshmcnts ~·111 be served through· out tht <'vcning and price or admission will ht. $1 for student~ \\"i!h 1denti1JcaUon cards and $l.50 for all others. r FrldJY, APtll 2, 1971 s DAILY PILOI' :J Belgiu111 Report Laguna Coed A~pts to Foreign Study By BARB~RA KREIBICH Of ... DtllY ...... '"'" lt's "quite a change" for an 18-year-old Laguna girl to go from Laguna Beach Jllgh School to an all·glrl Catholic school in a small town in Belgium where the official Janguag.: is Flemish and students, wearing smocks to protect their clothes, line up for inspection four times a day, But young Americans are nothing l( not adaptable and Laguna's Robin Oliver reports an apparently very successful adaptation to We with her new American Field Servir~ "family" in Veurne, Belgium. A 1970 LBllS graduate, Robin left fOr Belgium on 10 days' noUce last Ju1y after being selected as an AFS American Abroad. Looking bacil: ('Ver a hectic e i g h t months, she wrote her Laguna friends Ibis week : "There were two things I first observed when our jet touched down at Brussels last July: how green the land was and that it was raining. I'm sure when I leave this coming July 1 will remark on the same things . . . only I will leave with a million other impressions besides the greenness and the ever· prese nt rain. "You can't imagine how nervous you are when you 1neet your family for th e fir~t time when you are 18 years llld ... hiy parents own a laundry which stand s next to our three-story yellow brick house with the red tile roof. My Belgian Mama and Papa accepted me into their family just as another child. 1 also inherited a 21-ye ar--Old brother, Paul, v•ho Jo.,.cs to tease me, and a sister a year younger than me . Katelyn, who became as real as a blood-sister forme ... "We live in a village-like city of 10,000 • , . the city square is ringed by a number of Spanish·influenced Flemish style buildings of the early 1600s and two exquisitely beautiful churche.s or the 13th-14th century. One of the biggest obstacles in the beginning was the language. Belgium is officially bi.:_lingual with the southern half speaking French and Flanders, in the north, spe&king Dutch • . . but not Blways pure Dutch. In our region the local dialect resembles Middle Ages Dutch. "J had to begin to learn the language ... buJ there were some 'communication gaps.' One day after clearing the dinner table l took a bowl of leftover potatoes to the basement where we keep extra food.. I noticed that one corner was piled high with potatoes to last us all winter and when 1 returned to the kitchen 1 said to my Belgian Mama ·All the ANNUAL SPRING SALE potatoes ln the basement! AU ... the potatoes!' "She looked sllghlly punled then mil~ ed and handed me a broom saying, 'Oh, that's nothing. Just 1weep them up and throw them ln the trashcan?' We finally realized she bad tho~bt I was trying to tell her rd apillt! my bowl of potatoes. "My language problems haven't ended. Just a couple of days ago I was giving a speech and, trying to say 'Belgium is heavily populated' I managed to come out with 'Belgium hN a fat populaUon.' That one went over big!" The AFS student tellJ of traveling throughout ht.r tiny new COWJtry, viewing the breathtak.iog cathedral at Antwerp and the masterpieces of Rubens con- tained in the church, tben vislting the magnificent home of the arti1t. She learned that very (ew Belgians eat Brussels sprouts, but 'bk>od sauaaae' ls a favorite food, a1 are eel and r1w hamburger, and the ataples of Belgian diet are the three Bs, bread, butter and beer. "I bad heard that the Belgians were a closed and not very fr iendly people, but I don't agree," writts Robin. "The girls at school are always friendly, full of questions about America and the teachers are palient and understanding, always encouraging me and trying to help ••• " Homosexi1al 'Discovery' LOS ANGELES -ntree Los Angeles physicians, including a UC Irvine lec- turer, say they have found that homosex· uals can be detected by an imbalance in the male sex hormone. Ors. M. Sidney Margolese, Oscar Janlger and Riobard Green discussed Thursday lheir preliminary rindlngs in a study of homosexuality financed by the National Institute of Mental Health. They said their investigation, based on a study of 75 persons, lllllll!ests that male bomose1ual.s can be distinguished l\f asons ()bserve l\faundy Holiday Reservations for the Maundy Thursday observance by Scottish Rite Masom of South Orange County will close Monday, according to Paul Amsbury, secretary of the Scottish Rite Association of Orange County. The traditional and ob Ii gator y observance will be held at 7 p.m. April 8 in the Riviera Dining Room of the Hotel Laguna, Laguna Beach. The special service for all members of the Rite will be conducted by John A. Sicken- berger, past venerable master of the Los Angeles Scottish Rite Bodies. Featured speaker will be Warren F. Morgan, former manager of the Laguna Beach Olamber of Commerce. Dinner tickets are $6. Reservations may be made through Paul Amsbury, 720 Calle Aragon, Laguna Hills , 92653. STEREO EQUIPMENT from normat heteroseruals by an analysis of the male sex hormone, testosterone. Testosterone, they said, can be broken down into honnonat substances called androsterone A and etiocholanolene E. Whenever the amount of E exceeds A in a male, Margolese said, there. is an overwhelming chance that the subject is homosexual. The llnly e1ceptions to th.is noted to date, he aaid, are individuals with diabetes and severe mental depression. This throws off the testosterone flow, the physicians said. Margolese, an e.ndocrlnologist, said he does not believe an imbalance of A and E are the cause llf homost1uallty but rather they reflect an underlying biochemical abnormality which is the CaUst. "I am close to saying that homose1· uality is genetic," P.1argolese added. "We have not found anyone wbo is a strongly motivated homosexual and who i3 otherwise healthy whose E level does not exceed his A level." Janiger is a lectur\!r in psychiatry at UCI and Green teache1 psychiatry at UCLA's Neuropsychiatric Institute. Mayor's Dad Beaten NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -Mayor Ken· neth A. Gibson's 60·year-<1ld father was hospitalized after he was assaulted by five youths on a Newark street late Thursday night. A spokesman at Beth Israel Medical Center said the mayor was at his fathtr'I side. SALE DAYS-APRIL 2 Thru APRIL 9 All Equipment Offered Here-in Is Priced Incredibly Low To Insure Sale! All Prices Are Below Discount or Special Sales Seen Elsewhere RECEIVERS-AMPLIFIERS-TUNERS CLA RICON '15 ••It A'"p.-Pr1 imp , , , •• , S Sf l11awl HARMAN-KAROON 110-140 wi ll •••••• S26t FM Recur. C11ewl !OIOEN AT·400 Arrip-Pr11mp , , , •••••• , S200 c ,,,d •. i11) OYNACO P.A.T.--tA Pr•·•mp !demol S1l5 OYNAl'.:0 sr.110, 1'10w, R.M.S ........... S205 flr,d1·in) FIS HER x.101 .0 A111p, ''••mp •••••••••• S22t (tr•d• i11) .FIS HER X·IOl -1= l11t19r1l1d Amp , ,, ••••• Slff (tr1d •. !11 ) SCOTT 3SO·B, FM, MPX Tu111r •••••••••• Slff ci..d.-i11l MclNTOSH M)( 110 Tu"'r ,., •• ,,,,,,,,, S-499 pr•·~"lp !tr,de·inl HARMAN-KARDON Cit1tion II , •• ,, •• ,,, $350 100 w1ttt RMS Amp !tred1·i"I TURNTABLES . . ) .~. ' GARRARD 10 ........................ s " t n1wl IOARRARO SL 9S ·I • ,, , ••••• , ••.•...••• S12f ! d1'"0 I EMPIRE 491 .......................... Sitt (111w) SONY TIS JOOOA w/1rro1 11rn t•~•rt •• , ••• S407 .J d1mol GARRARD SLSSI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I If ld1rrool B ~R M l nic~1n~1r ltr1d1-inl ............ s '' STEREO CONSOLES SCOTT 2501 St1r10 Compec:I ,,,,, •• •• ,,, Slit 71" CUSTO M CRAFTED Stereo Con1ol1 , , •• Sltf ,, . ., ... SALE $35 $138 $49 $98 $142 $85 $46 $49 $99 $99 $27 $78 $95 $286 $41 $25 $127 $122 ~ L I' "' atlantic TAPE RECORDERHECKS 6 COST Sl'llH• HIW U.La SONY 160 Aufe·r1v1••• pe1!1bl1 r1corder •• $449 ldemel NORELCO 450 Ce111H1 r1cord1t , ••••••• S171 ( tr1d1-i" l SONY TC.I I-Trick R1c:ercl1r ,,, ,, •• •• , •• S1JI ld1mol SONY 1150·4, ] motor deck , ,, ,, , , • , , ••• , S44f ld1mol SONY TC· I I C11•tf1 r1c:order •••••• , , , , S 50 I demo) SONY TC-llO C1111fl• recorder•••••••••• Sltf •/remote 1p•11. !d1mol HARMON·KAROON C111eite Deck •••••• Sl 60 (d1mol SONY TC-104A Por!1bl1 ,,,,, ,, ,, ,, ••••• S14f R1cord1r !d1,,.ol SONY TC-70 C111ett1 R1corder ••••••• , •• S 10 tt.1de·i"I SPEAKERS AR.2X lde..,ol ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, •••••••••• S114 EMPIRE 9000M Gr1"edi•••1 • , ••• ,, ,, ,, • S1ff Cnew d1mo1) IOSE 901 '1 w/1qu11i1er , •• ,,,, ,, •••• ••• $-476 (new d1me1l BOZAKT,mpol ••••••••••••••• ,, •.••••• S1JI l111w 41motl .................... S1J6 LANCER S/CS 12" J·w1y •••••••,. ••••• Siii (new d1mol JIL C1"tu'V l /100 • •···•••• ••••••••••• 1264 [ fr•d1-ln) ALTEC V1l1nci• Voie1 of Thee Ir• ••••••• , SJ4t ftr 1d•·l"1l OYNACO A·lS , , •• , •• ,, , ••••••• , ••••• , S I• !de,,.ol EV t2", J ... ,y 1y1!1'"' •••••••••·•·· ,,,,, S17t ( tr1d1-ln I • music $226 $51 $79 $299 $38 $138 $113 $50 $62 $69 $199 $345 $125 $150 $85 $210 $.248 $50 $42 • • 44S E. 17th St., Co1t1 Mesa. Open Sund1yi 12·5, Saturd1yi 9-6, D111y "t2-9, Closed Wednesd1yi Du•l/Garrard /Shuro/T eac /Fishtr /Harman-Kardon/Picltring/Shorwood/ Altoc/Maranh Wharfdale/Soundcraltsmen/Sony /A. R./801a~/Mclnto1h/Scott / JBL/Empiro I • f. CAJLY PILOT \ \ •' I ~ps Weathermen Play the Odds By THOMAS ~PHINE 04 .... D1l1Y POlft '"" W'EATHERWIRE CALLING: The c:ar radio droned along with reports of the M:WI unW finally, it came timt for the word on cond.iUons of the day. The weather. A new voict chattered over tbe 1irv.·ay1: "Clear inland with Utile mwg and a light Santa Ana wind condlt.ion prevaU. lng," the voictJ intoned. "SllghUy cooler alone the o)a11t with our only problem right MW being dense fog along the IOU them aectlon of the coasUine ... " * Egad, thought I. fm driving rlght ln the mjddle of our only problem area. Dense fog right here along the Orange Cout. J rechecked the rear view mirror. The motorcycle that had been puttering alone: up Cout Highway a mile and one--half behind w11 •till vi..rible. You could read the "Honda 350" label on It.a gas tank. LOOKING TO SEA, it was obvious that three gnat. were circling liatJeuly over the casino at Avalon. Other sections of Catalina Island were fairly visible. Indeed, if thil was fog along our ~t. 1 was driving in a most unusual weather pocket * Of course, that could be. The vagaries of weather predicting along the Orange Coa!t are well known. You can drive out or sunshine in Huntington Beach eoutherly and abruptly 1trike a blanket of the 1tuff in Newport thick enough to stuff pillows with. Then from Corona del Mar on farther 90Uth, you might agaip be baskillg under Old Sol. ~ you driv~ down the dip at Emerald Bay on the e:d&e of Laguna, your hood ornament may suddenly disap- pear from view. SELDOM DO YOU gel much fog for too Jong at Dana Point. The wind usua11y takes care of that But at Doheny or San Clemente:, maybe yes or maybe no. Foe 1eLs whitm in lbOK regioru. * Indeed. weather predlctin& in our re&ion is a chancy game a.t beat. I envy the radio weatherman. He makes a strong and clear prediction. Then if he's dead wrong, he can jump right back on the radio waves with a new "updated" weather report Never mind apologir.ing for hi.a earlier inconsil!ltency \\'tuch cauaed the crepe paper floatl to fall apart under a wet deluge just before the homecoming parade. NEWSPAPER WEATHERMEN U$U81Jy lack the advantage of the radio update. They get one shot at their predicting and then it's hung out there for everybody to see. It's the :soggy paper on the porch, follu, that always predicts, "Sunny Tomorrow.·• I've alwa y, had a pet theory that the btst ""ay to predict "''ealher along our Orange Coast is to slick your head out the window. And if you rea1ly want to be safe. predict only where the window is. Especially if it's foggy out there. Chevalier !\'lending PARIS (UPI) -Entertainer ?ttaurice Chevalier, 32, Will released from the American hospital of Paris Thursday alter 13 days for treatment or laryngijis and for· a seriell of tesl.5. ll'hisker Assa1alt Barber Guy ~1udd or Kirkwood . ?\1o., i! caugbt in actio.n as he trie~ to break world speed shaving title. He shaved 83 faces in hour, falling short of record of 130 claimed by English barber. Heavy Fighting Shakes Unstable Jordan Peace By United PrH1 lntern•tioaal Jordanian government spokesmen said today the Palestinian guerrjllas had open· ed0 an offensive and that heavy figh ting was reported in several parts of the country. Jordan also reported lhe border town of Ramtha came under heavy Wicks '] Oec!are free spuch loralU' · machinegun, rocket and mortar attack again from Syrian terriklry. Reports from Amman indicated that lhe guerrilla offensive appeared kl be pushing Jordan toward another civil "."ar. The Jordanian army and the guerrillas fought a nine-day civil war last Sep- tember and there have been frequent clashes since then. The charge that unidentified troopll were firing on Jordan frmm Syrian ter· ritory was the se~nd in 24 hours. A spokesman also said Thursday infantry forces based in Syria attacked govern· ment positions in Jorda11 and were beaten off. but he did not say whether they were guerrillas or Syrian. Syrian bas pledged full support for the guerrillas in the fighting tbat h a ~ split the Arab world. King Hussein or Jordan has called for an Arab summit conference to try to end the dispute. But an Egyptian call for a lower ranking conference to try kl end the fighting appeared to be getting more support. A spokesman for the Jordanian Interior ft1inistry reported that Palestinian guer· rillas blew up and set ablaze the tranll- A rah i an pipeline (TAPLINE ), an American-owned Une which carries Saudi Arabian crude oil to the Lebanese coast via Jordan and Syria. The spokesman 1aid the blaze, 16 milea northeast of Amman, was brouaht under control eight hours later. A military D Ai.I" .. ttRi • •!fl~~ •• 'Chi11a on Mars~ \ Europe Coes All Out for April 1 LONDON (UPI) -The British Broad- casting Corp. I BBC I paid a 31).minute tribute to a man who does not exist for wiMing a prize that does not exist The Italian slate radio network in· terrupted a program "·ith the news Chlna had landed two men and a "'oman on ~1ars. A West Berlin newspaper said the government had authorized late rught television sex films to help curb the falling birth rate. The !late-run French radio network said the six Common Market countries had decided to change therr traffic laws and lntrodu~ Br illsh·slyle left side or the road driving. Throughout Europe Th u r s d a Y • newspapers, radio stations and in· dividual! observed April Fool's Da y with lraditional hoaxes. The BBC'• radio tribute to "Gerald Burley" for winning the "Ettore Savini Memorial Prize" was one of the most elaborate. Four months in the planning, the pro- gram included taped lributes .to the s~p­ posed anthropoligist and phlianlhropLSt from a number of "'ell kno"11 persons, includmg violinist Yehudi ~1enuhin and the bishop of Southwark. "\Ve taped a piece from each con· tributor. who knew what it was to be used for, and it is remarkable h?w '''ell they complemented each other with no con!licting bits of imagined facts," said Leonard Pearcey who conceived the program. Cold Front Hits Midwest Mercury Drops 40 Degrees on Plains; Fair Else·where 11.s. Summary "'-•-•!n.,. '"" ,..,., •• ,_ -•1'1irN f •D..-d 1Ht hll• ,,.., CHiiii •ltCll-t »d rc.t '" oomt 1"11,.., t •N• .t '°'111>"" Ct lllort''I . Tl'lt t l wot -.it •N1!11 tot aurl"• H rl1 fl"(><n· I,,. 1'1Urt Loo A"9tle• lltd W""V ,_, .. <o• .. __ .... :". Ual !or 10011 lr>d Suur<M• w•tfl lf>t \ lllCN •lon ol ...... HIC•• N rly "''""' • Int lft Int' low ciDUCll 1ioll9 l!>f 4 «otll. Loc111v •'•0111 1u111 .,,,.,..,, s••r•a•cnio '-,,_ Wtrt P•M •(ltd >or StTUrCll f neor COll!tl Ct•YOfl\ Th• l!ot" ~I• "' l M A .... 110 WI\ ir>tK!t'.:I \IJ rH (h q ""'"' ~wn !rom Tl!~r!.4l1y'1 ...... mum , ... Air P ollUI-c... .. , ... D111t•(! ,,. _.Id lltM t •t lr~ltll"' '" lllo ~ ... 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" $111 ~1~1 Ci!'¥ • " St" Olf.ft " " s.,, r11n(•K• .. • w.,~'"'""" " • W!fll\lo>ff • " Cona11auttol Graves Pakistan Rebels' \ Slaughter Told JESSORE, East Pakistan \AP) -Vic· " tlms or Pakistan's civil war were being buried in communal grave1 today in this sunbaked city 25 milell from the lndian fr ontier. Officers of Sheik Mujibur Rahman's Freedom army of Bangla Desh -the new name they have given to East Pakistan -claim government troopll lllormtd out of their canklnment on the out.skirts of town and killed score.s of unarmed men, women and children. P.1any Punjabi merchants from West Pakistan have been slaughtered in ~ prisals. Troops of the Freedom army maintain a tenous control in Jessore, a city of some 25,000 people. Only at the expense of hundred, or even thousand' of casualtiu can they overrun the heavily defended cantonment where about 800 of President Agha Moharruned Yahya Khan's soldierll are dug in on the oulllkirt.s of klwn. Reporta reaching a J'ebel command pollt here say the situation in Jes,ore ill repeated in dozens of towns throughout the breakaway province. Yahya•s troops, !afe behind their can· tonment defenses, maintained desultory mortar fire against Jessore's rebel army throughout the day. A trick.le of refugees is leaving, car· rying belongings tied in bundles on their heads and making for the nearby Indian border. The body of a young mother, her dead child 1till clasped in her arms, lay in front of the charred r u i n 1 of her wood and mud brick home. Several other bodies lay nearby. Backed by armored cars, a column of Pakistani troops swept out of their cantonment through the outskirt& of klwn two nights ago and de!troyed rows of peasant homes and shot anything that moved, the rebel11 said. Whole families were machine gunned as they fled from their burning huts , rebel officers claim. Other bodies, lying in fields and dit- Ecuador 'Revolution' Ends; Officer Quits QUITO. Ecuador (UPI) -Gen. Luis Jacome, head of Ecuador'' war college and instigator of a brief revolt to protest his discharge, has turned himself u• lo the army as "solely responsible'' for the outbreak, autho rities said Thurs· da y. The brief revolt involved some 30 war colle1e faculty members, most of them colonels. and about 1811 paratroopers sent to subdue them , but who joined them instead. ches, showed evidence of bayonet slabs. The East Pakistani•, armed for the most part with old World War IJ rifles and a few submachine guns , can do little to atop these sorties and seem increasingly apprehensive of a major attack on Jesaore. In their fury . the sheik's !'lpporters rounded up 14 Punjabi merchants and butchered them on a field near Jessore 'll bus station. The young son of one of them fled in terror from the scene but was caught and killed. Today. a mass grave is being dug for the Punjabls. "We have all the men we want but Yahya's men have all the weapons," said a rebel commander, Capt. Abdul Halim at the headquarters of the East Pak.lstan Rifles. To a man, the Rifle' have joined the secessionist forces and, together with the poll~. make up the backbone of the Freedom army. "All our people are taking i)art in the fight," said Halim. "There have been many casualties but we shall fight on unW the end. 'l'he Pakistan army cannot defeat 75 million people. They cannot hold out for ever in a hostile land. Eventually we shall starve them into llurrender." * * * East Pakistani Leader Prisoner In W. Pakistan RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP) -Sheik Mujibur Rahman, leader of the uprising against the mUitary regime in East Pakistan, was being held in army custody in \Vest Pakistan, informed aources asserted today. President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan has called Mujlbur, 51 , a traitor and sald he must be punished. Sources said Mujibur was flown from East to West Pakistari a week ago, the day he was arrested in Dacca as the army crushed the movement there that had virtually ruled the 70 million Bengalis of East Pakistan for 25 days. Sources speculated be was being held in Rawalpindi, near the headquarters of the army, in Quetta, capital of isolated Baluchistan Province near the border with Iran. or in a centuries-old fort on the banks of the Indus River 60 miles west of Rawalpindi. The army was reported to be holding at least 24 other members of the working committee ol Mujibur'a now banned Awa. mi League, whlch held 167 of the 3Il seats in lhe twice postponed National A:'lsembly. U~I T•i.11tN COMMUNIST DISSENTER Rum1ni1n's Ce1u1e1cu Two Communist Leader$ Seeking Autonomous Rule ?t10SCOW \AP\ -Soviet DefensB Minister Andrei Grechko told the Com· munist party congress today that lhe Soviet anny "has in its arsenal a. weapon of huge destructive power capable of reaching any point on the globe." Excerpts of his speech d1str1buted by Tass did not make clear whether Marshal Grechko was referring to some ne\V development or a known weapons system. But he accused the United States of increasing prepar;itions for y,·ar .end warned that the Soviet Union. if ever attacked, would "punish the aggressor" in his homeland. Two leading critics of the ''Brezhnev Doctrine " that national Communt~t parties and governments have only limited sovereignty within the worl d Communist movem ent used the con~res~ Thursday as a platform [or new appeal~ for full autonomy for all Communist parties. The dual attack on the L'Oncept that grew out of the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 came from Nico\ac Ceausescu of Romania and Enrico Berlinguer or Italy. Ceausescu devoted nearly 20 percent of his speech to his often stated refusa l to subm it completely to ft1osco"··."I domination. He said the only "safe way" to overcome difficulhes 1n the Com• munist movement is by discussion based on mutual respect. national sovereignty , equal rights and noninterference in Jn· terial affai rs. VIKINGS FOUR, Inc. -LIQUOR DEPARTMENT - FIRST ANNIVERSARY SALE VIKING IV PRIVATE LABEL LIQUOR SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT BOURBON GIN FIFTHS 11.,. Prlc1 SALi 3.65 FIFTHS "''· ,,1,. SALi 3.30 4.19 r11c1 :J.tf ' P'ltlC[ QUARTS 11. ... ,,k. SALi 4.49 QUARTS ·~· ,,1,. SAL( 4.15 l .lf rltlC[ 4.tf r1t1Cf 1/:z.GALS. lt•t· ,,,,. SA.LI 8.89 1/:z.GALS. •... ,,,,. S-Lf 7.59 10.45 r1t1c1 1.49 r1tlCf SCOTCH CANADIAN FIFTHS lt19. '"'' SALi 4.25 Flf.THS lt1t'. !'rite SALi 4.50 4,,, r1t1c1 5.JO r1t1c1 QUARTS 11:.,. rrk• SALi 5.25 QUARTS •• ,. '•Ii•• SAL( 5.35 '·'' l'l!CI ,.JO r1tlCE 1/:z.GALS. .... l'rk1 ~:~~. 10.19 1/:z.GALS • R.,-. •rk1 ~:~i. 10.19 11.ff 11.ff I VODKA RUM FIFTHS .... '•k• SALi 2.95 FIFTHS "••· rrit• SALi 3.39 ).4J l'ltlCI J.99 •1uc1 QUARTS .... rrk• SALi 3.69 QUARTS R19. l'rk1 SA.LI 4.15 4.JS r1t1c1 4.lf r1t1c1 1/:z.GALS. ""' ,,k. SALi 6.95 1/:z.GALS. le,. "'"' SALi 8.25 '·'' PltlCI f,Jf r11c1 Cash or Checks-No Credit Cards Fine Wines-Gourment Foods-Condy-Gifts-Beer 1Vi5it Our Win• Tasting Bari 56 FASHION ISLAND-NEWPORT CENTER Opposite .Broadway -644·0991 WE DILIVIR IN THE AREA se • a " e y .1 " ns " nd er , .. CV ist ly ·Id .s.~ ,, LSt •l 0 f m nd nl al ' y•• m· •d ty, 10• Four Critical Fumes l(ill Five In Tanning Plant BERWICK, Maine (UPI) - Five workers were killed and seven injured today whe111 fumes leaked out w h i I e chemicals were being loaded into • tank at the Prime Tan- ning Co. factory. A dozen workers were in the taMing room ?t'hen the mishap took place. about fi:30 a.m. EST. offlclals reported, as the chemicals were being loaded into a tank. from a truck. F'ive died. four w e re critically injured, I fifth was admitted in les!I serious con- dition to a hospital and two were treated and released. stale police said. - CALLED RACIST Judge Lind11y 1.~ar ~ Feathers Four of the dead were iden- tified as Ronald Hayes, 21. of Rochester. N.H .. Arthur \Vebber of Berwick, James Roy~ Sr .. 48. of Fannlngton. N.H .• and Richard Nadeau of West Lebanon. Atwr1ieys For Angelc1, Clairn Bias School Principal Victim The fifth victim was not immediately identified. YPSILANTI, Mich. (APl - The principal of Willow Run High. School. which was the :;icene of racial incidents last • month. was tarred and feathered Thursday night by a group of hooded men who forced his car to the road side. State police said Wiley Brownele, 42, suffered minor injuries in the incident which occurred as he \'.'as on his "''3Y home from a meeting of the Willow Run School Board. Brownltt said an auto \Yith "' lone occupant forced hill car off the road. The hooded driver, armed with a shotgun. gol ()Ul and told Brownlee. MAN'S PSYCHOLOGY NOT BASED ON SEX WAS FREUD WRONG? ..• Probably not. but lhen hr n"'Ver had lo consider that thtl'e v.·ould evt'r be a Volks- \vagl!'!n. ]lly ad nvo wf'eks ago fl'atured thf' psychology or th!! Volksv.·agt'n dri\'t'r. Grantt'd. I may not have been out of con- te.'(t offering lrf"e psychiatric mes&agt's ln that I am a Haber- dashf'r by lrade. But a pparent- ly. Freud nf"\"l'r lilSV!' a second lhoughl to an altl'rnatr of Sl!'!X _ . , th!' Volk~wagen!~ That's nght _ . , but it only happPns when I dccid!" to throw one of my super sneak sales. ?\Iy ad drew the lar&t'sl t:ollec- ' ion of VW Ids and E.1tos ever 8.!li.l'mbl!"d in r-.·f'\Vport Beach rxcept for ihr grand opPning of Chick lverson"s local dealership. "Turn off your headl&hts and 1et out of the car." Pro Grids' TV Ban Hit •He said a second car con- taining seYe:ral more: hooded men then pulled up and the group <lrdered him to walk lo a roadside ditch. "I was WASHINGTON (UPI) hit on the head with something Sen. William Proxmire ( D· -I think it v.•as a gun butt Wis. J. claims the airwaves -and fell into the ditch," belong lo the public. not to the principal said. professional football leagu~. "The next thing J kne\\'. He !laid he would introduce they were pouring tar oil o\'e:r a bill in the Senate to forbid me from out or a bucket and a television blackout of home then they threw a lot of professional football when the ctuclcen feather5 on me." he: game is sold out. said. ~1ore than 90 percent of He told state police he \\'a~ seats in National Football convinced the assailants, who League stadiums were sold numbered about five or six, out last year, he said. and were adults. noUiigh school on the average 50,0CNJ fans pupils. or more paid their v.·ay into After the attackers drove each regular pro game. Tens of£, Brownlee drove back t.o of thousands were turned his school and telephoned _•_w_•~Y-· _h_c_s_a_id_. _____ _ police:. Asked by ne\\'Smen if he knew anv reason for the assault. Brownlee said, "My mind would or course haYe: to go back to the racial tensions at the school and the fact that the school was closed for a couple days last month." Arn1strong llas 'Bad Night' NEW YORK (UPI) -The condition of jazz trumpeter Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong, who has been under hospital tN!atment for a heart ailment, took a tum for the worse Thursday night, ii w a s reported today. SAN RAf'AEL (UPI) -At - torneys for Angela Davia in- sist that somewhere I n California !here mwit be a while judge who can overcome his bias to insure a fair trial for the black militant. They challenged Judge Alan R. Lindsay Thursday on grounds he is racist and asked him to disqualiFy himself. Another out-of-county judge disqualified himself last month on a motioo by Mjs.s OaYis' codefendanl, Ruchell Magee. v.·ho said he was biased. The defense said as 11 member of the white upper middle class. Lindsay, 54. was so crippled by bias he could not be: fair. Linday has 10 days to decide whether to disqualify himself. If he decides to remain on the case:. the defense can ap- peal. Asked if any judgt could be: fair, Howard Moore Jr . Miss Davis' chief attorne.v. said, "I think the answer is going to have to be: ye5. Some white: pttsons obviously are .more capable of dealing with lheir prejudices than olherll." "There must be some judges like that in Califomia." Moore said. "I don't think there are too many, but I am sure thl!'!re must be: some .. Unions Delay i' Auto Walkout I "Mr. Armstrong spent • restless night. with increased respiratory difficulty," a DETROIT IUPI) -The United Auto Workers aireed today to continue contract Ul'I T•I•• ... ,. talk!! with American fl.1otors Ne1v Queet& Corp., little more than six spokesman lor Beth Israel lt 1..,as "·orlh every nickle of Medical Center said. "His 1ny misspent money because in- deed the V\V Driver ihopi> in 1 ~~~ral condition has weaken- Sarah Rippon, 21-year· hours before a threatened old daughter of Bri· strike deadline. tain's chief Common The move came after the union rejected two contract rn 0 st barg:&ln-like manner.I;=======~·-=-=-=~=->! Quality and service for the )r>a."l amount of "moolah." f\loolah is money for thme of ;.•ou "'hosl" per~onahty is not based on tht' Volksv.•a&cn Market negotiator, will proposals by AMC and had reign as Queen of the a counter offer of it!I own Norfolk, Va. Azalea turned down by AMC N• 1th•r 111w1p1p1r i11 the Festival in honor of negotiators. Talks we re w1rld c•r•• 1bo11t v•ur commu• NATO. Lady Arabella. recessed at 1:05 a.m. and it Who Cues? 11ity Ii•• vour <•"'tr11111ity tl1 il v Sir Winston Churchill's is up to American officials 111w1p•p•r ••••· It'• tli• DAILY granddauohter, refused to decide when negotiation!! P'ILOT. 1t To ~0 on, I had onP lady whol';::=;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=;~~~t~h~e~h~o~n~o~r~in~p~r~o~te~s~t~. ;;;;:::.~w~n~l~•~es~u~m~c~-====:::.-= 11rriv td in an irr1desc11nt limPl1 i;rern Bui; \\·1th a portrait of Gf'ori;::t Washington i;tam(M'd on htr hood . . She kPpl thank- lni; m,. O\'l'r and ovtr for thf' i<fJolhini:: rrlif'f that my S<I bar- ~a1n 1ah!r ::;avr h"r Thad i;t1.vrd hrr from rhr-d<'pth~ of r<'tllll dcfr·alomania. Thrn thrre \11a~ lhr Chap in the black Super Br.rtlr \Vho mi~­ Jud;;rd 1!1,. :1rrrdbun1r and landt'd in the Lido Thf'atrf' philodendron planter. lie made up his u·aY'1·ard direction by purchasinf: a $125 Top 0 ?\tart ~uif for S40. Very good jud1- tnl'nt~ Hr drn1>f' off and di~ap­ P4"'ared brt\1'l"en l\1·0 gold Cadil- la~. Obviously, ht ""' ~in& lonlrolled by thr handling: 1·haracteristics of his VW! Li .. rrn. ;r yotl think you 11rr iuffl"nn1; from an inner desire lo sa1r somr n1oolah don't ~ nut and buy a nrw Volkswagen. Drop 111 Saturda}, April 3 and ~f'f' "hat hypnotic hypers&les Y.•i!l agatn bt P"'sented 1n a re- f'('At 5rs.c;inn or lhrraputiC l\8V• ings hostl.'d by iUet.1 Star, Vl'nU~ [)(' r-.iol'll'Y' TH-an~galr. Orvnn~hlrr 11nd Top n r-.tart sui1!1 Hf! lo $145 l'IO\V S4fl. Enrn 11nd G111nt shirt!' \"al- 11,.d at .$11 no'" S4 or 2 ror 17. Cactus Ca.o.uFll .Jt'ans, Harris anrl C:orbin trt"1dllfon11l !ll11ck~ up to ~22 no\1 S4. Biltv.rl\ and LI· • roll11. Slack1 up to 540 now SlO. Cad11la1·. L111~nln, Ferrsrl drlv- f'l'1 u·,.loomt> lo altend. Chevy driYl'rJ ar" v.·rlcomr •110 ... I don't want lo <'iu•lud,. my1ttr. BIDWELL OF NEWPORT 3467 Vie Liiie In Newport IMch OJ-'510 Pl•n~y •f frH 1JArkln1 In th• f'ffr. vw llrlv9t• Jll•••• r•freln fr•fft doubt• p•rldn1. SATURDAY SPECIAL • TOMORROW, APRIL 3 WOVEN DRAPERY PIECE GOODS REMNANTS IN A MULTITUDE OF FABRICS AND COLORS 2 ycls. .. ~1'' 2 to 1 0 yard lengths •ASH ION ISLAND STORE ONLY STORE HOURS: Mondey •fttl flrlHy, 10 •·"'· t• f :JO p.m. Tuft., W.d. •ntl Thurt., 10 •.m. to f ,.m. Satuntoy, 10 •·"'·to 6 p.m, -Sunday, 12 to 5 p.m. ''-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • I DAIL V f"llOT 5 Military Pay Boost Uncertain WASHINGTON tUPIJ -A J{ouse-passed bill b o o 5 t i n g military pay and allowances by 1 record $2.7 billion faces an unc t'r\ain future in the Senate where a coalition of conservatives and liberals is unalterably opposed to the volunteer army such a pav raise would make possible~ · The pay raise!! and quarters . )0% in Poll Bat·k Nixon allowances -the highest PRINCF.:TON. NJ 1API single increase 1n I hr President ,\lixon·s po I 1 c 1 t' s republic's history -11.·ere lll-d h;ive the appruvill uf 50 per- by the House Thursday to a cenl of the American public, tw1>11ear extension of the draft !he lowest levt-1 of support and elimination of un-since he took offt<'e. according dergraduate draft deferments. to the latest Gallup Poll . 3 Seizecl it1 Bank Rohhe1·y, l(idnap CHICAGO I UPI l -Fow- ptr:sons have bttn charged with bank robbery ;ind aiding and abetling a bank robbery in connt'cllon with a $118,000 extortion plot 1n which \ht' wift' of a bank president was held at KUnpoint 1n hf'r suburban home . The FBI announced three arrests latf' Thursday night. about 11 hours after the bank president. Lawrence w. Nortrup, turntd oYcr the money. The fourth arresl was announced early t00a}' ,t President Nixon had re· Howtver. G:illup s<11d the quested ontr $987 million as 50 percent 1nd1cates <1 part CJ( a two-step plan to down1•:ard lrcnd 1n Nixon 's move towards an at I populanty n1ay be leveling off .. volunteer army by mid-1973 . Th~ poll said t'.ixon ~ <ipproval The House combined his rating wos 5fi percent 1n recommendations into 0 11 ,. i,anuary and 51 pert·ent In package with the increase:::: tG ~ru<tr) The first three suspe<:ls v.·ert' identified as Frederick W. Marschke. 31. Homewood : his wife, Joyce, 34. and Robert /l.lanley. 34. Chicago. The fourth suspect wa/; ldent1f1ed as John tarmen Starble, 25 Berwyn. U'I Tei.-• start July l. I F'ina! passage. 293 to 99. came after anti-war critics sou&!'ll unsuccessfully to hmit U.S. involvement in Vietnam by setting a deadline f(JT withdrawal, or by proh1billng USf' oF draftees in Southeast Asia after thf' end of this year. Plane Rider Sparks Panic CHICAGO I UP I I -Al name-thr::·.·:ing backfire from a taxiing Jetliner al O'Hare lnternalional Airport frighttn· ed 23 passengers into leaving the plane through an emergen- cy exit Thursday night and left nine of them injured. A spokesman for Trans World Airlines said the re- maining 30 passengers then alighted fron1 !he pl a n e through a regular txil. He said one passenger, \\ho was not identified. opened a window emergency exit when one of the Boeing 727'5 jet !"ngines backfired loudly and released a ball of orange fire. $118 ,000 RANSOM Oor1•n Nortrup Neither tht' FBI nor local police agencies wou!d detail what roh:..' Lht four were suspected of playln& In the plan. iewels by ioseph CONTINUES IMPORTERS J•w•l1 by Joi•pli ha~ b~n ~l'll'tll'd u Pxtlu~h·,. 11alr~ rrpresent.ltil'• n/ (PnUtnr 1lar ~apphi1·r~ 1n flnP JPwplry. &>r·au.sr wl' rf'!'e1ved •n ''""X!'IN'l"d 11nd O\'rry,hplmint rP~fll'!"~" In our •Ulr llf)phlr>" sa]P !11,.t ""~h.. 1"· h/111" pPrsuadr.d our 1mport~r In l'Ontinu,. thr 11le for nnl' mor,. 1..,,.,.k Don't ml'i..~ lhll opporlunHy hi buy a btautdul 1t&r ~pph1rc for a lo", lo1v pr1rr, 'feuR·CHOICE' Ol1J AV GENUINE' Star·Sappliile __ i:_ J ~o=-• --:D 0-'f= + _,. h "'"ll}~ ANY SIZE-.\NYf9MIE __,. V, Come in and choote from lhouladl Cl( a, 11!-=----+---........ ,,-'\ S.pphO., any "'" '"Y mp.. ar ..::!~.P.'. round, pear-Wpc, oval.\,*-1':9r • , Arn1r ic1n Expr t:ss " ..,. ... II Ibo --Jiric<, MOUNT YOUR STAR SAPl'HIRE IN A BEAUTIFUL SETTING • A. r nni11lt1P lfl'•'lion or rntn'1 i nd \l,(lfr\f'll J rnoon!mp 1rf' l\l i/11111 Ill whlT" •nd yrltinv (nl(j. fj()!d prl('rl 1111rt 11 I~ !l' p,.,,dll'il II\ I~ k11r11 }"1101' 11r 1~h1t" i:old 11r• •~•lllblt f1om $99.\ \Ootlhout rll&.ln. Jnr1l1 fli) ,.....,. ran lf't your dl1mond in • mounu111: ol your d\nk• '"11h Yollf Star Sftpphltt 1tlf'rll01t In "lllk" yn11 1" ,.~•" rin•r n"C· Jltmtinlll'r. J ... t. ~Jew_, d°" 11111t1·01k o" IM ptffl1!1ft. Noth· lnr l••~t• 1h .. stor• . ONE WEEK ONLY. MARCH 31 ·APRIL 6 South Coul Pin• JJJJ g,;,101 Cast• M1s1 Phont: s.a.1061 - • •. ,. ' • ... ~ .. : •• . • -'. ~~ . , !'( /: .. ;,, •.. .. .. •".°· .-·' .. ~- ~~ !.,,• ,, ::· .:. ,. .· ~ •1' .. . . ' .. DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Heroin Use Up 400% Laguna Beach police report a 400 percent increase in arrests for heroin use and possession in recent months. In one recent series of arrests on miscellaneous nartotics charges, 80 percent of those booked admitted to personal use of heroin. They \l'ere selling other drugs to support the habit. It's an expensive habit. t·osting easily $100 to $200 a day. The hapless-addict is hooked, not only by the drug, but also on a career of supportive crime. Young people n1ay chatter a"•ay about the pros and C?ns of marijuana and the allegedly mind-expanding vtrtues of the psychedelics, but no human being in hi.s right mind can /ind any virtue in heroin. This is the truly seamy side of the drug scene. The recovery rate for heroin addicts is virtually zero. It is one of the easiest drugs to overdose. It is not being emotional to say that the first heroin '1fix" can quite literally be the first step to total self- destruction. It is cold fact and anyone tempted to experi1nent had better believe it. YES Vote Needed April 6 San Joaquin Elementary School District voters \viii be asked April 6 to approve a $15.4 million bond issue . The bond issue is needed to bond the district to capacity for the next five years and thus enable the dis· trict to seek slate school building fund money. This money is the most economical means available to the district to finance buildings and the loans are forgiven after 20 years. rapid growth of tbe district. Past experience has shown enough new students are generated from housing de- velopments within the district's boundaries to populate three new schools -each year. 'fhe last of previously voter-authorized bonds \vill be sold to finance the new intermediate school in Irvine. 'l'hree more elementary schools must be built in the next two years in Irvine, Lake Forest and Mission Viejo. DisJ,rict voters are encouraged to continue their ex· <.·ellent record of support of the elementary district. They should vote yes on the April 6 ballot to assure provision of much·needed classroom space. More 'Fender Benders' Safety devices. warnings. threats and persuasion not\vithstanding, the traffic accident rate in Laguna Beach moves steadily upward . In a recent two-year period. statistics reveal an in· c;rease of more than 28 percent in miscellaneous traffic mishaps in the Art Colony . Fortunately few fatal accidents \Vere involved. and 1nost of the accidents were listed in the "fender bender" or minor injury categories. But even a fender bender carries its measure of e1notional and financial distress . Contrary to expectations, a majority of the accidents occur, not on the winding Laguna Canyon road or the high-speed, heavily traveled Coast High\vay. The danger spots, say police, are the tricky, four-way intersections in semi-residential areas where impatient drivers nose out in front of oncoming traffic instead of waiting to be quite sure the way is clear. The lesson for drivers tempted to sneak across one of these traffic traps would seem to be, "When in doubt, don't!" Fenders cost plenty these days. (;.• , ~ .... ,. . . ' s ;~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=.L.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:._~~~~-' ., ... Beyond tbe economies of bonding the district to capacity is the clearly obvious need to provide for the 'Truth'· ~: Wlaat Candidate Would Have Do1ae •,• •• ••• fr rom Humphrey to Nixon .•. .•. ;~\VASHINGTON -If Hubert Humphrey tMid been elecled President, he would ~ve sought a standstill cease-fire in )ftetnam, stopped sending draftees to 'tietnam and appointed a Negro to run the draft. He offered his ideas back in October, 1969, to the man who had defeated him for the presi- dency. Humphrey met in the White House wil.h Presi- dent Nixon and his national security ad- viser. Henry Kissi•- ger. Afterward, Hum- phrey summarized his suggestions in a confidential memo. dated October ll, J969 to Kissinger. Vle have obtained oi copy or the memo, which has been shown by both me11 only to a few intimates. "I GUESS PEOPLE expected more action in a shorter period or time than President Nixon has been able to ac- complish." Humphrey wrote bluntly. "In other words, the election raised their hopes. The people do not sense or fully understand the unbelievable complexity of the situation in Vietnam. They just want out. "The President has taken some steps that are constructive and should bt. recognized as steps towards peace and " . reducing American Involvement. Titese are good steps but not enough. _ .. "l think I appreciate the difficulties that the President faces . but it will only get more difficult if something more isn't done. His concern over the rising tide of isolationism. bol.h in Congress and in some areas of the public, i~ one that I share. But I am afra id it will get worse unless we find some way to get out or Vietnam. "THE LONGER WE are in Vietnam, the more the spirit of neo-isolationism grows. Vietnam is sopping the spirit of this country ... To hurry our withdrawal from Vietnam has risks within it. but not nearl y as much as the risk and danger of hanging on and hoping for something better." Humphrey called for ''American in- itiative in seeking a cease-fire and so- called standstill or all combat forces. I knov.• this is difficult but \Ve should pre~ ii. The military doesn't like it, but our options are not very many or very good. "The public wants an end to the killing, and the President must be the leader in trying to fulfill that objective. 1 have heard all the arguments against the cease-fire proposal, and from a military point of view they may make sense. But the problem that faces this country is not military; it is political."' llL1~1PHRE\' STRONGLY urged the President to anoounce "that no draftees will be sent to Vietnam for combat purposes. Now. I underscore lhe \VOrds for,combat pu.rposes . lt would be better if no draftees would be sent to Vietnam al all. but I am not sure that would be feasible for at least the next few months." The former Vice President praised Nixon for retiring Gen. Lewis Hershey as the nation 's draft director and recom- mended as Hershey·s replacement •·a top-grade. well-informed, a rt i cu I ate Negro \vho has the respect of the blacks as well as the whites, someone between the ages of 35 and 45, who looks good. who has {l sense of public relations and \Vho can communicate with young people:· Humphrey. noting that he had of- fered views ''in confidence and in a spirit of helpfulness," concluded: "I want to help the President, and I am prepared to defend him as he moves on his peace offensive, but it must be a peace offensive." ·For Male Sanity: Realhoy "'hen it comes to the. grave problems America faces, the gravest is neither pollution. urban sprawl nor excess 1;tomach acidity. It is Playboy magazine. Never since the Marquis de Sade has any literary figure spread more paln and misery than Playboy's publisher, Hugh Hefner. Statistics show that 68.3 percent of ~ l'Yllng American males study one or more centerfold ''Playmates of the ?o.1onth'' durinii. their lormal1ve ye a rs , for hours on end. "Aha." cries the )'Oung man, "SQ this is what young ladles look Ii k e \\'ithout their clothes on ! I'll find 011e for me·• And he starts hunting. The problem, of course, is that isn'1 \\'hat young ladies look like without their tlotties on at all. Not even young Play- mate ladies. AN ARTICLE 1n the new magazine Friday, April 2, 1971 Tht cd11orlal page o/ t11e Dailv Pilot setkt to inform nnd stim- u«itc reodrrs by prcsc11tn1g fhl$ 7ttWSpcl per 's opinions 011d cor~t­ mt"nt.ar11 01~ lopu:s of int.crest ond 1ignificance. by providing o forum for tht erpressio11 of our rtadtrs' opinions, &11d by prt1enti11g the diversr.. uu.·11>- points of informed ubscrvtrs and 1pokenne11 on topics of t11e dcJI. Robert N. Weed. Publisher I Art Hoppe Audience, points out lhal after the painstakingly-selected Playmate is paid $5000 to take of( her clothes. she is carefully posed so she doesn't wrinkle, sag or droop. Thousands of studio shots &re taken under Ideal .lighting conditions. One single. print is cbosen. 'fhen even lhis best of all possible photographs is - heaven help us -doctored~ For at this point, the article says. Hefner steps i11 with his retouchers: "Take off the hair on her upper lip~" he orders. ·'Clean up the shadows around her under-arms!" II is this blatant dishonesty that causes such untold suffering. There is our young 1nan. J~e has found the girl of his dreams, Sbe looks with ber clothes on like a Playmate with her clothes on. t.:AGERl.Y Ill': marries her. Ex- pectantly he swoops her off on a honey· moon -only to diseovcr that she.. like cill human beings , occasionally wrinkles, sags. droops and/or exhibits downy lips or underarm shadow. Moreover, she doesn't even h:ive a staple In her navel. Is it any wonder that 68.3, percent of American males go through life feeling cheated and frustrated? Is 11 any wonder that 17 out of 18 marria~t~ today end 1n uxoricide, divorce or shouting mat· ches. l''\Vhy enn 't you take the halr oH your upper lip1 Clean up ~our un- derarm shndow!") To save America from slov.·ly drowning in this sea of domestic acrimony, a group of ui:; humanitarians has brought out a new magazine called R.calboy. TllE CE~iERFOt.D "ltealmatc of lhe Mont11 ·· 1n our nrst issue 1s ~Jlss Elvira ?i1cGorkle. a 47-year-0ld unemployed fry rook from Bixby Fails, ~1onL Miss McGorkle. who is S-foot-2. \\'eighs 175 pounds anc1 has led a hard life. JS depicted standing against a brightly-lit 1\·a\I in the Bixby Falls Medical Clinic, all prepared for a free chest X-ray. As \\'e say in the caption. "It is a Realmate like ~tiss ~fcGork.le \\•ho makes American men appreciate their wives." \Ve are convinced that once Realboy replaces Playboy as the leader in its field. American males will grow up ra- tional and sane. NO LONGER \\'ILL they be obsessed by unattainable visions of perfection . No longer will they be. pandered to by books. movies and adverlising that pre y upon their frustrations. At last the y will accept marital sex for the good thing it is -an act or Jove bet\\'een lll'O imperfect humans. At last they will accept re11hty. \Ve. the publishers of Realll(ly _ ask no high rewards from a grateful nation !or restoring its snnity. \Ve 1vi~h \1·e could rind ~ome guy ~·ho'd bu)' a copy. Dear Gloon1v , Gus: If v.·riting lcllers lo 1he North \'1etn!ln1ese will persuade the1n to releast prisoners. 1hen \\'hy not write. letter$ demanding they not shoot U.S. :soldiers'.' -5 (" L. T~11 i.uwr• rollttf\ ''•f•n' ~1.-.t. "'' lltft111rlf~ "'-'* •I l~e ~""l•ll•t tfftf ~ ... , •t1 -•• i. fioltl9"'' Ou1. 0111, ~lie!. Moyers' Book ls Generally Depressing It was a different country when John Steinbec k and his poodle roamed the United States in a campe r. The findings of that voyage of rediscovery appeared in 1962 as "Travels \Vith Charley." Bill Moyers did much the same thing last year, traveling some 13,000 miles by car. sampling the mood of the nation in such places as Bondurant, Wyo., Mathis, Texas, and the tough steel town of East Gary, lnd. A fonner special assistant to President Johnson, a fo rmer deputy director of the Peace Corps, later publisher of News- day and a skilled reporter, Moyers reports on these findings in a tong and generally depressing book, "Listening to America." t.10YERS llAD, he tells us, listened to America fro m a distance living and working for son1e years in a' narrow strip of the East Coast. "I learned that it is possible to write bills and publish newspapers without knowing what the country is about, or who people are." Generally he found a confused and fearful country out there, one with little humor, sour over Southeast Asia, fearful of unemployment, searching for son1e political guidance, or moral guidance, and finding no ~loses, not even an Eisenhower to comfort it. As a one-man Gallup Poll, Moyers seems to have touch- ed all bases, youth culture to hard-hat. t-.1ost everyone he talked to was edgy about something -crime. inflation, pollution, racisn1, drugs, America was not a happy place. .. YOU CAN TAKE just so much kill- ing," a. legless Army captain, bitter about Vietnam. told him. He talked wJ1h Groucho Marx in Hollywood about the decline of humor In America. \Vyoming ranchers were bitter about big cor- poratlo11s grabbing up the old family ranches. A Quaker professor o f philosophy viewed the Kent State students as ''aggressors:' therefore wrong. In San Francisco. attempting to trace the missing daughter of a \l.'ashington friel'ld, Moyers became fascinated by fresh notices of runaways posi.ed on a bulletin board in Golden Gate Park. '.'Li~tening to America" is one Jong editorial by a concerned and articulate reporter-if a.nything a little too long, for the sustained theme of depression and frustration in it is wearying. !HE U.S.A. i~ a Space Age country v.-·1th lots of Cadillacs and country clubs but a!n1ost no narcotics-addiction pro. gram \\'Orth a damn . Dislrict of Columbia children are taught in low-grade slums. ~nd the capital's General Hospital had just n1n ou! of penicillin. "The District shou ld be a model for the: country," a police1nan told Moyers, but added that Washingtort Is merely a modf!I of \vhat's gone wrong with the country. "Hardly a day passed thAt v.·ould be free of some demonstrntlons of our v.-·oes," ?-.1oyers notes of hi.o; odysSt'y. One mi sses Steinbeck's gentle opti111i.~tn hert. And Charley. tllarper's Magailne Press : $7.95). Wiiiiam Hogao Quotes !Hr~. J-farry (".erMr. 011kland, oo modern: fashlon1 -"When will i;ome designC'r cleem lt important tnough 10 n1ar~et dignifitd clothes for 40--ish won1en1" ' 'Facts,' Are Not the Same What is a "lie"1 What does "telling the truth" consist of? These are seem- ingly simple queJStions, but there are no simple answers to them. This is \\'hy parents, and educators generally, have such a bard time explaining lies and truth to children. Storm Jameson. the novelist, has published her autobiography this spring, called "Journey From The North." In her introduction to it, she writes: "1 am an accom- plished professional novelist and nothing would have b e e a easier for me l.han to draw a self-por- trait which, ;vil.hout telling a single lie, would be dishonest from beginnlng to end, intelligent, charming, h1teresting -and a lie." ON THE SURFACE, a '"lie" is a statement that does not correspond to fact , or to what we believe to be a fact. But "facts" and "truth" are by no means the same thing; as ?-.1iss Jameson reminds us, a book of memoirs: can be absolutely truthful in its facts and yet be a total lie . Truth is the inner spirit of a statement. not just its outer shell of facts. Of course, if the facts are falsified, the inner spirit is injured; but the opposite does not hold -a report consisting of nol.hing but facts can be totally dishonest in its intent and effect. IN ONE OF Bonhoeffer'~ last un- finished essays ("1:ritten in prison ), he takes up the subject of the "always truthful" man, and reminds us that there are evil truths as well as necessary and healing truths. The man who alway• says what he thinks, under the guise of "candor," is not living in the spirit of truth, but in the spirit 0£ hate. He tells of a teacher who asked a young pupil in front of the class whether his father usually came home drunk in the evening. The father did, but the boy was within his rights In lying about it, since the teacher was absolutely wil.hout his rights i• asking the question -and the boy was not mature enough to give an answer that rebuked the teacher for his impertinence without either admitting the truth or lying. THE HARDEST metaphysical thing to grasp about the truth is that it is both absolute and relative at the same time: in one sense, the truth is always the same for all men everywhere ; in another sense, it is relative to the person, the time, the place, the situation. Wisdom consists in being able to distinguish: between these two, and to know when the spirit of universal truth is being served, and when not. Both the absolutists and the relativists are dishonest in this -the absolutists \vhen they insis t that circumstances do not alter cases-: the relativists when they insist U1at truth is wholly subjective. No wonder our children are confused, conflicted and cynical about it. Real Issue fl.as Emerged To the Editof : There is a wing of opinion in Laguna Beach, often encouraged by members of the city council, which holds that citizen action on the dog ordinance referendum and on the high-rise initiative is somehow irresponsible and perhaps e~·en dangerous. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Legally and morally we are pro· ceeding in the honored tradition. We had previously delegated authority to the city council to act in our name. while we, the citizens, re ta in e d sovereignty. We gave them no four-year contract to do as they chose; it was understood that whenever and i n whatever particular they ceased to act as \l'e wanted them to act we citizens v:ere legally and morally permitled to intervene and stop them. TlflS IS EXACJl,Y what we did with lhe dog referendum and v.•hat we are in process of doing with the high-rise initiative. We are taking back some of U1e authority we had pre~·iously delegated -alleging dereliction of duty. The outcome wa!> inevitable. Three city councilmen were elected last year upon a false platform. They generated a grtal dell! or politica l heat upon the Issue of "driving the hippies out of town," ari uneonscional'.llc as well as unconstitutional objective, Y.'hile they had allegedly accepted c a r.i. p a i g n con- trib11tions from financial interests v.•hich wanted to acquire our key civic assets <lt bargain ratts. NO\\'. A YEAR I.ATER. the false issue has disappeared -except for 3 resid~c uf h~te and . fear stirred 11p by this mo.~l irresponsible of campaigns -while the real issue haJ> emerged front and ct.nler. Who can be surprised .. Ma ilbox \. J l.tlltl'I fftlfl •1tdtri •rt wtl~t. Oltrm1n., ... r111n $1\0wld con"11Y !~ti• ,...1u1ei lft 10. ..,,.rf• tr lflJf. T"9 ~1,111 M <1-M !tnt " M !II N>-C• tr 1t1mlntlt !lboll 11 t1M•VMI. At! lt ltt rt mwtt 1 ... c1w.. .itfttlurt 11111 m1n1'.1 tllllr•H. ltu! ~•-• ""' '" w!lhMl<ll ... '"IOH' It iUlllti.ill rlfMft .. Ullftflf, Pfffry ..,,;n Ml M 1uDllihld. at this'? Un(ortunately, when you gel city coun· cilmen on the basis of a false issue, especially an emotional one, you have little chance of getting good city coun· ci!men, able and concerned. You are more likely to get officials hung up on the slick devices they u~ed to geL elected: you are more likely to get substitute is.sues -censorship, sex, dogs, religion -that can be squeezed for a quick headline. This 1nust be the explanation for the stream of trivia "'ith ~·hich .,...e are beguiled as \\'e, of nct'essity, take back important fu 111c. lions of government. DAVID A. MUNRO Boni. Lo11t1clri119 To the Editor· If E. C. Van !look Sr. (~tailbox. 1'.1tlrch 26 ) were observant. hf' would see one of !ht best boAl laun ching areas for rnany n1iles around located ::it the Coast Highway bridge on the Back Bay. Many boats can be launched at the same lime so there is very little ~·aitin", 0nd several acre~ of very valuable land 11re available for pArklng the towing c:irs and trailers. The prict' is so lo\¥ as to nearly fall in lht cn11··~ury of public service. Wha t more could a person ask for 7 \VILLlAM 'f. SPRAGUE CHECKING •UP• Best to Argue With One Pai·ent By L. M. BOYD SO C IG ARETTE COM· ft1ERCIALS are banned on television. And some money therefrom will go i n l o sponsorship of sporting events. For instance, in auto racing, watch for the L. & ~t. Con~ tinentat Championship, the Marlboro run and the Winston 500. In tennis. a women's C<>m· petition to be known as the Virginia Slims In vitational. 111 bowling, the Winston·Salem Classic. With TV L'Overage. certainty. And ad signs on camera everywhere, s u re enough. WHEN THE POLLSTERS asked a sampling of students nationwide where they would like to live, if not in this country, they chose. in order : 1. Europe. 2. Australia. 3, Canada. 4. Asia. 5. Africa. 6. Mexico. 7. South America . , . TIIlNK OF ALL the animals' names used to describe human foibles. Amaz· ing! Jackass, mulish, old goat. perfect lamb, sheepish, black sheep. horseplay. mo n k e y around, kittenish, catty. Have State Okays Minor Vote Amendment SACRAMENT.9 (AP) Proposals to put the 18-year· old vote issue on the ballot in 1972 have now passed both houses of the legislature, and an amendment to also lower the ~inking age s l a n d s d~feated. But at least one more vote by either the Senate or A11sembly ls necessary to decide w h I ch lawmaker's measure wHI be the one that puts the vote Issue on the ballot. I missed any~ CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. " 'Blood is thicker I ha n water.' my old sfepdad used to say. And scientifically it's known blood is actually six times thicker than waler. Thal 1neans my old stepdad likes hi~ natural children six limes better than me, right 1 " A. Sounds like a committee of computers figured thal out, doesn't it? No, sir. some- thing' s wrong there ... Q. ''What's it cost. average, just to own a car?'' A. A- bout $88 a month. More if you drive it So says the Triple A. WHEN YOU'RE in trouble around the house, deal with the folks one at a tizne, not together. Studies shotv a parent is more lenient without !he matrimonial mate at hand when tackling a little domestic situation. Remember I his , young fellow, If you're a little domestic situation. ALWAYS THOUGHT the potato was the root of its plant, but it's not. It's the stem . . . IT'S THE PISCES FELLO\V, says our Planet man. who is most apt to go for a yes-dear-no-dear type of girl ... WERE YO U A\VARE you could buy a bathroom bowl in any one of 18 different colors now? ~1iraculous. ''\VHERE was the mackinaw invented?" inquires a client. In what's now Michigan, it was. Around l81 l a'. SI. Joseph's Ford. An early freeze hit. So a company com· m;,nder passed oul Hudson Bay blankets to the women in the army fort there. got them to sew together a batch of short coats to ktep the troop! in shape. City Hall In LA Hit By Blast LOS ANGELES (UPI) 1'1ght s e c u r i t y regulalioM v.·ere initiated at city hall to- day as· police sought a short, plump young woman 1uspect6d in Thur1day'1 bomb explosion in a men's rest room. The bomb caused several thousand dollar s damage but none of the 3,000 employe! in the building, just heading home from their jobs shortly before 5 p.m. was in)ured. Glass in the washroom was shattered and water from rup- tured pipes cascaded into the corridor. There was no fire. Witnesses told police the v.•oman, about 20 and wearing brown pants and a brown suede hat. was seen leaving the rest room moments before the explosion. Al Cocanegra, 20, a messenger, was in the rest room seconds before the. blast and was just outside getting a drink or water from a foun· tain when the device went off. He w11s not injured. He said he noticed no unusual packages in the room. Marvin Levine, director of City Public Works. said ran· dom security had beeft In ef. fect at the time of the blast but "not we are certainly going to begin patrolling in the public areas" to the first three floors of the 28-1tory building . City Clerk Re1: Layton, who checked the room juat after the blast lo make sure no one had been injured. 1ald there was a "very definite smell of &unpowder or black powder.'' LA to Back 2 Policemen LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Tht clty council has revered Itself and vottd lo provide Je1al defen11e for two police offlctra accused of violating 1 woman's civil rl1ht1 by con. spiring to bur1larlu her home. The vote Thursday was eight to six with one abaentet. Previou1ly the council had deadlocked 7-7 on the queaUon or whether to defend the of· flcers, U. Ed.A:•r Brown and Sgt. Marshall Gaines. A tl&-9 Aaaemb\y vote Thurs- day for Assemblyman Will ie Brown's 18-year-old vole prC>- posal indicated final approval t1f one of the vote measures would be only a technicality, The Senate approved a similar measure by Sen. George 1'.1oscone. another San Fran· cisco Democrat, 28-9 on March 16. ''FAT rtfEN never lead rl- oL!J, '' co11tends a San Francis- co subscriber. Interesting. He is not the first to say such, however. It was none other thin Mr. Shakespeare himself who referrtd to the lean and hungry look as dangerous. And then along came Washin1ton Irving whq said. "\Vhoever heard of fat men herd ing together In tilrbulent mobs? No. no ... " .fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.I RAPID REPLY: Yes, sir, so far as I can find out, only U.S. Presidents who kept cats In the White House were Abe Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Cal Coolidge and John F. Ken- nedy. Voting yes on the Brown measure were 39 Democrats and 21 Republicans -six more than needed to put an imendmenl to the state con- stitution on the ballot. As in the Senate vote, all nine no vole s were cast by Republicans. Your questions and com· ments are welcomed arid wilt be uaed in CHECKING UP wherever possible. Ad- dress letters to L. !ti. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875. Newport Beach. C11lif .. 92660. SALE WATER LILIES P1cific Goldfi1h F1rm1 1'48-42 Edwtrd1 St. Off 1111 l i ft Eli.et ,r-ty II 0.11111 Wnl 1nl ltlft, WISTMINSTU 193.7105 earth first Get Involved wilh your earth ... it's your I ife1 Unless we ALL get involved our earth will become uninhabitable. T.hat means no-one ... not even you can survive. Santa Ana ~ash1on Square is hosting an ecology in format ion di splay April 3, 5, 6 and 7, to help inform you on the steps you can lake to improve your environment. Orange County high school rally be~ins Satur- day, April 3 at 11 :30 a.m. with speakers. live music to enter· ta in and public debates. There wi ll be free pa ste.rs, buttons and flower seeds and an Ecology Poem co ntest with bicycles as prizes. Reclamat ion center avail able a ~ FASHION SANTA ANA AND GARDEN GROVE FR~EWAYS SQU ARE AT MAIN Nixon Urged Japan Trip, Says Reaga11 SACRAMENTO. (AP) - Gov. Ronald Reagan says the idea thal he travel lo Japan and possibly Vietnam this fall came from President Nixon. He attached no per- sonal presidential ambitioos l-0 the journey. The chief purpose or visiting Japan would be to discuss trade between that nation and California, the Republican chief execulive said Thurs· day. A newsman pointed out that "a trip such as this ha s preceded presidential bids byl virtually every presidential candidate In the past." How would Rea1an dampen spec- ulation that that was the pur- poae? Reaean repll~: "f think it ought to be rather significant that tht 1ug1e1Uon for the visit ha1 come from the Presi- dent, which I think would sug- 1test a different tnterpret1t1on than you are suggestln1." Reagan traveled to the Phil· lpplnes two years ago to rep- resent Nixon at the opening of a cultural ctnter In Manila. The dates of the fall trip haven't been decided on, Rea- 1tan tald. He said his wife 9lft.Y mff 7 Panelist Writes Book Hank y Panky 1by Tate Jury Denied popular" with the other juror• beeaute he wa1 "very Im- patient." The Jury foreman uld that ~·hen the panel returned to the deliberating room after dellverlng Ila death verdict against Manson and h i 1 women for the Tate LIBlanca murders, one of the jurors, Larry Sheeley, told them he had dllcuued with an attorney puttln1 to1tthtr "a packa1e deal" to sell to a m11aztne. '·He aakl If all the jurors 1tuck together we could make some money," Tublck said. "He mentioned $200,000." Tubick aald he w a 1 "shocked" by tht sugge1tlon of maklne any profit from the trial because "I felt l was dolnj God's wil1 and my duly to IOCltty." He also said ht would bl somewhat disappointed ll tM J u d B e reductd l h • death sentence or tr It wtre revtraed by a higher court. "Anybody who takta a life should pay for It one w11 or another. I'd reel !he cour1 had failed us," he 1ald. LOS ANGELES (UPll - Thi foreman of the jury that convicted Charle• Manson and three codefendants a n d senten~ them to die said Thuriday he knew of no sexual actlviliea going on among the Jurors. lie called the j u r or who made such an Implication "very small.'' "We have our Inside jokes,1---::;;ljili;ijjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjiiiijiiiijjiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilijij;:-- we may have played around! a lot, but as for the hanky panky, I really don't know ," Hrrman Tubick. SB, a morti- BARBED WIRE SHOW al the Ambassador Hotel THE WEST ••• ALL DAY SAT., APRIL 2 cian, told a news conference ~ Sii THI WIRE THAT FENCED Where the jury WaS Confined . r th I". ast .,01 U- during the ln•l. oDU \0 r I In Cost• ~ .. .Juror William Zamora, who --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=---said he was savin~ most of his memories for a book he is writing, contended on a U!levision news show that "1n nine months people do give up and become what they really are and somehow they are promiscuous." The white-haired Tubick. his brow furrowed and f is I s clenched. said. "If anyone brought that up il was very small or him ." Tubick said Zamora \~as anxr -to be elected foreman hirr and had been EASTER EGGS THINK HEY KIDS tiERE COMES TtiE R·ovAL INTERNATIONAL * * * 20 OF TtiE BEST CIRCUS ACTS IN TtiE WORLO * * * 1 DAY ONLY SAT., APRIL 3 CHILDREN $1.50 ADULTS $2.50 -Showtlme 2130 & 8100 p.m. Naney and their two chlldren, W•t•llff 'I .... ,41•1444 Skipper and Patti, would ac· NIWPOlTll INN FAIRGROUNDS -~co~m~ptn~y~hl~m~·~~~~__!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I Flare leg slacks for today's man. 698 F11hion It; 1r1ck1 In aalld co11r1 Or &crylic/Avrut rayon and ttrt• and l1nci•• ol r1yon /nylol\, P1nrt-ltreet9 tie!. S1z•s 2Q 10 38 S·M·L Fashion leg we1tem grad 11yle In Dacron• ~otye1ter/Avr11• rayon 1trlpt1 and aollda, Siz112:9to38. Fashion leg Jeana in 11ripH and Janel•• 01 Fortre1• poly11ttrlcotton and eollde ol acryllc/rayon/ny!on. Penn·Preat for easy care. Slze1 30 10 38 S·M·L. 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G. tnll Pttrltot A li\trlo. A/lM M. t nCI Wllllt<"!, Jr. -~. Oannt $, 1NI Miiton S. lwN••... .11,c:e M1rl1 .r1a Tecldv Dew1•n• Collin\, Wl!Utm J 1nc1 J'lor.-.co S ltrfl•t. M1rcl•n1 L. '"" Wt"~" tr•1'1t Scl'lneidtr, Jo Ann E tnll ,.l'K E s1gi;:;;...~1vtord Mt rlln 1n<I "lt!lon~ Stlu1lri, ~!Itron lllCI Ml(l>l•I Cl)lt 1. llo!Mn P hl+/p t nO (trOl•n l !In lts Vt•USI F O)l"lunt. EMetn 1,1bfol •I'd Vine<!"• EllWttCI l ntered Mlrcll » Collen. C1101 Su• tnd ,.,,..,Id J1c•son. "'•"'~' C. tncl Di nny C Hutchlton. J••n ~•• 1nd \11/lltloM ~··Cl lt~ll~:· Mt rllyn, ltu!h i nd Wllllt m C•bo• •. Mtrl~n• (ynrhl1 """ llo1d H1millon Mlllor, llo!• J ;,nd Wt•n, r-. l u-c•I••· Niemi llu!n """ Et rl Wtvno M1rllnfl, EC1w11d J tmtn '"" Monict Mm lt!l!t, Dl1n1 F. '"" ltobfrl l ll«Mel, Mtt•1rol l and M••vln H w11..,.,. M'''''"' •••b•ll• .,....o cn1rt•• £dw•rd lofol!Tmon Jr, Donrwo '"" Mil!on Ht rold .,. M..ir"••· Murl•I II lf\11 Jo/>n Ml•cnrll l!lnle•. lnv1!f1 •nd S•"'ufl W. ltowtn, Ell1•bo"lh L011ht f nd Ev•'"" Sovmour W-. ltobo-"' H 1~ 1!.•I"' •co Ectwtrd'I, Vortlnit M. 1nd ltont ld N t;!lberl Roy tnd 5UJOn ll' l'yne. l'1lrid1 l . •11d Howt ro I l t lki,,.,, J11nn1 Lvnn '"" · Llo•d H•ol'lfr S1ut1l1y Dnr11 ,_nn 1-~ t•-•• 11.tv !:lier. lt1•l•111 1nd ltich1rd £ r>'l'"""· Su•"M •na Mlrno•I f KonMkl, JCUPI> !I f ftd \!'IOhll l M,.r';llnn. (tSUnClro Pl>vll!s 1na M1t1 in Wlfk1 •n•-M.l•Cll tt 1-<trv•v. (l-Wdln1 '"" l't • M1r•h1ll, Jove• M . 1nd J°"'n Kin~ 1-<..,~r~n. Cn.rvl G '"" LGw11i M lttmlr!'r, ''"" t '>d h~b•I ......-~. Jllfly H lnCI De.. H flr11r, Ml"' ,.lk• and J,,.• I uls 'trt u1tn. Core!• .I. •nd Phl!!ln ... ,.,,. Si..,,,on. Cl1r1 M1r11ul •••lt t nd C1'11rle' """ M.,..rlnon. Jo'"" •nd ltnber! • Inmon, tn~n C. •n" f111·b~•• F•le•n 'ti...,,., Co!IP"n M. ond flennl• I) r.r1m1~1w. 1-<•len ~-•nd ""•••'d s ~""Cll••on, How1rd Jos.,,h i nd Jovc1 I ••<I"• •11!!, "It•"' It. •n<! Jeon~e M ~1•11, l•nd• r. '"'" C~••I•• '" Mt "IOll!ll, ,_dr!I" G. •n" 1"'-VI l•t~on•v, J -•u•• 1n" "'1111•.., p 1'1..,,..,wmtn. (.1rol•n llutll t nd G1 rv Sro11 ~!mo '""' A, '"" nre•I Jol>n l •-xa,.tJ. Evel•n Elhab•!ll 1nCI Jtm~ ·~~ ""'"'e'· J,.~. l •n<I ,,.1, •••• ~tv-111¥, .,Int A.fin •nCI (;OQ<OI "'"" t• ... ~· Col•en Jo>" •nd (l1r•n•e w1111.,,. (;111181\••. P.,..11<'1 D•1n t nd Norm1)•1n Lt~'"'"' Sc'>o•nl"" ..... ~ s ..... J ..... ~······ , •• l-<1•11 .... lYdl1 K •ntl It""••! YI ~•ll•v. l•ct-OJ••I~• ' '""' p.., •• ,. r 9 0<1rlou•• """'"" T, •"'I n~·1•! J. ,. •. ,.,,,, E'lt•l>f'ltl ,.. •·• \"""•,... '" Y.'IO'O" J""n>' lll)Jt llt t NI r'>o"•ld ........ 11 '•l>j~I~. l!.111\• Storr •n" Dob•rl L~ llm ••-on. 1•1•••v '"" 'le'"' I liutlll!"". C1r111 lvnn 1nC1 Wflllt m ' ......... -. M•oe•. WUll•"'• lllebo!rt '"" Clt •d•nt ""'''"""' l••-m•n. Mlcllool Seo" t nd .,,,,.11, .. l'l llOTT t1YmonCI M . Elliot!. .lot 11, "' !71~ 111;n S• .. H11n1inv1on 8etcl>. 0..1e or '•1111, ,.,.,11 I. 5u,.,.l•ICI by wllf', M••· •1ret; Ctuqllt..-1, C1rolv11 Caci< t nd Juo• !lljot!t •on•, Norm 1nd Frtn~ Ell!ct11 ·hte..,. M••· Iner Lolv '"" MrJ, Onro"1v '.01•1 lft~t frtnClt;l\lld rtn; two ••••I· 1<1ndcll\ldr'"". Mtn"10rl1! terv!c11. Mon· ~.. ll AM. H1intln1tcn 1!.H Cll J'lrd :11r1,ti1n Churcll. Ftmllv IUD9"1h ,.,,,,. vlt!\11'11 !e mt~e m tm0rl1! c""trlbut!on•. '1•1• '""'•!bull to ltl• ll1clfit1 Hoopltt l ~Q~l1menl Funtl. Sml"1• Mort111rv. Di· -· , Pl.LC!£ ~""l'Y .I f'•lct . RH•dfnt of St n V1ldro. :1llternl1. 0.Tt ol 11111~. ,.prll 1 Su•· •ivll!I by wllo, O.rltnt, of St n Y•ldro; '"':t llOn•, ltKcfl, of Son lttmQll, Ctlll I f•rvv A. Jr , [OSI• MHt; Peu( F1!c1, .-INch: fWo a.uohll••. Mr1 Loui11 ~' COS11 Miit; Mr>. Morlt Cl"". ~-YC><1< City; el11\I t ttridell!ldr'°"; h•t• ,,,,.,,, fWO brOll>I!<'•. ROlt r•. IC- 1;.c.l'\S. Ffidt Y. I PM, l •1t1 CD<ll M•» 'ht~. llt<1ultm Mi ii, St lu•Clt v, 9 ,.M. 1· Jotfl>lms Colt\oHc (~u•cn ln•ermen•, ;O!Jd Sn!<>he•O Cemel•<Y. 8 1llr Co1t1 """'' Mortut rv, Dl•"C!On $.IXI fifjlllt m S1••. ,.,, n , of 11" Ac•cl• ~u~t1.,.1on lltt th Dt 1t ct Cl••"'· Aoril . S11T'Y1V-.I OY wilt. M1rv: b•M~•. M 1 ~t~t; lwO 1>111!<'1, St rt St•f 1nd ltr7"t Dobrin Ser~l<H PCfldln1 11 lml"'I MGrtut•Y SCllVllll.ICMllt 'left.rd E Scnum1cn1r. !j;()J Merlnt•I ''"''· "''""'"' 8e1cn. 0111 01 0.1111, l\1rtll 31 ~v•vlv~ bv wile. Eliub~tn; oon.;c1r1 Sn••m1n Scllumocher. "lt woorl l •tell: lwO <1•v1n1ers. Mr1, 5111v Oltnf :n;~.,.,.., of Pitmo llttcn; Su•t n (1rnl kl'!Qmoc!lf.r, "l!'WPOrl lletc~; ont t r1nO· l •"lnll •, Lt n 1':11111>1111 ChlduT"; 1i•· ..... M... Dcrcth•• Mle<>•• ·"' Ro••· !t i"'-M~mc•ltl ••••icn will "" 1>1ld Sol· trd••· • •M. Ptclllt Vlew (~•P•I Prl. ,.I• !nte rmenl Ftml11 '>>OOt!lt thG•t w••l!l"' to mtkt ""'"'or11I co~!tlOU!,on1. 1lt tl • c""Trlbult lo lht .,,...part Morbor lo1stlc l ttout . Ptcllic Vlt w Mor1u1••· '"«'°''· . ARBUCKLfo.: & SO'I WE.'ITCLIF'F tl10RTUARV t.'7 E. 11th St.. <Asta 1\fes• ........ • RAL TZ 1\IORTUART E..'i C.rona drl 1\1ar fi 7:1-9450 Co1ta ~1es• 6~g..%4%4 • REI.I. RROAO\\'A\' l\fORTUARY IUI Broadway. Costa /\tcsa 1 . .1 l-343:\ • ~1ct:ORl\flCK LAGUNA REACH l'tfORTUA ltY 1115 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-14.JS • PACIFIC \'IF:\f /\1E,10 RIAI. PARK Cemetery ~lortuary · Chapel l~ Paclnc View Dri,·r Newport l\ta<'h, California M4 -tieG • PEF.K FA,\fll.V COLOJ\.lAL. FUNERAL 1101\tE 7Atl Bol~• "''· Wr11tml11ster 113-35!$ • 11\fJTH"~ ~IORTUARY 1%7 1\lalfl St. 53f.Wt Runtlnrton Rr:aC"h -. • NEW LOOK -.J anel Richards of Foun tain Va11C'y and Robert l·lo11·ell of Vi'est m111!1ler discuss explor· er Scouti ng. Boy Scou ts of 1\nler1ca have announ- ced that girls are now \velco n1c 1n explorer posts. Explorer Scouti11g· Goes Coed i11 Cou1itv SANT A AN A -The Boy Scouts just arcn'1 whal lhFy used to be. Girls arc being allowed 10 join Explorer Posts. The change, authorized by the Executive Board of the Boy Scouts of America. 1<; the resu lt of studies and recommendations of busines". rducation. religious and youth leaders. Under the new system. girl!'. between l!l and 20 can regis1cr as members of explorer pos1~ organized around a career of vocational interesl. at thC' discretion of the sponsoring organization. ~· plorcrs instead of l'.:xplorer &.·outs Offir1ali: ,<;a1d lhetc arr no iP1n1edialr plan~ to bring girls into 1hc regular Boy Scout and Cub Scout programs. T11 sti11 Prof Appointed 1'o (~ouncil IRVlNI;~ -llr. Herbert I.. Stegrr of ·ruslln, <1ssistant llrofessor or physical 1ncd1cinc ' and rehabilitation at UC Irvine. has been ;ippo1n1ed to A spokesman for the i-:x. ploring progran1 in the Orange Empire Council said between 150 and 160 girls have been participating as ex oflu:io members in the area's 20 posts since January 19i0. the N<i!1onal Adv1.~nry Mental Health <.:uw1r1l of the Nationa1r1 Jnst1lulc of ~l l'nt;.il Health by Secrelarv Elliutt Hiehardson Stan Kautz. cha irman of thr Exploring Division :-.aid thr <1ction .. will enable i-:xploring tn more efreclively carry out its mandate to meet the needs and interests of to d a y · s youth.'' He noted that while the pro- Jilram is still part of Bri.v Scouting. it \~·ill be called simply Exploring and po~t members will be called Ex· Grand Theft Suspect Get Dela y SAN T A ANA -Ne"·pnrt Beach businessman Ra lph K. Ben v.·are and attorney Richard t.1urphy have been given until April 27 lo reply lo grand theft charges contained in an Orange County Grand Jury indictment. .Judge Byron K. ~1cl\!illan authorized the furrher delay on charges stemming from the alleged embezilement of $1 60.000 frorn the Cal1forn1a insura nce group for Benwarc, J i. of 411 15th St. and .\1 urph~·, 41. Orange. Both men arc free on thei r ov:n recogn1z;incc They \\'ere indicted af\t•r a six-n1on1 h investigaiion or lhe Caduceus group \and i t s subsid1ar}·. the Ca s u a I t v Insurance Co .. bv d1,<;!rtct ai -torne~•s 1nvesti~ators a n d agenti:: of the C a l i r or n 1 a Dcpartn1en1 of Cofporations. Ben\\'an· served a" prC's1dcnl nf Caduceus "·i1h l\lurphy a" chairman nf the board . f\turphy \\'as rresidenl of 1hc small<'r t·a,<;ually i:trour \\'ilh Brn11·arr under him as \'ICC president. of the ricpartn1ent of Health.I P.ducat1on and \\'cltare. Dr. Steger. JO, "as fnnnrrly a rl1n1cal psycholog1st for the department of p~~·choloJtV at Los Angeles County·Un1\·ersily of Southern Cahlorn1a Medical Cf'nler. and a cl1n1cal assistant professor at the F' u 11 f! r Theo to g 1 c a I Seminary J!radua1r school of psyrholoJ('y. Dr. Steger holds stale licenses ;is a clinical psychologist and ;is a marriage, fam ily and child counselor. The National AdVJSOl'Y Men· tal Health Coun cil i.~ an ad-1 visory board lo the Depart· n1cnt of Health, Education and \\lclfare on matters o f research. training. and com· munil)' mental health pro· J!:r;ims supported by llE\V's l\'arional Institute of f\1ental Health. V 11e1n1Jlo yed Worksho1> Scli edu.l e<l l/nernploycd aerospace pro- fr ssionals from ;ill o v r 1· Southern California \\'Ill attend a day-long conference on unc1nployn1cnt p!'oblen1s al Corona dcl J\1ar High School Saturday. Sponsored by lhc Arncrlcan Engineers and Sc 1 e n 1 i-" I s Association. the \\'Orkshop is dcsi!!ned to help workers {ind some a11s1o1·crs lo financial pro- blems The t'vl'n\ is Ir('(' and is schedul!'d to begin at 9 a m 111 the careteria ,1nd ('!{IS{' al :l p.n1 Thrrc \1J1t1 br no lunch t:1cili!1cs although coffrc and sn.:icks \\ 111 he 1>rov1drcl For further information call l21.1f 3i3-32Rll Deadli11t~ Nca1·s ProperL .Y Ta x Clai111 .~ Due SA;'l:TA :\\'' Cnun11· As"cs"or Andrt'11' .I . H1n~h;i11· l'a1d 1oda~· nn!y fi.1 p<'ttent of flrani;r Count\• hon1rn1\n<'rs ha1·r fil('d proPcrly la~ (').. cn1pl1on cla11ns. Thl' deadline for f1hoi;: 1~ :, .P ni. \Y<'dnci:tla~ Apnl 15 lhnsha\1' s:iui 150000 •lU I 111 2.111,000 r\:i1n1,<; nnJt1nall\' ni atl f'd out had bf.rn rrtur1iC'rl :ind !hat 100.(l(l(l h:id alrr:id\' brcn approvrd for rxen1rt1ori. A hon1cn\1·n<'r qu;i\1f1 es fnr a $7:14'1 r~rn1pt1nn nn hie pn•· J'lf'f1\' Ill\ a"~"""flli•nl 11 lhr rl11rlli11i:i 1n \1h1"h hr rf'~1drd rin ~1ar<'h I 11a" t11~ prinr1p;1l pl:irr of rrsirlr1u·r H1n~ha11 ::i1 ~., r" mi nd r rl (X'rsons filin g for 1 ctrrflns f!~· 1•n11111ons tn J,:<'I thrir ;ap- pl1c::ir1rH1s 1n hl•forr 1\pr1l 1:1 Thr !'lfl,000 \'i'1t>rans w h ri quahflC'rl for thr r:-.rn1plion la~t ~rar 11r1r ma1lrd form~ and ncw appl1l';1nls C.flfl oht;un forlllS ill the tl~"l'~\Or''i ofriee fhnshaw ad\'l~l'd ho I h h11n1f'n"nrr!'i ;u1d vrtrran~ lo C"nntarr h1~ orf1r(' i1nrned1alclv 1( 1h1·y hr11·c not recc1\'rd thcu 1~71 t'laun~ for r:1.cn1p11on~ The <1SSCi'iSUf II office~ for hRndl1ng thc~r r1111t1rr~ ;ir(' ll"H'•a!<'d 1n lhr nrv. C'nunt\ r1•11rthnu ~f' iOO \\'f'~\ l '1111r l 'rnl1 ·r r)r11·r Thr h(lnl('nunr r·~ rl111\ion t~ 111 !11'1!1111 \I~) .111d I hr 1'f'lr1;in~ d1\·1~1on i~ in ll2~l2 Rnnn1 I . hey gang! off to the beach • Hang Ten! In you 'll firid everything you wtnt at May C o lots of trunks 4nd shirts al'!d jackets too l:verybody 's off to the beac.li .. and v1hol better way to qo thon in Hong Ten? T'1ese or·e the clolhes de ~igned for fun in the ~un ... ot the beoch or ony where the action \-;. Sl1o wn, ilisl o few from our big collection. boys' we•r 1<4 •od 2), barrto 11 h•ll 8) •ncl 110 •• b. )' I , / I ., •. , , ·' o. nyl on joclet with Zip-front, novy, red S-XL II 16) 14.00 b. polye~te r, cotton trunks, many prints 30-36 (83) 9.00 c. cotton knit t-5hirt. mony colors S-XL (83) 6.50-9.00 d. nyl on trunks. many colors JO.Jb (83) 8.50 e . nylo n iac ket with zip.front. red. brown. (ol so in snop·front) S-M 11.00 L-XL (1 4) 12.00 1 • • \ ' I \ ' m•y co. south coast p l•11, 111n dieg fwy. at bristol, c::osta mesa; 546--93'2l shop monday th ru t1turd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1und1 y noon 'Iii S p.m. MAY CO ' .. I QUEENIE By Phil lnlerlandi . Frldaf, Aprll 2, 1971 !1 DAILY mer ', 3 Students BofA Finalists APPAREL ~~~ TALL ... BIG MAii Ping Pong Action Se t Tltree alud<nls from rom-$250 and wlU comptlt for lour, categories In which they ar< AT SENSIBLE PRICES munJUes aJong lhe Orange $2,000 first place grants. entered are : II Pin& pongers wil l battle ll Coest have bttn named From Ora1:11e Coast Colltte: out for the third annual J1un· fin alists in Bank of America's The thrte were selected at Charlei A. Clegern, 17911 ~ngton Beach Table Tennis $35,000 community c o 11 t g e a compeUUon recently In San· Gillman St, Irvint, technical· Tournament April 17. awards progran1. ta Ana where four students vocational, and Jane E . llll The tourney, scheduled for The students, two from from each or nine Community P.iande. 328 Bowling Green op ... SllNI:••,• Orange Coast and one from colleges spoke before a panel Drive, Costa Mesa, business. 1£.W 11 a.m. ln lhe Huntington Gotdtn West College, advance of judges including Saddleback From Golden West College: Bcaco High School gym-to the linals set for April <;ollege President Fr• d John Chari~• Spero, 9710 1912 HARBOR BLVD. c:,o,,..ST• naslum, ls lor singles only. 23 in Beverly Hills. All a.re Jlremer. . Talbert Ave., i''ountain Valley, ... . I Th I nd th . nd . -I I 000115 N0.1"" ST. Doubles play is scheduled1-~·~.,~-~~;of;w;•;n;•l;n;g;•;I ;";';';;;;;;·;.w;n;n;•;rs;;•;;;;;;;•;;;;s;c;ie;nc;•;•;;•;n;g;m;•;•~":n!g·:_-1t--'.'.~~~~~~--, at I l a.m. April 24. F•shion-Quality Competition will be in two NAMEA~~ANDS _ _, di,isions, juniors (under 181 THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE • B•nkM"'''"'d • and open (over 17-years/. • to.laster Charge • e DAILY l•t • 'AT, M • Entry fees are 75 cents for juniors and $LSO for the open division. Forms may be ob- tained at the Recreation Department, 17th and Orange Streets. Deadline for entries is April IO. IN THI CAIOUSEL COUIT •.• HAVE YOUI PICTUH TAKEN WITH HIM South Coast ?lua In Co1t1 Mesa Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers t ' • ' ., t~~~_;,~~~4-:·::;.IZ.~v~,..~--------.J I OPEN OAIL y 10 TO 10; SUNOAY 10 TO 7 SATURDAY ONLY! "Coals to Newcaslle, if you ask me." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~COSTA UCI Extension Set For April Lectures A highly varied schedule of lectures and activities will be conducted t h r o u g h the Uni versity of California Ex- tension during April at UCJ . The day-by-day schedule for the month is: SATt.HIOAY, ••rll l "C'-ilflt, PltnnlM, Proc:tHln• '"" Evtlu•rlnt 1 L'uon wl1n Young Cll11dren." l-• W 111 on, kln- dtrttrttn lftth ... NUPVI Otv Scllool. Ptrl ol • UC lrvl,,. E~!on1lon 1~11"~ str111, "Child 0.vtlopmenr Throu9/\ I ... ArT1,'0 t ,._m ,·11 ,,_., Rm. 1&!, Humtnl!lts Hall, UC lr•lnt c1m1>us $1119/1 IGmlHlon, ,,_50 SUNOA 'f, A1>•U I ''Tht We1lorn wl!h 5 e c I t Sltnl!lc1nct: TIM Ox-aow lnddtnl t1'Ul," P111I Fr1111r, Pn.o .• 1ul111nr prOltHor ti C111om1n College. P1rl of • UC lrvlnt E-T..i~lon lecture serl~1. "Flc!lon Into Fiim," 7·10 p.m., Scl.,,ct LeC!urt Holl, UC lrvlllt com· put. Slntlt 1dmlnlon, 15.llO. MONDAY, APrll 12 "Computers ~nd lht Rt•! E•la!e lfldu1lrY.'' Alltn D, Kolin, Prw,rtv Ret•1rch Fln•nclt! Ccr11art1!on. C•n· fury Clry, Flr11 el 1 UC lrvlfle E'irlfll1lon lecture 1t•l'9, •·ccm11ut•r AHllCt~I !11 llttl E1h!• An8IY1l"" 7-10:00 p,m., llm. 101, Phv1lctl Kltnc•• BIH .. UC Ir.In• ctm11u1. Slfllllt td· mlH\on, w.oo. TUESD.-.Y, Aprtl 1J "'Famllv lnltr•cHon P •I t t • n 1: Soc:!o/1>11kt l." Rt Y Fowlt r. B D., con- sullt nl In FtmllY Lite Educ:t!IOI\ and Mt rlratt, Clllld c;...,pSflor. Ptr1 of • UC 1 ... 1,.. E•!1n1IOI\ leC!urt .,.,;..,, "il!6uc:tl1ne !ht Child ol D!vcrcfd tll" Rtm9rrltd Ftmltl11," 1·10:00 11.m .• Scl9!>Ct L.r;tu'I Ht11, UC l•vlnt ctm- ,.,.._ ilntlt tdm!uk>n. U.00. T\HllDAY, A..rll IJ "'MOtlv-.tlne OVrltlvu "~,.."'"·" Jtck Studnle\1'(, 11rt1l~I. LH<ltrl/!111 Can•ullan!1. Fir$! 111 1 UC lrvlnt Eir11nt lon 1.r;hlfl 11flt1, "Prc!tnlonal Pr1cll~11 In ln1 H11111lr111 llldu1!f'Y," 7.f:XI 11.m .• Rm. ,,..., Humtnllltt Hill, UC lrVIM (ampus. SI n 9 It td· mhslon. 1$31. SATURDAYS t to I P.M. MON.-THUlS. 10°! ,,M. f llDAYS 10-& ,.M. 1714 l 540-1211 , located h1: So. Coatt ,la:re, Cott• M ... Ant. Vkt ,.,,.,.M1~111r f:I, M. STOL TE ENJOY A GREAT WORSHIP EXPERIENCE EASTER AT FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Miii• I AfflM Hdttllff•• IHcli FOUR GREAT SERVICES 7:l0 A.M.-t:lO A.M.-11 :00 A.M.-7:00 P.M. BIBLE SCHOOL-9:•5 A.M . VIS ITORS WELCOME I MESA ONLY 2200 HARBOR BLVD. ~~~:~·0~~COSTA MESA Harbor - J • .. I f ~ , • • ' • ' ' ' • ' I I J O D~ILY PILOT Frlda~, April 2, 1971 . ) . ...:.../ Some real great talent here .. some proven stars. some newcomers in the industry. All \ great performers. This show is rated "G," good for the entire family. /1 A.dverl11ed 1p.cial1 good lhru April 7, 1971. And 11 yo1o'r• Cl new r.ader of 011r a d. cheer 11p, It ;•t• wor11. MARIY'S THOUGHT fOR THE DAY lt'1 g11tln!J to th• point where you. n1.d more brain• lo mGlc1 out th• Income Tax f orm• thon to make 1h1 ,fncom1. 3 BAR ALUMINUM SCREEN DOOR 599 If you hoTen't got i ld1 and dog• around who Ilk• lo go thru th• acreen. thl1 may be your ticket, LUCKY 7 BAR TWIST 9a7 Theo. II th1 llld1 on11 ba'Q outwittff you too many Um11. d1!1nd the home wltb. lli11 7 twi1l.d ho:r deal. ANODIZED DIAMOND GRILL 1177 Now. vo11 rtally tum on the heat with thl1 line anodlied, !or longer 1parld1, diamond grill ra-.cal. BRASS ANODIZED MOROCCAN H regular pat11rna don'! atop them. then you conlua• th• pe\1, k\da, and !He1with1bia •xoHc cr-tio11.. lt'1 loo beo.utilul. (!he:t'1 c:all.d•lh1 "1oll1n1r" Mfore the "comm1rc:\aJ." And now a l1w comm1rclal m111ag11 from my spon1or ••• ) ALL COMPLETE WITH SILENT CLOSER. HINGES. LATCH. AND ADJUSTING CHANNELS. CAST ALUMINUM BAR-B-Q COOKER The outfit thot make1 th••• baa mad• toy1 lor years. toya th1 i ld1 couldn't bu1t -•ily. Thia 11 made ta Jail (11111 I wonder If a little clown might pop out of the top) GIANT SHELF SALE 1997 No.1101 When fgol this Item !twas hard lo r•1l1t drawing o mon1ter glont 11tllng on on• i:md !Utl• pMlpl• running all around lt. lt'1 o big d-t beeou1e we bought triple for this .a.le. In Walnut, White. AYocodo. Orange. and Yellow Uniatl. 10d8 2.99 12x36 2,39 !2x48 8x2( 8x36 Sx48 1.79 ·2.39 2.99 .Be1t vu••• I• thcit they are mod• from ocii. but why tru1t me? I lie so sw••!ly. IO LBS. by Kingsfo rd PARTY ROSE ,.,,,,. ', Girl a. I know Clbou1 the pan ft ho1e lutor. They don't fit. they hole .a1llr. ond they c;ost too inuch.. Wall. our5 don't co1t too mU<b. ..( - PETITE MEDIUM TALL 29C .PR. •• ·'!"' REDWOOD STAIN Th• way lence1 suck It up. you 01• gonna •av1 mucho money on thi1 good color 11dwood 1lain. 99cGAL. 17-0Z. BIG SPRAY PAINT Jt'1 big. 17 01 .. which 11 more than lhe other guy'• Giant 14· oi. can. ID0111n't our humlHty kind ol gi"• you a lump In your 1hroaL llk1 you juat awallowed an olive.) CONCRETE MIX • Jlah. and Hoh again. S!ill our colleagu11 sell the 60 POUND for lh1• price. lu1t add watll lo ot.1r 90 POUND good mix. 67c so LB. BAG TURTLE CHROME PROTECTOR Turtle. la lhnt any nam• !or a compony? ]!'1 good chrom• pro1.clor. but n•1:! y•or my company. Robbi! Inc. wUl kill it. sac PORTABLE CAMP SINK aaa WfilTE FROST PANELING A 1had1 like lh\1 we couldn't 1ell lor Jett lhOt'l 2.99 o l•w yeo:ra ago. (So who! tooi them 10 long, y ou. 0111.) y. Croo.,ed. full 4x8 loot. perfect. 197 4'8 FOOT KM BO GARBAGE DISPOSER ~lrt:·,,· \ I I .I ,I \: \~ i,H ul, Thi• I• tom• •ind of a dltpoter. with lf) hp. power, Thia will do the job cu1d l•t you hold on to a lew extra dollmt too. 1777 FLEXIBLE DOOR STOP For le11 them a n\(kel y&U get no more hol11 In th• wall from th1 doorillob. IU I can't talk you out ol k. l'm going ln!o poll!lct .) 4c EA. AUTO COOLANT SYSTEM fr•••OJ bo1lo1'•r TKO'l'•ry ••• prot-cllon. (Wrhing 1h11 it lllr• ' 1olldng with you. It you wGnl to --•ln1w11. drop a line 10 "Mork the • Larlr" ot any 1tor•. No ob1c•n• -·-Jeller1, no 1hr.at1. plea1e.) 197 Ii II 'I ! !, I " I I I , , I 'I I '.\ 11 , ' \"' I I ,, j, / 1 ,' I •'j.; L! I I I II [; I 4x4 REDWOOD STAINED TABLE Mean it'• fc>Ur by lour foot In •I••· not made out of 411:41. The thing •ould 'Weigh. a ton• then.. RedW1:!0d 1talned, 1997 MINI BAR-B-Q Righi for beach. apartment • Tacation. or to barbeeue tho•• Midi• that look like my Aunt A11r11la u1ed to wei;zr. 127 BEDDING PLANTS Got a bunch ol 1h•m. Plarit them.. and 1oon. pretly llow•r1. AnnualL next yltaT we can ••II you inore. Noture'1 own planned ob1ol•1c•nce. PISTOL NOZZLE Now you can do your John Wayne imper1onalion1 and wa1h the window•. the tot••· th• drlv• ond the neighbor'• cot ot the 1<1.n1• ti.J:nl , 47c KING O' LAWN POWER EDGER 'N••I y.o:r mayM w•'U gel the Pre11d1nt O' Lown. ar •"•n th.e :Emperor o· Lawn. but now th• be1t th•r• 11 It the l lng. 4- cycl1 engine. trirn ar tdge. - I I ! 5377 No. 206 Th• rnogic 11. Howall ne,,.er i•'».:::.;: heard ol it. f or plan11. 2 CU. FT. 97c KIDDIE SHOWER Th• gro11 get• watered. tk• lrid1 ha"• fun. Bet 1he g:oYemmenl couldn't do betl•r lor u1. •Y•n t.o an eleetlon yea1. 49c. .... • BUILT-IN BAR-B-Q UNIT Thta on• you brlek In and hold thoM Texa1 typ• barbeeue1. (And you're from Long ls.land and never h&ard of T•xal. I know.) 1997 3-PC. BAR-B-Q TOOL SET Moil platel toll it Cl four-piec.e 111. they count the bo>:. Got the tooga. lh• 1pat\lla, and the fork. WINDOW SHADES Loolt at that priC.. Mr man ho• wrlU•a the pric• baclr:ward1. like he writes the word1. Cut to 1i1• bee. up lo 36 inche1. . ~· ' -);-,. ll' ~'. ' ' '. ~ . 1--1--~ l :;re,:;.:' .. I . , I" ' 1,,,.' : "' ~ DINING FLY AND CANOPY Big llxll loot ccrnopy. cornpl•I• with po\e1 and Une1. Yoa can •r•cl It on th• bench or backyard in m\nut••· !or 1hod• or weath1r prol1ttio11.. (Watch. it, lrv wUl 1ie BruAo on you. tor th11.) 1667 ~-...... BY THE CASE You 1ur• can •crv• rnoney for a lew mlnute1' work and you don't walt all day lo git your car back too. S!mplt divl1\on 1ho..,1 th.1 per quart cat• tQ'Ylnga. TEXACO 6.99 SHELL X·IOO 6 .49 VALVOL!NE 8.99 HAVOL!NE 9 .49 PENNZOIL 9.99 24-Quarl Case VALUABLE COUPON -- \ BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 Ftkl11, April J, 1'11 S P111 II Doggone Busy Club Mails Invitations Patron letters are out -formally announcing the annual benefit ball sponsored by the Ebel! Club of Laguna Beach. The mood will be south ern ro1nantic on the evening of Friday, 11ay 14 , as a !\1e\v Orleans sellin g of magno· lias and 'veeping 'villo\\'S v.1elcomes guests to the Bayo u Ball in the Balboa Bay Club. Chairman of the Bayou Ball is l\1rs. James Agnew, assisted by co-chairmen ti1rs. Aldon Clark and Mrs. Ja1nes Townse nd. Heading committees are the Mmes. Clark. finance; 1tacauley Ropp, patrons; Douglas Kenaston and \Villian1 Thomas, invitations; \V illia1n Dotts an d Alfred Kress. decora tions; Louis Zitnik, reservations, and Herbert Burridge, door prizes. Rounding out the con1m1tlee list arc the Mn1cs. Townsend. printing; Rudolf Stev.1ard and !!ail Chamber· lin, hostesses, and Jun Chino, publicity. The Ebell Ball is the major fund raisi ng event or the year, the other being an annu al rum1nage sale. Pro· ceeds from both go to\vard scholarships. loans and con- tributions to civic endeavors. . Major philanthropies are $3.000 given annually to six graduates of La guna Beach High School; $500 to the American Field Servi ce. maintenance of a continual interest·free student loan fund and $16,500 already giv· en to South Coast Community l-l ospital in equiprnent and pledges. In other areas, the club has rontributed $1 ,600 to the Laguna Beach Community Players building fund: $4.200 to the Boys Club of La guna: $3.600 to the Y~TCA and $2,000 to the Lyric Opera Association. ..__._,,..,. ........ _ ... -· -· . ---________ .... -.......... ...,...... ' ,. --....' "' (\I -' BU LLET HITS MARK -Canine maildog Bullet delivers an Ebell were mailed recently, inviting Soulh Coast res)dents to the Balboa Bay Club for an evening of fun and dining in a southern magnolia setting. Ball patron letter to Mrs. Donald Knapp as ?i.1rs. Charles McCall;i serves as his able assistant. Patron letters to the May Bayou Ball Tuning Up fo r Travel Ade lines With Harmonize Melody' 'Dixie Southern costumes and so ngs are in the 'vorking stages as members of s,veet Adelines, Inc. of ~1ission \liejo plan for a regional competition in Phoenix May 7 through 9. The Mission Viejo choru s or 20 (an d adding ne \v nlcm bers every 'veek) \Viii compete against choruses of up to 70 in the regional division stretching from Southern California through Nevada and Arizo na . Concentrating on Southern atmosphere, the group _,vi!l si ng '·Jo'loatin' Down lo Cotton To\vn" and "Dixie .r.lelody" vying for an a\vard judged on music, sound, expression and sho,vmanshi p. First and secon d place quartets will be el igible to compete in an annual international convenlion and com petition in October. Women interested in learnin g barbershop harmony are invited to Tuesday evening sessions in Downey Savings and Loan building in ~lission Viejo. Those interested in information may call .r.1rs. James Gordon Jr., president, at 837-5294. Recent additions to the sin ging staff include lhe Mmes. George Dicks, \Villiam Goldsworthy, Keith Martin, Mark Lego1ne and Richard Lodyga of Mission Viejo: Denn is Ford and Edward Lowry of Garden Grove, and Laurence Cafarella of Santa Ana. SEWING AND SING ING CONFERENCE -Sweel Adelines (left to right), the Mines. Mark Lego1ne, James Hoo ker and Richard Lod yga select fabric for southern belle costume for a May regional com- petition. Teenager 's Typographical Trouble Trips Mom's T rally DEAR ANN LANDERS: My "1rc IS a nervous wreck over an incident "'h1ch I feel has very lillle significance. The poor woman is in analysis (her six1h year ) and she has come to believe that EVERYTlll NG means SOMETHING. (You kn ow, the old Freu- dian the<>ry that there are no accidents j Our 18·year-old dau ghter '\'ent away to tchool ror the first time last Sep· tember. She writes us a long typewritten letter every week . Yesterday a letter arrived. It !tarted "Dead Mother and Dad:" My wife went to pieces. She is l>Ure ClJr daughter wishes her dead . When I to16 her it v.·as a typographical error Ille screamed, "No, it was a sul>con· sciou• wi~h. You'U notice she didn 't . . ANN LANDERS [fl say 'Dcod Dad' -il "'as 'Oc;id 1\lolher.'" i'lca~r. Ann 11·hll1 i<: your opinion of 1t11s? Hurry ~our answer A supporll\'e t·1111'lmc,nt frnrn you n1ighl hfL my wile out of her depression. -BELL AIRE: l>EAft BELL: Anyone who uses a lypc\\·ril er w·ifl tell you that one uf the mosl common lypog rnphical errors lb«:ause of relative position or lhe keys I is the transposition or "d" for ''r''. After six years of analysis, ll'1 too bDd )'our wife II &till so paranoid . DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am a 26- ~'rar·old girl who needs to know \\'here the limits of friendship end. T1\o years ago Lows and t decided to share an apartment. She has lost Jobs off and on, but alwa ys managed to pay her share of the rent, groccrtes and ulililics. Eight monlhs ago Lotus was out of work for five week s. She \vas afraid of cracking up and asked me lo lend her $300 so she coulcl visit her folks 1n Arkansas. I borrowed the money rrom the credit union. In ten da} s Lotus was back -no money. no job and no prospects. I don 't want to throw her out because she has no place to go. Yel J can't afford to keep her here if she doesn't psiy her share. Whal should I do? - TROUBLE OEAR TROUBLE : Look for another roommate -someooe you can move in with, or somHne wbo will share a pla_ce with you elsewhere. Then give l.otus her notice. No need to fed guilty. Yau have prove11 your friendship and lai d It on the line -'300 worth. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A member of our family who Is very wealthy has cerlai., areas or cheapness well known to all ot us\ Last year wr son was married . This relative said she knew just the right wedding presc11t but it would have to be obtained from an antique dealer on her next trip abroad. Three weeks ago the wedding gift arrived from Paris. Attached to lhe gift wit! a handwr illen iote from the relative staling lhat the gift was a rare find, daing back to the 18th cen tury "although it isnt signed." The bride's brother is associated with the art museum in Chicago which eVeryone knows iA one of U1e world's rinesl. lie examined the gift and declared il a fake. Just to make sure, he offered to have It examined by a friend "'ho is an established authority on that period. Yesterday we heard the evaluation. The piece ii not authentic. There is a chance, Ann, that the relative paid a big price for it. If so should she be told she was rooked? The bride would like your opinion. -YONKERS DEAR VONK: Tbe bride s.bould 111 "thank you" and nolhln1 mot'!:. It would be in poor taste to let the rel1Uv1 know her gift bad been appraised and it Is a phony, • How far shouid a teenage couple go? Can necking be safe? When does tt become loo hol to handle?. Send for Ann Landers' booklet, "Neoking and M ting -What Are the Umlts?" M•il· your request to Ann Landers ln care or the DAILY PILOT eoclosing so cent. in coin and a long, stamped, aelf-a(j. dreased envelope. • • ' ~ • • • • • • • • • • • : ~ • I I ' i . • ' ' • • • .. .. I • = ' 1 • ' ' l ' • ~ I I I I DAILY PILOT ,,ld•r. April 2, 19n Your Horoscope Pisces: Clouds Vanish SATURDAY APRIL 3 By SYDNEY OMAllR Actre11 Bette Davl1 11 fond of pol.at out tbal, "J am aa Arle1 and to l Ukt to be flnt lD everyWA1 I do-11 leader." Mlt1 Davb: I 1 b.owltdgeable a~t a1trology and 11 a deltglu io talk to oa thl1 1ubjecL AlllE8 !March 21·Aprll 19): adaptable. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Some ob.!Jtacle1 are rt!moved. There ls greater freedom of thought, action. Jdeaa are developed, contact& are made. You are able to erpand vlew1 and publicize projects. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Spotlight on income, personal poaae.11lom. One born under Leo proves a delight. But heed your own counsel. D o n ' t permit another's charm to steer you in erroneous dlrec· Uon. CANCER (June 21.July 22): you know what ll is you ac· tually need. Improve ap- pearance; purchase apparel. LEO (July 23-Aug, 22): One born under Geml.ol can help you fulfill son1e hopes, wishes: Accent on glamour, clande- stine aJTangements. Have fun but don't drown out voice of cooscience. ri.1essage will be clear. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Emphasis on desires. &mance is in picture. But try to rem ember basic com- mitments-to others a n d yourself. Check details of uto- pian plan. Thtre could be a ' . New Group Forming Workers Wanted The call has been sent out for Y:omen to assist \vith fund.raising and support for the Crippled Children's Society of Orange County. Mrs. William Eytchison will host a coffee al 10 a.m. Monday, April 5. in her Newport Beach home to which all interested women are invited. Guest speaker will be Praim Singh, exe- cutive director, who will discuss functions and plans for the Easter Seal Rehabilitation Cen· ter. The new group \viii encompass the Costa Me sa. Newport Beach, Corona de! ~tar and Laguna Beach areas. Past lnvestments now can bear fruit-applies to time aa well u money. E1perlence wW pay dlvldtndJ. Some faml- Jy members may prove Ir- ritable. Go with the Ude. Be Cycle moves up; you get what you go alter, but be sure basic flaw. &..-------------------"""' Counselor to Review Results of Research LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): A change now could enhance reputation. If you insist on adhering to outmoded concept, you will lose. The choice is your 01vn. This also applies to personal relationships. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A change in domestic situation ls indicated. Strive for greater 1 harmony; make basic con- J cession. Open communication i lines. One at a distance may Engagement Revealed During Family Party l'llr. and fltrs . Robert 0. \Vhlte of Costa fllesa an- nounced the engagement of their daughter. Debra Lyn White to Vard" Beeche r Wallace 111 during a dinner party in their hon1e. HARD AT WORK -Mrs. Ralph Davies, Incoming president Oelt) and Mrs. Nor· man Branovan, vice president, prepare table decorations for the installation dinner-dance Sunday, April 4, of the University Chapter, B'nai B'rith Women. Fact and Fantaay About Human Sexuality will be the topic for Alexander P. Run· ciman, PhD, former Master• and Johnson sex researcher when he addresses members and guests of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Or1n11e Coun- ty Med ical Association. The luncheon meeting wlll take place in the OCMA building, Oran1e, be11lnnln1 with a social hoqr at 11:45 a.m. Tuesday, April S. have important nev.•s1 SAGl'M'A.RIUS (Nov. "'2.2.- Dec. 21 J: One you respect has special request. Grant • l it-If within reason. Money or j! legal area may b e In- ' volved-so are emotions. See facts as they exist. You ere Among guests v•ere fl1r. and 1.1rs. V. Beecher \Yallaee Jr. of Newport Beach, parents of the future bridegrooin and Mr. and fllrs . John C. Beach of Costa fl1esa , grandparenlll of the future bride. Meeting Planned University Chapter A native Callfornlan, Dr. Runclman earned his BA, fl.1A and PhD degrees from the University of Southern California. He was a producer· host for CBS-TV for nine years and ha! been a faculty member at USC, Washington University in St. Louis and San Fernando Valley State College. in better position than may be imagined. CAPRICORN {Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Lie low : let others show their hands. Be discreel. Give special attention lo mar- riage or partnership situation. Legal adviser needs your ·cooperation. You get nothing for nothing. ~11ss White is a graduate of Estancia High School and attends Golden \Vest College. Her fiance. an alumnus of Ne1<o'port Harbor 1-ligh School, is serving with the Navy . Mrmbeni or the Sisterhood of '1l: ·'.lie Ellat of El Toro will gather at 8 p.m. on Tues- day, April S, In the MJsslon Viejo home of Mrs. Elliot Levenson. Dinner-dance Marks Premiere Installation FANTASY DR FACT? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Be sure to praise those who perform special services. DEBRA WHITE Future Bride HB Auxiliary No wedding date ha:s been set. Currently under way ls a Sunday school poster contest publicizJng a fall hay ride, barbecue and square dance being planned by t h e Sisterhood. Mrs. Joel Brody and Mrs. Levenson wW judge entrlea : · following the June 1 deadline. Awards will be given at grade '. · levels 3 through 9. . The Unlver1lty Chapter 1407, B'nal B'rlth Women has planned it.s flrst installation of officers and in!titution of chapter on Sunday, April 4. The ceremony and dlMer· dance will take place begin· nlng at 6:30 p.m. In the Inn Place, Corona de! Mar. Mrs. Lawrence Klein and 1.1rs. &bert Teller are lrutallatlon co-cheirmen. ~-mc:"6:=--~_:au-""'""'"'~:&• 4 st !C"'f"X!lJ':; -"· .. .. " " t: Peering Around ,.· ., :; A MEXICAN POTLUCK h :· DINNER hosted by the Leon :: Axelrods of Laguna Beach for ~! Orange County Lion Club op-~ tomctrist.s kicked off plans for ~. an April 17 eye cli nic in ~: Ensenada. J~ Project LOOK ( L i o n :~ OpWmetrists of Orange Coun-;~ ty) is in its sixth year oi ;:; a people-to-people program to :;-help visually and financially ~ needy school child ren , ac- ·cording to Axelrod who is general chairman of the clinic. Attending the dinnt.r were Bottles Uncorked Members of lhe Pi Pl Chapter of Beta Sigma Pbi y.·ill gather in the Westminster home of Mrs. Harold Proctor for a champagne brunch Sun· day. April 4. The fol\O\\'ing Saturday Mrs. Oennis Parker wlll host an Easter egg hunt for members and their children. and the chapter will contribute Easter decorations to C h i 1 d r e n ' 1 Hospital of Orange County . A ritual of jewels \\"ill be given to the ~1mes. Jim l'\adon. William Van Zant and Proctor Tuesday, April 27, in the Santa Ana home of h-trs. Richard Lodwick. New officers have been elected for the coming year. including the Mm~s. Phillip Wakefield, president: Nadon, exten!ion officer; Van Zant and P r o c t o r , 1ecretaries. Lod1•.'ick, trea:surer a n d Parkf'r. civil defense chairman. Oil Pa inting Demonstration A demonstration of oil pain- ting b)' Laguna Beach artist Ken Knut!"en w\11 highlight the meeting of the Hunlington Beech Art League on Monday ,\ AprU 5, at 7:90 p.m. There will be no admll1lon ch1r1e, and the public Is hi· vtl<d to 1ttend lhf g1therln1 Jn the Rectt1Uon Center. Knutsen, who will b e District Gov. and Mrs. Homer Briggs of Ontario, district chairman Dr. and Mrs. Cal Chamberlain of Pomona, .and Dr. and Mrs. Norman Wiley of Placentia, president of the Orange County Optometrist society. Other area doctors and their wives enjoying the fa re were the William Buethes o I Laguna Hills ; Ivan Cady1 of San Clemente and &n Craigs, Martin Dales and Louis Prl- jatels of Costa ~1esa. Traveling from Ensenada to give the party an authentic touch and coordln&te work of Ensenada Lions were the Carlos Avilas and Santiago Campbells. EARLY SPRfNG visitors at the Santa Barbara Biltmore were the Jess Fenders. Howard D. Cunn!nghams and Thomas Greens of Newport Beach, Mrs. CI a re n ce Renouard of Laguna Hills and the Geoffrey C. Beaumont! of Laguna Beach. Fashion Show To Highlight Club Meeting Members of lhe Founlaln Valley Newcomers Club will gather for a noon meeting and luncheon In the Airporter Inn on Wednesday, April 8. Fashions from Gwen 1 s Boutique in Costa Mesa will be modeled following the luncheon. Mrs. Albert Clicker and ~frs. Don Wyrick are taking rtservations. Babysitting will be available. THINK EASTER 'BONNET THINK presented by Mill O r • Brimer, It a IUe member of Jc".,,.. ~LI\ the t..gun• Beach A r t Ulofl I W J\X Assoel11tlon and hi!! for seven w"~llff Plo1• • ••1·2444 \'"llr• t'lfhlh!ft-1 Ill lhe l.itl(UnA NEWl'OITER INN P ... -,..t, f'c•tl•·:il r+f th~ Art.~. ':.-----------'! Mrs. Ralph Davle1 has ac· cepted the pos!Uon of presi· dent. Assisting her will bt the Mmes. Gerald Birnbaum, Norman Branovan and Harold Splvock, vice presidents. Now head of 1 pey. chotherapy institute, he ls a licensed family, marriage and child counselor. Dr. Runclman is winner of television's Sylvania Award, an Outstanding ln1tructors award and holds memberJbip Dr. A. P. R.unclman In Tau Epsilon Phi honorary. He is listed Jn "Who's Who In Amer l can Education," "Who's Who in the Midwest" and "American Men of Science." Basic morale is an Important factor. Your general standing improves. One who h a s criticized does an about-face. PISCES (Feb. 19-march 20): Some emotional c Jou d s evaporate. You see more clearly. Issues are properly Other officers include the Mmes. Te 11 er, treasurer; KJein, Edward Miller and Barbara Gumbiner, secretaries, and Herbert Dale, coun!elor. B o a r d members are the Mmes. Jeanne Feldman, Robert Meltzer, Karl Ressler. Sam Roa:enbawn and Murray Sperber. Coast Groups Win Star Roles in Show defined. Give full play to creative processes. New at- titude leads to greater op· timism, independence. Twice a month the Ladies' Auxiliary to Huntington Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 7368 meets at 3 p.rn. The first Friday of each month they gather in Odd Fellows Hall for a business meeting and the third Friday the socialize in various !oca- Uons. Fu rt her information may be secured by calling !\1rs. LeRoy Hermann at 536- 3580." THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE Persons in te rested In membership in the chapter should contact Mrs. Spivock. The spotlight of the Greatest Ebell Club of Newport Beach IN THE CAROUSEL COURT ••• Show on Earth swung to one won one first. ~ HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN WITH HIM Orange Coast woman's club In the large clubs category. p 'Dt In Costa Mesa as winner of 10 fir8t places the Woman's Club of Leisure 5oufh ,oasf 1 JUI Sorority Gathering and 10 second pl aces during:l 1~w~o~'1~d,~La~gu~n~a~H~i~ll~s ~w~o~n~o~n~e~iiiij~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j~~~~~~-i the Orange District convention first and three seconds. of California Federation of Woman's Clubs. The Fountain Va 11 e y New officers will greet members of the Upsilon Omicron Chapte r of Bet a Sigma Phi sorority at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, April 7, in the home of !\lrs. Hugh Davis in Orange. fltrs. Robert Glomboske has been named president, assisted by the !\1 me s . Lawrence Oudeans, vice presi- dent: Tom Torrence and Hugh Davis. :secretaries; Dennis Kennedy, treasurer. and Grant Olson, civil defense and coun- cil representative. The Mmes. Kennedy and Woman's Club, competing in the medium clubs category, was heaped with accolade& v.·hich were accepted by Mrs. Wallace Short. during a ban· quet in the Airporter Inn, Newport Beach . Other area clubs brtnglnij home honors were Westmin1ter Woman'• Club, one first and one second, end Laguna Niguel Woman's Club, two seconds, both in the 1mall clubs category. In the medium c 1 u b 1 cate2ory, the Woman's Club of Seal Beach won four first.I and seven seconds, and the Davis will present a cultural! ,,;.. ..-program entitled Tools for the 1,000'1 OP. OIL PAINTIN•I Art of Lif 11 WHOLllALI WARIHOUSI e. n OPIN TO THI PUILIC The DAILY PILOT-~ SO•/o OFF -lllf I . IOtNOtll., SANTA ANA The One That Cares """"' •v-w. DIALIRI WANTaD THANK YOU HUNTINGTON BEACH! -GRAND OPENING- THE NEW WEIGHT WATCHERS CENTER 7732 EDINGER10pp."" "°""111"" '""Ml INTRODUCTORY OPIN MIUINGS WlllC Of Al'lll S-10, TH.., W .... Th"""S.I, 10 A.M. M•a..W.t.& Tlwrs. 71JOP.M. FREE WEIGHT WATCHERS FOOD KIT! For fur1her information Coll (714) 83S.SSOS ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS OUTITANOINO l'INI I UROl'IAN OIL l'AINT IHGS NOW OFFERED TO T"I l'UILIC AT W"OLISALI! PltlCIS 1'0111 THI l'JllST TIMI IN T"I HAltllOR Altl!AI OIALllt$ WILCOMll Grand Opening Sale! 00 24" x 36" $ ON CANVAS each UNL!MITED SELECTION Of. 8" X 10" OILS ................................. . Huge Selectiott of Old W ot•ld Fine A1•t All Sizes • • • • • Btadget Prices! llmported Carved frames • • • !LOOK FOR THE LITTLE YELLOW COTTAGE! 369 E. 17th St. Ope1t Sot •• su11.-Mo11 ..... 11 a.m •• 5 p.m. "45·5l60 from Costa Mesa LEE'S ORIGINAL OILS • .. r " r r d . f f f e d I I, " " Friday, Aptll 2. 1971 DAILY PILOT J 3 NO DIN GALING -Dan Rovran of J\tBC's "Laugh-In" prepares Santana-27 sloop for departure from Marina de! Rey on 2,500-mile voyage to Hawaii. From left are ,Peorge Millar, Phil Stangeland and Rowan. The voyage "'ill be a trial run for a new do\vnwind sail by Stangeland. •La11gh-ln" Comi~ at Sea I Dnn R owan Sniling Sloop to Hawaii By Al~10N LOCKABE\' He bought it second.hand after use lhe main doi,1·nwind, and selling his 35·foot ketch to the attendant dangers of ac- Dan H.owan or N BC' s buy something targer. cidental g y bes . ' ' says "Laugh-Jn'' televi~ion sho~· "I asked Bill Schock, the Stangeland. "ll will also aid \\'ent ·•yachting'' TI1ursday. builder , v•hat he thought of in sleering, in conjeclion with It wasn't the first time. the boat'' said Ro .... ·an. "Bill oru wind vane." The genial straight man ha!( said it y,·as a fine boat." Ro\l.'an is no ''dingaling" of the Rowan and Martin team "Then I asked him if he when it comes lo sailing. He has been filling up his spare ·would go to H.ono!ulu in It, appears serious about the • time for son1e 15 years by and Bill replied: ·Not in a whole thing. speaks l he sailing a 3J-foot ketch oul or million years.' language, and is not deceiving Ma rina dcl Rey to such places ··Bill hastened to assure me himself about the hazards on as Catalina Island. that the boat would take it such a trip. Thursday he set s:.iil in a alright, and I just as hastily A Hollywood type asked him Sanlana-27 s lo 0 p fr 0 m informed him that I had no if he had ever been in a Marina de! Rey with t\VO male notion of getting off the boat. Transpac race. companions. Besides the challenge, the "Hell, no," said Rowan. Destination~ trip is being made to test •·rve never been in any kind Lahaina, Maui. out a new sail designed by of a race. I get enough com· 'That 's in the Hawaiian Phil Stangeland. well known petition at NBC. I sail for archipelagri -<;om e 2.JGO sailor. professional skipper, fun and relaxation." m iles from ~ari na del Re v. ~omei ime beat des:gner and Asked v.•hal the studio thinks At a has1ily called P:css sometime sailn1aker. ab'IUt his adventure. Rowan Regatta To Open Season · South Shore Sailing Club kicks off il! racing season this weekend with the Grand Prix Regatta. Other races thls season in· elude Tri-Port, Triangle, One- Design Fleet Championship, Pomeroy Perpetual and the famed Wednesday nit e Hibachi Serles. The Grand Prix is open lo all boats in SYRF, MORF, PHRF, Tempest, Luders" 16, Endeavors, Cal 20, Snipe and all other classes with five or more entries. Two races will be held Saturday at 12 noon and one race Sunday at I p.m. Races start off Balboa Pier. Entries accepted up to 10 a.m. Satur- day at SSSC office. Trophies will be awarded Sunday at 6 p.m. at th~. SSSC Clubhouse. Sailboat Show Set In October The Southern California 1darine Association has set the dates for the third annuall Sailboat Show for Oct. 22-31 at the Long Beach ti.1arina, according to Dave Goodwin, SCMA president. I The Long Beach Show Is the nation's first all-sail ex-1 position. Home for the event is the modernistic Long Beach Arena, located on t h e waterfront in downtown Long Beach. It has an 85-foot high ceiling with a clear span across the entire exhibit area. "Our association has long recognized the need for an independent sailboat show," said Goodman. Since taking! over sponsorship of the event three years ago, we have been most pleased with the re.' suits." conference Tticc;day. Ro1~·an Phil is one of Rowan's shir>-said; tried lo explain lo the mates. The other is George "\'/ell. when I signed the Kialoa OK Hollyv.·ood prC'SS and tv.·o ~iillar. a sailing friend of contract. they wanted to know yachting writers -this one Rowan·s and Stangeland. what my hobbies were. They included -why he chose to grinned happily when I told F R d go to Honolulu the hard way. The sail looks for all t.he them, sailing end tennis. You ()T eCOT After all. he v.·as reminded. y,•orld like an inverted spin-know, no motorcycles, no I the jets still rly to Hono and naker. Stangeland describes it moun tain climbing -happily KiJ!IOa t i's elapsed time there arc plenty of boats in as a horizontal luff sail. It married and obviously not a record in last weekend's Tri- the island on which he could is triangular and luffed to faggot." Island Race will stand. i go soiling. a large aluminum ya rd which And his partner. Dick A protest and counter-pro·1 "That's just the point.'' the is centered on the headslav M;irtin? test riled by Kialoa 's Jim bearded anrl tanned comedian and hoisted to the truck cir "He's never said a word Kilroy and Blackfin's Ken ! cxplhined. "I wanl lo get away the mast. The yard ls braced to me about it. But I've heard DeMeuse was decided in favor from all that noise and a!! from each of its ends to the some of the remarks he has of Kialoa JI by the Los those people . .Just think, on cockpit v.·inches. The sail c!ew made to others." Angeles Yacht Club protest !his trip all v.·1'11 hear is the is single sheeted off the bow. And his wife? committee. Kialoa 's protest wind in !he riggi ni:-and the The sail is designed primarl· "She wouldn"t think of against Blackfin was sus- hiss of the sea against the ly for running dead downwind, trying to stop me."' tained. I hull." but can also be sheeted for When it was all over, Dan The decision makes Kla)oa And 1\hy a 27-fool fiberglass a bean1 reach. shoo k hands all around. When officially first to finish ln the boat~ ··on this trip to lfawaii we it came my tum, 1 could 133-mile race and gives thel "It's !he challenge. I will flv twin headsails Un· think of only one thing to big yawl her third elapsed Genuine oil finished Walnut veneers and select hardwood solids The SARGENT • C2994W Beautiful Contemporary styled compact console. VHF/UHF Spolllte Dials. 5" x 3" Twin-Cone Speaker. A sensational value! • Ch romacolor Picture Tube • Titan 80 Handcrafted Chassis • Super Video Range Tuner BUY NOW! ZENITH/The quality'boes in be/ore the name goes on• featuring AFC Automall c Flne--tunmg Control electronically line-tunes the cok>t picture at the !lick ol a !Inger ATG Automallc Tint Gu1rd Control keepslaceloneslunedwhen there 11re signal variations !!en~afionally Priced/ $537 11 19:'.. SUPER-SCREEN COMPACT CHROMACOLOR TM D!QAa. C•030W Gr1lnea W1lnlll. color. Chrom1color Plctur• Tube. Titan ChaNl1. AFC, Automatic Tlnt Gu11d Cont1ol, VHF/UHF $pottl19 Panei.. COLOR TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE 9021 Atlanta at Matinona HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-3329 PACIFIC COA TH y Form•rly In the ABC Stor• Serving Or1n1• County for 20 YNl'I guess." Rowan replied. dcrneaih my new wing ·sail, say. 1 said it: time record In the LAYC Th b t b I •-R lh b b -, h -I "Good · hl D " Wh' Se . Fh1onch19 fro"' •o Doy Coih f• l6 Molltht •nd No DoWll O.A..C. e oa e ongs w 01~·a~"--'""'""O>J!:Y_".'~''.'.""''".:>gg':_=-"~-~=·=~g~--=~·=·=····=--=--~·=-~-=·~=-=-=:''.'._"-~·-=-=··=-::.: . .,,:.: ... :.:_:_•::~:·:::.,:.:n:'.::::_:;,~,= ~· ,;:,:, :,.,:;,,,:,,:,.~=~::;;:;:;;~~;::::::;;::;:~;:~:::=:~:;::=::=-~~:-::-:-:-:-;-:::;~=:::~;;:;;;:::;;;;;~' ,.,,.....,.~. . I I ' ' l i I ' ; I I i I l • • . • " ., , 1 , t· .• , Personal service at llutual ~gyjngs I I The 8i9 M is big enough (over $400,000,000) lo p•y the nation's highest interest on insured savings ... 5 % to 6 .,,,. But equally important~ares enough to give you very personal service, Ccwonl cAI Mi r ofl'fce: 2817 £111 Co11I klghw1y / 675·5010 Other offices In Covina, West Arcadia, Pasadena and Glendale ' • • ' ' • • ' "' I • l ' ' ' ' ' J4 DAILV PILOf 5 Fr iday, APlll 2 19n Y0t1r /tfot1ey'6 Wortl& How to Guai·d AgaiI1st Behtg 81 SYLVIA PORTER A record I OoO 000 Americans are now living and workfn1 out.side the U S not including hundreds of thoua&nds of U S Government employe11, mlUWy sevlcernen and women Jn mounting num- btrs Americans are fleeing er threatening to nee our bor den -and for reasons which go far beyond their deep dlJo. illuslonment with our frantic pace of llfe our problema of pollution, crime urban decay To Ulustrate a not 10 spec- tacular but potentially much more important factor ls a developtna reversal In the "brain drain Whereas only a few yea.rs ago the draln was Junng large numbers of foreign scientists teachers pbyslclw and engineers to our &bores now the reverse drain 1a luring large numbers (If our sclenUsta, electronics apeclallsts enalneers etc to fort11n a.bores Again not to newsworthy, but more significant has been the explosion oC mult1natlonat corporallons and U S com pan1es wb1ch are br1ng1ng US workers overseas as they estabh1h and expand their branches and sales operalioru 1n other lands And certainly a third basic factor 1s the normal cunos1ty of many young Americans about life and Jobs overseas and their normal desire to find reasonably gracious l!v1ns: at lower cools than here be first getUng a job with a multln1Uonal corPot•tlon in the U S then angllng for rea!signment overseas Amona: proml!mg oc cupaUonal areas for overseas jobs now are teaching the travel tourl!m I n du a t r y men agernent consultlns !dvertialng U S Government Jobs in engineering math physics, mecliclne, agricultural services volunteer servlce, electronics United Nations agencies such as the World Health Organization UNICEF' -Follow up these very broad areas by checking the want ad sections of trade publications in your field na ttonally circulated newspapers overseas English language newspapers Study the U S Civil Service Co mm 1 s sion' I Are you among the Americans thinking of JOh hunting overseas" Are you searching for guidance on how to go about 1l" Then -Don t get on a plane fly across the ocean and start huntmg Rather warns Curtis \Y Casewll In a n e w puperback How To Get a Job Overaeas (Avco Pubhsh1ng Co $1 4~) line Up and assure your foreign JOb in the U S before you go In fact your best route may Broadway-Hale Reports Record Sales, Profits LEGAL NCYl'ICE ·-Clll:Tll"l(ATli 01" I UllNllJ 'ICTITIOVS NAMI Tfle VttMrsltnft -· c' llfY 1119 !f """"(II ..... bu•lflfH •• 111 w H•m tto11 &f Co•• ~ C•l l"'n 1 ul'd•r II>• flclll Qlll I m n•"'e ol Al S THOMAS U.fETV SEllVIC& 1nd 11111 11 O I •m It camHte<I 01 It,. kl! owl111 ""o" Whotl n1me n fut •11<1 p 1c1 o! 11l6en'1 b 11 IO loWI E1lh1r G111dr11 I 2701 Mine S Cot!• Me11 (It I Otled M~ th 11 1911 E11~e G11,1d!n! ITATE 0~ C:Al FOll:NIA O~At<GE COUNTY On M• ci' 11 ltn ~fo 1 mr • Ho!1no P11bllc ln I nd fo t11d $!11• Hrson• IY ll>Ptl '" E11~· G•vdwtl ltnow" to "" to boo 11\t PtflOIT Wholf '""'' 11 tub1cr btd to lhf wt!Mn I,.. t! um1111 1nd 1ck11owtfd11'd 1~1 tXltY I'd th• •• ..,,. (Offl(ll Se~I) M1rv lll!!h MO on No1 .. ·v PMb c Ct forf\. Print Pll Offl(' In Or1rt11! CO\lnlv Mv C:""'mlsll1111 EXP el AP II ' 1'11 "~b t~~ 0 1"111 Co•1I Ot V Pl Q Al•<~ If u ,..,,11, ' itn a1•11 fi"l ~ l.'T ·~--p 1 ooo.~Of 01L rAINTIHClS- 1 WHOLlSAll WAltEHOUSl ~ orrN TO THI PUILIC 50°/o OFF I '"' 1 101Hoe11: tAHfA ..,,,.,. ~ ""'"' tu.wot -.,.;:r:aJI 01-"L•ll:t WANtlO REAL ESTATE SYNDICATIONS SI 000 .-SlO 000 Tu Stt.1 teNd Real hr•M l••nt111t11ta. Ltd rertMnhl19 l11ttntf't •••II •bJ. '9 thOM wM iqiielify C•ll fer .,pel11tmt~ t• <lllhcim rtih ..,.,. •f proflto'1ol• ttl' .. , I.. ln,...tm.wt wit!! • pr•ttc. sl111•I ROlllT M 146 1101 AJIMS1JIOHti t62 JIOJ HVO• s~lpmtft! 61' coklf!M! 1wlmml119 ]•1111 s • "'"''' ror I I AOl,Jlf u1tt. FROM s1.so Vtllt VI '110M. 1 .. 1-CJttM T11tt. PacH1c Goldfish Fann UUl tOwlf'fl St WntmlMl1r Oii ft>• 5111 Olt90 F ""'''•I Go atn~• a. 101~ """°' LOS ANGELES -Record salts a11d eam1ngs for both the company s fourth quarter and the fiscal year ended Jan 30 were reported March 23 by Broadway Hale Stores Inc Ed" ard W Carter pres1 dent or the nationwide retail merchandising firm a 1 s o reported the formation of a new credit 1uba1d1ary Broadway Hale Credit Corp to finan ce customer a~counts rec en ab!e of t h e con1 pany Broadway Hale s firia l 13 weeks of the fiscal ye ar ended Jan 30 recorded $235 413 000 1n consolidated sales up S 6 perC1!nt from the comparable pcnod last year Net earnings 1n the fourth quarter rose 6 9 $11806000 previously Earn ings per common share for the quar~r were $1 16 vs $112 last year tn the same Firm Hires Consultant George B Storer J r Newport Beach a former president of Storer Broad casting Company has been retained as a consultant by Hughes Alrcrart Company Storer wlll work on a con sulllng basis with Dr Albert D Wheelen vice president and chief executive ol the company s space and com- munications group and with other executives 1n the areas of television and cable TV as applied to Hughes pro- posed dome s ti c. com mun1catlons satellite system Last Dtcember H u g h e s Aircraft filed a proposal wlth the Federal Communications Commisslon for construction of a domestic satelhte com murucat1ons 5ystcm costing $50 to $80 m1lllol'I to provide a mul ll ple dlvrrslty program to cable televis1on operators nationwide Storer 45 ~er~ed as pres! dent of Storer Broadcas!lnq: from 1961 to 1965 Tn 1966-67 he was chairman of the board nf Northeast Airlines HIGH TECHNOLOGY STOCKS IN THE MARKET NOW A talk sponsored by Stl'TRO & CO 1NCOR POR"TED The spt:aker will bt Rolf Wlnterlelt formerly Group Director of Research for High Technology at Hayden Stone Inc. end now a Registered Representative of Sutro & Co The mttUn& wUI be held tt fashron Island, Hswport Beach, lsltnd House. ln Bide. #81, Centtr Mall 1t 8 PM. on Monday, Ap1I ~ 1971. SU"IBO Et co ~~01 JOru',ThlO 6b 210 WaC &f\otntl'IStfMt lOI A/lltlH • (213) 625-7311 Insurance Firm Sales Revealed New York Life Tnsurtince Company sold $1 058 717 639 of life insurance lo California residents during 1970 ac cording to Wilham S Cosen Uno General fl.1anage r, of the company s Newport Beach General Office Laguna Banker Takes Reins OVER THE COUNTER NASO Llotlng• for Thuradoy, Aprll 1, 1971 - Complete-New York Stocli List •·t. ,.., th J H tll l.tw CMt Cllf. ~ ~1~ ... ;1 t ~ '"' ·m -. .. -. M '" '" u. + • • ~-l'i" ~. lll ~-~.+Ito " \;\; " \\\' • ll" 1 -To ' u. Ji'" i'" 'I "" ~· " ~~ '" .1. nu )J'h • ).I. 2••· "'' .. . -G- "' 2•~· 2•"1 , ... -• ,\ ~3~ '~1• 21i~ + " .~21 *-2~~ .. ...,. ~ OJ,. •J'lll + t l ta\• .... , + l~··j~..S•+• 1!.U l .Ullo~f\s ,, d. •"-"~ -I.. ' 11.. 111') lit -lo lJ ' I V. 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Cl-Cltt JI DAILY PILOT • ~.;_,, "' "\£ ..... ~· / .. . • FrldlJ, April 2, 1971 CHICAGO"S TOM BOERWINKLE BLOCKS JIM McMILLAN"S SHOT. Sixtli Gat1ie iu Cliicugo LA P11ts It Aµ Togetl1er 111J15-89 Wi11 Ove1· B11 lls i;,. GLE:'IN Wll lTE 01 ttl• O•flJ ,.llOI Sl•lf INGLE\\'000 -Thursday night they put il a\1 together to smother the Chicago Bulls. 115-89, and ta ke a 3-2 lead In the N a l i o n a I J}asketball Association playoffs. Thus 1hr Lakers. a te;in1 counted out nf the playoff.~ b£'fore they even bt•gan \\hen 1hc~· lost super ~l;1r J err.\' \Vest, ore one \ 1ctory away fro1n wrapping up the series v.·ith lh e up and dO\\n Bulls. \lov>e\er. lhev nClw S\11\ch to Chil·ago Sunda\ for ga;ne '.\'1>. 6 anrl as ('{larh J oe !ilul!an(•y put 1\ 1,1hen as ked h'J\\' l1is Lakers mighl "in in the \\'1nCy Ci!~·· '"B~ 11la~1ng in <111 ('ffipty building.'' The Laker" lo.~t t11·1ce during !hi' \\'e•'k In Ch1ral!n -a place v.1herc fans let their presence and fa1oritism of 1he Bulb· be known :'\lullani:y·s l'haps put nn a comph>1 e ghov.· Thursda1 as 1:;.(.1:;5 F'orum fa1thfl1l watched thl' · Laii:rs hold Chica~o to less than !00 p(Jlnts frir the thirrl l'!ln· scrut1\'e ~an1e 1n lhc Inglewood <kn <1f baskl•tball. Offcnsi\'tll' thr L.ikers dld ii all with Cciil Goodnrh sk1minin!! in :J3 po1nls on t'Very 11 pl' of sho! 1n1ag111ablc and froin 11bot1l l'\l'l'\11hcre \\i!h1n a peri111cll'r ol 20 ft•r1 · And. ll;1pp,1 lla1rsl11n <lnd Kc11h Erickson c:1th put!t•d 22. Bul the s1.111sl1c th:it 11as pcrh'1µs the k1•y lo !he tr1un1ph Y.as \\'illie llcCartcr\ 1:1 puinl.<;, r.1ullanl'Y luld the press that 11hcn Pro Cage Pael Sioncd bv Wicks t" PORTLAi\"D, Ori: -All·Amer1<:an forward Sidney \\irk~ h:is reportedly signed a contra<'! 1111h 1he Portland Trail Blazers {If the Nallnnal Basketball Associal1on. The report \I as pulll1sht1d in tuda1-'s f?ditions of the Or1').(0lll3n afll'r a Lo~ An geles l l'levi~u~n slalion said \\'i1·ks was flying Ill Purlland to sign a nlulti· year contrat:1 The Portl;tnd nev.spaprr said 1t hnd lrarncd that the aclu<ll sigrnn~ h:id alrtedy taken place 1n Los Angeles. ~lcCarter ramr off the benc:h and 11os 21 ble 10 hit so we ll in the second and third quarters il gave a chance lo rotate personnel and give key players a hreather. ~lu!lanev sav~ Goodrich has become such an OrrenSive factor for the L1kcrs !hilt he LS forcing the Bulls lo play O\'erly cautious 1vhcn he ha~ the ball. And while the Lakrr coach v.·as 1ndcC'cl enthused about 'fhursda.r·s offensive ef- fort, he said he belic1·C'd the olrense v.as actually better in the two losses at Chicago. Ho11e1·e r, the combo of offense and defense Thursd:1y nigh! v.as lhe Lak!!rs' Jx>~t 01·erall of the series. he ad1nitted. "Df>fcnsively '>''e forced turnovers ... \1e 11ere more alert and aware of 1~hat the Bulls \\'Cl'e doing. The.v s1mphf1cd lheir offense and Y.ent v.ilh v.hal \\'J S "·or king. "They 11 ert! going lo Bob Lo\'e much more lhan bernre. Before \le planned our defense but now 11 has bcC'Jrnc nlore a t:asc uf individuals adjusting to d1ffrren1 sit uations. "\\"ill 1Chamberla1nl blocked six or se1en shots early \\hen they tried to \\ork the ball in 10\1 and they .>topped trying tho1." Chamberlain. b.v the \l'<l~, pulled the p!a~· of !he gan1e carl.v in the ttnrd qu<!rter 111\h !ht' Lakcrs lcad uig. 70-62. The Lakrrs slole the ball and lhl're '1·as \\'ill, fast hreak1111'( and alone al 1nid-cuurc He took the pass ;ind dri!Jhlcd in for a dunk th;it JUSt about lurncd Forum fans inside out. The last half was a fruslra11ni; ex· pencnce for the losers, 11ho lra1led only 55-5.J al half lime. Thev had e1~ht turno\'crs in the thi rd quarl~r and 21 for the night cthe t..akers had 121_ TI1e Bulls cut the g:i p to 80-73 \\' i t h 3 24 left in the th1ro :.tu11i;i but af•t'r that II was never close and f111alty 11hen 11 was 107-86 l\lullaney pulled the horses. CH ICAGO LOS AtlGEL51 • • ' • ' ' w,,i.., • " " H~ir•lon " " " l O•O • " " l.•cMtllo~n ' " " "" • 00 " (b•ml>rcl~,~ • " ' w, .. , ' " " GOD<l•ic~ 11 11 14 " s1o-.1 • '' " F"'"'°" • •• " 8o••••r••• ' .. ' Mc(~"f' • " " "M ' " ' l!obN MP<I • .. ' GllOl<•1 0 .. 0 R11ev • .. ' Co>it"' 0 " ' llol'u"' ' ,. ' l!~flnrr 0 00 • HrlJ~I • 00 • 8•um 0 .. 0 loi.i. 3' 11 '° " lot•IS "!9?l llS {M,.QO " " ~ " " "' ""~~tn " " " ,. "' F Qu•1a <>vt Nn"• lot~I tou11 -c~1(•go n. "' "'"gtlb '° "'"'rod~·"• -lJ,tlJ, -· ·-.. -. . Angels, Dodger's Open Series Regardless of wbo Wini the cross- freeway baseball series pitting the Los Angeles Dodgers and Callfomia Angels, guys on both benches will be hoping for a 1971 rematch. The reason is quite s.lmple : the <1nly way a legitimate rematch cJn ·be staged Is if the Dodgers and Angel s each win pennants and meet In the World Series. Springtime pipe dream? Yet there's more realistic optimism this time because both cl ubs have a\)" parently strengthened during the off .season and tonight the story wiU unfold a bit more. The Dodgers have added power in Bantan1 Title Up for Grabs In LA Fight INGLEWOOD (AP) -World ban· tamweight champion Chucho Castillo and Ruben Oli\'ares, the young man he dethroned as kingpin of the ll8·pounders, renew their bitter feud tonight in a IS-round title fight. Favoritism has nipped from one camp to the ot he r the past week. They'll probably rate about even v.•hen they climb through the ropes at the Forum in suburban Jng\ewood. It marks the U1ird time in less than a year these tv.·o fighters from MeJ:iCO City ha\'e met. Both encounters v.·ere scorchers. Olivares, now 24. successfully defended the title here April 18, 1970, by unanimous decision. It was ,Castillo, 26, winning the title In this same Forum last Oct. 16. The referee stopped the match in the 14th round because <1f a deep laceration over Olivares' left eye - a cut that originated from an accidental butt in the first round, "l would pay my own money to see this rematch." declared the promoter, George Parnassus, who expects more than 16,000 to pay their own money -more than $225,000 -to see No. 3 in the series. The trend toward Castillo stems mainly from Olivares' history of eye culs. Castillo is a slashing puncher. Olivares assured his supporters he would take care of such trouble 1hls time and promised he v•ould knock Castillo out inside IO rounds. The voluble Ruben, ho\\·ever, in 29 rounds had been unable to deck Castillo "'h ile Chucho owns the only knockdown in the series -once in the first fight. Olivares, notoriously lighthearted, has Impressed gym observers with his serious training routine. Castillo has never been anything but Impressive 1n his seriousness. Castillo predicted he would retain the title but indicated he figured the fight \\'OUld go the distance -unless he can ngain carve up Ruben. The champion. who fights for an S00.000 j!Uarantee, has a 37-5-I record, including 22 knockouts. He has been stopped four times. most of them on cuts. Oilvares, guaranteed $30,000, is 5'-1·1. \1·ith an astonishing record of 56 knockouts. His only loss was the one to Castillo. Oli\'ares first \Von the championship \1•hen he bombed away Lionel Rose of Australia in the Forum in five rounds Aug. 22, 1969. The match is slated to begin about 9 p.m. PST. Scoring by the referee and t\\'O judges gives the v.·inner of a round one or more points up to five, the loser none and an even round none. Laver, Emerson In Quarterfinals r-.11A~11 (AP ) -Third ~eeded Rod Laver of Corona rle\ r-.tar and top seeded John Ne\\·combe fa ced each olher today in quarterfinal pair ings in the $50,000 A\'entura \\'orld Tennis Classic. fifth Seeded Tom Okker of llolland loo k on eighth seeded Roy Emerson of Nev.•port Beach Aus tra lian Tonv Roche, ele\'enth seed· ed. anr1 i\"e\\·coinbe IC'Ok on unseeded Australians Ray Ruffel! and Bob Carrnichael, y.·hile the second-seeded Amer icarl du o of 'fonv Ralston and Arlhur Ashe faced unse~ed Australians John Alexander and Phil Den i. Sixth seeded Cliff Drysdale of South Afric a Thursday nig ht dcfcalcd unseeded Nikki Pilic of Yu~olsa\'ia 6-3, 6-2 in a quarterfinal match. 'fhe \'lctory pits Drysdale in a semifinal CQntest Saturday \\'llh Roche. Roche ga ined entry into the se1nlflnal Thursday night by beating Ralston. In doubles action, Laver and Emerson h11nded a f..3 . 7.5 defeat to Okker and American ~larty Riessen, the bats or Richie Allen and Duke Sims: The Angels have acquired two superb outfielders, Ken Berry and 'f on y Conigliaro. and hope the pitching of rormer Cincinnati ace Jim ti.1aloney will help. The teams clash tonight at the hon1e of the Angels, Anahei1n Stadium, with Clyde Wright going for th e California ns. Dodger rlghty Don Sutton v.·ill starl for the Dodgers, who hope to narrow the gap in the series between the clubs which now stands M in favor of the younger Angels. \\'right won 22 games last year after winning one the year prior. He was the comeback player of the year and gels lhe nod for opening day next Tues· day on the same mound when the Kansas City Royal'I Invade. Sutton. l&-13 with an un impressive 4.08 earned run average last year, has been good and bad this spring. He figures to be the No. 2 Dodger starter this year back of no-hit artist Bill Singer. Allen will start for the Dodgers. a!! will Berry and Coniglia ro for the Angels, giv ing diehards of lhis series a look al new faces right on the bal. After the first game of this series was played in Palm Springs before S,000, an average <1f more than 24,600 fans have come out to watch the teams \\'tth 49,~73 atlending an Apnl 7. l963, encounter at Dodger S1adiur11 \\'hat was the attraction? Sandy Koufax was on lhe niound ft1r the Dodgers aud Bo Belul5ky for lhe Angels. The teil ms collide again S11turdav and Sunday at Dodger Stadiurn, closing out the 1971 spring schedule. Saturday's probable ~tarlers ll re Messersmith f(ir the Angels vs. either newcomer Al Do11•ning or rookie Doy.le Alexander. On Sunday. the n1alch·UP will be righthander Toni r-.turphy against the lkodgers' Sand y Vance. PHILAOELPHIA"S BILL CUNNINGHAM HITS FOR TWO IN 104·103 WIN OVER BULLETS . Sports in Brief Asher Drops to F oitr th; W a1·riors Shock Bucks AKRON. Oh io -Costa Mesa's Barry Asher captured onl.1• three or eight n1atch games and dropped from first to fourth Thursday C\'ening in the $ 1 O O , 0 0 O F irestone Tournarnenl of Champions. Asher, the leader through the first 24 gan1es. dropped 240 points brhind Brooklyn leFthander Johnny Petraglia. r-.1ike Durbin of Dayton. Oh10 holds the l'\o. 2 spot \\"hile Dick Battista o( Astoria. N.Y. is in the third position, 63 points ahead or AshC'r. Another 16 games 11·erc sthedu1ed ti). <lay with the fiel d being cut to fn e for Saturday's nationally televised I chan· nel 71 finals. e lt'arritJr~ Tri1111111l1 OAKLAN D -Joe Ellis thrc1v in a ~O·foot jun1p shot 1vi!h onc·second to play Thu rsday night to give the San Francisco \\'arriors a 106·104 \•ici ory 01·er the fl.lilwa11kee Bucks and ke~p them ali1·e in th e National Basketball Associa· lion \\'estern Division playoffs. The u·inning shot came three seconds Af ter !he Buck~· Oscar Rolx>rtFon hit a short jumr shot to gi\'e ~1ih\•aul;ce a 104·103 le:id . J eff }.1ullins of the \Var· riors. fouled y.•hile Ellis' shot was in the air, made a free throw for the final point. e K11icks 1tin Plauoff NE\V YORK -"At lhe start or !he last querier it looked bad for lhc home team," Walt Frazier said a gain. lie was beginning to sound like a broken record. Frailer ha~ been saying things lookrd bad in the fourth quarter for the Knicks in four previous playoff games against the Atlanta Hawks, and four times out of five everything turned out just great for the Kn icks. The final lime can1e Thursday nigh t when the defend ing National · Baskctb<Hl Associa tion champions came alive agai n in the final minutes lo beat the Hawks 111·!07 an d close out their best·or·sevcn game playoff series four gamrs lo one. e 76ers Still ,u;,.., BA LTl~IORE -Archie C1ark's Free thro11' in !he la~I n1in1111" was the winning poir.t as the Phil:Hlclrhi;i i6ers survived R:iltimorc's closing rally 1n Baltimore, 104·103 The i6crs nn\\ hope to C\'en the srnes al 3.3 by heat111g !he Bullet~ in l'hi!adclphia Sadirrlay af\crnoon. e J,i11cfll11 ,, ... ,,. Tille \\'EST POINT. N.Y. -Craig Lincnln glided hul Micki King harl to :<cr;~nlble tn ,·1ctnr1• in (ht'ir l'vcnls in th e Na1ional AAll Jn(!oor Diving Ch;11npionships c.t the U.S. ~li!itary Acadl·my po<•I. Lincoln. the nation<il AAU outd•lQr lhrce.me1cr spring:bo<ird champion. lt·d throui;hout the preliminaries a n d sernif1nals 'fhursdav and claimed lhe onc·mell'r springboB.rd title with three near·perfcct final dives. He ll'as a\\arded 51!l 72 points. ~1iss King. a U.S. Air Force captain, \\'ho cximpetes !or Philhps 66, tr;iiled C~rist1ne Loock, of lhe Panthers U 11 s Club. Fort \Yorth. Tex . entering the fina ls but the former Olympic di~er scored high lo 1~in 393.45 to r-.1 iss Loock·s 388.11. e Ali Decislfln """ \VASHl N(iTON -r-.iuhammad All. the former world hca\'y\\·eight boxi11g chain· pion. is expected to learn in J une "'hether he '4j have lo serve h i~ five ye:1r sentence for refu sing induction into the Arn1ed Services. Th e Supreme Court announced Thur~­ d:iy it will heAr arg11n1ents April J~ on AJi'5 appea l Iha! ht• wa~ cntillt>d lo an e~em ption oo religious ground~. Trevi110 Fears Player De spite 8-strok:e Lead GREET'\SBORO, J'\.C. 'API -Lee Tre1•ino held an eight ~troke lead ovtr Ga ,y Player going into 1oday·s second round in the $191l,OOO Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournan1enl -bul 11·as far from eonfiden!. "Eight strokes '.'"' he snilled. "~Ian, that's nolhtng \\•ith that l11!le n1an. I'd feel a lol better ahout it 1f it 1vas the last round and I had l'tght 1'.>lrokcs on hin1. "But right now. Y.1lh hun. that's nothing. He ran rnake JI up in one day ." Trc1·ino fired a lour·llndcr·par 67 in Thur~da.l'·s fir st round For ;i share of the top spot 11·1th \'l'lcran ~!1\lcr Barber and :\cw Zealancl lcFl·hander Bob Charles. Pla.1e1'. the doui.:ht.1' li!llC' Sr1ulll 1\frican \\ho is the d!.'ff'ndirni (_•lla1npit111 111 th1:1 tournan1cnt :inrJ \\'h11 h<1, 11011 thr last !110 tour Cll'llls. s!r11gl!l1·d 1n \\'Ith a fa! 75, fou r Q\'Cr par '.'That's gnlf." !ht• oh1 n1u~ly d1s:i p- po1ntcd Pla.1cr .~au! "Yo11 hn1e sorne good rounds and }HU ha\f' some bad ones Ne'. on(' c1·C'r pla1 cd the gan1c v.·llo cl1dn t ha1c somr· had ni•1nds. "I JUSI h~rl a ha•! ru!T1ng dav. Bul I can't blarne an~ lhu1~. The tnn°d1tions are the ~amr for c1er_1one l!'s Just n1~1 0"'" f;iull ·• Pla~er rlru1 c unr out or hounds anrl lotik a lriplc 1>oi.:r·1· !-.••1 1•n He once found thC' 11atrr and h;id 1o drop out. And he lhri"e·pL1!1ed four rin1c~. Trc1 ino. ll:i rhrr :ind Charlt•s held ri nne·Slrokr lr:id u1{'r a grnup of fi\'e tied at 611. Tht•y 111•n· Au~!l'ahan Bruce C'ramplon. forrnrr \fiJ<;!,..rs f'h:in1p1on Art \\'all. lour sophornorl' .lark Ll'wis. Pete Brn11'n an1I Da1e l·:1f·l1.;lbPrger. Nation:il arn:it•·ur rh:11np L ann v \\':irlkins topn"d 11 h1~ h11•1rh a! 69 and r_; S. Oprn l\1n}{ Tony .l:irkl111 of England harl a 70 111 \])111· of a do11ll)c bogey on his F1n:il hrih· Ba~l{s Placed on 21-day Disabled Lisi • 11· ... 1 c .. ,,,,r. 1t ill ~!Ei\1 P HIS, Tenn. -L:tah S1a1e·s ~·larv Robe rts scored 23 points Thursday l·ight to le11d the "rest to a 137-110 \'i(·1orlf o\·f'r the East in the Senior All·Amencan Collegl' Rasketball Cl11ss1c. ~f<ls!er!-. ('hn1no Hllh ca~rH r· JH"l h:ick fmm :in rxtrrodt•d 1:J";1l1<1n. n1:i1chPd l'layl'r's ii Hn!11 11n1\! 111111rn1(' lo m:ike lhc Yi-h• 11' ('ul fnr !Ill' l•n.d h1(1 round~ Saturflt11 :incl S11n,t;11 .Trc1 1TI0 1·111 th11 •' '\r••L..1'~ off par r)n hi" last four huh~ h11! 1n rharnrlC'r1st1c fashion J>1nnt •·d t•. " 2·. loot p'lr·sa1 1ng putt on h1" fourrh t.<111• ;i' !hr kf'' Dy The ASS'->CIATEll PRESS Just Like m01'lty 111 lhe bank, the Ghlcago CUbs never Y.orried :itx.1Jt one ltarter for 17 opening days. But this year will be different - 01ts year Ernie Banks will be m1ss1n~ ~ spirit is wllling. hut the knl'l'5 11re n't, doctors said 'fhursday a~ the Cubs put their gilt-edge sluggrr on tJ1e 21-day dlsnblcd list. The 4G-yeor'4Jld Danks.• tortured by t.rlhrltlc knt.'f•, twsn't responded as ex. p(·rted lo treatment and "'Orkouls this ~prtn~. "I'm lil:ratclul lo t.he Cubs for making· it pns5ihle for me W exlend the coo- dit1oninJ: of my kn('('S v.•ithoul putting prrssure on lhrn1 !hat would ht. ll('!'Cs~:iry 111 rr~11l11r s1•:ison 11:amr!l." !'aid Htink~. the :tll t1n"IC ~lr. Cub. '"fhcrt' l\<LS lhc l'h11ncf' thl'V wuuld be ~1r;.i11o·d anrl 1 \\·ould hr nut e\.cn longer. "1 fe('I. h1111t•Vror , that 111y knees nrr 5!ronct'r now and 111111 if 1 keep U\) m~· exerc ise~. I ran builri thern up ~ that I \\ill be of some valu e to lhe team later on." Ba nk! said his main concern u·as "not to hurt the club. I don't want to embar- r:tss the team, making it look a.s If the C:ub11 ~·cre playing someone v.·ho is hurt." \.f'neral Manager John lfolland &\>" proa\·hed Banks 1vilh the idt'a of rtmov- ing him from the active roster and I.he Cubs' great fi rst sacker agreed It '>''as besl Holland !\aid Bink!' v.·ou\d be restored to ftctive duty April 21. Despite his painful knees, especially I the left one. Banks was able to hit for average this spring during limited Cactus League service. f!c had 11 hits in 27 at.bat.! (or .40i. After coming off the disabled list last season. Banks b11tted .326 in Ill gamr" and a ppeflfed recovered from the arthritic condition . He fini shed 11·Hh a .252 average, way helow his hfet1me mnrk. Banks \l'aS the Nalional League's mnst vnlunble player in 1958 and 1959 ::.nd hall a career total uf S09 home r uns. Roix'rl!-got. assistance from D a 1· c Kobisch of Kansas. who scored ~'2. ::ind Drake's J eff Halliburton, who had 21. • 11'elb f'h1ed s 12:; OAKLAND -Oakland Rsiidrrs 1\·1dr receiver \\''Rrren \Vr!ls ":is fined ~1~5 Thursdav for drun ken drivinJ: Municipul Courl Judge Robert Fribt'rg dismissed a char11:e of speeding lhal follo v.·ed \Ve il$' arrest Feb. t on a freeway her•. "I \l:l' on" 111• r a1 th.ii \!mC' nn rl though! iF I ln1•1·11rl 1h.,t 001' l 'rf mi~s the t'UI I d l"'' Iii nu: ht 11111 \.1°1fc tu this lo11rnan1Pnt P,<-<"' ~Ifill 1ound·trip. tr l n11ss lh1• rr11 1 \1· i;ot to !:end her hon1r !!1n111rro\\ ;ind I it• Jll.~l blowa. SIM flut h1· 111~1<1°-!11• t•lltl !urnc1l 1111!' utld('r, Hu ·11 •Ii. 11! 1n ;1 n1.11 111, shrPrl n. lhrrr "'"'it 1111! ,.r 111. lli'rs 10 ivilhi n eight rt'l'I 1,f tho· 11-11! nn ;i IJHr flVC, n1ndr lht• 1•1111 t•or ;"1 1 •11:11' llirt'l' lhP n knuf'~"d 111 .1 1·, '' "1 lnidrl' putt <1n t[1(' r1n11[ ho!1· e ' r ' s ' c r b n ' t • • ' t ' t e • e ' t c y <I d y k 11 ' ' n c • d s 0 ,f ,. <I n n n Frld1y, April 2, lt11 DAILY l'IL OT J l CdM Pair FJC Tourney -i t ountain Valley Ace Rustlers, Pirates Sparkle - Wins Trio of Events ADJUST SHDULDEllS TO COllll£CT Orf-UH E SHOTS Notch Victories In Prelims Fountain Valley's Ray liar- r is hl1hll11hted Thursda y's area prep track and flt!d dual meet action by record ing a triple win in the undefeated Barons' 89-38 Irvine League bretle over the host Costa Mesa .ftiustangs, Harris captured both" the long jump (21-31{4) and hlgh jump (&-2, a seasonal best for him) and then came back to cop the 180 low hurdles in 21.0. Visiting Loara u p e n d e d Newport liarbor, 61·~7. in Sunset Le a g u e hostilities despite some Individua l heroics by Tar performers. Newport shotputters Mark Stevens and junlor Terry Albritton went 1-2 again wltb. 61·0~~ and 57-10~ heaves while high jumping mate John Kazmer cleared 6-J and junior :P.1atl Hogsett won the lows In 19.9. On an~ther Sunset front, in- vading Huntington dumped Westminster by a 67·51 score with Oiler junior St e v e Pickford recording a double hurdle victory in 14.7 and 20.4 and mates Garth Wise (long jump) and John P..1ullins (880) turning in 22..fi and 1:58.4 win- ning efforts. Marina aced out h o s t Anaheim, M-M, with Viking sprinters John Maltby (10.0) and Joe VenUmialla (22.I} i;teallng the spotlight In tlu.l Sunset confrontation. Other Irvine duals found Corona del Mar outrunning host Magnolla. 71·56; vlsltlng Edison edging Los Alamitos, 65-62; and Estancia gelling walloped by hollt and defen· ding champion Santa Ana Valley by a 103·24 margin. In the Estancia-Falcon Cee division, Ea g I e sophomore Bruce Girasole was a triple viclor with his legal 17.4 180 clocking being only two-tenths slo"·er than the existing ClF record. Vern McGarry paced San Clemente over Its visitor from Tustin, 65-62, in a Crestview League meet with the llprlngy Triton high jumping 6-0 and Jong jumping 2J.{}'14. Katella beat host Minion Viejo, 74-53, In a n o t h t. r Crestview battle while Laguna Beach dropped an 8 4 . 4 1 Orange loop verdict lo in· vading Brea. Mater Dei posted a 68·Ml Angelus League triumph over visiting St. Anthony a a Monarch Steve Fritz won the 100 (10.51. 220 (22.9) ••d long jump (19-81h). v1r1111 LMfl ("I Ulf 111 ...... rf 100 -l. Amltl (N) J. J'rlt!>d (ll 1. DoFuKO (l l. limo: 10.S 11G -1. Amltl (N) J. l'rltl'IG (lf l. RttHr lNl. Tlmtc Jl.G 4-10 -I. MtCl1l11 ~l) 1. 5thUllJ !N I l. BDWmln !LI. Time: il t UO -1. C111t1r (LI 1. lllllCll' jN I J. Mor1l11 (l~J T!mt: J:OJ.T M!lt -I. Pflt tr (Ll J. lololtOmll CN l J lu1h (LI. !mt: 4:lS.O 1·Mll• -1. ci.rk IN) 2. F19"11MO fN l l. JIKthll 11 .. J. Tl,.,t; t :tf.t 110 HH -1. Htl\Gv «LI J. H09Mft fN l J. SthrKt"90ll !Ll. T!:r: lt.t llfl LH -1. H"1t!I fN 2 .. Ht nd.,, Ill J Ourtk C\)· flint: It. 4al R1!1.,, - . Lo1r1. Tlint· 4-1 t Mil~ RlltY -1. NtwHfl. 'tl ... 1! 3 ~1i -1. ICtlfl"lt• (NI J. Jo~11oot1 fl\ J. lolonfVwtll (NJ. H4 th!: .. J LJ -I. Bt•ltr [LJ ' HlftdV fl! J. Kllf!"ltr !Ml. Dlll1~c1: 11.a f'V -I IUpl tT Ill ?, Ht11t fl) l. T~ck1r IN) Htl•~!: 11-4 ~" -t S!tVtn• fN1 2. ji.lh•l!lon (Ni l . Mclell'I !Ll Ol1!1nct: 114'-lo OH lotfl IHl (lt) N.WH'rf 1Cl:I -I. Ll!Chl• (Ll 7. (unllll!~htm fll l. Slrltker (NI Tl..,t · lCl.I no -1 C~nnll"h1"' tL\ '· Lllthlt fl' J. Dl•!tr>l1ltG !Nf. Tl,.,1: ,4,• 660 -1 C~'T'Pl><-11 1L1 1 Wlm..,11 fN l J, Norrl1 (ll. Tl"'t: l:ll.6 1m _ , ""'"' 1•.' I· s1 .... k11 (Nl J. H•ll !LI. Tll'>e' J:Jl. 110 HH -I. ~!ll<lr.lt"" [Nl l. i"•·..,•1111 (N) J. T1>'l81° tNl. Tlmt; '" no LH -1. '!rl~klt"ll !Nl 1 H'"'''"" IN) J OrltColl !ll. Tl"'"' " ' ••o 11111>' -1 t.o•••. Tl..,1· 1·,.1 HJ -t. Htd,lt~ Nl 1 l't!Mtr fl I J. V•ldtf !N! Htl•M: 1·4 tJ -1. L1rc111-r1) 7. St•tr~-· r,,.1 l. ~!rlc-1~·" !Nl Dl•tantl : 1~-1~'-'t r>V -I Drl!<Oll (LI 7. TtYllf (I.I • J No •hlr<! H-1•"1; 11.4 51' -I '-'•h• .. kl IL) '• Non i• Ill J B•~rJ !Nl ""''"r'' M' '" ltlrt IU) I ll) HtwHrt HID -1 l-loe IL\ I Sh•ll•11Mr11r ll I l. Yo1 .. l1•tt IL•. flint l~t 11" -1 1-1.,.. 11 l 1 <~tll-nbtrMf IL l l. Hoo•• «•II Tl"1t If I u.o -1 Hull"" r• 1 1. "'o'hOff (~I • 1-1•""'"!""' IL) Tl,.•· I JI~ 1)7'1 -' !.•If""" "l 7 ...... ,,1,,., fl I ], f'Mtt•ffr IN\ T1.-•· J•,71 ll"I LH -! v,...,1,.~1 (I I 1, 1·-r1nc~ !LI) Htndotohol fN), Tlmt : ,,. "" lt~I·~ -1 Lo•r• Tl ... t : 4•" 1-1 I -l, r}o,.•wt~ ti I 7 Y.t(lllCt fl 1 l G•l"•"n fNl. o.;1..,M· t~ l J -' •• ,.... .• " fll • •'l••!o• .. ····~ ft ' i Yat~I ""' 1ll. 01"•.,c• 1'•'0 '"V -• 1"•~•·•t "1 1. 1'01!1• OJ' ND l~l•d '-'•'•~!~ ••.a •<> _ , ,.,.,. '"' ' lv'""ctn INl l S!UW1'11 Ill, n1111~· no v .... 1,.. l'"•.,nUh• "•''-• I••\ I'll "'•••t Mt•• !"" 1 "••' (!'! ' OIJff>t! !Cl t c111 ir1. Tlin" 1n~ ""-' j1.twl"'''""' I"! • •omlltlY I(' • n,, .... , ICl •ii"!'•: ?' • •-!. M•AI !I'\ ' \tvlt1 11'1 t. ~ul>ll•~• 1c1. l l,.•r !I 1 """-1 ..... ~ •• !!'" ' r., ..... ,,,,., 11"1 I. Yo•'l•I !Cl f '"'t" 7·""1 t ,,,,,._, •••et•• .. I'"' " Hto! II'"\ ' ••• ~,,,,, ,. • .., •. 4J.<• '1•Ht • " "'I" ••n !1"1 ' ltt{!J !Fl J "'It•! /fl ,i,... t•n J • ..,, ... ,.._. t •••• ''' • """" ... (rl J Ltle\'t• IC!. Tl"11 1, i l 'od° ti-i ' H•··l1 '"' 1. """'l'ld" fl'\ l I •nit f!f) Tl..,.. 11 t. o~O lltflflY-1 FO\lfltflfl Vtlllf Tl,.,_ 44,~Tlt ••'••-' l'ovnltln Vtll••• '..... , ,. ~ 1-1' 1 .,, •• , I ~) ' "'oo-~ /Cl :J Mo rc>o!••I•"' I'' »•l•~t ~ 7 t ,_, ......... ,, ' .... ,, ••••• 11'"1 s ..... ,~1·-•··" ,,, r•,,,.,,. ""· r·· • •1•· · .. .,.~ ,., • •• ,,...., fl'l 3 IV•'~IM /{I l••'•M· !1-4 S" • •n•~·• ,,, • w•"·•• !l'I 3 WM••H•r rf'l 0111•"!:•" ,,,_,,~ ,..,l•"V' • --~·~ •("! ........ ··~ f~l J Sfll•lbort'' ((). D!1l•~(I ll1• ,., ·~ """"'"'ft voHt" 111 i nu c;'"'' Mt<• 100 I Mo/\1111~1 r•1 '· Stlt IF\ t Fonlfl l(l. Tl,,.. 11.I ,,,,._, Mof\Ull~I (l'J 2. Hanf'll 11'1 1 ~-•• rr1 t1,.,1 · 1'' MO-I Hoo~t!I (l'I 1 Wllllf'!'J (Fl 1 ,.,("'''"" rJI Tl"'f I ltJ •'2'1-1 Hollldt¥ rr.1 ' C1,..11i.r ((1 l P1!! !Fl T!"'t J J1 I no HI-I-' JO""•" (l'l 1 CJ\lovt rl fl'"' 1 !(•ll-•M•" 1(1 Tl"'tr 11 f t2!l LH-1 C~li'tttl /ff 1 Jot"Cf1" f'"' 1 o:•l•orr"•~ ICl f l"'t \If UO RlllY-1. llllO!n!tl" Vt llt>' f l"'I' , ., : 1111 -I, L•1111llt !W) t. lur•~ttl tWl S. Z1mor1 lWL Tl"'t: :IO.J 6111 -I, ~o!h (M) I. Cor!tl (W) ). "'nolO (HI flm•1 1:11.6 1J20 -l, S11cw CW} l Qulttlt !WI J. l'rGf\11: (Hl. T!r<i': J:H.S IHI LH -I. l'oli. (H) ). McCollum «WJ l. C~fn (M) T:m11 u.i di II.tier -1. Wt11m1111ttr. 'l'lmt: ffl 11J -l. Olttl tWI 2. No llCOl\d or flllrcl. Htl911•: J.t LJ -!, Ztmort IWI 1 llOI (M) I, ltmll11 !WI. Dl111n<;t: 1).J l'V -1. CoW'lltl'I IHI 1. llOWrll \H) I. L-HI, 1-ttltl'll: M Golden West and Orange Coast collegell bounced Into ttie semifinals or lhe Fullerton Junior College b 1 s e b a 11 tournament Thursday night with ln1press.ive victories. or the w1y Ol1 Just a trio !Seo TounO}', p,., 111 Ott~" CQlt lfl Ill ,. II rill Ji iii, tf (ltr~, 111 NtWfl, 111 ltt.,.,., ,, MCN .. lv, rt hl ... llY. 1' l(l"t, II Snyder, ( Qulunbl,,f, • to1tl1 . ' ' ' ' . . ' • ' l • ' u • • . ' • • . ' . ' • • ' ' • ' ' • • I • • • ' Corona del M1r'1 Kurt Krumpboli ind G a r l II Bttreton swept to bf:11t time• In two events Thursday to hlshllaht the Irvtne League 11 ·Im prelims at Costa Mesa High • The Onals were set today 1t the same Ille. KnJ1:ripholi 1ped lo 1 1:47.I 11' -1. M\/ff lY (Hj J. Ch1ndltr tW) J, ll:M (NI. 0111t1'Ct: :lt·tl• Vwtlir C<lach Fred Hoover'3 Golden \Vest Rust I er s outslu&&ed Ohlone of Premont, 12·7, al La Palma Park 11.·hile Barry Wallace's OCC Plratrs downed Cypres!I, 3-1, at Boysen Park in Anahein1. c,.. .... 111 .. • • • ' • • • I " ,., (200 free) and 48.$ ( 100 free l•n Cl-tt ''" 4611 T""'lln IOI -I. Wtlkt• !T l 2 MdCltUlt Ill ). lnYOtr (tJ. Tlmt: 10., l'!dlltr. 111 '•llm•f. II GtP\•11, Jll l'trMt, ti !tn<;hU, rl t111lr1vldl, Ill • • • , • clocking) while mate Berge:ion m -1 Mo;ICtn1l1 Ill !. Snv°"' If) I, C1tpen1.,. jfl. TIMt: U.t ~1 ea n w hile, Saddleb1ck • • l : ·had things ..,his way in the UO -I. l1wmt11 (JJ !. At11U~1 ti! 1. lft l11tr !Tl. Tln'lt : JJ.t A s liaht adjustment in the ali1nment of your shoulders 1s you address the ball c:tn dr1m1tic:1lly 1fftct the direction of your shot$. dropped a 4·1 decision to Santa Ana and Fullerton tripped Compton, S.1. ' • , 1 ' 100 breast (I :05.6) and the • NO -l, ""_, CIJ J. a.rcit CSI "'""u""· '' '"'""··· t c1 ... tltn0. , • l • 200 Individual mtd\ey (Z:Ol .2). I. Or!111H If ). Tl,,..: 1:114.J Mlll -1. l'rtlKlt !T) 1. I . P1l1r CSl J. Ll-tk Ill. Tlmt: t:21.J l·Mll• -I. 5,.,nh (SI 1. McGl1Mn (11 l. Hu1h11 llJ. Tim.: 10.:u.o !JI 1111 -I. Tl• Jt<kl <Tl 1l'ICI S. '''" (1) 1. C•umltY !Tl. Time: .... !ID 1.H -l W1lktr (Tl 1. J1tl1 CTI I, MQrrlt Ill. Tlmt: 10.1 uo lltltv -1. l1;1tln. Tlmt: ,4.1 Mii• 1111111 -1. ''" C:ltmtnlt. "Tlmt: J;M.i HJ -l. MtO trr.,, CSl 1. Turner (TJ I. Cr\/~ «T). HtlD~I; 6-41 U -1. Mc01r,.,, !SJ 1. Ctr~ll!lf (f) 3. J1,•1 (Tl. Of1ltll(t~ 21"°"' ll'V -l. t1""11UI !Sl 1. Go\dY (l\ J. WhMltr !Tl. H1l1M; u.a SI' -1. !y)(ow1~1 (Tl ,, GtO""' IS) I. Smltt. !"f l. Ollt111t1: 11·1\k l et's 'ay you are slicing your shots from left to right or pulling them on a straight lint to the left. Than you nt.ci more of an insid•·to·outsidt clubhead path throu1h the ball. You'll obt1in this by ah1r.::ig your shouldtr1 as shown in tht llluatration •t the lttt. If your shots bend from ri1ht to ltft, fly str1l1ht but to the ri1ht of tlrget, you nttd more of 1n open shoulder position (5ee itlustratlon on the ri1ht). Actu11ly, th• beat shoulder 1ll1nmtnt Is one that .parallels the t1r11t lint. Once you correct your off·llne shots, work back to this all1nmenl DllCUI -1, l'tOlKfry (f) J. ll:OITl .. O • 0 1,,t Mo\n. -.a,.. Im Ill). Jmllrl If ), ~!11'<1 ! l:IJ.l'i\ ';:=========================:::; ltn '""""t. Ill 1111 T11Ulft S«ir1 In 1plle of 1flp&, twnker1, rouch 1nd downh111 1111-with 100 -1. Oorlln tTJ J. Rot1tr11 th• h•IJ> Arnold P•lmK otters )'OU i11 his bookt1t, "Troubl• (Tl J. MCOff tt !. lime: 10.6 Shots." A 'op)' 11 )'CM.IN for 20< '"'' with' stampod, ••>l-220 -I, lltOll"l9 IT) t . LNtnclowllll .. (fl 1. Zt'111tf' r•1 . Tlmt i u .J 1ddr1ss •nwlOpe Hiil lo Arl!Old '•lm1r, i11 c1r1 of this 11ews-"° -1. l'trli.tr !Tl :l. "ncltrlOll piper. (T l l. Sdlttlftr Cll. Tll'lt: 1:)0.1 11'0 -1. lwtl'" CTI '· Ht11I CSI l. RoMl'IOl•t !5). Tl-: l:M.I ,,, HH -I, Tit tlUYtll IT) t .... M1ranlC {Tl J. lllcllmtnd CTI, llmt: 11·1 111 LH -1. 8ortl11 ("fl 1. ?un11lnttram (T l J, M1rWtlc ITl. l lmt: 16.0 llO ll:tl11 -1. Tu•lln. Tl-: l:il.' U -1. •ont11 IT\ 2. l rOWll ff) J, LtYtllllowlkl !Tl. 011l1nc:1: Stevens Leads 2 Events 1t-1\'ll "" - 1. Moll..,. Ill J. ICotl IT) I. All"'°"" ill. H1lthl: 11·6 SI' -I. '°t1trlon tTl 2 "Trrk (Tl l. Hll'ttrion Ill. Dlllll'ICt: 'l·I On Track Honor Roll OIKUI -1, Ma lt (ll l . Pt!tf~ (Tl •· McG•t ITJ. 01·~~"°: ""'"' Newport Harbor weightman ,,,, c•'"""'' 021 "" T111111 Mark Stevens is the sectional 100 -l. Hll"tlWGrl~ (f ) 2. Gt,rtll (T) J. Gon1tlt1 tT). Tlmt: 10.S leader in the Shot put f;nd P19otr1, COITIPI"" J1ck1Gn. Ct11lt"nlt l Mtnty. Mon'1f~lt lv•v. LB Polr H~lbtrl. SI. Monie• 11nd1•1on, Mui• $ho111. Mult cs1~,f;,~ rTt~~'1:::tn11'.l> l. llou•~ the dillCUS oo the latest list ,. "° -1. H•I• IT > 2, W•lt !Tl of CIF Southern Section trick J1ck1cn. CtM1nnlt1 1· ,~f'~ 't1• Z!i;·~,,: =1rs~ 1. coon..,. and fie ld bests for 1971 . i~:'n1.'·c~~~r~" IT> 1. JtYMI ($). Tlmt: J: ... I s . hol Tr•~·"· ~tOdltbt'k Ut Ll1 -1 .. Gtrrtll (T) 2. Ool'l1t\t1 teveru !Jls atop the II l'•PP•'I· CGmPICll'I CT I J. Joh~ 11,!. Tim•: u.• Ust at 81·10\h while his dlscus Jch~•cn. 11111, ... A.tO lltllr _ 1. v1!111. TlMt: ..i.t r 1 1 LJ -1. Hllntt•-"~ (Tl 1. Gertu ln best is 167·1. Manlt~ ... enitnn • ITl l .. Mtren1 (T). Dl1lt1"1C" '10•111 ~~f:r~nMGG°l!::~0,• pv -l. Ul'ldtrwoocl CT) 1. Ht•kr Long jumpers Ray Harris 1i:r1~101l1k. G1ro1n G,.,,., (ff J. 8or1nl1 !Tl. Htl1M: 11).4 110 5P -1. schrt m 1s1 '· lflt•tm (U-0) of Fountain Valley and vinev. con11""111 (S) i. Mt•td!tt. tT!. 0111t1"1Ctt '1•1! Garth Wise (22·10'"2) of Hun-1Cttl1111, Mornln11!6t Hel"'"' Glff\IMlrt L,....,.1 ~:~;17.,.1 1,.. Ungton Beach represent the ~:;k~·11:.t~.' .. ~rrdt1 100-1 1...a11e111• 1111 1. E1CG1 tBl area on the Jong 1ump roster R'"''· co"'"• 1111 Mt• 3 Gulnrll Cl l. Tlmt: 1111 MILi: n~1. Tt1Plt tBl 1. Gwlrlrl• CBl with Harris tied for lh~ sec· otvi., "••to1111 l E111o1 1111. Tlmt · n 1 Uoo'll best non-windy leap St":i't.':;:"lr,:~:11<1rtl ,0-1. Te11lt (Bl J. '-'ltktY «Bl I r M8•1h•ll. R.ao/Klo l . s11p111n• tLI. T\ine: J1' a ong '>1-'ilh Tony Brown O schwtlllt•. l u•bt nt. •~•. Mt<:k~¥ ou 2. s1,...,,,,. tLl Long Beach Poly. TWO M•L• 3. J11110 (II). Tlinf: 1:0J.t Gt~fl, 5111!1 Al'll M1i.--1. Oot>tck 1111 2. Jahn ~•ldl11t San Clemente pole vaulter G'"'· L•t.•'"ooet 11..11.~i•~,1~ ~~11.,,~1'7t_'1 ''rA Goni•I• Tony Hoffman, who'll probably ~;~~!l1i!',~n;;i: • .,., .., " " " '·' " '' '" 71.~ 1l.5 '" 11.• "' "·' ... ••• ... 1 Sl t 1.Sl.& l :U.O I "·' l U.I ~.JI.I • lt.6 •·11.4 ~ U.f o:ll.1 •:10 l .,,, J .. ,. ' 4:U.1 '~' •. , •. l (Ll 1. Ju111" tll). Tlmt: io·•·• lost for the remainder or the KhGU•I. 5'· 81'""ro 110 HH-1. Gf1t11ti.nk (I } 1. l'tct • 'th b k kl Htll. Mornln11I0~1t HM 11.t IL> 1. c''"""' 1•1. 11"'," ,u., 1,, campaign WI • ro en an e, co111er1. c~n1011n111 111 Golden \Vest met Fullerton and OCC faced Santa Ana this afternoon in second round tilts. Saddleback p I aye d Cypress and Ohlone and Compton tangled thls rooming ln consolation games. The chamhionship game i!I set for Saturday '8 p.m.) at La Palma with the consolation tJUe tilt at 5:30, Golden West jumped to a 10-0 lead over Ohlone after four innings of play, getting five of the tallies in the first inning. A triple by Jim Hogan, a wild pitch, two y,·alks, a pair of errors and Craig Keller's two-run double gol l h e Ru.suers the five runs. Hogan and KeUer had two hlla each in the Rustlers' eight-hit attack. Golden West pitcher Greg Henry allowed just one hit through the first five inning! before running Into trouble in the sixth when Ohlone com- bined a single, triple and home run fo r three tallies. Ttf'r! victory ran the Rustlers' season record to 11· 7. Orange Coast received one of ils top pitching pe-rformances or the season !rim side·arming righlhander Marty Quisenberry. The Pirate sophomor e allowNt three first Inning singles after two outs for Cypress' only run -then blanked the Chargerll the resl RllO!ntlY, J Toltll ' ' u • • • ' • • • ' • • • ' IAl'I .. IR•l~tl ••• Or1n11 Co.11 100 00G •11 -J 1 1 Cy!H"tll 100 000 000 -I • ) D~llllt II!. ' 11 rtl ICtlltm, ll Jon111IDl'I, ff ~ ...... Hltr, ct ,.. • l(I r.'11tlllt•. c !"''""· n lltVtlllO' U 1•y_d.1. I v.i;,, !l•rl ...... Jl"I l~OClll'I, Cf 1<.ltltr, II turt1n, rl l•dltltlntr, rf i ...... ( u111nci, I ""ttr,' on" t ft, ,., tu. l .. ' ti r. 1' ...... 1mlftcM1, 2b l I I ! ; l t i : I I ! '11•1,.11') 1 10 1-r~fll l ~ ~ g 1 2 0 f l ! I I ! l 1' ! I ! ll ! I o ~~,v~:. • ' l l g M11 .. 1110, • 0 I I I Tlllll )"! I te:trt llJ IRRlllll • • • Goldtll Wi ii JOI 40I D -U I l ~ltnt \llD llQ3 110-1 tO S ltH~ Ill JKkMn, JD C~rl11tn1t"' t• S~tp1rO. • CoMpblll, Jo lltt•l"Ott, !lt-•f s .... n~., Ho>t,..,tt, If 8irrlt. Ill Ml1!1n, ll·Cf Hoyt, r1 10110. rf fa1111 .. • ' , ' • , ' ' , ' ' " • I • • • • • • • • • • ' ' .• ' . • • • • I o ' ' • • • • • • ' • • • • ' • ' ltftft ...... 14) l'Oll. 111 Cutl1r, cf Alld••••l11, (! St/KllO•ll. lb Ci0'11•ln, ,, 1Col111o:1. rt Mt~tl, c Wftllt, lb Gotun~1. u H.,, ... , u Mt(OWj lft, • fot lll .. , ' ' ' ' • • ' ' • • ' • • ' • • ' ' • . ' " . ' ... ' • • • • ' ' • • • • ' • • ' • ' • ' • ' I It-'" lftl!C1111 ••• O!O llN000-1 7 2 011 001 OOll-• j I 100 t•tt-1 1tru11111\atf rC:OMI 1,111 r "~:"'· 1~:l,~"ttA'; ~;;i:.Z';. 'c.!~: tCGM) l·J.4.l 6 M•"ll'I lCM/ 1;~.J ,00 Ind, m••llt,._1. lt••llOfl ICo:IMI ,.ot.1 2 Ml1lolt-!CM\ 2.11.t ), W1Cnlt t (1!111 2;11 0 I. lltlcl>t• C(Ml 1:11.I S. Wtl~f• «CdMI 2:16.t 6. Ollw_, CC:4Mf 1:16.1 .M Frtt-1. Wt1dt!I<~ ICMl 2J.I t. 111 t11trmt n !1!11! IJ.I J. •trt1n1 iJIVI JJ.I 4. M<"ll ... IY !CMI n .1 1. Wu""' {lOllOll) JJ.t 6. 11YlllKI (COM ! J4,0 Ol~l"-1 . Ht!I !fV) 1'1.U '· Gall tlltr !CMJ ltS.tS 3. ZtlOln <CMJ 1n .n 1, lltckburn llOIMlll\ !IS.10 s. Git~ !IAV) lfl 111 I. Vtrooo ICMI lll,4S 100 llv-1. OUo lCo:IMI s&J 1 Wiii"" IL.Al U.5 J. WtlOtllcl\ !CM) '9 l t. Htll tC M\ Sl.J J Wt!t.r tf,1) 1·00,,' L1mmtr• (FYI !:fl.II 100 lr-1. K•UM.,..IJ cc•MI .. s ' LOl'1 (Cc!M! JI.I J. lwnd•,. !1!1!1 Jl.9 •. Wur1tlr Cldloonl '2.1 s. ,,.., ... ntntv CCMl JJ.2 •• ltrlll"I l,Vl "·' d rr-1. •outM'I' !COM! i OJ 1 7 Ktnl CE•tl "°'·J J. M•rrOll (CM I ,,10.t •. H•ll tCMl •·U.t S. Lund (CMI 1:U.l •·"'""' 111'\ll 6:1t f 100 "<--\, Ml11t1.ii ((Ml M 4 l Bit"''"''" 1111! n .f S.. ICntllt (f"tll lt.6 4. Wth<Vtkl l'fM) 1:01 I S Wtll1llr ll!tU 1;01) 6. Wt!ktf (COM) I :02.J 1110 llrttll-1. B.,..IOI! (CilMl l:OS' 1 s-ttlt iCMl I ;06 t l . \It.-! !CMI !~Gt.I 4. iltl.:MY «CMI I·" 7 S, l'tlrln1 (l!ll) l:ot.J t MD11t ILAI 1:10 r:t .. K 200 lrt-1. GtlU ((dM) l 'U S J. f•ttlfr'lll (l"l \;)I.I l . lflch IFV\ 1:$1.t 4, MCAOl"'t !l'"V) J;00.4 I. Lllltll 11!11) 1:1:1.I 6. Wlllm•n (FVI J·M.1 100 llKI. mfdloy-1, Jo~""'" !L.ll 1:01.I J. Tr1c1 !LAI 1:01.1 S. Mllllc~ ICOMI l ~QJ.1 4, l •OWft• iFVI 1:012 I. lh11ton !'Vl l;OJ.6 '· Gr•h•m Clo:lllO~I 1:01.J JO lrtt-1. O!te (CdM) 14.1 1. W11ter\ ICM! U.! I. SruHO IFVl 11,I •· l'rtdl1lt. lL") 24 7 !. Wt1I tl!dl1onl • 11 o '· Joh n111n (~Vl 1s.s UICI llY-1 JOl'll!•011 iLAl J1.1 t, ltrum•l'IOI• (~GMf !l J 1. Lll!tll ll•ll l:OJ.O 4. S<'llllCll'I !,Vl l:OJ.O ,, Wt•I IEOl1on1 l:Cll.O !. 6. Wotld CLAI 1:U1 100 lrtt-1. Orio {COM} SS 1 1. Mc ... d•m• (FV) if.I J. Wtllt<I lCMI S! 0 •. l'roolt\-(Lill 51 t I StutrO (FV) ~.4 '· tow111tl'ld Cl!l!l SI I C!O ••-I. K•vm~hOll !CdMl •.06 • t l'rffl•/ld (LAI •:ot.I J. Eltft (l'VI • II.I •. 14tll!dtr !CMI l:J,I J 5 JOltftlon If\/) 4:11.J t. Wlttmt" !FV I 4.•1.• 100 lro•tk-1. ,-11m11 (CllMl l·r:tl 6 1, lrtc..-IL.i.J l ;Ol.I l. llton ICM I l:Cl).0 I. Wtt;Jd CLAl 1:01 l I , iltultf f,VJ l 'Ol.J 6. DtWll! (SAVI l:llt.I 100 11rt11!-1. l •awM !FVl l:t~t J . Mlll\Ch !CdMl 1:10 I J M•rlo.lllY"' ICM) \:ID.I I. LV-lfll (Lil) 1:11.• s. ••rllfl l,Vl \:I• I •· l•OWA UVI 1.U.f llO LH-1. Pict !LJ · 1"11 is fifth in hill specialty al J•ck...,,. L0111POC 1< 1 3. ,,.o l!llrd. Tl111t: 1'.6 McOu11n. Antne!.,, U 6 4'0 Rel1v-1. lttt, Timi: iij,I 14-fi~. Hol!ln1. P1•&<11n1 116 Jo:! lrft-1, Bou1h•T (COMl 1:06.4 ~'.:1~·1~~~· ~'::· 1~m'H1::.:·• (LI Outlllde of the field events, ~.i~:.,~~'. ~; .. ~t'"''01"0 ~!.! Dennis ~1aas and Steve Mii• r111.,, -1, Gold.,, Wt11 ~°prv~·r~~;;~,'1 4 ic°e~i •• 1 ' 0 fc'M 1l. 1~'~ Maas, Lassegard Pace Rustler Spikers, 7 6-60 l Benk• 1111. Ht!tllt: ,., 1 the only area athlete in the Th R 1• LH Lasst"ard captured 1 wo IAnt.trm1n, s1rovth, Dlcktol'I t l\d 5 Mu~lh1u11r tE.iHlnl J;IO,, '· 1u!l1f LJ-1. l•tP!t (l l 1. Ctroenltr Cl t f" . t . C Jo~;;~~On•o~'('.Drlt 1: ~ ~ M•111. Tlmtt J:H.J /CMJ 1:11.5 , ,,.1th1n1C111 tLl. dlot•"'" to.7 1 op 1ve In any even IS orona McQYten, •n•htlm 1t.J eventll each to lead Golden Hlth lump -1. wn1111tld !Hl 100 ll'ld. mtdlty-1. •uo•I• ll!d1Nn1 l'V-1 sw"ntv «t.l l. ••11 (I de! Mar's Nick Ro!e, tied for c~e1d1e. Do• Pue&101 n 1 W Coll ' t. "'•" \Ci! J. 11111ll1!d !Gf. H•ltht: 1:01.1 '· c:1111h1n (El!! 1:0,.1 l. 3, No third. 1111t11•: l t-4 1 , 1 . 1 h • 880 1 . h fiolllni, Piiident 11,6 est ege ll track and fiel d •·1 w1&11u cf111 1:06.1 4. Oc~•"'' !FVl SP-1. K 1!il¥~h~I <L . 2 ,.wtrrt<'I 1 t on t11e isl wit Jo~n1011• Mui• tt.6 team to 8 76.60 vl~tory over LOO'I• lum• ~ 1. Jt <kNn IH) '· 1:06.1 s. l'ont1co1f tCMJ 1:01.t • (II \ J. Hot1n (B. Dltlll!tt! • C p'i• Mlk Saykall Bolh ColM•!. Cente"";,1 19.6 B1111r IHl J. W~lttlllG IH I, Dl11t~t•: McAnentv !CMI 1,01.CI DIJcu•-1. Mo,,111 r•11. K1111,11n111 rel! s e y. J•tkion. l °"'"°' host LA Harbor Thursday 21·1 so Ir•-'· Whn1mo•1 ICMl 11 11 (Ll l . Btugh !Bl. Ol111nct: UI·' h J ked J 558 81111 C v 11 19 ' Trlolt lump -1. J•,kHln !H) 7 GU ii! ll 2JJ•) D 11 IEl!l '" runners ave ,C.. oc : · · M.S:n. M':i.'0"Jr~ t '"' lt:: In another meet, invadin~ 1 zuvt• ICiJ J. wn111111o:1 cH1. tl.t :."" M~ow11 ·u:oi1oni'~ 21.1 .s, Lt•ll'lt 110 tH I •rt• Flt!clli'•. Mui• t .! ... , •1i.v Orange Coast dropped a V2·~ Ollltlltt: "·1 Tom•k1n1 cCMI 11.0 '· z1. 1Fv1 I00-1 Ettl !Bl '· Giiiin «L1 J, Trt~tn, Jt6Cll•ti.Ck 9~ C•n!fnnlol 41.t Shot PUI -1, Mulu !HJ ,, Zullnl Jt I "Trtiwtll (BL "Tlm.: 10.5 Jtca9i, C~tnn•I ''''"°' , • Comp1cn J1,0 decision to San Diego Mesa. !141 1. Entl• (Ci). 011•11"1C1. Q ·I io ""-1. BukoU ll!OIMOn ! !I 0 1. J W1ntr 1trv1 (CMJ ~I $. 110 _,, Gl!ll11 Ill i Tr1tw11t 111 ~~1·, Pol• ;j·' Maall won the 220 Jn 21.9 Pol~ v1111r ~ !. v1.~tt.l1 t1o11 '· L1ni11011 iCMI 11.5 Xt.O •. ,Otd 3 !o~~"~!~L1(Lli"'';.: ';:11111~ !Ll B!•I• M1L• ••LAY A): and the 440 in 49.7. Lassegard ~~urt CG! J. O'Mtl>ontT CHI. "' 1 "' 1 ' ll!rlen'ih•IMCtc'::~~· 3 Mtrllll f!I). f lint: l :ll.7 o· H CO!T'Dlon ''"·6 had a tough doubl I . ~l1<u• -I. e11t1• (G) '· .o,\ulu \EdltOl'l l )1.1 1110-1. i111rwtrt c•1 ?. Webtr (LI Ivers ot Ct~llnl!itl l.iJ.o lh 880 . 2 02 1 •• dcap unng ,",,,',,""'"',-, ,',',',· '1•'"1'",',',"',·''"'', 100 1.-,1. Wftlll'Mrt. (CM) 51 J l Heddon «LI. T!rno: J:11.' L 11. Pclv J·J1.1 e 1n : . an the mile '· G!l•o• c 111 J' 1 > utltr CCMl 1'10 lo!H-1. NtllO" (Ll J, Wl"th!P M11rnlnv•I~· J·~··· . 4 28 ~.. 51.t I. IC1M (l!ll! $1.1 5. WoeGru!I !LI l C1 11 «L) Tl"'t: 11 J HIGH JUMJI In : .0. 100 -I ~l~l ISi t. ·-!,V) ~.4 ' T-t•ln1 !CM) )I J 110 LH-1. NtlH111 Ill '· w1n1111, F p• ~tottt•. GlolKl•I• ,'~·~ Teammate Terry ~lcKeon <oi i . w111ri LI mt1• t.7 100 D•<•-1. ,111mor1 ICMI "' Ill l. Ahl~t IL). l lmt: 15.1 or 1rates Mlill. L.B. l'olv .. B -I. i ~ ! ) \· ICll!Ntll '· Wtlltlof IE•H H.r I '"''"""' 110 R•l•¥-1. Liiw11t 11tch. Tim•: Ful•u•on. Stntt l't a.1 had a fine thret·mile lime 15 · ~'':'"~ /81· .f2 R troori 1e111 :io J •. w-'u" !l'Yl 11 s 1.•1 .1 i:'i:~~. "c"'~"~:r~:11naJ •·•, of 14:39.9 and th• R"st1.,,. IS 'Gill• 8 I~"'" 11~ ..... J . MtCl•m•M !IAVt » 2 ' Mt•C\/m l-IJ-1 Tit Nth.ct" Il l 11'1<1 Wl1111!IP 4• -l, d!i\lcll J 1, lull•• tE•l1onl l2 i (L! 1. Fu•ttrron c•l. HtltM: u Oranie Coallt c 0 \I e g e . LOtr1• Ju111, Craig Nomura soared 14~ in (O> f· l t ird I · T tM: ·u 1 JO D••••r-1. 1vo•t\ tEOl1<1.n) ,, 2 LJ-I Fullt•!I" CBI l . J. Nil.ool B•own. L I . Po ly 7l.O 11M1 t -\i 1rn1 Cll:J. LIOlllll•r l u;nlKQll ICMl J .f 1, Cll:l"" 0 , 1• •• •·hfnd oome top one-eler H2,.ll, F11U11ttln v11lt1 2J.o the pole vault to ••t 1 school ! l . 1t1111 !t ttt1t: 41· . n i u.r 1. E••nt \Fv ) 3'. s. (Ll J.,. Ntl1on «LJ. 1!1Mt: .... U<c: -,., Wl11. Hun!. •••th ?1 .. 10"• mil~-. t.r'l'lr' ... ~Ltdllllltr c tnlio !SAY ) .).I.I •. Crim• ( dMI Pv_1 M•rk swo11111 cLl '· Ahlkt diving performances. trailed J•<•IOn. Lon1-= »·te record. 15 ,,•· ,','ics ..:. 1 1111 =,r.' •'·r· '\I >.-"· Ill J. P11tlccl1 fLl. Htl1M: 104 l111ltr. LNrt ''"' ·~ 1 ,. -.oiiim•·---------. SP-I l(lo11t•mtn (l) 2. w .... ., Fullerton, by jusl one point l'OL I VAV~r George Barnett and Dave rsn:•rion SI J •••t~ 01. mt:1 (Bl 1. Mumrarc! Ill. 0111111c1: 11..1 142,,__41 1"1) after the first day srlro•. G11n.c111e n -1loo Davis sparkled for Orange '"'~Int. -1. s~~!k «Sl l· ""'t•v Ol!tU•-1 W8Hll'I 181 1 MumklrO 711 W~l!t. DGmlnvutl ll·l '4 10! ). A"lll'Hln !l. Im': S .t (Ll 1 Fc•tt• CLJ. 01111roc:t: U»> of the South Coa!'I Conference "'""· +nq1, .. oot ''·' Coast. Barnell had a 1971 best ,411 itlt~ -~ ··~ l1:'' '"f••••· '" swim champlo•sh1'ps at Sa•la ~';';,~~" c~~1.!'1c•e"'""'' l:J,c 144 9) in w1·nning lhe ,,·1ple ~~r•ltY. vin ° 1 oN!. im1e 1.ttun• (01 !U) •rtt " " " . Miit rtl•• -I. Ort~t Cot1I II'"'· 100-1 . Atkl11.o" iL\ 1. M1rr1n1r Ana College Thursday. sr-"""'· N•w•~~1°T !'UT 11.10,,, jump while Davis went 14·0 ~~il1'' °''" '"d V6n Mort). 11111: (LI l. 5!ou9h !Bl. ''"''' 10·' J' Obe h .J" ' ~· •• • ..... ,',','.'",,,,. &1.1 "• in nabbln• the pole ..... 11 . t'll(lh lumo -I, Mil!• (!) '· Itel! 111n-1, ••~111wn !Ll 1. SlllO!th ti) lm rg won I e u1v1ng ,. ·· w ., Jl·ll'.. e • f!) l B " !01 Ht1 ~ .. 7 ,. M•rrlntr (Ll 11.,,1; lt.1 I McC~oi. Ctnt1n~l1t Jl·f ''> Other winners for OCC in· Loii ul "o ..: i. 0 1CijlMl•n !!1 1. 4-10-1. G&ltOWIY (Ll 1. WtlllCt title while Bill Ot!Huff placet !l•uck. Crt••I .,,,, d ··'"''' rm '· ltU I l. 01111~t1: !Ll l Brock (If Tlm1: 1::11.s eecond in tm 50 free (22 .9) Mtr~ sttvtM. ~1~~~~ UJl clu ed Tim Owene in the 440 '11;?011 1 0 _ 1. 111rnt11 101 , llXl-1. R:obln•Ot1 Il l 2 B t.,,l~O•• S S h , I • o< {51.8) and Da'e ' ·ufek )0 0 l!!t ltnton rri ). Mlllof !S), Ol1UMt• (II! 1. 1eni1tto• 11..1. t 1m1: 1~1.1.J and teammate teve • c 11.•er •" ... o m•"· Mor>t1 v11ta u1.1 ......, "I uo LH-1. 1<.1nel~t~h !Ll 1. S~••ll was ~econd in lhe 500 free g~~~·p':h~<~•;~,h~' •1tmllot :!~4'" the discus 1128·99.i). ·QI• vt u11 -l. 01.l" '°I /· (ll l. Rot1in1en ca it Timi· 11.1 L•"• Ot vld, c1m1rlllft 1H''4t'>l oot••~ W••I un !H) LA Hltllff l"•llh !S! · zmn1kr ( J, lit th · THINK EASTER BUNNY HQ Rt ltr-1 .. LtlUl!t lttC~. Tlint: (5:07 .2), 100 -1. Jone1 (Hl 1 l!.tm• 11J~jtlln -r. lt~lkt" !SIJ.· Mor1t '" "'"" C•tfl Ct1lltrtn<• Mett IGJ l. J011n1n" !Gl Tlmt: 't 101) ·-1"'' oliM.t · I fU-1. ll. MtM1nu1 Ill l , OMr l'1.1lltl1on 41\1 .. 0••<>11-(ot!I 41'" 1t0 -I Mft\ if') 1 JG~"'°" Shof 'Ou -.. V011iiQt1 ll ' l . !Ll l OM•• (81. H•l•M: J.4 ltlll• Ant n. Ml 5tn jl.~lonlo I/, N l T IGI J. Jone1 IH) l lmt l!' ToOOl••n (I) s. Tv•ntr fOI .. 01 IMI' THINK LJ -1 M1rrlnt<" tLI J. RDlllllHI" ,. ' e ourney uo ·-I M••· (GI.' .,,, .... 11 ""o",?.,, -'· ~ ~ ,,, '· ,,,,,,, (BJ 3. NoHll (8). 0111111<;1: II 11 .. trrllCI Cl. ''' '-0, • ,., ,, • ' -w-PV-1. Grtt11b&ck 1•1 1. '"'"" (9) SO ''" -1 F~lotnoto (Ml 1 . t IC" v . """· .. ~•:o::• ='=· ="=':="::'·=:::'"="::"::"::'::'::"::·'::"==,II t)tHu" (01 J 11vtn••• !Cl 4 Cif0"' MO -I l••uv1tO (G) 1 MtOuo"'~ -- l . 111/IOlffOl'I (LI. HtlfM: M (!A,) s. Slll••Y !l'I ' ll>btl>OI! COl The trio or Dick Mllltr, Sten (Gl J. Hobin (GI. Tim•. 1.01 l SP-I. Sllull (L} 2. •lnltY lll Tl,.,_: !I) Miio -t. l •nit•O CGI I MtOllOW<I l w ....... d (l ). Dl1!tll<;I: 41-414 "°° ''" -' Mtlllft ff'\ ' Sch .. •• Vermund and Ken Neisser or 101 l . F~n-CGl Im•· t ,. 0 GOLF TIPS Ltw Sclrt 1,,_,i.tdll t .... U..tf OOICVl--1. S~ull Ill 2. l l11,l1r (l} IOJ J. l•~l"IO" !Ol • RobOtt• (51 ).milt -l Mcl(to11 (G! ' Vlftl J. f'lt&<1ow1 t8! 0111t1"1Ct: 111· '· l'ol!t /Fl '· Bt•nt1r tMI Tlm•: Co rona del Mar High will be !G l l. t-<tl'ldtt>ort (Gl. ""'': U:>f.t Vtriltr J:Oj.I compel'ong .,, th• o· . T l• 1'0 Hltlll -' Ort~ (HI l Ou11l1p ...... -,.,.""' II ~ ... Mtrtr 0.1 u•I IMI 11. A~!M~r 200 ll'ld mid. _ 1 ""'ut•o-rFI JR I enn 1cn 2. llkhttdlOf'I IHI Time: ll.I N POR E INN 100 -1 Ffll r (Ml !. CD11w1' cu 2. M•r• ,,, i . wt11'1t !""f 4 R•dor Jn vi lational beginning April~ uo 1111. -1 ~o• IM! 1 er1dt11 EW T R. J. Turnl!lutn lM). Tlmt: 10.J !Sl I. WtrMdt:t !01 •nd PlwOl'lk• {~I l . $1•-h COi Tlmt: S&t PAR. 3 GOLF COURSE no -1 flr(U (Ml J. con .. •Y Ill ,,l. T!"'t: l :Ol.l 25. 440 tfl'w -I Ooldtn WHI (KfV•, J. llrnP•o11 ~Ml. Tim•: 22.t 0111...,t!tr Dl•lnt -1 Obt•• 101 K•mg, Mttt •nd Jaf\n•onJ. Tlm t. Sl .00 whit. tfllt 9' .... ~ ''°"""'· o.,1~. W'l . 1 \~!>dt11 !Ml i. Rt•• 101 1. ,,~ 1L1 4 ou,~1" ~1iller will be in the singl~!I• -~·~•_:·~----------_...!'=============~ l.~•11o~~,.:Jl11 'Yi>.~·J'· •uiltt ti ! 101 s. A~t 101 6. 11e11t""" IMJ. while the Vermund-Neisserl 1·~/ft,0~1 !M fJ ''"ii.ta•~ (Ml 1. PC::!~ • .,,Jl.l.,':,t.,, -t. Fyl!t•len ' tar\dem will compete \()l'!Qtt1lllroer 15) I, IL l'otl1M11 !M!. 511'1• A"t J, Ortntt C!>ISI • Ctrrllo1 d bl 1;.'~u~f o 1..-.i:mt. (Ml 1 Grttt11~··· ;";'·;;ii";";;';';"';;;"~·.';';;";';' ;;';';;';' iiOmiiiiiiOOUiiiiiieioSo._iiiiiiiiiiOiiOiiiiiiiimiiii;;I tSI J. ~hloolont ), Tl,.,1; !O:h.6 UO llH -1. •1•la111 ~Ml J. O•rr ($1 l. C.u(ul!t IM , Tlrn•: IJ.t llll LH-1 .. Gtr\ (ll J. '(l\llCll !Sl J. M1rrlQ•~ IM), lf"lt: ,0 I U!I Rtl11-1, Mitt' e>t\. Tl!flt i 4'.• Mllt llt!IY -1. M11tr Dtl. Tlrllt: J.~J!..h. H1n11tt\t11 Vf,l }. ""°"'°"' !SLJ(~~tdti:l~~.~~t1) ('f "FREE" Sailboating Plll TOUlSIL• o• THiii COSTS: • L···· lft .. fdr!ll Rt • Hi•h Mo•tint Ce1h APRIL SERVICE SPECIALS l11cluilin9 i111p1clion I full •d· )ullll'lt nl. Jw1t Reg. $1.lO Whttl Staring & Br•k• Combo. l~cl. (lt 111, lubrie tlt ' 1d jv1I w~111I bo4ri1191 . Co,.,pl1t1 br•~· !•IP•CI. ' tdiu1I. Jut! We1tellff r1 ... • •41·2444 HIW,oafll INN e l 1p1Jn i. Mt lt1!t n1"c ' e Clttnl•t Choftl • l"IW!l fttl 99' McCIUY lWINS II A PLATIOY I T•ur F•111l1y •• •lrt F'ltntl Will L•'"• Tiit ld11 CALL LIDO SAILING CLUB 675·0827 You Sev• $2.51 You S•Yt $4.00 SANTA ANA LINCOLN MERCURY ll01 NO. TUSTIN AVI., SANTA ANA 5<47°0143 "WI APPUCIATI YOUR IUSINISS .. - ........... ................ ............... Alll!RWM VDIKl!S .... Wiii ....... ............. 11114 . , JI DAIL V PILOT Friday, April 2 1971 SPIKE RESULTS • • • Area Tenllls, Gymnastics Orange Prelims Artist Shines • Ill· Lions Honor W restlers Andy Lassak was named most valuable "restlcr al \Vcslminsler Htgh 's sports :iwards banquet \Vedne5day night honoring the Sunset League chempions V1t1a•, Mii .lnd~ l••u~. MOJI ln•ou• t,oovf lem Ml•t•~lt: M"'I ltna•ov..i Jo~n 'Ulff: Du•ot1nc11"' .,..,lo• Ii i<• M•Jla~: 0Ull•ll>llo"9 j.,nlo< l •m M..:k; Ouh!1..ar,,, 50P"""'"'••· Nr·I Elk!"'' CtD!~ln Jt11 "'oon Jw111tr Vt "lh MV · W•wne ll•kt•: (Hl1ln Jim w1,tl1ch•n. .... ~.,-MV · llotl voci,,, Caol•ln G••t Co.r11111 I IH-1. ""')% L~' 1, ~M4tl IMI l -.7-~~n,~~· (lll°"l; t~,_• (Ml l.p'..:~\* ~f:~.:ii.r;:1 t .O'C_,,ll 1 '""" t!oor*'•l ,.11.J 3. Slow"" (MJ l. f;o.,.1 IMI. Ht1qtit ,_, '((TENNIS Neil Amsden WllS the loot Sonor<1.'s John Sutton sped louGe•l>.c-ICOl • "'' !ltt1••"" (1111"1• Ci•ra ..... !SI l•l !Lii) f u .1 • ltnl~ (LI) 1;11 1 SP-I. Hl(•tw (Ml). l lDMt IM) SeC .. C•lleMCU UILA l t•l•ll Ill) (.11 1 • 11;,n,,.,y IEDl 412'.I IOOllv -1,llurcl\fltll:l(EDllCd.) '••-·o IEOt fl'I 6. ,rkJlu,... l. J-iMi °'•1-•= "'·' t\rttst to gamer an individual lo a pair of first place !inishc~ 5 ..:.u •• 1v&11 •.ll!.o '· sm1111 ceo1 '· T1r1or ISono<•l 1:n1 1. Joiw.ir .._. Vt nlty Sh .. hu lh 6 400 f d 4 JO.l CV1ll 1:1J2 4. $tie•-!SJ 1:6'.1 (V•ll 2.70..l 1 l!.•kMflbtuA 1:•1-.. u•1 tllll u 1111 .. , hrsi place in the Orange wi a 4:07. ree an 100 t>oc~ _ 1 11-cSonor•I 3 2_. ~e.oi 1:0l.1 •. ,.. .... ,,, 100 Ind. mlOl•r -· 11 , ~· 1ao-1 G•t" 1111 J. O•<M<• 111 ,..,_ ts1 -•·•· ... Le g · prel'ms al <'I 1 '"1 200 fee 1:011 1 G1rll!Mft p.1111 1 ~01.r 1. 4si. ''°'·' tsonor•l 1.01.1 J. Jilabl•j• ~L «•~iU. ','!1'":"11 ~~ Ttrf: 11i~ct.mbi. cv1 sc~m1 ... csi -H . 4-1 a ue swim 1 c. ·JU. w r · v .... n• 1111 1 0.1 4 ~ ... ..., !Ill 100 "" -1. a1n•wa"9er cv.u l ,..,....,, 111 i,o7. • ~ · ~ 2> ~ o -t Dorado Thursday afternoon. 1 o..• s. zv11us !Vtll l.a5.J , ROCl9e<> 55 1 J. T.,,n.,ul•t 1vt1~ :U.I 1. 11,..,. tSono<•l Liit 1 5. Wflllllt tVtll l:ll.S J . ..:1...:1\t 11, l. Tlf'llt>' ,' ,,,.,, ''' M•~~ I l WOii 1· • 1 V•roltr Of I j , "'' OSI , , .. _ JSI 1:11 f ...._1 ..,.. II:) ·" An<H•Mll'(Sl-l-J,t2 ki f" · th C 50 ! .169 •nur 81 .UT•· Lecm• _..w~~ a.. ILel J!t l-J.;•""",· ',!,,',,'-,,,",·1 ll:tOOlno (VI ~lll•m !Sl won H , 1.1 ta ng irst Jn e ee 10G mt<ll~• ••+t• -I El Oiir..io 100 bt•••t _ 1. o~n1, (V•O t;O• o ',:.•,,,•.•,••dner CSI y ! 6. Hibbard , ~oim"•ff••••-,,,' ,,'.o~'. 0:.,1, t'onoril ~ · g" , o , free wi'lh a z•g clocking 1 44' 1 fono•~ t 4't l. vaie .. cl• 1 De•Hl.,10 Sonora 1,lll.l 1 • ..:111an • 1 , , , , J.Gotlli'5 V), lme:j, OJ. ''' Hln1'•!51wonM,H ~. • 1'111 er~al •dl ,,,1 ••. J •. H-lff ''' l :Otl -''" _ 1 •·-a~e IED\ ?oO i Plckrrll !\lall U . • trlll Milt-I. uftola !vl 1 A amt , ,,. ....., "'"~··· 1,·, "' 0 M"'mme (Sonoitl 1'.1 J ..... 1 (\::). l!fflll' •:Jl.j O.Wblh The (inals wUI be neld at 100 t•N - -.. Sullllf\ !~<>l'Of~l I '>t l s. Mllltr (EOJ l.O'l.S 6. Turnciuhf •:32.S 2. PUTtrKll'I !Val) •::15.6 ~. ••. . • '' JV 11 2t t l·Mllt-1, Contraras ('II l. 11•• H\ldlow·~Cl•llr''"' 151 WO<! ,-t, l-O 1 Loud .. ~•c~ IEOI 1111 J Cl•r~ (V•IJ 110l v1n111.,1aan (5! •:l1.l '· L~I•• IS) l.Q 11¥ -I. Plc-n • · <1111. CeMtna 1vJ. lomt· 10,06.I s1111m.111.~ Sl "'9" •·I.''° the same site Saturday morn-111) LSl.l 4. B•<r•ana (81 1:110 .oo 1r~• ••l•v -1 II••• 3 n .o •:•.• s. Wtll•f•r tLB) .,~. •· 1 Devor• (LB! ~l l , T•""'"° 151 '" ~-1. Goll:tltl (II) J. VorO<IO MtC-·Llndllllra~ IS) WOii 6·1, l·O · 5 Af\!ff•ooo !EDl 1 ~I 6 Bl>f'd 1 El Do••ao l.ll.O l Laguna 801t~ Smallwood (VII) l ;O.T ll • •· ICallti ('Ill~ J2.I S. Erm.,, ",!..1·. o_ .. ,1. E)~},•,m,,•, ',,'-'1 o. ,,,,~ I/lg at JO_ C£DJ 1·01.1 l .S? 1 4. Valonclt J lJ.I S. Sono•t 100 bid< -1. Owen 15! 1 Ool O OED) J? I 6. M•1<1""!1 ISi n .t • > ., ~ .. _. ·-w-1m1111._, n ... nl 0 1.lll "ltlllN•• . , .. ,, , 0 ,,.,,, fVt ll !Vl l. Cale (E:J. lime; JC.• •• L C 200 d 11113 Ind m~l•V l 1 Robin<e" (AO rlmt L 1. Hiii (ED) 1:01.1 J. Dl•Yoar vi 100 ''"" -• .. '''•v-1. !.A v11i.v lime: o~ ·~ i.or .. -1. A. Mo10 INI aguna•s ce yar l ·.-.o ._ 11,.,1118!'1.,.. fLBl 1:11 1 1 , Olm•lt•d !Bl 11.11. (htrd cso-•I ~ R I ' ' '' • ' •-·• WI o (SOn()ral J·D'l 6 1. Oul!Je IVll) 110 I OH> -' <•I ,__' S "''~ 11t•-· A • •·· ' · '· Tie wrween L•Coe t 1na u1•t• freeslyle relay learn also had 5,,.,... !S) l;U.3 •· &urn' cv•u 1.ao 1 • Mumm• 1 o"" ....... · )·400 El (Wl Poln!S: •·•· l Burn.ti (ED) l ·lll ' G••"M"' 200 meGI~• t•ltV 1 SHalfbtck l :l•.2 Frl<ll-lVllJ !;Ol.l I. eenton Ile) "Hj-t, Willi•"!• lV~_.l. ICIN> I Fr.., eK~tCIN" -1. Ru"t ' l~I a first place CJockin'g in (\l~ll l:lJl S. NorObert ISonora, 1 ... 0 1 [I 00<1do 1 SIO l. V1lef1Cl• too breall _ l. Bittl~e !Sl 1 lit 1 011 1 · Lsl~t~ ~"J;e:1!'vrJ1 1. M1vfl1ld llll 1. Jo/\._,, IWJ J. Tl• belw"n Se•••• 'fhursday's preli'ms. WI.th 3 l ·U.t 1 B!it>ow !Son0<il l· u 1 1 · 51 O • L1aun• Be1ch 1:10.1 S. l. Turn<1<1bt IV•ll l :u 1 J Throsen JC b•ct _ 1. 1111atnb1u~h 4~••1 l IClmbtll (Ill. Ol1ltfl<t: 20-7'11. and Jofln'IDn (WI. Polnlo: 11 '41 Ire• -1. ComPTon IBI r. 6 Sonora (no hmel l$ono<•J l:ll.1 •. Burle< (Sonor1! 190 1 Mell•l 11111J 12.1 3. W•l1M !ll~111-kJ-A~~:'11tf.,~~l. '17.:· Allman E~~_,,"°(~l -l ~"'.'"'~~•d1w11N~: 1:47.2. ~J.:~k•t~~.!;::.~~n-~af l~n;o~' <,;"~ 1 ~~~~~~e I c:~:'",':,cv:.u ~~~~~ l:UJ s. "',a.mi (SI 1;!8 1 •· Wal!•n, 1~~1.'.,,,'"1•0'1 ,",•,••,'."M!!! ... ~·o (~t ~p..:.1 De-Ml• fEI 2. l':ooul1 411) n 01nti ; 1 1. '' I · • 0 D ff" · Cll•U 1:1'. .., ~ l.Mu1CMtli'J.ouanct:»10 1 ' ~aenc1as ave u 1ecas1· c£01n••.Meor•tEol11,1. <Sono••> ?Oii 4. H1nc1lED)1·lll.• CIOt•N•t!iv -l.V•lent:lal510 Jtl Di>eu._I, Mllitt t'll 1 ICt 1~ (Ill Hltll O•• -l Ru1!ts !W\ 1 I td' j d lti · I · 100 llY -1 Rotlu1.50n IS?nO<ll ~ 11.wtt• IS) 1 lll.J 6. S1ern ISonot•I 1 SHalebt<k •:o5.1 J. fl Oot•!Jo }(! b•t••I _ 1 t<tltm1 Ill 1'.J J MulClllelEJ.01 .. "•,nct:12Ml.o JollnlOll IWI J. Wtl~~' C,..!. PolM• YOU IS80Ce 5 MVaS lM S.0 1. Hit! (Bl 59J l l1nKT1t•d l·OVG •:llO '· Lltunl etatll •.JO.I j ~ D•vll tSonortl JJ t J. ll:obtMI "" 1·'n,,.i1ei l»fl _ 1 Mun"°" (W\ the varsJ!y JOO yard breast tEDI s•.• • N"'dt>M11 cSonor•I 1 oo • 100 1..a "'""!'¥ -1 Folw•ll cva11 !>otmr• 1,,., ilmtl !Liil :J.o.o , ICtrK~ 1Sonor11 ll.J E1t11>e"' /Ul ctO SA I Y .-,. ''''''' 1'•'11-o o u-,, '''' IO••I ,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,, 0•--0.11''' 'o•o ''''' ".> •. ,,,-o•····•J '1~ • .f1if.'11~: fo_ .... _ I,',', : •. Evt••ll (WI J. L•Ca. (WI . .-O<nl• with a ni(ty 1:04.0. He cap· 1,01.J ........ ,......, 1Eo1 1 ~o •. SPfnVk "csi."'1°:0IO C••• , Sadtll luCk JJI ... •• ""'"" ·no:..-1 Mldln• cvi 1. ~1-ara Rlnt11 -1 T•t 1:1e1w1en Jann-lured the same event in the 100 ''" -1 c11•k (8) 5.2 • ' 5 Bu•11• 1v111 1:10.J '· Ad•m• csi '100 mee11ey "'111 -. 1 Lt 100 "'• ,,1., _ 1. LKlu~• 111d 1 l. W1lkfi IVI. Time: 2•.I l I !WI and Ewtrtl! tW) l Cok11 (,..). Burnell (EDl Sl.S l . PlC~•e\I IV111 ! 10 • 1.5'.l 1. Vll..-.Cll 1;00.• a!illlnl 1 ., 1 .l l. ••el 1: ... I 1. Slddltbldl: '6G-l. S.011, IVI 1. LID""' (II) Polftti! l .'5. Orange County championships SJ., 4. Turnciulsl !VIII S1.• 5. Rft'cl JC ,, ... -I. lll\llttH~V tBI "·' llff(h l :OS.J •. s..n.... 1:06 0 s. Et , ».O 4. V•l•MI• !:SI 0 l. £1 Dor•ff l . ,~. lllJ. ... 1~1: i..:n."' Munot tVI p~f1~~i...~s -llulocl IWI IO.lS at Foolh1'll last week. !EDI $-11 I. Dou!lllS IVtll 54.1 ', ... ',~, ,,.,'"," .• ",,', ,',','I ',·,.•,11w~:-..! 0or,.ao.. '~~·.o ~· B~~Yi!~JO·~v.n ~.s 1:13 0 '· Sonoft (no time) ]. ,..D 1t1lrd. TllTl'I': J:'5.l ,.c•~·:!·"~'~"~'~H~O~'---------~:-..:.::::::::'....'.::~:.::::: _____ ...:·:..~"~H:..-=-~·c· CS~o=H~oo:_~·-::~··c..:·::.·_.'..'._''.'.'.___'.'~':_:=_'.::.'.:'._'.'.:'._.'.__:::":... _ _:::_::_::_.::._::::.::::._c..c::._.:;_.c_ _____________ _ 120 H .. -1. MO<rl• VJ 1, Dlm11 Cllf l. S•ktt (VJ. T!tflf: 11.1 120 LH-l. AIY1•40o IV ! l. M"'ros (VI l Syktt (VI. Tim.· H.J ll80 "11e1ev-1. SA Vtlln. Tltflf: \•4() 0 HJ-1. At.1radQ !Vl J. P-tVt J S..eer !El. HelollJ: S.2 "U-l. Alvltlclo (VJ 2. SIDOda<G IEI Srktl !VI. Ol~!anct; 11·10 P\1-1. Pooc IV) !. ,..0 IKonG °'sl!'~f· H,l'~~~:?d:. [VI 1. Ret<t (El J buoen (V). 0101tnce: 44-• 01"'ui-I. Petri«brkh» IV/ 1. Rua <Ef J. a.,,.. IEl c~"""" Ql..S E11111da 15') ca 1 SA V1U11 i-1. Glrasele \'\ J. L1<1a11 IEI l llKk (Vl. Time: o. '110-1 GlrtlO!e !El 1 l!Odlt. I El 3 BKi (V). (Sct>oo! rKOl'dl. Tl"": ll~l. GttlftlCt \Vl 1. HIU" (E) l. 01111 !\fl. Tlmt: ·2'.l l-l\.---1. Ad1me IV~ 1. Aa<Jl!tr IV) 3 ~wino !\)· Time: l:JLT ~-­"nti LH-(llOSllH (Vl !. 14...,.,5 1El l. Davies IV). Time: ll., J•"-J uo Relaw-1. E<11nc11. ...., ..... record). Time _._, HJ-I. Wltllnof1tm IE\' Tie OtVtoH IE! 1 ,.a Con~r (Ell Helahl: M. 1,1 LJ-1. Gl1ai.e.. E) 1 Lide! 3 II.dims !El. Dljla....:t: 11·1\'J . 1,1 PV-1 Havs El I. Sm1ll l W1llite tVJ. Htlafll: 12·1 I"' 0 SP-l JOCt tE) 1. S111om • J MorillO (VJ. D11tance: 41·• Area JCs In Relays Golden West. Orange Coast and Saddleback culleges are among 30 junior colleges entered in Thursday's annual Southern California relays at UC Irvine. The meet, hosted by Santa Ana College. gels under \\'BY at 9 a.m. with lhe field events. The first running event is set for 1:30. Golden West and Saddleback wilJ compete in Division JI with Southwestern. Santa Bar- bara. Santa Ana. Ventura. Cy- press. RiverSide and Citrus. Orange Coast is entered in Division Il l (large schools) along \\'ith Compton, LA Harbor. Grossmont. San Diego ~1esa, Cerritos. Rio Hondo. J\ft. San Antonio. East LA and LACC. Competing in Division l (small schoolsl will be LA Trade Tech, LA Soulhwest, College of the Canyons, 11ira Costa, Imperial Valley, San Diego, Antelope Valley, Glen·1 dale and 11oorpark. All of the running events will be relays with the ex· ception of the open two-mile. Admission is SI for adults and 50 cents for students. TO URNEY .. (Continued from Pagr 17) or one-base blo'lll·s. ~1ean\\·hile. Wallace's ere\\· gol the only two runs they needed in the first (rame "'hen Pete Pijl opened the game with a drag bunt single and scored on a hi1 ·and-run double by Danny Clark. A pair of ground ouls lthe last by Bob Leavy) scored Clark \\'ilh the second run. The Pirates added their final tally in !he eighth when 1 Clark walked. wen! to third t\'hen a pickoff attempt at (irst ll'ent a11·ry and sCT1red on Jirn Ha1~se·s line drive ~u1gle to left. Quisenbfrry used only 89 pitches to set down the Chargers. Saddleback look a brief I.() lead in the second inning against Santa Ana on a \\'alk lo Jim Campbell and Bob Blacklidge's double down the right field line. Coach Doug Fr1U's Sad· dleback Gauchos '11.'ere held to just t1vo hits "'ith second baseman Gary Jackson pick- ing up the other one. a firth inning single. I See by Today's Want Ads e ~·I.OAT & BACllELOP. furn1shl.'d apt. Yrar lea~f'. 11 '~ on the rli&nllf'J. !\lax '..'8' l°'<>wf'r Cru1~cr. Ulll· J !lf'~ p.11d. Adult\ no pctK, Chf'ck lh1~ onr out before it noats out 10 :oca• Check class 910 • \\"E Xow havt .. '"PEJ\E" Puppir~. l<i 1~;·rk1 old. AKC. All fr1nalr. \·rry reasol\ablr. <ri<L ortt r~ day! e ~or1h Tus11n ll(I',, l!P>I lb'. 100 ya.n'.k rron1 11ark. Sl2,7j0. Ali'O h.t\"r l :-lop. 1~ v1rw lot~ for S:t.!00 rech. By pr1v31r party; 0: 170, • U&ll'dNes~rr " 1cl1rn1 .. 1r, tull or Pa,t 11mr. \\Ir can •rNu1ge a ahor1 \\l)rk Wttk In a PlVifl'~MVt rommunlty ... Ck 7Jn Spring's the l imP. lo give your home a fresh new look. And what better way lo top off that new look than with •dependable, top performing Sylruli1 l!ome eutera l.ainment product. 'J'herP are big beautiful ton!ioles for lbe living room that combine the finesl in advanced electronics with ha ndiome. elegant cabinetry. SmuUy .slyled components for Lhe family room or den. J OOm. And port.ables that can be cmicd from JOOm to 'T'bis spring, really spruce up your home. Buy a Syh·ania. HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN "1 Sylvania color TV. great for dad's den.19 incb (dilf. .mea8.) color 'fV n1odel CX79 in Pecan grain ''inyl on wood com positioo. Has AFC and lorig-life I Gibralt.1r_85~ chassis !or reliable perforn1anre. Roll-about stand oplional e1tn:. NOWONLY s3999s SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER. Enjoy the convenit>nre and e"tcitement or private JisttninJ. Sylv11nia slt>reophones model !-iP20. Hiith qu.alit}' perfonn1nce ail a. i;pttial intrO<!uctory price. NOWONLY s99s HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN"2 ?I.lake dad's work easier with 1 Syln nia full 'function cu..W:lte tape Teeorder model CTlOO. Optnt.111 from tioust current or battf'ri~. ~uipped with aspeclal met.er t.o indicate batlery 'trMglh and recordinf Intl. Canyin1 case, microphone and earphone included. ONLY s499s COSTA MESA 646-1684 Daily t .f, Sor., 9·6 I ; ' • ' \ \ snvaNIA DOESN'T MAKE THEM FAST. SYUIUllA JUST MAKES THEM GOOD. fnlegril ll n11d DPp e 11dtt b ilil11 S i11re 1 947 • HOME IMPROVEMENT PUN~ }·or your daughter. This Sylvania pea;oml air.al porl.able black and white TV model MW22 equtpped ...._ jackaod earpbon~ Operales on house curr~ ot frolJl battery pack (optional exlra). 1'U11.1 2 Inch (~1ag.meu.) pictuie provides extraordinary clarity and bn&bme... ONLY' $10995 HOME IMPROVEMENI' PLAN"4 • Mom ca.n enhance her li,ing room decor WW. this,Sylvania Mediteminean slyled stereo consoJ1 model SC205 fea turing 50 watts peak music power. FM/AM plus FM stereo radio, automatic record pla,. and sealed Air Suspension speaker system. lDeluda; convenient remote speaker and Lape }acb. ~LOWEST PRICE EVER s1999s HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN"S };very boy wants his vpry own .,teroo rrcord ~ .. Syln nia matched component slereo model MSll O Joclo4- .t'M/AJ.'i plus}'?!{ stereo radio and 1utom1tk: •tttfo ~ player. Set.led Air Suspension ~J>C•krri;, tint I'd dust COTC' and st.and included. OURLOWPRICE s2299s 01-4-lr~GTES.,C "'"°'t'C(."''' od, ·TV BLC£PTJON SIMULATiD EL TORO La9uno Hilb Pla1a {Nt.-t to Sav-on) 837-JBJO Dolly 10·6, M/F, ID·f • • ' - rrld1r, AJirlt z, 1971 • EEK D R A Complete Guitle ••• Where to go • •• What to tlo • •• • . . Psychology of Makeup Theater •Paint Job~ Involves Resear~h .. . .. .. . " \ ' " '. CAROL McGILL IS A VERY COY MINNIE MOUSE VON SCHABER CHANGES TO A MUSTACHIOEO GENGHIS KHAN '· • ·Ill ' GINA WOLTZ SHOWS WONOERFUL FACE OF BIG MAMBO VON SCHABER CREATES A MEAN CAPTAIN HOOK ' ' l RON ROSS MAKES UP AS MOP-HEAD RAGGEDY ANDY Stude11ts Mal\.e Presentation 0£ Characters Theater makeup is more involved Vian merely a.lapping on grease paint, po\tder, and putting on a costume. There is the whole p~chology of color, research int.o the chRracter, and method of presentation, according to Golden Wei;t College instructor Stewart Rogers of the Theater-Ari.! Department. Each semester Rogers' students make presentations of characters of their choice. It can be either an historical personage, fictional, or rantasy of any period from early Greek or Italian Renaissance to modern. Prior to applying lhe makeup e;:ich student must come in with a drawin11: and written psychological aoalysis of the character he intends to portray. ''Makeup is 11 complex art," 11 aid Rogers. "Any part of it reflect.!! the culture of the time. "Coloring and technique are most im- portanl. Subdued colors, for example, are best in serious drama while bri~hl colors are better in comedy. F'anlasy makeup for children's plays demends forced exaggeration with liberal use of nose putty, pancake and other devices ()f the makeup art." Result.!! ()f one clas11 effort are &hewn In the accompanying photos. 'Poynton' Airs On Channel 28 Begin,s Sunday "The Spoils of P()ynton." a four-part BBC dramatization of Henry James' oovella of pride, possession and con· science, debuts on KCET Sunday at I p.m. As the Sl!cnnd scriali1.atinn in the Masterpiece TheAtrE' series, the four one- hour episode!! In color will be seen on Channel 28 Sundays at 9 during April, with repeal showings on Wednesday• al JO p.m. Starring lo the teledrama Are Gemma Jones, Jan Ogilvy, Diane Fletcher and Pauline Jameson. James first got lhe idea for "Poynton'' 11fler hearing a conversation about 11 Scolti!!h woman who wa11 al odd! with her M)f1 over family itnliq~s. The 11ulhor had no intere:l!I in the legal complications or the case, or even in ils outcome. Whal did interesl him wlls the battle betwttn mother and son o v' r possessions. From that bit or unint•nli()oal tavesdropping came Poynton Pllfk, a maoor crammed with curi~. furniture, 1culplure and paintings from the shops ai1d bazaars or Europe_and Mrs. Gerelh, the possessive and optn1nnated lady col- lector who spent twenty-sia years putting them there. CAMILLE Carol McGill Creation TOULOUSE ·LAUTREC Crt1t1d by Ron Ros• ' ·- MIKE LEDDY TURNS INTO A NOSY CALABAN Hollywood Backstage Academy Awards Prove New Day of Movies Here ~ By VERNON SCOTT' tl"I M-.llYWM!I Ct'"l_..RI HOLLYWOOD -This year's Academy Award nominations prove conclusively that the old order ls dead and a new day for movies is upon us. ' Not a single "movie ~Lar" vnis nominated for a best acting performance. None of the five ~u:tresseJt nor Rctnr11 In themselves would set off a box office rush. The ladies are Jane Alex:ander, Glenda Jackson. Ali MacGraw, Sarah Miles and C11rrie Snoditress. Only Miss Mscc;raw among them approache.'1 being a household name thanks lO her great beauty and publicity. The men nominated include none or the big famili11r names of only a frw years ago: Burt L11.nca .~ter, Kirk Douglas, Peter O'Tonle, Richard Burton. Gregory Peck. Charlton Hestnn or Rod Steiger. GWC Production Called Insane By Instructor Golden West C.1J1ege's spring thea1er production, "Claude and ~1arinn." is "complete insanity -to I a 11 y un- believable." says drama ins I r u ct c r Charle! Mitchell. Milchell should know. He wrote it and will direct it on lwn succesllive weekends, April 23-24 and April 30-May J, at 8 p.m., ln the Palio Theater on campus, 15744 Golden West SI., Hun· tington Beach, as part of the college's ''Renais!lance Days.'' Mitchell has a number of plays to hiii credit includinii: sevPral one acts: a comedy, "A Minor Scandal :" and for his master 's thesis a Cflmed}•-drama. "The Governor Sends His Best." And while he views all of t~em a11 ex· perimcntal because he is still learning, this one is different. "lt't a different kind of writing than I've ever done. The . plot i11 ridiculous. The sceneii are short, the itctors in and ou t rapidly." He backii away from labeling or com- paring only VJ say the play is ~httr bedlam, a "hells-a-poppin"' thing where he stai-ts with lhe absurd and builds on it wllh more absurdity, Set during the Renaissance in 12'.!0. II deal11 wilh mistitken identilie!I. Debbie Che!lte.r, Hunt.ingtOI'\ Beach, plays Claude Deciever, 1 woman whose family is next In line for the throne. But in the country of La Vodkia a woman cannot take the throne so Claude has been dressed as a boy si~e birth. Ttie Aecond major character, Marlon Montforl, ph1yed by Rick Wailes, Newport Beach, Is the champion of tht: murt but lniiide hl11 heart he Is ashamf'd or hJs name. Moreover. none or tlle nomineea: w.a among the top box office auractiont with Paul Newman, John Wayne, Stevt McQueen, Barbra Streisand and the others. '"Airport"' Is the most succt"!ssful pie-- lure in Universal Pictures history. "t.An•e Story" promises to surpass anything filmed by f"aramounl. ''M·A-S·H" helped keep 2fllh Century-Fox alive. "Patton'' saved the studio. "F'ive Easy Pieces" breathed hope into Columbia. All were nominated. Curiously, there are more familiar names among the supporting players nominate<:! for the Oscar. Helen Hayes. the first lady of the theater, was nominated for her daffy portrayal in "Airport." John Mills Jnd Gene Hackman may stir vague re-collections among movie- goers. Both were magnificent in their roles in "Ryan's Daughter" and "I Never Sang for My Father," respectively. \.\'hrreas producers paid R i ch a rd Burton and Eliiabelh Taylor each a million dollars for a film a few ye,.ars ago, today the Burtons would be forred to <1ccept modest salaries and a perctn· lage of the profits. The resull has been improved motion pictures, hetler acting, more profits and, most importantly. greater entertainment. Perhaps none of the pictures will be remembered 81' "great." Indeed most critics brutalized "Airport,'' "Love Story·• and "Patton." They were guilty of en1crtaining millions of persons. "M-A-&.H" and "Five Easy Pieces" fared somewhat better 11l the hand! of critics because both films had anti- establishmenl themes. But they, too, were brilliant tn· lerlainment. With television in deep economic lrou· ble abetted by trite and empty ahows. molion pictures are putting it all tcige:tber (or the first time In many year11. WEEKENDER INSIDE t'EATURES Friday, April %, 1'11 Meny !!pecial events are planned for children durinit the Easter iweek vacaU()n, Check the Gulde tci Fun, Page 21. then go, go, go. ·Stan Dtlaplane Page Zt In the Galleries P1ge 9 Live Thealt:r P"ge %1 Ml~1inn San l..1111 Rey Page %t Narrow Guaie Train Page %1 UCI Art Exhibit Po.rf' %t Eve ThompMn Eihlblt Page ft J11termls1kt11 Pa.re %1 Gukle lo Fun Pi.re !I Johnny Grant 011 TV Page 21 Out 'N' Aboal Pages rz • U H1>llywond Backsta.re Pare l4 Disney SprlnR Flhl.r Page 14 La~11na Ballet Program Page !4 KCET Auction Pace t4 Guide to r.tnvles Page U Tf'leYl~Jnn Lti.r Page !$ F.ddlt Oeitn at Knnll'J Page !5 l,nn R1'~·1~ ~JH'f'\111 P1t.re U Petl'r ffllt11nt11ll Paae !I l rr1P1, Aptft 2, 1971 '\ Travel lri ~h Cottage Great Trip • • ly STAN DILAPLANE GALWAY1 Ireland -It l'.·as fi\•e years ago Brendan O'RtJlft 11td to me: "I've a mind to build some th1tc:h1d cott1111 In little villages in the west county. ~11ke them rnr rent to tourists \vho \van! to see lril!lh village llfe " 'l'hc first five \\'ere built in Ba!Jyva ughn on l~al­ \vay Bay. It's a sinall village-150 people. The only soc ial life is an evening glass of Guin ness at O'Don- nh oe's pub I look one of the ne"' cottages: Thatched and \\hite"·ashed like every other house in the village. A big Jiving roorn -dining roonl \Vith an enorn1ous f ireplace you could ~il inside \\'e stoked it \1 ith brown peal But -it had an all electric modern kitc·hen. :\nd the floor nagstones ,,·ere heated underneath. No cold feet in the morning. * O'Regan \he's chief of Ireland tourism) said: ''\Ve're losing our young people from the \vest country villages. There's nothing to do -I mean socially. They leave and the old people are left alone. "It's not to make money I \\'ant the tourists: I think new faces on the street would lift their spirits. They give something to the visitor. The visitor gives somethin& to them." * , It's bffn • success. Requests for cottages have " run 20,000! Now they're putting up a lot more. "Not too many to a villaa:e.'' said O'Regan. "Four or five. It's not my thought to turn them into show villages. You know, with everybody running cute shops and dancing jigs for the touriats and looking Irish." It's a great vacation -if you can get one. I rented bicycles !or the kids -about $3 a week with insurance. f rented them ponies. I drove all over the wild west country. Where Cromwell banish- ed the Irish -"To hell or to Connaugbt!" We had dinners in castles. Fi1hed in Galway Bay. Drank Irl!h whiskey. And had a wondtrful time. The cost was modest. A LETTIR TO Irish·Rent-A·Cottage, Shannon Airport, Ireland brings you 1 free brochure. And Irish International Airlines can put you in the mood. Ticket offices or travel agents everywhere have their folders. * "W•'d like to rent 1 villa on the co•1t of Sp.tin for the 1umrtMr •.• " I have a recent letter from European Villa Vacations, 136 East 57th Street. New York City. Says they'll send you a free 16-page brochure listing villas in Spain, Italy, Greece and the island of Corfu. In the Galleries Newport Artists Show Works at Civic Center 1\'B CIVIC CENTER GAl.J...ERY -3300 Nt v.'JlOrt Blvd .. Ne1\- 1 port Beach. CurrtnUy on exh.ibH during regular busines.!I hours, works or . three Newport Beach artists, Penney Mc· ?\Ianigal, Lucia Anderson and Bill Motta . This show will run through April 22 followed by the juried show from the Apri l 24 Newport Art Festival. PACIFICA HOSPITAL -18792 Delaware, Huntington Beach. On exhibit in lhe public room areas, oil paintings by Pat Jenniches through April. SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High· way, Corona del ~far. (Form@rly Coffet Garden Gallery.) Hours: 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. The Junior League of Newport Harbor exhibit will include watercolors by Caro Eaton. George James, Aline ThlsUethwaite and Ellen Wright, through April 15. BOWERS AMEID.1 -2002 N. Main SL, Santa Ana . Hours: 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues . .Sat.; 1 to S p.m. Sun., and 7 to 11 p.m. \\'ed. and Thurs. No chlrge. On exhibit through April, photo exhibit of Calif. Sea Otter. Lecture and film April 15 at 8 p.m. OCC GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa f..1esa. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.. ~!on.-Frl.; 6 lo 9 p.m. Wed . ?'<.10 admission charge. On exhibit through April . profesllional photography llhow. A-tARl~'ERS LIBRARY -2005 Do\'er Drive. Nev.'port Beach. On exhibit during regular library hours throush April, pain1- in1s by Eve Thompson. Junior Ebell Artist of the month. t.1ARINERS SA VTNGS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Ne"•port Beac~. On e>.hibil during regular business hours metal sculp- ture and oll paintings by Gloria Burton. through April . NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, through April. photographs by John H. Atkinson Jr. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2989 Mesa Verde Dri\"e Easl. Costa Mesa. Currently on exh ibit , through April. oil and acrylic paintiags by Lucy Sanlord. AVCO SAVING -3310 Bri!tol, Costa l\fesa. On exhibit dur- ing regular busine.u hours. watercolors and oil pslntings by Clay Campbell. throueh April. LAGUNA ART ASSOCIATION-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours : noon to 5 p.m. daily. Docent tours, 2 p.m. Sun. On ~xhlbit through April, Calif. Watercolor Society Sho\.\. Admission, non-members, St. students SO cents. CROCK.ER CITIZENS BANK -2.lXl Harbor Blvd.. Costa 1'1esa. On exhibit duri ng regular business hours through Aprtl . oil and acrylic palnUngs by Alice Grafe. SECURITY PAClnC BANK -196 E. Iith St .. Costa ~fesa . On exhibit during regular busineS!! hours, oil and acrylic paintmgs by ~lary Loog. through April. JACK GLE!li'S GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Highway, Corona del \lar, Hours : 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. On exhibit, lhrough April. conceptual art by Allan T\tcCollum . NEl\"PORT HARBOR ART ~fUSEUl'lf -400 ~Iain St. Bal- boa, Hours · \\°~ . Sun .. 1 to 5 p.m. T\fon 6 -9 p.m. Docent tours ? p.m. on Thurs. °'1 exhibit. through Aprll II. "The Art of the Southwest India n." Indian · objects including jewelry. basket!. pottery and weavings from Hopi , Navajo and Zuni Indians. Admiulon , SJ for adultt. 25 cenU! for stu- dent.. and children under 12. Indian arts and crafts on sale ln the Sites and Rental Gallery adjacent (() the main eic- hlbil areo CORONA DEL T\lAR UBRARV-420 Mariaold Ave,, Corona de! Mar. Currently on exhibit during libr1ry hour~. rice paper collages by M1rilou Taylor. through April. DOWNEY SAVINGS -360 E. 17th St .. Costa T\lesa. On ex- hibit during regular bu&iness hours, oU paintings by ?itan·t.I Coleman. through April. TRANS AMERICAN TITLE -liO E. 17th St .. Cosll ~1esa. On Hhlbtt dUTinf[ rqular buAlneu hours, oil paintings by Ruby AJ vord, throuah April. UCJ GAl.LERY -The Fine Arts VUh11e Galltry on UCI campu,1 is open l :JO to 4:SO p.m. Tues. Sun Clos~ ~londay1. On uhlbll April 7 lo A-tay 3. recent paintings i 1970-il ). by Johll MsLaughlln. , f'IRST WESTERN BANK -llK>n CUlvtr Dr1vt. Irvine. On uhJblt dur.lq replar bwlneu houri \brough April. oil poJnllllC• by llJlcla Allen. IThe address is the san1e as At Home Abroad-may- be they ju1t changed the stationery. Never used these people so I don't kno\v. l * J did notice reading the London Times about Spanish Costa del Sol house rent ads. One line came up severa.1 tJmes: j!Roof guaranteed not to leak." !Which 'vould indicate a lot of roofs do leak, \vouldn't it'~) * \Vh en the tourist rush came, a bunch of people put up jerry·built houses there. You ought to see pictures before yo u sign up. 'fhe •·v illa" is cute. But it can mean any kind of a box. Everything's a ''\•illa·· on the resort coasts. * "Wh•n w• rent • hou5e over5tl5, doe' th1t in· elude silver .1nd everything?" lt mostly does not. So ask. Those wonderful Irish cottages came without sheets. Why not? l don't know. I had to rent them separately. "Three bed- rooms'' In ads for Mexican houses doesn't mean all three have beds in them. "Central heating" in the house I rented in London meant ONE three coil steam heater. It ran only when you were beating water in a stove I had to stoke with coke. "Com· pletely furnished" doesn't mean to others what it means to us. * "Wh•r• would you r•nt • hou1e for the 1um- mer? W• •r• • f.1mlly of four.'' I'd keep it north of Madrid, Lisbon and Rome. You don't want to die o! hot weather. I AM about to rent a house for the summer. Family of !our, too. I'm thinking of Suva in Fiji -I liked that One or the outer islands in Hawaii. I'm of! Tahiai except for visits. Too crowded. Poor beaches. * For Europe, I'd Jill:e an Irish cottage again. A boat on the Thames. For a week or two, this Is the best. But after that you need more room to move around. Tie the boat up and stay at a riverside pub hotel. McLaughlin Art Set for Exhibit Cabo Sat• Lticas Located at the tip of Baja, California peninsula, Caho San Lucas gets an off-shore visit by the Prin- cess Italia on each cruise to the ~texican Riviera. The ship comes to within 400 yards of the cape Trains on \vhere the. Pacific Ocean and Sea of Cortez rneet. 1'he litUe·known cape area abounds in fish life, jut· t ing rocks and gray \\hales, all of \\'hich is pointed out to passengers over the loudspeaker systen1. Right Track Old Locomotives Never Die: They Go to Santa Cruz The de 1 c end ant of to 1963. the last narrow-aauae redwood forests to B~ a r general store. Nearby l l'c America's firsl narrow-gauge stean1 passenger train had left Mountain and return. several attractive Pi c n Jc railroad, California's historic Felton Station for Big Trees Clark credits a colorful areas, a trout fishing pond, and the entrance to Henry Roaring Camp and Big Trees in 1907 history and s p e ct a cu I a r Cowell Redwoods Slate Park. Narrow-Gauge Railroad at Back in the 1880's and !IO's scenery as the reason for this Tbe first steam passenger Felton, Santa Cruz County. an-so many narrow-gauge ancient railroad's success in train for 197l will leave Roar· nouncecl today that o Id -r.;ssenger trains headed south the 20tb Century: Using steam ing Camp depot at ll a.m. fashioned steam locomotives s " •--Ith · I 1· d -· I om an '"ranc..,..o w pie-ocomo 1ves an '-"'1u1pmen on Satu rday, April 3. Therc- would be returned to regular nickers bound for Big Trees built back in the 1880's and after, steam passenger passenger service effKtive that the tittle railroad became 90's, passenger trains climb trains will depart every hour, this Saturday, April 3. kno11,11 as the "Picnic Line.'' the steepest rajlroad grades on the hour, from 11 a.m. Recent paintings by John McLaughlin v.-111 be on exhibit in the Fine Arts Village Art Gallery at UC Irvin! April 7 through "1a.v 2. G1llery hours during the e:r.hlbiUon "'ill be 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Tues- d11y through Sunday. Continuing a tradition that Among the famous passengers in western America. pass to 4 p.m. This schedule v;it1 dates back to 1875, the who rode th.e narrow.gauge through the first red\.\'OOd be maintained on a dally bas is ra ilroad has annually steamed trains to Big Trees were fore.Its lo be preserved for until April II. after which the up Its historic locomotives to Presidents Benjamin Harrison posterity (back in 1867 1, cross hourly schedule wlll continue provide visitors to the Santa and Theodore Roosevelt and dramatic trestles that span on Saturdays and Sundays un· Cruz Mountains with an old-General John C. Fremont. mountain canyons. and curve til June 12th when daily rashioned steam r a i 1 roa d Although more than half a around the sharpest railroad se rvice will be resumed f0r outing to such colorful points century has passed since a curves in Nort h America. the summer month s. On ,.·Ion- as Big Trees. Indian Creek narrow·gauge railroad has Al Bear 1\1 o u n I a in . days through Fridays. fron1 James Harlthas, In describing and Grizzly Flats. crossed the Santa Cruz Moun· passengers are invited to April 12 to June 11. the old· McLaughlin's work, said, "His According to Norman Clark. tains into the San Francisco stopover and picnic and then fashioned railway track in- work rewesenl! a fresh, new presidrnt or the line . more Bay Area. visitors who drive return to Roaring Camp on spect!on car ''Jackrabbit" will approach to painti ng. He re-than 600.000 passengers have to Fell on today can still find a la ter train . Roaring Camp. depart from Roaring Camp examined the fwidam ental ridden the steam trains since the o!d(ash!oned steam trains \Vhere passengers board the depot at 12 noon for in hou r- premise that underlies all art his railroad elected to rev ive ready to depart on a nootalgic, old-fashioned trains, is a linv long, behind-the-scenes guided and came to the startling <:on-the old·llme st eam passenger hour·long journey from Roar-crossro11ds tov.·n consisting Or tour of the narrow-galij!'.e clusion that it is equally valid _1'-'-'"-"-'-'-"-'-'"_'963_._P_'_'°_'__c'--"g'-'C-'"a_m_:.p_th_ro_".;ic._h_1_he_v_ir.:g>_·n __ 1h_e_r_a_ilr_o_ad_de..:po_1 _an_d_an_1sao __ ,_•_il_ro_a_d_o,_pe_r_a_llo __ n_. ___ _ McLalij!'.hlin uses a single medium oil on canl'as lo create careful geometric, hard-edge composiUon! often using only black and white . The exhibition will conaist of 15 paintlngs loaned jointly by the Nicholas Wilder Gallery and Felix Landau. A catalog containing color reproductions of aJI the works on display wil] be avallable. School or private groups \.\'ishing to see the exhibit may make arrangements by con- tacting Helene Setlak at the gallery 133-6610. Corcoran Gallery Director to postulate In art tha t ex- prrsses no content as it is one which provide! content. In other words. art need not be uaed only to interpret or record experiences or prov ide solutions to problems:. It can itself pose basic problems by e:rprt!sly wlthholdlng a n y famJliar or recognizable sensory data or any other in- formation and have a pro- foundly dlfferent effect on the viewer." Mission To Be Live Theater ":\1iss Julit." "The Judl(ment " Dedicated ~ Dedication of the San Luis J Rey Mission Oiurch as a registered nation al historic landmark "'ill take place this Sunday. April 4. at 3 p,1n ., T"o one act plays on stage al lht Nifty Theater. 307 Main St., HunUngion Beach, 1t 8:30 p.m. Fri .-Sat., through April 3. Reservations 536-9158. "Janu1" A comedy on stage at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach, Tues . .Sat. al 8:30 p.m. through April 3. Reservations -494--0743. "A Vie" from the Brkl1e·· An Arlhur Miller drama oa stage in lhe Studio Theater on UCI campus lflumanJUes Bldg.J, staged by Irvine Com· munlly Theater, Frl . .Sat. - through April 3 at 8:30 p.m. Reser\'atior11 -833-07113. "Llllrs ol the Field" Comedy-drama on stqe at Santa Arla Community Theater, SOil W. 6th St., Santi Ana at 8:30 p.m. P'rl..Sat., lhrou&h April 3. Reserv1tlom -543·7847. ''Mother Eartb'' On stage 11 South Co11t Repertory, 1827 N e w p o r t Blvd., Costa Mesa, at 8:30 p.m., "Mo ther Earth.'' Wed. through Sun., cloa:lns April 18. Reser\'atlona - 640-136.1. "Patterns'' Rod Serline·1 d r 1 ma on st.age at Long Beach Com. munlty Playhouse, 5021 E. Anahllm Ave., Long Beach, 1t 8·30 p.m. Fri. -Sat. throu1tt ti.tay 8. RestrV1tlons -(213 ) 1:!3--0536 '"The ~1obluJ Twill " A three act comedy on It.lie 111 !ht F'lnt Arl.!i Vill11(e The&· ter on the UCI campti1 1t1:30 p.m. frl. • Sit. lhro<1ih April JO. Admiuicm lrff . • in front of the Old Mission, n ea r Oceanside. Preceding the ceremonial the "Conjunto Real Band" will play a con- cert of MexJcan music. As!l.1tant Director of Na- tional Park Service, Theodore R. 0 wings , will ofliclally present the land~rk' plaque bronze market . O t h e r participants will be Superintendent Thomas 0 . Tucker. of Cabllllo National fl.fonument in San Diego; Fr. Ralph Wel.!ih11ar, 0 . F . fl.l . , Franciscan director of San Luis Rty ~1l1slon. and other civic, military dignitaries and clergy . Franciscan Fr. Maynard Gelger, O.F.M .. hlstorl1n of the C11lfornia M i 9 s I o n 'I • archivist and llbrari1n or thl' Old Ml!slon Library at Santn Barbara and renowntd author. will gl v! a narration of the history of San Luis Rry Mission from Jta founding in 1798 to the pre.1enl day. With this award of the landmark plaque the nation offlcl1lly l'f<Xlgnlz.es the ex- ception al 1rch 1 t ec tu r a I .1itnltlcance of the magnlflcent Old M\11lon. Among I he Cali fornia mls!lon churches. San Luis Rey la outt:llnding bec1u9e of the e1tent of ii$ 1urvlvjng orllln1l construction and workmanship. It it also d\1UncUvely I mp or t 1 n t because of Its detlgn, be1uty and architectural composlllon. The public is cordl11ly in· vlttd to attend this hl1U>r1c event. The Old Mission 11 located on Hi1hw1y ?8, three miles Inland from OCtanskle. I .ra1'e lho~e non-vacation vacation~ in your '>'·ake. Let our ~20.000.000 floating re,ort do vovr 1raveling. S"·in1. sun. dance. play \Our \\'llY to Purno Vallar1,1, Acapulco. Mazat· l.1n. ]l.fanza1i1llo. No packing, and unpaokini-No &training ~chcdulr,, r-.o 11trange room~. Ju51 100'0 pure getaway that brin~ you home feeling brand new and shipshape. S:ul the da17ling Pnncess Jtal1a. nc"·cst. most luxuriou5 1.ruisesh1p on the blue Pa cific. l:;.nj1'Y the ultimate r~npc \.\h ilc 247 lovablt'. li~hlheartcd fl alians 11poil you ~hamc­ lts)l)'. feed ;ou fabulou~l). and cntcr1:11n you royall). fare i nclude~ Jrlu.te ~tatcroom. round·lrip uansport.ation, fou r 1;ourinr11ncaJ5 1 day. and iala acti\it1t''\. 11li1 )1.'ar dcn1anJ 1he all·\:1Cation 'acation. St.1. )OUnelr on 1hc adventure of a lifetime . Call )vUr travcl •aent now while i:hoicc cabins arr ~!ill :tvailablr. Or phone Pnn··c,, Crui~: tltJ) 380-7000 Princess Cruise8 ea Spoi/J you for any othtr l"OCOtiOn Aft.xiro •Alaska/Canada • Par/J Crulsts • Corlbbtan • co. 7, 10, 11, 13 , 14-day cruises from Los Angeles. Apr. 9, 26, May 7, 14 , June 4, Aug. 27, Sept. 7, 17, Oec.15, 29. S425' to 51485. Al•o J and 4-nlght Party Cruises. Apr. 23, May 28, June I. 5159 to SJ60 01.e'nr•11fkc.d \POK• IYl0•blt Oii -Mllll\p , The 'fl.·t/V Italia is of Italian registry. Bridge CraiH.. Accrrd ited ACBL tournament under direc1ion of Russ Goodr. April 9. PhototrtpbJ Crui~. Fe11turing Peter Gowland. Lecture demonstrations. April 26. Cabarel and ~llmtrel Cruht. Spec ial cntct1ainmen1 troupe from the famous la Strada rc1tauran1. June 4. r DAil Y 1'!1.0T !J • l1aternaiss io1a ' Best County Theater? It's Jolnmy Tossup Talks By TO~f TITUS OI "• 0.ll, •1•1 ti•" Probably the question most often asked r>f a drama critic by nev.•comers to the area sttking to btt.-ome theatrically Involved 111, just whlch of Orange Coun- ty'• m1ny amateur producing groups is act.uaUy the best'! Ordinarily this would be an easy enough query to answer. for in past 1easons ooe community theater group has shown its suptrioMty. as did the Coata Mesa Civic Playhouse in 1969-70 with tv.·o back·lo-back DALLY PILOT ' Distinguished Production Award winner!!. Jn previous yrars, the Laguna Playhouse.. the Orange Studio Theater and the Anaheim Playho~. the latter two now disbanded, havt led the way artistlcally. This season, however, it's a real horse race, with no clear single leader but a number of excellent productions spread over at least eight community theaters. And these same groups can, and often do, come up with a heavy megaton bomb the next time around . Certainly, on the basis of a single production. the biggest impression of the 1970-71 season has been made by the Irv ine f..om mw11ty Tht:ater with 1t3 out.atandln& "A Vltw f'rom the Bridge,' 1A'hich glve11 1t.:s cklslng ptrformant.-es tonight and S&lurday. Yet the balance of the Irvine sea.!On can be rated only fair to good. COSTA ~t ESA'S CIVIC Playhouse started the season in low gear and warm- ed up ll'ith each production W'llil itll Jat.ost. the wlheralded "Here Lies Jeremy 'l'r-Oy," hit a sea.90n's high on th!'! laugh meter. Battling it ror th!'! designation of the year's funniest show is "You Know I Can't Hear You When the \\!alrr's Rllnning" from the steadily improving Lido Isle Players. Heavy drama provided an artistic, if not commerciaJ, apex for two county groups 1A'hose comedies found lt!sser fa\'Or this season. The San Clemente Community Theater mounted a gripping "\\"ho"U Save the Plowbov?" "·hi\e !he Santa Ana Community Players staged a frightening "Or. Cook'! Garden,'' both unsuccessful Broadll•ay plays in their Orange County debut.s. The saml'! might be said of "A Loss of Rose!" at the Nifty Theater. but someone else will ha''' to say it. since it v.·as this colurM1st Your Guide to Fu11 who dire"Cted it. SandY.1ched between two bloodless comedic! for the Westminster Co m· munlty The:ater v.·as an e1ciUng and engaging "David and Lisa,'' one of the best of aU \Vestminster effort_,. The Laguna Moulton Playhouse reached it.~ pe:ak with "Look Home\\'ard, Angel.'' "'h.ile "Generalion" rev.Tote the bclx of· fice. rtc0rds at the Hun tinglol'I Be.ach Playhouse. Supremacy in community theater i~ an elusive commodity, dependent on three prime fa ctors -the script, the cast and the director. When all three are present and accounted for, 1t makes little or M difference which theater organiiatlon is underllTihng the activity , * BACKSTAGE -Corona de.I ~iar actor Peter Church M:ard the ney,·s of the birth or his baby daughter last y,•eck \1·hile performing in "Design £or Living" at the Ahmanson Theater in Los Angeles ..... it '.1 old stuff. hov.·ever , to Church. whose y,•ile Jackie prese:n.~ him v.'ith their first son, Ke\•in, while Peter v.·as playing in "The Hosta ge" at South Coast Repertory six ye ars ago. Egg Hu11t Slated 01ilch·en's Theater Domit1ates A1·ea In Valley The Long Valley ranger sta· tion , 1,500 feet high in the t.!t. San Jacinto Wilderne:is St.ate Park, will become the unusual locale for an exciting Easter egg hunt Sunday. April II at 1 p.m. Sponsored by the Palm Springs Aerial Tram,~·ay in cooperation \l"ilh several Palm Springs merchants, the hunt is open to any child 12 years of age and W'lder. Hundreds of colored eggs v.·il\ be hidden by an attractive Easter bunny, Miss Ann Petro. y,·ho also happens to be a setretary at the Palm Springs City Hall. In addition to the colored eggs, four dozen "golden eggs" will be hidden, each containing a valuable gift <lr prize donated by the local busi ness firms. APRlL t ART BUCHWALD -Satirist of the "1ashington scent-. Art Buchwald, v.•ill speak at UC Irvine, April 2 at 8 p.m. in Cra"'· ford Hall on the campus. His: topic is "The Establishment is Alive and \Veil in \\'ashington ." Ticket.:s. $3.SO, available in Associated Students Office or through Tickelron. APRIL ! TRLP TO NORTH POLE -Tessmann Planetarium at Santa Ana College. 1530 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, is having a series of public sho\\'S e:ach \\'ed. at 7:15 p.m. and Fri. at 7 p.m. The film "Easter and Our Calendar," y,•ill be shoY.·TI through April 2: "2001 B.C.," April 21 to May 7. and "Shadow! in Space.'' J\1ay 19 • June 11. The performances are free but reservations art! requested . Phone 547-9561. APRlL 2 • 17 KABUKI COSTl.i)1ES -There are 24 giant reproductions, in color. of costumes ~·orn in the traditional Kabuki Theater of Japan on display at Fashion Island, NeY.'port Beach , through- out the malls. They will be exhibited through April 17. APRfL 3 BALLET -The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company \\'Ill present a membership show ~open to the public ). at 8:30 p.m. Sat. in the Laguna Beach }figh School Auditorium. 625 Park Ave. ''F'esta." "Pas de Quatre'' and "The Ballad of the Sheriff and ' the-Schoolmarm" \rill be performed. TickeL'I for non-members adults. $2.50. $1.50 for children under 12, avail· able at the door or phone 494-7271. APRIL J CffiLDREN'S TREATER -The Children's Thetiter of }lun!· ington Beach is presenting a children's play. "The Girl and the Golden Bird," this Sal at 10 :30 a.m. ;:ind 2 p.m. in the auditorium of Huntington Beach High School. 1905 ~lain St. Tickets 50 cents, are available at the door . ;:i(ld Lclters is sponsoring a harpsichord concert perrormed by Frederick Hammond, aS!listant professor of music 111 UCL A, in the Concert Hall of Fine Art! Village on campus at 8:30 p.m., April 10. Admission free . APRIL It EASTER EGG RUNT -There u•ill be an Easter egg hunt at Sigler and !\lcFadden Park! in \\1estminster, April 10 at 10 a.m. Children 12-years and under may hunt for special prizes, Sponsored by Elb Lodge 2346, \\..l'!stminster. APRIL 14 FOREIGS FILl\l SERI~ -The South Coast Cinema S~ ciety is showing a series of foreign films. in the Forum on the Festival of Arts grounds, 650 LagW'la Canyon Road. La· guna Beach. On April 14 "Seduced and Abandoned." an Italian film (1964), directed by Pietro Germi, "'ill be shown. APRIL 15 AR~1ED FORCES DAY -El Toro ~1arine Corps Air Sl..lltion, El Toro, \11ill present the famed Blue Angels jet demon5lra· non team and a group of crack Navy parachutists, the "Leapfrogs" performing for Armed Forces day al the base on April 15. The open house. free of charge. will begin at noon. Gales close at 4:30 p.m. Static displays of P.1arine Corps aircraft y,•ill be: on vie\\'. APRIL I' OC PHJl..HA Rl\101\'lC -The Orange County Philharmonic Society will present the l.Als Angeles Philharmonic Orchestr11 in concert. under the baton of Zubin l\1ehl.a, April 16. in Cra\\iord Hall on !he UCI campus at 1:30 pm. Tickets $4.50 for adults, $2.50 for students. Phone 646-6411. APRIL Ii To Stars "Grant Takes Holly"·ood ." I series of fiVI'! half-hour pro- 1r&m!J featuring Johnny Grant interviell•\ng stars and giving TV vLe\vers a behind-the· scenes look at movie-making, will be aired on Channel S during Easter vacation week. The series will eminale 11\·e from Universal Studios al 2 p.m . each day, i\tonC.ay. April S through Friday, April 9. On J\1onday Granl will host .actress Carrie Sn<>dgre11s. ac- tor Joe Campanella a n d sperial effect expert Virgil SummeM;. wh<> \\'Ill sho11i - •i•w"s how thesludie creat" Blue Aiigels a flash nood. Tuesday's guests include The Angel~ \Vilt be one of til e allractinns at 1¥1arinc \\'alter Lantz. creator of ('orps 1-\ir ~talion , f:J 1·oro's annual :\rmed Forces Woody Woodpecker, and Day Open !louse .. \pril 15. Public is in vited from Universal"s veteran anim al noon to 4:30 p.n1. No charge for admission. trainer Ray Bery,·ick, who y,·ill ----------------------- put some of the animal stats 'through their paces. Wednesday's show w i 11 feature interviews with act<lrs George Maharis and Academy Award contender John f\!arley. The live camera al!<n "'ill go to Universal's mock ocean. v.·here \•iewers will hr shoy,·n how film-makers b!OI'•' ships out of the waler. On Thursday Johnny hosts famed c<lstume designer Edith Head and actress J a n c \Vyman. Arlhur T r ude a u , designer of Universal's ne1v Cinema Pavilion. I a k e ~ "ie"·ers on a lour <lf this museum of me vie memorabilia. Friday·s program features interviews with singer Johnny r..tathls and film producPr Ro ss Hunter. Hunter take~ Grant on a tour of the "Airport" set and explains how the film was made. Private Eye Film "Shaft' Under Way Artist of Mo11th Named By J11nior Ebell Club 1'he Junior !-:bell Club (If Nev:port Beach Jll presenting Eve Thompson as Artist of the 1\lonth for April. Her tx· hibit , which will 1 n c I u de watercolors and oilll. \\"111 be' displayed in P.1ariners Library through April. 1\1iss Thon1pson. ;:i native resident of Corona drl J\lar. i~ a senior at Corona del J\1ar High School l"pon ~raduat1ng she would like to attend art cla!>scs in the local area. tn study \\'ater color with Rrx Brandt , and nil paint1n~ \\'Ith Sergei Bnngarl. in lhe Lo!> Angeles 11ret1 . After this, ~he would like tn go to a four ,\·ear art school for a de~rrr in art She 1'P.Cl'n1ly wa~ included in a show in the fivic.-Center Gallery. and has exhibi1ed in the Laguna Beach fe5t1vril of Arts and the Balhoa Pavilion. In Febru ary she won the Na· lional League or Am!'r1can Pen Women Scholarship for Art She submitted. throu~h Junior F:betl. a \\'atertolor en· titled "Mounlain Valley."' and won the local Ca 1 i f o r n i a Juniors· .<\r1 Talent Contesl and now is competing for a savings bond al the district level As for the people having the mosl influence in her artistic ende11vors, M i ~ 1 Thon1pson names her high school art teacher. Mart Fr!'nth: Thelma Paddoc k Hopf' of Corona del ~1ar : Vin· t•cn1 f'"crra l of Ulguna Beach. iind her molhrr and brother. J-1 otels Vie For Gaines l\1l NICI!. C.erma"y (UPT) -The Olympic Construction Cnn1p:iny has 11sked 20 1n· \!'rnr1t1onal hotel cnocern~ IG suhn1n bids for build ing a 200- hed hotel on the Wl'!Stern end of the Olympic Lake. The $21 .8 million projecl wilt fl'alurc a ballroom and a ler-- race protruding over !he lake . Munich 1.,.ill hos! thfo 1971 Oly1npic Summer (;ame/i. for the Eastrr sunrise pro- gram begiMing at 4 a.m .. reduc-ed tramy,·ay fares will be in effect until 9 a.m. They are $1.75 for adults: SI for juniors aged 13 to 17: and SO cenUI for children from 4 to 12. Regular tram fares \\'ill go into effect at 9 a.m . at tilt: \•alley station on Easter Sunday. APRfi. 3 • 7 THEATER BENEFIT -The Actors Centre Theatre "-Ill pre· sent a pl'!rformance of "Rome<> and Juliet" in the Santa Ana Valley High School. 1801 South Greenville, Santa Anil. on April 16 at 8:30 p.m. Funds raised will go to benefit the Laguna !\1oulton Playhouse. Tickel'!, SS, from Actors Centre. Theatre. 392 E. 16th St., Costa J\fesa. Film edilor lfugh Robertso n t.1111 super\·ise the editing of .. Shaft ," directed by Gordon Parks and produced by Joel Freeman, now in lhe process! of shooting ror J\1GJ\l release . .----------------------- Diving Club Offers Fu1t For F aniil y CHILDREN'S THEATER -The children of f'oW'ltam Valley ;ire presenting "Fractured Fairy Tales'' in the Community Center. 10200 Slater, Fountain Valley, at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. April 3; 3 and 7:30 p.m. April 4: 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. April 7. Tickets, by donation. 50 cent8 at the door. For group tickets phone 968-6279 for reservationii. APRIL 3 CIRCUS -The Royal International Circus will be staged for one day only, April 3 at 2:30 and 8 p.m .. at the Orange County Fairgrounds. 88 Fair Drive. Costa P.1esa. Elephants. aerialists. clo\\'llS and bears will be part of the 20-act.~ pre- sented. Tickets, $2.50 for adults; Sl.50 for children. APRn. 17 CffiLDREN'S PLAY -The Scherazade Player11 \\•1\1 present "Sleeping Beauty" at 10:30 a.m. in the Children's Section or the J\tesa Verde Library, 2969 i\1esa Verde Drive East. Costa ~lesa. The free program opens National Library Week. APRIL 17 a Sterling Silliphant-Roger Lewis Production . Robertson's credits include "Midnight Cowboy," for v.·hich he received an Oscar nomina- tion, and ,;The M I r a c I e i,vorker," on which he served as iissociate editor . I THE VILLAGE WEST FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS CENTER RECENTLY RECEIVED 19 PAINTINGS OF ALASKA s120. by INA HOAK M.At:E llSEllYATIONS NOW FOi: GALLlttY Sl"ACE DUlllNG THI fl5TIYAL OF AITS 7,J L .. YIHI Ca11yo• ltaad -Fret' P'orki'"J -., •• ,190 FREEPORT. Bahamas - An unusual diving club in this resort city on Grand Bahama Jsland is keying on unclerv.·ater fun for the whole family. APRIL 4 ADVEf\'TURE -\Yayne !\ferry and Warren Harding, lhe tY.O men "ho scaled El Capitan in Yosemite National Park. "·ill present .an illustrated talk in the Science Lecture Hall in the UCJ campus at I p.m. April 4. Slides of the 30-day climb plus a film. "Ascent." will be shOY.TI . Tickets, $2.50. avail- able at Associated Student.a <lffice on UCI campus and Neal's Sporting Goods Stores. JAZZ CONCERT -The Committee for Aris and Sciences at UCI is sponsoring the last original New Orl•ans jazz band, Preservation Hall Jazz Band. at 1:30 p.m. April 17 in Cra\V· ford Hall. Tickets, $3.50. al Fine Arts Village box office UCI. Phone 833-6617. "Shaft" stars RI c h a rd Roundtree and featu res J\·loses l Gunn and Christopher St. John in a story about a black private eye who <lperales in New YDrk City and tests hisl~:::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::;:;::=::~::'.:~ muscle in a squeeze play Ii bet1.1·een P.1afia, militants and Harlem mob operations The Grand Bah a ma APRIL i · 17 APRrL 11 • J\1A Y Z RAJ\10NA -Early Calif. history with gay fiC.'llas and old \\'.Orld romance wlll be recaptured with the 44 th season of the famed Ramona outdoor play in the Ramona Bowl. Hemet, <ln Sat. and Sun. at 2:30 p.m. April 17·18: 24-25: i\1ay J-2. Tickets by mail lo box 755 Hemet. Ca. 92343 or phone !714' 658-3111 . Underwater E:oi:plorers Club, the ooly one of its kind in the world, combines scien- tifically oriented diving "·ith recrealional trips below the surface. As a result. according to club head Da,•e Woody,·ard, the club offers something for every person in the fam ily, and at differe nt levels or ex- perience. PADUA THEATER -The Padua Hills Theater, Padua Ave .. three miles oortn of Foothill Blvd. In Claremont, is presenting "Lune! del Cerro," a folk play. with songs. music and dances or the Indian tribes indi gent to various regions of Oaxaca . Performances are \Ved. and Sat.. at '.?:30 p.m .. and \Ved. through Sat, at 8:30 p.m. Dining room open daily except li1onday. Reservations recommended. phone (7 14 ) 626--1283. Adapted f<lr the screen by • .lohn D. F. Black fro Emest l 1'idyman's no,·el, it 1s being filmed entirely on localionl throughout ~ew York City ·-•• ~_;;--;,;;;; .. ; •• ~.~-;.~.--~.4;.;;;;;~;:;:;-;;;;~-; .. ;;;~;:;:;;;--;;-;:;;-;;;;;~.~.~.~.;.;;;;.~.;;;-~ --.. -!! :.;;.J·-.. . ·.r .,. ......... ~ .. ,. " .. ~··· --• • ., 1-leadquartcrs for the club are on the ground!> of a.1e ()f Freeport's resort hotels, the Oceanus N<lrlh. i,\'oody,·ard say the club was formed in 1966 l<l allow the '·exchange of Ideas and discoveries and to insure lasting access lo the frontier wilderness of the water .. , APRrL I OLD ~IOVl ES -The last of the series of old movies pre- sented by. the Ne,~;port HarOOr P.1uscum , 400 P.fain St .. Bal- bcla . will be shoY..n April 8 in the Balboa Pavilion. second floor meeling room at B p.m. "'The Forties" will feature film clips of ~tty Grable, Glenn P.liller. Carmen ~firanda. Errol Flynn and Gene Kelly. Tickets at the door. Phone 673-3603 for information. The club is st.affed by pro- fe ssionals and is able to pro· vide a full range <lf diving APRIL I · !t ad\"enl.llres _ from simple STORY HOUR - A story hour for pre-school children "·1U snorkeling on a s ha 11 0 w be held in the. i\fariner's Library. 2005 Dover Drive. New- trea3ure reef for the in-port Beach. each Thursday at IO a.m. The Corona de! P.1ar experienced. to \·ertica\ diving Library, 42Q P.larigold Ave., Corona del ~1ar \Viii hold a ()ff an ocean ledge. which can story hour for pre--schooler1 every second and fourth Thurs· qualify divers to a depth of day of tile month at 10 a.m. ' ,f ' ' ' • ' 250 feet. APRIL 10 l Accordilig to Woodward, HARPSICHORD CONCERT -The UCT C<lmmitte:e for Art~ ~·ho has bttn diving since.l'jijiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijl l 1943. age is no delerrent, 1 ~ although starling young has advantages. \Voodward says that one usually follo?t'S detail· cd ' instruction better the earller he: staN. y.r()t'.)dy,•ard's y o u n g e s l student? II was a five. and <lOC·half year-old who made: a number of shallow reef dives off Freeport . \Voodward also worked with a 72-year-0ld ·youngster" ~·oo made four dttp dh'es during a vacation on the isl.and. The club's lacililies water tanks and Sll'lmming pools for it1s lruclion. a museum that twluses historical items ind treasure flnds, an aqu:arlum hall, a specimens lab and a photographic dark room . The club also has a fleet or boats that can ae- t'Ommndatt up to 16 ptrl0\1S for d1 v1rig trip!. HUNTER'S BOOKS THE WEST'~ FINEST IOOKSTORES FOR 120 YIAPS-SINCl 1111 located At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (71 41 S43·9343 ••.soo lookt & P•p.rb.ck• ll,000 U•us•I Greet11MJ Cortis IARGAINS G•lOlfl OPEN E1'ENlNGS 'TIL 9 P .U. \ ' • I ' EASTER IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER! APRIL 11th Our flower shop will ht v• 1,000'1 of your fevorite Ees+er plent1, profe11ione!ly wreppecl by eur own ffu91tt.., D•ltr•. , . winner of meny prit:e winnin9 ribbon1 for florel err•n9in9. Come in end 1ee thi1 bontnt:• of Easter flower' e nd plent1, pricecl "s• tow" it will be herd fo believe ! Th et'1 why we tre he edquer+er1 for fresh flowers end plenfs in Newport! EASTER FLOWER HEADQUARTERS wew111e l'LOWIRI THOUSANDS SAVE EVERT WEEK IT CLIPPING THESl COUPONS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • LAIGI 41 1111 a OUTDOOll: GJtOWN • NIW CltOll'-LOCAL • • COACH IL LA • • GREEN • : GRAPEFRUIT : CUCUMBERS : CABBAGE : • 5¢ lo, • 5¢ Eo. • 5¢ lb. • • • • • • Limit -6 • Limit -' 8 Limit -4 Med• a • With thlt Ceu,.n a With tltl1 Ceu,.n a With thl1 Ceu,." a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIU APRIL 7 These re1le urt nf1 denie"d the fine1t for their cuitomers. lh•t's why +h•y fee- tur• Newport Precluc•I Pe+ro"it:e them! Heword'J. N•wport; Charll" Chill, Newport; DlllllMll'I. l•lboe Penin1ule : Tht VlklltlJI. Coste Mese ; The VIile Switclell, Hunfin9ton Beech •nd o ... e, 200 others. How ebout your c•llin9 us7 "Orange Countit• l'ruttst Grou..'t:nO Product Oroanization" e NEWPORT PRODUCE (i Op•R 7 Deys • We•k 7 •.m. ,. I p.m. 2616 H•wport leul•Yartl OA the Petdnsulo ,h..,e 17i-t71S 17)-1711 671·•2•1 "JS Y to.r1 of Produce Know llow'' "\Vher'-qtuilify l.t tile Ordtr of the Hou.,t" . ""t ~ ~ -·--·-···~f"*"'--"'~--··-·.,~-----~-=· ------ • l ' \ ' ' Ce111inela Bank will cm1linue to~ythe higheSt i11terest on savings! 41/2°/o Up 10 53/40/o i:1l•'r~·:I r• r i1flnurn i1r"f:'U"d fl!'lllV ;iml r ;;,rJ <Jll~'trrlv on rrr;ul.'r na'i~· hico:;;, i1!;f.UUI ••; nl'lpn.>I! bl( lh& lfJth 'n'"'l''"I r>· uJ lrrim 'h• I ,1 or1 ~.n"lr 01 mull1plP. Time Ocpo-.11-. of $500 or more. lrilf'rf'~I p.tid Quar terly. In add1!1011. Cen11nr.Ja Bank ol!P.r'.1 othf'r Bank Time Depo:;11s with vo:iry1n11 ratr"~ .:inr1 m.:ituntiP.r;. All ar.counts are insurer:! to S20/l00 hy !hf' fed ~ral Deposit lnsu1ancc Co1no rat1on . Please call or '.ilop in tor act.:i1l.s on any or all ol thc:;e saving:; plans. You'll g!'lt ou r lull interest! ,...., C..di telc> Bank Newport Beach \SI SpeciamhinMari .. BankingServims 3333 ~ (o:,..i ~y ("' ~I~) -llo<.d\(olb... 'l?l#l .,..,.. 6'6-111' I 2J llAllY PllQT I Frldly, April 2, 1971 I ABOUT B11 NORllJ STANLEl' ' N WEEKENDER OUT ORANGE COUNTY 'S Fleur De Li s : Extensive use in art has rn1de the Oeur de lis a wldely·r ecognized symbol. M y people can in· :: stantl y label the heraldic design somewhat resemlr ~ line three petals or floral segments on an iris tied •'-" by a.n encircling band. • Further. those familiar with it are prone to ~ know the emblem's ancient association with the ;; royal arms and family or France. ~ :: .• ·' ; • , ~ But even these knowledgeable folks may not 'oe r' aw1r&-to their deserving chagrin~! the delight· ;. ful Fleur De Lis located hereabouts. They or any· j:_ one lacking acquaintance with Laguna Beach's so- :. named cocktail lounge should arrange for an early : introduction. . IN THE ART CENTER ~: Right off it's apparent that this charmin& spot :: unites the fleur de Us' ties to France and art. The :~ place has a decided Gallic flavor and it's situated :' 10 Laguna's Art Center. f ~ • \Ve may have been late to join, but a sizable :: crowd or regular patrons has obviously been en- :-joying the intimate and rela;dng atmosphere for _;. 50me time. Small wonder seeing as how a kind of :_ old·shoe comfort prevails despite obvious touches ~ of elegance and refinement. LOUNGE ONLY Since the Fleur De Lls is strictly a cocktail lounie. visitors can't expect to partake of dinner. But it's an ideal establishment to hit for a drink before or alter the evening meaJ -if not both. From street level you descend down stairs Into the sunken confines. There isn't a feeling of going subterranean, however, because small windo\VS at the top of the walls are on a plane with the walk- \vays outside. Real Canlonese Food e1t here or take hame. ST AG CHINESE WINO 111 21st pl., Newport B•ach ORiol• 3-9560 OjM'll T.., 1Ne"4 hlJy 12·12 -l'rf. •IHI s.t. 'tfl J •·"'-__ ,_ ' Fine ltollo11 C11islne Cocktails 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 1...,..otlon1 01'" Dolly -S p.m. t• 2 e.111. CLOSED MONDAY DON JOSE' 1''01V A PPEARING Direct From Las Vegas' CAESARS PAlACE LOUNGE VIC GARCIA TRIO Wit h Vocals by GERMAINE !nchil1de end Ttco .......... , . , , . , . $1 .35 Cli lll Relleno · Encli il1d1 ..... , ..... , , $1.50 ~ wltll •le•. h•M, T"todltM 111114 S.ls• •INl!Sl MrllCAN '°OD AT ll!ASONAILI PllCIS • COCKTA ILS • -I 9093 E. Adems (at Magn~i•) Hunt. Be1cli 962-7911 mITLf.1 MEXICAN REST AU RANT Vl1ft ••r Mw Artece Lou119• ENTERTAINMENT Weelln•sdty thru Sund•y By UCHO PEREZ "IL TRDVADOR DEL CAMPO" MMMy o-4 TMMle, KIDS FIESTA DAYS PM ,.,., lu c-, a.110 .. 1 O,IN II A.M. -11 P.M. SUNDAY THaU THURSDA Y JI A.M. TO 12 P.M. Fll. & SAT. 547 W. 19th ST. COSTA MESA 642·9764 Food To Go RES TA URAN T, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCEN E • -· l[JllEl ............ "'" .... ,.., ......... ...,.,. .. """ .......................... ..,""'""""'""'""' .............. =:,,,, ... <::>i:::~ ·-·- STAINEO GLASS And lt's these windows that provide one or the outstanding features in the decor. They're the old· fashioned, genuine stained glass variety, with each tiny pane leaded into the multi-colored \vhole that forms an aesthetic design. Such bona-fide exampleS" ol this old art are rarely encounterec\ today. Most contemporiry in- stallations fake the appearance v.·1th ersatz materials, but these are the authentic handiwork of a San Francisco craftsman who ·s one of the few remain· ing in the field. MOSA ICS Jn this 5ame vein, there's an attractive glass mosaic behind the bar. It depicts figures of musi· cians and 'vas completely hand-crafted in leaded glass. I \f Celling gazing In the Fleur De Lis can also pro- vide something of an rare experienc. We so occu- pied ourselves for a v.1hile and haven't had such sore necks since studying the roof of the Vatican's Sistine chapel. HAND CARVED BEAMS Overhead are a number of extraordinary, Casein· ating and hand·made v.•ooden beams. \Veil worth detailed inspection, the intricate hand carving in· cludes the official crests that represent the various provinces of France. All standard drinks are available, naturally, but we found the bar's regulars have some partic- ular favorite. High on this list is Irish coffee -a concoction that definitely holds its own with that or- fercd any\vhere, including San Francisco's Buena Vista -and the "La Paz" Margarita. Likewise served up in appreciable quantity are a variety of ''fruit sour" house specialties. These delicious and frothy mixtures come in flavo rs rang- ing from apricot and peach to cherry and black· berry. PRIME Rll • SEAfOOD STEAKS • COCKTAILS OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH 11 to 2,30 DINNER 5 to 12 SUNDAY BRUNCH FROM 10 A.M. Ent•rtainmenf Wednesday thru Sun day 103 N. BAYSIDE DR., NEWPORT BEACH In Th • M•rin• Dun e1 644-4031 tli{! FLING ENTUTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WllK D.4..,C:ING * HAP HALL DUD wl!ll Otl Nai ll •n l•n Tllwr. tftrv S11n. MON.0TUIS.•WID.~ * L1rry L1k1 Sina: er ~ For Eerly Risers and Late Players Open Daily From 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. Rt•r-Me11 Theater · s~uE1:E Co1t1 Mesi IHI 145 I. ltrll St. J11st off N_,.rt lh>4. TREASURE CHEST AT MESA LANES Prt11nts Tu1sd1y t hru Sund•y evenings DUANE BASS and His Guitar j Bu1lnt11m•n's Lunch~~Frl. 1703 Super ior (at 17th St. & Nwpt. Ave) Costa Me11 Our lrlsl1 Coffee and Capp11rclno S preods Our i'Vntrae J:t .... '.-· j_, .. 1e.,..,',,..~{!j1aura1d. POOl~d •IHI AMlllCAN CUISIN I TROPICAL COCKTAILS CONNIE COM~!LL AT THI PIANO IAR We4. •IHI Tlnm. Nlt9 ~OLYNESIAN SHOWS-HI. & SAT. 1•61 ADA MS AYL 1 .. M .. Mll•t HUNTI NGTON l lACH 968-5050 • MEE T THE PROPRIETOR John i>alinkas, genial and soft.spoken preprletbr. told us one of his firmest policies calls for flrst· rate entertainment at all times. U the current en· tertainer is representative, it's a plan well executed. ALL THIS AND RYDER TOO The personable and talented performer cuJTenl· ly holding front and center stage is C. C. Ryder, • versatile guitarist and gentleman of song. It wa.sn't surprislng to learn-based on the boundless lipirit he brings to both folk music and contemporary ballad.s-that he's traveled over much of the world during the past eight ytars. ---~ Canadian born C. C. has a most remarkable var::~ range "'hich enables him to handle big tunt s with an effortless delivery. This, coupled with his ability to "shake the rafters" one minute and with the next song to invoke a tear, obviously accounts !or much of his audience appeal. TALENT AND VERSATILITY But Ryder's versatility by no means ends with good showmanship and tasteful choice of material. 1-lis renditions of calypso songs, foreign. Jangua$e ballads, and many songs which he him5elf has writ- ten and arranged, denotes an entertainer with some- thing well above average to offer. A few of his own compositions that bespeak out- &tandin& talent are "Going Away," "Stay Until Morn- inQ:," "Has Anybody Seen the Sky?" and "Calico Pie.'' Well-known pieces by others that he gives a distinctive touch mclude "Bridge Over Troubled \Vaters," "Fire and Rain," and "Me and Bobby McGee." Once part of the nationally-known duo, The Tall.!lmen. C. C. has been a single since 1965 and is proud t.p have shared the bill with such notables as Judy C!lllns, Buffy St. Marie. Richie Havens, The Voyagers, Jo Mapes and Josh White. He came to the states from Nassau in 196~ and undertook a concert tour of midwest coll eges. 501 JOTH ST. NIWPOIT IUCN WE WILL OPEN IUl•VATIONS 671.0JOO EASTER SUNDAY AT 2 P.M. A. Thrt~ Generation Family Tradition -Est. 1~21 EASTER SUNDAY VIRGINIA BAKED HAM COMPLETE DINNER -$3.75 En+•rl•i~m•nl I D•ncin' HAPPY HOUlt M•11. • frl. I t• 7 p.111. wltll HorJ d'o•llfl'H IANQUIT PACILITIU Jl7 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINCJJ ON IUCH CLOSID MONDAYS "Relax and onjoy the ca1ual intimacy of B•lboa ls land1' Vill•ge In n, AFTH THE PARADE JOIN UI ,Olt EASTER SUNDAY DINNER-APRIL 11th 'eetwrln1 A SPECIAL fAMILY MENU A !unny R.abbit'1 Welcome to Children SetYln g 10 •.m. te 10 p.m. lttHt'll'ttlon• lut1e•tell Supetb Cui1in 9-Excellent Cocktail, Cerntr ef Park and Marine IALIOA ISLAND '71-4130 212 1 E•tt c.,,, Hlthw•v Ceto11• cltl Mar RlSERVATIONS 675-0505 IAST&R SUNDAY DINNER Fr•1 h h11it C•c~••il S1• Food Co,~+.a N1pl1111• M1ri11•lt d Fll•t of So l• H•rrin' i11 S•111 Cr••lll C•••"' of Chlc\111 A l• R•!11• Ton1d G•11n S•!td -0, • .,111,, l1 ~1d H1libul 5111~ R•l'l'lo11!1d, •o•tl l •, of E1.t1rn L1"'D 011•·1-1111 1.~td C1po11•t1,. ltk•d S11•••·C&1r1d H.m ••••+Ne ... Yo1k Sirl oi11 or B••f C~1rco1I l1of11J Mi11u11 Sirlt i11 St11k A1nt11li•n Lobtl•r T ,a C1~1u1 ... ,, H•H1noi1i••· c.,,,,.,v WhiPll'•oi or S,1ct1I l1k1d Po'•'" Cho11!1t• le• Cr••"I •oll-St11wli1rry Mo11U• Full Dinners St1rtln9 from $S.7S GUITARIST · VOCALIST C. C. RYDER Currently Appearing at the Fleur-De·Lis flis first California engagement was at Reuben's Riverside. Prior to moving to the Fleur De Lis. C. C. was appearing at the Granada in Anaheim. PAUL LEMOINE ON SUNDAY You can catch C. C. Ryder, from 9 lo 1:30, Tuesday through Saturday evenings. Sundays the en- tainment spot is filled by a newly-formed group, the Paul Lemoine Trio. which is reportedly develop· lng an avid roster of fans with each new appearance. The Fleur De Lis. open seven days a \vetk, Is located in the Art Center, 1460 S. Coast I·ligh\vay, Laguna Beach. I-lours are noon to 2 a.m. daily, ex- cept Monday, \vhen closing time is called al 7.30 p.m. Continued on Page 23 OPEN ON SUNDAYS No1v ''i1ll 1 bi! of old J1p1n on Sund•y• to en1oy t11le-temptinR J1p1ne1e cuillne In 1 be1ut!fuJ i:arden 1tmo1phr.re. To celebr1te 1h11 Sund1y open in1. 11pec11l Sundoy Dinner v.lll be featured. Cocktall1 Dinner• from 4 p. m. @ml~RKO 33 To1\'n ind Country. Or1n11~ • ~41-3303 Jlcro•t/rom Fol/lion Square EASTER SUNDAY Brunch 1 l to l Dinner Served From J Meke Ro10.,,•t/on1 Now I NOW APPEARING T11ndoy tflr• Soturdgy c. c. RYDER SUNDAYS THE PAUL LEMOINE TR IO • , LAGUNA ~ FLEUR DE LIS I cocn.tiu "015 D'OIUVllS 5.7 P.M. 0'111 llVEN DAYS 1460 S. COAST BLVD. LAGUNA BEACH 494·2077 P"l l PARKING IN RfAlt 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER .._.." 8 UffWIT!t • •rotlfw• AIT!plo P11"1d111 lltMtf"W•U•nt ....... 2030• \ .. DAILY PILOT M Frid.at, AP!'U 2, 1971 OUT • WEEKEND EB 'N ABOUT FINEST SEAFOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND ' Contlnu.d from Page 22 Gino's one of the latest fa.st·food operations to apfear on the local dining scene Is Gino's restauran on Brookhurst St., near Garfield, in Huntington Bea,ch. • An eastern enterprise headquartered in ~g of Prussia, Pa., the new spot marks the thirteenth unit to open in Southern California but only the 1econd in Orange County. Paying our initial visit one day earlier this lveek, we met the genial manager, Tony Navitskis, and obtained a bit of information about the history cf Gino's expansion and the restaurant's specialized offerings. The first Gino's, we learned, opened in 1957 in Baltinlore. TWO MAIN ITEMS The two mainstay items offered in Huntington Beach, as elsewhere, are hamburgers and chicken. The latter ranges from the special (which provides l\VO pieces of chicken and French fries for 90 cents), to the banquet {21 pieces of chicken only tabbed at $5.50). The party, at $4.50, nets 15 pieces of chicken and six dinner rolls; the picnic, nine pieces of chick- en only for $2.50. The dinner provides three pieces of chicken, French fries and a dinner roll. BARGAIN BUY Gino's bargain buy is an excellent hamburger that goes for tf'ie incredibly low price of 15 cents. \Ve tried one, adding our own ketchup, mustard and onions from a bandy sell-service bar. A cheeseburg· er is 20 cents. Two more specials have been added in this line, \vhich are only featured at the Huntington Beach location. They are a double hamburger for 29 cents, and a double cheeseburger selling for 34 cents. The 55 cent Gino giant, billed as "a banquet on a bun," offers two patties or fresh ground beef, melt· ed cheese and shredded lettuce, served on a double- deck seeded roll and topped by Gino's gourmet sauce. Order a jumbo Gino for 60 cents and you'll re- HUNTINGTON LANES DINING ROOM Prime Rib 295 Now Servin9 Nitely 5-10 p.m., Sunday 1-t p.m. TEMPLE GARDENS CfJINgSSRestaura11t LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Visit Our RICKSHA COCKTAIL f ralurin;; f'.:xotic Tropical Drinks IUFFET LUNCH 11 :S0.1:JO Ol'EN ll:>a 1.111. • 11 p.m. Sun. trirw T~un. 11 ::io 1.m. • 2 1.m, Fri • ..,.. Si t. 1500 ADAMS (11t Harbor) COSTA MESA 540·1937 540-1923 ceive an extra large patty of fresh ground beef. to- matoes shredded lettuce and pickles, all on a large sesame' seeded buD with Gino's special sauce. WEDNESOAY SPECIAL Wednesday nights only, from 5 to 9 p.m., there's a family-oriented chicken and rixin's smorg· asbord. Price for adults is $1 .39, children 75 cents, and it includes Gino's golden fried chicken, French fries and co1e slaw. Dessert is a one item feature, hot apple pie at 20 cents per slice. Beverages include milk shakes. soft drinks, coffee and milk. Side orders of French fries and cole slaw also are available. The brightly-colored interior at Gino's create!! a cheerr atmosphere for the b~isk family ~ade it is certain to exP.erience. Theres an espe~tally _at· tractive use of tile on the floor and used frre brick on the walls. OISCOUNT TO GROUPS The restaurant offers a special savin g to groups and organiz.11.tions holding priv~te parties or ban- quets. This is a ten per cent discount on all pur- chases of $25 or more. Located at 19051 Brookhurst St. (al Garfield) Huntington Beach, Gino's is open fro'!1 10 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sunday through Thursday. Friday and Sat- lU'day the hours are 10 a.m. to 12 midnight. Gulliver's Coming \Ve've gleaned a few facts on still another restaurant building in the burgeoning dining out area taking shape around Orange County Airport. If the current rate of constructio n continues, Mac- Arthur Blvd. and Palisades Road will soon give New· port's Coast l-li ghway "Restaurant Row" a run for the money to boast the largest number of establish- ments. ,.,. .._ PROUDLY PRESENTS THE INTERNATIONAL SINGING SENSATION Lainie Kazan Thursdoy, April 8 TWO SHOWS t and 11 P.M. SUNDAY MATINEE 3:00 P.M. JIMMY VAN QUARTET Sund.iy and Monday 9,00 P.M. M•k• Your Dinner Reservations Now LUNCH e DINNER • COCKTAILS EXQ UI SITE HORS D'OEUVRES 3333 W. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH 642-4298 • ON THE BAY AT THE ARCHES sunday BRt..lnCh 11 <\.m. to 4 p.m. 3!!01 £Ast CoAST H1GBWAT C:O.osA on. ~(AJ. CALuo1s-u. ~~,-£Al( RETURNS TO COSTA MESA Puort&: (714) 675-1374 PRlnCE lb Mies RESTAURANT sEAPOOa.-ITUU TIN w .. ~ TII ... o,... t-"" lfrl~· IJI., SU<'!. ~ It 1111 IC ..... Mt"""'l"I SAim w: \5'7! "'"" ""· tn.t71'0 (I tlildl Jl ti Uinllf} for Advertisement Coll 642-4321 OFFERING NEW DIMENSIONS IN FAMILY OINING, UNOER NEW MANAGEM ENT, WITH A CHOICE NEW BILL OF FARE NOTHING ON OUR MENU OVER $3.99 CHILDREN'S MENU Also: A Pewee Plate For The Little Tots -29¢ • STEAK & LOBSTER e CHOICE T ·Bone STEAK e NEW YORK STRIP ...... . • Nothing higher on the menu. N1tur1lly· aged USDA Choice beef only. No tend!r· i1ers. St••k dinners st1rt •t $1 .65 ind 1n· elude ul1d, to11t and potatoe,. Baked po- t1to•1 from 11 A.M. 'til 9 P.M.I "Well· done" steaks cooked with tend•r loving care, tool Open Daily 11 A .M. -9 P .M. 2267 FAIRVIEW (At Wilson) COST A MESA 548-0368 To be known as Gulliver's, work ls well under way on this new spot located at 18482 MacArthur Blvd., in the Irvine Business Center, 1djacent to the San Diego Freeway. JUNE OR JULY 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE Following groundbreaking the firs! part or Febr11ary, Gulli ver's president, Hans Prager, indicat~ ed that if all stays on schedule the oUlcial opening can be expected by late June or early July. NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 In releasing the initial information about the upcoming enterprise, Prager said "Gulliver's will provide a unique experience for those seeking good, hearty fare in an atmosphere of comfort, fun and hospitality." PRIME RIB HOUSE Prager, formerly general manager of Lawry's restaurant chain, also reported that dinner time will find Gulliver's strictly a prime rib house. Several different cuts will be offered to accommodate vary~ ing appetites. • ~ LUNCHEON VARIETY 'l'he mid-day bill of fare, with special emphasis on businessmen's luncheons, will offfer a greater variety. Plans for this menu call for other meat selections and entrees ranging from omelettes to seafood. From our observation post, Gull iver's looms a!! a sterling addition to the local dining scene. We'll keep our readers appraised as further developments occur. DAILY ' DINNER SPECIALS $3.95 BREAKFAST AND LUNCH DAILY PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT TALBi/1kmLE WITH A SWl!IEP'ING VIKW OP' Hl!WP'ORT HAft•OR 400 MA.IH, 8.ALIO.A PEMJHSOU. (714) 67:M633 ~~~ c.,Airportor qnn "Hotel \Vite,,. Th~ INN J'f'Opl,. r>l«l MEDITERRANEAN DINIHGo ROOM. C•ptal11'1 T•bl• Coftee Shop Cabarot Cecktoll lo11119e Entcrl1lnmtnl •nll D1ncin1 Meetl119 •nd l•11ca11et Roe111t 18700 ~!AC'AllTl/t J R BLVD. NEWPORT BEAC'H, CAI.IF. ALLEY 1111T PRESENTS TONY FLORES Guitarist/Vocalist Folk, Cla11ic•I, Sp•nish TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Moncl•Y Hl1htl flATURINCi DINNERS In th1 Sin Fr1nei1co M1n111t Lt.Cl Of LAMI STIAkS e SUN>OD 5 TO 11 NIGHTLY IUSINISSMAN'S LUNCH 11 :00 10 s SATUROAYS LUNCH OR BRUNCH 11 TO S .;.PIN IYllY DAY ON TNI OCIAN ADJACINT TO NIWPOlT lllACN l'ltll 2106 W. OCEAN FIONT NEWPORT IEACH ~~ • SINCE THE OLD DAYS ' Right off the line ... RIX Fish 'n' Chips RlX's varied menu includes England's lalesl and tastiest export to America, fish 'n' chips .•• three choice pieces ot succulent, ocean·fresh fish fried golden brown wilh an ample serving of French fried polaloes. This tasly repast sells for only"' The fish 'n' chips pie lier which includes coleslaw is only $1. Io 79C 310 E. 17th St. 2196 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 645·1500 Costa Mesa 642-1553 BE SURE TO DROP BY AND SEE ALL OUR IMPROVEMENTS Do11't Forget lo Go to Cl111rch'• 011 Su11da11 HOTCAKES & EGGS SAUSAGE OR BACON $1.00 COZY DINING ROOM FOOD TO GO 2698 Newport Blvd. (at Mesa Dr.) Costa Mesa r S4 DAILY PILOT Hollywood B1·itt Discusses Swede11 Homeland By VERNON SCOT!' Vl'I ............ C.,., __ , HOLLYWOOD -Sweden is 11 nice place lo visit. but most Swedes who become famous Ind leave that Scand1n;i vian paradise re1lst returning to the homeland . OM authority is B r I t t Ekltnd. She of the blonde locks. pouty face , mag n i f l cent architecturt and former wile of Peter Sellers, puts down htr naUvt lsnd on several count!. "I've never worked in Swede11," she said. "Apart from Ingmar Bergman and Bo Wledenberg, there Is nothing ........ ''Only two or three movies 1 year are made in Sweden and Ihm they have lo be Swedish box offlct successes. So they uae Max Von SyOow and Bibi Anderaon or Gunrltl Lindblom to inlure a n!:lurn on their money ... While Britt doesn't work In Sweden and makes her home Jn London. she manages to appear regularly in t he Swedish newspapers. Like ln&Tid Bergman, Greta Garbo, Ingemar Johannsen - • trio of Swedish celebrities - Britt continues to make news back heme. "At least living abroad I can 1no\•e around and see people," ahe said. ''If 1 lived in Sweden who would know I was there? \\'ho would care? Evidently no one. In Hollywood for a n ep pearance on "The Dean ~ ;~~~~~~~~~ o .• ,,ge. f714) '"·"°' rr SOUTH COAST 'lAZ#. ~n Cei!e "'••• • [71•) $4(1.2191 1.,.1.,, mvIERA ft£5T.:AUMNT Continantal Cuitln• Cocktails Sennng L101cheon and Di11ntr AfondaJI through SaturdaJj'. Closed Sundays .\!artin Show" and lo shop arounci for mohon picture role:-Britt wrinkled her pretty nose and said she goes lo Sweden only to v1s11 her parents. "Tht Swedes resent me becau~ I've gone abroad and done well outside the usual expectations -becoming a model or a show girl. "Don 't ask me why , but there is general unhappines.s among the Swedes when one of them leaves the country and succeeds at somethlng that isn '1 easily done In S"'·eden. "But my name is in the Swedish papers all the time - without my talking to any members of the Swedish papers. How do you figure that out? "They print a non-stop running serial on my per~nal life. I don't know why but I'm a great source of gossip over there." Miss Eklaocl speaks flawless English and gets along well with Italian, German and French. She has appeared in a dozen pictures without making the world forget, say, Garbo. Currently she has four unreleased films soon to be seen in the United States: "Carter," Percy," "1'intoma· ra'' and "The Cannicals." An- other epic, "Machinegun Mc· Cain." made two years ago may also be shown in lh1s country. "I would like people to think of me as a star." Miss Ekland said. "But I don 't want lo li ve like one ." She didn't elabOrate on thlt SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplies in the area. New 2 Leutfe11t 211 'ff, WtUON, COIT.lo Mii#. ltotf 1'1l111h Rd., 5U.1til f02J All111t-"1tlllif\tl111 lt1c~ t61.0lll MOD MUSIC VOCALIST MARK LINDSAY Will Sing for all th• "Spring Flingers" Dis11ey Spring Fli11g Kick-off April 3rd 'J'hc S pr i n g Fling at and IS·fool catamaran, going Disneyland . Apr\\ 3 lrom 8 30 to some lucky Spring Flineers. pm. to 1 :l(l a.in , is thr ku:k-Starting Sunday the en- of! !'Jr a "ll'eek o/ music which features entertainers nightly at the parl.. during ~asll'r vacation week . Among t~ !op namr en - tcrta1nment fcalurts for the f'l1ng will be Gladys Knight and thP Pips perlorn11ng al 9 and ! J p.n1. on the Tornor· rowland Stagr sharlng the spotlight w1 lh the mnd group, Dawn. Al 10 1111d nlidnight IHI the Tornorro\vland 'I' c r r al' e , vocalist 1\.·lark Lindsay and Sound Castel Ltd. will provide music for listening and dan- cing. In Ilic l'lilia C:ttn.lru~ the Rh ythm He be J I 1 o n will 1wrform fron1 8 p n1 \I) I a.m. for dancing In addition to lht' t·n· terlainm~nt. 111ore than 500 prizes will be awarded with two lop prizl'S, a 1971 Pinlo lerta1nment lineup will include Roy A.cu ff, LeRoy Van Dyke and the Auctioneers and Diana 1·rask al 5, 7 and 9 p.m. on the Tomorrowland Stage with Jay Lawrence as emcee. Beginning Sunday. Lionel Hampton and his organization will be heard ntghtly, through Ariril 10, in \ht Plaza Gardens !·~~;:,;n);.'_:;t.."&-~A~~~~"':.:1.•" '{ I \ ... 1~ '!.-lHEr~x'f~B~HIN~ TO 'llSITlNG rMe ISLANDS,.. ... ';!r,·... I ~ :4: AllO Playi"gel"d Big F1•tur1eRo" Moody, Dom DtLul11 ';; VOLCANO ~-~ "THE TWELVE CHAIRS" .f,' II 0 US E l\ I 01\.l'S ,.QD~,J (~~ [1;::::=:=:=:=:=::=::::=:::::::::=:::::=~[ ~<! , ••• SHOP 'J . / "' filliil()I Cont;nuou1 Show -:',' A COFFEE / ,; -.: r.!{~;:;:;=;::::;=:ixa}E ve. Show Starh 7 p.m. S ~-I ,.,K,••" h.......,;·1 . .l, l..:l.!J-.~ Sund•y From 2 (,:. "'"e ,_ F14tur i"9 ~· ~~ •CW'°ll &CACM • oi.1.U:JO (,-,. -, • '"'"" \ '\ •;, FREE PARKING '·.' -__ ,..,..s.,v..i ~:.J1 _:,.4{t.'.'I ~}, 1" '11• H•w•u•n M•""" MOKl'S FAMOUS ~: E'xcl11."iit1e f"irsl Rt.tit •',' LUNCH e DINNER BURGERS & SHAKES 1\1 ~ LATt DINNERS B r ••kf~,t ~~ t~,. TIKI LOUNGE lu"cn Q' !ii.~ SONGS Of C:AVIN Dinner ..(. ••·· · 1400 PALISADES ROAD. COSTA MESA ~ ~ IN1•t t1 tti. l1d1w1r 11111 557 -t••• ; ('.; A TREAT FOR RIB LOVERS ! }) THE \'(iLCA:\'Cl JIOUSE f:XTF::\'J)S A !-'Pt:CIAL ~' ( 1rt·t:1t (/,"\ ITS FA:O.J<IUS HA\VAflAN RIBS -~~ SUNDAY and MONDAY HITES , i-J. COMPLETE HAWAIIAN Rll DINNER FOR ONLY $3.75 ELLIOTT GOULD -DON SUTHERLAND MARCIA RODD IH "The Little Murders" .lLSO JASON ROBARDS IN "The Ballad of Cable Hogue" .. • Ce11,l11•e.,. Shew Set . Fre111 l-S1111. F1•111 4 ler9el11 M•,1- l••ry WHHt.d1y-1 ,,M. ~: ..•. COLP TERROR" ··-. -- Ballet To Offer New Work ... Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company will present the th ird in a series of mem• bershi p programs. tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach High School euditorium, 675 Park Ave. Laguna Beach. A new <:oJorful w o r k. , "F'esta " with music b y Burgmuller, will be performed LAGUNA BEACH CIVIC BAL LET COMPANY IN NEW YORK fea tu ring a pas de deux by Qdile de Witte and Hal O'Neal. _____ 'F_•::• ... ••::.'_W~lt--h_:M~u•::.;..:'..:b:_y_B::.u::r.'.g'...m ... u::l ... l •::'..:'..:h::o.:.•"'11~'.:'.:":;.Ph.;.td::::....:b:..y_L_l_l•_Z_•_I_; ____ _ "Pas de Quatre" by Pugnl will also be part of the pro- gram, both choreographed by Lila Zali. artistic dlr~tor of lhe company . Hal O'Neal has chore<>- graphed an Arn er ic an a work. ''The Ballad of the She n rr and the Schoolmarm, .. as part of the presentation. The program 1s free to members, non-member ad· mission $2.50 for adults. $1.50 for child ren under 12 . Tickets :ivailable at the door. For in- formation phone 494-7271. Davidson To Appear On •u.s .A.' Donations Increase KCET AnnuC1l Auction Slated for Airing A JS-foot speedboat with 50 h.p. motor, a new Datsun automobile and a thoroughbredflorse are among n1ajor donations so far to KCET's 1971 on·the-air auc- tion . Others include paintings and sculpture by n o l e d artists, television sets, radios. refrigerators and other home appliances. sporting goods. bicycles and motorcycles. The horse is a 2-year-0\d Yo·yoChamp Has Role In Nelv Filn1 Arabian gelding named Bo Royal, sired by Bolero out of Treza. KCET's annual fund-raising auction will be telecast on Channel 28 May 16 through May 23, but the non-com· mercial, community-supported television station must fir st solicit more donations of new merchandise and services as \Yell as antiques and art ob- jects lo be put up for bid. Although donations have been COn)lng in daily, many more are needed, according: to auction director Richard ~1anning. All items must be new . ex- cept antiques, and if Lhe dona· lion exceeds $25 in retail value, the donor's name is mentioned when the item goes on the block and again when it Is sold. Donors get a tax deduction for the value of the merchandise and KCET 1ets the proceeds from the highest bid for financial support of the station. Last year's auction brought in more than $200,000. This year the station has set a goal of $.150,000. Volunteer "go-getlers" arc now contactlng s l o r e s . manufactw-ers and Individual:\ to obtai n auctlonable Items, and al90 underwriters to help defray the production costs of the telecasts. 1\1 make your donation, telephone the auc· tion office at (213) 486-4211. ARTHUR MILLER'S 'a view from the bridge' f'rl .&Sat., thru April third " ••• WITllOO'I' QUALlf'ICATlO!I , TH!: flNf:ST, MOST TOTALLY 1111'RESSIVE l'ltc& or THEATER MOUNTED ct! AN OIU.NCt COO!l'!'T CCHMllT'l STAG£ TllUi lit.\SO!I." --TCM llfUS, DAILY 1'11,QI " ... N0111!NC USS Tll.UI' SP!CTACUV.l ••• AN EVf:NINC or DIVJ'IATIC Tl!RIU.S." •• l{Yf )'IC CANN, llVl/ft WllRLD tltw.!I Ro meo and Juliet, Bob and Bing, Ulysses and Grant , George and Martha , Martha and Jo hn, Bob and Carol, Ted and Alice, Bob and Alice, Ted and Carol, Bob and Ted, Carol and Alice , Pat and Dick, Julie and David, Byron and His Sister, Bill and Coo, Liz and Eddie, Liz and Mike, Liz and Dick, Dick and Sybil, Eddie and Debbie, Muck and Meyer , David and Goliath, Magen and David, Mamma and Mia, Frankie and Johnny, Hollywood and Vine, Anthony and Cleopatra, and now ... Henry & Henrietta ... "l:W lOW iO~fSSll)lf f!)t TWl lNlllf fiMlYINClUIMN& ,_,, (~~ft-' the love couple of the seventies ... and the laugh riot of the year. ··:i~ Pans r1eseru A HOWARD W. KOCH· Hill.ARD ELKINS PRODUCTION Walter ttatthau Elaine 1111¥. "A neC1J Leaf" ("A-\Q Jack CIJeston George Rose Ja:iiti Coco a:lll Williaiil Redf:eld ~-.,,. • I .... "'"'~lo!f>lor ~';o"rtten•l'ld !lfecledtiy" ... .., Bfsp;lon W .,..., ~rtiory. THE. GREf.HH{AJl(T A Pararra.,R Pic:t\.lfe ~ C()I()' by MCMELAB [;aJ ... [GI-==+ f~. STARTI; TODAY "T 2 COMYl•llllT lOCATIOW:S 11 - WKIM Y otir Gulde to Movies Barefoot Executive Spoofs Film Ratings Editor's Not1 : This motM guUft U prepared bV th• filmi committee of Harbor Council PTA . Mr1. Nig1i 8ollct1 '3 pre.sfdent ond Mr1. Brue• Nordland U committ11 chairman . It is Intended 41 a rt/erenct in detcrminfn(I .suitable I f I m 1 for certain agt groups a n d wilt appear wttklt1. Y o u r views are solicited. Mall them. to Mo· vlt Guide. care of the DAILY PILOT. * Adul&J B.S. t Lo\•e You (X): Adven• tures ol a young man in the advertlslng buslneas starring Peter Kastner . Ballad of Cable Hoaue (R): A pro.!lpeclor who Is left on the desert to die teams up wlth a self-styled preacher and 1 prostitute to get revenge. 1'he Diary or a M a d llousewlfe (R): The disin· tegratlon or a New York at· torney's marringe. Ca r r i e Snodgress is the submissive, bored house\vifc; Richard Benj amin plays the social· climbing pompous husband. Getl ing Straight (R): Elliott GouJd plays a veteran of Viel· nam who returns to college and campus violence. Candice Bergen costar•. Eddie Dean Scheduled At Knott's Coming up Jn the \Yagon Camp at Knott's Berry Farm this Saturday is the Eddie Dean Show at 6, 7:30 and t p.m. A long·Ume favorite in the country music field, Dean has recorded for nearly every ma· jor record company and has ~ceived acclaim as a music wrlter ptMing such old time favorites as, •·one Has My Name, The Other Has My Heart". "Fools Gold". "\Valk Be.side J.fe ", and "Cry Of A Broken Heart", In contrast. tonidit's of. fer ing is a contemporary group in the country western field, the Country Coalition. performing al 6. 7:30 and 9 p.m. Featuring the new country sounds, the Country Coalition Includes folk, rock, soul and blues. Their credentials in- clude the distinction of having provided the vocal for the sound track of the successful movie "Lovers and Other Strangers." For still more musical variety the Walter Arties Chorale a 20-member group will present a program of spiritual music on Sunday at 2, 3:30. 5 and 6:30 p.m. Knott's Berry Farm 1s located at 8039 B e a c h Boulevard, Buen a Park The Good, The Bad, and The U&Jy (GP), In Ille hunt for a hidden cuh boi:, two sadl!tlc klllel'I and thelr "friend '' (Cllnt Ea 1 two o d) mutder two dozen people. Western filmed in Italy. I 'Love My Wife (R): Break· up of a Romeo 's mi1rrlage, starring Elliott Gould, Brenda Vacaro and Angel Tompklru. Little Murders fR): EUIOt Gould stars In black fantasy of urban collapse. Directed by Alan Arkin. ti.1•A•S-it (ft): Irreverent comedy about the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital during the Kt'rean War. Spoof on nursMoctor relationships and the ''Last Supper." Stars Elliott Gould and Donald Sutherland. The Owl and the Pu11ycat fR): Barbra Streisand and George Segal star in film version of Broad way comedy. Prostitute • with . a • he<trt· of-gold theme. Prime pf !'tflss Jean Brodie (GPJ : Maggie Smith's portrayal of an older un· conventional teacher. co1n- 1nitted to a rom anti c, distorted view of life. Story tlf her two aborted love affairs and tragic influence she has on students in conservative English girl's school of the 1930's. Valdti Is Coming (GPI: Burt Lancaster, Susan Clarke and Frank Silvera have a run- in ~'ilh ~1exican bandits. l\tATURE TEENS AND ADULTS Anne of tbe Thousand Days tGP): Story of sec::ond wlfe of Henry VIII. Fallin& to pre>- duce a son and heir, she is beheaded to nlake w1y for a aucceuor. Richard Burton portrays 1 lusty Henry Vltl Genevl~ve Bujold ls Anne Boleyn. Cover• Engtlsh hlatory from downfall of Wolsey, beheading of Thom1s Mort. birth· .of future Q u e en EI iz.I beth, to Anne's beheading. Butcb Cusldy and &be Sun· ,dance KJd (GP): Legendary friendship between the mo5t infamous and amiable of We.stern outlaws who flee the country and take Sundance':; bored schoolleacher-mi!tress to Bolivia with them. Bank robberies and gun flgh~ ad· m1t humor and pal.hos. Burt Bacharach musical sctlrt. Cold Turkty (GP): $25 mill ion Is offtrcd small Iowa town if residents 11top smok· ing . Story of how greed affects the town minister, doctor, right-wing fanatics, and the enforcing police. Local bars and masseuse parlor do thriv- ing business during smokers' ''withdrawals .'' Equl noi: (GP I: S\isprruie drama starring: Edward Con- nell . Little Big rt1an (G P ): Du11tin Hoffman 5lars as a legendary 121-year-old gunfighter In this "be.tier White-than-Red story of the American W e s t , culminating in Custer's last stand. Love Story (GP): A Ii ~facGraw and Ryan O'Neal star in romantic, bitter-sweet 'Ed Sullivan Presents ~1ovin' with Nancy Sinatra on Stage' starring Nancy Sinatra in a special edition of his regular shO\\' to be seen this Sunday at 8 p.m. on Channel 2. CO·HIT O.ll lHEATllf l'OR l:.HOW TIM( .---~ --... 011uo,. ,......, J.Jll,M. ·-SZS·l,11 __ ._lCl,A * TONIGHT - 9 p.m. ONLY ANOTHER IMPORTANT * MAJOR STUDIO SNEAK PREVIEW FROM PARAMOUNT PICTURES -IMPORTANT CAST Rated IGPl '•IOAY, APRIL 2 SCHI DUL• ONLYI D•ett Open at j :)O "LOVI STORY" .. 7:11 "!'REVIEW" •:OO "LOVI STORY" . 10:4t fable of todQ'• c0Ue1e youths and the 1tner1tlon e•P· Told in lhelr Janiuace. A New lAaf (GI: Walter Matthau playa 1 I u 1 u r y • hwlary bachelor. Elaine 1<1ay la the love lnterest tn this 1l1pallck-ttyle contemporary comedy. The Party (GP): Comedy occurs when dla11ter·prone Eut lndlan actor 11 ac- cidentally invited to chic Hollywood party. Peter Sellers stars. Ryan'1 D1ugblrr ( G P ) : Robert l\1itchum, Sarah ~1iles atar in love 1tory 1et In scenic l~land of 1916. Restless , beautiful wlfe of middle-aged school teacher bas affalr with English major. Tragedy for all resuJts. Sudden Terror (G P): 11 year-old boy on Mtdltcrranean Island is only witness to chill· Ing political murder. Family ignores his pica for help because of his [requent fan- tasies. Ziggy is left alone to escape from the relentless police who hunt him down. Planet or tbt Apes tGJ : Science fiction film dealing with premise that a planet exi sts where apes rule, and men arc hunted and caged for &cientlfic vivl1ect!on by monkey scientists. Charlton Heston play1 a captured astronaut, Kim Hunter and Roddy McDowell are apes . Twelve Chair1 (GI: Tait of greed set in 1927 Russia. A charming vagrant. a aon·ln- Jones Gets New Music Assignment law, ar.:l a prlat amell money 1n the old family manikin and raet each other to find the pre-revolutionary iewels hid· den In one of the twelve aold Hepburn star 1n film ductlon of the Lerner Loewe musical. pro- and Fri day Saturday Evening Morning RJo tobo (G): Humorous APRIL 2 AP'RIL 3 w e stern-adventure 1t1rrlnt l :OO 11111 ""' J•'IJ Gunpllf. I:» fl S111fht ......., chairs. John Wayne. Takes place at o MIC M ... l'Ylclt Tom Stfdw. 7:00.9"-' w.• ""' w.,. F'MJLY cloae of ClvU War . lJTllt Alltn SlllW IJD Cl)Cll....., ... Tora, Tori, Tora (G): Re-Q lll O'Cloct MM: ('C)0 (IO) m11tlndloullle- Barefool Ei:ecutlve (G): creation of events preceding "Mr. Mobbl Tll• a V.utlon Con· 111._.. llnll n1.m. S I On th t.levl'lon ratl·n· I k clualOll (oomtdl') 12-J~l!ltl stfW' 7~8o.tr"• T....._ • poo e .. Japanese 1urpr se ath1c on •rt. Miur•n O'H•"· L•url Ptten, DD (I) e,..... a Wll system starring Wally Cox. Pearl Harbor. Dual view or Fibl in, Mldl•tl l1ir111. .IOlln Suon. fJ lltdi ~' A mallboy use1 a chimp to the event treated more as a Dia v .. DJ'* m l11111d•rti11• help pl ck ral!::gs and gives pictorial h I I l 0 f Y than m TIM fllnbttflll 1:00 IJ 9 (J) -...,,.. ... the network: e1ecuUves an establi1hlng cause•. CD 1J! (]) S1'r TM ..,. KMr unusual time. Waterloo IGI: Rod Steiger, G!IMlltflnlt11d Cl lUCE Cl....,....,11•• Cu1ter of the Weit tGl : OrlOn Welles and Christopher ll)nthw ''"'"' D i!!(l)LI_... Lii* of Ge '•· Pl t In I l!ilN-14 &!JM""' ..... ..,. (-Tale ncral Custer s &;8st ummer s ar story o m n. a-kf• Wtll "*"•!YI •41 _ Scott •~dJ' • ., Stand, the mtssacre at the Na~leon and the Duke of CI!)U...,. fi•lll•r •"Co,_. CortJ. LitUe BiJt Horn. Spurred on \Yelhngton . m llNI Jim Htwtl\olM, my ........... flfll by I thirst ft"lr alory, Custer 1:15 fl!IAtt sttdlt 1:458......,_t'I Mlbitl also fetlll government's Indian * 1:30 a C.ldld C.11«1 1:10Cla(I)m1'111 ...... policy unfair. Story of his am· The letter immediotel11 mTM nytnj ft.. OC.1111M11 l'rlflll bivalent feelings told a1ain1t after th.e title tndicattl tlte fI!J Ho4llPOCIP Lod&I m Cbc:o Kid scenic treatment of West In rat111g giuen the picture b11 IIDU«llill '11•• CIJl••bJ Cinerama. the Alotion Picture Code tn!TM ~rt •.,.,t l :UD..,..... 111 .... 1 llello, Dolly fGl: Barbra The Code And Rating prd-m')Lo.Ot.ld•dtl l:OOIJ9(1)1*1M I .. .,_.. b J --' aJ AIC Ntwl llllltl Streisand portray& Dolly Levi, gram may . e ~U•iu on ons };OOIJCIS,.... Wilttr cron•Jt•. DID (il CCIOr.Dontllt the m;itchmaker. in this lavish of t},t motion picture paQtl. 0 CCI QC hn Dl'fid lrlR~IY• ID Mowtl: ..... frlr .. Mr (ft. musical 11ct in New York at o Wlllt"• My UM1 1111) '$3 -SOllllJ Tllft:t. llfW• the turn of the century. Walter m !]! I]) 1 Lott L1cy Pt(l:Orl. Matthau costars. U1 Or1prt fJ t!7J W Mn1 '-" Dow Kr k t E t I J (G) fI!J Thirty Mtnltn W1t11 •• , m A.M. Mwtp: '1 J.111 .... a a 01, al O ava : l1il Chrtlll thl LMn& Wtnl 1t1r1" (dr1m1) '60 -Curt .lefllfl'. Awesome, volcanic eruption of GI Ml llllw por TI ..,... Od ... Aft.-Dirt" ("""' Krakatoa and the monslrous CI\)St111Pltt11tllt. M1111 tt!Yl 'M -SWcJ Kemt. tidal Wi!VC thsl fOl!OWS \t A ~ I • n. rtll kl fil)Movltlllflll IDTNI ...... furnish the framework and Orltlllll UMllf \'1nll!o '"' a-CJJ ftl ,.,. CollllG Miit GI c.n.' ...... ltu K1rrt-Allll"1 M1Pt1111 "1Pl , ...__ c\lmax or thl11 tale of a· sunken Klmtll lpjlllfl 111 • dr1m1tlt ro!• m ,. ..... -- lreasurc. Maximillian Schell. ''MY FAIR LADY'' •• 1 rtc:tnt!J llllf'ldtd ptdpocktt t-.lODmtw: hlltW !'tty Fair Lady (G): Cin· Ctlll. tllllll•t 1:M l"Jol. wllll Joint• 1rouP ther•P1 Pl'Cllfllll. D !17JCil 1111 Dlllltla4 II, derella story of Cockney glrll"';;:::;;;;::;::;::;::;:::=:;;10 THE RECORD-MAKERS &!Jllt.t• ... ""' <-l \\'ho ia transformed Into a lady Ii * Flip Wilson, Butltt, '53 -Gtorlt MontlOfMIY, TY by an arlslocraUc professor. Crosby I tpo~t creatt ;n:.: .,,.. .blo!t~ "-" Rex Harrison and Audrey D 8' cmmc n. 1'*' ..... N 1 r-..i Cei19 l•t1velv• Or•"f• C-ty l 1t1111n"nt "Fl¥1 IAIY PllCll" "MAGIC CH•'STIAH" .. ,, .. , ... -..• --"'· "CHlllllTIAH"-4:11 lo 11111 111. I. l \lft'.-C'111. lrt m 11111 .-Cclutftrt Or•n1• County 1111111111tnt "I.TAN'S DAU&Hl ll" I•• otllct 011tn IJ fl .. n • ' l".M, O•lfy !.ho.,.lmn Mt~. lhru Th\ll'l. • • l".M. ""· • Ill. • ••• ,..M. Mt llllffl It!.· 11111. ·I l'.M. Ol'IN .... 7"Llo-.. l .... Pnl,_.. NOW-IHDI TUISDAY WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS! 1n Fii? Wlllon llOll.1 111 hoUI (dr11111) 'IO -°' _....,.., sotdtl lhll 11lutH tht ltCOf'd hOl4· loMIOl't. 1n tl'Olln4 tilt world. G ArflMI ti N'41 -e YlrPtll Qnlllll llloil' 10:00. a I]) ... ' .. 0 till Cil GD"" ""' ''"" DID Cll II! M.A. -CJ Mtlllff S ..-.: (C) {2jtr) "little 0 Q1l (]) lt.t .... Sh•pht~ of ICln,00. Cami" (•d· Ill lacM Utwt v.ntur t) '61 -Jlmmlt Rodpr1. lO~fJ IBCIJ "'"-II a t ... 1 m Tnrtli" CoMIQvtnea 0 ID (I) m Mn c... .. m Mftle: (C) (2:!h k) "'Clptllris Crump of the CIOlld•" (1dvtntun) ·•z -O Movlr. "'ltlOll °"' ....- J1me1 C11n1Y, Otnnlt Mo111n. (1or'!llnt1) '40 -Dot'Odl7 LllllOl.I', flll Cllmttt btlltl Preston fotllf, cm Clne1111 so O @CIJ 1111 Mn4ll Im U DMtrtt 11:00 f) 18 (J) Ardllt'I Fvt1'*"" 7:5S tiI!> C4!1rtlon dt Stpn6ol Cl (l)i (I) G Hal Dis a:oo 0 aJl (])rm"''"' & Ill "°' D !17l Cil .._. ..._ I..., "[ S Putt." Q OJ lilt/Wiit All·b ....... m MANCINI 1nd FRIENOS ""'"' * GREAT MUSICAL HOUR Ill""'" """"" --m Ktrt!J M1ncl11I lptci1t tltnry (drllftl) '6G--Clry W1117. Mtnclnl le llolt kw tn !lour of II!> n.tl MalcMlft music, 1nd his 1Pttl1I r;ullll 1r1 l l:JO Cl fD Cl) CD ..... Andy WUll1111t. ltob1l11 fl1d;, .lo~n· fJ Q}) (ll TM Krrdf ..,. llY Matti\s, [lton John, Muedlth Im 111111 1 Mint ...... WllM!ll 1nd 1ctor rorrtlt TueUr. ft m Toms '" MlllOd A emoon El Uvin1 loot (E LI Cnl Juqtdl ~-llil ..... ""' Look who'I ©'illn ~;~g ••• an Imp ol a chimp I• 1he big brsln behind ttM network '• boy ... 5nderl -J;---...-....-~-..,...,.. CCI( ---"'Miiiin -..... Ill :•-·-""'l lllllll!T-!UllMr"••""""·EllUrl, .. Un ft -ai.--Mltl-.U: -~.:=-.. • •• 11:00 u aw m "'" D IDCIJ l!!-OGD•.., 0 McMt: (C) "11lt Clptllll'I T11tll" (comldy) ·~John GrtPoft, Pe11KY Cumming l m M!Mt: (C) "l ltow1nl h1nctloll" (ldventurt) '56-Strw1rt Gr1n1er. m eut·a.. Clod; 11:15 Im ClnllM M 11:30 IJ 9 (I) .... l rffftlt o o (I) m '°"""' c.,.,. OaJDlmemtt lD MIWll: (C) "H6flll ltt lndl1t11" (d11m1) '44-lOl'l McAllister. Z:)O IJ Mwlr. ·~ 111 .. rtl.n" (llDmtdYJ ·4~ Youn&. For Advertising in Out 'N' About Pho ne Norm Stanley 642-4321 r I I ~ i 1 ; ' l ' 1 l • • I • I ~ -------. • . . ..... . . . ~ . 2f OAILY PILOT Trlday, A,prTI 'l, 1'71 • PERFECT HOLi DAY SHOWS AT EDWARDS CINEMAS Please Phone Theatres for Times, Matinees and Erening Performances. Look who's GONE BANANAS! WAil" DISNEY .,,....._ THE BAREFOOT ' EXECUTIVE Dono Dt l.,.,,.,,,,, ,restr1t1 ~ ~1• • °"""'°""' ,Mm>tr "' -w.r. rrnoo· ~Woll" 01 louil. lVll (&-~tcrr""l .. "'"""'-"' OtW Jld~1 -Y•g"""' Mo:Ktrflll • OOW101Wlih'( ''WATERLOO" STARTS FRI. APRIL 2 "Dtho you take211 ra IS woman. Pren1iere Ora11ge County Engage111e11t Parar'l(Wl1 F'o:.hlfes t'lesenls A HOWARD W. KOCH· HlllARD ELKINS PRODUCTION "Yes, for everything she's got.H LAST SHOWING THUR. APR.1 "DIARY OF A MAD HQUSIWIFI" AND "FOOLS" IN HARBOR SHOi.IHC C£NT'£R Watter Matthau · Elaine May •. "A fte{I) Leaf" r,, ..... ,0\11 Jad! llleslon 1..-.:.... 8th GREAT WEEK! DUSTIN HOffMAN "UTTI.f 816 MAN" A Cinema Center Fiims Presentation John Marley &Ray Mill1nd ·c~o 111ctuJ11 1rw.11001111'(11J1( 15th RECORD WEEK Rawls Special Slated ~ Rhythm and blues king Lou Rawls dishes out a royal help- jng of "soul'' in a one.hour color television special aptly titled "The Lou Rawls Show". Joining him on the program, which airs on Channel :; Saturday, April IO at 7 p.1n., is internationally famous com- poser-musician Duke Ellington and songress Freda Payne. Variety in entertainment is the keyword for this special, as music, dance and comedy are presented throughout the program. Lou opens the show \li'ith a soulful rendition of ''TQ,bacco Road," followed by Fred Payne's vocalization of "Deeper And Deeper." Lou and Freda then combine for a duo version of "Oh, Happy Day ." Other l'lighlights include an appearance by the Kid Street Band which bangs out a spirited "When The Sai nts Go Marching In" and then backs Lou whi l e he does "Inchworm." Linda and Tom of the Cana· MOVIE RATINGS FOR PRRENTS ANO WIJNOPEDPLE 7,,. o611'C ..... ol ,,.. "°'"'IJI iJ JO illlOI,. ,.,_......,,,,. ... w./1111<1r o1 -,_,,,, .,...,... ~ ,_ c/W9<.-i. -------------------- ............................ ... g M...,!111.,. ..... .,,. ,~ .......... .. __ .,. ..... ._ ................. ... LOU RAWLS Coming to Ch•nnel 5 dian Royal Ballel dance to ''Something" and Dr. Music does ''Brother Loves Travelin' Salvation Show,'' and the gospel style "Tell It All Brother.'' The show vi'inds up with Lou and the entire cast mov- ing about an elaborate "Chet· to Street" set while they sing ··very Good Year," "Old Folks " "United We Stand" and ~ reprise of "Tobacco Road." Western Set For Spain '·Catlow," a v.·estem ad· venture produced by Euan Ll oyd and directed by Sam Wanamaker. will begin pro. duction in Spain on April 23, according to Douglas Netter, l\IGM executive vice presi- dent. Based on the novel of the same name by Lou is !~'Amour. the film explores the relationship between two men who live on both sides or the Jaw. Scot Finch has \\'ritten the screenplay. Wanamaker, a Broadway. n1otion picture actor, has directed ·'The Big Knife," ''Threepenny Opera" a n d ''The Rainmaker." Majo r casting an· nouncements will be made shortly. JUNIOR MATINEES SAT., SUN., MON., TUES. TWO BIG ONES ALL SEATS 75¢ 1HE MOST EXCmNG ADVEHTIJRES ABC1'1 MR HAD! METRO.f;OLOWYN·MAYER ,_ SAMUEL GOLOWYll, JR'S-• MARK TWAIN'S 1'he .Adventures ar lf.9cldeberrg Finn ALSO "HANSEL AND GRETEL" SAT. 12 ,.M. "HUCKLEIERll'f'" ot 12 011d 2:45 SUH., MOH ., TUES. SHOWING AT 2 r.M. MESA THEATRE HARBOR & NEWPORT, COSTA MESA ,. -NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS- e .. -se :r:~"l .... see :;:-.. ...... see ::; .. see ~ ..... "VALDEZ IS COMING" ' ''TORA TORA TORA" Bryant Hit at Age2 Your career can begin when you're two years old, if you're a singer and a natural born ham . That's when her started, says Anita Bryant, who has been seen on most major television shows, m a d e personal a pp ea r ance& throughout the country, and sung 14 command performances at the White House. At the age of two, she brashly made her debut as a soloist on the platfonn or the Baptist church in Barnsdall, Oklahoma, before an astonished congregalion, she recalls. "I was too young lo be shy. If the congregation was surprised to see a lwo-year-0Jd get up and sing, they must have been really startled at Peter Cottontail the big voice that came out Danny Kaye plays the little fellow in the basket, or my tiny body!'' Seymore S. Sassafraaa. on 1'tlere Comes Peter Cot· Miss Bryant, who says she tontail" Channel 7 at 7 p.m. this Sunday. always was a ham and always-----------'----------- 1oved to sing, de.scribes this event in her autobiography, "Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory," published by Fleming H. Revell. Director of 'Hair' Writes Filni Score It was Grandpa Berry who got her started, she says. \I/hen she was six months old, Grandpa Berry, who headed a large musical famil y, would 'fon1 O'Horgan, director of c1ans. In addition to the hold her tightly against his the rock musical "Hair," has O'Horga n score, music heard big chest and croon, "Sing, composed the original score in the fi lm includes: "Le Vral Anita, sing." He would shout for Tucker-Maxursky·s "Alex Scandale" and ''Le Reve Est with laughter when she would in Wonderland" star r i n g La" both sung by Jeanne respond with a loud, "Ah-h-h-Donald Sutherland. The first Moreau; Doris Day's rendition ee-eee-ee ," she writes, and f i Im by director·writer of "llurray for Hollywood'' would announce triumphantly, Mazursky and producer--writer with music by Dick Whiting ''This baby wa s born singing. Tucker since "Bob & Carol. and lyrics by Johnny Mercer ; She's really got a big mouth Ted & Alice." is currently "The Little Theater" (from on her!" It was he who pro-in its premiere engagement Fellini's "Juliet of I he udly arranged for her two-at the Beverly Hills Music Spirits''), composed by Nino year-old debut. Hall Theater. Rota, and Hassan and Hi:t "From that fir , t ap-l n scoring the dramatic Afros performing ··JA-L&. satire, O'Horgan used more MAN-SI" and "0-ME·YA·W.<\· pearance. I knew I'd always sing wherever J could gel than 4-0 artists, ranging from DO" written by Joh n anybody to listen," she writes. __ ha_c_d='°='k=to==cl:Jap;ss;:;c;;a;;I ;::m:;u:;;s.,1-~B:;;ro;;;u;:;gh"t;=on'°'andLS_t_an_l_ey_B_m_w_n. "Always, somewhere in the wings, I seemed to see Grandpa Berry, smiling, en· couraging, bragging , saying, 'Sing, Anita, sing!'" From then on she continued to sing publicly -in school plays, on radio and television talent shows. in musicals, before organizations, at state fa irs and rodeos, at both na- tional political conventions, 14 times at the White House, with Bob Hope's Christmas tour for the Armed Forces overseas and in summer stock. At the early age or 12, she had her own tel evision show in Oklahoma City. Then followed the agonizing adoles- cent years and unctrlainty about her appearance and ability. "'Prayer became my chief weapon against fear." While still in hi gh school, she became nationally known for her appearances on the Arthur Godfrey CBS morning programs and the Don McNeill Breakfast Club Show. In her autobiography, she describes the excitement of being crowned Miss Oklahoma and being chosen second run· ner·up in the Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, M1cGllllvr•y·Fr11m11n Fllm1 Pr111nt ''SKI MOVIE I'' TIMES-7:30 & t :20 Sat. From 1:10 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE-IN All Color Pr•mlorl £t19•91mMll _o;,...,_, Wiit 01.,.IY l'r11111!1 • ' "THE 8AREl'OOT EXECUTIVE"CGI .._..,(k) plUI StcoM 1'1mlly l"ff!Url "'1·1•11 "SAVAOE WU.0'1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t<UNTo,.GIO" ~f~OI WARNER ORIVE -IN SZ.00 rE• - --,AH C.Mr E~clwllvt Dl'IY•l11 51towfllt! Dllitln Ho>tlmtn • ColOr "LlTTl.E 81G MAH" (GI') --·--Ml'41l1 pion • John W1yn1 "Jtto Loao" CGI •un L1nc1111r "VALDEZ U COMING" (GI') PIUI Elkt Sommor "TllE INVtNCll l.E SUI" AH-color 1wc!u1lvo drlv•!n •howlt19! Ole~ Vin OY~t "COl D TURl<EV'' (GI') plus Clint E11l-•L" Vtn C!ttl "GOOO, IAD AND THE UGLY" AH Ctlor l"tmlty Enltr1tlnm..,U "l(RAKloTOA. EAST 01' JAVA" !G) plvl "CUSTEilt 01" THE WEST" Plvl Tht f"llH ·Alf lltM .r "" ,..,,.,., •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• sw imw1ar for i pring vacation DOORS OPEN 6:'5 DAil V 1114 ru.1u1r iATUROAV & SUNDAY AT 12:,5 P.M. Al Mwy Jt 011lr k• OH<• OP,.. )JQ l11n~1mtric11d e m11l1r ch1r91 l f11hion i1l1nd, ntwporl ct nlt • li.4•f.5070 ....... ~ ... ,•.JO, M. It• 6111 j • d I t • " .. • • ' n j • '· DICK TRACY I OICH'T WANT TO "SAV A.NYTMIWG TO Gst<>OVV ANO \..111., 5UT' TMEV'vE MIT T M! Fl RSTP.#i OIRiOF 'T'WIS CASE. If' GROOV'YI. COAT SL.Ee.~ Cllo.UC.MT 11-llS "TWtG• IN 'TM! PARK- ly Chester Gould .JUST WM!N DID T\.ll! F'lllt.RIC 90.ARD sr.RT 'Sn'TlNG OU,-PLASTIC ~e5 ? PLASTIC: TWIG lj·'L·,1 ·i::...~'l::l'::..- TUMILEWll&DS JUDGE PARKER 5ME WA.5 /t.. TM09E LAST !'A.VS &EFORE SWEET, r;.EMTI.E A.UWT Mi\ITHA. Pt.SoSEI' A.WA.V PE,SOW, •• ALL. SME CJIP WAS TALI( JOMNNY! I A.IOUT YOU, MISS ... aaEY ! HOPE 51-!E I CIOM'T'·THIN K ANV&oPY DIDN'T SUl=FEIC: LOVIP YOU A.NY MORE TOO MUCM A.T Tlol.A.M s~e Dlt:I ! Tl-IE END! ,,,,, ,. ~ . ........ ---..... .............. _ \ I TR:lEP lO 61VE MEil TM E WMV PIDN'T &E&T NU~ING CARE I COULD 'IOU GET 6ET •• A.ND l'li\ NOT ONE &1T IN 'TOUCl-I SORRY ~ TME MOW!V I Wini ME? !>PENT'. I ONLY REGRET TH-'T I PION'T MAYE MORE TO SPEWU ON MER ! By Tom K. Ryan WE:~"' MY JOCKf Y SHOKIS 15 A1'THE "AUN \IR'( By Al Smith ly Harold Le Doux SHE WAS A. VERY AS MER N!PME¥( t P'ROUP WOMAN! SME FilT IT W,.S MY WOULDM'r W.\Nf AHY· PUTY TO TAKE ONE TO KNOW SME CARE Of: Mill •• ~S PISTITUT'f! »IP, LIKE t 5.t.10 •• I 'M MA.PPY I DIO! 0 I I +-• I ~ !DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by •.• POWER I ACR OSS 1 Growl 5 Crib grnu s 9 Contt nd ed 14 Vtry t nthus1js\1t rf'YlfW 15 Symbol 1& Mont1tal's Forum 'g. 17St a of···· 8ay or t~r 8 18C~ St• ll Cao Footb•il's ---·-Co1P 19 By -···--- Oral ly 20 Ttr"'1nalt5 22 Sou11d t ondo t1on 23 TV rect1YtfS 24 Tf'Y~$ t ommtm1\y 25 Kind ol strmo'1 • 41 Tt lt scopt 4} "·--· lnlt rno" 44 Without com pany 45 Ma9 n1tudt 111 thr rr d1m t ns1ons 4b Tu•n on an a••s 49 Or1vt • of t tfla "' Qutdr uptds 53 Reprt· ~tnta 1i~' 54 A lt•J~dt• G -···-·- 55 R1~t1 cl Eurour b R'·" tS'.Jtt Sb Stal on (.,1 t~ a plan ~ 7 Ft llows '.17 Look a: Slan9 f1i1t~l1ously 8 Evtn on r 58 Drug sourtt q Kind of 5q Ha~111g co11a~r. frwer 2 words 1!!".pl1r1\1l'~ 10 Publ•c bO -···--a11d spt~ktr Mta11s I I Saucy 21 St\ down+~ ptrml!lt'1 1 bl Dure! to 12 Chrm1cal form a parl+tul1r s11Hlw )2 -··-·-\he po1nl 13 Mr. boy~; Carnr9or 2 wo1ds DOWN 21 E90 ll Put lhln9s 22 Fronts uocn 1n 1 hr an I Count. 111 24 W.11tr 34 Gr~•n sp1k r Ausl11.1 sourc<s 35 M1k t1~ or 2 Hlti t r or 25 Mulliludrs Mus11I Gorbbrls, 2b Co'll r 3& Pl ac r wl1f1t r 9 cut····-··· 4 2 71 31 Gannru! 33 Composure 3b Jrt 37 Crl!a1n sot1AI ~rt~11s 2 words 3'1 ~cl1tmfr 40 Frnt t p>Ckft 42 Snrf look 43 Joh11 Fos1rr ·••••• ·~ "Vr1y 90od1" 4& Ab radr wllh ~ 1011g 'I 11'1~\rumrnl 47 USSR stcrtt pCI ICt 48 DriJp ol s1l 1ne Y1~1rry !1~·~ 49 Great PERKINS 1•71. T!• ~"""' ._ • .z.. .. 4 Trii.. .. •1"4\nlo J /TJ,h,, MISS PEACH '~~t',S',S' <l)Ullf' ]Hd>one· 1111'i~ [.Da~s: . ·--·-- STEVE ROPER . I - a Ll'L ABNER 'f0115 IN TH' RIGHT SHAPE lOOO~E NO'W,DEAR- SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS -r~ AJY.,lo/'e~ IS NO!., l'OY, IN«THe OLO Olt>IS. HOUSBWIVE'S DIDNT HAVE OIJlt Pi<:Ofll.t:MS. volts arr 3 Sh3•~ 2 words t1ktn spr.Ht ~ 27 Rich 1n Prt!1~ 37 ~r~~11~n19 4 ~1~~r01 28 ~~1\~';es ;~ ~:~::rPort. I Lfrs SE SURE I HAVE THI~ 38 Small child ~1trr ln9 29 Cistributrd 52 Walt~ C. -··-: .STRM1HT, MISS -PLILASKI/ )' Layrrs 5 01 9rrat cards US sur 9r o11 J$= I A5Sl6t.i YOU TO A AND IF I CAH'T NAN""E IT JUST AS W£LL "5 NIY MALE "''LL GO °" TifE SALiS STAFF AND I/MR M!llTIOI< AGAlW THAT I WA' UNFAJALY 00\'h.l- 40 Mtd1c1•1e Si lt 30 6 i1d or pr ry ~4 8 anfl's d vrr MAlll'S JOB, 'l()tJ WH.l ,;._~1 -T.,-,.,-..,,-...,--,c,,-,;-, -,c1,-.,,,.,-,..,,..-,,,--,.,,-~~ CALL OFF THi Sl1 10 11 12 IJ .SIT•J Nf " Gll.'l>EO FROM JMMAGE5"/ By John Mile! 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IT IS OUR CONSTANT GOAL TO OFFER THE HIGHEST ,QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE BRAND NEW . 1971 3 DOOR RUNA BOUT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW 1971 /~ $ OR IF YOU PREFER OUff.EASY TERMS $65 TOT AL $65 TOTAL DO WN MONTH! Y PAYMENT PAYMENT 36 MONTHS BRAND NEW 1971 ''The Proven Compact'' FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DEUVEllY AT WILSON fORD ~ii lfM IOl<I! '"""" p<>y<Mf'll dflC/ ...... io II>• !.,;ol "'"'""''POV"''"' '""' "'"' '71 lk•Me o<>d oll finoftc;e c~•'ll" on ~ ued•t lar lfl mon)t>\. 0.1 • .,..i PY"''· pfoce ia St..05 itod, oll flnOnc• cloo1go-. lu1 ... '71 i;..,... OI ii 'f'1'U p<•fe • to ioay <.ci.i., follun~ !>fKP " S:I0~8 9~ ,.,. I '°'"'' .... &. (11 lic""\e. 11 Rl0WJ.'Ml3). w hilly 9quippfll Wflh lully ~ync:ronutd J ~ttd 1roQWNHIOl'I, ireilo oir htvttr & delrosltr, soltty oOj. bro~es with W0<ning hghl. POdded vi~s & Oosh,. seot btl,,, 170 C.LD. e1111ine. wrlJll or0<imd.bumpen. bock'-" t..,.ti1s. lot~ stterlflg column. Serio! No. (ll91U1809•3l. IMMEDIATE DEUVERY U. it che tflltl ..,._ .. ,....,, uid '61 it d"' rot.a -w, P•r-i.cllfll ... •u:. 7 I lit•11• ...i .u fiQll..llt• dlara• .. ~ cr..in r« :w; -Ill. o.. feued par-ot pric•itt 2jJ6 i•dlld.iq .ii r.,.,....,.,....,,n.1au .. 71lic•._· ,.. .. pq(w ui .,., tu.lo. drw IWJI ,_., Pt'in n '"1r t2 lj4.90 O.d1uli111Ml•1&11. 7 1 -ANNUAL Pl•CINTAGl RAT I 10.64% lie•..... AllUAlrllCUTAllUR 11.71% BRAND '71 MUSTANG 2DOOR NEW HARDTOP 1JS4Hl12413 --. '6·2 !~~~.~~.~~~ ...... ., ........ $24 8 1t11ri•1· (PMf-22t) '6 7 !~.~~-.~~.~t?.~ .. ~~~~~.~"""'" $5 88 (XfllV·770) '65 ~.~.~~·.!~'.~~.~Ji.~: .. ., ....... : $6 8 8 ' IP If~) '66 ~.~.~Y.:.!!~~,~~ ........... , ... , .. $78 8 (TSIJ.172) $178 8 NEW '71 F-100 Pickup .. BRAND NEW '71 FORD F-250 TRUCK BRAND NEW & 8' ELDORADO ~!~p~~eR $~~,.--,,~~·~;.~ ,,,.~ l""ff•<i '"'lh ~··R •U• ~Id ,\~I • ......,.d btod, 3 llt,orner tq• wolh hood. lorge itebe•, s!antu 11H ( 1.nk, ler91 "°'"' w111l plenty ti t"""1 spoxt, lliv-1~1, ..oool ..... i111rior laJltNlly dtul- reled. t ICS«.7) IMM DIATI DIL YERY ' . ' . ., . SPECIA'L CA~PER lfNANCING • 60 Mont~ Fliancing Plan Available On Truck & Camper Units. NEW '7~, E oo iwLi~e '.'v,~.n : ,, '70 !2~~~!.~~~~.,.. ..... $1988 ''68 ~?.~~ ~.~ '""· ...... , ... ...... $148 .,., .. , .. -11 .. (illllf) 125234() '69 ,!,;!!~~.~~K~~~Pow .. IH0.$2··a· 88 Wl•••w• • •••r ltckt, AM0 fM Sttrtt, ,,.., .. CHtrel. (ll12t17JI '6 7 VW Deluxe Wgn. $1· · 1,.,...,.,. eU er~leel tltnfft (TMT-lll) -. . . '"11' 4. c •• ,,, 4 .,,,., r1•11, keeler, l•tr• llice. (WPMtl5) '68 ~.~-~!e~~!!~,.,,,,,.,_ $1 0 '7 0 !~!!~.~!.~~~, ..... M) .... f;: ;-;- • I ) •A OJ.IL V PILOT I"""" • Fr1d1r, Aprll 2, ltn • "-~--=LEG:::.:cAL.:.~NO,n_cs~~-1;~;;;;LEG-..~AL;;;;-N~OTl'f~CEi'7.;;;;;;;;l_~_::_LEG::AL::.'.HOl1::::CE::_~-l·~~LEG'--;AL;:;;i;NO;n~CE~~l-~~LEG~AL--=NOTJ..:..:.~CE~~-l-~-LEG=-=~AL::;_N~OTl~CE~~•-~-uro~-AL~NOT~ICE~~-1~~L_E_'G .. ALNOTJC_E~~ T-tUll ~ • Ml-. 11 IUd I"~ ,_.111M •Alt '1n , M I~ IAlll"'ii11- IUP•••OI c.~•T Of' TM• 4TrHI. l'-lalft V1!l1Y, C.UMl'l\lt, ......... ,,..,. ICl•T•l"IC&TW ., ............. IUl'••1ott (OlllT ... T)ll l"ICTITIOUI IUllNlll """""' fllOTICI TO ca101to•11 -, ~Tl CW CALll"0•1111o l'OI: l'N 1~ firm -"' JOHNS c:lllflf11GATI 01" IUllllllU PICTITIOUI 111.ud ITAT• 01" (41.1,0lNIA lllOll NAMI 1TAftMllO" ClllTll'ICATll Of' IUSOllllS $Uf'IJl101t COUltT 01' THI I CCMINT"I' OI' OhMll S"IUNICLlflS ~ IMI ulll """ lt lllK:TITIOUf NA.Ml T"9 ..,......l1tl'oM ... (MtJry h1 trt THI COllMT'I' OfJ .... 11101 1lit 101'°"1119 per.., .. o.1nt bo.111-l'ICYIYIOUS MA.Ml STATI O' ~LIN>ll/lllA l'Olt • Ne, A_..1,, ,___ fl !hi 11111-1.fte """"' ..,_.. Tl'w ~tlfnM ... (ffllt\' lilt It ~ t llol~ it f'.0 ... 110.11 M, ~ ti: The -tttlf(ltd do (trtffy lfley t rt Tt41 COUNTY 0111 OllA/1101 .,OTICr Of< MIAlllMO Of' l'ITITIOM ... ,,.. Ill ~ ... pit(• ., ... JofllKt WN!lvc:tfllt I ... lnffl ., "' Mc:llHIM $Miii ,.,.., Ctllf, ,,,.. ~ "" lie: lfflTICI OP NLUllNO °" Hl'ITIOtl HYDE f'AltK UPHOlSTflltY, IU ~lltlt • tutll\MI ,, '"" lrvJN ""' A..UU 1'01 AUTHOltlTY TO IOllllOW It t~loror\oftc(t. l6l2I ' -· II llllKI, N_. 14edl, Ct!ltotnlt, V'ldiw tltlou1 fl"" ,.._ If KIUTN COAJT lll'Olt l'ltOIATI II" WILl A.1110 l'Otl W, 11'111 St .. C•lt MQe, C1llfottll1. Ave .• N--1 llttell (11""""11, u..S.t l a-TATE OF HINJIY WINTMltOI' VAL-., MOMIY AMO TO IJllCllTI 0110 ...... 111 .... flctll,.,,. """ flt,.,. " lllYlt.AMID lllAK ... ~I .... ""n 11 ~"' Lin••• TllTAMlirtAltY n.v tt>e llctl!IM Ihm Mme of SlllAltl(LI! ENTIN!, ALSO KNOWM AS Hl!NllY • o,Jt.. T•UlT 'llCUlltNO l'ltOMtSi.ollY F0-t.lll v!,,...-,,,.c,,',~1tonlr.. IXCHA"°°ltl Mil ltlll wit flt"' 11 If .... ~119wlM ...,..,.. ..-. lltlNI lillt. ot C~ I WHtTl'OllO lttcet C-MU!, 111111 low1 Siu PLENTY Ind 11'111 wll! llrm It ~ W. VAlENTINE, A.LIO ICHOWH AS ·itt' ll'tO ......,..., · ~If tlW ftOtwlM "'""' ...... tr> NII Mid .ilGI If ,111Mnct trl °'"'!'"' ' ' C•lt Nlt14...C1Ufornl1. nm Of IFMI foltn lno Plf"ION, wtloH "'"'" HIHIY VALl!HTIHf, OICl!A.!EO. • l!lllM " Ll!ILIE 11.0llllT 11,111(1, It .. ., J~lot~~~. c ty• ~ Jn fl.Ill """' •ltC. of •• ...._ II ..i•-: HO 1cli ,. Hlltll'I' OIVl!H -I TJll• lblltlllftt •• lltlM colldVC:lld "~ In tv!I •Oii .. i.~ ol •••lo."'' ••• NOflCf II HElll!IY GIVEN to !tie ' t kl L. llOllEllt llUlll(S, alt1 110 .l!llT 1 1I ' l 1lntt °"" . II II i.ilo"n: LY"'IMI A. lw 11,, Yw-.., A ..... , (Lll'POllO M, WMIT,0110 Fiii !lll'tf llfl IMllYlfl.llll II follow): tf'9dll'Ot1 f1I "'-illoYe MfMG dfclodtnl I Ulll(l , Dlc11wd ... :. .... ~:;.:; in :no· "''°'' -, • N11'CY J1 Ctnullol, 1'1' Ctnkt l"t.. (Mii ...,...., c .. 111,. '""· lfi1111Mtll Mf'flll • ,..il!IM !tr ,,...,, ol WIU II. """"llOQI Torn 1¥~1 J•.. '"° in'lnt A"" ' '"'' 111 pettom h••l"t cl•lm• 191!n1I trtOTICE IS Hfltl!IY GIVIN "'-t "'""'II¥ .!.,.,IOI J.,,,11"Qr!:t~ k·~ C ..... -.. "'',', ","",,,11. J. L•, J12' Y\llMfl /.YI., CMll Mitt, tnf fw IH"4111U If Ll!l«t TMttlnlMl•Y .. 111~\Woil>L >I ........ "OCIH•,,.,t 01lty P11et, ~1-rl .... ~. (1111. IM M id df<ldfnl I" tMUl•ld lo fl it; ~nn D¥t. •• ......lnhlrllrlJI "' .,,. to lit "" M•Ml'1 -"'" Mfllt ..... r • Ct llf. ,,.,. ,, llltllllorltr rl11rl'Mt .. Whldl It .... , ~.. ' W-71 Jltn McVltlt1<, 1110 1•111 11., HtwPOrf ll'ltn\, ...,,. IFMI f'«IHIN YOU<:llltt. Ill _., 1111 111111 If lhl .__Id 4«•• 1s •ubKrlMll 11 ti.. wllf\ln lntlt"""'" Sttl9 ol ~t~ J,1 ''J'* Cwnt,.. Dtltd #Nrdl l' Im "'"" 11t f\lrttltr ltrlJMttt. '"" 11111 11•:1~' ~~~;... niJ I!. ll•IOOI :,~1:''!.,:',', !.-""ie t~~.:. 1~"!...~1~~ · !~ t.ci~ :~i::...1~,::111~ .,:::~:., 'fo rgit~~::L1W:.i,.,. •xlOJttd"" -· °" Ml:C,, "j,~· 1t~1;''_,,,. ·-. • ~r17~:·J7·~.. :'m.'~, = :i"i;."~1~•r11~ 1,~ LEGAL NO'l1CE a1111o1, c1m. &lvd., ""' neu1ttrv V'OllCh•••· 10 ~ u ... ,uffl• 1 nolt '"° -., 1rv11 w.i:url11t M•rv ""' Mortoii Nettry 1~1c In •Ml tor ttld •t•tt· 11111 or Ctlllor111 .. Of•,.. Cwnty: 11 1:io t.m., If! 11\t u.urtrOM1 oi J::;:,~':,:~M~~lck•r <Hrtltllld 11 1111 ott1c1oi11111r •ttomtn: • rJl n1, Lat A-ltt counlv, l'rlnc:llt t OIUte In know~ It "" Iv llt 11>1 H rttll wl\OM Not1N Pullllt 111 Ind Ill' 11ld llllt. 100 Clwlt (tlll ... l)rllot Wt", In fhl Cllltll'ICATI 0111 tUSINISI l(lrk S. l!ivtnt Ct..,IUI 0•1.,., H..-Hrl llttc.11, Cttllarnlt -~!I UllOfl ttl l .,.._,,, t!l11t!H "'-lll"I' ,.Vl:lllt.Cl lll6fllil HfMfll t-•M H111cv J. Cttwllf Oft Mtrd'I 2t. lfn, 11119" IN, I 0..ttlmtlll Mo.. a 9f ttld Qlllfl, t i 1""""'7t Jl~rt11n, HowHr I nd Otrltr.d, 4J.e CM , •tftrlf'Ct to WllJch la ll\IClt OttllM Count¥ ntml 11 tublc•lbtcl te tilt wllhln In· jltf-11¥ IPHtfN Lflllln A. l• 1..-Cllf al ltnlt Allt, Ctll,.,lllt. l'ICTITIOUS HAMI STATE Of CALIFO,Nl,f, fllu.), which It ,,.,. pl1u ot ~utlnt•I .w Plf,1!1 ... Hrll~ulttl, •Nd 11111 "" MV Col'l\nllHlorl faJ1lr11 :!...."""'"'' .... ICll.-IMl•IOI Ult lltellflll lll11h11'1 J, =kllf"ll'!I It ..... It OllH Ml•dl "· 1t11. TM u!!Oertl911td "° ur11;., t~~ .,.. OllANGf' COUNTY; gf !Fii UllOtfl11rt9d In •II mtltlrt ..... ""'·•-r pl1¢1 ot ~·••lllt "" ,...,t AMII t. lf71 M,.. ·-· .... ,.,_ -· ••t lllllic•I• w, I , IT JONH, ~Int • l>lr:tl,,.H ,, JIUI , ... r °" Mlrdl 11, nn. btlo•• m• •• t1lfllflll IO tt>e .,, ... el Mid dtetcltnl, htt bfffl w t tor Atrl! f, 1,11, ,1 l'vbllol\M Ort-COPI O.llY .:l!'"n' COl'f'ICtAL SIALI ICI i. 1111 lll.l/lllptll'\llflttlt iM COu~y Cltrt LIM, HunllMloll ltlc.ll, Ctllfol'nlt , UNll' N•l1rY P1111llc In Ind tor u.KI Sl1lt, wl!Mn '""" 1n1111!~1 1h ... 1111 ltnl 11'1/bll-"-Mt" .. tll ~ llOI H fltn' k 'otW 1111 fill . flelll!M firm Mmt of Ml!TlllL ... rtot\llly tl)Jl•trlod Tom IEY1n1 Jr~ utkif> ot 11'111 M!ICt. '. • t .JO t.tn~ I" 11'11 _,,tr..om If .,..pt•I· Mt•Ch U, U, 2'. ...,,u t. ltn NM lllutllc-C !1"1tll 'A~-' .. Ul'lll. MIOWIH, lllM a IYlVIA IHTllll'l!.ISll 1114 lhtl t•ld firm 11 JI"' MCVldi:tr t lld l(lrk Evt"' 1mC-W11 D.atM Mir~ t, 1111 ._.,. > •, u• -, ' ,.~' ,\"', 111r1!.'i..1 Otrln :11 • I llJc,",~J::Ls' •••••••• "'• '"',~-"•'-,... ftn'IMHd 1111 11111o11ow1,,. p1r11nt , w"-II m• lo lit !ht PtrHtlt WhOH t1tll'1n Vlr11n11 Ill. V11111!lr>1 t nd ~tf. •:,:, ~:n~!,,.~~11• n ,,.. I' LEGAL NOTJCE Ot•"ft c"""" H••N l"ulillc..,.. ,..... T~':'~iio'~'iHit1 ,_....,., 111 tull elld 11-ot r1MdH1Ct ,,.. tublctlllt<I 10 ,,.,. wl11'11n lntltumttn• Stcvrlty l't(lllc N111-1 111n~ -g;, Mlrdl n 1'11 Ml' C.lllhllon llilll,... i' ... "c.u ... 1111 All-1'1 ..... l"tttti.-.... .,.. •• f(illfwll •Ml ICillooWlld11d ,,.,.y ••tCUllOI ,,.,. 91: Gtw"t• L.. HolloM ll ' -""'" ' 1'71 '~· ...... ' •••• ~... Mturlc• e. Tr ... , "'''' 1 .. , ~ ··-· Co-lhKUIOl'I W. E. St JOHN, > .,,,_ , • ..,, ••• ,, Do•• t roe n l'vll!ltllM Ortntt Ctef'I "1 ""'I fi. ~"" Clff1' MOtlCI Cl IMTIMtlOll TO ....... _ .... -•not, Or• C-IY A.#11 L ~ ' ltn s., l!...clld, St.nit All .. Ctlltornlt (...,,(Il l lit•ll "' '"' Wiii 9f "'' VAH IUllN •JllCUTI AOllllMIHT Mtrcfl II, It, M, ""'111, 1tn .... n *' c-fqlon l•llllr• ... ' 1»·11 Jull JI L_, tlUI cu11r L1111, Jo AnM M1M '"°"' "'""" dt(~nl • "A-• NOTICE IS Hl!ltl•Y OIVl!ll 1" ... Ml'/' H. ltn Hi.11>1111111tn ••Kii· Ctlt'8tr>ll tK.66 HO!IN Pvt>llt. Ctlllot11l1 101flT10N, 11owse:11 AND OAllLAllO ,,,..._ c111fvll1 tnu c,..,110,. ., c..,.. o . flln , °"''°'· LEGAL NOTICE 111111111.,... °'°'""' c..11 01111 ~It! LEGAL NonCt 0t11011""'""11. it11 111r1nc1p11 OHtc1 In UM C•"'"' or1 .... Tlf,: lQJJ .... ,.. -.. tut""*'' tdd,_ II JOi t H.._,, Mtrdl )I, AMII J, t, 1f, 1'71 "1·'1 M111rltt E!. Tri,. Or1n1e CO..nly MtWIWI htc.11. CtH'-1• '1"l "11tniiity hr: P•lll-CllY ,,. Cttlt Ml•• c "' " 0<11111 11141• p Jllll Juli JI l .... , Nl"f Ccwnmlu kHI f.afllrt• Ttl: )llt..I .. ~l•lled 0t1ntt Cat•t 0tll1 Pllflt. s1111 f1' C.1llt1tni., ,.;., :":'.curJty l11l1<t.i ClltTlllCATI 0111' IUJIMltt. LEGAL NOJ'JCE l'tCTITIOUS IUllNlll ~~'A',,.'0~"c%~'i.'~.•N rA. Put>lllh.., M'ti,1 1:..,1'1ta111 Otlb' 11111or A=,:..,,... 0r~-:~•K-:w!::' O.llr Piiot, "'1dl ~·· APl'il I, 1'11 '""" ~O~Ti:tN~t= ... " .:~ ooizlt c<>J\i """ .. ...:::1!~04,f.!:":":,llT hi " Tiii 1e1t!!:'J,'!!.'11tM:::!. blnlnu• Oii MJitilll 17. "1r11. llel!lrt ""· • Mtrdl lt. H. I J\CI Ai>tU 2, ,, 1t71 '415-n Mira. IL t•. 26, April 2, lt1l J.4+11 "" 'EGA' NOTICE Corn1>111Y -U.14 • DIYlllon ot Gull ctMl,ocll"t • lutlMH ti -.. MtnM ~ 11: Htlirv l'ullll( I~ IN for Mio ~lit. i.. i.. cl•Trl"ICATI O' IWIHllS MAlt tNE 11.00NI. ,u Oct111 AYlllW, "MllNllll' 10""'"' M.lurl~• I Tri., LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ---------------·}OH W-1tlon, tt.I "'°1•14 Pll1f, ""'-Yllf1, Collt Mff1, Ct ll..,fllt, unMf" f'JCTITIOVI MAMI Ltiune IMdl, Ci llfotnlll. tM Judi Je L-... kMWft to IN''·----------~7~~~~--,:C::C:C.::C_:__:_ _____ _ ..,llnff.I tdelfflt la 11101 A.,._ ti !flt ltttlll-ltr"' -· ol NIW $YSTIM T1'lt ufldtft)tllH .,., ~1ltr 111 It WIJltr J. flt•-·11, ''·• .. '"'' to Ill rr,. .,.._. wl'IOtl .,....,., ,,,I OO ' N • ~U,111011. 'c~~':, 01' THI "" "''" Cltr " Lot AMII-. Cwlltll &UILOlHG ANO lll'OOL MAINTENAH(I ctNlldlM t Wtlf!WH .i ,.., • Wflt ltlHf, lltllfll .;;c;, C•llltrllle, tuMcrlbH le "" wltllln lnotru ... •M Ind AN OIDIHAHCI IST:.~~.H~::~· ~::"""' FACIE s•t:ICI 1 'STAT! OI' CALlr'Ol!.NIA l'Oll °',, .:_DI ~It.~ .. ,•;·~· ~~ .. ~',1~.111,.,'' :: ~ .. I 1!!'°-·~·~ ~.~!"''!°~ ::: 1tth, Ctlfl Miit (11!'°""1, unflr flll TM, llonl11tt1 It 1111111 unfuct..i 11'11' ldl-lldftd "'er tliKllfH IN flmt. LIMIT ON A Cll!.TAIM POll.TION 01' llOYCI 11.0AO IN -" ..... "'" ....,,w ,., '"" .... ~~ ..,...... ·-·~ llclllltul 11,.,, "'"" ol LEA.THEii o• , •• ,,,.,,, (Ottltltl ""' c.&tl& COUNTY OF OIAHGI to buolMH Mld•n•. 11111 Ind ti.at el rnlde<'><t 11 ti followt: GYPSY Ind lhtl tlld llfln Ii tilnlll'<lff'd " , .. .;:11,, ', ,, __ •o, ''· Jein l. Jobs! THIE COUNTY 01' OllANGli, CALll'OllNIA Ht. j1"'9W Slid ..,_riv 11 -liel'lbld 11 t wM!fn-Otv!d W1mpllr. 1~ Ottnt• A~ .• ef !ht IOllOwtno ••-whost nim• 4 ~,.-4 H ' l'V p bll C Ill lo Tht llolld Of Suptf'<!IOrt OI !flt C-!f Of Or~I, Cllllomlt, dO onltln •• HbT•CI 0" HIAll.tHG o" l'liTITION 11•1 Hrllon et Ill• f<IUlpmenr, klOl1, Sulit "IE", COlll Mn1. (1111. '" ,,,, , •••••• ," •• -.·,·,,"·--,, •• Publllf\HI or.,... CMll Dilly PllOI, a . u '. I orn lo!lows: ~.i,,!•OllATI 0, WILL ANO 1'011 1n ... nfofY, tllOll effkt h ... nllure, HOttlltr Oiied Mttcll 25, "11 fol"'"' ,.. ..,. '" _,,._w Mitch 12, tt, 7l. ,_,rll 2, lt7\ 1'1·11 ~~~~=·t~~· In Sl!CTIOH I. O!o !Ill bttll ol tn e-nqlneerlng IJ\CI lrlfllc: wr.,.y ,,,..,, pUtou•ftl ~'l"f·••' TllT .. MINTjlll.Y wilt\ t!I •wl•c-11111. 110111-Of Dt¥1' W1m11er • ' ·-· '"' v -""-k L MY C""'mlu lt" E~•I••• IO Stc!lon• nm I nd 12151 OI !ht V~icle Cod~ ol mt St•t• gt C1l1k!tn!1, II l• 't:s!tTi ol CHAllLES SLECHTA . iublll!ullont ....,Ito of 11'111 cer11!n Siii• of C1llfWn!1, Or-Coun1Y: S .:: ,;Hf ' 1""'' e, tlUft t LEGAL NOTICE M•rch 2, lt7J htrtbf dt lttmln.., Ind OKll•ed 1h•• tn1 111'1'"' ltcll ~ed llmq Ul>Oll !hit PortlOt! 0...1~ ltNlllnt ,.,..ltt •'•llOl'I bu1l11111 •nown On M•rdl ,J. 1•11, bt!"11 ,,.. 1 o:ito1'Mtfdi 17 ltn ,.ubllt.htd OrtM• (aitf Dilly P!IOI ol llO'fCI Rotd, hertlntl"r HI klr!h, l«l led In the unl"'ll"PO••tld lrtl of lh• "N"QllCE IS HERflY GIVl!:H "''' 11 Dllllt'I Gull Strvlcl , 11111 loct ttd HO!t•V l'ubllc 111 1MI ""' 111f $1911, Dtll "~II• Mlrch It, 1f I nd A.fr!l l, I, 1911 •lt-Jl County OI Or111111, 11 nt~bllsht>d Ii here"1thtr l"°letttO, which IPt«l llmll It AllONft "IKl!ll tnd JootPh Sltdllt hive ii: Pl"Ol'llllY 1.-1rtcl 0.vld W1mtlot STATE OI' CA.LIFO.NIA. OIPAltTMIMT Oii l'\l&LIC: ... ICS tour.cl mo.I lpprOOtlllt IO toclllt1t1 ti. ordtrly mo ... m•nT of tr1lflt !htreon 11141 I llCI her In 1 P1ll!I011 lor problt. 1011 Htwparl, Cot11 M111, Counh' kMwn I<> ,,.. It bt lft' "'"" Wl'>t't OJIAHGl COUNTY· Dl'llllDM o .. MIOMWAYS LEG" NOTICE 11 ru1on1ot.t tnd 11!1. nd tor lu u1n(t cl Lttt•rt cl Orenff. S!llt o1 C1lltornl1. "'mt II 1u4Mc,lbltl t. 1111 wlthlll llflo On Mtrdl II ·1,,, llelort "" 1 HOfl(I Tit COHTltACTOfll '"' SECTION 2. Stcll"" 61.0ll.14 11 herrily odllld 10 111t Codlfltd Ordln1"'n ot t tV Iv The oe1nlontr rtltrtn(t An t •tcu!td ftCutllY lltHmen! will 1ttum111t 1M t(.kJIOWllOI ... Ill 1•K11ltd Noll" 111111111, 1~ 1,.,,l 16, ttTd siilt, Sttlld ,.r-.11 wllt lit r«tl'o'ld 11.1·---------------' Tiii Coun1y ol Ortrtgl 10 fflld 11 lollow1: .a m1d1 lot !ur!hor p1rtlcu•&fl·"' otllvtrto 1ny time 1llt• !O 'CIC 1.m. l!lt 11m1. H'IOfltU• 16Petrld D•n FowUe \:-1' tllt offl(f ol "'e lllll Hl..,wtv •n•I,,..,., C1u tie. 1'-.0117 · Slit. 6•0l!.UI. RDl'(t RC>.11<1, hit llrnt Incl 1>11<1 ol ~tr.ng on !ht 11th 01y ol A1>tll, 1911, ti COFFIClol.L SEAL) to "" lo Ill l!lt ll'lllll wl>l>t1 ntl'!'ll II_,, .a.I, Cl"fllltn d H1tl\WtYI &ullOlnt, ..... J1tl Royc1 Rold be1WMn Mlcht llOn C•lve ind Ytlt AVtnYt. lhl prime h11 ~n t1! tor "'"'II I!, I.CH ol.venu~ ol tht Sit"• RCJOl'I\ 1\q , MAllY I{. HENllY I• tubl(rlllt4 lo lhe Within Jnitrumlftl UO 1111111'1 lpr!11t Slr1tl, Let Alltllu, ClltTll'ICATI Of' &UllMISS, 11(11 IP-.d llmll II lhlr!Y·ll•t IJ3l mil~ Pl' l>DY•. 'IJ;JO t .m, !n Int CO<Jtlt(llm lo !ht Clt'o' o! Los An .. IU, C...,nty NoltN P.,,bllt -Ct lllotnft Inf I Ckl'IO' .. ltclgtd Ill txt<Ultd 11'11 ttmt. Clllftrnlt , ""'Ill 2 o'ctKll. '·"'· on Atrll l'ICTITIOUI NjlMf SECTION !. Tht Fl11td CommltslOl\I!° ol tn1 U lll Coun1y or Orang• oh1il tttel ent No. l of Wld c1111rl. of Lot A"''"''· Sl1tt ot C1lllornl1. Pr!nch>tl OtllCt In COl!lcltl Sffl) 1, 1111, 11 Whlcll !Im• lllrr will lit T,.,. ur.d•Hl;nod dot• cortlll' iht It t1>P<ot>tl1t1 •IQnt °" !ht •bCvf.<le.orll>e<:I por!lan ot 1<oyc1 Road In c""lorml!y ti I lvk Ctnlt r DrlYt Wtfl, In So fir tt known lo 1111 SK.UrN C•1ng1 C!KmlY MIN 8tth Morion PtJllUclY -!ltd llW f'llCI In ltOMI I COtoOuellng 1 ilu•IMU 1t 1:1611 RowtlJ\CI htrl'IO lni:I with Stcllon 12»1 ol !hi Vet.fell Code flt lne St&le Of Calllornla. 1111.'(ll#v fl !1n11 An•. C1lllornl1. 1111r1r, 1W butlMn Nm11 •Ml MldrfuH MJ CemmlulOll lix•lm NoltN l>ubt!( • Ci lllorn!t of ••Id bullolnt, 10, tono!ruc:tlon Oii O.lvt, Tut!ln, Ctlllo•nli, u,.,.,e, !Fii lie· SECTION•· Thlt Ordln1nte ~h•ll ltkt ti!~! •114 be !n full IC•CI 1nlf'!y (:IOI Otlfl! Minh 1~. lfn . uwd bv t>Plot 1.,.. IN 11\fff y11rt Nev. 21, 1trt PtlO'l(lotl Ol!ltt In s11r1 h!lllwt'I' In •ttordil!C>I with "'9 111111111 firm ntm• o1 JOOYCO lllO lhtl d•yi lr<>m lf'llf •!!er 111 111ue;e, •r.d be_!Ort tht explre!ion ol Ull Hn Pl) d•y• Vt, f . SI JOHN, lttl 1111. II dllltrenl from f111 1tiw•, Publl1ntc1 Or•ntl Ceut O.lh" P!tol O••nt• Counl't' ooeciri.;11...,. !MrtlM 10 ~Id! IPl(.ltl ttld firm lo COITl!)<ntd of 1~0 •etl;wlnt •lie• '"' 111neg1 tntir901 iholl bt P<Jbh1ntc1 onct In t~t Or•ngt Co.Ill! Dlllf --CGintr C!lfk •••: unlu>own Mtrch H, A,,.it 2, t, ,,, un l>Q-71 My CO...mlulon l!•Plrtt r11ttWW:I i. mtOt, 11'lollttrl: Plrtorl ~ im 1 fvll nd Pl tt Piiot, I n1~poptr publt1htd In !ht Coun!y ol Or1nge, Slitt or Ct lllcrnle, 10- WILLIAMIMALPl!llM Ot1td: Mtrd! 20, 1111 At•lt ,, lt1l 0,,_ COUlll'f, In IM !Ifft Cotti If rtok:ttnu II 1~ tol'iow~: 1 1 Gt!htr with lhl 11amn ol lht mtmb9n. Of Int Soard OI SUptrVlsOrt voll119 tor 1Mtt W*fllrt srw~ 1>11111 n1 51!CUl!.EO PAltTY: LEOAL NOTICE lllutnllltlll 0.11111 '°''' 0111'1' Pllol Mtw, llffw .. 11 1.0 "'Jin -.111 tlld llot1ltt S•ll•n -1:1111 Ao.11llnd •M '11'1"'1 1111 """· Us AM4ft. C1llflrtol1 MM GULF OIL COllPOllA.TlON MtNfl lt, M, AIH'M 7, t, 1'71 -.n 0.1-mllt norlt\ of 11tltlol llrlll•Pt11Ulltt Drive, T111Un, C1tlto•nl1 ll W. BATTIN Tt11,uu1 •n·Hll 11MfU BT It. H. ci.1-111 , ... :r. II.Old (W.(tr1.j!-J.'1IU.I), tr-y lo Ott..r M1td! 26, !tit Ou11rman or th• l§l)tf11 of SuprnillOfl Atlfor""° IW: l'tlllltlltrs Mt n•tt•. c • ..,u ClllTll'ICATI ,. &USjNISI Lg(iAL NOTICE lit tenirructto1 bv ••Mint tlld Hrlnt Ra1e1H Sttl t n {SE,.LI ol O•t11111 CO!Jnty, Ct llltmll 1"(,1>11Vtta 0 ••-c ... 11 DttlY Pllot. GULF OIL COM,.AHY -VS. f'ICT!fl0Uot NAM with ~tl'l.cl (llll.lfll COl\tftlt 6\ltt Stilt of C1llflfnl1, Ort nlM' CovnlY: ATTESTt Aitllfc .. .M,. J1, April t. ltll ..0.11 A. DIVISION 01" GULF OIL Tn~ ""°"•lonltll dtn ctrtlfr Ult II ,..4ff11 tt ...... I lfttllod NH, tlld I llr161M On Mlrch 2L lt1t, 1>1tor1 me, I W E ST JOHN CORPOIATION c-ucllnt 1 ltu1l11tu 11 "J/17/t M1r1,,., Cl'llTl,l(A'ff O, IUSIMlll ,. M cttulrvctecl. Hoftf"f l'ubltc In I nd lot ••Kl Siii•, Countv Cl"-tnd e•...tt!cicl Clerk '11.EGAL NOTICE Outl 011 C-Hll\' ·U.S. 8•1bct hlt rod. Ct lllPtnli . \llllllt till flt· l'ICT1TIOUS Ml.Ml! &Ida lrt rMUlrtd fW 11'11 lllllft "1_..ll"f t-trltll 11.ott ln Still" kl'IOWn cl 1n1 Bo.ta of ~ypervltOfi OI lMI A...,,111 fl '*'' Slt n. 111111111 n .... n•m• of "SCOll.1'10 llY 'fht undersltntcl "°" ctrtlh' lhtY ''' -• 01'1Cr!'411 htrtlft. to mt lo lit "'-Pt<IOn ,..,,.,., nimt Or1no1 C1111nty. C11,1ornlt ··-cillTll'ICATI 0, IUSINllS Let Allltltt, C•llftrilll 9'N1 T11E SEA" 1no 11\tl 11i, !!rm h .,.,... cllllllucl!M 1 llutlMll ti un Pltctnllt Plan1, t.111Clllo:1llfln1, IM ,,_I I It lUllKTllltd le 1111 w!lllln ln1tTum1nl 8y M•C.I L Cllltbi; Anlflttlfl: #Ir. I . H. Clll-Post0 of 1,,,_ "lltwlM M'I"", ~ A.wl., COiii Mita, Ctllltrnlt , undtt 111t fwmo fol' blOdl"' f!IT1 troCld Ctll IOIV Ind tdlllOWIMllCI """ f~KYt..r 1111 11m1. Dtlllltf l'ullU ...... Or111M C011! 01lly Piiot n1m1 tn lull 11\d •lt ct ff '""'~' tlclltllUt 11"'1 ..,..,,. ot AllTJIAN'S lllf 6111tlntd ti IFMI efllu If IM St1l1 !Ofll'ICIAL SEAll ~lATE OF CALIFORNIA l 11 A,ptll l , "" nl·lt II •• lollow1: HOl/11! Inf 11111 ••kl fir"' .. ,_..., HllllMr ltllll-. lllUllic W•l'l• l wtl!llnt, l!lolH J. H•I•• J fl. ' l'ICTITIDUS NAMI ,,., 1flld•r1l1.... """' (lrll!Y ht •".; '" . Who Reads the Stars 30RG ~ J 'I ' I l ,, I• ., For the Stars? ·- • J' • "• ' It's Sydney Omarr ... ' 11 And now th is c!lrticul.!te wri ter who hes _, - been celled the ''estrologer's estroloqer" reods the sters for you . Sydney Omerr, longtime personol a strolog~r to meny of Hollywood" ond the l;toroiy world's most fem ous sters, is n DAILY PI LOT column;st. Omerr's recor d for ecc urec y of predictions based on astrological e"elysi1 is amaz ing. Whetlier you read tt strological forer ti sts for -fun or es e serious stud ent of ster-gerzlng, you'll enioy Syd ney Omorr's doily column in the DAILY PILOT • S1,..,r1 Ltt WIHtrt. ., '•rnl••I, et !flt tel ..... f"' M...-, wt..11 -S.u......,to. Ctll..,l'llt . trod 11'1•1' M Notttl' Putlllc·C1lltornlt COU NTY OF OllANGI!' J Coron• dtl """'· C11ll, lfl tvM Incl PIK•I ol ltlldHKt .... Ifft. •' Ille olflce. .,. ,... 51t lt HIM'IW°lf f'•l•lclPl l Olfkt Ill I, w. E. ST JOHN, Cou~t~ Cttf'll: •lld ex-otllclo Clfrt' of 11'1f &M,d °' S<Jptr-DlllCI M.lrch 10. 1t1l •I lollowt: l"ll-ti l1tr11r11n111, Ind 1111 Dltlrld Ctuntr of Ort"" vl•Ol"f, OCI hereby cll'llf\' 1n11 11 1 /'l'gUll• meellt11 or 1ne Board cl Su1>trvlM1rl 5.tl'Cltt L" Wtlt.rs 11...,,utldo Pooltl, 3110 So. Mtln $1., l!Mlnttrt •I Los An1tln , Ifft Prlol'ltlteo, Mf CommlHl"" fJ.Pltll or Or11191 Cwnty, Ct lltorni., held en !ht ?lrO ll•Y llf March, 1t11, 1111 tor1gclnf $Tj1TE OF CALI FOltNIA, ~ftfl Mt, Cillhotnl•. •ni:I lhl dltlllcl In W'hldl Ille WOllt Aut. U, lt1l O•.cllr11nct cclnt1lnl1111 !cur (11 tec!IOlll, Wll <Otlfldttt<I 1ttll0n by 11c!IO!I, and 01!.ANGE COUNTY: Nltk A. Goclow, llt ~. OtOln Or., It lllulllO. r,oPtALO M, lllklHNl'lt, Alltrr1,r !ftM lht 1111! Ordlnlntl Wt• Th•n P15Stcl ''°"' 6CI0!11tcl 1• I w~cle bY Mt falloWllllll 0.. Mlrch 10, 1'71, IMMl1 -· • L• A,...i.1, CllUor nlt . Tht Ototttment Ill l'u,llc Wwb, In I WMI Tnlrl $1. vot1· Nol•N l'Ulllk In ''°"' lor 1110 Sl1t1, Dtltd MllCll 11 lt71 ICt11td1nc• Wiii\ Tltl1 Vt 9f !flt Clwll t•111t AIOI, Ct!ll. '2111 AYES: SUPIERV!SDR5 RONALD W, CASPERS, WILLIAM J PHILLIPS. pet1<1nt llv toP•t•ICI S1ndt1 Ltt Welrtro Aemut!do POll!tl "'Ml AU <If 1"4 I~ Siii. UU tllcl Tt/1 171'1 SO~lll OAV!I) L, 9AKEI!., FlALPM 8. CLAlll!. .. ND k""""' ,, me It 1M ,,.,. "'"" ,..,, .. , H~k A. GHIY "" ll19u11lton1 of ""' 0.1t•l .... nl ... lllulll!tlltcl Or1nt1 Cotti OtllY lllllfll. II. w. eAnlH NIN lo lUblC'"'" 19 Ille Wl11'11" 111-51111 of (11\fornl1, Or•"ll COUlll\I ! CemmtrCI OJ C.f".11,. Pttl •l, loutcl A•rll !, t, 1', t), 1'11 7lJ•1l HOE$: SUPERVISORS HONE 1trum~I IN ltkl'IOWIMfeof the t!IKU!ef 0.. Mt•~ll 11, U71, btfort !tit, I -.. ... ul "I i. lllCh Ad, hllf°tllY lltllf111 ___ _:._.:__:::_:__:_ _____ _:::_:.;..,8!1EHTt SUPEllUl$011S HONE ""• 111111. Noll,., '"'lie 111 tllf IOI" 1114 lltlt, •JI bidder• th•I n win 1Hlnfl1t1 .... h" LEGAL NOTICE IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I ~•ve h•rtunlo 1tt my hand,,.,., 1fllllltll l~e oftlcl•I IOfflcltf S11!1 "11Clnt111 ••Ht•IO •ornu•ldo lllNltl lnwre f!ltl IN COll!ftel enlottMf fnlo 1111 ol 1n1 8a8•d at S11P1rvl.or1 of !ht County of Orang•, St1T1 of CtlllWnlt, Miry &t!h Morten •~d H~ A. -$. •-lt mt to •11rau1nl lo lhll 1d.,..rll1tm1nl wl11 ff !hi!. 2lrd 01y ot M1rch, Ull. No11N lllutlltt ~ Ctl!fW"I• lit 1111 ...,~ 1"""" 1111 111b1t•lll--•rdld It 11'11 lowtol rnPOfttlblt 111dd1r 111.1111.st lll•lntlf,.I Oftlit In ., f11 11\t fhlt1 lntll'lll'nllll 11\d wl~t dlKrlmlMllon 1!1 11'11 l'i!llM ClltTtltCATI' OF COl!.l'OIATION 1'011 Ottntt Ctt;nl"f i ckll9Wledtld lhtv lllttuhid' Ille tfml, Of fl~t, COior. er nttlontl .,..11ln. TllANIACTION 0, IUllNl:IJ Ut!Dlft MY C-!Hlllll l!J•INt (OPl'!CIAL SEAL) Purt~tnl to Stcl!on 1170 ti "" Ltbot f'ICTITIOUS NAMI APttl '· 1'71 M•N l!leth Mori"" Colli, 1111 OtPtrlmtnl 1111 tiC11'111,...., Tiie undtril•lltd torporilllll'I dotl lllullll•llH Ot11111 C11ll Otlll' lllllOI Ntltrv Pulllle.C1lffornl1 "'' H nt•ll Prtv1Ul111 fl!t ol W•tet httttil' ctrl!fv thtt II h co.,.,uctlno W E, 1T JOHN County Cl1r1< •fld u.oUlclo Cltrk Ill •he Soa•d of Super.l1crs Cl Or~ng• Counfy, Ctll!o1nt1 By M10el L. (Ulll• ..... Mira.. n, If, n, A•rll l, ,,II Ut•n 1'•1..C:IH! Oftlc1 I" 111 Ill• toullf\' In whlth 11'11 wart 11 , 1tu11t1n1 111 the Sl•M al Ct lllornli, !Sl!All Or1• Ctvnh' IO be .,_, ta t.. ti lhlld In 11'1t C61H!f"f of 0•11111. '" !ht Cl!v of S1n1t Put>t11ned Crlllljll Coast Cally PTlo!, April 2, 1'71 11'-lt My Com1t1lo1lon l!ulrtl OtNttm1nt If Public Workt, Dlwfll"' An1, 11 1l5t! f!11t 17\h $!reel, su1~1c::_.:_::__.:,CC::__.:,:::_.::,c.:,,~__:-::__.:::_,:c ____ ~-~~~-'-'--...,.,u t. nn " H11t1wt•• "'"11''11°" 1n1111tc1 faulp. 101, unoer '"' 11et1Hou1 11,m n•"" LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l'ullllfl'llld Or•M• Ca11l Otllw Pll1t. "''nl lltnltl llttei jlllcl G1ntt1I l'rwvtll· ~I lnleni:I ln¥otlmtnl Strvlt•• end !h1ll------------------------------ LEGAL NOTICE lll .... Mtrlh n ." .... Apr11 L ,, un 6<M·1l Int W••• •• ,.,, lftttd l'ttirutrv, ""· tlld llrm •• comoottd "' ll\1 lol!ow ln• NOTICE INVITING l lOS OH 11,soo.OllO ClllTIPICATI ., &UllMlll C•!fd "•llnJ•N '· 1tll. COl'oor111111. WllOll Pl'fMIPtl 1>l•t• ol CilliNEll.AL DILIOA.TION •OHOS 01' llCTITIOU• Ht.Ml LEGAL NOTICE Dl!lllAl!.TMENf 01' I'll ILIC bui lnnt 1• ''I<!!!~: NIWPOllT-MISA UH11'11i0 SCHOOL OISTlllCT Tiie uni:lt r>klntd dott cl'f11f\' M It WOllKS ln!tgr•led Fln1ncl1t AOYllC>fl, Inc .. eetl01Kllnt 1 buol ... ll el "· O. IOI' NOTICI OI' PUILI( NfAlllNQ Of' OIV ISIOH Of' MtGHWAYS TIJO Et•I ltrn St•H I, Sul!t lCll, ltnll NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 11111 $ell~ PtGIOOlll1 tor II,. 11ln"cllt1t Cl "°'"'· lNIM. CllUornlt, 'Ul'I (llnellorl THI Clf'I' 0 , POUMTAIN VALLIY J . A. LIGAl!.llA Ar>I. Ct l!fcmlt 14.500.000 ptf Vtlut Gf!\Ctll obll111!1on llc>nds of Howpot!·M°" l.lnl!ltd ~(nOlll Averl\ll', Corl!l'I• ftl Mir, Ctltlorl\lt, 1!.I AMINDMIMT TO TNI CITY'S Slllt Hl .. Wtl' 1Entln11r D1IH: Morch 10, 1171 Oll!rkl of 0.11191 Coun!y, C1tlf<ltnl1, "'Ill be ttttov!<I bf the Ct.trk ol tl'HI Bttr• un<ler !hi llctl!lflut llr"' nt .... ef O'l)Clot. MASTll!. l'LAM OP l'AltlCS "'11111111d Or ..... Cotit OtllY l'!lllt, IHTEGlll:ATt:O Fll'IANCIA.L ct 5ull8fwl.Ofl ot 011d COllnly •I 111• p11ce Ind up !O !hi time l>tlow l~llltG. Nl!LL'5 MAHAG EMl!NT CONSUL TANTI Nollet It ..... ..,., thtffl "''' Gft A ... 11 Mtteh 16 tnd Aorll t, ltn '51·11 A.l)VISOlll:S, INC. TIME: TueslltV, Aprll 10, ltll, al ll :OI) o'tlodr. ol..M. -•• O '' '' ' N .. Arll\t;r L. t utbN, PLACE: O'!kt of !ht Cieri( or !ht Bo.ord of SUPtNlson, Clll!Qe Counl'J' A• 1.... "' 11 '"' ' ~t 14 1tn, tllt lllltMltlt Commt111tt1 ol 1'•··!4••t mlnltrr•li<ln Bu.ldlng. ROllm ll)l, SlS NM11'1 Sycamore Slrttt, S•nll AM, C1lllornl•. "" toi-1,,. HfJOfl • ._..... fttlM In"'-.,., If l'e11n1tl11 V111ty wlll Mid LEGA' NOTICE --· E s t i f e ot s full 11\d •IKI el t11IOIO'l(I It ll fllllwtt 1 pulllft ... t rlllt Pt<ltlnlnt to 1 _.., LI STATE 01' CALtFO"NtA MAIL D BIO : t •k O th• Otrt uporvll0r1, 0.111111 Co\tnly A.clmlnl11' .. 1!.olltrl J. O'Ool'lnt JI. 411\.'t (lmlllon t-..ilfl'ltllf lo Ille Cltr•i ,..,.ti.r l'llni----------------}COUNTY OF OllANGE. 55 l1ftn 8ulldlng, 11-.i llll, SIS Horlh Sr1:amor• Strwt, Stnlt ""'· C11llotnl1 AY..,.... Caront Otl Mt•. Cell"'"'-, el llllrkt. Tl\lt ,,_.... tmellllmtnl l'-tfffl tin March 10, lt71, bofflr• "'' • ISSUE: U,lQC.000 tont!1Ung of 900 bond•. numbilrtcl 1 to too. bO!I! l1>CM l¥t. Otlld Mtrt.h II, 1'11 COltlll" tf ltdlllf!W lo tM Plti~ 1 ~trll ct:•Tll'ICATI OP IUllMlll Ntlt N P~llllc tor 1110 Covnh' t nd OI 1111 dlflOm\nttlon 01 SS,000 •ch, Ill dl!ell Mtf 1, lt1l, lf'ld dnlgntt"' "EIK- lll:Gbtrl J. o·oon ... 11 c1111••1lll'lt ,,., .. 1 .... 1111' ,, Krn t rod l'ICTITIOIJoS Nol.Me s""'' Pttoon1l11' IPClltld A•11'1ur L. tlon 1'1'0, Sirin II." $tt11 ol C1tlfor,,lt , L• Anttl11 Count¥: tllutttd MllKenl 1., fht lOU11'1 ,1.,, Tiie ~Nlll"fltl\ld dott cinlty "'•" 1,1 l ut9" kno*'" la "'' lo lit !!If Prtsldm! MATl/RlllES: Tht bonds wlll m•lure In tOn1tcullv1 nurrw:rlc1I crdtr In 111• O!o Mitch 10, 1'71, IHIO•• .,,., • of 1111 Sin 01"° l'rttwiv lletw"n cl!l'l•uetlnt 1 buimtH 11 ltJ• Unit Ho. flf lllt cori1or111..., lh1I •~•cu!•d the &rnGUlll• lo• "'en of !ht uvott•I Yll•$ es rollowo: Hlttry l'ubllt In lftjl ler 11ld Sl1te, lrC!ellhutll IMI Buol'lard lht ,,,_.,Jnt t l'\tc...,111, Cotli Mitt. Ct lllPtn\•, undt r Wll 'I" !N.!tumenl on lltht!I ol 11'1t CCC· YEAR OF MATURITY AMOUNT YEAFl OF M/ITUll1TY "'''°"'"' ...... .., labttt J, O'DCHl~tH ... 111 "'hlld I~"" City c.Vnc11 Clltmblf'l'I 1111 fldUkM "'"' 111mt cf MIET.ll "'''""' rhuel" n1m..,, tnd ICknowlMl'I· May 1. "" I 6J,OOO M•y 1, 1fl2 k"IW'n t. tnt te lit lllt Ht1on ~I it 7:3D "·"'• OI' ff _, !~t<Htttr SllfCH CASTING 1!.IPAtl COMPANY Id ff mt lhtl tueh toroor1llo11 ••tcuted May 1. \91l 1.!0,000 Mty 1. lfll ..-m1 11 1ubtcrl&tc1 to lht wllhl11 1 ... 11 convtllltrlf. lt1terttltcl "....,,' mlY !ht fllllwln1 ,..,..,,., who.It Nmet In 1111 ttmt. M~Y 1. 19/~ H3,000 Ml"f 1, ltllf 11rumtnl Ind ICkM'll'ltdtld "' IJlKWltd •H•k In IUIPltl .,. OPOOllllOll lo 1111• f\ltl Ind PllC.1 "' !111\Clentl '" II (Ofllc:l•t Sttl) MIY 1. lt1i UJ,OOll M&y 1, lfllS lht 11mt lollow1· OOl'OlhY '· H!1!11n Mty 1, 1916 160,0(IO Moy 1, 1"6 (OFF'tCIAL Sl!ALI ,._.., cMllH In "" Clh"'• ,..,.,.., o.r,.n It. Nct, '"" V1rm..t L"·· Holtry Public -Ct!llOl"nl• wr .. H71 110.DOU Mty I. 1UI Lolt L l'tl..,lnl I'll~ If '°1,..1· MunUnih•n 8ttth, c 111111rnlt Pr!llC~tl Otllee In May l, !ill 180,000 Mir 1, 1981 NeftN. lllubllc.C:1ll!Ornl1 lllLAHHtffG COMMl5't0N 01' ldt 111. Hoe, 1MU Vtrmont Ln.. Ottntt Counlv Mty 1, 191'/ !t0,000 Mlf 1. 19St l'rll'l(.l••t Onie• In ;~~ ... ~·:~ 0:ALLEY ~un!lntlDn Bitch, Ct lllornl1. ~: .... cr,-n;~;1"" fi•Plrtl Mt Y 1, 1~0 ~': M&y 1. 1'90 ~~ ~=~!.~:"~JlP!rtl Clint~ Shttrlld, .. (rtltN llld Mtfch n. 1fl1 lllS!lKAL AllO ,..,TY INC MIY 1. \Pll 11 ' May 1. lt'll Oc:ttbtr H. l'7I l'lt"~lnt Cornlllllllo" 0 1rr1ll II . Na1 An/Ir"''' II LIW, ' ., SIGNATURE ON BONDS: Al l1a11 on1 ol l~I 1!0nl!UtU Dn !ht AMOUNT sn3.000 .. , ..... ,lD.OOll ,.,,., 215.oocl 21'1!.GOO J(IJ,000 J1'.0dO l•S.000 303.000 bonds will lit lllublltl'llO Ot"lnff c••i! 0 ,,., 11111~, 1'ub1!1llH Ort"" Cttfl Ctll' lllllfl1. ld1 "· Nat .. , Cl•lc Ctllltl" D'ln Wtll mtnutlly llll•td -A II t,. \'7! 10·11 Sl1t1 Ill Cllll0tnl1, Ort"tl CllU~IY ~ llRh ARI Ctllttmtt Hitt ' INT EREST: Tl>t bonds •h•ll btlr lnTtrul II t rtlt or rt!H lo be llKtd 11111~ lll:"':::"":::c':":..::":·:':"c'"'":':' :•·:_::":':' __ :~:•:::":I~-~---,:-:::=-::~:::=:-::=----I On Mitch n, nn, "'1ore mt t PWIUt....d Orlf'll• Cr:>til D•ll'o' Piiot !ht H I• !!•t•IOI Wt "'°' ta ••cc.., 1"1. per ennull'1, payable t nnuall y fer th1 tlrol "G" NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Nol•r'I' l'ubllc In i nd ltr t tld S!tlt, Mire.ti 12, 1•. 2•. ,t,prll 2, 1t1! 117.7j y11r I nd 1•ml1nn111lly tht rNUtr. ~ IU.o Plflllnt!IY 1op11red Olfft ll A. Hiit PAYMENT: Said bo...:11 Ind !ht lnlt reU !h•rt0n ltf pay•ble In lawlul mon1y 11----------------1·---------------I•-ff I'll lo bl Ille "'-willMI LEGAL NOTICE of tht llnUtO St1111 01 A,,..rlc1 •I th1 0111<1 or 11'1 Trtt111rer o! Otll\ll• County. ,.....,,, n1m1 !1 1Ubitrlbld II 1111 wl11'11" 111-AIEOEMl'TIOH: Sor.cit rn1tvrln111 on or prior Ill M•Y 1. 1"6. 1 lolt ! prJntlptl ClltTlllllCATI gjl: IUllHlll 1114\lit flf\l ..... nl Incl t d<llt"ftlltlltod ,.,. ntclllN 1mount ol 12,t70,00I), ltl no! oubltcl lg Cl ll erod '"''m~!lon P•IOt !O !h•lr ti•~ ,ICTlflOUS HI.Ml CltTl,ICAn O' IUIUtlSS 11'11 ,,.,.,., l'ILI! 1110. P tlH mtTutll"f dates. BonC11 m1!urlng on Ot" t f!lr Mty 1. lttl, a toi.1 prl"'IPll amount T1>t undlltltnff !Iott Cl"llY tit It llllCTITIOUI NAMI t0Fl'ICIAL $f:j1L) l"ICTITIOUS IU11NISI al l l .. J0,000, •ti oubf«I to calt Ind ttcltmp11on 11 t whDI• er In ptt1 In lnvo•st C'OllllUC!lt11 1 butlnttt 11 1'11 w. CttH Tiit uMtnl•tllCI -• ttflltv rMI 1i J11n l. Jot>tt MAMI ITATSNllNT num1rlc•I ord••, •Y !ht oovernlng l>Oltll ot the Oll!tlc!, on •nv lnternt poymenl HWY., Htw-I ltitll. c.,11.,"111, vnflr COl\Of\Ktllll , WllMtt 11 t1U w. Octtn-Nol•N lllubllc.Ctlllot"I' TM foltowlnt ""r"" I• .Goin• butlMH 0111 on or 1111r M•v I, 19'1, 11 !hi prlnclptl •mount rhtreo! and •<t•ved (nlttnl !ht nctl!IOlll lit"' "lmt If J1M THOMAS lrOlll, "'""'"'" lll(h. CtlUornlt , """" Prhl<ltll Offl<t In I t : CHICK IVl!l!.SON POii.SCH£ AUDI. !htrton TO delt cf redemption. ply• 1 oremlum of (~J ""e-nalf ol ""' !"•Ctn! cl AGEHClllS •lld tlltl ••Id !Ir"' i. ,..,._ 1111 llcttllout ltrm n1m1 ol THIE llEACH 0 •11111 C1111nt'o' tflO Wttl C..tf Hw-,, HU'POfl 8tlc.1'1. •uc.h D'iflC•Pll •mount plw (DJ 01'18><1utr!tr ol one fll'Cenl ol $1Kh prlntlPill 1-..nt Mild ot ,,.,. fellow!.,. 91,_. _, IALL •nd 11'111 w ld llrm lo cornlOWd Mv Commln !on '-••I,... C1llfor'r>l1 '16'0 rar tt(h whale ~11r Ir.cl fer toy lrecllon o• 1 ye1r reme1n11111 !•om the Ot!t Fllme tn lull 11111 •IKt f1' , .. ld4111Ct 1111 !ht fetlOWlM H•M1n. wtictt 1111111 Mirth I. 1'13 Chick Iver,.,._ t"'" 44J E1•1 Co1u l••t>d tor rt>d1mptlrrl ID Int l l•td rn1!u1 ily da11 of t~e '"Elet!1on 1'10 Sorin I"" I• 11 1111-t: '" full 1111 el1r1 Gf r111dtMt 11 11 STATf 0~ CALIFOIHIA 1 H""'. N~PO<"I 8t1th. C11llotnl1 '164!1 bon<ll so cllltd tor rtcl1mptlfln. ' llolltt1 I. llocco. "" w. Cotti ~lawll COUNTY 0" oft .. NGE ' ... Thlt butlMll t1 c.1 ... conOuc!ed llY SECURITY: Seki -· .,. Gfllttll ol!JigetlOlls ol UIO ICllool <llt!tlct, PilY•blt ~ ........ A•I. II, Hl'WIOrl ... ch Cell/, G-H L. 11:..... lot ""° SI.. On Mllfh II, lt1!, ti.te•• -· Ill• • Cot-lllOOI bOth pt!t>(iptl lr>d ln!ere.t !tom IC ¥tlottm '"·~ Whkh. Ul\llt• the llws ftOW In 011.., Mtrcn 11. )ti! Htw-1 &tKI\, (llltornlt . und1t1lt~"'· • HoltN '°ubllt In lllCI Ed Enoc:h1 lo•c•, m1v lit levlt>d w1th0ul l!mlt1tion •• Ill tllt or .,NlUnl upon t ll of me I••· llebtrl S. ltetto O.IK A ... U 1, lt11. !Of 1t ld Slflt. Plrl...,l llv toM•fld ldt Gt~. Ml•. 1011 proptr!y, 1•CtPI ctrt1/n .. roontl proporty, in ~110 .cll!IO! dl>!•lct STATE 01' CALIFOllNIA.. 0-L. 11.tttr "· Hee •-n lo me 11 lit 1111 Off""' P~lllltl>ld OtlMt C1111t Otllv Pllo! TE.RMS OF SALE " ORAN,GE COUNTY· Sttlt If CllffO!'ftfl, Orann Countv: WhOol "'"" lo tut>Hrllled te "'e wlll\ln Apr111. I U. 21. lf71 1JO JI INTERESt RjlTE: T~I maximum ra!t b·d mty "°' t•Cttd 1-., ~r innum On MlrCft 11, 1'71, btfGtt rM, I Ct! A"M 1, 10 1, llftor• mt, 1 N1!1tY l11tlrum1n! Ind •cknow!tclff<I lo l'M pay1Dlt ennutllY lht llrit YIN' •f'llf 1eml1nnu•lly tnero1nu. Each rile b~ rnuit NoTltY lllub!lc I" 11111 1,,. ••" Sltlt. ,.11"Jt '" ,,.,., Ill" 11111 llttt, H •tont llv 1~11 1h1 ••Kltltd ll'>e lll'M· LEGAL NOTICE b• • mutt.pie of 1110 ,ol 1 .... ,.a bond sMll !>!'•• more lh1n on• ln•trnt ••t• end ot•1_11, 1PPi''*" lttOtrt s. II-,_,,. °"°'" L. "'''' knowft '° 10W,~~~r:~ S'lAtjllCI •Ml lffklt1 tttl. all bOna• or !~t •~m• m•turltv •h•ll Ill!•• !he ••m• r111. Eac~ bond must'11tar •ftOwn M mt lo lit lht """"' w!MU "" f11 lie tnt ""°" w!IGI• n11111 Lt J 1 11 lnltreo! at l~t •II• IPtcif•ed in !~• bid from Its 01t1 !o l!J h•td m•rurlty date. n11111 ti tllbtt•ltltd le lht "'!lftl~ 111-11 iut>Krt.,_, to 11'1t wllhtn !n1tr11..,1nt N 7 •1n't:utoil t nnt 111 .. 1111 lnf't snal! not lie • ~prtld ot ""''' lhen 2'. bt!wttn 1ht hl11htst lf'llf low1:11t lno f'l'lfmtnl •rod IKknowlldl .. .,. ·~l(ilfld •lld 1ctuoooWlMltld l>t ••KU'ltd fhf Hmf. • .,. c C••TlllllCATI 01' IUUHllS. ·~fett '"''' bid tht lfl'l'lt. tSl!ALI :;~~11:.!;'k,,C:,~~t 1" llllCTITtOUS NAMI jlWA,D: 'f~e bot'>Ch 1h1ll bl ,al<f for Ct•h only All bias -mu•! II• !or not (Olllc!t l \1111 MIN &t11'1 Motlllll Mv Ctmmln\on li•PlfWI Tht undttolenell dees C•"llV hi Is ltH '"•n tll o! tht l>or.ds hereby o!!eren tor Slit 1nd ..,ch bid •h•ll slata lh•I Mtry &tth Mlorttn Nt'11ry Pvt>llc -Cfllk!fnl1 Mt•,, 1t1l ctn411Clll'l9 1 tiuilf\ftl 11 f5t w, \Ith Th• boddtr o!!a•s Pt• •n<f accrued mter .. 1 lo dale cl dtllvory. me P•omlum, II Ho!tl'V l'ubllt · CtllPllrnte PrlMlp•I Ollie• in Publllhtd Ortntt Ct11it Olllv P!tol SI., Ctl!t Mei1, CllllO•nli, unOrr !ht tny, and lhe lnlere•T r•le Of '"Ito n~I 10 f~(••O tno•e •PKlll9Cl h•rtln 11 which P•lncl••' Office In 0,1..,, C011ntv Mi rch n 2._ ....,,11 1 , "n !U--1! llctlllout 11,.,, nimt o1 TYS trod 1n1r tne llldaer ol!eri 10 buy 1a;d b0nd1. E•cn lli<ldt• •hail ot&Te In hli bid !ho 10111 O•tntt CMlnh" My (""minion l•plrtt ' ' ' it\d firm II com"""ed o! !hP tollowln~ net !nl"HT coil In dPlltn and lht averag1 nil lnter111.t r&lt detormlntO lh0teby, AarU t , U ll Al'rll t, UJI LEGAL NOTIC• "'""· wllflt ntm• In lull tnd plfct whlc~ 1hell bt can1ld1rtc1 !nlorme!lve only and nc! 1 DatT or !h• Cid, l'ulllhhM Ortn•t C•1I 0.ll1 .. lltt P~•lllhN Or•"'' (0111 Ctl\11 Piiot. I'< of tttldtnct Ii 11 lotlflw1t HIGHEST BIDDE'1 : Tnt l>ondt will b9 1w1rdtd !O !hi h1Qh"3! re.ocnilbll -"c'c"".:...'-'c·~'c";;";-;"~'-'~·~'~·~'~"~';;;:--"-"-"1:':~:·:1•c•:·~'·:,::":,:':•:_:>n:::,•,,.,,,,,.,=---"':::·:':'1i----------------I Mtl11'1t'I" John v i nLttuwtn. 12()] Hun-bidder o• bkld••• con•i<ltrmg 1n• JMt•t•t rftlt or rttes u>Mifled Mio I~• premium LEG " NOTICE llnl'len SI., Hun!lntlon 8tich, Ctll! Otrlfld. 11 lny. Tnt nlghHI bid wit! bl Otttrmin!'O by deducting tht 8maun! of ALI LEGAL NO'nCE P·"'11 t1UI lne Prtm•um hid Iii anvl from tne ltllil amcunr of +n!trtll whlc~ •ht dll!rltl ClllTlllllCol.'fl 01' tl/llMlSl OtlllCI .i.,,11 1, ltl1 would bO r~ulr!'O lo l>llV lrom the d&!t of s•id 1X>n<11 to Int rni>eetlvt m&tudTI' P·tnlt llCTITIOUS Nol.Ml MIU Vt nLt.UWl'!'I dt lt• lh•rilal ti Tnt t01tpOn •II• or rotes IPKl!lf<t In lnt bid I nd lht 1watd ClllTIPtCATI 01' OllCOltflfltUANCI IAlt JI» Tiit UllCltrtlll'ltd do nrHIY lhrr 1r1 S!llt of Cllllar,,11, Orl nH CllUnlv~ wilt C. mede on th• bl•lt o! Int low""' net lnllrtJI call !D lht 0111rJe1. lht 0' U•I' AN0/011 AIANOIMMINt 01 ......... tO"OT '' THI ror>dutllft9 I bull11tn •t ... W"I 111~ On Mtll I 1t)i llefor "" N I IOWtll no! ln!t•llf toll thlll tit <<>mpylt>d on I :J60.01y Ytl• llllsls T!'le llU•(hf>t~ T S NAM " u SI., C11i1 Mtu, Ctlll~nlt u,,.,, !ht ' ' 1 ' 1 0 llf°Y mutt pay 1ccrutd +nt1~111 trcm tn• di re ol 1111 bO,.,.,, lo the Oott of dtllvttl, '"' ~~~Tl i0NuOl!ltSl0:10 dMt Nor•" •,',",•,•,t,',',",',",",',',',•,• llC!l!I0\11 llrtn n•-of IAllTH lrOUI l'ubllC In Ind tar ••Id Slttt. lllflOM tllY COIT of printing lftf Ilana. Wlil llt bOtnf b' tnt ol1ltkt. ' -' O O ' M • -,,.. Inf lhtl ttld llrm 11 t""-H ot •l .. tfld Mllllllw Jolln Vt nLHUwon RIGHT OF RE JECTION: T~I 806f(f ol $yl)frvl10 .. ratrv111. !ho ''''' "' ''' C'ttl " ftl ' II IKI •t lfCn ov, " Nt ,. ..... ) the tell-Int ""''" """°'' 1'141"'" lr\ k-n lo "'' IO lie ,,.,. Pf•ltfl wl\Olt I 1en I I nd ti bid rid I he Clllffll t. di butlfltll """"r lhl ltOTICI Of' M.l.f.ltlNO ON llllTlftOH lull tnf eltCtl ot • fllllolflC t lrl 11 MIN It wkcrlbld !o ll>t wlll'lln lfl. II ICfll • to tt IC 1ny I I ' I O !na U!tn) tlOt pr<>l!lbltt>d by llW ti lldll!11U1 !(rm n11111 .. HOUSI OP POl l'lO•Afl 01' WILL AMO POil h>llow1: ttrullllnt 11111 tcknowlMttO ht t •ttlf!ICI w1 lv1 •n'I' 1.,1g~lttlly tr lntorm1my In eny bkl AllTS ,, )02t Elll CQ1I Hlthwty, LITTilllllt f'llTAMl!NTAllT COii .... 11'1• 11m1. PlllOMPT AWlll.O: The 80~•d O! Sll!"fY<I~ wrn 18~· ~<'""' IWl•dlnQ ll>t cor-dll Mir. C1ll'9rnl1, Whlcll ltlJM ol ClA.ltA J. HOllll.rS, DKtllN. 11d J. l~!herl1llcl, !.,.. Pt;l0tr1tl'I, IOFl'IC1AL SEAL) -or ''!tc11119 t ll bid• nor l&lt• min !w..,ty.,t• nouo titer m1 t•plt1!10t1 ol ""•I-w11 leffMtlY comMttd ff !flt NOflCI! IS Hl!llflY GIVl!N 11\tl Coil• Mft•. Cilff. Mlf"f 8t11'1 Marlon !t<t time hwr11n prncrl~a !It "'' r•<•lor of P•Oix>nl•; provided, 1h1t the lw•rd teltowfM "'-· wt.att -Ill 11111 "•Ink L. MlnlUI', lSJ '°""""• L-H• > .,, , ,,~, ml>Y be mtdt t fllr Int t•P!r&llO~ ol lhe 1111<111!'0 !Im. II the bldde• 1htll 1111 heut •-,,._ .. ,,,,,,_, '' ,, ,,,_ Vllll'IOH fl'. STll.UCIC hlo lllW htttln llttdl. C1Ht. try u ... i .... 1 ''"" 1 •• o o " , " , ,. "" ~-··• Dlltd Mtrch lJ, lt1I ••11'1<.!t•I Otll(t In 111ven 10 , • .., o.r roe ct ~ w" 1111 o •• w;•nat1w•I at 1ucn prnocill. IO.w!I; t tllll11tft ltr ,.roblll Ill Wiii t rod ,. __ 000 '· """''''" 0 ,1,..1 Ceunt, PLACE: OF DELIVt:llY: (lellvtty ol se>O l>Onch w!ll t>t mi!'llt lo tnl tucCn•lul GIN Kftl~, l'.0 . ltx 1j4. c-. ,., l""'tll(t -' Ltlltrl T1111<•n1nttN ,;;'Iii: L. M•nir.rr Mv Com..,tnlon li••frtt llklll•r IT rtie alll<t ot the Counly TtNIUttt ot C•l ngt Counly or tt Ir.Kn Olht r 0.1 Mlt, Ct lU. t. lllflll'-, f'tllri11C1 It , ""'ltll II •TATE O• CALtFOllNI• April f . l'1l plACI tQtH&b1t Iv b01h !ht ouccn>tul b>Odtr •<Ill th• Coun!y Par""nt lot 1111 Cvtlne1t1 for trt nttt!'-' If llu•llll'M tn ... for Nrltllr .,.r11cul1ri, '"" lllt J OllAHOI! COUNTY; .., lll<lflllll'IH Or•nt• <:ottl 0.llY Pllol bot>01 1htll be m1dt In e••h or <trf!!;ld F!'lltttl Rueni~ Bini< Fu,.,.,1 wlllcll ''' undtf lh• 111tw1 llC!UI .... """'' Inf IM lllftt I /WI tlt(t ol h•t"ft9 11\e ...... .,_, ''· ''''• ~, -. 0 A ... lt ), ,, ''· n. !'1! 7lSll !ln,.,tdl11P1¥ ••8•l•blt la lt<e l(llllOI Oi1l•lel. or allier cc"'~'lblt fvnda •11101Ylt 111 ,;iblltt!lort IMl'HI, '"' 111 llMI lllJ IMl!I ltt lot ol.lfll U, 1111. ""' •• .,._ ,._ l'R" .. PT OELIVEllY Col.HCELLATIO• •O• C•T< 0E'O"E0 . C t. I lilt Net1ry l'u,Uc In tMI k!r 1t!fl lltM, ""' ' ~ • Y: II 11 ••Pf(.!· 1111 ltl "'9 fl'!!Ct Ill 11\t C""""" l•l'l II : •·111 ' n '"""'"""' Ill ., • .,111,11., '"'"'" Ooni1d J. l.ull'ltrltMI LEGAL NOTICE t>d thM ••Id boncl1 will be d!tlve•td to lht l<Ktlnlu! llk!Cltr on or about Mi y 1. el Orlflft C1111nt'!'. unotr ll}e ......... i-D111·,~~·,"'~· t.,of ••Id tOU•!, ,, I nd Ft•"" L. Mtn1ur k~ .. m1 ,,,1 Thi IUCC.•HIVI b1dd•• •hall h~v· rn, •IQhl. ~·h i• notion, IO c•nc•I !I'll con· If itcllen hU el ll>t Cl'l'll CMI. JOO 1¥1( 111 t t l•t Wnt, I~ ll!t 10 .. 11\t "'"""' ""'*' ,.,._, 1,1 irocl o! 1111rcn1oe II !hi "°'°"'' 1r1 no! ler>nort>d !or llOll•ory wllt<on •l•tr 1180 fr om Wl'fNISS m'I' ft1'14 llllt ttltl N~ f1I CllY ti S1~t1 Alll, Ct111trn1t , IYblCrlllld 11 IM wll1'lln lntl~-~I Inf !!Of O•t• ol l~e Ill• lt<~r-OI, 111<1 In 1uch tvtnt Tnt luC<Hlf~I bl!tcltt th!ll lie .... M••c.11. un D•llMI M•9c~sr· 1t11 ,1 • ._1.,...., lhrr ••«uMd .._ .. ,.,,.. lll·•lllf tl!l!'ll 10 •h• r1tuM 01 1111 dtP01l1 1ccom111t1yl~t hi• old Q1rv K~1x WC, • C JOHN, I lllcltl SttU ClllTlf'ICATI 0, IUllNllS, FORM 01' BIO: E•ch bid. lo;t11'1tr "'l!h '"t blO ttitc-, mull bl !n 1 ..,.11d l'ub!IJhld 0 •11111 Cotti Otlty llllltt °"'lllj ttrll Mtl1ltrtl Helt 1111CTITIOUS NAMI •~~tlbpt, •cldttuld lo !l>t Olstrtc1 wl!~ rne ...,v•loo. .,.,., blCI dtt rlv ll'llt~td "Pro- Mt rth 12·L"E' o'"A"L"N"0T"'l7;.. .. n :O:'c~-·. ~l':.,.'...!yi,:vlA Holt•V lllullllc .. C•tltornlt ..,'"' ,',"°'"'ltl'llll do ctr1101¥ ll'ltT •,•,• o<n!I !Cir N1wpa,1l-Ml'l1 u, nilled Schoel Oh!tlt! llo~dt ., •a .. ,_ ...... i. nu.a P rlllellll Oflltt In ( UC: ~t I ltutlfltll •I ,. .. llo• 10 . BID CHEC : A (t•T llld or ~~•h!er't cnl<'~ 11n 1 •nl>Ollslble bltlk 0, ltuit ft! L• AMlltl CtunlY frvln1, Ct. ,,...., u""•r 11'1t llc!l!louo COmPlnY In !~I 1moun1 01 lllo. ol !ht prl"'IPill ~mau~t o• 1ht bc>ndt. PIJtD!t It ,.~, .. , ' OU) W ·llN My Com1r1ln l"1 ·~·Ir" ll•m ... m. ot ROLLING H!LLS IN · T~• ord•r ct ''" Coun!y Trt&tUttt fl\Ull 1ccom11e~.-lttft Pr'Ol!Cll~I ••• ou•r•l'llY Clllf\l'l(AT• 0111 CORlllOl!.ATtOfll f'Qlt AIWl!nl fW i Pllll._ 01<. 1, 1'71 Vl!STMINT Gl!.OUP tnd 11\1! tlld !Ir"' t~et !tit lllcldlt, II l11CCJ11!ul, will l(Cfpl UICI PIV k!r said DO"cll In t cconlanrt TllllANIACTIOM Of' &Ulll'lll' \IHl'll lllurl•hlll Ortlllt Cont OtllY lllllOI l'u"lllltd Ot<llltl C11111 0.111' 1'1101 " (""1P(ltcld of ""' lol lowlnf P"rtOnl. w!1~ '"t "'m' ot n11 bid 1~• pracee<11 of !~t '"'~ ICCOml)llnylno •ny IC(eplld ,ICTIT10UI tlAM •'ccff_,_ •. _._._._._,_._,, ________ ,._,_.11 M•rcll lt , ''· ... ,,II l . '· 071 •11 """""' nlll'lll In full '"" 11ltt•1 ot pro111111I ·~•II Ill l~lltd o~ 1n1 pUt(~··· price, Of, II lllCh prcnoa•I It ICttD!td THI IJNOEl!.IUlHED COl:lllOllATIOMI' 1-----------------Jfll~IA(I lrttf lell0w1: bu! l'ICI tl*rlormt:'d. uni~•! tU(h f1llure of Pt•!Ormenct •hCll Ill (luitd by toy td oe.1 llfl'tlr'I' ctrllh" 11'111 11 11 colldue!lf!W LEGAL NOTJC! LEGAL NOTICE lllltllt I', l"''· P'.O. 8cl 1911. er omlHlon gl the d•J!rocl, 1hell 11'1en lie •11&1/\ftl by s&ld Trff•urt• f<>r ,~, bin• 1 1>11ilnt1t 1tc1Mcl •I UU su .. n... HUflllnllon l11ch, CA "'"'· flt ot tht dl11r11:1. ,,.,. c.htc~ 1ccomwnylng e1ih un1c(tplt0 oroPDnl wilt 11e r• ........ Ht.....,., .. Id\, Ci llterfllt, ~nftf WIYlll A, Schlnt!, .. , (~OPltl Ori¥ .. turn«! ~romP!l1 lh• ll(!ll\ouo fir"' "'"'' ff NlfllllOllT O l'·lHfl &utnl llltr111. (A fOo\20 CHA NGE IN Jjl)C EXEMPT ~llTUS• At ~nv !•mt DtlO•t l~t bOndt lrt '"'" Hol.l&Olt COl'IVALllCl!flllT llOlllllTAL C lfl,IUfl 01' IUl!fltlll lll~lllf Dt•ld I . ~lllf, ntot wtl!lltY Colll"t .cl"td !Of dlllvt ry 1n1 1..rc111lul bfcldtr mil' dltl!Urm lllll wl!nclr&w ll\t DrOllOlll tnd 11111 11141 11,111 It t-Mfttl • 'ICTITIOUS NAMI Clltf\Pl(ATI Of' IUllNISI, 0• .. lllllOI Vtr'dtl l'tllln., CA t0'.11• II !!'HI l~1c1111 •Ktl~l'!I bf prlv1tt 1>0ldlf1 !tom btnclo ot 1t11 '""'' 11._ l'ld t l>tr· ~ lotltw\11t COl'POft OOll, -.,IMl"I 'Tiit .,..,.,,ltned dt <•rtlf'r lhtY •I" llllCtlllOUl MAMI T!IGIN• E. lttw!•llll1, n10 1Eucllyotu1 1c1t1 1h1lf lit dtclt red •a bl 1•••011 lnco...._, lll'llltr Pftttnt fod1til l11<ome lltl .itct ti .... llMll ft., tollewl: elftlfllcilM I llutlntU ti 6)11 Wiii ltlh. Tht UNllftltlltd dolt tllllfy ~ II Al't .. L-IHtll. CA fOto& l•WI. tl!htr Oy t 1~l1rtg of !ht IMtr!\11 1 11.t¥lflut Strvl~f Of ll'o' 1 dKll lon Of i nf H"btr c-t lllU"t ~Ht~ \II(., COlll Mttt, Ct ll,.,,,,la. llMllf ''\ lie· ~uelllll • butlM" 11 ntO H1W11rl 4rc.lllt A. Coolt. 417 e:. OGOtl•ldtt, lt>dt'll caur1, or 1h~11 bt dteltred 11xab11, or bt ttll\llteod IO bt ltklfl lnllO toGo IM N. ltlt•lt . Ott-Cllltlf'lllt 111"'11 tltll\ "'11'111 If McDOJ>lol.LOl A~ 1111 ..... trf, Ct1l1 M111, C11ltw11ll, u...itr K111ttvll!1 TJI lllU counl In ca"""'""" 1ny ll<ltttl lncomt tt•n, llf !lie ''"'It ot tnf flli.rll r~ .,... &Ull:Glll tM llllt u llf nrm 11 ,.,,... 1111 flctll!M """' "'""t Gf ANOltlA'l I"""' S. HtWli;IN , 11771 I!. 5trrt...,, (Omtl !t• 11., ""•tt..:I 1ubJt<111•nl to 1111 di1t o1 tftli l'll!lkl. WITN1!$1 llt II,... lhfl Ill 41T 1111 .... ~~~I '::::"'17 ~,:..::11 ANl10Ult tMI lftll Olld I\"" It -Vl111 1111,._ CA f'*1 • LIGAL OllltMIOH: T~• ""'<IUO!!!lt'd Of)lftll!I ti O•MtlwMy A M\'9n. •norM ..... MtfCll, ltll """'' I K 1 lllM tr lhl lolioWI,,. ,..,_, """t lltlltrt L. LI~, lt)O Vlt Lt ltlvt , t l>P"tYl"ll tllt ~lllO ry 6! l t ld bOllCll wll! t.. tut"llllh..:i !ht l<KC"''~I bldodor 11 e• H•1W ClllYtllKtnl .... ~·:iar,.11 J I 11" I "" A -In lVll .,., pll(f " rt11ft11Ct l"•lfl V""'e. 1!111'9f, CA '°''4 cwlllr to '"' dtlt ol I~ C!tlt•••v Df !ht Oo'ICll. •t llli lallf'\tf Of Ill• dltlrkl. A Heatlltl, IM. ....:..:i &Mell. ~if. rv .,., II II lol ..... lt L-..rd II.. Ntll, 1'74 AntlHI W•T· n!IY ti lt<t lftll CN>lftloft t trlllotd Dy 1!1t Co;iu~ty Auctltot Dy his llUlll1!ll ,.,.. l!lfl""t M. Gtlltrl, Otrtltl1I I'-llH lrvllll ....... Ch1rtoltt Ctnlw, I Q1 Go.vi" (lf'(.lt. .._! lttch, CA tu.o turt Wiil bt ll"iolltd Oft Int ti.w;• ot Mch bond w!l"""1 ('Ott te ll•t t<K<tt.llvl ltldGott, "'''''"'·Tr••-Ntw"'1 lttdl. c lll •• Hvnll ........ l•Kh, t 1U,.,.,,t1 Htnry IC. Ylkol, 1201 5•n Ju1n NO LITIG .. TION Cl llTIFICATI!: Al , ... 111111 ol Pl"fll\1111 tor •llt de1l111• .. 1 af STATI 01 CALll'OltNIA , °'"" Mll'tJI. 11.~ ' 011.-MttJf! , .. 1t71 Al't., 11oc•1oto. "' tJJG.J u ld bind• lht 0\IC(ftlfUI ll•ddtr •!II ~ /uf'nll~IOI Wllft • (t•llllttt1 11\lj ""'' It (OVHfY OP OllANOI! I ... ,_.: ,, Chlrfltt. Ctftlo.I C•Md Mlrch n. 1t11 ,,. llt~lllen Pl"ll•no lll"C!I""' ""' Vftlldt ... at •• --. •·• -•••• -,,,, •• ,,, o.o-c-•· '"' • w • '• " _,. Oii lhlt 111 ,, .. ,, ""''Cf\. A.O. Ooro11'11' Sll"Ofl .. .... ' ·~· -""T' , . ,.,.,,,...,, IN ORMol.TION AYAl\..A BLI: lltt911t1t1 lw 1n1or-•1on conc1rn1111 lh• dllllld \"1. IHIOrt .,._, I N ... ,, 111~1111< In 5TATI OP CAl.tl"OlllNIA, 0.. Mlf'Cl'I 1'6. lt71, IHlt!'I ,.... • Glntrll lllltt"" 1l>OYl4 t.. ukttn11'!1 to 1nO "" ulOI c .... ft .. •Ml l1tM llf•ttnlllv OllA/1101 COU NTY: Hflf" '"'1tllt In '"" !tr 111' $t1M, Stitt of (tlltor~I•, D't ntt C""nt'o'! COUNTY .. UOll'Oll. •-tted 1111-t M. Otlltrf ~ Ct! MM<~ ,, 1111, lltftr• l'l'lt, t ,..,,_11¥ ,_ ...... Clll rltttl Ctn1'M Ol'I Mt rdl n, 1'71 , "'"'' m1, I l'IHANC£ IUILDIHG te ,,... te tit 11\t iKrtlttY-TN•tu•tf Mt'I•" lllllllllt Ill 1>1'1111 ""' 1111 ,,, .. , k-" 19 -•• lit "" "'-""'°" Malt.., lllWiollo; I~ '"° IOt 11•0 l!•1•, uo HOttTM aqo11owAY ., "" ttr-111 .. "''' llltt~• ....... M ....... ,.,. .... ,... l.ftls !Ill,. Sllt\lf'I 11 ..... r. """'tt.f .. 1111 wtftl"' 1 ... ,..,_ltv ._ ...... AIWl w, Ano.•Nn $1flf ol. AHA, CALl,OllfllA t'1tl wttl\111 l111t--7 111 M!ltll fl 1111 .,. '"' Otl'elll"f SI,,_ k-n ,. -to 1!1""""" tMI tf k_lld ... tM tKll\llN k._n te ,,.. II llli 1111 "''°" wt.on Ott llOtt lllll thfrtln Mtn .. , and ldt_._ .. tl>f "'*-w'hNt "'""I 1.-. ollbKrl .. ll>t ltf!ll. llllM t. whet!btll Ill lh1 Wlltll~ 1n !TONf 4 YOU"GBE'O MUNICJPA,l PINA,N(lftG CONSUlTANlS INC. .. '-.... IMI "1Cfll cer-·-••\lltll.. .. tht wtlll•~ l"'ltvrlllt't' IM CO,,ICIAL SIALI lltvll'ltnt •1111 K--·-.., I'll ·~f(Ull'I! DN!c Col.LIF!"LllN!A $1 111!11 ' 11\t ·-· tt .. ntwlloiltld INll' •xtculld ""''""· Dtrwlhw I . l1m.iM ""''"''· SJ\N ~tt ANCISCO, Uil1"011Nlol. •111 1 10111,JCIAL llAL) • lOftlcltl JttlJ Hllt•Y 'lltllc-C•tl,.,flf• (0ftlllCIAL StAL). GIV(H oy ll'llr• ol Ito• tlOlfd OI tu~rvl1i:11 er o ...... C°""'ty, c1111o1~1· Ot!'!rllff H. O'l•ltn MIN .. Ill Mo•ICl!I Or•"'' c .... 11.... TOM A ~flVlllS tdOO!ltl M•r<n u . !tll. Ht11rv lllutlllc , C1!1 ... nft lffll" PUO!I( (l llltotnlt MY C°"'"'lu l"" li•lru Ho!trv '°ulillc • Ctllf~ni. (llALI l'Ylll<IHI Ofllt• In 1"rt1111N 1 Of'll(f In lirl.11'(11 20, ltn f'rll'l(.1~11 Ofl!C• In w e lT JOHN °''"" C.Ulll\' Ortllff (111111\1 COMIN a llAttt••· AfliwlMl'I Ortr>M Coun!Y C,,.,,.!y ci.n l ftd 11-0!Utlo ci.r11 Mr (Oll'lllllHIOC'I '"'''• MY Cemmh•ll!fl 1.,1111 tllJ...tt"' lf""'t, Mv c;e... ... 1.,1on l11tlttt af 1~1 eo~ro 01 !vpervl'°" ol Julf 11. ltll Alrll t , !'11 H._.,I IHfl\, (lllhi•fllt ll:Mt J t nu••• l, ltll O•~~<lf COU"IY C,.!l!Otnl• M tl tlltcl Or•ntt c on• o.11r Pllol. .,v11tl1htd Or11111 co.11 0 111, .,llol .,<lfllltlltd °''"'' Co11t D•ll• lllllQ! .,YblllMd °''"'' Cuti Dilly ,.T!ot h• M~bfol ~ t~••tl•, D!>oulv "'~-----------------------------Mt rdl 21, A1tll 1. t, 11, !tit tlt•ll Mtrc~ 11, If, ll. A•lf 2. un lH-11 A•rll 2, .. 11 U. 1'11 111·11 A,..ll t, t, 14, ~),. l,11 IJl.11 "Ul>ll1hild Otlr"llll (0.1! O•lly Pl!o!, A:irll I t nd Nitti t, 1tll t I I I rrt!frr. Apr1! ?, im Everyon e Ha s Something Tha t Someone Eloe Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell If, Find It, Trade li~f ' ,,.~ With a W ant >:J: The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-~ial 642-5678 for Fast Results ' . ' '· I . 1~ I '" TREE-LINED REET LEISUR E LIVING I '""'' "' ... "". -"~"" Dover all electrtc Condominium, Shores Just hsted. The best buy. The sha.rpe!st 2 bedroorn <"harmer on the eas1 nde. Hardwood noors. spaci00$ back yard with fruit trre.~ and cha.in link fenct:. Very unique. No dov.TI to Vets or FHA. Only $23,j()(), Phone today. &4&-n1t. O THE REAL I'."\.. ESTATERS '-< <>I" l '• f PM * OCEANFRONT * ESTATE SALE 2 Bdrm. home on prline IOI • best location. CaU us for dclaU$! inclOOing radiant heat. Beautifully e&rpeted and draped. Detached double garage, profe55ioM.I land- sc11ped thru-out Enjoy bad- minton courts, shuffle boards, putting greens and heated pools, Y.'ith 3'l other cham1ing ne ighbors. f'o maintenan~ • Relax and Live. ON'l.Y .$35,750 \VITii TER.\1S. Come to 1033 ?-.farinen Drive fOI' a pre11iew showing ol. t~ plMs tor our exlstini:'. new model.~ now under con· siruction. They'll be ready 10 ITl()l."e into in July. Beautiful and bi.g 4 & 5 bed· rooms large enough tor pool tables, oversited master bedrm auite1 -and all with oul!tanding Views. This is your opporUJn1ty to select your O\\'TI colors & custom details. Our "Show Room'' Is o~n daily from 10 A.\1 to 5 p;-.1 . Come Sfl' the newcS'I. Md best in llL\"lll)' living in Dov- l'r Shores. BAY AVE. BARGAIN Evenings Call 646-4579 Owner lr11 ns. 3 BR. Balboa 1----------1 hon1e -only S~9.500. REPOS., 2-5 BR, all trrns Ivan Wells & Sons Roy J. Wa rd Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENrs 1033 l\lariners Drive IHfi.1560 JONES REALTY 673-ti210 Call Pat \Vood 5'$5-2300 2001 W. Balboa, N.B. Sceaic Properties 675-5T2b General General l CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFFICE OPEN SAT. & SUN. AREA'S BEST BUYS BAYSHORES -Priv. beaches. 4 Bdrm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 42,000 IRVINE; TERRACE -VIEW - Custom .................... $1 I0,000 CORONA DEL MAR -Immaculate $ 39,500 BACK BAY -To,vnhouse ...... S 44.500 Lea se . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $385 Mo. BA YCREST -4 Bdrm. Fam rm , , $ 76,500 OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 2306 ARBUTUS. EASTBLUFF Lusk home . 4 BR. 21h Ba. On qu iet street. Garden set· ting \Vith complete privacy. Great for fami- ly fun . S48,950. Harriett Davies. EMERALD BAY-OPEN SUN. 1·5 1123 E?.-1ERALD BAY -enter main gate & ask guard for directions. 2-Yr. old con tern· porary 'vood & J:?lass -3800 sq. ft. custom built w /every luxurious extra -4 bedrooms, 5 baths. $138 ,500. Fee. Carol Tatum. A TERRIFIC BUY In "The Bluffs''. 3 BR. & ba ths, w/a vietv. One of the best greenbelts. close to Upper Bay. Vacant, clean, ready for you to n1ove in todav. 542.500. Al Fink. WOW! WHAT A VALUE J.lere it is -the one you have been waiting for! 3 BR .. 21h ba ., gigantic ram/rec. room: large· sv.·imming pool. formal din . rm., 2 fire· places. $58.500. 1\1. C. Buie. 5 BEDROOM HOME Owner leaving area. Bright. sunny kitchen , large fa1nily room 'v/Y.1et bar & cozy fire· place. Sep. dinin g r1n . 3 Car garage. Cd?II High School. $59,500. LaVera Burns. CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Better see this 3 BR. ?Jome plus 2 BR. rental -So. of P.C. llv>y. It's brand ne\v & beauti· ful! 111onthly payments & taxes are $500 & your tenant pa ys half! $71.500. Bill Comstock PARKLIKE Rear vard v.·ith POOL. enhances this cutie 3 bd rTn. home v.•ilh SHAKE roof: on quiet cul-de-sac street. Be an EA R LY BI RD. $49,500. Harry Frederic'k. THE LIVING IS EASY A sunny -cheery "park" home; 3 BR., fami· Iy rm., beaut. kitchen. all bit-ins; Roman tub. atrium gardens. Only 1 yr. old -next door to U.C.J. An e d u c ate d buy at -fee - $43.950 . "Chuck" Lewis. 2 UNITS BEACON BAY $75,000 Few steps to sandy beach is this attracti'.'e· well built. 3 bedroom. 2 bath home; l~e. hv· ing rm .. dining; fireplace plus charmin~ 1· bdrm apt. ?i-1ust sec. Call 1'1ary 1..ou Marion. HARBOR ISLAND I uxurio11!i six bedroom, five bath & den h'ome located on the most exrlusive island tn N~wport. Lovely patio \V/elegant '11anl· ing . Deep front terrace & private beach & slip. $250.000. Belle Partch FOR FULL LIVING ENJOYMENT Professionally decorated . i!i this excellent vie,v. 4 bdrm .. 4 bath, dining rm. home. En- closed pool in atrium patio. plus p<>ol table off patio. $125,000. Kathryn Raulston WHAT A FABULOUS BUY!! EXCLUSIVE IRVINE TERRACE -OWNER LEAVING AREA -ANX!OUS TO ,SELL. Call now to see this nearly new. Span1!<h de· ~lgn 3 Bdrm . & den home v.•l_a POOL & VIEW. Only $85 ,000. Bud Austin 833-4700 644-2430 12 Steps To Florida * i\l~a Verde Locauon * 11~ Years New * 4 Bedroon1s, l bath~ * Separate laundl'l' roon1 * 2 Fireplace~ * Formal dining room * Breakfasi nook * All electric kitchen tr FHA loan 11s.~umption * rasi possession * Price $38,j()() * Florida Slreet COATS " WALLACE REALTOR$ -546"4141- (0ptn Evenings> SUPER SHARP- Ir's lmm1culale. 3 Bedroom home in quiet residential area -close to schools & shopping, For $30.9~ this has ro be the Dest home for lhc money and an ab10lute n1ust to see. Carpels, drap- e:;-, bltns, plus, plus, plus! Su bmit your tenm. Ca 11 54!'>.8424 •••• \outh ~ (. oast --. 'muNn6t 3093 MADE I RA One Block from Gou Cotlhe 4 Bedrooms Large Trees Copper Plumbing Neat Yard . Try 10~;, do"'" j 1;,"t. Loan S3.J.:ioo BUY IT~!! ')llcstl\'inlc'.Rcali~ 546·5990 1.------- POOL & VIEW Large patio, 2 BR. &. den. Spotless. Ne\V appliances • low lease. t11ake 11. date to see 624 Ramona, h•11lne Ter. race. CURT DOSH, Realtor I &l2-61i2 l::ves. 673-3"6!1 IT.lO W. Coast HighY.ay TODAY ls the day lo aee this ED.st· side 2 BR & den, near Cath· olic church. $600 Do wn • JollA, no do'ol'n VA. S20.000 Sale pncr. PERRON REAL TY 1797 Orange, C.M. &12-1771 DE LUXE FOURPLEX Jn be!t llu111ing1on Beach lo· cation. H11s large 01vners l DR, 2 Ba 11.pt. + th ree 2 bt"droom apl1. Excrl!cnt !in- arn:lni;:. sn,900. Coy Hester, Realtor 644-5902 ~D=owNTOWN Ex~urr to bu,;y do'A·nto"''n 11rea, 3 brdnn on corner C-2 kit. Grf'IU for linme and bu.s1nr~~-Salt" prier S31 ,000. 11inco RealtY 2029 llarbor, C~I 6-ls.ooJJ $28,000 4 BR. + 3 BATHS n~aullfuJ hc'lmr, lurge rooms, l slory, rllnlna rm., entry h11Jl. huU1°lftS. !irtpllCf'. !"'40-1720 TARBE LL 29SS Hu bor Buy the nrw sfuU Sf..11 1he old Rft.IU MACNAB -IRViNE FINER HOMES HARBOR ISLAND ESTATE An elegant ba.yfront home, less than 2 years since complete rebuilding. 4 bedrooms, den, family room , children's play room , secluded amidst tall trees. $439,000. LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT \VatCh the sunset from this beautiful South Linda Isle home. Interior brick pil· Jars and wood add 'varmth and charm to this oversized bedroom home -each with pri· vate bath. Large gourmet kitchen -two fire- places. Pier and slip for your 60 foot yacht. $174 ,950. BEAUTY AND QUALITY Beauty for her, quality to please t~e exact- ing male. 3 bedrooms plus convertible den. Breathtaking in Mexican Tile with sliding roof. A really superb home. Asking $125 ,000. Fee Land. "LOOKOUT" for superb view -Large pool and jacuzzi. Patio and play area. Smartly decorated 3 bedroom, family room , convertible den, view kitchen, 3 car garage. Tremendous lo- cation. Hurry! and call 675-3210. DOWN EAST See this quaint and charnling BEACON BAY borne -two living rooms with beamed ceil· ings -two fireplaces -3 bedrooms -en· closed til e patio - a real nooks and niches house. A community dock, sand, tennis courts, at your door. $73,000 . HOMES FROM $34,900 TO $57,500 EASTBLUFF 'S FINEST 4 bedrooms, former deluxe nlodel Lu sk home. Breezeway that can be enclosed for billiard room. Exquisitely decorated for the owner that demands perfection. Sho\vn by appointment only. Call 642·8255. $57 ,000. Open Satu~day 1-5. 921 Bellis. VAST BAY AND CHANNEL VIEW from balcony or choice 2 bedroom -2 bath -all electric condo, with new carpeting and drapes. Boat slip available. underground parking. On the Bay. Call now -675-3210. IRVINE TERRACE Snuggle!l among the bird filled trees a charming 3 bedroom home ay,•aits your in· spection. Unwind in this secluded retreat. $47,500. Call Tom Queen 675·3210. A BEST BUY 4 bed room , 3 bath, formal dining room, family room. immaculate, beautifully decor· ated. Has everything for carefree family living. Lush landscaping. Room for pool . $43,500. Lease option possible. BAYSHORES Live among your sailing friends. Jim the Windjammers club. Ship shape, just the right size -big living room. dining room, 2 bed· rooms. 2 baths. Sandy community beach. $42,500. YOUR RETREAT The master suite and connecting den seclud· ed on the second floor of this great Univer· sity Park 3 bedroom , convertible den, Cam- i.If' room home. Close to schools. shopping, pool and greenbelt. Please call Joel Smith or Tom Queen for appointment 675-3210. $37,500. FASTIDIOUSLY DECORATED 3 bedroom 2 1,~ bath condominium faci ng pool with extra parking and double garage, \Vido\v must move . \VQ I trade $15,000 equity for income property in Torrance or San Pedro area. Call G I ode n or Dick r,ay 548-6966. A HOME FOR YOUR LIVING DOLL in beautiful University Park -3 bedrooms, family room. many extras. \Yalk to everv· where. \\'e Invite your inspection. Plea.Se call 675-3210 for appointment, $34,900. MACNAB · IRVINE 675-3210 642-8235 1080 Bayside Drive 901 Dover Drive Nawport Beach ~~ General General COSTA MESA TRIPLEX The clo.o;es1 you can come to living for free after an ini· tiaJ invesm1ent of only 20'7~ do11•n la17Pl"Ox, SS3001 is thia W(']I located 11·estlkle tti- pl""· Thrtt roomy 2 lkd- room units l\.ith separate g&l'RS(t>I, hardwood floors and pri\·ate J)fltlo area.a ex· cellenl for the ownrr OCC\I· pant. $41,sGO 67).1550 -o· THE RE AL \"'-E~!J\TE~S * OPEN SAT /SUN * $21,900 FULL PRICE for this gre&t 3 bedroom be&u ty. U:it11 ol carpels wllh m11lch!ng drapes. l\fl.ldern built-in1 are In this country iityle kitchen: Ill~ a di1h- wa!tv-r. i\fove-ln condition. At th11 price YOU CAN'T Af'I-'ORD TO RENT. Cail UA and •'e'll qu&llty yoo. Walker & Lee Realtors 2790 ll1rbor Blvd. II Adam• 5Q.~91 Open 'Iii 9 f'~I HORSE RANCH La.'r~ 4 Br. 3 Rn. Mm~. ~ form pool. lttlrrnttndl'(I by loRds of avocRdo, pear:h It citrus lrrt'~. A fantastlc vi('\v & only minq1.-s to the Gentral 914 Grove Place, CM ANYONE QUALIF IES For this sh!ll'P 3 bedrm home -luah carpeting & drapes &; 10x25 covered pafto. 7~,% Interest no loan lees 10% Uo11.'n. H'urry, rh~ ll'on·i last! NO DOWN TO VE TS 10'/'tt Down to others, large 3 bedrm w/hnlwd tlrs, bllm, 20xll rumpus nn, hick 1vall end rear yard. VA apprais- ed at. .. $24,600 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Cute older home and 2 story bldg with guest apt. \VaJk to to11•n & beach. Newly re· dc.>cora tffl ~ priced rig hi al . , , $45 ,000 VA REPOSSESSION 3 BR, 1%. ba, cloged patio, newly dccorRfed ~lesa de! ?i1ar. Sl600 Oo'.l·n, $31,950 EASTSIDE BARGAIN A modern 2 bf'drm home nn an F.ast.!ide Costa ~lesa 60x 110 R-2 lot, 3 car garagl' + 11. big slorage bldg, Full prier. , . $20,500 Newport •• F&irview 646·8811 (anytime) -E-cusToM BUILT Near OH1 Drive & neat ,·1ew from front yard. * ~ bedroom~ &. den * 2 haths * 511 years old. * Room (or BOAT 01' TR.All.ER * Ni'."lvport llcights * S35.%0 Call nw• to .sec 1hi.~ priced honie~ 67;:.-4920 value PRICE SLASHED! 0'.l·nrr has redu<'ed pl'ice S3000 below markel and must sell 1hls 4 }'f'(lr nld bcau!iful ho111e. 4 Bedrooin~. 2 baths. rireplace, bl!f1s, p.1tio. Closr to 0Cf'8n. F11A/ VA tf'rms. S?J,900. ~COATS ~ WAtLACE REALTORS • 962-4454 • Open Evenings -ROOM FOR EVERYONE llrrr·~ a real fa1ruly llo1T'l(' with sepsratr f11mlly room. thnlnit room. 4 l&rge t}('(j. 1'0011\~ 11nd J h11ths. Extra lergr yard "ith al"Ct's~ for hoaL camper or trailer. \\'alk to the beach au year round! Only S·l2,cm. Takr 8 look! 5-'6-2313. \O 'THEREAL .'."\., ESTATERS ' ' ... , '· "T . : Ree.Ir ors 71)81 F..d1ngrr 171 41 ~415.i or 5-I0-.'\140 * NEWLY LISTED * Nc~·pon Helitht5. Charming 2-1ry. 3 bclnn., din. nn. Ex· IN>mely largr waJJ!d palio. Grea1 fami ly homr! $3-1,000 Ca.IL 61J.lli63 673-80$6 evt1. 3044 MADEIRA UJ\•rly, imntAC. home. l't OUt>r\n,ll". Be&ul. grounds. Cov. palio. 3 SR. & fl:lmi!y rm., 2 b.11h,, Slll.500 George Will lam1on beach. S19,ooo. ~E-"'"m"E".-c".~;-.1=-. -,m"·"-•"'1.,,=-. 'x:;;1°',1 l\iatchain Realty, fiW>-4R37 Joe. 2 br rach, tried y11.rds. REALTOR G7~:UO 6#5-1564 E\·es, SEU..tNG Yo1w boat? "Ll1t" g11rnt"'· ln<'Ome S·\1 ~1/mo. with us ,lf'll It fast. Dolly S::S.:AJO or fn1dr up !n 1111me P1klt CJ11.s1\fied. 642-6618 11r"'· By nwnrr. 642-5.\11 ... I~ I -...... " ' * * * * * * RANCH STYLE -4·:JR. * TAYLOR CO. * ~~!~~~~.-~~ .. Dou t.ouse -curia" .,ea!. CORONA DEL MA R Spacious custom built 3 BR modem near Little Corona beach. Some. ocean vu. Beau- tiful Wood paneling & mstr ste . $87.500 216 POPPY Open Sun. 1-5:30 MESA VERDE -$34,250 New listing on quiet st. Very sharp 3 BR &. family rm. Better hurry, 'von't last! 3039 MADEIRA Open Sun 1-5 :30 BEAUTIFUL CAMEO SHORES Owner \Viii consider exch ~ging this luxuri- ous 4 BR & den home for 4111aller one. Lge. DR, p!u sti bar \V /vie\v of sf$ciou s patio. pool & lanai. Fine interior de sign. $175.000 4500 ORRINGTON RD. Open Sun. 1-5 :30 HARBOR VIEW -$62,500 Near new 4 Bdrm. "Broad moor" home \Vi th fam. rm. & formal DR. Quality cptng. & drapes. 2612 LIGHTHOUS E Open ·Sat.-Sun. 1-5 :30 LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Gla1nor & perfection in this superb 5 bdrm. home \V /fam . r1n .. formal DR & 5 baths. Elegant deco r thruout. Pier/slip. Air cond . TRI-LEVEL ELEGANCE -$45,500 4 BR ., DR .. FR. ln fact. you'll ~revel in the spaciousness this prestige home oilers. On a quiet street in l\1eredith Gardens. H.B. 20251 CRAIMER Open Sat.-Sun. 1-5 :30 BEAUTIFUL BAY ISLAND You \vould love living on this picturesque sn1aller island of 24 homes surrounding a pvt. park of flowers . trees & tennis ct. Quaint 5 bedroon1 home. $160,000 BROADMOOR "TRI-LEVEL" !\lost desired amenities in this spac. 4 BR. home w /fam. rm. & sep. DR. Ocean/island vie\v & dream garden \V/rare plants. $77 ,500 CORONA DEL MAR \Valk to beach from th is high style Conteryi- porary featuring glass & \VOOd. 3 Bedroom custo1n bit. For young at heart! $84 ,900. 228 GOLDENROD Open Sun. 1-5:30 "LUSK' HARBOR VI EW HILLS "Burlingame" model 'vi th 5 bdrms .. fam . rm .. dining r1n. + bonus rm . Profess ionally landscaped. Including land -$72.500. 8¥ appt. DOVER SHORES A really dramatic 2-story modern ~·ith 4 BR .. study, garden rm. & formal DR. Brand ne\v and just for YOIJ! $105.000 410 MORN ING STAR Open Sat. 1-5 :30 70' BAYFRONT -LIDO NORD Lovely courtyard patio surrounded by 5 bd- rm. home \V /4 baths & guest apt. Pier/slip PLUS sandy beach. By appl. 1260,000 BAYFRONT WITH POOL -$150,000 5 (or 6) Bedroom home 'vilh pier & slip . For· mal dining. Oversize patio. By appt . WHITE WATER VIEW I $115,000 t-..'orlh Laguna ocean frl. ! 5 BR .. 4 ba. New England farm house. Custom quality & top condition. Really different. C:all for appt. CHO ICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS DOVER SHORES & BAYCREST ' l''ront, le vel, fee $27 ,500 ' 1-~ront, level. corner, fee ........ $28,500 80 ' View site. level, lease .......... $29.500 94' Vu site on Galaxy, lea se ........ $38,500 75' x 180' VU on Galaxy. lease .. , ... $39.500 57' Front, pi er & slip, lease $53,500 BEAUTIFUL LINDA 5fi' \Vaterfront. Lease. $69.500 573,000 incl. .. S75,000 . $125.000 45' \Vate rfront. Lea se. 45' \Vaterfront. Lease. Plans 108' \Valcrfront. Lease. BROKER S & SALESM EN \Ve have an opening in our Residential Divi· sion for an experienced man or v>o1nan pos- sessing enthusiasm and int egrity. If you are inte rested in ;i beautiful office in the fines t location. "'orkin,I!' \rith congenial associates. \Ve arc interested in meeting you. "Our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reciltors 2111 Sflln Jo11auin Hiiis Road NEWPORT CENTER ~910 * * * * 5 LUSK HOMES IN BEAUTI FUL HARBOR VIEW HILLS FOR COMPL ETE INFORMA TI ON PL EASE CAL L HOME snow RF.AL TORS 3S35 FMI C.... llighwoy Coror11 del J\1ar -.. * Spilt rat\ fence . •'!_ "_g\J~n 5ited l>Mrooms. Family rm. 0eJUXe buill·ln kik~I. 2 full bath.~. ~ ~g lire. place. Wall of gl .... i!o rear pal!o. Heavy shake'Hot. E:\· qu1si1e landscawni•r?.iec· ond~ to beach an<l'.~f\I:. Have a GI f'liglbllil)lfj'ltlusf see to appreciate.;~·~ and call (114) 962-~· ' 19131 Brookhurst :aoe. llunlu1gton Be4al'" EASTSI06'.o•.J 1, .,: COSTA ME$A-'~ Spacious Mode rn • '-t-u~on1 j built rambling oom,e:;'rl>m-; pletcly renced in wlth:brick I \l'aJI~ and "''TOUll'hl ll'On gales. Large Ll\'W.:.-Rrn.. \\'Ith open beameci_ffiling!, Three Bdrm~. Tu·o bathll, DIN. RM. AND ELEC!'IttlC B/l h.1T. renced o!(Mated and fi!Jrrt'd POOf..'~ced tn Sell fasl at Only $29,500 with GI OR 1'!-IA TERMS.. Evenlng!I Cnll 612-7438 BEACH TRl-PLEX C.Omple!ely rcmodrl ed through 001 . l be<lroorn housf' in ft"onl and duplex tn !hf' rear. Rnn1an bat.ha, shai;:: carpt'ting, \\'ood panel· ini; -vr1y i\lush. NelY rvof and ll'f'shl.v painted l.'"lerlor. Two block.~ IO the beach, onr block 10 slor<'~. A rM1 hruuty, f76.9:'i0. Phooe ti4G. 7171. . \o 'THEREAL ·~ESTATERS \__ OPINU .. Til '' EASTS I DE COSTA MESA CHARMER :i c1ucen·si1.~ bedroom!!. Vr1')' lo11ely bath, Brahd ne\v carprls und drapfs. !luge kitchen for 1notn. Freshly paintNI. I!: x tr a lnrge double -;::aragl'!. (j I and FHA tl"rn1s available. CAi.J... NO\V and we'll qua.JifJ.r YOU al $23,500. Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adadls 5-1.>-0465 Open 'UI 9 Pr-.1 : Trees T recs Neslied among large lrees 1\J\d sec off by split rail fence th111 J bedroom ranCh 11cyJc hon1e h&.'! a large laQl- ily room, covered patio, frpl c, bltn kitchen & rloee lo all school.~. $27.950. \Vl'.th Fl-IA /VA tern1s, of couri.e. Call ~>10-11~11 lo(>t'n eves.I. .!> .. HllllAGI llAI. b lAJt POOL TIME 0on·1 wnH "n this lo\'ely pool homr in NrY.l)Or! Heii?hfs. F.v1•ry ('(lnvrni('nC't" for lao1· ily li»ini:-. Foor sunny bed- room$, 'l baths 11•1lh ll\JfSiile rntry from pool. 1.argr COV• errd 11.1tio, earefN"r l&r\ll· 11eaµin'=". &>Urr trurry -Call tnd.<iy to ll('r. $45,950 l46"2Ji3 ~THE REAL ~~'.!'~TE.RS $28,950 S BEDROOMS Jfuge fa1nily rm., entry hall, l"l<'Kant 2 1tory. dlnln1t nfl .. park like y;1nJ wi1h frUll ll'N.'~. No down Irr ms. !H0-17)) TARBELL 2955 Herbor BA YCREST LOT Best slret:t _ large lot, Nor Le1srhold -hurry• Arnold & Freuil 388 ~;;5~··· c.~tJ l'""""""s-P-EC_T_A_C_U_L_A_R'!!!!!!9 f BEACH HOM!! 1\·f'ran1t', "ll!p. to ONAl'I 3 BR. 2 h.i. Only $33.900. CAY WOOD REALTY 6.100 \\' CM.•I llw)'., NB 548-1290 "o-,il.,y~Pilot \\'antAd-;-~ bargain~ gflloJ? I 1 • I I· Frld•t. Aprll 2. 1971 .... ~I .......... I~ I ........... l~I -...... I ~ I ......... I~ I -..... I~ I _ .. _ l~ I -·-l~ [ _,,,... I~ ~iiii:ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiii.i:Git~ntii''ili;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiil/~Gt~nt~r•~l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~Gant~~ra~I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Corona del "'-r A PLUS STARTING OUT? I FRENCH QUARTERS Costa Men B Bed Roams -81 THINK BIG- HUGE HOME! Huntl~ton Beach GLE~ MAR ~\m)M CLIFFHAVEN '~LISTING -privacy . but room to pur- 's"ue i.(ldjvidual hobbies and pleasures. 4 Bed· roaui. family rm or c\inin~ rm, and 3 baths ·anu1:t arouµd large secluded patio. Closets amt-storage galore. Separate unlt \\1ith 4th 4dh~ kitchen has some Bay View -ideal .~kllaws or as play room. 3 car gara$!e. ·m kings Place Open Sur"1d.1y 12 to 5. M11t ' GLGIUOUS GARDENS @TuTY Cor the knO\\'ledgeable buyer. Qiis)Qm \Veslclil'f home offered by design- er/builder. 4 Bedrms, 3 baths. family rm & -...g rm. 3 plus car garage. ~.1any n1ore 1>oCtt$ features. , ·l:D4tiHampshir• Circl• Open Sunday I to S ~NlTANT HOME IMMM:ULATE. TASTEFULLY DECOR- A~·D, 2 bedroom, den home \Vith lovely ,··-· Westcli£f. Ready to tnove into and ~ lo sell at $39.950. . <T .~. Hefl!J BUILDERS AWARE: . ~.14fge neighboring lots. custon' '"'!Mew-port Beach area . . . . each $20,000 Dlli!tle View Site, Ne\\•port Bearb $18,500 73' !IYeninsula Bayfrontage . . . . . . $293,800 ~l..ct -overlooking China Cove. tlbulous view . . . . . . . . . . . . . $57 .000 .la?tC!i Corner Lot. small price. 113.500 · · ll()li'!ta A1esa . •ti • I w:.e,~El~nd SPAvf.~S -cle3' a.. ne3' ·YAff.ake. well priced. 10l"i, Office Open Saturdays & Sundays ' 1 ']_ PETE BARRED REA~1'Y it.~; 1605 642~5200' N.B . GC: • (Jt(Z." '1.;.\ t.·· '1! ..... PBESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES .. ;~ : SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT _ _ 26 Linda Isle Drive ~rator furnished. 5 Br. 5 bath home fac· Wt ltµbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready fo.E:.linrned . occupancy. \V/dock $200.000 ., ... ~ .. · , 53 Linda Isle Driv e }IOlnfi on lagoon, 5 BR .. 4 11~ ba.: "'/4 frpl~s., iieti&i tub, hdwd. £\rs .• sep. ilv. rm .. dm. rm., fam . rm. & brkfst. rm. . .. $175,000 I --• 92 Linda Isle Drive ~~· 5 BR., 4 ba. home \II /formal din. rm. .ft ~~ily rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. · irrnit-:in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000 ! . ·:··· ~ 1 · •• .,. 107 Linda Isle Drive 5 BR. 3 baths: !am. r1n., form. din. rm. 2 J · FjiTas., Rm . for pool. Dock. By appl. $145,000 "t ' Waterfront Lots · N~: 108 J<~. on water . . . . . . S125 ,000 NO'~'Tt : 3 Car garage. Reduced to ... $ 77.000 For complete Information on all homes & ---0-lots, please call: "'--'_ BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR '&1i:D.Over Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 BAYSHORES BAYFRONT Exceptional Bayrront home with desirable .t:asteru e:a:posure, in exclusive Bayshores - Jtpacious "lrPJan'' .surrounds bayslde swim- ming pool & beautiful rose garden -cozy paneled den with fireplace. Co1nfortable for· ma! dining room -4 bedrooms, including separate servant's quarters. Extra deep, double garage -pan<'led office with out· side entrance. Elegant ho1ne in in1n1aculate ('Ondition. $293,700. HARBOR VIEW HILLS Ne\v listing on 3 bedroom OCEAN VlE\V home -large swimming pool -circular driveway separate concrete dog yard or storage for boat or camper. Needs some fixing, but \\'hat a sensational view & a great location. $67 ,400. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS ''SINCE 1944'' 673-4400 J. Designed for large family with separate living zones. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths + powder roorn . Panelled family room. Ex· large living roo1n 'vith handsome stone fireplace. r~or mal dining room. Large landscaped lot on quiet tree lined street. Sparkling pool \Vi th jacuzzi jets. Priced for quick sale. OsMn Sund.1y 1 to 5 1805 Glenwood Lane (Santiago to Ashford, left to Glenwood) 2. Large 3 bedroom. 3 hath & family roon,, 2 fireplaces, lovely low maintenance gar· den on quiet street. "Must see" at $62,500. HARBOR VIEW HILLS Light and airy 3 bedroom & fa~1ly room \Vi.th great view from large entertainment patio. Ca ll to see anytime. $57 .000. DOVER SHORES VIEW Near ne\v 4 bedroom, 3 bath fan1ily room, formal dining room. Great court yard pool . $112,000. ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors 1033 M.1riner1 Drive, N.8. 646-1550 Dover Shores Office G __ •_n_••-•-l,....,,,,.,,,.~~~1 .G_•_n_•_•_•_l~~~~~- URGfNf $22.soo Q\\'n<'r bought rw:1v hon1t • mu!ft ll' I J lmmethately. $30,000/VA approi~J. All tem1s availablt'. !\lanicurl'd yard, 2 mas~lvc firC'placC'~. 3 large bedrooms & 2 apark· lini: bathll. Call ~J...842t \outh 0 ( oast ---. MESA VERDE SPECIAL WHAT A PRICE ,\n,J what a horne •lilh ovt>rs11.ed brdroon1s, :! baths on 11uio·t treC'·lined streel, O\·('r.~i1Nl lot and morr . Walker & Lee R<'altor~ 'itili2 :fJ:!inr:rr !7111 ,~l:l·4'1.'i1 or ~IQ{il•IO $23,500 4 BEDROOMS Sha rp & clean. ~10\'e in con- dilion. Rear living room, dining rni., enlry hall, built-I Rare ILc:ting in cxcellront my ins. No rlown !Prms. ~G-1720 neighborhood. 3 &-<!room. TARBELL 2955 Harbor family roon1 \\'llh flreplaC'f', all b,;11-ioo, oow rool. $?'.000 I POOL TIME! • -I Gentr•I -Let's !Rik tcnns. Pllf)(lt". / ' ii•riff• :;.;.;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;151&-2313. 4 BR. I~. BA, 1-.l w crptg . ' • thruout. BHn~. freshly pa1nt-i"i.·1r'"--~ f'd interior GI or FHA ~··BJ ,_, /B BAY & BEACH REALTY, Inc. 22 Yea rs of S.rvic• In Th• H.1rbor Area .: ENJOY THE ENCHANTING MOODS ~l .:.. of the peac<'ful Pacific from the nu1n· en:ttt5 picture. \VindO\\'S Of this i1nmac. 4 bafm. bon1e. Pro.perty in n1ove·in cond. at ofle0! the lO\\'esl prices in CAMEO Sl10RES, at ~'3,500. r-IRVINE TERRACE ':'2 . Cofona del ~1ar exclusive -price !educ.t1on S4 00 -4 bdrms .. 3 baths; marine v1e,v. Fu price $69 .950. Subtnit reasonable off- er ' THE BAY & BEACH -t is vours -ri~ht from you r O\rn patio &: irtur'e \l'indO\\'S. 3 Bdr1ns .. 3 bath home on he Big Bay. at only $97 .500. Desert own- ' ,er ays. "sell "' • ..:;;;.;;;====;;;; 1 * 5 BEDROOMS * Ne port H•iCJhts I Bu11ut. J111rho1· \"11'w Honie~ res, 11 11 f'I l1.1r. lo\'l'ly : ll<dE. I bollh, &llltt <'n; 1' <'11111 ..... l!·t'lr:-in111~ ,..,1111$: 11'\• JC1" iuu I vlng rm \\' ,,. Good ,_ £. vtu·n111, '1n1 r-k 1xi5ses!. 1irrp rr. <·rp.... Jj9 :ll(I Jn1·lut1 1111• lhl' land drJ>$ 'Strv~ porch Lovt!~V ' " ' It . .,,.,._""'~cl<'"" I CORBIN-for c ldrPn. $27.350. MARTIN KID STUFF This 4 BR, cut.cJe.gac homC' has Jarge yard fl•r playui)::', 7\J BA and separa te laun· dry arra. :\lo1·c in on rredit approval. Gf or i',IA . Tnk(' time to look at Hu.~ n11c - only $2!1,j()(I Collins & Watts 962-S523 AXER UPPER $17,650 Brin:; your pain! hrush 11nd :ltl\'f' Sl!Xl's on this 3 brdrm. 2 balh, fa1n1 ly room hnm1" Bltns, dbl' gar .. crpts. drp11, Sl76 Per mo. payJJ 11vt•ry. thln~ \\'ilh IO\\' dOl\71 pa;.·· 1nent. Call 516-5880, Heritage Relll tcirs. loprn eves.\. --==---* BA YSHORES * Best Buy $31 ,000 Anractlv<' 'J, BR & d('n. ltll· m3culntr. Pril'Ol<' beach . '.lJ3G Crestvie11• Dr. Oprri s.1t & sun 11·51 'or t•eH 1-'r:ink .lamr~ PJrr ~ ... t~G17. Newport Beach Tim•! Oprn :.:a1 Sun J.;, :>.'lOO R1\'rr Great location. 2 'lhort blocks I to bC'.ach. Belong to pr ll'i.l c I cluh: swlni, lt"nniF. rtr l RR A·ff'tlmr homr, !op t'l'ln- !('J111S. $3(1,50(), Collins & Watts 962-S523 IMMACULATE F.·~irli• Costa !\lf'sa. ~ Br + f;unil.v. Br1n11iful 1·ornc r lot. H1N1111 for lruilf'r. boa• or pool. Open Hou.'!e Sunday 1 '!il ~. 21:\~ Aster. PYRA:\11[) EXCJlANGOns 67S-8800 ---$23,900 3 Bdrm.+ Den Sha rp & clt'an. 01\·ner 1rans- le1wd. Built·in range &. ov- en & d1sh\\•asher & rcfriger. ator :-t~0.1710 TARBELL 2955 Harbor REPOSSESSIONS Sparkling clean homl!ll, tome newly painted & carpeted. 2. :, 4 & ~ bdnna. Some with pools. ntA-VA conv. terms, from SZ0,000 to $-10,00'.l. Collln.11 & \Vat!JJ Inc. S.~I~ Ad ims Ave. 962-5523 -DOVERSHORES- Vlc\v honl<'. U4S Sanlill,lfO Dr. Ui·~t buy -spac. a BR. 4 ba. Adartablt> floor plan for rot1pl1: or l~f'. tamUy. Newly clccoratcd. By ;1p11'1. $91,00J. Bill Grundy, Realtor Sl~ J)O\'f'r Or., N.B. &l:l-4820 Eastbluff-View i2:!\ Arhutu.~ -644-20'2~ By 0\1711•r -Mnkr orff'r OPfo:N &111Sun U 'liJ dark t)1llllt1 Belbo.1 l1land Lochenmyer Realtor REAL TORS 644-7662 JEAN SMITH, RL TR . I -------100 E. 17th ~! . C :i.t ~:t2.>5 _O_U_P_L'°F.-x""'"1 -U-,-. -,-,~-, .. -.., Nr-wpon Blvd , C;\I 1.6-39'J8 E\'es GT.H.171 I DOWNTOWN IPARKL IDO CONDO-'"' · ""~"" s.;:,"10 Lovrl> $fllJI h•\'rl :i Bit . 2 P} r11n11d L'l:changors 67:r8SOO ba. l\it<'ht!n bltn~ :-.'<'11 cpt/ • l nr. 2 1>8, iuagt, patio. E11u11.k Co.:tta ~lc5a, ('.'(l't>l-drp~. ratlO, l'OO!. " 3 $10.000 r1ni"n, cDJTy Isl, U8 ORCES OK lent 2 Bednn il d\n1n11:. fll'f'. 11:11r:u:t'~ $11.000 Topai., 673--0Zl2 or~ "'l' I plaCtt!, blc R~2 lul, I bioclc lo \'1 nt•r UCI, 3 hed· all ihOpplnf. Mkin( J2,4,95(1. CALL G) 641 •l414 Bayshor•I l"t)C)I ~on 26.000 sq. 11. Call .wG-U51 (open e\'~~I. 91,. ~ -'--------,-l&l. 900. Tem11 i ..... -. ~ B.Jrm~. 2 Rath11. Oln ng :toy erdle, Rea ltor I ·~ HWTAGll llALT\' rrt01n, rn11'). 2 pntlO•. lwc· 1!10 Nr-11'[Vlr! f'hd C.:'i(. .... -.... lfl•ft Nt•r Nt•J•rl •••• orrltt I ur1ot1~ r.'l rprt, lh'A{lC!I' & S41-7nt " .!·=:;;:;;:=:;:::;;;:;;~-I Dally Pilot 'VaiiiAd!I' ha~ 11h11Hr•r.i l.ll1• lt>:t'"'hold. __ _ b.lflt~im ta.lort l 'n11r11111I~ nnly f.12-lM.'I Brt,:ht, cheery, contempor- ;iry 'l Bedroom, grt•I ror 1u:wt,yv,·edJ or retired couple, Very •tltacl1~ yard -R·3 lot ·"'itb roon1 to bUild aar- age apartn1enL •• Or 1lowin9 down? In """" "-" Wt hav• "'' 4 BR. & POOL ho1nt! for yoo. Only $2!),9:(1 0wr nlO IQ, fl. Of COUid bt luxury llv1ne. Pool, badmin- ton co u r I, lhu111.eboant, atudy, nUTHry, QUice - name It! This propercy bu Jt IOI' the one wilh active 1n1aainatlon. Ne:eda somt! paint I: f!Jrin -Priced ac· oordlngly. Call now for tull detalll! Call ~ BE(l!UTY Gre11t fanilly hOmc whh 2000 aq. ft., 3 bedroom• and large tantlly J"()0.111 In IOP ah.ape and lop location. Malntenanct! lree JandsC'ap- lng including a huge patio. This i5 a mullt 5ef: at 134.~. Call 842-2535 for thil IOlid 2 bedroom $151 MO •1"c<o. n.2 Lot, room 10 • •<Id. $33, 900 67U550 University Realty \0 THf. RF.AL ""'-ES1'ATCRS • "" '· " r OPEN DAILY 1-5 4607 Wayne Rd. 3001 E. Ctr. HI\'}'. 67J..6510 CHARMING 2 BR on R2 corner lot. Beam ceilings, ?t1auive brick frplc, Cozy ~It, 700 l.&rkspur, S37.~. 61;>-2409. Sharp 3 bdnn. home. Enc)O$· cd patio, DOLL HOUSE OPEN SUN. 1-5 1106 Goldenrod J Bdrm., 1am1Jy rn1 .. pool, v1ew. Lge. Jot. 2 Bdrm, fireplace, range & retrig., crpl!i, drpa, Sl'J,000 or will leaS(.'. RJtr !>-111-7711 Costa Mesa DON V. FRANKLIN BY Owurr: 3 BR/2 ba, 2 frplc. Clo.w to ihp 'g. 1714) Open Houses THIS WEEKEND ... , lhh llatHlf dirttte" with fH ft;h ...t"411 U row •• llo11N•h11lltl11f. All "'9 lecotfo• lhtod Mlow .,. ct..crlbed I• ,,...., d ... 11 ~ •~lllt .,..,. .....,. "' toc1..,·, DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. rmo. ... , .... ,.. 11 ....... , ......... , ... .,. •rtff .. lltt 11dl l11hr_tf .. I• Hall col•-eM.11 frid.,. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) 614 Goldenrod, Corona del l\1ar 673-8550 $33.900 (Sal & Sun 1·5) (2 BR & Family or D•n) 2536 Crestvie\v Dr. (Bayshores) NB 548-4617 (Sal & Sun 1-5) (3 Bedroom) *5300 Ri ver. Newport Beach 646-3255 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 801 Kings Road IN'pt Hgh ts)_ NB 675-3210 !Sat & Sun) *2632 Ri verside, Costa t.1esa 675-3210 $30,250 (Sat & Sun) 1014 Santiago (Dover Shores), NB 642-8235 (Sunday) 216 Poppy, Corona del Mar 644-4910 $87.500 (Sun 1-5 :30) 16201 Culpepper Cr. (Prestige Homes) HB 846-0232 IF•i. Sat & Sun) 4607 \Vavne Rd .. Corona del Mar 673-2222 IDaily t-5) (3 BR & Family or Oen ) 445 Tustin (Newpo•l Hghlsl NB 675-5200 (Saturday 1·5) 3086 Gibralter. Costa l\1esa 545-2075 $29,950 (Sat & Sun 10-5) 425 Redlands !Newport Hghlsl NB 646-3497; 642-5140 (Daily 10-5) 9032 Adelia Circle, lluntington Beach 968-3654 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 2134 Aster, Costa r.tesa 675-8800 $36,950 (Sun 1-5) 3044 Madeira fh1esa Verde) Chol 673-4350; 645·1564 eve. ISat & Sun) 3039 Maderia (1'.1esa Verde) CA1 644-49 10 $34,250 !Sun 1-5:30) 228 Goldenrod, Corona del 1'1ar 644-4910 $84,900 !Sun J-5:30) 4652 Rovce. Irvine 833-0700 $43,950 (Sun 1·5) 470 E. 19th St .. Costa Mesa 645-0303 $28 ,950 !Sa t 1-5) 1120 Gleneaglc. Costa fi1esa 645-0303 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2512 l\ndover. Costa ?\fesa 645-0303 $32,750 (Sal 1·5) 2221 Arbutus {Eastbluff) J\"B 644-2024 (Sal & Sun 12-dark) * 1106 Goldenrod. Corona del ~tar 673-2222 (Su n l-5) (4 Bedroom ) **3871 ~·llstral, Huntington Harbor 645-0303 $83.500 (Sun 1·5) 4507 Gorham (Ca1neo Shores) CdM 833·0700; 644-2430 (Sun 1·5) 2306 Arbutus. Eastblu!f 833-0700: 644-2430 1123 Emerald Ba.v. F:1nerald 644-2430; 833-0700 tSU!l Bav ·(Sun (4 BR & Family or Oen) l-5) l-5) **505 Morning Star (Do"'ver Shores). NB 642-8235 (Sal & Sun) 921 Bellis (Eastblulf) NB 642-8235 $57 ,500 (Salurday) 4500 Orrington Rd (Irvine Terr.) Cdl\I 644--4910 Sl75.000 (Sun 1-5:301 2612 Lighthouse (Broadmoor) NB 644-4910 $62,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 20251 Craimer (A1eredith Gardens) HB 644-49 10 $45,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 410 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB 644-4910 $105,000 ISat 1·5:30) 604 AllviC\\' Place, Laguna Beach 645-0303 (Sal 1-5). *2033 Highland . Ne,vport Beach 645-0303 (Sun l-5) (5 BR & Fami\'6 or Oen) **210 Evening St8' ( over Shores). NB 642-8235 !Sunday) 2421 Sierra Vista (Upper Bay), NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) **11 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle). NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) *1033 Mariners Dr. (Dover Shores). NB 646-1550 (Open Daily) DUPLEXES FOR SALE ('2 Bedroom & 1 Bedroom) 317 lleliotrope. Corona del Mar 673-8550 tSal 1·5) 12 Bedroom E•ch) 617 Jasmine, Corona dcl Mar 645-0303 1sun 1.;1 ..... • • • Peel ead W.tett...wt Unbelievable poolllkie CUlltol"n townhouse llvini;. ft.taint. trtt. 4 hup BR's, 3 i'UU. baths. Deluxe built-in kitch- en. Dl1hwasher, Indirect lighting, walk -in pantry. Real circul.8.r stairs to up-. per 3 lluitPs, Hil &: hen wan:lrobt' doset.5. Oub- bouSt'. Fun tilled open air pavilion with fireplact'. Pa- tio. Great locaUon. Only $23.500 with low dn. \\fhy rent'!' Hurry & call CTI4) 962-5585. IOl!ISI .J Ol.\0\ Pi"lfl TONS 19131 Brookhurllt Av,. l luntington Beach l'M UNIQUE And l'm looking for that par· ticular couple \\'ho needll charm, privacy, swimming and easy maint,nance. I havt! 3 bedrooms and a larg!': !am!ly room. f.fy kitchen overlook! my pool. I ha\'e a nict' atrium ofi my living room. Come up and sae me -I'll sell myself to you for ftj,950. 842-2535 \-oTHC REAL \"'-ESTATERS ' ' ' •, I ' ,' I ORISI L Ol\O\ '" NFA~f0~5 2299 HARBOR, CO~A MESA LOVE NEST $23, 950-FHA/VA 2 years new &: simply gleams! Xtra lar&e bed- room1, dirung, work-saver kitchen, much, much more! HJ.S to be one ol the be1t buy1 in the wholt! beach area -Fltil looker ahollid be proud new owner~ Call 645-0303 IORlS I [ OI \O~ "' 1?£/llTOR .!> 2299 HARBOR, COSTA ?t1ESA BY O\VNER: 2300 sq. fl. 4 Br, 2 Ba, formaJ din nn, lrg panelt!d faro rm, cpt.s, cwton1 drapez, encl front !lalt' patio. Sprink1ers. t.iany extru's Because ol tr&n!fer only $42,500. 2029 \O THE REAL "'-CSTATERS , I,' I 'o f'.l VACANT Don 't live In Tent Buy Like Rent See this vacant 3 BR, 2 BA Townhouse, w/crpts, drp1, refrig., bltn R&O "-Iota ol rec area. FP, $1!1,990. Sub- ntit 847-1221 SEYMOUR REALTY lnU Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch Open 'ti! 9 PNI IDEAL FOR RETIRED COUPLE Single family 2 bedroom home, Modem elec kitchtn with' dishwasher, washer and dryer dining room, liv- ing room, '1arge yard, all ell· ceptionaUy \\'eU kept. VACANT 3 Bednn + tam &learic Dr., c~. ~· I' nn. 2 ba, bllns. Crpts/drps, FREEDO;\I Home. Clean .C frplc, Iar2' yard, 7 yt!ars BR, 2 BA. Completely 162-4471 ( =.) 546-11 OJ 1llage Real Esta te -Old. Good location. Take carpeted. Patio. \Vlll seU over 6~% VA $215 pe r VA or FHA. By Q\\.'Jl('r e BY owner "Prestige", S%. mo. Iota!. 0 w n er I Ag t 616-2188. IBA, J br. 2 ba, oversized 636-4470. 1--;4.--;;8,;R---;F"A"•°'n"'L-;;Y.--;;R-;cM;--. -a I l -e I e ctr I c k i t ch en STEAL THIS ONE! 1•t. BA, wlk to all .chis w/bar-b-quc. M11ny extn.11. $21.950 \Vest.side Beauty, All-& chtu·che5. Lg fncd bk 7300 sq ft lot. Exceptional sume $19,100 l"HA 1~•<;0 yd, on cul de sac 546-4253 cond. $33,500. 846-0232 or int., \V/W crpt, cuSt d111s. 1\'k days aft 5:30 897-4189 10x20 cav palio, vacant.1 =o-.-v-.-,~S=h-.-,.-,----'B~Y~o=w=N=E=R~,-,~B~.,~111=.~.,-.-1 Owner/Agent 2 car gar, crpts, !rplc, hltn ~2-IiTI : eves: 646-736.) • LOOK • stove, dbl even & dshwshr, !1-lESA Verde by owner; 3 \\'ater skiing, Boating, Crc\\'· lrg cul-de·sac Jot. $28,000. bdrm, fmly rm, 2 ba. patio. lni, J\lntns & reflections Call for appt. 1213) 764--8091 Open daily $29,950. 545-Z75 from niost fOOlll,!1 in !his CUSTO~i 4 BR, 2 ba WESTCLIFF spacious home unmarred to1i'nhouse, aJI appl .. Pool by ui:,ly roo!$. $169,500. tennis:, Eruiy p y m n Is, AREA >1s-n19 12-1.000. 001--1680 $28 950 Dover Shores Beyfront 3 Br, beaut. lndscped, frplc, 1 BEST BUY. REDUCED for Beautiful resin. area. Close J{arbor Iii Dl!trlct -\Valk Quick Sale. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Den. ro bch. 96S-3654 to fantastic \\'e5tcJitf Shop-Bar. Piel'. Sllp. Sll0,500. .' "<· 3 i••gt Bdrm, -J"'t ~lODERN 3 br. Good Trad,, si8-193S or Ul-4684 redecoratt!d, new carpeting, ---------neighborhood. By 01vner drapes. Brick patio, boat/ EilJ Bluff $31.000. ioo..1014 or 962--009&. trailt!r parking. Financing?' 1---===--==---GLEN t.IAR $27,750. by 01vn. O\\•ner \'ery flexible -Fa~t e EXCLUi:IVE AGENTS e Spotl,ss 3 BR. shag cpt. possession -Don't tarry on SALES -LEASES 962·3921, 9391 Portsmouth Dr thill one( Call • 64>0303 0\.\-'NER, 4 BR, 2 Ba, Frpl., l'ORISI [ 01 .SO~ "' NE <-'£ TO~'> 2..J2·1 Vista Del Oro ---,5=1-:;;5-:;;0:-:;0c---1Ne11·pon Beach · &1~-1133 e WHAT A VIEW! e MOVES YOU IN Come ,.. & moke ollec 10 Choice Huntington Beach 3 o•vner. 2 sty, 3 Bd, 3 Ba, bedroom 4 new carpe111, ll' den, 2 lrplc'5, Prlv deck large covel't!d patio · as-off m~tr suitP. Shag Cflll.s. 2299 Harbor, Costa Mesa sume 6%.% loan. Etc, etc, etc. 7~; finan. 29:r.I $26,900 1424 2535 Cala.lpa St., &"4·1450. BLUFFS CONOO D-PLAN Located on lush greenbelt, Nr Bay, 3 br, 2~ ba, crpts/ Bltns, Crpt.~. Orps, Patio, $29,500. 5.31>-3406, 968-9923 Irvine 4 BR lo PLAYROOM Are offered \vith !his liOO sq. ft. townho1Jse, on choic' greenbelt Joe. Playground equipin·i., pools & bicycle paths close by, Children do not n~ to crosll 5tr,els to reach them~ Th(> s.1fe area for your children you\·e been waiLing & only SM,950, ired hill drps. By 0111ner, St4-S9SJ Univ. Park Center, Irvine CLEAN & Neat &. Sharp • Altorney's gt-Owing lamily • mol'ing up • mass1\'t' • upstairs lam. nn -plus 3 bdrm. &. 2 bths. -do\l•n • a -IMJly lovely home • at 3111 Coolidge In C.~f. • under market at $34,950. • Lot! of extras -wd. shuttt!rs, srrinklcn. frt, &. rear -and a landsc11ped paradise • Quintard R'aity . 1871 -Harbor -C.i\f. &lZ-7991 NEED R00'.\-1?' 4 &drm, 2·~ ba. covered l enclosed patio. Extra, eJC· Ira shflif). Ownt'r in hurry to mO\'t' -pri~ 1011· at $2.1.950. Ht!ritagt Realtors, Glen Queen, ~ll5l. lopen l'vtll.l DAILY PILOT for aclionl Ca11 642·5678 & Save! 2 BR, 2 BA , gardn nn. 2 Call Anytime 833-0820 pa1io1, 2 c gar 11'/elec drs, 11001. All in pk like setting. OPEN lfouse·Village Three, Dhc xtras &14-1498. Prince!on model .] br 2 ba. J775:i Oak T!"f"~ i.n. LUS!{, View 3 BR, 21i BA Unh•ersity Plll'k. Hll-lUJ. 2221 Arbutu1 -64~2024 i\lust move, make oUer. By 01vner -Make offer 0f)en S~Sun 12 'lil dark. 2 SfY, 4 BR condl), 21~ b.a., 2 lrplc"~. Landscp'd, Fountain Valley under 2 nii'ir; from UCJ. Avail July 1st. S35,j()(l. 4 BR, FAM RM 83.1-0817 eves & \vkndll Corner lot. 510.fi03ll l--------"'---1 Huntington Beach Would You Believe? F.1nte1tlc I Only $22,9001 3 BR, fenced, lge yard I\ I .lruir !ref's. Low GI -Or FHA 11'11'1'11'. HAFFDAL REAL TY 142-4405 Eves: 541·21·'6 Fast resulu are jc~t a phone caU a"l\'l.f • 642-5678 Lagun.1 Beach * OCEAN VILLI\ • i~l'W, olde \\'Orld dt!!1gn: 2 Br, den it, rec'. rn1. J)in. area. F rpl. 1..'.itch. \\)ran,c:t!, oven, dish\\·asher. $39.000 full pr. Lo\1't'r dn. pf). OK. l\tls.5JON REALTY 494-0731 l.llVELY ocean view horn,, :i;parkllng. :2 Bdrms, dC'n, frplc, 2 patio~. deck. $37,500. 0\\'0E'r 499-2094 t!Vf'S It wknds. $©\l~lA-.ltt-~S" The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle 0 R~trong• lett.,s of tho -;-,_,..~~~.-<--. lout womblod words be-r. low lo fon11 four almpl• WGrdi. f-f :.., I NEKLEN I .-...... "=" -I I 1 • 1 I I -~, ·; IPYREK I! _I'll'!_• ILAKEN 1' _ I 1 j 1 J I • Sign In Miami bar~ •Mini-;:;;:~~-:;~-;::~..., clod Girls Welcome. We Newr I COTSEK i--." 1 I i I ' I I" I 0 Corri!)~ th• dluc~r. ;,;,,;d _ . • . by fllf1"1il In ths mlulng WOtd• YoV O.V.lop lrorn SJ.p No. J below. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCA ' Friday, April 2, 1971 [ HolMI tor Wt l~I _,,, .. I~ I l~I I~ ;;;I _ ...... _ .. -:,I~~ I -1 ·-I~ I -w-I~ I _, .. -l~ Afw·-·-. Newport Beach * FA;.l!LY E.!i"TATI!: • NEEDS TEENAGERS 2-Story a bdrn1s., 2~~ baths. Con1111unity pool, clubhouse Lge. kl!ch. v.·;brk.1:11. area; & punlng gn-en 'With this lorni•I dining rin.; lge. hv. inimae. adult occupied 3 rn1. v.•/fi·plc. On cul de sac Brt .. fantily rm. hOmt'. Lg~" i>lNCI, ~n gootl nclgllbor. bdrnis. & huge encl patio huod. $39,[J(J(). 1nakes this ~ great ho'me for itr CUSTO;\I BUILT * a flunily \l'ith teenagers. SJJlit-lt•v('l: 3 huge bdrn1s., $J9,j(JQ, 2111 bo.ths ; lgc. riving & f11m-Delancy Real E1tete dy rins. ForinaJ din. rtn. AU 2:'12S E. Coast H\\y .. Cd:\1 11•irh beaincd ceUlllli:;~. /.las-644-7270 s!ve stone frp{c. \Vet bar. Ron1an balh Jo rlislr. suite. P!4NORA~IC VIEW ~ Lots of extras; Good lllianc-of Jelly & main channel. .. Ing. $48,000. BR .. 4 ba. home w/formal d111. rm., s1udy; 2 frplcs, ....,, ~il"W On sandy beach. $169,500. mtlW~ wet bllr. Newly redecor. -..., o w .... 1 HW'( 2001 Bays.ide Dr. By app'I. WVIH lA\il.ta,. CAUi. Bill Grundy Realtor ~ .... e. .. ~c.-• 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642~ • '99·'800 * OWNER WILL HELP EXECUTIVES Beat the summer doldrums 3.350 Sq. It. p!us 1200 sq. tt. &. let Oll'ller help u•ith tbe of deck; overlook111g \\"oods financing tor your summer Cove lot· spcch1l'lllar white vacation in this 2 BR. 2 ba. 11·ater & ci ty view. Pool ta· boine on R-2 lot {yoa O\\'n ble size family room "'ith the land). Short steps to 11et b:i r & fireplace. High beach. Take a look ·you'll vault rd ceili ng in Jh ulg be glad you did! Offered 1-00111 111th flfeplace. 3 Bed-for S?.J.500. roon1s, 31~ bath.i & den. MORGAN REAL TY 11odr1·11 hu1lt-in ki1chen \I ith 673-6642 675-6459 dishwasher. Con1pletc inter-~ con1 s>sten1. Hot t1ouse in PRIVATE ROAD enu·~. $08,500. Call -ln1mac. J BR, den, din. rm. -40tan REAL ESTATE 3 bath home on lge. fenced lot. Light airy rooms. mani. cured lawns & beaut. gar- dens: dbl. garage & shop. Assoc. pool & putting green. IJ!IO Gle111lC')re St. Best buy in area. $64,500. 49~·9173 ~9--0316 Call &l246l:l for app't. Lovely 2 Br/2 Ba. Condo Bill Grundy, Realtor Leguna Beach Home OA COVES JOEAL !or year J'OUnd con1· BALB WATERFRONT fo1·t & gracious relaxed 11.,,·-Transferred _ "Iust sell ! Jllg. J\li extcr101· n1a1ntain-. J 3 BR 2 ba . 1 II d d T . Prime oc. , .smg e anc'I' a enc . enn1s N 1 d F -• . . story. ev.· y ecor. en,_-n1 t.'O utts, only 100 steps to pll· d 30 ft boat sl'P :75 "'111 vate be.itch, also overlooks Y • • 1 ' • ' gla1norous hif.ite<i pool. All Bill GrundyN :e~~~20 clec kit, incl : rt-frig, T'Jnge, 833 Dover Dr., · · dishwasher & disposal. Con1-OCEANFRONT pl~tcly carpeted \\'iill to wall UPL X thruout Lower level laun. D E dry has \1·shr/dl'yer, ~!or-Good Income. $&:.500 age room & double carpor!. BURR WHITE This is a corner unit in Realtor 675-4630 braut lndscpd, palro!ed 2901 Ne11'J>Ort Blvd., N.B. urea. Close to market & BY Q\\ner. Sell or lse/opt t>hJl ng. Ava1l f1.1rn 01· unfurn. 3 BR + lam. nn. & din. Prlced under markrt !or di· re• t sale. Phonf': 837-0791. SHORT WALK rm. 2 Ba. Ne w drapes & carp. Sprinklers. Westcli!f area, nr schools. 5.5% assun1. loan. $43.500 -Incl. To the beach . charn1ing. the land. 642-8839 ne11·f'r . ~ bdrrn. Lag~11a S::-000 REDUCTION. Custom hon1r Ln \\oodsy l>C tllng. 3 br pool ]Jomr. \Vrlte Lo vely \10CNI 1orlf's 1n open Classified Ad No. 111, Daily bean1 ll\-'llli; rn1. & famlly· Pilol P.O. Box 1560 C."f. d ining r1n , L~e. playroom 9263)' ' with k1tch., 3 baths. Divid· . rs in10 2 2-bclrm. un it~. BY 011-ner. Harbor Vlt'w Zoned for 3 unus . SOJ.000. home, floor p~a~ 3, 1 story, Turner Associates 4 BR. 2 ba, d1n_g rm, frplc, 110-N c 11 , • O\\'n land, $43,9j(), 644-4218. .> , . 011s1 · wy .. ._....guna 494-1177 Anytime NE\\', quality 3 br, 2 ba, 1~-----·:----1 5'16 Santa Ana. $39.500. Open Laguna Niguel Sat & Sun 1-:>. 646-4080 OPEN ho11se Sun 12~. S8000 i\-lARINE.tt'S Westclifl, 4 BR, he'lo1v 1nurke r, s p a c i o u s 3 ba, Bonus rm, encl child home & grounds. 3 BR, yard. 646-2063 2 ba, f an1 rm, Lndscpd. . _ V\e \\i. \\"alk to beach, 3 CHAR..'llNG hillside home yr<; old. ,\lovt"in cond, I.Dad· w/v~e1v, Ne11110t1 Ht 5, ed 11 /x1r11s. i\lu~t sell , 318511..:"~'-"-''"'-=-----__ _ Grand Canyorr Dr., 01vner, Newport Heights S3G.900. 4'.16-3714. ;'\JUST ~e!!, bf>11u1 3 bdrn1. * 445 TUSTIN AVE. * hon1e. 21i Ba1hs. Lgc. tocn. OPEN SAT. 1·5 )'llrd, br11u1. lndscpd, 11 ilh A Touch of Spanish co1. patio & gas BBQ. Cptd. \V1th \\"ailed lnne:r courlyard; & tlet.:ir thruou1 S~l.JOO. 3 BR., 2 ba., din. rm. + CALL TO Sl::E fam. n1l. opening onto rear 0\V:O:E:R 1!l.">--:i:iO:i dec king for entertaining. 1'S_P_A-,-.l-S~i"ST"YLE hon1c 1\·ith a:IX2'2 Ft. nn. ov~r garage. clo~c·in PAr\ORA:\llC virw. Only 41~ yrs. old. S111rd1ly built :2 BR, 2 BA. Walker Rlty. 67S.S200 ~llin!": ht'low rt'placrmenl 3336 Via Lido, Ne"·port Beach co~! Ah~enl{'{' -0 "' n <' r NE\\"PORT 1-lei his comer l'"duc•rs pl'IC" $6JOO now g s.i.1.~i00· 4!1 \-6!.1,iG • 3 br. 2 ba, lrplc, rleep shag !hru--0ut. Real clean. acll Tustin Ave. 64~32~ Sat, Sun & 1t1on or 886-1022 or 883-5181 11•kd~·5 BY Q\\"ll('r • in1 n1ai;. :-: br. 2'~ ba, fun1 r111, ldr:v r111, lrplc. lg deck, l3(J,OOO. !!t,">--.i1'.":8 LOVELY 4 BR. 2 Ba, fam Exc!u.~h'e, spectacular view, nn \'iC\\' ol vallcv close 43 lxlr111. 2 ba). 425 R<'r!lat1<!:1 111' ~hopping. S4·j',ooo . A\·e., Nwpt 1-fgts. Sl9,;m 4!12--0422 Open daily, 10 to 5. R!tr. 'd I 64&-3497: &t2-5140 Lt o Is• 1--------..--· tS•n Clemente Acreagt for 111• 150 Lats for Sale 170 Mort919t1, Houws Unfur n. 305 Hou.es Unfum. 305 Hou1o11 Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Fum. £1111 COLORADO NORTH Tuslln area. 100 x ..... Truat DHda .......,_..~ G•neral Co1t1 Meta Mesa Verde Cotta Mtu .·~ S3 Down, $3 mo per Acre 125'. 100 yard1 trom park. $21,000 DISCOUNT Owner liquidat.in& beaut $12,750. Also have 2 iloplng L1ndlord..0Wner1 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpts, FOR sale or lelle -l..ge foothills acreai::e Trees! view lo!& for $8900 each. Emtryen(")'. Sacrifice choice \\'e 'tl.'ill refer tent1nt1 to you drt>4, stove,. re.frig, Quiet 3 br, 2 ha, bltrui. Comer CASA de , 1 Views? Elk £: Deer hunUng CW:ne:r 832-6540. $83,000 TlJ, JmY• $2,ii<I ptr .t"'R.EE of charge .. ,f.tany tropical 1'4!ttlng for ad ults' house. MT-7238 or 673-a096. CASUAL Calli. LlviN'" a area, Fishing nearby. Full OIOICE lot. 100 x 13S R-2 mo, at 9%. Sell wit>i tul.i ~-d111lrablilt'\ len&nls on our only. 1 blk to shol>'. · $169. Newport S.1ch warm ~ledlternnean atme. price only $2970 for $10 Ac. paffii alley. 348 E . ~i Strona; bu,yera, ttl4J ws.itlf\i Ust, 1_......., ___ . _______ 1 phcre. Spac!ou1 color co- Pl d¥•n, $30 mo (98 Itocbester St, C~l clo~ to :J25.20J9 or (n4) 327-87'19 ALA Rentals • 64~3900 f.IESA del ~tar 4 lrx hr Adults Preferred ordinated apts -deal&:ned A' pynmts) NO INTEREST. 17th St shopping are a atl)'Unte. $13j LAGUNA 1 BR, atove, hon1c, clean. 2 b11, Lrg 2 BR. 2 Ba .; garage··· $225 furnished tor atyle A: com- For plctw-e8, in1o I< $22,000 673-9509 NE.ED 2nd Tnist Deed $5000. refrlg, Child OK. f/yrd w/chldrn play area 3 BR, :2 Ba, 3 car garage fort e Healed pool 9£1!\f!I gua1·an1.ee, wr!U!: Owner, 4 LOTS, <."Ot Miran1ar & \Vestcliff, prlme luc:alion. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 U).)/mo. f"irm . 557-6581J. REALTOR 548-6966 en W/ lndltt:ct Jlfh~· • Box 17043 T.A., Denver, Capistrano, Arch 8 each Aft 7 pm, 642-1067 SPACIOUS J...-4 Br. 3 Ba. 1925 \Vlndv.·ard, Bay<"rest DeJIDe RIO. Adults. lfo~tl. Colo. 80217. His, Laguna B. $19,900. $199 3 1 BDRM., ~~llY,.;n1·• park Fam rrn. lge fncd yard. Open SUnday 1-5. l BR, pool l BR . ..$175 fUrit. ' 11 <In, 1199 mo. 0 , .. ", r lke )'ard. ....,..ta 4"t'A. Kids ~1 "~ C 11 J ' ~no. Oinln, rm, den, I.a" tmUTIES· INCL"-0 1 5 Ac, level, adj to Nat'J "" OK b"· ~a mvnth NO ···1· c . ..,,,..,. a 1m at ""' v..-r;.. Forest nr Big Bear. $39501_21_,_,,.._ __ 33_1_8_. -----1 ~-;"'"';;;";';";";""•~1~1;~.:1 1, ~F~E~E~·~·;.~·~;.7\71.,"o. =-~· ~ 645-1976 or 83.l-2113 $475. mo. Realtor 642--5200 365 \V, \Vil.son Gda.tn FIP. NO 00\\'N $39.50 per LAGUNA Niguel corner lot . 1·· REALLY NICE • 2 Br. LOVELY 4 BR 2 BA, fmly 3 BR, 2 Ba, 2 sty, Ne""-port *$Ill UP* ~ti!, n10 Except. invest m n 1 Ml X 117. AU lmpro\'ements huge kl! h tpl t ~hores hOme. For lease. GIANT 1 I< 2 BEDROt'..IMr poten1ial w I abundant In. Owner 495-5505 2 Ba, bloui, C / D' ~· schls ._ c •' -p•'. crpl'"~·. tl50 per mo. S.l0-299I. G<lrgeous, patk·llke •UOW. H F I heel 300 kids/pets. 11;io. .,. ... ,,..., I c=-"'c.,.-'-~;_...c;;__ rtt:i'f.'at'J opportunities. Bk:r. Golf Fairway Lot OUMI urn s Al.A Rentals e &U-3900 646-1112 Univer1ity P1r'k Closed garages '* IU):. &14-1670 By ow-r "2 ·~"' !mum security. QWet street, 0 '"' "" ..,....,.. General $120 POOL, 1 Br, Guest col-LEASE 4 br/2 ba, l&: lncd Adult5 no pets.~QJ.O GJ...a.~T ~~g~ ~85 \V'! Mobile Home/ , ___ ...;.______ tage tot OK. yn:I, Chldrn OK. 3 BR. lam. rm. I< din. rm. Fullerion Ave (H.ar'bcil\;·to rowhf'ad Ave, San Tr•il•r P•rk1 172 Blu~ Beacon* 645.0111 * * 646-S?34 * * Turtle Rock .......... $325 Bay, then So. until'~ Bernardino, Ca. EXCELLENT opp. 2~<;q ot • ~llr\l RANCH 2 Br. 2s~':~1~arpe1 &·drapes. 48~ ~~; ;:;;il: ~k·;;,s ~~of Nel'>'J!Orl m~1 1 ~ 20 ACRES Northf'rn Calif. tv.·o 5 Star Fant . .Al. H. RENTAL FINOER.S atv/re.f, kids & Pet I * Cati 67" ~• * 3 BR & •. · "'M-" Fr •• To L.ndl.rd. I $,.,~ .... ...,..., . in. rm., 1mmae .,.., Nr River, !\lain hiways. Parle! tor 65.'I. Total spaces we come. ....,, 4 BR. l tam rm, 2'~ be $35(1 Take over, $29 do\\·n, $29 312 (142 ap. ready to start 645.0111 ALA Rentals • 6t5-3900 ATTRACTIVE, clean 3 BR WE ALSO HAVE -o _,7 hon1e, nr OCC, cul-de-sac, mo . ..uo-\/\1'1 COn!tr'.) Limited Partner. 4JSW.lttti.c..:1 M .. • 3 BURM. + tam1ly nn., full S230 mo. 54Cr-S963 FURNISHED RENTALS Apartments for a•I• 152 ship. Net return the 1st I ~~i;,;;;.:_::.:.::_.:_:::.:_:._::~ dlnina: nn .. built-ins., brk. ...;._;.;.;,;c.;...;;...;.;.;..;;.;...c...-""t year 3M per mo. For details e LAGUNA SPECIAL $390 a month. NO FEE, 2 BR. 1-loui;e, no pets. *** 14 very charming call 682-1357. StePa to water. 2 er. encl Newport 540-1120. $160/mo. $50 cleaning fee. unils, iood Joeatlon. Prin-1~-~~~-----~ e LUXURY Bu"" d 2 1994 Pomona Ave, C~t. ci"-1' only. Ow-r "" "'15 Real Estete gar . .,.50. ''6ete • .,.... .... .,,.....,,... E h 182 ALA Rental1 e 64S-3900 Br. 2 Ba, + POOL, * * 3 Br. HOUSE. $200 Condominiums xc ange Kids/pets. $150. per month. No pe:ts, 1940 ..,,'~·~r-·~·~'-·-----''° HA YE s~'r!:~sEI~ be~~a~a.' i ne r ALA Rentals • 6-15-:ml _P_o_m_o_ .. _._,_._. ----- Cozy "Bacllelor Pad" 2 BR NE\V ottit-e Building Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642.4620 $275 OCEAN VIEW 3 Br, split 2 BR house in courl, Crpt1• ' "' level, avail now. & drps, Garage, 2 !ima I 2 BA, single .story, a.it cond., w,.,100 K equity, S80 OCEANFRONT Bachelor, Blue Beacon* 645-0lll children, $15.'.i mo. 646-2719 easy care patio. custom t27K Net lncon1e Ulil paid, student OK. "!] nh ,-Pr.Hi!. ---'ll Pnhor "SINCE 1946" 1st \Vestern Bank Bldg University Park Oay1 833-0101 Nights crpts &: drps thruout in Lar· WANT Blue Beecon * 615.0111 • BUDGET BOOSTER · l ::.· fd~:~~· $?~~." ;~ win's prestige Tiburon. BAYFROl\'T House or Lot .• REAL F I NO-INCL ~:·o~~vs~1{, yd, + pool. \V. \Vilson. S.18-2802. 3,BBRR. ,2\Lbbatti~_. ....... ~ \V.R. DuBois: 5-15-7166 OCEAN 2 Br. nr e\·erything, ALA Rl'ntal! • 6-\5-3900 =co=zy~2=,-,c:..c.,~l~S~o~n;:;.,n.~t~Sl-. l ., 11 at.~ ........ ~ cova;~D 3 BR, 2 B~. single e HIU.SIDE LOT in Sierra $175 fncd yd, 1 C"hild, no garage, ,a BR.,2lb,,.thohs ........ ~ s1ory Gl"l't'n Valley tov.·n-:\f dre Have abo 1 53 000 ALA Rental!! e 64>-3900 $150 \V/liTlL, Lge 1 Br, Pvt no dogs S40--0289. 3 BR. a. me •..... ~ hov"';,· Excellent ."t. a .k e ~~lty. \Viii trade u for iess patio, \Valk to stores. ti d hf II o er loan, No cp.;alilying ~ity in other property or $~I:~~.T~~l~r~r :i.:~.ile Blue Beacon * 64S.01I1 &rmSIO~ 3t BdR, ,2 bo'b·I Dg~n~g . -'.·,· re necess•ru, low do1"·n -uk-BOAT, CAR, AlNTI"UES e ROOM" 2 B B ' "'' t' 5' I'll . """ -;r ~ Blue Beacon* 64S.0111 · ~ r. l1ns, cld 1215 •07 7621 °00 •737 GARDEN LIVING,d Quiet, attrac, pleasdtt;.ttltll patd. Healed Pool. 1 Br $1<1li • 2 Brol1'81· Adults, no petL•( It: 1. 740 \V. 18th St., ~.!f~ I 1 Unbelievably a..J(I VAL D' ISERE Ganf'en Ap Adults -no peta. ~­ everywhett:. Stttdm' ""& \Vaterfall , 45' pool Re'e.IJtft,.; Sauna, Sgls 1·2 Bdrtrti ,turn- Unfum. from $135. SEE 11: 2000 PanoM, &12--86'1) ·r.~ * BONUS.$701 '+In FOR NEW TEN.utTrl , QUIET & SECLUDED!11BR. furn. Nr. S. Coast .Pial& & frwys. Pool. Adults. __ p40. minull bonus. 2831 lotol- SI., C~f. ing $26,950. etc. 646-'7JJ;) • S tncd yd, kids/pets. $140. · "" -' U'IV"'U l="...c,-~~-,,,,--~~ PAClOUS 1 Br steps ALA Rentals e 64~ Fountain Valley REALTY * SUS CASllAS "POODLE PALACE". Extra Re•I Estete Wented 184 to heh. Kids & pets. Sl20. Univ. Palk Center, Irvine special 1 BR Condo • Cot-\\'ANTED: 3-4 BR. home t;;. ALA Rentals e · 64j..3900 $11j SPACIOUS 3 BR, 2 ba, FOR lse, immac 3 Bit. l~i Lrg nicely furn Bachelor It lo Fain!ly or singles, pet OK. ba, new shag cptll & drps.1 ..,~ea,..U~Any,..~ti~·m~•~833..,~·""'.i.,..., l Br. Furnished tls 1age + separate enc Rd family in Cd'.\I from • ~UGE Bacht-lor-full kit, Blue Beacon* 64S.0111 frp\c, bltns. S22'3 nio. open dally. pet quarters (or game O\VNER. Fee simple, prin-sm pet ok. LAGUNA. Sl15. .,,,., 9543 21 ~,1 ..,..oo 3 BR. 21,I BA, lg bonu' rm, 2110 Newport Blvd. room ). A rare price o! only c\pals only. 1·213/6%--7318 ALA Rental1 e &l:>-3900 • f.lOVE IN Today· 2 Br. """. -. or 3'"" "'""'°· S315/mo, 4 BR, 2 BA. $16,900 on special terms. Balboa Island R/O, cpts, drpS", kids & Huntington Beach $275/ITl'IJ, Pool. Pr! v i I . $155-SHARP 2 Lar 'in R alty I pets, $135. &1~2996 Heated pool. Adules, -.-ts w • 1 nc. ~ ALA Rental11 e '"5-3900 EXECUTIVE llving-2700 gq ,.....,..., 21562 Brookhurst, H.B. financial I • FURN 2 Br house &: apt. .,., ft , $450. Huntington Crest Townhouse Unfurn. 335 .!'11~"~n~o~k~}~. ~64~2~-9520~~·~· ~~ 546-5411 anytime Now thru June 30. Winter $150 NR BEAO! 2 BR, 2 ba, 4 hr + family rm + lge * STUNNING G~, LIKE TIIE OCEAN? ratell. 67~74 gar .• Child &. pe! OK. office/den, 2 trplcs, 3 ha. Huntington Beech APT • lrg 1 & 2 ai--~. Y Cor'Qna del Mer Blue Beacon* 645-0111 s ,1 1 1 t lnn•r Infant·sml dog ok.~ o~ can't get closer than Business pa s \·S Y e S22fl-Sh11.rp 2 br, l~t ha, this. BLUE LAGOON VIL-Opportunity lOO FA""TASTIC VIEW of e SPREADING R.\1 • 3 lg courtyard patio. Near Be11.ch bl!n~. crpts, drps, aulomalic up. l MO. Free, 645-5530 LA, right on a private I--'-.;...---'-----Ne\vport Bay, Balboa Island br, 2 ba, stv/rct, fncd yd, & Ga r I i e Id . Ca 11 garage, 2131433-9893 DELUXE 1 BR&: Bach Aptl, beach, thrte bedrooms, BUSJNES.S OPPORTUNITY & Ocean. Nearly new kids/pets. $~. 2131772-108-1 or TI4/962-3892 I $35 wkly & up. Furn. incl · · f ALA Rentals • 64~900 B *3 BR. 2 Bath, lrp c, refrig, util. Mo. rates ~erm1 avl. t1·.ree bath!!, beauUfulty A chance tu JOln one o Spanish -1tyle 3 br, 3 ba •EXECUTIVE Hume-4 R, pool. $210/mo. Call 998 E C ~11 1.. furnished • bltY at today's America's fastest growing ex~uti\·e home. \\'ill lease f BR. 2 Ba. carpets, drapc's , 2 BA .. 2,000 i;q. fl. Activities %245&\. · amino. price and get next )"ear's lndusbies. furnishe-d or unturnishe-d. fncd yd. S225. 19072 Stingray rm, frplc, "-"el 'bar, etc. 21 ~-=-='--~~---= QUIF:r attrac !ihldlos S11.'i, incrt!ased \'alue all tor only 1\fOBILE HO'.\lE SALES Live-in maid incl. SUOO mo. in JIB 673-6578 car gar, boat 5 Pac f' . Duplexes Unfurn. 350 1 Br. $125. Adlt.1, no pets. $79,500• Also ~thrrs from Jnvesl in a goi~g establish. 2131772--10&4 or TI4/645-l353. Coron• dtl Mar $275/mo. 1st & 111.st + Coron• del M_a_r___ 2135 Elden, ~fgr Apt 6. }tj 000 ment, n1ove 111 Io day. alAR.,tING COTTAGE 2 l'lean. lee. 846-5972 Rfl 4 1 ;:::;;;:;;:..,:;;;..;,;;;;;. ___ 1 BR. Trailer noo+. ).Bf. 'Bl.ue la<joon Investment only 3 2 8. O O O ~p~m='•~x_".c:''-'_'kn=d~•·_· ___ ,NEW 3 Br. 2 ba, cpts, drp•, ,_,.1,,, 11~.+ •1a 1 u ,, d H · br. turn. Nr beach. Lge DOLL HOUSE "" ~ " req' . ave your 1n\1estrnent 3 BR, _ •·", crp•• • d-·, gor. 1295 Mo., I•"' nJ <«1-g R I d · 4 hs !rplc. t.lalutt: adultll. No "'" ....,,, "" ... ~ persons o y. V"IV" <Jl\I" ~ • ea ty returne to you in mont . pets $2'23. 673-7796 2 Bdm1s, fireplace, range & 2 ba on cul-de-sac, cov'd Qirbln-:\1artin Rltrs. 644-766:2 •• ,.. , ___ 1 You are buying fixed assets refrig., crpts, dzi>s, $250 or 1. 1_ & 1 t + C ,, .. _ * $15 per week up ,,..,,,.,... Soulh """""6t hvy. &: deposit assets only. Only Costa Me1a \vill sell. Rltr 5'18-7711 pa io. .,, as mo osta nt111a v.•/kltchem, S.25 per Wffk , Laguna Beach 499-2206 Interested J)f.'rsona apply cleaning f~. S205. 892-1357 ----------up Apts. MOTEL, 54&,9'1SS . EXECUTIVE please. Jomicra Inc., 19261 e 1 BR furnished house. \\"ATERFP.ONT 3 BR. 4 Ba. TNHSE-cpt, drp, ref, v.·hr, :2 BR, crpt~_. drps, b1t~7 • l BR, 1,,,.,,, No chlldNn' _ II,. hom• -.. I -d·" · 2 160 trpk, gar, f,.._"" yard. Sl O. . .... CONDOMINIUM Beach Bl\"d, H.B. J36..6jll .:.:i. '"'"'' Y '' ,._,,on san-dryr, rnge, pool, Br S · 732.e Weelo Dr, 64&-2613 pets $135. in Mesa Verde. Next to Golf 333 \V. Bay St, C.~1. dy beach. $1,000 ;o.10. 3 br. SUKI. 5 4 8-14 0 5 ' * 64;).1848 * Course. 2 story 3 BR, 24' TO BUY OR Newport Beach Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-463'.l ..:"':::.,.:..:.:":::'::.· ------Newport Heights ba1hi;, Intercom. Spacious SELL A BUSINESS CA:\tEO Highlands 3 Br. 2 3 BR, 2 BA, ""cant beauty. Of.LUX duplex, 3 BR, 2 b11., SPAC. 1 :· Crp/spd, '.~ dining & Jiving rooni. It's See LUXURY 2 Br home on Ba. Ocean view. Priv. Best area of 11.B. \\lalking Crpts, Drps, Frplc & =-i::i: A::',~-~ Your!! for the price $35,500. HOLLAND BUS. SALES channel. April 24 thru June. bt'arh. Rea!lor 675-7:z2j dist. to beach. $260 mo. garage. No pets, $185. $500 entire period to ''s~P~A~C~ro=u=s-,~,-,-.-,-,-m-u-y 1 962-5.'i23 A.sk tor Jack. Agl. 54,.395 ./ AVL now-1 & 2 Br tilrn. \Vill sell furnished, &:!eat "The Broker with Empathy'' r es pon5lble persons. l~~~F"~t~t;;11 ~~~~~~~~~~~~1 dPoo~IG.~~~~~l~~tl;~N:1 3024 Club House Circle. 1TI6 Orange Ave., C.M. 642-3573 rm, crp!s & drp.s. frplc. 3 BR. 1v.·nhse, drps, new • rec rm, oca on. 0 5-IQ..8i99 for appt, Art Adair. 645-4170; 54().0608 anytime 1----------Inquire 605 ~1argueri!e. shag cpt, R/0, frpl, pool, pets or children. ~ LARGE 2 br, 2 ba, 2-story CLEAN 3 Br , etl"c bltns, patio. $193/mo !st It. la.st, !•I TOWNHOUSE E-slde 2·1Sr, '11?0NT~~~LLO twLnhse 4Cbr, \"~' L" • 1. hon1e u•/frplc. S 2 7 S. 2 lrpl-SU""•ok "" •hpg 1100 clng d•p. 67~319 L-'-'_"_'m_••_•_1_~_"_'"_'_, --=--1 1,~ Ba. Pool. No po1'. $115. 1 ~xmgton n, .:'If. -.~-Jn an ique popcorn 675-43.~ after 6. '"• '"' ' .... "I "C.C.~O'-=c...:,.c...::_;_~ ... Call 646-QilO lmm occup. 54!}-3612 or booth-Custom aw n in gs , 531--0534. att 4:30 wkday~. * 3 BR. SUperior condition '•••••••••• 5-I0-!1583 glass windows, valu S200'J+. University Park 4 br, 3 ba, frplc. From S350. $235/nionth. 11 • * NICE 1 br duplex, Trd !or car, jewelry, boat 3 BR. & atriUrn. 2 Bath8. 9 am to noon, Sfa-4656; Aft Cllll S4&>-2350 Apts. Furn. 360 adults. $115. Income Property 166 prop or 7 Aft 6:30, 494-4977 Frplc. k bltns. $300 f.1o. 6, 644~527 H --.-n-,-1.n-g-ton--H-'-a~r-bo_u_r--I General Phone 549-0833. CANDY vending business for Avail. April 5 to Sept S. CUTE, newly dee cottage. e t & 2 BDRM'S ·e Duplex-Newport Beach We in S. \V. San I a Bob Pettit, Rltr 833--0lOl 2 J3R, fpl, patio, adlts. S:.'00. $550 BEAUTIF'UL u·ateriml * CUSTO~I FUR."ITURE UTILITIES PAID Beautiful, brand new {2) 3 Anall\v.'Pt Bch area. 675-3482 3 BR, 2 ba u•/sundeck k RENTAL. See ad-class 810. BR wilh many extras. 833-2708 Housel Unfurn. 305 dock, lse or option. &1.J-4132. * Call '548-J48l. 2-150 NEWPORT B(..yt>. Prime location. Block 10 \\"RECKING yard xlnt loca· General [Costa Mt•.• -"~4-4.cc~"~'~------Ma ....,, NICE 1 & 2 br •n°•a, beach. ;.Iaximum dep!"eC'ia· tion. Reasonable'. "'ill sell Laguna Beech Corona del ·Cli-r Avail. April lsl 133 E. ~Pl. lion. t•olll' Star it"ealty, all or part. Call 613-ilSj 0\VNER 4 BR. 1~, BA. fncd C.f.I. 6-12-1265 &'!.5-4422. lnveatment 2 In Huntington Beach • both yard, cul-de-sac s I . ' BRAND NE\V 3 Br, 2 ba. FURN 11 brd, I utllilies in-l '$~1~15-.~F7U~Rl-N7.-ba-,-h-.-"'w~/uKtll"-.I 3 bedrooms; one al Sl!}5 and h'I eluded. a u t pre.fer-red. il LIDO ISLE-320 f\ord. 6 Opportunity 220 on" at 122• St b M"' c i dren/pets OK. N t "' !!ill top Home/Ocean Vie1v. Sll5. 675-2.$40 Broker Adults. \V' son & FaiM~ beach apt!. Furn. Gar. 80' " J. op Y 3 '"' crptl;, pa.int, lmmac SZS5 Crpt/dl'ps, bltlns open arta. Call: 548--0522. -l beach Leasehold )T. 2014.t---------,--look 1hru our Rental Book. mo. 54!>-73;i9 beams, lrplc, "'"I .bar, fam Costa Me1a CLEAN Asking $110,000. ConsiderNEAR BILLI ON S WALKER & LEE, VACANT AND READY_ 3 rm, 2-rl!!ckll. $350/mo 972 * lBR.w/11W. trade. 6'" '097, 54'22U ""t DEVELOP'.\IENT · :i.tust Realtors La '.\Tirada or Owner: * Sll5/mo. Adults. * 'U-'< o-~ blg l>erlrooms, big coverC'd SPECIAL Low Rail's fron; 532 C t SI •~ ..._ m Sllcr\fice 160 gorgeous ac 2._,, Harbor Blvd. &I Ad•m• 49-1-5200 · en er ., .,.~ -=-,--------1 '"" patio, BAR·B·Q area. \Valk ,--==~=~=~-$25 "'k. Kit. avail. r.1aid wl fantastic artesian well. ~5-9491 Open 'til 9:00 P.~1. 2~ p 1 · E $135-beaut. turn l BR. OX· * "* 2 Bit. J-louse + four Partly "'hite fenced \\'/ pie· to s!ore.~. $ ;iO. er month * N \V 4 BR. HO:-.IE * 5erv, TV & Ph. Sea Lark P"nciable mobUe hom•. 132 I BR apts. + rooni for ture book setlini;::. Terrific e J BR, 2 BA, qu!el tilrf'eL to families only. Call agent Ocea)1 View. $100 fl.lonth "lotel. 230 1 Npl Blvd, CM. I 'G ,~ I · · Crpl• drp• blln• l>'plo lg" S.lft-1111 PLACE REAL'•Y 49·1-9704 6·'" 1AAJ~ \V, Wilson, 548-9577 n1ore. ncome ~ ,:_,.,,.,, yr. po!entia lo subd1v1de i11to • • • • "" """" .,., Assume 7',t. $ 5 5, O O O, am l ranchos or hold fcir !ncd yard w/room for boat Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 1 ffi -5'~·-7.7""1=....,--~-~-l appreciation. EZ trrms. or trlr. • 5 BR, 3 BA, --------------------1(~ e Huntinnton Beech (il4l 3~2039 or (il~I crpts, drps, blLns, lrplc, a 1 N_•_w~po_r_1_B_•_•_c~h ___ _;N~t~W..:.PO.;...rt_B~•~·~c~h_; __ ...;N.~•~w~po""r~t_;;;B~•~•~ch_; ___ ~N~e-w~po-rt_;B...;c•~•c~h::_ ____ " • 327 0179 y1· great ho1ne ror 11. lge family. (21 Fourpk>«•. Prid" nf own-' ~=~=' ='="~'-m_o_. ~-,--'" 1; Property i 1anagemenl Div., ership. Ideal owner Jive in INVESTOR n f' e d t' d South Coast R. E. 54:Hl424 Each \\•ifh 11' 3 BR 13) E1 !11.bl lsht'd bu~iness ., ' d &J' I h'ld & d I LARGE 3 bed \\'Ith car., t• BY O\VNER: Lovely · 2 2 BR. 2 B!ocki; to ~hoppi ng. e 1ng "" c 1 ren a u ts Bedroom home \\'Isome F'our Ster ReaJty S.'hl-l422 11('{'(\s money to expand. and drapes thruout, fenced VIEW OF BAY marfner E\ll'a la rge 101 view k guest house. Xlnl ~-~=,,c.:='-C::c:..:..::=·c 1 i\'luat believe in itood musit yard, family room, will take S Bech'OOrn! _ 3,1 83 1 h~ location, Lots for Sale 170 & dancing. 53-1--:2221 or children & pets -$210 P/~t. $117,:,00 148\V.CornilioE\·es: $1236 I='"~-<>='°'=~,--,.~~-WALKER & LEE, LIDO REAL TY INC. Santa Ana Height' FORECLOSURE SEASONED 2nd TD's on Realtors 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 21,7 acre hOrge ranch repos· prime Arcadia property, 8';0 . ~, acl"f', 2 BR home \\·/pool, se!sed from former a~ro-$2·1,500. Pays $2'60 per mo, i?lf) M2-445d or 540-5140 s:,:!OQ do11·n buy~ bl.'st Li<kl rielarhed rec room & shop gpace employee now avail-7t4/67l--0738 FRESHLY palntM 1ipaclou5 \'&lue. _ lj' 101 , i;_~zr __ l br. lclraJ for horse~. dogs, e!I"'. ;1,ble at de,·eloper1 cos!. M-..,.--y-to_L_o_a_n---2-,-0 l bedroom, (new cpts. &. furn S.12.000. 7.2 " 61 .. 26-IJ Av iary r.et up in back, L.R . .r.. Bc\nns when rentccll Mesa del Mer Slll,000, :>l.>-814S SAVE $3000 Fenced yard, garage, near &ChOol & shopping, $1:..0 pr. mo. 1\1. "1-La Borde rutr. ACRE for Comm'\ Sia.hies • ~ BR /, fam ily rn1, nr1\' or home & .stable!!. 673--ni2 rarpct, ldr .~-p11111L FHA, or 673-5723 VA. $.~1,j(){). ;..11-.''i:ilt'.l. BY 011'J1CI': Ln; 4 br/2 ha. lnscpd. Pri1'f'r! to ~t"ll! Al S30.9.",0. !lfiS-i%3 Mesa Verde t---------Acreage for ••le 4 BR & POOL 150 l R.1, din rnl, fa111 rrll , 3000 MOBILE HOME Mt fl nr 11\ lng ~pare By {l\\fll'r. $·11,T.1(). 1.1173 IUlOIJrs PARK Dr. Phont' .11"1-007~ for appt. 00 ;\tt~s. Po1cnlial mobile LOVELY 4 RR, man y hOme park idtc. Smog-(ttt, l'U~lon1 f1>ature~. A~~un1e j~1 minulcs from Rl\·er5ide. $19.900, .i1 ,', ~1-IA S.ll.!IOO. Pl'f.'llnil nary f'nitineering 1n- Pr1ncipal~ onl~ :H&-:i0:27 c!ud1n1: ()3rk design rom· SY 011 ~r 6\ ';; 3·~umahlr plt'lt·d. Sl.:UO per acre. Sub· loon, 4 ht, 71~ ha, lam m11your1enns. F"or rurthrr rm . 2 !rplc-• s \ 4, o o o . info1·ma110n, plea!e call R.E. $1.';..\7.itl ~ Knox \1 ith 1,..;.~_,..~~-=~~· Eckhoff & A11oc., Inc. 3 Br, 2 h~, hl.,;11 f-11A. 1011 do"n or 1~i·lo1i1 t0n µOll~ible. 1818 \V, Ch&pn1an Ave., Bkr f:\r~ ~'.'.41·11 Orallit', C•ltt. ----511·2621, Evea-\\'lmds ~Mlj M ission Viejo C,tsh Fast ! on these fabulous, oak stud- ded, ranch 4i2e 11preads. Located in the booming South Coast area near San 1st & 2nd Trust Oet3s Juan C11plstrnno. 11 i g h FREE APPRAISAl.S aDove the llmOg, private Costa Mesa lnv~1tment roBd and Jockf'd gate ruar-548-7711 anytime an1ee lhe natural beauty of I"!""'""~~""~""'""'"" this rom1er Spanish Gran1 lsf TD Loan surrounded by beautiful Cleveland National 1'·ore1!. &•~ ~ INTEREST . AU uti!lt1e1 av"ll11.ble, 2nd TD Loan PRICED FROM S9.9jQ LOW DOWN -EASY TER.i'dS Term~ ba.\ed on t<f\llly Circumstances force the lm· 642·2171 545-0611 mediate disposition of the!t! Servfnr Jlarbor area 21 yrs. lew choice ~Is "'holf: S•ttler Mortgage Co. former owntra LOSS It )'OU?' 3J6 E 171h SI I GAlN!t Call ()r write for i• rre complete details and <'Olor Money Wanted 250 on-1ite pholos. Buy direct 1---------- from th@ dC\'Cloper: \VANTED to bomiv.·: Local RA~CHO CAPISTRA"'O bulkier ha$ R-2 lot , prime 111rea, 11tttls private funding 7172 DuPont Drlvr, Rm S ror consln1ct!on o! quaHly Ne1'-port Be11ch, C&l. 9"664 dupltit. 54:Hli69 833.3223 -----1NEED 132.500 for prh·ai .. l ~t 1~ 1\<.:; 1,000 It. frn!~, El DA~A PT, RI or P.1, $1500. TIJ. Income property u·l1h • .. l BD J't :'-1, 2 Blllh. Ton. Ca~n l fl~-y. ~ TV l tl<J\\"n, ha!, @ 7'~. BY Kf'OSS Si20 1no. Good F..-Flri,., lodscp 1l, p111io, 111~ Joi film, Home Show Rltrs. APP"T. C.;\I. propr1·1:v. Call Chari~' _<_'2_.,_~c....~0_11_·N_E_n-'&1_;_.·_,,_,._!,.;6~i;~,~'2Z:ic....______ Dana Really -496-9661 Street 646-&'lll 6~ $123 "tOVE TODAY~ 2 BR, R/0, Kld5 & pelM fine:. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 t BR cottage, singles OK $75 1 BR furn rottage ... $79.50 2 BR ~ln&les or cple OJ< $95 Z BR gar, kid1 OK .•.. $120 3 BR gar, vacant/fnccl $140 'l BR llorge rsnc:h .... $l7S 3 BR horses, 48 am .• $350 STAR*LET 77'"7330 e DOLL llOUSE • 2 Br, CID, 1ncd yd, kid1 I< pets. $14j, AL.A Rf:ntal11 • 6-l;).3000 e HEAR THISI Step_. to 1111trr. l.al\Jna Beach. Encl i):ur. Sl·IO ALA Rentol1 e 6'.1-3900 $13.;: VACANT 2 RR. Stovel retrlg, crpl_., drp1, Tot OK. Blue &.econ * 645·0111 e SPARKLING VIEW-- "'a\k to bch, 2 Br. cpli, bltn ... c:hildttn ,. ~ml pcl ok. sis;,. Al.A Rrntal.. • tit}-!OOJ square apar:tments ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABILITY OF TWO AND THREE BEDROOM UNITS FOR ADULTS DESIRING TO LIVE .AMIDST BEAUTY BY THE SEA IN THE PRESTIGIOUS WESTCLIFF AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH, ••••••• FROM $230 ' For Information lelephone Mr. Roberl M. Buckler, Manager al (714) 645-0252 or write lo The Office 01 The Manager, Mariner Square Aparlmanta, 1244 Irvine Avenue, ' Newport Beach, Calllornla 92664 I! ill! 1!JouAL1TY APARTMENTS I ,.· 1-, ,,., -· ')• • KS Apt. Unfvm. 345Apl. Unf11m. Nowport leoch Newport Beoch Apll. Furn. UO Aph. Fum. 3.o Apt. Unfvm. 1-~~~----··-~---~~ Costa Me.. Ntwport Welohta Cost• M••• ' ' r Hai:iDAY PL.Aiil'" CLEAN I °' 2 Br. Mlts, \:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DEl.\lt".E Spaclou.I 1 BR DO petL Le kit. ~SlSO. EL CORDOVA A t 11tm 'i>t ft3S. H•ated pool. :11%1 E. 16th St. Na .... 1Bt11 P $ Ample Plfkin&. No t'.hlldrtn Apt. Unfum, 365 • no petl. 1965 J)()mona,, _. _______ _ Of. General BAYCLJFF MOTEL l=====- NOW YOU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH t * LOW WEEKLY RATE.~ * YENDQME 2on Chorl• St. '42-4470 SPACIOUS new 1 Ar 2 BR. w/dwhrs, xtra closet• It cupboards, luxury ah ~ i crpt'i:, beaut. rec. tac. It Pool. Perfect for adu.lt1 Who appreciate lovely, <1ulet sur. roundlnp. Enjoy $750,000 health club & spa; 7 pools, 7 tennis courts. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also Z. .story townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. Elec. kltch· ens, private balcony or patio. Fntm $175. Subterranean parking, elev, maid aervlce. Full-line food market, dry cleaner, beauty salon within complex. 7 beau!. model apll . V am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt. Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. ol F..,hion Island. 714: 644-1900 !or !ea1ing Info. ; Kitchen, 'f'V'1, maid .cervlce. IMMAt'ULATE APTS! r Heated Pool. ADULT e,o<1 FAMILY SectJon •' • . ' • • 646-1:.;s D• .. Point Close to shopping, Pork I """"''!"'!'"!!"'!'!"'!"""~I EXCEPTIONAL 1 BR \1\f!W * S~clous 3 BR's, 2 ba lovely Spt1nl1h Decor • ' * S1111m pool, pUt/grttn FROM $1SS $1~~~ BR, 1% BA, 1160, * FrPl Indiv/lndry fac'ls Gas and Waler included 2Mlilf Cordova Dr. Alao I 1 ... • A h • A 2 Bedrooms BR ar bcb San Omenete _,, n• tlm Vt. $tt0, l..M Bolu 492-4225 COSTA MESA &12-2:824 Built-Im • Alr Cond Carpell • Drapt1 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS , 1V, pool, pets ok. B•lboa lsl•nd Enclosed Raratea ~ up. ~·kly. Dan•1---------Pool & 1Ucreat1on Room Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. Marina Inn, 34111 Coa&l LEASE, 2 BR, l ba, atove, 160 W. Wiison 641-7373 Cost• Meta """'>'· reirig, Crpb, drps, He.at, * SIJ(l UP * ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Huntington Beach Huntington 11 .. ci. """' ad"IL $215. 6T><ootl GIANr I • 2 BEDROOM! 11 * FRESH AIR "'t Bolboo Penln1ulo "°"!"'"'• J>Uk·Uk• "'"""· NEW NEW NEW Walk 3 bllt.o to ll<&ob! La 'nta H Closed ra.raa:•• tor max· I ermosa DELUX duplex, unfurn, ytar imum security. Quiet attteL Beaut. bi&' s BR aJIL .,,,.,, • ., 1-· AU applianc", '"1 Ad..Jt.. no pet.. 2020 VILLA CORDOVA °"1" d!'PI, bl!M ""''1 S , ' Country &.late Liv-garage. Wkdys after 6 pm, Fullerton Ave (Harbor to ref.rig. $2'J5, No petl. 5.16-1711 . Spaclaus Apia, Ter-or all day Sat " sun. Bay, then So, until 2 blks QUIET.SAFE Children Wtlcome · ; 1unken IM BeQ 1,838-<'-"'~"='=~~-,--,,.,-So. ot Newport Blvd.J (Near Back Bay) rmmac. 4 Br. l Ba. Studio ; 1 ·:t.nf $150.furn $180 ne\1. Mature adults. 41!H' Park-Like Surrounding Apartment Complex Crpt1, drt>ll, bllfll. Lr1 play l vable Living • Only • 2 BDRM. Yearly, Like 642-8690 40 Unit Adult apt. f.pltx. Priv. patio . • 2 ~nf $175 furn $210 E. Bay. Call 675-4172 art QUIET. DELUXE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS area. Cul-Oe.1ac 1t. No peta. ' lmL INCLUDED 1_6~pm_. _w_klld_•_____ 1.2 le 3 BR APTS Entertaining wllJ be a pleu. 11871 Bell Circle. 3fl..3677. Spe Bonus; a silver-UNr'URN 2 Br. enct garage. Prv patios * Htd Pool1 ure. DK"Orating this lovely, SPARKLING NEW 2 br, 2 ' • . • ·ala candle snuffer ta steps lo the bead!. Adults. Nr 100p·1 * Adults only spacioUs apt will be a joy. ba. near beach. Shar crpt, f )'OU hrlni lhi1 ad No pets. SIOO/mo. Yearly MARTINIQUE APTS. e Special cabinet ipace drp1, bltn1, encl ganp, ).ou visit Ol11' model~. lease. 675-3472 aft 6 pm e • --k I I 1 ""'° oar door o-ner. 21662 1177 Santa Ana Ave C:"d ..........: garage1 w I I or r-4 blks -6. ol San Diego Frwy 2 BR, !rpl, balf.-uny, 315 E. 11J i4&.S5-'2 e Bm ttU e Lndry e PaUot Brookhunt St. on Beach, 1 blk W. on }folt Bay, \V!nter rate, $175/mo. Mgr. Apl e DW/diapJ e Huge ga.s 1tve I BR, refr1f, bltns. Sl35 mo to 16211 Parkside Lane. Yearly. S225/mo. lnq No. INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY e Special soundproofina il"l('i util. 2 BR, refrig, hltnl, 1n4) g.r7.5441 c. 673-1521, 548--Tm ADULT LMNG • Dttp 2 color ahai S150 incl uw. Adult.I only . i: 1 BR $135 per mo, incl util. Coron• del M•r Lg dlx 2 hr 1~; ba w/gar carpets, drapes Tradewind1 Rl~ M7~; •-stor. par k-11 k e al· GAS & WATER PAID Eve1; 536-7661 ~ 2 BR $150 per mo. Incl °' $140 ~~~~~~~~-II ... u ti 1 . Adu J ta 0 n J y. rnosphere. Fncd patio, CID, Mo. to Mo. From • Nr Huntington H•rbour Tradewlnds Rhy 847-8511; -wtr pd. 6364120 2323 Elden Ave, 0.1: Triplex • quiet area. Lq ] ~ Evr~: 536-7661 Q. C,., ~v 667-K Victoria St. i i55 See ?o.fg;, Ted \Voodhead Br • S140, 3 BR . $240. Pet.I ,, 1 BR. patio, pool, natural ~ CORSICAN 646-0032 ok. CTI4l 846.oon. ; beam c e 11 l n g a . Nf'ar ON TEN ACRES NE\V 1-2-3 Bdrm. All bltn.~. A L L E LE C GOLD ./ CllEZ ORO APTS g hospital. S165 util. paid, l & 2 BR. Furn • Untum. shaf crpts, drp1, closed pr-f.1EDALLION Af.Ts 2 BR 82.14 Atlanta. l-2 BR. Pool. ,, 17676 Cameron, 842-5192 Fireplace' / Priv. patloa. ages, frplc In 3 Br. % mt. 1,, be Crpts drp~ pati~ Private Garage. W&1her. ~ DEl.UXE Bachelor u n l t' Pools Tenn!• Contnt'I Didst. E. So. Coast Plua. Ott Sun-vl:"''· Nr bus' le •~pping, dryen. 536-8038, 536-7171 ~ furnished, SlOO per mo. [KX) Sea Lane, CdM 644·26ll tlower at Rosa. Mar at 421 encl garage Adlta no pets LGE uni 2 hr, 2 ha, Jae " Call 64&.2687 (~lacArthur nr Cout Hwy) W. Steven•. 545-2321 Sl55. 645-3515 • ' pvt fncd patio, ihai crpt, • 1 U 111 ,_ l blk to 1tores. 7731 FJ.l11 ~ 1 BR, poo, carport. t !J"CS * BRAND NEW * UNF. 2 ~R. $185, DMlmatlc SJGj, Furn apt also aval1 ~ paid. Clou to Be a ch. OEL.uxt downstairs 1 BR. 2·&1)'. hv. rm. w/trpl., Sl45/mo. 536-1956 duplex. Frplc. \Vasher/ LA COSTA APTS, 1 & 2 BR. over Io o k Ing tropical 2 BR duplex, close to hlach e 1 BDRM GONDO dryer. Carport. Util incl'd. Bltns, twimmln1 pool & rar· lndscpd. swimming pool le; & downtown. CTptl, dl"Jll Furn, S165. 962·9568 Nrar water. Adlts. Lease age. A!! utl] pd, Sl50 to S170 patio. l4j E. 18th, C.\1. & lilove, No peta. S140. L•aun• Beach Sl!r:i. Days 635-9390, eves mo. Adult.I, no pets. 5'8·9949 e\.'ell betw~n 5 & 6. =530-350=""''=-...,,_,~-,=- 673-5120. 354 Avocado, O.J. 642-9708 N!CE lrg 3 Bdrm-~e<:orat· TRIPLEX 2 Br. BJU.. SWEl!PING VIEW f'd. 657 Plumer Sl 986-1330 ReJri&'. Encl ear . * COROLIDO APTS * \\'Tl.SON GARDEN APTS. 0, 6'l-llll6 •ft <PM 0, wk-\Va 1 her I dryer. 2l7J • OCEAN AND HILLS 2 Br. stlldw• • ,1ree1 levels, 1 , __ 2 . BR Unfurn. Ne\\' y uao-. nds collect. F1orida. 536-6978 ~ Decorator furnished l bed· S185 & up. Penthouse S220. New cpts/drp&. Sp a ci-~-~~---~ LARGE z hr. j blocks from : room apt., twin bed,, new Di;hwhr. trpJ, dbl carport. grounds. Adlt~. no pet.s. CLOSE 'JU beach &: shop- ' paint, carpet, drape1. Walk Pool. 613-3378 S140/mn. 7283 Founlaln P'illi· Bit.in range, \\'{W beach, Crpta, drpa. M I di Sl60/mo. Call ~ to beach &: lo1''n, a Ure FOR leaae, delx. all elee. \\lay E. (Harbor, turn w. CTJ)ting, drps, a ts, no petl. adultl. no pet1. l )'fat Jge new w/a view 2 BR. i .i"ii".i"ii"iil'°ii"ii'iii&iiii_,iii•l-~54~S-4N;M;;';i;~~ffiit.d_ 12 BR apt, 3 bllu: from ocean. lease. 4M·3S39 aft 5 pm. 1 BA apt, All blt·lns incl I• e Newly Decor•ted S165 mo. Avail Mar. 21:1th. Lido Isle dWiwshr, dbl. gar. Adlts GARDEN LIVING Quiet l 4 .2 BR's. Gar A ~536-=1~11~0.c..,..-~-~=ll only. 673-69'J2. Quiet, attrac, pleuant, Util pool. Crpt•. drp,, Adults OCEAN view <lelux 2 BR, ./ BEAOI APJ'S. Bachelor . paid. Heated Pool. 2 BR. only, no pelt. 642-8042 2 ba, Frple, Garare. Bltnl $200. l BR. S22S, $250. 320 2 BR. I BA. New palnl, ,,,, 1 Nord. &12-4097 or 548-2211 S225/mo. Btwn, hn 10-5, $lu:i. AdWlr., no pets. 40 3 Br. Unturn Apt. Stove 4 & rehi.1. S175. 53&-6120 ext m 630-2062: all $ pn1, 213: \V, 18th St., CM. refrlg Jncl'd, Garqe. Pool. 2 Br apt-w/w, drp;, bltrui, : 596-1719 2 BR. FROf.f Sl::.0 All utll pd, Adlbl only, no dlapoga.l, laundry spact1, No 1 Newport 811ch SUNNY 2 Bdr, bltn11, ref, CO~fPLETELY REDE C, pet.. l\Igr. No. 9, 383 W. pel!I. 962-8578 tor lnlo. I . ' . J t F cpts, drps, gar, adlt11, no CLF.AN & COZY FA1'.tTLYl:-cW~ll~'°-",-,S_l.70 _ _,=,..-,,,,. l2 BR, New crpt, drJ1. US or pt>ls. S175 Jae. 67H275 UNITS. CONY. LOCATION. 2 BR. Up1taln garden apt, Children &: 1mall pet OK. LRG 3 Br, 2 Ba view. Be1t VILLA r.tESA APTS cpts, drpa, no pets. Lndry Sl40. 842-8365, 962-16.17 Single Adults ~~~~an Bl~. S325/mo. ~s \V. \Vil10n 646-1zs1 ~~issGNr. acc. s 130, Girdin Grove LRG dlx apts, S140 2 Br. South Bay Club \g 11 WhOle Costa Mes• lltd pool , Newly dee. Play 2 BR. unfurn deluxe townht.e, $100. RENT BONUS new "'ay of life designed 1---:=""'°"'-:---yd. Crpt'd, drps, bltnll, Jl\'t pat & gar, ne\\·ly decor, * NEW * JUii! for single people, It's FAIRWAY patio. Child ok. adll,, pet OK. Sl65 mo. 3009 Come ~ee Ull -Best tor le•• run living \\'ith warm, dy-1998 t.1aple A\'e. 6-12-&4-1 Coolidge. 5-19--0433 ALL 2 BATH namic nl!i&'hbol·s. l l's a VILLA APTS. 2214 College Ave. 646--0627 LRG 1 Br. Apt. Garage. 1 BDRM & 2 BDRM ~1~~h r!,~.hPa5:i~n~~~·~: HARIOR GREENS ~~ s:r:r°·1~9~ ~~~~~A~n p'11~ lianls, indoor golf driving 2 & 3 BR's GARDEN .&: STUDIO APTS \Va.1111.ce. 548-651!1, 838-0038 All dlx Items in &: out range, tennis court.ii, pro Private pa1 lo pool • indiv, Boch. 1, 2• 3 BR'i. from SUO. * 2 Br. i11esa Verde, new Recrea1ion tacilltle1. shop and resident tennlt pro. laundry lac.' 2700 Peterson \Vay, C.M. rlecor. Lrg closet!!, caoinets. EL CENTRICO APTS. Single, I & 2 Bedroom lw:-Near Or&nge Co. Airport & 548-00iO Gar. S115-Sl55, No pet!. 2 Blks N .. G.G. f'rny ott ury apartment.I "1th all the UC!. Adults only. VACA~! -Rt decor a I e fl 55i--MOO B~hurst. modf'rn convenience!& avail· 201Zl Santa Ana Ave. tl)ruout 2 Br, 1 Ba, cpts, S'.\tALL unf 1 Br. apt, 9931 Central Ave. able. Furnished and unturn-il1gr. l>trs. Joachim, Apt J.A drp1, tti'rli, bltJU, 2 ynft Kllchen liv rm k bath Garden Grove 1n41 53t)..235(] ished. ~15 ('h\\dr~n ok. No pet1. S145. gar, 1n~ back yd. SlOOtmo'. f.10DELS OPEN DAILY 10 A.t.1. • 8 P.:\!. RENTS FROM $150 NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE & 16th 17141 645·0550 SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS ••• Live where the fun is I ORLEANS APTS. ADULTS ONLY 2 iii 3 BR. Aval!, Priva1e p&· \lu, pool. indlv. laundry tac. lNr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus. tir at 11th St; nr. \VestciiU}. 590 Joann St . tnfo 64:2-1467 &tl-3847 Mes• Vertie ·=-::----:--..,-·II e l.RG 2 br, 2 ha b'\pltx· LG 2 Bf, 1\, Ba studio apt. 2 BR. New crpts, drp!, clog. -bltns, rlrpa. crpts. dllhwahr, No pets. famil!es only, Prtv. ed gar, nr Shop'g. Adult1, 2-CAR GARAGE. Cl03e patio. 126 Joann St. Sl40 no pets. Sl45tmo. 645-MIS in. Adults, no pets. 318 16th 2 BR 1 h 1145 c tsl..1-Newport Be•ch Pl. 548-14:U ' a ' . rp ,_....,s, ~~-~--~--! frplc. gar, patio, 2544-C 2 Br l'itud!o, 1''1 Ba, cpt1, I-:Iden. Cail 537.()()62 art 7 pm DE LUX CONDO drp1, patlo chlldren ok Nr --S BR + den, 3 Ba, Dbl 1ar 11chl & ~hop'&'· Sl65. 3003 2 BR upper 14-plexJ. Crpts, Bick Bay l?~l Tus!ln, Costa J\,eaa Fillmore \Vay 546--011>1 drps, bll.n R &: O. Xlnt $285 f.lonlh · Joc11tion S140/mo. 962-954.1 l\lir. l\lrs. ThompJOn ~2.400 SPACIOUS, clean 3 Br. 2 · STEPHENS & KAYE Ba, crpts, drp5, enc I 2 Br. crpls/drp&, bltJis. C'!o&o-Property ?o.fanagement Spanish Elegance gar&ge. S175. Adults. F. 18th ed gar + perkng. Adlll. * 645.0122 * St. 546-3176 or 540-\-t3i 2'll0 Rut~e~ Dr. 646-6919 * EXCEPTIONAL ~ 2 Units-2 Br ea. l Br. Crp1s, SPACIOUS 2 Br apt, qu 0 _i"7 1 4• Living-2 Br. 2 Ba . &('1~ tile mood ror d-· bit-•'•• ,,_1 ''' 1 pleasant, no pets. Q • Ad I L' • .,.~ '' "" Furniturt avail. El ev , u11t U t 1v1n9 child ok. N~ JX'IS, SI-to' & Hamilton. 541:-3846 sub-terranean prkina. From !'hag t'rpt • drps • bltrl! Sl~:>/mo. Call 5'16-9j37 Dana Point S375. BeauU1u.I Pool. NE\VPORT TOWERS M2·23J2 2 Br Sl?O Incl all util. .f GARDEN APT. 2 Br. SPECTACULAR oceantrnt Adults only-no pet.~. \\'{\I' crpl. Stovr. Bltna. \·ie"'' 2 BR 2 ba 11tove SEACLIFF Ma.ror Apts, 2 COUi\TnY CLUB 2-tl Avocado St, CM 646-0979 Slj(l/mo. * 646-2181 refri~. cpts 'le. drp~. sm: Br, cpts, drps, bltns, pool, J~rVING S160. l Br,]"' Ba, Irr, qu\el. 837-5370 priv P•tio, •tudlo type, l \~ Lul:ury~ gardC'n apts, oller1ng e ~PACIOUS e GE kit., 2 car 1ar, 8'x20' LEASE l BR. Oen, 2 BA, Ba. Child ok. 54S-28Bl 1~ compl~ pri\•acy, beau 1 . 2 BR .~ ' B~. new. dtt. AdlUJ 5414432 PlacenflL Ask about our lndscpi;: & unpai·aUe!cd f"'\·t pat1ci, blt111.~~ $160, ()pf>n stor rm. · pvt patio, pool. S225. Adults discount. ttcreation..'\l faci\\tit>s in a Sat & Sun 10.J pm. 3029 Sl-I0-2 br, ca~Hng. 1 or pref. 4!!9-2055 ~OCE=AN=-,~,-. -w-, -,-,-00,...,-k~.-,3.ll country club 11.1mo!!phere. (oolldge No. 50• C.r.1. ! ~:~~~0tr70Nr Placentia E1st Bluff B.R., 2 ba., ~' blk. to wattt, Furn, (Jr Un[-;\1odela Ollf'n 2 BR. 2 BA. Jrplc. Upstah-s . ram . or ltacht-I'I prel'd. 10 a.rn-8 pn1. Rl'nts from New cpl, drps, adult!!, m 2 BR, l BA, crpts It drps. S295. mo. yrly, fi73-T452 Sl4i Jll'."11L SltiO. Eves 540-0896. $150. mo. 360 Han1ilkln, Apt NEWPORT BEACH DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, crptJ, OAK\.\'OOD GARDEN D11.y1 540.2570. A, C.M. 646-9853 Villa Gr•nada Apts. drps. bltr111, DW, nr HOJI APAHT:'l1El\'TS • BEAUTIFUL ] &: 2 BR. • 2 BDR~t DUPLEX • Foor bedroomg \\'ilh balcon. Hocp. SI~ If S115 mo. 170 l61h St., NR Contemporary Garden Apts. CPTS & DRPS _ $140 l\10. le'I 11.bove &: "low, Gracioul &ti-4387 612-8170 Patio~. frplc ~. pool . * 540--0171 * Jiving&: quiet 9'11Tl'.ltlndlng ==~~~--~=II f I 11 'th llhild JIOAG Ho~p Area, 2 BR. B~. 2 1 B.A. fully SI 1:>-$!60. Call Z>l&-516.J ] BR. u!ll!d brick 1rplc, w/w, ~=ar '~:;\.:na ~el !\tar ~ 2 BA, crpU!, drps, bltW, d. ge 1\·1ng rm, SHARP lge 1 BR. Cpl,~. bltns, be11.m cell. pal~. $140. !\chool. Flreplact: 9.'Ct bar A fAr. 540-0093 1!°'~~c~ u; d :~~: ~1:·:~ bldg, No pell. 1 Adil Yearly. ~ hullt -tn kitchen a'pplia.nce1, $ nw.>. l'ilO ~h1rcus , 2 Bit eut • slttr, walk lo 835 MnGOs \VAY 644.2991 fi13-l4&1 2 BR. l'i Ba. Studio. Orps, abopg. Crpta, retng, 1to\-e, Coldwell Banker&: Co. b=~=~o--:=-::=c.1 ept&. bltns. No peb. Nr. pool, gar. Sl.&o. 548-1565 l-flln~ni: Agtonl 541-5221 UDO J~!e..,~ ~ 00~'. OCC. SI.JS. 557~7195 lOX42 lurn tn.ller, e NEW DELUXE. ,. rJ>spon . adll. EASTSlDE % Br. bllns. in riark on Bri!lol. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt fr.r le&llf. Incl .60-1161 dshwhr, crpta, ~ eDCI * 548-<M65 * ~pat'. mnsttr suite, din rm gar. priv pallo. 645-2939 2 BR. h-'•'d nooN 1\alrr k lbl •-·u front b a ch , '"' . · 1 garage, auto UUlhl t. S3Xl/mo, yr lu-ENJOY prl\'acy: DeJ~ 1 pd. SI~ mo. 1093 \\'allatT, opener a\'all. Pool & Rtt. A'TRA nice 2 Br, pool, pr, bltns, CJD. Adltl, no peb. Sl50. Ml-8001, ~. Newport Height• l Br Uriper. Fl'l'lc, pr, patio, laundry. Adults, ne ~u. S170 mo. MJ.-3781 Sen Clemente • pv.T mir..,.r. t;!i! Br, bltru:, rtft1Jr, C'pf/drp. fror llan1il1on) arrll., t ~Adults. ro J)('IJ. lJ).1 gar. b&.le. 962-41.80 ~10DERN' 2 Br, 2 811 Studio e J26j • -'c:--c=-:----6T3-~2 ra SRAND NEW lux. 2 Br, J nr. Frplc. &am «ii, apt. new cpl, nr 1chb, bltn,;, 86j A1n1i(>s \\'A.)._ N 2 Ba, 1100 aq, ft. QuWt THEBEACH--patio!>, u1ll fnrl 'd 1148. Per ok. $15.5. 6-15-1496 ~111.nagrd by , e1ll-de-tae. Panortimlc V'W:w 2 Brr.I bft Spilt lf'vrl w b Y1>arly. l adult. ~20 DELUXE 1 Br"' i;?Ar, r;uirt -\~l:_LTA111 \ViU.TERS CO. of ocean. Adults only Sit:! llttplace.'Lot1 more'too! ~E\\'LY rrdtt0r11!<Xt 11tudki. area ror 11d111t11 onl). $1~. TO\\':"\llOUSE &>lxe 2 Br. 49'J-1259 C11JJ: ~3·1 ~,jl 2 BR, 1 1 ~ ba, nr !hopping 150 F. 21sl. 646-6(116 2'~ Ba, hllm, rrpl, patio, t ·.~.11~,E~E~D~l~t-A-,.-,-,~ .. -,~,,-., Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD I. Stovo 2. Gult1r 3. loby Crib 4. Eleetrlc Saw 5. Camere 6. Wisher 7. Out1M1rd Motor I. SterH Set 9. touch 10. Cl1rlnet 11. Rtfrl1er1ter 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Machin• 14. Surfboord 15. Machine TMls 16. D11hw11her 17. Pu,py 11. C1bln Cruiser 1'. Goll Cnt 20. l•romtter 21. St1mp Collection 22. Dinette Sot 23. Ploy Pen 24. Bowling Bell 2S. Weter Skis 26. FrMMr 27. Sultuse 21. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Bir Stool• 32. Encycloped;a 33. V1cuum Cle1ner 3.(. Tropic•! Fish 35, Hol Rod Equlpm't 36. Fiie Cobine! 37. Goll Clubs 31. Sterling Sliver 39. Vlctorl1n Mirror 40. Bodroom Sot 41 . Slide Prolec:tor 42. L11wn Mower 43. Pool Tobie 44. TlrH 45. Pl1no 46. Fur Coat -47. Dr1pe1 41. Linen• •9. Horn SO. Alrplene 51. Oro•n 52. Exercycle 53. Rare Books S4, Ski Boots SS . High Choir 56. Coln• 57. Electric Train 58. Kiiton 59. Cl111ic Auto 60. CoffH Tobie 61 . Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Sot 65. Workbench 66. Ol1mond Watch 67. Go-Kart 61. Ironer 69. C1mping Trailer 70. Antique FurnJture 11. Tape Rtcorder 72. Sollboat 73. Sports Cir 74. Maittre11 Box Spgs 75. lnboord Speedboet 76. Sholgun n. Seddle 71. Dart G1me 79. Punching Bag 10. Biby Carriage 11. Drums 12. Rifle 13. Desk 14. SCUBA Gear Th-or any other extra tilings around the house "I con be turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRICT 642-5678 ' t •·.~oc:=EA~N=rno=Nr ha C'lw<lo , & rehoolll, S\65. 5"16--17Zi3 /REDECORATED 2 hr. 1'1 ('nCRar.Quict 6i~tl out the rreuum iii ·t;_th ... "'l!ll'i'"Jhlr1ial kll, SlJO mo. llOUSE llun!lng~ \\'111ch th!! b~ ~ti.1<1'lll. Crp!t. rlrp~. hltn~. for th11! !t~m undtr ii'./ tum inlo cash thn1 • Delly Tl'!)'. ~l-3443 OPEN 1-IOUSE colun1n. C'h1h!1Tn nk. $1!"1.i &12·~1'17 tr~· !l1r> PC'nny PiOC'her ~Pl:::lo::,l_:C:::l•::",,;:,:fle::dc.::•d::.·..:"oc~::00'.::11'1: ·-------------------------------------..:'! I - • I 1~1-...... 1~1 ...... Apt. Unlvm. 365 Apt.., Apts., F....urn. or Apt1., I~ ;;ml ......... ~l~_,11 400 Office Ront•I 440 ''s".-.-, • ....,,,,,_------Furn. or Unfum. 270 Unfurn. 370 Fum. or Unfum. 370 LG~E::--...,.,-m-.-.... -,-.......,.---. OFFICE space for rtrrt • bath. Employed par 1 y. m W. 19th St, Cc.ta MH&. f15/nio. m-3612 or S4G-9583 Phone~ tor appt. NICE roo1p tor WOrkina: roan 1 '1~6=1Q-SANT=~A-'ANO.,:,A=A_;VE,~:,CM-·ll Costa Meq Huntington S.ach Westclfff VILLA'MARSEILLES RJNG BROS."""°""''" BRAND NEW ON BEACH! DELUXE 2 Br. WHldiU Joe. P<:iol. Bltns. No leue. Un.I: $210. FUm $245. 6t2-677f SPACIOUS Aptll, Now Avkilable MEDITERRANEAN . w/ or w/o cook'&' prlvil. From :nJ 11q, ft. 35c IQ ~ E-akle, CM. 642-()326 675-2464 or 5Cl.&m FURN room ln priv, home, CORONA DEL MAR 1 I. 2 Bdrm. Apts. VILLAGE Adult ll'llng 2400 Harboc Blvd. 2 BR ........ From $235 Furn. & Unfurn. Costa Mesa Furniture Available Carpeta:-draP6-(lishwasher bealed pool-uuna.s-tennla rec room-000an views patios-ample parking Security gunrdll. Rentals II &) Costa MeM; kitch. prlvil 1 & 2 Room oftiee •Pl.ct• ,-plus. Nr. acc. 54~1061 avail. OWNER * 613-6157 Dishwasher -color eoordlnat. (714) 557..so'lO ed applian~s • plush shag ~, °"B"'R,..$125=-on=twc=n-: °"Sl'°<°"s -,10-m-. c11.rpet -cboiee ol .2 color Families welcome. BIG scheme1 -2 baths -ataU SUR APTS, 20 43-204 9 showers • mirrored ward-Wallace St, Phone 548-4.301 robe donrs • Indirect light- li'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ilii LOf room, kitchen & laun-3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB dry privileges, 1'~emale. $70. • ON THE BAY • 54tHi130 eves 675--2464 or Ml·5032 Rooms 400 FURN room in pvt home.1 '•~1"1.,.s..,P"ER"'°-w7k-,p-w"'l-k~l-t. Bu1ioe11 Rental C45 ing !n kitchen _ b~aldut l25Q sq ft lg 2 Br, 1% Ba, bar -huge private fenced utl rm for wh/dr. patio, patio • plush landscaping • gar. cpt/dp. $1£5. ~ br'1ck Bar-B.Q'a -lal'it beat· • 2 Br. Heated pool, No ed pools I: ianaj. pets. Crpts, drps. 126 Monte HUNTINGTON PACIFIC H t "·h N • US week up Apl.!s. MOTEL un · ..... . r Brookhurst 548-9755 PRIME LOCATIONS k Coast Hwy. l\1ale only. [ -:--,-,~-----" E. 17th. St., Costa Mesa 7l1 OCEAN AVE., H.B. $65 per nlO. 962-2029 a.JI Guest Hom• 415 (TI4) SJ0.1487 4. P!\f I:::'°"',-,::::----.,,-,...,~ 1U> Sq. ft. c:onunercial bldg. Ofc open IO am-6 pm DaUy CO" "CE king 'rl PRIVATE room w/bath in v.-il'b parking, $300 Mo. 3101 So. Bristol St. Vista Ave, Q.'I. 642-5790 WILLIA1tt WALTERS CO ~ or Y•Or gi Uceraed guest home for am- . Balboa Isl, shr kit & TV bulatocy senior citizens. Broadway, Laa'u.'1& Beach I '2!'B!!!R!!!_"1"'m~. 3!'B!!!,".'!1"1.,!!!!/~•"•"· p!!!,!!_[ ~~~le. $65/mo & up. Aho semi-private room for 1650 Sq. ft. store with parking C1n ~U. N. of So. Coast Plau.) Dana Point Santa Ana PHONE, 557-8200 CAN'T BE BEAT SINGLE STORY South Sea Atmosphere 2 BR .• 2 BATH Carpets & drps Air Conditioned Private Patios HEATED POOL Plenty ol lawn Carport & Storage HI DDEN VILLAGE • GARDEN AP'I'S. 2500 South Salta Santa Ana '1 546-1525 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 General PALM MESA APTS. 1 BR untur.i ........ $115.0D 1 BR furn ••••••••••• $149.50 Bachelors Fumisheti from $135 2 BR apts $175 mo. mo.Imo. OK e POOL e SAUNA e J ACUZZI Ll6I ~1esa Dr. Sanra Ana Corona d1I Mar FURN. 1·Br.. frpl, patio. Close to beach. $18J Mo. UNF., new 2 BR .• •b!lns., cpts. drps: nr. beach. UN.f". 2 BR house, e.~tra sharp, fpl, nice yd. $250 Don Franklin, RJlr. 673-2'122 e BREATHTAKING VIE\V • 1 BR & convert den. $300. 644--0906 for appt. 237 Carna- tion. Costa Mesa * * • * El Puerto Mesa Apts * * * * 1 Bedroom Apts. $130 & up Incl. ulililles. Also turn Poot & Recrenlion area. Qu iet Environment. OU street parking. No ChiJ. dren, no pets. 1959-1961 t\1aple Ave. <Asta t\lcsa BAY MEADOW APTS. Beam ceilings, paneling, priv patios. recreation facilitie!I. All Adults. no pets. * Bachelor Ap· * * 2 BR. from $16.J * * 1 Bedroom * 387 \V. Bay St . (bl"'" Jfarbor & Newport Blvd. %. mi. N. of 19th sn. CALL 646-0073 1 BR. furn $140. l Br unf $135 \\"/stv/ref, u1il JXI. Acl!ts, no pets. 820 Center SL 642-5848 tio P I ~"d k '-c.-=-=---· ..,....-..,--,--~ lady, avail April lst. Lge Nr. Coast Hwy. $500 Mo. ---------. oo . ..._ .. .., ren o .1, 2 BR !" BA 1 •185 MORA KAI Apt• 18881 ~fora SLPG rm for steady work"g yard &: patio, good food, Realonomics Bkr. 615-6700 , 711 • poo . " ' I 'al turn, $165 unfum. Adults Kai Ln \t blk E. of Beach, 0 der man, no rooking, by ~nl atmosphere. C.M. SUITES Available: 11 612 pref. 4~2055 off Garlield. 962-8994. ~ only, $35. 1543 Orange, area. 548-5225 Beach mvd, H.B. Parking: LOVELY room & bath in Air cond: Heating : Huntington Beach Laguna Beach $12 a wk, Cool 11.B. Men, new pvt home for I.he Carpeting: Janitorial serv. Children Welcome! Move in now, 2 Bil's, all xtras. Pool, pvt patios. Pets OK. From $139. Nr schools & &hopping. 17431 "B" or "D" Keelson Ln., ~-7510, 847--4856. Turn unused items into quick cash, call 642--5678 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Newport Beach FURN Bachelor apt. Ocean Pvt entrance, uptown, nr retired. Xlnt 1ood. 2-1-hr Inquire Suite 8 or call view. $175. Unfum 2 Br. bch. 507 California, 536-0391, service because \\'e care. s.K>-5124 $210. Ocean View. 100 CHU 646-1049 Near ~!sure W o r Id . s=M~A~LL~-"'°"'--,~--,,-,..,--Jo-,·11 Drive, Lag Bch. 49-1-5933 l;s"°LE=EP=·co--,-m~S60=1-.. -,-m-o. -----====~=~-I rent. Grocery equip for sale. Priv entr. & ha. Adulta, * PRIVATE ROOM $65 a mo. H.B. area. no pets. 2135 Elden, Mgr for eldery lacly, Bright 847...ffif( 53&-1983, ( 213) apt 6 cheery garden surroundings. 69&-.9880 2 BR., 2 BA. on canyon, LUXURY t d' I I Nutritious meals. Ca 11 l ---co=•=nl~E~R~Cl~A~,-~. -II . • bch Ad l'n 8 U 10, comp ele y "'" ..,. ocean view11.45ne;.~75 492 ~ pvt. Heated pool. Privileges. 548-4753. INDUSTRIAL no pets. :>. " • -N.B. 494-1929 •v;:a"c"a:;llo;:-n'R'a-n"'t-a'°ls--4~25~ 1 500-1500 .!lq tt, l3c to 12c San Clement• A I Roo * San Clen1ente 496-1840 * p 1., !VI for \\°<Irking girl, NE\V lge chalet, No. Shore Furn. or Unfum. 370 kitchen privileges. Lake Arro\\•head, D a Y, SHOWROOM, mfg. & office * 642-6716 * ·weekend or week 1 Y. space. Parking. Close.in La- Newport S.ach ROOM for rent in :Private 549-36U, 540-9583 guna. $85-$395 J\1o. 494-4653 :;::;::;:;:;:;~ home, employed lady preJ'd * EASTER RENTALS * STORE bid~ 3303 Npt Blvd. pvt bath. 540-239-1, C.1\f. ' $100 to Sl25. Near 960 s/f. Brand Spanking New be"" * 645--0735 6T>l601 ., m 280-7144 Rentals to Share 430 Industrial Rental 450 In Beautiful 1-*:-::c"'o"'sT"'A,...,.M"'e"'sA""""*-11 BACK BAY [91!.51..!eflnglNDEX) EMPLOYED lady to share $95 & $167 Per mo., immed 1 and 2 Bedrooms riuvcrl™ beauti!ul ocean vie1v ap!. oceupancy, llG-220 power. Furnished and Unfurnished completely furnished with R. Nattress. Agt. &12.1485 privale bath. Hoeg l JospltaJ Ad It L• • l )~ """· 642--0327 1500 "I It-All """'· beat. u 1v1ng ............ ~ hgh1', P"tilkms & noo~ _ . PLUSH beach side apt, N.B. finished. 1535 Monrovia. * Dishwasher Clo1sificotion 100-1~9 Young ""Oman to sham ex-N.B. can 64;)...(1770 * Stove and Refrigerator penses w I same. ~7-~7 =-------=,II * Shag Carpeting (4 exciting colors) ~,,.._"-',.,",..'_''-",..'_· -,,J~ ~ 1 ,,,w7k~d'°''~------_5_10_,_•"'9_• ______ 45_5.11 * Sound Proofed Generil ~ SHARE my waterfront home FENCED -Storage yard *Billiard Tables Class ification 150~1·84 w/dock .. Man, 30-00 years. wished. 2500 sq. ft. Harbor * Pool $150/mo. 675-43.11 &: Baker Ci\f. * Large Recreation Center ._ __ ~_._'"'_1'_' _ __,I/•] Garages for Rent 435 $5S mo. Occupancy In March -. RENT STARTS $155 • Vista Del Mesa Apartments $ Tustin & Mesa Drive ~ 545.4955 Classification 200-260 -.,,,, ... )~ Clas5ification 300-355 [ AP'rtmonu '"' Rmt J ~ Classification 360-370 LOCKED garages & paved off-st. park"g s pac e . Suitabl~ for sml boat, camper, or personal pro- perty. Apt1., Apts., ,~ Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Rn11111~ _H_u_n_11_n.;:g_ton __ e._•_<h ___ H_u_n1_i_ng.o.1_on __ B_•_•<_h ___ --::c71,-,-,;"r,..,c-,"1;-,-.-~"0J0-465 177 E. 22nd St., Q.t. 642-3645 • 675-6044. FOR motor homes, trailer, 1urn., boat, etc. 1652 Npt Blvd, CM. 642-2821, 6'12-5106 SINGLE GARAGE !or rent Harbor & Baker, C~1. $25/mo. 540-2571 * STORAGE GARAGE for renl $15/mo, Call 6'12-8001, Refreshing ••• Parkllke beach living for adults Casa del Sol 9/10 of e mUe from !he beach 11 ""Recreation City .. with 2 swimming pools, putting green, gym, volleyball court, sauna, bltlla rd room, clu b- house. One or two bedrooms, fur- nished and onfurniahed, privete patio, fireplace in two bedroom. elevators, dishwasher•. carpets and drapes, no lease, adults only, ell uunties e11.cept llghtl paid, pets accepted. from $145. 21661 Brookhur1t SL H1.1ntin11ton Beach, (714} 962-MSJ A1k for Commander Retting ·--.. ·a f , ___ ., I~ Classification 500-510 I-...,,~"'~"'_"''_' ___,J[.) Classification 525-535 lo1t and FIMl'ld I~ Clas si fication 550-555 64>«XJG Office Rental SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY 1-2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq. ft. office 1ultes. lmmed. oc- cupancy. Oran&e County. /.irport Irvine Commerc· Complex, adj. Alrporter 1-lotel &: Restaurant banks, San Diego & N'pt F~s. UNCROWDED PARKING [ )~ LO\VEST RATES Instruction ~ Ow-ner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr. c.. -,-----..J. Rm. 8, Ne\\'J)Ort Beach Classification 575-580 833-J223 Courtesy lo Broken I ................ ,,. I~ Cla islfication 600-699 AVAILABLE tor immediate occupancy. Sublease pleasant 4 room suite. 2043 \\'es1cliJI Dr., Suite 2 Oil, Nev.'J>0{1. Beach. &12.-7690 or .__'_""""'*" ___ __,/[ i J 1 -"'-;,b;oil-,;dc;lnO-g-m=ana~go°",". ~-1 1 -· DESK SPACE Cla11 ific ation 700-710 222 Forest Avenue JI ~! Laguna Beach ~~...----.,.~,-'· 494-M~ Clasiification 800-836 ====-'-'-.C-.--~· 11 BEAUTIFUL l room office sulte w I kilcheneue. Ideal for architect, lnsu r an re agent, rcaltor, etc. On Monrovia St. In N . B , $350/$300 per mo. 645-0TIO .. j t • \, _1 540.2571 / 'l DESK SPACE 305 No. El Carnine; Real San Clemente :1;1' h=i Amazing Adult Living UNLIKE ANY OTHER APARTMENTS '-:~T-~-'"""',.,,._,",_''-"..,..,~l/~)t·J~0~~~.~6""'R°'~~>7<-~-.. ~il-,,~N-,-w -drps, Paint. Crpt, Air cond, Cla11ificc.tion 915-94'; All utll &. cleaning ~rv. Lots of glass. 40c per fl. 1§1 £r:HmJ '"'°'""SM .. <-~-~-- Re•d Cla111ficatlon1 For Expert Assistance 6500·6900 in the Featured in PROFESSIONAL BUILDER'S MAGAZINE "SHANGRI LA" as Liveable luxury with all the conveniences: Clubhouse-Social Life -Indoor & Outdoor Spor+.-Walk to stores, banks, movie and college. I & 2 BEDROOM Apartments with Terraces MODELS OPEN DAILY Merrimac Woods 425 Merrimac Way, Costa Mesa ' (Between H•rbor and F1irview) ----------------- --- . * NEWPORT .BEACH Civic Classification 950.990 Center on Npt Blvd. 310 ~q. fl 61>1601 or (1) 286-7144. • DAILY PILOT Prtlbf. J1tr11' !, 1m JOIN ·THE '1"" "'~ _....J --·"'ill ·-"'I tci:O -~· .'SELLERS C/RCLE~t~' ( WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR ~ ~ r-;:;:-; ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hord way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section daily) gives you an advantage you get through no other advertising medium. It reach· es customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn 't listed, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" •.. " ··----- • '1 • ·, t w ' T ' . ,,, ·····~ •:"'" 1 ';.:1 ,:i:.."" !.•i.·1 I ·1 ·~ , .. ., .. " ··~· . ' •. • ·I . i '' 1 " • I ...... .. ' ' ' . !. '" ·'' ,i!'1' ;.iv,, -. ' ' ·- Your Direct Line to·:·:" Directory Results ' !' .~ ' l ·' "·t ·,r. ' " . DAILY PILOT . CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMEJ.I'-, ... • I . . . . .. [ '--_~ .... _ ..... ___,)[)1] [ ![Il]I ..__ __ , ..... _. J[ll]! '--~_ ........ _.. J[Il] When You Job Wonted, Molo 700 Holp Wontod, M & , 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & , 710 NSIBLE, mat u r l! KF.\' case Jound on Ht1I Ave, d l'Odfle wilJ take·OVl!'r· 1111 Ileh. ldrn!ify. Want it one »'J'l'UtU A occupy your Mmt' 8-12-2%4. .l~ily OT ~·ill rent a I Sl~M~A-1~.I-. -,.,,-td~b~IM:-k-f-,n->-ale right • • • 'fi~ \ou• on )'NI"• letN SCR·AM-LETS ANSWERS ·~-1 poodle Jound ln C. t.l II f •1-··· """"" Sl&-l496 ..,_,... Co one o :Z BR lq&lt, apt or n1obll• FOUND . Texa1 driver'• Kr.nntl -Prrk.y -Anldc - .,,.., '""'· ...,,1, •• ,., 11.,. ... 3130 the experts Soc1<e1 -KNOCK KNEES San Franc1 5co Dr. • 642 :.Jfi'' Slj:n rn Miami ba.J" "l\1\ni. Coco ~ 1111 W11tcliff Or . Newport Beech YOUNG pre~nant cat "hire er KNOCK KNEES." MORNING BUSBOY H•m•1. ea !1234.l. I · · listed below!! <l•d 01"' w.ioom•. w, N"· l/•J a."'',111po,',,_" 3863round in Laguna !. ~~~~;;;~;~r~~~------BOATS OVER u hnONll• ,;n. I ,.. Exec. avllilablf' tor· boal1 1!,..Al!P~PL!!l!Ym!Nlll!!P~ERS!!!!~O~N!!!!~ ll!i!••~·iiiiiiiiiii~~~ COCKER Spaniel, male, on compeny. Pf'r1orm b 0 a ti! Noria, Lquna 8 each, calculation, modUicallon1 & OISTIUBUTOR, man a~• 4"'5254 i :.;;;iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~I ~--···-~:.; I ~·-····~-~ deta!I draftlnr. AllO help your own bu1lnt~s w11n. • ~1PMl1 530 Lost productkm achedullnr and come ~~tnt~I of $1000 pe:r I~-""'°"'"""'"""°""--555 1nspPction. Write Clusltltd mo. Jrutial 1nVttl1n~nl le11 OVERWEIGHT FEMALE do1. Collie X, told B -~•-by~•-l_tt_lnt _______ l_G_•_•_d_on_l_n_g,.,,-,..,----I ronlng ad 129 Dally Pllof, P.O. than $100. Early ttttnmtnt Oo )'OU autftt from u11rue I whltt. Vk, Sllter & COSTA MESA e LANDSCAPING e IRONING 20<: ta "·ash. $1 Box 1560, Costa r.te1a. Ca.Ill. poiilblt 642-21~ panp on )'OW' Magnolia. (CI n n am on) PRE~SCt"IOOL ROTOTILLING, 2rJC SQ FT, load. P/U deh11. :,oc: ea 92626 DISTRIBU'I'ORS • Ora;anlze et? WouJd you Iller \Vash . Stair rabies tag 2369. 18th Ir Monrovia, ~3 day + SPRINKLERS, SEED & "·ay II "11.ntW. J't. e t • CAL Po!y-Pon1ona Arch. 1tu-YoUr OW'l 1alea force to aeU Jpt eully A•have '"Family broken hearted. fU11 di.)' .eulona. Planned SOD LAWNS. LIC'D CONTR 1 c.,._-~9""~·~·~------dent aeek1 &u1nmer '''('l"k. Shaltley naturally or1anlc 'tperp to 1pare! For a f'r!oe 847-9963 P!'OIJ'f.!n, hot lunches. Aget 332.26.)( J•nltorlal Conti. buildin1, carp. product.I. Y'Tor PT. SJG.9464 ~Pie: can Dorla 5-t9-2J76 /L"o"'sr,,--.-;Bl°"a-c'°k-,-lo-,.-.'"le-,g-,ed 2-6, hrl 9:30 AM-6:00 PM. 1 -.-L-A_N_D_S_C_A_P~IN_G_*_ he Ip er, e tc. Denn 1 • or IJS..0522. Ms, 5'8-6611 days. 8<>11g!e type doc. white $18 wk-C'OPtiPAREJ uz..toso SPARKLE Janltortal. \Vin· SY..ickat'd 8450 E. Doril, s.111-----'------~ Wee c 0 mp an i 0 n, patch on chest, im icar New lawns, tree t'eDtOv!LI, dov.•1, noora. crpt• & con1tr ,c~ab~,~~~I~. '='~'~' ~'8~1--7~'50::..~-I * DRIVERS * ~ evenlnp le weekends. front rlcht lea, brown col-~",;;_,~833-0237;;.:;,::.,~· -~-~-sprlnkler11, dr.1in1, arbor1, cleanup. A complete comm'! EXPER. all 1orma Prod. N E • ~---~ ol . 1 LARGE REWARD VACATION mother .,ill can patios, fence!I. Lic'd contr. strv. For 1-~~e ett utl, 0 xpenence """"'" i,loJ yrs d. '.''rite, ~~-30j2 . for your children whUe you 13 yr1 loc. exp. 5J6.tm, 962-0672. Control, whop J\at0n, ml1.. N-essary' O..,tfted ad No. 85, Daily vacation. ~tature dtpen.. ~---------L'OS1 analyst. altet 6 p.m.. ..,. • P.~!, P.O. Box "60, Costa LONG-haired ~y ca 1 dab le, d r Iv e 1 . XI n t AL'S GARDF.NlNG Paintin9 &. M7-::i2al ~1u11\ have clean Calll. dr1v. f.lua,CaJlf.92626 ,.,. /flea collar, "Smokf')'"' I r.,. I 4 !or a:ardenina: .l 1mall . Popo•hon•i"nn ing: ~cord. Not under 2i ::;._.•tt96n1cea .......... at pm . lan<lscap1n~ aervlce1, call • • Job Wanted, Femele 702 YELLOW CAB CO. ,JN,$(X)Vf1R DISCOVERY !Olli! vie Humboldt Jlland, :r. .. '6 m.._.,., Find Younelf Ht~ Harbour. Reward, CHJLD , h ~0-5198. Servin&: Newport; No \\'11.1Utie: XMffi:<'E:SS:Ji;.;;;;;;;;:;u1-~186~E~.~l&~lh~S~l.;,~C;.M~. ~ .-"!,:.In Someone Elae 846-4391 or 60-&440 care .n my ome. Cc.I.\!, Costa ~leaa. Dover * WALLPAPER * GOVERNESS: Relined -...·•U C&ll N N Obll t1 Infant to 4 yra old. Have Shore1, We1tcllH. ·When you call "f.Iac" l'!ducated Canadian •1 dy 1t-EXEC. SECRETARY ~;,j ~ga on RE\VARD! Los! 6 mo old 3 )T old d&U&hte-r. Fenced PROFESSIONAL. Prtinin&:, 548-1444 646-1711 latt 30'1 available tor ;,,1: New ofllcea • Airport Loe. The A~'U'd Wlnnlng SeN. w h It e m a I e Hu• k Y. yard, larae homr. Call trH work, ipr!nlden, at'ra· tion as gover'neaa. Speaks Good oppor1unlty tor all' rt ~~t:& ~~rAnaV1~e!. ~~·. i~.~~~I~ ~: lion, pe1t1, d!lll!ase, v."eed J:O.'TER . Extrr. Guaranteed ntient Enali•h A-Swed!1h. aecretary, ~o work in . rast lnlfj'[&'? WIDOWE-D? 54S-f,.105 aft 5 control. Clean up lob1. woril.., Lic'd .r. bonded. Local \\'ill live in & travel pact' d N.B. adverll1lng ~Dfvorced dv.r 21 * BABYSIT my home, fl-feaa Termi. Geora:e. 646-58!13 ref1. Lan•y'1 Int I' r i or 1 . 714-728-2127 · agency. All •kllL, includin11: a.klt 4 largfft. ror a self UNUSUAL Jure cameo pin ~ 1.tar. Bable• "·elcome. ~ER. J•P•"••• ,.~, •• , 64.>JJj(J. Reaid. 548-27::i9 WIOO\V d 1 . . 1horthlnd required. _, 2 Iott In Newport ~ntrr. Sen. h Lhr" " &lU .... cs N'S pollUon Lli * DUREL ADVERTISING e,.Vlanatory meuap 4 hn .... , Xln't pl&l' tacil, ot lwiche1. R.ellable ma l n ten 1 n c,. . PA INT r NG : Hone 11 , companion tor old••ly l•dy ' .... "-'1 -1 tlmenuu value, aenero ""'·rt t h I 01• -,. d 2172 Dupont Dr./SUl!e 4 ! uaY-'" -~ ....c • eac er. re 8. ;r """' Reas. monthly r a t t' s . iruarnntee 11·ork. Lic'd or baby•lttl ..... l\J 0 n. F, I. reward. 673--021R 1 --1 1 ... Nt1vport Beach, Calif. ~~AL & card reader OUW can !:Ir molhers "''"° S!n-3219 u..n.:ll nr1. Cal 67.l-5740 546-4198 I d I I . LOS1': Black Leather "'·allet _ .... , < I l ~C,.,C....~~-~-~--1 alt~. ~'=,.:.:~------·EXP'D I t Id ye a vce on ove. n1ar· ""W"JI.· Near eem .schl1, AL'S Landtcaping. Tree I ======~---AIDES For conv-•er..._...,,..,, . · genera ou 1 1 ' ~·-• b · l37 ....... (check type) No monry. ~"" r.-23 PAPERHA ~ _.__ I ~ • ...,... us1ness. •or....,, Credit cards Ii: checks. .,...,....,J ren1oval. Yard remodellna. NGER. fiock, lo•I elderly care or f11.mily care. ~atn t:nanc:" ~an · 0~ ll~ Soulhwrstern A ve ., 675-..SOn Builders Tr&lh hauling, lot clcttnup. vinyl, guar., estimates, the Homemakers 547-66111 lacht Cltib. Call 673-Jjl6 L.A. Repair liprlnklers. 673-llfi6 Hangman, 547-5146 ' for appl POR Sport & Confidence e LOST IRISH SE'M'E:R. BRICK, block, c 0 n c re 1 e, -ESXP~EfJRf..~J~•~P,;,,~.~ .. icG~ml~•~"'~'~. I ;Sc~h~w~or~I~'------· Help W•nftd, MA F 710 r __ A_CT_O~R-Y-h-,~1p-.~s-,.-,~,,-,,-.,~,, c··-t A I k · d REWARD, CHILD GRIEV· ,,~ •-· I u I i;" > PROF g n.c:u .. e, 1 o, ·r·n~_,., K> :se eveu•a, Complete lawn lll!rv &. ES IONAI., JO yrs I----------for steady 1\·orken, Apply ~ , Judo, K e n do INC. all types remodeling. No landicaplnr . ~-4 6. O 7 2 4, exp, paperhanain2 I.: pain. ADVERTISING A rt I• l I at l2972 Ca.lie Perfecto, San ~749. * 646-6728 * job loo small. Lie. Contr. 548-7953 ling, from EnglVld. 968-7461 Production Manaa;er Ior hot Juan Capistrano ALCOHOLICS AnonymoWI. LOSf: Siamese cat. female, !l62-6s.IJ EXPER Ja .... nese-Americllf\ PAINTING. profrsslonal. All Ne"port Bf'ach a I enc Y· ~--~·i-1211 ., --~1 •• A lite color, $5 reward. Vic: B . s . ~ Mu•t h•v• -· bo--"' 1''ASHION . SHOW Dirt'Clors .. r/11,Jf-== ..., ~·. .., u1un•ss arv1ce gardener, complrte ganlen-work g u a r n. Co Io r .......... ..u P ft Bo 1~ C la ,1 No. end of Laguna Bch. 1. kUI v.. 1 1 · earn S.1 IV $S hotir. No .,... x .:.:;;, OJ "esa. .j!K-322(1 Jn: scrv~ l: cleanup. 1pecia 1st. 646-7081: 547-1411 ai ·~-""ruw pr nt ~J:, pro-1 nve s 1 m r 111 . Beeline c-lal Clubs S~~ 1 ~==~-~---EXECUTIVE TYPING 893--0lj() You Stipply The Palni. ducuon anJ ii;chcduhng. Xlnt F hi Car • G.33-9•14 _,... BIFOCALS rtadlng glasses. ~ly home. ti<tG-2()89 -opportunity. DURtL AD-as oni. ~· J South Col.it Plaza, Bristol BACKACHE? Room!! painttd SIO t'a . VERTIS NG or :2!39-:>43.'i Carpet Service Call 5.17-6062 !or li!Wn " c ar· Call ~7646 'I ' • 2172 Duponti-~~-~~~~--entranct. Mi-~ den cart'. Dr .. Nrwport Beach . F iberglas Molders ~ Jal . PAlt\'TING/paperinJ;:. lS yn • ~• 1670 , •·--.·-•. 0,,ly •pply. 1v,·11n•·d Diamond Carpet Cll'anina: In Harbor aru, Lie & -=-~==~--~=~-~i"·'r t b l.olt and Found I I~ Avg size room S8 COMPLETE Ja"''n &-aardcn· bonded. Rel'! turn. 642-23.56. •ASST. HELPER• Boal \\'orks, 1300 Loaan l~·iiiiiiii;i;iiiii~~;: llwtrvctlon ~ Repairing &. installntion.~ ing servJ;j',',· 51,_010,, Avr., Costa i\1e1a. II ~. ------~-Free Est. &IJ-l3l7 rOR clean & neat paintina. e $3.75 HR. e i---'--~~~=~- P0untl (frH •ds) 550 Carpenter ~10W, rdae, vac. frnt &. 1W interior J.. exterior. Call Permanent en1pJoymrnt. full . FOLK SINGERS . Schools & yds. S5 a week. Dick, 968-400:> time or part timr Depend-Singles. or gi'Otip~, at1dll1on& FOUNO l\1ixed Spaniel lnitructlons 575 ·CARPENTRY H.B. 968-7318 INT "-Exter. Paintini. 1.blr ' for CBS Special. Contart Jemale, 5 mo'a. ~'flf!l'I i'lllNOR REPAIH.S. No Job l Gardening ServH'e Lic'd, ins. free e~t. 30 yn Cllll ·Mr. f>'rank • ;')46.9862 Steve John!lton, 646-0712 a.ft dihn. Or \\ill give lo &:ood Too Small. Ca,binel in gar· I by expenenced Japanese exper. Chtick, &IS-i1809 BUSDRIVl';RS S3.IO per hr.1 ='~· -==:--~~~- hcilne. 5-t8-i:l964 arr 6:30 or AIRLINE age! & other cabinets. e 968--0183 • PAit-.'TING/papl'rina. 11 YM Apply ;\Ion thn1 Fri, 7am.fULL TL\IE Activities 1'Jlnd1 SCHOOLS ~5·8175 jf no an.~\\'l'r leave LA\l'N care & i&rclen ii·ork. In lrarbor aiea, Lie &. 4pn1 11 Bu~ Gu1ae. 600 Director. Exper. prer'd. in FQbND: Chihtiahua ciof, vie . PACIFIC n1sg. at 646-2372. H. 0. Liihl haulina;. Exp · d, bondtri. Refs fw·ri. 642-2356 Irvine Ave. Newport Bf'ach. teachirlf:'. art~ & cr11-ll!, and 1-f9ntlngton & Chlc a io Day Ir. Nl.a:bt Cla~,,es Anderson. Reuonablt. Call ~973.S *PAINTING*--&12·7007 plann.!na leiaure time ac- Sftet5, liunl. Beach. Call 54l-6S96 CARPENTRY • Repair. AU 5'16-7319, LA\VN Ma Jn t. Ill Quality. Rras. Price~. BABYSIITER Grandmother· tivllles. &nd re~u'!le to Box •:· ider.tHy. 536-7450 After 610 E, 17th St., Santa Ana i... •.• 08"·' 1446, O!'anae Calif., Attn.: pi ..... ...es, llon1e 1 .. apt, Lile raraa:e & yard cleanup. 1.itc r rel' esr, 646-'" Jy lady • lrre to babysit, 10 Activitlrs co'nitil!ant. :r P.M. VIRGO Swim Sc hoot hatiling. E\·c: 54 8-6266, hauUn1 Ir. ttpaJr. * PAPERHANGER * !rt't' mother for occ 11hoppma: -'""----~- mJND 1mall Poodle mL'<ed LfflOlUI, 6 010,1 thru adults. Day: 537-1860 Gtnerel Services ReaiOnablr. G4G-'l4-1!l Ir Dr appt. etc. Goldt'nwril FURNITURE mill ma n. dQs, female, blk w/whlte Also, i wlm lH.ms. Carden REl\lODELING & Repalr &. Edina:er aN!a H.B. Exp'd, J>'ull lime "'Ork. ,.1e1.t~~~ves jTI4) MT-7043 or Grove I: Balboa Isle . Specialist. Comm'l. residen.. 1t-LABOR UNL!l\11TEO '* Pleater, Petch, Rtpelr 847-9569 ALSO: \\'oman wanted for W~ """' ...,.,. !Jal. Paneling. cab 1 n e' l I , HANDYMAN I =====-~----1 case CO\'ering. \Vil! tra111. -·~ Woldi"< • C·-·-· 67•1972 • PATCH PLASTERING BABYSITIER for 11rl, 2. Apply 87:>--C. \V. IZ>th SI. SM. tan and v•ht Beagle-IYl>I' marlitt, formica. 614·7j98 " ~,,.. ..... .,-.:r I' f h AU lypcs. Jo'rre t'.,t1m11tc! re er our omf! or l\IP11a Newport Bch. .fl!+le dor. Vic 221'1d and Cement, Concre :e Hysband Btisy'r C1U :\loo~ Call :;.i:.~:25 Vt'rdt-Sehl 1rea. ~.>--3116 ,"-'~G~E~N~'E~"= .,~.---~- Santa Ana Avr 1n Cl\1 I I ~ 5(5.-0620 altrr 6-Rfopair f'vet """ 0 f FI CE. ~7 Serlicn md RepWs CEl\1ENT WORK, no job too Build-Serv ?-.lost Thing~ PLASTER · Pa I ch· Rm. Privatt' <.1lun1ry club. Ex· Add N k r BAB''S ITTER 1••/o••• 'd \VI h s M A N' p reac rip 1 ion small, reasonable. Fr r e 1. ew wor . rec " per. req . ~c 1 ru . un, Eat! H Stutllclc S48-86lS H•ullng estlma!es. 54;-,.4;)M aft 5 transportation needed al! 8ani-:>pm. A.pply Tt1C1i thrti l,l4;1i;lasses fotind nr Harbor m. · • · -------.,---da)', '>1on·Fri. Call 1 t1 6, VW School, Cdlll , 644-l~ Babysitting QUALITY crmf'nt -...·ork. let FREE hauling (or salvai;i:able Plumbing !">4~l5'1 7 Fri. OLD RANOI COUN· 2 RABBITS rotind ·vie. 300 ----------Geora;e do it. Lic'd., Bond· Items. Fn!e pick up on furn. ----------,,c.,,;:cc:_ _______ / TRY CLUB, 3901 Lampson bi.ck of Avocado Sl C.M. BABYSlITING my home, -'"-·~"=>-_1_69_5~·-----It: appliances. ;1 j7-~ 151 LbE1'W Taka~ &-Son'1 Pltim· BABYS .. 1dLlve-in for 3 .llCh A\'f'., Seal Beach tl b~~ · = ~7-2005 eveR. ng Rcp11ir R" p Ip r aJ:'e chi . Reliable ref. on N. or S.D. F'rwy al S<'.u 648-5810 l?'i fncd yd, hot mt'ali, day PATIOS, "'alks, dnve1, in-.,:;:.,,:~-'--'--~-~= Renu1drJ frtt 1-:atlmates bch, 642-1343 Bch Blvd turnoff) Lm=Eo-~.~-y~,~11-,.-,....,p~,-.-.,~.~--,1 •&="-II~•-· ~"-~-5211<]_____ !tall new lawn!, saw. break, TREES topped, cleanup. \\'r 646-8'.'.40 =-='==~--~--1-"-"-,:C.:C,,==:....~ . H -~-==~---BABYSll'fER. l>Ou"'""'.. GENERAL HELP clustfied ... Dally Pilot CHILD Care?' I Ca.re! M-Jo', ~"'~m-'-'~"~· ~"'='"""='==='~'~'~"~'--do tveryth1n11. andyman "-" I • •"Y1 imo R•u .,, o1gg PLU:'tlBING RJ-:PAIR 1nature, depend11blr, Jive • $3 !5 HR • -. v•ce D ttcr-. Check lt I"' fenced yd_ hol lu-h, ee CONCRETE. Floon, " · · ""~ · ~· jo .... .,-.. ..... •~o b too small In or out. 968-8231 alt 5:30 · • *--ln1. Sale~ WE NEED YOU YOU NEED US POSTING CLERK \\'Ul train. Cort11tr, helpful. 10 Kry addini, U!c rypln,i. Ctl.\1. MISS EXEC AGENCY 410 w. coa,I Hwy., NB 1146-3939 A,>: A PART O•' our. EX·10::::~~!1!==~ J::CUTIVE SALES DEPT.11 WE WILL GtVE YOU 'mt: Reel Estate Sel11 BEST p0SSIBLE M£TH. Xl11't organlzat1on h•1 1 ODS AND TRAINING SO opt•111na1 tor proven back· ,,~AT YOU ?ifAY £ARN around. OVER IJ0,000. YOUR !S"f. NEWPORT YR. Per•onntl Agency START IMM'D. NEW 1971 CADILLAC PLUSH OFFICES FULL FRINGE BENEFITS Ill Daw•r Dr., N.8. 642-3170 e R .N.'1 e fnfrnMvt t~/card11c c.:arf', full timt', 11 10 7:30 arn. YOUR COMPENSATION e HUNTJNCTON JNTEll· MAY BE m.ooo.s100.ooo COll1~fUNrtY HOSPITAL . PER YEAR AS AN ASSOC· r('nonnel Dept, 17112 Beach TATE 01'~ C0fl1!11UNITY Blv<l., Hunllni;i:ton Beach, LEADER, R.E . BROKER, 01· Call 817·1307. F'INANCIAL TY C 0 0 NII cc, e77."'°'='°"-....,-,.,--=I DAVID B. L.OOKlNGLANO. SALES GffiLS, qe 11 to ? Earn S300 to SSOO mo. In your spare !imr. ror appt. cal! Jim Harrison 49.J.9).l.4. Oricn !11onday Through Sunday for Calli and Jnttrview11 Orang• County 714-547-5773 Ask For Mr. D•vl1 J . W . ROBINSON'S NE\VPORT BEACH hu 1mn1rdi.1.te opcnma: for a e MAINTENANCE MECHANICS e fULL TJ.\IE AND XI.NT COl\lPANY BE:-/Ef"ITS SALES •• \fen & Women STOP!!! LOOKING & ACT Salt& minded per10n, 11er fol' you t'lielf, a rea.J. caret'r op. portunity. Xlnt tuture loJi' riiht man. Earninas com· mcrn..·e in1metl1att>!y should be in excl'.111 of S250. per wk. No canvassing or s0licHln1. Interview~ by appotnlmtnl only 9-3 \\C<'kdays. 835·2771. SARAH Coventry net'da fl. or pl \!mt' help. No 11'1· 1·e1tmen!. Will train, min •it 20. ~1407 "-543.90M. APPLY ln pel':-.Clll 10·.J pm 1--.~S~'E"A~,~1sr=R~E~SSE=~s-.--1 PeNOlln<'I Depl Exp poll'er mach 0Jlf'111. .,2 1'~ h. I I NB NORTH SAILS, 913 E11'r· . as ion s" · ' tric. Se a I Be1ch. (2L1J 1 Eqtial opportunlly rrnployer j~1461 I JANITOR · ('tlt1ple o\'er 30.1:.0:::::::::~-------i Nia;ht \\'O!'k. 1\fual kno11 ho11 :)('C!'l'l~I')' to 1trip & \Vax floors /.:. EXEC. ;eneral ma!n!enancr. ()v.•n SECRETARY transportatl<in. Pl'rn1anenl. 41~ hr~. per nia;ht, 6 days So.'il PLUS TOP BENEFrrS "'tek. $225 per mo. to sta11. At lea~t $ yr1 ~ecret.trial f!X· Call 642-1963 pcr and £'d, 11cills re11'd. MEATCUTI'ER JOUl'll<'yman with Calif. exPcl'. !or qtiali-HUNTINGTON BEACH ty, 11ZT11ttll m11rkct .• \lature Union High School &-perm. 673-3510 District 1\1EDJC,\L Jaborafol'y Call :\36-9331 by 4111 tech~logisl, 11 cl' n se rl. SERVICE 1tn nile ma;r nerd- parl-t1mc. l ; 30 -7 : 30 · ed, &alary & benefits. Apply Newport B{'h. 044-2?.1'.i in per10n, 319:i J~arbor Bl,, NEED parl l1n1e, It.\/ 7·3: 30 C.~I. am, LVN'• 3-11 :30 pm, k S°'E~R~V~l~C~E,....,,S~l&~t;'°o~o~s.i=,-,-ma-~·i 11·7:::0 a111. AIDES --11.1! fl!ll'I 1111u·. t'Xp 'd, over 11, 1h l !t1 . cxp 'd only. Chl'vt'On S!at!on Adami f; Nf:\\IPORT HARBOR CO:"'l· ~la~nolia. H.B. 1 VALESCEN T HOSP.=""=·=-=-~---/ 71~.-646-176 1. SERVICEStaSaJ,1me n , _ part 11n1e, nejll 1n •P· e e NEEDED pearanct. Apply 2 511 0 /\'c1~'Jl0rl Blv<l , C.:\I. Two .Office Girls SE:\VING Machine O~ator1 ;\Just be 2J and ablf' to drive \\"anted. F:xper. neccs!al')'. -APPLY -Also i;rcl't'lal')' \\'Anted. Ca.LJ IR6 !::. 16th Sl., C.:\1. afltr 9A~! 496-1236 NITE \Vatt'rn1an. Ir" 1 n r SHIPPING &-Rrcelvina;. Ap.. ~ast Country Club. Apply pllcan1 n1t1sl have lood 1n person, A1\1 only. dnving rr<.'Qrd. Apply il1on. *NURSE-FEMALE * in person S.>.~ Production (PractlcelJ P!acr, Nf'1vpt. Bch . fi>r elderly gtntleman. Lil•e in, with salary. Cell eVt'll only from 6·8 P~I. 67.l· 7::6:i . TOP EXECUTIVE SEC RETARY for !he service you n~d. lot! or love. 6--l:-r-3487 patios, dril'e~. sid"·alka, YARD, Gara11:t. cleanup~. e 642-3128 • -Large chain nred1 9 mt'n, 1Jab1. Reas. Don 642·8314 RemO\'t tree a , dirt, ------'--'-'-'~ BARTENDER ~.11p .. 11-pply in fulJ or part !lme for mer· OPPORTUNITY kl I d b kl ~o 874. e PLUillBING .--""!'&On arter 4 pm fhf' Bluo . >"ilh •lro•g -•I ••l•I• or * Child Ce re 1 P oa er ac "IOI'. • ...u· J ,~ · chandi11lng 11nd srrvicr • ~ " "' ·-- F:ll'rtr!cal Repair l~ hr Beet 107 21~t Place NB Ca!! :>.Ir. Day :J.J6.9862 for 4 lic<'nsed Real f::s1atc 1c&al backil'OIJnd needed i\lOVING . Garaae clean : up 642.:.27l3 6<2-140".> • J p I I · LICENSED hlld BABYSITTER '"•"l•d ~a l'!I rop e or aro1v1ng for 0, .. , ol ou' compa•y d]. c C:ll~. \\"OW k lltt' hnu!111g. Rrasonable. .. " rny G I Off' " " look ai this, nur~ery :<ehool frt'e rsliniatei. 6,15.1602 Remodel & Repair homr, Laauna Nigue!'area. ,.. __ _, ener a ice 011:'1Jn1za1 1on. Posaiblr to fl!r·iors. u quahlit'd. rall * * * * * atmosphere, act l \' i t i t 1, All 6 pin 49:>--0189 uuvu lypini;, cXC'l.'llf'nl co. .>Pl! -lnconie &-commer· J11dy at 642-4960 ext JJ9 to fingf'r painting, P!C. ProJ· HAULING CUSTOi\1 remodf'ling, •ltera· e BLUE. OL ;\lath abillly, call Lora111r, ciaJ properly, land drvl'lOp· set up an interview, r cts daily, indvidiuaJ care Grncni! cle1nt111 11on11 k a1tditlon1. nr11·jd D PHIN • \\'r~tclltf PerM>nM] AS.:l'rK"y. nient, reiale.• on homes, Reai:or1nblr 646-:2188 Stcwort·Builclrr 673-12.l:J \\'ii1re5tri. "· .. · f"ry Cook ~l \\'l'~tclir Dr. &-l:J.2/iO n1ay l"'nslder part t1m•. Trader's Paradise ii?• sandy beachlron1 be. l.,._n San Clrmentt &. Dana Pl. price<! 50~'o below mkr., I?. equity tor ind., comm., $J or TD~. 4S.l-482i ~7 18" l\lercury trall!'r w/canopy, Good l' on d , \t&htt SiOO FOB ('11t>o\'•'r camPtr. * 541-1050....!__ l:~'°'lod-,.'•~.,,-Ea•tsrde duple)( $36,9j() incon1c s::r, month trade l13,000 equity for 30 lo 35' hvn eng cabin cruiser. Ed Riddlt' &ffi.58:>3 \\'ant 1, acre or more w/ al.d~r home OK. E-sldt C,:'-1. or County 5trip FOR hon1" In Lake"·00c1 \"1llagc or '~ f'vt pty, 612-J7fiG \i1 Mil. Jttp. Ori-.~,-. -,~-m~h· lion. Set to 1pprec1a1". JUOI) va.l1at. \\IUJ tr11de for Vallut or DoriJ:"e Oare In u aot1d.tUon. ~5-:izn t-,., •. 14' Speedboat. 40 }IP J ohn- IQP. Elttl. ~t11rter. rluill t.nks, f'tC. 1111h tr11lrr IAke new. Trade !or V1U· l bl. Dart, 545-5227 tYll!, i[cn;i Equity In units plUJ tr.e A: clear prop, Neid -~ Southern C1llfornia. M&dat Davia, Rc1l1Dr till-7000 '8 Dlrttr Commandfr •Ir· !Karw. 4-'ICat "'1 100 hr•, t'tf $.1SOI), TR1\DE f'OR ~~1111, 11uot bµ&gy or "'~" * ~a.:i.4111 t lines times dollars 'T'r;ull' .1 BR, 2 ba, Costa :\!rs• house, S9000 eqully, FOR un1mpro\·ed apt or oon11nercial lot . • 5-i.).iS&i • Jl;11'f' 12~t cq In <"har1n1ng 2 BR tmnie, ~=·~ide R.: lot. Hu·n1 $163. \\'ant \, 2 or 3 fl\<'r uppl'r urut~. ~anie a1't·:1 Stan11al, ; .. 3-l722 21'.: ll9-J677. . \\'alk·in antlqut> popcorn •l'Kl altrntion. any houn. 1----------E 'd 3""· \' L'd N B " I T"'SH & G I R fl ~-P · ~ 18 1 0• . . GIRL FRIDAY \'ou• ow• d••k ' pho Hot unch &:. snack. plenty """ · arage c ean-tip, oo ng -• " "' nP . of play eq111p, Fenced yard, 1 d&)S. SJO a load. }'l'l't' BOOKKEEPER, tuU-chaf'it, ro a;;si~! rl'crcallon dil'f'i·tor. Call for 11pp1. W. E. Lachtn· 1 1 S20 pl'l' .,.,k, 968-.11112 Ell!& es!. An~lln1e. :>18-5031 \\'E:-lf:DA Hoo/111g. At1thor1z. sharp, ne~ded fol' expanding NO EXPERJENCENECE.:.· lll)t:'r. 61[}...'1928, .).lj.J ISJ and Bushard HAULING, gt"n'IC!eanup, f'd Appl1caTor for Snn-lhde co1npany. 1\luat ~ave niini· SARY. Apply Jn person only, --. .... --... -... ..., .... Contractor tret serv. lfandyman. Reas. ="Roo'=='l-"Si~··~1'~m~•~-~64~~~· ~IG=O~I-n1t1m 5 Yt• e~p .. ~me know. Club Grt'rnbrook, Magnolil P~RK11"G a\lendants, part 646-~S. T. Guy Roof1n1:, ~al 01rel't. ledat' of ~t1bhih1ni: business St., biiin Talbert &-Ellis, tunr. Evr~. Expl'r Apply :'llY \Vay, quality homr ~--,1 -~----1 do n1y o"n 11·ork. 61j..i780. helpful. !Salttry open. Com· Jo'ounta in Vallry, ~ton bt\\•n pa1·k1ng lot, 3801 E. Coa~I Leadership Hou1ing Sy1t•m•, Inc. P .O. Box 2160 Newport Baach, Cel. l:.:rru.-.1 Opp. Employer repau" \\'alls, cC"ilinJ:. noors Houaec eaning "1'18-9390. pany b<'netits. Call tor 111-1 pm.4 pm. II\\')' 11 fler 5 pm. rte. No job too sn1a.IJ. Ry Dil). Stwlnv/Alteret!On•--1rr\'1P\\'' ,\OCO Advertlslna -------e PART TIME e l ~~:':":'.""-.... ""'"".,..•I ~7--0036, 21 hr ans. 1er1·. l)wu Trun~pt1f!Hllon l11c., l.agun" Ni11:uel. 499-JMO • GIRLS • GIRLS I . \\ A:'\T~:o. Y~ u n a• ~:C· ~:UROPEAN Drea~inaking --Clerk11! ~livery with :ialc; ~~E>rv1rt-m11n 1ntrtt1t~ in ROO:\I A<ldilfons. [. T . SJG-0618 • BOOKKEEPER, account• E!lt.i.bll1hcd tlrm .. openlna Genrr~' ht'lp. · learn1n& tht' · ....... Cl''"" •· monl C tru II SI I ~ 1 ---~=~=~--Ex""rtedly cu~tom r lttod. bl • 1 b h • 1 1 D,j ··~ '" .,.. ons con. n&:e11vl')'Oi' DEDICATED CLEANING ,.... p~ya t · n1·entorycontrol. nt1v ranc "I. r . or P -e WE WILL TRAIN e bus\n"•~. fu!I time & perm 2. Estin1., plans k la)out. \\'~ do t'Vf'tylhlng frcr Ai'<'ur. \V 0 r km• n ~ h i P · ~ ull (1n1t S111rt Sl. per hr. Un1r 6i~-~110 Sli-1511 cstimatr. Call 673-4012 c6~i~'-=l~S~IO==~--....,-Goorl tu1ure \\'\th rapidly e SJ.~O HR. e :\l~st b.r nc~t {.: ag:i 1·rss1J '•i-;.-:,·.,·'O<;o:;.--;;:-:::-:---,o-1 Addition~ * Rrn1odt'hllg Gl'rv.·ick & Sons, Lie G73-illl1 * :.19-2170 R00:\1 Additions. RenlOdtl· B11y .r. Beach Jan1tori:t- Crpt11 11-indo"'ll, floor~ rte. RI'~. I.: Conim'J li·lft.1!01 ----i«rusE of CLEA'.'1-in~. Frei' plann1n~ i;erv. Completr Hou~ Clean1ni Kl'nnedy & Jlaust, 633·6~10 642-6124 dll,} s/;;JS-611~9 rve~. ---~,;:..:;:.:._ __ _ Income T•x E lectrical ALTERATtO:-IS, rr~1y!lnr. aro\1·inl! company. Phone C11.JJ :\Ir Grand * 546·9862 }or m1r.r.Je11 . rail. ~IR . \\,\tTRES:-;. F::..prr1l'n~ F.xpert fitter Top r~·,. KEN 6-12-9262 at 4Day Tire --~-------BRANDON. e 1i9'1·558.i e <h•f'r 21 .. 1111:~1~. Apply Jn N.B. RN!a. &4&-27G--f Co.11 Stores Hq. UiOO \V, Coast GOOD JOB PART-Tl~!!'.; S<'l'J-et11ry ligh1 pel'll~~ ,:1::'9. Piro A1p Ruth Call 1111~. NrwporT Brach PENSIONERS 1y111111:, lihng, sonic h11nking OF.:1\:-.i\ S 111 San Clt'111t'nt. Alteration5=-6'2-SMS' Bookk••per/ Acct clerk No selling. :'<lus1 havr car. 2 dutie1 Se~ R,t'1u1n" top 0. WAJTR~:ss F:x11. apply lr1 Neut, accurate, 21) yeir! exp, nrt'ded b)' Nii'J)rt Bch dcveJ. di\),. f)('r 11k :"o rlrinkt't'~. ~~3 lll7 Nf'i\por1 lkh Ca ~™'~0~r~l'r 4 Pm Tllf'-Blue Tiit op111ent !inn. f:::icper iv/con· Gd .~!early nlrn • rcfcrrric· · -rrt ' 1'1 PIRC"f' NB aU'Uction or development es. 67:l·Z'289 • PltODt.:CTJON WIG SALES tiooth·cui;ton1 awnings, glass EL~CTRlCIAN. h«:n~d \\UlrlQ\\S, rallJ l 2000+ Trd Small jobs, n1ain1f:ll8fK'f' &: for car, J{'11rlry, Omi.1, prop !'<'Pfl!l"I. 518-5703 or 'r Af1 6:~. 4944977, l ·F~u~m~l-lu-,-0----- Smiley Tax Service e 1.1111 YEAR LOCALLY e Quul1fled • Rt115onAIJlr CERA'.\llC 11lt ne11 1. remodrL Y.-rc~ rsl. :)1n11l job.~ \1 tlCfln1f' ;)36--2~:26. Tree Service firm dt'1lr1b!e, S1lary r11na:e HANriY:\IAN .\la1ntrnancr . SUPERVISOH.'i • full Tirnr "loncy.:•art Timt Sl'l(l, Send re.~un1e 10: P.O. "·ork a couple hrs a d11y, Al! tlt1"t't shills. Xln! luiurr Call Ou·1;;: 816-4092 Box 1880, 1\t>ii'IXlrl Bcb, privatr .~chool. Prrf ttlln--rl for f'flt'ctlvt leader~ 10 )Oln•l;;;;;;;;;;j 92660. or olrltr man. 846-6287 the Harbor Are11 '1 lutl'sll l ~wina l"Ompany. r------~ 7 Olrlf"r unit• Prlmt' loc. hf'11e h RS<'tl. jn('()me 17.080. TURNinlRE S1rlpplng · any F.11 $'.!.~·:\! \\'11n1 house. R\"f'1'8g" 1•hn1r or rocker T IJ ·~ nr ~ubi11i1. stripped Jj. &12-344J Aizent 6~2·ifl«l ~1 2 rx1•f'Urn1 rental uni l~ Sjl.~f <'QU Hy -"·ant T.O. '1 and / or !>mailer ~· SOF"A, Good conslMJchon Only net'df! slip ('()\l'r In he pe_rfe r i, .i:vi. 644--0.i77 G•rdenln9 Boo K KE E p ER, l'xper HAIRDRESSER "/cli<'nlclr, :\olacGREGOR YACHT COH.P. [ II" J 11/,,1cr~tar11l ~kill.~ for Full nr parl-1im r . \\'(' can COHP. _ Merchandise y lnt ern1 tion11I ~rhoOI arr1U1J1,'r a short work 11r.k ~l~C'l!_ntia, C .\I. . orianii111 1on, :'\ ~ !0(·111ron. ln a pn:ifr~ssh't' comrnunt!y To SiJO mo. Call Dick r>:eu, 541~1 432 or E\•t's: ~3~-2089. PR01''f::SSTONAL phont' i19-838a HSKPP.S E•npl)T ,.,-~ ff'-e~ llOHC!IOI' • Dani Polnl , San Antiqu•• Cll'n1tnfe, C<1p1strano arra. BROll.ER.i.\lAN-t-.:xp'd A~ Gf!Of'te Alll'n Byl11nd ~tn-\\'ork In your 01vrt home_ l-:'.:'::':-::::::-.,..----- P<'rn1. offlce·Rea1 Ra1t'~ LJC Uphol1t1l'l!r -Quahty ply in per"°n, j!O E. cy 10&-B E. 16th, "S.A. Be.! deal in arcll. Phone_ AFl.RTVF:S !h1~ ll't f' k ·end :;z,i No. Ne10i-por1 Blvd. v.'Ork, Anthony·s Up h . Katella, Anihehn 541-03!Jj S:t:i-146.'l bet"·cen 9.00 a.m. fru1 ·k !l)lld riw1 the Eu!. \\', A. S:lllLEY TREES, Hrdge~. Top, 'l"ntn, r .. r11f!t><l rubl\c Accolin1 t cut, removed, h1uled. ln1. r.12.n11 anyl!m" 646·!l6&G 1 c6~472-1-0__.30_B_l•=-J_oh_o ___ _ Ccn1ral Bu1lne11 &>1'\'1rr;-Uphol1ttry eTHE TAX ADVISORS IOO 0p11M1le Hoq Hoepi11l Servicr.. 64l--M27 NB. ===~~-----/HffilsEKEEPER.live.-ln . and noon. ftnurld n11k table & lion a f"~ Appt. C•il 615 n•nn OUSBOYS 18 it 01rr l IO s A11nt {i 12 7000 "' ~ S2:ll nio E..;p'd , rtfrrt>ht"f'~ -----~ -..;;...,__ -"11'11· Pt' • pan11h o.k ' · LAWN c111·r, rlt1.nup. rlo"'t1· ·-\\'AITRESSF:S -Da)~ --;T..;>t;-r.T _. ! Ji Fullr hnprov"-J R·I lols brili. f'rf'r r.~L TAX SERVICE $4 UP HOSTESS_ N!ihl~ 811ltioa P<"ri1r. 673-41i:, PPCOGttAMMs:R < inin~ ~rt. i·hairs k chine, un111. (u Sl . .".00 tSZ11 .:i001 Clrar , Cttll 1111.;.,wi I App'\ av&ilable da)',, Apply h1 ~~n SOI d~r11J T1mr1 l'rocr)o_~ nin· sir!c ~;•nl• k standln1 \\'Ill UJv1de. \Va111 :tllolor· cvl'~. \\'kndl. 5f3.()5M. E. Balboa Bh·o_ Bfllboa 1 tf\)I. S\j,(iOO ~~~··ls..:iflTl B~ilJi:rl l..A\\'n St!rv. iio mo IS.I:? N'ewporl CM DILL.'1AN'S RF;ST1\UR.ANT Llr Rtlndtrl RARE n10•1~~~,~,,~,'Y-rl7ro-p.7],-,cll yacht, A!rplant., Ba,r111dr f rn! ,it, bark. lll(l1i, rd&:" _ • [~ n home or Inc. ('?1•1 4$·3103 ~ ''!IC' S·\6-20i6 al1 6 SknuSt-n Tax Sr.r.·ke CLJ:;AXINC 11rl for new ! Perio'!.,nel ,.... Agency b:~1;;r la hir; ~l~~k. cut ~~1110, f .r. C lo! in Arrowhead • CLEAN UJi S""cialis!, haul· ~our horne, comp! .1udir pro-mo!htr, 2 day$ 11rrk, $\JO • 411k} •JHi111u:-: ._,r , ;\ B " 1 r "• ....,. ,_, N 'h ho /•··k · I 1" icclion 54&-4.528 _ Job W•ntod, Molo 700 rn S2 hr. ()lrn r11r. Call "" C.:all For ,\prio1n11111·n1 ~~P"''l?"''"· ptll'«t'llliri "''.l.'e\ry ()I' ,_ re w <llA.'. pr1\•1 • in•. ·"" J!lb~. llf'W fe .. ~ Ito" 1''"' R ' R• ·•• •••• ......... ..... 4' I .,. '"16 ,;]6·"11~ •. j • I' di•Hl ....... fKll!I. Track for e41ulty in ~ l't'ptir. Rras. 51~ SKOUSEN TAX SERV. ( -pm on y, :>.-.-..Kl • 0 tu'of. Pl'I Jl.~7-1C.OS l"•'O l'lt p""f)l'rt,v 1n Orani."C Jl,\t Inndy pnrkin~ 101 11ea~ Your Hon1r. ~·389~ l"!A:".. 44, 11.11n 1~ work COASTAL AGENCY-~ lfr>uuful nf O~k F;;;;;-- Co. Oworr 136·2866 ll\\Hpin\!, 11111 n niowina:. l roninv Drl ~rr h1ndy 11111,n F:~p. Wt Pleet People! TIME FOR ~ !'!lit !op nr~k~. Butt~!- \\'hlt1no)'tlUhave10 trJWc!' l'flgu1a And \aC., 11-17-1707 I bolt 111an l pa 1ntr1 \\rl!e • Cler1ca1, Sale~. Adnunia 1[1• E 1hlf'bo1rd;1,, A11rbr1· <'hair, l.t~I It h"I"" -In OrAngell F.XPER llaii11.iian Gan:l<"ner ffiON l~C hO Sl 2• 1 f ll\Slfll'f'! •d Nq :!.1. Dally 1r11tl\•t, T•cknicAI.,. "\/IN Pf:RSQNNfl QUICK CASH Dn·~~""· Tn_inks. Chllin Ii: Countr'• laf'i!'"~t re~1d trad-Co111plr1e Gardl't1ini;: Ser-hr• nr'i1;>' ov.·~e h~~:;.:,~or. l?IJ \IJ. BA)', C.\'--12~ H~borlBdl, C'I .NO·&ll.i SERVICES~AGENCY THROUGH A nx·krr<. rrr t'IC' :,.m.oos2 ~ pc:llll .642-!im ,,Cf', Nimalani. 646-46i6 M.>--7611. PF.RS01\ABLE tnrll•h1T11n ·o•rwr B v · 111,~d11111~_ DAILY PILOT ANT IOUE:-ANTrQUE * * * * * *, --S1ntlf' 2.> yr1. BS drrrt't. I OlNTAI,. Chah"Slfi" A:.sl'nt 4~ [ lilh l~t Jr.·u·irl C \I r..-i11nrl Oak Pt'dr-~111.t table I Cir. ConJ1dtr 1") th n i , Prtvlou1 ""P l\t"l'. Ph. '42·1 470 WANT AD 12 · !l1Amtr<'r Complet•lf lii!9mi!!!!!!!!l!!l•••••••••••••Ji! I ---~-~~==~~= Pf'!ltr NB •rt1 &16-4.',.12 ~Z-1539 be! &Spn1 reflnl~hed SlOO. 848-7335 .. ' DAJlY Pl(DT " . ll§J [ ,~..... Ill I ..... _ l~I ~ ... l~l.__"""_-_:___,l,111=1 .,,. I ~iiiiiiiiiiiii~ I~ I l~I I ...... ~· Appll&n<H CLOSING out Wt; Stovt1. Pl I elec, bltnl, Hlf• cltani.nc, combo compact Jd\Chenl. Dlltlwuhen I.: '!l'&ter I01tn1rs. Al'I Ap· pllanct Sttvke, 1S9 9 Oran.it. C.M. 842·6575, IM84215. R.EOONDmONED PO RT ABLE Olshy,•ul\en, \Vashar•, Dryen 6: Rt>fr\a:er1to1'1, $40 I up, Sales and Service, 49UW. Larson'11 AppllAn~• 212 N. El Ca111lno J\.ed, San Clemente. C 0 L D SPOT rcfriseraton &. Krnniot·e 11tove1, •lla:htly lrti(hl da.niared. T 11 l l y ruuanteed. Reductions up 10 SlOO. Phi 96l-TTll1, St1n RMbuck :.: Co. 90l9 Ad•ma. 1-luntinrtori Stach. \\1HIRLPOOL auto V.'Alher SJJ. Kel\'inalor t>lf'c dryer, 6 cycif' $40, Both eood rond. Guar "-dellvt'red. 546-MT2, &17..SIJj ;\tOVJl'\"G Ea:st; lf'llin1 Lady Kt>nmorc, ytllow 3 1peed \\'8.!her, matchin1 el 1 c. dr)'f'r. SlDO, !load condiUon. S<s--0939 KEN?-.fORE IUIO \\"Uher, late modtl Xlnt corid, S65, -guar & dehvtred, 346-8812, 847-8115 KENr.tORE auto matic v.nhf'r, excell,nt condition, reconditioned $4j. 968-6381 aftf'r 6 •LARG!'; REFRIGERATOR $45. DBL OVEN STOVE $M 646-'1820tfl> KELVINATOR cl\e1t frt11:t>r $25. P'r\cldaire cook top ,2.J. 6'JS-2109. 111 "'•-/Ort•n• 12' MIXED Shopbml l•maJ•. 1 Dltl• 114 ... ,.. s.n "' CyclN, lllllt, llAMMOND 1100 Y•ll'. lpa.yed ahotl, lia!nH. I C90Wt N 1 112 Mlocall1MM11 11D Gu19e .. le .._,A.,,,,BA""'Noo=N=m- 5 RM. GROUP Llvtn1 room 1et. dre1Ser, n1trror, headboard -full siie box 1pr1n; l n1attrt1• -5 pc, dinette ut -2 1.,.,·Jn box •Prln&1 A mattre&~s - ' dr. che1t-rtfrl{l:t'rator. $2.75 PIR W EEK $238 BALANCE W!LK'S FUllN ITURE *SANTA ANA * 60D W. 4th ST. WHY BUY FURNITURE? DINE't'T1: Ht.I cha.in, $3$. orsan · HAMMOND, lt•lnway, Xlnt with eh'udrtn. ramlly OUR Euttr buktt bu lot CA1' )) No. 111. I hp ---------1 f"okll,.-t&ble"' 311 x 90, $10. Bdnn ut mmpl $60. ~.. Yamaha. New It uHd do(. Ooa:notue, doi ao-Ml• lovable Lab Rcit (obc· t'vinrudt, new p&illt. top -...... ..._ _ _.. SltnMr, $10. Touter $5. colorTV ,'11\TV _jlOO•_, u," 811~ pllnol of mott makt•. Stat ceeaoriei lnd. ~tlT 4/5 dltnct trained), LovclOIM cond. $2100. WW OON Vtn I --'IMICI - -• Record -1··" .. I ·~ -. •"""' eo..... rt.d.. ~.--lD So. Calif. at Schmidt Ml lchnl 4 lo ,.... "U --1 .,.-.,ifll' u P ..,... tlrt• almo t new ttt1 •~ .....,. ~•co y,~. 1 lov•bl• doc• n l.lllr vt 1 11 In part • I --· Pole lamp 18. Sl.trP!na-baa • • -w.-Mwkl Co. 190'1' N. M&la, r l' ...... Whippet.. Mlttlncn1t Ktn-or n4/ ~'TJ(l. H-....-.. $10. Retina IJA Cn.niera, lt:• cu. Antique M\\'\n&" Santa Aft&.' belit pup 3 mo and Golde:i nel 5f8.09l9 ,..,,..,_...,.. m&ch.l111, Su1amer trunk. ~=;;;.,;=:.-~--= Water Spaniel mix male ' CORONADO~ ~k)tlp, ......,,. li,rht meter, tl&lh, t>lc. i~J. S ti G-• ••O POODL"S ........... · ,_ · Dtcorttor divider J cretn. por ng """'' 'f-.,..!th f'rtclde1, 136. • 4 9 ! ""' 1 1lp& S, Good equtp, Com· u.-iutui1 equip, P~n1.meter, SCWU•h dln't/ra~ table. :Wa.7096 •13 Dlaek StandJ.rd. lnltrn'tl mlMk>l\I '69, Popular all -Strobotac. Tan, !\I~. loola. '61 Jtc XKE, B&raaln Etc. C 0 bl Ptxl'E backp&cldl\f LGE dt-ra"·-'an a r Y champ, 1 )T. old male. 3 wt1thtr Saller. n•t~ ~~ hp tltc. motor. t sal. 6T~ lbw. Ntw 1tore.; Loc•ted ....... '1~• Toyi, 2 black ma.le I daya, or S.U..UllllJ evt1. -...-"""·'" Sp~er. Vt.e. pUmp. 'tii" island type dalt palm trtt1. It I 1 \1 al UT4Dt e ... 151116 "fRIEDU~ DrUl motor, Orbital under PATIO Salt; 2 motorcycle1, at You dtc & haul. Al:so I mat, 1 vtr m •· SACRIFICE San Otmtntt NIW..Ullo.llRV. $10.. ~titre box with 24'' car air conditioner, 2 rv·, ~4-i Newport Blvd. Suite r I Ke pa mp a 1 1ra11 s . 546-4t'2 333 E. 1Tttl. St. CM ::i. SletPI 5. Ocea.nllde 111'· backllw. Lapidary arlndlns men'1 clothc1. n\lttrtau•. Open Eve1')' day 3-6. Sat liMi. 6-t~ 4/2 DACHSHUND PllP' min., No reuonablt olltr retut-~ and poH11\lrc unit. Bt.tttry Pl'tllurt cooker, electric OMPENIN1 GU SP~IAl..S: 121 2 OEAP catt: l-6 mo'i old, AKC, BUc l tan & ltd 493-3279 --=,.--.,.~--- c;haJ'. a f1. Fl1.K1rel<"en1 altlllet, areplact }op, lad· ea~~. PP": eek !"'t""' n~~~ht• ionr hair, malt"; 1 • 1l! mK1chop1~~ ttd.rn<18633-4-0lk 1111 10' . 11btralu& by Schock, We Take ll1h1•. Card•n tool1. 1 Ton dt>r ~ varlou1 misc. 1tt>m1. Sl.n. M+ll~: Tu ,,.,11 -:,told, malt", alt•red. Both A A gr ... n. ., ., lltnn mail, etc. "Fut", Motori:y-1.s chain hot.t, 12 x 12 1qulml %843 Europ& Dt.. C fl.f "' h It t. I 9 T. 5 4 8 o 0 r mo .. mo\·Jng. must Hll $100, sm, l3S--4m or •'3"'333, .,. c~ 111.n. '° 11.l, drum ~3 •It e \\'eekda.y1, &LI ti.lounl11.inffrln1 Co. ~l&-7308 •13 1d. natured. 53&->n« .vo. In Tracie Ote1tl tu.I. pump. ri.fl.tc. dat Sat~Sun. H 156 0 VW' Jum"-r. ~tlsc, book.a • .-....tr ="==-----~ SCUBA, ttl 6 tank $50. 5 YREE to iood homt> -3 Ori ti LIOO 14 No. 13$8, raclnc ft 1 """' "'v iroVJNG not1.h·r<i1uat 1t1l o • s Id 1 1 Colli J" h XlO pa~rbackl, Analoc, almo;t new \V h I r l Po o I HP Johnso11 , , i 0 . ~tt:r. H:.~:niken. e~~-:, AQJlA Rec ~ r.tatt, l l rig, ':~!1er &: 2 .els oJ allt. llLL YATU Scitnce fiction and misc. lVuhtr ,. au. dryer; 3 bar _><_M_,,73.,,1,_,====:---)T, xlnt ihow quality + 846-95j..) 2 tor 25c. 15l~ tt. MUbo&t, 'ltoo!1; 6-drt"'''"r dre11t>r; g·4" SURFBOARD ~~~· \\'ell t ra In e ~3 tick, ;2000. AQHA ~1 Chnt''a~.-,-,,~S~ll~p-1/~Doc~~k-a"""tl"'O VOLKSWAGIN 8 Fl lb' I r.lany other Items. Sat.sun, nite. itand; bookcut>; oJflct' GOOD CONDmON l30 Filly 3 yn, ~f'ri broke, ' _"" V·"· •··• I I X e 9.5 PM. 136 Albtrl Pl. C?-.f. • , .... •KN< • FORD '292 t>n..ine • '""' BALBO' t·' -' -...-1-a. --.-u R . h desk &. chi.Ir; Mmplett' 3tt •~.n.i &• .. top show qualll)' $1000. "' ...................... • Ban Jll&ft "'""'1'tnno tnt mo. to rno. wit 6'2·1763 of Great Book•. 968-5732 1'2 -~CO~M=Ps->-11-,~,.,~8~,,,.~,""-"· I tran1mi111on, comp l e I• . &S7·73!M, ~ 21' inboard cruiter !of ult, .. 74001m-Wifte.221t 100"/• Purchise Opfion ~Ll,iDO~JOiSLE=~G~A~RA=G=E,..S~A~L=E Good nd 200 C1 r.t 64MT81. ''~ LI k •ta Sletpe 2. Gray marine 6 ...:::.__===•,-,=:-·! 1nd Item ielectiotl En •uN C 6'7" Da\'OI skis "'-poles $25: co , • . u1l OAP." G _.. wttoc -,..,I ~·,,·•int. $2'100. Loc&ted '69 TRIUMPH 250 • "' ~ : am er a 1, Scnv.·inn "L.'ll Chic" bike st'll. SW, bt•t ofr, 642--0m ... IN wht doz ndl 1vvu ~J ''6 24 H r. o.1y. bik.eo, couch<•. desk I. homo, w/chl'·-·· ...... u. BOX ....... I I • II • d•Y in north Bay oa Sapphlrt C • OM $2>; Haml:lton t'lec dryer SKIS APPROX 190ct, Xlnt "4"' "'"""'"' U:,,T ta.bit'&, chain, linens, bed1, SfrO; marble co!fee .~ t>nd corid. $50 Il'ICIUdlnr pohti, tral~ LU-0029 4/5 Oran&r Cnty P'alrrround.s St. 644-5.336 Ex ll condl Ion (Q77GT) Furnitur e Rental children'• lum, 1 ta in• d table•: &110rttd 0 th er M&.4665 LOVABLE Beqle/Tt>tTler * M'·23T4 • 'r'"LO=A=r"•""'btd>o""'=1or.,..,!U"m:'."'"a"'p1'-I ct •nt $4t~ · 317 W. 19th, C.?.f, 548.mJ glu1 doort, etc. 215 Via lumlture. 64.Z..2799 =,-,.-.,,---r>tj=---mix, female, 5 moi, To rood iiiii .. liiii.iiiiiil · S200/mo, yr leaM. On A.,.,..im 71•2800 G<noa. 61!.!2<s '===~~~~-TV, Radio, H F l, homo. Ol&-61'2 •t> '""""'!. Mox 21' p wr BILL YATU _,,, .. ===c-=-7"-:-,..,,-= UPRIGHT 12' Wtr.tin&'hou.e St ereo 136 ~ ··-"ill pd du! L&Habra .,,,....,, GARAGE Sal& Sat.Suri lo..5 frttur, 12' i;el r-dtbwtln1 SJLKY halted Calico • 10 r ~~,,,.,.. I ·JR cru...:,, ~ . A "N~ VOLKSWAGEN 2 TWIN bed trame1 "'/bm Rtlrll: &: 1V. vacuum, Westi~ae 1't'frif, Gl111 ,,.,,,.,,,..,..,,....--....,,,.,.-mo old, 1payed • lovable. 1'-ptll:. 330& Mama, ' ' 328$l Valle 1'ol4 vinyl htadbo1rds, srii. beige radlol, Fl ah In 1 • c: am P • lop 5• dlnlna table, 6 chair•, ZENITH Ster' 0 •·F10 0 r ~7308 413 I ~------~~~[j'fi;-~:e;z~"""'i~mo:-PiiY&iil sofa, 2 noraJ chalni, \\"hite camtra equip f\.1ucl\ more, blk metal frame S 60 • cle1ranct. All new, COfit ! 1 26' ilip, $65/mo. Prtvat. San Juan Caplltnno vtnyl reel chair. Good cond. 2040 Vilta Cajon, Newport M5-2691 plu1 $20. Full fcty warranty, PUPPIES • H•brk 3 m~ Otntr•I 900 bath. No. 2 Balboa Cowl, 137...SOO/~--- Rll!u. 230 Larkspur, Cdr.t, Beach. ABC Color TV 9021 Atlanta mo. Like pea A chllrl NB CtJI &TS.-031 Sat l:llh1; Sun 9:3().3 I~~....,.~----~~ POOL tablet, liate, old· lat l\11l(nollal Hunt Sch. 836--4493 <1/3 CAPTAIN . ' Ml1celleMOU1 I ll fu.hionrd model•, 7', a·. 9', 968-3329 TO ~ hom s . Licensed. R.adtr. Loran, 30 lo•ts, SPffd & Ski ttl 5 ANTIQUE cl\aln needle Sacrltiec. WUI dellver tnr. ==,.-...,....,.,..--,.,,..,.,,.-, a •"""" t princf'r point teal• SJS f'&·, 1 12' 1---------• 1 ~42 llayea Avt>., Loni RADIO rune.· .• Stereo Spaniel liver " \\'hi. Lovei years experienct Nil or 14·"· OUTBOARD. '° HP curved sectional xlnt cond. Allo'TIQUE •Pinet desk, sn1 Beach 213143~~. am/fm. comp. "'i ork model t"hlld. 833--2847 ''J p;iwer. Profe11lonaJ Sport ?.l•rc. elte. itarter, trailer, $300, t slw\'cl • rocker • teak tabltl, very old rare • ltiPX-23, 60 v.·11.11 "'/plua FEl\tALE min. Podle, black, Yl1hlnii; G\lldt' Mexican I ~·attr aklia, tow rope, 2 an. bridge chairs $3:J e 1 . Chlrie1e blackv.-ood chair, NE\VPORT Beach Tt>nn.11 In 1 \ r phone jack Ir: tape tree lo rood I\ om e. Ctntral Amt'r\e&n waters. f'Mre ml1e equjp. All for 67~ 1tudlo btd w/attached dt1k, Oub lull c:harttr famUy monitor. SllO or b 11 t , MT-3029 4/l Also licenaod multi·f'ntint 1 m;~·~·~'6~2~636.l~:.,.--,.,,--;;,:::-liiii=;;;~~5Ejffi~~;;;i 1883 colortd lltho1 of Amer· membenhtp (tennl1 + 673-4191 Commercial Pilot, land 11:: ,.,,,., ... 1_ 18, C &00 co VELOCETrE 'nlrwl:· BEAUTIFUL 9' 10fa, nf'1vly ica.n yacht•, l1e collection o! iwlml Sax! + tranlft>r. Alt ====::-==== BASSET1', olcMr do~. nttda Ad I I I ti ......., l e SA .... nu \..Lo e!to I h ~ d •-tc••ard black CASSETTE Recorder/Pl1yt'r kld1 or anot'·r do1, Pa--. &e•. m n 1 ra ve fn,. .. r · .,_,_,,... .. , -·"ne ,.1, Slffl ton, new c utc , '""''• recovere • ~" '16 • (out-of-print) booka on iall· 6, 67~23j9, '"'" .. ~•P Be t f re ""'J ... " mai• " ..._,.~ J •-nd lo KEN1.10RE wul\t>r 5 cyclt>. &.:: l(lld plaid. $250. 2 ""'=~------Stereo. B&H auto load, r.10. 613-4~ 4/3 enct'. 1 0 " rence!. trl co r Xlnt rond ?.taU 11'".-'• P '""' • Wtr Model TOO, rreen. Xlnt cond. lovt>seal.8, brov.•n pli!d, $300. Jni. Bone It ivory 1hip'1 KNGSZ bdnn 1tt, antiq cheat de! 337. Play 6 taPf's con. ~&1-'~"~'n==----,,c 1 ofl:·r. ~i&s · •nd. Purial'• dtllght and 20t2 Port \Y • y b r 1 d re, model, Chlne1e porcelain, ol dra"·ra, mlrtor& Ir: m!K, aecutively, Nt>a.rly new. Paid 13 FT BOAT comp with in ptrfect 1hf.-pe. Btat oUer $12$. fl40....4911 6''"6m Japantte carved Ivory, &f~UL 17616 A Camtron, $l 673--1191 I ll 'L.J l 10 H.P. W!urd cxitboud 16' GLASS 1ki boat, 100 1KP over $9S(I. 17~S95-I altt'.r 4 CLEARANCE SALE J..r:. Newport ' soapgtoM. fXt Orit'nlal H.B. $Xia. Sell OO. ""end ~ 1' motor $90. Call aflfr 4 p.m. ttlerc, Ready to go, S 200, ,:;P;:·'"c.·~~"""-c'"'°-,,,- refriltraton: $35, $45. $35. Gar•1• l•I• 112 scrttn, Mt'erachaum pipt'l, AIR compres10r, $60. Good TRANSCEIVER, )3 ch. Gen-. MQ..38Cll or be1t oUer. 5'il--0865,195A 6M Dirt bike. Xtra ~Tm lge Auatrlllan (Amphora! condition. Please call after •r•I MCll·A. P a Ir CB NE\V Sabot, no ~111, $95. 64Z-7'271 afttr 6 pm whl•. tire•, etc. Can ~ RE"°'F~)\,;l~G~E~RA=ro=R-1"<-cu-.~,~t. GARAGE Sale.Cement mix· vaae, Toby mua:1, German 5. 968-4984 ·w/mobU Ii:. bale antennie Pets, Oener•I ISO New 8. fbfllas din""" 170, Bo•t1, Storage 912 made 1trtttable with Uttle Adm'"', ·~. n•·. 821-.. '"" t'r, % hp, $60; 2 mini blktl, lltin•. + extra&. Complete set .... v k ... ··~ uai _. -.-.. like new $60 ei; 1950 vii\. IRVINE Coa1t Country Club $3.lO. :>l6-&l88 23961.st St, NB, Ml-.3:1T3 OPEN Boat yard, ttpalrs ~.~-d=-I tYtl , aft 6 P .?it tag' TV 7", ST.50; 3' P lus, Plus, Plutl 11 memberahip !or aale from ===~=:--;--,:-:-:c:"C BANTA.'! CHICKS all lots ~ ._ • C•metll & surt"ooard $31; ftitt, ,. WtltclUf Vllla, Apt 3 (up· member. 644-4~9 ROBERTS 990 4 -track &. bt'autle1. Fine fur E:ter, B~~T;i:'~C:. ~~f'r:. ~~~es ~lrt~ ft. I970 KAWASAKI IO trail Equipment IOI fluorelC't'ril• $18: ~· "" 3' stain on Weitclift Dr. bt· 3 c 0 R p 0 RATE mem· It e,re 0 ••• !'>""'. '°, -ni 9 Only -3 Jor $3. l6U Ta Co '" M r~'CED --u blke. 11«1 milt•, onb' ltl .... atepladdt'r1; e~l\t 2xf1, 25c twetn Dovtr A Buckifli'hamJ be1'Ship1 In Balboa Bay Club ;:~2[• u.. ua ...... ver. S.E. i\It>Sa Dr. 8~"'· 1M•- 1 •aa. ~a~: ·~;·M::_a.c:n mUe1 oU road, wtth bwnper 135m,rn TELEPHO!O It 3.Smm wide .nsle ltnlf'!, Spiratorie telxtt'ndtr, all fit SLR. Arru• i\tMO automatic allde proj ll. ma1uinf'!. 545-6!21. BELL & Hov.-el! Canon r.< 33mm SLR 'A'fmt'ter, Auto FL leme1: 3.) mm t/2.5, :;o mm f/1.4, lOOmm f/3.5. Catt'•, hood1. J mm• c . €M4-:!Sll1 F urniture 110 ta: plate 1lu1; air com· USED BIKES at reduced prlct1. 546-41370 BABY DUCKS &. ~ese, Hts Ir ne 64• -~1 or 98a.nl3 can'ten. $295. Call &tter, I I t C.8, r11dio1 • Johri10n t.-1l"••· lqulp ~ ~~ • pm •"' ·-preuar w pan •prayer SALES & SERVICE NE\VPORT Bel\ Ttnnls Club idea! for Ea11ter, only a. • ~ 15 · · .,....__ St•; new v.·at.r pump for 10 -·•Bl"·• '"l90 shan, $350 + tra.l'\Sfer. J;""ohe:_I~l i~::i~.:r ;1m~~ 2 for$$. 2612 !I.E. t.1eaa Dr. Alrcr ift 9 MlNl Bllte, Taco 2l wtth .._ Sear1 auto "''aaht'r; ba1kel· .,...""' ""' ~ MS-5306 """ r.-tERClm.Y trol Sh BS Xl t CODdlUon. nc ball ~. brand new: 4 3 spd P.1t'ns &: \\'omen1 $2'2.;35 * . * t'a. 96&-50&I 0091 lS4 propa; con '69 DARTER Conun1n4tr P · n .,,.,. bar stool• &: many other ?-.1en Ir. \\'omena Std $10-$13j Ml1celleneou1 Color TV Combo $200 c1ble1, .•lna:le lev1r control•, 100 hn. Balance owtn1 M&-4615 ltem1. 26461 Ver a c r u .,, Stinil'aya-3 ~ 5 •pd i s·s.tO W•n ttd 120 * 9118-0213 '* AUSTRALIAN sh• 1" h e rd, many inrtrumenll, 1 Jack $4600, itakt OHtr or tra.de.l'Mo"""'r.cll-1"'H"'o_me_1---.fil""1 Jo •••28J4 Some New Blkea In 5tock colt bucket 1e1t, 2 lnboud.1~~14~"'1~21~1!!~!!!!~~~1·---"j~----1 :r.ti11ion Vie , OJ<r • purtbred, blue-eyed pup. su tank•. heavy wirlni BE1WN 22nd &: 23rd Off All Blkei Have 90·Day REfRIG, LATE !'.tODEL, pit'&. Blue Merle1, 10me c1ble. Sterrln1 .,.,·htel1 with * Irvine, Back S.y. 2300 -GUARANTEE -USED BRtCKS, ANY A~IT I[ s spottf'd, Mim• aohd color. ridlt slide. Call ~9'-0530 I lfiai1 Prlvatt Rd, N.B. April 2nd, 2MOCNO!SWTAPOMRETSA8LVD. RED\VOOD 2X.tX4 '1 ~-·'•'"•'•'•'•"'·-~· ;;;;;1-i~1';'.~~~-~c~ho~l"'~-'-'_l_·_l_•_i_. DACRON u.!11, main 38' lulf," Tr1n11>ot11U011 FAMILY 3rd le 4th. Knasi Sealy ==~•-646--'-7!2_26~•---;:-'' 16' foot, matn 26' luU 10'1'·;;;;;;;;;;:;1 Ortho matt!', like new. An· OPEN ~10 PM WKDYS CASH for furn!turt, AP· RING-A·DINGding 1wo more foot, jib lS' JuU, 9' toot.II Uq1, old &hips lantern, old f .5 SAT, & SUN. pl!ance1, tools, ml1e ltenlfi. fREE lO rood hoine ' start.I Nov ice Obedi,~e 1plnnaker1 2.5' luU, 16' toot, Camper1, S•l1/R1nt HD J1paneH articlt11, I e w -WW take Tra.ck·In.-Open 9 to 5. 64Z..7015 orange, cuddle kittens, muit Dog trainl111 April 6 k '1 usol1t'd nlarlne han:lwal"t'. PARK DINING room .. 1, Bdrm 11tt, h '··•·-h.J .. ,... h ave n t w h o m e 1 · 1P'! '! ~• I K t "--------"'"'"'"""-Virtue bttakfut room 1tt, :~~';tt;; ;kie;.-· * AUCTION * WANTED to buy alri clotl\e1, 6Th-19T9 4/3 • · · ",,.,ncrei tnne • MS.lBI• 1 ~ OPEN ROAD CAMPER. mitchlnr divan ti chalr, childttrur. Warm. Boy1 it 5'6-0089 60 WATT' ?.1arlne radk>-tel. Full cab over, xlnt aind, PRE·GARAGE SALE Ylne l'umltur. J.2 & ,. I I g "''11 11'''"' 2 YOUNG citr., 1 orangt', AKC SILKY PUPPIES U d le 175 "' h TV, dlshe~. pan:i, etc. 221 ""'' Ir Ii IZ · ~.JIW lipeyed Jem, \ blue~yed se tw f', . Cflmp . ..,.,t comp!. 1el1 con! .. many tX• Uth Pl&CI!', C.M. Ml·50'3 Trundle bed w/pllto....•1 &-. It Appliance OXYGEN-Acetyltnt Welding altered beire male N11me your ov.'ri ttrm1. cry1ta11, ant. 4' mount tr11I 114 : 347-3961 Golden Coach aft 12_ coven U5: XI saJ It !lO Auetiona: F'rlday, '1;00 p.rn. • CUttlna: OtJU!I. Th"y're dtli&htfu!, have 64~342 1al aquarium •· filters, Windy's Auction Bar n .5.ST-82!4 494--1558 i;lloto; and can he OOught ·11 RED VW Camiwr. ri1ht Of C I tr A N TI Q U E V I c to r I a n pump1 1 J) fl.ah, f75 or 20™i Newpon, CM 646-16&6 DESPERATELY need ten1p. pa iri!e1sly. 543--4957 But1, Pow1r 906 off lhe bolit $3350. Day:1 ap $ 300 v.·h.at-not w/brs.M cl1w G\T beit oHer. Also many other Behlnd Tony's Bldg. t.fat'J, Muslc•l Instruments 122 or perm, homt tor fen1ale Ouf•tandlni Blac k Lab 536-9153/eve &36--lm _ 1111.~s ba:!;; ~alnu~e:i.:tena\o~ item•. 3141~ E. Bay, E L E c TR 0 N 1 c GrJAn . Poodle, h.1brkn CT l 4 l AKC, Female, 9 mo. obedi· ('691 23' CHRrs c. frbgl1 . CAMPERS-(!) 6 moa\NI old Newest & finest Mobile 6"7~•1·2'.19 ,1•1 0 pe eon Peninauli. 673-22.50 \\IHEELCHAIR $20 Sewlng Baldwin o•iaaoriic niodel 83Z..5I7• aft• Ptlt 4/2 <nc~ -atood, potontiat held Great day lx>at/overnl~r. pam top 5225. 11) Home Park in Calil. r ~~=~-~~-~'I machine $10 '\'ool braided 8 ' " Head 185 hp V 11 bl!t &. -SAT ONLY 10-4. Se<:tioMI. ru''• z..g· x 12. oval $T5 51P. Xlnt cond. W i \I SPANISH 1tyle hicleabed ·. & show champ. 548-1033 • • • homemade 1heU $ 3 3 • We l.ovt Kida A &nan Pett 5.4.CRlFICE, Eleiant Klrll[ couch matching eh air•' "9 tti I~ f,45-1489 fttr Con.~tructlon xlnl, net>ds I ~=~~.,-'-.,-~~~ f!1h t&nk + xtra1. lmmac. ~8-lOM ~ n ••• 1. r1.-_... ~fedit. Bdrm tu!~. Kins table•: toys, s\l·ing set, each 4' x 6' O\-al $20 ..-' ucr ce · a recover1ni . &4&-27i2 a f 1 2 YR old fem shorthairerl 85! olr ovt'r $3000/terma.\,.-...,.--.,,.-----·I .. pace n.cn...,. "'""'" - mattres! att. swac t1mp1. teepq, ne-.v iron, ~w tlt<t x 12' sq. S2J & S20. '1' 6P~I ~ 415 min coUie; 5 mo old male 67:>-1781, pvt pty. Cycle1, Blk11, 91S $70 Per MD. Art lOam, 1tt at my home, blanker, type\ITlter. TV'g, x 9' sq:. $2:'1. fi.12-1249. 'TO FLUTE, Profe111Gnal aolld 3 ADORABLE doxi~s mtxerl Chihuahua pup. Both love OWl!:NS 2.5' c.c. Slpa ~. S.!li. Scooters 13071 Red Hill, Tustin radio t'tc. 408 E. 16th St., Cambridge Circle, Ci\t ~lv~~tFrJOenl~~. n1re!,.. w/~~~: pups, 6 wks, need lovinr i·h!ldrf'n, mu1t havr good enc ht'ad, ralley, bait pump,l·L~t-K"'E-,_--..,Ho~nd..,..a-Mo""'1"ol Imaa1nt livina' •t the beach EARLY Amer. CO\ICI\ &: C?.1. flJLL sl:ze 8' pool table SM: M0-4!162 J• b:lmt'a, frllCll!d yard . l\omei. St5 '"'· 645-0077 cover1, e1c. A·1 a>nd, $2~. Sport SLlOO. Xtraa. 375 total A enjoyina: )'Our own laviah chair: maple coffee table, GARAGE Sale: The Orange Zeiu Contaflex Beta 1in(le 778--0672 or 53!>-71111 ~/5 REG. German Shephf'rd. N r I\' po r I ~lip avail. ml. J.t9.5 value, $37S takll!i Club Houff, equipped with xlnt cond.; reason• b I e Coo\i.nty Associated \\-'omen Jena n>Dex 35mm canwra LUDWIG 5 pc set, Xlnt cond. ft>m, 3 )Tl, hlk/wht, rood '11•1~98 af~r ti pm r1r II. 646-lSOT lqe pool room, lounie with 96S-0107 for Pepperdirie University w/f 2.8 Jens Sjl}: Bell &. Zildjl1.n cymb1l1. Gre1 • POOP"PP~;;:':f';r1~"'km ~1:1:1~ .,.,·/cl\lldren, xlnt witch dos· "·knds. KAWASAKI bf.by"'"" llntk· Jireplac, A color TV, Dance TRUNDLE beds, large sizf', have been Sprit11 cleanln1. Hov.·t>ll 500 "·an i:;lide pf'Oo 6Tl-63l2 1 bl'O\l'n ff'male. ~5034/5 492-SX!l J9M 26' CHRIS Connie, twin t'd w/Hilt• fork~··& alloy I party HIJI, SwimmtJta ..... "'ondt'r!1d con d it ion in· Come take a look at tilt ~~~5;v/4" 1 3·5 lens $a>. Office Furniture/ rt:r.lALE tortoUe shell tat MUsr •ell prttiou• f•malt' :icrew. Xlnt conrl, $3250. whli. $l95, B9?-4!5tt a.ft 6 Pool le nwrapeutie pool, • clu<ling lx>lster• I. cover $60. barraln1t, lOSU Momlnt Equip. 124 wlr,haired min. d ox It . Dy1: s• '1 -5 4 6 6: Eve1 k wkndi kiddies pool coverwd skat. 6'42-721:: Glory, F.V. LGE 1tand·UP freezer BpAytd. i mo cld. Paper1, 1hot1 & trnd. 3~1 673-7"7 in1 rink. Planround for LTrE maplt' 3 pc aet table• w /Jocking door, Rea1: IrSHAPED executlvt deEk, 893-2867 4/.5 yn:, m. 495.-420.1 ew~ l9BT 32, Chrla Corin-1989 .YAMAHA iame• rl: equipped with Sl'i, n1atch. pie cru.1\ th! GARAGE Salt' • Tablt 1, C.Cpper color e!<'c. df)'tr, glus top; leel't'tacy chair; \\'E are movlna:. Beautiful DACHSHUND pup AK C • thi&n-twln IC.Tew, f u 11 Y r.,o c.c. twin, i39.5.00. 4,300 1win11 • aU kinds Of ridt'1. 12', \!anity btricl\t• •A t'a, •tudlo bed, camena. vacuum like new, reas: Lge mt'tal 2 filina: cablnet1; 2 metal mema cat .5 klttt>n1 &. IO\·tly min!t. mal• ,. female , equtp-d, 1t•dy to fO· mlle1. Very clean. Call Direction•_ Take San Dlqo .,.. cleaner, fur coat. 1wlvt'I oUt-d••k & ·h•'"· All Jn ~,, ... , "' -btwn "-1 -•· t 89' -41> ~ "'1<-d 61'143 E ..... ._ " uuu .. """" · ,,...,.4"D\IU " • ca.rioo ca · ~£"" shots. WIN or •mooth roal. 54v "·~• .....,.. -;," aya. v--.... to Orlep HI"""-"· TV stand i4. ..-1 ""'· chair, misc clothing Ii:. xlnt cond. 642.-{)427 ir-£>1.... ~ ... , ... n..., COUCH, 2 chain, misc tum, trou11ehold article•. ~t;; Vic· """='""'""'~~~~~· 15' SECRETARY'S de1k, I,. l"REE Cl I Gutnea P l1 (2 6J3-.4{)18 2.'J' ULRICHESON cab In YAr.1AHA 360 l:nduro, 1970. Turn oU ri(ht on Ort~, 111 xlrit cone!, SiO. 2299 "B" toria, C.?il. 541--4903 \VHEELCJIAI R & \1·alker by r.hapt, It chair, hke ne"'• r1t1 1nd 1 very \lnu1ual AKC Germ. Sht>p, pupl5, crujger 91,1, beam, Chry~l•r Ch"rry Pit must lt'tf Lota left on Camino C1pi1trano, Fount,1n \Vay Ea~t. C.f\1. DESIGNER'S I Evt>rest & Jerinings. N' w SW. 3>42 Port \Vt')'bridse, cal. ~S-154T 4/2 ch1tmplon line, r.t & F', 11 Sta·V. Sl1>1 6. Great Ocean cf Xtra1, llOO ml. Call riatlt on Del Obitpn -left 1 am P t • • ....... --', Co•\ 11 31, ••II 115. Ne"·port ~2~6 ••A u.14 n '" A1J an 5 pm . b'kl t d •-_.._ .... uu .. """ · FREE Ger. Shep. ' yean; wk,,, Blk, I Tan I Sliver. Boat $45(X) Eve1: MS-3693 VTI""...., • one m eon"" pu. 1 n S, ?"el!el 90 ya, ... 1e. Call Sat ;oi[lrr 1 pm or E ECUT RY I bl T\Vl i'I beds, mattress, box Junk to j•wel1. 2626 Vl1ta Suri A~f, 644-60:i7 d~ f A er.~ !port.I : old. B!k. arid ail\'f'r. Lovt>5 M2·7219 196~ 31' fAfRLINE:R Twin BIKE Schwinn applt crate. 32742 ALI PAZ ST. •prln~s. & frames &. de\ Oro, Thi BIU'fh, N.B.1,""'~""'~~...,.=~~ eta inr mac n e children, ?it alt ~3-69!12 •13 DAL.\1ATION 4 mo's old EKpresg Cruiser. Low hours. 5 ap. -cosl $100. Sell $50. Sen Ju•n C1pl1trene ~ °" •318 nAIR J4X1 Cl1ovy u s Sp"nt trliln"·riber, I ""old, perfecl ,.. __ .. 61' ~·• II • bedsprcarl~. .,....-o;i • r ·· · " .... J' 2 )'r old Wt'lmaraner. UVU<J AKC P•J>flt1. F'lne m11rk· Extr111. Dey1 646-6154. Aft .,....,...,.. • " IJ0.3142, 49J.1120 • &!~--OSiT • GUITAR/ I I m&&• "''/lug lx>lu Sjl}. •1.4" cond, $400. Mz,.gj(X) v.-.tch dos. 8482 Slater, Ap! i1111. Healthy, Xln't ""' for II, 646-0174 , '69 n-lumph TR6R. Red. Low 4-•••• cue. u n c Y c • • ttflec!or teleSC<Jpe S' 0 . P i / O 126 " .-~ .,_ TRUNDLE Beds & bolslen Francllcan dl11M:1, roll"'•Y _;'nos rg•n l B, Ht1 Bch. 84Z.31~ •I• chUd. $75, l!?J..4191 2r f'('m>-Ctm•nl boat mtild mlltaae, rood condition. THI B!ST Of' $40. Oriental teak p!antl'r. bed, ).)1ophorie, toy1/1am-1"'~,._,,,l<l=IS"""°"'°""===7• e nELD'S WAREHOUSE 7 ~10. old part·S!an1t'ae m11lt> ?-!ALTES!: pupple1, AKC, 10 Tn.wlt'r bull. $.500. 515 17th =ritd mtt~ Nile IOTH WORLDS Carved <:onsole t a b 1 e . ea, mite. 32'T7 MlchJa:11..n, IRVINE COl\ST COUNTRY SALE c11!, silver 111'Y fur, yellow wk.I. Adult milt lti )Tl St, Hli Sch • &YI •or & ~ ...... ~-IOW •7. 39~ ..... 1 .,.,.~.,.,, CLUB r.1 E ~1 BERSHIP. 83"116 •I" ld Call -• """ '6' ~ y •· Bl ,.._ '"' .,.. ..,..., """"" ~ "~ '-'' '"" ,,,,.,. 6Ts..3015 300 plaoo• le or1an1, New, t'yei. 7.J • 0 · """'"'""" • 13' BOSTON WHALER • a •w amana r R"<"lkt, mtinlenanct and U'Cbti.cur. C6NTE~fPORARY 1of1-!l', AIR Condl!klrier, :sla 1ame =~-~~----uied. Spinet1, irand1, aolng fOUND 2 wka aro, feml.le EASTER Poodle1 AKC. 31: 40 l\p '70 John!IOri. 20 hra; t~~nd. $2):) or oUtr. ally tmprelaive d•&l.pw::: rood condlllori. Mr and ).frs 1pear ruri. TOl)la, Art ltt'm!, WE loan-Buy.Sell anything. nut f.or bu1lne11, rentab $8 cockapoo, blk, lo sood Mme mo. old. \I/ e 11 ·Ir a In e d Trlr, Xtraa. ~-the txdUnc 11.., "V chain , f!asy to reM~r. etc. Aprll l I<•· lOA.'f...Cnt. Cout Pawn .. Auction. 2'36 mo. option lo buy. Stein. only. M&.7223 •12 Jj(}..$73. Ml--0326, 6T3-93lT & R C 90I 'TO HONDA CL.1.50. Llk:e nt'W. JlouH" by Le\litt Mobile: $50. ~7-8004 35l:i6 Camino Capbtnm, Newport Blvd. 642-8'00. way, Bl.ldw\n, Chlcktrlnz. GER.\tAN Short ha Ir t' d COCKAPOO puppte1 Black, oats, ent/ hert'r 350 61 _.. ~~~·· $595, Call Denni• S,Ylt.ms on dilp1-y now &t YOUTH Bed. Step Tablf'. Cap Bch 496-3342 SINGER FrELO'S pointer, fem . 1% yr. Lovr1 Wtll htild for Ea1lt'r $10. 32' Twlnscnw Chris, fully ......,.,.,.. BAY HARIOlt Step Tible WI Cab In et. NEIGHBORHOOD garage SE\VING il1ACH!NE 252.2 COSTA t.-1ESA k!dl. 546--0306 <1/2 5'[,..J97ft. f'QUip'd. Fi1h!n1 Gr Crui1-Got Drafted. r.1u11 SeU MOllLI HOMll Dre11er. 2 Livina room aalt. rum, a PP Ii 3 n c ~ 1 • • ~71 • <714 ! 6-IZ..3.f.'il ADOl\ABLE female puppy, Jt EAL German ~hrphrrrla, 6 ing. Also '59 Tv.·in~rew '70 HONDA SL 3.50 1425 Ba.leer St. Cotta Mall chain. M&-«192 clothl's & misc. Fri, Sat flSHERGEJGERCOUNTER Ci\RDEN GROVE 3 nw. r.ti11:ed bl't"M. \Vh l1e "'ks old. r.tale $3.';, !emilt Owen1. Xlnt cond. 548--2434 1$~ ** !M6--!5932 • JuslS.olS.D.F.,.i l ffutxr ROLL-TOP dt1k I ld!tor'1 It Sun. laBS Rivenide Pl, UK!: N!:W CONDITION (n-41 638.2770 v.·/black apo!J:. 962--074• 4/2 S2:l. !i-IZ..736.:i. 801t1, S.11 90f '71 Hondt S50 Scrambler. TUJNO..e470 lo C.l\t. CALL 531-729-i CLE RANCE rhatr, antique Mk, S' "I· A 2 l't>ar old G. Shep femalt' ClllHUAHUA P UP, c!'f'am 12. SNOIVBIRD S h k lmmac. 600 ml, 2 h.lmtl, MODEL MOBILE HOMES $430 ttrm, '°42 Port We)'· P'OWtR tool•, hand 10011, BROWN mink jacket. 1\t• tn --' I 11 I • T k Id 1 'll\ c 0 c I rck $150 Ml-4M3 I C M • G .1. G • ~ 1 SALE a •"""' am Y · ~ .. ~2'2",· wee s 0 • .,....,. 1·,•·fll••• Incl tn'•l•r Stu. ugi ' n Olla •• 1 re•·-&.f brtdre Newport UM248 rauex camaru, ,,.,we!')', 12. Llkt new, Call 642 .. 1'9 892 JZlT 4/2 ......,... ..,. '-""" "" p rlc :Ux60 A t U. R "lTU,RI? ·-many other ltem1. 22117 att I wkdy1, Ovt1· 100 Pianos 4 0rrana • 12131 225--31~ day1/ wkendl YAMAHA 80 Trail~!; '"~ ~ ._..,. Mm ut c 1 n a I' " Eldt A CM Mtl-6305 ,,,,,=,....===-=-= 2 year old ftmale Dalmatian TEACUP Poodle Pup!. Tiny, Ir: evt• 1n3J •4T-T40l •xptntlon chamber, Ir ... -• ...,'"""' ....,_ on •r e r Have you rheebd Pennty'•, n vt., · · SIGNS: Stor9tro11b: A win. Reductd tor lmrned. 1ale. to a rood family. Leve! 2 pound poodlt>5, Yorkie, or p\1ton, $125. Ml-4116 $12,T&O. O:nnpltttly NJUp Fuhlon 1~1and N.8. GARAGE Sal• Eltt ttry.r, dowl, boata, trucka. Tor Buy Now & Save l cl\lldren 961-1~1 412 r.taJtese at atud . &42-15~1 22' COLU~IBJA and .•Up, l~ 1969 BSA 2!0cc deatrt bike, w/sldrta, •wninc•, pordl. '""'""'==~=~-,.-Auto pta, P.11tc, !at thru caUmat• c·•t·. -°'"T o-n Dally lo til 6 cludlnr acctuones Ir: etc e SPANISH OAK bldreom K 8 .. ---..-GUINEA Pll Pt ru v I an, IRRESISTIBLE poodle pupa Road tqtllp alao Xlnt Ct.Ind . it! v,•fqur'ri size bed, SCIO. ;,~n!s712 Spa Dr, · • BUMPt:R. pool l1ble, 1l1!t Fr! lD.B * Sun 12•5 white A brown, femalt'. -Black m1riiature, 6 wlu, mo!or. MS-l2fi3 alter 5 Ml S315. 64~. ' , Gft.!!ENL!:AJ' PilX &4!)..2326 too. workinl ooin slot, J:JO, COAST MUSIC 4.9f-.ll32 .,2 AKC. $55. S49-0M4 SCHOCK Lido 14 tull ractnr e .611 TRllfMP1-I ~ !TSO Wl\Htler Ave., C.M. GA.RACE: Sa I e! Black l.: su.-3153 NEWPORT Ii HAR80Jt .,......,..,... Id ·• POO I (f'ar w/auto 'trlr, $315. * PERFECT COND * 64~251D •• ~ • >-pit'ce double bedroom It!. $-Kl. .. '.>l:>-87i2 • l' ME."\ICAN dlnlna: nn table I: 8 cl\al'l'I w/palrn 1ea11. ~2.:512 white T.V., clothing, taPE' --...,...-='""'=-c--Colta ?.ft.. * 60-2151 3 ni• ••nS, 6 .,.,.k o 'tt.uy DL!: puPf, beaut. I Ille 673-2921 •rt 4 e MUST s•LL e 'TO LUXURIOUi Amtricam rll!COl'dtr, blkt>, f'lc. 7il 18th * BASIC-H _.. to (0. )Jolhier !1 nre tiny toy 6 toy1. Stud Mrv. i-.. c o AU Shacklee Productt. WE QUIT I I I Toncineae. 6TS-11.5.\ '13 All colon. m..eru 24' Col. Challtnat>r 19'2 0/B. * 543-'JD> * 24X60 at DrlftMMXI Bncb St.. ~'1· Sat nly! t7l4 l 962-3656 The tnd 11 near~ Final & 1 ,,;.:.,.;;:.,""'.,..;."'--"i-~~;.; IOLD ENOLlSH SK EE p Beautifully maintained. Pvt l Golf Cub. Cu•tm a~ GARAGE Salt; 2 Good drtp cut price1 c>specially EASTER Kitten, adorable, I DOG, •vr, tom,• MO. pl)'. S3'™>. 6"--1831 SacM 1~. xlnt mnd. td model. Tully equipped. c.'OUcht•, matt'h, chair, 111: f\tlCftOSCOPE Co 1 0 Co wk1 old bile h 1brk . An\.. oJ 0cPf'nd&bl•, extras <>w~r relocattd, Muat 11111. Exetll•nt Germtn man ()fl nlO • r1ans & n-6T~TeTT •t!i 14W282 LIDO li--Xlnt oor\11 , Incl new br1.idtd n.11. Mlec. 964 ~ .., 673-()()tt ml• 4 Grl.l'lll Pianos. Nt>ver 11111, lrlr ,. n, w rover. .• 173-1061 • Contact Jomlcrs ll'IC .• 192161 CANOPY bdrm •tt, •1\tte. Grove Pl, C.olta r<ifesa aa;atn barsalns like 1ne,.e. F'R!:E to a rood hOme Gnat PEKE puppi••, II v.·ttk5 old. I.le tor ·n. $900. M&-3T39 HONDA ~. rood cond. Beach Blvd., H.B. 516-651l dbl ~d. 11-pc, $l25. Dyl: GARAGE SALE! &32 6$C1LL69:6PE C WARD'S BALO\VJN STUDIO Dane 531~ '15 AJ<C, All fmiale, S80. * CAL CAT, includi..,,. lttany xtru. $475. 548·'761S CUmf built 24'XS3' MDblW 642-5070, Ev,s: 642-6'.>6T Prt-~ld!o, C.r..f. TRI & SAT. l:ICO Model 460 D • 1111 Newport Blvd, 612·348'1 TWO 15' p&lm tr•e•. * 63$.131» alt 5 pm wkdy• ·~ or ~l honw, tull:r crptd 6 drpd . -I I I ALL DAY • •· p M ~'ide81'1'1d 171. 96J..6460 """ """1 •/• C ,,,_ traUer. Xlnt,cond. L\tust Hll w/blUt ldtetltn, 1unbn lh"1 3. PC uctional, r 1vV nc a . • -n • . WAf\'TED: •mah con110le or ~= ., " AK Small miniature ,......,. ma.kt oU1r. ~179 Blc)'Clt for tw&- blut'fgrn, S3Q. Erld t1bles PATIO s;,,. . P'rl, Sttt & KEl\;1.fORE turquot~ wa•h-iplnel piano· lull ktyoo.rd ~ 1.ab pupi, 5 wlu die, m11le. coco. S(h -detox t ndem rm, dlnrlle, tam rm, 2 Bl\. $20 r v 962-3168 ., 6 Ina: machine xln1 aind. pa, ' ' ' Call: 968-3925 12' ENSJGN · ftbf'r1h1•~ · winn • 8 2 bL Lndlcpd, tpriMltr · · · · Nm. 1.-noon to p.m., '7a.Z54l Prtftr Btltfwln, con11dtr lll3-(13.52 4/3 •loop main jlh Gll'IOI. 31,, Aftft' 5, 613-7127 l)'lltm, C.M. g4l·J42J , CUSTOM·MA.DE Sp 1 ri I 1 h 67'11 lr\1, O:>rona dl:I Mar. other1. ?ihiat bt In rood MA.LE Labrador, 3 mo'• old. SCHNAUZER PuPI, a I 1 o HP outboard S250. 673--W7 'i AMAHA Endlll'O 25(). Du1 5'3·2"fT3 IOfa. Coll new $400: l ytar y6U namt It we may hav• VAIUETY lhactt p I ant•, rond.; "aaontblt. 6'i.a511 uo-t2•3 •11 rare black.I. ?italt ti 1tud. · ,t. XI 1 nd. •"'T& l===-~,.-~-~·I old, ~. Atltt 5, m--r121 11. 1431 Ttzit Circle, H.B. terM, bttonlas. f'rl·Sat·Sun, Eve•. ""ke"'11. Croomlna. Tennsl 846--0638 CAPE COD CAT BOAT '11'fft. n eo .,, ' BEFORE )'00 Buy, '1tll, Lilt filvle r• h1d ... .,.Md ~1000. Sat A Sun MS-.519.5, 3l3 Either, C.M. LOVELY old Chic kt rl n 1 7:.:~ld ~·hlte male ki":73 WIRE FOX TERRIER Pup1 U'. fbrbla. fnl) 113f..3&A. S7l-5llT or fTJ.-28'lT or Trade· Call TED _.. ~l'.S.l,. Mio 8 G •·J .,._ ..,, I' SOFA. Good ooru;tructon. Grand P\a.M I bench. M,.. ' AK(; rt(, Champ line $63. i31 MIL Bo•t, £oodi ~n· ·70 HONDA SL JOO. Perf. 145-3140 ..... " rt! pm GARA t:; .,. '" .--I I "'111• hoc•••, In ••-~ oond. I Adorablt klttt"""411 oolorl. All a•·••. "T--I di't'·n. 1-. cond. $325. Ce.11-United Mobile Hem et !lw )'OID" cd • rt'• ,., April 3 .. 4. 16335 So\llti Only Mitdt 111.p covtr to -v ., ......... ~2812 412 llVl iN .... I> IV ....... m A'' N flu'! Jiut!cll 1tJr 10'U" P11.clflc Avt, ~uwt Btaeh. bt pcrftet, $30. ~1'1 SIOO. IJO.t33I , BLACK MAL!: POODLf: Call "6-'7tl * 1!75-22Tl * 1 ,, pt Bl., C.M. phone A Dllb' PUot Ytiu 'll be 1urprlted. ee DIAMOND RING ee BABY CrJnd • l\art 511· Kt"T"nNS • & wlUI, o Id. Minla., champion AJ<C hrwfd. i'PC 32' Sloop, raca equlp'd, '69 JlbNDA !iii Mini Trail, 30' H0Utt Trailu, ,•tr cond. Cll.Jl!ltltd 1-5fT1 Oiata:• I A «OOd w11nt •d ii a sood ~ Jtoiwi, 1pprat.1l $600. lrfl?'tn w/Mch *1Jt tone. Uf...U:l5 4/' inc, I wk, old, $125. C&1l 2 b'unkt. Top cond. $3250. Good cond, 11~. Clean • fully tflJI d. fl.2111. )'Olll' ad. J inveitment , _w_1_u_ .... c._r_u1 ....... _•_n_ .. _11_1__ A 111111 at SI~. ~Tl MALE h~mrtt-ltr. MT·&lf1 4/~ N.1-0SH. gt&.2}17 * MUm • &M--'1Mfeve1 ~1222 \ j sa 'l>AllV PllOT Friday, April 2, 1971 I -. .. w. l~I -..... 1§1 I .. ~...... l§l I ........... l§l I -...... 1§1 I ......... ,. l§J I .. ,,...... I~ I ......... !§JI ~,..... l§J l(J ONE LOW PRICE IN EACH GROUP ALIGNMENT SPECIAL1 FULL 4-PLY NYLON CORO TIRES COMPACT CARS Plus $1.76 10 $1.94 F'.E.T. for~, .~ tubeles~ b!ackl''.'I! 1<1es 6.50-13, 7.00.13, and 6.95·14. REGULAR CARS ~us $2.0110 $2.16 F.E.T. for tobtless blackv1a!I sizes 7.35-14, 7.75-14, 7.35-15, and 7.75-15. BIGCARS $1779 and STATION WAGONS Prus $2.32 to $2.48 F.EtT. for tubele$S blACkwall 1izes B.25-14, 8.55-14, B.15-15, and 8.45·15. FREE MOUNTING-BUDGET TERMS SALi INOS APlllL 2NO AC SPARK PLUGS ANY SIZE 65C EACH Avtot, lmpomd 970 DATSUN '66 DATSUN WAGON 4 apeed, radio, heater, tSRY 523) ,BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So, Coast Hwy. Autot, lmporfed 970 Autoo, lmporfed ___ ...... __ _ 970 Autos, Imported MERCEDES BENZ PORSCHE PORSCHE 9ll·S, late 1969 fac. air, FM radio, all ex· tru perf, cond, pri. party, $7450. (714) 623-3962 e '60 PORSCHE cpe. Blk, · new Sllddle int, ~w tires, TOYOTA TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN PAYMENT chrm whls, Blau AM/FM. $69.01 MONTH* Xlnt throout. Reas. 557-7268 36 mos. Del. pay price, SAAB $248.f.36 or cash p r l c e ---------I $2003.55. incl, Tax & Lie ------·---• A.P.R. 14.54%. Serial No. SAAB '70 99E 2-dr. 134341 • LagUna Beach * 1958 METRO * 1 -~5!&4-051'-=-~"""1_47.94~-9771~~-Real Sharp 700 Lldo Park •on approved credit FACTORY Bill Maxey Toyota DOT DATSUN D,. No. 4, N•wport "'"" OPEN OAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntingl:Oll Beach 842·1781 or ~B-0442 '69 2000 ROADSTER 5 spd. dlr. Owned by little old school t~aciler from La· guna Beach. (ZNS 159) Take older trade or small do\\·n. Will finance pvt. pty. All 10 am 5-10.3100 or 494· 7506. ENGLISH FORD 1967 ENG. FORD 6lation ·wagon, Auto, trans., radio, extra nice cond. Owner going lo Europe, must sell. 833-1757 FERRARI '62 FERRARI 2+2 CT Beau!iful re<!. 4 speed. E.'!• cellent cond. (WID 573) $3595 ~~ 2100 Harbor Blvd, 645-0466 FIAT MG AIR CONDmONING 18881 BEACH BL. IW7.s5.5S • -~ ONLY <600 LOCAL MILES HllNTINGTON BEACH ~~ -BeautiM d'"" "''•· w/ '69 LAND CRUISER • THINK gorgeous tapestry interior, "MG" 4 i;peed radio heater ra· dia1 ws~ tires, ~ust be ':.een Sation \Vagon. 4 Wheel drive. Ill & driven. (445BNR). (Si\ffi 400) ''FRIEDLANDER'' $2999 .BA~~~CK lt15f aEACH tHWY. )f) 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. GN°~"b q, IMPORTS INC. ~~CA~LLAC DATSUN ~ AUTHO!llZEO DEA.I.lit 998 So. Coast H\\·y. 26<!0 HARBOR BL., Laguna Beach $1395-' COSTA MESA 546'.-4051 I 494-9771 1967 MGB Rodstr, R., l-1., 4 540-9100 Open Sunclay l--'--'-"i$-i-l3:i.9 .. 5::..:.:::_:__ speed, vo'ire wheels. VBS 848 • DEAN LEWIS 1----=====---11969 Toyota Crown Sed. R., .,..,.,, TOYOTA H., 4 'l~•d. # 2309. 1946 Harbor BL, Costa J\1esa DEAN LEWIS $1871 .. ~,.,, 1962 MG Convt. 1971 TOYOTA COROLLA 1946 Harbor Bl., Costa l\1~a Good cond. $480. C all &1~2347 ., 558-1616. 2 DR. FA"':i~~.EQUlPPED '70 TOYOTA CORONA MGB CHOICE OF 5 4 Door. Automatic. dlr. Im· $1495 fl""" Lnn.:1 moeufal•! C!.16 AQX) Will UIA UlllD take trade. Call 494-7744. 1966 MGB GT Cpe. R., H., TOYOTA 4 "''"'·wire wh"''· YWT· TRIUMPH 298 DEAN LEWIS .646-9303 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646.9303 $l495 $1495 1969 Triumph ilfh Rods!r. $9.95 Cott• Men Tire C•nt•r 11 d9dlc•ttd to 1--------- 1946 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa '68 MGB·GT. New radial tires. new clutch, new paint. $1550/best offer. 54&-4824 1969 Toyota Seel. R., H., auto. R., H., 4 speed, wlrewhecls. malic, factory air cond. ZAE 30:i AIM lncl~n repacking front whfffl & •dJu1tin9 br•kN. Reg. $16.99. Promotlng S.f• Motoring Qu•llty Prod- ch and Exceptional Value to Jt1 cu ... tom•nll .. , AUTHORIZED INDEPENDENT DEALER ~ · COSTA MESA ~ .19!1N'!,~R~l~~!!~74 n ,t41.1 t1:r.111.t:i t .1~ t. 12, rm ---------Auto Service, Parts 966 """""""'" "THINK" \ OPEL t:a .. On OPEL '68 0e1uxe wagon, ,. .. ,.,~ red, big eng., 4 spd., p/disc s.. brks, R/11, lo\11 mi. Good "FRIEDLANDER" 00 ""· $!200 °' "'" ''"'· 833-5507 or 833-3598 13750 IEACH ILYD. I ·,~68~0=PE~L~l~500~R~,7.l>-y•~K-.,~,,-,, 893-~~ ~~-6824 65,000 rni'11, yel1011• w/!bk NEW-USED-SERV. inter. Good cond, 53&--1832 anytime after 6 pm. ~ 1969 -102 OPEL Sin \Vgn. I~~~~~~~~~ I Dune Buggies 956 jli] VW DUNEBUGGY T ransporti\ltion 1968 CORVE'J"TE ENG 3Z7, '63 F'IAT 1600 Oska Spider· Good oond. R/H, auto, air, 4-0,00'.l n1i !ires, $1695. Eve£: 548-3693 I~~~ Mobile Homes 935 }l.'TRA clean 8x2j Shasta \V/ Jrg cabana liv'g rm, nice )'I'd, ~torage, adlt prk, C:'.f. 646-3702 aft 7. 8x42 Norse, beautiful cond. tum, $2100. 2191 Harbor, CM, lot 6L No children or ,.,, 820 sq ft, 2 BR, at beach. Adults, no dogs. $6500. 530-1674, 336-0347 Motor Homes 940 f Kin9s Coach * Motor Home Agency Superior * Landau SHOW SPECIALS New 71's 5 KW, roof air, eng air, Ar.l·Ff.1 srereo & tape, cnJise control, 413 engines; dual holding tanks, waler purifiers. loaded! This Weekend Only 601 N. Harbor, Santa Ana clutch, Bell Housing l\luncie 4 spcl. Complete. Perfccl Call af! 6• £46-066j Comp, with fiberglass body, condition $AOO. &l.>-4687 JAGUAR $575. (Ir best offer. Call I ~~--------1 after 4 p.m. 540-3803. V'V 2 bbl. Chrome nianlrold 1--------- Trucks 962 fits 40 hp, used one month JAGUAR """"•5"'9-cf::-::Oo::R-::-D-ll-2-:T~ON~ ,.,~:~~~"'~~~'""~s~.,~b,-,m~A~lpi-no HEAD9UARTERS i'~ parts for sale. TI1e only authorized JAGUAR 642-4689 dealer in the entire Harbor Pickup. Rad io, stick. Good .,--------9-,-.> 1\rea. condillon. IF32988) Autos Wanted vo Comple1e SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER $649 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546·1203 63 IH SCOUT Short cab, new trans. &: rear end. f9j(). or offer. 546-3763 after 6 pm. TOP DOLLAR '" CLEAN USED CARS See Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD 206o Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-0010 BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Street 548-7765 JAGUAR PORSCHE '66 912 Dark Green wi!h Black inter- ior, AM/FM, 4 Speed. (NOS.121) Real Nice! BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837 "l800/ 493-4jl1/ 499.2261 '63 PClrsche Super Cpe. Bahama yellow 11•ith blk inleriol', A!\l/FM, chro.nc 11·heels, recent e n g i n e PX\V982 $2399 CHICK IVERSON 1970 Ford f'.250. RANGER XLNT. Con1pl. loaded 1r/ 8' Can1per. Gary. bus. 673--3700, re~. 548-3521 WE PAY TOP '65 JAG 3.8 J\lark JI sedan YW FORD truck 196( New 223 l'U ln 6 cyl eng, new dif· terenll11l Gd cond. $800. Call: &t-t-5014. Xlnt mechanical. Original, ~9-3031 Exr. 66 or 67 $2400. 61~4177 1970 HARBOR BL VD. KARMANN GHIA I =="'CO"'S"'TA~ME~S""A-.,.,,.- ror used cars & trucks,,jusl '65 PORSCHE 365-C, while, l '67 GHIA COUPE 1 owner. 48.!XXl m j • s . cal\ us or free estimates. A!\1/Filt Blaupunk1 radio CASH 839-9030 Open 9 lo 9 daily '61 FORD Ranchero. New 1rans, New paint, Xlnt cone!, 8 x 35' SPARTAN -A!l ask for Dick or Gail, se! up in Adult Park. t\o 1 ~"'~'-"~'"-'"-· -----~ pets. Jmmacula!r, t\\·] n '69 Dat.~un sl<ike bed !Tuck, beds, qui('t street, exira long \\'hC'el base, R/H, GROTH CHEVROLET PERFECT throoghool. Alr condi oning, 4 sl>l'ed ra-675--1051. Ask for Sales Manager 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847 .5087 KI 9-333] dio, heater. rUQV 495). '67 PORSCl-IE 912·Best in BARWICK area. ne1v engin<', brakes, doloh, ""'"'-'""'~ m•g•. Aft 6 pm, 540-0617 Th!PORTS INC. balh & storage. Real c<Jn1-~take olfcr. G.12-7015, a fl 5: WE PAY CASH !ortable li\'ing \\'i!h ocean s.1~227 DATSUN view. Yours for $2.7«1 Cash. I °"~==~~=~= s.. " '"" \Vh;t{i" A>-•. '62 FORD 'h TON P.U. FOR YOUR CAR 1 ,., ,,.7 6 slll, new eng, trans, brakes Sp. No. . .,.,"""'"'"' b ,. & atrery. s~1 j or trade, IDEAL motor ho1ne tor 2·seH G.\,)-4687 CONNELL ~ So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach S.16-4051 I 494-9771 MF.RCEDES BENZ contained-parked in garage-1 -==-,-.,,----,-- pop up top. 12,000 ni1. A '61 Stude ~ton truck CHEVROLET Mercedes Ben'l 230SL ONE or Calif. fi nE"sl "J9" Carrera. Lacquer red: '69 engine. On display, Newport ~clery, 2116 Nl'.'1vport Blvd '69 911 T Targa, lo mi's. LikP new. \Viii finance & lrade. $.500 below OOJk. l\.1ust sPll. 673-4237. YCM 823 DEAN LEWIS DEAN LEWIS 6l~93D' 646-9303 J.9.16 Harbor Bl Cost<1 t lesa l!H6 ~~';;r :~~:;~S iltesa • '71 SPITFIRES . COME SEE OUR NOW ON DISPLAY SELECTION OF Come In for a test drive! TOYWAS FRITZ WARREN'S Jim Slemons· Imports SPORT CAR CENTER 140 W. Warner 710 E. 1s t SL, S.A, 547-0764 Santa Ana Open daily 9·9; closed Sunday Open Eves. & Sun. $1395 540-4125 1967 Triumph TR~A. R., H .. $1295 4 speed. YCT 818 OEAN LEWIS 1969 Toyota Sed. R., JL, 4 646•9303 s?(!ed. YSR 33G lfl.IS Harbor Bl., Cosia :\IC'~a DEAN LEWIS 646-9303 TRIUJ\f PH TR-4 Roadster. 1946 Harbor BJ Costa i\lesa 1vire \\·heels, very good con- -· ·· dition thruout. Sell or trade BILL MAXEY '°' piok-op lru<k o' oamp" truck. $945. Call 549-0~ ITIOIVIOITIAI TR -3 E"gio0 '°' "><. ,'""'""""'"""""'"'""'""'"I Oversz pistons & sleeves. Compl rebll. bt>tter 1han 11181 BEACH BLVD. new. $175. 642-2399 art 5 Hunt. Buch 147-1555 Aulos New 980 I tnl N. af O>ut Rwy. Gb Bell ' $1695 1969 Toyota Mk ti MT. speed. 059 BNP OEAN LEWIS 64&-9303 1946 Harbor BJ., Costa ~l<'sa '68 Corona Hardtop Loaded. Black landau top. Automatic, radio, heater. (~ 748) Take s1nall down. \\lill finance pvt. ply. Cali aft 10 am 4!).l. 7506 or 540 3100 $1195 1968 Toyota Scd, R., l-1., air cond. Y\\'G 313 DEAN LEWIS 6~6-93ro 1916 Harbor BJ., Cosla i\1esa '69 Toyo1a Corona 2·dr HT. Au!o, r&h, factory air. Pvt pty. Like nc\1', 19.000 n1i. $149.'i. &l:>-71489 '69 Toyota Landcruiser, 4 1\·heel drive. A-1 cond. i\.lake oHer 64&-8191 $1295;------' 1969 Toyota Corona Cre. R., H .. 4 speed. YC~1 017 DEAN LEWIS &16-9303 970 '69VW SALE 25 '69 VW BUGS ON SALE!! All 100°/o Guaranteed ! ! Parts & Labor EXAMPLE ' '69 VW 'BUG $1399 zuc 708 Kelly Blue Book Says Average Rat1il $1720 OVER 110 USED VW's FROM $399 CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 HARBOR COSTA MESA 546-3031 Ext. 67 or 68 TRIUMPH $1795 1968 Triumph GT6 CPt". R., H., 4 speed, 1vire \l'hcels. \VQ\V 67.'i DEAN LEWIS &IG.9303 1946 Harbor BL, Cos1a ?.1esa VOLKSWAGEN '6.1 V\V Sunroof. Looks & Runs like ne1~·!? $7:il VOLKS\V AGEN 196S • good shape. $127:1. IH&-:'HOJ CompleTc V\V Service l G~O Discount \\'/this ad 1'-1.D. Automotive G.12-3623 445 E. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH 673-0900 VOLKSWAGEN '71 VAN VW Bus-Air. T&h, license, ere. Cost over $4000 new; \Vill take $3493 cash or small down & T.O.P. P vl pty, 646-9108 V\V K. Ghia '64, 43,00'.l mi's, Pvt p!y, Xlnt cond, $750 cash. 675-5505 '66 BUG • Xlnt. Wht/red int. 43,000 mi. New tires. $850, 6-14-411fi or 548-3389. V\V '69, Immaculate, Many xtras, Must sell. Sl~ or make offer. 5J6..27Z7 '68 VW Bug-Xlnt cond. ~1100 or offer. 673-0259 1968 Volkswagen, exeellen1 ./ '69 V\V BUG 2Hlt)) X!nt t'Ond, S1lnroof, radio. $1395. 497-1037 mi. condition, priva!e party . fm l\olany extras. $1175 536-1010 Sell the old stuff Buy the new stult Autos, New 980 ~1Usr St'll '68 V\V, new rtres. e x t r a s , $ll00/0FFER. 673-2273 Autos, New 980 real buy. 675-0621 Can1per i;hell. SGOO. Eves: C 4 pd "3l50 644 5607 613-4374: Days: 646-4491 2828 Harbor Blvd. onvt, -.~ , .,, . · · 945 I =-=~~---~ Costa l\1esa 5-16-1200 For that item under $50, '65 FORD Econ 100 Van, -o====~=~~ 'VE PAY TOP DOLLAR try the Penny Pincher 6 cyl, good rond., $800/of· Trailers, Travel • '64 PORSOIE C , GOOD COND * $2200 . * '633-8911 * 990 19-16 lfMbor Bl .. Costa il1esa Fast results are just a phone call away· 642-5678 Autos, Used BY Q\\·ner -20' tanden1 axle. Tub \\'/sho"'t't, hell I er. relrig, completely self-con- tained. Sac r i ti cc. 714/ 531·7800. f('r. 645-4598 or 49-1:..6-nQ .FOR TOP USED CARS Autos, Used 990 Autos; Used 11 your car ls extra clean, Ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; But you save it both when you· buy and where you drivel The low, low price on this fine quality compact lets you keep some of your cash and the cost of operation is low tool Save both ways at John- son & Son Lincoln Mercury. 1963 Ford FIDO 6 cyl pickup, see u5 first 8' hed. ·12,00Q miles. $800, BAUER BUICK 491-1781 234 E, 17th St. 1967 NIMROD tent trallcr '66 CllEVY-'I ton pickup. Costa lltesa 548-7765 with a\\·ning. Xlnt rond., 2 V.S--Stick $1300 -Ut.PORTS \VANTEr:;-- i;pare Hres. $350. 536-7602 I • &l&-9~ • 0!'flnge Counties 1970 APACHE camp trailer 1966 EL CAr.IJNO TOP $ BUYER ~ slp1 tl. bBttery, ~pare tire. GOOD COND. E:\'TRAS BILL l\tAXEY TOYOTA Clean. $%0. 830-4079 i S1050 * &l&-7959 l8S81 Beach Blvd, Trailers, Utility 947 1 '59 CHEV i;, TON lt Beach. Ph. 847-8555 14' Tandem Trailec vs ** ..... ,..,, DATSUN \Vith 4 "'het>lE. Ml steel we\d. ed construction. 1-'" Steel deck plating. \Vi][ sell or trade for pickup. 3166 SieHy. (Mesa Verdel C.M. Auto5 lor Sale 1§1 Antique1/Cle1sic1 951 l&Cl BUICK Coupe-78.00'.l orlginaJ miles. Thorou~h!y re1tored. Xlnt eond. l~un~ beRUtifully. $7500. Call 714: 557-0J2 Dune Bufgies 956 Auto Leasing LEASE /I NE\V 19TI PINTO $50.00 mo. 964 '""'•59'"""'2=00.,,..0 =Ro=ADSTER BRAND NEW • 1970 ROAD RUNNER 30 To Choose From 'Z 00011. HARD· TOP, 31) Ve , 11u- t om•lic, +i"l•d 91•1" relly1 in· .trum•"t p11111I, lletvy d uty 1u1pe11. 1io11, l11evy d uly brtkt1, rtdio, F70 '114 tti1ed wllit1 ltlf,r li1,1, wir• wll,,I cov1r1, I ~RM2lNOE· !)96051, $2695 1971 COMET F11ll FIJ(tory ~11lp., pl11l roctlo, ti.offr, AM rodl o, wh~ wall ttnn. thlted '''"' 011d • Mo1tlf11I bri'"' red color, 2 DOOR $ JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 54G-5630 642-0981 • -. - • • DAILY >ILCIT 3 1) 970 Autos, New ~~m-1~m=1~m-~~-~m-1~ VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN _V..;;.O.;..LK_S~W-A-G~EN-l -VO.,.-.,LK.,.;S,,..,W""A'""'G~E~Nc-I VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 980 Auto1, New ~80 Autos, Now 980 * 68 VW Bue l Q,vne:r • Must see to appri!!Ciate µrict'd to sell fast 673-1131 aft 6 pm. '65 vw SEDAN '66 vw SEDAN '63 vw Bug _....,.UA ..... SE ...... A--1-... ·6siiivwiiii'ttsEiiiiDANU-I ·55 V\Y Squarebnck • Xlnt. HeUll ene, oe1v ores. tape derk. $875. 673-9439 II.ft 6 SHARP blue '63 Bug, l owner, n1inl cond. New tire~. $999.97. 548-4Tn Llc. • VJY 650. Total dOWn payment of $47.95, 36 monlb- Jy r1aymen1s of $34.38 Annual pe~ntage rate ol 17.92<;0 (OAC), Total CB.Sh price including tu: & lie. "'6.93. Uc. • SKD 633· ~.% total Rullo, heattt, 4 speed. CWA2. down payment. l6 monthly paymenu of l{M). $38.20 Annual percentage rale or 17.92% (OAC). Total cash price including tax & lie. $1!>51.9-5. Full Price $399 BARWICK ll¥tPORTS INC. DATSUN '68 V\V Bug; paint job, rims, new engine & trans. $l300. 998 So. Coast llwy. Harbour V .W. Harbour V.W. NEW '71 VW $51.89 Per. Mo. + Tax AT BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road Lie. • WXE 131. $17.95 total down pa,yment. 36 monlh.ly paymeor.s ot $57.26 Annual precentag~ rate 17.82% tOAC), Toti.I cash price including IP I: lie. $Ll76.95. Harbour V.W. Call 673-9352 ~~ ~S:.~~ San Juan Capistrano • '63 V\V, REBLT ENG I 1r.11 BEACH BL. &424435 1sru BEACll BL. 842-44351-~~=~==--· I 337--lDl/493-4511/49!l-22St JS711 BEAOl BL. M2-4435 ' .. .. • TRANS. llOO. I HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH '67 vw SEDAN '68 vw SEDAN HUNTINGTON BEACH .. . --· ~II • 675-0311·1 • 1--.,5"'9.--:vw=--e"u"n.,_--1 • - '69 V\V Sunroo!, am/Im, '67 vw BUG lal'CJ• Selection Ltc .• YEV927, S7Z.93 Iota.I Automatic, 1"adl0, heater. a • PONTIAC auro. Pv1 ply must .w!I. Of YW Campers, 0011i·n payment, l6 monthly {WQD 882) $1:ul or ofr. 6~1-6027 NC\\' paint. IXTE 7211 V K b• payments of $9 99 ! speed, radio, heater. '68 VW xln'I cond $895 ans, Om IS, $53.45 . ITAZ 142( • -· I t.o m.-,. ..._u., <'UI--·-·· --"-· Buses, New & Used An""'' ,.,,,.,,.., ,. " BILL YATES .BARWICK * '57 vw * ,,_.. I'~ lmmodlalo Dallvort 17.92% IOAC>. Total ouh VOLKSWAGEN IMPORTS INC. • ""' '"" * >15-8615 2100 """°' "'''· 64'""6 CHICK IVERSON pnoe lod"diog tax & Uo. 3285' Valle Road DATSUN '68 V\V. AUTO. $895 YW $I-tn.9.3. San .Juan Caplstrano • l• IN A HURRY $la.I 1!170 Dune Buggy, V\V eng., Sf9.30l1 Ext. 6l5 or 6T 837-4800/493451V.f99-2261 !ES So. Coast Hwy. • lilG-07" • 4 '"'""' & • top. D63 ARW 1!17U HARBOR BLVD. VW DUNEBUGGY >t~i"a; ~;t~l • • :1 1963 VIV Bus-Ne\v eng & DEAN LEWIS COSTA MESA 1----0,,~C.O.-"--I brakes. !\lake offer. 619 &j6..930J 18711 BEACH BL. 84Z-443S $nS • Poin~ettle, Cd:O.f. 673-5500 1946 ~larbor Bl., CO!ta ~lesa 'j!I VOU<SWAGEN Bug· HUNTINGTON BEACH Comp. with fiberglass I.Jody, 1969 Dune Buggy. Corvalr 1 Over $300 mechanical "WOrk ~====~--$575, or best oifer, Call Eng . .r,, ;:utomatic. 013 ADX ** '68 Volks11·agen, XL.i\fT WANTED done. Sculptured seats, new '69 \VESTPllALIA Camper, alter 4 o.m. S4D-3803. DEAN LEWIS • COND. Call bhvn 8 & 2:30; I'll pay top dollar for •>our acrylic paint $395. 545-3641 pop-top, tent. Xlnt oond, lo ,61 Sunroof w/new fbrgls 6£.93()3 BRAND NEW DEALER Presents • • • • ,. S36-4I35 VOLKSWAGEN today. ~Call SOULFUL 1956 V'i\' needs mi. Imm sale $2750. 6-12-.lYlO Baja kit new paint, '66 1~6 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa • 1965 V'IV Convertible • and ask for Ron Pinchot. good home. Casst'tte tape. 1964 VW Body in excellent trans axle, n1 ag \vhct>ls. VW ,66 BUG Original o\vner. Good cond. 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673-0900. Very clean. $400. 49-1-5881 <.'Ondition. $150 or best otter! sand tires, reblt eng, $650. MINT CONDITION • SSOO. 962--1761 For best results! 64J..:i678 For best results! 642-&i78 968-4169 548-471.l ~~~---~= Attr&ctive RTttn finish v.ith --m--m--m----. BRAND NEW '71 PONTIAC JOHN CONNELL "No Gimmi,.1, No Gi"••w•v•. Ji.it 21 'f11. Hon11t St iling WE'RE LOADED WITH THE ALL NEW 1971 CHEVROLET WAGONS! • The rear window 9oes up and disappears into the roof. The tail 9ate 9oe5 down and disappears into the floor. ALL MODELS • E9UIPMENT AND COLORS AVAILABLE! OVER 50 VEGAS TO ~CHOOSE FROM ; BRAND NEW 1971 VEGA Nomed Cor of !he Yeor 1971 MOTOI TltfNO Best Handling Car in America ~Regardless of Price llOAO I TRACK Finest Out Of Comparison Tests of the 'Six Small Cars CAl & D•tYt• 2 DOOR SEDAN • OltDlll TODAY IN YOUlt CHOICE o• IO COLOIS WE HAVE THE FINEST CHOICE OF BRAND NEW 1971 EL CAMINOS BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVY 'h TON LONGBED !C5 r~tl61l1221 TRUCKS~TRUCKS-TRUCKS SHOP NOW FOR YOUR SUMMER VACATION TRANSPORTATION. WE HAVE THE NICEST SELECTION OF NEW CHEVY TRUCKS RIGHT NOW ! • CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA I er, etc. Check thla Out for price &: quality. (TRH543) S!IZ5. Johnson &: Sori, 2626 • Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa.. -"'-'--5630--".~~----1 • $995 1965 V\V. R., H., 4 speed, r new paint. NGB 025 , ..... DEAN LEWIS .... ,,., Venturan. IMMIDIAn DlLIYIRY • • • l!Mfi Harbor BJ., Costa Mesa VOLVO ~~· $1695 Volvo 122 SI. Wagon. R .. lt, automatic factory air cond. VCJ 083 • DEAN LEWIS .... ,,., • 19~G lfarbor Bl., Cos!a P.Yesa n.nn.n.ri. tHIHl • 'VOL VO' "" '"'"" ... ,,,.. "FRIEDLAND;" • s7 7 ao-··L·~~T~~· ·=~'~''k";'.;J;I • MONTHLY NEW~USEO..SERV. • Payment for 36 Months l ~ •• $2564.75 h th• ~!~h !,~!i~~end~~I~~~ i1 th• tot.I dow~ I $3260 pevment price ;, $29'0 ind. I•" •"d lic•111• itnd •II c•tr~i119 ch•19••· P•vm•11i. $77.50 p•r 1no11th for 36 1no11tl'll 011 •ppro .. •d b•nlf cr•dit. D•f•tr.4 I lllil Volvo 142 Serl, fl., JI., -ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 15 11.01 % ,:·::~;t~:,: "'" • DA.VE ROSS GOODWILL USED CARS L·· $3093 I '67 OLDS. VISTA '69 BUICK • 1971 VOLVO CRUISllt STA. WAGON ltlYllU DEMO 7360 I v.s, •ulo. lr•n•.. •It co11dilionl1u1, >-1110, •••111., •ir co11tlitio..i119, power • We Specialize Jn power 1!11ri119, pow•r b',•~11. 1!11rl11g, power br•k11, pow•r wilt" ~·;;'r~ I s1988 ...... ;.53188 • • VOLVO • '68 PONTIAC '67 TEMPEST • 1966 Harbor, C.r>.f. 646-9303 I • VINTUAA 4 DR. H.T. 6 cw!.. l io•td, f11JJw 1q11ipp•d $1695 A1<to. lt ~l'll., •ir condifioni11g. pow•r !UU Nl04 ) i:;.oiv:v:~:~~~·· ~!·~; I •'••rin9.5o1 .. 98k.,. (8xsPJ241 •• wh~I•. PIY sr,-• $988 DEAN LEWIS 19" Harbo~~ .... M"a I '64 FORD '64 RAMBLER • • '67 VOLVO 2.cfr i;edan FUTURA 770 CLASSIC • Xlnt ('(Ind , AM /F"M r11dlo. I • Auto. lr11u., r•dio, h•tf•r, wh.if1w11f ''""" ·~i'-J"i·l11t • I ""'$'5di11,8~JO ·'·a'· (JAE4!ll sis'''· 8160198" I ~•.oo I • ~-™~~~ 11 My •q.,;pmem • :>lJ<). I '68 MUSTANG '71 HONDA DEAN LEWIS A11lo. lr•n1., power 1!1erin9, power f.,l!w -.quipped Ii\• new. l9•0!QE) 646.9303 br•kti, r1dio. h•tlet. !XSP,091 II "" """"~~; eo ... "'" I s1588 $1288 I 1963 Voh·o 122 ~d. R, Jt .. ' ·~·~A'~c';.i';,1s I '65 BUICK I 646-93m I '65 MUSTANG 6 cvl., •ulc. 111111., r1d i1, h•1t•r, Auto. tr•n•., 1ir condition;119. power 19-16 lllU'fx:Jr Bl.. Cos1a i\ff'.~a ELICTlA 211 • Aufos, Used 990 I whil1w1 ll t ir•1. IZKZSIJ) ••••tin9, pow1r br1~11, pow1r .,.;,.,. BUICK I sass .... 1Nk0$S88 I ,,-:;68:-:1:::u"v1:::E"°RA..,----.....,.t.o-.-,«1-.1 1 I Ai\f/Fi\f atetto. Be au t. 1 ,,,,.,, w/black vinyl .... '65 OLDS '61 BUICK \Vkdy~ only. 642-4000 Mr. • STAI.Piii CONVll111LI Ron McKendcy Air (01'1ditio11i119, powtr tl•1rin9, pow· Ai.lo, lr1n1., power 1l•••in9, pow•r I .E*::;~7~i. ,~~r~;; 11 .r .. ,.\ ... $d 8 ;. ,88. I NHW04ll ., •• k ••• ,.d52. h •• 9 , ... rSco• .. ,, • '69 Riviera GS, fully loaded. I • '3400. Call .. &IG-1.SJ * - Good ,. .... '"'· ..... 14' ROSS 19611 Buick [k>Juxe 1ta • wg11 • Air. XI n I OOnd , ,.,_.,., •" • wkday• 2480 HARBOR BLVD. At FAIR DRIVE • '63 BUICK Le Sabre 4 dr, • COSTA MESA ;:;"~~~ ~;~·,;;11 w. • 546 8017 I '6.1 Buick Spt'Clal • V6 en.a. • I a"'o lrM>. Ru"' llko MW •• ·~.;,;;~ :~;~. ;;,~i .. SALES DEPT. HOURS 0;:~~:·:~~,:·:~. ~ "'~' sru rv1 ••Y. •r,.2m ~fl••. I I •••• -I~ _, .. 40 DAILY PILOT rrlday, April 2, 1971 -~.. 1§1 I .......... -1§1 I .,, .... _ 1§1 I ...... ~... 1§11 .,,....... I~ I ... , .. ,.,... 1§1 1 .,,....... 1§1 r •. ,, .. ,.,... 1§1 1 ,.,,,,,.,... ][~ 990 ~A;u;t•;•;•;U;tod;;;;;;;!;990;;;:1 ~A;u;t;os;,;U;;tod;;;;;;:~990~:1,A~ut;o;s;,~u~ .. ;d~;;;;;;990~ CADILLAC CADILLAC '67 El CAMINO • Cad. '68 Cpe. De Ville CHEVROLET 990 Autos, UNd CADILLAC ~------990 Autos, UNd 990 CADILLAC -------utos, UMCI 990 (Autos, UMd 990 Auto,, UMd 1;.;;..:.::....:...;.. __ _ CADILLAC • • cAolLLAc __ , CAD. '68 BROUGHAM I Cad. '70 Sed. De Ville Autos, Used CADILLAC • • CAD. '6S SEO: DE VILLE Cad. '69 Cpe. de Ville • Cad. '66 Cpe. De Ville FACTOR\' • Cad. '67 Cpe. De Ville FACTORY 110 SEO. OE VILLE LUXURIOUS FLEETWOOD I FAC'l'ORY 12.000 local n11lei. Only by l FACl'ORY . AIR C'O:-l"DITIONlNG .!it:'e1ng and dri1•1ng 1111.s hke AfR CONDITtONING BN!athtalring l1re1nist pa in ! F'ACTORY f'ACI'ORY fo'ACTORY ~w trndr •ll can }'OU ap-Padded top, BeautiluJ lapt's. w/lwnfr10t1!t c\01h & lea the1· AIR CONOfMONING AIR CONDITIONING AIR CONDITIONING /\JR CONDITIONIN G precuUt 1undiuon. l'.:Xolic Try & leather interior. F'ull intl'r'., lull power. u1cl. till Full power incl. electric WU1· f'ULL LEA1'HER V!nyl top, full power, nit .~I full power. be&u!1lu.I cJ01h AJR CQNDITIONIN'G l'llll power . Tilt \.\ht>el, A~!· f"~t radio, vlllyl toP. rlC .• etc. { ~VEA393 \ 4 s/H't'd. 1'>1d10. pu11cr ~1crr- 1ng, 1\·11h• 01·,11~, ~·hn.une \.\ hl·.-1~. I Qi:ii.\ 11;1 $3222 green goJCI n1e1ul11c firnsh po11 f'r, incl. tilt & t<'lescope & telescoplQslel'r1ng, st<'l'eo, do11.~ & electric. !K'at. Signal INTERIOR teleK'Opic 1J!ttring, cloth & & leather intei·. Sterl'O, door 111lh harn1on1t1ng interior l· Stf'er111g, door locks. !l!ereo, door locks, v111yJ lop, etc. iiet>kin~ radio. See to ap· Vinyl padded top, Juli po11'-leather inter., AJ\1-Fl\1 ra-Jocks, cruiS(' control, trunk landau roof. Full~ ro11 r r elc. (VTI..38!1J !ZSK034 ) prcciate. r rBY3061 . <'r. A.\1-rM radio, f'IC. An dio. An exeept.ionaJ beauty. opener Light scnunel, auto equ1pl){'d of COUl'Sf', p!u~ l c3333 $5333 $1222 cxcephonal buy. ({XX)OO J. tS8f'203). d1m n1cr. nlOSl every dlx. "' n• '"'""· '"' · ''" ~ $4222 $1999 "~'· {1VV650i. s1rg 11·het>I. AIH COND., $2444 ib _A ~::;· :;;~:, ·'~~:·; .. ~,:' r>NaberJ) <>Mabeij; ib ~c•~'~ BEJJ. l>rK·ed ro Sl'U. J ohn-.a. ~CADILLAC .a.. ~CADILLAC ~CA~~ ~abeij; ~~betli ib it.UT>lORIZlO O{Al.[R IOn l: Son. 2626 Harbor Bl., a.Ul110R1Z£O 0 £"1.l ll AVlkOf\IZtD OCAUR .t.UlliORIZEO Ol..,,l "I 4 ~CAOIL~C .a. ~CADILLAC Gl\Ta1 e.S. 2600 HARHOH. BL., Coiita f\ll's.::i 5-t!l-5630 2600 HARBOR BL . 2600 11Afmof!. BL., :zooo HARBOR BL., •u11-10R1zto ou.~ER ... urtt0R1zco oE.&.Lci:t .... ~cAOiL~ cosrA :i.tESA C'OSTA l\1ESA CO.STA :'\lESA COST1\ l\fESA :?600 HARBOR BL., 1WO HARBOR BL, AUTHORIZCD Ol ALlR :i-10·9100 ()peon Sunday $1499 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN Nil J11:111 C!1p1~!r111l'l .-i::i-1800 1~::-1:111 199-.!161 1 63 CHEVY WAGON- 9 p,,s~rn~rr. J\1 huil1 11n.:1nc tJJV 7iU1 Sl9l 1966 CADILLAC j.1()..9100 Open Sunday s.Ml-9100 Open Sunday ~(1.9100 Open Sunday COSTA !'.IESA COSTA !'>tESA 2600 llA RBOR BL., e SEO DEVILLE e 'I C e ;;.I0-9100 Open Sunday I :J~()..9100 Open Sunday COSTA MESA CA MARO "lU---··· "!U.J._. PRJCF:D F'OR QUICK SALE BEAlIT. '62 oupc de VIUe, 1 ~-==~-=c--=~ / ,~ I'~ Beautiful ebon,· bl..ilck finish '69 Coupe DeVille I ml'<'h xtnt cond, full poy,·er. "66 COUPE de Vtlle, Xlnt • • ~-9100 Open Sunday 1--------=cc:-I bo HI 1 ,1. ""' ~~00 .~ ~oo I >"ull " .,, c D •• , d v·u r II • '10 CAMARO-PI•, p I b' 21 00 Har r~'( -, witfl l>lack landau roof !.: 1-'ull po11·er, good rond. *"""· "~' . mus set'. cone!, Vinyl top, y loau· QUICK CASH A . """an <' 1 e u lc.o,-c==~==-o="' • ~ black I t a 1 h e r interior. 673-2262 or 673-J723 "69 El Dorado. All xtrrui. ed. ~lust ~JI llO""'· $2100 po11·f'r, $500. E ven 1 n g : '69 COUPE DcVille, 20,000 radio, a ir. Only !1 mo old '67 BL"!CK Hl\'!t:RA I Equipped 1111h all the ]ux· 1970 CAD El Dorado-l7,000 Must geJl/n11lke olr. Pb. alt or best oUr r . Pvt pty, THROUGH A '."~li-23\g m l. loaded, tilt wbl, leather, $3099. 67":>-1298 or 5-l:Hl6-16 O\\'NEn F:.ir <Ill" l~Jmt. t"\ill I r I ; Pm "" ~-67• '""' .62 CAD .•• ,., ~ville • ,1,~ ,,,,. 1,. 149,-9_ Pvl -,,===,--;;-;::;--;:;;;;;;-;;;ml JX111rr. \'1n)\ ronr, i\l1chrl1n ury ca t ure.~ u 1 po11-er, mi, fully equipped. Sil\'er • ..HU""V<J.,., .,......,.... DAILY PILOT .x: ....... ''" "' .. ~ CAMARO, Xlnt cond. 1970 radio, hra rer. (arrory air grey & 11·hite. A~I : can CAD '70 SHI De Vi 11 e , .60 FLEE'li\'OOD 4 dr. 60,000 mi. Xlnl cond. $6.jQ, ply. 841 Baker St, C.i\I. • 427 C''"'· aO,OOJ ini's, $!8j(l tirt>~. ~l•t<' ii his. ~tPn'O tld t !SBD 1··1 $16T5 ~3486 P'f 67-7102 k . I WANT AD Ph: &1~8312 '.H&-2131 .... li>pt: Ci\LL Dll. JOY)';F:R cu •• <' l'. ;),) · : : ;,... • as IOj\de<I. BeautLfu bt has J\.lotor in xlnt. cone!. tire~ Pvt ply, 213 799-69 17. /\T ;iJ7-7077 Sal l'r sun, 1-6 Johnson & Son, 2S26 Harbor !or Pau.I Henderson. m i's, Sac. \.\'hsle. 493-4473 fair, new paint. Needs seat Sell the old :;:tuil Ruy the DAILY PILOT for action! ...,-c,-_...---;c-;::;;-;::;-1 Bl.. Cosln J\le~a :N0-5630 _ 1 For best results! 6-t2-567S -I ~AILY PILUf lor action! <.'Overs. $275. 5.17-3331 642 .. 5678 ne'v stuff Call 642-j678 & Savi!! \Ve'll help you sell! 6-12-~Jl.i"i~l-'-P-"'--~~ ----·t Avtos, New · 980 I Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Au,01, New 980 I Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 $895 ----------------------------1967 Chrv :-;1 ll'a}!" v~. R .. WHY SETTLE FOR A "' SMALL CAR WHEN • TRUCKS VANS JI . ;11110111;il1r· Vl \I 26o DEAN LEWIS l!llij ll~rbur Bi. Cns!a .\lc:-.a "tll Ch'1' l\o\'a Jl Grl. Ir.in~. ne\.\ llH' au10 f; < yl. Sl!IJ Ser 111 'l•''J<'Q .-.ta11on, ;ooo b!k. \\' Coa.!.T H11y' \Vrsl :'\"r"'P..'1"1 Bt:ach. 6-12-9182 &lti-\92:i YOU CAN BUY A FULL SIZE WITH COMFORT • SAFETY · FOR THE · SAME MONEY. TRY THESE 1969~1970 MODEL VALUES. 36 MO. FINANCING '69 Impala CUST. COUPE Auto .. P.S., 1i•, r1dio, vjnyl •oof. W1rt1nty booL low mil11. Gor9tou1 c1•. IXWE221! '70 Impala SPORT COUPE Auto., RlH, •>r, P.S , f•cl. w•rr•nly r•m•inin9. low, lo,.. mil11. (JJ9ACYI '69 Malibu SPORT COUPE Power 1t11rin9, •tdio. ~t•i· ''· eulom•lic. Tremendous buy. !YCROl.111 '70 Impala 4 DR. H.T. Vinyl 1oof, rtdio, PS. 1uto., •ir. Low mil 11. I 1! owner f•ctory "'•rt•n!y. I A5U . J l') '69 Impala 4 OR. SEDAN R•dio, •ulo., P.5 .. •ir. Fin e eulomobil•. I YOSS42 I '70 Camaro 2 DR. H.T. Auto., r1dio. P.5., •i•. low mil11. Rem•ini"t f•clory w1trtnly, IAZVlJ7) '69 CHEVY -WAGON Kin9 1woocl Ii ptu. Stt l1ii1 for 1 u11c•lion, l04-4CPN) CHECK THESE PRICES--STOP LOOKING! '68 CAMARO '69 RAMBLER AMERICAN l Oo. H.T. Ao<o . R&H, """ """"'· $1699 lWIEJS2 t < Oo. Sod.,, Aolo., o,d;o, low •.In . $1499 Dir! c~••P· I 2LK911 I '68 CHEVELLE '69 V.W. 7 PASS. c,.,,, 7 O· H.T. '"'"""'" ,.... $1099 ,','•,',''" "''""· 5.,;,11, ,1 .... >YCM-s2599 1!1e,.n9. ••die, n•c t. !VTP42 2) '67 FORD WAGON '68 V.W. BUG • ""· ''"""' soo ''"' ....... $1499 P ) .. 1ulo. f ~2 )C J) Nicf . '70 LTD WAGON '65 V.W. BUG '67 FORD CUSTOM ~00 4 D•. Std•n. A••. po.,., ·.t~,"~9 •u•cm•t« ••d;o. I UOUO J61 '66 V.W. BUG $799 R.d•o "'°' "'''-ISV22•71 '68 PONTIAC FIREBIRD '69 TOYOTA CORONA 1 o •. Coo. '"''"'"" "'°'· '""" $1799 •'~'"""9 (YXVISI ) l o., H.T < "'''· "'°'· l:lo "'" $1 099 !lqOAGt! '69 PONTIAC FIREBIRD '67 CHRYSLER NEWPOlT 1 o •. c~ •. Po .... 1t•••in9. tu•o1"tlic. $2199 · r•-l 10 vo nyl •ool, '""· < Oo. S•d. l9.000 .;i.,, Hn ''" P.S , s1499 •ulo., R&H, I ow~•• ~idory. Fine ct r. (WIAJI O) 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '69 CHEVY ~. TON VAN VI Auto., R.dio, n•w condition w/n•w Sun Di1) c1mper conu,n;on. ( 16l6El '61 CHEVY ~. TON VAN VI w/ntw rubber, ntw color. New Sun Di•I c•mp•r convenion. 9 pin c•r c•r conv•ni tnce. !8Sl06A) '69 CHEVY 'I• TON VAN Auto., "'""' rubber, ntw Sun Di.I di. c•mp•r conu•riion. l•tuliful l fr•1h. t771.4lGl '65 V.W. CAMPER .41,000 mil11. Lt•• n•w. ''" • Sun 0 •• 1 conver1ion. You'll h1 vt lo ''' this ont. !NFY2tll '69 DODGE VAN 90" wheel be••· •/, Ion. Autom1!oc h1n1miuion. !P2)51J '67 FORD 1/1 TON VAN Ii cylind,r, slick 1hift. f ll.721A I '66 FORD 11> TON VAN No window1. Ri9!-it one. Au!om•l•c r•dio. ~••ttr. (-451975 ' '64 EL CAMINO \II, t ulo., P.S., 8". Hu,.v. !P60!S21 '60 £L CAMINO Plttlt 1•1 lhi1. Auto., 11dio, P.5 .• ll •CI . !R2811,l '61 EL CAMINO Va. •ulo., P.S., •tdio. '""· Fr11h ind noct . (P1l5ll '69 EL CAMINO \II, vinyl •oof, rtdio. P.S .. •ulo lttulilul yellow. 178,SIZl '69 EL CAMINO VI, P.S., tu!o .. ,.;,,Vinyl roof Dead 1~1•p . t 7110101 '68 EL CAMINO VI , 1ulo., P.S., •ir. ttdio, -i~yl •ool. ,~•rp ,,d c••· !171•8AI ~899 - l'O Vt, H.0. c1mper equipm•nl. ! N, .. '"' co"ditionl. F'ul your c•mptr on lhi1 one. (IS5-42GI '69 CH.EVY 'I• TON Ii 'ylindtr, slick, r1dio, r11dy. ( 116860) '69 CHEVY •(, TON VS , 1lep1id1, t ir, P.5., eulom•lic. ( P2 I 71 I '69 CHEVY l/• TON VB, 1l ic l.. r1dio. Be11uliful color 'll.63bf1 '69 CHEVY 1/2 TON 6 cylindtr. 1 lic~. rtdio, cu1lot'l Cdb. Sh •• p. !P2268) '69 CHEVY 1;, TON Subu•b"n c•rrv•!I V&. P.S, cu1!om inltt. Noct. ! l8F20!) '68 CHEVY 1/2 TON V8 , r11d .o. P.S .. •ulomelic, ,.;,. Rc,,dy. l P211i 11 V8, automatic, po11er ~leer­ ing. dlr. Loaded. tCV F:369) Full price $219J. Call 494-7744 '6.'i Chevy 2·dr l1rdtp, auto. (!\o. P I0610) ~~'!19. $10 drJil'ers on approl'ed l'redH. See at 1915 Harbor Blvd, C . .\-1. '&1 CHEVI::LLF: :'lh1!1bu con- vr r1 , rl'hlt cng, 11c111 lop & t ires. Make oiler. 67;';--1911 l'l"l'S. 'G!l Chevy Ku1g~11()(}(J S1alion \\';:n, Air. hrak"S, ~11•t·ring :\1111 :'llal-ie oUrr. 6·1J...-0+16. !H;';--20:1ti '61 Chevy 2-dr 1:\o. RVP374) $199. SIO d•'h1•rrs on ll.f>' I pru1rrl cri'o..11 See at .ls.1~1 HarlY'r Bhd, C ~I. ·..;..,c-- • "fi] Ch~·\.,. h npala t·ac 111r Pih PIS VS vE.'fl Y i:1.1-: \~ • ·ssoo • GIC...\Fl:-.ll • ··~~~ --··~-­'70 EL f'1\~1l;o;"O. ::lli cu in, 11n1111uxl. I'/!'. P/B. mist grn, TOP. ;.~J-128 2, $2999 :..IG-l~i60 '6:> 2 DOOi: \l;ol>l>;o, ""' 011 ner. fully cqu1pped, Likr fl('\\. $400. 4~2-97·16 ' air, Originnl 011 nrr. $2199 '&t !MPALA, 327. P;o»O< & 11.~=·~. %2·2G7\_; ~·~~-1 •-----------------'6,l l ~lP.\L.\ 1 dr lirdlp, Jal"I I air, p/h. o/~. In n1J"s. P\ l '68 FORD 1/2 TON 6 cylinde•. ••dio, 1tick. Nict. I 166 1',.6,) '67 CHEVY 1/1 TON 6 cylinder. r•dio, i lick. {V'4'1Zl '61 CHEVY 1/1 TON VI, 1!ock, ''"'P•r 1qui pped. (US8250 1 '67 CHEVY 1/2 TON VB. •tdio, 1ticl. 1hofl. (V44 l 06l '67 CHEVY 1/2 TON V8 . .,utQm•l1t ttdio, n•w co!or. (V9-4 7801 II" '64 FORD l/2 TON (you h~v• to ••• how n;ce.I l P'7l 30l '64 CHEVY 1/1 TON T ~lk lo th e owne r eboul thi1 bt•utiful '''"lur t VI, 1t1C~. !0751981 '64 CHEVY 1/2 TON Oo ii you .. eH. Slit\ 1hilt \18. '59 FORD 1/1 TON Poc kup true ~. Nice, f FJ29~81 '57 FORD 1/2 TON w 1'62 !' t•mp••· We'll 9u••"nle• cond itio" to vour 11li1f<0cHon. Clttn •~d nice. Stitlr, V8. !M987701 '67 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT T11~tl icp. 4 wheel clri••· low mile1. E~cellent tondition. !VDLJ711 $1699 ply. Gi:!-lSl:\ , 196(; T:'llPALA 11agon \I/lop I '""""'. Pl>, Pih. "" XI"' (\)Jl(l $1::00 .. lJ&-::ilO I 99 j "69 Chrl'Y \'<in 90"". \\lutr, $15 ,._, ·'°'· '"'• c .. 11 ""· P'Y. I b'i~i-21::!"2 cH=R~Y=sL~E~R-1 $1999 !'69 TO\\:\" ,\· Cou nlr ) I &-P""'""' ''"'°" Loodod. A:\l/F\I :'l!r H'ln .\lcKen· dry llP<']•;.':11~ "Illy. ti-t2-40()0 $1499 ., """"~~~~: 6 '"' v ... ~. r/h. nu·. PIS. \\lrll $1599 .<ON. t;,, '""'I. $.;;:<. O< bsl ofr !iTJ..ll!!I ~----1 1·51ST,\T!(J:"-/11,;11. ;a110, !lOOd l\rt'\ Xln! ru1u1111i; cond, $999 sz~~~;·j~~E=N=T~A~L-1 '61 Lncln Cont'I Sdn $11 99 Full 11111 + .ur '"'llll ,\· cood I """' \ ""' '"" ""' "'' fnr onl.1 Sl.-11) c•.-1,ll. Sf'(' at 1 ,116 L11;.;on1a .. \r1q10rl Shor· r~ t1ll •• fflf1l $699 1970 .\1,\~!l~i\~11~, -,-.,-,-.~""'= fl('\\'. Sar. Sli199 Uncil'r 11ar- ranl}. DI.fl. 0\'89AS03.107. ph(ln<' 6::.i;...11110 $599 C~OR~VA-IR -I '66 CORVAIR $1 099 2 DR. H.T. $1999 ,\1l11•n1aln' r,1rl1n hr\Urr. 1:-;1·,, 2.1::1 $699 BILL YATES VOLKSW AGEN ,_.,_.,:! \'.1llr Roarl ~.1n ,J,r.111 C.op1,1rano ~.1"0. JSf~l 1•1t-1,1 I \!~.?"~! 'fil \ln•1:;0 (''"I, (,1-.:-.:I coixJ. Or,~ '"1 •k ~ ,1 • ' ~-((i::: -1;1-c,-.,,-.11r·l;,,,-.1 rr:-.,-11~-..,-,-,,·_ I I'"" ;..,., ,j, 1.1 i;:rar_ :\lake 1111, r 1.i I 1r17·, CORVftTE 1 w~, f( 11:\ I·. rr ~\Gm, ··111!1 h 1:. II l!·•U'I~\;:: \June~ l '1'' ! , 111•io·1.. 1'r1•fcct '' l\•111"'11 tl1~\ lil ... lf$~ !(, ( •1111• I .\Ir f:ral rl\•11n .'>f,-: lllu. 1 "I ('.,n1un Dr 1"1 f.' I)(\ I 'l·'·li1 l!lf~'l11\\'f· 1r1 .. -=-1·l7t:'Ji:, hn I "•d 11··111~. 11\1/f\f I ~ •1 ' , , • DAILY PILOT 4J [ AulosbW. }! ~I ~ Autot I~~· l~~~I I§! l~·"·_·"'_"'·~l§J I .,,,.,.... l§l I· ·"0·"'~· ~~~ ..___•"'_'"'_""__,J§ll ~ _'"'_'""""~!~! ~ _.,.._.,~_"'·~!§] [ " ~ le • .......... Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autoa, UHd l~,~C~O:::-:::-UG~A~R~-l---:M-.E~R~C~U~RY..,.....-m MUSTANG Autos, Used 990 ~~ m~~ m~~ m~~ m~~ OLDSMOBILE l-o.,..L'-D-:-S"'M.._O.B-1-LE--l•--,p'""o..,.NT""l'""A...,.C-PONTIAC- '70 COUGAR XR7 1'70 MARQUIS CPE. SHOWROOM TYPE or CAR . ll,OOJ MlLES V8, automa~1c, air corxl., Attractive medium turquolM pc.wer steering, radio, heat-1 . . . er, vinyl roof. (3LM1441 m 1r f1n1.th with white Inter. $3299 lor &: landau rool, immacu- late? Premium equipped BILL y ATES '"10· !nm., om-Im '''""' radio heater power 1tet-r· VOLKSWAGEN Ing, P.wu , ....... ''"""' 32852 Va.lie Road air COnd. Truly apotle1s .\ San Juan Capiltrano !lice M¥' 4 neu new tires, 837-4800/493-4511/$2261 etc. ~ I< uk for demon. 1,,18"""c"o"'u"'G-:AR-;;-;3'l;;;2"'=v~. -=rac:-c-:,;:-ir,I 1tration. 1916 BEQ>. John- IO!I & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., p/dlac brakes, PIS, vinyl Costa P..Jesa. 5'10·5630. $its '65 Mustan& HT. VB, R., ii,. automatic, facJory air colld., P.S. OVK 775 DEAN LEWIS 646.9303 l!W6 Harbor Bl., Cos.a Mesa '65 t.1usllil1g 2-dr, VS, 4-spd, (No. RZf4g'll $599, $10 delivers on approved ~It. See at 1945 Harbor Blvd, C.M. '68 t.fUSTANG :1+2, p/1, p/b, alr<and. $Ui00. Call MUSTANG '69 MUSTANG CONY. Auto., Radio A Heater, Pow. er Steerln1. Lie. XUF 3" $1699 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 VaUe Road San Juan Caplltram 837-4800/4iHSll/499-226l OLDSMOBILE -------· 1 · • P1-=-------~ ~~G~'!!;,..~;: 0;0~~~ '70 FIREBIRil ESPIRIT Cutlau Capt, bla ena:, r/h, -mol•le .•-•-, • "·-·I•· air. JS&'I. Penl.nsula Point: ....., -• =• • .... 4 &peed, V8, air cond., poWf'r rACTORY f71..19lf · .2480 Harbor Blvd. steerin.a;, rally croup, A~AI A1R CONDmONINC . at falr Dr. FM, wide ova'1 with mas Luxurtous, 4-0r. sedan w/ i'L YMOUTH Costa Mesa 546--1017 whttl5. t727 OQI) tull power, vinyl top, till Open 7 days a w~k $2999 whttl. all dlx. opt~no. '66 BARRACUDA 8 30 AM to 9 00 PM BILL YA TES (VOF25-IL $1666 SACRJFICE '70 """'· Stn VOLKSWAGEN ~utomatic, air c:ond,, r1u:Uo, Wan. 5 mo old, "9&n, Ve~ _ .._1_. ~v..,. _ beater. OtYM 118) tura 400, Afr, f\lll pwr, N1--..u u.>1:>1 ""'Ill $495 Radio, Lua: rack, Auto. Pvt San Juan Capistrano GN'nl-,.f, pty. 13071 Re{! Hill, Tu.ttln, 32852 Valle Road • Olds. '67 Luxury "98" ' .. ~~~~ ~ ~ aft5pm,all4Q'w-RAMBLER '69 Old1. 442 2 Dr. H. T. AUWOAIZ[D DlAL[A noo liarbor Blvd. &tS-0466 '69 LcMans 2 DR HT, Jm. -------- 540-2585. 1---------1 • ., MUSTANG, VB, Xlht ONE OWNER 11.000 Ml. 2800 HARBOR BL.. 1''1<l:-cP~L7.Y~Roo~d~ru-n-..,-,--""ig"3·,I mac. vln. d, AT, PIS, '67 RAMBLER WAGON ''1 COUGAR 289, 3 speed, oond, Lota of extras, Pvt Beautiful silver mi!t llnlah COSTA MESA PIB, T/G, AM , I a fl e tl k M ,_ __ . R11.. f"'~t 1-;;-;;;;;;;;;;f,;tt;;;cl;"'Vs:l~p~ty~, ~""'."''.'.'~':'.'"~l.~-~~7 = wt I b burgund)' inlerk>t. s.J0..9100 Open Sw!day t-spd, AM/FM radio, rna&s Ma&•. air. SJ095. $7-4686, ::,:: 8'1ow Bl•• Book. MUSTAN~ a c · eciuu.ic......, per"" ·('66 t.1ustang fastback VS new lire1. Aft S pm. &K--0114 Automatic, power s!ttring, .f96-5388 + ' ' '70 r..tach I 351, P/S, P/B, Equipped with &Uttl tnu\I., e • '69 COUGAR. 23,COO mi's, of~~.' ~°;;3 $1?50. best Auto, Air, O!h!r options. rlllo, hUter, power itetr· OLDS '67 Cutlus Supl'f!mel ..!...,,,,,~~-~~~--ili·6757iGil'TflO[,'jAG,1i;,.i:i1]toiO,;r111i2959', radio, hea5''9''9'9WBJ 952) 541-2373 alt 6 pm &: wknds Ina:. power brakes, power ,,..h 1 v • / lb RIH '69 Sport Suburban ... , ... , ,. to I 1 ?Ylr, air, Auto, $2495. Pvt '66 MUSTANG _ Air cond, vunv , -o, p I, P . • "..., -ce apprec a e, pty, 675--0669 auto, P/S, .........., cond. '66 Mustani, orig. owner, Windows, air cond. U )'OU New wide tread belted llrer. 9 Pass. \Vagon. Alr oond. Must sell, owner in Vit>I BILL YATES 6"""' New brkl, runs xln't. $995 are ha.rd to please, don't Good cone!. $1200 or best Ne .. tires. $2395. 675-7689 Nam. M9-00M'.> FALCON 673.2460 or bst ofr. 613-1684 ~!:!Is fl~ c~~a:: offer. SlJ.-5507, m-3.598 i '66 SUBURBAN wagon, '64 GRAND Pm:, 241r, HT, VOLKSWAGEN '70 Bos1 302 Futback. 1968 t.rusrANG • 22,000 mi. n l.i n, ~.68~0~L~D~S ~cu~u.,.-~...,,,~~H~Tc. I A/C plus a.II extras. Sharp xtras, f1nt rond. $500. Pvt 32852 Valle Road RAMBLER '53 Rambler 2 dr. 327 ~. ln. 3 1pd. Floor lhUt. I overdrive. 4:11 rearend • wide ova.la wirh mags. FM radio wlth tape dt!ck. $800 or Best offer. S4S..s359 aft 5 PM. '63 AMERICAN STN \VGN $300 or Best oller talu~s. • 646-4901 • ,: T-BIRD '64' THUNDERBIRD Convertible. Full power, {F~1H 9711 $795 ~~ 2100 Harbor Blvd. e '55 '!·BIRD lN ORIGINAL COND, $1295. * MZ..7056 aft 6pm It VALIANT l~ r1.1199,,,, NStation w8"°, .... n P/S.J>fB.R/H. Like new. $1175. BJ., Costa Mesa, 540-SliJO Air, PIS. n,ooo ml, r&h, Bf'~: offer. * 644--0183• Pty: f>4&-4ID San Juan Capistrano _,.,. I ewport ~u., tmrnaculate!I 6t6-6980 *Call 673-5621 * '64 Old1 Cutla.ls V-8 Clean-Sl!t50. 646-2305 NO rnattl!r wtat it U:, )'0\1 '68 BonnevUle lfl'K Landeu-&tt-4800/49J..45Wa-tm 'I' 'ta Valiant. Auto. trarui. 59,000 CM Space <11. Ua1/y Pilot Want Ads have The "Yellow Paires" of auto, r/h, tach. $!50 -'--'--'--------1 c.n aeU lt with a DAILY a.lr, fUll power. $2100. Day DAlLY PILOT for action! ml. One owner. Extra good FIREBIRD bargalrui galore. classified . , , 642-5678 Call 84&-ll98. For best resulta! 6G-5678 PILOT WANT AD! 6(2...f.678 644-3311; eves &.l3-87M Call 642-5678 & Save! cond $3.50. 646-1968 ~~~~---~=<-~-~--~~~ * .69 "400," AUTO. Disc Aut~s, ~ew 980 Auto1, New 980 Autos, hew 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New brakes. P/S. Vinyl lop. AM/F?-1 stereo. Sport wbHls. 151.f mi's, Prrf~t. fol'Cl!'d to sell. $2600 or best offer. 557-7900, 642--&45 FORD '66 Ranch Wagon Automatic, power irteertn&, {~JOOJ). $999 BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. Cout Hwy. Laguna Beach 5'46-4051 I 494-9771 Fo•d '70 LTD 4 Dr. Sed. Excellent local trade. Beau· t1tu.I dark ivy metalllc fin. !sh with matching landai:i root. Ivy gold interior. Equipped with auto, trans., radk>, heater, power steer., power brakes. factory air, etc. Shows excellent care. (375CQS) Priced to sell. Johnt0n I: Son, 2626 Harbor BL, Cos1a Mesa. 540.5630 '65 LTD MUST SEU.. T·Blrd Motor, 57,500 mi., 2 dr. hardtop, all power exc. wind., tac air, auro. transm., AM-F'MI n.dio, radial ply, clean, xlnt cond., 1 owner. Asking $900, S220 below current Blue Book. Make a.n offer. Call 644-0GOS Eves, weekend. • '67 COUNTRY SQUIRE Excellent condition, 390 CJD enc. only 51,000 ml. PS/PB, auto lransmission, new air cond!Uonina;, n e w wide tires, $1950. * 557·3lll * 1965 l'ord G•1 SOOXL Buckel seats, power steertn1, powtr brakes, automatic !rans., 46,000 orlr. miles. Won'I last Jong. NMV 268. $775. Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa. 540-0630. '64 Ford Ga1axie 500 2 Door Hardtop. Radio, heat· er, pov.·er s!eering, power brakes, factory air, auioma- tlc trans. $645. ORB 512. Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa ?>1esa. 54().-5630 I96f COUNTRY SQUIRE: Very c!ean 42.000 ml. Br11.nd new Ure• & battery. $1450 • ....,,,,. GOLD 1968 Bronco, 20,000 actual mi. All Xlras 64~102 art 7 pm '58 RANOlERO, xiii! cond., overdrive, 2 way radio, stereo, ~ orT 536-3021 lJTU MAVERICK. n&H, Lll.n· dau top. Priv. Party. $ll!OO. ~' '61 FORD Squire Wagon Clean, Runs Cood. $150. 545-2%15. '81 roRD 3 spd owrdr, Hunt, Pllit•· Seit otr th1I wknd.Orlg.ownr. &H-6094 '71 Ford Van, 6000 ml'•, £200, Air. V8, Custm inter., Loaded $3895. 675-8794 •gs Custom 500 2 Dr. 6 cyl. Rm. 2 new tires: $450. 646-4003 JEEP '70 Bronco, fully equipped, 9,000 mi's xln't cond, must .elL Pvt ~ty. ~2568 au 3. MERCURY 1969 M•rcury Monftllo ATI'RACTIVE A ECO NO Ml CAL l.Jrht Ivy finish wllh gold In-. terlor equipped with auto· malic trans., radio, heater, power sterring. elc:. Priced for quic:k sale. $1675. YCN· 380. John50n .tr Son, 2628 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 540-"630. '88 MERCURY Colony Park wqon -Full pwr, !Ur, luutre rack, hew tire•. X1nt cond. Must 81!'11. Dayt 645--0310; Eve1 49$-UJG '68 Mercury Montclair 2-dr hrdtp, Atr eond, Lo11.de:d, No ~uonabl11 nUer n-fu~d 897-6413 1 THE IS ''ULTIMATE· HERE CAT'' NOW The Car Everyone's Been Waiting For! WE LEASE CARS ALL MAKES & MODELS EXAMPLE: NEW 1971 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DR. H.T. Fully e~uipped including V8 1n9in11 1utomat1c, radio, haeter, power 1t••r· Ing & brekes, fectory air conditioning, white wall1, tinted 9l•11. OPEN .. ENO .. LEASE \!IAUlR~ - PER MO. 1969 Cougar XR7 VI , eutom•tic, AM-FM •f•,•o r1dio, ' power steering & btak•1, wire wheel c0Yet1, a lt cond., New premium tlr•1, over 50 r. of factory warrenty r•• ma ining. (812AGB J s2995 1989 Jaguar XKE Ceupe. 4 1p11cl trensmlsslon, r1dio e nd heater, elr conditioning, white w•ll fires, wlr• wh11l1, Ju1t be1utl- lul. IXXOl60 1 s3795 PRESTIGE CARS AT SENSIBLE PRICES 1969 Buick Electra Cu1tom ~ Door h•rdtop. Full power, factory •Ir, vinyl roof, f•ctory w1r· ranty rem1inln9. IYCL257) s3595 1970 Riviera Fwll power equipm1nt plut fectory 1lr conditioning, AM-FM 1t1r10 r•· dlo, vinyl roof. A gorg•ous cer. l794AF81 BUICK,1N COSTA MESA BVICK·OPEL·JAGVAR 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa "SPECIALIZING IN 9UALITY" 5 4 8-7 7 6 5 WE LEASE CARS ' • Sport W1gon. 3 111ater. V8, 1utoma- t ic, redio, h11ater, power 1t••rin9, factory e ir conditionin9, roof rack, r1dial ply tir••· Locally own•d car. IYMMOS21 s3195 1087 Jaguar XKE 2 + 2. Autometlc tren1mi11ion, r•· d lo end heater. Wlra wh11fl. You won't f ind on• nic:er then thi1. IZQB. 3441 s3195 I • ' !· I' -. • ' Business Is Good At Theodore Robi11s Ford! The Reasma ~s Si111ple . PRE-SEASON CAMPER SALE NEW '71 ALL NEW 1970 CAMPERS NOW SLASHED TO . ' MUSTANG N4~8.M!~!!r~ inter., ronvPni· -SAVE ence grp., pwr, steer., brakes, win- d0\\'5, air cond., tilt whl, Spt. deck, $90l 00 elec. defrost, Ahl·F?iot, consoll!, ti.Rt. : glllS!i. (100059) ~ W-1tkr. $5559 Ollr Price $4651 NEW 2 DR. SPTS, ,•OOF 351 V-8, hi bkts., bit tires, A-T. P· &leer, P-discs, radio, dee:. grp., T-glass, \\'hi C\'rs. etc. (131869). \ $75 OYER FACTORY INVOICE ~i~ FORD NEW LTD 4 Dr. Brou9h. SAVE H.T. 429 VB, vinyl roof, cndso., \VS\V, vis. grp., P.S., dlx., str. whl., P-stnl., $1100 P-dr. locks, air, auto temp. control, AJ\f-F~1. P.W. etc. (l.287081 W-Stkr. $6041 Our Price $4941 NEW LTD 4 Dr. Brou9h. 400 V8, cruiso., \VS\V, \'is. grp., P.S., air, AJ\f /Fi\l, tinted glass, po .. ,,er v.·in· dOV.'S. (1 32276) THIS WEEKEND -ON LY-' ' BRAND NEW 1971 TORINOS 4 DOORS HARDTOPS .FASTBACKS 23 IN OVER TO CHO~:E $7 5 FACTORY INVOICE FROM plus fex I license NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD ON'S-NO ORDERS ~~~ T·BIRD NEW 2 DR. LANDAU SAVE 429 V8, A-T, P-S, .P.dlsct, vinyl top, bit. u .. , tilt'"""· p . .,..,., •U--auto $135200 temp. cntrl. R. wind. defioost, P-an- tenna. (10001(). W...U. $7371. Our Price $6025.54 NEW 2 DR. HDTP. Alr, Full po'A•er, tilt wh.l, A/T. Brougham lnt., W /W, radio, 429. VS. 1106435) ' SAVE $1201 60 NEW 1971 '1919· I W-1tkr. $3911.25 0... Price $3334.74 SAVE $57651 W-Stkr. $5271 Our Price $4313.92 N!.! .~.T!.~!.~;. .. ~~!!.· ..• SAVE W-stkr. $'351.50 Our Price $5157 ' "'"' 9111Jp,..i ,.,Jtll ''" c.c. ~'·· "'"' ., ... , .. 1 ... N~ •. ~ .• ~!; .. ~.~~~~~~ .... SA VE bit "'"· Utt,,...,,_, A· T, A,.·Fl\I. con-' $750 I Iii solt". P-wlndo"-a, spl whl cvh~ T· Ill gl&SJ, etc. ( 182430) · W-stkr. $478-4)5 0... Price $4034.5' NEW MACH I SAVE 3.'51-4V, auto/tran~ .. rad., f'l\\'r. str., & disc brka, 11pU. Inter., wide ovals & $70100 more. (1000601 r W·stkr. $4449.00 Ovr Price $3748.00 ~;1w RANCHERO NEW RANCHERO SAVE Emwton contn>I .,, ...... "7X14 .,,... $68 388 AM radio. (119131). w ... kr $lHU2 o.r Price n112. 94 NEW RAliCHERO 500 SAVE 351 VS. cruilomatlc, vis. group. P.S .. pow" dbc ..... ,,,, ndio, tinL 11"" $888&3 H.O. 1usp. C1l5648J. W-stkr $421-4!06 Our Price $3395.43 ' \v)ndows, air, elec. defrost, AM-FJ\.1, ~7200 Vls. grp. W/W, Tint. glass, whl. cvrs. 1100017J W-stkr, $5267 Our Price $4295 NEW GALAXIE 500 2 Or. Hd. Tp. 400 V~, Vinyl rf., AIT, Pwr. Str. and brakes, air, radio, v.·hl. cvrs.. tint. glass, elec. de(ogger. . (00015) W..stkr. $4922 011r Price $399t . "·~f BRONCO . NEW BRONCO WAGO~ SAVI V8. Spt. Pkg., conv. grp., H.D. Radia-· to.-, aux. fuel tank. Stk. #0764 $67123 170012) .. W·•lkr. $4522.44 Our Price ~151.21 NEW BRONCO WAGON SAiiE VB. bucket 1ta., traction lock R-axle, · Ud. slip-front """ Spt. pkg.. aux. $70676 fu el tarik. radio, free running bubs. Stk. #1'20018014) · w0 stkr. $4610.22 Our Price $3'73.46 N•w ·2 Dr. HDTP. Brou9h. SAVE Full J>'VT., vinyl roof, air, A/T, Ult whl., pw.-. w;nd .. ""''· and brak.,, $120300. rad.lo, 429-VS. t374FJ . W_,,kr. $6561 Ow Price $5351 NEW 2 DR. LANDAU 429-VS, F'ull p\vr.. A/T, Af.f.fl\1. Bro'ugham int. T·glass, tilt \\'hi. Auto Temp., A.ir, 429.vs. ' W-stkr. $7378 Our l'rlca $5867 SAVE $1511 00 ~~ FI 00 PICKUP • NEW f.100 STYLESIDE SAVE P.U. 2•l0-6 cyl eng.. 3-spd, radio. . l!nt. glas:s, H.D. R~r Sp., gauges, clg. $643 97 l1;hter. Slk. •T63 (26.18). W-Stkr. SJJl.t7 Our Price S26t5.H N:,:_;!~ ~~0 ... C.~!~~ .. xi~ SA VE amp & oil gauges:, tool box. cruiso-$ 89 matic, opt. vacuum booster, A~f-F'M 953 1terco. P.S., G78xl5 tires, etc. (0651 ). . W0 1tkr $4150.20 Our Price $3896.31 4 ..... tNm11thde11, Metn & Rfru...-, ·~ "41,...,. .. , ... ......,... .,.,. ••• 1 ... 1e111 ....-..., w-•• ....., 11.clet ............. , ... --........ '"'· , ..... n. ... • 4 .......... ''"'· c11IYMll, •..Up lfthts, Or4« T....., A LITTLE BIGGER • • • •• --' FOR A LITTLE MORE MAVERl:CK 1 Dls--4 Dl5.-GIAllllS-¥-IS ~~~ F250 PICKUP NEW 1971 FORD f.250 " Camper s~ial. Sport custom cab, Crulse-o-matic transmission, · power s teering, pov.·er disc brakes, "360" VS. radio, extra gas tank. #16, motor •2158. let ell $41JJ.tl-lale $JIU .71 MUSTANG SALE CHEVY HARDTOP & WAGON SALE FORD-l TD -GALAXIE-TORINO -WAGON SALE 10 to ch&ose from. '65 thru '70 models. Coupes, hardtops, convertible and 2 + 2 Fastbacks. Soma with 4 tpaed1, also eir conditioning and automatic models with power steering. EXAMPLE: 197p' MUSTA.NG H.T. Lotd1d. VI, 1wto., 1'.S., RIH, ftciory 11r, wirrenly •••iltbl1. low 1111111. !ll21AVPI OUR PRICE $2796 '67 MUSTANG _H.T. Good niilcs. Radio, heater fftclory rqulppt.'d. (T\VA715J 196 '67 T-llRD ~.T. 2 door. V8. auto., R&lt, P-s t('('r\nf(-~('A ls .y.· induy.·~. alr. I UTCJ87) '6f lrnp•I• H.T. fXOCISfl I '6f M1 1ibw H.T. !I071S ll VI, •ufo .. R.I H, P.S., Air. '6t w1911n. Concown , \II, 111!0., RIH, P.S. YOUR CHOICE $2396 '69 CHEYy<l:ONCOURS WAGON vs. a.uto .. R&tJ, pwr. steering. . '62 e~!~~-9.~~5~;.w,!,~.'. $696 Clean car. (0KL736) ~------ '67 PLYMOUTH Spt. Fury 2 dr. H.T. VS, auto., Rl:H, P.S., vinyl roof. good miles. (WCHS90l '69 FALCON SED. 6 cyl., euto., H&lf, p:ood miles. IXSV7971 '64 e~~~.:~ :s°.R~.~jT;,, $696 1 o\\·ncr. (JOZ.129 • $1596tr-1-5l_1_9-70_F_O_R_D_C_U_ST_O_M_4 _D_O_O-RS-.1-. S..,l '69 LTD 2 DI. H.T. $2~96 VS, au~o., RUL f.S., ,.i.ny\ , roo r, air, waffitity ava.tl. . IZKH573) '70 TOYOTA CORONA Dix. 4 dr. R&I~. &uto., arunc. 10.000 mUq. (742AQY) Colo' 1eletlion, fully reconditioned, o;ood 111il 11, VI. •ulo., l'.S .. \.Ir. So111 1 w1r•clio1. Citv of Co1t1 Me11 le111 tfl11rn1, 11041l l ) $1796 { 104126) { 1041251 ( 105)241 ! 10412 71 OUR PRICE $1696 '--~~~~~~~~~---! Manr to chOOIO. from. '65 lllr• '70 Mod ell. Sport roofl, formah, 2 doot- & 4 door hordtOps & Mff•. FWI po1'er, •Ir condltiotd1t9. WarrantlH a'talloble. EX AMPLE : 1970 FORD LTD 2 dr. H.T. Good rnil•1, VI, 111111., P.S .. •&H, •inyl roof, 1ir. W•rr. •••ii. I IS2AGll OUR PRICE $2896 'H FORD COBRA $1896 'H DODGE CHARGER $1996 Spt. root. auto., R&H, RT. Fully eiuipped.. VS, P.S. CZDV707J auto., P.S., &H, air cond. IVZY8081 '67 COUGAR H.T. $1396 ''2 IAMILH WAGON VS, P.S .. auto., R&H. air. Classic. Radio, h('ater, Good n1iles. (ZLH999J 6 cyl .. very ""'rll cared for car. (XUP248) '67 DODGE $1196 ''4 CHEVY 1/, TON Polara 4 dr. H.T. VS, Pickup. 3 speed, auto., P.S., RAH. air, healer. (Cl6500JJ good miles. (0.106451 ... SALES Of.PT. I A~ lo 9 PM MON.fl! I A To 6 PM SAT I PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • HOURS 10 A Te 6 PM SUN 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI • • I 7 I.