HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-05 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY, APRIL 5, '1971
In $350~000 Drag Haul
• • • ..
Stars
Calley Case
Nixon Decision
'Unprecedented'
Historians may .argue for decades tbe
importance of Presideal Nixon's decision
:o intervene in the Calley conviction
review proctsses, a decision reached this
weekend at the Westem White House in
ian Clemente.
Already the Presi.denl's move lo
IC.l"Utinii.e successive levels or the review
~rocess bas been termed
'unprecedenled" by a top Nixon aide and
'inherently dlsftspectful to lhe rule of
tie Jaw," by former U.S. AttorAey Gen·
1ral Ramsey Clark.
Despite the ~iews of officials, the
lromised intervent i on in the
Torrid Weather
Drives Throngs
f o Area Beacl1es
Torrid inland temperatures and murky
nland smog drove nearly half a million
;ieaple to Orange Coast beaches over the
veekend but chilly ocean waters kept
nost folb beachbound and out of trouble.
It was the first big weekend of Ea.!ter
racaUon for rn o s t Orange County
itudents but troubles and congestion were
nosily limited to beaches and highways.
Newport Beach lifeguards estimated
he largest throngs with 150,000 visitors
1n Peninsula unds at Corona de! Mar
'leaches.
Hootington Beach guards figured they
1ad 100,IXXI 1k>ng their long shoreline
'lhile San Clemente logged 48,000 and
,aguna Beach, 30,000.
Surf along the ~tire Orange Coast was
1 wUh wave11 generaJly in the three to
r·foot range and water temperatures
cred in the high 50s. Both factors
• . itributed to keeping visitors ashore
md ho!~ down Ill< rescue loll.
Newport illeguards said they rescued
rT swJmmers from the lighl rip tides
running along the Newport beaches.
The Newport arrest count from the
i)()lice department was up slightly over
last year. In 1970 on Saturday. thert were
t2 juveniles and adults arrested and on
iunday there were 56. This year tbete
weN: 60 both days.
Of the arrests, police logged eight
IM>oldngs of per*>ns over 30 for drunken
;!riving. Officers could not explain the
IUlUSUatly large number of drunk dri~rs.
Police alao reparted a minor traffic
Jnarl in the parking lot at the Balboa
Pier. ''There were no direclion indicators
ii!' one-way l\gns, 1111 people were trying
lo go both directklnl al the same time.··
nm: ofri<:er reported.
With inland te.mperature1 forecast in
the high eia:hllt! •nd low nineties through !See CllOWDS, Pa1< I)
CTintroveraial My Lai m a s s a c re
CTinviction of Lt. William L. Calley, Jr.,
seemed today to have sated the public's
outrage. Letters telegrams and phone
calls to the President slackened in the
wake of the weekend announcement.
Aides described the President as being
"concerned" about the low morale among
Calley's fellow soldiers and anxious to
demonstrat' support for U.S. fighting
men in Vietnam. Nixon announced
Saturday he would personally intervene
in the case and make the final judgment
on Calley's punishment.
\Vhile Calley 's sentence may not be
made more harsh than the life
imprisooment dealt rum last Thursday by
a Court Martial panel of Army officers, it
may be lessened by successive stages of
the Military review process.
Jt is those follow-up stages of the case
that President Nixon has vowed to
scrutinize.
John D. Ehrlichman. a top Nixon aide,
said the President's action was being
taken under hi.s authority as commander
In chief of the nation 's armed forces.
Ordinarily the secretary of the Army
would handle a final review of the case.
The Army's highest legal officer, Maj .
Gen. Kenneth J. Hodson . Army judge
advocate general, said the President's
action was "unusual" but "aG we
understand It . he does not intend to
interfere with the normal review
channels."
Ehrlichman was reported at first to
have denied the Preaident'a decision was
"unprecedented" ooth1g that President
Abraham Lincoln had s I m i I a r I y
(Stt CALLEY. Page Zl
Louis Armstrong
Shows Slight
Improvement
NEW YORK !UPI) -Louis Armstrong
asked for solid food Sunday and w•s
reparted slia:hUy Improved.
11'le sineer-trumpeter, who is 70, has
been in Beth Israel Medical Center with
a heart condition since Man:h JS.
Armstrong "improved slightly during
the day," a hospital spokesman saJd late
Sunday.
''He has been asking for food. He ii
still being fed Intravenously."
Earltlr A~troog . was described "
"a>#ake and 'alel'l " He 11ked' his nurse
for a pi«t of palm when he learned it
was Palm Sunday,
Armstrong underwent 1 tracheotomy
list week 11nd 1 respirator waa needed
Friday lo aid hlJ bteall!lnf.
VOL. U, HO. fl, S SECTIONS, JI l"AGlll
• • • • • • • • •
Nixon for Tax
Big Ha-.I • lll Laguna
THE MAN WHO ARRESTED TIMOTHY LEARY IN LAGUNA SIZES UP NEWEST HAUL
Oet. Nell Purcell Looks Over Seized Drugs ind Manufacturing Equipment
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Harbour Sailor
Kilkd as Boat
Strikes Bridge
A 47-year-old Huntington Harbour man
was killed Sunday night when his
pleasure boat collided with a bridge
during. a channel cruise.
Police said Donald R. Stoneman, 16581
Peel Drive, was dead on arrival at
Hunti11gton lntercommunity H o 11 p I t a l
11ufferlrtg a· fatal head injury-apparently
sustained when bis head struck the
Humboldt Bridge.
Jnve.'Jtigators said Stoneman had been
demonstrating his Z.foot outboard Cl!bln
cruiser to friend1 visiting from Fresno
when lhe accident oceured around 9:30
p.m.
They said he had been showing 33-year·
old Mary Jane Pimentel how to pilot the
boat and was standing behind her when
the boat's wlndshleld hit the bridge and
stoneman fell backwards into the boat.
Mrs. Pimentel 1Uffered only 1 cut finger,
according to pollcc.
Police said the crew of four was unable
lo determine which bridge had been
'"" k b~t !!\eor<d lbe" boat back "' Stoneman s dock.
Officer Larry May said the vessel was
110Uthbound on Long Channel at an
apparent high rate of rpeed when it
collided with the unlighted bridge. Tlde
condlUons were high.
Trio Ai·rested in Laguna
In $350,000 Drug Haul
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of tll• 0.llY 1'11.t Stiff
Laguna Buch narcotics o r 11 c e r 1
Saturday arrested three young men on
drug charges after invt1tipton allegedly
uncovered one of the largest LSD hauls in
~lifoqtia. htrtory in a -Woodland Drive
home .
Authorities claim the confucated
narcotics, wilh 1 "street valUe" of 1bou\
$3l0,000, lncluded 130,000 tablela of LSD
contained in 23 jars, 11 pounds of hashish
and about five pound.I of marijuana.
The team of officen. under the
direction of veteran n 1rcotic1
tnvnllgator Sgt. Neil Purcell, took the
trio into euatody at 2f7 WOOdllnd Drive
aftf!r tt2 1weet odor of burnina
marijuana attracted them to l h e
residence.
The men were Identified u Tbomaa
JOMph Sach<e, 11, Of 30628 C.ile Qiucca,
San Juan C.plslrlllO, Gary Ray Allen, 23.
of Lona Beach, and Davld William
Godwin, 2!, ol LM Vegas.
~ulhorltlu ••kt U)e ltam 0 r
lntU'ligator... cunductlng n a r c o t I c s
aurveillance In the area, wenl to tht
addresl alter tr1cln.( the IOUrct of the
smoke, which was hanaina In the •Ir all
alon( Ille oborl 1trteL A barklnc do& In
J
front o( the home alerted the occupants
to the offi~rs' arrival and two of the
men allegedly attempted to flee through
a rear window , police said.
After capturing: the trio, the detectives
searched the home and a 11 e g e d I y
d~vered the hashish and LSD. Sgt.
PUrcell said the hashish was contained in
qu8rt cans with masking-tape labels
jdtntifying the contents as a health food.
The smoke which attrac\ed the o!fictn
to 'lhe house was pouring rrom the oven,
where Sgt. PurceO · said 'marijuana was
bl!tng burned to reduce the weed to a
highly concentrated oil.
In the garage of the home , police claim .
an· operaUOn' had' been 1et up to can the
hashish and marijuana for nationwide
dlitrlbution. Pur~ll said the. c&Mlng of
narcotics his come into uie recently in
order to eacape the sensitlYe noses of
dop trained to detect different types or
dror.· A IO found 1by offfccrs iD the 11rage or
the"home we\'e 17 new surfboard•. which
police are holdln& until ownerahtp can be
determined.
The three men art belnc held in
Orange County jall In lieu of $100,000 bail
each and wert to be arraigned today on
char1t1 of pououlon of. dangeroua drugs
will! Intent lo Mil.
Break
Hollywood
Oii Verge
Of Collapse
Hollywood leaders in San Clemente
urged President Nixon today to support
legh!Jation for • *1 percent tax break for
the movie industry which they said ls .in
• "state of collapae."
Jack ValenU, prtsldent of the Motion
Picture Aasoclatlon, told n e w s m e n
outside the Western White House prior to
• di.scussion with Nixon that the
Preident initiated the meeting to look
into the industry's economic slump.
"He was the first President who cared
about the industry and we're very
grateful," Valenti said.
"It comes at 1 crucial time. This
Industry ia in a atate of collapse and It
could be disfigured beyond restoration."
VaJenti a&id that the bill before
Congress haa bipartisan support and ii
also supported by 111 segments of the
Hollywood lnd111try.
The Prelldent met wlth Z4 industry
leaders to diJCQll ways to pu11 Hollywood
out of ita: unemployment slwnp.
The major mov:lemakera have been ln
the doldrum for aome time and
producers say the lncttase Jn fllma being
made abroad ii pa.rt or the problem.
Bealdel ValenU, actor CW!l1ton Hesto11,
president of 1 the Screen. ~Ct.ors Guild,
attended the meeting.
Heston Aid that 76 percent of his
union's 23,000 members· made less than
13.000 last year.
Coast
Weather
Fair s1ciea will! IODle mom1ng
low cloudineu ls forecast for the
coa!t.al area Tuesday,. with the
temperaturu dlppiftg back to 75
locally and 81 furlber·inland.
INSIDE Tf)DA Y
The ScMh. Coos& Choral oM
Light Opel'/J Auociction is back
in: burincs.r "'1Ch u rouaina ren·
dition of "'GVPI~ .. m San Clem-
ente, St• E"t&Ttainm.tnt,. Page
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f DAILY PILOT s Mondir. April S, 1971
From Page 1
BEACH CROWDS
Tlaeoday, poUce and JileguardJ In
Newport are preparing for more of the ......
In Huntington Beach, tht biggest
.c:n>wds lfrived SUnds.y with 28,000
,.Wing In the sand al the cJty beach,
another 21,000 at Huntington Statt Beach
'az>d 10,000 at Bolsa O\lca Slate Beach.
.. If the weather stay1 like It is now,
_we'll probably t:ave one of our better
Euter weeks," Max Bowman, uslltanl
director of the city's harbors and beaches
'deportmen~ aald thil morning.
Cly Ufeguards had to pull '19 swimmers
bul of tbe surf, and again Wued their ·warnmc to beach visitors to remember
they're not in shape for too much
nis was lhe first weekend of tht
summer season for state beaches which
are now open to midnight each wee.keod.
Water temperature for Saturday and
Sunday as 56 degrees while the air
temperature wu record@d at 71 degrees.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beach. about 10,000 for Bolsa
Chica and 9,000 at Huntington State
Beach.
VacaUoners bit the beaches in Laguna
,by thousands, Wt li!e1U1rd.s bad an
."ea,!f" weekend with chilly water
Jempe.ratures discouraging all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds or
)5,000 on the beaches both Saturday and
~Dday, with air temperatures at the
shoreline reaching a hlgb 81. Cool SD-
.degree water, howeYer, kept most of the
beachgoers up on the sand.
' Surf was low and there were no serious
fescue incidents. Forty.two beach Yisitors
i'equired minor first aid assistance from
tbe lifeguards an~ three lost cbildreo
Low Clouds, Fog
Set for Coa st
Mter Heat Wave
Lew clouds and fog during the night
and early morning hours are expected to
return the Orange Coast to the usual
spring weather pattern.
The "cool.it" forecast brings to an end
a record three-day heat waYe that
brought 90-degree temperatures to inland
prange Coun ty and highs from 7~ to SS.
degrees along tbe coast.
Westerly wind! from eight W li knot!:
.l.his afternoon will bring in the marine air
.that is expected to fog the area tonight.
Tuesday will be mostly sunny with
.highs along the coast between 70 and 80
itegrees until the westerly winds return
in the attemooa.
The National Weather Service predicts
·the cooling trend will continue for the
next few days as the nonnal spring
onshore now of marine air replaces the
.NeYada high pressure rystem that heated
Southern California over the weekend.
The northerly Santa Ana winds credit-
ed for bringing the high temperatures
will be replaced by the afternoon wester·
lies and become light aid Yariable for
the rest of tonight and Tuesday.
Illness Delays
Human Fly Act
De.spite a scheduled Tuesday headstand
20 stories above the sidewalk in Orange,
Benny Foi:, sole survJyor among the
famed Human Fly aerlaJlsts, has been
grounded.
Illness has rorctd cancellatioo. o( the
"1&.year-0ld circus performer's plan to
celebrate hlJ 60th year in show business
at 10 a.m. atop The City skyscraper.
No date has been set yet !or another
try by Fox, of 212 N. Beach Boulevaro,
Anaheim. according to Bill Purdy, of
The City's management branch.
Fox announced the daredevil trick on
a plank ei:tending eight feet cff the
side of the roof earlier this week.
The yeteran whose name is inscribed
al the Sarasota, Fla., Circus llall of
Fame remains actiYe, despite his age.
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• • •
were restored to thelr families.
San Clemente's shoreline was vi.sited
by 48,000 persons buklng u n d e r.
temperatures lo tbe low b:.
Only one major lncldtnt wu reported
by Wel\W'(ls IOI' the weekend, the
·grounding and total )Oss of a new 2.0-loot
sloop sailed by a Buena Part man.
Guards said the Logger 20 aloop
fetched up on Doheny State Park Beach
at about 6 p.m. S.turday during a brisk
eyeniog wind.
The vessel, was owned and sailed by
Daniel Hernandez:, U, who told reseuers
that when tbe wind picked up be dropped
his uUs and fired up 1 small outbo1rd
motor, but the tiny auxiliary could not
gain headway against the breeze.
The ooat grounded and 't\'as destroyed
by surf, guards said.
Other than the boating incident.
activity on the beaches patrolled by the
San Clemente guard service Wcls light.
OnJy a few dozen rescues were
recorded through the weekend. Tbe bulk
of the beach atteodaoct and rescues
occurred Sunday as the mercury on the
aandl rose to 82 degrees. Water readings
were • chilly 56 to 59 degrees.
Tribe Petitions
For Pit Rive r
Transf ormatio11
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbe Pit River
Indians today asked the f e d e r a I
gOYemment to allow them to tear down
the dams and power statk>n.-which they
say have transformed their sacred riYer
In Northern California Into "• series o(
stagnant, polluted artificial reservoirs."
Attorneys for the tribe petltiooed the
Federal Power Commission to refuse
renewal cf Pacific Gas & Electric
Company's licenses to operate tts dams
and related power raciliUes along the Pit
River which winds through the lribe·s
ancestral lands in Shasta County.
'Mle petition is the latest in a series of
attempts by the Indians to regain control
cf a Connecticut·siud parcel of land they
claim was taken Illegally from their tribe
during the gold rush.
The Indians contend ln the petition that
PG&E bas "transformed a once wild and
free-flowing stream into a series at
stagnant, polluted, oyerheated, silting,
artificial reservoirs and scarred the
length of the riYer with the heavy hand of
'progress'."
U.S. District Judge Robert Peckham
dismissed a suit In October which 10ught
the return of all ancestral land! to the Pit
River tribe.
From Page 1
CALLEY •.•
Intervened in a military conviction.
Ob!trvers noted that the Lincoln
precedent was diasimHar frorn the Calley
case In that there was no Unifonn Code
of Military Justice in rorce in Lincoln's
time.
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott or
PennsylYan.ia said today Nli:on'1 actions
in the caney case have been designed to
"lower the temperatures of public
reactlon."
Another GOP senator said U the public
really hails a conYicted mass murderer
as a hero, ''then we have changed
disastrously as a people."
Sen. Jacob K. Jayits (R·NY), told the
Senate the world will judge whether the
U.S. applied a double standard between
the war crimes trial at Nurenberg after
World War 11 and the Incidents at My
Lai.
Talks cf medals, marches and honors
for Lt. Calley "Is not patriotism but
antipatrlotism," JaYlts said.
Sen. Frank Church (D·ldaho), leadlnl'
capitol Hill doYe, said Sunday that Calley
should be treated neither as a scapegoat
nor a hero.
Church and Sen. John Sherman Cooper
(R-Ky.), said Calley must be subject to
the final judgment of the law.
Draft Lottery
Numbers for May
Ma y Hit 125
WASHINGTON (AP) -ri.fen holding
Random Sequence Numbers up to 125
may be drafted to meet the Pentagon 's
draft call for May, Selective Service
Director Curtis W. Tarr announced today.
During the first four months of this
year draft boards were calling men with
lottery numbers no higher than 100.
Tarr said it was necessary to raise this
ceiling to meet the May call for 15,000
men.
At the same time, Tarr authorized local
drafl boards to order pre.induction
physical examinations for men holding
numbers up to 175. The previous ceiling
was 150.
The draft has been taking men at a
lower rate this year than last year and
the top lottery number to be called in
May this year is 20 numben lower than
a year ago.
The Defense Department asked for
17,000 draftees In each of the first four
months or 1971, then dropped the call to
15,000 for May - a five-month total of
83,000.
In comparison, draft ca11s for the first
fiye monUts of 1970 totalled 84,500.
Standards OK'd
For W aterbeds
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A legWa!lve
committee, after being warned of lhe
dangers of leaks and short-circuiting
beaters, has endorsed application of state
safety standards to waterbed.
The bill's au t b or, AMemblyman
Robert Bad.ham (R·Newport Beach), told
the Assembly Commerce and Public
Utilities Committee that beds holding
200 gallons of water and weighing 2,<KX>
pounds haYe ruptured and their heating
elements abort-circuited.
Dadham, an apartment resident, ad·
ded: "If you live in a downstairs apart·
ment when the water escapes, well •.. "
The bill was forwarded to the assembly
ways and means committee for further
action.
Complaints b y U.S.
Retreating South Viets
Leave Live Ammunition
QUANG TR!, Vlelnam (AP) -Soulh
Vietnamese for«s pulling back alter
their retreat from Laos were leaYing
thousands of unsued artillery shells and
other ammunltion at bases in the
northwest corner of Sooth Vietnam until
U.S. military officials comp 1 a I ne d ,
informed llOUl'CeS said today.
The sources said tbal if t h e
ammunition had been abandoned at the
numerous allied support base$, the
enemy might haYe collected ll and used
it .
No estimate of Ute amount of
ammun!Uon ws1 available, but U.S.
officers In the field said It included
"thousands" of t~mm and lSSmm
howitzer shells, mortars and small arms
ammunition.
The ammunition was left at several
posltk>ns Yacated by SOuth Vlttnlmese
Army and Marine units. Some U.S.
officers told of artillery 5htlls left neatly
stacked In the gun pits.
"If you can imagine a gun posllion .all
set up to fire and pull out thr guM and
leavt. eYerythlng e\.Je behind -rounds,
fuM:s and lhe like -that la what lt
looked Uke ," 1aid one.
At a M;arine command post in the Khe
Sanh area , another officer said, the
Vietnamese opened hundreds Of bolM of
artillery shells, discarded tbe shells and
used the wooden boi:es filled with sand in
building bunkers and fighting positions.
Then they left it all behind as lhey pulled
oul, he said.
"We looked the area over and told
them It was a disgrace," said one U.S.
officer at Khe Sanh .
"Tht Vietnamese have been so careless
v.·ith ammunition that we haYe had to
clean It up before wt leaYe."
The complaint by U.S. officers in the
rield w1s nlayed through top American
commanders in Quang Tri to the
Vietnamese, and orders went out that the
ammunition was to be collected. Several
U.S. ofrlcers expressed the belief that
most ol all of it would have been
abandoned to the element.a and the
enemy if no complaint had been made.
Truck$ of the South Vittnamese lsl
lnfnntry Division were carry I n g
nmmunllion back along Route 9 today
toward Quang Tri. Ammunition which I~
not trucked out of the forward basei will
~ blown up by demolition crews,
military olflclals aald.
Nortl1 Viets
Still Sh ell
Fire Base 6
SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese
gunners shelled Fire Base 6 near the
Laolian border Monday and South
Vietnamese defenders struck back with a
helicopter assault three miles from the
outpost in the sixth consecutiYe day of
heavy fighting in the central highlands.
Casualities on both sides climbed,
including Americans killed, voounded and
missing.
.r.tilitary sources described the fighting
around Fire Base 6 as a ''localized
offensiYe" by North Vietnamese forces
designed to show that the South
Vietnamese offensive into Laos to cut the
Ho Chi 1'-tinh Trail had not affected
Hanoi's capability to attack at will.
"The communists are simply telling th;
world that the operation up nor'lb in LaOI
did not hurt them much," said Lt. C.ol.
Frank O. Miller, 43, of Maitland, Fla.,
commander of a U.S. Army aviation unit
supporting the South Vietnamese defense
of Fire Base 6.
County Ecology Move
A South Vietnamese communique said
1,817 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
have b~n killed in Fire Base 6 action
since last \Vednesday. South Vietnamese
losses were placed at 71 killed and 132
wounded. U.S. headquarlers said five
Americans had been killed and one
\Vounded. Another U.S. serviceman was
lis!ed as missing in action.
Creates U.S. Agency
An ecology moYement centel'1!d in llun·
tington Beach has drafted a National
Environmental Systems Act esta blishing
a new Federal Environmental Quality
Agency.
The model bill was prepared by a
group of EDICT (Ecology Development
and implementation Team) attorneys and
has gone out for review by leaders in
government end education.
"The sooner this bill moves, the sooner
people released from lhe SST and other
aerospace programs can get back to
enYironmental problem s," said Charles
L. Stoner. chairman of the 2,000.member
group headquartered at Golden \Vest
College.
1'-tost of Edict's membership, stretching
through nine states, i.s composed of
engineers, scientists and management
ei:perts from the aerospace industry.
Many have been affected by recent in-
dustry layoffs.
Members or the group are seeking
a national commitment on ecology equal
to the space program of the last decade.
Their proposed Congressional act cuts
across state and local political barriers
and approaches environmental problems
on a coordinated major scale not yet
attempted, according to Stone.
In design It was patterned after the
Federal Highway Act of 1956 and the
act setting up the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA).
Stone said the act Is a definite master
plan of attack on enYironmentaJ problems
under a single management
The agency will also establish en-
Yirorunental policy for Federal programs,
enYlronmental law enforcement, public
information, community action coordina·
lion, and act at as catalyst for priYate
enterprise projects.
The proposed act creates a dedicated
"public trust fund" to be financed on
a "wer pay" basis similar to the
Priests Ask Option
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Oplional
celibacy for Roman Catholic Priests was
approved nearly unanimously at a
symposium of 500-<:lergy and lay leaders
from the San Franclsco Archdiocese.
Ladles
highway system which receives Federal
taxes on gasoline.
Specific taxes named by the model
act are taxes en corporate utilities
related to the user's size and energy
consumption, a gasoline tax related lo
air pollution and traffic congestion pro.
blems, and a Federal sales tax on con·
sumer products which degrade the en·
vironment.
The agency would . also prevent to
Congress other taxing proposab to aid
e n y i r o n m e n t a I reeonstruction and
enhancement.
3rd Mall Okayed
At Santa Ana
Civic Center
Plans for a third mall in the Orange
C.ounty.Santa Ana Civic center complex
tlaYe been approved by the Civic Center
Commission.
Estimated cost or the Plaza of the
Fountains, including an lOS.car un·
derground parking area is $655,000. Loca·
tion is south of 6th Street, between
Parton and Garnsey streets.
Surrounding the new plaza will be
the law library building, now under con-
struction, the federal and state buildings.
Architect for mall and the buildings
is William Blurock of C.orona del Mar.
Blurock said plans for the two struc-
tures will be completed by August.
Estimated cost of the nine·story, 300,000
square fool federal building is $10.S
million and for the smaller state building
$4.2 million.
An unusual feature or the federal
building v.·ill be a requirement recenUy
added by authorities because of the fre-
quent attacks on federal buildings -
rolling steel gates and shutters for the
lower Doors.
Blurock said a he\istop might be in·
stalled on the top or the building.
No federa l money has been a~
propriated for the structure a n d
authorities are considering building it
on a lease basis as is done with post
office construction.
SOLITAIRE*
''T119 ... , .i-• dlnMllMll h • '°°' , .... ._, " .....
.,. .. bey ft ,.. ...... n. di •·
111eff yee Hy fNM H h •
potll l•-'-et 1'ec•I M -
t l ClfG .... It ta approlM fff
410% te IO•J\ men tha1 yo1
paid for It.
8tt11.1111"1 'IO pl. di.mond
Top d .,11'11, nit & <OIOr -
4 pron; mod1rn 1111111)
mountl"9 I~ 1•1( wt.11t
Vold,
$550
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aw.lrt .... La-, I l...tte
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Elsewhere in the central highlands
Ione. 18 Americans "'ere killed and 82
wounded in fighting southeast o( Fire
Base 6 in coastal Binb Dinh Provlncti
where U.S. units bad beenmoYed to free
South Vietnamese infantrymen for tht
Fire Base 6 combat. The Sinh Dinh
action was in an area bordering a North
Vietnamese supply base. Sp or ad i C'
fighting \lo'as reported t.1onday fol!owlng a
thr~.<fay battle.
A correspondent said Sooth Vietnamese
reinforcements jumped from U.S. Army
helicopters at land ing areas cut out of
dense jungles Monday to attack North
Vietnamese infantrymen three miles
from Fire Base 6.
North Vietnamese troops in a force ot
4,()()().5,000 operating nn the Fire Base 6
area overran the outpost last Wednesday,
killing four Americans. Two U.S. Army
UHI Huey helicopters were shot down
during flights to eYacuate s outh
Vietnamese defenders, and one crewman
was killed and one wounded.
South Vietnamese forces recaptured
the hilltop base on Thursday but
Communist gunners haYe subjected It 10
pressures eyer since. A barrage of 82mm
mo~r shells struck the outpost t.1onday
mornmg.
Three North Vietnamese defectors
from the 66th Regiment walked into Fire
Base 6 Monday. 011e was quoted a
saying that his battalion of 500-fiOO men
had suffered 100 percent casualties from
a recent strike by U.S. Air Force BS2
Stratofortresses. Another said his
battalion suffered 75 percent casualties in
attacks on the base.
~iiller said the North Vietnamese for
political and psychological rea;ons,
attacked the outpost to "show that they
are being supplied without any trouble"
despite the 45-<lay South Vietnamese of-
fensive against the Ho Chi Minh Trail Jn
Laos. He said the Communists hope to
establish that the objective of the Lao!
campaign to cut the supply li11e "was
not met."
1925 LA Skyscraper
Will Be Demolished
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Demolition of
the city's oldest skyscraper begins today
to make way for the new 62·story
headquarters of United California Bank.
The Wilsh(re·Hope Building, built In
1925 al a cos! of S2 million will be tom
down lo be replaced by the tallest
building west of Chicago.
DIAMOND*
RING *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
I lllt. 1m11!er tMll 1 fl.
('11100 pti.I St! Iii HK
hM~V yt!IOW 0011:1 ,,_,.
illq -trnatl inclv>lon.
$690
DIAMOND GUARANTEE
When you buy a diamond from us we
wil l guarant .. that diamond to apprals•
at ~/. MOR E then you p.id for it o!'
your money beck. Can you do as w•ll
•ls•wher•? COMPARE.
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SELL, TRADE COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
1Q38 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lotw"" Harbor & Broadway
I' I
I
I
I
I I
,.
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1
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•
Hontiugto~ Beaeh '.l'oday'• .Flnal
N.Y. St.eeks EDITION
VOL. 64, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS 38 PAGES ORANGE COU '
CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL i. 19;1 JEN CENTS
McCracl{en Seen a·s Next Mayor of Huntington
By ALAN DffiKIN
OI lllt D1ltt "1191 lllH
George McCracken, entering his fourth
year as a member of the Huntington
Beach City Council, appeared a good bel
to<tay as lhe clly's nut mayor.
The annual speculation on who will get
th~ nod from fellow council members
warmed up with the vote just two weeks
away. Cowicilmen are expected to make
County
Beaches
Jammed
T.orrid Inland temperatures and murky
inland smog drove nearly haU a million
people to Orange Coast beaches over the
weekend but chilly ocean waters kept
most folks beachbound and out of trouble.
ll was the first big weekend of Easter
vacation for 0m o st Orange County
1tudents but troubles and congestion were
mostly limited to beaches and higbways.
Newport Beach lifeguards estimated
the largest throngs with 150,000 visitors
<ln Peninsula sands at Corona del Mar
beaches.
lfuntington Beach guards figured they
had 100,000 along their long shoreline
while San Clemente logged 48,000 and
Laguna Beach. 30,000.
Surf along the entire Orange Coast was
low with waves generally in the three to
four-foot range and water temperatures
hovered in the high 50s. Both factors
contributed to keeping visitors ashore
and holding down the rescue toll,
Newport lifeguarda said they rescued
!7 swtmmera from the light i1p tides
running along the Newport beaches.
The Newport arrest count from the
police department was up slightly over
last year. In 1970 on Saturday, there were
32 juveniles and adults arrested and on
Sunday there were 56. This year there
were 60 both days.
Of the errests, police logged eight
bookings of persons over 30 for drunken
driving. Officers could not explain the
unusually large number of drunk drivers.
Police also reported a minor traffic
snarl in the parking lot at the Balboa
Pier. ''There were no direction indicatorfl
or one.way signs, so people were trying
to go both directions at the 5'me time,"
one officer reported.
With inland temperatures forecast in
the high eighties and low nineties through
Tuesday, police and lifeguards in
Newport a.re preparing for more of the
1ame.
In Huntington Beach, the biggest
cro~'ds arrived Sunday with 28,000
settling in the sand at the city beach.
another 21,000 at Huntington State Beach
and 10,000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach .
"If the weather stays like it is now,
we'll probably have one of our better
Easter weeks," Max Bowman, assistant
director of the city's harbors and beaches
department. said this morning.
City lifeguards had to pull 79 swimmers
out of the surf, and again issued their
warning to beach visitors to remember
thc:y're not in shape for too much
'This was the first weekend of the
summer season for state beaches which
are now open to midnight each weekend.
Wi!ter temperature for Saturday and
Sunday as 56 degrees while the air
temperature was recorded at 72 degrees.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beach, about 10,000 for Bolsa
Chica and 1,000 at Huntington State
Beach.
VacatJoner1 bit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands, but llfeeuards had an
"easy" weekend with chilly water
(See CROWDS, Pqe 2)
Now, for My
Next Number .•
TOKYO (UPJ) -Michiji Tso, a
21-year-old m1ndolin p I ayer.
escaped with minor i n j u r i e 1
Monday night when he fell from lhe
roof of a nine-story buildi11g aDd
plunged through the tin roof of a
restaurant onto a bed occupied by
two sleeping women.
The women wf!:re not hurl and
called pcllce who rush~ l!O to a
hosplta l whtre it was discovered tie
suffered 'only slight head and leg
Injuries. The two women passed
out from shock
PQ\ice gaid Jso had p\ayf!:d al a
wedding party earlier In the
evening and afterward stopped off
at a bar with friends. He left "lo
gel some air," rambled down to
Yuracucho Street 11nd took an
tltvator to the roof of a buildnng.
11t sl8rted to climb It.a pro ttclivt
fence but lost hll b1l1nce and fell
nine floors to tbt bed.
their choice in a secret ballot at the April
19 council .meeting.
Today M_cCracken appeared to have the
four votes.be will require, although those
who follqwed the drama ot last year's
maYQr making when Donald Shlp~y was
picked after a 3-J deadlock developed
betwee; Councilman Jack Green and
McCracken, will know the picture can
quickly change.
DEAD AT 77
R1ymond M. Elliott
Raymond Elliott.,
Beach Educator,
Services H~ld
Friends and relativeA of th• lat•
RS:ymond M. Elliott, a lhlnllngton Beach
educator for 34 yearll, this morning
mourned his passing In memorial
services at the First Christian Church.
Elliott, Tl, died last Thursday mornlnJ
after a brief period of hospitalir.at!On.
The former superintf!:ndent of the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District, known as "Silent Ray'' to his
close associates. held the city's top school
pMt for 12 years until hia retirement in
1gs1.
For sixteen years before that, he had
1erved as vice-principal or HuntJngton
Bea.ch High School , then the only hi1h
school in the district.
He began his career as a mathematics
teacher in 192.1, having taught in
Anaheim for one year before arriving in
Hunt.ington Beach during the 'oil boom of
the early 1920's.
Elliott graduated from Pomona College
in 1917 with Phi Beta Kappa honors.
While in college he participated in track,
football and men's choir.
Later. he served in the intelligence arm
of the American E•peditionary Force in
Siberia during World War I. Returning
from military service, he coached
football and worked in the business offic1
of the Univerllity of Hawaii.
Elliott also worked for the San
Francisco Chronicle for some time before
returning to Anaheim, his boyhood home,
to begin a career in teaching.
From 191.0 to 1924 when the Elliott
family jncreased by four cblldret), thf!:
young educator worked in the oil fields
during (he summers and commuted to
USC lo work toward a master's degree In
administration.
During the Depression yon Ellk>t.t
worked with Principal MCCieiian G.
Jones . In developing a series of
educational improvements and coon!f!:ling
llervicd for the students of Huntington
Beach.
While the war raged In Europe: during
the t940's he assumed the office of
principal and superintendent and worked
behind lbe scenes to help establish a new
college: ~ 1erve Orange County. That
college was Orange Coast College.
Expulsion of the HunUngton Beach
high school district from one small
campus to five campuses wu initiated
prior to EUiott's retirement.
The late educator madt extensive
statistical analyses or population growth
patterns in the llOlllhland and Wlll
devoted to reaearch of school fundln& and
the equaliution of wealth aoon.a ac:hool
dalrlCU ill Colifoml1.
One Slain in Clash
Of Motorcycle Clubs
WINTERHAVEN (UPI) -One man
was killed ind three others Injured
during the weekend when gunfire eropttd
among riv11l motorcycle gangs In this
1mall Colorado River border town.
1'he th<Xitings took pla« Saturday
ouukle a bar about iO yarda f r o m a
sheriff's ruMt.atJon.
,
Here .is an oullint of the reasoning that
seemingly make.s McCracken the favorite
at this stage:
He appears to have the votes of the
pre,,ent vice mayor\ Jerry Matney,
Green, Ted BarUett plus his own. Both
Green and Bartlett ~ believed to feel
that McCracken. who bas served a year
as vice mayor, deserves the honor on the
grounds of service.
Backing McCracken would be a switch
for Green who sought the role himself
last Arpil. Since then,_. Green has taken a
job as an air ·polluUOn coiltrol officer in
Palm Spring• and no kinJer could-iievole
the Ume to t11e·maynr'1 post.
Bartlett voted for McCracken last year
and Matney al• seems Ubly to 10 alooc
wtth tht move a.a.ltd McCracken
because be feel~ the n~ for 1 ctwige
and yet has said he does not want the
position himself.
The present mayor, Shipley, Is
convalescing from a case or infectious
hepatitus and probably will not be able to
attend the April J9 council meeting.
Cowlcllman .Al Cotn's VG\e: ta an
unlcoown factor at thit 1ta1e. but
observen point out that he already bas
served M'! term as the civic chief.
Mrs. Norma Gibbs, a former mayor o[
Seal Beach, would like the honor,
observen believe. but it may suit her
purposes more to wait wrtil the third or
fourth year of her term. She was elected
to her fint term IS I Huntington Beach
coondlman last AprU.
Calley Outrage Cooled
Intervention in War Case by Nixon Debated
Historians may argue for decades the
importance of President Nil'on's decision
to intervene in the Calley conviction
review processes, a .decision reached this
weekend at the Western White House in
San Clemente.
Already the President's move lo
scrutinize successlve levels of the review
process has been termed
"unprecedented" by a top Ni•on aide and
"inherently disrespectful to the rule of
the Jaw," by former U.S. Attorney Gen·
era! Ramsey Clark.
Draft Might
Call '125'
Despite the views of Officials, the
promised interve111:1on .in tbt
controversial My Lat m a s s a c re
convtctk>n Of Lt. William J... Calley, Jr.,
seemed today to hive aattcf the JiubUc'1
outrage. Letters telegrams and phone
cal.ls to the President slackened in the
wake of the weekend announcement.
Atdes described the Pre&ldent as be!ng
"concerned" about the low morale among
Calley's fellow soldiers and anxious to
demonstrate suppor:t for U.S. fighting
men In Vietnam., Nixon announced
Salw'day he would personally lntervf!:nt
in the case and make the fin•I judament
on Calley's punishment.
While Calley's sentence may not be
made more harsh than the life
imprison ment dealt him last Thursday by
a Court Martial panel of Army officers, it
ma)' be lessened by successive staces of.
the Military review process.
It ls those follow-up stages of the case
that President Nixon has vowed lo
scrutinize.
John D. Ehi'iiChman, a top Nixon aide,
Harbour Man Dies
said the President's action WU being
taken under hi! auUlority as commander
in chief of lhf!: nation's armed forcts.
Ordinarily the teeretary of the · Ar1111.
would handle a fin1I review of the caae.
The Army's highest ie1al officer, Maj.
Gen. Kenneth J. Hodson, Army judge
advocate general, 1ald the President'•
action was "unusual" but "as w1
understand It, he does not intend to
interfere with the normal review
(See CALLEY, P11e I)
Nixon Leaves
Southland
.I!'~<JY~. ~··EPlt : .AcAjde~ For Capitol
WASHINGTON 16Pl -Meo lloldlnC
Random stquence ~umber• up \0 125
may bf' drif\td to rnett the Penta«on'•
draft call !br May, &!lective .service
Director CUtUS W. Tarr announced today.
During tht fir11t four months of thl!
year dfaft boaidl were caliing men with
lottery numbtra no higher than 100.
Tarr said It wa·1 necessary to raise thi.!
ceiling to meet the May call for 15,000
men.
At the 11ame time, Tarr authorized local
draft boards to order pre-induction
physical examinations for men holding
numbers up to 175. The previous ceiling
was ISO.
Tut draft has been taking men at I
lower rate this year than last year and
the top lottery nwnber to be called in
May this year i8 20 numbers lower than
a year ago.
The ·Defense Department 1si:ed for
17,DOO dnftees in each of tbe first fiiar
months of 1971, then drop~d the call to
15,000 for May -a five-month total of
83,000.
In comparison, draft calls for the first
five months of 1970 totalled 84,500.
Guards Rescue
Five in Boat
Huntington Beach lifeguards pulled five
passengers oU a sinking boat Saturday to
keep It afloat
Once the pusenger-1 were removed and
taken in a liff!:guard boat to the municipal
pltr, Roy Watt, 36, Garden Grove, took
his 20-fool fiberglass beet safely back to
ll•wport Bud!.
City lifeguards said they reoelved 1
radio call for help from Watt about 4
p.m. When U..y eot to. him they found h~
boat tlllng on water oU of Bearh
Boulevard. '
The boat was overloaded, so all the
p11sseng1rs were remo~ and Watt took
it home alone, lileguardJ said.
II iq.~H\llltln(ton ~
wa1 killed Swid1y nlgltt
pleasure boat collided with. A bridge
dui:ing ·a channel cruise. .
Police said Donald R. Stoneman, 16$81
Peel Drive, was dead on arrival 1t
Huntington lntsreommunity H o s pi t a I
sufferin& a fatal head injury apparently
sustained when his head st.ruck the
Humboldt Bridge.
Investigator• said Stoneman had bf!:en
dj:monstratlng his 2.5-foot outboard cabin
cruiser to ff'ienda visiting from Fresno
when the accident occurred arowtd I:»
p.m.
.Ila,~~· had bfM-~ mai....,. )1ne f.tmf!:tltl !
boat ·Ind w11 atandint bohlad .her wbon
the boot '1 •wtndshJeld ·hlt the •hrldle Ind
Stoneman fell backwards into the boa't.
Mri. P.inlentel sulfered only a cut fin&er,
aceon:Ung to police.
Police said the crew of four lfas unable
to ·determine which briCl@:f!: had been
strUct but 1teend the bolt back to
Stonem.an's d0ck.
Officer Larry May said the vesllel was
southbound on Long Channel at an
apparent high rate of speed when It
collided with the unlighted brld1e. Tide
condiUOM were high.
County Ecology Move
Creates U.S. Agency
An ecology movement centered in Hun·
tinrton Beath has drafted a National
Environmental Syllleml Act establishin&
a new Federal Environmental Quality
Agency.
Tbt model bilJ Wa.!I prt:pared by a
group of EDICT (Ecology Development
and implementation Team) attorneys and
has gone out for rt:view by leaders in
covernment and education.
''The 900ner this bill moves, the sooner
people released from lhe SST and other
aerospace p~ams can cet back to
environmental problems.'" uid Charles
L. Stoner, chairman or the 2,000-member
group headquarter.cl 1t Golde!I West
College.
Most of Ediet11 membership, stretching
through nine states, ls composed · of
engineer•. lclentistl and manapment
experts from the aerospact indurtry.
Many have been affected by rectnt in-
•dustry layoffs.
Members of the group are seeking
a national commitment on ecology equal
to the space program of the last decade.
The.Ir proposed Congressional act cut.!
across state and local political barriers
and approaches environmental problem!
on a coordinated majo r llca le not yet
attempted, according to Stone.
Jn design It was patterned after the
Federal Highway Act of 1956 and the
act settil!S up the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA).
Stone said the act ia a definite muter
pl3fl of attack on environmental problems
under a single manage11J,ent.
The agency will alllO establish ert-
vironmental policy for Federal programs,
environmental law enforcement, public
information, commu,nlty action c:oordina-
tion, and 'act at a1 catalyst fQr private
enterprise project.a.
Harbour Fumes to Fade?
·City to Divert Sewage Away from Costly Homes
By RUDI lllEDZIELSlll
OI ._ Dlltr f>llM i"lt"
One of Huntington Harbour's moet
talked·aboul aubjects -the fumes
al"ged.Jy n.ltlnc OVtt e:rpemfVe homes
from the Sunset S,ach S.!ll!Uy Dlatricl
ir.otment plat -Ii upeded to
dluppe,lr Jolo thin. air today.
City olllclUsol4~mornln&1boy ire
coaoectln( Ibo ..,. ii.a ircni the ltttle
green hulldJni dll&llecllGoalelJ knowo 11
''tht honey pot" to <:tty nne,~dinc to a
sewage treatment plant Ill FOUDtain
Vallf!:y. .
Joinin& of tbt pipelintt, ..acordll1'. tti
City Eneineer Bill )ltrlc~ should
•liminolt the 1Uok ro~ bj l\IJnllnP!ll
KarbOut ..,........,. (,,.,;; "'"' lilt
wheo oble<llol\lble -. oupPooodly
began to dritl rrom tbe planl
Tbe .r• .ewage, city officials
axptained, will be carried across Warner
Avtm1e and coontcied to County Sanitary
Dlotrlct l iilJfS Vil ·IQ •leht.ipch ·pipe -1>!• 1o1 c1rryJne 2!0,000 piloOs per
dly. '.
From lhr.,, lt will be tal<to to the
larp• .... .,. tr.alment plant o<Br
l'aClflc C..S~ Highw1y and Bl'GCl!llu1'11
St_ In Fountain Vllley !or purllleatlon
an4 ulllmat.e: dtJcbarp into the ocean.
ltartge u~ it , CIOll th& el))' of
HunllngtOn Beach flf>5,000 -to buy
capacity rlghla Into Ibo District 11 lille•.
II/, tbe np1t1 I ouU11, will be Olr..t
tlj ~.d!Y 1'\11 .acqllrt~~ ~
tie JI\ piaJI! It ""'1\!r A>i!-llld
" I
PaclUc Clast Highway for purpoug of
buildin& a f1rf!: 1tatk>n.
Tbe land, accordtnc to Hartge, it
valued at SI2&,000 and the sunset Beach
sanitary DiJtrlct ha1 ••reed to pay b.ack
$30,000 ewer lb( neil five years, equallinc
the ·amount paid out for capacity riaJiLs.
Translorma,LJMI of the "honey pOt''
acre.q:t wU1 bt eri>enalve, according to
Hqe who Pointed out that tltmlMUon
of the. old _,. .. u1ng pond, gradlng
work a:nd lbe ln&tallatiOll of bulkbelds
would cost $100.llOO.
Rlctwd Harri.son. who had been
at:rvtoa: as wpertnteodent of the-
contrvtm:lal trta"l.nttnt. plant, said this
-~ ht bel1-• the·ad,oni wtll perlllt tS.. Ro/olEY POT, P ... II
"""" Wlrl Servlea
~t NR.t11· who today WH
he1dlni back t0'11ub!hgtoh -has made
no.moyf!: to speed niillt.ary review of the
Jiff si!ntenct given~ Lt William L. Callf!:y
Jr .. for mwdering ti c_ivlliaris at My .La.I,
al~es. said today.
They reported the chief executive, who
twice Ja'st w~ek intervened In the Calley
case, believed the review· llhould proceed
thr'ough normal c~Mels at jts deliberate
pace..
Al the samf!: time, the 10Urces !aid,
Nixon would have no objection il the
Pent.egon expedJted the process through
such mechanical acLs u providingi
addJtlonal stenographers to prepare the
full court·martlal record. It must be
cotnplet.ed beforf!: I.be case can reach the
fint level of review -by legal officers at
Ft. Behning, Ga., where Calley was tried.
The Chief Executive, sporting a new
tan, was to take off about noon aboard
Air Fqrce. One from El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station.
Beforf!: departing, he scheduled a
meeting with 24 movie industry leaders
.at the W~tern W}litf!: House on ways to
pull Hollywood out of its unemployment
slump.
The major movie makers havf!: been In
the doldrums for two decades and the
situation lll WO?"!Ming. The Increase-in
films being made aboard Is part of tbe
problem.
The President worked bard .and played
litUe during tUI l<klay IOjoum on the
shores of the .Pacific Ocean. He did get in
a brief Sunday ocean swlm. however,
despite the cool water.
Mostly, he spent the weekend polishing
his Vietnam radio-televiaion address lo
be . delivered from tbe White House
Wednesday. The 1peecll will ceoter on the
-t U.S. lrOop cu~ eipected to speed the
cwnnt rate of 12,500 men a month.
Coa•t
Weather
Fair Wes with 10me morning
low eloudlneu ts fortCUt for the
coastal area · Tut9day, with the
temperatur.. dipping hack to 7'
locally and as farther lnlond.
INSIDE TODAY
TM South Coast Choral and
Light OPfrn A11odotion. u bock
in. biuiness with a rousing rtr>
dition o/ '"GypAv'' m San CJtm-
en£e. Sft Enttrtainmtnt, Page
29. -••• _ ..
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2 DAIL 'f PILOT "
Candidates for Valley
Five candldolet ore teeklng the two
ochool board seats on the AprU 20 ballot In
the Fountain Valley School District. Neither
incumbent trustee is seeking re-election.
--. --+ Tb& Fountain Valley district covers most
of the city of Fountain Va11ey, plus a por-
tion ol Huntington Beach. Currently, it serves
more than 10,000 students in grades kinder·
garten throu1h eight. They ore housed In 13
district school&. ,
Following are the candidates' ans,vers
to questions posed by the Huntington Beach
League of \Vomen Voters. Three of the Foun·
tain Valley candidates give their vie•·s today.
The views o! the other two will .appear to-
morrow.
WANTS COMMUNICATION
Don1ld Hulett
DISTAFF CANDIDATE
Mrs. Miry Hix
SEES UNION LOOMING
Paul Hu1rd
Hopeful Hulett
Seeking Better
Communications
Candidate Hix
Seeks Improved
Conf ere nee Plans
Huard Opposes
Teacher Tenure,
Backs Unifying
Donald Hulett is .seeking his first term Mr.s..._ Mary C. Hix is a housewife Paul A. Huard Is seeking his first term
on the Fountain Valley school board. He seeking her first term on the Fountain on the Fountain Valley school board. He
l~ an air freight aale1 repretent&pve. }\e .,Valley scbool-~ard. She receotly .served is 1 profeuor of management at the
did not reply to the League el Women as chairman cl \he Citizens Committee University -0f Southern California.
Voters questionnaire. Instead, ll e Agaln1t an Airport at Mlle Square Park. Q. What program or policy cbanars
submitted the following statement to the Q. Wbat program or policy cbu1es would you 11.ke'r
DAILY Pll.oT. would yoa Uke? -Policies and mechanisms should be
'"The reason t am running Is to -"Develop a new report card that established through which the opinions of
establish a direct line of communication provides more specific information for the parent.! In the district would be made
between the community and 11chool1. Th.la parents. known directly to the board. This can be
will be by phone and per~nal Interview -Make a v a i I a b I e parent-teacher· achieved through d i s t r I bu t i n g
and also letter•. This will be conducted .student conferences ao that children and questionnaires or by telephone and
twice a month. I do not believe tllflt a parents can find out about student personal interviews. This process mwt
&ehool board member should make progrest at 1ebool. be under stric! board supervision to
major decisions an vote on ltlem accord. -Institute 1 reading clinic at each eliminate bia11 In the reporUng of results.
ing to his vew1 and opinions. I believe school for children with problems. -A visllaUon program In which at
that he should consult dlrtcUy with the -Set up procedure1 for teacher• t.o least one board member 1Uends each
communlly. After all, parents are the C<1ntact parents regularly -particularly school's PTA -0r PTO meetings on 1
ones th1t know what ia best for their own \\"hen there is a problem. bimonthly basis \\'Ould facilitate two-way
children. -Purchase more library books and conununicaUon between the board and
"l also think lhe Fountain Valley establish library collectlona al each parents.
district baa been an experimental or pilot school. -The board must eitabli.sh a more
district too long. I think it is Ume to stop -Start an annual report so that definitive system for the evaluation of
and evaluate all the programa we have, parents know what is happening in results in areas of student skills. This can
and to aee how good they are. instruction and finace . -0nly be achieved through a thorouglt
"AJ a parent and taxpayer, I think It is -Insist that new methods be worked -On system or testing which v.·ould establislt
time we have a direct say In how the constantly to individuall:r:e instruction by results on a comparative bash over tlme,
schools are run. After all, they are our administrators and teachers. within each school, within the entire children and we pay taxes for education B · gr m •he a h n w -egin a pro a · re e c e system and among our system and other so why shouldn't we are parents approve family receives information about the systems. Without clear quantitative.
-0r di!approve monies spent or new district. comparative measures of performance
programs. -Start a testing program in math ao established for each grade level, th• "If elected il is my lnlcntion to open that •-a h rs •--h re ach ch0Jd J Jn ...: c e •nuw w e e J s grading 1y1tem used to report pupil this dlrect line of communication to the h kill community." eac s · progress U meaningless and Indeed
I
OU.M•I COAll
DAILY PILOT
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-set up vocational programs for 7th deceptive.
and 8th grade :11tudenta th11t is realistic -The board must take an acUve role In
about jobs, preparation, and evaluating the prospects for and tbe
opportunities. con1equenct.1 of unionization or collective
-Require more academic preparation bargaining for master contracts by
In the middle school for our 7th and 8th teaching personntl in the district. The
grade students. disruption -0f the educational process
-Insist that the best evidence be given which has taken place elsewhere muat be
us on how our programs are avoided here by the joint, conxientloua
progressing." acUon of the board, the dlatrlct
Q. How do yoa feel about anlficalloa? administration and the tea$ing faculty.
''Unification ls very important tow. OUr Q. How do you feel abort. llDifkaUoof
high school students are being deprived "Unification is desirable booluse It because of a poor attitude on the part of other people in our 52 ct1uare mile area. en11ble1 any school district to achieve a ~, higher degree of coordkiat!Otl in We should either unify on our own school curriculum and teaching methodology.
district boundaries or work out a S-way ltowever, d1stricts created by unillcatlon unification. Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach vdth the Santa Ana should be u small as poulble to provide
River on one side and Newland or Beach for maxi mum parent-community
Boulevard on the other V.'ould be influence on the educational procw.
somewhat over 30,000 children after our While financial feasibility will be a major
area is built up. My Information is that determinant of district boundaries, I
these boundaries would provide 1 proper favor establishing these bounduies
tax b 8 s e for future costs. l w 0 u 1 d contiguous wllh other p o I i t I c a I
completely oppose anything larger than borderlines In order to 11chie\'e a unified
these boundaries," sense of community.
Q. How do you fetl about teacber Q, ~ow .. do you fed abont te1cber
t.eolffe? "The probelm l! not tenure but te11W"e . Tenure Is obsolete a~ d
removing irresponsible ind imcompetcnt unneeded. Tea<:hers ha\·e adequate Job
teachers from the clas~room. Tlf!'l?N.JJ...--pro;pttio~ b~ \'lrtUe of •tale and feder1l
to protect against firing wflen there art laws. This 1ssue '!'ay become moot if
no IJ'OWlds for it or opportunity fur 1 fair collecUve bargal.nmg and master
defense. What needs to be chlnged are
local school district procedures for
evaluating teachers. Evl!ry new and
experienced teacher ahould be observed
in the classroom and ev1luattd regularly
by the prtnetpal Also. st.tt law should be
more speclflc in describing procedurt!
and causeJ which will allow the board to
dismiss under expedient due process. I
am lntertStl!d in the continuous
Improvement of our chlldrtns learning
t11rough evaluation of each ttacher and
administrator."
Q. How woald a \'OU(hu sy1Um or
11t.ab!wlde property &111: atfett loc1I aohoel
finances! "Tht sl.1le·w1dt property ta1
I
"'ould be essenUal before a voucher
system could bt attempttd becall5e
school dlstr1cll are rtttlvlng dlffe/' nt
amount.! of monty to educate ch.lldrtn
now. Fountain V11ley has orie of the
!owe.st flnancial b1ses In Callfoml• and
would deUnllely bentflt from a atate-wlde
property tax. It would 1ppear that Ole.
voue.hcr 1y$tem is In conflict wilh lbe
14th Amt:ndment of the U.S. CorutltuUon
111 that It doem•t provide "equal
opportunity undt:r I.ht law". There wouJd
be llttle or no control of who teacbe1 or
their q'91liflc1Uorui."
f'ro• P•ge 1
CAIJ.EY •••
channels."
EhrUchman WU nported at lint lo
bove denied the Pmldtnl'a dedsion wu
•unpr-.led" "'tllti lh>t Pr<~dent
,\bralwn Llneolo hod s I m 11 .r I Y
in~ 1u • P'lil.ltary conviction.
Oblervtrt noted that the Lincoln
precedent Wllll d!Mlmllar from the Calley
cue ln that tllert wu no Unlform Code
of Military JwUce in force In Llncoln's
Ume. .
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvanl1 1ald today Ni.t.on's actions
in the Calley cue have been designed to
"lower the temperatures of public
reaction."
Another GOP senator said if the public
really halls a convicted mass murderer
as a hero, "then we have changed
disastrously u a people."
Sen. Jacob K. Javlts (R-NYJ, told the
Senate the work! will judge whether the
U.S. applied a double standard betwffil
the war crimes trial 1t Nurenberg after
World War II aod the incidents at My
Lal.
Talks or medals, marches and honors
for Lt. Calley "is not patriotism but
antlpatriollsm," Javlts said.
Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), leading
capitol Hill dove, said Sunday that Calley
should be treated neither as a scapegoat
nor a hero.
Church and Sen. John Sherman Cooper
(R-Ky.), aaid Calley must be subject to
the Hnal judgment of the law.
Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson JII (0.1!1. l,
said today that if Lt. Calley Jr. is guilty
o( 1tfy Lai crimes, others with respon si·
bilily for the slayings must also be
called to ·answer.
At a Capitol nev.·s conference,
Stevenson said that if Callev killed
''innocent \\'Omen and children, ·he must
pay the penalty." Later he said, •·11 he is
guilty, he must pay the penalty, and so
must others, in their consciences or in
the courts."
In the House, Rep. Ed Edmondson (O.
Okla.), introduced a r~lutlon calling -0n
Q>ngress to go -0n record favoring a full
pardon for Calley.
Gun111a'.ii With Turban
Hunted in Slayings
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A man
wearing. a towel as a turban walked up to
the second floor entrance of an after·
hours club in south ct.ntral Los Angeles
Sunday morning and cut down lwo guards
""ith a burst from an "automatic
\\'eapon."
Stephen A. Macklien, 23. and
Darlington Freeman, 20, were killed and
a richochetlng bullet wounded a woman
bystander In the foot.
'Ihere were about 300 per~ns dancing
in the showcase when the shooting
occurred.
contracll become an unfortunate reality
in our district."
Q. Dow would a vou.cher system or
statewide property iu affect lt>eaJ 1chool
rlna.nce1? "The voucher system is
appealing phlloaophically as it ·would
provide for construclive competition and
expanded parental choice ln educating
our children. Unfortuantely, the existing
system of education is simply not
adequate to cope with the demands of a
truly worthwhile voucher system. 1£
vouchers are to be used , a substantial
recon1truction of the existing educational
establishment will be abs o I u t' I y
necw1ry.
"Stale1,1•ide property taxation v.-ould
eliminate some present inequities in
school funding. Thereby. promoting the
establishment of smaller C<1mmunity·
conlrolled school districts. Both of these
results are desireable. However, there
are dangers Involved. First, t h e
community might lose control over the
level of funding of the district. Second,
and most important, there is the real
prospect or added curricular and
operational control by the 1tale. These
factors could overwhelm easily the
possibility of closer community control.
Final approval of a statewide property
tax system must be based on the actual
legiJl1tion created.
Ladles
30 Kids Served
Head Start Set
For Downtown
Head Start is moving to downtown
Huntington Beach.
The federa\ly.(unded proiram has been
based the past three years at the <Am·
l'rana Page 1
CROWDS ...
temperatures discouraging all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds -0r
15,000 on the beaches both Saturdty and
Sunday. with air temperatures 1t the
shoreline reaching a high 86. Cool SS.
degree water, however, kept most of the
beacbgoers up on the sand.
Surf was low and there were nt serious
rescue incidents. Forty-two beach visitors
required minor first aid assistance from
the lifeguards and three lost children
\\'ere restored to their families.
San Clemente's shoreline was visited
by 48,000 persons basking under
ten1peratures in the low 80s.
Only one major incident was reported
by lifeguards for the weekend. the
grounding and total loss of a new 2Q.foot
sloop sailed by a Buena Park man.
Guards said the Logger 20 sloop
fetched up on Doheny State Park Beacn
at about 6 p.m. Saturday during a brisk
evening wind.
The vessel was owned and 1ailed by
Daniel Hernandez, 35, wbo told rescuer!
that when the wind picked up be dropped
his sails and fired up a small outboard
motor, but the tiny auxiliary could not
gain headway against the breeze.
Tbe boat grounded and was destroyed
by surf, guards !aid.
Other than the boating incident,
activity on the beaches patrolled by the
San Clemente guard service was light.
Only a few dozen rescues were
recorded through the weekend. The bulk:
-0f the beach attendance and rescues
occurred Sunday as the mercury on the
sands rose to 82 degrees. Water readings
\\'ere a chilly 56 to 59 degrees.
From Pa9e 1
HONEY POT •••
e\·en though the new connection bas been
made.
"The h-Ouses in Huntington Harbour are
built -0n reclaimed marshland and that's
\Vhere the smell was coming from. We
may have· been a contributing I actor, hllt
people tend to smell with their eye!.
\Vhen they see a sewage treatment plant,
they'll blame the smell on it," he said.
The treatment plant was disposed of
this January when members o( the
Sunset Beach Sanitary District Board of
Directors voted 4: to 1 to close the facility.
Some residents of Sunset Beach and
Surfside which the district !erves had
feared that annexation to the sewer lines
\\'OUld be !he first 1tep toward annexation
of the COWJty areas to Huntingl-On Beach.
Clly officials have denied th.it.
The old treatment plant became the
subject of a bitter feud between Harrison.
the Sunset Beach Sanitary District and
Huntington Harbour homeowners.
It was unclear today v;hether lawsuJls
filed by both sides have been dropped as
a result of the connection agreement.
1925 LA Skyscraper
Will Be Demolished
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Demolition of
the city'1 oldest akyscraper begins today
to make way for the new 62-story
headquarters of United California Benk.
The Wilshire-Hope Building, built in
1925 et a cost of $2 million will be torn
down lo be replaced by the tallest
building west of Chicago.
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munity United Methodist Church In north
Huntington Beach.
But when the preschool program ihuts
its doors in June, it will be lhe last
time at the church.
Preschool for +year-old tots v.•ill start
again next October somewhere in the
dow ntown area.
"The larger percentage of our children
come from downtown," 1t1rs. Robert
1''ool.e, director of the church program,
explained.
Head Start currently serves 30 children
in an eight-month program at the church.
Jl provides preschool experien«! for
youngsters who come from economically;
deprived families .
Mrs. Foote .said the Huntington Beach
Community Center at 309 Fifth St. has
asked to be the delegate agency for
the Head Start project, but final approval
hasn't been granted yet.
The Community Action C-Ouncil (CAC)
of Orange County decides what agency
in a city may sponsor Head Start.
The Community Methodist Church
launched Head Start in Huntington Beach
with 60 toddlers in a summer school
program in 1968. Some 75 children en·
te"red lhe summer program in 1969.
Last year the summer program \va1
dropped. and the eight-month course
opened in October.
"\Ye're only serving 30 children, bul
¥;e feel v•e're doing a much beUer job
v.1ith them now," Mrs. Foote explained.
In addition to Head Start, the churcll
runs its own private preschool and gives
scholarships for it to some of the Head
Start children.
"We have only 11 scholarships to the
preschool now," Mrs. Foote, who directs
both programs, said. "When llead Start
moves downtown, we'll Increase our
scholarships to 20, which really makes
it better for Huntington Beach."
Mrs. Foote will stay at the church
preschool, rather than shift with tho
llead Start project in October. ·
\\''hen the CAC announctd the shift
from the church to the downtown area,
it also asked any agencies \\'hich would
like to be a delegate agency for Head
Start, to contact the CAC at m.2236,
before April 14.
Garage Gutted
In Huntington
Fire destroyed a $2,SOO garage and
shed Sunday afternoon in Huntington
Beach.
Firemen said cause or the 3:4:5 p.m.
blaze at 19301 Beach Blvd. is still under
inv~tigation. Vandals are suspectedJ
investigators said.
Three firemen received minor injuriet
batUing the flames. Bolh the garage and
shed were destroyed, but no one wu
seriously hurt.
The garage and adjacent home are
owned by Gerald Lance. The occupant ii
?-.tary Rivgera.
73-year Beach
Resident Dies
Margaret ri.t Reeves, 77, a 73-ytar
resident ol Huntington Beach, died
Sunday.
She lived more than 40 year• at 1802
Main SI.
There will be no funeral services. She
Is survived by her husband, Richard;
four sisters, Marie f,opperton. Jenny
Cullers. Deutrice Roberts and Edna
Burgess: and three brothers, Ray
Seabridge, Roberl Seabridge and Lee
Seabridge.
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•
B"vtllvl to pl dlo ...... T°" ~l•,ltv, cut t. COll1' -
• pn:in0 rro:lem flft•"Y
"'°""!i"'ll 111 14K Wllll• -· $550
Mtns
DIAMOND*
RING
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*OUR UHUSUAl MONEY BACK
DIAMOND GUARANTEE ~
When you buy a" di•mond from us we
will guara"'" thi1t d li1mond to i1ppr•IM
ilf 40,.-, MORE then you paid for It or'
your money back. Ci1n you do •s weU
•l1ewhtrt? COMPARE.
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN. IUY, SEU,, TRADE COME IN AND BROWSE AlOUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MfSA --~ .. Horbor l ltoadooy
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I
I
..
H DAILY PILOT 1
p .S. Draft Ruling Hit
New Study on Religious Aspect Ordered
THE MAN WHO ARRESTED TIMOTHY LEARY IN LAGUNA SIZES UP NEWEST HAUL
D1t. Ntll Purcell Looks Over hind Drugs and Mlnufacturl1'g Equipment
Arrested 3 • Ill Laguna
130,000 LSD Tablets Seized in Narotics ·Raid
By PATRICK BOYLE
OI IN D•ll1 Pl .. 1 ll•H
Laguna Be:ach narcotics o f f i c e r s
Saturday arrested three young men on
drug charges after investigators allegedly
120 Degrees
uncovered one of the l1r1est LSD hauls in
California history In a Woodland Drivt
home.
Authorities claim the conflacated
nan::otics, with a "street value" of about
500 Ignore Warnings,
Brave Festival Heat
DEATH VALLEY fAPJ -Ignoring
warnings of rattlesnakes. heal scanty
water, food and toilets, 90me 500 persona
Students Def eat
Self -paid Union
Building at UCI
t'C Irvine students have voted down a
proposal lo build a campus union with
student fees .
"'nie vote tabulated Friday showed 3,092
opposed and 1.286 favoring the project
that would require payment of $3 per
quarter next year.
By 1974-75 school year , when lt wu
anticipated lhe building would be open,
the fees ·would have risen to $11 per
quBrter per student.
There were 4,404 ucr students return-
ing ballots out of 6,300 eligi ble. The
ballots wers included in registration
packets in the hopes that a favorable
vote would be obta ined.
are camped near the ed11 of Dtath
Valley awaJtlng whit wu promoted 11 a
free Easter weekend rtllgiOUI festival.
Promoter Rudy Zamora of Hollywood
y,id he expected three million persons to
attend the "rellgioua pilgim11e. a
gathering of the people."
Undersherift' Jame.I Randolph, of the
Inyo ' County lhertff'I offict, Y)'S the
fesUval seekers m11 flnd the 1oln1 • bit
rough.
"It'• already so hot. like 120.degree
ground temperature ln the day, that the
snakes don't come out unUI It coo11 oft at
night," he said.
The event ls auppoltd to take place at
Ballarat, popuiaUon el1ht. a clump of old
buUdings in the de1e1late Panamlnt
Valley, nearly 200 mile1 northeast of Loi
Angeles and 15 mUe1 from Dealh Valley.
Deputies said mlnl·buatJ, campen and
truckl arrived at Ballaraton Sunday at
the rate of about JO an hour, contalnlnl
mostly }'OWll people.
County olfictalJ are trying t o
discouragt people from coming becauM
of the lack of facilities and Intense heat.
"There's water here, but not much. lt'1
a one-wtll town," Randolph said.
$350,000, included 1~.000 tablets of LSD
conlalned in 23 jars, 11 pounds of huhlsb
and about five pounds of marijuana.
The team of officers, under the
direction of veteran n a r c o l i c 1
investigator Sgt. Neil Purcell, toot the
trkl Into custody at 247 Woodland Drive
after the sweet odor of burning
marijuana attracted them to the
residence.
The men were identified u Thomas
Joseph Sachse, 18, of 30628 Calle Ch.ucca,
San Juan Capistrano, Gary Ray Allen, 23,
of Long Beach, and David William
Godwin, 23, of Las Vegas.
Authorities said the team o f
Investigators, conducting n a r c o t i c 1
aurvelllance in the area, went to the
address after tracing the source of the
1rnoke, which wu hanging in the air all
along the short ~t. A barking dog tn
front of the home alerted the occupantJ
to the officers' arrival and two of the
men allegedly attempted to flee. through.
a rur window, pollce SIJ4.
After capturing the trio, the dtttttives
searched the home and a 11 e g t: d I y
discovered the hashish and LSD. Sgt.
Purcell said the hashish was contained in
quart cans with masking-tape labels
identifying lhe contents as a health food.
The smoke which attracted the officers
to the house was pouring from the oven,
where Sgt. Purcell said marijuana waa
being burned to reduce the weed to a
highly concentrated oil.
la the garage of the home, police claim
an operation had been set up to can the
haahi1b and marijuana for nationwide
distribution. Purcell said the canning of
narcotics has come into use recently in
order to escape the sensitive noses of
dogs trained to detect different types of
drugs,
Also found by officers in the garage of
the home were 17 new surfboards, which
police are holding until ownership can b9
determined.
From Wlte 5ervkft
WASHINGTON -The Suprtme Court
set uille IDday a Iederal JUdB•'• Nllng
that the draft law violale.9: Ole nligious
freedom ol Roman Calhollco oppoaed to
the Vll,tnam war.
The court, reca!Una Ill declslcm early
ln March in two .imtla\ caaes, diftlCted
U.S. Dlatrtct Judge Alphonso J. Zirpoll of
San Francisco to reconsider hi.I ruling.
On March a, the court ruled in effect
that coosclenUoua objectors cannot pick
the wars in which they refuse to serve.
One case involYe• • Roman Catholic
conscientious objector to the Vietnam
war and the other involves a self·
delCl'lbed human.llL
Justice William O. Douglas, who
dissented In the high court's ruling on the
two earlier cases, dla.sented al.so today.
Zlrpoll held Iha! the Finl Amtndllient
prohiblta the 1overnment to command a
man to 9d, qain..t bll co111Cience. Tbt
Judie said ' the draft law w 1 1
uncomtttutlObaJly forcing Catholkl to
choose betweon their religloo' ..,4 &Olni
to jail or abandoning thelr .eonvkUona. to
avoid jail.
In another case involving ponesaion of
han~ 1renades, the Supreme Court upheld
lD'lanimously today the 1961 Ortarms
reg~ratlon law again:it alleaaUo~ that
It violated consUtuttonal guara.nteu
agafnat seU·incrimlnaUen.
The court also rejected • cl&lm 1hat an
indictment o( two Callf(J'Dia residents 911
charges of posseulng aod conopiring to
JX11SU1 unregistered ~ grenadel ·wH
faulty because the ~I'! did not
know the weapo111 wereiunregist.ered.
The Supreme Court abo:
-Refused to review the
constllutionality of a 1970 California law
saying that public schoel 1tudents could
not be bused to class without written
parental consent. (There are ~ral
other issues still-pending before the court
-tncluding a North Carolina busing law
-ooncemed with general &Chool
de~gregation standards.)
-Upheld 6 to 3 today the rigging of
undercover agents with hidden radio
transmitters to snare narcotics violators,
The deel1ion, in a case that has
troubled the court for almost two years,
sustalns the Justice Department and
gives electronic surveillance a major
legal thrust forward.
-Ruled that if congress can confer
American cltii..enship, it also can lake it
away by impo1ing residence
requirements.
-Rejected an attempt by city officials
in Lackawanna, N,Y., to b Io ct
con.strucUon of a Negro housing subd.iv.
ision ln an almost exclusively white
neighborhood.
The unanimous action indicates local
governments eve.rywhere will have legal
dilllculty lf they try to zone out Nearoes
from white areas.
-Denied a hearing to the Netcong,
N.J,, school board, which wanted to use
prayers printed in the congressional
record as voluntary devotional exercises
for students.
The brief order leaves standing as final
state court rulings that the practice is
unconstltullonal.
Justices Potter Stewart and Byron R.
Wbite wanted to hear the case.
-Limited the federal government'•
power to punish small·time gamblers.
In an 8 to O rull.ng, Justice Thurgood
Marshall said tf1e Federal Travel Act,
w h I c h prohibill Interstate travel to
further certain criminal activity, caMol
be used to prosecute two lottery
operators in Florida simply because
aome or the betton came from Gtorf!•·
-Ref• to mako retroactlff a 11111
rubftl Ollrblnl •""" ol I "°1Jlt bf polloa when an occupant ls Mrestecl.
The opinion concerned a cowt rul_N on
June 23, 1968, in a Calllomla cut. It said
that W hUe I I U Ip e Ct 1 t ""tntdlate
sWTOWKling1 could be lelfthld, the enllre houae In which he la antlll4 could
not be. ~llefUHf IO era.. I ""'p of Pl'O\'I®~ ~lltr op1rators 1 IUpreme C.>lfl litarlnf lit 111111 Cli1ilenga II Rl1ocle
J1h1nd'1 movie eenJOnbip llwt.
The theatre operaton <Clllondld the
state !.t procedure1 ~ unconatltuUonal.
They were tim>od down 7 to S, wllb
Justices Hugo L Black and W1Wam 0.
Douglas dltsentlng.
Und<r ~ 1111111! "" ..... plctuie operalOn mdil appl, ror •
Uceme to -a lllm at lull 41 boun
bef... the tpenlng. The Buruu ol
Li<:i!nstl m1twt the movie and lf tt flDdl
no "obscenttf controveny," tbt liceDll: ii
issued.
Battle for Base
Rages Near L~QS . .. ' . . . . -. .
SAIGO!I <UPI> ... lin VIebiiimese
glll1Jl•ra •hti!o4 '"' ilbt f l!'ir the
Latllan border ..elt -1~ ~-0;,1)1
Vielnamese delender1 tU'Uck back 1fKIS 1
h(IJJcopter assault three mlles from .. the
O\llfM>St in the 1i1tll C()tlSeCUUve d•y or ""Vl' fig)>Ung ID !ht Ollllral billllancla.
Cuua!1tie1 on bol!t ltdot •limbed,
including Amerlcani '1lle4, wounit.d aod
ml11h11.
Mllllary IOUrcts described fhe fighUnk
around F1rt Base I u 1 "localiJed
of!enslve•• by North Vletname.se forcel
designed to show that She South
Vielnamese offensive Into Leos to cut the
Ho Ch1 Minh Trail had not aUect.ed
Hanoi's capability to attack at wUl..
"The communists are simply telllnl the
world lbat the operation up north in Laos
did not hurt them much," said Lt .. C:OL
Frank 0. Miller, 43, of Ma!Uand, Fla,
commander of a U.S. Army aviation unit
supporling the South Vietnamese defense
of Fire Base 6.
A South Vietnamese communique said
1,817 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
have been killed In Fire Base 6 action
since last Wednesday. South Vietnamese
lossu were placed at 71 killed and 132
wounded. U.S. headquarters said five
Americans bad been killed and one
~ .\Mlher U.S. 'llOl'VlcomU wit
lllta<t u mf11ing in octlon. •
S-. In the central blll""nda
-11 ~rlftDI were ldlle4 llMI 11 """"'*' lft ftghlinl ' IOllU!eUI ol M
Base t in coastal B~ otn11i~ Ptqrira
wher< U.S. unita bad ~'Jo Jrte
South Vleinamese lnfantryujjll•for Iha
Fire Base I combal ~· ~ ~
ad.ion was in an area • Nd
Vletn-se •YPPIY _ltfAt. t;• .. •d l c flg!iUng wu reported Mi>oday followlng a
thfee..day battle.
A cormpondent sald Soulh Vleinam ...
nlrdoraementl jumped from U.S. Army
helleoptm at landing and tut oat af
dense jungles Monday to attack North
Vietnamese infantrymen three =1lta
from Fire Base 6.
North Vietnamese troops ln a force of
4,000-5,000 operaUna nn the Fire Bue I
area overran the.outpost last WednesdaJ,
killing four Amerleam:. ho U.S. Army
UHl Huey helicopten were abot down
during flights to evacuate a out h
Vietnamese defenders, and one crewman
was killed and one wounded.
South Vietnamese forces recaptured.
the hilltop base on Thunday but
Communist gunner• have subjected tt to
pressures ever slnce. A barrage of l2m.m
tnortar shells struck tbe outpost Monday
morning.
Hollywood Leaders Ask
Nixon for Tax Break
Hollywood leader• In San Clement•
urged President Nlzon today to 1upport
legislation for a 20 percent tax break tor
the movie industry which they said b Jn
a "state of collapse."
Jack ValenU, president of the Motion
Picture AlsociaUon, told n e w a m t n
outside the Weatem White Houae prior to
a discussion with Nl1on that the
Preldent Initiated the meeUn1 to loot
into the industry'• economic alump.
"He was the first President who cared
about the industry and we're very
grateful," Valenti said.
"It comes at a crucial time. ThJ1
industry is in a 1tate of collapse and it
could be disfigured beyond restoration."
V1Ienil 1ald that the bID before
Congress hu bipartisan tupport and ti
also supported by all segmenta ot tbl
Hollywood indUltry.
The President met with 24. industry
leaders to discuss ways to pull Hollywood
()Ut of ita unemployment slump.
The major moviemaken have been ln
the doldrum for some time and
producers say the increase in fllma bein&
made abroad is part of the problem.
Beaidet Valenti, actor Charlton Heston,
prealdent of the Screen Actora Gulld.
attended the meeting.
Heston 1aid UW 78 percent of hit
Wllon'1 23,000 mem.ben made lelll than
$3,000 Wt year.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
Veal Chops .. T. .. 79~
Tender and mild flavored. ••• delicioual mu• .,,. ... ttc""
Veal Rib Roast ... $1 2!
Your folks v.·ill \'\'elcome the ch&ngf:! YEM SrDl<O S1W ... U! I\.
Stuffed Breast of Veal .......... ~.~ .......... 69~
Stuffe d plump ~·ith fresh gound veal, dtliciouslJ HUOhed !
Breaded Veal CuHets ....... ~-.~ .~ ........ '1.29 "'
All r,.dy for the p&o ••• CIOll trimmed, breodtcl, IMIOnodl
fop
Dyeing la ao mucn i un ••• and Rit makes It even better? Give the kida some bowl! ••• the eggs ••• and turn them lOOM! They'll
Jove it! ••. then gi,·e them Handi-Wipes t.o clean it all up. And note the Kit is pre-marked 26c ••• and then note our price!
Compare the blooms ••• the quality! (Subject to stock available).
Pritts in t/fect M@.1 T1it.1., iVed.,
April 5, 6, 7. No IQ.la to dea~r1.
Fruit Drinks ... ~1~ ••• 29c
Serve their favorite. while they color eggs! 46 oi. can.
Handi· Wipes .s.A'!f: 1~·.39c
So durable.,. they1l clun up 10 many 1pill1 ! pkg. ot 10
Tree Top Apple Juice ................................. 43•
Big 48 ounce aiz•,,. ao delicious ••• healthful, too!
Pillsbury Cookies ............ ~ .~ .. 0'.1~.1
..... " ............. 49•
Chocolata <-nip or Oatmeal Raisin ... 1lict 'n' bake I 16 oz.
ARCADIA : PASADENA : SQ~TH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH: 2121 Ncwp01i.mvd "'~
Sunsel and Hunltnglon D• (El Rancho Con•e<J ;Jn .,,,. Colura!u e:,u . FfJn on l ,,,d ifon l111elon Or. War ner and Algonqu in (Boardwalk Cenlcr) • 1>15 l"iblull Dr . (E as ibiulf Village Cenl cr )
J.
•
• f'"'l V r Hf\1'" Monday, Aprn 5, 1971
B .loody War Co~iinues
REBEL EAST PAKISTANIS CONTINUE TO BATTLE FOR NATION'S INDEPENDENCE
Planea Airlifting Americans From Emb.ttlecl Nation; RefUfMI Stream Out
'----~~~~~~~~~-
P~ Passenger
Battles Marshal,s
On London Flight
SO Percent Mark Missed
Chilean Marxist Coalition
LONOON (UPI), - A passenger on a
Pan Amen.can World Airways flight from
Boston~ London threatened to pull a gun
today dUrfng an argurrient with a
stewardt.s and was !llbdued at gwipolnt
ati.r ponchUti a sl<y marshal.
Scores Victory in Voting
A Pan American spokesman said the
man did not have a guo and was later
rdea&ed by police. ''There was no
attempt to bijaci: the plane," the
l!>Ok-said.
UPI Cm"espondent Lucinda Frm1b,
Glle of '8 passengers aboard the plane,
said a mlddiwged man in the touri!t
a>mpartment begu l(llJ!ng with a
stewardeu about an hour before the
plane readied Londoo.
•'He eomplained about the service, then
ll>rtalened to pull a gun," Mi.U Franta
llid. ·"A aky.marahal attempted to calm
Ille plant.
11
'Me .run for Preaident?
I ,L f " t ?' 1• •• &011a a my a.ge.
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -Final
official e1eet.ion. returns today showed
tbal PrUident Salvador A 11 e n d e ' s
Marxist-oriented partieJ scored heavily in
the nationwide elections but failed by a
hair to capture 50 percent ef the total
vole.
. Tbe 1overnment parue5 collec:Uvely
won 49.73 percent ()f the vote while the
opp05.itioa in the aggregate scored 48.04.
percenL
Tbu.s the voting electorate almost split
down the middle. The remaining 2.23
percent of the votes went to lnde~denl$
of comprised blankJ and voided ballots.
Of the 3.7 billion eligible voters nearly
a million -968,778 abstained.
At stake were 1,653 un.salaried
alderman positions.
1be results of Sunday's balloting
showed an Jmpressive gain for the
government parties, which had only 36.3
percent of the vote in September when
Allende won the Presidency, and paved
the way for him to accelerate his
nationalization and agrarian reform
programs.
U.S. Troop Level s
In Vietnam Decline
SAIGON (UPI) -The number of
American soldiers in Vietnam dropped
4.600 last week to 301 ,900, the lowest level
since Aug. 20, 1966, the U.S. command
reported today.
Cul.1: in lhe Army and Marine forces
made up the bulk of last week's troop
withdrawals under phase 6 of President
Nixon's program to reduce the number or
American soldiers in the war ione to
285,000 by May L
Allende, who had predicted the
coaliUori would win 46 \o 4l percent said
he was happy but "not arrogant" 1bout
the result.
Despite the lillowina: by the govt!rnment
coalition, the opposition Cb r i a t l a n
Democrab bad the laigest vote. total er
any aingle l>&M!I. _.., •boul -
fourth ef the 2.l '!iUilioo votes cut.
Communists Laud
Brezhnev Plans
For Next 5 Years
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet
C.Ommunist Party Congtts.!I approved
Leonid I. Brezhnev's policy platform for
another five years today and acclaimed
him with a dlunderous 90-second ovation
and cbanb of "Gkiry Glory!"
The 50,000 WU'd report by Ow:
Communils Part chieftain, dtlivered
Tuesday, contained a peace plan calling
for a world conference on disannamtnt
and another of the five nuclear powers to
ban .nuclear weapons.
The Brezhnev peace formula also urged
improved relations with all countriu,
including the United States and Red
China and promlsed 1 general upsurge in
the Soviet living standard in the ne1t five
years.
F'orty·six speakers at the Congress and
250,000 letters from citizens-lauded the
report.
The 5,000 delegate1 formally approved
the foreign and domestic policiu laid
down by Brezhnev in his keynote 1peech,
as e.xpected.
Nation Sizzles, Freezes
Mercury Ranges From Zero to 99 Degrees Across U.S.
Clllllornla
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MONDAY
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110 Yanks
Airlifted
To Karachi
NEW DELIU (UPI) -A chartered
Pakistani plane brought 110 Americans
and ~7 other evacuees from East
Pakistan to Karachi, West Pakistan,
today to begin an airlift of U.S. citizens
from the embatUed provinct.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Karachi
11aid 650 of the estimated 750 Americans
in East Pakistan would be •vacuated in
the next few days.
The Pakistan International Airlines
(PIA) plane that arrived early today
carried 10 French nationals and 37 United
Nations personnel ar>d dependents as well
as the Amer icaM.
The Embassy spokesman said the U.S.
government employes and t h e i r
dependents among the evacuees will later
continue to Tehran where they will
remain until they can return to East
Pakistan where civil war has raged for 12
days.
-fie said some private U.S. citizens also
may stay temporarily in other countries
in the area . The Americans were lodged
temporarily in the beach luxury hotel,
where the U.S. Information Service set
up a rtt!ption room lo welcome and
register them. Msny had mail waiting
from anxious relatives and friends.
Radio Pa.!Wtan reported today the
Pakistan government is enlisting support
from East Pakistani political leaders who
are opposed to the rebels.
The broadcast said Lt. Gen. Tikka Kah,
the martial law administrator in East
Pakistan, met Sunday with 12 political
leaders from the province who pledged
full cooperation In restoring normalcy.
AU-India Radio said reports from the
border revealed fighting was going on for
mntrol or Sylhei in East Pakistan. It said
We.st Paldstani troops were evacuating
Rangpur, which wu under control of the
rebelJ. AU.India said reports from
Comilla indicated the rebels killed at
least 70 P:ikistani. paratroopers in a
clash.
Radio Pakistan charged today that
India was sending troop reinforcemeats
to the state of West Bengal aJong the
Ea!t Pakistan border.
In a broadcast Sunday, the Pakistan
radio accmed India of helping armed
infiltrators to cross the border into East
Pakistan and or seeking "to escalate the
existing Indo-Paklstan tension."
Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
Ila.id Sunday India has never interferred
in the affairs of another country but
would continue to speak out in criticism
of the treatment of the East Pakistanis.
NO PULLOUT IN SUEZ
lsra•l's Golda Me ir
Red China Sends
At Least 4,000
Me1i Into Laos
WASHINGTON (AP) -China has sent
another 4,000 to 6,000 troops into
Northern Laos in recent mo n t h s,
Pentagon sources report.
The sources estimate Peking's military
slrength there has risen le between 18,000
and 20,000 men , about double last year's
number.
U.S. officials sald it appeared the
reinforcements were intended mainly to
beef up protection for Chinese engineer
troops worlting on a major road project
leading from Soulh China 's Yunan
Province toward the Mekong River and
for defense of ibe road itself.
Among other things the Red Chinese
were said to have posilioned large
antialrcraft guns and to have introduced
new radar for surveillance and warning.
U.S. military analysts said lhey doubt
the manpower buildup had a n y
connection with Chinese government
warnings during the recent U . S . •
supported South Vietnamese d r i v e
against North Vietnamese supply routes
in the Laotian Panhandle.
Rather, the Chinese road construction
through northern Laos seems to have
Jong. range implications for the security
of Thailand and Burma, they said.
Both countries are considered target!:
for Red Chine:se·backed G u e r r i I l a
insurgency.
•
Mrs.Meir
Turns Down •
Suez Terms ·'.
By The Assocl•led Prru ' ..
Israeli Premier Golda Meir ~~
rejected Egypt's offer to reoptn the Suet!
Canal in exchange ror an Israeli:
withdrawal from the banks or ~:
waterway. She also reiterated her
government's determination to retain the
Golan Height&, Sharm el Sheikh, the Gaza
Strip and the Arab sector of Jerusalem.
Addressing a national conference of her
ruling Labor party Sunday night. Mrs.
hfeir avoided stalln& specific terrM for
reopening the waterway but repeated her
offer Feb. 9 to bold talks with Iha
Egyptians on arran,ements to reopen tOe
canal. .
Sources close to the Israeli Cabinet
said Jerusalem might once again pul:
forward Defense Minister Moshe Dayan'I ·
proposal for both Israeli and Egypti~~
forces to pull back from the canal 11·
conjunction with ita reopening.
Sadat's proposal called for only the
lsraelis to withdraw, with Egyptian
troops replacing them on the east bank
the canal.
Saying that April ''is the month whid\.
shall decide between a solution and war ,•1..
Sadat warned Israel to make a promP\':
reply, to his proposal or risk renewed.
fighting . 1 •
Mrs. Meir told ber party:
''Anyone who proposes I .!Ir a e 11
agreement to the oper.ing of the canal as
a lever to obtain total Israeli withdrawal
from Sinai and from Gaza will certainly
not be surprised by Israel's outright
rejection ol this plan."
She said Israel "would willingly see the
canal open to shipping of all natiom,
nncluding Israel, and the restoration of
civilian life in lhe area . We are prepared
to discuss the arrangement required to
do this ."
She repeated Israel's demands for •
formal peace treaty guaranteeing secure
borders prior to any troop withdrawal.
She noted that her government "is having
a serious argument with the United
Slates" over Israel's territorial demands
and Washington 's insistencs that
international guarantees can safeguard
Israel better th.an new borders.
She said Israel "should not forget whal
the U.S. and President Nixon have done
for Israel in rectnt years-, especially in
the field of arms supply." but s-he
expressed amazement at "those who
think geo~raphy is nonsense."
and we love it!
Join us in celebrating our
36th ANNIVERSARY
April 1 through April 9 • Refreshments served from 1 P .M. t.o 3 P.'M. daily
Get yoar Souvenir Gift of Oldlegtma
A 15J20" fram&eize replica !n full color of~ 1926" by nnowned mtiat
Jcuph EJeiladt is J1JQJ:8 fur the~ at all 3 lagmiaPhleraJdlkas. Yaaare lnrililcl
to'lillrtldl arfgbial oil.~ with the '""'W!efa 1-Federalmta>!Mke
Ill aaraWmda! llaganal!eachmaln lllliceJOlnnda pllei:i111.
.flO§una7~8'~
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
eolNorthEI Cam!noJlal
61111 CJm>ente
49:1-1196
j
I
I
I
' I
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
.. ,, .. 11
Fas .hions Form
Spring Bouquet
·Summer will only be a spring away when members of the Affiliants
Chapter of the Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian arrange
a bouquet ol new fashions Wednesday, April 14.
The hospital's conference center will be transformed into a garden
setting for the 11:30 a.m. event, which is titled Spring Into Summer.
Tempting summer salads will be served under the direction of Mrs.
Paul MacMillin, featuring favorite delicacies prepared by the members.
Ensembles for all occasions will be modeled while guests e!Uoy their
lunch, .aceording to Mrs. James Blixt, fashion show ahairman.
Mrs. Paul Kuhn, outgoing president, will introduce n~w mem~rs ?l
the executive board, headed by Mrs. Blix t, and -Mrs. Lee Mittman will dis-
tribute gllts.
Proceeds from the fashion showing will be used for the purchase of
an infant care center, which includes complete oxygen and warmer systems
and ' vital system signs monitor, designed to enable physicians to perform
special procedures with newborn infants.
.
-----··
..
• • •
' Affiliants sponsor the hospital's monthly maternity tea for new par·
ents, staff the visitor's desk on the maternity floor and maintain attractive
art displays in the hospital lobby.
Tickets for Spring Into Summer, at $3, may be obtained from Mrs .
Norbert Cochran, ticket chairman, 675-8889, or Mrs. George Logan, 6444522.
SIGNS OF SUMMER -Spring-fashions mean that summer can't
be far away according to member;s of the Affiliants Chapter of the
Auxiliary of Hoag Hospital, Presbyterian. Selecting fresh blossoms
to set the mood for a fashion showing, titled Spring Into Summer,
are (left to right) Mrs G. W. McClellan and Mrs. Richard Simpson~·
The event will take place \Vednesday, April 14, in the hospital
conference center. '
....,,. .. I • ·~ti; • 1•!°;'
·1 ' •' -,;..'.., t
' . ,, tl' ·• '
•• • · j
,
Sparkle of Diamond Reflects Gl·eam
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a senior
In collqe and going with a wonderful
young man who is in graduate school.
We plan to be married this summer.
He wants to give me a ring for my
lilrthday, which is next month. Rod workll
part lime and has very Huie extra
money. His mother has some beaulirul
Jewelry and she wants mt to have one
o(· her large diam<>nds. I don't want
• large diamond. I'd rather have a
SIT!Bll pearl -something Rod bought
hbnself. My mother says l'm crazy.
What do you say? -SlMPLE STELL.A
DEAR S.S.: Since it is Rod you art
manytn1. and not bl1 fatber:. I 11y you
1hould have a ring he can afford. Hold
<1Ut for lhe pearl, Cfrl. .
DEAR ANN LANDERS : U111employ-
ANN LANDERS
ment in our a re 1 ls at a JO-year
high. I wonder how many people reallu:
what happens to a family man wbo
is out of work. I can tell you. Ann.
It is lhe most ego-shattering experience
in the world.
I have a few suggestions for the wives
of lhese men: Don"t greet him at the
door with, "Did you find anything today .
dear?" If he did. you won't need to
ask. He'll tell you And for heaven'•
sake dorr't go around 1D a ratl)' kirQon11
and torn nose. This is lhe time to
bring out the white linen tablecloth and
the good ch.ina. Put flowers on the table
and paint the kitchen ceiling 1 bri1ht
yellow.
Above all, keep your Hnse of humor .
It can save your life -and hill, loo.
Laughter In the house can have a
magical effect. It says , "This. too, shall
pass. Everything will be all right. I
have rallh In you, 11nd in th~ future ."
-A WIFE .\VllO IS IJVl.NG. 1l!ROUG!l
IT
DEAR WIFE: You MHand like 1
W"ooderfal 1al. Your letter ls till't lo
give a 1111 lo . womea who 1bare your
pllgbl. CGnflden« 11 coota1k>u1. Good
l11ck and lbank1 for wrlUn1.
DEAN ANN LANDERS: Our son is
15. our dillghler is 13. People are forever
complimenting us on how well behaved
they art, My husband and I often wonder
if they have us mixed up with someone
else. At home, oor kid11 are constantly
at each other 's threal11 like a ceuple
of jungle cats.
Last night il was worse than usual.
They were having a terrific argument
1nd hollering st loud J'bU couldn't bear
the rock mualc. Mytbu1band became
•
Gl ittering Even ing
Angels Planning
Heavenly Event
A golden evening is being molded by members of
Anaelitos de Oro for Saturday, April 24, in the New·
porter Inn.
On that evening, the Gold Book Ball. one ot the
Hai'bor Area's most elegant events will take place with
fund·raising as its primary objective.
Just 320 .euests will be able to _gather in the inn.
according to Mrs. Ernest C. Saftig and ~frs. Richard
Nabers, reservations chairmen, to ensure ample space
for comfortable scatinJ? at round tables.
Mrs. Cecil TI. Shirar, ball chairman, ha s planned
every detail so the evening-\vifl be as near perfection
as possi ble, from the formal invitations selected by Mrs~
Lloyd L. Aubert to a _gourmet dinner arran2ed by Mrs.
Thomas F. Riley.
A committee of the "golden angels" assisted with
addressing invitations, and others, under the direction
of Mrs. Clifford Hake s, planned and executed the decor·
ations.
Dancing to the music of Joe ?\-1oshay and his or·
chestra and fine wine to accom pany dinner will round.
out the evening.
Angelitos de Oro is an organization dedicated to
raising funds for Big Brothers of Orange County.
IN T_HE MA IL -The lnvitallons to the Gold Book
Ball have been written and are in the mall. Putting
the finishing touches on the formal bids are (lelt to
right.) the Mmes. Clifford Hakes, Thomas F. Riley,
Cecil H. Shirar, Ernest C. Saftig and Lloyd L. Aub-
ert.
Mother's Eye
s11 irritated he stalked out of the house
and went to a movie. J look two tran-
quilizers and went to bed . At about
10 :30 I heard a crash -like breaking
glass. 1 rushed downstairs and there
was the glrl wilh blood on her blouse.
She had pulled out a handful of her
brother's hair. His head was bleeding
and he was holding a hockey stick.
He had hit her in the mouth.
busbaod isolate yourselve1 tram tbe ,,..
blem 11 extremely revealing. Whu Wnp
get out of hand, P1 1hdk1 oat of th
house and bidet la a movie. M1 &aka
a couple of traoqulllzer1 ind gou to
bed. No evidence of any parental
distlpllne or guidance wbataoever.·
Yov MID aod daughter need aa 1dult
ftgure: of authority. I 1ug1est codnselhla.
And you and your husband cookl UM
Mme ~unstling, too. FIDd tomeooe wttb
lour couches, Lady.
This .mom ing 1 was talking to my
mother. l told her the kids were driving
us nuts. She said all brothers and sisters
havt disagreements -that it'll a normal ·
part of growing up, Is this true? t
need your opinion . -EXCEDRIN
HEADACHE IN LOUISVILLE
DEAR HEAD: DlsagreemeoU, ye:1, but
-¥n•r. w .... , .... w.yl•1 io klU e1ch other.
Tht ma•ner In wltlcb yoa. and your
Unsure of yourJel f on dtlet? What's
righl ? What's wrong? Should yoo'!'
Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Lflnders'
booklet. ''Dating Dos ind Oo1't1," encl°'"'
ing with your request 36 cents In coll
and a Iona. self-addressed, stampea
envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT.
•
•
1: 22 DAILY PILOT Monday, April 5, lq71
,.··
Costa Mesons Wed
In Morning Rites
A lite mom.Ina ceremony
or St. John the Baptist °'urcb,
Coata Mesa, linked the names
of Bellnd1 Susan Cox and
Roderick. Lafferty.
The brkte was escorted to
the altar by her falhu for
the double rin1 rttea perform-
ed by the Rev. Mark Staley.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cox and
~Jr. and Mrs. ~farley.Lafferty,
all cl. Costa Afesa, are parents
of the newlyweds.
Attending the bride was
Mrs. Ron Platt u matron
of honor. Bridemaids ln-
c:ludtd ~tiss Martha Cot,
si.Ster of the bride, ltfrs.
Stt\'tn Afan:, sister ol the
bridegroom, aDd Atrs. Dale
Mitchtll.
The bride's · 1ister and
1• brotbtr, ti.1ary and Dennis
Cox, were floy,·er girl and rlng
~arer.
Paul Brisso v.·as best man.
Ushers included David Cox,
the bride's brother, Roque
Lafferty, brother of the
bridegroom. and ~tarx.
,
' l •· '
The bride, who attended
Or1nge Coast College, was
craduated from !he Southern
California College 0£ Denta l
Asslstants. Her husband is an
Orange Coast Colle1e student Cl'I l'lltM
MRS. R. LAfFERTY
Formal Ceremony
who plans to transfer to the
University of Washln1ton in
lbe fall.
Donald Henzes Choose
Corona def Mar Home
Corona del ~1ar will be
home for newlyweds Caroline
Colladay, daughter or Afr. and
Mrs. John Colladay of Balboa,
and Capt. Do111ald Ke n z e
(USMC). son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Henze of State Center,
Jowa.
The couple wa5 wed in a
Iate afternoon ~remony in St.
James Episcopal Church of
Newport Beach. The Rev.
John Ashey officiated .
The bride's sisttr. Katherine
Colladay "·as maid of honor,
serving with bridesmaids the
Misses Llnda Donohue. NaJ1cy
Perryman and Jamie Carr.
Jay Jones "'as best man.
Seatine guests "·ere Roger
Henze, Ben Henze, ~fichael
Steuer. Charles Colladay, Joe
Colladay and Gar)' Smith.
The new ~frs. llenie, a
graduate or University or
Southern California where she
was affiliated with Delta Della
Delta sororitv. is a teacher
iN Fountain Valle)'. Her huir
band attended the University
MRS. DONALD HENZE
Newport RitH
of Iowa and ls a jet pilot
statloned at El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station.
Mrs. Wolfe Takes Gavel
Nightingales Plan
Luncheon Installation
l\1rs. Sterling \\lolfe v.·ill be
Installed chalrmu of the
Nightingale Chapter the AUJ·
Jliary of Hoag 1demorlal
Hospital. Presbyterian during
the group's annual luncheon
-tomorrow Jn lhe Balboa Bay
Club.
A special guest will be
William R. Hudson Jr .. ad-
ministrator or the hospital.
Spring Rush
Commencing
For Chapter
Assisting in the ceremonles
will be Mrs. Jon Meyer,
former member.
Those to bt installed with
Mrs. Wolfe are as follows:
the li-fmes. Edward ~farti111-
dale. R1y Dosta and Donald
Frner, vice chainnan: Daniel 1 Shepardson and J 1 m e s
Wlnstoo, secretaries, and Rob-
ert Stipes, treasurer,
Chairmen and assistants in-
clude the A!mes. Kerm Rima
and Ralph Waterma11. baby
photos: William Saxton. calen-
dar: Thomas Boler and Alfr~d
Boehner, holiday: Leonard
South, publicity: \Vi 11 I am
Sch...,·orer and Boehn~r. tumor
board, and Thomas A. An·
drews and J. F. Nickertz, can-
cer registry.
Artistic Efforts Appear
Words Immortalized
Trophy Trips T onque
As a viewer of the Oscar,
Emmy, Tony al'!d Graminy
a~ ard cerenlonies, it has
be<xlme apparent that tnaoy
of our favorite performers
can't ad lib a belch.
It's not fair. Housewives ·
never win awards for anything
and I'm the nut wlth 15 or
20 humble , all-occasion ac·
ceptance speeches In the stove
drawer which have never been
used.
No. 10 : ?i-1rs. An1erica A('-
ceptance Speech:
"Oh \\'O~'-\\'hat C'3n I say'! rm pretty because I eat
sensib ly, get lots of exercise
and take iron. During lhe year
of my reign, J'll do my best
to glorify the A1nerican
"'on1an by leaving my husband
and children for a year and
visiting Army bases. (J\1oisten
lips) And now, goodbye for
a little while. My girdle is
killing me."
AT
WIT 'S
END
average, 1 knew I was ill
lhe running for the most im·
proved bo~·ler in the tourna·
men I.
"All I can see is, 'thanks,
gang.' " (Scrape floor with
toe of bowling shoe with head
down .)
No. 15: On Being Named
Girl Scout Cookie Captain~
"First of all I want to thank
all my 'friends' out there \vho
voted me as Girl Scout Cookie
Captain . You all know \vho
you are. and I am not likel y
to forget you. (Steady yourself
on podium.)
your envelopes and de> not
write check.5 under SS centii.
"Again, thank you for your
trust. ll almost makes me
wish I lived in l he
neighborhood and had a
daughter who is a scout.''
No. 8: Mother-<1!-the-year
Award :
''One of my favorite quotes
is, 'God couldn't be
everywhere. so He made
mothers.' There isn't a day
goes by that I don't ask
myself, ·\\'hy ?'
"There ~re so many people
to thank for this honor. ?tfy
husband, th! producer. my
mother, the director, K a.tart
for my wardrobe and all the
rotten mothers \ho made me
look so good.
''The fact that J. won after
my own children voted against
me makes its a double honor.
I also take iron. Thank you."•
Harbor Area Jirls (left to right) Dianna Linhart and Laurie Hostetler compare
Dianna's original sketch with the printed counterpart in this month's Ameri·
can Girl magazine. A quote from Laurie's review of the movie L-Ove Story also
appears in the magazine. The daughter of the W. 1.f. Linharts, Dianna is a stu-
dent at Costa ?tlesa High School. Dr. and Mrs. Clifford R. Hostetler of Corona
de! Mar are parents of Laurie, who attends Corona de! 1'1ar High School.
No. 3: Bowling -Trophy
Award For J\lost Improved
Pla)'er:
''Hey, gang. could you hold
it down"? l 'm not big on
speeches, but oh \\'OW. This
is too much. r started to bo\vl
in the \Vednesday J\1orning
"I ~'ill dispense with the
usual cookie jokes. • .v.·hat
a sweet job you have and
thi s is the way a scout leader
crumbles. . .and will only
assure you this will be a no.
nonsense drive.
"All cookies must be picked
up from my living room by '
the 19th before my husband !
gef3 home. Please have th e
1 correct amount of money in
1
TH INK
EASTER EGGS
Your Horoscope
Bowling Belles League about '"'O years ago and to tell
yoti the truth I "'as lousy.
(Laughter) I THINK
Taurus: Spread Word
"J had never bo\1•led before
in my life. Th':!n 1his yea r
l don 't know y,•hat happened.
Things started to fall into DTERY
place. During the last twD J Jc 11 .,.. t\... L II TUESDAY
APRIL 6
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (P.tarch 21-April 19)'.
Control tendency t o w a r d
headstrong actions. survey
1ltuation. Accent on health.
"'ork, relations v:lth close
associates. Strive to build good
will. Other1vise, there 11 loss.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Plans expand. What was
restricting now is removed.
There is greater freedom of
thought, action . ~take contact.
Spread your 011'n l'l'Ord. Write,
publicize and advertise.
GEPtllNI (lifay 21·June 20):
SLUdy Aries message. Be aafe
rather than sorry. Cheek
details. Study fine print. One
you trust may now be
misguided. Best to heed inner
voice. Refuse to 10 against
your own grain.
CANCER (June 21.Ju\y %2):
Be ready for change, travel,
variety. li-1ernber of opposite
sex plays excitini r o le ,
Creative activity ts in·
tensified. Specific emphasis on
journeys, ideas. Relative may
sing blues.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): If
you spend too much no\v on
nonessentials, you may regret
it later, Concentrate on home
improvement. Conditions in
domestic area demand at-
tention. Diplomatic approach
will succeed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22 )'
Legal entanglement co u I d
create some delay a n d
dismay. Key iJ to time moves.
Cycle is basically higb. Wbat
Ni..;ptial Mass Read
For Jane Louise Hall
A nuptial ma&s in St. Fran·
<:is of Assisi Church, Hun4
tina:ton Beach linked Jane
Looise. Hall, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Warren G. Hall of
Htinllnatoo Beach and John
Adrian WJlls III.
Officiating was the
Thomas Schneider.
Rev.
Miss Deborah Dewlen was
1 the brJde'1 maid of honor 1
while brldt.!maidl included
Miss Susan Costa, M r 1 .
Thomas Leroux, and Mn:.
Raymond Gtuthler, 1ister of
appears a setback will pro. weeks when I hit my stride, ns •· 111R st \A.Ill I ll.lf\X
bably rebound in your favor. !he pressure began to build '
LlBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22): on me. Today, ~·hen I rolled j W"'811ff tt--641-2444
So NIWPOITll INN me secrets are revealed.1 ~12~9_fl()o:_r _im~y>'_'l_'h'.:rc_:•::•:.::· g"..'.'.a.".m::e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Not a good time to try hiding
things-including feelings. Ex-
press yourself. Realize those
in positions of authority \Vil
back you. Stand tall. THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE
SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov, 21);
Finish rather than/ IN THE CAROUSEL COURT •••
begin-complete tasks, /ti HAYEYOURPICTURETAKENWITHHIM
assignments. What <1ppears on ~OUth l'Ol$f 4»f.,.,1 In Cost• Mest
surface is deceptive. Look'! cJ 'I JI-..
dications. You get chance to beneath super f i c i a 1 in-Ir=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::::::::::=~==-,
display polential. Go to it. i--
SAGIITARllJS INov. 22·
Dec. 21): You seem now to
be very intuitive. but you also
are seeing persoll.!I, situations
as you wish they could exist.
Key is to really know the:
SCOl"t!. Superiors are testing.
CAPRIOORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Subtle. approach is 1 necessary. ffeavy-handed
methods now will work against
you. Realize this and act ac·
cordlngly. What has been a
secret will be revealed, Pro-
tect yourself in clinches.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
13): Have fun but don't
neglect commitments. You .
v.•ill hav'e to face yourself.
Some who encourage you may
have ulterior motives. Take
time to analyze. Give full play
to intellectual curiosity,
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20):
Break through red tape. State
needs in frank manner. Leo
individual c a n now prove
valuable ally. Aid comes
through unorthodox channels.
the now knits
practical, packable, beautiful
READ -TO -GO KNITS!
for the young 1t he•rt
"SLINKY" KNITS
e SOLID COLORS $129 hand w•sheble acetate
YD. • MOD PRINTS $198 wash•ble ac.t•te
'4"/45" widths YD.
CEDILLA KNITS $1~ clingy textured nylon
in solid colors
lbe bride. Camilla Lennert Ir~;;---..~\!" Blazer Stripe Knits $229
C'S l'~tlt
MRS. J. A. WILLS 111
Form1I Wedding
was the flower air!.
David Fuente.1 iitood as best
man for the bridea:room, who
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Wills Jr. of Pauma
Valley.
Sealing guests were Steve
V.'illiams, Mike Hall and
Gauthier.
The bride was graduated
gr••t colors and combos
acetate & nylon 45" YD.
"LOOP" KNITS $2~! "wet" look-crajM "fetl"
•cet1te & nylon solids
SCREEN PRINT
DOUBLE KNITS
Officers for 1970.71 v.·i!J be
elected during the g p.m.
meeting on Tuesday, April 6,
of Beta Alpha Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi.
The group wi\1 gather in
the Huntington Beach. home
of Ml'!. Phil Peoples.
from Huntington Beach High
L h T School and the bridegroom at-Un C eon opic Lures i.nded oebools Jn Pasadena. Both studentl at Orange Coast
College, they will make their
TOO-/. polyester
$499
YD.
Spring rushing for new
members is beginning, and
any<>M interesttd in joinlnf
the sorority may call l\1rs.
:000 Kracht.
Hunt Expands
To Toy World
New toys, cookie~. tandy
eggs and Easter baskets v,•i\I
be added to Easter eggs 11s
Cystic Fibrosis children from
Orange County join an egg
hunt at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday
April 8, in Garden Grove. '
1bt egc hunt ind a &•me
seu!Ofl bu bff:n arran1td by
the 0.1.o Alpha XI Chapi.r
of Bet.I Sifm1 Phi 1ororlly
and the Cyatic FJbrosla Yount
Actlvfsl.
•. • Parents Club
Orqe Coat Chapter,
Parenti \\'lthout P 1 r I n e r s
sponsors a pancake breakful
the l11st Sunday ol e11ch month
in Coit.a l\tesa Oty P1rk from
t .a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wally
Rlchardl, chairman, • i J I
answer que1Ucm1 reg1rdtnr
(he public "rtln or thine"
e:veat •t MU700 or 6d-M&5.
Area' S Yachting Wives liii1;;;;;1"l•bo•me~1nc..tiiiiiiiiiiii•Miiiiieaiiii•· iiil
I ..oot'I OP OIL PAINnN•I
WHOLIUU WAllHOUll
OPIN TO THI PUILIC \Vynnett E. Bedall, Jack F.
Early, \Vllliam C. Adams,
.• ' "''hat Every YachUn& Wife
Should Know but J3 Afraid
to Ask is the intriguing topic 50°/o OFF
John R . Amies, Larry A. . "" •. •DUIO••· SANTA AHA M E E r for the opening Ladies Day 1'1il!er, ~fyron ~heward, Sallye ~ ""-• •J.HMt •
luncheon in Bahia Corinthian Brat~-a~<l _oa~1~ Domanski. ~ DEAL•1ts '<WANTED rm~ D E B B I E
Yacht Club on \\"tdnesdayJ -----• • • •
April i. J
During the n<?On luncheon,
model~ ~·ill presenl Lorraine 1
Suthe rland 's yachting and
resort clothes in an lnfonnal
showing. The $0Cia1 hour \\'Ill
begin at 11 :30 1.m. ?tlrs. Lorin
C. Weiss is chairman for the
day.
Overall coordinator for the
Ladies Day luncheons whlch
will take place on the tirst
Wednetd•y of e1eh month
dW""in( !he coming }'tar is
Mn. John P. Hooten, wife
ol the cmnmodort. Lune~ <'hairmen who ... 1n)
assist during the season in·
elude lt.e :.01mts. Jamts C.1
Beasley, Jam~!I R. G1rntr,j
\\'ilha1n L. O'Bryon ind S.
~fcKee Thompson.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e SPRING JS IN TIIB AIR
SPRING JS EVER\'.
\VHE'R.E
A "SPRING SALE''
Startin& )-londty, April
Slh. Stort Chlt(k tun of
new It ntar new tummer
items. Bathlna wlr.s,
1horu, shifl s, elc .••
Ck class !18,
• l\fotlier rttfl~ 1t ;\fother'!I
}frl~r .. I() lh·e in, rlra,.
ant hOmt "'11h own l"()()m,
\\'ork not htavy. If inter·
nted 0: 710-11
•••• our new Coroustl Op·
erotor. For some old foshion :
fun ride ttie Carousel.
little girlt l to 7 •nd Jr.
Mi11e1, 7 to I 0, 5)9n up e ll
thi1 we•k et B•rgstrom's for
E•1fer Beauty Contest on
Saturday, April I 0, Cerovsel
Court from I to 3. Ch 1rm I
c.otir1e for winn1r1 end other
South
Coast
'Plua
DACRON POL VESTER $598 DOUBLE KNITS
m1ny l•cqu1rd stitch•• YD.
SOLID COLOR
BUTCHER WEAVES
R•yon & Silk Tex Ture
with the look & feel of
fine linen
machine wash
44''/46" wide
Reg. l.19 yd.
m•ny mtchine w•sh•ble
44" to 51" widths
NEW "LINEN LOOK"
FLAXTONE PRINTS
mod desi9ns on
backgrounds
washable cotton,
44"/45'' wlcM
comp•re at
1.98 yd.
neutral
rayon, flax
yd.
HOUSE OF FllBRICS
Se1tft Co~ut rt-lri1tol ,, s,,, Di••• hy.
Cem M,........141·1116
Ot1111t1f1lr M.it--Or1"91tllo•"• 111i Htrbor
'11llemll-IZ6-ZJJ4
Ho~ ,_, 71)1 11 lrhtol
Sat. ............ 1.1111
Further C'halrmtn 1''ho are
plannlnc tu<'h evtnts 13 cook·
Ina aboard, cultural ouUn11,
bridle ind 1allln( are tht!
Mmu. Robert J. Eastman,, .......................................... ..lll_:•~·l~••:·~·~·~·~·~·~D:l:'l~·~':'~""''.'.:'.'~'~IL..~~~_.:":•:•:":"'"~'~"'"::'.'.::~:~:'.:''~'~''~':':''~'~·:·•~~~1:1·~'·~·~":·•~":"~'~''~ .. ~·~··~~··~7~.1~,1~1'--~~~~J
111 ... P•rt ~le P1!1111 •I St1~!011
l 1tttt• Pm-121·6llJ
7
j '
Fountai•• Valley
~ ' . .
VOL. 64, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . MONDAY, APRIL 5, 197 1 TEN CENTS
McCracl{en Seen as Ne :X t Mayor of Huntington
By AL,<N DJRKIN
ot tllt DtllT l'lttt STiit
George McCracken, entering 'his fourth
year as a member of the Huntington
Beach City Council, appeared a good bet
today as the city's next mayor.
The aMual speculation on who wlll get
the nod from fellow council members
warmed up' with the vote just two weeks
aw..ay. Councilmen are expected to make
Count y
Beaches
Jammed
Torrid inland temperatures and murky
in18nd smog drove nearly haU a million
people to Or3.nge Coast beaches over the
weekend but chilly ocean waters kept
most folks beachbound and out of trouble.
It was the · first big weekend of Easter
vacation for m o s t Orange County
iiiludents but troubles and congestion were
mostly limited to beaches and highways.
Newport Beach lifeguards estimated
the largest throngs wtth 150,000 visitors
on Penihsula , aands at Corona del Mar
beachei.
Huntif!gton ~ach guards figured they
bad 191),000 , along their long shoreline
while ~ a,mente logged 48,000 and
Laguna ~ch, 30,000.
Surf along tbe en~ir" Orange Coast was
low with waves generally in the three to
four-foot range and ,.,ater temperatures
hovered in the high sos. Both factors
contributed to keeP.ing visitors ashore
and holding down the rescue toll.
Newport ltfeguards said they rescued
27 swimmer• from t~e light rip , tides
running .. ll)o Newport beaches.
The Newport' MTt:rt count from the
poJice department was up slightly over
last feir. In 1970'00 Saturday. there were
32· juveniles and adults arrested and on
Sunday there were 56. This year there
were 60 both days.
Of the arrests, police logged tight
bookings of ·persons over 30 for drunken
driving. Officers co~ld not explain the
unusually large number of dru.nk drivers.
Police also reported a minor traffic
11narl . in the parking lot at the Balboa
Pier. "There were no direction indicators
or one.Way signs, so people were trying
to go both directioAS at the same time,"
one officer reported.
With inland temperatures forecast in
the high eighties and low nineties through
Tuesday, . police and lifeguards in
Newport ·are preparing for more of the
11ame.
In Huntington Beach, the biggest
crowds arrived Sunday with 28,000
iettling in tile sand at the city beach.
another 21,000 .at Huntington State Beach
and 10.000 at Bolsa Chica State ~ach.
"If the weather stays like it is now.
we'll probably have one of our better
Easter weeks," Max Bowman, assistant
director of the city's harbors and beaches
department, said this morning.
City lifeguards had to pull 79 swimmers
out of the surf, and again Issued their
warning to beach visitors to remember
they're not in shape for too much
This was the first weekend of the
summer season for state beaches which
are now open to midnight each weekend.
Water temperature for Saturday and
gunday as 56 degrees while the air
temperature was recorded at 72 degrees.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
!he city beach,' about 10,000 for Bolsa
Chica and 9,000 at Huntington State
Beach. .
Vacationers bit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands, but lifeguards had an
"easy" weekend with chilly waler
(See CROWDS, Page %1
Now, for M y
Next Nuni ber ..
TOKYO (UPI) -Michljl lso , a
!l·year-<1ld mandolin p I a y e r ,
escaped with minor I n j u r I e s
Monday night when he fell from the
roof of 11 nine.story building end
plunged through the tin roof of a
rtstaurant onto a bed occupied by
two sleeping women.
The women were not hurt and
called police who rushed Tso to a
hospital where It wa s discovered he
suffered only sllKhl head and leg
Injuries. The two women passed
out from shock .
Police said tso had pla.yed at. a
wedding party e8rlier' ln the
evening and afterward stopped off
at a bar with friends. He left "to
get .o;nme air," rambled down to
Yuracucho Street and took an
elevator to the roof of a buildnng.
He st8rted lo climb lts protective
fence but k>.'!t hl.s balance and fell
nine floor• to the bed.
their choice in a secret ballot at tht April
19 cOuncil meeting.
Today McCracken appeared to have the
four votes he will require, although those
wbo followed the drama of last year's
mayor making when Donald Shipley was
pi~ked alter ·a 3-3 deadlock developed
between Councilman Jack Green and
McCracke.n. will know the picture can
quickly change.
DEAD AT 77
Raymond M. Elliott
Raymond Elliott,
Beach Educator,
Services H eld
friends arld relatives of the late
R3.ymond M. Elliott, a Huntington Btach
educator for 34 years, 'this morning
mourned his pas.sing in memorial
services at the First Christian Church.
Elliott, Tl, died last Thursday motnihg
aft.er a brief period of1 hospitalization.
The ·fonner superintendent of the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District, known as "Silent Ray" ·to his
close associates, held the city's top sch9ol
post for 12 years uritil his rettretnent in
1957. '
For sixteen years befoi'e that, he had
served as vice-principal of Huntington
Beach High School, then 'the only high
schOOI in the district.
He began his career as a mathematics
teacher in 1923, having taught in
Anaheim for one year before arriving in
Huntington Beach during the oil boom of
the early 1920's.
Elliott graduated from Pomona College
In IIU7 with Phi Beta Kappa honors.
While in college he participated in track.
football and men's choir.
Later, he served in the inte1\igence ann
of the American Expeditionary Force in
Siberia during World War I. Returning
from military serviee, he coached
football and worked m· the business office
of the University of Hawaii. ·
Elliott also worked for the San
Francisco Chronicle for some time before
returning to Anaheim, his boyhood home.
to begin a career in teaching.
From 1920 to 192-4 when the Elliott
family increased by four children, tht
young . educator worked in tht oil fields
during t~e summers and commuted to use to work toward a master's degree in
administration.
During the Depression years Elliott
worked with Principal~ McClellan G.
Jones in developing ·a series . of
educational improvemen~ and counseling
services for the studenta of Huntington
Bea1;h.
While the war raged In Europe during
the 1940's he assuined the office of
principal and superintendent and wOrked
behind the scenes to help establish a new
college to 11erve Orange County. That
college was Orange Coast College.
Expansion of the Huntington Beach
high school district from one small
campus to five campuses was initiated
prior to Elliott's retirement.
The !ale educator made extensive
statistical analyses of population growth
pattern~ in the southland and · was
devoted to research of school funding and
the equallialie1:1 of wealth aoong sthool
districts in California.
One Slain in Clash
Of Motorcycle Clu!Js
WINTERl{AVEN (UPl) -Ont man
wall killed and three oUle.rs lnjurtd
during the weekend when gunfire erupted
among rival motorcycle gangs in this
small Colorado River border town,
The ahooUngs took place Saturday
outside a b1tr abo\,lt 50 yards from •
lherurs substation.
1
Here ls an outline .of the-reasoning that
seemingly inakes M'cCracken the faVorite
at this stage~
He appears ·to have ~ votes of the
present vice mayor, Jfirry Matney,
Green. Ted Bartlett plu.s bis own. Both
Green and Bartlett are believed to feel
that McCracken, who has served a· year
as vice mayor, deserves tbe honor on the
grmmds' of service.
Backln~ McQ-acken wouJd be a. awlt<;h
for Gretn who sought th• role himself
lqst Arpil, ~nee then, Green hu taken a
job. as an air pollution control officer in
Palm Springs and no longer ~ devote
the tirr.e to the mayor's post
Bartlett •:oted for McCracken last year
and Matney al•ueema Ilk~ to go along
with the move "toward · McCracken
because he fet:ls lhe need for a Change
and yet has said be does not want the
position himself.
The present mayor. Shipley. I s
convalescing from a case of infectious
hepatitus and probably will not be able to
· attend the April 19 council meeting.
Councilman At Coen's vote is an
unknown factor al this &tag,,· but
observers point out that be already has
served one term aa the civic chief.
Mrs. Norma' Gibbs, a former mayor of
Seal Beach, would like the· honor.
observers believe, but it may suit her
purposes more to wait until the third or
fourth year of her term. She was elected
to her first term 11 a Huntington Beacb
COllllcilman lul Apr!L -
Calley Outrage Cooled
Intervention in War ~ase by Ni xon Debated
Historians may argue for decades the
importance of President Nixon's decision
to intervene in the Calley conviction
review processes. a decision reacbed this
weekend at the Western White House in
San Clemente.
Already the Presldfnt's move to
scrutinize successive levels of the review
process ·bas been termed
"unprecedented" by a top Nixon aide and
••inherently disrelipectiul to .the rule or
the law," by former U.S. Attoraey G~
t raJ Ramsey Clark.
Draft Might
Call '125'
Despitt the views or olficiais, the
promised inlerventio·n in tht
controver!ial My Lai ma s·s &c re
conviction of Lt. William L. Calley, J r.,
seemed today lo have sated the public's
outrage. Letters telegrams and phone
calls to the President slackened tn the
wake of the weekend announcement.
Aldes described the President as being
~~concerned" about lhe low monle among
Calley's fellow soldiers and anxious to
demons!J'ate sUPPQJ"t. for, U.S. fighting
rmn in Vietnam. Nixon announced
Satuz:day he would perMnally intervene
in the cast and make the final judgment
on Calley's punishment.
While Calley's sentence may not. be
made more harsh than the Ille
imprisonment dealt him last Thuraday by
a Court Martial panel of Army offlCen:, it
may be lessened by successive stage.a ol
the Military review procel!IS.
It is those follow-up stages of the case
that President Nit.on has vowed to
scrutinize. '
John D. Ehrlichf'\lan, a· top Nixott aide.
Harbour Man Dies . \
said the President'• action was being
taken under bis authority u commander
in chief of the nation'• artned forca.
Ordinarily lhe 1ecrellry <ii tbe· Aney
would handle a final review of the cue:.
The Anny'• bighe31 Iegal c1ncor,,1'1a).
Gen •. Kenneth J. Hodaon, ArmT judge
advocate general, 11.id the' President's
action wu "unusualrt but "as we·
understand ft, he does not intend tB
interfere. witil tfle ~l review
. (Ste 'CALLEY,. Page. Z')
Nixon Leaves
Souih:l.and· -
-
In ~~X:+~~!f.~!JL~ij· · ;.. f pr Capitol
WASHJ!IGTON CAPJ ...: 'Nen-lloidiiig ' ' • ' • • .,.. ~ .•
Random SeqUence Numbers up to 125 A 47•yf:ar-old 'ttunt.iqtorl ilubour-man
may bo drolled to meet the Pentagon's "*' 'ldll!<I s®i!•v night ilhmi ·h~ draft call for: Mfy, Selec:tJve Servlc• · . .., ' · · . Director Curtis w. Tarr &nnDUnced today. pleasur! boiat collided wtlh ai bridge
During the first f«?ur months . or this during a channel · cniise.
year draft boards were calling men with Police said ·Donald R. ·Stoneman· 16581
lottery numbers _no high_er than.100. Peel Drive, w11 dead on lrf~aJ at
Tarr said it was necessary to raise this Huntir.~n rn'terciommunltY H o· 1 pit a I
ceiling to meet the May call f~r lS,000 su:ffering a fatat hn.~ injury l:ppanntly
men. sustained when bis hl!ad st nJCk the
At the same time, Tarr authorized local Humboldt Brtdgel
draft boards ·to order pre·induetio.il Investigators said Stoneman .had been
physical examinatiofis for men hofding demonstrating bis ZS.foot oUtboard cabin
· 4Jd be had ~"""•a,.yeu-
dld Jo<'PlmeiilW oo-.i.16'1 Uotlh• ~ wil ltancfina'. bebln<! ·~-when
the boat'~ windshield hit the bridge and
Stonqnan rell backwards into the boat.
Mrs. Pimeritd auffered Only a· cut finger,
accord)na: to police. · ·
Police llid the cre.w. of lour was anable
to, determine Which bridge had beeri
sltUck but steered the boat back to
Stoneman's· dock.
numbers up to 175. The previous ceiling cruiser' to 'friends visiting frQm «FtelM'
was 150. when the· accident occurred ar®•d '9:ll ·
Officer, Larry May said the vessel was
SQiithtiouOO ' on 'LOng Channel at an
apP,arent' high ratt of ' SJ)!i!ed When it
co,lldfid with the unlighted 'bridgt. Tide The draft has been taking men at a p.m. ,
lower rate this year than last year and conditions were 'high. · .. the top lottery number to be called ln
M;1y this year is 20 numbers lc.wer than
a year ago.
The Defense Department asked for
17,000 draftees in each of the first fl)ur
months o( 1971, then dropped the call Ill
15.000 for May -a five-month tot.al o(
83,000.
County Ecowgy Move
In comparison, draft calls for the first
five m6nths of 1970 totalled 84,$00.
Creates U.S. Agency
Gua rds Rescue
Five in Boat
Huntington Beach lifeguards pulled five
passenaers off a sinking boat Saturday to
keep it afloat. .
Once the P.,SS!engera were removed and
taken In a lifeguard boat to the municipal
pier, Roy Watt, 36, Garden Grove, todk
his 20-foot fiberglass boat safely back to
Newport Beach.
City lifeguards said they re~ived a
radio call for help from Watt about 4
p.m. When they got to him lhe)' found his
boat taking · on water oft of Beach
Boulevard.
The boat was overloaded, so all the
passengers were removed and Watt took
it borne alone, Uleguarda aaid.
An ecology mavement centtred in HtUt·
tington 8Pach· has drafted· a National
Environmental System! Act establ!Jhlng
a new Federal Environmental Quality
Agtncy.
The model bill was pi'ep8rtd by a
group of EDICT (Ecology Development
and implementation Team) attorneys and
luia gone out for review by Jeadert in
goverrunent and educatiQh.
j''f'he sooner, thls bill m'oves, the' sooner
peoplt released from the SST a1!4 other
aerosp1ce progfams tan get back to
envirOnment.al ·problems,'' said Charles
L, Stoner, chainnan of the 1,000-member
grOup headquartered 't GOiden West
College.
Most of Edict's membership, stM!IChing
through nine states. is composed of
engineers, 11cientist.S and management
txf>trts from the aerospace industry.
M~y have been affected by recent in-
dustry layoffs.
Members of the group are seeking
a national commitment on ecology equal
to the space program of the last decade.
Tlleir proposed cOngressional act cuts
•cross state and local political barriers
and approaches environmental problems
on a coordinated major scale not yet
attempted, according to Stone.
In design It was patterned after the
Federal Highway Act of 1956 and the
act setting up the National Aeronaulics
and Space Administration (NASA).
Stone said the act is a definite rnaist:er Plan of attack on environmentaf problems
under a single management.
Tbe agency will al90 establish en-
viro~ntal policy for Federal programs,
envlro ental Jaw enforcement. public
informa. on, community action coorliina·
tion, a act •t as catalyal for private
enterprise projects.
Harbour Fumes to Fade?
City to Divert Se wage Away frorn Cos tly Homes
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI when obitctionable odors tupposedly
ot "" O•llf' ,., .. mn began to drift from the plant. . ,
One of Huntington Harbour's most The raw s.ew&g~ •. ~tty o ff I c l a I 1
explained, will be earned acrosa Warner talked-about subj(!'CLo: -the lllmei ~jenue and connected to County Sanitary
aUegedly wafting over expeMlve homes ~let .Jl •\¥Jes .•la• a.n elghtrlnch· pjpt
from the Sull!<t Beach Sanilary" Dl&trlcl °!"fib~ t!' <,llTying ·llQ,OIO 1a1Iw: p;r
treatment plant -ts expected tt ~ay. 1 • • ,
dialppear into thin air toffaY. F.rom. thtm, 'it.-.wHI bt-tallri1 1 to .Uur
Clt:tottn::ials said t.his rrio'mlna they are large! lll:WWt treatment pla1tt· '-Mar
connecting the sewtr lines from tbe little P1cific Co"1 lDghWay, ~ Breolduirsl'
green building di18flectionately known as Stn:t.t In Fibntaln Vallcy1rbr purifieaUGn
"the honey pot" to city !Ines IC11dlng to· a l'nd ultlm*.dlsc:har1e hM the oetan~ •
sewage treatment plant jn Fountain llartge tilid it cnr:: the. cttJ. ·et
V&lley. H .. Ungtoliw Beacill $115,000' to l>oY
Joining ol the pipelines, according to up1cUy t141'ts inti! the DIJUict111 line&.
City Englnttr Bill Harlge, lbQW<I' Part ol ~&I>IW. O.U.1 wUl; Ill .u .. 1
eliminate the 1Unk r1i.se:d bj H~ 'l• llnoti ~ tba.1:.ai,"..·wJU .C.,Urt 1 1ht *
Harbour hdmeownen four Y<ll't !'-!' -~~ .P~•l Wal:oor.An/ila ...i
1 • • ·r
Pacific Coast Highway for purposes of
building a fire station.
The land, accordina: to Hattge, ls
valued ~1 $125,000 and the Stinset Beach
' SllC!itsry D~lrlct has agrted to P•Y bock
· $3(i.OOO over thf: hext flv't years. «iualting
the· amount· !)3id out for cpl)acity rights.
Ttansformation of the ''honey pot"
acr-f;age will be expen.l!kte, acr.nrdhlg to
l:larlgt who pointed out that elimination
of the old sewage setting J)ohd. gradlna:
wott and ibe' installation of bulkheads
would cost $100.000.
Rlchud Harlloon, who had been
aervln& as wperint.end~t 'Of th '
'c0rlttofeftla1' tttatment 1)>lAnt, said this
morning ht b<i1i.v.1 the odon wm pmbl
· • Cllet· llONEY POT, Pip 11
'
From Wlre Suvtces
1·7'eiJ~ ~ f""""llo today Wal
beodlng 5i~ t&Wa8hl.;ton -has madt
no movi to .speed inrntary review or the
life sentence gi'lf:n Ll William L. Calley
Jr .. to1"mlll'der~ 22 civilians at My Lai,
8¥fes said today.·
They reported lhe chie! executive, who
twice.last week inteMned in the Calley
case; belieYed 'the reqielll ~hould proceed
through· norznal;chaMels at. its deliberate
pace. · •
At the' same · tlriie,, th! sources said,
Nixon Would. have ·no objection if the
Pentagon 'expedited the ,procw through
euch ',t~chani~aJ , · act5 ae providing
additional stenographers to prepare the
fu,11 court·a;iar:ti~i record. It must be
comp!~¢ before the case can reach the
first leve~ of re.view -by legal officers at
Ft. Bt~iDg, Ga., where Calley was tried.
The Chii!f E~tive, sporting a new
tan, waa· 19 taH oil about noon aboard
Air Force .one from El Toro Marine
Corps .Air Statio.n. :
Before ' departing; he scheduled a
meeting with 24 movie industry leaders
at the Western White ·House on ways to
pull Hollywood out of its unemployment
slump: ·
The major movie· makers have been fn
the doldrums for two decades and the
situatlOn is worsening. The increase in
films being made aboard is part of the
problem.
The President wurked hard and played
tittle during ' his IO-day sojourn on the
shores of the· Pacific Ocean. He did get in a brief Sunday ocean swim, however,
despite the cool water ..
Mostly, he spent tht t.'eekend polishing
his Vietnam radiO.television address tB
be. delivered from the. White House
Wednesday, The speech will center on the
next U.S. troop cut. expected to speed the
current rate of 12,500 men a month.
Oruge Coan
Weatlaer
f"alr skits with some morning
low' cloudiness is forecast for the
coUl.al area Tuesday, with the
temperatures dipping back to 7S
locally and 85 further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Th£ SouOi. Cocst Choral and
Lip'ht Optra Association is back
bi· btuhte&s wi~ a rousing rt"'"
dilion oJ-'"'Gvt>.su" tn. San Cltnt·
entt. Ste Enterkdnmtnt, Page
'29.
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"
2 DAILY PILOT H M-.~15,19n
'
Candidates for Valley
Five candidates are seeking the two
school board seats on the April 20 ballot in
the Fountain Valley School District. Neither
incumbent trustee is seeking re-election.
The Fountain Valley district covers most
o! the city or Fountain Valley, plus a por·
tion of Huntington Beach. Currently. it serves
more than 10,000 students in grades kinder·
garten through eight. They are housed in 13
district schools.
Following are the candidates• ans\vers
to questions posed by the Huntington Beach
League of Women Voters. Three of the Foun-
tain Valley candida tes give thei~ views today.
The views of the other two will appear to-
morrow.
WANTS COMMUNICATION
Donald Hulett
Hopeful Hulett
Seeking Better
Commumcations
Donald Hulett Is seeking his first term
on the Fountain Valley sch&! board. He
is an air freight sales representative. He
did not reply to the League o( Women
Voters questionnaire. Instead, he
submitted the following statement to the
DAILY PILOT.
"The reason J am run ning Is to
establish a direct line of communication'
between the community and schools. This
will be by phone and personal interview
and also letters. Thi!: vdU be conducted
twice a month. I do not believe that a
school board member should make
major decisions an vote on them acoord-
ing to his vews and opinio ns. I believe
that he should consult direcUy with the
community. After all, parents are the
ones that know what is best !or their own
children.
"I also think the Founta in Valley
district has been an experlmenlal or pilot
<llstrlct too long. I think it ls time to stop
and evaluate all the programs we have,
and to see how good they are.
"As a parent and taxpayer, I think lt is
lime. we have a direct say in how the
schools are run. After all, they are aur
children and we pay taxes for education
so why shouldn't v.'e are parents approve
or disapprove monles spent or new
programs.
"If electro it is my intention to open
this direct line or communication to the
community."
OaANll COAST
DAILY PILOT
01.ANOI O)UT rUIUIHIMO COM~ANl"
leh•rt N. w.,,
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J1,ck ... c.,i. .. Vlei PmliMnt .,,. 0..11 ~
n. ........... 11
Elllllr.
,.... .... A. ... ,~111 ..
MIM9lnl 1111""
Al111 Dlr.111
WMI Otwlg11 (.own1y £dllor'
Alb1rt W. 1,1,,
MMcll~ Edllllr
"'""..,... ...... OMc. 11111 a.tell 1 .. 1,,1r1I
M•1n111 ""''•••1 r.o •... m , t1••• ........... '-"""' --.c., m ,_, ,._
Cll .. ,,.,.,.1 »I W.I air 111·-......... •l9dl: IOI H_, .... ! .....
SM Cllmll\11: »$ ,..... El C-IN 11111
Candidate Hix
Seeks l1nproved
Conf ere nee Plans
Mrs. Mary C. Hix is a housewife
seeking her first tenn on the Fountain
Valley school board. She rectnUy served
as chairman of the Citizens Committee
Against an Airport at Mile Square Park.
Q, What program or policy change•
wou.ld you like?
-"Develop a new report card that
provides more specific information for
parents. -->
-~take av a i 1 ah le parent·teacher-
student conferences so that children and
parents can find out about student
progress at school.
-Iru:titute a reading clinic at each
school for children with problems.
-Set up procedures for teachers to
contact parents regularly -particu1arly
when there is a problem.
-Purchase more library books and
1 establish library collections at each
school.
-Start an annual report so that
paren\.s kno1v what ls happening in
instruction and fina ce.
-Insist that new methods be worked on
constantly to individualize instruction by
administrators and teachers.
-Begin a program where each n e w
fam ily receives information about the
district.
-Start a testing program in math so
that teachers know where each child is in
each skill,
-Set up vocational programs for 7th
and 8th grade students that is realistic
about jobs, preparation, and
opportunllles.
-Require mo~ academic preparation
ln the middle school fer our 7th and 3th
grade students.
-Insist that the best evlden~ be given
us on how our programs a r e
progressing."
Q. How do yoo feel about u.alflcaUon'?'
"Unification is very important to us. Our
high school students: are being deprived
because of a poor attitude on the part o[
C'llher people Jn our 52 square mile area.
\Ve should eilher unify on our own school
district boundaries or work out a 3·way
unification. Fountain Valley .and
Huntington Beach with the Santa Ana
Ril'er on one side and Newland or Beach
Boulevard on the other would be
somewhat over 30.000 children after our
area is built up. My information is that
these boundaries would provide a proper
ta x: b a s e for future costs. I w o u 1 d
completely oppose anything large r than
these boundaries.''
Q. How do yo• feel about ttacher
tenure? "The probelnt is not tenure but
removing irresponsible and lmcompetent
teachers from the classroom, Tenure Ls
lo protect against firing when there are
no grounds for it or opportunity for a fair
defense. What needs to be chang"d are
local school district procedures for
evah.lating teachers. Every new and
experienced ttacher should be observed
in tile clauroom and eva1u11ttd rtgularly
by the principal. Also, state Jaw should be
more specJllc in describing procedures
11nd causes which will allow the board lo
dismiss under expedient due process. I
am lnteresttd In the co n t i n u o u s
improvemrnt or our chlldrtns learning
U1rough rvalu11Uon of each teacher and
adminbJtrator. ''
Q. How woald • voacbtr sy1tem or
olalewlde ,..,..n7 tu aflt<t local odlool
fla.uct1? "The tlate-wkle property tax
f
• ·+ t
SEES UNION LOOMING
Paul Hua rd
Huard Opposes
Teacher Tenure,
Backs Unifying
Paul A. Huard is seeking his first term
on the Fountain Valley school board. He
is a professor cif management at the
University of Southern California.
Q. What program or pollcy changes
would you like?
-Policies and mechanisms should be
established through whic h the opinions of
the parents in the district would be made
known directly to the board. This can be
achieved through d istri bu t ing
questionnaires or by telephone and
personal interviews. This process must
be under strict board supervision to
eliminate bias in the reporting of results.
-A visitation program in which at
least one board member attends eac h
school's PTA or PTO meetings on a
bimonthly basis would facilitate twf).\vay
comn1unication between the board and
parents.
-The board must establish a more
definitive system for the evaluation of
results in areas of student skills. This can
only be achieved through a thorough
system or testing which would establish
results on a comparative basis over time,
within each school, within tM entire
sy~m and among our system and other
sy~tems. Without clear lJUantitative,
comparative measures of performance
established for each grade level, the
gracUng system used to report pupil
progress is meaningless and Jndeed
deceptive.
-The board must take an active role in
evaluating the prospec\.s for and the
consequences of unionization or collective
bargaining for master contracts by
teaching personnel in the district. The
disruption ()( the educational process
"'hich has taken pla~ elsewhere must be
avoided here by the joint, conscientious
action of the board, the dislrlcl
administration and the tta<:bing fac ulty.
Q. How do you feel about ull.illcal\on ?
"Unification is desirable becau:'lt it
enables any school district to achieve a
higher degree af coordination i n
curriculum and teaching methodology.
Howe1'er, districts crea ted by unification
should be as small as possible to provide
for m a x i m u m parent·communlty
influence on the educational process.
\Vhile financial feasibilit y "'Iii be a major
determinant of district boundaries, I
fa vor esl.8blishiog these boundaries
contiguous with other fl o 11 t i c a 1
borderlines In order to achieve a unified
sense of community.
Q. How do yeu fetl about uacber
lenurt? "Tenure i.$ ob~lete and
unneeded. Teachers hal'e adequate job
protection by virtue of st.Ate and federa l
laws. This issue may become moot if
collective ba rgaining and m 1 s t e r
\Yould be essen~ial before a voucher
system could be atlempte-d becil:\ljf)
school dlslricts are receiving diffe(\nt
an\Ounls of money to tducate children
now. fo'ountain Valley has one of the
lowest financial battS 1n Calltomt. and
would definitely benefit from a state-wide
property tax. It would appear that Ole
vouchtr system is in conOld vdth the
14th Amendment of Ole U.S. Corutitution
in that It doesn't provade ''equal
opportunity under the law". The.rt would
be little or no cootrot of who r.acbes or
thelr quallficatJom."
'
~-P,119e J 30 Kids Served
CALLEY. ••
channe.111.11
Ehrlichman wu reported al first to
have deIDed the ~ldenl's decision wu
1'tq>recedented" notlll& that Prtatdent
Abraham Llncoln bad s I m i I a r I '1
Intervened in a military conviction.
Observers noted that the Lincoln
precedent was dissimilar from the Calley
case in Olat there was no UnUorm Code
or Military Justice iJl force in Lincoln's
time.
Head Start Set
For Downtown
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvania saJd today Nixon's actions
in the Calley case have been designed to
"lower the temperatures ()f public
reaction."
Another GOP senator said if the pubtlc
really hails a convicted mass murderer
as a hero, "then we have changed
disastrously as a people."
Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R·NY), told the
Senate the world will judge whether the
U.S. applied a double standard between
the war crimes trial at Nurenberg after
World War II and tbe incidents at My
Lai.
Talks of medals , marches and honors
for Lt. Calley "is not patriotism but
antlpat.rlotism," Javils said.
Sen. Frank Church (D·ldaho), leading
Capitol Hill dove, said Sunday that Calley
should be treated neither as a scapegoat
nor a hero.
Church and Sen. John Shennan Cooper
(R·Ky.), said Calley must be subject to
the final judgment of the law.
Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson l it (0-111.),
~aid today that if Lt. Calley Jr. is guilty
of My Lai crimes, cithers with responsi·
bility for the slayings must also be
called to answer.
At a Capitol news conference,
Stevenson said that H Calley killed
''innocent women and children, he must
pay the penalty." Later he said, ''If he is
guilty, he must pay the penalty, and so
must others, in their consciences or in
the courts."
Jn the House, Rep. Ed Edmondson (D-
Okla.), introduced a resolution calling on
Congress to go an record favoring a full
pardon for Calley.
Gumnan With Turban
Hunted in Slayings
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A man
wearinB a towel as a turban walked up to
the sc!bond floor entrance of an after·
hours club in so uth central Los Angeles
Sunday morning and cut down two guards
with a burst from an "automatic
weapon."
Stephen A. Macklien, 23. and
Darlington Freeman, 20. were killed and
a richocheting bullet wounded a woman
byslander in the foot.
'Iflere were sbout 300 persons dancing
in the showcase when the shooting
occurred.
contracts become an unfortunate reality
in our dlstrict."
Q. How wouJd a voucher syslem or
statewide property tu affect local school
finances? "The voucher system is
appealing philosophically as it would
provide for constructive competition and
expanded parental choice in educating
our chlldren. Unfortuantely , the existing
system of education is simply not
adequate to cope with the demands of a
truly worthwhile voucher system. If
vouchers are to be used, a substantial
reconstruction of the existing educational
establishment will be abs o I u t e 1 y
necessary.
"Statewide property taxation would
eliminate some present inequities in
school funding. Thereby, promoting the
establishment of smaller community-
controlled school districts. Both of these
results are desireable. However , there
are dangers involved. First. the
community might lose control over the
level of funding of the district. Second.
and most important. there is the real
prospect of added curricular and
operational control by the state. These
factors could overwhelm easily the
possibility of closer community control.
Final approval of a statewide property
tax system must be based on the actual
legis lation created.
L.dies
Head Start is moving to downtown
Huntington Beach.
The federally.funded program has been
based the past three years at the Com-
f'ront Page J
CROWDS ..•
temperatures discouraging all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds or
15,000 on the beaches both Saturday and
Sunday, with air temperatures at the
shoreline reaching a high 86. Cool 59-
degree water, however, kept most of the
beachgoers up on the sand.
Surf was Jow and there wert ne· serioU!
rescue incidents. Forty-two beach visitors
required minor first aid assistance from
the lifeguards and three lost children
\Vere restored to their families.
San Clemente's shoreline was visited
by 48,000 persons basking u n d e r
temperatures in the low 80s.
Only one major incident was reported
by lifeguards for the weekend, the
grounding and total loss of a new 20-foot
sloop sailed by a Buena Park man.
Guards sa,id tbe Logger 20 sloop
fetched up on Doheny State Park Beach
at about 6 p.m. Saturday during a brisk
evening wind.
The vessel was owned and sailed by
Daniel Hernandez, 35, who told rescuers
that v.•hen the wind picked up be dropped
his sails and fired up a small outboard
motor, but the tiny auxiliary could not
gain headway against t.be breeze.
The boat grounded and was destroyed
by surf, guards said.
Other than the boating incident,
activity on the beaches patrolled by the
San Clemente guard service was light.
Only a few dozen rescues were
recorded through the weekend. The bulk
of the beach attendance and rescues
occurred Sunday as the mercury on the
sands rose to 82 degrees. Water readings
were a chilly 56 to 59 degrees.
f'rom Page J
HO NEY POT • • •
even though the new connection has been
made.
''The houses in Huntington Harbour are
built on reclaimed marshland and that's
where the smell was coming from. \Ve
1nay have been a contributing factor, but
people tend to smell with their eyes.
When they see a sewage treatment plant,
they 'll blame the smell on it," he said.
The treatment plant was disposed or
this January when members of the
Sunset Beach Sanitary District Board of
Directors voted 4 to 1 to close the facility.
Some residents or Sunset Beach and
Surfside which the district serves had
feared that annexation lo the sewer lines
would be the first step toward annexation
af the county areas to Huntington Beach.
City ofliciaJs have denied th.is.
The old treatment plant became the
subject of a bitter feud between Harrison.
the Sunset Beach Sa nitary District and
Huntington Harbour homeowners.
It was unclear today whether lawsuits:
filed by both sides have been dropped as
a result or the connection agreement.
1925 LA Skyscra per
Will Be Demolished
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Demolition of
lhe city's oldest skyscraper begins today
to make way for the new 62-story
headquarters of United Californla Bank.
The Wilshire-Hope Building. built in
1925 at a cost of $2 million will be torn
down to be replaced by the talle!l
building west of Chicago.
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Mens
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munity United Methodist Church tn north
Huntington Beach.
But when the preschool program shuta
Its doors in June, it will be the l•.rt
Ume at the church.
Preschool for 4-year-old tots will start
again next October somewhere in the
downtown area.
"The larger percentage or our chilhn
come from downtown," Mn. Robert
Foote, director of the church progr am,
explained.
Head SLart currently serves SO ch.itdren
in an eight·month program at th e church.
It provides preschool experiences for
youngsters who come from economically
deprived families.
Mrs. Foote said the Huntington Beach
Community Center at 309 Fifth St. has
asked to be the delegate agency for
the Head Start project, but final approval
hasn't been granted yet.
The Community Action Council (CAC)
of Orange C,ounty decides what agency
in a cily may sponsor Head Start. ·
The C,ommunity Methodist Church
launched Head Start in Huntington Beach
with 60 toddlers in a summer school
program in 1968. Some 75 children en-
tered the summer program in 1969. .
Last year the summer program was
dropped. and the eight-month course
opened in October.
"We're only serving JO children, but
\\'e feel we 're doing a much better job
with them now," Mrs. Foote explained. 1 In addition to Head Start, the church ,
runs its own private preschool and gives
scholarships for it to some of the Head
Start children.
"We have only 11 scholarships to the
preschool now," Mrs. Foote, who directs
both programs, said. "When Head St.art
moves downtown, we'll increase our
scholarships to 20, which really makes
it better for Huntington Beach."
Mrs. Foote will stay at the church
preschool, rather than shift with the
Head Start project in October.
When the CAC announced the shift
from the church to the downtown area.
it also asked any agencies which would
like to be a delegate agency for Head
Start. to contact the CAC at 835-2236,
before April I•.
Garage Gutted
In Huntington
Fire destroyed a $2,500 garage and
shed Sunday afternoon in Huntington I
Beach.
Firemen said cause of the 3:45 p.m.
blaze at 19301 Beach Blvd. is still under
inve!tigation. Vandals are suspected,
investigators said.
Three firemen received minor injuries
battling the flames. Both the garage and
shed were destroyed, but no one wu
seriously hurt.
The garage and adjacent home are
owned by Gerald Lance. The occupant Ls
Mary Ri vgera.
73-year Beacl1
Resident Dies
Margaret ftf. Reeves, 77 , 11 73.year
resident of Huntington Beach, died
Sunday.
She lived more than 40 years at 1801
Main St.
There will be no funeral services. She
ls survived by her husband, Richard;
four sisters, Marie Copperton, Jenny
Cullers, Deutrice Roberts and Edna
Burgess; and three brother1. Ray
Seabrldge, Robert Seabridge and Lee
Seabrldge.
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VOL. 6'4, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 38 l'AGES ORANGE CCilUNTY, .CALIFORNIA
. .
MONDAY, APIUL S, 1971
Toda~li Flnal
----.. -N.v:. sti.eti ..
TEN CENTS
' .
Public uieted
Calley Intervention Sates Outrage
•
. DAIL T l"ILOT ll•ff PllM.
EASTER VACATION PLUS UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER EQUAL BIG BEACH TURNOUT
-This Wis the Scene Sunday at 22nd Street 1nd Oce1n Avenue Near Newport Pier
Nixon Rescinds
Abortion Order
For Military
Heat Wave Drives Crowds
To Orange Coast Beaches
Hl!!ltori8Il5 may argue for decades the
importance ol ?resident Nizon's decision
to intervene in the Calley t'Onviction
review processes. a decision reached this
weekend at the Western White House in
San Clemente.
Already the President's · move to
scrutinize successive levels of the review
process has been termed
"unprecedented" by a top Nixon aide and
"inherently disrespectful to the rule of
the law," tiy former U.S. Attorney Gen-
eral Ramsey Clark.
Despite the views of officiala, the
promised interv ention in the
r"nlroversial My ·Lai m 1s1 acre
* * * LVixon Leaves
Southland
For Capital
From Wtre Service•
President Nixon -who today wu
headinl back to Washington -has made
no move to speed military review of the
life sentenct given Lt. William L. Calley
Jr. for murdering 22 civilians at My Lai,
aldel Aid today.
They reported the chief executive, who
twice last week intervened in the Calley
case, believed the review should proceed
lhrOU&h normal channela at Its deliberate
conviction of U. William L. Calley, Jr.,
seemed today to hive uted the public's
outrage. Letters telegrams and ·phone
calls to the President slackened in the
wake of the weekend announcement.
Aides described the President as being
"conct1ned" about the low morale among
Calley'! fellow soldiers ind anxious to
demonstrate 111pport for U.S. fighting
men ln · Vietnam. Nixon · announced
Saturday he would personally intervene
in the case and make the final judgmen\
on Calley's punishment.
While Calley's sentence may not bf:
made . more . harsh than the. life
imprlsorunent dealt him list Thursday by
Owners Chided
a Court Martial p111<l of Army offloen. It
may be 1esaened by auccessive 1tagea of
the Military rnlew iro<aL
It I! tboae foll~ atages ol !be , .. ,.
that Presiclent Niian · ha1 vowed to
scrutinh:e. •
John D. Ehrlldnnan, a top Nilcon aid•,
sakl the President'• acUon was belna:
taken under bll authority as·commander
in cbtef of the naUon'• armed force1.
Ordinarily the aecretar, of. the Arm¥.
would handle a final revle"° of the case.
The Anny's highest legal officer, Maj.
Gen. Kenneth J. Homen. Army judi:e
advocate genera]. sakt the Pre1ldent'1
ISet CALLEY, Pase 1)
Leashed Dogs Ci·eating
Health Hazard on ·sands
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of lllt 01lly l'llfT SMlf
Dogs •re creating "serious health
problems" along Newport Be a ch' 1
oceanfront, Calvin T. Stewart. park!!I.
beachei and rec re a lion director, said
t~ay.
And he said the · problem · Is c,used
mosUY by dogs on leashes.
•1t•a really tlte·fault of the dog owners
who take their pets for an earty-momlng
stroll along ~ oceanfront sidewalks,"
Stewart said. . ,_ ·
'"Ibey doii'i cleu up alter their dogs.
They'tt'jtdfnot being fair to the general
public."
Pres,id!nt Nixon has rescinded a
Pentagon order liberalizing abortions ~
milit,afy bolpttlla b<cauu be pmonallt
cpposes abortion as ''an unacceptable
form of ·Population control."
Torrid inland temper•tures,and murky
inlu4.-·-~.laa11 • millioa peo~o Orange CQlt btachu ovu the w~ but chiDy oetan waters kept
moal folit beacllbound and •·ol lrouble.
out of the 1urf, and qain issued their
...rnios.-..;~ti ,..,,..,., th< ;.,
~ w.Wd ~ "' ob •• Ji lfio:
V·Cl Classroom
ff' ·by BlJm ,."'fijbi.. Ht iaJd lht """i!!>'!oiataJ 1ubje<t,
alrudJ qnc1ttliiikf1 bY l'O dty COUD<il,
will liU!y be dllcualOd ot a m .. tlnc ol °" Pub, Bt1cllf,I, !"d Recr .. Uon I •Cliillil~ ~IO p.m. lb City "A. .• ood and ~ettt~s i>eO?lt will not
apt, in my view, for this kind of
altenlaUve to its social dilemmas,"
Nixon said In a special statement issued
Saturday from the Western White House
in San Clemente.
"Rather. it will open its hearts and
homes to the unwanted children of its
own, as It has done for the unwanted
millions of other lands."
The order will make military hospital•
comply with the generally m or e
restrictive aborlion laws in the states in
which they are located. lt supersedes a
Pentagon directive of July 31, 1970, which
made it easier to obtain abortions in 163
military hospitals throughout the coun-
11)'.
"From personal and religious beliefs. I
consider abortion an unacceptable form
of . population control. Further,
unrestric~d abortion policies, or abortion
on demand, I cannot square with my
personal belief in the sanctity of human
life -including the life of lhe yet
unborn," said Nixon. a Quaker.
Accordng lo the White House, the
President djd not learn of the Pentagqn's
order until recenlly.
Magic No. 125
Might be Draft
Digit for May
WASHINGTON (AP) -Men holding
Random Sequence. Numbers up to 125
may be drafted to meet the Pentagon's
draft call for May. Selective ServiCf:
Difector Curtis W. Tarr announced I.Oday.
During the first four monlhs or this
year draft boards were calling men with
loUery numbers no higher than 100.
Tarr said ii was necessary to raise this
ceiling to meet lhe May call for 15,000
men.
At the same time, Tarr ~uthorized local
draft board• to order pre·induction
phy1ical uaminatiOM for men holding
nUD'lbers up to 175. 'Jbe previous etilin&
WU 150.
The draft has been taking men at a
101'(er tate thl1 year than last year and
the top )c&tery number to be called in
May tllii )'ut ts 20 numbers lower than
a year~ ·
Police ".Hunt Hit-run
Driver; Tot Killed
Simla Ana poOce today are hunting a
wom!ln driver of a hil and run car wblcb
!'truck down a 3-year-old girl in front of
her home late Friday .
The vlcUm ill lttne Martina, daughter
of Mr. and Mr~. David Martinez, 812 N.
Buley St. Shf! wu dead on arrival at the
Orange County Medical Center . Police
aaid the de•th car was 1 turquoiR
colored 1964 Plymouth driven by a
dar~alred woman.
It wa!!I the first' bll weeke.nd of Easter
vacation for m o a t Orange · Cowity
students but troubles anl:I congestion were
mostly limited to beaches and highways .
Ne'wport "Beach ' lifeguards estimated
the largest throngs with 150,000 visitors
on Peninsula aands at Corona del Mar
beaches.
Huntington Beach guardl .figured they
had 100,000 along their lopg shoreline
while San Clemente logged U,000 and
Laguna Beach, 30,000.
Surf along the entire Oran1e Coast was
low with waves generally In the three to
four-foot range and water temperatures
hovered in the high 50s. Both factors
contributed to keeping visitors ashore
and holding down the rescue toll.
Newport lifeguards said they rescued
Tl. swimmer! from the light rip tides
running along the Newport beaches.
The Newport arrest oount from U.e
police department was up slightly over
last year. In 1970 on Saturday, there were
32 juveniles and adults arrested and on
Sunday there were 56. This year there
were ao both days.
Of the arru1':. police logged eight
bookings of persons OYer 30 for drunken
driving. Officers could not explain the
unusually large number of drunk drivers.
Police also reported a minor traffic
snarl in the parking lot at Uie Balboa
Pier. "There were no direction indicators
or one.way signs. so people were trying
to go both directions at the same time ,''
one officer reported.
Wlth inland temperatures forecast in
the high eighties and low ninetiea through
Tuesday, poliei! and tift.gUards in
Newport are preparing for more of the
same.
In Huntington Beach, the biggest
cro•ds arrived Sunday with 28.000
settling in the sand at the city beach,
another 211000 at Huntington State Beach
and 10,000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach.
·:tf the weather. atay1 like It is now.
we rn probably have one of our better
Easler weeks," Max Bowman. assistant
director of tbe city's harbors and beaches
de~tment, said th~ morning.
City lifeguards had to pull 79 swimmers
they're not in shape for too much
This was the first weekend tf the
summer season tor state beaches which
are now open to midnight each weekend.
W11.ter temperature for Saturday and
Sunday as 56 degrees while the alr
temperature was recorded at 72 degrees.
The crov•ds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beech, about 10,000 for Bolsa
Chica and 9,00o at Huntington State
Beach.
Vacationers bit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands, but lifeguards had an
"easy" weekend with chilly water
{Set CROWDS, Page Z)
Low Clouds, Fog
Set for Coast
After Heat Wave
Low clouds and fog during the night
and early morning bours are expected to
retum the Orange Coast to the usual
spring weather pattem.
The "cool-it" forecast brings to an end
a record three-day heat wave that
brought 9(kfegrce temperatures to inland
Orange County and bigh.s from 75 to 85--
degrees along the coast.
Westerly winds from eight to ti knots
thJ!!I afternoon will bring in the marine air
that Is expected to fog the area tonight.
Tuesd1y will be mostly lllnny with
high!!I along the coast between 70 and 80
degrees until the westerly winds return
in the aftemoo11.
The National Weather Service predicts
the cooling trend will continue for ' the
next few days as the norm1l spring
onshore flow of marine air reptam the
Nevada high pressure system that heated
Southern California over the weekend.
The northerly Santa Ana winds credit-
ed for bringing the high temperature!
will be replac:ed by the afternoon wester·
lies -and become light a11d variable for
the rest of tonight and Tuesday.
Penta1•• upedlle4 111 .. ~!f!
aucb medlanlcal acts U
additional ateno.,.aphen ID prep<,.
full court·martial record. I\ must be
completed before the case can reach the
first level of review -by legal officers at
Ft. Benning, Ga., where Calley waa tried.
The Chief ExecuUve. sportlfll a new
tan, was to take off about noon aboard
Air Force One from El Toro Me.rlot
Corps Air Station.
Before departing, he scheduled l
meeting with 24 movie industry leaders
at the Western White House on way1 to
pull Hollywood out of it! unemployment
slump.
The major movie makers have been In
the doldrums Ior two decade! and the
situation ill worsening. 'Ibe increase h1
films being made abo.ard is part of the
problem.
The President worked bard and played
little during his lo.day sojourn on the
shores of tht_ Pacific Ocean. He did get in
a brief Su""ay ocean swim, however,
despite the cool water.
Mostly, he spent the weekeod polishi:ttg
his Vietnam radio-television address to
be delivered from the White Hous·e
Wednesday. The speech will center on the
next U.S. troop cut. expected to speed the
current rate nf 12,500 men a month.
Aides declined to discuss recurring
repom Nixon also may offer Hanoi a
definite total withdrawal date i n
exchange for release of American
prisoners of war.
The White House Sunda y reported 1
generally favorable mponse to the
President's decision to personilly review
the convicUon and sentence of Lt.
William L. Calley Jr. His decision
Thursday to move him out of the Army
stockade also was a popular move with
the public, aides said .
While the now has lessened 10mewhat,
telegrams. tele~: • .:ine calls and letters
still poured In urging clemency for the 17 ..
year-old officer !!lenfenced to I i f e
imprisonment for the murder of 22 South
Vietnamese civilians al My Lal.
A President's Best Friend
Nixon's Setter Makes Master's Home His Own Castle ' ..
He II undoobtedly the h1ughUe1t. ·moet
Independent and the m o 1 t pampered
member ol Pruident Nixon'• family.
And be haa pretty much .the run of the
place '4'hea the President Md Mrs. Nil·
on arrl\re for their stays 1t La Casa
Pacifica.
When t)le press brlga~ a.hows up. bow·
ever, "fim" (1hort for KJrt1 Tlmahoe)
pours on 90me of his better hoapit1Uty,
hopping: from • •Pot in the aun neAr his
master's office door and consenti11g to
say hello to the waiting reporters ind
pbotogrllpher1.
"'J'tm", whom evtryoM agr~s 11 one
ol the prtttielt lrJlb 1etU!r11 around, us·
u11ly stops for a pat on the head at every
newsman's knee, then Urea of It •ll •ad
rambles back for 1 nothe r nap in the s0n.
He wu on hi1 standard behaviof 111 the
middle of lat \t'etk, 1t,1ted one momtn11
at the feet or the Presl4ent'5 valet. M11n·
olo Sanchez, who likes· to boast a b o u t
his control ove.r the setter, a gHt to the
first family by their 1tMf at the ~!«tot
the Nixon administration.
"We are roommates/' uid the Cube n
re(ugee. ''and 1 ca• make hqn do wbat
I like. · ._,.
King Timahof started out for • 'I'~.•·
''Look," Sanchez said, tm!Unt~ * ~
him 1lt down." ~ '. .
And with 1 ntce. sweet IJ1tonaUon,
~nchez satd. "come alt dow1. Tim ..•
Come tit ... "
Ttre dog walked away.
El.!ewhere on the compound lbe attter
rai1es aome 11txlng quest.ioG& in lht
minds of some 1taff member.-wllh hJs
dln lng hablll.
He has bee1 kno.wn to nip a 1ltak off
a plate In the WhJ~ Hoose qiua bill
whll~ lbe cultomer Isn't }Oo1dnj.
~It do,yw ~l" as~ 1 vlellm of
11i .~ .. •• •pte_~t . . . °"' 11h I v ~ JblO 1w17 Ibo' I Pn ~·-d6s·-"' l' '· ~ I .... '
, .. ,;\Jt~qi,.....weat olf~y af. ,,,.....11"11_,;JodlY in4 . , · <118 bl l!elerlce Lecfll,. Hall a tJt Inlnoi 11111 Injured ~pne of tlle llO stlldeata 1ttetldh1g. There was UtUe
dam11e.
er. Olarles Gordon evacuated
tht 1ectw't hall 1fter 1 leatherettei
cue "exploded like a firecracker",
Tht tape recorder-type cue was
placed near the lectern and wa1
hooied to a timing device, a UC!
1poktsman aald. Sheriff's depulleJ"
att il'lve1UpUn11.
Newport Beach
Manager Search
Now Under Way
The formal 1dvutlslng for a successor
to Harvey L. Hurlburt begins this week
as , effective today, Newport Beach is
without a permanent city manager.
Assistant. Clty Manager Philip F. Bet·
tencourt today become! chief admini·
strator 011 an acting basis and Hurlburt
begirts a 45-day consulting period.
The man who ran the city for the past
sir years announced he was quitting
thret weeks ago. Hurlburt eaid he had no
other job and wa1 goi11g to take hiJ Ume
findine one.
Bettencourt's first duties will be to pre--
pare for neit Mond1y night's city council
meeting although larger1 pres!!ling mat·
tera al'!: erpected to take COft1iderable
amouats of Iris time.
The city administrallon is currently in
the fl'.lld!!lt of preparing a recommended
1971·72 budget and is operating without
the pending budget 1t1idellne1 -council
directions that precipitated Hurlburt'.s
resignation.
The city ls 1lso In the midst of final·
izing pltn11 for a new civic complex at
Newport Center and is 1lso work ing
with Laguna Beeoh and the Irvine Com·
pany on a land development in lbe 3.5·
mile area between the cities.
Boy, 14, Shot;
Mother Arrested
A 1 .. yeal'-ofd G1rde'n Grove boy wn
listed tn erlUCll ROnditlon today 1fter he
w1s lhot ln the head Sunday. His mother
wu booked by police <11 • attempted
murder chartet.
Carden Grove police Identified the
victim 11 Joaeph Nlewladonskl of 7702
Chapman Ave. He underwent surgery at·
Orange 'County Medical Center .
Physlcllns reported they are optimistic
about hla cllances for recovery.
lnvett11atlng offtC.ra said lhe slug
from : a ,38 ca!lbtr etetol entered Nl•Wl~'f rlghl ...,pl& and uil!d lbe 'Of hll'M~di "611ce lden(tftd he
• mOlll ik 11'.jy 1'l!wiadonald: 17.
hall,' • .
Ste,wart •Id lll{problem ~ not ltolai.ct It ' ~ to any,~ are•.
"They're ereatmi.. a h!alth hazard
•long the aidewalk the entire length of
the penln1ul1," be Aid, explaining the
prnbltm i1I greater cJOH to the sldewalkl
"not out,on tbe be1ehea."
"We've got,• tremendous mw on cur
heacbea near the w.idewalk," he said, and
pointed out the problem la compounded
by the fact· that's where the children 1•
to play In the momingl.
Stewart said It ii cominon to see 50 or
llO dogs Mine wal.ked between s:ao and
7:30 o'clock every '.moming. .
"And U.... P'l'Ple m Just not clellQlni
up otter their ,4agJ u required by th<
existing ·Jeasb fawl, '' he said. ·
'"Ibis takes place In the same place
where tbe cb.lldrltl play who live in·tbt
bousea alone the aldewalb."
He said be baa no formal
recommendation to mike at this point,,
but: will have if. one 11 requested by the
council or the commlssion.
The. city councn Ii' iti list mee\ing
instructed . City Attorney. Tully Seymour
to obtain:copin cf ordkumcts on dop in
effect in Huntinaton Beilcb and ·La1una
Beach.
Stewart said be ts certain the PBJt
commisaion will t&kt no action at ill
meeting Tuesd1y; bl4 lr more likely t11
name a committee or simply wait for
council direction. · •
''The city councU haa not 1sked us for
anything yet," he aaid~
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers of Balboa
originally propoRd dogs be banned
alt()fletber from tbe ~bes. saying he
hu. been under be1vy l!r\ssure from the
Peninsula Polnl Homeowner 1 • •
Auoclation to Id on the matter.
lfea .. er
Fair akiet with aOme morning
low : cloudlntu 11. fOl',teast for the
coastal area TUUd1y, with the
temperatum dlppln1 back Co 75
locally and 85 fur1ll<r Inland.
INSm£. TODA 'l'
TM Sout11. Coo.rt ClloruL and
LiQht Opcro Auodotlon b bock
in budts11r with. o tbWino rn.
dltton of '<GVJ>I~" m &• 01 ....
fntt. Ste fnkrtoiftment, Pog•
29.
1
-" ......... ,~ .. , Or•• C-fr '' !~ ,.,.,. ,, ~ ....... ;:f,
~ :: ...... . .... _. .. ..... .. -.l'lll't 11•1' --..
t DAILY PILOT N Monday, April 5, ltn
1'tejo Theft
Accuse~ Deputy
Trial Postponed
A seven-wetk delay was ordered today
in the Orange County Superior Court trial
of a former sheriff's deputy accused or
burglarizing the Mission Viejo Country
Club.
Presiding Judge William C. Speirs
ordered Frederlcl; B. Irvine, 42, of La
llabra to return to his courtroom May 24
for trial on charges of burglary, grand
theft, auto theft, receiving stolen
property and coMpiracy.
Irvine is free on his own recognizance.
The e:r-deputy was arrested last Sept.
20 and accused of being one of two
.i;heriff's ofrlcers who ransacked the
country club's golf shop of golf gear and
liquor in the course oC their rounds as
part time security guards for the Mis:!!lion
Viejo Company.
Arresting officers said J r v i n e
commandeered a patrol car and led his
former colleagues in a wild chase that
ended Jn Riverside County after shots
were e1changed between the vehlclea and
Irvine threatened to commit suicide.
Jrvine's co-defendant, Arthur B.
Duncan, 34, of Huntington Beach, quietly
surrendered. He was indicted by the
Oranae County Grand Jury on identical
charges and was found hanged from the
rafters of the garage at his home three
\'leeks later.
First Section of Public
Pendleton Sand Dedicated
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of "" Delb' I'll" ll•tf
California's top state par:CS official and
a crusading-congressman thiJ weekend
dedicated the first section of Camp
Pendleton beach to go public -rites
attended by 100 of the inaugwal users of
the rugged 3.S..mile park.
And immediately alter the afternoon
ceremonies Saturday State Pa r k s
Director _ William Penn Mott added
another note of uncertainty for the major
ranchers and tanners of nearby San
Mateo Canyon -persons with huge
investments which might be erased by
last week's Presidential ruling. President
Nixon took the canyon from Marine
Corps control.
Mott said that if his department
assume1 cootrol of the scenic canyon
south of the San Clemente city limits, the
ranchers' contracts would ''be honored,"
then their farms might be "phased out"
to allow for space for campers.
At issue is the 3.40!J..acre canyon now
studded with flower and vegetable
ranches in a canyon declared surplus by
President Nixon.
In all likelihood the canyon will fall into
How Sweet It ls
state hands and be used as the camping
segment of a huge stretch of beach park
which will ultimately run six miles
downcoast from the Western White
House.
Mott and Rep. Alphonzo Bell (R·Santa
Monica), Jed the list of VIPs dedicating
the San Onofre Bluffs State Stach
Saturday at 2 p.m.
Harmony with the Marine Corps and
promiY.t of harmony with th e
environment. were the two key issues
repeated during the ceremonies.
Camp Pendleton Chief of Stall Col.
Emil Radics streased that t h e
negotiaUons last year between the
Marines and state officials were "always
friendly, no matter what you may have
heard or read," be said.
After the rites Mott, Bell and the
Representative's wife went for a stroll on
one of three traW cut for access to the
rugged, picturesque beach.
During that walk Mott pondered the
fate of the ranchers in the nearby canyon
and said some "could be phased out"
after their current agreement with the
Marine Corps expire.
O~IL Y ,ILDT lt•fl ,,._ ..
Ho1ne Court Victory
The Michigan (right), Balboa Punting and Sculling
Society entry in match with San Diego Refit and As-
piration Society, appears to have the edge in race
with southern entry, The Trojan. Event was· staged
Saturday, but confusion still reigned today over
outcome. Commodore and chief helmsman Dick
Shaw of Punting and Sculling group claimed victory
"when a lady fell off our boat and tbe o th e r guys
stopped to pick her up." San Diegans, however,
claimed victory by default. A rematch is being con-
sidered.
Laguna Niguel
Man Sentenced
In Conspiracy
A Laguna Niguel man convicted in
Orange County Superior Court on lesser
charges after being accused of bribing a
Costa Mesa patrolman today was
sentenced to one to three years in state
prison.
Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered that
term for Samuel Rosman, 27. of 2935l
San Briso Place just three weeks after a
jury cleared Rosman of bribery but
convicted him of conspiracy.
Downey Savings Outbids
SA Firm for. Tract Area
Sealed bids ror the choice, 1.93-acre
piece of property Newport Beach owns
in Huntington Beach were opened Friday
with a Do'ivaey savings bank outbidding
a Santa Ana development firm.
But the loser may be the winner, yet.
Specifications on the sale of the tract
provided tor an oral auction to be con-
ducted following the opening of the seal-
ed bids, open only to those who had
made written offers.
ident of Dow1ey Savings1 said this morn-
ing it his firm does obtain the property,
it will construct a facility that will serve
as its Orange County headquarters.
"We have a temporary branch in rent-
ed quarters nearby that would be relo-
cated,'' McQuarrie said.
The :JOO.foot by 280-foot parcel at the
southeast corner of the iatersection is
the last piece of a 120-acre parcel New·
port Beach once purchased for water
well sites,
From Page I
CALLEY ...
action v.·as "unusual" but "a5 we
understand it, he does not Intend to
int.erfe.re with the nonnal review
cba.Mell. II
Ehrlichman was reported at first to
have denied the Presklent's decision wu
"~pi;ecedented" noting that President
Abraham Lincr>ln had s i m I I a r I y
intervened in a milHary convicUon.
Observers noted that the Lincoln
precedent was dissimilar from the Calley
case in that there was no Uniform Code
of Military Justice in forte in Llncolll's
time.
Senate Republican leader Huah Scott or
Pennsylvania said today Nixon's actions
in the Calley case have been designed to
"lower the temperatures of public
reaction."
Another GOP senator said if the public
really hails a convicted mass murdertr
as a hero. "then we have chanted
disastrously as a people."
Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY), told the
Senate the world will judge whether the
U.S. applied a double standard between
lhe war crimes trial a:t Nurenberg after
World War Il and the incidents at MY.
Lai.
Talks of medals, marches and honors
for Lt. Calley "is not patriotism but
antipatriotism," Javits said.
Sen. Frank Church (0-ldaho), leading
Capitol Hill dove, said Sunday that Calley
should be treated neither as a scapegoat
nor a hero.
Church and Sen. John Sherman Cooper
(R-Ky.), said Calley must be subject to
the final judgment of the law.
Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson III (~lll.),
said today that if Lt. Calley Jr. is guilty
of My Lai crimes, others with resporui·
bility for the slayings must also be
called to answer.
At a Capitol news conference,
Stevenson said that if Calley killed
"innocent women and children, he mwt
pay the penalty." Later ht said, "If be ia
guilty, he must pay the penalty, and so
must others, in their consciences or in
the courts."
In the House, Rep. Ed Edmondson (D-
Okla.), introduced a resolution calling on
Congress to go on record favoring a full
pardon for Calley.
tr tr tr
The panel reached its verdict after
hearing Officer Gary Barwig testify
that Rosman gave him $1 0,000 to plant
narcotics in the car cf a key prosecution
witness in court action against Eugene
Rondondo of Newport Beach.
It was alleged that Rosman thought he
had bribed Barwig to halt the car driven
by Charles "Chuck'' Dreyer of Laguna
Beach and place barbiturates in the auto
while booking the victim for a trumped
up traffic offense.
And even though Downey Savings and
Loan, at $338,000, and the Rinker Devel·
opment Company, at $327,250, are the
only two eligible, the auction will pro-
ceed next Monday at 7:30 p.m. in city
hall.
'Raw Deal~
0•1LY ,JLDT 11111 ,Mte
Officials of Rinker were not a1•ailable
for comment this morning to say whether
they will come up with a higher offer,
Under the rules governing the sale. their
first bid would have to be five percent
higher than the Downey bid.
After that, bids of $5,000 or more will
be accepted.
Gerald McQuarrie, executive vice pres-
Illness Delays
Human Fly Act
Despite a scheduled Tuesday headstand
20 stories above the sidewalk in Orange,
Denny Fox, sole survivor among the
tamed lluman Fly aerialists, has been
grounded.
Ulness has forced cancellation of the
76-year-old circus performer's plan to
celebrate his 60Lh year in show business
at 10 a.m. atop The City skyscraper.
No date has been set yet for another
try by Fox, of 212 N. Beach Boule vard.
Anaheim, according to Bill Purdy, of
The City's management branch .
Fox announced the daredevil trick on
a plank extending eight feet off the
side of the roof earlier this week.
The veteran whose name is inscribed
at the Sarasota, Fla., Circus Hall of
Fame remains active, despite his age .
East Gennans Flee
Marine Wants Calley Treatment
FLORENCE, Pa. (UPI) -Marine Pvt.
J\1ichael A. SCh\varz thinks he has a Jot in
common with Lt. William L. Calley Jr.
His parents agree -and fault President
Nixon for not thinking so also.
Schwarz, coovicted of murdering 12
Vietnamese women and children near Da
Nang in February, 1970, was released
Friday from the Portsmouth Naval
Prison and spent the weekend with his
parents, his wife and his 4-year-old son in
this western Pennsylvania town.
Schwarz originally was sentenced to
life imprisonment, like Calley. He thinks
there are other similarities too.
.;I got a raw deal from a few people in
the Marine Corps." be said. ''Field grade
and combat officers were all for us but it
was the people behind the desks. the
people who really don't know what the
Vietnam war is all about, who gave me
trouble."
Both his parents said Nixon should
have intervened more quickly in their
son's case.
"President Nixon should have come to
the aid of all the boys, not just one, like
Calley," said James Sch"'arz, the
Marine's father.
"Calley spent a few days in jail: my
son spent 14 months in the stockade,
while President Nixon refused to yield to
public opinion against the conviction of
our son," Mrs. Helen Schwarz said.
the service now if he were old enough.
This is a police action. I would let him go
into an all-out war, and I'd be fight
beside him," he said.
PoliCe action or not, Schwarz said the
\1'ar in ~ndochina must continue "to 1top.
Communist aggression."
Today the Marine private reported to
Quantico Marine Base in QuanUco, Va.,
where he will be listed on administraUve
status. He expects "some kind of
discharge" in six to 10 months.
Police Chopper
Aids in Rescue
The Newport Beach police helicopter
aided the Harbor Department Sunday
night in localing a boat in distress in the
dark off the Newport Harbor entrance.
Pilot Kenneth McGregor and Officer
Jim Golfos were called upon by Harbor
patrolmen to locate the vessel Barracuda
\\•hich had radioed it was alongside
another boat with a dead battery.
'The helicopter spotted the two boat!
two miles outside the harbor and directed
a Harbor Department tow boat to the
scene.
Richard C. ''Dick'' Torrence. assistant Newport
Beach postmaster. samples cake during retirement
party thrown for him by Postmaster H. Payne
Tbayfr (rigbt in coat and tie) and fello'v posW
workers. Corona del Mar resident Torrence, who
started his post office career in Newport Beach in
1935. retired March 31. He is 'succeeded as assistant
postmaster by E. Vance Roberts.
BERLIN (AP) -T~·o East German
youths climbed the Berlin Wall Sunday
and escaped to the West, West Berlin
police reported today. The pair arrived
on the West Berlin side unnoticed by East
German guards, the police said.
"My daughter had to drop out of school
because fellow students called her a
murderer's sister," she said.
Michael Schwarz said that in Vietnam,
1'You either get a medal or .a court
martial."
Priests Ask Option
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Optional
celibacy for Roman Catholic Priest& was
approved nearly unanimously at a
symposium of 500 clergy and Jay leaders
from the San francisco Archdiocese. OUM•I COAST
DAllY PllOT
dAA"Gl O>AST PUILISHlfltO COMl'AHY '
~o\t•rt H. W'••• l'r•lffnl Miii PW!llhtr
J.,k l. c· .. ,r.v
vie.· l"rtilcleltl .,,., ~· M•ntttr
Tli.'"'' k'.,,1r &fllW
T\el'll•t A. M11rphiftt
Mt""'"' Editor
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Mr..,..-; .. >di. C.~ ~. H~~a.-d\.. l'~lrl V•11•'1''. SH c_,., c••"'-...,. Sffill1e1>1dl., ,...,. ~"' -.... IMtt tllfl"'"' l"rlMlpel "'111""' ..... ftf la •I la W.t ler SITM!, C.I• Ill-.
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From POfle I
BEACH CROWDS ...
temperatures discouraging all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crov.·ds of
lS,000 on the beachet both Saturday and
Sunday, ·with air temperatures at the
shoreline reaching a high 8&. tool S9·
degree water, however, kept most or the
beachgoers up on the sand.
Surf v.·as low and there \~ere no serious
rescue lncldents. Forty-tv.·o beach visilors
required r11inor first aid assistance from
the lifeguards and three lost children
were restored to their families .
San aemente's shoreline was visited
by 48,000 persons basking u n d e r
temperatures in the low 80s.
Only one ma]or incident was reported
by lifeguards for the v.·eekend. the
grounding and total loss of a new 20-foot
sloop sailed by a Buena Park ma.n.
Guards said the Logger 20 sloop
!etched up on Doheny State Park Beach
at about 6 p.m. Saturday durina a brisk
1925 LA Skyscraper
Will Be Demolished
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Demolition of
!he city's oldest skyscraper begins today
to make v.·ay for the new 62-story
htadquarters of United California Bank.
The Wilshire-Hope Buildini, built in
1915 at a cost of $2 mlWon will be torn
down to be replaced by the tallest
building west of Chicago.
evening wind.
The vessel was owned .11:nd sailed by
Daniel Hernandez, 35, who told rtscuers
that when the wind picked up be dropped
u·ere a chilly 56 to 59 degrees.
his sails and fired up a sm.11:11 outboard
motor, but the tiny auxiliary could not
gain headway against the breeze.
The boat 1rounded and was destroyed
by surf, guards said.
Other than the boating incident,
activity on the beaches patrolled by the
San Clemente guard service was light
Only a few dozen rescues were
recorded through the weekend. The bulk
of the beach attendance and rescue!
occurred Sunday as the mercury on the
sands rose to 82 degrees. Water readings
Injuries in Mishap
Fatal to Countian
Denver S. Grubb, 23, or 11440 Western
Ave .. Stanton. died Sunday at the Orange
County Medical Center Of injurtes
suffered in a traffic accident March 27 on
the Garden Grove Freeway ntar Newland
Street In Garden Grove.
The California llighway Patrol said the
accident ii 1UIJ under investigation.
(lrubb v.·as a pusenger in a car driven
by Robert Es..,, ti, of 13151 Olympus
Drive, Westmlnsttr, which officers said
wa1 aPPiftntly situ.ck from lhe rear by
one driven by Adrienne O\edt, 3t, ol
15461 Capri Clrcle, Huntln1too Beach.
(
"I \\'ould object to my son going into
.,_ ..i, ri• • Iii ..... ..
ll~::11:.=:r· fMtll ............ .....
,... ..., " """'· .. n.. •• ..... .,..kftr-nh• L.dies
SOLITAIRE*
tl .. ll!IM 'IO ti!, dl•m&""
T"" clerlty, cul I. colc>r -
• ~ ""'<Kl..,, l!ff~ny
""""'Ting In IO( M!ilt ,.,
$550
Mons
DIAMOND*
RING
' "'· ..,..n.-""" • t1 !'11100 P!s.J Set 11'1 l•IC llffyy , .. _ OOld ~
... -tl'Nll lnc:llrlkwl.
$690
fMllll•.-....Nc .......
·---It .. .,,.... .. ,.,
40Y. .. 10% -.... ,..
'""' .... It.
A1 .,,_ 9f 1t. C"t• Mn•
J-el'T _. LM., I lnlr.
TM t. c•-..... Iott -.... ,..Hw,..c.-• ... ., ....,. .. ,.__._
*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
DIAMOND GUARAHTEE
When you buy • diamond from us we
will guerantff that diamond to appralM
at 40"/. MORE th•n you fNkl for lt or
your money back. Can you do a1 'Nell
elaewhere? COMPARE.
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST -
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SELL. TRADE COME IN AND HOWSE AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MIS.A --H-• -•t •
I
•
~I
7
\..
. .
' '
Costa Mesa TQlfai'iFlaal . ·.. ,. . .
N.Y. Stoeks •
"
..
VOL. 64, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDA'!', APRIL 5, lg'! I TEN CENTS
eounty
•
Beaches
].am med
. . Torrid inland temperatures and murky
bl~ lJll08 .drove ntarly half a million
oeoole to Qrallge Coast beaches over the ""9lrend but chilly ocean water~ kept
lnQI( folk1 beachbound .and out of trouble. l\ ~is~ fir~t big' weekend·qf Eas~er
't.aeition for m o s t Ol'ange ·eounty
atuClents but'troobles "and conge!lion were
mostty·limited'to beaches and highways.
Newwrt Beach lifegua{'ds estimated
the· largest throngs With 100,000 visitors
on Peninsti\a sands at Corona del Mar
beaches.
Huntington Beach guards figured they
bad 100,000 ·along thetr long shoreline
while San Clerpente. logged 48,000 and
Laguna Beach, J0,000.
SUrf along the eIJlire Orange CoaSl was
1...-with waves generally iri the lhree lo
fout'·foot. range and water _temperatures
hoYered in the high 50s. Botb factors
contributed to , keepina: visitors ashore
and holding down the rucue toll.
Newpoi't lifeguards: said they rescued
2'f. ·swimmers from the , light rip tides
runnihg along ttie Newport beaches.
The Newport arrest count from the
oo'tce department was up slightly. over
litit year. In 1970 on Saturday, there were
32 'juV,eniles and 1dulta arrested and on
Swiday there were 5&. Th.ls year there
wtTe '60 bOth days.
Of the arrests, police logged eight
bookings of persons over 30 for drunken
"'iving. Officers could not explain the
unusually large number of drunk driver-s.
Police also reported· a minor traffic
snarl in the PJfking lot al the Balboa
Pill'. "There wece.no dtreclitln indil;ators
or (ft.Way signs, so people we:re teying
le go. lffh dir~s 1t tbe mne time,"
~1~1!K~11itt1 'for.i!l" 1n
!J!e'1i!gh el&hti<I and.low ninetiel jhrougb
t:iiesdaY, polioc and lif!l""dJ in NtW1"'fl art preparlni for mcrt of Ille
Wf>•. . In Huntington Beach, tbe biggest
crdwdA arrived· Sundey with 28,000
aetlling in the sand . at the city beach,
another 21,000 at Huntington State Beach
and 10,000 at Bolsa Chica State .Beach.
"If the weather atays Uke tl is now,
we'll "· probably have one of our better ~ter weeks " Mu Bowman, assisLa.nt
mi-e<:tor-of ~ city's harbors and beaches
dtPartmenl, said this morning.
City lifeguards bad to pull 79 swimmers
cul of the surf. aod again issUed their
warning to beach visit.on to remember
they're not in shape for loo much
This was the first weekend of the
summer season for stale beaches which
• (See CROWDS, Pqe Zl
Low Clouds, Fog'
S:et for Coast
After Heat Wave
Low cloud~ and fog during the night
aiid early morning hours are expected to
return the Orange Coast to the usual
tpli,ing weather patt.ern.
The "cool-It'' forecast brings to an end
a rtcord Uu'ee-day heat wave that
brought 11(1...degret iemperatures to inland
Orlngt County and highs from 75 to 85-
degrees along the coast.
Wester\)' winds from eigh~ to II knot&
thb afternoon will br:inl in the marine air
that Is e'XPfided to fo1 the area tonight. 'tutsdaJ will be mostly sunny with
hl41" oJoog the coast belw .. n ?O Ind 80
degeu unU1 the westerly winds return
In !he aiw-. . The National Weather Se'rvlce pred1cb
the coolfn& trend wUI rontinue for the
next few days as the nonnal spring
onshore now of m1rine 1ir replaces the
Nevada high prusure system that heated
Southern C.ilfomia over the weekend.
The northerly Santa An1 winda credit·
•d··for brlnaln& the high temperatures
will be replaced by the afternoon wester·
Hu a11d become U,ht ud variable for
the rest of toniJht and Tue.!day.
~ome Popular
With Burglurs
Costa Mell family repor:1.td a suddeo
crime w1Ye SUndQ wheft fi!lr botM was
b<Jt&Iariled 1w1ce . wi~; ~ !"lfr,getjgll.
po~~ ' ,I \I-•• \lj;, , ·~ . Erwlil'll~ 'Tonne ·oi Sl7-COl!ttt ·Sc. told
Officer Jim Farley. 10tne0ne stole $50 .in
spartlna good! tnchuHng 1 bow ~nd ~4
arrows from hi• work&hop while his
(Amny wa1 in cburch.
Sllortly alter the 1 p.m. burflll'Y
rtPOfl, the f1m\ly lert to visit J~lends.
lteturnll\I ,1 7 p.m., Mrs. Tillie Tm\nt
dl•eovcred the front door 1cree:n &lubed
opin 11nd ber w11let with $75 tn cub
rnbJln.g from tht residence, 11ccordlng •to
polloe roporu.
Public uieted
Calley Intervention Sates Outrage
OA.ILV P'ILOt S!'tf Pllett
Historians m1y argue for decades the
lmportince: of Pre1ldept Nb:on'a deci.aion
to tntervene in the Calley oonvietion
review processes, a decision reached thia
weekend at the Western White House in
San Clemente.
Already the Pres1cienrs move to
scrutinize sUCCi!ssive levels of the review
process has been termed
"unprecedented" by a top NiJ:on aide and
"Inherently disrespectful to the rule. of
the law," by former U.S. Attorney Gen·
eral Ramsey Clark.
Despite the views of officials, the
promised interventlnn in the
controversial My Lai m 1 1 s a c re
* * * Nixon Leaves
Southland
For Capital .
OFF TO ENSENADA ON lU SPEED TWO.WHEELERS
Cyclists Prlnciotto, Terrin, Do\19 Br•nt (from left) From Wlre Servlces
President Nixon -who today was
heading back to Washington -has made
Students Plan to Pedal
no move to speed military review of the
life sentence given Lt. William L. Calley
Jr. for murdering 22 c:iviliaru at My Lai,
aides said today.
' .
To Ensenada Over Easter
They reported the chief eXecutive, who
twice last week intervened in lhe Calley
case, believed tbe review sbould ·proceed
througb normal clJ4nnels •t·lt& deliberale
~ .. i:;ii...J..~~
e1miSe. li wfia't fiVe C:. Meu. youths
· have-')tl ,;ptind u . they.~ &Mir way
al..,.. u.~. 1 IOday.. 1 ~. ,;
No-wi.py, "V\•WJ ecof01Y lteab. tbt
four Estancia High· · SC'hool ·football
players and an Orange Cout Colle1e
student will bicycle the 30&-mUes to prove
"we're Jnt~rested in the ecology thins."
Ron Brant. 19, of OCC Is leading the
Easter weik jaunt which began at 5:30
a.m. Siinday from his Costa Mesa home
at 863 Arbor St. The group expects to be
back Friday.
"We want to see things. the way they
really are,•• Brant said. Sbort sidelrip&
will break up the routine. ·
Planning to average 15 mil ea an hour,
the cyclists will· pedal IO-speed bicycle!,
laking· nourisbment in liquid form alon1
the way. ·
Brant negotiated special permluion for
the cyclist.!! to cross Camp Pendleton.
Ridin&: with Brant '!i Dan Princeotto,
~
,. n-... ... .ce.. . ! ' •. ..,...,... ~llU.17.iMldt>Ttrrill.~~··l'M·lji~f,f tiaWt!lui; tbt • ' . diil,
Bryco .C..b111, 17. Nixon would· I!Jv• no ob~ il tJio
1be Cf'OUP will maintain a fi~
diatanoe between bikes, Ind Brant hu p.,..,.,. eipe~ted tb• PfCC! .. .:l!!l.'!M~ auch mechanical acts 1. :'~ briefed the long distaoce cyclisll in 1ddlUonal atenographers to prepare-the safely tactics including appropriate danger signals. The group has practiced full court-martial record. Il must be
on .round trips to Laguna Beach, weekly completed before the case can reach the
journeys designed to put the cyclist.a in first level of review -by legal officers it
top shape for tbe longe:r haul. Ft. Benning, Ga., where Calley was tried.
Their interest in bicycl.ing is not a The Chief Executive, spar.ting a new
sometime thing. They regularly pedal to school and home. Classmates "said we're tan, was to take off about ' noon aboard
crazy," Doug Brant said, "But we're Air Force One from El Toro Marine
1oing anyway." Corps Air Station.
Ron suggests the ecological value of the Before departing, -he !Cheduled 1
trip. bes'ides that of a:etting somewhere without leaving 1 trail of choking ~eetinl with 24 movie industry ltadert
exhaust, is it's salutary effect on at the Western White HOUJe on wtya to
conditioning the bod;.:. pull Hollywood out of its unemployment
"It's our own way Of saying take your slump.
time and enjoy your world," Brant The major movie makers have been in
sdded. the doldrums for two decades and the
aituaUon is v.·orsening. The increase in
Nixon Vetoes Military
Relaxed Abortion Order
films being made aboard Is part of the
problem.
11le President worked hard and played
little during hia to.day sojourn on the
ghores of the Pacific Ocean. He did get in
a brief Sunday ocean swim, however,
despite the cool water.
MMtly, he 1pent the weekend polish inf
his Vietnam radi()otelevl!lion 1ddress to
be delivered from the White House
Wednesday. The speech will center on the
next U.S. troop cut, eJpected to speed the
current rate of 12,500 men a month.
)
President NiJon has rescinded 1
Pentagon order liberalizing abortions in
military hospital! because he personally
oppose! abortion as ''an unacceptable
form of population control."
"A good and generous people will not
opt. in my view, for thit kind or
alternative to its 'IOCia1 dilemmas.''~
Nii:on said in a specilll ttatemeut issued ,
Saturday from the Wostern Whlt.t House
in San Clemente.
''Rather, it will open i~ Matta· and
homes to the unwanted children' of ita
own. as it baa done ror lhe unwanted
million!. of other l1odS. ''
The order will make military hospitals
comply with the a:enerally m o r e
re!ltrictive aportion Iawt tn the states in
which they are located. It supersedes a
Pentagon dlrktive of July 31. 1970. which
made it easier to obtain 1bortions in 16.1
military hospilals throughout lhe coun·
try.
''From personal and religious beliefs, l
consider abortion an unacceptable form
of population control. F u r t h e r.
unttstrlcted abortion policies, or aborUon
on demand, I cannot square with my
per10D8l belief in the sanctity of human
life -including the life of· the yet
unborn," aaid Ni1on, a Quaker.
Accordng .to the White House, the
President. did not learn of the Pentagon's
clrder .until recenUy.
Medical License?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A local
physician baa one of the n e w
"penonalized" Ucerue plates on hit car.
It reads: QUACK.
Aides declined to discu!ll!I recurring
reporl! Nixon also may offer Hanoi a
definite total wlthdrawsl d1te in
exchange for release of American
prisoners of war.
The White House Sunday reported a
generally favorable-response to the
President's deciaion to personally review
the convlcUon and aentenct of Lt.
William L. Calley Jr. Hia deciaion
Thursday to move him out of the ArrtrJ
stockade also was 1 popular move with
the public, aides said.
While the flow has lessened &Otnewhat,
telegrams, telephone calls and letters
still poured in ura:ing clemency for the 27.
year-old offioer stntenced to l l f e
Imprisonment for the murder of 22 South
Vietnamese civilians at My ~i.
A President's Best Friend
Nixon's Setter Makes Master's Honie ffi:-s .Own Castle.
' f .. . -. .
He i1 undoubtedly Ult haughtiest. moot
lndepe......,.· .and tllevin•' pomptrod-. 1~J~=~~-Hle
place whtl the Pre.aklel)t and Mrt. Nir·
on arrive for their Jttys &O.I Casa
Pacifica.
When the preu brl&ade shows up.~ho•·
ever. ••Tim" (aboit rOf' Kini Tlmahoe)
pout• oa aomt of his beUer hospitality,
hopptng frvm a 11pot In I.be 8\ln near hill
master's office door and consentitg Jo
1ay hello to the ·waitlng reporters ind
photogr•pher~
"Tlm", wbom everyone •Bf"ld 11 on•
ol the prettiest lrlsll .. um tround. u1-
• I
..
ually slop.s for a pat on the bead at f!Vtr'/ 1 ··wilb a nice. tweet l1Jton1Uon.
MW-n's •-tben Urea of It 11! ond 1 ·-~~--1d ·~, ·" ...._ Tim . ..... • "'="· ~-• ... ·~ ·~ • ·~" ---.. · ..• r.m~~k kit a nou1'!r up ln u111:'1un. ~.._..lit. "· • · Rt WU !n hil standard belimor In the ~ • · · •• .
middle of lut week, teated one motJling doC ••tr! 1•1r;: •
11 lhe leel of the Pr,.idenl"s valet, ~'n· ' !l>ew~"!'l.lh< "°"'l"'"nd''.\r.r..utt
olo Sanchez, who likes to bottM a blj:U t
1
. raf1e1 ~nt :tqatlUoaj In, Che
bl• control over the setter. 1 ;ift to the mlndl tome 1t1R1Uember1 Wfllt 1'lt
flnt family by their staff at t.bt oulatt of · •dlnlng.b'.abill. 1 r' '
the Nixon 3dministration. He hll beM tnowft to nip a lttat flff
"We are roommates." 11kl the Cubln ~ a pit~. · tb6 WhUe Hou• "'Jndl• ball
retugee, "and I caa make him det-#hat wt\Ut, dlitorner ·lan't·tooktng.-
1 like. • " ~ )'OU do1" uked'a YicUm of
King Timlhoe started out for 1 wtlk. Titnih ~te.
''Look," Sanchez 11Jd, am.llln&, ''l make "You. can't very welt shoo 1way ·the
him lit down." President'• doa:.''
.~
conviction of Lt. Willian) L. Calley, Jr ..
&eemed today to have tated the public's
outrage. .Ldten · telegr1m.t and phone
calla to the Presldt11t slackened ln the
wake of the weekend announcement.
Aides described the President aa being
"concerned" about the low morale among
Cal~y'_a fellbw so!61ers and anxious to
de(nMStrate support for U.S. fighting
men ln Vietnam. Nixon announced
Saturday he would personally intervene
in the cau and make the final judgment
on Calley's punishment. ·
WhUe Calley's !lentence may not be
m1de more hnrsh than t!te life
impri50Mlent dealt him la!t Thursday by
Full Night's.Work
I Court Martial paae1 of Anny officers, II
may be lta.sened by suceesatve sta1er of
the Mllital'1' review procesa.
it b Ibo!< fol~•MIJ,.tlal"'ol the caM
tbat PreS!dent N1X1la llu vowed to
scrutinize. -
Jobn D. Ellrlldllnan,, a. top N-alde,
aald the Preti.dent'•· ~ waa being
taken Wfder \1U11aUt'.iiar:itY u~cmnm1Mtr
In 'chief' ol the" nall6n'I armOd f.,,,.,.
Ordinarily the le<reli\IY ol tbt Artnl
woµld handle 1 final revle7' Qf the cue. ·
The Anny"s ·hl&b<it lepJ,olflctr, Maf;
Gen . Kenneth :J,' Hodaon. Anny judge
advocate general, aaJd~ the Prulde:m'I
(Seo CALLEY, Pap I)
Busy A·genda Confronts
Costa Mesa Cl>·u'ncilmen
A 1erie1 of publuc hearings and other
matters tanglng from a general plan to
an unfinished house and Solicitation for
charity by a ahaven-headed religious aect
comes before the Costa Mesa City
Council tonight.
The meettn1 begins at 6:30 p.m.
Critical commentary on the city's most
recent financial difficulty with a private
operator of the public Co!t1 Mesa Goll
and Country Club ia expected durinl oral
~-~tio111 time.. .+,
....... M. )\'~-"' cloiibl< !lie city wW offer aw new
res~. 4fter iJsuiN 1 !arlPll 1tatt--
* -# -t 1 .,-~r. ~i ... ;' . rJcI Classroom . . .
Hit by Blast
• · Al. ei:ploslOI went .off ·shortly aJ.
ter noon today in a bio-che'rnistcy
class in Science Lecture Hall at UC IrVlne. but injured none 'ol the 250
studer1t.l attendin1. There was little
· damaee.
Dr. Charles Gordon evacuated the .)ectutt hill afttr a leatMrette
c11e "e:rploded like a firecracker".
'M.e tape recorder-type case was
pl1ced oear the lectern and was
hooked to a timing device, a UCI
1pokesm1n said. Sheriff's deputies
are. J.nvesU,1ting.
Draft Lottery
Numbers for May
Might Hit 125
WASiflNGTON !AP) -Men holding
Random Sequence Numbers up to 125
may be drafted to meet the Pentae:on '•
draft call for May, Selective Service
Director Curtis W. Tarr announced today.
~Ing the first four months of this
year draft boarda were calling men with
lottery nµmbera no higher than 100.
T1rr aaid It was neces&ary to raise this
c~lling to meet the May call for 15,000 ·
men.
At the aame time, Tarr wlhorized local
draft boards to order pre-induction
physical ezaminations for men bokllng
numbers up to 175. The previous ceiling
was 150.
The dnft has been taking men at a
lower rate this year than list ye1r and
the top lottery number to be ciilled in
M1y this ye1r ii 20 numbers lower than
1 yel.r 1go.
The Defense Department 1sked for
J7,000 drafteff in ta.ch of the first four
monthl of 1971, then dropped the call to
1,,000 for May -a five-month total of
83.llllO.
ln comparllon. draft calll for the first
fJve montba of 19'10 totalkd 14,500.
.
Police Hmit Hit-run
Drivet\ Tot Killed
Saiita Ana police todly ere hunU1111 1
woman drlvu of j hit ind· run car which
ljruck down a S.ytar-old air! In ff"llt of
hj< home lat.t Friday.
The vlctfm Is !roDe Mortinez, d111gMer
ol ¥'·and MA. David Mtrlh1e&.,IU N.
Buley 'SI. She was-dead oll l!1'1val 11 lj\e
Ora!'C• COO.IJ' li!edlcol Center. Polioc
11kf the deaUI . car was a lurquol.le
col..-ed 11164 Plymoutb driven by 1
darkhalred wom1n.
meitt detailin.r .the J'Olf~®rae. aperaUQA
10 d'ays .ago. • · . ·
"l'll U!tei-i, bu( tlut's ill,'' he
predicted. . . .
CQunoilmeo . "111 !Jptll ,the 7,30 p.m.
session .wltll four pUl>lic hearlna:s. the last
on the geherar plan.' ' . . ' Rey~ perlod\Ully 1lnco adoplion Ill
1957, the basic ,W~ for. community
dev~pment coot.aj.nt no major chaJ\ie1
In "" !•I'll\ lo "' ~ .inliilhl·
"lillaatly ""'' !'fl''"1clt> •llY •fll I• 6o ll;" ~.'ilil*io ,.mtrbd todoy.
J\e'Ptuentatitea of p 1 r t 1 c u'J a r
~'!'lod'po<ll't °" espeded to mike ~--eoNlili portlou.of the pl1n, • ' .
1bt · Eel 910. cl'ropetty Owners ~lion; form!d to oppc>se tbe E<llt
Side Study Report which envis\onJ
multiple resideiltial development over the
260-Jcre·~are• involved wllf be thei-e.
No acUon adaj>fthat Apart as a·poIJey
guideline in deteryrllnlng future indlvldual
re:onlng requesti.bu yet been taken by
the council. · .
The new genera] plan concept also
show! , a large, vac;ant parcel of land in
no~west CG.ta MMll D.muJtfple denaJty
bouslllg.
Owners ol.Uie m.1-ln<luillng Wllllam
Cagney, brothtr df "feteran Hotly'IWIO(f
act.or James Ctane1 ~.bave Upreued 1
d .. b'e lot ci>1nm<tc!al r.onlng. ·
A third area Of .codalder1tion Involves
surptWi .property , adj1oent to Fairview
State Hospital whieh may eventually be
told. wltb the city getllng first bid.
A resol!Jlif:!:D aWne thLs step will be
presented tonight.
Mayor WU.so11 ay1 5lron1 com.lderatiflb
wilt De given to creaU~g a recreational
a~ea of aome sort under UM: 1eneral plan
view for the future.
One group promoUn1 bicycle trails I!
expected to addreSI the CGUneiJ.
A second hearing involves declaring
lhe. unfJnlBhed home or John Wakula
t 128 Gle.neagles Tm ace, _bi: the Marin~
View tract a pub& nuilance.
Councilmen alao e~ to hear from
the l•ltrnatloof! SOcit\y for Krishna
Consciousness, lieadquartered in Laguna
Beacb, abOut a request . to &a licit for
cbarjleble..purpooes wllbout PIYin& I 1 ...
'Ibe saffron-robed, abaven-he.aded sect
Js a common' slght OR uM streets of
Lal\lna Beach ind i. now actiVe In
Newport Be~ch. lolklting alms for their
cau••~
Representative Olarles c. Hensel wu
· ($ee COUNCIL PIP II
' Weadter
Falr tktta with tome morning
low cloudln,.. It foNClst for the
eo11tal· area 'l'\leiday, with the
t.tmperatures dJppfl11 back to 7$
locally •nd 85 !Urther Inland,
INSWI! TODA V . .
Tht South Coast Choral ond
Llg~t ·()i>ttd'AilO<lofto~ la flock
'" btufncn tott• o .roWling rt~
'dition of "G~" fft. San Clem-
tnte. Ste Enttrtainmtnt, Page •
29. -.. . .... , .._ .. ,
".... ClllllfJ '' = ,.,,.. ...:
·~ Mlnlttlo , .. ,, -.. _,,.. .. ... ...., .
'Mlit. Wt.it M .................. ,,"" --..
z DAILV PILOT c Moodq, Aorll 5, 1'71
Harbour Man Dies
In Boat Accident
A 47.year-old 1~untinglon Harbour man
wu killed Sunday night when his
pleasure bo1t collided with a bridge
during 1 channd cruise.
Police said Donald R. Stoneman, l™I
PeEI Drive, w1s dead 011 arrival at
Huntington lntercommunity Ho a p It 1 I
suffering a fatal head injury appartntly
sustained when h1I head struck the
Humboldt Brldj:e.
Investigators said Stoneman had bttn
demonstrating his :z.&.root outboard cabin
cruiser to friend!!: visiting from Fresno
when the accident occurred arou11d 9:30
p.m.
They said he had been abowln& :t1-ye1r-
C1ld Mary Jane Pimentel how to pilot the
boat and was 1tand1ng behlnd her whtn
the boat's windshield hit the bridge and
Stoneman fell backwards lnto the boat.
Mrs. Pimentel suffered only a cut finger,
according to police.
Police said the crew of four was unable
to deUrmlne which bridge had been
struck but steered the boat back to
Stooeman's dock.
Officer Larry May said the vessel v.·as
southbound on Long Channe l at an
apparent high rate of speed v.'hen it
collided with the unlighted bridge. Tlde
coadiUons were blgh.
Complaints by U.S.
Retreating South Viets
Leave Live Ammunition
QUANG TRI, Vietnam (AP) -South
Vietnamese forces pulling back after
their retreat from Laos were leaving
thousands of unsu!d artll1ery shells and
other ammunition al bases In the
northwest cornoer of South Vletnam until
U.S. military officials comp I a in e d ,
informed sources said today.
The sources said that if t h e
am.munition had been abandoned at the
numttom allied support. ba2s, the
enemy might have oollected It and used
It.
No estimate of the amount of
ammunition was available, bul U.S.
officers in the field taid lt .included
"lbousands" of W5mm ind 155mm
howitzer shell!, .mortars and small arma
ammun ition.
The ammunition was lefl at several
positions vacated by South Vietnamese
Army and Marine unlt.s. Some U.S.
of!icers told of artillery shells left neatly
&tacked in the gun pits.
"If you can imagine a gun position all
Rt up to flu and pull out the fUM and
leave everything else behlnd -rounds,
fwies and the like -that ls what Jt
looked like," said one.
At 1 Marine command po;.t in the Khe
Sanh arta, another offlctr aakl, the
Vietnamese opened bundieda of tiozu or
artillery ahells, discarded the abellt and
used tbe wooden boxea filled wi th sand in
building bunker! and fighting poa!Uons.
Then they left U all behJnd aa th<J' pulled
out, be stid.
"We looked the area over and told
them it wa.s a cfugrace/' said one U.S.
Louis Armstrong
Shows Slight
Improvement
NEW YORJC IUPJ) -Louis Armstrong
asked far solid food Sunday and was
reported slighUy improved.
'Ibe .singer-trumpeter, who is 70, has
been in Beth Israel MedJcal Cenlt:r with
a heart condition since March 15.
Armstrong "improved slightly during
the day," a hospital spokesman SI.id late
Sunday.
"He has been asking for food . He is
still being fed intravenously.''
Earlier Armstrong was described as
•·awake and alert." He asked his nurse
for a piece of palm when he learned it
was Palm Sunday.
Armstrong underwent a tracheotomy
last week and a respi rator was needed
Friday to aid his breathing.
OlANfil COAST
DAllY PILOT
011,t,NGE COAST ,UILllHING COMl"AHY
•ob•ri N. w •• d
Prn:oen1 •ncl ft~D1i1l'lft>
J·~• •. c ... 1 • ., V•t • l"f(IO!t!ll .... G-••I MlfltOtf
Tho"''' IC•evil
EOllOf
lho"'•' A. M~r,hine
M•MQl"'I EOllW
officer at Khe Sanh.
"The Vietnamese have been so careless
with ammunition that we have had to
clean it up before we leave."
'The complalnt by U.S. officers in tht
field was relayed through lop American
commanders in Quang Tri to the
Vietnamese, and orders wtnt out that the
ammunition was to bt collected. Several
U.S. officers expressed the belief that
most (If all or it v.·ould have betn
abandoned to the elements and the
enemy If no complaint had betn madt.
Truck& of the South Vietnamese 1st
Infantry Division were c a r r y i n g
ammunition back along Route t today
toward Quang Tri. Ammunition which ill
not trucked out or the forward bases will
be blown up by demolition crews,
military ofricials said.
Rape, Kidnap,
Robbery Lands
Mesan in Jail
Concurrent st.ate prison term.1 or one
to 50 ytar1, one to ll year• and not
lesa than five years were handed Friday
to a former Costa Me1an who pleaded
guilty to three of ·the original 11 kidnlJ>"
rape.robbery Charges ftled agalnlt him.
Judge Byrnn JC, McMlllan ordered thole
temrs for Paul H. Anderson, 30, in a
triple-count action that makes it im-
pQSsible for Andtr!Ofl to be considered
for parole before he has lerved seven
years in prison.
Andtrson, former manager of a Costa
Mesa apartment building, wu captured
in Sweetwater, Wyomlng, and brought
back to Orange County to face a variety
of rape, robbery and kidnap charres.
All but the three processed Friday were
dropped.
He was charged with kidnaping a 25-
year-old Costa Mesa woman last Feb.
28 and she was nezt seen In Salt Lake
City. Utah, after she fled from a motel
in that city to alert authorities to
Anderson's prtsence.
Andtrson was being hunted for an
Anaheim rape-kidnap whtn the Costa
Mesa v.·oman was abducted.
Frederick Case
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held Tuesday
at Pacific View Memorial Oiapel in
Corona de! Mar for Frederick B. Ca!C,
long time resident of Costa Mesa.
fl.fr. Case, who was 68, died Thursday,
He had lived In Costa Mesa for I&
years and was the president and owner
of Specialty Molden Rubber Products
of Orange County.
He leavts his wife Eltanor, of the
home al 418 Ogle Circle, 1 son Dudley,
o( Costa Mesa and two grandchildren.
Services will be at I p.m. with Dr.
Charles Dierenfield officiating. Pacific
View Mortuary is ?ta n d 11 n I ar·
rqements.
DAILY ,ILOT Sl11! l"Mle
EASTER VACATION PLUS UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER EQUAL BIG BEACH .TURNOUT
This Was the Scan• Sunday at 22nd Strett and Ocean Avenue Ntar Newport Pier
From Page 1
BEACH CROWDS ...
are now open to midnight each weekend.
Water temperature for Saturday and
Sunday as &e: degrees while tbe air
temperature was recorded at 72 degrees.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beach. about 10,000 for Boba
Chica and 9,000 at Huntington State
Beacb.
Vacatio ners hit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands, but lifecuards had an
"easy'' weekend with chilly \Valer
Frotn Page 1
CALLEY ...
action was "unusual" but "as we
understand it, he does not intend. to
interfere with the normal review
chaMels."
Ehrlichman was reported at first to
have denied the President's decision was
"unprecedented" notiJlg that President
Abraham Lincoln had a i m i I a r I y
inte~ened .in a military convlcUon.
Observen noted that the Uncoln
precedent was dissimilar from lhe Calley
case In that there was no Uniform Code
of Mllitary Justice in force in Lincoln's
lime.
Senate Republican ltader Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvania said today Nixon's actions
in the Calley case have been designed to
"lowtr the temperatures or public
reaction."
Another GOP senator said iI the public
really hails a convicted mass murderer
as a htro, "then we have changtd
disastrously as a people."
Sen. Jacob K. Javils (R·NY ), told the
Senate the world will judge v;hether the
U.S. applied a double standard betwttn
the \Var crimes trial nt Nurenberg after
World War II and the incidents at My
Lal.
Talkll of medals, marches and honors
for Lt. Calley "is not patriotism but
antipatriotism," Javits said.
Sen. Frank Church CD-Idaho). leading
Capitol Hill dove, said Sunday that Calley
should be treated neither as a scapegoat
nor a hero.
Church and Sen. John Sherman Cooper
(R-Ky.), said Call ey must be subject to
the final judgment of the law.
Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson III (0.111. ),
said today that if Lt. Calley Jr. is gullly
or My Lai crimes. others with responsi-
bility ror the slayings must also be
called to answer.
At a Capitol news conference.
Steventon said that if Calley killed
''innocent v.·omen and childttn, h~ mmt
pay the penalty." Later he said, "If he is
guilty, ht must pay the penally. and !IO
mwt others, in their consciences or in
the courts."
In the House, Rep. Ed Edmondson (0.
Okla .). introduced 1 resolution callina: on
Congrt;ss to go on record favoring a full
pardon for Calley.
* * *
temperatures discouraging all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds of
15,000 on the beaches both Saturday and
Sunday, with air temperatures at the
shottline reaching a high 86. Cool 59-
degree water, however, kept most <lf the
beachgoers up on the sand.
Surf was low and there \\:ere n& serious
rescue incidents. Forty-two beach visitors
required minor first aid assistance rrom
the lifeguards and three lost children
were restored to their families.
San Clemente's shoreline was visited
by 48,000 persons basking u n d e r
temperatures in the low 80s.
Only one major incident was reported
by lifeguards for the weekend. tbe
grounding and total loss of a new 20-foot
sloop sailed by a Buena Park man. •
Guards said the Logger 20 sloop
fetched up on Doheny Slate Park Beach
at about 6 p.m. Saturday during a brisk
evening wind.
The vessel v.•as ov.11ed and ·sailed by
Daniel Hernander, 35, ·who told rescuen
that when the wlnd picked up he dropped
we rt a chilly 56 . to 59 degrees.
his sails and fired up a small outboard
motor. but the tiny auxiliary could not
gain headway aga inst the breeze.
The boat grounded aod was destroyed
by surf, guards said.
Other than the boating incident,
activity on the beaches patrolled by the
San Clemente guard service was light.
Only a few dozen rescues v.·ere
recorded through the v.·eekend. The bulk
<lf the beach attendance and rescue.!
occurred Sunday as the mercury on the
sands rose to 82 degrees. Water readings
Injuries in Mishap
Fatal to Countian
Denver S. Grubb, 23, or 11440 \\lestern
Ave., S~nton, died Sunday at th~ Orange
County Medical .Center of Injuries
suffered.In a traffic accident March 7l on
the Ga rden Grove Freeway near Newland
Street in Garden Grove.
The California Highway Patrol said the
oiccident is still under invesligatiun.
Grubb was a passenger in a car driven
by Robert Estes, 19. of 13551 Olympus
Drive. \\lestminster. v.·hich offlters said
\\'as apparently struck from the rear by
one driven by Adrienne Cheek, 39, or
15461 Capri Circle, Huntington Beach.
Deputy Trial
In Burglaries
Given Delay-,
A seven-v.•eek delay was ordtred today
in the Orange County Superior Court trial
of a former sheriff's deputy accused Clf
burglarizing the Mission Viejo CoWltry
Club.
Presiding Judge William C. Speirs
ordered Frederlcl: B. Irvine, 42, of La
Habra to return to his courtroom May 24
for trial on charges of burglary, grand
thert auto theft, receiving stolen p~rty and coosPiracy.
Irvine is free on his own re<:0gnizance.
The ex-deputy was arrested last &!pt.
20 and accused of being one of two
sheriffs orficers who ransacked the
country club's gol! shop of golf gear and
liquor in the roune Cl( their rou~ _as
part time security guards for the ?-.1iss1on
Viejo Company.
Arresting officers sa id 1 r v i n •
commandeered a patrol car and led his
former-colleagues in a wild c.hase that
ended io Riverside County after shots
were ezchanged between the vehicles and
Jrvine threatened to commit suicide.
Irvine's co-defendant. Arthur B .
Duncan, 34, of Huntington Beach, quietly
surrendered. He was indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on Identical
charges and was found hanged from the
rafters of the garage at his home three
v.·eeks later.
Illness Delays
Human Fly Act
Despite a scheduled Tuesday headstand
20 stories above the sidewalk in Orange,
Benny Fox, sole survivor among the
famed Human Fly aetialists, has been
grounded.
Illness has forced-cancellation of the
76-year-old · clrcu$, performer's plan to
celebrate: his 60th year in show business
at 10 a.m. atop The"'ity skyscraper.
No date has bttrr set yet for another
try by Fox. of 212 ?II. Beach Boulevard,
Anaheim, accordin1 lo Bill Purdy, of
'The City's management branch.
Fox announced the daredevil trick on
a plank extending eight feet off the
side of the roof earlier lhis week .
The veteran whose namt il!I inscribed
at the Sarasota, Fla., Circus Hall of
Fame remains active, despite hil!l 1ge..
Pendleton
•
Beach Site
Dedicated
By JOHN V ALTEllZA
01 tt.. Ol llf ,1111 tlet!
•
' t
California's top state parks offtclal and
a crusading congressman this weeken4
dedicated the fir st sectlon of Ca~
Pt.nd1eton beach to go public -rites
attended by 100 of the inaugural 111ers ol
the rugged 3.5-mile park.
And immediately after the afternoon
ceremouies Saturday ·State P a r k •
Director Williain Penn Mott added
anolher note of uncertainty for the rmi}ot
ranchers and farmers o! nearby San
Mateo Canyon -peisons with huge
investments which might be erued b)'
last v.·eek 's PresidentiJJ rulina:. Presidtnt
Ni.Ion took the. canyon from Marine
Corps control.
Mott said that if his departmtnl
assumes control of the scenic canyon
south ot the San Clemente city limits, the
ranchers' contracts would "be honored,"
then their farms might be "phased out''
to allow for space for camptrs.
At issue is the 3,40Q..acre canyon now
studded with flower and vegetable
ranches in a canyon declared surpl111 bY,
President Nixon.
In all likelihood the canyon will fall into
state hands and be used as the camping
segment of a huge st retch or beach park
v.·hlch will ultimately run six; miles
downcoast from ' the Wes\ern White
House.
Mott and Rep. Alphonzo Btll (Jt...Santa
Monica), led the list of vtPs dedicating
the San Onofre Bluffs State Beacb
Saturday at 2 p.m.
Harmony with the Marine Corps and:·
promises of harmony wilh t he-
environrnent were the two key lssut:I
repeated during the ceremonies.
Camp Pendleton Chief of Staff Col.
Emil Radics stressed that t b e
negotiations last ytar between the
Marines and state officials were "alwayt
friendly. no matlel\-.J'lhat you may have
heard or read," he said.
After the rites Mott, Bell and tht
Representative 's wife went for a stroll on
one of three trails cut for access to tht
rugged, picturesque beach.
Standards OK'd
For W aterbedS
SACRA].iENTO (UPI) -A legisl,Uve·
committee, after being warned of the
dangers of leaks and short-circuitil'i&.
heaters, has !!'dorsed. applicatioo of, state'
safety standards to waterbed.
The bill's author, Assemblyman
Robert Badham (R-Newport Btach), tolct
the Assembly Commerce and PUblle
Utilities Committee tbat bed! holding
200 gallons C1f water and weighing 2,000
pounds have ruptured and their heatin,:
clements short·circuited. ·
Badham. an apartment resident, ad·
ded : "If you live in a downstairs apart·
ment when the water escapes, well ... "
The bill was forwarded to the u.sttnbly,
'"a~ and means committee for furthtr
action.
From Page 1
COUNCIL • • •
unable to attend the last council mee.tin1
so the Krishna group's application wu
tabled.
Not countj.ng the preliminary consent
calendar on which dozens of item~ are
acted upon in one vote unless brought up
for specific disucssion, the agenda
includes v.·e\I over 20 items .
One coming under old business ls an
appeal by 11ark C. Bloome Tire Company
against a zone exception p e r m I t
reqUirement that vertical hoists not be
built under its canopy.
They were built there anyway, crealina:
a legal problem for the firm.
Churle, H. Looi Rid1trd '· N•ll
Ns1\I•"· MIMQin(j E.011"'
C•lt•-M"• Offlc•
llO Weit l1y S!tt1t
•naw Deal~· Ladies
SOLITAIRE*
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'
Marine W wits Calley Treat1nent
FLORENCE, Pa. (UPI) -Marine Pv~
)Uchlel A. Schwar:r. thinks he has a lot in
eommon with Lt. William L. Calley Jr.
His parenls agree -and fault President
~ixon for not tblnking so also .
Schwart, con,·lcttd of murdering 11
Vietnamese ~·omen and children ne;ar Da
N~g in February, 1m, was rtletsed
..Ftlday from the Portsmouth Naval
Prison and spent the v.·ttkend with his
parents. hi.s wift and his 4·ye•r~Jd IOfl ln
this western Pennsylvania town.
Sch~·an: orlgina!Jy was sentenctd to
life impriaonm,nt, llkt Callty. He thinks
there are other slmllarltlts too.
"I got a raw de!'1from1 fe!W pt<>ple In
the Marine Corps," he said. "F'Jtld gr1de
11nd combat offlctrs were all for us but It
was the people behind the desk!, the
people who really don't know what the
Vietnam war Is all about, who 11vt me
trouble."
Both hit parent_, uld Ntion s~ld
have lnluvened more qulckly In theft
•
son's case.
"Presklent N\xon should have come to
lhe aid o( all the boys, not just ooe, like
Calley." ~aid James Schwarz, the
Marine's father.
"Calley spent a few days ln jail: my
son spent 14 months in the stockade,
while Presidtnt Nixon refused to yield to
pubUc opinion against the conviction of·
our son," Mr1. Helen Schwan Aid.
"My daughter had to drop out of school
because ftllow students called her 1
murderer's sister," she said.
Mtcbatl Schwan said that in Vietnam.
''Yoo either 1et a tned.al or a court
rn1r1ial."
"I would object to my IOl1 eoln& lnto
the 1ervlce now if he wen old tnoucti.
This i1 a police action. I would let him 10
into an alJ.()!Jt war, and I'd be rl&ht
bookie him." ho n td.
Police acUon or not. SChwan ••Id the
war ln lndochlna must conunu. "kt stop
Cornmunl.lt aggression." -
. ' . , ,
-· $550
Men•
OIAMONll*
RING
,.w mtr.
............... c .........
....... ..., m11 L...., I lnlte , .... ,_ ..... ,..._
*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY ~CK
DIAMOND GUARmll
WMn you buy • di•mond from u1 we
wlll euaranfM that di•rnond to tpprtlM
at 40% MORE thin you p1 kf for It ol'
your money b•ck. Can you do 1s1 wtll
elsewhere? COMPARE.
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE RRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
COMI IN AND DOWSE AROUND LOAN. IUY, snJ., TIADE
1838 NEWPORT ILYD. PHONE '46·7741
DOWNTil.WM COSTA MUA -letw-H-& -....Y
r
7
I
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7
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•
' ... ... --.....
Saddle • ._ek
VOL. 6'1, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
•• ass1ve
DEDIC.ATING A NEWLY WON PUBLIC BEACH ·AT SAN 9NOFRE
St1t• P1rks Director Mott, (S.1ted) 1nd Rep. Alphonl'o 8111
First Section of Public
Pendleton Sand Dedicated
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 llMI 0.HJ l"Olt 1111'
California's top state parks official and
1 crusading congressman this "·eekend
dedicated the first section of Camp
Pendleton beach to go public -rites
attended by 100 of the inaugural users of
lhe rugged 3.5'mile park.
And immediately after the afternoon
ceremonies Saturday Slate Pa r ks
Director William Penn Mott added
a11other note of uncertainty for the major
ranchers and farmers of nearby San
Mateo Canyon -persons with huge
Investments which might be erased by
last wee~'s Presidential ruling. President
Nixon took the canyon from Marine
Corps control.
Molt said tha t ii his department
assumes control of~ scenic canyon
soutb of the San Cle e city limit!, t~
ranchers' contractt "be honored."
then their fanns pJght be "phased out''
to allow for •P*e for eempe:rs.
At issue I! the 3,400-acre canyon now
studded with flower and vegetable
ranches in a canyon declared surplus by
President Nixon.
Jn all Jili:ellhood the canyon will fall into
gt.ate hands and be used ag the camping
lt'e•tker
Fair 1kies with 10me morning
low cloudiness Is forecast for the
co.1stal area Tuesday, with the
temperatures dippfng back to 75
locally and 85 further inland,
INSIDE 'TODA'l'
The South COOlt C.ltoral ond
Light O~ra A.s.rociation i.t back
in business with a routing ren·
dition of "Gyp,,Y' iri Stin Clem·
f'nlt. Ste Enttrtainmtnt. Page
2.9.
hatl!lt tt•U
C•fflllf1!1• •
Cl•Jtltl.. '141
c-~• • Cr.H-rf • 0.1111 NtlktJ It
t .. ttrltl "'" I tflttr1tlflm1111 H·" ,,_, 11·1 1
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M•1111ita I
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segment of a huge stretch of beach park
which will ultimately run Iii miles
downcoast [roriJ the West:.ern White
House.
Mott and Rep. Alphonzo Bell ( R.Santa
Monica). led the list of VIPs dedicating
the San Onofre Bluffs Slate Beach
Saturday at 2 p.m.
Harmony with the Marine Corps and
promises of harmony with the
environment were the two key issues
repeated during the ce remonies.
Camp Pendleton Chief of Staff Col.
Emil Radics stressed that t h •
negotiations last year between the
Marines and state off icials were "always
friendly, no matter what you may have
heard or read." he said.
After the rites Mott, Bell and the
Representative's wife went for a stroll on
ooe of three trails cut. for accdt to the
rugged. pictur~ue beach.
During that walk Mott pondered the
fate of the ranchers in the nearby canyon
and said IOOle ''could be phased out"
after their current agrv:ment with the
Marine Gorps, qpire.
"Certainly we would booor all the
formal agreements all!i then we might
st.art to phase out some of the farmers.
"But. i qpn't know." the 1late parks
director rn6sed1" maybe we 1hould leave
all the farms where they are. .
"You know . there are thousands of city
people · who · would get 1 thrill out of
seeing vegetable and polMttlla farms,"
he said.
If and when hi! department can find
the money necessary to develop I~
canyon 8.nd attractive beaches. the slate
park would be amorc Califoraia'1
• large'1. Spanis!Htyle buildings •l .tlle soon-~be abandoned Marine Enlllted
Man·• Beach Club al10 will become part
of tha't public fa cility.
Attendance during the weekend at tht
dedicated beach park waa lea than what
many obaeivers -includlnc Pre.ident
Nixon -bad predicted.
Several hundred campers 1 t a y e d
through the weekend, while 1everal
hundred day UJen drove In and out
through a temporary entranee.
The beach wtll remain open through
Easter Week, then close.
lf enough fund.I are raised during the
week, then the facility would be opened
nn week,nd1 -"unW the funds run out,"
Mott a id.
. . ·• -..
'
ORANGE COUNTY• CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1971
Trustees
Scrutinize
Courses
One of San Clemente High School's
largest and most innovative packages of
proposed class offerings-ranging from
Japanese to art welding-will come up
for study tonight by trustees of the Cap-
istrano Unified School District.
Separate plans for 21 different classes
-many of an iMovat.ive nature -will
receive first e:rposure to tile board, along
with a projected ne w total cost of $7 ,562
for materials and books.
lnch.lded in the proposed course offer-
ings are composition classes dealing with
the environment, science liction a n d
sports; choral reading, Japanese lang-
uage, ornamental horticulture, natural
history of California, sophomore human-
ities and more than a d(lzen others.
District spokesman Joe Wimer said the
new classes comprise probably the larg·
est package ever proposed for one school
year on the Triton Campus.
He said the classes -if approved by
trustees-only would be offered if enough
studenls enroll to t"Omply "'ith a set en·
rollrnent minimum.
In other matters scheduled tonight,
trustees wil1 considtr:
-The instlillati!U\ of a pvblic addma ,,...,,. in Illa la~ aildltbria >
where they meet everl twe wee~
-A progreg repcd' an .1 "pr.emature
planter". an area ·ot "the Sa111 Clementt
High campus planted, officials asserted,
hy students who failed to seek official
permission for the project. Students la·
ter requesct.e'd funds from the l!lchool dis-
trict to help pay for the landscaping.
-Setting procedures necessary to hold
t1 public sale of a wide variety of sur-
plus school district property.
-Approval of a11 agreement to parliC·
ipate in the UC Irvine teacher intern prcr
gram next school year.
-A progerss re port on a new drug
abuse program and possible selection of
a steering committee to guide the proj·
eel .
-Consideration of a tax·sheltered an·
nuity program proposed by the Capi.s·
trano Unified Education Association.
-Appointment of the district'! commit-
tee which will meet and confer with em-
ployes on 11ext fiscal year's salaries.
Students Def eat
Self ·paid Union
Building at UCI
UC Irvine students have voted down a
proposal to build a campus union with
student fees.
The vote t.abu1ated Friday showed 3,092
opposed and 1,286 favoring the project
that W<>uld require payment (If $3 per
quarter next year.
By 1974-75 school year, when it was
anticipated the building would be open,
the fttS would have risen to $1 I per
quarter per student.
There were 4,40t Uct students return·
Ing ballots out of 6,300 eligible. 'I'he
ballots wers Included in regiatration
packets in the hope! that a favorable
vote would be obtained.
The defeat of the measure Indicates
students do not want lo Ul:t thmnsetve&
to build. a capipus toeial hall. \.
'Three. years· Of planning prlor lo 'tft,~
vote hid led to proposal of .1n $l3
building.
-'
au
San Clemente Lauded
For Foresight on Bonds
By GEORGE t.EIDAL
Of l~t O.Ur .. ,,., lltff
The city of San Clemente was com-
mended for i!J foresight in supporting
bonds necessary to build the $2.S million
water reclamation plant dedicated Fri-
day.
A representative of Gov Ronald Res·
gan told a dedication audience of 100
''no one forced you to do · this for the
ecology, you just took the leadershi p and
built It."
Kerry Mulligan, aide to Reaga" who
was visiting the Western While House
dt1rlng the 11 a.m. dedication, told city
officials that 80 percent federal funding
ls now available for such projects.
"Perhaps when you are ready to seek
!crtiary stage treatment such fundi ng
will help you do it," Mulligan concluded.
~1ayor Walt Evans introduced speakert
Including Donald Rumsfeld, counselor to
President Nixon who had been invited to
attend. Rumsfeld said the water purifica-
tion plant was symbolical of San Cle·
mente's concern for the environment, a
concern that is shared by the town's
leading citizen .
Olhers addressing the crowd gathefed
In bright sunshine on a parking lot ad-
jacent to the ocean view sewage treat-
ment plant, were Dr. Harvey Ludwig,.
chairman of Engineering Sciences C,o,
and consultant to the project, Maj. Gen.
George S. Bowman. commande r of Ma-
rine Co rps Cam p Pendleton, and H. G.
Osborne, chief engineer of the OraJ1ge
County flood Cont~ql E>lstrtct. '
Osborne iasked ~ulligan \}'he~~ ~
mi&ht "p(Jt in a 1'0l'd with the President"
to urge the Army .Corps of EngM,.•. to
!'l.1l!h a Oam· prOjict that ·will lilore ftaf·
ed ef!Juent.
The nearly pure water that leave« the
1econdary stage of treatment tbpugh
sand and charcoal. will eventually pr~
vide recreational lakes for use by' San
Clemente residents, when the dam is
built.
For now, the effluent Is piped to camp
Pfndleton for pen:olation into ground
~pplies. Mayor Evens noled much of
the wattr is used to irrigate farm areas,
golf courses and even freeways. ''The
state buys water and trucks it to water
foliage along the San Diego Freeway,"
he noted.
A [lag that had been flown over the
U.S. Capitol was presented to ~1ayor
Evans by a representative ot Sen. John
G. Schmitz (R-TusllnJ.
An honor guard from Sa" Clemente
High School handled the flag raising
ceremony before the watchful eyes of lhe
Pendleton brass.
Gen. Bowman noted that "as lo11g as
I am here the warm relations between
the city of San Clemente and Camp Pen·
dleton will continue."
"The 2,000 Marines that live in this
community are delighted !o be recognized
as cillzens," he i;aid.
The base commander lauded the elll·
zens who in 1967 supported lhe bond issue
creating the trea tment plant with a 90
perceat vote.
Rossmoor Tract Map
Before OC Planners ·
~ tract ~ 1f(lr 7p.5 acres of. l\osiiinoor
LeUna;e WOrld Planiied Community Is
• befOre ijle Or•nge C.Ounty Planning Com.
· mlasion for approyal Tuesday.,
JO(!!uded in the plans for the tract
-ire 2-43 single famlly homes, one park.
one scbo<?I and ·four ·open apace areas.
TEN CENTS
•
a e
3 Arrested
In Laguna
Crackdown
By PATRICK BOYLE
Ot tfMI ~ ~·-ll•ff
Laguna Beach narcotics o f f J c e r '
Saturday arrested three young men oo
drug charges after invesligaton allegedly
uncovered one of the largest LSD hauls in
California history in a Woodland Drive
home.
Authorities claim the confiscated
narcotics, with a "street value" of aOOut
$350,000, included J.3(1,000 tablet. of LliD
contained in 23 jars, 11 pounds of hashish
and about five pounds· of marijuana.
The team of officers, under the
direction of veteran n a r c o t I c 1
investigator Sgt. Nell Purcell, took the
trio into custody at J.47 Woodland Drive
after the sweet odor of burning
marijuana attracted them to t be
residence.
-The men were identified as Thomas
Joseph Sachse, 18, of 30628 Calle Chucta,
San Juan Capistrano, Gary Ray Allen, 23,
(If Long Beach, and David William
Godwin, 23. Of LN Vtaas.
Authorities 1aid the team o f
investigators, c:Ond:udlna a a r c o t I c 1
aurveillance in the area, went to thl
-aJ"r tradng the o6urce o! tho ITOQke, wbich1tll banging In the •lr all
along Ui.e 1hoit ltreel A barking dog In
front of the home alerted the occupanll
to the officers' arri;.oal and two of the
men allegedly attempted to flee through
a rear window, police sa id.
After capturing the trio, the detective•
starched the home and a I I e g e d I y
discovered the hashish and LSD. Sgt.
Purcell said the hashish was contained in
qUart cans with . masking-tape labels
identifying the contents as a health food.
The smoke which attracted the officers
tO the house was pouilng from the oven,
w.here Sgt. Purcell said marijuana was
being burned to reduce the wted to a
highly concentrated o.il.
In the garage of the home. police claim
an operation had been set up to ca,n the
hashiJh and m&ijuana· for naUonwide
distnbu.tion. Purpell said the CaMing Of
narcotics has· come into use recently in
order to escape the stns.itive noses ot
dogs trained to detect different types of
drugs.
Also found by officers in the garage of
the home were 17 new surfboards, whicb
police are holding until ownership can be
determined.
The three men are being held in
Orange C,ounty jail In lieu of $100,000 ball
each and were to be arraigned today on
charges of possession of dangeroUI drugs
with intent to sell.
Apartment Fire
Injures 2 Men
Two men suffered minor burns in a fire
which did $9.600 damage to an apartment
comple:t in Dana Point S4nd1y nighL
Orange County firemen said Richard
Krjsher of San Clemente spotted the fire
shortly after ·I ·pim-. and alerted
apfrt1Pent. •maoqtr' Tbomu( ,TtldeQ .. 85,
of 24257 sant.a Chnlar.Avtnue. . '
The two' qien were burned slightly
whlle pushing •·vehicle out of a garage ln
the burnln,.blllldlng.
Battalion CJiief Dick Pilkington sald the
rause of the blaze Js under investigation.
The aP.artmentl•are owned by Dr. Arthur
C. Ell\oU of 5'1nta Ana.
Clemente,.·:Stree.t '.Tonic'_ Studied
87 JOHN VALTEVZA ot lllol Delly ...,.., II ...
Crumbling streets, a coodiUon which
bu plagued San Clemente for decades,
might receive a tonic of nearly $300,000
In malnltnance fund! Wednesday night.
City Councilman, who met in a special
study aession last week to resurrect lht
tht issue of the city's roadways, unof-
ficially agretd that Ute funds, accumu-
lated from state gasoline ta1 rebates.
could be u.std' under a new, llberal ruling
to cap and patch many of the ctty 1'1reets.
Late last year sttite legi11lation relaxed
the rutrlctlonJ on the use of U1CI rebat.e1,
'
maidni n poulbfo to ... the windl.llls for
capplng al)d patching services, not just
reconstruction 'of major select·l)lstem
streets.
Councilmen looked over mapt of the
city showing doztna of streets in need of
repaiNI, capping and some rebulldini,
then in general conversation agreed to
take up the matter o!flclally at Wednes-
day's 11ction meeting.
~luch of the necemry cappin& of the
rlty'11 "'orst streell! might be done with
lh e funds without an asse~smtnt district
nr Increases in nearby homeowner'• t81
bllls.
In recent years aucb disttlcls have
gparked loud pnrtos,ta -especially In ,....
construction projects which aometlmn
cmt each landowner 11,000 or more.
In &0mt casese, cOUnCilmtn agreed,
they could call on texpayeni next to
street. without curbs and rutt.era to pay
the COJts of 1hoJe facilities, while the
city picked up the tab for a capplng job
on the pavement itself.
One prime target of that sly le of project
111 the Avenlda de 111 EstreJla·Portal
stretch of roadways from Pali.iada to El
Carlllno Rtar.
The road theN,. used as a major through
street by many moloriat!I, la also .tl·
. '
1n<>1t "undrlveal>le" accon!lns to Cool>
cilmM Th>mu O'Kteft.
O>uncilmen alto studied a new tech-
nique of aolll prdplrtUon tn ltreet re-
construction which could reduce 'Costl
considerably -the 1ddJUon of hot ltme
lo the tubeoil, turning the base Into a
form of crude concrete.
The process wn U8ed a yt1r aao in I
new parking lot at the pier with outltand..
ing rtl!ulll!. City Enalneer Phil Peter ex-
plained.
He recommended that It be U$ed ·1n
all street reconmucUOn in tht clly, eb
insUna the need for mora etpenslvt ball
mattrtala.
I
'
•
I ----
f DAILY PILOT SC Monday, April 5, 1971
North Viets
Still Shell
Fire Base 6
SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese
• IUDntrs shelled fire Bue 8 near t1w!:
Laollan border Monday and Soulb
Vietnamese defenders struck bact with a
helicopter auault three miles from th•
outpost in tbe ab.th consecutive day of
heavy fi&hting In the ctntral highlands.
Ca.!uallties on both sides climbed,
lncludin1 Americans killed, wounded and
mi5sing.
l\1ilitary sources described the fighting
around Fire Base 6 as l> "localized
offensive·• by North 'Vietnamese forces
designed to &bow that the South
Vietnamne olfemlve into Laos to cut the
Ho Chi l\linh Trail had not affected
'Hanoi's capability to attack at wilt.
"1be communists are simply telling the
world that the operaUon up north in Laos
did not hurt them much," •aid U. CoL
Frank 0 . Miller, 43, of Maitland, Fla.,
~mmander of a U.S. Army aviation unit
supporting the South Vietnamese defense
·of Fire Bue 8.
---
Water Chilly
Countians Crowd
Southland Shores
~
Torrid inland temperatures and murky
Inland smog drove nearly half a million
people to Orange Coast beaches over I.he
weekend but chilly ocean waters kept
mo.st folkl beachbound and out of trouble.
Jt was the first blg weekend of Easter
vacation for moat Orange County
students but troubles and congestion were
mostly limited to beaches and highways,
Newport Buch lifeguards estimated
lhe largest throngs with 150,000 visitors
on Peninsula sands at Corona del 1t1ar
beaches.
Huntington Beach guards figured they
had 100,000 along Ute.Ir long shoreline
\rhile San Clemente logged 48,000 and
Laguna Beach. 30,000.
Surf along the entire Orange Coast was
low with waves generally In the three to
four-foot range and 't\'aler temperatures
hovered 1n the high SOI. Both factors
contributed to keeptn1 visitors ashore
and holding down the rescue toll
Newport llfeguards raid they rescued
'rt awlmmers from the light rip Udes
running along the Newport beaches.
Beacb.
Vacationers hit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands , but lifeeuards bad an
"easy" weekend with chilly j waler
temperatures discouraging all Wt the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds of
15.000 on the beaches both Saturday •nd
Sunday, with air temperature• at lhe
:shoreline rtachlng a high 86. Cool 9·
degree 'A'ater, however, kept most of the
beachgoers up on the sand.
Surf was low and there \li'ere no serious
rescue incidents. Fortr·t\\"O beach visitors
required minor first aid assistance from
the lifeguards and three lost children
were restored to their families.
A South Vietnamese communique said
1,817 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
have been kiUed in Fire Base 6 action
since last Wednesday. South Vietnamese
Jo:sses were placed at 71 killed and 132
wounded. U.S. headquarters said five
Americans had been killed RDd one
wounded. Another U.S. serviceman \li'a:s
listed as missing in action.
EIASL'I' Pl\.DT li•ll P"-!t EASTER VACATION PLUS UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER EQUAL BIG BEACH TURNOUT
This Was the Scene Sund•y •t 22nd Street and Ocean Avenue Near Newport Pier
The Newport arrest count from the
polict department wa1 up slightly over
last year. In 1970 on Saturday, there were
32 juveniles and adults arrested and on
Sunday there \•;ere 56. This year there
were 60 both days.
Case Delayed
In Deputy's
Theft Case
President's Intervention
Elsewhere in the central highlands
ione, 18 Americans were killed and 82
y,·ounded in fighting :southeast of Fire
Base 6 in coastal 1Unb Dinh Province
where U.S. unll! hild beenmoved to free
South Vietnamese Infantrymen for the
Flre Bue I combat. The Blnb Dinh
actioa was ID an area bordering a North.
Vietnamese llU'PlY base. S p o r a di c
fighting was reported Monday following a
~ay battle.
In Calley Case Discussed
Historians may argue for decades the
importance of Pcesident Nixon's decision
to intervene in the Calley conviction
revlew processes, a decision reached this
weekend at the Western White House in
San Clemente.
outrage. Letters telegrams and phone
calls to the President alackened in the
""'ake of the weekend announcement.
Aides described the President as being
"concerned'' about the low morale among
Calley's fellow soldiers and anxious to
demonstrate support for U.S. fighting
men Jn Vietnam. Nixon aMounced
Saturday he would personally intervene
in the case and make the final judgment
on Calley's punishment.
A correspondent aald Sooth Vietnamese
reinforcements jumped from U.S. Army
hellcopters at landing areas cut out of
dense jungles Monday to attack North
Vietllamese infantrymen three miles
from Flee Base 6.
Draft Lottery
Numbers for May
Might Hit 125
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Men lloldlng
Random Sequence Numbers up to 125
may be drafted lo meet the Pentagon'•
draft caU for May, Selective Service
Director Curtis W. Tarr announced today.
During the first four months ol this
year draft boarda were calling men with
lottery numbers no hlgher than 100.
Tan" aald It wu necessary to ralu this
ceiling to meet the May call for 15,000
men.
At lbe 1ame lime, Tarr authorized local
draft bo&rdl to order pre-Induction
phy1ica1 examinations for men holding
numbers up to 175. The previous ceiling
y,·u 150.
The draft hu bttn taking men at a
lower rate lhl1 year than last year and
I.ht top lottery number to be called in
May this year is 20 numbers !Olli'er than
a year ago.
The Defense Department asked for
17,000 dr1fttts in each of the first four
months of 1971, !hen dropped the call to
15,000 for May - a five-month total of
83,000.
In compJtrlson, draft c1lls for the first
five month.I of 1970 totalled 84,WO.
DAllY PILOT
OllAHG:> COAIT PUlLllHIMO COMP"'4Y
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a 111111 .a•a.w .. MJ·Un
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Already the ·President's move to
scrutinize successive levels of the review
process has been termed
"unprecedented" by a top Nixon aide and
''inherently disrespecUuJ to the rule of
the law," by former U.S. Attorney Gen·
eraJ Ramsey Clark.
Despite the views or officials, the
promised intervention in the
controversial My Lal m a s s a c re
conviction of Lt. William L. Calley, Jr.,
aeemed today to have sated the publlc·s
Laguna Niguel
Mun Sentenced
In Conspiracy
A Laguna Niguel man convicted in
Orange County Superior Court on )esser
charges after being accused or bribing a
Costa Mesa patrolman today was
sentenced to one to three years in state prison.
Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered thal
term for Samuel Rosman , 27. of 29351
San Briso Place just tllree weeks after a
jury cleared Rosman of bribery but
convicted him of conspiracy.
The panel reached its verdict alter
hearing Officer Gary Bar-wlg leslify
that Rosman gave him $10,000 to plant
narcotics in the car or a key prosecution
witness in court action against Eugene
Rondondo of Newport Beach.
It v.·as alleged that Rosman thought he
had bribed Barwig to halt the car drl\·en
by Charles '"Chuck" Dreyer of Laguna
Beach and place barbiturates In the auto
while booking the victim for a trun1ped
up traffic oflense.
Rondondo 44, v•as a partner with
Dreyer in the ill fated Feliciano's
restaurant Jn Newport Beach. Both rnen
were indicted by the Orange County
Grand Jury on liquor hijacking charges
and Dreyer was to testify for !he
prosecution against Rondondo.
Rondond o's trial has been set for May
U in Superior CourL
Last Rites Held
For James Davis
A memorial mas! was celebrated Sat·
urday 1n St. Catherine·s Church, Laguna
Beach, tor Jamts C. Davis of 825 La
fl.1irada who died Wednesday at the age
of 6S after suffering a heart 111tack.
fl.1r. Oa\'IS, a native of Texas, was a
former department manager ~l Bullock's
Santa Ana stort.
He Is survived by A brothf'r .. June
David and a nephe11 . Donald Da\'iS,
both of Dallas, Tex.
Burial "'ill be at Cah·ary llill
Cemetery. Dallas.
Hilgenfeldt Mortuar y, Anaheim, 1n
charge of arrangements.
Swimming Pool
Open at School
The Lagunl'l Reach R~ren t lon Depart·
men\ has :lnnounced r:on~ lu open th<!
high school 1'Wimm1ng p;>ol for rtcrta·
t1on:il sv.·1mmi ng durmg the Easter vaca·
tion nl!xt week.
The pool will he optn to th t' pub lic
today lhrough Salurday from J p.m.
&o 4 p.m.
While Calley's sentence may not be
made more harsh than the life
Jmprisonment dealt him last Thursday by
a Court 1i1artial panel of Army officer!, it
may be lessened by successive atage1 ot
the Military review process.
It is those follow,up stages of the case
that President Nixon has vowed to
scrutinize.
John D. Ehrllchman, a top Nixori aide,
said the President's action was being
laken under his authority as commander
in chief of !he nation's armed forces.
Ordinarily lhe secretary of the Army
"'ould handle a final review of the case.
The Army·s highest legal officer. ~faj.
Gen. Kenneth J . Hodson. Army judge
advocate general, said the President's
action was "unusual" but "as \li'e
understand lt, he does not intend to
interfere \\'ilh the normal review channels.''
Ehrlichman was reported at first to
ha\'e denied the President'! decision was
"unprecedented" noting that President
Abraham Lincoln had s i mi 1 a r I y
intervened in a military convlctlon.
Observers noted that the Lincoln
precedent was dissimilar from the Calley
case in that there \.\'as no Uniform Code
of ~1ilitary Justice in force in Lincoln's
time.
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvan ia said today Nixon's actions
in the Calley case have been designed to
''IO\\'er the temperature! of public
reaction.''
2 Lagunans Hurt
In Auto Crasl1
Two )''oung Laguna Beach residents
suffered minor injurits early today whe:n
their auto went out of control al'Jd struck
a light pole at the corner of Broadway
and Forest Avenue.
Police said the car, driven by Stephea
Butcher, 20, of 1653 Arroyo Drive, was
southbound on Broadway at about 1 a.m.
v.·hen a patrol officer spotted it weaving
from side to side. The policeman followed
the vehicle in an attempt to stop the
driver, police said, but the car then
turned onto Forest Avenue and bll the
light :standard.
Butcher and his passenger, Josnn
Phillipsen. 21, of 2SIO S. Coast Highway,
v.·ere taken to South Coast Hospital where
they were treated for minor Injuries.
Hotelmen l(eep
Haneline Chief
The board of directors of the Lagun1
Beach Hotel·~fotel Association has rt-
t'll'Cted Loren Haneline and Merrill
Jotinson president and vice president of
the organluUon for 1971.
The lwo were named by the newly
<'lr.cled board at a mteting in the Beach
House JM . Named to serve one-year
h.'rm!i on the board were Jim A(flew of
the Hoitt Laguna CorporaUon, Julie
l!radshaw or Seven Seas, Jlanctine of
Vacation VIiiage, John!on of Surf and
Sand . Betty Robinson of Laauna Shores.
Bill Thomas o( Boat Canyon Apartmenls
and Harry Wlllats of Laguna Riviera.
!:: ti:-=-r.:t.'l..-r:r' = .. -.. -... -.,. ........,.,.....,, ............ ...... A certified lifeguard will be on duly
and thett will be no admission charge.
Glad)'S Adams were elected secretary-
treasurcr Of the a.uoclatlon and will
conUnue to optrate the II o 11 d a y
J-tewvatioo Bureau. a aervice ol tt.1
llot.el·Motel group.
( '
Harbour Sailor
Killed as Boat
Strikes Bridge
A 47-year~d Huntinglon Harbour man
was killed Sunday night when his
pleasure boat collided with a bridge
during a channel cruise.
Police said Donald R. Stoneman, 1'581
Peel Drive, was dead on arrival at
Huntington Intercommunlty H o ! p i t a I
suffering a fatal head injury apparently
sustained \\'hen his head struck the
Humboldt Bridge.
Investigators said Stoneman had been
demonstrating his 25--foot outboard cabin
cruiser to friends visiting from Fresno
when the accident occured around 9:30
p.m.
They said he had been showing 38-year-
old Mary Jane Pimeotel bow to pilot the
boat and was standing bthlnd her when
the boat's windshield hit the bridge and
Stoneman fell backwards into the boat.
Mrs. Pimentel suffered ooly a cut finger,
according lo police.
Police said the crew of four \\'as unable
lo determine which bridge had been
struck but steered the boat back to
Sloneman·s dock.
Officer Larry 1t1ay said Ute vessel was
southbound on Long Channel at an
apparent high rate or speed v.·hen it
colllded with the unlighted bridge. Tide
condltlon11 were high.
Boy, 14, Shot;
Motlier Arrested
A 14-year-old Garden Grove boy was
listl!d in critical rond!tion today after he
v.·as shot in the head Sunday. Hls mother
was booked by police on a!tempted
murder charges.
Garden Grove police identified the
\•ictim as J oseph Nlewiadonskl of 7702
Chapman Ave. He underwent surgery at
Orange County Medicll C e n t e r •
Physician!! reported they are optimistic
about his chances for recovery.
Investigating officers said the '1ug
from a .38 caliber pistol entered
Niewiadonski 's right temple and exitrd.
the back of his head. Pollet identified the
moth~r as May Nlewiadonsld, 37.
LodlH
Of the· arrests, police Jogged eight
bookings or persons over 30 for drunken
driving. Officers could not explain the
unwually large number or drunk drivers.
Police al3o reported a minor traffic
snarl ln the parking lot at the Balboa
Pier. ''There were no direction indicators
or ooe-way signs, so people were trying
to 10 both directions at tbe same time,"
one officer rtported.
With Inland temperatures forecast in
the high efihtles and low nlnelles through
Tuesday, police and lifeguards in
Newport are preparing for more of the
same.
In Huntington Beach, the biggest
crowds arrived Sunday with 28,000
settling in the sand at the city beach,
another 21,000 at Huntington State Beach
and 10,000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach.
"JC the weather stays like lt is now,
\\'e'll probably have one of our better
Easter weeks," Max Bowman, assistant
director of the city's harbors and beaches
department, said this morning.
City lifeguards had to pull 79 swimmers
out of the IUrl, and again i.s.!ued their
warning to beach visitors to remember
they're not in shape for too much
This was the fint weekend of th•
summer aeuon for state beaches which
are now open to midnight each weekend.
Water temPerature for Saturday and
Sunday as 56 degrees \\'hile the air
temperature was recorded at 72 degree s.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beach. about 10.000 for Bolsa
Chica and 9,000 at }funtington State
Per111it Lacking;
Work Called Off
Joseph Sweany. Laguna Beach director
of public works, has reminded
property ov.·ners planning improvements
that work undertaken without proper
permits may be stopped by the city.
A "stop work·• order was is!ued
Tuesday evening, Sweany said. to
1.forgan Paving Company of S a n
Cltmente and Phillips Buick of Laguna
Beach. In connection with • paving job
on a new car 11torage lot at Laguna
Canyon Road and Canyon Acres Drive.
Though the car atorage use is permit-
ted in the zone, Sweany said, it still
is subject to issuance of a permit by
the city and thlll had not been obtained.
Nor, he added, had the paving firm
obtained a permit to pave in the public
right o! way where the entry to the
Jot joined the street.
\Vork can proceed when the pennil!
are obtained, the <1ffielal said.
Dom Raciti
6 ~ ......... .....
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SOLITAIRE* , ..... tt .. .,,....... ..,
40'11> .. ··~ --.... '" '614 ,_ tt,
9wv!tM ,. Pf. d'-""I
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• -,,_.,, flflAfl) MIMlllrtl ~ !~IC Wli+I• -· $550
Mens
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A seven-week delay was ordered today
in the Orange County Superior Court trial
of a former sheriff's deputy accu.'td of
burglarizing the Mission Viejo Country
Club,
Presiding Judge William C, Speirs
ordered Frederick B. Irvine, 42, ol La
Habra to return to his courtroom May 24
for trial on charges of burglary, grand
theft, auto theft, receiving atolen
property and conspiracy. .
Irvine is free on his own recognlZ8nce.
The ex.deputy was arrested la.st Sept
20 and accused of being one or two
sheriff'! officers who ransacked the
country club's golf shop nf golf gear and
liquor in the course of their rounds as
part time security guards for the Mission
Viejo Company.
Arresting officers said J r v i n e
commandeered a patrol car and led his
former colleagues .in a wild chase that
ended in Riverside County after 11hots
were exchanged between the vehicles and
Irvine threatened to commlt suicide.
Irvine's co-defendant, Arthur B.
Duncan, 34, of Huntington Beach, quietly
surrendered. He was indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on ldenUcal
charget and was found banged froin the
rafters or the garage at his home thrtt
y,·eeks later.
Lo,v Clouds, Fog
Set for Coast
After Heat Wave
Lo\v clouds and fog during the night
and early morning hours are expected to
return the Orange Coast to the usual
spring weather pattern.
The "cool-it" forecast brings to an end
a record three-day heat wave that
brought 90-degree temperatures to inland
Orange County and highs from 75 to B>
degrees along the coast.
\Vesterly winds from eight to 16 knota
this afternoon ""·ill bring in the marine alt
1hat is expected to fog the area tonight.
Tuesday will be mostly sunny with
highs along the coast between iD and 80
degrees until the y,·ester!y winds retura
in the afternoon.
The National \\'eather Servicr predicts
the cooling trend will continue ror the
next few days as the normal spring
onshore nov.· of marine air replaces the
Nevada high pressure system that heated
Southern California over the weekend.
The northerly Santa Ana winds credit·
ed for bringing the high temperatures
will be replaced by the afternoon wester-
lies and become ijght and variable for
the rest of tonight and Tuesday.
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I
(
I
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7
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... -. --~ -. . ••
Lag111Ja Beaeh
ED ITIO-N
VOL. b4, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. .
MONDAY, APRI~ 5, 1971
. .
• TEN CENT,S
Fir·st Sectio.n of Pendleton Beach Dedicated
•
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot tn1 O.llY PUii $111f
California's top state parks official and
a a"US8ding congressman this weekend
dedicated the first section of Camp
Pendleton beach to go public -rites
attended by·11>0 of the inaugural users of
the rugged 3.>mile park.
And Immediately after Lhe afternoon
ceremonies Sa'turday State P a r k s
Director William Penn Mott added
another note Of uncertainty for the major
ranchers al1d farmers or nearby San
Mateo Canyon -per!Ons with huge
investments which might be erased by
last week's Presidential ruling. President
Nixon took the canyon from Marine
Corps control.
Mott said that if bis department
assumes control or the scenic canyon
south of the San Clemente city llmlt.s, the
ranchers' contracts would "be honored,"
then their farms might be 1'phased out"
to allow for space for campers.
At issue ls the 3,400-acre canyon now
studded with flower and vegetable
ranches in a canyon declared !W'plm by
President Nixon.
In all likelihood the canyon will fall into
state hands and be used as tbe campina
• ass1ve
·Plan1.er Resigns
Eschbach Cites Lack of T ime
Laguna Beath florist Jack Eschbach,
33, who was appointed to the city
Planning Commission Feb. 3, has
submitted bis resignation from that body,
effective immediately.
In a letter to Mayor Richard Goldberg,
Eschbach states, "I am unable to devote
the time necessary to fulfill by
obligations of this position. Furthermore
l feel J do not have adequate background
neti!sury to make such important
decisiOnl as required on the Planning
C:Ommmiasion."
In his brief period of service on the
commission. Eschbach parLiclpated in
only·OQt m>Jor decbion, •otinc with the
di11tnttng minority Jn the
recommendation that tbe City Council
adopt the CR (Commercial residential)
zoning ordinance for beachfront hotel
development with a ~foot height limit.
Eschbach and Com.missioner Carl
Johnson dissented in the vote, seeking to
permit the SO.foot height only in existing
C-2 zones where it now is allowed and
maintain the existing 30-foot height in
-other areas.
Mayor Goldberg said today the council
probably wiU discuss the matter of
appointing a replacement for !:scbbach in ...... u,., -.. • lolltWiJ)l,.Jla regull'
Wednesday meetlng. ·
Goldber& said. he did oot know lf the
other: membert of the councll WQU!d be
re1.dy at that Ume to propose D&!beS for
the appolnlmenL
Nixon Not Ur ging Quick
Calle y Military Review
From Wire Service•
President Nixon -who today was
heading back to Washington -has made
no m-0ve to speed military review or the
life sentence given U. William L. Calley
Jr. for murdering 22 civilians at My Lai,
•ides said today.
'They reported the chief executive, who
twice last week intervened in the Calley
case, believed the review should proceed
through normal chan.Qels at its deliberate
pace.
At the same time. the sources said,
Nixon would have no objection if the
Pentagon expedited the process through
such mechanl.cal acts as providing
additional stenographers to prepare the
full court-martial record. It must be
complt!ted before the case can reach the
first level ol review -by legal officers at
Ft. Benning, Ga., where Calley was tried.
The Chief Etecutive, sporting a new
tan, was to take off about noon abo~rd
Air Force One from El Toro Marine
Corp.! Air Station.
Befora departing, he scheduled a
meeting with 24 movie industry leaders
Coan
Weatlter
Fair skies with some morning
low cloudinesa IA forecast for the
coastal area Tuesday, with I.ht
temperatures dipping baclr: to 75
locally and 85 further inland.
at the Western Whfte House on ways to
pull Hollywood out of its unemployment
slump.
The major movie makers have been in
the doldrums for two decades and the
situation is worsening. The increase in
films being made aboard is part of the
problem.
The President worked hard 1nd played
little during his 10-day sojourn on the
shores of the Pacific Ocean. He did get in
a brief Sunday ocean swim, however,
despite the cool water.
Mostly. he spent the weekend polishing
his Vietnam radi~television address to
be delivered from the White House
Wednesday. The speech will center on the
next U.S. troop cut, expected to 1peed the
current rate of 12,500 men a month.
Aides declined to discuss rec\lrrlng
reports Nixon also may offer Hanoi a
definite total wfthdrawal dalt in
exchange for release of American
prisoners of war.
The White House Sunday reported a
general!y favorable response to the
President's decision to personally review
the C<lnviction and sentence of LL
William L. Calley Jr.' His declllon
Thursday to move him out of the Arrn'y
stockade also was a popular move with
the. public, aides said.
While the ffow has lessened somewhat,
telegrams, telephone call! and letters
still poured in urging clemency for the 11;
year-old officer &e11tenced to 11 f e
imprisonment for the murder of 22 South
Vietnamese civilians at My Lei.
POW Driv e
Segment of a huge stretch of beach park
which will ultimately run si.I miles
downcoast from the Western Whltt
House.
Mott and Rep. Alphonzo Bell (R-Santa
fi.ionica ), led the list of VIPs dedicating
the San Onofre Bluffs State Beacb
Saturday at 2 p.m.
Harmony with the Marine Corps and
promises of harmony with t h e
environment were the. two key lssues
repeated during the ceremonies.
Camp Pendleton Chief of Staff Col.
Emil Radics stressed that t ll 1
I :r··~·· . '-r •• . .
negotiations last year between the
Marine• and state ofUcials were .. always
friendly, no matter what you may have
beard or read," be said.
After tbe rites Mott, 3ell and the
Representative 's wife went for a stroll on
one of three trails cut for acees,, to the
rugged, plctUJ't3que bc•ch.
During that walk Mott ponc1.,.ec1 the
fate ff the i"ancberf tn the nearby canyol\
and '8.id some "could be phased out"
after their currtnt agreement with the
Marine Corps expire.
"Certainly we would honor au the
formal agreements and then we might
start to phue out some of the farmers.
"But, I don't know," Ute state parks
director mused," maybe we lbould leave
all the farms where they art.
"You know, there are tbousandll of city
people who would get a thrill out of
seeina veaetable and poinsettia farms ,"
he said.
U and when his department cu find
the money neceuary to deveJop the
call)'Oll and aUractiYe beacbta. the-state
park would be amo"« Callforaia'•
largest. Spanish-style buildings at the
100n-~be abandoned Marine Enlisted
Man's Beach Club also will become part
au.
of that public ftclllly.
Attendance durli11 the weekend at the
dedicated ~ach park was less than what
many observers -including President
Nixon -had predicted.
Several hundred campers s ta y e d
through the o,(leekend, whlle several
hundred day users drove in and out
through a temporary entrance.
Tbe beach will mnain open Utrough
Easter Week, then close.
U enough fund.I are raiatd during the
week, then the facilrty would be opened
on weekends -"until the funds run out,"
Mott 1aid.
a e
3 Arrested
In Laguna
Crackdown
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of IM Oelb' l"l)tt Sltft
Laguna Bdch narcotics o f f 1 c e r s
Saturday ~led three young men on
drug charges after invt.l!gaton allegedly
uncovered one ol tbe largut LSD hauls in
California bis\ocy lo a Woodl1111r Drive
,,,.. home.
OAILT ,ILOf,~ l'tllM
THE MAN WHO ARRESTED TIMOTHY LEARY IN LAGUNA St~ES up· NEWEST HAUL
Det. Neil Pu rcell Looks Ove r stlzed Dr ug s and. Manuf•ctutlng Equipment
Ex-mayor· Wddle
To Be Honored ,
By Art Colony
Former Laguna Beach ~fayor Jesse E.
Riddle will be honored by the City
Council Wednesday night for his man y
years or service to the Art Colony.
A special presentation will be made to
Riddle who is C<lncluding his latest city
assignment as a member of the Board of
7.oning Adjustment, a post he has beld
since August, 1966.
He served on the Laguna Beach City
Council from April. 1956 to April, 1964
and was mayor for six years during that
period.
Riddle also served on the board of
dlrectors of the Festival of Arts and as a
director of the Laguna Beach Puhl ic
P'acilillts Corporation, the oorrproflt
corporation established to build the two
new city fire staUons.
His moat cherished honor came when
youngster1 of the Laguna Little League
named their Boat Canyon playing field
for him.
Medical Llcense'f
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -A local
physician has one of the n e w
"person8.lit.ed" liceruie plates on his car.
It reads: QUACK.
Stars Ask .Break
Hollywood in 'Suite of Col'lapse'
Hollywood leaders In San Clemente
urged President Nixon today to support
legislation for a 20 percent tax break for
the movie industry which they said is in
a ''state of collapse."
Jack Valenli, presidenl of the Motion
Picture Association, told Q e w s m e n
outside the Western White House prior to
a discussion with Nixon that the
Preident initiated the meeting to look
into the industry's economl-:: slump.
"He was the first President who cared
about the industry and we're very
grateful," Valenti said.
"It comes at a crucial lime. This
industry is in a state of collapse and it
could be disfigured beyond restoration."
Valenti said tha1 the bill before
Congress has Uipartisan support and is
also supporttd by all segments of the
Hollywood industry.
Library Shuts Down
The Laguna Be;;.;h braoch llf the
Orange County Library will ht close1
for · several days beqiltning today in
order to move the books and shelves
to temporary ouarters at 207 N. Coast
Highway. The last opportunity residents
will have to check out books will be
prior to 5 p.m. tocla)'.
The President met with Z4 Industry
leaders to discuss ways to pull HoUywood
out of its unemployment slump.
The major moviemakers have been In
the doldrum for some time and
producers say the increase in filrru being
made abroad is part of the problem.
Besides Valenti, t1ctor ChJJrlton Heston,
pr~ident of the Screen Actors Guild,
attended the meeting.
Heston said that 76 percent of his
union's 23,000 members made leas than
$3,000 last year.
Services Sla ted
For Copter Pilot
Servittlll will be held at t p.m.
Wednesday In Pacific View Ch1pel for
Warrant Officer Steven K. LBITabee,
former Laguna Beach resWent killed In
Vietnam March 24. He wa.s 21.
11ie Rev. James Stewart will officiate
at the riles, to be followed by burial 1t
Pacific View Memorial Park.
~rrabee, 1 1967 graduate Of Laguna
Bea'ch High School, also attended
SadPleback COllege before joining the
Army in 1968. He was a helicopter Pilot
attached to the 25th Infantry Division
and had been in Soufhwest Asia for
almoit a year. His helicopter wu shot
down over Cambodia, the Army reporttd.
Aulhorlties el&l.m tbe confiacated
-· will\•• ~l vlllue" ol oboul
$311.«tO, lncludill m,1111 tal>lell of LSD
cootalned In ti fin, 11 pounds of haohisb
and ibout flv• pout1dl of marijuana.
The ' team of ·officers, under the
direcijon of veteran n a r c o t i c s:
invertlgator Sgt .. Neil Purcell, took the
trl,o into' C'llStoify at 247 Woodland Drive
after the sweet odor of burning
marijuana attrlcted them to t h •
residence.
The men were identified as Thomas
Joseph Sac~. l&. of 30628 Calle Chucca,
San Juan Capi!lraoo, Gary Ray Allen, 23,
of Long Beach, and David William
Godwin, 23, of Las Vegas.
Authorities aald the team o f
investl.lilators, conducting n a r c o t I c 1
sui'vei[ance In -thfi area, wen,t to the
addreSa after traclnR: the sourCe of the
smoke, which wu hanging in the air alJ
alang the short strttt. A barking dog in
front of the borne alerted the occupanta
to . the officers' arrival and two of the
men allegedly 1Uempted to flee through
a rear window, police 18id.
After capturing the trio, the detective•
searched the home and a 11 e g e d I y
discovered the h~hi11h and LSD. Sgt.
Purcell said the hashish was contained in.
quart cans with masking.tape label1
identifying the conl.el1t:i as a health food.
The smoke which attracted the officer11
to the house was pouring from the oven,
where Sgt. Purcell uid marijuana was
being burned to reduce the. weed to a
highly concentrated oil.
In the garage of the home, police claim
an operation had been set up to can the
hashish and ma.r1Juana for nationwide
distribution. Purcell sakt the caMing of
nareotic.c bu come lnto use recently in
order to e.scape the sensitive noses of
do11 trained to ~tect different types of
drugs.
Ah10 found by officers in lbe garage of
the ~me were 17 ~ surfboards, which
police·are hold:inJ until oWnership can be de\ennfned.
the thtte men are being hekl in
Orange County Jill In lieu of 1100,000 bail
e.acb and were to be arraigned today on
chargea of posaeMion of dangerous drugs
with intent to lell.
INSW E TODAY
The South Coost thordl and
Light Opera,.A.ssocidtion ii back
tn bu.tlnu.s with a ro.uing re~
dition of "G~" in San Clem-
cnU. See Entertainment, Page
29 .
VIV A Chapter • Ill Niguel He is sarvived ·by his mother . and
stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Qermah White
of Irvine; father, Orman G. Larrabee ot
Laguna. Beach; aister, KeUy Larrabee;
·and bruthen, Jt~ llld Mork
Larrabee.
Standards OK'd
For W merbeds
SAGRAMENTO (l.J1'1l -A legl~allve
commJttee, 1fte:r being warned of the da""' o( • lelb Md llhort-cimllllng
· bealert, has ~ application of state
taf4ty 1taridanil to Watcrbed.
... ""' N<n CtlltwtMI t
C~ JI.a
Ctlftk• • c,...,_.i •
DHlll "'911C11 II
....... i.1 ..... • . ...,,._. ..
~.... ,.,. ..._,.._ II
... I. ..... " JI .. -.
_.. "
111..,....I ~ W °'"'" C-f'f 11 .,, ........ .., ,.
S..l'tl U?J
S!Kt Mlr'llttJ ll•H ·-" -" W .. tf\tlr I
Wflltt Wt.it M
WMMll'I Ill-tl•JI . .,,. ~ ..
A Logu111 Niguel hoomwlfe woo
organized the recent Don Lyon Day in
Laguna Beach hat announced ahe J11
forming a chapte.r or ValctS In Vital
America (VJV Al for the area.
Mrs. Janict Jupenon hu long been
active. in the movement to foltcr concern
for American,, held prlaone:r or mluing
111 action In North Yittnam. She 1ald her
VIVA chApter will continue to work
toward this end and 1he It now Rekin1
volunteers to help promote the chapter .
"It would be Idell! for W0111<11 wholllve
I
Priiice EndS Tour
LONDON , CAP) -Prince Pblllp,
hulbod of Queen Ellzaheth II, returned
today from 1 M,OOOrtnllt, two-moqth tour
of Autltall• and lht PactUc.
He '4'lok part in ·the 50U1 aD11lversary
~ftbraliona of the J\Oyal Auatraliln Air
F'!'"' ·~cl b0c1me tbt nrsl ""'\l'"" ot ~-~·ft Oy to-"811 "tcrtl P•cWlc -~~·
1
The bill's au t1h or, A~emblyman
Rebert Biclham (J\.lle•port Beach), lold
lhe Aaoembfy ·Oon!1.,.,.. anf Public
Utilities CommlltM that bed• holding
200 gall.., of -and wtlghlng l.000 PoUllda have roplut<d and tht~ holing
eltrnenta ahort-drculted.
Baclham, an 1pal'tmenl ruldtn~ 111-
ded : "lt you live in a dawnltain IJ>llrl--
ment when the wattr tttapes, well ... "
The bill wu ror,.1rded 1o the -mblr
Wl)ll Md mtel• a>mml~ for fUrtltor -
2 DAR. T 'fl OT SC
North Viets
Still Shell
Fire Base 6
SAIGON t UPI l -North Vietnamese
gunners shelled Fire Base 6 near the
Laotian border f.1onday and South
Vietnamese defenders struck back with a
helicopter assault three mllei from the
C>Utposl in the sllth consecutive day of
beavy fighUng in the central highlands.
Casualities oo both sides climMd,
Including Americans killed, wounded and
missing.
Milltary sources described the fighting
around Fire Base 6 as a "localized
olftmi\•e" by North Vietnamese forces
designed to show t.btt the South
Vietnamese o!!ensive into Laos to cut the
Ho <lU Minh Trail had not affected
Hanoi's capability to attack at will.
"The communists are simply telling the
world that the operation up north in Laos
did not hurt them much," said Lt. CoL
Frank 0 . Miller, 43, cf Maitland, Fla.,
commander of a U.S. Army aviation unit
aupportins the South Vietnamese de!ense
of Fire Base 6.
A South Vietnamese communique said
1,817 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
have been killed in Fire Base 6 action
since Jast Wedoesday. South Vietnamese
losses were placed at 71 killed and 132
v.·ounded. U.S. headquarters said five
Amtrlcans bad been killed and cne
wounded. Another U.S. serviceman was
listed as missing in action.
Elsewhere in the central highlands
1one, 18 Americans were killed and 82
woWlded in fighting southeast cf Flre
Base 6 in coastal Binh Dinh Province
where U.S. unill bad beenmoved to free
South Vietnamese infantrymen for the
Fire Bue I combat The Bl.nh Dinh
action was in an area bordering a North
Vietoamese supply base. Sporadic
fighting was reported Monday following a
t.bteM.ay battle.
A corr~pcndent said South Vietnamese
teinforcements jumped from V .S. Army
helicopters at landing areas cut out of
dense jungles Monday to attack North
Vietnamese infantrymen three miles
from Fire Base 6.
Draft Lottery
Numbers for May
Might Hit 125
WASlilNGTON (AP) -Men holding
Random Sequence Number& up to 125
may be drafted lo meet the Pentagon's
draft call for May, Selectlve Service
Director Curlis W. Tarr announctd today.
During the first four months of this
year draft boards were calling men with
lottery numbert no higher than 100.
Tarr said It was oeceuary to raise this
ctiling to meet the May call for 15,000
men.
At the aamt time, Tarr authortud local
draft boards to order pre-Induction
physical examinations for men holding
numbers up to 175. The previous ctilinf:
was 150.
The draft has been tu:fng mm at a
tower rate this year than last year and
the top lottery number to be called in
May this year is 20 numbers lower than
a year ago.
The Defense Department a.aked for
17 ,000 drafltts in each of the first four
months of 1971, then dropped the call to
lS,000 for May -a five-month tot.al of
13,000.
In comparison, drart calls for the first
five monlha of 1970 totalled 64 ,500.
DAllY PILOT
Dl.AHG:i COMT P'UIUNOMG OOM'M't
a.i..r. N. w.M "'9llMt ...............
J••k l. C111'f.y
\IQ "'-........... o-.. ~
Tlritt11•• Ke..,if .. _
n-.1 A. M..S.I., ......... ~
Q.,.f,, H.. t.... lldit'4 P. Ntll ..... .......,~,..,... ..._ __
212 kt"t A .. 111tt ... __
JD5 Notti. fl CtMiee lttl
°""' ....... Col" ,,.,..,. DD Wnl l1r S~"Wt
Hft'Wf B-.c;ll; ZJ30 H~t Bwt ......
Hll!lllnGltln '4itdl: 11111 a.e11 kulevtrf
DAil Y 'ti.OT, ~ Wldl k ~ .. ~ ........... .,, .. ._
.., ....... 11, ........ ~ .... .......,l ..... C..• .......... .....
.-. ,.... Vl!lry', "" ~ ~--..:. -==:-..=. -::.-: •• ,. .... .., .,,.. Ollll ....
"' ,, 1n4> 6UAJl1
Cl T J AJ;ul'' I '4W11
S. 0 rte Al t111 se1 tu;
,.,. 14'2 ... . '--............. ,,
f t J' Ill 4f+f466
~ tm, ow. °""' ,...., ....
C"MN>Mr. .. -..... ...'"' ...... -----· .... , .... ,_ ... ........ _, .... fll? ............ ,,.. ....... ........, ..... .
!:""oi:" rt:!'~""::.'.= ~ ~ ....:.':~ -r,.-wt~
--
' . .
DA.IL V .. II.OT Sfllf PMfo
Water Chilly
Countians Crowd
Southland Shores
"' Torrid inland tenipe.ratures and murky
Inland smog drove nearly half a million
people to Orange Coast beaches over the
weelend but chilly ocean waters kept
most folk.s beachbound and out of trouble.
It was the first big weekend cf Easter
vacation for m o a t Orange County
:;tudents but troubles and congestion were
mosUy limited lo beaches and hlghways.
Newport Beach lifeguards estimated
the large.st throngs with 150,000 vlsltoni
on Peninsula sands al Corona del Mar
beaches.
Huntinglon Beach guards figured they
had 100,000 along their long shoreline
v.·hile San Clemente logged 48,000 and
Laguna Beacb, 30,000.
Surf along the entire Orange Coast was
low with waves generally in the three to
four.foot range and water temperatures
hovered in the high 50s. Both factors
contributed to keeping visitors ashore
and holding down the rescue tell.
Newport lifeguards said they re.!lcued
27 swimmera from the light rip tides
running aloog the Newport beaches.
Beach.
Vacationers hit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands. but lifeeuards bad an
"easy" 1veekend with chilly water
temperatures di.scouragln& all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds or
15,000 on the beaches both Saturday and
Sunday, vdth air temperatures at tht
shoreline reaching a high 86. Cool 59-
degree water, however, kept most of th •
beachgoers up on the sand. .
Surf was low and there "'.ert ne str1ous
rescue incidents. Forty-two beach visitors
required minor first ·aid assistance from
the lifeguards and lhree lost children
\Yere restored to their families.
EASTER VACATION PLUS UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER EQUAL BIG BEACH TURNOUT
This W11 the Scene Sunday •t 22nd Street and Oc.1n Avenue Near Newport Pier
The Newport arrest count from the
police department was up slightly over
last year. tn 1970 on Saturday, there "''ere
32 juveniles and adults arrested and on
Sunday there were !iii. This year there
\rere 60 both days.
Case Delayed
In Deputy's
Theft Case
President's lnterventio11
In Calley Case Discussecl
Hbtorians may argue for decades the
importance of President NI.Jon's decision
to intervene in the Calley coaviction
review processes, a decision reached this
weekend at the Western White House in
Saa Clemente.
Already the President"s move to
scrutinize successive levels of the review
process has been termed
"unprecedented" by a top Nixon aide and
"inherently disrespectful W the rule of
the law," by !ormer U.S. Attorney Gen-
eral Ramsey Clark.
Despite the views of officials, the
promi!ed intervention in the
controversial My Lai m a s s a c re
conviction of Lt. William L. Calley, Jr.,
teemed today to have sated the public's
Laguna Niguel
Man Sentenced
In Conspiracy
A Laguna Niguel man convicted in
Orange County Superior Court on lesser
charge! after being accused of bribing a
Costa Mesa patrolman today v.·as
sentenced to one to three years in st.ate
prison.
Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered that
term for Samuel Rosman, 27, of 29351
San Sri.so Place just three weeks after a
jury cleared Rosman of bribery but
convicted him of conspiracy.
The panel reached its verdict after
hearing Officer Gary Barwig testify
that Rosman gave him $10,000 lo plant
narcotics in the car of a key prosecution
vdtness in court action against Eugene
Rondondo of Newport Beach.
It was alleged that Rosman thought he
had bribed earwig to halt the car driven
by Charles "Chuck" Dreyer of Laguna
Beach and place barbiturates In the auto
while booking the victim for a trumped
up traffic offense.
Rondondo 4-t, was a partner with
Dreyer in the Ill fated Feliciano's
restaurant in Newport Beach. Both men
were indicted by the Orange County
Grand Jury ~n liquor hijacking charges
and Dreyer was lo testify for the
prosecution against Rondondo.
Rond ondo·s trial has been set for ~lay
26 1n Superior Courl
Last Rites Held
For James Davis
A memorial mass was celebrated Sat-
urday in St. Catherine's Church, Laguna
Be11ch, for James C. Davis of IW La
Mirada who died Wednesday at the age
er 65 after suffering a heart attack.
~fr. Davis, a native of Texas, was a
former department manager at Bullock·s
Santa Ana storr.
He is survived by a brother, June
David and a nephew, [)Qnald Da,'ls,
both or Dallas, Tex.
Burial will be at Calvary Jilli
Cemetery. Dallas.
Hilgenfeldt Mortuary , Anaheim, in
charge of arrangements.
s,vimming Pool
Open at School
TI1e Laguna Beach Retreatlon Dtpart·
men! has announced r:ons t<) open the
high school swimming p..ol for rtcrta·
l!onal swimming during the Easter vaca.
tion ncxl .,.,.erk.
The pool .,.,ill ht open L1 tht flUl>llc
today through Saturday rr om 1 p.m.
io 4 p.m.
A certified lifeguard wlU be tm dut7
and there will be uo admission charge.
• '
outrage. Letters telegrams and phone
calla lo the President alackeoed 1D the
wake of the wee.kend announcement.
Aides described the President as being
"concerned" about the low morale among
Calley's fellow soldlers and anilow to
demonstrate support for U.S. fighting
men in Vietnam. Nixon announced
Saturday he would personally intervene
in the case and make the finaJ judgment
on Calley's punishment.
While Calley's sentence may not be
made more harsh than the life
imprisonment dealt him last Thursday by
a Court Martial panel cf Army officers, it
may be lessened by successive stagu of
the Military review process.
It is those follow-up stages of the case
that President Nii:on has vowed to
1crutlnlze.
John D. Ehrllchman, a top Nii:on aide,
said the President's action was being
taken under his authority as commander
in chlef of the natlon's armed forces.
Ordinarily the secretary of the Army
would handle a final review of the case.
The Army's highest legal officer, Maj.
Gen: Kenneth J. Hodson, Army judge
advocate general, said the President's
action was "unusual" but "as we
understand II, he does not intend IG
interfere with the normal review
channels."
EhrUchman was reported at first to
have denied the President's decision was
"unprecedented·' notiRg that President
Abraham Lincoln had s J m i I a r l y
intervened in a military conviction.
Observers noted that the Lincoln
precedent was dissimilar from the Calley
case in that there v.·as no Unifonn Code
cf Military Justice in force in Lincoln's
time .
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott of
Pennsy lvania said today Nixon 's actions
in the Calley case have been designed to
''lower the temperatures or public
reaction.''
2 Lagunans Hurt
In Auto Crash
Two young Laguna Beach residents
suffered minor injuries early today when
their auto v.·ent out of control and struck
a light pole at the corner of Broadway
and Forest Avenue.
Police said the car. driven by Stephen
Butcher, 211. of 1653 Arroyo Drive, ~·as
southbound on Broadway at about 1 a.m.
v.'hen a patrol officer spotted it weaving
from side to side. The policeman followed
lhe vehicle in an attempt to stop the
driver, police said, but the car then
turned onto Fore.st Avenue and hit lbe
light standard.
Butcher and bis passenger, Joann
Phillipsen, 21, of 2510 S. Coast lligbway,
were taken to South Coast Hospital wbere
they were treated for minor injuries.
Hotelmen Keep
Haneline Chief
The board of direcWrs or the Laguna
Beach Hotel-Motel Association has re-
elected L<lren Haneline and Merrill
Johnson president and vice president of
the organlzalion for 1171.
The two were namtd by the newly
elected boanl at a m~ting in the Beech
llouse JM. Named to serve ont-year
trrms on the board were Jim Agne" of
lht Hotel Llguna Corporation , Julie
Rradshaw of Seven Seas, Haneline ol
Vacation Village. Johnson cf Surf and
Sand, Betty Rob inson of La(lJna Shores,
Bill Thomas of Boat Canyon Apartn1enUJ
111d Harry Wlllal, of Lagun11: Rivier•.
Glti:dys Adams were elected secreta.ry·
treasurer of the 1tso(l1tlon and will
continue to Qpilrate tbe HO 11d11
Reservation Bureau, 1 urvk.'e of tl:t
Hot.cl·Mol.C!l group •
Harbour Sailor
Killed as Boat
Strikes Bridge
A 47-year-old Huntington Harbour man
was killed Sunday night when his
pleasure: boat collided with a bridge
during a channel cruise.
Police aaid DMald R. Stoneman, 16581
Peel Drive, was dead on arrival at
Jlunlington lntercommunily H o s pi t a I
suffering a fatal head injury apparently
sustained when his head struck the
Humboldt Bridge.
Investigators said Stoneman had been
demonstrating his 25-foot outboard cabin
cruiser to friends visiting from Fresno
when the accident occured around 9:30
p.m.
'Ibey said he had been showing 38-year-
old Mary Jane Plmentel how to pilot the
boat and was atandlng behind her when
the boat's windshield hit the bridge and
Stoneman fell backwards into I.he boat.
Mrs. Pimentel suffered Only a cut fmger,
according to police.
Police said the crew (lf four was unable
to determine which bridge had been
.struck but steered the boat back to
Stoneman's dock.
Officer Larry May said the vessel was
.southbound on Long Channel at an
apparent high rate of speed when it
collided with the unlighted bridge. Tide
conditions were high.
Boy, 14, Shot;
Mother Arrested
A 14-year-0ld Garden Grove boy was
listed in critical condition today after he
\I.as shot in the head Sunday. Hi! mother
was booked by police en attempted
murder charges.
Garden Gro\·e police identified the
\•ictim as Joseph Niewiadonski of 7702
Chapman Ave. He underwent surgery at
Orange County Medical Center.
Physicians reported they are optimistic
about his chances for recovery.
Jnveslig:ating officers said the slug
from a .38 caliber pistol entered
Niewiadonski's right temple and exited
the back of his head. Police iden tified the
mother as May Niewiadonski, 37.
Litdle1
or the arrests, police logged eight
bookings of persons ever 30 for drunken
dri\·ing. Officers could not explain the
WlUSUaJly large number of drunk drivers.
Police also reported a minor traffic
snarl in the parking lot al the Balboa
Pier. "There were no direction indicators
or ooe-way signs, so people were trying
lo go both directions at the same time,"
one officer reported.
With inland temperatures forecast in
the high eighties and low nineties through
Tuesday, police and lifeguards in
Newport are preparing !or more of the
same.
In Huntington Beach, the biggest
crov.'ds arrived Sunday with 23,000
settling in the sand at lhe city beach,
another 21 ,000 at Huntington State Beach
and 10.000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach .
"If the weather stays like it is now.
\\•e ·11 probably have cne of our better
Easter weeks,'' 1'-1ax Bowman, assistant
director of the city's harbors and beaches
department, said this morning.
City lifeguards had to pull 79 swimmers
out cf the surf, and again issued their
warning to beach visitors to remember
they're not in shape for too much
This wa1 the first weekend cf the
summer season for state beaches which
are now open to midnight each weekend.
Water temperature for Saturday and
Sunday as 56 degrees while the air
temperature was recorded at 72 degrees.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beach, about 10,000 for Bolsa
Chica and 9,000 at 11untington State
Permit Lacking;
Work Called Off
Joseph S1,1.·eany, Laguna Beach director
tJf public works, has reminded
property owners planning improvements
that work undertaken without proper
permits may be slopped by the city.
A "stop work" order was issued
Tuesday evening, Sweany said, to
1'-1organ Paving Company of S an
Clemente and Phillips Buick cf Laguna
Beach, In connection with a paving jnb
on a ne\¥ car storage lot at Laguna
Canyon Road and Canyon Acres Drive.
Though the car storage use is permil·
te.d in the Wne, s~·eany said, it still
is subject to issuance of a permit by
the city and Utia had not been obtained.
Nor, he added. had the paving firm
obtained a permit to pave in the public
right of way where the entry to the
Jot joined the street.
Work can proceed when the permit.!
are obtained, the official said.
SOLITAIRE*
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A seven-week delay \vas ordered today
in the Orange County Superior Court trial
of a former sheriff's deputy accuaed of
burglarizing the Mission Viejo CountrY.
Club.
Presiding Judge \Villiam C. Speirs
ordered Frederick B. Irvine, 42, cf La
Habra to return to his courtroom May 24
for trial en charges or burglary, grand
theft, auto theft, receiving stolen
property and conspiracy.
Irvine is free on his own recogniunce.
The ex-deputy was arrested last Sept.
20 and accused of being one cf two
sheriff's officers v.·ho ransacked the
country club's golf shop cf gclf gear and
liquor in the course of their roun?s. as
part time security guards for µ,e Mission
Viejo Company. -
Arresting officers said I r v I n e
commandeered a patrol car and led his
former colleagues in a wild chase that
ended in Riverside County aft.er shot.s
,~·ere exchanged bet"''een the vehicles and
Irvine threatened to commit suicide.
Irvine's co-defendant, Arthur B.
Duncan, 34, of Huntington Beach, quieUy
surrendered. He was indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury oo idtntic.tl
charge! and was found banged from the
rafters of the garage at his home three
weeks later.
Lo\v Clouds, Fog
Set for Coast
Mter Heat Wave
Lo1v clouds and fog during the niaht
and early morning hours are expected to
return the Orange Coast to the usual
spring weather pattern.
The "cool-il" forecast brings to an end
a record three-day heat "'ave th.at
brought 91Hiegree temperature1 to inland
Orange County and highs from 75 to ~
degrees along the coast.
\\'esterly winds from eight to 15 knots
this afternoon will bring in the marine air
that is expected to fog the area tonight.
Tuesday will be mostly sunny with
highs along the coast between 70 and 80
degrees until the westerly winds return
in the afternOOR.
The National Weather Service predict.t
the cooling trend will continue for the
next few days as the normal spring
onshore flow of marine air replaces the
Nevada high pressure system that heated
Southern California over the weekend.
The northerly Santa Ana winds credit·
ed for bringing the ·high tempe:rature1
will be replaced by the afternoon Wtllt:r·
lles and become light aftd variable tor
the rest of tonight and Tuesday.
DIAMOND*
RING J•--"-·"· lf1/Mt ..... ) "" "' Int ....VJ )'Wiiow ....,, -.. -_,. lrldlot ....
*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
OIAlfOHD "GUARAHTEE
$690 WMn you bvy • dl•mond from ui -
will gu•ran ... that diemond to appraf.M
at W.4 MORE than you paid for It or
your money back, Can you do a1 well
el1ewhere? COMPAF'fE .
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SEU, TRADE C:OME IN AND IROWSE AROUND
1838 NEWPORT. BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN C:OSTA MQA -.__ H-I .,_,...,
7
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7
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San Cle1nenie
Ca istrano EDITION N.Y. Stoe"8
VOL. 64, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
• asSIVC '
•
MILT PIL6'f Sltff 11Mtt
DEDICATING A NEWLY WON PU8~1C BEACH AT SAN ONOFRE
Stat• Parks Dir~ctor Mott, (S..ted) and Rep ... Alphonzo Bell
First Section of Publi·c
Pendleton Sa11d Dedicated
By JOHN,-V AL TERZA
Of lltt D•ltJ ~1111 St1f'
California's top state parks official a nd
a crusading congressman this v.•eekend
dedicated the lirst secli<>n of Camp
Pendleton beach to go public -rites
attended by 100 oI the inaugural users of
the rugged 3 5-mile park.
And immediately after the afternoon
ceremonies Saturday Stale Pa r k s
Director \Villiam Penn Motl added
another note of uncertainty for the major
ranchers and farmers of nearby San
Mateo Canyon -persons with huge
lnvesl.mentB which might be erased by
last week's Presidential ruling. Pre sident
Nixoo took the canyon lrom Mar ine
Corps control.
Mott sa id that if his department
ess11mes control of the scenic canyon
M>uth of the San Clemente city limits, the
ranchers' contracts would "be honored .''
then their farms might be "phased out"
lo allow for space for campers.
At issue is the 3.400-acre canyon now
studded with flower and vegetable
ranches in a canyoo declared iiurplw by
President Nixon.
In all likelihood the canyon will fall into
slate hands and be used as the camping
or .. ge Coast
Wea tiler
Fair 1kie11 with some morning
low cloudiness Is forecast for the
Cilastal area Tuesday , with the
temperature!! dipping back to 75
locally and as further inland,
INSmE TODA l'
The 'Snuth Coo.st Ch.oral and
Light Optra A.1.!ocuition i.! back
in busines3 with a roWirlQ ren·
dlt ion of "Gypt!J~' in Saii Cle m·
entc. St:f' Ente'rtbinmtnt, Pngt
29
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segment of a huge stretch of beach park
which will ultimately run aii: miles
downalast from the Westei:n White
House .
Mott and Rep. Alphonzo Bell (ft.Santa
1'.1onica ). led !be list of VJPs dedicating
the San Ooofre Bluffs Stale Beacn
Saturday at ? p.m.
Harmony with the Pi-1arine Corps and
promises of harmony with th e
environment were the two key issues
repeated during the ceremonies.
Camp Pendleton Chief of Slaff Col.
Emil Radics stressed that th e
negotiations last ~ar between the
Pi-1arincs and stale officials were "always
friendly . no matter what you may have
heard or read." he said.
After the rites Mott, Bell and the
Representative's wife went for a stroll on
ooe of three trails cut for access to tht
rugged, picturesque beach.
Dur ing that walk Mott pondered .the
fate of the ranchers in the nearby canyon
and said some "Ciluld be phased out"
after their current agreement with the
Ptiarine Corps expire.
"Certainly we would honor all the
formal agreements and then we might
start to phase out some of the farm <?rs.
"But, I don 't know." the state parks
director mused.'' maybe we should leave
all the farms where they are.
"You know. there are thousands of city
people who would get a thr ill out of
seeing vegetable and poinaettia farms,"
he said .
If and when his deparlment can find
the money necessary to devclOp the
canyon and attractive beaches, the state
park would be among California '&
largest. Spanish-style buildings at I.be
soon-to-be abandoned Marine Enlisted
Pi-1an's Beach Club also will become .part
of tha t public facility.
Att.e ndanci! during the weekend at the
dedicated beach park was less. than what
many observers -including Prelklent
Nixon -had predicted.
Several hundred campers 1 l a y e d
lhrough the weekend, while several
hundred day use.rs drove in and out
through a temporary entrance.
The beach wlll remain open through
Easter Week. then close.
If enough fund.Ii are raiM'd during the
week, then the faci lity would be opened
on weekends -"until the fund.I run out,''
Motl said. ,
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1971
ru-.
Trustees
Scrutinize
Courses
One or San Cleme11te High School'•
largest and mOISl ianovative packages of
proposed class offerings-ranging from
Japaoese to art welding-will come up
for study tonight by trustees of the Ca'p.
istrano Unified School District.
Separate plans for 11 different classu
-many or an innovative nature -will
receive first ei:posure to the board, alooir
wilh a projected new total cost of $7,562
for materiab and books.
Included In the proposed course. offer-
ings are composition classes dealing with
the environment, sci.ence fiction a n d
sports; choral readinf, Japanese lang·
uage, ornamental horticulturt, natural
history of California, aophomore human-
ities al'KI more than a doz.en others.
District spokesman Joe Wimu said the
new classes comprise probably the larg-
est package ever proposed for one· school
year on the Triton campus.
He said the classes -if approved by
trustees-only would be offered ii enough
students enroll to comply with a set en-
rollment minimum.
In other matters scheduled tonight,
trust.ees will consider:
-The Installation ol 1· t::'li'\j,J<ldr!!"
l)'ltan In thO'firsi diiiW auodlollilll' ·· ....... ~---.. "'--:--A pro1r• ~ on • "p_rematurt
planta'', •n orel ol ~ s .. ewn>ntl
High campus planted, of!lclall ..,.n;d,
by &tudt.nta .-ho failed to aeek Q{ficlll
permission for the project. Students 11-
ter requescted funds from the 1ehool dis·
trict to help pay for the lacdscaping.
-setting Jn)Cedurel'I necessary to hold
1 public sale of a wide variety of &ur·
plus school district property.
-Approval of aa agreement to partio-
lpate in I.ht UC 1rvine tea.chu Intern pro-
gram next school year.
-A progeru report on a new drug
abuse program and po.s.!ible selection of
a steering committee to &uide the proJ·
ect.
-Collsiderat.ion of a t.ai:-sheltered an·
nuily program prQPO&td by the C&pig.
trano Unified Education Association.
-Appointment of the district's commit·
t~ which will meet and confer with em-
ployes on aext fi6cal year'1 salaries.
Students Def eat
Self -paid Union
Building at UCI
UC Irvine student! have voted down a
proposal to build a camp.lJ union with
student fees .
The vote tabulated Friday 1howed 3,092
opposed and t,28& favoring the project
that would require payment or $3 per
quarter next year.
By 1974-75 school year, • when It was
anticipated the bailding would be open,
the fees would have risen to $11 per
quarter per student.
There were 4,404 UCl 1tudents return·
tni:i ballots out of f.300 eligible. T1le
ballot!!! wers included in regiltraUon
packets in the hopea that a favorable
vote would be obtained.
The defeat of the measure: lndicates
students do oot want lo tai: themselves
to build a campu! social hall .
Three years .of planning prior to the
vote had Jed to proposal of an $8.3
buUdlng.
-au
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. :OlDl!>A'{ION HO~iiiiW' s~ Ctlt,\lNTI .. .-.en.I.TY
IMYtr Ivana HOida The Sptrklln1 Final Pord•tt . '
San Clemente Lauded
For Foresight on Bonds
By GEORGE Ll!lllAL
Of IM DlllY ,,,._. lllff
The city of San Clemeott '.Nat com-
mended for, ita forulgbt in 1upporti111 bof'lda .nectsaar~ to build I.be $2.S million
water reclama'ilon plant dediated l"rl·
day.
A representative of Gov. JWi,ald Rea·
1an told 1 dedication Judience of JOO
''no ii."le forced . you io· do ·th ls "for the
ecology, you jUlf. took the'leadership and
built it."
Kerry Mulligan, aide to Re1ga11 who
was vislting the Western While· J-louse
during the 11 a.m. dedicaUon, told city
officials that ID percent federal fundina:
is now availlble for such projects.
"Perhaps whe'n you are ready' to iieek
tertiary stage treatment such funding
will help you <!? it," Mulligan concluded.
Mayor Walt .Ev11V1 introduced speakers
Including Dohlld Rumsfeld, counselor to
President Ni~on who .had been illvlted to
alt.end. Rumsfeld said tht waler purlflca·
tion plant wa! symbolical of San Cle-
mente's concern ror tht eilvironfuent, a
concern that· It sh.lred bJ 'Ute town's
leading citiziii. '
Others addrtuinl tht crowd ·111thered
ln brtght sUNhine on I parWlng lot ad·
jactnt to tht ocean view Stwage treat-
ment plant, were Dr. Harvey Ludwts.
chairmen of. Enginttring Sciences Co.
a11d consultant to the project, Maj. Gin.
George S. Bowman, commander Of Ma•
riht Corps Camp Pendle~ and H. G.
Osborne, chief engineer of the Orange
CoU11ty Flood ContrOI Distrlcl
Osborne asked Mulligan whether he
"1ight "put in a word with the President"
to urge ,the Army CorPJ .ol Engineers to
n.iah a dam project that will store treat-
ed etnuent.
Tbe nearly pure -water thtit leavu the ''"'""'arr 1llgo ol ·1reaimeQ1 through
1and and charcoal. will eventually pro-
vide recreational lakes for use by San
Clement.e residents, when the dam is
built.
For now, the effluent is piped to Camp
Pendleton for percolation into ground
supplies. Mayor Evans noted much or
the water is used to irrigate farm areas,
golf coorses and even freeways, "The
slat.e buys water and trucks it to water
foliage along the San Diego Freeway,"
he noted .
A flag that had been flr>wn over the
U.S. Capitol was presented to Mayor
Evans by a representative of Sen. John
G. Schmitz {R-Tustl nl.
An honor guard from Sa1t Clemente
High School handled the flag raising
cerempny before the watchful eyes of the
Pendleton brass.
Gen. Bowman noted that "•s tong u
1 am here the warm relations between
the city of San Clement.e and Camp Pen-
dleton wi1J co11tinue."
"The 2.000 Marines that live in this
community are delighted to be recognized
aii 'cilizens." he said.
The base commander lauded the cit!·
U!ns who in 1967 supported the bond issue
creating the treatment plant with a 90
percent vote.
Rossmoor Tract Map
Before OC Planners
A tract map for 70.5 acres of Ro!.smoor
LeilUre World Planned Community is
before the Orange County Planning C.om·
mlaion for approval Tuesday.
Included In the plans for the tract
are 243 single family homes, one parK.
one ichool and four open space-areas.
..
JEN CENTS
e
3 Arrested
In Laguna
Crackdown
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of ffll o.llt' "I"' lllff
La~na Beach narcotics o f·f I c • r t
Saturday arrnted th.rte young men on
drug charges after invesUgatQra allegedly
utlL'Overed one of the largest LSD haull in
California hiltory ID a Woodland Drive
home.
Authorities claim the confiscated
narcotics, with a "street valne" of about
$350,000, included 130,000 table.ta of LSD
contained in 23 jars, 11 pounds of huhl.sb
and about five pounds of marijuaM.
The team of officers, under the
direction of veteran narcot·lc1
investigator Sgt.· Neil Purcell, took the
trio into custody at 347 Woodland Drive
after the sweet odor of burning
marijuana attracted them to t b e
residence.
The men were identified as Thomas
Joseph Sachse, ll. of 30&28 Calle Chucca,
San Juan Capistrano, Gary Ray Allen, 2.1,
of Long Beach, and David William
Godwin. J.1, of Lu Vq:aa.
Aulhoritieii Wd the team o f
tnvettl1e.ton,• cOnduCtlil n • r c •Cl c 1
.......,jjlaoce in lli6 area. w""t to' fill
addrtu · after lracln&. tbt. aouru of thi" 1tnoe. ll'biclj m l!inltril in 111e " an llonc'tlle ahoiit llriet. ·A.borldiic 0.1 in
''""' of the bom4 alerted tbe OC<llpanll to the olficenl lrr1J1l and two of Ibo
men allegedly attempte.4 t.o flee lhrougb
a·rear window, police alld.
After capturing the trio, the detectives
searched the hoi'ne and 111 e gt d l y
discovered the h.ashl&h and LSD. Sgt.
Purnell said the hashish WQ contained in
quart cans with maskinc-tape labels
identifying the contents u a health food .
The smoke which attracted the officera
to the house was pouring from the oven,
where Sgt. P.urcell &aid marijuana was
being burned to rtduce the weed to a
highly conctntrated oil.
In the garage of 'the home, police claim
an operation had been tet up to can the
hashilh and marijuana for naUonwide
distribuUon. Purcell said the cannlng of
narcotica has come into use recenUy in
order to escipe !he sensitive noses of
dogs trained to detect different typea of
drugs.
Also found by ofncers in the irarage of
the home were 11:new. aurt'boardl, which
police are hokling untU -ownership can be
determined.
The thrte men are being held In
Orange C.Ounty jail In lieu of $100,000 bail
each and were· to be a1Talgned today on
charges of poasesskm of dangerous drugs
with intent to sell.
Aparbnent Fire
Injures 2 Men
Two men suffered minor buma In a fin
wtiich did $3,600 damage to an apartment
CilD"tplex in Dana Point Sunday nighl
Orange County firemen laid Richlrd
Krisher of San-Clemente sp'.>tted the fire
shortly after I p.m. and alerted
apart.ment:manager 1bomu Tiiden, 65,
of 24257 Santa Clara Avenue.
The two 111eo. were burned slightly
while pushing a nhlc)e out of a garage in
the burning building.
Battalion Chief Dick Phk!ngtoo said tht
('8Use of the bl.aieJi under investigation.
The aP,Srtmenta are owned by Dr. Arthur
C. ElliOll ol Santi ,Ana.
Clemente. Street 'Tonic' Studied
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t.J. Di.ttV PILOT __ sc __ •--'c."'--''::.' -•'-pt11--'-5':...l1...m_· _ _,___
North Viets
,Still Shell
•
:Fire Ba se 6
SA.IGOfll (UPI) -North Vietnamese
~'IUftM'n shelled Fire Base g near the
·Laotian border Monday and south
Vietnamese defenders struck back with a
helicopter assault three miles from the
outpost in the sixth comeeuUve day of
heavy fightlng in lbe central highlands.
Casualllies on both sides climbed,
Including Amf:riuns killed, wounded and
missing.
ltti!Hary sources described the fighting
.around Fire Base 6 as a "localized
offensive" by North Vietnamese forces
designed to show that the South
Vietnamese offensive into Laos to cut the
~Ho Chi ft.1inh Trail had not affected
.. Hanoi's capability to attack at will.
~ "The communists are simply telling the
. v.·orld that the ope.ration up north in Laos
did not hurt the m much," said Lt. CCII.
J-'rank O. Miller. 43, of Maitland, Fla.,
,commander of a U.S. Army aviation unit
1Jupporling thl? South Vietnamese defense
tif Fire Base i .
A South Vietnamese communtque said
l ,817 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
have bl?en killed in Fire Base 6 .action
flince last Wednesday. South Vletnamese
Josse.s were placed at 71 killed and 132
wounded. U.S. headquarters said five
Americans had been killed and one
wounded. Another U.S. serviceman was
listed as missing In action.
Elsewhere in the central highlands
tone, 11 Americans were killed and 82
wounded in fighting southeast of Fire
Base f in coastal Dinh Dinh Province
where U.S. units had beenmoved to free
Soutb Vietnamese Infantrymen for the
Fire Base 8 combat. The 8inh Dinh
action was in an area bordering a North
Vietnamese supply base. S p o r a d i c
fighting wa.s reported Monday following a
lhree4ay batUe.
A correspandent 1ald South Vie tnamese
reinforceme nta jumped from U.S. Army
~ten at land.log areu cut out of
dense jungles Monday to attack North
Vietnamese infantrymen three miles
from Fire Ba.se &.
Draft Lottery
Numbers for May
Might Hit 125
WASHINGTON (AP) -Men h<>ldlng
Random Sequence Nwnbers up to 12$
may be: drafted to meet the Pentagon'•
draft call for May, Selective Service
Director Curtis W. Tarr annou nced today.
During the first four months of this
year draft boarda were calling men with
lottery numbers no higher than 100.
Tarr uld It wu necessary to raise this
t elling to meet the May call for 15,000
men.
At the ume lime, Tarr authorized local
draft boards to order pre-induction
physieaJ e1.aminatlons for men holding
numbers up to 175. The previous crillng
'vu 150.
The dralt has been laking men at a
tower rate this year than last year and
the top lottery number to be called in
May this year i3 20 numbers lov.·er than
a year ago.
The Defenae Department asked for
17,000 draftees ln each of the first four
months of 1971, then dropped the call to
15,000 for May -a five-mon th to!al of
83,000.
Jn comparison, draft calls for the first
five montm of 1970 totalled 84,500.
DAILY PILOT
o1V.NG:Z COAST l'UM.llHINO COMl'ANY
a..~N.W ....
,.~ Md Pwllllln'
J111i: 1t. c.r1..,
va~•o...~~
T1iP111 KM•il .......
n....11 A. Mw-'iTN
M-.i. l!:o:U ...
Clt1f'IM H. '-• R.lU1r4 '· N•lt AN!t,_ Mlllltlfw l•ltft --°""" 221 kr.1t An11•• s-c ..... OflllM
JOI H•rfti lA c-I•• l t1I --C.• ,,_.! -W.I ..., 8"-' ........., '-Iii zm N ........ 1 ... ~ twnMI* a.ct11 um .__ ~
DAILY l'ILOT 11•!1 l'~i.
Water €hilly
Countians Crowd
Southland Shores
~ Torrid inland temperalW'e.a and murky
tnland smog drove nearly half a million
people to Orange Coast beaches over the
1,11eekend but chilly ocean waters kept
most folks beachbound and out of trouble.
It was the first big weekend o! Easter
vacation for most Orange County
:;tudents but troubles and congestion v.·ere
mostly limited to beaches and highways.
Nev.·port Beach lifegua rds estimated
the largest throngs with 150,000 visitors
()n Peninsula sands at Corona de l Mar
beaches.
Huntington Beach gu&rds figured lhey
had 100,000 along their long shoreline
while San Clemente logged 43,000 and
Laguna Beach, 30,000.
Surf along the entire Orange Coast wu
low with waves gene.rally in the three. to
four-foot range and water temperatures
hovered in the high 50s. Both factors
contributed to keeping visitors ashore
and holding down the uscue toll.
Newport lifeguards said they rescued
27 swimmers from the light rip tides
running along the Newport beaches.
Beach.
Vacationers hit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands , but lifecuards bad an
··easy" weekend with thilly w1ter
temperatures discouraging all but the
bravest swimmers.
Laguna guards reported crowds of
IS,000 oo lbe beacbea both Saturday and
Sunday, with air temperature.s at the
shoreline reaching a high M. Cool $&-
degree water, however, kept most of lht
beachgoers up on the sand.
Surf was low and there were n• seriou.s
rescue incidents. Forty-two beach visitors
required minor first aid assistance from
the lifeguards and three lost children
v.·ere restored to their families.
EASTER VACATION PLUS UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER EQUAL BIG BEACH TURNOUT
ThiJ WaJ the Scene Sunday at 22nd Street and Ocean Avenue Nea r Newport Pier
The Newport arrest count from the
police department was up slightly over
last year. Jn 1970 on Saturday, there were
32 juveniles and adu1t.s arrested and on
Sunday there were 56. 'Ibis year there
were 60 both days.
Case Delayed
In Deputy's
Theft Case
President's Intervention
<.
In Calley Case Discussed
Historians may argue for decades the
importance of President Nixon's decision
to intervene in the Calley conviction
review processes, a decision reached this
'veekend at the Western White House in
San Clemente.
Alre.edy the Pre.sident 's move to
scrutinize succe.ssive levels of the review
process has been termed
"'unprecedented" by a top Ni:ron aide and
''inherently disrespectful 1o the rule of
the law," bf former U.S. Attorney Gen·
era! Ramsey Clark.
Despite the views of officials, the
promised i ntervention In the
controversial My Lai m a s s a c re
conviction of Lt. William L. Calley, Jr.,
&eemed today 1o bave sated the public 's
Laguna Niguel
Man Sentenced
In Conspiracy
A Laguna Niguel man convicted in
Orange County Superior Court on lesser
charges after being accused of bribing a
Costa ~lt'sa patrolman today was
sentenced to one to three years in state
prison.
Judge Ronald Crookshank ordered that
term for Samuel Rosman , 27. of 29351
San Briso Place just three weeks after a
jury cleared Rosman of bribery but
convicted him of conspiracy.
The panel reached its verdict after
hearing Officer Gary Barwig testify
that Rosman gave him $10,000 lo plant
narcotics in the car of a key proseeution
·witness in court action against Eugene
Rondondo of Nev.·porl Beach.
It v.·as alleged that Rosman thought he
had bribed Barwig to halt the car driven
by Cha rles "Chuck" Dreyer of Laguna
Beach and place barbl!uratcs in the aulo
while booking the victim for a trumped
up traffic offense.
Rondondo 44. ·was a partner \Vllh
Dreyer in the ill fated f eliciano's
restaurant ln Newport Beach. Both men
were indicted by the Orange County
Grand Jury on liquor hijacking charges
and Dreyer was lo testify for the
prosecution against Rondondo.
Rondondo's trial has betn set Ior h1ay
26 in Superior Court
Last Rites Held
For James Davi s
A memorial mass v.·as celebrated Sat·
urday in SL Catherine's Church, Laguna
Beach, for James C. Davis of 82~ La
Mirada v.·bo died Wednesday at the age
of 6S after suffering a heart attack.
~Ir. Davis, a native of Texas, v.•as a
frirmcr department manager nt Bullock's
Santa Ana store,
He is survived by a lirothcr. June
David and a nephew, Donald Davis,
both of Dallas, Tex .
Burial v.·ill be at Cah·ary IUll
Cemclcr~·. Dallas.
Hilgcnfeldl Mortuary, Anaheim, 1n
charge of arrangen1cnts.
Sl\'immin g Pool
Open at School
Tht Laguna Beach n~creation Depart-
ment bu announced plans lt1 open the
high school i;11t'imm1ng p..ol for reerea·
tionnl sv.·1mming flurtng tht' Eo~ter V3CR·
tion next wttk.
The pool wl!I be open to !he public
today through Saturday from I pm.
k> 4 p,m.
A certified lileguurd will ht on duty
and thcrt 11i·ill be Ill] odmlssl'ln cluirgc.
outrage. Letters telegrams and phone
calls to the President slackened in lbe
wake of the weekend anoouncement.
Aides described the President as being
"concerned" about the low morale amone
Calley'.s fellow soldiers and anx1ou.s lo
demonstrate: support for U.S. !lghting
men in Vietnam. Nixon 8.MOWlced
Saturday he would personally intervene
in the case and make the final judgment
on Calley·s punishment. ,
While Calley's sentence may not be
made more harsh than the life
imprisonment dealt him last Thunday by
a Court Martial panel of Army officers, it
may be lessened by successive stages of
the Military review pl'OC!.Ss.
It is those follow-up stages of the case
that President Nixon has vowed to
Jicrulini.ze.
John D. Ehrlichman, a top Nixon aide,
said the President's action was being
taken under his authority as commander
in chief of the nation's armed forces.
Ordinarily the secretary of the Army
wou ld handle a final review or the case.
The A'rmy's highest legal officer, Maj.
Gen. Kenneth J . Hodson, Army judge
advocate genera l, said the President 's
action was "unusual" but "as we
understand It, he does not intend to
interfere with the norm al review
channels."
Ehrlichman was reported at first to
have denied the President's decision was
"unprecedented" noting that President
.1'.braham Lincoln had s i mi I a r I y
intervened in a military conviction.
Observers noted that the Lincoln
precedent was dissimilar from the Calley
t•ase in that there v.·as no Uniform Code
uf t.hlitary Justice Jn fort-e in Lincoln 's
llrne.
Senate Republican leader Hu gh Scott of
Pennsylvania said today Nixon's actions
in the Calley case ha\•e been designed to
"lower the tempe ratures of public
reaction.''
2 La gunans Hurt
In Auto Crash
Tv.·o young Laguna Beach residents
suffered minor injuries early today 'A'hen
their auto went out of control and struck
~ ligh t pole at the corner of Broadway
and Forest Avenue.
Police said the car, driven by Stephen
Butcher, 2.0, of 1653 Arroyo Drive, was
::.outhbound on Broadway at about I a.m.
1~hen a patrol officer spotted it weaving
from side to side . The poUceman followed
the vehicle in an attempt to stop the
driver, police said, but the car then
lurned onto Forest Avenue and hit the
light standard.
Butcher and his passenger, Joann
Phillipsen, 21 , of 2510 S. Coast Highway,
v.·ere taken to South Coast HD!pital where
they were treated for minor injuries.
Hotelmen Keep
Haneline Chief
The board of directors of the Laguna
Reach Jlotel-~1otel Association has re·
l'l!'Ctcd Loren Haneline and Merrlll
Johnson president and 1·ict president of
the org anlll.lion for 1971.
The two wert named by the newly
elected board at a m~ting tn the Btat.h
!louse lM. Name:d to serve one-year
lcrm!I on the board Wtte Jim Agnew or
!he Hotel Laguna CorporaUon, JuUe
Bradshaw of Se:ven Seas. Jlantllna of
Vacation VIilage, Johnson of Surf and
Sand . Bttty Robinson of Llguna Shoreg,
B1ll 1'homas of Boat Canyon Apartments
and Harry Wlllats of Laguna Riviera.
Gladys Adams were elected secrttlry·
trtallurer or the asu11tton and wttJ
l'Ontinue lo nperate the Ho I 1 d a y
Rtsf'rvatlon Burtau, a .service or U.e
llol<l·Mol<I group.
I
Harbour Sailor
Killed as Boat
Strikes Bridge
A 47-year-old llunlington Harbour man
\1'as killed Sunday night when his
pleasure boat collided with a bridge
during a channel cruise.
Police said Donald R. Stoneman, 16531
Peel Drive, was dead on arrival at
lluntlngton IntercommWlity H o s pi t a l
suffering a fatal head injury apparently
sustained when his head struck the
llumboldt Bridge.
Investigato rs said Stoneman had been
demonstrating his 25-foot outbo.erd cabin
cruiser to friends visiting from Fresno
when the accident occured around 9:30
p.1n.
They said he had been showing 38-year-
old ~tary Jane Pimentel how lo pilot the
boat and wa.s standing behind her when
the boal'a wlndshleld hit the bridge and
St<>neman fell backwards into the boat.
Mrs. Pimentel suffered only a cut finger,
according lo police.
Police said the crew of four was unable
to determine which bridge had been
struck bot steered the boat back to
Stoneman's dock.
Officer Larry May said the vessel was
southbound on Long Channel at an
apparent high rate or speed "'hen it
collided with the unlighted bridge. Tide
condltions were high .
Bo y, 14, Shot;
Mother Arrested
A 14-year-<1ld Garden Grove boy was
listed in crltical condition today after he
v.·as shot In the head Sunday. His mother
was booked by police on attempted
murder charges.
Carden Grove police identified the
,·ictim as Joseph Niew!adonski of 1702
Chapman Ave. He underwent surgery at
Orange County Medical Ce nter.
Physicians reported lhey are optimistic
about his chances for reCO\'ery.
Investigating officers said the slug
fro1n a .38 caliber pistol entered
l'iiewiadonski 's right templ e and exite d
the back of his head. Police identified the
mother as May Nlewiadonski, 37.
LMi•s
Of the arrest.!, police logged eight
bookings of persons over 30 for drunken
driving. Officer• could not explain the
umJ.!Ually large number of drunk drivers.
Police also reported a minor traffic
snarl in the parking lot at the Balboa
Pier. "There were no direction indicators
or one-way signs, so people were trying
to go both direction,, at the same time,"
one officer re.ported.
With inland temperatuns forecast in
the high eighties and low nineties through
Tuesday, police and lifeguards in
Newport are preparing: for more of the:
same.
In Huntington Beach, the biggest
crowds arrived Sunday with 28,000
settling In the sand at the city beach,
anothe r 21,000 at Huntington State Beach
and 10,000 at Bolsa Chica State Beach.
"If the weather stay.s like it is now,
we'll probably have one of our better
Easter weeks," Max Bowman, assistant
director of the city 's harbors and beaches
department, said this morning.
City lifeguards bad to pull 79 swimmers
out of the surf, and again WI.led their
v.·arning: to beach vis.itcrs to remember
they're not in shape for too much
This was the first weekend of the
summer season for state beaches which
are new open to midnight each weekend.
Water temperature for Saturday and
Sunday u 58 degree! while the air
temperature was recorded at 72 degrees.
The crowds Saturday reached 14,000 for
the city beach, about 10,000 for Bolsa
Chica an d 9,000 at Huntington State
Perniit Lacking;
Work Called Off
A seven-week delay was ordered todly
In the Orange County Superior Court trial
of a former sheriff's deputy accused of
burglarizing the Mission Viejo CountrY.
Club.
Presiding Judge William C. Speirs
ordered Frederick B. Irvine, 42, of La
Habra to return to his courtroom May 24
for trial on charges of burglary, grand
theft , auto theft, receiving stolen
property and conspiracy. .
Irvine is free on his own recognnance.
The e1-dep11ty was arru:ted last Se pt.
20 .end accused of being one of two
sheriff's officers who ransacked the
country club'a goU shop of golf gear and
liquor in the course of thelr round,, u
part lime security guards for the Mia.don
Viejo Compllly.
Arresting officers said J r v i n e
commandeered a patrol car and Jed h.ls
former colleagues in a wild chase that
ended in Riverside County after ahols
"''ere exchanged between the vehlcl~ and
Irvine threatened to commit suicide.
lrvinl?'s co-defendant, Arthur B .
Duncan, 34, of Huntington Beach, quietly
surrendered. He was indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on ldenUcal
charges and wu found banged from the
rafters of the garage at hl.s home three
wee.ks later.
Lo\v Clouds, Fog
Set for Coast
After Heat Wave
Low clouds and fog during the night
and early morning hours are expected to
return the Orange Coast to the usual
spring weather pattern.
The "cool-it" forecallt brings to an end
a record three.clay heat wave that
brought 90-<legree temperatures to inland
Joseph Sweany, Laguna Beach direclor
of public works, has reminded
property owners planning improvements
that work undertaken without proper
permit.s may be stopped by the city.
· Orange County and highs from 7a to 83-
Uegrees along Ow! coast.
A "stop work'' order was issued
Tuesday evening, s~·eany said. kl
f\.1organ Paving Company of San
Clemente and Phillipa Buick of Laguna
Beacli, in connection with a paving job
on a new car storqe lot 1t Laguna
Canyon Road and Canyo'"! Acres Drive.
Though the car sWI.:.1e use ls permit·
led in the zone. Sweany 11aid, it still
Is subject to issuance of a permit by.
the city and thle had not been obtained.
Nor, he added, had the paving rirm
obtained a permit to pave in the public
right or 11·ay where the entry to the
lo! joined the street.
\Vork can proceed when the permits
are obtained, the official said.
Dom Raciti
. '"' .............. ..... .,.. .............. ,..~
\Veslerly winds from eight to I' knots
this afternoon will bring in the marine air
that is expected to fog the area tonight.
Tuesday will be mostly sunny with'
highs along the coast between 70 and IO
degrees until the westerly "'inds return
jn the arternoon.
The National Weather Service predicts
the cooling trend wl ll continue for the
next few days as the normal spring
onshore flow of marine air replaees the
Nevada high pressure system that heated
Southern Catifornla over the weekend.
The northerly Santa Ana wlnd.s credit·
cd tor bringin« the high temperature.t
v.·ill be replaced by the afternoon wester·
lies and become light and variable fO(
the rest of tonight and Tuesday,
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' J Monday, April 5, lq71 DAILY PILOT J 7
Paint Job Brightens New Apartment
Decorating that firat ef·
fttieney apartment w l l h
limited time and budget is
one of the career girl's first
challenges. But there's a quick
solution that costs less than
$20.
A little planning, a quick
trip to tbe store and a few
hour's work with latex paint
can accomplish wonders with
the walls. And it can all be
done in a day that ends with
entertaining evening guests.
Latex paints make "instant"
interior decorating possible
because they have a pleasant
odor, are easy to apply, and
dry in only 30 minutes. Two
commonly used varieties are
nat-linish paint for covering
walls, even discolored areas,
in Living areas, and semi.Jloss
paint for use on trim and
in the kitchen or bathroom
where walls are subjected to
lots of bard use.
The most lmportarr.t step In
redecorating i& to take a few
hours and plan the project
Although there i.s no bard-and-
fast rule to follow in interior
decorating, Sandra Rochlls,
national design coordinator for
Seer's Roebuck and Co., says:
"An easy guide is to pick
an appealing shade from a
favorite piece of furniture or
paintln& aod use t.tiat as tbe
. 'Sailing' Along .
Sailor suits, complete with the classic striped collB!°• as shown above .• are making
it this spring. "Sailor colors," too -blue and white -also are going strong.
"¥ KNITTING IS
A
Woo l Goods
Soften Up ----.,....,.---..... \\\\¥P/N~--~uoo IDEA
---~ ... -----
Woolen and wool-b I end
fab rics for Spring, 1971 will
be softer than ever, with a
new emphasis on texture and
drapability. Hand woven and
rustic looks are in; classic
checks and plaids remain
strong.
,,,,.,,,.. ........ /
when it comes to
timely
FASHIONS
The
...._.KNIT WIT
Sa. Coa1t Plei•
Costa 111 ..
yo. c•11 lurw
h lull! ff CNC ....
wtlt'lill mh'l11tft •••
lft 11• pn1we Ill
The easy-care synthetics
have been improved to give
them a softer hand, when
bter.ded with wool.
Knits are the biggest story
for Spring, and th ere are all
kinds ... doubleknits, jerseys,
raschel knits ..• in pure wool
and wool blends. The patterns
are getting more complex,
more interesting, with a great-
er use of rolor. They are soft
and packable for -today's
young, mobile fashion set.
The colors for Spring arc
clean and bright, but
sophisticated.
The DAILY PILOT-
T ops in Locel Sports
IBCKORY FARMS
mueet-bot
:ftlustarb
Made From An
<!E){b
d?erman
Recipe
Thie is out famoua mu1tard .•. now you
can enjo1 ll1 unique and exciting laate
on your next Andwich; 1dd ze1l to 111-
ada, cold meal plauen, fish 111uce1, etc.
Try a sample before you buy and taste
bow delighUully dl!lerent our mustard
CflD be.
Six Oz. Jar. Reg. 40(l
Specially 39 rt
Priced Al -t
Offer Good April 5 Thru Apr il 11
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
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BRISTOl AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA
PHONE 540-6991
AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES
predominant wall color."
Several visual "tricks" can
be used to add interest. For
instance, to create t w o
"rooms" from the main room,
paint one wall a darker shade
of the same color and use
that end of the room as the
sleeping area. Tones of warm
gold for example, are excel-
lent for tttis purpose.
Also, a dining area can be
created from the living room
by sectioning aff part of the
wall nearest the kitchenette
and painting it a bright, snap-
py color, or using a lively
printed vinyl-co ated
wallpaper. "This type of
wallpaper provides a great
decorative and durable accent,
and if it's already pretrlmmed
and prepasted, all you have
to do is cut it to fit, dip
it in water and smooth onto
the wall ," fo.1rs. Rochlis says.
For kitchen and bathroom
decoration, latex semi-gloss
paint is especially g o o d
because it resists stubborn
stains and won 't fade with
frequ ent scrubbing. Latex flat
won't fade either, but because
the semi-gloss surface is
smoother, it is easier to wash
clean.
One of the easiest ap·
plicatars for latex paint is
the brush pad for walls. It's
six inches wide, so more
surface can be" covered than
is possible with a four-inch
bristle brush. It bas guide
roUers on the side for painting
around door and window rims
without lapping over. Both the
latex flat paint and the brusb
-I Sears I
pad should not leave "lap"
marks on the wall, so th&
paint job really looks pro-
fessional.
decorating. Contemporary use
L! inspired by changes in col-I
or, or slight variations of pat-1
tern in the ti1neless motif,
and sometimes through
technological breakthroughs!
An efficiency apartment can
be painted with very lilllt
paint, for one gallon will cover
up to 450 square feet -com· that permit textural effectsl
parable to four walls and tbe that can change the look of l
celling of an 11· by 11-foot a pattern.
room -in about three hours' 1;:-=="'=========,
time. Drips, spills and soiled
hands and paint tools can be
cleaned up wilb soap and
water.
The eclecUcism of Fastoon
certainly applies to floor
coverings. The floor plctu.re
in cludes shags, Oriental rugs,
fun rugs and stylized tradi·
tional designs.
The transformation has gone
fro1n no-pattern gray, bei ge
and other dark solid colo rs
to the brightest and wildesl
designs. I Time-honored patterns of
stained glass, Oriental, plaid
and tile are used in modern!
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-.
,,
JI_ OAILV PILOT
lllonr.11'• Worlh
Hotpants
·Hot Issue
In Finance
By SYLVIA PORTER
•·1101pants art merely mini·
1kirts, seasonally adjusted,"
SC
quipped Gurdon T. Wallis, 51· l\i ... .,;ill
year.old l'ha1rm11n of NeY1 ..
York 's giant Irvine Tru!t Co ..
when askMI to descr1bt' hi.~ decision up 10 tht department
bank's policy IO\\'ard en1ploye head: it would depend on U!e
dress al .a recent annual lypf of )Ob atld degret of
meeung. In a resigned tone, l)Ubllc CQ11tact: it would vary
he then added, •·tiunl·skirls. \vith !he outfit beu1g worn .
yes. hotpants, no • • so While I billed this as a far " ''relaxing" column, you will
"Hotpants are here lo stay, be racing the problein soon.
1'1iss Porter," assured Irene !-.Ir. Employer. so you might
Satz, vice president o I as well consider it no\v. Those
Ohrbach 's Ill Manhsttan. as executives who doubt th;it
I stared wlth longing at a their employes \\'ill actually
couture reproduction of Valen-dare \\'ear holpants to v.•ork
lino's polkB dot organdy hot· are wrong; those who think
pants \.\'ith matching organdy this i~ 3 lad which will have
shirt and long black chiffon run its course by sutnmer's
overskirt. "They're all over end atready have been proved
the fall collections. Don '! be ·wrong by early clues to the
afraid." fall collections. And those who
There it is. your latest oftice believe hotpanl3 will appeal
challenge . r..tr. Amer I c: an only 10 teeriagers simply don't
busine.~n1an -a relaxing understand lhe fenu1 le. Wha!
change of pac€ from your pro· should you do. therefore'! ble:ms or innation, unemploy· men!. laxes, v i e 1 n am . -Do not lock yourself into
Specifically : a position which you might
Q.: What are you planning regret at once and from which
to do, Mr. Employer, when you could only retreat under
lire. your girl employes come to
work lbi! spring·summer in -Do have reasonable rules
hotpants'! in tenns of the situation in
A.~ If you heed the experts, which you must enforce them.
you'll not rush into print with A girl in the front office seen
an ans"·er. You'll be even by all ty)JCs of custome rs ma~
more flexible th an Wallis hints be under different rules than
with his resigned ''so far." a girl in the back office seen
Q.: As for you, P.1iss or only by co-workers I i k e
1'1rs. Employe, what do you herself.
plan to do as you stock up -Do not be htZzy about
on beautiful, becoming, allur· whatever rules you do have.
ing hotpants and the v;eather Put then1 clearly in writing
gets \\'armer and warmer? and circulate them freely.
A.: If you also heed tbe _ Do be uniform in your
experts. you will v.·ear what enforcement. Don't penalize
is in style and comfortable, vne girl and let another get
but you will nol wear anything away with it
lhal might demora lize your _ Do not be rigid in your
office or that is in atrpcious taste. You'll '"'in over your attitu des. Hotpants with a coordinated blazer jacket can boss just by your good man· be nearl~ as prim as an ners and gradualism. od ordinary suit or even m est
Q.: What is eniployer policy under a long, matching skirt.
generally on hotpants now? P.S. Yes, I bought the black· A.: Most of the executives polled in a telephone survey and·\l:hile organdy .hotpants. as did two or our town 's most by P·ll Personnel Service replied they would "wait and g 1 am 0 r ,o us · e l eg an t
see." 'fo the surprise of p.Jt grandmothers· Mrs. Babe
most of the executives said Paley and fi1rs. George
lh<y "probably v.·ould not take .Zauderer. Mrs. Zauderet says she'll wear hers wilh black a strong stand,'' v.•hile some ducked the question bf in· stockings. I'm wearing mine
dicating doubt th<it their _"_·i_th_•_i_oy_o_u_•_g_'_'"_· ___ _
employes "would act u a 11 y
wear the shorl!I to work.'' ·
Most also said they prefer-
red not to have a too.specific
dress code for the simple
reason that fashions are now
changing so often a n d
basically, t ha t "Inflexi ble
policies b e co m e unen·
forceab\e."
And mosl underlined the
traditional answers: Leave the
t _ 1.000'1,. OF ·~ll. PAJ~~INGS-1 F WHOLtSALf WA•EHOUSE
r OPEN TO THE rUILIC 1 50°/o OFF
1tlf I . l:DINGEI!, s -.NTA ANA
Pllo"' ll~
• OIEALEll:S WAHTIED .
REAL ESTATE
SYNDICATIONS
SS,000 t• Sl0,000 Tor Shel·
tffffl ll:Hf lJIOI• l"l'OltlM'"tl,
Lt4. PertMrshi p '"''..," ••all·
ftM to tilOM •II• quality.
Coill for oppolfll"'*"' to dhcu~s
r•h tyj>9 of p1otltobl• to• "°"" I.. lfl'l"tmt"' wltll o prof•1·
..... 1.
lOlllT M. ARMSTRONG
546·110)
Neov Veep
\Villi a111 G. Co rbett or
Costa li1esa has been
na111ed assistant vice
president and 1n:inager
of Crocker. Citizens
National Bank 's Pacific
Coast High\vay-Cren·
sha\11 offi ce In Tor·
1·ancc.
Your visiting in-laws
are using the family car?
Rent a new Ford from Ford.
Just call your local Ford Rent·A-Car Dealer. He's
close lo home. And In a jiffy he'll rent you a new
Ford, Mustang, Torino or Pinto tor a day, week or
month. Low rates ... Insurance 1ncluded.
FORD RENT-A-CAR SYSTEM
THEODORE ROBINS FORD
?OH H9tMf lf•lil.
Ced• ... .,., Cellf.
•41 ... 10
WILSON FORD
1 IZJ' St«• l l•lt
Hoothttt•• l...cll. C•tlf.
14Z·4611
I•• lli9h Gea1· Complete-Nelv York Stoel{ List
Ma11ufacture1~s l(eep .Close
' Tab on Far-ranging Dealers wa;:~
By CJd Carsteosto
Ot ,,,_ Dail'I Pl1't IMff
!low doe•.a large .inanufl\C·
lurer maintain cl05e com·
munlcati9~llh Its far.rang·
ing rei::in de&ler network'! :
For .one Uu'ng, it isn 't easy.
The primary method, and
a tin'le provr.r one, is to deploy
a field cootact organization
comprised of f a c t 0 r y
re_prestnlalivcs who c a 11
M!gularly on lhe manufac·
lurer's retail outlets to furnish
guidance and counsel.
But having a trained •·rac·
tory man" ca ll' on each dealer
isn't always quite enough in
this day of communication
gaps and tonsumer problems.
Frequently, the retaHer want!
lo talk directly with top fat"
to'ry management on special
matters of mutual concern.
At Oldsmobile, for instance,
the 37th national dealer coun·
cil -consisting of . a dozen
Olds dealers fro1n all corners
of the nation -c;onveries
periodically in Lansing. the
divi sion's n a 1 io n a I hea d·
quaHers. Elected to the na-
tional gro up by fellow dealers
in their respective regions, the •
12 oouncil members represent
:!,SOU dealersb,ips located in
metropolitan areas. t h e
suburbs and r u r a 1 com·
munities.
They gather in Lansing for
a 2·day session aimed at 1m·
proving fu ture Oldsmobile pro-
ducts and services. Tb ey
discuss sales and service ac·
livities, m!rke:ting strategy,
and a variety of business
lopics that arise ~t of · a
m an u faeturer-dealer. rel\)·
tionship.
"This method c r c.om·
munication , is like an old
rashioned sil·down·across·lbe·
table kind of discuSsion."
remarked William J. Buxton.
Olds general sales man.ager.
"It's the kit)d o f c,om·
munication that. v•orks •better·
than anytbing else. We ' are·
able lo clear up misun·
derstandings· and gel some,
troublesome ~;ubjects aft our
chests. ·
about uur dealer council
sessions." Buxton explained,
''is that they involve our
dealers more ,directly io mat·
tcrs of colnn1on lflttrest. The
factorY v:i1Ue~ ttle council a.11
a sounding t;>oard. i!nd the
dealer.; provfde thr factory
"itfl feed·back from the ret11il
Sales arm of our business." '
According to Buxton, lhe
dealer councils "quite literally
improve t w C· way com·
111u11lcation bet\\•een factory
ai1d rt tailer, an d consequently
benefit lhe customer."
During their stay in Lans·
in&. the Olds dealers also tour
thv: division '! nev.·e!t manufac·
luring facilities and see first-
hand how Oldsmobile prepares
its~producls.
CAPRI SALES CONTINUE
'1'0 CUMS
StJes or L1ncolB-Mereury
Di'dsion 's imported Capri in
Soiihern Californ i~ continue
to 4se sh8.rply due to Teeord
.shi .. Oilds or the~ars arriving
fros$ EU . '.
.J ..c'W. ~ocaSter, L-M Los
Anglles District s a I e s
manpger, ~aid that the bigger
suppty or Capris. plus lhe
avai\abUity of a 2·liter engine
and automiHic tr®smission,
ha'Ve t strengthened the m
Aiige~s area as the number
one market fo~ Capris.
"Local .dealers ha ve sold
over 16 percent of the national
\Uta! since introduction day
a year ago," Lancaster said.
··At the same time this district
normally handles nine percent
of the division total in other
ca r lines." ht said.
·•The appeal of the Capri
is heiglteced h1.rtber with the
introd~tian of the Capri 2000,
'\vhich ciffers as op\ionli a 100
horsepo .. er overhead cam 2-
liter fl:i? cµbic inch) engine
and 3.(peed auto ma t i c
transmiSsiorl.
.. Both (Ir these are good op.
lions and customers have been
quick to 'recognize iL"
The 2.11rcr Cflgine is priced
'at $50 pl)d 1he automatic
transmission at $185. The sug·
gested retail price at port or
er:itry r or the standard Capri
•:.ferbapS lhO biggest lbing· .,~
Beacl1 Man
Takes Post
Jim Herrell has been named
to the top southern California
marketing post by . Fox &:
Carskadon. major bay area
real estate investment firm,
it was announced at the com·
pany's Menlo Park head·
quarters.
Fox & Carskadon is one
or the largest syndicators of
registered real estate in·
vestments in California. Her·
rcll was syndicate and un·
derwriting manager r u r
Reynolds & Company. and
also served as Laguna Beacn
manager for Mitchum, Jones
and Templeton. both l\1ew
York Stock Exchange member
firms. ·
Herrell , \\'ho has unde rgone
intensive training at Foi &
Ca rskadon 's home office and
in the field, makes his home
ln Huntington Harbour with .
his wife and tv.•o children. tie
1~ a graduate of Long Beach
Stale College .
•~•·0111oied
Jack 0 . ~lathis has
been appointed assi.'i·
tant manager in charge
of the operations de·
partn1enl at Security
Pacific National Bank's
Nev<port Center Of·
rice. 1tlathis, a resident
of Balboa Island. JOltl·
ed the bank.as a n1an·
age m e ·n t ;trainee 1n
July, 1969.
W esthaven Plaz'u Set
I
For Septeniber l)ebut
Groundb reaking tt.remon1~s
for lhe Westhaven Plaza Shop-
ping Center. the largest aud
mos\' extensive in Fountain
Valley. were held reccnOy at
the ~acre site al BrookbLirst
Slreet and Edinger Avenue.
In attendance at I he
ceremony '"·ere Larry P,
Shields of Doyle and Shields,
developers of the complex.
Also attending '"' c re l!x·
ecut1vcs of the ma10r stores
that \Viii occupy over 190,000
square' feel (JI floor space 11
the center.
Repre senting \Voolco
Oepartmenl Stores. 11 division
of f . \Y Woblv.·orth Co .. v.·as
J . A. Astler : Thomas Killeen
and Michat:I flfessina o I
Market Basket : Rodney Puu.
rep r cs t: n t I n g Sambo's
Relltaurant, as well as city
~incilman Albert Hollide:n :
ChalrmAn qi lhe City Plannin~
Commission. JamcJ Dick, 11:nd
Planning Dire:ctor C 1 I n I o n
Sherrod.
T~ Wooll!'e store will be
lhr firs t of tt1 kind 1n Orang r
Count}, and only the second
1n Southern California. ThC'
huge 103,000 square I e c l
building \Y1U be a complctr
departmt'nl and automotive
~tore. It will be one ol 38
the co1npany wHl build in 1971.
Opening ts expe(ltcd in Sep-
tember of this year.
The Market Basket \\ill be
one of the largC.-;t in the com·
pa11y 's Southern Ct1lUom1a
supermarket f11cili\~" the
building will rontain 30.000
square ft:et.
Samba's Rcst:111rant will
contain a restauranl area
seating over 100 pcr!>ons in
a coftce shop and separate
dining roo1ri
Other 1enants i n·c I u ii r
Fashion Fabrics. all' cxct11~1ve
v.·omen's store: a barber shop.
real estatr off kc and shoe
repair shop.
Tht crnter i11 cxPected lo
be completed 1n 1~ fall uf
this year. Parkin~ capacity
is over 1,000 cars on the 151.,
<icrr parking ot "'ilh en·
trances from both Brookhurst
and Edinger Bott. 5treeis
bordering Y..'e.'ltha\'el Plaia
will be wldt'llCd lo netp tonlrol
the anliclpatt'd hea\'y Volume
~ traffic at the Center.
~~r.:"' J:
with 1 l ·fi liter engine I! $2,395. =ft .~ Aam1tll Tbe C.prt is brin .. ing ne" Mfl'WL+. 1.• l!t' .... !ll<tl,.I ~ ( customers to Uncoln·Mercury ~~~·in~o
dealerships, Lancaster ~aid. ~rr :,~0001~
"Among 1,SOO CUlitOnlt!TS :f ~.:.,.~~
who ordered Caprb, only fuur ~.1°': .. :.1,
percent said they would h9ve ~m:.jD<.•11.'}f•
ordered another Linc o In·~~.~ ~111,,:,l'1 tifercury product had the !~...:.~':" .~
Capri not been offered Frank· A11AmL1 .~..a . ' Allea (.I) .,/Os ly, a 96 percent 1ncrementality ~r.:L~ 'i~
is hard lo imagine but even A•ie11~ .. '~"" • • • -.u11e1 Cll 1..111 if you assume a conservative A"•"'•'" .... , . "llOMtll HO 80 percent figure, Capri must Alli.ii P11"'
be th 'd I , h . A11!90PGP1l e 1n us ry s c amp1on A111edst• i.o!O
source of extra sales. ~::::ach5~1':.; . Allrlg!Alll ,.0 ."Dealers a~e also impressed ... 1.,1wi P ~
with the typical Capri buyer ~~'it' .,;.f/J
because he is an excellent~~ J~,:10
addition to lhe L i n c o I n • ~~~u ptjllJ!
Mercury family. The profile ~"~W{n .. ~
or the average customer ABak•r .1ae
sho'A'S he's 27, a male, earns ~,:8~1 2i~
$11,400 annually, has college !mc,~~1,:J's
training, and ,holds a pro-~mc~riT~
fessional. management er ~1'0~111i1'
sales position." ~~1'g:!1v:1!
Neac Positio11
Edmund A. Bretz has
been appointed inter·
national officer in the
U.S. Division \vith In·
ternational Banking De·
partment at Security
Pacific National Bank's
headquarters in Los
• .\ngeles. Bretz, a resi·
dent or Costa ~1esa.
\Vas formerly assistant
manager of the bank's
Newpo rt Cent er
Branch.
AD11VI pt,,,.. AmElPw l.10
Am EIQI Ind Am E•P pl AGnllFll ·"-A Gtonl111 .30 -. Gnln ,,i1.• Am Hol•I • ..a
A HDml! 1.lt A Hameptt Am HOIP ,)6 Am 1nv11 .!Ml
A MIGk:•I ,11 A Ml!Ch1 I.Ml A MtlClx pt 4
Am MINOfl AN1IGl1 2.20 Arn PFlolO .16 A R:tsDv .c.!t Am ~r .n Am $hlP .600 A Smell 1.9'0
AmSoAlr .l<I AmSAlr 111.]Q Am 510 I A $IOOl41S Am Sltlll .41
AT&T w1 -.m Tl.T 1.60 AWarWk .60 AWW 5Pll.1~ ~~ r.~ 1.1>
Amer°" .tO Amtlel< .60• AMF Inc ,IO
Aml•c .tO AMP I,.,.; .6• AmpPgll .I~ Afl\~• COfD
"""'" 1.10 Am•t•r pl 61 Amlted 1.611 Amltt ,1'l AMt!IAOI 1 Aflch HC.:k I Anco•p ~Yt 1 And Clly 1.20 APIClllCP .JS
ADCo0 l.l'tl APL CDrP
APL <>I C!.O.
APL pf a.so ARA ~IK l ~
t~~'•o.i°..31 Atil PSv l.01
Arlan; D $Ir Arlen RllvOY -.rmco SU I Arfl\C pf? 10 Arm• P ... n Arm1t Ck .IO Arm Ru 1.60 A•o Corp ,11(1
Arvlfl l"d l A•Md 011 1.10 Assd llrew And DG i,XI Aid So I 70b A•..i lr•n•c Atlllonf-Ind AllCvEI 1,3' -.ucE ou.11 -.11 Rlc:lltlcl 7
AtlRtn pl) 15 At! 'fief> nt ] --------------~J::,c~~:~·'V
Cotrntian
All~1 Corp A TO Inc: .OC1 -.u<ll'I PrOCI
""'"'" o ... -.ulotl\ln Incl Avco Cll'o
AYcoCo •' -.vco pl) l'(I
Appointed
Avtr' Pd .:IC ,.._ t"c Avon Pd 1.10 •rtec Oil .llt
To Board
ll•bc~W .J.o Bok<OUT ."5 81!1 GE 1.11 BlnllOf' Pllnl Ba"~p pl ? 81np I'll 11
Bk o!C•I r.l•
.John J. ~1 cNaughton. Presi-~=~: r. N,v,/
dent or National Systems BtrbO 1.311
C . B°"d CR .t5a orporat1on (ASE), leday an· B••ic inc .to
nounced the election of G. i:~~ r.U,'°
\Vayne Leslie to the Newport ~!\~~~' .~ 1
Beach flrm·s board or direc· ~!~~"nL~12 ~ tors. s1x1 L•~ .11 Seotl"OI I
Leslie joined Na l I an a I i;~~~l" i:M
Systems in 1970 and is cur· eru1.0A~~ ·n
rently assistant to the presi· 1::~::•11 J'Jf)
dent . with prlmaryB'l~~l-l.,,~
responsibilities in the areas B;11 1n1°rtD" Beml• Co ;a or long·rnnge corporate plan· srn111K i 6't · Bendl~ ar J n1ng and eva laation of ac · B•n~1ca 1.6(1 .. ,. did 8-11 pl5 J.o qu1si ion can · ale!. !'""'1 pJ4.J.o e~n au 311 He was also re<'t'ntly named ~"11 5ot 1 l4 • Be""" et director of the compa"y's new 1••••1 Pno " e•n Sii I 70 l\'orth American School of a;c rnro• ·•o _ , Slac~ 04< II Conservation and Ecology s 111rJonn •• , • lll1H L•uo I ll'h1ch "'Iii open this summer eiockHR .10 • Bobbl• Br•• 1n Anaheim. nie school v.·ill 8~nt1 co .oo
d 'd . 8ol>Cfl .l~ prov1 e resi ence training to Bon11 1n<1
students interested in careers ~~~·h1.~11
. 'ldlif f (' h Bor-<1W~t I.JS In WI e, Or es t, IS and Sorman . !OP
Sol'! -"se Li. · B0&Edl1 l ,3' .. v.. rva on services. B°' Ed 011.N
Prior lo joining National .~~ll' i~w
S t Le ). . 8rlCIQSI 140• ys ems, s 1e was Director r•1'! MY 1.70
or Planning and Acquisitions 1;a:r:r jfi.i1
for Lear Siegler Education a~w~ ~"at~
Comp. ny H also · I Sd•vl-lal 01 1 a . e prev1ou."I y ll••wyGt1 .10
served as M.._ger 0 f t1~~vnu1_01n
Corporate Planning for ~tal· l;::::;1b i10so tel, Inc. 11 • .,,.,, .. ~ u llucY Er l.16
Leshe is married. hlls
children. nnd currently
in Ncv•port Beach .
three l::l ~~ 01 s lives Bu<ttF p1 .o l udte1 lrld Butt~ort 1 10
llu1D"IW t0 l u.,'I.• R•mo 8uf\kll: 01i,30
New port i'\fa u
On Bauk Board
8url Incl l.«I
8"'\HG• .rs. Burl"lor o!.H
Bu•""' .Ill llurrOh• tO llu1h UfllY
C•IX>I C1 'It '·"'~~ '"" llenry C. !-.lay president or C•I ... !II • (1111nn M"" filay Outdoor Advertising Co Campll:L-.~1 '• (1ma So I 10 has been elected a director Cans...,11. 1
I C · Cd" l•rv 00 o entineld Bnnk. announced cai1 P,,.; •JO
I> ft . canP ~» 'o~·an enry. presrdent of the c~n111t •.10
I I d •· d (oo C ftdtlo n g e w o o ·1K'a quartered f4'"'u" 1 ~
bank, c:~~·1~L16f 16
flla y. who resides In t:~~1.Jr.r 'l: r\e~'j)()rl Beach. has headed ~:~~0"'1.,~s
his outdoor advertising Clrm ca.iw.1 i. C•1tll!C~ . .Ob
1n Los Angeles since HMS. For ~!1t•2;:,..1 •
the past nine months he has ~e<o c .. , '° flt'lt1K• l served as a membtr of the •l•i1 ..i-.4 JO
d I ~'"'JO .a v sory board for Cenlulela '" ,..,
Bank's regional ornce in :11~~ I:~
Newporl Beach. ~~J*1 11:00
Wilh Its hccid office at $24 ~=~~'fc::. ~
E. t\'ulwood SI , lngltwood. c':,11'~• ·J
Ctnt1oela Bank h3S o(()ce! 1n ~:.1:=11 O'".'to
lhe. Play• dtl Rey section of '~~1"t1t1;.,.•
Los Angeles. llermosa Bcoch ~~:::."oi'"'..
and Newporl Bc!11ch. E~:~:.~ JyX11
.... \ tttl 111111.J ff ... t..w ,...,. c~
J'" '" ?JI• l1 ' ~ ..
" .. ~ ••• "' "' ~·· t4• .•
" ~ ~;·'
~~). ...
1)11
II• -• ...
1S1• 'I Sl' I '• av. ,. " Sl'• -t \1 ~. 4' .. ,, ,.,,, -"' "'-·· ,, ......... .
'°"'~ 1, '°h ... ~. 11 1~ ... '. 3' -'•
\•1t.. ' . -' " . 1f -·· 111, •••
111'• +·· Ult,-••
I
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,,..._,, April S. 1911 SC ---
Monday's Oosing Prices~Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Complete Oosing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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:tf DAILY PILOT
LA Quake
Victims
Get Help
By JOHN BREWER
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Nearly two months after Los
Aogeles was hit by a
devastating earthquake, good
aamarit.ans still are doing
good de<ds.
A dozen San Fernando
Valley teenagers tour
hospitals with a variety show,
entertaining quake victims.
Their show te.atures I monkey
that plays pat-a-cake, a folk
singer and a comedian.
UCLA nursing students work
to calm rears qr children emo-
tionally disturbed by the shak-
ing.
Youths fill cracks in streets
and help neighbors w i t h
repairs .
Gilbert LaSalle, 71, an in-
valld, tells or being helped
by teenagers headed by Frank
Kelly, 19, o( Sylmar. "I open-
ed the door and there they
were," he says. "When they
gol done J had water for the
fil'!l time in 20 days." The
boys repaired hi! cracked wa-
ter pipe and mended hi! gti.r·
age door.
VolWllttr! pitched in to help
others virtually from the mo-
ment the quake gtruck at e:
a.m. Feb. I. The Red Cross,
Salv&tkln Anny arid other
Oflj'.anitea relief groups gave
massive help to victims, and
1lill are.
But a newsman seeking ex-
amples or pure g 0 0 d
samaritanism -he I p i n g
others with no thought of
reward -found e1amples by
the hundreds.
There was the 5-year-old son
ol a woman visiting 111 San
Fernando when the temblor
hit. He was injured by flyi ng
chunks of roofing an d
hospitalized. His mother had
to return home to ·vonken,
N.Y., to care for thrtt other
children.
The boy needed therapy.
The mother v;anled h i m
brought home, but money was
a problem. A relative he.re
mentioned It to a neighbor.
~ neighbor told a man on
the block. The man offered
to fly the boy to Bethesda.
f\fd . Other relaUves picked
him up there and delivered
him to mother. He's taking
treatment now in Yonkers.
Many thousands of books
tumbled from shelves in
libraries. At San Femando
Valley State ColleJ?e i l'I
North ridize. not far from the
hardest hit area, about 200
per.sons worked to get ~rhaps
500.000 volume! back o n
shelves in the four -floor
library.
About 180,000 booli:s were
t}lrown from shelves ln the
downtown Los Angeles library.
about 23 miles fmm the
quakt''s epicenter. Volunteers
reolaced all oo the. correct
shelf. Similar reports came
from olht'r libraries.
The Red Cross said Its work
with auake victims emotierl
Its national disaster fund. Tt
reported 13,000 s e p a r a t e
grants of monev -total lni:t:
almost Sl.5 million -for
emeri:t:ency food and clothin.e:.
repalr of hou~!t and replace·
m~t of vlOtl belnnl?ln.e:.~.
11le mO"ev never has to
be reoald. 'l'h,. Red Cross al.~
ooerated 11heller~ for flt1:>lce
victims -it e<rtim11ted 10.nno
or more -until they cnu1d
mum to their homes or find
permanent Todrin.e:.
LAter It opened "disasttt
eld" staUon! for qu11!.:e vlc-
Ums to come to talk with
aodal workers aboul varled
problems of ~hab!Utation.
b orrowlnR monc!y Rnd
detetmlnin• hriw lo obtain
aV11%le ff"der1l aid .
Folks who9e home! were
dtstmved bv the ou11ke -
er f1ter declared un(•fe fnr
OCCttOlnC)' -ft!'! Dl"ced in
1 home or •p,.r1menl by
feckral Houaln• and Urban
DeveloorMnt otllcl11l1 awt the
rtnt paid ror up to l2 month11.
M8ny banb sU:ved ooened
on Satnrday1 to help vletJm1
•pPly for federal dlsa1ttr
loans.
Un~le Sain Keeps Close :W~h· Ov~r Taxpayers
•\. , \
MARTINSBURG, w. Va. account." when proper ~ 1 ~Y Qf thl err o ""' five mWlop lndtvfdual' t.ai: tupaytr'1 h 1 If· I D-e ti ol ~ or wbo were ;.t bit too made. Hierooamus say1 It Is
(AP)-Armed with a com-gramsareapplled. .. ;;r ~eiiaAnollqt~al. ftUris •hlcb co1talned; magnetic tape ill~ ~tn plamlng waya to aJm0&t assured that th • plu: of_ com.put.en and· a Doctor lncorne1 are unea t.-'We ~ people w b o mathemttlcaJ em:n,. At ti:stl In any caee, the their oontribuUon. .number o( peraom able to
system ot cros.s-cbecklng that up •g~hial others in lbelr pro-l)'I write down tbe wrong two mUUon were.not ldf.aerv· \tsttf ii ~ng. ' w prG-Is aay th;' $I 3 4 cheat on tp returns will bt
explores apg)es by · the fession to comPJ&re deduc-ial Security number and in&: They c<llltaioed •136 . gra.n;s az:e l.ht•Y• ~lnl ·~ rnlllion wu added over-all to continually rtduced.
thousand.!, Uncle Sam keeps Uons, Income and etpenaes. ~Uest tb4Ulands w;hol:an't 'lnilUoniDov•~· 'piled dVer ·a tbre1f·7••r IRS· collectJon1 In 1169 as a "'After -all," he said, "in
close watch here over hia: 9S The aame b: done on other 'T 'ffieronam.ut 'ald.. Jn tbooe~'i' Hli~us .',Jtfetfole ~each retmn io find result of th&.comP\lters' work. 200 tries a computer will pr~
million tarpaytl'1. professions. In t• alone,--.: there were aaid, reftiftde are ~ a .those penona who eWher made Aallt wtt.h refine~ts being bably outlhlnk the human.''
Four mo d e r n compulera"-'------------------'-------~~----------'-----'---~----------''--''-'---------
spend every minute of the
year coottnuaUy pourtng over
the returns filed by America'•
brt.adwinnea.
And wlth tu time at hand,
and about half of the country
yet to file, the machines at
the National Computer Center
here-the pride and chief
detective of the International
Revenue Service-are whir-
ring away lo pay refunds, pro.
ces,, returns and catch cililens
who make mistakes, ell.bu
honestly or otherwise.
The IRS has centered its
income tax memory bank in
a one-story, plain· looking brick
building outside this eJ1.stem
West Virginia town since 19&1.
The system that has evolved
is staggering and has saved
the nation hundreds of mUHons
of dollars, according to center
officials.
The ta1 return being filed
by the taxpayer first goes
to one of seven regional
centers, where the most vital
information is placed in
magnetic tape and sent to
what employes here call the
"Martinsburg Monsters."
In the next 31A years, before
It is kicked off magnetic lape
for storage elsewhere, every
taxpayer's return will be sent
through suspe<:ting computers
almost 200 times.
Tax returns are fed through
the computers from 86 million
individuals and 9.2 million
bu.!linesses.
The computers' job& are
many and are overseen by
a staff of 275 trained techni·
cians who program the pro-
digious memory banks for
continuous operation. Jn fact,
not an hour has bee n loet in
the past seven years:
"We can perform numerous
functions. and provide in·
formation for about every ta1·
payer in the country," assis-
tant director Ed Hieronaumus
said.
Every Saturday morning a
new cycle is begun at the
center as the 100 million ac-
coonls move from master file.!1
througfl the IBM 380 com-
puters.
Entries are made each week
on about five million returns.
They can constitute filling in
this year's return, making out
a refund and recording it on
the tape, or checking some
suspected irregularify.
On each lndivldual'1 file are
to~! income, occupaUon, ta1
paid, deductions, and whether
the taxpayer got a refund or
not for e.ach or the last three
years. That informal.loo lakes
all of .434 of an inch of tape
ta re.cord and store.
On one reel of tape, the com-
puter center can store rtl\lms
which would rill a nonnal-slz-
td file cabinet.
Any ta1payers whose return
is dillerent from those m }Us
class ts immediately singled
out for special attention.
..For instance., a r-etum
listing $6,$00 Income and
$2,000 in payment to
charitable organizations is im-
mediately spotted by the com·
puter.
Persons i n high-income
brackets are among others
v.'hO normally get special at-
tention.
The computers have also
been given some credit for
cracking down on persons
making money in racketeering
and other illegal ventures.
Hieroaamus said by
developing trends and pro-
grams, the computers can
single out specific returns that
look suspicious and forward
them to special investigators
for a setond look.
Officials estimate the com·
pt.Hers have pulled together
inf o rmation on 4000
racketeers. '
But th en racketeers aren't
the only grouping which can
be identified. Hieronamus says
his technicians are capable
of "extracting all kinds or
Gov.Reagan
Appoints
Board Man
SACRAP.1ENTO -Gov .
Ronald Reagan has announced
the appointment of Or, Emil
Mrak. chanctHor emeritus of
UC Davis and an authority
on food preservation to a four-
year term on the State Board
of Agriculturt .
He will sutteed t\11"1. Athalif'
Clarke of Corooa del Mar
whose term as a publlC
mtmber on the board expired
thi~ year.
Dr. P.frak, 70, a Democrat.
Is 8 native or S11n Franci~rt
and • graduate or u c
"
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Th.is IODOOr'f»Q•CU: is nciibcr
udb11>..U-asdicizaticn of 111o6:r
ID buyd>c""-Tbcoflcr is mode
<lilly by die OlbingCin:olar,milablo
11tfl1I'!c.Jilomia bmdtofl!onltof A-0 Nr.&SA.
Dated: Aprill, 1971
Subordinated
Capital Notes
e1978
This $100,000,000 offering is being
distributed directly to the public at
all California branches of Bank of
America N.T.&S.A. It is issued in
denominations of $1000 and multi·
ples thereof. Interest will be paid
semi-annually. The Capital Notes
do not constitute deposits and are
not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
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Viejo High School
Uy C EORG E LEIOAI.,
Of I~ Del" f'l•t Slttl
A Mlssion Viejo High school
adjustment of the dn>ss rode regulations
v.·hi~ allows girls to wear panb during
inclement weather has sparked a counter
propogal. Boys want to be allowed to
wear skirls on hot days.
Both aides of the issue were explored in
• recent editorial in the Oiablo Dispatch,
~ campus newspaper.
Supporters of the equal d r e s s
provisions cite research by Dr. Dietrich.
F. Apfeltreo of Uolvtnlty ol Anpallo
P'alil, Oklahoma. Dr. Aplellree ii aeeml
"bu conclullvely pnwen that mone In
smoggy air wbeo !rapped und<r -
lep for long pertodl of lime ca.uees
cancer of the ear lobe."
Thus. studenll favoring lhe rlghta or
boya to wear aklrb or dre11es argue that
on "inclemently bot day1" 17 .5 degrees
should be designated u lhe temper1ture
at which boy1' tltlrtl b e c o m e
noDdisruptlve to the e du ct t Ion a I
process."
The advocates of bo)'!' akirts said the
sptclal ltgislatym oeed not opplj< to glr!J
alnce "l) Girl! beve aftady been ctven
the right to wear pants as a consolation,
1) The womm 's llberaUoo movement
would Irown on it, and 3) Girls can easily
cure ear lobe cancer by havlng their ears
pierced."
Campus observen !11.!pe(t the leading
opponents to the proposal are girls, The
opposition notes, "glrla worked Jong and
hard to eam the prtvUege of wearing
panl.! to ICbool, but boys have done
• •
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' .. ihbl(to -.n.A<1U11,....lder1Uon .• ·n.o iri-"l'ta'li_,. ~ aunuta ltlore ... lllil!Jy lo bt '!"" ~ .. la ... v~ 111u ra1ny ••••: Jlvtnc .. . edie lo boyo la. the -1oo ol cJre.. JWl.U.S. '"nlla ,...,. .... wl1I eod
,up1iborthanded by i<ar'1 'ei\d, to say
oollllng,of lllllDlll« IChool, wbeo bo)'J will
l1lj'e11 1\1 the bat part ol lh• deal," Ibey ........
"A moft r<UOnable propooal would be
to ollO'I! loog balr, belrds aod musllcbel
00 rainy dl)'J, but lhla too la unfair
'
----'--' --'Apr_l_l!-',_1_'7_l ____ S. ___ _cDAl_:.cLY-_"1.0f __ _,,;,
becaUR eris WOllld be at , a Cllactvantli:e, .. tbt)r note ...
The opponenla dlamla Dr. Apleltreo's
-"' eor lobe cancer nou., tliAI It W\I . ~ .. bJm"<n: "Jost bei:•iilii lmnlQR le! .... tom _,,,,,
panta II no reuon why ll\111111 ules shoold..
'Ibey fUr1her suggeat bll 'Dnllnp ue
lnv1lld by nolin( .llamltlrll .... •1 no w
~-.
&.plclon ol the w o r k i o I of the
felJlllllfll 111N 11 «llflrmef with lhe
. ' . " opposition'• final argument ,w)! ch
...... " bo)'J woold ~ the dJd!Ot.s,ol baW. coulllre.
"MOit of them would pl<lbably .-:ou1
their Uter'• oldest JllOlt nald draPU
and weir the:m to ICbool I
"If tile MVHS admlnll1r1U.,, la .....6.
enough .19 Allow •ucb -«I a.ntoa1';on,
they llo"'fully =JJI .. ~~ to roqulrt tbal . .... """ • by iaJlcnd (Or boys aod nol bt ol
~y !Of denim material, H
concl"4t· t
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'3.using Review Ref used I
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Supreme Court UphoUls School Transportation Law
OAl~'I' .. IL.OT 11111 """"'
Pla1it Dedicated
Shown Is San Clemente's new sewer water reclama·
tion plant built at a cost of about $2.5 million. It
was dedicated Friday at a ceremony attended by
federal, state and local officials. The reclaimed
water produced by the plant is being used for irri·
gation of the golf course and freeway greenery. It
is also used to replenish underground water supplies
and may be used eventually for recreation lakes.
Researcher Reveals New
Health Hazard-Laughing
STANFORD I AP) - A Slanford
University research scientist says
laughing might be hazardous to yiur
health, especially ii you are susceptible
to heart and respiratory troubles.
Dr. William A. Fry Jr. says he came to
this preliminary. tentative conclusion
after about.. JOO volunteers were wired to
machines and their phy sical reactions
were measured as they listened to tape
recordings of comedians telling jokes.
His work \\'ith the !)hys1cal effects of
laughter has bcC'n going on since 1968, but
he first began \.\'Orking in the problem
mirth presen ts to the psychologist as far
back as 1953. He said more research is
needed before firm conclusions can be
made.
A report of his continuing v.•ork in
Stanford M.D .. the magazine of the
Stanford Medical Alumni Association,
which was released Friday said:
-Laughter completely disrupts the
norma1 breathing cycle. ReCOvery to
normal brt.alhing ls gradual, sometimes
taking more than 10 seconds,
-The components of laughter -
Inhaled air, exhaled air and intervening
pause! -have characteristics which give
each person a unique laughing 1tyle.
-More rapid than normal heartbeat of
varying degrees Is associated with
laugb.ter. with rates of over 120,
compared with 72 normally, found with
prolonged and Intense laughter.
Fry said: "There are olher basic areas
that beg investigation : For example.
brainwaves. blood now rate, lxldy
temperature. and concentrations of body
chemicals will be studied in the future.
Capo Hitchhiker
Loses Money
To Armed Trio
A young San Juan Capistrano
hitchhiker was robbed at gunpoint •
Saturday night by a trio of banditl 1\vho
took the money from his wallet and left
him 'l "to eat on."
Laguna Beach police said the victim,
Allen C. Taylor, of 32082 Camino
Capistrano, lo.st $13 to the three men
after they gave him a ride from the 700
block of South Coast Highway in Laguna.
Taylor later told investigators he had
asked to be dropped off at a restaurant,
but the driver ignored his request and
continued past the eatery. When Taylor
objected, he said the front seat passenger
pointed a chrome plated Derringer pistol
at him.
The young victim told officers he then
glanced at the man beside him in the
back seat and found himself looking down
the muzzle of a blue steel revolver.
WA8HINGTOlt (UPI) -''!be Supreme
Court ~ today to review U>e
too.otitutlOOallty of a Calllorola !Jw
viding that public school students may
be bused to cl.... "Witbou~ the
nt of thdr parent!!.
E, The court's brief order, wUhout
loll, upheld the ca!Homia Supreme
which anal)'Rd the lt'10 statute in
&reat detail and ruled It consUtutionl.1 on
' very lll\>ited lnlerpfet&Uon. 'Il>e appeal .,, brought to the hilh
ciourt by a pu<nlalll'OUP which bad-tried
'fltbout succesa to Intervene as a party 1n
tliec:de. •
''!be law prov!~ .»JlLitlloo.f
autnoritles Cannot requlfe pupU3 ;-ro be
lrm!pOrted for any purpose .•. without
the written permission of the parent."
The state court said tf 'that languagl!
means students could not be bused to
break down racial segregation without
parental consent, the law w a s
unconril..itutional no matter whether the
segregation was by design ar came about
na!arally through residential patterns.
Otherwise, the law woukl create a
parental right to discriminate in racial
matters and parents could i n j e c t
discrimination into the school system, the
opinion said.
But the court concluded . that the law
was suscepUblie lo another lnterpretaUon:
Sun Seekers
Swarm Laguna
VacaUoner1 hit the beaches in Laguna
by thousands as the Easter holiday got
under way, but lifeguards had an "easy"
weekend with dlllly water temperaturea
discouraging all but the b r a v e s t
swimmers.
Guar-ds reported crowds of 15,000 an the
beaches both Saturday and Sunday, with
air temperature at the shoreline reaching
a high 86. Cool 69-0egree water, however,
kept most of the beachgoers up on the
sand.
Surf was low and there were no serious
rescues incidents. Forty-two be a c h
visitors required minor first a i d
assistance from the lifeguards and three
Jost children were restored to their
families.
Junior 'A' Student
A list of Laguna Beach High School
honor roll studenl'l for the fall :Jemester
included junior Jon Tensfeldt among
studenl'l reeeivlng all A or 8 grades.
mer'ely that a child could ncit be forced to
use tbe bus ~lttlft without parental
consenth .
Under that vtaw of IN law, a parent
who did DOt ~hla chUd \0 use the bus
W<ll.lld hlvt d 1t1othet way to get
him to schoc . 1111 lilt IClhnol would
retain full authority \o lll.lgn the atudtqt
to ~ school requiring tran!portatlOft. .
T1't suit was started direcUy in the
C.lifomia Supreme Court by lhe San
Yranclsco School Oit\fict in connection
,with desegregaUall. lnfolvtn1 t school
complel known u 11lk loulli.
'"120 Degrees
•
I ..
500 Ignore Warnings,
' Brave Festival Heat ..
DEATH VALLEY (AP) -Ignoring
warnings of ralllesnakes, heat scanty
water, food and toilets, some SOO persons
ere camped near the edge of Death
Valley awaiting what was promoted as a
free Easter weekend religious festival.
Promoter Rudy Zamora of Hollywood
said he expected three million persons to
attend the "religious pilgrimage, a
gathering of the people."
Undersberlff James Randolph, of the
Inyo County sheriff's offl~. says the
festival seekers may find the going a bit
rough.
"It's already so hot, like lllklegree
ground temperature in Lhe day, that lhe
snakes don't come out until it cools off at
night," he said.
The event Is supposed to. tate P1acri a~
Ballarat, population eight; a clunip 'ot. oid
buildings in the desolate Pana.mint
Valley, nearly 200 miles northeast of I.di
Angeles and 15 miles from Death Va.Dey;
Deputies said ml.nl-buso, campen and
truck! arrived at Ballaraton Sunday 1t
the rate of about 10 an hour, contaln1ng
mostly young people.
County officials are lrylnl to
discourage people from coming becau~
of the lack of facilities &lld intense beat.
"There'• waler here, but not much. It's
a one-well town," Randolph aald.
The event bad been dated for the
Death Valley, .but only persons v.1lh
confirmed camping reservations wcuJd
have been allowed into the naUonal
monument so the site wu cbangecL
Company 'Rolls Its Own'
WASHINGTON (AP) -The National
Can~r lnsUtute has awarded a contract
to a suburban Virginia laboratory to
make two million marijuana cigarettes
for testing to delermlne if smoking large
amounts of the drug can lead to cancer.
However, the lnstltute refuses to say
which laboratory has the contract, citing
security reasons.
James F. Keiley, a spokesman for the
institute, also declined to say how much
marijuana wtll be stored for the project
or how long the contract will be in effect.
He sald the company already hu beeri
checking to delermine Jf t o b a c c o
smoking causes cancer under a June.
1969. contract. The total cost of tM
tobacco and marijuana contracts ii
$611,449, he said.
Kelley 1aid the marijuana will be
puffed In smoking machines and ~
condensates from the cigarettes will be
used In tests upm mice and hamsters at
several laboratories. The cigarettes wiU
be made from marijuana 1emd in
federal drug raids.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
Veal Chops .. 5~~-. 7 9~
Tender and mild f\a,·ored ... delicious! IOUllD 90NI ... !9< "-
Veal Rib Roast ... $1 2!
/
)'our folks v.·ill \relcome the change! VEA! Sl'EllCU $lW .•. 1.19 IL
Stuffed Breast of Veal .......... ~~-~ ......... 69~
St""'~...W.ump with fre~h round veal, deliciously aeasoned I
Breaded Veal Cutlets ....... '!All' .. '.0 .~ ........ '1.29"
All ready for the pan.,, clOl!le trimmed, brudtd, aeuoned I
.
for
Dyeing Is so much fun ... 11.nd Rit makes it even better! Give the kids some bowls ••• the ergs ••• and turn them loose! They'll
love it!, •• then give them Handi-Wipea to clean it all up. And note the Kit ia pre-marked 25c ••• 11.nd then note our pricet
Compare the blooms ... the qualit) ! (Subject to stock available).
Hil l
. ll11 • .... Pric ra in rffect ~fem., T"~a .. Wed.,
April S, 6, 7. No 1a.lts t-0 dealers.
(O '12 ... ; 0\. ~clw ~;~/
·.11/1 r 1 'l'Jrr · ·' · . '•./\tl\o..I" :··I . ' ,.
. ,
Fruit Drinks ... ~1-~ ••• 29'
Serve their f&\'Oritea while they color efg'S ! 46 oz. can.
Handi-Wipes .s.A~~ ~~·.39'
So durable ••• they'll clean up 10 many spill!! pkg. of 10
Tree Top Apple Juice ... .... .. .... .. .. . .. . .. ....... 43•
Big 46 ounce aize ••• so delicious .•. healthful, too I
P'll b ( k' Al Ovr Delitalo"'n 49« 1 s ury oo 1es .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . ......... .
Chocolate Cnip or Oatmeal Ra.iaio ••• slice 'o' bake ! 16 01.
. .
ARCADIA: PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH : NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Ncwpo1l 8
Sunset and Hunlmgton 01. (E l Rancho Cen lei) 310 \'le.I Coloiado Blvd. fiemonl .nd Hunilnglon Dr. Vlainci and Algonqum (Boaidwalk Contei) 1555 Easlbloll Dr._(Easlbluff Village Center) ·-.
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MoodU, A,rU 5, 1'71 ------'-----,.--
0lllllL,IAST PAKISTANIS ·CONTINUE TO IATTLl 'fOll NATION'S INDEPINDINCI
Pl•-Alrllftl111 Amerl<1111 frem Emllottlod ·Nfll""". Ref-StNlm ·0vt
.,
,
• ' ' ..
~-----------~
50 Percent Hark Hissed
Chilean Marxist C.Oalition
Scores ·victory in Voting
SANTIAGO. Ollie (UPI) -Final
•fficial election returns t~y showed
thlt President Salfador Al'l1end-•1·,1
Marxist-oriented parties scored'be.ntly in
the nationw:ldt· eJtc1iori1 but failed lbJ 1
hair to capturt so · ptrctnt •f tbt: total vote. ·
Tbt 1•vemmtnt parties· eollecUvely
won .fl'.73 percent of the Yote while the
ePpo.iU.. In Ille IJl"lllo,IC01"!-41.0I
ptrcelt. ' , , • ; ., · · ·
~ tbi voUnt•tlecterate. alraosl'split dmi\i Ille' IJllddl•. '!ht nmalnln1 2.23
percent of tbe vote• went to independentl « cOmprlsed· blllllannd. ..idecHallot.!.
Of ttie .;. 7f l(UJ.on lelll:i&Je; veien"ne1rI1
a million -961,nr.bltiined. ·
.At state W'lrt 1;653 .unaal&rled
alderman posit.io:na.
The "llllls Of Sanclsy'1 • ballolin1 1howe~f an · tm.piuslve gain ; rGF ttie
aovemment part.lea, whlcbi had' Gnly 36.3
percent of the v~ 'in Septem~r. whe.n
,,Allende wen the Prtaidncy, and p1ved
t.be Way for him to acce.terate his
nationa1iu.Uen and · airartan reform
fm'll"lllll.
U.S. Tr.oop Levels ·
In Vietnam Decline
SAIGON (Ul'I). -The numbei of
American•·10l~1 in ·Vtetcam dropped
4,600'lut week to 301,900, the lowelt level
since AJJg. 20, JIM, tht U.S. CQllUlll¢
reported today.
Allende, wlle hid pi-fficled the
coalition would win 4t: to 41 percent 11.id
hf; Wu happy but "not arT01int" about
tbt resuJL ... i ,
• '· 1 • Despite tht showing by·!]le.1..-.riunent
coalltjon, tbe oppe<Jofi • C b r: t 1 t J l n
Democrat. ~ithe ·Jqert· ,.ote teW .of
~111.YjsJnale "party, -ivlnl ·-..... !Ourth el Ille U mll1loo ntu cut. '
'
CQmmnnists Laud
'
' '
Brezhnev Plans
'
For Next 5 Years
• MOSCOW (UPff -The ·so Viet
Commwmt Party -Co-1pprovod
Leonid I. Br?:ihnev'a policy plaUorm kif
another live yean tod1y and cacclalme4
him with a thunderous •second ovaUon
and chanta of "Glory Gk>Ty!"
The 50,000 word repcri ,.·by lhe
.Communlts Part chitftatn1.; delivertd
Tue.aday, contaloed. •)1"te'plan calling
for a world cpnf~,,. dlnrmament
and ~:of ·the'ftve nucltar pow.n to
ban nlkltar W'-JIOM·
The, Bruhnev puce formula also ur1ed
improved ttlatl9na with all eountria,
lncludlng tht United States ·llld R<d
China and premised a ae&erahapiurae in.
tbe Soviet living standard in the nelt five
years. .
\ ... ·. " .
.,, .. ~for Praidsnt?
l ' ,, ••• . ·c my "'8·
CUta in the Army and Marine forces
made up the bullt of Jut week'& troop
withdrawals under phaae I of 1Pre.sldent
Nixon'• procrun .to reduce' the nwnbU of
American soldier• in the · War zone to
215,000 •by Mly.1.
Forty:-six.speUen at the Congress and
2:i0,000 letters from ciUzem lauded the
report.
The 5,000 dele11tes formally approved
the fort.lgn and domest.ic. poUd,a laid
down by Brtt.Jmev in hiJ keynote speech, ' •
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110 Yanks
Airlifted
To Karachi
NEW DELHI (UPI) -A chartered
Pakistani plant brought 110 Americans
and 47 other evacuees from Easl
Pakistan lo Karachi, West Pakistan,
tod1y lo begin In airlift of U.S. citizens
from the embattled province.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Karachi
said 650 of the estimated 750 Americans
In East Plki.atan would be evacuated in
tht next few days.
The Pakistan International Airlines
(PIA) plant that arrived early today
carried 10 French nationals and 37 United
Nations personnel and dependenU as well
aa tbt Americans.
The Embaasy spokwnan said the U.S.
government ernployes and t he i r
dependenta among the evacuees will later
continue to Tehran where lhey will
remain until they can return to East
Pakistan where civil war has raged for 12
days.
Ht said some private U.S. citizens also
may stay tempor1rUy in other countries
in tht area. The Americans were lodged
temporarily In lht beach luxury hotel,
when: the U.S. Infonnation Service set
up a reception room to welcome and
Rgister them. Many had mail waiting
from anxioua rtl1Uvu and friends:.
Radio Pakistan reported today the
Pakistan 1ovmunent is enlisting support
from East Paklatani political leadtni who
are opposed to the rebels.
The broadcut said Lt. Gen. Tikka Kah,
the martial llw administrator In East
Pailstan, met Sunday with 12 political
leaden from the province who pledged
full cooperation in rtstoring nonnalcy.
All·lndla Radio said reports from the
border revealed fighting was going on for
control of Sylhet in Ea.st PW.st.an. It said
West Pakistani troops were evacuating
Rangpur, which wu under control of the
rebels. All-India said reports from
Comllla lndJeated I.he rebels: killed at
least 70 Pak.btani paratroopers in a
clash.
Radio Pakistan charged today that
1ndl1 was sending troop reinforcements
to the state of We.st Bengal aking the
East Pakistan border.
In a broadcaat Sunday, the Pakistan
r1dio accused India of helping armed
Infiltrators to cross tht border into East
Plklstan Ind of 1ttking "to escalate the
eiisllng lndo-Pakistan tension."
Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
said Sunday India ha1 never interferred
in the 1ffa.ir1 of another country but
would continue to speak· out in criticism
of the treatment of the East Pakistanis.
~
NO PULLOUT IN SUEZ
l1ra•l'1 Golda Meir
Red China Sends
At Least 4,000
Men Into Laos
WASffiNGTON (AP) -China has sent
another 4,000 to 6,000 troops into
Northern l..ao.s in recent mo n t b 11 ,
Pentagon sources report.
The sources estimate Peking's military
11trength there has risen to between 18,000
and 20,000 men, about double last year's
number.
U.S. officials said it appeared the
reinforcemtnts were intended mainly to
beef up protection for Chinese engineer
troops working on a major road project
leading from South China's Yunan
Province toward the ?i.1ekong River and
for defense of the road itself.
Among olher things the Red Chinese
were said to have positioned large
antiaircraft guns and to have Introduced
new radar for surveillance and warning.
U.S. military analysts said they doubt
the manpower buildup had a n y
connection wilh Chinese government
warnings during the recent U . S . ~
supported South Vietnamese d r j v e
against North Vietnamese supply routes
in the Laotian Panhandle.
Rather, the Chinese road construction
through northern Laos seems to have
Jong range implications ror the security
or Thailand and Burma, they said.
Both countries are considered targets
for Red Chinest·backed G u t r r i I I a
insurgency.
Mrs. Meir
Turns Down
Suez Terms
By Tht Associated Prt:SI
lsraell Premier Golda Meir has
rejected Egypt's offer to reopen the Suez
Canal in exchange for an Israel\
wlthdrav.•al from tht banks or the
waterway. She also reiterated her :
government's determination to retain the
Golan Heights, Sharm ti Sheikh, the Gaza
Strip and the Arab sector of Jerusalem.
Addressing a national conference of her
ruling Labor party Sunday night, Mrs.
Meir avoided stating specific terms for
reopening the waterway but repeated her
offer Feb. 9 to hold talks with the
Egyptians on arrangemenl5 to reopen the
canal.
Sources close to the Israeli Cabinet
said Jerusalem might ontt again put :
forward Defense Minister Moshe Oayan's :
proposal for both Isratli and Egyptian ~
forces to pull back from the canal in :
conjunction with its reopening.
Sadat's proposal called for only the
tsraelia to withdr1w, with Egyptian
troops replacing them on the east bani:
the canal.
Saying that April "is the month which
shall decide between a solution and war,"
Sadat warned Israel to make 1 prompt ;
reply w his proposal or risk renewed '.
fighting .
Mrs. Meir told her party:
"Anyone who proposes ·1 s r a e 11 -
agreement to the opening of the canal as
a lever to obtain total Israeli withdrav.·al
from Sinai and from Gaz.a will certainly
not be surprised by Israel '• outright
rejection of this plan."
She said Israel "¥o·ould willingly see the
canal open to shipping of all nations,
nncluding lsrael, and the restoration or
civilian life In the area, We are prepared
to discuss the arrangement required to
do this."
She repeated Israel's demands for a
formal peace treaty guaranteeing secure
borders prior Ul any troop withdrav•al.
She noted that her government "is having
a serious argument with the United
States" over Israel's territorial demands
and Washington's insisltncs that
international guarantees can safeguard
1srael bet~r Iha.rt new borders.
She said Israel "should not forget what
the U.S. and President Nixon have done
for Israel in recent years, especially in
the field of arms supply," but she
expressed amaument at "those who
think geo~aphv is nonsense."
andweloveit!
Join us in celebrating our
36th ANNIVERSARY
April 1 tJirough April 9 • Refresbment.s served from 1 P .M. to 3 P .M. c1aiJ1
Get your Sonvenir Gift of Old I.egmia
A 15'20" :bamHize replica in fall color of "Iaguna, 1926" by miawDlld mtist
JcoophXleitac:h 18 J01US for the asking at allSl.agunaFederahllica1. Yau me invited
ii>...,..11Usorlginal oil, together with the <0111Pletel.agunaFederalaztm!ledlm
In oar celebrated Laguna Beach ma.ill ofll<e robmda plleri""
....,,
.{l~tu1a7~g~
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Orate tAanzt• Iargeit, Fini and Stmnged ~ FIJtlmJI
ax-dln.PJaa
l&iuna Niiuel
4~18'0 496-1201
260 O<l!lllJI A-.1!11119
l.aguna Beacl1, Califumfa
494-7541
RUNS ON RECORD
M-yor D•lty
GOP CHALLENGER
Richard Friedman
New Road
Link Named
For King
.lo.lE;MPHIS, Tenn (AP)
This city in which Dr. r.tarlin
Luther King Jr. was slain has
paid tribute to the civil rights
leader on the t h i r d
annlver!!ary of his death .
A freeway was named for
King in a Sunday ceremony
that drew about 200 persons,
most of them black.
The ceremony was
conducted by the city's three
black councilmen. The only
\\"hite official present, a
council1nan . did not
participate.
5tli Term
For Daley
'In Bag'
CHICAGO (UPI) -Richard
J. Daley begins bis last day of
camp•ilninl today in his bid
for an unprecedented fifth
term as May0r of Chicago
wllh the only rtal question
mark being just how big his
victory margin wUI be.
Daley's opponent, Richard
E. Friedman, a Democrat
turned independent who is
ruJllllna; aa a Republican, has
claimed throughout the race
-thot be can urueat the
incumbent, but most political
analysts think the big question
is whether Daley can match
his 1967 plurality of 500,000-
plus votes.
Daley, 68 years old and
running what may be his last
campaign, has used the slo-
gan "Good for Chicago." His
campaign appearances
generally have been limited to
large groups and his speeches
have concentrated heavily on
his record.
Friedman, 41, has run a
race horse campaign, walking
Chicago's neighborhoods lo
meet the people, addressing
virtually any group which
would hear him and constantly
sniping at Daley's
organization·slyle politics.
Fire Strike
Headed Off
In New York
NEW YORK (UPI)
Negotiators reached a
tentative agreement on a new
contract for New York city
firemen today less than an
hour before a feared mass
sick call.
Arvid Anderson, director of
the city's office of collective
bargaining, announced t h e
agrttment at 8:20 a . m .
oulside the mayor's residence
after 22 hours of talks between
city and union negotiators, a
mediator and a state supreme
court justice.
The Most Rev. Carroll
Oozier, Roman Catholic bishpP .
of Memphis, and Jerry Wurl.
lnternalional president of the
American Federation of State,
County and P.1unicipa l
En1ployes, beth ·while, also
attended .
It had been reported
unofficially Sunday that half
the 2,200 firemen scheduled to
shop up at 9 a.m. would start
calling in sick to press
demands for a contract
settlement. The old contracts
for uniformed flremen, police
and· sanitatlon men expired
Jan. 1.
r-.1ayor Henry Loeb gave no
teason for his absence.
Viet Bonibing Study
Sought by Prox11iire
\VASHINGTON (AP) -Sen.
\Villiam Proximirc fi).\Vis.),
proposed today that President
Nixon commission a study of
"lhe true cos l s and
effectiveness" of U.S. bombing
operations in Southeast Asia.
Despite pres s11re he
antltipates {or a ~tepup in the
bombing. Proxlmlre predicted
1uch a study would indicate
the number of U.S. air
missions could be cut in half
v.•ithout reducing the
effectiveness of the alr war.
The bombing. he said. doe~
not appear to have been ver~·
successful anyhow a g a i n s t
Communist supply routes.
"\Ve have been told that our
air st rikes in Southeast A~ia
have been successful in culing
off the f\ov• of supplies to
enemy forces in South
Vietnam." he said in a
statement. "But even i n
recent days -after years of
bornbing and a g r o u n tl
incur~ion as well -report s
persist that up to 1,500 trucks
remain in operation along the
!lo Chi r..1inh trail.
''IL is high time th11l the
American people had an
accurate picture of just what
our bombin~ can and cannot
do.'' he said.
Poli~e Tragedy
Promotion Never Came
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Patrolmen Thomas F. McLaugh·
Jin. 45, was a quiet and dependable officer with 19 years
terVlce. He felt his promotion to sergetint was long overdue.
McLaughlin w11 at the top of a list when the opening
occurred F'eb. 27. His promotion never came through. The
bitter disappointment and some not·IO-£entle ribbing In the
1quad room, pollce o(flclals theortted, caused him to lose
oontrol Saturday.
McLaughlin empUed two .38 caliber revolvers In the
radio room of central police headquarters. Then qultely sur·
rendered. PKtrolman Thomas S. Haklam. 35, was killed. Sgt. Sheldon
B. Friedland, 45, was cMUcally woooded.
"Since not getUng the promotion, 1'.1cLaughlin Juat went
down and was very despondent .over It," said homicide Lt.
Ralph Ptt Joyce.
The orllcer, whole case "''ill be taken directly before the
cuyahoga County Grand Jury before any chargu are flied,
w11 described by acqulantancet as 11 regular church·goer
and a good father to his two children.
"Somelhlnlf must have happened." one neighbor said,
11He ju1t wasn 'l the kind of person to do something like this.''
Pollet, who were holding him at Clevleand State Hospi-
tal under heavy guard, stld he enltrtd th'e r11dlo room as
Friedland and Hakalm were dl1CUJalng the delayed promo-
Uoo. McLaughlin. they said. drew his revolver end emptlt.d
l!s six shot~ al Friedland. hitting him three times in !he
l'ltom11ch ;ind nnre in cRch arm
As the ~crgennl fell. t-.1cLBughlin grnhl)('d his ~un, pohre
11afd, nnd ~hot llak;iim four limes in the ches1 and once in
the Rrm v.•hilc the p:itrolm:in pleaded for his life
V nlachi Lies
Vnclai1ned
EL PASO, Tex. {AP) -
Officlels at the l...a Tuna
Correctional Institution are
trying to find relatives to
claim the body of Cosa Nostra
informant Joseph f\1. Valach1,
66.
Warden Bill Zecham said no
funeral arrangements h ad
been made pending efforts to ·
locate family members to
claim the body. ·Zecham ;ilso
confirmed an autopsy report
thal indic:iled Valachi died of
heart failure Saturday.
Mon4a,, Aprll !, iq11 .DAILY ,PILOT Ji
' Committee
U.S. Ag \ overty Rises
WASHINGTON iUPll
The number of poverty.
stricken Americans beyond
the age of SS swelled by
200.000 last year, despite a 15
percent Doest in S o c i a J
Security benefits, the Senate's
Special Committee on Aging
said today.
'"Older people continued to
fight a losing battle "'ilh
inflated prices." the report
said . It called 1970 a "year of
frustration" for the elderly,
one in four of "'horn live nn
poverty.
The Republi cans Oft the
cammitt~ submitted a n
additional report. saying that
the incomes of the elderly no
longer can be raised onlv by
Social Security be n e f i ts
because younger workers are
at the point of rebelling
against the steadily rising
Social Security payroll tax.
'fh(' GOP members thre\Y
their support behind a direct
government subsidy for the
elderly to give them a
guaranteed minimum annual
income. Such a proposal,
backed for several years by
Sen. Winsto~·::;·~'~'\o~~l~yf!l~R!· couple, if their income sources
Vt.) would provi e -did not bring in that much.
subs,idy ~ raise the inconie (; ~ ."1fgl8,\i~lve prospects for the
ii single elderly poor person to subsiay ,•pg>posal did not
$1,800 a year, $2,400 for ,~ appear brigtb'J.:_,~~~· ~ .... ~
Wisconsin Block Party
Erlipts Into Violence ,.
~ADISON, Wis. (UPI) -A about two-and·a~ll. ·hour s.
block party held by young Earlier there were lgolated
people del!ipite a city ban in a incidenls involving rock and
sludent-hippie area along bottle throwing and othi?r . ' ~fifllin Street erupted into minor violence but whm
rock throwing and tear gas darkness came youlhs began
battles w i I n police Sunday setting up barricades 0 f
nighl. ,,, garbage cans and other debris Al least 16 persons were
,. .
• ' t ...
.· .. arrested .on charges 0 r in the Streets and setth1g them
disorderly conduct, property afire . p · d D dd
' .
L
•
' UPI TtltPIHll•
damage and possession of Police moved in to knack l"OU a g
rnarijuana as hosUIJtes flared down the barricadest8od.kJep Sen .. Strom 1'hurmond {R·S.G.), holds his new baby
uri during the celebration by the streets open. 'fbey · fired .· diughter. Nancy Moore. Th~tmoqd, ~s his wile left
socne 2,100 young people. Nit tear gas canisters .tG disperse the Self·Memor1al Hosp1tal 1n Greenwood, S.C. The
serious injuries were reported ,-the crowds who .pelfed them 68-ye~r-old Senator and bis ~.f.)rear-old wife said
The major trouble lasted • w}th rocks and Stones. they hope lo t1ave more children .•
"My fatlu!r wai/gd until
he retired to buy the car hell always wan/€d,
That was too f.ong for me."
Jim Siemens Imports, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avenue, Santa Ana, C.tlifornill 92707 Phone: 714·546-4114
I
" '
' '
I
I
I
•
• •
I
I
I
' f DAil Y PILDT Monday, Aprll 5, 1971
•
Some of your best
have a new aclclress.
Glendale Federal Savings
has moved to Harbor Center.
Lock, stock and safe. People too.
We're now right on the
corner of Harbor Boulevard and
Wilson, so if you're looking for
Glendale's famous friendly serv-
ice; escrows, Umpteen Ways To
Save or great new low rates on
home loans, look no further.
Glendale Federal/Costa Mesa
is just as nice os it ever wos. And
lots more convenient.
Mon.-Thur. 9-4;
Fri. 9-6.
Qindale Federal Savings-Costa Mesa
eon. of It.bar llolNad. Wllon. (Hllbor Calls)
February
Working
Ti111e Cut
SAN FRANCISCO IAP)
The average work week of
California workers w a s
shorler during February,
partly because of the Los
Angeles earthquake Feb. 9,
a state agency said.
\Yillian1 C. Hem, director
or the Department o f
lndustrial Relations, said
earnings reached a record
average of $3.97 an hour. 2:
cents above the previous high
in January and 25 cents more
than the Fehruary, 1970, total.
The survey week came dur-
ing the earthquake, which
closed some plants for sarety
checks and cleaning up.
\'t'ork lime dropped i n
February to 38.6 hours per
\\'eek, .6 or an hour from
the January total, lowest since
early 1950.
The February v.:ork week
was 1.2 hours below the
average one year earlier,
Acude11aic Wi11ne1•s
Gov. Ronald Reagan took tin1e this \reek to greet the "''inners or the Orange
County Academic Decathlon. Fron1 left to right are Steve Vinisky. Kennedy
Hi gh School; Connie Morrov.-, Bolsa Grande; Deborah Carle, El fi.fodena High;
Gov. Reagan; David Kicata, La Quinta 1-ligh; Tim Stratfor, Anaheim 1-ligh and
Nancy Doman, Savanna High School.
·.
J!ern said. --------------------------------
In the San Francisco Bay
area, average hourly earnings
hit a record 4.46, five cents
<1bove the January high and
32 cents above the year-ago
Hgure.
\l.'ork ing time rose to 38.9
hours per \\'eek, up .4 of an
hour from January and .1 of
an hour from February, 1970.
Hern said February was the
first month since September,
1969, in which Bay Area work·
ing time exceeded the prior·
year leve l.
In the Los Angeles-Long
Beach area. the average \\•ork
"'eek dipped to 38.1 hours,
down 1.3 hours from January
-the lowest tally in the past
30 years. The February work
week was 1.9 hours shorter
than the year-ago ta!ly.
Hourly earnings averaged
$3.81, a cent below the
January record high and 22
cents higher than a year ago.
Check the Most
Popular New
Column Alive ...
'Checking Up'
Glue S11iffh1g Teenage1· Dies
Bef 01·e W arni11g F1·om Mo1n
WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) -
Mrs. John Salayka realized
v.'hen she cleaned the base-
ment one Saturday that her
son and two friends had spent
an evening sniffing glue. She
found the glue lubes on a
table.
Upset and unsure aboul her
next move, she spent the
'veekend thinking about Y.'hat
to say to her son.
Monday. it was too late.
She went down to the base·
ment freezer and found her
15-year-old son asphyxiated
with a plastic bag over his
head.
She agreed to talk about
it ""ilh the \l/indsor Star in
the hope that she might help
some other mother prevent
a similar tragedy.
"On Friday evening," she
said, "I '~cnt down -lo the
basement to finish cleaning
the stairs, and saw Chris and
[Y."O O( his friends Sitting
around a lighted candle at
the tennis table."
She has since learned that
candles are burned to cover
the smell of the glue.
"I didn't mind the candle.
but I w11rned them against
playing table tennis with it
lighted. I was afraid they
would knock it over and start
a fire. When I found the glue
Saturday n1orning, the first
thing I did was look around
to sec if they had been
building models, but there
y,·ere none.
'"As soon as I realized \\'hat
they had been doing, I toOk
the glue and put ii in my
night table and started think-
ing about the best way to
approach Chris.
''I"m 100 percent Irish an d
T know I'm likely to flare
up and say the \\Tong thing.
"A 15-year.old kid is tuucby,
''I decided it might impress
him more if I waited until
his l\\"O buddies y.•ere over
again and spoke to all of them
together.
'"I thought this 1night pre-
vent then1 from just going
and doing it sonic place else."'
After school ~tonday Chris
did sonic family errands, then
came home and \\'ent down
to th e basement. t.1rs. Sa!ayka
said there was nothing in that
to v.•orry her. She had not
considered the possibility of
his sniffing glue alone, and
the b<1sernent \1·as his special
retreat.
"His buddies \\"Cre all real
nice chaps. most a little
younger than hin1. lie wa~
sort of a leader. al"·ays get-
ting the other kids out huntin'
or playing games.
" ... I see other cars that
have a lot of fumes
from the exhaust ...
we've never had thal,
1lnce we've used
F-310." I Mn. G1r1rude E. Wescott DOES F·31·0 WORK?
" ... the performance
of the car actually
seemed as ii t had a
ma1or tuneup ... "
Mr. J.C. MacDouga11
\.
",.,it had more oomph
to it, you know. like
you could almosl step
on the gas and you
could get to where you
want 10 go, .. "
Mr1. Ad1ian V. C1ve1tany
I " ... it's almost like
a brand new car when
I use f·310 in it."
Mi11 Martha Amici
" ... one of the best ,
limes I ever had wat
with tho F·310.
because t had no
trouble. 1 still use 1t,
you know."'
Mr1. F1irla1t P. W1lku111 .
~
DAIL V PILOT 7
CHECKING
•UP• Political TV Ad Cu1·h Sought THE ' EASTER BUNNY IS HERE •
IN THE CAROUSEL COURT .•.
" ,,.... vcrtising 11·as exl.remely in-HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN WITH HIM
Red . Cars, Dresse s
Lead to Trouble
HOLL YWOOD (UPI) lo represent a dirferent situa-nuentlal and to belie\'e that 5outh Coast 'Plaza in c .... M ...
By RICK DU BROW ''the ••estern r•goon •P'-"rs ~· •
tton. People here are n1uch the contenl or (the ads) should
Almost three-quarters • f more likely to feel that ad-be restricted." _ _:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_ __ adults want some kind or,-----"-------....::..:..::.c:.:::::.:::. _____ _:__
restrlcUon or control o r
televised politicar advertising,
according lo a survey taken
immedlutely afl.er la s l
NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA,
By L. ft.t. BOYD
ANlMAL FARM: Were you
3\.\'are Joe Fraz.ler and Cassius
Clay put tog~lher don 't weigh
as mucll as 'the skin of the
average grown hippopotan1us?
• . . Another thing about a
giraffe, it doesn 't have to turn
ils head to see behind itself
. . . They say a purebred
goat will give her weight in
milk every IO days, ir prevail-
ed upon . . . lncidentally
Adam's off oi v.•orked on th~
right, for your information .
. . . And get it straight,
please, it's a yoke of oxen, a
learn of horses. a sp11n of
mules ... Lav.•darnercy, am
feeling rornpy today . \Vatch
uu u
"I'VE NEVER i\lET anyone
like you befo1·e." That's still
known lo be the second most
powerful s!atcn1ent a n y
romMlic single girl~ make
to a rcluct.:int bac Jor. Our
Love and \Var mar a1•s it
is almost but not uJtC as
potent as, "You are so clever
<in math) (at words~ (11·ith
your hand s)." In dcli1·eri111,!
the you-are-so-<:lcver !1ne, ifs
clear, isn't it, the girl ought
to select only one of the three
pa re n l he tic a l phrases.
\Vouldn't do to tell the old
boy he's a mathematical
marvel, a linguistic whiz an::I
mechanical genius, too. That's
some11·hat much.
"In the malting · of a bagel,
is It boiled or baked?" A.
Both . Boiled firs!, then baked
Q, "\Vhat's yellow and
writes'!" A. A ball point
banana? , . . Q. •·How come
Costa Ricans are c a I I e d
'Ticas'?" A. Because so many
of their words end in those
five letters.
IF YOUR ~-f I L K J\I A N 'S
BlLL is running a l1Ulc high,
might try 1nixing up your O\l'n
blend out of po;rdered milk .
That's considerably cheaper.
You say you don 't like the
chalky taste? No matter, one
drop of vanilla per quart 111ill
fix that ... AN EXPECTANT
J\10THEfl \\'ho s mo k es
cigarettes is ap! to have a
smaller baby than a non·
smoker. So contends a Cana-
di11n medical expert. Offspring
of wo1nen who s1noke. he
c\ain1s. a\·erngc eight ounces
less at birth. \\lhy is unknown,
evidently.
SPK ING HAS sprung. It's
bit·yc!e-accident time. Seven
out of every IO n1ishaps on
such wheels happen about now
. AS TO \VHAT •
qualifications go to n1ake a
successful farmer. an1 adv ised
merely he must be out stan·
ding in his field la de da
.. llAISE YOUR thermostat
by one degree and you hike
your heatiJJg bill by 3 percent,
remember that.
Noveinbe r's elections.
This is the finding of the
Foote, Cone & Belding agency
in a survey summarized in
a report on the public's reac-
tion to political ads.
or those polled, 65 percent
favored controlllng the ads
!hen1se/ves. and nine percent
felt lht> length of the campaign
should be restricted.
"The most frequentl y
~11ec1fied concern,'• said the
report, "is that all candidates
should have equal tin1c and
money the opinion of 24 per-
cent of all adults polled." The
report added :
"This was a more prevalenl
feeling an1ong 1nen. people 25-
34, college educated. in pro-
fessional occupations. n1iddle
income and from large cities
-a profile ('SSentia!ly similar
lo 1hose believing that ad-
vertising had the greatest ef-
fect. ..
!\'on-whites. the survey said.
tended not to ascribe great
innuence to television ad-
vertising for political
purposes.
"Co1nP'ared to the other
groups," the sur\'ey v.·ent on,
"they 'A"ere more likely to
have no opinion of ils effect
other lhan to say it was not
influential. A similar pattern
is found among service and
unskilled laborers -among
11•hom non-whites arc highly
over-represented."
WHAT IS IT al>out the
British that mnkcs then1 so
fond of cats and dogs? Pet
food makers say !hey sell
more per household i n
England than any11hl'!'C
GfRLS IN RED DRESSES
and men in red cars get into
more trouble than the i r
counlerparts in any other col-
or. and that's a statistical
fact, too, sir.
RAPID REPLY: Ye~. sir,
some weapons experts believe
civilian citlzens of the United
States O\Vfl up to 35 times
as many pistols. shotguns and
rifles as do the Armed
Services.
''Belief in th e influenct> of
political advertising varies on-
ly slighlly by party af-
filiation." the survey added,
"with Republicans and In-
dependents somewhal 1nore
likelv than Democrats to feel
Ohe.ads) highly influential.''
,
7 (Pat~~~-------~ Los Angeles (Orange County, Palos
-.... ·-~· Long Beaoh,to Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, etc.), • ist -.-San Francltco $18 ,... rolUMI to S.f.) including tex. Long Beach is like having your own private
Leave Long Beach: airport. You don't have lo light the free-
Now you can !ty PSA from Long Beach 7:40 ain way traffic to l . A. lnlernationaL There's rour ques!io11s a,1d con1·
111ents are 1velcomed and
will be used 111 CHECKING
UP wherever possible. Ad·
dress letters to L. ~I. Boyd.
P, 0. Box 1875. Newport
IJcach, Calif., 92660.
The report observed that
''people from the East·• ex-
pressed somc11·hat greater
concern about control over
political adv e rt is in g ex-
penditures.
Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. 10:45 9f1l easy parking. And lhe crowds haven't
More on \veekends. More fr ights than 1 :30 p'm found it yet. Next time you head north
CUSTOr.t ER SERVICE: Q. On the o!hcr hand. it noted.
297 cars, representative of California's total car population, tested F-310 .'
Th e cars were changed from the gasolines they had previously used to
Chevron with F-310 and driven by their owners for 2,000 miles.
Exhau st emissions were tested by an independent research firm
before and after using F-310.
While not all cars showed reductions, hydrocarbon exhaust was
reduced an average of 13.9% for the group as a whole. Carbon monoxide
was reduced an average of 11.6%. These results mean that if all cars in
" ... and I just never
knew 1he difference in
gasoline untll I had
tr ied F-310."
" ... I don't get the
smoke lrom it, H's go! a
belier pick up."
Mr. E1rl Hudtpelh
\
" ... the car Idles better
11nd bo!h my wife and t
lell it ran better."
any other arrhne. Connections 10 Sacra-4:30 pm (or south), head for Long Beach Airport
mento. Or, avoid the freeway and Uy to Mon thru 1h\Jrs & Sat. by way of your travel agent and PSA.
San Diego. If you live any place south of More flights Fri & Sun. PSA. &Ives you a 1ft.
~~~~~~~~
California arone used F-310. exhaust emissions, compared to levels before
F-310. would be reduced by almost one million tons per year.
Below are some of the people and their cars who participated in the
test. Their comments are further testimony lo the effectiveness of F-310.
F·310.·IT WORKS.
. Cntvnin
Standard Oil Company of California ==r
Mr1. Donna Sievers Mr. Georg• Ptnneb•ker " ... I don 't have to
look for another car.
because it's perlormini;
beautilul!y ... "
Mr•. Beverl~ 8. W1gnf'r ... you can tell that
the engine was just
running smoother."
/
" .•. out ol the F-310
I really <fld·get good
mileage."
Mr•.oGrace H. Btll•
"It caused ii to run
more smoothly than
it had been."
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
The Pendleton Beach
Possibly the· fi.nesl stretch oC public beach on the
Pacific Coast tnay soon be made available as a result
of President Nixon's order last week turning back to
the state 6.5 miles of Camp Pendleton's shoreline.
1'he gift came as a surprise lo everyone, including
the f\1arines, \vho had been doggedly holding off public
use of their l7-n1ile shoreline.
After extensive negotiations, the f\1arine Corps
agreed last September to lease to the state 3.5 miles
or the same beach south or the San Onofre nuclear po\\'·
er plant. The lease \Vas to run 25 years.
That '''asn't giving up anything permanently. but
the President's action does so. Whether the Department
of Defense \\'ill appeal to the Congress to try to balk the
gift remains to be seen. And '''hether such action could
succeed is in doubt. too.
Assuming the action is final, and the state will take
permanent ownership and possession, more than one·
third of Camp Pendleton's coastline ,,.W be made public
By any measurement, it is a monumental gift -prob-
ably unprecedented -of federal property to a state.
\Villiam Penn Mott Jr., director of the stale De-
partment of Parks and Recreation, considers it "the fin·
est 6.5 miles of uninterrupted beach on the West Coast
and possibly on the East Coast, too."
The problem is that Httle state money is available
for developing either the beach or the 3,~00 acres north
of Interstate 5 included in the gift as a potential camP"
site. Private donations will be needed to get it started.
·rbe area is not an unmixed blessing in its pres-
ent state. Total beach flooding occurs at severe high
!Ides. This could back beachgoers up against the blufrs.
'!'here are no roads to the beach. 1'hree trails wind down
200.foot·high bluffs. There are no permanent san itary
facilities, or running water or telephones.
The experimental Easter \Veek opening \viii see
no lifeguards and only t\vo rangers at a time patrol·
ling the beach. Some danger from snakes exists in the
heavy brush on the blufftops.
But once developed for family use, San Diego
County will have, and all Californians and visitors from
everywhere can use, a superb recreation area. A hearty
"thank you" to President Nixon will be in order.
Protecting Public Access
Ir anyone is prone to consider the cla1nor over pro·
tection of the environment as all words and no action,
he should consider recent developments. Public offi·
cials from the President on down are on the move to
provide such protection. For example:
In addition to the President's action at C a m p
Pendleton, Orange County is negotiating for purchase of
the Salt Creek beach area bel"-'een Monarch Bay and the
Dana Strand Club. Public access is permitted 1his '"eek.
A .Plan identifying open space and recreational op·
portun1tles along 27 miles of the Santa Ana River and
Santiago Creek within Orange County would create "an
oasis in the urban desert." as a planner describes it.
The county has created a new Beach Recreation
and Development District to gain dedicated public ac·
cess before city annexations could eliminate it. Cities
are on the move, as "'ell
'
• ;
C\.A\S MAI~
SU&J~CTTO f
5NOOPIN<i
I
First action along this line will come this week -
Easter \Veek -when the presently leased 3.5 miles of
beach \vilJ be open to the public. Donations of $1 to $3
will be passed on to the State Parks Foundation. a non·
profit organization, to help provide minimum devdop-
ment of the beach and upland camping area.
Deeds are in fact following the torrent of words in
the new era of environmental concern. 'Well, they said the new Post Office Depllrlment would be
more efficient.'
He's Not the
Person to
Review It'
'
• '.
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
President, Sau Franclsro State College
(The following 11 a guut coh1ma
by my wife l\targedanl.)
My husband showed me his column
this week, a review of "Blow It Up!
The Black Student Revolt at San Fran-
cisco State and the Emergence of J?r.
Hayakawa," by Dikran Karagueuzian
!Gambit ). ilis rev1ew was charac·
teristically generous.spirited and non--
defensive, and on reading it I conc\u~ed
that he was not the person to review
lhe book. I was. This is one or several books published
recently by the participants in events
at my husband's col·
Jege. Mr. Kara~
gueuzian "'as a stu-
dent editor and a
slrike supporter. He
seems really to have
been close to the
councils of the Black
Students Union and
the radical whites. or
SOS. What '"'ll""fells
us rrom the inside
about "'hat y,•ent on
is more damning than anything which
might have been published in righl-\1.'ing
scoop sheets.
Step by step he recounts the events
(If the mad scenario which the "·orld
finally became a\\·are of. He tells them
vlithout much interpretation. What \\ere
the motiviations of thl' leaders and
followers? II reform. why the tactics
of non-negotiable demands, some clearly
impossible? If revolution, did they really
expect to bring U1e system down?
OF COURSE TT \\'ASN'T just one
lhing or another. The strike was a kind
of group euphoria, fanned by the bellows
of television attention. It was militant
rhetoric grown to guerilla theater, in
v.·hich each of the students and faculty
members taking pa.rt contributed his
oy,·n meaning. Some thought they y,·ere
opening the doors o~ opportunity lo the
underprivileged ; some y,·ere Standing
Shoulder lo Shoulder v.·ith the Third
\\lorld: some were wresting control of
the C'flllegr from the trustees ; some
\\'ere Overthroy,•ing a Sick Society: some.
v.•ere having a hellu\•a time being where
the action y,·as
All these things and more. y,•ith much
:iincerity and passion and considerable
~--B!I Geor11e ---
Dear Grorgt>:
1 scnl for your pamphlet on
"Ten Easy Steps Toward an Easler
filing Sy!item," 1 wrote, in fs.ct.
four timrs. Why haven't you 1ent
my pamphlet on efflelent filing?
MYRTLE
Dear rityrtle:
I can't seem to find It.
Dear Georae ;
My husband !1 a prude. when
I we.ar " mini But, oh, boy, does
he lo,·e to Hf: other Yt-omtn In
skimpy dre.11e1. Will you kindly
tell me whit got• on In hu.abands'
minds' MRS. G.
Dear Mrs , G ..
No.
(Send your proble1ns lo Georgf'
and notice how nluch mort con·
fu8ed you bf!cOmt alrtlOllt un·
medlBlcly.)
Dear
Gloomy
Gm:
lf Lt. Calley's trial is an indication,
who could you get to join an <ill·
volunteer professional U.S. Army
when the results or your training
-killing the enemy-ends in di,..
grace, dishonor and poulbly
death?
-D.S. 0 .
Tilll '"'''"' ,..!Kn rltOotl" YleWJ. Ml lleCt-ll"J lfMN ti TM ,.....,., .. ,, $11ft4 ,..,, "' -¥• ,. GJ_, Out. DlllY r llM.
personal inconvenience, went into the
mixture, including the rather mundane
and mt!tcenary demands the fiery faculty
strikers had to say they y,·ere supporting
in order to earn Labor Coun cil sanction.
t Karagueuzian unfortunately passes over
this ironieal aspect or the strike, I
KARAGUEUZIA.N'S account is frankly
partisan and ignores the total context.
He clearlY had no contact with the
non-striking studenl body or the incensed
parents who had sacrificed to send their
sons and daughters lo college; or with
the non-Panther members of the Negro
community. who seem to be beyond
his ken and concern.
The fact that the whole undertak111g
had quite predictably negative results
in the state and the nation does not
enter his evaluation. Black: studies, tunds
for admitting "underquallfied" students,
budget& of colleges everywhere, decen-
tratizatlon of control! in the college
.system, all would probably be in better
shape today if it had not been for
this futile and destructive exercise in
revolutionary bravado.
Nevertheles1, like the bemused old
peasant in the poem, "The Rattle of
Blenheim.'' y,•ho finds the skull of a
fallen soldier and can't quite reconstruct
"''hat the battle v.·as all about, he keeps
reassuring hi1nself with , '"11 was a
ramous victory ."
WHEN IT COMES to his account of
I.he character and motivations or Prcsi·
dent S. I. Hayakawa, Mr. K. gets into
the realm of fantasy, inference ;ind the
snider sorts of academic detr~ction.
True. he does not include some of the
y,•j\dest and most fanciful tales \\'hich
ran through the campus, but all of
Karagueuzian·s perceptions are rlistnrted
to fit his definition of llayakay,·a as
an autocratic, right-wing puppet. m:.<dly
e~ocentric. always a bit ridlculouJ. This
comforts Mr. K., and as a matter uf
!act thi1 legend did my husband no
harm . It rather terrified his enemles ,
and the rest of the world knew better.
The humorless Mr. K. obviously cannol
fathom a person \\"ho is non-derenaive
because he l11 unafraid, who is without
facade or concealment, self-allsured and
yet wilhout self-Importance. Thu.!! he
mitses much of the hums.n feeUn1 of
thl'lt strange time.
ONE lNCIDENT he recount.I happened
at the height of the trls\s. lt is h\11rlou1\y
true and to me lndlcatlve of something
quite different from whet Kar1gueuilan
Implies. Prtaldent Hayakawa, prP.ssed
as always, 1dmltttd 1 .... ·o vi 1 Ito rs
simultantOU31y into hill office lor their
appointments. one of v.•hom wa1 sn out·
of·to••n repot"ler seeking M lnter\·lew.
Explalnlng that "One trouble. with this
job iJ that you don't havt much tlme
to eierciae," the Prtaldent thtrtupon
took time out for a few quick and
relaxin1 aomeruult.a on the floor.
Karagueuzlan may heve been put ()ff
by the lack of Pr~1dt'ntial 1Uffnc11.
but clearly lhe reporter wa1 not. It
wa1 bt who 1afd to me later. "What
do you thlnk Is ROln~ In bf' thfo nuteomt''"
Y.'arily I declin4'd IQ prcd1ct. "'\\'ell. I
can tell you llr i~ ~oing In \\In·· l1r
said.
Hr did , And Ml he t·;1n lc:i .. c lhr
rt\\rltlng of lnstory to other$.
Nixon's Health Care Plan
More Services at a Higher Cost
\VASHINGTON -That new health
care program being fonnulaled by the
administration will offer greatly ex·
panded services to the elderly -but
at a cost coMiderably higher than the
present $5.30 monthly Medicare charge.
Under the plan shortly to be submitted
to Congress, Medicare and Medicaid
parlicipanll could choo&e to be eligible
for comprehensive medical services from
groups of physicians to be organized
throughout the country. For this enlarged
health care, the cost would be about
the same as that now generally paid
by the elderly y,·ho purchase sup-
plemental insurance lo meet ex-
penditures not covered by Medicare
Some 10 million persons over 65 nnw
buy such supplemental insurance.
ACCORDING TO a little·noticcd study
published by the Social S e c u r I t y
Administration, these elderly constitute
about half the total in this age gruup.
The supplemental insurance purchased
by the 10 million is for the purpose
<if helping to pay ever-soaring hospital
bills.
Of that number, 9.5 million also buy
insurance to cover surgical costs ; around
Allen-Goldstnith
B million have coverage for visits by
doctors, X-ray and laboratory charges:
3 million have insurance for prescription
drugs ; another 3.1 million ror private
nurses : and about 4. million insurance
to supplement Medicare nursing home
benefits.
Under the still tentative new health
care program, all or most of these
services would be provided by group-
practice organizations the elderly could
JOin.
The goverrunenl would pay the dif-
rerence between the larger fees collected
from the elderly and the costs of the
physician groups. As yet, no jnformation
is available on how much that might
be.
TllE SOCIAL SECURITY study shows
that 157 million persons -slightly more
than lhree-fourths of the civilian popula-
tion -now have some protection to
cope with hospital and surgical costs.
Two·thirds of the population buy in-
surance to pay for in-hospital visits by
doctors.
The report also discloses that the
number of persons 65 and over buying
supplemental health insurance increased
steadily until 1965. But by the end of
1966, the year Medi~are went into errect,
the number dropped by 18 percent. It
decreased again in 1967.
In 1968 and 1969, however, private
insurance purchases rMC -apparenlly
as a result of the realizaUon that
~tedicare did not cover all high health
costs. By 1969 the number of elderly
with supplemental insurance had gone
back to about the same level as before
t-.1edicarc.
ACCORDING TO the study, 125 million
persons -62 percent of the population
-are now covt:red for X-ray and
laboratory services; 43 percent for physi-
cians' office and home. visits; 45 percent
for prescription drugs. 45 percent for
private. nurses; 50 percent for visiting
nurses; 14 percent for nursing home
care; and 4 percent for dental services.
Blue Cross-Blue Shield policies are held
by 73 million, with 121.S mlllion having
policies w•th private insurance com·
panics. .
Throughout the country, Blue Cross-
Blue Shleld, says the report, had a .
total subscription income in 1969 of se.1 ·•
billion and paid out $5.9 billion in benefill
and $500 million for operallng costs. .
Insurance companies had a premium .·
income of $7 .6 billion -three-fourths ·
of It from group policies.
GROUP BUSINESS paid out 9f percent
of premium income in benefits, as ·
against only SI perct'nt for indlvidllll
policles. Operating expenses amounted .
to $859 million in individual business
and $750 million for groups.
The study also shoy,·s that in 1969
-Blue Cross-Blue Shield paid an •
average of $56. 76 per person enroTied ·:
for hospital care, while insurance com-:
panies paid $31.63. To individual pollcy ·:
holders, the companies paid an average .·
of only $15 .77. ::
For that year the net cosfio Americans ·:
of all ages for all private health in· :
surance was $1.6 billion. That ill the
dif£erence between premium income and
benefitl paid out.
By Robert S. Alita
and John A. Goldsmith
The Bed Is an Underrated Amenity
The. bed is. on the whole, a neglected
and underrated amenity.
The old Puritan ethic, the propellent
of our society, would have it that use
of the bed. for any purpose other than
sleeping. is immoral: and . even worse,
orrensive . The idea is to get an honest
rlay's "'Or k out of
the filthy bnitcs. IJo..
1ng noth111g, £or th<'
Foundin~ Fa1hcr s,
was the sin that
cned out lo I ll'aven
for vengeance And
there is no forn1 of
doing nothing like
lolling in bed. fThe
WO'fd loll is or course
pejorative in our society.)
There "'as old Ben Franklin lelling
one and all that he that riseth late
must trol all dav. and similar ban.~.
Early birds, that a"·ful lot. are said
to gel the worm. \\'ho needs worms?
IT IS MV CONVICTION that the 1nore
tim!' a man spends in bed. the more
ti\ ii he becomes. and thilt our unruly
country would be in far better shape
for a little more mindless staring at
tellings. For an American. doing nothing
ls the hardest of ta1~. Like most things
hard. it can be rewarding.
For those caught in the prison of
nine-to-five, with the daily Armageddon
on the freeway throv,;n in, It is still
possible to sandwich a little nothtngne1s
into your lives. Just set lhe al11rm an
hour f.1tlier than u1ua1. Vou won 't mis!
Quotes
John V. Brig&•· Fullerton Asstmblym•n
-"To lower the vollng age alone
tlrnlshea the right to vote. It impll(s
that lt take! lest malurlty to vote than
It doeJ to con(racl, obey the law, marry,
etc."
AJ,•ln Attlea, blatk playe:r-<:eiaell of S.
f . Warrior' prn ca.r~ team -"I ju~!
t:ike people for \1·hat th(ly art'. try tu
tre11t 1hen1 v.11h ;i l1ttl1• tlec·('nry :i~
hurnan bc111,;:s I lh1nk 11 f'\erybody 1hrt
Iha! '!le wouldn'1 havr R 101 ol the
prohlenls we have around u~ nO\\ "
Charles McCabe
.J.._
lhr sleep. And let the old noodle float
like a butterrly, lighting on whatever
leaf turns up handy.
H you are out of the rat race, as
1 lhrough good fortune happen to be,
then spend all the time you can in
bed. Chairs are contrary to nature . Peo-
ple in chairs look rather foolish, if you
bul give it a thought.
I 00 ri.1osr OF MY reading in bed,
and my walching of the 1elly, and listen·
Ing 10 the r11dio, and thinking vengefully
of how cold it is outside. Apart lrom
I.he n1echa111cs ol typing , most of my
"·riling 1s done in bed, either while
asleep or during the free-floating period
just after I have awakened.
\l has taken me decades lo get over
the feeling that my affection for the
sack is not a form of perfidy. But
I made it. Now I'm an unreconstructed
slugabcd. Proud of ii, too.
Not nil nations and people are uptight
about being horizontal on a Beautyrest.
The Chinese philosopher, Lin Yu tang,
spoke out loud and clear for all !he
lentlludinous when he said:
'"It is amazing how few people are
consf'ious of I.he importance of the art
of lying In bed, al though actually in
my opinion nine-tenths of the ....,·urld's
most important discoveries. both scien·
lUlc and philosophical, are come upon
Chavez Union Opposed
To the Editor:
The Student Coalition for Farm
Workers (SCF\Y) was organized last
January to fight for the farm worktrs'
"freedom of Choice" ln joining or not
jo.lnlng a union. SCFW, which originated
11s an ad hoc commlttee of Orange
County Young Americans for Freedom
tYAF), haa now arown at a statewide
11tudent organtzaUon whlcb favors in-
dividual freedom.
SCFW firmly believea that Cesar
Ch11vez'1 elostd shop union wlll not only
hurt the farm worker• in the lou of
their llbttty, but in their job1 a1 well.
We fttl that the fa.rm worker• art
caught In the middle of a ''union power
grab" and thnt the union could cart
l9s about each lndlvidual 1A'Orker.
\\IE STARTED SCFW In order to show
the public that many students in high
achool aind colltge reject I h t
authorltarl•n-10Cla.ll1tJc and co er c I v e
rnelhods of Chavts's union.
Our ort1:anlzatlon already has about
200 rnt1mbers in Colifornla of which n1ost
arr n1t1nbers of \'AF. And 1n the futurr,
1\t' 11re planning for more stutl nt
cuunter-demon:ttrnUon.o; during the .'lum·
mt:r months nJtainsl the lettuce boycott
(Ir any olhtr OOycott (OOl'dloaled by
Chavez.
HOWEVER, AS A newly-rormcd group
and as 1tudtnta, wt are not u flnancially
well off u other 1ndlvldU1la or the com·
munlty. SO the main obJectlve which
11 ketplng SCFW from expanding our
operation1 to 1realer he:IRhLI b financial
asslltance. If we can accomplllh tbls,
we wUJ be able to Involve thow:ands
of studtnt.s and other toncemed persona
in opposing "Olave1'1 Slavery."
LARRY SAMUELS
PR Director of sc~·\y
TONI LF.IPOl.D
Cha1ry,·oman of SCF'\Y
P.O. BQx 2341
Ana helm
when the scientist or philosopher Is
curled up in bed at 2 or S in the morning.
"I FIND THAT Tl-fOSE pe<Jple y,•ho
agree '\\'ith me in believing that lying
in bed is one of the greatest pleasures
of life are the honest nien. \\'hile those
\vho do not believe in lying in bed
are liars and actually lie a lot in the
daytime, morally and physically."
It's lhe Chinese sage's view th.:it those
rrenzied tycoons who use four phones
in their obsessive pursuil of lhe buck,
u·ould not only feel better, but would
make a great deal of money. if they
gave themselves a dally allowance or
"one hour's solilude awake in bed."
Purpose can he the great enemy of
enjoyment. Mekini:: up little mora l
syllogisms which all end up with, "I
have to do thl1, that or the olher, ·•
i! a fine way to extract the joy from
life. The pleasure! of goofing off, Ilka
the plealW'ts of playing h0oky, are
among the greenut of memories.
Staying awake in bed. flnally, 11 a
W1Y of looking at things under tht aspect
of eternity, which the ancients 11ld was
the only way to look. After tht old
brain has been cantering almlesa\y for
an hour or ao, aortlng out the dregs
of exlatence, you will find that you
have to arlae from the sack to d.,
something. Whatever It la, I can assure
you It v.·UI be Important.
-~--
Monday, April 5, 1971
The editorio:l page of the Defir
Pitot 1e1ka to inform and 1«m.-
ulait rcadtrs b11 preienilng thiJ
MW1paper11 o¢nio1U and com-
fl'llfltary O'n topic1 of interest
and rignt/icanct, b11 ?'"OVlding a
forum for the t.rpre1sion of
our rt~rt' opint?"'· and bv
p?'tsent1n11 flit d1vcr1e vJ.tw-
pcinU o/ informed ob1erven
and $pokemie11 (HI topics of the
dny.
Robert N. \Vead, J>ubhsher
Man1iunt SF A1·ea E111ptied Rocks Rip ~~~~ CDC Seeks Angela Bail;!'.---.......,·
I THIN K Pressed
lnAmbush ht Blast Threat Boat; Two
Perish
War Pullout by July 4 i EA STER BONNET
SANTA MONICA tUPI) -believes Gov . Ronald Reagan·$
RJVERSlDE (AP) -Police
officials, lntensifylng t he
manhunt for the ambush-
murders of two police1nen.
passed out handbills notifyin,ll
parents in the largely black
section that their children
rnight be stopped f o r
queslifJning .
.. \.Ve're trying to get
Information.'' LI. Wi!ham Sl
1\1:.rie said Sunday. "'!l's
necessary to talk to many
people."
Veteran patrolmen Leonard
A. Christiansen, 25. and Paul
C. Teel, 30, were shotgunned
Friday night as they ' answered
a phony burglary call on a
narrow b<imboo and shrub-
lined road on the edge of the
small Negro section of the
160.000 Community.
Four youths described as
Negroes were seen fleeing the
area. No arrests have been
n1ade.
SL Marie said lhe handbill
asks for community
cooperation and states parents
"particuJ;irJy those in the
black areas should rnake their
children aware there are
strong possibilities !hey might
be stopped and talked to by
police officers."
•'
Limited
Time
Only!
BERKELEY IAP) -Police
evacuated six. city blocks
Sunday nighl after t h e
discovery of a cache of at
least 100 sticks of dynarnlle
which a letter said was
intended to blow up police
headquarters two b Io ck s
away .
An Army bomb squa d
helped police work their way
through a cluttered basement
~arage of a house where the
dynamite was found along
with detonating equipment
ll.'hich was not connected to
the explosive, a po Ii c e
spokesman said.
A feared bobby trap did not
Prison B1·awl
Hurts 2 More
SAN QUENTIN IAP) -
Hoping that tensions will cool,
San Quentin Prison officials
have locked l,500 inmates in
their cells after an o th er
violent outbreak at t h e
racially troubled prison.
The Sunday lockup came
after two inmates "'ere hurt in
a brawl that erupted after a
movie Saturday.
materiallze aJld lhe llve-and-a·
half hour evacuation ended by
midnigbt.
Presence <1f the dynamite
was fir.st made known in a
special delivery letter to The
A.ssociattd Press bureau 1n
San Francisco from a group
calling itself the New Dawn
Tribe. Police said they had no
knowledge of the group.
The letter said the dynamite
and detonating equipment plus
a stolen car also found in the
garage, were intended !o blow
up the police 6lation
\\'cdnesday. TI1e plan was
abandoned. the Jetter said,
after an ''outside associate"
told others of it . The letter
asked that poliee be notified of
the cache's location.
Police theorized the plan
had betn to load lhe dynamite
in the car and park it near fhe
Hall of Justice two blocks
from the garage where the
police station was loccated.
One officer estimated there
was enough dyna.inite found to
"take a whole block with it."
Police said the residents of
the house where the explosives
were found had been renting
the garage to persons <lfficers
refused to Identify.
Buy
Now
and
Save
The-California Democratic welfare rtform program is
Council hall gooe on record "an inhuman attack against
SAN PEDRO !AP) -A favoring the release of Angela Ulc people."
locally based tuna boat has Davis on bail. Social Securily The volunteer organization
been dashed aparl in rocky for housewives and abolition of -which claims I 0 , 0 0 0
surf off Baja California. ttborlion Jaw:;. members_ concluded 1ls 19th
TH INK
killing the skipp«"r and 3 annual co""•ention Sunday by crewman. Two others are 1 t a I s o adv oc a Les "~
missing. \vithdrawrng An1erican troops adopting a raft of resolutions
"I talked to one or the fr 0 TI\ Indochina by July t and electing its first Negro
crewmen who "'-'ere rescued;============; thinks Congress 5 h 0 u 1 d president : NatJ1an N. "Nate" (hi
' OT investigale My Lai and other
and he said he didn't n · The DAILY PIL -II d · Holden, 11. an unemployed Wettclltf r1a1a _ ••2·2444 there was any way they CQU]d a ege war cnmes, supports a I
have survived. It v.·as so rough The One That Cares nationwide antiwar protest aerospace engineer 1rom Los,1., __ •_•_w_•.o.".'.'.'."·"~--'
as soon as they hit lhe beach '===========-_:':.:'h::ed_:.:..ul~ed_:f~oc_:A::_P.:_".:_'1_2:.:'.:..· _n_n.:_d_A.:_n_::g~e_l"-·-----------------the surf splintered the bo<1t,"
said Anthony Pisano, manager
of the San Pedro fishermen's
Cooperative.
He idenlified the dead as
Andy Tipich. 63, owner and
skipper, and l\fichael Kulgis
The names of the missing
crewmen. presumed drowned,
were v.·1thheld.
Pisano said the dead
skipper's two sons and five
other cre\\'men v.·ere safely
carried ashore on a rocky
coastline abou t JS mi I es
southwest of La Paz by stron,'t
ocean currents. The area is
about 650 miles south of the
California ri.lexican border.
1'he survivors were expected
to arrive in Los Angeles
Monday by plane from La Paz
he said.
Save10%on
air conditioners.
Don't start payments
'til June 1st.
Sale 22495
Reg. 249.95. Penncresl r.i lmperlal
11,500 BTU air conditioner. 10 podion
thermostat maintains desired ten~le.
Air exchanger. adjustable air d irectors.
Sale 121 45
Reg. 134.95. Penncrest~ Styfeaire® S,000 BTU
bedroom air conditioner. Features Mylar® polyes!er
wings with decorative floral pattern, 2 speed ran
and cooling power, 11 posi tion t hermostat control.
Paper or fabric may be added to front panels to
match the room decor. Comes in beige, avocado
or harvest gold.
Penncre1to> Style•'-' 6,000 BTU, 3 speed
bedroom air condldoner. Reg. 149.95, SaS. 13&.15
Decide on the Automatic
Ice Maker Either Now
3 speed fan and cooling, permanent Scott
foam filter. S lide out chassis. Sale 17995
Or Later In Either Side-by-
Side Or Top Freezer.
Penncre1P Imperial 14,000 BTU
115 volt 3 speed air conditioner.
Reg. 299.95, Salo 269.95
' I
FllP-OUICk
tee Elector Kii
$995
H.rvit Ille m1rvelau• c-enH!lfll'.t of lh• Au1o--~
m11oc le• M•ker l!O"' a1 t.ier. E:.njcy l\IYtng •II
lhe 1e1 yau ,,•td .. 1111ou1 le1 '"YI· wi!hout golng .
OUI !or oce. 1( !1llfi, lrHZO!I. ftle1M11, cubei 1ulo-
m111e1lly inlo '"""·Cube l1•11I Conno1 tel•
Y!::>U d11I thti r.ub•• )'QU Wiil! to kt .. p h1ndy !()(. '
r.ouplt ore c<owd. k11 111lw1~s f<efi.11 Op1,on1I • ·;
Al t•l•1 cost E••lly 1n1!alltd. 111rmply rePllC"I l
!he pr19,.nt fee ''"'"' In thlllfl Rtlrog"<~1ort j
£ai.11y conl\OIC!ed It> •~1ll1b/1wt!er1uoply. I
Penncre1t11 Imperial18,000 BTU
3 speed •Ir conOJt1oner.
Reg. 299.95, Salo 269.95
Penncre1t® lmperlal 24,000 BTU
3 speed air conditioner.
Reg. 349.95, Sale 314.95
Reg. 199.95. Penncrest® Imperial
8,000 BTU air condJUoner. Features
Auto-Aire for wall~to-waU cooling.
3 speed fan and cooling PoWer. 10
position thermostat control, permanent
Scott foam filter.
Penncrest® Imperial 101000 BTU
3 •peed •Ir conditioner.
Reg. 229.95, Sale 206.95
Just !lip the handle and you
have ice cubes instantly, eas-
ily. Offer Includes two special
20.Cube tee Ejector trays, as
~u as handy SO-cube server! I =-~ """"' I _....,
l11tegrit11 and Depe11dabillt11
COSTA MESA
_.I 1 E. Se•.nteenth St.
646°1684 dally 9.9 Sor. 9·6
EL TORO
LaCJuno Hiiis Plaza
(n••t to S•v·On)
8J7.J8l0 dally 10·6 M/F 10.,
Radio Dispatched
TV & APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Frigidaire • RCA
Sylvania • Ma ytag
For Dependable
Friendly Service
c.11 548-3437
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
l\nnelf•
Av•;l.ble •t these st,,es: FASHION ISLAN D, Newport Center,
HUNTINGTON .C ENTER, Hunt;ngton Beach. U1e Pen ney• time paymen t plan
'
•
!! DAILY PILOT
J.ie•tft Netleu
l•llNA•l!I
GlttY JOl'ln 8•rn.ord. 102n ll't'Vlew ..,.,.~
a.1111 ANI Hllvlll•· ..... '· $u .... Jv.cl b¥
........ l't, Mt. ~ "'"' ltl't'moncl ....
NrllJ Dl"Olholrt. Tony ~ Jl•'t'"'°""'I 11 ..
ltf, Mllftk11 trlMNrenll. Mr. lflCI Mrt.
Jorln lemerd, S..1111 Monlc1; Mr. Ind
Mrs. T.O W1rt...,,thl1n, SOOJ!h o.itot1.
}ffvkM Witt bl hlkl tod1y, MOnd1•, 2
PM. hi! lrMdw1v CMpel, w!lh II,,..,
lo\ci>'L•"" lllCI lltv. Lul\dt!rlM officlJil·
;.,_, lnl..-!'Mt'I, P1cllfc: View ~ltl
1>1n:.. hi! lll'09dwt't' Mor""'"'' Olrfe-.tl:i'>.
CASI!
f rlldttkt I . C1st. ~11 0.lt (ll'Clt , CN'-
Mtw Dito al <ietlll, ... orll 1. Surw!-.d
llv Nl!t, Eleonor, o! in. nomo: .....,
'Dlx!ltv. Co•lt Mtt1; 'IW> grondU.l!Gttll.
')tN lct s, TuHIWr. April I. 1 PM, Ptd llc \r\fl (hH>ll, will! Or. Ch1rlt1 Oltr.,..
•ltld ottlcl1!lrie. E1110Mllm1nl, P1cl!lc
\'I..., M-111 Pork., Ptcl!lc View Mor·
l u1ry, Dlr1oor1.
CUHNIN&HAM
Ml"41 Cunnlnth1m 111 H~mlt!Ofl SI.,
c ... 1. ..... ..... S•"''''' ouldlnt I I WHI· Cliff Cn111tl Mortutrv. 6*-f!ll.
HEFPION
l 111 G. Hetf•on. Aff n. of SS·D (lltt
"'rtt<m. Lt9V"8 Hlll" Survlvf'<I 11'1' 11 ..
"'" ll<Ult ScP\Uvler, Nell•••~•: nl.ct,
Mrs. Arif"• Edtn. Servi"' will be Mid
'rut sdo•, 1 PM, Bell llrOlldWOV C~apel,
~Ith Rh'. Ed,..•rd Ct!d,..tll olllcl•ll,,.g,
Jnltrmenl. Ptcltlc VltW Mem<>rlt! P1r-.
Bell 8 r0&dw1v /,l<H·lutno, Ol"cror..
HE•51!'Y
WlilltrTI A. H•r•••· 11 .0 RllMOt Grt~
ldt, Ltiru"" Hiii•, O.lt of c'.i!•ln. Aorll
) SurvloM bV wl!•, M,,_ Rul~ Htn.tv.
Grlvt•lde ltrVktl, 10dl'f, M011<11v, 10
AM, F1im1v~ .o.lt...crlol P1rk. We"·
f.1111 Chtl>*I M<>rTu1no. M~-41U, OlrKIOtl.
HO.llG
J dw•rd 11 Hoo~. A~~ 6l. of 1113' O.k
ST , ~ou~I.-n V1lltv, Due of 0.1111, Aorll 1-Su...,i 1 b• wlle. Dorolllv; rT10!'1'10•,
t.011 H 1W<I "°"'· Edwtrd H0te Jr.
e "d ~ twa 1l1T1t1, Htltn Aooi .. ••I " 'IMY LO<! LOl\9! lwo 9fl"6-
Cllo ·-~ Prlv11e ltl"\ll(H wtrt l!ttd ti
~,.. hi M<M'lu1ry Chtptl, Ftmllv IUf •
•••'• mo•• wllhln• II> rT1alie rT1..-n0tl1! ton!rlt>uli(><1!, pltllt coftlr!IH!le lo l!lt
ArTltric•n Cone•• Soc;lf!v. Sml!!\s IN,t•
tuarv, Ol•K"'"·
KAllSTEl'IS
R udOlc~ A. Ka"t•"'· A9! ll, o! 1C1t
Cor~na Lene. Co•t• MMa. 0•!• o! dt1!h,
Acrll • Survived bY two •on1, llobert.
Co•!• M•••: Kennelh 1<'.ar1len1; naugl'o-
to• 1•-•. Ruin JollannS<ln, both of Iowa;
brQ •or1, ,::~ •nd F•tnli K&"ltns, IOWll w,· -Kar.ten!, ln~l•ne; 11s1tr . .t.nn
St• -•, O••l•r>d: II•• 11ranctchllnren tnd •n" ~,..1.11,.fldchlld. Servkes, Tue•n1v,
I PM, flell fl•o.llw•Y c~ .... 1. wlH1 lltev.
,S,.mH Si.In ofllcl1tlng_ 11111 l!lro.cl'WIV
... <>rlUlr"I', OlrK!Dfl,
• LAl'IO&:H
•e
OAILY l"ILOT Sitt! ""°"
Grove Convict
Faces New Trial
'
SANT A ANA -A man who
drew a long state prlson term
for the near fatal beating of
a Garden Grove bartender will
have to return to Orange
County lo face a new trial
on what are now rnurder
charges.
Gerald Roland Caron, 30,
of Garden Grove, was named
in an indictment by the
Orange County Grand Jury.
cessfu lly alleged !hat he
post-sentencing death of
Douglas Snyder, 37, justified
the return of Ca ron to lhe
courtroom on the capital
charges.
Deputy District Attorney \V.
tempted murder. It was sue·
cessfully alledged that he
savagely beat Snyder follow.
ing an argument over a
mutual woman acquaintance.
Snyder died last Jan . 5 after
spending more than s i x
months in the intensive care
unit of a county hospital. He
never regained consciousness.
conviction on charges of at·
FIRST IN LINE AT EYE BANK
Mission Vl•jo's Becky Rogers, 4
J. Moscle.v hopes to schedule
the arraignment of Caron
within the week .
Ambulance
Employe
In Cl1ino
SANTA ANA -A Costa
Mesa ambulance s er vi c e
employe captured with polire
helicopter aid after an attack
on a woman 4'h months ago Coto de Caza Benefit
Caron was sentenced to two
and one half years to 20 years
in state prison following his
To Aid New Eye Bank
has pleaded guilty to charges Blood Donors of assault with a deadly weapon. Untler·,!!o Test Kidnaping charges against
L > Robert J. Cote. 24, of 2928
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
or "'-o.11, Pliet 111tt
Santa Ana -Becky Rogers,
4, of Mission Viejo, wiU
become the first patient to
benefit from Orange County's
new eye bank.
the efforts of Dr. Anderson SANTA ANA _ Orange Peppertree Lane, we re
and the Santa Ana Host Lions County blood donors will now dismissed by Orange County
Club. Schroeder said it cur-undergo tests for hepatitis Superior Court Judge Howard
rently consists o! records of before their blood is placed Cameron when Cote entered
county people who have in county hospitals by the Red his plea.
donated their eyes for use cr~s. , The woman, identified him
after their deaths. The new precaution is being as the man who allegedly fore.
YOU WORK LESS
Keeps things cleaner without effort, ellmi·
nates bath tub rings .
YOU SA VE MONEY
Soap and clothing last longer.
Smoother,
Easler Shaves
FttlFrtlla ...a ...
Di1ht1
Sputl•
Ask About Sean Convenient Credit Plans
Complete Installation Available! Just Ask!
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, 3333 BRISTOL ST.
BUENA PARK, Bl SO LA PALMA AVE.
SANTA ANA, 1716 SOUTH MAIN ST.
Ph. 540.JJJJ
Ph. 828-4400
Ph. 547.3371
l<Jv11t L1ngen. ~ n, (If 1005 Dtl1wore.
HuftllM!on Beet~ Dalt °' dtllh, .t.prll
' Survived ~v hu1b~nd. Wllllun. S1rv·
let! 1>tnd•nv IT SrTllll>• M0tlu1ry,
Dr. Thomas Anderson, chief
of Opthalmology at Santa Ana
Community Hospital. said he
will transplant a cornea for
Becky's diseased eye as soon
as one is available through
the bank which is set up at
the hOllpital.
"But more than being a taken on a nation-wide scale ed her into his car Dec. 11,
record receptacle we will be because of an increase in slugged her inflicting a broken
able to work with the other hepatitis cases resulting from jaw, then kicked her out at
dozen eye banks nationwide blood transfusions, according Harbor Boulevard and Baker
in reciprocating programs, in -~t~o~th~e:__IR~e:_<d~C~ro~s~s~. -----~S~tr~•:•':· ________ _.'.:===================================-whictt y,·e can exchange in-
'LAlltltAl!'.11
Sl•v•n M. Larrat>et. Atl 711 dltd In
Vl•lntrTI Maren 7£. R.,ldenl cf 13'1
S<:on R.-.:l, 1rvln•. Suf'\11~..r llv "'°'"" •~~ 1teo!1!'l'ler. Mr. tnd Mri. G•rm1n
Wti'!e; t1r~tr, Or,..,1n G. L1rr1b1t, L1-
gun1 ftt•cti; 1IJ11•. Ktlly L1rr1-ol
'"" ~omit b•ot"""' Jtfl-.v Ltrro~"" L~gunt Beach; M1rt< L1rr11Ht, cl rnt
"'..,"· Strvlce1, Wed~n1v, Aorll 1, 1
PM. P1<ifl< V•ew C~ocel. ln!ormeM,
P11dllc Vltl' M~...crl&I Pt•~. P•cllk
View MOr!uorv, OlroC~fl.
M.llLOOHAOO
Ale!•"drl M1ldon1no. !nle"I GtuthTl!i'
~r Mt. tnd Mro. J.urtllo M1tcion.ac.
01te "' "''"'· ...... n ( "llO $\llVIVW bv lhrft brOlhtro. LOUii, Frlftk •nd Ptotl
lls!ert. Corid&, Ann Mtrlt Ind Ttroll.
Gr&vr ld~ $trvlc.,, Tund•v, 11 .llM,
Good ~·-~l'lfrd CtrTleltr'I'. SrT1!11\1 Morlu·
.,,,., 0 '-·1~··
OLIPHAHT
J~mt~ , .. 1. 9091 Gt11Yl~Urt Or ..
l-1un!in· llNC!I. Oelt Pl Ullh. "~•It
] Surv • bv dl"9Mtr "'" ..,,,.lft·l•w.
Mr. '"° 1,\rl, Cn1rlts ~tltv, Huntlng!on
8e1cll; 91~'"'d1uth!tr, Wtndv """ s-fe y; two 1l1ter1 tM Two brvthorl. P•I-
"''" .~__,,,,._ Wtl't l!tld IQday, Mondav,
T:!O PM, Pacl l!c VI"' Memorlll Ptrll;,
.,l!'l'I lt~v. llruct Kurrlt cfllclttlnt. Wtll•
cliff Cht<>tl Mortuaf'\I. '"'""'"'' Olrec!<>r1.
11;11.111> G...,·~• w 11111,.., llood. A~t 61, ot '1'1
C11··,1y Ot. Mun1lntlon lltt(h, DI .. Pl
nealh, Aor\! ]. Survlvod l>v wlle, Ttnie;
<'Vth!tr, Oo!orn Smith, Hun!lrttton
Beach; brolhtr, FrtM L. lltHd, Hunllr>t-
tlln P1rk1 1ll!tr, Ora L. Gl111, lltnt<I•:
1'><.tr ,.-"dcnlldrtfl, Membu of 1Ctw1nl1,
YMCA, $hrlnt. M11onlc todtt. W11Ton1l
Smooll> Done..-•. Sef\ll(fl, W9dn1..i1v,
' PM, SrTllffi~ c111 ... 1. '""'"'""'· Peclllc Vl..w MtmoriBl P1rk. SrT1l!l\1 Mor!uttY,
OlrKIDtl.
Because she will be the first
to use the new servl~. Becky,
a lively litUe girl with a mop
of blonde hair, has been
chosen poster girl for the up-
coming horse show ·which is
being held to raise money for
the eye bank.
The horse show will be held
May 20-23 at Coto deCaza in
Trabuco Canyon. Jt will be
a Class A Open and Class
A Jun ior show sanctioned by
the Pacific Coast Hunter,
Jumper and Stock Horse
Association.
H o s p i ta I administrator
Wayne ·Schroeder said he
hope! the benefit will raise
$1 million for the hc>!pilal's
eye bank.
Anderson said the litlle girl
needs to have a cornea
transplant. Previously, tissues
for these transplants were ob-
tained through the L e s
Angeles eye bank.
He said by having an eye
bank in Orange County, physi-
cians will be able to oblain
formation, donors and dona-
tions," be explained.
The eye bank will be housed
at Santa Ana Community
Hospital. The hospital is get·
ting new equipment for the
dellcate transplant surgery.
Schroeder said an eye bank
information center will be set
up at Coto deCaia during the
horse show.
The show is being jointly
sponsored by the hospital and
Coto de Caza. The honorary
committee for the benefit in·
eludes actors James Drury
of "The Virginian" and
William Shatner of "Star
Trek.
Honorary co-chairmen are
actors Jim Arness and John
Wayne.
ltfEVES I bl Merv•reT M. 11tttve1. 1!07 M1in 51, the tissues with ess trou e
Hun1lng1on Be1ch. 01111 of dt11h, Aor11 and without a wait of four ~ Su,.,.l•ed bv hu1boncl, Rl<htrd L. R~.,.1 two •111.... M1rl1 C•PD••'o" to six weeks.
efl<I Jennv. P1lv&1e oe••lcn will be ~11d 1 _ _".~Th~e~O~r~a~nJg~e!Co~u~n~t~y~e~y~e~b~Rin;kL_~~~~~~~~~~-1 •' Smith• Mortuo•v. l'ubtl< "1111•flon, has been organ1·zed through Tu~""1Y, 11 loloon To S PM, SrTll!ht Chlo·
t i. Smllhi Mot!uerv, Ol•K!Otl.
lltUNHf:LLS
Margart! V. Runntlll. Ag• "· ol i10 E. lltOlldWllV. Coll• Mttt. 0•!• cf detJh,
Mt rC"lo JI. survl•td by nlt <I, Mrs. Mtud
E W•llh, (hlcivo. PtlY•re 1trvlc11
'""re ti1tn ii Smilh1 Mortu1rv.
SAXE
Will••m s •••. Av• 71. of 1116 At•Cll.
Hun11nglb<I Buch. Dalt cf <lt•lh, llorll
1, Survived bV wilt, !Olly; lwo Jl1Ttr1,
511•• ~••• ond B!•!~• Cobrin; two ne·
phews, De. Jameo Dotlrln and Or, Sa•e
Oot>rln, bD!~ ot Lo• .111';el••· Ser•l<U•
TutldeY, 1 PM. SrTl\Tn• C~~<>el ln!t«
"""'· Good Sntonera Comt1orv. 5..,nns
~ortu•rv, Olrt'10•1
STRANG
M••I• 01;y, ~lr~nq. Aee IO, o! 9317
Vlller(IO Or. HuM•nglon llottn. Dalt of
Gell!~ ,Aor\I J S"rvlvo:<! bv !WO d&uGh·
'"''• Julttn• Slr~n~. Hun!lnvlo" l!it~thl
J,nntne Ane~ln, Pillm Ot1tn. '''"""' W~nnd•V. 11 AM. Bell Bro•dWtY Ch•o-
el, wl!h JI••· Loren ~llt-lnt•r olllclof.
lnG. 11111 Bro.!d,.~Y Motlu•no, Olrtt!Ofl,
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF l\-10RTUARY
4%1 E. 171h SI., r.asta l\-tesa
6lH883 • BALTZ l\10RTIJARIES
Corona de! l'tlar 613-9450
Costa f.1esa 6-t&-2424 • BELL BROADWAY
l\tORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cost• r.tesa
LI 3-3433 • rt1cCOR~f1CK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
494-MlS • PAClFJC VIEW
f.1El\-f0RIAL PARK
Cemetery l\lortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific Vltw Drivt
Nel\'JXlrl Beach, Californl•
&4t.2700 • PEEK rA!'ttlL\'
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
\Vestmlnsttr 113-3SU • SMITH'S l\IORTUARY
IZ'1 !'thin St.
5SM53t
Hu.ntlngton Beach
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Saturdays in
The DAILY PILOT
m
Money? APRIL
n0
Watt like to help.
This year, pay all your taxes with a loan lrom
Morri1 Plan. Then 1chedule payments to lit
your budget.
~On approval, you can borrow from $100 to
$5,000 or more for taxes, bill consolidation or
any good reason. And you 'll get our Money-
'3ack Guarantee (if you find you can do better,
return the money within 5 days at no cost to
you).
Talk to the friendly people al Morris Plan about
money for taxes or any worthwhlle purpo1e
We'd like to help. ·
Morris Plan
673-3700
Newport Bt1ch -3700 Newport BoultYlrd
WHERE DOES IT ALL GO?
• • • ON SEARS SHELVING, OF COURSE
~\\I·'. 1111 1\1lju ... 1nl1l1• St""1 \1 rdilf'rtancau ShcJ, in~
lu 1l1•1•uri.lur t<ulur•; 1li•lrt•.~1•1I "11!11111, n10~" 1t~r11 or 0111i11ul" ro.,I ""
~111rdy ,.t(:('I ·h~'lv1••. 1.'rum .. ,I "ith l1l11rk end !!troll~ a11J J>o•I-. "'h•·I·
',., a1lju,1 •1' I I /2·in. inlel'l'•l!'I.
ftr~ul•r •2:J.1)9 6-Shtlf llflll, 36 J; 60 x 10, •••••••• 19.88
fl,.ri:ular ' 18.99 f>...Shrll Curio, 18 x bO 1 10 •• ,,, ••• 16.88
f'.1 1 \Hf; E l'I' ~'" ~l'Af"< Re\'Ql,.i111; Clinrgt'
-I Sears I
"'"·-""'°~ ••P~(>.
•UINA l'l•'l
Col.HOOi PA•lt
COVINA ,
n '"""' •UJolDAU
ltr~ul1r l~.99
1388
-l·Sh,11 U"it
36x36xl0
MOUYWOOla
IWQUWOOD
lONO If.II( ..
She, Nl9h11 Mo11. '"•" S•"· •~30 A.M. te f iJO ,.M., ,_., .. , 1 2 Nooll t• I l.M,
.. J PrictstlltttlveApril7thniAprilll
"'lrPI "helve" Prr M:I "lr,111J[, lhey cuultl hol1I Tohy, lh1• "'I, H1·rnitr1l .,.
111 Caci lhcy hold up lo :JOO pounJs. Shf'iil'~ adju~t lJI I 1/2-inch intcr-
,,111~. Uecoralor in~l'rl~ in posls re¥ene from hlnrk to walnut color •
Uookend rods with 10-in. il eep unils.
Rq;11l1r •21.99 4--11. x 4-11. x IG-in •••••• 17.88
Rqul•r "16.99 6-11. x :J.11. x 12·i"·••••·l3.88
Rqul•I' 031.99 6-fr. s 6-11. x 12-i11 ••••• 24.88
Resul1r 021.99 6-lt. s 3-ft. s 18-ln •••••• 18.88
Rl!IUl•r '39.99 6-fl. x 6-ft. x 18-ia .•••• 33.88
0lTM'1< 6 llOlO
O•INOI
ltAIJ.tiNA
PICO
f'OlllONA
IAHfA Al't.t.
SANTA,, SPlllNGI
l.t.Hfa lllOt«llCA
sOVTM coatr !'I.AU
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98s
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T .. OUJINI 0..\D
fOQANU
YAU.IT
"••1110Hr
Monday, April 5, 1971 DAILY PILOT 11
QUEENIE By Phil ln terlandt
"You bonged?"
W estmorela11d Bristles
Over Viet Accu sations
LUBBOCK, Tex. !UPI) -
Gen. William C, \Vestmoreland
.$!lid it is absurd to accuse
him of sharil)g the guilt for
LL William Calley's conduct
.at My Lai.
(Japanese) Geo. Yamashita."
Yamashita was tried, con-
victed and hanged for war
crimes his troops committed
during World W81 II although
he claimed to have no
knowledge of those crimes .
Stark, Grim Chinese Life
Painted--No l(issing Ever
TOKYO (UPl) -Cars, k.is-are very expensive," Nagata
slng and cosmetics are selda1n said. "Tbe UIUal lncome of a Pek-sten in Peking, says a tng worker, whose wife al$O
Japanese member of parlia-work!, is 100.150 t1tlneae won
ment jwt back from Com· (Hl.50 to ~.50).
munist China. R e g a r d I n g their ex-
"Tbere are no people who penditures, rent for an apart-
appear to be lovers walking ment will be $1.80 to $2.76.
in the streets," writes Ryolcbi The electricity and water bills
Nagata, a cons er vat iv e together will be about $1.S8.
member of Japan's lower The food expenditures, depen·
house, who spent 20 days in ding on the size of the family,
Red China during recent Sino-will be '13.90-$22.10.
Japanese trade talks. Clothing and miscellaneous
"Couples who "'alk holding expenditures also come to
hands or with th~ir shoulders about $13.90-$22.10. The re·
touching, as they do in Japan , mainder o! the income
are absolutely unseen. bel ween $8.35 -$1 l . l 0
represents savings. "Once in a park I thought .. As one can see from such
from judging by their general
appearance or age."
Nagata aald Chinese watch
televlslon in groups, and there
apparently are no individually
owned receivers.
"Principal foods and cotton
all are on the ration system,"
he reported. "However, at
restaurant.s in the towns you
can get a dish with an ap-
vegetables and a large bow!
of rice for 3.9 cents. If you
take it home and eat ll, the
price is even cheaper." j
Bus Tours
Scl1eduled 1 saw one unusual couple sit-a household budge!, food and
ting together. But when I ex-lodging are very cheap,"
pressly webt closer for a look, Nagata w rt t es. ''Clothing,
they were sitting SO cen-which still i.s in short supply, A free blLS tour of the Hun-
timeters (two feel) apart -is comparativeJv hi"h."
l I ly a I a n
'
• l I. z 1· n g / &>• tington Beach park system Cl cer an Nagata said soldiers of the
distance." Chinese armed forces can be offered to the public Saturday
Nagata's observations on distinguished from the general morning.
China. accompanied by 14 population by their green The tour begins at 9 a.m.
photographs taken in Peking uniforms. There are no in-at the Recreation Center, 17th
and its environs. appear in signia of rank. and Orange streets. Hostll are
an issue of the Japanese pie-"'They all ""'ear identical red Recreation and Parks Director
lure magazine ?-.1 a i n i c h i collar badges," Nagata said. Development Coordinator Tom
Graphic. "But as to who are the com-Severns.
He said men and women manders and who are the A no-host breakfast will be
dress almost alike in blue or enlisted men , you cannot tell. offered at 8 a.m. at the
grey civilian clothing, Both Even when v.·e v.·ent to see Sheraton Beah lnn, preceding
sexes wear trousers, with the 196th division at Yonson the tour.
jack~ts that button closely at village jn the suburbs of Pek· Reservations for both
the neck. ing, there was no way of breakfast and tour may be
"In the towns you don't see distinguis hing the d Iv I s Ion made by calling the Recn~a·
any "'omen with cosmetics commander and his staff from tion Office, 536-2586, no later
$3,928.50 Collected in YMCA Drive
Members or the Fountain
Valley \'MCA have colll!cte
$.l,928.50 In austalning
me.rnbtrship donations to keep
their programs opera ti D g
tiiroughout 1971.
T h e donations reprt?sent
nearly a $1 ,500 increase over
last year's colle<:Uona.
The Fountain Valley YMCA
has also been named Jin
honorable menUon winner by
the inle:""atlonal organllaUon
for Its youth work ln 1-.1970
when the Indian guide, Indian
1nalden and Gra-Y pro&z'lml
were initiated in the crtf.
PRESENTING
GRANTS
BRADFORD
HOUSE
BONANZA
EVERY TUESDAY -ALL DAY
2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1
TURKEY DINNER
COMPLETE WITH ROAST TOM TURKEY, CELERY DRESSING, GIBLET GRAVY,
MASHED POTATOES, BUTIEREO VEGETABLE, HOT ROLL ANO BUTTER.
REGULAR $1.29 EACH
GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST AND ADAMS -HUNTINGTON IEACH
Open Dally
Mon. thru S~t.
9:30 1.m. to t p.m.
Surtd1y lD 1.m. to 6 p.m. "No, 1 fetl oo guilt -not
in the least," the U.S. Army
Chief of Slaff and former field
general in South Vietnam said
at a news conference in Lub-
bock. The general was in West
Texas to dedicate a n
agricultural-science laboratory
at Lubbock Christian College.
"Never in all history have
we impose d such constraint
over our troops and our fire
power and given such at-
tention to avoidlng civilian
casualties as in Vietnam,"
Westmoreland said.
on,'' Nagat_a said. "All women ~l~he:.....'.c~om~m'.".on~s~ol!<ld~;e::rs::_. _:•~s~;d~e~lh~a~ni_W~ed~n::es".'d~•Yf'.:·----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ wear ordmary p e op I es 1-
clothing, and cut their hair
about the same way. It is
hard even to tell how old
they are."
"It is an absurd allegatioo,"
he said. "You cannot compare
my role and the conduct role
In Vietnam with that (Jf
The four-star general ad·
mltted civilians have been
killed, and snid thousands
were killed by the enemy also.
"'And , of course \\'e ha\·e
had some atrocities," he said.
"Even so, they say most
of the marriages are love
marriages. But if you ask how
this Jove develops, they tell
you they look for a right think-
ing girl in the factories or
peoples communes." (Advtt11Hmtnll
Artificial Teeth Never
Felt So Natural Before
Nagata said private cars are
seldom seen in Peking. He
published a photograph of
Peking Peoples Square taken
during the 8 a.m. rush hour
on a v.·eekday. Only buses and
bicycles were visible.
Now ••• Plastic Cream Discovery
Revolutionizes Denture Wearlnc
For tM ant time, 1icienee onen a ... •"4 _, t-fn1obl1. You rn11r
11l1stic aum that hold1 dm1ureii bite harder. cht" bt:tW, eat 111or1 ••they've otvt:r heal hdd before-naturally.
Nagata sald that '"the first
goal of every employed person
ls to get a bicycle." The
Japanese politician said that
lonn1an tlutic membrane th•t ll•lpr flXODEN1' la1t1 for houn. Reei1r..
M/4 :JtlVT ilmlv111le1111 noturo//u-mo11ture. Dcnturea that 6t att ti·
'""'' f1f ~ ~·-sentu1l to health. Stt your dentitt
the price of a Chinese bicycle
is about $50 -four or five
months savings for a n
I t"1 a revolutionary di1COYer1 reruJatlJ. Get eu1·to-U9t F1J.ODSNT
called F1100&rn-for dally home Denture Adhc11T1 Cream at all ordinary Peking family.
"As for prices, th e lllt. (U.S. Patent 13.003,988) dnJc c:ount.en.
FIXOD&Nt hold.I derltwu firmer necessary articles of life are
very cheap and the luxuries
•
•
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•
•
Want to do your bit
for conse ion?
One way is to check outthe use of energyrigtit inyourown home. 4'
Energy is essential to the
economy and to the environment.
Withont it nearly ever,ything in
your home would stop, including
cooking, heating, cooling,
television viewing and your
water supply,
Outaide, most factories would
shutdown.
From time to time other sectiolllJ
of the nation have faced a
shortage of enera-electr!city
and fuels such as oil, coal and
natural gas.
So far, there has been no shortage
of electricity here and no short-
age of fuels for your residential
requirements. But even so, why
use more energy than you really
need-whatever the type?
By not wasting energy you'll be
helping conserve our country's
natural resources, which in turn
contributes to the protection of
the environment.
Here are a few 1111ggestlona to
comlder:
0 Check your home's insulation.
You could be using up to 50 % more
energy than necessary to heat or cool
your home. You'll be dollars ahead in
th e long run with proper insulation •
Incidentally, most homes with electric
heat are already insulated.
0 For the same reason, install
weather stripping on doors and
windows.
0 Keep your dam per in your
firepla'" closed when not in use.
0 When the weath er gets very hot
or cold, draw your drapes and
curtains. This will help reduce the
demands on your heating or air-
conditioning systems.
O If you leave the heat on while
you sleep, set your thermostat
at 6v0 • Special thermostats are now
available to do this automatically.
The lower you set your thermostat,
night or day, the more energy you
will save.
D If you happen to have eleetric
heating. you probably have separate
thermostata for individual rooms.
If so, you can tum them down
in rooms not in use.
D Don't use your oven to heat your
apartment or home.
D Turn off lights when not in use.
That seems obvious, but some people
believe it costa more to turn lights ·
off and on. Untrue. (An exception i.!I
fluorescent lights. Turn them off onJ.1
ii you won't be using them within
30 minutes.)
D In summertime, set your ail'-
condition.ing thermostat as high 1111
you can without beinguncomfortabl&
The greater the difference between
the indoor and outdoor temperature,
the mo re it costa you.
D To keep your house cooler, shada
window areas from direct sunlight.·
Use awnings or plants that shield
\Vindows.
O To cut cooling costs, install an
exhaust fan in your attic. It can
reduce heat transmitted through
your ceiling.
O Check the temperature setting on
your water heater. Controls are set
too high in many homes. And fix
leaking faucets to save water and
energy.
D Operate your dishwasher only
with a full load. Same holds true fol'
your washer and dryer.
E E
• JI DAILY '!LOT Monda1, A~ll S, 1~71
Bo1nania Losing Drive for lndependen~e
VIENNA (UPI) -After
fll'nt years. Rcmania 'a
dramatk drive f or in-
dependence from Russian con-
lrol Is coming lo an end.
This is the opinion of
analysts, businessmen and
dlplomall -both Communist
and Western -whoM: job it
is to watch the fei sty Jillie
Balkan nation
port of the Arabs. And it Ht wvs right. By early last in rustory ravaged the coun· neHI. fortign visitors there brought
has begun rebuffing American year, tht Romanian economy try. China stnt S20 million Whtie he was fhrlmg with back tales of partnls urging
offers of friendship. was groaning. Cea usescu had and America sent SID million. the West, Ceausescu kept the their children to defect.
-Ecooomic: after year1 ef balking, it is cooperating accepted loans from the West This helped, but the Hoods Soviets al bay by running one When riots broke out Jn
with the East European Co m· In the belief that West.em aid cost Romania more than SI of the lightest. hard-line Com-Poland in Dec em be r ,
mon Markel , Comecon. It has would moderni2.e his economy billion and Ibey needed big mun1sl dictatorships in the Ceausescu quickly cul his own
Joined the c 0 me c 0 n in· quickly enough to enable him money. There was only one world al hon1e . Al the same food prices, called for more
vestment bank, increased its Lo produce world-clasa goods country likely to send ll itnd time, he short-changed the consumer goads and
trade with the East, concluded and pay off the loans. When that country -Russia -chip-domestic market by using all · revamped h.is trade uniom,
joint agreements on iron and the loans atarted le come due, ped in a token $100,000. the best consumer goods and to forestall similar violence
steel, cheniicals and ship-Romanian Industry still lagged The affair proved that a much of Romania's food for at home. Analysts here believe
building with Russia and other far beind the Weal and there country like Romania -with export, to pay his bills in that he reallzed that he might
Comecon nitlions , and has wa1 loo little money to pay a Communist government and the West. ' someday need So v I et in-
ordered its businessmen and the bills. a long border with Russia -This built up a head of tervenlion -military or
Tormenting Rectal Itch
,)f Hemorrhoidal Tissues
Promptly Relieved
In many cues Preparation H dreda of patientl ebowed tbi5
giveaprompt,temporaryrelief to be true in many C&MI. In
from such pain ~ itching fact, many doctor1, them·
and actually helpe ahrink &elves, we Pr~parotion ll'8 ot
swelling of hemorrboidal tis-recommend it !or their t.m..
aue111 caused by inflammation. iliea. Preparation H ointment
Tmta by doctora on bun· or suppositories. Romania's slow shde back
toward Communist co-
(lperatlon -visible on nearly
every front of life there -
comes at a time when the
United States is pressing an
eeonomic and diplomatic of-
fensive in Bucharest. Presi-
dent Nixon said roc"tntly he
will ask Congress f o r
guaranlteS of private U.S. in-
vestment in Romania. The
U.S. campaign may have
come too late.
scie ntists to resume work with Then, in the late spring of can never really count on the d is s a tis fact inn within otherwise -to save his own
Soviet counterparts. -.'.:"~"'·....'.'.R~om'.'.a~n'.'.l''.'_''.'_s_:w~oc~st_'.:noods~:__'':'.'"'.'.'_:•'.'.l_the~_:w~o'.'.''.'.ld'.._'.'.in'....'.'.ti:".m~e-o~l-.'.'.Ro'.'.m'.'.'.".an"'i-"-a,:.._'.lo'.'..__:t.'.'.he'.__!po~in'.'.t__".lh~a:_t _'.''.'!'g~i'."m':':_· _______ !::====================
Reasons for Romania's rap.
proachmenl with Russia are
not certain. But lhe analysts
gay they Include the failure
of her atlempl to build a
Weslern-st yle economy, her
realization that she needs
Moscow and growing unrest
at home.
Among a mass or evidence,
these signs stand out :
-Military : Romania has
begun cooperation with the
Warsaw Pacl, the Comm unist
NATO, taking part in pact
exercises and sending its top
0Hicer1 to pact meetings.
-Diplomatic: Romania has
1 igne d long -dela ye d
.. lriendship treaties"' w it h
tither Communist nations and
tnned down il!! indepeodenl
fore1gn policy . Although ii is
the only Warsaw Pact nation
that still recognizes Israel. it
has swung over to strong sup-
3 Studen ts
Win E ss a y
Contest
All this is a triumph for
Soviet policy and patien~. and
a blow for Romania's presi·
dent and Communist Party
leader, Nicolae Ceausescu.
Ce ausescu's predecessor,
G he or g ht Gheoghiu·Dej,
started the campaign back in
1963 by refusing to go along
with Comecon plans to leave
Romania as an un -
derdeveloped Communist-
block breadbasket.
It continued with a vigorous
trade policy wilh the West,
the receipt of Western grants
and l'rcdits. the reC<lgnition
of \.\1es t Germ<iny. the refusal
to break relations with Israel.
noisy insistence • n "in-
dependence and n o n · i n·
terference in internal affairs
or other nations." cour ageous
opposition to the Warsaw
Pact's invasion of
Czechoslovak 1a and
strengtbened ties with the
Communist v.·orld"s two other
major heretics -China and
Yugoslavia.
The campaign culminated in
the summer of 1969 with the
visit to Bucharest by Presi-
den t Nixon.
The Russians applied a mild
economic squeeze, but
basically bided their llme ,
believing events would bring
the Romanians around.
"We could crush them ." a
Soviet strategist said private·
Jy, "but we will wait. The
Romanians can"\ make iL
alone." -------
Three Newport Be a c hlr-PO-WllfUl ___ Pl_UNG __ ll_QWS __ _
!'iludents have been selected
as wi.iners in their categories CLOGGED TOILETS
In the Americanism ES!ay l
contest !!ponsored by the
American Legion Aux iliary for
Newport Beach Post 291.
Janel Broxon of Newport
Heights School took first plact
for grades 4-6. Serond was
Linda Ryan of Mariners/
Sehool and third went to
Brya n Bttz of Harbor View
School.
In the category for grades
7-9. A. C. Kawamura of
Newport Harbor High School
took first plitce. second was
Gary Gick of Horace Ensign IMMl AGAIN th .. Wdi r..1m.
Middlr School and third was ........, ,_, .. u ....... ~
!.i5' F.11 .. man also ol "'""" TOILAFLIX•
En~ign. Toll~ ~ Pl The winner nf the high •• ~ unger
!lchool division w::is Mary UnHlre "tdinary pluncen. 10i1alle1 doe<! =t permit comprencd air "' H;:ime1 rtf Corona del Mar High meuy water to •PL••h t.:1< or eoc•pc.
School. Second place was won With lbilalle1 th~ full prcuure ,,._.,
b" Ray A!bred of the same throuch the c1occin1. m••• a nd .T 1with.ea it down.
'Choo!. • IUCTION~IM ITO" U'U.114-•&CK The winninJt studen!.S were • clNT£111 n1£L,., CAN.,. 1J1.10 AJtouNo honored by the Po!iit al a • TAl"(Jt£o r .. tl a1•c1 A111-r1Gl4T nr
banQuet March 2~. They cw."'-G9ftulne 'toll•l"'
received ca!iih award~ and •2•• AT MAIOWAll tTOIH titations frQm the Auxiliary. ,_ _________ ;..._j
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
Call
to get a head start on spring.
Spring is ou r busy season
so take a minute to call an d
reserve your favorite
hairdresser. You'll get the
same loving attention you're
used to all year tong.
)
l\nne'fl bduty N lon
MUMTllrlOTOM lt:•CM "l"#l"OIT lt:•(M
M""l<"lllon (..-!•• ~111>1&n ltl~ntl
1"'11 •••• l'tt·17/t '""' 1100.-, , •• lllJ
Ort11t1 "Tiit (!ly" ,JI . ...,
•
)
27 OFFICES STATEWIDE
lmPERIAL SA\1111GB
OF NEWPORT·PASADENA
Executive Office:
3366 Via lido, Newport Beach
(7141673-3130
Main Office:
61 South Lake Avenue, Pasadena
(2131795-8441
Corona del Mar Office:
550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach
(714) 644-1461
3870 East foothill Boulevard, Pasadena
1213) 795.0447
134 North Glendora Avenue, Glendora
12131 335-4043
Woodland Hills Office:
19900 Ventura Blvd., Woodla nd Hills, Calif.
(2131346-3920
1mPERIAL SAVlnGB
OF THE SOUTH
Main Office:
8347 la Mesa Blvd., la Mesa, Cal if.
(7141463-4441
ExeCtJtive Office:
2320 Fttth AYO., San Diego, Cali!.
(7141234-7151
Chula Vista Office:
398 "H" Street, Chula Vista, Calif.
(7141420-5000
El Cajon Office:
234 Magnolia Ave., North, El Cajon, Carif.
(7141442-8811
Lemon Grove Office:
7770 Broadway, lemon Grove, Calif.
(714) 463-8871
National City Office:
305 E. 8th St. National City, Calif.
(7141477-311 1
San Diego Office:
5508 Balboa Avenue, San Diego, Calif.
(71412784060
Escondido Offir.:t!
1500 E. Valley Pkwy., Escoodido, Calif.
(714) 746-8990
la Jolla Office:
7877 Ivanhoe Ave., la Jolla, Calif.
(714) 459-4275
Pacific Beach Office:
1001 Gamet St., San D~go, Calif.
(714) 481.1011
llTdlERlllL 8AlllllOB
OF SANTA BARBARA
Main Office:
3868 State Stree~ Santa Barbara, tanf.
18051 687-1311
Ojai Office:
11 O South Ventura SI., Ojai, Calif.
(8051 646-5523
Montecito Office:
1482 E. Valley Rd, Santa Barbara, Cant.
1805) 969-3207
llTIPEAIAL BA\llnGB
OF THE NORTH
Main OHice:
90 Santa Rosa Ave., Santa Rosa, Calif.
1707) 546-0544
Santa Rosa Branch Office:
715 Hahmann Orlve, Santa Rosa, Cartf. aon 546-0544
Apple Blossom Office,
119 N. Main St., Sebastapol, c.rrt. aon 823-7411
Napa Office:
3300 Jellerson Stree~ Napa, Calif. oon 255-3310
Pla2a Office:
127 No.th McOowen SM!, Petalum, C.111. aon 763-6821
llTIPERIAL llA\/lllGB
Br'awley Office:
122 Main Street. Brawley, Cal if.
t7141 344-4510 •
Calexico Office:
325 Imperial Avenue. Calexico, Calif.
17141357·1126
El Centro Office-:
5th & State Streets, D Centro, CalU.
(7141 352-7210
WHOL LY OWNED SU BSIDIAR IES OF $1.5 BILLION
IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA Hftm
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.,
lake 11 ?icture &ith taster 'Bunny
All thi s week, Ea ster Bunny will be
rn our Carouse l Court to vi sit with
the children. Yo u ca n h av e your
picture taken with him outside his
own littl e hou se. In sid e hi s house,
there'll be live little bunni es and
chickies. Startin g Wedn esday April
7, i:elevi sion's Mr. Magic Man will
prese nt four shows daily. See a 6-ft
bunny make animal s appear and
disapp ear, a gi rl divided into three
parts and Houdini's famou s trunk
es cape! Show times will be at 2, 3,
4 and 7 p.m. See Yol.!.
•
"
Monday, Aptd S, 1971
\
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DAILY PILOT J:J
South Coast ?tua
"THE GRANDEST MALL OF ALL•
fUlfSTOLATSAN DTtGOFUE'WAY.COSTA Mr~~
OYll .. Fiii STOIU A•D SllYKU .• ..A le C•N e AIMrt'1 Ho1itry • AlrH'1• Ayco S.ti"I' & Lt•• •ltrt•'s Till f11ariio•1 • ltrt1troM'1 lt~y Nows oC.N. 11.ktr o lo1k of A1Rtric1 • l1rrJci•i <1•4it1 e lotter lor._,1
o C1•ot'1 Cllll•fft't Slloes o C1111H Sltffs • C1,..t'1 o <••ffitt S,orh C••ltr o Cltti1l•'1 o Chtf Y •'Chic Acc111ori11 • Cllrls' f11~it•1 • Cllw1'1 Stotio•try o Crocll:tr Cltl11n1 tletlet11I hak e Crtwaia9 Gltry S.I• •
Dec:MWter UH• flt J1ck'1 C1ffet 5e.., • f11l•'1 Sltett • fl•a'1 fe1•IH hetl.-e •first Wttter'I ... Ir:• ft1 5"" (Htt Pl111 Tlt11tn • Tltt Sill ... llftt & C1a•l11 e IPt'1 '• G•try L... Gtof'lt Mu""y e Gol••n llttdlt e
SrMla't • GIHlts.hntttt Shon• Htll"'ark lt1ti .. 1n e M1ni1 I Freak• l,.C. • M1n11t MHn C1ftttrl1 • Mlckery ''""' • Ht•tt tf f1ilrlc1 •111111 tf Nl11 .iH1111 of T1ll1rl11•N11111f Terrye H1WM!lt • l• .. 1SM111 ,..,..., .., '""It 1 Je..,lt MQ•l11 Jeyct S .... Tl'M1JIH1y's·1W.111 llclttl1 o,te.ttrl1t1 .. pl11't Dtllcltt11M I ltttftnntt •hit Witt 11•1•1J1wtltr11 l1111 lr111t 1 Lt Pttit 1 lt St1,ct11 lt1t11r••f t LtM't Slttt1
1Ullhie'1 • lhNllttrt l1trltl" •Mllrftff f1r.rft11t •Mlly C1. t Ml11 Newell • Ott TIM .. y,.q1 1 Pict Sttttr 1 P1clfic k•lt111 & L1111 t Pickwick l11k1h111 t T .. t Pr111 Sll111 t 111 of 11•11 1 l1f l1t1r11tl111I 1 l i•l1r1
l11t11r11t • 111111 lt11t1 W•rl• • l11t11'1l1111111S1•ria11S11r11 Sl111r •S..tlt (Htf Dn111 t S.111t M1•111 TIM• McAa t Tie lick t Tl1•1r 111 • Tty 'W1rl• t U•tff't Htmt f1,..l11t l.,1 o U.S. J11tl1a1I ... rr • Wollit~·· M .. i< City I W1bll1I•'• , •••• .,.I Tito Wot SHI I Wl11tH•'• c ..... I Wlln•'• ..... n., I F.W ...... .,,~I,_ Mollrlity • llllt'•
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•
;• · J.f DAILY PILOT Monday, Apr!I 5, 1971
Mini Sewing Machine
Does Maximum Work
Increased interest among
young women lo create their
awn fashions has lec;t to the
development of a new sewing
machine.
Mini in size and tnaxi in
features, the machine is
designed to meet the needs
of teen -age sev.rrs. '\'ho ac-
count for 30 percent of the
$3-billion hon1e s e w i n g
market.
Research by Sears,
Roebuck and Co. found that
the median age of today'15
home sewer is 23 years and
that 85 percent of the nation's
teen-age girls koow how to
sew.
BOOKS
BOOKS
BOOKS
BOOKS
lliclWici ~· BOOKSHOPS -1
THI Clt1 °'-. {71•1 "39·7100
SOUTH COAST ,LA.IA o,-Ceole Me .. • 171•) ~21t1 ,.,.__.
The new Kl'nmore is a true
portable. It features die-cast
construction, ye t weighs only
18 pounds. Its comract, mold·
ed carrying case with floral
rose motif will fit easily into
a bicycle basket, under a jet
seat, or in the corner of a
dormitory closet. And a young
student can carry it to sewi ng
clw where she ran have the
pleasure of working with her
own equipment.
The machine features dial-
type stitch and reverse con-
trol. d i a I t y p e buttonholer.
mending sUtch, blind hem-
ming stitch and zig-zag stitch,
a zipper foot attachm~nt and
built·in compartment for sew-
ing accessories. It carries a
21)..year guarantee.
introduction of the compact
machine f o 11 ow s extensive
research which showed that
the mobile new generation of
young sewers sought a n
alternate to the more com-
plicated macbi.ne t o d a y ' s
mothers learned to use. This
new ~neralion is defined as
the seventh grader learning
to sew in her home economics
-class ; the teen·ager determin·
ed to do her own fashion
thing; the colleglenne off to
her first year of dorm life,
and the young woman faced
with her first decorating job
on a limited budget.
SILVER PLATE
Kors d'Oeuvres Dish, length 12".
Three sections for serving a
selection of favorite snack foods
in elegant style.
Regularly $27 .50, now $23.50.
Save $4.00 through June 30.
See this and other specials"in
t he famous Baroque pattern
by Wallace.
' <J 'l ;.!/ -•.
i~"! j I~' • -~
,,(. .. . '
M•tchfllf Gr1111~• 8•t04ll• Sl1rlinf r~~tw_•,. -· 1 W I
l"ncff •wbli0c:111~• .,.,.~, nolica.
SILllE" • CH1N ... e CJIYSTAL e GIFTS
LowPr Mall Near thf' \Valer Fall
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Bristol at \hi' San Diego Freeway
COSTA MESA PHONE 540-2627
White
Bon•
T•n Celf
10.,,
..
Show Hi ghlight
Sensuous Bathing Rert1rning
As Fashionable Pastime Treat
Once. people bough!,------------------
bathtubs to bathe in , but
bathing fashions are changing
once more and you can now
get bathtubs a deux and even
have them in your living room
as conversation pieces! Yes,
there's a Sagittarius Double
Bath for two Ul take a tub
at !tie same time, or a "his ancf her" bathtub combination
in which two separate tubs
are felded together. .rr this might herald a
return to the Roman style
of bal.hlng, when it was con-
sidered a social activity,
pursued in a communal bath
and designed for relaiation
and general well-being.
Although bathing we n t
through the doldrums in the
Middle Ages -Queen Isabella
of Spain was said to have
taken only two baths in her
entire life -it later cccame
a fashionable habit. Marie An-
toinette had two baths -one
for washing and one ror rins·
ing. Louis XIV had a bath
suite with a gilded ceiling,
housing seven baths, including
a rose pink marble octagon
ten.feet across.
However, bathing a g a i n
went out of favor in the 16th
and ea1·ly 19th Centuries, when
it was considered almost a
crime to take a bath and
it was certainly never men·
tioned in public!
Scenting the bathwater and
therefore yourself has always
been in fashion. Pomander,
myrrh and saffron \\'ere some
of the earliest fragrances used
and Louis XIII was supposed
to have floated red roses in
his bath water.
('huck Jones, television's famous "Magic r.1an" \Vill perform in the mall at South
Coast Plaza, starling Wednesday. Four shows are scheduled in the Carousel
Court at 2, 3. 4.and 7 p.m. daily. Highlight of each show is expected to be a
six-foot bunny suspended in air. The same bunny makes animals appear and
disappear in each show.
There's a return to sensuous
bathing, and a medley of oils,
soaps and de signer ac-
cessories are commonplace in
the average Ame r i c a n
bathroom. Now there's a new
"first" to add to beautiful
bathing -a creamy liquid
that takes the place of soap
and acts as a bubble bath
and shampoo too. Ne w
~1oisturelle, by Br Is Io 1 •
~1eyers, is a unique multi·
purpose lathering cleanser
that leaves the skin silky soft.
Limited Quantities! Nol 8VfKY model In eVfKY
store! Get One Touch Sewing at a great saving only
because it's a floor model/demonstrator of the
Golden Touch & Sew• sewing machine of the 70'sl
One touch chooses straight, zig-zag or decorative
stitches. Or take your choice of 9 stretch stitches.
Other Touch & Sew• sewing machines by Singer
are included in this sale (Models 756/758).
Linen Reflect s Fashion The Singer 1.JQ..a6'Credit P\an helps you
havethesevaluesnow-withlny.mirbudget.
SINGER
Loo!<lno for I lllemand ..,g..,.t-nl
rl"' ll•t! I• 11 tr-s~ •nd tllrli>Fllln-
•ry 11 ttle teellllO of ~l.,.g In \Ovt?
s .. tM rn.ny 11cl!lno n-llalgn•
at 1ew1h bf l••at>I!· Prlc1s from
510000.
So~tb Co11I Pl111
Coit1 Met• 540·'10bb
Bri1tol 111111 Sin Oie'lo Fwy.
Whita Calf
12.99
Once associated with
milady's \\'ardrobe, fashion
has become a pace-setter
everywhere in the home,
especially in the bedroom and
bath.
Whether your taste leans
toward the sophislicated, the
romantic, the whimsical or
contemporary, the pattern
choice in bed and bath
fashions is wide and varied.
Best of all, most of the
newest bed linens are blends
of 50 percent cotton and 50
percent pol~·ester that require
no ironing when tumbled dry
in an automatic dryer.
A REFLECTION
OF GOOD
TASTE
"your .,,,~.1!op Tablcco c!nler"
Sollltl C01•I Pllll -Low•r Le•tl
C•••I to M•Y Cornpa•y)
Co11t M"I -S*-17'2
Little TLC (lender loving It can be applied directly to
care) is needed for these the body' or used vlilh a •A TrOOemlrl< ol TI-iE SINGER COJS'l.Nf.
For address ol the Singer Sewing.Center nearest you,
sea White Pages under SINGER COMPANY.
sponge or washcloth and is
items. Vivid, printed fashion available in two "delicious'
bedding can be sorted and fragrances_ floral and pine.
laundered together with other With products like this
articles from the clothes available. bathing is a l.---------------------., hamper. pleasure instead of a chore . cosTA MESA-er111ci1 • s~ntio••r, kllltl c..11 pi.11, t*2•JJ
T t lh · · · I (h I COSTA Ml&SA-ueo H1.Wr llVll., Harbllr CHltr, Kl 1·11t5 o retore o e1r or1g1na So if you're inking o giving HUN11NGTOM •EACH-Elll1191r •I ltlKh, H""tl119to" '"'~ Ctnler, "1·1MI
brightness she els and your bathroom a new look oRAMGli-11 s111"11DR E•1I,' 'Tr. c11Y' c ... 1.r, su-nu
pi 11 o w c a s e s that show this spring, why not have a j GARDEN 011ovE_,,J1 c"''""'"· or•nt• county Pi.11, i>Mt1t
discoloration where head andl _l~it@tl~e~f~u~n~w'.'i~th~~il:_. =~~==============:======~ body rest, Maytag reeom~1·
mends using the pre·wash cy· M•~!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'~U.
cle with warm water, a ;¥(1' ~~
generous amount of laundry C'
detergent and oxygen bleach.
On washers vdthout pre.wash,
sel the controls for the final
rinse, add the detergent and
bleach and it will perform
the same as pre-wash. In both
cases. follow the pre-washing
with a regula r wash cycle.
The addition of f a b r I c
softener will add to their
freshly laundered smoothness
and overall wash results will
be best if the washload cm-
tains no more than three twin
or two double-size sheets, with
the remainder of the load ron-
sisling of smaller items.
Sheets and pil!ov.'cases from
a queen· or king-sized bed
should be considered a full
load unless the washtub still
appears to be loosely filled.
In this case, a few small
litems or similar color and
soil might be added.
VIVE . ,
EARN 253 TO 503 MORE
Most banks have now reduced savings passbook rates
to a low 43. At Pacific you still earn the same
high rates as before.
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.18\ 6.00\ 5,0002.!! TWO
5.92\ 5.75\ 1,0002.!! ONE
5.39\ 5.25"/o 5002.!! Y.lh
5.13\ 5.00°~ 12.!! ONE DAY
FREE
SAFE DEPOSIT BOX
for maintaining a $ 50022 balance in any of
our high rate accounts-take your choice.
A~ AN IMPORTANT EXTRA
For procl1imin9 the freedom
ol th1 foot-with sandals that
move in ease .tnd in elegance
. , , . from pia111 to
penthouse , , • from
city street to
countryside.
Your money earns interest from the day you deposit.
till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day.
ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE
~-~ FREE ~!JJ~ 1. Income Tax Service
2. Traveler's Checks
3. Collection of Notes
4. Many other FREE Services
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9;30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10;00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
im llRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CALlrORNIA. • l'tiOHE 54G-IOM
1udes arnett
3333 Bristol St , South Coast Plaza
Co1ta Maia
Huntlnqton Center, Huntington 811ch
Bu•na Park Cent«, Buene P•rlt
•
. '
--
Easllr B111111is I-Jere
I lydi i ·an1ncn1an11 and Tom ~1erri!ield, both from
La t>ull a Beach, visi t the Easter Bunny in South
Coa:-.l J1laza's Carou~el Courl. Free Easter eggs are
be ing tl\'Cll a\vay and children may visit ~vith li ve
bunru cs and ch1eks. loo. at the Easter Bunny house.
Run ny hours arc fro1n 11 a.m. to 8.30 p.m. at South
('oa"l Plaza
H ovv Y Ott Ca n Sizzle
111 1-f ot· Fas hion Look
l\u1l~ :1rl' tlh• h11I I J~luon through fabrics. Large 'voven
i1rn1 µ:Jr!1cuJ:1r!y Ho! Panis. knits, sheer crepes and voiles,
J! \(1u r1' ''1'C'I' tv.1·n ty-!1vc you fi sh-net lace with appliques
r;tJll'r! thltll "'hort shnrl;," are all sensual. yet subtle.
b•;ck 111 Ille !'1.iu.~. Teid;1y, For this look , let sunglass
lhcv·n· dr·~i·c1.•·d hy couturiers rashion go lo your head with
<''Id 1'-"1"11 1111·1 p<1tl('rncd ho~c f oster Grant's seductively
;1·1r! li,,,11-11r t<111p•d by tunics I 1 n I e d .. cocktail glasses."
;1:-;d Jong. -.Jit <h.1rts_ J\nd the designed to come out when
f;1,h111n p;u·•'·'''ll<:-r<• v. ho the sun goes do.,.,·n. Available
r h1:u'•' Holf'nnt'i v.1l\ \1 an t in metals and chromes, these
s111ling nt·.,.. ehron1cs and come in a range of shapes,
ri~t·:;1I ,un;;la-sc' tu c.:0111p!ct<:-including classic rounds and
t/Jt· lu .I; ·-chrun1Jtics" are ovals. stylish squares and rec·
<11-;o1l:ibl1• in b1in1 go ld and tangles. av i a Io r s, and
:-.1h·{·r lin1,Ju::~. 111lh pierced geometrics, for the gal wbo
n1c JI rJcing 1c111plcs and a knows all the angles.
11 idt• r;1ng<' of l<'ns 1in1s 1,.....;-.;.,;_,;;;;;;;~;;;;;;mo;;~Ojll
,\11ulh<'r p:•nt-in::; Jonk for 1
!'pr111;.: 1s kn icker~. 1\v~ilab!cl
in L1brrc1; lrnn1 veJvcl toi
dc•n1n1, h.n11·l,t·r::. ;:1rf' kicks for
d,11 t1n1t' or nu:p1l. 1-'nr a l11gh-j
fi1·1n~ f<1·'111un <1er.:ent, v.·car
1hr·n1 1~11h p11pular metal
' :111;;in1" Chno,1 t:1!hcr the
"\11.1·li;1 J.: 01 Ilic latest
'·E11 .J• hiT. · ·" "C'l of four
in11 fl l1;111ge;•ull' <I\ J;i\o r and
n1 :11 ll·nsl·..: Hl thr nc1v darker
1111:, <1 tlt·1111·.1n1ber. bro1\n.
~'"!"\ ;ind b!u1• I
Ii 11.u re lht· · e'us11·r · l~pe
\\ho p11 f('r~ !o .~u1-;i;c·r ra!hcr1
11•:i'l rr' ral, ,1e·1r 11c panlsl
·.1 ,th ~ ' . '111•1~ a n d sec-
. ""L (~~ "";li,.,_ ~
·ewers b oseph
IF YOU DON'T WANT A OIAMONO
FO• YOUA ENGAGEMENT ltlNG-
ffW'tlo l>y {oupll Ila• a rna11nlnc..,r
coHec!lon of preclou1 11ern1 • • •
nollin -tm•r•ld1 -11pal1 -
"ppllirn -Hl"'lrnlriM -toP11 -
•me1hv11 -9ttnl'I• -l>t'•ldot -
and rn anv, m•nv more , .. Some vov '""4'1 ne~fr 11.i,,. hNrd ol
Let tne 1><"atn•lona1, at ltwtll 1>1 i•••P'I help yo"' i•l•d yovr ft..Wllf" ie,.tl ·
South Coa1t Plti•
Coil~ Me1a 540.'i'065
Broi!ol al the San Oi~90 r-wv.
(~ @l GI ,,row 11l11g 01~y
hcaLt ty salt)ll~
SHAG CUT ... SHAG PERM
The new lon ger look! Beautifully s995 I curled by our car efr ee perm. Complete
I BUD-GET PERM
j SHNv'POO·SET L STYLE CUT
~0 \llH CQA.<;t FlA.ZA
"'I , _q,,, lo s.,~,1
!'llon11 5 ~'·71116
0r•n f,,, "1'
.. , •• , elwavs s595
(Normal Hair)
2 9S J45
150 200
161 E 17th ST., COSTA MISA.
P'ho11t s~•-'•1•
Cp•n E••"•~91 I Sw~d•y
W• f.\llt 11M11• v~v· l~• ~•v• t>et1t
give your boy a Van Heusen shirt
we'll take his portrait, no charge
Pick an y one of many, many handsome
Von Heusen boys' shirts . Take the cert-
tificate you receive to any of our photo
reflex studio~. They'll po~e you r boy
for an SxlO photo portrait.
Our Von Heusen boys' sh;rts 8·20 4.50,6,00
Billy the Kid co rduroys are
styled for extra·rugged wear
•
The polyc ~.t e r ~nd cotton corduroy is
high-low ribbed to wear longer. Trim-fi t
las t-ba ck sty ling . Never need iron ing.
Blu e, green, brown . 8-16 7.00 27 .)0 8.50
Mond.Jf', Aprlt ,, 1971
for Easter egg hunts and bunny-chasing,
shorty pant sets by Active Editiops
'·
Crisp little tunics over their own cuffed short~ P,ants. To
romp. To ploy. And st;lf stoy o l;ttle lody. Mom's love the
washable no-iron cotton fabric. Always .stays fresh and bright.
a. Red/white/navy flor~I pr;:lt tul'\ic, open up the side,
button trim. Red shorty pon t. Sizes 7· 14. 7.00
b. Tunic with pastel flowers on navy . white
collo r. Wh ;te short y pont. S;zes 7·14 . 7.00
may co. south co11t p11za, san dlego fwy. at brl1tol, Cotti me11; S46-932l
shop mond•y lhru uturd•r 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunUy noon 'Iii 5 p.m.
DAILY PILOT J5
MAVCO
'
I
I
I
• . .
J 8 DAILY PILOT
Here's How to Make
Frames for PictL1res
j
j
•
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA'S
LARGEST
SELECTION
OF
ACCESSORIES
ACCESSORIES Soulft Cnol Pl•ll -COSlA M!SA H1111ll111Mf! C•ltr -HUNTINGTON ll!ACH
l119M P1r1I '"'''' -IUENA PAIU(
5oulh Coast ?lua
KAPLAN'S
extends
HOLIDAY
GREETINGS
to all it's
CUSTOMERS!
RESTAURANT -540.9022
BAKERY -541).7581
3333 BRISTOL At San Diego Fwy.-CDSTA MESA
Lown l.e••I -oppodtw M.., Co.
-....... i
·/~-.. -..... ,
'
RrJtulor
'J .99 [>r.
SAVE25%
Cling-a1 on'"
Thi-Top
Hose
•Sears exclu si ve stretch yarn
m~sh knit, nude heel
•Latex top stays up "'ith ease and
-eomfort ·
•Petite, shapely, clas:-ic, tall
,2.19 Statuesque size ... 2 prs. 3.50
U•e Sears Re.-oh ·ini: Chorgr
-1sears J ~;£:: .. l!OUYWOOI
INOtlW009
1.0N(l IU(lj
1 ..... -.......... D<Q.
I'
I
"""Mlfllttt M9L"'"' .... f1~0 A.M. te frl)O ,,M., ........ , I) NHfl 11 I P.M,
You can add life to a dull
wn!J, add interest to any room,
with framed pictures. And you
can frame them yourself.
The n1at is the border for
the picture, and sets the
perspective. Blotting and com-
position paper e-0st only a little
(you can get them in the
"dime" store), and both make
fine mats. Fabric maLi are
good for special effects.
FJgure mat measurements
by using the margin ratios
shown in the sketches . In a
vertical rectangle the bottom
margin of the mat shOuld be
the widest, the top next, and
the sides narrowest (5:7 :11
ls the ratio). F'or the ho rizon-
tal rectangle the bottom
should be lhe widest, the sides
next . and the top narrowest.
Jn the square the bottom
should be the widest, and the
sides and top equal to each
other .
To make fabric mats. cut
the mal from cardboard and
cover it with new or leftover Eye, EJ'e material -pra ctica lly
SPECIAL! 6.99 SANDAL
5 DAYS
ONLY! 5so
anythingthatsuitsyourfancy. The long and short of fashions this spring is that \vhether they're long or Glue or tape fabric at the h ff h h rt back of the cardboard, cutting short (or long with a \vraparound desig n that allows you to s O\v o t e s o s
CrinklH.hined strippy! A bright, fresh sandal shape
in whi!A! manmade crinkle, woven through brass rings.
On a blocky low heeL You save now on t.hiafavoritel
away all surplus. -as at right). the eyes have it ... better than ever before. Glasses for look·
ing at are as important as glasses for looking through. · To mount your print, place --'"------'-----"--------''---''------------It on cardboard cul the same <Lee4s aiu as the mat. Touch the
corners with paste or glue
to guarantee a non-puckering
print that lies flat. Place the
met o\·er the picture; shp
on the glass and frame. Your
picture is ready to hang.
In Spring, Everything Se ems
Soiith Coast 'Plaza
You can buy budgetwise
frames at many variety
stores, or rescue an old frame
from the attic. Refini sh the
frame to suit your taste -
somellmes all that's necessary
11 a coat of paint or lacquer
and a few highlights done in
gold or silver gilt. Or you
can antique it.
1~o Take on a Lighter Touch Bridal St. at San Diego Frwy., Costa Mesa
ditionel botanicals for other<-----------J~==========~==========~
South Co11t Pl111
Co1t1 Me11 540·9066
llri1tol et the-SI" Di190 Fwy.
Everything becomes lighter
in the Spring, your clothes.
your kitchen curtains. the food
you prepare, your mood. and
maybe even you if you're
working towards a new figure
for summer.
Even the type of liquor you
serve to your guests has a
seasonal touch to it, with the
lighter-bodied ibut not llghtcr-
proof) spirits suddenly re-
quiring much more shelf space
in your cabinet.
Gln and vodka. although
popular all year round as fine
pre~Hnner relaxers, really
come into their 01-1·n 1-1·hen the
weather begins to hint of
balmy days ahead.
For your information, the
central flavor of gin is derived
from the juniper be r r y,
although each distiller with
his own secret recipe will use
some twenty tO thirty ad-
Sears
SAVE$2
Children's Shoes
Regula r 18.99 to '9.99
• Boys' school and dress
shoes in b1ack, brow11.
•Girls' patent vinyl
strap shoes in colors
$6.99 Infants'
Shoes .............. 5.97
Cll•MMt & -.oro PKO ...... " -~
Cll,M(ll l'Cl-1 l•IC• -ICA
PAIADIN4 IA#ll A114 lollll COAlf PUIA
••Wlft4e11 awwwa1l•..,•Y•....,.a.f<"
97
TllOUIA..0 D•MI
subtle essences. This gives gin
a very distinct flavor and this
is \\'hy it is also good to
use in cooking t.o liven up
many dishes.
Vodka, conversely, usually
has IHtle or no flavor. which
makes it very light on the
breath and superb in mixed
drinks. Each season a ne1v
mixer is touted lo bceome
a boon comp311ion to vodka;
quinine 1-11ater, tomato juice,
orange juice, boullion,
cranberry Juice -you name
it.
The problem then bec omes
the mixes, remembering to
t.eep 11·cll stocked \l'Jlh them
nnd maintaining the variety
necessary to please each
"Vodka and .. ," drinker. Not
to mention the added expense
of all the se mixers. But none
of this seems to discourage
vodka fan s from switching Lo
their favorite "vodka and. .
. " drink al the first sign of
Spring.
A growing number of
sophistica ted hosts have found
an easy way around the gin-
vodk a clul\cr and that is an
imported vodka, particularly
one like the Polish \Vyborowa
\Vodka. This is an odorless
spirit 11hich nevertheless has
a distinct and delicious flavor,
very much like a fine dry
martini with an olive in it.
It is sipped like the Poles
(\\'ho invented vodka) do it
-in a small glass. icy cold,
straight or on the rocks. Since
nothing is needed to add a
pleasant taste mixers aren't
missed one bit. Americans en-
joy the familiar flavor and
the real case of serving.
Poles enjoy a lillle caviar
\l.'ilh their "11·odka'' or maybe
some plckeled mushrooms.
AmC'ricans add to this rolled
anchovies or tiny wedges of
sharp chccsr.
For gin dcvot::!es a new fillip
th is spring might be the
ginger martini in \\hich a bit
of dned ginger root has been
soaked for 5 minutes. The
Dry i\'cgroni needs I oz. of
gin, 1 Ol. of Campari, 12 oz.
s11ect vermouth, '-:-oz. dry
\'C'rmouth. ~hakcn \\'Ith ice and
strained into a cocktail glass.
Wrap Skirt
The \\·r:ip skirt; Yves St.
Laurent brought it back. and
e\'Crybody wants flnc because
It 's rnsy to 11·ear, one size
anci his evcrvnne in mini,
midi, m<1xi lcn~ths. ----
BOOKS
BOOKS
BOOKS
BOOKS
• •
ewinner!
Sears UsaSeaJs
RevolvinQ Chatqe
sxto
GLiV.ng ~oloi
<¥0 T T~
•Babies, Children S wet ks to I!
years
•One per subject.
•Satisfaction guaranteed
•Groups tk per subject.
Photographer will be in store on Tuesday. Wed ., Thursday and Fridays 12 noon Lo
8 p.m. (6 p.m. Tues., Thurs. in Sanla Ana) Saturdays 10 a.n1. to6 pm.,
Sundays 12 p.m. to4 p.m.
Sttn Onqt 1111 N. T•§tla PHONE '37-11M
Sf9n Coli. MeM 8rl1tot al SuAflower i1 lk ScH!lll Col.It Plau 541 SUI
Sein B•t•• P1r\ Le Pal mt ti Sta1t011 PHONE TA ~-4480 or '2:J-4UI
&an S.111 t't Spri111 lsall E. Ttle1npll R4. PHONE H4-Mll
Sean Sl"ll A• 1716S. Mala St. PllOSE KJ.';-3371
Sein C.mpt1111111 N.1.011 ftn~lrl Blvd PHONf: NE ._!UI, NE U'Jll
SMnlM• Sud 4Ml.olll k.-ci61vd. PHONE HE Mlll
Monday, Aprll 5. 1q71 DAILY PILOT J7
Paint Job Brightens New Apartment!
De<:oraling thal first ef·
Helency apartment w i t h
limited tinie and budget is
one of the career girl's first
challenges. But there's a quick
solution that costs less than
$20.
entertaining evening guests. lots or hard use.
A little planning. a quick
trip lo the store and a few
hour's y,·ork with latex paint
can accomplish wonders with
the walls. And it can all be
done in a day that ends with
Latex paints make "instant"
interior decorating possible
because (hey have a pleasant
odor, are easy to apply, and
dry in only 30 minutes. T11.·o
commonly used varieties are
flat-finish paint for covering
walls, even discolored areas,
in living areas, and semigloss
paint for use on trim and
in the kitchen or ba\hroom
where walls are subjected to
The most important step Jn
redecorating is to take a few
hours and plan the project.
Although there is no hard-and-
fast rule to follow in interior
decorating, Sandra Rochlis,
naUonal design coordinator for
Sear's Roebuck and Co., says:
"An easy guide i5 to pick
an appealing shade from a
favorlte piece of furniture or
painting and use that as the
'Sailing' Along · .
Sailor suits, complete with the classic striped colla~, as shown above_, are makmg
it this spring. "Sailor colors," too -blue and white-also are going strong.
~ ~f0-KNITTING IS •
Wool Goods
Soften Up
------...... ,,,.------....... ~\\PP/N~/u\\OD IDEA
---~ ,,.,..----
Woolen and wool-blend
fabrics for Spring, 1971 will
be softer than ever, vdth a
new emphasis on texture and
drapability. Hand woven and
rustic looks are in; classic
checks and plaids remain
,,.,,,. ......... /
when it comes to strong.
timely
FASHIONS
The
._.KNIT WIT
So. Coast l'lma
Colfa Mtsa
l'hon• 545-2812
yM c•11 ..,..,.
I• knll or croc:htl
wl!lll11 mlnultl .••
ltl 111 p,.v, 111
The easy-care synthetics
have been improved to give
them a softer hand, when
blended with wool.
Knits are the biggest story
for Spring, and there are all
kinds ... doubleknit.s, jerseys,
raschel knits ... in pure wool
and wool blends. The patterns
are getting more complex,
more interesting, with a great·
er use of color. They are Pt
and packable for today's
young, mobile fashion set.
The colors for Spring are
clean and bright, bu t
sophisticated.
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Tops in locol Sports
IIlCKORY FARMS
51.tleet -bot
.fl]u1'tarb
Made From An
<!&lb
~erman
l\ecipe
This is oar famous mustard .•. now you
can enjoy its anique and exciting taste
on your next sandwich; add ust to sal-
ads, cold meat platters., fish 1auce1, etr..
Try a SAmple before you buy and latte
how delightfully different our mustard
cnn be.
Six Oz. Jar. Reg. 40<:
Specially 39 ¢ Priced At
Offer Good April 5 Thru April l l
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
LOWER LEVEL
BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA
PHONE 5~991
AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES
predominant wall e<1lor."
Several visual "tricks" can
be U!td to add interest. For
instance. to create two
'"rooms" from the main room,
paint one wall a darker shade
o( the same color and use
that end of the room as the
sleeping area. Tones of warm
gold for example. are excel-
lenl for this purpose.
Also. a dining area can be
created from the living room
by sectioning af( part of the
wall nearest the kitchenette
and painting it a bright, snap-
py calor, ar using a lively
printed vinyl-coated
wallpaper. "This type of
wallpaper provides a great
decorative and durable accent.
and Jf it's already pretrimmed
and prepasted, all you have
to do is cut it to flt, dip
it in water and smooth onto
tbe wall," Mrs. Rochlis says.
For kitchen and bathroom
decoration, latex semi-gloss
paint is especially g o o d
because it resists stubborn
stains and won't fade with
frequent scrubbing. Latex flat
woo't fade either, but because
the semi-gloss surface is
smoother. it ls easier to wash
clean.
pad should not leave •·Jap" decorating . Contemporary use !
marks on the wall. so the is inspired by changes in col·
paint job really looks prG-or. or shght variations of pat, fessional.
An efficiency apartment can tern in the timeless motif,
be painted with very Jilt le und son1et1mes I h r o u g h,
paint, for one gallon will cover technological breakthroughs!
up to 450 square feet -com-that permit textural effects
parable to four walls and the that can change the look ofl
ceiling of an 11· by ll·foot a pattern.
room -1n about three hours' Ir=-=-========::::; time. Drips, spills and soiled
hands and paint tools can be
cleaned up with aoap and
water.
Tile eclecticism of Fash.ion
certainly applies to floor
coverings. The floor picture
Includes shags, Oriental rugs,
fun rugs and stylized tradi-
tional designs.
The transformation has gone
from no-pattern gray, beige
and other dark solid e<1lors
to the brightest and wildest
designs. I Time-honored patterns of
stained glass, Oriental, plaid
and tile are used in modern I
APPRAISALS
Le )'etit
~reneh Cafe
TRADITION Al
AMERICAN FOODS
SERVED WITH A
FRENCH FLAIR
HOMI OF THI
"EIFFEL TOWER"
BURGER
1NE
FINEST
R
~-fff~~,4
The Fresh Idea Company Ooe of the easiest ap-
plicators for latex paint is
the brush pad for walls. It's
six inches wide, so more
surface can be covered than
is possible with a four-inch
bristle brush. It has guide
rollers on the side for painting II r--,-,-,,-.-c-,-.,-,-.,-.-•• --1
around door and window rims Coit• M••• 540-to••
without lapping over, Both the lri1tol •t th. Sin Oi19o Fwy.
South Coast Plaza
CAROU$lL COURT
LOWEii: LlYll
SOUTH
COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA
540-4760
latex flat paint and the brush
-I Sears/
........... ..,..~.-<0. <O•"'-
SAVE 25%-35%
PEKMA-PREST®
tulip girdles
••• including panty girdles with detachable inner-shield!
• Finn control panels ..• wooderful disci-
pline for tummy, hips, thighs e Smooth rudden •••m• ... stitched from
jnside. Great with today's knirs
e Continuous support •.. won't sag or go
limp. Shr in k-controlled, roo
e PERMA-PREST" .•. fabric srays fresh
and new-looking longer
Regular '6
2for8 99
l 8-INCH PANTY GIRDLE. Light, comfortable, sheer Lycra® spandex power net
body. Self-fabric fronr and side panels fl atten tummy, trim thi.i:;hs. Detachable nylon
tricot inner-shield. White. S1 M, L. Hosehuggcr feature in XL only.
MID-LEG PANTY GIRDLE. Self-fabric sheer Lycrae spandex power net front
and side panels firm tummy. hips. Self-fabric crotch, detacha91e nylon tricot inner-
shicld. Adjustable garters. White. AVERAGE HIP: S, M, L, XL
$7 Full Hir Panl y Ginlle. Size M-L-XL-XXI for 8.99
MOUfWOoe
INOU.,009
\0 ... llAC.
U1e Sean R""oloing Ch~e
OlT~ & toTO
OIAN-01
•.1,IAOINA
.,.
... .., ....... l•Jna" $HINOI
lllN"f.I. •Oftl(A
IOV'lll C:Oll,lf l'\AlA
HIOVIAN9 0.ucl
TOlllAN(I .. ..,.,
si.., s • .wi.,.1J .._ ... P..&.,--.ttw• s.t.t aJO.L& .. t ilt P.M. ••• h•Ni •-o.tr.•'-'-• ,.., r .... Tit.'9. '-'-., . .,.,,
J
I
l.L_ OAILV PI LOT
llloHf'!I" 1t'orl/1
Hotpants
Hot Issue
In Fi11ance
Uy SYl.VIA l'OltTER
"llotpunls arc n1crel)' mini-
sk1r1s. scai:.unal!y OJ.djusted,"
qu1p!)cd Gordon T Wallis, 51·
:i-ear-old chairman of New
York·s giant Irving 1'ru5l Ui,
11 hen askt'd to describe his
bank 's policy toward employe
dress at a recent annual
nl('et1ng. In a resigned tone,
he then added, '·M1ni -sk1rls
1cs. ho!pants, no . so
f<tr ··
"llotpanls are here to -~ta~.
'.\hss Por1cr." assured lrcnr
Satz. I JCC president 0 r
Uhrb<1t"h0!. 1n lilanhattan. as
I stared with longing at a
couture reproduction or Valen-
t1nu·s polka dot organdy hot-
pants 111th rnatch1ng organdy
~hirt and long black chiffon
ovcrsk1rt. ··They're all over
the f:ill col!ectiOn5 Don"\ be
11fr;,1d '
There il 1s, your le1tcsl office
cl1rillcngc .. 11.lr. 1\ n1 c r i ca n
busines.s rna11 -a relaxing
change of p;ice fron1 your pro-
ble1ns ol inflation. unemploy-
ment. Laxes. \I i et n am.
Spcc1£1cally.
Q • What are ~ou planning
lo do. ~lr. Employer, "'hen
your girl employes come lo
\\Ork this spring-summer 1n
hotpants"
A · H you heed the cxperl.s.
)Ou'll not rush into print \\ith
an answer. You·u be even
more flex.1ble than Walhs hints
wi!h his resigned "so far "
Q · As for you. ~11ss or
~trs. Ernploye . what do you
plan to do as you stock up
on bcau11ful. becoming. allur-
ing hotpants and the weather
gets warn1er and \1•armer'?
A.· If you also heed the
experts. you 1r1ll \4ear \1·hat
is in style and con1fortablc,
but you v.'11\ not wear anything
that miJ!hl deh1oralize your
office nr thnt is 1n atrocious
taste You'll v.in over your
boss ju~l by ~our good man-
ners and gradualism
Q · \\'hat is employer policy
generally on hotpan\s no"··'
A · :\lost of th(' execu111·('s
polled 1n a telephone survey
by P-11 Personnel Scr.·icr
replied they would ··1,1a1t and
sec ' To lhe surprise of P-H.
most of the cxecu11ve::. said
they "probably "ould not take
a strong stand," "1i1le some
ducked the quesl!on by in-
dicating doubt that their
employes "would act u a 11 y
v.·ear the shorts lo work:·
ri.1ost also said they prefer-
red not to ha\le a !()(}Specific
dress code for the simple
reason that fashions are rlO\V
changing so often a n d
basically. that ··inflexible
policies b e c o m e unen·
forceable."
And most underlined the
traditional ansYl'ers: Leave the ---~1
1,000'1 O,_ OIL PAINTINGS j
WHOLESA LE WAREHOUSE
OP'EN TO THE P'UlllC
50°/o OFF
UI• [ [CllNGE!ll, S•HT• •N•
Pl>o"f ll~"°'
OEA.LEllS W•NT[O
REAL ESTATE
SYNDICATIONS
SS.000 1a 51 0,000 T<11 Sh!!I·
tll!'ed Re-at Euate lnweUmt"nl'I.
ltd, P'arlnenhip h1tere~11 ava11-
oble to thole who quQl ity,
C<ill for appointment la di\~us1
tllll type of profltcible ''•• ~o•
i119 i11wn1me111 wiln a p•ofel•
tio11ol.
ROBERT M. ARMSTRONG>
~~6-8\0l ,62-lHOl
A11oc. Yilh191 Rtal ls1a1e
... ·-· ,,
s
dec1s1or1 up to \.hr department
head, it would depend on !he
type of job and degree of
public contact. it \\OUld vafy
wJth the outfit being worn.
\Vhile I hilled this as a
"relaxing" column. you will
~ factng the problen1 soon.
~Ir. Employer. so you might
11:. \\'t'll consider 1\ now. Those
t·xccutives "'ho doubt that
their employes "'ill actually
dare \\'ear hotpants to work
are wrong : those who think
lhLS ts a fad which \\'ill have
run its course by summer's
end already have been proved
wrong by early clues to the
fall collections. And those who
believe hotpants "'ill appeal
only to teenagers sin1ply don·t
understand the female. What
should you do. therefore?
-Do not lock yourself into
a position '>'lhich you migh~
regret at once and from 1,1•hlch
you could only retreat under
fire .
-Do have reasonable rules
in terms of lhe situation in
which you must enforce them.
A girl in the front office seen
by all types of customers may
be under different rules than
a girl in the back office seen
only by co-~·orkers I i k e
herself.
-Do nol be fuzzy about
whatever rules you do have.
Put them clearly in writing
and circulate them freely.
-Do be uniform in your
enforcement . Don't penalize
one girl and let another get
away u·ith it.
-Do not be rigid in your
attitudes. Hotpants \11ith a
coordinated blazer jacket can
be nearly as prim as an
ordinar\I suit or even modest
under ~ long. matching skirt.
P.S. Yes. I bought the black·
and-\.\·h1le organdy hotpants.
as did IYIO of our to\\·n's most
glamorous. elegant
grandmothers· ~·lrs. Bab t
Paley and l\1rs. George
7,auderer. ~!rs. Zauderer says
~he'll wear hers with black
stock1nl';S-1·m wearing mine
\\'ith a joyous grin. ----
1\·e11, Vet•p
\Villtain c; Corbett of
('osta J\1c.~a has been
narncd ass1.~tanl vice
presidt·nt and 1nanager
uf ('rocker -Citizens
f\;1\1on;i\ Bank's Parifi{'
\oa~t lligh\vay·Cren·
~ha1Y office 111 Tor·
ran er
Your visiting in-laws
are using the family car?
Rent a new Ford from Ford.
Just call your local Ford Aenl·A-Car Dealer. He'3
close lo home. And 1n a pffy he"ll rent you 8 new
Ford, Mu stang, Torino or Pinto ror a day, week or
month. Low rate3 • 1n~urance included
FORD RENT-A-CAR SYSTEM
THEODORE ROBINS FORD
20•0 H•rbor l lwcl.
C.sr• M .. «. C•l/f,
••2·0010
WILSON FORD
11155 lt~ll llwcl
H~"tl1191a11 ltoch, C•lll.
142-•61 1
111 fli9l1 Gear
Ma11uf acture1·s l(eep Close 1 Finance
r Briefs • Tab on Fa1·-ranging DealeI'S -c~~%.1~~R~ll~ll::·p~a;:
in Mansfield Towruhip, N.J ..
By Carl Cunterui;en
OI It!• o.lly 1>1101 11111
How does a large manufac-
turer maintain close rom-
about our dealer council
sessions," Buxton explained,
"is that they involve our
dealers more directly in mat.
tcrs of common interest. Tht municallon wilh its far·rang· factory values the council as
tng retail dealer network'> a sounding board. and the
For one thing. it isn't easy. dealers provide the factory
The primary method, and with feed-back from the retail
a time proven one, is to deploy sales ann of our business."
a fie.Id contact organization According to Buxton, the dealer councils .. quite literally
comprised of facto r Y improve t w o-w a y com·
representatives who c a 11 munication between factory
regularly on the manufac· and retailer. and consequently
lurer's retail outlets to furnish benefit the customer." During their stay in Lans-
guidance and counsel. ing, the Olds dealers also tour
But having a trained '·fac· the division 's newest manufac-
tory man" call on each dealer luring facilities and see first-
isn't always quite enough in hand how Oldsmobile prepares
this day of communication its products.
gaps and consumer problems. CAPRI SALES CONTINUE
frequently. lhe retailer wants TO CUJ\tB
to talk directly with top fac· Sales of Lincoln-Mercury
tory management on special Division's imported Capri in
rnatters of mutual concern . Southern California continue
At Oldsmobile, Ior instance. to rise sharply due to record
the 37th national dealer coun· shiploads of the cars arriving
cil -consisling of a dozen from Europe.
Olds dealers from all corners J. W. Lancaster, L-M Los
o( the nation -convenes Angeles District s a l e s
periodically in Lansing, the manager, said that the bigger
division's n at ion a 1 head-supply of Capris, plus the
quarters. Elected to the na· availability of a 2-liter engine
tional group by fellow dealers and automatic transmission.
in their respective regions. the have strengthened the Los
12 council members represent Angeles area as the number
J.500 dealersbips located in one market for Capris.
metropolitan areas, the "Local dealers have sold
suburbs and r u r a 1 coin-over 16 percent of the national
munities total since introduction day
They gather in Lansing for a year ago," Lancaster said.
a 2-day session ain1ed al 1m-.. At the same time this district
proving futu re Oldsmobile prt:r normally handles nine percent
ducts and services. They of the division total in other
discuss sales and service ac-car lines." he said.
tivilies, marketing strategy. ·'The appeal of the Capri
and a variety of business is heightened further with the
topics that arise out of a introduction of the Capri 2000,
ma nu facturer-dealer rela· ""hich offers as options a 100
tionship. horsepower overhead cam 2-
"This method of com· liter (122 cubic inch) engine
munication is like an old and 3-speed auto m a Ii c
fashioned sit-down-across-the-transmission .
table kind of discussion.'' ··Both of lhese are good op--
remarked \Villiam J. Buxton. lions and customers have been
Olds general sales manager. quick to recognize it. ..
''It's the k.ind of com· The 2·liler engine is priced
munication that \\'Orks better at S50 and the automatic
than anything else. \Ve are transmission at $185. The sug-
able to clear up misun-gesled retail price at port or
derslandings and gel some entry for the standard Capri
troublesome subjects off our --
chests.
"Perhaps the biggest Uting
Beach Man
Takes Post
Jim Herrell has been named
lo the top Southern Californi.1
marketing post by Fox &
Carskadon. major bay arlia
real estate investment firm.
ii was annowiced at the com-
pany's ,.,.fenlo Park head-
quarters
F'ox & Carskadon is one
of the largest syndicators of
registered real estate in-
vestments in California. Her-
rell "'as syndicate and un-
derwriting manager f o r
Reynolds & Co1npany. and
also served as Laguna Beach
manager for r-.1itchum. Jones
and TempleUln . both New
York Stock Ex change member
firms .
Herrell, who has undergone
intensive training at Fox &
Carskadon·s home office al\d
in the field, makes his home
111 Huntington Harhou r u'ilh
tus wife and two children. 1/1·
1s a graduate of Long Beach
State College.
Prftt11uted
Jack I). il!athis has
been appointed ass i ~
lanl manager in charge
of the operations dc-
partn1ent at Security
l-'acific National Bank '~
I\"c11 port Center Of-
fice. J\1athis, a rel>idcnt
of Balboa Island. JOlll·
cd the )Jank as a m<1n·
a g c m c n t tra111ee in
July, 1969.
W estliave11 Plaza Set
For Septe11iber Debut
(iroundbreaking crrcmoni~~
for the \Vcsthaven Plaza Shop-
ping Center. the largest and
most exh:!nsl\'I! In fountain
Valle y. were held recently oil
lhe 20-acrc site a1 Brookhurst
!:it reel and Edinger Avcnur
In rittendnnce Ill I hr
1·1•rt!1nony were Larry r .
Shields of Doyle and Shield~.
ch.~\rlopcrs or thr co111plex.
Also <1t1rnd1ng w c r l' cx-
t'Cut1vc~ of !hf' major ~tores
that \\Ill occupy over 190.000
square fee1 o4 floor s1>act al
thr center
n r pre s t' n ! i 11 g \Vonlc(l
Department Store~. a dn·1sion
of F. \\' \\'ooh111nh Co . "II~
J A. Asller. Thcun3s Killeen
and ~11chaeJ .\ltss1na o I
!\1arket Ba!-iket : llodncv Pu11,
r r p r r s c n I 1 n I! Sambo·~
Rest3urant, :., "'Cll as l'1tv
C'0\1nc1h11<1n Allx•rl llollulcn·.
('halrltHtn of the C'ily Plann1nr:
Comm1~s1on . .Janie~ D1cJ.., and
Planning Dirt!C'lnr ('I t n ! on
Shl.'rrQCJ
The \\'oolcn ~t..,,.r \11!1 be
thr first or II~ kind Ill Or11nj1:.'
C'ounly, 11nd unly the l'irronrl
In Southern Calil 11rn1;;i The
huge IUJ.OOU ::.quarr I r r l
budding 11111 Ix• a t'on1pl('lf'
department and :iutn1not11 i'
:,tore. Jt 1111! br one of 38
the company \\'ill build 111 1971.
l)pen1ng i5 expected in Scµ-
tcmlK'r of this year.
Th:' ~1:irket 13askrt 1\•11! hf'
one of the !:irgest 1n the con1.
pan~·~ Soulhcm Cal1for11111
~uprrn\.'lrkl't tact11!y, 1 h c
building 11ill cont11in :10.000
'-(j11ar1· f«cl
S<1ml>o 's Hl',l;lil/';Hll 111!1
C'un\H1n a n•.,1;:i11r:u11 arP.1
~eating 01 t"r 100 j)cr~(rns 1n
:i t·offce shnll <irld :-.cpara1c
dining roorn
Other l~nants i n r 1 u d t'
Fashion F<1brics. an cxclus11 c
11omcn·s store . a barl>cr :-hop
rt;1I cstatr 11ff1f'r and ~hoc
repair $hop
Tht· crntrr t' cxpcc1M \\I
~ comph:.'tc'<I 1n the f:ill of
this ~(':tr 1';1rking c11par11v
I\ 01rr I 000 l'ars on th(' 151'
;itrc pal'kinJ: ot 1\1lh cn-
trnnct~ from lxlth Rrookhur~\
:ind l·:chnt;<'r Bo1 h .i,lrePts
bordrrin~ \\'p~!h:11 ~·n l'laza
\I di be widcncfl 1n help ('Ontrol
!ht• 11nt1cipa!r1! 11('~\Y volun1c
Qf lr'afflc 111 the Crnlcr
..
with a 1·6 htcr engine is $2.395.
The Capri is bringing new
custo1ners to Llncoln·Mercury
dealerships. Lancaster said.
"Among 1.500 customers
"'ho ordered Cal)f'is. only four
percent said they would have ,
ordered another L i n c o I n •
ti1ercury product had the
Capri not been offe~. Frank-
ly. a 96 percent incrementality
is hard to imagine, but even
if you assume a conservative
80 percent figure, Capri must
be the 1ndustry·s champion
sour~ o[ extra sales.
"Dealers are also impressed
with the typical Capri buyer
because he is an excellent
addition lo the Lincoln·
ri.1ercury family. The profile
of the average customer
shows he's 27. a male, eams
Stl,400 annually, has college
training. and holds a pro-
fessional, n1anagement l'I r
sales position."
Ne10 1•ositio11
Edmund A. Bretz has
been appointed inter-
national officer in the
U.S. Division 'vith In-
ternational BankJng De-
partment at Security
Pacific National Ban k's
headquarters in .Los
Angeles. Bretz. a resi-
dent of Costa Mesa.
\vas formerly assistant
manager of the bank's
Ne\vport Cen te r
Branch.
Countian
Appointed
To Board
John J. r-.lcNaughton. Presi-
dent of National System:s
Corporallon (ASE), today an-
nounced the election or G
V.1nyne Leslie to the Newport
Beach lirm·s board of direc·
tors
Lcshe JOincd Nat Ion a 1
Systems in 197G and is cur-
rently assistant to the presi-
de n I. with primary
responsibilities In the areas
or long·rangc corporate plan·
ning and evaluation of ac-
quisition candidates.
He was also recently named
director of the company's OC\V
North A1nerican School nf
Conservation and Ecology.
\vhich will open this swnmer
in Anaheim. ~ school will
provide residence training to
students interested in career);
in wildlife. forest, fish and
soil conservation services.
Priur lo joining Nalional
Syslems. Leslie was Director
of Planning and Acquisitions
for Lear Siegler Education
Company. lie also previouslv
served as Manager n ·r
Corpor<Jll' Planning for Mat-
tel. Inc.
1.e .. 11c is rnarricd, hns three
ehi1drcn. and currcnlly Jives
1n Nr"·port Bea('h
Newport l\lan
On Bank Board
I !enry C ~la). president of
r-.1ay Outdoor' Advertising Co.
has been elected a director
nf Cenlinela Bank. announced
l!o.,.,·an Henry. president or !ht
I n g I c woo d·headquartercd
btink.
ri.1ay. 11ho rcs1dcs in
Newport Beach. has headed
his outdoor adverl1s1ng firm
111 Lo~ Angeles since l!M5. For
thr past nine months hr has
~erv('d ;is a n1en1ber of the
.1dvisory board for Crnt1nela
Bank ·.~ regional office in
i'iewport Beach
\Vith ils hPad office n! 524
I::. Nulwood St ln,c:le\vood.
Ccnl1nel11 811nk has offices in
lhe Pl:ivn del Rey section of
l..<1~ An~r!cs, llcrn1osa Beach
and Ne"·JXirt Beach.
• •
to make plastic bag~ for food
sloragc and waste disposal.
The plant will ul timately
employ about 200 with a year·
Jy payroll of $1 1nillion. A
75-acre site has been acquired
on Highy,·ay 57. ll wlll be
r-.1obil's tenth plastic packag-
ing plant in the United States.
MILWAUKEE -Allis ·
Chalmers Manufacturing Co.
and the United Auto Workers
reached a tentative agreement
on a new labor contract cover
ing 11,000 workers. The agree-
ment averted a strike to have
started WedDeS{lay.
HAMMOND, lnd. -Swift
Chemical Co. has closed its
Hammond Soap and Industrial
Chemical Plant and dismissed
300 workers. Swift originall
announced it would keep the
plant open and change its pro-
duct lines, but the company
said it was unable to reac
agreement with the unions in·
volved on restructuring tbe
working force.
WASHINGTON The
Securities and Exchange Com
mission has suspended the in-
vestment advisor registration
o( John Kenney Associates of
Boston for 90 days for misuse
of inside information in viola-
tion of the securities law. 'T'he
specific charge was that the
firm sold for ilS clients 51,000
shares or Phoenix: Steel in
October 1969, on the basis of
inside information John Ken-
ney Jr. obtained as a director
of Phoenix Steel. The stock
was sold before this in-
formation was made public.
Th e firm also was charge
with fa lse and misleading
adverlising.
TETERBORO, N.J. -Com·
puscan, Inc., maker of optical
reading machines, has ob·
tained a contract f r o m
Urbadyne. Inc., of Silver
Spring. ri.1d .. to use its readers
to translate federal patents
into computer language fo
storing in a compute
memory. The actual optical
scann ing will be done from
microfilm copies of t h e
patents. Urbadyne Is a firm
organized under the Small
Business Investment Act to
create an electronic patent
library.
BOSTON -Eastem Gas &
F'uel Associates. Tnc .. said its
midland enterprises b a r g e
subsidiary has negolialed a
]Qng-term contract to barg e
two million to 3.5 million tons
nf st e a m coal from
Shawneetown, 111.. to three
ports on the Gutr or Mexico
rlf'ar stean1 power plants of
Alabama Po11•e r Co. and Gulf
Power Co. The coal will be
produced bv Peabody Division
of Kennecolt Copper Co rp.
NE\V YORI\ -A subsidiary
of Ralph ~f. Parsons Co ..
Parsons-Jurdon. has obtai11ed
a contract to prov I de
engineering services for the
Cflrfliba Copper Project in the
Bra1.ilian State of Bahia. beinlT
de1·eloped by industrialist
frllncisco Pignatari.
Thc> plant \\•ill process ahou1
2 5 million tons or ore yearly.
I\'l::\V YORI\ -ri.1obil Oi!
Corp. hfls anflQt111ced iln oit
disc0\·erv 12 rni!es sou theast
nf l.ansu1g. l\fich .. lhe wildcat
1rell flo\1•ed at a rate or 1 .2..~
barrels of 38 2 l!Tavitv oil a1
a deo!h or 3,aOo feet frolT'
the Silurian Niagaran Reef
A second well is bein'! duy
one half mile to the northwest.
NE\V YORK -Japancsr
insurance companies, only
recently permitted by law tr
invest in foreign securities.
ar(' sending a task force or:
a global tour lo scout fo
investment opportunities, th
Daiwa Securities Co. o
America has disclosed. The
force of 25 to 30 Japanc
insurance investment special-
ists will br in tile United States
fro1n April IJ through April
27
PITTSBURGll -\Vesting.
house Electric Corp
has obtained an $8.4 million
Air Franct contract lo design
and fabricate mocl1f1ed radar
equipment.
NE\Y YORK -f I r s t
General Resourcei; Corp. ha
formed a condominium hous
ing division lo prov idc
n1arketing s e r v 1 c e s lo
bu1ld1ngs serving the middl
and lower income brackets.
The rompany is investing
million 1n thl! division initiall~
to foster lhc program o
b 11 i Id 1 n g tw~bedroom con
dominium hou~PS Expected In
sell for less than $20,000. th
condominiumi; \4'111 be locntCl'I
in communiliPs with thctr owr.
s11,lmm ini; pool~. tenni~ courts.
gardens and aauna baths .
IA/I. '• : rrno ,,__;tens ~
~
To la,._'ers?
•
SINCE
·SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
Does
That's Who
You Can 'listen' lo Ann Landers
Daily in The DAILY PILOT
•
. •
:THIS MATTERHORN . .
• . .
. . . . . .
. .
. . ; ~ . ' • •
IS NO DISNE YLAND
Yes, you're right. There's nothing really funny about a fractured leg. But -pardon the pun -it does give ou r friend, here, at least
one break. He has time to. thoroughly enjoy the DAILY PILOT as he takes a leisurely meal at the outdoor restaurant in Zermatt, Switzer·
land, in th shadow of the real Matterhorn.
But you don't have to break a leg, go to the Matterhorn -or even to Disneyland, for that matter -to share our friend's enjoyment.
We're happy to deliver the Orange Coast's finest hometown daily newspaper to thousands of homes full of whol e·limbed readers every
day. If it turns out this season you're not as great a ski whiz as yo u thought you were, turn a bad break into a good break. Take time
to get even better acquainted with the . . ..
•
DAILY PILOT ..
,
ze DAil y PILOT
LA Quake
Victims
Get Help
By JOHN BREWER
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Nearly tY.'O monlhs after Los
Angeles was hit by a
devastating earthquake, good
samaritans still are doing
good deeds.
A dozen San Fernando
Valley teenagers tour
hospitals with a variety show,
entertaining quake victims.
Their show features a monkey
that plays pal·a-eake, a folk
singer and a comedian.
UCLA nursing students work
to calm fears of children em~
tionally disturbed by the shak·
ing.
Youths fill cracks in streets
and help neighbors w i t h
repairs.
Gilbert LaSalle, 78, an in·
valid, tells of being helped
by teenagers headed by Frank
Kelly, 19, of Sylmar. "I open-
ed the door and there they
were," he says. "When they
got done I had water for the
first time in 20 days." The
boys repaired his cracked wa·
ter pipe and mended hiB gar·
age door.
Volunteers pitched in to help
others virtually from the mo-
ment the quake struck at 6
a.m. Feb. 9. The Red Cross.
Salvation Anny and other
organized relier groups gave
massive help to victims, and
ilill are.
But. a newsman seeking ex-
amples of pure g o o d
samaritanism -he 1 ping
others with no thought of
reward -found examples by
the hundreds.
There was the 5-year-0ld son
of a \\"Oman visiting in San
Fernando when the temblor
hit. He was injured by flying
chunks of roofing a n d
hospitalized. His mother had
to return home to Yonkers,
N.Y., to care for three other
children.
The boy needed therapy.
The mother 1\'anted h i m
brought home. but money was
a problem . A relative here
mentioned it lo a neighbor.
The neij!,hbor told a man on
the block. The man nffered
to fly the boy to Bethesda.
Md. Other relatives picked
him up there and delivered
him to mother. He's taking
treatment now in Yonkers.
Many thousands of books
tumbled from shelves in
libraries. At San Fernando
Valtev State Co\Jei;e i ,,
Northridpe. not far from the
hardest hit 11rea, about 200
persnns \4'0rked to gel Pfrhaps
500.000 ''olumes bacl.:: on
shelves in the four-floor
library.
About 180.000 hooks \\'ere
lhro"'n frf'lm ~hel\'es in the
downtow,, Los Angel"s library,
about 28 miles frnrn the
qu ake's epi{'enter . Volun!etrs
renl;iced all on ihe C'Orrect
shelf. Similar r!'oorts came
from other librarie:i;.
The Red Cross said its wnrk
"~th ouakt victims emolie<l
its national di.c.aster fund. It
reoorted 13JXXI s e pa rate
~rants of rnnnev -totali.,~
almost St .~ millinn -for
emeri;itncv food and clf1thini?.
repair nf OOuc.ec. and n"place·
m•»~t or viuil belnn.R"in~c..
The morie\• nev('r has tn
be reoaid. Th"' Red Crnss alc.o
ooe:rated s!'lel\cr~ fnr (1111>\c<'
victims -it elltimritf'rl 10.nnn
or more -until !hev cnulrl
relum lo the ir homes" or find
pemH1.nent lod 2in'!'.
L;iter ii nJ)f'ned "rllsastf'r
aid" stations for Qu;oke vir·
lim!i: to come tn t:ilk wilh
~ociaf workers 11hont vari"'d
Droblems of rehabilitation .
borrowln$Z money and
detennfninf( hnw to obtJ1ln
avJ11lhtb1t fMeral ald.
Folks whose homes "'trf'
destroved bv th' ouPl(e -
or l11te.r der.l11ttd un•"ft fnr
oecnoancy -wert nl.11red in a home or apartment !)y
federal Rn111intt 11Fld Urbl"ln
Devt1onm4'ttt ofnr1 .. 1~ antf the
rent DRld rnr on to 12 mll'lth~.
l\f'i>nv b,11nkll st:ivl'f! (lT"ll"t1Pd
on Ssi:b1rtf11y1 In hPlp virtim~
apnlv for fM,.r:il dlsastrr
ln,.ns.
Monday, A"1[ 5. 1971
Un~I~ Sa111 Keeps Close Wat~h O~er Taxpayers
MARTINSBURG, W. Va,
(AP) -Armed with a com~
ple:x of computen and a
system o( cross-dlecking that
explores angles by t he
thouianda, Uncle Sam keeps
close watch here over his 9$
milUon tupayers.
Four mo d e r n computers
spend every minute of the
year continually pouring over
the returns (Ued by Amerlea's
breadwiMes.
And with tax time at band.
and about halt of the country
yet to file, the machines at
the National Computer Center
here-the pride and chief
detective of the lntemational
Revenue Service-are whir--
ring away to pay refunds, pro-
cess returns and catch citizens
\vho make mistakes, either
honesUy or otherwise.
The IRS has centered Its
income tax memory bank in
a one-story, plain-looking brick
building outskfe. um eastern
West Virginia town since 1962.
The system that has evolved
is staggering and has saved
the nation hundreds of millions
Df dollars, according to center
officials.
The tax return being filed
by the taxpaye r first goes
to one of seven regional
centen, where the most vital
information is placed in
magnetic tape and sent to
what employes he.re call the
''Martinsburg Monsters."
Jn the next 31A years, before
it is kicked off magnetic tape
for storage elsewhere, every
taxpayer's return will be: sent
through suspecting computers
almost 20J times,
Tax returns are fed through
the computers from 86 million
individuals and 9.2 million
businesses.
The computers' jobs are
many and are overseen by
a stall Df 275 trained techni-
cians who program the pro-
dlgious memory banks for
conUnuous operation. In fact,
not an hou r has been Jogt in
the past seven years.·
"We can J¥!rfonn numerous
functions, and provide in·
formation for about every tax-
payer ln the country," assis-
tant director Ed Hieronaumus
said.
Every Saturday morning a
new cycle Is begun at the
center as the 100 mill ioR ac-
counts move from master files
through the IBM 360 com·
puters.
Entries an!: made each week
on about five million returns.
They can constitute filling in
this year's return, maJtins out
a refund and recording 1t on
the tape, or checking some
suspected irregularity.
On each individual's file are
total income, occupation, ta:r
paid, deduCtions, and whether
the taxpaye r got a refund or
not for each of the last three
years. That information takes
all of .484 of an inch of tape
to record and store.
On one reel of tape, the com-
puter center can store returns
'4"hich would fill a norm.al·siz·
ed file cabinet.
Any taxpayers whose return
is dirferent from those In lUs
class is immediately singled
out for special attention.
For instance. a relurn
listing $6,SUO income and
$2,000 in paymen t to
charitable organizations is im·
mediately spotted by lhe C-Om·
puter.
Persons i n high·income
brackets are among others
~·ho normally get special at-
tention.
The computers have also
been given some credit for
cracking down on persons
making money in racketeering
and other illegal ventures.
Hieronamus said by
developing trends and pro-
grams. the computers can
single out specific returns that
look suspicious and forward
them to special investigators
for a sf'COnd look.
Officials estimate the com·
puters have pulled together
information on 4,000
racketeers.
But then racketeers aren·t
the only grouping which can
be identified . Hieronamus says
his techni cians are capable
of "extracting all kinds or
Gov. Reagan
Appoints
Board Man
SACRAMENTO -Gov .
Ronald Re agan has announetd
the appointment of Dr. Emil
Mralc. chancellor emeritus of
UC Dnvls and an authority
on food preservation tn a four-
.year tenn on the State BoArd
of Agrltulture.
lie will suet-ttd ri.trs. Athalie
Clarke of Corona de! Mar,
v.'hose term as a public
member on the bo.,rd expired
this year.
accounts .. when proper p~
grama are applied.
Doctor incomes are lined
up agalnsl others in tbe.ir pro-
fession to compare deduc-
tiona, Jr.come and expenses.
The same Is done on other
profwJorui,
Many of the errors
disco\lered are not lntentlonal.
"We have people w b o
always w?I" down the WJ'()ng
Soeial Security number and
C(IUl'ltless thousan<b who can 't
add," Hieronamus said.
In 1169 akxle, thef:e were
five million .indivtdual tax
returns which cont al n e d
mat.be.matical errors. At lea.'lt
two million were 90I. self-serv-
ing : They conlalhed $136
million in overpayments.
In those cases, l-lieronamua
said, refunds are given or a
ta:xpaytr•a b a If -1 n c b of
maaneUc tape la crod.J~
In any . case, the system
itsell is unyielding. New pro-
grams are always being a~
plied over a three-year
lifetime of each return to find
tJlOse person,, who either made
'
This lllllOWXlClllmt is neither
an db 10 &di no< a sOOcitatioo c:i an clJc.
to buy the Notts, The c:ib is.made
only by the Offering Cittular, available
at any California branchc:il!onkd.Amcrica N.T&:SA
Dated:Aprill,1971
errors or who were a bit loo
creative in pla1ming ways to
reduce their contribution.
Officials say that $ I 3 4
million was added over·all to
lRS collections in 1969 as a
result of the computers' work.
And with refinements be.ing
•
•
n~e. Jlleronamus says lt ls
almost a:ssur«I that th•
number of persons able to
cheat on tax returns will be
rontinually reduced.
"Aller all ," be said, "in
200 tries a cornputer will prt>o
bably outthink the human:'
en ca
Subordi11ated
Capital Notes
e1978
This $100,000,000 offering is being
distributed directly to the public at
all California branches of Bank of
America N.T&S.A. It is issued in
denominations of $1000 and multi-
ples thereof. Interest will be paid
semi-annually. The Capital Notes
do not constitute deposits and are
not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
Dr. ~frak. 70, a f'><o}Tiocr11t.
l<t 11 n11th·r nf ::lan FrnncL~cn
;ind ti gradua!t or u c
Bcrk(•lt·y. !-----------------------------~----------------------------------
•
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bi
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oh
OU
A HEADY AFFAIR -Soroptimists Oeft to right) the Mmes. Her·
berl Sutton. president. Wilham Eschbach, Thrift Shop chairman,
and Paul \Vestbrook, publicist and soloist for the Easter Break-
fast, fashion a flowery spring bonnet. Members and guests will
don classification hats for the annual birthday break!ast on Thurs-
day, April 8, at 7:30, vying for the best hat pri~e.
Rx : Cheerfulness
Service With Smile
Spurs Healthy Heart
Service with a smile is natural for a group of young women
dressed in pink and white stripes.
The hard "''orking teenager group, known as Candystripers, ha~
been in existence at South Coast Community Hospital for more than
five year:; -beginning with a small group of girls from 15 to 18 years or age.
Following a recent election of officers, Theresa Schlarb ot
Laguna Niguel presides over an expanded Junior Chapter of the hospi·
tal Auxiliary now totaling more than 55 qualified young women.
Girls bring water to patients, deliver prescribed drugs, feed
patients, distribute flowers and mail and deliver that most necessary
ingredient for a quick recovery -cheerfulness.
Assisting lhe president on her board are Lagunans Dawnette
Polland. Vicki Haas. Judy Tensfeldt and Martha Jorgensen, and Mission
Viejan Debra F'alk.
Serving as activity co-ordinators are Beth Wormald, Maureen
J\.litchell. Cindi Wilkinson and Colleen Clark.
Telephone committee workers include Cindi Wilkinson. Maureen
J\.litchell . Regan \Vood and Sandy Spencer.
Other appointed offices are Colleen Clark, bulletin board; Gerri
Price. typi.~l: Pat McCord and Terry Enz. time cards. and Marci Wylie,
Cindy Dunbar and Cindy Nelson, tray favor committee.
Young women from El Toro to San Clemente are invited lo call
?i.lrs. Lav.1rence Campbell. junior coordinator. for information on the
program
CANOYSTRJPEO CHARM -South Coast Community
Hospital Junior Auxiliary Candystripers (left to right)
Theresa Schlarb. president, Debbie \Vagner and Ginny
Sparkle of Diamond Reflects Gleam
DEAR ANN LANl)ERS. I am a senior
in college and going with a wonderful
young man who is 1n p:raduale school.
We plan to be marrtf'<l this summer.
Ht wants to give me a ring for my
birthday, which is next month Roel workl
part lime and has very little extra
money . His mother ha.s some beautiful
jewelry and shr wants me to have one
of her larRe diamonds. I don'l want
a largt diamond I'd rather have a
~mall pearl -some.thing Rod bought
himself. My mother says I'm crazy.
Whal do you say" -SIMPLE STELLA
DEAR S.S.: Sincf' It is Rod you art
marrying, and not hl5 father, I say you
1hould have a ring he can afford. Hold
out for the pearl. 1tlrl.
DEAR ANN LANDl-.:fUl . U1employ·
ANN LANDERS
ment in our 1 r" a is at a J~year
high. I wonder how many people realize
what happens to a family man who
1s out of work . I can ttll you, Ann .
ll is lht most ego-shattering txperitnce
in the world.
I have a few suggestions for tht wives
or these men : Don't greet him at the
door with, "Did you find anythinjil today.
dear?" If he did, you won 't need tn
ask. He'll tell you. And for heaven ·~
sake don·t go around in a ratty kimono
and torn hose. This is lhe time to
bring eul the whitt linen tablecloth and
the good china. Put floweri on the table
and paint the kitchen ceiling a bright
yellow.
Abovt 111\, keep your sense of humor.
It can saYt your life -and his, too.
Laughter in the hoost can have 1
magical efftct. It says, "This, loO, shall
pas..,. Everything will be all right. I
havt faith in you, and in the futurt."
-A WIFE WHO IS WVJNG THROUGH
IT
DEAR WIFE : You sound like a
wonderful gal. Your letter Is 1ure to
give a lift ln women who share yDDr
pU1ht. Confide nce Is Ci>nt11lou1. Good
luck and lhank1 for wrltlnc.
DEAN ANN LANDERS: Our M>n is
15, our daughter is 13. People are forevtr
complimenting us on how well bchavtd
they are. t.1y husband and I often wondtr
if they have'. us mixed up with M>meone
else. At home, our kids Jirt constantly
al each «1ther's threat~ like a couple
of jungle cats.
Last night 1l was worse than usual.
They wert having 11 terrific argument
and hollering so loud you couldn't hear
the rock music. My husband became
•
BARBARA DUARTE, 494·9466 • ,..,.21
Topical Toppers
Hat 'Scene'
For Easter
Hals, hats and more hats will fl!\ Hotel Laguna on
Thursday morning, April 8. as members of the Sorop-
timist Club of Laguna Beach and guests gather at 7:30
for the 23rd annual Easter Birthday Breakfast.
/\ sizeable array or classification hats denoting the
wearer's occupation will set a heady scene for the affair,
enhanced by potted flowers on breakfast tables carry·
ing out a spring theme.
The Past Is the Beginning of the Future is the theme
of the affair under the direction of Mrs. Leon Axelrod
and assistants the Rev. Dr. Iris Turk and Mrs. William
Eschbach , Thrift Shop chairman.
Tnvited guests include Mayor and Mrs. Richard
Goldberg, I..aguna Beach High School District Superin·
tendent William UUom and Mrs. Ullom, service club rep--
resentatives, area Soroptimists, volunteer workers,
scholarship winners and American Field Service stu-
dents.
Guest speaker ·~ill be Mrs. Wilbur Page. district
governor or the Pacific Region covering four states.
Mrs. Page. a Banning resident. has held local. district
and regional offices since 1959 and was Citizen-of-the-
year of Banning.
Brown prepare vases of flowers designed to brighten
patients' rooms and spirits. The girls also deliver mail
and drugs and assist in general nursing duties.
1n Mother's Eye
se lrrilaled he slalked out of the house
and went to a movit. I look two tran-
quilizers and went to bed At about
10 :30 I heard a crash -like breaking
glass. I rushed downstairs and there
was !ht glrl with blood on her blouse.
She had pulled out a handful of her
brother's hair. His head was bleeding
and he was holding a hockey stick.
He had hit her in lhe mouth.
This morning I w111 talking lo my
molber. I told her !ht kids were driving
us nuts. She said all brethers and sisters
have disagreements -that it's a norma l
part of growing up. Is this true? I
need your opinion. -EXCEDRIN
HEADACHE JN LOUISVILLE
DEAR llEAD : Olsaireemenl1, yes. but
ynur kld1 are trylna lfl kill tach other.
The manner 11 which )'Ot.t and )'Ot.tr
husband isolate yourselves from the pro-
blem Is extremtly revealln1. When things
get out of hand , Pa 1lalk1 out of the
house and hides In a movie. Ma tUe1
a couple of tranquillzer1 and 1oe1 to
bed. No evidence of any parental
discipline er guidance wbatsoeYer,
Your son and daughter need aa adult
flpre of authority. I 1ugge1t counselln1.
And you altd yovr busbaad could DH
some counseling, loo. Find someone wltb
four couches, Lady.
Unsure of yourseU on dalf's? What'1
right? What's wrong? Should you?
Shouldn 'l you? Send for Ann Linden'
booklet. "Daling Dos and DoR'L,," tnclo.
1ng with your request :I~ ce.nl.!i in coin
and a long. self-addres5f'd, st11mped
envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT.
t. :: .. . ·
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Ing
a<d
Ian 10.
bot led ne,
ird
dy
...
•. '· -..:
''•, .· • •
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... • 22 DAILY PILOT MondJJ, Aprll 5, lq71
Costa Mesons Wed Words Immortalized
In Morning Rites Trophy Trips T onque
•
A late morning certmony
or St. John !ht Baptist Church,
Co!rta Jl,1esa, linked thl' naines
of Belinda Sus<1n Cox anll
Roderick Laflerty.
The bride \\'llll el>Corted to
CPS ,. ... 19
MRS. R. LAFFERTY
Form1I Ceremony
tht alt.ar by her falbtr for
tilt" double rin1 rites ptrfom1-
td by tbt Rev. ?ttark Staley.
JI.tr. and ?t1rii. Paul Cox aod
JI.Ir. and 1'1rt. ?t1arley Lafferty,
a!I ol. Costa 1itesa, are pattnts
of the nel\'lyweds.
Attending the bride wa!
?ttrs. Ron Platt as matron
of honor. Brldesmaida in·
clu<led :\tiss Martha Cox,
sister of lhe britle, fi.1rs . J •
Steven ltfat1, Sisler of !he ~
b~degroorn, and Jl.lrs. Dale ••
?\.11tchell.
The bride's )>iSl!!r and
brother. .\la.ry and Dennis
Cox, v.·erc flo11er girl and ring
bearer.
Paul Brisso l\'a5 best man.
L'shers included David Cox,
the bride's brother, Roque
Lafferty, brother of the
bridegroom, and l\1arx.
The bride, who attended
Orange Coast College, was
gradllated from the Southern
California Co\Jegt! of Dental
Assistants. Her husband is an
Orange Coast College student
who plans lo transfer to the
Unlvertity of Washington in
the fall.
Artistic Efforts Appear
As a viewer o! the 01ear,
Emmy .. Tony and Grammy
award ceremonies, it has
become apparent that many
of our favorite performers
can't ad lib a belch.
ft 's not fair. Housewives
never win awards for anything
and I'm the nut with 15 or
20 humble, all-0ecasion ac-
ceptance speeches in the stove
drawer which have never been
used.
No. IO: Mrs . America Ac·
ceplance Speech :
"Oh wow. \\'hat c;;;, :;ay?
I'm pretty because r eat
sensibly, get Jots of exercise
and take iron. During the year
of my reign, 1'11 do my best
to glorify the American
woman by leaving my husband
and children for a year and
visiting Army bases. (a.1oisten
lips) And now, goodbye for
a little while. My girdle is
killing me."
No. 3: Bowling Trophy
Award For 1\-tost Improved
Player:
AT
WIT'S
END
average, I knew I was in
the. Nnning for the most im·
proved bowler in the tourna·
ment.
"All I can see is, 'thanks,
gang.' " (Scrap: floor with
toe of bowling shoe with head
down.)
No. 15: On Being Named
Girl Scout Cookie Captain:
"First of all I want to thank
all my 'friends' out there who
voted me as Girl Scout Cookie
Captain. You all know who
you are, and I am not likely
to forget you. (Sleady yourself
on podium.)
your envelopes ind do not
write c~ks under 35 cents.
"Again, thank you for your
trust. It almost makes me
wish I lived in the
neighborhood and had a
daughtrr who is a scout."
No. 8: Molher-of·Ulfl'oyear
Award:
"One of my favorite quotes
Is. 'God couldn't be
e1•erywhere. so He made
mothers.' There isn't a day
goes by that I don't ask:
myself, 'Why ?'
·'There are so many people
to thank for this honor. My
hu!':band, tht! producer, my
mother, the director, K }.lart
for my wardrobe and all the
rotten mother!': who made me
look so good.
"The fact that 1 \.1'0n after
my own children voled against
me makes its a double honor.
I also take iron. Thank you."
THINK
EASTER EGGS
.. Donald Henzes Choose
Corona def Mar Home
Harbor Area girls (le(t to right) Dianna Linhart and Laurie Hostetler compare
Dianna's original sketch with the printed counterpart in this month's Ameri·
can Girl magazine. A quote from Laurie's review of the movie Love Story also
appears in the magazine. The daughter or the W. M. Llnharts, Dianna is a stu·
dent at Costa Me~a High School. Dr. ind Mrs. Clif!ord R. Hostetler ol Corona
del Mar are parents of Laurie, who attends Corona del Mar High School
Your Horoscope
"Hey, gang, could you hold
lt down? I'm not big on
speeches. but oh wow. This
is too much. I started to bowl
in the Wednesday Morning
Bowling Belles League about
two years ago and to tell
you the truth f was lousy.
(Laughter)
"I will dispense w i I h the
usual cookie jokes. . .what
a sweet job yw have and
this is the way a scout leader
crumbles. . .and will only
assure you this will be a fl().
nonsense drive. I
"All cookie!': must be picked
up from my living room by
the 19th before my husband
gets home. Please. have the
correct amount of money in
J
THINK
Corona del Mar will be
home for newlyweds Carolille
Colladay, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. John Colladay of Balboa.
and Capt. Do1ald H e n z e
(US,.fC). son of Mr. and ~frs.
Harvey Henze of State Center,
Jowa.
The couple Y:as wed in a
Jate afternoon ceremony in St.
James Episcopal Church of
Newport Beat'h. The Rev.
John Ashey officiated.
The bride's sister. Katherine
Co!laday "'as maid of honor,
serving \\'ith bridesmaids the
Mis.sell: Linda Donohue, Na11cy
Perryman and Jamie Carr.
Jay Jones was best man.
Seating guests \\'ere Roger
Henze, Ben Henie, :P.1ichael
Steuer, Charles Colladay, Joe
Colladay and Gary Smith.
The new !\Its. Henze, a
Rfaduate of University of
Southern California wher·e she
was affi..llattd with Delta,,.
Delta sororilv. is a le · er
i11 Fountain Valley. ller us·
band attended the University
Taurus: Spread Word
"I had never bowled before
in my life. Thfn this year
I don't know what happened.
Things started to fall into
place. During the last two
DTEP.Y
TUESDAY
APRIL 6
By SYDNEY O~fARR
' ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11)~
Control tendency to w • r d
headstrong actions. SUrvey
1iluatlon. Accent on health,
~ lvork, relations with close
associates. Strive to build good
will. Otherwise. there is loss.
MRS. DONALD HENZE
Newport Rites
or Jowa and ls a jet pilot
stationed at El Toro ?ifarine
Corps Air Station.
TAURUS (April 20.11ay 20):
Plans expand. What was
rertricting now is removed.
The.re is greater freedom of
thought, action. ,_.lake contact.
Spread your ov.·n v.·ord. \Yritt',
publicize. and advertise.
GE~llNI (1.lay 21.June 20 ):
Study Aries message. Be safe
rather than sorry. O:ieck
details. Study fine print. One
you trust may now b e
misguided. Bat to heed inner
voice. Refuse to go against
your own grain.
CANCER (June 21.July 2:2):
Be. ready for change, travel,
variety. Member of opposite
sex plays e1citing r o J e •
Creative acUvlty I s Jn-
tensltied. Specific emph11la on
journeys, ide.as. Relative may
sing blues.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): If
you spend too much now on
nonessentials, you may regret
it later. Concentrate. on home
improvement. Conditions in
domestlc area demand at·
tention. Diplomatic approach
1vill succeed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sepl. 22):
Legal entanglement c o u I d
create some delay a n d
dismay. Key ii to time move!':.
Cycle is basically high. What
appears a setback will pro-weeks when I hit my stride.
bably rebound in your favor. the pressure: began to build LIBRA (Se t .. ~ nnt 22) Wes.tcllff Pi.--64J·2444 p . ~ . : OJl me.. Today. when 1 rolled NlWPOlTll INN
Some secrets are revealed. L-1~29~f~or~m~y~l_'1h:_ir:_-e~•::·::g~a:'.'.':m~•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Not a Sood time to try hiding
things-Including feelings. Ex-
press yourself. Realize those
in positions or authority wll
back you. Stand tall. THE EASTER BUNNY IS HERE
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21): IN THE CAROUSEL COURT ••• Finish rather than
begin-complete tasks, "' HAVIYOURPICTUHTAKENWITHHIM
a5'lgnmenls_ Whal appears on C!_OUfh ,._Olsf 4h8 .,I In Co1t1 Me,.
surface ill: deceptive. Look CJ '' J 1-..
beneath super tic i a I in·1;==~~~~~~~~~~==:::::::::::::::::~=::-, dications. You get chance to
display potential. Go to it.
SAG11iARIUS (Nov. 22·
Ott. 21): You seem now to
be very intuitive, but you also
are seeing persons. situations
as you wish they could exist.
Key is to really kno1v the
score. Superiors are testing.
the now knits
practical, packable, beautiful
READ -TO -GO KNITS !
Mrs. Wolfe Takes Gavel
Nuptial Mass Read
Hall
CAPRICORN fDec . 22-Jan.
19): Subtle approach is
n e c e !': sary. Heavy-handed
methods now will work against
you. Realize this and act ac·
cordingly. \Vhat has been a
secret will be revealed . Pro-
tect yourself in clinches.
for the young at heart
For Jane Louise
Nightingales Plan
Luncheon Installation '.
A nuptial mass in St. Fran-
cis of Assisi Church. HWl .. ..
tington Beach linked Jane
Louise Hall, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Warren G. Hall of
Huntington Btach and John
Adrian Will!': 111.
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20..F'eb.I
13): Have fun but don't
neglect commitments. You
vdll have to face yourself.
Some who encourage you may
have ulterior motives. Take
time to analyze. Give full play
to tnte.llectual curiosity. ~lrs. Sterling WoUe will be
Installed chairmu of the
Nighli.ngale Chapter the Aux-
iliary or Hoag ~!emorial
}Iospital, Presbyterian during
the group'!': aMual luncheon
=tomorrow in the Balboa Bay
Club.
'.-A special gued
William R. Hudson
ntinistrator of the
will be
Jr .. ad-
hospital.
Spring Rush
Commencing
For Chapter
Officers for 1970.71 will be
electtd during the I p.m.
meeting on Tuesday, April 6,
of Beta Alpha Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi.
~ The group will gather in
the Huntington Beach home
of 1trs. Phil Pe()ples.
Spring rushing for new
members ill: beginning, and
anyone interested in joining
the sorority may call t-.1rs. De.Ji Kracht.
Hunt Expands
To Toy World
New toys, cookies, candy
e.ggs and Ea!':ler ba5kels will
be added to Easter Pgg!': as
Cystic Fibrosis children from
Orange County join an egg
hunt at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday,
April I, in Garden Grovf'.
The egg hunt and a game
seulon bas been arranged by
the Beta Alpha XI Chapter
of Bela Sigma Phi sorority
and the Cystic Fibro!':ls Youn1
• ActJwlaL
Perenh Club
Assisting in the ceremonies
will be P.frs. Jon Meyer,
former member.
Those. to be installed with
11-frs. Wolfe are as follows:
the Mmes. Edward Marti•·
dale, Ray Dosta and Oon1ld
Frazer, vice chairman: Daniel
Shepardson and J 1 m e 1
Wlnst.on, secretaries, and Rob-
ert Stipes, treasurer.
Chalnnen and 1J1:sist.ants In·
elude the Atmel':. Kerm Rima
and Ralph \Vaterma11, baby
photos; William Saxton, calen-
dar: Thom1s Boler and Alfred
Boehner, holiday: Leonard
South, publicity; W 111 i am
Schworer and Boehner, tumor
board, and Thomas A. An·
dre\\'S and J. F. Nickertz, can.
cer registry.
'
MRS. J, A. WILLS 111
Form•I Wffdlng
Officiating was
Thomu Scbne.lder.
the Rev.
~Jiss Deborab Dewlen was
the bride's mald of honor,
\\'hilt bridesmalds included
1 ~1iss Susan Costa, 11-f rs..
Thoma!': Leroux. and Mrs .
' Raymond Gauthier, 1ister of
PISCES (Feb. IS.~1arch 20):
Break through red tape . State
needs in !rank manner. Leo
individual c a n now prove ,
valuable ally. Aid comes'
through unorth odox channels.
I
' the bride.. Camilla LeMert ""'""""'
was the. flower girl.
David Fuentes stood as be.sl
man for the brlde.gr<nn, who
i.s the. son of ?-.fr. and Mrs.
John A. Wills Jr. of Pauma
Valley.
Seating guests were Steve
Williams, Mike Hall and
Gauthier.
The bride was graduated
from Huntington Beach High
I '
I
I
I
L h T School and the. bridegroom at-
U n C eon opic Lures tended schools in Pasadena. Bolh students at Orange Coast
College, they ~·ill make their Are a Is yachting wives liiiflriiiisl .. ho.,meiiiinuCiEos..,ta M_._ .. _. iiiiiil
1,101'1 0, OIL PAIHTIN•s •
What Every Yachting \\!He
Should Know but fs Afraid
to Ask ill: the intriguing topic
for the openlnK Ladles Day
luncheon in Bahia C.Orinthian
Yacht Club on Wednesday,
April 7.
During the noon lunche()n,
model!': ~·ill present Lorraine
Sutherland'* yachting and
resort <'lothes in an informal
shov.•ing. The social hour will
be1in at 11 :30 a.m. Mrs. Lorin
C. Weiss is chalnnan for the
day.
Overall coordinator for the
Ladles Day luncbton!': ·which
will take place on lhe first
Wednead1y of e1eh month
durinc the coming year Is
Mrs. John P. Hooten, wife
of the «rnmodore.
Lunclteon c.halnnen who will
usiat during the. Rason in·
elude the ~!mes. James C.
Beasley, James R. Garner,
\\'illlam L. O'Bryon and S.
McKee Thompson.
Furthtr chairmen who ere.
plannin1 auc.h event. as cook·
Ing aboard, cultural ouUnis.
brkl:Jt Ind ltillng lrt the.
1 WHOLllALI WAllHOUll "' r \\ynnett E. Bedall, Jack F.' Of'IN TO THI PUILIC ·•
Early, \Y1lliam C. Adam!':, ~ SOO/o OFF ~
John R. Amies, Larry A. · 1•1t •· •011tG11t, SANTA :J"' M E E T Miller. a.1yron Sheward, Sallye liil . '"'" 11MM1
Braly and David Domanski U!Dla CIAL11t1 WANTID D E B B I E • • • •
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e SPRING JS JN ntE AIR
SPRING JS EVERY-
\VHERE
A "SPRING SALE"
Starli~ )londay, April
Sth. Store chuck tuu ot
new Ir near Tlf'W aummer
items, 8 a t h i n r aults,
shortt, shlttt, etc .•.
Ck cl••-818.
• l\lolhtr r:ttds a ~loltw!r"s
iletper .. to ln'e ln . Pleas.
ant homf' "''Ith own room.
\\'ork not heavy. Jr lnter-
nte.d a no.11
• ••• our ft•w Carou1el Op-1·
ltl'ator. For som• old fashion
fuft rid• the Carousel.
little 9irl1 3 to 7 and Jr.
Mi11e1, 7 to I 0, siqn up •II
this we1k •t Bergstrom's for
E•1ter B•auly Conto1t on
Saturday, April 10, Carousel
Court from I to ). Charm I
cour1e for winners and oth•r
merchandis• 9ivon •way.
South
Coast
'1ua
"SLINKY" KNITS
e SOLID COLORS
hand washable ac1tate
• MOD PRINTS
washeble acetate
44"/45" widths
CEDILLA KNITS
clingy t•xtur1d nylon
in solid colors
Blazer Stripe Knits
gr•at colors and combos
ac•tet• & nylon 45"
• "LOOP" KNITS
"wit" look-crepe "f••I"
acetete & nylon solids
SCREEN PRlNT
DOUBLE KNITS
100% polyester
DACRON POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNITS
many Jacquard stitch•s
many machine washable
44" lo 58" widths
SOLID COLOR
BUTCHER WEA YES
NEW "LINEN LOOK"
FLAXTONE PRINTS
Rayon & Silk Tex Ture
with the look & feel of
fine linen
machin• wash
44"/46" wide
Rog . 1.19 yd.
mod designs on neutral
backgrounds
washable cotton, rayon, flex
yd.
HOUSE OF FllBRICS
l•111tfl Co-cnt 'ln-8•i1tof •I S•l'I Dl•90 Fwy,
Co1,o M9-5•5·15•6
Or..fcilr Mell~,•~9tt~orp• eftd H•rltor
F1111/•rt•lt-J 2 ,.JJ l•
H•Mf r-17th •* lriittl
leMe A11-54J·lll1
I••• '•rti C~tet-lt P•lm1 ti St.~lt1~
l•efl• P•rti-IJl0 6J2J
Orange Coast Chapter,
Partnls Without P a r t n e r ~
aponaora • pancake breakfast
the tut SundaJ cA each month
In Cotta Meu Clt7 P1rt from
t a.m. to J2:M p.m. Wally
Rlch&rdl, dllJrrniin, w 111
answer questions tt11rdlng
the publJc "r1ln or shine''
t\'e11t at M.2-1700 or 542·9665. Mmea. Robert J. Eastman,,._ ____________________ Jl . ..'."'.'.''.'.''::'•::•:_&~S•"'."'....'::D~l•'.!l"_'~'~"~'~w~•!_1 H•111l1111to1 Co11Nr-Ecl i ~9 ,, •' '••c~Bl~d .. H1111tlllllt•11 loec!t--1•7·1D1J '----~~~~~----'-~~~--'.~~~~~___!
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FMllLY CIRCllS b11 Bii Keone ----~
•
"Monwny I p J ate the baseba ll c<Ns and left
tho gum. 0
Mistal{es n1 Laos
Attacl{ Asserted
SAIGON (UPI) -Whal
"'ent wrong with operation
Lam Son 719, the South Viet-
namese Army 's incursion into
Laos?
'l'alks with U.S. and South
Vietnamese staff officers pro·
duced many answers for the
failure or the operation to
achieve its goal or culling
the Ho Chi Minh Trail until
the start of Laos' May
Monsoon season.
The series of mistakes may
'have begun as early as
October, when a high ranking
American officer told friends
in off-the-record chats that if
tbe South Vietnamese went
jato Laos, Se.pone would be
.tl'Je target.
A North Vietnamese defec-
, tor who turned himseU in dur-
lng the Laos ()peration said
his unit was informed last
October to . expect a South
Vietnamese invasion along
liighy.·ay 9.
The next mistake "'as the
leaky security in \Vashington
and elsewhere which pin·
pointed plans 1n the v.·orld
press which still were secret
in Saigon. The leaks may have
been deliberate trial balloons
to assess in advance world
reaction, but they ended any
hope or the type of surprise
achieved in last spring's
Cambodian operations.
Then there was the malter
or preparations. Someone
forgot to provide enough maps
and some American heliC<lpler
pilots on resupply missions to
'south Vietnamese troops ln
Laos had only a compass
bearing to help them find posi·
lions.
As one Asnerican Colonel
assigned to advise South Viel·
nam's Joint General Starr put
it, although the operation was
"part of the weaning process"
to teach the South Vietnamese
to handle their own ground
to air liaison the time was
bad . Thus Sou I h Vietnamese
units which had a I w a y s
,depended upon t h e i r ac-
companying U.S. advisors to
call in air slrikes. helicopter
resuppl y and medica l evacua-
tion mi ssions, and American
artillery support. had only
..Joiir days of rehearsal lo learn
how to do it themselves. Their
English wasn't up to it and
often the radioed appeals went
unanswered. South Viel·
.;namesc sources said.
Finally, in the preparations.
Americans had educated the
Sou1h Vietnamese lo light a
•·rich" v.•ar. \Vhen corrugated
tron bunker building material s
iailed to arrive, the South
Vietname se soldiers
50metimes sat around to await
them instead of making do
with lhe Jogs or bamboo at
hand. Thus, v.·hen Hill 31 was
overrun , an officer y,·ho was
lhcre sa id the Vietnamese
paratroopers were not well
dug in and defenseless against
lhe North Vietnamese tanks.
The:·e is a military rule of
thumb that an altacking force
i'ihould out.number a defending
force two or three to one.
There were elements of three
North Vietnamese Divisions in
the Sepone area initially and
elements of two others ap-
peared on the. scene during
the. operation for a total
strength well in excess of
30,000 men. The attacking
South Vietnamese never had
more than 24.000 men in Laos.
The South Vietnamese. even
with America n air supPQrt.
v.-ere outgunned, particularly
since the Soviet-made 130 mm
and 152 mm artillery used
by the Ccmmunists oulrangf>d
tht American supplied 105s
and l5Ss.
Most (If the troops ~elected
lo go into Lan~ v.·cre lhe pick
of the South Vietnamese
1\rmy. The Isl Arvn Jn!antry
Division J:C'ner11lly is cun-
sidered to be the country's
best. Thr paratroopers.
t\tarines and rangers are elite
volunteers. But the armored
cavalry units were below par
-the best such are assigned
to South Vietnam's III and
IV military regions and are
veterans of Cambodia. One
of the armored regiments sent
lo Laos was among the
poorest in the ARVN.
A major factor of the Laos
incursion was the failure to
secure Highway 9 for supply
convoys. and to reach Hilt
31 before its paratrooper
defenders were overrun. Both
these tasks were assigned to
the armored cavalry and in
each case it failed. In the
case of Hill 31, an armored
rommander tarried for a full
day before carrying out an
order to rush to Hill 31's
defense. He said he did not
have enough air support.
In their enthusiasm to
match the material finds of
the Cambodia n operation,
ARVN field commanders sent
!heir troops off on search
missions instead off con-
centrating lhem to withstand
attacks, even when recon-
naissance had reported mass-
ing of North Vietnamese
troops and tanks. Thus only
a fraction of the troops assign-
ed lo points like Landing Zone
Ranger North and Hill 31, both
of which fell, were on band
when the Communists at-
tacked .
The South Vietnamese had
made a number of e\aborat
feints at the demilitarized
zone to tie down the North
Vietnamese troops there and
to lure others to the border
from Laos. U.S. military and
diplomntic sources said
statements by South Viel·
nam's President Nguyen Van
Thieu and Vice President
Nguyen Cao Ky that an in-
vasion of North Vietnam was
"inevitable" were part of the
same strategy. But the
prompt public rejection of
U.S. support for such an in-
\'asion from Washington con·
vinced North Vietnam that it
would not occur. The North
Vietnamese failed lo reinforce
the Dl\1Z and diverted some
of their troops from it to
Laos to repel the ARVN.
There is criticism and
counter criticism of the U.S.
air support for the Laos in·
cursion. American helicopter
commanders complained that
South Vietnamese field com·
manders secured their landing
zones but failed to secure
enough area aaround them lo
prevent the helicopter from
taking heavy ground fire as
they landed and took ofL
South Vietnamese field com·
manders complained th a l
when an American aircraft
v.·enl down, vitally needed air
support evaporated -diverted
lo take part in the search
and recovery operation of the
air crew. At Hill 31, a South
Vietnamese officer s a i d ,
helicopter gunships were
diverted to rescue an air crew
just as North Vietnamese
tanks were making their final
assault on the hill.
But perhaps the most im·
portant element in limiting the
success of the Laos operation
Y.'BS the fa ilure ol the North
Vietnamese to repeat a
mistake they made in last
spri ng 's Cambodian opera-
tions. In Cambodi a they
ordered their infantry to
withdraw and left the defense
of lhe base camps and cache
areas to the rear strvia
troops who operated them.
The service units were over-
run and the North Viel·
namese, nearly a year later,
ha\·e be(~n unable lo rebuild
their supply chain into South
Vietnam. This lime the North
Vietnamese sent the i r
lou~hcsl infantry in to defend
1t1t' Ho Chi f\.1inh Trail and
f1Jl r f'rl \hf' Srluth Vietnrtmese
lo withdraw with the job only
half done.
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DAILY PrLOf l3
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may co, south coast plata, tan diego fwy. 1t brl1tol, co1t1 me11; 546-9J'J.1
shop mond•y thru saturday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunday noon 'til S p.m.
--.
. ' !•
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• ! :. .. l
{: ~'!~
~ i· .. ! ; I . '. , .... J ' ,.t. ~ '·. ~ ,. .. .,,
knits
go
casual
lhe double-knit jacket movH easy
men on the move appreciate that
When a man bends, st retches, twists,
swings, this jacket moves right along
with him, very easily. That's what's nice
about knit. And, it never wrinkles, even
packed in a suitcase. This one by Robert
Lewis is Fortrel@ polyester. In cream,
maize, brown, nJvy. 38-46 32.SO
Levi's double knit flares fit smoo(h
men appreciate their neat look
Smooth fit. That's what Levi's® are so
famous for. Now lhe fit's even belier
because the fabric is double-knit
·polyester. Wrinkle? Never. Machine
wash and dry in a wink ••. ready to
wear again. We've gol solids in navy
camel, bro\.vn, white 11.00
Stripes in blue, brown 22.00
men's SPortswear45 and flJ
•
MAVCO
cing
ned
!Ian hu
loot
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die;
erd
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Zf DAILY PllOT MorKlay, April ~. 1971
Passage Cuts 31 Hours Off Record
.ln the rect.nt ~1\aml to
t.footego Bay tJamaica) yacht
race, Mark Johns on's
Wlndward. Passage slashed 31
hours off her own elapsed Ltme
rtcord (or th~ 800 ntilt race
in 1969.
to the first 1nark -Great
Isaacs.
conce.rn about the ma.st will ,..,.,..--..,.--.,....,• ed up to about 25 loot.a.
WP's new record for the
course is now lhrt.'t' days,
three hours alld 40 minutes.
Her average spe«i for the
course was 10.8 knots.
Chip Cleary of Newport
Beach was aboard t be
Passage in her record
smashing run. In case you
want to know \'fhat it's like
on such a race. here a~ a
few remarks of Cleary's:
··tt was a fast race from
the start on Friday, March
19. Mark got a good driving
st.art (10-11 knots) at the
weather end of the line, and
within a minute we were clear
ol lbe Oeet and on our way
"Y.'t had Peter Bowker
navigatlng and he did a
superlative )Oh. \\'e v.•ere on
the button in every situalion
-including the right times
to gybr. Peter kept us close
to the various marks, avoiding
extra sailing miles -and that
was a real plus (ac'lor.
"In retrospect, ""e may have
driven Passage a little harder,
but always in the back of
our minds was concern about
the mainmast if v.·e overload-
ed her. and that guided our
sail changing thinking. Conse-
quently, we v.·ere prelly actJve
-up and down -on sail
changes with every change in
the weigbt of the v.·ind.
"With the new stick and
the heavier wire standing rig·
ging, which will be installed
lie.fore the Hooolulu race, that
$3 yard:
be elimlnai.d.
"We had a doff reacb to
Isaacs, passing close abeam
~ 100 yards) about five hours
and 10 minutes after the start.
Chasing us were Ondine,
American Eagle, Sorcery and
Improbable-. Great Stirrup
Light was a haU·mile abeam
at 1320 Friday.
"Saturday morning saw us
leave Eleuthcra a s t e r n ,
Ondint wu nw hull down
oo the horlwn. Before noon,
Huey (Sumner Long) decided
to gamble and headed Ondine
up for the weather side of
Cat I.stand, which we were
leaving to ilarboard. We
figured Huey was looking for
a better wind and a chance
to set a chute and reach down
and tnttt w at Conception
Island later that day.
"But that didn't happen. \Ve
Elegant over and
under draperies.
';
\ )
; I
Both for one low price.-
Choose from beautiful antiQue satins with matching sheers: au
for what you would expect to pay for the over draperies alone.
One price gives you value plus. Regu lar k>w Penney prices on
our finest fabrication.
Call collect (714) 523-6511
for our shop-at-home service.
ALL
THE
Decorate now, Use Penney• time payment plan.
SPAGHETTI~~: EAT
WITH OUR DELICIOUS GENOA MEAT SAUCE AND
GENEROUS AMOUNTS OF FRESHLY GROUND BEEF I
TUES., &th, WED. 7th, THURS. 8th
WE SERVE LOW CALORIE SPAGHETTI
SPECIAL LET'S GET ACQUAINTED OFFER
ADULTS 95~ CHILDREN ss~
UNDll 12 PllASl
· nlfiony4
SPAGHETTI HOUSE • ,;.·:-;·.~.
MODllN All CONDITIONID, 210 SLlT
PAMJLT lmAUIANT LOCATID AT .,.
HARBOR BLVD. AT McFADDEN
SANTA ANA ... 839-2281
Acr.w tr-H..tl•r Drl••·I• 1"ttf•r
ci .... ,..,..,,
.
( . \ i
"
didn 't see Ondine again until
after the finish .
"Our first day's noon-lo-
noon was 262 miles. We
weren't able to set a spinnoker
until 2200 Saturday -about
two hours after we rounded
Ruin Cay.
"About 0100 Sunday we had
the south point c( Long Island
to starboard and wel'!: into
the Crooked Island Passage.
Crooked Island's Long Cay
\Vas on our port beam at
0300 and Ackland Island was
abaft the beam. We had Caslle
Llght off cur port beam at
0600.
"At this point we were about
IS hours ahead of Passage's
time in 1969. The wind picked
up at daylight and we put
on a heavier chute. Sail hand!·
ing throughout the race was
excellent. By noon Sunday we
bad another 250 miles in the
bag.
"On a course ci 180 we
closed with Cuba's Maisi Point
and it was three-quarters of
a mile abeam at lli!O. We
were now running 24 hours
ahead of WP 's time in 1969.
"We rounded Cuba, clearing
the dewlate beach by about
200 yards ruid moved into the
Wind'l\·ard Passage (for which
WP was named). At 1715 we
Gybed and head for Jamaica.
The wind in the passage pick·
"On our 7 to 11 watch we
began to surf off the short-
coupled seas, sliding off oae.
going over the .next two or
three and then sticking our
bow into the fourth or filth
wave. We were moving at
a comfortable 14-16 knota with
an occasional 18-11 toot slider.
"Best speed was recorded
by Don Ayres with a soUd
20-knot slider, and Paul Cook
followed him on the helm with
a beautiful one at 21 knots.
"lrm StawJckl.'s watch came
on u the winds began to
abate by OHIO Monday . They
Y.•ere down to 11-12 knots.
(There does come a time when
this speed seems as if you
~ standing sWl.) By 0300
we were down to 91f.s knots
at which point we changed
to a lighter chute and got
back to 10-11 knots.
"At 1015 we gybed over to
the port tack and were on
our way to the finish cU the
Montego Bay entrance. Our
noon position showed we had
Jogged 254.5 miles for the 24
hours.
"Ondine reported herself
about 30 miles behind us,
Sorcery 60 miles and Eagle
«12 miles astern.
"We crossed the finish line
at 1540 with a hastily-obtained
proxy committee boat on hand
to do the honon. It was subse-
quenUy reported by a spotter
pl.ane that Ondlne was about
45 mile' astern when we
finishe44. She finished some
four hour' behind us.
"Next to Windward
Passage's performance, the
other most impressive boat
in the ra ce w33 Improbable,
the Gary Mull 43-footer oo
which Skip Allan sailed. Skip
will be with us in the Honolulu
race. In the Win ward
Passage Improbable broke
free to surf at 20 knots. Since
Skip knows £rom experience
what il means to surf at 20
knots on Big Ti, his word
is reliable and acceptable."
Shouldn't You
beat Home?
OVer
$31h Billion
STRONG
Over
82 Years
SAFE
Now is the time to
COMPARE FAC IS!
Now more than ever you're better off at 110ld Dependable" Home Savings.
Compare Home's rates and terms with the current offerings of banks. Com·
pare the eamings you can enjoy at Home with Treasury bills and Treasury
Spring Series Yacht
Standi11gs Revealed
· notes ••• municipal bonds and commercial paper ••• stocks and mutual funds.
With the changes that are occurring iR So many investment areas, you'll
agree that for earnings and the safety of your principal there's no place like
Home. At Home you always can be sure of the highest interest available any.
where on insured savings and the extra protection of the highest assets and
highest actual dollar reserves of any association in the nation.
King llarbor Yacht Club.
Redondo Beach, S u n d a y
announced the final standings
or itc; Spring Series. Results:
COLUMl!IA-26 112) -(I)
Trigger, Phil Lucas, SBYRC;
(2) Rubber Duck, Ma r k
Johnson, KHYC: (3) Midget,
Steve Gibson, SBYRC: (4)
Kahuna Kai. Bob Cohen.
KHYC.
T-BIRO (1) -(I) C-Jim.
Mike Cook, KHYC: ( 2 )
Allegro, Bill Johnson, KHYC.
CORONA00-25 (1) -11 \
r..·ui Loa, Jim Morrison .
Kl!YC : (2) Tsunami, Tom
Collins, KHYC.
VICTORY 151 I \ I
Tangerine, Bert Fe r g e r ,
KHYC.
CAL-20 (13) -(1 I Wahoo,
Borry Branin, KHYC; 12)
Interim, Frank Vyz r a I ck,
KHYCl 13) Scorpio, \Vallv
\\'bite. KHYC; (4) Nereid .
J ohn J orgenson, KHYC
SNIPE (11) -(II Oran ge
Pov: er, Michael Eisenberi;:,
\VYC: (2) Bird. Jim Boldt ,
K~fYC ; 13) Sticky \Vicket,
Nixon Galloway, NHYC.
LI00-14 (1) -(I) Well
TAT\.E THE
NEWS QUIZ
We Dare You ...
Every Safurday
Done, Oiarles Dunn, KHYC;
{3) Wiki·WUti, Carter Gage,
KHYC.
LIGHTNING (11 11)
Padd.Un Madelyn, W e n de 11
Harter, KHYC ; {2) Maverick,
Jack Glverink, KHYC.
CORONAIXH5 141 -(I)
Front Page, Brett Page,
KllYC.
WIN ARO SABOT 11 I -(I I
Fo:ty, Kelly McMartin ,
KHYC; (2) Yellow Baron,
Mike Galloway, KHYC: (3)
Super Chicken, W i n k e y
Saville, KHYC.
PHRF·A (10) -(I) Nov a
Kai. John Jordan, KHYC; (2)
Colleen II, Ed Connor, KHYC;
Cl) Maren, Ed Venable ,
KHYC.
PHRF-B (15)
Challenger, Jim
KlrYC; (2) Virglnlana, Gene
Ford, KHYC : (3)
\Vindjammer, Richard Leslie.
KHYC; (41 Aetos, Chris
Karatzas, SBYRC.
MORF (5) -(1) Bravada.
Dick Johnson, KHYC.
Coast Guard
Aids Told
Coast Guard Au1iJiary
members of the 11th Coast
Guard District assisted 2,869
boaters during 1970 and helped
save property v11lued at
$4 ,600,000, according to Arch
McGregor, district
commodore.
The auxiliarists of the area
comprising Southern
California. Southern Nevada ,
Arizona and part of Utah,
perfonned 9 3 7 assistance
missions during the 12-month
period.
ThtN! are now more than
2,000 men and women in the
11th District Au1iliary
participating in p u b I i c
education through classes in
safe boating, piloting ond
seaman sh Ip ; courtesy
motorboat e1aminaUon.~. and
operalions such as 3earch and
rescue, regatta and voluntary
safety patrol.
LET'S BE FRIENOL Y
lt )'Ol.I have-nt'"" nclfl\hbon:
or know er 11nyont' movini:::
to our area, pl~ tell us
ao that .,.,., may extend a
rr\cndly V>'l'IOOmC and hl'lp
them tn bt-o'-om<' acQuRintro
2 YEAR MINIMUM TERM ACCOUllTS" 1 YEAR MINIMUM TERM ACCOUNTS
For savings Df $5.000 er more, Guar·
antees 6%. compounded daily, for an
annual yield of 6.18%. Example: Jn 2
years, $5,000 grows to $5,637.43 and
$20,000 grows to $22,549.75.
For savings cf SI,000 or more. Guaran·
tees 53!. %, compounded daily, for an
annual yield DI 5.92°/0 • Example: In 1
year, $1,000 grows to $1,059.20 and
$4,000 grows to $4,236.80.
3 MONTH IWNUS ACCOUNTS REGUUR PASSBOOK l SPECIAL.PURPOSE
for savings of $500 or more. Eams 5%,
compounded daily, witti a lA % bonus
paid •fter 3 months. Thereafter the
bonus account earns 5'!."fo, com·
pounded dally, and paid to d•te cf with·
drawal. Annual yield after the first 3
months. 539%-Example: In one year,
$500 1rows to $526. 94.
"PAY YOURSELF FIRST" ACCOUNTS
Add er withdraw any amount anytime,
Earns full interest from day-in to day.
cut. Current annual rate of 5% yields
5.13% annually, Example: In one year,
$1,000 gTOWS to $1,051.V.
America's Largest
LOI ANCIRr:I (MAIN OFflCD
761 S. Br11•dw•'r •t Ith• !IOCH4
(213) 627·7991
ALHAM•llA .-01 E. V•lle:t lllvd., llt $1trr1 VIM.I 91801•(21J)219~211
ANAHfllil JOI S. H1r'bor lllvd. 1t Llnooh1
92805. (714) !ll~2113
AltCADIA 60 E••I Hunun.i;on Drive It Firat • 91006
(21JJ «6-all21
8All'STOW
1212 £. M•ln St. lr1 '"• s 111w1y Shopplnl Clf111t • 92311
(7141 256-2131
aEVt:RlT HtUS
9245 Wll1hlr1 8!vd.
1t R1dord Drlvt • 90210 (21J) 273-6666
9UENA rAllK 8010 811ch Blwd.
11 Le P1lm1 • 90620 (714)128--4664
a UR9ANKl40 N. Sin Ftrn111do 81~d. at Burblnk Blvd,• !111501
1213) 845-7211
COMrTON 1801 N. lonl
B••c" ll!vd. 11 Golden 90221 . ~!)) 638-11135
ENCINO l7107 Ventur• Blvd.
•I Amntoy • 91316
4213) 7111-0630
GAROEN GROVE
11922 lllrookhun.I SL
II Ch•pm1n • 92640
(71·0 !530-5680
GLENDALE 620 N. 1lr1nd Blvd. II U11 Ventur• f"'f .• 91203
(213) 241-4102
H1GHl.AH0 .. AltK
6100 N. Firu1ro1 St.
•I Ave. 57 LA. i0042 (213) 254-!5184
HOLLYWOOD 1500 N. Vin• •I Su11t.et
900211 • (213) -466-1121
HUHTINOTON rARK
71'1P.1clfj.c91"'1.at Florence• 902!5!5 (2lll SSS-1177
LAKEWOOD 1909 L1kewood lll\1111. •t Del Amo• 90712
(213) 6.3•-4909
LA Ml'IAOA
1!5128 E. Ra1.-:r1n1 A~. [1st al la Mlr1d1 Blvd.
90638. (71•) !521·1310
l..TYEllMORE 275 S. "K" st. at 3rd St. 94!550 . !41!1) 447 ... 660
l..OHO IEACH 201 Ea1t ,1rs1 St. 1t locu1t
90102. (21l) 436-1231
MOHTDtlLO 14~9 w. ew1rlr Blvd. at M1p11 • (213) 721-0317
OAKLAND
2!10 E1ll 11th St. P1rll lloul1v1rd Oltlricl
94606. (415) -465-1400
PASADENA
160 E11t Colorado Blvd. •• l•••· 91101 {213) 795-5 174
PICO 'llVE'IA 9125 E. Wflllt!1r (llvd. C..11
of Rot1m11d • 90660 (21J) 699-1071
POMONA
100 l'Dmon1 Mill Wnt 91769. (714) 623·2491
RIALTO IOI E. Foolh UI Blvd. at Ri'l1,_id• 92376•1714) 87!5·7010
SAN llEllNAROINO
301 W. Hl1hl1nd A._., at A•rowhe•d • 92406 (714) 812·3321
SAN FRANCISCO
2500 M111lon SI. 1t 21tl St.
94110. (415) 641-8900
SAN JOSE
1221 Uncoln Ave. Wiiiow Gl•n Di11rict 9!5125. (408) 217·0101
SANTA ANA
l 300 Nol1h M•ln St.
at W•shjnft°" Ave 92701 . (7 4) !547·9611
SANTA MONICA
2600 W!lth"e 81vd. •I 26th 90403 . (2 1]} 821-5541
STUDIO CITY 120~1 V1ntura Blvd. •t l au•rl Ctnyon • Pl604 (211) 763·1341
TORllANCE 1511 Crtvflltl Avr.
at El Pr1do • 90&11 C2ll) 328·9244
VICTORV1lL[ 14909 71h SI.
flllf thl Victor VIJii)" ShODpln! Cent1r • 92392 '
(71•124 -5327
WCSTCOVINA 100 Vif1Clnl Ayf • at lh1 Sin Btm•rdlno Fwy.
9J7!MI. (2 13) 966-7591
WHITTIER 15625 E•tl WhlNl•r Blvd.
II S1nt1 Gtrtrudn 90103 . (213) 691-6761
Wll.SHlllE CtHT[ll
3750 W1lthlr1 Bl~d. •I Oxford 90010 • (2l3) 3'1W97l
Accounts inwt«I lo $10.000 br Ille TEDCRAL S..rin1s and Lot/I lnsural'IC.• Corf)Or.lt1on,
MVlfl,W KCCMll'lb ,,,.y be inSIJred to 120.000 •.eh. Memm: FEO!Rlol H~ L.otn fl•nlc Zy<"'
'" ;;~· c~;st"Vi;~;"· II===;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=
414-1157' 494-9361 G Fasfesf in We•f Harbor Visitor Y !t. s,11 ll. Tr~ the fAsltst rtsponst In tht Wtst ag.:ilnst your own tlor.~. Ttst 01mt·
Int Ads, .,.,hPre llir ,1ct!cri IS, Ill SaturdJ)'s ["IA!LY PILOT
'4'-0174
• ' .
I
• I
Wins Trophy
Bob Grant's Columbia-50 Robon Ill, skippered by
Taylor Grant, won the Al Adams & Son Challenge
Trophy in a sudden death race at Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club Sunday. Robon III was a Newport Har-
bor Yacht Club entry, which means the race will be
sailed in Newport next year. Runner-up was the de-
fender CBYC with Karl Burton's Freedom. Third
was Del Rey Yacht Club with Jim Feuerstein's
Querida II.
Southland Boat Show
Will Get Bigger in LA
The 1972 Southern California
Boat Show will gro w substan·
tlally as a result of it! move
to the new $40,000,000 Los
D. Ullman
Captures
Wood Cup
Dave Ullman of Balboa
Yacht Club bested 24 rivals
Sunday in capturing the Harry
Wood Perpetual Trophy in
BYC's annual Lido -14
Invitational Regatta.
There were 25 entries in
Class A and lS in Class B.
Winner in the Class B division
was Robert Hubbs o f
Voyagers Yacht Club. Final
results:
CLASS A (Harry ' \Vood
Perpetual) -(I) Magic, Dave
Ullman, BYC; (2) Wood Wind,
Harry Wood, ABYC; (3)
Snoopy, Dick Lineberger,
ABYC; (4} Upset, Al Perez,
• BYC.
CLASS B -(I) Lorelei,
Robert Hubbs, VYC; (2)
Rutll.! Audiorium, B 1 a I r
Barnett, BYC; (3) No Deposit
No Return, Herb Riley, BYC:
( 4) Red Baron, Ken Harrison,
LIYC.
Cup Challenger
Sought for '73
LONDON (AP) -French
and Canadian yachl!men will
attend a London meeting thi.!
monlh to try to pick a
challenger to contest a U.S. 12-
meter yacht for the America's
Cup in 1973.
The meeting, arranged for
April 26, has been organized
by the Royal Thames Yacht
Club. Australian challengers
have refused to attend the
l.A>ndon meeUng.
Angeles Convention Center for
the Feb. 4-13 dales.
There will be nearly 250,000
square feet of space all under
one roof at the ultramodern
downtown fa c 111 ty . 'l1le
recently concluded boat show
at the Pan Pacific Auditorium
had 200,000 square feet of ei:-
hibit space.
Facilities for exhiblton will
be deluxe in all respect!.
There will be electrical, gaa
and water facilities out of the
floor every 10 feet.
There will be sales meeting
rooms , cafeteria, d I n i n g
rooms, and cocktail lounges.
Parking. i.! available for 5,000
cars-most of it under Olle
roof.
Tbe building will have com-
puterized air and healing.
Move-in will be facilitated
by a 50-foot wide door with
a 25 foot heJgbt.
Location of the building, 8!
well as the increased room
and beautifu l facilities, b ex·
peeled to stimulate crowds to
a record level. The building
is located in downtown Uis
Angeles near the junction of
the Harbor and Santa Monica
freeways.
Alamitos
Club Wins
Ri ck Grajerlna of Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club v.·on the
California Open Championship
regatta for OK Dinghies
Sunday at Uis Angeles Yacht
Club.
There were 23 entries.
Including six from Santa
Barbara and the S a n
Francisco Bay area and one
from Florida.
Runner-up in the six-race
series was Gene Kohlman of
St. Francis Yacht Club, and
third wu Steve Tosch!,
Inverness, YC. Fourth place
went to Doug Halsey, BBYC
of Florida , and fifth was
Mary Griffith of LA YC.
Firm Moving
Campbell Boats in Arizona
LAKE HAVASU C ITY ,
Arizona -Campbell Boal
Company. one of the West's
leading custom boat builders
for the past 25 years, today
announced plans to move Its
manufacturing operations
from Glendale, into a new
$150,CKKI plant in this young
light Jndustrial-resort city on
the lower Colorado River.
William Campbe ll .
president. said construction Is
already uR<ler way on a 21),000-
square-foot facility combining
production and s h o w r o o m
areas.
"We upect to be in run
production within 60 days."
Campbell said. "With an initial
work force l)f 12 employl!ll. By
rtie end of thl.! year, we
anticipate having at least 20
full-time employes."
White Bro!. Construction Co.
of this city il'I !Upervisfng
c.'OnstructlOPI Of the plant.
J()('ated on a four-acre sile in
Lake Havasu City't!I Science
t1nd lndui::try Park. Featuring
A Spanish-styled 200-fOOt ·wide
front "porch" for display or
boats and other m a r I n e
products, the bujlding will face
Arizona Highway 95, the main
highway roule into Lake
Havasu City from U.S. &Ii.
Manufacturing areas will
include a hull assembly area,
a high-performance engine
le.sting room, a n d engine
ln.!tallation and repair shope.
Campbell said present plans
call for additional boat storage
units to be completed this
summer.
The Campbell li11e o f
rlberglass hulls includes 17..ft.
and 18-ft. l ow-pro f l ie ~
n1nabouls, and cu s I om
designed cruisers rang I n g
from 21 feet to 40 feet in
!ene:th.
Th<' Campbell firm is the
second boat bullder to locate
in Lake Havasu Ci!y. year-
round watersports capital and
center of boating activity on
ofS.mile·long Lake lf av a s u .
llavasu Ma nu r act u ring
Company has been producing
Starllght Pontoon borits l'lere
for more than two year!.
..
Monday1 Aprft' 5, lq71 DAILY PTLOT f§;
Ensenada Powerboat Ra~e Set April 17 :~
A fleet or nearly thret dozen
hlgh perfonnance, o c e It n
daring 'race craft will be in
view or shoreside spectators
most of the way between the
start and finish lines April 17
when the third annual Long
Beach to Ensenada
Jn tern at l on al offshore
powerboat race gets under
way.
This was the observation of
Pacific 0£fshore Powerboat
Alsociation p~sldent Russ
Hill in disclosing the 12
checkpoints where the racing
boalls will be recorded during
the American Power Boat
Association national
..... . , ...•.
chan1pionship points race .
The start is scheduled for 9
a.m. Saturday mornlng off
Belmont Shore in Long Beach
tlarbor. 1'he fleet will race
along the shore, past. the new
permenant berth of the Queen
P.lary, and then out the
Queen'.!! Gale entrance to the
Long Beach breakwater and
into the open sea.
The first checkpoint will be
at Pomt Fermin. Hill said lhe
short jog to the north would be
run for safety reason!, under
the theory thul any boat get
into trouble Yt'ould do so early
in the race.
From Jloint Fermin the fleet
UQUID nmuna
•A .... ,._ ..__. ..... ---•HlfltlJ% ......... "-· ........
66:..
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IDGER BLADES
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•ct·"· 69~
will head south on the 170-mi!e
trip to Ensenada. Entrants
will ~ requirtd to pau witbln
easy visibility of patrol boats
and wilhin view o (
spectators -at the Seal
Beach Oil Island, Huntington
Beach Pier, Newport Pier,
Dana Point Oceanside, La
Jolla and Point lAma before
entering Mexican waters.
There also w i J l be
checkpoints at Descanso and
Pesadero Points before the
entrants reach Ensenada.
"Checkpoints serve t w o
major purposes ," said Hill.
''First, we a!! want to know
how the racing is going. But
even more important, we keep radio equlpnlE'nt. Previously foot The Cigarette racing
track: of boats best by this was only required of team hu.11, Aeromarine, owflt'd
recording them along points or entranl.s in the featured by Carl Kiekhaefer. HawaJlan
Offshore Class for the sportsman Jim Pflueger his
the course. If a boat fails lo I n tern a ti on a I· I eve I entered his pair of 32-foot '
pass a given chL'Ckpoint. we competitorll. Carys -a twin engined
have a good idea of where the Entry deadline for the race inboard which he will handle;
I06t boat might be." ls April 9. Entries already and a four-engine outboard
confirmed Include R o b e r t driven by veteran R u d y
The system, U.!ed in all Magoon, Miami, Fla. in the 36-Ramos of Gardena.
international ocean racing, ls---------------------
part or the reason for
POP BRA 's perfect s a f e t y
rerord in seven yea rs of
completion, according to Hill
For additional safety, the
Long Beach-Ensenada classic
will mark the first time boats
entered in all five POPBRA
classes must carry two-way
Attend the Church of Your
Choice Regularly
Dc·lt·Y-H a...
"WORKING
WIFH CIMfNF"
WM, April 7, 7-1 pim AJtMcl"'
"'-t. .. April I , 7 -1 ,_ f.-t11h1 VcllcJ
hew PTJ .. __.,frc•hmcRh
2V214. ...
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PELLETS
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20LL ••• SULFATE OF.
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FAN TRIWS
UP 10 P INDIVIDUAL P1AN1S PER CAR10NI
..,w It-• cN AJf
Y-C/h19l11f Y/rtClll*
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hfcn W••• .& •• ,..,,,, Mo/1t•,., ..
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SJ!_'!
FLOWERS
••A SuJMr luy from The
World's lorgest Petal Pushenl"
•Your choice ol pansies, violas or snapdragons.
• from 4 to 9 plants per cart~o one c;an
match thl1 borgalnl
..... 49,
YOUR CHOICE
VEGETABLES
''Your Garden Wiii I•
As Green A1 The Olant'sl''
• Tomatoes, peppers or eggplant-
grow your own salad ":"Clrdenl
Great woy to t•ach the kld1 that
ve9etoble1 don't grow crt the
1Up9nnC1rlcjet.
• 4 to 9 Individual plants per pock.
leg. 49c
YOUR CHOICE
CHARGE IT ON YOUR
LIN·IROOK CHARGll
:I Woy
SPRINKLER
''Dfol·A·SIJ!rSYI"
• Itel.re the t•p tc
Hlccr fhc rl911f
pcrttc,.,, for yow
1lcc law".
• Atl/wt te .J .,,._..,
Jcrw .. lhDp$'L .. , ....
69c
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28 DAIL\' PJLOT
Daily Pilot"s 1971 Major League Fore~ast
American L eague
Rugtr Carl!!OD
""' Baltimore
:! New York
3 Bo~ton
~ Df1ro1(
~ II ri~hlll!o\IOn
6. Cleveland
\\t:~l
f\l1Mesota
Oakland
California
J\ansas City
~lih~aukee
Chicage
Ho"·ard Randy
f.ast
l. Baltimore
2. New )'ork
3 Boston
4 \Vashington
~ Detrn11
6 Cleveland
We:;t
California
f\hnnesota
Oakland
Kansas City
~hlwaukce
Ch1cage
rhll Ross
East Wt SI
I. Baltin1orl!!
2. Boston
3 Washington
4. New York
5 Detro11
6 Cleveland
Oakland
California
f\.1innesota
Kansas City
Chicag11
f\tilwaukee
Crail Shell
East We11l
L Baltimore
2. Detroit
3. Cleveland
1. New York
5. Boston
6 Washington
!\11nne.sola
Oakland
California
Chicago
Kansas City
Milwaukee
National League
Roger Carlson lloward Handy Phil Rosa
East '''rsl
l. New York
Easl
New York
Weal
Cincinnati
East
t . Chicage
2. Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
San franclscfl
Los Angele!
2. Chicago Los Angi:Jes
San Francisco
Atlanta
Houston
San D1eg1
2. New York
3. Chicagn 3. St Louis 3. Pittsburgh
4 Philadelphia
5. SI. LOUIS
Atlanta
Houston
San Diego
4. Pittsburgh 4. Philadelphia
5. Montreal 5. St. Louis
Ii. ~tontreal 5. Philadelphia 6. Moutreal
LA T opples Angels
Dodgers, Houston
Open Fire on TV
HOUST'ON (AP) -The Houston Astros
and the Los Angeles Dodgers, two teams
hoping to do helter this year in the
National League West. open the 1971
seawn tonight in the Astrodome.
The Dodgers, who finished seccmd, 13 1~
1;:an1es behind Cincinnati Jasl year, are
hoping !hat many sportswriters are
correct and this is their year lo take the
di\'ision.
For the Aslros, who finished fourth 1n
011 T V T o11 i9l11
Cl1111111e l JI al 5 :30
the six-place division 24 games out. it's a
)"ear for !ilepping up in the standings.
About 30.000 persons are expected at
the indoor ballpark to watch Larry
Dierker. the only 20-game winner in
Houston's hisl.Ory, oppose Bill Singer.
Both right-handers won 20 games in
1969. Last year Dierker was 16-12. Singer,
hampered by illness and injury, was 8-:>.
year. to move to first base.
Manager Harry Walker says the Astra~
are the best club he has brought out of
spring training. Two young pitchers, '!'om
Griffin and Don Wilson, seemed to have
recovered from arm troubles. he said.
"\\'e are good enough to make a run for
11:• \Valker said. "lf arms slay good we
could be real tough."
\Vil\ie Davis socked two doubles and a
single to lead the host Dodgers to a 7·3
victory over the California Angels in the
conclusion to the Freeway Series.
The victory enabled the Dodgers to
salvage one game of a three-game set
and close spring tra1n1ng with a 13-9
mark. The Angels, who hold an 8-4
overall advantage over the Dodgers,
finished at 10-17.
Los Angeles collected two unearned
runs in the second inning, Richie Allen
tallied the third run with a sacrifice ny in
the third inning, and then Davis sparked
a three-run rally in the fourth which
broke open the game.
Wes\
San Francisco
Los Angelei1
Cincinnati
Houston
Atlanta
San Dieg•
Craig Shelf
East
1. New York
2. St. Louis
3. Pittsburgh
4. Chicagn
5. Philadelphia
6. Montreal
\\'esl
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Cincinnati
Atlanta
Houston
San Diego
Gltn.a Whlte
East Wet I
I. Baltimore
2. New York
3. Detroit
~ Boston
5. Washington
6. Cleveland
Minnesota
Oakland
Angels
tt1ilwaukee
Kansas City
Chicago
Glellll WhlU
Ea•I
1. Pilt.'lburgh
2. Chicago
3. New York
4. St. Louis
5. Philadelphla
6. Montreal
West
' Cincinnati
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Atlanta
Houston
San Diego
eo-....
ElaL Weai
t . Ballimor~ Minnesola
2. New York Oakland
3. Boston California • 4. Detroit Kansas City
5. Washington ~1ilwaukee
&. Cli!!veland Chica10
Con1en1u1
East
1. New York
2. Olicago
3. Pittsburgh
4. St. Louis
5. Philadelphia
&. Montreal
West
CinciMaU
Los Angeles
San Francisce
Atlanta
Houston
San Dieg1
Both teams have collected some new
faces they hope will help them this
season.
Right-hander Sandy Vance blanked the
Angels on three single!! through the first
five innings.
LAKER HAPPY HAIRSTON STUMBLES OVER A DOWNED BULL AS GAIL GOODRICH LOOKS ON.
Home Com·t r
Advantage
For Lakers :· .·
CHICAGO (AP) -JI you follow the
form chart you must lake the Lakers 'p
de!eat the Chicago Bulls 'J\lnday night
al the Forum.
They shift there for thl!! sevenLh 11nd
deciding gaml!! in their N a t i o n a I
Basketball Association st:milinal series.
'J11e winner takes on the Milwaukee
Buckl in thi!! Western C.Onferenee playoff
finals.
The home court has been the big thing
tn the Laker1-Bulls Rries. Each team has
won its three gamu al homl!!, the Bulls
tying the series Sunday beforl!! 14,211 in
Chicago Stadium with a 113-99 triumph.
Counting the three playoff games Jost
In Los Angeles. th@ Bull!! have been de-
feated there seven straight times since
1969.
"I can't put my finger on this home
court thing, said coach Joe Mullaney
after his Lakers blew a 57-52 halftime
lead. the Bulls surged to 111 points for ary.
~72 third quarter edge and easily
padded it out in the last period.
''The Bulls as well as us just seem to
be a different team at home, added
Mullaney.
"The Bulls have a consistent offense
but are just average on defense. We were
blown out in that third quarter Sunday
mainly because. in five straight fast
breaks v.·e didn ·t gel anything out of
them.
Gail Goodrich hit eight-0!-14 rield goals
In netting 19 points in the first half for
the Laker!! then made only one-in-11
attempts in the last-half foldup.
Wilt Chamberlain chipped in a total of
13 points and got 33 rebounds.
But the hustling Bulls out.retreived thl!I
Lakers 59-49 and attacked behind the
output of 25 points by Bob Weiss, 23 by
Jerry Sloan and 21 by Bob Love.
Goodrich collected 25 and teammate
Keith Erickson added 2<1.
"We felt from the ~art we must break
a game in Los Angeles to win the serlei.
and maybe Tuesday will be the time, said
Chicago coach Dick Motta.
"After teams play each other seven.
times, neither can expect anything new.
Jt's just a question of execution. We both
know wh at each other will do. If v.•e lose
our fourth in a row oul there we don't
deserve to win the playoffs. ·
LOS lr,NCJILl!S
ChlmDln Erkk>On
GOO<l•ich 1-l1rl11on
1-lllf1•1 Mc Cl,,.,.. MtMiln
Rlley
TDl~ll
I i-111 1J
' l·! 2'11 ' 1·1 ,,
' l-• II ' .. ' 6 fl.I 1!
1 !.J 1, . " . «I l .. Jt "
CHIC ... GO
8on,..He
'" Gwk1•
King L••• ....
Wiike<>
Wein
To11I•
J 2·4 1) ' ... I 11-0 2
• 11-0 I 7 , .. ,.
10 l-) 11.
1 >4 '' 10 s.s 2J a 1t.1• 111
JO '11 Jj 21-.,
1' " " Jl-l!l
Off-sea!'on trades brought sluggeri1
Richie Allen from St. Louis and Duke
Sims from Cleveland to the Dodgers. Los
Angeles hopes the two will raise the
leam's home run average, a dismal 87
last year, lowest in the majors.
Set 9 More Yea1•s Rookie Bags Playoff
Allen. who has averaged more than 32
home runs a year, starts in left field.
Kims, a catcher who hit 23 home runs
la~l year. will be sitting on the bench as
veleran Tom Haller is expected to open
behind the plate
"I'm pretty sure we've helped out
nFfensive side," said Dodger manager
\\'alter Alston "\\le been without power
for a lon.e; time "
The As!rn~ acquired ~hortslop Roger
1'.1 r!7.J!Cr !rom the Chicago Cub i!
organ11.ation The rookie had a line spring
l'lnrl \\•ill start ~1onday night. allowing
\•etrran Denis ~1enke. a .304 hiller last
Angeli\, Royals
Collide 1'uesda y
I n Big A T iff
All of the Ani;:els v.·111 be in llf'W
un1forms and many in lhe uniform~ will
bt' new Angels v.heo California opens 1ti1
1971 American League pennant bid
against Kansas City Tuesday night at
Anaheim Stadium.
Acquisitions of Tony Conigliaro. Syd
O'BriC'n. Ken Bl!rry and Jerry r.1oses
appear to have stren,e;th<'ned Cslifornia
and the pitching department could get
help from Jlm ~1a10lley and Billy \Vyone.
Many hel1eve lhe Angels ha\' e
i;trrngthened thernselves enough Io
capture the An1erican League \\"est and
manager Lefty Phillips agrees his club
ha s the potential 10 n1ove from third
place to first
Cl) rie \Vri~ht. the left .hander Y•ho "''nn
a single game in 1969 and 22 1n 1970.
opens on Inc mound for Cal1forn1a
oppo!11ng the Hoyals' Dick Dra~o. a right-
tiander "ho was 9-1$ for a club wh1ch tied
for fourth in the <11v1s1on a year ago.
A b1~ Qiff Prencc for Kansa~ City
thl.9 i;e~~ ('t)lild be the i;mallest man in
th(' maJor!i, a-1001·4 short.~top Fred P:il('k
"ho came to Kansa~ City 1n a six·player
11, inter 11w11p with Pitt.sburgh
Tab~d lll$ the leadoff batttr. Patek has
!prt1J •n<l JI stronti arm
Tht Royals have a 1·2 punch in Roh
011\'ff 11.nd Lou P1n1clla who drove 1n 99
aod 8fl run11 r~ptt\1ve:ly a year ago "'hen
('('fltrr fielder ArnOli Otis Droke in wilh It
Z84 batrin« ll\'trap;r.
Cou11ty Clinic Atti·acts
Leading Sports Figt1r es
An imposing gathering of sports world
personalities gathered at An ah e i m
Convention Center over the weekend to
put on a two-day clinic.
Anrl the event will be repe;ited the next
nine years. according to Jack Stovall, its
{"reator
Stovall induced a lot of nan'e athletes
and coaches to take part In lhe clinic,
---WHI TE
WAS H ----
\\'hich was open lo anyone "·ho wanted to
pay $17 admission fee.
Football names included O,J. Simpson
of the Buffalo Bills. Stanford coach John
Ralston, Arizona State tutor F'rank Kush
and '"ashi ngton Redskins player Jerry
Sn1ith.
F'ro1n thr world of basketball came SC
mentor Bob Boyd and Arizona Stale
coach Ned ''"u\k. along with t:lmer
Combs of Hunt1ng!on Beach and sh1~1i1n'
Jin1 Nev.·man, the Con1plon College coach
v.·ho slugged an official al Ventura.
Angel players Jim F'regosi and Andy
t.\es.."er!'rnith joined Dodger Tom Haller.
Arizona State coach Bob \\linkles for
ba:;;eball cl1n1cs
And in track l9fi8 Olyrnp1c as'\1~l..1nt
Stan \\1r1ghl was there along 1111h 1964
Olympic 400 meter f!Old medalist Mikt
Larabee. sevrn·IOOI. hll(ti jumper J oh n
Oobrolh and 1!168 Olympic steeplechase
bronze mrdal1st Georgr Youn~
\\'restl1nJ11 fealurrd Okl3horna Stair·~
1971 NCAA 0Cavywe1ght champion MilAn
ROOe.rick.
Stovall ~a) s h1~ ~praker!i rameri
anywhere from no dollars ln $1.000 per
hour and lhf'y speak t~·o hours 1!011·('v('r,
!<Orne guvs k1C'kt<I in thf'ir lime a~ a t:i~or
10 Slovall. \\ho :ilso n111nage!i lhc Inn of
To1norro1i,· r.iotf'I
St0\'311 <'nt1ced his subirct~ by bnng111g
their families to the area and fixing them
up with Disneyland passe~.
* * * "'ord has It thRt tht University ol
Houston v.•il! be admitted lo the
Southwest Conference sometime this
spring. The Cou.e;ars should do well in tht.
t:ircuit in football and basketball.
The Sciuth"·est Conft.renee ha~ been
pov.·erful for many years on the gridiron.
Bui its hasketball repu\Blion has ye t lo
bee made.
* * * Nev.·port Harbor High rarely gets any
or its trackmen as far as I.he stale meet
but this year the Sailors n1i~hl have lwn
in the cinder classic -both in the shot
put.
~1ark Stevens' 61·101--: should more than
be enough to qualify ii he can maintain or
improve upon that distance. And mate
Terry Albritton h;is climbed steadily,
arriving at 59-1 over the v.·e<'kend.
If he stay~ it\ that plateau or goes
higher he should also make the slate
showdown.
Anrl whal a great rip to look fOl"\\'ard lo
-about 60 miles up the freeway lo
UCLA. Thf'y don "I even have lo change
freeways to get there.
("est la vie.
* * * t-:pito1nt of the l.alctrs' frustration•
Sunday 11urt.ly bad lo bt whtn they ltled
to C#ill a limfful, left I~ b11lr in lbt
mlddle oi the floor •nd ttlarled tci le1t\-'e
the playlng area.
Trouble WAll the orfk:ials hadn't c•llrd
limt. ytt and the ball was li''f. •Ith alert
Chica.co pickin~ It up ind taklnJ lt In for
11 ~lft ~·a points.
And t4·ho i1 going to beat i\fllv.·aukt.t in
this year's Nallonal Bas k et b a 11
Ass""iation playolfs:"
* * * Nl"il Sy~rl. c>:·\Ye~tm1nstrr H1J::"h !~)'If'.
pl.~ced seNJnrl for l'CL1\ :ii: n 1 n s I
TN11ll'Ssce Saturrlay 111 the tv.'o-1n1lf' \\1th
111 9 18 8 clocking.
Buddy Allin 8e1t• '•m All
Oft-decorated Vet Alfu1
Stnns Greensboro Field
•
GREENSBORO. N.C. CAP) -Buddy
Allin is a frail·looking litlle 130-pounder,
sandy-haired and boyish appearing,
looking for all the y,·orld like the
drugstore delivery boy.
But the ex-ar1illery officer, decorated
four times in 16 months of Vietnam
combat duty, again proved his mettle
when he banged in a birdie putt on the
first hole of a sudden-death pla yoff and
v.·on the $38,000 first prize in the Greater
Greensboro Open golf tournament.
"I really didn't feel that nervous," !he
26-year~ld tour rookie said Sunday after
besting 38-year-old veteran Rod Funseth
and four·year tour regular D a v e
Eichelberger in the playoff.
"I've been more nervous in other
tournament's," said Allin, ct1mpeting in
only his 14th professional event.
"I lold mysell the. night before, 'you're
going to win the tournament' I slei)t on it
and got up thinking the same th ing. I felt
the same way when I got to the course,
the same way whtn I tttd off and the
same way in the pla yoff."
Allin, who had won only $5,954 prior to
his victory, hed a final-round 69.
The 27·year-old Eichelberger had the
lead alone going to the final hole. -Allin
had finished almost a hall hour earlier -
and set up the playoff when he bogeyed
after hilling his drive deep into the
v.·oods.
Thal sent lhe three of Lhem lo the first
lee for the fourth play-off of the season.
All drove the fairway. And all put their
sect1nd shots Into the fringe around the
green.
F'unseth putted first and missed.
"I kind of went to school on that one a
little," Allin said. "I had a litlle hill to gl'I
over, then a valley. It was about 30 fett. I
just stepped up and hit it."
And he holed It, giving him a spot in
the Toumament of Champions and the
1natch play championship with a
guarantee. of el least 3,200 more from
those two evenls. But he won't be on the
Masters, which starl.s Thursday at
Augusta, Ga.
Eichelberger missed on hiii birdie try ,
and finished lied for second. But the
t.1aco. Tex., native, through his high
finish. vaulted past two other players acd
won his v.·ay into thl!! Master!!.
Fln1I .corn 111!1 .....,,..., w1nnlnoi I" Ille \lllO.oot
G•Uler G'ttniDo•o Oo.n: •-"'"'•lfur ~-wo" suoo..., 011111 0!1voll •llrl1n Allin. Ul.000 RO!I Funsflh. tl7.J15 O..vt L':lcllti.roor, 111,JH
PeTe Brown, U .fll'I Mh ler ll•rbfor. U.'"'6 lfftt 01!1. M.Ufl !loll (h~11"-" Mi,60.I ~~ .. ~,~~'~,r~: l.1.::1
Tom .O.••on. ti.lto
J..-ry He•rO, U,11~
[)oft J&f'llk"'· 5•.lto Lee TrevTM, '"llO l\rl Wiii. \l.115 Georoe "''c~er. ,3.115 Jim Jl"1ie•on. U.US
Wiii Mo"'e~ul~. U,lJ.I M••on lhdolc~ S1 ,.,!
J•"V M1gee. 'l.tl1 Lou G··~·"'· ,1 ,G Rov P1ce, 11.tO Lee Elder. ,1,t'1 01~ ~locktll". 11.t6' :~U{t~::."',~',;~l ''·'" 1-l!Mlt Jo~~•at1. II to LtrTV MlntO)rl, 11.9.cJ
•·Ed PN''' JIJ!lrn lorot. 11.:n
Theisman Inks Canada • Ill
TORONTO t APl .John Bassett.
chairman of the boartl of !ht Toronto
Argonauts, said he hRs sii;tned Nolre
Dame quarterback Joe Theism&nn lo a
t"·o-year rontract w1lh the Canadian
f'ootb.all League club
Thci!in1ann, fourth round drafl choice
nf lh~ Mi11mi Dolphins. thu~ surprisl'd the
C3nadinn tr.an' v.•hich had livC'n up on
h1n1 after he ~as reported to have
renched 11greemenl with Ille National
-"
Football League team
Ba!iseU said The ismann tumM h1~
b.ick on the Dolphins after a contract
they sent him lo sign apparently d[d not
agree v.·ilh the terms he had $ettled on 1n
earlier talks at ~fiemi
"\Ve \\'ere surprised and dtlightC"d ."
Bassett said of Theisn1ann's appearance
here Sunday.
l~P said Theismann !ligned the contract
Sundey and relurned home to South
Bend. Ind .. v.·here he is slill attendln&
classes at Notre Dame.
"We've not got a good quarterback·''
said Bassett. "I think it v.·ill still Lake hl"1
a season or two to develop lo his ful)
potential."
Argo ct1ach Leo Cahill had been "'OO\n~
Theismann i:ince the I 7 0-po u n. d
quarterback steered r\olre Dame Ii>
victory over top ranked Texas in the Ju&
Cotton Bowl game.
l
. •
-DAILY PILOT Z7.
Di-ysdale
Knocks Off
Coast Area Shotputters Shine in Meet
Rocket Rod
ftliami -Cliff Dtyadale, a South
AftlC"an with an awkward but crunching
two--ftsfed backhand, defeated Corona dcl
Mar resident Rod Laver. 6-2. M , s.a, M,
SUnday to win the '10,000 flrst prir.t in
tbc A~entura tennis classic.
Dry~lae, handlng Laver only his third
defeat bill year, won handily on I.he a\ow,
aynt1letk: Country Club Aventura surface.
Laver &tarted shakily, losing the fJrst
two sets, but came on strong In the third,
charging the net more often and using hlJ
wve for poinls.
In the deci!lve sel. Drysdale traded
service bruks with the Australian. But
tnen bl the ninth set he broke Laver'•
serve again, held his own and won when
Liver. was unable to return a deep
forellond ahol
"Dryadale's game is suited to a slow
court like this, but he played well ,''
Laver 11ld. "I could have done a little
better had I not been a Ult.le careless."
Dryadlle establlahed an advantage
ear Ir; in the first aet, holding service
everytlme and using his clumsy-looking
backhand to win easily.
t.ver'a $5,000 second prize pushed his
earnlnp aince J an. 1 to $17~,4M!.
• Bullet• Fl11
BAL 'flMORE -The Baltimore Bullet.
defeated the Philadelphia 76ers in the
National Basketball Association playoffs,
but los t a quick decision to Commissioner
Walter Kennedy over dates for thelr next
series.
A 43-point explosion in the second
quarter propelled the Bullets pasl the
'16ers, 128-120, Sunday in the final game
or the best of seven Eastern Conference
semtftnal.
That advanced Baltimore to the finals
against the New York Nicks -another
best-of-seven series which Bu 11 e I!
officials assumed would get under way
Friday in New York .
e i\'em Gopher Coach
MINNEAPOLIS -Will Bill ?>.1usselman
of Ashland, Ohio, College become the
ne:irt University of Minnesota basketball
toach?
Musselman was in ?o.1inneapolis Sunday
and Was not expected to return to Ohio'
until Tuesday, The Associated Preb
leamed.
The whereabouts of the Ashland coach
threw an interesting light on the musical
chairs basketball position at Minnesota.
Cal Luther. coach and athletic director
1t Murray, Ky., State ae<:epted the job es
Minnesota coach last Friday bu l
telephoned university officials during the:
weekeod and said the deal 'vas off
becauae of "personal and fa mi 1 Y
reasona."
e Bucks in Romp
M,\DlSON, Wis. -The Milwaukte
Bucks unleashed an a'vesome diiplay of
power to take the first step toward 1
National Basketball A s a o c i a t i o n
championship Sunday, and now face
another challenge from out of the West.
The Bucks pounded the San Francisco
Warriors into submission. 136-86 at the
University of \Visconsin fieldhou sc to win
the Western Conference semifinal playoff
round, four games to one.
The victory advances the Bucks to the
conference finals where they y,•i\I take on
either the Uis Angeles Lakers or the
Chi cago Bulls in anolher best of 7 series
"'h\ch begins in ~l!lwaukee Friday night.
e Top Spike nlnrl<S
UCLA's James McAliate:r led a bevy of
outstanding track and field
accomplishments ove r the weekend with
his ~&-3'12 leap in the Jong jump to lead
his mates to a 100-40 rout of Tennesee.
At the same meet 29-year-old John
Dobroth flew over the high jump bar at 7·
2·~S in a special event.
Oregon 's Steve Prefontaine sped to a
J3:0i.5 three mlle while 33-ye:ar-0ld !11el
Pender clocked a 9.4. 100.yard dash in San
Diego.
Prcfontaine's mark is tht firth best
ever made in the three-mile.
e King• on Top
VANCOUVER, B.C. -The Los Angeles
Kings built up a 2-0 lead over Vancouver
In the first t~10 periods Sunday, then
traded goals in the third to top U1e
Canucks 4-2 in the final Natioual Hockey
League game for each team.
Ralph Backslom connected ror his 15lh
J:oal of the season at the 9:37 mark of the
first period on a power play and Eddie
Joyal hit his 20th at 4:02 of the second.
Rosaire Paiment's 34th marker at 10:M
nf the third cut the Kings' lead in half but
Rob Pulford put Los Angeles ahead 3-1
about "!iJ minutes later.
By PHIL ROSS
Of the OlltY ,./ltf lf•lt
ONTARIO -It won 't be long belore
tM !edtral anti-trust people begin
tnvestlgaUng into the Cirm of Stevens and
Albritton, Ltd.
Evidence was brought before the jury
aagin Saturday u the heralded Newport
Harbor shot put duo of senlor Mark
Stevens and junior Terry Albritton won a
few more converta and some more
hardware to boot.
Stevena, who boasts the CIF Southml
Section's best seasonal mark with the 12·
pound steel sphere al 8J.JO'iS:, captured
the gold medal in the open division shot
event at the 42nd annual Chaffey
InvitaUonal track
Chaffey High.
~fate AlbrlU.on,
and tleld meet at
meanwhile, couldn't
match Stevens' winning put of :i9-101h.
But he did manage to place second wlth a
career best :i9-l elfort for the section's
thlrd best mark in 1971.
Jn fact, the Sailor pair led a ntar
complete Orange Coast area assault In
the open divlalon shot put as Huntington
BHch's Bob Dreiling (50-7~•) and Brad
Borden (5Q.2 I of Co!la Mesa placed
fourth and fifth.
Only another Orange County putter,
't.1agnolia's John Seib], was able lo
prevent an area sweep in the compeUU011
Nice Cureh for Area Anglers
as his 54-214. beave garnered him third
place.
Newpc.. t was also the highest scoring
area unit in the open division, finiahlna Jn
the fifth spot with 16 points.
Victorious Garden Grove added lo Its
Scuthern Countlea meet lenm ctown by
copping the open team lltle with 36
markers.
Compton was the novice division tean\
w\Mer with S3 points v.·hile West.minster
(17) tied for fifth with Foothill (17).
Weslmin.rler'• Jeff Yowig zipped to the
day's fastest MO clocking in the open
divl.sion with • 1:57.4 victory w h l le
Huntington's Marc Mitchell and Young's
teammate Rieb Hoy took third and fiflh
Fountain Valley residents Mac Mcconnaughey (left)
and Carl Cluck pose with catch of nine bass taken
on feathers '"'hi.le
Landing skiff.
trolling in Balbo Bay in Art'•
Anteaters Face UCLA
After Losing to Arizona
The last time UCLA saw Irvine, 'lv.•as
in th e month or March and Dennis
Nicholson v.·as on the mound.
The ne:tt time the Bruins see coach
Gary Adams' UCI Anteater baseball
team will be \Vednesday aftemoon on the
lrvine diamond with fl.tr. Nicholson again
slated for mound duty. First pitch is at 3
o'clock.
\\'hich brings UCLA coa~h Art Reichle
to comment, "Does Irvine have any other
pitcher on its staff?"
The stylish right-hander has defeated
the H.;ulns in three of four gan1es he has
faced \hem in a coll~ career at UCI
and in junior college.
l\ieanwhile, the Anteaters will be
fieeking to regroup their forces alter
sUfferlng a 13-10 setback in Tucson to the
University of Ariioha Saturday before
battling to a 5-!i tie In eight innings of a
scheduled seven -inning nightcap due to
darkneu.
Irvine en}oyed a big series at the plate
but the Anteater pitching staff couldn't
hold the borne nine in check and as a
result, dropped two hiah·scoring dec1Sions
be for' ending the three-game series in a
deadlock.
"We were hitting the ball well but our
pitcher.1 cou!dn 't hold their batters."
coach Gary Adams said upon return
home Sunday night.
"They only got Mike Saska out one
time in the three games and Tom Spence
did a great job for us at the plate. Dan
Hansen belted a 400-fool home run but we
couldn't win."
"They invited us back again nellt year
but I am not sure v.·hether v.e will be able
to make il," he added.
Arizona coach. Frank Sance!, told
Adams aft.er Saturday's twin·blll : "l
have never seen such an e1hibition o[
hilling by a college division team."
Rocky Craig, plagued by bad luck this
season, ran into further trouble in the
first game Saturday. He was hit on the
left arm by 1 pitch and taken to the
hospital for x-rays that proved negative.
Craig played center field on defense in
the final half of the last inning of the
nightcap but didn't bst. He is hilting at a
.406 clip this year after leading the team
last season.
FIRST GAM[
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Monarchs Bid
For No. I Spot
After 9-2 Wi11
Coach Bob \Yigmore·s ~later Dei
l\tonarchs ha ve a clear shot at a portion
or the Angelu~ League baseball li:ad
\Vednesday when they travel to La
Puente for their second lry at Bishop
Amal.
S11turday Wigmore·s crew turned
visiting St. Paul away empty handed with
a 9-2 pasting to set up their confrontation
'vith the defending Angelus Leagu'
champs ...
!\tater Dei is a game behind Amal wilh
a 4·2 mark.
Saturday's t~,y win was capped by a
live-run uprising in the fHth inning al lhe
y,·inner 's dian1ond.
Singles by Oa\'e \Vi1t. Bob Haupert,
Rocky Simp!On and Tom Bonkowski,
alonJ.( with a double by Rick Sheldon" and
a free pass to Tom Cottage earned the
y,•inners an 8-l ltad.
St. Paul mllde some noise ln lhe slxlh
by touching up starter Steve Frilz for its
second run and loading the sacks.
But reliefer Ch•Jck Adams came in wllh
none out end wh iffed three straight
Swordsmen to preserve the win.
Ten enemy bntt.ers struck out in all
wlt h Fritz accounting for si1 of them.
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Foyt Outduels Petty for Atlanta Win
ATI~ANTA (AP~ -''When you'v •
beaten Richard Petty and the olher
NASCAR drivers. you've beaten the
best,'' says Tex11n A. J. Foyt, v.•ho I~
finding the Grant National late model
llitoc.ll car rs<:!ng circuit financially
rewarding.
Foty, a three·t1me Indianapolis winn er,
steered his l!Hi9 ~fercury by Petty on the
bac.k'. !lraighl·8Wi1Y 12 laps from 1hc
finish SundAy 1nd claimed the $19,200
fir1t~pf'tte in the Atlanta SOO.
"He11 run wheel-t~wheel with you."
Foyt said of Pelly. "He got into lht
cornt'I"! better than f. but I beat him out
of the corn~rs and that's how I got !ht
Jead. Things got a little hairy running
that fast and I almost lost it tv.•ice ."
Foyt had controlled the race n1ost of
the way , holding the lap lead for 205 or
the 328 trips around lhe L>mile saucer·
shaped oval . But Petty closed a 26-serond
advanlage under a caution flag and then
zipped into the lt!ad when Foyt stopped
for fuel on tht :J0.5th lap.
"l needed about a fruit jar of i::as,"
11aid Petty, who went to the pi!s for the
final lime stven laps later. "I couldn't
have finished tht r•~ if I hadn't 11topped
the las! lime for gas and becllJ5l' I
slopped, 1 i:nuldn't win."
Petty retained his 11llm lead, but Foyt
sla ytd right on hl.s bumper sind made bis
move 26 miles rrom I.tie end. Foyt
extended his advantage to 1.8 teC<lnds
when he took the checkered flag.
The fini sh gave Foyl memories of his
1967 triumph el Indianapolis when he
picked his way through a five-ear pileup
on the final lap.
F'o)1 and Petty had to ne10Liate 1 tw~
car spin~ut a quarler·mile lrom the
fi nish line SundAy.
•·fortunately J WBS looking ahead and J
sew the accident.'' !aid f'oyt. "I w11s
pretty sure I t<>Uld get lhrough. and I
did."
Foyt ave raged 131.37!i mlles per hour
<lespite running under caution flag! lour
li mes duri!1g the race. Petly, In •
Plymouth, earned seoond pl•ct money of
SJ0,700.
Pete Hamilton drove hls Plymouth to .a
third pltce flnith, followed by David
Pear90n In a Ford and Bobby Isaac: in a
Dodge.
At Hocktnhtl1n, Germ1ny. Francoitc
Cevert of Franre won !he formula two
Jim Clark Memorial auto race in a
Tecno, be11tlng Graham ltlll of E~land.
Ronnie So.< of nurllnalon . N.C., 1et a
pro atop rewrd At the Nati on1tl Hotrod
Auoclstion'i. ch1mpion1hip series evmt
at Phenill City. Ali. Sol had an elapsed
tlmci of 9 72 atconda and aVl!raged 412.63
mph. in a 1971 Barracuda.
plact In the saw rice.
Tim Rudy Qf Newport WIS: fifth In
another open half·mllt conlelt.
Newport two-miler Rick" Jiiemlnl: W&!I
impressive, aa bis t :SS.7 thlrd place time
came ln the ume race where Santa Ana.
junior Marc Oentt had broken I.be meet
rect1rd wtth a t :14..2 clocklnf.
The fourth and fifth apoU ln separate
mile races were earned by Newport'•
John Rolc:omb and John Mulllna of
Huntington.
Junlor Steve Pickford of HunLington
was fifth In the 120 blgh hun::Ues in lhe
open dlvlalon with the Otlers' mile relay
quartet speedinf to 1 3:29.3 thJtd place
mark.
SOpb:lmore Jirn K e a t h I e y of
Westmtnster taused most of the area's
commotion ln the DOYlee dfvialor1 11 be
blaied to the day'1 fastest 330 m1rk
(35.5) whilt also placing second in tht 220
(22.t on a stra.J&btaway) and aocborinC
the Uon!' 8111 relay combo to a fOW'tb
plaCf!I finish . -
Mate Walt Sinner Wll third In the
novlc:t pole vault at lW.
In addition t.o Gtnet's record, two ot.bet
open meet standards were smashed.
Saddleback'a Devon Trahan TOUed lo •
20.a 220 record on the straightaway and
C.Ompton's 440 baton fours om•
accompllahed a 42.0 record docking.
* * * * * * Chaffey Spike Results
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Casey Stengel Tourney
Next for Pirates, GWC
The Casey Stengel baseball toumamtnt
ls the nex t order ol busineh for Golden
West and Orange CoaM t colleges.
The eight-team toumey gets under way
Wednesday with Golden West and
CerrJtos hosting the annual affair.
Coach Barry Wallace'a OCC Pirates
launch the tourney at Golden West.
facing tough Los Angeles City College in
a 10:30 a.m. tilt.
The Pirates split a pair of games in
last week's Fulle rton JC tournament won
by JFC while LACC fini.!hed second (to
hit. San Antonio) in the annual Citrus
classic.
LACC (8-1) currently has a two-game
~ge over Golden Wesl in the Southern
California Conference standinas.
In the afternoon tilt at Golden West
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Burins Go Wild
BOSTON -The 1971}.7t Boston Bruln1
broke 1& National Hockey Lt1gue team
records 11nd 11 individual marka In their
rcgulAr 5el80n which concluded wllh
Sunday'1 7·2 victory over the Montreal
Canad lens.
The Eaat Dlvi1ion champion• finished
with 1 54·14·7 rteord, ttlUng hlahs for
vietorle., and for polnt11 ln the standlft&•,
121.
(2:30), !he host Rustlers~"rtteet Eut LA.
Coach Fred Hoover's Golden West nine
baa defeated East LA twice this seaaon.
The two Wednesday losers will return
lo Golden \Vesl for a 10:30 a.m.
consolation game Thursday while the two
vlct-0r1 will clash at 2:30.
In the other two first rOtlnd games
Wednesday at Cerritos, Hancock meeb:
Chaffey at 10:30 and Cerrito& LantleJ
with Citrus at 2:30.
The championship and consolation title
1ames will be played at Cerritos Friday.
Meanwhile, S&ddlebac:k treks to Lonf
Beach. City College Wednelday to face
Phoenlx at 2:30 in the first round or the
Vern Stepherui Memorial tournamenL
Orange Coast's Pete Pijl ia the top
hitter among the thrte arta junior
collegea with a .429 average. Golden
West'a Jim Hogan ranks 11econd (.418)
wlth teammate Pat Curran third (.413).
Hogan holds the ad vantage in most rbl
(21) and runs scored (It) while Pijl bas
the top hit output (35).~
Golden West has notched an I l..S
record, OCC is !>-10 and Saddleback ts S-
lli. ..
Pirate Crew
Sharp in Win
After a sparkling 1971 debut, 0t1nae
Coast College '!!! crew will take a week'•
break before re11uming competition
11gatnst a pair of four-year schools
S..turday, April 17.
Saturday In the annual Newport
Regatta, the host Pirates. using the!J· new
European shell for lhe first time.
productd the top time of the day in
capturing lhe junior varsity race.
Coach Dive Grant'• Pirate!!! clocked
6:32.3 In the JV race , nearly three boat
lengths ahend of second place Cal State
It.one Beach). The 4ters had 1 time of
6:42.0. Loyol• WU third In 6:47,J.
Tht varsity rare was won by Cal State
(Long Beach\ Jn t :Jl.7, over seven
stronda behind OCC's time in the .JV
event. Loyola pllefd second in the
vanlty event in 11 :41.0 "'hlle UC Irvine
wl'ls third in 11.4!.5.
Oranae Coa11 also wt1s victoriaw in lho
freshman raet in a Ume of 6:39.7 while
Loyola finished second In 6:48. This also
r~reaenll 1 three·boAt victory for the
BUC yearlings. San Dteao State wu third
in t :41.2.
Or1111e Coast's next two foes April If
wlll bt UC Santa Barbara and UC San
Otego. 'Mu1t metl ls al!O scheduled fot
Newport.
?>.11anwhile, UC 11'1'int returns to action
Saturday at ?>.1erine Stadium in Lon'
Beach. facinr the Unlverslly of Callfomla
(S.ri:elt)') ind host Cal State (Lon&'
B .. chl.
I
..
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•
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fli DAILY PILOT
~tlst Cee Wins Marina Nabs Swim Crown
V awncia Nails
SET UP TO BAU "AT ATTEllTION" Marina ·High Schoo I ' 1 100 ,,,,_,_ """°°'..,. !Al 3 J10 1111 2'1t '"" .... , -1. N.t'1nii l :dA
II I t ' ... _ 1 "'·~-(Al l M.J J. Hallow•Y '°° ., ... ftl11 -'· Mathie J tGI 1. N••-11 ;0 .t l. W•lmlMT« l;a.6 vars Y swm earn l! 1-1rc <M••I •00' • Allll' CNJ •.OJ.J s. , wto1mln.i., ''"·2 l. A,..ntlm '-W•trern 1:'90,
Orange League Sw1set League ch a mp IO n M•llW 1......,1 •.11.0. ) S7 1 ' NfWPOr1 l ·it 1. F IMi i(orlnt: 1. ,...,.._.. H1rw today following the Vikings' 100 btc--1. Pum""r., !Al 1 oo.s Fl1111 &c:orl11t1: 1. Mctr!flll ID\11, 1. 101 , , Mlrlflll .., l. wtt1m11111er u.
h 2, Nett fAI 1.01.6 J. Qui<'tn jt.11 1·1111 W•11ml11111r SJI,~, J, Hvftlh'l!ltof\ IM<l'I '-WH1t1n 14, 1. Hvl'lti<'tttofl l~Ot 6, triump ant venture at ~. Scl\ol9t tM1r) 1·01.t s. ~ <M••I Jt, • N _ _, ~·-"'· '· Aflll-'· ,...,. ... "" 1. Aflaheim High Saturday io the '·°"·' 1. D'E11 .... (NI l:N.s. llt•m n a. *"'"'1,...1., 1.. pmmmiioi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'i league fin•'-. 100 bl'"11-1. wrn11m1 CM•n 1:011 ,_ ,1
Valtncla High sWmed to
the Orangt League swim
c~ampionship Saturday at El
Dbrado ll ig h b e h ind
br~A!tstroker Dave Duffie's
nifty J:03.1.
El Dorado finished second
v.·t'ltle Sonora and Bree. lied ror
Pro Cage,
Hockey
Standings
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Si. Lovl1 •' Mlnf!fi.ott, 11 n«eu•.,.
lwnt11y, A•rU 1'
Tor""'" II lfow Ycrk, II nectlUf'f
MDntrNt 11 am'""· ii l>Ktu.t,...
PMi.<1e1olli1 ., Clllc190, I• ....:e ... ,,
Mlnl>I!-• II !I. Lau11. II Mceu .. ....
Anteater
JV Boxes
UC lrrln1 !Sl .. • • ~c~n>. l'b
!nra". ct
L"°'1t. Jb l•ndtr1, t
S1>1n11!1, II
eusri, 111 c.,,..,tOo, !D
Rrown. rl
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Tol1IJ
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S111.,, tl
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LICe!1. lll
Low• P to\111 " . l<M'I llr llllll"n
• • • ' . ' . • • ' . ' . . ' • • • • • • ' • • •
• • • • ' 11 rlll ' . ' ' • ' ' ' • •
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• • • ' • • ' • •
••• UC l•rlf!f 001 7X1 000-~ t J ca F111"''1"" 10? 1n oo.-• 11 l UC HrlM JY Cl l ... ' . ' . • • • • • • ' ' • " JV 111 .. • ' • ' ' ' • ' " llJ '""lftfll
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• • : ' ' . . ' • • • • ' . . '
third 1n the varsity division.
Laguna Beach's -0 n 1 y
individual v.1nner was Neal
Amdseri in the C e e 50 free
where he WOD in 25.9.
The Artists also picked up a
first in tht 200 free relay
(1 :44.2).
V&"I"
~ ,....,...., ra11y -1. !.onor1 l·U.S,
t. Ir" l:t1.I.). IEI Dor•«t 1. ..... '-
\lt!ttw:la J•jQ,._
20Q trtor -l. S..tton !SOnar11 l:S<l.J,
' N\CNll'Wn tEDI l,V,I, J. lel"fruMI
Cll 1:J1.$. '-Cl..--Ill 1:!1.,, !.
~ IEDI 1:51.0. 6. tend (EDI
,, ... 2. The golfer who is setting up to the ball properly
ll.Q lit•lue rKO<'OI I. Fr1wlev «.a.1 l :O•J 200 mltoltY r•l•~-1. N""oorl 1·s.1,1 Coach Chuck Morris' crew 1. li•fOY. (M•rl· 1:00.1 •. wn111 !NI 2. w111m1~11er2:11,, '· Mctr1r1e1 :u.1.
swept by rivals Anaheim and t'i~~i.' c.!i1 r1·~~~m (Mfrl t:"·' 1• 100 ''" -1· BK~ (N) l :Ol.1 '· Wtll !NI 2'01.J l. Arm11r-(M1r) Newport Harbor In the finale .1(1(1 ''"" rl'l•r -L w-•• 3:212 2:1?.J '· Laro !NJ 2:u .1 s. O••Y and past frustrations because 111<1ou• recprdl '· AM1111m l.11.J l, twn11r"1 l :IS.t 4. si.1n1m IW) Wu11rn l ::U.l •· M1rlna J:".O s, 2 11.2. of near misses in the 1oop wn1m1r11ter l ·si.1, 100 Jnd. rM1111v -1. F1bl1n 1 ...... rl r, I ·• f I f +I.A Fll'lll .corl1111· M1r!f111 ll\'i, 2 Anl• I Gl., 1. ll1111ft IN) 1:05.0 J, Ft!ft>cfl. 1na s seem ..... orgot en or 1-111:: l'lt!m 17\lt. J. N""'PC" ''· '· Wt11trn mtnn oo 1:1M.1 •. Barrett (NJ 1:06.7 victorious ·Yikes. 11. s. lit Hununer"" e.-11 ·~ W1a1. 3 RMd cw111em) 1:01.1 •· B•rl•n M · ·"JI·" I mln1!1r II eath. 1.,1 l :OI.,, orris crcu = a arge •-!<I ''" _ 1. ''""',.." IM•r! ''·'
Sharf!: Of his team's Upset OVer ~ m.dltr ,..llY -I, Wt1tmln1rer 1 Smltn !N) 15.1 l. Fr•l'llo;hOU!lt (WI
the host Colonists to John 1:5<.S 2. M•rln1 l:"o J, H11.,11n;1.,.. 21.i • &r1u•u (Mui "·' s. 5tlrlH
M I b ho Bll(h 2:00,, •• Anilhtlm 2.01.J J. (Nl 11.4. a t y, w aced out some Newl>Ot't 1:ot.1. 51 111-1. Iii"'" tNI 21.1 2, FtltCll· key Anaheim performers in 200 ''" -Robin""' cM1r1 1.00' m1nn !NI n.J l . H•l•st!dc CM•rl J. 11.<tb•rhon (NI l Ol.• l . .a.ktr C .. l 2'.I l . ktwnk11 lN) Jt.1 1. 0.lt the prelims. l Ol.6 •. Pe11IO'y !Hl 2.0l.7 s Htbtr fH1 30.S •• B•Yltn (.a.I 11.0,
Only one Viking swimmer {Wl ''°"·' '· Dunn (Mir) 2:09.5. 100 !rt• -1. lr911f\lln tM•rl S.A 11111 Ind. mtdlf'JI -I. 'l'ou"' !WI !. Sn\11'1 !NI U.I l. Itek ("I) J6.t was able to capture an 1:0J.2 1. Prl..,.. 1 ...... rJ 1:112.6 J. 11111noi •. F1r,.11 C""-rl 1:00.0 s. s111t1•m
THINK
EASTER BUNNY
THINK
,.,. 1ne1. me1111rr--1. Ra111ntor1 ma)' feel like he's in the army-back straight, shoul-r:or;;:;~::'1v:11 °,"7:;•1.cv:o ,!/!~ ders back, stomach in. He Is 0 al attention."
ceD1 2:13,..., 5. NOrabtr• 1s--•i If you assume such a posture. your buttocks will
individual first place and that CNJ 1:02.1 •. F.ri•..iin1u tM•r> 1:oas !Wl 1:00.1. S. Weir IHI l :Ot.2 t. FrtJ.)1111.• CHI » bKk -I, kftmlot !NI n .t J was Kevin Williams in the 100 1:10.0. flffUU• recora) 1. a1rr~t! (NI lll.O E4lrl tnhl breaststroke where be sped to ,, 1,.. -1. H.,.,.,, 1H1 20.1 2. l. D111 (HJ 31.1 •· Pni1t1ps 1w1 J:1.1 ' Tit 800111 (,,.,_r) Ind I UtllO'l'r>e (WI 5. Dk:keY (N) 13.0 6. l'rt"khault a league record of 1:03.8, 1•.• •. S1l'Oer1 (N) 15.0 s. PtD$111' (W) D .O. ,,, .. ,, •· •1111tow tSorlofi 1 1.J•3 · protrude as you bend your knees slightlk(illustra. so trtt -1. C°""'ton !I f' lJ-1. '· I l'rc•r•o t'-'•ll n.1. l. snraer 1v111 tion at left). You shou d actually feel as there is
snapping the circuit standard tHI 15.o 1. o'Connt11 CM•rl n .1. 511 bru11 _ 1. F•bl•n 1M1r! l:l.l Wftlcllff rtu.-642·2444
100 lt1 -1. G\199l1r !Mtrl 1:'42 2. owaan !N) '2.s 3. Jonnton lWttl· NEWPOITll IHN
u.1. '· R_, IED> ''·" s. -· 1EDi a bendina: inward of your back at the base of your 14.S. '· HWICl«SCll II ) f<.i.
,00 ,., _ 1. 11:o1>1.,_, 1s-i) ss.•. 1pine.
1. H•r• uu St.!, J. Limc11t1a 1ED1 From this posture it becomes almost automatic
by 1.1 second!. '· JI-(H) 1:06.]-J. I U•torntl 1w11~·~'"~)~,,~·~·~·~·~·~· ~IW~l ~"~·~·~·~· ~,~ .. ~~~~~i~i~~i~~~i~~ Huntington Beach's CJay 1:1).1.• l. AlkITTi 1w1 1:01.1 s. F•h· rlnkrUll IMtrl 1:07.2 6 . .Mllltr (NI Evans was a double winner, 1:11.s. flying to a 2:05.3 in the 71)() 100 irtt -1. Httl'WI'• CHI s-i.• 1,
St.I, •. Narabf:rw ($onetral l :Ol.O. !. I ' I d f II oil lh bl M-• u:oi 1:111.1, '· 11:1111, cv111 o swing on a proper pane an u y c 1 g
1:01.1. mu scles of your body.
100 1rw -1. P1c:•1en <V•n SI.),'· Such is ·not the case, however. if you stand too
eurnort (EOI W. 3. Cl•rk Ill SJ.• .
•. ,.,,.nciu••t (vin 53.1. '· 11..a 1Eo1 straight (middle figure) or if you squat at the knees
.s•.o. •· 0ou91" 1v111 ss.l, wh ile your back is rounded (figure at right).
.co l•H -1. s111..., 1scnar11 •:(13.•, Check your address position in front of a full · ' LO<H;krbatk (EOJ ··1s.o. 3. lle!'l-flr>d tai •:H.s, •. smith 1rn1 ,,.,.,,, length mirror to s11 that you are "at attention." ·
!. KenM'f IED) •:JJ .•• t. K•lllli IV•ll
Trlnol'lem (W) .SS.6 ). D'C<IMlll !Marl individual medley and came ~.1 '· Tl• &oath tMl•I •fld a11dc
back later to capture the 100 cAkt ~;~ ~ t'T~~n.'!1 1!!°:;1 .,2fl,1 butterfly (f».3). '· 11.ooeriton tNJ •:11.6 l . Aktr 1"1
Newport Harb 0 r was •:11.0 '· H•t>M <WJ "11.1 s. s,,,.... (Weit1rnl 4:41.0 &, ""'"'.,,, CM1r) responsible for another league .,.s.2. mark with 3 -2 I k' · 100 t>.oc--1. Yount1 tw> 1:01.l 2. a ;1;i . c oc mg In M. P1tm1 {Mlfl 1:117.0 J. """ (HI the 400 free relflY-1:01.• •. s1r111on lAI 1:01.2 J, J. Ne\..rrv.rt bad j f Prime !Mir) 1:10,t . . ..,., a coupe o 100 t>reasi _ 1. 91111"111 IN) 1:12.,
.,JJ.1. :=================•=a=•:":':"'::"::-:::""'::=~ loo btcl< -1. 111v.ow ISanor•I
I ·Ol.7. I. Grrl!am (Val) I ·01 5, t.
v1111,.. 111 1:113.t , t, HtnOtr.an 181 LOW SCORES! HIGH POWER! Gtt pltnty cl' plli"I help In Arnold
I D<.J, .s. ZvUu1 (Vt U l:C:S-1. '· Rod· P1lm1r'S booklet, "lff Sholl end t'1iiway Woods," written ••-
individual champions in Kevin 2. rr1nim.m (WI 1:1:i.o >. °"""
Ashe and Matt Greer. ,,~·~·~·~'~'~';_"='~"~'~·~·~·~~~~1•:.':•:•~-·~·=··~·~-'----=------------------------Fresonk• (HI l :U.1 6. LllP!lel' !Al Ashe turned in a 1:51.6 in
_., 11) 1:15.7. clusMl lY' for readers of this columlL A copy ts )'Ol.lrs far 20S •nd
100 b<Q1I -1. Ovtnt IVttl l.Ol.t. e st1mped, self·MidrtSHd envlllops Miii to Arnold P1lm1r, c/o
the 200 free while Greer added
the 50 free lo the Sailors' list
with a 22.4 clocking. -) O~kltrlo (Sonora) 1:117.C, J. K~l~I th" CV11J 1:01.J, •. Mijier tEO) 1:0&.I, ~ , __ .. _,_ •• _ .. _._ ... __ • ___________________ J
,._le!' Ill l:Of.3. i. 1111'"""111 (Ytl} The Vikings also added the
Bee meet title by outsCQring
Westminster by 'l1 counters.
1.10.s.
Olrlno -I. M-n {Ill .11).S.JS, '·
Ct-1!tV CEDI 206,'5, 3. ,.111<1! ... v
C~•I 1.,.il, '-Mlt11r IL11111111I
111. 6c. S. Pfftl (EDI lll..S.S. •. Wtrt
!LI ..... ) 18'.3S,
.1(1(1 frtf' •ti•• -1. .... ~111 J·lt.!,
'· llrta l :lO,t, J. Et Ooroe!a 3:3!.J. 4,
Lt llUN l :Sl.2, }, Sof!Crl !!50.1.
·~ 1GO mt<llfr •fllf -1. Slailltbte•
1,5u1, J. v111nc!1 l:loli,,, l. El Oor100
l Sl.J, l. Sor>or1 2,01.1 * frH -1. Pilltn<ln (Vil) 2:DS.1,
'· Sl!twm1kt CEO\ ?:07.J, J. 11'11"""
4S....O•tl 1:0!,I, '· Awrty (SI 1:1:9.t,
J, Hind (ED) 2.Jl.I, I . $Ttrn (Sonorl )
1:11 .•.
100 Incl. ,_.,l~r -I. l ltlllC.t (S)
1 ;1)1,1, 7. FolWll! (Vi ii J:Ool.J, J,
1111rcnllt 10 fEO> 1:115.1, '· 51>tmal<
(5) !:Oii.i , 5. llllrM {Yl l/ 1;10.t, 6.
Ad.,m CSl 1;12,2.
50 lrM -1. Lecllm911ilc. IS! 2!.I, '·
11n1rr.gur l tl ?SA, l. l lr11wan-
(V1ll U.7, '· Gtrdo'IH !SJ n :t. .!.
Hiii IEDI :M.l, '· lill>IM ll l 16.1.
100 !IV -I. a ..... c~flela IEOI 1:81.0,
, ~ ... '"'~ (SI 1 :112.1. 3. Fol-11 (\/Ill
1 OJ.S, l T1rlor fSooor1! l •CDS, ~.
2&m0r• CEO) J:QS.O, t. A.wrt'f (5)
l 10.!.
IOll fret -1 •• iMWlflttef' (Yl ll il.f,
1 Tur,,.,uf~I CYt ll !ol.J, l. lltllrr.-U'f
ltl 5'.1, l LPCl'lmtnlk fSJ 57.t, J.
GaraMr {S) $f.l, I, Hlbllttll !V•ll
'" •!lO ll"H -\. SIM-ll<t (EO) t:7t .••
?. V-~l••n IS) t:ll.2. ). Plt!.,!.Cln
(Vall c·U.!, t, J. ~11s1.,. !Li-..>
l >I.I, S. SrMl1WIDDCI (Vi l) t ::ll.J, t .
LORrtlM ($) t :3t.,.
100 b.ttt -l, 0-CS) l:Ct.Q. 1.
Hill (ED) 1:0..J Olivier (VII) t:ot.c .•
l . Sl•<>nll CS) l :\J.2, s. lr0llltr'9!'1
IL1s~n1) l:ll.1, 6. Burnt (VII) l:lt.J.
100 btfl$! -1. 11Dl1kl (51 1:11.l,
1. lur"~11l'1 (Vt lJ 1:11.5. l. ThlH'tM
!S-1l 1:13.3. t. l11tlto!' !5-••I
1,U,?, S. WeHl't'J (Vt!) 1:17,,, 6.
AO•"'~ (S) 1:19,,,
100 lrtt rel1¥ -I. Yllt M;I
1. S•ddleb1c~ J:il.7, 3 SOnc•1
.. E! OortOOc.C:ID.1, $. Lt•UM ,_
3:!-1.1,
6'01 1,
4:11.~ •
lUI medle~ rr11y -1. Sor>or'I 2:ba.S.
1. V11t-r<.l1 J:OO I, J. L1gun1 J•lll .l,
•. El DcoOO ?;ll,$. S. I r .. J:J73.
100 tru -I. OUvie< IVtll 1:1)4.l,
7. C1'1¥1t <Sonar•! 2-u.o, J. S-*•
fltWNl 2:1S.l, I. I"°'°" (Llt'llf\I)
l ·IJ.1. ! FrldltJnd /Ytll 1'11.l. i.
Maor1I ti:Ol 2:16.t ,
IOll 11111. mecllt¥ -I. Jle~bt,,911 cs...-.1 1:G-t.J. 2. Ntlfnll (l l 1·01.0,
3 Roti.rh ILa11un1J 1:01.6.. •. Ktnd'I
C~•l l:lf.1, !. WrltM 1v1n 1:11.1.
t . T~P (S) 1:11.J.
SO ""° -1. Amt0111 /L1.vn1l lS t,
1 Olmsted !8 1 M.1. 3. Otvlt (Snnorll!
76.6. ... Pkt<rell !Vol) :16.t , S. C1rl'611
Cl l 26,6, 6. M11mmt (Sor!orl ) JI.I.
so fir -1 Plt~rtll !\laU ,._,, 1. OeVQI'~ Clai;i11n1) "·'· l . E"""" (EOI
ll.0, I, TW-P tSI 31.t, 5. K1lll$
(VJIJ :n.5, 6. 1'.,_t<l\lt!!t !SJ :t1_1.
100 /'" -1. Otlvltr IYt!l 5" I. 7.
Olmsle<:t II) SI.I. 3, CMrd (Sorlaft1
l:Ot.1. •. Mummt !Sorlor11l i ,01.0, 5,
FrldlJr.d (VII) 1:07.0. I, 8tfl!O" (LI·
tu"•) l :M.!.
SO btdt -1. ll:t!<li!nbaullh C5c110rl\
,..I. '· Wrlotlf {\111) )2 2. ]. M11i.1
!Vtl! llO. '-A:~;tr ll•tuMJ JJ,), .s. Or,.,..11• (SI n.1. '· Ml!~vtl• CS!
"" .SO bre11l -1. Wt lfMS <l l :0.1. 1
Dtv!1 C~•l JJ.t, 3. ltobtrt1 tL1-
,,,,...l :ll.2 .... Kerso. !Sor,.:i••> 1'.•.
s l••rv (Sonorl) 3'.l. I. DiM tY1I)
.)fi.S,
1i10 lrM re!1v -I L...,111 leach
l •U,1, 2. l tN 1:UI. l. Y1lt~cl1
1 Sl.P, •. Sl'dd~t l:JS.1. S. Sonor1
1 1.1.4, t. El OortOO l :ll.1.
Bucs Place Second Newport Harbor's annual
dominance or the C e e s
continued with the Sailors
racking up 101 points to
runnerup Marina's 64. Behind Fullerton \11nl'7'
JOO mM1l1r r•l•r -1, Marina 1:.U.J
t .... n1htlm 1:46.0 J. Hewpart 1:•7.f
t, w"1m1n1ter l :!S.O.
Orange Coast College, after
a second pla~ finish in the
South Coast Conference s\\·im
meet last weekend at Santa
Ana College, will wait a couple
or weeks before competing in
the Southern California meet
at Cypres.s.
Coach Jack Fullerton"s OCC
Pirates recorded s o m e
Impressive performances. but
jusl did not have enough depth
to stay with circuit champion
Fullerton JC.
The winning Hornets totaled
174 "" points while the Bucs
finished Y:ith 1291h, far
outdistancing third p I a c e
Sant.a Ana (61 ),
The top effort of the day for
the Pirates came fr om Chris
Cammon who clocked 53.5 in
capturing tbe 100 fly from
Fullerton's Steve Figueroa.
The Hornet v.'hiz bad 1 ti'me of
5.l.7.
In the lhree-mete r diving
llMll!I (Mil Clfl,__. l:hlm1i ... 1~iH
1 ... l<O frtt -I, Mtlal" IF), l1:4t.e;
'· tin-. COJ, 17 51.,; l. Sc~wtr tOJ,
11:12.1: t. Polle fFJ, 11:71.I; !. #APl'-
l lfl ((), ll:!l.t1 6. ltobtrto ($)
lt·OJ.•
100 lrM -I. l1y1n1k1 {(~ . .51>6:
1 Fulln>ela (Ml. 51!.6; l OfHuH 101,
51.6' t. lbt>el~ !Of, !I•; i. "II• !Fl,
n .1; •• Slllr•• (FJ, SJ.?.
JOO btclt -I. lil•ldo!nbtu;h !I')
2·0! !: 2. Jlklet CS), J:ll.0; l. tl urt
IF), ?:U .I; l , McSn.ne tC), )•lt.t:
S, Kf'Ck !SJ, 7 19.S.
too brt1JI -1. M•r IF), 1.17.1: 1,
Kru•t 0'1, 2:27.S; l . Slmpkln1 (Ml.
J:ll.I; I. Faulkner IS), 1.31.i: !.
(1,llllo !S). 2:lt.'1 '· W1rnf'(.llt lD).
1: :U.7.
100 llv -l, G1mm<1<1 (0). $:1,S: ).
Fl9uer.,. (,\, 5J I; J. Sw•n...., IF'I,
5'.I; t. Merlin (C), 511: 5, Gro.11 IS),
57.1; i , H"'rd /Fl, J;OO.
J.m1ttt 01•1"9 -I, Dl>l!f' !Ol. pcl"'" JO.J; J. Cr~ !F l. l . .a.1>11cll
fD). J Rtt9 (0!, •. Rtet 10). 5.
Ourl<I" !Of, I . l'tllerson !M!.
a)O frM rellr -1. Fullt-r!On. l :?J,Q;
J, Or1n91 Ca-11, l:1~ 1; J, CeHlloo.
l .Jl.7J l . S1n11 Afll, J.lJ.I; S. Ml, Sin
.a.ntonlc!, J•)'l.1.
Fl111I tt•m IU>l'lntl -I. Full~·ton
\Jtl~; J, Dr'"'' (<111!, 119'" J. Santo .a.M 411 C.,.rlfot 57; Ml. s,,,, ..... tunic
~
competition, the Pirates went
1-3-+5 with Jim d h e r g
capturing individual honors.
Bailey Abbolt, John Reeg and
Bill Durkin were third. fourth
and !Ulb.
The Pirates' Dave Bannon
and Steve Schw~r placed
seeond and third in the 1.650
free behind Fullerton's Tom
A1cLain. Bannon c I o c k e d
17:58.6. while McLain's mark
V.'as 17:49.S.
Bill DeHurr and · P a u I
Ibbetson finished third and
fourUi for the Pirates in the
100 free while teammate Tom
Warnecke was sixth in the 200
breaststroke.
Fullerton's Byron Re iden-
baugh won the 200 backstroke
in 2:05.5, equalling his season
be.st. It was Reidenbaugh's
third victory of the three-day
swimfest.
20CI lrM -1 .... ,,,_ {NJ l :JT.6 !.
Tie Halloway lMlr) tnd Ntlf (Al
l :SJ.2 t. F•rrer !Ml 1:!7.1 S. M1ltby
l""-rl l:!ol.1.
JOO !<Id mM1l1y-l, Ev1"1 CHl 2:05.l
1. llo111orouo11 ( ... ) 2:06.0 l. c. Harav
!Mir) J:ll.S •. SchOlff !Marl J:U,I
s. Sadl!I IAI J .11.G I. Pumth•rr-(AJ
2:H .S.
50 frtt -1, Greer !N) tl,, 2. Fll•t
(Mar) 11.1 J, DIVkliOn ( ... ) 2].1 '·
Frllwl., IA\ 2J.l l. Wlllllm1 1""-rl
213 I. C1rdentt1 tMtr) 1'·'·
Divine -I, J•wonkl (WJ 3t1.2J 1,
Oracvt tWI JUAO I. Harbin !W) m .oo •. o.v111 !Marl llt.65 J, Gold~
tM1r) I '3.05.
100 !IV -1. Evans CHI "·J 2. Wall
IN) 51 2 3 tioDpt {Marl J7.6 l. Kint
IM1rl jt.Q 5. Sod«n t.a.J st.t 6. Kf/l'""
IN) 1:000.
100 lrtt -I. Grttr !NJ n 7 1
01rl111'1 !A) 50 ! J. l'llH (Mtr) .SJ.I
•· Koenl11 CWtfltrnl Sl.I S. l1rlllnt
c.a.1 52.J I. F1rrw (N) ~.O.
UCl Gotr
Area Net Summaries
Colaffl W"I Ill 171 CIOlllTlllll
"""" Ki•~ Orlhood IGl losl 11-1, J-6
Crtw CG) '"°" t-t, •-6. 7.5
Orr CGl w"" !rl. l-6, 6-J
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Bing: 'Musi~ Easie1· • ID My Day"
By ROBERT MUSEL
LONDON (UPI) -An elder
sLatesman ~ IOfl& listened in
'..ondon to the caroling ol.
Y'OW\I men atW unborn when
he WIS kin&: of the pops. And
be found It good.
''The kJds," sakt B i n g
Crosby, ''have talent, good
musicianship and good soogs."
The old groaner did not
speak as a diplomat in lhe
homeland of the hard rock
that drove his own brand of
melody out of the charts.
When it oomes to pop music
Harry Lillis Crosby pon-
tificates with an authority
maLcbed by few others in thti
history of modem song.
And ht speakJ his mind -
too emJnent for envy, too well
aware at 66 that his own era
v.·as long, lucrative a n d
rewarding.
Crosby stopped briefly in
London recently on his way
to hl.s sixth photographic
safari in Kenya. Any lion,
rhino or hippo reading this
dispatch. need not be ad for
cover Jn the elephant grass;
Ding 11 carrying nothing more
lethal than a (amera with
telescopic lens.
However this reprieve docs
not apply to game birds.
"l mli:;h t," he warned,
"shoot a few of those."
The golf courses are also
safe. Bing moved his left arm
in a small circle and winced.
"I've got a shoulder problem,"
he said. It is bursitis, the
curse. of even better golfers.
Bing has tried every fonn
of ln!atment except ooe that
will have to await his return
from banquets of game birds
-diet. "I think eating the
\vrong food rruiy have
something to do with it," he
said, regretfully.
Before be left the States
Bing recorded is part in a
Bell System documentary call-
ed ''Tho Recoro Makers"
shown on NBC-TV April z.
The subjects were drawn from
people listed in . the Cu.lnne~
Book of Records and Bing
is there. for selling well over
300 million records -the all-
time mark.
Thirty million cl these were
for "White Christmas," a song
that didn't sound like a big
hit to Irving Berlin when he
wrote it.
Bing said he was asked on
the program about pop music
when he broke in with ··the
"Rhythm Boys" as a youth,
and pop music today. It is
a subject he UKiught about
academically at the height of
the Beatles rage and thinks
of with a more practical
gleam in his eye now that
Perry Como (57) has taken
a sweet ballad almost to the
top of the British charts.
"It was easier in my early
days," Bing l!aid. '"Today
there are too many records
being made on too many
labels, not counting th e
records the kids m a k e
themselves or. spec in the hope
of selling to a record com-
pany.
"There are any number of
good singers around and I'll
bet there must be nine million
guitar players who can play
beautiful and .inventive things.
Ir my time there were only
a few or us making records
and only a few !ables lo make
them for. If you could strum
a few notes en the banjo you
were in."
Bing's advice to young musi-
cians is to diversify their
talents and not concentrate
on just one form of music.
"You never know abo.ut
music," he said. "One year
it's one thing and the next
DIGS NEW SOUND
Crooner Crosby
it's another. Right now there
seems lo be a move away
(rom hard rock. Look at the
success of 'No No Nanette'
on Broadway -That's a 1930s
musical.
"But good music -I mean
music with a good strong
melody and i n I e 11 i gen t
v.·ords-is always around. The
Beatles wrtte It, Simon a!KI
Garfunkel play It, ~does Glen
Campbe)I and others. Good
music isn't coming back, flS
some people say. The f11.ct
is it never went away."
But Bing was cagier y,·Jien
he was asked to name any
of today's songs that he
thought would be "standards."
the evergreens played decade
after decade like "Tea for
Two," the hit song of "No
No Nanette." Bing does not
award the accolade o r
';standard" lightly.
" 'By the time I Gel to
Phoenix' is a good song," he
said, after a pause.
It seemed implicit in Bing's
remarks and attitude thal he
thinks today's music is better
than tOOay's lyrics -and that
some good songs may perish
as time goes by because the
words are v.•ritten in a
perishable idiom .
Bing said he is enjoying
life , that he is making oc-
casional television ap-
pearances and had been in·
terviewed on David Frost's
TV show . He was surprised
to hear Frost is more popular
in the U.S. than in his
homelanci. ''He was marvelous
to work with,'' Bing said. "He
ap~ar!I: to be genuinely in~
terested in you and when you
say something funny he ralls
about. In that sense he's a
great guy to work with.
'·Louis Armstrong was on
the shov.•,"' Bing said, "and
I was glad to see him looking
so welt In January I was
on another show with Louis
and Pearl Bailey and he was
so feeble after complicated
abdominal surgery that we
had to lead him about. Dul
six weeks later there was a
big change, he had put on
weight and he was more like
the old Satchmo."
Bing aald wife Kathryn had
decided to stay home and
make sure the kids got on
wlih their piano and guitar
lessons. Enroute here he
stopped of( in New York to
see Joe Frazi~r c I o b b e r
Cassius Clay .
"You know Frazier Is a good
singer," he said. ''Well,
watching him lay into Clay
I got to thinking he'd be better
as a rhythm singer. He cer-
iaioly has a good sense of
rhythm."
Drug Drama
In Harlen1
By \YILLl hl\1 GLOVER
NEW YORK (AP) -The
many terrors of drug ad·
diction are narrated with fer·
vent intensity !Jy a newly pro-
f essional troupe in •·King
•teroin" which opened this
v.'eek at St. Philips Com·
munily 'l'hPater in •larlem.
The Al Fann Theatrical
Company, which began a half
dozen years back as a welfare
project and has been playing
since for school audiences,
hopes now to sellle in as an
uptown Off.Broadway center
of interracial appeal.
The debut augurs y,•ell for
such ambition. The youthiut
group, that began mostly as
raw re~ruils off the streets,
displays both an admirable
degree of trained talent and
that other great asset or
dramatic success, passionate
involvement.
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Mond.Jy, apin '· 1m DAILY l'ltl!T
"'IT....,. 'FOLLIES' GIRLS -Veteran actresses {from left) Dorothy Collins, Alexia ~
Smith and Yvonne De Carlo get together after the opening Sunday night of the 1
Broad\vay musical "FolHes." "' .,
~
Musical Re11nio11 I
'Follies' Nostalgic Show
By JACK GAVER
NEW YORK (UPI) -Just
as they did last April with
"Company,'' producer-director !ll'"S:J
Harold Prince and songwriter
Stephen Sondheim gave a
quality boost to the tag end of
the cur"rent Broadway season
Sunday night when their
"Follies" opened at the Winter
Garden.
With a libretto by Jame!!
Goldman, the new show i.s a
lavish ex cu rs ion inlo
Broadway's pa st of elaborate i.....J.-""''-';..;;....o;
revues, and the nostalgia in
the Winter Garden can be cul
with a knirc.
Prince has loaded the cast
·with veteran performers of
name status and staged the
show is spectacular fal!hion
that is basically in the mood of
modern musical theater but
suggests the flavor of the past.
reunion of players who were in
a factional series ()f old
revues.
The players almost m;ike up
a miniature theatrical who"s
\1'ho -Alexis Smith, <..;cne
l'\elson. Dorothy Collins, John
l\1cl\1arlin. Yvonne De Carlo,
Fifi D'Orsay, .l\-1ary l\1cCarty,
Ethel Shulla, Arnold Moss ,
Ethel Barrymore Co It ,
f\Iichael Barrett, Sheila Smith
and Justine Johnston .
There also is a complement
or younger players or talent. a
number of whom represent the
principals as they were when
young and as Ibey relieve in
memory the way things used
to be. Among these are
Virginia Sandifur, Kurt
Peterson. Harvey Ev a n s,
fl1arti Rolph and Victoria
!\.1allory.
Goldman's peg for his :story
is the tearing down of a
famous musical theater where
an impresario has staged
extravagant revue! for
decades (undoubtedly inspired
by the demise of the Ziegned
Theater).
Boris Aronson has de signed
a fabulous basic setting that
represents the half-dismantled
interior or a theater, and it is
here that lhe producer of the
story has invited some of the
old glorified girls and other
perforn1s for a farey,•ell.
The tale centers around
l\.1iss Smith and Miss Collins,
who come with their husbands.
Neither couple, it develops, is
happily married. Miss Collins
still has a yen for the man
who married fi.1iss Smith, and
the latter and her husband,
wealthy and prominent. are
JUSI bored with each other.
The nashbacks through song
and dance and dialogue are
neatly contrived and
beautifully staged by prince
and choreographer 1'1ichael
Bennett.
The music and lyrics by
Sondheim are a golden asset
10 lhe show. \Vhere needed, he
has l!imulaled styles of the
past in his songs while keeping
his individuality as a creator.
He has provided show-stopping
numbers for most of the
veterans, among them :
"Don't Look al Me." "Rain
on the Roof," "Ah. Paris!,"
'·Broadway Baby.'' ''I n
Buddy's Eyes." "Who's That
Woman?," "Too Many
J\l ornings," "The Right Girl,"
•·vou're Gonna Love
'l'omnrrow,'' "Love Will See
Us Through'' and "Could I
Leave You?''
l\1iss Sm it h , beautifully
regal, here makes h e r
SAG Incr ease
JIOLLYWOOO (UPI!
Inflation note: The Scre€!n
Arlors Gulld voted eight lo
one lo increase initiation fees
for new members from $200
to $250.
Sally Field No
Broadway stage debut and her
musical bow, but you'd never
know it. She appears ta have
been doing nothing else all of
ber life,
Oddly, A1iss Collins, cn-
time singing sensaUon pf
television, also Is in her first
Broadway show, and she also
handles her taxing asslgnmenL
like a stage veteran.
Nelson, Mcl\.1artin and an nf
the others score heavily in as
intricate and demanding a
musical as you can imagine.
If the show has a fault, it Is
that the last third, although
valid enough in conception,
does not fit as neatly as ()ne
could wish into the overall
pattern. This part conslsts of "
sort of dreamland sequence
presenting s~eral I a • i s.h
numbers as they were done hi J '
revues of the past.
Nol the least of the show'•
assets ls the fantastic
costuming create d by
Florence Klotz. She gives you
more than a vague Idea of
what Flo Ziegfeld put ort
l!tages when he did the m1111y
editions of his "Follies."
Prince produced the show in
association wllb Ruth
Mitchell.
14 Vying
For Award
Fourteen Golden W e 1 t
College students have been
named scmi·finalist$ by the
California State Scholarship
and Loan Commission.
The grants, ranging from
$500 to $900, will be awarded
in May.
The semi-rinalists art :
.lames A. Long, Raymond J.
t-.1artell, Karol L. McGill.
Richard E. Ramos, Gardea.
Grove; Mark L. Oudin, FoUDP
lain Valley; Karen J.
Annitage. Connie J. Daigle,
James G. Jennings, Suzanne
E. Maltz, Paul S. Saenz. John
C. Spero, Huntington Beach:
Vickie A. Bennett, Karen J.
?.ofoderow and Harry M •
Zatkowsky, Westminster,
Angel
Actress Changing 'Gidget,' 'Nu1i' linage
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Sally Field, the I m p Is h
youngster who played the title
role in ''The Flying Nun·•
television series, is no sainl
and trying her best to prove
It.
First as television·~
''Gidget" and later as Sister
Btrtrille, Sally established a
sickeningly S\veet hnage.
It did, in fact, make Sally
sicker than most.
She is married now and the
mother of a 2-year-old son.
She is also anxious to prove
lo the wor ld she is not a
road company D e b b I e
lleynolds.
Toward thnt end s h e
recently starred in a television
drama, "Maybe I'll be Home
in the Spring,'' ln which she
played a runaway, and will
be seen this fall In "Marriage,
Year," another non-sugary
role.
Lest she develop5 a fatal
case of diabetes thrbugh
her pGJ'U, Sally ls determined
to act her age and use lhe
language or her generation.
"I could go on playing
goodie two-shoes.'' she said
the other day. "But there are
more import.ant things thnn
1noncy.
"Whal '!i really lrnporlant i!I
to satisfy other dreams e.nd
KICKING THE HABIT
TV's Silly Field
fl!lnlasies 1 ·ve had about acting
s1nct' I was a little girl .
"For instance. aU rny life
acting to me was the way
I got t.o be Sally Field. Whi le
other kids played house or
dress-up, 1 always pretended
I was' acting in movies.
"I dkln't havt many friend!!
Jxocausc t was nlw::iys acting.
They Lhoughl I was weird.
"l"d pretend my rnoth'..'r died
nnd cry and cry. I could du
al! those crazy things as 11'1
excuse for acting. And when
f got to junior high I began.
acting in plays. People thought
I was odd and some of them
were frightened of me."
Sally said she never cared
for her "Gidget" or nun
characterizations.
"l never had an opportunity
to act when 1 played Ulri
nun,'' she said, "I was Ii~
a robot. I pressed a butlol'I
to smile, another button to
look sad and another to be
contrite.
"You know what l'd like
to do -play drama. I'd really
enjoy playing murder scene1
or nude .scenes, explaining
myself by creaUng other
lives."
Sally's large brown eyes fill·
eel with anliclpiltlon.
"I'd like to see what lt•1
like lo murder someone
without taking the ~
sequences.'" she said. "Yoo
can get away y,·ith that S<lrt
or thing if you're an actress.
"There arci othtr roles I'd
love to play as a meant of
losing my fears ."
One hopes Sally's wishes are., •
fulfilled. Not to much becau•
she would erase her lmase
as a sweet young thing, but.
because California doesn't
~~~~in~no~:k.goody·lwo-aboet.
I
I
. . . . . . . . " . '. .. • .. ~· ...
~· DAil Y PILOT MO!Mlay, AP'lt .5, 1m
~otlthCoutL~htOpera .
jExcellent 'Gypsy' in San Clemente
I .
BJ TOM TITUS
• Of .. Dtlr '111t le.ff
:Beyond the obvious delight
~ watchln&: a good musical
splendidly done there Is an
~a 1a t lafac:t lon ln 'ftnus!nc a small theattr
group struggling on a
shoestring to, as th e
orerworked phrue goes, put It
aP to1ethe.r.
!The South Coast Clloral and
lJght Opera Association has
''but It all together" with Its
rdusi.ig:, in v o Iv Ing and
lltorouibly exc!Ung production
of ''Gypsy," whlch deserves
~ but will not receive -hold-
Monday
Evening
APRIL 5
l:OOJJI 111 lkwl Jmy Dunphy.
}O IUfBC ,..._rvkt 1Gm Snyder.
~ 5"" AHlft Sllow GUtsb: Jtcli
~ Dody Goodrrun. SkHlet & :IClbtcCI Ytuthn (knlltthrowtrt).
8?'FAHRENHEIT 451"1 *1'art ~SKAR WERNER 0 Sir O'Clodi: Mtwlr. (C) (tO)
:>fttw.btft •st,. Ptrt I (ld·fi) '66
i-Jvlll atrbtil, Cyril Cl..IPCL A nrt-
'Mln. In a future JOdtty wlltrt tt•d·
Inc of books b forlllddtn tnd n •d·
111 111 hunted down by 1wlh<lriUu.
,becomn obMIMd with rt1d\n1 rJiooks It tht 11rfln1 of • youn1 sir!,
,_,d tostlhtf thty btcallM oute11ll
lrom IOdety at tht 111! kttpert ot
)nnnan knowlldp.
'U Dick Y11 DJ'• mm Dod&tr laMblll (cont'd !tom
5:00) Dod11r1 vs. Alltoa t i Hollll:on,
1 .....
IDSblr TNl
lftl (J)MCN ... m Mlfrlnllltd "Columb~L"
8 ([l1'1Wt/Wtet1Mr/Sjllrtl
fli)fbW ftMlly
Ill""""""
tr) -,..., "" El 1..1 Hon r1.n1tr Cfft Contatll
5:15 m Alt Stocllt "Plilntlna: lllrd ....
uro c.ffld c.111r11
(UJ (J)SttrTrtk
•4'CIJ NIC "IWI
ctl~ttlMlt
·GICll CIS ....
., SIUdld fllmt/Mulbll
m T1ll D .. rt RIPOft m 1.o1 Ohtdldot
r.oo 1J CIS "'" W1lhr Cronkite.
11 tl' NBC 1'tw1 Oavld Srlnklq,
John 0!1llttllor, Fnnk McGH.
i> Mat's MJ lhl1? iii ......
0 (I) A Col!Hrlltlon Wllb Or. John
. .Lthardt.
over performances at San
Clemente's relurblsbed Arts
Pavilion.
"Gypay'' is a total l y
pleasurable experience, from
~ superlative portrayal of
f!J&dame Rose, the super stage
mot.her who spawns quite by
accident the career of Gypsy
Rose Lee, to the split second
changing of props and scenery
by a well drilled crew. And
everything in between Is
equally first rate.
Director Ruth Yielding has
fashioned a show which builds
briskly, without letup, and IJ
complimented by Irvin E.
Klmber's high q u a 11 t y
1:30 I) a Cf) Htrt'1 LVCJ (R) M1rry't
collep $weetheart, Glor!• P1ndtlton
{MarilJn Mai;well), 1~CfUlts him lo
rt5hlt a college show lor tn 1lurn·
nl ll!unlon at Bullwtn~l1 Univ111lly.
0 !l!I (f) Tht Riii •••• m Scor1bo1rd
Ql rtlonJ Sq_uld m httn for tMn1
(ri1 Allplltn flflJOI
al) M!Jue llte Y1hl1t Shw m--
EE Tiit WtrW Wt lM la ''The Child ~Wltthers." T.chnlque1 u1td b)' child
'psycholorbb to oblrrw1 1nd l'Mtl· ! ur1 1t1mln1 art attn. 10:00 B 9 Cl) C.T61 I Lmlltt Sllo1f Ed·
I la (I) Trwtll or Co1t11t111111CU w1rd ViUell1, M1rthl Rtye 11111t.
!El a1111t th L1¥1"' WMd 0 t»@ m 1 IJl<LALI Di1h1n1
'fll Ml AMtf 11tr TI C.rroll GutSI stirs HlrTJ Bel1lonh
I' a£1 Shl!p"'9tntt Maril ind Tom Jonis IOln DJ1h1nn tor her
Ill'$! musical special. Featured 111
rnoie than 1 dozen IOlll3, plus
e1meo 1ppe1r1ncu by Bill C.OSbJ
ind Don1ld Suthul1nd.
Allllltt •
II ALSO II
JASON ROBARDS
"THE BAU.AO Of
CABLE HOGUE"
Al so "R''
"SUDDEN TERROR"
I
I ~
Alto Pl•ylnge2nd Ilg '••turteRon Moody, Dom Dtlulu
"THE TWELVE CHAIRS"
1:308 Qt(l)Cwn .. ok1 (R) Bovntr
hunt1r1 hold Doc. Kitty, S.m ind
Loul1 Pheete11 ho1t1r1 It !ht Lani·
branch, hopinc ta tr1d1 thtir CIP·
llvu lo M1rsh1I Oillon tor cowh1ndl
Ben Mllllf, on whoW head tlltrt It
O Clllnntl 5 """ Kwin Sande11 1'======================'.ll 0 l artf:r Wtnl Ntn I·
· t $10,000 1ew1rd i nd who !Its turn-
ed h11115tll ov1 r lo tht '"trslltl to
ttttPt the bounty hunters.
m Nns Pulntm/fls~mtn.
t!) M1nlr1p Al Htmtl hosl1.
fl1J WIMid Prtst
([!) Hit dtl Momtrlla G ~ Cil m rrom • 11rd'rc,.
Vin "Mime's MO'o'etblt fe1st ." Mil·
1111 tose1 her job 1nd triel to 1et It 10:30 0 Clinic MO'o'lt Wttk: (2h1) "Cito.
back 1hro1.11h 1 dmner p1rty. I p,alrt" (classic) '34-tlaudet!e Col·
D '"'"° btft, He"ry WllooJtOn. Cecil B. DI·
0 llll ~ '"' M I Mll\1'1 lwish specttclt of CIM'.lpttr1"1 ~ 1 ••• 1 Dtll Monty love 101 M11t Antony.
Hill hosts. 1 . 0 Million S Movie: (C} (2111) m 6111 Johns Nr"
-r1pt'1 Delk.I ll Con~lllon" {c.om-1 EI! TBA
ldY') '65--Jtckle G11110n. Ch1ti~ ll:OO €1 llf (})OJ N
Ru1flt1. A lippllng. l11wlin1 r1ilro1dl · " ..,
supeivisor wt.o buys 1 dru1stor1 .o 0 ~@ ffi Hews
ht t in hrve I d1lnk 01 SuMay, t nd 0 m J1nt
thtn bU)'I 1 circus to Ills d1u1httr O lilovit: "nit 111!1 tf S\. M"1's"
ur. hl¥r t pony, 11100 111uch IOI h11 (dr11111) ''5 -Bini Ctosby.
wile, who 1011 home lo ht1 dtd. m Mowlt: "llhlnd t111 Mtsk" (mJ>
Q) It l t\U I Jltllf !try) '32-BOfls l';trloff.
ED Cltywttdlera Mob ilt r111t1rttr1. m kt! ttlt Clotl
Chl1les Chtmplln 1nd Ari S1ldtn· (}!)Cl) Ptny MUOI\
b1um inmtittlt tilt public'1 limittd -. ,._ tdMn (R) S 7,30 PM
tttets lo t1hllbu brttht1. """ "''1"1 " tistint. IIi) CIMa!t 30
fil C.d1111 o. Anrauu 11:30 Q 9 (JJ Mtrw Srlfflll
D ill@ m lohnll)' c.'"" Join
Rlvtrs Is hosteu.
1!00 D Q) (1) m l.lwch·ln (R) ltrtl 0 m Diel Ct\lttl
Mos1el 1ooh. (!" MOtlt; "I Cotlf tilt UlldtrwOl'ld"
9 I IPIC!ll I o\nttll 1 Dollrtrt; A (m)'lttr,) "•7-l'fll!lp Rttd.
1'11 ~m.w .lttry Coltmtn ho~ll.f ll:OOQil (I)Dldl CMtt U ~ CIJ Ntwtywd Ct Ml Bob
(ublnb hotlL 12:JQ m Morie: "Otld Mt-'t (,.... (lllJ'I' m c.nwt Ewnb !try) '44-ton Chtllt)'.
C!) llllN If YIM
Gi loo_ .. _
m ",.. Jlrn Hawthomt.
.-m a.~Truhllll•
Tuesday
DAYTIM E MOVIES
12:.J.s 0 Dnt Stall ltf0114
1:00 0 Mwlt: '"TlMi Clant ltbtlllCltr'
(ad fl) '~1111 [YlnL
0 0 Nim
D "'T'""tr '1111 r .... ldr1m1) '6t
-DIVid JtniHn. Je1nn1 Crain. m 1ci "Yor••• " tt11 l'fllhlM
l'ltntl" hci-11) ·~eMI R1lllbonl,
f1!!h Oom1r111•
t;DOCJ "'ttltl17 Mk1dl't utt Slatf' 1 :00 m "S.n Dtrs to Noo11" (ITl)'fltl)'l
{ml'rltlJJ '4l-Jhn111J IJdoft, Clltrltt '50-Barry Jor1e1. Oltw S!o1n1.
11111111. "T,,,._.. (td'ftflflll"t) ·4~ 12::00 0 "T1M Ghort I nd Mrt. Mlrif' (d11
DonitllJ L1mo111. "obtrt Ptta!Ofl. rn1) '47-llt• Htirlwn, Gtnt fltf•
~ D (C) .,.ltM I 111, law" Condll· ~11. N1t111t l'foo4,
JOE FRAZIER
See him in person
w ith his musical group
THE KNOCKOUTS!
Al FlbUIOUI Kings Caslle
3 D1y1 Only!
Thur1.1 Frl, Sil., Apr II 8·9· 10
On stage-Singing & Dancing
Two Shows 8:15 p.m. & Midn11e
Room Ratti 1s low as
$16 sln&1• occupancy • ita double accupanct
It's the fftlltsl 'f'ICation bur in AmeriQ.
At Maplflctn t Kinrs C11tlt!
& ACADEMY AWAllD WINNIR
-BEST ACTRESS--
IN CO LOR e RATED GP'
"D ' h' ..,u o you L .. ..:e I ts worr1an~
~ 11Yes, for every:hir.3
she's go:11
Plr~I P'lc.TIJl'M ptll.MfllS
A HOWARD W. KOCH·
HILLARO ELKINS PROOUCTION
iner Matthau
Elaine May .
"A ne<o Leaf"
lG1 Colof by MOVlEL/16
OU>
NOW PLAYING
IT 2 COMIENIEJH
LOCATIONS
New Rtductd Pricts
At Cinedomt
"o" (drtrn•) '62-flomr SdlnthMr.
1
l ;IO 8 "Jlttlrbtlp" (ccmtdy') '43 -
K•rt llolhm. lt urll I H.11dy. !----------------------I •---------4
. .... ••' . . . .
-~I-NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS-I
MACGIWYIAY ... l llMAN
f ll MI -PUSINT
"VALDEZ IS
COMING"
h•fUTUll
At Hw., 3' 01d7
DOORS OPEN 6~4S DAILY
5ATUROAY & SUNQAY AT 12~45 P.M.
-.i.,.,f;~:~ .. !~"f·-~1t:9".\;JK.t;:tf ~
•l""'•'r ;111 .... 1...., I
IJl~O 11£ LAURf.1111~ PRFSF.\TS · '"
ROD STEIGER· CHRISTOPHER PWMMER
"WAllRLCXl "
ORSON WEUESAs Lou;s XVIII . .,,.,,...,.,_.-~'-..':;_-_'"',"040I• .W::K JiAWKINS·VIR&}~I-~ :.kKf.\NA· D;\"l Q'HERUHY ~ .
HANG EM HIGH CO·HIT All THIATREJOR PROGRAM
CLINT EA5TWOOO TIME
CA.ll 1HlAH1E
---f011 SHOW TIME'
... Dllk•°'"" .S..l()P II\.
__ .. _____ ., -·-·""·· -· ·-' --.....
Now Playing
Now Playing
2 -.it SOUTll 01 ,.... M$0 ,..,,
MATINEES DAllT
APRll 3-11
........,,. ._ -...1., cm••..,,. -••• 1•0 .. _____ .. ,_ ........
.,f•o 9orbofo Henk<:y
"THE BABTMAKER " Il l
GORDON
fASTMAN
7NO HIT
CLINT
EA~TWOO
"HING M HIGH'
Mee! Henry & Henrieua ...
the laugh riot cl the year.
"A new Leaf
1GI ColOf by MOv1rLAB
"-~ A P.-1ro;1·11r)11r11111(..IU!C
oh~• !101~., Joe~
h t. M & WI'"
·~
DUSTIN HOffMAN
"Lrrn.f 816 ~-
~ TedVlcolor• ~ ....
CHIEF DAN GEORGE. FAYE DUNAWAY
CXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY lNGAGEM£NT
,A,l llUSAN -•SAM SHAW,.,_ c•··· FFrl
CiD•••ss J ._ ___ ........
-..... ,A,l RU&AN ~.:. .. :SAM SHAW o·.,;;:::o: JOftN (ASSAVEl tS ''°"' COIUMllA PICTURES
TUMBLEWEEDS
ji,. -
MUTI AND JEFF
WHAT K!NO OF MAoAME,
AN ENiREE IS IT'S NoT
14415 ---ONE EASY TO
PEELED GRAPE? PEEL r-----,,--'I GRAPES!
BESIDES YOU
ASK.ED 11-IAT
I SERVE -,oi.I
A L1Gl-IT
MEAL!
OH--
NEVER
MIND!
BRING MEIHE
REST.'
WAITER,
\"OU GAVE
ME A WET
PLATE'
•
By Tom K. Ryan
NO,°™AT's
YOLJR SOLJP,
MADAME!
YAGOTrA ~e
T' UNLOAP 1\115
JUNK!
By Al Smith
"--0"'' , ....... -q".J ,. .. ___ (7
i:r ~@
11-_.:::: I ~
Ll'L AINER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MUWNS JUDGE PARKER
..... ;.., ___ ....... ,ri>,.~s;:;U;;;,.-.-,~ VOii MAVE NO •LTEl1:NA·..,,..'°l 'l:::E:::<U:::5f~
By Harold Le Doux
MAY I TA.ll:E #.HOTl-IER MINUTE OR TWO
OF YOUR TIME, JllD6E? I :rusr CAME
!=ROM 1.!BEV SPENC.EIZ's i\WP t IF I WERE YOU, Ml1:. W:A.NE 60Nt.IA T!VE !UT TO STA.V MERE TO ST.AV
.. 1 WOULDN'T PUT ANOTl-IER' MISS OLD : AT SPENCElt l=AltMS FOR UNLESS. '10ll
W"NT TO A.SK YOU A QUESTION TH.A.T's N!CKEL IN TI-llS CAR'... S\.IEBA'. I'VE ; f. WHILE,JOMNN'r'~ COlllE, LET ME
S\.IE.'5 JUST A HAD HEil } ILL SMOW YOO TO YOUR WORK FOR Al>OUT MER: FOR:MER: 60VEINE55~ NOf
HEA.P 01= JUNK: TEl>l YE,\11:5~ LIVING QU,..RTERS ~ MV KEEP, PIP VOU KNOW THAT SHE POSSt&L
PIED PESTITUTE.?' SAM!
PLAIN JANE
:!.:: --
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWEO I
AC ROSS
1 Passed lo1;1d
throu11h
a sieve
b A m 1neral
silica le
10 Inclined
pa ssage
1• "A Bell
f1;1 r ----· · ·"
15 Bus tll'S
lb Assam
sil ~w orm
17 ForemGsl
18Grave
19 Fixed ch,i;rge
20 Alter the
proper time :
2 w1;1rds
22 In good lime
24 Greek
assembly
2b Form of
income
27 Salad
dressin g
ingredient·
2 words
30 Secure with
a ro pe
JI Tease
Informal
32 Ori e111al
laclat
feature·
2 words
37 Ev ery
38 Most fr igid
•O E~cavat~
•I l'l52-S4
presidential
candidate
'13 Refrain
1n songs
' 2 IJ •
"
"
,~
2• .
" ..
'
,,
" ,, ..
•• .. -,,,
"
" ..
•4 Adjectlve
suffix
45 Scandi-
navians
48 Cily-stalir
ol aocient
Greece
51 Overact
52 A11yth1ng
that is
useful·
2 words
54 Styl e of
prmt1nQ5
58 W11!o w
59 Golf club
til Rose-
scen ted
liQu•d
ti2 Desc11be
b3 HP1per
t,4 Fe lon y
tis M1ssln11
bb Knob
b7 Anc 1ent
Sr i!Qn
char11;11
DOW N
1 Swimm er 's
pla!lorm
2 Pecul1111Jty :
Pref1 ~
3 Dear
Italian
• Reduce to
bondag e
5 Sen!li ty
b Yard goods
7 Wedding
cerem011y
response·
2 words
8 Crest , • ""'t.
"
ii
"
J2
-
'" -..
7
"
.,
"'
' Qutbtc mineral
10 laid ntw
floor
tGvering
II Smell
12 !l iddl r dis·
tanc e runne1
13 Erifeebl rd
coodition
21 E1cessively
23 Expose ID
t()r'l laqiGn
25 Finished;
2 words
27 Domesday
Book monel·
ary ll1 its
28 H iippy tunt
2'l 111 ac live
JJ Indian of
Mlch+gao
34 Netherlands
export
35 Timr of
year
36 ActGr
Richard·--
I ' ,, 10
·~-"
'~ "
21
, .
'
lJ
4/5/71
38 Numerical
prefix
3,Michi-
gander's
nrighbGr
42 Co~r1rd
with g1een
gro"'lh
43 Antennas
4& Orcay
47 One's
intellrclual
pos il10t1
•B T t i! a!!:
Informal
., lnnrr
roorlrss
courtyoud
50 Mornings:
Slang
53 Small group
55 Part of
the eye
5~ Occur
57 Vehicle
ll!Otmled
on runner1
bO Strange
" IT nr
:--" "
, .. ..
' \# •l .. "
•• -" ,. " -"
'
·• "
'
A&&EY !
By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS
PERKINS
-~
MISS PEACH
;tltA FAl!S TO USE ·
HIS POTENTIAL.,
ANO Sl'Oll.S
H/SOWN
CHANCES-~ ~
STEVE ROPER
WHEW/'f66'f
STARTS Hf.R
llEWJOB
AS MIKE'S
HELP£//, THE
MU TUAL
HOSTILITY
M<JtJNTS.'
PEANUTS
rr,:g -(~
( ..
--
J. 1'WO-l/fAF1-~D
COULD W£t1E l!etfeit-MAre~IAL 1HAIJ "n!IS 1-
"1W:r KllJD OF
l.0141-l!tOW5 >££.
1l<t:: 'fu.t:l/ISIOi\1
IJefUJ()IOOO 'f~l.\lld
"fO~f-
e
;r llA, AS '>CllJIZ CCINCEIZNEP
Ftcl6NO, :1 '"1 GONG 1t> IJ£l(f"
50\11: 5ENSE INTD 1J.IAT
UGCV ~E.<P OF )OUIC5,
FOil YOUR OWN QOO~
8£CAUst° I CA/lE
.tSOUT YOU!!
~ -f
jl..l.._:tl::....l..l---J I
By John Miles
By Men
TUAt«YDU, 6UT 1\1'.l!LO IT
AFFECT CUit
FICIENOSHIP IF
;r SCICfAMfO
IN~(
By Saunders and Overgard
P'" BIG sna«; W.LE !''""";;;;-;-, <ise;-;E--;Hl.-;RE;,, '-J""-------ir"'llllll'Jl,lf'I
·"4E ~KE5 T1E .EJ.5Y ..,ISS PULASKI/
JOB FOR rr AAPPEMS rM
ftlMSEt.F.' TH£ 0Jr.E 1HA1 ~S llE
OIWE~ "-1: UHLOAO
TI<E 8'1-£< .,_, ~-:11 ,_, • .___ FS
By Charles M. Schulz
-• lllOOOS1ro( • JUST Sl<r~ ' • MIS FIR:iT • 1'£LfPIO<E ''" \IJIRE ~ it, ~~ ~ .__, t -
~'-----.-_ -,,_,
MOllday, Aprll s. l'\ln DAJLV PILOT !'J! .~
By Al Capp
, ... ___ _
-~--
By Charles BarsoHI
_ 1f11S riootJ.M klo\$
Dl'f.l~llED FOt<:
011eeF111ep 1t1Pes
WnH 1ilE ~Mill•
i\TllJQ TA'S-rf5 Cf" I A~ 9Al!OOlJS·
THE STtANGI WOILO
MR.MUM
1
' ,, ' . ll
ll I •
ly Gus Arriola
ly Roger Bolen
'ttt1t1t (0 .,,
f/r;,1
DENNIS THE MENACE
. . .
'&:l'I. ~f NfVER GIVES IJI! ME'~
G®IA Tfl'f "6AIN 'THIS 'fE)ll. I' •
-.•.
" ' ,,
\
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•• •
:rJ DAil Y PILOT M°""''· AP<fl 5. 1971
Ll!IGAL NorJCE LEGAL N<mCB
. -
LEGAL NOl'ICB
T-7lMt
HOTICI! (I, SALi! CIP
llU:AL ,110,EllTY AT
,JllVATE I.I.LI!
H~ll!Ol'I N ... HI! P·IMSJ In 1ha S\1-lor Court or h SI•'•
LEGAL NOTICE
..... ,.,..
ltOTICI TO ClllOITO!tl
SUPllllO!t COU!tT OF lMIE
STATI OP (.ALtFOll.llllo\ l'O!t
T"I COUNT'r 01' OltlNGI
Est•" ._. .... Jot• A·611111
f# WALES ~. JAClt.$0N,
NOTICI! ll HEREIY G!VEN to !l'lt
c....tl~ of "* 1trove n1me<1 (!Ktd•nt fhlll 1n Ptr-.a htvlnt clalmt •01tn11 .,_ Mkl lllCld.,.I ,,.. '"~l•.O lo lilt
in.m, wl"' Ille fll<t"'l"I' 'IOIK1'•r1, Jn
ftll' Offlce t1I fhe dtrk ol lht tbovt '"
t llltd ~. ... "' .. ~ .... , '""""·
""""'( CEllf lllllCATE OF a utlNftS l'ICTITIOUt NAME
The '-"""""loned <Iott c1rll1V !~er ''' c-vcllno • bu1lnt11 et 7061 llu'I""''
[)rive, NtWPOrl 8••<1\. (tlllornl• 92660.
under 1111 llc!lllOlll firm na,... ct
AlllPORT MEDICAL CLINIC lnll 1~11
w ld firm 11 com90litll of Ille lol!C\111119
Pt'IOftt, WhOH l'lmft Ill fll11 Ind pl1t11
ol residence ire •I to1iaw.: Fr.,, K1~11. M.D .• 1"20 N1~
A.-.n.,.., Tu1tln. C1Hlor11lt. l'r1nk E . ObuU1<1, M,D., ID I!:. K1"llt $ullt
G.. Ortn9'1, Ctlllo .... 11, M I ' I h. w $i•wlew1kl, M.D., 2'QS Edlllfff (W111J
Slnl1 AM, Cllltt>mlt P1i.cl Mirth lt, nn
Frid IC1h11
M1tllltw S!twlO'W'llll
Frtn11; E. ObuHtn
Sl81e ol (1lllorD!1, Orlntf (OUflh'l
On Mardi It, lt71, btfor1 ""' I Note,., P11bHc 111 """ tor uld ~!tie.
Ptt>Ontllv •-red Frink Obu!I~. "'"" Kihn. Mlllhew s11wl-.kl, k"°""" lo m• lo be lh• "rlOll' """OM """" 1re subi.crlbed ff !I'll wfll\ln lnttrvmenl
1nd edomowlldted llllr •~Kut9" TM ..... ,.
(OFl'l(IAL SEAL)
M•rlor~ W. "'"'or Nof1ry Pvbl!c-Ct!!lornl•
Prlnc:lptt Ofl!Ct !n
O•t"ff Covn!v
Mr corn..,1111cn Enlr"
Otc""btr 2i. 1971
PubH11'1od Or•nt• c ... , 0111'1' Pllol
Mire.It :tt, :it, -"'•II 5, 12. 1'11 61•71
'Nllfl ftll' ,,__,. ~•••. lo
tfl>t 11nftralollfCI ti tllt oft\t1 ~· !hol• •"""""': NOllMAJot £. lllUOOLPH, JOI)
Sovll'I oi. v1tt1. "" CltloKntt, c~ ''·'"'" n.12, -"ildl 11 fht pret. of bv•!ntu
el flll u,..,..ltne<I !fl 111 l'r'lll•tt or•• fllfl/ .. flt .... "Ille ol Mid (t~tOIHI!,
wrt11111 low '"°""'-1f!W' ...., llr.Z PUtt!l(t·
11on et tlllt MtlQ.
Dated ~ ''· 1m
or Ctl!~r!'l1, for 1N Courl!"I' ef LOI ,,,,..!tt.
tn "'' Mitter of IN !'1t1ff 9f 9Elt£HJCIE CRAFT HIE I T AN 0,
O.Cff!MICI,
Notice h ,,.,ttl.,. ,,..,, "''' ""-""" ditni.Md will lfll 11 ,rivet. Ml• to tl'lt hlthetl and bnl ltkNtr, tublt-1;!
10 l)Ollflrl'Mlilon ol Nllt 111-IClr (ourt
on or '""' tllll 14111 d•Y of Aprll, IJ7l, ff fht .me• of Trv•t OtP<lrtment,
Pei.a-!Nin 0tnc1, searrltf PKlllc
N1U01111 II•""· ~JO E11t eolorMe er.a .•
PIUffN, C1lltornla tll01 Count'I' Clf
Los A11ftl11, 11119 ol C11lforftl1, 111
tM r!thl, 11111 "'Id lflftrtll ol uld
dt<ttHd 11 tN !$f!'lt of dell!I t fld 111 ,,... r'9hl. Tiit. 111111 Jnttrat ltltt
TM .. ,,,, of uld 11ec11i.d h11 .c~vlr.O
bv -••llon of ltw or ofMrwl"'
olfler 1htn or I!'! edd!tion to "''' of uld dKta~. ti ,,,. !lmt of
dftlt\, !11 IM lo 1\1 Ille Qt11t1n COl'ldomlnl!;m Uni! Rttl prOHffl
tlhi.ltcl In f!\e Ltl1urt World, Lt~N Hiii~ County of OrtnGt, $111t el
Ctll!o•nlt, 1>ar!lcvl1rlY de'l:•lboed ••
lollcws. 10-w!t:
PARCEL 1: Dwt!lln• \Jnll 1·1 1n
811!1d!1t1 Ne. "'°· II 111• Unit It $tl0Wn on 1n11 cor!eln Cof>dornlnl11m
Pl1n 1111cti.O to •nd rnect. • ••r1 or 11111 ,.,..111n 0rc11r1!1ort o I
Ccvl<!1nl•. Coriclllloris 1NI R11trJctloru
rKOr<lf<I Oc~r 2, 19'9 In look
909.!, P••• ~. ol Oflkllt Recor<11 In tilt Of1l<e ol lfte (O\lfllY R«0rdtr ol 1110 CO<ln!y, Incl I I llt'tncl 11nd!YIC!e<I
ln!trfll in 1...i lo Loh 1, 2 "'" A Of Tr1d No. 701'-11 Hr rn•~
record..i In &ook 1'1, Pt;•• n 10 ~I. [Mfu1lvf o1 Mli.c1U1-i M1~.
!n th• Onie• ot 1110 Countv Reconltt,
s.l'lo'wn 1nd denned 11 :·common "'"'" on !!W tboY.,.fltrr.O to Condomlnl.m'I
P ltn.
EwctPllnt lf\Y J111r11o<! el Loi A
ol Tree! No. '951 II Hr mljl rKorH<I
!n lloo~ 2.sl, P11111 24 tncl 2$ ol
Mbcell•MO<J• MtPI rn tl'lt Otlkt ol
the CO<lfll'r RKor<ltt ol u!d Covnl'r.
E~tf'l>Hnt lrom 1ald l ol1 !, 1 Incl
A ell 111, oll. ~rdrocerbons, mlner1l1
•nd OIMr 1Ubs1•Mel lrlnt ~low I
dei>ll'I ol 500.00 IHI. but wlltloul !tit
rlot>I lo enter 11oon lt>e aur11u or
1ub•urteu ol 1~1 prooerty •bove I
de~th ol JOO.OD IMI tw 1nr 1>urwu w!'Ml!_.,er, u r...-ved 111 dttd• ot
ttcort. PARCEL 2: Non .. x(lutlva tl•tr"'tn!o
for lntre11 ind eor111, J>Wbllc u!llllle1,
sewtr1 1nd tor . 111 1>11rPGHI lncidtnlll
lhertlo tnclud!111 bul not Umllf(I 10
lh1 co111!rvcllan, ln1t1111tlo"'
rtP!ac1m1nt. r f 11 t I r, malnte111na,
ooer1Uan tnd u11 ol 111 11ecw1rv
or dfllr1ble rotdWIYI. t ld-•lk• I nd
condulll _. 11\t ltnd dtKrlbed tn
PiJl'c11 2 of 11'111 ctrft l1> dH<I recorM<I
$e1>! .... tllt 16, Jftt, Ill 9ook tol(l,
Pao• Sil of Ottlrlal lltc0rd1 In 11\1
0111c1 Of mt covntv Recorder "' $11<1 niunty,
PAJICEL J: A non .. xclutlv1 fl .. m9f'lt tor l"llrt .. 1l'ld •treu, pUblk ull!lllet,
MW•'11 end for 111 purpo••• .l\Cldtn!tl
fl'ltreto, 1...c:1...a1ng but not llmltfCI to tho (onnructlon, lnt11ll1ll011,
repl.teemtnl, • e o 1 Ir, m1ln1tn•nc•,
-r•llOl'I t!'HI \151 of all nf!Ctt.,_,.,
.,.. de1lr1ble r<lldwl'l'I. 1ldt'W1lll1 incl
cor>c1111r1 over Lot e ot Tr.ct 1110.
511t, 1n the CO'Un!y of Or1noe. ~11tt
ol C1!1torn11 11 ""'' '"'" recor<led In lloot 26.4, P11e1 ,, to lf ln<lutlve
ol Ml>e:ellaneov1 M101, In the ottlc1
of 11\e Coun!V lltconltr of 1tld Coun!Y,
"1Cfe commonlv known •I:
Menor No. tm-19 'II• Mt•l.011
W11!, LIOUnl HHIJ, C1lltornl1 (to bt
t<,ld •• lt l.
T....,1 of 1111, catll Ill l1wtur "'°""" ol
lltt Unl11!C1 ~11!H Oft t'Onl!rm1!lon ol
1111. Ttn percenl of 1mounl bid 111
bs llepcnllf<I with Did,
ETHf_l G. J.IC.C~ -AlllTMUlt A. JA(l(J(IN C.t~tattori flf ""' Wiii
of "" •fleot• _.,,.. Olc:f'dent •o•MA• 1. auoe>t.'M , .. lt>llffl OIJ VII.II '"' '""""" Cftll..,. tlln T•h lt24J11
""-"'-' .... C.l..m.n
"1blt"'*' °"'"" Cot•f Oe!lr "'"' Millr(')'I ti. 1' •f'll:I ""'II '-12, 1171 bi·7l
Nearly Ever yone
Listens to Landers
SAYE
CASH I
c:
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
ISEST
ISllYSI
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L~
0
T
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
ltAll .. \7 Pil .. OT WANT i.\ltS
'.l'he Bl11a t Sh11re lll•r k etplue on '.l'he Orange Coast . P ho"" 64.%·5678
1..._-_ .... __JI~ I _ ..... I~
1
.:;I ;;;;-_ ... ,.~JI lt&~J ___ ... _ .... ;;:.l~~I
Genere l
2629 Harbor, C.M.
546-8640
Thinking of
SELLING?
Let us help, we will buy
your house today for Its
fvll value. The only ad-
d1tion&l charge la 1 % of
the selling price. No ad·
dltional expense. W•
M9d ho11lftl It doesn't
cost anything to call
and find out--you might
even aave!I
GET
BARGAIN PR ICED
ts this beautiful 3 btd· room. borne with 15 x 23
bonu1 room, new poly.
shag carpet, upgraded
draperies, 2 large baths
with marble pullmans,
walk-In linen «:loset gi-
ant muter bedroom
suite with dressing
room. 3% years old.
You'll love this one.
ACTION
3 BEDROOM
2 BATH
FIXER-UPPER
Try thi1 one for size.
Located In North CO!ta
Mesa. close to all
schools and shopping.
Owner asking $23,500
for quick aale. Sorry, no
picture available. C&ll
to see lt!
FASTER
IT'S SKINNY
DIPPIN' TIME
A beautiful 4 bedroom
home in Mesa Del Mar
v.1th heated &: filtered
pool, !11.mi.ly room, built-
in kitchen, double ga-
rage. Vacant now. Qy:n-
crs have movffi north
so hurry, they att 11nx·
lous. Asking $29,950
FHA or VA.
FROM
LITTLE HORSE
RANCH
On % aC're in Costa
Me~a. n ea t 1 y tucked
l.\vay for privacy. The
1't$idence ls truly a doll
house with knotty pine
paneling & clean as a
whistle. Asking $30,000.
FARROW
EX ECUTI VE HOME
It's only 18 months old.
Complelt:'ly upgraded
with deluxe nylon car-
peting. floor·tO·ct!Ung
cu 1 tom draperies, 4
huge bedrooms, 3 apec-
km& baths. 1eparate
family room with fl~
place, deluxe master
bedroom sutte complete
with tetT'f\ce &: bath,
V1cant and owner anx·
lous. See lt now!
2629 Harbor Blvd.
546-8640
OPEN EVES.
'TILL 8:30
2629 Harbor, C1't
ALL PURPOS E
REC REATION ROOM
EASI'SlDE COSTA f.lESA le>-
eatlon-6ctlve family addl·
tion. You'll enjoy the J7'x2'.!'
high beam celling Fam.
ltm. with indirect lighting,
built ln sewing centet and
many other extras. Add to
this a three Bdrm. 1" Bath
home w/tlreplace and de-
taclk.'d Dbl. glll'1lge w/altey
e.ccess. Centrally located
kitchen-aervice porch. Call
this evening. for appt. to see.
Evenings Call 543265
Mesa Del Mar Beauty
NE'\VL Y LISTED so come
and see tJtlg big 4 bedroom
homt' with family room,
hea.vy llhaU roof and ~au
titul gold shag carpets, As-
sume 5% % lollll at $220 per
month including taxes or NO
DOWN PAYMENT to vet-
eran., How about $32,900??
/Ca.. co:Ts
·~WAL LACE
REALTORS
-54'-4141-
(0ptn Evenin9s)
SPECTACULAR
VIEW
ShMp, sharp custom bwll
home wttb panoramic view
of'ocean and coast·line plus
canyon below. This beauti·
ful home has 3 bedrooms, 3
belhll, dining room and a
fabulaua game room Gr
famlly room with a terrific
buill·in bar. This home is
prie<.'d right for fa.st .sale.
}IWT)'. 546-2313.
1:0· THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS " •,. • r, "ti 111 ~ r•r.1
EASTSIDE $19,950
Charming Ea!:tside home.
Oversized living and dining
rooms, 2 big bedroonu, ae~
11.rate utility area. Complete
with patio, carpets thruDUt
and shingle roof. Large lot,
alley access, one block to
Catholic church. \Von't last
long wlth No Do\vn VA
terms. Call S.IQ..1151 (open
f'\"'eS.). .,,.. H!RITAG!
WI. UT'ft
Newport Heights
3 Bcdrm, 1% bath, slare en·
try, nice size living nn w/
fireplace, Good crpts &
drps. service porch, Lovely
landscaping. Lge back yard
for children. $27,350.
Lachenmyer
Re°'ltor
1860 Newport Blvd., Ct-.!
CALL 646-3928 Eves: 673-4577
* S BEDROOMS * Beaut. Harbor View J-lomes
"tt!f. w/wet bar, lovely
Cllf"P.; self-cleaning ovens:
vacant. quick possess.
$59,500 Including the land,
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
EMERALD BAY
Fanlattic white wa!er vitw
from OU. inunac. 4 bdrm.
i: Wnlly rm. home. Com.
munlly pooh:, tenni& ct.s.,
prlv. beach; prtv. patroled
1treets for your securl/y,
Sh0~11 by app't. only. $93,000
Delency Real Estate
~ E. Coa.lt Hwy., QiM su.mo
RESTAURANT + 4 BR. HOME
on bu11 C·2 llarbor Blvd.
location.
Vinco RealfY
~ Harbor, CM 646-0033 * NEW LIST ING * 2 BR. duplex • xlnt Joe. Per·
mil for 6 pl\ying KUesta.
$35,000.
George Willlam1on
Realtor
I 67:1-4)50 645-1564 Evu.
I SPECTACULA R
Generel G1n1r.1I
* * * * * TAYLOR CO.
BEAUTIFUL CAMEO SHORES
*
Owner will consider e.xchanging this luxur·
ious 4 BR & den home for smaller one. Lge
DR, plush bar w/view of spacious patio, pool
& lanai. Fine interior design. $175,000
"Our 26th Ye•~'
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
21 11 San Joaquin Hiils Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
* * * * * * * General
BALBOA IS LAND
SPECIAL
3 Bedrooms. 2 baths
On full siZe
R·2 Lot
Room to add:
Large 2nd unit
Close to Showini
Only ~.000
REALTORS
SlNCE 1944
673-4400
BUSINESS
TRANSF£R
Owner forced to sacrifice
this 3,COO square foot brMd
new tri·level, top quallty
home. ~P 1hag carpets,
etc. 4 bedrooDl!I, Family
room, Dining room, Large
patio kitchen and 18 x 30
Came room. 3 car garage.
General
I
UNHlUf ti()-'tfS
RMI lltlM, ITMOOit
THE BIBLES' HOME
Now here's a delightful.
quality buill goU course
home. It's perfect for n.
golf loving couple, 2 Super
size bedrooms, a king size
living area & a quiet tul-
de.sac location. There's
ma'tlmum privacy and
minimum maintenance.
Don't mi~ this one -pricl!
has been miuced $2CXII, fl)
l&l.!llO.
UNl()Uf ti()-'tQ
fl .. ! Ettl!f, ITS«IOO
2~4l E. Co"t Hwy.
Cltonl Dll ...,, Cali£
As . ..ime $37,())) VA Ioan. lr:=Er:=r:=::=::=::=::=::=!l Phone 64&. 7171.
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Compeny
MEDITERRANEAN
Custom Built Beeuty
with Bay & Ocean VIEWS.
Uniquely designed. Large
billiard room~ secluded ter-
race • 3 car garage · 3 bed·
room"· dining room • gour.
met kitchen .
Macnab-Irvine
642·8235 675-3210
AREA'S BEST BUYS
BA YSHORES-priv. beaches,
4 Bdrms ............. $42,0CO
IRVINE TERR. • VIEW
Custom .............. $110,0CXI
CORONA DEL MAR
ImmaC\llate •.••..••.. $39,500
BACK BAY • Townhous.
$44,SOO · Lease $385 Mo
BAYCREST. 4 Bdnn.
P!us Family nn. , ... $76,500 ....--
Coldwell,Banker
~
833-0700 644-2430
NEAR SOUTH
COAST PLAZA
Ideal price of $23,900 ill Costa
!-.1esa for this sharp and
and high.tail It in to see this clean 3 bedroom mansion, 2
beach beauty. Large queen-luxurious baths. Deep-pile
sized bedrooms, 2 modern baths, paneling, Calif, I.ire· carpets with matching
GRAB YOUR
CAR KEYS
place and a real steal. drapes. $.100.00 TOT AL
$24.900, VA or fllA terms COSTS to G.I, buyers, FHA
or take over Jow govern-costs will be pald by seller
ment loan also, I! you're tired of rent·
Walker & Lee ~!i.i'.''~0~','1" be'"''"'
n'"''" Walker & Lee 7682 Edinger
(714l 842..4455 or 540-5140 -a-URGENT!
Wness forces salc-VTE\V
home in Corona del Mar-
POOL. 2 bedrootn11 ""ith M-p-
a.rate guest ho\J.<le. Carefree
llv1ng at its best. fk'lmv
market at $54,500! call
67S-4930.
FIXER UPPER
$17,650
Bring your paint brush end
aa~ $100'1 on this 3 lx'dnn,
2 bath. family room home.
Bltns, dble gar., criits, drps,
$116 Per mo. pay! ever)'·
thing \vilh low down pay.
ment. Call 5*SSSO, l~eritagr
Renltoni, <open eves.),
HOME & INCOME
Enjoy the comforts or thl11
very nice 3 bedroom 2 both
home and lr.t the 3 renW
1111i1s hrlp yoo pay for the
property, Only $59.500 .
Arnold & Freud
388 E. 17th St. ("')Sta Meu
646-7755
-BAYSHOR ES 4 BR-.
Clo~ 10 heath & playground.
2 6it!hJ. Nttd5 demr<tting,
$39,500
Home Show R•eltors
''Anrichait llouwhunting''
35.Th E. CG11s! Hwy,, Cd:-01
Rl'altors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'tit 9 Pl\1
SUPER SHARP
It's imm'\culate. 3 BMroom
home in quiet resldentia.l
area • close to schools it
shopping, For $30,950 this
has to be the best home for
lhe money and an absolute
must to S('e. Carpel$, drap..
es. bltns, plull, plua, plw;:!
Submit your terms. Ca I l
545.8424
TRANSFERRED!
Handsomf!' corner honll." In
lmmaculale con d t t 1 on,
Large Iivini<: room and MJ>-
arate dining room. Ultra
modern kitctk'n with eating
area adjoining a wonderful
la..rge family room with fire-
place. Beautiful back yAl'd
with \\TOUght Iron enclO!led •
completf!' s.'lfety pool. llov.·
C<luld any homt" be finer?
&>c it riizht awa.y -only
~~·"'°· ;w.2313.
~<THE REAL ~~:'.{\.TE~~
URGENT
BEACH HOME
1\·Frt1mr, sreps :o ocean
RR. 2 ha, Only U1.9XI.
CAYWOOD REA LTY
6306 \'( Cout Hl!.'Y,, NB
• 548-1290
3 I ---C.:675-7225 -~~
E·SIDE C.:'-1 tri-pl<':)C, Xlnt
Joe 2 br each, fn('d yards.
gar11gt~. 11\COmfl S.lli/mo.
$311,500 or lrade up In 1111me
area. By O\\'Tler. &12-SSJI
O\\Tif't bought ntw homt •
niu.s1 !tel J irnn11"dia1ely.
$30,000 /VA appraillllJ. All
tern1s av11Uab!e, ?.fanicurod,
y11rd, 2 m11~s1ve nN'pla('ft,
3 l11rge l'Jr.rlroornll & 2 spark-
ling baths. Ca.II 545-!tt.U.
•
I
Mondat, Apt!I 5:1 1'171 DAILY PILOf :J3
Gfneret Genertl Generel Gener•I E•lf Bluff Huntlnvton Ila'""'
jr;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. ~nv:;-:::0wne:::::,,-:;3-;Be<lroo:::::'.'.'::m:"":;2l~--------l ey OWNER: 3 Br, 1% ba, BY e>wntr. Sell or IM/opl Dupltx~Ntwport Beich 200
TAX
REFUNDERS
CHOOS£ THE
: PROPERTY THAT
f ITS YOUR NEEDS
Eastside Duplex
Near UpPf'r Bay, full
price ~29.500 \Vith 10%
dO\\'n. (It will carry it·
self).
Costa Mesa Street
2 Units -extra s~cisl
owners unit in rear and
2 bedrm rental up front.
Full price $3I,900.
(Ov.'ner \Vlll help 1i·
nance.)
Duplex
2 Bedroom unit up front.
3 bcdrm house w/bltns
in rear. l.JJcated on 23rd
St. $.36,000.
Santa Isabel
Corner lot, 2 bcdrm
Mme + rentaJ unit. Just
l,istcd & rrady to make
you money. ~2900 Do\vn
-moves you in,
Cecil Place Duplex
3 Bedrm owners unit +
2 bedrm rental. Live in
91'1!' and rent the other.
$36,000.
.. Baker Street
Triplex
3 Units built hy KPn
ko\1-owners unit with
fireplace etc. May sell
to veterans NO DOWN.
$41,900 Full price.
Four Rentals
09wntown. A duplE.>X + ~ separate houses. Real-
lY unique with privacy
1n prime rcnt11.l area.
Full price S6S.OOO.
: Coriander Street
FOURPLEX
·You can drivi: by 1629
and call us for details.
Full price $69,500.
12 UNITS
One Year Old
·Large size apL-. ... ~1ith 1 %
Oaths nnd ah,·ays rent·
'ed. lncon1!" ~1R60. JX'r
month. full price ju&l
:Sl6.i.fl()(). S2.5,000 Re·
Q.IJIN'd dO\\'n.
: ·:
NEWPORT
AT
FAIRVIEW
646-8811
J "
Bath, heatM & tllttt'M 18 CHILDREN 2 car IC&J', crpts, frplc, bltn 3 BR + f.am. nn. &: din. BeautltuJ, brand new (2) 3 --------·I I x 36 pool w/dlvJ.na board A nENTION!I •toVe, dbl OVf'n A: dshW&llt, nn. 2 Ba, New drapes &: BR with many extraa AAA inda ~ t! &. tlldt. Built-in kitchen. lrr cul-de-tac lot. $28,000. CftJ'p. Sprinklcra. We1tclilt Prime loc:at\on. Block t~ CANOY ANO Beo.u.liful condition tnskll' & Tell )'OUr parents about thiJ Ca11 lot appt. (213) 764-8091 atta, nr i;ehoolll. 5.5% .. __ .. M 1 d __ ,_ SNACK SUPPLY
out. Take over 6"-'!o VA beautifUl ''Trina" modtl 1b DUTCll IIAVEN 3 Bdrm, &m1m. loan. "3.500 -Incl. 0o""'a"'"' ax mum ep~-WE ESTABLISH PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES loon, M"a Vtro• location The Blut!J. T'8 !Mm the 1% bath, w/w .,.t, dmpe" th< land. 6'U839 ~J°"' Star Rt&lcy, All ROUTES
5 Linda Isle Drive
Just completed 4 BR., 5~ ba. l!bme w/fam.
rm. & study. Magnificent 39 ft. waterfront
liv. rm.·w;t!'pl. a wet bar. $164,406.
'33.500. 54.>1849 or 544-8311 back yard is & huae park patio fenced '"XI 500 5"'"" CHAR.'11NG hillalde home • (No 11eU1nn in·"'lv--')
Balboa Island :.™1 be=drttullnoy ~~~nd3 Pri~lpatg "~~BY 'o~;: w/view, Newport Ht 1, Lott for Saft 170 CASH R'EQuJR£~
\K'l.VI•-. 842-4847 aft 5:~ ur w"-.:i~. I !"8-~1983~'.....-------1·-=:::z:=::::-=:::7':=:::--Pia• on -s 00 Bedroom2%bathhomeWith ..,,.... I· " e ••·••••••••• ""'' all the luxury a tamJJi Irvine Sant11 An• Heights FORECLOSURE Plan two .......... SlGZJ.00
uld -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;. ".c;...;..;.__.:;.;.:;.;;:.;...;.._ 2"'-aae bone ranch repos-Plan three • • • • • • • • $3250.00 BALBOA ISLE
For Complete Information on all homff &
Iott, ple11• call:
Ocl~gbtfuliy different 3 bed·
room, 3 bath. Completely
remodeled and enlarged
jus1 10 S'teps trom the beach.
All sorts of storage and blg
2 e a r garage, $82,500.
673-855()
co Want. • '-' acrt, 2 BR home w/pooJ, aessed trom tonner aero-Excellent income for a few
$44,500 5 8EDROOMS detached rec room & shop, 1pa~ employee now avail· hours weekly work.( Days &
Call 013-8550 On one floor! Fonnal dining Ide.a.I far horses, ~· etc. ablit at developers co11t. Evenings). Refilling and col.
Bill GRUNDY, REAL TOR 1o ·THEREAL
\"'\, ESTATERS
rm., tam, l'ttl, w/wet b&r; Aviary liet up .111 back, Jectlng money from coin op.
cut de sac Joe. View of hil!A $48,000, ~5-8148 SAVE $3000 erated dispensers within a 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 & much more is offered Y>'ith ACRE tor Comm'! Stables on these fabulous, oak stud· qualified are a. {Handle~
thl• one. Must see to ap. or home & stables, 613--2262 ded, ranch size sp~ads. name brand candy a' n d General
TREES -TREES
TREESll
Large CORNER LOT S\Jl'-
rounded on two sides by
beautiful MYoPOntm Trees.
Spacious Three Bdrm. Two
Bath home with separate
yardi; and three patios.
C.Ompletely carpeted and
draped. Located in beautiful
Harbor Estates, close to
schools and shopping. ONLY
$29,500-NO DOV.'N TO VET·
ERANS.
Evenings Call 549-0292
BEAUTIFUL
REPUBLIC HOME
Split level -4 bedrooms -3
baths -3 car garage. Large
family room and formal din·
ing room. 2200 sq. ft. home
beautitully situated in one
of J\1esa Verde's most pres·
tigiou."I neighborhoods. If
you like Spanish design you
must see this charming
home. For full patticu1ars
and appointment to inspect
call now! 546·2313. $46.!"m.
B/B
2'l YEARS or
REAL ESfATE SERVICE
L"l THE 1-lARBOR AREA
BAYCREST
Convenient Joe, • among tine
homes • only 5 min. from
shopping, schools or beach.
4 Bdrms., 24 ft. paneled den,
delightful kildi. w/eating
area. $511,500,
675-3000
984 Grove Place, C.M.
ANYONE QUALIFIES
For this sharp 3 bedrm.
home • lush carpeting &
drapes & 10 x 25 covered
patio. 71,'.i ~f, !nterest, no Jo11n
fees. lO'ih down. Hurry this
won't last.
COLLEGE PARK
Beaut 3 BR in choke area,
lovely shag crptg, in "move_.
in" cond. Priced right for
quick S!llc! Call now for
I appt lo l'iet' -only .•• , ,
$24,900
PERRON 642·1n1
' -j WAS MODEL
Nestled in a forest of sweet
scented pines yet only min.
utes to freeway and major
shopping. Quiet cul-de-.sa c
ncii:;hborhood, near by park,
4 ovcr·sized bedrooms, dec-
ora1or mirrors and a!J for
LESS than $30.000. Tra<le
:,.·our home,
Walker & Lee
Realtors
'1682 Edinger
liJ.tl 8·12415'j or 540-5140
LEASE-OPTION
Th!: largest home for the
monry in Costa l\lt>s<1. 5
hcdrooms. a big family
room and kitchen, 3 large
b11ths, cnmplrtc landscaping
with 40 feel of paHo. A'll.·
sume a big 6 ':'~ VA Loan .
&1&-71TI.
DOVER SHORES
Under constru1·tion, sre th<'
plans at -1033 ?.la.nner~
Ol'lve, Oover Shores, 4 & ;,
Bednru:. 4 & 5 bath!, select
your ov.11 coh)rs & cus1on1
1lera!L"I. AU wl1h outstanding
Views. Roy J, \\'ard Rltr,
&\6·1550, Op.·n Dnily,
BIG VALUE
BIG HOUSE & LOT
Idl.'sl for t1c1lvt: fan11Jy, 5
I3R + !rim 1m, din rm,
Room for pool, cars .,,.
boo.t,;, Plus outdoor l'l'crra-
tion. $1;5,(Xl().
Pete Berrett Rlty
642·5200
HIO£.A.\\'ay 3 rms plus.
I Cnrnplrlt'ly furn, 1,4 a.CTI'
corn~r. rnmmt•rcinlly mned .
General
RANCH STYLE • 4 BR.
FHA-VA OK -$28,900 Corona del Mar
. . '
e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e
SALES • LEASES
preciate. $59,500. or 673-5723 Located In the booming snacks), For peraonal intel"'
i rMI h·,11 Westmlnst•r South Coast area near San view sE.>nd name, address Juan Capistrano. High and phone number to Multi· SUPER SHARP above the smog, private State Distributing, Inc., lGS:l C' ~ ~' An eXtra nice 4 bedroom and road and Jocked gate guar. West Broadway, Anaheim, DUPLEX ~J !"..EALT'l family room Sol Vista home antee the natural beauty of Ca, 92802 (714) 778·5060.
JUST LISTED, Choic~ area. na IT Univ, Park Center, lrvint in Westminster. Protessio~ this tanner Spanish Grant Distributors Needed
T1•:1) uults, a sharp one bed· Cali Anytime 833-0820 ally d--t•d ··d land•··p-surrounded by b""u'lul Doll house • curb appeal. . lro ...... v... ...... """"' National ?.larkct!ng Com· room in nt and a hvo ed and on a quiet cul-de-sac Oeveland National Forest. NEED Split rail fence. 4 queen ._ _ _. ., ... , v·~-~1 0 pany. ~ S NO\\'. Re. """'room in the rear ail re· MU 1, ..... """" ro L•gun• Beach ,•-t. What mo--uld you "" utilities available. sized bedrooms. Family rm. __ ,, N rt n. h .,, ,,,. ·----------u= ... "" ~ sponsible man and. woman "·! cently 1"TI.1ecorated and neat ewpo .ucac '7RT'.J.,.L;>.) w•ot lo• 0 -•y •~.= . ..,., wee built-in kitchen. 2 L I 2 B /2 B C d .. • '" <f"' "JV PRfCED =oM 19 g· 10 service high wlume new
&£ a pin. A great buy at Fountain V•lley ove Y r a. on ° Call 842-2535 or 673-3550 "''' ' 50
full baths. Log burning fire· ;-12,500 Laguna Beach Home LOW DOWN-EASY TERMS product routes. "Hunt Snack
place, Wall of glass to rear Call 673-8550 IDEAL for year rowxf com-Circumstances force the im· Pack". A new multi million
patio, Heavy shake root Ex· Owner Tran1t.rred fort & gracious ttl&Xed llv-mediate disposition of these dollar advertised products.
quisi!e landscaping. Sec-OUered by owner. 2 yr new, ing. AU exterior maintain-few choice parcels whose Part or !uli time, Company
onds to beach and shopping. 3 br, 2 ba home, tully car· ance attended. Tenn 11 former owners LOSS is your secured locations, commer·
Have a GI eligibility? Must peted, custom drapes A: courts, only 100 steps to pt1-GAIN!! Call or ll'li!e !or c1a1 ancl factory.
see to appreciate .• Hurry l ---~~=~---I rods, beamed cathedral vate beach, also overlooks Rtil Emitt. 1 IMI complete details and color NO SELLING
and call (714) 962·5.585. 519 IRIS ceiling living rm, bltru. glamorous heated pool. All '---°'-"-"-'-' _ _, on-site photos. Buy direct CASlt REQUIRED $600 to
Drive by this lovely duplex. Beaut landscaped, lg:e yard elec kit, incl: retrig, range,' ••••••••••I from the developer: $2,995. \!.'rite for more infor· 3 Bdnns., :il ba, w/a" the completely w a I led. Nr .. ,... h d' al Com 11 n\ation, Dii;tributorship Div. " ..,,..,was er & ispos · • RANCHO CAPISTRANO bltns., carp, & dra""s, plus schools le shopplng. Assume pl 1 1 -t-• w·" t all Acruge for sale 150 51 P.O. Box 3155 Torran~ • .--. e e Y ca • ...,. = ...... 0 w Zl12 DuPont Drl••, Rm 8 ONE l·BR. 1 Ba. Lge. dbl, .,,. .. _ p~nt VA loan or buy '--•A"l ' -I l I Callf. 90505, GIVE PH l'llREST L OLSON "c •-FHA 29 o"" t1"""" ....,wer eve aun.-Ne"""'rt Beaci. Cal. "'6< age, Xlnt cond, & good Nnl· or conventional.$ •°""" dry hu shr/d MOBILE HOME "r¥ '" NUMBER.
19131 Brookhurst Ave. a.I area. OUered for $49,500.1_71_•_1"™' __ ,_._____ age room~ doubr~~o;;: '"'=~..;::.833=·'=223=--~-BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Huntington Beach MORGAN REALTY TRANSFERREDlll 'I'hls ts a corner unit in PARK NORTif Tus'tin a~a. 100 x A chance to join one ot
R£ALT"ORS
-~='='=:,.c:,;;..:,c....-.1 673.-6642 675-6459 MUST SELLll beaut lndscpd, patroled 60 Acres. Potential mobile 125'. 100 yards from park. America's faste5t growlng
COSTA MESA DOLL HOUSE Only $30,500ll area, Close to market & home park site, Smog-free, $12,750. Also have 2 sloping industries.
EASTSIDE CHARMER 2 Bdrm, fireplace, ra•><•e & 4 BR + 20x 20 DEN ghp'ng. Avail furn or un{urn, just mrnut" from Riverside. view lo\1 for $8900 each. J\10BILE HOME SALES 3 very large bedrooms. ''6 Pr'-·• und k l di PreJ.imin11rv enuineerina in-Owner 832-6540. Invest Jn a going establish· relrlg., crpts, drps, $35,000 GI no down! I.ow FHA terrru! 10..-.:u er mar et or • -·--~ ..... • ... Enormous living room v.•ith or will lease. Rltr "-A8_77ll \Von't last!!!! re<.l sale. Phone: 837-079l. eluding park design com· 010ICE lot. 100 x 135 R-2 ment, n1ove in today0. beautiful red brick tire place. ,,.. pleterl. $3,340 per al're. Sub-paved alley, 3-48 E . Investment only $ 2 8 , 0 0
"GLISTENING HARD· Costa Mesa HAFFDAL REAL TY $29, 950 mil )'Qur terms, For further Rochester St. CM close to req'd. Have )'Qur investment
\VOOO FLOORS." Country 842-4405 2 Bedrooms, l~ baths & inlotniallon, please call R.E, 17th St shopping 11 re a returned to you in 4 monlhs.
armosphere, v.·ith Jots of FRENCH QUARTERS Eves: 541-2446 den. Excellent ocean view, Knox with $22,000 673-9509 You are buying fixed assets
towon·ng --11·n,·ng th,·, Hunt1'ngton Beech . E kh ff & A tnc 4 ',..,.. , &. deposit assets only. Only ,_ "'"""" Under construction-time to c O tsoc., • J.AJ•S. cor ?.1rramar & interested persons apply
circle street. G.I.'s no monry 4 BR. & POOL _ select interior colors &: I!DS ,V. Chapman Ave., Capistrano, At'l:h Be a ch please. Jomicra lnc., 19261
do11r·n -·we'll get you quali· l'M A WINNER styles. Call _ Orange, Callt. Jlts, Laguna B. $19.00J. $19\1 Be h Bl d H 8 536-<Sll
tied. Also FHA terms. Sub-541.mJ., Eves-Wknd! 538-9435 dn, $199 mo. 0 w n er . ac v ' · ·
mit v.·hat you have 011 $24,500 $151 MD. That's right. I have every· ~/!!O .I 17 213:96S-331S.
price. thing· new carpeting, shut· ...,/TO,,W:/Z 5 Ac, level, adj to Nat'! DANA pr Rl or ru $1500
Walker & Lee Unbelievable poolside custom ter5 and draperies, patio REAL ESTATE Forest nr Big Bear, $l950 down b~ @ 1% BY
TO BUY OR
SELL A BUSINESS
See
HOLLAND BUS. SALES
2790 Harbor Blvd . at Adams
545.ot65 Open 'til 9 PM
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Quiet street and close 10
schools. 3 bedroom light and
airy home. Easy mainten·
ance yard, $35.500. Phone
646-7171.
\;R'THEREAL '= ~~! ~J,~,Ji?
2 STORY
4 Bd. + Family Rm.
$24,950
Owner desperate. Price re·
duced 10 $24,950. l!uge fam·
ily rm., entry hall, 21"' car
garage. \Vork.i;hop. Open 'ill
9 pm. 540-1720
TARBELL 2955 Harbor
IBAYCREST AREA
4 bc-droom-2 bath. over 2000
sq. tt. Formal dining, ~P
arole master suite, plush
a.crilan carpets. \\'on<leiiul
kiddies play yard. Reduced
$3500 to $41,500. Own<'r is
ready to move. Phone
646-7111 to view.
$23,950
1ov.·nhouse Ji\'in&. Main!. with built Jn Bar-b-q, 1oad5 F/P. NO OOWN $39.50 per APPT . . ot well planned used brick 1190 Glenneyre St. mo Except. i n v e &,.i m n t 0 •• : Realty • 4~ ~~ tree, 4 huge BR's. '3 FULL <"'9473 ••o "'16 --~~• amenities. I'm cbeedUl and """ .,.,,_. potential w I ab u n d an 11~-'.C'""-'-'". """'-".:..:.=-I "The Broker with Empathy" baths. Deluxe built·in kltch· LAGUNA Nl"'"el co_,,. I t sparkling clean. Come be * OCEAN Vn.LA * recreat'l opportunltie!. Bkr. .,... .,...,r 0 1TI6 Orange Ave., c.r.r. en. Dishv.·asher, indirect 80 X 117 All imp-vom•n'" my new ov.·ner. $30.~. As-New, olde world design:· 2 cj6~4~4 'j46C.70'i:ANri$i~C'Writ.I.~~~·~~~··~--"" 645-4170: S.10·0608 anytime lighting, v.·alk -in pantry. i l Owner 49>5505 "-. 1 aumable loan, new FHA or Br, den & re. rm. Din. GOV'T LAND ~<.. ac. Write '' , """al c1rcu ar stairs to up-..., G If F L
3 . H VA. Call 842-2'535 area. Frpl. Kitch. w/range, Land Pac'""'e, 1185 Ar· o airway ot \VRECKING yard, xlnt loca·
tion. Reasonable, Wilt sell
all or part. Call 673-7185
per suites. is le herw -e. oven, dishwasher. $39.000 row head Ave, San By Owner 642-4361 wardrobe closets. Oub. full pr. Lower dn. pty. OK. Bernardino, Ca. "'-If ftlrw•y Lot house, Fun filled open air ~USSlON REALTY ~94-0731 vv pavilion with tittplace. Pa· 20 ACRES Northern Caill. By Owner 642-4364 SMAU. lumber or bldg
tio. Great location. Only, .:======== Laguna Niguel Nr Rlver, Main hiways. M bll H I material suppllcw wanted.
123 500 ... ,.th low d \\'h 1-Take over, $29 down, $29 ° • om• * 213: J59.87S8 * , " n. Y $18,500 BY Owner • immac. 3 br, mo. 968--0047 Trailer Parks 172 1---"-=:..:c::..:.=..;;..._
rent? Hurry & call (TI4J 3 Bedroom 2 bath, 60x.lOO 2~-li ba, fam rm, ldry rm, 1---------Money to Loan 240
962·5.585. fenced lot. Elec bltn range frpic, la: deck, $30,000. Apartments for sale 152 EXCELLENT opp. 25o/o otAr---:~'"'"'.~---1
& ()Ven, garbqe dilpoaal. 4~ *•* 14 very charming two 5 Slar Fam. M. H. st TD loan }~A Mat, crpts, drpt, tarnny LOVELY 4 BR, 2 Ba, fam units, good location. Prin-Parks for 65M. Total spaceR
room, nice neighborhood, rm view of valley, close clpals only. Owner 644--0315 312 (142 sp. ready 10 a tart 6"' % INTERES?
oversized dble garaie, land· to. shopping, $' 5. 000. Condomi luma cons tr.) Limited Partner. 2nd T 0 ~oa n HlRL\T L Of.SO~ ''" "
11caped, see today? 492--04.Z2 f In 160 shlp. Net return the lsl .. ,
19131 BrookhUl'Sf Ave. If Lido Isle or 111 • year 3M per 1no. For details
P£Al i0R5
Tt>rm~ based on equity.
Hun tington Beach ---------COZY "Bachelor Pad" 2 BR,l=''al=l:,68:::.>~135=7:.:· ____ _
Owner 63/4% VA Loan 962-4471 ( := J S4WIOJ VIEW Of 'BAY 2 BA, single story, air cond., Real Estate Serving Harbor area 21 yrs,
$299"5 down • 4 br + FR 2 easy care patio, c~tom Exchange 182 Sattler Mortgag• Co.
642-2171 545-0611
ba, 2000 sq ft. $32.250, $270/ VACANT Extra large lol crpts & drps thruout in Lar·1-,....-------336 E. 17th Street
mo pymnt, Imm poss. no $27.900 GI no down, FHA low 5 Bedrooms • 3~ Baths win'1 prestige Tiburon. HAVE .. .,..,._,_,_,_,_,iiiill
qualifying. 557·6536, 548-0588 down, 3 huge BR, 21,) ba, su7,500 · C h f t I best crpts, customiud kit., LIDO REAL TY INC. COVETED J BR. 2 BA 1ingle NE\Wv/10flice Building as as • WESTCLIFF lge fam rm, new paint in· 3377 Vi• hido 67J.7300 1tory "G~n Valley" town. JOO K l'qUlly,
AREA "'! house, Excellent "take $27K Net Income lit & 2nd Trust Deeds
side/out. Possesslon upon $5al0 down buys best Lido over" Joan. No qualUying WANT FREE APPRAISALS
$28 950 credit approval. 847-8507; value. 45' lot, cozy 3 br, , _ d k
1 Eves: 968·1171. *"2 1271 67~ :E4 ~ecessary, u.1w own~ as • BAYFRONT Hou~ or Lot. Costa Mesa lt')'•stment
Harbor Hi District _ Walk tum . .f:I •000· · " "" 3 1ng $26.950. W.R. DuBols: 545-7166 548-nll anytime
I I · \V t 1·u Sho m 'I) Mes• del Mar ~~ng~~ ~~;e B~~~ _Ju~ o" ~l~r~41 j f
1
ftM;n ' ---------"POODLE ~CE'" Extra e HILl.SlDE LOT in Sierra _ "9l., 111 .,... LOVELY 4 BR, many ipecial 1 BR Condo._ Cot· f.1t1~re Have about $3,000
redecorated, new carpeting, custom fettlUTI'I, Assume + 1 .... equity. WW trade lor less
rlrapes, Brick pat lo boat/ $19,900. 51.' % IBA. $31,900. tage separate enc 0""" eqUity tn other property or
trailer parking, Finfilicing? ASSUME 'Principals only, 546-5027 pet quarters (or game BOAT CAR ANTIQUES
owner very flexible_ Fast room). A tare price of only etc &4s,7335 '
possession -Don't tarry on 51/4 °/o LOAN • ' BR & family nn, llt'W $16,900 on 1pecial term1. I!~· ~~~~~~~
this one! Call .. &IS.0303 Start o({ with a winner In carpet, tile & paint. FHA. Larwin R•Alty, Inc, \;
this 3 bedroom, 1% bath, VA. $3l,500. 544-8580. 21~1 Brookhurst, H.B. I~
shake root home .• Shag BY Owner: Lrg 4 br/2 ba, 546-5411 •nytime f'inencial •
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
.THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
carpeting, custom drapes, lnscpd, Priced to sell! At I --===='=~--I'-------'
3 Bdrm. + Den fireplace, electric built-ins, $30.!r'J(I. 968·79S3 EXECUTIVE
patio t1.nd fenced yard, M••• V•rd• In .,',~.aN~,0,!"',.1 NN<lxUIMto Goll Bu1in•11
FOREST [ 01.SO\
'" R(ALTQNS
WANT AD
642-5678
$137 A Month $28,500 Try FHA.VA ,-.,-'°""...,-,..,...,,--:-•I " " Opportunity On the payments. cathedral 2m }!arbor. Costa Me$8 3 Br, 2 ba, high FHA, low Course. 2 5lory 3 BR, 214 200
Call on this today ~-2535 beamed ceilings in lal')?;e IM1\1Ac. 3 SH, lam rm, 2-clown or L11e/option possible. batlui, Intercom. Spacious
rear living rm. <ill modern brk !pis, w/crpts. Owner. Bkr. Eves: 838-6341 dining & living room, It's
kitchen. entry hall. Bkr., Prin's. only, 546.2803. Newport Beach Yours for the price $35,SOO.
540-1720. I ~~.;;;..~'----'"'--~~1 --'---------1 WW sell furnished. See at
TARBELL 2955 Harbor 8 Bed Rooms -8!1 ______ ...:;=1WOW-WHAT A VIEWI 3024 Ct"b Hou" Clrde.
* NEWLY LISTED * THINK BIG 5 BEDROOMS !rom ""Y room. <000 oq. rt. """'"'for appt, Art Adair.
-$-,soo luxurious split-level. 3 br. Nev.•port Heights. Charniing HUGE HOME' ~£ MONTECELLO ~11hse 4 hr. • 2 Stllry1, close to beach, 2 4 ba. Master 1uite w/2 170 Lexington Ln, C.M. 2-sty. 3 bdrm., din. nn. Ex-ba "· 2 d · kl Over 3000 sq, ft. of could be ba areas. brick frplc, cprts, t.13, ress1ng rms, ng. Imm occup, 549--3612 or
lremcly large walled pa!lo. Jwcnrv living. Pool, badmin. d'Ps. R&O. dishwasher, sized beamed living rm, 10' 540-95.U Great family home! $34,000 ~J ·~1-· b · · 1.::::..::::::c_ ____ _ Call: b"73-::G63 673.8086 eves. ton co u r 1, shuffieboard, ideal for family w/grow:lng li ... :~ce, spacl0u1 uUt-m Income Property 166
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
2025 W lolboo 67].]6']
study, nursery, office -paint. FHA ; VA tenns. kitchen wi1h bar, ~Ira large
name it! This prorw.rty has 847-12'11 covered pat.lo & deck. By DUPLEX
it for the one \\'ilh active SEYMOUR REALTY D.ppointment only, 204 Kings
imnginalion. Needs l!Ome 17141 Beach Blvd, Htgn Bch Place. 642-0590 Broker. & LAND
pa.Int & 1L'<i n -Priced ac-Open 'til 9 PM HAWAII BOUND Tll'O 2 bedroo1n units with
cordingly. Call oow for full Owner aayw "scU". Exec. single garages, Room for MO details! Cali 645--0J{IJ $26,900 Lwik bit.. newly decor 3 Jour more units. Alley ac· NEY MAKER 4 BR + FAM RM BR., 21Ai ha's. Family rm .. 2 ce&s. Only $34.500. Call to-
5 }!ousts on l11tgt lot. Costl Close To Oce•n I I day 646--TI71.
1 N . frplCfi .. rl n. rm., sep. ndry.;
1i esa. Inconie $ll{)j rno. Ask-ew paint in & out, J700 sq. dlx I Cp
2 . e ec. kltch. ts., drps.
Ing $69.900. Try 10'7'> dn., 1t.. ballu, tropic, formal Sprinklers; rm. for pool.
you can i:et A 31 '7o yearly dining area, bltn R & 0. LDw mAlnt :n~·d. yd. Jj(l,OOO.
return on your investment. Amdoua owners. All terms. H G •
to · THE REAL
I"\, ESTATERS
' I '! '• ''•'<I >''.'
C'.4.Ll /:\ , .. ,. z• I' 229'J HARBOR. COSTA MESA 847-12'2'1. ope: •rr11 Raelty .:,,_~ LOVE NEST SEYMOUR REALTY 64.\.3320 ANYTIME ~h !!E-~ .... N~~: .,.~ ""4flfC. in4t Beach Blvd., Htgn Bcb PARK LIDO CONDO beach. Leasehold yr. 2014.
REALTY 1 $23,950·FHA/YA Open 'til 9 PM BARGAIN, price reduced Asking $140,000. Coruiider
Nt•r Ntwporl Po1t Orfltt I 2. yclln> nt'W &. simplyl----------1 from $11.~ to $31,000, Love-trade. 642-4097, SlS-22ll ext
HORSE PROPERTY 2"l"ant~! Xtra large bed· 3 BR +$tDl,19SOI R Jy 3 BR, 2 Ba. Kit. bHns. 22S
Charming E:nrly American r00n1 s d1n1ng, l\'Ork-savtr n "I oom New cpt/dtps, patio, POOL * * 2 BR. House + four
modern 2 BR, lam rm + kltrht'~, much. much more! lmmAc concJ .. 2 ba areas, It 3 lllMlll~. For the best ] BR apl'I. + room tor
.Jn?en how:" + def. nimpus lrAS 10 hf' on~ of the beat shag crpts, dl'J)I, bltn RlO, ca.relree living, more. Income. $6,500 yr.
rm. \Vestside C~I. Zoned hu~·i;: 111 the whole beach wu'.1'1', d~r. owntr II CALL e 64•·Z414 Assume 7%. $55,000.
R--4. 1.ta:--excMang... arc11 -~·1r.~t looker should leavma 11.tt11.. Lo, lo down J!l.'fiW!. ~ 557-2360
JEAN SMITH, Rl TR lK-proud ntw nv.'ner! Call pymnt. ~~7"1221 7'f"""'L l.O::e;:.;H~u::n"'t'"in-g'"to-n--=B-t-ac"'h,.--
400 E.17th St .. C.\f &16-3755 G~:t.o:!O.l SEYMOUR REALTY .., RF.ALTY (2) r~·~l-•s. Prkl•olown-1n41 Beaeh Blvd., Hirn Bch ,,t1r Nt•P•rl P•1t Offltt v-r....,.
REPOSSESSIONS Open 'tll 9 Pt.f OCEAN~rRONT trl!hlp. Ideal owner llve In. Each with 11) 3 BR, (3)
SpttrklinR clean bOmes, 110ml! l Br ooaut , .... __... 1-1c DUPLEX 2 BR. 2 B'··•-10 •hopping. new'.ly ~inlfd & <'-1lf'Pl!led. 2, ' ' '111-I"'"• '1" ' ""'""' l, 4 & 5 bdrm!. Some with Beautiful re.lid. &ft'6, OoMl Good lncome. ~.500 Four St.ar R.(al!y Sl">-4422. to Jx-h. 968-3654 s PCltlls. F1LA·VA conv. tenna, BURR WHITE 28 UNIT
tron1 $20,000 to $·10,000, 2299 llARDOR. roSTA MESA MODERN l br. Good Realtor 675--4630 2 & 3 11r, ClOI" !o ~tiopplntt.
Co!h115 & \Vatt1 Inc. . . 0 neighborhood. By OWl"ltr 2901 Ne'A'JK)tt Rlvd., N.n. AU ttnted. Ht& Bch. $410,000
RS-13 Ad~ms Ave. 962 ••23 FP.r.,i::n :\1 llon1e. Clean 4 $31 ,000 ~7014 or !!62.-009S. <>•7 -1 " """ BR . 2 RA. Cornpletel>'i-"==· =-"'--'-'--"-= BY owner. Harbor Virw -~~-~~~°""=~~=,.-
SELLING Your bcNit! "List" carJ'('tcd. P11tlo. \\''ill ~II OWNER, 4 BR, 2 Ba. Frpl, homt, tloor plan 3, 1 story, WALK TO BEACH
This year the total dollar volume of vending
is expected to reach almost SlX BlLLION
DOLLARS! That's not nickel and dime stuU!
Ussery lndustrie5" can make you a part of
this industry for an investment or as little
as $700 to $7,000. Vending does not just plod
along keeping it's own in the business world.
Vending is a forerunner in this country's
economy and it's future is on the brink of a
fantastic dollar volume growth. e
Wouldn't you like to have a part of that
growth? Wouldn't you Jove to v.1ork for your-
self? You can be your own boss and have
the best vending experience there is behind
you every step of the 'vay .
U.l.J. can offer you opportunity in the vend-
ing business. You can make nickels and
dimes grow into BIG MONEY! After invest-
ing in your eqtlipment, you maint:i.in the ma-
chinery and service it. U.LI. secures the!<>-
cations for you. U.1.1. provides a toll-free
telephone system so that you can communi-
cate rapidly with our specinJists. U.1.1. offers
an intelligent financing pl an "'hlch can help
you grow from part-time to full·t.ime. Above
au U.1.1. trains you to operate your business
and then holds your hand until your feet a re
firmly on the ground.
If you are interested in becoming a part or
one of the fastelt growing industries ln
America, write U.t.I. today! Include phone
number and references.
Ussery Industries. Jnc. • t 195 Empire Cen-
lral • Dallas, Texas 75247 •
I
;i,.; min hi)m Captstr1uio.
C.nriM \'Ulagr. St:JOO down.
II..;".,· __ ia•n•y•t•lm_•_I __ ,, r 11ll 4M-14f.~ !'un or Mon
\Vlth 11-' •• ~11 It fa.,I. Daily V1\ <ir fl-tA . By Ownci.r Bltns, Crpt.!1, Drptl, P11.tio, 4 Bl't, 2 ba, d1n·g rm, frplc, New 6 &: I units by builder.
Pilot Cla1>~UlNJ. 642-5678 1;.u; .. :n.~.11. $29,500. S3(...34(16, 968--11923 Oll'll land, $43.~. 644-421.S. Htg Bch. S~7-3{ij7 Dept. • 4882B
\
I
•.
-· ' ... ' . ' . . .. . . . . .
:f4 r · .Y PILOT
Money Wanted 2SO I Hovses Unfurn. 1---------I Gono<ol NEED J32.500 tor prn·ate l!t
TD. locomt1 property v.·11h I crosa ~ 1no. Good ~hit', SltS.:2 ~· Bltns, Crpls, drp11,
C.M. property. Call Charles S<tr. Kids/pet ok.
Strtt1 646-88U Blue Beacon* 645-0111
e !\UNI RAN0-1 2 Br. Mortgages,
Trust Dffd• 260 ~tv/ref, kid.~ I.:. pt Is
NEED 2nd Trust ~ $j000.
\\'e1tcllll, pri!l'lt' loca11on.
Af! 7 [lm, 642-1~
I~
welcome. $13J.
ALA Rentals • ti4j...J900
3 BDRM. + famlly rm., lull
dinin& nn., built·ins., brk.
$390 a month. NO TEE,
Ne\YJ)Qri, 540--1720.
e LUXURY Budi.;:eted -2
Br. 1 Ba, T POOL,
KidsJpets. SWO.
..
3BR..7ba~ ........ m
3 BR.. 21S baths ........ P50
~ BR., 2 batt11 ........ $325
l BR. 2 ba, home ...... $.125
(ired hill
REALTY
UnJV. Park Center, lrv!ne
Call Anytime 833·0820
T ownhoute Unfurn. llS
. . . '
:WO Apt. Unfum,
S.lboa ltland
365 Apt. Unfum,
Coate Mesa
l65 Apt. Unfum.
Gard.n Grave
NICE 1 le 2 br trailers.
Avail. April lsl 133 E. 16tb,
C.M. 642-UGj
• CLEAN 1 BR.. w/ ulil * SUS/mo. Adulta. * 532 Center St., s«l--0623
$!~beaut. turn 1 BR. ex·
pandable mobile home. 132
W. Wil*>n. 548-9577
TOWNHOUSE E-11ide 2 Br,
1~ Ba. Pool. No pelt. $175.
Call 646--6610
e 1 Ir 2 BORM'S ·e
tmLlnES PAID
2 BR. ftpl, balCOfl)'. 315 E.
Bay, Winier n.te, $175/mo.
yearly, $225/mo. lnq. No. c. 67> 1521, ~ 7771
LEASE, 2 BR, 2 ba, 1tove,
retrlg, Crp~, drps, Heat,
Mature adult, $215, 67'"~
Bilbo. Penln1ul•
e 2 BDRt.1. Yeuly~ Like
new. Mature adult.I. 419~t
E. Bay, Call 61;>-4.172 aft
6 pm, wknd1
NEW NEW
Lovely Spaniah Decor $100. RENT BONUS
NEW FROM $155 * NEW *
Gas and Water Included ~ !\ff Us • Bf,tt far Jess
1 Bedrooma ALL 1 BATH
BllUt-h" e Air Cond I BDRM l 1 BDRM
Car!><t. • ""'"' $1SS.$175, furn $100
QUIET-SAFE Enclosed R'lll'a.l.~a GAS & WATER PAID
(Near Back Bay) Pool & Recreation Room AU d1x iltma in Ii. oul
40 Unit Adult 160 W. Wilson 642.7373 Recreation rac!lllits.
VILLA CORDOVA
Ap•rtment Complex * $130 UP * EL CENTRICO APTS.
I & 2 BEDROOMS GIANT 1 Ii. 2 BEDROOM! 2 Blks N. G.G. ftwy oft
Enterta.lning ww be a pleas. Gorgeous, park-like tttting. Brookhurs't.
ure. Decorating this lovely, Cloaed 1arqe1 ~ max-9931 Centtal Ave.
.spacioua apt will be a joy. !mum aecurity, Quiet 1nwt. Glll'den Grov" (714) 530.2350
VILLA MARSEILLES
BRAND NEW
SPACIOUS
l & l Bdrm. Apts..
Adult Living
Fyrn. & Unfurn.
Houses Fumi•hed 300 c•=LA:.:...:R;;';;";;tili=------'•-7&1-';.73900---' Huntington B•ach
$1~ Br. 2 Ba. gar, fncd yd.
Kid.s/pets/mgls \\'elc.
24.50 NEWPORT BLVD.
BAOfELOR, close in, gar-
age. Onq. upstairs 186~' E
UNFURN 2 Br, enct a:arage.
Steps to the beach. Adults.
No pels, $190/rna. Yearly
lease. 675-347' alt 6 pm
Caron• d•I Mar
e Special cabinet space Adults no ~lll. 2 O 2 O M V rde
e l.Dck garages w/ lg ator Fullerion ~ve (Jl~r to~--"~'"--"---.,.--.,-•
• Bm cdl • Lndry •Patios Bay, then ~-until 2 blka 2 BR. New crpt.1, drpli, clos-e OW/di.spl e HUge Pl stve So. ot Newport BJvd.) ed. gar, nr 1hop'g. Adults,
Disbv.·asher • color coon:llna.t.
ed appliance. . plu•h 1ha::
carpet • choice of 2 color
9cheme1 • 2 ba!hs -1ta.ll
&how11:rs . mirrored Y.·ard-
robe donl"I • indirect light-
ing Jn kitchen • breakta!I
bar • huge private le:need
patio _ plUAh l&n&caplnc -
brick Bar-B-Q'1 -larye beet.
ed pools & !anal. G•Mral Blu• Beacon* 645-0111
Coron• def Mar
""""'"''
•3 BR. 2 Ba!h, trplc, ttfng,
pool. $210 /mo , Call
~:>84. D•na Point 35Q Dupl•xes Unfurn.
-'---------!SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok.
Coron• d•I Mar $25 I: up. wkly. Dana
1'1arint Inn, 3lli.l Coast NE\V 3 Br. 2 ba. cpls, drps, H wy. gar. $295 !\lo., lease
• Special IOUrldproofinl'. G<lZ-8690 no pets. $145/mo. 66-l:JLS
e Deep 2 color sh.a&: Parle-Like Surroundin9 Newport lkach
carpel$, drapes QUIET • DELUXE
GAS & WATER PAID 1-2 le l BR APTS ~ Mo. to Mo. From $140. ~patios * Htd Pools MARINER SQUARE
3101 So. Bristol St.
(% l\11. N. of So. Coast Plua)
Sant• An•
PHONE: 557-8200
Q. N hop' * AduJt. 1 APARTMENTS -• 2323 Elden Ave, CM r 11 g on Y AplL -• M RTINIQUE PTS """"""''" ""avallabillty or ' ~ Mgr, Ted Woodhead A A . w Furn. or Unfurn. 370
RENTAL FINDERS
Frff Ta Landlords
645.01 II
4JSW.1ttl.C.-. M-
SPARKLING 2 BR. 1 BA.
Carden House. Bltn kit,,
cpts, drps, oU st. parking + priv. gar. w/laundf)•
facihtie~. $225/mo. ~ O 9
Fernlea.f, CdM .
ON TEN ACRES 646-00l2 2 & 3 BR units for ad ts ;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 11 I 2 BR. Furn. • Unfum. 1m Santa Ana Ave., CM deslring to live amidst beau. General
Mgr. Apt 113 646-5542 ty by the sea in ~ P"• l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
Corbin-Martin Rltrs. 644-7662 Huntington Beach
Co•ta M•s•
e REAL FI ND-INC L
OCEA.t'l,I 2 Br. nr everything,
1175
ALA Rentalg • 64.l--3900
$120-Utll pd. Nice I Br. bl1tis,
cpts, drps, :<ng!s ok,
Blue Beacotl * 645-0111
e SPACIOUS I Br. steps
to bch, Kids & pets. Sl.20.
ALA Rental!! e &ia--3900
$95 UUJ pd-Budget SB\'er for
s1uden1.JiurT) !
Blue B•acon * 645-0111
e HUGE Bacht!Jor.fuJJ kit,
sm Jpet ok. LAG UNA. $115.
ALA Rentols • 64>.3900
Balboa Island
FU RN 1 Br IJ:>u.~e
!\ow thru June ~
raies. 61j..507~
Corona d•I Mar
8: apt.
\\'1n1er
DOLL HOUSE
2 Bdrms IU'eplace, range & PRfV. P&tn>-encl. gar. :I
refrig .. Crpu, drps, $250 or BR's. New epl.5 &: drps.
v.'lll sell. RJtr 5-18-7711 I ~1~100 __ . _'7_>-736~90_7" __ _
2 BDR!\1S., bllns. trplc., Newport B•ach
carp., drape~. l mm a c. I ·.-3-'8-R-,-ba----.-,tru;-A\·ail. May 1st $2:5. ' ' uppe r. ·,
University Realty 673-6510 crpls, drps. $.250/mo )Tly. 646-8458.
Costa M•sa N•wport Heights
e 3 BR, 2 BA. quiel stn>et. ----------Crpts, drps, bltns, frplc, lge DELUX duplex, 3 BR, 2 ba, Crpts, Drps, Frplc & fncd yard .,.,•/room for boat
or trailer. Propert y ~~ No pet!, $185.
?ifanagement Div., South I ~~~~~~~~~~ Coast R. E. ft.l.>-8424
1
.
O\\'NER 4 BR. l~ BA. fool I /(e) d l " f Ap.tments '°' Rtnt yar , cu ..... e-sac s . , . .,....
children/pets OK. Ne .,.,.
crpts. paint, immac J25..l
mo. ft.l>.7359
VACANT AND READ'!' • .l
big bedroom.5, big rovtred
patio, BAR-8-Q area. Walk
ro stores. $250. Per month
Apts. Furn.
to families only, Call agent
* CUSTO:'>t FURNITURE
RENTAL. See ad-class 810. * Call 548-3481 f'AP.'TASTIC v r EW ol 546-4141
Newpon Bay, Balboa I sland I"~~~----~-LOVELY 2 BR furn'd apt. & Ocf'a.n. Nearly new 2 BR. Car. Patio. Crpts,
d
"'
•-· ,.,,. l nr pvt beach. Yrly lse. Spanish • style 3 br, ] ba ll!S, !! ve, reu1g, .... ie
executii'i! home. \\1111 lease tropical ser!ing for adults =---~6'&~7"~"---
fumished or unfurnished. only. 1 blk 10 shops, $169. Corona del Mar
Li"e-in maid incl. SUOO mo. 646-4~30.
21Jm2-I084 or TI4/64~1.353. CH~iING 3 Br. home FURN l br, utilities irr eluded. 1 adult preferred.
C1iAR..mNG COTTAGE 2 Blln~. patio. '\'alk'g dist. $lli 675-2440 Broker to \Vestclitf Plaza. $235 util
br, Jurn. Nr beach. Lge paid. 1 child only. 64a--J848 Costa M•sa Jplc. i\iature adu!Ls. No
La Quinta Hermosa Fireplaces / prlv. patios. N ~· T Co CORSICA tigtous \Vestcli.H atta o1'
& uws enni1 ntnt't Bid.st. NE\V 1-2-3 Bdrm. AU bltns, • LR.G 2 br, 2 ha triplex· Newport Beach.
Spanish Country Estate Liv-~~~r ~ ":i:! shag crpts, drps, closed gar--bltns, drps, crptil, dshwshr, FROM $230
ing & Spacious Apts, Ter-age1, trplc in 3 Br. ~ mi. ~ CdAuJR GARAGE318Close For intonnation phone 1.Ir, 1 BR untur.1 ........ $135.00
PALM MESA APTS.
raced pool: sunken gas BBQ FOR 1 d Ix all 1 E. So, Coast Plaza. Oft Sun-p 1"1 ~ • ._1'4'21· no pet!!. • 16lh Rohert M. Buckley, Manaa:· 1 BR furn .......... , $1'9.$0
Unbelievable Living -Only ease, e • e ec. Do t Ros M t 421 · "" ""'" · Baob-'o-..,..,_;_,,,_ ... lge, new w/a view 2 BR, wer a s. gr a . i er, at (TI4) 66-0~ or wnte .,. ... """''...,'""-1 1 Br unf $150-furn $180 \V. Stevena. 545.2321 2 Br stud.10, l •. '1 Ba, cpl'!, to The Office of ...... Man-from $135
L. $210 1 BA apt, AU bll-ira inC'J iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim] •-llO hild k N "~ 2 Br unf $175 TVrn dish .... ·!!hr, dbl, gnr. AdltJ: ........ his, ra ho. ~ re11~= 0 ~NI~ ager, Mariner Square Apts, 2 BR apts $175 mo.
AU. UTlL INCLUDED only. 67~992. * BRAND NEW* 8~ ~ 11 Pi-"'"'· J\NJ 124-1 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal. mo,/mo. OK
Special Bonus: a silver· 1-,*c--.C"O"R"O"'"L"ID"'O"A"P"'T=s-*'" LA cosrA APTS 1 & 2 BR. Fill~re Way. 546--071-4 -'~"""~'-~~~~!""'""~ • POOi. plated candle snuffer is Bltns, 8'\imming Pooi &: gar-:l Units-2 B'. ea. 1 Br. Crpts, ;:; e SAUNA
yours it you bring this ad 2 Br. studios &:. street levels, All Iii pd $l50 1 $170 drps, bit-ins, encl gar, l PARK NE\VPORT -care e JACUZZI
when you visit our model~. $185 & up. PenthoUse $220. age. Adulu · 0 child ok. No pel.!l. $140 &:. lrtt livg overlkg the 'vater. 1561 ?o.Jesa Dr. Santa Ana
C bl.ks S. ol San Diego Frwy Dthwhr. frpl, dbl carport. ~Avoca~~· ~f pets&-17.9703 $145/rno. Call 546-9537 7 pools, 7 tennis cts Sl:il,000 """"""""""""""""""""I
on Beach, l blk \V. on Holl Poot 673-ll78 · · $160. 2 Br, 1~~ Ba, lrg, quiet, Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also _ 2 Caron. d•l M•r
to 16211 Park!.ide Lane. LRG 3 Br, 2 Ba, view. Be&t WILSON GARDEN APTS. GE kit., 2 car gar, 8'x2JJ' sty Toy,•nhouses. Elec. kit., ----------
(714) 847-5441 Joe; Ck:ean Blvd. $.325/rno. 2 BR Unfurn Ne'A·ly dee. stor rm. Adlls. 548--6432 pr. pat ?r bal subtrn parkg UNF. 3 Br., lg. mstr. br., 6'1~ ' opt maid ser, cpts, drps. lots storage, patio. $325
New cplsldrps. SP a c $140-2 br, carpeting. 1 or Just N of Fashion Isl at FURN. J-Br., trpl, patio I BR $135 per mo, incl uW.
2 BR $150 per mo. incl
util. A dults only.
Tradewinds Rlty 847-8511 :
Costa MtNt grounds. Adlt.s, no pe~. 2 children ok. Nr Placentia Jambo~e & San Joaquin Close to beach $185 Mo.
$140/mo. 2283 Fount a 1 n & 18th. 536-1770 Hills Rd. 644-1900 for leasing UNF. 7 BR. houSf', extra
Eves: 536-7661
DELUXE Bachelor u n I ( ,
furni.sbed, $100 per mo.
Call 646--2687
Laguna B••ch
SWEEPING VIEW
OCEAN AND HILLS
Decorator furnished 1 bed-
room apt., twin beds; new
paint, carpet, drapes. \Valk
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
1 l 3 BR'a
Private patio pool • indiv.
Jaundry lac.'
Near Orange Co. Airport &
UCJ. Adultt; only,
~122 Santa Ana Ave.
Mgr. Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A
54&<215
to beach &: town. Mature -.Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
adulbi, no pets, 1 year
lease. 494-3839 att S pm.
\Vay E. (Harbor, tum W. • 7 BDRl1 DUPLEX • "nf sharp, fpl. nice yd. $250
on Wil~on) I -'~·~· =~~===o---1---o=°""'===;;--I CP'I'S & DRPS -$140 l\10. DE U CO DO Don Franklin, Rltr. 6'13·2222
2 BR. FROM $150 * 540--0178 * l X N e BREATHTAKING VrEW COMPLETELY REDEC, . 3 BR+ den, 3 Ba, Dbl gar CLEAN & COZY FAMILY l BR. used brick trplc, wlw, Beck Bay - 1 BR & convert den. ;JOO.
UNITS CONY LOCATION bltns, beam ceU, patio, $140. $2S5 Month 6.w.-0906 for appt. 237 Carna-
' VILLA J\IESA APTS . 1 Adlt. Yearly, 64.2-fl520 STEPHENS & KAYE tion.
719 \V. \\lilson 646-1251 2 BR east • aide, walk lo Property l'.tanagement Costa Mesa
LRG dlx apts, $140 2 Br, shops. Crpts, relrig, i!ove, * 645-0122 *
llld pool, Nev.·ly dee. Play pool, gar. $l40. S48--1.565 A New Way To live
)'d. Crpt'd, drps, bltns, 2 BR, hrdwd floors. water in N•wport B•ach
patio. Child ok. pd. $135 mo. 1093 Wallace, OAKWOOD GARDEN
1998 Maple Ave. 6-12-6344 (cor Hamilton) APARTMENTS
2214 College Ave. 646--0627 DELUXE ) Br w/ gar, quiet
• '* * •
El Pu•rto M•sa Apta • • * * 1 B•droom Apts.
HARBOR GREENS ~;·E 10,';,:.d~~~'· 1135·
peUi $2"25. 673-7796 2 BR. Duplex. Garage, Nq
pets. AduJL~. $144/mo. CASA de ORO F'URN Bachelor apt, ~an
vu. $175. 100 Clitt Drive, CASUAL Calif. Li ving in a Lag. Bch. 494-5933
* Spanish Elegance
On 16th Street btwn
Irvine and Dover Dr.
1714) 642-1170 GARDEN A STUDIO APTS REDECORATED 2 ht l1ii
Bnch... l, 2, 3 BR's. from $ll0. ba studio. Crpts, drps, bitm. * E."'\CEPTJONAL Bayside
$130 .t: up Incl. utilities Also
turn Pool & Recreation
area. Quiet Environment.
OU street parking, No CbJ.1.
dren, no pell!. N•wport Beach 773 \\'. \\lilson 548-2802
LU>.."URY 2 Br home on 2 BR. Hous.?, no pets.
channel. April 24 thni June. $160/mo. $50 cleaning Jee.
S:.00 enlltt pe:nod 1 o 1994 Pornana Ave. Of.
r " s p on 11 b I t pel'!IOns. '2 -_B_R_ho_u,.--,,-ro~urt-,~c-.,,-,,
642-3j7] &. drps, Garage, 2 1mall
Univarsity Park cltlldren, $155 mo. 646-m9
3 BR & alrium. 2 Baths. LEASE 4 br/2 ba, lg fncd
f'rplc. & bltrut. $300 A1o. ynl. Chldm OK. $300.
Avail. April 5 to Sep!. 5 * * ~57J.4 * *
Bob Pt'rt11, Rl!r. 1!11-0101 Fountain Valley
Hou••• Unfurn. 305 ·,-'O-R-1,.-, -,-m-m·.-,-,-.-.-.-111-'
G1n•ral ba. new shag cpts & drps,
f'rplc, b I t n s. SZ25 mo.
1 BR garagr ·rurn, C~1 .. Sll5 968·9'".>\3 or Zl3/241-}.5gg,
:l BR Jncd k.Jds/pets CM $125 Huntington B•ach 2 BR vacam k1ds/Cl\t .. $135 1 _________ _
2 BR vacant kids/C:'.1 .... $138' EXECUTIVE living-2700 sq
2 BR kids/pets OK C~l .. .$J4j It. $450. lluntington Crest
'.!BR big k1dSIJX'!S C~t .. $145 .\I hr + tanuly nn + lge
2 BR fncd k1ds/pe1s C:'lt .. Sl 50 oflice/den, 2 frplcs, 3 ba.
STAR*LET n6-7330 S pan i 1h·styl e inner
•~~~~-~-~-~ l courtyard patio. Near Beach
RENT or lease lhtS 3 & Garfield. Call
bedroom homl'. Brand new mmz.108-I or 714/962<1892
gt'('rn sMi carpets. Nev.•
1traflC'S T 10 ontered. Brick l BR, ~m den, crpts &:. drps,
firepl&ce, lal"b'e kitchen, 2 ba on cul--<le-sac, co11'd
dooblf' garage. frnCl'd ya!'d. patio. lsl & last mo +
$225.00 !\to. CALL Broker c!roan1ng fet>, $205. 892-1117
~>9491 • • ~ BEDROOM HOUSE
Landlords-Owners Bltns. crpts, drpi. $2.'iO. V 1nco Realty "'e will refC'r tenant. l.o you 646-003.1
FREE of charge .•. l'llany I ~~~-~-~--
desirable tenant& on our 3 BR. hl"nhst, drpll., ne w
v.·1!ting list . shag cpl, R/0, frp!, pool,
ALA Rentals e &15-3900 patio. St9;i/mo 1st & last,
warm ?>lediterra1>ean almo!-~~-~-----
phere. Spaciou! color co-Lido 111•
ordinated apts -designed & ·.,-.-EA-Cl!--APT-·.-.. -Ba·ci><--lo-,
',urnished.
11
lor style & com-$200. 1 BR. $225, $250. 320
on: • eatl?CI pool • Kitch-Nord. 642-4097 or 5'18-2'Zll
en \\'/ indirect lighting • ext 228
Deluxe R IO. Adult1. No pell. ~'-'-'"-'--~-----
\ BR . .$175 tum.· Newport B••ch
UTILmEs INCLUDED LIDO ISLE 1 BR, comp!
365 W. W~n 642-1971 furtl, Stereo, color 'IV,
• $130 UP * linens, etc. Respon. adlt.
GIANT 1 le 2 BEDROO~! $165. 642-1169
Gorgeous, park-like setting. CHANNEL front b ac h
Closed garages for max· wlfloat. $200/mo, yr Jse.
imum security. Quiet streeL Max 28' pwr cruiser . Util
Adults, oo pet.!t, 2 0 2 0 tum. Adults, no pets. 3304
Fullerton Ave (Harbor to r.1arcus 673-2662
Bay, then So. until 2 bl ks t --0~N~T=H~E~B~E~A~C=H~
So. ol Newport Blvd. 642-8690 2 Br/2 ha, Split level. with
NE'\V LRG DELUXE API'S fittpla~l~~~: too!
Bach-furn ...... $139.50 1 ~=-~-~-~~
1 BR f $149 50 I BR, patio, pool, natural ·urn ...... • beam ct>iling1 . Near
2 BR-furn , ..... $179.50 hospital. $165 util. paid.
lJ:IWURN AVAILABLE 17676 Cameron, 842-5192 ADULTS ONL )', NO PETii
1760 Pomona 642-2015 * OCEANF'RONT bachtlor,
gar, partial kit., Sl.10/rno.
Unb•li1vably B•autiful Yrly. 642-3443
VAL D' ISERE Ganfen Apts. Adults _ no pets. no.,.,·ers N•wport H•ights
e\·eryv..·here. Stream & CLEAN J or 2 Br. Adlts,
\Vatertall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, no pets. Lg kit. $135-$150.
Saunn. Sgls 1-2 Bdrm, Furn· 24Zl E. 16th St. NB. 646--1801
Unfurn. trom $135. SEE IT: Apt. Unfum. 36.5 2000 Parsons, 642-8670
Sels The ;\lood Jo'or
Oui•t Adult Living
Shaa: cpt • dt1>1 • bltns
Jkautitul Pool
2 Br. $170 incl all U\11
Adults only-no pets.
241 Avocado St. 646-091'9
ORLIANS APTS.
ADULTS ONLY
2 le 3 BR. Avail. Private pa-
tio, pooJ. lndiv. laundry tae.
(Nr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus--
tin a t 17th St; nr. Westclitt),
1141 Tustin, CM!a !\1esa
1'Igr. i\1rs. Thompson G-i2-4641
2700 Peterson Way, C.M. Children ok. $155. 642-5297 Living-2 Br. 2 Ba.
54&-0370 Ea~ Bluff Furniture avail. Elev ,
., !!Ub-terranean prking. From 1959--1961 l\laple Ave. * SUS CASIT AS 1375. c .... "'"
Lrg nicely tum Bachelor & NEWPORT BEACH f\'E\VPORT TOWERS 642-220'2 I ~""""!!!!!!!!!""""'!!!!!!!!"'I
1 Br .. rui:iishtd models Ville Granada Apts. SEACLlFF 1.lanor Apts. 2 BAY MEADOW APT$.
open daily. New rental rates Four bedrooms with balron. Br, cpts, drps, bltns, pool.
2110 NeY.l>Qrt Blvd, O'I ies above I: below. Graclotu priv pa_tio, studio typto, 1',~ Beam ceilings, panelin.g, priv
AL L EL EC G 0 L D Hvin&: & quiet .uroundina: Ba. Child ok. 5'8-2682 1525 patios, recrealioa facilities.
J\tEDALLlON Afrrs. 2 BR, for family with ebildttn, Placentia. A!!k about our All Adults, no pets.
11.4 ha. Crpts, drps, patio Near Corona del Mar J-Ugh•l ~d~l!<O"=u~o~I-. ~----,--1 * Bachelor Ap: +
vieY.'. Nr bus & shopping, School. Fireplace y,·et bar & LOVELY 2 sty apt, unfurn, * 2 BR. from $165 *
encl garage, Adlts, no pels, built-in kitchen a'ppliances. 2 BR, 1 1,~ ba, Crpts, drps, * 1 Bedroom *
$155. 645-3515 835 Al'.DGOS WAY 644-2991 wasMr/dryer. Gar age. 387 w. Bay St. !btwn Harbor
UNF. 2 BR. $18.3. Dramatic Coldwell Banker & Co. back ol Hoag Hospital. $185, & Newpott Blvd, ~~ mi , N.
2-sty, Jiv. nn. y,·/frpl., Managing Agent 541-5221 Sub leaS(>, 646-8325. of 19th St ).
ove r Io o king tropical e NEW DELUXE • DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA. crpts, CALl. 646-0073
lndscpd. swimming pool & drps, bltn!t, D\V, nr Hoag A\IAZIN'G Ad I L. ·
Patio. 145 E. 18th, C:-01. 3 BR,2 BAApt f°'.leM~.Incl Hosp. $165 le $185 mo. " u 1 lVIng.
l l ,1;" Eeaut. l &. 1 BR furn or unf 548-99~9 eves het.,.,·~n 5 & 6. spac. mas er sw e, ......,, r m 642-4387
1 ~=~-~--~---,-• & dbl garage. aulo doorl:c=o-=-,-----coc--;;-= Ap ts. Self c!ran. ovens, -,,~,~D~IVJ=o~U7A~t.,--,P~R~f~V~A~CY,,,..-NICE lrg 3 Bdrm·redecorat· opener avail. Pool & Rec. HOAG Hosp Area, 2 ~R, D/\V Hn 2 Br) displs, shai
ADULT LlVll'G l'd. 657 Plumer St. 986--13.10 area. 2 B~, crpts, drps, bltins, cpts, drps, jacuzzi &. u.una
Lg dL'< 2 br l'~ ba w/gar or 627-1106 aft f PM or Y.'k· e $265 e l ::':"~"~·~540--009"'--::c:;~'---:---,--,---· I baths. lluge pool.
& stor. Park • like at-nds collect 86:) Amigos \Vay, NB N•wport H•ights Merrim1c Woods
mospherto. f'ncd palio, CI D, e N•wly Decorated :r.1anaged by 4'Z;J r-.JerTimac: \Vay, C.M,
v.•tr pd, 636-4120 Quiet l & 2 BR's, Gar & WILLIAi't WALTERS CO. 2 ~r Upper. Frplc, gar, RING BROS, A""ou-•a l;;;;====--c=c---;;-=·I patio, laundry. Adults, no "" '"' li67-K Victoria St. $15:i pool. Crpts, drps. Adulls TO\Vl'o'"HOUSE delxe 2 Br, pets. n10 mo. 642-3781 Apts. NO\v Available
2619-J Santa Ana Ave. $155 only. no pets. ~2-8042 211; Ba, Qubl~t,67t~!;,~f8tio, San Clement• MEDITERRANEAN
2 BR apl. Fncd yant, Plv 2 Br. Unfurn Apt. Stove & enc gar. 1e · J"'o,1VJ.J -~;;.:.c~~-"""'.--VILLAGE
gar., Child &. pet OK, $150. relrig incl'd. Garage. Pool, Huntington B••d\ BRAND NEW lwc. :? Br. 2-IOO lfarbor Blvd.
2012 Santa Ana Ave, C.~f. All util pd. Ad.Its only, no 2 Ba, lJOO sq. ft. Quiel Costa ~tesa
~6-4631, 646-25 44 or pets, Jl,fgr. No. 9, 3&l W, * fl.ESH AIR cul-de--sac. Panoramic vie\v CTI4) 557-8071)
5'1S-S33.l \Vil.son St. Walk 3 blk.s to Beach! of oce_an. Adults only $lSO. 2 BR $125 unlurn: $145 turn.
1 BR. $125 • 2 BR. $140 2 BR. unturn deluxe to111nhse, Beaut, big J BR apt. wtw1,•~92-"C2':--'-'9~·,--,------Families 1velcome. BI C
Pool. Bltns. crpts, drps, no pvt pat & gar, newly decor, crp~. drps, bltns except Santa Ana SUR APTS, 2043-2049
ch.ildren, no pe ts. 325-"F" acllt~. pet OK. Sl65 mo. 3009,. •~fr~ig~·;l2'l5~.JN~o~P'~1~•·~536-~~17~1:1 jl·-:~;;;:;;:~;;:;:f,~;;;; \Vallace St. Phone 5-18-4301
SlOO clng dep. 67:5--8319 e DOLL l!OU!iE · 2 Br,
CID J"od d kl 1 & 1 ~ Br. 2 Sn. rarpe1~. draPf'S, ' " Y ' < ~ pe !!. fncd yd. S22S. 19072 Stingray $143.
E. 17th Pl., C.11-1. Coolidge. 54()..7247 .::. Children Welcome CAN 'T BE BEAT l BR, turn $140. l Br unf
ME CLOSE to beach & shopping. • 2 Br. Mes' Verde .. ne1v rmmac. 4 Br, 3 Ba, Studio $1 3:i 11•/stv/rEf, utll pd. VEN DO Bil-in range, wlw crp!ing. decor. Lrg closets, cabinets, apt. 4--plex. Priv. patio. SINGLE STORY Adlts, no pels. 820 C~nter
*Studio Apt $110 Gonoral * 1 Bedroom $130
:!\1APLE ST .. NEAR 19Ti i
ALA Rentals • &l:>--3900 In H.B. 673-6578
Sl~O • Pool. :? Br. l1i Ba. Huntington Harbour
Bhns, cpt5, drps, k1ds/pe1s $~ BEAlITifUL '\'atrrlrnt
ok. l BR, 2 b::i. v.·ti;undeck &
Blu. Beacon * 645-4111 dock, lse or option. 644-4132,
e SPARKLING VJE\V • 644-4221
v.·11lk to lx'h. 2 Br. cpts. Lagun• B•ach
blrm, childrtn & ~ml Pt'!
64S-0349
~H-O_L_I DAY P~L-A~ZA~
DF:LUXE Spacious l BR
furn apt $13:i. lll'aled pool.
Ample parking. No children
• no pets. 1965 Pornana,
C:'>L
BA YCLIFF MOTEL
ok. $18.i * NF.\V 4 BR. HOt.lE • * LO\V \\'EEKLY RATES *
ALA Renlal~ • t•l.)..3ro(l Ck:ean Vit11,.. $400 ~lonth Kllchen, TV's, maid service.
PLACE REAL TY 4!H-g704 H d p 1 ] BDR..\I, F'amily nn., park e11tc oo,
likeyard,Costa!\ft!U..Kld! A!.;o.fQST OC'ranlront. 6-16-326.;
OK, brk .. S200 a mvnth. NO Chaim. 2 Br. 2 Ba in excrl. SPF:CIAL Low Rate! Iron1
F'EE. !>I0-173). La!.!unita. f>r1\·11te beal·h. $2.j \\k. Kit. a1·ail. :'>laid
e REALLY NlCL • 2 Br. S29J leaM'. 0 111M"r. <19')..J638 111?rv. TV & Ph, Sea Lnrk
2 Ra. hltn.ot CID, Mesa V•rd• il!otel, 2301 Npt Bl"d, C:'>l.
kid.ot/pctf, Slj(J. f~l&-7·1~.I
ALA Rf'nlal.ot e t.H:-.-Z'.)OCJ t"OR sa!~ or lea~e -Lgc l~,A7R~G~'~" •• ~7! ~.~--.~_,~, .1 hr, 2 ha, blui.,, Corn"r " " r. ceth,,.., Y
• llUDGET BOOST!:.R • llOUSl', J,j7-12&, or 61l-S096. locntcU. Pool. c 8 r po r r'
I Br. lovrly )tl, + pool. Adlls. no pet~. SI.1:i. 560
('hill! ok . $110 N•wport B•ach W. llnmllton. &16-41&1 or
Ill.A ll"nl11.l.ot • Ql:-.-:iro11 I Adults Pr1f•r red .:"'\4. ~"°"=''°="""==~~-
Sl2J..l Hr. 2 H11 horne, !or I 2 BR. 2 Ba.; gara~,. .•• $22J 1 si-:PARATE UNIT-1 Br. at-
h11ndy ('Ill nr rl'$JI. ~11111~ l J !Ht 2 Ba, :J car ~:u·:il(f' !ached ~ar & pa1io. Quit!
Blu• Beacon* 64.S..0111 rt~hL'f'OR .\48-6(16& t\n rhildren ur pets. $13.'i. r..i; ... i.i1g
• ROO:itY 2 Br. Bl!n~. c/d Univ•rsity Pa rk
tncd yd. k1d~IJ>t"t'· s:40. $155-SHARP 2 BR.
ALA Rt-ntab e fi4;)-3900 llca1r<1 pnol. Adul1s, no prt.~ l BP.. lam. rm, & din. rn1. ! ! trron ok 1. 612-9320
f!Ta-3 Br. 2 Ba. Bltns, C/D, TurrJt Jtoek ...••.•. ,. 1325
11r, yd, k1dst~ts. ~ RR. lam. rm .:· rlin. rm. * ST\""~l~G GARDE~
Blue B•acon * 64S-011 1 Bra.nd n"'"" Turi!e R•1tk S3T.i APT · lrg 1 '1 2 Br. Pool.
I lnlant-•rnl 1k~ ok, s1:1:i l e !\fOVE JN Today . 2 Br. J BR. & dtn. rm .. lmmac S~2j up 1 '10. fret. 6";3-~
RJO, rpts, drp11, kJda & 4 BR. " ram m1, 2~ ha UiO
pel.5 $13.J. \\'E Al-liO HAVE DELU,'\F: I BR & &ch Apl~.
ALA 0Rental!'i e &IJ....3900 FUR.'l,IJSHEO RENTAL.~ $3.'i 11·kJy It 11p, Furn, incl
util . ~to. n1te~ ll'TTTls avl
$1Z.Room)' 2 Br. w/bltm, 998 E. Camino. !>-IG--0151
1 UIF.T 11tr3c !'itud10!0i Sl15 CID, gar. sng!J/peta/peU. Q-I
Blue Beacon * 645-011 1 Rr. st:r.1. Arllts. no ~L~
e SPREADING RM · 3 la 21::.:i E\rl('tl, 'IV Apt 6
br, 2 ba, 1tvtrel, focd yd, • s1;; per 11t('k u 0 lddl/petl, $200. "S!NCE 1946" .,,,/klrrhens, SZ-1 Jll"r 10;re:k
Reotali • 64~3900 ]SI \\'~tern Bank Bids up Apl,o; MOTEi... s.18-9756
"'MAKE Room For Did· Unl\'f'N:•ty PArk SPAC. T-nr.r.;11.ot, l'l!'JI~.
dt •• .. clt•ll out !he D•y1 &JJ.0101 N ights pool, ur ~hOP-'. Urtl J)"l. lf.SI
prap .. )'OUT tl"JSh Is CA.SJ-I :\lotlNJ\•i::i A\'t'., C:'lt :>JS-tll'l&
.1•• 0 ~-tly Pilot Cluailled L'hll Uie old 'tu.II Buy th< -,,::-.cccc-oc-
"' um ~w ~tuU For be!<'! rl'.•uit.w.• 642-Slii!-od.
n.rntACULATE APTS! Drps. Adults. 2 Bdrm. ~~~~l45--Slj:i, No pets. Crpls, drps, bltns. Lrg play South Sea Atmosphere St. 6-12-~-t&
ADULT and 548-424S. area. Cul-de-sac st. No pets. 2 BR .• 2 BATH lT;i(I sq ft lg 2 Br, 1n &,
FAl\1ILY SecUon * BEAUTIFUL l & 2 BR. LG 2 Br, l~2 Ba studio apt. 17871 Bell Circle. 842--3677. Carpets & drps utl r m for v.·h!.lr, patio,
Close to shopping, P•rk Contempomry Garden Apt&. No _pet~. families only. Priv. SPARKLING NEW 7 br, 2 Air Conditioned gar, cptldp. $165. 5-16-8688 * Spacio115 3 BR's, 2 ba Patio!, fr PI c 11 • pool. pa ho, 726 Joann St. $l40 ba, near beach, Shag crpt, Private Patios Huntington B•ach
*Swim pool, pul/green $14~$160. Call 546--5163 2 BR upper (4--plex). CJl)t.1, drps, bltns, encl gar11.'i('e, HEATED POOL * F'rpJ, Indiv/lndry fac'ls ENJOY privacy? Deluxe 1 drps, bltn R &. 0 . >.'1nt auto gar door opener, 21662 Plenty of lawn 2BR.Sl55.JBr.$180/up.Pa.
1145 A h ' A B<, bltns, refrig, opt!•-, location. $140/mo. 962·9541 Brookhurst St. Carnnrt &: Storage tio. Pool. Ouldren ok. na ••m ve. bal 80 .... v 11IDDEN VD..LAGE l\10RA KAI Apls. 1888t 1'-1ora
COSTA MESA &12-2824 i -"°'~·-~'·-!lfi'l-4~~1,---~ 2 Br, crpts/drps, bltns, clos-1 BR, refrlg, bltns, $135 ma Kai Ln, ~~ blk E. of Be:acb,
1 Br. Frplc. Beam cell, ed gar + parkng, Adlts. iocl utU. 2 BR, re!rig, bltns, G_ARDEN APTS. ot! Gartield. 962-S994.
Just for Sing)• Adult• patiofi, util incl'd $148. 2210 Rutgers Dr. 646-6919 $13Cl incl util. Adults only. ~South Salta
SOUTH BAY CLUB Yearly. l adult. 6'12-fl520 SHARP lge 1 BR. Cpt, [)rps, Tradewinds Rity 847-8511; Santa Ana Q 5'16-1525 Lih"'F. To tradf'? Ou r
APARTMENTS Bltns, quie t bldg, No pet!. Eves: S36-7661 Trader's Paradise rolumn ls
BUSIESf mark~tplace tn l~;if,;;>i'i;;;';f.;;~~J;O;;;: l~"".!!'l'':"'""""~~~~· I for yQu! 5 Li nes, S Days ior N•wport B•ach to"n. The DAILY PILOT $130. 540-97Zl Nr Huntington Harbour We'll help you se!Jt 642-5678 S5. Call today ... 6'12--56i8.
880 lrvlnt Ave. Cla.uitied section. S ave EASfSTDE 2 Br. bltns. Triplex_ quiet area. Lrg 1 ·
<Tr.:int and 16thJ money, time A: e.Uort by dsh.,.,•hr, crpts, drps, encl Br. $140, l BR. $240. Pets Apts,, Apt5.,
17J4) 64S-OSSO armr.hair. gar, priv patio. 64a--29.19 ok. f7T4l 846-0071. _F_u_r_n_._•_r_u_n_fu_,_•_._3_1_0..,..._F_u_,_n_._._,_u_n_f_u_rn_._i1_0 1 ./ CHEZ ORO APTS Huntington Beach Huntington Beach S@~~M--~"B~S'"
The Puizl• with the Buiff./n Chuckle
e PR~~~s~~~~lfTTER$ lN I 11 r 11 I' r r I
e ~~'~"~~· •mi.. I I I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800
8234 Atlanta, l -2 BR, Poof· Ir,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;;; I Pri,·ate Garage. \V11.sher.l 1
dryer.i. 536-8038, 536-m7
2 BR unt, crpts, drps, bllns.
I small child ok. $140. '..li12
England SI., li .B. 5J&.J53.1
or 96S-3089
LGE unf 2 br, 2 ba., lgt
pvt tncd patio, ahas: crpt,
1 blk fo 11fof¥. 7731 Ellis
$16:"J~ !-"Urn apt also avail
rnlPLEX 2 Br. Bltns.
Re lr lt. Enc l a:nr .
\\·asher/dr~·~r . 2321
F'lorida. 536-69i8
2 BR apt, 3 blks from 0Cf'1n.
$16.> mo. Avail Mar. 3>tb.
536-1710.
OCEAi'IJ view <l~lux 2 BR.
2 ba. Frplc, Gan1.g-e. 8.ltn9
k. f'f'big. $175. SJ6-67'J)
1 BR, New crpt, drps.
Children & small pet OK.
$140. 842-8365, 962-76J7
DELUXE l &. 2 Br. w&Jk
ro bch. Adults.$135 I< up.
220 \Zth St or 219 15th St.
Relreshing •••
Pa rklike beach livin g for ndults
Casa del Sol
SlflO of 1 mile fro m the beach is
"Aecreallon City .. with 2 1wlm1T1lng
pools, puU•ng green, Q)'ITI, vollayb11U
court, 5auna. billiard room, club-
house. One or two bedroom., fu,..
ril1h1d and unfurn!ah1d, prtv111
patio, fireplace in two bedroom,
1l1v1tors, dlahwa5her1, c1rpe1a
ind drape1, no lease, adults only. ell
uldllleJ: eKCept l1~hl• peid, pct~
eccepted. From $1~5..
21HI Btookhurwt St.
Huntington Bt.ch,
(714) ff2«SJ
A•k f«
Commander Ratting
:! Br apt-w/w, drps, bltm;,
N -~o d\!<'J)Otlal, l1'11ndry 1paee. o -·:._..__ .
J)"tl. 96.2-llS7R for Info I~~~~============~~~~
'
:11 DAll.Y PILOT M.....,, Aonl 5, 1971 ~~~~~~~~~~'~!!!!!!!!!!!!~
. , .__I' _ ..... _ .... __,J[I] I ..... ,,... l[fl] ..__I _-__.I~ .;;I ;;-;;;;;;;;;;l~;;;..I ~' --~I~~~ I ~--l!B I ~... lil I .,_.,~ Jil I
7 l•H•el•p•w•.•.•,.cf•,•M•&•F•7l•O H•lp W•nted, M & F 710 Antlqu.• 800 MiieellaMOUs 118 Sporting Goods a30 Dogs 154 Campers, S.le/Rent 920 Motor Homes
• l.,,."'.:"'.::,...,.. ....... ~-:::-::"'""'1 -~~~~~--1 -~~~~~~ ~~~~~~-SCRAM LETS GARAGE' FUU. ol OLD SCtJBA, rea .\ ~nk sso. 5 POODLES! '66 OPEN ROAD CAMPER. '68 CONDOR 2G ft Motor
940 Autos Wanttd
J/j_newport .
personnel
agency
833 Dover Dtlv<"
Nt."\\1>0rt Beach
f>U.3870
SALt:Si\1 0MEN, exp'd,
Clll'ffr-n\incled, to work into
asslst11nt nianager al flne
ladies rlothing chain. Please
apply In pel'l'iOn. Backstreet,
NQ. 15 f a.stuon Island, N.B.
SALESLADY. E:xp'd. Cur-
rains & draperies. Udotfs
Home t·w·iu:;htngs, S C'.oasl
Plaza
SALESMAN $600.
Escrow Ofc . $650 1 Exp, h&-grr!i$ivt', eaU Mrs.
Stable, r.tature a ttHurfr Sctm11d1. \\'estcl1l1 Person.
Sec'y $SOO ht'l Ali::ericy 2Q.U \\'estclill
Gd sklll!!. f1-IAIVA bc kb'fn<l Dr .. N.B. &JS-1770
Girl Friday $450 I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Abillly lo organ11.e ofcs Siles $560 Mo.
Recept./G.O. $425
Vivaciouli. TYPe 40.
Field Sales Engr $11K j
Cumm/auro. Cornputer e.xper
Exec. Sec'y $700
f1)Ur IO fll't .)'t'at$ recent
r:'(Pl'f. in plant &: ganien
suppl)' sales.
Call Russ
(714)956-1000
Cat.fair
Employment Agency
~ So. Euclid. Suitt 4
Anaheim
L..A. !Dr n1gn11 consultanl!i
Branch Mgrs $12K up
R. E. Backgrnd helpful
Comm + profll shanng,
*NURSE-FEMALE*
(Practical)
Jor elderly gt"ntlernan. Live
in, \1•ith salary. Cali eves
only from 6-8 Pl\f. 673-7365.
OPPORTUNITY
For 4 licensed Real Estate
Sales People for growing
organization. Possible to
se/J • lncome & commer·
cial property, land develop-
ment, resalt's on homes,
n1ay consider part time.
Your ov.·n drsk & phone.
Call !or appt. W. E. Lachen·
myer. 646-3928, 545-3483.
~RKING attendants, part-
time, Eves. £)(per. Apply
parking Jot, 3801 E. Coast
Hwy after 5 pm.
PART·TIME secretary light
typing, tiling, some banking
duties. Send Resume to P .O.
Box lll7 Newport Bch. Ca
""' PART OR FULL TIME
Join a successful SHAKLEE
group. All organic products.
fantastic people . l\f.r.
Karlstad, 49.i-4928
PRODUCTION
TRAINEES
Pl time 4:30...S;JO
-Immediate Openings. Top
Pay. Call Nov.'!
SANDER
Exp. & Trainees
Immedi ate Openings, To p
Pay. Ca]] Now!
9AM-9P~I. Sat 9A!tf-6Pf.I
0. C. Employment Agency
124 Broad\\·ay, C:-0! &15-3111
SAR.AH Coventry needs fi.
or pt time help. No in·
vestment Will train. min
age 20. 530-1407 & 543-9066.
SEAMSTRESS
Exp, & Trainee
Jmmt"difite Openings. Top
Pay. Call NO\\'!
9A.Vl·9PM. Sat 9Ailf-6PM'
0. C. Employment Agency
124 Broadway. CM &15-3111
* SEAMSTRESSES *
Exp power mach ope?'!.
NORTH SAlLS, 913 Elec-
iric, Se a I Beach, (213)
596-4461
Secretary
EXEC.
SECRETARY · ,650 PLUS TOP BENEFITS
At least 5 yn ff'Cl'f'tarial eX·
per and gd. skill! req'd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Union High School
District
Cail 536-9331 by 4/12
-1''URNITUR£ &: AN· I-IP Joluvloa 0.8. i ~o. Black Standard, I11tern'tl FuU cab OVll'r, xlnt cond, Jlome. Compktrly ~u con--
ANSWERS TIQUE."i. R0tu1d unk tabl~. 5-IS-6731 champ, I -. old m·"•. l co J " ·
Ind llt' -Poked -AvaJI -
J•icket -TIPPED
Sign in a bar that brags:
"Jaek fk.nny TIPPED here."
ROLL TOP DESK
$' With s Roll.
I.;:,:::,.:=. _____ =_ .,. w mp. at cont ., many f:X· tained.Slreps8.Cha.ss1s&nd 42"'. Several chest o I XI Toys, ~ black male A tra 71
d"' .. ·er<. ..,,·qur "Awi .... SKIS· APPROX l90cm.. n! s~ 4: 847-3961 power by ;·orc1. Au to. " ,.,. "" .,... -"' 1~ j ··"udl poJ female. 1 sllvl!r male. machine v.·lth csrvl'd COuu . ..., hU ng es, 646--0l42 333 E. l 7tb St. CM '70 CAMPER cabovtr trans,. Pwr. steer., 11.lr
dra\vers. 4 Pc Old Oak 1 _M_o_st_•_•il_._646_-«65_____ w/jacks. $900 or best olfl'r. cond., 11tereo system, etc.
Bdrm M't. 11 Pc whitr & RELOADERS -hard lead REG. German Sht'pherd, Ctt.11 642-1175 after 3 pm Reconditioned throughout,
J.'Okl bdrm !ll't. Plus Spanish for sale. 557-7886 or 6"6-3109 fl'm, 3 )TS, blk/wht, good V.·kda)'ll. Orig, sold new by us. Prlc~
Lamps. Decoralor items. eves. w/children, xlnt v.·atch dog. •n RED vw eam .... r right ed lo sell fast at $9,950.
.I I · >I 1 ,.::,;:;.c,.,=--~-~ 492-SlOO If ,~ ' (ZYA253J any ot lE'r pieces. ust K7 COi\fPS f.farker Biodlngs. ~ ..... 9~;1,boav• '.,~ Days THEODORE ROBINS Scll 6-t&-73.35 Good t'Gnd. 200 CM. f.fusl SPRINGER Spaniel. female, .....,.,.. ...., .......r........u
WE PAY TOP CASH
lr>r used cani & tnickai, jw:t
call UJ for ~ estimale11.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask for $ale1 ManRger
182ll Beach Blvd. All refi1ushe<I. $.lOO. *. 645-1446 .. * u Sl25 be I &42--0n7 2 mo, Registered, paper 1.,,-,,,,,.,-,,,,-:.:.:..::::_ __ I FORD * AUCTION * se · • st 0 r. t:r8.ined. f75 Wknds/eves, Cycles, B ikes, Huntington Beach
Fill(' Furniture TV, Radio, H iFi, 544-:1166. Scooters 92S 200l llarbor Blvd. 847.li087 KI 9-3331
Stereo 136 Co!ita 1'1eu &-12-0010 & Appliance PEKE puppies, 8 weeks old,
FRO.,....._"'---....... ;,,, .,Hd Auctio111 I''riday. 7:00 p.m. AKC, Ali female, $80. rvvV'l.n Trailers, Trevel 945 -31 1'1-.:T •'-U'b 2 ALTEC Voict 01 Theater state, 12 volt DC, 115 volt Windy's Auction Barn ak * 63!)..1309 aft 5 pm wkdy11
AC, 4 cu ft For boat, bar spe ers* ,'!'15·~· * GERMAN Sh h ~ AKC THINI BY Owner -20' tandem axle. 20Th'Ai Newport, C:\1 646-8686 "'""" ~ ep eiu, • HONDA Tub w/shov.'t'r, he a t er , or trlr. 5-18-Sa85. 1834 Behind Tony's Bldg. f.tat'l. l---2~1~ .. -c~o~J,~r~T~V~l~LIO~--male, 8 months. refrlg, completely sell-con-Pomona, c.~f. S50 * 84&-4739 INOUSTRlAL Sweeper. Ideal 1.JlfF·VHF Walnut -tained. Sac r 1 f ice. 714/
Appliances 102
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET \VHIRLPOOL auto \va&her for parking lots, e!c.. Ex-e 54S-6529 e EASfER Poodles AKC. 3J,.2 "'fRIEDLAHDBI"•· 5.'ll-7800. S35. Kelvinator e!ec dryer, cellent condition, $1195 in· ~=~'o-'-"""'c.,-:c_,.~~ mo. old. \I/ e 11-trained I;;;;;;--;-;==,.---.,-= 6 cycle $40. Both good\concl. PACKARD-Bell 21" black & S56-$7S. 642--0326. 673-9357 1970 APACHE camp trailer 2828 J{arbor Blvd.
Guar & delivert!d, 5'--8672, eluding trailer. CRll be white TV, walnut con110le, '°" MAOI fMWT. lfl ·sips 6. battt'ry, spa.re tire. Costa Mesa 546·1200
R47-8115 financed. \\'ill take car in Excellent. $40. 842-3172. DAOISHUND pups mui., 537-6824 e 89J.TS66 Clean. $950. 830-4079 l--'"==-~~~~"'--1
trade. Theodoro Ro bi"' AKC, Bil< & tan & NEW-USED-SE RV. TOP DOLLAR KENMORE auto v.·a..sher, Ford. 2000 J-larbor Blvd., Color 'TV Combo $200 mahogany red. 714/633-40l8 e '70 ARISTOCAT 20' SELF-
lale model, Xlnt cond. $65, Cos!a f.lesa * 968.()273 * ........... -CONTAINED.
guar & delivered, ~2. i -'=T.;;;:"7,,....,.,.~-POODLE pupt, beaut. little • -....... -1 * 531-3425 * for
g,17..g115 SPRING SALE tiny toy & toy1. Stud serv.500 •"'°c"c"'VE=LOC==E=r=rE~Thnlx~.-. AIRSTREA.."if '62 30. Int'!, CLEAN USED CARS
tEN ORE . Serra Thri!t Shop, 113 Main I 111 All colors. 893-9719 ton, new. clutch, tires, Air, ••!do·• ····•. S"-rb See Andy Brov.·n K 'M automatic St,HtgB··.o-o'"am·2 ,.., •• v.., o b ""' "~ .. ,~ THEODORE •-_,. od ', "~' ... ~ .iv "'" LD ENGLISH SHEEP rakes, puton and lo\.\·er cond. 673-8l'l9
\\'asn.,r, ex~'='ent co ttion, pm, 536-9057, Starting l\lon, :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ DOG AKC f l 0 d ~. . d ROBINS FORD od·,;n_.. .... 968--6581 , • em, M , en . rtJrlSl'I elight and _ . reco i.. • .,,..,., ~J. April 5th. Store chuck Jull 64;>..5282 in perfect sha""'. Best offer Tra1ler1, Utility 947 after 6 .. ~ 2CJ6o Harbor Blvd. of new & near.new stunmer MOVING, have to give my WIRE FOX TERRIER Pups Clpv,•
0
r $950. 675-5954 after 4 14• Tandem Trailer Costa Mesa
CLEARANCE SALE Lrg. items. Bathing suits, shorts, lovable pup away. Small, AKC reg. Cham() line $65. · · Wlth 4 whee.l.!I. All ,,,,1 weld-&42·0010 retrigerators: $3:., $45, $55. shi!ts, t'tc. short hair male part Poodlr
645-7820 ==""==--~-~I & Doxie. Hsbrkn & has l liA!ili•ihoiii~i. i5,;i 7i.9953iii-iiiiiiiiii 19?0 KA\VA~Kl ro trail e<I construction. -\4" ·Steel \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR
GAS STOVE $30 WHEELCHA1R & \Valker by shots. Doghouse & xtras in-11 bt~le. 800 miles: only 10 deck plating. \Vil! sell or FOR TOP USED CARS E\•erest & Jennings. New m1 es off road, \vith bumper trade for pickup 3u;6 Sicily
53&-2152 or 536-1734 cond, Cost $137, sell $75. eluded. 645-4865 4/6 I ......... ~~ lf:Jel carriers. $295. Call after (Me Verd ) C l\f ' U your ~ar is extra elem ,
Building Materials 806 Call Sat after 7 pm or 1'11XED Shepherd female, l . _ ... __.._,. -~ 6 p.m. 494·5808 sa e · · see us first.
-----------' Sun AJ.f, &1H057 '"''• •P•Y•d, '"°~• license. KE BAUER BUICK LI , new liooda l\1010
CLOSING QUI -bldg sup. POOL tables, slate. old. Xlnt with children -family Sport SLlOO. Xtras. 375 total I If~) C ta ~34 E. 17th St548-7765 plies, tools, llXlO',s misc. fashioned models, 7', s·. 9'. dog. Doghouse, dog ac-General 900 nil. S·l9a value, $375 takes Autosfors.I• os esa
Starting Sun. Z155 Bristol, Sacrifice. \\'1ll deliver tree. cessories incl. 673-5117 415 it. 646-2807 · Autos, Imported 970
C.M. 1442 Hayes Ave.~ Long FNCD yd !or lovable Coc.ker CAPTAIN
Cameras & Beach, 213/435-8885. Terrier mix blk & br. hsbrk. Licensed -Radar -Loran, 30
"" 7006 day •~ '~ aft 6 years experience sail or Equipment 108 IRVINE Coast Country Club .,..... s -N<r~ 4/6 pov.·er. Professionll..I Sport
Dual 8 Canlera & pro-
jector. flood llghts &
screen $90. 646-4003
Furniture t10
WHY BUY
FURNITURE?
membership for sale from , -~~-------'..: I member. 644-4559 1 c2 YOU Fishing Guide Mexican & NG cats, l orange, Central American waters.
NE\\'PORT Bch Tennis Oub spayed fem, 1 blue-eyed Al.so licensed multi-engine share.~+ transfer. a Ile r ed beige male C 494-llSG • ommercial Pilot, land & * 548-5306 • sea, Administrative experi·
IRVINE COAST COUNTRY SPANISH style hideabed 8'. ence. Best of references.
Cl. U B 1'1 E !I-I BERSHlP. Construction xlnl . needs 646-2977
675-?.073 recovering. 646-2772 a f t -~~~------5 4/5 13 FT BOAT comp. with
SINGER 10 H.P. \Vizard outboard
SE\\'ING MAOIINE 252·2 3 ADORABLE doxies mixed motur ,90. Call after 4 p.m.
Be Flexible! • 548-66n • pups, 6 wks, need loving 540-3803 homes, fenced y a rd . I ~~OC'"-~--~-~ Rent mo. to mo. "'ith FISHER GEIGER CffUNTER 7?8--0672 or 5:>9-Tifil 415 14' Boat, to.1erc o/brd, w/
100% PurchaM Option LIKE NEW CONrllTION trlr & acceS!. Must ,sell S200.
Ind. Item selection CALL 531-729-1 Poocl~ pup for your Easter 675-6898
24 H D I basket. 6 wks, Creme col-~-~~------
KAWASAKI baby gm streak-• . BMW
ed v.'/Haua forks & alloy Ant1ques/Cla1s1cs 953
v.·hls. $395. 897-4521 aft 6 194~. BUICK Coupe-78.oool·.-.,-w-·-s -N-'E_l_V_&_·_U_S_E_D_._al_l
& wknds original miles. Thoroughly models. parts and i;crvice.
YAMAHA 360 Endu1-o, 1970, resto~d. Xlnt cond. Runs Overseas Delivery.
Cherry Pie. must see~ Lots ~aut1fully. $2500. Call 714: C. BOB AUTREY t !OTORS
of Xtras, 800 mi. Call 557-4202 1860 LonJ: Beach Blvd.
644-5014. Dune Buggies 956 213: s91.s121
DATSUN 1970 Honda 175 cc. Excellent
condition. Daytime ca 11
5<15-5870. 5-i!}..88.'Xl after 7 VW DUNEBUGGY 1--------~ "P~•~I~. ~==~~~~~1 comp. \Vi!h fiberglas, body,
• 1964 HONDA 305cc dirt $575. or best offer. Call
bike. Best offt"r. 84~ a/1er 4 p.n1. S.I0-3803
or 545-6331 Trucks . 961
'70 HONDA CL.~. Llke new. -~:--:::::-:-o:--==-1 ~,,_;::'· 1595• Call °'001' '59 FORD Yi TON
'69 2000 ROADSTER
rwo tops, speriaJ \Vheelg,
Parilli tires. 1155 AVBJ
.BARWICK
IMPORTS INC. r. e y. • BASIC-H * or no paJ)Ers 540-86:!8 314 Boats/Marine
CU5TOM All Shacklee Products Equip. 904 Got Drafted, 1'.1l1St Sell Pickup. Radio, stick. Good Furniture Rental (7141 962-3656 Whi1e cat with black spots. ·10 JIONDA SL~ od. · DATSUN
,.__ M c•-=·"'-CO t!Jon. CF-'329$8) 998 So. Coast Hwy.
9At.1·9PM. Sat 9A!lf-6Pl\f
0. C. Employment Agency
124 Broadway, C.\1 645-3lll
517 W. 19th, C.M. !',48.3481 8' SOFA. Good constructon. '-V:>ta esa . ...,;ruWJ, area Marine Surplus Sale $550 ** 8~6-5932 $649 Laguna Beach
A'laheim 774·2800 Only needs slip cover to I ='='="~'~V-•~r~'='·:_-:-:---Use<I engines jn as is cond. I ~.66,,..-J~fo-n-d~a-=305~--=sc_ra_m=b=J,-r---I S-i6-4051 / 494-9n1
SEC'Y.BOOKKEEPER La.Habra 694-3708 be pert"ec1. SJO. 644--05n FORD 292 engine & auto Boat davHs &. misc equip. Xlnt JTil'Ch cond. Must seH N
fantastic oppor, for person POSTER bed & dressers, ROCK Hounds Selling Calif. transmission, completl'. Zl'lapstral<erunabout4cyl $300/best offer. 548-4816 CONNELL CHEVROLET ew '71 Datsun e PRODUCTION v; /gen'l olc skills. Star1 $400. reclining chairs, de. s k, jade, misc .. t"quip., supplies. 64~781. 4/.1 Volvo enbrd e.ng. 20' Dyer I --.~.= .. ~m=JU~M"'=P=H-500:,C:,--1 1600 OHC, Pickup witb camp.
SUPERVISORS • Call Jean Brown. d ishes. lamps, Danish Setee Start Sun 2755 Bristol, C.M. 2 Calico female cats to good Glamor Girl, 6 cyl intercep. 2828 HARBOR BLVD. er. Sale price $2099 dlr,
lb d d t I 11. I * PERFECT COND * All three shills. 'xlnt future COASTAL AGENCY & 2 chairs. rocker . 284 E. POOL table., slate top, com-homes \Vith children torou r rve. cy is er • l\oIUST SELL • COSTA ME&\ 546·1203 (# PL521452270) \Vil! take
for erfective leaders to joln 2790 Harbor Bl., CM 540-6055 18th St, Cl-of 54~3177. pletely rtcondilioned. ,200, 897....fi763 4/6 diesel w/37 volt generalor. • 548 7890 • .68 CHEVY .'.I' car in trade, Will finanee
the Harbor Area's tastest Harbor Bh·d. al Adams LIKE new baby c r 1 b, 546-776-1 DARLING wht dog nds good 3 KW Onan gasollne gener-I c==~=·--~-~-I 3 S .. T. P.U. truck. private party. Call 646..8136
grov.•ing company. ~~~~~~~~~"" Storkline, \.\'hite, cost '150 h.,i.'l""C~h~o~v-. =1ru-,k,-,,..-,_-:-:,=d.~~~ home, "-'/children, v.~ll-ator. Lldo Sbipyard, 900 }IONDA 350, good con~i. C • i1 1trcao1s, clean8. S1500.17o~r~'="=·"=ll~.=~=~~-
MacGREGOR YACHT CORP. SERVICE CENTER new. will take $50. Also ....-trained 83.1-0029 4/a ~L_id_o_P_"'=k_D_'~·~NB~·--~ botany xtras. $475, MS-7689 on ac oeman yslenis, '66 DATSUN WAG N
l63l Placenlla, C.M . Employment Agency Cosco high-eh11ir, good T. S225. 12 x 16' orange SOS M . Boats, Power 906 or5'18-8673 18842 Teller Ave., Irvine. 0 Nylon ru~ S35. fHS-0392 . . . ov1ng to apt. Need 833·1810. PROFESSIONAL phone cond, S1.5. 545-7764 ;:;;;~"""';:~~c:.,==I good home for cats Mobile Homes 935
.. l' .• 'tor • Dana !'<>Int, San $400 value for Sll'1, take red · 21 STARCRAFT '70 Chieftian ·1--,6~3:-;;IH'°s===--·I .... *Exec. Sec'y $6St BLUFFS BEST BUY velvt'I drapes 20 x 7, call i_644 __ -_74_92 ______ 416 V Cabin Cruiser. Sleeps 4.1-_,,,,,.,_,..._______ COUT
Clemente. Capistrano area. Frn1 oft poise/!op &kills BY owner, 4 BR 3 BA, beaut 846-7208 LOVABLE Bcagletrerrier icebox. head, can vag. THE BEST OF Sbort cab. new trans. & rear ~'ork in your own honie. *Gen'I Ofc Bkkpr $43J decour, upgraded thruout. M' mix, temalr, 5 mos. To good Biniini. compass, J 20 BOTH WORLDS end. ~-or oflcr, ~3763 Be.t deal in area. Phone bl ' 29 1scelleneou• aft 6 A e to handle rooune bkkpng s~3.900. 644·14. Want·• •io home, 548--61~2 4/5 Mercruiser, trailer, xJnt For 8 beautiluJ home, 1ow.,.,,;;;;';o;r:-o:~'m=. -;;;,,-7.'-='I ~1465 bet"·een 9:00 a.m.. ~=-~----=-~ 0 , & accur. typing. 8 Ft. sofa. good condition, G. Shep. female blk & bro\vn. cond. S5.\00. In water at maintenance and architecur. FORD truck 1964, New 223
4 speed. radio, heater.
(SRY 523!
,BARWICK
1~1PORTS INC.
DATSUN liiiandiiiiiinooiiiinii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit I *Customer Serv $500 only needs slip cover to REFRIG. LATE ~IODEL, Must have yard good Hun Ii n gt on Harbour. ally impressive design, See cu in. 6 c.yl eng, new dif.
Enjoy meeting people I gd bf< perfect. $30. Phone USED BRICKS, ANY A.'1T y,·/child 646-4704 mom. 4t6 1 .,,JW&..'=-5~7~87-·==~--:-:~~ the exciting new "Village ferential Gd cond. SBOO. 9!'J8 So. Coast H\vy. RECEPTIONIST
P/time. Attractive ou1going
\\'Oman for local personnel
ofc. ff you are t-ongenial &
typist. G-14--0577 RED\\'OOD 2X4..'<4 's EASTER pups, lh Collie _ 1958 26" ClffiIS Connie, twin House" by Levitt Mobile Call: 6#-5014. Laguna Beach
· able to meec v.•ifh & handle
the public we v.i!J train. Lite
typing. $2.25 hr. Call Sally
Har1.
. COAST AL AGENCY
Z790 Harbor BL. Cl-.! ;H(J.fiOJj
Harbor Bl\'d. at Adams
Sales 1'1utunls
*Escrow Ofc $700 F.&JRNITURE? * 646-82'16 * ni German Short haired screw, Xlnt colld, S3250. Systems on display now at '69 Datsun stake bfod truck, 546-4051 I 4~-97n
Exper w/land devel or Es-'I-rave yoli .c~c.ked Penney's, CASJ{ for furniture, ap-636-230S. 633-1505 4/6 Dys: S 4 7 • 5 4 6 6; Eves BAY HARBOR long v.•heel base. R/H, DOT DATSUN
cro\v co. Fashion Isl.ind N.B. p!lances, tooli;, misc items. POODLE/Terrier mixed i ,-,'~73,...-72_5~7,....-=-,....~~,.-~ MOBILE HOMES J\1ake otter. 642-7015, aft 5:
*Housekeeper $40r. 1 4 Piere beig sectional $50 00 Open 9 to 5. 6-12-7015 puppies • 3 black males, 1967 32' ch r i 9 Corin-1425 Baker St.. Costa Mesa 54$-4227 OPEN DAILY
X!n 't pos1tion/N.B. area/Jh•e. e ' · Musical Instruments 822 1 brown lemale. 645-350J4/5 lhian--t.,.,·in screw, f u 11 y Just S. of S.D. F.,.,)' at Harbor '62 FORD y2 TON P .U. AND
in lpyt quarters & TV. Cal! Jor 1~~~· """"' e-quipped, ready 10 go. 714/540-9470 6 stk, new eng, t""'· brakes SUNDAYS
Cl k T · $400 ~~-FLUTE Pro I Id FEMALE tortoise shell cat "o 2 1-•• n-b Blvd. * er yp1st :\: , fessiona so i 54,... 434 MODEL J\10BILE HO~fES & battery. S·175 or trade. "°""' =ac
Accur. typtng & record keep· 0 SPANISH ~AK bed~n1 silver, French model w/low ~~~~~7 6 n10 o 14~5 '25=· ~U-L-R-ICH-:-:E-SO~N--,-a-b-,~. n in Costa l'\-1esa's Greenleaf &15-4687 Hun~on Beach
ing/do simple figure v.·oi·k. ~f t ~~/queen SlZe bed, $150. B foot joint. l )T old.1..:.:::...:::.c_ _____ ,c:.: crui!er 9\~' beam, Chrysler Park 2·1x60 Americana l95 FOR 842-7781 or S!G-0442
*Sec'y (p/t ime) 5-19-.J26 540-4962 WE arc moving. Beautiful Sea-V, Sips 6. Great Ocean '11,~. 20x52 f.f on t ere Y to~ pickupD ~. r. 2000 ROADSTER
$2.60 hr FULL APT of furniture, Office Furniture/ mama cat 5 kittens & lovely Boat S4.500 Eves: 54S-3693 $12,750. Completely setup . "~U\1 calico ca!. 892--0290 4/5 * &1:>·2633 • Good tJ-·ping 3kills/work }:.r incl. relr\gerator, v.·asher ~ Equip. 824 1965 31' FAJRLINER Twin y,·/skirts, awnings, porch. .
d&''. dryer. 962.9".J68 FREE 3 yr old spayed black etc. 1966 Ford Super Van-paneled 5 1spd. rHr. 011.-·fled by little
00 YOU FEEL L-SH1\PED l'xecutive desk, Labrador. Good w/children. ExpressCrui5er. L<lwbours. GREENLEAF PARK & insulated. X!nt running od school t~acnrr from La·
SECURE IN YOUR * 5-piece double bedroom gla5s top; !ecretary desk, 897~76.1 1/6 Extras. Days 646-6154. Aft 1750 \\'hlttier A\'e .. C.~t. cond. Sl2l0. 536-9534 guna Beach. (ZNS 159) Take
JOB & FUTURE? :m Newport Center Pt., l"'B sel. S40. 2 Jiling cabinets, 2 metal LABRADCR 0 _ 1 1 6· 646-0l74. &15-Z5lO ** &l:>-0450 .66 E r . older trade or small down.
Talent is the source Suite 535 , &t~-49!ll * !)..1.}-Sii"l * bookcases. 548-2900 btwn 2-7. /ot:ag e. !e.ma e, 28' CHRlS Craft, Twln Screw ., . cono ine •. new tLres, \\'ill fi nance pvt pty_ Aft h f" OLIVE: green naugahyde 6 mo old black & white. 283 Chevy's . Clean. 8 x 3J SPARTAN _ All paint. 240 engines. Best of. 10 am S.J0-3100 or 494_7506 t at create1 a pro 1ta· SERVlCE s!n ni!e mgr need· chair ,vith ottoman. EXECUTARY IB:\1 portable 89:1-2867 or 548-0813. 4/6 Reasonable Call 675-4759. set up in Adult Park. No fer 832-58fi0 , ·
bit company. Edward 'XI, 1.alary & benr f1t~. App!y $j(J * 642•20:r; dtctatlng mach i ne & GREY & ·white mother & pets. Immaculate, 1w t n Hl6? DODGE pick·up i~ ton 64 DATSUN roadster ron\1·
Golka is achieving fi· in perwn, 319:i Harbor Bl, I ==~~=~=~-transcriber, 1 yr old, perfect son. rnan..x, neute r ed. Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 beds, qu iet street, t'xtra auto. A-l. Camper \\•/boot'. lmmac. cond. 4-~pd. R&H.
nancial independence in C ,~f. 1'\\.tN BED FR A i\1E 5 • cond, $ADO. 61~j()IJ 893-2867 or S.18--0813 4/6 37• Twi Ch . 1 11 bath & l:itOrage. Real com· $1400. 536-3053 Mr. Myer. ....·./w _tires. 40.000 act mi. -;c=='°""'""--,.-,..---hardrock maple. nscrew rts, u Y 1 bi 1. . . 546-9562 •• societion with Ofle of SERVICE Si •1 '1on .... ~•ec. ma" Pianos/Orga s 826 E bl · 'd F · c · orta e iv1ng 1v11h ocea n A L • '---'-~-----"' .. .,.,.. ·' ,,.. S5fl • 673--0736• I-----"--"----ASTER Killen, adora e, 8 ('(Jlllp . ishing or ni1s· \i eiv. Yours for $2500 Cash. _uto easing 964 1· FIAT California's renowned part timr, t>.~p'd, over 18, "'·k11 old blk h 5 b r k. ing. Also •59 T1,·inscrew
co ni mu nity leaders, Ch!'\'mn St.:it1on, Adams & MAPLE BDRM SET CLEARANCE 67:'.-7677 4/5 Givens. Xlnt cond. 548-2~34 See at Jf,60 \Vhi!tier Avr:. LEASE
R E b k T .\lagn()!is, 11.B. $150. 540-0366 SALE Sp. No. l. :HS-6447 A NE\V 19n • . ro er, ycoon, G I 812 FREE 10 a good home Great Boats, Sail 909 'iO LUXURIOUS America1111 PINTO
David B. Lookingland, SERV!CE Sta Sa Ir s n1 t n, aragt Sa e Over 100 Pianos & Organs Dane 53l-5027 4/5 24x60 at Driftwood Bcal'h $SO OO
If you are troubled pari lime, neat in ap.. 4-family G"'ge Sa 1 e. Reduced for inlmed. &ale. T\\!O lJi' palm trees . SACRIFICE Sari Clemente .~ Golf Club. Custm up,.,..,.ad. • mo,
L--· • b h pea ranee Appl y 2 5 9 0 23. Sleeps ;i. Oceanside slip. '" a1NUt your 10 , t en I !\' 'Bl d C · f China, Glass. Household Buy Now & Save I 839-8967 415 I'o reaso nable offer re/U.!i· ed model. Fully equipped . 136 mo.)
you probably don't feel SE~;~11;;~1 v ·• ··~· items, Avon's. Insulators, Open Daily 10 til 6 3 PUPPTES. 5 ll'ks, old, ed. 493.3776 01\'ner relocalcd. i\lust sf'll. 01.en el'ld
very secure. If you . illat'hine pcrators Plan!s. 317 E. 22nd St. CM. Fr: 10.9 * Sun 12.s small type. 5:'17-4190 4/6 1 =--~-----~ Contac1 Jornlcra Inc., 19261 RENT
want an exciting re-\\anled. Exper. necessary. HIDE-a-bed f80. Bed divan COAST MUSIC FREE d . . 12' SNO\\iBIRD Schock Beach Blvrt .. H.B. !i36-6511 A NE\I/ 1971
d . . , ' Alio sec!'l"!firy v.·anted. Call NEWPC arhng puppies, fiberglass incl trailer Sl~Jll PINTO
i ft.ftl'l.l'l.rl
"THINK"
llutru ...
• war 1ng 1ob, with a se-a rter 9A,\I 496-1236 $5S. Lovescat $60. Chairs RT I< HARBOR Shepherd mix .. 8-17-1 335 4/6 j2l3) 225-8145 days/ wkends CUSTM built 2·1'X53' ?-.lobill' $
4
D Y
• cure future, and you •iiiiiiiiiiii..0.ii;i;;;iiiiiiiiiii S2:>. Llke ne1~·. misc. Cista Mesa * 642-2851 home. fully crptd & drpd A
:-feel you ere capable of I' SHEET METAL &12-8171. e 300 Pianos & Organs Cd~~C:.' ~~~;ir, poor ~;6 =&='~"='-12~1_3_1 _44_7_-7_40~'~~ \V/blln kitchen, sunken liv'g
being the boss, we can Exp. &. Trainee f.lOVING Sale-Studio couch, NEW-USED. Going-out for SCHOCK Lido 14, full racing rm, dinette, fan1 rm. 2 BR, ANO
"FRIEDLAHDBr
1J750 IUCH ILVD. -
fHwy. 391
ff · th I k' d I d chairs, baby ilems. nothing l:iusincss. Rentals $10 R nio. l\lALE hampstt'r. 847-5181 4/5 gear .,.,•/auto trlr, $8'ij. 2 ha . Lnd~cpd, sprinkll'r O t r you 1usl a in mme iatr Openings. To P 673-2921 aft 4 system, C.l\1. ti 4 6-3 <& 2 3 , PUT A LITTI..E 4¢ MILE 393-7566 • 537-6824
NEW-USED-SE RV. of job. ra~·. Call 1'ow! over S25. 339 Wake r·orest Steinway, Bll..ldwin, Chicker· 548-2473 9A:'IT·9Pi11. Sal 9A:\T-GPM Rd, C.\ot 54~72:l9 ingfl.ELD'S PIAJNO CO. 1 ll"L,! 22· ENSfGN • fiberglass 1 =~==~~-~-~• KICKL~~OUR U'Ll"UVQ • Complete Fringe
Benefits
e Top Compensation
• Incentive Plans
e Start lmm'd.
OPF.N
f\lON_ TITROUGH SUN.
CA LL :'>iO\V
Orange County
714-541-5773
r A1k For Mr. FrOlt :1~~~=
.. Sales $346 Mo Up
: !50mt e.:cper w/parlo &. Jurn . -""" Call Russ
(714)9S6-1000
Cal-Fair . -. .. Employment Agenc y
; 625 So. Euctir!.. Sullfo 4
• Al\llhe1m
! ~-!!!!!!!!!!~"'!'"" I ~ WEED It A rup"', .clean
: ool the .b"ftlUr8 ' trasb -• rirrn ln1D cub thl\I .,. Oa1iy
: PJIM Oau!f\ed ad. 642--5678
0. C. EmploymPm Agency GARAGE Sale Elec dryer. . hts •I'd Supplltt ri sloop. :.Iain-jib·Genoa 3~i: 30' HOUSE Trailer, ;.iir ('Qnd.
J'.!4 Broadwa y. C.\I 6-J,j..3111 Auto pts, i\1isc, Sat thru Costa i\lrsa G~rdfn Gro\'P HP ou!brd. $2500, 67.l-1887 Clean & fully cqp'd. SL2'J5. THEODORE '63 FIAT 1600 Oska Spidfl-.
;·:; ~1762 Spa Dr. llB. lil4l 645-3.2:iO 11111 638·7i70 LEHJ\!AN l2, ne'v mast, 53&-9153/cve~ 536-1222 ROBINS FORD Good cond.
89'i-Zl4j WE QUIT I J I Cats 852 rlacron anti, with trailer. 10x50 l BR. Full a1vni11g, 2060 llARBOR BLVD., Call att 6, 646-0065 • TRAVEL AGENT
\\'ork tra1·rl dtsk in fine
!:rowing agency. They sky
I' lht• hn111! SIJ ii you·re the
i.:;•\ fly inlo Snlly llart.
GARAGE Sale. -lOOO's of The f'nd 1s nr11.r! Flnal & Good oondifion. Ph. 842-7976 Adult park. Close to stores, CO~A l\tESA JAGUAR llf'n\~. Must 6ell. Starling: decri cut pr ice~ espcc·111.1Jy REGISI'ERED Bwmese kit. CAPE COD CAT BOAT J ~S~:<~>XJ~. ~"'~'-:7~04~9~·~,,.,--cc J;r.;;~o:;~G<~Z.OO;;;:~IOi;::;;:-;;u:J---;-;:-:;-;:-;-:;:"'--~un. 2T.'i1 Brilllol, C.i\t. on Con.wle O~n5 & Con· lens, 7 v:ks old. 3 males, 18', fbrbls. (213) SJ'-3883. 8x42 Norsr beautiful rontl Auto Service, Parts 966 JAGUAR
solr & Grand Pioi """" .. Nt-~·er 1 ~'-'_c_m_,_1•_· _64_4-_56_21 __ =~ f 12100' 2!91 I' bo . COUCH S40 2 <'hairs SIO """ D--11 Sl1'ps/Docks 910 urn, · ~ar r. 1iVO t''' ~~"'6 ho! · • HEAD"'UARTERS
~1ar1 S-100. r;1ch. i\lr. S.· j\!1~. Chc~t aga!n bargain~ like lhr~e. Dogs ~4 UQG ' Ci\1, lot 61. No children or '1 .......... ,. e nm.· ,.
\\'ARD'!' BALD\\'IN 1'TU DJ0 26' shp. $65/mo. Private pe1s hl·flo1ut1on. tll'f'll & lubes, The only authorized JAGUAR COASTAL AGENCY 120. l\l1scc1lanl'011s. 54S-J&)(I
21*'1 Harbor Bl,, C:\t S.IO·ti055
1
Miscellaneou• 818
Har!)Or ui~·d. fl l Ariams I USED BIKES
T\\'O n1cn Iull tune. v.1C1ass SALES & SERVICE
1 licenses & pt't"v1ou11 t'X· lh .•Pf'rd B1ke11 S:).).S90
prnrnce 11'1 UH· houSl"h(l!tl :: ~pd :\len11 & \\'on1en5 S22-S5.i
n'U)\'lng hu\:\11f'~S. C It l l .\!•·n & \\'omrns Std SJO-S155 ~.1 1..()C:.SO \\Pt'kd11y.~. !'tlnr.:rRys-3 & 5 !pd $8440
\\',\.'\Jt.D, y oun g . r x-So.int" !\rw Bikes in ~tock
-i>eiv1ce.man, 1n!cr1·~t1>d 1n All Bikes llil\'e 90-Dny
learning thl' grorery t, mrn1 -GUARANTEE -
bust&ss, Juli time & perm. 2340 NEWPORT BLVD •
li7l--l'ilO COST A MESA
\VAITRESS • !:xJ'lf'rienced OPEN lr10 PM WKOYS
0 \•rr 21 , n111"1\T~. Apply tn 9-S SAT. & SUN.
pe~n. 52'.l Pico Avt. -\\'ill rake Trsde.Jn&-
1819 Nt'wpori R!vd, 6-12·8~S~ OBEDI ENC.:E cla~ to start bath. No. 2 Balboa Coves, ----------t n1ountftl. S50 6'12..0-111 cv"~ dcale I ti ltr: H bo in th t-lrvuie/Nt\l'f)Orl 820 sq fl, 2 BR, at beach, and weekends, 83&-3344 1vk Ar r fl le en • ar r
\VANTED: ~11111U cort,(')le or Jknrh art-a \\'ed, April 213 N.B. Call 6Ta-43.11 Adults, no dos;s. $6500. days. ea. P~pin1ct pianQ: full kc}bo11rrl. el 7:30 pm. Open tD all Boats, Speed & Ski 911 _53'l-__ 16_7_4._536--0 __ '4_7 ____ ,l968 CORVETI'E ENG 377, re er Baldwin, ronsidf'r d(l{!s over 5 mo old. 546-4928
ot!w>rs. ;\lu~t be in good J.t.fT. OUTBOARD. 40 I-IP Motor Homes 940 elutch, Bell lfousing Mu1"1C1e
ronrl .: rea~nable. 642--3.')89 Outstanding Black Lab Mere, clec. starter. tr11.iler, 4 spd. Complc!e. Perfecl
tve-s, v.·krnrls. AKC, Femalt-, 9 n10. obt-dl· \.\'11.ter .ski1s, tow rope, 2 tH\. C'OllCJllion $400. &l5-46K7
C<rmpltte
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK HA.1"11\10ND, 5 t e in"' 8 Y, ence tralnrd, polential field ehors misc equip. AU for * KinlJS Coach * ~v 2 bbl. Chro1ne nianifol~
Yaniaha. New & used & llholV champ. &48-1033 S325. 962 6363 f1 C~ 40 hp, used one 111ontn piano.~ of mos! mnkr~. Be.st AFRICA.I\/ bllrklr~s BRscnji e SACRIFICE 16' Cen-Mofor Home Agency Sl:i. 54S-~l380 IN buy~ In So. Calif. a! Schmidt r111ps, 12 \\'l'rk~. Af\C. Meke hn;·-JtTay marine en~. Steel Superior * Land1ul;,;;u"sc"."""'""::,.:;:be::,:-:m,.-A"Jp"'1"',.,:I COSTA MESA.
!'ltus!c Co., 1907 N . .\1ain. offer. .1 48-8 58 5 . l&:M trlr. rover, Xlnt rond. l\1ake 60.J N. lfArhor, Santa Ana part.!! for ~Alf'. 2.-W E. 17th Street
Santn Anll. f'on1ona. C.1\1. offer. 673..£63i Opl"n rilllly 9 to 9 8.l!l.9030 6~2-4689 ~·IS-7765
El,F;CT RONIC organ.
Baldwin orgaSl')nlc 1n01lr1
51P. Xl nt ('l)lld, W 11 l
&i.crihcr. SJOO. !W5-1·189 after
DACHSHUND pup A K C,
rn1n1a. malt & female,
1100t~ \Vire or smooth roat.
63.'HlllS
Boats, Storage 912 1 ~;;;~~::;~:;:~1 ~A~u~l;••~W~a~n~te~d~:;:::!968~ 1 ·-,-, _.t_A_r.-:: .. ~~1·'a"'rk~l~I -,-,,-,-,·1
. TIRED Of that olO fumllure! '"fPORTS \VAi",..,..,,...,,_ Xlri i n1rc-h11nir.al. Original, OPt:N Boat yard, repairs 11'1 ttally nor that ha.rd .~ir~u $2~m 67;~1177 • 'lo--"" per ft Oran,,., Coonll•• J)1'~'.'iNY'S 11'1 S.1n f l,.mrn11'
l\'AITRESS [XIJ. l pply in
pe t"90n eftfr 4 ;11n. Thf> Blue
Brri 107 21~1 Pl&N' ND
\\ f \I/ 1·;u·1irt. l'XCl'pt. \';dur I ='=P=M~~-,....~--~
7'l :tr•I, br11u1. blut . S1 3.1 RABY Cr11nd • Rart ~t
)"1. fndrtt",S, J•ertrcl. trrgt"'J'J v.·/rit-h ht-a111 lont.
''%~· • · tt.i replace. Just '••a1ch the TOP"s BUYf'." 673-6809. eves 96Ulll. fw'Tllhtrt & ml.scellanecrJ.S "
FENCED florage 11.rrll, oil ceJumrui ln tht ClA.ssilled BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
11urfaced: Costa MeM. Call Section. l8881 Beaeh B!\'d. ----------r,7~q ','l A ~IPR! lft $.~YI. fi46-Jl!'l11
OON 'T g!Vt' H awA.y, pl
quirk cash for II wilh a
DAILY PlLOT Cla.ssilled
Call 642·S6'78 & elvl~r it ~7111 or 962~illl 3 H. Bearh. Ph. M7·853.'i
\\'hy ~tore 11 ln !he attic
11 !1rn )OU <'an turn It Into
n1ctlt'y lhrnu,;;:k a DAILY r n .m \\'R111 j\d.
I
.. '
I
' '~,.,_ .... -.... ~.
Mondar, April 5, tq11
l§J I ....... ,. l§J I -..... l§J I '"'"1~'"' l§J I ......... l§J I .......... l§J I ........... l§J
Autos, lmportod 970 Autos, lmportod 1--------970 Autos, Imported
JAGUAR MGB
Coupt. 4 IJ)t'ed transn1ii;,s1on, r
radk> and heater, air t~n
d!tioning, white \1'aH tires,
vi'ire \\'heels, Just beuut1tul.
(XXD2601
$3795
BAUER BUICK
23-t E. 17th St.
.l-18· 776.)
I
'68 MGR-GT. New radial
tires, ~w clulch, new paint,
$1550/best offl'r. )48.-4824
OPEL
OPEL '68 Deluxe \\'agon,
red, big eng., .( spd., p/d~
brks, R/1{, low mi. Good
1..'tlnd. Sl.200 or be11t oUer.
833--5507 or 833-3598
1969 -102 OPEL Stn Wgn,
R/H, auto, air, 40,000 mi
tins, $169'5. Eve•: )48-3693
PORSCHE
'63 Porsche Super
Cpe. Bahama yellow with blk
interior, AMflo'M, chro.ne
1 + 2. Automatic lransmi1· wheels, recent en g In e
sion, radio and heater. \Vil"1! PXW982
\\"heels. You \\'Oll't !ind one $2399
. nicer than lllls. (ZQB344i $3195 CHICK IVERSON vw
BAUER BUICK >1~3031 Ext. 66 or "
234 E, 17th St. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
Costa ~Iesa 548---7765 I '°'o-o=C~O=ST~A~M~ES~A-~-
KARMANN GHIA
'67 GHIA COUPE
Air condi .oning, • spe~d ra-
dio, heater. (UQV 4951'
BARWICK
IMPORTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. Coast H"'"'Y·
Laguna Beach
5464051 I 494-9m
MERCEDES BENZ
Otilll'.'.je County''>
L •• rqt·st Sel('ction
N('\., & Used
1\\<?rced e~ Be nz
Jim Slemons Imps.
w .1 rner & M.un St .
S.1 nt,1 An .1 546 .4114
MG ...........,. t.ift\ THINK ... ~ ..
''FRIEDLANDER"
1J7JI llA(M CKW"I". :tt)
893-7566 • 531-6824
NEW-USED-SE RV.
'65 PORSC1{E 36>C, \Vhite,
1 0'.1-'ner, 48,000 m i ' s ,
A?.1/F"~I B!aupunkt radio
PE RF EC T throughout,
675-4001.
PORSCHE 9U-S, late 1969
fac, air, Fi\f radio, all ex-
tras perr. cond. pri, parry,
$7450. {7141 623-3962
e '60 PPRSCHE cpe. Blk,
ne\v saddle int, llt'W tires,
chrn1 \\'his, Blau A~f/F:'ll.
X!nt thtuout. Reas. 557-7268
'58 Porsche convr-New Kanis,
clutch, tires. paint. Good
cond, $1400. 642-2486
e '64 PORSCllE C
GOOD COND * S2200 * 633.8911 *
1959 Porsche Super 00-Sharp.
Bes! offer.
64~2005 or 536-3652
'66 Porsche 911-Bahama
yelJoy,·, l o\vner. Xlnt cond.
S·llOO. Pvt pty 6#-4443
TOYOTA
$1295
1969 Toyota Sed, R., H., 4
speed. YSR 336
DEAN LEWIS
646-9303
1946 Harbor Bl., Cost11. ?.lesa
BIU MAXEY
!TJOIY(OIT!AJ
TOYOTA
$69.01 MONTH*
36 n1011. Def. pay prict.
$2484, 36 cir ca.sh p r l c e
f,ll03.55 incl. Tax & Lie
A.P.R, '14.5'1%. Serial No.
134.147.
*On approved credit
BiU Maxey Toyota
18$1 BEACH BL. !W7·85.55
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'69 LAND CRUISER
Salion \Vagon. 4 \\'heel drh·e.
(S?.t:R 490)
$2799
.BARWICK
lllfPORTS JNC.
DATSUN
998 So. Coast Hy,•y.
Lagttna Beach
5'16·4fr31 I 494-97TI
$1871
1971 TOYOTA COROLLA
2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED
#9878
CHOICE OF 5
..DeMlewi.i
• TOYOTA I
1966 Harbor, C.i\I. &16-93031
BEST BARGAJNS
COME SEE OUH.
SELECTION Of
TOYCYrAS
Jim Slemons Imports
140 W. Warner
Santa Ana
Open Eves. & Sun.
541).4125
'68 Corona Hardtop
25 '69 VW BUGS
ON SALE!!
All 100°/o Guaranteed!!
Parts & Labor
EXAMPLE:
'69 VW BUG
$1399
zuc 708
Kelly Blue Book Says Average Retail $1 720
OVER
110 USED VW's FROM
$399
CHICK IVERSON vw
1970 HARBOR
COSTA MESA
546-3031
Ext. 67 er 68
445 E. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
673-0900
Autos, Imparted 970 Autos, lmport&d--970
--T-R-IU_M __ P_H __
'71 SPITFIRES
NOW ON DISPLAY
-VOLKSWAGEN
'65 VW SEDAN
Come in for a test dri\·e!
Loaded. _Black 1.andau top. FRITZ WARREN'S
Automatic, radio, heater. SPORT CAR CENTER
(VWN 748) Take small down.
\ViH !Jnance pvt, ply, Call no E. ~t St., S.A. 547.0764
aft 10 am 494_ 7506 or 540 3100 Open daily 9-9; closed Sunday
Lie. # \'JY 6:-.tl. Total (.]01111
paymen1 o( S~7.~5, 36 n1onlh-
Jy payments of
'70 TOYOTA CORONA
4 Door. Automatic, d!r. Im-
maculate! (236 AQXI \Vill
VOLKSWAGEN
'66 VW SEDAN
take trade. Call 494-7744. Lie. # SKD 633. $52.9'5 total
do'.1-·n payment. 36 n1onthly
$34.38
Annual pt>rrrntage ra1e ol
17.92'/(, iOAC!. Total cash
price including !a.x & lie.
$~6.9:i.
Harbour V.W.
payments of 18711 BEACll BL. 842-443.:i TR--.-,-E-,-.. -,,.-,-,-, -,-,-1-,·.I $38.20 HUNTINGTON BEACH
TRIUMPH
Overl!z pistons & sleeves. Annual percentage rate of l --~,6=9~V~W~B~U7G~-
Compl reblt, better than 17.92% (OAC). Total cash .............
1962 MG Convt.
11811 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. B11ch 147-1555
I mt N', of a.It Hw7. oa Bdl new. U75. 642-2399 afl 5 prire including tax & lie.
=.63,.--=To_y_o,_ta__,Land,.--'7""'-0Cn>c--ci..,-r.· l-~T=R7.fU7.M7PH=.-T=R~-'1=B~1'6=2-I $10'51.95 .. 4 speed, radio, heafrr.
<TAZ 142) tires and wheelll. Other ex-$525. Good eond. $480. Call
64Z-2347 or 558-1616. tI'a.!!. $1375. 431-5044 * 3546-2565 After 6 Pr.1 *
980 Autos, New
But yau savt it bath when you buy and where you drivel The low,
low price on this fine quelity compact lets you kee p some of your
cash and the cott cf operation i' low tool Save both ways at John·
son & Son Lincoln Mercury.
980
Harbour V .W.
18711 BEACH BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEAOI
Large Selection
Of VW Campers,
Vans, Kombis,
Buses, New & Used
lmmedl•t• Delivery
CHICK IVERSON vw
54"3031 Ext, 66 ot 61
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA P.tESA
'68 VW SEDAN
Lie. • \\'XE 837. S77.95 total
down payment. 36 monthly
payments of
$57.26
prrcentagt. rat@
17.82% (OAC), Tola! ca!h
price including tax & lie.
$1576.0C..
Harbour V.W.
la?l 1 BEA0-1 BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
163 VW Bug
Radio, heater, 4 !Pt'ecl. (\\'AZ
10.1). ...
Full Pric@
ii99
BARWICK
.BARWICK
Ji\iPORTS INC.
DATSUN
998 S..i. Coast 1-h~y.
Lilguna Beach
~6-·IO;iJ I ~9-l-9771
Comp. \\'Jlh fiberglass body,
$515. or best o/fc!'. C111/
after 4 'l.111. ;~!0·31'03.
'61 V\V Bug. englne torn
down, chass1.~ & body in
g(! shape. '71 tai:::s. Grroit
for dune buggy. $'al or bst
olfrr. Joe Quinn 870-1170
Wkdys. 494-637() eves/y,.·knds.
'69 V\V Sunroof. am/fm,
au!o. P\'I pty mu11t Sl'li.
$1550 nr orr. &U-6027
'68 V\V, AUTO.
1:-l A !!URRY Sli50
• 6-lfHJ742 •
vw=-n~,-,-1%0, sunroo~f~. -rr-17>Ir
eng, tr3ns. r.tust Sell S.'150
or bst orr. 4S4-1768
'66 BUtl • X!nt \\'h1/r~'<i
int. 41000 ini. 1''cw tires.
$850. 6--J l .. IJ26 or 5-18-3389.
V\V '69, ln1maculate, Many
xtras, :'11u~t i;('ll, $1650 or
mak<' offrr. 536-2727
VOLK S\\'/\GEN 196.~ • very
good r-hafll·. Sl27:i Call
646-54();1
Call 642-5678 & Save?
Autos, U sed
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, Used 990
VOLKSWAGEN BUICK
VW '66 BUG BUICK '70 LeSabre • Gorge·
l\tJN'l' CONDITION Olli liurk blue & white. !..an.
Attractive gn.-en !lnlsh Y.'ith dau, fflclory air rotld P /1,
beigt' interior, radio, heat· P/b, $3450. G«·Z707 '
CHRYSLER
'69 TOWN & Country
S-pauenger .,,..a.g.:)n. Loaded.
AM/Fl\f. Mr. Ron McKen-
dry weekdays only, &lZ-4000
COMET
FORD
'66 Ranch Wagon
Automatlc, powu .-tttrillc.
(f:WJ OOJJ.
$999 er, etc. Chee.~ this out for e '68 RrVIERA -Air, stereo,
price & quality. (T1Ui543l bucket seatl, full power.
$925. John.son & Sou, 2626 SJl95. fi?3-43S9
Harbor Bl. Costa ?.Iesa.1----=-----1'6"1 STATION win. auto, good
5'10·5630 ' '56 BUICK lln!s, Xlnl running cone!,
BARWICK
!MPOR1'S INC.
· Good trans. $99. 64&-0142 S25Q. 645-4038 '68 V\V Bug: paint )Ob, r1n1~. -======,.,.,,-DATSUN
oew '''''" & '"'"'· 11300. CADILl:AC CONTINENTAL 9'J8 So. Coast llWy.
Call 673-93J2
I .,68-vw · Bug-Xlnt cond.
$UOO or oll<'r. fi73.-02.S9 I
Laguna Beach
CADILLAC '61 Lncln Cont'I Sdn Si&-4051 ! 494-9m
"70 SEO. DE VILLE Full pwr + air cond &. rood '67 Mustang, 6 cyl, 11ticlc
1 tirt>s. A very good work car . V Cl ~-VOL VO 1~.000 local miles. Only by I for nnly $450 Cllllh Se at shitt ery ean. ..,, ...
---------Sl't'tng and driving this like 316 Lugonia New~rt s'oor-49S-5006, 837-3306.
l"Ll'U'V'LI'\ new trade in can you ap-. 642-4661' MERCURY
preciate condition. E.'<otlc "'7'~-=----=
~ lHINI ~YO!YO'
green gold rnetalliC! finish 1970 MARK III cost $9600 -19_7_0_MA __ R_Q_U-IS_C_P_E-.
wilh hArmoniz!ng interior &: ne"'" Sac. $6499. Under war-
landau roof. Fully power ranty, DLR. OY89A803507, SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR
equipped of course, plus phone 636-KllO ll.000 MILES Attractive medlwn turqUoise
"FRIEDLANDER" M1/FM stereo, tele • tilt CORVmE milt nni.th w:lth whlte illter-strg. l'o1leel, Affi CONO.,
t:l1M lliAClt tHWY, )f)
89J. ":566 • 537.s824
NEW.USED-SE RV.
plUs much MORE. See thi.J 1 ..... 0 CORVE'IT ENG 327. 1or &: landau root. ltnmacu-~ late! Premium equipped one before you buy. (291).. clulch. Bell Housin<> Muncie t '-~ --._ l BEJ). Priced to sell. Joh1>-~-. au o . ._. .... s., anr-uu s ereo
son le Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., 4 !'ipd. Complete. Perteet ndlo, heater, power 1teer·
condition $400. 645-4687 tng, power brakes, factory Costa 1'.1esa, s.10-5630 a1r cond. 't'Po.1 •• •nnOess ,., -'67 CORVE'ITE Fstbck, All ••-J ....-
$3093 1966 CADILLAC like new• Mat new tires. P\\T, Air, Auto tram, $2COO
197! VOLVO
DE:\10 7360
SEO DEVILLE or. best offer. Aft -4 pm: etC!. See & uk I.or demon·
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE 540-0153. stration. (916 BEQ). John-
\\'e Specialize Jn
O\'c!'.~l'as Delivery
Beautilul ebony black finish COUGAR son & Son. 2626 Harbor BL,
with black lantlau roof & Cosla Mesa. 540-5630.
...DeMLew W VOLVO
blac.k I eat her lnlerlor. l i!i~~~~i!ij----;;i 1969 Mercury Montego Equipped wirh alJ the IUX· A'l"I'RACl'IVE It
""' '"IU"'· ""'1 pow"· 1969 COUGAR XR7 ECONOMICAL rad!o, heater. factory air Light Ivy finish with gold tr
cond., etc. tSBD 1551 $1675, VS, automatic, AM-FM stet· terior equipped wlth autr
10Ci6 Harbor, C.i\f. 646--9303 Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbo r eo radio, power ateering & matlc tranl., radio, heate1
.----BJ., Costa Mesa 5'10-56.:lO brakes, ivire wheel covers, power steering, etc. PriCC"
Autos, U sed 990 .66 COUPE d• \'ill·. XJ·t for quick sale. $1675. Yer " "' " a!r cond., New premium BUICK cond, Vinyl top, Fully load· tires, over 50'7c of factory 380. John50n .!i Son, 26= ...... _. .. iiMiiiiiil «I. Must sell 0011·. $nOO warranty remaining. (812-Harbor ffivd., Costa Mesr. I or best oiler. Pvt pty, AGB) 540-5630.
1969 BUICK ELECTRA icc.67,,_,_.=884~~~ $2995 -~UST AN~
1970 CAD EI Dorado-17,000 '65 Mustang (RZF487), Run~.
Custoin .1 !Joor hardtop. Full n\i, fully e~uipped. Silver BAUER BUICK xlnt, Will let lt go for
f . . 1 grey & white. A.\J: Calt 23 , 7 h' f al .,. """ power, at·lory air, v1ny 5'1B-3.JS6; PM: 675-7102 ask ., E. 1 th St. anyt ing o v ue . .,._...,....,,.
roof. factory 1\arranty rt'· fo Paul Henders ' Costa Mesa 548-7765 '70 Boss J02 Fastbac.k.
main1ng. 1\'CLr.i71 r on. P /S..P/B-R/H.
$3cgc '62 CAD. St>dan de Ville Full Immaculate!! 64&-698() J J power, $j()(), Evening:
~143-231S '68 MUSTANG 2+2, p/s.,
BAUER BUICK
2:'.·I E. 17th SL
Costa :\lesa 54S.7765
'(i6 Buick .Skylark 2-dr hrdtp,
All factory xtras, INNA5081
'fill E! Dor<ido, Ali xtras.
r.lust sell/make ofr, Ph. aft
5 pm, 5-l&-0650
'69 Coupe DcVi!le
Full po"·er, good t'Ornl,
673-2262 or 673--5723
$899. Lo mi's, $10 dellvers.1 --~~~~~--
1945 Ha»boc Bl, CM. CAMARO
6~6-9<l·lS
'69 RIVlERA, white, rlh, '70 CAillARO·P/s, PI h,
p/b, p is. No air. Xln't radio, au". Only 9 mo old.
cond. S:l:BJ Pvt ply. 61>-2·122 $3099. 67~1298 or 545----66'\6
1969 BUICK
SACRIFICE 1969 C11maro.
4-spd, Loaded. $2095/best
orrer. 644-4319
~por! \\'agon. 3 !eatrr. V8, CHEVROLET
alltomanc. radto, 11eater.1---:1:::7-::0-o'.No:O-V"A,_--
)Xl\\'er stN'rin~. faclory air
condit1011ing, roof rack, ra.
dial ply t1n:s. Locally O\\'ll-V8, automatic. power s!ef'r-
ed car. (Yi'oli\1052J ing. dlr. Loaded. !CVEJ69) $3195 l''ull pr!ce $2195. Call 494-7744
'62 Chev. No1'a f[. Gd. tr<1ns.
BAUER BUICK new 1 ires. auto., 6 cyl. $2!15.
See at Texaru stallon 7000
23-t E. Jith SL Olk. \V. Coast H\\'y., 'west
Costa ~TC'sa 5-18-7765 NcY.TJOl't Beach. 612-9182
6-16-1925
'67 BUICK RIVIERA 1 '65 Chevy 2-dr hrdtp, auto,
0\VNER Fae air cond, Full !N~. PfD6JO) S299, S_IO . . dehvers on approved credit. f'.O'\'t'r, Vinyl roof. il11chel1n See at 19.:15 Jlarbor Blvd
tires, l\1aJ: \\-'his. slereo C.M. '
lnpe. CALL DR. JOYNER , -
AT :i57·i0i7 Sat or Sun, 1-6 &I Chevy 2-<lr hrd1p Impala, A!I (al·tory Xlras. {JZY389)
pm. S499, $HI dt>livers. 1945
'68 RIVIERA -Loil.ded. Harbor, C.ilf. 646-9448
AJ\1/F:\I stereo. Be au I .
sih·cr '.1-'/blac:Y vinyl lop.
\\'kdys only, 642-4000 :\fr
Ron r.·tcKendry
e '63 C!Jcvy Impala
Fae air. P/h, PIS. V8
VERY CLEAN * $600 * 646-1880 * l iiiiii~~~~~~-'6.J lr.IPALA 4 dr hrdtp, fact 1970 RIVIERA .,,., p/h, pi•. 10 mi'•· PvJ
ply. 67:~1823
f11ll pi'J\1rr {'\JUlpn1r11t plus '6!1 Chevy Van 00". \\'hire,
factory air c-onditioning, V-8 307. S\9:-io. Call Pvt. pty,
A.\1-f''i\1 ~lrrro radio. \'1nyl ITTj-2~22, 1~~~~------1 J\'lOI, A gorgeous car. (7S.I-e '59 BEL AIH, GQl"H't work
J\1'1.IJ car, $125. 543--0~. 360
$4195
BAUER BUICK
2:\-1 E. J7rh Sl.
Cos!a :\lei;a ~8.7765
Broadway, C.r.T.
'61 CHEV)' 2-<Jr 28,1, chnn
whlio;, new tires, brakes, £le.
S'.1511. :i.%--418.1.
'66 Impala
9 Pass. \\'ag. $950.
673-8963
'6.1 POLARIS. R&H, 55.000
ml. Runs good, $390. Ph:
846-2204
FORD
Ford '70 LTD 4 Dr. Sod.
Excellent local trade. Beau.-
p/b, alr.cond. $1ti00. Call
54f>.2585. I
'70 Mach I 351, P/S, P/B,:
Auto, Air, Other options.·
541-23'13 alt 6 pm & wlmds
OLDSMOBILE
UM dark Ivy metallic fin. '69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H.T .
ish y,•ith matching landau ONE OWNER 14,000 MI.
root. Ivy gold Interior, Beautilul silver mbt finisl-
Equipped with auto. trana., with burgundy interior
radio, heater, power steer., Equipped with auto tran~
power brakl'!, factory air. radio, heater, power stec
etc. Shows excellent care. log:, power brakes, pov
13T:iCQS) Priced to sell. windows, air cond. If ~
Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor are hard to please. d<
Bi., Costa 11es11., MQ.5630 rnl.!s lhls fine car. (XLll
,65 LTD Jvhnson & Son, 2626 Harbo1
Bi., Cotta Mesa. 540-5630 ' r.ruST SELL. T-Bird Motor,
57,500 ml., 2 dr. hardtop, OLDS '67 Cutlass Supl'f!r
all power cxc. wind., lac Convt. V-8, p/s. p/b, R/1-
air , auto. transm., AM-Fr.1 Ne1v wide tread belted tire~
radio, radial ply, clean, xlnt Good cond. $1200 or best
cond., 1 owner. Asldng S900, ofter. 833-5507. B33-3593
$120 below cumnt Blue j Book. Make an oiler. Call '67 Olds Cutlass Sup. Retifl"d couple 11elling to travC'I ' 64-4--0605 Eves, w~kend, Sl49S. 673-'1343
e '67 COUNTRY SQUIRE '68 OLDS Cutlus 2--dr HT.1 Air, P/S, 27,000 ml, r&h.
1
Excellent condition, J!ij CID Cl@an· SI550. 646-2305
eng. only 51.000 mi. PS/PB,
auto transn1ission. new air PONTIAC j
conditioning, new wide 1 ---~__,...,......, __ _
tire'-$1%0. DAVE ROSS
* "1·'I1l * PONTIAC
1965 Ford Gal 500XL Complete Sales & ~Ce
BuckC't seats, ixl\ver steering, 2480 Harbor Blvd.
pmver brakes, automatic at Fair Dr. I
tran~ .. 46,000 orig. mlles. Costa Mesa 546-8017
\Von't last Jong. NMV 268. Open 7 day1 a week
$115. Johnson Jc Son, 2626 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM
Harbor Bl., Cos!a i\fesa. 540·5630. '67 GTO. A steal for $129~
r.1ust see to appreciate 1
'64 Ford Galaxie 500 ~lust sell, o"'"·ner In Vier
2 Door Hlll'd\op. Radio, heal-Nam. 5-19-0040
er, JlO\\'er steering, power '64 GRAND Prix, 2 dr, HT,
brakes. factory air, i'IUtoma. xtras, fine cond. $550. Pvt
tic trans. $645. ORB 512. Pty: 54S-4211
Johnson & Son, 262'6 Harbor
Blvd., Co~!a i\le11a. 540-5630 RAMBLER
'61 FORD Squire \Vagon I ·,-63_Ra_m_b_Jo_r _2_d_r.-327--,-,,,
Oean, Runs Good. $150. ln. 3 zpd. F1oor shlf1,
51~·2Z1J. I overdrive. 4: 11 rearend .
I:. you ad in the classlll~ y,•ide ovals with mags, F:O.I
SECTION? Someone 1 s radio with ta~ deck. S800
watchlna: for It. DI a I or Best oiler. 548-8359 alt 5
&U-5678 today! PM.
990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Usect
1971 COMET IMPORTS INC.
DATSUN
998 So. Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach
546-4051 I 4!J4..9m
LOOK! WHAT
WE HAVE FOR YOU
BRAND NEW
1970
ROAD RUNNER
11111 fftt91'f' ~.,,.. $
,111t rUI•, ..._..,,
AM Ndi., wlllte -11
tfN&, tflttM ,, .. -'"'
• Hetrtff.f "rftht .....
celM.
2 DOOR
JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540-5630 642-0981
'67 VW SEDAN
Llc, • YEV927, $72.95 total
down payment, 36 inonlhly
'payments or
$53.45
Annual percentage r a I e
17.92',0 101\C). Total <'ash
prier including tax & hr..
Sl·lTI.9:i.
Harbour V .W.
!8711 BEACll BL. 842--4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
WANTED ,
I'll pay top dollar for ~'Our
VOLKSWAGEN today, Call
and a,;k for Ron Pinchol,
5'9-3031 Ext. 66.67. 673-0!XXl,
'62 VW Bug Gd Cond
CLEAN. $.'l50. 673-4387
SOULFUL 1956 V\r TI('rds
good hon1c. CasSl'tte tflpe.
Very clean, $4((1, 494-5&87
\Ve'U help YoU sell! 642-5678
150 USED CARS lO CHOOSE FROM
'69 CHEV. IMPALA
V.8, llYIO, it•n1., pOwtr 1!terin9,
t~<J io, he•ler. e good ve1ue in
e•ervw•y IYCMl61)
'68 lRIUMPH SPllFIRo
4 1peed, ell ouhl•11din9
v•l111, f RRG2SI J
'69 FIAl 850 COUPE
4 1peed, 1111 ouhtendin9
v1lue. 13l4AI
30 To Choo''
From
1 DOOR: HAR:D·
TOP, ltl VI, •11·
t om e tic, ti11ted ,1.... ,.11.,. i11·
1fr11ment p1111/,
"•••v duty 1u1p•1t·
•1011, hee•v cluty
111•••1, redio, F70
1114 r•hed ""hile
l1Ht' tlre1, wire
wJieef CO••'ll•
l•RM?lNOf.
I J9601).
$2695
\
l
O.W.Y PILOT Mond.iy, April 5, l 97l
Sears
Allote 12 Volt Battery
With Trade-In
Noa. 4338, 4339 1199
• Replace your worn-out battery with a
Sean Allstate Battery.
Heavy Duty Motor Oil
SAVE 25o/o! Regular 39c Qt.
e Meets or exceeds all
new car manufacturers
warranty requirernent s. 29~
SAVE '1"'! '3.49
Tun~UpKit
Super ''alue! 199
Includes: Coodeo.scr,Rotor
tndPoiou.
~
Booster Cables
99e
Out1tanclina nlucs oow at
SeKs while quantitirs luL
-
Allstate
Spark Plugs
Terrific Buy! 47c
Fantastic vaJues on All.state
spark plugs at one low
price!
12-In.
Jack Stand
Soper Value! 199
Sears irurdy iack stand ad·
jusu lO 3 beigha.
$J.52!
Rugged O.RR. •
Shocks
Regular $4.99 Tubeless Blackwalls
•.• Any Size Listed
''
•Outstanding value
now at Sean
• Fits moet cara
•Original Equipment
Replacement.
Aok About Sean
Convenient Credit
Plane.
SAVE '2!
Regular '11.99 Testing Kit
Low Priced!
• 3-Pc. tes ting includes: tim• 999 i ng lite, remote starter switch,
con1pression tester, vacuum
gauge. Terrific value!
Sears Carburetor
Air Filter
As Low .<\s 199
Tapered ends provide leak
proof seal oo all filter
sides. At Sean!
•
Sears SAVE '2!
Carburetor Cleaner Grease Gun
Terrific Buy! 77c RegularS:l.99 3 99
Increase ga.1 mileage and Develops 1000 prcssurr.
bcrter ign11ion with a clean Load 3-way cartridge dis·
carburecor. pecuer and bulk.
SIZE •·.t:.r. SIZE t·.•:.r. £At.:H t.<1.r.H
6.95xl4 1.94 8.25xl4 2.32
7.35x l4 2.01 7.7ox 15 2.16
7.75xl4 2.14
1671
Plus F.E.T. Each And Old Tire
Whitewall s Only $3 More Per Tire
I
(,0 mi le11 east or Loi An11,f'le~
J unctions or Hi,:hway1 60 and 39.i
DI Sf:OlJl'liT TICKt:T§
,t.,.,lohl• O"IT •I M on Tirlrt""" SI O~"f
p.,,..,.h.,r Prrrr ef ••1 Tle•iH (or IM Ri~rT>
oodt 1 .... nd rn~.
St '(ll'S IUINA ,All( TA 1-41100, JJ1-41:t0
CANOGA PAIUC 340.0641
ll MONTI GI 3·:ttl J
OllNDALI CM 1·1004, Cl 4·4611
lONO llACM HI 1·0121
OlTM"C & IOTO AN l ·S211
P'ICO Wt 1-4242
IANTA ANA Kl 1-3371
llAAt.,...UCX AND CO,
'
COM"ON NI 4-2111, NI 2.J761
COVINA t44·0611
HOLLYWOOD MO t-St41
INGtlWOOD Ol 1·2,21
OIANOI 637°2100
'AIAOINA 611·l211, JJl-4211
J'OMONA NA t ·Jl61
IANTA •I l'llNOI t44·1011
SANTA MONICA ti. 4•6711
IOUTM COAIT PlAIA l40-Jl33
Tubeless Blackwalls
•.• Any Size Listed
SIZE ··.l:.T.
I I' II ~IZ E J' J'T.
t \I K
7.3jxJ4 4lc 7.7.>x l4 44c
8.25xl4 45c
1011
Plus F.E.T. Each And Old Tire
Whitewall s Only ~2 More Each
lHOUSANO OAKS 4t7-4J4'
TOllANCI S42·1 Sll
U,LANO tlS·l•1T
U1 eSeara
Revol"U.,
Charge
VAUIT P'O l ·l461, tlll·l110
VflMONT 'l t -1 t1t
r
"
,)