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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-12 - Orange Coast Pilotl 7 • • Dnlaneys~ Dearing In Sto~k Swindle Case ' P~llce in Sky Suspect Held • Ill Newporl Beach police today are holding a San Bernardino man on attempted rape charges after officers allege his car was follo\ved by the searchlight from Newport poli~ helicopter as patrol _cars from three communities closed in on the ground. Police identiied the suspect as Earl Kenneth Lukins, 39, of 14200 Del Arno Ave., San Bernardino. . During the pursuit, Santa Ana pohce Sgt. Charles Mi\ler crashed his patr?l car into a drainage ditch. He escaped ln1ury. The Case began in Newport when a 17· Y1!ar.old girl reported to police tha_t she had been attacked by a man wearing a gray hOOded sweatshirt. She said he was driving a black sports pickup ond accosted her as she walked on East Coast Highway near the entrance to cameo Highlands in Corona de! Mar. She reported that passing motorists Jgnored her screams for help u &he struggled wilh her assailant in the well· lighted intersection. . A resident of Newport Beach, the girl told poli~ she was walking home from tending a sick horse at the Irvine Horse Ranch, one-quarter mile to lhe east on Coast Hi&bway. The victim said the man ran away from her and escaped in the sports pick Orange C:oast 1''enther Early fog and afternoon sunshine relum to the coast Tuesday with temperatures dipping to S2 along the beaches and 76 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Most police departme'PJ.ts in Ora nge County arc not set up to hpndlt-CO!ll.IU"1tT frovd. 1011.! .OU! dtputy district ti'torn4"t1 11S!1gtt· ed s1tch sases. Stor11. Page 8, ... HM H C•lllwft'41 1 Clltc.klM U, lt Cl•Hllleill tf.M C-kl ,. Creu-C ti Dffftl N.tlnt I Dl ... l'CH I ~•1i.r1e1 l'•tt • hMrtallll!lthl ti ,.111..,,.e-n.tJ -.. ' • AftRL.~ 11 ,,,,.""' fl "''""' .. "'"'" ... °'-c-tr • SJIYl1 hortw tt ,_,. """ llKll Mt'1tttl :rl·tJ Ttlfl'lt.IH t1 Tk1lr" fl •.. ,..... . w-·• ,...., IJ.11 W...-111 N.-s 4-4 Set April 21 Rape Newport • Ill up, driving westbound on Coast Highway while she ran to a nearby home for aid. Responding to the call, the helicopter piloted by Officer John Beene and crewed by Officer Tim GrW1deman , spotted a car mat.ching that description driving north on MacArthur Boulevard at t h e intersection of Campus Drive. Followed by the helicopter, the vehicle traveled to the San Diego Fr:eeway, then to the Newport Freeway, northbound, and exited at Edinger Avenue, where officer Mill er spotted the auto. When Miller attempted to pull the car over, he alleged the swpect accelerated and made a ·series of U turns. The auto got onto the ramp leading to the northbound Newport Freeway and halfway up the ramp, with Miller Jn hot pursuit, made a right turn down the embankment and jumped a drainage ditch at the bottom. 1'-1iller wasn't as lucky and crashed into the ditch. • The helicopter crew reported the suspect vehicle circled back onto the ramp and too!{ the Newport Freeway to the Santa Ana Freeway southbound and exited at Tustin Avenue. Tustin police had sent units to pursue the vehicle but officers said they could not see the car. They were guided by the spotlight from the helicopter. Police theorize Lukins abandoned bis auto on Raleigh Place near the intersection of Mitchell Avenue and ran toward Del Amo Avenue with a gray sweatshirt in his hands, officers said. Lukins was arrested as he leaped a fence between Debusk Lane and Del Amo, landing in lront of two waiting Tustin patrol cars. The Tustin Officers. Donald Grimm and Sgt. Allan Brown. said today they would not ti,ave been able to locate the suspect so easily if it bad not been for the help oC the helicopter. Bomb Threat Forces Jumbo , Jef to land WASHINGTON !UPI) -A t.)ephoned bomb threat forced an Eut.em Air Lines 747 jet to make an emergency landing at Dulles lntematlonal Airport Sunday. The p I a n e s 283 passengers w e r e evacuated and a search of Lhe craft fumed up nothing. The plane was en route from New York to Miami when the threat wu telephoned to Eas:ttm'1 office in Newark, N.J. Assets Shaken For Charity SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Tu!· lah Hanley, the belly dancing art patroness, raised more than $1,900 for charity with a "Happening" that included nude body painting. Nearly 800 persons attended .the event Sunday night at the Family Dog Rock Music Hall where young men and women took off their clothes to be painted and wiggle to rock music. Mrs. Hanley, a widow from Bradford, Pa., ordered "all those with clothes on" off the stqe. Tullah was clad in a bare midriff metallic outfit. The art patroness, who described her clothes as a •1 navel maneuvers" costume, last year gave the De Yuung Museum $3 million worth of paintings. Proceeds J r o m Sunday night's event went to the financially troubled Visual Arts Center for Underprivileged Children. The former exotic d a n c e r gyrated and said, in her best Budapest accent: "You mu!it shake your assets for a good cau.se." 7-f.oot · Antitpie Steel Trap Taken in Mesa A hunt is on for a huge, rare, grizzly bear trap presented to one of the first white girls born in Lewia County, Wash., as a memento and unceremoniou!ily stolen from her Costa Mesa typewriting academy early today. Great sentimental value is attached to the seven-foot antique, along with I t a eight-foot, hand-forged chain. Maud and Claud Qiilcoat, cf 173 Del Mar Ave., are offering a reward for Its return. Claud, 81, ia her brother. "He was so }..1~.J•i®d hardly eit ~l1• idf Ml.SS Chilcoat, wbo no longer teache! typing. The 75-year-old bear trap relic was bulldozed out of a Washington mountainside during early day highway iC!OUtrUCtioo .~6eerJ..fii UleOilcoat family for 25 years. Actual physical value. of the 150-pound artifact 11 '500, while il! historical worth is considerably more notable. Only one other griztly bear trap like it was ever made. Miu Chilcoat didn't suggest why. Miss Chilcoat said the trip's brutal steel jaws would clamp •round the unfortunate grizzlies' legs, wbUe the {S.. TRAP, P110 I) • non an Grizzly Bear , Trap Stolen · fro1n .Mesa Typing A~ade·•ny •• Yanks Drop Big · Weapon On Troops SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Air Force used Its 7Y.z ton blockbuster bomb as a tacUcal weaJ)On for the first time today ip the Indochina war, dropping two of I.hem on C.Ommun.ist troop concentrations around be!le-ged Fire Base 8 in tbe Central Highlands. The bombs, largest in the U.S. arsenal except for nuclear weapons, were parachuted from Cl30 transport planes. They exploded a few yards of( the ground, blasting holes as big as football fields In the jungles. Their concussion can kfll a man or di.!lable him by causing bleeding from the ears and nose, Despite rain squalls and high winds in the Fire Ba11e 6 region in the Central Highlands, B52s dropped 500 tons of bombs on the Communists near the base. The 23 sorties flown today raised to 2,500 tons the amount of bombs dropped in the area since the siege began March 31. Front dispatches said Ole Communists had sent In 10,000 troops to the fire base area and that the government had a Slmilar~lud force "there, the heavi~· concentrations since the invasion of Laos,' 1!1.S. military soutee! in Saigon said their. lntelllg~ ind"5ated • • '• s m a 11 e r ' ~ Communist force but dJd not elaborate. • The Viet Cong, which calls -the Fire' Base Hill No. ,1001,~ broadcast several victory clal'!\8 · and' said one Saigon reinforcement column broke and ran when Jt came ®def attack. 'Ibe Viet Cvng said they had killed 620 Saigon troops In the battle. Saigon reported 2,624 Communl.sl! slain at a loss of 172 government dead. Reports from U\e area indicated that the North Vietnamese commander in charge of the attack on\Fire Base 6 had moved his headquarters from Laos into South Vietnam to dlreaf. \he f,(gh&. ·,The. base is ne~r the J,ntertectlorr" of Lao.s. ' DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONO~"( Al'Tell!llOOlil; APRJC.J?, (197f WL-<.._, .... .,,<IKtlllts..11 •Mia. On the Hoeks.? ' UPl1T ....... : Adress Raquel Welch, who stirred l n t ere st w!ien She wore see-- · \~rpugh · mlfii .dress-~,J1lfl'.r.Y per m)IP~er.P~ck '<¥:.tis in 1967, . Wdul'd.n(ifiler1' confirm nor deny divOrce .rumors SUnd.8.y. He bas r~ portedly· packed_ and moved , from the couple's Bevetiy 1iills apart- ment., Raquef stud she hoped to ~ave more to tell toda:f. f1e~ring,· s~t ~p·ril· 21 . . . . ' In Srock ·Fr.aud Count ' Cimbodla and South Vietnam ln the · 1 ; ••• , ,; ay-~ e.vu.ft:. . ·"u .. • · ii~st· hlm .~-.tbe; fur;ther delaJ of Central Highlands. • '\ ~ 11111111trJ'i.t,s•~~ I , .., . . !... . ....D. •Sullivan, quoting highly placed South ; , ;_:!:.>I.. , 1 · · , • · ~'• . ,,.--....-uadlon. Viel;llamese mJJit.ary aourcea, aaid the. J~p!I ano Mar1ene . ~aney waay, "The d.l.s&rlct attomey"s ource hu bad headquarters of Hoang Minh 'fboa were ordered to face prehm1nary hearing a year and a half to Jnvestlgale thae Q:.f~mander of the J.3.day-old olfensiv~ April 21 in Santa A.n11 munleipal court on . cba,rgea againat us and they .lhoUld lrnow against Ibo ba_ge., w~i;:i•ved local<d . eraod . the It , and, forgew .c h.u ~es • .._ • -'lhit 1 . llnii •• ......:. I aliouit~th Ibo,,.,. 11111 s)eiitrrililg rrom'wnal"l> all~od'to 'be lite '"' •IKIW_ •m eo Y ··-• ~ I thai be · moved his h e ad q u a r t ~ r s $3 n\illion defrauding of lpveston in the Dulaney aald. ' · 1 tfequenUy to avoid bombing attacb. The Newport st~kbroJter's World Financial Judge Mast auggested that OulaneJ ' headquarters ii known as· B3. Trends emp1rc. dilcusi the matter with his 11ttomey The 7 .S.ton bomhl have been used Judge Pau1 Mast's ruling means that Robert Law and sent the eloquent , previously to blast out landing pads; In the the globe trotting couple. will go to court. defendant b;ck to Orange County jaQ., jungles for U.S. helicopters but mllii.ry ror the first limo with their co-<lefondanl, llll{aney Is J\e!d ih neu of 1311 500 bali !IOUrces said they were effective against Jame! S~ley or HunUngton Beach, the and Mn. Dulaney is free on her own l m_assed Communist troops. In tome fOJ1mer v1c.-e preeldent ol the Investment n!cOgniAnoe. '. operations the big bombs are floated complex headed by Dulaney. S~pley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle Is I down by parachute and dttonated a few Dulaney. 11, today made anolhtr frt!f: on $311,500 ball. He tacea ldenilcal yardJ off the ground to bla11t out an area outburst lrom the defendant's box lo chlf'&es of grand I.heft, forgery Ind 1 !Seo ASIA WAR, P11< I) which h• protested Ill< charges !Uod {Sfe DULANEY, Pqe I) • I 1 · J ) DAlLY PILOT $ urke Asks borrion ime Limit reduclkJD ln tht time period ,.,·omen have aa abortiOn. from 2'I l''ttb 14 bas been 111>qosled by .....,mblyman Barb (R-Hwtllngtoo BeachJ. a.Id, '"It ls 1 medical !act that ture babies weighing &1 little as lf hive SW"Vivt'd to become mature, adult human beinp.. believe it is inhwna.OOy crud for y to pet"ffill the killing of hwnJ.I who ha\'t a ch.mot to llJl"ViYe "°"""''ent of the mother," ht said.. kt outlmtt several othtr proposals wookl drastically revise I b e Penl><"lic' ~ Ad cl -under more than 100,000 legal abortions ve been performed in California. He said introductioo of five bills and raolutloa"Jaoowaywutomw t I condone er ....,,t abarilcm a IOward effectinl birth control, or a •11 of .tiJ1ill& onr'1 respcmibillty tholr Idiom. .. measures art deligDed t o le --cal1od loopl>ile1 .-ID the Jaw, wlllcb hi aid II iDg med bJ ..ne wamm to "ltlelpl '"P"o!b!IHJ fer -ol lhdr _.. -aptda" suggests that unless I W'OOWl been ~rgoing p1ychl1trle t befort pregnancy. sbe could 1et an abortion oo U. pnmnlJy grounds that gl•in& birth would ~di·ri her menial balth. Many •HXD~n ~ an abortica do 00 tbe5t grounds wilb statements sudt 'll you don't give me an allartiaD. 111 myself ~· 1bis rtatm>mt has been imtilled as ~ of the women's pc:a' balt.b and the -ii ~=~ .. Bu:rb said. ~ Butte meuure would ban 111 11111.. the -rnkw "ttee 'tl'U ooovioced it 'ti' a I 1!'"""1ol the woman'1own-.W. molullon Burke Is --have the Stale Dopartmeot cl Bult.b study the ·-lllwltloo the liberaliud law took tffed for a to the leglsla-by JlllQIJ')' cl Another Barke bill would prohibit lily of the abortion r e v l e " mm.iUee to perform an abcrtion. olice Probing arage Fatality n Huntington Police today were Investigating the th of a Huntintington Beach man pPaftllltly killed in a garage accident. They said the body of Ed'tr1rd Bruce ·vimgood, 48, 9901 GarttU Circle, wu in his garage Sund1y afternoon by eer John Saoden:. PoUce hid received report that Livengood bad not been for one week. Sanden tlroke down the door to the , and RPOnedly found Uvengood (ace down on the floor. An auto was the garage. The 1uto'1 lgnjUOl'Hlfu on the battay WU dud, accord.i.Dg to officu. An injury in the pelvic area, and a eight-Coot aluminum ladder hive invl!Sllgatora to believe Uven1ood 'ed accJdeotally. OffiCU 5Ander1 said the garage WU ktd from the inlide and lberl! wu no vlderlce to suuest foul play. A cot'Oller'1 utopsy hu been achedult!d to determine exact caute of death. OWIH COAJT DAILY PILCT ............ " .............. '---·-c.......... S.C" 71 ou.MGC co...rr '"UILISMIMC) (OMP'AltY lehti H. W•ff ,,,.~ Miii ..,....,. J•tlr I. Cwri•y vie. Pr"9i...t .... ~.1 M-..r • n. ...... IC••Til Elf!"°" lh•••I A. M11r,liiiR• ......... ~,- Cll1rln H. l"' l lclii•rtl P. Nill ~IMI M41Mtln, llfl"'"' ....... c.-.. M1M: :m W.t a1y llrwt .. ....,, '-"': m:a "-' ~--­u.-a.-dl: m '"'''"' ,._ M.-tilof1'M ._,,l 1"1S ~ IMtirlt .. "" , ......... , -.... •1 c.ltlN fl ... Dill\. Y PIL.OT, ...,. ~ .. _.._ .. ,._..,_ Iii ,.,.,...,.. •ll'f --..... ..., .. ...,. ... IPllN ... ~ ..... fll.....-1 htcfl. c.m ........ """"""'"" a-oi. ......... V•t..,, IM~ ~-..... ~· ........... -,........ •"'-'-Mroc-4 """""' .... It. ...... ..,~l..C-.. ~ ,, •• , •.• (714) '41"""' a.11w ...,. • .-.... MJ.Mn S.. C r1 Al 111 1t• ... , , ............... It ~ """ 0...,.. c..t ..... ....... ~ .... _ .--. ...... .... ........ ...,.,.., ,,, ••1111e:iM••ll ....... ~ ........... ~ ........ ........... """"""' --· __ ,.._,.w ......... -..., c.. ~ (1,.,.,... .... ....... "' _,..,, ti.II -!"lt!.,.., .... ...,. ...,,, ~ •M ' .... -911\'> ..,.,.~12.1m Sad, But Clean Reggie, an 18-month-ol d orangu~n. at t~e Vilas Park Zoo in Madi· son, \\"is., doesn't seem to be en)Oytng his hath. He gets one \\'eekly, but., so far, bas resisted all offers to endorse soap. Harbor View Residents Get Bungl.ed-up Ballots About 300 residents al Harbor View Homa ID Newport Beach have reoetved e'TOOeOUS samplt ballota far lbt! April 20 IChool board electicm:. 'lbe ballot.s carry the Coast Community College district candidates. Tbr voters, however, by quirl of law IDd boundary making live in the Saddlehact Community Colltge Dtmfd. Robert Matthew, assistant COUDty --"'tmdent. -ccrreded ballots are in the mall. "'!bit_.,,. par<el ls t.be only area In Orange County w!*r< bi&)l llChool district boundaries do not match community college boundaries," be aaid. That's what caulOCI the ovenlgbt on the part of the people who wri~ the ballots. 'Jbe area, also bmra as the Bren development. is located off Mac.Arthur Boulevard behind Urban"' Squat<. In lt6&. the area wu anneied by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District followtng ~otiaUoos with the Tustin Union High School and San Joaquin Elementary School DkltrlcU. Al the lime. 'SaddHbact College Di.strict was e>e•ly rormed. The Newpor1· Mesa district is ln the <:oast Community Big 'Cycology' Event Scheduled In Newport, Mesa Maintaining their numbers will near 5,COI, a Harbor Area bicycling club said toc11y it has completed planJ for it! 12- mlle Earth Day bike ride through Newport Beach an~ Costa Mesa. Arnold Parker. 1 spokesman for Cycologists Workshop! International, aponaon of the hike, aa.id the lour will begin April 24 at 8:30 a.m. 1t Corona de\ Mar High School. ''A second meeting point. !or those v;ho 1ren't up to the whole trip, will be at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa 1t 9 a.m.," Parker said . He 1lso said that ?oiewport Be.ach and Cost.a Mesa police have agreed to block off the right lane of the roads along the enUre route for the safety of the bikers. Parker said riders will start north on Jamboree Road from Corona del h,ar High School, turn v;est onto Pali!ades and south on Newport Boulevard, Jtopplng at Arlington Street to meet the ste{)nd group. "They will continue south onto Balboa Peninsula down to 14th Street wMre they'll tum into the Newport Elementary School parking lot." Parker said representatives of area police departments will be tMre. to hctnse bicycles. Followmg this, he old, l.Mrr will bf: a picnic lunch, [rom noon to l p.m., "lhtn we'll spend the Dt:rt two hours cleaning UM! bt:ach." He s11ld both the Cosla Mesa and Newport police departments wW provide escorts for the cycllst.s. On the numbf'r or pArticlpants, P1rker lli&Jd "there will be more than 1.000 high school k1ds 1lone, Our origin•! prediction was between 1,000 and S,000 and we'N! now ttrtaln it will bt clnser to 5,000." He uld the sponsoring group Is encour1glng new me.m~rs and h111 invited Jntere.sted person~ to Its ne1t meeting, April 17 1t 7:30 p.m. In the Newporl Harbor High School f1culty '"""''" College Distrid. Malthew uplainfll that lbt state Education Code prohibits community aillege district land transfers during the first five years of a college districfs operations. Thus, residents of Harbor View Homes send their elementary and high school age children to Newport-Mesa schools, while their college age children mu.st go to Saddleback Co Uege in Mi.ssioo Viejo. Pr~mably, at the end of the five-year land swap moratorium. the probletn will be ironed out by Saddleback and Coast officials, Matthew said. Detriot Recalls 23,300 GM Vegas For Adjustments D£TROIT (APJ -Owners or some 23,300 General 1'fotors Vega mlnicars ha\'e been asked to bring them in to dealers for correction of mechanica l defects ranging from possible faulty chokes to noilly windsh.le.ld wipers. A Gtlt spokesman said none of the defects represented a hazard and all ocevrred on Vegas produced prior to the United Auto Workers strike last Sept. 15. Five po!Sible defects v.·ill be checked and repaired by dealeni: at no cost to car o...,·ners, GM said. Metal brackets on the rear seat of the Vega coupe an d station wagon will be replaced with a viny l bracket to avoid possible damage to car seats by rubbing. A new choke lever and shaft will be placed ln cara to correct oneii that could become loose, jamming the choke mechanism. A new windshield wipe.r transmission with a dillerent nut \\'ill replace possibly cross-threaded nuts installed earlier. Al50 beilli replaced are gas caps, l''hile the fuel tank filler neck sealing area will be repaired on some cars to prevent fuel spillage. A stud holding lbe rear shock absorber will be cut on some ''ehicles to C<irrect insufficient unde:rbody clearance, a condition that call!ed some Vegas to catch ln automatic car washers. Some 150,000 Vegas have been produced. A G~f spokesman said the defe<:l! had been repaired on those made since production resumed in December. From Page 1 TRAP ... chain \\'Ould be hooked to 1 large log. If the bear tried to Dee, the log would lodge In Umber and kttp him close by. The trap was unearthed and given to Lewis County historic officials. who finally turned it over to the Chllcoats. Costa t.ftsa poln we~ called to the scene shortly 1ntr daybreak when the grizzly trap was dllcovertd missi ng. Officer Roger Nu! discovered thrff iiuspic1ous m1tchbooks -Ont from a Santa Ana taft -in the: driveway. ''He e1plained It u • clue and found It was dry ." says Miss Chilcoat. suggt.sting the grand theft case occurred shortly before. She e~lained If the matchboot was 4)Ut overnight It would have betn damptned by lb< dew. Yanks~ Chinese :Mix American Ping Pong Team Visits V n iversitr, P'£KINC (UPI) -Amerirll table lttlnis players talktd aod p I 1 ye d i.telball today with Cbioese O>mmunisl Uni\'e"lily stodenlS who told them that omted Preddmt Liu Sbao-drl was alive bol "bis t.bollgb1 is doad. .. Tbe ~U.S. oontingent stopped oft at Chincbua Unive.r5ity oo lhe way to 111t the Great \\'a.U of China. They wue de:la>~ (or about five hours as they talUd wilb the students and toured I.be miittrsity grounds in PWng_ Af'tl!!' eatiug a late lunch al \be l.mivusil)'. I.hr Americans p~ into cars mS two buses and trave.le<: to the Great Wall. They lat.tr returned tD their hotel ill Peb>g. ,,,. American Pin& poog tum lw )'<l to play a fcrmal =tch, but olfldals WI the U.S. p!ayttS, who arrived Saturday oo an wiprecedenttd visit, would play here 'f'unday alLemoon and Uien leeve for Shangbli OD Wednesday. The highlight of \be day for the Americans was the trip to the university. They left lbtir hotel about 9 a.m. aod reached the unJven.ity at 10 1.m. v.·here they "'·ere greeted by the xhool's revolutionary commillee m e m b e r J , teacbm, students and school WQl'ktrs. 'Ibe Americans sat in a reoeption room aroood a table with a while table cloth. smoking cigarettes and sipping black OUDe$e tea. Included in the 'lttlooming group was Prof. Chen Wekbang. who "·ocked in the Jet Pr~ Laboratory Pilgrims Leave Ballarat Hea1' Winds to Nature By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL ot .. Deur ,..... St9ff On?y a handful of young pilgrims remain in the ghost town of Ballarat this momlng, after Inyo County sheriff'• deputies auved notice early Sunday aflemoon for the young people to leave the land by noon today. TIX>Se who do remain. many of them organiz.en from Laguna Be.ach, an in the process of cleaning up the Littered desert land. Sgt. Dave Walizer of the sberiH"s deplrtment ... tnu...i that t.be festival dn!W 90llle 5,000 people before peaking out Saturday afternoon. Strong winds. blowing llDd and dust. forced about 3,000 penons to leave that day. Others, however, remained, braving be1l, wind. and dust. They slowly left Saturday nigbt and Sunday as ii appeared that no rock music would ever gel started. A few local musical groups from the Ridgecrest area perormed for a short time Saturday evening, but were watched by only a small number of young people. The most popular f o r m of entertainment it seemed, ww the cmsta.nt. use of a \'ariety of differerit drugs and aloobol. No major medical problems were reported by the "Ball1r1t Free Clinic" which officially closed Sunday evening. 'Ibe worst injuries at the site were caused when a car. driving through ''Tent City" in the early hours Sunday ran over thttt youths. From Pagel DULANEY ... conspiracy, all of which are denied by the trio. Dulaney is attu.sed of using hi! World Financial Trends facilities al Laguna Hills and Seal Beach lo defraud a number of investors, most of them residents of retiremenl commwiities in those areas. htrs. Dulaney, an attractive blonde, worked for him as a secretary in the Laguna Hills ·~aj Mahal" headquarters until the couple left for West Germany in December, 1969, as complaints from investors began to now into the district attorney's office. Shipley stayed behind to take over the affairs of the corporate complez and was the first member of the trio to be arrested. He testified in bankruptcy CQurt before his arrest that he was not in\·ol\'ed in any •Nay with the alleged swindles and he repeatedly denied k no w i n g the whereabouts of the missing Dulaoeys. Dulaney was picked up two weeks ago in the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao. Mrs. Dulaney was arrested a week later in the: British Colony of Bermuda. She seemed to be recovered today from an illness for which she was hospitalized by British authorities. They were trea~ for minor injuries and returned later to join in the festival. No snakebites were reported a1though No snakebites were reported although authorities bad warned of the danger presented by aidt!winder rattlesna.Us. Sgt. Walizer reported that no arrests were made at the pilgrimage site, although some narcotics arrests w e r e made along the roads leading to the Ballarat area. The "free kitchen" reported that I.here was enough food to feed everybody who wu hungry and th.at everyone had plenty of water. supplemented, of oourse, l''ilh a variety ol different beverage!. 'lbe small cafe and genera1 store, run by Paul Jones, sold out Its stock by mid afternoon Sunday. "It's the biggest we ek end we've ever bad," Jone s reported, be.fort he mysteriously disappeared from the cafe Saturday morning. Friends surm ised he was anxious to get a...,·ay until the festival ended, and county officials had cooled off. District attorney Frank Fowles said this morning that it U doubtful that any court action will come out of the festival He said that the rock music at the site, which is illegal under an 1nli roc k concert weasure ln Inyo County, would not be blamed on Laguna Be:ach org.an- iu.rs Beth Leeds and Dion Wright. From Page J ASIA WAR ... the size of a football field . Front dispatches said the bombs were used today six to eight miles soulh~·est of the border ranger post of Ben Het, itself six miles oorthl'·est of Fire Base 6. Sullivan. reporting fr om the Central lHghlands, said a North Vietnamese defector told interrogators he had seen 2.000 fresh North Vietnamese troops in a rear area awaiting orders to move into the battle area. He said th e defector, Lt. Bui Ngoc Chieu, told questioners h i s battalion had been ordered to cu t Highway 512 east of Ben Het , the base's only land link to the outside. Bet Het ¥dth.!ltood a 56-day Communist siege in the spring of 1969 when it l''as a Green Beret camp. While the Cl30s unloaded the i r blockbusters, B52s returned to the area in strength. Military soutct!.S said the big eight-engine bombers ha\'e dropped nearly 2,51).) tons of bombs on the Communists around Fire Base 6 since the post "·as overrun 13 days ago. It u·as recaptured later and is still i n government hands. "The enemy ha5 dec ided to fight,'' a South Vietnamese official said. "They are still here." He said in the first 12 days of the Communisl offensive a total of 2,624 Communists bad been killed , mostly by U.S. air po...,·er. Government losses \\·ere announced as 172 dead and 292 ·wounded. JVC J u1t look •t what the 41~-' offwr1 : '4 5 w•tt 1twreo •mplifier, 4 1pwwd •11tcmatic record ch•n9cr, full frequency c•11ettw recorder, FM MPX IFM/AM t11ner, two way ulfr• r•ri9e spe•ker 1y1tem1, two recordin9 mies, •crylic dust ever •nd bleckout 1tylin9 to lJlwnd thw 4144 into •ny decor. at the Califorina tru:titute or Ttc~kll1 from 1941 to 1&46 before returrung to mainland China. Lattr. UM\ Amerlcanll were taken on a tour of the school growlds and they thalted with a number of other teachers in their late so·s and &rs who had studied in the st.ates. When they stopped off al a •·m truck'~ factory, Graham Steenhoven of Of:lrol.t. president of the U.S. Table Tenn11 Association, climbed up in~ the cab ol ooe of the trucks and drove 1L around. The "7'!1'' stands for July 7, 1968, '."''hell the first propaganda team ta~e ID to help run the. scbool . and unite two disputing factions during the cultural re\•olution. On their way back fro~, the factory, the Americans ambled 1t1to an open basket.ball class and paused to try a few shots. After visiting a computer transistor circuit workshop. the Americans came across the school's indoor gym. where they spent 15 minutes trading ping pong sbots vdlh Chinese students. Dick Miles, who was the American table tennis champion nine times, joined a Chinese student in a spontaneous doubles match against Errol Rue.k o[ New York City and another Chinese student. The informal. rambling tour of. the university continued. but the Americans came across anolher gym w b e r ~ .the school basketball team was pract1Clllg. The Ameri cans again joined the play and tossed a few balls into the net. During a long lunch, which consist~ oC S\\'eet and sour carp, meat d~p~. North China steamed bread, nee, fried prawns, cold meats. pork and vegetables. a! well as soda pop , the Americans broke up into groups of four and five and 11.t among Chinese students and professors.. Asked about the fate of Liu Shao-chi, one member of tile school revo~utiooary, committee. Chili Chwun, 37, replied : ''His thought is dead, but bl' is alive. What we criticize are his revisionist ideas." Police, Guards Take It Easy After Busy Week Lifeguards and police were relaxing In Huntington Beach today after a busy but uneventful Easter \Veek. About 225,000 swimmers, surfers and sunworshipers flocked to the 1trands during the vacation. but the crowds dropped off Sunday as the youtm forsook the beach scene for the family scene. "Overall, v;e had one of our best Easters," reported Lifeguard Captain Douglas D'Arnall. "The hot spell and good surf attracted heavy crowds the first four or five days, bul then as the weather turned the crowds fell off." About 30.00J persons went to the municipal beach Saturday and about 12,00J on Sunday. Abo ut 15 rescues were logged by the guards over the weekend. ll v.·as \Vindy Sunday with air temperature only 68 degrees and the water 53 degrees. Abount 9,000 be.achgoers relaxdd on the Huntington State Park strands over the weekend while a similar numbe r opted for the Bolsa Chica Beach. Members of the police Sp e c I a I Enforcement Detail (SED ), a group of specially trained offiCfrs \\'ho can quickly be dispatched to troubled areas, also took in the beach scene. Sgt. George Renek reported lhat they arrested 35 suspects on narcotics possession charges but no dealers were nabbed. "We expect things to slow d0\\11 until June v.·hen the SEO will be out on the beach again ,'' Sgt. Renek added. REG. $369 5299 NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT • PIONEER • SAN SU I • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LO ... N, IUT, Sill, TU.DE COME IN ... ND HOWSE .... OUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COST ... 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Stoeks ' VOL. 64, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, _APRIL 11. ·197f .TEN CENTS Blo ckbuster Bombs Use d In Vi etnam SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Air Force used its 71ili ton blockbuster bomb as a iacUca1 weapon for the first lime today in the Indochina war, dropping •wo of them on Communist troop concentrations around besieged Fire Base -6 in the Central Highlands. The bombs, largest in the U.S. arsenal except for nuclear weapons, were parachuted from Cl30 transport planes. They exploded a few yards off the ~ound, blasting holes as bi& as football fields in the jungles. 'Ibeir concussion can kill a man or disable him by causing bleeding from the ears and nose. Despite rain squalls and high winds in the Fire Base 6 region in the Central Highlands, BS2s dropped 51.Xl tons of bombs on the Co mmunists near the base. The 23 sorties flown today raised to 2,500 tons the amount of bomb! dropped in the area since the siege began March 31. Front dispatches said the Communist! had sent in 10,000 troops to the fire base area and that the government had a similar-sized force there, the heaviest concentralions sine!'! the invasion of Laos. U.S. military 800rces in Saigon said their intelligence indicated a ' • s m a 11 e r 1 ' Communist force but did not ·elaborate. The Viet Cong, which calls the Fire Base Hill No. 1001, broadcast several victor/ claims and said one Saigon reinforcement column broke and ran when it came under attack. The Viet Cong said they had killed 620 Saigon troops in the battle. Saigon reported 2,624 Communists slain at a loSll of 172 goverrunent dead. . I DAIL. Y ,IL.OT •11H ,lie;. Filling llp the B each In the Mideast, they pipe oil across desert sands. But in Surfside Colony, Seal Beach, the pipeline is for sand. The idea is to pump off. shore sand onshore to rejuvenate erosion-prone beach. It is almost an annual occurrence at Surfside. The Army Corps of Engineers is in charge of the/roject. When it is completed, workmen will pick up their pipes an go home. Officials .Call (or Split. Su perintendents Se ek Creation of Thr ee Districts some area school orficials are speculating that the 52-square mile Huntington Beach Union High School District could be divided in· to three separate, unified districts. Officials of two of the five di~ tricts w h i ch make up the high school district have drawn similar plans for unification and separation of the district. The superintendents of the Ocean View and Fountain Valley elementary districts will show their plans to their respective boards of trustees during special meetings to- night. In e s s e n c e, they call for the creation of three individual unified school districts aJong the following boundaries: -One district consisting of the cur re n t Westminster and Seal Beach elementary districts, plus Westminster High School. -Another district laking in the Fountain Valley and Huntington Beac~ City elementary districts on the east side of Beach Boulevard, along with Fountain Valley and Edison High Schools. -A third district combining the Ocean View a1'd remainder of the HunUngton Beach City elementary districts on lhe west side of Beach Boulevard, with ~1arina and Huntington Beach high schools. "It would mean the loss of the Ocean View district as an identity, but it's In the best interest of the children," saya Ocean View Superintendent Claren<:e Hall . "We want the full 13 years of educaUon to be consistent and continuous. But unificalion of lhe total district would be a disas ter," Mike Brick, superintendent ol the Fountain Valley School District, said. Six districts -one high school, five elementary -make up the 5Z.squ111re miles of the high school boundary. Eich is separate and independent from the other. but all are studying unl{icaUon plans. .SI.ate law requires a unification election In June 1972. for all school dlstrlcU not already unified . ti no alternative ls propo&ed, mkienb will vote on the same total untrlcaUOn plan -all S2·square miles under one f!dministr1tlon -they defeated t h r e e years ago by a 7·1 margin. _ And If no unification pl1nt art 1dopltd bv voters prior to 1977, the st.le Board of Edocation must move In and unify the t1istrict.s alona a plan It reels ls bat for the area. The three-w1y spilt propoeed by Ocean View 11nd f'ountai n Vallty ls the only plan offered so h1r. Administrators from the Stal Reach and Westminster element.3ry dJstrlcll and the Huntington Beach Union High $(hool District, have lndlcated they l)r'Obably will not propose plan_,, but their trusteea wlll study submitted proposal1. S. A. Moffett, superintendent of tht • 1'..-,M_ OUAN \r1£W $CHO(X. DISTRIC.T) ·-. ~ ·t ' Huntington Beach City School District, said 'his district. may propose unificaUon aloog ill own boundaries. State rules which guide the splitting up <1£ any district, however, could make it difficult for any individual district to unify ak>ng its own boundaries. Each new unified district Q"eated from any old non-unified 4Ultrict mwit have an assessed valualion per Child within 10 percent or the avenge figure for the old, non-unified district. And school populaUons or the new districb must be limllar. T h I 1 guarantees eich new district falrly equal education opportun!U ... Under the OCean View.fountain Valley Unruh Won't Run For Yorty's J ob From Wlre Senices SACRAMENTO -Jw U n r u h , unaucuutul Democratic candidate for covernor last year, today aakl be bu no plans to run for mayor of Lot ,Angele&, as has been apeculated. A!ked at a Sacr1mentQ n e w 1 confermc::e If he IJ planmna t.o run ror mayor lrl lf73. Unruh replied, "No, I am noL" Buf whfn a&ked U ht w a 1 unequlvocably rulin& out tht possibility, Unruh rduaed to answer f u r t h e r q-.. tht IUbJ•d. Unruh returned to the Capitol today In a new Nile : private citlttn. Not Ol1ly Iha~ the former ....,.mbly speaker and DemocraUc nominte for govttn0r I~ joinUy promoUng 1 program with many of the wealllly 111ppor1«1 of Republican Gov. Reagan. " I ' I I RXWfArl \IL --• SOJO«. DISTlllCT ~1 1! ~:.... .... _loo ~t I proposal, which both dl!tricts agree is general and can be amended. the. assessed vaJuaUons and populaUona are projected to be close, though not euctly equal. II Ult three separate district..; were unified next September they would have, according to Brick, the r o 11 o w 1 n g attendance figures: 22,000 childrtn east of Beach Boulevard; 17,500 students west of Beach Boulevard, and 19,500 students for the Westminster-Seal Beach area. Assessed valuation is expected to average out to $13,000 per student for each district over seven years allowed by the state. "The key to the money situation is expansion of the Edison plant in southwest Huntington Beach." Hall explained. "Without it, the Fountain Valley area would be somewhat poorer th11n the other two." Hall's Ocean View District would lose six schools wb.k:h are on the east aide of Beach Boulevard -the line • f demarcaUon 1n fluntlngton Beach. "We fee.I lhls plan can provide 1 much higher qu1Uty or education (or au the cbil dren." Ha11 stated. All l!Jcal educators seem opposed to total unification. "I'd hate to see a district with I0,000 ttu~t.!I 11 projected under the total plan," Jack Rop_e..r .. lbe new •.uperlnl<~nt of the ll1lb school district, commented; "We .haw-n't really looked at unincation," Roper added . "Since thrtt of our board membtn. are on elementary boards u weU. I'm cu~ they're aware of what's happening. tbey11 probably stud) I.ht elementary district plans." Ocean View's tru.~1 wilt 1tudy their admini!ltration plan a\ 7:30 o'clock tonight, In d~trict oil~. <!bile fOWllaill Volley trustees wRI n>Oet:ott.anlltt&Uol 11 ''!II o'clock tonlCJl41bJl1elr'fllicl!L • Bolsa Battle Ends Huntington Quits ; State Way ·llear By ALAN D!llXIN Ot "" CllltY ''"' '''" The city of Hunllngton Beach today bowed out of 1 b4tUe with the atate over the Bolsa Chica Beach. allowing the state to obtain full ownership of the atrand. The city notlfled Superior Court 'Judge Raymond Vincent th.at it was dropping ita claim for surface access rlgbts over the railroad rlaht--Of-way on the heath. This action clell'ed the way for the state to buy the rlght-<1f·way for $3'.I million and • thus put all the beach property under st.ate ownership. The acquisition would pot the rt.ate in a Poss ible Cuts In Huntington Schools Listed Ways and means by whlch the budget of the Huntington Beach Union H.Jgh School District may be lrimmed by $4 million will be suggested to the board of t.natees Tuesday night by Superintendent Jack Roper. Roper said he would present the itemized cut lilt not as a specillc recommendation to lhe four-member board but as a "report to show what it would take to ope rate the dislrict on an 85-cent budget." The impending cut& have been blamed by schoo l officials on a drop in rtvenue caused by the district's failure to win a tax increase election last month . Ugl~ the . <iblrir;l is all<m'lul In ....... 1 .-.i·11t hiD llilif~ ~ . . . flnind1l upet1I aay Ua opuat1n1· illldget wlll ·~rop fronl the pr<-$f.lll· to 1$- CfOll per f!llO of a.......i V1IU1Uoo, lht lowe!I permitted by tl>e 11.11<. Ro,Per did not di11cl01t details ef his suggestions but they may include an asse!sment of tk>w rnany teactiers may be lost it the slashes go into effect. About 249 probationary emplo)'es - teachers, counselor1, nurses a n d assistant principals -have already be~ notified that they "may not be" reemployed nexl year becattse or fiscal 106.!es. District officials must give them definite notification of their termination by May 15. Although It has ndt been exactly spelled out, district oUiclals s.11y only 25 to 40 of the 249 are considered to be in j~pardy. Other cuts which have been suggested but have not been acted upon are reductions in student transportation, special programs, athletics and other educational programs. Final determinations on what will and what will not be in the budget will be made by the board of trustees at public budget sesslons. • These meetings will begin later this month and last until the end or the school year, according to Roper. Police, Gua rds \ Tak e f t Eas y A fter Busy We ek Llfeguardl and poUct were relaxJna in HunUngton Beach today after 1 busy but uneventful Easter Week. About 225,000 swimmers, surfers and sunworshlpers flocked to the strands during the vacation, but the crowds dropped off Sunday as the youtm forsook the beach scene for the family scene. "Overall, we had one of our best Easters," reported Lifeguard Captain Douglas D'Amall. "The hot spell and good surf 1tlracltd heavy crowds (ht first four or five days, but then 11 the weather turned the crowds fell off." About 30,000 per!IOns went to the municipal beach Saturday and about 12,000 on Sunday. Aboul 15 rescuea were logged by lhe guards over tht wtek:end. Jt wa• wlndy Sunday with air tempenture only a degrees and the water 53 degrees. Abount t ,000 beat:hgMn rdaxdd on the Hualln;ton ,State Park atraqds ovrr lbt- Wff~ ~lt a similar number opted for !ht Bo1'a Ollca Beach. 'Mtpiberi of the pol1oe• Sp• e I a I Entorttm<nl Detan <SED). 1 111"11' of apoclally trained 9ffi<:<rs who can qulckty be dbpalched lo troohled lll'NI, •bo toolt In iht beach scene. Sil Gtmge Ren<k te110<led 11\al they arrested 35 1U.Spects on narcotlca poflN!IO:n chalrgu h<lt oo Maler• •tte nabbed. "We .apecl thlllgt to slow down until JWlO when the ~ ... m be aut on a.. .._b qol11," Sit-Ra>ek added. po&Uon to &velop the beach -·called Tin Can Beach because of lnadequate cleanup operaUons in the past -for wide public use. But the development -delayed for years unUl the railroad 1trip was acquired -may agaJn be held up by M lack: of 1tate funds. "It may be delayed for another year," Pat Dougherty, the at.ate'• Orange Coast area manager, said thla morning. He said that the state haa bond money to develop newly acqulred property but money for roads on beaches come from the stat.e operating fund . Dougherty did not opecl,_aJ fi'um Ille Leg1al1ture of U... operiiU.,· lilnd ezpaidflurea tbia year, . ~Y explaJned tbal tllo at.to pl11111'1 ~~ parking lo,11 that could be used ~Y cautjwotl !Jflhe on ....... al Bolla Chica. "It ~ ben nqr" highly developed than H\lt\lh1iton State Park,.. be commented, Dougherty uld be believed tf1at the state may be able to go ahead with some of Its plans at the north end of the beach near Warner Avenue. The railroad rlgbt- fS.. BOLSA,.P1ge ll Girls Get Help Sis ters Save Famil y A fter Crash ORINDA (UP!) -Jenniler Dryn<r, 10, and her lister Kelly, 9; traipsed for four hours through dark, dank, rain-soaked, wooded terrain. At the end of their trip they were weary and "a mess," but not one whit less determined. The two girls had a mission, and they accomplished it handS<1mel y. They saved thelr mom, their dad, their two younger brothers. · The sisters stumbled through the woods to gel help for their family lrapped in a light plane that had crashed in Conlra Costa County. Henry Boeger fOWld them Saturday morning on hla ranch. "There stood those little girl!, wet and cold .•. they were a mess .•. ~ had a bad gull on her head. "They were so serious about helping their femlly, they didn't let anything else bother them," Boeger added. "They were brave kids." Boeger notified sheriff's depuUes and then rode a horse to the wreckage. He and d!pulies rescued James B. Bryner 34, his wife Bretta, and their sons Mark: 8 and Eric, 7. ' All were reported in satisfactory condition Sunday at John Muir Hospital. Bryner was flying bis family to Orinda from Ojai, California for an Easter'l'visit with relatives when. the plane craabed Saturday and WU demolished.. Huntington Pol~e Move Over Pay Scale Scored A· move by Huntington BeaCh poJJce and firemen to set aside the city's pay scale 'proposals was condemned today In Orange CoU11ty Superior Court u Colorado River Campers Leave Lots of Litter PARKER, Ariz. (UPI) -An estimated 30,000 students and other young persona departed camp grounds along a 200-mile stretch or the Colorado River Sunday, leaving behind mounds of litter. California and Arizona authorities said that nearly 500 arrtsts were made during the week-long student vacation, most for drunkenness and narcotics. B u t , authorities added, that other than the Jitter, mostly piles of beer cans. the crowds stretching south along the river from Bullhead City were peaceful and well behaved. On tbe Arizona aide of the Colorado, Yuma County Sheriff Travis Yancey said ••the biggest part of the crowd has left. But there'1 lots of Utter, lots of litter." Yancey uid he had 55 offictrs in the area the past week and a lotal of 315 arrests were made. The sheriff said it was mosUy pta<:eful but '"l just hope they do somttbing different next year. t think we had a good holiday. We don't like lt arrest people but the law Is the law ... " In Mojave County to the north, deputies arrested 81 persons and a spokesman said "for Ute size of the crowds, tt was pretty peaceful." On the California side of the river, 82 young persons were taken Into custody on mostly drunk chargeJt. "For the most. part they were well behaved," said Sheriff's Lt. Walter Acuna. Meanwhile in Palm Springs, which In past ye.an: has been overrun with hippies numbering more than 30,000. the city police department said only about 15,000 were on band and thal virtually all of them had stayed in motels or bolelJ. Twa yean aiO, youths nocked In such numben: to the Indian-owned Tlhqulti canyon that the tribe prolelted. Pollet arrested 157 persons that year. VALLEY HOPEFULS • SPEAK TONIGHT A final rt111lnder: lonlfht Is sthool candldate:i 11ight in tountalil VaUty. The Chamber or Commeree has lnvlttd the 11 candJde.tet 'in the Huntington Be.ach Union JDJh School District race and the five undld1te1 rot Founlllin Val- 1<1 Sdlo01 Dlslrfct &uat... lo opeik 11 1:30 p.m, at Fount.In V1U•y lllf!h Sclloo~ • 1, "unjllltlfied and a pointless challenge to undoubted' tjly authority in this area." Attoi:ney Herbert A. MOSI asked Judge Raymond 'IbomP8Qn to deny the writs of mandate filed by the Huntington Beach police and firemen's uaoclations and defended the agreement he said wu reached .before both organ i z at I on s decided to chlllmge lhe city. Both groups Wint Judge 'Ibompson to set aside the Ctty Cound! reeolutlon of laat SepL 1 in wblcb an 8.25 per<:ent pay Mte was ordered fOT all city employes. Both police and" firemen want an 11 percent raise and they argue that the city should have continued discussions on the issue before taktJ'lg action. The police officers U!Oeiatlon al8<1 wants $650,000 ta damages from the city. Both writ.II of mandate clalm that city council action violated a tong standing agreement between the clty and both associaUons by including pay hlkea for both organizations In the overaU city action. City officials tst.lmated that the pay increases for its 120 fire.men would coat the city about $61,000 a year. Increases for policemen over the 8.25 percent level would coat the city a further Wl,812 annually. Judge Thnompson took the Issue undtr 1ubmJssion 1rter bearing arcuments rrom both aides. It ii upeeted thlt be Will ruie later today. Easter Spent at Sea CHARLO'ITE AMALIE;, V.1. (AP) - AristoUe and· Jacqueline Ooaala along with her two chlldttn, spent Eas~ here abolnf the On'"'1a yacht Cbrbtfnio. 0r..,. Cea.a We•dler Early fog llld llUmoon IMllhfnl return to tbt c:out Tu.elday with tempero.tuna dipping to 12 •Iona Ille belcbu Ille! 71 lurther Inland: INSm E TODAY Most police cUparh'Mnff fn Orcnge Countv OTt not •tt vpJp . 114..U. c-/"""1. .. y, .• d•put)/ diltrlel OllOmey ouign. ed IUCh '°'''· Stofv,. Poot 8. ........ ,, Cl'"-"" , Cl!Md""' \ht 1l Cltt•lfMI •M ""'"' .. c,..."""' n o..ni '"'1ftt • -" ' 1:411Wlel l'e" • .",.. .. """"" n '''""" """ -" I ' I f DAILY PILOT H Huntington Candidates Frldoy, the views ol three candidates lor the Hunlln&ton Buch Union H!Jh School Diattict Board ot 'l'nlltees were presented in thJs 1pace. Tod I,)', the vleWI ol lbn1 more candl<lates for the board are offered. 1 There are 17 candidates in all. They are 1ee1ttn1 two aeall on lhe April 20 ballot Voters will be casting two ballota in thJs elecllon -11111 Ill order to llll tile UllllPIN<I term (May and June) of former trustee Joseph RlbaJ, the other tn order to fllI two seats on the flve·man board for regular, four--year terms. Following are candidates! answers to questions posed by the Huntington Beach League or Wrr tl men Voters. All candidates were given an opportunity to respond to the same questions. n 'OPERATE YEAR 'ROUND' Computer Con1ult1nt Gordon Gordon Favors More. Efficiency Robert M. Gordon Is a computing systems consultant. He lives at 5212 Princeton Ave., Westminster. Q. What program or policy cha.ages would you favor? "We must organize and operate our schools so that they are more effective and more efficient. The way• we cboose lo do this must provide e:icellent educational opportur.ll) for all 1tudentl, college bound or not, and not just the exceptionally go(>d ones or the handicapped. We can begin by (1) re-- e1amlning what we want our schooll to do; (2) setting up programs which will get lbe jobs done, and (3) organizing, budgeting, managing and measuring to make the programs successful. "We should increaee the teaching and decrease the administration in the district. We can do that by vesting teacbtn and students with the authority and responsibility for some admlnl!tration, subject to t be i r accountability for performaoct, a 1 mentioned above. "We should operate our schools year 'round and use each school more intensively." Q. How do you feet about uDiflcatlop? ''State law says we must unify that is ()rganize one or more school dlitrlcts t~ ()perate all grades, K lhrough 12. We should make our own decision as to how unification should be carried out rather th an , let strangers from Sacramento dictate lo us. I favor small districts - perhaps three of them -so that we can get a better match between our schools and the wishes of the people they are suppoaed lo serve. One district, composed o~ all five el.i.atlng elementary acbool dutrlcts and the HBUHSD, would be too large lo permit that. However, I believe that many auxiliary services -for e 1 a m p I e : tramportatJon, purchasing, data processrn1 -should be centralized t~ achieve efflciencle1 that could yield s1gnillcant cost saving.s and result in lower lax rates in each of the surviving unified school districts." Q. Wbat a" your feellng1 on teacher tenure? "Teacher tenure, which bas come to mean the guarantee of Jiletlme employement -even for the incompetent -should be abolished. 1o replace the !~nure system we should do two things. Improve our procedurei for selecting teachers, and Improve our techniques for measuring instructional perrorma.nce se that we can reward those teachers who do their jobs well: But, before we abandon tenure, we mwl be certain we hav_e adequate sa feguards a g a j n s t arbitrary or capricious mistreatmenL of teachers by trustees ar adm inistrators \\·hich 1s "'hat ga\'e ri&.! to the tenur~ i;ystem in lhe first place." Q. How would a voucher 1ysfl:m or statewide proJl'rly tu; affect Jehool finance.? "I am opposed to the voucher 1ystem. I belleve it v.·ould foster the prolileration at newly-established fly-by· night schools and would dest~y the !ystem of public education as we know It by depriving our schools of the funds needed to operate them. "A!! 1 understand them. statewide property tax proposals made so far merely shi ft proptrty taxes from a local to a slate base. There is no guarantee th_at significant amount a! ne\\' money will result. Nor is there any guarantee that other local agencies will not in· crease their levies to rillt he vokt left when the school ta:r 11 transferred to state rolls. We need property tax rtUef and we need other !Ol.lrces al funds to operate our schools. These proposals do not 11tisfy either need. Sen. Thurmond Frog Wins Jumping }lonor SPRJNGPIEUl, S.C. <UPI) -"Pl!Jh- ups," a froc entered by Sen. Strom Thurmnd (R-5.C.), won the poUUclanl' .UVIJlon of lhl aonual governor'• fro& Ju:mptnc contl!lt. Thwmond's ... try jumpod nine let!, tbrft lncbet at the eveot Saturday. 'RECOGNIZE DIFFERENCES' Attorney Hlckt Hicks Advocates Program Change Harry E. Hicks, 9177 LaGrande Circle, Fountain Valley, is an attorney. Q. What pn>IJ'"alll or polley cbangtt wolllcl you favor? "I would like to see several changes in our programs in the ne:rt four ynrs. A greater Interest must be taken concerning the students who do not care to attend college. The vocational programs must be e:ramlned and In the high schools which have a need for more emphasis in this area, such emphasis should be supplied. "Tbe high scbooll 11hould be permitted more freedom to concentrate on the needs of their students in the specific geographic area. It ill quite probable, for example, that the specific needs and interests or the studentl at Marina High School are different than those at Westminster High School. Let us nat treat them all as one "plastic mass", Jet us recognize the differences and saUsly the educational needs." Q. How do you feel about unification? "Unification depends Ofl many facton. Jr It can provide significant savings without • weakening of the educational proctss, then lt might be good. It also depends on whether you unify horizontally or vertically. Jt should be remembered that unlficatlan is only one tool for use in solving the educational needs of our children, it ts not the whole tool box." Q, Wbat are your fetlln11 on teacher tenure? "Tenure may have become a self defeating proposition. Many s c h o o I districts wiil not permit many qualified teachers to remain Jong enough for tenure to vest. 1'he net result is that many ttachers become 11 i n e r 1 n t , teaching in school di.strict after school district I suspect that this situation will berome worse with the c u r re n t overabundance af qualified ttache.r1 1n the job markel." Q. How would a voucher system or statewide property tax affect school ftunces? "I believe that neither the vouche r system nor the state-wide property ta1 would have a beneficial effect on our local school system. Both systems would be subject to having their own bureaucratic systems which would defeat any savings, plus, if adopted, they would probably be subject to averaging which would be highly detrimental to our local interest. This might be good for Inyo county but with the acquisition cost for land and equipment In this area, neither system ·would be satisfactory." Marine Stabbed In Los Alamitos Triangle Brawl A Marine was slashed with a knife early this. morning in Los Alamitos when another boyfriend of the woman he was visiting appeared on the scene, police repcrted today . Gary O. Ma.rah. 26, stationed at the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility, told police he was vialting Mrs. t.1arle C. Rayburn, at 4411 Farquhar Ave., when Jame! E. Eastwood, 21, a lrAfl!i\enL, entered the home , picked up a serrated butcher knile and slashed him acrw the head. P..1arsh ned the acene and called police. \Vhen Loe Alamitos oUlctn went lo the Rayburn home to ln\lesUgate, they allege they htard 1 female ICl'taming for btlp. Officers kicked in the door and reacued P..lrs. Rayburn. They claim Eastwood was beating her on the bead and flee with bis fists. Eastwood was lodged in Orange County jail on dual charaes nf amult with a deadly weapon and amult and bllttr)l. A valanchcs Kill 7 VTENNA (AP) -At least seven peaple were kllled and. many otMrs surfered 5hock or injurlu when enow sUdea hlt tourist rroups on Austrian 1kl j)opr.t during the EulA!r wetkend. CORPORATE APPROACH Ch1mber Leider Horton Horton Outlines Prime Objectives Peter Horton was president last year of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce. An aerospace e1ecutive, he lives at 16431 Barnstable Circle , lfuntlngton Beach. Q. What program or policy cbau1e1 would you f1vor? "I would suggest we set two primary objectives: ''First, lo make the relationship between the trustees and t h e adminl.straUon most effective, we might benefit from regarding the school as a rorporation. The taxpayers are the stockholders; it is their money we are usin1. The students are the customers. We must orrer a product they want and need. The administratian and faculty are the managen and workers, responsible for developing and delivering the products. They must be the experts in the theory and practice of education. The trwtees are the board of directors, responsible on behalf o! the stockholders, for approving the nbjeclives, plans and programs of the school and evaluating the degree to which objectives are met and the eUlc!ency with which programs are carried out. "Second, much of the undesirable behavior we observe in children today stems from the fact that they are underchallenged and underappreciated. In short, they are bored and often feel rejected. We musl develop a richer school program in terms of academic and exlracurricular opportunities properly planned and supervised. Such a program would provide apportunities the children need to develop fully, in whatever constructive direction they want ; and, as they succeed, to receive the recognition they need Crom their peers and superiors.·· Q. How do you feel about unification'!' "There are arguments for and against unification, A unified district eslablbhed over a wide geographic area can realize financial benefits. TI1e major one is the ability to equalize differences in assessed valuation per pupil. Secondary benefits presumably can be realized by consolidation of administrative functions. On the negstlve side, larger districts introduce comp I ic at ion s in the management process. Also there is some loss of identity with the local community. Financisl unification with decentralized 1nanagement is probably a desirable goal." Q. \Vbat are your f«liogs oo teacher tenure? "Teacher tenure was conceived to correct a malpractice prevalent some yea rs ago but now no longer of concern. Because it can prevent a school administration from taking prompt and effective action to upgrade the teaching staff, I am nat in favor of it. A primary N!sponsibility of the trustees is to ensure the competence and integrity of the Administration, thereby protecting the qualified and dedicated teachers." Q. How would the voucher system or !'ttatewlde property ta1 affect achool finances'!' ''The "oucher concept would apply the stimulus of competitive free enterprise to the school system. Parents v.·ould be free to select a school y,·hich aHered the best produ ct. 1 believe the e1pected advantages would be onset by inequitable distribution of load, the inability of some parents to provide transportation for their children to the chosen school. and by loss of identity with the immediate community and Its particular needs. ''I believe that, in general, ta1 revenues should bt spent by the same authority which collects them. Only then can t11payers take dired action lo erpres.s d.l.wtlafactlon by nol re.electing the accountable officials. J stt nothing basica lly wrong with the pttstnt system wh.lch provides about 60 percent of school trpense:s from local tu~. about SS percent from state funds. part of which correct_, for differences In ratios of assessed va.luatlon per student, and about 5 percent from Federal funds for special programs." From Pagel BOLSA ... of-way rWll the lqtb ol Bolsa Chica but ls wldeil at the llOrthtrn tnd. ''They -be •bl• to lmp!O\'t tt w11!1 lht. bond money at the northem end," llou&hertY 11ld. 1lle city of HunUngton Beach entered the court case last year al the request of state attorneys who had filed an eminent do1nain action to acquire the rail strip from the owners. Bolsa P a c I f i c Corporation and U1e Southern Pacific Company. Citing the landn1ark Gion and Dietz public access cases, the city claimed the public already held surface entry rights over the railroad. Deputy Attorney General Marvin C.old!mlth agreed in a letter lo the court that the Huntington Beach claim for a recreational easement and ' ' t h e uncertal..ntles of trial·• brought on the settlement -to a figure $1.9 million less than the awner's appraisal and $t.2 million less than the state's outside appraisal. The sttate public works board approved the comproml.se but lasl month the city balked and threatened to pursue its claim in an undisguised attempt to persuade state Parks and Recreation Director William Penn Mott to grant Huntington Beach the right to operate Bolsa Chica. No deal was struck with Mott and today City Attorney Don Bonfa told Judge Vincent that the city is withdrawing from the case. "The City Council appreciates the fact that the public interest is best served by a quick termination of the pending litigation based upon the compromise settlement of $3.8 mllllon," Bonfa said. Bonfa also pointed out., however, that the city's intervention in the case gave the state a discoont from fair market value in scquiring the land. Referring to the city's failure to obtain an agreement to run the beach, Harbors and Beach Director Vince Moorhouse commented, "The city got the short end of the deal, but the public won and that's the main thing we were all concerned about.'' Police Probing Garage Fatality In Huntington Police today were investigating the death of a Huntintingto11 Beach man apparently killed in a garage accident. They said the body of Edward Bruce Livengood, 46, 9901 Carrell Circle, "''as found in his garage Sunday afternoon by Officer John Sanders. Police had received a report that Livengood had not been seen for one week. Sanders broke down the door to tb11 garage, and reportedly found Livengood lying face down on the floor. An auto was in the 1arage. The auto's ignition v.·as on and the battery was dead, according to the officer. An injury in the pelvic area, and a fallen eight-root aluminum ladder have Jed invesligators to believe Livengood died accidentally. Officer Sanders sa1d the garage was locked from the inside and there was no evidence to suggest foul play. A coroner"s autopsy has been scheduled to determine the exact cause of death. Political Foes Of Sato Triumph TOKYO I AP) -Reformers jointly backed by the Socialist and Communist parties won the governor"s sea ts in Tokyo and Osaka -Japan's two large.st prefectures-while Prime M i n is t e r Eisaku Sato"s political allies retained their strength e\seY.·here In local elections Sunday. The Socialist-Communist triumphs in Osaka and Tokyo "''ere gene r a 11 y regarded as political setbacks for the 70- year·old Sato, who had campaigned in both prefectures for candidates supported by his pro-American liberal·Democratic party. • lst Ti11te in Court Dulaney Hearing I In Frauds Slated By 1'()111 BARLEY ot no. D<lllY 1'1191 ll•lf Joseph and ft1arlene Dulaney today v.•ere ordered to face prellminary hearing April 21 in Santa Ana municipal rourt on grand theft and forgery c h a r g e s stemming from what is alltged to be the $3 million defrauding of Investor!! in the Newport stockbroker'!! \Vorld Financial Trends emplrt. Judge Paul Mast's ruling means that the globe trotting couple will go lo court for the first time with their co-defendant, James Shipley of Huntington Btach, the former vice president of !he investment complex headed by Dulaney. Dulaney, 31, today made another outburst from the defendant's box in which he prote.sted the charges filed against him and the further delay of court action. "The district attorney's oUice has had a year and a hall to investigate these charges against us and they should know by now that I am entirely innocent,'' Dulaney said. Judge Mast suggested that Dulaney discuss the matter with his attorney, Robert Law, and sent the eloquent defendant back to Orange County jail. Dulaney ls held in lieu of $312,500 bail and Mrs. Dulaney is: free on her own recogniulnce. Shipley, 38, of 16951 Loy,·ell Circle, is free on $312,500 bail. He faces identical charges of grand theft, forgery and consplracy, all of which are denied by the trio. Dulaney ls ace~ of using his World Financial Trends facilities at Laguna Hills and Seal Beach to defraud a number ()f Investors, most of them residents of retirement conunwtitles In those areas. Mrs. Dulaney, an attractive blonde, worked for him as a secretary in the Laguna HilliJ "Taj Mahal" headquarters until the couple left for West Germany in December. 1969, as complaints from investors began to flow into the district attomey'a office. Shipley stayed behind to take over the affairs of the corporate complex and was the first member of the trio to be Injuries Suffered In School Prank Fatal to Youth ARLINGTON l!ElG}ITS, rn. (UPI) - One of three youths who surfered broken back.!i in a high school prank Jan. 20 died just before an operation at Northwe!lt Community hospital. William Jlorn, 17, had told doctors he wanted to V.'aik again and would take his chances with an operation rather than face a lifetime of certain paralysis. hospital autho rities said. He died of heart failure just after being anesthetized Sunday. they said. Horn and four other youths \vere barricaded into a washroom at Arlington Heights High School by pranksters. When they tried to batter their way out through the washroom door. the wall and part of the ceiling collapsed on them. Horn and two other youths suffered broken backs and inle rnal injuries. Bradford Boice, 17, remained hospitalized in fair condition. Wiiliam Kelly, 17, has been released. Horn. partly paralyzed from the \\'aist do'M'n, y,·as told surgery might save hin1 from a lifetlme of confinerr.ent to a wheelchair. but \\'ould be dangerous. hospital authorities said. The boy elected to take the chance. they said. Police in this Chicago suburb said they considered changing from rec k 1 es s conduct to more serious charges the charges filed against the t\VO youths who barricaded Horn and the olhers in the washroom. JVC arrested. He testified in bankruptcy court before his arrest that he wa9 not involved ln any way with the alleged swindles and he repeatedly denied k no w i n g tho v.'hereabouts of the missing Dulaneys. Dulaney was picked up two week.s ago in the Dutch Caribbean colony o! Curacao. Mrs . Dulaney was arrested a v.·eek later in the BriUsh Colony or Bermuda. She seemed to be rccO\'e.ted today from an illness for which she Wll!I bospita.l.iud by British authorities. Beacl1 Festival Entry Blanks Out to Groups Entry blanks for the second annual J1untlngton Beach Cityw ide Festival May IS have been mailed to more than 150 community organizations, schools, clubJ and churches. •·we are anticipating re c or d participation by community groups," uid Bruce L. Williams, chairman of the Murdy Park get-together. "More than a doun organizations have a I re a d y indicated they will participate." The community festival, spon!.Ored by the Huntington Beach Coordinating Council, is aimed at increasing civic awareness of services offered by organizations, according to William!. Organizations may sponsor ane or a combination of three activities at the festival -a large audience event on stage, booth, or field event o r competition. Major attractions will be on the city's "showmoblle" stage throughout the day, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. In the event of bad weather, the festival will be postponed to ~lay 22. DAILY PILOT OllAHGE COAST l'UILIS}ilNG COM,A'I'/ llob•rf N. w.,. PrHldtnl •tld Pllbllt~ J 1c.k a, Cin1•'f \/let Pr111dtlii1 •1'111 ~I MIMl'll" ThM•• K.,.,i( f:lltor lhon111 A. M11r,hi11t· iMNVlfit l!IJIW Al111 Dirkin W11I Or•nt111 '-ily 141111' Alb•rf W. 11111 Aucci.10 Ell""" Hntlllf™llMc•~ I 1•1s l11c.h lo11l1.,1r4 M1ilt119 Addr111: P.O. Iii; 7t0, t2•41 °"'"' °'"'" t1guro.a lMd'>: 2r. 1'«•1 Al'"""" Cci111 M111: llD Wn 1 S1y SI'""" ,,......,.., 1 .. o;t1 : nn ,,.,_, aov: ..... r1 Sin Cltl"l'*llt; »~ Norttl E.I C.mln. Ill.Ml 1..., ..... 17141 142-4111 Ct ... Hs.4 A4ftrtl~111 14Z.llJI c.,..1g11,, 1tn, o,..,,.. °"" '"'°'""lflrl eo...p.ny, No ,,.....,, 11w"!ft, m111tr•llllM. eolHOJi.I """"' or HWMh-N '*'-,..., bo ~IKcd ·W1""""1 tPtei.I ....... mlulool oi ~I .-. StcanC ell.a C*lllVO M141 It ,...,.....,., ._. .111111 C:0.1• M .. , cau1an1i.. 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PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA Mf.SA -.__ H-• hodwoy I I I I I Yanks~ Chinese 1Mix A merica n P ing Pong T eam Visits University PEKING lUPfJ -American table lenni.s players talked and p I a y e d basketball loday with Chlnese Communist Universily students who told them that ousted President Liu Shacrdtl was alive but "his thought Is dead." The IS.member U.S. contingent stopped off at Chinghu1 University on the way to see the Great Wall of China. They were delayed for about five hours as they talked with the students and loured the unlvensity grounds in Peking. Alter eating a late lunch at the university, the Americans piled into can and two bl.l!es and travele<! to the Great Wall. They later returned to theJr hotel in Pek.ina. The American ping pong team has yet lo play a formal match, but officials said the U.S. players, who arrJved Saturday on an unprecedented visit, would play here Tueaday afternoon and tlJcn leave lot Shanghll on Wednesday. The highlight of the day for the Americans was the trip to the university. They left their hotel about 9 a.m. and reached the univeniity at 10 a.m. where they wue greeted by the school's revoJutJooary conunittee m e m b e r s , teachen. students and school workers. Tite Americall! sat in a reception room around a table with a white table cloUi. smoking cigarettes and sipping black Chinese tea. Included in the welroming eroup was Prof. Chen Wei-c.hang, who worked in the Jet Propulsion L.abor.atory at the Califorina Institute of Technology from lt41 to 1M6 before returning to mainland Ol.ina. Later, the Americans were taken on a Burke Seeks to Cut Down Time Period on Abortion A reduction in the time period women can have an abortion, from 20 weeks to 10, has been suggesled by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Huntington Btach). Burke said, "It is a medical fact that premature babies weighing as little as 10 ounces have survived to berome mature, 11ormal adult human beings. .. , beJie,•e it is inhumanely cruel for soci1cty to permit the killing of human beings who have a chance to survive independent of the mother," he said. Burke outlines several other proposals that would drastically revise t ti e Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1957 under which more than 100,000 le1al abortions ha ve bttn performed in California. He said introduction of five bills and one resolution "in no way was lo imply Detroit Recalls 23,300 GM Vega s For Adjustments D.l::."I'ROIT (AP) -Owners or some 23,300 General Motors Ve2a minlcars have been asked to bring them in to · dealers for correction of mechanical deJe:ct! ranging lrom posllble faulty chokes to noisy windshield wipers. A GM spokesman said none of the de:fecl5 represenled a hazard and all occurred on Vegas produced prior to the United Auto Workers strike last Sept 15. Five possible defects will be checked and repaired by dealers at no cost to car 01-rners. GP.l said. f.1etal brackets on the rear seat of the .Vega coupe and station wagon will be replaced v.·ith a vinyl bracket to avoid JK!Ssible damage to car scats by rubbing. A new choke lever and shaft will be placed in cars le correct ones that could become loose, jamming: the choke mechanism. that I eondone or accept abortions all means toward effecting birth control, or aa a way of skirting one's responsibility for thelr actions." The measures are designed 1 o eliminate what Burke called loopholrs and abusea in the law, which he said is being used by aome women to "escape the responsibility for some of their more amorous escapades.'' Burke suggests that unless a woman had been undergoing p s y c h i a t r i c treatment be.fore pregnancy, she could not get an abortion on the presently accepted grounda that giving birth would jeopardize her mental health. "M•ny women seeking an abortion do so on these grounds with statemenl.!i auch a1 'lf you don't give me an abortion. I'll kill mysell !' This statement has been construed as proof of the women's poor mental health and the abortion is ~rmHted," Burke said. Another Burke measure would ban 11n abortion unless the abortion review committee was convinced ii v.· a s requested or the woman·s own free will. The resolution Burke is introducing would have the State Deparlment of Public Health study the abortlon situation since the liberalited law took effttl for a report to the legislature by J anuary of 1912 . Another Burke bill would prohibit any member of the abortion rev i e w commJHee to perform an aborUon. T wo Boats Collide; Skippers Uninjured PALOS VERDES {UPll -A power boat collided with a sailboat off the Palos Verdes peninsula Sunday but there were no injuries to the 12 peraons aboard the two ve1JseJs. The skipper of the 27·foot sailboat. Harry T. Hayes, 50, was thrown into the v"ater in the collision but was rescued by county lifeguards and taken to safety . Tht sailboat sank in about 130 feet of water as it was being towed ashore. The Powerboat sustained little damage. tour of the school growut.s and they chatted with a number of other tea chers in their late 50's and IO's who had stud.led in the states. -When they stopped off al a "727 lruck" factory, Graham Steenhoven of Detroit, president of the U.S. -Table Tenriis Association, climbed up into the cab of one of the trucks and drove it around. The "11'1" stands for July 1, 1968, when the first propaganda team came in to help run the school and unite two <fuputing factiom during the eultural revolution. On their way back fron. the fat~y. the Americans ambled int.o an open basketball clau and paused to try a few shots. After visiting a computer transistor circuit workshop, the Americans came across lhe school's indoor gym, where they spent 15 minutes trading ping pong lihots with Chinest studena. Dick A1iles, who was the A~rican table tennis champion nine Umes , joined a Chinese student in a spontaneous doubles match against Errol Resek of . New York City and another Chinese 6tudent. The informal, rambling tour of the university continued, but the Americans came across another gym w h e r e the school bask.etball team was practicing. The Americ:a)i.s again joined the play and tossed a few balls into the net. During a Jong lunch, which consisted of sweet and aour carp, meat dum plings, North China steamed bread, rice, fried prawns, cold meats, pork and vegetables, as v.·eH as soda pop, the Americans broke up lnto groups ot four an~ five and sat among Chinese sludents and professors. Asked about the fate of Liu Shao-ehi, one member of the school revoJulionary committe~, Chih Chwun, 37, replied: "His thought is dead, but he is alive. \Vhat we crilicize are his revisionist ideas." "Yes, he must get some re-education. All this is common knowledge In China." Another Chinese student was asked when the Chinese National Aasembly will open -it has not bttn called even though the deadline for convening it has passed. The student replied: "When the time iJ ripe.'' At the end of the lunch, and just before the U.S. group left for the Great Wall, Steenhoven rose and told the Chinese of the growing "friendly feelings " of Americans for the Chinese. The American conlingent lhen stocd-.... and applauded the students. Abortion Talk Slated Tuesday Liberalized abortion advocate Rtv, Lester Kinsolving will speak al noon Tuesday al UC Irvine in the first of a weekly lecture series in Science Lecture Hall. The associated studrnts speakers commlllee arranged the program which is open to the public without charge. Rev. Kinsolving was a Sacramento lobbyist for the late Episcopal Bishop James Pi ke with the mission to persuade legislative liberalization of California abortion sta tutes. Other cam paigns he's been involved in have been capital punishment, religion and the communicatio ns m e d i a , conservative theology and Black Power. ' !~: . .. ' ~· • .. ~ . --.. ~•'"!'<· ..... ..._.,,. DAILY l'ILOT ..... _. ,,....,.. S1•1twrtf PILOT WHO DE CLINED TO IDENTIFY HIMSELF FLEW TO BALLAllAT, GOT STUCK About 25 Pilgrims Try To Halp; However, Prop Got lent And Piiot Stayed Awhile Pilgrims Leave Ballarat Iny o Deputies Order Youths Ou·t of Desert Today By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL Cl ttlt Dally l'lltt 11111 Only a handful of young pilgrims remain in the gnost town of Ballarat this morning, after Inyo County 1heriff'1 deputies served notice early Sunday afternoon for the young people to leave the land by noon today. Thost who do remain, many of them organizers from Laguna Beach, are in the process of cleaning up the Uttered desert land. Si{. Dave Wal iur of the !heriff's department estimated that the festival drew some 5,000 people before peaking out Saturday afternoon . Strong winds, blowing sand and dust, forced about 3,000 persons to leave that day. Others, however, remained , braving heat, wind, and dust. They slowly left Saturday night and Sunday as it appeared that no rock music would ever aet started. A few local mwlcal groups from the Marine Double Amputee Faces Court-martial PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Atarine Lance Cpl. Charles-Stewart, 19. a native of Connellsville. Pa., and a double amputee wounded In Vietnam, f1ce1 a spe<:ial court martial for a 11 t g e d I y 1triklng a nurse. Authorities at the U.S. Naval Hospital here said charges against Stewart stem from incidents dafing back to last Feb. t when a nurse, Lt. Cmdr. Rosemary Geraghty, was preparing him for gurgery. The Navy said Stewart, who lost both his legs when a mortar shell exploded, went wild. struck the nurse in the eye and began cursing. Stewart. who says he has nightmares in which he is imprisoned in North Vietnam, remembers he was "real uptight, scared ." The Navy also accused Stewart of having a bottle of whiskey hidden in the amputee ward and when 11. master at arms took it from him he again used "improper and vile language." we've charged Ws man with a lon1 string of offe.nses." The charges include behaving with di1respect to a senior officer, 1trlkin& a senior officer, t.rtaUng with cont.empt a non-commissioned officer. v I o I a t I n a general regulation.II, u1ing nproachfu\ words and drinking in quarters. If oonvkted. Stewart . could aet • mailimum of a bad conduct dl!cbarae, loss of two-lhlrds of pay for ail months and six month! of hard labor. A hospital officer said hard labor for 1 double amputee was "extremely unlikely, of course." He said "a physician would make • recommendation at the court martial.'' Lon Nol Goes Home Ridgecrest area ptrormed for a short time Saturday evenlna, but were watched by only a mall nwnbtr of ywna people. The most popular f o r m of entertainment It seemed, wu tht constant use of a variety of d1ffercrt. drugs and alcohol. No major medical problem& were reported by the "Ballarat Free Clinic" whlch officially closed Sunday tventna. The worst injuries at the 1lte were caused when 1 car, driving through "Tent City" in the early hours: Suodly ran over three youth!. They were treat.ed for minor injuriu and returned later to join in the festivaL No snakebites were rtported al thouah authorities had warned of the danger presented by sidewinder r1lUesnakes. Sgt. Walizer reported that no arresll v.•ere made at the pilgrimaae site, although some narcotic1 arrests w e r e made along the roada leading to the Ballaral area. 'The "free kitchen" reported that there was enough food to feed everybody who was hunirY and that everyone had -plenty • of water, supplemented, of COW'le, with a variety of dilferent bevera1e1. The small caf1 and g~neral .tali, nm by Paul Jones, sold out ill stock by mid afternoon Sunday. "It'a the blnfft weekend we've ever had,'' J o nes reported, before he myste r io u sly disappeared from the cafe Saturday morn1n1. Friends surmised he was anxlou1 to get away until the festival ended, and county officials had cooled off. Kinsolving is a nationally syndicated columnist. Capt. L. T. Brown, rommand ing officer of the hospilal, said "l can asaure you PHNOM PENH (UPI ) -Cambodian Prime Minister Lon Nol returned to Phnom Penh aboard a U.S. Nsvy OC6 Monday after almost •xactly two monthl t>f medical treatment in Honolulu for 1 stroke he suHered last Feb. I. District attorney Frank Fowles Aid this morning that it is doubtlul that any court action will come out of the festival. He said that the rock music at the site, which Is illegal under an anti rock concert measure In Inyo County, would not be blamed on Laguna Beach orpu. lz.ers Beth Leeds and Dion Wright. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! $1.39 SIZE ••••••••••• Here's proof ••• you do ret brand11 you know at strper·s~ial &dvert.i11ed prlceg when you 1hop El Rancho! R l,tht Guard ••• you know the quality ••• the .size ill the familiar 7 ounce aerosol ca.n, rerularly $1 .39 ••• but for these three day1 only ••• you 1&ve a "'hoppini' 30c Ptr can at El Rancho l Beef Liver .... ~: ... 69fb Rich in nutrient.I ••• and flavorful btcauae lt'a from younr beef I Bacon .. ~~. ~ .~~~~ ... 5 9~ El Rancho'• own ••• sliced a little thicker •.• tun and delicious! McCoy's Beef Linkles .................................. 29 ' A different kind of u.usa.ge treat ••. (?'tit beef flavor: S ot. Buddlg's Sliced Meats ................................. 39¢ Your choice of \\'&fer thin varietit & ! ... 3 oz: .••• a t our dt!icAtessen. Cantaloupes ..... 3 : $1. Sweet, ripe, juicy •• serve slices in the morninr .• haJ,·es for dessert! I Pri.cti in. rf/rrt ~fo11., Tu f._.., Wrd., April tt, 13, 14. No iaka to dea..ler1. Tomato Juice.s!~!~~.4]c Libby'1 •• , cart.on of six 5 ounce can&! ••• Buda-et booster! Dog Food .. ~-. ~0.~ •• 8 ' 0 I F1avor varieties to pleue your pet .•• No. 1 tall can1. Hidden Valley Salad Dressing Mix ............ 59• Nothlni else like it ... tuy to prepare •.. euy to appreciate! King Vitamin Cereal .................................... 49• Ct.real th.at'• enriched In food va.1ue8 ! .•. 9 ounce packAft. ARCADIA : Sun>et and H11111111r,ton D• i1IM· PASADENA: ii/iii· SOUTH PASADENA : iW11'· HUNTINGTON B£ACH : 1-:1,1,/: NEWPORT BEACH : 1711 Newoml Blvu aml 1[1 RJntho Center) " 320 West Color ado Bl~d ,.;y , fre1nont Jnd Huntington D1 ·· w.u11rr .111!1 Alpor11111111 fh1.ud 11tJlk Ce11le1 1 ··: 155~ [;istblu11 Or 1(a \1l1lnlf V1!1.1~r Centr1 ' • • Ul'I T1ltPM"' DETERMINED SOLDIER E. P•kl1t•nl R•bol Peking Promises It Will Support P akista11 Cause NEW DELHI. India (AP) -Premier Chou En-lai of Red China has assvred Pak{stan that the Chinese goveriun~nt all(! people will support· the Pakistatiis against any attack by India, Radio Pakistan reported today. The broadcast followed lodia'11 denial ~f Pakistan's claim that two .companies nf Indian forces had crossed into Pakistan on Saturday. Pakistan said the Indian troops were wiped out. Pakistan's central government is righting a rebellion iq East Pakistan. Radio Pakistan s11fd Chou's message .vas sent to President Agha Mohammed \'ahya Khan. "Should the Indian expansionists dare lo launch aggre!!lon against Pakistan, the Chinese government and people will ~ always aupporl the P a Ir: i s t a n "'ovemment and people in their just 1!.ruggle to safeguard the state's integrity ~ national indepern;Jence," the radio ·quoted Chou as telling Yahya. For the third time In the last six days, in official ChiDese !ilalement -this time Issued on Chou'a behalf -said that the civil war in East Pakistan ia purely an Internal affair of Pakistan w,hich. can . only be settled by the PakJslanl people themselves without any outside Interference whatsoever. ~'"'"' 12, 1971 Fears Mount Of Pakistan, h1dia Oash ~ NEW DELHI (UPll -Indian and West Pakistan troops stood within nine .miles of each other along the East Paki11tan border today, increa11ing fears of a confrontation between the two nations. Official Pakistan radio said Sunday Pakistani troops had "wiped out" two companies of Indian border security forces in the Benapole area two mlles inside East Pakistan Saturday. 1ndia denied the claim and accused Pakistan of kidnaping three of its border security !JUMds who had been on a routine patrol In the Petrapole region on the Indian side of the border. The Indian government demanded the· release or I.be men. Pakistani troops drove to within eight mils of India's border Saturday wh en they captured Navaran from the East Pakistani rebels. In reaction, truckloads of Indian troops moved to within a half mile of the border accompanied by jeep-moun~d recoilless rines. Fears the civil war in East Pakistan might lead to fighting between Jndia and Pakistan have swept New Delhi for several days. India has voiced support of the East Pakistani rebels but bas denied Pakistan'g charges it is smuggling arms to them .cross the border. Pakistani troops appeared to be engaged tn a major offensive to retake major tov.11s and close the border areas berore monsoon rains make the roads impassable toward the end of April. News reports said ,the Pakistan army captured the airfield near the tea plantation town of Sylhet in the northeast sector after heavy fighting. The air force was reported to have bombed Dinajpur and Rajshahi Sunday. The Pre!l3 Trust or India said reliabl& estimates reaching official sources in New Delhi indicated more than 3,000 Pakistani troops have been kllled since fighting broke out March 25 over the question of autonomy for East Pakistan. Another Indian agency, the United News of lndia, said more than one million people, mostly civilians, have been killed. It gave no source for the estimate. Indian news reports said the Pakistanis were conducting a scorched earth program, burning what they cannot hold. Several villages near airfields have been bumed, reports said. Thick black smoke was seen Sunday near Sylhel. The rebels said their guerrillas captured the Lalmonirhat r a i I way junction in northern Rangpur district Sunday and ambushed and sei1ed a convoy of 130 vehicles traveling between the eastern city of Com ilia and Chandpur. 40 miles to the west. w1 .. .1ca I · ... the FBI, 1ir ! They've been bllgging all morning!' 500 l11surge11ts In Ceylon Slain By Air Sweeps COLOMBO, Ceylon (UPJ) -Combined military and police security forces using planes and helicopters supplied by India have killed about 500 insurgents trying to seize control of the country, a government spokesman reported today. The insurgents, mostly unemployed lertist youths, call themselves Che Guevarists after the late Cub a n revolutionary. They struck against the government or Prime P.1inister Sirimavo Band.aranaike last week with a series of attacks on police stations a n d government offices. A government spokesman reported earlier the situation was perilous and India agreed to send planes and 1 helicopters to try to put doy,·n the rebellion. The government has imposed a curfew from 4rp.m. to 6 a.m. and troops were ordered lo shoot curfew violators on sight. Dozens of new,. clashes and incidents were reported tooay. At the southern town of Akuressa. the spokesman said, army forces killed 25 insurgents in a firefight. Another five terrorists were reported killed at Dodanduwa, another southern town, when pollce fired on terrorists attempting to block the main road. In tbe eastern town of Amparai. police found an arms and ammunition cache in an abandoned Buddhist temple and in Ceylon 's second biggest city of Kandy several youths were reported kidnaped by terrorists. The spokesman also reported a number or food-looting incidents. 'The government did not disclose casualty figures for its forces but 1i1n:. Bandaranaike and Governor General William Gopallawa visited Injured troops in a Colombo bospit1I. Six districts of Ceylon were reported hard hit by terrorists and the government appointed military governors there. TODAY DOORS OPEN AT 9: 3 0 FOR THE START OF OUR SPRING APPAREL ) CLEARANCE 1 J OFF ANO MORE ON FRESH , CURRENT FASHIONS FINE APPAREL d,..,.,, coats, suits and costumes 1'tctuding I. Maanin·exclusives SPORTS SEPARATES AND APPAREL dresses, tr~I shifls and pantsels in l1ghlweight, easy-care fabrics, coals, all· weather coats, suits, pantsuits. knits, blouses and shirts, sweaters, cl1ssic separales and coordinates, and year-round piaywear. INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S APPAREL inlanl s' and toddfers' dresses. playwear, layettes. Girls' 3 to 6x and 71• 14 sire dresses, lont and short peasant dresses, sportswear, separates. Boys' 3 to 7 size shirts, slacks. IMAGERIE, THE YOUNG IDEA SHOP peasant dresses, navy and past11I polyester knits. sportswt.ar, pantsuits, ethnic ~ear intludin& skirts, dresses, blouses. WOMAN'S SHOP drosses in regular ind mid-sizes RAN LEIGH APPAREL daytimeand sparetime dresses and costumes, pantsuits MISS MAGNIN AND MISS MAGNIN JR. APPAREL long and short occasion dresses, coats, suits. pantdresses, pantcoals, pantsuits, including many with skirts, short coals, all-weather coals, including canvas and denim, sportswear including pants, tops. knickers. sweaters. All the cuuent silhoue\les MILLINERY ROBES • HOSTESS GOWNS CULOTTES •'SLIPS AND HALF·SLIPS S:OllY, JUI MAil OR 'HOJfl Ol"OBS •AU SAW fllW. • IT[MS IN STDCI 011 SAU All WILD IN UCN llt1ARTMUIT MONDAY STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 9:30 2 FASHION SQUARE• SANTA ANA • ' First Decade EgyptiartS . Spacemen Reject.Pkt~ • • Soviet Ask Cooperation By Dayan MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet union marked man's first decade in space today by seeking more cooperation v.•Jth America• astronaul3 and saying orbital stations and r.obot explorers are its chief goals in the 1970s. Soviet CGSmonaut Yuri A. Gargarin 10 years ago today made man's first flight in space, orbiting earth once in Vostok l. "The road to the planet! is hope,'' Moscow Radio said in announcing Gagarin's feat. It was Gagarin's only space flight. He died in an airplane crash in 19611. In a letter to the Communist party newspaper Pravda today, 19 Soviet cosmonaut!! said: "We think that in the interest of peace and friend11hip between the people or our planet, business cooperation between space explorers of different countries, including the Soviet Union and the United Stales. shouJd develop and g r o w stronger.'' Writing in the same edlt1on of Pravda, top 5pace scientist Boris N. Petrov said orbilal stations and a more sophisticated generation of robot explorers are the chief Soviet goal! in the second space decade. "The second decade could be called an epoch of orbital stations, planned research work of men in conditions of space laboratories, a decade of wide use of automatic stations," Petrov wrote. "'Space exploration would go along the way of gradually seUing up simple ....,... in the beginning -orbital stations which would be followed by more complicated and bigger orbital stations for exploration, scientific and techaiCal experiments." Petrov said, "universal research laboratories and specialized stations, like astrophpysical a n d radio-aslronomic observatories, wlll probably appear. They may be either fully automatic or manned rrom time to time by a crew." By The Asaociatfd Pree• Egyptian offk:iab re}ected todly an idea by Defense Minls~r Moshe Deyan of lsrael, who favors withdrawal of '!Sraetl forces along the Suet Canal prpvkled. there is a perm.anent cease-fire and "no Soviet or Egyptian troops will move to the Israeli side of the canal.'' 'Ibe Egyp~ans said they were standing firm oo fileir demand that Egyptian mili~ry forces must hold J>03itions on the side of the canal now held by Israel. ''Egypt will accept nothing less," officials in Cairo said. "We have nothing new to add. Our position has been clarified by President Anwar Sadat's restatement of April 3." · In this restatement, Sadat demanded the partial withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Sinai Peninsula as a11 initia l step to relinquishing all Egyptian territory occupied since 1967. Sadat said Egypt would then reopen the canal to navigation. Most of U.S. Fair, Dry Thundershowers Soak Part of Midwest; So111e Snow California Temperature# IM:re•sl"'I nl"'11 •nd morn!'" tow do•-"'• •nd loo 11on!r the co.11 ,...rrtd 1unnv •nd tie•• we111>er 1oe11v In Soull>frn (11ltornl1. lnoro "'II lo!Tle l1"'1qrllu" dllM•. I Y UNITE"O ,.ISS INTE•MATIONAL n.1 Loi """"''' •••• w•• rnc111v 1unnv wlltl 1om1 e1rlv lo<.11 co&slll too, L"" .l.nfele. htd 1 predicted hi•" IOdlY pf ,,, c"'1'1ol•ed "' SundlY'I 15. ~.;C::"I ~ .... -:~1~1:J' 1~~111111: fr~,;'; Anaeln W1ln. An ts!lmatl'd ~,000 """""' won! 10 covntv blotc h9t undtr Easler t unshint. lift ou1rd1 "oortf'd 10 fl!SCu11 In rl11idf1 Coastal MO'lll1 1unn1 10Cl.IY. Liv~! v1ritDI~ WIM• nl9'11 Ind ........ 1n11 ~...... bt:· cornlt1t Wtil•Mf 10 lo II knoll In t!t•Tlldot'IS IO<llY •nd lund•v. HiDh Co11!1I ltmPtrtture• rtl'Hlt from 50 Ip 61. lnl1nd ltm-1lurn r1nve 1•"'1'1 50 to 74. wet..-lfm1>11rllur1 ''· Sun, /!loon, Tides F\nl h•9h Flrtl !OW Seconc:t nioh Socond low MONOAY TUliOAY Sun ill:!IH J ·7~ t .m. MOOoll ltlMI l .lJp.m. • JOp.m. 5l J:12 p,m. IA 10:.W t m. JI •:S6 1.m. ~ 1 ,,.w .. ...,. l.J l JO '·"'· l.t ,,,. 6:21 ....... Siil ,,OJ'·""· Summary Ft lr 1nc:t arv we1111er conlin~ over ,...,.1 ol !!'le Niian '9G1v bu! • cold Iron! lrorn nom..-n Like M1(hlo1n JDrffd lnro 1-• Mltlnf off •l'IOwe<a •nd lllundeurorma. llf-•turn 5UndlY SkYrtKko!fll ID fl... hlel'I 10I In Loa Al'lll•l•o. '"" en e11 1m•1ed l\llf.mllllon Dlrton1 southl •tll.-f 11 county bncl'les. CounlY 1i10. •ut•dl w••• IDn ed ID m1kt l'O •••· cun. •• ,.,.1,,,.,,.,, Dr1vod rtther (~illy Wl1t'1 ol SI d .. l"Ofl. 111 Chic-S41ndty, I rtC<,.d !t,..Ptr- t lUtt of 13 ..... recorde<:t ,, MidWtY Alr""'1. l1o!lled tt1un<111110•m• 0<· turret! In w1111!rn Oll;ll-1nd soul,,.. tt1l1rn N-Me•iC~. In !he ""''""'''' OCCIJIOntl r11n loll teatv In W11hlntltln Ind -anow 1111 111 Wtllern Mon!tnt. • Alb<toUOtclUe A1l1nl1 .AM:l'l<l'lllt 110110<1 llull•lo Ch1r1ottf C"lc190 CIM:inn.ol! Donvtr o .. Moines Detn)lt F1 lr~1n~1 HoMlulu 1r.d••n•P<>lls Juneau IC1n11s CilY LI! Ve1111 L0<1i1vll11 Me<r1p~l1 Mlt,..1 Milwluf.H MlnMu1oll1 New Otltll'IJ New Vork 0~11nom1 c nv °"""' Palm 5Prtf'>ll• PhllldtlPh•t Pt-Gen I~ l'olhOUrgl\ Porlltnd ··~ l!ichmonc:t S1c•1menl0 sr. L"'"' Si ll Ltl<t (!!y S•n Ft1ncl100 SOll11P SPo111nt W11Mno~n Wonno"" Hllft "-,RC, " " " ~ 11 n A• ,, 31 i~ •1 ,, '' II '7 T ,, '' . " " " • n . " 11 ,, M " 91 Af 17 31 •s 31 " " " " " " " ~ " . ,, .. .06 6, 31 " " " " " " " . H " .. " fl 57 " ~ n u .10 " ~ " " .. " ~ " .. " .. " " " " " ,. " ~ tt . .. .. Pric .. Efl'ectin Mon., April 12 thru Wed., April 14 Nylon Pile Shag Carpet YO UR CHO ICE 5i1d. Ina tailed 4·~tellow J\lorning'' Carpel In 10 colors to suit your decor. ''Windmill" Ca.,;'Ling in 2·ply yarns for Jong ~·ear. Padding aval11b1e 1C needed SAVE $31! Sea ls "Luxury" Innerspring or Foam Latex JHattress Re"ular '89 .. " ~~~rce 53ss 3·1n. Dimple Top Fo1m Late1. llt1ttrt11, foam latex core plus layer or polyurethane foam quilt· ed lo top. . Jnnenprlng ~11ttl'ffl has M4 coils in f\lll siie, 384 coils in twin size. $89.ts Makhln& Foundation........... S8.81 1249.95 Qutt.n Slie Set .1159 t341.91 Kini Slit Stl .••.. 1z09 Ask AbGatSean Con•enfent Credit Plans. FREE Delivery, OfCouru! -[Sears I ..... . ........... ,~ l\lllfl. ,,.., (.l.HOl,1. •.O•ll fOVll<.1. " "'0"" 9lll'lt•U MOUfWOi)t IN.UWOOt 5-M•t• fttTIUO(. ,\ tolO 01,1.,..., •1'JMfN,._ mo "'"'' ...... I ltNTI '1 lrll ... I ....... -·~· tovT>I (OOJT l'\AU _, • ..., •w T0.1,1.0f\1 ••iur VlllllCN!f I 1 I I I I ' l I j I j I I ' I I I I I ' I I BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor MMMy, """ IL 1'71 M .. _II Members Serve 'Rubaiyat Rib' Members of Las Brizas del Mar will gather a jug of wine, a loaf of bread and their husbands when they take a break in their busy calendar or activities for A Rubaiyat Rib. ~ The first spring social activity for the Fountain Valley support gr up of the Children's Home Society will take place at 8 p.m. Saturday, April 7, in the Santa Ana home or Mr. and Mrs. Arvin Sethman. Mr s. Sethm is a provisional member of the auxiliary. In addition to honoring their husbands, members will welcome four other provisional members and their escorts during the party. Attending their first social will be the Mmes. Thomas Blinn, Arthur Caplett, Michael Harris and Miss Penny Lantry. Mrs. Robert Isaacsori. social chairman, is in charge of arrangements for the evening which will include a variety of hors d'oeuvres and other re- freshments catered by members themselves. Following the respite from their n1ajor philanthropic endeavor - supporting the goals or CHS -members will begin preparations for CHS Week in Fountain Valley. According to a proclamation by Mayor Edward Just, the observance will take place beginning Sunday, April 25, and continue through Friday, April 30. Auxiliary members will be stationed at different major shopping cen· ters in the area each day of the week explaining the changing face of adop- tion and offering brochures and other information to the public. • IN SEARCH OF A BOUGH -Members of Las Brizas de! Mar Auxiliary will be branching out from their usual funding activities for C.hildren's Home Society when they stage l\ Rubaiy_at Rib in honor of their husbands. Leading Ed Lavelle ''into the wil derness" are Mrs. Lavelle, armed with the jug of wine, and Mrs. Arvin Se thman, supplying the loaf of bread. To honor the auxiliary during the observance Girl Scout Troop 970, directed by Mrs. Ronald Thomas, will present 26 handmade receiving blankets which will be distributed to foster mothers caring for babies await· Ing adoption. Cooperation Requested City's Wheels T urn Toward Environment Communitywide concern for environment has prompted many 1ervice groups and individllals to climb aboard the Let's Recycle pro· gram sponsored by the Seal Beach Junior Woman's Club in cooperation with the city. As a part of Clean-up Week Expands, recycling centers ha ve been established wit hin the city. Purpose of the drive is to collect ma· terials that can be reused, therefore reducing pollution, litter and trash disposal. Each family is encouraged to take the responsibility of educat· ing themselves about recycling, buying returnable containers when- ever possible and reusing products which are not recycled ~y manu- facturers at this time, including plastics and wax-coated containers. NEIGHBORHOOD EFFORT Neighbors have been urged to band together in the collection of restorable iten1s: one neighbor might collect a can for glass. another maintain a can for aluminum and still others for reusable trash, ac- cording to Mrs. Ronald Ada1ns. president of the Juniors. Citing the many ingenious uses for recycleable articles, Mrs. Adams illustrated by pointing out that old glass is melted down to make new gla ss containers or ground up and used in highway construction or in the manufacture of bricks. · Old newspapers can be shredded, mixed with water. cooked, wa::ihed and smoothed out into strong new sheets of paper while it ordinarily takes 17 large trees to make one ton of new paper. Ne\v aluminum cans emerge from old ones, and some businesses ind grocery stores are recycling corrugated linings and cardboard to make new cartons for their products. Tin cans and mixed metals are processed and shredded bcfOre being sent to copper mines for use in leaching copper from mineral- lad en water. Residents mav help in the citywide drive by saving clean glass jars and bottles of all colors. aluminum cans, foil and frozen food trays and all clean mixed metal items including both cans and lids. CITYWIDE DRIVE • ' ' Recycling centers have been established at various areas throughout Seal BeacQ.. including 17th Street and Electric Avenue; Safeway, Seal Beach Cen1e r and College Park East. Questions concerni ng the campaign will be answered by Mrs. SIGHTS SET ON RECYCLING -In spiring many other city organ· izations to join in a communitywide project for environmental con- cern are (left to right) the Mmes. Mickey McDonough , Lee Risner, Donald Hadley and Ronald Bennett who have joined the Seal Beach Junior Woman's Club's Let's Recycle program. The project will be emphasized during Clean-up Week which begins tomorrow and continues through Saturday, April 17. Mike Knapp, 431-.9775, or Mrs. Ronald Bennet, 596·8191. Wings Jittery as Social Butterfly Emerges From Cocoon DEAR ANN LANDERS : t am nearly 17 and have had this problem for over a year. Whenever I am asked for a dale I get real excited about it and I look forward to having a good lime. So what happens~ About ten minutes before the guy shows up I get a stomach ache. By the time he arrives l feel rouen. 1 have these pains the whole evening and it's all J can do to force a smile and pretend I'm having fun . It kills me lo see other girls ti1ughing and enjoying themselves while I'm in pain -wishing I was dead. Please tell me how to get over this ridiculous thing. I am -SICK OF GE'IT!NG SICK DEAR s.o.G.S.: Go tn a doct<1r and learn whether or not an organic problem ts.;.caualnc Ille pain. Chances are good • ANN LANDERS that the trouble Is not In your 1:lomach but higher up -like la your bead. People who are uptl&ht, fearful and unsure of lhemstlves oflea develop phyaical tymploms. Stomach aches and beadacb~s are the most common. Hopefull y the doctor will give you some medlcaUon or 1u1gesl counseling. Maybt both. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I resenl your consistent portrayal of homosexuals as an immoral. antisocial, ob no x Io us segmenl of society. I especially take exception to the letler from the Arizona homosexual. Why it is you would not allow the words "kike" or "nigger" to get into print, yet you let the word "queer" appear in your column , even though il is olfensive to 20 million Americans. (Kinsey's stat Is tics ) . 1-'urthermore, your conclusion lhal the straight student was approached often because he was "prettier than rno.~t guys'' Is a sterotypica\ fallacy -pure fiction . Why do you treat 10 percent of your readership as though there is no good side to their life style? Your low opinion of homo.sexuals is apparent from the selection of the letters you choose to print. Get with it or give up. - MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL GAY LIBERATION ALLIANCE DEAR GA Y LIB: The letter below might be of lntertst la you since il deals wllh the same subject. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is one of the sincerest thank-yous you'll e v e r receive. I've always believed that only a homose.1ual could understand what it is like lo be persecuted by ignorant people, but you, Aon Landers, have displayed unusual understanding. A!. a 23-year-0ld homosexual, I can tell you ifs a rough life to be rejected and humiliated, but for boys IS and Ill il's pure hell. I appreciate your compassion. You are one person who prints the truth about homosexuality . Please keep reminding your readers that the trouble with t h e world is not that some people make love differently but that they don"t lo\'e at all -Love to you, Ann Landers. EVANSTON DEAR EVANSTON: Everyone llkes to be 1ppreeiatrd. Thanks for wrlOng. And now. 1 word to Gay Ub who says I 1m misinformed. Sorry, you're wron&. 11 11 no 1tereotyplc1l fallacy that pretty malea altraet bomost:.1uals. "Pink Tea Queens'' (as they are called) are weU aware of their r'rllah Rood look1 ud the.J Ust It to an advantage, Tiiis lnfonn aUoa comet to me from the homotenala themselves and aot from third-party r'tearchers. Drinking may be "in" to the kids you. run with -but it can put you "out" for keeps. You can cool it and s~ popular. Read ''Booze and You -for Teenagert Only ." Send 3S cent! in coin and a lonll'., self·addressed, stamped envelope with your request in care of lhe DAU. Y PILOT . • J 4 DAILY PILOT USC Cla ss mates Garden Chosen For Wedding Patricia Ann Tay Io r, formerly a Newport Beach resident, became the bride or Jchn Murray Cairns in 1 poolside garden wedding at her parents' Ontario licme. Bishop Seth Baker performed tbe double ring ceremony. Parents of the bride are MRS. JOHN M. CAIRNS Double Ring C1r1mony ~tr. and ~!rs. Ralph L. Taylor. The bridegroom Is the son of Mrs. James Herbert Cairn! of North Vancouver. Brilish Columbia and the late Mr. Cairns. Escorted by her father, the bride chose her sister t\iiss Cathi Taylor to be her maid of honor. Douglas Cairns flew from North Vancouver to be his brother's best man. The new Mrs. Cairns is a learning coordinator in the Fountain Valley Schoo I Di.strict and an instructor al Orange Coast College. She i!I a masters degree candidate at the University of Southem California. Her husband, a Fulbright scholar, U; a high school teacher in the Santa Monica Unified School District. He also teaches English at Santa Monica City College, and was for two years on the faculty of the university in Thesalonike. Greece. He has earned two masters degrees and an administration creden· tial from tiSC. ' Clown ing Around Joyce Runge Becomes Mrs. Michael Ollila The circus will come to toy,•n Friday, April 16. 'vhen the ~Ieadowlark \Vomen's Golf Club sponsors its annual InvitalionaJ. Following a shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. will be the tournament and a t1rcus luncheon. Ready for their day "under the big top" are (left to right) the l\<lmes. John Montgomery, Stanley Du Ree and Robert Moore. A double ri~ ceremony in Prince of PlaCe Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa, linked the names of Joyce Runge and Michael H. Ollila. Counselor Joins Staff The bride was given in mar. riage by her parents, M r . and Mrs. E. H. Runge of Huntington Beach. Conducting the morning rites was !he Rev. Andrew C. Anderson. Of Crittenton Services Florence Crittentun Services enable the budding Crillenton or Orange County has reached organization to bel!er build its a milestone in i!s expanding structure. Parent.s of the bridegroom are 1'-tr. and Mrs. Eino Ollila of Costa 1'-1esa. Howard Ollila was best man far his brother, and another brother Ed Ollila headed the ushers. including Dennis Holland, Dave Siebels and Loren Matson. Miss Laurel Runge was her sister's maid of honor , a n d Miss Karen Runge her brides maid. Other bridesmaids In· eluded Miss Pat Ollila, sister af the bridegroom. Miss Judy Robinson and Mrs. Myron Okimoto. Flower girls were Donna and Karen Stanley. a n d Michael Stanley carried the rings. The bride was graduated MRS. MICHAEL OLLILA Morn ing Rites from Marina High School and from UCJ. Her husband, who graduated from Costa Mesa High School. served for four years in the Air Force. \\'Ork with un\l·ed mothers and Any problems relating to their families with t he pregnancy may be discussed addition of its first social with Karen. whose office is at worker. Mrs. Norm an 531 S. Main St .. Suite 7. i11 Bigelman. Orange, telephone 547·9377. Mrs. Bigelman. a native of Cr ittenton administrators point out that one out of everv Tustin, brings to the services 10 births this year in Orange extensive experience 1 11 County will be to an unwed working with emotionally mother. and four of those \\'ill involved young people. be to teenagers. She earned her BA degree at "Sadly. in many cases, th is the University of California, P reg Ill an c Y marks the Santa Barbara in 1960 and her beginning of a cycle consisting MA degree in social work at of dropping out of school, the University of SOuUiern living on state welfare. never California. marrying and having more out-of-wedlock children." a Prior to joining F'lorenr.e spokesman said. Critten!on Services. she was Toastmistress Club affillated with f'lve Acres With Karen 's help. the l"t'sidential treatment center Criltenton Services v.·i!J hope for emotionally d 1 s t u r b e d lo break that cycle and help children, Family service pregnant teenager!> assun1e Association of Oranae County responsible roles by offering • OFFERS HELP Karen Bigelman Objectives Listed "' direction in medical care. and the Orange Co u n t y education, legal aid a n d A~plion Age~cy. counseling. ~re11. who IS the mother of Atrs. Bigelman. ...,. h 0 s e husband has retumed to California Stale College al Ful1erto111 to study political srtence. enjoys sewing and playing bridge in her leisure time. You Were There will theme the Wednesday, April 14, meeting of Las 0 I a s Toastmistress Club in the (Mercury Savings and Loan Association building. Huntiagton Beach. will be David. 16 months. and -iiiiiliiiiiiiilllliiili•• lo learn correct Kimberly. 3 months. feels that reporting. · · · 1 h Mrs. Calvin 01 1t 1s 1mportan I at unwed c GI . . colt. \\'ill molhers-IC>-be consider a I I row cond"'l a b'oefmg "'"on on opUons I" 1he;, child. l}IJ}g OI'Y how lo make reports . "They have lo live with that The objective of the 7:30 p.m. meeting. according to Mrs. Velma Bolin, president, Mrs .. Laurence .Th.om as .• decision 8 Joni{ time." she J toastmistress, w1!l. introduce . stated. The total ramily unit is leauty "'alo11 !-" the. prog_ram participants and welcome to come to her office. a.:J I.:'.' top1.cs, 1nc.lu.d1ng the Mmes. including the natural father. OPIH tV!HIHGS AND SUNJAYI Bolin, g1y1ng, a . c I u .b She will concentrate on representatives repo rt. Marie visiting other agencies to find Fouts. a book report_. and Joe what social services are Gonza.1es, a book r~Vle\\". . missing in Orange County to Alpha Phi Alumnae To Gather Dunng the clubs April 2ft meeting, members w i 11 demonstrate the making of craft items for a booth at the Huntinl{ton Beach City· \Vide festival May 15. Soro ptimi1ts Newport Harbor Soroplimlsl Club meets the first three \Vednesdays for a noon luncheon in the \llh ile Horse Inn. Newport Beach. Women who are interested In achieving poise a 111 d confider.cc in hand Ii n g everyday situations a re An Aug. 8 \\'tdd1ng in the welcome lo join the club. Orange County B h u d di st r============, ---~:oo;, Of OIL PAINT INGS ~ Church. Anahein1 ts being LOCAL WHOLIS.lll WA911HOUSI planned bv Jean \\'ada and 1 Of'IN TO THI f'UILIC Ronald S. Nakano. N• eth•' n•wip1,-r t1U1 you OFF Their betrothal 11.as an-rno••, •¥•ry <il•y, •h•vt wh1t'1 50°/o • . . th G t 0 • '''' •· '''"'''· ''''' ,,, r; nounced by her paren ts. ~fr. 9°1"9 •" '" • ••• '' r1n91 ,_ ••• .., ~ d t II Co11t th•n lh1 DA ILY f'ILOT. ....... .. an I\ rs. Bl H. V.'ada or~:::;::;::;;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;:=:::;:~~-~~·~·;"~'~';';'~·;";'~·~·~~~ Garden _Grove. during a rlinner 11 party in the Kono lla\\'aii restaurant. Among guests were l'\1r and! r-..frs. John G. Naknno of Santa Ana Heights. parents of the benedict-elect. 1'1iss Wada, a graduate oll Pacifica l·li11h School. attend~ California State C'olll'R<' a1 ' J<'ullerton wherr she t~ af. filialed wilh Sigma Kappa sorority. Her fiance, a graduate of Corona del Mar Hi!'h School . earned ihs BA degree in finance at CSCF. where he wu • member or Sigma Alpha Epsilon rrale.mily. OTERY SHOii f'O• '#OMllll 6 CHllO•IN IU I . Uftl It. c-tt• ... • ...,,,. LADIES -ARE YOU OVER 30 AND DO YOU HAVE AGING SKIN PROBLEMS? 1t••DE£ Tlll•OllMAL I EAUTY f'lAN -M t11le:1tly _,,., .. ntw "' •<"'C+plo. H '""'llfotlly l'HKtlYI .... llMlll!lykot, "ltw tll<t•trlft 11111 lton' Vw "'"'Y !tr Y'Ollf CllrlPltl-. I• ·~•If •! lflt l~(I !~II l llnMI I tlltllrl .. tllr'I .... tttl el ell• ,,..tk1 ••• Hll ••11"11.,., It I• "'~Ifill ltlll ltllrt ••• in.,.. 111111 Nt1y ftlllllO• ""''' 111t!otl"" f,..fll -'-"" el _,., 1U11, illy 111111 •• U119r tflrlJI•• ........... ...... "I .. , II l10!, (ftlllll lllk '"111'1-.h !tr .... ~11111 lolrlft yff , .. "' •to l'llln hr "'° IM!flt. nt. fl'.1,.." Trt-0.IMI l .. llfy f'lff - lllillf' ,., '"' '""'· "ff .,_, "'"'IMI wllfl tflt •Ill """"1111 "'"' !If' <•• ..... ~I, A.•t •• .. tt """9(h .... Jly-lltf'INI[, M ni.y Clftlltl 111"'9 -•lllvo Sll lo •.-11111w1 "'"' ft -•It. -•· ... .__.....,., " r1 '"'""'' ..,. <ltl•, '"lllilw1 •~••· It 1tty -.. 11~1 . .,,.., " ,...'9rtf <•rW i.r. T~• c•r• 11 ''" ''" .. ~ ..... ,.,.. •r H CO• .. o<i.o.IMktlly ~. Tt N Ct""'ltltly •""41, II illlfvlll Nl-....,...,. .. , IN'lc '"" -TIM fl:t111ft T!1•0.nn1l lttWIY f'llto -to! <rttllflt I rt .. t\l'flr fl tOtlllltf f-Clen Wllfllfl 1111 lloJot. ti •~1-•11Y , ... "'""· -flt· •• "'•w111v1111 '-' "" Mlt nirnpltJlfll ''"'' <111 ........... , .... "'"' "' , ... , "" ... _ ,_11••11111 ... ,.., • ltW ltl-t IVlt It Wll~ttl t -•ltlt ''°"'Ill( c!1•4'1t 11[ tl!elr llC!tl •-r•IW•. N1 ..,otori... i. ....,. ,,. 1.,. '"""" '" ,,,,,.1..,. "' ,.... ~ He•. Plllflt """' ltttl ....... IMvry Ct11 .. Ht1!1 11 IU.1'11 Ill' .. ..t.l'tt llllllf ··-"'"'''""· APPOINTMENT NOT ,l,LWAY5 NECE~~A.RY SPRING PERM SALE! Bouncy, breezy beautiful curls Flattering new fashion look. Very Special. Reg . $15.00 now BUDGET PERM •••. (Normal Ha11) FROSTING SPECI AL. .. $14so SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT "''" T'" "''' $295 •150 l •tff W11t •345 •200 '-s=o=ur"""H =co"'"'As=r ~PLA~ZA= _-'p;~·~si6~7f86w l..-0\1er l.cvel-1'\C'-.:t to Scars Open Ev•nings 267 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Phone 548·9919 Open Evenings & Sund1y We CAR E about you! Look your be1tl Your Horoscope Aquarius: Avoid Ruts TUESDAY, APRIL 13 By SYDNEY OMAJ\R ARJES (March 21·Aprll 19): Hold off on financial commitments. Take time lo evaluate. lnvenlory or your own assets is essential. Jo'inish major project. Leave no loose ends. Money pressure will ease. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You wiU have to handle added pressure . Don't duck responsibility . A past commitment makes rearpearance. Maintain ba ance . Throw aside eutmoded concepts. Get down to business. GEMINI (May 21.June 20)' Play low key . You gain most now through quiet approach. One who constanUy complains must be given facts of life. Refuse to be a doOr mat for any persons. Message will be clear. CANCER (June 2l·July 22): Accent versatility. Don't scatter forces. Finish w Na t you start. Spread influence. An older friend may have legitimate objection. Be a good listener. You I earn something of value. LEO (July 23--Aug. 22): Check details; don 't overlook apparent minor matters. One born under Scorpio can help unravel mystery. Accent on securing properly. Stay on top of situation. Be available. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Take nothing for granted. Reports need verification. Some messages now tend to go astray. Key is to do some Irvine Club to Hear Executive Director Mrs. Judson Sutherlland, ex. ecutive di r ec tor of the Orange County chapter o( the March of Dimes will be the ftatured speaker when members or the Irvine Junior \Voman's Club gather on Wednesday, April 14. fl.frs. Craig Parks will open her Irvine home tor he metling at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Sutherland, 1 Costa Mesan, also is a f i e I d representative for Southern California and a 2 2 y e a r member of the March crf Dimes. She will speak on health needs in the county and show a film explaining how clubs may assist the foun-- dation. Members also will have the opportunity to set the ensemble which won a serond place award for Mrs. Parks in the Orange Dist rict, CFWC, Creative Sewing Contest. She will model her entry, an off· white Forstman wool A-line dress with tunic length jacket. personal investigating. Ask questions. Go to sour~. Ne secondhand reports. LIBRA ( S.pt. 23-0ci. 22) : Some financial pressure is in· dicated. Payments come due. Weigh budget; take inventory. Home improvements a re necessary. Make gesture ar recwiciliation to f a m i I y member. You'll be happier. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be aware of competition. Don't rool yourself into false sense or security. Be wary or one who is quiet, but resentful. Face facts as they exist. R,e.. cent venture will bear fruit. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): You complete im· portant task and receivt! ad· ded recognition. Steer clear of dispute between fr l e n d s. Otherwise you could be caught in middle. Tread JighUy. Laugh at your own foibles. CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You ccnnplete importan~ task and receive added reco- gnition. Steer clear of dispute between friends. Otherwi:se you could be caught in middle. Tread lightly. Laugh at your own foibles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. 18): Your values are put to test. You may have to choose between inertia and progress. Latter course takes initiative. Don't permit yourself to re· main in any rut. PISCES (Feb. 19-t>.1arch 20): Some plans are altered. Have faith in ultimate outcome. Giving up now would be error. There will be changes . You will adjust to them. Protect interests via le gal procedure. ewinner! , Sears U1 eSecrrs Revolvin; Chmv• •Babies, Children S wttks lo 1~ )'ears •One per subj eel. • Satislac&io11 paraalttd eGrovps ttt per nbject. Photographer will be in store on Tuesday, Wed., Thursday and Fridays 12 noon te 8 p.m. Saturdays IO a.m. to 6 p.m., Sundays 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sean C.S. Mesa Brtllol 11 s..no.,.. .. r I• tilt Sol~ C:O.st Pt.ra Mt..QD Seen 9.,.. Part tm Palm• 11 SU111ot1 rnoNE TA M40I w u1_..,1r1 S...n Torn ...... H•wtM>nll' •I S..ps.IYH• PHONE W!-1511 Se9n 8oyll' Olyt11p6c 11M1 Soto PHONE ?'8-S!ll San Venn.I • Vt't"DIOlll 1lSl.l•-AYt1. PHONE PLt.1111 INn l11lneod MIKlilnttt II Hlllnat PHONE OR &-u!J 8-11 Pk9 W. PWJUN. at RimP1• PHONE WE M!CZ I I I , . I 1 I ' ! i I ' I I. ! I I ! i· I Fo1111iai.11 · Valley 'f~ll l'lnal • N .. Y. Stoeks • voe. 64, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COONTY, CALIFORNIA MON DAY-, APRIL 12, 1971 TEN CENTS Blockbuster Bo mbs Used Bolsa Battle Ends In Viet nam Huntington Quits; State W~y Clea r SAIGON (UPI J -The U.S. Air Force used its 7'h. ton blockbuster bomb as a tactical weapon for the first time today In the Indochina war, dropping •wo of them on Communist troop concentrations around besieged Fire Base 6 in the Central Highlands. The bombs, largesl in the U.S. arsenal except for nuclear weapons, were parachuted from Cl30 transport planes. They exploded a few yards off the ground, blasting holes as big as footbrut flelds in the jungles. Their concussion can kill a man or disable him by causing bleeding from the ears and nose. Despite rain squalls and high winds in the Fire Base & region in the Central Highlands, 852! dropped SUO tons of bombs on the Communists near the base. The 23 sorties Oown today raised to 2,500 tons the amount of bombs dropped in the area since the siege began March 31. Front dispatches said the Communists had sent in 10,000 troops to the fire base area and that the government had a similar-sized force there , the heaviest concentrations sine~ the invasion of Laos. U.S. military sources in Saigon said their intelligence indicated a ' ' s ma 11 e r'' Communist force but did not elaborate. The Viet Cong, which calls the Fire Base Hill No. 1001, broadcast several vfctory claims and said one Saigon reinforcement column broke and ran when it came under attack. The Viet Cong said they had killed 620 Saigon troop11 in the battle. Saigon reported 2,624 Communisls slain at a loss of 172 government dead. Filling llp tJae B e ach In the Mideast, they pipe oil across desert sands. But in Surfside Colony, Seal Beach, the pipeline is for sand. The idea is to pump off. shore sand onshore to rejuvenate erosion-prone beach. It is almost an annual occurrence at Surfside. The Army Corps of Engineers is in charge of the project. When it is completed, workmen will pick up their pfpes and go home. By ALAN DIRKIN Of ... DlllY ,llM '1eff The city of Huntington Beach today boW«I out of a battle with the 1tate over the BolJa Chica Beach, allowing the state to obtain full ownership of the strand. The city notified Superior Court. Jµdge R491f1ond Vincent I.hat it was dropping lta claim for surface access rights over the railroad right-of-way on the beach. This acUon cleared the way for the state to buy the right-of.way for $3.8 million and thus put all the beach property under state ownership. The acquisition would put lhe atate in a Possible Cuts In Huntington Schools Listed Ways and means by which the budget of the Huntington Beach Union High School District may be lrimmed by '4 million will be suggested to the board of trustees Tuesday night by Superlntl!ndent Jack Roper. Roper said he would present the Itemized cut list not as a 11pecific recommendation to the four-member board but as a "report to show what It would take to operate the clistrict on an 85--cent budget.'' Officials Call for Split The impending cuts have been blamed by school official.s on a drop in revenue caused by the district'' failure to win a tax increase election last month. Unleu the. district ii suoceuful 1n ~ ~lax ---fli\lhd~ llJ)erb •IY ill operltlq liaaret will drop from Ille ~.11.Jt to ti- ceni. per 1100 of a....,ed nlultla). Ille liWell permltled by Ille state.'' . Superintendents Seek Creation of Three Districts Roper did nol disclose dellUs of hil suggestions but they may include an assessment of how many teachen may be lost if the slashes go into effect. Some area school officials are 5peculating that the 52-square mile Huntington Beach Un ion High School District could be divided in· to three separate, unified districts. Officials of two of the five dis· tricts w h i ch make up the high school district have drawn similar plans for unification and separation of the district. The superintendents of the Ocean View and Fountain Valley elementary districts will show their plans to their respective boards of trustees during special meetings to· night. In e s s en c e, they call for the creation of three individual unified school districts along the following boundaries: -One district consisting of the cur re n t We stminster and Seal Beach elementary districts, plus Westminster High School. -Anolhcr district taking in the Fountain Valley end lluntington Beach City elementary districts on the east side of Beach Boulevard. alon~ with Fountain Valley and Edison High Schools. -A third district combining the Ocean View and remainder o( the Huntington Beach Cit y elementary districts on the west side of Beach Boulevard, with Marina and Huntington Beach high 1;chools. "It would mean tht loss of the Ocean View district as an identity, but it's in the best interest of the children," says Ocean View Superintendent Clarence Hall. "We want the full 13 years of education tn be consistent and continuous. But unification of the total district would be a disaster." Mike Brick. sllperifttendent of the Fountain Valley School District, said. Six districls -one high school, five rlcmen1 ary -make up the 52-square miles of the high school boundary. E&eh is separate and independent from the other. but all are studying unification plans. Slate law requires 11 unification election in June 1972, for all school districta not elready unif ied. If no al ternative is proposed. reslde.nl!I will vote on the same total unification plan -all 52-square mlle11 under one adminislratlon -they defeated l h r r e years ago by a 7-1 margi n. And if no unif ication p\an11 are adopted by voters prior to 1977. the state Board of Education must move In and unify the dis lr icls along • plan It f~la is best for the area The three-way split propo.sed by Ocean Vlf'w and Fountain Valley 18 the only plan offered so far. Adminis trators from the Stal Beach and Westm inster elemen~ry dlltrtcts 11nd tht lfuntin~t.on Btach Union High School District, h11 ve Indicated they probably wUI not propo.'lt plana, but their trwi:tees will atudy aubmllted propoaall. S. A. MoffeU, ruperlntendent of lht 1 ·• About 249 probaliodary employes - teachers, counselors, nurses a n d assistant principals -have alteady been notUied that they "may not be" reemployed next year beca1.11e of fiscal IOl!i~S. -lt..~P~-· {)(.CAN \llEW SQloa. JJl5TRICT l ;/ District officials must give them definite notification of their termination by May 15. Although it hes not bun exacUy spelled out, district officials aay only 25 to 40 of the 249 are considered to be in jeopardy. I ,_ ti \..J J ------: I ffXNrAFfl \ill Other cuts which have been suggested but have not been acted .upon are reductions in atudent tranaporta.Uon. special programs, athletica and otbtr educational programs. --· SCl(Da. DISfRICT _ J1,.,i;,.,1,,, aw! u.,;., ~ -:: Jf.gh !clial J);tt.,..ct «: 11 -£Icmutl81J Pidrich ""4:t.J,Jb.'!!...~ ... Final determinations on what will and what will not be in the budget will be made by the. board of trustees at public budget sessions. Huntington Beach City School District, 8aid his district may proJ>03e unification along ils own boundaries. State rules which guide the splitting up of any disltict, however, could make it difficult for any inclividual district to unify along its ,own boundaries. Each new unified district created lrom any old non-unified distrkt must have an assessed valuation per chtld wtthln 10 percent of the average figure for the old, non-unified <mtrict. ·And school populations of the MW districta must be slmJl1r. T h i 1 guarantees each new district feirly equal educaUon opportunltieJ. Under the Ooean View-Fountain Valley Unruh Won't Run For Yorty's J ob Frem Wlre Servfcfl SACRAMENTO -Jes.or Unruh, unsucce11Sful Democratic csndidate for governor last year, today atld he has no plans to run for mayor of Lot An1eles. as has been speculated. i · Asked 1t a Sacr•f n e w 1 conference if he is piano t6 run for mayor in 1973, Unruh repll , •·No, I am not." But wheo asked If he w a 1 • unequ lvocabl,y rulin& out the possibili ty, Unruh rtfuatd to •l'wwtr f u r t h e r questions on the 11.Jbjec\. Unruh returned to tht Cap itol today in • new role: private citizen. Not only that, the former Auembly speaker and Democratic nominee for governor is jointly promoting a program with many ol the wealthy 1upporttr1 of Ropublican Gov. Reagan. proposal, which both districts agree Is general and can be amended. the assessed valuation• and populations are projected to be close, though not exactly equal. 1f the three separate districts were unified next September )hey would have, according to Brick, the f o 11 o w i n g attendance njUJ'es: 22,000 children east of Buch Boulevard; 17,500 students west of Beach Boulevard, and 19,500 11tudents for the Weslmln11ter-Seal Beach area. AMessed valuation is expected to average out to $13,000 per student for each district over seven yea.rs allowed by the state. These meetinp will begin later this month and last until the end of the school year, according to Roper. Police, Guards Take I t Easy After Busy Week Lifeguards and police were relaxing In lluntlngton Beach today after a busy but uneventful Easter Week. About 225,000 swimmers, surfers and 11unworshipers flocked to the strands during the vacation, but the crowds dropped off Sunday as the youths forsook the beach scene for the family scene. "Overall, we had one of our best "The key to the money situation 11 expansion of the Edison plant in southwest Huntington Beach," Hall explained. "Without it. the Fountain Easters,'' reported Lifeguard Captain Valley area would be somewhat poorer Doug.las D' Arnall. "The hot speU and then the other two.·• good surf attracted heavy crowds the llall's Ocean View District would lose first four or five days, but then as the 11\x schools which are on the east 11ide of weather turned the crowds fell oU." Beach Boulevard -the line e f About 30,000 per10ns went to the demarcation ifl HunUngton Beach. munlcipal beach Saturday and about "We feel this plan can provide• much 12,oo:I on Sunday. About 15 rescue3 were higher quality of education for all the logged by the guarda over the weekend. chJldreo," Hllll stated. Jt was windy Sunday with 1lr All local educators 11eem opposed to te:mpetature only '8 degrees and the total unificallou. water 53 degrtt1. "I'd hate to set a dilltrict with 60,000 Abount. t,llOll l>r.achioer1 reludd on the. students as projected under the tctal Huntington State Park strands over the plan ," Jack Roper . the new wetkend while a 1imllar number opted 11uperintendenl of the bigb school dlatrtct, for the Balsa OUca Beach. commented. 1 , -·· l·~~ al the polk!e &pe.ct .. 1 "We haven1 r11D1 · loobcl 11 .· ~! Dtllil (SEO), • ""°P •OI unification.", R09et -'"lllace 1lu'te ~~of~ Who CID quickly of our' board mtmbel• are on elementary be dlspatdledto troubled attu..:11ao toot • boarda as well , l 'm· SUtt they're awsre of In the beach scene. "'hat's happe.ninc: ~11 probably 11tudy Sgl George Renek rtepol'ttd that ·they the tlementary di4rlet plans." arrt:sted 36 MJSpeeU on narcotics Octan View's trustees will study their JIOl!Sl!llsion charges: bUt "°' dtllers wen• administration plan at 7:30 ti'clock nabbed. .;. tonight. In district offices, while Fountain . "We eX)'>ed thlnp to alinr down vn6I Valley trustee&. will meet on unlficallon June when the !ED wtll bt ou.t oo ttil •I l::rJ o'clock teolgh~ In their elllC... , beach 1pln," Sf1. llenelt ldded. T - posllloo to develop the beech -celled Tin c.. •lltach became of lnadeq01te cleanup operations ln the past -for wiGe publlc Ille. ,, But Ute dlJelopment -delayed for yeara ~tD ' the railroad strip was acquired -·may ~Sain be held up by a lack of ltate fundi. • "It may be delayed for another year," Pat'Dougbfrty, the state'• Oran&e coot area•manaa:er, said this morning. He 1ald that the state bas bond money to deveJop newly acquired property but money for roads on beaches come from the state operatina: fund. Dougherty dld ' . nol aMOl IJlll'IWll.from lbe l.ellalature of--~ llmd upenditurea this ~· . ·°""""'1'1,.. ·np1tlned tllot the allte •·•·3.--Jlll'ldni lot, fhll c:ould be .. by ~·bl the oil ....... at Bolsa ,Ollca. • "U ....Wck he more highly developed tiWI l!Wllbi,un Sllte Park," he -.....i: l)ooiherty said 'ho holi••"' the! the state may ho 1ti1' ~ go aheld wllb eome of Ila.plans at Ille nortltend of lbe beach near Warner AVenue. ~ raUro.ad rl&ht- ·(l!ff ·BOLBA, Pli1e I) Girls Get Help Sisters Save Family After Crash .ORINDA IUPll -Jennifer Dryn<r, 10, and her sister Kelly, 9, trai~ for four hours through dark, dank, rain-soaked, wooded terrain. At the end of their trip they were weary and ''a meas,"· but not ooe whit leu determined. The two girls had a mission, and they accomplished it handsomely. They saved their mom, Lheir dad, Lhelr two younger brother&. The slate.rs stumbled through the woods to get help for · their family trapped in a light plane that had crashed in Contra Costa County. Henry Boeger fOWld lhem Saturday morrting on hla ranch. "There 11tood those Utile girls, wet and cold. •. they were a meas .•. one bad a bad gash on her head. "They were so serious about helping their family, lhey didn't let anything elle bother them," Boeger added. "They were brave-kids.'' Boeger notified sheriff's deputies and then TQde a hone to the wreckage. He and deputies rescued Jam~ B. Bryner. 34. bia .wi_fe Bretta, and their sons, Marlr, 8 and Erie, 1. All were . reported in satisfactory conditio'n Sundsy at John Muir Hospital. Bryner was flying his family to Orinda from Ojai, California for an Easter vis.it with rtlat.ivea when the plaoe crashed Saturday and wu demolished. ffunringttn.t Poli.be M6Ve . O·ver Pay-Sca'.18 Scored , A ruove by Huntington Beach police. llld , lirem,en to set a11lde the city's pay aca1e proposals wll!I condemned today In Orange County Superior Court as Colorado River Campers Lea ve Lots of Litter PARKER. Ariz. (UPJ) -An e11t.imated 30,000 students and other young persona departed camp grounds along a 200-mlle stretch of the Colorado River Sunday, leaving behind mounds of litter. California and Arizona authorities said that nearly 500 arrests were made during the week-long student vacation, most for drunkenness and narcotics. B u t • authoriUes added, that other than the Utter, mostly piles of beer cans, tl~ crowds stretching south along the river from Bullhead City were peaceful and well behaved. On the Arizona side of the Colorado, Yuma County Sheriff Travis Yancey said "the biggest part of the crowd has lefL But there's lots of litter, lots of litter." Yancty 1aid be had S5 officers in the arta the ·past week and a total of 315 arrests were made. The sheriff said it was mostly peaceful but "l just hope they do something different next year. I think we had a good holiday, We don't like to arrest people but the law is the law ••. " Jn Mojave County to the north, deputies arrested 81 persons and a spokesman said "for the size of the crowds, it was pretty peaceful.'' On the California side of the river, 82 young persons were taken into custody on mot1tly drunk charges. "For tbe most part they were well behaved," said Sheriff's Lt. Walter Acuna. Meanwhile In Palm Springs, whJch In past years has been overrun with hippies numbering more than 30,000. the cjty police deparlment said only about 5,000 were on hand and that virtually all of them had stayed in motel1 or botels. Two years ago, youths Oocked io such numbers to the Indian-owned Tahqolta Canyon that the trJbe protested. Police arrested 157 persons that year. VALLEY HOPEFULS S.t'EA.K tONI(;.fl:P· A final remtn.der: tonigb! 11 • ~ candida\es nJiht \n F01111l:.ln Ville.. . · The Chamber ol c.n.m.rce hla1iiilted the 17 iddldale1 in.. Ille liuntl114ion Beach Uolan Hlgh Sc~ Diltr~ rice and Uie ffve.-eandldalet Fouii&a n Vel- l•Y SchoOI Dlatriit t~ Jo lll"ik 11 7::rl p.m. a\ F9unt1ln ye j Hiib ;iiihOol. ' "Ut1jUatllied and .a ·polntleu challenge to undoUbted city authority in this area." Attorney Herbert A. Moss asked Judge Raymond ·Thompeon to deny the writa of n:iandate filtld by the Huntington Beach police and firemen's usoclatlon1 and defended the agreement ht uld was reaebed before both or a: an ii at I on s decided t.o c:halleiij:e the city. Both gro~ps want Judge Thompson tc set atlde the City Council resolution of last Sepl 1 fn whicb an 8.25 percent pay hike was ordered tor all city employes. Both police and firemen want an 1 l pereen& rai.st and they argue that the city should have continued discussions on the Issue before ta.king action. The police officers ,usociaUon alao wants $650,000 in damages from the city. Both wrjtl or mandate claim that city council action violated a long st.anding tgrttment ·between the city and both aaaociationa· by including pay hikes for both organizations in the overall city action. City officials estimated that the pay lncrease1 for its IJO firemen would cost the city about $61,000 a year. Increases for policemen ove.r the 8.25 percent level would cost the city a further $43,813 aMually, Judge Thnompeon took the issue under submission after hearing arguments from both sides. Jt ii eiptded that he will rule later today. Easter Spent at Sea CHARLO'l"l'E AMALIE, V.I. (AP) - AristoUe and J acqutllne: Onassis along with her two chikhn, •pent Easttt hert. aboard the Ona"ll yacht Chrtstlna, Weatller Early fog.and afternoon SWWtlne return to lbt c:oaol Tueoday wtlll ttmperalurea dipping to 62 al011g lbe heacha lll1d 76 lurthtr Inland. JNSmE TODAY ,, . Mo1t polfct dqxzrtmn.tl f11 Oranot Count11 are not se1 up to handlt coruum«r fraud, 1a11s thf: dtpvt11 di.strict attorney cu.rign- td tueh 1ait1. Storv. Poat B. ' "' t .. .... n " • • • " .... .. ........ ~ ....... l: ""''"'" ...... +.f °'Miff c-iv , lflYI• Pwlw ti '""' .... ,. lfMl M...tttt 0.b TIJl1"111M n .,,_,,,"' " '#N,Pfler • W9!!WI'• ...... , .. ,, Wwtll ...... M -• t DAil V PILOT ----ANllU.1"1 Fro• P•ge l l st Time in co,.rt Huntington l;andjdates BOLSA ... of-way runs the lencth of Bolsa Cb.lea but la widest at the aorthern ~nd. Dulaney Hearing In Frauds Slated Friday, the views o! three candldales !or lhe Hunlln&ton Beach Union Hilb School District Board nl Trustees wen pnsented Ill Ibis 1p1ce. Tod.,, the vlew1 or three more-candlilates for the bQlrd are oUered. "They may be able to Im-• It wills the bond money at the northern end,'" Jlou&herly oa!d. There are 17 condidates Ill all. They are seeking t"" """ tn lb• April 20 ballol Voters will be cssting two ballots In this eleeUOD -one In, order to fill the unexpired term (May and June) or former trustee Joseph Ribal, the other in order to fill two seat:s on the five·man board for regular, four-year terms. The city of Huntington Beach entered lht court cue la1t year at the request or state attorneys who had filed an eminent domain action to acquire the rail strip from the owners. Bolsa P a c i f i c Corporation and the Southern Pacific Company. Following are candidates' .answers to questions posed by the Huntington Beach League of Wo- men Voters . All candida tes \Vere given an opportun lty to respond to the same questions. t; Br TOM BARLEY arrested. 'OPERATE YEAR 'ROUND' Compuier Consultant Gordon Gordon Favors More. Efficiency Robert M. Gordon is a computing iystems consultant. He lives at 5211 Princeton Ave., Westminster. Q. What program or poUcy chan1e.s would you favor? "We must organize and operate our schools so that they are more effective and more efficient. -The ways we choose to do this must provide excellent educational opportur.it) for all students, college bound or not, and not jw;t the exceptionally good ones or the handicapped. We can begin by (1) re· examining what we want our schools to do ; (2) setting up programs which will get the job! done, and (3) organizing, budgeting, managing and me.asurlng to make the programs successful "We should increaee the teaching and decrease the administration in the district. We can do that by vellling teacben and atudent.s with the authority and responsibility for some administration, subject W the Ir acco1:1nt.blllly for performance, a 1 mentioned above. "We should operate our achoola year 'round and use each school more intensively." Q. How do you feel about anUlcatlon? "StaU: law .says we must unl!y, that Js, organiu one or more school dislrict.s to operate all grades, K through 12. We &hould make our own decision as to how unification should be carried out rather than let strangers from Sacramento dictate to us. I favor small districts - perhaps three of them -so that we can 1et a better match between our schools and the wl!hes of the pwple they are supposed to serve. One district, composed of all five eJ.l!tlng elementary school district! and the lWUHSD, would be too large to permit that. However, I believe that many auxiliary services -for ex a m p I e : transportation, purchasing, data proeessmg -should be centralized to achieve ef!Jclencie11 that could yield significant cost savings and result Jn lower tax rates in each of the surviving unified school districts." Q. What are your feellngs on teaicber te11ure ? "Teacher tenure, which has come to mean the guarantee of lifetime t>mployement -even for the incompetent -should be aboll!hed. ·To replace the !~nure system we should do two things. Improve our proceduret for !electing tea chers. and improve our technlque1 for measuring instructional perfonnance se · that we can rewa rd those teachers who do their jobs well. But, before we abandon tenure, we must be certaln we hav.e adequate safeguards a g a I n 1 t arb11rary or capricious mistreatment of teachers by trustees or administrators which is what gave ris..? to the ten~ fiysle.m in the first place." Q. Row would a vo ucher sy1tern or •tatewkle property tax affett scbool flaan<:a? "I am opposed to the voucher system. l believe it would foster the p~ollferation of aewly~Sl!iblished, fly.by· night schools and ·would destroy the system of public educal!on as v.·e know it by depriving our schools of the funds needed to operate them . "As I understand then1. statev.·ide properly _tax proposals made so far merely shift property taxes from a local to a state base. There is no guarantee th.at significant amount or new n1onrv will resun. Nor is there any guaranteC that other local agencies will not in- crease their Jevles to lillt he \'Old lrft when the school tax Is transferred 10 state roll!. We need properly tax rrtief and we need oilier sourcu of funds 10 opera te our school!. These proposals do not utilfy eilher need. Sen. Thur1nond Fro!? Wins Jumping Honor SPRINGFIELD, S.C. (UPll -"Push· ups," I ff08 entered by Sen. Slrom 'nJurmnd (J\.S.C.), won the pollticl111s' cflvlslon ot the annual governor'• frog Jumping CO!ltelt. Thurmond'• entry jumped nine feel , &bret 1nchel 1t the event Slturdly. 'RECOGNII! DIFFERENCES' Attorney Hlckt Hicks Advocates Program Cltange Harry E. Hicks, 91T1 LaGrande Circle, Fountain Valley, is an attorney. Q. What prnpm or policy cbange1 would )'i!U favor? "I would like to see several changes in our programs in the ne:s:t four years. A greater interest must be taken concerning the student! who do not care to attend college. The vocalional programs must be examined and in the high school5 whlch have a need for more emphasis in this area, such emphuis should be supplied. "The high schools should be permitted more freedom to concentrate on the needs of their students in the speci fic geographic area. It ls quite probable, for example, that the specific neem and interesU of the students at Marina High School are different than those at Westminster High School. Let us not treat them all as one "plastic mass", let us recogniie the differences and satisfy the educational needs." Q. How do you feel about unUlcatlo n? ''Unification depends on many factors. lf it can provide significant savings without a weakening of the educatJonal process, then it might be good. It also depends on whether you unify horizontally or vertically. Jt should be remembered that unificaUon is only one tool for use in solving the educational needs of our children, it is not the whole tool box." Q. \Vb.at are your feeUng1 on teacher tenure? "Tenure may have become a self defeating propo.9ition. Many sch o o I districts will not permit many qualified teachers to remain long enough for tenure to vest. The net result is that many teachers become t t l n e r an t , teaching in school district after school district. 1 suspect that this situation will bec(ime worse with the c u r re n t overabundance of qualified teachers in the job market." Q. How would a voucher sy1tem or statewide property ta:x affect 1cbool flnancu? "I believe that neither the voucher system nor the state-wide property tax would have a beneficial effect on our local school system. Both systems would be subject to having their own bureaucratic systems which would defeat any savings, plus, If adopted, they would probably be subject to averaging which would be highly detrimental to our local interesL This might be good for Inyo county but with the acquisition cost for land and equipment in th!J area, neither system would be satisfactory." Marine Stabbed In Los Alamitos Triangle Brawl A Marine was slashed with a knife early thia morning In Los Alamitos when another boyfriend of the woman he was visiting appeared on the scene, police. reported today. Gary D. Marsh. 26, stationed at the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility, told police he was visiting Mrs. Marie C. Rayburn, at 4411 Farquhar Ave .. when James E. Eastwood, 21. a transient, entertd the home. plcktd up a serrated butcher knUe and alashed him across the head, Marsh fled the scene and called police. When Loe Alamitos of(Jcen went to the Rayburn home to investigate. they 1llege they heard a female screaming for help. Officers kicked in the door and res~ ~lrs. Rayburn. They cWm Eastwood was beating her on the head lllld faca with his fists. Eastwood was lodged in Orange County jail on dual ch11ges of a.mull wllh a deadly weapon and &Maull and battery. Avalanches Kill 7 VIENNA (AP ) -At least seven people were killed and many others sullertd shock or injuries wh•n snow slides hit tou~lst groups on Au!ltrian ski slopes during the Easler weekend. CORPORATE APPROACH Chamber Leader Hortan Horton Outlines Prime Objectives Peter Horlon was president last year of the Huntington Beach Chamber o( Commerce. An aerospace. executive, he Jives at 16431 Barnstable Cir c J e , •luntlngton Beach. Q. What program or policy changes would you favor? "l would suggest v.·e set two primary objectives: "first. to make the relationship between the trustees and the administration most effective, we might Citing the landmark Gion and Dietz public access cases, the city claimed the public already held surface entry rights over the railroad. Deputy Attorney General Marvin Goldsmith agreed in a letter to the court that the Huntington Beach claim for a recreational easement and • ' t h e uncertainties or trial'' brought on the settlement -to a figure $1.9 million less than the owner's appraisal and $1.2 million less than the state's outside appraisal The stlal.! public works board approved the compromise but last month the city balked and threatened to pursue its claim ln an undl!guised attempt to persuade state Parks and Recreation Director William Penn Mott to grant Huntington Beach the right to operate Bolsa Chica. No deal was struck with Mott and today City Attorney Don Bonfa told Judge Vincent that the city is v.'ithdrawing from the case. "The City Council appreciates the fact that the public interest is best served by a quick termination of the pending litigation based upon the compromise settlement of $3.8 million," Bonfa said. Bonfa also pointed out, however, that the city's intervention in the case gave the stale a discount from fair market value in acquiring the land. Referring to the city's failure to obtain an agreement to run the beach, Harbors and Beach Director Vince Moorhouse commented, ''The city got the short end of the deal, but the public won and that's the main thing we were all coocerned about." Police Probing Garage Fatality In Huntington benefit from regarding the school as a Police today were investigating the corporation. Tbe taxpayers are the death of a Huntintington Beach man apparently killed in a garage accident. stockholders: it is their money we are They said the body of Edward Bruce using. The students are the customers. Livengood. 4ti, 9901 Garrett Circle . was We must offer a. product they want and found in his garage Sunday afternoon by need. The administration and faculty are Officer John Sanders. Police had received the managers and workers, responsible a report that Livengood had not been seen for one week. for developing and delivering the Sanders broke down the door to the products. They must be the experts in the garage, and reportedly found Livengood 0 tht 0.11¥ P'lltl Sl•lf Joseph and l'\1arlene Dulaney today were ordered to face preliminary hearing April 21 ln Santa Ana munlcipa1 court on grand theft and forgery c h a r g e s stemming from what is alltged to be the $3 million defrauding or investors in the Newport stockbroker's World Financial 'frends empire. Judge Paul Mast'! ruling means that the globe trotting couple will go to court for the first time with their co-defendant, James Shipley of Huntington Beach, the former vice president of the investment complex headed by Dulaney. Dulaney. 11, today made another outburst from the defendant'• bo:x in ·which he protested the charges filed against him and the further delay of court action. "The district attorney's office has had a year and a half to investigate these charges against us and they should know by now that I am entirely innocent," Dulaney said. Judge Mast suggested that Dulaney discuss the matter with his attorney, Robert Law, and sent the eloquent defendant back to Orange C.ounty jail. Dulaney is held in lieu of $312,500 ball and Mrs. Dulaney is free on her own recogniz.ance. Shipley, 38, of 18951 U:iwell Circle, is free on '312,500 ball. He faces identical charges of grand theft., forgery and conspiracy, all of which are denied by the trio. Dulaney Is accused of w;ing his World Financial Trends facilltie.s at Laguna Hills and Seal Beach to defraud a number of investors, most of them resident.. of retirement communities ln those areas. Mrs. Dulaney, an attractive blonde, Ylorked for him as a secretary in the Laguna Hills ''Taj Mahal" headquarters until the couple left for West Germany In December, 1969, as complaints from investors began to flow into the district altorney's office. Shipley st.ayed behind to take over the affairs of the corporate complex and was the first member of the trio to be Injuries Suffered In School Prank Fatal to Y outli theory and practice of education. The tying face down on the floor. An auto was trustees are the board of directors, in the garage. The auto's ignition was on ARLINGTON l!EIGHTS, 1!1. ! UPI) -and the battery wa! dead, according to One of three youths who suffered broken responsible on behalf of the stockholders, the officer. backs in a high school prank Jan. 20 died for approving the objectives, plans and An injury in the pelvic area, and a just before an operation at Northwest programs of the school and evaluating fallen eight-foot aluminum ladder have Community hospital. the degree to which objectives are met Jed investigators to believe Livengood \Villiam Horn, 17, had told doctors he and the efficiency with which programs died accide ntally. wanted to walk again and would take his Officer Sanders said the ga rage wa!i chances with an operation rather than are carried out. Jocked from the insi de and there was no face a lifetime of certain paralysis, "Second, much of the undesirable evidence to suggest foul play. A coroner 's hospital authorities said. He died of behavior we observe in children today autopsy has been scheduled to determine heart fa i I u re just after be ing stems from the fact that they are the exact cause of dealh. anesthetized Sunday, they said. Hom and four other youths were underchallenged and underappreciated. barricaded into a washroom at Arlington In short, they are bored and often fee l p }i • 1 F Heights High School by pranksters. Whrn rejected. We must develop a richer 0 tlC3 oeS they tried to batter their way out through school program in terms of academic and the washroom door. the ,,..·all and part of extracurricular opportunities properly Of Sato Tri' umpli the ceiling collapsed on them. planned and supervised. Such a program Horn and two other youths suffered would provide opportunities the children brokrn backs and internal injuries. need lo develop fully, in whatever TOKYO I AP) -Reformers jointly Bradford Boice, 17, remained hospitalized constructive direction they want; and, as backed by the Socialist and Communist in fair condition. William Kelly, 17, has they sucettd, to receive the recognition parties v.·on the governor's seats in been released. • they need from their peers and Tokyo and Osaka -Japan's two largest Horn, partly paralyzed from the waist superiors." prefectures-while Prime Minister do"·n, was told surgery might save him Q. How do you fetl about unification? Eisaku Sa\o 's political allies retained from a lifetime of confinement to a ''There are arguments for and against their strength elsewhere in local elections wheelchair, but would be dangerous, He testified in bankruptcy court before his arrest that he was not involved in any way with the alleged swindles and he repeatedly denied k no w i n g the whereabouts of the missing Dular1eys, Dulaney was picked up two weeks ago in the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao. Mrs. Dulaney was arrested a week later in the British Colony of Bermuda. She seemed to be recovered today from an illness for v.·hich she was hospitalized by British authorities. Beach Festival Entry Blanks Out to Groups Entry blanks for the second annual Huntington Beach Citywide Festival May 15 have been mailed to more than 150 community organizations, schools, club! and churches. "We are anticipating record participation by community groups," said Bruce L. Williams, chairman of the Murdy Park get-together. "More than a dozen organizations have a I re a d y indicated they will participate." The community festival, sponsored by the Huntington Beach Coordinating Council, is aimed at increasing civic awareness of services offered by organiutions, according to Williams. Organiiat.ions may spon50r one or a combination of three activities at the festival -a large audience event on stage, booth, or lield event or competition. Major attractions will be on the city's ''sho wmobile" stage throughout the day. from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. In the event of bad weather, the festival will be postponed to May 22. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST f'UlllSHINl:f ctJM"Alrl'f Roh•rt N. Wt1i Prnldtrll 11!d Pl,lbllol'!ff' J1c.\: Jt.. C11rl1f Vici 1"1'91ic1Mr ~ GIMl'tl M-vtl' • Tli11t11s K.1viC Ed!!Ot". Tllo"''' A. M11•,lii111· M•Mtll'll EdllW Alen Dir.in Wfll Or.,,.a CO\lnlf !dllor Albtrt W. 1.1,1 ~1110 Edlnor H111tl ....... OMw 1717' l11ch l•ult•tr4 M1lli119 Addrtu: P.O. loic 7t0, •2l4t otMt-omen L"l\INI IMch: 2'Z: l'or•t A-C.I• ...,,_.: lJO wn: air $1tMt H1W119r1 &Md!: lJJ3 NIWP(N1 111u: ... ,~ Sin ci."""lt: ~ H~ El Clmlnt Jlt1I DA1lY PILOT, w11tl W!'>ldl It (Orr'blMll fi'lt M_P',_., II M!lthal d•llJ UCIJll S<.lrl- dlJ "' _,,.kl ..SlllOl'4 for L.....-. IMdto MtwPOrl hto;ll, Cotlt -·· Hll!lllng• BNd'L. l'011nt•ln v11i.y, $lon c-....i.1 Ooplt,,._ ... '""leb1dl, ."""' wllll -, .. _. Miiion,. l'tlnchMI pr!~!lna ""•"' .. at :Al Wat BIY Slrtel, Cost• ""-. Ttfep.._ C1l<l1 14J-4J21 Cl_.tffH A4ftftl\lllf '42·,671 unification. A unified district establlshed Sunday. hospital authorities said. The boy elected over a· wide geographic area can realize The Socialist-Communist triumphs in to take the chance, they said. Cecrrrlflht, ttn, Or•no• CM11 l'uWl1i'llfl9 financial benefits. The major one is the Osaka and Tokyo \\'ere g e n e r a 11 y Police in this Chicago suburb said they Cotl>!Nny, "'11 ,...., iiwi... lll111t••tl9nlo b·1·t t 1· d·1r • d edl...-lal INlltl' or HVMh-11 ,._ a i 1 Y o equa 1ze 1 erences 1n assesse regarded as political setbacks for the 70-considered changing from rec k I es s 1'1\1¥ 11o ""'°""'" .w1n.oo.i1 •!*lal ~ valuation per pupil. Secondary benefits year·old Sato , who had campaigned in conduct to more serious charges the mhllon .; <OP'fr1Clh; -•. presumably can be reB.lized b Y both prefectures for candidates supported charges filed against the two youths v.·ho S-cono11 <'-n !D'taeo ,.Id 11 M..,.1111.1 ,_,_ consolidation of administrative functions. by his pro-American liberal-Democratic barricaded lforn and the others in the :,.,,. uC:~~ ~.'::· ~~~''.;., s~~'r, On the negative side, larger distrirls l.'.p::ar~lY;;·;;;;;:;;:;;:=======--_'.w'.'.a~sh"''."'°~m'.'.:._· -----------~=-=·="=m='=""=~='"::'=N='=""'=·='='·':':-::•:'•:· ~ introduce comp li c ation s in the management process. Also there is some loss of identity v.·ith the local comn1unity. Financial unification with decenlra!ized management is probably a desirable goal.'' Q. \\'bat are your feelings on teacher tenure? "Teacher tenure was conceived to correct a malpractice. prevalent some years ago but now no longer of concern. Because It can prevent a school administration from taking prompt and effective action lo upgrade the teaching staff, I am not in favor of it. A primary responsibility or the trustees is to ensure the competence and integrity of the Administration, thereby protecting the qualified and dedicated teachers." Q. How would lht \'ouchtr sysltm or statewide property tax affect school finances? ''The voucher concept v.·ou!d apply the stimulus of competiUve free enterprise to the school system. Parents would be free to select a school which offered the best product. I believe the expected advantages \\'ouid be offset by inequitable distribution of load, the inabllity of some parent.Ii to provide transportation for their childrtn to the chosen school. and by loss of identity with the Immediate community and Us pArticular needs. "I believt that, in general, tax revenues should be spent by lht 11me authority which collects them. Only then can LArpayers take direct action to exprts.s dis.satisfaction by not re-electlng the aC'COWltable officials. 1 sec nothing basically wrong with lhe present system which provide.,-about 60 pertent of school expenses from local taxes, about 35 f)@rctnt from state funds, part of which oorrecta for differences In ratk>s of U&dSed valuaUon per student, and 1b<rut 5 percent from Federal funds for spedal programs." JVC Ju1t look •t whit th• 4144 offtrs: 45 watt 1t•r•o •mpl ifitr, 4 sp••d 1utom1tic r•cord chang•r, full frequency c11sett• r•cord•r, fM MPXIFM/AM tuner, two w•y 1.1 ltra r•nge 1p••k•r 1y1tems, two recordin9 mies, •crylic du1t ever •nd bl1ckout 1tylin9 to blend the 4)44 int o any decor. / REG. $369 $299 NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT • PIONEER • SANSUI • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN. IUY, SILL, TRADE COMI IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -.__ Hort.or ~ .,_,..., I I I \ I I • ' : " Newport Bea~h EDITION Today'8'.Flnal N.Y. Stoe~ voe. 64, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 12, '1971 TEN CENTS Council May Act on Newport Beach may move to enforce the public's claim Lo the entire 14-loot bayfront sidewalk on Balboa Peninsula between Main Street and 7th Avenue. City Attorney Tully Seymour today told the City Council he wants Lo prepare an in-depth report on what ID do about a number of encroachmenl! on the one- mitl. right-of-way. Se~r said the city last month won a court suit filed by a resident who had wanted to fence off the walk In front of his property. Seymour said that because ol the number of similar situations, he feels the matter should be dealt with collectively. "It is my suggestion that the difficult questiGns which must be answered regarding this public right to tra\·el, access to the bay and use of the beaches in the general a r e a . , should be approached on the basis of a comprehensive staff study rather than on a piecemeal basis," he said. Seymour said the problem i!1 especially acute in the area between Cypress and Adams Streets. "Over the years," be 1 1 i d, "encroachments have been bWlt thto tht!: sidewalk area in front of the properties located between Cypress Street and Adams Street to the east. "These encroachments consist of fences, porches and steps. Although (the recent court case) does not direcUy affect these ,properUes, the evidence produced ln the CasseJ case and the court's judement indicate that t h e 1 e encroachment.! are located oo public property. ''The encroachments have the effect of uducing the wkltb of the aidewalk from Big Bombs Used , Blockbusters Dropped on Red Forces SAIGON (UPI) -:--The U.S. Air Force used its 7~ ton blockbuster bomb &5 a tactical weapon for the first time today in the Indochina war, dropping •wo of them on Communist troop et1ncentrations around besieged Fire Base 6 in the Central Highlands. The bombs, largest in lhe U.S. arsenal except for nuclear weapons, \Vere parachuted from C130 transport planes. They exploded a few yards off the ground, blasting holes as big as football field! in the jungles. Their concussion can kill a man or disable him by causing bleeding from the ears and nose. Police Hold Suspect In Rape Try Newport Beach pollce today are holding a San Bernardino man on attempted rape charges after officers allege his car wu followed by the searchlight from Newport police helicopter as patrol cars from three communities closed in on the ground. Police identified the suspect aa Earl Kenneth Lukins, 39, of 14200 Del Amo Ave .. San Bernardino. During the pursuit, Santa Ana police Sgt. Charles Miller crashed bis pa~~! car into a drainage ditch. He escaped 1n1ury. The case began in Newport when a 17· year.old girl reported to police tha.t she had been attacked by a man wearing a gray hooded sweat.shirt. She s_aid he "'as driving a black sports pickup and accosted her as she walked on East Coast Highway near the entrance to Cameo Highlands iri Corona de! Mar. She reported that passing motorists Ignored her screams ~or h71P as she litruggled with her assailant m the well· lighted intersection. . A resident of Newport Beach, the girl !See CHASE, Page!) Newport Council Slates Round I In Canine Case Newport Beach councilmen today began study of the touchy question of whether or not dogs should be baM~ from the city's public beaches. Despite rain squalls a.ad high winds in the Fire Base I region in the Central Highlands, B52s dropped 51.JO tons o( bombs on the Communists near the base. The 23 sorties flown today raised to 2,500 tons the amount of bombs dropped in the area since the siege began March 31. Front dispatches said the Communists had sent in 10,000 troops to the fire base area and that the government had a similar-sized force there, the heaviest concentrations sinC<! the invasion of Laos. U.S. military sources in Saigon said their intelligence indicated a ' ' s ma 11 er'' Communist force but did not elaborate. Lawmaker Asks W emth Limit.s 'SACRAM!!N'll'.l (AJ'i ' -San Francisco Assemblyman J o b n Burtt>n laid today he and eight other Democratic lawmfkerl at* Introducing a bill to I t m i t Inheritances to $1 million per recipient and outlaw personid wealth exceeding $10 million per family. Burton described his propoeal as "a moderate ... counter revolutionary measure" w h i c b would save capitalism by stopping the accumulation of wealth by "a privileged few." Burton said he gave the bill no chance of passage this year. but predicted it would be enacted in a few years. Market Prices Show Increase NEW YORK (AP) -Stepped up ac· tivity by institutions increased trading volume on the stock market today as prices continued higher. The 2 p.m. Dow J<N1es average of 30 industrials was up 6.11 to 926.50. Sea final quotations, Pages 22 and 2.1. Advances led declines by about a to 5 among issues traded °" the New York Stock Exchange. Analysts said institutions appeared to have returned to lhe market after a par- tial retreat Thursday. They cited an in- creased number of larger block trades as jndication of renewed insUtuUonal parti- cipation. Brokers also said that the marke t's strong performance last week •llracted new buying. The Viet Cong, which calls the Fire Base Hill No. 1001. broadcast several victory clalma and 1ald one Salgan reinforcement column broke and ran when it came under attack. The Viet Cong said they had killed 620 Saigon troops in the battle. Saigon reported 2,614 Communists slain at a loss of 172 government dead. Reports from the area indicated that the North Vietnamese commander in charge of the attack on Fire Base 6 had moved his headquarters from Laos into South Vietnam to direct the fight. The (Ste ASlA WAR, Page Z) 1971 Bal Week Arrests~.Show ~ Rise Over '70 Newport Buch arrests and beach attendance for Easter Week, 1971 were up, acC'Cl"ding to statistics released today by police and lifeguards. Lifeguards credited the good weather with boosting beach attendance for the nine days from 635,000 in 1970 to 720,000 this year. Guards reported a total of 88 rescues - of which three were listed as near drownings -and o~ possible drowning. In 1970, there were only 16 rescues and no drownings. Police said there were a total of 542 arrests made from the first Saturday through Good Friday. Last year's totals show 379 for the same period. Officers said that despite the increase in arrests, there were fewer crimes reported and fewer traffic accidents this year than last. Total crime reports for 1970 were 146 but dropped to 129 this year. There were 6.1 traffic accidents this year, which Is ei~ht less than the previous year. Police said the rise in arrest.a and the subsequent drop in crime reports might be linked to the decline of Newport Beach's popularity as an Easter Week resort. Officers speculate that with fewer crime calls and traffic accidents to respond to they had more time to Investigate loud party calls and perhaps prevent the parties from turning into the brawls that made pa.st Bal Week such a notorious event. Officers noted that of the tota l arrests, 337 were juveniles most of whom were pick~ up at these parties for lack of P"tental control or cw-few violations. Bayfront Right-of-way 14 feet to approximately eight feet,'' Seymour .said. The issue was precipitated, h e ei.:plaiiaed. wllen P. A. Cassel was denied permission to erect a building that projected' into the walkwly tw:tween Edgewater Place ar>'1 the bay at the inter$eetlon of Cypress street. -~&ymour said after the city council rejected an appeal of the planning commission action, Cassel took matters into his own hands. "In the early hours ef Aug. 18, 1969, Anyon~ Need A Mr. Cassel caused a fenct and gates tG be erected across Edgewater Place completely blocking public access along tbe sJdew&lk, '' Seymour said. He said the city rtmoved the gates the following week "on the grounds they were illefal and constituted a public nuisance.' Cassel then went to court. "The city filed a crO!s complaint seeking to quiet title to the length of the sidewalk in front of the Cassel property and establish it as a public walkway," Seymo~ said. During the ensuing trial, he said, the dty produced .evidence that the sidewalk "bad..btien tn ~~ use by the public for 1 piwlod <:l ~·~ of 40 year1." lit uld he ns··able to produce several long-t111)e Ne'fPOrt Beach residents who 1e.uf¥ Illa! ~d.uaed lbe sidewalk,, wftb,out. o~ ~~ anyooe over a period Qf yeart. Seymour'• report ls eqiect.ed kt be filed routinely by ~ the: cmmcu tonight with IMl.ructJ:ol1&. fOJ ,the preparation of the more comprehtnilve rfoonunendations. Candidates for summer lifeguard jobs In Newport Beach splash through 1,000-meter swim to win a place in the sun (and ript{des). There were 79 tak- ing the grueling series of physical tests Sunday. It wail the largest turnout in s!x con~ecutive years. Sixty !inl&hed but only 32 m!de ·it to the oral inter· view. In-service training for 'those selected will be- gin Sunday morning. ' Tideland Use Fee Foes Meet Councilmen Tonight Tidelands use fee roes may muster an. other attempt to kill the controversial charges al a meeting of the Newport Beach City Council tonight at 7:30 o'clock in City Hal!. Councilman Donald Mcinnis said this morriing he plans to meet with olher op- ponents of the fee, ·Mayor Ed Hirth and Vice Mayor Howard Rogers. to discuss the move prior to the meeting. An amendment to the existing ordi- nance that would rescind the tax on docks and piers has been on the table for nearly two months, pending a report from Harbor and Tidelands Administra- tor George Dawes. "We !\ave the report now," Mcinnis said, "It doesn't say much, but we also have letters from varioos boating groups aski111g for action." Dawes had been instructed by the: coun· cil to determine whether private pier owners do provide benefits to the public by dredging along their property. The council. on a narrow 4 to 3 vote, i11stituted fees more than one year ago. stipulating at the time the matter would not be reviewed for five years. The Association of Newport Harbor Yacht Clubs had not relented in its cam· paign against the "pier and slip tax,'' as they ca!J it. hov.oever. They are now citing a ruling by the State Attorney Gelleral's Office, a ruling sought by the City Council, that says lo- cal governments do not have to charge the fee for private use of the public tide- landa. Lifeguards Halt Hunt for Youth Tricia's Wedding Slated June 12 At While House WASHlNGTON ·fUPJ) -Tricia Nixon said today lhe and Edward Finch Cox had IJ1aJly settled on June 12 as the date for their White House wedding, That ·ii a Saturday ·and the ceremony will take place at 1 p.m. (PST) -and the President's 25-yur~ld daughter hinted it might bt held outdoors. She disclos~ the final date and Lime in an offhand way as she talked to reporters during the a11nuaJ Easter Monday egg roll on the White Houae's south lawn. Then she laughed and .said she hoped she had not j'acooped" firat Lady Pat Ni.Ion's staff director, Connie Stuart, who waa auppoaed. to make the date olilcial with an annouJteement ThQ.TSday. Both June· 12 and. June IS had ~n dis- cussed as the date for the wedding since Tricia and CO., 24,. had officially an- nounced their engagement March 16. With pressure mounUng from various corners, to keep dogs off the sand the council three weeks ago directed City Attorney Tully Seymour to find out what other commuruties have done about the problem. . Dulaney Hearing Slated The ae.arch for a Montebello youth presumed drowned off Corona del Mar F.riday has been called off, Newp0rt Beach lifeguards said today. The victim, Peter Mat.chniff, 19. was la st seen swimming at Little Corona beach. Lifeguards Ray Garver and Steve Feldman said they saw the youth surface after making a prolonged dive. He was struggling and yelling for help, they said. Tricia did DOC. aay why they settled on that date, bur reporte•s ·noted that Cox' f i n a I exams· at H&rvard Law School would not be fUltshed unUl June 3. 0r .. ,. Councilmen were scheduled to review the ordinances at this afternoon's study session but the debate about what to do v•ith the pup problem may carry over to tonighl's regular meeting at 7:30 o'clock in Cily Hall. Jn a report prepared for the coundl , Seymour said Orange County and Huntington BeRch ban all dogs, and other pets. from beaches and parks -period . In Laguna Beach, Seymour reported. dogs are banned from the beaches between I 1.m. and & p.m. between Junt I! and S.pt. 15. A compromise that followed months of oontroVersy. the Laguna law was adopted following 11 relerendum ln the art colony. Should the council decide to propo!e legislation with similar regulations in Newport Beach. al least one public hearing would have to take place. More than likely, the CXIUDCll will direct Seymour to prepart. an ordinance for rtvlt'w by the Parks. Be1che.s 11nd Reae11tlon Commission, if they do anything 1t sill. PBR Commi55ion rt:commendaUon1 would thtn be returned to the: counclL Globet;rotting Pair Court Date Set on Fraud Rap By TOM BARLEY 01 l"'9 Dtltr' Plltl lt•lt Joseph and Marleoe Dulaney today were ordered to fact preliminary hearing April 21 in Santa Ana municipal.court on grand I.heft and for1ery c h a r g e s stemming from what ls alleged to be the $3 million defrauding of investOrl ln the Newport stockbrolttr'1 World Financial Trends empire. Judge Paul Mast's ruling means that the globe trotUng coupl.e will go to court. for the first lime with their co-defendant. James Shipley o( HunUnaton Beach, the form~r vice president of the Investment complex headed by Dulaney. Dulaney, f7, today made another outburst from the defendant'• boJ" ln which he proteated the charges filed agJin!t him and the further delay of court action. "The diltrlct at.tone1'1 oUict bu bad a year and 1 half to investigate these charges against ua and they should know by now that l am eaUrely innocent," Dulaney said. Judge Mast suggested that Dulaney discuss the matt.er with his attorney, Rohm Law, and sent the eloquent defendant back to Orange County jail. Dulaney is held in lieu of $312,500 ball and Mrs. Dulaney Is free on her own recognlunce. Shlpley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Is free on '312,500 t>Ail. He facts Identical charges of grand thefl. forgery and conspiracy, all of which an denied by I.he trio. Dul3ne)' ta accust!d of using hls World Financial Trends fadliU<'s at LagunR Hills ttnd Seal Beach to defraud a number or ,Investors, most of ,them residents of retirement commuDftlfl Ill thole areas, Mn. Dulaney. an attractive blonde. worked far him u a tecret.al')' Ja. the I Laguna Hills "Taj Mahal" headquarter1 until the couple left for West Germany in December, 1969, as complaints from investors began to now into the diatrlct attorney's otnce. Shipley slaytd behind to take over the affairs of the corporate complex and w11 the first member of the trio to be arrested. He tuutled In bankruptcy court befo"' his arreat lhat be was not Involved in any way with the allege:! swindles and be repeatedly denied k no w I n g the whereaboUt.s of the missing Dulancya. Dulaney wa.11 picked up two Wetks ago In tht Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacto. Mrii. Dulaney w11 arruted • wed later In the BrtU&h Colony or Bermuda. She lffmed to be recovered today from an Ulneu for whl.ch 1be wu hoa:pttaliztd by-Brll!Jl> IUlborltie&. f Both lifeguards 1wam out to rescue him. but cwid not locate him. Llefguards, members of the Harbor Patrol and the Newport Beach police helicopter joined the search FriUy and Saturdoy. but could not filld his body. Last Oil Well Fire Rages for 133 Days NEW ORLEANS (Al') -Tbe last tenaciou11 oil Well fire Oametl on today at Shell Oil Co. '1 ravaged offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico, despite two days of continuous effort& to finally end the 1U. doy .. ld <Ire !hot lw COii 13' million. Fld by 11 wlld well• at lu i\tlghi, the oil Industry'• costllf.!lt offahore blue had httn reduttd to the size of a bonfirt laat week when one of the remaining two wtld '1ella .... killed. Early fog and afternoon 5Wlshlne return to the coaal Tuesday with te:mperatum dipping to a along the beacbet and 'TS further inland. INSIDE TODAY Moat polfce dtpartments fn Orang1 Couni, ore not tet up to MMZ. coruumer f'taud. 1a111 the deputJ diltrict attorntv • ..,;gn. ed 1uc~ ca111, Stor y, Page 8. ... ,... u Ctl"""lt 1 atcll!tt u.. n -..... Ctonllc:• ,. --" --. ...... . ............ _ . :;,t:r~... "~ -.. 1 • AM~ II -" N1'*'1 ,._ ... ONIPC!J c..... . ' ll'IYll ""'... tt -.... lfiMll ~ tl•U ·-" ""''"' " WMflttr 4 .......,.,...,,.1, --.. Class Sizes Relaxed Stat.e OKs District Trial Staffing Plan Newport-Mesai Unified School Di.strict ii one ol live dbtricu ln the state to be lelecttd fOC' a trial rtlaxaUoo of Education Code provisions barring cla~ sizes in e1ces.s of 30 students. class mes to S2 1ludents 1n eltmtnlary schools and 30 students on the average for t.he district aa: a whole. With the special authorization provided by Senate Bill 60t, Loata aaid the dl.stricl will ask principals to apply for the privilege to try new teacher staffing patterns. ''dlfftttmlla1 atamng" -men than one teacher -might be tried under the plan. The district will select four elementary schools and one middle school from the applicatioos made by principala to try the e1panded classes method. Dr. Nonnan Loats, a 1 s i at ant superintendent for imtructional services, said the approval of lbe district's appllc1tion by the State Dtpartment of EducaUoo 1'allow1 a look at different ways of staffing." The easing of the class limit rule assumes there may be aome as yet untried method of instructlon that may be more fruitful. The other districts which we r e similarly given tht large c~s go ahead by State Superintendent of Public Jnstruction Wilson Rl1es, are Ocean View Elementary School District in Huntington Beach, and San Jose, Fremo and Cupertino Unified School Dlstrlcl.s. Presently the Education Code restricts Loats suggested larger classes with * * * * * * Harbor View Residents Fron1 Pagel ASIA WAR .•. ~~~ ~~\~~~~~~Fs.~~~~~~n~ ~liege Hc:me1 In Newport 'Bea~ ~ve received District. base is near the intersection of Laos, Cambodia and South Vietnam in the Central Highlands. Sullivan, quoting hi.ghly placed South Vietnamese military sources, said the headquarters of Hoang Minh Thoa, commander of the l:kiay-old offeruiJve against the base, was beUeved located about 14 miles southwest of the base, but that he moved hi'! headquarters frequently to avoid bombing atlacks. The headquarters is known as B3. erroneous um.pie ballotJ for the April 20 Robert Matthew. as:iistant county IChool board electioos. The ballots carry school superintendent, said torrected the Coast Community College district ballots are in the mail. candidates. The voters, however, by quirk of law and boundary making, live * * * Student Conduct Policy Addition Set for Review An addition to the Newport-Mesa Unified School District Policy oc student conduct will be considered when the board meetJ at 7 p.m. Tuesday 1n the Ly~um of Costa Meta High School, 2e50 Fairview Rold, Costa Mesa. The student conduct policy nvlslon establilhes ' • b e t. t. e r communlcaUons" with atudenlJ and bars s t u d e n t dl.sNpUons, uplained Dr. Norman Loats, asa:istant auperintendent for lnstrucUonal oper1UonJ. Tbe key change In tile policy, LaoU said, Is the mandate for IChools to establllh "proceduru to provide a n y ftudent or studenta: a channel of commwllclUon to expreu toncerns.'' The policy revWon also chara:es principals with the responglbility for students r<porlinj to clwu acoordlng tu their acbedulea. If approved by the board, th• policy would bar "unaulhorlud persons" from achoo! campuses. Loat.s said the policy rewrite la the resuJt of post..unlflt1tion development of board policies for the district. A previous update of the policy empowered the superintendent to suspend any student arrested for use, possession ar sa:le of narcotics or o th e r " hallucinogenic drug. Until the result of a court bearing on the arrest is received, that p o I i c y provides that type tiUperintendent may assign a student to the McNall,y ContinuaUon High School. A change In dJstrict ru1es and regulaUons concerning the use of information listed on a s t u d e n t • s emergency ca.rd, allO will be conaldered by trustees. The change I i m i t s administraUan personnel to discussing the quOlllonlng ol pupl~ by police with parents anly. U the student's parents cannot be reached, principals muat leave word with otben Usted on tbe eme.ra:ency card for parents to call back, rather lhan discussing the nature of the "emergency'' with tomeone other than member af a •~dent's family. 'Both the policy and the regulations changes will receive their first reading at Tuesday's meeting. By law,• policy must be considered twice ln public meetings of the beard prior to adoption, OU.N•I COAIT DAILY PILOT dlANc;I COAST PVILl'"IMO CCM""1fY . l•ktt H. Wee4 ,,.*"' -,,.,..,.., J,,. a. c~ n:.-~ ... 0-.... ~ "''"''' '·••lf ••ltw 1\.M1t J.:. ,..,..)ii~I ~ .... t:•!• L. Ptltt krl•t M...,...i a.di (11y t:llllw IN..,.,. ...... °""' JJJJ N1•,o•I •oult•t~ M'1lli119 Aclcfr111: P.O.••-1171, '266J t 1111;1111 ln41 M2-4H1 Cl WW .W11rtl 111 '42·1611 ~ !"It' er... °"" ......... ~ .. ... ...... '""*'""""' ~ ....,... .. ilA•"""'4c•• •• ..,_ ..., .. .• , . , ......, """""' ... .,.... . ..,,...., --· ..... d-. ~ -........ ._. .... c:.-...... ~ •••tlllll• ... ...,... .. .....,.iy, .. _.. tl.11 ~'......., ._,--., P.JS ....,,., ' "That ~acre parcel Is the only area in Orange County where high school district boundaries da not match ctlmmunlty college boundaries," he said. That's what call!ed the aversight on the part af the people who write the ballots. The area, abo known as the Bren development, is located off MacArthur Boulevard behind Urbanus Square. In 1968, the area was a.nnu:ed by the Newport-Mesa Unified School Distnct following negotiations with the Tustin Uolm High School and San Joaquin Elementary School D~tricl>. At the time, Saddleback College Di.strict was newly formed. The Newpcirt.- Mesa district is in the Coast Community College DistrJct. Matthew explaJned that the !late F.ducatlon Code prohibits ctlmmunity college diftrlct land transfer• during the first five years of a college district's operations. Thus, midenl.s of Harbor View H<ines !end their elementary and high 1c!iool age children to Newport-Mesa schools, while their college age children must 10 to Sadd1eback College ln Mission Viejo. Pre!umably, at the end of tbe five-year land swap moratorium, the problem will be Ironed out by Saddleback and Coast olficials, Matthew aald. From Pagel CHASE ... told police she wu walkin1 home from tending a sick horse at the Irvine Horse Ranch, one-quarter mile to the east on Coast Highv;ay. The vjcUm said the man ran away from her and escaped in the sports pick up, driving westbound on Coast Highway while she ran to a nearby home for aid. Responding to the call, the helicopter piloted by Officer John Heene and crewed by Officer Tim Grundeman, spotted a car matching that description driving north on MacArthur Boulevard at t h e intersection of Campus Drive. FoUowed by the helicopter, the vehicle traveled to tile San Diego Freeway, then to the Newpcirt Freeway, northbound, and exited at Edinger Avenue, where officer Miller spotted the auto. When Miller attempted to pull the car over, he alleged the swpect accelerated and made a series of U turns. The auto got onto the ramp leading to the northbound Newport Freeway and halfway up the ramp, with Miller in hat pursuit, made 1 right turn dawn the embankment and jumped 1 drainsge ditch at the bottom. Miller wasn't as lucky and crashed into the ditch. The helicopter crtw reported the suspect vehicle circled back onto the ramp and took the Newport Freeway to the Santa Ana Freeway southbound and erlted at Tustin Avenue. Tustin police had sent units ta pursue the vehicle but officers said they could not see the car. They were guided by the spotlight from the helicopter. Police theorize Lukins 1bandoned his auto on Raleigh Place near the intersectian of Mitchell Avenue and ran toward Del Amo Avenue with a gray sweat.shirt in his hand!!, afflcers said. Lukins wa.s arrested as he leaped a fence between Debusk Lane and Del Amo, landing in front af twti wa!Ung Tustin patrol cara. The Twtin officers, Donald Grimm and Sgt. Allan Brown, said today they would not have been able to locate the suspect so easily if Jt had not been for the help af the belleopter. The 7.5-ton bombs have been used previously to blut out landing pads in the jungles !or U.S. helicopters but military sources said they were effective against massed Communist troops. Io some operations lhe big bombs are noated down by parachute and detocated a few yards oU the ground to blast out an are.a the size of a football field. Front dispatches said the bombs were wed today six to eight mileJ soutbwest or the border ranger post of Ben Het, itJe.lf six miles northwest af Fire Base &. Sullivan, reporting from the Central HJgblands, said a North Vietnamese defector told interrogators he had seen 2,000 fresh North Vietnamese troop! In a rear area awaiting ordert to move into the batUe area. He said the defector, Lt. Bui Ngoc ChJeu, tald questioners h I s battalion had been ordered to cut Highway 512 east al Ben Het, the base's only land link ta the outside. Bet Het withstood a 56-day Communist siege in the spring of J969 when Jt was a Green Beret camp. Big 'Cycology' Event Scheduled In Newport, Mesa Maintaining their numbers will near 5,000, .s Harbor Area bicycling club said today it has compleled plans for Its 12- mile Earth Day bike ride through Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Arnold Parker, a spokesman for Cycologists Wark.shops International, sponsors of the hike, said the tour will begin April 24 at 8:30 a.m. at Corona del l\tar High School. "A second meeting point, for those who aren't up to the ·whale trip, will be at TeWinkle Park in Costa l\.fesa at 9 a.m.,"' Parker said. He 100 said that Newport Beach .snd Costa Mesa police have agreed to block off the right lane of the roads along the enlire route for the .safety of the bikers. Parker Slid riderr will start north on Jamboree Road from Corona del Mar High School, tum west onto Palisades and south on Newport Boulevard !ilopping at Arlington Street to meet ~ secQJld group. "They will continue south onto Balboa Peninsula down to 14th Street where they'll turn into the Newport ElemenUlry School parking lot." Parker said representatives af area police departments will be there to license bicycles. Following this, he said, there will be a picnic lunch, from noon to t p.m., "then we'll spent! the nert two hours cleaning the beach." He said both the Costa Mesi and Newport police department.s will provide escorts for the cyclists. On the number af participants Parker said "there will be more than 1:000 high school kida 1lane. Our original prediction was between 1,000 and 5.000 and we 're now certain it will be closer to 5,000." He said the sponsoring a:raup is enl'ouraglng new members and has invited interested persons ta its ne:ct met'ting, April 17 st 7:30 p.m. in the Neu.•port _Harbor High School faculty lounge. Girls Get Help Sisters Save Faniily After Crasli ORINDA (UPI) -Jennifer Dryner, !O, and her sister Kelly, I. traipsed tor four hours through dark, d&nk, rafn..aoaked, woode<f terrain. At the end of their trip they wtre weary and "a mw," but not one whit less determined. The twa girls had a ml.Sslon, and they acc:omplished It handsomtly. They aaved their mom, their dad , their two younger brothers. The sitters stumbled through the woods I? get help for their [amtly trapped in a light plane that h.ad crashed In Contra Oilts County. Henry Uoc2er found them Slturdly morning on hill ranch. "There stood those little girls, wet and cold .•. they were a mess .•. One hid a bid gash on her head. "They were sc serious about helping their family, they didn•t let anything else bother them ," Boeger 1dded. "They were brave kids." Boeger noUfied sheriff's depulles and lhen rode • horse to the wrtekl.ge. Ht and deputies reseutd Jamei e. Bryntr 3.f, his wife Bretta, and their sons, Mark: 8 •nd Eric, ? . All were reported in satisfactory condition Sund"y at John Muir Hosplt.1. Bryntr w11 fiylng bis family to Orinda from Oj11I. Callfornla for an Easter vialt wJth reh1tlveJ when the plane crashed Saturday and was demolished. On Hocks? • .. • ' \ t •I t ' . ~.. ( . .( ... ~,.,,, ·"i • • . I ,, "' , ' ( ., •• "' .. 4-k .. Ul"I Ttls.tMt. Actress Raquel \Vel cb, \vho stirred in t ere st ,vhen she wore see· through mini dress to marry her manager Patrick Curtis in 1967 \~·ould neither confirm nor deny divorce rumors Sunday. He has re: portedly packed and moved from the couple's Beverly Hills apart- ment. Raquel said she hoped to have more to tell today. Program to Aid Veterans Announced by President WASHCNGTON (AP) -Con tending the Aat ion owes its Vietnam veterans an ex. tra measure (If help, President Nixon announced today a $!-million program to attract disad vantaged veterans to ex· P8•ded Gl bill job and education benefits. Red Vans Halted In Mesa Holdup Police declared apen season on red ~olks\vagen vans Sunday night for a time, after ane was seen zooming awa y from a service station holdup in Cosla Mesa. Several were stopped following the JO p.m. robbery of Broadbe.nt's Mobil Service,. 2199 Harbor Boulevard, by a long.haired, bearded man with a pistol. Attendant John C. Treat said he was counting the day ·s receipts prior to locking them in the safe w h e n approached by the bandit. He said he was forced to put lhe $60 - mostly in quarters -into a cloth bag the bandit brought along. Treal was telephoning the details lo police ~·hen the suspected gelaway car roared out of the lot, leading lawmen to slap several and question the drivers. Nii~ SB.id the Office of Economic Op- porturuty program is aimed at direct contact with the 350,000 Vietnam-era un- employed veterans by cadres of former Gls from poor backgrounds who are now studying under the GI bill. "We owe these men a debt of gratitude for their service -but we also owe them somethln~ more,'' the President said. "The dismaying facl is that unemploy- ment among Vietnam-era veterans still is significantly greater than it is among non-veterans in the same age bracket." The programs-admi1istered for the OEO by the Natianal League of Cities and the U.S. Confe rence of Mayors under a $1,016 ,375,000 grant is to start in low. income and blue-collar neighborhoods in ten cities OJI a demO]lstration basis. Details were spelled out by 18 govern- ment officials and veterans invalved in the program after an hour.Jong meeting with the President. Former infa"try Lt, Robert Penn, a Negro who already has been frying to attract dlsadvanlaged veterans to GI bill benefits in his hometown af Buffalo, N.Y., said the primary beneficiaries of the CI hill ha\·e been men with high school educations. "Somehow they're not reaching the less advantaged," Penn said, "What ·we're going lo try to reach is the high school dropout. Veterans can talk 10 veterans better." JVC J u1t look •f wh•t the _.3_...f off•r1: '45 watt 1t1r•o amplifier, '4 tp••d •utom•tic: record c:h1n91r, full fr•quency c•111tte rec:order, FM MPXt FM/AM tuner, two w•y u!tr1 r•n9e tp••~•r 1y1+•m1, two r•c:ordin9 mic:1, a crylic: du1f c:v•r •nd blackout styling to bl•nd ~ha '41'4'4 i11to any d•c:or. Planners' Power Cut To Get Eye An ordinance that 'vould dilute the authority of the plar'tnlng commission will be considered tonight by the NewporL Beach City Council at a 7:30 o'clock public hearing in City Hall. M proposed, the measure would give the counctl final authorily to review use permits. required for certain usea lo various building zones. The planning commission. a seve11- member panel, currently serves as an advisory body for zone changes and, besides the issuance af use permits, hs1 anly the authority to grant variances on individual pieces af properly. The ordinance would not eliminate the $75 fee charged persons who now wish to appeal planning commission decisions to the council. Under the current ordinance, the only procedure for the council to legally review a use permit on its own discretion would be far one or more councilmtn lo pay the fee. The amendment measure stipulates that the council, by majority vate, "may elect to review" any decision by tht planners in granting a use permit. As with a regular appeal, such action musl be taken within 21 days of the commission's decision. 1t * * Ne,vport Panel's Budget Guides Slightly Looser A city council committee has bacUd aff -but not very far -on rilid guidelines it is proposing be adopted to goviern preparation of the next Newport Beach budget. ··we've taken out lhe sectian tlJst places a celling on salary increa!ea," Councilman Donald Mcinnis said thil morning, "because it's probably illegal." He said the recommendation against filling any vacancies has also been relaxed . The guidelines now call for council approval before any vacant job is rilled . Initially, the two-man panel of Mcinnis and Councilman Carl Kymla ha d proposed pay rAises be restricted to those employes whose salaries were five percent or more below people in the same jobs in other communities. "This. ·we have been told, wou1d abrogate our 'meet.and-confer' clause in our existing contract," Mcinnis said. The rest af the ground rules remain the same, Mcinnis said. 'lltey include some tough restrictions, like: -Predelermining the 1971-72 fiscal year tax rate at $1.20 per $100 asses1ed valuation, a two and one-half cent drop. -"Providing anly for the maintenance at existing levels of service .'' -Reducing miscellanous expen1e1, such as travel, meetings, :supplies, etc., by 15 percent. -Eliminating any consideration of new office furniture, fixtures, office mach- ines, remodeling ··and all other conven- ience and comfort ilems.'' -Establishing a prlarity list for all capilal improvements. -Prohibiting the purchase af new city vehicles "unless it is f a c t u a 11 y demonstrated that an overall real dollar saving will result." The proposed guidelines were set for review at this afternoon's study :11esslan and will be brought to the council toniJht for adoption. President Kin Dies LOUISVILLE, Ky. !UPI) -Mary Strother Taylor. 97. a niece of Zacbarv Taylor. 12th presidrnl of !he United States, died Sunday at 1 nursing home here. REG. $369 5299 NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT • PIONEER • SANSUI • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL, TRADI COMI IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -latw-H-& lrooclw_, I I l j ~ l I f I ,, ,, l i i f I r l .. .. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor M91tHy, AHll IL un • ,. .. , IJ Tribute Plans Effervescing Champagne is al\vays appropriate for tributes, and the graceful glasses soon will be raised in honor of the patronesses of the Adoption Guild of Southern Orange County. The Newport Bay home of Mrs. John \Vayne will furnish the setting for the Adoption Guild's opening event of the year, a luncheon on Monday, April 19. Joining fi+lrs. \Vayne in the rC'reiving line will be Mrs. Roy Hulse and Mrs. Randall Presley, guild president. llighlight of the year's activilies will be a benefit tennis tournament to last through t\VO '"eek-ends, beginning May 29 and concluding June 6. A record number of 300 teams is expected to turn out for this ninth annual senior tournament. ~lore than 70 teams also will participate in a junior tournament beginning !\lay l. 'TRUE GRIT' OSC AR -A close-up of her husband's Academy Award statuette is given proudly by Mrs. John Wayne to fellow patronesses of the Adoption Guild of Southern Orange County (left to right) Mrs. Roy Hulse and Mrs. Richard Leitch, who are planning a champagne luncheon in the \Vayne home on ltfflnday, April 19. Beautifully carved statue of horse and rider in fore· ground is appropriate focal point for the noted actor's study. To mark the tournament's conclusion, a gala Tennis Ball will take place on the evening of Saturday. June 5, in the Irvine Coast Country Club. Funds raised through the guild's efforts will benerit the Holy Family Adoption Service of Orange County, which is a nonsectarian, private child· placing organization. Spastic Leagu e's Effo rts Ghostly 'Ship Ahoy!' Sounded for Cargo The ghost of King Neptune will be hovering over Corona del ?I-far on Friday, April 24 -but he will have a benevolent purpose in mind. The loading of King Neptune's ghost rummage ship is occupy· ing all members of the Newport Harbor Spastic League, as they plan to load the ship to the gunwales for a sale benefitting tbeir philanthropic efforts on behalf of cerebral palsy victims. Car.go will be taken on board the 'craft,' located on the premises of ~1rs . William E. Fisher's Corona de! Mar home. and from there vol· unteers will transport it to Los Angeles, where it will be sold by the Spastic Children's Foundation thrift and boutique shops. Rummage-of the real and not ghostly variety-sought includes household furnishin_gs, clothing, jewelry and all odds and ends which might bring in a profit. Mrs. \Villiam L. Kitchen, ways and means chairman, is leading the membership's effort to collect a wide variety of rummage. Friend~ and patronesses of the league who have items they wish to donate are asked to call Mrs. Kitchen, 675·3111, or Mrs. Philip M. Coholan. group president. 646-3736, for prompt pick-up. A receipt will be given for tax deduction purposes. Proceeds from the sale of the ghost ship's cargo will be ear- marKed for Orange County expansion by the Spastic Children's Foun- dation. The future hopefully will see a resident home and school estab- lished in Orange County for cerebral palsied children on a five day and for adults on a seven day basis. Since ii <; iricention in 19!19. the Newonrl lfarbor Snastir League ha<; rai red and di~trihnted ~nnrn"imately $100.000 fnr the victims or cerebral palsy and similar disabilities. On the lookout for King Neptune's ghost ship are (left lo right) the Mmes. Richard Pendle· ton, \Villiam E. Fisher and Paul Garman of the Newport Harbor Spastic League, which is seeking rummage items to load aboard tJie craft on Saturday, April 24. ror Ole benefit of its erforts to aid cerebral palsied children and adults. Wings Jittery as Social Butterfly Emerges From Cocoon DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am nearly 17 and have had this problem for over a year. Whenever l am asked lor a date I get real exc11ed about it and I look forward lo having a good lime. So what happens? About ten minules before the guy shows up I gel a stomach ache. By the time he arrives I feel rotten. I have these pains the whole evening and it's all J can do to rorce a smile and pretend I'm ha ving run. rt kills me to see other girls laughing and enjoying themselves while f'm in pain -\l'tshing I was dead. Please tell me how to get over this r1diruloul'i lhing. I am -SICK ot GEiTJNG SICK DEAR S.0.G.S.: Gn In a doctor and learn ~·hethrr or oot an organic problem hi caulina the pain. Cbancu are 1ood ANN LANDERS that the trouble I• not I.I your stomach bul lllcber up -like la your tie.ad. People who are uptight. fearful and unsure of them11elves often develop pbysk:al tymptoms. Stomach aches and headachu 1rt &be moil common. Hopeful1y the doctor w\11 Jive you some medkaUoa or saue1t Ci!WIH.ilng. Maybe both. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I resent your con.sislent portrayal of homosexuals as an Immoral , antisocial, ob no x i o us segment of ~iety . I especially lake exception lo the letter from the Arizona homosexual. Why it is you would not allow the words "kike" or "nigger" lo gel into print, yet you let the word "queer" appear in your column. even though it is offensive to 20 million America ns. !Kinsey 's stat Is t ics J. ~'lUthermore. your conclu.<;ion th at the straight student was approached often because he wu "prettier than IT\O.'il guys" Is ·a sterotyp1cal fallacy -pure fiction. \\'by do you treat 10 percenl or your readership as though then.• is no good sid e lo their life style ? Your low opinion of homosexuals is apparent from the selection of the letters you choose 10 print. Gel with it or give up. - f\fEMRER OF THE-NATIONAL GAY LlBERATION ALLIANCE DEAR GAV LIB: The letter below might be of Interest to you since It deals with tbe 1ame !lobject DEAR ANN LANDERS · Th~ is one of lhe sincerut thank.yous you'll ever receive. J've Rlwnys believc1t that only a homosexual could uruleratand whal ll Is like to be persecuted by ignorant people, 4 but you. Ann Landers. have displayed unusual under slanding. As a 2J..year-0ld homosexual, I can tell you it's a rough \lfe to be rejected and humiliated, but for boys 15 and 16 it's pure hell . I appreciate your compassion. You are one person who prints !he truth about homoselCuality Please keep remind ing your re3ders that the lrnuble wi\h l he world is not thrit some penple mak e love differently but that they don'l love at all -Love to you. Ann Landers. - EVANSTON OEAR EVANSTON : Everyone likes to be apprttlatcd. Thanks for wrltinii:. And now. a word lo Gay Lib who 11ay~ J anl millnlormed. &Irr)', 1ou'rt1 wron1. ll 111 no 11tereGtyplcal fallacy that prettJ male1 attract bomose1.ual11. "Phtk Tea Qu'eeus'' (as they are called) .,-.well aware of their glrllsll good looks and ~ u1e II to an advantage. Tiiis information comes to me from the homO&Uual1 themselves and Dot from lhird-party researchers. Drinking may be ''in" to the kids )'OU run with -but it can put )'OU "out'' for keeps. You can cool it and slay popular. Read "Booze and You -for Teenager-I Only.'' Stnd 3S ce11t:i in coin 11nd a long, sclf·addres.scd, stamped envelope wltb your request in care ot the DAILY rnm. • • J 4 DAIL V PILOT Monday, April 12. 1971 USC Classmates Garden Chosen For Wedding Patrir.1a Ann Tay Io r, fonneciy a Newport Beach resid•lnt , became the bride of Jc.h» P..1urrny Calms in a po,o1side garden wedding at l;ier parent~· Ontario home. Bishop Seth Baker performed the double ring cercmon~. Paren!s of the bride ;ire MRS. JOHN M. CAIRNS Double Ring Ceremony Air. and Mrs. Ralph L. Taylor, The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. James Herbert Cairns of North Vancouver, British Columbia and the late l\1r. Cairns. Escurted by her father. the bride rhose her sister l\liss C:ithi T01ylor to be her maid o/ honor. Douglas (':urns tlcw from llionh \';;ncou\'er to be his brother') best man. The nc1r :'>!rs. Cn1rns is a learning coordinator in the Fountain Valley Sc Ii o o I District and an instructor at Orange Coast College. She is a masters degree candidate at the University of Southern California. Her husband, a Fulbrigr.t scholar, is a high school teacher in the Santa Monica Uni!ied School District. He also teaches English at Santa Monica City College. and was for two years on the faculty of the university in T~salonike, Greece. He has earned two masters d~grees and an administration creden- tial from USC. Clowning Around Joyce Runge Becomes t./\rs . Michael Ollila The circus v.1ill come lo town Friday, April 16. when the Meado\vlark \Vomen's Golf Club sponsors its annual Invitational. Following a shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. will be the tournament and a circus luncheon. Ready for their day "under the big top" are (left to right) the Mmes. John Afontgomery, Stanley Du Ree and Robert ~1oore . A double ring ceremony in Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa, linked lhe names of Joyce Runge and l\.1ichael H. Ollila. The bride was given in mar- riage by her p<1rents. ~I r. and ~irs. E. H. Runge of Huntington Beach. Conducting the morning rites "'as lhe Rev. Andrew C. Anderson. P3rents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs . Eino Ollila of Costa ~1esa. Ho\\•ard Ollila was best man for his brother, and anot~r brother Ed Ollila headed tht ushers. including Dennis Holland, Dave Siebtls and Loren ~tat.son. Miss Laurel Runge was her sister"s maid of honor. and Miss Karen Runge her brides maid. Other bridesmaids in- cluded Miss Pat Ollila, sister uf the bridegroom. fl.tiss Judy Robinson and Ptfrs. ~1yron Okimoto. Flower girls were Donna i nd Karen Stanley. and Michael Slanley carried the rings. The bride was graduated MRS. MICHAEL OLLILA Morning Ri t•s from Marina High School and from UCI. H~r husband , who graduated from Costa ~1esa High School. served for four years in the Air Force. Counselor Joins Staff Of Crittenton Services Florence Crittenton Services or Orange County has reached en<1ble the budding Crittcnton organization lo better build its s!ructurc a milestone In iTs t'-.:pand1ng work with unwed mothers anU their families '"'i lh the Any proble1ns relating to pregnancy may be discu.~sed first social \\'ilh Karen. whose oHice is at Norm an 531 S. :\1ain St.. Sune i. i11 Orange. telephone 54J.9377. addition of Hs worker. Mrs. Bigelman . ~1rs. Bigelman. a native of Tustin, brings to the services Cr illenton administrators point out that one out or ever\' 10 births this year in Orange extensive experience i 11 County "ill be to an unwed \'IOrking w i I h emotionally mother. and four or those \\'Ill involved young people. be lo teenagers. She earned her BA degree al "Sadly, in many casts, this the University of California, Pre g 11 an c Y marks lhe Santa Barbara in l960 and her beginning of a cycle consisting MA degree in social work ;:it of dropping out of school, the University of Southern iving on st;:ite welfare. never California . marr ng and having 1nore f-wedlock children." a Prior lo joining Florence Crittenton Services. she was spokesman said. Toastmistress Club affiliated with Five Acres \Vith Karen's help. the residential treatment center Crillenton Services \\'ill hope for emotionally d Isl u r bed lo break that cycle and hel1J children, Family s e r v ice pregnant teenagers assume OFFERS HELP Karen Bigelman Objectives Listed responsible roles by offering Association of Orange County direction in medical care. and the Orange Co u n I y education. legal aid a n cl Adoption A~en.cy. counselinj!'.. K~rel'l, who is the mother of ~irs. Bigelman. \\' h 0 !I' e husband /1as returned to California Stale College at F"ullerto11 to study political science, enJo~·s se"•ing and playing bridge in her leisure time. You Were There will theme the Wednesday. April 14. meeting of Las O I a s Toastmistress Club in the IMercury Savings and Loan Association building. Hunli11gton Beach. The objective of the 7:30 p.m. meeting, according lo ?tfrs. Velma l3olin, presldent. Alpha Phi Alumnae To Gather lo leam correct reporting. fl.frs. Calvin Olcott \\'ill conduct a briefing session on how to make reports. Mrs. Laurence Thom as . toastmistress. will introduce the program participants and topics, including the Mmes. Bolin, giving a c I u b representatives' report: fl.farie Fouts. a book report. and Joe Gonzales, a book review. During the rlub·s April 28 meeting. members w i I r David, 16 months. a n d _______ _ Kimberl y. 3 months. feels that •liiliiiiiiiliiliiii•"!!ll!l•li••••••••• it is important that unwed c !Jlp mothers-to-be consider a 11 r G ·1 oplions 10< lheic <hHd. ow111ng 01•y "They have lo live with lhal decision a lonq time." she J ( slaled. The IO!al famHy unil is Jea ll ty !Sa Q 11 S welcome lo come lo her office, I inrluding the natural father. OPEN {~lNINGS ·~o SUNDAYS She \\'i ll concentrate on visiting other agencies to find ' what social services are missing in Orange County to A"POINTMENT NOi ALWAYS NECE:5SA~Y demonstrate the making of S 1. • t craft items for a booth at the orop tm1s S Huntington Beach City-Wide Newport Harbor Soroptimisl festival May JS. Club meets the first three Women who are interested Wednesdays ror a n o o n ln achieving poise a l'l d luncheon in the \\'hile lforst confidence in h a n d I i n g everyday situations are Inn. Newport Beach. An Aug. 8 wedding in the welcome to join the club. p:;,;;;;;;::;;;;;;:;;;~;;~ Orange t:ounty B h u d d i s t ;====='====== Church. Anaheim is being planned by Jean Wada and Ronald S. l\'akano. Their betrothal ";is an· LOCAL ' 1,000'1 OF OIL PA INTINGS WHOLISALI WAlfHOUSf O"N TO THI PUlllC 50°/o OFF No olh•r 111wtp•P9• f•ll1 you "'or•, •v•ry cl1y. 1bouf wh11'1 9oir11;i o" in th1 Gr11f1r Or1n9• Co11f thin tt.. DAILY PllOT. nounced by her parent.~. ;\Ir. U !f E. EOINOIElt. SANTI. ANA ,. ..... •U-- and fl.Ir~. Bill H \\"ad.1 of ~===~========~·~·~~-~·~·~"-~":•~•:•~·=,~·:•~·-,,II G.arden Grove. dunng a d1nner J ---- part y in thr Kono l!a1\i1li restaurant . Among guest~ ~·l're i\11· and l ~1rs. John G. 1"akano of Santa Ana Heighl!I'. paren1~ nf tbf' benedict-e!ert. Pi.1i:o;s Wada , a gradua1r orl Pacifica High School. attends\ California State rolle,'le at F\illerton where she 1~ ;if. filia~ wi1h Sigma Kappa sorority . Her fiance, a graduate of Corona de! 1'.tar Hhii:h School. earned iha BA degree In ftnlJICt at CSCF. where he ~ 1 mtmber of Sigma Alph~ Epsilon fratemily. ! }' ! OTERY I LADIES -ARE YOU OVER 30 ANO DO YOU HAVE AGING SKIN PROBLEMS? IC.AIDIE Ttt-Dl:•MAL IC•UTT "LAN -M talk•llr Mii ....... now I• 1rln•o•11. " 11••1a11,..rr tfl•dlH '"" 11011u111w1..,, ,.,.. ••1c1wuln 1n11 ~""' ''"' "''"' ,.r ....,, e1m1111•ilt•. I• 1,u. 91' Ill• II(! fll•I 11 .... 11 • 1111119!1 ••ll•r·· ••rltl II (II· "'th<I lfO Miii -lllllfY, It II lllll!Mt9111 llMll llltrt 1'9 "'"' tllln lerty "'•llilll _,.. ''""""' """ '"' ''"" "' •rv """'' illy Plil tr llhor 11 .... 1o .. ,,. ,....lol'lll, "It• •I laott, ctrt1i.. Mfk '°"""~' II<' tllt IN1vtll11t \liloi Y911 •1•1 '" Y"'" ...,. tllt 11111 ... TJ11 Kl .... Trl·Dlnr11t 1-ty P'll• _.,, ,.,...,., t1r ,..r ••111, "" ._. .. "''!Mt """' "'-•Ml 1011'11r11t1 11ttol "'' CM-kl ....... 1(1 ..... ~ 1r• Jl.,,..l~lc, M ""' Cl-Jltr"' ""l•llvt ....... . INulll'llt •~lfo lc ••111111, Moll, --•.._.. II h lltlltllf •1111 cltt•, lttwllt.,i lklll, ,. ,,., klulllvl, _,, ... ,..,..i-, ct•9111 ,..., Tit '''' If •tit <I• ................. It ti (II ... l(""'llfl(llfY ..... -. Tt "9 Clmllflllp -· " """"' .. lllw Mlurt•o Ntlc , .. ., -T ... 1(1 ..... Tri·Dl•,...I l••-ty •ltto -II CtNllflt I •Mt••l+r If tOlftfll! Uc ..... •lflllOI "" ollln, M t•ttr,.111, Clt•fttkl.IJ, """"· 1, .... •wtlll'lolt ,.,. "" "'' cl'"''-'lo~ {Ir•. (•I! Mlrtl,.I ~t\J '"'' !tr YtOlr trff ... _ •t-llrlllM, .I.Mo I low '""""' fVtf lo Wit""' • -l<ltlo tFIP'Mllc d'llllfl In l~tlr llClt l '"'"'""'< .. Nt ltllt•lltft It ""' '"" o ...... ttt •rt 1111,1,.19" tr '1'141' _, ~It. f'tMM '"' 11t11 I('"'" 111.it, CM!"""'' ti lll-JtU ttr '" 111111ro1""" .. _''"""'· SPRING PERM SALE! Bouncy, bree2y beautiful curls Flattering new fashion look. Very Special. Reg. $15.00 now BUDGET PERM . , .. (Normal H1:lfr) FROSTING SPECIAL . SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT "''" Ion "''' •295 •15-0 111111\'ttk •345 •:zoo Stylrn pt1c111/1ghl/'tl hlflhtr SOUTH COAST PLAZA-Phone 546· 7186 l.A'''f'r Levrl-\'ext lo Sear~ Open Ev•nings 267 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Phone 548·9919 Open Evening ~ & Sunday We CARE about roul Look your bestf Your Horoscope Aquarius: Avoid Ruts TUESDAY, APRIL 13 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): ·Hold off on financial commitments. Tate time te evaluate. Inventory of your own assets i.9 e55ential. Fln!M major project. Leave no loose ends. Money pres..ure will ease. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You will have to handle added pr es sure. Don 't duck responsibility . A past commitment makes reappearance. M a I n t a i n balance . Throw aside eutmoded concepts. Get down to business. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Play low key. You gain most now through quiet appfoach. One who constantly complains must be given facts of life. Refuse to be a door mat for any persona. Message will be clear. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Accent versatility. Don't scatter fortes. Finish w h a t you start. Spread inRuence. An older friend may have leglttmate objection. Be a good listener. You J earn something of value. LEO fJuly 23-Aug. 22): Check details; don't overlook apparent minor matters. One born under Srorplo can help unravel mystery. Accent on securing property. Stay on top of situation. Be availablt. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Take nolhing for granted. Reports n e e d verification. Some messages now tend to go astray. Key is to do some Irvine Club to Hear Executive Director Mrs. Judson Sutherlland, ex- ecutive director of the Orange County chapter of the March of Dimes will be the featured speaker w hen members of the Irvine Junior Woman's Club gather on Wednesday, April 14. Mrs. Craig Parks will open her Irvine home for he meeting at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Sutherland, a Costa Mesan, also is a f i e I d representative for Southern California and a 2 2 y e a r member of the March of Dimes. She will speak on health needs in the county and show a film explaining how clubs may ~sist the foun- dation. Members also wil! have the opportumly to see I h e ensemble which won a second place award for Mrs. Parks in the Orange District. CF\l.'C, Creative Sewing Contest. She will model her entry, an off- white Forstman wool A·line dress with tunic length jacket. personal ln vestlga.Un&. Ask questions. Go to source. N• secondhand reports. LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0ct. :ti): Some financial pre.5.!lure ls in- dicated, Payments come due. Weigh budget; take Inventory. Home improvementa 1 re nectssary. Make gesture of ' reconcillatlon to f 1 m 11 y member. You'll be happier. SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 21)~ Be aware of competition. Don 't fool yourself into fllse sense of security. Be wary of one who is quiet, but resentful. Face facts as they et.1st. Re- cent venture will bear fruit. SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): You complete im· portant task and rece.ive ad- ded recognit.ion . Steer clur of dispute between f r I e n d 1. Otherwise you could be caught in middJe. Tread llghUy. Laugh at your own foibles. CAPRICORN (Ile<. %2-Ja•. 19): You complete important task and receive added rtctr gnition. Steer clear of dispute between friends. Otherwise you could be caught in middle. Tread lightly. Laugh 1t your own foibles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 1 18): Your values are put to test. You may have to choose between inertia and progress. Latter course takes inJtlative. Pon 't permit yourself to re- main in any rut. , PlSCF.S (Feb. 19-Man:b 20): Some plans are aJtued. Ha ve faith in ultimate oukune. Giving up now would be erTOr. There will be changer. You will adjust to them. Protect Interests via legal procedure. ewinner! • &bies, Childre• S weeks to 1: )'t.ars •One per subjC<!t. • Satiabct.loa 191rutttd •Groups 99t persubjttl. Photographer will be in store on Tuesday. Wed., Thursday and Fridays 12 noon t. 8 p.m. Saturdays 10 a.m . to 6 p.m., Sundays 12 p.m to 4 p.m Sean Cel$a Mes• Bristol at Sufloll'tr I• Ille Soti1• Oau& Plu.a 5ff..us1 Sain BHU Part. U P1\nu at SU1t1111 PHONE TA M4Mer ~1-0Sif Sn.n TernKe ll1wl.IMl111e at SeP':'l~ PHONE MZ·lill Sean Beylf'Otymplc •IMI Soto PHONE :'8·~11 SNn Venao•I • VenMetll SfaHOll A\", PHONE PLS.JIJJ S.n ''''-'"" Ma.cllnt1'1" II Hllh·mt PHONE OR 1-!.S?T S.nl'x.W.PbBhC.ai tum,.• PHONE WEMU:Z I I ) .. I ·' 7 I I I " • Today's Flnal VOL 64, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS. 34 PAGES ORANGE COuNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1971 TEN CENTS Planner·s Consider 2nd Skyscraper • Ill Mesa Renecting the changing character of the city and the limes, the Costa Mesa Planning Commission tonigbl w 111 consider among other matters an 18-story skyscraper, a problem center and a produce stand in the heart of town. The panel's 7:30 p.m. agenda includes nearly 20 items, after several months of slower activity and shorter scheduJes. First item under the category of old bµsiness will be a new ordinanct requiring a zone exctptioo permit to Sky Police Get Suspect In Newport Newport Beach pol.ice today are holding a San Bernardino man ori attempted rape charges after officers allege hi! car was followed by the searchlight from Newport police helicopter 11 patrol cars from three communities closed in on the ground . Police identified the suspect as Earl Kenneth Lukins, 39, of San Bernardino. During the pursuit, Sanla Ana police Sgt. Charles Miller crashed his patrol car into a drainage ditch . He escaped injury. The case began in Newport when a 17· year-old girl reported lo police that she had been attacked by a man wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt. She s.aid he was driving a black sports pickup and acrosted her as she walked on East Coast Highway near the entrance to cameo Highlands in Corona de! Mar. She reported that passing motmilts Ignored her screams for help as she struggled with her asuilant in the well· lighted intersection. A resident of Newport Beach, lhe, pl told police she waa walking h?mt rrom tending a sick horse at the Irvine Horse Ranch, one--quarter mile to the e.ast oo Coast Highway. The victim said the man ran away from her and escaped in the sports pick up, driving westbound on Coast Hig~way while she ran to a nearby home for aJd. Responding to the call. the helicopter piloted by Olfiet;r John Heene and crewed by Officer Tim Grundeman, spotted a car matching that description driving north on MacArthur Boulevard at t h e Intersection of Campus Drive. Followed by the helicopter, the vehicle b'aveled to the San Diego Freeway. then to the Newport Freeway, northbound, .and veiled at Edinger Avenue, where officer Mi.ller spotted the auto. When Miller attempted lo pull the car over, he alleged the suspect accelerated ISee CHASE, Pa1e 2) Colorado River Campers Leave Lots of Litter PARKER. Ariz. (UPI) -An estimated sa ooo students and other young persons de.parted camp grounds along a 200-mile 1lretcb of the Colorado River Sunday, leaving behind mounds of litter., . . California and Ari%ona authorities said that nearly 500 arrests were made during the week-long student vacation, most for drunkenness and narcotics. B u t , authorities added, that other than the Jitter. mostly piles of beer cans, . the crowds stretching south along the river from Bullhead City were peaceful and well behaved. On the Arizona side of. the Colorad~, Yuma County Sheriff Trav1.s Yancty said "the biggest part of the crowd has left. But there 's lots of litter, lot! of litter ." Yancey said he had SS o[ficers in the 11rea the past week aod a total of 315 arrests were made . 'J'be sherif[ said it was mostly peaceful but ''I just hope ~y do something different next year. I think we had a good holiday . We don't like to arrest people but the law is the law .... " In Mojave County to the nortb, deput1e1 ar(elted 31 persons end a spok~man 11ald "for the !ilie of the crowds. it was pretty peaceful." On the California side of the river, 12 young persons were taken into custody on mostly drunk charges. "For the most part they were well behaved," said Sheriff's LI. Walter AcunA. Ml!'anwh1le in Palm Springs, which in past yl!'ars has been overrun with hippies numberinit mnrt than 30,000, lbe city p01lce department st1id only about 5,000 were on h11nd and that virtually all of them had stayed in motels or hotels. Twe years ago. youths ncx:ked in such numbers to tht lndlan-owned TahquiU C.nyon that IM tribe protested. P0Uc1 1tTUled 1$7 persons that year. operate adblts-only book and fllm outleta. The law -which will indlreClly ban sueh bwiness -la outlinod In sligblly over 30 well-chosen but vaaµe words relaling to COJJUQUDicstkms or visual materJ&ls forbidden to mioon. Santa Ana, wttich bU an ibundance of such st.ares, is enact1ni a variety of controls, wblle Costa Meaa baa QOM: bul some operators have made everturea to the city. ~ oo the agenda is a ZO!Je . ' ' Sad, Bu( Clean exception pernllt for Costa Mesa Towers, an ~cal twin to Bethel Tnwera but proposed for construcUon at 650 W. 19th Sl., by a dlfle,...t rdlglous group. Study cl sewagt, water, a.nd other critical services indicates tbe West.em Association of Bapti&la Inc.. project is feaSiblt under certain CondiUoos. Tbe most critical would be aPPl'C!vaJ by the Federal JIOOJ!ng Admin~traUon for lhe annual payment.of $21,000 to 111ppart fire, poll<e, ·-~ IJPU!lg, llld ·otller .-1 - Reggie. an lll-mooth-old orangulan at the Vilas Park Zoo in Madi· son, Wis., doesn't seem to be enjoying his bath. He · gets one week)Ot, but, so fU'; bas resisted.all offers t-0 endorse soap. Program to Aid Veterans Announced by President WASHINGTON !AP) -Contending lhe wation owes il.! Vietnam veterans an ex- tra measure of help, President Niion announced today a $1-m.illion program to altract disadvantaged veterans to et· panded GI bill job and education benefits. NltOll said the Office of Economic Op- portunity program is aimed at direct contact with the 350,000 Vietnam-era un- employed veterans by cadres of former Gia from poor backfroundl"tfho are PoW studying under the GI bill . "We owe these men a debt of gratitude for their service -but we also owe them somelhlnlif more 1" the President said. "The di1may!J11g-fact ls that unemploy· ment amoog Vietnam-ua veterans still is significanUy greater than It is among non-veterans in the l8Jlle age bracket." The proeram~dmi1l11tered for the OEO by the National League of Cities and the U.S. ConJerence o( Mayors under a St.OIS.375.000 arant is to Ila.rt in low- income and ~Jue-collar neighborhoods in Grabber Grabbed te n cities OJI a demonstration basis. Details were spelled out by 18 govern. ment officials and veteran.s involved in lhe program after an hour-Joni meeting with the President. Former infantry Lt. Robert Penn, a Negro who already has been trying to attract dlaadvantaged veterans to GI bill benellts in his hometown Of Buffalo, N.Y .. said the primary beneficiaries of the 01 bill have bee11 men with high school educations. "Somehow they're not rea ching the less advantaged," Penn said, "What "J'e're going to try to reach is the high school dropaut. Veterans can talk to veterans better." The cadres of former Gls already tak· ing advantage of GI bill benefits are to recruit disadvantaged veterans 'IOl only for on-the-job training and education un- der the GI bill but for other program5 including rehabllit&Lion for drug-addicted men. city servieto. If this can be dooe, the plannin& department urg's city councU approval of the II-story, 270-unit aenior ·Citizens' residence which wtiuld be a neighbor to Bethel Towers. The latter was built by the Southern California Assemblies of God Inc., under a federal Department of HOU!ln& aDd Urban Development (HUD) loan and camot provide aucb supporting taxes. Reverend Harley MWTay, leader for • the' Baptist layman 's group. believes this can· be done through tbe FHA-financing program but city officials want it in writing from Washingioo D.C. first . A majority of the agenda itelllJI are for zone e.1ception permits, some requiring annual renewal and expected to get little discussion. One such item is for Al Jacobs' Mesa Produce, 18$4. Newport Blvd., allowing open display of seasonal fruits and vegetables in a.a abandoned corner servict · atatloo. A SfJCODd that may come under m.ucb more study and discussion is for relocaUon of the Harbor Area Youth Problem Center. 333 E. 17th St., in a commercial area Into a residential district. The lllghly auecess!W center -recent recipient of a $1,500 D'i s n e y 1 and communitY service award -found its quarters 1\oo small almost immediately (Set PLANNERB, P"' I) Big Bombs Used Blockbusters Dropped on Red Forces SAIGON (UP!l -The U.S. Air Force used its 7~ ton blockbuster bomb as a tactical weapon for the first time today In the Indochina war, dropping •wo of them on Communist troop conctntraUons around besieged Fire Bue I in the Ctntral Highlands. The bombs, largest in the U.S. arsenal except for nuclear weapons, were parachuted from C130 transport planes. They explcxled a few yards off the ground, blasting holes as big as football field! in the jungles. Their concussion can kill a man or disable him by cau.sing bleeding from the ears and nos~ 1971 Bal Week Arrests Show N.-.port BqdJ arre.U '.HI'· llail'll attondloce for Ea•ter Week, 1171 wort up, according to 1tatl11tlca rdused today by police llld lifegU>rdl. Lifeguards credited the food weather with booaling beach attendance for the nine -days from '35,000 in 1'70 to 720,000 ¥tis year. Guards reported a total of 88 rescues - of whi ch three were listed 11 near drownings -and one possible drownlna. Jn 1970, there were only lS rescues and no drownings. Police said there were a total of 542 arrests made from the first Saturday through Good Friday. Last yur'I toWa ahow 379 for tbe same ptriod. Officer• said that de1pite the Increase in arrests, there were fewer crimes reported and fewer traffic accidenls thia year than last. Total crime reports for 1970 were 148 hut dropped to 129 this year. There were 63 traffic accidenl.! this year, which ii eiJ?hl less than the previous year. Police said lb'! rise in arrests and the aubsequent drop i'n crime reporl.! might be linked to the decline of Newport Beach's popularity as an Easter Week resort. Officers speculate that with fewer crime calls and traffic accidents to respond to they had more time to investigate loud party calls and perhaps prevent the parties from turning into the brawls that made paat Bal Week such a notorioU5 event. Officers noted that of-the total arrests, 337 were juveniles most of whom were picked up at these parUes for lick of parental control or curfew violations. Avalanches Kill 7 VIENNA (AP) -At least seven people were killed and many others suffered shock or injuries when 11now 11lide1 hit tourist groups on Austrian 1kl 11ope1 during the Easter weekend. Despite rain squalls and high winds ln the Fire Base $ region in the Central Highlands, B52,, dropped 500 tons of bombs on the C.Ommunists near the base. The 23 sorties flown today ral5ed to 2,500 tons the amount of bombs dropped In the area since the siege began March 31. Front dispatches said the Communists had sent in 10,000 troops to the fire base are.a and that the government had a simllar..ab:ed force there, the heaviest concentrations sine"" the invasion of Laos. U.S. milit.ary aources in Saigon said thefr intelligence indicated a • ' s m a I I e r ' ' Communist force but did not elaborate. The Viet Cong, which c:alls the Fire Base Hill No. 1001, broadcast geveral victory claims and aa~ one Saigon reinforcement colWM broke and ran when it came under attack. 1'11e Viet COng saJ.d they had · killed 63l Saigon troops in the battle. Saigon reported 2,824 Communists slain at a loss o( 172 government dead. Rt:porl.! from . the area lndicated that the North Vietnamese commander in charge of the attack on Fire Base 6 had moved his headquarters from Laos into South Vietnam to direct the fight. The !Set ASIA WAR, Pa1e I) Girls Get H~lp Sisters Save Family After Crash ,, ,.,.. 4 , ORINDA (UPI I -Jennifer llryMr, 10, and her sister Kelly, 9, traipsed for four ~.dft'u..~·~ they were weary and "a meas," but not one whit less determined. 'Mle two girls bad a mJssion, and they aceompllshed It handsomely. They saved their mom, their dad, their two younger brothers. 'The sisters stumbled through the woods tG get help for their family trapped in a light plane that had crashed in Contra Coata County. Henry Boeger found them Saturday morning on his ranch. "There stood those litUe girls, wet and cold .•. \bey were a men .•• ea. had a bad calh on her head. .. Ther were ao ,tertQu,s about helping IM!r l1mfly. _,..llllli, let ~ else bother them,., BOeaer added. ''They were brave kids.'' Boeger notified aheriff'1 deputies and then rode a horJe to lbe wreckage. Ht and deputies rescued Jamea B. Bryner, 34, his wife Breua, and their sons, Mark, a and Eric, 7. All were reported in sati!lfactory condition Sw>day at John Muir Hospital. Bryner was flying his family to Orinda from Ojal, CalifomJa for an Easter visit with relatives when the plane a-ashed SatlD'day and wu demolillbed. District Gets State OK For Trial Cfuss Plan Newpnrt·Mesa Unified School District ls one of five districts in the state to be selected for 1 trial relaxation of Education Code provisions barring clas1 sizes in exctss of 30 students. Dr. Nonnan Loats, as 11 is ta n t superintendent for instructional services, said the approval of the district's application by the State Department of Education "allows a look at different ways of starting," PresenUy the Education Code restricts class sizes to 32 studen\s in elementary 8Chools and 30 students on the average for the district 111 a whole. With the 1pecial authorization provided by Senate Bill 604, Loal.! said the district Tricia's Wedding' Slated June 12 At White House WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tricia Nixon uid today she and Edward Finch Cox had fiaally settled on June 12 as the date for their White House wedding. will ask . principals to apply for the privilege to try new teacher slaffin& pattem1. The easing of lhe clua limit rule assumes there may be some as yet untried methoO of instruction that may be more fruJUul . Ulal.! suggested larger classes with "differential staffing" -more than one teacher -might be tried under the plan. nie distrid will select four elementary schools and one middle achoo! from the applications made by.princlpala to try the expanded clasaes method. The other · districts which we r 1 similarly given tbe large class go ahead by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Wllaon Riles, are Ocean View Elementary School District in Huntington Beach, and San Jose, Freano and Cupertino Unified School Districts. , Weather Police Seek Bear Trap That is a Saturday and the ceremony will take place at I p.m. (PST) -and the Prelldent's 25-yeM-oki daughter hinted it might be beld outdoors. She disclosed the final date and time In 11n offhand way as ahe talked to reporter• during the a11nual Easter Monday egg roll on the While House'• south lawn. Early fog and e.fternoon sunshine return to the coast Tuesday with temperaturu dipping to 62 along the beaches and 76 further lnland. INSIDE TODAY A hunt la on for a lnlte, fart. a;riuly bear lrap presented '° one ot the fint white girls born tn Uw~ County , Wash .. a1 a memento and .unceremoniously stolen from her Costa Mesa typcwr\Una academy early \Ocla7. Great sentimental value ts attached to the stven-fool antique, 1!01111 wtlh I t • •JthHoot. band-foreed ch1ln. Maud and Oaud Otilcoat, of 173 Del Mar Ave ., ire offerln& 1 reward for lta return. Claud, 82, ls her brother. "Ila WU IO UpiOt be QlUJd hardly eot bru.kfasl, .. said Miss O'lilcoat, who no lon&er teachea typina. The 75-year.old bear trap relic wa8 bulldozed out of a Washington mountainside durlna ear)y day highway construction and bas been in tht Chilcoat famJJy for 25 yean. Actual physical ••1ue. of the 151J..pound artifact ls $500. while its h\1torical worth Is consld'-rabty more notable. Onl)' ooe other artuJy bear trap like it was ever made. Miss Chilcoat didn't,SUUrst why. Ml.u Cbilcoat ..id Ibo trap'1 brutal steel )aW1 would clamp around the unfortunate. grizzltes' legs, while the chain would be hooked to a large lo&. If the bear tried to nee, the 101 would lodge In Umbor and keep him close by. The trap was unearthed and gtv1n to Lewis County histork: officials, wbo finally turned It over to the OtllcOats. CostJ Mese police were called to the ~ne shortly arter daybreak when the griu:ly trap was discavered ~Ing. Officer Roger Neal discovered three 1uspk:iou1 malchbooks -one from a !Set TRAP, P11e II Then ahe laughed and said she hoped she had not "scooped'' fl.rat Lady Pat Nixon's rtaff dlreetor, Connie Stuart, who was aupposed to make the date offJcial with an annouJtCement Thuntday. Both June 11 and June 5 had betTi dJ&-- cussed as the date for the wedding since Tricia and Cox, 24, had oftlcially in- nouriced their tngagtmtnt March It. Tricia did not say why they settled on tNt date. but reporters noted that Cot' f I" a I e:rams at Harvard Law School woold 001 be lln!Wd uoUI JW10' a. Most polict d1partmenti '" Orange County art not set vp to haMlt CO?llkmtr fraud, 1a111 t.llc deputy d!itric& a.ttomt11 ciui~ td such ccut1. Stor11. Page 8. ........ '' ~"""'"' , Clltctl"'9 U,. 11 Cl..-11... 1'-M C-k1 ,. Ct'fnMnl ll DMlll Neltnt I .......... 1'•1""111 ... " ' lt1twtt1-i t1 ,..._. 0-tl -,. , \ - _:t ___ ••_1_Lv_P_1L_o_r ____ c ______ 1.~~···l l2. ~ 1st Tinae i•a Court Dulaney Hearing In Frauds Slated By TOM BARLEY ot ltM DllltY l'llllt ilflf Joseph and Marlene Dulaney loday were ordered to face preliminary hearing April 21 in Santa Ana munJclpal court on grand theft and forgery ch a r g es 1temming from what II allPged to be the '3 million defrauding of investors in the Newport stockbroker's World Financial Trends empire. Judge Paul t.1asl's ruling means that the globe trotting couple will go to court for the first lime with their co-defendant, James Shipley of Huntington Beach, 1he former vice president of the investment complex headtd by Dulaney. Dulaney, 'n, today made another outburst from the defendant's box in which . he protested the chargel5 filed against him and the further delay of court action. "The district attorney's office has had a year and 1 half to investigate these charges against u.s and they should know by now that I am entirely innocent," Dulaney aaid. Judge Mast suggested that Dulaney discuss the matter with his attorney, Robert Law, and sent the eloquent de£endant back to Orange County jail. Dulaney is htld in lieu of $312,500 bail Frotn Page 1 CHASE ... and made a series of U turns. The auto got onto the ramp leading to the northbound Newport Freeway and halfway up the ramp, with Miller i.n hot pursuit, made a right turn do~'ll the embankment and jumped a drainage ditch at the bottom. Miiier wasn't as lucky and crashed into the ditch. The helicop!er crew reported the suspect vehicle circled back onto the ramp and took the Newport Freeway to the Santa Ana Freeway southbound and exiled at Tustin Avenue. Tustin police had sent unils to pursue the vehicle but ()fficers said they could not see the car. They were guided by the spotlight from the helicopter. Police theorize Lukins abandoned his auto on Raleigh Place near the. intersection of Mitchell Avenue and ran toward Del Amo Avenue with a gray sweatshirt in his bands, officers said. Lukins was arrested as he leaped a fence ~ween Debusk Lane and Del Amo. landing in lront of two waiting 'l'Wllin t.11itrol .can. 1be Tustin officers, Donald Grimm and Sgt. Allan Brown, aald today they would not have bte.n able to locate the suspect JO w ily H It bad not been for the help of the helicopter. Red Vans Halted In Mesa Holdup Police declared open season on red Volbwagen vans Sunday night for a lime, after one wu seen zooming away rrom a service station holdup in Costa Mesa. Several were stopped (olli>wing the 10 p.m. robbery of Broadbe.nt's Mobil Service. 2799 Harbor Boulevard. by a long-haired, bearded man with a pistol. Attendant John C. Treat said he v.·as counting the day's receipts prior to Jocking them in the safe w h e n approached by the bandit. He said he: was forced to put the S60 - mostly in quarters -into a cloth bag the bandit brought along. Treat was telephoning the details to police when the suspected get.away car roared out of the lot. leading lawmen to stop several and question the drivers. OllANGI COA$T DAILY PILOT Ol!:A.NGE co.-.sr P'Ull,.ISHING COMP'AH'( Rob•rt N. w,,, P'rt1.otn1 •t>CI Puoll.W J .t~ R. Curltv V•t• P'1t1o<1t n1 •rd c;.,..,.r Mtllt9"' 1kom11 K11~a Eoo:Ot C~~1l11 ~. Looi 1tic~11d P. Nill Aullltn. Ml~•~·..,, C<!•tO" Co1ta lii\t'1a Office JlO w,,1 B•v S1 .. ,t M1 ili n9 Addttt1 ~ P.O. Be• ISbO, 'i2b16 Ottwr Office• N~POrl l11ttt>: 1JJJ Nt'"tof• l ou·•"•'d L"911"t ae1ch: n: Fo1n. "'"•"u• l<yn•+<>q•o' l11ct>· 1711! e.icn 6oul••••d ~~ (lt.....,lt: jl)S Mollh [I Ctm•1'<l R•>I CAIL Y Pit.OT, wo•n -t~ h romnl'IO'd •~t ................... P110h1n1~ Otol~ ••<111: Sun. tltV lfl lCl»re1t ""''IO~I "1r l tQl<"I fltl(n, ~ ....... ; l t ldl, '""' Mtu, '°"""'lt'OOI aUCI\. ft-••ln Val,.~. S•n Ciot"1tnt1/ (.ecll1I•-trd Stfcll•ll"~k, • O"t ... 1111 .,.. rt;1"""! tdllleol. ,-,IM.ittl! ~'"li"lJ Olaf>! i. •I ~ W11/ lt1 SI'", (11'\lt Miit. T ... , ..... 17141 "4l·4JJ1 Clet.tflff An.rthl .. '41·1,71 c.trrllfll, ""· 0<•1199 tout "~~•""'"' C:-ffl'I'. NO l'ltWI ll'Or .. >, 11111\l•o!lol,_, dl!Wltl ,..,.,,_.,. t • 1.dv(l"ll1t,.,,..t1 Mttlfl ll'ltY 1111 ~Id wll....,, 11MOC:t.I -· rr!\Jtitft ., ...,,....,, OWM<', hcor' tlnl •1He Jltld ti Mt-t lttct> •"" Ciel• t>llnf, Ctll..,,.,11 ~ll!IKl'!ltlleol ~ e."1W U.11 ...,,"''" ~V m1U '2.IS _.,,,.,: 11•1t1t•rv t1co11nt1'°"'· ,in ..,..1111y and Mrs. Dulaney is free on her ow11 recognlzanct. Shipley. 38. of 16951 Lowell Circle, is fret on $312,500 ball . He faces ldenlic.;il charges of grand tht·fl, forgery and conspiracy. aU of which are denied by the trio. Dulaney is accuse<i of using his World Financial Trt'nds facilities at Laguna Hills and Seal Beach to defraud a number of investors, most of them resicie'nl5 of retirement communities in those areas. Mrs. Dulaney. an attractive blonde, \\'Orked for him as a secretary in the Laguna Hills "Taj ~1.ahal" headquarte~s until the couple left for West Germany ut December, 1969, as complaints from investors began to flow into the dl.!ltrict attorney's office. Shipley stayed behind to take: over the affairs of lhe corporate complex and was the first member of the trio t.o be arrested. Setback Problem Confronts Mes a Planners Toni ght The Cost.a Mesa Planning Commission tonight will be asked to grant a point of entry setback deviation for Van Doren Rubber Company of Anaheim. The city planning staff opposes .. the request. The company is interested i n developing a parcel at the southwest e<>mer o( Harbor and r.1acArthur boulevards, where a deep, 160-foot corner lot property setback is impased. A reduction to 70 feet 1s being asked but planning department personnel urge commissioners to keep the city's image in mind for the future. "This is one of the key gateways to the city and the existing setback will help set city image," their report reads. '"There is no evidence or justificallon for revising the existing setback at this time," the study concludes. Acting nearly 10 years ago to preserve esthetics and appearance al major entry points, planners established the JOO.foot come r lot setbacks at certain locations. The planning study on the Van Doren Rubber Company setback r e I i e f application mentions this and urges serious study of any other such requests. Fron• Page l PLANNERS ••• after opening 16 month! ago. Leaders have obtained a medical building al 1814 Fullerton Avenue in 'an R·2 duplex zone to continue the five-day a week operation including a 24-hour hot line telephone service. Calls are dispatched to designated counselors by an answering service when they come in outside the center's 4 to 9:30 p.m. operating hours. A total of 1,100 calls have been logged 11.nd 1,200 persons -roughly 15 to 25 years old -have visited the center, most Or them referred to vaTJous other agencies. Help-seekers with drug p r o b 1 e m s account for only about 20 percent of them . The rest runs a [ull range of perso nal difficulties , from sin1ple adolescent depression to poor sChoolwork, medical, dental and legal needs, unwanted pregnancy or even finding a low-<!Qst apartment. Volunteers representing the varloU!I professions involved give their lime to staff the center, while some supporters undergo training to become ('()unselors. One problem the Problem Center zone exception permit application m a y encounter is I.he fact such relatively new community help projects are noy,·here defined in the city's land use ordinance. ThUJ while the staff• recommends approval from the planning standpoint, it raises the question of Jegallty because by Jack of definition there is no zoning set dov.•n for problem centers. Preparation of the backg~ound report by the planning department point!! out the police department has no objection to the cenrer's function and, in fact, supports ils philosophy. f 'ron1 rage 1 TRAP ... Santa Ana cafe -In the drivew•y. "He examJned It as a clue and found it v.·as dry," says ~fi" Chilcoat, suggesting the grand theft case occurf'!;d shortly before. She explained Jf the matchbook was out overnight it would have been dampened by the dew. ~1iss Chilcoat is terribly anxious I• have the bear trap returned for sentimental reasons. No one in the Immediate area could want it for the use It was inlended for either, she notts. adding that age, burial in the damp earth and other weathering proces.Rs left it rusty , scarred and pitted . Tht bear trap ntver posed 1 safety problem durinJ! lhe many years ii rtpO!ed in tht front yard of Chllco•t's Ten Step TypinR School. "Why yes." she f\11~~ Chllco1t 1a!d \\'hen asked 1f ll was purely a keepsak~. OAILY PILOT lltll .. "-ftl They're Among Best Boys Club of the Harbor Area photo instructor Bill Mason shows off mounted shots by two 14-year-old students that placed high among en trants Jn na· tional club's contest recently. Marlin Pante! (right) ()f 2044 1'.1onrovia Ave ., took second 'vith bank safe- ty deposit box composition. Brad Russo of 2050 President Place, took two special merit awards. Cate· gory required them to develop, print, enlarge and mount pictures without help. Big 'Cycology' Court Will Hear Plea Event Scheduled In Newport, Mesa By Firelwuse Operator f>..1aintaining their numbers will near 5,000, a Harbo r Area bicycling club said today it has completed plans for its 12· mile Earth Day bike ride through Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Arnold Parker, a spokesman for Cycologists \Vorkshops International, sponsors of the hike, said the tour will begin April 24 at 8:30 a.m. at Corona de l lilar High School. "A second meeting point, for those who aren't up to the whole trip, ,.,.ill be at TeWinkle Park in Costa 1'1esa at 9 a.m.," Parker said. He also said that Newport Beach and Costa Mesa police have agreed to block off the right lane of the roads along the entire route for the sa!ety of the bikers. Park.er said riders will start north on Jamboree Road from Corona del Mar Hlgh School, turn west oato Palisades and south on Newport Boulevard, stopping at Arlington Street to meet the second group. ''They will continue south onto Balboa Peninsula down to 14th Street where they'll turn into the Newport Elementary School parking Jot." Parker said representatives of area police departments will be there to license bicycles. Following thls, he said, there will be a picnic lunch, from noon to l p.m., "then we'll spend the next two hours cleaning the beach." He said both the Costa Mesa and Newport police departments will provide escorts for the cyclists. On the number of participants, Parker said ''there will be more than t,000 high school kids alone. Our original prediction was bet\\'een 1,000 and 5,000 and we're now certain it will be closer to 5,000." He said the sponsoring group Is ent·ouraging new members and has invited interested persons to its next meeting, April 17 at 7:30 p.m. in the Newport Harbor High School faculty lounge. Burglar Suspect Held on Pot Rap A man wbo gave his name as Sunny Sunshine and his occupation as minister, film actor and singer wu arrested Sat· urday in a phone booth near a Costa Mesa cafe where a burglar alann was ringing. Sunshine.~. of l&O Rochester Sl, Co!ta Mesa, and also with a residence in Tu· junga, was booked on charges of po.s- se!'sion of marijuana . Ofricer Tom Boylan said he spotted Sunshine at 12 :~ a.m. in a telephone boolh He had responded to a burglar alarm at El Matador, 1726 Newport Blvd .. but could find no evidence of entry. Questioning Sunshine -who he 8aid was nervous and evasive -Officer Boy. Jan asked hinl to empty his pockets and found a small quantity or the forbidden herb among coins and keys. Firehouse bar operator Raymond Rohm'• argument that the city of Costa Mesa unlawCully revoked his business license will be debated April 29 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert Banyard set the hearing dale Thursday immediately a f t e r attorney Berrlen Moore flied a writ of manda~ chaUenging the legality of action taken March 1 by the city council against the bottomless bar at 177 E. 17th SI. Bottomle!s dancJnc ls not an issue in Moore's complaint. He alleges that Rohm's bminess license was withdrawn because of the tavern owner's rtfnsal to remove a coin operated pool table from the premises -a refusal that has thw far produced a crop or 52 dtatioru. Moore argu~ that Rohm's applicaUon From Pagel ASIA WAR •.. base is near the intersection of Laos, Cambodia and South Vietnam in the Central Highlands. Sullivan, quoting highly placed South Vietnamese military sources. said the headquarters of Hoang Minh Thoa, commander of the 13.day-old offensive against the base, was believed located about 14 miles southwest of the base, but that he moved his headquarters frequently to avoid bombing attacks. The headquarters is known as BJ. The 7.5-ton bombs have been used previously to blast out landin g pads in the jungles £or U.S. helicopters but military sources said they were effective against massed Communist troops . ln some ()peraUons the big bombs are floated down by parachute and detonated a few yards off the ground to blast out an area the size of a football field . Front dispatches said the bombs \.,.ere used today six to eight miles southwest nf the border ranger post of Ben Het, Itself six miles northwest of Flre Base 6. last September 1 for the pool table was denied without a fair h e a r i n g . Councilmen, noting tha t Rohm had persistently defied police demand! for the table's removal, voted U March 1 to cancel h1a license. Rohm's last appearance In Superior Court was on lbe topic of nude entertainment at h I! controversial tavern. He won last week the concession from Judge Robert Corfman that the nude dancing at the Firebou&e depicted on a television set la lbe court room WaJ not obscene and not in viola Uoa of state cod ... But Judge Qrfman made it clear in that hearjng that be wu not prepared to permit what police allege have been a. series or lewd and obscene acts by female employes not connected with stage performances. Rohm, dancer Cynth ia Louise Drey and several other Firehouse performers and t mploye1 fact court action on a series of citations alleging lewd and <>bscene conduct. Services Slated For Jabe S. Hill Funeral services will be he Id Wednesday for Jabe S. Hill, 88, a plonttr Santa Ana businessman who died Sunday in Sant.a Ana Community Hospital after suffering an apparent heart attack. Mr. Hill. oI 1612 N. Freeman St.. had been a resident of Santa Ana since 190.f. He has been president ()f Hill Inc. a downtown clothing store for 60 years. Survivors include his widow, Evelyn Hill, two sons, two daughters. three brothers, a sister. nine grandchildren and five great·grandchildren . The Wednesday services will be al 2:30 p.m. in 'Vaverley Church. Santa Ana. with interment In Fairhaven Memorial Park. Smith and Tuthill Mortuary is in charge of arrangement!. JVC Juit look at wh •t ihe 4344 offer': 4 5 wett stereo •mplifier, 4 'peed e utcm •fic record ch•nCJer, fu ll frequency c•11ette recorder, FM MPXIFM /AM tuner, two w•y ultra r•ng e 'Pe•ker sy1ten'11, two r•cordin9 mies, •crylic dust cv1r •nd bleckout styling to blend the 4144 info •ny decor. Airing Set On Conduct Of Stude11ts An addition to the Newport·Mesa Unified School District policy on student conduct \\"ill be considered when the board meets al 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Lyceun1 of Costa f..tesa High School, 2650 Fairview Road , Costa Mesa . The student conduct polity revision I .• establishes · • b e ! t e r commun1ca ions \1 ilh students and bars st u den l disruptions. explained Dr Norman Loats, assistant superintendent for instructional operations . The key change in the policy, Laots said. is tho! mandate for sc hools to establish •·procedures to provide an Y student or students a channel of communication to express concern!.'" The policy revision also charges principals with the responsibility for students reporting to classes according to their schedules. If approved by the board, the policy \1·ould bar "unauthorized persons" fron1 school campuses. Loats said the policy rewrilt is the re sult or post-unification developmenl of board policies for the district. A previous update o! the policy empov .. ered the superintendent to suspend any student arrested for use. possessio11 or sale of na:re<>tics or o t h e r hallucinogenic drug. Until the result of a court hearing on the arrest is received, that p o I i c y provides that type superintendent may assign a student to the McNalty Continuation High School. A change in district rules and regulations concerning the use of information listed on a s t u d e n t ' s emergency card. also will be considered by trustees. The change I i m i t s ad.ministration personnel lo discussing the questioning of pupils by police with parents only. If the student's parents cannot ht reached, principals 1nust leave \\'Ord with ()thers listed on the emergency card for parents to call back, rather lhan discussing the nature of the ''emergency" \•;ith someone other than 1nember oi a student's family. Both the policy and the regulations changes will receive their first reading at Tuesday's meeting. By law. a policy must be considered twice in public meetings or the board prior to adoption. Police , Guards Take It Eas y After Busy Week Lifeguards and police were relaxing in HunUngton Beach today after a busy but uneventful Easter Week. About 225,000 swimme rs, surfers and sunworshipers flocked to the strands during the vacation, but the crowds dropped off Sunday as the youths forsook the beach scene for the family scene. "Overall, we had one of our best Easters," reported Lifeguard Captain Douglas D' Arnall. "The hot spell and good surf attracted heavy crowds the first four or five days. but then as the weather turned the crowds fell of[." About 30,000 persons went to the municipal beach Saturday and about 12,000 on Sunday. About 15 rescues were logged by the guards over the weekend. It V.'aS windy Sunday with air temperature on:y 68 degrees and the \\·ater 53 degrees. Abount 9,000 beachgoers relaxdd on the Huntington State Park strands over the weekend while a sin1i\ar number opted for the Bolsa Chica Beach . Members of the police Sp' c I 1 1 Enforcement Detail (SED l. a group of specially trained officers who can quickly be dispatched to troubled areas, also took in the beach scene. REG. $369 5299 UnruJ1 Won't Run For Yort y's Job NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT From Wire Service& SACRAP.1ENTO -Jw U D r u h , unsuccessful DemocraUc candidate for governor last year, today aald M: has no plans to run for mayor of Loi Angeles, u has been speculated. Asked at a Sacramento n e w a ronfettnct U he U planning to nm for mayor In 1973, Unruh replied, "No, I am not ." Bui when asked if tie w a s unequivocably ruling out the possibility, Unruh refused to answer f ur t her questions on Ole 1t1bjtct. • PIONEER • SANSUI • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 1002 nEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND n HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL, TU.D! COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646°7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lttwe'" H-& tn.odway .. Saddlehaek Today's F lnal N~Y. Stoeks VOL 64, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1971 JEN CENTS San Clemente Police Condemn Pen·sion ·Off er By JORN VALTERZA proposed by the d ly's existing private or IM c.i1, ,.1191 s11tt insurance carrier. Negotiations for better salaries and an Instead, after weeks of study of the improved stale..administered pension proposals of the Fraok.lin Life Insurance ' . 1mpany, the afficers have opted for the plan ar~ erpected to be particularly ublic Employes Retinment System tough this year between San ClcmP.nte 's PERS) which is state-administered. police officers and the city. This is San Clemente •is one of only a few alr~dy evident in preliJ9inary studies ange County cities who ha ve pension on 1he insurance issue. systems other than the PERS. The city's police officers -whose wage The competition between the two schedule this fiscal year is the county's packages is expected to reach the city lowest -have officially condemned an council in coming weeks. amended pension lruiurance package Cowicllroeo last week received a city Viejo Youth, 10, l{illed In Accident A Mission Viejo boy, 10, was killed Sunday in a traffic collision when his bicycle rolled into the path of a car near his home. Lee A. Geronimo, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Geronimo of 24181 La Pala Lane, died at South Coast Community Hospital about 2\\ boun lal<r. California Highway Patrol offictrs said the mid-day accident occurred on Ma.rguerite Parkway at Pueblonuevo Drive. Investigating offirers said they did not cite motorist John C. Bates, 21, of 24851 Stem Ave .. El Toro, following study of the factors involved. Funeral services were pending today for the Marguerite O'Neill Elementary School fifth grader at Lesneski Mortuary in San Clemente. Coroner's deputies said the Geronimo boy was the SSth county traffic fatality so far this year. 3 Hospitalized After Derisive Remark in Bar A barroom brawl over the weekend sent two Camp Pendleton Marines and a San Clemente resident to hospitals for suturing of scalp cuts, police said. The donnybrook. which apparently started with derisive comments l'lbout Leathernecks, was reported to officers at 4:50 p.m. Saturday at a bar at 1409 N. El Cam ino Real. When the battle subsided three men ~·ere taken by ambulance to hospitals. Marines Johnny Lee Ramil, 20, and Michael Stags, 19, received treatment at the base hospital for cuts. Thomas R. Phebus, 40, of 1010 Buena Vista, San Clemente, was treated for a head wound which required two doz.en stitches to close, police said. Jnitial reports to officers indicattd bottles were being used in the fra cas, but police said they could find no evidence of it after arriving at the bar. Library Week Activities Set The San Clemente branch of the Orange County Library ..l\'ill receive it.! 1hare of honors next week (April 18-24) during an observance of National Library Week. At least two major special activities bave been planned for the occasion including an afternoon punch party featuring 11even local authors and music by cla!!:ical guitarist Lee Stryker. That event will be from S to 7 p.m. April 22. On April 21 al 7:30 p.m. San Clemente artist Georg Rauch will present a un ique slide program detailing 20 years of hi.a work . The pro11ram begins at 7:30 p.m. in the San Diego Gas and Electrk Company auditorium. The public is welcome to each of lbt 1pecial obW\!IDCff. om Down the Mission Trail Bikes Hig hligh t Cinco de Mayo MISSION VIEJO -A bike parade will be a highlight of the Cinco de Mayo celebration schedliled for Sun<iJy, May 2 al loliS!ion Vltjo Hllh lldlool. Priul will be awarded for the beat decorated bikes during 1 contest prior to t.be parade. Tbe parade will be sponsored by lbe Mission Viejo Elks Lodge and all children in the CQmmwtity are invited to participate. • Arl11 Officers LAKE FORF.ST -Members of the Lake Forest Air Association ha ve elected new officers for the coming year. Margaret Scott will serve as president, assl1ted by Joseph Wing, vice president; Joan Steed, secretary; Judy Kavanaugh, treasurer, and Rusty Johnson, publicity chalrman. Other chairmen include V i v i a n Caldwell, exhibits; Joyce P s j ares, hospitality; Kathlene Stenn in g, membership; Beverly St. C 1 air, telephone : Mildred Brown, workshop, and Ruth Dalian. member al large. • Newcott1er• Jtleet SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Members of the Saddleback Valley Newcomers Club will hear about the historical development of the Sadd.leback Valley during a luncheon meeting Thursday, April IS. James Sleeper. a county historian. will speak on "History at Your Doors~p." The meetin11 is at the Saddleback Inn in Santa Ana. The Newcomers Club is open to all women in the valley who have moved to the area witllin the past slJ months. • Club for Ga b MISSION VIEJO -Girl11 aged seven through eleven are invited to join a Girls' Club for members of the Mission Viejo Recreation Center1. Girls interested in nt'Utliona. special craft&. parties and other activities may 11ign up at tbe Monta0080 Center durin g an information meeting on Tueaday, fl 3:30 p.m. Olil City Hall To Aid Cent;e r San Clemente's old city hall, unUI re- cenUy an auto parts store. will be trana- formed into a mercanUle blulding for two day1 in May.-and 1Ull be up far sale in the process. Members of the San Clemente Interfaith Serviceman's Center recently won permission to use the vaca~d Spanish building for the 11le to ra!Se funda for their active hospitality center for servicemen. The building. along with the city yards nearby, have been up for 1ale for the past several months. but thus far thert have been no takers. Bids on both properUea wlll be 1ubmilted by buyers -U •RY -oo July I. slarf report -a year in 'the making -on the two separate insurance proposals. City Finance Director Gery Teachoul, in one segment of the study package, recommend!'! the PERS plan, because it would be cheaper to the city. Teachout said that lhe city's aMual cost for the original Franklin plan this year was $31,046. A new plan offered by the same firm would cost $25,124 more a year, he explained . Under the PERS system, Teachout said, the addild coot would be about $18,&98 a year. Police officers overwhelmin&IJ-endorle the state plan, primarily becauae of Its universality in other departments. Many officers have said that a universal pension plan protecta a man's retirement benefits when he transfers. Ont officer said lhat under the pruent coodltions in San Clemente offlcers with PERS .will not algn on wjlh the local departme.n.t be<:aue of a lou of benefita. And local o!ficer1 seeking advaDcement in other clUes are alao rel~t~t.o leav• beca.,. tb<y woold looe benelill accrued under-th< prl~a pion hero. 0 What it a ts to," said one officer, u15 a moraJe and lting problem." Some councilmen have said privately that the cond!Uon has two edgea -that the private plan reduces the turnoVer rate within the l<>Cjl ·department. The officers, boWever, disagree. In some salary rang• wtthiit the raiW, the only chance fCl' ~ in rank would be cbanclnl lo>-cMparbnenll, because of a stable IUpetYbory p:oup 1D the local 1 ...... s ro e Developer's Pinn Set For Study City planning comm1ss1oners will resume their discussion Wednesday on a master plan for one of San Clemente's largest developmenl3 in years -an issue which thoroughly c o n f u 1 e d tbe commission about two weeks ago. ~d will> ,,,. """ ............ recent atudy session.~ and a complete draftlng of an elisting motion te -. prove, ooquuialoners aJ•ln ..m dwtU on the dUa1 roqwll of the lloto&lu Pacilic Corporation. ' The firm seeks city approval for I uae permit. It would' allow approval of a general plan for twin condominium developments and e!tate lol3 on 292 acres near the municipal golf course. The plan also would require the use of Los Bautismos Lane for access through the municipal links, which would have to undergo some physical change.s. Opposition already has surfaced from residents along the access r o a d , complaining of new traffic. A group of ardent golfers and the management of the city links also have spoken out The latter group has bitterly assalled the proposals to change any features: of the golf course -including the shifting 30 feet to one 1ide the champloruiblp seventh tee. But spokesmen for the developers have argued that the changes to the links would not hurt play. Los Bautismos, they said, was the logical access route because it passes only eight homes, compared to 30 or more on other suggested access routes. One other access alternative -through Camp Pendleton, had been discussed by city officials earlier this year. but Douglass Pacific spokesmen said the road woold be too costly. The complexion of that issue, however. changed somewhat last week when President Nixon declared the land where the access road was proposed surplus to Marine Corps needs. Easements for the road now are not nccnsary from the Corps, but from the State of California, instead. The master plan issue is allied with a tentative tract map also filed by lhe development firm which Is purchasing the acreage. Once the master plan issue is settled, ~the request to 1ubdlvide 37.S acres of the parcel into 3<ll condominium lots will come up before commissionera. The situation Wednesday ls .unusual, in that a moOon to approve the master plan has been made and seconded. Whal is required by commissioners Wednesday is only a vole. If the proposal passe! -then clears city council JCtUtiny -It would mark the first planned community development in the city. San Clemente House Looted by Thieves Thieves made olf with a surfboard. lightweight bicytle and car-top rack from a s6n Clemtntt' realdence over the weekend. Police said the auspect.! broke a padlock to the garage of Willlam Chase. 230 Del Gado Road, 10metime Satta'day night or Sunday mom111g. The stolen items were worth mi, Chase told OflictrL • I •• • 011 Rocks? Actress Raquel Welch, who stirred Interest when she wore see- tbrough mini dress to marry her manager Patrick Curtis in 1967, would neither confirm nor deny divorce tumors Sunday. He.has re- portedly packed and moved from the couple's Beverly Hills apart· ment. Raquel s'aid she· hoped to have more to tell today. Extra Lif e~ard Charges Irk Shoreclif f s Re sidents Shorecliffs beachgoers have lost one round in their fight over extra charges for public lifeguards on their private beach. but city councilmen have prom- ised lllat the plctuno might be a bit brighter by 8WJ'Jmer of tm. Tht resident.II, who contract with tht city ·each spring for special lifeguard services In .the summer month a, coml)lalned this year about a $350 utta charge for equipment maintenance. But eooncnmeri 1tuck to their policy for tb6 coming 1Ummer contract. Spoliesril"'1 tor u.. s bore c 11 r 11 ""'1pliln0<! lhal membel of their group we~e being i11ce~ to f>'Y the ume r11te fo r the maiitenlnce ts other prl••le grOups outside the city Um.ill whJch recetve the aa~ ,aervlces. ~l<k llweek, the (rOl!p'a b e a c h oonimltttt chalnpan, aa1d , lila oquol ctia:raes were untalr, becauae SbortCllHs realdenta are city tupayera. b u t Mbt!arch Sq r .. ldenla ata not. ' I ' He pointed out that the city cbaraes a 50 percent surcharge for water sold outside the city, but not for lifeguard servicu. Water Surcharge For Ca po Probed A it per occupied apace lllr<harg•• on trailer park w1ter bills will be cona\dertd by the Boord or Director. <I or~. Coonty W11terworks' Olstrlct FOU1' at tonJght's 9,,. meetln1 In· tlle.IJan JG1n Capistrano Cit)' Hall. 1be surcharge lw betn propoled ·by the Water Advisory Committee, a cltlzen'1 group which. ad\1-.. lhe bolrd oC directors on lees, pollclu. t"4 penomiel. Tb{ char1e has betf1 PtQPOHd 11· a blmonlllly ree to make.molllil bomt.paft'. wattr bUls -• tciut111>1ir. ~· Besides the pension issue, salaries are expected to spur tome w e I g h t y .. go11.11ona. Lu& year, U...ct1Y1 force receiwd an average seven-percent raise in pay, but the increases did litUe to bring· the city's alar5ea up'to the competitive level. So~eh have indicated that the city'• apt.Jon th1I year would be to offer the preferred state pension plan instead of any aalary lncrea .... But in time. of· inflation, that oUer may not. tatilfy many Qfficers. • Ie U.S. Uses Blockbuster. First Time SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Air Fon:e used Ila. 7~ ton blockbuster bomb as a tactical weapon for the first time today in the Indochina war, dropping two of them on ComrQllnlst troop concentrations around besieged Fire Base 6 in the Cen!ral HlghlandJ. '!be llomba, largest In the U.S. menal aClft for nuclear weapon.a, were P.l?adljt.d·from CU0 lranapo<t pJaoea. '!Uy ~ploded • ,.... yarillr Off • .the ~ ~UUDJ bolei iJ big U football lleldl Iii Ille Juoil,s. TbeJr oonCUMion can klJi a min .... dlaable him by causing bleedlna: frorn the ·ears and nose. Deaplte rain iqualls and high winds in the Firt Baae IS region in the Central Hllhlando, 853' dropped !00 tons o( bombl on the Qnnmunists near the base. The 23 IOrilea flown today raised to 2,500 tona the amount of bombs dropped in the area •tnce the 1lege began March 31. Front dllpatches said the Communists had sent · in 10,000 troops to the fire base area find Uii.t the government had a almilar'tlzed force there, the heaviest conctntratlobs sine~ the invasion of Laos. U.S. military sources in Saigon said their lntelllgence lbdlcated a ' • 1 m a 11 e r • t CommunJst force but did not elaborate. The ·Viet Cong. which calls the Fire Base Hill No. 1001. broadcast several victory claims and said one Saigon reinforcement column broke and ran when it came uwler attack. The Viet Cong 1&id they bad killed 620 Saigon troops in the battle. Saigon reported 2 62-f Communlits •lain at a loss or '172 government dead. Reporlll from the area indicated that the North VielllA(llese commander in charge ot the attack on Fire Base I had moved his headquarters from Laos lnto Sooth Vietnam to direct the light. Tha base is near the interaectlon of Laos Cambodia and South Vietnam in ~ Central Highlands. .Sullivan, quoting. highly placed South Vietnamese military ~tees, said the beadquarten of Hoang Minh Thoa, ai~mander of the ls.day-old offensive agamst the baae, wu believed located about 14 miles IOUtbnst of the base, but. that he moved hb .headquartera frequel'.ltly to avoid_}ombiJ1& attacks. The beadq~1 la kmwn u B3. Weatlter Eorly rog and afternoon - return to the coast Tuesday with temperatures dipping to 62 along the -and 7' further Inland. ll'VSmE TODAY Mod polic< deport....,,11 hi ' Onmgc Count¥ are not ut up to handle con.iumn-fraud, savs t~ deJ>111¥ dillrld ottornq/ cultl'> cd auc.ll aaae1. Sk!rv. Page 8. .... tlllt I, C•ll""'ll 1 Cli«JtlM u, 11 ·-..... ....... . c...._. ,. °""' lilltkt1 • -' hMWMI ,... 6 llttWfl~ 11 -1>U -.. ... .._ .. -" "•tlt11ft """ ... Or ..... ,_" • ''"" ...,+w n ,_.. tJ.M Sf!Ma Mattftt IWJ T""f!M ti --" WHlflW 4 .._..~, .. ,, --.. • I DAJL't PILOT SC Monday, ""'" 17, 1971 Court Date Set for Dulaney·s • Ill Fraud Case llJ TOlll llAllLEV Of .. °"',... s ... Joseph and Marlene Dulaney today were ordered to face preliminary hearing April 21 in Santa Ana municipal coort on crand theft and forgery c h a r g es tlemmlog from Whal is alle&td to be the $3 million defrauding of investors in the Newport stockbroker's World Financial Trends empire. Judge Paul Ma•l'I ruling means that Burke Asks Abortion Time Limit A reduction In the time period women can have an abortion, from 20 weeks to 10, has been suggested by Assemblyman Robert Burke CR-Hwitingt.on Beach). Burke said, "'It is 1 medical fact that premature babies weighing as little as 10 ouoct.1 have survived to become mature, normal adult human beings. "I believe it is inhumanely cruel for society to permit the killing of human beings who have a chance to survive independent of the mother ," he said. Burke outlines several other proposals that would drastically revile t b e '11Jerapeutic Abortion Act of 1H7 undet which more than 100,000 legal abortions have been performed in California. He said introduction of five bllll and one resolution "Jn no way wu to imply that I condone or acctpl abortions as means toward effecting birth control, or as a way of skirting one's responsibility for their act.ions." The measures are designed t o eliminate what Burke called loopholes and abuse! in the law, which he said is being used by some women to "escape the responsibility for some of their more amorous escapades." Burke suggests that unless a woman had been undergoing p 1 y c bl at r i c tnatment be!ore pregnancy, she could not get an abortion on the pruenUy accep"'1 grounds that Jiving birth would jeopardil.e her mental bta.lth. "Many women seetlng an abortion do ao on th.-e grounds with sl.atemenU such as •If yau don't give me an abortion, I'll kUl myteU!' 1b1s statement bu betn constnied as proof of the women's poor mental health and the abortion is permitted," BlD'ke said. Another Burke measure would ban an aborUon unless the abortion review committee was convinced it w a s requested ol Lhe woman'a own free will. The resoluUon Burke is introducing would have the State Department of Public Health study the abortion sltu.ation aince the liberalized law took effect for a report to the le&iJ!ature by January of 1972. Another Burke bill would prohibit any member of the abortion r e v i e w committee to perform an abortion. 3 Persons Vanish -On Easter Onting FRESNO (AP) -Three persons disappeared during an Euler outing oo the Kings River in the Pine Flat Dam area below Piedra, authorities said. A diving team from the Fresno County sheriff's office searched for the trio ltte Sunday afternoon. The efforta resumed today. DAllY PILOT OltJ.tilG;! COAST ,VILllHlltO CRM.,.llK'f -·~•rt H. w.~ .,.r.~t •"' ,_...,_ J•c• k. Cwf.y \l\c• ""1-lfent .... ~ .. ~ n.'"''' K1e•If EdllW T\e111111 A. M••~i .. M• .... lnt E~llW Chert11 H. L~ kitlri1r4 P. Hfl At1lllM: MfMIW. E.ii.r. ( ........... Offk. 112 Fof•ll A•t ftWI S..C ....... Otfke 101 Nortlri ll C1Mifto ke 1I DAn.V ,.,LOT, wt!ll llltllell lo ~ ._ .. ........,._ .. "'*"""" •• ,.,. 9ftiN'I .._ Mr Ill ..... "" WI! ........ ~ '-"" N ....... I '-di, C..11 ,._,, H....t ...... ~ .._... Y•llly, ..... a..-w c..11--... 1Hdlt9Kll, ..... -- ,,._.. --Prlolic.IMI """""" ....... .. ·• .. , ..,. ~ C:.11 ,,,,..._ T .. apl Cn41 MJ~1J1 Cl1wYW M1alt ... "42-Nll s.. a •• Al ,..,., ,,.,: , ........ 4tl-44JI L.,... ..... Al a.,11 Sil T•pl II 4f4-t"6 ~ ttn. Or-.. c-t ~"" °""'"""· .. -.,....... '"""'"'"-... ""111 --• .~.,,._ • ...,,,. ,.....,, _, ....... 1 ... """'"' ......... ......... ~-· ..... dea ,. .... ,. .. ,, ""'"" kid! .... o.t• ..... , C<oJ.,.,.., ~"""" ..,. a"11r tt..-_fl'itf, IW -H a .n _...f\11 ftlflff9ly MllMI .... *t.2J -ttow. the cJobe Uoltlng cooplt wlll 10 to court la< the fin! time wllh thek CO<!elendanl, J am#s Shipley ol Huntlngtoa Beldl, Ull former vice presJdenl of the lnvatmenl complex headed by Dulaney. · Dulaney, '!l, today made another outburst Crom the defendant 's box in which he protested the charges filed against him and the further delay of court acUon. ''The di.strict aUorney's office hu had Sad, But Clean • )'81' and • half to lnveattpto - cbari .. .,11oa1 Ill and tbo,y ahould Qlow II)' now U.t I am 11!1'"'1 -~" Dlll>ney aal<I. Judge M~t suggested that Dulaney discuss the matter with his attorney, Robert Law, and seat the eloquent defendant back to Orange County jail. Dulaney is held in lieu of $31Z,500 bail and Mrs. Dulaney is free on her own recogni?..anc:e. j .1 V"ITe~ Reggie, an 18-montb-old orangutan at the Vilas Park Zoo in ~1adi· son, Wis., doesn't seem to be enjoying his bath. He gets one weekly, but, so far, has resisted all offers to endorse soap. Number of Easter Week Visitors Hit 720,000 Newport Beach arresl.s and beach attendance for Easter Week, 1971 were up, according to statistics released today by police and lifeguards. Lifeguards credited the good weather wllh boosting beach attendance for the nine days from 635,000 in 19i0 to 720,000 this year. Guards reported a total of 88 rescues - of which three "''ere listed as near drownings -and one possible drowning. In 1970, there were only 16 rescues and no drownings. Police said there were a total of 541 arrests made from the first Saturday through Good Friday. Last year's totals show 379 for the same period . Officer• said that despite the increase In arrests. there were fewer crimes reported and fev.•er traffic accidents this year than last. Total crime reports for 1970 were 146 but dropped to 129 this year. There were 6.l traffic accidents this year, which Is ei~ht less than the previous year. Police said the rise in arrests and the subsequent drop in crime re.ports might be linked to the decline of Newport Beach's popularity as ·an Easter \Veek re>ort. Officers speculate that with fewer crime calls and traffic accidenls to re.spond to they had more time to investigate loud party calls and perhaps Capistrano Sets Public Hearings On Road, Weeds Two public hearings -one on weed abatement and the other on the precise alignment of Del Obispo Road -will take place at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting of the San Juan Capistraoo Oly Council. The counc il will be asktd to consider reclassifying Del Obispo R o a d rrom Aguacate Road south to the city l.Jmla from a primary arterial highway to a secondary collector. This would rtduce the right of way lrom 104 to 14 feet. Councllml'n will •\so cons Id tr realigning lhe ctnterllne In order It straighten nut dangerous cur'V!:1. Also on the 1gend11 l''ill be 1 public hearlng which w I 11 allow property owners to protest notlcta they h11ve received to remove weeds and other debris from their property. Jr tbt work Is not compll'tf'd S/\ti~fnctorily lhe city will do the work billing tht proptrty "wner. ' prevent the parties from turning into the brawls that made past Bal Week such a notorious event. Officers noted that of the total arrests, 337 were juveniles most of whom y,·ere picked up at these parties for lack of parent.al control or curfew violations. Thousands En joy Day on Sands At San Clemente Chilly water temperatures and a brisk breeze k e p t swimming activity and rescues at a minimum Easter \\'£€kend. despite thousands of visitors to the sand al San Clemente. Lifeguards reported only eight minor rescues thr oughout the two days. which had an average high temperature of 70 degrees. The water reading. however. ho11ered in the mid 50s both days, keeping an estimated 33.000 visitors on shore. Guards, who also patrol Dana Harbor and beaches in South Laguna. said no major mishaps were reported at the Marina or upcoasl beaches. In all, the entire Easter \I/eek activity v.·as relatively quiet. despite the attractive spr.ingtime weather, guard spokesmen sa.Jd. Susp~ct Arrested In Laguna Heist Laguna Stach detettives ha,·e arrested a suspect in the April 4 robbery of a hllchhiker in which the bandits left the victim $1 "lo eat on'' and took $13 in cash. Authorities identified the suspect as Robert William Hoffman . 19. of IOI E. Marquita, San Clemente, }le was taken loto cwtody Friday afternoon arter being qUf.!tlontd by dtltttives and is to be .trraigned today on charges of armed robbery, kidnaping And assault with inlent to commit murder. Police claim Hoffman and thl't(! companions picked up a hltchhlker in Utuna Beach, robbed him at gunpoin t and dumped hlm from the cnr in South Lagun11.. The case is still under lnvestigallon as iulhorities are searching for the other suspect. ' Shiple1, .. ol 161111 Lowtll Circle. la free .., $111,lOO ball He ltce1 ldentl<al chlrau of grand 'theft, forgery and conspiracy, fll of whldl art denied by the trio. Dulaney ls accused of using his World Financial Trends facilities al Laguna lfills and Seal Beach to de fraud a number of investors, most of them residents of retirement commWlities in those areas. Mrs. Dulaney, an attracUve blonde_ -ktd for btm u a -.tary ID tbe U,,... BUia ''Taj Mahal" beadquarlen until the couple left for West Germany in December, 1969, as complaints from investors began to flow lnto the district attorney's office. Shipley stayed behind to take over the affairs of the corporate complex and was the fir!ll member of the trkl to be arrested. He tesWied in bankruptcy cow-t before bl.t lmll !hot be •as not involved In any way with tbe allesed swlndlts and ho repeatedly denied k no w I n g the whereabouts of the missing Dulaneys. Dulaney was picked up two wteks ago in the Dulch Caribbean colony or Curacao. Mrs. Dulaney was arrested a week later in the British Colony of Bermuda. She seemed to be recovered today from an illness for which she was hospiLalized by British autborlties, Yanks~ Chinese Mix American Ping Pong Team Visits University; PEKING (UPI) -American table tennis players talked and p I a y e d basketbaU today with Chinese Communist University student!! who told them that ousted Pre&ident Liu Shao--dli was alive but "his thought is dead." The 15-member U.S. contingent stopped off at Chinghua University on the way to see the Great Wall of China. They were delayed for about five hours as they talked with the students and toured the wiiverslty ground.1 in Peking. across the school's indoor gym, where they spent 15 minutes trading ping pong shots with Chinese students. Dick Miles, who was the American table teMis champion nine times, joined a Chinese student in a spontaneou.s doubles match against Errol Resek of New York City and another Chinese student. The informal, rambling tour of the university continued, but the Americans came across another gym w h e r e the school basketball team was practicing. The Americans again joined the play and tossed a few balls into the net. During a long lunch, which consisted o( sweet and sour carp, meat dumplings. North China steamed bread, rice, fried prawns, cold meats, pork and vegetables, as well as soda pop. the Americans broke up into groups of four anc! five and sat among Chinese students and professoni. After eaUng a late lunch at the wtlversity, the Americans piled into cars and two buses and traveleC. to the Great Wall. They later returned to their hotel in Peking. Saddlehack Enrollment The American ping pong team has yet to play a formal match, but officials said the U.S. players., who arrived Saturday on an unprecedented visJt, would play flere Tuesday afternoon and then leave for Shanghai on \Vednesday. Up for Sprnig Courses The highLight or the day for the Americans was the trip to the university. They lefl their hotel about 9 a.m. and reached the university at 10 a.m. where they were greeted by the school 's revolutionary committee m e m b e r s , teachers, students and school workers. The Americans sat in a reception room around a table with a white table cloth, smoking cigarellcs and sipping black Chinese tea. Included in the welcoming group was Prof. Chen Wei<hang, ?.'ho worked in the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the Califorina Institute of Technology from l!Ml to 1946 before returning to mainland China. Later, the Americans were taken on a tour of the school grounds and they chatted with a number of other teachers In their late SO's and 60's who had studied in the states. When they stopped off at a '"l'tl truck'' fact«y, Graham Steenhoven ef Detroit, president of the U.S. Table Tennis Association, climbed up into the cab of one of the trucks and drove it around. The "711" stands for July 7, 1968, when lhe first propaganda team came in to help run the school and unite two disputing factiorui during the cultural revolution. On their way back Iron. the factory, the Americans ambled into an open basketball class and paused to try a few shots. After visiting 1 computer transistor circuit workshop, the Americans came Candidates Set For Town Meet Candidales for the Saddleback College board of trustees will appear at a town hall meeling at B p.m. Tuesday in the San Clemente High School Little Theater, The meeting is sponsored by the American Association of University Women, the League of Women Voters. the Capistrano Council of PT As and the San Clemente Jaycees. Candidates for the three seats coming up for election April 20 are Alyn Brannon and LcRay Anderson in Area J: John Lund and r..fargaret Roley in Area 3; and r..1ichael Collins. John Parker and Thomas Crago in Area 5. Saddleback Community Olllege District trustees will receive a &urprising enrollment report at their meeting 7:45 o'clock tonight in the board room. 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. A college spokesman indicated spring quarter enrollments are up by some 80 1o Detroit Recalls 23,300 GM Vegas For Adjustments DETROIT (AP I -Owners or some 23,300 General ]\.1otors Vega minicars have been asked to bring them in to dealers for correction of mechanical defects ranging from possible faulty chokes to noisy windshield wipers. A GM spokesman said none ol the defects represented a hazard and all occurred on Vegas produced prior to the United Auto Workers strike last Sept. 15. F'ive possible defects will be checked and repaired by dealers at no cost to car owners. GM said. /\fetal brackets on the rear seat of the Vega coupe and station wagon will be replaced viith a vinyl bracket lo avoid possible damage to car seats by rubbing. A new choke lever and shaft will be placed in cars to correct ones that could become loose, jamming the choke mechanism. Stereo Heisted In San Clemente There will be no music at the home of Auslin Goodson of San Clemente tonight . Someone stole the man's stereo radio and tapes over the weekend after scaling a balcony and entering an unlocked door. Police said the loss from the apartment at 315 B Avenida Del Mar was set at $150. Goodson told officers he noticed the loss late Saturday afternoon. JVC Just look •t wh•t th• 4l'4'4 off•rs: <45 w•tt s+•r•o •mplifitr, '4 tpe•d •utom•fic r•cord c:h•ng•r full fr•qu•ncy c•1s•tf• r•cord•r, FM MPXIFM/AM tuntr, two 'w•y ultr• r•nge spe•k•r sy,t•ms, two 1ecordin9 mic1 •cryllc cfust cvtr •nd bltckout sfylin9 to blend the 434-4 info '•ny decor. 100 students. Usually enrollment drops from fall and winter quarter total!. The final figure expected to be reported to trustees will be in the neighborhood of 3,000 full and part time students. The trend in higher spring enrollments Js consistent with that being reported by other community colleges, the district spokesman noted. It is uncertain whether the increased enrollments are due io unemployment, he said. The board also \viii c o n 1 J d e r appointment of a computer technician and a computer sharing arrangement with Santa Ana College. A study by Norris and Gottfried Inc. presented at tht: last meeting of the board showed the district might benefit by use of Santa Ana College's computers for administratJve: data processing. The board will be asked to approve payments to Ramberg and lA:rwery Architects totaling $32,386 for services related to the planning of the college library building. Hotel Burglary Suspect Seized In Laguna Beach Laguna Beach police today arrested a suspect in a hotel only moments after another hotel guest reported his room had been burglarized. Authorities said Anthony P a tr Jc k Harding, 20, a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton, was to be arraigned today <in charges of burglary. O!Ucers said he was arrested shortly after midnight in his room at the Inn at Lagwia where he was staying with several other Marine companions. Police said a hotel guest from Illinois was awakened b ya noise and saw a man dressed only in swimming trunks standing in a doorway leading to an adjoining room occupied by the guest's sleeping children. Investigators went to the suspecl's room and placed Harding under arrest. Officers allegedly found $22 stolen from the guest's room stuffed inside Harding'a swim trunks. REG. $369 s299 ' NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT • PIONEER • SANSUI • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SELL, TRADE COME fN AND IROWSI AROUND' 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -..... _ Nart>ot & lhadwOJ \ I . I , I ' • • ) . t ~! ~' I I I I f 7 I I I I • • • I Lag1111a -Beaeh 'loaay's F lnal ' N.Y .. Steeks VO~. M, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, H PAGES om Meet Laguna Candidates In LaQU'na Beach Unified School' DUtrict trustee election April 20, 12 candidates are vying for three board seats. The DAILY PILOT will before the election present pictures and · stories of those seeking to serve. 0 f the caJ\didates, eight 1eek election tn two four-year posts and four seek election to a two 11ear term left bu the resignatian of tru.stee Wiltiam Wilcozen. Below are two of the four-year candidates. Mrs. Beane Sees Room For Change in Schools Mrs. Florenei! Beane, 42, of 32221 Vista de San Clemente, South Laguna, is a housewife and is president of the Laguna Beach PT A Council. She is married to an electronics engineer and lheir three children atterid Thurston Intermediate School and Aliso Elementary School. She has been an area resident for the past six years after moving to South Laguna from Philadelphia . "I believe the one best thing about our schools is the determination on the part of the school bc>ard, administrators, teachers., and parents to furni3b the best possibll tduca.Uon !or Clll' chiltfrtn," she says. "The restilt bu been an overall philosophy of education wbich bas produced a curriculum lhat. at 111 &r•de levels, bas stimulated the enthu1iasm of the students, and offered them the opportunity to achieve their highest potential according to their individual abilities." "With respect. to the cla~room," she gays, "so long as the teacher remains within the course requirements as set by the board and the school administration, ind presents the course material in an effeCtive, objective and unbiased manner, the board should not Interfere with the teaching methods." Mrs. Beane feels lbere is still room for Improvement in the schools and think! that if past teaching methods are found to be inadequate, they must be changed. "Change, intelligently considered," she lay!, "which widens the student's choice and increases individual opportunity for OAIL Y .. l\.OT S...i ,.,.,. PTA COUNCIL PRESIDENT Mrs. Floren~• Beane development, must not be feared." In the area of school-community relations, she feel11 residents have showed a lack of interest in school matte.rs in not attending School Board meetina:s. Candidate Linke Places Importance on Histo ry RETIRED OFFICER, TEACHER Gerald 0. link• Auto Ring Smashed REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -,,,. California Highway Pal~l. says ~hat' hOt car ring which spee1ahzed 1n stoll!:n Porschcs has been broken up. William George. chief auto Uitft Inve stigator at the CHP office here , sA!d Saturd11y six arrets had been made In Ille san FranciJCO Bay area. Gerald D. Linke, 73. or 437 Shadow Lane, is a retired U.S. Navy Captain and retired school teacher. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1920 and served until his retirement in 1950. As an ordnance engineer, he also earned a master's degree from Carnegie Institute of Technology. After retiring from the service and moving to Laguna Be.acb, Linke taught al Santa Ana College, Orange· Coast College and San Clemente High S c b o o I , Instructing classes fn math, science, cbemlstry and engineering drawing. Linke feels that aince IS.year-olds art now able to vole, the curriculum at the high school level should be modified to enable them to vote inlelligently. "The contents of our curriculum must come into very serious focus." be says. "F.mphasis should be placed on areas of communication, mathematics, history. some law , the blessings of private property, tllation, private enterprise, profit motive, problems oI the full·time waa:e earner and the SCOW:P· ol aociallml." "Al80, Jt is nece~ry that 'the children get proper instruction ln the history of the United States," he says. ''This subject abould be taught from a tnle h11t.Ory text and not from a type of history book now med." "Schools have taken over wht1t the home and the church taught recently," he claims. "These responslbllltlcs have to be pUt back In lhe home and church.'' Unke feels t h a t communicatJon between the teachers and the school board is "very bad" and shauld be lmprond by Iba dlslrlcl 1uperlnlM<kmt. ORANGE COUNTY, yALIFO~.NIA MONOA:Y, APRIL l?1 '1971 TEN CENTS • • s r ·o Ill Ie U.S . Uses Blockbuster First Time \ SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Air Fore< used its 7Y.a ton blockbuster bomb as a tactical weapon for the first time today in the Indochina war. dropping •wo of them on Communist troop concentraUons around besieged Fire Base 6 in the Central Highlands. The bombs, largest in the U.S. arsenal · except for nuclear weapons, were parachuted from Cl30 transport planes. They exploded a few yards off the ground, bluting holes as big as football field! in the jungles. 'Ibeir-conamion can kill a man or disable him by causln& bleeding from the ears and nose. Despite rain squalls and high winds in the Fire Base 6 region in the Central Highlandll, B52s dropped SOO torui: of bombs on the Qimmunists near the base. The 23 sorties flown today raised to 2,500 tons the amount of bombs dropped Jr. the area since the siege began March 31. Front dispatches said the Qimmuniilts had sent in 10,000 troops to the fire base area and that the government had a similar-sized force there, the heaviest conctnlrations sincl! the invasion of Laos. U.S. military sources in Saigon said their intelligence indicated a • • s m a 11 e r • ' Qimmunist forct but did not elaborate. The Viet Cong, which call.s the Fire Base Hill No. 1001, broadcast several victory claims and said one. ~on ninf.,.._ eoi-,.Pte """'.no when it came u~· a~ Tbe V1et °'"' aid llley ----q! -~ ~ bal~ r•poi .. cU,414 Communlsta slAln at a loss of 1'12 govttrunent dead. Bearded Man Dents Auto s At Dealership A Laguna Besch automobile dealenhlp Sunday morning was the target of two separate acts of vandalism, one of which re.suited in an estimated $5,000 damage to several new can by a hammer-!winging, bearded assailant. Authorities said a new car storage lot at 127 Canyon Acres Drive, owned by David Phillips Buick, was the site of the destructive act of m'1icious mischief. Also Easter morning, police said, several eggs were thrown onto new cars from a cliff overlooking owner P h i J I i p s ' downtown facility, located at 3 1 O Broadway, but no damage wu reported. Officers said an area resident heard the sound of breaking ghw coming from the car storage lot at about S a.m. Sunday and went outside to investigate. The citizen told polict he saw a man with what .appeared to be a hammer break.log windows and denting bodies of the new cars parked In the lot. The resident yelled at the man to stop and asked what be wu doing, and the hammer-wielder reportedly &aid, "I'm selling cars. You can kill me if you want to." The assailant then scaled an eight foot chain-link fenct surrounding the lot and escaped into. the Woodland Drive area. Aulhorities said 19 automobiles were damaged in the attack, some with windows broken and others with dents to the hood and rear deck. Owner Phillips said today all of the autcs were inmlred against such acts, but that an e1act estimate of the damage had not been made pending an inspection b:;.· his !nsuranct adjuster. Phillips had been criUcized recently by residents living along canyon Acres Drive for his action in paving the new car storage lot. Local residenls had claimed his blacktop parking lot would ruin the natural appearance o( the area and woWd make the entrance to Laguna Buch "ugly." Resurf.acing of the lot was tiKed priM' to complttlon by city official& who aakl Phillips had -not obtained a pennll lo accomplish the wotk. However, Phillipa said today const,ructton had re$Umed under a temporary permit. A city tp0ke.vnan said suitable screening and landsctplng of the car lot would be required at a 11Upul1tion of the penn!L .... DAILY .. ILOT ....... W ,,....,kll SdMelMM PILOT WHO DECLINED TO IDENTIFY HIMSELF FLEW TO BALLARAT, GOT STUCK About 25 Pll1rim1 Try To Holp; Howovor, Prop Got Bent And Pilot St1yod Awhllo Library Back In B~iness The Laguna BelCh libraiy It ~(or b\l!I-~11Ct.4i ·~ ............. l>oclt . .. . ...,pcll'll'f 'quoilen at. WI ..Nortll Coast~. Tlie'JJbn11ylt'OSpected to-...W. at Ille loCalion far 1boul! • i'~, wllll< • new, .ltr(et .tiUUd1nj 11 "'llllructed al II< Glea!>e1rt Simi and PaJit A venu. iocatlon. Librarian C 11 ff o r d Cave aimounced that library hout1 now will be noon to 9 p.m . Mondays throua:h Thursday•, noon to 5 p.m. Friday! and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. The change in hours, be said, bring• the Laguna Branch Jn line with other county library branc~ which already have dlaconUoued morning library servtce o n weekdays. Georgia Arner Services Slated Funeral services will be hekl at 2 p.m. Wednesday for Georgia T. Amer, a Laguna Beach resident and member of the Woman,.-s Club who died Saturday at her home. She was 70. The · services will take place at the Faitb Chapel of Forest Lawn in ·HpUday Hills, Sheffer Mortuary directing. · Mrs. Arner, who lived at 654 Treasure Island, is survived by a niece , Mra. Nancy Burke, of Palos Verdes. The family suggests U'me wishing to make memorial contributions address them to the Orange County Chapter of the American Cancer Society, 18356 Irvine Road, Irvine. Pilgrims Leave Ballttra Festival By FREDERICK l!CllOEMIRL ~ tN 0.llt' " .. .,.,, Only a handful of 10UJll p11&rlm1 remaJn in the Jbost town of Ba.JJaiat th!1 momlns, after Inyo County 1herlfr1 deputie1 served notice early Sunday afternoon , for the youn1 people to leave the land by noon today. 1bose who do remain, many of them organlur1 from Laguna Beach, are Jn the procesa oI cleaning up the littered desert land. Sgt. Dave Waliur of the aheriff'1 department estimated that the festival drew some 5,000 people before peaking out Saturday afternoon. Strong winds, blowlna sand abd du1t, forced about 3,000 persons to leave tha' day. Others, however, remained, bravlng heat, wind, and du.st. They slowly left Saturday night and Sunday u It appeared that no rock music would ever get started. A ftw local musical groups from the Ridgecrest area perormed for a short time Saturday evening, but were watched bY onJy a small number of young people. 1be most popular f o r m of entiertainment It seemed, was the coruitant use of a variety of different drup •nd alcohol . No major medical problems were reported by the "Ballarat Free Clinic" which officially . closed Sunday ievening. The · worst lnjurits at the site were cau.wd when 1 car, driving through "Tent City" ln the early houri Sunday ran over thrtt youths. .'fl>ir ..... Walecl for mJnor Injuries and returned later to join in the leatival. No mabbllri• ...,. n!porled although authoriUea had warned of the danger presented by tidewinder rattle.snakes. 'Sgt. Wallzer reported that no arresta were made at the pUgrlmage aite, althouah aomt narcotics arrests w e r • made· along tbe roads leading to the Ballarat area. The "free kitchen" reported that there wu enough food to feed everybody who wu hunarY and tblt everyone had plenty of waler, aupplemented, of course, with a variety of different beverages. The small laft and general store, run by Paul Jones, sold out its stock by mid afternoon SUnday. "It's the biggest weeke nd we've ever had,'' Jone a reported, tiefore he m y 1 t e r i o u s I y disappeared' from the cafe Saturday momJng. Frleodl surm.IS;ed he wa1 anxious to get away until the festival ended, and county officiala had cooled oU. Di!trict attorney Frank Fowles aa1d thi.! morning that it is doubtful that any court action will come out of the fesUval. He said that the rock music at the site, which Is illegal Wider an anU rock oonctrt measure In Inyo County, would not be blamed on Laguna Bea<:h organ~ izers Beth Leeds Ind Dion WJ'iih~ Lon Nol Goes Home Laguna School District 'Civic' Use Report Set PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian Prime Minister Lon Nol returned to Phnom Penjl .. board a U.S. Navy DOI Monday after allnoat.euctly two months ef medicaJ .treatment in HonOOllu for a •!rnke be lllllllled 1u1 Feb. 11. The role played by the school diltrlct In Laguna Beach communl\y activlUea wOI be revealed Tuesday night whesr'Bwliness Supervi!Or Charles Hesa reports to the school board oo CJvic Center. Activities ln the district. During the period covered by the report, JUiy. 1970 to date, 83 aep1rate org1ntiatlons used achoo! 1 d I 1 t r I c t facilJtie1 Jor a lo ... of 1,714 (>lhftlnp, Baby Falls 9 Floors, Qnly . Slightly . Hort NEW YO!llt (UPI) -Mori: Bnnm, 2. fell nine ttorlts hm a Bronx •J)&rtment window Sunday,.tiut apparen{ly suffered only minor injuriu. A 1poketm1J1 at Mo!llellore · Horpltal ,.Id tho child ,...., l~ted In "11Iiaioctory cond!Uon," He was held for obetrvatiofl. "Ht bad I iood cry" but "he's la Sood sb1pe," Iba IJ)OM&man told .,,UC.. I • accordln1 to Hes!. A five.page breakdown of the "civic'' uses reveals that school facilities were used for everything from regular weekly chlll'Ch services to folk d a n c I n I programs, chamber music concerta, meetings of the Dog Owners Auoclatloa, ba!eblll g1me11 ·with the Wtlite Houn )X'eU corps all-slllr1 and election polllil& platt11 High school faclllties ....i t or commonity aerv1ca include t b • auditorium, boys' Ind 11r11• 1)!11)1. c.11feteria, awimming pool· and athletic fjelds. . The tlementaty tcboola hive· ·opened their clulrooms, ctfetm.u, addltortums llld playlnfl fielda ICJr a variety of community use1. Fees charged for UM at the IChool facUIUes range from RVeral hundred dollara for use 'ol the high achool Mltortum for screenin1 of a CtRJntrclal film to no char1e for a number of R e c r t 1 &> r o ft DepartmenHpontor"td -· . -·- Weatlle r Early fog and afternoon sunshine return to the cout Tuesday with temperatw:es dipping to a along Ille beachu and 78 fW'1ber Inland. INSmE TODAY Mott poliu depar"""'t.r m Orcnge Coti1ftty an not ltt iip to handlt coniumer fraud, 1ay1 the dlpulJI dittr'lcl attorney ossjgn. td IUCh MUI$. Stort1, Page I. • • • • f DAILY PILOT SC -.. Aoo1I u. 1971 Court Date Set for Dulaney·s Fraud Case • Ill ay 10M lWU.SY a( .............. Joseph and Macione DWaney today "·ere ordered to lace prtllminary htaring April 21 in Santa Ana municipal court on arand theft and forguy c h a r g es ltemming from whlit b alleged to be the '3 mWlon defraadtng of investors in the Newport stockbroker's World Financial Trends empire. Judge Paul Mast's ruling means lhat Burke Asks Abortion Time Limit A reduction In the time period women can have an abortion, from 7D weeks to 10, bu been suggested by Assemblyman Robert Burke (It-Huntington Beach). Burke said, "It ii 1 medical fact that premature babies weighing as llltle as 11 ounces have l\D'Vlved to become mature, normal adult human beings. "l believe it Ls Inhumanely cruel for society to permit the killing of human beinp who have a chance to survive independent of the mother," he said. Burke outllnes sever1l other proposals that would drastically nvlse t b e Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967 under which more than 100,000 legal abortions have been perfonned lo California. He said introduction of five billf and one ruolutlon "in no way was to imply that I condone or accept abortions as mearu toward effecllng birth control, or as a way of skirting one's responsibility for their actions." Tbe measures are desig ned t o eliminate what Burke called loopholes and abuse3 in the law, which he said is be.ing used by some women to "escape the responsibility for some of their more amorous escapades." Burke suggeJll that unless a woman had been undergoing p 1 y c h i 1 t r i c treatment before pregnancy, she could not get an abortion on the presently accepted grounds that giving birth would jeopardize her mental health. "Many women seeklrig an abortion do S<l on these grounds with atat.ements auch as 'If you don't give me an abortion, I'll kill lllj'&elll' Tbla ataW.ent hu been construed u prool of the womea'a poor mental health and the abortion ts pennltted," Burke aald. Another Burke measure would ban an abortion unless the abortion review comm1ttee was convinced it w a s requested or the woman's own free will. The resolution Burke is introducing would have the State Department of Publk Health study lhe abortion situation since the liberallzed law took tffect for a report to the legislature by January of 1972. Another Burke bill would prohibit any member of the •bortion r e v i e w committee to perform an abortion. 3 Persons Vanish On Easter Outing FRESNO (AP) -Three persorui disappeared during an Easter outing on the Kings River in the Pine Fial Dam area below Piedra, Juthorities said. A diving team from the Fresno County ~heriffs office searched for I.he trio late Sunday afternoon. The efforlJ reswned today. DAllV PILOT OllAHG::!: COASr PU.LISHING COM,Nf'Y Robert H. We.J. p,..~, .... '""...., J11• l. C11rf11 Vke Pt'tlld«tl _.,. G-11 ~ lll•"'•• Kte•n Elllflr llle"''' A. M,r,\i11• Maflott'"9 l!lllw O atfe1 H. L.ot licl.•'4 P, NiJl .-,..ltteN Mlnlt'"9 IEltt.n, Let ....... OHk. 122 for1•t A••n~• S-C._...OMM JOS Nerti. ll C•"'ino lt1I .,_ "'""' t111i. Mftl• U0 W•t a1y '""' Mt--' twcfl; DD H"""""1 •ovl1Y1f'I "'"""'ll'llWI 1Md11 1111~ a1Mt1 a.,,1 .. ,re Qie globt lrOttilW coople will 10 to COllli for lbe nnt .... with lhtlt ro<ltttndln~ James Shipley of Huntington Beadl, tho former vice ~t of the trivutmtnl compla headed by Du1aney. Dulaney. 37, today made another oulbursl from the defendant's box in which he prote9led the charges filed against him and the further delay of court action. ''The district attorney's office has had Sad, But Clea11 a year a6d a ball to lnv..U,ate 0- dwlU aplost ... and Ibey --•bf ..,. IW-·l ·am ootlrtl1 lnnocon~" Dulanty said. Judge Mast suggested that Dulaney discuss the matter with his attorney, Robert Lav.·, and sent the eklqutnt defendant back to Orange County jail. Dulaney is held in lieu or $312.500 bail and Mrs. Dulaney is free on her own recognizance. U~I Ttt.Jl\9 .. ' Reggie, an lS.rnonthoold orangutan at the Vilu Park Zoo in l\ladi· son, Wis., doesn't seem to be enjoying his bath. He gets one weekly, but, so far, has resisted all offers to endorse soap. Number of Easter Week Visitors Hit 720,000 Newport Beach arresl3 and beach attendance for Easter Week, 1971 were up, according to statistics released today by police and lifeguards. Lifeguards credited the good \veather with boosting beach attendance for the nine days from 635,000 in 1970 to 720,000 this year. Guards reported a total of 88 rescues - or which three were listed es near drownings -and one possible drowning. Jn 1970, there were only 16 rescues and no drownings. Police said there were a total of 542 arrests made from the first Saturday through Good Friday. Last year's totals show 379 for the same period. Officers said that despite the increase in arrests, there were fewer crimes reported and fewer traffic accidents this year than last. Total crime reports for 1970 were 146 but dropped to 129 this year. There were 63 traffic accidents this year, which Is ei~ht less than the previous year. Police said the rise in arrests and the subsequent drop in crime reports might be linked to the decline of Newport Beach"s popularity as an Easter Week resort. Officers spe<'Ulate that with fewer crime calls and traffic accidents to respond to they had more lime to invesUgat.e loud party calls and perhaps Capistrano Sets Public Hearings Ou Road, Weeds prevent the parties !rom turning into the brawls that made past Bal Week such a notorious event. Offia:rs noted that or the total arrests, 337 were juveniles most of "'horn "·ere picked up at these parties for lack of parental control or curfew violations. Thousands Enjoy Day on Sands At San Clemente Chilly water temperatures and a brisk breeze kep t swimming activity and rescues at a minimum Easler weekend. despite thousands of v~itors lo the sand al San Clemente. Lifeguards reported only eight minor rescues throughout the two days. whlch had an average high temperature of 70 degrees. The \\'Sier reading, however. hovered in the mid 50s both days, keeping an estimated 33,000 Visitors on shore. Guards, who also patrol Dana Harbor and beaches in South Laguna, said no major mishaps \l:cre reported al the Marina or upcoast beaches . In all. the entire Easter Wl'ek activity n•;is relatively quiet. despite t he attractive springtime weather, g u a rd spokesmen said. OArLY Pl\AT, .,._ ..,ktl 11 ~ ""' N-~ It ..... w... ftllY •Hiit ,_ 4h' Ill ........ 11-. .. ~ lwdo. H--1 ....._ C. .. fMM, Mwol .. ltio 11.oit,, .. _...... Vt l..,, S... (........, Two public hearings -one on \\'eed abatement and the other on the prtcise alignment o( Del Obispo Road -wiU lake ~lace at tanight's 7 o'clock meeting of the San Juan Capistrano Qty O>uncil. Suspect Arrested In La g una Heist Lagu11a Beech detectives have arrtsted a suspect in the April 4 robbery of a hitchhiker in which the bandits left the victim $1 ''to eat on·• and look $13 in cash. "-"'"-.... INllflttelt. ..... - -,.......... tflt• "'""•' ~ ..... .. ... ,. .... -.y ·~ a. .. .... Tah,•111 ITI41 '41-41%1 a • ., ...,.."',,,. MZ..1611 S.. Cl h Al D•alz"": T•,t 111 '4f l-+4n Lllfalle ......... .,., 7 t Tth; t 111 4f4.t4" ~llM. lfll, ~ c.. .. """" ...... ~ ... -........... ,......,,., ....... _.... ... ~, ........ -- _, M + ¥ I 7 I •""'°"I """"'I ,... ............ .,,....,_. ._.....__...,.N •I H..,..lftdilo ..... °"' ....., c~ ........ 11•1 • .,.. ... !IV ~ IUf """""'' ., -n 11.n """"'IYI lflllllwy •thin..,. D.ft ,,........, The council will be asked to consider reclesslfylng Del ObisPo R o 1 d from Aguacale Road south to the rlty llmllJ from a primary arterial highway to • secondary collector. This would reduce the right of \\'iY from 104 to 84 feet. Councilmen will also cons Ider reaHgninit tJ1e cen1erline in order to slraighttn out dangerous curves. Also on the agenda will be a public hearing "''hich w i 11 allow property owners to protest notices they have reeelved to renlOvt wetds ind other debris from their property. If the work Is not completed aatl~h1C'torlly the city will do the work billing the property owner. I Authorities idtnlified the suspect as Robert \Villiam Hoffman, 19. of 101 E. ri.1arquil.8. San Clemente. He w11s taken into custody Friday afternoon after being questioned by deteclives and i' to be arraigned l0d1y on charges of armed robbery, kidn1p1ng: and assault with lnttnt to commit murder. Pollct cb1lm JioUmAn and lhree companions picked up a hitchhiker in Laguna Beach, robbed hlm 1t gunpoint and dumped him from the car in South Lagun1. Tht. rase is still under lnvtstlgatlon aa authorities are searching for the other suspect. Sblplq, :SS. ·l>I 11151 LowtU ctrde. II !roe oo 1311,lllO ball He laces ldentlcal char&ts or crand the.rt, forgery and consplraey, all of which are denied by the trio. Dulaney is accuseci of using his World Financial Trends facilities at Laguna Hills aod Seal Beach to defraud a number of investors, most of them residents of relirement communities in those areas. Mrs. Dulaney, an attractive blonde, worked for bJm u a ...,,,..,.,. In tho Laguna llUla "'Taj Mahal"' iie.dqtwlers until the couple left for West Germany in December, 1969, ll! complaints from investors began to now into the district attorney's ()ffice. Shipley stayed behind to take over the affairs of the corporate complex and was the first member of the trio to be arrested. He testified in bankruptcy court before bis ams! that be wu not Involved In aey w1y with tbe alleged swindles and he reptated.ly denied k no w i n g the whereabouts of the mlssing Dulaneys, Dulaney was picked up two weeks ago in I.he Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacao. Mrs. Dulaney was arrested a week later in the British Colony of Bermuda. She seemed to be recovered today from an illness for which she was bospltallud by British authorities. Yanks~ Chinese 'Mix A merican Ping Pon g Team Visits Uni versitYi PEKING (UPI) -American table tennis players talked and p I a y e d basketball today with Chinese Communist University students who told them that ousted President Liu Shao-dti was alive but "his thought is dead." The IS-member U.S. contingent stopped off at Chinghua University on the way to see the Great Wall of China. They were delayed for about five hours as they talked with the students and toured the Wliversity grounds in Peking. across the school's indoor gym, where they spenl IS minutes tr1ding ping pong shots with Chinese students. Dick Miles. who was the American table tennis champion nine times, joined a Chinese student in a spontaneous doubles match against Errol• Resek of New York City and another Chinese student. The informal, rambling tour of the university continued, but the Americans came across another gym w h e r e the scbool basketball team was practicinc. The Americans again joined the play and tossed a few balls into the net. During a long lunch, which consisted or sweet and sour carp, meat dumplings, North China steamed bread, ria:, frie d prawns, cold meat.oi, pork and vegetables, as well as soda pop. the Americans broke up into groups of four an<! five and sat among Chinese student.s and professors. After eating a late lunch at the Wliversity, the Americans piled into cars and two buses and travele<: to the Great Wall. They later returned to their hotel in Peking. Saddlehacl\: Enrollment The American ping pong team has yet lo play a formal match, but officials said the U.S. players, who a1Tived Saturday on an Wlprecedented visit. \.\o'ould play here Tuesday afternoon and then leave for Shanghai on Wednesday. Up for Spring Courses The highlight of the day for the Americans was the trip lo the university. They left their hotel about 9 a.m. and reached the university at 10 a.m. where they were greeted by the school's revolutionary committee m e m b e r s • teachers, students and school workers. The Americans sat in a reception room around a table with a whlte table cloth, smoking cigarettes and sipping black Chinese tea. Included in the welcoming group was Pror. Chen Wei-cllang, who worked in the Jet Propulsion Laboratory al the Califorina Institute of Technology from 1941 to 1946 before returning to mainland China. Later. the Amer icans were taken on a lour of the school grounds and they chatted with a number of other teachers in their late SO's and 60's who had studied in the states. \Vhen they stopped off at a ''727 truck '' factory, Graham Steenhoven of Detroit, pre.sklent of the U.S. Table Tennis Association , climbed up lnto the cab of one of the trucks and drove it around. The "Tll" stands for Ju1y 7, 1968, when the first propaganda team came in to help run the school and unite two disputing faclions during the cultural revolution. On thei r "'ay back fron. the factory, the Americans ambled into an open basketball class and paused to try a fe1v shots. After visiting a computer transistor circuit workshop. the Americans came Candidates Se t For To,vi1 Meet Candidates for the Saddleback College board or trustees will appear at a town hall meeting al 8 p.m. Tuesday in the San Clemente High School Little Theater. The meeting is sponsored by the American Association of University \Vomen, lhe League of Women Voters, the Capistrano Council of PTAs and the San Clemente Jaya:es. Candidates for the three seats roming up for election April 20 are Alyn Brannon and LeRay Anderson in Area 1: John Lund and Margaret Roley in Area 3; and Michael Collins, John Parker and Thomas Crago in Arca 5. Saddleback Community College District trustees will receive a surprising enrollment report at their meeting 7:43 o'clock tonight in the board room, 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. A college spokesman indicated spring quarter enrollments are up by some 80 to Detroit Recalls 23,300 GM Vegas For Adjustments DETROIT (AP) -Owners of some 23,300 General Motors Vega minican have been asked to bring them in to dealers for correction of mechanical defects ranging from poss.ible faulty chokes to noisy windshield wipers. A cri.t spokesman said oone of the defects represented a hazard and all occurred on Vegas produced prior to the United Auto Workers strike last Sept. lS. Five possible de!et::ts will be checked and repaired by dealers at no cost to car owners, GM said. Metal brackets on the rear seat or the Vega coupe and stalion wagon will be replaced with a vinyl bracket to avoid possible damage to car seats by rubbing. A new cboke lever and shaft will be placed in cars to co1Tect ones that could become loose, jamming the choke mechanism. Ster eo H eisted I n San Clemente There \vill be no music at the home oC Austin Goodson of San Clemente tonight. Someone stole the man·s stereo radi() and tapes over the weekend after .scaling a balcony and entering an unlocked door. Police said the loss from the apartment at 315 B Avenida Del Mar was set at $1;(). Goodson told officers he noticed the loss late Saturday afternoon. JVC Ju1t look et whet th1 '4)4'4 olf1r1 : '45 w•ll st1reo emplifi1r, 4 1p11d eutom1tic record ch•ng1r, l ull fr1qu1ncy ce111tt1 r1corder, FM MPX IFM /AM tun1r, two w•y ullr• ren91 spe•k•r 1y1tem1, l'w'o r1cordin9 mlc1, ecrylic du1t cv1r i nd bleckout styling to blind fh 1 '4l'4'4 info eny d1cor. 100 students. Usually enrollment drops from fall and ""·inter quarter totals. The final figure expeeted to be reported to trustees will be in the neighborhood of 3,000 full and part time students. The trend in higher spring enrollments is consistent with that being reported by other community colleges, the di5trlct spokesman noted. It is una:rlain whether the increased enrollments are due to unemployment, he said. The board also will c o n s l d e r appointment of a computer tedmlciMl and a . computer sharing arrangement with Santa Ana College. A study by No1Tis and CotUried Inc. presented at the last meeting of the board showed the district might benefit by use of Santa Ana College's computers for administrative data processing. The board will be asked lo approve payments to Ramberg and Lowery Architect! totaling $32,385 for 1ervlcea related to the planning of the college library building. Hotel Burglary Suspect Seized In Laguna Beach Laguna Beach police today arrested a suspect in a hotel only moments after another hotel guest reported his room had been burglarized. Authorities said Anthony P a tr I c k Harding, 20, a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton. was to be a1Taigned today on charses of burgla:-y. Officers said he was arrested shortly after midnight in his room at the Inn at Laguna where he was staying "'ilh severa l other Marine companions. Police said a hotel guest from Illinois was awakened b ya noise and ssw a ma• dressed only in swimming trunks standing in a doorway leading to an adjoining room occupied by the guesrs sleeping children. Investigators went to the suspect's room and placed Harding under arrest. Officers allegedly found $22 stolen from the guest's room stuffed inside Herding'• swim trunks. REG. $369 5299 NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT • PIONEER • SAN SUI • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 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 646-774 l DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -·--H-& lr-ay I San Clemente Ca istrano VOL 64, NO. 87, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES EDITI O N - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .Today's Fina) N.Y. Stoeks MONDAY, APR!~ 12, '1971 JEN CENTS San Clemente Police Condemn Pension Offer By JOHN VAL TERZA Of tfl.I Ot111 Piie! St.,I Negotiations for better salaries Slid an Improved, state-administered pension plan are expected to be particularly tough this year between San Clem~nte 's poiJce officers and the city. This l! alrtady evident in preliminary studies on the insurance issue. The city's police officers -whose wage schedule this fiscal year is the county's lowest -have officially condemned an amended pension insurance package Viejo Youth, 10, Killed In Accident A Mi!Sion Viejo boy, 10, was killed Sunday in a traffic collision when his bicycle rolled into the path of a car near his home. Lee A. Geronimo, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Geronimo of 24181 La Pala Lane, died at South Coast Community Hospital about 2'ii houri later. California Highway Patrol officers said the mid-day accident occwred on Marguerite Parkway at Pueblonuevo Drive. lnvl!Stigating offlctn: said they dJd not citt motorist John C. Bates, 21, of 2'861 Stem Ave., El Toro, foUowlng study of the factors involved. Funeral services were pending today for lhe Marguerite O'Neill Elementary School fifth grader at Lesneski Mortuary in San aemente. Coroner's deputies said the Geronimo boy was the SStb county traffic fatality so far thiJ year, 3 Ho spitalized After Derisive Remark in Bar A barroom brawl over tbe weekend sent two Camp Pendleton Marines and a San Clemenle resident to hospitals for suturing of scalp culs, police said. The donnybrook. whi ch apparenlly started with derisive comments about Leathernecks, was reported to officers at 4:50 p.m. Saturday at a bar at 1409 N. El Camino Real. When the battle subsided three men were taken by ambulance to hospitals. Marines Johnny Lee Ramil, 20, and Michael Stags. 19. ttteived treatment at lhe base hospital for cuts. Thomas R. Phebus, -40. of 1010 Buena Vista, San Clemente, was treated for a head wound which required two dozen stitches to close, police said. Initia l reports to offi«rs indicated bottles were being used in the fracas, but police said they could find no evldeoce of It after arriving at the bar. Library Week Activities Set The San Clemente branch ol the Orange County Library will receive itJ ihare of honors next week (April lS.24 ) during an observance of National Library Week . At least two major special activities have been planned for the occasion including an afternoon punch party reaturlng seven local aulhors and music by classical guitarist ~ Stryker. That even~ will be from 5 to 7 p.m. April 22. On April 21 at 7:30 p.m. San Clemente artist Georg Rauch will prtstnl a unique slide program det.al\lng 20 years of his work. The program begins at 7:30 p.m. in UM! San Diego Ga• and Electric Company auditorium. The pubUc itl welcome to eacll of the 1pecl>J observlllCU. proposed by tht city's existing private insurance carrier. In.stead, after weeks of study of the propoSals or the Franklin Life Insurance Company. lhe officers have opted for the Public Employes Retirement System (PERS ) which is state-administered. San Clemente is one of only a few Orange County cities who have pension systems other than the PERS. The competition between tht two pack.ages is expected to reach the city council in coming weeks. Councilmen last week received a city om Down the Mission Trail Bikes Highlight Cinco de Mayo MISSION VIEJO - A bike parade will be a highlight o( the Cinco de Mayo celebraUon scheduled for Sunday, May 2 at Minion Viejo High Schab!. Prizes will be awarded for the best dec«Ated bikes during a contest prior to tbe parade. --~ -- The parade will be aponsorm· by th< Mission Viejo Elks I..odge and all chlldrtn in the community art Invited to participate. • A rty Offirn 1 LAKE FOREST -Members of the Lake Forest Air Association have elected new officers for the coming year. Margaret Scott wlll serve as president, assisted by Joseph Wing, vice president; Joan Steed, secretary; Judy Kavanaugh, treasurer, and Rusty Johmon, publicity chairman. Olher chainnen Include V iv l a n Caldwell, exhibits; Joyce Pa jar ea• hospitality; Kathlene Ste D n Jn g, membership; Beverly St. CI air, telephone ; Mildred Brown, workshop, and Ruth Dallan, member at large. • Newco1ner 1 Meet SADDLEBACK VALLEY -~1embers of the Saddleback Valley Newcomers Club will bear about the historical development of the Saddleback Valley during a luncheon meeting Thursday, April 1$. Jamea Sleeper, a county historian, will speak on hffist.ory at Your Oooratep." The meeting is at the Sadd\eback lM in Santa Ana. The Newcomers Club is open to all WQmen In the valley who have moved to the area within the past sil months. • Cl11b for Gab MISSION VlEJO -Girll aged seven through eleven are invited to join a Girls' Club for members of the Mission Viejo Recreation Centers. Girl.I interested in ucul'lions, spetial crafts. parties and other acUvJUes may 1lgn up at the Montaoolo Center during an Information meeting on Tuesday, at 3:30 p.m. Old City Hall To Aid Cente r San Clemente'• old city · hall, witll re- cently an auto parts store, will be tran,.. formed into a mercantile biulding for tvro days in May.-tnd still be up for tale in tbe process. Members ol the San C I e m e 11 le Interfaith Strvlceman'a Center recenUy WQn permission to uae the vacated Spanish building f..-the pie \o falae funds for their acUve bosplta ottter for servicemen. ~ Thi! building, along with the city yard< nearby, have bltn up for sale for the past several months, but thus far there have betn no takers. Bids on both properties wlU be IUbmltted by buym -U any -oo July L staff report -a year in the making -on the two separate insurance proposals. City Finance Director Gerry Teachout, in one segment of the study pacUge, recommends the PERS plan, bet".11use It would be cheaper lo the city. Teachout said that lhe city's aMual cost for the original Franklin plan this year was $31,046. A new plan offered by the same firul would cost $25,124 more a year, be explained. Under the PERS system, Teachout aatd. the added cost would be about because they l'OUld loee benefill aeerued $1&,698 a year. " under the private plan here. Police officers overwhelmloily endorse "What It amounta: to," aa.id one officer. the atate plan, primarily because of 113 4'is a morale aod recruiting problem."i universality in other departments. Some .councllmen have sald Jrlvately Many officers have &aid that a that the condition. has two edgea -that universal pension plan protects a man's the-private plan redu,ce.s the turnover retirement benefits when be translers. rate within the local department.. One officer said lhat under the present 'I1le officen, however, dllagree. conditions in San Clemente officers with In some salary tar11es within the ranb, PERS will not sign on with the local the only c.hance for advancement in. rank department because of a 1083 of benefit!. would be c:haqing to other dep&rtmtnl!, And local nfficers seekinc advancement beca~ of a stable 1uperviaory group ln In other cities are al.so reluctant to Jeav• the local force. • s ro e· Ill Devewper's Pinn Set For .Study City planning commissioners will resume their di!cussion Wednesday on a master plan for one of San Clemeflt.e'a largest developmentJ in years -an Issue which thoroughly confuse. d the commission ·about two wee.is ago, . Anntd wjtb inllrma~· -ivtii al a recent study session a, Complete dndting of .. •rlslinCi to •Po Pl"OYet commi.mcmets -. dwe.D .. the dual nqueats Doqlai Pacific Qirponllon. 1be firm seeU city approval far a use permiL It would allow approval of a general plan for twin cond-Ominlum developmenta and estate lots on 292 acres near the municipal golf course. The plan also would require the uae of Los Bautismos Lane for access through the municipal linb, which would have to undergo some peysical changes. Opposition already has surfaced from reaidenls along the access road • complalnlng of new traffJc. A aroup or ardent golfers and the management of the city links ahlo have: 11poken out. The latter group has bitterly asaalleol the proposals to cbange any features of the golf course -including the shilling 30 feet to one side the championship seventh tee. But spokesmen for the developers have argued that the changes to the llnkl would not hurt play. Los Baulism03, they 1aid, waa the Jogl cal acl"Css route because it paues only eight homes, compared to 30 or more on other suggested access routes. One other access alternative -through Camp Pendleton, had been diSCUQed by city officials earlier this year, but Douglass Pacific spokeamen said tbt road would be too costly. The complexion of that issue, however, changed somewhat la!\ week when President Nixon declared the land where the access road was proposed surplw to Marine Corps needs. Easements for the road now are not necessary from lhe Corps, but from the State of California, Instead." The master plan issue is allied wilh a tentative tract map also filed by the development firm which is purchasing tbe acreage. Once the master plan issue is settled, then the request to subdivide 37.$ acrl!S of the parcel into 3CM condominium Jots will come up before commissioners. The situation Wednesday is unusual, in that a motion to approve the master plan has been made and seconded. What is required by commissioners Wednesday is only a vote. lf lhe proposal paMCS -then clears city council scrutiny -it would mark the firll planned community development In t.bt city. San Clemente Home Looted T hieves - • " On Rocks? Actress Raquel Welch, who stirred .1 n t ere st when she wore see. through mini dress to marry her manager Patrick Curtis in 1987, would neither confirm nor deny divorce rumors Sunday. He has re- portedly packed and moved tram the couple's Beverly Hills apart~ menl· Raquel said she hoped to have more to tell today. Extra Lifeguard Charges Irk Shorecliff s Residents Shoreclif!s beach&oers have lost one round 1n thelt_ hght over extra charges for public JUeguards on their private beach, but city councilmen have. prom- ised that the picture might be a bit brighter by summer of. 1972. The residentJ, who contract with the city each sprtng for special· lifeguard servlce.s in the summer m o n t h 1 , complatned this year abeut a $350 extra charge for equipment malnlenance. But c:ouncllmen lluclc to lh<Jr policy ror the c:omhir aummu contracL SpOlcmnen 1iJr the Sh Ore c1 I ((I cr,mpla.ined thal membel of lhelr iroup were belog asked to J>&1 the aame rate for . \he maintenance as other priva te groups outalde the city limita which receive ·the same services. Jack Duseck, the group's be 111 ch committee chaiTman, aald the tqual charaea were unfair, because Shorecllffs resJdeJlll are city tu.p1.1era. but Monudl 8aJ raldenla IA not. •, He pointed out that the dty charges a 50 percent surcharge for wattr sold outside the city, but not for Ufecuard services. Water Surcharge · For Capo Probed A 11 per occupied space llll'cllar1a on trailer park water bills w1B be considered by the Boord or Dlrocl«& of Oraqt County Waterworkf Dbtrlct Four at tonl&l>t'a !:IO m,.tlng In the Saa Ju .. Capl."-rano City Hall. The sureharge has been propoaed by the Water Advltory Commllttt, a clUzen'1 group whlch advises the board of. directors on r1e1, pollci<3, and perllOllllOI. The cbarge haa been propoaed a1 a blll!Olllhly fee to mau mobile .home park 111le<'bUlt more equaltbla , I ltesldM ·the·pe111lon lalue, aalariet 1r1 eipected to spur -weighty negotlatlom. Lut year: tbe cltY'• force received an averqe seven-percent raise In pay, but the tncr.o&es·dld lltlla to bring the dty's 1alaries up to the compeUUve level. Some cbserven have. indicated that the dty'• option this year -.Id be to offer the preferred alate penJloo plan Instead of any salary locrtast1. But tn t1meti of inflation, that otter may not aatllly ·lllW offtcen. • Ie U.S. Uses Blockbuster. First Time SAIGON. (UPI) -The U.S. Air Force wed lb n; too blockblllter bomb u a 1actlcal wupon for the lint tlme today tn the Jndocbina WBr, dropping two Of them on Qnnmunlst troop conctntrat\ons around besieged F1rt Base I ln the Cenlral Blgblanda. Tho-bombs, lar1eat In the U.8-ar...al actpl for nuclev wa:vona. were por~·-.eut li'lllopoi1 planes. 'llle1 llJl!o\¥ ~-finr.; 7i?di ,-<>It-"" • ~ lloiOa bi. u ..... .r~1J.., ,:t~ ~ ·~111 l"1I' "' oualDf bl"4tq.fmn !Jle"-bd ..... 0..pfte rabl tquallt and bfgb wltJd& tn l!IO fire. Jlaa • l'fllon m the c...1ra1 llllhlllldl. l!6ll; dropptd liOO -of bombs on tbe Q>mmunllts.pur the ba!e. The IS aoitlel llown"~ralsed'tq 2,SOO tons the UIOWlt of bombs dropp<d Jn tbe .,,. &lnce the tltge began March 3i F-dllpotch" aald tbe Communist! ./ bad oent In 10,000 troops to the fin !we IJ'fa ~ that 1he 1ovemment had a: llmllar:.lzed force there; tbe beavieat ccrocentratiON llnce tbe lnvulon of Laos. U.S. 'military 10Ur<o1 In Saigon sald1heit lntell!Pnce tnd&Clted a • • • m a J I e r" Communilt force but did not elaborate, The Viet COllg, "1tlc:h can. tile Fite Bue llfll No. 1001, broadcast several vlct«y· claims and sald one Saigon ..w.....,..t colwnn broke and nn when Jt came uu:der attack. 'Ibe Viet Con1 &aid they bad kllled ll20 Saigon troopl·to the battle. Saigon reported 2,1124 Communlata · llain at 1 Joas ol tn 1ovemmezit dead. Reports from the area indicated that the North Vletoameae c:ommander In charge of the attack on Fire Base g had moved hia headquarters fn>m Laos Into South Vietnam to direct Iha fight. The base fs near the inte.necuon of La1>1. Cambodia and South Vietnam tn the Central Hlgblanda. Sulliva n, quoting highly placed South Vietnamese military JOUrces, said the headquarten of Hoang Minh Thoa co~der of ~ 13-day-old offenslv; igamst the bue, wu belitved located about 14 miles aouthwest of the base bat· that be moved htJ.h ea d quart~r. irequefltly to avold'bombtng atlaclai. The beadquarlira·ll·lr:nown u 83. ...... 'Weatller Early roa and alt.moon -· retllrn to the COlll Tuesday with Wllpmturu. dlpplng to s alon1 the belchea and 71 fllrtber Inland. ' INQDE TODAY llOll police ~II In Onmoe County ore not 11t up to ilandlc 'cona..m.r fraud, "'11• lhc d<ptllv diltrlt:I 41'°""11 4Uig.,. rd •uch "'''· Storv, Paae B. " ' " .... • " I I • " ''"' " -' f DAJL'f PILOT SC -.,, .... , 12, 1971 Court Date Set for Dulaney·s • Ill Fraud Case llY TOM llAllLllY of •..., ...... ,..,. Joseph aDd Marlene Dulaney today were ordettd to faoe prellmlnary hearing April 21 in Santa Ana municipal court on grand theft and forgery c h a r g e s atemmlqg from Whal 11 alleged to be the S3 million defraudlnc of investors in the Newport stockbroker's World Financial Trends empire. JUdge Paul Mast'• ruling means that Burke Asks Abortion Time Limit A rtductlon In the time period women can have an abortJon, from 2:0 weeks to 10, has been suggested by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Huntington Beach). Burke said, ''It Is a medical fad tha t premature babies weighing as little as 10 ounces have survived to become mature, normal adult human beings. "[ btlleve it is lnhumanely cruel for society to permit the kilting of human being! who have a chance to survive independe'Jt of the mother," he said. Burke ouUlnes several other proposals that would drutically revise t ti • Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967 under which more than 100,000 legal abortions have been perfonned in California. He aald lotroducUon of five billl and one n solutlon "in no way was to imply that I condone or accept abortions as means toward effecting birlh control, or as a way of 1kirting one'• respom.lbility for lhelr actions." The measures are designed I o eliminate what Burke called loophole! and abuses in the law, which be said ls being used by so me women to "escape the respon1ibillty for aome of their more amorous escapadel.'' Burke auggestl that unleu 1 woman had beta undergotna: p 1 y c b J a t r l c treatment before p~cy. she could DOl get an abortion on the presently 1ccepl<d grounds tlllt sJvlog birth would jeopanl~ her menlll heallh. "Many women •kin& an abortion do ao on these irouOOs with statements such u 'U you don't give me an aborUon, I'll Jrlll m,1"111' This Jtat.ment hu been comtnled 11 proof of the women's poor mental health and tbe abortion ts permitted," BID"ke aald. Anothe r Burke mearure would ban an abortion unless the abortion review committee was convlnced It w a 1 requetted of the woman'• own free will. Tbe resolution Burke Is introducing would have the State Departmr.nt o! Public Health study the abortion situation since the liberalized law took effect for a ~port to the leglslature by January of 1172. Another Burke bill would prohibit any member of the abortion r e v 1 e w committee to perfonn an abortion. 3 Persons Vanish On Easter Outing FRESNO (AP) -Three pemn• disappeared durinl an Easter outing on the Kings Rtver Jn the Pine Flat Dam area below Piedra, authorities aald. A diving team from the Fm:no County ~eriff's office searched for the trio late Sunday afternoon. The effort. reaumed today. DAllY PILOT OU.JflS>! COAST l"IJll.llH!NO CXIM'IMV ... b.rt H. w.~ l"ralilMl .... hlililollW J,,. l. c .. r1.., Vic.I "**"" ..... GMw.I ~ n. • ..-., 1i: ..... 11 1•11cir n-•• A. M11r~llllf /Mnt0'"9 ,.,. C .. 1rftt H. L..1 ._1c .. ,t4 ,, H411 ...... ,. ..... MaM!l"'t 1Ed11~ Let-.... C>ffM 122 "'''' .......... . S-C.._..OHIM lOS Nod .. ii C•r11i11• ~111 OAl\.Y Pll.CT, wtflt _.,Id> 1" """""""' !file ........,.,.... i. 11•H1t• M ll'T _. a-._, Iii! ....... ., ... ,., u.... hid>. ....._., htdl. C..11 Mft•, ...... ""' ... a-. ,...,... Vt lllf't, hll C.._"W' ~·• _. IHI~ ,..., """ -................. l"rtloc•• ~ ...... .-. ,. -. .. r 1w..1. c.i. ,..._ tl'1,•111 17141 MMJl~ Cl ....... Moa*til ' 141-NN .... = 3 •• Al ,., ... •••l , .. , ...... 491..WJt ............. ····=··\ ''"'' • 4f4.f4'6 woo.,., ,.... an.a C-.1 """' ... ~. ... ....... ........ """'""-"'· ........................ .....,"'"" ....... _., M '.. I .. •"'*If ..-Cit! ,..... ......... ..,,,...1 ....... . the globe trotUng couple wW 10 to oourl roe tbe !1nl lime wllh tbelr <»<ldtlldlo~ Jomes Shipley of Hunllnlton Btadl. tlle former vice president ot the investment • complex headed by Dulaney. Dulaney. ?'!, today made another oulburst from the defendant's box in \\'hich he , protesled the charges filed against him and the further delay of court action . "The district attorney's oftice has had Sad, But Clean • )"Olf ond • hall "' Jnv .. tlgale 1hele dwl• 1&alml us IJld they aboWd llnow by no• tllll I aia tntlrtly lonocen~" Dulaney said. Judge Mast suggested that Dulaney dlscuss the matter with his attorney, Robert La\\', and sent the eloquent defendant back to Orange County jail. Dulaney is held in lieu of $312.500 bail and Mrs. Dulaney is free on her own rerogniz.ance. Reggie , an IS.month-old oran gutan at the Vilas Park Zoo in Madi· son, Wis., doesn't seem to be enjoying his bath. He gets one weekly, but, so far, has resisted all offers to endorse soap. Number of Easter Week Visitors Hit 720,000 Newport Beach arrests and beach attendance for Easter Week, 1971 were up, according to statistics released today by police and lifeguards. Lifeguards credited the good weather with boostlng beach attendance for the nine days from 635,000 ln 1970 to 720,000 this year. Guards reported a total of 88 rescues - of which three were listed as near drownings -and one possible drowning. Jn 1970, there were only 16 rescues and no drownings. prevent the parties from turning lnto the brawla that made past Bal Week such a notorloua event. Officers noted that of tht total arrests, 337 were juveniles most of whom were picked up at tbese parties for lack of parental control or curfew violations. Thousands Enjoy Day on Sands At San Clemente !lllpley, 31, of 111151 Lowell Circle, II lne on $1U,l00 ball Ho laces lclentbl char1t1 o( erand. theft, forgery and COt1Spir1cy, all ot which are denied by the trio. Dulaney is accused of using his World Financial Trends facilities at Laguna Hills and Seal Bcoch to defraud a number of investors, most of them residents of retirement communities in thoee areas. Mrs. Dulaney, an attractive blonde. .... u.1 lat bbn ¥ • .....wy Jn the Laguna llllll '"I'll Mllhll" he1dquatttt1 W1til the couple left for West Germany in Del-ember, 1969, u complaints from investors began to flow into the district atloroey's office. Shipley stayed behind to take over the affaln of the corporate complex and was the first member of tile triq to be arrested. He testified in bankruptcy court before hil amat that be wu not involved In any w1y with the alleged swindlet ind ho repeatedly denied know i n g the whereabouts of the mbsing Dulaneys. Dulaney was picked up two weeks aga in the Dutch Caribbean colony or Curacao. t.1rs. Dulaney was arrested a week later in the Britlsh Colony of Bermuda. She. seemed to be recovered today from an illness for which she was bospilalized by British authorities. Yanks~ Chinese 'Mix American Ping Pong Team Visits UniversitYi PEKING (UPI) -American table tennis players lalked and p I a y e d basketball today with Chinese Commwli.st University students who told lhem that ousted President Liu Siiao-cttl was alive but "his thought is dead." The l>member U.S. contingent stopped off at Chinghua University on the way to see the Great Wall of China. They were delayed for about five hours as they talked with the students and toured the wiiverslty ground! in Peking. Alter eating a late lunch at lhe university, the Americans piled into cars and two buses and traveleC to the Great Wall. They later returned to their hotel in Peking. The American ping pong team has yet to play a formal match, but officials said the U.S. players, who arrived Saturday on an unprecedented visit, would play here Tuesday afternoon and then leave for Shanghai on Wednesday. The highlight of the day for the Americans was the trip to the university. They left their hotel about 9 a.m. and reached the Wliversity at 10 a.m. where they were greeted by the school's revolutionary committee m e m b e r s , teachers, students and school workers. The Amerlcal13 sat in a reception room around a table with a white table cloth. smoking cigarettes and sipping black Chinese tea. Included ln the welcoming group was Prof. Chen Wei-chang, who worked in the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the Califorina Institute of Technology from 1941 to 1946 before returning to mainland China. Later, the Americans were taken on a tour of the school groWldS and they chatted with a number of other teachers in their late 50's and 60's who had studied in the states. When they stopped off at a "7'l1 truck" ractory, Graham Steenhoven of Detroit, president of tbe U.S. Table Tennis As90Clatlol\. cltmbed up into the cab of one of the trucb and drove it around. The "rrT'' stands for July 7. 1968, when the first propaganda team ca me in to he1p run the school and unite two disputing factlo113 during the cultural revolution. On their way back fron. the factory, the Americans ambled into an open baske tball class and paused to try a few shots. Aft.er visiting 1 computer transistor circuit workshop, the Americans came Candidates Set For Town Meet across the school's indoor gym, where they spent 15 minutes trading plng pong shots with Chinese students. Dick Miles, who was the Amerlcan table tennis champion nine Umes, joined a Chinese student in a spontaneous doubles match against Errol Resek of New York City and anothe r Chinese student. The informal, rambling tour of the university continued, but the Americans came across another gym w he r e the school basketball team was practicing. The Americans again joined the play and tossed a few baJis Into the net. During a long lunch, which consisted of sweet and sour carp, meat dumpllngs, North China steamed bread, rice, fried prawns, cold meats, pork and vegelables, as well as soda pop, the Americans broke up into groups of four anc:! five and sat among Chinese students and profe530rs. SaddlehackEnrolhnent Up for Spring Courses Saddleback Community College District trustees will receive • aurprising enrollment report al their meeting 7:45 o'clock tonight in the board room, 2.8000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Vlejo. A college spokesman Indicated 1pring quarter enrollments are up by some 80 to Detroit Recalls 23,300 GM Vegas For Adjustments DETROIT (AP) -Owners of some 23,300 General Motors Vega rninlcars have been asked to bring them in to dealers ror correction of mechanical defects ranging from possible faulty chokes to ooi!y windshield wipers. A GM spokesman said none of the defects represented a hazard and all occurred on Vegas produced prior to the United Auto Workers strike last Sept. 15. Five possible defects will be checked and repaired by dealers at no cost to car owners, GM said. Metal brackets on the rear seat of the Vega coupe and station wagon will be replaced with a vinyl bracket to avoid possible damage to car seats by rubbing. A new choke lever and shaft will be placed in cars to coTTecl ones that could become loose, jamming the choke meclrani.sm. 100 students. Usually enrollment drops from fall and winter quarter totals. The final figure expected to be reported to trustees will be in the neighborhood ot 3,000 full and part time students. The trend in higher spring enrollments Is consistent wltb that being reported by other community colleges, the distrlct spokesman noted. Jt is uncertain whether the increased enrollments are due to unemployment, he said. The board also wlll conside r appointment of a computer technician and a computer sharing arrangement with Santa Ana College. A study by Norris and Gottfried Inc. presented at the last meeting of the board showed the district might benefit by use of Santa Ana College's computers for adminislraUve data processing. The board will be asked to approve payments to Ramberg and Lowery Architects totaling $32,386 for services: related to the planning of the college library building. Hotel Burglary Suspect Seized In Lag1ma Beach Laguna Beach police today arrested a suspect in a hotel only moments after another hotel guest reported his room had been burglarized. Authorities said Anthony P a tr I c k 11arding, 20, a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton, \\'as to be arraigned today on St H • t d l'harges of burglary. Officers said he was Candidate! for the Saddleback College ereO eJS e arrested shortly a~er midnight in his board of trustees will appear at a. town room at the Inn at Laguna "'here he was hall meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the San In San Clemente staying with several other Marine Clemente High School Little Theater. companions. The meeting is sponsored by the Police said a hotel guest from Illinois American Association of University There will be no music at the home of was awakened b ya noise and saw a man Women, the League of Women Voters, Austin Goodson of San Clemente tonight. dressed only in swimming trunks the Capistrano Council of PTAs and the Someone stole the man's stereo radio standing in a doorway leading to an San Clemente Jaycees. and tapes over the weekend after scaling adjoining room occupied by the guesrs Candidates for the three seats coming a balcony and entering an unlocked door. sleeping children. Police said there were a total of 5t2 arrests made frOm the first Saturday through Good Friday. Last year's totals sho w 379 for the same period. Offi c e r• said that des pi t e the increase in arrests, there were fewer crimes reported and fewer traffic accidents this year than last. Chilly water temperatures and a brl.ak up for election April 20 are Alyn Brannon Police said the loss from the apartment Investigators went to the suspect'a and LeRay Anderson in Area l; John at 31S B Ave.nida De l Mar was set at room and placed Harding under arrest. Total crime reports for 1970 \\'ere 146 but dropped lo 129 this year. There we.re p traffic accidents this year. which is eip:ht less than the previous year . Police said the rise In arrests and the subsequent drop in crime reports might be linked to the decline af Newport Beach's popularity 33 an Easter \Veek resort. Officers speculate that with fewer crime calls and traffic accidenll to respond to they had more time to invesUgete loud party calls and perhaps Capistrano Sets Public Hearings On Road, Weeds Two public hearings -one on weed abatement and the other on tbe precise alignment of Del Obf!po Ro1td -wlll take place at tonighf1 7 o'clock meeting of the San Juan Capistrano City CowlciL · The cooncil w\11 be asked to ccnslder reclasslfying Del Obispo R o 1 d from AiJJacate Road south to the dly Umlts from a primary arterial highway lo a secondary collector. This would reduce the right of way from 104 lo 14 feet. Councilmen will 1tso c: on 1 Ider realignu1g the ce.ntrrtlne In order to straighten out dangerous curves. Also on the agendrt will be a public hearing which w i l I nllow property owners to protest notices they have received to remove weeds and other breeie k e P t swtmming activity and Lund and Margaret Roley In Area 3; and $150. Officers allegedly found $22 stolen from rescues al a minimum Easter weekend, Michael Collins, John Parker and Goodson klld officer!'! he noticed the the guest's room stuffed inside Harding's despite thousands of visitors to the sand l-Th~om;';';Cr:::a~g;;o ;;ln:::Ar;;e;;a:':·:::=====-:lo_ss_1a_1e_s_a1_ur_d_a.:.y_a_rt_e_m_oo_n_. _____ _:'_:w.::im::__:t:_ru::•:::"'::· ________ _ at San Clemente. Lifeguards reported only eight minor rescues throughout the two days, which had an average high temperature of 70 degrees. The water reading. however. hovered in tht' mid ~ both days. keeping an estimated 33,000 "isilors on shore. Guards, who also patrol Dana Harbor and beaches in South Laguna, said no major mishaps were reported at the Marina or upcoast beaches . In all . the entire Easter Week activity was relatively quiet. despite the attractive springtime we ather, i u a rd spokesmen said. Suspect Arrested In Laguna Heist Laguna Beach detectives have arrested a suspect in the April 4 robbery ol. 1 hitchhiker in which the bandits left tht victim •1 "to eat on'' and took $13 in cami. Authorities Identified the suspect as Robert Wllllam Holfman, 19, of 101 E. Marquita, San Clemente. He was taken Into custody Friday afternoon after being questioned by detectives and Is to be arraigned today on charges of armed robbery, ltldnaping and au&ult with intent to commit murder. JVC J u1t look •t wh•t t he 4344 offer1: 45 w.t tt 1terao •mpli fi•r. 4 tp••d 1utometic r•corcf ch•nger, full frequency c111etta r•cord•r, FM MPXIFM/AM tuner, two w.t y ulfr• r•ng• sp•.tkar 1y1t•m1, two recording mlci, •crylic dust CY&r and bl1ckout styling to bl•nd th e -4 3'4'4 into •ny decor. EG. $369 5299 NEW and USED STEREOS and EQUIPMENT • PIONEER • SANSUI • ROBERTS • JVC • ELECTROPHONIC • WALD • SONY 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE RRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL, TRADI COMI IN AND IROWSl AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 ...... c-............ "'..,.,, &Hdl .... C.Mi ..... c..1 ....... l tl !'"'""' ' debris from their pro(>f'rty. If the work Is Polict claim llof(man and~ three: companions picked up a hitchhiker in i...auna Btach. robbtd hlm at gunpoint snd dumped him fNlm the car in SOuth t_..RUnl. The case is &till under lnvestlgallon 1s authorities are searchln& DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -llfW-H-t hodway -.......... ........,., ... _...,. llJIMllllrl .. """ Mtlllll .... ta.a ....,._,., I • no1 cornplel~ 11iitlsf11.ctorily tht city wOI do I.be work billing the property owner. for the other suspect. • ~I ~ l I .. • ... TV Review Shepherd's U.S. in Debut BY CYNTHIA WWRY NEW YORK (AP) -Jean Shepherd, who has been reminiscing about his Midwest boyhood for years on New York radio, now is doing it on a naUonal television network. "Jean Shepherd's America," on the public broadcasUng lineup, had its premiere Sunday night, a half hour in which the Narrator, o f f ca.mera, recalled s i g ht s , sounds and e1periences when at 17 he worked in a steel mill. As he talked, the screen was occupied by the operations o( a conte mporary steel mill. The star talked of the excitement of buying a pair of safety shoes and getting a new hard hat. He recalled a fall, Evening APRtl 12: 1:0011 ltl ,..... Jtrry Dunphy. O MIC M...mct Tom Snyder. 0 Tht AllH Show Guut&: Rl)blrt Goulet, Helen Gu1ley Brown, jerry Collins, 11$Ychic Bnerly De1n, Milt Kamen. 0 Sil O'Clock Morie.: (90) "Dltec- ti'H Storr" (dr1ms) 'SI-Kirk Doua· l1s. E11anot P1rker. A behilld·tlle· sane look at the ~ic• force of a bit city IS Detective Jim McLeod's usutnled ldus ol riJht and wront boom1111n1 •rid 1lmost ff. stroy him prolessionatty and Plf· tonllly. 0 Did: Yin o,tt m.n. fli~• OJ star Tut: fij) MMffinl1111f '1'he Rtndl # l,"> fB.(l) Mtws/Wut!Mr/Speftl £!) Fisllu f1mily tJ) Nttititte 34 fE Dut!t Y•llrr Dafs Cl) La Hon F11alliar ton Con&Mlo &) Nm Jim Hawtllornt. &:15 fil Art Stud'9 ~~ntina Ani1111!s." l :JO 0 Candid c. ..... m 1lt FlJiq ,. •• @(1JABC- ID CI! Nit .. ... @!Modi' ..... """ 19(1JC8S- l[!)Selldtd fillllS/Minlcale m TH Dnert Report EI!) Los OlridldM aJABC Nin 7:00 Q CIS Newt Wt~et CronkilL 0 m NBC Ntn David BrinklfY, .lohn CllanceUor, Frink McG«. 0 Yrllat's Mr Unt! m@m '"""" IE) Dt1ptt @(!)Jlrlia tD De World Wa llw ,. "till In P1rchtd Llnds.N 19 ({) Tr9tll er Coaseqvmm @Ii) Christ 0!1 lMnt Wetd ID An1111to11 N•am Gil) Shnplt:1D1nta Maril aJ Mwle C11n1 7:55 el) Cllltlol N Slplldts ... m@ C1J m ... ,..,, cRl ""'"" Dr1il Jr. OllpoJll 7.foo!11 Wiii CMmbtr11in hi ttra "BatUt ot IN Glllsf $tlr1. N Tuesdoy DAYTIME MOVIES dislocating both sboulden, from a stab· high above the mill. Meanwhile, the ¥iewer with a color set s a w fascinating film. ribbons of molten steel flowing in designs that often looked more like art than Industry. It was a novel approach -a commen ta ry used as counterpoint rather t h a n explanation of the pictures. And it was very interesting. NBC's Edwin Newman, who seenu to handle well all sorts of odd jobs around hl.s network's news department, has in r~ent months been presiding over an ea r I y Sunday evening show called "Comment," a sort of guest editorial spot. itl)M• _, Yllkll fl)fanla L-OS El!) 4'11 Tl'll Pati111 1;30 fJ a II! Kiit's l•q Ct1i1 •nd Uncle HtfTY become p1rtners in filmlna 1 document11y usinr lgcy 11 Ille subitd, bill she b mor1 con«1ned with he!pint Kim ketP her bo)'frielld {Don Crichton). 0"''" O IHlffiCiJT>o"" ""' m Dnid Fl'Oll SlllW Guuts lncluclt Smok.,-Robinson alld Tht Mlt1des, Lassie. Alu Klrm, Tonr Joe Whlta. 1!1- fl!) httn ,., 1.M111 fl!) Mlpalnt Valda 5"9 1:45 m OM ff'llll ._ l ;DO IJ OJ (I) MIJbmy l.F.I. (R) Goober opens 1 1111w 1u shlllon. ind Howud fi11d1 1 dinosaur slleJ1. ton under It. 0 ID (1.) En World rr1111«1 ..... ii: CC) (2N) "'Ille OtMr Min" (dram1) '70 -Roy Thinnes, .loin H1eketl Thi wifa of 1 succuduJ llW')'fi flllt hi lo't'I with I wetl- kllOWn pl.yboy wM Mrved e jlh 111111 tor a crime he d1ims be did not commit. 0Th F111tiN o @m m ... -•-<C) (2\t) "l"nnlJ.fo111 Hollfl " itm• (dr1m1) '65-Mk.nr Rooner, Lu Blrktr. Two pilots of 111 lnt•r· n1tio1UI air11ner forced to land lfl Leblnon find th1m'8lvu iri tht mid· d!1 af a11 1!1bor1t1 smu111Jn1 a11d 111urder plot. m n. ,,.ldtls ID bllitlH "A R1n1iss1nca Lifr. A P1r10n1I Vltw of Bern1rd Berlll· son by llenlllth Cl•rl .. fID lO Mlnulll €11Softrba EI!) Natadla t:!O B 1111 (IJ .... "' (R) 0 C.INlkl """" II!) Mukll1/hater"1 Dnll II) LI Cm M Mariu Cf'm IO:CIO fJ 9 (}) Canl l11rMtt S110W .lenJ lrwi1 1nd Ltslit Uu11111 ruest. 0 CNnfltl 5 N .. hvin Slnd1rs, B1m1~ Morris, OlutwWltdJllWs 1:0D8""": <C> .,.,.. 1te111o 1or. flH"' (1dwntUJt) '64 -Gto11t Montiomer,, Toti" Thalche1. mo-m-"' '62-41111n rord, l•• Remick. m "llttll If tilt Cert! SH" (ad· 'tlllf~") '59 -Cllh RobertlOl'I. Gia Stal•. 1;00 m "A"alr Wini a Strtiqlf" ldr•· t :DO O '\111 W"itll Htllrj" (comld')') '41 1111) ·54 -Jt•n Slmmona, Vlctoi _ J•di:i• Co®tr. [cldfl Br1tlltn. M1tu11. "Oii' l11dln1 C1Uzefi• (drtm•I '39 2:GO 0 "lat MIMrabln" (cluak) -$2. -Bob Bums. S1111n Hirwird. -Midl"I Rll'l"lt Otbn P111t.. t·JO 0 •111t Kntltr"' l:oftcluslofl (tfr•· ' • 1111) 11 -P1ul ftmn•"· Pi1Mr• 4:JO fJ (C) "JtMr SIMI AflJthhll kllll" t1urit. I (COl!'ltdW') 'St -Jlmll Ct&M)', o "tJ.perl ... 111 TfltlW' (dnm1) Sfllrl., Jt!n• bftr Smltll, Last week there were some assorted viewpoints of Vietnam. This week, former presidential press secrelarles and Herb Klein, president N i :r on' s communications director, presented views on White House press relations. Pierre Salinger, John F. KeMedy's press man, talked of the credibility gap and touched on problems created by pictcirial coverage of news. George Reedy, President Johnson's aide, suggested that presidents tend to blame the press for bad news, citing the legend of Peter the Great strangling the messenger who brought him news of a defeat oC his troops. Klein defended President Nixcn 's policy. approved an•• adversary relationship'' between government and press and maintained the public i s getting more news today than ever before. The viewpoints are usually lnterestinB and well considered, but the format is deadly dull. One merely sees head shot..s of the men, their eyes firmly fixed on a prompter out of camera range, reading -often quite badly -their essays. * Don Fedderson, whose production c o m p a n y is syndicating the L a w r e n c e Welk show next fall, reports that more than 330 stations across tbe nation have asked for the program. \Velk's fan mail has jumped from live or six thousands a week to around 80,000, Fedderson said. He estimates that more than a million letters, wires and phone calls have been received by Welk or ABC since the network announced the cancellation of the 1 o n g • playing musical hour. "FISTFUL OF DOLLA~S" linco!n & Brookh.lri.i "''' Moftday, April 12, lffi DAILY PILOT JIJ New Stars Faee Bough Go Jazz Band Concert Set For Irvine The Preservation Hall Jazz Band of New Orleans will present a concert ill UC Ii;vine's Crawford He!! at 8:30 p.m . Saturday, April 17. The concert, sponscred by the UCI Committee for Art.s and Lectures, will be the band 's only performance in Southern California. The Preservation Hall Jazz Baod is composed of men and women in their sixties and seventies who played with such jau greats as Jelly Roll Morton, Johnny Dodds and King Oliver and who helped create the music known as New Orleans jau. The band, the last original New Orleans jazz b a nd , features Billie and DeDe Pierce, Cie Frazier, Willie Humphrey , Jim Robinson and Allan Jaffe. Tickets for the concert art $.1.50 and are available at all Ticketron outlets, the UCJ Fine Arts Box Office and the Associated Students office. For further inform ation phone 83Ul\17. By RICll' DUBROW HOLLYWOOD (UP!) Movie stan are nol necessari· ly guarantees of succes.s for television series they dtcide to appear in regularly. A number of motion plcture names will face tough competition when tt'lty bow in with their own weekly shows this falt Jal'l\H Stewart, for instance, will have rough network foes as be launches his half·bour NBC-TV series. According to the e a r 1 y three-network schedule, be will be up against ABC-TV's "The FBI" and ~TV"s Sunday NI g h I Movie. Glenn · Ford also will get some heal Unleu the various network plans are altered, biJ one-hour adventure series on CBS.TV, "Cade's County," wlll face NBC TV's "Bonanza'' and ABC TV's Sunday Night Movie. Dick Van Dyke, who is returning to CBS.TV after a considerable fling in motion pictures, will be up against the Saturday Night Movie on NBC. TV as well as ABC.TV's "Movie of the Weekend," a new series of to .minute originals stressing suspense and drama. Tony Curtis and Roger ("The Saint") Moore are teaming up in an hour comedy-adventure series for ABCTV, "The Perauaders," . and their competiUoo wU1 be Also "R"' "SUDDEN TERROR" """'°"' •lAC'H -., ..... ·-.. hhl••• Lii• 1.1. -01. 1·•>~ ENDS TUESDAY IUD CORT ''Brewster McCloud" PLUS! J.JTRA ADDED A mACTIOM • ,-AKE OFF' WnATUll At Hwy 39 O•lr MATINEES DAILY 2 4 ' I 10 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOWI C B S .. T V ' 1 • • M i 1 s J on : returM from movies to current top star tn ABC TV'a Impsible" and N 8 C. T V's televtsJon, where be rose lO "Me.mu Welby, MD,'' flaures Saturday Night Movie, fame ln "Maverick," and this to fly exlraord1narily hl&h In David Janssen, formerly Ume he wfil be in a the raUngs acalo becaUStl television's "Tbe Fugitive," la Ughtbearled adventure hour there won't be any· network coming bact'to video on CBS-on NBC-TV enUUed "Nichols." programming at all agalnlt TV 11 a go.emment agent in His competition will be CBS. Ute final half hour of bil teries a hour series caJled "O 'Hara, TV's Thursday Night Movie, on Tuesday nights. United States Treasury." Now which will be replaced once a a movie name as well. he will month by • tw&bour "CBS he up agalnst "'Room 222." and Reporls" ently. whli. ABC-TV opposes h'im with "The Pat1rldge Family" on "Longstreet,'' wblch 1 t ar1 ABC-TV, aD:d NBC· TV' I James Fr&nelscua as a blinded "World Premiere" twi>bour investigator who tries lo con- fllms, which will be replaced tinue his career. once monthly by a news Among returning v I de o magazine publl& affairs pro-headliners, Carol Burnett bas gram. had her CBS-TV hour switched! Shirley Macl..aine will have from Mondays to Wedne&days, a new ball-hour ABC-TG show, wPere abe will square off in which she plays a travellng against "Bewitched" and "The pboti>journalist, and be r CourUhJp of Eddie's Father" network competition will be 00 ABC-TV, and "Adam-12" CBS. TV's s u d d e n 1 Y • h o t and those to-minute mystery "Medical Center" and a &eri6 films NBC-TV on • MATINm· IAT. SUN of 90-mlnute mystery films on _ _;Ro~he~rt~Y~o~un~g~,~te~le~v~ls~lo~n~'a~~'!"'~!'!!~~~:::"!!!!!""" ~~:,'~Quinn wm star as , NATIONAL GENERAL THEA TIES mayor in an ABC-TV one-hour series tentatively titled "The City,'' and opposing his show will be CBS.TV's "Mannix" and NBCTV 's ''Night Gallery," a collection oI biur· re tales. J ames Gamer, meanwhile, BALBOA 673-4048 -6:45 ,.. ....... .....'"'" .. ---_,_ -- otso lcrbaro H1,.l!!t_ "THE BABYMAKER" tar ENDS TUESDAY WALT DISNEY'S "BARE FOOT EXECUTIVE" IGJ And "THE COMPUTER WORE TENNIS SHOES" !Gl Burt Lancaster "TORA "VALDEZ IS COMING" TORA TORA" 2-4+1-10 ~ • "'"'"'.£ EXCLUSIVE SHOWING t~l~T 5th SMASH WEEK 2ftJ lld C.ut Mwy, =~ co1toM• ·011. MAil Both Pictures "G" ALSO PLAYING 2nd BIG FEATURE ''THE 12 CHAIRS" lnventfv1, Cres:y, Very Funny with Ron Moody-Dom DeLuln Meet Henry & Henrietta ... the laugh riot of the year. Paramount Pletures present.. "A neco Leaf" /l1I Color b-/ MOVIEl.AB C3i A Paramount Picture SmriQJ . YaituMllfthn·ElllatW..,•Jedi: W-= DUSTIN HOITMAN~ ·mru 816 MAN" --·~-· CHIEF DAN GEORGE· fAYrDUNAWAY ,,.._.,Al RUIAN =SAM SHAW '::..~·;; JOHN CASSAVETES ftOli! COtUMBIA "CTURES .aP MINAJIONS WciuvtNG BEST PICTURE 2HO AT CINEMA wtsT 12 • WAlTl>fSNIY'S Pltl Sl'tUS 0 IOIRT MORS1 "THE IOATJllKS" (0) WALTDISNIY .,.....,n-· '"1BAR£FOOI' EXECUllVE ~NO Al "VIEJO'" YAtTOISNIY'S "Tit! COMPUTIR WOii TINNll IHOll'' (I) 22 DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTICE .... , ,.ICTITIOUS IUSINISS N&MI£ STATIMINT Tl\~ lollo-lno "'..,..' ,,.. bu1 ""'' •• '"'llL~V1£W $.&OOL'E CLU I Se H1rbol' lllvG ~1nt1 '""' ""' W F Hicock li.IU Ill H<lrllor 8 1vd 5•n!1 An• Cl 11 "1'-1 T J Hltedl 16'rn SO Hflbor l lltll .. nl1 "'""' C1lll t'1tM Thl1 blnl...eu 11 0.1119 OMduc!td bY • ~rfMo~lll W F.. Hlcock ll'ub!lolltoll Or1nv1 Cot1I 01lh' PH~! M1rch U 1' April! ll "11 &22 IT LEGAL NOTICE ·-· Cll!.ITl,.IC•T• 01' •VSIMt:SS 'ICT ITIOUS RAMI n,. "nd•ril11'1td do ctr11''1' '"-" '"' l!Ofld~c! 119 • bll1ln1n al ?J!ll w ll1lb06 ll!WI New-' lltHll C1!llornl1 11nc1er th1 lldl!lout firm ,.. .... .i Wl'IO Alt'E TltOSE c;uvs• •1'!1 '"'' Y id 11 ..... II ~ ., 1'111 '°''"'"' NrtoM wlloM IWl'tft lri Ml 11'111 'IKft o! rnli:lenc.t 1 r1 M te11ew1 ltoti.<1 ni~rrn111 1416 ~l•lbvlll Ave ~Ilk, C1!1f )Ceo. K\01 DOI WHI a.11169 lll'vd ~ l e•cll O.lld Merell If lfTl lltaDtrt '""'rTN" I(.., Klus Sii'-el C1llforr>IL <lfl l'llt Count'I' o.. ~rdl If 1•n !Hlore "'' • Nolltl'Y ll"ubllt In t<>d for ~•Id S!at• .,.,._,.11'1' -rff ltllbtrt Tllurm1n 11'111 I("" Klv:t known lo ""' lo bl 11'11 ""'°"' ,..,... ~•..,.. ••• 1ub1crtbtd to Ille Wl"'ln Ins!.-! lflll .ai-~ ~" "'"' l!ll~t'd' ""' ... ""' IOFFJCIAL Sf.All M1r'Y a11frt Mortofl "lot•rv P1Jbllc.C•l1loml1 Pr1ntJ1>e! Offfct In Or1119f CPUnfV Mv com..,lnl&n l:'lPlr• "~· l t 1911 •vbl 1~•d O••"~• Co••/ 0.1,., "1ol '"""~ n .., & Aprll ~ u t 71 Ul 11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE In Blgll Gear - Plynwutli Slams ·Troubl,e Complete-New York Stock List S1woting Cont,est in Area get tools at substantially reduced cost when b.irtd and paying for them through payroll deductions while they work. A quaW1ed y o u n g mechanic can go to work Jmmediately with his 11wn set of tools which retails at ~ His total cost of the tools 1s Jess than half $224 and ~ can pay for them with no dov. n payment and a small weekly deduction from his wages Tropb.ies for their schools and individual pru:es are provided for local ontest winners Part1c1pahng schools from the Orange Coast area include Huntington Beach H 1 g h Fountain Valley High ~11ss1on Viejo High and Mendenhall H1gb m Westminster along with numerous ether County schools. ~N FORD SALESMEN SCORE BIG Ten saJesmen or Wilson Ford Sales Huntington Beach, will be honored for their outstanding sales performance durm1 1970 at a banquet April 30 Th• Peter Ford salesmen are V1abaki s Jack Ki ser, Money's Worth U.S. Income Tax Cuts Predicted This Year By SYLVIA PORTER The odds are startmg to mounl tha t we will get cuts 1n our Federal mcome tu.es before the end of this year - via an acceleration 1ntn 1971 or lax reductions now acheduled to take effect 111 1972 and 1973 Orr1e J Add1s1on Henry Cook Earl B Drabant C A McMiilan Charles Clunta Frank T Budd Steve t.I Pulvers and John Rossi Each \Ylll receive a 300 500 Club Y<as founded 21 years ago to recognize lhe performance of out!tand.ing Ford salesmen throughout the country. About 11000 of Fords 27 ODO salesmen from coast t0<0asl betame members tn the Club In 1970 a:~~\'fr ~l 8•1 GE 111 8•11 Pl 8• 'G 8•"90r 1>.,n1 lhJ>QI' l>I l B•"" on l 8k o!C• 1 l• flll'llo: ct NV 1 !!oM lr 1 U 8•1!:>0 t)11 8•"' Cll 7s. B••c 1...,911 8••c l)lf~ 8tit• Mfg &•I~• Mf of\ 8.rlllnd 'IO !lf!~I~ oil '>O 8•V>c~Lb .0 8••1 l•b ll B•v~ C t SQ B•oFC>JU Exct:llenl retail s a I e s ::::~~ ~ performance is the basis for :~:~i' ~ en.1ry into tbe 300-500 Club ::~~ ... • ~ said John L Hall Ford s .. , '"'o" 60 Bell 111•rcon D1v1s1on's Los Angeles d1str1tt B•"' \ co t0 I Th SUKI• 160 sa es manager e average ee...i. ,,, 1 member sold about $750 000 ::::::::c!,s1 /: worth of automotive~:~;::::~ merchandise during 1970 to B..,., ~·1 7.50 BrntOHI qualify for the n at 1 on a J Be~1ue1 ·~ honor ' ::i~iu "i"~ Bit T11 er 60 Some 503 Los A n g e 1 e s s11c~ o-11 B • rJOll~ 4 d1str1ct Ford salesmen will be t!.11 .. L•IJll 1 h d Bl~~ ... Q )6 onore at the April 30 Blue ee11 1 10 banquet including 50 Top =~~t~ "~!:1 Hatters" the hlghest award :gr,c:,c01~o11> any Ford salesman can earn ::;~,..,1,~d 1 11 Maheu Buys Into ELPAC Then Sells 8ord•n ! 10 BCrQW•r I 1~ Bo'"'"" 10D B0<Ed5 l3" Bc>Ed e>IJi8 Sou•n• Inc !Ir•"! .. lrw Br gg~I I olOa Br.,Mv l}O Btl<!MV e>I 1 BrlJPel XIII 11.dwy .-,ie ! eo ...... ,..11 pr 1 8rltwvGI• 16 11~1vnuc 1 n Brown Cl> Bwn~ll•ll 10 Bw11Sll~ 1.50 llrUo\w~ l7 BUCY Er 1 10 ludd Co udd Coe>IS BU(laF 11! 60 Bud••! Ind Bul!Fo a I 10 Bulo••W 611 Sunk Ram<> BunkR n•! SO Burl Ind l olO llurlNor 1lo ElurlNor 01 " Burndv Ill Bu"a"i ~~ BuW> UnlY Jtllt II .. ii*. I Ht.II Ltw Cina C~ .. .. n ,.l'I 11 ... -.,. .. 1• 0111'• J ' .... '117'U 1ll:i.. 71 ~111 JO\.o Jilt., •• ;io II!• l~ 114' le ...... '• '\' II s•. Slo S\o -• .. '''• ,,1.. ,, ... -• l'OI>•) .. """-'' U 10 II,!, '" -I, UO ,. ... ,.\olH\1 -• s11•"'''"l.,+1 .. 25 '> ,.,,. ''""' 1' IJ .... IOt 11'> i J l~u ''• h-1 ld '' .., .. 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S!1nd IS N11 Slttl 1 ~ Nit Te1 .IC NaH.1£1 .311 N1tom1' .~s flee>!UM • .IG Ne•P-I 21 N....,Mrrv 1 NE"lllE! 1-56 NE TT J.16 ::-:=::1~~ Newmt 111.50 NVHonlil: .l»d t!YS EG w,OI NYSEI ptl.llO NYSEI Plj·" Nl11 MP .H) f.11.o MDI S.25 1'111 M pf 1,10 Nia M pf J.fO Nll MPI ) . .0 tn1asnr .Mii Norfolk W S Norl!nCo .56r Norri1 IMI 1 NA C<>11I . .0 NoAMto .S\11 No Am Phil 1 NoA,mlil:~ I 10 NoARk p!I IS NcAllk otl li N""11t U! ,91 NcrCenGs .64 N,,,. Cent llv f.101tlG1' 1.11 No In P~ 1.32 NoNG11 ].60 No NG ofl.4 No NG pl6.ocl NoSl~Pw 1 10 NS Pw o'•.Sli NS Pw 011.ll NS Pw oll.10 NS pw pfJ.l>D Noth!l1t .~50 Norfl'•OP j Nortl>P DI .•J Nwtt Alt1 .•J Nwtl!llllC l,c;J NC"""! lrcl Nwflfld DIAJ ~:!Ir;? ~lo N.,.1s1vf'i:~ NOl"IM I.JO Nott $Imo<' Norf S 1111.j,O NV" CO U!tt-o~~T ... -T-~ H!1 i!!: f~~ + :! »'llvi i•h "' ... 1u Rt? ~i. '; ='\lo ~Y.nq ... n ,:~ 1·1,~ ,~ ... h 11 •h• • •1~ -" Jil&}l pri«d gln1or aloclu posted sharp gains ?J~ 1!!~ 1,ni'~ 1Hj 0 'f ::'l~ today as the stock market racked up a strong ad· t11 tt\oo ... 1-. ~• 2s1, 5 -'• vance. l~ 11~: '~; 'll? -i ~ 1'rading was moderately active and analysts m 1t'" '31l\~ I~ .. i.. said there was Increased parUclpatlon by lnsUtU· ~~ "1'1 • " -'· tions . 'll Jk H~ 1·· i'~ The Dow Jont1 average of 30 lndll!lrllls clog. iS 1~ 1; 1 "" -u ed up 6.25 to 926.M. ,. m? 11 , 11 = \? Advances outpaced declines 873 to 564 among t:lt tl~ f~ tUt ! ~ the 1,699 lsluea traded on the New York Stock Ex· J .i!\~ rri; .lt.~ .::·~ change. On the American Stock Exchange, losers * n--! n: s·~ edged out gatnera 466 to 450 among 1.1~7 issues ,. 11.; ~ ~. -~ traded. • ~· I ~" -. Analy11! uld a good deal of new money was 1lt -101' = i., I I I •L ".l lln f u . I t k' ,, Hil _ i~ pour ng n rom .... e 11ue ea o owmg as wee s ~ ::! ~ ~ :-; ~ atrong showing. They noted, too, that there waa a j~ if} ~t~ f1~ +I , spreading Confidence among investors that PreSi· 1~ ~f.: !J~ J~1• :!: ~: dent Nixon will get the economy moving again. 10; ~~\? ?lr: r~ :t'l~ even though the recovery hu been 1lugglah up to 3l 14"-Stl• Sth -'t nO\V. S• 4 \'i' •'Iii •?lo -~. •is ,,.., 11\.!o tl•• +1 Philip Clark, a general partner of Burnham & 11 ''" ll 111~ ... ,, 11 13"• 121• 111. -'' Co. and chairman of its investment committee, said 131 111, l~ 11 .. '• s 1• it>• 11w. -11 the market for technical reasons is close to a ceillno Ut f•o i... 91, -._. ~ n• l'l ,,, , _,,, on the gbort·term hasi!. But he was optimistic with Jll l \ Jtl<i :U'-1 t lo u "" .s·~ " + "' regards to the long term. ., 21-.., ,,1~ 2111t -"''••llill••••••poi•••••••••••••••••I 62 ll'.• JO\la 31\• *I ., MOfldlY, Aprll 12, lffi IC Olll V '1L0f %1_ Complete Cli>sing Prices -American Stocli Exchange List • • Valley Banker Takes New Post Dean R. Sch11rnbeck bu been promoted lo 1J1i1tant vtct president In tbt com· merclal loan deparlmtnt of Union Bank's S.n D I e Io Regional Head Office. Schlernbeck h&s bttn ... aoclated with the bank 11nct 1te6. Prior to thlt be WU • credit manaa:1r tor a flDanct corpor1tion. Schlembeck 1tt1 n d ed Oranae Coast Collect. He ruldea with hlJ wife and two tOlll In Fountain Valle7. Viejo Man Gets Honors Mistlon Viejo bualne.uman Jan J , Blanchard hl.1 been clltd 11 one of tbe top life insurance salesmen ol. 1'10 for Occidental IJ!e of c.Jl/onita. llll ..... performanai pall him •mot!( lhe top lllO qenta of the oompany'• 3,- rleld lot« In Ibo United Stalal Ind Canada. Blanchard ii Ocddr:nlal'J eenerll qent 111 MlWoo Vie- jo. Ocddtnt1l t.Ue 11 Die na- Hon's ninth leldln( ll!e 111- rurance c:ompauy In tmna of It• mm 1111111 124 blllJon of life ll\l\lf111« In ''""· ff It 1 1Ub1ldl1ry of Tranu.me:rka COrpor1Uon • • • • 14 DAil Y PILOT Mondoy, Aprll 12, 1971 -ANIMAlogic "....,. • • Pricea E£rective April 12 and April J 3 Some Quanlitic• Police Set Big Auction In Newport A. dlamood wedding ring set Limit ea 'frill be among the items up for }i.i·''-;'~:-·, ule at the April 17 Newpurt ~ "'· .. , Beach police auction. •-· 1be let includes two rings, !. made of silver-colored metal, which contain one quarter carat diamond and siJ: smaller diamond! of about hl points each, all are brilliant cut 'lbe ring will be auctioned llong wilh 48 bycycles, 21 watches and a variety of other ttema not claimed from the department. A complete list of items ii available in the department's records section. The auction will begin at 10 a.m. in the city yard at 592 Superior Ave. No guarantee ls made to the physical condiUon of the items and payments must be made in cash. All purchase.s mw;t be removed from the city yard at the coocluaion ot the auction. Three Win Coflege Expenses Three HunUngton studentl have been awarded Ford FoundaUon u p p e cilvUlon scholarships for the 1971-72 school year. Recipients of the awards are Augusting Reyes, 19, Christine Herrwa, 3:1, and Irene Garcia, Ill of Goldeo w .. 1 College. All three are considering transfer to Cal-State Long Beach to use lbelr icholanhips. The awards were made under the Ford FondaUon's under the Ford Foundation's program. They cover a portion of student expenses at any college or university in the United States. Aloha Week Proposed In Newport Newport Beach will be transformed into a veritable Hawaiian festival next month if the Newport H a r b o r Chamber of C.ornrnerce gets tu way. Plans are under way for an .. Aloha Week" promotion of the city a.nd Its merchants that hopefully will catch on throughout the community. A meeting of businessmen, civic leaders and o t h e r s wishing to become involved was to take place today at the Newpor1.er Inn on Jamboree Road. Chamber manager J a c k Barnett, whlle admitting the main objective of the promotion is "lo increase store traffic:• said the week will also feature ··conlests and oolorful banners and ~auty queens and prize trips l-0 Hav,.aii." Barnett said a similar pr o m oti o n receive d en thus \ R s tic citvwide acei!planct last year in ·stinta Barbar~ Barnett said the cha1nber's board of directors selected May 24-30 for the special event. ~ Wide Base Duplex Firm Acquires Dorex, Inc. Growth Sciences, I n c . (OTC ), Stnta Ana. today sign. ed an Agreement in Principle to acquire Dor6, Inc., Garden Grove. for an undisclosed number of shares of stock. aa:onllni to Donald F . Sheahan, director •nd ex- ecutive vice president or Growth Sci<nces. CAMPER TIRES AIXOl"dl'na to Shtahan, the completion of the acquisition wUI be tubject to provisions belna: met by both parties and certain regulatory approvals. 6-Ply Rati ng 8.00.16.5 3988 1'1•3.JO F.t..T. • Rngi<ed nylon cord construction •Made with long.wearing Dynatuff tread rubber. No-Trade-in required -Sears llm'IA •MC tA .......0, •21-4tlt C:AMIMA PM.IC ~t <GMPrON Hf._,,.,, M' S47•t HusJ..)', Reliabl e, Strong IDGHWAYHAULER 6.Ply fi.70115 2393 l'lu 2A2 • F.&.T. • 6-ply nylon cord construction for etrcngth and long mileage •Wrap around tread enabl .. better cornering and more !5tabiljty NO TRADE.IN REQUIRED SIZE Shop Monday Thru Saturday 9:30 A.M. thru 9:30 P.M. ; Sears Tire and Auto Center Regular $33.95 2 Fiberglass Belts Plus 4 Polyester Plies 6.50xl3/C78-IS Tobele" Blackwall Phu L92 F.E.T, And Old Tue Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Kr•..i-.... Rc1•I .. S•le Tr ....... I• Trod .. I• F.E.T. SIZE 1'r.de-ia Tro .. ...._ F.E.T. l'ri<• l'ric., r n. .. Pric• 'J'nbelea Blacli:wal.I T11heleM WhitewalJ 6.Slhl3/C7S..J3 33.95 ""6 1.9:? 7.35xl 7hl4 40.95 "'-" :.21 7.7Sil4/}'78-l4. 38.95 29..!!I ,.,. 7.75xl4/F78 tl4 4~.9:> 3%.21 ,_ .. 8Zs.14/G18-J4 4L9i 31.46 z.s.; 8.25xl4 G78J1:14 4J.95 34A6 ~55 LiSslS/B78dS ..... 34.'6 ,,,. 8.r>5xl4 !178x14 48.9:> 3"71 2.74 8.25xl5/G78xJ5 46.95 35.21 :.64 8.5jxl5{U 78:cJ5 49.95 37.46 2 00 ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee Guanull«J Aa:aiu.t1 All rirc &i!urcs from C.uar>111te~d A1tain1t: Tread wca.r.()ut. normal n~ buard.t ot defects in material or For I low Lon11 ! The number of monlh! speci· ·workmaruhip. f1cJ. For Uow Loni: For the life of the origill.11 ~hat S•:;or! \\'ill Uo: Ju exch~ge for 1he tire, tread. rcpl.u:e ii. char~ng the current selling price plus What Sean Will Doi In esch~ngc for the We, feder~I Excise Tu le» the follo,.,,ing allowance: ttp!aa jr, tbargillJ; only for rhe proportion of JU011tht Guarantced Allow•nee cum::nt sellins pria phu Federal Excise Ta 18 to 24 10% that rrpreienU ac-1 use. Repair 02.ll pu.nc· 27 to 39 20% tnres•oochu.i:e. 40 2~% TUBELESS WHl'.l'.EWALLS SIZE 1'RAIJE-IN PRICE 175-13 $36 11)5-14 S44 211:;.14 $49 215-14 $54 l tf;.15 $47 !!1 5-17i S5H 225-IS $64.50 2 Steel Beh11 wilh Smooth Ridin1: Rayon Cords Pl11A 1.9.l.f.E.T, And Olrl Tire •Tread reinforced with. 2 Mre l hell!, 'firtu1JJ1 elimin111ing all typca ot road ha7.11rrls • R a~on corJ pliea pr~ \·i1le &moolh aecu re ri<lc e Trt-ad lif etiw.-. 11 lu• 40.000 mile tread ...-c.,.. RIVERSIDE INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY 60 miles e1st of Los An11:eles Junctions of Highwayi 60 ind 395 DISCOU!'llT TICKETS Atoaihble 0..17 n Sn.,.. TltV'""' 11 OFP r .. ..,1-Priee •C•flf ToeUt f°'" 1be Jti""" •ide G.--1 !'ri.. IL .Mottlr Ot )4fl' aUH9ALI at l •100t, Cl ...... 11 MOUTWOGO NO •..aM1 ~ llUOI .. ...0111 Ot.YWIC a tcrfO Alf NJ.11 .aMONA H.t. .... ,., .-0 WI 1-4U2 IGUlM <GAIT JUZA .......aaa nioulA-GA•t 4'7-4.tM TOU.AMU M2•1111 a.un ... ANA kl 14Jn Qn<e the detaila ol the IC• qullltlon are complete, Growth Sciences will relocate at the new faclUUu ol Oore1 11t 1lP4 Weit.em Avenue ln ftudm Grove. •r••s,au~BL'l K ANn1..c1. (0\t!Nt. ....... ,, INOUWOOD GI: 1·1121 ...-..... -·-.. ,...,,, . ....,,, ......... ,. ................ , ...... flQflJtCA a. .... . 't'MUT ~ ~--4A1, ,.._,,_. .._,g.,," .... ,, Mon. thr11$at.9:30 A.M.. to 9o30 P.M. •• • S••ta Ana Only, 'lo••• 6 P.M. tu••· thur1. Sat. • I t j l I I \ ' ' Nader Band Rip s O ean Water Curbs WASHINGTON (AP) - A consumer study says the federal government -IS years, l3 billion and seven laws after lmmerslng itself in the flght to clean America's waters -has yet to reduce pollution in any major body of water. Ralph Nader's Task f'orce on Water Pollution issued Sunday a lengthy report on the government and clean water, culminating a study begun in mid,J969. Sinef: the government started working on clean water in 1956, the report said, ''Its effectiveness lo date can be concisely assessed by the virtual absence or any evidence that the seven laws passed and $3 billion spent by the federal government have reductd the level or pollution in any major body of water." Action by the government against industrial polluters, the task for~ said, has been most nol.able for t h e backpedaling involved. "Federal officials routinely trip over each other in their (reni:ied retreat from any dealings with polluters which have even the faint air of confrontaton," the report said. The Federal Water Qua Ii t y Administration suHered some of the task force 's most blistering assault~. Under the Waler Pollution Control Act, one city -St. Joseph, Mo. -out of 3.000 polluters involved in federal enforcement action has been taken to court, the report asserted. "Court action has never been taken against an industrial polluter under the act," the report added. The study showed "around 41'J ,OUO Industrial polluters are routinely violating the 1899 Refuse Act. Yet FWQA has asked the Justice Department to initiate suits against only 14 of the industries as of P.iarch 1971." Research by the water agency, th~ task force said. has produced no real progres! toward solving the problems of water pollution. Further, some jobs have bee11 filled on the basis of politics by the Nixon administration, the report said, citing the appointment in 1969 of David Dominici: to be the agency's administrator. Firemen Douse Apartment Fire Laguna Beach firemen battled heavy holiday traffic on North Coast Highway Friday afternoon to reach an apartment blaze at 176 McKnight Drive. Three engines made their way to the scetie in time to douse the fire that apparently started in a living room sofa. Damage was confined to the sofa, an end table, lamp and portion of a carpet. However, firemen reported, heavy black smoke from loam rubber in the sofa filled the second floor apartment, leaving a difficult cleaning problem. Tenants Mr. and Mrs. Fred Soden were ev.·ay when the blaze broke out. Firemen, summoned by neighbors. entered by jimmying a sliding glass door. Citrus Chartn Kathleen Shapard, 17, daught- er or Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Shapard of South Laguna, will join 50 other girls in beauty pageant which kicks off 11-day run of National Orange Show in San Bernardino. Advisory Plan For Builders Set in Laguna The Laguna Beach city building department has announced a new advisory service for architects, builders and developers designed to help interpret city regulations pertaining to their projects. The ';pre·submitlal conference program" will permit developers and others to review their preliminary plans wilh qualified city officials in order to save Lime attempting to make plans conform to local laws at a later stage in the project. The conferences will be held at City Hall on the first and third Wednesday of each month, according to Building Direclor Clyde Z. Springe. The advisory panel will include representatives from the city planning department, department of public works, building and safety departmenl and, as necessary. the heallh, police and fire departments. Representatives of the water district and utilltiea firm! also will be asked to participate from time to time. The panel will review proposals for commercial, industrial and residential complexes, land subdivisions, individual site development proposals and planned development proposals. A summary of conclusions and recommendations will be made in wr i!Lng and delivered to the applicant. No fee will be charged for the service. Applicants are invited lo submit, on the Friday preceding the W e d n e s d a y conference date, a written descriplion of the project together with a preliminary site plan. The director of building and safety will advise the hour when the project will come before the CQnference. Further information may be obtained from the Laguna building departmenL Fast Mail Deliveries Promised WASHINGTON (UPI) -Postma3~r General Winton M. Blount said today the new postal system will provide next-day delivery of Zip-coded airmall to princlp1l cities with a 600 milt radius and second· day delivery of 95 percent of airmail between most major U.S. cities. "This is the first time the postal service has ever stuck its neck out like this," Blount told reporters. "lt's a very important first step on the road to improving service to the American people." He al'° said the new poslal service has decided to 'keep the separate air mail concept. The Johnson Administration in 1968 proposed eliminating air mail and charging 10 cents for first class mail which normally would be delivered by air in most instances. Air mail deposited by 4 p,~J.. weekday! in some 3,500 air mail-0n\y ooies in 500 selected cities will be delivered the next day within a 600-mile radius and v;ithin two days after deposit "in virtually all principal cilies in the contine ntal United Stales," Illount promised. He pledged similar delivery standards soon v.'ould be announced for first class mail. Air mail stamps will increase from IO cents to I I cents and the first class slamp will be raised from si:i to eight cents, beginning May I6. Blount said there is "about a 25 percent advantage today in air mail over first class. I think this will widen that difference." Blount said the new program would take effect April 22. He predicted a 95 percent successful performance rate by July for the 2.25 billion pieces of airmaU moved annually within lhe nation. This would compare with only 24 percent of air mail which today achieves a one-day delivery standard and 70 percent which arrives the second day. Voters Advised To Note Address On Sample Ballot Laguna Beach School superintendent Dr. William Ullom today advised voters to be sure to note the polling place address included with their sample ballot for the April 20 school board election. "For the first time this year, the election is being run by the county, not by the district," Ullom Said. "This means we wlll not be able to help people who call in lo ask where they should go te vote, as we have done in previous years. The county ha s reduced the number of polling places to about eight and many people will find they have lo vote at an unfamiliar address. 'Ve will not have complete information at lhe district office " Vol~rs v.·ho art: not sure where they must vote can find out by calling the Orange County Reg istrar of Voters at 834-2260 and living their home address, but. Ullom points out, lhis it a toll call, so it would be better to hold onto the information mailed v.·ith the sample ball ot. Laguna Art Show Crowds flocked to Forest Avenue in the Laguna Beach business district on Easter Sunday to browse through the work of local artists and craftsmen. The work ranged from displays of pots and prints to glass sculpture. A portion o{ Forest Avenue, be- tween Glenneyre and South Coast Highway, wu closed off for the holiday show to create a mall for exhibitors. Senator Launches Drive To Clarify IRS Forms WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Charles Mathias proposed today a lf>.member commission to simplify Internal Revenue Service ta:i forms for Americans haggard and worn from the annual struggle with 1040. In a spee<:h prepared for the Senate, li.1athias said purpose of the "advisory commission on federal tax reforms'' would be to make "common, everyday American English" the official language of the IRS. The Maryland Republican Introduced legislation requiring IRS to submit to the commission any individual or joint tu: forms issued after Jan. 1, 1972. "This month, millions of Americans are emerging, haggard and worn, from the labyrinth of Form 104, Schedule T, llne 15 b, Schedule R and related forms, schedules, declarations and instructions," he said. "Although the Internal Revenue Servi ce -contrary to popular belief - does not deliberately make its forms obscure and ili; instructions bafOing , I believe that substantial improvements are badly needed." His bill v.·ould limit the commission to a maximum of two attorneys or acrountants and bar federal employes_ It would represent all tax brackets, age groups, job categories, and regions of the country. Jn !lhorl, he said, tax forms would be submitted to "a panel of average taxpayers before the materials are printed by the millions and released to the general public." Mathia! said 1969 la"''' spreading changes in tax regulations over .several years "make lt esptcially important that all income tax forms and materials used by the general public be as clear, as concise, and as e-0mprehensible as possible." Crowd of 15,000 Lolls in Sand At Laguna Beach On the final weekend of the Easter vacation. suMy skies lured crowds of 15.000 to Laguna's beaches both Saturday and Sunday. but chilly, 57-degree water kept most of the beach huffs safely on the sand. Lifeguards reported JO re .s cues Saturday and 15 on Sunday, and a tot.al of 70 first aids for the weekend, almost all t1f. a minor nature. Air temperature wa.oi 75 on Saturday but reached only 70 on Sunday. Harking back to previous rainy Easter holidays, guards cla.oisified the 1UI1ny 1971 Easter "·eek weather a.oi "the nice.st we've bad Jn 10 years," despite cool water. Young Democrats Posting Gains In Registration In solidly Republican Orange Orunty only 30 percent of the under·21 voter1 registered recently have 1 11 g n e d themselves with the GOP. Since lS.year~lds became eligible to vote in federal elections 925 young people hiive regi.!Jtued In the county, whet$ Republicans lead Democrats in the rolll, 54 percent to 41. Fifty percent registered as Democrats. 30 percent as Republicans. FUteen percent listed therru.elve!: as declining to. st.ate, or independent. The rest chose minor parties. Of the county's 507 ,MO registranta only four iicrcent chose no party. David Hitchcock, regi!trar of voten, said the under·21 regiatrations tD date are but a trickle of the 30,000 to 50,000 be expects to register by the 1972 elections. He said the new signupa are Tllllninl about 10 percent of the total regiltration. Laguna Niguel Probes Future Developments Future developments In Laguna Ni1Uel will be discussed at the Tuesday meeUng of the Laguna Niguel Community Association. The community's recreational and resident.isl revisions will be described by offlcia.l.s from Avco Commun l t y Developers at the 7:30 p.m. meeting ia Crown Valley School cafetorlum. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! • $1.39 SIZE • • • • • • • • • • • Here'a proof , . , )'OU do get bn1nds you know at !t2per--!pecia1 adl'ertiatd prices when you shop El Rancho! Right Guard .•. you know the quality ••• the eize Is the familiar 7 ounce aero&0l can, reiUlarly $1.39 ••• but !or these thrtt daya only, •• you aave a v.•hopping 30c per can at El Rancho r Beef Liver .... ~~~' .... 69~ Rich in nutrient.a ••• and flavorful because it'& from young beef I Bacon .. ~~. ~ .~~c~~ ... 5 9~ El Rancho'• ov.•n •.• aliced a JittJe thicker ••. lean and delicioui'i ! McCoy's Beef Linkies .................................. 29' A dif!erent kind of sausage treat, , , great beef flavor! 8 oz. Buddig's Sliced Meats ................................. 39¢ Your choice of \YA.fer thin v11.rieties! ••. 3 oz., •• at our delicAtesaen. Cantaloupes ..... 3 : $1. Sweet, ripe, juicy •• &erve r.lice1 in the morning •. halves for des!ertl I Prirr1 in rffect Mott.., Tt1rtt., lVrd., Avri'l Jt, 13, 14. No 1alt1 to dea.kr1. Tomato Juice.~'~!~~.43' Libby'•, •• carton of .six 5 ounce cansl ••• Buditet booster! Dog Food .. ~-.~~~ .. 8 : $1. Flavor varieties to plea.Mi your pet • , , No. 1 tall cana. Hidden Valley Salad Dressing Mix ............ 59• Nothing elae Uke it ..• ea.sy to prepare ••• e.a.sy to appreciate! King Vitamin Cereal .................................... 49• Cereal that's enriched in food valutal , •• 9 ounce package. · ARCADIA: sunset and Huntington ur ll/i';/; PASADENA : r//1/; SOUTH PASADENA : /!IS/: HUNTINGTON BEACH : /1/i'1'/. NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Newport 01.11 ""' ([/Rancho Center) .•:. 320 West Colorado Blvll .. ,., r1emont and Huntington D~ . ·: WJtner and Alp,onqu1n 180;1r~wdl~ Center •.• 75~~ fa stblull 01 ([a,tblulf Vrllage Center ! • ... -........ MOllCl&1, Aprll 12, 1971 Ul"I Tt......,.. DETERMINED SOLDIER E. P1kl1t1nl Rtbol Peking Promises It Will Support Pakistan Cause NEW DELHI, India CAP) -Premier Chou En-lai of Red China has assured Pakl.!tan that the Ollne~ government and people will support the Pakistani• 1galnst any attack by India, Radio Pakistan reported today. The broadcast followed India's denial )f Pakistan's clllim that two compal'!ies Gf Indian force• had crossed into Pakistan on Saturday. Pakistan said the Indian troops were wiped out. Pakislan's central government is fighting a rebellion in East Pakistan. Radio Pakistan said Chou"s me,!Sage was sent to President Aglia Mohammed Yahy& Khah.. · . . "Should the Indian expansionists dare · to launch aggression against Pakistan, lhe Chinese government and people will ,ts. always support the P a k i 1 ta n government and people In their just Jtrugle to safeguard the state's integrity .and national independeta," the radio quoted Chou as telling Yahya. For the third time ln the last six days, 1n official Chinese statement -this time Issued on Chou's behalf -said that the tivil war In East Pakistan is purely an Internal affair of Pakistan which can imly be 11etUed by the Pakislani people themselves without any o u t a i d e lnt.erferenct whatsoever. Fears Mount Of Pakistan, India Oash ... NEW Dl!:Ull (UPI) -Indian and West Pakistan troops atood wtthln nine miles of each other along the East Pakistan border today, inctt:aalng rears of a eonCrontaUon between the two nation!. Official Pakistan radio said Sunday Pakistani troops had "wiped out" two companies of Indian border security forces in the Benapole area two mllea inside East Pakistan Saturday. India denied the claim and . accused PW.tan of kldoaplng three of Ill boro.r stCUrity guards who had been on a routine patrol in the Petrapole region on the Indian side of the border. The Indian government demanded the release of tht men. Pakistani troops drove to within eight mils of lodia's border Saturday when they: captured Navaran from the East Pakistani rebels. In reaction, truckloads of lndian troops moved to within a half mile of the border accompanied by jeep.mounted recollleos rtOes. Fears the civil war in East Pakistan might lead to fighting between India and Pakistan have swept New Delhi for several days. India has voiced support of the East Pakistani rebels but hu denied Paki!lan-"s charges it is smuggling arms to them. across the border. Pakistani lroops appeared. to be engaged in a major offensive to retake major towns and close the border areas before monsoon rains make the roads impassable toward the end of April. News reports aa1d the Pakistan army captured lhe airfield near the tea plantation town of Sylhet In the northeast sector after heavy fighting. The air force was reported to have bombed Dloajpu.r and Rajshahi Sunday. The Press Trust of India said reliable estiniates ·reaching official sources in New Delhi indicated more than 3,000 Pakistani troopi: have been killed since fighting broke out March 25 over the que!Uon of autonomy for East Pakistan. Another Indian agency; the United' News of India, said more than one million people, rnosUy civilians, have been killed. It gave no aource for the estimate. Indian news reports said the Pakistanis were conducting a scorched earth program, burning what they cannot hold. Several villages near airfields have been burned, reports said. Thick black smoke was seen Sunday near Sylhet. The rebels said their guerrillas captured the Lalmonirhat r a i I w a y junction in northern Rangpur district Sunday and ambushed and seited a convoy of 130 vehicles traveling between the eastern city of Comllla and Chandpur, 40 miles to the west. "'"''" I i ·,..; the FBI, 1ir! They've been bugging all morning!' 500 Insurgents In Ceylon Slain By Air Sweeps COLOMBO, Ceylon (UPI) -Combined mUit.ary and police security forcea using planes and he~opters 1Upplied by India bave killed about ~urgeots trying lo seize control of the country, a government spokesman reponed today. The insurgents., mostly unemployed leftist youths, call themselves Che Guevarista after the late C u b a n revolutionary. They struck against the government of Prime Minlsltr Sirimavo Bandaranaike last week wjth 1 series or attacks on police stations a n d government offices. A government spokesman reported earlier tbe situatk>n was perilous and India agreed to send planes and helicopters to try to put down the rebellion. The government bas imposed a curfew from 4 p.m. to 6 a.m. and troops were ordertd to shoot curfew violators on Bight. Doiens of new clashes and incidents were reported today. At the southern town of Akuressa, the spokeeman said, army forces killed 25 insurgents in a firefight. Another five terrorists were reported killed at Dodanduwa, another southern town, when police fired on terrorists attempting to block the main road. In the eastern town of Amparai, police found an arms and ammunition cache in an abandoned Buddhist temple and in Ceylon's second biggest city of Kandy several youths were repOrted kidnaped by terrorists. 1be spokesman also reported a number of h>od-looting incidents. 1be government did not ·di!Close casualty flgurea for Its forces bot Mn. BandaranW and Governor General William Gopallawa visited injured troops in a Colombo bospttaJ. · Six districts of Ceylon were reported hard hit by terrorists and the government appointed military governors there. TODAY DOORS OPEN AT 9: 3 D FOR THE START OF OUR SPRING APPAREL CLEARANCE 1 J OFF AND MORE ON FRESH, CURRENT FASHIONS FINE APPAREL dresses, coat~ suits and tostumes includlna: J. Magnin-exclusives SPORTS SEPARATES AND APPAREL dresses, travel shifts and pantsets in lightwei2ht, easy-care fabrics. coats, a\1- weather coats, suits, pantsuits, knits, blou ses and shirts, sweaters, dauic separates and coordinates, and year-round playwear. INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S APPAREL infants' and toddle1s' dresses, playwear, layeUes. Girls' 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 size dresses, long and short peasant dresses, sportswear, separates. Boys' 3 to 7 size shirts, slacks. IMAGERIE, THE YOUNG IDEA SHOP peasant drosses, navy and pastel polyester knits, sportswear, pantsuits, ethnic tear includin& skirts, dresses, blouses. WOMAN'S SHOP dre""' in re1ular and mid -sizes RAN LEIGH APPAREL daylimeand sparelim• dresses and costumes, pantsuits MISS MACHIN AND MISS MACHIN JR. APPAREL lon2 and short occasion dresses, coats, suits, pantdresses. pantcoats, pantsuits, including many with skirts, short coats, all·weather coals, including canvas and denim, sportswear including pants, tops, knickers, sweaters. All the current silhouettes MILLINERY ROBES • HOSTESS GOWNS CULOTTES • SLIPS AND HALF·SLIPS SOll'Y, NO llAIL GI Plmt OlMIS • AU SAW flMAl • "UtS llf $lOCI OJI SW: Alt M.lll!l Hl U.Cll WAil MOO I.ma DID MONDAY STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 9:30 2 FASHION SQUARE• SANTA ANA ' gyptians : Soviet Spacemen eject Plan Ask Cooperation/By Dayan MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet union marked man's Ural decade In space today by seeking more cooperation with Americaa utronauts and saying orbital alaUOM and robot explorers are its chief a:oals in the ,19708. Soviet Cosmonat1t Yuri A. Gargarin IO years ago today made man's first flight in rpace, orbiting earth once in Vostok 1. ''The road to the planets is hope," Ptfoscow Radio said in announcing Gagarin's feal It wu Gagarin's only space fligbl He died in an airplane crull In 11168. In a letter to the Communist party newspaper Pravda today, 19 Soviet cosmonauts said: "We think thal in the interest of peace and friendship betwttn the people or our planet, buslness cooperation between space explorers of different countries, including the Soviet Union and the United States. should develop and g r o w stronger." Writing ln the same ed.1llon of J>ravda / top space aclentlsl Borls N. Petrov Ai~ orbital slaUons: •nd • more sophisUcated generation of r,Obot explorers an the chief Soviet goab ln the second space decade. "The second decade could be caneJ an epoch of orbital stations, plained research work of men in cond.IUonh of space laboratorle!, a decade of wide use of automatic stallom," Ptttov wrote. "Space exploration would go along the way of gradually settin1 up simple -in the beginning -orbital stations • which would be followed by more complicated and bigger orbital stations f o r exploration, scientific and technical experiments." Petrov said, "universal r e s e a r c h laboratorie! and specialized stations, like astrophpysical a n d radio-a~tronomic observatories, will probably appear. They may be either fully automatic or manned from time to lime by a crew." By T~ Associated Preu Egyptian officials rejected todly an Idea by Defense fl.1lnlster Moshe Dayan of Israel, who favors wiU1drawal of Israeli forces along the Suez Canal prov'ided there is a permanent cease-fire and "no Soviet or Egyptian troops will move to the Israeli side of the canal ." The Egyptians said they were standing firm on their demaf1d that Egyptian mililary forces must hold positions on the side of the canal now held by Israel. "Egypt will accept nothing Jess.'' officials in Cairo said. "We have nothing new to add. Our position has been clarified by President Anwar Sadat's restatement of April 3." In this restatement, Sadat demanded the partial withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Sinai Peninsula as a1t initial step to relinquishing all Egyptian territory occupied since 1967. Sadat said Egypt would then reopen the canal lo navigation. Most of U.S. Fair, Dry Thundershowers Soak Part of Midwest; Sonie Snow Callfen1ia Te111pernture~ ar UNIT.ED l'ltl5S INTl'llNAT10NAL lnc'..,,J,.. nl.,.t •I'll onorn!M low c .. •NI fN 11orw 11\e cot•t ,.,...rrecl f\lf'ln'I' Ind ci...-_,,,., todlY Ill :so.mi.<n C1!1h>rnl1. TM•• w11 11111• •-r11ur1 dt11>D1. Tri. Li:tt Al>D•lft 1r11 _, m06ll• 111"""' wltll '°"" urlw 1«11 ~s11t ::1,L::J 11. ... ~111~ :0 'S~~i~ Fi'h ll•hl kt mooHrtlt ..... lrrll1llDl'I f"""' -w11 •redltlfil fer the Los Al>Dtln ti.1111. "n "''"'''" $0),(IOI) "'~ _, fO countv llM<lln unci.r £•1l1r 111MlllM. Lii• 1111rcb rffOl'ltd 10 rncves lft r!11!1dn llffchll ""'re mGltll' llll'lllY lodlY whh lllel\1 nt•r •2 lild tlllP =~r 5'. It \11~1"'1~· ,r.."""~ !~ ~"lf:'.f.."f:,.~~~ ,,..., wttl 1unnv wltll 11=1 irl IOs In ~:fi'~.~11'-"l -Ill tile In lfW low TIW 1xl..,.,H O<rll!fi ltll'W'lh frldl¥ t1lltd tor 1111 w11 r but wl"4¥ •f tknl1. Ml1ht will 1111 " lhe 10t 11onli ftte cotrf. In tr. '°" In ltll lftCIUflt1lrt1. 7J II IJ In Ille 1'1111'! '"'41111 -IJ 1o fS In """ ._, 11'fft- Ce111<1I !emPt/'8turn ,,,,.. ,...,,, 50 Wt 6J, lnW.nd 1efl'l-•tur" r1ft9t ,...,,, :IO lo 14. W1l•r tem111rttu'1 51. Su11, Jlfoo11, Tides . ... t::IO '·"'· S.l ... ):11,.m. 1.6 TU•SDAT Coastal Mosttv •""'"" i'e<LtY, lltM v1rl1bl1 wind• fll.,.I tnd ....ornlt'll /!GI.In ~ comln11 '"'"''"' 10 N II knoll In Finl hlth lO:M1.m. !.? flnt 1-.. . (;)61.,.., -0.1 I«-hi•~ ........... t :5' •. m. J.) 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In 1111 norlll.,...11 oct11!-! r1ln !tll fo<Jly In W111\l11tton ind -lf\OW fell Jn wu11rn MonJtM, 5-Jn. Dlmfl• Top Foam Late1 Matlre11, foam latex core plus layer of polyuntha.ne foa.m qullt· ed. to top. . Ianenprtn1 Mattre11 ha15'4 coils in full 1il~ 3M calla lD twin siie. flt.ts Makblns Foundation........... 58.81 SUt.95 Queen Sitt kt SIS9 '3.'9.N Kl"' Sile Sel ••••• JZot AltAboal S.an Ctll'mllenl Credll Pl1n1. FREE Delivery, Of Course! Al1N<111erq111 .-,1W.M1 An<,,..,.191 Bosron 1111111\c c111r10!!1 Clllct9t> Clnc;M,111 Cl1v1l1nd Dall11 Dtnvor Dts Maino• OOTtOll F1Trbtnk1 Hanolulu 1nc111n.,1>11ll~ Jun••u K•n•t• ClfY Lis Vt111 Lovlsv1111 MtrnPhll Miami M ;lw1uktt MlllMIPOlh New Orlt1m New l'ork Oliltl'IOml C11y ...... Pttm Sorlno1 P~!l1!1elpl\1e P~!• l'l1t11>u•~~ l'orlltnd .. M Rkllrnend S1cr1me<110 SI. LOU!• S1\I Like Clfv Sall Fr1ncl1c1 Sell lie $DdrtM Wolhlnt!Oll Wlnnk>H -I Sears I ~Y-.C • loOIO '"'"''" '"' .... 0 .... ... • ... ,~ -<• , ....... .,. .. IA .... A AMA tov1'll COAlf l'\AIA .... ~-Ot..<a•><••o. INp NJaltt MM. •• ,.. tet. ft.al A.II. .. taJI P.& Hl1h UW l'nic. " ~ " ~ 11 ~1 ... H l1 . " 7j ,, II 6? T 11 ,, in H 11 ,. . " 17 ,, ll ,, ~ " " .. II SI U JI " " " .. 71 ,, " n n 61 16 q ., u " . " 6) j ) " .. " . ,, ,. ... •I J7 61 l1 !' ).j 10 " " " . 19 u " " " " ti Sl d 3' .6' 11 11 .II .. ~ JS 11 .. ' Winter's Gone Emergency snow route signs are now ignored as winter in Oma.ha. bas passed and summer is rapid- ly approaching. This young sun-worshiper ev:empli· fie1 the fresh .!!pring weather as she walks along 1 street barefoot with her shoes dangling on a stick. Temperatures neared the 80 degree mark. Youths in Commune Stripped; One Slain DETROIT (UPI' -Poli~ are seeking four gunmen who invaded an inner c i t y commul!e, ordered 19 young people to strip naked while Fugitives Surrender In Hawaii they v.·ere robbed and fatally shot one or the youths when he moved to quiet a dog. The bullet which fat.Illy wounded Franklin Abramsen, 23. of Ptfesick. also innicted minor wounds on L y n n Hachey. 19, SL Clair Shores and Thomas Beaman, 20, Detroit. 7 Killed, 26 Hurt In Crash MondlJ, Atirll 12, 1971 OA!l y l'JLOf I 6% Increase In May Domestic Air Rate Boost Approv·ed by CAB WASHINGTON lAPl -The decided mt~. percent level. !are will be cul back from $26 "A policy Oil': buln& fares all Civil Aeronautics Board gave The immediate increase of Where prevlowi mcrtasts to S24. actual k>td flciorl can only the scheduled a i r l I n e s si.1 percent cannot be .added on m:ceed six percent but are lesa The board also propoeed for lead to lncreuifl& o v ~ r permission today to raise top of recent I~ I e ct l v e than nibe eercent. the airlines the flnt time to utablilh load capacity, with the tra"'ttnc DETROIT (UPI) -Seven domesticfaresasmuchuslt increase.a granted by the may retatn such fares in ataodardi and 1e1tJn1 public being aaked to Pl1 persons were killed and 26 percent early next month. board to various airlines in effect. standardl ln lbe calculation of hlabu f1te1 to compenHte injured when a mo loris t The board also proposed congested markets. The CAB decision thus fares, the carriers let" the toet of. driving "at a speed in excess that within 50 days, if no The airlines will be per. permit.II a $2.00 increase In the The board uld the nine operatins an l n c r •a a In I of 100 miles an hour'' Jost exceptions are filed, the mitted lncreaseg only to the co1ch fare between Atlanta percent fare Increase la based number of empty 1eata," t1'le control o! hiJ car Sunday and airlines be permitted coach e1tent that prior increases do and Memphia. from m to $34. on 1 finding that the average board aaid. Jt leaped over the guard rail fare lncreases up lo nine not reach slx percent. the including tax: a S5 lncrea.e load ia 52.5 percent o t j"l'bls result la virtually on a Detroit Expressway. percent. board 11aid. between Detroit and Miami, lo capacity. inevitable becauae scheduWI The five-car chain-reaction The CAB ruling came at the Where certain re e en t SU; and a $1 increase between The CAB noted that Uilil con at t tu le tbe major aillision tied up tr1ffic 45 ~d of the first stage of a Increases exce~ nine percent tndlanapolis and Washington, load factor dropped in actual compeLIUve device ol earr~I mlnutes on westbound and massive fare investigation . over the tares that were in to 56. operationa from 57.2 percent ln th&1r eU<rta to prttuVe and eastbound lanes of interstate Remaining stages having to do effect last Oct. 15. the fares On the Boston-New York in 1961 to SO perctnt in 1gg9 enhance their participation Ui Sot. with discount fares • n d must be rolled back not later route, where increases were and 48 percent for the year the trafiic marketa: wbich they Four of lhe victims were. _g~'::"::":;'::.1.:.f•:;:r.::•..:llnl:::.:::''"'::::'::...::":::lll:..::be::.....:lh::•::n:....;Ma:::::y!:.._~ll:....;lo::._.;:th:;:•:....;mne:::·:::..~i::ra::nted=~':::":::'::"'::,IYc:·__:th::•__:c<>a:::c::h__.:•::•::di::'ng:!..:la::•::.l.:Se:::!p~le:::m:::::be:::•..:30::..... --.:'::'"":.:::.·"-------from the same family . ':" Police identified the victims as John Gidderu;, 20, Escorse, Mich., William Westphal, 211. Oearborn, Mich.. Jack L. Derderian, 40, Wayne, Mich .. hia wife Margaret. 4 (I : Den:lerian's father and mother, Hagop A I be r t Derderian, 79, and Dorothy Derderian. 70 and Helen Hawkins. 25, no address. Lt. William Wolfington of the Detroit Accident Prevention Center said three or the 26 injured were in critical condition at Detroit General HO$pital. Music Fans Go Berserk MINNE . .\POLIS, Mi n n . <UPI) -Young people did an estimal~ $50,000 damage to two nightclubs early Sunday after learning that th e drummer.singer they h a d aime lo hear was being imperlK>llated. About 1,000 persons paid $.) apiece to get into the New Cafe Extraordinaire to hear Buddy Mites. When they found out about the impersone:tion. some of the members or the audience broke the · club's stained gla.u windows and some tables, damaged some of the band's equipment. emptied a Ii re extinguisher, broke cash rtgisters and a cigarette machine and a plate glass window and th~ pushed out into lhe street. NOWI LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. HONOLULU (UPI) -Five of 1ix desperadoes who broke out or a aiunty jail and threatened to kill 1 n y policeman In sight surrendered meekly and were back behind bars today. The mother of one -triple murder 11uspecl William K. llti!dt:iros -said she hoped the public wouldn 't condemn him becall!e "everybody's a litt!e n1ughty 1l times." The youth! said f o u r intruders. anned with a rifle, shotguri, revolver and what appeared to be a subll\!.11:chinegun, invaded the ~north side home about 1 a.m. Sunday de m and In g money and drugs. The residents were ordered Into a downstairs living room where a baby slept in a crib, ordered to d1sro~ and forced IG sit in a circle u1der the guard or·l----------- Police armed with sawed-off shotguns and Ml6 rlnes closed In on 1 rented hOU!e in the awank auburb of Kabala Sund1y and seized Medeiros. Daniel Cuevas and Edward L. SJlva, also accu~d killers. Three women abo were 1rreated at the home. two of the runmen while the other two ransacked the house. Alan King. 20. one ot the residents. said the shooting occurred when A b r 11 m s o n reached nver to quiet his German shepherd. "The guy with the nne kicked Frank in the shin and said. 'We don't wany My heroes.' " Beaman 11 a Id . "Frank rolled back a.nd then leaned forward te"t set hl11 balance and the guy rirt:d." (PIK Ot .. == ..----------, Los Angeles (Orange County, Pa los -----~ Loog Beach to Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, etc.), • •=.,__. .._ S."'-" S.n Francisco 115 Long Beach la like having your own prtvate ........ Mil •y lneludlng tax. fl h the f Leave Long Beach: airport. You don't have to g t '8&-- Now you can ny PSA from Long Beach 7:40 am way traffic to LA. lntematlonal. There'• Airport to S&n Francisco. Four times a day. 10:•5 am easy parking. And the crowda haven't Mora on weekends. More flights than 1:30 pm found ft yet. Next time you head north any other e!r1Jne. Connections to Sacra· •:30 pm (or 1outh), head for Long Beech Airport mento. Or, avoid the freeway and fly to Mon thru Thurs & Sat. by way of your travel agent and PSA San Diego. If you live any place south of More flights Fri & Sun. PSA llVllS JOU a lft. Good news, tax victims. The tax loans are ready at Souther.11 Califoniia First National Bank. All you have to do is stop by yo11r nearest SCFNB office and fill out a simple little form. (After the 1040, this one should be a snap.} Your loan can be ready in a matter of hours. Get a tax loan at Southern California First National Bank. I Cost• M111, 230 East 17th Stree~ 642·1660 • Huntington S..ch, 8899 Adams Avenue. 962·3377 • 17122 Beach Blvd .. 847·9Ml • , I • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Battin Chairman Robert Battin or the Oranae County Board of S~pe.rvisors transferred hl..s stage performance from Santa Ana to Los Angeles last week. This time it was an appearance berore the Cali· fornia Supreme CoQrt. The c~. was a ju~~ictional dis- pute between the Public UtiliUes Commiss1~n ~d the Orange County Air Pollution Co~trol. District over an application by the Southern Cahforrua Edison Co. to trtP.le capacity of its Huntington Beach steam-powered generating plant. Battin was on hand to represent county govern· toent. As a lawyer, he certainly could be expected to speak to the issue before the court. Instead, he lectured Lhe court on the1environment. And the court, in effect, prompUy gave Battin the heave-ho. Fine representation. indeed, for Orange County. And for its legal profession. VD·· a Growing Threat Veneral disease (VD)-syphilis and gonorrhea-ha~ grown from epidemic to pandemic proportions. . . California ranking third in national VD statistics, bad more tha~ 115,000 reported cases last year. And it's anyone's guess how many went unreported-and un· treated. All segments of society are affected. The knowledge needed to prevent VD, and to seek treatment once it i! contracted, is just as lacking in Beverly Hills or New· port Beach as it is in Watts or Compton. . . A group of medical, pharmaceutical and public health officer associations has mounted a volunteer cam· paign to bring VD awareness to a peak this month. U~~g a Wide variety of public media, VD control authorities will stress these important points: -\'D is a serious threat to human life and health. -It can be silent. going undetected for years, e.s· at the Bar pecially in women. (In many cases, detection is possible only through laboratory cultur ... ) -It is treatable. Cures are available that are 100 percent effective. . . . -It .is preventable if the right pr~aulions are taken. · The last point is considered extremely vital, for VD can never be controUed unless preventive m~asures and widespread public education are undertaken •. Treatment a1one is not enough. Until recent years, any mention of VD in public was avoided as in bad taste. The nation has outgrown that silliness, but VD education h.as not kept pace with population growth. The Calitomia campaign comes none too soon and certainly deservts public support. McGovern's Rhetoric Sen. John McGovern {O.South Dakota), the only of· ricially announced candidate for the presidency in 1972, already is the front runner for the Ridiculous Rhetoric nomination. Commenting on U.S. bombings in Indochina, P.1e+ Govern declared: ''It i.s the most barbaric act that has been committed by any modern power since the death or Adolph Hitler." This shining example of the intellectual depth and emotional stability of McGovern's thinking makes it a~ parent his best bet is to stay safeJy in the Senate. There his flights of fancy can pass literally unnoticed among the daily output ol some of his equally loose-tongued . colleagues of both extremes. McGovern's constituents back in South Dakota are not the type to pay much mind to the erratic utterings of a senator. After all, they zurvived the great grass- hopper plague or the 1930s. Most Boards Need the Boat Rocked Dear Gloomy Gus: ·Parents and Teachers Struggling for Status I was havinl lunch with a (rlend, wbo beads a Jarge company, aod he lold .,. that bo had jult turned down an ·rnvitaticn to )oin the" board of direc- ton of another large company in a diffe~nt field. "I told lhein ' I didn 't ha Y.e ·any time," be.said, "al· though utilally w- ving on i board doesn't take much - time.. ln fact, l didn't have tht i11cli· nation-I'm already a useless decoration on too many Boards." My friend. a quite unusual man, then went on to develop his new philosophy ef "boarddom." It makes a great deal o( sense, and I think it will become generally adopted in the near future . "MOSf BOARDS of directors," he ex· plained, "an homogenized, like a bottle of milk. It .is like taking one man and multiplyjng him 12 or IS times. You compound his strengths, but you also compound. bis weaknesses. "Virtually everybody on a board is a succes.11ful busioessman of one kind cc anothe'r, or el.le a lawyer connected with business enterprises. Despite their individual dillerences, they pretty much think the same, and regard the corporate venture from an aim.ost identical angle of vision. After all, p r o I i t is profit everywhere." "AND 'l1llS ISN'T good?" I asked. giving him a chance to catch his breath and rollect bis tboupt.s. "No, it's a bad Wna," be said. "A True, JFK and RFK are dead (Gus, April 1), but we are still ex· ploring space, peace is in the air, and evtn if the ssr Oew out the window the flame ol life ill not yet exhausted in this nation of dreamers and doens. -K. K. ftb fMl!lil,. '""""" .......... "-""' ~,, .,... '" tM _._, &tflf -"" •v. " Aloitrftl' .... o.I,, Pli.t. corj:.oratlon, 1fke any other social in- stitution, needs to be viewed through different an1~ of refraction.. ln additioo to ~ a r 11 business heads, it needs the skeptical curiosity of a scientist, the ranging imagination of a creative penon, the irrevtrance of youth, and perhaps even the critical astringency of a radical. Otherwise, it's likely to get oul of touch wi1h reality." "UNIVERSITIES ARE beginni11g to do this now -to appoint to their boards the kinds of people wtto never would have been considered a few yean ago, and it's going to rejuvenate the whole educational scent. Why should college boards be made up moiiUy o f businessmen, any more than corporation boards should be made up of mostly educators? It takes a diversity of t.alenUI to oversee a romplex institution and to keep it from getting a hardening of the mental and emotional arteries.'' "WOULD TIDS help In any other way?" I inquired. ''Yes," he nodded. "It would provide ··a stricter guardianihi.p for the company. At present, most boards just ratify whatever management suggeiits, because they all belong to the aame club, and nobody wants to rock the lloat. But a boat sinks if it isn't rocked when it should be -and what most boards need ilre better naviaatora and less ballast." Skeptical Fishermen Al Giddings and Sam Knoles are ·• pair of California fishermen walking around with mercury in lhtir bodies to the extent of ?.8 parts per million in Giddings' tissue and 1.1 parts per mill ion in Knoles'. With all the flap over mercury con. Wninatioo or fish thafs a statement which standing by itself ·would probably ct~ tht average fish-ftter the wfilmwhams. But what dots it mean to Giddings and Knolet'! "'We are beautiful," says Giddings. a \'tteran Marin County game warden, and h1I Jong-lime fishing partner Knoles. 11IE PAIR. both wldel y known aniong Nortbem California aportsmen , can be found fl$hin1 San Franclaco Bay and en- ''lron• wbtnever possible. They regularly tat pme liah -striped bass, st urgeon. aa1mon or flounder -at least once 1 wtf:k and often more. Tht State Department of Public Health, however, hu bttn warning sporl'lmtn to p 1low on auch coniumption because of Jl(ltMUal mercury pol!1oning. T h I• becau.1e fish te1t.ed In the region have llllen found to contain mercury In unouata t:xcttdlng the 1CH:llled "safe" li!ttl el .Cl6 ppm let by the department 8olne ltripid bus, for t1ample, have Nn found with 1 mercury content of ll'Ol1I .• to 1.n ppm. Mord .Un"' know have been taJd11g the wbok • wltb 1 gain of All flgur· ... a.at rnomwy bu bt<n droinlng Into ~ ntmny1 at lull llnc:e the •> Gokl Rush H not forever -and there haven't been too many fishermen known to be iU from eaUng their catch. TO MOV't TOWARD rtsolullon of the controvefJY the health d t part men t wanted 'la check human belngs who regullrly tat fish In quesuon so Al and Sam volunteered. SptelmeN of their hair, blood and urine were ta.ken by the deJ>frtment and their piscat9rial eatlng hlblts laaed. Analysts of the 1peclmens by the Atomic Absorptio n Laboratory of the Unlver,ity of Michigan Clmt: bid: with the 2.8 and LI ppm mercury content cited above - well within the normal ranee of tolerance for bolb men. As a result htallh depm"tmenl ofUdaltl are con:sldertng raitblc tbllr mm:ury safety factor lllandardJ and more tests are In the offing to 1tit if AJ'1 lftd Sam's results are typical. In the mqntlme Giddtnp and Knoles aren'\ pl1nnln1 la chn&e tbdt fbhlna or eating hablll. and neither -thanka la thtlr tfforti -are lhouundJ of othtr somewhat 1kepUcal qien In tht bay ttglon. )Ub Abram.JOI CalUIH"ll.t Teatar. ~&cc Foot Binding and ~rain Binding I have. Iona: been in a state of mild to furious rebelllon against 1 c b o 1 a 1 t i c achievement tests, colle&e entrance e1· aminations. and all the o t b e r paraphem&lia by means of 'Whlt.b hia:h school seniors are sorted out and graded Those with the lop scores are admjtted ta tht ''top" WUtu· tions, UKl8e with lesser score.a have to settle for aornethlng Jess. Every sprina; in upper • m.iddle-clas.s families· with a higlr school senior. thett are the big quo-· tions. ''Will Cindy do well enouah to be ad.mil~ to Mouflt Holyokt!"' "CM Wil- bur grt into Stal!.ford7" Parents worry about ·t~e matter5. They want the best for their , children, tbty say. But that is not all they want. Don't lhey also want to be ablt to say to their friends, "My sOn · Petei is at Princeton," "Joanne is at Swarthmore"? And teachers! Prep school and high school teachm also want the beat for their students. They coach them, therefore, to get into the most prestigious schools. They want to say, "We got more of our graduates into Harvard than any other high school in the state." PARE~'l'S AND TEACHERS. lflug- gling for atatua. Students are btlpleu pawns In "thli game. Teachtrs work energetically not to prepare tbelr students for life, not to aharpen their .in- tellectual curiosity, but to enable them to let bigh ICOra: in these college tests. lf,a astudent gets so fascinated, for example, by cllemlstryt4.ilat he wants to go deeper and deeper Into It, be ll often discouraged from doina: so, becaUJe it might bring down .his scores in social M:ience or EDJlish. Moet rtudenll are docile enough to a:o aklng with the ayatem. But mainy ue. noL At some point they rebel -41 ,ny own SOD Alan did. Becauat be ii tbe 90D of a proftSJOr, and because he iJ naturally bright, his teachen ei:pected great things of hirii. Bui he was already in a state of rebellion in his senior year in high school. He was clearly not interested in his studies. His gradu began to drop. But he did extremely well in the college en· trance tests -and was admitted to thrte of America's most famous colleges. I AM SORRY NOW that I did not at the time fully understand what was going on. However, if 1 had understood better 1 don't know what I could havt. done about it. u~ tht pressures he ftll from all std.a, he was becomin( a behavior prob. ltm, sURen and uncommunicative, keep. lnc atremely irregular hours. u, chose Harvard. We uw him off and hoped for the bat, but , before one . ' asemesle'f' was completed he was dropped for academic deficiencies . Apparently, hav~ got t.o Harvard, he never opened a book. Now. si:r years later, I find that l am vuy proud of him for h a v i n g been bounced out of Harvard. Doing well in college entrance tests, being admitted to an Ivy League school -in these performances he was never pursuing his own purposes. He was merely fulfilling other people'5 e1peetations of him. How lorlg must a boy tor girl) continue to lead lives dictated by the expectations of one 's community or so;:ial class? When can the young be freed t.o discover their own purposes? "But you should be proud and graterul for the opportunity to study at Harvard!" But what l1 going to Harvard w.u never bis i~ea? NO WONDER SO MANY college studtnl.s rebf!I or drop out. No wonder they reject colnpetition. No wonder they see our society, pol!tica11y the freest in the world, 1 as "repressive." Some students rebel quietly. They go to local junklr colleges , even when they are childttn of prominent and well-to.do families. to v.·ork out their ov.11 educa- tional destiny. (Incidentally. Alan worked out his. He got married at nineteen. v.·ent to work lo support his wife. learned to operate a rork-lift truck and throw around 100 lb. sacb, went Oii to a West Coast college, graduated in mathematics, and now has a steady job.) And what makes a "good" college or university anyway? The presence o{ Nobel prize winners and famous scholars in its graduate 5chool? What good is !hat to a freshman? Is a famous private col· lege founded in 1&49 necessarily better than a state university founded in l!H9? Can a CQllege be judged -as it so often is-by the social standing of its alumni? What does "better·· mean? Better for whom? If the University of Puget Sound is the best possible place for Eleanor, is it equally good for Colleen? \\-·uv IS IT Irt1PORTANT lo get inll'l II "prestige" school? What is so \\Tong with Eastern New Mex ico University at Portales, or Western Kentucky Universi· ty at Bowling Green? ln Imperial China lhey u.~ed to bind the feet or little girls in the belief that. for a woman·s feet to be truly beautiful. they had to be tiny, even at the cost of beinc crippled. In America it Is customary to bind the brains or girls and boys by training them for success in college en· trance examinations. It is .!I training heavy with cultural bias. 'vhich is tough on Negroes and other minorities. II is oriented almost exclusively to verba l skills. which is tough on students "''hose parents art not in professional DC· cupations. Foot-binding was no way to produce strong, healthy feet. Brain-binding is no way to produce strong, healthy, Ut- dependent minds. By S. 1. Hayakawa President San Francisco Stale Colle&c Costly Military Commissary Graft WASHINGTON -The worldwide military commissary system, tht third largest groetry chain in the world, hu been plagued with i;candal. The Pentagon has hushed up stories of conniving and corrJption that are CO!ting commissary customers and tupaytn more than $100 million • year. Wt have discovered the same sordid practices in military commissaries that the Senate hu exposed in service clubs and PXs. We have unearth- ed evidtnct. for eI- ample, t bat food broker1 have ar· ranged wild week· ends in Paris , ,Ca•nes and Nice for commissary man•· ger1-<:omplete with credit cards. cars and drivers, posh hotel rooms and waJUni play&jrb. TO HELP commissary officers make a hit with the ladies, the food s~en B11 Gf?Otlffl ---. Dear George : Every Umt I go to this particular HUlng station the attendtnt makes some frtsh remark a.bout my mini 11.kirl. Do yoo think I ahoold report this to his boss? 11'vt"betn going to this sllUon for a year and I hlllf.) MINI Otar J\tlni : I think lt would be a w;ste of tlmt to report th!J altuatlon to the bou -if you've bftn 1otn1 to the 1ame fillin1 station for a year and a half, I'm 1uri the botil already knows about ywr mini asklrt. have also provided orchid•, perfume and French champagne. .Only the A&iP and Safeway supennarket chains do a bigtr busine:53 than does the $2.5 billion-a .year commi~ l)'stem. For the food broken who C\lllect a 5 percent CQmmisslon, therefore, the stakes are high enQQSh that they can •fford to provide wine and women f ·of' commissary· citlonela. Tht. commissar~• art irupwscd to offer Gr. and their del"!ldents quality foqd at' Cost. An irttttulng · numbar of J>lmpered civiliana hive alto been a.ranted commissary privileges. Dt~pite !]le Jow P[lcu. cu$t.Dp\trs and tUpaytrs are·befrw scalped·ft'oin 10-&o-40 ~t on most ltefna becauae Of' niiljf:j-y rtd tape, mlam.anacement and c.<rup(jOn.. ' . THE DEFENS& Dtpartmont NI bt<n awltTC of the fCll:ndala at least 1lnce 1967 when Col. John Sutlftrland,, l b e Quarteruw,... carp. penoniid support chief,,aubmttted a cle.aslfted repo(l on tbe SUbjecL Ht secretly• alerttcl the Security and ln...Ugation 'Divilton to a "gradua1 lncrew in the. nwnbtr of, commlssary pef90Mel who 1cc:ept, and ln some tns&anctt 1cUve1y tolk:lt, gratuities in return for te~ a parUcuJar brand for •lockt,p." Sutherlfnd aDepd that commluary ornc.n, In r-. for brlba, fllll Ille bribepayel'I' pods oo the shelves and leli. the bonelt llltl:mtn'• loods In the boxe..<i. ''These cratuilMla," ht wrotr, "ar1 alleeedly bi the form m lickel.s. el\lett.alrlmt11t,-wnplu cltli11ered tt the I homt, use oflcrtdll cards, organization memberships, cash, payments of bills, etc.... I •'ONE SUCCasFUL representative i.s alleged to ha\11 stated that the cost of gratuities and the time required lo deliver them has reduced his net on commission to the degree that he is barely making a li'ling." Sutherland asked the Army inve1tigators ito help him crack down on the bribery and, thereby. LG bring about 0 1ov.·er prices for military families in commissary stores." The Sutherland repcrt, plus fear:. of public scand&IJ, brought acUon. A task force was ~tablished to draft a plan for Junketeers ' P.-ess Comments --··· Price. Utah. Sua-Adv~tt: .. Most tir· paye.rs will surely be interested in joining up with tbe Lame Oock CongreMmen·1 Hunt Club. Thia club's purpo5C is to k~p congrnsmen who were be.alien 111 the pc:1ll:s or anoounct retirement from making wor~wide junk~ta at ta~yus' eJpenst belore leavin& office. The Chamber of Commerce of the United States rtporttl that .. _ (in 19691 the lame duclen ,only cort UJ 1bout $28.000. They have junke~ al higher cost in recent yeal"l -1olng around the world, seeing Paris for the first time, etc. They can go wherever they plea~. and 1pend •• much 81 they like. Ther~·s nothing lo stop them -uctpt maybe oonacience." basi ng commissary purchases on ·what the average American housewife want.s iA her pantry . The task force began drav.'lng up a list or name brands anrJ non-name brands plus special exceptions such as extra spaghetti sauces for commissaries in Italy, that would orfer customers high quality at low prices. THE PURPOSE of the central list was to eliminate th<? cut-throat selling and bribery by son1e 300 American food brokers in Europe. But the brokers called upon the Defense Supply Association to fight the plan. The association. headed by retired LI. Gen. Andy McNamara, an ex· Quartermaster General, is made up of mili~ry suppliers and brokers -plus, incredibly, the military commissary buyers themselves. The lobbying by this fo rmidable group. In the end, defeated the plan lo save GI wives and the taxpayers more than $100 million a year. ..... ~ Monday. April 12, 1971 Tht editorial page of the Dail11 Pilot sttks to inform ond 1tim. uJ.att rtaders b11 prtstnting th1.:1 tlt!tospo:per'& opinions and com- mentary on topics of inttrest and significance, by providing a forum for t11e t.zprc.:1.sion o/ our readtr.t' opinions, and bu prt.terlling tht diverse v1t10- point.1 of in/ormtd obserwri and .tpokesn1en on lopic.s oJ tile d-Oy. Robert N. We<d. Publisher ' 2 Sl1ot, 63 -Seized LOS ANGELES (UPI l -A relatively ptaet'ful ttlrong of 5,000 young persons was forced to leave downtown Ely sia n Park rock fes· tivel S u n d a y when violence that resulted in two youths being &hot. six policemen injured and more than 63 persons arrested broke out in mid-afternoon. It began when an undercover police fl f t I c e r attempted te arrest a suspected drug a b u s e r . Several fistfights erupted as the oflicer tried to make the arrest and then numerow other ¥ouths began throwinc rocks ~d bottles. The Los Angeles Police Department called a tactical alert and nt>arly 200 officers, some c~ying batons and ct.hers on , metorc9cles, began clearing )he area. ' Mother's Doy is Moy\9 ORDER THIS WEEK! • limited,.. ''me Only ... offer end; Mother'sD ay Beautiful Mother's Day Portraits that say "We love you!" special 9 are only 799 • one Bx10 for you to keep Police Raid Dog Figlit Operation IRWINDALE (AP ) -.Poll« uid they have raJded a dog fighting operation that drew well.heeled speclalDrs f o r hundred., of miles a n d included a basement art!na and 11 specially bred fighting dogs. Police said they W e r e alerted Saturday by an anonymous tip, but a lookout at the home wamed the more than 20 spectators and they fled out a back entrance. Officers said they naObed 10 persons and ·arrest.cd three. Betting markers 11 e i z e d showed spectators planned to wager $200 to $600 per fight and some, driving expensive cars, said they came hundreds of miles to see the fights. Admission was $7 .so, police said. Officers said many of the 1 t dogs, all" En(:listi pit bulls, ""'ere heavily scarred from past Figbls, and one suffered fresh wounds and bed to be treated. They were taken to the dog pound. Boals Crash, 12 Rescued • PALOS VERDES (UPI) "A sailboat and a power boat collided orr Palos Verdes j>eninsula Sunday. There were no injuries to the 12 persons aboard the two vessels. llarry T. llayes, &O, skippe r of the 21.root sailboat was thrown into the water in the collision but was rescued by coUnty lifeguards . The sailboard sank in abotlt 130 r~ oI W!ller as il was being towed asho~. The powerboat susJatned only sllght damage. Teachers' .Strike Settled SAN FRANCISCO iAPI - Teachet.s v o le d overw.hel· mirlgly to return to class- ~ms today at San Fran- cisco's 119 schools, struck on March 24. W\th only a handful ,er ' dissents, 1,400 I each er memben; of twe organii1tions late Sunday ratified . 1 compromise settlement reached Friday by strikers and the San Fiancisco Unified School District. The city has 4,000 teachers and 89.000 pupils. Classroom attendance had dropped to about 30 percent. Because er the Easter vacation last week, the strike affected eight school days. A key issue in the strike was the teachers' flbjection to reduction in teachinc staffs because of budget JimitatlflnS claimed by the schoel beard: The groups which negotiated in the 60--hOur bargaining sessions ev er eight days. with Ma y or Joseph Alie to mediating. were the 2,700-- member Classroom Teachers Association and t.he l,SOO. ·member A FL · Cl 0 San Francisce Federation o f Teachers. ; The ratified pact pravides about $2.2 million ?nore than e<1vered in the pro po s e,d budget before the settlement For achieving reductions in classl'O(lm size. Lawmakers End Layoff SACRAMENTO (A P) Gov. Reagan and· California lawmakers retu~ to the t:apitol ·today . after a week· long layo{f. The issue between t b e Republican governor and the Democratic leaders in t b e Senate and Assembly in the poSt~Easter Period is how to {lass a ~lanced budget of $8.74 billion or more without r a) 1 i n g taxes -throueh s8vings in "his sweeping welfare refonn program. The governor wants the program cln.red by July 1 even tt\ough It doesn't get its first Committee btaririg until thi.s week. • two 5x7 for Grandmothers • six wallet-size for the family Hoffa Will Return Bring both your children In now ••• and there's no extra charge for the family pet! Remember you can charge it at Penney's. To Priso11 Tuesday l\nnelfJ SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - James R. Hoffa will retur71 to federal prison at Lewisburg, Pa .• Tuesday after a six-day visit with his y,•ife who Is hospitalized here with a serious heart condition, their son Says. FULLEltTOlt Oran~ef~tr Ceott• 2nd !IOOr. lll·~l.O [Sears] I"°' o"'M.U•""'<<>. James R. Hoffa Jr .. 30. said ltUNTINGTON IElCM NEW .. OltT l'EACH ay he would accompany his< father back to the prison where the Teamster.; Union president ha s served four year.s of a 13·year term for 01u~l!r>Q!on C~!~t Fa•~ion ltf•lld 1n<1 1100•. m .1nt 2nd IHl<>r. u..2lll --. , YOU WORK LESS Keeps things cleaner without e.tfo.rt, elimi· nates bath tub rings. YOU SAVE MONEY Soap and clothing last longer. G,11ltto B1b-y's Sidi Sm.-tllo,r, Easitf SlllVtl Di•"' ....... Asi. About Sean Coa~ellie•t Credit Plaas Complek lu1.all&tlu Available! Jut Alt! Santa Ana 1116 s. Main St. Pbone547-3371 jury tampering and mail fraud. A daughter, B.1rbar1 Cran cer of St. Louis, and a stepson, Charles O'Brien of Detroit, wi)I 1tay here to be near lt1rs. Hoffa, the you•ger Hoffa said. Hoffa, 58. and the childttn made morning, afternoon and evening trips to the University of California Medical Center on Sunday to visit Mrs. Hoffa. "Because it was Easter we look. some colored eaa and jelly beans." sald the ao•. The younger Hoffa said his mother appeared improved Sunday and that s i n c e Wednesday when H o f f a arrived on temporary lea ve from prison "we have been able to make our visits • little lone er each lime." . Josephine Hoffa, who W"! married to the • Teamster leader 34 years ago. came here to attend a testimonial dinner for West Co a s i Teamster I ea de r Jack Goldberger. A heart condiUo• which has afflicted · her for some months worsened and she was admJtted to the hospltaj Mardi II. Mood'1, '"'' 12. 1'71 DAILY 'II.OT 7 Qu.rshag carpet prices · just hit the floor. ' ,. ..:; " ., S1ve S50 ott90 ... ,.._ •. ... ---Lush, deop, t~ .,._.111 brilliant trt4one eofora. 'Trident llproclical K-0 ....,.... ... ~ ........ ----_,..._I IN IPlrougll t I -~ • so""'lq.·yds. is-enough· to cover• 12·x 18' lfving l'OOmf 12 x t' dining room. Ix s· toyer, 3 x 30' hlf1 ft ...... . ' ... ., . . ,, 350 Special .... ~ IO eq. ydo. • jaot "7!. -ihd. pluah shag at aich a'l euyP!iee- 'Cf\9leau' continuous filMn~ nyk>n carpet is sturdy. •ISY to.ctesn.. Choou decorator 801idtortw 111t ·' ; · ' Bring In your llOor mee1urem911i.1ot•' llCMlbllgll!IOn . , cerpe• ••Um•l•l Peddlng end proleulOllll lnttaJlnt le ._ ... Vall.le. It still means something at Penneys. l\nne'I• For c•rpet inst•ll4tion c•ll: FASHION ISLAND. N•w port Cenltr (6-44-2313) HUNTINGTON . CENTU, Huntington 8Hch (892-7771j Uoo Ponneys time p1ym1nt pion. ' ) • I • • • • • For -· the Deatlt Nodees Alllrollll 4 C..C.-11• 't A•.... •j.I TrNMltt 1111,..,, • Utv,..,. •ffcll. Me!l'111 .. 01 D..A • • ...,. I lt111 ... lff<.11 W_.,. Clull Ot•t ol ~ .. ,111, A.,.11 !O. ~rv!Yotd b• nle<•. ""'" I "'•MY lhlrilt, Ptln V1•N1 f une•tl •••~le•. Wednndily, Aorll 1 .. t l>M, F•llll (lltNI ol FO••l1 Ltwn, HQ11dt• J H1111 F•lt•ltli mtv ,. ... ,....,...,. •t ,,.. 1 Sht'ff.,. l•tunt ll11c1< ~t•Y, t7' s i '"'" HIOl>WIY. l tfU'll ludl. l'tm!lv ' •1111111' "'°" wl•h•l'l<I 10 Jn•\t Mttno•- : !ti '°"''lbullnn1. tl••.. «"Olrlbu•• 10 • !l\f Ort"" (llU"'' (h11>1•r fl lh• '"-"'•'· • ktn Ci ne ... 5.o(lflY, lll5' Jrvln• Raid, : ;;:~~Ol'~IHtt ltlUlll llNCI\ MOl'l\/trY, • SAGI : Mldo.ttl 11111. ,l.~t II, ~I 1Jl6 '-I \I·• • l"u.<11, Ltlll"" Holl• Ct •• ol ~-·~. '.Air" t. s.i ... 1~"" II• d1u1Mu. Mlld•l<I 't'. Ptlltll, l.1tun1 Hiii• 11\r•e ''"P'°"' ll\CI -1l-u1M1• '" Cl\!<110: toor "11Ftn+thlldr1n Strvlct1 Tut1cllv. 1 PM. Mc<:O"fl'lltt Lt"'"'" ll~1cn ChtPfl "'''" P111ot \11rnot1 E <0111r ol "'" Lu""""" C•u•cll <ti '"' c.,,.,, "''•4'1•"• !"I••· "''"'· El To.,, c-t•"' McC0<m.c~ L•tu"I llllCl'o M""u•r• Olroc1or1. l•ICfl Mrt. l'ICl•ef\tf !It•., 041• ol d••'"· A1•n 11 s.,..,,<H .,....,,1119 11 we1•<1u1 (1111191 Morru1rv. &O "811. Glll'JtTM G.itH (" C;tllll!ll. M 0 A<lt !-1, l>t !:loll .. 81~tr SI • Cooll M••• 01tt of d•o•ll, AP•ll 11 S!Jryovl'll bv ,.110. Mr> l'rt"· <•• Gdlll!ll; $1111, Wllllom I G. Grll· 11111. c ... 11 Mt11; o,,. 9t1ndclllld 5••~· lt9', Wod .... Mll>. 1 JO PM, St JOllll Ill~ Olvlnt Epi1Co1>1I Cl\utCll. Co•t1 M•u. with tnl..,.,lomtn! 11 H••t>Or ~tf1. lltll 81"'""''' Mertu1rv, Ol"cio ... LIONAIO Edi!" l.,,..l•d 111! K..i*ilOC&. !.ell 11<•<11 Dolt cl d• .. 11, A"'ll !~ Su,...1v..i bv ,_ 1•~tu1. EllNll J<jkttl '"" Al!lltl Wtl>- bo•, l>G111 at Stll llt1d11 -brclllft1, Jolin i nd l'rl<Hrlc-w 5t 1Ytr. Ccs11 Mtu Str-.lcft. lodoY, M-••• l PM, ~!CUii Cl\1HI. will\ ,,. G-<1• Wood 11•\cllllM . 1n1trmH1!, l'1lmevon MffNI" +~ •••~. w • .,,1111 '"'"' ,,,,....,.,., •• 11-t·..U. Olra<iot1. " lltOa#.AICll Jls1 E Slloem1ke< U•! WI'"'' Av• . Sp 1!1. Hu!'lll111110" lt•cll. D1•t ct do1111. .,,,, 10 iu .... lv.c! "" wllf, Mltflfl , 8 .... tt!Ttt, PtUllM G. T1ylo" -G••-c~ikl S1,..ka, WMnn.Uv. 1 PM, Peel< ,,t:nl!Y Col...,111 l'un..,•I Hofft•. ,. STUMPP BJ*..• L .. Slum••· !tSJ2 H1r1..Wlt Cit· ~ .. Hunllft'llon Bue~. D•I• of dfl!ft, "-5~ •· s ....... NllCI bv l'tuttNoncl. Wllll•m 15:1f"1•d Slum11111 IOI\, Roblr! Wlllil Hl(ll· ~·.,; dl u8hl..,, Jonie fllr•bt•~ S!umoo; l'jitlltr. M•!ICI• 8u11n. ll•oil'e•~. Jome• 8 . G. !e.u~~; 1ltltr, .\l!lt MtM•· Mf""'rlol •e•vice•. lut.n..Y. 11 l!:me•10n·Ol•on MOrtut ro, L•n<•ll~r 11 1tt1notmenlo llt """ 1'1mlly ot>l1t Fu""ro! MC<T!I. ;" ARBUCKLE & SON ~ WESTCLIFF MORTUARY ;:m E. litb St., Costa t.fe1a :: -:~ . ~ BALT'l MORTUARIES ~rona del Mar ... 6'71-9450 Costa Mesa 64&-%-4%-4 ' . : BELL BROADWAY ; MORTUARY ·!uo Broadway, Costa Mesa .~ LI 3-3W ; . i Record Births M• tt\d """· l.oetr! T, 1"\ttn!f 1tJH .kllll Crut Clrcll, l'°"nltln \/1il••· .., Mt1 -Mrt. l.ICNra ""!.~'ro;lJ!i "l!ttlf W11, N"""°"t lt°WJ' Mflr~:'. :;~, Jollll i)Kl(lt. 0 not Mr tnd t,1,.., Oonllll Sor«kUll. lit M .... Drive, Cctle M•llr. ~· M• tnd Mt0 Glrv C{t t . lU ii' Esc•lo•• Avtnue1 $an ltrr'l!ln". M• ar'IO) ...,.,.. . .\n l>ony f F••no, . 1 JJ•d s1rt11M~~.' ~fr"· a1r1 Mt. fnd M•t. Tlmofllv Cr!t!l!li, Ml Vle· tori• Slr .. I, Apt, I, Co1!1 M111, air! M• ind Mr1. Jtfh"1v rnoua. i.u Sollltl Saruct · S•11•1 AM til•I M• j,;;;f ~· Jtf1•1 K""aclc. JIM M~1":: M:,~· lrn.!:1l~'~Di:!~ 2t'l W•llKt. "t: ... ~ ~r~r,:r• ... ..,. Mr I"° Mr1 Reit Wff¥er, 1HJ ll)Nr Nn A, CoU• Mtw. oltl M• Incl liV't Glfn DIYldton ta77 If.!.!: ,.11111,0 Ori,.,, "411nllnoton ltatll, ,';'ff .... r.1.=:':!. 111Crrt••~~!n1f:-11.~11. al•I Mt """ Mtl •tfr.c! S-IM. t~ Wfll W•l'OI' .Costt M111. bolo M• •ncl M11 Ru1.,.11 Fl•-'" .. 51 1.-.w•n ""''"""· Cv~rns. bol Mt incl Mro R-1 Kr... 1 ... Plaatnll•, Co-11 Mesi. olrl ar.e•dt "· 1m M• -Mt1 DDn Clllln" liM S1111!t, l'1111t1!1ift V1llev, 1lrl M• tl>d Mt\ llcMra "4 Jor>n•IOll. '/Om Ordlld. 5t1111 A,.., bov M• """ ,,.,. Scon Mtlll~•. 1«11 Pf!fr..,., PltCf, 51·A, (~IA M~u. ~· Mt ,..., M•• ROl>fr! O Molleron. t76'!t Lt A<>'I Lant, F(kJMAon VIiify, boY Mt tncl M" L1ren10 M•nOo11, 1C/' lh! SttHI w11•mln1ter. bo¥ M.lrc~ 20, 1'11 Mt And Mro J1mto (.....,, 102J1 R1rnont Lint. Hunll1111ton ltlC/I, ll<lY Mt 1-.d Mrl, ~obfrt NtwbOkl. 1176 H1mi11on, Coott M•••· bov Mr And "'"' M1•\0l'I Smlll<, •n' CorllAnd Drivt, Co,on1 d>rl Mlt. G•rl M• And Mr1 W•lllam W!hon, tll) Elm Vl111. No 6, Downor, bov Mr. tn<I M" DDnlld like•, 11>41 w. Molv.,n No 6, Fulltrfon. 1><1¥ Mt, 11"' 11\n JCl\n 11\llclltl!. "7t1 Wll,,...lm C!rclt, Hunl!~1•on 8e8tl'I, olrl M1rcti 11, 1t71 M• •ncl M'I. R-le-1r 6'1 J01n" S!rff!, Cotle M..,1, bOY "'" A<><I M•a. ll lcerdll llur, IU W. 1..i11 S"'""' toto. C, COiii Meli. llOY Mr 1nd Mro Artllur IC-. "' $1!1lim1•A1>! A, (,,_II Mfll, tlrl M1rt11 Jt, 1111 M•. end Mfl Jtmfl L. 51111w1-. W Centlr SI•"'• ~I. I, C111t1 M•••• ... M• •ncl Mro. llOMt B. kn..,.., ~ Dt t"ll, CorDn• Ml Ml" l ltt M• end Mrl D11f St.hvltl, JU BtO&dwtY, COiii MeN, lloY ,.,., 1<><1 Mra. Lnllt llro, ltt•I Pc"'"''' L1n1, Hu11llnlton at.K~ 9!rl Mr ""' M<1. A:lcft1rd 81:..ler, !U E. lttl'1 AQ! 14, Colli Mftl, boy M• 1"11 Mr•. W1l1tr WlllOI\, 41f M, ~trffl. 81lllol, llOY Mr efl<I M•1. Cr1lt Blue, 6Jl' Gle"' ntY•t, l•OUlll l..,JI, t lr! Mr and M"· An!llOnV Ht!lor1n, Jr.17S. ~&mOtll Ori¥•, St!'ltl •nt, t it! Mt, end M•>. MlrrV Sertno, ltt.Jll N1• !lon•I Avenut , COil• ......... 11•1 Mr 111<1 Mro. bvld IE. Mcter,tm Mt lr'ld Mro. DIYld E. Mc11r ~n Cc•nw111 Drl¥e, t-tunt!,..•on 8t•Cll. ~· Mr. •rd Mr1. lntt Scllulll, >U 8rOIG•IV, Co>11 Mt11. bely Mloro l), 1'11 Mr, ind Mtl. JCMl'I\ Condon, JllMJ Mir....., L1M, Hun!l,.,.!Cfl 8e1<11. lift Mr. incl Mr1, l.1lpto Ctrl!on, lJ.I E. 1•111 P!«t. COl1t """"'· 1lt1 Mr. 1nc1 Mt1. Trw.m11 wc1n11~. 111~ Wtl""I Strt11. l'wnl•I" Velltv, bOv Mt. t ncl Mro. Tllom11 J1C11111, 11\ Al1b.....,, Mun!lno!on ll•Kll, IMIV Mt. 11'\d Mt!. Mlrw.ttl C11tlllo. .UIO W111 1ncl, S1n11 Anl. 11r1 M•, '"" Mu. Pt!.., Cl>urcll '2t'll A,..chod, COi.ONA DEL Mlt, 11tJ Death No,tleea .. Duo Admit Consumer Frauds Supervisors Study UCI Project 21 Bid Guilt In Forgery SANTA ANA -A couple Identified by lawmen as lhe principals in a forgery ring that covered n1any areas of Orange, Los Angeles and San Die&• counties bas pleeded guilty to charges er fergt:'ry iind conspiracy. Orange County Su per Jo r Court Judge Byron K . McMillan sentenced Sterling Newcombe. 44 . to one l& 14 years in stalt: prison for his role in a forgery network that utilized sciphislicated counterfeiting e q u i p m e n t valued al more than $1 million. He set May 7 as the date on ~'hlch he will sentence Darlene Cozart, 39. te what cnuld be an identical prison term. Miss Cozart and Newcombe were arrested Feb, 4 in Orange. That arrest led t& the Orange County Grand Jury's Indictment or 25 persons, several or whom are still being sought on forgery and conspiracy charges. A Lakewood woman named in that ·indictment also has pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges and was erdered by Judge McMillan l& return June 10 for sentencing. Mary Sue Pold, 28, arrested last Feb. 15 by Newport Beach police at a Fashion Island store, faces a possible slate prison lerm of one to 14 years. Judge McMillan dismissed identical charges a g a i n s t George Guimond, 1JI, Long Beach, when the prosecution conced~ that they had insufficient e v i d e n c e to support cha rges against him. Blue Angels Takeoff Set Ahou11d in County Py JOANNE REYNOLDS OI t11t O•ll'f Pll.i Stiff SANTA Ron SANTA ANA -Orange lndepl!!!ndent and not funded by County Supervitor• are the county." studylllf a request for 110,000 David S. Colltns of the becomes mi.!represenlalion." county· a Citizen Direct i c n he 1ald. to fund UC Irvine-Project 21 F I n d I n I C a m m I t ~ e e J h · d · B f 1tudy teams for the coming o nson 11 a vice: e ore recommended the funding. He · . . bu • · ll1eal year. 101n1ng a yer s service, said that In previous years Jobnson, tbe deputy district ""--k I ••·· ghl d Su v· D vld L B1k ' ... ~-.; l oul """" ou y an per 110r • • er funding bad come from the attom~y assigned to prosecute read carefully everything yeu already has lnd.Jcated his . university but this was not consumer frauds in Orange are given to sign. oppoeltion to the request. possible now becRuse of ANA County, says few local cases If a person does find be has "This UCl·Project 21 1tudy budget squeezes. grt tl'I court because the u n w I l t Ing I y signed a program started as .11 n "Al a time when community GOLF TIPS me m be r h b J p contract. independent study of county problems are 4n the upswing victim1 don't know where ln Jo•---n sai'd. 1..-can resclnd !l needs and they emphasized and re•"'•rc-.J to deaJ with "' .. k.,.. 1r.c1.,...., • °""' lllfrf IUIMI Ill: """' ell 01"" -Pr.c:llcl ti "'• , , • go for belp when they 've been by written statement la the that they w111nted no county them become more scarce, NEWPORTER INN taken . finance company that holds funds," Baker said. "They this program has filled a real PAR 3 GOLF COURSE "We've alsa found the the contract and the sties have done a tremendous job, vacuum within the ,1,00 w!Ht thh .i _. 49.,. county police departments are company. He cautioned lhat1.i'~bu~l~l~h~eyi.,~'~hoo:;:::Jd::,.~r~e~m~a~i~n:_~c~om;:m~u~n~il~y~.'~'~Co=llln::•~"::id~ .... .l!::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=; not oriented to investigating sometimes the conmmer muslll consumer fraud." Johnson be willing to go to court. said in an interview. -Candy and magaiine sales Consumer fraud in Orange for charity purposes in which County has grown to the the salesman claims the cost extent that his office needs the is Jwl for postage, not the help of local p o I i c e product itself. departments le keep up with -&Kalled He 11 y woe d it. he added. photogrphers and film agent!! Recently, with the aid of who cffer to make .11 child a investigaiors from the district movie 11t1t, for a price. The attorney's fraud div is i 0 n, cost usually includes the price Johnson set up a consumer tlf a set of photographs and fraud ct1urse for local lawmen. the services of an agent to take the pictures to the During the she-week course, various studios. he attempted to familiarize detectives with the kinds &f "That's usually as far as it bunce>-Oealing that are going goes, and the paten~ never tln Jocally.~He also discussed hear from the agent again," the laws under which these Johnson observed cases can be investigated and -Franchising operations in prosecuted. which the inveiitor is offer!'d "Oflen detectives w o u I d the exclusive franchise of a rather inve11ligate an armed product in a given area. robbery or murder rather than Often this form of bunco a fraud, even if that fraud is entails the investment of a taking Sl00,000 a year out of a large sum of money to community," Johnson said. •·purchase'' the franchise and People who are dissatisfied tben no product is with product! or services they forthcoming. have purchased and wbo think .Johnson listed several other they may be victims of a types of shady operatons. fraud have .11 couple of They include the heating recourses before taking their system inspector wh• will tell case to police er to the district the homeowner he needs a attorney. new healer and then One is tbe Better Business recommend a given company; Bureau in Orange. Or the a service which represents victim can deal directly will\ itse lf as an offi cia l county the brand name manufacturer agency ror registering of er parent company. homestead claims, and a In all cases, Johnson noted, whole range of s a I ell ·~~ 2 TURKEY DINNERS FOR EVERY TUESDAY • Roast Young Tom Turkey • Turkey Dressing $ • Cranberry Sauce • Vegetable • Mashed Potatoes • Roll and Butter Bring• friend,., or maybe your mother-in-1.tw? Thay m•y like you even bett1r efter being treated to • delicious dinner. And , look et the price! Bring the whol1 f.tmilyl Thi family who eat1 together, 1tey1 to. getherl Coma on over. -r!lOJlilj KNOWN FOR VALUES 29 Op1n Dally Mon. thru lat. 9:)0 a.m. te f p.m. luntlay 10 a.m. te 6 !J.m. a good defense can save the promotions from the going· ORANGE -The members consumer a lot of trouble and out.of·busine!I! sales to thejl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,lll!B!!!!~ of the Blue Angels aerial flight money . He outlined a few you·have-won·a-free·gift sale. team will warm up for their types of frauds to be en the Johnson stressed the need performance at El Toro MCAS Jookoul for : for con!Umer awareness of by appl!!!aring at Childrens -The buyer's service which these operations, emphasWng ( McCORMICK LAGUNA j. BEACH MORTUARY t 1115 Lapn• Canyon Rd. Hospital ef Orange County on offers. with the purchase ar a that consumer alertness could Wednesday. membership. le eblain variou!I stop a lot of them before they Jo/wt w11111 Sr. 1~~L~'°" ,1,.1,, w111• From 10 a.m. to 11 ·30 a.m. types of goods at a discnunt beg in. mln11er. Du• of "'•"'· APrll 10. Su•· patient! from six to 16 will be price. Johnson said salesmen "People are becoming 11 vlv..a 11v '"'''· "'111111'1' 11111· JOlln w111o1 able te meet with the seven will have people sign contracts 1,·111e more aware. tha-•-lo $3 yard: :; 4H-H15 Jr , dliltlllt•", Mr> l<1tttlr1<1 Jlldtr; 11 I~ 1ru1ocM1<1r'"; •out ~t..,1-trlf'ld<:~uor•<'I. pllol!I and leam about their which are disguised u credit people like Ralph Nader. But • ;;.· PACIFIC VIEW RourY,<tonl•M, Moridtv, 7:• 1'M, Pe• )·obs as the Navy's flight team. applications. all of these .-•-mes have one 1'1'"111' Cc~lll f"unt"I Mom1. I.Mui..., "'-11C ~ ., MEMORIAL PARK M11 .. T..-a1v, , AM, s•. 11rw.r1·1 On Thursday the men will "These oper.11tions a re thing in common and that's : Cemetery Mortuary c1111011c c~~rch. PHI< ,,,,,11, co1on111 be performing at El Toro i_n difficult le atlack. There I~ 111 the guy that falls for the FuMrll HOmt, D!rtctor1. ~ Oapel wooococK honor ef Armed forces Day. fine line where sales puffing pitch," he said. Klr<ll!I P. Wcodcllcit. Jlesldert! at L11u,.. 1-----------------------'---'--'---'---'--'--'-------I ; 3500 Paclllc View Drive :Newport Beath, Callfomll : 1«-n• ' . ~ PEEK FAMILY ~ COLONIAL FUNERAi.. ~ HOME ~ 7811 8olaa Ave. r Weatmllllt.tr 113-ml ~. . ~ SMITll'S MORTUARY ~ m~st. ~ Hutiqtt• Beach ' ' • ' t-11111. Survlvltcl b• ion, II-rt, ol Coo11 Mtll. Ol!t of d111~. Aorll II. 5t,..1Ctl """'"o ti Wn•c!lf! ClltMI M~''"''~• ~,. ... LEGAL NOTICE If-------------l'·SUt ~ICTlTIOUi 1Ui!Nl11 NAMI STATEMENT T~• lollOW<f\11 ""'""' Is "°'"" '"'''"'" .. Quiol C1nno<'I. J.ll,. G•ttn L1ntfrn Dini Poon1, C1lllornl1 RESl-"Ul.INT ADVEHTUlllES IMC . U10 L-1101<~ 1 1\'d., :IO!, L- 8uc10, c111tor"!1, Tll!• "'"'~u 11 w 1n1 c-.ciltcl by A Corper1hon SlqMd: Ot•hl Ptlrl" ,.,~ .. Publltl'lfd °'''''" C1111ll DIHY P iie! Ao"' 11. 1t, )I; e ncl Ml• l. nn '°'"11 Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Get set for spring. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday only, our 'Festival' perm including shampoo, cut and styling is just 711 PULLlaTOH QN,...i11~ C..,1# ,,.. '""·.,,.UC! MUtotflNO'rON llACM "'""''l<'lt'O!"I '""""' .... f'IOl'I•· ttt Tl'l l OlllAN "T~t Cl'V" •JI' JOtl Hl[WPO•r ll•t'I ~ •• ~-1•1•"11 l'->f f'l<le• U<.)111 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°lo 5,000~ TWO 5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000~ ONE 5.39\ 5.25\ 500~ %th 5.13\ 5.00°lo 19.! ONE DAY FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX for maintaining a 550022 balance in any of our high rate accounts-take your choice. AN IMPORTANT EXTRA Your money earns interest from the day you depasit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day. ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE ~ FREE ~ ~ J,l!'~ 1. Income Tax Service 3. Collection of Notes ~ 2. Traveler's Checks 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 UU llUITOL llllEfT • COITA MUA. CAUFOAAIA. • ,..ONIMMOM t •IC UTfVI ••••C •• ••••• , ............ e l llU~, .. ~ •• IOW'lf' CA\.1ro1111A \ Elegant over and under draperies. Both for one •-price. Choose from beau1iful antique satins with matching &heers: an for what you would expect to pay for the over draperies alone.. One price gives you value plus. Regular low Penney prices oo our finest fabrication. Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service. O.COl'll1e now. Uaa Panneya time psymant Plan. • QUEENIE By PhU lnrerlandi -~ , .. ~· Toa1rists Note Drop . ' Dollar Wanes Abroad, Too NEW YORJ< (AP) -The greenback Is worth leu than A ·U.S. tr•veller, for monetary agreement. 1 ts purchasing power of the s:.01. Instance, will gel 622 Ura for currency management American dollar, shrinking al And the U.S. dollar now ·his dollar at an Jtalian bank practices are in line with home in recent years, also ha.11 fetches fewer West German compared with 82'1 a decade declined abroad as the marks and Dutch guilders earlier, Tordella reports. At a nations that do subscribe, he discerning American tourist because of cur re n c y Belgian bank the American says. may discover again t h i a re v a 1 u a t I on s by the tourist can, he aays;r buy i&Vot. The dollar has lost ground summer. govemmenll of those two francs with his dollar instead even aaain!t the Br l t Is h In the decade after World naUons. of 50 ten years ago. pound, hardly the strongest of ......... Ap«l 12, 1971 DAILY ,11.llf •• 9 SEWRG .A BOME ... FBA ·VA? Comiiare tho low rat ea and oapoclally tho low loan t IH• izvallablo Cl! HOil\• Scrrinql. ~ Call the ladinglmer Seo why Hom• makeo ...,.. loam them anyothor_.ia. tlon.111 th• naUon.. You are qiven all the fac:tt, and on quallllod c:rodll and p:opoJty you are gi.veo an actual Joan c:ommftmont. " ' " " War TJ, the dollar was at a Even io those nations where And 100 Swiss francs will currencies in teCMt years. premium in virtually evtry no formal revalultion h.Ks cost the traveller $23.50 at a WhertN the U.S. tourist Pham MY off'°9 ol corner of the globt. Today occurred, the official exchange Geneva bank against $23 in would have paid about $%.40 Bo..BwiDI• greenbacks still are: a previous rate for the dollar has crept 1961, aceordlng to Tordella. for a pound at a London bank America'a l.argelt commodity in underrleveloped\.~u~p~ov~t~r~U>.:~las:_l ~dec:•:d•~·~":Y•:_~A~llhou~~g)>~~S~w~ilur~~lllnd;~i~•~no~l___:•~Y•~•~r~a~g~o~. he~no=w~w=oul~d'..:pay:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~·~"~' and semi-industria1 countries. Tordella. bound by lhe inlemational close to $2.43. But in major foreign industrial W..W"°"".....-L nations the dollar's potency has been waning for 15 years. • • t n tern a tiooally, the standing of the dollar is probably even worse than its domestic standing," says Fred ur think it's time for me to take my spring vacation. The two of you are beginning to stare at me." Tordella, vice president of Manfra Tordella & Brookes Jnc., dealers in f o r e i g n currency to commercial banks, C1:lrporations a n d individuals. "In the early 19 5 0 s American tourists in countries like France were approached in the street to sell their dollan," he says. "Foreigners were willing to pay quite a premium so they could salt APRI L'S BIRTH.STONE 1he Oia ffl &,,./.. Dean's List Names Pair From Coast Two Newpo rt students at Colby Bea ch College 1n Waterville, Maine, have been named to the dean 's list ror the first semester. dollars away under their pillows. "Now the American's got to be contended with paying the official exchange rate for some foreign currencies or mavbe even a shade less." The Ameri~an tourist In Western Europe ty pica I I y changes · $200 to $300 into foreign currency during his average two-week stay there, travel agents say. ?!tore than any other gem, the Diamond, pri:r.ed for ita fire a nd brilliance, haa influenced th, live' and 1ctio111 o! both men and wonien. Its h1rdne11 m11.ke1 it invincible and, They are Robert Hyland, a senior government major and son of t.-1r. and 1i1rs. Raymond P. Hyland of 1907 Tradewinds Lane, and Larimore Trippet, a senior mathematics major and son of Mrs. Oscar A. Trippet of 2147 Vista Eatrada. MIRROR MIRROR ON The fact that the dollar ls going at a discount may mean that for his entire trip the average U.S. traveler must fork over perhaps $3 more than in past years. The dollar has been losing ground in the big nations not Mly on the free market, where only the law of supply and demand determines the value of a currency, but also in terms of official exchange rates. ao it waa thought, my1ticall1 upable of protecting a v.·earer from evil. The Diamond romantic1l17 eymbolir.ea tnnocence for April'a rhi!dren. THE W tar uo11r birth.1f01'.t1 fo r Jftil /1111!io11 t11ld good fort'U.11• V WALL , .. Ill• l•lrnl llf thfnl Ill If• t••s e -l rt s-rtly 1n1r.ci In .._.,.. l<nlflfd, lt1tlih •WIM ci.1t111. Wt'll ttat~ Ye\! hClw It ~nll rovr IW!I panl 1ultt. dflHn llMI uvtr .. ,.. 11111 wm •In "" c1mpl!merih. An exchange rate is the price of one national currency uni t in terms or the U.S. dollar. It is set by the central banks of foreign countries. A central bank is the equivalent of the Federal Reserve System in the United States. So11th Co11t Pl111 l ri1tol 11 th 1 Sin Oi190 Fwy. The ~Th=.=D=A=IL Y==P,=LO=T=-==(ll K!Q' ,!~ Americans need go only north of the border to detect signs of the dollar's decline. An American dollar a year ago was worth about $l.07 in Canadian money; now the , .. ,. Tops in local Sporh LOWE• MI LL C11ta Ma.a kl·2tU • You're invited ta ltS S\, 6Womans6World at California Federal. Savings 2700 Harbor Boulevard Costa Me.a TUESDAY, APRIL 13 FLOWER FANTASY •••.•.......• 10 a.m. Unusual fresh flower arranging demonstration PUT ON A HAPPY FACE .......... 2 p.m. Makeup tips for a prettier you TODAY'S FASHIONS• .•.•..••••• 7:15 p.m. Presented by May Campany, 3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14 BEEF ON A BUDGET • . • • • • • • • • • 10 a.m. Su an actual 1idt:of beef cut Learn about best buys and preparation PATTERN PATTER ...........••• 2 p.m. How to properly fU patterns and professitmal tips on emphaJiizin.g your good points WOMEN AND MONEY ••. · ...•..• 7:30 p.m. Current fnwd3 and ide<u affecting your financial f ulun No admission charge-Drawings-Door Prim • Admillance to fashion slww at May Co. by ticket only. Tickets limited-First come, first served. Pick yours up at California Federal Sa.vins• 2700 Harbor Boukvard California Federal Savings end Li;a'l luioc.l1tion • Natlon't l.IJ'Obt F1der1I Savings end Loa n Assoel1\ion Head Office: 5670 Wilshire Btvd., lol Angeles . . . Bed-and-board sale.~; Sate prices effective through Salurday onlyl Queen size, king size. k•ll'· $199, Sa•• S50 Flfm queen size mattress and box spring :set Rayon sateen quilted cover on cotton felt fill. Set has 480 coils and 12 side lllPPOf'ls for .aog-reslslant. Mt width lleeptng area. King stze set, Reg. S271l. "Sol• $229 Reg. S:Zot, ,..,,.. $501 Extr• Firn1 queen size set. Rayon U INl twW CJJilted CO¥er on ~ • polyUtelhane loam pad. Sel has 708 coifs and 2" side aupporta for aag-reslstant. lull wtdlh sleeping ., ... KJng 1lze set. Reg.1319 ••• -- f199. ~.Saw• SSOJ Super firm queen sizeael Rayon damask quilted cover on ~ • POlyu'rethane fo911 pad. Set ha 951 calls for uni to"" firmness. Also features fuUy quflled prebuflt bortfe~ and 24 aldeouw<>r1& K'.ng slze set, Reg. $339 •. , Sal• S28t Ot1tuxe metal bed frame. 112 Klng tile melal bed frame, $19 ""'"'°P tumlhlN pota.e Include dol...,. ~· loul dell'f•IY ereL I Sale $189 Sale $99 .. " .. ; " . .. . . . . ' . . . . . .. ·' . " · .. • ,• .. ·" " . " . : . " .. ',• . " . " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • •• Sale $129 Value. It still means something at Penneys. ennelfl Rog. $111, Save $201 5-pc. oval chrome set. 36" round table extends to '48" with leaf. 4 yellow wet look vinyl covered chairs. . . . ..... . . : .. . . " . . . . . -. . .. . . . . -1. .... ' . • . . • • . • • . . • • • . .. . .. ' ~ .... • . • • • Rog. $141. S1vo ~I 7·pc. oval set ":'able meB.sures 4... 'x54 .. and ext;tnds to 86'" with Joaf. 6 green floral vinyl covered chaif3 . • ,, ' • • Ute Penney1 limo ~ymonl plen et these tlont: FASHION ISLAND, Newport C.ntor; HU NTINGTON CENTER, Shop Sunday loo, 12 lo 5 p.m. Hunling fon BHch l • • • l l l • l i • • • • .. • • • • . • ' ' • • ' ' ' • • ! • • • . • ' ' J ... Jt, OAILY PILOT Mond1y, April 12, 1971 Russian Diplomatic Manuvers Expected Over Berlin By STEWART llENSLEY Middle East. agrttment prov1d1ng betler the "sov~ign rights of the agreemenl in rttum ror a consequenets for Europe or lie spoke or the wisdom Gennany, at the behtsl of On the Berlin 1 u b j e ct , access for \\'est Gennan (Communist East\ German lowering of the West German Soviet-French relations. And Wtst Germany would show i( the United States. has said lt WASHINGTI)N (UPI) however, eruhnev made il c1vihans to Hl'<l-encircled West Democratic Republic." political profile In West Berlin. he said "new prospects In it went ahead and, contrary to \\'Ould not ratify I.he pact until The Soviet Union appu.ra to clear t.hat the Russians are ~rhn, and greater freedom of This is precisely what the but the Kremlin IS still Europe'' were opening up as a the wishes of the Unit~ there is a ntw Ber 11 n be preparing an lnteri.sive new slicking firmly to 1 heir civilian traffic between West United States in parUcu.lar will insisting on a higher prict. result of a "subslantial shift In States, ratified the Soviet-West aareemenl ; but opinion within ·diplomatic effort to get the previous position. If the Berlin and East Germany, he not accept. It had hoped to Brezhnev pointedl y oor relations" with West Gennan trr:aty which was West Germany is divided oil ~~n:a~t':.fi~.!;:~ _w.c"_.:'_•m_po;_w_en __ w_an_t_•_"'_" __ •aid_·_._1h_e_n_lh_ey_m_u_s_1_a_cce_p_1_g_a_in __ • __ be_1_1e_r __ •~"~c-•_s_s _m_•_n_tioned __ tbe __ ,_m_P_•_r_1_a_n_t_G_e_nn_a_n_Y· ________ •_.:ign;_ed_last __ •umm ___ er_. _____ 1hi_s_is_su_e_. ------ 1.ssues. '~-::----, .......... .. Thal a the impressiontl otficiala h.,. have gained "' Costa f-.r from policy declarat.Jons at the Communist Par1y Mesa Conartu in Moscow. Statemmts by Party Chief Store Leonid I. Breihnev a n d Fqi-eign Minister A n d re i Gromyko have ranged across On~ ~ entire spectrum o f MON.-TUES.·WED. ONLY! v~~·~:.::.~~'·':! .. :·~.-·"i~; ~;·:~ Founder's Day c·1scounts Kremlin's pri1nary interest is Sun. l().7 fil the Berlin issue and the Qu.eslK>n of a European l'--~;-;-;-;-;-~~ .......................................................................... ..;;;. .............................................................. "' Security treaty . .i11 Th e cor.sensus in \\1ashington is that Russia is seeking to use the negotiations ~'ith the three W e s I e r n allies-Britain , France and the United St.ates -to try to secure recognition or the soverel~ty of Communist East Germany. which lhe \Vestem powers still regard as a Soviet -occupied puppet regime. And Wa shingt on , in pirticular. has always \riewed ffµ,ss.ia's proposal for an all- li;µropean s~rity conlere:nce a;. a ploy to 4isrupt NATO and at the same time furthtr lbe iJlterest of East Germany. • Brezhnev. in his speech to !Ile Congress. sai.d "lt is j)Qssibte to improve ttlalioru Oetween the USSR and the United States." He said, bowever, that I.he Ni 1 on Adm inistration receotly "has 41'.en a more rigid stance on a riumber of intemationaJ issues including some v.·hicb have a bearing on the interest of the Soviet Unton." Gromyko echoed the party chief regarding the possibility of improving relations ·with Washington but he said "Washington mu.st back its statements by concrete acts." Brtihnev condemned U.S. actions in Indochina and the 1[1iddle East in general QfOPaganda terms. He said tl.S. action in Indochina was ·~ main atrocity committed bj the modem colonialists," adding the only way to solve the problem was to accept Hanoi's proposals. 'ln the Middle East, he <1>atended, U.S. support of ';futernational Zionism" was ifre v en ting a peaceful sfttlement. On European I s s u e s "ijrezhnev wa.s more precist. It <(ppeared that this v.•as the f1!gion which wo~ld ~ e ptirnarily under cons1derat1011 If there Is as new Soviet ''peace offensive." On Sc:iutheast Asia. Breihnev did not mention any direct Soviet re!!ponsibility as a cochainnan with Britain of t~ Generva Conference, to coovene a new conclave to try to find a solution. And be made no mention of the ~lfic role which Russia has pfayed in bolstering E~t and oeher Arab states m the , Six Music Stude nts Wi n H o1ior s Stx senior music stu.denl.J at l\ewpon llarbor High School ha,·e been hono~ f • r outstanding music ability and part1c1pst1on 10 the school'• band and orchestra programs. Karen Kuplerman received the National Ore hes l r a Award : David Hr.~te\\er won the; n:it1onal John Ph1lhp SoUJa Band Av.ard . Chris Quinn and Jan F1Ugerald received the Dwight D. E1senho\\e r Band Award : Paul John~on received the 100 Percent Bandsman Award, and John Tackman '~as awarded the ~1 u s i c Department Scholarship Ocean Vie'v Science Fair Set Planning is now under w11y for tilt annual Ck-tan V1ew School D1str1cl Science Fair, scheduled for April 19·23 at ?t1eadow Viev.· School 1llf!' fair, 1nvolv1ng !he district's 23 tchoo\!I, is undrr the direction nf s r i t n cc teacher Ital Chapman All enlrits submilltd to thP distrktw\de fair will have v.·on cateJorle5 at their individual llcl>oofl. Competition 1s epen ''' seventh and t11hth 11ri!de Jtudtnta. The winners \\'tll he ent.lued to compete for prius tn the countyw1dt fair. 30-9UART POLY FOAM CHEST l D•ys Only 74c Big 30 qu•rt site poly· fo•m chest with pl•sfic: h•ndle is a perfect picnic: c:errier. Keeps e¥ery thing cold & fresh for hours. ~-:i.~1; _ ·, INFANTS' -• . •1 r . NO-IRON , ~-;; j~, CRAWLERS ' Reg. 2.)).) Deys Only 147 Cotton/po~sler 1vm· peroU with •·bu!lon Vioulder, grippers 0 11 1eg,, 9-24 mo i. 30 DAYTIME PAMPERS • O ur Reg. 1.71 • 3 Oeys Only • 3-0 ooyt;-Pompe"• 128 '" 12·lbs. ond ~·. Soft oftd abtorbe"'· kind to baby's Wlif\, 1......i~·--··- ' r , TERRY CLOTH Rog. 1.37 yd. 87C yd. De11 River terry cloth.Guaranteed f11st to weshil'lg. In solid c:olor' and flower design. 44"/45 ... 13-0Z. *SIZE PROTEIN 21* HAIR SPRAY Our Reg. 44 c . J Da ys Only '"·'·ply.'-l /2' .. 28 . 1, 2" shee!\ per ro ll Ct. Northern toilet l•\sue · White and color~. . " ~t'M'UIP!~~;jt 1 SPECIALS FROM OUR GRILL ALL THE SPAGHml YOU CAN lAT aac T &sty meet sauce, t.law, roll & butter. CHOPPED BEEF STEAK s129 8 01, grilled to ordtr, golden brown fr;es, fo11ed g•rden s•l•d, freth str•wbetty t•rt, roll & butter. 18" 44/4S"WIDE ALLCOTION SPORT DUCK Creo:i.e·re~istont cottOf\ canvas sport duck . Choice of perky pfll'lh. 15 .. JS..yd .pc.s. BIG 40-QT. SWING ·TOP WASTE BIN Reg. 2.97-l D•ys Only 177 Modern·style lih.drop· lop ploslic bin. In ova· coda or ~old. l ev. 2.11 .ZO-'~.c ... ,1.t• 1 ..... ..,_......,._ ............ -. CERAMIC TABLE LAMPS l Oeys Only 597 Ceramic lamp assortment. Assorted decorator colors and styles. ]Q".]5". •4000 --TABLE l GRILL l D•y• Q,ly $1.57 Avoc•do green steel tebletop grill with new burn proof leg triangle 1lend, 18x27" CARPET REMNANTS Our Reg. 94c: ee .• l D1ys Only ~Y~::~~:o~olr:~:.~'. 6 8( lon•ocryl1cs. Twi st and plu\h pile\. Sove Eo. • .....,..._..,, ••q •• -....... ~--_...k .. ~:w,w .. ~,-_..,::...::111c:1i:::U • ~ 52/54 " WIDE LOOP KNIT YARD GOODS l Oeys Only 13~- Acetote/nylof\ loop \,nil r.ovelty Boudette type fabrics. Solids, while~. 12·15·yd . pc~. 1-PT. SIZE VACUUM BOTTLE Reg. I. 78-l 011ys Only 87 Insulated, plaid Thermo~ollle keep~ liquid~ hot. cold. Ideal for the lvnchbo~. §p,'; ,, . I '. ' ' '· 0..qj f .i -... iJ :r I /-.... ! S 0•!.' ii '1J. ~ •I' • ' '/., ' ;:' :,. ,, ., -...... ~~5 .. ,'/t,:-.,.. ••. , I ih : 70" CUTTING BOARD Re9. 3.27 l Deys Only 174 Opens to 40" by 72" end folds for c:om· p•ct storage. Protects table tops. Mekes pattern layout end fabric cutting quic k and e11sy. '"''""""! .:J FRISBEE GAME OF CATCH Reg. 77c . 3 Dt1ys Only TE EN'S SLUMBER BAG R•g. 897 6.34 " Convertibl~ slumber-petty bflq with pri11t cot. ton top, 1ol1d color cotlo11 b•ck with w11rm pol •stet fill. Multi-purpose opfln lor comforter 1 r~ close for 1leeping beg. b8 ir80. ' 1 • i ; l I I ! I Monday, April 12, 1971 OAIL V PILOT Ji' ; Nixon's Economic Aide Says He's Not Quitting Sub Group t Seeks Area War Vets A Division of th• S.S. KNsg• Company 11>e Nat ional Otgan.lzatit>n of the U.S. Submarine Veterans of World War II are seeking submarine veterans llvtng in Orange County. The organization i!I interest.id in locating alf officers and enlisted men that' served on a submarine or a submarine relief crew bet\vttn Dec. 7, 1941 and Sept. 1, l!HS. COSTA MESA STORE ONLY! FounderJs Day Discounts The purpose of the group 11 to perpetuate the memory or shipmates that lost their lives in the war and to keep nli~e the spirit and unity that existed between submariners. Eligible veteram s h o u I d contact James La VI n e, president of the Los Ange1t! area chapter, 10531 Dempsey Ave., Granada HUls, 91344. STEAM AND DRY IRON w Our Re9 . 8.97 -3 Days Only f J Provide~ plenty' of 7 54 .l sleom. Hos easy·lo- see fabric dial, clea1< "°iew• heel, l...if.d """""'7 ·-Mild lo dool••• 7~ OMPACT AM POCKET RADI Our Reg. 3.58 -3 Days Only 6 sor.d stme dh'kes, 2 1/4" ~a•er, f10• ger tip tuoing, bvifl· in on.tenna. 2aa SPECIAL ON CASUAL SNEAKERS Re9. 1.49-3 Days Only 93c lnfonl1', children's ond misses' c:ottaft camos ~en, cvsh· ian tnner'°'91. White, rt'((, blue. 5·3. Rog. 1.90 $1.33 G irls nylon wind breeker jei::k- et1 . Sam• with hoods. Sii:es 4. /'4 . A1sarted colon. 2for4.97 Button-front cerdiqens et super sevtnqs. Orlan ecrylic. Sitts 8 ta 20. Sev•. """3'._, 16-0Z. * SPRAY ENAMEL Our RO'). 88e 2/97¢ 3 Day' Only E11y fe Mii, f11t dryi119 K m1rt Wind fpt•'f '"'mil, Whif1 •ltd 1;olon.. 51•1. •fffol wt. l lmtfld ~ --111111 " ... ..,,, r ~ YOUTH BASEBALL GLOVE Ou• RO'). 3.97 2 96 3 DayJ Only • c .. whid1 fi1ld1r'• 910•1 with int1rloc•1cl fi"9''"' 1d j111l1bl1 wri1t 1tr1p. l fl 1· • '1 // Candidate Forum. Set At School 'lbe Westminster Y o u n g Americans for Freedom have arranged a candidates night: for the 17 conteslants in lhe: • Huntington Beach Union H1gb ti School District election. ~ 1-\ ~--'·-~1~ .... ,_. J:...X::...U.. ri •• t. ~ The public forum will be conducted at the Dr. J~ Hayden Elementary School. 14782 Eden St., Westminster.: from 7 to 9:45 p.m. Aprll 15. Andrew Smith of the You.og. Americans for Freedom saJd' ~ all the carxlldale! in the rac• for two board seats bave been 1 invite<!. :\ PLASTIC TOILET SEAT 3 D<rt• O.ly 3. 94 St11rdy pl11li< with p11rlto"1 fini1h, pl11li< hi11911, '"•P·Oft i...onp1n , Colon, LIMlllllll l~ftllfJ - -111111 N ... lln GIRLS' AND WOMEN'S SMART STEP-INS Reg. 2.ll·l Days Only Te,rilic 1electian of cak>rf..,. cawol 1tep·in1 la< springtime. All cat· ton can ... as fabrics. Siuis 10.3,5-10. 1-SIZE FITS ALL ••• NYLON STRETCH BRAS Reg . 1.47-l Dey• Only 1 ~O~•/t loghtweighl, comfor1 • oble, de1igned for a notural look. Po ck· aged. Shop and MJve! Men's permanent-press. polyester I cotton can - vas dressy jeans.Solidi, plaids.28·36.Charge 11. ~ I ROD AND REEL COMBO OUY RO'). 5.24 3 33 Both For • I • . " • ALUMINUM SCREEN DOOR 711 fMll·1ir1d, 1pi"<11t m1!1I 1111 ""ith ,0 yd1. of mo"o lin1 . Fib1 r9l111 rod, ISlml llr II 11~1/tll .... J 321f80 ar 361(80 aluminum screen door. Also he' a screen gu•rd far lan91r service. Herdwer• included. . I I, ~ ~ Reg. 97c tt Saft and absorbent cotton terry ~ towels in bald stripes .tnd 1alid1. :.. A1st. colors ta choose from. ~ ~ k Ii '1 l 10-PACK 45-RPM RECORDS Our Reg. 53< 37c 3 Days Only lfert'.s an opponunity to buy tht "llitJ You\·e i\\1sstd" on At• lanta, Decca.,MGM and 0 1hrr labrls ~F.a ch pack of ten 4S-rprn .records contains 20 different hits of the past by lcadin& 11li$lS. Students' Eyes, Kars Examined jt The ears and eyes ot I children in the Fountai n Valley School District have \ been thoroughly checked out I, this year, acet1rdin g to the district administration. f. A total of 3,433 youngsters in kindergarten through fourt:1 grade had their h e a r i n g tested. Of that number, 280 were rtferred to ari audiometrillt for f u r t b er· le!ting. • The vision of 4,621 students. in the first, third, fifth and. seventh grades was also tested., UU.s year, said school official! .. , U.S. Spends $31,852 For Books • The f e d e r a I government bought $31,852 worth of book.!:,: film projectors, tapes and· other audio-visual mattrials for children in the Fountain Valley School District this year . NYLON OR BLENDED HALF SLIPS Reg. 1.47-3 Deys Only 1 ~o~•ll Nylon. nylon -satin or polyesler/d"ori, Too· lored:,.-tfimmed. Cal· ors. SMl,X,XX,XXX. JR. BOYS' CREW NECK POLO SHIRTS Rog. 1.17-3 D1y• Only Short·&IHYe ftylts In qualitY cotton fabrics. Get horizont•I multi· stripes 1nd solids. J. 7. ALL-COTTON SCOOTER· STYLE SKIRTS Req. 2. 78-3 Deys Only 2~~ Collon 1<ooter-11yle sk1rl1, New button· fo1hion detaih Many colari. 8 to 16. 311> H.P.0 21" MOWER RO'). 7f.96 Mdl. KM400 59.94 District orficl als said two separate federal gr an ts accounted for the materials added to district libraries. One grant gave the district $13,452 to buy 2,305 books and 221 pieces of audlo-viSWtl material to bolster learning in · reading , math and scienct. . The other grant, for SlB,400, · bought boob, Bmm projectors, film strips, and a c I enc• equipment, district offlciall aaid. 2 Firsts Captured By Barber A Ntwport Beach barber has won two first place evenl.s in the annual Souther11 California Gold Cup C h a m pionsblp Hairstyling Competition conducted rec~tly 1n Santa Monica. Sam Wiggins, who owns and operatts Samuel Josephs H11ir Oe1tin. 1048 Baytlde Drive, clipped hi! way to the lop pr ize In lhe categories of European Classica l Bombaae (razor cuUing ) and Fashlon Cut, whlc.h produces mod styles. Wiggin!' wiurclry w a !I worth $$0 In cash and a !rte trip to San Francisco th/1 summer to compete in I.be state championships. STARS Svd~·v 01111,t I• Oft• ,, the wtrl4''t treat ••trolo91r1. Hit c1l11,.." h '"' 1# th1 DAll't PILOT'S 1r•1t f.1frtr••· t JJ DAILY Pilar Mond~y, April 12, 1971 CHECKING •UP• Cows Shine Bright In Ship1·ock, NM By L. M. BOYD road is not just a mysterious AMONG th 0 s e fortuntttl' pair of eyes, but t.he whole fellows who eam over SJ00.000 hairy be as I . Particularly • year, researc~ shows 15 Ot•I weird when purple. of 100 either make their own CUSTOA1ER SERVICE: Q. breakfast or eat oul. .IT'S A ''Those African tribesmen who MED1CAL E S T I Af A T t: eat grasshoppers. do they eat (pause) that cigarettes have thr wings and legs, too?" A. killed almost five times as Not supposed to. That's bad manv Americans lpausel as form. When snacking on were killed in romb;il in all of grasshoppers. you tear orf the our wars since lhe Revolution ~·ings and legs f i rs t , (gasp). . .QUICK. NA~fE ren1ember that. Unless the those three fields of activity grasshollpers are French wherein you rind <::hi Id fried, then it's alt right. .. Q. prodii;iies. No, no! art. nol "How does President Nixon literature. They're n1 us i c , like his steak?" A. Medium mathematics and chess. Vt's. rare. chess. ARGUMENT CONTINUES OLD SOl.OIERS nevf'r die, over whether it's legal, as they just fade away. You've here 1 n o n ce reported, to heard thal. Far more widclv change your name \\'i1hout knoWR observation lhan any of going to court. Our expert in these. certainly: Old la\\•vers the law slill insists iJ is. never die. they just lose their What's illegal, lie says, is to appeal. Old bookkeepers never change your name with intent die. they just lose their to def r au d. . .ANY figures. And old ticket apenls EXPERIENCED ARTIST will never die, they just lose their verifv this. If the main object rtscrvations. in a 'painti11g is on the left. it MOST commercial airliners will look closer than if it were in this countrv have no seal on the right. Take a look at No. 13 ... WHAT'S missing the pictures around your from lhe motion picture rating · house. Checks out. does ii not? system is an "M" category for "WHEN IT COMES to films you can lake your nagging." writes a feminine mother to. Agreed? ... WHY subscriber. "what's the breast ca11cer occurs far more difference between husbands often on the left than on the and wives? Men nag , don't right is another mystery. they?" Sure eJJough, says our AM TOLD the word "smile" Lo1•e and War man, men na~. appears nowhere in the Bible. With a difference. however. Odd ... CAN YOU name the Men nag their wives ;ibout only four stales wherein I.here what their wives do. Wives are no ski slopes? nag their husbands about what NEXT TIME you're driving their husbands don't do. al night in the vicinity of that dandy 1a1e metropolis called Shiprock in New Mexico, observe the luminous cows that shine in the dark Citi1.ens thereabouts sprav their loose livestock with reflecth•e p;iint. What glows by the side of the Your questio111 Dnd com- mcnt.s are welcomed and will. be used in CHECK· ING UP wherever possible. Please address your letters t.o L. ~f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875. Newport Beach 92660 Huntington School • Drivers Place 2nd Bus drivers from the Huntington Beach Union High School District have captured a second place in the annual Orange County School Bus Drivers' Training Institute. Shaver won second place whilt Coffee and Wolbert tied ror third place. Another district drlver. Steve Doron, received fourth place. Competition included a written examination. bus The team of Dan Shaver, Steve Coffee and Jim Wolbert were awarded the runner-up trophy for winning 1.418 points out of 1 possible 1,500 March inspection; offset a 11 e y problem. diminishin'g clearance problem, b 1 ind railroad crossing problem. parallel parking and several other tests of skill "· ' In individual competition, Money for bills? We sayftyes"to 2,302 loans every week. n you're swamped wttti bills, use our money \o pay them al l. MOnis Plan wants to loan you rnoney-lor bill coosolidalion, major appM· anocs.. or arry good reason. A bit1 conso&idation kJ.)r'l from Morris Plan can end your worries and consolidate your debts to a single, affordable monthly paymenl On approval, you can borrow from $100 to SS.000 Of more and get our Money-Back Guar- antee (if you find you can do belier, return the money with in 5 days at no cost to you). Call your oearby Moms Plan oflice \o find out how much your ~an 'Will cost. Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport IM1ch -3700 Newport Boulev1rd Mesa Anny Hero Wins Third Star A Costa 1'tesa man who joined the Army a f I e r graduation from lluntington Beach's Marina lligh School has won hi:! third Silver Star a5 a combat helicopter pilot in Southeast Asia . He is Warrant 011 i ctr Robert L. Parker, son of Robert M. Parker. of 1347 Baker St., who has since been reassigned to Fort Knox, Ky. He won the nation's third highest honor for gallantry as leader of an aeroscout team operating south of Takeo, Cambodia under heavy ground fire. The young chopper pilot - wounded twice in action ~led gunship$ from his air calvary troop to destroy a number of North Vieln::.mese g r e u n d units. Despite the fact his small scout ship was damaged already by relum fire, W-0 Parker was credited with killing 19 enemy soldiers in low-level strafing runs over the attack zone. Youths Work For Indigent Sixly-four North Or a n g e County high school students returned Friday from Tucson and Casa Grande, Ari:iona where they spent Easter week helping the underprivileged. Tbc coed Hi-Y groups of 32 led by five adult advisers plastered and painted houses. built furniture and constructed a home for an elderly woman whose house had b e e n destroyed by fire. Math Group Sets Visit To Schools Mathematics teachers from throughout the U.S. this week will attend an Anaheim ('(Invention tltat includeJ:I visits to three Orange Coast area IChool.S. The National Council of Teachers • f Mathematics meeUng from April 14 to 17 In Anaheim Convention Center will vislt seven county schools in all te observe ntw math programs. Teacheni will vi!it Ocean View Elementary S c h o o I s • Huntington Beach; Top of the World Elementary School in ' Laguna Beach. and Marina liigh School, Huntington Beach. The sch e•l s will demonstrate a variety of innovations in the teaching of math including r I ex i b 1 e scheduling, math resource and research centers, laboratories, computer calculators. teletype units, cassette tape a n d closed-circuit t e I e vis I 1 n installations. From Smokestacks Mercury Traced in Vapor ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -A team'1 aenkir acif.Dtlst, uld team of W a 1 h I n g t o n mercury vapors Inside plant..s Univenlty researchers has have Men found to cau11e reported that mercury serious Illness. Vaughan said mercury vapor falla \o tht (found in rain and bu been round far from Its lndustrhl sources. pollution, known to ccme fromlp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0 waste mercury in streams, also comea from mercury vapor released lrom smokestack.a. Re1earcher1 1t the university's center for the biology of DJlural sy1tem1 said it surveyed amoke1tackl in Missoorl and Illinois for three mootlu. A Barringer airborne mercury spectro- meter, an instrument sensitive to mercury vapors, wall taken Aloft in a helicopter to mea- sure the vapors. The research team said it found 12 power plants or city incinerators that discharged mercury vapor al a ralt greater than the ralt oi mercury discharge i n lo strealn.ll by the nation's 50 major mercury polluters. The team said that St. Louis' two city incinerators discharged an estimated S,800 pounds of mercury a year In vapor. Dr. William Vaughan, the I See Dy Today's Want Ads e LORDY-00-0AH~I!! Un. employment has got to JO down, with all these poa;i. lions open for your c~ inc .•. So; No more 1tand. ing In long Jines. , ,gettin1 nervoui; & upset. .. Put an end to it all ... & Pkk yourself • rood paying, reilptttable JOB. . .For Men & Women Class 710 ... It will be kard 10 choose from such a vari~ t;y, , ,But Try! Girt F'ri· days, • ,Telephone adver .. tising. • ,Man ID auiJt manarer , • • Assembly worken; .•. Mocho More!! e IT'S SPRING CLEANING FOR 'IllESE PF.OPLE. , • Books • • • m1111ines. clothes, dishes & I.ot'sa MISC. Ck 812. 'Why thousands of_Americans will.spend .$6"900 for a Mercedes-Benz thats three feet shor.ter ·than.American luxury cars.. At Mercedes-Benz, we define lu,;ury a bit differently than most automobile makers. To our \Vay of thinking, size £or the 5akc of size is not luxury. It is waste. I[ adding an inch to a Mercedes-Benz won't contribute to some function, Mer· cedes-Benz engineers won't add it. Eric Dahlquist, in a recen t issue of f\.1otor Trend, commented on the size of the American lurury car. "Stunned by such mass, the passen·; gercnters to find 1hat size i:locs not equate with room .•. " The Mercedes-Benz 250 Sedan is 11ir,.,e feet shorter than the shortest of the do- mcs!ic luxury sedans. Yet it is a curious fact 1hat the 250 concedes almost nothing inside. l.ftrctdts·Bt•!l t 11111nt:trs btht11t: both /r1111ds btlont on the 111/ittl.So tltty bu1/l /011r crirical co11110/s into o single stalk and pruitiontd it 11 finger's length a"'ay. In its recommended position, the seat seems too far from the wheel. And it's too unyielding to be caJlcd "luxurious." But that strange scat position lets you drive with the 'vhecl at arm's length and your back firmly against the seat's. And that gives you better control. The "unyieldin " seat, it turns out, 0 \1.•as designed b · opedic surgeons to give firm su . You'll appreciate it more after J1101dred miles 1han you do after seven. J f you press the floor switch to get your high beams. you'll get a squirt in the windshield instead. That's because a curious-looking .stalk, positioned precisely a finger's il'-.,..-· length from the wheel, embodies fourd.if· · .. T/iougli not o particularly big c11r, 1ht fcrcnt controls. occo1111noda110~1 i_111•tll-pla1111cd and quirt: 1-1 igh and lo\v beam~. tum signa1s, roomytnouglrforco115idcra1io11bythc · d h' Id · d h · _, chaufleur-d1·111cn t.tec1u111e." -Motor \Vin 5 JC wipers, an t e1r t\vo-spet;U control all can be operated without tak· The engineer is king A Mercedes-Benz is as different from a domestic luxury car as automobiles, each "'i!h four \\heels and an engine in front, can be . ~1ercedcs-Benz is one of the fc\11 auto- mobile makers left in the \Vorld where lhe engineer is still king. Design decisions arc made by an en· ginccr, not a styling \,,,.hiz or a marketing \Vizard. At i\1,•rcedcs-Benz, the engineer· ing dcparl mcnt still tells the sales depart· ment \,·hen a nc\v model is ready. The result is an automobile that has been built to an l.'nginecring ideal. And an automobile that 1s fundamen· tally d1lTcrcnt than any built in the States. From oddity to necessity To the uninitiated, this orproach ma}' appear to ha\'c disadva ntages. Your first time behind the \11httl of a Mercedes-Benz is likely 10 J'ltOducc a vague sense of disoricntatipn. ing your hands from the 'vhcel. Or your eyes from the road. Such oddities, admit1edly, 1ake some gellin g used 10. But there's a· reason for c\'ery one. And, before you know it, the oddities have become necessities. No domestic sedan •.• It is at the wheel a man discovers the pcrfonnancc cbancteristics that make Our l!Jll Stda,,. Tltc editors of i\1ntor Trend m11g11:i11e t:alltd 11 " ... tilt: "!OJI ('aurrollablc lrtf.lr-Jptt:d Jtd1111 l•'C°l•C /tJlt:d." Mercedes-Benz unique among the world'• motorars. Mercedes- Bcnz engineers belieYc that a car'• abilities should be limited only by road and conditions-not by its oWn design. Every Mercedes-Benz has fullyindependent suspension front and rear.A design concept .Used, without exception, on 200.mph grand prix can. It provides the maximum possible cornering power over a variety of road surfaces. No domcslic sedan has it. Every Mercedes-Benz is equipped with four massive disc brakes. Standard, nol optional. Because, to our way of think· ing, it's unthinkable to relcaate the best' brakes you can build to the option list. No domestic sedan bas them on all four wbcc:ls. And every Mercedes-Bem has a steer· ing system so precisely balan~d that the car seeks a straight pith on its own. No domestic sed~ can match it. Even the Grand Mercedes 600, a three-ton limousine, notes Motor Tren.d, " ... will outrun and outmaneuver many sports cars." Join the club But the final word on the distinction between Mercedes-Benz and domestic luxury cars belongs 'lO a aroup of Mer·, cedes-Benz owners. Owners so enthllSiastic that they've formed thirty-two chapters of the Mer· cedes-Benz Club of America. Each year they hold more than 60 It> cal competitions and 3 national rallies. It's their opportunity, in performance events, to extend their cars to the limita of whitjl a Mercedes-Ben1 is capable. Note\leryone joins tbedub.1 Mercedes·Benz ownen who nlly their cars are a relatively sniaJl share of our owners. But, tlien, no 1domestic ·~· ury car even~. a club. $6,900? Our pursuit of engineering ide.a.Js has placed Mercedes-Benz automobiles among the world's most costly. The suggested retail price of the Mer- cedes-Benz 250 Sedan, wUh autoJD&tic transmission, is S6,5JJt. With such popular options as power steering, white sidewall tires, and radio with rear-seat speaker, you can spend ovu$6,900. And t hirteen of our models cost more, including the 300SEL 6.3-dubbed by Road dr Track "merely the world's area.test sedan ..• "-at J16,35St. But if your tastes do not run ta the conventional luxury car. we ~ ~11 A1ty llUllry«LrCGn loot food in tlte COMlttfJ club dn·v,way. Merctdt.i-Btnt loo.ts good f,, placu like l.ime Roc:k, RoaJI. Amuicc and J l.q1U111 St:t.4-. find Mercedes-Benz automobiles well worth the price you pay. And if you1l fill out the coupon. be. Jaw, we'll send yeu our least expensive production. A full-color Mercedes·BeD% brochure, absolutely free. tWtst c.....i ,...,.r111'1b'y.o:twiw 111 ~ • ......, -119 f.i..,.,...).othor ........ 1w.-local ..... 11 ~· ~IJll,Mw :kza-llfilanlr.Awa.ls. r-m~~¥o!:::~;;~~I 'O S..... A-, Collf.,.lo t2707 II Please send me your fulk:olor brod!Uf'll ol the I Men:l:dcs-Bcru: motor carJ, O Please il'lcludc the Mcroede~·Beni Guide to Euro-r pean Ddtvery. ··~--------------Addrcu ____________ _ C11y SI•-----, Zip Telep'"°'"--------I ------------------.. ~ Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. 120V{.WamuAvenue,SantaAna,Cilifornia92101Phone:114-s46.4114 r BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 ..,...,, 4#11 It. ltn I ,._ ll From the Horse 's Mouth New Stock Fi I ls Barn A county fair atmosphere and a "ya all come" greeting will Jure bargain bunters to Ye Olde Bargain Barn stocked by members of the Laguna Niguel Woman's Club on Saturday, April 17. The annual fund-raising event will be in .the Niguel Riding Stables in Laguna Niguel from 9 a.m., until 4 p.m., according to Mrs. Nelson Collins, ways and means chairman. Besides a special corner reserved for bakery items and homemade breads, members will man a potted plant booth and sell the usual assortment of clothes, books, records, toys, furniture ,antiques, patterns, curtains, di shes and house hold items. Niguel Teen Scene will man a sno-cone booth and the junior high group will peddle hot dogs and soft drinks to hungry bargain wranglers. Chairmen of the sale include the Mmes. Kenneth Bloom, bousehold items; Leo Vartanian, clothing; John Gibson, food and baked goods; Gregg Neibert, posters and decorations, and John Smollen, potted plants. All items that are not sold will be donated to the Salvation Army with sale proceeds going into the Laguna Niguel W~man's Club Community Improvement Fund. MODEL AFTERNOON -Members of the Woman's Club of Laguna Beach (left to right) Miss Robin h1itche11. Mrs. Ina Steele and Mrs. Lillian Randolph arrive for the anl1uaJ spring luncheor and fa shion .!ihow. The tunv· WHITTLING AWAY TIME -h1rs. Gregg Neibert whittles away the hours while Mrs. John Gibson CO(Lt ributes a frying pan to Mrs. Nelson Collins' goat for Ye Olde Bargain Barn sale. The Laguna Niguel \Voman's Club members will stage a rummage sale in the Niguel Riding Stable quarters on Saturday, April 17. to raise [unds for their extensive co mmunity improvement projects. raisi ng event will begin at noon on Friday, April 16. in the Laguna Beach Woman 's Clubhouse. Guests are welcome. Suiting Summer Models Bid Welcome To Madame Fashion Fash ions by Robin will be modeled by members of the Woman's Club of Laguna Beach during their annual fashion show luncheon and bridge party on Friday, April 16. Models \vho will show attire during lhe noon meal include the h1mes Lela Finklea of Laguna 1-l ills. Louis Underwood of South La· guna. and Ina Steele, Frank l·Jurlburt. Duncan E. Stewart, 0. W. Price and Harry llanse n, a!! of Laguna Beach. The spring affair is under the direction of Mrs. J . \V . Lansdell, past president and ways and means chairman. She will be assisted by the Mmes. Finklea, Underwood, Clifford Loucks, Edith Saunders, Ross Meunier, 1-Iansen and Miss Faye Bentson, president. The Crafts Section under Mrs. Saunders' guidance, has been making seasonal decorations and interesting table prizes. There will be a prize for every table plus door prizes. Re servations at a cost of $3.50 may be made wilh Mrs. Loucks at 494·5006, or ~1rs. Price, 494·1927. Members of the Junior Club headed by Mrs. Carl Manus, presi- dent, will serve lhe luncheon. Luncheon tickeL<; entitle guests to participate in door prizes. Those interested are invited to stay and play cards. h1rs. Ruth Hull , a past president, and her daughter Miss Janet Hull, are in charge of tickets at the door. Mrs. Edgar Axtell, chairman of hostesses. will greet guests with the assistance of the Mmes. Gates Rheam. Joseph Simmons and Joseph Brown. ~ Wings Jittery as Social Butterfly Emerges From Cocoon DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am nearly 17 and have had this problem for over a year. Whenever 1 am asked for a dale I get real excited about it and 1 look forward to having a good time. So what happens'! About ten minutes before the guy shows up I get a stomach ache. By the time he arrives t feel rotten. I have these pains the whole evening and it's all I can do to farct a smile and pretend I'm having fun . fl kills me to see olher girl! laughing and enjoying thems.elveJ while l'm Jn pain -wlsh\ng I was dead. Please tell me how to get over this ridicu lous Lhlng. I am -SICK OF GETriNG SICK DEAR s.o.G.S.1 Gn to • doctor and lean whether or not an or1anlc probl em hi cau1ln1 the p1la. Chance• are 10Cld ANN LANDERS A ~M that the trouble 11 1101 la yoar stomach but b.ilber up -tlke llli your btad. People •Ito are apllgbt, learlDI and ansare •f lbemselva often deYelop physical 1ymptom1 . Slomacli aches and headaches are the moil common. Hopefully the doctor wtll glYe you some medication or 1ugge1t coun1elln1. ~faybe botb. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I resent your consistent portrayal o( homQ3'.xuals a.11 an Immoral. antisocial, ob no x Io us aegmenl ol society. I especially take excepUon to the letter from the Ariiona homosexual. Why it is you would not allow the words "kike'' or ''nigger'' to get into print, yet you Jet the word •·queer" appear in your rolumn, even though it is offensive to 20 milhnn Americans. tKinsey's statistics\. Furthermore, your concltL<iinn that the straight student was approached often because he was "prelt1er than most guys'• Is a sterotyplcal fallacy -pure fiction. Why do you !real 10 percent or your readership as though there is no good side lo their life style'! Your low opinion or homosexuals is apparent from Lhe selection of the letters you choose to print. Get with it or give up. - MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL GAY LIBERATION ALLIANCE OEAR GAY LIB: The letter belo-w miJtht be or Interest to you since It deals with the same subjeel. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is one of the sincerest thank-yous you'll ever receive. I've always believed that only a homosexual could understand what It Is like to be persecuted by ignorant people, but you, Ann Landers. have displayed unusual understanding. As • 2..1-year~ld homosexual. I can tell you it's a rough life to be rejected and humiliated, but for boys JS and 16 it's pure he.II. J appreciate your compassion. You are one person who prints the troth about homosexuality Please keep reminding your readers that the trouble with I h e world IS not that some people make love differrnlly but that they don't love at all . -Love lo you. Ann Landers. - EVANSTON - DEAR EVANSTON : Everyone likell IAl be appreciated. ThanQ for writln1. And now, • wnrd to Gay Ub who 1ay1 I am ml•lnformed. Sorry, you're wrong. It ft no 1tereotyplc1I fallacy lbat pretty males attract homosexuals. 0 Plnk Tea Queens" (11 they are called ) are weD aware of their glrll1b &oocl looks and they u~ U te an adYaatage. n.il lllormaticMt comes to me frem Ute bo1ROHIUal1 themsdYes ud not rrnm lblfd.party rt.un:hers. Drinking may be "in" to the kk1! fQl run with -but It can put you "out" fot keeps. You can cool It and stay popular. Read "Booze and You -for Teenagn Only," Send 35 cenl.S In coin and a long. self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request In care of the DAILY PILOT. J f DAILY PILOI Mondiy, April 12, 1971 USC Classmates Garden Chosen For Wedding Patricia Ann Tay Io r, formerly a Newport Beach ttSident, became the bride of Jt.hn Munay Caims in a poolside aarden wedding at her parents' Onlario home. Bishop Seth Baker performed the double rina ceremony. Parents of the bride are ~ir. and ~1rs. Ralph L. Taylor. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. James Herbert Cairns of North Vancouver, Britisb Colu1nbia and the late Mr. Cairns. Escorted by her father, the bride chose her sister ~Jiu Cathi Taylor to be her maid of honor. Douglas Cairns flew from North Vancouver to be his brother's best man. The oew Mrs. Cairns is a learning coordinator in the Fountain Valley Schoo I District and an instructor at OraOEe Coast College. She 11 a masters degree candidate at the University of Southern California. Her husband, a FulDright scholar. is a high scllOOJ teacher in the Santa Monica Unified School District. He also teaches English at Santa Monica City College. and was for lwo years on the faculty of the universit y in Thesa1onike, Greece. He has earned l~'O masters dt!grees and an administration creden- tial from t:SC. MRS. JOHN M. CAIRNS Double Ring Ceremony Clowning Around Joyce Runge Becomes Mrs. Michael Ollila The circus wiU come to tov.·n Friday, April 16. when the li1eado\vlark Women 's Golf Club sponsors its annual Invitational. FoUowi.ng a shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. will be the tournament and a circus Juncheon. Ready for their day "under the big top" are (left to right) the l\1mes. J ohn li.1ontgomery, Stanley Du Ree and Robert Moore. A double ring ceremony in Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa, linked !he names ol Joyce Runge ar.d Michael H. Ollila. The bride was given in mar. riage by her parents. M r . and !\!rs. E. H. Rwige of Huntington Beach. Conducting the morning rites was the Rev. Andrew C. Anderson. Counselor Joins Staff Of Crittenton ServiceS:. enable the budding Crillenton ) Parent.s of the bridegroom are P.tr. and Mrs. Eino Ollila of Costa Mesa. Howard Ollila ~·as best man for his brother, and another brother Ed Ollila headed the ushers. including Dennis Holland , Dave Siebels and Loren Matson. Miss Laurel Runge was her sister's maid of honor. and Miss Karen Runge her bridt>s maid. Other bridesmaids in· eluded 1'.fiss Pat Ollila, sister of the bridegroom , ~tiss Judy Robinson and Mrs. fo.1yron Okimoto. Flower girls were Donna and Karen Stanley. a n d Michael Stanley carried the rings. The bride was graduated MRS. MICHAEL OLLILA Morning Ri tes from t-.larina High Schoo! and from LC!. Htr husband, ""ho graduated from Costa ~1esa High School. served for four years in the Air Force. T oostmistress Club Objectives Listed Florence Crittenton Services (If Orange County has reached a milestone in its expanding work with unwed mothers and their families 11·1th t h e addition of its fJr st wcial y;orker. ~1rs. Norm an Bigetman. ~1rs. B1gelman. a native of Tustin. brings lo the services extensive experience 1 • v.·orking "' i t h emotionally in\·oh·ed young people. She earned her BA degree al the Universily of California, Santa 811rbara in 1960 and her MA degree in social '"'ork at the University of Southern California. Prior to joini11g Florence Cril\enton Services. she "'as affiliated with Fl\'C Acres residential treatment center for emottonally di s I u r bed children. Fami ly Se r v 1 t e Association of Oran_ge Count' <ind the Orange C o u n t :\• Adoption All:enc} Kare11. who is the mother or organization to better build its structure. Any problems relating to pregnancy may be discussed 11·1th Karen. "·hose office is at 531 S. ~lain SL. Suite i. i11: Orange. telepOOne 5'47·9377. C r ittenton administrators point out that one out of every JO births this year in Orange County "'ill be to an un~·ed rnother. and four of those "·ill be to teenagers. ''Sadly, in many cases, this pregna ncy marks the beginning of a cycle consisting of dropping out of school. living on state v.·elfare. never rnarr.v1ng and having more oUl·of-1\·edlock children.'' a spokesman said. \\'ith Karen 's help, the Cnllenton Services will hope to break that cycle and help pregnant teenagers assume responsible roles by offering dirf'c!ion in medical care, educa11un. legal aid and counseling ~!rs. Bigelman. whose ( OFFERS HELP Kar•n Bigt lman husband has returned lo Catifomia State College at Futlerto" to study political science-, enjoys se~·lng and playing bridge in her leisure time. You \Vere There will theme the \Vednesday, April 14. meeting of Las 0 1 a s Toastmistress Club in the \Mercury Savings and Loan Assoc i a t ion building. Hunti11gton Beach. v.·ill reporting. to leam correct Da\'id. 16 months. a n d Kimberly. 3 months. feel s that l•••••••liiiilll•ll!!••iiiii ~,:~,~~~~'"~.;~;~' .. "":~~1 C1·ow11<Jl!l111g Glory f\frs. Calvin Olcott "'Ill ronduct a briefing session on how to make reports. options for their child . The objective of the 7:30 p.m. meeting, acet1rding to ~!rs. Velma Bolin, president, Mrs. Laurence T h o m a s . toastmistress. 1vill introduce the program participants and topics. including the P.lmes. &!in. givin~ a c I u b representatives' report; Marie F'outs, a book report. and Joe Gonzales. a book re\·iew. "They ha\'e to li.,·e "'ith that decision a lon~ time.'' she : J [ stated.Thetotalfamilyunitis, Je auty ~a O llS "·elcome to rome to her office. includinR the natural father. I OP!N l~ft,jlll'GS ANO SuNo.1.r' She will concentrate on l t.P?OH•-1TN.ENl NOT Al.Wl.'fi NECE55ARY Alpha Phi Alumnae To Gather During the club's Apr il 28 meeting, member~ "" i 11 visiting other agc11cies lo find .,,·hat social sE'rvices arc I missing in Orange County lo demonstrate the making of Soroptimists craft items for a booth at the 11untinglon Beach City-Wide N rt H bo So · · t festival May 15. ewpo ar r ropt1m1s I Club meets the first three Women who are inlerest«>d Wednesdays for 3 n 0 0 nl In achieving poise a 11 d luncheon in the \\'hit!' Horse confidence in h a n d Ii n g Inn, Nev.·port Beach . everyday situations a r e: ~~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;q An Aug 8 "cdd1ng 1n the u·e/come to join the club. Iii *" *'""'"~ Orange l'Clun!\' B h ~ dd I s t r============, 1,000'1 OF OIL PA INTINGS I Chur<:h. 1\natieim is being LOCAL WHOLBALI WA•IHOUSE ~· planned b\ Jl'an \Vada and ' OPI N TO THI PUI LIC . Ronald S. :\akano. No othet 11•w1p•per tell• YDU so•' OFF Th eJT hetroth11I \IJ' an-more, .... ry dey, •beut wh c1'1 /0 r nounced by brr parent~ ~Ir 9oin9 on i11 ff.e Greclet Orc119• ' "" I . r,o_INGt:,~: .~~NT• •11 • nd \ I Co11I tficn tli• DAILY PILOT. ...-- a . !rs. Bi I II \\ ;ida of '-:=:=:=:=:=:=::;:::;:::;:::;::~=:;~'~'~'~'~"~'~'~"~';'~'~'~'~'==, Garden Grove, during a dtnner ·r party 1n \hr Kono IL111;1ul restaurant. Among guests werl' ~11· :ind 1ilrs. John G. ~akano or San1;1 l\na Meights. pllrtnts of lhe benedicl-e!eet. ~1iss Wada. a graduate of Pacifica High School , 11l1cnd~ California State College :it F'ullerton wherl' ~he 1~ af- filiated wilh Sigma Kappa sororitr. Her -fiancr. a graduate of Corona del 1'1ar High School . t'amed ihs BA degree in finance at C5CF. wher? he wu a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity . DTERY IHO•S f'O• WOM•• a CM!Utt•M .... lmt M. ......... ...,,. LADIES -ARE YOU OVER JO AND DO YOU HAVE AG ING SKIN PRO BLEMS? lo;f.l:OEE T•l·DEtMAL •l'A\/TY l'Ull' -M H1lccll, ownoll, .. 11tw llt ''"'<t,10, M i<NlitotlY .,,. .... Miii MH!lty...,, Mtw llltuW..-lft !Mt '""' ¥W ff .. 11, l•r ,._ (9"'~·~ ..... 1~ •J•lo I! 111• !"Cl Ill.II C'-1 C i.IM""' •lllr'I -•Ito lol ctt· "'"'><' ••• NII a-ai!y. It It •ti......, "'al -• ••• _,.. men ""' ,.,;,. __ ,,, "''"'1"' 1,..,.,, -,..,., c1 •ry """'· illy 111111 ., etrier ••..,Pit•,.• ,,.tl•m" 111 ..... 11\! <•'111ft •••k '-' ... """" ... Ille _,'"" 111111 ..... ""1"' 1'0 """ ,., "" oo1r1..,, T .... 1(-Trt-Dlll'llWI a...ty ~t..trl IOfl II,. ... \ IM VIV• ••i• ...i Mltrt -llliltl wtlll ..... ell Mlllrill• WI .. ter .,,,.,.,,.,, Aflt 1(•'9t1 ,,..ll<h 1r1 11""'1....,...k. • lftlY 11-i Mrm _lt...., .. lll, I HlllMlfl Mio! k ""'"19. Mtl, -~-rttfllotll. " " llNltlly c!MI ·-· INlllll•I "'!•, .. 1t1y ko•tt••I, ""'' at ..--,,. cc .... tw, Tiie 11ni 11 It'll 11~ IH ~llilwUr,i "' ii <•ft IH K .... lllk1l!y ,U...,., Tl at -~ w;N, ii _.,. Ill-""'"'''' .. ,,. -'•• -Tlla "'""' Tri-Dl""'I tuvty Pll• -.. <••fl"'t • ,.....,..,, If ••-licl l~ten •lfllln Ille lllol. If ••l1n1111y clNft'""' ''"'"'· -""''""''"' ,., Ille Ntt <9'""''-'"" ceni. Clll M1 .. 1rol ~Ill !May t., 1..., Ir .. 111.,.. ••'"""'1lr1tlloi. All! 1 '" ,,,_, 1vt< It •lllln• • ,.. .. 1a1t '""'•!le ,,,..,,.. .. 1acw toc .. 1 •-t-o, "'' .. l"lltliMI It ..,., -lilt '"•Ill Ire 1wcr1..,.. ., ~ -y Hdl. "-.,.... ltu1 1111 .... 1 .. 111y C""MMl lll .. IU.1'U t.r .. .....,..111 .. .._ ...... SPRING PERM SALE! Bouncy, breezy beautiful curls Flattering new fa shion look. Very Special. Reg. $15.00 now $89S BUDGET PE RM . , .. (Normal Hair) always '595 FROSTING SPECIAL. SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT M1~ Two WH •29§ ., .. $14so Sty/111pr1cec 1/1ghtl-f h1ghet ....,s=ou=rH:-;c=oA=sr"""'P"""LA=ZA=Phone 546-7186 Lo\\.Cr IA.'vcl-Nexl lo Sears Open Evenin91 267 l 17th St, Costa Mesa Phone 548-9919 Open Evenings & Sund1y W• CARE about youf l ook your best! ' Your Horo scope Aquarius: Avoid Ruts TUESDAY, APRIL 13 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March ll-AprU 19): Hold off on financial commitments. Take time to evaluate. Inventory of your own assets is essential. Finish major project. Leave no loose ends. ~1oney preuure will ease. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You will have to handle added pres sure. Don't duck respon sibility. A past commitment mak"es reappearance. f\1 a i n t a i n balan ce. Throw aside eutmoded concepts. Get down to business. GE.WNI (f\fay 21.J'tlnf 201 : Play low key. You gain most now through quiet approach. One who constantly complains must be given fact! of life. Refuse to be a door mat for any persons. lo!essage will be clear. CANCER I June 21-July 22/: Accent ver&atllity. Don't scatter forces. finish w ha t you start. Spread innuence. An older friend may have legilimate objection. Be a good J14tener. You I ear n somethlng of value. LEO 1July 23-Aug. 221 : Check details : don't overlook apparent 1ninor matters. One born under Soorpio can help unravel mystery. Accent on securing property. Stay on top ef situation. Be available. VIRGO IAug. 2.1-Sept. 221 : Take nothing for granted. Reports n e e d verification. Some mfssages now tend to go astray. Key is to do some Irvine Club to Hear Executive Director Mrs. Judson Sutherlland, ex- eculive director of the Orange County chapter of the March of Dimes will be the ftatured speaker w h e n members of the Irvine Junior \Voman's Club gather on Wednesday, April 14. Mrs. Craig Parks will open her Jrv;ne home for he meeting at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Sutherland, a Costa Mesan. also is a f i e Id representative for Soulhem California and a 2 2 y e a r member of the f\farch Of Dimes. She "'JI! speak on health needs in the county and show a film explaining how clubs may assist the foun- dation. il-1embers also ~·ill have the opportunity to set t h e ensemble which won a second place a"·ard for ,..1rs. Parks in the Orange District, CF\VC, Creative Sev.·ing Contest. She will model her entry. an off. white Forstman "'OOI A·line dress v.·ith tunic length jacket. personal invtsligating. Ask queslions. Go to source. Nt secondhand reports. UBRA /Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Some financial pressure is in· dicated. Payments come duf. Weigh budgel; take in1•entory. Home improvements are nece.ssary. Make gesture or ret'()nciliation to fa mi I y member. You'll be happier. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be aware of competition. Don 't fool yourself into false sense -0f security. Be wary of one who is qui.el, but resentful. Face facts as they exist. Rf-- cent venture ~'ill bear fruit. SAGITI'ARJUS r Nov. 21- Dec. 21J: You complete im- portant task and receil'~ ad- ded recognition. Steer clear of dispute between f r i end 1. Otherwise you COtJld be caught rn middle. Tread lightly. Laugh at your own foible s. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): You complete important task and receive added reco- gniti-On. Steer clear of dispute between friends. Otherwise you could be caughl in middle, Tread lightly. Laugh at your o"'°'n foibles . AQUARIUS /Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your values are put to test. You may have to choose bet""·een inertia and progress. Latter course takes initiative. Don't permit yourself to re- main in any rut. PlSC~ (Feb. 19-March 20): Some plans are aJtered. Have faith in ultimate outcome. Giving up now would be error. There will be changes. Yoa will adjust to them . Protect Interests via legal procedure. ewinner! Sears UnSeoT• RevolrinQ Chm;• sxto GLiving Goloi <i>O T TS •Babies, Qillclrea 5 weeks to l:! years • Ooe per subject. • Sati1ract1oa panatttd • Groaps lk ptr subject. Photographer will be in store on Tuesday, Wed ., Thursday and Fridays 12 not.II te 8 p.m. Saturdays JO a.m. to 6 p.m., Sundays 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. Scars twa Mna lkUMI •t S-0-er bl tile. So.di C.sc Pbiu $M-Ull Semn BeMa Pan U Pal-•l~ PHO!l.'ETA M4 .. •r5Zl-U5t SninTwn~ Ratrdlerw1t Sqiti'Na PHONE Mt·IW !ksn &.ylf OlympkPd Sot• PHONE %'3-S!l I &mn Vem!M&. V~ 11 Slaalft Avn. PHONE PL t-ltU San lq:"""°' Mllldtnttt 11 Rll\crttt PHONE OR 1-%5!1 5-nPlcl 1f, PbBI"' 1t Rim,.• PHONE WE M?Q • • --Monday, April 12, 1971 DAILY P!LaT JI Bubble Memories Uncorked by Erma Bombeck It was more than a passing interest th1t caused me to stop and read that the Lawrence Welk show iJ being cancelled. Back in 1944, while I was still in high sclxioJ, I ipplied for the job of copy boy on our dally newspaper. This was agelmt my parents' wishes. According to my mother newspaper people wert as kin to !!in as show bwlness people. • And we all know about them. How they chew gum, stay up until 10 and use word! like, "Lydia Pinkham" and "kid· do." Mother was quite relltved when they lei me cover obituaries . In fact, she used to run around the neighborhood trying to get me •·exclmives." (''If you go between 1 and 11 p.m., Mrs. Sidewinder, we can still make her deadlines.") Despite the fact that my proud mother was the only one in the neighborhood with a scrapbook of deceased people she didn'l even know, she was still suspicious I would fall into bad company. AT WIT'S END Bad company's name turned out to be Arthur and he was had never danced with a man wearing an accordion befo~. When I returned home, mother wu furious, "Where dld you go tonlght!" J told her 1 w11 at 1 dance at the A.Ir Force Base. "Who did you dance with?" !!he asked. "A man drused in an ac- cordion who put his finger in hls cheek to pop a cork while the band played champape mu!lic and he danced the polka." ··vou mark rny word," Ibo predicted, "Weirdies Uke that will never make ll in a decent world." After '11 years, I wonder lf Mr. Welk would like to try bit luck in an indecent world. the drama critic. There w1s,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;; something about Arthur that intrigued me. I think it was the free passes that fell from Ju. bilUold. Or maybe it was the parade of weirdo!! who passed by his de!!k seeking promotion ... the burlesque queens who alway1 felt embarrassed in clothe1, the big band leaders, the circus tooters who d i d everything from planting a midget in hi.! filing cabinet to bringing a Brahma bull up on the elevator. One night, Arthur and his wife invited me to Wrighl·Pat. terson Air Force Base where a small band was holding forth . It was LawM!nce Welk. H asked me to do the polka. J Have you counled.· your diet pills. lately? 'B' SHARP NOT FLAT -Members of Orange Coun- ty Philharmonic Society (left to right) the Mmes. Richard H. Lee, Roger Blancharct and Robert Rad- cliffe are in a musical mood as they anticipate the Friday, April 16, concert by Zubin Mehta and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, as well as Or. H. Colin Slim's preview lecture preceding it on \Ved· nesday, April 14. Left-handed 'Brooms Sweep Up at Auction Everything from wigs lo Haviland china to a left·hand- ed broom wUI be offered dur- ing a sileal auction which will be the spring philanthropic project for the Mesa-Harbor Club. County, will take place during the monthly luncheon Thurs- day, April 15, in the Mesa Verde Country Club. Theater Premiere Projected Plans for the opening of the John Wayne Theater al Kno!t's Berry Farm were formulated during a luncheon in the Newport Beach bayside home of Mrs. Kenneth Reafsnyder. Attending were presidents and regional re presentatives of the Orange County Chapte r of the Nati onal Assisl ance League, Region II. The opening will serve as 11 fund· raising project for the many philanthropies conducted by area leagues. Among those attending from lhe Orange Coast were the ~1mes. Gilbert Turnbull and Jack Colvin. Huntin g lon Beach: Thorras tl-faddock and Tho1nas Jones. Laguna Beach and Wilbur Reynolds, Kenneth C. Albright and Paul Rogers, Newport Beach. The June 19 opening will feature a premiere or the actor's latest mo vie. THE BEST R•1d1r1hip potl1 prowl "P1.>· nuh" i1 on• of th1 world't moil pop11l•r corn ic 1lrip1. Rt•d it d•ify i" th• DAILY PILOT. Consultant Views Art Lynn Slacey, a newcomer on the California art scene, will discuss creative drawing and contemporary portraits for members of the Niguel Art Association at II p.m. on Thursday. April 15, in Crown Valley School. Stacey, whn has b e e 11 arlisticly active in the east and mldwest, is listed in "\Vho's l\'ho in American Art" as a painter, designPr and il- lustrator and is a Fellow of the International Institute of Art~ and Letters. The artist has designed ex- hibits and executtd mural.! for natio"al companies and has been a consultant for the past four years. The lecture will cover u~ or line. color 2nd desi~. Semi ab~tract <ind abstract drawlnlt' etnd introduction lo ''arious mr>dia also will be discussed. The meeting is open to the public at no charge. Rebekah lodge Triple Link Club of Mesa Rebekah Lodge has meetings the fourth ~tondays at 8 p.m. in various locations. Mrs. Douglas Morgan at 543-1938 may be called for 'ddJliona.1 information. Perlman to be Soloist Ta I k Previews Mehta Concert The event. which will raise funds for the Florence Crit· ttnton Service or Orange April Tea Planned Auction chairman Is Mrs. Edward Zielimki, and Mrs. Duane M. Steputis, president, invites all members and guests to participate in the fun. Mrs. Brian Gallagher, golf chairman, has a nn ou n ced plans to change play to JO a.m. Wednesdays at the Riverview Golf Course, Santa Zubin Mehta is returning en The author of the book Ana. Amphetamine diet pills are ofttn abusecf. Amphet•mines are discussed on pages 17 through 19 of the Fedefill source book:' "Answers lo the most frequently asked questioils:' about drug abuse.'' For your free copy send in the coupon below. •••••••••••••••••• F d ~tembers of the Midway City Tennis-minded players are riday, April 16, to con uct "f\.1usica Nova," he is making Woman's Club will gather invited to make rtservations f I lh f-' I book the Los Angeles Philharmonic final revisions en the volume e oracopyo e ONetJ. sou rce : 0 h tr f the 0 at 12 :30 p.m. in the clubhouse with Mrs. Robert Sickler, ten· "Answerslothemostfr'""uentlyasked • re es a or range entitled ''A Gift ef Motels and tomorrow for their rtgular ...... County Philharmonic Society's Madrigals for King Henry . d 1 nis chairman, for games at • questions about drug abuse" • fifth concert, and a preview meeting an ea. writeto:OrugAbuseQuestions andMswtrs • lecture on Wednesday, April VDI" which v.·ill be published Guest speaker will be Sam 9:30 a.m. each Tuesday at e 14 . will illuminale woe ks to be by the University of Chicago Migliano. director of parks Costa Mesa High School. • Nilional deoitinghouse fOf Drug • d t I f Abuse lnformition presented. press in 1972. a n rec re a on o r Highlight ef the concert in Dr. Slim completed Westminster. VFW A ·1· • ~~~gton,D.C.20013 •· UCl 's Crawford Hall will be graduate stud ies at Harvard Selections of Easttr music UX I 1ery • • the per f o,r m 8 n c e er and taught al the University of also will be performed by Nime:.· ______________ ...,." Tschaikowsky's Concerto in 0 Chicago before coming lo UCI members of the WestminJter Coastline Auxiliary to • 2 for violin by soloist ltzhak in 1965. Baptist Church choir. Veterans of Foreign Wars. • Address; . Perlman. The noted 24-year-Tickets for the April 16 con· Hostesses for the tea to Post 3536 gathers the first old violinist will be playing a cert are available at the follow include the Mmes. and third Fridays at B p.m. e Oty· _____ _,tite· Zip·o---9 rare Stradivarius crafted in Orange County Philharmenic James C. Badgett. John Tim-Costa Mesa's A mer I can ~ 1723. office in Newport Beach at brook. Kenneth Beno, Russell Legion Hall is the meeting e · e e e e e e e e e e e • e • .... fi In the preview, Dr. H. Colin 1_1<_.5tl_. S_1_u_de_o_1_ti_c_ke_1s_a_re_l2_. __ B_a_lk_e_a_o_d_R_._v_._P_h_lll_lp_s_. ---"-'"-'-· ________ J'.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Slim, chairman of lhe music department al UCI. w i 11 discuss the works by Lizt. Varese and Tschaikowsky that will be en the concert pro· gram. His talk is scheduled for 11 a.m. in Edwards Newport Theater, rash I en Island. Dr . Slim. whu has perform- ed as piano soloist with the Canadian Broadcasting Ce .. is noted for his studies in the field of Italian Renaissance music. f()f J'()Uf ·SLENDER OON T WAIT! SI art now , , • in o f.w slat ,....ks .....ar.ted !)OU'lds and inches <XS! quickly md >Ofely di-r. NI this without starvation diets ot exerc.i.sc. Ws ore NOT a SPA or GYM. No membecllip required. •. • : . ·'st.art. now MotoS,. .. Gyno.loducawMlwot ...,..uou• n.•rciae or .... bi ... Ho -bon!Up FREE p1.,,..,. facilitin for FAMOUS DAN RIVER ~ {ilUUGlll-t J?..I.u;,.,, child Nil. "HOYA" COORDINATES F1ncie1 0-C. ........ _ ...... . -... _., .. _..,, .... _,,._ ............. n.-111 ........ ...... M•tching Solids ... !mt Ml}'Z ...... _. J I ... sp•rkling new spring colors, muted pastels. NEVER NEEDS IRONING Regul1r 9k yd. V•IU9 1 oo•.i. ••''-" ····-h ll"/Jt" •I• NATIONALLY ADVERTISED _JUTION-NEKS No .M .. • LMt Or L•eM l•tton 49c PlG. Jril• Mo,.. Fr9Y'fCI lvtt•• H•IH. -24 t. • P'lit. II HOUSE OF FllBRICS :Morti Coest ".-t•ulol 11 S•n Oiito Fwv. H•Ht' rteq -171~ ti l •lttol C•lf• .M-. -541-1516 S..'9 AN -14l·5151 Oronq•lolr M•ll-Or•119tlltorp• •nd H••bor l •elle Perlr Celltet'-lt Ptl1111 t i 5!t11to11 ..... ~ ... -12l·l)J4 ......... ,. -121·6lJJ H1111tl'"1t1111 C1111ter-Ed•1191• •• l11c.ll l l•<il., H1111tl'"1tell lffd--lt7·101J 4Jt PACllllC COAST Hl•HWAT •41·J•Jt 11 l lec\1 f •t• ef l1lbe• l•y Club! IANlA ANA, 1140 W"' 17fll ltNet ALSO IN : ANhel"', c .... 1 ... C ...... w, De...,, Olettct.le, ...... "'°"· l.411 Y..-, a.. .. IHc:lll, N-,..-t lffclll, N. Heliy..M. D...n., ,__,_, S... Diet•, '-'• A"-s.t. hrMNri S... leflll, l"'leH, T.,,.-.., WlafttlM. It.I C•pyri9llt. tf71 Gleri1 Mtr1ll•ll Mqt. Ce. l11c • l ., ~ i j I •• DAILY PILOT Monday, Aprt/ 12, 1'171 • ·NB Ceremony \ ' Lin.ks Couple • STARTS MONDAY at all 18 stores shop 10 a.m. 'til 9:30 p.m . Saq Diqo wlll be home ror John Leslie Gridley and his bride, the ronner Janet Sue Lewis, who exchanged wed- dinl rlnp and pledjjes in SL AMrew-11 Presbyterian diurct,, Newpon Beach. '1be Rev. Dr. Ch a rl e 1 ~ read the afternoon rites for the daughter arid -ot Mr. and Mn. Earl Allen Lewta of Newport Beach and Mn. Roger Forde or · Llguna Beach. ~Ste-r sales & clearances Given in 'marriage by her father. the bride was attended by Miao Christine Le.Its, her sister. Bridesmaids wert the Miues Kathy Arnold, Lisa Wuhboo, Barbara Lu den, Pam LoVig. Candlellgtlters ' were Miss Sharon Orona and Miss Kathy Johnson. Flower girl was Kim Groll ' and ring bearer was Jef£ Owens. Barrett Hunt served as best man and guuta were seated by David Sears, Eugene Johnson. Don McNealy and Mike Crouch Ill. The bride, a graduate or Newport Harb<>-Hlgh School and Orange C.Oast College where she was president of Epsilon Della, is a junior at ...... ,.,,.It MRS. JOHN GRIDLEY Sin Diego Home ~ASHION SAVINGS 2 AND 3 PIECE SUITS town & travel 49 -were 40.0C>-66.00 PANTSUITS cosmopolitan 96 -were 36.()().60.00 18. 99-39. 99 18.99-38.99 2u~~d~r~.S~ _P ~.~2Io8~~SSES 13. 9 9-2 3. 9 9 San Diego Slate College. ma· !~~g ~~~~~~~ 1 wf ~tJJJo~ITS 14 • 9 9-2 2, 9 9 ionng In home eoonorrucs. Her husband, also lhe son CASUAL DR ESSES 8 99 15 99 ~the late ·Dr. J . W. Gridley, daytimedresses6t.-reg.14.00-26.0U • -• 1s a graduate of Laguna Beach High School and oc.c He SHIRTS BLOUSES AND TOPS 9 99 attends SDSC, maJor1ng 1n 1 English. He also attended better blouses 39 -were 13.99-19.99 • Westmonl College. ACRYLIC KNIT TOPS, 5-1 3 6 99 8 99 young sig ~plswr. 55 -were 12.00-15.00 • -• Bell-Raub Wedding SOLID AND PRINT BLOUSES 3.99-5.99 10.99 5.99-8.99 99c-1.99 t.ompus shop 43 -were 7.00-11.00 Afternoon Vows Said ORLON "' ACRYLIC SWEATERS knit sportswear 72 -were 15.0Q.18.00 Kathleen Ann R a u b , Episcopal Church, Corona del FAMOUS MAKE JEANS Mar. ac.live sportsWear 76 -were 9.Q0..12.00 The Rev. John Davis and 1he R.,. S1anley Parke of FAS HION JEWELRY Santa Maria performed the jewelry 22 -was :l.{)().6.00 HOME FURNISHINGS NYLON PILE KITCHEN CARPETING ·floor covering 32 -was 10.00-) 2.00 sq. yd. 3.99 3.99 49'-1.79 2/5.00 6.99 1.19 COTTON TABLECLOTH, 52x70" linens 30 -was 8.00 FAMOUS MAKER TOWELS tof...els 30 -were 75c-4.SO FULL FIT BOTIOM SHEEJS ~heets 34 -were 5.49 VENETIAN POUFF PANELS curtains 113 -were 16.00-20.00 CUSTOM DRAPERY FABRICS cuslom fabrics 11 -w.i:s 2.75 yard 12.99 DELUXE LOVABLE LEGS EXERCISER sporting goods SO -\OJas 19.95 BASEBALL GLOVES ~porting goods 50 -\Vere 6.99-I 3.99 TABLE LAMPS, OPTIC GLASS lamps 63 -were 25.00 4.88-7·.88 19.99 GOLD LEAF TABLE, WALL LAMP lamps 63 -were 50.00 PLATE GLASS DOOR MIRROR 34.99 11.99 daughter of Mrs. Jack Saunders Raub of Newport Beach and the late Mr. Raub, and Jerry Yates Bell Jr. of Playa de! Rey were married in an afternoon ceremony in St. Michael and All Angels double ring service. The bride's brother, Jack G, Raub of South Laguna gave her in marriage. mirrors 75 -v.·as 1 S.00 REPTILE PATENT HANDBAGS 14 99 19 99 . handbags 26 -were 20.0G-45.00 • -• SPANISH TYPE GLASS MIRROR 39.99 13. 99 Attending the bride were the Misses Ethel Simonfy, maid of honor, Leslie Meyers and mirrors 75 -was 68.00 ~o~~HS~~e~~J?.oo5HIRTS 5.99-8.99 ENAMEL FONDUE: COLORS Beverly Bosch. Peter Heikes was best man, with the bridegroom's brothers Hilton S. and Robert 4-G. Bell, and Allan Messing acting as ushers. FA MOUS DR ESS SHOES \vomen's shoes 51 -\Vere 18.0Q...22.00 DR ESS AND CASUAL SHOES c.i:suals shoes 129 -were 22.00-24.00 The new f\.1rs. Bell is a graduale of Newport Harbor CA SUAL AND DRESS PANTS High School and Oregon State University where she was a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. She is a teacher in the Lowell School District. small boys 52 -were 4.()()..5.00 DR ESS AND PANT SETS girls dresses 56 -were 8.00 ASS ORTED SPORTSWEAR The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Yates Bell of Newport Beach, was girls ~Ports\vear 77-wcre2.SQ..8.00 graduated from Harbor High FASHION SUNGLASSES and the University o[ Wyom- ing where he was affiliated cosmetic 100 -were 3.00·6.00 ""'"' '"" ~i.lh Phi Della Thela r;atemi· PASTEL NYLON GOWNS MRS. JERRY BELL JR. The couple vdll live in ~leep\\'ear 10 -\vere6.0Q..10.00 April Bride Anaheim. WOM EN'S HALF SLIPS t.laytin1e lingerie 28 -were 4.Q0.6.00 YOUTHCRAFT BRA SLIPS bras 44 -\Vere 7.00·12.50 • gifts 82 -was 17.50 13.99 <.hina 46 - was 45.00 29.99 45-PC. IRONSTONE FOR 8 8.99 SHEFFIELD DESK PAD CLOCK 5 99 2.99 ~'(;'L~EST~8:PILEAREARUGS34 99 79°99 6 9 g areJ. rugs 137 -"'ere 70.00 to 160.00 • -• • • 1.99-3.99 BUDGET STORE FASHIONS, FURNISHINGS 1.99 MISSES' BLOUSES, VARIED misses' sports\vear 800 -were 4.99·9.00 3.99-5.99 MISSES'PANTSUITS,MANY mis~· dresses 810 -were 11.99 1.99-2.99 JUNIORPANTSUITS 3.49-4.99 junior scene829 -were 11.99 MISSES' ALL WEATHER COATS misses". coats 828 -were 24.99 2.99 8.99 8.99 13.99 Cinda Jameson Weds William Whitehorn MEN'S WEAR VALUES fo~.~Ts':Yw9V.9~LTED ROBES 4.99 The Peek Family Colonial Terrace Room, Westminster was the wedding scene when Cinda Jameson exchanged vows and rings with William C. Whitehorn. The bride, daughter of Mrs. Thomas E. Coultas of Hun- tington Harbour, was given in marriage by Coultas for the late afternoon ceremony. 1ifiss Donna Brooks attended the bride as maid of honor. Bridesmaids included Mrs. James Catanuro and Mrs. Jerry Chapman. Miss Temre Pettigrew, the bride's ni~. was flower girl. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Whitehorn of Memphis. asked MJchael ··-1~ Jameson, the bride's brother, to serve as best man. Ulbers MRS. W. C. WHITEHORN wert Raymond ~1cNeill and Afternoon Wedding Louis Lopez. M EN'S NO-IRON DRESS SHIRTS men's furnishings 6 -were 7.S0-9.00 SPRING'S NEW NECKTIES men's furnishings 6 -\Vere 5.00 ONE SIZE CREW SOCKS n1cn's lurnish1ngs 127 -\\'ere 1.00 6-P.ACK OF NO-IRON HANKI ES men's furni::.hings 80 -\\'ere 3.50 FAMOU S WALLETS,. CARD CASES m en's iumi~hings BO -\Vere 7.SQ..10.00 COD ON KNIT SHIRTS n1en·~ sport (urni::.hing;i 84 -\Vere S.00-6.00 4.99 1.99 ~~~E ~~~1 E~~1~.1£1~d~~!?,dE1 .. 1.99·12.99 5. 99 !5ci .. ~·~~~:osS~9.,~~9SHIRTS 2/3. 00 GIRLS' DRESSES, 4-14 7 9 C girls' wear 824 -were 4.99 2 .99, 3.99 2.49 3.99 2.99 MENS .SPORT SHIRTS men's furnishings 60& -val. 6.00 BUTION-DOWN DRESS SHIRTS men's Curnishings 806 -vaL 6.00 ALL WOOL BLAZERS men's clo!hing 8 14 -were 39.00 2.99 1.99 NO-I RON SPORT SHIRTS 111en'::i. sport furni;hinss 84 -were 9.00 3.99-5.99 MEN'S CA SUAL PANTS, 29-36 men's sport3wear 817 -ii perf. 5.99.fi.99 HANDSOME BATH TOWELS linens 831 -wer~ 2.49 The bride was graduated from Marina High Scbool and presently serves as an airlines 1tewarde53. Her husband, who attended Memphis S t a t e University, served four years YOUNG MEN BOYS' 1t1 lhe U.S. Marine Corps. ' domestics 803 -were 4.99 POL VESTER BED PILLOWS 28.99 2.99 1.69 2.99 4.99 11lC new Mr. and Mrs. -----------------------72x 90" THERMAL BLANKETS Baby Feeding Group's Topic Members and guests of La LecM League will hear an informal discussion of the Art ol. Natural Feeding and Overcoming Difficulties tomorrow in the Costr. 1i1esa home of Mrs. J . 0 . Sampson Jr. 1be meeting will begin al 7:45 p.m., and those interested in further information 1nay call Aka. H. W. Mo0re. Whitehorn will Jive in 11un· Ungton Beach. FV Arts Group Planning Goals Future goals wJll be e\ aluated during a meetJng on r-.fonday. April 19, for lht f o u n t a 1 n Valle:y Arts Associ ation, wJth members only 1nv11td 1,-, atlcnd. The t;roup v. 111 gather at 7 30 pm 1n the Fountain Valley t:n·1c Center Cofftt will be ~er\ed at the conclusion or the d1~uss10n, Attend the Church of Your Choice Regularly FAMOU S MAKER SPORT COATS borrlon hdll 11 b -\\•ere 40.00.50.00 BOYS' FAMOU S MAKE PAN TS boy~· \Year 14 -were 6.0Q.7.30 BOYS' NO-IRO N SPORT SH IRTS boys' fu rn. :'.'3 -\vere 4.50 BOYS' ST RI PED T-S HIRTS boy>' furn . ~) -\Vere 3.50·4 .00 19 • 9 9 ;~~8;'25N;~~·~ PILE RUGS rugs 81 l -were 49.99 3.99 QUILTED TWIN BEDSPREADS bedding 825 -were 14.99 39.99 8.99 2.99 ;:;,~~~1?~~~~;.~~ PANELS,58x54"or~!:'1.89 2.29 illd~s92~~~~~~9I BLANKETS 4.99 may co. south co.st plau, N n dlego fwy. at br istol, co1ta mna; 546-9321 ahop mond•y thr u wturd1 y 10 1.m. to 9130 p.m .. MAVCO Stewart Trophy Race Blackf in Misses Record I 1 I I ., I ii I 1 ·1 ' ' BR.EAKS JINX -Ken De Meuse's 73·foot ya"·\ Blackfin romped home ahead of John B. Kilroy's Ki· aJoa II in Los Angeles Yacht Club's 49-mile Stewart Trophy Race Saturday to break Kialo~ !I's th~ee· race streak for first to finish in the Whitney Series. Blackf1n failed to break her old record . NewsBoy Takes Easy Abalone Point Win Taking a hk1ng to moderate \.1'inds and smooth seas. Jack Baillie 's 12-meter NewsBoy romped to an easy \"icto!'y Sunday in Balboa Yacht Club's Log Race To Reveller Frank Ruppert's Reveller VI from Long Beach Yacht Clu!} won Huntington H a r b our Yacht Club's Easter Catalina Island predicted Jog rac!' Saturday wllh a Io \V percentage of .5629. The event was actually three races in one 11t'ith 22 boats starting from Uing Beach. f\iarina del Rey and Ne11t·porl Harbor. In predicted log racing for po11t·er h o a I s gkippers choose their own starting limes and predicl the time of the fini sh. Reveller VI led three other boats v.:h1 ch fini shed und!'r one percent of their predicted log. Aba lone Point race. !he second feature of Lhe 66 Series. Second in the overall standings v"as Jack Hall"s Ragtime from Ne \It' port Harbor Yacht Club, and third \\·as Sanderling, co.skippered by Bob Poole, Frank Ho?C, BCYC and Morrie Kirk , BYC. Handicap results in class: CLASS A -ti) NewsBoy; (2J Ragtime : !3) Encore, Blattcrman & Riley, BVC. CLASS B -(1) Trend , Jim Li n de rm an , BYC; (2) Firebrand, George \\1 cs I , NHYC: 131 Sanderling. CLASS C -! I I Puff. David Stone. BCYC: 12J lrnpetuous, Chuck Glasgow, BYr: !3) Jezebel. Vifa n Couch, BYC. CLASS D -I I) Lucky Chance. John B r o tn I c v . BCYC. (2) ~1alahini. Ja.ck Bosl \\•ick, BCVC ; r:l) Andale, Graham & Gray. SSSC. MORF -t l) Sen~n;:i, Phil Doane. NHVC; (21 Sequoia, Jim Moore. SSSC: r 3 l Starshone, Bill von KleinSmid, NHYC. Ken DeMeuse's 7 3 -f oot Blackfin from St. Francis Yacht Club was first to finish in Los Angeles Yacht Club's Stewart Trophy race Saturday but failed to bre¥ her own elapsed time reCord for the race. ' The big aluminum ya w I finished the 49-mlle course in 7 hours and 12 minutes. Her previous record. set in 1969, was six hours and 24 minutes. In defending her own elapsed time mark. Blackfin had to stay ahead or Jim K1Jroy's Kialoa II which had been first to finish in the three · previous Whitney Series races with new elapsed t 1 me records. Kialoa JI finished five minutes and 30 seconds behind Dlackfin. In the corrected t i m e standings 1'heo S le p hens' Lightning from St. Francis Yacht Club was the overall ancl Class A winner. The victory places her at the lop of the Whitney standings for the first four of lhe six: race series. Corrected time results of the Stewart Trophy race : OVERA LL -( l I Lightning: (2) Whimsey II, Hugh Rogers, LAYC: (3) Blue Orpheus. Dick Johnson, LBYC ; (~I Tabasco, George Griffith, LAYC: t5l Pleiadcs, Richard & R and y Smyth. CBYC. CLASS A -(1) Lightning; (2) Kialoa II ; (3) Blackfin. CLASS B -fl) Blue Streak, Tom Corketl. NHYC: 12} Blue Norther, Sullivan & Gordon, LA YC : (Jl Stardust. Carlos Swanson. SBYC. ~ Pro t e 5 t pending between Blue Streak and Blue Norther). CLASS C . -JI) Blue Orpheus, Dick J n h n s fl n , LBYC: (2) Tabasco, George Griffith, LAYC: 13) Vivant, Mort Haskell. ABYC. CLASS D-ll) Wh imsey I!, Hugh Rogers. LAYC, 121 Pleides. Richard & Randt Smith, CBYC : 1~1 Centurian, Larry Folsom, SBYC. Result s of Litt!e Whitney Marineland Race : OVERALL -fl) Finale, Ray Cundiff, CBYC; 121 Lorelei. Steve Jos1. CBYC : !3) Retreat JI, Robert Smith, PM'l·c. CLASS A -! 11 Finale ; 12) Lorelei : i31 Retreat IL CLASS B -!l) A'Te, Homer Meek, CBYC; (21 Bay ~. Lee Thompson , LBYC; IJl Britte. Bill Stark, ABYC. Whitney standings after first four races· (l) Lightning: !2l Star, Lloyd Powe!l, LBYC: !JJ Tabasco, George Gr 1 ff it h . LAYC. Blaze Ra~es Jn Lon~ Beac h LONG BEACH (UPJ1 - F i re caused an estimated $300.000 damage to a furniture store and adjoining abandoned hotel Sunday and it took more than 60 firemen about an hour lo hring it under control. Fire spokesmen s;ud the s!ore was gutted and portions of the hotel were seriously dama~ed. There were no reports of ln;urics. Ensenada Race Draws Huge Field Friday. April 17, is the deadl ine for entries in y.·tu~t is expected to be the big gest Ne\vporl tn Ensc.nada yacht race in the history of the event. The race is scheduled to get under way at noon. t-.-tay 6. Ed Carpenter, president nl the sponsoring Newport {)crnn Sailing Association, reminded hopeful skipp!'rS that ~,rida~· 1~ the absolute deadline and tha' no entries will be acct>pt cd after that date. At last rount nearly :.'00 entries had been received fnr the classic '"tequila derby." John Payne, general rat'c chairman. said the hsl• this year would probably exceed 600. Previous record 11t'as 5i6. The Enscnada race is numerically the I a r g e s l international yacht race in the world. The race starts :it l\'.ewport and ends 125 miles down the coast al the popular BaJa California fishing resort. Participants in pre v in u s Ensenada races autnmati..:all y receive entry blanks and instruction form s. First timtr~ in the race may pick up the necessary forms at 1TI!"l.~t Southern California ya c h t clubs. The race is hmJLed to sailing yachts 11t1lh a mini ni uni waterl ine length of 200 feet and 24 feel overall. 011t·ners or charterers mu.st be men1bers of recogllized yacht c!ubs. Point Dlm1c Race Slated South Bay Yacht Racin~ Club of Marina del Rey has St'hedu!ed ils annual Point Dume race for April 17 s1a rting at I I a.m. The s!art will be at King Harbor and the course will take the fleet arounrl 1 buoy off Point Dume and thence to the fin ish at the south end of the detached break11t·ater off Marina rlC'l Re~·. This 11t•ill be thr lh 1rrl race in the Commodorc"s Series. Results v.·111 also be cou nter! for the PHRF' Hi·Point series and the r-.1att \\"alsh Series for MORF. Boating Safety Course Set The Boating Safely Center is designed to glve quick and accurate safe b o :it 1 n g inform<ition to the Io ca I boatin.e; public. Besides a 11t•1de assortment of educational pa m p h I ct s devoted to safe boatin.e: practices, provided by var1ou:J orf!_antzal ions which promote sale boating. the U.S. \\'eather Bureau v.·ill provide on-the· spot marine 11t ea t he r information \\'hile vi511in~ lhe center for the Jales! information on safe boating. bo:iters m:iy have their cr;:if\ inspected to insure that 1t has the proper safely cqu1pn1ent iind that !heir boat meets all the Fcd!'r:i! and Stair boating rci;iulalions. The Boating Safety Center, which is operated by the Coast Guard . The Co11st Guarrl Auxihary, the U.S Power Squadron and the Sen Scouts, is a free puhhc service and no cit.11Jons will be tssuerl for a violation nf fedrrat or s1ate boat1n1l reR"ul11l1ons "Lasl .\ear. !he puhhc·!' response tn lhe ~sl Guard·s plea fnr safe boating v.•as very roncourag1n~,'' ~ I 11 I rd LI. Cmdr Peter f . Sterbhng , chief nf the Elcven!h Coast Guard Dis!nct Boating Safety Branrh Lt Cn1dr Sterhhn,;: 11t·ent on lo Sd}. "BrcauSf' of !ht> cour. lesv motnrboal exam1nat1on~ coriducled h\" the C'!'last r.uard Auxih;irv \\'r v.·err able to rtarh boRlf't~ on more th an 1 500 lnr!1v1du,1I craft during OPEN FOR BUSINESS -1ttembers of the Coast Guard Auxiliary inspect boats at the Boating Safety Cen ter at the Coast Guard TerminaJ Island base. Tho center \VIII be open for inspections every "·eekend starting Saturday and con· linuing through Labor Day. thl' summer last )ear '' tie pointed out tllal although dt~crepancies werP found on many of the boats examined, most of them were easUy Mrrected by the s a f et y conscious boater af!er \"1s1ting lhe rPnt.cr. The Roa11nµ Salcf\' Cen!rr 11h1ch is loca ltrl at Coast Guard Base, Terminal Island v.·11! be open every Saturda)' and Sunday and on maJor holiday!> from JO a.m. lo 3 p m. beginning this Saturday and conunuing through Sept . 6 If you are nHv1gallng your b<lat In the Safely Centrr. the Coasl Guard Base is localed on the south side of the main channel of Los Angele s Harbor. If you wish to travel by automobile and bring your boat by trailer, lake the nearest freeway or city streel lo Terminal Island. ~o wesi nn Seaside AvP, rthe main street nn Terminal Island J whi ch will !cad you lo the main gate 11f the Coasl Guard Bnse. Mond11y, Apr!I 12, 1971 DAILY PILOT J f ,. ------ ~~~~~~· Sears .,,., '"! "' •• Regular Trade-in Price $19.99 36 i\'Ionths Guaranteed ••• • Fits most American Madell·voltsystem-can. • Year 'round battery starting power for)'Olll'car tha t's guaranteed !or 36 long months • Sure-Fire starts cost so Utile al Sears Volkswagen Batteries •\'tit Repl1rS18.H 14 .99 •l! Vol11ttparm.n 18.99 HeavyDnty Mufner Lifetime Guarantee Il mufller fail!! due to de- fects in materials or work· minship or blow-out, rust· out or wNr'(lul while orig· lnal purcha5er owns the car, it will be nplaced upon return, free of charge. If the defective muffler SAVE NOW! was instal!NI by Sears, we ll'~llillr"''-----;:: will in.sl.ll!l lbe new muffier with no charge for labor. Prices Effective April12 and13 Sears .Heavy Duty Mufflers Guaranteed1ora1 2 O~o OFF Long as You Own Your Car Regular Prices • Up to 1/2 thicker gauge steel than most Nndard equipment mu!flen • End caps crimped over two steel layers • Zinc plated to resist rust• Installation available U1e Sean Revolving Charze Regular '4.99 Shock Absorbers S4VE'I! ' S.1 VE '2! Crease Gun 399 Cartnmt..r Air Filter All.ft ••• }99 -------.... SeanHeAYy Duly Oil Filter }99 Heny Daty MolorOil 29~ 12-inch Stanly Jack Slant! }99 ~--:.. Ja DW P,ILOT Mo!tdfy, 1'Pfll 12, .1971 SAJ'E 15 to $6! Fashionable F~;Flattering Pant Sets -.. . -,, ' R~'$%0andl21 Lilidied 9,uantity! 15~ Tanic,.lops. i.n s\lon sleeves or sleeveless sry Jes. flarrdoiog flare leg pant Easy-care 100% pol Y· ester kniL AssortDJenr of colors. Sizes 8 ro 18. ' . Sport!Wtar. Dtpt. · . • Regular 'L59 Cling-alon• Hose Limited Quantity! 99~" Mesh .knit with reinforced heel and toe. In fash· iOn1tol_ors.' Petite, shapely, classic and tall sizes. ~$1.79-Pr. Stameoquo Siu....3 Pn. 3.33 H01i"1 Dtp1. SAVE $10! Kenmore -,.. S36. 95, 8-Speed 7 pc. Tofion"' Sot · Regular$24~99..l 7.99 ~~-;~ ... 3-Cup Blender 2688 8 pushbutton speeds. 5· cup glass jar. Non-slid- ing console base with cord storage. White, gold and avocado. HouJtwdlll Dept. SAVE $10! Cookware Set Regular $34.99 2499 Stainless steel 7-pc. ser includes: 1-2 qt. cover- ed saucepan, '5 Vi-qt. Dutch oven and 10-in. s1Ulle1. Ho11stu;11rtJ Dept. CUT '40! Continental Style Tent Waoll29 10xl4-ft. size ... sleeps 5. Ou!sid~ flap windows tie 8999 down. Durable fabric. Can· opied.end windows. Spor1i11,_ G(J()d.r Dtpt ' . Your Choice ••• Linen Look or Dacro.n• Polyester Colorful Pant Suits Sean Dayw Vaine Limited Quantity! 1099 Machine washable, no iron 100% Dacmn"-poly· ester knit or "linen look" sets. Manycolor1. Misses' sizes 8to18 :mdJr. or Jr. Petites. Woinm'1 Wtar Dtpt. I . I Women'• Colorful Nylon Shift Gown. Super V alu" Limited Quantity! 297 Assoranent of shif!S in the latest Spri<>& colors. Your choice of many styles with lace froac panels aod neck line. Bow uim. Lingrrit D1pt. SAVE '5! "Edera" Bedspreads Regular 522.98 Attractive ivy Jeaf design. In many decorator colors. $34.98 King Size-.28.97 DomtJtic Dtpr. 4-Leg Rugged Gym Set Regular $37.99 :> different play features plus an aitached 6-fL slide. Swinging fire pole with 3 2 999 pl1:5tic steps. Tubular stttl Oy1ng trapeze. To)' Dtpr. Sears Day~ Value Limited Quantity! Penna Prest~ Women's Bras or2.22 Ea. Total strecch frame. Nylon cups aod front band are nylon. Sizes 32-36A, 32-408 and C. Bra and Gird It Dtpt. Summery ~olid colorf'\.1 pull-on shorrs wi th stitched-down front crease and color coordi nared stri ped sleeveless mock turtleneck 1ops. L.ittle girls' Mizeli Uix..J .97 Big glrls' sittt 7-14-2.97 "J'reUy-pluiS'' 11izes 81/2-16 97 Girl!' and lnfant1' and Childrrn'1 Wtar Dtpl!. ?(_ SAVE $1 and $2 •'frenrh Bouquet~' Linen Sheets 447 S.t 49 Twin f'lat. fitted_.f..4 7 $.l.99 Pillowc:eae• 3.4 7 19.49 Queen Flat., Fiued.__7.47 !I l.99 l\.in11 Flat, fined_9.97 S.l . .J9 Qut:en Pillowa11eL-.3.4 7 St1J9 l\.inJ: Pilloweasea_3.97 Domalic Dtpt. SAVE$46! Color TV Regular S4 I 2 23-i n. color TV wich memory fine tuoin.g. s .. in. speaker. Base in .. eluded. #4300-4580 TV Dtpl. Rugged l5x8-Ft. Patio Covers Regular 1109.95 Beautiful white roll· 8838 formed fascia with built-in gurrer. Buildi•g Material D'pt. CUT48o/D! SAVE '20 t.o '150! Quality Rings Regular 95 to SSOO Colossal sale of dia· mond, engagement and wedding rings in ele· gant styles. jewelry Dept. Little Boys'-Girls' Sleepwear WereS3.49 Limite d Quantity! 197 Texrured corcon knit 2-piece pajamas for little ' boys and girls. Trimmed wirh Winn ie -The-Pooh ' design .•. or girls' pasrel print gowns, 3-6x. \\>Walr D isney Production. lnfantJ'-Children's Depr. ' ~! ,J - ·~ r. ' ' ·er ' - ' . SAVE$20! Model 61520 •8.99 Plate Glass Mirrors llevel Edged 4~I 18x26 1·t98 ~ize 24:ii:3 12.97 19.98 Site 30:ii:411 15.97 24.98 :-iii~ 30s48 19.97 :l6.'J8 Size 3b,.;60 28.97 11.~IO !'ii1r. 16:\:il 9.97 IR.98Sizc 20x6H_J 5.97 Lamp' and China Dept. 15 cu. ft. Refrigeralor- Freezer Reiru Jar $3 19.95 Ad justable alumi num shelves, rwin crispers. Only 30 .. wide. Moves on rollers. Major App/1i111cer Dept. 50~ }'abric Wh'"n Tnstallt:d Ry Sear"' Galvanized after weal'- ing to prevenr rusting. Square gate wirh orna- mental scrolls on top. B•ildin~ Mattrial D'pt. f P~rsi-------'----------------------------------i-.----... --------i SEARS CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY .......... .J, • ' Sf,,•r> Mor1rlnr Tl1ru Sat11rLlnv 9:30 A.~l. tl;ru 9:30 P.M. . ' • s Y• g. a- p. I. \ l ' J 00% Modaccylie . Pre-Curled Wig :;ears Days \i'alue 1088 Read y-[o-wear, re- quires no setting. Easy £0 manage. 25 shades, in cluding frosteds. CoJnutic Dept. Boys' Knit Shirts or Walk Shorts Sears Days Valur. Limited Q:i~\lnlil~· PER~IA-PREST~ polyester kn itshins wirh short sleeves. Solid colors, sizes 8 co 12. PERMA- PREST'!.l walk shores, sizes 6 to 12, reg., slim. $4 Students' Knit Shirt· for $7 = Boy51-S111dents' \Wea,. Dept. SAVE25%! Nylon Pile Carpeting Regular$7.99 Flirtation Walk carpet- ing of Anti-Scacic ny- lon fibers. Repels dust and dirt. Floorcovtriflg Dept. SAVE'31! 15 cu. ft. Freezer Regular $219.95 $188 Coldspot thinwall c hest freezer holds 525-lbs. of frozen food. Sliding baske~ Major Applianar Dtpt. Assorted Rosea or Sun Azaleas Your Choice 109 l-gal. size roses or sun azaleas. Huge varieties of colors to choose from. Plant now. GardmShop SAYE '1! Boys' Short Sets Regular !2.99 J97 PERMA·PREST• short sleeve knit shirt and boxer sty le shores. Sizes 3 to 6x. I nfantJ'-Chiltirtn's Dept. Canvas Deck ShoesfortheFamily Sean Day1 Vaine Limited Quantity! 2pr.!6 or3.33 pr. Your choice of misses·, children's, women's and meo's canvas deck shoes in boar type styles. Available in white, navy and green. Buy now! ·Sha< Dept. '279 Contemporary Sofa Shaped channel back de· sign. Reversible scat s2 2 7 cushions. Herculons ole- fin fiber tweed cover. . FNrnilurt Dept. SAVE '20! Kenmore Washer Re@lar $249.95 i I . ~ I . ~ -position wash/rinse temperature control. Bleach and fabric soft-\!! :::::::::::::::JI eoer dispenser. !r M,,j.,. Appliances Dept. #20660 Latex Flat Interior or Exterior Paints Your Choice 3!?. Durable finish, wash- able, colorfast interior pa.int. Exterior pa.int re- sists blistering and dis- coloring. White, colors. Pai•tDept. Sears IUINA rAaK TA l-4400, lt1 ... AO A MONTI .. .a..ati11 CANOOA ,AllC MO-OMI .... Didi CH 1•1004, Q ...... 11 COM"ON NI 6°2Slt, JiM 2•1761 HOU.TWOOll HO NNI !i[\RS.1101 nee,; AND CO. COVINA fff.Of11 INILIW'009 oa ...,.,, Mon. thrt.1 Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. ••• lont• .-.. O•lr,cloMa • P.M. t...., THn.,Set. SAVE! s3! PERMA-PREST° for li<t Care Men's GIVE 'N T Slacks Regolar SI 0 Limited Quantity! Trcvira" polyester, Avril• royon a"!f Lycra"' span- dex. Solids, stripes in trim n' tight, trim regular. Regular SI I FuU Cut Sty! $8 Men's Dms C/1thing Dept.· Men's Polyester Double Knit Snits Sean Days Vaine Limited Quantity! $65. 100% polyester double knit in sport models and new !Wo-butttlll srylcs. Some with fashion- able bi..wing back. Wide lapels. Belt loops. Mett's Drrs.s Ct.thing Dept: 100% Polyester Double Knit Fabric Machine ....,hable and dryablc polyeSter dou- ble knits in 60-incb widths. Spring colors. Y ardagt Dept. SA.VE'5! Barbeque Grill Regular $74. 95 3600 swivel on perm•· neat post. Mounts easi- ly te>patio. Large cook- ing area. HaNStwt1m Dept. SJfEIIO! Reversible Drill Regolar $36.99 Cnfaman ~·inch vari-. able speed drill Drives and remo•es screws. Safety releue on 1Witcb.~HP. HniwrtD1pt. ,. ' I ' .t . " UAILY 'JlOf Jf ' .. ' ,. ' Iii-'~·~ Regular 3 for '3.98 Men's '{op.QUa)ie,y · Polye!Jter and Cotton Uh1:1~ , ... . Buy Now! Limited Quantity! 3r~3tl ---- ~ricf~. boxer shorts, atbfetic sbirt$,S>r ~ in blend 0£ 6~% Kodcl• polyetter, 35% _,~ cottoa. Small to ex[fa large. ·,-., . · . •. ·' ·. Men's Furnishi1lg< Dt/11. ·,' :1 •:· · .: • •' . . .. . . ~ .; . . ' .. I I . •22.98 to '39.98 Fullion Lugg.p 1497 to 279r. .. Limited Qoantl'1J · Handsome grained.vinyl co•ers with 1'..,laitt · composition backing. Li.llhtweishc . aiaili•iiiia . frame. Many. pieces to Choose. from. C<o4• Luggpgt Dept., · " '1 SA.VE 33"/ol Sayelle .. Yarm Regular$1M ·: . . 99e · akei~ 100% acrylic ~ yarn in 4-oz. sloei111. :M.chine 'nShablC .. dryable. M2ny ~ Y 11r'4g< Dept; · , . SA.VE'301. Built-ID Dishwasher Regular ~!115 199~ . ..... . 1 . 2·lcvcl wuh acdoe. White, coppenoli'-'··· avocado or ta.,,,Y .ilihl: · Installation avai~· ~jor App/~'¥.. . . .. CUT$J11 ... Sears Typewriter w .. ~- ' Citation ·1ypeWcl!fr with 10-in. carri•.,., Eui·lood cartridie ~ bon. 'Elite ·type. ~. St,,1i•""1 D1pt. :' · I I I U>NCt llAQI "' 1.0121 Ol.TWIC A. IOTO AH Wt11 CIUMN W'..t.100 POMONA NA f·l1•1 IOutM COAIT ft,\lA l40~~ ' THOUSAND OAICI 4fT-41tt fOUANa Mt.1111 PM'llllA M142111 111..a11 PKO WI M16t IANfA ANA In 141-11 IAHTA N '"'"91 '44 ... 11 &AHIA MONICA IX 4"4711 VA.WT PO 14461, fM·lllO VlllMONT Pl f •1f11 J l l · I I ,. .... ~ ...... ' . • -to DAILY PILOT hknd1y, April 12, 11171 1 ' TUMBLEWEEDS \t-::.--~~~~~-.,..-;::i HOW LONG-HAVE \'tlU w l'eEN AFTfR MR.11JMltE'NeED5 TO MARRY 'ltlU1 AUNT HIL.DfG-ARD? MUTT AND JEFF A L.ADV NliveR PURSUES A G-W!l.EMAN1 DEAR! ... IT 15 THE GENTL.EMAN ~ PURSUES 1llE L.AD'I! • .. 1\lE G'fNTl.EMAN IN ~ESTION HAS l'eoN AITTR ME FOR Al'OIJf 5 YEARS! GOSH!THAfS A L.ONG- l lME l "1·12 \YHA.,. ARI: yt>U YESTERDAY ?OUTING ABOUT? WAS EASTER f'----~~-r,r' AND TME B UNNY DIDN'T LEAVE ME ONE LOUSY EGG! l/:jj ~ JUDGE PARKER Jo1-1 t.1~ IO.lJE QUICKLY Wlt.15 OVE I<' TME-t::ITQ.IEN l-IELP AT SPEN CE~ S::A.l!'MS Wlf'M 11-115 SPOORW6~ ' f 7%'"7o"'-.---I fj/ 4 -t2 VOil U.D1E5 MEA.R:O ME ~ woroov !\IT ~1 55 SPENCER' ON STA\' 1W TME KITCHEN WMtlE I MAKE M.V !=AMOUS W&Ea!E S~CE •. A.MD Sl-IE'S 60TTA. &E 8Ul.JO~EO'. PLAIN JANE EX.ACTLV DEPENDS OJ.I MOW I.ONG MOW LOJ.IC:i IT MUST t TAKB roll ME SfANt' MERE. CMEF? By Tom K. Ryan YES, HE'S A TOUGH COOK IE: 1ll NAil. By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux AND IF 'K>U'RE REi\L 600Cl', MISS i\l'i~ SPENCER .. I MIGMf JUST REWAIW VOtl wrrn " 1'1SS! By Frank Baginski """"4AT A 'w'.A~E~ 1 OION"T ~~ a.IE ELIGll'ILE SAO<ELJ:JR ALLDAY ~ YOU 'Sfll.L HAVE TWO HOURsol= DAYLl6'-fT LEl"T! DOKTGIVE UP! I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ' • POWE• I ACROSS 1 PLtnl y1 r ldin9 1 strong f1b rr 5 Locations lCI Hra~y war club l~ Grraint's wilt 15 1':1~d of b"ck Jr, Nol at l!omr 17 0Dtn spact 18 Not atttpt as t•ut 2f) 'l.11~ S10<"'S 22 P1~~1 ?3 t,(, Hu'lt\ey 2~ 'i.U 1·Sl!t.,.n '. '" lS .• .• ~i £.1'"~P ~6 \1~>j· ·~~'l t d ;2 1,1 , •'''l"P ;1 r •. 11 ,,1 ~~ 11 •· .i·~ '" lS C.'lll••'s p•obl~., Jb Onros•'• of"~wtp•" JB Cul ooro rub ts 40 A'"tr•t'" !J"IV!IS•IV 41 Larv ptrs~" 43 C.~all t~?t' 4; M~l r an""~I ' l l • • " IN 4& Put Into Satu1day'1 PJzzl t 'i.olvtd: a dllftrt"! lor111 •a Jtwtlt r's un1l s SO At • po1Hlo" li1qh~ tli an SI Wh1lt S! Ont mak in g amtods SSC lutcliin9 S9 Certain tth111c groups 61 Smtll &2 or th t usA.: Abbr. &3 Frt11ch r!vtr 64 Klrtd of Illy bS Grrman Nazi I tad tr bb Trusttd b7 Oritnl DOWN 9 Gave tilt imprtss •on of bting 10 Gent It 11 lnsl)ired l l Grotto 13 Obstrver 19 Cripples 21 Yoby Dic k's pursutr 24 Unpl eas Mit l ~trtil1 ztt look 2 Jaoao esr 2S Rate of l;"IY Scand1- } l~ytr navr1n gods 4 "T t'l 2b Corrode C.•-1s ---": 27 Frtothmen 1 wt)r~s 28 lodi ans 5 ~~~· ltss of Peru "lOPY zq Pope's ~ ·-~p·1I P !r1plt crowrt J l "~"' 30 Disp lay 8 Rt ced• ot l'.ll)'ll P: . ' .. 4112/71 31 Consldtrs 34 Horstm1n 37 Rtvt rts aga•n )q Ditd 42 Ort who sprak s wildly 44 Lon9·tail td 1odt11\s 47 Dir 49 Rt!arat1on Sl ···· dt tata a 52 Orit11t1I nurstm1 1d Sj Duration St Dollar bills: lnforlflll S5 P il)ln 9 5b Thouglit 57 Egg dr inks SB Sm all cavt : Pott. I CO In 1dd ftlor! 5 ' ' • ' 110 n " ,. " ' ', •• ' ' ll " ,, ., • ~ ~ ' '~ " l1 " " ~ I" "' ~ 35 . "' , .. ,~ " - " ., " « ,, ' . ' .. " -,, PERKINS MISS PEACH fu7'URE JN'l'ERNAt. I RfVEt<li!O I AGENT> ! AM~lllc.A • STEVE ROPER .. ' eur SW'POSE A PERSON REFUSE& TO PAY HIS TAXES? I •WHAT CAN THE GOVE~NMENT DO? ' . Ll'l: AINa - CB<>. ·=-::...-..::::.-4 ·1t c SALLY BANANAS GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS qoo W/.!lr TO lll~TCH SOME- 1'.V.' IJ.l~e: ? TJ..llNK OF IT ASA CLU6 MEMSEl<SHIP- NO! .:r: it-lllJK WE SHQ)J.O f)(EF!GISf ~ M11.lt>SA Btr, 811 J!EADllJG ! ~61lf! By John Miles •IF'lOU DOflff PAV lOUR DUES, THEYTUfWW YOU our. By Mell EXCEPT lN THIS ~SE, THEY THROW YOU IN. , , , , ::: . ,• , ... • • ;.J By Saunders and Overgard ~All WE Fl~D A 'TABLE ~CNI. M~. t>JOMAD? °Yl"E MA'vf WASTED '-9.S HAL~ OUR LUNCW TIME ,I "' ~ IJ>f!:§J1i'fl g ff By Charles M. Schulz ' ,. 51 ~"'fl"'~~~--~ ........ ~~-------. " --.~ ~ --'~ " ' ~ ·~ - " .. ' 61 l ' " • . I /.Y'~ i I Oont ~ ... ~ ly Al Capp ~ By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola By Roger BoDen DENNIS THE MENACE . j ... ' ' '· ,. ' ,, " :; :: I j l l TV 'Revlew S·hepherd's V.S. in Debut BY C\'.NTJIU ·tolfl\Y NEW YORK (AP) -Jean Shephtrd, who hatr b e en reminiscing about his Mictwest-- boyhood for years on New York ndlo, now is doint it on a national televi4ion network. ''Jean Shepherd's America; .. on the public broadcasting lineup. had its premiere Sunday night, a half bow-in wblch the Narrator, o ff aamera, recalled a I g b t s , eounds and experiences when at 17 be worked in a stetl mill. Ju he talke(t. the screen was occupied by the operatioM of a contemporary steel mill. The star talked of the excitement of buying a pair of safety shoes and getting a new·· hard bat. He r«alled a fall, Monday Evening APR1L 12 1:00 8 llt: .... 1'1'11 DunpJty. CJINIC la-1ice Tom SnJder. 8 TIM ..._ IM9 Gl.llSb: Robaft Goult:I. Helin Gun., Brown, Jeny Col)lns, psydlic 8Mrfy" 0.1n, Miit ,.m.._ 0 .......... -, (90) ........ tlwt ltMf' (drllnl) '51-«ir\ Dou1· lls. E>Nnor f'1rUr. A blhind-tht· 1C11M )D(lll It tlle pallet forot et • bit city II Ottldlvl Jim Md..IOd'a 111aer1ted lde1s or rllht ll'ld "'°"' boomer1111 •nd 1lmost de- llroy him ptofesslonlllJ •1111 p.r· *>l'!lllf. CJ Diet '111 n,t:1 m TM" fliDtlttNI Q)stlr Trlk fD M~ "The Wltllth #1 ... llllill-/W_/_ flil'*< .... ~ llil"'"'""" m DMlll "'"" DtJ11 m LI ,..... r1111ililr Cltl c.n111111 EE""" Jim H1wthomt. l:lS Ii.I Art ,... "P'Mtint Attlm1la.. U&'J"""4 ...... mnt n,1., ••• @CIJ AIC- @(l)ftlC- m Hodppad&t Lid&• llllillCIS- tI!) S11tcW rll•/Mnicale m n. Dltllt a.,.rt ai)LtaOMOdll U)AICJten J:OD 1J C1S .... Walter Cnlntitt. CJ m lllC Nan David lrinkle1. John Ch.1neallor, Fr1nk Mc:Gff. 0 Wtllt'• MJ Una! m @CIJ•...,,..q l!)Dr11111t tiJ (!) Juli.I fD TN Wtr1d Wt LM 11 "Lift In P1rclttd Lindi." Qtl(l)Tld«~llCft m "'"" "' """ ""' Bil Mfllltta 11.- GIF.l Shllplullnta M1r1I (EMMI• .. dislocaUng both shoulders, from a &talr high above the mill. Meanwhile, the viewer with a cotor att 1 a w fascinaUng !Um, ribbons of molten at.el flowiqg in designs that often lool<M more like art than 1n4ustry. It was a novel approach -a commentaJ"y used as counterpoint rather t h a n ezplanation of the pictures. And lt_was very tnteresUng. NBC's Edwin Newman, who seems to handle well all sorts of odd jobs around his network's news department, bas in recent months been presiding over an e a r I y Sunday evening show called .. Comment,'' a Sort of guest <dllot1al spol atT1·T• .. TrA !!>""""""' O)YM!lil l:OSCEI ~Ill Tm P6u 1:30 IJ a(() ...... t., Crlif and Unt11 H111'J btcDmt Plrtntfl In filmin1 1 doalm1nt11y 1111111 Lucy 11 tflt lllb)td. but sM It mor1 eonetrned with helpln1 Ki111 l•P 111r boyfriend (Dori Crichton). ""'" o llll mm n. ... •- m DnW FM& Slllw' Gunts Ind SrnobJ Robhoori Ind The Mlrad lnsll, Alu ltlna&, ll>llJ Joe WllllL 111-m httn "' UMt: IJ3 Mlllllfi't Yaw. Slillw 1:45 at hwi4 f flll Sllft 9:00ID1111 Ill M-II.II. (R) Goober Gfltl\t • 111• 111 shitlo11, •nd Maw1rd fillds • diftCllllll' JbS. ton l.llldtr it. D @@ mw.w_..,_ ;.: (C) (fit) """ ..... .. ••• (dr1m1) '70 -Ror Tlllnna. >oa11 H1cbtt. Thi wife of 1 succmtul bwyer 11111 "' kMI witti • well- kJIOWll playboy who ltNld I )IH term for 1 cri1111 hi d 1lma hi did not «1111mit e n. rllilM ID @CIJ !DAIC--(CJ (%W} "'t'IJtirtr-f• 1111111 .. Kill" (drltr11) '65-Mlcbr Rooftq, ltx BtrUr. T"" Jflols al 111 intll'• nationll 1lrtintr forcad to land 11 leb11,in ftnd Ule11111tvls In tht 1111d- dl1 et 111 eil1bont1 ll'l'lunlint: lfH1 munlw plot. Qin. -fm l•tltils "'A Ren1bslnce lift: A f'1raon1I View ef Bemlrd Ben• 11111 bJ K1nnrth Clt!lr." l!DJOM- ID"°-m•- ''"ID 1111 Ill on .., IRl oc-.c.-m .. ...,.,,..,.., hl Im LI Crw1 di lhrill Crm 10:on a a (J} en a.f9111.,. .11"' lnls 1nd leslil Uuams iuut. e clan.I! 5 11 .. llA'l!n Sandtrs, B•ml}' Morris. Olllt#W•I""" m ..... Putnam/ Fishman. ID N111trtp M Hlmtl hotf.t. fDWtrU f'nll Gl)tlt., ....... 1:00 D D CI> m ...,..,, IRl Slmm1 Davit Jr. oppoMI 7-foot• Wiit Ch1rnber11ln 111 Hit "'Battle d tilt Guest Stirs.'" Tuesday OAmME MOVIES "62-Gltnll FOii, lM ltt111kk. m "llttal • .. en ..... <M· ftllhll1) 'SS -CUH llOllatboft, Git Seti•. 1:00 CD •Atflir Wiiii I Sin ..... (dll· l:ODD"Uf• Wit\ """1" (temld1J 'Ct 1111) '5' -JMn Slmm<Mll. ¥idol _ Jldlt Clllof*, l'.ti!M lkld:en. Mltlltt • .,,_. Ue6ic attrtl" '(dr11111) '" t.«I fiJ.,. MllinM-r (clnak) 'S2 -Bab B11rM. suatn H.,..rd. -NkllMI hnftll. O.lwl f'11ec. t:JO Q -n. _...,.. t.otidusloll (drt- 1111) 'It -hut Hewm1111, ""' C:JD fJ (Q """"111111 Myllllllc ...... "''"· I ,_ .,, -""" .. .,.,. 0 ~ 5-T.,.... (4rli1111) Shlrllf Jan .. Jlottf Smb. Last week lbert were some assorted viewpoints of Vietnam. This week, former presidenUa1 press secretaries and Herb Klein, president N i z on • 1 communications director, presented views on White House press relations. Pierre Salinger, John F. Kennedy's pre3S man, talked of the credibility gap and touched on problems created by piet.Qria1 coverage of news. Geo{ge Reedy, President Johnson's aide, suggested that presidents tend to blame the press for bad news, citing the legend of Peter the Great strangling the messenger who brought him news of a defeat of his troops. K.Jein defended President Nixon's po Ii e y, approved an'' adversary relationship'' between government and press and maitltained the public is gelling more news today than ever before. The viewpoints are usually Interesting and well considered. but the format is deadly dull. One merely sees head shots of the men, their eyes firmly fixed on a prompter out of camera range, reading -often quite badly -their essays. * Don Fedderson, whose production co m p a n y is syndicating the L a w r e n c e Welk show next fall, reports that more than 330 stations across the nation have asked for the program. Welk's fan mail has jumped Crom five or six thousands a week to around 80,000, Fedderson said. He estimates that more than a million letters, wires and hone calls have been received y Welk or ABC since the network announced the cancellation of the 1 o n g • playing mu.sleal hour. DAILY. Pll.qT1 :IJ New Stars Fa~e Rough. ~o Jazz Band Concert Set For Irvine The PrtservaUon Hall Jazz Band of New Orleans will present a concert in UC Irvine's Crawford Hall at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, April 17. The concert, sponsoretl by the UCI Committee for Arts and Lectures, will be the band's only performance in Southern California. By RICK DUBllOW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Movie stars are not necesearl~ ly guarantees or lucctll for televlsion aeries they decide to appear in regularly. A number of moUon plcture names wtU lace tough competition when they bow in ,wlUt their own -1dy showa this fall. James Stewart, for instance. will have rough network foes a.s he launches bis half·bcur NBC.TV series. According to the e a r l y three-network schedule, be will be up agalnst ABC.TV's "The FBI" and CSS.. TV's Sunday N l g b t Movie. Glenn Ford also will get some heat. Unless the various network plans are altered, bis one-hour adventure series on CBS-TV, "Cade's C.ounty,'' will fact NBC-TV's "Bonanza" and ABC. TV's Sunday Night Movie. Di~k Van Dyke, . who is retumlng to CBS.TV after a considerable fling in motion pictures, will be up against the Saturday Night Movie CJn NBC. TV as well as ABC-TV'1 "Movie of the Weekend," a new series of 90.mlnute originals stressing suspense CBS-TV'• '•Ml11lon: rttums from movies to currept top atar Jn ABC:-1V1 Jmpalble" and NB C-T V'I television, when be ,,.. lo "Marcaa Welby, MD.': flprel saturcfljl Ntgbt Movie. fame in "Maverldt," and thl.I lo Dy exlraordlnati\y. high In David J•-•· former\y U-be will be • in a the raUnga again beca11!" t~evlsloo'• •'Tbe. rua:tUve," Ls llgfitbtarted adventure hour there won 't be ady netwo:i't <eminl bad; to video on CBS. on NBC-TV enUtled "Nlcboll." programming at all. agalnol t 1 · HI• compoUUoo wlll be CBS-the finil bali hour o!.1111 wlit TV as a 'ovemmen a.gen m TV'a -·~av N•., ... t Movie, on Tuesd•• nigh'• a "'~·-series ealled •'O'Hara, iuutllU 1 -e1• -v ..., -which •"" be -1a~ once a --~;;;-~Afi~~ United States ,1reuw'Y," Now ~ ··,.;. "-···-"CBS a movie. name as well~ he wlll month by-• tWIMWW be uP againlt \jRoopt 221" and Report$" eatr)'1 wblle ABC-TV oppoa•s h·im wlth "Tbe Partrlda:e Family" on "Longstreet," wtilch 1 t·a rs ABC· TV, aod NB C ·TV ' 1 James Franciscus as a blinded "World Prtmlert" two-hoar inve_,tlgakir who tries to COD· films, which will be rtplaced Unue hls career. onee mon\hly by a news Among returning v i de o magaiine public affairs pro-headliners, Carol Burnett has gram. had her CBS.TV hour switched Shirley MacLaine will have from Mondays to Wednesdays, a new half·bour ABC.TG show, where she will square off in which she playt a traveling against "Bewitched" and "The pho~joumalist, and be r Courtship of Eddle'1 Father" network competlilon will be on ABC.TV. and *'Adam-12" CBS. TV's s u d d e n 1 Y • h o t and Utose SO.minute mystery "Medical Center" and a series films on NBC.TV. MATINIB.SAT &'SUH of 00.minute mystery films on _~R~obe~rl~Y~oung~~·~le!!l.!:ev~lsl~on~·s~!"!'!""!~~'!'l~;:!!!!!!!~ N~~:~yQulnnwlllstarasa NATIONAL GENERAL. T~EATRES mayor ln an ABC-TV one-hour aeries tentatively titled "The City," and opposing his show will be CBS. TV's "Mannix" and NBC.TV's •'Night Gallery," a collection of bizar· re tales. James Gamer, meanwhile, ENDS TUESDAY WALT DISNEY'S "BARE FOOT EXECUTIVE" And CG) The Preservation Hall Jau Band is composed of men and women in their sixties and seventies who played with such jar.z greats as Jelly Rall Morton, Johnny Dodds and King Oliver and who helped create the music known as New Orleans jazz. and drama. Tony Curtis and Roger!;;;=========,! "THE COMPUTER WORE TENNIS S CG> The band, the last original New Orleans jan band , features Billie and DeDe Pierce, Cie Fratier, Willie Humphrey, Jim Robinson and Allan Jaffe. Tickets for the concert are $3.50 and are available at all Ticketron outlets. the UC! Fine Arts Box Office and the Associated Students office. For further information phone 833-8617. ("The Saint") Moore are teaming up in an bow' comedy.adventure series for ABC-TV, "The Persuaden," and their competition will be Also "RH "SUDDEN TERROR" lfido IUD CO"T "Brtwster McCloud'' ,ClUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING I OUTH COAST PLAZA I & HIWAY 39 DRIVE-IN SHOWING:.;N:y.0-.,,W~! l~m.W WFIATUll At"""' 19 O•IJ llTIA ADDID A mACTIOM • '7 A KE Ofr' MATINEES l>AIL Y 2 4 ' • 10 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOWI -6[)(11 fllllJ · RKlWll CUI· lllllUlllDIS • lltllllll illflll8AH Wf8AfllfH llll0Jr1tt11• ·ll'Otil ,tO:lll'lllllf·tOa1·J11-..,.QfllUJC*•-=' _.., .. _ .. .._ -·-......... -·----.. --!GP!-=--=-+ IAI "'l'!'!!'I'!', .. C•lllllliiltdNtlttlCWy °""-···"'"'" "COOOYEDCOWIOY FJ0M C~l(O COUNTY" IALIOA 673-4048 o .... 6:41 ,.. ....... ......... ,_ 111"' Barbaro Mtr1~ "THI BABTMAKIR" lll Burt Lencester "TORA "VALDEZ IS COMING" TORA TORA" 2-4+8-10 @l@i) • .,, .. , .. ..&. EXCLUSIVE SHOWING t•l"'I 5th SMASH WEEK 2"S l' .. I C.ut Hwy, ~ co110HA 01"1. MA.111. Both Pictures ''G" ALSO PLAYING 2nd BIG FEATURE "THE 12 CHAIRS" lnvtntivt, Cr•zy, V..ry Funny with Ron Moody-Dom O.Lulao Meet Henry & Henrietta ... the laugh riot of the year. Par&'TIOunt Plelu'es presents 1l neCll Leaf" llil Color by MOVIE!A8 ~ A Paramount Picture Sfarn11• .-.icet Mlltthla.0 EWMU., •JKk ,,..,. DUSON HOffMAN .l.llTlf BICi MAN" --·~-· CHIEF DAN GEORGE· FAY£ DUNAWAY ,_.,AL IUIAN =SAM SHAW 'C."I; JOHN CASSAVElfS 110 .. colUM!IA PICTURES ·ar !NATIONS llicwu,NG BEST PICTURE :_~ f'WIOMl !'t!IJt1 f'!ll..ltlll ~. . WALT DISNllY ' --llllBAREJOOT EXECunvE 2NDAT"VI00-__ 1" At T DISHl'Y'I "Tiii COMPUnl WOii TINNIHHOIS" G) I -• 2! DAILY >ILOT s 1 Molld11. April 11, 1971 t LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTIC£ In High Gear Plymouth Slates Trouble Shooting Contest in Area ., LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,_, C1!1tT1•1c•T• 01' IUllN••• NOT•c• 01' "UILIC H•t.ll:INO l'ICTITIOUI Mt.Ml! •ll'Oa• THa CITY COUNCIL By CAJIL CARSTENSEN Of ....... , ,..., ltillf Some of the boy• wbo will help keep us on wbeeb in the year• abe1d "ill be out lo demonstrate lheir automobile know·how in the Plymouth Trouble SbooUng contest later this week. This ii an annual event sponsored by Plymouth dealer• of thl1 area in which auto mecbanJcs student& find and fix several malluncliom deliberately bidden in new quickly restore the car l• normal runnin1 order counts as 70 pereent of the teams final score. Thert is also a written examlnatloa which counts u 30 percent. Schol1rship1, an iuide track an a job, ud a chance to perform on the f a m e d Jn<fianapoliJ "500" Speedway are tho studenta' inducements. The winning team in thi! and some 100 ether Jocal conteats receives an a 11 • expense trip to IndJanap0l11 where the National Trouble Sboolln& Finau will be b<ld in June. Mort than $125,000 worth of scholargbips, prius, trophies, tool!, practice engines and 1et toolJ at substantially reduced cost when hlred and plying for them through payroll deductions while tbey work. A quaWied y o u n g mecbanlc c•n go to work immediately with hi! own set of tools which rttail.s at U50. llis total cost of the tools ls le.u than half, '224, and be can pay for them with no down payment and a small weekly deduction from bis wages. Trophies for their schools and individual prizes are provided for local ontesl winners. Participating school! from the Orange Coast area Include Huntington Beach H i g h , Fountain Valley High, Mission Vlejo High and Mendenhall High in Westminster along with numerous Gther County scbools. Wil.50NFORDSALESMEN SCORE BIG Ten salesmen of Wilson Ford Sales. Huntin&ton Beach, will be honored for their out.standing sales performance during 1970 at a banquet April 30. The Ford salesmen are : Peter Vlahaki!, Jack Kiser, transmissions aDd • t b er·------------ automobile components for competing scboolt are offered, E:~M ... "''"::" __ _ accordln& to John ll Moore, Jr., NaUonal Trouble Sboot.l.ni Manager. Scbolarahips provided t.biJ year tow 137,000. The lint place teams at the NaUonal Flnals in two classes -hlgb school and poot·hi1h acbool>- each will be offered $5,000 in scholarsblps. Another feature in the 1971 program i.s the a c t j v e recruitment of T r o u b l e Shooters who participate in local cont.uts to become apprentice mechanics i D Plymouth deaJerships. Plymouth makes available to all dealen in a local contest area the ntmes and addre.uu of all boys who make their &ebool Trouble Shooting teams and urges dealers to interview Promoted tbtm as potential apprentice mechanics. Tht boys rtceive Andrew S. Huson, for- Trouble Shooter cutlljcat.u to mer general manager present to dealers. o! Ratheon Computer of I I Reco1nlzin1 that a SantaAna,hasbeen ap- subsl.antial investment in tools pointed president and ls a prerequisite for mO.!lt chief executive officer automobile mechanics. the of Data Technology in program Includes a plan for Pa1o Alto. letting apprentice mecbanics __________ _ Money's Worth U.S. Income Tax Cuts Tiie u""*rtl•* do ctrllfy lllfl' ,,. • o• THI tOllO...ctl"" • b</11MH ,, ,)01 w. ••11»1 crrt 0,. •OUHTAIH V.lLLl!Y lllvd .. N•wPorl 11 .. cfl, Ctfl,,,,.~lt, Ulldt• NOllCIE 1$ HIEll:EtY GIVEN m11 .,. lllt flcll!IOVI llrm nt .... ol W .. 0 ARI! TuftdlY. ,_.,II l'O. lfTI, 11 1:00 ,.,M. In 'THOSE GUYS1 Ind "''' ltld II"" I• "'' .Covncll Cll1m~r1, City Htll. 10700 ~ ef Ille tollawl,,. ""°'"' wlloM S1t!t• AYtl'IUt, F .. n\11111 V 1 11 t y , n1mn In lull arid PIKtl ol rnldtl'ICI Ctlllwn11 "" ClfY Council wOI Mid a Predicted This Year ••• " •ori.tw.: P<l~llc 11u r1,,. °" fll• fol-In" R•f"I T"1unn .... 14*H 1'!1111\M AY9.. J. A~tfll It l'lrb Mhltr l>I•~ B SYLVIA PORTER NotWt lll:. Calif. ll:tn l(Ju1, not WMI -Addll'9n ol Ntltll~ Ptrtr. le Ille y lltltoe 9Pyd_, ,,_,, htdt. Clty'1 M11!rr PllM. T11!1 ••rt WIUld The odds are Startin" lo Pthif Mardi If. 1t71 1¥Vt the nolt]\borhood boundtd by a Robel"! Tlwnrltn w,.,,.,. a .-11un1, s111tr, 1111 Pit.. mount that we will get cuts in IC..,. ll:tu1 FrMWtY tl'ld llu1h1rcl (LI AltmtOt F·'-I J-••• st1•e e1 Ctlltot11l1, °"'"" CDU11ty: N•!tl'tbor'heod p,.n;_ 1 · our cm:ra , .... vrne ....... es Ott Mardi If. lt71, blhl'I ,,..., 1 Tlll1 mlllltr 11 ~In's •roc:n>ld 11Urou1nt before the end Of thi8 year -"'<>'•""' PubLFc I" •lld '°' ••Id s11~. ,., Ille P11""1"" L1w1 o1 tll• '"" "' v1·a an acceleration '·to 19'11 of Pt•IOllllly -•rid Jtoberl n. ... rmtn l l'ld C1lltornl1 (Gov'I. Code 11$,llOO rt tlQ.) tn<! Ml O:•n 11:1111 known 16 ..... "' bt '"' '"' Foun111ft v111ev z..,1,,. Ordl111nc1. tax reductions now scheduled ••r5')fl1 wllCIM fllml't tr1 iubKrlMd TM 1onJ,... Orcll~nce, Zonl,,. M11>1. anO In !ht WllllTll lntlrumtnl I ncl aa.-ltft. 1!•~111(11 1r1 on flit In tM ,.l1nnln1 to take effect in 1972 and 1973, ~ciF~r~~:'t.1""' .. rne. °'"1r1"''"1 •lld '" t¥9lltb!I for Pllllll< One tax cut would take the Mi ry lt1'1! ,..,.,..tQ<o lntPIClkHI ind tJtmlntllllf\. Notiry Pu~llt·C•lllOf'ftlt TllOll otn!rino lo lt1!1fy lft If-or In form O( ID increase in the Pr1nc11111 OffH:• 1n D111'61lt1at1 "' "'" i>r-•t wm N •l¥en individual tax •"'empt1·oa !rum Ortnt• countv in 011Porl11nl1Y lo do 10. II lu•lh1• """ My com,.,lt•lo!1 IE••I•-. 1111orm1t1at1 11 de1!rtc1, '!'OU ,,..,v conttct the current '650 lo $750. •1t•ll t . 1911 !ht ,.l1nnlnt Oep1rtm1nl 11 "2·lO• tn4 .. ,,~"•'•d o''""'' co111 o.u., Pno1 ••I•• to t11t ti-. 11""· Another would Lake the rorm , .. "~ ·1 1' & A11rll $ n 1•11 flJ.11 CITY COUNCIL 0" THIE ol a ,,.,, ,·, ··-1tandard ta x . ' ' ' CITY OF FOUNTAIN VALLEY urc LEG•L NOTICE M••Y IE. co1t deduction from the current 13 City C!"ll: P~i.11.....i OrtnH co.11 Dtlh' ,.1101 percent of adjusted &ross LEGAL NOTIC• Alllll U, lf71 11»·11 •;(lll(I!' 1~ H£1U!Bv GIVEN 111tt fM l------,--,..,.-,=---1 income up to a maximum of :~.:"';.'.;.!~1~';~ ~.'~:c'P°o'i+::y~:.'.r::;!.'; LEGAL NOTICE Sl,500 to a 11tandard deduction •1 '"' C·t• 01 co.11 ,..,,,,lot• "'loll 1111--------,-----1 of JS per ctnl of adjusted • ""I 11!. ""V roc1 01v1: BAii: J147 o~· OJOD·T b'~·. eM l'Old bl-•· -1utl'a11:10• COUll:T 0" TH• aross income up to a b""" b·>• ont l' lhY11lvtr, °"' .n STAT• 0, (A\.l,O•H•• ll'O• maximum of $2,000. <•I l,.•Ol•ot ~"" <o!n DllrH TMI! COUNTY DP D•AHO• 1;011c~ ·~ ~l•"1"e • G1vtN 11111 11 "''· •~"" The total tax relie f involved rn ""'''' ll><l"I" ~<'<! orevu r.11 NOTIC• O" MIAll:INO 01' P•TITIDN 1-th l ed ell a) • ', .... 0 •' ••• N00o1!y ... 11 .. Tn ...... ..D. Pll:OIAT• DI' Wt\.L Al'tD UI ese WO r u ons one ,,, n1,, '..+"'*"'""' 1>1bll(111°" o1 t1111 L1n1a1 TllTAMINT.t.ll:Y would be a hefty $4.S bllllon. ··~•·c• ..... ',. ,,, •. u., •••II •nt !11 ttt• E1111t °' OLIVflll ,.., o It To N • -of lh1·1 dale, the chances I "<1". It lt •1o bo ,.,. o-,,. •~t City el WA .. IUSON, 11..e ~l'ltw~ 11 OLIVIElt M, no-r·••• f.'.p<,• 1 • ..,.,.,.,, <•1• "' .... -m-wA11:1t1soN, Dec:••1"· of these tax cuts are at least •••I "" ... ·~•• o"~'' •~tloGn ti t llMt NOTICE IS Wt•EB'I' GtVfN 11\tl ··~ ..... •o ,. '"" ... "''~ CHARLE IM. N.lJtllt$0N lllt llJM lltrtln 50-MI -up from next to uro DATED ••• • '' 1111 1 li'fllllon ,... Probtll <tf wrn Ind lot I le f ••· " £ ''fh• inut/!Ct o1 L•'"" Tt1t11•1tnllrv 10 on Y a coup o mon"'u ago. '"'£"' o~ POutc "•t1rlllntf", rt1 ... 111Ct hi ""'1d'I 11 m•• '"' And If the economy continue& '" bll•n•n 0•1rge Coa.1 Dt1lv Piiot. tu•,,,., Nl'llcui.n, 11\0 llltl tllt tlrnt '""' ,. .. ,., n 1n1 11 ,.11 lll•ct .,, 11nr1,.. "" ••mt ,..., *" ,,, to laa: for Just 1 while longer. --•er ,1...,.11 "' 1t7l, •• t:.IO A.M .. In mt the oc1..1-will jump ~-re are LEGAL NOTICE-COii'"-" " OtHl1""1'11 No. , " 11kl \Q • llll:' -----i!IU•I. " 100 c1v1c c1nttr or1 .... Wt1 t, 1~ four basic explanations: ,..n1" Th• city e1 s ... ,, "'"'' c.u1or111i. (I) Even t h e optimists CillTl,ICATl Q, IU~l"lf'' Olltd Al'rll 7, 1t11 r'l(TITIOU\ """' NAMI w. II!'. ,, JOHN. admit lhlt our economic T"'E ut101 111s1c;NfD 010 M'• ""••• county Cl91'1C uptom in date has •---f ll•lllv lhll thl• Will ~· to"""""' • M(OWEt.r, Oltl!IN • SYLVIA ~· ar .,. •• ,n1 r•«''°"'n "'"••c" ~""""\ ,, '," 1111 c1111H11•~ ..... more 1lugi1b than the White JGl? St ,l.lb1n• O• • <> A•o " '1~1'' Ct!lf. tuf4 H j'• J ad I C&llfGtnl•. u...,., •~· ,,,111,;,~, 1 "" ~.~·. 1,1. •ll·"" ouse or ...,, voca v sers l'I ,.A(ll'I(; ......... ll•N E II E ~ E •"Cf< Allo•••Y• ltt flle!I.._, pre_dicted. ASSOC IA TIES '"° "'" U •d , ,,., 1, ~vlllh•"ed Or•n" C1111rt P•llr 1'!111! d o! •-I I .._,,,.,_.., 111 "'' •011ew1"' ""'""' .. ~,,1·:i'-'-"-' _"c· l":i,'~"~"~· N'o"~' 1ci' __ ,.._,,.1iii!~A~n;i:;~iiii•~-~~u~lti;iyiiiiic~ru;i;ic~lai,ll, rem"..,, 1v11 •"<I •l•tn 01 rt1.a•"v ,,, LEGAL NOTICE _, I• IClllowl. !O).Wi!. ... rn Jack I'. Slciov1• XII • C ~,1,...,1y j-----~------1 OOf' O• OIL •AINTIN•I O"vt, """' l,. O•t"~'· Cll•lorh•t ZAii l\M • I (0.a"ff Cou"l'l l SUl'lfllOll COUllT OP TH• WHOLIULI WAllHOUll (I I lt1CN•ll c , .. _. lM ~· SlATI! 0" C.lLlll'O•NIA J'Ot; OPIN TO THI PUIUC: Al-Orlw. LOJ. Allmllft\, C1I ""nit THI COUNTY 0' Oill4Nff IO•tnft COt.1"1'11 "• A .. tOlJ so•' OFF WITNESS our 111""$ "''' ~lh llY el HOTICI 0" HlAlllN!; O, 1'1fTITION /0 April, 1971. "Oii 1'10.All 0, WILL AND l'OR f"f .. •Dlflll•I• tAffTA MA Jack J', ltovlfo LllTllll TlSTAMINl.lll:Y f'llllM ....... ltlcfltrt C. i l!IOOd F1•••t "' ilNlOIN[Ttl; L W.Ull!l. . -SI All! 01" CALll'OltNIA •I"'.,._,. 10 ANfOIN[lll! z WAl11L. -DUL••• WAMHD-COUNT'I' C)ll L.Oi Jo!l(GfLl' ~5 l)oo(oa,..., ON TNl1 Jiii NY <tf .._,,,II, A 0 · Ill\ NOTIC E t\ H[llt'I' GIVl!N 1"-1 k 'or• ""· Gl<l""\'1 E "lf1t1t11 1 Wl~ll.t.M F. Ull"CH fl11 111111 ,..... 1 No!t<1 Pulllk It. ..... 1'111' rM It~ Ce.,••• 1>11! 116'1 lo< P•OOtll o! Wiii 11111 lot '"" 5!1tt, '"Id'"-tft.,.tln. ""'• ""~•"<• o• ~"'!•.-. l o1t011.,,"llrY "' tOn>"'lHJoNrd tftd ,_,., ""'""'11' "'' 11onf•. ro!t11"''° 19 -10. "rntati 1111' , .......... Jldi: P llillt .... '"" ltido.lra l ... ,~., ll/tif11!1••, IN! ,.,1, "'' ""'t l !'f 1 11-.. •-ti mt hi .,. tllt --· 1!1n o1 "'"'l"' ,,.,, ~"'• ~·• """ "' ,..,., ~ ••• t!IM<•"'9d te 11'11 """'" b" .f..11•11 n, 1"1. 11 1 JC 1 <fl 1., "" l11i1r-t, 1M ac.11,...IMIN to "" lfltl eo..t1r..,... o! °""'!tfttnl No, l' e! ~•Id '""' uac:vt"' IN -· (.Wrl, 11 "l10 Cl•« (-ff 0.1..., WU! I IN WITNfSI WHEJll!Of', I "'"' ""-(tty"' l1M1 t. ... , Clllfllt~ll ' " """"""""" Ill ""' """ .... llff!•l'll l"I• DllOlll Ml•~ JI , \'11 . 0111<111 otll Iha !Jey lttCI v.1r Ill 11\lo W, f 51 JOHN, C ... t1!Qf't fir.I .oovt wrlttf!ft. (OOJ.,I• (ltl'I !Ottltlll S.111 CUll'l'IA. (.llf'lll'lill • •llHll G1,.,...,1 I!. "ltr9't•tld •Yr lllNl'T J, tCNtO, Jl. NOii,., J'U'll!lt • Gttlflltt'tlt ltu MKA'"""" hlrMYll'f TAX SHIL TEii SYNDICATIONS SI.NI te 110-Tu SW. '""' ................... .. 9"11.W. ......... 4'..nlJ• Cetl fe¥ 4• 11 IWI '* 4i. .. "''' "'9 rtf "" ,_ ...... 1 ..... '"'"'"' •IHI • ,,.,._,, ... . Prlnc!1 .. Ofll« In fl. 0. I•• Ull LM """"' COlllll'I' .. _ •••tll. C.llt, '116.1 IDlllT M. AtMmo•• M¥ Gorl'll!llHIOI\ iulrll T .. I .. , ..... J,lfll •• "" """'~''' lw ••lllltl>I• t•l·)lll "v'lll°"" O.t..... COlll b1l1T l'He! ,.Ub!llh"O O•t"tt t41! Otl!t 1'111'1 ........ Vhf ....... -A..,.,1 1i. 1,, u. wt i. u11 m.n Mrll .. 1. n. 0 11 1,1•1110, ____ ..; ______ ., " imporlance to Republican politicians, the o v e r a 11 W'lemploymtnt rale is oack to the potentially disastrous level of 6 percent. Unless the pace of our expansion is speeded up l500n, this level cannot be pushed d o w n substantially before the 1972 elections. for the economy must absorb millions or new w o r k e r s crowding into the I a b o r market each year simply as a result or the normal grow!h In our work force and the return of veterans fr om Vietnam Ol.nd other areas. (2) The Federal Reserve System is extremly reluctant to add more stimulus to the economy with money; there is no short.age of bank credit at 111. What's more, short-term interest rates have declined so steeply that "bot" money bas been flowing out of the U.S. i11 dangerously large amounts ill search of higher interest rOl.tes in other lands. We have actually been flirting with a new dollar crisis in recent V.'tek!. Assuming that the economy needs another spur to get back into a strong uptrend &11d assuming monetary p o 11 c y (easier, cheaper credltl is ruled out, what's t he alternative? Answer: F1scRI policy, or t.a1 reductions. 13) Tax cuts w o u Id stimulate consumer spending particularly, for the cuts v.·ould show up immediately in lower withholding Rnd tht.rt(ore, millions would have more like-home pay at once. (4) Experts argue that tax rtducOons would be le11s inflationary over the long run than easier credll fhe imp:ict of the lat r«luctions would be quickly di~rnlble and then dissipated In the marketplace; easier credit might leave a hanaover which our economy wouJd feel for years. The speed-up would be a cinch lo put through. The lax reducUons are in the l9'W Tu Reform Act. Orrle J. Addblon, Henry Cook, Earl B. Drablnt, C. A. McMiiian, Charles Giunta, Frank T. Budd, Steve M. Pulvers and John Rossi. Each will receive a 300-500 Club was founded 21 years ago to recognize the performance of outstanding Ford salesmen throughout the country. About 11,000 of Ford's 2 7, O O O salesmen from coast-to-coast became members In the' Club in 1970. ''Excellent reta!.l s a I es performance Is the basis for entry into the 300-500 Club," said John L. Hall, Ford Division's Los Angeles dislrict sales manager ... The average member sold about $750,000 worth ef automotive merchandise during 1970 to qualify for the nation a I honor." Some 508 Los Angeles district Ford salesmen will be honored at the April 30 banquet, including 50 "Top Hatt.ers," the highest award any Ford salesman can earn, Food Firms Hit Hard By Nader BOSTON -(BW) -Ralph Nader, the noted consumer spokesman, has taken the food industry to task in an ex· elusive report in the current issue of "Supermarketing. ·• His conclusion: "Ln the food promotion area, profit means more and more an end that determines the means." The supermarketer, Nader asserted, sees his business as real estate rather than food. Noting the growing discontent among consumers over the confusion caused by the array of unexplained choices in what he refers to as the "food jungle." He asks: "How is one supposed to choose a safe and nutritious food supply when label!i reveal nothing about the content of the food and others actually disguise the nature of their content'?" Nader blamed the "nutri· lion a I deterioration" in America on the food industry, Including retaiieis, becawe it has not performed el)J)ugh or the right kind of service. What's more, the food retailer, acaJrding to consumerism's champion, ls playing with a "stacked deck of cards and how badly that deck is stacked can be seen by the food in- dustry's ability ta, disguise nutritional awareness through advertising, confuse consumer choice t h r o u g h misleading content and price labeling and to adopt policies thal keep prices artificially high." Aceording to the Nader report: "Food indu~try marketing practices make It virtually impossible for any consumer to know what he is actually buying in th~ supermarket. "Bleached \vblte bread , which has more than 20 nutrients removed during pro- cessing. ls called enriched when only four nutrients are returned. More than 95 dif· ferent ingredients and chemicals can be added to bread by the manufacturer as he desires without adding them to the label,'' Nader said. "There are 76 such in- gredients in soft dri1'ks; 33 are in chee~e. In fact. the ~·holl' standard-setting procedures of the Food & Drug Administration and the Oepart111enl IJf Agriculture are irrational and do not refiec,t... the best Interest of the con· suming public.'' Figures Included in the Nader report show that more than 40 percent of all food advertising In 1969 were, in :iddltion to bet>.r, ale and soft drink~. coffr.e, candy, ~m. de~serLs and pie fillings. spices and sc:asoning. potato chips. preliels and snacks. Summing it up, Nader looks to the supermarket operator to improve the nutritional level of the American diet by aJklng him~lf questions of nutrition~! importance. by not allocating sMll space on tht- basis of immediate pro- fitability. by setl.1.ng up stores In low-Income!: communities and by miking Information Available to the consumer that v.·ill enable him to underst.1nd the lllbel arid allow him to mike the right choice. ' 'Su perm a k~tlng" Is publlsht'd by Conover-Mast Pub1Jr1!1ons, a divi~ion of Cahneri; Publishing Co. Finance Briefs NEW YORK -Contlnenlal 011 Co. 's 1971 capital outlays will be from 13 to 19 per~t higher than last year's and will run between $475 and $500 million, President John G.1 McLean disclosed In the an- nual report. E:c ploratlon ou\Jays will rise 12.S percent to $100 million. BOSTON -UpJohn Co. of Kalamazoo, Mich., t o I d Boston Security analysts it bas befn assured of a federal pa- tent on a promising new pro- staglandin drug and that it will bring out a new antibiotic named Trobicin for the treat- ment of gonorrhea on the U.S. market later this year. The prostaglanin compound, PGE 2. is still under e:s:tensive clinical test. NE\V YORK -PennsyJ. vania Electric Di vision of General Public Utilities Corp. has bern granted rate increases totalling $6.7 million a year, bringing to $18 .7 million. the total of r.!lte in- creases the company has received since December. NEW YORK -Chairman Auguston R. Marusi of Borden Inc., bas urged the United Na- tions to appeal to all governments l1I lhe world to action to create "a moratorium on major forms of pollution ." Marusi said "pollution. like radioactive fallout from nuclear tests. knows no boundaries and it knows no discrimination." He said only international cooperation can de a I ef- fectively with it. ~1arusi's ap- peal will be made formally, he said, at the International Chamber of Commerce meeting in Vienna this monlb. NEWARK, N. J. -The comptroller of the currency has accepted a preiimiqary application for the establish· ment of a new national bank in 'tJte Parsippany-Troy HiUs section by Midlantic Banks. Inc. the proposed new bank. to be called Midlantic National with headquarters on Cherry Hill Road. v.·ould be capitaliz- ed at SI million. SPOKANE, \Va sh. -Noble Metals, Inc., said it is recover· ing valuable amounts of silver from used photographic film and fixing solutions by two simplified processes. Each gallon of the fixing waste con· tains abouL one-half ounce of silver, the company said. 1 President Victor Connell of Noble said his company has one process for industrial recovery of such silver and a smaller reclamation kit that v.•ill enable small pholographic shops, dentists and x-ray of· fices to recover s i I v er economically from used materials. TOLEDO -Qy,ens-Corning f iberglass Co. a n noun c e d Tuesday it will establish a plant at Huntsville. Ala .. in the Lowe Industrial Park to make fiber glass reinforced pla stic plumbing parts. A tub-shower unit and a stall sho wer molded in severa l pieces, will be the first products. 1'he con1pany said the multipicce un its will be more adaptable to various needs than units molded in one piece. The Huntsville plant is lo be in production by the end of this year. PHILADELPHIA -Com- prehensive Designers, Inc . has obtained a license lo the cobalt £rO process of treallng sewage and other wastes for its subsidiary, Tampa Bay Engineering Co. of St . Petersburg, Fla. Tampa Bay v.·ill design and install plants to irradiate sewage v.·ith cobalt 60. a radioactive substance used in treating cancer. The technology was developed by Energy Systems. Inc .. of Melboume. Fla., wh ich is operating a pilot plant at Palmdale, Fla. E n erg y system's staff is composed of scientists of Floridn Institute of Technology. They said the cobfllt liO radiation It 11 I s virtually all bacteria and many viruse., found in sewage. DALLAS -l. TV Aerospace COrp. of Dalla~ has obtained a 1 $33. l million additional Air Force ordtr for A·7 attack planes. I Si. LOUIS McDonntll Dougla~ Corp. received 1 $21 5 million additional Navy order for A--4M attack plane~ and TA-4.J trainers for the Marlnt> Corps. Who listens To landers? " , SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does That's Who You Con 'Li.ten' to Ann Landers Doily in The I DAILY PILOT J BETllPAGE. N.Y. -Grum· man Corp. ha~ obtained a $.\ 8 million ord'r for vcarious itemsl for lhe F-IA Carrier based llghler pbn<. "------------------! " l ' h l 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h Yourself A Pile Of Pennies (Or Even Dollars) Dial Direct for Details Penny Pinchers 642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County, 540·1220, Toll Free .\ ' DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS r in is >ek oil for est Pis " ,or l!y of l lol on he ,,d he he ~' • ' • ' • • • • ' • ,. .t;C DAIL V PILOT ANIMlloglc Police Set Big Auction In Newport A diamond "-'tdding ring set will be among the items up for aale at the April 17 Newport Beach police auction. The set includes two rings, made of silver.colored metal, which contain one quarter carat diamond and six sm.:iller diamonds of about 10 points each, all are brilliant cut. The ring will be auctioned along with 48 bycycles, 21 watches and a variety of other items not claimed from the department. A complete Ust or items is available in the department's records seclion. The auction will begin a t 10 a .m. in the city yard at 592 Superior Ave. No guarantee is made to the physical condition of the items and payments must be made in cash. All purchases must be removed from the city yard at 1he concJwion of the auction. Three Win Collel{e Expenses Three Huntington Beach student! have been awarded Ford Foundation upper division scholarships for the 1971-72 school year. Recipients of the awards are Augusting Reyes, 19, Christine Herrera, 20, and Irene Garcia , all of Golden West College. All three are considering transfer to Cal-State Long Beach to use their scholarships. The awards were made under the Ford Fondation'11 under the Ford FOWldation's program. They cover a portion of student expenses at any college or university in the United States. Aloha Week Proposed In Newport Newport Beach will be tramformed into a veritable Hawaiian festival next month if the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce gets It& way. Plans are under way for an •Atoba Week" promotion of the city and Its merchants that hopefully will catrh on throughout the community. A meeting of businessmen, civic leaders and o t h e r s wishing to become involved was to take place today at the Newport.er Inn on Jamboree Road. Chamber manager J a c k Barnett, while admitting the main objective of t h e promotion is "to increase store traffic," said the week v.·ill also featu re "C-Onlests and colorful banners and beauty queens and prize trips to Hawaii." Barnett said a si milar promo ti on recei ved en t hus i a s I i c cilvwide accepta nce last year in ·s;:inta Barbara. Barnett said the chambe r's board or directors selected May 2~ for the sprcial event. Firm Acquires Dorex, Inc. Growth Sciences, J n c . (OTC), Santa Ana, today &ign- ed en Agreement in Principle to acquire Dorex, Inc., Garden Grove, £or an undisclosed number or shares of stock. accordlng to Donald F . Sheahan, director and t x· ecuUve vice president of Growth Sciences. Acconltng LO Sheahan, lhP' completion of th e acquisition wUJ be subject to pro visions being met by both parties 11nd certaln regulatory a.pprov&ls. Ooce the details of the ac- quisition are complete, Growth Sclence1 will relocate at the new facUltlu of Dorex Al JlSSf Western Avenue In Carden Grove.. Monday, Aprl! 12, 1971 Prices Efl'ecdTe April 12 and April 13 Some (,uantitit:• Lin1ilr1I 6-111~ Raling 8.0llx 16.5 • Ru~ged nylon cord construction • r-lad e willl long·wearing Dynatnff ln•ad rubber. No.Trade-in required Shop Monday Thro Saturday 9:30 .A.M. thru 9:30 P.M. Sears Tire and Auto Center ;iL£~ ~, , , :') ~~· '" Regular $33. 95 2 Fiberglass Belts Plus 4 Polyester Plies _<,.;,~; ,,_,,.: "' :rr :f/ o ·-;· ·~).'. ,,1-·. ;-_;;, '-i:f. ·-;r "·' DYNAGLASS 6.50xl3/C7Jl.13 Tubeless Blackwall Plu• l.92 F.E.T. AndOJdT.,. SILENT GUARD Ruggedly Con81rUcted ; Pliea of Polyester Cord Prier fi'.E.'r. $2.1.93 S2.42 $33.93 $2.87 6.50x 16 $26.93 !2.61 . I ll--"T~U~BELESS Husky, Reliable, Strong IIlGHW AY HAULER 6.Ply 6.70xl5 23 ?.~ F.E.T. Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans 11,..aler ... R..,•lar Sole "l"r..1.,..1• Tro•k·I• F.E.T. SIZE Tr.cl.,.;• ·--F.E.T. Pr-i•• ..... ., !'.;.. .. ·~ 'l"uhf'le11 Blark"'·all Tuheleu: Whil~wall §.50113/~7ft.ll lJ.'l.; :.!.0.46 'J.9".: 7~l:;1tl•l/)':~R" 14 4'1.9:; 30.71 :.21 7.75-.14/F:S.14 311.9.'l !!9..21 ~"' 7.7:.ll 14/l-";Rt 14 4:?.1f> 32.!l = a.:?5114{C.ifl...14 4J.9:j J l.46 !!.!.5 H.:!.l:c l4/f.IR.: 14 4.l.'J5 34.46 8.5.is.l5/B71b:l5 4;>.9;> ..... !.80 2.'5 8.S.'i.: 14/Hi8.r.14 4&.95 36.71 :.74 8.::.illl~/C.7R.r.J5 46.9:'i 35.21 .... 8.S5.r.15/H:8JCl5 49.95 37.46 .... ALLSTATE Passenger 'fire Guarantee Guannteed Apiruh All rire failures from C.11•r11n1effl A,.-11io~t: Tread we:u-oUL OOl"ma.l road bu ardt or defoca ia mm-rial or t'or How Lon11: The number ofmootbs tpeei• ,.·orkma.n~bi p. t'ied. }'or How Lon,:: For the life of the origil1a.l \\'h•t S .. 11tt1 Wi.11 Do: In c-.ch:mgc for the tin!, ftead. rcpl:&i::e it, char,i;:ing the current selling pdce plus What ~ Will Do: la eu:!Jmse for the ti.re, Federal E:i:cise Tu Jess the followio.g allowaoce: replace it. charging only fOr the proportion of MonthR Gu•ranteed AllowaQCe cunait tclliDJt price plus Federal EJ:cig Ta.t 1B to 24 IO!"f, that reproenu uftld me. Repair Mil JlllllC• 27 ro 39 20% mru..: oocb~. 110 25% TUBELESS WHI'..l:]':WALLS SIZE 11fAl)&JN PRICE 175-13 SJ6 185-14 $-11 195-14 M4 ::!OS-14 S.'IJ :!15-14 $54 195-15 $47 205--15 $53 215.15 $."8 225-IS $64.50 2 Steel BehA with. ::imooth Riding Rayon Cords PluA 1.91 F.t;.T, And Old Tire • ·rrearl rt.inron:ed with 2 &lf'el helta. -.:irtllally eliminating all types or road haArds e Rayon cord plte& J1f'Oo- vide 1mootb aecur• ride e 'J'read lifetime plu1 40,000 mile tftllld. ~ RIVERSIDE INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY 60 miles east of lo& An1tele1 J 11nctions of Hi&hwty• 60 and 39S ,,,,,,..._~ DISCOUl\'T TICKETS • 6-ply nylon conl construction 'or lllM-r-'-"_"·_ .. _·_ 0 _·',.'.,,M_ ... _·_Tl_·,.·-__ '_'_"_"'._. 1' r.rett.. Prieeef1•)' 1lckir1 fw •he ftj.e,. 11trength and long mileage .w. Grand Pria. •Wraparoundtreodenableobetter c ......... c-.- oornerlng and more s1ability \-• .,. • J R Prl.. '" sa S6 NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED .......__,..... L.;.;""';;;.";.;.Pri;,;.."';;..i..~"';.....;;17..i..__;15;;...-1 -Sears l••••.•,11 .• •.•,11.111 .. !llll,.fll!l,l!',111.001!.•,11,11 ... ~ ... f!ll•••111 .. •""""llfll' ... 111.• ... llfll',11 .. ········--!!'!llll,.11....,!l ...... !llll,11,111, •••••••-~~0M .. 111.l!' ... !1111!,!l.,11.111 .. •••••• ............... ·"· .... •••••••• ... • ... •••• CANOGA PAil.it .UO.OU1 CUHeMI at 1•100t, a 4-4611 OlTMl'IC • tolO AN .... 11 f't(O WI 8-4112 TttCMnANll OAlll •"7-41-M CO,."ON NI &.'.:1111, fifC 2·t1tl MOUTWOOD MO 9•1M1 OllANOf 611·11~ IAfrftA ANA kl 1..s.171 TOlaAH(( M1·1111 hl:A l S, .. •Jtllllt" ANI'• 1). COVINA 911·0611 INOllWOOD OI •• ,s11 •AIADIHA •1.as11, ,,,...,,, • ..,..,. Pl IPllNGIJ ... ...,,, YAUlY "° i..wtt, .... nto Mon.thrv Sat. 9:30 A.M.10 9;30 P.M. ••• Jania Ana Only, ,101016 P.M. Tu••· Thura.Sat. UNtA MOfl!ICA a~• ~" .,,,11 ' ' ~ I 1 ·. • Monda1, April 12, 1q71 DAILY PllOT r't~ Coody Erase·s '69 'Disappointment With Victory AUGUSTA, Ca. (UPl)-Texan Olarles Coody erased the memory of his blowup here two years ago by winning the Mastera golf tournament by two atrokes Sundly and, in the process, ended Jack Nick l aus' march toward an unprecedented "grand slam." Tile 33-year-old pro rrom AbUene, who had bee n seesawing in and out of the lead throughout the four days of lhe tournament, sank a pair of clutch 12-foot birdie putts midway through his final nine and wound up with a 2-under-par 70 that gave him a ~under-par 279 and ~;000- Nicklaus Confident To Very Last AUGUST, Ga. {AP) -"Until the very last I thought I had a chan« to win it," Jack Nicklaus said Sunday afler Charles Coody had destroyed his dream of a professional grand slam of golf. Coody, a dark-haired, handsome Texan "''ho bad scored only moderate success in nine years on the pro golf tour, beat Nicklaus in the final round of the 35th Masters championship, the second leg on the never-accomplished slam. Coody had a final round 70 to Nicklaus• 72. Coody finished with a 72 hole total of 279 and Nicklaus tied for second with youthful John l'.1iller at 281. A1iUer had a final round 68. "There was no time this week that I didn't think I was going to win,'' said the detply disappointed Nicklaus, the only man who has ever won all four of the world's major titles two times. He mentioned again his announced aim to win them all -the PGA. the Masters, the U.S. and British Opens -in a single )'ear. "I'll be playing the U.S. and British opens v.•ith a different feeling, now," he said. "I'll still be trying to win, but the pressure I felt this week won't be the 1ame." He was never far off the pace and started the brilliantly sunny day in a tie v.·ith Coody. •·t was prepared as well for t h i s tournament as J ever have been in my life," the 31-year-old Nicklaus said, his blond head slumped fonvard and his high- pitchecl voice husky. "When I started out this morning 1 thought 1 was ready. I was playing well. There was no part of my game that I was dissatisfied with. l had a good menlal fra me of mind. "I thought that somewhere along the way that the things [ wanted to happen would happen, that I'd st.art making some birdies. But it just never happened. "I still had a tie for the lead artcr the 11th and I thought I still would win it. "The bubble burst on the 12th, a little," he said. "I hit an eight iron that just h~ng, then bogyed. But J still thought I'd Win . Nicklaus. 1 lhne-time P.1asten winner and the reigning British Open and PGA champion, never gol a charge going Sunday and his even-par 72 left him with a 7-under-par t.81 that tied him for runnerup honors with 2S-year-old John Miller, who shot 1 68 after letting a two. stroke lead escape by bogeying two of his last three holes. Coody bad been trying for two years to gel people to forget he had a one-stroke lead going into the final three holes or the 1969 Masters and bogeyed all tlll'f:e to wind up fifth. He appeared out of thi.$, the 35th l\1&6ters, too, when bis bogey .at the par- four 14th hole dropped him two &hots behind lhe unheralded Miller, who had just made his third birdie in a rour-hole span. However, as the lanky young Miller began giving ground to the pressure, Coody birdied the 15th and 16th to forge to the front and then parred the final two holes to wrap up his first~ver major title. Coody, who jumped off to 1 three- stroke lead in Thursda:y's opening round with a six.under-par 66, Was lied with Nicklaus at aeven-under going into Sunday's final II bola. When be and Nicklaus both shot 35s on the front nine, the two still were lied at eight-under and Miller, who ha.d started the day four !lttokes off the pace, had closed to two back with a 33. Miller moved to one stroke back with a birdie at the par-four 11th hole and when Nicklaus muffed a shot from the edge of a creek: at No. 12, the protege of 1970 Masters champion Billy Casper was tied for the lead .. ,Ith Coody. a stroke ahead of Nlcklau.~. Miller's birdie at No. 14, coupled with Coody's bo11ey there, gave the youn11 CHARLES COODY BLASTS HIS WAY TO MASTERS GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP AT AUGUSTA, GA. Vance to Face Cubs Tonight; Dodgers Lose i\.sks Chamberlain How Can We Beat 'em LOS ANGELES (AP) -One of the myraid of off-season trade rumors When It's 5 Against 9? involved San Diego's Nate Colbert. r..tILWAUKEE (AP) -Larry Costello Asked Sunday if the Padres ever Is waiting for his team to break loose considered dealing away the power-orrensively. Wilt Chamberlain is waiting for help. expect us to win, but I expect our bench to help. That's \\'bat they're getting paid for, not to sit there and \Vatch the game," he said. Callfomian 1 two-stroke lead and It appeared he wall on his way to winning the Masten in hi! first appearance here aa a pro. Miller's only previous Master is appearance had been in 1967 as an amateur after he placed eigbth in the U.S. Open at the age of 19 the year before. Coody began playing golf when he will 13. He won the Te1as State amateur in 1959 and was a semifinalist in the National Amateur in 1962. He spent two year!! in service as an Air Force Lieutenant and turned pro in late 19'3. His first tour victory came at Dallu in 1964. Coody said besides tour money bt Is paid for representing tl'lt Prairie Creek Club in Arkansas and has some 'oil lnve!ltments. His father works (or Humble Oll. He is reputed to be one o[ the Ughte!lt men on the tour, Beard having said of his f19,000 winnings in 1969 that "It's I shame to put that much money out of circul1tlon." Of hLs $25,000 Masters purse , caody acknowledged, "I'll k.eep as much o)# of circulation as possible." ;,.t; 4,._: .,. Halo Bats Siwnt • ~ ~ I Always Get U~ l For Angels--Patt• ·. -~ ,d; ClJICAGO (AP) -The C81ifornia Angels gave up pllchlng depth to acquire tnore bat power and a better defense but in light o( their most recent perfor- mance one might have thought it was t'otiler way around . The Angels got 1100<1 pitching Sunday but the brilliant pitching or Marty Pattin stymied the Californians on three hits •nd Miiwaukee's Brewers won, 3-0. A former Angel, Pattin w a s A11gel Slate AH lll'MI Ml ICMI"< {111) APtll lt -A1111ei. 11 Clllcno ~I ll -A1111tl1 11 Chlc1110 A.-11 1~ -Alll!llS It ICl~WI Cl!, t,prU 16 -At>11-!• ti M!t111t$0ll ll;IO •.m. 11:10 • m. S:1S P.'1'1. 11 :10 ...... magnificent as he upped his season record to 2--0. "I always get up for this club (California)," Paltin admitted ... It's not only because I once pitched ror California, but it's a good llneup and you've got to play them tough all the way ,'' When Pattin was on the Angels roster, he was relegated to the bullpen. "Marty never got a chance to pitch with us," said California shortstop Jim Fregosi. "If he'd been given a chance, he might have made it." "But then , rrankly, 1 didn't ever think he'd become the starting pitcher he has.·· Fre11osi said. "He had control trouble and never had that kind of slider, either .'' Brewers manaaer Dave Brl'~~olu Pattin became a pitcher wheD he his temper. "M "He used to fight him.self," B(fftol said. "Now he doesn't." •r. Dave May's double and Andy•• single in the first iMing provided 1.§1.; ly run Pattin needed. ln the secon though, Ellie Rodriguez and Ted teamed up to produce another run."' Milwaulee's final score came on Bernie Smith's first home run of the season, a JM.foot shot into the lefi (leld bleachers to lead off the eighth. •• ; The Brewers received a scare j the seventh when Pattin was struck oo.-the ., (Set ANGELS, Page %6) .""/ ·-. (ALl,OllHIA MILWAUIC111;~ 1 lb r ~ r•I 0 ',-fllifttl Alom•r. 2D l O I O M1r~r, lb I • ,f O 0'8rlen, u 4 o o t $.Smlttl. ti • ~ ;t 1 A.JonnMH>, II l 0 I Q 0.MIY, er .I I i{ t T,(t1nl11ll~ro, rf 4 o o O l(aoco, lb ~ t ,, J ~11tnc~•. lb 1 o o o w111on, 11 I •o 1 o McM11ll1~. lb 3 o o o H<111n, lb I t I o 8errr,c• JOIOPl!'l&,H ... 0 lorboro. c 1 O O O F..Aocl•l91111, c J I O Sl~tn•On, c I 0 0 Q ICuOllk, 7b l 0 J 1 T.Mur~~v. p ; o O o P1!t ln, p I t t o Re1101,ph IOQO E.Fl1~er, p o o o e Tot1l1 21 I ) 0 Toi~•• lt ) t ~ c .. 11or~I• OOD DDO ODO -0 Mllwoultoe l!D 000 Otx -l E -· A JOhn.on, P11t!n, I 5mlth OP -C~ll· lorn;1 1. M\lw~ul:tl J LOI -(•lllorn~ '· MU· w,l'\•~' 111 -0. Mey. MA -I . $ml111 tl), SI -IC01co, S -P•tlln " M • 111: a• SO T.l~~rphy (L.111 1 • 1 1 l I E FIJ.ht• l J l I I t P•ltlrl 4W.J-Ol t l I 0 J 4 HIP -by 1 Mu•phr /P•l1inl WP -T Mu•- ~hv. flmt -;,01. """'"'•"'' -1.110 .. , ·~. "I thought I'd win after the 13th, but I hitting first baseman, San Diego r I I "I don't think \\'e've played 11t•ell at all," manager Preston Gomez a I y .. Our starters are giving it all they have,'' he said. "It's just that by the fourth quarter. we're dragging while they (the Bucks) are running in fresh guys." :n •• •• •l: •• i: •' ., . . • couldn•t birdie there. "I thought at every hole it was going to happen. "But that's the way it is. 1 gave it the best I could give it, and it just wasn't quite good enough." Fina! IC'Clttl Ind "'°""Y M111er• 111111 cMmpoon1Mp; Cll••lfi COOiiy, 11!.000 Jolln Mlll1r, 117,loOO JICk Hltklaui, 111.lQll Oon Jani;11rr, lt.i~ o .... t Lll!ltr, 1~.Jso Garr Pl•rtr, S.l,600 Tom Wthkopl, lS,600 Ken S!l!I, S.l,600 Oavt srockron. ll,161 Frtni; BNrll, U,1'1 llobtrto Ot Vlctn10, Sl.1'1 $trl Grttnt, IJ.lOO 81!!y CltPtr, IJ,ODO Rty Fkly.:1, 13,0DO Hilt Irwin, ll,000 Brue• Or.1ln, ll.000 eoo Murpl\r, IJ,000 Arnold Pllmtr, 12,,SO lruct Crtmp!Vn, 12AJO 0.vt Elclltlber11tr, S1.4SO O"•lllt Mooclv. Sl,450 lot>lly Mlt<IMll. ll,l54 Tom Mron, l2,HO At Gel-~·· Sl,'15 Old! Loll. 11,rJ.l Slevl Mllnyll Clmllfllt) 0.~ Hiil, 11 ,7.lO .Dtlt 0oll9llH. 11,1.50 Ari Walt. U,UO w+nn\119~ tn tilt l!t~ remarked : ;-Costello, J\tilv.·aukee Bucks coach, said. "You trade a\Yay Colbert, I leave town. "U1e've won two, but I think "'e·re due \Ve've built this whole club around his for an explosion." pov.·er ." Nate did a sizeable building job himself . Offensively, the Bucks were under par Sunday. But their defense helped give Aarll 1' April lJ APdl U April n Dodge r Slate Alt GI""" lft 1(,1 (Mf) Qodg ...... (hlt•llO OO!lg~" Y•. (hit•ga Oodv~•• ••. St. L°"l1 OoclQt•i ••· 51. L°"I' 1:SS P.m. l:.U P.m. 7:.U p ''" l :U a.m. Sunday. personally dismantling the Los Angeles Dodgers with two home runs and six runs balled in as the Padres stormed to a 9-7 victory. Los Angeles, which has now lost four of its fir!lt six games and two straight series, hosts the Chicago Cubs tonight in the opener or a two.game set. tl11ssion Viejo's Sandy Vance makes his debut against Chicago·s Ken lloltzman . (}. I. Colbert slugged home runs his first ty,·o times lo the plate Sunday, a three-run v.·allop in the first inning and a hvo-run blow in the third. Both came off Don Sutton who surrendered 38 homers last season including nine to the Padres. Of the nine , Colbert whacked five. them a 91-73 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers to take a 2-0 lead in their best-of. seven game series in the National Basketball Association's Western Conference playoff finals. "\Ve were running without a purpose at times," Costello said. "\Ve came up with a lot of steals that we didn't turn into point s.·• Chamberlain, the last Laker to get dressed, was fuming in the dressing room following the loss. The 7-foot-l veteran had played his best game ever against ~1ihvaukee and its 7-foot-2 sophomore center, Lew Alcindor. "Our defense is all right," Chamberlain said, as he started off quietly, "I don 't expect to win. \\'e've gor three of our starters out." JIMn ltod•IQ;Ull, 11,100 Urry ZltQler, 11.100 L1rrr tllnMlll, Sl.100 HIPlll Y~Yo, 11.71>1 kb L...,..., 11 .. 71 GllOl'ftl ArcMI', llMO Tonr Jldilln. 11"~ O.vld Gr11\1..,, 11 .~ 5oD 0.0.~J. Sl.ut Tom Sllfw, 11,'50 Joi\" $di'", Sl,ut H1~1d Herinlntl. 11"25 Jolln Lll!t•, 11..00 lho,....1 ICl!t (1m1t1ur) Alltn Mlll..,. (1m1teurt GIDClJ Gllbtrl, U..00 Oou11 Ford, llMO U-7) 71).7Cl-21' 11·1Mol·61-211 10-11 .... n-211 6Mf.7J.12-11l 11·69-IU9--21l 11.n.11..et-11-4 11-"·11·12--21l n.11.n .. t-21-4 11·1U9·12-1U , .. ,3.,9.111-116 7•6t-11·•9--216 /J.IJ.11·1~211 ll·7J.71·r.1-:lal •f·IJ.7).11--2'1 .,.n.11.111--11• n .ro.IJ.74-2111 .,.ll)., .. ll-211 1:1-12·11 ·I :l--21t 1).l?·l'-111-2" 1 .. 11.111-1:1-m ,. .. ,.111-n--m 11·10.1•13--7'1 1•n.1...,-n1 JJ.IJ.n.n--m 11.n .1J.i.-m IJ.,.IS.l.......m 7•1J.ll).lll-l'U 71).11.7 .. 711-ttJ Jl.J .. 11·1-l'tl IJ.IS.11·73--:rt• 1).Jt.11·1-1'• 1J..11.1 .. n-2'• 7Uf·Tl·l3--?U ff..IMl..,._,.i 1J.1 .. J1.11--1ff 1J.1 .. 1 .. n-:rt1 7S.11·1'·1l-7'1 1•7.J.1•1-:rtl 11·1'J.1•111-1'1 , .. , .. ,,.,.._,,, 17·1S.11·14-2'M 71 n ./J.IS--300 16-l•IO-IC-lDO , .. ,,..1.71--JOO 1'·76-15·11'-JOJ l!-11-11·711-JOJ 7J.71-'l·l~l , .. , .. l!-1'--30ol "[don't know why I hit Sutton so v.·ell," Colbert said after he boosted his homer ' output to five in six ga1nes. "I guess I'm lucky. Laker forward Elgin Baylor played only the first two g1me!I of the season, y,•hile Los Angeles lost guard Jerry \Vest for the playoffs. Sunday morning, Keith Ericbon woke up with stomach pains and v.•as hospitalized in Milwaukee. "I'm not saying anything against the coach.'' Chamberlain said. starting to warm up. "But, \Yhen do they beat us? Both times it's been in the fourth quarter." How~ J~"'°"' llMCI J•HJ H.ard, 11..00 "I do like to hit in lhis park. though. Actually, I've changed my bitting qulle a bit. I've learned not ~o try to -puU (See DODGERS, Page 161 SAM DIEGO LOS ANliRL•S .... ~,.,, ···~..-1 •ll !W+11s,1s lJll "How arc we going lo win with five guys against their eight or nine? l don't The series now switche5 lo Los Angeles \\'here the Lakers and Bucks clash Wednesday night "They've got to get points from Wilt and Gail Goodrich." Costello said of the Lakers. "Defensively. we've done a real good job on Goodrich." Chamberlain scored 26 points and grabbed 22 rebounds to lead in both categories. AIClndor paced Milwaukee with 22 points. with 11 coming in the second hair. and grabbed IO rebounds. The Bucks jumped off to a 24-15 lead at !he first. stop, and led 44-37 at the hair. The score wall 68-57, 1\1.ilwaukee, going into the rinal period. Los Angeles' 73 points ties an all-time low by Buck'' opponents. equaling Cleveland's output on Jan. 2. 19?1, when l\1ilwaukee won, 118-73. LOI AN01L8S Ch1mbtrllln Hl !t1llll GO:illrlc~ McMl!ll•~ MtClrttr ltllf:y ·-- 101111 a ' T 10 M 1' l ).J I f .. , 10 J .. , ' ' .. ' J J-<I u . .. . 71 IJ.t) ll Foui.ci au! --140ftt MILWAUICl!I! Al<l""'°r 5mltll O.l'IClrldQ• ·-~ MCGIOrhlln 8001•• Allen Cu"nf/llllllm w ... Toltll 0 ' T ' .... ,., 6 1-l IJ 1 M H J l·I II • J J u J 0.0 • ~ 0.l I ' .. ' . .. . •1 •. ,. " 1~:11201'-7) ,.10242)-tl T•l•I fllu11 -Lat All$t'" I•, MUw•llkH II. A!"'""lnc1 -10,1_... UPI Tllt!OMtt BUCKS' LEW ALCINOOR SCORES OVER WILT CHAMBER LAIN L1ker1 Entert1in Miiwaukee Wedne1d1y et tht Forum 33.CENT WAGE R P AYS $81 ,258.60 Cemllbt'll, :!II Dea .. , II G1110f!, ~I Col~rt. lb O.lrown. '' 5t1hl, 11 81'1oll, c Storum, 311 l1o•eucknfr,rl J 11 J J I W0..~11, cl S ) I } J ' w "''~''· lb J J 1 0 } I It AJIMI. If • 1 I •lll S\lffkb,, S 11 Positi-ve Approa~h Pays Off SAf~ JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -One lucky bettor won $81,238.60 for a 33-«nt wager al the El Comandante race track Sunday. Irwin Tre&!i, vice president and general manager or the track, said it was a record pay-otf ror what UI known here as 1 papeleta v.•hlch costs only 33 cents. In thi s type or v.·agerlng the bettor nius. p1c.1 th,. "inners of six races. Sund11;y's winner, who was not identified, picked five of the six wtnner1. The flr!ll rice was declared void becau1e of scratches, however, He was the only person to have. the othtr five winners. • I D 0 Gr•bl<l 'wl11,Pt I 0 0 JODIGt~)'.Jb • 1 0 ""°"""'· p "'°''· p k-ltu•ft. p JIOIR11111U.1'11 J ti IOl fSllt""',p 0 00 OIOICr1wfo.,,.!lll I 11 Mflllltr, p I 0 I ""''· pll ' 0 • 0'8rl..., p I I O V•'fnllM. pl't I I I HOltfll, o 0 I Q To!tlt :Iii 17 ' Xl70171Dt -t 001 to) QO) -f • -C•mob<>ll, 0 l•G-, Wi!lt o• -... Dle9G I, LOI Angtlfl • '"' -5,., Olfvo •. LO. A"Vf'lol • " -• .. u ... "' -Colbirrl 1 (JI, s1.11t en. G~•'°" o> ii -Clmpblll s -Ot•~· 510c""' SF -WU11. " ' • .. .. .. ....... 4W.1·11 ' ' • • I I '"' ).)/J ' • ' ' I , ..... 1n_ "' • • • • ' Sutlllt! (L,t.I) ' ' ' ' • • MMt!tr ' I ' ' ' • o•a,lffl ' • • ' ' • -· • • • • • ' w• -O'B"'" ,,~ -' " AJ•r<!Otl>Cf u.nt BALTIMORE (AP) -The Baltimore Bullets, playing with the indomitable spirit of eo1ch Gene Shue, have come alive in the National Ba 1 k e t b a 11 Associallon's Eastern Conference finals. Using five player! most of the way, the crippled Bullets cru.c;hed New York. 114- 88, Sunday arter the }(nicks had won the opening two games or the best.-Of-7 !leries • Gus Johnson, Baltimore's All-Star for- ward, has not played 80 far because or injured knees and guard Kevin Lou11hery wa~ on the sidelines Sunday with In in- jured right ankle . That left lhe Bullelll with eight players, Including the three ~ubs who had just 21 1ninutts of playing ti.me among tlltm In the firat lwo 1ames against New York. Ew:n the Injury sltuatiom didn't discourage Shue, who always managa a positive approaCh. "Our players JefL the locker room thinking t~y could win," Shue said. "This victory wa, espectatly satisfying because everyone had written U3 off." Guard Earl Monroe, whose 42 minutes of playing time wa; the least of any Baltimore starter, scored 31 po in ls and had 111 assists. Guard Fred Carter acored 20, and forward Jack Marin htuJ 22 while assisting on seven baskets. Center Wes Un.'leld, in a workhorse role, had II JJOlnls, 16 rebounds and nine assists. John Tresvant. ln Johnson's !IJ)Ot, finished with 15 points, 14 rebouOO. and rour assists. New York gu1rd Walt Frazier, quoted In 1 story published Sunday about possible miUchup' against Mllw1ukee in the NBA finals , conceded the walloping •·may be what we need to wake us up." "We were loo passive." said Frazier , who led the Knk:ks with a modest 17 point!. "We sbnuld all sletp easy, because we all messed up." Frai.ier and center Willis Reed were benthed In second quarter with thrtt foub apiece, and then after Baltimore rolled up a hugo lead . Coach Red Holzman rested h1s ttarters. New York was awarded Just six frte throws In the fir!lt half, And Baltimore didn 't even foul deliberately in the normal !!ltuations. "With eight players, we cooldn't give any foul!!." Shue: said, "unless ii Will leto 1n the game: and really meant tomethlng. "But we usually don't foul the Knie.kt much anyway. bctause they'ri an out.side shooting team. Thf.lr whole offense ll based on hitting the open shot. .. The Knlcks didn't on Sunday, however, hitting only 39 perctnt to Balllmore 's sa percent. ''Our offense was brilliant because Utt pl1yers were runnina it right," Shue said. "most of our sholl v.·ere from within lS feel" ' . ' . . . U DAIL V Pl~OT West Coast Roundup Classy Performances Turned in by Spikers By A111J(iated Preu A IUY named Smith etched his name into the record books as track and field plowed through another weekend on the WJ!,1t Coast. But this Smith was only ffCMUy discovered. t't. ,Pll began Saturday at the San Diego Rt_JiYJ in BalOOa Stadium. The meet announcer told a gathering of more than 4.000 farui that Ronnie Ray Smith had won the first heat of the 100.yard dash in 9.lseconds. An(.~ that was surprising to some; SmitJtOad been out of action for some tim~ hasn't been among the world lea since 1968 when he made the U.S. 01 le team and set the world 100- mete dash record of 9.9. .-ror was noted , ho"A•ever, the day after ~ the meet by another sprinting Smitlt, who was reading the newspapers. Chifk: Smith, the former Occidental Oash1wu really the guy who clipped off the 9t, a personal best. and then won the fina)9'.(lf the event at 9.4. Smlh was the upset winner of the 100 and*> in the, 1970 NCAA coUege division ch&mtiorU:hlps, running 9.4 and 2fL9. 50Plt>MORE SIDNES The~weekend 's top performance, howe er. came by Oregon sophomore Steve,.Prefontaine. He "laid, "I didn 't feel well and the wuuter was lousy ," but he went out anyw~ and ran the distance double of his li(f in the rain. T~foot-9, 141}.pounder ran one mile tn 4: .6 and then, when Oregon needed cruci points in the two mile. he came back whip a fresh Jim Johnson or Wash~gton. The lime for the eight-lap affai~was 8:3&.l. Kntle Kvalheim of the Ducks edged JohnsOn for second and Oregon beat the Huski•s 85-60. Witlt perfect weather conditions and one ot the nation 's fastest tracks, UCLA and $puthern California recorded dual meet ~ victories over Stanford and Califii'a, 108-37 and 101-43 as 12,343 look on. SHO ·AT UCLA The \ crowd was alm ost the most pleasifig thing for winning coaches Jim Bush of the Bniins and Vem Wolfe of the Trojaroi. The death of track and field in Southern California had been Jong rumored but the idea of staging two Eeparate dual meet.s at one facility at the same lime apparently caught the fancy of the paying public. And they saw a show . Act one: James ti.fcAJister of the Bruins; a freshman, leaped 27 feet 10 inches-in hb first long jump of the day. It didn't -Count, however, since he was over the tale-off board by about four inches and ~re was a slight aiding wlnd. His winnirli leap was "only" 26-0. Act two: Willie Deckard of the Trojans used the swift UCLA Tartan surface to record a personal best of 20.5, fastest in lhe world this year, in the 220. Act Three.: Rick Fletcher, a raw sophomore at UCLA, soared 7-0¥, in the high jump for a lifetime best Act Four: Edesel Garrison of the Trojans caught and passed California's Rick Brown on tbe anchor lap of an ANGELS • • • (Continued from Page !5) Jett elbow with a 3-and-D Ditch by loser Tom Murphy. Pattin did be experienced quiet a bit ()f pain when he pitched after that, "but there wu no way I was going to leave the 11ame." California was able to come up with just three hits -all singles -off Pattin. Ken Berry had one in the second, AJex Johnson in the seventh and Sandy Alomar in the ninth. exciting ml1e relay. Brown w11;s Urned In 46.7 for the 440 leg but Carrison was recorded in a phenomenal 44 .8 and USC won the relav by a tenth. At Corvallis, Ore., Brad Skov b o surprised the dope sheets by winning the pole vault and leading Oregon State over Washington State, 811h:-711h:. But for top marks. the UCLA track festival couldn't be beat. The UCLA 440 relay team ran the fastest time of 1971 -39.9 seconds in the first race of the day. About a minute later, a USC 440 relay team clocked 39.5. Then long-hai!1!d John Drew of California came Crom far back to beat USC's Rick Carr in a thrilling mile. Both were timed in <1 :08 .l. Southern Cal's Doug Lane tossed the shot 63-031~ and teammate Joe Antunovich raised his personal best in the discus with a heave of 193-9. The Bruins matched that performance with Reggie Echols' surprising 20.9 victory in the 220 and a 17-foot pol e vault by Francoise Tracanelli. But USC came back as Garrison ran a 46.9 quarter and teammate Henry Jackson triple jumped 50-2'h. However, Denny Rogers of the Bruins went 51-9-Yt in the triple jump for a school record and teammate J ame.s Bull! did 51-21h. In the San Diego meet , Lee Evans ran the best 440 intermediate hurdles race of 1971, 50.2, and the Pacific Caast Club won three relays, the mile. two mile and sprint medley. Aud the PCC's Gary Ordway tossed the discus 199-4 for a world best. Then Sunday, the PCC's Ed Kohler matched Ordway's distance in the discus in a meet at Long Beach. Rangers Seek Soccer Title Mter 3-1 Loss The Coast Rangers go after the Pacific Soccer League championship clincher Sunday when they battle Fullerton at a site yet to be de termined. And they'll go into the game fresh from their top effort of the yea r -a 3-1 loss to one of the nation 's collegiate powers, UCLA. The sethack came Saturday at UC Irvine when the invading Bruins jumped off to a 2-0 halftime lead and then dueled the Rangers on even tenns the final 4$ minutes. Despite the defeat, coach Brian McCaughey was highly pleased with the showing of his Rangers. "It was one of those games where UCLA took advantage of Its chances and we missed on ours," he said afterward. And so ll was. One UCLA goal came when defender C.Olin West tried to break up an attack and inadverteutly headed the ball Into his own goal. That came in the first ha1f , arter the Rangers had dominated the early part of hostilities. Another Bruin score made it 2-0 al intermission. But then Harry Ogilvie got his mates back in contention by popping in a shot two minutes into Lhe last half. Then two Ranger goal attempts in a row bit Lhe cross bat and fell harmle!.Sly away - a fate the losers also suffered once in the first half. In preliminary games Saturday Coast Rangers Preps whipped Lemon Grove. 4- 0, on two goals by Rick Bartell and single tallies by Scott Young and Bob Conn. And, UC Irvine suffered a l-0 loss at the hands of Cal State (Fullerton.) Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE Ease.era Dlvllloa AMERICAN LEAGUE Ea1tera Division • • •· r Accident Opens Door From Combined Wltt Stn1ceai PULLMAN. Wash. -When Sue Atwood was seven years old , she went to a party where a boy almost drowned. • "My mother decided then it was tlme for me to learn how to swim," explained Miss Atwood, 17, Lakewood, when asked what began her aquatic success that earned her fourth gold medal Saturday night in the national Amateur Athletic Union short course s w I m m i n a: championships. She learned exceptionally well. She won the high-point award for f e m a I e swimmers and bettered her American record in the 100-yard backstroke during this past week's competition at Washington State University. University of Southern CalUornia's Frank Heckl thrilled a water-worn audience Saturday night when he shot from behind on the final turn to edge the defending champion Dave Edgar, and Indiana's Mark Spitz in the 100-yard freestyle in 45.45 seconds. It was his third straight upset. It also marked the first time Heckl had beaten Edgar, a junior at the University of Tennessee. The tall Trojan came back later Saturday to anchor Southern Cal's 400 freestyle relay team which tied the listed American record of 3:02.8. Miss Atwood wrapped up her fourth award for \he Pan American qualifying races when she held off a fast-closing Cindy Paltsted of Long Beacn t.o finish the 200 individual medley in 2:10.1. Both Susie and Frank, a 20--year-<lld junior, head the U.S. team selected to compete in swimming in the Pan· American games in Colombia in early August. Such outstanding eligibles as Frank Kinsella, Gary Hall, Debbie Meyer, Mark and Nancy Spib: declined Invitations to lhe Pan-Am. Most of them want to concentrate on the national long course championships at Houston in late August. Heckl's achievements during the four- day sessions at the Washington State University's new pool included: A first over Kinsella in the m.yard freestyle, a first over Edgar in the 100 freestyle as both defending champions and American rec<ird holders met defeat, and a first in the 100.yard butterfly over Hall and Spitz. Miss At'A·ood's efforts were su ccessful In the 100 and 200-yard backstroke, the 400-vard individual medley and, capping it ail off Saturday night. first in the 200- yard individual medley. Tustin Swimmer On PanAm Team Steve Furniss of Foothill High in Tustin was named among the swimmers selected to represent the United States in the Pan-American games in Colombia in Augnst. Others include: :f.1en -Frank Hcckl. Dav id Edgar, Jim McConica , Steve Genter. Tom McBreen. Pat Miles, John Murph y: ti.1el Nash, Tim McKee, Charles Campbell, Brian Job. :f.1ark Chatfield, Rick Colella, Jerry Heidenreich, Bob Orr. Robert Clarke, Tom Beyer, Andrew Strenk. Kim Tutt, Gary Chelosky, Paul Tietze. Women -Sandy Nielson, Cathy McKitrick, Ann Simmons. Jill Strong, Cathy Calhoun. Cindy Enze. Lynn Skrifvars, \Vcndy Fordyce, Sue Alwood. Jill Hla y, Barby Darby, Lynn Colella. Linda Kurtz, Kim Brecht , DeenA Deardruff, Allee Jones, Cindy Plaisted. DEAN LEWIS ITIOIYIOIT@ W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB APRIL SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 New York 3 1 .61f1 Pituuburgh 3 2 .600 ',.\ Philadelphia '1. 2 .500 J SL Lou ts 2 3 .400 1112 Chicago 2 4 .333 % fl.font.real I 3 .200 2 Western Division Atlanta 4 t .800 Ba!Um<>re Cleveland Washington New York Detroit Bostoo 4 1 .800 3 I .750 3 3 .500 2 3 .400 2 3 .400 I 3 .250 We1tern Division P.1llwaukee 3 I .7S<l " 11: 2 2 Houston 5 2 .714 San Fr!Ulcisco 4 2 .Mil ~ Minnesota 3 '1. .600 v.i S!Ul Diego 3 3 .500 I~ Dod1Ier11 2 4 .333 21 ~ Cincinnati O .i .000 31.2 s11wnhr•1 lhwlh Ntw Yorlt :t. Clr1d1'n•ll 1, 11 '""'"'' PllJ!tdt""'ll '· MMlr...,1 1 l1n F•lhcttcct I St LOiii• 1 "111.,111 s. Plt"l>vt't~ I, 11 l~n1n11 0Nnr1 t, S•n Dl-1 °""' ''~' •dwdoltod S..M1r'1 ll1wU1 Norw v..-. 1. Clnclrlntt+ f, ti '""1"9• Htu"'°" ,, (~le.to • II L.o\111 •1. Stn "••ncloca 1·' PhU .. t.Mt II. M""lrttt I An.ttlt l. Pltl1but1~ I S... Di.tto t. °"""' 1 11'Nr'1 Ot lftft ftl11Mltll/r9'! fJ~ •OI 11 P~ll"''"''"' (w.,. M).~ Hoo.lllM fllni ... -, .. , ., ., ~ ...... !(•r\10<' 1.(11. f\Wll Ckw::klMtl I~'-"'"" 0.11 ti All1nt1 1 t~ , .. ,. """' C~lc:8R 1Mofltt<¥11M1 0.0 ti u.il_. tV#ltt Ml it11 Olflol f l(I,.., 0.1) t i lln '"•~lte:tl fPfr<w ,., Chicago 3 2 _6()() I~ Kansas City ! 3 .5CIO 1 Oakland 2 4 .33.1 2 Angels I ~ .200 21 2 l l flll'lllV'I flH11llt O.~l1nd 5. IC111M• C!lv ' M!h,.tvktt I . Alltth I Mlrl-11 1. (Mc•.., j N•w Y0t~ 6. Wtl~IM~ft 0 ll•ltlmort !. O.lrol! I Cl1v1l1NI !I, llOl!O!I 10 1111tt11r1'1 lt'111th Ci.rv.l1N1 1, loltvn I New Yori! loJ, W111tlnw"1tl O.• Ml~~~IO!t I. (~I(:-0 ~rolt S.J. 111111mor• '' Mllw1\rll--e J loft911• I IConu• (II\< 10. O•lltnd J Tlll1)"1 lt1""1 ... I"""'°" i•l'I''""" loll) " 1( ...... (It~ '°'"° I 1.0) ~19111 0.~l•llf !''""'' HI ti Md"'•llktt llCr111iH "" •-II l~v t-0) 11 (~'<••~ !~ HI llt110I\ !(II(~ l.Gl II W41h1 .. •,,.,. IJ1""'1t l 0·~) ... h. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA S.rvlc:e •nd P•rt1 for AU Imported Cari Mod•rn Body Shop for All Cari 646-9103 Orange county's Largest and Most hf odem Toyota and Volvo Dealer OflltlAI DILIYIR.Y S,ICl4lt5n SPECIAL $1871 ~ All Ollie!' Model1 ht Stock Mar\ 11-HllM~ 'kl111p- ........ L~••.•~C~'-''~~._..._•.••~·-· ......... VOLVO 1971 DEMO $3093 t4<1 S•"•~. llt•cl •o. H,,,,,, " 'P'''· •1160 ~----~ USID CAR. S,ICIAL $1295 19•t TOYOTA CORONA H.T. R&H. 4 1pt1d. !YCM0171 GRANT GELKER Newport Harbor CRAIG MORTENSEN Edison Racing Fans To Drive Cars At Speedway On Saturday, May 1, 6-8 p.m., you'll be able to do something you've always wanted to do ... drive your car around the Ontario Motor Speedway track. That's right, you drive your own car. The Speedway is opening its gates lo the non· professionals to aid the philanthropies of the Pomona Valley Assistance League, and £rom the enthusiasm it has received, it should be a day to remember. People who have been suppressing that Marlo Andretti and Dan Gurney that's in them can now let it come to the surface. And that car that they scrub, wax and pamper as if it were a family member will now have its day of reckoning. Each participant will be allowed two and a half pace laps around the track. which should be more than enough distance for the driver to imagine the screaming audience and screeching tires of a real race. This "Dri ve for Charity" is being organized by the Pomona V ~ 11 e .Y Assist.ance League, and to benefit their many philanthropies the partici pants in the event will be asked for a $5 donation. JERRY HINOJOSA Edison 13 All-CIF Stars CURT THOMAS Eatancla Newport's Gelker Heads South Football Roster Newport Harbor's Grant Gelker heads the 30-man South roster announced today for Orange County's 13th annual North- South All-Star football game. Gelker, a tackle, was a first team All· CIF AAAA honoree this pa.st season. Included on the :JG.man roster are 13 members who won Ail.CIF honors. Two are from Mater Dei quarterback Bobby Haupert and guard · Steve Kemper. Haupert, also an outstanding defensive specialist, and Kemper were selected to the A.AAA second unit. Three other Orange Coast area stars named to the South team, were accorded third team all-OF AAAA bertm, They include Huntington Beach running back Garth Wise, guard Ron Tripp of Newport Harbor and quarterback Steve Monahan of Marina . Seven members of the Rebel squad were accorded honors on the CIF AAA team. First squad members In c I u d e quarterback Jerry Hinojosa and end C r a i g Mortensen of Edison a n d quarterback Curt Thomas of Estancia. End Lee Freiderscklrf of Estancia earned a secood team berth while Corona del Mar end Karl Killefer, linebacker Mark Padbury of Tustin and halfback Randy Cobb of Pacifica won third team honors. Cobb was Orange County's leading scorer last season. With these 13 as a nucleus, coach Phil Brown of &tancia will begin to mold his squad. Included on the 30-man roster are five with quarterback experience. Haupert and Monahan are listed at other positions, but will prov ide excellent offensive insurance to Hinojosa, Thomas and Newport Harbor's Alvin White. 1971 South AU-Star Squad Pos. Player School E • Bob Witt, Marina E -Lee Friedersdorf, Estancia E -Karl Killefer, Corona de! Mar E • Steve Monahan . Marina E -Pat Sweetland, Costa Mesa E. Jim Nanry, Mater Del T • Craig Mortensen, Edison T -Tony Wright, Santiago T -Dave Jackson, Marina T • Cal S~res, Estancia G -Pat Heffernan, Mater Del G -Steve Kemper, Mater Del G -Ron Tripp, Newport Harbor G -Grant Gelker, Newport Harbor LB-Mark Padbury, Tustin C -Jim Soltis, Fountain Valley C • Scott Schaeiler, Newport Harbor FL-Bob Haupert. Mater Del FL--Bob Keiser, Estancia :FL-Terry McNay, Edison Q • Jerry Hinojosa, Edison Q -Alvin White, Newport Harbor Q -Curt Thomas, Estancia F . Rick Hartsfield, Fountain Valle1 F . Ray Carmavo, San Clemente F -John Baize, Bolsa Grande H • Garth Wise, Huntington Beach H • Randy Cobb, Pacifica H • Kim Wnlf, Cosla Mesa H • Monte Floyd. Santa Ana DODGERS. • • (Continued From Page tsl everything and I'm learning th e pitchers." Colbert, "'ho was obtained in the expansion draft two years ago from Houston, slugged 38 homers last year. Still, he's something less than a household word around the National League. ''This doesn 't bother me at all," insists Colbert, who celebrated his 25th birthday last Friday. "I'm concemed more with the team gelling recognition. When it does, then I will, too." Colbert's homers peppered the Pads Into a 5-() lead and Larry Stahl and Clarence Gaston later slugged solo homers for San Diego, which now has blasted nine homers in the first six games of the season. Diagnostic Center for car check-ups. Penneys Scientific Testing Center can help to point out weak spots in certain vital areas of your car. In less than one hour we put your car through a -series ol scientific tests (2 12 of them ). Steering, engine. brakes, transmission, electrical and cooling systems. You watch the results come out on an electronic typewriter. The written report shows the results of the tests. It indicates what tested parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong. A trained diagnostician will go over the report with you. If you wish , he'll give you an estimate of any necessary repairs costing big money. There's no obligation to have any of !he work done. You decide what to fix and where to fix it. Tho cost? Only g 88 Nol bad for a check·up lhese days. Penneys Scientific Testing..Center l\n'l.~"' Charge 11 at any of these Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PARK (Or1n;ethorpe a1va11ey V1ewl CARLSBAD FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" DJ1gno1llc lanet open Monday lhrough Saturday. l.I011d.1y, April 12, 1971 DAILY PILOT 27 ~~~~~~~~~- • Ill UCI Crew Anteaters Face Tough Foes Rustlers Sparkle Places 3rd After Sweeping Twin Bill The Un1\'!:!rS1\y of Cal1forni.1 ~Berkeley) served notice H IS back 1n the Lhlck of thc b:.illlt· 1'1\l'.r posting some 1n111rl'SSl\'t• marks in the Sun !ln·i.:11 lli>lo.i~s. Sa turda y Colden \Vl•st College·s tr:ick <1nd field team returns hon1e fr1day tu host Eusl LA in a Southern Ca l1forn1a dual rneet encountt.>r. Al San Diego'$ Balboa Stadium Saturday" Gulden \\'est won lwo relay events in the 1unior collegi· d1vls1on. captu ring one heat of the mile relay in 3:2tl.5 and w1nn1n.i !he distance medley 1n 10: IS 7. Both were season besls In the mlle relay, Dennis !\laa!'l anchored .,.•i th a 49 5 quurter-mile. The rest or the quark·! was con1p.ised of ~Valt Ankerman !S0.81. 8 1 1 an Strough (50.6) and Ron Dickson (49.6J . former mark eslabli.shcd last ... year. 3.35.!, UC Irvine is in !he rnidtlle of its second baseball ca1npaign and on successive days this '4·eek ii will entertain Cal State j Los Angeles) and San Fernando Valley St ate College, l\\'O teams it ha s never defeated. Neithrr foe was on the first year UCI schedule and this season. each has defeated the Anteaters -SFVSC twlce. Coach Gary Adams 1 s expected to send Dennis Nicholson to the mo u n d Tuesday against CSLA in a 3 o'clock contest with Tom Dodd going again s l SFVSC Wednesdav at 2.30. CSL.A r~gistered the second shutoul ever a,gains1 the Anteaters last \\'eek i 6-0 1 and UCI will put its best foot forward at home in an effort not only to eras~ the shutout but the sling of defeat as well. Earlier in the year. San Fernando de(eated the Anteaters 8-S and 3-l with Dodd receipting (or the first setback. UCI ended a four-gan1e losing streak Saturday at homt! with a vengeance as Adams used mainly first and second year playe rs against Cal State ([)ominguez ). UC! \YOO the opener, 10-3. \\'ith Bob Barlov,r the \"ictor after pitching six innings. Jn the nightcap. Ben \Vetzler v.•as the winner in relief of st:ir1er Skip Redondo with I he 1\ntealers posting a 9 -0 \'icto ry. Freshrnan first baseman Jeff Malinoff belted his first home run for UCI in the riflh inning of the opener with Jim Gr~nway on base. Chuck Spanski, playing left flltSY GAMf CS DeomiftluU 01 .. ' • • h r1>1 T•k•kl, 1tt H1r1lc1. II 0. M•1•gum1, n Cltll.i,, ID P M,.u1~um1, d 1111ooi.:1. lll C~t<>•to. <! Mi(lill· < Ar(hrne•u~. P Mnr~I••. p Toi.h ' • " • • • • ' • • • • • ' ' ' • • ' • • • ' ' ' • • ' UC lrv!ftc l!Ol Sn.!A\kl. II Tr<!tsto. rl ll'C'l>. JD H~ASCA. 1' Grre<iwav. lD Mal·nol! !D Aooer10A, c Snl'Oer. c! 6•t\o,.,, 11 Pennlt>~lo~. 11 10111• .. ' ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' • ~ rbl ' ' ' . ' . ' ' ' ' . . ' • • .n IO 11 sc1rt by tnnln" CS DDmlA9UCl UC lfvlne • • • Ol'i:'lOOllOO-l I' 170 OSO OJ~ -10 11 o SECONO GI.ME CS Deml"tull tt\ .. ' ' . ' . Tak•~I. ?b Coro.•CO, (! . ~· ' . • • 0 Mo••Yu"'•• U tlrl>ll~•· Jb C•rlfUf , lb H•rllfY, II Olm•INd. rf Moel••· f P Mir..lUum•. o St~~"'· " Molln<tl, lo Coronoao, lb Shtlont, t So•"'~" II SA>~r. <I Rt"G""°• o O'Connor. o Tot11\ ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • ' ' • • • • • • ' . ' . • • • • • • • • • h •bi ' . ' ' • • • ' ' ,, ' . ' • • :1 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 n ' ' scant by lnftlnl' 11 H I! I C~ OoM'Muel 0000000 -0 •>I UC I rv\~ 400013•-• f 1 Coro11a del Mar Nine 111 Crucial Irvine Tilt First place is at stake in the Irvine League baseball race Tuesday afternoon v.· h e n CQrona del Mar High's Sea Kings invade the c<lnfines of loop-leading Los Alamitos. Coach Tom Trager'.s Cd~1 crew is a half game out of first with a 3-1-1 mark Two other key issues are at slake with Fountain Valley's Barons 13-2) hosting Estancia 12·31 and Santa Ana Valley !3- 2) meeting visiting f\ingnolia (2·2·1 l. Costa f\lesa and host Edison (both 1·4) clash in a struggle lo escape the Irvine cellar. San Clemente will be trying to keep atop the Crestview League v:hen the Tri tons ( 4-1) entertain up-and-down Mission Viejo (2·3). Something has to give in the Sunset League where \Vestern is at Newport Harbor and Loara at Westminster. All sport 2-2 marks, a game behind Anaheim. f\larina, with a 2-1-1 mark and a half-game deficit lo l\naheim. is at Huntington Beach fl·3l. La:;una Beach, in a lhree· \vay tie a half game out of first place in the OranJ!e League behind Sonora, hosts Brea. Rancho Alamitos is al University in a non-league lilt. We know you're tired of jumping up and doinq the DASH-AND-DIAL every half hour just because your newspaper doesn't list all the TV • receive channels you can But soon you can sit down and relax The DAILY Them All . PILOT Lists • • SAN DIEGO, TOO WEEK Starting Next Week f April 17th l and in daily logs, too DAILY PILOT field in both games, had three hits 10 e<1ch. going 6-for-9 for the day. Freshman Da\'itl Lyons was at third base in both gan1es and had a triple in e;~ch along with four hits in nine appearances. He also stole two bases In the opener. UC! SCQred In the -first 11U1111g of each gan1e and with exception of the sccood inning of the opener ~·hen Donunguez went briefly in front , 2-1, was nerer behind for national crew rac1n~ honors Saturday at Long Beach Marine -Stadium by \\'inning al\ three raees 1n an invitational re gatta sponsort..'<t by Cal State !Long BeuchJ UC Irvine finished third in the varsity and Junior varsity races and s:>cond 1n !ht• freshman cornpeiition. Coach Bob Ernst will keep his squad out of curnpcl\lHln this coming weekend Whh the next big race in the San Diego Regatta Saturday, April 24. Tile Hustlers :.ire undefea ted l ~-01 1n circuit competilion. F ol l<1w1ng the Friday encounter. co.1ch Toni Nnrin 's sn1kt·rs enter\;un tough LACC, Tucsdciy, April 2Q. In ulht•r sp1kcfests ~·nda~·. Orange Cuust hosts San Diego and Saddlebuc!.. clashes \1 1th in\'ad1ng San Bernardino. Jack McQuown and Terry !\1cKe<in pnced the distance 1nedley fourso1nc. ~1cQun11 n clocked a 3·06.J 1320 wh1IL' f\1cKcon had a time of ~ 18.8 i11 !he mile, Both were hfelirne bests. Walt Ankern1an had a 50 O quarter-mile ;ind Steve Lassegard ran the 880 1n 1 58.8 1'he fourson1e of Dave Keys, ~ill K1.unp, Maas and Dave Johnson ran 42.2 in the 440 rl'.lay 111 placing third. The tune was two-tenths of a se<"ond off the school reco rd. Thr sprint medlty tea1n of ~trough ~49,8 ). Keys (22.0), Kamp (22.6) and Mel Hobbs 11 ·~.71 set a school standard <lf 3·33.J 1n finishing sixth. The ,.., DI ... lttli1l UO relt> C~o•I 11 -I S.nlil ·~· •1 I l (IYlttY. 411, l GctlOflO WMt. •1 J; Ci...t 11 -I. LACC, •I It 1 Ml. ~•n An!or>IO. 4111 J, fMI l"- •1 I, •. Cer.,10., S O••n9t Coor•• MD •tl•Y -I !It bt!Wfftl IEil! t..A tnO (ll•H••· I ?1.IJ 1. Ml. S.n ...... ton•o. 1 11 •. 4 LACC. \·H.O. S. Pt$alit,,.., I l&.l Milt ••I•• -(n101 11 -1 GolCttit W•~I. ~Aflloc•m~n. $irou11n, 01:~­ •nO Mat•L l 10 S; I LA Htrbor, J.110; J, GltAOalf, Arif., Ill.I. in••t ll I ""''"'•" lll~tr . l .ll.S l. 1 C~tl!ev. J·t•l; J. Paud~n•, l 1!.1; ._ LACC, l IS.I, I Pllotnl•, 111.l. Two-mll1 rel•• -I ""''"It•• ltlv~r. /·)Ii. 1 !1-0nl• """· I '"'' l. Pnoenlw. 1-so s $ofiAI ..,...,111 rfll• -l. - tSet RELAYS, Pagr-ZIJ '" "PLUM I/NG PR08UMS & PULi.MAN INST Al.LA JION" Wetl., Aprll 14, 7-1 '"" Anehelm Th..,ra., Aprll 15, 7 •1 pm feunlolft Y•ll•Y 6 ''· , ••• 2x4REDWOOD • '•rfM'I IDr lho1• w .. lit•nil lt11Uillt19 flrO lt <IJ. IT'S 1.,1, '''''' Honoro4 !hru SDI., Aprll \1 --------------""'" 6 ''· :r IS Pt. Rell BAMBOO FENCING • Strol9hl tllt •I '"' •Iii f.,r&Dft ........ -h• ~ghlt••­ hooil chl,..p1 . ,. '1 i• '" "J • " ;d' • lt•ilwooil 2•4'1 a<• fUrfD<•il four 1id••, enil1 lri,..m•il whh 001•d ed9•1. lto9. S9c 25~. 90 , •••• , REDl·MIX CONCRETE "Jul/ Adel WDter Ancl Ml•!" • Ju1t Ilk• "'"'h•r 111eil I• mDk•· • for oH your bullillng Pr<>i•ct1- l•n•• p11111, WDlkWD)'I, •le• •Co••• I 1q. fl. eppr•1<. 1" thi1k. la9. 99c 77~. 4 ''· JI • ''· PEGBOARD "Great '"' •1tD11n4' HDm• .& Sl!Dp/" • (•If• "ron9, rigid pa11ol1 .,,. 1/1" !hick, • '"' han9it>9 tool1 •Ad poll-mok• '•m bri9ht- they'r• paintobl•I 1.9. s~.6• 5 1~.~I e LATEX WALL PAINT "011ce O•tr An.J fho Job'• Dana/" • Cow•ro Dll bllt lh• dD•k•1t colar1 • flal ••l••I lini>h-30 mlnut1 ilr)'lAt llmt, • Com•• in ... hit• ar 3,000 cu1tam CDlor1. la9, SA.95 $447 SEAMLESS FLOORING "Gr•nt for 1.,.,.,, Wh••• f~a trallrc 11 HeD~rl" • l••vtiful vlnyl cl1i,.. 1u1,.nil•il '" d•cir 1Dllil plo1tlc, • 'ra11'U 11t1111r he•a t• ••• DtDlnl • U•• lnila1r1 •• •ut-ppll•• '!Uickly •nil •••lly 1n wcrll1, co11llt•r1, flD1r1, petla, 9"'"11•• 1!c. • Ch•I<• 11 6 cil••-20 •'I· ft. ki1 . l•t· S1.91 • TIME Spring V afue1! ''SPECIAL'' SCREEN DOOR i•ro l•f Tli• Sunsliln• Int" • Ribbed design with 7" kickplate. • S bar twist grille -3 " center push bar, • 36", 32" or 30" widths -air cushion closer. Reg. $10.99 $7!! ..... All Aluminum ''DELUXE'' SCREEN DOOR "The Name Of Our Game Is Savings/" • Roll.formed frame with 101/2 '' lr:iclr:plate. • Child & pet· proof grille. • 30", 32" or 36" widths--oir cushion clo1er. Reg. $16.9~ s12!!pl eto Full Fame WINDOW SCREENS "Maintenance fre.-Never Needs Painringl" • All aluminum for easy living. • Complete with hardware. YOUR CHOICf 18"x24" 24"x36" tl"x36" 30"x30" 36"x36" 30"x54" 30"11148'' 36"•48" wll1 I••• II. • ""' noturol bomlN• flnnly weven with Uol11l•11 11 .. I. •• ,. $3.69 $1?.~ '" " ~Ii · ,1 r, '1 ·: '" t-------t ., ., 4 ''· JI I Ir. SHEET ROCK •Woll y•ur1•111n with lhh c•nllr11c• lion quoU!y b•Dril. • 4'~1' pan•l1 ore 1/i " thick-VA •n4 fMA DPpr•w•d. •• ,. $2.40 '•• l"onal No1t•Slrill PATIO DECK PAINT "Mo••• Ovr<loar S11rlai•• Sola/'' • ""'••IH1 • l•u9h, 9rl1ty cootln9, • lgol. co••.-. up I• 100 •Cl· fl.- ouotf•il c1lo,.. •••. $6.49 Co1tc-tNNll BLACK DRIVEWAY COATING • One 9olloft con mak•1 • lull tw• , .. 11.n1 •' COD!lnv--a•I• , ••••• r•1lor•1 arl9lnDI bleck c•IO•I. • fa1y I• apply. 11:.,. "' 79:., [ ffNCf FINISHES I G•lle• w .. ,,. FENCE PAINT "fo1y '• Applr/" •••• $1.7f REDWOOD STAIN ""•• .. rv•• .& l'r'O!Hffl" •••. $1 ... 99~,. CIHr LOG OIL "'tr Htw Or Old l•,,.,,...I" 11:.,. $1 .79 '1!~ '•,·: " ' \ !a DAILY PILOT l.1ondil11 April l ~, 1971 ---- Tough Competitors ~A~~ I CM No Longer Bridesmaid Freshman Duo AVOID STIFFENING LEFT LEG OK DOWNSWING By ROGER CARI.SON Of ... DtJlr l'lltt' ..... Top UCI Netters Costa Mesa High swim coach Don Utter ii a man. who derives p I e a s u r e from accomp lJsbment s not necessarily on a grand acalt, such as vJewing the ei:pression of youngster. who have: tint realized their ability to swim the length of a pool. By ROWAJID L HANDY ot .... °"" l"M!ll ..... What dots a coach woo iA"ins an NCAA championship with two seniors in the final singles cbampk>nship match do for ;111 tncore! If you are J\.l y 1·on MCNamara at UC Irvine, )'OU look ahead to the next season ind go after a pair 1•f out & tan d in g fresh11H111 competitors. Of course, r..1yron h a s some.thing else going for ~ii1n \\'hen he takes the Antcatf'r ttam to Depauw Uni1•ers1ty June 8·12 lo defend \hf· college division crown Greg J<1bl onskl. a sophomore. and Ch u c k Na ch and, a junior. 1vill be on b8.nd to defend the doubles cro\\'n they won last year to give UCI a big edge over other foes. But wait a 1nin<1te. Jablon~ki and Na ch a n d aren'! even ttie i\o. I duo on the UCI tcllm this season. A pair of upstart freshn1en have taken over the lop spot on the Anteater team and ha\'{' held the position since they were paired together by the wily LiCJ mentor. Bob Chappell enrolled at Jr1·inc from Santa Barbara and a I mo st imrnediate\y installed hlmself as the No. l siugles player. He took over for departed Earl O'Neill , !he r\CAA winner last year over another senior teammate. Cr~ig Neslage. The other freshman. Glen Gripe from Nev.•port Harbor Higb, was slowed in the early part of thf' season with mo no nu c 1 e os i s and is ctirrenUy playing a5 the fifth singles for UCI. It 's this duo of first-year players that has taken over the No. I position on lhe UCl team and threatens to brcon1l' the biggest thorn in the side or the Jablonski-Nachand comho for the NCAA title . r-.tcNamara is noncommittnl about it all and enjoys the rompetilion immensely. .. Jrs good for all of thern and I wouldn 't be at all unhappy to see the four nf them make the finals this year.·· Records do not indicate such a precedent but it i5 highly unlikely that any school has e\·er had two doubles teams rea rh the finals on suc!"essive years -especially v.·ith a chanJ!e in personnel on one squad. Doubles play isn't exactly ncv.• to Cripe and neither is champion5hip compelititltl. lie teamed with Robb i e CUnnio1ham (now at Oran~e Coa5t College) to win the CJF doubles title last year. Cripe is rated second in Jun ior doubles on the national level vdth Johnny Andrews ol Fullerton. The yo ung st er Frnn1 r.>ew port began his sports career by playing football in Pop \Varner competit ion and b<J~<"ball in Little League. ''\\'hen 1 was playing those ~ports." he says, "n1y rather ~J11· that r was jus1 an a1rrage player . ''\!<' told me to pick sorne ~PQI t I could txcel in I tried Ba~ehall tt"nn!s and hav~ been involved 1n II evcf since. I le has been taught by t 1\'0 of lhl' best in lhe country. l\l<iriao llafatl of Lido Isle and !\lrNan1ara at the Balboa Bay Club before his enrollment at t;C l In high ~cliOOI he 1'ried the 1r11n1p('\ and french horn to to1nplemen l his tennis playing but has given up a musical l'areer "I cnn appreciate !he liner t~·r>e of music after playing in the band and orchestra .. , he says "but I am not a Lawrence Welk fan . Im u ch prefer the rock type of music l-J01\I about thl" racquet he uses·.• Is he 11 devotee of the poplllar new meta l racquel most or the pros are using ~ "I don't like it,"' he says without show or emotion. "II just doesn't s~m quite ri ght lo me now and I prefer the 11·ooden one instead." ~lcNamara isn·t one lo suggest or encourage a change at this point although the crafty coach may have Cripe usi ng one of the apparently sturdier. lighter metal rac- que ts before he finishes hi5 college carttr. If the mono bug lea1•es Cripe for good and other injuries and illnesses don't persist. it might just be that UCI has foun d a new doubles combination to win the NCAA college divis ion title this year. You can •t improve much more than that -having the defending champion5 back but ranked only second on their O\\'n team. ~lcNamara's band of tennis stars continues to gro v.·. Bel ieve the old golf phra!joe, "Hit againSt-·a ff rm left side," has misled many players. By following this advice, many golfers tend to stiffen the left leg during their dOWi'l SWina: (illustration #1). This causes lopped shots as well as ones that are pulled le ft. , The knees should remalil fleKed as they pull your arms and clubhead back to the ball (illustra· lion #2). Only after the ball has been struck should the left leg begin to slraighten. I th ink it would be better to call for• "firm left a rm," or a "lirm left wrist," ••• not a "firm left side." JC Nit1es Return To Circuit Actio11 After concluding tournament a!"tion, all three area junior college baseball teams get back into conference action this Wetk. The biggie of the v.·eek Involves Golden We5L~ The Rustl~rs of coach Fred Hoover meet Los Angeles City College Friday at Quigley Field in Commerce, needing a victory to put them one game behind the Southern California circuit leaders. Golden West has a 6-3 record while LACC is 3-1. The Rustlers figure to see LACC's hard-throwing lefthander John ?.lcAllen. GWC Ace Ranks High At11ong Quarter-1nilers The Rusliers, 12·10 for the season, travel to Ventura Tuesday for a non-conference tilt. Orange Coast. which has dropped three games in a row, faces a trio of Soutb Coast Confere~ foes this week, traveling to San Diego Mesa Tuesday, hos ling l\.1t. San Golden \Vest Co 11 e g e no h'9~ ~v•£11t~ -1 w ;1!.0n 1F••!· Antonio Thurs d a y and no 1, 11 J; l. P~nn (Mt. $1n An!Qnt.,1, t t . . S t A sprinter Dennis J\.1aas has the w.,1h1,,9100• IL..,cci. Jone: 151" 0,. en er a1n1ng an a na eighth lop JC quarter-mite "9n). L1rve <P""""'x!, 1," Friday. lime and the nintr. best 220 "o inl•rmf<:I••••• -1 p,av<"'d"" Coach Barry \Vallace's OCC !Cronmonrr, SJ l, 1. Et>erh1r1 (Ooutn p· t h " ' '( clocking in the nation. P1a1n,, T••.i. s-.•• 3 1i•cn !Lit. Sovi1>-tra es eve a ....., c1rcu1 ilCcording to the latest list of we••>. n.1, •. Mi11 !•M San A"'"""'l· mark, 5 11~ games behin d !rack and field mark s JJ_,, 1 "''"""' lPh°""1•J. ~·° Fullerton (16-1). Orange Coast L""9 l~fT'P -1 M'11 11>\t ~on An· . "J2 f th compiled by thf' JC Athletic ,.,.,.,J, 11.1•,; 1 08,,,,t IL"n9 1s l1" or e season . \Vlth that in mind U's rather evident what the r e c e n t 5uccess of his varsity swim team has had on him. H I s Mustangs, perennial bridesmaids lo potent Corona del Mar, shocked the latter in the Irvine U!ague finals prior to Easter vacation, capturlng the first ever varsity swim championship for the Mesan.s. WiJlning the league finals overcame a dual meet loss to Corona del Mar in tbe double standard 61 scoring for the title. It had been six year! of frustration for Utter and his Co5ta Mesans, first <.'Ompeting in the Freeway League against Fullerton and Buena Park, then the Irvine with Corona del Mar in a year-in and year-out d<zninance of the aquatic sports. The final margin oI 18 points in the finals doesn't single out any specific turning point in the meet but Uttu points out some things that went Mesa's way early that seemed to turn the tide. "We expected Corona <lei ~Jar to finish second in the 200 medley relay and they finished third. Then Neal Richey got a third for us ir. the 200 indo and Matt Waidelich and Bi 11 McAoeney finished Ole-two in the 50 free. "The kids just got higher and higher. It 'Wa3 a case of the high beating the mighty. We got our momentum built up early and we just couldn1t be stopped. "It's the first time Pve ever had a team come unglued li ke that." said the Mustang mentor. Utter's teams have oot been blessed with an overabun- dance of swift freestyle swim· mer!. Instead the: nucleus of Mesa contingents have been Pro Cage, Hockey Bureau. ee1(n). i ... .,, i. M"'"Wl 1od•••a1. \leanwhile, Saddleback also f\1aas has clocked 48.8 in the !'-'~~t,:;,;0~;:;,•vJo:~~0·:;r1~1;, 21·11 v.'ill be trying to halt a losing '"' ••11111.-11 l'l•r•"' 440 v.•ith the No. I time being 1.;01• 1~mo _ , s•u~" !Man11... streak (six ) when it travels to ''"''"''~',••-•ti turned in by Lee \Villian1s of F••·'· •9·''" 1. Lou11M1tldPo !LACCi. Chaffey Tuesday. Coach Doug "" ••m•s Jc1<t11111w1. •t-11: l. F••-•n !Sin Jo~!. 11·10•~: F . , dell ba k G h SVllHJ'I ••1-lh Ranger. Tex. 1 48.2~. Maas· • Tubb (Moo,.,•·~i. ,,.,,,, 1. L"Q"' ritz Sa e c auc Oll siit1r• CHftrMH ,.,., ... 21.7 in Lhe ?'l(I lies him with cFr .. ,,.,1. •!·l. al so have a f\Hssion circuit tilt &1111m(M'1 1u. N-Y1r11. 11. Now six others for the ninth spoL H191< lumo -I, L1•0Y !Mn•. Ari1 ), sl11ted Thursday al Palomar. York i.1d1 1Ktt.ci!·1 sul~ 1-1. 7.11,: 1. Mevo (San JOl<tu!n Dol!a l, Wffllrl CMl.,...,CI ,1111!1 The leader is John Koeppen of 6-10; 1 l'lr•dloY 1 P~•ad•na\ 1.t•., 1. Citrus and Southwestern M!Tw1uk H ti. L" Ant1ltt 11. M!I· Glendnlc. Ariz. 121.31. Foore ccro.i..-n. •·9= s. B•!l•1• currcntlv share the r-.1ission wuikw 1ta<1s 1>11• .. 1·7 ,.,11,, 1'°· tLono B~·c~). J~ !S~n Dlrool. · Tte11r•1 •-• Golden \'lesl's Terr v w1""°" ccon••ar, Ar1i i. 0.1, Conference lead with 5-1 No ••mn Kl'ted\Jled. l\.lcKeon has the eighth be.St "o'" v1u11~1 s"'AlltY 1c•1cc. T•• l. marks. Sadd!eback is 1·5. The Tv• ... Y'I 01111•• No 11me' •tnt<!ulfd. mark in lhe j\\•o-n1ile (9: 13 81 H·1' 1. 110v•1 iee Anu1. is~, l. Win-Gauchos have a 3-18 season •ta Th I d . ,, s !U !Ntw 'll••icu J(I, lS.S: ·-Mc· l•t~nrt'I ···~th e ea er IS "t. a n Mr11•n !S1ml11CI!. F1, 1, 15-''': J. record . £tll Dlvi•1111 s-111aa11 Antonio's John Gregorio and C~aom•n (Ctr<il0$), L•Oon ($an M•· In J C tournament action l<tn!11tllv 111. ,lorlctl111• 101. !(on- e , M'k M . lt~I. W"d'Q ("'m"'i<•n ll iv.,l. l'lill>l'Y S E ''''' lttds bltl.cif.7 HrlH, J-1. anvons 1 e a r l 1 n e z !B•~e,.1.~1~1. ouv•r 1san Joul •"" a!urday. ast LA V.'00 two • v1r1!nl1 1u, Ntw Vert 114. 111r;ln!1 f9 :0ll.2). Otte• (Laney ). lS-0 games from Hancock, 3-1 and win• bnl-ol-1 11rtn. '·l. The top marks in JC tra!"k snoi w t-1 L~u .. •t>O 1Lono &e•c"1. 4·3. at Cerritos to annex the Only 11me1 schtollulftl. S6-J; ~-G•~V• rccn!,. (~ltl. SS-S; l. Slll'ldly'I •flllllf and field this season have J•c~-!M•nai•e. Flt\. !l·''.: '· Case~· Stengel championship. No ••m" 1d•9dultct. been turned in by r-.1esa. Ariz. "'""~""" !LA. souin....,,o, 3!·11 ' s. Hancock had defeated Ea5t T ... v .... "'" I, h . J1cot>nn IE~;t LAJ, $)9 01"tr• -Wttl OhrJtlM ,lttl i1g Ju mper Ray Lisby !7-1 11]1 1 Forc,1tr ICvi>re,,\, 51-4. LA Frldav in the be5t two of Ut•h 11 tnc111111, 11m 11m• er •e•t· and r-.foorpark three-miler Ken DI''"' _ 1. s11t•"'•" (l'oo•n:11). three chaffipion.ship series. c1.1 ,,,1,,. r.errv 113·5? Ol l1HI; i. J•(olloon !E.t•t L1o ), ut-i; F It . th 111'1f oiw111111 5tflllfl1111 ' . . •. . l Fair (S&~•'•lit"l!l). 1M·5: • FOl•f 0 0 w In g are c KtMu(ky al Flori,ditM. KMtutkv Cerr.\ 's ti1ne. \vhich came ic;,,.,montf. 16•-11, 3 L••Ol•"e 1111io conference schedules for the le•e• t>u •.ci•·' ''"tt' 3·1· S I d ' h S 0 ' M nOol 161-0 Onlv vamn •tlltdule<I. . a ur ay 1n t e an iego 0 ' coming week: T'll•Ml•r's ••"'" Relay~. cslablished a national Jtvrlln -1. s1ev1n1 !Ntw Mt»to sou111 COAST •111 oiv111 .. s-n'"'" JC I JC), 1•5·11 1. Htnlni.cn !Pt>otfll•\, Tin<1cl•Y Ktnl~tkv •I f'lor1d l1ni.. ii fle<tu uy. , rerorc, wiping out the old 11•-16; >. 111111111 tNtw M•~tco JC\, 0,11,0• c,,.,, 11 :;,n Dlt9<l M~'>• oniy ••m• 1,11..,.1tct. mark Of J3'.5G.O. Set jn J967 by 7'l·1: I . Anlollfl !FUlllf'lot>). 1\1..(; S. ('<tiTO• tt /,\1. S•n Antonio MtcktY Ple1tfh All~n (Mlnl!ee. Fii I. J,131. , •H• Hnnrock·..., Jerr,<' Duogan . ·•~•~ A"• 11 F~l!+'r!"" .. " ., '"'relay -1, °'"'""· l•• · 41 T; 1 Thvncl•Y l1t1jNlll1'1 1111,.lllt '" JC Tr•dt: •net Pltlf MIM<I MfHf!1, ll.S: l. F•n~o, MJom .. o.~e. /,It ~In Anl.,.,10 ., O••nll<! (O~<,I Q\llrttP·fl ... I• lfl() ' H•r9•~1! (MlafT':·O.a1 LAC(. Mf•e, Artt' '1 6 Ful(t•ttn •I S.." DINO l'o•onlo J, New Ycrlt I ~ov1n, Fla) tJ, 7. Ha"\""' (°"tsi•· Mlle relo• -1· ""'''''"" Qiv•,, ,rlAY l/on!•!tl ], l'lotton 1 T•• I, o '· l MHn (Mt, Sin it.nT.,.,iol. t :lJ.5; 1-(Iii!!~, l 10·7' j Pa>0dt~•, S1n1J it.n1 ti Oranl! tea'! Clllc !;o ), Pll111df!oJh11 t McGill !Con!<• to<lal. Smit" !Oa•1... )·15.l; ' LA(C. J II lt i Mi•ml-Mt ~n An!<>11~ 1! Full~OI! SI. Louh l. Mln~I 0 To> I. t 5 Oido, ) 1'.l. Sthll'AY SuM•v't lle•Ulh n~ -1 K0t111>tn ((;1.....itl1, A•!1 ), c, .. 110~ •• !Min 01~ n1 CMca9D I. P~il•delPl!il '· C~ICllO 11 •; l W!!l!•m• IMtno•U. Clbson MIS!tO,,. "''"' bt•t-or-1 st•'''· "~· 1M•"'11J, 21 •1 • F fth"' !Ccm,!onJ. f\ltldlV New Yor11 '· lorcnlo 1. be•l-fl·1 ... ,.,,so~ 1D~~ .. J. n 1 Othe•l· -'· UC} GoJf $100111>1(• Al c:na1•1• ~•·1,, """· i-1. M••• IGcl~on Wt•!!. 11 l. (il•u• ~I Sou!hwt•le•n l'IO!!"" s, Mon!rtil t. ~ttl•Of·1 <tllU .. , -1 w.11iam1 f~lflQe•. l•• I, Crin.1•nc'"I II ~•n llt•n.orQ•~O 11.-.1 ;.7, M-1ft1i+1•n t•mtrlcen ll iv~'1. •11; l P•lon\I• 1t Jl ivtt11,,. Mlnn.,ot• 1. M. l cvLf t. tt51-el·I L•e tM1ort•i·Ooae l. 41.l; ' C~nt•fll UC 1,...1,,.. 1'1' II ) CS <n1mln•u•1l T~~P!Ot• 10r;e5 11..:1 }.). 1•io .. M•.,co JCJ. 41 •; s ~l•"•r l!o" cn1"'bf,rHn ru H do! Gt~!' s"ddtttac\ •I Peloma• M•N•v't .__, 1CQO'r\Dlon1. P1ulu1 1•rtoortl•l. 'IS "'"" !0) n. S.l . c_,1,,,, •! S.n B!'>'n~r~·no No o•f'l'ltt Kll.,.,ltd. Olh~" -I Ma•i lG<>laon Wt•ll. •I.I, !Iott Allprt 111 11 O•f Bob Hlf•I• ID ! (hlf1!• ti Sculhwo•t"n T-tl•r•t .. _ ?lO -I Low•"Y !Amt"<•rt lllv~rl, 1'(,!'.1-. $l"11..-(I) lS aot l!•r><!• D'"~' G,o.,,.,cnt ti ll i•t'3ide l'cr!M'llO ti N""' Y•~. Ill!~ c•"" or I S1 '· 1 L•'"ln IPaloman, Ill J; IOUTHI•"' CALl,011,,.11 l>tJl~l·l Hrln . .&•!c;fl U~ 1.C -!UE . ' l W•~••' (Amtrl<•n illl•tr), l·IJ.1n: IDl t•. l-0. "-P•<••• "•• ' ' ",-,.,,. ••-o< GI ' Wi11!1m• 1Ml1mo·D.o•I. l ·SJ t ; J 0 .... • H-lrt1 11) llO a•I 11111 ~''"'~ '"o den W••< '' <•<< ,..,..t\'Te I 1 .. ,. ' " ""' , .• , '' , 101 t•. 6-0. v bl'l!-of-1 n·rl,... ' ·~·~· ~--.1 St •MM·' M•lot o., $~ •••• , II P•ut 'lu1 )( 1"~0~ •m.i ! " "• ~r•,Jft ~. PtUI I' ) !! A.n!n<~' ~' 1.,••g~ ' ', Sf•Vll( •I /, "" D• $1. Ptul &1 f'·~• x ..,.,~r • Qrt9 •acn). !:ll I Otlle" Ron Moov•rt (II 1• end Chri• Vtu~rtn Eoil LA ot Cv<>r•11 Mlnntltll •I St. loula. titlll fl"'-4 L•P•I.; (S•n!• An•l. 1 !i,o. {I) JJ, wDn on Cle!•ull tt •o 11ondo 11 ~it. H••ber o! ~l-of·7 wrln. Milt -l Ha,11!t'r lMlrt1tto, Flt.1. --------------------------------------! • 01 •; 1 Lio•~• !S.n11 Art•!. 1·!'-l• l P•nmon tLO Plercrl. 1·U.I: I. lij~~~~~~~~~-Eu•ll IMt••· A,'11 !. 4:15.01 J. Ma•· !lrtt! (SO Mu•\. • 11.J 1-m;le -!, Crnorlt (Mt. S~rt An-'·nlOI. M••'"'.., (Con1on1). t·Ot.1: l. Bobir•c•• 11,.A Vall••), t :Of.O; • Gt "v !Moorot•~). I ()9~; I Cll<JWtoll 8urr•fifl<ll. 'l~• Ot~,r1 -I, ._.,._~...., IGo!clt'~ We.t), '. ll.I. !""•'• -1 Ge"¥ (""""'•••~\, ' ' ~; 1 lhblr1(1cl (LA V•ll•1 •• z Wt~"'' CA~l(1rt 111vor1. ' ~iD"I l~JnlJ Anal, !•;11.111 1 .. ' '••n Joltl· ll•JI 6. ---' Why It Pays to Know FILTER, LUBE OIL CHANGE 1!:~~~- BOB PALEY W1'd M ,,,,..clo.111• • point '• ..., tlto• lob Polty k c bdO.,t t..p«I like. •or. Go •e11 Ht tll\11~1 ttlt 011ly -Ion ltlddi11• i~ tlt1't ct ICbftCI •tttflo"" I• f"'· lcb dce111'1 •••fly ltohl wlttt tMIJ CO•d ......... thot 4 ... 11'1 , .. ,1!0 •we" wild. How•••• . ..,., "'1tro11.-r ff fllt•JO 11 fflCttt" of lfftltO"'tf, IUENA PARK .... amt. .. t..dtw411tf 1)11 .._II 11'4. IJJ,JMD • GOOD MON., TUE., WED. IT llPOlmUlll Dill I IUENA PARK • U.olo ... ..., """ IHI U.... A.,._ IU-UM composed ol specia l ty swimmer& -tuch u Oran1e Coast College•• Chrls Go1nrnon ( btltterfly) and Lhis year's Ron Mi siolek (backJtroke). Graduated Dave Whitaker was an esceptlon but for the most part the freestyle swimmer hasn't been that RELAYS .. mucll help to the Mustang~' wife Dolly and two dauah ten cause. in Costa ~1esa. •·An extensive w, i g h l The Illinois nali\'e was a three.sport lctt~rman al Dixon program is n~ded for working Hjgh but h.is p re p oo tbe freestyles. Cliff liooper s wimming exp e rlenc e and Corona del M&r art an .COO!!lsled of splashing a«1und e1.cellent example with their in a river. weight program and lhe hours Prior to coming lo Mesa he U1ey put in," says Utter. spent eight years as . an One of Utter's p r J m e aquatics coach. at Clovis High salisfaction5 this past year and was an instructor for the was in JA'atching freshman Army at Fort Ord. John Whitmore win the 50 and A:s for next yea r lrs Otter's 100 free in lhe lllague flnali; in opinion that the league will be tCoaUaued f,.01 Pa•e %'7) his. first year of competitive better balanced . ,..11 .• t:k .!1 t. u.cc. '=H.tJ l. S•" swlmmlng. "C«ona del Mar. Estancia 01199 Mtw. 3:27.l. Ol!lf•l'l(t MH!let' rt11Y -i,. Goltl•n ''I lo11e t-0 watch a kid and and Costa Mesa 5tand lo lose Weir (Ar11.erm1n, L••-•rd, l>N.· work with him. 10 see him do several key swimmers whl]e Quowa I ncl McK-.n), lG ;lS.J, t. ~-j be -~rt<. 11:1t.o; 1. c1rr110.. io·li.1. things right." says Utter. Los Alamitos seems o on 100 -1. G11111rd 1Et$t Lit.>. t.61 ~-His next mai·or goal in mind the way up,'' he says. llrttl~tt Isa"' C>ltgo M011>. ,.6; J. D0111ntrc1 tLAcci, '·'· 15 the est:iblishn1ent of an Leading the Costa Mesa 110 "111M -1• TIMln (P•"d""'I. aquatic director at l\.1esa contingent will be seniors 1•.ti 2.. Grav (LA ~rllel'l. l'l; J. W•Mlntto... CLACCJ. u .3. designed to be in charge of the \Vaide!ich (butterfly and w Lnt•merl•tt• -1. "111 {Ml. S•A overall S\vim program for freestyle sprints). Steve An,.,.,111, ,U.i; t. I"-(Ml. ~an An- ltfllt l. aui i. P11r11i. Ille An1•>. boys and girls so as to better f\1arron (di5tance freestyles) $1.S. utilize the pool and to improve and breast.,lrokers :.Of I k e Hll~ IM""• -1. BrHI .... {P1...:l1n•l, •·•i 2. F691• cGr-11, ....,.; J. the overall aquatics program. Yarwood and Oran Marks- M•ll• (San DI-Mew), '"'-UI 39 Id 'th h. bu Pot• v .... 11 -1. 1111,11 (De An111. ter, , res es w1 JS ry. IW: 1. Weldlt (A....,.\c1tt River I. ---.:;jjijiiiiipipjiji~'91jiji~jiiiiiijiiiiipi·~ 15-t; 3. C1'11""'9n tC9f'rl9-), lU. I LOl\t lump -1. HHt (Ml, S1<1 A,.. tonlll• 2~J.\~; 1. Con•...., (~P•rkl. U.•'4; l. ProcMOW (l"1Uden1 1. 1'1· '"'· Tri•!• lumo -I. LOUQ1'rld!>' ILACCI d:~I J. Stell IDttt<tl. '1-V.; l. lllllman (P111c1tn1), '6·1!,_,, '· J-ILACCl, "6--tV.. Shel ~ -I. llltl'tltlt fG l..,.,ale, ArlJ,), $3-t\~; 1. Forrttlll' •tC¥Pt1 Hl. S'1 t ; l. GirctM~m•n {l.me,lctn lllvtr). 51·2. DIW:ll!I -1. Mff!"'°""e"" (Ct,rl!o1\, ,,,_,, l. Ccvev !Oe A<111J. n1.1; l J1coo.in {E1sl l..11, 155·1. Meet our toughest roughest, gutsiest 'El Tigre' tire. 40 month• guarantee with 18 months 100% allowance Foremost• 'El Tigre' 424 with 2 belts of fiber glass on a 4 ply polyester cord body. Dual whitewall design, too. Dual wNtew1ll lubelffL Sin Fed. l1x FTS-14 2.38 G71--1.( 2.55 H711·1 4 2.i-1 J lll-1.( 2.91 Price 40.95 42.95 44.95 46.95 95 plus 2.21 fed. tax and old tire. E78-14, whllewall tubeless. Slie Fed. tax '"°' G78-15 2.64 42.H l 78·15 3.19 4Ltl Plus Fed, tax end old tire Penney Service LJ:::.__---, Dl1c brake overhaul 94es * "'Moil American c•r• Complete Foremosti» disc brake overhaul. Top quat11y materials and e:ii:pert work- manship are our unbealable combination. 3 days onlyl Mon, Tues, Wecf. oniv 35aa• For our Foremo1t ., Cu1tom brake service. Here·s what we do: install new l1nu1gs, new front grease seals, rebuild all wheel cyl inders. re· surface brake drums. re· pack front wheel bearings. more. *Moat Ford1, Chtvrolel1, other• tllghtly higher. ~ llAFECD tNIUAANCI If , ••• ,. ,.,1 .. , ••• "'"" ,., 1 ... turo11.e.1, yo1'rt •1l11Hobl1. If Y••'•• ,.,.1 .. IP• ffllfCI! for '" llttlo, ,,,.,. doobtff ! Tllot'1 w Ii tr t l•b Poley lOMft 111, Ho cot1 .,.cl will tollor lliit 1011Hint of cc•••ot• It yt•r •~Mt ...... Thot't whtor1 yo• 10•0. Don't p•I .. , tol• It tf'et wht. h~. tff't i6Mllitt ot 474 I, 171~ S• •• C•tt• M.-,.._ M24500 COSTA MESA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER H•'"' atN . ., wits.a • •••f" StNff .. """" • ...... -.... • w.,...., Yes, you ctn shop 12 to 5 Sund1ys, too, et -any of these Penney Auto Centerst "",~::::::"" ":: .. ':::i '"'~:::,-!FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center; H,1,1.NTINGTON CENTER , Huntington I.... __ :::..:.:.;;_ _____________________ .. Buch. U.a Panoey• time payment pl1n. • Classified INDEX Advertising .___[ __ , ,.,_u•___,J~ j s.~ .. •nd R•pm~ j~ .... ..., , .... ,lktlllll .. ' • ,. lSJIHtl'r ttM fl"MI ..._, ._,, lacll •• , •• ,... C•~• ..... """' ...... '-1111111 .. , 4fftM •• ,, .. JI' .. ,"'"'" ltk111 .. , CtllhlTtM ... tll ""-..... , __ Ml Mfr --....... °""'' llllnl htl IMf II T.,. ,._ltMi Vtlltp .. ,... . ...,. 1'1..-11111• l•n Hllllll11111N Ntrtltl,ir H.,... Mltlllll .. ll"Vllll Tlrr.kt .. _ ..... U,..u Hllll LltllM Mlt1111 L1 .. "" Lllltt 1111 MMt .. , ""' -. .... 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" , ..... , ........... , 1M •vHfllll Meftrllll .............. ... Clflllrll a l1111•"1tlt~I ......... .. "-"-.................... 111 ................................ IU M-.tlttt ..................... IU Mlldlltt,., .... ,. ............... ..,. M11ct111""'" ................... Ill Mlfctllt-Wttl ............ Hf M1t .. etl ,....,._,. . . . . .... .. . IU eHi. llwMlwt/l1wi,. .. ..... 111 ,,,...,°'"''"' . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . a• ....... Medtllln ............... hi 1""1 ....................... .. ............................ I# SWIJol ..................... 1M TY, ~ MlP"I, lltrM ....•. n. Pets n Su~lo• II~ I ,.,, •• """"'· .. . . . . . . .. . Ut Ctts ............................ ISJ o.,. .......................... , b( "''"' .......................... l3t u v .. ttc11 ........................ u• .___[ '"-"' R_•nt•I_• ___,j~ .__[ Mar_f::_~_~___,t I~ lM'" & .... ,. . .• . 411S Mtlela. Mellh .. . •. .. . Ill Gllftl """"'' .............. 41J 111111111w 1."'ftlll ... ........ . •II V"K1lllll lltlltl ll . ... . ...... 4U ........ .. '"''' ............ ~ 01rm1 ..,. ,.,., ............. us Otlk1 11111111 ................. 64f 9w1J11111 ll_,111 ...... ., ......... IU 111111111.i.11 lltttl.. • ............. ut Slll"IM ................... •ss '19'1ttll W""41 ........... • .... Ml1<t~1Mt11 Jlttlftlt .... . _, •• ltttl. MtllltJff"~ ........... "' ... b/Mttillf ................. ... ...... ,_ ................... ... ... ta, 11.tllllCM,,_. ........... "' IMll, Stll ..................... "' ....... llif'll~ ............. tit ...... '""" ................ tll ... .... •twttt .... tu Cl"'""• Stltll.tflf ... .. .. nt c1,1-. ••-... ""''" ....... .,.,, I llctrlt can .. . . . . ............. tlt ...____[ _"'"_ ••• 1. __.I~ M•llfll M ........... , .... ,., .... hi Mtttr ~ ................ t4t T,11,.,... Tr•nt ••·. ·•·••· ..... Ht Tttlttrto "'llltf . . . .......... M1 Ault trt11Nitf11tl9ll .... . '" ,...,...,. ..... . .... .. ,.--[ "'"_' •-_·· .. _ ...... laJ"' l.__A_utosfor-Solo__,l§J Lost and~ ..._._ ... .. ........ "' Allll<wfl/Cltl&lq ... .. •.•. HI •• u• ._[ __ l••_t•_•<_tion _ __,/[1•] ••• ,fl , .. ,,...,... . . .... ..ar-' -1r1...i ....••. ".. ......... .. 0.. l iltthl . .. ........ "' •Ht+t. •tct. ..... . .... . "' Tnictt , .... •· to Avtt L .. tlllt .. .. ...... . ~ .... Mrlltitt • ""' . •• • . . • . '" ............................... it. ..... ,....,.. ........... t1' ........................... tit ........ u ........................ tllt ·---~--. -------. --·--.. -----·--·-- MOl'lday, April 12, 11171 OAll Y PILOT 29 • -•.. DAILY PILOT WANT ADS TUE BIOOEST SINGLE MARKETPLACE ON TOE ORANGE COAST CALL DIRECT 64.2·5878 _..,. .... MESA VERDE SPECIAL Rare listing in eicellent family neighbor- hood near schools and 5 minutes to shop- pin g. 3 Bedroom. farilily room with fir eplace, all built-ins, ne w roof. $28,000. Phone 546- 2816. NO DOWN TO VETS 10% Down to 01hers. luge 3 bednn "'"'hni"''d firs , bltnJ, 20xl> rumpus rm, blck \\'Ill encl rear yard. VA apprai&:- ed a' , .... $24,600 CORONA OEL MAR DUPLEX UNl()U( t1().ot(I ~ttl Ettt!t, 175-IOOO • Jlnda Jj/e * PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES * * * * TAYLOR CO • * 8 Lind• Isle Drive Spacious 4900 sq. ft. 4 BR., 4 lh bath home. !lining rm .• fam . rm ., study & 38 ft. wate r- front living rm. 2 Fireplaces. Car peted & landscaped. . . . . . . . . . . . $167 ,840 CORONA OEL MAR-"BROAOMOOR" High on the hill on quiet street. \Valle to com- munity pool from this • bdrm. a ttractive home with formal dining room. '61,500. "Our 26th Year'' For Complete inform•tion on all homes & lots, ple1M call: WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hlll1 Ro.d BILL GRUNOY, REALTOR NEWPORT CENTER 644-4911 133 Dover Dr., Suit1 31 N.B. M2--i620 1 General I Gtntrtl I G1neral 1 G1n1ral ------- :;;;;;;;=m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•J ~..........,B~/~8~- LA COSTA 22 YEARS OF Lawson LIOO EXCLWSIVES l BR on 35 f• lot $63.500 San Dltgo County RE.AL ESTATE SERVICE Beautltul Fairway Home IN THE HARBOR.AREA 1 3 BR + ram. rm. 40" $69.9j(J Fabulously furnished J Spacious Bedrooms & baths Cameo Hlghlend1 _ Open dally I-l p.m. Beaut. 11 BR + ram. rn1. ·l:l' $72.~ formnl dlning: room Luxurious tarnlly room 4 bdrm. & dining rm. home. I . . Located •J626 Cortland or., ~ Bil + din, rm. T.> $78.500 v.·ith profes1iona1 bar \\"ords cannot descrille corlft'r of Cemeo J-llJhlands. SJ.1,000. :t BR, dining room, oled This magnUlc.nt homt 1 Ill c $163,Dl FURNISHED 675-3000 ana1 and patio 0, ,J m11.n ,, 111:.lfll ' llL\1:1'\' 1:\1'. EST 1119 ~,~ Jf\J(j I Hi income apts. $120.000 Luxury 3 BR, dining room, poo.lroon1, view $1,j.f,()()(l Ba) fronL.;. from Sl.2.3.000 Everyone Has A Pool In Mesa Verde Sometime11 they own their own heated and filtered pool. Sec thhr swingt.nc 5 bedroom. 3 bath 2800 aq. ft. pad. By the wa.v, you could :usume tht-l<ra· interest or ???? • Orange County'• Oldest RealtOl'I -Farrow. 546-8&!0 . -Farr&·.V- 2629 Harbor, C.M. THE BLUFFS -~-bowa12b lowaon jJl.. Immacu.late and hardly llved LJ 1teolC0Jt in. Choiee corner location.. BANKING 1 3416 Via Lido 67M562 lS50 Sq. ft. ot living area ·-----' 8 B d R 8 I in this trl·lf'vel 3 ""drm Eastside $19,950 Tlloierentcheckaclt'un [ • ooms-·i home. 1'".anlaslically carpet>- TerrUic price lor this charnl· 11 you buy theae • Sf· THINK BIG-td and expertly decorated. lng Easl3ide home. Over-SIDE units \\'Ith a doWu HUGE HOME' Almost immediate posse1-payn1en1. Prime Joc11Jon. All • sion. SeeinJ.: ls believing at sized ll\"lng and dining arc neat one slory 2 bed· O\•er 3000 sq. ft. of could be $-14.650. Call 545-8424. rooms, 2 b!g bedrooms, sep-rom unit!. Each h1.ppy ten-Juxu1•y livin~. Pool, badmln. 9 e arate ulilit.y area. Complete ant ha.1 a good :tizt'd fene«I ton court, 1hulf!eboard. with J>*lio, crpts thruout and "' & · I ,;hingled roof. Largp lot yalu, enciosrd garage · 1tudy, nursery, ofhcc -•DI l~IJ!f.11 use of the la!'Re tilVlmming name ii! Th111 property has I -. • 1vt1ti. allPy acces.~. One block pool. Don't mis~ this a! it for 1he one 11ith :i.c1ivc tll Catholic church. $600 TO-7 TAL cosr TO ANY BUY-$7~.JOO. Call 6 .;...i9Jo 1n1.:ig1naoon_. Needs !Omc , For The Young I paint &: flx111 -Priced ac-I ER. Payments ltss lh11n I ~ORS&CQ. cordingly. Call now for full , At Heart rent. C;1l' .JtS.:IB80 lopen d ·1 "·I '" "303 I ' ._, ._ ,.,._ 111.41,. cta1 s! ...... i ""'""" This dt-Hghtful l bedroom e\"rs.I F• o home hu everything. Wall ;;~~~~:~~1~;t~~!~; l ~l;;;';;;;ii;;;:"'~•;;;;:;n"';A;~;;E 111 =' ~,e ~ '' ,~!~!.. ~~:::d:~~j•::~~~ lhing run of !hr n1ill about Out or town own.rr \\1J.J sac-yard. f"HA or VA financing it J! the price. -Ea1t1ld1 Costa Mesa rificc for immedlatt A.IP • 229'J HARBOR. COSTA r.IBSA is availnblt. See and com· Coriander Street FOURPLEX You can drive by 1629 and caJJ u_. tor detalls. J'uU price $69.500. ONLY $4l,9SO UNIVUl t1().ot(I Rt•l E'1tlt,tTt-a000 2Ul E, Cotti Hwy. ~,_ Oii Mtr. CdL -.. ***** BRING PAINT BRUSH Chirmer all terms av1.ilabie or a~· pall S30.200. 8-l2-253S 3 queen-sized bt.'Ci.rooms . sume low lnlere11t loan. Raise Your Very lovely balh. Brand new Large 3 bedrm. dln lnli: and 111.1ge ram11y room, au 1:>11ns. Easter Bunnies carpets and drapes. llugC' kitchen for m01n. Frrshl,v clble fireplace & more. Quiet Here tree shaded resldenllat area. palntrd. Extra large double Quick !ale for $32,950_ Call garagr. CJ and FHA terms :;.i;;..a424_ available. CALL NO\V and we 'll (Junlily YOU at $23,!"iOO. ~ e Walker & Lee·fil!L•htD ~O~ THE REAJ, '"-ESTATf.RS ' ! ~. • .. • ' "' Plannin11 • Party? Four Rentals DOWNTOWN I 4 Bedroon1 2 batt1 home on Realtors O Easlslde cul-de-sac. 7 Yean 2790 llarhor Blvd. at Arlam~ l S~~.'ty -plus horsei;. chickens -or i:row an apartment. 1400 sq. ft. home one 1/l acre plu,; lark room. bani. srr('ened pa1io with fireplace and hol>by roon1. All lhis tor $35,0CXI. Gro\V with Fan'O\\' Really -~8640. llnvP. one in !his 11potleu 3 bedroom home with hu~ bonus room. Ideal covtred patio ready for your barbe- que. Beautiful weU kept yards. BYOP (Brlng Your 0\\71 PoatJ. Stt you there. i.32,500. VA/FHA ttrms. The most diversified Rtaltors - .farrow. f>46-8640 A duplex + 2 separate hous. e!. Really unique With pri- vacy in prime rf'ntal area. Full price S6.>.000. young wilh tireplact' & blln!. s.li-i-191 Open 'tll 9 Pr.I Thi.• fanla!tic bargain or only $26.950 Include! 4 h u i e bedrooms. JJ x 20 family I room, formal dining room. I Newport II F11 irvi1w 646-1111 (anytime) WEST CLIFF AREA $28,950 llarbor I-Ii District -\Valk to fan!a.stic \.\.'eslcliU Sllop- plna;. 3 large Bdnns -Just redecorated. new carpeting. drapes. Brick patio. boat/ Plenty or yard .~pnce for children. Hurry !or lhis one as ii iii only $30.930. Arnold & Freud :'.88 E. 17th St., C.M. 646-77Xi days 646-J.538 eves • * * • • * * 6 UNITS* On BaJboa Blvd. Good corn:!. Grt'al renl1.J area. 8lep1 to ocean. You O\\'n rhe land. 4 Unlts "Ith 2 BR., 2 ba.; 2 units with l-BR. Parking for 12 cars. Call lodty for app"t, Call: 673-3663 642·2253 Evta. associated ~RQKrR S-AEAI TORS 101~ W Br,.bno 4 7J.J6b) trailer parking. Financing! 1--..=c-===-=---. - ow,.., vory n.,;b10 -'"' $23,500 Buys It posussion -Don't tarry on ~ bcdroon1. 2 ba1h with room U1ls one! Call -IW.)-0303 for 2 pool tablP~ in tile ~n­ I Olil.\I I. Ol~O\ •'> ,.,.,,, 70Q• 2299 Harbor, CD.la Mua 4 Bedrooms $25,950 Cutt ~hakt> rool home on a big lot In one of Cosra ' rlos<'rl lanai. l.ar11r lot \\•llh lruit trres. Pri~ at VA 11.pprn1~11,l. S650 rould mO\l' you u1. r.1onthly payment 1~ 1han $XX'I. Tb:1nk )"OU for Calling Fa.n-ow Reali)• -546-3640. ~zg llllrbor, C.:-01. M'"" "'""' '""· " -"R"'e"s"T"'A"u=R"'A~N=T­sumr 61,~';. FHA loan and pay only SISj per nionth + 4 BR. HOM! TOTAL Owner is really on busy C-2 II.arbor 81\'d. anxious !IO thlt; one WON'T loc~tlon. I.AST LONG~! Vlnco Ri•llY 2029 Harbor, C~f $23,900 LOVE NEST $23,950-FHA/VA I 2 years new & simply gleams! Xtra. large bed-I rooms, dining, \\"Ork-saver kitchen, much, much more! llAS to be one ol the best buys in !he \\'hole beach area -l-'irst looker Eibould be proud new o1''tler! Call &l.>-0303 I 0111\I [ OLSO~ '" l>'C ,.4 1. •"OPS '.¥\29 Harbor. C.1\1. 3 l1!11hs, carpets and drapes I liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ...... liii ... _. thruont PLUS ovrr 2000 sq. GOV'T ft. No miJltaXe or ml1pnnt. Walkw~;"& yolee REPO 1714) Realtor~ 7882 Edinger 812445j or 5-10-51 40 I ~!~~~~ ~orb~i~ ~~ room. 2 bath, dble garage and near schools Total ol ......... .,..,..,.,.,...,. SISJ a month pay·.~ all with HURRY! HURRY! /ow dov.n payment to any. 1 $17 ,650 one. !furry! Call 5-10-ll51, I Vacant and ready !or lmn1ed-(open evrs. i 2299 HA RBOR, COSTA MESA !all' occupancy, fully in1-·~· ~· ~~JT.A,,G,I prnved J B~rm, 2 ba1h. I .,.. • .... _ Macnab·lrvine iMERALO BAY F&nlalllc white watar view tron1 thJS lmmac, 4 bdnn. & filmily rm. home. eom. munily pools. tennil cts., prlv. beach; prlv. patroled sh'9cl1 for your security. Shown by Hpp't. only. $93,COO Delancy Real &st ... 2828 t:. Coa!t Hwy, CdAf &14-7270 . Newport Be1ch Addre11 fa1n1ly room honie. B!lns .• ,:;;;;;;;,;:.;;;;~ dblc gar, crp1s & drp11. $176 j Realty Companv Pt>r mo. pll)'I! evcrylhlng $100 DOWN I 0'.1'ner S8fll !!ell or leue op. .. , lh r "-p••m0 00 !ton. &!.oit buy l bed.rm ram SERENITY "1 ow ,,.,wn u..1 ,_ • Comp!ell'lyredeooralrd ' By THE SEASHORE Can 54~5880 iopen rvea!. FOUR BDR~f T14 Balh i·m, 1800 !'!q Ii. S31,90Q, ' 0 JEAN SMITH, RLTR A lovely 3 bedroom home 1 ·~· ~•"AGll carpeted.and draped home. 400 E. 17th St C.M. 6f6..3255 ..... ,. nU\11 Vacan! 1mmcdla1c posstli· ' tucked among !all lrccs ~ .. IUi atUI sion. full price only S23.00J 11.waiis you in exclusive Ir- vine Terrace. A ff'W m1nute.oi ______ ±£ 1 1 *MESA VERDE* to Bay Bf>neh. Please ca.II I VETS -$1 Lovely, immae. borne. lJl 67 ...... 3210. S-17,500. TOTAL COSTS Olfcring. Beaut. if'O\lnda. Macnab-Irvine No foolln'. you Cl.ll move Into Cov. paUo. 3 BR. Ii. family thi,; &lll houM: "1th lllf' rm., 2 bath1. $38,MX> 67.S..3210 change In your pock"!! 1 George WllllamNn Largr :«>parate h1milyroom. 220E,17tH 646·05D5 REALTOR FIREPLACE. modrrn 11• 1-:V 1 Call 644•7003 67l-05() &15-1564 Eve1, '42-8235 CORONA DEL MAR tomorrow kitchen and mott. l----'.,".,.",;';r'-.;;,,..--- Ch.oinnln1 custom l BR .. drn. DON"T DELAY, CALL TO-1 KOOL POOL Io1111al <llni111, plne paneled DAY TO PAD kltc~n & nook, \\'alk lo w I k Big&: Little Corona. Perftcf a er & Le I wllh st><'ludl'd p;1tlo !or pr!· e vete rn!crtainmt11t 01' bl& rnough for a BASii! Lush hha~ carpel.~. family room • tor family living. $79,500. ~ Coldwlll Banker ~ neRltt)rs 768'1 Edinger t714l 312-4-lM or 540-~140 * 5 BEOROOMS * 1nod1•n1 kitchen, and ~ady 1n mo\"r Jnlo -all for ONLY $211.000. Trade yours! Walker & Lee HORSES OK A·l wnc near UCI, 3 bed- room home on 26,000 8q, ft. 101. $37.900. Tern11. Roy McCardl•, R11ltor 1810 Nt;:.'1,J~vd., C.M. cusTC5M lPTExlfs-• co:rs · WALLACE REALTORS --J514<61'"44141-I (Optn Evenln91I 3 BDRM. + DIN aii.orot '46-2430 Sl'larp A rlran. ;\IO\'I" In c..'On• Beaut. Harbor View llomes tts. ""/wet bar. lovely C"nrp : scll-clraning overi.~; vac11nt, q u I ck l>OU"ll. $~.~ Jncludlng the l1nd. Realtor• i68'! Edl~rr 0io1~ lot, $74,(0J, 4233 Dana Rd, N~ 8. 42'23 HJl.tril "'Ry, NB. 213:981·1039 REPOS, 2-s BR, all trm1 'aoihiirl '¥RAIL llf HOME On mmer Jot plu.. neat 1?11c- lous Three Bdrm. 1\1."0 Barh ho1nt. Only $29.~ . NO DO\VN VETERANS. I 1 220 E 17tH 846·0595 F:vtJ, Call 549..(1292 dlllon. Owntr fhngferre-il. SP'ANISH STYLE Thick pills "'""II lo v.·all car· 1 RC'd tU<' roof hOnie with 3 petlflJ", bulll·ln ranire Ir ov4!n (/uttn·alzed bedroomA, $it-+ dlahwasher + refrlgrr11- tor Bkr. open ·111 9 pn1. 54().1~ I TARBELL 2955 Htrbor I ualf'd on a. .lil;rT&t corner. Truly Spani!h decor, with nrw mAtl'hing carfK'tll and dnipe~. Gors:eou1 f!rtplace . 1 hui:t k1tchen And llll pri(°t'd At $25.!l;(l. Sutimll your trrms. Call - REPOSSESSIONS Sparkilr\1 clean ttomt"t, .om1 I newly patnttd & carpetM. 2 . !, 4 & S bdrm1. Som1 with pool1. J'KA.VA t"Onv. ltrtnl. from S~,000 !O $40,00l'J. Colllna A: \\1atts 111(". SM.'l Adami Avt. 982-5.\23 Walker & lee Rt'altorll 2790 llnrbor Blvd. At Ad11m1 :11.\-0~.\ 0Jlf'n 'rll II P,\f CORBIN· MARTIN REAL TORS '46-7662 -SPECTACULAR- BEACH HOME ,,.rr11.me. •t•ps o oef'ln J BR. 2 hA Only $33.900, CAYWOOD R&ALTY 6306 \V. Coast H"'Y' NB 541-1290 011.Uy Pl!ol Want bsra:11!n.~ 1(1111'"'- Adi have tTI41 812-M~ or 540-Sl40 -00VER SHORES- Call Pat Wood MS-2300 Sc.nic P?"OpeTtiea 6Ta-.!72S Balboa Island l:ndrr con11NcUon, ~ lht' plans RI 1033 ~11.tlnen Ori,l', Do\ltr Shorn, 4 & S 3 Bd 2 ba + convl-1ar pt ~ hst w/'i. ba, nr wal, frpf nn1o:. 4 & S bntkt, llC'lttt Pat {covd fncd} SI.OM dn. your Ov.TI colors & cuatom g7J....6267 drtaila. All •llb outstanding r ~~c-'--------· V1011·1. Roy J. \.Vard Rltr. Balboa Penln1ul• 6411·1!'«1, Open Dnily. e DUPLEX -2 Rdnna. ut. J -FOR Nonhcrn C a+i f . prorwttllca ron!Art Ray Rllndolph. Arokcr. P.O. Booe 2376, Redding, Ca. 00001. !!ll!ll 27~1120. Bdrms. down. $47,500 Msnthall Re1.lt)' ~ 5f:LLtNG \'n11r boat' ''lbt" \\'Ith u~ ... 11 ll r11st. DIUly Ptlo1 tln~HlNt 6-12-!!r,73 ' .· I :. '.'-,. • ..,r ' '-• • 30 DAILY PllOI t.\ondiy, April 12, 1971 Everyone Hes Someth ing lhet Someone Else W enh DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Con Sell It . Find It, T rode It With e Went Ad J~ !._-_,_ ...... __,1~'~·0:.~_:::"__,~!1...__'"""_"' ~I~ I -.. ..... 1~11;; -~ .. -~J~~\l;I ;;; ....... ;;;, .. ;;; .... ~l~~I Huntington Beach I Huntington 8t1ch Newport Btac.h Income Property 16' I Business Hou'" Furnished 300 Houses Unfurn. l05 HouHs Unfurn. 30S l~I [ _,.. .... ]~[ _,.. .. _,.. .... ---------' ------------------I _O_p_po_r_1u_n_il_v ___ 2_00 I ·G-en-e-,-,-,------Gener•I Un iversity Pa rk ~.·,~~,u•T•l•~U. L,L· ·,,·,h•;' RAMBLING SPANISH I TOWERING ADOBE $21 ,900 FULL PRICE Builders Clo••Out AAA 1------1------ .... K'\ " .,,, for thi' great .1 bedroom \\'e havr 8 trlple:..cs 1 or CANOY ANO e FRE~H &.· CLJ::A;-;" Z Br.I ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; • ... '"',.,· ,~'"'• :.~~~'.~. •'o·',",!'.: SHOWPLACE 4 +FAM. SPANISH HACIENDA benuty. Lots of cal"J)E'ts ,,,;th $~IS.~ each. Ov.Mrs unit I SNACK SUPPL y stv/encl gai". kids & pe!3. \Vt h<l\'f' UNfURNISllED Ir - ~"' ...., matching drapes. :.,fodern has J bedrooms, .2 ~!hs, WE ESTASLISH $13i Fl.JR.."ll!SHED rentals 111 a:arare. Owner may earl')' built-ins are in lhLS ('Ountry flrcplace. Income 1s $.)j(l.~ j ALL ROUTES ALA Rentals e ~:>-3900 Unl\'Crsi1y Park I.:. Turrie la! T.0. Thru Spa.n1sb arrhed f'ntry to Aulhentically styled from the style kitchen: al'iO a dish-fl('r month. All terms avail-I . . 3 BURM. + tamily rm., full Rock & would consider 1t • MORGAN REAL TY excilJng luxury <k'cor. 19' arl'hed courtyard entry 10 1••a.!iher. :'-love-in rondition. able inclucling No Oo"'n ! <No selimg involved) 6-45.0111 dinin& rm., built-ins., brk. pr\vllr&f' 10 help you SO)\'C 67J.6642 675-6459 n\asler BR sui1e. 2\.ii ba!hs. aclol:ll!' red !ilrd roof. ~ At thi!! price, YOU CA~'T G.L's or F .H.A Call CASH REQUIRED 4l!i W. lfttl, CMr. MtM $3911 a month. NO FEE, your housmg needs. Sparkling gourmet kuchen QUEE.~·SIZED BR'S, 21 ~ Al''FOP.DTORE::\'T.CiJJus w lk ., L Pla11one ............ $9ij.OO N 720 w11h breaklast bar. Family ba!h~. \Valk-in clmet aod and we'll qualify YOU. a er ee Plan two .......... $162:').00 e \\'alk TO BE.l1CJI Snglsl e11i1'.°rt, 541)..l . Coron. del Mar PRIVATE BEACHES 3 Bdrms., deh. $41.500. ~ Down; inlt>rest only 1st )ear on balance, Owner aays, "SELL!'" Home Show Realtors 67;.m; DOLL HOUSE 2 Bdnn, lirt>place. range & refrlg., crpt.s, drps, SJj,OOO or wUJ Jesse. Rllr 548-7711 Costa Mesa CHOICE LOCATION Large 3 BR, 2 BA, heavy shake roor, vacant soon. Near OCC and Plaut. Pool siud cul.tJe-sar Jot, today's bt>st buy -$29.%0. rnA1G1 ternu OK. larwln Realty, Inc. 21562 Brookhunt, J~ncin Bch S.C.5411 •nytlme 3 Br, 2 ba, ~hake roof, n1• S.A. f'A·y, 0.C.C. & S.C. Plaza. Cul-de--sac lot. xlnt rond. Vacant !lOOfl. $26,500 hy owner ~5366 VACANT 3 Bednn + fam rm, 2 ba, bltns . Crprs/drp!, trplr, large yard. 2: YeartL old , 1;ood location. Take over 6·,~ ';i VA, $215 per mo. total. Owner/Agt 636-4470 ri1ESA Verde by O\l,'l'll'r: 3 bdrm, lmly nn. 2 ba. patio. Open daily $29.950. !H~2075 Dover Shores lNGLEWOOD, 9 Deluxe unirs, prime area. .$140.000 Or !fade. ~uintard ~ ltEALTY Sine• lt4' Downtown C•ta M ... 1171 HARIOI 642-2.991 List 11i•ilh C.Q. Buy trom C.Q. East Bluff EASfBLUt~r VIEW Lge Lusk 3 BR. 21., Ba 2'Z21 ARBU'T'US 644-202.4 By 011i ner • Make olfer Open 581/Sun 12-j Fountain Valley TRANSFERREDll l MUST SELL ll ONLY $30,50011 4 BR + 20x20 OEN GI no d011o'n! Uiw F"llA term'~ \\'on't last!::: I HAFFDAL REAL TY I 142-4405 Eves: 54\-2446 GI $50 dcm'Tl. n!A min down. Condo 3 BR, 2 BA, all bltns, community pool. 2 car gar. John Irv.-in & Assoc. 63&-4470 rnt 11i1th be1iutlfu.J buill·ln VAULTED CEILINGS. t.hts· w lk & L Plan tlu-ee ........ $3250.00 ok All uul pd s1o:i. • ON THE BE<;\CH I Br. cabinet.s. Hea\'' plush car· a er ee 7191) Harbor 81\'d. 1.t Adams I Exc-ellent income for a few , ALA Rtntals e 5-1:,.1900 stv/ ref, encl gar, kids ok. li ive family roorn 11i'llh a.i· 4'65 $14(1 pets and cozy burning fire. crackling f I r e p I a c e. 25' r. a • Open 'til 9 P~f I hours Wttkly '11.'0rk. ( Days & $&!-Uhl pd Sep I Br nlCl' I • &1· ~Mil 1Job'-l\•Ui\. ---1lP ullu r place. Patio. Shake roof. sculptured patio. J . CAR Rt>altors WALK TO BEACH Evenings). Refilling and col-yd This .,.,on'1 '1as1' . ALA Rentas ..,..........., SIJperb. Talked about r.tEA. GARAGE. Only lt,. years 2190 llarbot Blvd, of Adams New 6 & 8 unit5 by builder tecting money from coin op-Bl · B * 64>0l ll Sl~-3 Br. Family homt, "SINCE 1946" DOW HO:\tE. Bt'ach loca· old. READY FOR TillS! ~;;.g.i91 Open 'til 9 P:\t I Htg Bch. 847-3957 · erated dispensers within a ue eacon bltns, <"• d, gar, fncd yard. tion. Take a look_ you \\'On'! ONL"I' 529,j!XJ_ A must lo JUST LISTED L I I S llO qualified are a. (Handles • HANDY TO BEACH 2& Blue Beacon * 645-0111 1st \\'estPrn Bank Bide University Park Days 833-0101 N ights \\'ant to lea\"e. Cal} i_7l~) O 1 or illt nan1e brand candy and child ok. Ulil pd. S130. 2 Ba f 962.,j58,·, i\£'e • Hurry Call l714) 01\.'ntr going east. l\tus1 sell onacks). r·or ,....1.sonal lnler-ALA Rentals e &l~:J900 • ROO:\lY 2 Br, · b tns, 962-5.jgj, B ho 4 I .,.. cp!~, encl gar, kids &: pets. nice ayer.est me,. FORECLOSURE i view send name, addl'rss e HANDY J'O BJ::ACll 2 Br. $ iO '"'.!,'"",'· ,,",,mlly2 ',m.1 din1milg 21.i. acre horse ranch repos-and phone nun1ber to j\.lulti· l-c~h~•l~d~o~k~. ~U~til':<._pd~·~l~130'.'::. ~~!i;~';'LA;. ~R~'j;"';j'~''~•;r""~;,.~3="'°=-i3 BR. 2 baths ........ $.12j ". !, rp cs, e sessed !rom former aero-I Stale Distributing, Inc .. 1681 ALA Ren1ali; • 6\J..'.:900 entry, extra, large dbl gar· space employl!e now avail-\\'est Broadway, Anaheim, NQ.U i•I ~1. Y1·~rti· Bach. at Coroni1 del Mar 43 BBRR. ~) bab thsf, ......... !~22; ''' Lot 80 \\'td Asking .., ... " . . v a, am r n1 .. .,., .> · e. able at developer1 oost. Ca 9'1802 (TI4l nB-5060 be! c d s l k $39,000. See this today. . . . !. on.~ . Pl'I. nJ::" o . SPARKLING 2 BR. 1 BA, 3 BR._ 2 baths: furnished C.Ll 0 •• '·l •I< SAVE $3(lK) NEEDED: Blue Beacon* 645-0111 Near Beach. Bltn kll.. avail. June 20 ...... $400 19131 Brookhurst Ave. O G PART 'ER OR rlRt~l,J ois61~' :.~.f!F A l r O R S .. HJRIST E OL\ON "" R!'A l1"0 R S M \\' RKIN N Hous.e s Unfurn. 305 cpts, drp.~. off sL p11.rkino; + i d h•11 Hunlln&ton Beach Allllll on these fabulous. oak stud-PVT INVESTOR s b ••·t . · GLEN ..uW.-.. ' . us .... ,. pri\·, gar. IV/laundry re I MAR ELEGANT MANSION a EAL TY ded, ranch size spreads. ial return on money invest· Gene r al facilities. S225/mo. 409 · BEAUTY I j Bedroom 3 balh, 3<nJ sq. fl., Nt•r Ntw,orc P111 orflct Located in the booming ed. secured w/collateral. LARGE 3 BED Fernlt>af, Cd~J. ·. 19131 Brookhurst Ave, Huntington Beach South C.O.Ut area near San F' f · po -='=~~~-. . ) large heated I: filtered pool, e BEAUTIFUL 5 br, 4 ba, or n1ore 1n O YiTi!e · • CLEAJN 2 3 BR R··' If i·ou v.·a•t ' b•g •·m• ,.,,. '"'" ~·p«•--fl,. g h i·ust 11aintl'rl. 'ar""1• .< d•·an. ~.ty · ~-uecor. " nu ' t'Xlstin" 6', VA loan of farn nn homt> in .-......,er " ....., ..,.,........ Box 1819. Santa Ana. ,,~ ,. · small y·-wo"· <-ih•• • ~ ,~,, lh• •mog ,,, ... ,,, ''· fenced ya-•, family rm.. now.'"'·~' f'.lf'c. bltns, nr Uni\', Park Cen1l'r, Irvine REAL1i.' <LIU "' -.,.,e SJ5 800 ri1ammoth 2 slory Shol"l'!, I ne poof • patio "" • ~ FOR ..• , .. Smolf Sh··ta Co. '" . 3 •·•-m ·1h 1 b' ' · ' -road, d r-k-f gu r ,..... ..., childi'f'n & -1·.· QI<. 1210 shopg . .).)!--0.i.34 alt ~;30 Call Anylinie 8l3--0S2il ' ""''"" wi ex ra ig entry v.·ith spira.J slairca.se, garden . .$97,500. Call owner n "'" ~ ga e a · Ca!e-l\1aw & Pa operation ,.L ·• family room ho m", Top sep lormal dinina; room with 1 5-12_3203 antee the natural beauty of clean & wrll t>qu!pped. p/n1. "'ktl)s. HoulHIS furn. or 5hape and location. Let us bJtnchinacabinets.Upgrad-BLUFFS BEST BUY this fonner Spanish Grant Businrss onlySlj()().St25per Walker & Lee DOLL HOUSE Unfurn. 310 shov.• you this home today. d 1 bit .... dble surrounded by beautiful mo rent. 19161 :275-l520. 2 Bdnru:. fireplace, range k 1---------- 842-2535 e l' re ~ ra • ..,r, I BY ownt>r, 4 BR 3 BA, beaut Clevel•nd ,N,•~n•I Fo-•t. f · d s~ L"d I I oven v.•alk 1n pant,.,, big d "" •L \\'rite, elassilied ad No. 51. R·•lto-re rig. crpls, rps, ~ or · I o Se ' ·~. derour upgra ed thruout AU utilities av11.ilab!e. ~ "' 1vi!I sell. Rltr 5-18-7711.1----------family room with huge used [ .$43 900• 641•1429 · Daily Pilot, P.O. Box l:i60. 7682 Edingrr FOR RENT OR FOR SALE: REDUCE~ $1200 4 Bedroom -jL bonus rm 2 STORY Sharp hon1e near school.~ & park. 1900 Sq, fl. 2 bath area.~. brick Jrplc. 20x20 bonus rm., lots ol panE""IJing lr. v.•/w crpts. Bltn R&O, oversized loc v.•/palio. Re- du("('d lo S30,5oo. All terfns. 847-12Zl SEYMOUR REAL TY 17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch Open 'lll 9 P~1 $36,950 THAT'S ALL -'Bed e 2 Bath Family Room • Alley Coif Cour~ • Airport CONY. V,\ _ FHA CALL 8-12-r.M:> $20.950 brick fireplace. 2 Master ' . PRICED YROl\I $9,%0 Costa r.tesa, Ca 9262G. (7111 812-ll:U or 510-Jl40 HOUSE v.·/PATIO . 72j Via Lido Nord. Lido bedrms, sunken Roman tub, VISTA DEL LIDO WW DOWN-EASY TERJ\15 Free Rent l BR !'Ott ulil 2 BR, 2 ~a. conserva!1\'E" lslt. Call \\'ebster 4--0920 or 3 car garage. OCEAN & BAY VIE\\'S Circumstances force the im-TO BUY OR 'd f ·1. • couple or single, Lease, 440 Brighton D-4j.17 Luxurious l Br Apartment I SELL A BUSINESS pa1 or i!e ma1ntenancc.l~D:•~W~io~A~'~'"~-.,,..,-~~-J C.;;'d;;;;;r;;;u.;;;----1 l' 1ll;ige Re al Estate S.l9,;m, 673.8&XJ or 1144 mediate d1spo.~lt!on of these 2 BP. k1dsl pc1s OK .•.• $1251 · Condominiums few choice parcel& whose See 3 BR kuls /pt>rs OK ..•• Sl~i • CH.AR.\11!\"G . 2 br, 2 ba, Unfurn. 320 Hl-4471 ( ::::.J 546-llOJ BY O\Vner, Harbor View bomr, floor plan 3. 1 story, V.A. RESALE 4 BR. 2 ba, d1n'g nn. frplc., 3 queen-sized bedrooms. o .... ·n land, $43.9j(I, 644-4218. Great t"Xlra largt' cul-de·53C VJE\V exotic pool through Jot. Anyone can take over v.'alls of g!a!s. 3 BR, 21; subject 10 VA loan with a BA. Assume 51 ~',0 i43.500. little dab of cfl$h and pa)'· 5-l~ ments of $164 per month -1 ·w'~A~T°'ER'=""7t'=R=o=,=T~.~u7·,-"-,-"'~"' lneludeir;: all. GO ritAN GO! BR, dock. Income. Lo Walker & Lee 1 ~~~.,.· .... By 0 ""''· :.'790 Harbor Bl\'d. at Ada1n.s ~ ()ptn 'Iii 9 P1'1 Irvine DRAMATIC •.• I ... and llL>;Urious? Made ror entcrlaining your most dis- <:riminating lriends & as- soc1alt'~. Format din. rm., frplc. &-1\tl bar in lg,. lamily rin. & another frplr. Acreage for sale 150 .l AC .JdJ. to Nat'! Forest nr Big Be11r. beat1t. vie1v p1up. XI ut short term ln~·t>,;tment. S62JO r/P. Only $2j(] dn. Xlnt te1ms on ba!. Bkr. 64+-46m fol"mer ownertL WSS 1s your HOLLAND BUS. SALES 13 BR kidsl pl'lS OK .... $1·101 l1rl'place, patio & yard,1---------- GAIN!• Call or write for '"fhe Broker \\ith Empathy' :; BR horse rnnch SJOO/nl\'.l, ~r l~aM' .• 2212 Costa Mesa complete delail:i and color 1TI6 Orange A\e., C.~I. .. l ' ;200,l,,'"~··~"~'~fro~"~' ~0~«~6~<~3-~34~'6~-1;;-;;;:-;;-;;-;-;;-::;:=~= on-site photos. Buy direct 645-4110: 540-0608 anytime I sT~1~*L'E'T""'"j]'6.1330 Costa Mesa 2 ER, }1, BA .. 2 .!!IO';Y· Cpts, from the de\•eloper: I cl rps, all blt-in.o:. } replaC(>. )lAi\AGElt-Can you manage Landlords-Owners 2 B I JJ b 1 1 & Pool. Recreation room . RANCHO CAPISTRANO a "·hoJe~lr busifl('ss? Uss J \\1e "':ill refer tenants to you in~~:rn ~::.~~. a, A~~ i 1 Laundry room. Enclose~ Zt72 DuPont Drivt, Rm 8 than $W invt>stmrn! for lhr FREE o[ charge ... r.1any irnmed on monthly rtntal garag.I'. $190. l.!!l &.ICLSI plus Newport Beach, Ca1. 9266t ri~h\ person, man or desirable tenani., on our S2:i0/ U Ba , sert1r1ty dr>pos1t: No 8::3-3223 '1 on1an Star1 part lin1r. in I "·1itin" list. mo. 1 PP e rh Y Lhijdn"n or pc>ts. Avail !<lay • ''eo (-ountry a mosp ere. 54.-74 r1t'ni~s an<l grow with ALA Rental1t e &;~,..3900 &!j..-06.82 l,C::1'~1.CC,~~-"-~----CHOICE lot. 100 x U) R-2 pa\·cd allty. 3-lR E. Rocbesler St .. C.\I clo~ to 17th St shoppini; ;i. re a $22,000 67l--9509 Golf Fi1irw1y Lot By Owner 642-4.".&I SO' x 200', C-1. PROF'. 40' x SO' !ti 20' dri\'t', C-1 5-l3-5r17 :J.12-4781 50' Rcsi1tentlal lot. $6900. S400 down. in CapislrBno Beach. P\lt ply, 49&-5:'>26 ----Out of State Prop. 178 busifll'sS. 968-i6:;.J · H nt"tngton B ach e SP1\CIOUS :'.: Br, 2 Ba, BIG 4 BEDROOl\I hon1e on a u e rASHION DRESS SHOP for CID fncd d k"il t. ""' ~ 180• Y , ·1 s 1n s. fenced ror1ll'r Jot in a primt> 3 BR/1'~ Ba-Townhous<'; sale, 3555 E. Coasi ""'Y· S _ , Costa ltll'sa area. ~26.J Per Adanis & Brookhru~!. Utll Cdr.I, 67:>-2601 or ~S. AL\ Rl'ntal.o: • 6-1.r.,roJ mo "'ith lst and Jasi + Si:> d 1--1 •r: ""'""-1'.ixtun"s $3.j(l(J, inventory · pa1 . ~uJ mo. o-,,..,,-....,J 3 BDR.\f .. Family rm., park deposit req. Ai;::ent 5-16-4141 T h U f 335 optional. Husband being like yard. Costa r.1~11a. Kids • 3 BR. f'' ba CONDO-own ouse n urn. transferred. OK, brk., S200 a month. NO Frplc. 2<ar garage, pool. Huntington Beach ANTIQUE popc~rn 1 FEE. 54&-1720. i\uail ~ta;.-1. SZ20/mo. Call l--.-------- hooth-Pt'rfect o Pr r a I Jn g SJ:JO-'l Br. Bl!ns, nriv crpcs. :H0-5347 alter 5 T\~HSE-<-rpl , drps. , ref, cond. SIOO pPr d<1.y income drp "rtr d Kid ·lflC~? 2 BR ~. 1 G ... v.hr, dryr. rnge. pool ... Br. at good location. \Viii sP!J or s, ... · ) ' ' · · v"P ex. arage. i•O SlS:J, 5--Jij.J40.i 611:>-674.i:l trade. 6-J2-0010, 49~977 Blue Beacon * 645-0111 pets. Adults. S144/n10. · BEAUTY SHOP for sale. e FINE ARE,\ • 2 Br CID~ 773 W. \\"tlson 5-18-2802 Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Owner \\'ill sal'ri!ice 2 lncd yd, kills & prts. $t,}.'j. *-l BR, Jge ft'nced yard, Corona del Mar $600 TOTAL CASH 3 BR To11i·nhouse, pools, ~c faciJ . I ities. Some paint nt'eded. I \\'alk 10 schools & shopping. Sf;'-8j(]7 in lb(' ms!r. bch·n1. suilr. 2'100 Sq. ft.: 3 l>drm.s., 21~ baths. Top loca tion. Only $36,000. Vacant • imnicd. occupancy avail. Commercial Property Ill ACRE for Comm'l Stables least' back w/8 ~;, net net ncl. 6i3-2262 or 673-5723 BY OWNER-1 acre, fuUy improved. Underground util!lies. Near Pho c nix, Long lenns. lo1v dov.·n. S:GOO. Ca!l t602 J 94;Jo-5989. 41 33 N, 62nd St, Sco!!sdale, s!at1ons inc I inventory. ALA Hcnt11ls • 6\j..3000 garage. SJ&.!. S1600. 646-3621 Tues, Thur:;, $90-Quirl 1 Br. i;(I()(! lor, nr 540--0190 nr 5-i8-S12~ NE\V ~ ~r. 2 b~. cpts, drps, Fri & Sa1 n1or11ings shop~. l\laturr \\'Om11n. 2 BR house in court, Crpls gar .. $29J f..lo., lease _ WRECKING yard, xlnt loca-Blue Beacon* 645-0111 & . drp~, G_~rage, 2 small Corbin-i\fartln Rltrs. &M-•662 lion. Reasonable. \Vill sell e LONG HAIR OK ~1 children, $1.)J mo. 646-2719 Cos ta Mesa m;>;§li!ti 4 +POOL $27,950 FIX ME UP Phone 342-2'535 (ired hill Un iv. Park Cent<'r, Irvine Cali Anytime &33-0820 Li1guna Be•ch PRIVACY 3 Bedroom, 2 ba1h l·Le\el hon1e In peaceful hillside rn:'1ghborhood . Lan::e ~eclud· rd ~und<'ck & pr1\ ate eov- ACRE for Comni'I Stablci; Ariz. cal=-1 ~•,_P~'-'_1._C~al_f_6_7_J.._7_18_>=, I BR. SI\'. CID kids & pets. SllARP 3 BR. 2 BA, bl1ns, 2 BDR.\-I, plltro, dbl/~ar. Money to Loan 240 Slll. D\\'. crpts. drps, S2J:J mo. ADULTS ONLY $\-lj, Jl'.'asc back w/8',;. nt"t ntr cR~a~n~th-e-,-.-F_e_r_m-,-, -- net. 673-2262 or 673-:'!723 Groves 1st TD Loan Condominiums for sale 160 We Love Your Pets "'TIBURON " TO,\'XHOUSE 180 20 ACRE producing orange l:'l'O\e in Riler-;lde, al Van Burl.'n & Cie~·eland. Good 6~· '/.> J!'TERESf 2nd TD Loan Sile for lrlr park or sub· Terms based on equity, division nr new Arhng!on 642·2171 545-0611 High Sehl sue. on ma i n Ser\'ing Harbor area 2l yrs. ll iway to :\larch Fi~ld. Sattler Morfgage Co. \\'rite Charif'~ )larl1n, 8i0 336 E. Jith Strttt AL1\ Rrntals• 61j..~'XXI I Call Ray Gault 5'W-ll:il si~l'l \\'krly~ afl 6 pm $123-2 Br Bl ln~ rp!i; dps llOUSE in court, 2 Br, erpls, gar ~n11' pet f.. rh1lri, ok ' drps, palJo 976 \V l71h St. Blu~ Beacon* 645-0111 1 No. B. C:'ll. :>IS-2839 Api1tmen1,forRrnt /e ) e J-"OUR BR's. fncd yJ: Huntington Beach .,... cpis, rlrps, kids!.: pet~ $19.'i I . ' ALA Renlal~ e 61>3!IOO CLEAN' l 81·/2 ba. \\/I\' Furn. 360 -5hag. drps, blt1ns Great Apts. TIME FOR loc. !.Ras!' S230-Rtnl 52.i:1.l'G,,....--:1----- Cj)UICK CASH "'3->l>I •fl. Spm °' bd. * CUSTO" FURNITUR[ !Oam RENTAL. Sl'r ad-class i!IO. with priva te paliO for safe and happy pels + 2 lo\·e· Jy bedrn1s & 2 baths for happy people. Only single siory 1esaie availabl(' -don t H B h P I S id rrt>d pll.t~. f.:.,pansivl' oreiln untintton e•C 00 • P1radis• 1w11·. Bulh·1n kitchl'n '\'llh I 1"111 · No. i\1ain S!., Riverside, I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cali[ 92j()I 11 Cash Fast! l li.J42 Chapparal Ln, enera • 3 BP., 2 ba, run1pui; rm. * Call :J.iS-3"1111 crpts, flrp"._ 1 <' n c e d · Balboa Peninsula THROUGH A -A- 11 -....:. ;...._G_l_b ____ I Surrounds the 16x32 pool w/ di~;hll'l\Shl'r. Dining roont. Larwin Realty, Inc. ent1on uyerl-lols of decking + 1 BR 2 .'HG-:ttll I ')"" I 2 b 2 .. A 1 • f'in"place. Double garage, -~~=· -~----• ..., moves you n r, ,,.. BA area home 11i /frp!c. twnhlle. Alt 6:30. 714/ Ctpls, drps, bl!ns new pain! $:fJ.900. Call • c.11 The E xperts!! ""3780 · \\'e spccialiZe tn selling roo- J...,. • inside. Close to ~hops, ...,JO /; don1Jniu n1s, buyers v.·aiting. 2 STORY 3 br12i, ba, f11m schools & beat·h. S27,900. 0 a·## Double exposurr a1 no t'X· rn1 v.·ffrplc, all ~lee ki1, At !emu:. !147-1221 IC/ din'a rm. cvrd pat1o. SEYMOUR REALTY REAL ESTATE tra ('()St. Call today ror frt'e I"' """ ~·1 ..te•• appra1$al. ·"'·"""· .,.. _,_.,. 17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Sch 11!1() Gl<'nnE""yrr Sr. Larwin R'ealty, Inc. J\1EREDJTII 'Jarden5 trl-Open 'tJI 9 P1'1 1!)1.!lli3 ;,1~-03Hi 2 562 0 k W ACRE producing orange j?"l'O\·e in Riversidl', a! Van Bur<'n k Cle\·el11nd. Good !ite lor ~r1r pork or sub- 01vis1on nr new i\rllngton High Sehl !i!e, on main ll1way to .\larch ric\d. \\'rite CharlE""ll f<.1art ln, 870 No. /'.la\n St., Rive1'!iidt>, Calif. 9TJ()t -------Je\"rl. 3 hr. lgt" fam rm. LA CA_S_A__ I , roo hurst, Hntgn Bth formal din'r rin. By o\\ner • OCE,\~ VlLL,\ • 54.,..5411 anytime Real Estat• 962-9ili El Monterrey N<'11, oldt' 11or!d n~.~ign: 2 Duplexes/Units Exch•nge 112 1.~~TO""ll~,_=.H=o=u=s=r=,=,~b,-,-1 ,-, I Fountain Valll"y's ni 051 I Br. den & re. rm. Din. area. sale 162 1---------- unique and 1nterestin:;; trac.! I frpl. Kitch. w/rangr. o~·en, ----------HAVE ba. lirepla~. pool. $18,950. rt1~h11a~hrr S39 000 I 1U DUPLEX Oi\'ll!'r, 199-J.M>.f and check lhf'se featllrts ~ · · · · 1 pr. NE\V OffiC', Building • •·••-oon f ·r L1:i11rr tin. PY!. OK. Assun1e J~4 ';'i:i Joan on '"'a' [ II' !100 K . ~""-' 1 ' ami y 1001~· '.\11S~ION REALTY 49-1--0il "~ equi!y, d1n1ng room, heated and fiJ. 1 nl'W 2 BR units. Patio~. $2iK :"et Income tered pool, priva<'y, t'Xcel-1 Laguna Niguel I Blrns. F'/A h('a!, C & D, WANT Jent condition lhroughout. 1 , S300 mo irlC', ye1 S22U pil~'li SpanL,h in design and st~·!,.. WVEJ.\ 4 BR, 2 b~. fam all. Asking S31.SOO. Bkr, B,\rFRO;\"T llou~ or Loi. Conv. terms and lairly pnc· rm, \'U of 1aJlr), tlose to 646-8226. \V.R. DuBois; a.1:>7166 ed. S.l:Z.2SJJ ~hoppini:. $\j JXKJ. 192-W22 Income Propt,rty 166 Real Est•te Wanted 114 L~I~ -\\'ILL usume ~an View home or income u n i t , :> l10t1se~ on lari;:e lot,_ Costa ~e.,.,·port to C • p i s I r a no Ml'sa. 2 & 3 BR. $80.i nW>. 714-6~10 Vacant lot 32'(1\~ Sl'l.'100 5 Bit.. 312 ba. Any vie.,.,·, L.a.n:r !01. $1 1 ~. :-00 $18,950 3 BR ., fnn1. 1·m .. ~1. R.11h~. J BR + Dining Room 1:-.xs!I Lot. $'.C,:JOO ln1n1ac rond .. 2 ba area.<;, ' LIDO RE1\LTY l~f'. ~liag crpl!, di·ps, bltn R&O, 3Tii Via. Lalo tii:l-7300 Ou ICK C "SH 11<1shrr, dryf'r. O"''flf'r is Mesa del Mar t AI ICS\'Ulf: area. Lo, Jo dfll\'ll ---- pymn!, ll~i-12'.!1 VACANT & SPOTLESS 31 °/o RETURN gros~. A5klng $69.000. Try I ~~~~~~~~~~ $10.00(l dn. for a 31 'C annuli! l'<'!llrn. I ll •l GH.\11.\~1 HF.1\LTY ti-16·2 114 L __ r_n._oc_;,_r __ J J19 R1v('r~l1l(' ,\\'('., N.B. ·---------LIDO ISLE-320 l\\iNi. 6 1 hPa(·h apts. Furn, Gl\J'. 8()' Business hrath. Ua~t>hold yr. 201t Opportunity THROUGH A SEYMOUR REALTY lle~u'llbl!' J l>rt!rn1 , 2 ba1h, 171.U &ach Blvd., H!i:n Bch l pauo~. lxia1 <loor 1n glu'-DAILY PILOJ i ---O~"'-"-'_li_l_9_P_>_I __ :;.~100~harp fAnuly ho1nr WANT AD $1000 DOWN Ptte B,~'i'.e52,00, Realty Asking $1,10,()(Xl. Consider lrade. 6.\2-40'.!7, 54&-2211 e"! "' Distributors Needed 1 NaHonaJ ~luket in~ Com· p11ny, NEI-:os NO\V. Jle-I ~pon.11ble 1nan and \\Oman 10 .Y>rv1ce hiih volume new produr1 r{)utes. "Hun1 Snack P:iek'". A nt'W mul11 million 2 i\iory 4 bc'dmi :l't ha1h_ V"'I <1t"ll tk'1"0r111e-c.I ' hon1r nri 642.5678 lllll:<' loc. Sou1h ll u1H1ni::1o•n Newport Bt•ch .,.,., '"'''~"· '''' ""'"·' OCEANFRONT \\'llJ. trarlr O C. 111f'l'.ln'E" prnp, lcr Shula or Trinity Cnty Arl't'al:{' or T.D.'~. \\'nil', Cla-.slhl'.-t ad t\o. ~I. 0Hily Pilot. P.O. Bo'< \,"llil), ~k'ln. 1\•k1ne S26 .. i00. \octa ~1<'<-a. Olhl. !lli26. llnll.:1r Arh't'tt1wrl pnxlucls. L.,w;n RHlty, Int. DUPLEX 546-541 I anytime Par1 or lull llmf'. Company 1 5TOJ:F.. OffltT, 2 nR houo•, -.t'1·urrd loc11t1on.o:, con1mrr• Good Jncon1e. JG;.~00 rocu·n lo nrld. C-11onrrl. 50 >; ciaj and far1or-y. • 4 br. 2 full halllZ'"SZ'l.:ro S9:.0 rlov+n, $216/nlO pay s 111. 1~161 \'allea C 1 r 892-308·1. o~nrr 2 STO!tY ~ Lr/21:. h:i, f11n1 rm w/frplr, 1111 l'lrf' kiT, i!ln'~ nn, r\•rrl p" t 1 !l. $3.i.!lll'J )>,l~---l!i:!.l BURR WHITE 1~ t'<lrnrr, $12,jQI) 19th ~I NO ~f:LLI.">;(; Realtor 675-'630 nrar llarbor, 11 C\!. \\'ill ('i\:'111 REQUIRED $GOO to ~~1 Ne.,.,lJOn Rl \'d., N.B. lri1dt'. Brok<'r l l-%:i!I i2,9'.13. \\'rll(' !or morf' lnlor- nr (h1ner. Stoll or 1~e/opt 28 UNITS 1 m1tt 1on, D1srr1h11t0Mihlp Div. 3 Br. + farn. rm. ,. fl ln. 2 ~ 3 hr. Clo~e to sho:ipping. :i1 P.0 Bo• .11.''15 Tl)1TanCf', ni1 2 811 t\ew dr11pr~ /.: AH l't'n!ed, Htg Beh. $~10.000 Calli. 9:,,·,o,j, GIVE PHONE rarp :;iprlnkl<'r!i. '\'rsl('lifl ~li·.19717 ,\t;,\IRl·:R. ------The----::Y .. uow--p-,-,,.-,-.• --8.l'f'R, 11r Jl'hool~ ~ j~~ 1 RY 011 nt'r, 2 ou a Jot \\' ~)l ~lumhrr or hlria: of a~~nm Jo,1n $1~.:i!XI -lnrl \\ 1bon C \1 ' l n111l<'l'1ri l :o;uppllr~ ""11ntM. tf\f' lt!1•1 1>12-~~·:q ·• 41 11.~ •. ?i . ' t"IM~llif'd . r..t2-Slii8 • 1] l.\~,7f'JI • -~-~~~--~- -• DAILY PILOT 12·""'0 · """"" 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds 3 BR. 2 ha, Ji;;c family rn1 OCEAi\FRONT year nlund FREE APPRAISALS WANT AD l'./frplc, b!111~, Jgc yard, 2· occup, A\'a1l _ r;irl~ :vlay. 1 Costa Mesa Investment l"Ot' i;::ar., s2:.o. 673-9 127 Bl_t & Den. ~XII"'fll!'ly nice. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllliiiiiii J:;'~i¥iiifY,ii;i::";;'ji:i;:;;;,J $2,iO. 1-larried r11l, n n 548-7711 anytime I **FOR LEA~E: a Bdrn1. 2 1·hildrC"n, no fll'!•. 011'1'1Cr I I ~ 1<!y Pacific Sands honie. ,",.Ji-16~1 Turn tho~~ White Elephanl5 f'nancii1 • 6i:~s2:~1 _ BACHELOR-Yf'arl~ l..r11~r into calih 1hl'u a. Dalbi Pilot ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~I ** 4 BEDROO!<t l-10l':5E I rurnishl'd 111 11 priirl For J Dime-a-line ad!! • Bltn:s, crp!~. rlrps, $2:i0 n1an. $~.-1/mn 6i3-6i90 VINCO REAL TY 646-0033 C d I M 200 • CONOO--Lgc 2 br, 1•; ba, orona • ar ...::.o:;;:;~::::==============::I fireplaCl', pool. S 175. FURN-J Br. utJ!itie.~ ln- • NOSE . TO THE GRINDSTONE? There is a \\'ay for you to continue bringing home the bacon. increase your income. and not have to keep grinding a\vay. l~O\V? Be· come a U. I.I . Di stributor and o"·n your o"'n Snack Shop vending machines . You can join the ranks of over 6.000 dist ributors from ·coasl·ltreoast for as little as $700 to $7,000. Start part-time. a few hours each \veek. and grow to full time. All you dQ is service and niai nt ain your O\l.'ll equipn1ent and collect the nickels. dln'e~, and <1uarlers \Vhich '"ill grow 1nto five dollar bills, ten s. and hundreas! In sta rting you'll have your o'vn business \\1ilhout having to make personal sales calls or solicit busine!)s. U.I.I. secures the loca· tions for your machines and tra ins you in all phases of the business. Toll free telephone lines throughout the nation are provided so that you can co1nmunlrate immediately with the home office. A flB~T Systen1-3) computer ordering s\·sten1 allo"'S you to re-order nationally ad\'erlised vend ing products in a hurrr. You ~111 enjoy voursel(. have spare 11n1e (I r you v.·Ant it) and not have to keep your nose to the grind stone. For run detail on ho\v you ran becon1e a U.1.I. Distributor. ,,·rile toda y' Give phone number and personal references. Ussery Industries. Inc. • 1195 En1pire fen· tral • Dallas, Texa s 75247 • Dept. • 48R2<" 499-3464 eluded l adult pre!e1Tcd. .i BR, 2 ba, Crpt~. tlrps. fncrl Slll. 6i:>-2+10 Bmkrr )ard, $230. ~::a r.termaid Costa Mesa C1rclE"", 968-3·197.----------- Fountain Valley * LARGE l BR* Crpl.s, drPs. disposal, patio. FOR L..~. ln1ma1·. 3 lir. 1'2 gllf, AduUs. no pels. Sl:'.:Q 11 I.la. fl('\\ ~hag cpri; & drps, mo. St>r lo appl'f'c. 2().l7 B frplc. bllns. $225/nio. CharleSt.:JJ:\.6GJ() 646-l&il 968-9543 or 213/2·11-l:i&l * STU!\~ING (;ARDEN Leguna Beach APT • lrg I &· 2 Br. Pool. lltlnnt-~n1I floJ: ok. 515:1 & Al,l\10ST Ocf'anfront . up. 11\10. ~~rer. 615·:U30 Charm. 2 Br, 2 Ba in excl.),,-=='°"'=-'""'--'-1 l.a!;unila. Private hl'ach. 3 ROOr.t $80/mo. for p<'rso n $295 lease. o"·ner. 499-36.1R or Bt'nny's 3!1. 2 0 .1 7 \\'rs!n1ir1~1rr. C f\I. lnq. at Mesa V•rd• 240 ~if'rk~. Cl\1. .~-~--~~~-1 Immediate Occupancy DE_Luxr: l BR&: Baell Ap1~. 3 br, 2 b11, all hltns. S2·Ul. S.1J .,.,-kly !. up. Furn, incl 0!flion a\t1il. The Do:i-·le Co, ut1!. !\lo. ~les 1rm1~ avt Evr~: 8.'\.'i-6311 m E. Camino. 546--04.11 FDR sail' or lease -L.Rc $155-SHARPT BR. 3 hr 2 ba bltrt~ Corner Hra1rd pool. Adul1s, no pets hou.o:i-. 5Ji-7i3~ or 67~. l l<'E""n ok ). 612-9.:J.20 Newporf Beach QUIET artraC' ~lulfios $11:, I Br. $1!i Arill,, no prt.~ 100' l'.'alerfmnt. dock fnt 4:i' 1135 Elrll'n. \IJ;n" Apt 6. hoal. 3 hr. 2 Ni, l:::f' utJ] nn. * s1.·, Pf'r "'i•rk 11 p lTPIS. dll)~. ~lf'l't'. c.I\\, I/II' l\/k itchr11~. s~:1 JX'f 11rrk (1f parklnr: r-.o ptL.;;. P.rrs cp 1\pl• ~10TFI • 1~-!l-·­Nq'tl. S·IJO/n10. )r I~('_ _. .... ) ..•. ~) A\·all 4 !~1. 68 Balboa Cove~ * Cl.!-:.\:'ll I BR 11 ut1J. Crp!~ N B. 6i:J-2.'138 * S12jfrno Artulr.~ * A I P f d 71,12 Crntrr S1 . !JKHJf,23 du ts re erre -- 2 AR 2 Bnttu ...... ,. .. $225 G.'\C:llf.l.OT:-Cornp rrrltl"'t' 3 OH_'.' Aa. 3 Car gara_g(' Pvl ~\\nlnl' n. $11:1. El Rr;AL1'0R ;.i~-6fa66 Pall<', 1~,\ f.iro11rl11·1i::__ ---* l B1 f'{Xll. 11111 pd San Clemente Atl1.1i1~ orrr :r, $12() nio j\.!OIJJ-.:llN 3 Bil, 2 BA. Sou1h ~•l"-2·1fli ~" (')r111Pnlr , lO!'l Avr'l ;D~A~l"L~Vo;P"1"1m=~,,-,-.-,-,.-,. (,t\'!'t\f'I•'. ~1"' r11il 1!'12-8&1~ Ca!! i;l2-,r678 ,t· <\.11·•'' T • u...s11• A"'1 n. 1971 DAILY Pit.OT SI ~~~~~=I I ~~~~~=.~1~!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1!~,~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~I [ _b .. -. ]~ I _,_.1«-1~ '[ ---1~ 1-ul« .. " I~ [ ....,_,,,._ l~ [ Aowlo."dw-]~1 .._I _ ... _ .. ~J ,S I •-}~ ~[ ~~][j]~I Apts., Rooms 400 lnduatrl•I R.ntal 450 P.erSONlt 530 Apts. Fum. 360 Aph. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfurn. Coste Mase 365 Apt. Unfum, Cott•~•• 3&S Apt. Un!um. Newport Beech Furn. or Unfum. .370 --------• SU PER wk up v.•/ kit. tNDUSTR.IAL UNITS CAS d 0 0 I * ON THE BEACH A. e R ttlodero, Mwly painLtd, util CASUAL C:t1lf. Living In a tncl. l br apt&414S/mo win- wann Mediterranean atmos-ter , 4165/mo winter, $1.@ep- FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. pbere. Spacious color co-Ing rm &. bath $60/roo. Call ordiDated api. • de111gncd Ii 67&5475. [ 2 • 3 BR' furnished l"r 1!yle &. com-• I tort e Heated pool e Kitch-NEW 2 br, 2 ba, fully crptd, Private patio. pool -lnd!v, en w/ irnlirect ligflllng e lrg Uv rm, elec. kit., sundk. Jaundry lac. Deluxe RIO. Adullll. No pets. Close ~o bC'h & l!ihops. Yrly 1 Near Orange Co, Airport l.c l BR . .Sl7j furn. basis $225 mo. 673-1464. 3:!"10 1 UCI. Adults only. Lml.ITIES INCLUDED Pifarcus, N.B. 20122 Sanla Ana Ave. 36S "" Wilson 642-1971 Newport Heights I Mgr. Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A I 541Hl2!5 2 SR, I \It BA. 2 story, Cpti, : ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Costa Mes• • $25 Wttlc: Up Apll. MOTEL t,IXIO IQ u, Placentia Ave. 54S-9755 $89fmo. Sul her I and, drps, all blt·ins. Fireplace. MARINER SQUARE RlNG BROS, Announces Pool. Recreation room· APARTMENTS Apb. Now Available Laundry room. Enclo~ Announces tbe availability ol MEDITERRANEAN KITCHEN privileit)a. Man ~7-1'900 only, $00 mo. 2161 Miner St, ''R~..,~,-.•1,-w=.-n"'tod---:---.460'­ C.M. 646-5289, 893-5.:110 garage. $190 bl &: la.st plus 2 •· • BR nil I ·"·'1 "' .. u s or auw a VILLAGE FURN room ln prlv. home, ',...,..AL e·-. -~-2 or 3 br. &eeurity deposit. No d ·J II ·d "·· UV\.. ""'"' ·~ children or pets. Avail May esi ... ng 10 ve anu.i.'! U<!&U· 7400 Harbor Blvd. Cost<t Mesa; kitch. tll1Vil hou8e with 2 baths in 7 IY by the l!ea in "~ pres· Costa Mesa plua. Nr. OCC. 54~1061 NowpQrt or Corona del Mar ht. S4S-06 4. t14ious Westclllf area oJ RENT & RELAX Newport Beach. 1714) 557·8020 SLPC rm for sleady work'&: area. No childttn, yearly in this beaut, extra 1.rg 2 FROM $230 1AMAZING Adult Living. olderman,no1.'00k'&,byma leue. furnished or BR. 1\.9 BA. apt, Compt. re-For Wormation phOne ?.fr. I Beaut. J & 2 BR furn or unf only, $33. 1543 Orange, Cl\1 unturnl!bed. WW move in at deC'Orated & in sparkling Robert M. Buckley, Mana.g. Apts. SeU clean. oveM, Guest Home 415 end of JuM. Pho~ 5ot8-77&a cond. New plUSh carpets, er, at (714) 64~0252 or ~Tile D/\V fin :I Br) disp!s, sbag 1-----------t~"'=k~f=":...cArt:..:..~V='°':::::h~t'---­ UiveJ.y, lncd & lndscp'd to The Office of the ?.tan-I cpts, drps, jacUZ1..l & sauna * PRIVATE ROOM FAMU.Y ot 4 l!ef!ks Water-7 BEDROOM apt. 1st floor. CLEAN l or 2 Br. Adlls, tlO Carpeted. Nice furniture. pets. Lg kit. $13S-$150. 7t21 Spacioul!i. Beautiful deC'Or. E. 16th St. NB. ~1801 PalMHiomelike atrnmphe:re 1--~~------ lhroughouL Children & Westcllff yard. SlOO/mo. 1004 El Ca-ager, t-.lAriner Square Apts, baths. lluge pool. for eldery lady. Brl&:ht • front furn 3 or 4 BR home S "sh El mino Pb, 5-1&-5704 1244 Irvine Ave, NB, Cal. M.rrimac Wood1 cheery garden 1urroundlnp. April li to June 15, up lo SINGLE? WIDOWED? * Divorced Over 21 * Okh:st .t. l•rae1t. for a al( explanatory meR1&1e 24 hn a day. 541·99!n Socii1I Club1 535 1llE Intimate Group whett contemporary relationshlps ~n. Pan'ies l>'ri .l Sat nites. CaJI 1 to 9 pm, 5»-2500 Lott Ind Found I~ Found (fr .. •d1) 550 Small pets wel~e. Very I D~E""w""x=E,._,2,-B~,-.-=w~.~.~,cl=ill reasono.ble roirt. Cor.aer location. f ool. Bltns. No location. \Valk lo &hopping. lease. SUS. 642-6274 * pan1 egance I INDMDUAL PRIVACY 92664. 425 MelTlmae Way, C.M. Nutritious meals. ca 11 $500. rno. Call 56-476, ADULT LIVING BACHELORS • 1 & 2 BR's; s.tB-4753. e WANTED to lea&e-4 br Sela The )food For , L.11t d1x 2 br ll,1 ba ~·/gar PJ.RK NEWPORT -Cart! furn. or unfurn, SIOS up . Rentals to She... 430 holl'lf: In EutbluU, the FEMALE [)(We. BUihard Ii & ator. Park _ Hke al· tree hvg overlkg the water. Pool. Laundry rm. Adult.s,1----------Blulll or Harbor View Hilll. Adami, H.B. 96 2 _ 397 8. Sc!Klal ljAIS: 'tops at door. '351 I ~...,.~~-----.-,, Victoria. Apt. 2 Apt. Unturn. 365 Quiet Adult Living mosphcre. Fncd patio, C/D, 7 pools. 7 tennis cts S750,000 no pets. 897 Center St, Apt WORKING lady wll!ihea to Call M4-5175 Found 3 weeks ago. H&\'C Shag ept •. df'Pl! e bllnl wtr pd. 636-41.20 Bach. 1 <lr 2 Br. Also 2 sty 2. 6(2..2181 share lovelybd furn & p ti~~~~~~~~=: watched papen carefully. Beautiful Pool 667-K Victoria St, $155 TownOOuscl!i. Elec. Id!., pr, 2 BR Sl25 unfurn: $145 furn. "'/Ame. Pvt rm, bath&!, Please claim (have 3) or * $1JO UP * Gener el ~Br. $170 incl all utll !--~==-~~~-pat <lr bal subtrn parkg opt Families ~·elC'Ome. BIG ~ress~n&: rm. May thru Aui; I ......._.. Jf ..-J will ~ve away. GIANT l & 2 BEDROO~I! j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Adulta only-no pets, IATIRACTIVE :i Br, duplex . maid ser, cpts, drps. Just SUR APTS 2043 _2049 iJ 1&.t1sfactory, longer. Park . Gorgeous, park-like setting. 241 A\IOC8.do St. 646-097!! frplc, cp!s, drps, beani N. of f'ashion Jsl at Wallace St. 'Phone 541-430l Newport Apts. Call 673-lS&ll ~;;;;;;;;~;;i;oi FOUND; Gray w/blk strlpe1 Closed garages for max-VEN DOME .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I ceilings, patio, adul~ only Jamboree lo San Joaquln 2 br COUPLE past 50 to wrell male cat, very •Ueclionare. imum security. Quiet street. 11: Sl30 UP* no pets. Refs. $169.50. 2354 Hills Rd. 644-1900 Io r 2 1Blt ~use unfurn 1&.1 k 1 '::-t home. Refs. Call alter 7 Announcemenh 500 84Al7.,7588sbort.-h&ired wht cat. Ad 11 I 2 0 2 0 rMI'aiACULATE API'S! Sant• A"• Ave. 673--0395 leasi~ info. urn in newer ~·e ep I· m· "d2-52&.1 u s, no pe s. GIANT 1 &: 2 BEDROOM! '"' plex. Privacy. 768 &ott PL1=.'~·=~,.....-...,.-,--,.,--W NTE Fullerton Ave {Harbor to F~;T S:~on Gorgeous, park·llke setting. SUiQ. 2 Br, 1.lh Ba, lrg, quiet, ~ELUXb~ 2 B~\~ BA, ~fts, 646·2323. SHARE my waterfront home .A D LGE gold & white male dog Bay, lhe.n So. un til 2 blks k Closed garages for max-GE kit., 2 car gar, 8'x20' rps, Ill!, , nr oag I H I •· h w/dock. Man, JQ.'60 years. OVERWEIGHT w/long shaggy hair & cut So. ol Newport Blvd. 642· Close to shopping, Par !mum security. Quiet street. stor nn. Ad.Its. 5t8-6432 Hosp. $165 & $]85 mo. unt ngton uwac SlSO/mo. 675-4331. on hind leg found vie 19th It. 8690 * Spacious 3 BR's, 7 ba Adults, no pets. 2 o 7 o 642-4387 · -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; LADIES Pomona. ~ Unbelievably Beautiful * Swim pool, put/green Fullerton Ave Ofarbor to Sl4.0-2 br, crptg, 1 er 2 XTRA niC(' 2 Br, pool, gar, • WlbaLLyfro~lhaC:R ,myl•l'•hmnhotnmg• For weigh! reducin ... , ......... am 1 G~. -s .. -,-m~ .. ~,-. tan--,~ .. -o-t~l~yr-.1 * ~1 1-•1 /'~-· lac"· So il 2 bl'-· children ok, no pets. Nr 17th ON BEACH I °"" -• •ve.• . N Ce VAL D' !SERE Garden Apt.s. • • ., , "" v .. >U-<,. 1:1 !lay, then . unt "" bltns, CJD. Ad11s, oo pets. • w/gal ~SO. 6 pm, 67~ to establish statistics tor Vic ewport nter Adult.I _ no pets. F1oMrs 1845 Anaheim Ave. So. ot Newport Blvd.) & Placentia. SJ6..-l77D Sl:il. 642.SOOl, 642-8006 837·2742 everywhere. Stream & COSTA MESA 642-2824 '=642-86911--~-7---~--~-2Sl~~·:ie;~.N~4t;7 HOAG llosp Area, 2 BR, 7 2 Bit ........ Fro1n S2l5 Office Rental 440 ~:::.dco:u~~ne~ liU~~:~ Waterfall , 4.5' pool Ree. Rm, 5, d 1 I Park·Llke Surrounding f BA, crpts, drps, bltins, gar. Furniture Available PrestiCJ& Office phyaical culrurists. Must be Sauna, Sgls 1·2 Bdrm, Furn. Just for 1ngle A u ts QUIET. DELUXE or appt. 1 540--0093 4249 Hilaria. Carpets.drapes-01.shwuher "ON TIIE BAY" a minimum of ai pounds Unfurn. from SUS. SEE IT: SOUTH BAY CLUB 1.2 & 3 BR APl'S E_•_rl_B_lu~ll------San Clemente heated pooJ.saunu-teMil ovl'rweight have transpor. 2COO Parsons, &t2-8i70 APARTMENTS Also Furn. Bachelor rec room-ocean views At Lido Yacht Anchor&il tauon and 'not currenUy un· * Sus CASITAS Newport Beach Prv patiog * Jlld Pools --------patios-ample parkin& 3 Room Suite der doctor's care. All inquir· NEWPORT BEACH BRAND NE\V Jux. 2 Br, Se ·1y -·A..,,. Ground Dour·6S8 ,q ft 880 lrvlne Ave. Nr l!ihop'g * Adulls only curi "......,""· Jes completely confidenliaL l.rg nicely furn Bachelor & ( S VIII• Granada Apt1. 2 Ba, 1100 sq. ft. Quiet HUNTINGTON Air cond Qlls, Drpa 1 Br. Furnished models lrvine and 16th) MARTINIQUE APT • Four bedroortl! ~·ith balC'On. eul-<ii!-aac. Panoramic view E·Z Parking, Util pa.id Ask for Miss Powell open dally. New rental rates 17l4) 64S.-0550 1m Santa Ana Ave., Ci'.! le, above 6 i,eJow. Gracious of ocean. Adults only ~. PACIFIC S410 per month 537·5410 2UO Ne~'POrt Blvd, CM Balboa Island ~1gr, Apt 113 646-5542 Jiving Ir: quiel S\UTOUnding 4.92--2259. 7U OCEAN AVE., H.B. Available f\.1ay lilt DISPLAY your aupport tor F'OUND: Vic Brookhun;t It. Adams, blk dog, 1hort bait, female, 968-1651 PET duck found v I c Rochester A-Westmlnaler St.s .• C.M. 548-nss aft ti SlAMESE cat wtnea collar found vie Cap l 1tr o.no Highlanda, 830-6417 Lost 555 H'OLIOAY PLAZA LEASE 2 BR, 2 Ba, l!itove, !or family with llhlldrf'n. Santa Ana fTI4J 536-1487 717 UDO PARK DRIVE Lt. Calley witll a chrome DELUXE Spacioua 1 BR refrig, crpts, drp, heat. CORSICAN Near Corona del Piiar High Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Dally Newport Beach 673-1060 llcen1e pLl.te frame WOULD the peraon who hit turn apt $135. Heated pool. Mature adult. $215. 61:>-4000 NE\V 1·2-3 Bdrm. All bltns. School, Fireplace, wet ba.r & CAN1 BE BEAT WILLIAM WALTERS CO. "Amttlcans • rally for the while Poodle ln front of Ample parking. N<l children shag crpts, drps, closed gar. buiJt.Jn kitchen appliances. !"'!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!""'"'"-i PRESTIGE OFFICE Calley"; In red. whlte & Exec Suites Motel 0 n ~ no pets. 1965 Pomona, Balboa Peninsula ages, frplc In 3 Br, 1,1 mi. 835 AMIGOS \VAY 64\1.29'31 2 & 3 BR. $150 up. Patio. Next to Real Efltate firm. blue letterin~ Only S2.75 ea. 4./1/TI pis call 647-9161. we. c~. • 7 BDR!\-1. Yearly, Like I E. So. Coast Plaza. OH Sun-CoJdweU, Banker &: Co. SINGLE STORY Pool, Children. MORA KAI Carpels, drps, utll paid. or $5 per pa . Order today. miss "Hogan" fl Ro M .21 '! I A "'I •221 1100 Ex 11 I P<ltter Industries, 9445 Heil, B YCLIFF MOTEL ne\ .. i'.1ature adults. 419Y.r ower at ss. gr at "anag ng gent ..., -,, South Sea Atmosphere Apts, 18881 Mora Kai Ln. Y.i per mo. ce ent or KITTY lost ~'un, April 4. Htg A E. Bay. Call 675-4172 a.It ) \V. Stevens. 545.2321 e NEW DELUXE e 2 BR .• :I BATil blk E. <lf Beach at Garfield. insurance, tax 1cc'1, archl·l~F~o"~"~1'~1~n~V~a~ll~•y~'2~!07~~! Q:inlinental Twnhses No. 1. * LOW \VEEKL Y RATES * 6 pm, wknds 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. Incl Carpets & drpa 714.: 962-8994. tect. 1860 B. Newport Blvd.1~ OU while, I 0 n g-h 8 Ir @d Kitchen, TV's, maid l!iervice. Corona del Mar *BRAND NEW* spac. master suite, din rm Air Conditioned Laguna Beech C.M. 11-1 marked like Siameae. W1U Heated Pool. LA COSTA AP'I'S, 1 & 2 BR. I & dbl garage. aulo door Private Patios W. E . Lechenmyer Per1on1t1 reward finder. 962-1674 646·3265 Bltns, swimming pool & gar-opener avail. Pool & Rec. HEATED POOL SWEEPING VIEW 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. I LO=N~G-~h-Wffif~.~--.... -y--,-,-1 I SPECIAL Uiw Rates from age. All uW pd. SISO lo Sl70 a.rea. Plenty oJ lawn OCEAN AND HILLS Call 646-3928 Eves: 673-4577 w ; !lea collar, "Smokey" $25 wk. Kil. avail. Ma.Id ~-~ Ad 113 t e $265 e Carport & Storage Decora1or furnished l ~-Personeli 530 1061 vie Humboldt Island , serv, TV & Ph. Sea Lark Q, ~A.voc~do: ~.pe 5642_9708 865 Amlgos Way, NB HIDDEN VILLAGE room apt., t-.vin beds, new SUPER-DELUXE QUAUTY I--=----------Htg Harbour. Reward, ~1otcl, 2301 Npt Blvd, CM. "'"• Managed by GARDEN APTS. paint, carpet, drapes. Walk 1·2-3 room, up to 3,CKXI aq. * FUU.Y LICENSED * 846-4.J9l or 642-944!} G~S-7445 ON TEN ACRES WILSON GARDEN APTS. WILLIM-I WALTERS CO. 2500 South Salta to beach & town. Mature ft , oWce suites. Immed. oo-Renowned Hindu Spiritualist SML grey kitty "Dinah", 3 I BR. Garden duplex, garage 1 &: 2 BR. Furn, &: Unfurn, 2 BR Unfum. Newly dee. TO\VNHOUSE delxe 2 Br, Santa Ana fJ ~1525 I adults S?25 mo. 1 year cupancy. Orazii:e County. Advice on all m.atten,. mo. bind. hind fool, vk: 3XI $135. Quiet, mature adult. F. "'" / · 1· New cptll/drns. S p a c 1 1 1 .:... lease.' 4!H·3839 aft 4 pm. /Jrport Irvine Commerc· Love, Ma.rrlage, Business E o.•~-Bal R ire.,_ce1 priv. pa IM, ... 21i Ba, b tns, rp , pauu, ~------~--!Complex. adj. Alrporter Readings given 7 da,ys a · O<UUU4, • e w · References. 548-8007 Pools Tennla Contnt'l Bld!t. grounds. Adlts, no petJ. enc gar. Quiet. 675-5033 Weitcliff ~10DERN garden townhouse, Hotel & Restaurant, banks, week, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. 673-6692 SPAC. l Br. Crpts, drp!, 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 $140/mo. 2283 Fount a; n Huntington Beach nor1h end, 7 siory, 7 BR, lib San Diego & N'pt Fwy1. 312 N. El Camino Real. LOST Sat pm -All white pool, nr &hops. Uti.I pd. 1884 (MacArthur nr Cout H~'}') Way E . (Harbor, tum W. DELUXE 2 Br. \Vestchfl BA, sundecks, I block UNCROWDED PARKING San Oemente longhair Cockapoo male vie Monrovia Ave., Of. 54U3.3Ei on Wil!on) * FRESH AJR location. Pool. Bltns. No shopping & Bch. Adlts. LOWEST RATES 492-9136, 492-0076 Finley & Newport Is . TOWl\'HOUSE E-side 2 Br, * COROLIDO APTS * LRG dlx ap~. Sl40 2 Br. Walk 3 tlks to Beach! lease. $210. 642-62'1ol Rt-ls. l..se S275 mo. 494-9981 Vwner/mif. 2172 OU.Pont Dr. DISCOVER DISCOVERY Reward. 673-4313 ar 1~~ Ba. Poot. No pets. $175. 2 Br. 11tudJos & street levels. Htd pool. Newl1 dee. Play B 0. 3 BR 1 / A t Newport Beech Rm. 8. Newport Beach Find Y-·-·ll 67>-5034 Call 646-6610 Sl~5 l.t up. Dsbwllr. frpl, dbl yd. CTpt'd, drps, bltns, eaut. ig ap' w w P 1•• ----------1133-3211 Courteay lo Brokftl v... ... snJDIO apt. $105 Util furn. carp0673 33~1,. LARGE Pool. 1:Sti':.:ta~~!!dA~~: 64~4 ~i~. S~.sNo ~~. J:~ri: Furn. or Unfurn. 370 VISTAApaDrtEmLen~sESA DESK apace available $51'.1 eainNo~~~': o::aUon ~ ~:!t~9i~oow::i.e~~~ Neat, adlt person. 2191 1 ~=·~--~-~~~ Generi1I mo. \Vlll provide furniture (714) 8J5..688S 673-5221 Harbor Blvd, so ol Wilson fOR lease, delx, a!I elec. 2214 College Ave. 646---0627 • 4 Br. Studio Apt [;:;::;;:;::;::;::;::;;;;;,::;::; 1 &. 2 BR. FUrn & Unt. Dbh-at S5 rno. Answering aervlce The Award Winning Serv. lge, new v"/a view. 2 BR, 1 HARBOR GREENS in 4-plex. 3 Baths. Im.mac. washer -Stove and Retr!g -available. 272 Forest Ave, 1~~=~~~---CHILD GRIEVING! Nice 1 Br. Trailer BA apt. All bit-ins incl Priv patio, crpts, drps, PALM MESA APJS. Shag crpt'g-Lrg Rec center. Laguna Beach. 494-9466 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. IRISH SEITER, FEMALE. S!KI & up. d\shwshr, dbl. gar. Adlls GARDEN It STUDIO APTS bltns. play area, cul·de.sac RENT S1arts $155 1~~~---~~~~·1Phone 542-7217 or write to RE\VARD 646-i728 133 E. 161h St #42. C.M. only. 673--6992 Bach. 1. 2, 3 BR's. (rorn SUO. st Children welcome. No Tustin & Mete Drive DESK 11pace available $50 P.O. Box 1223, Costa f\.fesa. SMALL black Cockapoo. No NEWLY Decor. 2 BR. 1613 1 ,--='-o~c-..-.-"7",--. 2700 Peterson Way, C.M . .,e1s. 17STI Bell Circle. l BR unfu1.i ........ $135.00 * 545-4855 * mo. Will provide furniture DAILY PILCYI' tor actiont collar, contact at 406 2 Br, 1 Ba, trpl. shag cpl, 546-0370 ') 3677 1 BR tum ........... $'149.50 ~--'--',----~--I al $5 mo. Answering aervlce ,..A., 6'2-5678 le Sa , H-~· B.i~- Santa Ana Ave. $145/mo. drps, b!tns, hurry $210. 1 ------=-~-~ 84-· Bachelon Fumll!ih&t Santa An• available. 305 No. EI ..,.... ve, cuuing .......... 543-S.S72 or &16-4710. Btwn 10-5, GJG.2062; alt 5, UNF. 2 BR. $lB.;i. Dramatic BEACHBLUFF Apt1 from $135 Cami no Re fl 1, Sa nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii FURN Bach. & 1 BR's. 213: 596-1TI9 2-sty. Iiv. rm. w/frpl.. New 3 Br, :i Ba, d&h"-'hr, 2 BR apts $175 mo. MA L Clemente. 492.-4420 * *' * * * * ~1s1~c~~~:n n~;:~l~~P 1!~ ~;~2 ::d~i$;sr~~ ~n~;;d.o:w~~~fng i::~ pool84~~~7 !2;184~~~7 •;;;~mo. OK VIL~~ANDR~~I~ ES B!~~~7~1t:heZ:1~. ~~~1 ,..-------------------,1 67~ ...v\A patio. 143 E. lBth, cr.1. • 8~'l1NA SPACIOUS for architect, In aura n c e HOUSE . 1 BR furn, small ,,.....,.,.,.. S.18-9949 eves between S &. 6. l BR, retrig, bltns, f1J5 mo • JACUZZI 1 & 2 Bdrm Apts 2 I. 1 incl uW . 2 BR, refrig, bltns, · • a.gent, realtor, etc. On Y"d, on strt'CI nr shop'g. BR, l BA, w/ irep · = Ad it L' · vi S I N B 2 BR. FROi'.1 $150 1·~ '"cl otil. Adults only. l.l\ll r.tesa Dr. San!a Ana u 1v1ng t.1onm a t. n . , No dogs or cats. 54S-2720 Garage. No chillren or pets. ......., ... F & U f - Dan. Po' .nt 517;, mo 673-9183 COMPLETELY REDE C, Tradewlnds IUty 847-8511: urn. n urn. P50/S300 per mo. 645--0•iu SINGLE. TV, pool, pets ok. S25 & up. "·kly. Dana t.1arina IM, :Will Coast ilW)'. CLEAN & COZY FAMlLY E,.e~: 536-7661 Costa Mesa D!ahwas~r -color coorclinat. DESK apace avallAble $50 e BACHELOR APT UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. A'ITRACTIVE rent-3 br, ed apphu.nces • plush shag mo Will provide f\lmltun! $100 PER MO~TII VILLA MF.SA APTS hl . d & 1 d BAY MEADOW APTS. carpet • choice of 2 color ,115· mo. An··-•lng oe••lc• Call after 6: 6~7250 "l25l fres Y painte c eane . .. ... " , • 719 W. WilMln 64<>-Air rond, frpl c, bltn.~. Nr scheme1 • 2 balhs • stall available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Costa M11a A LL EL EC . GOLD shop'g, achools & park. Kids Beam ceilings, paneling, prlv showers • mirrored ward· Huntington Beach. 642-43:11 J\.\EDALLION APTS, 2 BR. ok. no pets. 830-1548 patios, recreation facilities. robe doni:5 • lndlrect liJbt. NICE OFFTCE Avail. $Ii(). 114 ba, Crpts, drps. patio H • H bo All Adults, no pets. \ng Jn kitchen . breakfast Roo d 1 • .,. E N b • hop I Nr unt1ngton ar ur * Bachelor Ap· * b h · 1 __ .. my, g oc. ui>)J • view. r us s p ni;-, ar • uge pnvate en,_,,., Coast Hwy No. 7, Cdr.-1. NEW NEW NEW Trader's Paradise lines times dollars ** New lge 1 BR ap!. $150/mo, yr lease, l!l & last + $50 deposi t. 496-4456, 24622 Cordnva Ave. Huntington Beach VILLA CORDOVA encl garage, Adlts1 no pel.5, Triplex • quiet area. Lrg 1 * 2 BR. rrom $165 * patto _ plU!h la.ndscaplng . 675-2000 Sl5.'i. &!~351;, Br • $140, 3 BR . $740. Pets * 1 Bedroom * brick Bar·B.Q'a. large hca1.1.:.:~cofi'iii"oN."li~EJ.°iiMAiAiRt-l '-------------------...I ok. (714) 84.6·0071. 387 \V. Bay St. Cblwn Harbor ed pools Ir: lanai. I RONA D L I Q~etN:w~y2 D:~~~·~:~ & 2 BR, clean & attraclive, &. Newport Blvd, %. ml, N, 3101 So. Bristol St. One~ Two room desk apace& Store, office, 2 BR house, La Quinta Hermosa QUIET·SAFE PoOI. Ct11ts, drps, Adults hltns, air cond,, patio. Nr of 19th SI). ('h Ml. N. of So. Coast Plaza) avail. Owner 6~757 room to add, C-1 zoned. SOx I <Near Back Bay) nl 1 642-804 2 Broadway shop g center. CALL 646-0073 Sant• An• * NE\VPORT BEACH Civic 180 Corner, $4.2,500. 19th St. 40 Unit Adult 0 y, no pe 11• Kids ok no pets. l®-154S PHONE: 557.8200 Center on Npt Blvd. 310 sq, Nr 1-farbor Blvd. CM Will Spanish Country Eslate Liv-Apartment Complex l BR. $125-2 BR. $140 l .,/ ci1EZ ORO APTS * * • * ft. 67>1601 or (ll 286-7144. trd for50' boat. Bkr494-9659 ing & Spacious Apts. Ter-1 & 2 BEDROOMS Pool. Bltns, crpls, drps, no 8234 AUanla. 1-2 BR. Pool. El Puerto Me1a Apts raced pool : sunken gas BBQ En!er1aining will be a pleas. children, no pets. 325-"F" I Plivale Garage. Washer. * * * * Unbellevablc Living • Only ure. Decorating thll!i 10\·ely, E. 17th Pl., C.M. dryeni. 536-8038, 536-2727 1 Bedroom Apts. t Br unf $150-furn $110 spacious apt ,.,111 be a joy. 2 BR. unturn apt. Stove & 12 BR unf, crpts, drps. bltns. . . 2 8r unf $175 furn $210 1 •Special cabinet space refrig inct'd. Garage. Pool. t small child ok. $14.0. 2612 SI.JO & up 1nc1. uUl1lles. Also ALL UTIL INCLUDED • Lock garages W/ lg stor all utll pd Adlts only, no England SI., H.B. 136-3534 1 furr Pool & Recreation Special Bonus; a silver· • Bm «Ii • Lndry •Patios pets. Mgr No. 9, J8J w.1 or 968-D9 , Area. Qulet Environment plated candle l!nnUer is 1 • DW/~1.SPI •Huge gas 'tve I WUson St 2 BR N@w crpt drps I Off l!itn?et parkina:. No Oiil- yours If you bring this ad • Special soundproohn& '* BEAUTIFUL 1 .r. 2 BR. Chil~n Ir tmall Pet OK: dren, no pets. "'hen you vislt our mode'·. • Deep 2 color sbq: $140. 842-8365, 962-76J7 4 blks s. ot San Diego Frwy carpels, drapes Contemporary Garden Ap1.!1. on Beach 1 blk w. on Holl GAS & WATER PAID Patios, frplca, pool. SISG-2 Br apt-w/w, drps, hllns, 10 16211, Parkside Lane. Mo. to Mo. From $l40. $16.'l. Call 546-5163 disposal, laundry Bpace. No r714) 817-5441 I 2313 Elden Ave, 01 LRG 1 Br. apl. Garage. pets. 962-8578 for in!o. 1250 sq fl tr 2 Br, 11,S Ba, I.,!!!!.,.!!!!!!!!~=±!!!!~.,.~~ See ?.!gr, Ted Woodhead Lndry. $125/mo partly furn. * 1 BR. beaut. dttar. 1 blk uU rm tor wh/dr, patio, * * * 646-0032 Woman pre!. lnq: 1922-B from ocean. Sl35. Avail gar, cptfdp. $165. 54..a688 1 BR. patio, pool. natunil Wallace. 5-1HS18, SlS-00.18_ 4/15. Ph. SJ&.2070 A t APTS ~=-~-~'°'"""7."---:-I p s., bellJTI c e i 11 n g a . NeRr ORLEANS 7 BR. unturn delu,'<e townhsc, 2 BR "''/gar. $ll). Yard. Furn. or Unfur-n. 370 hospilAI . $16.'l ulll. paid. • pvt pal & gar, nrwly dCi:Or. Water pa\rl. 2110 - C li6'T6 Cnmemn, 842-Sl.92 ADULTS ONLY adlts, pet OK. $165 mo. 300'J Delaware Ave. 636-412(1 1959-1961 Maple Ave. C.Osta r.1esa Huntincton Be•ch 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM AnUque popcorn booth-Per- fltnt•ls ~ r·rom JOO 11<1/ft. 3Sc sq ft. feet operating C"Ond. $100 I ,,a * 67:>-2464 or 541-5032 per day lnC'Ome at good lo- ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J:Ji700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB ca1ion. Trade tor Car, boat * ON THE BAY * or '! 642-0010 494-4977. 67:>-2464 or 541-5032 LAKE TAP.DE recreational Room1 • lot with all Improvement.!. LADY to share w/same Busineii Rental "4S Tnde tor boa! or TD. beaut octan "'.irw apl, com· PRIME LOCATIONS ARNOLD&. FREUD, 388 E. plet<?ly furrushed, w/pvt E t?lh St Coata Mesa 17th, CM. 646-77i: bath Hoag Hosp area · " · · 1120 Sq, It. oommerc:lal bldf. Ideal absentee · Ownr tax 642-0321 with parklna:. S300 Mo. shelter profllabl'!! orange NICE room lor working man grov(! '11 acres @ 4000 !or wt or wfo cook'g privil, Broadway, Lag1.r1a Beach clear home, unlll!i, yachtJ. E-1lde, CM. 642-0026 1650 Sq. f!. 1tore with pa.rklna Russ McCrea (:113) 8464695 cA~p°'t-L-, -------! Nr. Coal!it Hwy, ~ Mo. VIEW-to-OCEAN R·l LOT Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Realooomic11 Bkr. 675-6700 adjacenl Beverly HI~. fbr OFC. & WAREHOUSE home, unit&, boat, vacant Huntington Beach 1629 Monrovia at \V. 16th 30,000 clear. McCrea 1200 c.~f .. 2500 IQ. II. to 1ublel Riverside, •362, Burbank. \ BR $135 per n'IO. incl utll. 2 & 3 BR. Avail. Private pa-Coolidge. 540-7247 2 BR duplex, close to bch & 2 BR $150 IX'r mo. Incl UCJ, pool -lndiv. laundry fac. 1 * 2 Br. Me11a. Verde, new dntown, erpts, drp~ & stovt. tit i I . Adu I ls on I Y · (Nr. Orange Co. Airport; Tu.s-decor. Lrg closel!i, cabinet,, Nn pels. $140, 536-J507 Tradewinds Rlty Sol7-35U: tin al 17th St; ru . Weslclltt). Gar. $16-$155, No rets. I M-"'0~,~.=V-o~r~d~o-'----- Eves: 5.1&-7661 · 551-&100 DELUXE Bachelor Unit. 17(1 Tustin, Coeta Mesa L~G""2;..;,B~r.~l\l~&~-,.-"~"-~-,-p-I 2 BR. New crpts, drps, closed g8r, nr 5hop 'g , AtluH1, no pels. $145/mo. 64~15 Relresblng ••• at Ile per sq. ft. Zoned M-l. Have 4-Plex·pool & ~ For lurtbcr !nform11tlon call room. Pride of 011rnen;hip 642·9'170, Jean Jurich. in Tustin. Wan t Free A: SUITES Available: 17612 Clear hoUH", fumL<;hrd, $100 per mo. r.tar. Mn. Tbomp&On 642.4&lJ. No pets, families nnly. Priv. '* Call 646-7687 * pet~. 726 Joa.nn SI. $140 Laguna Beach FULL ocean view. 2 Br, 2 Ba. newly dee. Mature ad.Its ,.,., ref's. Ba.by ok. 49S-3922 $105. f'um 5ml coiy place, nr beAch. l·rel!ip, employed. Ph · 4!M·a!O Lido Isle .,/ BEAO I AM'S. BacMlor 12(11). 1 en . sm. sm. 3'2tl NOTTI. 66-4091 or 54&-22ll "'' ""' Newport leech 1 Ult. Pool. Blk lo oct11n . Sing le adult. $1!l5 to Sl-1~ YTly. 833-&.'5, 644-0637 t"VeS. SPACIOUS 1 BR, erpt1, drp1, Bltns + refrig . Adull~. no pets, 1130. In- quire 2868 La Salle, apt 1. 54!h'l524 DUPLEX-very quiet 1 hr, Jrg yard, clean. r.1011Jy lurn. $125/mo. ~/;,4 2 BR. 1 BA. cpts, drps, bllM, 1nat gar, 1 chiltt ok. No pets. 11~5 mo. MS-!n37 HSE, I Br. NPw cpl!, drps, gar, Prlv. Cpl or l!nA;ls.. No pei., $145. 548-1405, &'6-6762. l BR, used br:lck irplc. w/w, bltna, be,am cell, patio. $lt0. l Adlt. Yeari,. 642-8520 ENJOY pt1v&Cy '! Deluxe 1 Br, blln&, retrlg, cpVdrp. gar, halt'. 963-4180 2 iR b'!plex unit, Bun RIO, disJ>Dllll, $140 mo. 2272 PomONI. £36-5640, ~'\2-4177 Newport &each j i--· .. ~~~1 .... Parklike bee.eh l!vlng for adults Casa del Sol g/10 of a mlle from Iha beech It "R1cr111at1on City" with 2 1wlmmltlg poofe, pulllnliJ 111reen, gym. voll•yb•11 court, e1un1, bllll 1rd room. club· hou1e. One or two bf:droomt, fur- nished end unfurnl1htd, privet• patio, f1r11pl•C• In 1wo b111d room, •ltvator1, dl1hwa1her1, carpets •nd drtp•. no le•••· 111dulta only, ell ulillll•I e11.ctpt Hght• p1ld, pete 111cc11pted. From $145. 211111 &rocikhut1t St. Huntlntlorl llt•Ch, (714} 182..W Atli fot' Comniender Aettlfl1 -~o .. ,.:-.. .. Beach Blvd, H.B. Parldnr: Call 61l-3101 A.gt Air ~nd: He a t I n I : BOSTON female AKC, Chi~ Cafl)!t1n1: Janllorial erv. huahua femaJ.e1 AKC f lnquirl'l Suite 8 or call bunk bed& cheats can1p1: ~572·1 . ' • l~~=..,---c=:,---,,-,;liCar <!IC., ot T. 842-2825, .,/ FOR Lease 21Jx5.1, av1ll Mike F'Unk, Ma y t, ltl E. 17th St., C.M.1;2,,-1-:A°""=i ---,h~E~T-$230 64>2450 cus om IUC I ONI . sn;,r.1 yaJ for ll'IC unita owe SHOWROOM, mf2. II. olflct lat. 32 u Tu.tin, au rented, l!ip&Ce. Parking. Close-In~-lor unli. dn to 16 or up :o guns. $3.»39S Mo. 494-4653 60. Prncpls. A1t 6/;,.'1141, STORE bid~ 3303 Np! Blvd. Trade 1935 Ford pick-up ~~l or (ll 286-Tt44 :~~· real d&ulc, for ski fndustrlel Renf•I 4.10 c.u 540-2991 * COSTA MESA * Hav~ $14,500 pquily. 51'. S9J k $167 P11r mo., lmmed FHA IOlll.n in beaut Coil<?ge occupanC'y, 1 lO-~ power. Pk horn@. Trad& tor 13t TD R. NaHrtlJI, Aa:t. 642-1485 Ol' prop, COWt!\ J{elrhts area, 546-0902 tvtll. * * 28' Chris TS, 1 owner, 'SS. Connie Hu!!, 210 hrs, Clean x!ras . Take late m~i Cad, Lincoln, Riviera or Toronado as trade. 838-3791 Have 4 BR, 2 ba. 3"' blockl from CdM beach, J~y and/ or Aui:, lurn ren!al. \VANT late model car or ? * 673-4144 • Have golf course fairw~ lols. Golden Hilla C.C., Te- hachapi. Trd eq for bch house, older aPls, diamond, or stock. 842-95m Sy,·ap equity 10 or 20 acrt:1 beau,t. seclUded Rancho CaL. Hornia. for 1tock, older apt1, beach house rlc. 642-9505. Will trade '67 Mustang air, pb, ps, auto, or '65 Chev + 16\.ii' travel trlr au in xlnt condition, for truck &: camper. Call 548-3797. 1963 Dodge Custom Sport~­ man 108 va" camper, l'lfJUipptd. Will trade fC'lr """'· 968-7644 llavt am lot, Calif City, va.Juc S3SOO. Trade far Po Cal house to $30,COO. The Doyle Company Eves: 838-6341 Shtu·p trtl)Jex, 2 BR. ea, Costa Mesa. Exch.a.nge for fixel'UPPtr unlta, 1 a m e fl~a. FORTIN CO. REAL TORS &12-5000 Lah! model Cbryslt>r JOO convt-440 cu in fmPf!NI ens, air, ps/pb, 22.500 act mi, Wlll !rode tor older ca.r or ? 64 l.39:S What do 10U b&\ .. 10 tradt1' LlJit It hf.:r. -In Ortna- County'1 W'ttU read tnul. ""' ............. * * * ·,, 2 Br. crpts, drp1. 2 houses to Oeat'h. tmtmo. yrly ~ll\!I!' 642-3141 • 2 Br. Near K-M•r1. ~· Adult11 over $120/mo ~-24(17 I SEACLlIT Manor Apia. 2 Br, cptii. drpB, hllnJ, poo!, prlv ~1101 1tudin lype, 1~ Ba. 1nlan1 ok. MB· 2682 ~ Placcnlia, AJk about our dl!ICOUMI. BUSl'EST marll:etplae111 In klwn. The DAILY PJLOT * Cla11lned 1ect1o11y . ~---~-------------· I ~ .. 32 DAIL V PllOT 1~1 _ ....... _ .. _,::;;.~I -~-I ~ [.;... ... ._.I~ 1---1~ I ....... l[I] I 1"1~·-· JllJI ,__ _ ..... _,. ... _l[I] I -·-l[I] ;;;[ ;;m"""';;;·-·~Jll1;;1J1 Schools lo Contractor Income Tu T'" Sen1 lce Help Wo-. M lo F 711 Help W•ntod, M lo F 711 H1lp W•nlod, M lo F 711 'lelp W•nlod, M lo F 710 Help W•ntod, M lo F 710 Jnatruc:tlW11 515; 1--------- MY W&.."'· quality home s ,-K_,OU.,...,S"'E'"N'"°T"•~ vs"'E"R=V. ,T_R_EE_S_U--·-----Tri-.- Ofscover • G,..et N•w C1rMr With Th• AIRLINES rt>pair. Walls. ttilioi. tltxlNi """ • .,.,, , """lt'5, •uP, m. rll'. No JOb 100 sinall. Reu. Your llome. 5tG-.-.. cul, removed, Milled. Ins. &i2-4030 Bi&: John 547-0036, 24 hr a~. strv. Janitorial 1 -~A~d~d~lt~~~ ... --,.~R~e-m-od-,.,el~ini:-· I Welding Ger.1•ick & ~nis, Lie. SPARl\U: Janitorial. Win-\VELDINC, portable a.re gas, 1 1 6'1J..-O).;J * ~19-1170 duw~. floors, crpt! &: const; 1 bni.Zlng, bun'!~. Jtn, rate~ Gardening cleanup. A oomplele conm1 I or nat 00 job too small Gxec A nia.turaI for yeung people wlD WJDI excitement .plus! Tkht A&tntt Air Freight? StaUon are n I? Rfferva- tlons! Ramp or travel qent! We'll train )'Oil for the-le and mott, di!.)' or nite. We fnclude pla.wnent a1- S('J'V. For Free esl call, I 536-6782 I AL'S CAROF.NINC 962-0672 tor gardening It small .=::.:;c.:. ______ Upholstery S.C'y L-sial (21 landscaping services, call Ma.onry LIC Upbolsterer _ Quality fl) Dome1Uc &. Criminal 540-5198. Serving Newport Masonry of all TyfMS \\'Ork. Anthony'• Up h, l2) Corp, Law. Cd;>ii, O>sla Mesa, Dover I e 64 2-.'"1698 e Servi~ 642-5827 Ne Shores \VestclitL ' · S.C:'y/Purch11in9 * LANDSCAPING * Moving SH 80, l)'pe 60. .U.~. . Nrw lawns, lf't'e rtmo\·ai, 2 Amb1ll0ti1 oollege arudents I ][iJ I .,... E~,,..t S I ~1, 21 yrs_ Approve<! for / .spnnkl('rs, drains, 1i1rbors,. have truck. do hauling mov-.c:'y lnsuranc• Vell!rana;, Eli&ible institution pallos, lencrs. Lir'd t'Onll'. lng. Exp. depend. Call lor LUe &per. SH 80, tYPll"\i 60. under the federally insured I~ )'rs Joe. t'Xp. 536-1Zl3. tree est. 833-f.673 atudent b.n program, I e LANDSCAPING e Painting & • · II S h I p .1. ROTOTILLING, 2~;,c SQ FT, Paperhanging "''r M c 00 s ac1 IC SPRll\'"KLERS SEED & --'---'-.:_ __ _ 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana I ~o LAWNS, i.rc 0 CONTR * E>..'TERIOR-INTERIOR • S4US96 lll:'-2654 \Von't be underbid~ Custom Ii~~~~~~~~~~ I w'Ork, fine~t paint!. Ftet-PROfESSIONAL. Pruning, est/color consulting. Ref~. Job Went•d, F•m•l• 702 Stc'y /E1crow EIC!'OW belpfW. No SH, Good typiil. Posting Clerk "'ill train. 10 Key adder. Some bkkpna: expe.r, BUSBOYS NEEDED. Gil Frld1y to $650 P•rkhurst Hotel, 9921 La &c'y I lite bkkpna. succe•s- Alameda, Fountain Valley 1U1 Irvine co. • • CASHIER. National Grant A1soclet•• Lumber. Huntington Beach. Asf•ncy call 96l-5561, 1M PM JllOO'J lMne Blvd, T\ntin COOK/Institutional, w l th 832-1000 back.around in homea for the GASOLINE SERV ST A • ·I aet<I, able to work wkends. CdM area. Pump island Knowledge ot 1pecial dielll. sa.le1man, over 20 w/2 yn Salary open. 9925 La exper. lie mechanical. ·rop Alameda, F.V. pay, gd. hrs. 5 da,y Wll. COUNSELOR Appt.' 613-7233. JANITJlESS • Part time 4,5 hrs per night. Surr.Thurs. Ex,p not nee. 545-8271 J. W. ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT BEACH e Has immediate opening lor a -WIG STYLIST - a FULL TJj!\i£ e XLNT. BENEFITS Xln't position for qualified GENERAL OFC. Modern olc person, Fun & &citing tor in professional c e n t e r . one who enjoys working v.:/ Brend new crowing Apply in person lG-5 pm people. Xln't earning poten-financial organization. Good Personnel Depl. tlal. Call Louise 5,j1~. typing req'd. StOO. #2 Fashion lat, N.8. ' Call H&n Hayes, ~ Equal Opportunity Employer MECliANIC. ll.lfnC)' exp. w/claM: A lie. Tom Reill)' Certilled Senolce, Riclilirid Station, wr. ,19th l Newport, Costa Mesa. MEDICAL ASST. Work w/cloctors in b e autiful land6caped setting. A.ui1t w/exams. Somr exp. wW get you this job "''/great hrs. $2.~ hr. Call Heleri Hayes, ~ COASTAL AGENCY 7700 Harbor Bl at Adams e P.fTS'T / SC operator, ex.- I per1enced . Call 6t6-016t, uk for JoAnne. e e NEEDED * DISHWASH~Apply in COASTAL AGENCY person. Must be clean 1:: e KEYPUNCH OPERATOR Two Office G irls 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams ___ .. _ .. to " Jn 1s•1 -I neat, over n. NO phone •~ wo~.. " ........ p · Must be 25 and able to drive calls. SUrt le Sirloin 59:.1 W. G•ntiral Office Req: HS grad, either 2 yrs _APPLY - Coast Hwy, N.B. Good typina:, e'4~1lent co. working experience in like 186 E. 16th St., C.Y. DENTAL RECEPI'. Lovely Call Loraine, Westclltt Per-position or training in ~hool I •iiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil aonnel Age"'"" ~l We t + 1 yr vrork experience. lilllTOOndings, greet pa lien ts, ---3 ' 5 • Please call lor interview ans\.\'er Phone, lite typing. clltr Dr., N.B. &t5-Z770 appt. 4 9 2 -11;, 3, t.ln:. [ I~ free work. sprinklers, aera-lie. bonded. Full financing SeMces and Rtp.1ir1 11ori. pests. disease, \\·eed avail, 842-1524 -. control. Clean up jobs. No \\'asung CPN, Experienced, needs position in hledieal Office in June. Prefer 1.f.D., D.0., or Pediatrician. \Viii consider all interv1ey,·s. Contact 212 Oceansidf' Blvd No, 7, Ocean3ide, Cat. or ea.11 alter 7 PM a t 72'1-4093 Collect lor intervie'A". S400. GIRLS 17 &: over, pa.rt time Gon.z.alez M.dic1I lnsuranc• Call Helen Hayes, 540-6055 or full lime, 1 tu dents P/time. Mon, Tues. Thurs, COASTAL AGENCY preferred. Set own hours. LOAN P ACKAGE TRAlN- newport . personnel _,agency Babysitting T,..rn1s. Grori;:e, 6-1fN893 * WALLPAPER * EXPER. Japanese garde~r Wheo )'OU call "Mac" I Reliable main le nan c e, 54S..J444 646-lID OlITSTANDING Scotch lady avail. for live--in hskpr t:hildcare. Loves children. Xln't ref's. r.lin. UJQ a mo. Health & Family Care Agency, 1805 No. Broadway, S.A. 5'17-«.fll Medicare l private Ins. 2790 Harbor Bi at Adams program til June. Summer EE FHA -VA, Ability to Also, &en'I ofe. SeJf 1tarter. I --'-~-='=""'--.:;:=. travel u: assistant counselor work w I figures, hand I e * DRIVERS * w/girls 12 to 15 years old. public. capable ol assuming 833 Dover Drive Newport Beach COSTAMESA Rras. monthly rales , PRE~SCHOOL 1192-3219 COLLEGE 11tucl en1. no 18U·. & t.lottrcrv_ia, \l day + -,-L-.5--Land--oc-.,-p-io-g-. -T-,-,-e drinking. ls! Class ex1. luU day sessions. Planned renio\•al. Yard remodeling. pa inting, Low rates. Sieve, A 54S--45-19 program, hot luncbes. ges Trash hauling, lor cleanup, 2-6, hn 6:30 A:\J.6:00 Phi. Repair sprinklel'll. 673-1166 $18 wk.COMPARE! 642-4050 I ~==-'---~-'c--or 8J.S..S237. EXPER. Japanese Gardener. CompletP lawn serv & CHILO care :n my homf' landscaping. S 4 6-0 7 2 4, ln!ant to 4 yrs old. Jlave 548-79:>.S l yr old daugh!er. fenct'd 1-1.-,-11-.N-,-m-,-.-.-.,.,-,-,-.,-ri<-. yard, large hon1l'. Call L <>hl hallli E · d 836--4370 hn 7·30 G·OO 1" . ng x P ' El Toro'. h1issio~ Vi;~ are~ Heasonablr. Call ~3-9735. Garderier. Yard cl('an--up. LIC'D CHILO CARE Planting. SprinkJ('rs. Harbor &. Baker, C:\t. ~ )rS. Exp'd. &16--5469 exp. Reis, s.ta-29-0 BABYSITilNG Eve~ & wknds. ttly homf'. 67>.1~ days, Eveli. 543-0417. Builders JOHNSON'S GARDENING Yard care, clean-ups, pl1i1n- t1ng. sprinklers. 962-2035. CLEAN Up Specialist, haul- ing, odd jobs, new fence ,t, rE'pair. Reas. 54~955 BRICK, block, con c rctt,1 0=~~-----­ carpentry, house le:ve!Jng, £.\'.PER Japanese-American all types remodeling. No gardener, c:omple.te garden- job too 5maJJ. Lie. Contr. ing service & cleanup. 962-6945 893---0150 HOUSEWORK $3 HR • 5-18-24.34 • PATIOS, \Valks, drives. in- stall ne11' la'A'fl!, 11aw, break, r('move. 548-8668 for e~t. Income Tax ee CONCRETE. 1-'Joors, '""'· , '1""'· •1d~a1 .... Smiley Tax Service ~lab~. 1.ea~. Don 642-8514 \VENEOA Rool!ng, Au1boriz. Contractor • 13th YEAR LOCALL.\' e eel Applicator lor Sno-Hidc. Qualified _Reasonable Roof Systems. 64j..l69l \\'. A. SMILEY T. Guy Roofing, Deal Dittl't. Certihed Publil' Account'! I do my own \\'Ork. 645--2780, ...... ----......... ~itiO°i" Liz Reind.rs P•rsonnel Agency 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. Call For Appointment 546-7ll8 Sec'y Engint11ring Leading Co. Orailie Co. Type 60, SH 80. lite F /C BookkHpor Head dept Laruna Niruel 410 W, Cu1t Hwy. Newport Beach By Appl. 646-393! BOO KK EEPER. accts payabff! le inv. control. Fl tine. $3 hr to it. Gd future "'/rapidly rrowina: co. Ph: Ken, 642-9262, 4 Day Tire StoreR Hq. 1600 W. Cst Hw)I N.B. ACCTNG CLERK. Jo-anlalllic BOOKKEEPER • f' u I I charge, mu11t be f u 11 y JOb !or tilt' person \vho qualified l e:.:p'd In wants a permanen! spot without layoUs. Stan S47:i manuafcturing bookkeeping thru general ledger and P !: Call Jean Brown, 540--6055 L. Outstanding opportunity COASTAL AGt;NCY 2790 Harbor Bl at Adami 10 grow with company. Good salary & !rlnre. Call ADVERTISING A r t i s t I 968-9'1i9 for appt. Production Manager for hot I oBOOo=-~KKE===E=P=E°'R~. ~J.n:-~k-i~ol Newport Beach age n c )'. ofc near airport. Plush Must have good board professional surroundings. ~ls. Know printing, pro-Some machine know'I " du ction and scheduling. Xlnl Start J47:;, opportuni1y. DUREL AD-Call Sally llart, 54()...60.l5 VERTISING, 217:? Dupont COASfAL AGENCY Dr., N.B. 83J..1670. 7790 Harbor Bl at Adams ADVERTISING-survey pt . • Bookkttper lime. full lime \\'k. av all S3.SO 10 }1 .50 hr. No selling involved, must be resident of 1'-V or SA 828-9922 ASSEi\IBLY TRA I NEE. Clean working c on d 5. RA ises each month. Good hrs & benefiU!, St.art Sl. 70 h• Cal! Jean Brown, ~jj COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams ASSISTANT MAINTENANCE ENGINEER Exl)t'ricnce ttQULted • air t..'<>nditioning, relrigera- tton, tle cl r ic al and plumbing. Apply 1ri person April 12th. after lO a.m. No phone talls. Salary opi?n, THE AIRPORTER -INN HOTEL· 18700 ~lacArthur Blvd, Ne\\"PQrl Beach, Cali!. ASSISTANT manage r tra i nee-\Vill tra i n aggressivt young man tor fast food business. Call Mr. Dork.in bt"11 2 & ~ pm. 645-1500 ACCOUNTS PAYABLE Excellent opportunity for ac- counts pa.yable • bookkeeper with an expanding reaJ ell· late development company, 10 key adding machine re- quired, typing prefe.rred. Good salary and excellent fringe bcnelits. Fory,•ard resume and salary history !o: I Will Van Oldenmark I Wm. Lyon Develop Ca., Inc, 4163 Birch Newpon Be1ch, Calif. Equal opportunity e.mployer BookkHpor P/Tlme Irvine Area Insurance Agen· cy. Hrs flexible. Must be exper. Call P.tiss Laut11., 5.j7-6l2'l, Abigail Abb:it Per. .sonnel Aaency, 230 \V. War· ner, SuiU! Zll, S.A. CHECK HERE WITH THE JOB KINGS!! MALE l\ATERPRF' l'lnyl deck M;t!1nll'~. all type~. l.ef' r.oof1ng Co, CM. &-1.2--7222 [N'f' .-~1 &1.2-2221 anytime 646-9666 ~,.,_-~'-"~''· ~----- Central Business &-rvlces Sewing/Alteration• ATI'RACTIVE , girl, model R00:\1 .\d!1111ons1Remodel. eTHE TAX ADVISORS --------- T ruclc Driver Exper. From Stoo "''k 1n,1;. Fr~ planning serv. EUROPEAN Dressmak1ng bikinis &: lingerie, 3 or~ hr "'""""Y ,. Ii "·•·. 633.~,0 Perm. o[fice-Reas Rates 1:"'-_, C 1 ,. 11 d a week (time rlexiblel. .. ~ .. , a.. .. "'"' LJ1pt1·uy us orr I e ' I sin·, .. , pn'vat•. -'''· ter· W•r•housem•n . d•y~io•o "\19 ('\'''· 328 No. Ne'A'J)Ort Blvd. Ao-· n. 67' 1849 u • ·-~ ()ppo!l:ite Hoag HospiW .... r. , ... as. ,,.. r ific pay. ·Some exper, From Sl.lJ hr. P.00~1 Add111on~. I.. T. for Appt. Call 645-0400 Alt.rations -642-5'45 \\'nte Classified Ad No. !9 Cons1ruct1on S1nll'lr sffl1)' or Neat, accurate, 2.1'.l yrars oP. 1 Daily Pilot P. O. Box 1560 2. E~tim., plan~ ! l<t)llut. TAX SERVICE $4 UP .-.... 't ca1·1 ~-Tile 1 .._usta " esa. 1 . "...,"" 8'1i-Ij\} I App't availablto days, I DAILY PILOT DJ,, IE _ A ev~s. wknds. 548.ffi88. --------AUTO LEASE SALES CERAl\.11C tile l'lf'I\' & An opentng in our sales staff. -_LINES cost YQ\I Jilli! pen-I 1842 Newport, C.'1 remodel. Free f'~t. Small Xlnt opportunity for good l~"="='='=d='='=· ======':.':':"'::'':"::'":':":' =642-$11J=====jo:b:•:w:'J:t.'O=m~o;;. ~-='~'~"'~·== produccr. Experienc~ pre~ frrred. but not tiecesu.ry. 5.11-0607, ask for Harlan. S©\\~lA-aitrs· Th e Pun le wi lh the Bui/f./n Chuckle 0 ~tm'IOflQe lt'1tr5 (l! !he /' foor 3.Ctombl.ct wo•dl l-•- r. ;:; ;~.1~~'i I I MIPER l '!' _ I' I I I _ ~ l . I M 0 T E C I ; F;;m o clos$1fi!d od co!· r I I I~ .. urnn: "Fonner, oge :ls, wishes · • - . 10 meet wornori oround 30 I who owns o t ractor. Pleosa T T M C I S lsend p icture of _" '* .. 1;t,. I I r I I' 0 c,., .. ,. ·'"' "'""'!· •"'••d _ _ • _ • . • b't' l1!ling 111 th• ''"urn; word YOV dev11\op ftO!T! •ltp No. 3 belol'I, :o ~~~~~\~E;Emis 11 I' I' I' j' I' I' I !?~~lfllERS lO l I 111111 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 ~ .. AUTO parts coun- terman. E.xperienced only. Paid hOspitllliU1.tio11 and vocation. Apply in person, Un1\·crsl1y Oldi;mobile, 2S50 Harbor Blvd., Cosia t.fesa B ARBER STYLIST Male Or Female Airporter Inn BerlMr Salon u s.2no BEAUTIC IAN w/clientele, t •u1t 'Or part-time. We ~•n ~rrttnge a short \.\'Ork \1ttk in 11 p~ssive community. :H4-1432 or E\•es: ~nlS BEELINE tuhiom l'ltt'<U 131 1tyl11ts in thil! arr1. No ('()Uectlng or deliv•ring. Car ne<'. ~-:;4.tj/431-6975 BEAUTtOAN for Mondays, TurMlllY~ & \Vrdnfsd~·s. Cali S.l--08.W e BLUE DOLPHIN e , \VaJtrtsRS ...... Fry Cook F.xp'd. 3.1.l..l Vin Lido, N.B. VACANCIES Coft money? Rent your hO\.tSe, apt., •tor" blda .. etc. lhru a t>alb' Pilot Cl1s1\Utd ad. I 'I' R•frig. Rep1lrm1n from S2 an hr Forklift M•chanlc E:xpcr. $4.!JO hr Warehou•e Supv. from $4'lO a mo. FEMALE D•ta Dept. G lrl Accur, typl11 iood st fii\ll'es SoijQ 11 mo. R•cept. Cl•rk Typitt From $37;; a mo Gen'I Offlc• All around rlrl From u;,o a mo S•c'y 8oalckHper Exper. Sharp 1lrl. IOOO """ BooklcHp.r t:.x~r. "'linA bckarnd. s:ioo • mo R•c•ptlonlst Peraonnel Clerk Good typlfl. $2.6() hr. APEX Employment A91ncy 117l H•rllor Blvd. Co••• Mt•• S41-l42' E·--6 w•·-or 8 w'·-"'v responsible posiLlon. Send No Experience pe ... ;;,; pat: + si).$400 resume to J. Stellman, Necessary! salary. For interview appt, Boise Cascade Residential write P .O. Box 211, Corona Communities Group, 2082 Must have clean C&lif. driv. del f.lar. Michelson Dr, New p ort ing record. Not under 2i. 1..:=..:=::.,~~~~--Bea·" 9~= YELLOW CAB CO. GOOD JOB u• ·~ 186 E. 16th St .. C.M. Ideal tor Retiree. W ~~GALN T~N~.E iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:Clean-up &. It maintenance o .... at e .. l"''' ""'nter, Electronl.CS of coin operated car wash start $425 mo. ~res sec- opening soon near S Points retarial exper. Type 60 ~ · r . t If B Call WP1'f, Llte S.H. Attorney at ,,,...,pptng .....,n er, .. Assemblers .,..;,,, ~~01'"' ' ""''"m" * GIRLS wanted, 11 t e ~~~-'--~~,...,,~~"'°" Exp1ri•nced in pr• cislon •ssembly of d•licata in. strument•, small component work soldering; c o I o r codes end blu.print reading. NASA 101- daring certificate dasirabl•. Plt•t• 1•nd lett•r outlining job background end skills to : assembly. Jntervie 'A'S April LVN SUpervisOr, 3--11:30 shill lllh, 3Pl\1 to SPM, in person. relief. PARK LIDO Con- BAh."ER HYDRO IMC. ln52 valescent Center. Ph : Armstrong Ave, Santa Ana ."::::2-"'4..::~''--~~-~- (Nr. 1\.1cArthur & McGaul e MACHINE OPERATOR - **GIRL FRIDAY Drill press. mill, lathe, Opportunity lot otli~ train-punch press. Must be exp'd. ee w/pleasant ph manner, Apply S.J8 Production Pl, neat appcaranee good ace: N.B. typist. 1-2 yrs exPer. requir-l---.-.~.-,~,~A~ID~*-.-.-- ed pref mfg, Mrs. llawley LAGUNA REEF' r.tOTEL 546-3344, 30806 S. Coasl H\~'Y· GIRL Friday, interesting gen Lagut1a Beath 499·200:> ofc duties, It typing, 7am-1 pm. 642--8001 j!\fAIDS Experienced. in person-Vagabond Hotel, 3151 Harbor C.'.\f. Apply Motor Blvd., *MAID LAUNDRESS* :HS-558;; &12-3870 Fi•ld Sele• Engr $12K to-tin'. Computer, comm/auto Branch Mgrs $12K Mgm1 /supervisory exper Loan Serv. Clrk to $800 Boolckeep.r to $550 Sales Sec'y $500 Escrow Clerk to $500 T •ch E l•c $700 up Escrow Ofer to $650 Warehouseman $433 NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING DEPT. TRAINEE Permanent part-time -posl· tion, could possibly '\Wk In- to full lime. Musi type. Hours from lOAM-2 PM., Monday through Friday. Call the DAILY PILOI' tor an appointment. 642-4321 and ask for Mrs. Gr~nn1an. OPPORTUNITY For 4 licensed Real Estate sales people. Private desk & phone. Business is rea.1 good! Cal! for interview, W. E. Lachenmy1r 1860 Newpon Blvd., C.M. Call &IS-3928 Eves: 673-4577 Classilied ad • 1~2 Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, C.osta Mesa, Caill. 92.626 Equal opportunity employer HOUSEKEEPER Llve -in. preferable age around 50, aaJazy open. r.rust be good plain cook. Ablf! to drive car for 1bop. ping. \'1rilf! Clas.slfied Ad •112, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa J\'lesa, Ca. 92626 r.IAN to assist manager in [~ Engi""r to 16K HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. local appliance Wes. r.1ust be neat appearing. Prefer over 25. Call Mr. Sobrito al ........ Sia:ht le plot planning, y,•ork-George Allen Byland Agen- ing \\ith architects able to cy 1(16...8 E. 16th, S.A. relocate Call Mrt Schmidt 1..:54~7~-0=39;=·::________ ,\1ANAGER Trainee, male WestcJui Peno~l Agency: HOUSEKEEPER, 1 )T old or femak, Kentucky Fried 2043 WestcliU Dr., N.B. son, comfortable beach Oiicken, 2929 E. Coast PRODUCTION lmmeche.te openings lot the following: 645-2770 home, Ref's req'd. 892-1006 I ~H~wy_,_,,~Cd='~'-· ------I ENGINEERING AIDE -II-MACHINISTS $771·$911; H.S. req'd. 2 yrs l\fgmt. Sa1es c:oll. des: 2 yrs sub-Profess. NO EXPERIENCE OR eng·r. exp., except son1e • _ ~ DEGREE -Must know De-Vlieg jig mill. t.1lnimum f.lve years in manufacturing precis· ion p&rts. Background in prototype, tooling, use of rotary table; make Q\l'n x k y calculations and laYou ts. coll. work may 1ubstitu1e. NECESSARY File app by Wed. Apr. 28th.. • $25,000 TO $75,000 S p.m. Personnel Dept. Rm 511. e CITY OF COSTA 1fESA e 77 Fair Dr. (714) 834-5350 llMNE PERSONNEL eeeeeeeeet ~CES•AGENCY Engineering SPECIFICATIONS ANALYST S•c'y Con1tr .. to $600 Asst Bkkpr .• to $475 G1n'I Ofc . . . . • . . . ~33 Recopt ........... $37S One of the largest companies Sale1 Sec'y .•.•.• $500 in the relay field is looking Mall Cl•rk •.•.... $l05 tor a Specification.~ Analyst Typist ...........• $375 \\'ith an Associate Degree or Warehouseman . , . $433 equivalent in enginttrlng and a minimum of four 488 E. 17th fat Irvine > C.l\1, years; appl!cations expe.rl-642· 1470 enc:c with relays. Familiar·· I~""""""""""""""""""' ity with military specifica- lions is necessary. This ~ an excellent oppor- 1unlly to join a company thal hill and is sun expand- ing. Relocation expenses pa.id. Salary and benefit pack.age are excellent. Write, catassified ad # 140. Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 9'26al. • ••••••••• ESCROW OFFICER J. W. ROBINSON'S e NE'W'PORT BEAOI e Hall lmmediste openina: for a -OUTSIDE - CUSTOM DRAPERY SALESMAN e FUU. TIME e Xi.NT. BENEFITS Apply in person lG-:i p.m. Peri;onnfl Dept. • 2 Fashion Isl., N.B. I Equal opportunity employer ' Sell lhti old 1tuff Buy the NO\V YOU J\lA Y EARN \VHAT OTHERS Wini EX- PERIENCE A N 0 DE- GREES EARN. fF YOU'RE READY TO \\'ORK HARO, BE AGGRESSNE A N D LEARN, \VE'RE PRE- PARED RIGHT NO\V TO EMPLOY YOU, TRA I N YOU ANO GfVE YOU 11fE RESPONSIBILITY TO HELP US j!\1EE'T OUR PRO.. JECfED E.XPANSION. Dave Lookingland invest- ment analy11. tin11 ricial ty- coon, R.E. Broker, is just one ol th~ many experienc· ed professionals y0u'll lK> learning from . Start l mmerha1ely Co. Car Plan Plush Offices Full Fringe Benclils e CALL NO\V e 547-<1771 ASK FOR MR. WHITE PRECISION ASSEMBLERS Perform assembly \\"01·k on close tolerance assem- bly .structures 1n the air· cra11 • missile lield. SHEET METAL MECHANICS Jo:xperlcnce in layout, lortino;:. labril'atlon and as..~mbly of sheet metal parts.. \Vlll use shears, po'A'C'r brakes, i;trippit fabricators, squeezers and other related ma· chines. Pl•as• send l•ttar MASSEUSE outl ining job Attrac:tlve girl, xlnt SSS. I back g round and i'OOd ho~l-~~ train, I skills to: 10 am 10 12 midn1!P . Classified ad • 141 Daily Piiot. P.O. Box lSfJO ''WHIT'E ELEPHM'TS'' Cost11 Me5a, Calli, 92626' overrunning your house? "Cash" .. sell them thru I Equ11.1 opportunity tmployer Daily Pilot Classified ne1v stuff We'll help yoo sell! 642-5678 Pleaee call Shirle.y Willard atl.;:~;;;::;;;;======:.!.:==;:;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;::;.!::;:;;;;;;:;;:::;::::;::=::;;:;::;:;1 TARBELL 142·5571 N:w ~~; :'~~".!, fiiffiir STAR GA'ZEX~~ Good opportunity for alert ~~~'-'.'..,;..._;_..., CJ..AY.l. POLUN-•• ----..--....:.~ secretary, to v.'Ork in last .If': ,t:1,'! M y_.Ooifr.AdMlyc.iJ. H scrrLll&.rl-x paced N.B, advertisina: ~,.,;., "-r A~ortli1111tolho $lorr. f .·1'~ ar;ency. All skills incJudinc ~11-liiM To deYelop messoge forT1JoeSday, ocr, :i ahorthand rt!qllired. 464-13 · reod word$caresp::f ding torunlic~ 41-4S.j!-~ * DUREL ADVERTISING ~TAIJlUS 1~l.ad~~$ign. 61 High- 61~7!,IO 2112 Dupont Dr./Sulte 4 N,..•,;»,. 23-h ,,"-wh 611...:r._. OCT.ZJ~ Ne\\lJOrt Beach. Calif. .. Up 3,,..!,,. ~~ NO;.,,~ FACTORY HELP W£"'""""" I J;1-77-1Ml .5..... 35 Ylpof' 6S~ 12-lS.l'~·-"-' ~~•o:-u ! 4Mo.-36~ ""-'.M-'11Ut1:-18l:,_.. Apply 32972 ~Perfecto. MMnn 7S..-37f• 671'ffiwrs San Juan Capistrano ~HAr, Ir fAI...,. 31f".er MColi..t MGITT.U:M .......... J981.M 69lki!n #Of'.Jl ~n FASHION SHO\V Dirttton • ~JUfll 10AI .COJ~ 1ov,,.. ,· r•rn i:; to $8 hour. No ~·1s.n -" l lT-.f ""'~ 71To ~21 .-,_ ¢: 12 ..__ .. 1 ,..,,... n ""'ffd.d _..., inve&lment. Bff:linr Fash· 13Mab ,.3 ~ 7)Trrp n.71-IJ..IP1"" i0n1. Car nee. 6.13-9574 or CAHCD. '" n. ""Hmttt. '' 5ir::mo •haw C.t.PIK:O«H 539-S43j, ~Ju"!'11 1sc-.r -'Sfrilrifl ~,.....,, oa:-~ JUtt n 16Dm"t "" 76 11.ec:ft _.u FRONT OFC. Loca.l doctor •• 110.. Ale.Md 71 ~ JAN:" . . . 1·~~ 1','"!.:!...:..... ....... ~ ',.'!t 2-.!-~~· 1n beauutul mod o I c "6-4G-7S --....._ ... .. ........... ~ -. overlooking &y. So me 20¥-.. 50~ IO.....,. uo .. ~ !ii LIMlr II MuddJ. AQW.trus medical in~. exp. lanM thli .wan 2:1 sic;.-. 81 0 ___ ........... ~ job. Start $>100. • D 23 0..'t "e. tJ ;;:.;;-~"11 • C•ll S.lly llt11, S40-ml5 77---2A'llw ~Y<N'I MG..ot.. k f." :f.;D.;I 2$....... " T,, IS a. .f. .S.10-24 COASTAL AGENCY o.JM.2 24 ,..., ~,_ 116Ft-..W.lpt 1-'1-7' 2790 Ha.rbot 81 at' Ad•mt YllftO 71,,._. S1 h 1711~ flSCIS AUS.P 21 T• .sa.-....~ 8'C--. al GARDENER. See H •ad • 2'.,....,. !W~·-• "~ ff';'' r.~,.,., •Jr Ell'· I SIP'/', D al~ l!J..YrMffl to~ w.o.• ,. N:~e~ inn'. Appl; ~n ---..,---=:::::"'::·=~·®=:"""':::::{!():· :Ad::-;=:():=:ll<:::f.:~'.::~";~ .. -;;...,~ .. ~1~7·~19~~--I ptnM. No phorW' calls. • . Moodol, .... I 12, 1971 DAILV PILOT :J3 I[§ l[Il)1 ~' ;;;;;"'"';;;;;=-~II~'~ I llw<I , 1 ~I ---l[EJ I ~~. I~ I -llil1:;;;' _ ........ _w.~J~~~ \ 1 A,w ...... Help Wentod, MA I' 110 Help Wentod, MA F 710 Fumltvre tlO Office Fumltvoe/ Dog1 154 S...t1, Sllpt/Dodcl 910 Mobile HomH 925 Autos W•nted 968 A uto1, lmpomd i.__' -~Jrpi• I -i. • ...,..... .l!!J . 970 Se<tttart.i.. MAPLE round collft table, Equip. 1141--------,_ ____ . ___ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiill-----,.,,,=- PART tlm•, •• .., ... ol!l(o, SECY.-0> ...... te, lepl, ... SlO. 2 motclllna..,.. tablts, OBEDJ!:NCE cl.ul IO •tart :16' .Up, 16'/mo. Private * Kings Coach * WE PAY TOP ball dtl'I, 5-d.l.Y ~k. Som~ ecuUvt exper. l..quna Hllls. SU each. 646-3t!l.1 5'x2'1" otnc. cksk. Black In t be lrvlnt/Nl"wPQrl bath. No. 2 B&lboa Coves, CASH e.xperieOCll req'd, Mu1t typo. Call 131 _,,,, ..... •u7 •--WALNlTT n1~1-table 311" • metal w/wood top du'ome Beach ana Wed, April 28 •I N.B. Call 6Th-t331 Motor Homo Agenc y Permanent. Apply in person appt. ---...,, .c.llt ... ..... 56" wm7.uie':r 6 Chain trim. $150. Mwui T: J) pm. Open to all dogs Tuea, owl-Concrete I ~='======== SlOO. Call 847_2473 ' P linos/n.....eni 126 over 5 mo old. Mft..4928 BoAt•, Speed It Ski 911 Superior * L•nd•u ~::~rlif.ri. 7391 Talbert ~~~~r~~';!~~! G1rao-S-2e 112 Facla:•Autbotlzed =?1~~r:'t~!~;~~ • 14· PacM~tlberglau or::nNd~j:O~O r'11~~~ IPR.ACTICAL Nune, hlkpr, tlge job!!, 0 ii Pt time poaf-GARAGE Sale • 1000'1 ol Dla:trtbutor f:or AU AKC! 64~1U 333 E. w / f Io I a 11 on -40 hp tor Ultd can A ll1!Ckt, Just call u1 for tree t1tlmAlt1. GROTH CHEVROLET cook, live fn. C&ll aft 7PM, tion1 avail. 523 N GraOO/ ltemt. Mu.t sell. StarUnc Ya.n:Ww. * Kimball 17lh st. CM. motor-ski or fiah-$475. Trailers, Travel 945 ~7316 Suite G., S.A. SUn. 2756 Bristol, C.M. Conn * Tbomu Siiky Terr ier Stud 9&2-J~ll Jl.B. PRESTIGE SEC'Y. SERVICE STATION SPRING Clu.rllnl:· Books KohJul:catnpbell Availford:atu.AKCChamp. 8CM1tt,Stor1 .. '69 SHA~A 13' • Fita in a Ask tor Salta Manaerr aarage. Stove, rer, 1lnk. 1B2U Beach Blvd 912 $.WO +. Fut ralaes. Work MECHANIC wanted. HOW"I mag clothes dbhe misc' FabWoua alection ol new & ion back&roofld. Proven 1,--------- w/PhDt, friendly p-oup, ul-11 lo 6. Ex Per I en ce tO-J.' 2CKl6 eoUrt A,,:• NB · uted O"U41, 1plneta,. con-stud. 6t6-73lS OPEN Boat yard, repairs Uke new, $600. 67W18& Huntlii&ton Beach Trellus, Utlllty 947 '47.11187 KI >3331 neceuary. Burt'• ARCO • IOlie1 A orpns only at t-'---'.CC..-----1 & 1torqe, ~ per tL tra. plush. Train tor ownu·s Servi~. ~ Mlgl'IOlia, Mltcell•neou• 111 COAST MUSIC DACHSHUND ~P AK c · fi73..al09. eves 962-6lll. 14' Tandem Tr1lltr iee'y, H.B. F.V. NEWPO minla. male It female, Grant Aaeoclatr1 ~cy SHARP ..:..t, ,_w •• ,_ fUll JOHN'S BIKES "--ta M•uRT A*~~ !!>'~0.13wtre or 1mooth coat. FENCED 1\orage an!a, oil With 4 wheoe!a. AU ateel weld· lbl2 lrvlne Blvd, Tia tin ,,., ....,......_ we vn ~ ,,.,.,...... ~: C.Osta Mesa. Qill ed construe Don. li4 •: Sled 832-1000 or part time po.sitlons in NEW & USED HAMMOND, Sttlnway, 2 sr. Bernards. AKC. l l ~~M~·s.-0281~~.,.~96>-~~181~3~~~ deck platina;. WW ll!lJ or e PRODUCTION sales with one of Orange 10 speed bike $40.t90 Yamaha. New I: used ?.We, 5 moa.: 1 femnle 3 trade for pickup. 31Ei6 Sicily, All thrre shifts. Xlnt tu .. ·-Expttienced girls only. Call 5 speed $-IO-$al bu;ys l.n So. cant at Schmidt &eU. $150 Dich 963-0353 I ·-~· •w~ for appt. THE LOOK All B'~-G 1 Mu.sic Co, 1907 N. Mal.n,1---'--"=='-'== . WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET SUPERVISORS • Coonty's finest boutiques. 3 spd Mens & Womena SZ..$60 plarm ol: most makes. Btlrt ™· ?if~ lo apt. must 1--•tion ll •l !(Mesa Verde) C.At. Jor eH~tive leaden to join ~2400 1aq uuan ffd Sant Ana ' MINIA. Schnauzer female I;;;;;;;;;;:: I~ the Harbor Afta'a Wiest Some Sold As-J1 a • AKC, champ, llttd. Afi ALll1UIOf'$.llt r::i_ 2828 Harbor Blvd. growing company, SERVICE ST AT ION 2340 NEWPORT BLVD. e 300 Pianol A Organs aholl &: ears c ro ppod, 1 ,,;;;;;;;;;;:;~-.;~1·_:"°'~fita~Mli ... fui"'fA·l200~-MaoGREGOR YACHT CORP. Sal.,,,,,.,,...,. tlmo, exp'd, COSTA MESA NEW-USED. Golqr out In• .....,.,, Cempers, S.1e/Rent920 TOP OOUAR 1631 Placentia, C.M. ever 18, Chevron Station, OPE PM WKDYS busineu IW!ta.ls $10 a mo I~~=;,_.----= GREAT V\V .ux;_;-1 Adams &: Magnolia, H.B. N 6-10 St lnw • Baldwtn .._ Ka .j AOORl\BLE AKC tnlnlalUR: camper -' m Antlque1/Cla11ic1 953 PROFESSIONAL phone SHEET METAL 9-S SAT, & SUN. ~ck~~--Y•-•:,"A elw Schnauzer puppleM male~, on reblt eng. New treads,1---'-------·1 1Dr aollcitcr • Dana. Point, San TRAINEES -Will take Trade-Ins-nii.o;s f'iAN'Q .... co c. 1 female, 7 wka old. :_.w.,.., carpelO ..-'4· ""1/J ..,::.Pi· $!!00. ·57 T-Blrd, 35,000 ac1ua1 CLEAN USED CARS Clemente, capilltrano area. · Reuon11,ble 644-4919 ............, .,.,..,.,,,., n1ies, see to appreciate. W k ·-Immediate Oponinga ESTATE ITEMS. Sean best Costa Meaa Garden Grow . ... '131/Atl •·. ll!AA """" See Andy BfO\\'D or "' your own homo. Cyco'e• Bikes ~ -~ Good Pay cau Now! lawn swing, antique china (n t) 6'5-3250. (n " 838-2Tl0 YR old shaggy female dor. • ' THEODORE Be.t deal in area. Phone .. , Scoot r 925 Dune Bug I 956 8J,j.1465 between 9:00 a.m. 9AM-9PM, Sat 9AM1PM cabinet, Louil XV upright WANTED: •mall console or Geo d 1v I c:: h I Id r e n .1 ___ •_• ___ _:.;; 9 ti ROBINS FORD and noon. 0. C. Employment Agency plano, 1mall 1plnet Ham-spinet piano; run keyboard. Housebroken. 53~7045 4/13 .............. CLASSIC V\V drive buagy. 206() l·Iarbor Blvd. 124 Broad\\·ay Costa Mesa mond elec cord organ, cut Prefer Baldwin. consl~r u NI Q u E Puppy-Female I a. ~ --• T-top & '.l'indsh!elfl, 14" ~~~~~al ~~~uiC:ee:~ 645-ll.11 645-3112 645-3113 gllls~, depression g I a 11 • othen. Mu1t bf tn good Australian Shepherd 2 mo THtNI mag wheels. 714/889-9931 r.oss:.~~sa STENO SEC'Y Dese::t Ro a e dinnerware, ccnd.· reasonable 6t2-J589 cld. $20. 673-7615 ' H I ,":'"'~'~"'":'.:.' ~·~'~'."':.!'~·~88J.-~294J~~J-w;;:;;,\,i;~'ocii:LAR' poGubllc ltenography work. Must be -•apte ble fu>gers Bros rtatware, old Eves' wkends. ' IRIS!! Sett . 3 QNDA ''s R Rod 9 WE PAY TOP 0011.AR aranteed aalacy + unltm.. ou silver service. Sal & all next • er puppies, mo ports, ace, a 59 Ued potential, Exper. Cleslreable in con-week. HIR Harbour, 3m FARFISA El.ectronlc Organ old, AKC, 1 male{l fem. IU FOR TOP USED CARS See: Robert Nattress rutr. struct..ion &/or advertising. Easter Circle. 213/592-25-16 $4.50 or Best Otter $100 each. M8-58'93 •'FRIEDLANDER" • '70 GTO e If your car 11 extra clean, Ccsta MeM 642-1485 Hvy work load. Contact P.O. Old Fumlutre &. * 5'M21! * * e BEAGLE PUPS • u; · Ram Air .. 4 apd, see ~~~R BUICK RECEPI'IONisr. Attract. Box 855, Costa 1'1e&a. * ANTIQUES * 7 Ft Hardman rrand piano, 8 W':A~ .,!*, $35 :.~:": t~~ 6-l&-466a A~ A WKNOS 2:W E. 17th SL cutgoing woman fer loca1 TELEPHONE SOLICITOR · Round oak table, 42·'. Se\.'t'r-1pro1200feuional quality.40,1...,.. * ,,..,,......,., * NEW-USED-SE RV. T k 9,2 Costa Mesa SCS.Tni~ personnel ofc. If you art' We need 1 profe!.sional al chest cl drawers 4 Pc :....-, .... WHITE miniature Poodle rue s u congenial & able to meel person w / charm, poise Old Oak Bdrm set · u Pc HAMMOND "A" tun size. puppy. Housebroken. $30. ~ -,-5-9-FO_R_D_llL_T_O_N_'IAutos, Imported with & handle the public \\'e & personality le &et up white & gold bdrm ~L Plia New D Ban. Priv. Pty. $895 2676 ~ Ave., C.M. '/Z will traln. Lite typini. appointmenb for c 0 p y Spanbh Lamps_ Decorator w/LesJle $1150. 5#-8034 HorMI &S6 TRAIL BIKE BUMPER CORTINA 970 FIAT """""""" "THINK" llBBB ... "fRlfWHDBI" 1 SJ H MACH ILft. (Hwy. Jt) 193-'T:i66 • 117.ml NEW-USED-SERV. ~ iS-8 124 SPORT CPE. Radio! ht&ter. (WVG82ll) Sa e Prlco $149S Open Easter Sonday I SW Jones' B. J, Sportscar Center 2833 Harbor, C.M: 54Mt9l JAGUAR JAGUAR HEAD(j)UARTERS Tht only autborlnd JAGUAR dealer ln l!l.t entire Harbor' AnL O>mpl~ SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA Call Jean Brown, 54()..8)55 machine demoru;trations in ·t u.n.. • .. A 1 S rtl Good l30 CARRIERS $1D Pickup. Radio, 1tick. Good• ________ _ COASTAL AGENCY ~ r-D 1 em. ........ .,, ou ... r p ece:s. po "9 I FOR Sal Trad · 4 Id 494--5808 aft 6 P?ot c• -A E. 17 va .. nge ......... raw + com-Must SeU 64g..7335 e or •. yr. o :;---;;;.:.:;;:;:.;;..:.:;'=-I condition. (FJ298$) '68 Cortina ata wgn, 4-<ir, air .-tb S'trftt Z7!Kl Harbor Bl at Adams mission. Short houni, blg · I SPECIAL! 2 Man plastic black reldlng pony &: tack. • '61 SUZUKI 1 2 Dec $649 ccnd, tape deck. Run11 eood. !SCl-Ti65 e RECEPnONisr t 0 r money. Male er female. c::a.ll * AUCTION * tube tenb $1. Far \\'est ~ 1or Mini-bike or bll: srR.EE'T BIKE 1ncl Mlmet. Best oHer. 1137-5502 i-iii-ijijjj-!iij-~jj-iijjji-irj' beauty 1alon. Attractive. 2131149-2411 Fine Furniture Mountaineering, 44.f..F tire boat trailer. utilltyl=llc,75,o·~963-,:,;:ll88=·---~ DATSUN LS i'iii SU "'" <hru Sat. 64U857 TELEPHONE advorn""• & Appltan<e .Newport Blvd, NB 644-1JJl2. trail.,, 347"'82, """" BULTACO Matado• 25<><0 CONNEll CHEVROLET 1969 JAaUAR 2+ RESTAURANT _ Assistant from our pleaaant Ncv.'J)Ol't Auctions fl'lday, 7:00 p.m.. (Open 3-6 Dally) MUST Sell: Buckskin relding 1969. Newly tuned. 1700 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiii mana1er & try cook, full offices. Hrly wage•. W indy's Auction Barn BUY, 1ell, trade f\11'11. 1968 a: tack. Gentle riding horse original miles $635. 549--0530 cosr""A HMAERBSAOR BL~2.·,-., ,.-9 .. D·A-Ts·u-?p•1cK•ullllp time & part time for fast Moming or eve. shifts. Dodge Van Camper equt~ S200 or best 0H1r. 847-6682, e '68 TRIUMPH 500 ,,..., -. 'ti JR food 1ervlce. Quick pro. 645-3030 33, MR. MADRID. 2075% Newport, CM 646-8686 peel, Trade fim iu n I 'l,,C735-8527:0.:~=-----*PERFECT COND * Very hard to ftnd. 4 speed, factory air, '''ire wheel1, !OW mileage, New tlre:1, Yellow w/blnck leather lnterlar. (XXD259l moticns for right man or WAITRESSES & Busboys Behind Tony'• IDdg. Mat'!. 9611-7&fj CHE STNUT quarter e MUsr SELL e woman in our expanding Apply Huntington Seacll!f OLYl\fP-Pen F 35mm % Store, R•1taurant, tboroughbttd-6 yrs, 16 * 548-7890 * operations. Call 64~00 Country Club, 3000 Palm frame & Yashlka 1.4 w. Bil" 132 hands. Spirited. l500 incl =--..:-~c:_c,.. __ A H B Aft 5 coupled x-meters; Tripod; tack It saddle. 644-l526 '65 Yamaha 90cc &: '69 Honda R ESTAURANT HELP FULL TIME Sandwiches &: Deli &ales, Ov- er 21, Apply in perscn only. Dell • Shef 10039 Adams Ave. at Bnxlkhurst, lffi. • R.N.'s • Intensive care/cardiac care. F'l.IU time, 11 lo 7:30 am. e HUNTINGTON INTER- COMMUNITY HOSPITAL e Personnel Dept. 1m:z Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, or Call 847·7807. ve., . . er pm. 60,. &. (2" d W ...... ir 1 b SL 3511. Ask for Mr. Bubetz e ; 6~, cu s SHOWCASES-Cub Rqigter MUST Sell 10 yr. cld man. Call 549-3829 Ir. bag; 4-dn.wer file, tape -Gilt Items -Closeouta. See Good riding horae. Taclc * WAITRESSES * Exp'd. rec::o.rder; t gal 1o11 at F" M. 824 W. 19th, CM lncl. 735-8527 or 847-&;82 1910 Bullaco Pwung, xlnl Apply in person only, Mesa fumigant; fish poles; pa.Uol~~~~~~~~::'.I !~~~~~~~~~ cond, $700. Lanes 1103 Superior, C.M. table; misc. 545-1JJ7S Ir * Call 557--8191. * 646-3993 ANTIQUE Diamond cluster I ;,... to You JI I I _.,. j~ ~ . .,,-;;cz:-=;;"'°":,:::: • .:;,v::.,:....:,-.-... ~ \\'AITRESS -E."('perienced ring. Total Might appx. 3 --..E.ipT«lf 1C. condition. $650. Over 21. Alert. No others carats. Ins. appra!u.I $850.l;.;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ · · 962-4356 After 5 PM need apply. 492-61172 A.~king $650 or best offer. wv.1.o r to' c •ntl --• _,, Mobile Homes 93S \VANTED-woman solicitor, Phone betwH:n 10 AM & 6 n.u-..>t e .. uue Gener•I TIAI some &ales experience. PM 642-3230 Australian Ir: G. Shepherd, 11--------;.;;. 25-50 )'!'ars old, salary and B&:W 1totorola 'JV itereo &: yr, blk " wht, blue eye1, SCRAM LETS Perfect for YacatiOft · I . lovn childrtn, nffdll good • co mm 1 s s o n . W r l t e radio combo, good cond, home fncd yard &36-4t93 OaS&ilied Ad No. 150, Daily exc:pt for paint, $151J, COii (l) 52-4-MSl • t~ ANSWERS Immaculate IOx4S 2 bedroom Pilot P. 0. Box 1.560, Costa $195 new. Size 1B clothes &1~==------'-·I Fleetwood-likenew$2995. Mesa, Calif. 92626 misc. 64~2761 DESPERATELY need home includes furniture and awo· SALES LADY. Ex P, d . ~~~~~~~~~ 8' Sofa dinette tab 1 e' forh·h' "h· femSbo&le .~ ~e,.% Artery -Prime -Come-t -lnp. Curtnins & d r a Perie 11. : 1 Holl~ bed tra m ea. ~ 1 ua ~a. 54s-sI89 .,~ 4 1fl MYltlC -TRACTOR BAY HARBOR Ut.bffs Home Furnishings, Merehlndis• ll~l m\.mlrs, chair, scuba equip. ery cue / From & clauifled ad col-MOBILE HOMES S Coast Plaza, C.M. All. very r e a a o n a b le. 3 very lovable dcr•. Loves umn: "Farmer, age 38, wlah-1425 Baker St. just off Harbor Sales 557~96 kld1 3 mo. to 6 mo. all es to meet woman around 30 Blvd., Costa Mesa Full Time WHEELCHAIR & lk b kinds, partially housebroken who c~ a traclor. Please i';;;;:,.:=;;;,,:::;.;;::=-,==o I A.;;.P:.,P_ll~·-"_<•;..•c_ ___ w.;.;;; Ev'"'' • ,,. M'"~. N"• WY MS--0813; &J&..4493 -4/13 send plclUn! of TRACTOR... MODEL MOBILE HOMES LADIES READY-TO-WEAR E xperienced DESMOND'S ... at u,.;• tn Costa Mesa's Greenleaf KENMORE auto washer $65, cond, Cost $131, sell $75. FREE to rd home, fncd yrd, CAPTAIN Park. 24x60 Ame r I can a Hotpoint gu dryer S55, Both CaU Sat after T pm or 10Ud blk Welmeraner mix, LlCf'nsed -Radar • Loran, ~ $15,900. 20x52 Mon t e r e y xlnt cond, guar & delivered. Sun AM. 644-fo057 ~m:1~pup, 4 mo, haa s~,'ti yean e:icperlence aall or $12,750, Completely setup 546-8672, 874-8115 N.B. Tennis Club ptayi.ng power. ProfeulonaJ Sport w/Uitlll, e\vnlnp, porch, KEN?.10RE auto wa..sher S35, membership •~1·$500. own-OUR ownen are moving 6 Fishing Gulde Mexican & etc. Whirlpool elec dryer $45, er pays trans fee 49'-&US weeks. Husky and G. Shep Central American walers. GREENLEAF PARK Both xlnt cond, guar & aft l:30 wk daya. · mi::ic pupplea a.nd l adult Also lic61aed muHl-englne 1750 Whittler Ave., C.M. delivered. 540-8672, 847-8115 ;ru;r.;~e--;;;';';';;-;;;;<,I.:''°"~'"..· ":"""~~1'1"'..,.. __ ~<11~21 C.Ommertlal Pilot land & 64>.2510 ** 645--0450 #3 FASHION ISLAND KENMORE washer, $35, KIN/~SlZE rrcwaKll" lbed Calloo Kitten 4 month& With 1ea. Admlniall'a.ti~e experl-1970 "'~' Pondo-.. ~mpl NEWPORT BEAOI w u ... me •'"· nga :ze Bet ol f 61A"" ,u.,....,_., •=~-------· t excellent: Also Washer & ttn! & bo •--ll"" shob and spayed. 67J.848'1 ence. s re erences. aet up, Skim, ~w po.ch, SAIL seamstre:s• needed, Ex-Dryer set. 541).1005 ~~· x •P• ... '6• '"· -4114 646-2971 lndscpd, comer~·!~ Shown per pn!t'd, Full t Im e • REFRIGERATOR \" l TH 6 wt k cld f al t &.oh/Mori-anytime. 557-2175 or MI Ullman Salls, 644-8101 '" COLONIAL braided rug 9xl2 e em e puppy P , ... I---"'===-"-"----I LARGE FREEZER $40. floor polisher & exercycle: ahaggy and pt terrier. _.;E;:q!;u'.:l!'.P:.· ____ _;904'.:: I ;'S-i,l::i<:'":C' '=175i:':():'W:'h"itt:.:i•::'!.' ,,sp'C'i:i" SALESMEN WANTED lST YEAR $50,000+ 163 E. 18th St, CAt w 5 ............ -.. 7 • 3 • • 646-7332 t/12 Motor Homes 940 ne . wu ..... .uu , e · . MARINE equipment : 'VESTINGHOUSE 5~~· modern brown refrigerator. S45. 9611-~ or ~4 REFRIGERATOR $40 * Cail 536-6369 * 536-4063 TO eood horn -Delightful P.temiry prop~. win<'lshlelds, '68 CONDOR 26 ft. Motor SEE BURG JµJce box femlle cat. Have to leave ccntrol cables, alngle lewr Home. Completely selt cOn- desl---' for home use. country. 841-3492 .4/12 centre~. Instruments, etc. 6'~ tafned. Sleeps II. Chauis and Pla)'ll 45 rpm's. $500 lncla FREE top dirt. You haul. 549--0530 pov.·er by Ford. Auro. 100 old "goodies". 645-5016 1139-7297 Fountain SIGNET ....... 1 m•"'· oow, p · Valle 4112 .... .., trans., wr. steer., air Cameras & NEWPORT Beach Tennis Y $120. Ritchie bulkhead com· cond., stereo system, etc. 1967 Chev %. Ton Pick Up. P/b, r/h, custom cab. With camper shell. 4 .speed, 23,000 ml + 8' cab-over radio, heat::. very hard to cnmper. $2650 or best oUer. find. (YX'f583) 5.>l-8!9L $1695 1.!UST Sell '70 Chevy % ten 23-1 E, 17th SI. sobu.bM """'"""· s.ooo BAUER BUICK mi, 9 pass. All Xtru. 350 vs. New 11n 644-noo $4195 BAUER BUICK 2M E. 17th St. Costa Meaa .SU.77tiS Auto Le11tng --LEASE A NEW 1BT1 PINTO '~\~ '69 2000 ROADSTER KARMANN GHIA • 'Iii KAR~1ANN • pd d'-0,, __ , by " ti I GHIA-Llke new $1295. $50.00 mo. .) S · u. • •nC1.1 1.1! c:: 673-22'11 er 546-4120 old achoo! teacher from La- (Jill mo.) open end RENT guna B"'"· Full pnoe 11m MERCEDES BENZ A NEW 19'71 PINTO $4 DAY ANO 4¢ MILE PUT A LITTLE KlCK lN YOUR LlFEt THEOOORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Ii.ARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA MZ<IO!O Auto Servlc•, P arts 966 IZNS 159) T1ke older trade or 1mall down. Will finance pvt. pty. AU 10 am 540-3100 or 494-7506, '68 DATSUN PICKUP 4 sfl{'<'d. Jua:t palnted. dlr. 4 new lites. 1WPP76:Z) Must sac.! \ViU ta~ car !n 1ta1le or wW finance private par- ly. Call 494-6811, MS-8736. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNOAYS 1883~ Eea.Ui Blvd. SACRIFICEl l HunUncfOll &arh Llke ne1v -Engine i\1asters1-,,.;842-c::.7c:181.:c:..°'::.:"~M"2'--'-­ Torquetlite transmission, 1970 Datsun 1600 v e r y cable type. HI-stall Hem! clean red Roadster. $2240. converter, both $300 or will Call 644-S292. 837-8448 1eU separately, Edelbrock PIA T Hi-rise Manllold tor Moparl-...---,...--==-~ $65, Micodon oU pickup '68 850 SPYDER ""'m '" wcdgo or heml· moperenglnes S50.Ex.cond. AM/FM, luggage rack. Real Bargalns! 633-551ti (WI0093) {Bruce) Sale P rice $995 * ENGINE sTANDs Open Easter Sunday $15 each * 646-46&1 • MERCmES '65 DIESEL Deluxe 1900, Beautllul er- mine wh.lte w/rlch black leather Jnterlor. Aulo. trana., radio. heater, wsw tires, In e."<CcpUona.I condition. 1.tust be seen &. driven. f PBW033) SALE PRICED ~Ji AVTHOllllZEO OEAL.Elt 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA AU:SA 540-9100 Open Sundl,y • • WE ARE LOOKING FOR SALESMEN FROM ANY FIELD WHO ARE READY TO PUT THEIR TALENTS IN TIIEl'"'DIRECTION OF BIG MONEY. Equipment SOS Club full membership, $375 TO a good home Springer paas, ne1v $60. 646-8303 Reconditioned lhroughout. '60 MERCEDES l!IC6L Roadst,r. Michelin tinL Beautiful. $1450. 673-ll!S _.,,_...,______ + transf~r. 644-4285 Spaniel puppies avail aft Boats, Powtr 906 Orla. told new by 111, Prlc.. Autos Wonted 968 Bill Jones' BROWN ml•k jook•t. .... 12. M•y l 5Jl-7920 "12 •• to "" ,.,, " 19,9".,(), --------18 J Sportscar Center TIME FOR We have ttie faclli!ies. the product and the know-how- now &IJ Y.'e need "' you, Expense accounl WIDE·angle lens, Nildror auto 2!1mm F 3.5: Never us· ed, \Varranty, $120. 551-7986 Fu rn iture 810 Like new. Call 642-<1" alt 6 LOVABLE l'"ti' G. Sh<p. 1967 32' Ch d • Corin-(ZYA'53) IMPORTS WANTED • • wkdys. male, Like • k lda, thlatMwln screw, f ully THEODORE ROBINS Orange Counties QUICK CASH I d '" TOP I BUYER 2833 Harbor, C.t.1. S.I0-1191 BICYCLES SUngraya wed 642-1274 4fll ~u ppe ' rea...., to fO. FORD THROUGH A All types,' good cond'. Mile: WHITE Jeng ha~ female 54&-2t34 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Why store ii In the ttttlc blkes. Call : 6U-tm cat to good h 0 me . 21' Chris cratt exinu 2060 Harbor Blvd. 18881 Beach Blvd. \\'hen you can IW71 II Into DAILY PILOT C.O. pn!slige car ICa.dlllael Top ccmpensationm WHY BUY FURNITURE? IRVINE COA5r COUNTRY 776-034.f 4113 cruiser, tulJy equipped. Costa Ml!l'la 642..(XJlO H. Beach, Ph. 841-8555 money through a DAILY WANT AD CLUB MEMBERSHIP. ORANGE c::hair. $1595 * 646-9000 e WANTED: Late model PRIVATE party will buy Pll.DT Want M. 1 -,,...,.,.-.,-,.--...,.~-~ 6f;r3075 548-3850 Boeti, Rent/Chirt'r 90I motor home. 17'-22', fully real equ!ty In •n model Autos, Imported 970 Autost Imported 970 IF YOU F'EEL YOU ARE QUALIFIED TO SELL AND HA VE BEEN LOOKING FOR THE CHANCE, COME IN AND TALK WITH US. D A V J D LOOKJNGLAND, INVESTh1ENT ANALYST, R.E. BROKER, COMi'ofUN· ITY LEADER, DID -NOW ltE'S ACHJEVING FlN- ANCIAL SECURITY. e CALL NOW e S47-6nl ASK FOR MR. NEARON Be F lu lbl1I Rent mo. to mo. "1lb 100"/. Purch11e Option Ind. ttem ael~tlon 24 Hr. Doly, CU.iTOM Furniture Re ntal 517 w. 19th, C.M. 54.8-3481 A'l&.beim Tif-2800 LaHabra 694-3108 MOVlNG! By owner! Ele- p.nt kinr bed with match- ing armcitt. Also 8 pc quHn bed. CU..tom built 9' SALES in a fail growlna ~lptured velvet act& and field. Le.\ds furnished. No love!leal. 2 matchin& chairs. tredit problems. Avg pemn HJde-t.-bed. U' sectional , w/soml!. aalcs exper. can Naug . family room make $15,000. C.O. will train, f\crnlture. Beaut. lamps. Liberal comm. Guani.ntee Med. Pecan " dark oak sr.oo. coclcta.11 " commode sets. Cail Sally Hart, !46-&155 Rttrlg. Dinette. Port. TV. COA5r AL AGENCY All qu.alHy furn. Must .ee to 7T90 Harbor Bl 11.t Adam• appnc. ll2-QT4 SARAH Cowntry ntf"d1 O. SPANISH-MWcan fumlture. or pt time hflp. No tn. Custom m ad e . B cl d , w1tmen1, Will train, min attract. Very reu. 1.1ade to a,ge ~. ~I«l'J A: 513:9068· nrder. Call Daw, ~~1481 SEC'Y TRAINEE FULL APT ol tumltu,., To $-450. Jut! out of sehoo.I Incl, ttfrl~rator, washer I: OK. Lovely N.8, ottlct•.1 ..:dry='::'·..;002-:.=_:;9!08;:._ __ _ Pleuant bots. CAil Mill * S..picce double bedroom Connie, 557..GJ:z2, Abigail A~ 1ri.. $40. bot Ptnonnel Al*ncy, DI 1 ~~=~*.:;•.,_1>-8772;_,:._;;..::• __ W. W11mer, Suite %1], S.A. BAR57001.S 30". arma A back-fully upholstered, olive .. WEED Tl I rt&JI" .. cfean lf't'fln. 846-2fl():j out 1h1 trtt!Ure1 a 1n1h -1,;:.:,,;,=-'-'-""''---- tum Into raiib tl'IN • 081ly OLIVE irretn n & u I• h Yd e Ptlot Oau!!Jed ad. tu.JGi8 c::hn.tr with ottomen. ~ -__ ... _~'42-20:!! 4/13 aelf~ntained w/rMf air D a t 1 u n or Veg a . =,-::'=='°""::::::-:O:'.C''."':"'.O"".:':"'.:":'.",,-'""~""';;,.;_,_ BED corner group, rood . " 32' Ttv\l'lltt'eW Chris, fUlly Will cash. 540-0603 . 71H29-fi010 r - -O,t:lt t AM. '1'0 ' ,.M. DAILY"m - dhlhwuher. 646--8506 fie .. a good home. 4 mo. oltl Ing. Also •59 Twlnscn!w Truclu I cond. GE mobile made prtbl MOVING have lo ~ve Souf. equlp'd. Fishing or Crull-pay 962 Trucks 962 F I A T N .B. Tennill Club family TerTi-Poo. Blk 645-2633 4/ll Owens. Xlnt eond. 5'18-2434' J;: I membership. Make oUer FREE puppy, female, l moa Boats Sill 909 -1 am ii I 642.{)8.42. old. Codcapoo to good home. , 1 I e BALBOA Bay Club reg. 84z..M04 4-ll e HOBIE SUNSET e I membership. $1400. tnc::I YR old Wire Haired Terrier. IS OPEN II EASTER SALE 1· W;:.~'5;;,. ,,,r.; ~~~~7-a.'.90 .... ~~ 1:J;; ~;,7,i,E~: TRUCK CENTER II "~•m• NIW I pl""' tape 20o ea. Ms-J150 SPAYED ftmale Cookapoo. I' RACING"""'· complotely 1971 124 1600 SPYDER * PATIO COVER * Good walchdoa:. 548-34614112 ~qu.lppcd, Almot:t new• OVER 50 TRUCKS IN STOCK. WE RENT 1 •110155, Only 6,026 "'"••· 29 Flit ,,tr11, f••tary I $75 or cffcr * 548·84~ 5 MO old male Chihuahua. ~~'.~ &aft!~ce~s:d~ ~~~ CAMPER TRUCKS & MOTORHOMES TOOi 1 wirri t1ty. lALI $419, 95 Mlscelleneous 645-0077 alt 4 '112 '""'· G.M.C . TRUCK SPECIALS 111 I Pl tCI '-I Wentod 120 12' SNOWBIRD Schook '71 GMC $2895 I WANTED 1o b 01d J JI 'L. J Oberglus 1nc1 "'"" mo I H G1S111 NIW I umuoally ,i,.~ bottlo~'. ---~ ~n;~.~:·.~::;~tk•nda l/2-TON I 1970 1!4 SPORT COUPE 645-4063.180 Roche1tu, Apt Short whee l best, 6 cylinder, stick shift van. I Only 6,510 ,,.,1 ,, 011114-UMtt Ftctorv W11r•ntr I ~.M.ror turnlture •Pets, G1Mral &SO ~N~8~' ~~ ~: Oliv• 9t1•n with b•ig• interior. I 13231 I ~!~~r $2495 pllAncet, tooll mite 'items. RARE Purebred checkered S69!l5. PY! pty. 6-i6-830l. 7 1 LIL 7 1 GMC I Open 9 1t1 5, ~70U t!Mt baby bUMY. black CAL 2! n..ctr, lolded, 1/g 7 l KING SUBURBAN I Muslce l Instruments 122 •ix>rt male, $3. ~ nd., dinghy, $900l Sl!p of ROAD KING 101h' , '"' .....,... u111om 11 n-•r_. avall . Npt Bch. 49l-(HS1 '"' -· Sto.,.. ,, o00 v1. J',5 • P II . I ELECTRIC 111ltu • cue, -vi -• '!DO 14, No. 233" 1 l Sid• tLIMttt . ltt11rkl , '''° 1o.11i1 '"°"', ''" tJoll•H 1 I oiv !ltn. I R•dio, "'•••••. •111c uli¥1 c..1.r, f1c+ory wcrr1nty, ... 11ovr, ull 0"11• I' ilMP tl'll Mo..~l;,, II" ft<:ION •Ir ill•MIV IO f ' I I J;'''' ) Xlnf cond , Must aee , to PEKJNGESE 1(1 wkl, AKC, tniller, Xlllt cond. P.tll.llt tell. movn!td .,. • Htw 1 _ .,,,·"" vi plf\ 11w11 '"•t 1r•ll" •11v 1 11 •• '''· 6 · appl'O<la'-1100 "'" 1•"" GMC ~ "" •'PG-"•l •uto , s ,. II -·•· !11l1H """*' I SALi $1695 ui:, • orw-'1W xln°t •tock. Adorable 646-8411 tll1c ~"'' YI wltll 1e11 eo,. ii--·· H.o · 1111 Pfk• "'~ s.w :i Plit t Office Fur n ltur•/ B~autte1. ~183 18' Unicorn Cat Fute~I :1~1o'fM'lllgl & INKkt. 1:~:';"' tQU lpfltd, 11000 lfll• -~•1111. --------- l lGISTll HIW 1971 124 'S' SEDAN " I I I I E quip. 124 SCHNAUZER Pu~. a 11 o mad~. !Ike new I~ h"lr. co~t SAVE I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY p A y M ASTER C h" k "" blaoka. Molt al .,U<I, ov SlOOO/oac JUlo '73-<663 $3995 $4995 $1000 I r"""''"· al""'' new 1;;, Groomlnc. T•mu ,_ CAPE COD CAT BOAT : OPEN EASTER SUNDAY ~~~· e~~ ~1~1~ ~~r, :i= ~iL':iis.A UST RA LI AN 18', fbrbls. C213) 1134--3883. 2850 H b Bl d ,, •• I ,,_..,., xlnt 12 0 0 , x1n1 q1ta11ty. 6'15-24G5 Boots, Slips/Docks 910 ar or v , B. J, SPORTSCAR CENTER, INC. OUv11U calculator, model 24 DONT 1svt It •W&Y. pt NF.WPORT Sot.t $11.,_Po~r 0 ,, 8 33 Ha,botnulovo'd Dlvt """ "' sta Mesa, tit. 92e26 •1111111, xlnt f......,, victor 11Ulc1t CUii tor u with a or aall, 40· to !iO'. Choice l <ii"~ < 14 C$Q:.4.4JUS •~"•• m"hln> 1100. Call DAILY PILOT OUsUltd lcx:atlo•. 12.50 ,... It. COSTA MESA 546-6750 ·L -L.L INt:. anytime, trn-™2 -0!.11 842~ • c-Mrce II. 66-4121, Mr. DOien ... -------I -I L I I t • U OAILV PILOT Mond1y, Apti/ 12, 1971 ( -.... J§J i '~--·"'_"'·~l§l 1 1~--""_-~l~l 1 liA~uleo,=~l"'~IPO=rl=od~~9:70 Autot, Imported -..... -..... 1§11 ---1§11 1§11 ..... ..... 970 MGI I PORSCHE 1,,,.....,.. ___ _ 168 MG&GT. Ov•rdrJve '64 SC Cpe. Sl59S w/requltt Good eolld. S1150. Call trans wk, Body & eng gd. ~96-Z22 or <l9l-a37 w/consld trade 8.17--041> MG ,_.,mSUNBEAM ............. ____ _ • 1HINI '69 ALPINE 6.T. "~'' tully factory ('Quipped. AMIFM. CZKH081) S..le Price $1295 "RIEDUNDER" Open Easter Sunday ..... ISAOI l..wl'. Jt'I •1'161 • 537- N!W-USED.SERV. ~ OPEL Bill Jones' B. J. Sportscar Center 2833 Harbor, C.M. M0-4491 TOYOTA Autos, lmporttd 970 -~~----~"'"',....~-TOYOTA TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN PAYMENT FIRST BIG ONSTRATOR SALE Several models & styles to choose from Including the Lincoln Contintn· tal. Demonstraton hove 6,000 to 7,000 miles only. Some with less. JOHNSON & SON Lincoln C.Ontinental •Mark III• Mercury•Cougar 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540-5630 642-0981 • Cad. '69 Convertible '"""""""' ....... BAUER BUICK BUICK 2M E. 17th St. liiiiliiiijiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Costa Me&& 548--7765 !1 '69 SKYLARK '66 vw 4 speed, radio A heater. REF "" J1'l7 Qmvertible. Vil. automatic, 2600 HARBOR BL., radio, healer, power ltttr· COSTA MESA • Chry. '69 New Yorker :r;-MUSJ ANG.Auto e,oo:t ml, air cond, r&h, 1ww tltt• &. Jlillnt. Xlnt cond. \ owner, FACTORY ! price, $950. 67l-5016 aft AIR CONDI'J'IONING S: 30 pm. Olx. ~ Hardtop Cpe. w/ '68 r.tUS'fANG 2+2, p/a, vinyl top. fUlJ po\Yer, vl11.yl p/b, air-cond. $1600. CaU 5f0..2585. strato seat.., tilt wheel, all dlx. exttu Incl. new wsw '66 l'tlUSTANG 6 cyl stlclt, tires l ;Nat 20,000 carefully new Lites, I n 11 p e c I I o n driven local 111iles. (X\ITD97J sticker. $725. 646--0313. SALE PllCED 1 ~.66~M""°'u°"sT~AN=G~$1""so-1 Good cond * &u-4678 ibe4 OLDSMOBILE ~CADILLAC '6T Toronedo-1 owner, fac. AIJttt()RIZUI D£AUll tory &ir, full pov.·er, vinyl 2600 HARBOR BL., top, 40,000 ml. Xl11t cond, COSTA MESA Below Blue Book. $2375. Aft 54(}.9100 Open SUnday 6 pm or wknds, 833-2399 · • '69 Cutlass S. Convt., Air. ~ COMET power, A.~/FM, lo mi'Sj xlnt rond, $2100, Pvt PtY '61 STATION wgn, auto, good Urea, Xlnt rnnnifl& conr:I, $250 . ..,._ 548--0173 : '68 OLDS CUUus 2~r HT: Alr, PIS. 27,000 ml, r&h, Clean· $1550. 64&-2305 '£6 Olds 442 4 speed PIS CONTINENTAL '68. 4 dr. posi. ex cond. $1095 Offer Mint condition. Only 9XlO , _a_f_t _6_96!<-0365 __ -____ ~ CONTINENTAL mi. $3300 White, Fact, air, '62 OLDS Super 88, 4.dr, Orig full pwr, lthr interior. owner. 55,000 mi'a, Good 673-9515 or 673-5789 cond, $600. 536-7146 'M Black 4 Dr., full pwr, lthr '£6 Cutlass convt-R&H, air, st!3l5, good shape. $695 -power, big eng. Peninsul& !\-lusl &ell. 557-8400 Point $750. 673-1916 CORYEnE PLYMOUTH 1968 CdRVITIB ENG 327, clutch, Bell Houmng 1.func)e 4 apd. Complete. Perfect condition $400. 645-4687 CORVE'ITE '67 S 11 v er Fastback. 4-.spd, 327/350 hp. Air, AM/FM, P~1' window&. Xl11t cond. Pvt pty. $2300. (TI4) 846-3293 '6l Corvette 327-4 sp. nu tires, tape. Sharp Musi sell $795 best oUer Trade for van 644-4393 alt S PJl.f. COUGAR '70 COUGAR XR7 Convertible. V8, automaUc, radio, heater, power sleer- lng • brakes, factory air, )ow mileage. Fac,l!lry war- ranty. C9CMBFS) $3295 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St Corita Mesa 548-7765 '70 PLY Roadrunner -383, 4-spd, AM/FM radio, ma.gs new fires. Aft & pm. ...... 73 '64 Plymouth Fury-383. headen;, cam, tape deck A: extn.s. Need! body work. Best offer. 646-1346 '65 BARRACUOA V8, aulo, blk int, PIS, P/B, radial tires. Perfect 2nd car. 48,000 mi. $645. 6(5...4681 '65 BARRACUDA 2 DR.. XLN1' COND. $.550 or BEST OFFER 646---0796 PONTIAC DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Complete Sale• &: Servtc. 2fl0 H•rbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. Cost• Mesa 546-8017 Open 7 dayl! a WHk 8::11 AM to 9:11t PM ST,ATION WAGON '70 LeManl wlwood trlm, f\Jll pwr, air, lug. rk, Xln'I cond. SJ.IOOloUer. Call (lli} 96>-2192. Harbor American 6 ~6-026 1 ing I& brakes, factory air. 540-9100 Open Sun4a¥ Low milea. Factory watran· e ..,_.,,.,_,,==~=.,....,.. IY. <ZLl<44<J CHEVROLET * •u DODGE VAN * e '70 GTO e 455 * 4 spd. $289' 1969 HAii.DOR COSTA MESA $2995 va, .uto, RIH. low .nrl. black 1ni.no,,. Xlnt Corn!. 646.466.) aft 4 ' wkndl '63 C~ Jrnpe.lia. Wagon. BAUER BUICK N•w '"" w/ooly 28,000 mt. Sl2!l!l. 6'5-468'1 S New 4 p1y tires. Paint It '63 POLAR.A • UH, 53,000 '68 YW BUG 168 Pontlac Firebird, xtnt. Sacrifice Below Wholesale. Call 644-273.'l Rad. · I 234 E. 17th I. bod In xi t --• ~= -1 ml Runa ~ •-Ph· 4 speed. dlr, 10, viny C.OSla Mesa 543-7765 Y n ......,..,, -· "':;, • 6""""' ...,.,... · iop, heater. (VST387> Will ~~!!!'ll~!l'l!!!!!ll ..:M:::•o:""":::::"iJ\°'fj' CMiiiv· jMs.-000'1=~-i ,,0846-=""'-'-~~~~~'""~ trade or fl11ance private par-~ 'JQ NOYA '60 Dod&e 2-dr hrdtp, 318 VS, ty. Ca.II 546-8736 or ~94--6811. '68 BUICK Riviera, air I all Auto, E;)lceptional con d , 'M Pontiac Tempest Sed. V 8, aulo. Good Urea .l running mnd. $295. 642-7064, '67 GTO-Blue w/vinyl top, lo mi. No liner Jn town. A steal at $1275. 64h6126 '69 YW SEDAN pwr. R&ll, tilt wh1 & cruise $225. 64&--JM6 control. Green w/lite L8.n-VB, autom11Uc, po~·er stttr· FORD Radio, Heater. fZBK617) $1299 Harbour V .W. dau top, gold intef'. 39,IXXI Ing. dlr. Loaded. (CVE369) ml'&. Oean. $2400. DoWn FWI price $2195. C&1J t9f..7744 pmnt ol S200 1o1ill handle 'M Chevelle Malibu SS 2-dr, 0 .A.C. Ph. 968-3129 aft 6 VS, auto, fully eqnipped. All PM. original & above average. '61 Buick Electra conv. New S950. Days 838-2121; Eves brks. new top. S 1 7 5. ~7533 18711 BEACH BL, 84241.l:i Incl~ing xtra 1 rans _l-,~6~7-CEO"l~C~a-m~i~no-S~.~S-. - HUNTINGTON BEACH ~S Red & black bucket 5eata, '67 Country Squire excellent ~ ~70ml':',,""'py",'·pFulty.ly equip'd, condition 390 CID eng. only UJ Sl,000 m i. PS/PB auto ==,,.-,*-6'1>-:.::,.:;39::'3:._,:*~~-I t ran s m i SI Io n , a i r PONTIAC '67 GTO, Hnltp. condltioni11g, wide tires, 4-spd, PIS, disc braku, $1800 557-3111 $1100, Pvt ply, 968-1770 1966 Ford Bronco roll-bar, T BIRD tow-bar, rew top, .,eot • ,67 YW BUG BUICK '68 LoS.bre 4 0.. 327 <-•pd. 1' o""'' 37,000 hdlop. ''Cream PuU", Air, mi. $1350 or trade. 6454687 Radio, hr ate r, special J;:~lc. Way Belo~~ e '6.1 Chevy Impala JEEPS Hardtop. Full power, fac- whN>ls. ITQA6181 W<i• or Fae air, P/b, P/S, VS tory air. fPDK336) ::t~~i; $'""· !I'm . --,-65-T--B-IR-D--1 Sale Price $795 1968 Buick Deluxe sta wgn. VERY CLEAN * $600 ''18 JEEP Stn wagon, 283 1 S•le Price $695 Open Easter Sunday i-~'-;~~k'"';;i"'a~"'; ="'~00-· ~ ..... ~'-"_a_" 1 .69 El ~::,-,:,_~; """""· ;::;~ ~1.:."'· ""w pa;"'· / Open Easter Sunday . Bill Jones' * '68 R.IVIERA·Air & stereo, many extras. $2475. 49&-t194 LINCOLN Bill Jones' , B. J. Sportscar Center "·~\ •• 673.4389 '"a~"='-'"'~'-m~~~~ -----.....,.. ....... B J S C '65 Chevy Impala 2 Dr. xlnt '67 4 dr Lincoln Cont'!. Xln'l I • portscar enter _,_ Ha ~ C '' <•o "91 eng, body, & tires. S600 cond. Orig. owner. $2475. -.>.) rvui • ·' ' ....,..,..... 893-4943 Jt 5 PM 644-6484 •66 vw YAN '66 WILDCAT CUSTOM roR Sal: '"' ci .. ,,.1.1 --'7cM=ER~c~uR=Y~ 2833 Harbor, C.At 54()..4491 * '61 T-BIRD. New tire1. Runs good. conv. Good cond. Needs en<>ine work. (SBN73.5) Sport Courw. ~8• auto .. R&H, 673-4m or 540-7878 .. o power stcenng & brakes, 1,.=c,,--.,--,.-c-,-.,-,,.. $675 fac!ory air. Sold & seiviced 62 Chevy Im~ fi:lr hrdtp, by us. ISVY8.l5) >..1nt mectuu11cal cond. Auto, $1495 ~:y"~~ '"' action! Harbour V .W. $250 * * * 673-3682 '63 Mtteury Olmet Conv. 61 ",-.,,,-7"--=--.,-I cyl, 4 speed. New tires, top, '6,j Ht, fir PWf. Xln1 cond. carburetor. clutch, pressure Nl'\v tire1 $1200. Pvt pwr. plate. Re-built engine and 1 ="'~·"60-''-'af.:.t .::'.::'"'::....~=-I trans. $400. 549·1690 For best results? bU-5678 18711 BEAOl BL. 842-4435 BAUER BUICK 990 Autos, Ustel 990 Autos, Used 990 JIUNTINCTON BEAOI 234 E, 17th SI. BRAND NEW Large Selection eo.i. M•sa 5'8-ms Of VW Cam~ers, .70 c,..00 sport Immac. Vans. Komb1s, Must sell now, Pvt pty, Buses New & Used fl35.-0J4', 837-lllOO ""' to' t Ev. lmmodl•le Oellvery 1-~C~A~D=IL~LA~C~-11 CHICK IVERSON 1------11 vw • 549-3031 Ext. '" .. ., CAD. '65 SEO. DE VILLE l?'TO llARBOR BLVD. COSI'A MESA FACJ'ORY '66 V\V clean, ~ood lirea, AIR CONDITIONING engine runs ~OOd. Original Full power incl. eltttric win. O\\'JlCr. S800. 846--6437 dow~ & electric ~al. Signal VOLKSWAGEN 1968 • very seeking radio. See to ap. ~..... 1im. c.It pnda"·s'122i' e SACRIFICE 1969 V\V Squart"bark, Air rond, Xlnl cond, $177:1. 495--il:l2 1963 VW Bu.s-New t"fll & brakes. !-.take offer. til9 PoimcntA, Cd'.\1. 6~ '66 YW SEDAN Rad io, llc11l<'r rt-.. KD633) $999 Harbour V.W. ~1!~~ AUTHOAIZ(O [)(Alfll 2600 llARBOR BL., CUSTA MESA M0-9100 Open Sunda,y • '62 CAO. Sedan Ile Ville Full power, s:;oo. Ev 1t n In!:: 5-iS-2318 '69 Coupe t>eVille Full J)0\\'1!r, good rond. IA7tt BEACH BL. 1142..ftJ,; 67J...2'2G2 or 673-5723 HlJNTINGTON BF:ACH ror bes! ~suits! 642--5678 l 1'70 • ROAD RUNNER 30 To Chooao From l DOO!t HAAD. TOP, l lJ \'I, IU• to1"1tic, th1te4 t l•n, t1tlye 111· dr11"'111t p1ri1!, lo.11wy dvty 1111p111. 1io11, lo.11 .. y 9uty br1k11, redlo, ~70 11 4 roJMotl .... hlte t11!1t tlr11, .... 1,. ........ , , ...... . l#AMJJNOE. IJflOil. $2695 '