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1971-04-19 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 ' , • lXOll ·' ' -. -·~' . ' , , .. -. -.. . . • ' 1~000 lv.ew Christia•s ·Baptised a ·t ·.cdM Beac6 MONDAY ~FTERNOON, APRiil' :19', l 91JI ' ' •· . • Pot Space Platform1 Russians Launc·h .·Novel · Satellite· MOSCOW CUP!) -'l:he Sovl1t Union "?daY. launched a new Jcind. ()f aatelllte called · "Salute" and sclentllic soi.irce.s ~id. It will be the basis of a lengthy project to buUd the first manned station in space. , A report by the Sovjet News Agency Tass did not IP<dfy II Salute was -· ned but the scienUfic llOW'ces said it was not. They said there will he mare launch- es in the coming days involving manned vehicles whlcb will redeiv~ with Salute and begin-the construction project. They. predicted' the mission will be complex, ~tacular and lengthy -l'\lJlitlni severill wee.ks. The name "Salute" never before has been used for Soviet spacecraft. sug~esting that it is a new type built especially for the spat! station mission. Sa1ute's orblt wq: exactly the same as that used for most Soviet manned• shots ~a nearly circular flight path some .140 miles over•U.,Jarth and passing over the Sov.i~ Union's Baikonu.r Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. 1be Soviet manned space program of recent years has concentrated exclusively on the goal of buildlna: a' space platform. A whole series of flJght.s by Soyus spaceaan in the last three years has tested the systems and theories of plaUonn building. ln rectnt weeks top Soviet space scientists have discussed d1e project In the prei;o, Indicating Soviet confidence the plaUonn soon will be a reality. The Tass report of the launch called the sputnik a "statkin.'' suggesting it had or .. ge Cont r.older nlghla and 1radlially warmer days are the prognosU· callol lor Tueldoy alo111 the coast. witb tempe.raturea hitting 65 Jo. cally and 75 further inJlnd, INSmE TODAY Two '°7agrwmn haut re· vtaled findtngs tohich ind£cote heroin me of tpkWnfc propor- tions ammtg American troops in · Vie:tnam. The c03t U imaU there but huge fn the'1/.S, StorJ Page 4. • I -. a J>lll'PO'< different from previous unmanned 81¥>\I usually , ca 11 e·d "spu~" or ~entlfic aatellitea." The &alute orbital parameters Included an angle of inclination of 51.1 dtgrets, period of revolution of 88.5 minutes, • maximum ~ from the lllrt•oe of (See 81.'ATION, Pase I) Nixo1i Denounces Current Syst,em Of U.S. Welfare WILLlAMSSURG, Va. (AP) President Nixon said today the United States cannot tolerate a weHare system "under which working people can be made to feel like fools by thi:>se who will not work." "ll is incredible that we have allowed a system of law1 uhder which one person can be penalized for doing 10 boneJt ~·s work and another person can be rewarded for doing nothing." Nb:on 1aid in a speech prepared for the Republlca11 Governors Conference. 1 The President denounced the current welfare 1ystem as "a monumental failure." and urged support for bll own fam.ily assistance proposal, b e f o r • Congresa again after faillnC to · win passage last year. Nb:on· Aid under the current system ''the person on weUare can often have a higher income than bis neighbor who holds a low·paylng job. "TragicAlly, these situations often exist in the same nelghborbood,•1ide by side in the. same apartment bouses -and the effect Is corrosive," Nixon Aid. "It creates bitternes1 on the part of the . worker. In the-end, I suspect, it causes res.ignaUon -and we end up wftb anothtr person on welfare .•• ~ '':!Jbe fact 11 that tbe welfare <stabllshni<nt and 1y1tam In the Unlled States ii a lllODUJlliotal !allure. It ma!td the taxpayer furious. It makes the weUm roclplent biUu, and ll lnfik:il the distillation of all Ulla anger aDd blttemeu to the children who will inherit th11 land. It is a disgrace to the American splriL" Nii:on said he does not think any job ii menial if it puts bread on the table, "provides for your children and leta you loot every one elae in tbe~ye." He said 1<t11bbl111 Doon or •mplylnl bedpana Is nOt enjoyable wort but there is u much dignity in It u in any Job to be done ill thla country "lncludlni my own." . Nixon choae for hls hard-sell bid for wellare reform an audience cl. GOP (See NJXON, Ptp I) VOi.. 64. ~. sacn:o.. ......... • ' ' , • • • •• • • ••• • • • Psychoses D.ete:cted· ' '· MINISTERS OF SANA ANA'S FUNDAMENTALIST CALVARY CHAPEL BAPTIZE BELIEVERS More Than 1,000 a.com., 'New . PtrtOnl' II) S.t u~1y Rites et Plr1tt.•. Covt In Ntwport Harbor Wintry ·Storms Calvary Chapel Bapti,sm Hit Southland; With Snow, Rain Ritilal on Stare Beach Windblown Southern California wu ~a;ly back,to·normal·today,·a6'r a late- seasoo weekend dorm· brou&bt buffetlna: breezes, sprinkles, anow and Ice along with Slgalerti aild 11mall. craft warnings. The dying gup of the storm front's wlnd.s led 1the Coast Guard to cancel 111 search for two men missing alnce their ' sailboat capolled oil Rodondo Bel<h Safjlrday. Nick Harberry,'25, of Loo Ange!t1, and Derrick Smltb, 19, of Santa Moolcl, .,,.... presumed drvwned wben tbe!r »loot aioop 'l'lhoma overturned In three to four-foot seas. A tblrd puaenger, Ray llal<y, ~ of Baldwin Hills, llWllJed to swim ashore aafely Winds a1ac> lanned t'I" 6rt1, ... r<achlng witbln 40 yltdl of -In Eaale Rock and ttie other -driven ahead of 40 mlli>per'bour (!\1111 -was cootrolled belore It reached S a n J'erliando Valley ho,,,.. and a partlally _buill VlllUn i'tMwlf oepieaL Editor'• Note: Their nu~bers were unprecedenttd, the l,000 who were baptized in a public ceremony Satur· dot/ at CorOM <kt Mar"Cit11 and Statt Beach Park. Thi! if an account of that ritual aa written blf 20-year-old Andi/ Sperling, a member of Calvarit Chapel .which conducttd-tht ritt, and an emplo11e of the di.ipatCh depart· ment of the DAILY PILOT. By ANDY SPl!llLING Of tllt °""" ""' ..... '!be baptltm WM aboolU1ely beautiful, eapeclaJJ,y W~ 1.W1rr. •1Qiristian. To ,.. bn>tberi and 1Jatert getting rid . of that okl ·1tH, lhat·ald lile,wltb Ill of. It. empt-and cro11llig·lnto that new, lull me that ... bave In :Jesus Christ makes me want to bunt. , ' That'• tbout the wi.y everyone wu Slturday, JUI! buratlqr wltb joy and the lovi of ' J MUI. One abler came .over to me ·ju1t after lbe WU ~zed and Aid, "Praise. God! • You'i:t 1ettin1 wet," Md threw her arms . arowid me. , The pu.._ of the ba'pUsm w11 for 11<1' belleven In Clu1il to be baptbed and , for the lamlly d. God, to ptalte ·tho One . who saved us and gives us the abundant life, and that's just what we did. It wasn't Calvary Chapel trying to get poiblielty or anything like that. They don't need to. People Jwit trust in God and atay In the 1plrft.and He does the rest . Tbere waa a real unity and oneness In Jtsui Saturday like there always ls in Him. There , were people ftom every age group there. No ban1-upo about long balr or suit and ties. ·M111y of the people there are living eumples of what the rullly of having . Jesus a L«d O(your llle and Savior can do. A IOI of thtm have been de!fvered from drop, a lot from drjnklng problema, aex hangupi, you n1rne It. Jesus ii real and living and He can change an empty, dirty We alld make It clean Ind !\Ill. Anyway, I see all thtt and 1 lot more at the baptll~ What It cornea clown to . la J~ it Lord aJtd He's working.in • mlghly way by thla Spirit. An you have lQ. do ls receive Jeaus,lJrto ; your hurt 11 Lord and Sivior 0 and He wm do the mt. • .. M ... .,atlJUana . : . . P.~~·tnld • . I . • ~ '.. T '. By Experts Cli!e,i.GO ·(UPI) -·Two< Pbi1aclelpbla psycboanalylll, In · • report , released today, Af PJe ~lhl;di~• of SB indlvidualt abow serious mental disturbance, fn:cl~. 00"~ in 10me cases, accompaotad beavy marijuana IJDOldng. '"lbese , pali9ta coosltteotly showed vern•oor aodaf•JudlDI"'~ -attention span, poor"'I «J1•w&ration, confusion, allllety, . ........, apalby,' passlvtty. -· and, r-. llowed and 1IU!Ted -"'" tho -seld. 'Ibq a19o;ustfd amoni IYJDptomJ '1an alleraUon of COlllclilwneaa wb \cb Included a split-~ an otiservlnr and an expulenci'8 porllon of tbe. ero, an Inability' to bru)g• thou(bta together, a paranoid ~iclouaneu of ethers and regiiuion to a more infanUJe state." These. symptol!UI, they aald. wer• not present before tba subj«ls began U1lng marijut'QI. , The article,, 0 effect.s of marijuana on adolescents and ' )'OWll adults," was publlabed lo .tbe-\Fll 19 laaue of t b e Journal of the American Medical A&soelatloo. ' A spok•m•'n for the AMA uld tbe lrllcle ii "the llnt real oriclonce, baoed on· pod -· d. bonnful e!Cecta from llDOkfltc muijUUa. Heretofore, njecljclno-bu been.able to l!lf only tbal tJier< Wll&DO (ciod riJdenco Cf harm from ,_,,.._ .... Jlaw w.' bave aome riii;.»~ . IT!fo~ Dn. a...111 Kolanllcy and Wlllla!!I T. Meore '11• Illa Oilld Analysis Dtvilk>a of tho Pl!lladelplli1 AssoclaUon fer Psycbo.~ seld tbelr purpose wu to-''npartiaaly>ttie1effectl seen as a cooaequeoce d. mariJ11anL 1mOltlog fn those not """""' a .oredlsoooIUon to Mrlous paycblatrtc probl.mt.'' They aald they reli>ovecl from the study aroup thojie, pallepll wbo sbo1ved. l1gpl Ibey bad been P.redlspo8ed i o paycbo!oglcal pl'ob!ema tielore Ibey began usln1 marijuana. • The final irt>up 'of.18 patleoll!.r-.iired Jn •iJ• from.,li to H and •<Ollllsled• ol ZO mate, and 18 f~m1Jea1 . . · Sexual prom1Sadt7 al3o wu a frequent symptom among tbeJr 1Ubject.s1 the authon aald, "and the lncldsnce· of unwanted F.egnancies· among female patlenta WU hllb. • WU the Jnc.ldence of venerut dltuJea , , , "'lbera' wat, riilrbd llller!ereoce with penonal cleOnJIDaa, '"""""11l. dressing and' llud1 bablla' or work bablls or both . . ' ~•ii, OM lllblroolt>, a cleaN:ul dlagnoala tJI paychosll,wu1~1\lhed 1nd, In the,. pattentalJtheN! wu neltller evidence of poycbos .. or qo dlalurbaoce nor family history ol f>OJCholl1 prior to the paUenll' use of marijuana/' ' 1 '!'bey dladttbe cut <JI.. I nwried, 24- ytar-old man who; altll: ualn& marlju~p• for · two · montbe, "baliofed that he had cloveloped a 111porior lnlellect' al tho exi(enio o(· I' ldta' o! hit .,.iuil me. He wu·t.he flnl--member of 1 "'' ,•auj>er jlee.POr \lll, Pip I) . j I t OAll. Y PllOT S U.S. Planes Blast Reds • Second Day , ,,_ P,,.e I STATION ••• Ille artla ti m miles: mil a m••1un 61' ~t ti DI milltL ~'Die jW * ' I Wft dllim pncilely 6R w • pt•kw marwecl s.,m fliiiPll • ... Sorid • ..,. ... p:adiml ails a e.c e11 a ry tcr cawlr«timd•8'tlblll*ltltatilm.. 1'e ...... 8Jlll!mr, &rtii 4 -S •. , ...... aww• ., aw: .aitiaa -wmalb'." Taa said. "'Ibo Ff" •• -· .......... cm •" •+ '4-C jiWWW ..... ,._ .... tualiw.. .. So le •tt mas ill ,.._. brft jfldidt:d a:l Jr.d tW9 tdlk:Jes ta I ) izlC tw or~•••• '*will be med Im lbt mmq ..-:e ~ 'DI*' mhDm, -.as md. will be to oombod ~ first pa waaB «tiitaJ nmwd ~ station. tbt [int skp ill w p: =* u.-mm m the dar' - ..... COAl1' DAllY PILOT WI v~ -~ '' < r•• .... .... ...., ---.. ..-mu:r Pll• ,,,. a.>Nt't Llowt M. w ... ---.1..l I. e..i.. . ....................... _ ...... -_ ........... --_... ... .._ .....,.P,Hol ----Qi-.._. ____ _ ......,-.m._....,... ...---..: -...._ ._ !"' ... iii ---~'::.!! a.c.....•--·~ ... ..... f'IUJt ................ .. T ......... ...-_, __ _ -. _, .._.. .... "-.,._ .._,. ..... °"" -. ·-= ................. ~ ~-..=.. .......... :"";j ~-: ·--.. .-.a.. , m41 604Jlt a rs• t' Ma 6CM611 .. ..... 7 t ':' tntCll .. 7 '24 ES.£-:.--==-... -· .... _,.. \ ............ -. ....,_......, .............. ..-o---. a a • ·"!!!::"!:~ ... ---:-:-!' .... .,. ._._,_ .... ...... • .....,, -.,..., 1,, 1971 M&.1' Pa.oT ........ DR. GLASKY TEsn PILU IN STOMAOI SIMUl.ATOll flthlint tho Common Cold in .., Ollocure Nowpon ~ Loi. Battle of Cold Lab in Newport Sce ne of Drama It's caDed .boprimsiDt. 11'1 already bttn calltd a an for I.ht mnman cold, a qWck em to inflmma. and ,,,..In. and drlcRfl poi.. and men tba a lamdaed otlm' viruses. trs called NPr 10.31'1 for st:mrt. U tt worts. all ?: a biJlioo..doUat baby for n-. Amo J. Glasicy attd a baodbil ol --pal up S2 millkm to start Nurport ~ Inc., U..... ,......_ Dr. Gldy attd • ..... .. 211 ~ brft beel wmc iti lll n. • 'l+rgnm labar.tory 1111 Mcmnwia Slnet iD Nnrpart Beadl siDce t• to filldoallk-U. 'llloy-"""' ~ 1atiaC and most ta::euQy ma••4•hwilc NPT IUll -Dr. """' Gordml. Ille Uaiw:rd) fill. Qiraip Pl*"" wt. d:scouaM it. tm.d lb dt•"••1ec .... lo !Iii....,._ --,..... .. i*tw4'AM7 .... piett.,, tbr Ilda De .... ,., ..... crl _, dnlc ts time-- • •••m .... ~apmblo Dr. Ginty is by oe means cna•••'"•• ahcq the Jiiusp:dL He ..,.11ri11 11e a--•t1nr,.... before isop:Baiae it prwm to ta so-el Ille U.S. Food attd Dntc A.Jlrrsjedltat.iue ..t dean!d (Cl' ~ -lo ... pal>tic. Hca cva. the cwaiiilW!Ul el Argentm almlly lias """' ..... -and is ...._ _.. -"' Ille dntg tbtft. 1i'la ii -,.. cm Ille marta ....._ H ft -. "II 'lrill pnbalily --.... samr IS a IJ'lihintit, ~ bdwi&i a aad • for a 1J-Wild ... ~"Dr. Gld:J said. Biii fllll't ~ Its I'd•..... .. 1mri!!M•in ends. ·~·· llOddol a. ~ -. .. meif-inr," Dr. GlastJ said, rqilainq that the dnl!I simply •....t.s lbe body·s natunl def~ rrw:banjgm wwt btuer- and Usl.er _.. - He said be aDd Dr. Gardon &r'al't mre bo• il ckies iL ·111oy ;o.t do -! lhey -n, dll •• ... said. ... lot ..... quid:ly and dlic:imlly." Tests art' rar from ampld.t, Dr. Glasl;y- •• ~-· <lJ.ecs bat< lllly """' caarumed OD a dozai cases hl•ofmw --cold.,._" ... said. ·-ro say right oow it is the ahlolule: an r.o tbt commc:n cGld is pnmatare. ... ... said, bm ... an6t mtd Iha! ill ...., w of those 12 c:&9eJ. tbt srqirmrs di:sappea~ in less than 2l bJurs. He insists be is llUXb mere emted about ils dm.cw••a&ed efttds: .... the Da. ... thiap JR Tiral lff'ii!W!Y, and smallpaL "Riglol -!bolo is ...... lo treat tho !Ill." ... said. ~ .... -.... thal ..ts apimt 1U ti I• maim d tbe 0.. bot ,... ..... pt to -I bdm.. J'CIU "'sick." Dr. GlastJ sat lest! .. the dlect "' lhe dntg .. ...-.............. still boiol made. "'We haft m•nn••idtd it not be prescribod .. pngmnt ...... in """'-, ... said. ·-... -....._ .. He said thert blft bem llO jndicati<a ti. uy aeriaus lidr dfecU.. Yar lhe 37_,.....-old ,_ dllelor and for bis old ._,.. corm..i. in Olicqo, and lor -.,....,.. --in bolh ol lhem, moogll to mp Newport Plwmxmtlcals _.-tiog lhe put - ,...... and ...,.P to pledgo -$! lo S$ milliaa ta £tt isopriDo&:im on U. -!bolo 'lrill ... -sidr dlect .. them from their p!'Cllb:l They ,.;n 11ne ......,, o1 ...-1o m back. iaio 1bt Ordclinc lmsi•os Girl Abducted at Mesa Night Club Not Harmed School Strike Ends NEWARK. IU. (AP) -Tbe II--· mil Nf'9wt t.tac:fm• Slritt-mdrd Smdly """' -the --., FAocoboo ad U..-T-"'n U-.,,...S1>a .-od-au.. ftft ~ to 1'tUM todq. woowi said she ns g!'1bbed l.Dd dragged her inlO th! car. a1 1li:ticb tJDll! ..... pan;oUd and hogan a,iog . She said ...... tho ...... -that the man. _._ stocky and -D. ... her out JOCDtOel'e iD tbt east side and sh< began nlting bad to tho bar . Tirio,g finally , the tearful woman Uicited 1 ndt from an okier" awi. sbr AM:l amviQg at Pier 11 to be met by lrimds --..... to the police -l!nutigaton said it ns unceruin wben tbt kido.aping victim was rdused. siDCt sbt ns tmfamUiar 1ll'i1b the aru. Humorist Poet, Ogden Nash, 68, Criticall y Ill BALTIMORE fli'I> -llumarisl Ogdeo Naoh ..., cntically iD in a bmpilal ..... lodaJ' • NaM\, 6l. wm admitted to Union M<monal H""'"" Marti! U. li ..., )tarntd SUnday. for trMIJnrd of UI -.. hospital ·olfidals .....wd ... d11elosr They said tbt 11l"tte-0J family had ~ oo ..,_ be ro.a...i I !<ash had ._, in lair ooaditiaa -I s.mda~·. but ht dtteriDrated in the altt.rn00n. a hosptal spoi:PA1'81l said.. Born m Rrt. N. Y.. Nash 1ttendrd lw u rd fw ooe yur. lit kft in IJll and qui<klJr --.. • --Glli&l>4-........ Viet Veterans Protest 1,000 Ex-Gls St.age Rally at Whit.e House WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hmlltds ol Vidnam \'tieranl ...... utinr ..... --put !be 'llltlle -amd ralllod al ,_ lao& <I Copiiol lllll tdo7 .......... .. eod lo 1U. IDvatftmml in """•ft.ii• Kiddn& all two weds of peoce ct.momtntiom lo the nation· s capital. .. .cts estlmal<d by plliee al 1,l!llO""""' flnl pa r a de d te Ar~ Natiana.l °""""· --to Ibo Whlle -... to .... Capitol. lhdr -POtritC _.as1he7walbd. Al-point, .. _ .,tbe._ .... pande ................ Ian ol the w.m&e Home. Pluidtal N i Io n ' a belk•ipter pnm:I cwerbeld an ill ny tD pa up NiaOll and demamtraton. with cle•hed nm railtd, abouted "Pm DOW! Pelee DOW!" 1be mudJen bad .,...,.. pmt !be .......,.., girl lriendJ and apporeally White lb.-wbta N"mm left in lbe :some active Gls in civilian clotbln& - mapped a week of activities aroond cboppet fer a spokia& ~ al Wubingt(m leading up to a mu1lve rally ~ VL Satan!oy. At !he ca p II o ~ tho dmloastratan, Still mm, posolbly more mUltan~ many dftssed in \he ClODlblit uniforms demoo.stralions have been scheduled tor they watt in the j~ ot Vidnam. out week by other groups lncludln& such beard spee<:hts by seven1 antiwar antiwar figures as David Dellinger ind C4nglessmeu urging that they peacdully Rennie Davis, two of the "Chlcq:o Jobbj apinst. further Onaw:inc o1. t be Seven" defendants. war · The man:bers wbo, bad 1pent I cokl Tb. nllJ....., up -••di••,,,,,-1tlg)lt buddied ia l'()31.S, bedtolll or otber t.be prolelten anembled 1IDder a warm wraps in~ grwy ~near tbe Lincoln sprioc IUD CID tbe grass or OD lo-.er lrw-e1s Memorial, marched (U'si to Arlington o1 !be 11mg ..... kodinl up ,_ w... canetety lo booor Callen romrades aod. """" ol !he Qrpitol. ----.. vidims of the "'" ~ to pre¥ent them. from etttial i.a tbe They were not allowed ~o enter the Capitol en muse.. cemeterv, arxl retraced their stepa back 1be nUnns -1agmrnted by Mimi aaos,, B r oa d 1.femorial Bridie. thto Week of Eco-Crusades followed an approved route along Comtttution Avenue, up 17th St. N.W. far hR> blocb, then ..,, along E Street "1licb -directly back ol the broad upanse of the ftll manicund Wblte Hoo.se aouth lawn. Stnrted Across Nation 1be lines had passed when Nilan'• chopper took off, almost unnoticed. 1t aboul lO:lS a.m. 'Jbe marcben continued to 1$tb Bt. By J AKES PlllU.IPS . , .. ,_ .... Man,lhe~sptrits.llands ..... _,ill !be primate N!ilcfong ol lhe Afbnla, Ga... llJD.. Be ii aaiOUDdtd by _..._ la New Yori<, --IPilled out ol JQmap1n ta dia:o+a U bkds r;i aarmaitJ tlllCE sted Maclhor! AWDJe ... " ....... ks+thdt uwswu:I tile lrftl If lf:n• ··-ic cmftminub 8odli .. Eardl Weet • m••stratialll drsipwl to point at the many 11'21)'1 in '7'bids mu poi!cm bis on aJVirorunmt. ........ ill Des -1on,-...pec1 "' callect ·-of ...... PllJJ'I' Satunlay IO kd all Earth Wed. By Sunday, lhey bad gad:il!nd O'Ve!' 2llO tom. . A --fund-raising rally lll -..Com~ .. estimal<d -for.... . . Eal1h -Group. 'Ille rally WU desc:ribed by a ................... "happiest, cleanest and best" m bad ev"' seen. Tbe Atlanta display WU among the moll dramatic. A li\•e man sits by --pil<O ol -in the boilding .....,._ ocazpied by apes aad a<borprUnata Onkr Veroon ms1iQI said the man- 11.a 1~biee demonstral:ioo is an dlmt to chmatiae U. danger man and otbs' aaimals (a:e because ol prba&< and .,.._ 1be tr.ac:IHm., 1 e m i n a r 1 and dllma:stntiaDS will take p 1 a c e tbrmct-• u. mtiaD'• teemd amma1 Ear1h Wm iD bopa ol ..,.,._ 1RJ'I ea indi•tcmal cm amtril:de to • clraer. ireeoer. bealihler plaDK. ,,....P .. el NIXON ••. Music with N.W .. back to Constitution Aw:nue, then on to tbe foot of capitol HiU. '111at la the M.icb.ipn Go\?. William G. MiJliken said site of a massivt' rally scheduled for in a p-oclamalica "Progress has bttn Saturday to climax the week a{ made, bot we must naw shift our demonstrations by varioll! a n t l VI a r emphasis from COIJMinnmea ol. tbe groups . Jnbiem. to an active., 8CICelented eftm1 The veteram flashed the 'V' peace •Ian IO prdd ff the mrirulmmt... mostly aa they marched in brtcbt. Ttree recycling Cll!llten opm in Rhode pleasant weather to Arlington Cemetery, 1sland in an effort 1o 1et. corwmns to but .-ere disappointed in spite of rmn lhfir waste J>aPft' m cam for advance notice -when they were not ...... by Industry. allow<d to ....... Ceamp campaigns, wi1h woltl:deitn They marched back acl"Olls t he nreepinc traSi from puts and Potomac River, growin1 more terioul roadsides, highlight Earth Weet. iD Nm1h and chaJrting ruc:h slogans a.s: "Power to Dakota. And Gnnd Fora Ma)'or Hugo lhe peopl<:' "Hi-di, Hi-di, Hi-di-bo, Mr. MagmJ<QI bas urged aD citiRm to .. focus J\1loo's got lo go." en 1ola11..-n....-to·tadt-..,pr.,lll>baol>lt""~"'~·----=---=------··-·· - cons e rvatioa . environmenLaJ managaneo~ "'*'11 and JIC)llUbtioa. While many coUed garbage. others trill ride bicycles or in car poob Lo reduce the emissicn of 1tmospheric rmtamiNnts fn:m a_Wol ~wer eel witb inlemal ooobibli<l:'l "''"" New Yori< Qty May<r Joitn V. ~y got .. early start Sunday with • -"' bike rides and a wait in Cmlnl Park. Booths akiog main sveets aod at "ecology Fain" vilJ point to the t<panding popalatm. and lhe -t7 to maintain a ''ten> populaation growth.'' Cloe critic. howt\"er, W&!I Rep. Mario Bi.tggi (l}.N.Y.). For politicians, be sald. "A ""' ....U dramatiza.tim of aJDl'9'D is laudable. but it is tiR taDic" a bath onlJ oa Saturday ci,i!tts." Pair Arrested After Stabbing In Garden Grove . A family argWDCDt~ GIJ"den Gnl"'e Sunday Digllt eaded in • llght In - oot man was stabbed ud two ntt jailed oa atteaq:itei murder dmteL G....i..t <;,.... police said Ille victim. Paul Bumi. a, of Ra:lanr» Beach. was at lhe lune al bis lotber.Jo.law and lrothor- in-law lbmoll e. ""1-, s~ and lbmell w. -. l2. al Jam Malian! nm._ The trio ~ .uting cm • car during lhe day _, and into lhe Digllt and also dtding.-. ~ A fighl -<IUl aad lkns ns sta.bbed ~ ia the Uck. Be dnwe '° a nearby ......,. ........ called ...,..,. and collapood. R_.,.iing o1!ioors toot him to Palm Harber Bnspih1 wbln his an:fitian is listed as aitical today. Both f.atba' amt -.a ftft anuted OD lhe alllmpled tmtr<l<r diaries. Police Aid lhe7 ba.. not yd i-able lo determine .tlD atabbed Barm.. From Page I POT USE ... race.' After stopping his smoking his de:hWona.I id e a s disappeared a a d be returned w bis norm.al functioning in bis job and marriage." A 20-year..old man, alter sii: months ef pot smoking, ''believed that he wu in charge of the >.lafia and that he was an ea.stem potentate of the Ku Klw: Klan," the doclors said. A 16-year~ld boy, after three yun: ef smoking marijuana, believed he was God's son. A l,..year-0ld male thought be was ''able to communicate with and c.mtrut the minds and actiom of animals " ... Of these cases, ~foore and Kolansiy said It .-as their ''impression" that the use d marijuana •·caused such severe decompensation of the ego that it became Df'ttSsary for t b e ego to develop a dehWooa.I system in an attempt te restore a new form of reality." Tbty also reported on 13 female patients .. singled out beca.use of the wmuaJ. degree of serual promiscuity, which ranged from se:rual re lations with 5"Vttal individuals of the opposite sex to relatioos with individuals ol both sei:e.s ud, somt>times. indi\'idual! of both sexe.t eo the-same e\·ening ... Seven patients of thi! group became pregnant (one on several occasions) and four dt'~ptd l'enereal diseases,'• the authors 5.ald. ''It is our impression," tbe authors Wd. "that our study demonstrates the possibility that moderate-to-heavy use 41f marijuana in adolescents and young people without predisposition to p!ycbotic illne.s! may lead to ego decompensaUon nngiag from mild ego disturbance to ~is. "Clearly, there U. In our patients, a ~ation of an interruption 41f normaJ psycbolo8"ical adolesrent grewtb processes follovdng the use or marijuana; as a consequtnct, the adolescent may reach chrooo}ogical adulthood wltbeut achil'Ving adult mental functionlngs ar emotiOllal ~sponsiveness." --=,,- an Option from NC 0....,1 n. J"tC 610Z •-tt" ftiri. tt c_ .. ifao • 4.lm ••'-•he. +.,...!111 •""'-t.nt1W1 ~ •• 1-tted .,__ ,.i..,.. ... o. -.._..~ ~.._, nit. ra. an ,_,,. .. tt. ~ I I.._. ,_l•itw .... Wt Nd ... ,..Jn, N.t ill ft,, ...J fw .;~., tW-.t. ....., ~ t .... 1.ryl Ol-,. Mo.. jcd W111 • c•n. rill,. m. "" •. ., ............. ,,...,. .... ...,.,, a. n., ~ ..... ...... ft-.--.. 1-tr•d "-'-' .. ~ ....... ~.ttc..Jly. S.t i111 fi .. , ......... ,.,..,,, ............ 6102 .. ,.., • .te.4 .. ...-., ..... ..-;., ..,."1.U..eJ ,...._._ .. Ii"-,_...._ NOW ONLY REG. $169.00 s119. CREDIT TERMS AVAIL.AaLE m 1002 rTEMS TO CHOOSE FIOM • RND IT HERE RRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN 1.0A11. IUT, SIU. 1UDE COWi IN AND llOWSI AlOUND 1838 NEWPOIT ILYD. PHONE 64'-7741 DOWtn'OWM COSTA a.IA -a.a-IW'-& •••lwf • I I ~·:I ' 1 --- . -Bo~il1'g~n Beaeh. · E-trl T 10 N . . . . ... . ORANGE COIJNTY, CALIFORNIA • VOL 6'4, NO. 93, 3 SE.CTIONS, 3'4 PAGES -. MONOA)',:,YRtj;.)9, 197f • Tetf•Y.'• Fhud N.Y. Stoek• . ' Heavy Pot Users Show Mental Disturbaiices CIUCAGO (UPI) -Two Philadelphia poycboanalysts, in a repQrl released today, aay case studies of 31 individuals shew serious mental di 1 turban c e 1 including psychosis 1n 11>me cases, accompanied bei.vy marijuana smoking. "These patients consistently sboftd viry poor soclal judgment, poor attention 1pen, poor concentraUon, conluslon, anxl~ty~ dep~sslon, apathy, passivity, indifference and, often, slowed and slurred epeech," lhe researchers ea.id. USS Endorses Pair .. 'llley a1'o liMI -l)'Dlploma .... alteration of CODJcloumess w ht c b included a splil between an oboervlng and ao apetlelJciq portion ol tho ego, an Inability to brin& ""'tg)its to11ether, a paranoid suspleloowiea of etben and regression to a more infanWe st.ate." These symptoms, they aald, were not present before tbe subjectl began using marijuana. The article, 4~e1ftels of mar!Juana on adoleoconll and yow11 adulll," WU publlabed ln ·lhe April-II iaaue-ol the Journal of. the American Medical Aaaociation. A spokesman for-tho AMA nid tbe article is .. the first real evidence, based on good JUearCh, of harmful effects from smoking marijuana. Hereiofott:, medicine bu been able to say only that lhert WU DO good evidenc:e of harm from smoking pot. Now we have some evidence.'' '!be, 1utbor1, Dn. Harol!l Kol>naky and _.aunc ' .. Wffilam-Tc-Mo=-ef tho-oQllld'·~ ll!vbloo of tho Phlladelpllia" Alsoclatlon for Pl)'cho-Analyals, aal4 tbelr JlU!l>O.'O WU to "report Only tbe effects Ren U a co-uence' ol marijuana amoklng in thole oot showing • p...u.jioolUon to ser~ psychlatrtc problem,,." 'Ibey aeld thi!r r<movec1 from t11e study· gioup thole J14!Jenla who showed aignl they bid been pr;ci;..~ to psycbolo,(lcal pro~1111 before they be1an u,ln.! mlrtluan•. n< fll!ll l'WP of 31 patiellto-ranpd In ago • Iron) II to II: and c:oosbled of .IO males and· 11 females. · 5emal promilcuity alao wu a frequent sympmni among their irubjec:ta, the autborl ' iald, "and the fnclden<e o! unwanted pregriancles among female paU,ents·was 'bigh, 11 wu the incidence of venereal · dileues , . • "There .Wal, ~rked Interference with pemmal_ cleaniloen, aroomln&, 4r<aaln.! Board President Raps Candidate By ALAN DIRKIN Of "" O.llT ..... llfiff In an 11th-hour twist to the volatile Huntington Beach Unioo High School District election, Board Pr e s i d en t Matthew Weyuker endorsed t w o candid,at.1 today and imloeded a penonaJ attack on another. Weyukt.r, wboM .seat ii one of the two offices 11 !lake Jn tho eleetloq. ill llOI aeeklng r&dectloo. ' But ho caljod from Sacramento late this rnoniln(·-""-' ho worlll 11 an aide to A!aemblyman Robert Burke (R- Huntlngton Beach) -to endorse ·John Hamilton, former mayor of Seal Beach and Ed Sheehan, an ABC agent. In an obvious referenct to Denni! Mangers, principal of Harper School in the Fou•tain Valley Elementary Dlstfict who is a candidate lo the high ICbool * * '* 37 Hopefuls Vie for Seats In District Election officials art preparin& for a busy day Tuesday when West Orange County voters elect new &Choo! ~rd members in five elementary and one high school district from a field of 37 candidates. Affected a.re the 52-aqu are-mile Huntington Beach Union High School District and the elementary school district!'! within its boundaries . - Huntington Beach City, Ocean View, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and Westminster. For the ~art polla will be ~ted at neighbor schools. They will be open from 7 t .m. to 8 p.m. Two of the candidates are seeking. dual trusteeships. Both Joaeph A. Mitrabi and Donald A. Jooes are candidatu: for the high school dlslrict board, bul ere llilo seeking seats on elementary school district boards, Mitrahl in Westminller and Jones in HuntingtOD Beach. Voter registration figures abow that the high school d~trtct llaa 79,IOO registmd voters while figures In 1b component elementary school districts are as follows : Westminster, 11,'161; Ocean View, 21,463; Fountaln Valley, 13,n&; Huntington Beach City, tS,075; and Seal Beach, 12,564. Most of the attention la focused on the race for two aeab on the Huntington Beach Union High School District Boerd of Trustees where an unpreceden~ 17 candidate.a are leekinl two vacanctes. Voten in that dlstrid will actually mark two ballots. one to elect a candidate to fill tho U""llind ~~ fonner trmtee Joseph Rlbel, and """"~' to fill two regular four·YW torml. Of tho 17 candidates, however, onlJ IO hive flied · for the unexpired term. Dr Ribal who lolt his seat lut ~ber ,;,.hen he absented himself beyond the perk>d allowed under the California Education Code, is asking voters to relnstalt. blm as a trustee. Matthew Weyuker, the other incumbent, will not seek re-e.lection . Dr. Rlbel. a psychology plorossor, bas introduced an element of mystery in the election to the eitent that be hu not campaigned ln peraon In the district and Is bolievtd to be sUll in Scandinavl1, (lie< ELECl'ION, Pl .. II • race, Weyuker charged "there is a school principal from another school district running on the claim that he will 'bring reasoo' to the board. "This same man, wbile employed ln a central California district., led a mob in a minor revolt againsj. the board wbic:h e~ployed him. Not only ii th1a not 'r.-n• but jt appears , to me to be irrap-. . . . Questioned, Weyubr aplained that be WU refO!TJll.I to ID incident fn the EarlllnaJt SdloOl District two years ago. "This princ~ waa a principal there and was unhappy with the board," Weyuker claimed. "He demanded that this guy on the board resign and led a group of Mexican Americana, Chicanos mostly, who literally stormed the board meeting demanding .that this man resign. A! the result this principal wu forced to resign and that's why be came down here." In .rebuttal, Mangers regretted Weyuker'1 "desperate attempt to inject smelt tactJcs and inluendo" into the campaign. "I categorically deny of courae that I ever led a mob in a revolt of any kind against any achoo! board anywhere," Mangers declarM. ""One incident occurred wbile I was tbete that may baTe given rise to his charges," Mangers continued. "A certain liquor store operator running for the school board in 1 tiny commUJ.ity in the San Joaquin Valley in which I was previously employed made a number of public, obscene commenb about Mexican American citizens who represented the majority of th e population there. "Several of the younger, Mexican American mllitanta came to my office threatening the man with physical harm. After six straight bOUrs of talk, I was finally successful In persuading them to seek more peaceful means of protesting the man's bigotry, such as refusing to buy from bis store and registering to vote so they could express their anger at the polls. "They did as I suggested and the man 111bloq11111Uy witbdrew. All I did wu calm an angry mob and suggest nonviolent alternaUves to their suggested a COUf'I d. action. Mr. Weyuter should play politics in Sacramento and let Mr. Sheehan and Mr. Hamilton campaign Oii their own merita," Mangers concluded. Mangers .aid that be left the San Joaquin Valley because he had the opportunlty to make several thousand more &liars a year In what lll acknowt~ed to be one of the country's oubtandina: achoo! districts, the Fountain Valley district. l Solons Approve Gasofuie Tax , SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Senate committee today approved Jep!aUon to levy· a penny of ·the sales tax on gasoline to raise an estimated $1714 milliol a year fur local rapid transit aystems. The· Public Utilities and •Corporations Committee unanimously endoraed the - measure by Sen. Jamei R. Mill! (0-San Diego), and sent it to the finance co'mmittee. There was no opposition. The money would be diverted to local transit dJstrtcts and earmarked for construction or maintenance of a system. In areas where there ii no diatrict, the revenue would be deposited in the local government's general fund. The Automobile , Chll> of Sou1hem California supported the "coocept" of the measure .. but recommended that the 1e1111.atlon ,penrut rural SCM:al ,....,,_11 to 'Ille tholr ohant ol tile aales Ill ..,..... for road cooatructloo. 'Snubbed hy Spiro' SAN , FRANCISCO (UPI) -George Christopher, fonner San F r a n c I s c o mayor, Saturday confll'Jned a columnist's report that he was snubbed by Spiro Agnew when he attempted to get the vice president's autograph for his dying l~ year-old nephew. . I SealBeach WomanHeM For Drugs After Crash Police today· alleged a young woman was under the influence of. drugs Friday when ahe was involved in a fiery collision that injured two Huntington Beach realdenb. Officers have booked Jessie Marie Shertzer, 20, of 410 Coast Drive, Seal Beach, int<> Orange County Jail on charges of popeuion of marijuana, dangerous dru&s and being under the influence of dangerous drugs. H u n t I n g t o ri Beach narcotics inveatlgators say they found the contr•band, which Included secoberl>IW table.ta, Jn the woman's purM while· taking Inventory of the items in her burnod"rihlclL Miu llllerber, ~lice dwged." WU • aouthbound on Boiaa. Chica Road near Quall Clrtle Friday Jilornjng and rin aero.a both la'nes of .onaiminC traffic when ahe OYermrrected after running off the road. Her vehicle struck anotber- head-oo, bunUng Into names, according to invesUgaton. The other driver, Thomas Duff. 39, of 4922 Kona Dr1ve1 Huntiagton Beach, waa pinned inalde his sportacar whUe reacuera worked far more than 10 minutes to free hint. Officers said· his legs were jammed inside the car and his head beneath the burning Shertzer ear. Both Duff and his 18-year-o\d wile, Ulis, are in satisfactory conditio n at Huntlniton lntercommunlty Hospital. The Shertzer woman was treated fbr iliujries at Orange County Medical Center before she wu muted. Board Will Meet TueSday Evening Trustees of the Huntington Beech. City (elementary) School District will hold tbelr only April meeting 1t 7:!0 p.m., Tuelday in the library of Dwyer Intermediate School. Trustees will hear n!Porls on a pilot drug a~ program started this year at Eider. SChool, and a slm11ar program for adults at l:;isler .chool. . Seven Seek College Posts No c~ meetings have been schedule.ct b)-truateil fi>r April beeau,. of • lack of 1janificant items for another agenda. Countian Killed Only 3 Seats Vacant in ·Coast District Elections . Seven candidates are vying for three openings on tbe Coul Community Colle&! District Board of Education In Tuesday'• election. All of tbe dlsttlcl'• 129.1418 re1istered voters will be eligible to vote on all candidates, but hopefuia reside in the trustee area they .eek. to represent. Polla wfll be Ol>tn Imm 7 a.m. unUI g p.m. 'l'uelday with ruulu to be compiled by the County Reglstrar of Votm in San!a Ana. No elec:Uoa 1100 witch be• befll aet up by tho district since r<IUnll I will be filed by pr<elnct ·dimly •lo" the Belch and l'ountalo VaDe, Elementary county rqiatrar'• oUice. ' dilb1ctl. ·'!lley .,.., 9-1, e.n, 11 o1 . Innunbenl Donald G. Holl, 12. of HIDltlngtoo Beach aiid . J,ln. Enriqueta Mkl•1,1 ctty fw 1 t u d e n t Cherin •• Daglon; 21, alao of Midway Ctty i• the Ral!IOI, II, ~ Fountain VaUey. trustee aree two race. Holl preaenUy ' Incumbenl Robert L. llbmpiireyl, ."4. repreaenta voters in the 'portion or the an attorney from COit.a Maa,.11 Ol)'l)Oltd diJtrict w h I ch is t b e· We&tmlnster by two cbellen1er1 for bla iioanl · aeat, Elementary SChool Dlatrlct, Richan! L. Oliver, l$, a ayllemnwlylt Incumbent. William KetUer, ff, ol from Co.ta Men, and 1tudeint Willlam T. Hunti"8tao BHcli, facn lwo opponenll In Unger Jr. The '"" four -t on tile the race for bis .,.. tine •I 1 CoUt Collea• board repr_,11.-11 repmentina rtsldebto ol Ibo ~ ' .i the dty oH:0.11.MMI. • - ' In Freeway Crash 'CllULA VISTA (UPI) -An Anaheim nian ~u klUed Saturdly when htJ car <Olllded with I ~-ri(. OD ll/tenlall 5. Tbe Cllifornla Hlghwey P11n>l eaid1he victim waa Albert R. Beck, 49. Tralllc wil,delayed for about an hour., The tractor drtver \ Martin Cnp: Pinedo, !O, of TIJuana, '11kl • c;ar cut him oil in the 10Uthhound lanea, for<tnc him to hit the bra~o. Ht. ilg -t out ol control oh the ra)ft.llicked freeway, Uidiled '"""''the center divider and bit ' Beek'•northbound car. lfld _ lllud)' ~ .... wm-.habilll or-bol!i • , ·~inooe111~1c!Ur-cut,diap.oela of_psycbal!J WU utabliJl>ed and, In ~ patlenll, then WU neither evidence of psycliosis 0< qo disturbance nor fainlly hiJtory of t>SY.cl>olla prior to the patlento' use of marijaam.. n 'Ibey' died tho COM of I married, JI. )'W'Old -;who, aft<r UJlng mor!Ju8!"' (or two· months, "believed that ho· had • (lie< POT, Pap I) , First, Step . For, Sp~e Platform? MOSCOW (UPI) -Tbe SOvlet Union todiy launched a new kind of utelllte Called ''Salute" and .1tlentlfic eoutcea aaid lt will be· the basis <>!-a length1 project to build lbe first inanned atallon ii space. A report by the Soviet News Agfgey Tass did not specify if Salute was me. ned but the IClentifie 90uroe.s aa1d it wq not. '!'bey aeld there wfll be more launch- ., Ill.tho oomlnfl ~lnvol•lng mannod vebiclea Wbidl,'!lll ~ wffl! l!aluto and liigin ~ ~ proJect, ,,., predleta4 Ille -will bo .. ~-lpOl:llcular and lenglby -.....,........,_ . ' '1116 ~-· ...... be! ... .,.. been Used ~let spacecraft, 1ugg!8lfng · I ii fa _a new type bulll e8peclally foftho"opace atatlon mlSalon. · Sa1ute's orbit' wu eucUy the same 11 thal uied lat most Soviet' manned 'abota - a neerly drcu1ar !Ughl path some 1411 miles over tM eartb and puaina onr tho Soviet Union'• Baibur Coemodrome in Kazakhstan. Tbe Soviet manned. space proaram of rectnt yean hM eoncentrated. eiclUllvel)' on tile goal ol•l>ttlldl!I& a space pl•lfonn. A wbol< oert0t of . fll&bll by Soyui spaceaafl bi Ille lut lhr<e yem hu tested tile . lynema and tbeortefl ol plalfOJlll bulldlng. ' Ill '""'11 -lop Soviet - tdentlsta ba'9, -fllO iwoject ioj tho -lndiatlnl[ SoViel cmifidencO tile platltnn..,. will be a reality, The ,...._. of tho lall!lch called tile !pUlnik a "llatlon," IUQestlng tt had a ·pmpoee dillerent from previoul!I unmanned abots lllDally c • 11 e d ''sputniks," or lclentlfic aatellltes." The Saluto orbital parameten Included an angle of. tnclinaUon of 51.S degrees, period of revolution of 88.5 minutes, maximum d.iJtaoce from the surface of the eet1h ol l3l mllei and I minimum dl.!tance of 120 miles. The parameWl'a ~ .. all\IOll pred .. ly the aame u Pr<•ioua manned Soyui fiigl\ta il!I which 'soviet cosmonauts praclieed lkllls n e c.e 11 a r y fot constructlon ol an'orbltal specie 1latloo. "Tbe Cllboard" l)'lleml, oqulpmenl •nd tclenUllc apparatwea ol the &talion functklo normall,y," T.. llld. ''Tho coordlnaUoo computing oenter proct11e11 Jncom1na information." Sctenlffic IOUrCel bt Moscow have pttdicled al -two veblclea cmytog two or more counonauts Will IJe. \lied 1n (!ee ITATION, Pap I) ' . wua.u. ' . , Colder -.i,bta IOd aradually warmer di)'I .,. tho _...u. calioo lat-Tulsdey·along the coea~ with ltmperalu1'1 bltllng 15 fo. cally and 71 ltulbor-inland. INSmll TODAY Two C'onQr"'1Mtl Mus ,.., 0<altd flndlno• ,.hkh Indicate heroin "'' of cpidtmfc prOJlOf' tiolll among A ... nc.. lroopr In Vl<IMm: TM cort·ll mall1hcre ~~I hJ'(lr ill '.tl\C U.S. Sto<r•Pago L ,,,. ......... ,. -.... NttjMlll-.lf,_ ... --. ...... . .. =::.~ ·: -. ""'I ::::::. ..... U.li --.. -- Z DAILY PILOT H Mon6>J, Alrlt 19, 1'71 •• 'Judge Nixes Jury Quiz Taw Defense Asks Jurors W' Take Swnd LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The Judge in the Tate murder trial toda)· denied a ctereruie effort to call jurors to the wtloess stand lo he questioned aboot how they rtached a death verdict for Charles -and hi& female codefeodanll. Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older delayed formal pronouncemen~ o t sentence against Manson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Jlouten while thelr lawyert arlWJlf fCI' a new trial. 1bt Uiree young women appeared in the courtroom with their heads shaved so there was only a slight fun appearing on their skull3. The 36-year~ld Man.00 bad shaved hlmseU bald severaJ weeb ago .. but today his hair bad erown out to a crewcut length. 'Ibe cult leader began making remarks lo Older shortly efler he entmd the courtroom and the judge warned him that if he did not ceue be would be rtmoved, aa he bad been many times during the. trial. "It's your Jut warn1J1g too,'' Man!Oll Older sald. ''It's your Jut wraning too," Manson muttered. Olief defense counsel Paul Fitzgerald orauod Iha! the Juron lhooW be queotloned alioot outalde lnllueaceo wblch afleci.d llltlr dedalon fncludtna P"trlal publicity, contact wttb. other penona and financial arrangeme:nta regarding aelling their story~ The jurors had been sttVed with subpoenas and four of them wert in the courtroom when the seaton began. Fitzgerald.uld tb.tt one ol the juron. Anlee Sisto, bad tokl a newsman that he w.. approached dortna the trial by persons who ethorted hlm to "get them." Fitzgerald .said It was obvious that the phrase meant to give the defendanL! the dtaUt penalty. Manson's attornty, Irvln1 Kanarek. argued that another of the Jurort had said that men and women on the panel were promiacuoos during t he I r seque:straUon and that such behavior could have influenced their decision. Kanarek said that another juror had remarked that they m1ght 1et as much as $200,000 if they stuck together and told their stori~. Kanarek said that a color picture showing the nude body of actress Sharon Tate with dozens of stab wound!! lying on the floor of her liv}ng room had been . ValleY. Council Studies ' ;city Expansion Project Fountain Valley clty councilmen will ~learn Tuesday how much it's going to cost for e1paru1ion of the city hall, police .peadquarters and the corporation yards. .._ .. Councilmen will meet with city staff ,members and lr<hltecb d.,lgnlnl the expansion In a study session at 7 p.m., £PCior to the regu1ar 8 p.m. meeting of Ute #(IUDciJ. About $'100,000 has been set aside to pay .{or expansion of the three facillUea. City .tfwtanager James Neal said if the architectural estimates are accepted by .:the council expansion of all three . faclllUes could be complete by the end of J171. One civic center facility wm not be discu.ssed -the community center. It was originally scheduled for eipansion also, but cowtcilmen have switched the plans o.a IL 1be commtm!ty center wu to be doubled in me, but mt.er a 1eries of public beui!l&a and dllcuulca oa Ute council level, lt now appears that plan will be lbtndoned in order lo build I 17· acre central part and r e c r e a t J o n complex. Counellmen, however, are movtns ahead o.a the plan.I to expand the other three faclUUea. When councilmen take their ttall for the a p.m. regular metUng they will face a routine agenda with only three publlc hearings. 'Mle hearin&1 cover charges for weed abatement, an amendment to the parks muter plan to allow a nelahborhood put, tod 1 propoaed !&-foot ICelllc con1dor aJona: Warner Avenue. Newport Brothers Seeking HuntingtonPierTram.01{ ~ • Two Newport Beach brother• are «etinl pmnlulon to provide mlni-bus «!'Vice al0111 the Hunlinaton Beach Pier. ' Carl Jr. and Bob McCulllll, already jlperate two restaurants and a IP(lrt '.*ilnt·bul u part of thoH operaUom. Several prevJoua operators of trams en \be pier bave found the businea1 to be a 11uD<lal Oop, bol Vince Moorhouaa, \lirector of harbora and beacbea, lh1nta Iba McCulith brolhen mlghl make ll. : "By tying the tram lnto their other 1'ualne11e1, they can write off any foaes," MoorbOUte erplaln1. "The city ~ nothing to lose l;ly letting thfm try, 'ind tt is a service to the beach visitors." The mlnl-bus -capable of seatlna; 19 P!Ol'IOIJ.I tod boldlnl !O -will start wlUt ·runs alons the pier Itself in May, if the council ·l ives 1pproval toni&ht, then expand tb.tt 1m1ice llonr Ute beach lo Beach Boulevard in the 1111nmer months. While tbe bus will carry passtngers to the aport fitbing operation, Moorhouse 11id anyone will be ablt to ride It, and the city will aet tbe route and where it- stops. OIAMH COAST DAILY PILOT CIWfOI COAIT PUIUSHllrfOi ~J,J(y 1.1r.rt tt. we"' ,.,.. ................. J•c\ l.. C•tf..f \'kit ..,.lllio!t .................. n-.. I.mt ...... n.::.::_ .. .:'·· Al•• Dlrld• wtlt °"""° ~ 1!'1W Alb,rt W. l1t•1 AIMd9t. EdlW ............. 0"'- 11t11 ...... 1.-1 • .,,,.. M.111 .. , u,,..,, r.o •... 1•0. •2•41 _.._ ·""""' atldl1 tn ,._, ·-c.. .. MmN: 1.11 Wai ••r ''""' N..,..-t e-c:t11 1111 N..,_.. ~ IM ~; • -.... E ""'" ""'' The laat tram aervJce on the pier stopped Jn JllSe. Variou1 tr1m1 have worked the pier area 1tnce lMI, but all have found It ffna11clally difficult bteuase of high lnsuruce coats, Moorhouae aaid. "Tbit, however, 11 tbe flnt encloled bua service," he added. "It mJcht reduce the iMW"ance rate and bt1p them make it." Round trip rides are expected to cO'Llt from 25 to 40 cenl!. Language Skill Program Granted Preliminary OK Ocean View School Diatrict ofllclala: have received preliminary approval of a $200,000 pilot program .for the development of language akilll. The program, which could ao tnto effect by September of 1971 pending approval by the St.ate Board o( Education, would be tested at one of the school.I for • three-year period. Gordon Bl1hop1 the Me1a View School principal who authored the tundina: proposal , says the program would be aimed at improving read.Ing and writing by usUq; a "phannaey" or prescriptive teachlfll packagea. Further, it would reduce the adult· learner ratio to 5-1 throuih 1 cadre of volunteen from the community. "Instead of telling the childrtn, 'Read well!', we will be telllns them apeciflc thlng1 to accomplish that 1oal," nld Bitbop. For example, they mlaht bfl asked to rttell a certain story they havt read or perhaps te11 a story by klokin1 at a plcturt and fantulzing about what ml1ht happen to the people in the picture. Bishop says the re wUI be about 460 different "prewiplloru1'' to specltlc diffleu1Ue1, some lnvolvin1 b o o k 1 , filmstrlP1 and e1erclse1, Life in County Symposium Topic "Lire In Orange County: £nvlro11mental Quality, Re 1 our e ea, Growth" will be the theme of an Earth Wttk symposium aponaortd by the Prosram in Social Ecology at UC Jl"\llne Tuesday. The sympoaium. open to the public without char1e, will bt held at 5 p.m. ln UCJ'1 Science Lectwe Hall. Speak.era will be Dr. Kenneth Watt. profeuor or ioolou al UC Divis ; Robtrt Battin, chairman of the Oran&• County Boll<I of Supervbon, and Ray Walaon, eucutJvt \'let pruide.nt of tbt Irvine Company. .t.1• l!llln' Ibo 6oart e'l.rk•• m.. He llld the piclun "u lall -lo Iha Jury room, "'81t•tloi lhat one ol the jurors had taken lt. Older tald that he. had 1lven careful conaldtratlon lo calling the jurors ind said that he ha4 reached the conclu.s.lon that "it ill not neceuary nor la It desirable for them to be intem>gated." The delense attorney1 then turned to other argumenta for 1 new trial. The lrlll jury de<reed deaUt in Utt gas chamber for all four. Although the judge is empowered to reduce tbe sentence to life tmprilonment., it was considered highly unlikely be woold do ... After sentencing, Manion will be taken lo San QuenUn and the women lo Ute California ln.stitu.Hoo for Women near Frontera. Howevu, Mauon and Mlal Atkina were expected to spend only a day or two at 'those prbonl before lw.1n1 broog)it back again lo Los Angel•~ They still face trial in other murders. Miss Atkins ls charged in lhe staYtna of musician Gary Hinman. Manaon iJ accused of the mW'der of Hinman and of Hollywood stuntman Donald "Shorty'' Shea who disappeared from the Spahn Ranch in the spring of 1969. Erom Page 1 ELECTION ••• where he went Wt fall to study sex education. Other candidates are Mrs. Dorothy Bray, bousewile and political wrtler; Robert E. Dingwlll, l!J'&phlc Iris abop owner; Edward Gauthier, contracta admlnlstrator; Robtrt M. Got d on, computin& systems consultant; John B. Hamilton, oU producUon uslataDt; Harry E. Hieb, attorney; Peter Horton, a~ce execuUve; Donald A. Jones, attorney; Jon K. Lawson, high tcbool teacher; Geor1e Loaan, attorney; Joseph A • Mizrahi, retired deputy sheriff; Catherine A. Mooring, housewile; Edmund C. P. Sheehan, peace officer: Bartletta Suter, houtewl!e, and Howard M. Warner, designer and teacher. Thole CODtesting the nmaining term of Dr. Rlbal whlcb expires July 1 are Mrs. Bray, Dingwall, Law.OU, Lo I 1 n, Manger1, Mllrahl, Mooring, Sbethan, Suter and Warner. In the race for two 1eata on the W"lmlnaler School Dlllrlct bolrd ort challengers Roderick Cr u 1 e , an adminlstrator in marketing publications; Mb:ahl, ud Dewey LeRoy Wlla, a deputy thetllf. 1'he lncumbeoll are Mn. Ada Clqa:, a housewife, and Frank E11twood, water auperlntendent for Ute clly o f Westmlnattr. In Sul Beach, three candldatu lncWdln1 two 1ncumbenta are vying for two aeall on the elementary 1cbool dlslrlc\ board. Being challenged are Mn. Rutb. L. Calkin.I, a trustee for more than 16 yurs, and Lloyd J. Patterson, mao11er of an industrial chemicab plant. The challenger is Mrs. Geraldine West, a housewife and political science student at Cal State Long Belch. Five candidates are running bard for two open seats on the Fountain Valley School District Board af Trustets. ~either incumbent is seeking re-election. The five office seekers are Mary C. Hix, houJewi!e; Paul A. Huard , Jr., professor of maRagement; Donald Hulett1 freight sales rtpre1entative ; Richard F. Plum, sales representative, &Od Fred w. VOQ, senior mana1ement reprtaentaUve. ln the Huntington Beach C I t y (elementary) School District race 1!1: candidate• are fighting for the two open trustee posts. Both incumbents, Orville Hanson and Louis DaHarb are seeklll& re- election. The four challengers are Donald Jooe1, attorney; James Gath, 1ero1 pace englneer; Harold Becker, criminology professor: and Ralph Marc are 11 l, pharmacisL Jury Selection Begins in Nudie County Bar Case Jury selection began today in the Oran1• County Superior Court trial of nudie bar operator Harry Maselli and one of his shapely entert1lners at the Tomc1t Bar In Sanla Ana. MaselU, SB, and Naomi Frances Slmt, 2.8, of Santa Ana, are accused of exhibiting obscene material, encouraging lewd cond uct and conspiracy. They and fellow Tomcat employe James W. Davl1 Jr.1 38, of Santa Ana, were arrested at the bar last June 4. Arre.tting officers said they took the trio into custody Jfter viewing several lewd filmt ahown to the patrons and what they !&id were equally I e w d performances among the clientele by several ol the bar'• female employes. Davis WIJ sranted immunity today In pretrial maneuver:s with the prosecuUon during which he promised to te1Wy against Ma1eUI a.nd MW Slnu. lt 11 ~i:pected \hat kienUcal char1ea 11atnat the codefend111l will be dropped st Utt conclmJon of the trial. Defense attorney Konrad Scholl& rab:ed Ute poulblllty that Miss Slm• m!lht ltlUfy IJA'inll Muelli but Jlldi• Wllll1111 Murr11 refused to 1llo1' a Ju& minu\e w~tltuUon of attorneya. ' I P.All Y PILOT SNIH l'lltlt DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMULATOR Fighting the Common Cold in an ObKure Newport Beach Lab Bat1le of Cold . Lab in Newport Scene of Drama By L PETER KRIEG Of ""° Dall' Plitt fl•H It'• caUed isoprlnosine. It'1 already been called a cure for the common cold, a quick end to influenza, and meaalea, and chicken pox, and more than a hundred other viruses . 11'1 called NPT 10.381 for ahort. U Jt works, call lt a billion-dollar baby for Dr. Alvin J. Glaaky and a handful of friends wbo put up lZ million to start Newport Pbarmaceutlcab, Inc., three years ago. Dr. Gluky and • team of 20 researcben have been working in an lnconspleuous laboratory on Monrovia Strttt 1n Newport Beach since l~ lo flDd out 1f tt works. Tbey have bem experimenting, testing and DlOlt recently manufacturing NPT 10.Sll ii.nee Dr. Paul Gordon, the Unlvenity of Cb.lcag9 profell!IOr whe dilcoveted It, turned Ill development ever to b.i.I Jong-time friend three years 110, preaumably for a piece of the action. The development of any drug is time· cOlllUmlng, expeosive and a 1amble. Dr. Gluky 11 by no meant overconlldent about the prospects. He 1ay1 it wUI be at leut two or thrte years before Jtoprlnosine 11 proven to the aatlsfactlon of the U.S. Food and Drug Admlniatration and cleared for prescrip- tJon to the public. However, the governmmt of Argentina already has been convinced and is allowing general use of the drug there. Erom Page 1 STATION ... the coming IJ)lct spectacle. Their Itliulon, sources .said, will be to construct the first pennanent orbital manned rpace ataUon, the first step in large-scale e1ploraUon of lhe solar syatem. . The previous Soyuz flights a 11 were aimed toward that end. Soyuz 9 in June, 1970, waa a two-man endurance test to determine how well men can withstand the effecl.! of wela:hUessnes:i aboard orbital plaUorms. Music with When it does get on the mark.et here, if it does, "It will probably cost about the same as an antibiotic. somewhere between $3 and $6 !or a 12-tablet prescription," Dr. Glasky said. But tbal's where lt.s relationship to antibiotics ends. "There's nothing like it known to medicine," Dr. Glasky said, explaining that the drug simply "makes the body's natural defense mechanisms work. better and faster." He said he and Dr. Gordon aren't sure how it does it. "Th'y just do what they normally do " he said, "a lot more qulck.ly ~d efficiently." Tests are far from complete, Dr. Glasky stressed. "lsoprinosine·s e[fects have only been confirmed on a dozen cases involving persons with cold symptoms," he said. "To say right now Jt Is tbe absblute cure ~o the common cold is premature.'' he said, but be conllrmed that in every one of those 12 cases, the symptoms disappeared in less than .24 hours. He insists he Is much more excited about its demonstrated effects against the flu, and tblnp like viral pneumonia and smallpox. "Right now there is nothing to treat the flu," he said. "Dupont has one drug that works against one of 140 strains of the flu, but you've 1ot lo lake Jt before you get sick." Dr. Glasky said lests on the etrect of the drug on pregnant women are still being made. "\\'e have recommended It not be prescribed to pregnant women in Argen tina," he said, "until we know more." He said.J.bere have been no indications of any serious s.ide effects. For the 37-year-old Tustin doctor and for his old teaching comrade in Chicago, and for those Jnvestors who believed in both of them, enough to keep Newport Pbarmaceutlcals operating the put three yean .. a_nd enough to pledge another $3 to $5 m1lhon to set isoprinoslne Oll tbe market, there will be one aide effect te them from their product. They will have plenty of proflt.s to sink back into the fled1ling busloesa. an Option from JVC Ch·••v' n. :JVC 6101 •11••11t•9•1 thtl, 1t 10111ii11•• .... 111 .. •Mf~ll'l•llc 4·1p•1~ 1tttto fut11t1bl• wltli •11 l·lr1d1 tl•t•• pl1,. •r '" o~• h•11d1om1, co111p11I w11it. Pil• 1i1 t•cord1 011 tl-11 1119, I l·l11ch ,.l1tt•r •11~ 1it lttck •PHI r1l11t. Not 111 th• mood fot tlftl119 thr•M9h your r11ord llbr1ry1 Ok1y, lh•11 ju1t 1llp • c•rt-- rldt1 int• th, l ·l•11k •'•••• pl1y•r •H fo•9•I it. Th• ch1119•• •~•r from pho11• I• l ·h•ck '''''' 11 •1••tnpli•h•ol aut•m•llc•llv. Sit 111 fl11• fur11llur 1-fi11i1h1d wood, t • 6102 i1 9u•1111t••d te r111d1r •uhl111dlnt prof111te111I p1rfo1m1nte in eith•r fu11tl io11o NOW ONLY REC.. $169.00 CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE II • U.S. Planes Blast Reds Second DaYr SAIGON (AP) - U.S. figh!«·bcxnhers attacked North Vietnamese poe:itton& inside the A Shau valley today for the second successive day in support of' an allied operation that apparently hasn't gotten ol.f the ground. Both President Nguyen Van TbieU and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, th e commander or U.S. forces in South Vietnam, announced the o p e r a ti o n Saturday, and Abram3 said South Vietnamese troops were in the A Shau, giving the impression that they had moved into the ~mile-long valley in force. But field reports today said only reconnaissance ·troops were operating inside the valley on the Laotian border. and the major forct would move in later this week. The announcements by Thieu ind Abrams raised the possibility that the U.S. Command and the South Vietnamese government were giving out misleading information in an attempt to confuse Uie North Vietnamese. But Abrams' chief spokesman, Col. Robert W. Leonard, said he considered questions along this line ''impertinent" and added: "We have never used the press to c a u 1 e 1peculaUon." South Vietnamese military headquarters turned aside all questions about the operation. A spokesman, Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, said he would not disclose any details until there was significant contact with the enemy. The forward command posts of the South Vietaamese task force and de· ments of the U.S. lOlst Airborne DlvllJon have been set up just to the south of Quang Tri City. U.S. officers in the field said troops from the lOlst would conduct offensive operations once the operation gels going. About 2,000 American ground troops and 10,000 South Vietnamese are committed ''on paper." offirers said, but there flfe several possibilities, including a smaller operation, or a larger one extending into Laos, depending on what t be reconnaissance forces find . The South Vietnamese forces include two regiments f r o m the lst Jnfantry Division and two brigades of marine.!, all of whom took part in the invasion of Laos in February and March. A U.S. helicopter reportedly was shot · down over the A Shau over the weekend and !he pilot was killed. Helicoptert or the lOist patrol the valley regularly. The A Shau valley 365 miles north of Saigon is just to the ea1t af Bate Area 611, a major North Vietnamese supply depot on the Ho Chi Minh trail thrOUih southern Laos. The valley ls used a.1 an infiltration corridor and 1 u-p p I y transshipment area far the northern quarter of South Vietnam. Erom Page 1 POT •.. developed a superior lntellect at the expense of a loss of his sexual life. He was the first member of a new 'mper race.' After stopping his smoking his delusional i d e a s disappeared an d he returned to his normal functioning in his job and marriage." A 20-year-old man, after sit months of pot smoking. "believed that he was in charge of the Mafia and that he was an eastern potentate of the Ku Klw; Klan," the doctors said. 1 A 16-year-old boy, after three years o( smoking marijuana, believed be wu God's son. A 19-year-old male thought be was "able to communicate with and control the minds and actions of animalJ " ... or these cases, t1oore and Ko1ansky said it was their "impression·• that' the use of marijuana "ca113ed such severe decompensation of the ego that it became llecessary for t b e ego to develop a delusional system in an attempt t.t restore a new form of rea.Uty." lOOZ ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL. TIADI COME IN AND llOWSI AIOUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MllSA -let•-Harli. a "-•'r --.. ~ ----. . . -----·-- 11-. ~ 19, 1971 H DAILY PILOT ' a Mll.1' ,....., ,... .... ,.... t'o-.1 KEN GULLIKSEN, CALVARY CHAPIL LAY MINISTER, BAPTIZES JOANN SMITH DURING RITES SATURDAY AT PIRATE'S COVE IN JcORONA DIL MAR • • Sho WH Ono of About 1.000 Bollo .. rs Who lmmonocl Their Old !'•rson•lltln In W1tors of Cove ind Emerged 'Now Parson• In ~ .. Chrlll' Viet Veterans Protest 1,000 Ex-Gls Stage Rally at White House WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hundreds of Vietnam veterans shouting antiwar 1logans marched past the White House and ralUtd at the foot of Capitol Hill tday demanding an end to U.S. involvement in Indochina. Kicking off two weeks of ~ce demoDltrations in the nation's capital. ex-Ola estimated by police at 1,000 strong first p a r a de d to Arllitgton NaUonal Cemetery, then back to the White House llld to the Capitol, their chants growing louder as Ibey walked. At one Point, as some of the twG-blocka.. long parade passed the rear lawn of the White House, President N I J: 0 D ' I heliCopter passed overhead on it! way to pick up Nlzon 11nd demonstrators, with clenched fist.a raised, shouted "Peace now! Peace now!" / The marchers bad moved past the White House when Nixon le.ft in the chopper for a speaking_ engagement at Williamsburg, Va. At the 'C °' p It crl. the demonstrators, many dreMed in the. combat unlfonns they wore in the junglea of Vlellwn, beard .tpeeehes by several antiwar Congressmen urging that they peacefully lobby against. further financing of t h 1 war. Week of Eco-Crusades Started Across Nation By JAMES PBilLIPS Aa.cla!M l'r.n Wrtltr Man, the endangered species, stands alone today in the primate building or the AUantl, Ga., zoo. He ls surrounded by caroagr. In New Yor~ workers spilled out <lf 1kyscrapers to discover lS blockl of normally congested Madison Avenue devoid ol autos as scientists measured the level of atmospheric contaminants. Both are Earth Week dt!:Jll()nstrations designed to point at the many ways in which man poisons his <lwn environment. Students in Des Moines, Iowa, hoped to collect 80 toos of waste paper Saturday to kick off Earth Week. By Sunday, they had gathered over 200 l<lns. A weekend fund-raising rally in Hartford, Con1.l. collected an estimated SIS,000 for the uinnecUcut Earth Action Group. The rally was described by a policeman as the "happiest, cleanest and best" he had ever aeen. The Atlanta display was among the most dramatic. A live man sits by himself among piles <lf trash in the building otherwise occupied by apes and <lther primates. Curator Vernoo Kisling said the man- surrounded-by-garbage demonstration ii an effort to dramaUu the danger man and other anJmah · fact becaU&e <lf garbage and polluUon. The teach-Ins, a e m i n 1 r 1 and demonstrali<lns will take p I a c e throughout the nation's second annual Earth Week in hopes of emphasizing ways each Individual can contribute to a cleaner, greener, healthier planet. Michigan Gov. William G. Milliken said in a proclamation "Progress has been made, but we must n<>w shift our emphasis from consciousness of the problem to an active, accelerated effort to preserve the environment." Three recycling centers <lpt!:n in Rhode Island in an effort to get consumers to return their waste paper and cans for reuse by industry. Cleanup campaigns, with volunteers sweeping trash from parks a n d roadsldel!I, highlight Earth Week in North Dakota. The rally broke up about noontime and the protesters a&embled under a warm apfing sun on tbt: grasa or on lower levels of the Joog steps leading up the West Front of tbe Capitol Police lined upper steps to prevent them from gettin,g in tbe Capitol en masse. The veterans -augmented by some mothers, girl !riendl and apparenUy some active Gls in civilian clothlna: - mapped a week of acUvities around Washington leading up to a massive rally S.turday. Still more, possibly more mllllant, demonstrations have been scheduled for next week by olher groups including such antiwar flgurea: as David Dellinger and Rennie Davia, two of the "Chicago Seven" defendSJtts. The marcben who, had spent a cold hight huddled b1 coats, bedrolls or other wraps In the grassy area near the Uncoln Memorial, marched first to Arlington Cemetery to honor fallen comrades and other victim! <lf the war. They were not alk>wed to enter the cemetery, and retraced their steps back across B r oa d Memorial Brtd11e. then foll<lwed ao. approved route along CanstituUon Avenue, up 17th St. N.W. for two block.1, then east along E Street which passes directly back <lf the broad expanse <lf the well manic\lred White Houae 10Uth lawn. 1be lines bad passed when Ntxon'• chopper took off, almost unnoticed, at about 10:15 a.m. The marchers conti.oued to 15th St. N.W., back to Constituti<>n Avenue, then <ln to the foot <lf Capit<ll Hill. That is the site of a massive rally scheduled f<lr Saturday t<l climax the week of demonstrations by various a n t i w a r groups. The veterans flashed the 'V' peace sign m<lstly as they marched in bright. pleasant weather to Arlington Cemetery, but were disappointed in spite of advance notice -when they were not allowed to enter. They marched back across t h e P<ltomac River, growing more serious and chanting such slogans as : "P<lwer to the people ," "Hkli, Hi-dJ, Hi-di·h<l, Mr. Ni1on's g<lt to go." Nixon Calls U.S. WeHare Big Failure WIWAMSBURD, Va. <AP) Pl<sldent Hlloa llld today the United stata cannot tQlerate a wellar1 qstem ·"uiider which warklng ptopla ... be made to feol llke fools by thote wba will not. work." "It " lncndlblt tllal wt ba .. -• .,...... of .fawt under which Olll penoo "'" be penallud for doing an bootol dlJ'• wort IDcl -,.,... ... be -erded tor dalna nothlnc," m.oo llld ltl • ~ prepered for the Republlcaa dovernors Conference. The President denounced the c:urrent welfare system as "a monumental failure," and urged support for his own family assistance proposal, b e f <l r e Congress again after failing to win passage last year. Nl1on said under the current system "the person on welfare ca.n <lften have 1 higher Income than his neighbor who bolds a low-paying job. "Tragically, these situations often Hist in the same neighborhood, side by side In the same apartment houses -and the effect Is corrosive," Ni1on said "It creates bitterness on the part of the worker. In the end, I suspect, it causes realgnati<ln -and we end up with &n<lther person on welfare ••• "The fact ls that the welfare establishment and system in the United Statei is a monumeatal failure. It makes t.be taxpayer furious. It makes the welfare recipient bitter, and it inflicts the dlstillaUon of all this anger and bitterness to the children who will inherit this l~nd. It ls a disgrace to the American spirit." N!J.on said he does oot think any job is - menial H It puts bread on the table, "pr<>Vides for your children and lets you look every one else in the eye." He said scrubbing fioors <lr emptying bedpans is n<lt enj<lyable work but the.re is as much dignity in it as in any job to be done in Uilil country "including my own." Nl1on chose for his hard-sell bid for welfare reform an audience of GOP governors beset by riJlng state weUare coals. ,. Calvary Chapel Baptism Ritual on Stai£ Beach .Edftor't Note: Th•ir numbtr1 were who aavtd ua and givtl us the lbuDdlnt unpr1ctcltnted, tM 11000 toM totte life, and that's just what we did. baptiltd in a public ceremonv Satur· Jt wasn't Cllvary Ol,pcl trytnc to pt day at Corona dtl Mor CllJi and Stale publicity or 111)'1hlot Uko tlloL TheJ doa, Bracll Park. Thi.s ii an aecowt of need to. People jull W.1a God and "'1 that rl"'41 ., ""''"" btl 20.year-o~ In Ille 1J1irll llld He -Ille nel. Andy Sf)ftling, • ...,,.ber of Calvary Tbere wu a ruJ unity llld -In Chapel which eonductrd Ille rl!t, and JeJUI S.tunlay Uh tllera aJw.,. la In an ""'Piov• Of the dilpatah dlpart· Hlm. mint of 1111 DAILY PILOT. There wero people 1n1m ...,,, ... By ANDY SPERLING group there. No iwic-UPI -iooC bllr °' "" 111.., '"*' ,,... -or adt and ties. 'Ille bapllam wu ablolultly belUllful, MlllJ of the people tllm .,. U'1lll tljllcially when you'"' a Chriltlan. eumples of whll the realilJ of blTtnc To tee brothen 111<1 llstera ge!Uq rtd Jmll u Lard of your Ille llld -c& of thet old •If, thel old lift wltll ell el Ill do. emptiness and crossing into that new, full A lot of them have been.delivered from life that we have in JeSUB Q\rlat matea drugs, a lot from drinking problema, aes me want to burst. bangupt, you name it. That's about the way everyone WU Jesua ii real and living and ffe ca& Saturday, just burating with joy and ~ change an empty, dirty life and make it love of Jesus. clean and full. One sister came over to me ju3l after Anyway, I see all that and a lot ID(lft she was baptized and aald, "Praise Godt at the bapU!ms. What It coma down tb You're getting wet," .and threw her anna is Jesua la Lord and He'1 •orkln& In 1 around me. mighty way by this Spirit. The purpose o( the baptiSm was for All you have to do is receive Jeswi tnte new believers in Christ to be baptized and your heart as Lord and Savior and He for Ille family of God to prllle Ille One will do the rm. County School Trustees Take Look at Book Lists EvldenUy not salt.sfied with Ille present book selectkln melhoda used by the Orange County Depitrtment of EducaU<ln, the COunty Board of EducaUon baa asked staff to preaent a new system at ita nelt meeting. Trustee Roger C. Andenon, p f Huntington Beach, raised the issue 18.st week when the board wu asked to approve a list <lf paperbackl requested for UR in a county-operated apeclal school. Anderson, and board member Dr. Doris Araujo, <lf Orange, questioned teveral tiUe1 for which approval for purcbue WIS sought, including "Up Against the Law -Legal Rights of People Under 21." Allbaugh the board leter •Plii•itd purchase of the complete r<eomm<i>dt!I list, Dr. Araujo questl<lned the one booll: <ln the ground tbat Jt f1ll&ht inflame .,me you Iha. Don Jordan, board member from Garden Grove, defended the reading .111& recommendation noting he had met a teacher at Otto A. Filcher School wbo'• found "The Great Gatsby" to bl therapeutic to one problem 1tudent ii partlcular. • "I would hesitate to place m)'lelf u a person who can judge these boaU from a vantage point far removed from the Ull <lf them,'' J<lrdan sal~ "How are we ta tell baw • specific book mar belp -child." • El Rancho has the hottest price in town! CAMPBELL'S MUSHROOM for • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Thick and rich and creamy .•• as only Campbell's knom how to make it! ••• and so vet'BatiJe I Serve it u a hot and hearty soup .•• use it for a muahroom sauce. , • a rravy ••• a cooking aid in caseerole.s •.. and be glad you thought to get some at El Rancho's apecial price! IO Ya oz. cana. Cabbage ·Roll~.~,~ .. ~~: 39! Tender leaves, stuffed ••• ready to cook and aerveC Pickles .... ~~.~~~ .. ~ .. 49' Crisp dill halves • , ~regular or k08her ••• 22 ounce size I Royal Gelatin ..... 3 i 25c Regular size packages in your choice of favored flavora I Bee.f Tongue~ .. ~"! ... 59~ Freshness is one of the differences at El Rancho I Downyflake French Toast ................ 39C Frozen •• , heat Jn the toaster or Oven and serve! 11 1/:i oz. pkg.! Sliced All Meat Bologna .. .. ... . .. ... .. 29t Always a sandwich favorite ! Springfield ••. 6 ounce package! Gingham Sliced American ...... ....... 35c For sandwiches, from the 6 oz. package ••• or delicious melted I Bay's English M.uffins .......................... 33• At our delicatessen ••• 1pllt and toast for sheer delight! 12 oz. Pricu in effect Mon., Tuu., Wtd., April 19,~0, !/. No aalu to d«llert. ARCADIA : Sunset and Hunlrno,Ion Or 1 11/1 1 1: PASADEN A: 11/1 1 1/, SOUTH PASADENA : )i/r'i/. HUNTINGTON BEACH : /!/r11/i NEWPORT BEACH : 1117 Newporl Blvd Hlrl tEt Rancho Centeri ·· 320 West Colorado Blvd .-·.· Fremont and Hnnlrngton Dr ·.-·: Wa111er and AlgonQurn !Boardwalk Cenlcr l ""' 1555 Easlhlull Dr 'Easlhhrll V1lla~e Ccnlrr • I ~· DAll.1 l"ILOT Border Tension High Vf'l N9WWIM• INDIA. PAKISTAN TENSION WORSENED TODAY WITH REPORT OF ALLEGED SHELLING 1' Pakisten rt.dlo S.ys lndi1n Guns Shell• d Governmtnt Troops Inside E. P1kist1n Pmg Pong Team Returns, Radio Pakistan Charges Outpost Hit by Indians Heaps Praise. on Chinese By IJBlted Prell Iaterutloul The U.S. table tennis team WU bomt1 today -home for more penonal appearances, home to relax and home to cemember. Fifteen team memben and wivea vi!ited the Oiinese mainland last week to play ·a series of table tennis . matches. •1 weie the first American group to .Wt, Qlina since the Comm~ toot ever in 1949. "Fantastic," said Glenn Cow!lD of Saota Monica. "Fantastic. The people are· SJQl We saw the wall (the Great Wall cl Qlina), we saw the premier, we aaw the country, animals of al.I kinds, hones, pis. Fanwtlc.'' Cowan, 19. whose long hair and mod life style made him the most publicized member of the team , was one of ail" team members arriving in Les Angeles Sunday horn Tokyo. The othen flew into San P'rancL9eo and Ntw York. Cowan said be was very impressed with Olinese Premier Chou En-lai, with whom he had a discussion of American bippies. f !" ..... ' . Uf'l(T....,... ' NEW DELHI CUPI) -Radio Pakistan said today Indian troops supported by artillery attacked a Pakistani border post and that Pakistan had lodged a strong protest with the Indian government. Last week lh,ere were similar. charges and protes~ by India. Radio Pakistan said the alleged alta'ck too k place between Comilla • a.n d Brahmanbaria in eastern Paki3ta.n. Brahmanbaria is in.the far eastern sector of East Pakistan just across the . Indiiin border and near the Indian border'town of Agart.ala . Another festering sore in ·lndo-Pa)U.,tan relations appeared to be developing in Calcutta where the Pakistani deputy high commissioner and 50 members of his staff renounced all ties w:ith Pakistan and threw their support to the rebel government in East Pakistan. Pakistan has not yet reacted to the move , but was expected to protest. "lntelligent.. versatile," Cowan &a.id of the premier. "I believe I could mediate between him and Nb:on very easily." Cowan would not be able to relax Immediately since he said he had a round or television appearances to make. PRAISES RED CHINESE Visitor Glenn C~wan Jn lhe actual fighting lbe Pakistani army appeared to be gaining the tij!per hand. Radio Pakistan reported Army troops had moved within five miles of the Indian border near the spot where East Pakistani rebel leaders form a·I I y proclaimed their independence o-n Saturday. Another well publicized member o! the team was John Tannehill. 18, of Middleport. Ohio, who was quoted while in Ol1na as saylng he wanted to remain on the Communist mainland. On arriving l:n New York with four other team members Sunday, he said he was misquoted. "l didn't want to stay forever," he said. "l wanted to stay a 'Week or two and learn more about the Chinese people and maybe go on a farm and work there." He said other members or the team also wanted to extend their visits but the Chinese told them that if the delegation "went in as a whole then the same 15 peopl~ would have to leave in order to eliminate any commotion." Radio Pakistan said the t r o.o p s occupied the town of Meberpur, five miles from the border. This was three to four miles from Bhaberpara, the village where the rebel proclamation was Ussued Saturday. The guerrilla I ea.de r·s-.are believed to have left the area. Spring Goes Into Hiding· Much of Natwn Pelted by Cold Rain, Snow; Some Sun California no. -· WI• ,,_H, 1-lr lodolY wtlfl '°"'' coetlll low cloo.>ch In SooYll>-.,... Glllfot'ni.. llOl',...lll'll clovcll111M W.• t QllClld Tve.dt l' wllh 1 c111nc1 of ~ 1 ... "" moun111n ,...., nortft. .,. CMtltl MCTIOl>I. 111 lo6 An"lti •!Id vlcln!!Y lltfft .... -Mrll' f'l'Wlm)"" COll!tl kM clouds. O'PNrw!M II Wlf, lt!r wltn "" .,.. lrrfllllDn fl"Ol'!I ._, h~<Mlh.,. <loudln9o1 w11 hPllC1td TwM1•. Tiii l'l\tlfl lodly w1• ""r n wlftt 111 11Cf1Kt- • -.illll• low el Jll. It -· .... 11., ....... ., •lent Ille be.ct>- • •1111 .... """' -· '2 .... "" ...... JI • ..,,..._ w1111111 10 "' 20 .... "" flour. Al fM -l'llllft ,........ It Wl l Mrtlf dlludl' '"' ... ~llr'I' -"' the --o-~ou-ln"'9~ wHl'I ....,. r•"'"-'""" "'-tOI .,., .._ fllfl't ,..,_ ., rM 1h ln 1111 ..,..,,.,fin. Hllfll lvnN'll 1M1 1-tet '"'~I· -....,., ~· t..Molo kldl ...... s...... MMlct ~. • .... 111 .. '1·'2.. Ml. Wll-.... l'1lro>dll1 !'° ... lllftnldt 6MI. l"tlltl S.rlftt• ,. 7S. lllk-"Md '2-11. S.1> OIHo l'MS. a.ntl .. ,,..,. ..... IMI ANMI,,.. ftnt.AM ... ,.., V .S. .Summarv ltdllY ....... ""'~· _, W.. ... fel"ll -llllM .t "" c..,1r1t ....., -+hirnt OtMI 1"111 .. 11 1 -kw _.. ... '""" __, _ ... ,.. """' ,.... ....... S-1 ""'tdOl>t ... ,. ,.......,.. Ill _..... T HM 1.W """1w•i!dl ~Ill ..i1i111 ~ (ljy, "-'· A tllmMe rtltYIEWOf'MOAA NITK>fCAl WEATHER SEh'ICETD 7:111.1 .M. EST 4 ·1t •71' 1r1'n~'f:-,__ 7-77.::7..,,,{..c~ ""''!'t ~D IAIN • f~~tto"110 \it,,,, /'f':-.... .. LI tt..et 111'\id ~-Tn ., c114 ~· ttll•MIM 11 U l'lllllbtl ...... lnhtrtocl .. ,...... ....... -"""'* •• • •• MMtll'I II El 1'111), Tip~ .... \It I., fl>t lloct.lft .....,, l!Yn ... Inell of ·- w1a <-'tel 1,..,,, "11ftW t rtll. L•n• cltr, Ww,., fl'(fl¥M Twe lnd'IM. 11 CO)rllr11! lUftftl' ll<IM l l'lcl 1111111 ....,,,.,,1u•11 --• 111~'"'" lrom ,.,. /llllHIHIHI V1li1¥ 111r...1rcl It "'9 ,11111n1~ C..11 t nd 11.,,,, "'' 1'1elt>e COMI, LiNdo. Tu., Wll 1111 Wlr-1 IPO! ifl ltiif "'"°" lll'fldt1 Wllh I retell"' .t M clttr-. T'-OWt?lltht ~ w11 11 ..,,_ It llJ', Ntv, • Coastal Metlly 1-f fod•w. Llthl Vll'ltbll wl'* nltfll tl'lcl momlnt '*""' ~ 1111 -t to ,,.,...,.,Wft, Kl M 11 ~nah lft .i'~ 1'111N• •ncl TUlf,d•Y. Hfti'I ,_., In 1!>e k1w tot. C1111t11 t'"''Ht1lur11 rentt trom " te " •~11"° 1-...11u'ft •-lfllll il ~ l'O, w,1.,. 19"1-llYrt JI. Sun, /tfoon. Tides MO"DAY $t<:oncl •le~ IJ U" m. 0 0 kconcl tow 1·11,.m. J.t TUISOA'f l'lt1t "'ell i .lill 1.m. • • lt'J••• low .• 10·5'1 ........ , Stc.eM ~It~ l~d '·""• 4.0 ~O"ld tow 11: .... J'll. '·· ~~ Ill ... SU 1.m. IMI •;ti 11,1'11, M-Ill-l: .. 1 m. l9h l11J2 '""· Temperature• •1 UNIT•D l"llfl$ INTUNAT!ONAL TtMHrllurtl Ind P1"1Clplt1tfO)rl IOI' the 14-llOl/r ~rfod t'lldh•• 11 ' 1.m. AIMu...out ,t,nchO•ltt eoston l!urt1le Clltrlartt C~lcate Ch1clnftllt CltvtlllWI 0.1111 ...... ~ Dtlr1>1l l<1lrbl'*• H-'11111 IMl1111pell1 ,_ k111M$(1.., L11ll-1 L1111bwll .. -· Mlt ml Mlt..\lkM N .. v .... Oii.it"""" (lty ....... '"''"" Serlfltll '""''•dtlpl'l\a ....... l"l"'llll""' Petr'ltlWI ltaf!ld(l!1 ·-.. ._ S.c,........,re SI loul1 SIU Llllt (llv S.n 0 /tff Sin Fr1"CllC'O S..•lllt W1,,,ln1to11 Wlllfo!Ht HI•~ 1.1 .. l'roc. " " " .. .. ~ n " " .. .. .. ., " .. " ., " " ~ • " " n " .. .. .. ~ * " n •• " " " " " .. " :: " " • .. a • • " " " • " • • ~ a " " " • • ... .u •• . .. ,Q , -Anaong v.s. Troops • . Heroin Epidemic In Vietnam Cited SAIGON (AP) Two U • S'. congressmen said today that heroin addiction a m o n c American troops in Vietnam ls of epidemic proportions. They blamed corrupt Vietnamese officials for part of the problem and said the ready. availability of drugs makes the aituation almost impossible for the U.S. Command to control. 1be two congressmen are Rep. Morgan Murphy (0.IU.), and Rep. Robert H. Steele lR..COM.). Tbe House Foreign Affairs Committee sent them t t Southeast Asia to look into the drug problem. They spent three days in Vietnam, visited Laos and attended a narcotics conference in Bangkok. Steele said figures provided them by the U.S. Command indicated tbat 10 to 15. percent fl! the American troops in Crisis Worsens; Israeli Rushes To Washington ' By United Press International Israeli Deputy Premier Yigal Allon left abruptly for Washington today to discuss the worsened fl.Uddle East situation brought by fonnation of an anti '.Jsrael federation linking Egypt, Libya and Syria. Diplomats said he would seek new American guarantees. Israel, under American pressure, has been working ror days to come up with an acceptable counterproposal t o Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's call for an Israeli pullback from the Suez Canal so the waterway can be opened to international shipping. The situation changed a b r u p t I Y Saturday when the federation agreement was signed and the three participants issued a series of slatements including one that the Sadat canal proposal was no longer effective . Public statements by 1sraeli officials during the weekend .showed Israel had hardened its own position in response. The federation not Only links the three nations against Israel but pennit.s Egyptian jet.s to use Syrian air fields against Israeli targets. Libya provides a backup force with 110 Mirage jet.s recently purchased from France. The French ForeigMi Ministry said to- day in Paris that if any Of the JJO Mi· rages are used outside Libyan territory all furthe r st\ipment.s of the supersonic warplanes would be immediately halted. The .Mirages were onct the backbone of the Israeli Air Force but were replaced by U.S. F-4 Phantoms when France haJted all shipments of anns In Israel. , Yietham -about 30,000 to -45,000 men - are using hlsh grade heroin which is between M and 97 perctnt pure. Sleele blamed the ertensive use of heroin in part on the "widespread and rplstak:en belief that it is not addictive if snorted or smoked" andl that it doesn't have the odor and bulk of marijuana . In 1970, be co.ntlnued, between 59 and 90 Gis died rrom tverdoses or heroin. "-problem has reached epidemic proportions," Steele said. "Efforta to meet the problem have only begun and se far are ineffective. There are enormous implications to discipline and the effects on society when these men return home. "Unless the problem Is checked, It will provide a compelling reason to speed up the withdrawaJ of troops from South Vietnam." Murphy said he and Steele were approached several tin:ies by Vietnamese heroin dealers working the streets of d n w Ml t o w n Saigon. A vlal of heroin, roughly a fnurth of a gram, sells for $1.80 to $2.10 and the average addict reqpires two vials a day. "These boys will need a Jot of money to support their habit in the States " Murphy said. ' Both Congressmen said the Sout h Vietnamese govemment has not done enough about the problem and that it bas just started realizing the extent of it especially among young Vietnamese. ' ""We have every reason to believe that corruption among public officials is an important factor in smuggling heroin to our troops in Vietnam," said Steele. "The time is long overdue when our allies sbould recognize the extent of the problem." 500 Rebel Prisoners Surrender in Canada KINGSTON, Ont. (AP) -Kingston penite~tiary was a shambles today following the collapse of a rebellion by pr!soners who didn't want to give up their privacy. The rebellious inmates wrecl:ed the main cell block they occupied for four da ys before they released five guaros they held hostage and surrendered Sunday. One convict was reported killed by a feDow prisoner and 11 others were injured in fights among themselves. A prison spokesman said all but 100 or the 500 rebel prisoners were transferred to nearby federal prisons and that no concessions were made to the inmates. Ifie,.. "!i's the neweat in waterbed nightlDefll'. Pull the •Iring (!nd it inflares!' Ceylon Soldiers Execute Rebel Troops on Spot COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) G<lvernment troops attacking a forest full of rebels say they execute their captives as soon as they're convinced the prisoners are insurgenls. Ten have been shot and twelve more are being executed today, said a ranking oCficer who reported that rebel baUle casualties in the hills around Kegalle totaUed 200 last week. "Once we are convinced prisoners are iMurgents, we take them to the cemetery and dispose or them," he told newsmen. Another officer said the idea of a truce with the rebels had come up but his solution was total destruction of the leftist movement that tried to overthrow the government on April S. "We have learned too many lel.!Ona from Vietnam and Malaysia. We must destroy them completely. We have no choice,'' said Lt. Col. Cyril Rana tung a. who heads a force or troops and police shelling an estimated -4 , 5 0 0-5 , O O O insurgents in a thickly forested triangle about 40 miles east of Colombo. He said this is the backbone of the rebel anny . Ranatuanga said his forces bad been raining mortar fire on the rebel strongholds, but "we cannot go in" because of rebel snipers, tree-trunk road blocks and sentries who warn insurgents to scatter and hide. Inside the triangle are the rich graphite mines at Bogala, where rebels · seized 12.000 sticks of dynamite, and large gasoline stores they are using to ~ake firebombs. Four of the government forc.e have been killed in the past week. Newsmen were shown 38 prisoners in crowded cells at Kegalle. Most of them wore dirty shirts and sarongs and wailed silently to be interrogated. of your best have a new address. Glendale Federal Savings Save or great ne>N low rates on has moved to Harbor Center. home loans, look no further. Lock, stock and safe. People too. Glendale Federal/Cosio Mesa We're now right on the is just as nice as it ever was. And comer of Harbor Boulevard and lo~ more convenient. Wilson, so if you're looking for [GFS] Glendale's famous friendly serv- ice, escrows, Umpteen Ways To Fri. 9-0. tv\on.-Thur. 94; Cilendlle Federal San111·Cost1 Mesa c.on.otllllbcwlhij1mdlf• 1& CllnarC ' ) I .I .\ ~... ... . ... . ~-'-.. ·-·-....... ·~ 'WEATHER OR NOT' -Although sudden April showers cast clouds of doubt over what · milady might select to wear to the Grand Marlihal's Ball, members of the Huntington Harbour ·eommitlee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society still ~· A rouSing ovation greeted the introduc- tion of William Ekberg as 1971 Grand Mar- shal for the annual Christmas boat parades sponsored by the Huntington Harbor Com· mittee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society. The winter boat parades and the Opu· lent Grand Marshal Ball in the Spring are the major funding events sponsoi;.ed by the com· mittee with all funds ·earmarked to provide continuing free youth concerts to all Orange Ctunty child{en. Relinquishing the nag to bis successar was retiring -Grand Marsh3.l Robert Kerr. Greeting guests as they arrived in the Balboa Bay Club for a 6:30 no-host cocktail hour prior to an 8 p.m. dinner were mem· bers of the committee's board of directors, group officers and their escorts. The com· mittee i.s ·comprised of members from Ad· rniralty, · Islander, Marina and Starboard groups. BEAUTIFUL GOWNS Board chairman Mrs. John Silver ac· •. cented her diminutive brunette beau1y in a nostalgic white lace ankle-length gown de· signed with Ieg-of-mut~on sleeves and featur· Ing a form-fitting waist and slightly galllered skirt. Her only jewelry was an antique broach fastening the high neckline. Ba,11 chairman Mrs. James De Maras sel· ected ·a white crepe sheath designed with a jeweled neckline and costume coat of citron ~een while Mrs. Ekberg. wife of the new Grand Marsha], chose a white formal preated pantsuit with a jeweled top. Black was the choice of Mrs. Harry T. J.tiegel. board secretary. who accented a Jong sleeved floor-length gown of flowing jersey' with a simple strand of pearls. Mrs. Claude Jones, treasurer, picked a Jong sleeved white chiffon with a high neck- line trimmed in blue ,sequins. -.-.•• .t ~v • rived eleganlly gownOcl . for the ·formal' fUJidlDg event of.the spring. Trying io·mate a dt«;lsiOn'.ar• Mrs. John Silver, board -chairman, Oeft) .and Mrs. David'M'eyer, ways.and means cAairman .. · . · Also favoring formal'Panlsuils.·were Mn. !Wph Moss, who·selected yellow crepe ·with a matclling fringed. shawl and Mn1. Robert Bruns, who wore 'a.pltated blue desien tea~ turing an. empire · waist trimmed in . .rhln_. stones. . ' . . Ways and means ·chairm-.rt Mrs .. D1tid Meyer picked an elegantly simple white·ijor- sey bimmed.at the elJ1pire wairt' and.lllihecl neck.line with.multicok>red·jewels. S!'RING HUES Bright Spring hues complimenting . the potpourri of fresh multicolored flowers which adorned the tables and stage: were selected by Mrs. Matthew Schuster, board coordinator, who wore a bare _midriff top of black. wittJ: a semifull skirt of yellow, black and white print. Mrs. Gilbert Thompson , president .of Marina group, chose a ruffled cocktail'length dress in a silk print of pink, yellow, green and white. Parade chairman Mrs. James 'I:bompson. favored ja floor length black chiffon inter· woven with gold threads· and featuring tong sleeves and high rounded neckline, while Mrs. Dallas Moran m, board parliamentarian, wore a ~ktail length black cbiffoh with a white satin collar edged in rhinestones. Mrs. Richard H. Morrison, president of Admiralty grouo, accented her dark h&lr in a red chiffon ball gown with fitted bod!~ and flowin~ skirt while Mrs. David Thurln, 11fesl· dent of Islander group, selected an original creation of whit~ silk organza. Mrs. Albert Herbold, president of Siar· board, the newesl group which comprises the Huntington Hartiour committee, filiored a Ion~ pint chiffon with a beaded top.' • In addition to the ball and holldav .boat parades, the committee sponlOrs a 1 Christ· mas Cruise of Lights in which area rosldenu are invited to view the el1bor1tely decorated Harbour homes by boat. · . . ' ' ·-·--·-· • en BEA ANQERSON, E41tgr· Ml!Nn, "-ti lt, •lfn M ...... 11 .J,-. r-,._ • TEA FOR THREE -Or the more, the merrl<r when the Huntington Beach ·wotnen'a Division, CharD'ber of Com merce, entertains mothers and candf· dates for the MiSs Huntington Beach contest during the annual motber-daugb· ter tea taking place Sun.day, April 25. Early arrivals for the event are Mrt. John lrminger, contest chairman, Bobbie Thurston Oeft) and Becky Sullard. Dea.dline Nears Entrants Poise Cups For Contest Judging P.o.i.se a1 well as personality will be judged when entrants in the Miss Hun· tington Beach contest and their mothers attend the. a ual mother and daugb· ter te1 sponsored. by the Woman's Division, Huntingto Beach Chamber of Commerce. . Serving a; chairman for the event taking place · between and 4 p.m. Sun· day, April 25, in the Com,munity Methodist Church will be · rs. Raymond Morehouse Vt'.hO will be joined by Mrs. John Irminger, contest c a man, and other members of the board . Contestants also will be eritertain ed during a swim party and barbecue on Saturday, May 1. • Entry blanks are available in area high schools and colleges. Additional Information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Irminger, 592·5896~ or the cham· ber ofnce, 962-8661 . Deadline tor entering is Friaay, April 23. In oi;der· to enter girls must be 17 prior to Sunday, April 25, but not more ~n .26 by Aug. $1. They must be residents of the city or attending school or working within the area. Assisting with arrangements for the contest are the Mmes. Ed Rubio, lick· ets; George Freeman, programs; Ted Bartlett, publicity; Russell Reilly, decor- ations; Henry Knack, prizes. and Jake Stewart, Judges. Already named as judges have been MisS Susie Bruderlin, Mrs. Florence Smales and Mr1. Mary Lantz, with otb ers to be announced at a future date . . Edison High School Madri,al Cons oils will . perform during the contest whlch will take place May 15 in the. h lgh school. Youthful Idea.ls, Aspirations ·Span 'Madem·oiselle's'. Era :'·-: . . ' .. . . . NEW YORK, N.Y. -Betsy Talbol Blackwell I e av' e s • • Mademoiselle • ' Magaiine after 36 years on t h e maguine's staff. She relinquishes her position to "Mademoiselle" Editor Edith Ra)'TM!ld Locke with lhe July, 1971, issue. "In 19.15 her sights were set Ot1 a magazine dedicated to the young college-educated woman between eighteen and thirty who shared her own wide interests ... everything bun fashion to f I ct lo n, grooming to 1<>und vocallonal advice, philosophy and art to entertainment and t r a v e I . Mrs. Blackwell understood from the · beginning . thlt ' a· 'to' the j,.ibl15her'i belltf that It magazine for the young shoakl • wriuld • not • Hll a fashion· open it! pages to the young." .• m,Jp:qn,e) the .m •·I a 1 I n'e Taken Crom the forward of publlaJ>ed Dylan Tho ma 1 ' a "Forty Best Stories from veru· play, "Under Milli: Mademoiselle," by eutaffers Wood,7 . complete, with .tbe Cyrill)' Abels and Margarita author 1 corrections made Just G. Smith~ the above be.st before hla death .• Tbe play was describes Betsy T a 1 b o t first heard re.ad at a "Y''. by a Blackwell's 36 active years on statfer, who ' lmmed11t.e:ly her magazine "(or smart afterwards ran backstage and young women." bought it. From its early beginn.ihgs, "Mrs. Blackwell'• policy,'' Mrs. Blackwell helped to g~kte say1 a staff member, "has the magazine through many always been to Utmt 'her literary and fashion "firata." ~itors and totally back·tbelr Judgment. no mailer · how LITERARY FIRSTS controvenlal lhe 1Ubject. She Uader Mrs. Bl1ckwel1'1 never turned ariytbhtg . d01'n astute direction (and contrary on the basis of subject or I - ' ' laaguace ~dtY-ttabe tholiaht' tliOuglih, and " ~~atlon1 o1 l,t ·~am't goM"edOllllf'to lllfft . tbl.y....C: , al Ci 'Ma cle fDIO·IMHe:t'! • bigki . "Our ·Uuell Ed.Hon wl!.lcll . . ttudards." we started ilr1ht·>0'1, belp us A'ANS G~rtQ~' ~ In '.~ wtlll :toc1ay'a la her deep II'.,• . ollice, youlll~ l loo'-upon .lune, when aurrounded,by 1·b O·W e1-. e I ~,~ .Ed.U.orl· -come to ~ln)qc-.ber oollectkloa ol N"'.' ','krt to help UI edlt the antique dOlla, fa'na, J a n d Aupat Collt1e IAMe, 11 our mlniaturt I b o·e 1 , Mn. rejuvenation period -a Bllclwell tells · bow ,ahe· his · dJ'aoc.ot,. fer thtm to brln& UJ been able . '° 1pan" .t.h e IOllle..fresb, 'MW ldeu." eenerations theM . pail M ~:-Blacli:wen bas 1lw1y1 )'ean. • *ii ·'!ttermlned . to keep up 'Thanks to the predomln-wllll t1ic paco of today'• younc enUy )'OUtig staff at Made~' ,people -'their dre'ss, their ollelle, and lb' lnteOlfe ~-· ·p11Uooolflly,'thelr'morts ..• munlCltiOfl• Wifb tKe ~)'duth ., 1 • I I I of• the: Q)l,Ultfy, t.toha.ve~ be ·1"8JG•STu. · able to 'lollow lllt • ldeill. "Lall year I' I apprond lht fil'lt tour·letter word to be could be pun:hued. publi!bed in Madet'nolselle. I How did she prorhl>te · her felt ln context, this word ,youth marketing concept? belonged. Until then, -1 had ' "The Idea alarted when I • reluctant to consent to I~ wu dlsouselng fashk>n with appearance, but we· h a d Andrew Goodman, head or rtaCbed a point where; I Bergdorf 0 o o d m a D . I limply could not dJsregard e:a:plained to him that.his older it!" customer1 will Inevitably grow Wllb her background In older and die off. He had to wblisblng and merchandising, carry young clothes at Mrs. ·Blackwell created a concomitantly young prices in maguirie tbat bridged the gap order to meet the needs of his between manufacturer and new young customers.'• consumer. She originated the YOlM'llFUL MARKET now-accqrted practice of Mrs, Blackwell continues, •llltln& specific prices for "Youth·mlncledilarketing was .Very fashion shown, and a revoltfUonary Idea at lh&L f.ellina readers Utrou&hool the tlme. It ,wu ''Mademoiselle'' c:owilry wbtre mtrChandlH that recognized the educated young woman as a vlabl' rriarktt, and , aold the textile and ~auty Jndu1trle1, manufacturers, and ret.aUen on youth." Looking ' back on her 38 years a t "Mademoiaelle:," Mrs. Blackwell poinll out, "Mademoiselle" I 1 11ightly autobiographical. I was in my twenties when I started working on the maga.r.ine, and there was really no magazine edited for me, I was certalnl1 interested In a career; I Jiftd clothes; end I liked to rtad. " 'Mademoiselle' encompa• 8ed everything I was lnlareD ed .In •. and fortunaiely,. tJ\eiw were other people~Ub me." " .. l JI DAILY PILOT ; - M....,., April 19, 1971 ... ora1 debulanlel. 1111 I lli*CI Pili• Stocwn, Mrl. Nancy N<wb"'"'11. a 1970 Wayne w.,,.. Slocwn; 11111 Ea>plre debutul< modeled Sben1 Anno 'Illoniqulst, Dr. her ball cown. aod Mra. Joba Jerome '71 Debutantes- Pink, •hilt. and II"" Doral arrancements set a festive mood "hen 1971 Emplre Debutlrltes were introo.uced Friday durloc a molbef'. daUlhtar -· In the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Norman CJttle. 1171 Empire d<l>utanla and Thornquist,· and 111A Gwen tbe1r pattnll.,. Miii Leslie Elizabeth Wlqwtt, Dr. and J ... Allee, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mn. Jwi Richard Wittwer. Jefferson A 11 en ; Miu Debutantet aad tbelr fatben Kathleen Merry Duncan. Mr. were hosted at a bnmch and Mi"s. MerTill Vernon Sunday 1n the Irvine Cout Duncan; MW Mary Michele Cow>try Club by the ball Edelblute, Mr. and Mn. ~mmlttee of Harbor Key, Charles Graham Edelblute; which la a iupport.. group for Miss Jo Ellen Field, Mr. and the Child Guidance Center of Mrs. Owen Lincoln Field; Orange County. MiuKarenAnne'Johmon,Mr .. Tablet were adorned and Mro. Rid!anl HUmar with wicker baskell ntled with Become Toast The 12 young women, who will make their bows Friday, June 111 were greeted by Mrs. John P. Wright, president of Har}>or Key~ the sponsoring organization of the ball. Of an 'Empire' Also offering a welcome were the Mmes. William H. Weaver. president-elect; Van R. Parker, ball chairman, and Ivan W. Sturgis, presentations chairman. Jobn90n. sprinl flowen. Others are Miu Patricia Before the brunch, the g.lrlt A highlight of the hmcheon was a showing of fashions from the Park Ave. Brkial Shop, Orange. modeled by Ha:-bor Key members including the Mmes. J. O'Hara Smith, Jame. Evans, Frank Pend1eton and Jun Miller and SUzanne Mayna June, Mr. and and tbe1r fa then toured the Mrs. Roy Etbiel June; MW Harbor Key Thrift hp, Micheata Beth Kelley, Mr. and where the debutanlel gjve Mrs. Olarles Elmer Kelley; service tlrnt, and the cUnic, ?i.fiss Cathleen S u z -A n n e headed by Dr. Leonard I. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Le!:ser. Laurence Martin; Miss Mary Proceeds from the seventh Lou Myers, Dr. and Mn. annual ball will be praented Charles Lincoln Myers; Miss to the Child Guidance Center. Scholars Benefit An art will: and tea In Laguna Beach's Sleepy Hollow Gallery will be sponsor· eel by tl)e Orange County .llllls College Alumnae on Wednesday, April 21, from 10 a.m. to ' p.m. Admlriog art works including jewelry, driftwood pla· ques, metal and wire sculpture aod paintings are Oeft to right) Mrs. James _Truesdell aod Mrs. Estey Cowman. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Horoscope Sagittarius: P.roposa I Due TUESDAY APRIL 20 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2l·Aprii 29) Much that occurs may be shrouded in mystery. Be wary of one who speaks only off.the- record, Some faclt must be· for the record. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Some of your fondest desires can be fulfilled . You have backing. Go ahead. Refuse to be discouraged by oae of little fa ith. You have knockout punch. ' GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Obtain Yalid hint from Tauru1 message. Stress is o n performance. What you do now will be appreciated by one in )Xlsition of authority. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Your intuition is active. You cut through deadwood and get to source. Trust inner feelings. lgnor one who procn>tjnates, LEO (July 23-Aug. :12): What you thought wu part of past may, like legendary pboelli1, rise again. Keep mind open. Some may startle with unusual requests, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. :12): Boon to Business Orange Coast se<:retaries will have their 1'day in the sun" Wednesday, April 21, during Secretaries Week, April 18-24. Theme of the 20th observation is Better Secretaries Mean Better Business. Hoping to be a winner in a contest to find the ontstanding secretary sponsored by Bahia Cbapler of National Secretaries Association is Mrs. Vernon Price. ' Lie low. Observe rather than assert. Be flexible. Sagittarius individual will aid. Key is e1panslon. Refuse to stand still. You must time movea. --------------------I LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. :12): Emphasize practicality. Ooo't play games with security. One who tempts, promises is not for you. Know this and respond accordingly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You can show off best Alumnae Lesson Defense Makes Sense qualities. Good lunar aspect Who better to bead a and Loan building in Tustin coincides now with creativity, · elf• r '"A~ will be the locale for the love, Intensified relations with program m 5 "\le ense wc•u a program. ~·1e policeman and a former v_., .. 1 sex. Inspector Kovac joined the SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· li-1arine? Force in 1965 after serving Memories Rekindle Dec. 21 ): Home, environme nt. Stephens College Alumnae or four years in the l\tarine re I at Ions with family Orange County have asked Corps. }le was appointed members are SJXltlighted. Inspector Edward J. Kovac or senior patrolman in 1969 and Build for security. Refuse to the Tustin Police Department investigator in 1970. h e e d s I re n c a 11 o r to instruct them in "Sell· All area alumnae are invited irresponsibility. defense for Women" when to attend. Mrs. Wyn Qiapman CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan . they meet at 7:30 p.m. on w i 11 furn Is h fur t be r 19): Be ve rsatile. Realize that Tuesday, April 20. Jn f 0 rm at i o a for those APRIL'S BIRTHSTONE 1he. Oi~anl. llorti than anr other l'flftl, the Diamond, prized for its llN and brilliance, hu in!luenced tbt 11'"9 and aeiiona of both men and wome:n."It.a haTdneu make• it inYinciblt and, ao ft WU thoucbt. 1J171t.itaJIJ capable of protactinJ' a wean:r from tYil. The Diamond romantlcallJ •Jmbolius trmocenc. for April'• childrtn. WHf' 21our birtA1!owt far Jlfl /a.1AMnt. tnui 1ood /orlwne W s.vth c •• ,, Pl•s.t lrilt•I •t th• S•11 Di•90 Fwy. 540·'0" By Erma Bomb«k When a radio station caught fire recently, a disc jockey ran into the burning building and emerged happily with the one thing he considered worth risking his neck for . . a recording of Frank Sinatra AT WIT'S END singing, "Night and Day .. , ''Yeah, bul not until next When I asked myself what J Easter," be said. wouJd save if our borne was in "I'd save your hair dryer,'' flames. the answer was quick said my daughter. and unfaltering: the baby book "But wb.at about all the of the children. l don't get friendship pictures of your mellow too often. but when I classmates you gathered?" do I am positively sickening "I see them at school," she about it. I leaf through that yawned . baby book and can almost see "I think J would save my the bald-head and the \\'tinkled bowling ball," pondered my feet ; smell the milk breath husband. and talcumed bottom : feel the "You're kidding," I gasped. smooth skin and wet fists. "That thing bas been stored jn That book ls Daddy with hair, the anic so Jong, it's flat on a house the size of a phone the bottom. You never bowl booth; me in a size 10. It can anymore." never be replaced. "I know, but tr a new house "If our house was on fire," t was being built and I didn 't asked my family, "w hat would have all this yard work and you save?" inside repairs, I might have "\Vho set it on fire?" asked time lo bowl again." tbe youngest. My other son hesitated. "I "It doesn't malter who set guess, first I'd grab Jtarry the fire." I said, "'l'm only tour dog). then my box of asking wbat you would save." snacks I keep under the bed. "That's easy," be said. "My and then my can of new tennis Easler candy in the freezer ." balls. If I still bad some time, "That's stupid," l said , J'd check on you and Dad." ~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~"~lbaitic~a~nibeii"~P~la~cedii.'i' iiiiii:~"~W~ha~liiwould you save, Meet the genius behind that Fabulosa glow, ANA MARIA ALBA appearing 1 to 3 Tuesday in I. Magnin Santa Ana Mom?" they asked. ideas can be numerous but Tbe State Mutual Savings interested. total concept Is special. You --------------------! will understand. Neighbor is I thought of the book with the pirik faces that launched a thousand Christmas cards. The record of Jmmunilatlons. The loving arms t b r o w n around Granddad's knees. The cardboard flowers stapled to a sucker. and said, "My li!t o( baby sitters." "That figures," they grimaced. I didn't want to blow my Image. Besides, I keep the list of baby siltet!l in the back or U:le baby book. likely to tell tall story. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18); Be aware of what Is of rtBI substance. Don't fall for fast talker. Ask to see, hear and test facts . By being n:aJ. lstic, you gain respect and money. Know this and proceed accordingly. PISCES (Feb. 19-~farch 20 ): Emphasize the new. Encourage one who has Ideas. You benefit from fresh approch. Leave the past. Crowning Glory beauty salons · OPEN MMINSS ANO SUNOAY& APPOINTMENT HOT ALWAYt HECl!:S5AllY SPRING PERM SALE! • • • • BEAUTY SALON 1/2 SALE PRICE • Chapter Advances Members ol the Silver all Gold Chapter of South CoUt Community H06Pllal will * &in an acUve year of service with the first meeting Of !JI!' year •t 10 a.m. tomorrow. Plans for the .. fuad-raislng soft drink booth al tJie summtrr Laguna B e a c li Festival of Arts will bl di!<:us3ed In the Sooth Lagun1 home of Mrs. Bertram Kampert. BE FREE.,, OF FACIAL tlAIR FOREVER. LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO REMOVE EXCESS HAIR Wini MODERN ELECTROLYSIS , MEDICALLYAPPROVE'D,1 • SAFE, FAST1 GENTLE, CONSUL "f"WITif OUR LICENSED TECHNICIAN IN OUR BEAUTY SALON, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT .. to teach you the beauty ritual using her secret formula creme concentrate. Bouncy, breezy beautiful curls Flattering new fashion look. sats Very Special. Reg. $15.00 now OUR F'AMOUS CONDITIONAL. AND SALON CUSTOM PERMS: Get the purse-size Fabulosa Spray as a bonus with any Fabulosa purch~se. Just at I. Magnin. Cosmetics 1. magn1n. • BUDGET PERM ••••• olwova •SH (Normal Hair) $ IS« FROSTING SPECIAL .••... 14 SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT Mt11 T11tt WM •2•i ., .. SOUTH COAST PlAZA-Phone 546-7186 Lower Level-Next to Sears 0.,.n Evenings 267 L 17111 St, Costa Mesa Phone 548-9919 Open Evenings & Sund1y We CARE' ebout youl Look your bettr . ,, ................................ .. REG, 2s.oo •••••••••••••••••••••..•....• 12.50 REG, 35,00,,,•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 17.50 REG. 50,00, •,, •••,,,,,,,,,,,, •,,,,,,,,, 25.QQ ntE PERM OF YOUR OiOICE INCl.UDES A PERSONALIZED STYLE CUT, BEAUTY SAL.ON, , RESTOR CONDITIONER "REVITALIZES YOUR H.-,/R , .CONSULT OUR KREE EXPERT IN PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644.2soe f I ·• ,\ • Fo1111ia.i11 Valley E.DlllO·H ' ~oday'• Final N.Y. • VOL 1>4, NO. 93, 3 SECTtONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, <;:AUFORNIA MONDAY, APRIC )9, 1971'. l'EN CENTS Heavy Pot lJsers Show Mental Disturbanees CHICAGO I UPI) -Two Philadelphl1 J)!)'choanalysts. in a report !'.tlleased today, say case studies of 38 individuals show Serious mental disturbance , including psychosis ln some cases, accompanied heavy marijuana smoking. "These patients consistently showed very poor social judgment, poor .attention tipan, poor .:.oncentraUon, confusion, ani:iety, depression, apathy, passivity. indifference and, oft.en, slowed and slurred apeeeh," the researchers said. USS Endorses Pair They also listed 1mon1 symptoms "an alteration of coosclousneu w b i c h Included a split between an ob.w!rvlng and an nperimciq port.Ion ol the ego, an inabilit)r to brlnf tboogbts together, a paranoid auspJciousness of ethers and regression to a more infantile state." These Symptoms, they said, were not present before lbe iubject.s began using marijuana. The article, "effects of marijuana on adolescents and youni; adults," was published 1n the April 19 iuue oI t be Journal of the American Medical Association. A spokesman for the AMA Aid tlie article ii "the lint real eVldence, ~std on good research, of harmful effects from sll'!oklng marijuana.•· Heretofore, .medicine bu been able to say only that there wu no good evide~ of harm from smoking pot. Now we have 50me evidence." The authors, Drs. Harold Kolansky and _aunc • William T." Moore of ·tbe Ollld ..Arlalyala J?lvllloo ol the ~Iphla ~tioe fer P1ycl>c>.\nlly1il, aaf4 lhelr purpose Wu to "report enl)' tbe eliects ~ u 1 COMequence · of marij....-, smollhli In those not lbo!rini I ~ltlOll to serious psycblatric problems."• They said Ibey ftlnoved from lhe ltudy group -pall .. la who obow<d lien• Ibey htd been pndllposod t o peychologiool proble1111 be! ... Ibey began iu!:J1 mlr\juana: ew The flnll group of 33 poOO>tl r .. geiHn age from IS 'to 24 ,.llJd CODSflted of II males and 18 females . Saual proMlscuity also wu a freq11t11t symptom· among lhelr subjects, lhe author:t 1a141 "and tho incldellee of unwanted pregnancies among fema1e patients was high, as wu the lncldeoce of venereal diseases . . . "There was. marked ln~erence with penoell CleanlineSI, grooming, drtulng Raps Candidate By ALAN DIRKIN Of tti. P•llJ l"lllt ll•ff In an 11th-hour twist to the volatile Huntlngton Beach Union High School District election, Board P r e s i d en t Matthew Weyuker endorsed t w o candidates today and unloaded a personal auack on another. Weyuker, whose seat Ls one or the two offices at stake in the election, is not aeekiqr ('e-election. But he called from Sacramento late this morning -where be works as an aide to Assemblyman Robert Burke (Jl.. Huntington Beach) -to endorse John Hamilton, former Playor of Seal Beach and Ed Sheehan, an ABC agenL In an obvious reference to Denftl~ Mangers, principal of Harper Sch~t .in the Fou11t.ain Valley Elementary D1str1ct who is a candidate in lhe high school * * * 37 Hopefuls Vie for Seats In District Election ofCicials are preparing for a busy day Tuesday when West Orange County vo~ers elect new school ~rd members in five elementary and one high achool district from a field of 37 :andidates. Affected are the S2-sq uare -m i 1 e Huntington Beach Unk>n High School District and the elementary . school districts within its boundaries . Hun tine ton Beach City, Ocean View. Fountain Valley, Seal Beach 8 n d Westminster. For the most part polls will be ~at.ed 1t neighborhood schools. They wtll be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. . Two of the candidates are set_!king dual lrusteeships. Both Joseph A. Mizrahi and Donald A. Jones are candidates for the high school district board. but are also seeking seats on elementary ~l district boards, Mizrahi in West.minster and Jones in Huntington Beacb. Voter registration figures show t~at tbe high school district has 791500 reg1Stered voters while figu~s in •.ts component elementary school districts are as follows: Westminster, 18,763; Ocean View, 21,463 ; Fountain Valley, 13,21.l: Huntington Beach City, 13,075; and Seal Beach, 12,564. Most of the attention is focused on lhe race for two seats on ~ Huntington Beach Union High School ·District Board of Trustees where an unprteeden~ 17 candidates are .eeking two vacaoc.ies. Voters in that dlstrlct will actually mark two ballota, ope to elect a candidate to fill the unexpired term of former trustee Joseph. Rlbal, and another to fdl two regular tour-year terms. Of the 17 candidates, however, only 10 have filed for the unexpired tenn. Dr Ribal who lost bla seat last Dece.mber ~hen he absented himself beyond the period allowed under the Calltornia Education €ode, Ls asking voters to reinstate him I! .a trustee. Matthew Weyuker, the other mcumbent, will not seek r«lection. Dr. Ribal , • psy<hology ploreaor, hu Introduced an element of m11f.erY in tbe election to the extent lhat he bu not campaigned In pereon In the district and \s believed to be tUll In Sc:and.inavla, (lie ELECTION, Pa11 ll \ race, Weyuker charged "there is a school principal from another school district r.un ning on the claim that he will 'bring reason' to the board. "This same man, while employed in a central California district, led a mob in a minor revolt again.rt the ~d which emp)oyed him. Not only is this not 'reaaon1 but it appears to me to be irrespQnsible." • Questioned, Weyiit.r upl1Ined lhat he was referring to an incident in the Ee.rllmart School ~jp: two·years aa:o. "This princlpil wu a principal there and was unhappy with the board," Weyuker claimed. "He demanded tbat tJm guy on the board resign and led a group of Mexican ·Americans, Chicanos mosUy, who literally stor'med the board meeting demanding that this man resien. As the resuJt this principal was forced to resign and that's why be came down here." In rebuttal, Mangers r e g r e t t e d Weyuker's "de4perate attempt to inject smear tactici and ibauendo'' into the campaign. "I categorically deny of course that I ever led a mob in a revolt of -any kind against any school board anywhere," Mangers declared. ';One incident occurred while I was there that may bave given rise to his charges," Mangers' continued . "A certain liquor store operator running for the school board in a tiny commuaity in the San Joaqt1in Valley in which J was previously employed made a number of public, obscene comments about Mexican American citizens wbo represented the majority of t b e population there. "Several of the younger, Mexican American militants came to my office threatening the man with physical harm. After six Jtraight hours of talk, I was finally su&eMful in persuading them to seek: more peaceful means of protesting the man 's bigotry, such aJ refusing to buy from bis store and registering to vote so they could express their anger at the polls. "They did as 1 suggested and the man subsequently withdrew. All 1 did was calm an angry mob and suggest nonviolent alternatives to their suggested a cours of action. Mr. Weyuker should play politics in Sacramento and let Mr. Sheehan and Mr. Hamilton campaign 0111 their own merits," Mangers concluded. Mangers said that he left the San Joaquin Valley because he had the opportunity to make several tbousand more dollars a year in what ii acknowledged to be one o( the country's outstanding IChool districts, the Fountain Valley district. , 1 .. Solons Approve Gasoline Tax SACRAMENTO' (UPI) -A Senato . committee today approved JegislaUon to levy a penny of the sales tax on gasoline to ' raise an estimated $173.4 millio1 • year for local rapid transit systems. Tbe Public UUlities and Corporations Committee unanimously endorsed the measure by Sen. James R. Mills (0.San Diego), and sent it to the finance committee. There was no opposition. The money would be diverted to local transit districts and earmarked for construction or maintenance of a 11stem. In areas where there iJ no distrlct, the revenue would be .deposited In tbe local government's general fund, The Automobile Club of Southern Callfornia supported the "cbocept" of the measure but recommended that the Iegl11latlon permit rural local governmenta to use their ahare of the sales tax revenue for road conat.Nction. 'S~ubhed by Spiro' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -G<orge Christopher, fonner San Franc l 1 co mayor, Satuniay confirmed a columnilt'• report that he was snubbed by Spira Agnew when he attempted to get the vice president'• autograph for his dying 14- year-old nephew. • '' SealBeach WomnnHeld For Drugs A·f~r Crash Police today alle&ed a }'OUJ1I 'WOman was tmder the influence of drugs Friday When she wu involved in a fiery collision that injured two Huntineton Beach residents. Officers have booked Jeule Marie Shertzer, 2.0, of 4-10 C.OUt Drive. Seal Beach, into Or8nge County Jail oo charges .of possession of marijuana, danger<>UI drugs and b<lng under lhe influence of dangerous drugs. Huntington Beach narcotics lnveatlgat.ors say they found t he contraband, which included aecobarbital tablet., in tbt woman'• pune while taking Inventory of the Items in her burned vehicle. Ml" Shertm, police charged, Wll southbound on Boha Chica Road near Quail Circle Friday morning, and ran acrou bolh lanes ol on<omlng lralflc when the overc:orrected after. running off lhe road. Her vehicle liruck another · head...,, bunllnC Into !lamta. aocording to lnvesllg1toa. The other driVfr, Tbomu Dll!f, 39, of 4922 Kona Drive, HuntiAgton Beach. wu pinned lnolde .hll sporlacli wliile rescuers worked f« more than 10 minutes to tree him . Officers aaid hla .Jegs were jammed lnslde the car and his head beneath the burning Shertzer car. Both Duff and bis 18-year-old wife, Lois, are in saUa!actory condition at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital 1be Shertzer woman was treated for Inujrlel at Oflllj!e COunty Medical Centtr before she wu arreated. Board Will Meet Tuesday Evening Trustees of the HunUngton Beach City (elementary) School Dlalrlct will hold their only April meeting at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday In lhe library ol Dwyer Intermediate School. Tru.steea: will hear reports on a pilot drug abuse program started this yelt 1t Eader School, and a almllar program for a<lllta at Gisler chool. Seven Seek College Posts No other meetings have been 11eheduled br, trustees for April because of a laci ol. 1 gniflcant Items for another agenda. Countian Killed In Freeway Crash Only 3 Seats Vacant in Coast District Elections Seven candidates are vying for three openings oo the Coast Community College District Board of Education in Tuesday's election. All o1 lhe d~lrlc\'1 t29,'611 -regloiered voters will be eligible to vote on aJI candidates, but hopeful.a reside In the trustee area they a.eek \o represent. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. unUJ' 8 p.m. Tueeday with re.suits to be compiled by the County Registrar of Voter1 in santa Ana. No election poll watch bas been aet up by the district since returm will be filed by preclncl dlrec\ly to lhe county rea:lltrar'a offic:t. Innimbenl 00.ald ,G. Hoff.. &2, of Midway City facet t ~u d e n t Charles Oaglon, 24, also of Midway Cty ln the trustee' area lito «race. Bolf prue11tly reprtseRta .otera in the-port.Ibo of the dilttict w h l c h ls t b e Westminster Elementary School Dillrk:I. Incwnbent Wllii1m Kettler, ft, of HunilnCIOll Beacll. face& two opponoola in the race for hit area three .,. teat. rtpreoentlng ruldenla " tla Hununatm Beach . and F:oontain V1Uey Elentenllry diltrldl. They .an: Barbara Bell. 23 ol Huntµigtoo Beach , and · Mr1. Enrlquela Ramoo. aa,1of.i>oun1>ln Valley. lncumbeftt .Jlobtrt L. Humphreys, «. •• 1ttorney from Colla Meal. la oppooed by two· cballtngera tor h1I board 1eat. Richard L. Oll•er. 15, a 1ystem1 analysl f""" Cool> M ... , and 1iudtn1 'Willlam T. lhlger .Jr. The .,.. foor Hat on ·Ibo Coall ,O>llegeibolt4 __ fa. _la " U..dty ol Cool> Mell. ' CllULA VISTA (UPI) -An Anihe1m mon WU ld!led 5atun!a7 when ' Illa Cir coJllded wllh I inlCt.tractor rJi 00 1nws1ato ~ The CllUornla Highway Patrol said the vlc\lm 1'U Al,berl II., a.ck.,49. Tr.ilia wu delayed for 1bout 1n hci<Jr _ · The tractOr driver, Martin CnlJ Pinedo, 30, of Tijuana, said a Qlr cot hlm ofl In the IOUlhbound lines. forcin& him to hlt the bralles. Hl• ·ril -t out o! control on the raln·tUclted freew1y , 11ddded acr<>11 lhe centor divider and bll Beck'• norlhbound car. , and Hudy ht~ila or work htblla or bolh ... "In ... tubgrqup, a cJtar.cU1 diql>olfs o1 ~· wu.establlahed and. In lheM patlenla. lhl!ra'WU oellher evidence ol peycholil or ego dflltutbanc:e ·nor lamll1 histOry of peycboifa prior to the potlellU' use of mar:lju&nl.'' They ·ctt.cf· lhe Clio ol • married. :u. year-old man wbo~ after Uling marijuana for two . months. bell<ved lhet be had (~POT, ..... ,) First Step For.Space Platform? MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Union today launched a new kind of aateWtll call.eel "Salute." •nd scientific aourcu oald II will be lhe bub of 1 lengthy project to build the fint manned station in space. A report by the Soviet News Agency Tau did not specify lf Salute was man- ned but the tcientific IOUTCU said it was not. They said there will be more launch- es bl the comitl& ,da)'l involving maMed vehk:lil 'which will redezvous wlth Salute ""' llqin ~SQllllnlcllon projecl. '!'bey predict.cl Ibo -~ bo ~ l(>ldlclilar .... lmalb1 -·~~~beforehas been Died fat 8ovlet spacecraft, augpstini that Ir ii a oew type built ~ for the 1p11ce slatlon million. ~'• orbit wu euctly the same u that med for moat Soviet manned shott -4 wily circular filght polh oome HO mlleS'ovu lhe Wlh and pwlng over lhe s.v1e1· Union'• Ball:onilr COsmodrome In Kuakbstan. The Soviet manned' 1p11ce program ol recent yeara baa concentrated exclusively on tile atial of btilldlng a lfllC" phrtlorm. A wbple oerle1 of fllgbla by Soyuz apacecraft in . t11e· la!t three yeart ha! tosted , lhe , syatana and lheorlea of plaliOn!I building. ln recent weeks. top Soviet apace llCienilala ht~ dUcu""1 die projec\ in lhe pm., lridlcaUn1 Soviet Confidence the platform aoon will be 1 reality. The T;.. repl>'I ol lhe laW1Ch called the spulnll: a."llatlon," lllUesllng It htd a .purpose d1fttrent from previous umnarmed thota usually c a I 1 e d "apubtlks,'' or 1eienUfic satellites." The Saluto orbital paromelm Included an an&le of inclination of 51.6 degrees. period of revolution of 88.5 minutes, malimum diltance from the 1urface of the earth of 133 mile11 and a minimum diatance of 120 m!le1. The Poramel<n were almoot precl!ely the wne ao pr<vlooa nwmed SoyuJ fiigbla In wbtcb Soviet cnomonaula practtcm akllla . n e c e 11 a r y for consttuct1on of an «bital space station. •'The onbofrd syitema, equipment and: aclenlific 1pparatuaea ot the atatlon function normally," Tau aaJd. "The cooriHnation computing center processes Incoming lnfonnaUon." Scientific llOW'Cel tn Moscow have predicted at Just two vehicles carrying two or more CO!Jmooautl will be used In (See STUION, Page S) Weailler Colder iilabto and gradoally warmer deya are· the pwognoatJ.. cat1<>11 for Tlleld&)' alone the coast., wilh temper111ueo blUlng as Jo. Cally aod 75 fUrlher Jnland. INSm.11; TODAY · Two Co,n.Or11tmen have ·rt-- .. olcd fl~ which indicate hUoin vat of epidimic propor- -among A...nc.n ~fft Vi.mom. Tiit c:oil ii ""6ll lhcra but hug• fft lhc U.S. Storv Pago 4. '. ' ---- t ! OAJLY PILOl " M...,.,,..,..119,ltn ... Judge Nixes Jury .Quiz Tate Defense Asks Jurors t.o Take Stand LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Th< judge in the Tate murder trial toda)' denied a deftnse effort to call jurors to the witoesl stand to be questioned about how they reached a death verdict for OW'les Mamoo and hJa female codefendanta. Superior Cow1 Judge Charles H. Older delayed formal pronouncement o f sentenc:e again.st Manson, Susan Altlns, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van llo11ien whJJe their lawyers argued 10< a new lrial. Tbe three young women appeared in the courtroom with their heads shaved &0 there Wall only a slight fuzz appearing on their skulls. The Syur-old Manson bad shaved himself bald several weeks ago, but today his hair bad l?'OWD out to a crewcut le.ngth. 1be cult leader began making remarb to Older shortly after be entered the COW1ftlom and the judge 11Parned him that if he did not CUM be would be removed, as he bad been many times during lbe trial "It's your last wamiag too," Manson Older said. "It's your last wraning too,'' Manson muttered. Chief defense coWlSel Paul Fitqerald argued Iha~ lbe Juran llhould be queotiooed ·--lllfllle-which affected tbelr dec!Jioo including pretrial publicity, contact with olbtr penoos and financial arrangements ~gardiug selling their •ltlry. The jurors had been served with subpoenas and four of them were in the courtroom when the session began. Fia,erald aid that ... of the Juron. Anlee Sisto, bad told a newsman that he WU approached during the trial by persons wbo exhorted him to "get them ." Fitz.gen.Id aaid it was obvious that the phrase meant to give the defendants the death penalty. Manson'• atlonley, lrvlnf Kanank, argued that another of the jurors had said that ~ and women on the panel wtte promiscuoul during t h e I r sequestration and that IUCh behavior could have influenced their decWon.. Kanarek said that another juror had remarked that they might get u much as $200,000 H they •luck together and told the.Ir 1tories. Kanank aald that 11 color picture showing the nude body of actreu Sharon Tate with dozens of stab wounds lying on the floor of her living room had been .Valley_ Council Studies f;ity Expansion Project 1 Fountain Valley city councilmen will learn Tuesday )low much it's going to cost for expansion of the city haU , police beadquarters and the cotp0ratlon yards. ,. Councilmen will meet with city staff inembers aod arcblted> deslguing the expansion in a study session at 7 p.m., '"'ior to the regular 8 p.m. meeting of the 'touncil. About $700,000 bu been set uide to pay ~or expansion of lbe three laclllUes. qty -Manager James Neal said if the architectural estimates are accepted by the council expansion of all three ~•cllltiel could be complete by lbe end of 197L One civic center faclllty will not be liscusstd -the community center. It 1"as orlglnally scheduJed for expansion also, but councllmen have awltclled lbe piano oo IL The community center wu to be doubled in •I:e. but alter a Kries of public 'bearing, aod dlaculalon OD the cooncil level, it now 1ppeara that plan will be abandoned In onlor lo build • 17· acre eentral part and recreatio• complex. Councllmen, however, are moving ahead on the piano Io upand the ~!her three facWUe.s . When councilmen take their aeat.s for the I p.m. regular meeting they wlll face a routine egonda with only lhr<e public heatings. '111e bearings cover charges for weed abatement, an amendment to the parks master plan to allow a nelgbborhood park, and a proposed JS.loot tcenlc corridor along Warner Avenue. Newport B~others Seeking _Huntington Pier Tram 01( • Two Newport Buch brolben art .feti1nl' permJssion to provide mJnl-bul service along the Huntington Beach Pier. .. Carl Jr. and Bob McCullah, alttady ~perate two restaurants aod a sport Jlllnl.bua as part of tho.se operau ..... • Several previous operators· of trams en the pier have found tbe business to be a llnanclal Oop, but Vince Moorhou!t, director of harbors and beaches, tblnU lbe McCullah brotben might mal<e It. : ''By tying the tram into their other ~. they can write off any )mses," Moorhouse erptainl. ''The clly J\aS nothing to lose by letting them try, and it is a service to the beach vlslton.11 'Ibe m1nl--bas -capable of seating lt pe,_ and holding '° -will •tart with rum: along the pier it.sell ln May, if the council gives approval tonight, then erpand that service along the beach to Beach Boulevard in the summer months. Wblle the bus will carry passengers to the .!iport fishing operation, Moorhouse 1a1d anyone wW be able to ride It, and the city will set tbe route aod where It stops. DAILY PILOT OlAHGI COAST PUSUIHIMG CQMl'Alf't ••'-' N. w•.1 ,,...l!Mnf .... hMWW J1c\ a. e,tf.t Vice ""*"' -~ M....-n. ...... IC,.,nf llfl!W l\•11t•• A. M....,r-i-. _.,.... .. I .. Al•• Dirllit w... Or-. CeuM1 EflW Albert W, l•t.1 ....... le lllllW Hlllltl .. tM.._.Oflle9 1717S le1cll a..1,,.,,.i M1Ullf A4ilrt111 P.O. lu 7tO, t2&-41 --utuneo t..01 m f'"••I A-c.. .. ~; »I W•I t1y StrM N...,.,, ~~ a= Hftllll!W't ...,,_., t.11 °""""': JD$ ""1ll ll C:.N "ltt ~l\.Y ,II.OT,~""*" lit_......, ... . _..., .... ,. ........... .., --... 4tf ....... ,..,. .. ,,... .... 1..-., ....... .....,.., ~ a... ................ .... ....... ...... .. V•n.,, .... C-..W ~ ..,.. ••••• 04 ..... """' -~ """""" PrlMl..i ,,......, ......... .. -w.. a.y 1"91t,, <:iii.. .... T-.•aat fn41 '41-4Jft Cl W1M1 AM:tf ... '4J·U71 ~ '"'-~ °"" ..... ........ °"""""'· ... ...... .... . ....... ...... ......,., _ .... .,, ~~" ...... ..., ... ·····* . .,... ...... ,.,.. ......... .,.,,...., ......... ..... °"" ....... C,"if ., ............ ::' C: :=-fMn.::-w ··~J"'m: ...... .....,., ... ..,..,.. M.JS....,,. The la1t tram 1ervlee on the pier flopped In 11161. VarlOUJ tr&JDJ have worked the pier area 1lnce lHI, but all have fouod it financially difficult becuase of hlg'h tnsuruce costs, Moorhouse 1ald. "'lbis, however, is the flrlt enclosed bus service," be added. "It m.Jgbt reduce the insurance rate Eld help them make it." Round trip rides are upected te cost from 25 to 40 cent.s. Language Skill Program Granted Preliminary OK Ocean View School Dl!trid offlclall have received preliminary approval of a $200,000 pilot program for t b e development of language skills. The program, which could go into effect by Seplember of 1971 pending approval by the State Board of EducaUon, would be tested at ooe of the schools for a three-year period. Gordon Bishop, the Me1a View School principal who authored. tht fundJng proposal, says the program would be aimed at improving reading and writing by using a "pharmacy" of prescriptive teaching packages. Further, it would reduce the adult· learner ratio to S..l through a cadet ot volunteers from the Cilmmunity. "Instead of telling the children, 'Read well!', we will be telling them specific things to accomplish that goal," uld Bishop. For es:ample, they might be a!ked to tttell a certain story they have read or perhaps tell a story by looking at 11 picture aod lantasWng about what might happen to the people in the plctutt. Bishop PY• there will be about 460 different "prescriptions" to specific difficulties, 1ome Involving b o o k 1 , filmstrips and uercises. Life in County Symposium Topic "Life In Orange County: Environmental Qu•llty, Re 1 our c es, Growth" ww be the lllfme of an Earth Week sympo.!iium sponsored by the Program in Social Ecology at UC Irvine Tuesd>y. The symposium, open to the public without charge, will be held at 5 p.m. in UCl'1 Science Letturt lla\J. Speakers will bt Dr. Ktnntlh Watt proftQOr of zoology at UC Davis ; Roberi Battin, ch8lrman of tht Orange County Board of Supervl.90r1, and Ray Wabon, executive vict president of the Irvine ComP:'"1· ololeo from tile -i clerk's IUea. He aid lht pldure WU laot -IJl lht Jury room, iuggesUng that one of the jW'Ors bad taken JL Older said that he had given careful consideration to calling the jurors and said that he had reached the conclusion that "it is not neceuary nor is It desirable for them to be interrogated." '111e defense attorneys then turned to other arguments for a new trial. The trial jury decreed death ln the ga1 chamber for all four. Although the judge is empowered to reduce lbe sentence to life imprisonment, it was considered hlghly unlikely be would do oo. After stntencing, Manson will be taken to San Quentin and the women to the Cllifom.la lnJUtuUon for Women near Frontera. However, Mauon and Miss Atkins were es:pected to spend only a day or two at time prisons" before being brought back a3ain to Los Angeles. They sun face trial in other murders. Miss Alkins b charged ln the slaying al musician Gary Hinman. Manson iJ accused of the murder of lilnman and of Hollywood stuntman Donald "Shorty'' Shea who dis.appeared from the.Spahn Ranch in the 11pring Of 11169. f'rom Page I ELECTION. • • where he went last fall to study se x education. Other candidates art Mrs. Dorothy Bray, houoewilo and poliUcal writer; Robert E. Dtngwall, grapblc art.a shop owner; Edward Gauthier, contracts administrator; Robert M. Gord on , computing systems COl'llUltant; John B. llamlllon, oU productlon wistant: Harry E. Hieb, attorney; Peter Horton, aeraspace uecutive; oohald A. Jones, attorney; Jon K. Lawson, high school teacher; George Logan, attorney: Joseph A. Mizrahi, retired deputy lheriU; Catherine A. Mooring, housewife; Edmund C. P. Sheehan, peace Officer; Bartlett& Suter, housewife, and Howard M. Warner, designer and teacher. Those cooteltlng lbe rtmatning term of Dr. RJbaI which expires JuJy 1 are Mra. Bray, Dingwall, Lawson, Logan, Mangen, Mizrahi, Mooring, Sheehan, Suter and Warner. In the ra~ for two teab on the Westminster School District board art1 challengers Roderick Cr u • e , an adminiltrator in marketing pdilications; Mluahl, end Dewey LeRoy Wiles, a deputy lberlfl. Tbe incumbents are Mn. Adi Clegg, a housewife, and Frank Eastwood, water superintendent for the city o f w.-. In Seal Beach, three candidates Including two Incumbents are vying for two aeatl OD the elementary 1cbool district board. · Being challenged are Mrs. Ruth L. Calkins , a trustee for more than 15 years, and IJoyd J, Patterson, manager of an lndustrlal chemicals plant. 'The challenger is Mrs. Geraldine West, 11 housewife and political science student at Cal State Long Beach. Five candidates are running bard for two open seats on the Fountain Vallty School District Board or Trustees. Neither Incumbent is seeking re-election. 'Ibe five office seekers are Mary C. Hix, howewlfe ; Paul A. Huard, Jr., professor of maaagement ; Donald Hulett, freight sales representative ; Richard F. Plum, sales ttprftentaUve, and Fred W. Vou, senior management representative. In the Huntington Beach Ci t y (elementary) School Distrlct race .!iix candidates are fighting for the two open trustte posts. Both incumbents, Orville Hanson and Louis DaHarb are seeking re- election. The four challengers are Dooald Jones, attorney; James Gath, aero 1 pace engineer; Harold Becker, c:rlmlnology professor: and Ralph M a r c a r e 11 i , pharmacisL Jury Selection Begins in N udie County Bar Case Jury telecllon began today in the Orange County Superior Court trial of nudie bar operator Harry Maselli and one of his shapely entertainers at the Tomcat Bar In Santa Ana. Maselli, 38, and Naomi France! Sim.!i, 28. of Santa Ana, are accused of exhibiting obscene material, encouraging Jt>~·d conduct and con.!iplracy. They .and fellow Tomcat employe James W. Davia .Jr., 36, of Santa Ana, were arrested at the bar last June 4. Arresting officers said they took the trio into custody after viewing several lewd films shown to the patrons and what they said were equally I e w d perfonnances among the clientele by several of the bar'• female tmployes. Dtvls wt1 granted immunity today In pretrial maneuvers with the proteCUUon during which he promlatd to ttstU~ against Maselli and Allss Sims. lt lt expected that identical charges against the codcfendant will be dropped at the conclusk>n of the trial . Defenst attorney Konrad Scholtz raised the poplblllty that Miss Sims might testify against Maselli but Judge WUllam MWTay reh1std to 1llow a 1'3l minute substitution of attorneys. - PAILY l'ILOT 111" PIMle DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMULATOR Fighting th• Common Cold in an Obscur• Newport Beech Lab Battle of Cold Lab in Newport Scene of Drama By L PETER KRIEG Ot flll Dtllr ~llt ll•lf lt'1 called isoprinosine. It's already been called a cure for the common cold, a quick end to influenza, and measles, and chicken pox, and more than a hundred. other viruses, It's called NPT 10.381 for short. U it works, call !~ a billion-dollar baby for Dr. A1vin J . Glasky and a handful of friends wbo put up $2 million to start Newport PharmaceuticaJs, Inc., three years ago. Dr. Glasty and a team of 20 nstarcl>en bave been working in an tncon.splcuous laboratory on Monrovia Street in Newport Beach .since 1968 to find out U It works. Tbey have betn experimenting, testing and meet recenUy manUfacturing NPT 10.311 since Dr. Paul Gordon the Univenity of Chleago professor' who dbcovered It, turned lta development ever to h.11 long-time friend three years ago, presumably for 1 piece of the action. 1be development of any drug is tlme4 consuming, upenalve and a gamble. Dr. Glasky is by no m e a n s overconfident about the prospects. He says It will be at least two or three yeans before iloprinosine is proven to the aatisfacUon o! the U.S. Food and Drug AdminislraUon and cleared for prescrip. tJon to the publit. HO\\-'ever, tbe government of Argentina already bas been convinced and is allowina: a:eneral we of the drug there. f'rom Page I STATION ... the coming space spectacle. Their mission, sources said, will be to construct the first permanent orbital manned space station, the first step in large-scale e:tploration of the 50Jar system. The previous Soyuz nights all were aimed toward that end. Soyuz 9 in June, 1970, was a tw~man endurance test to determine how well men can withstand the effects of weightlessness aboard orbital plaUorms. Music with When it does get on the market here, if il does, "It will probably cost about the same as an antibiotic, somewhere between $3 and $6 for a 12·tablet prescription," Dr. Glasky said. But that's where its relationship tG antibiotics ends. "There's nothing like it known te medicine," Dr. Glasky said, explaining that the drug simply "makes the body 's natural defense mechanisms work better and faster." He said he and Dr. Gordon aren't SW'tl h<lw ·it does it. "They just do what they norm.ally do," he said, "a lot more quickly and efficienUy." Tests are far from C11mplete, Dr. Glasky stressed. "Isoprin03ine's effects have inly been confirmed on a dozen cases involving person.!i "\\'ilh cold symptoms," be said. "To say right now it i1 the absolute cure to the common cold is premature " he said, but he confirmed that in eve~y one of those 12 cases, the symptoms disappeared in less than 24 hours. He insists he is much more excited about its demonstraled effects against the flu, and things like viral pneumonia and smallpox. '-- "Right now there is nothing to treat the flu ," he said. "Dupont tia.s one drug that works against <>ne of 140 strains of the nu. but you've got to lake it before you get sick ." Dr. Glasky said tests on the effect of the drug on pregnant womeo are sliU being made. "We have recommended it not be prescribed to pregnant women in Argentina," be said, "until we know more." He said there have been no indications flf any serious side eifect.!i. For the 37-year-<>ld Tustin doctor and for his old tea~bing comrade in Chicago, and for those investors who belieud in both of them, enoua:h to keep Newport Pharmaceuticals operating the past three years, and enough to pledge anolher $3 to ~5 million le get isoprinosine on the market, there will be one side efftet te them from their product. They will have plenty of profits to sink back into the fledgling business. an Option . from JVC Ch101y? Th1 JVC 6101 •ncour•911 thtl. II combi11t 1 1 cl1 lu:ro •wlom1tic '4·•P••d •t1rto turnt1bl• with 1n 1-lrt (lt tl•r•o pl1y• •t In •n• h1M11otn•, COtf'P•~t wnil, Pile 1ilf r1corcl1 on th• bl9, 11 .111,h pl1H•r •nd 1if b.,. •nd t•I• .. Not in th1 mood for 1ifti119 tlireugh yowr r•co.rd libr1rv1 O••v, then iu•t •lip 1 c1rt4 ritlg1 l11t• *'• l ·h•c• •l1r1• pl•y•r ind fortef it. Thi ch1n91• •••r fro'" pho110 tto l ·h•c• 1ter10 It otcompli1htd •ulo1111tic1tl\'. Set 111 fin• furnlfwr1·fi11l•htd wood, +111 4102 11 9~1r111t1•d t• r1nd1r •11hl1ndlnt prof111i1n•I p1rform•11c• in •ilh•r funttlo n. NOW ONLY REG. $169.00 CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE • -·· U.S. Planes . Blast Re.ds Second DaJJ SAIGON (AP) -U.S. fighter-hotnbeu attacked North Vle.btamese poslUons inside the A Shau valley today for the aecond successive day ln support of an allied operation that apparentl1 hasn'a gotten oU the ground. Both President Nguyen Van Thieu and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, the commander of U.S. forces in South Vietnam, announced tbe op e r a ti on Saturday, and Abrams said South Vietnamese troops were in the A Shau, giving the impression that they had moved into the JO.mile-long valley in force. But field reports today said only rteoMalssance troops were operatlog imlde the valley on the Laotian border, and the major force would move in later this week. The announcements by Thieu and Abrams raised the possibility that the U.S. Command and the South Vietnamese government were giving out misleading information in an attempt to confuse the North Vielnamese. But Abrams' chief spokesman, Col. Robert W. Leonard, said he considered questions along this lioe "impertinent" and added : "We have never used the press to c a u 1 e ipeculatioo." South Vietnamese military headquarters turned aside all quesUons about the operation. A spokesman, Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, said he would not disclose any details until the.re lll'U significant contact with the enemy. The forward command posts of the South Vietaamesc task force and ele- ments of the U.S. IOlst Airborne Division have been set up just to the soulb of Quang Tri City. U.S. officers in the field said troops from the lOlst would conduct offensive operations once the operation gets going. About 2,000 American ground troops and 10,000 South Vietnamese are committed "on paper," officers said, but tbert are several possibilities, including a amaller operation, or a larger one extending into Laos, depending oo what t h e reconnaissance forces find. The South Vietnamese forces include two regiments from the l!t Infantry Division and two brigades of marines, an of whom took part in the invasion of Laos in February and March. A U.S. helicopter reportedly was sho' down over the A Shau over the weekend and the pilot was killed. Helicopters of the IOlst patrol the valley regularly. The A Shau valley 365 miles north or Saigon is just to the east of Base Area 611, a major North Vietnamese supply depot on the Ho Chi Minh trail througb southern Laos. Tbe valley is used u an infiltration corridor and sup p 1 y transshipment area for the northern quarter oI South Vietnam. f'rom Page I POT •.. developed a superior Intellect at the expense of a Joss of his serual life. He was tbe first member of a new 'wper race.' After stopping his smoking his delusional ideas disappeared an d he returned to bis normal functioning in his job and marriage." A 26-year-<>ld man, after .!iii: months of pot smoking, "believed that he wa.s in charge ol the Mafia aod that be was an eastern potentate· of the Ku Khn: Klan," the doctors said. ~ A 16-year~ld boy, alter three years of smoking marijuana, believed he was God's son. A l~year~ld male tbougbt be was "able to communicate with and control lhe minds and acti9ns oI animals .. . Of these cases, Moore and Kolansky said it was their ''impression" that the use of marijuana "caused auch severe decompensation of the ego that it beeame necessary for th e ego to develop a delusional system In an attempt t. restore a new form of reality," 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE RRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SEU. TUDE COME IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -'-H•bor & ltoodway I 17 17 ··-' ' - , Ne . . • -. ' VOL. 64, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY,. CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIC '19, 't97f . ' .JEN CENTS Heavy Poi Users Show Mental • • Distu·rhance.s CfilCAGO (UPI) -Two Philadelphia psychoanalyst., in • report releastd today, say cue studies of 38 individuals ahow wlous mental d l s t u r b a n c e , tncluding psychosis in 1eme cues, accompanied he•vy marijuana smoking. They aLoo liJted'omollg aymptoml .... alteration of conaclc:lwatss w b 1 c b included a split between an observin& and an ei:periencia& portlon. of the ego, a.n inability to bring thougbu totether, a paranoid smplcloomess of ethers and regres.sloo to a more JnfanUle state." · published in the Apt!I II iMue of I he Journal of tbe American Medk:al AuoclaUon. William T. Moen of the Cblld Analysis Div!Jloo ol the Phllldelphia AllocjaUoo for l'lycho-Anal,ysb, uld lhelr pwpoae was to •'report ectly the effects aeen u a consequence nl marijuana lll!IOUlg in lbose not ' lhawfol a ptedlrposJlloo to 1or!Gos plYClllalrlc 'problems~· · "Ibo final group ol 38 pallenll ranged in •le from IS to 24 •nd coaalsted of 20 mala and 18 fem.ales. and ofucly bahlti-or ""'t·hahlla or l>ofJi I "'Jlhese patients consistenUy showed very poor IOcial jud1ment, poor attenUon apan, poor concentration, confllsioo, ~iety, depres.sion, apathy, passivity, indifference and , often, slowed and alurred speech," the researchers Nid. These iymptoma, they 1aid, were not present befbre tbe <1UD}ecU tigan using A spotesme for the AMA said the article is "tbe fir.st real .evidence, based on good research, of barmfiil etfecta from 1mcking marijuana. Heretofore, medicine ha.I been able to say only that there was no 8:oo<1 eVider.ce ot harm rmm Slll()lting pot: Now we bav,e 10me evidence.'' They said tbey removed from the study group lliooe palltllla wlio lhowed signs they had been pr<dispo!ed I o p3)'chol0&ical probleim before they began usJD& marijuanL Sexual promiscuity al.lo was a frequent aymptom a111011g their subjecll, lhe autbors 1aid, "and tbe incidence of uilwanted pt1gnancles among female patients was high, 1s was the lnckience of venereal dbeases .•. "In oae subcr9uJ>, a -deir<Ut cilainoall of psychooll WU eatablialled and, ID -patients, there' wu t»ettber ·mdence ol poycbosls or ego dlltarhance nor faml!J hialoty of psycllolll pr!Dr to Iha pa&nll' me of marijuana." .. Five Face School Vote OnTue$day Five candidates seek elecUon Tuesday to three openlnp ori the Newport-Mesa Unified School Di.strict Board of Trustees. There are 50,373 registeffil voters in the district eligJble to vote, Polls are cpen from 1 a.m. to 8 p.m. While candidates for the three openings on the seven-member board must reside in the trustee area they seek to represent, all voters in the district decide each race. Attorney Donald E. Smallwood, (2, of Costa Mesa is runnin&: unopposed for the trustee area one seat vacated by Trustee James Peyton, whose tenn expires July l. Incumbent Mrs. Marian C. Bergeson, a Newport Beach housewife, is opposed by business coordinator Donald T. Bull of Costa Mesa in trustee area three. Mrs. Bergeson represenbl residents of both Newport Beach and COita Mesa whose homes are located between the Back Bo,y and Newport Bolllev.rd north and east of Dover Drive and 21st Street. Incumbent Board President Sellin S. ''Bud" Franklin, a Costa Mesa attorney, ls opposed by salesman Herb Stricktr, -41, of Newport Beach in Uie area six race. Arell six is the portion oC the district betn~en the Back Bay and Newport Boulevard south and west of 21st Street aild DOver Drive to Pacific Coast Highway. . Trustee areas were designated when the Newport-Mesa Unified District was formed to guarantee. b a I a n c e d representation on the seven-member board. The district plans no election watch for rtturns, since results will be tabulated by precinct and reported directly tO the C.OUnty Registrar of Vole.rs in Santa Ana. The Newport-Mesa board election is one cf thirteen being conducted Tuesday aklng the Orange CoasL The DAILY PILOT will report results cf all races ln Wednesday's editions. Hearing · Slated For Duke's Gun Thief Suspect A prellmlnacy hearing will be held Wednesday in Harbor Judicial District Court for a l..cfll Beach man arrested in connection with the theft nearly one year ago of a gun collectioo from the Newport Beach home of actor John Wayne. According to detectives, William Lee Montgomery, 43, is the alleged lone burglar who toot approximately 30 firearms-some of which are tlllflved mementos commemonilng W a Y n e. ' I mov ies-from the Baysbores home last May . Seventeen guns, vaJued at $12,000, were recovered last month from M.exicall where they were found in ~ possess"ion of Raoul Diaz, governor of Baja California . Diaz told Newport Beach investigatora the guns were impounded by his stat.I police during an tnvestlgatlon and be held on to them because he thought they might have eentimental value to Wayne. Tustin Board Profiles Given Eight candidates are vying ror two open seats on the Tustin Unkln High School D~trlct Boord of n-u.tets Tuesday and !he DAILY PILOT today preae~ b r i e f biographies of candidates on Page 28. Seven cand.ldattl are prt:ldttted. One refused an interview. The Tu.!tln board IJ the governing body for bOth University High School and M~slon Viejo lllgh SChool. marfjuea. ' The artide, ''effects af marijuana on adolescents and Yt>UDf adulta," was The authors , Dn •. Harold KolllllkJ and • ·'"There wu marUd Interference with penooaI c1ean11ne ... llfoomin&. dmain& They cll<d Iba cue of a married, IK- year-old man wbo, after uslnt martJana for two months;-~ tbat be· bad (See ·l'O'f,;l'lp I). Russ Lah Sky? • Ill Platform 'Salute' Project B·egins DAIL~ ,ILOT IMtf ,..._, DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMl/LATOR Fighting the Common Cold in an Obscure Newport 1k1Ch L'ab Battle of Cold Lah in Newport Scene of Drama By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. 0.lfr ,1111 IMtf It's called iS()prinoslne. It's already been called a cure for the ccmmon cold, a quick end to influenza, and measles, acd chicken pox, and more than a hundred other viruses, ll's ~ajled NPT 10.381 for short. If it works, call it a billion-d ollar baby for Dr. Alvin J. Glasky and a handful of friends who put up $2 million to start Newport Pharmaceulicals, Inc., three years ago. "'" Dr. Glasky and a team of 20 researchers have been working in an inconspicuous laboratory on Monrovia Street 1n Newport Beach 1ince 1968 to find out if it works. They have been experimenting, testing and mosl re.cenUy manufacturing NPT 10.381 1ioce Dr. Paul Gordon, the University of Chicago professor who discovered it, turned its development over io bis long-time friend three yean ago, presumably for a piece o( the action. The development of any drug is lime- coosuming, expensive and a gamble. Dr. Glasky is by no m e a n s overconfident about the prospects. He says It will be at least two or three years before Jsoprinosine is proven to the saUsfactiOD o( the U.S. Food and Drug Adm.iniatraticn and cleared for prescrip- tion lo the public. However, the aovernment of Ar1enUna already bas been convinced and la allowing general use'-of the diug lbert. When it does get on the market here, if it does, "It will prcbably cost ab6ut the same as an antibiotic, somewhere between $3 and $6 for a 12-tablet prescription,'' Dr. Glasky aaid But that's where its relationship to antibiotics ends. · "There's nothing like it known to medicine," Dr. Glasky sai d, er.plaining that the drug simply "makes the' body'a natural defense mechanisms work better and faster ." He said he and Dr. Gordon aren't sure how it does it. ''They just do what they normally do," he said, "a lot more quietly and efficiently." Tests are far from complete. Dr. Glasky slreued. "lsopl'inocine's effedl have only been confirmed oo a dou:n cues involving per:aons witb cold symptoms," he said. "To say right now it is the abeolate cure to the ccmmon cold ii premature," he said, but be ccnfirmed that in every one cf those 12 cases, the l)'Jilptoms disappeared in less than 24 bour1. He insists he is mucb mort excited about its demonstrated effects against the flu, and things like viral pneumonia and smallpox. ·~Right now there Is oothlng to treat"tbe CSee COLD, Pace !) MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Unlon today launched a new kiild of atelllt.e called .. Salute" and sci~Ufic IOIUttl aald II will ba !he ball< al a lengthy project lo build the f~sl manned 1titton in lptct. A report by the Soviet News Agency Tass did not 1pedfy if Salute was man· ned but the scienUflc aourcea uld It was :-inn:: :::mi:e~11ln:1~ =~ vehicles which w1ll redezvous w1tb SaJute and be&in !he conalructlon project. Tiier, predicted the mlsaloo will be comp ex, 1peclacular and I..,U.y runnln& several weeks. Lawyer Says Davis Afraid & urrender. .. .... 1;'1 - LONDON (IJPIJ -· An(ela Davis wu afraid to turn Jlmell In afttr befol placed OD the U l'i most wlnUd IIJI Jul August becauae of !ear Ille would be llllol down, her lawyer Howard Moore aald today. "'Ille !act she did not turo benelf Ill II no evidence the la guilty,"' tlM pateed Moono aald of MIU Davia, c:barled wllh murder, kldnapln& and ODIJIPltaey in COIDM!dloDwllh•coortroom-lln San Raful, Aug. 7, 1170. Jonathan Jackaall, brother nl Geor1e Jackaon,.a prilooer at IM llate'1 Soledad Prlaon ancl ... of the "Soledad Brothen,'' two eonvlcta and a Judge were killed In (he 11111 baltle. Moore l&Jd that wben the FBl put the 23-year-old MJ.u Davis on Its moet wanted Hst, "This wu license for any law enforcement official or any private citizen to lhoot her on sight. "She could not show herseU publicly without feeling sbe would be· 1UJ1UDarily shot. down," he told a news conference at which he 1Mounced the launching of a Brltl1h campaign to support Mias Davis and the Soledad brothers. Mlsa Davis, a 1elf-proclalmed Communllt. wa• arrestec_S OcL U ill New York. !'»lice nlfldala alleged she bad provided the 1UJ11 UM<! la the courlrOom lhoouNt. • Penny J11<UOll, Aln>balred lial<r of GMl'l!e Jackaon, told the news ccllf<rence mlnorlly -llllCb .. the Mulc:an- -· Q!lcanoo and the · Blad< Panther party bad rallied to support Miu 0 ... 1. ancl her brother. Miaa Jack.son, wearing dirk gJUset:, said !he Panll>m. put drug· adYOCale Ind former H1rvard iutructor Timothy Leary under bouJe arrul to Alglera because be wu a r1Ak and he CCJUJ.d "be olf somewbue trlpploi" dW'!ne a pollce raid. · · · Seven Seek College Posts Only 3 Seats Va.cant in Coast District Electiom Sevtn candidates are vying for three openings on the Coast Community College D~lriCI Board of Educallon In Tuesday's election. " All ol the diJtrlCI'• 129,439 re1111erec1 voters wfil be eligible to vote on all CJndidatel, but hopefull reside ln the trustee area they .eek to represent. PollJ will be open from 7 a.m. until a p.m. Tue!dly with r'sulbl to be compiled by the County Regl1trar of Voter• in Santa Ana. No ~lectlon poll watch has been set up by tbt dlalriCI since relurn1 will be filed by precinct dlreCIIy to the COJ,lnty registrar's office. , Inrumbent • Donald . G. lfnlf, 12, of Mid•11 CI~1. faces 1tudenl Cbafle1 Degl011, 21, alao "of Midw11 Clly In the trustee area. two race. Hoff p~ represents voters in the portloo ol the district w h i c h is t h e Wettmlnster Elementary School Dlslrlcl Incumbent William Kelller, 411, 'C!f Huntington Beach1 facts two opponentl !ft the race far his area three ·Mt representing resldenll of Iba ll~ J f J • The name "Sllute" never before has been wed for Soviet 1pacecraft, 111iitsUng that II II a new type buill especially. for the space 1taUon mission. Salute'1 orbit Was exactly the ume u that UJed for most Soviet manned lhots -a· nearly circu1ar flight path tome 140 miles over the earth ed pasalng over the sOviet Union's Balkonur Colmodrome in Kazakhstan. 11le Soviet manned space program of recent years has concentrated e:l!=lu11ively on the goal of building a apace platfonn. A whale series cf Olgbta by SoyuJ spacecraft in the last three years has tested the systems ed theorlea of platform building. News Incomplete • In r.c:ent week! top ituvlet lplC< sdenliat& have 4llcuaaod Iii project In lhe pttSO, lndlcaUng SoVtet confidence the plaUorm eoon will be a reality, '.!be Tass rej.n of the laW>Cb called the sputnik a "station," IUUUUng tt bad a purpose different from pn!Ylous unmanned lhota: usually c a 11 • d "sputniks," or aclentific aatelllt.es." The Salute orbital parameters included an angle cf incllnaUon cf 51.1 degrees, period cf revolution of 88.1 minutes. max.lmum dlatanc.e from the IW'fact of the earth of 133 mllea and a. mtntmnm distance of ~ miles. Bombers Blast Reds SAIGON (AP) -U.S. l'Iglltl!'bombero attacked North Vietnamese po1fti0111 inalde the A Shau valley today for the aecond auceeaslve day Jn support of· an allied opmUon !hat apparently bun'I (Olten nll !he ground. Both President Nguyen Van Thieu and Gen. Clelghton w. Ahranur, the """'1Tllllder ol U.S. forces in Soulh Vietnam, announced the o p e r a L J o n Saturday, and Abram1 Wd South Vlelnamese lroops were In the A Shau, giving !he Impression that !hey bad moved Into the :IG-miJe.long valley in force. BUI fleid reporll today aald oll!y reoormaluance troops were opera.t.Jnc Humorist Poet, Ogden Nash, 68, Critically Ill BALTIMORE (UPI) -Humorbl Ogden Nasb was critically ill in a hospital htre today. Na.sh, M, waa admitted to Unkln Memorial Hospital March 13, it was learned Sunday, for treatment of an UlDeu hospital officials would not dllclo6e. They aald the wrller'e famUy had requested no lnformatkln b • releated. Nuh bad been in fair condition eartiu Sunday, but he deteriorated in lbe afternoon, a hospital spokesman said. Born In Rye. N.Y.. Nash attended Harvard for one. year. He left ln 1921 and quickly became famous as a facile writer of l.lgbt. bumcroua verse. Solons Approve Gasoline Tax SACRAMENTO (UPI) -·A Senale <0111mlu .. IOOay approved Ie&tallllnn to levy a penny ot the aalea: tu on guoline to raise ln eatlm1ted $173.~ mlDioa a year .tor local ravld transit syatem1. The Publl< Utll1u .. ancl Corporalionl CommlU.. unanlmoual1 e\odoned the meuuro by San. Jamea R. Miiis (-nsan Diego J, ancl. Nlll u to the finance tdmmitfee. 1bere Wal DC> oppoeiil()ft. The D1011f!7 wouid be dlvtrled to local tr..,,11 . dlatrlcts and wmarked · lor construct.Ion or malnten1nce of a ~. In arcu where !here II no dlstrlc~·the revenue 1"lll\d be deposll<d in the io«I rovemment'• general fund. The AutomoPlle Club of Soulheni Clllfornta supported the ''concept" ol the meuure but recommended that the l e•g l 1 I at Ion permit rural local 1oveonntr1ta to Ult 'thetr 1har1 of tba yJea tu revenue for road conatrucUon. . I lollde the valley"" the Laot!ao border, and !he major force -.Id move In later this week. The announeementa by Tbleu and Abrams ralaed the pou!hlllly that Iba U.S. c;:omm.nd and (he Soulh Vietnamese government wera giving out mlaleading JntormaUoo In an attem~ to eonfule the North VI<toa-. Buf Abrams' cblel spol<eoman, P.>J. JllJbert W. Leonard, uld he C01111dertd tj!lellJons along this line .. impertinent'' Ind added: "We have never u5ed tbe mu fo c a a 1 e IJ)eeulation, •• South Vledwn,.. military bea~ tulned aide all queatlons about the operation. A apot.esman. IA. Col. Le rru., men. said be wuuld not dllclooe any cktalII until there was significant contaCt wflh the enemy. The forward command PoSts of tbe Soulh Vletaameio tul< force and eJe. menll ol lhe U.S. 10111 Airborne Division have been set up just to the: aoutb of Quang Tri City. U.S. officers la Iba !leld 5'1d troops from the 101.st wmld conduct offensive operaUoos once the operation geta gclng. About 2,000 American lfOWld troops and 10,000 South Vietnamese are committed "on paper,•• ofOci!:rs Sa.Id, but there tre several possil:illiUei, Including a smaller operation, or-•:-targer one utending into Laos, dtpendihg on what th e -forces !Ind. The Soulh Vldnamese lor<!ell Include two regiments from. the 1st lnfanlr1 Division and two·bricades of marines, ab nl whom took part In the lnvuloo ol Laoo in February and Marc11. A U.S. helicopter r.portedly wae 1hol down over the A Shau over the weekend and the pilot waa ·tnled. llellooptm ol the IOist patrol the valley rwiJarly. w .. tl!er Colder nlgbti and llfadually warmer day1 are the prognoetJ,. caUOI for Tuesday along the coast. wllh temperatures hilting 65 Jo. Cally and 75 further inland. INS1* TODAY Two Congrt11nten haw r~ llfOied findinga whl<h indlcotc heroin .,, of epi4rid< J>l'OJlO" -among~ l7oopi ii' Vietnam. TM COit-is sma:U thc-rir bul huge m N U.S. S'°'1! Pogo 4. • -; ---.. -.... HttMMI ·-..., OI" .... CM!itr I ...... 1141 It.di Mtrbh 1 .. 11 Tttiwll• • ,,......... .. .. . ...., ... ............ ,.,, --.. ' • • • • I DAil y P~LOT N 'Bot' Corner Ex-Newport Lot • Future Studied By ALAN DffiKIN Of ~ 0attr ...... tMtr A savings and loan oHice may be built on one of the mo s t expensive and controversial c o r n e rs In Huntington Beach. Sale of the property -1.93 acres al Brookhunt Street and Adams Avenue - by Newport Beach last week was followed closely by residents of southeast Hunt:ington Beach who recalled a bitter battle over the mie ~ledkJn last summer. Residents realized what all the fighting was about when the prime lite w a s auctioned arr for $419,900 -ab 0 u t $210.000 an acre. Association led a light against a plan to buUd a service station, car wash and a restaurant or bank on the property. A lumber and hardware store also were planned on an adjacent parcel. Despite an appearance by the then assistant city manager of Ne w po r t Beach. Jim Dea1aine, all the proposals were turned down on split votes by the City Council The main objection was to a gas sta· Uon and car wash being on the comer. Several cooncilmen felt that this would result in five gas-disperuilng facilities at the busy intersection. • Atto:r,iey Set For Capital Road .Meet An expected legal cbtllenge to the Newport Beach freeway charter amend· ment has 11ronlpted Mayor Ed lUrth to ask City Attorney Tu.Uy Seymour to ac- (.'Ompany a city committee to Sacramen· to for TUesday's ·Assembly RuJea Com· mittee bearing on ~ leglslaUoo. The charter change, whlch calls for a t'ity-wide vote before the city council can sign future freeway route agree- ments, was overwhelmingly adopted by, Newport voters, but sUll must win n.ti- fication by the state legislature. Historically, such sanction has been routine but the cities or Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach have launched unpre-- cedented oppo&ition contending the amendment may be unconstitutional. "We're still bleeding all over the rug," commeflted Gtrald McQu.arry, executive vi~ president or Downey Savings and Loan this morning. ••we ended up payinJt: about '8(),000 m o r e than we h a d bargained for." 'Ibe dispu te caused relations between the cities to dip as Huntington B e a c h councilmen charged that Newport Beacb would not b a v e allowed a similar de- velopment in Jts city. McQuarry said that Downey Savings and Loan planned a new oflJce building on the site. THIS JS HOW ARTIST SEES COMPLETE COMMUNITY HOSPITAL PLANNED NEAR UC IRVINE First Ph1M of 200 Beds Scheduled fo r Completion in 1974 There are also reports the Callfomla Public Works Department is opposln&: the measure because or its statewide im- plications. ~~~~~~~~~~~ McQuarry waa referring to the auction at Mo nd ay night's meeting of the Newport City Council. Downey Savings and U:>an was the hl~est bidder in sealed bids with $338,000 but in an auc· lion against the Rinker Development Company the p r I c e rose In $5,000 in· crements to $419,900. "It may become our Orange County headquarters, but we haven't re a 11 y decided on that yet," he added. "Exposure is key to our operation and we feel we can get the best use out of the site with our own ofiice building." Bids for Medical Center From Page 1 POT .•• If. all Calilomia cities were to adopt such a law, the state agency would be virtually powerless to proceed with ex- pansion of the California freeway system. Hirth and Seymour are leaving Mon· day morning to meet Vice Mayor How- ard Rogers and Councilmen Don MclM· is and Richard Croul, who also expect to attend. . The site ls on the southeast comer of 'Adams Avenue and Brookhurst Street. It ,ts the only tmdeveloped comer at the intersection or the two arterial highways and in presentaUons to the Huntington 'Beach City Council Jut year It w a s ;tescribed at "the hottest comer · in Huntington Beach." The association is drrenUy housed in a temporary branch facllity across the street. McQuarry did not know how much of the property an office building would take up since the size had not yet been determined. Near UCI Slated in July developed a superior intellect at the expense of a loss of his sexual life. He was the first member of a new 'super race.' Alter stopping his smoking bis delusional f d e a s disappeared an d he returned to bis normal functionl.ng in his job and marriage." They intend to determille il a legisla- tive counsel is researching the coruitit.u- tionality or the measure and to learn what his ruling is. • Last year's dispute began when the Meredith Gardens Home o wner 1 ' From Page 1 COLD ... • flu " he said. "Dupont has one drug that wofks against one ~ 140 strains of the Ou bUl you've .got to take it before you lei aick." · Dr. Glasky aaid teal.I on the effect of the drug on pregnant women are ltilJ. )eing mack. " "We feel there is room for addlUonal office space at the site," he added. He called the site "a jewel" but admitted that the association would not have gone mllCb higher in the bidding. "Newport Beach got top dollar - there's no doubt about that," he said. .. There's only ao much you can do with two acrea." Newport Beach paid $385 an acre for the property nearly 50 years ago. The property iB zoned for commercial uses and an office building would com· ply. Tbe site, however, is surrounded by another 15 acres of undeveloped land owned by a single landowner and no additional proposal! for it.s development have been made since last summer's battle. Plannillg contracts for a proposed medical center to be built near UC Irvine will be awarded by July, state Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), said today. carpenter is the president (I( the Orange County Medical Foundation, the sponsoring non-profit corporation which is planning the center. Carpenter said completion of the first unit, a ZOO.bed community hospital, is scheduled for 1974. The hospital will be the first of several facilities which will occupy 150 acres .adjacent to UCl's School or Medicine. Total cost or the project ls an estimated $400 million. "This is the first time, so far as we know, that a medical cen~r has been DAIL T Pl LDT ll1tr Pl!ttf CITY PONDERS FATE OF SMALL, BUT WELL-USED 38TH STREET PARK To Widen, or Not to Widen -That's the Question Along Balboa Boulevard DAILY PILOT d AANGE COAST PUILllHIN~ COMPANY ' ••••rt H. 'W••' .. , .. *"', •Ml f'v&lllllr J 1cli: a. c'.rr • ., Viet' l'l"UJ04nl' Ml 0:-.1 MIMtW' '"•"'•' r, • .,if ..... 'tlio1'l•1 A:. Murp)ii11 1 ~:Ill IEtillW L P•l•f ICri•t Nt'WPOf1 l•d'I City Editor " .................. JJll N1wport l oulo•t'111 M'aili119 AdJrou: P.O. 1011117 1, t 266J .,_......., cottt Mol1: DO W•t llY Strwt L.,uM ... di: 1'ZI. ,..,.eat A~ \li1111tlfloto~ •ete;ll: 1117S, leKfl IDllltWl'll a..11 C"""'1l1: as Morlll £1 (.lmlllo llQI • Tel•,•••• (7141 WJ-4111 tl...tflM .u..mtl9t '41·1171 ' Half of Balboa Boulevard Widening Project May Die Half of a long·standing plan to widen Balboa Boulevard from 32nd Street to the Pacific Coast Highway may be killed by the Newport Beach City Council. The western half, from 4tith Street to Coast Highway, has been banished to the Transporlaton Study Committee because of objections by Councilman Don Mclnnis and the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission. Public Works Director Joseph T. Dev\ir., in the meantime, has been told by Life in County Symposium Topic 0 Llfe in Orange County: Environmental Quality, Resources, Growth" will be the theme or an Earth Week symposium sponsored by the Program in Social Ecology at UC lrville Tuesday .. The symposium, open to the public without charge. will be held at 5 p.m. In UCl's Science LeciW"e Hall. Speakers will be Or. KeMeth Watt, professor of zoology at UC Davis; Robert Battin, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, and Ray Wat.son, eiecuUve vice pmident of the lrvlnt company. the rouncil to continue ahead with plans for the 33rd Street • 4tith Street segment. Widening from 32nd to 33rd street Is already under way in conftection with the 32nd Street widening project. Delay, and possible death , to the remainder came at last week's council meeting when Mcinnis and the parks people said they didn't like the fact It would cut a 35-foot swath wt of the 38tb Street Park. "I have reservations whether or not it's in the best interests of the city to proceed," Mcinnis said. "I question the improvement to traffic now." Devlin said plans call for addina a th ird westbound lane, a left-t um lane and a parking Jane aloog the south side. "Traffic safety Is our number one consideration, hov.·ever." Devlin said, telling the council there have been 100 right • angle aceidenls in that stretch during the past three years. Rolly Pulaski, a PBR Commbalon member. said his panel is coDCtrned aboul the 38th Street Park. "IL gets 1 fantastic amount of use," ht said. "Why do any road work at all,'' he said, suggellng the city might find better usts for lhfi money. Devlin said the entire projec:t would COii about 11.25 million. ball of wJUcb would be paid by the oounty. planntd from the ground up," said Donald S. Burns, chairman of the foundation 's board and chalrman of the board of the Newport National Banlt. Burns said the Irvine Medical Center will start with the Newport Community Hospital and will eventually b e augmented by a surgical center and a group of specialized clinics. When developed to its fullest, the center will include medicille-related commercial and Industrial areas, hotel and motel accommodations and seminar and conference facilities, Burns explained. He said UCl's medical school will be an integral part of the center. "Subject to approval by the Board of Regents, the two hospitals -our community hospital and the university hospital -may share some ancillary facilities," he said. When be announc'ed the project in October of 1970, Carpenter noted the community hospital will be designed to serve the medical needs of the 400,000 people who are expected to settle in the Irvine area. Hoag Contest ' A 20-year-old man, alter six month! of pot smoking, "believed that be was in charge of the Mafia and that be was an eastern potentate or the Ku Klux Klan," the doctors l!iaid. A 16-year-old boy, after three years or smoking marijuana, believed be was GoQ's son. A l~year-old male thought he was "able to communicate with and control the minds and actions of animab: .. . . ' Of these cases, 1t1oore and Kolansky said it was tbeir "impression" that the use of marijuana ''caused such severe decompensation of the ego that It became necessary for t h e ego to develop a delusional system in an attempt to restore a new form of reality." They also reported on 13 female patients "singled out because o( the unusual degree of sexual promiscuity, which ranged from sexual relations with several individuals of the opposite sex to relations with individuals of both sexes aad, sometimes, individuals of both sei:es on the same evening ••• " Police Hunting BB-gun Slliper '// Newport Beach police today are seek· h1g a suspect in the BB-gun shootiitg ot a Balboa Island woman. Margaret A. Watson, 35, told police sht suffered a minor wound on her right tern· pie while working near her home late Thursday night. She said she was walking west OR Bal- boa Boulevard near Apolena Avenue when she passed a man carrying an un- knowa object in his right hand. The victim told officers that she turned to look at the man after they had passed one another and that was when she wu •hot. The suspect is described. as being 25 to 30 years of age and of medium build. There was no appare11t motive for the shooting, officers sald. 'Mother' Finalists Told The 12 finalists in Hoag Memorial Hospital's annual "Mother of the Year" sludent essay contest were announced today and honored at a reception at 3:30 p.m. in the hospital's conference center. The winner will be named at a luncheon May 8 and presented1 with the contest's top prize, a trip to HawaU for the author's parents. Selected as finalists were Sheryl Harms, a first grade student at Christ Lutheran &hool; Paul O'Gorman, a first grader al St. John the Baplist School; Kent Harper a second grader at Harbor View School; Amber Sage, a second grade pupil at \Vilson School; Ann Louise Koehler, a third grader at Garden Hall School and Asch win Herter, a third grader at Wilson chool. Also, Bunni Rogers, a fourth grader at Victoria School; Christine Carr, a fourth grader at St. John the Baptist; Vicky Sutherland, a fifth grader at Newport Elementary School; Dahl Hunter, a fifth grader at KiUybrooke School; Robert Hudack. a sixth grader at Whittier School and Debby Pazjk, a sixth grader at Newport Heights Elementary School. Music with Excerpts from their essays make heartwarming reading. "My mom is special to me because God made her for me, '1 said 6-year-old Sheryl Harms. "My mother cooks the food for us to make us healthy. She helps me, why, because she loves me," wrote 7·year-o!d Paul O'Gonnan. Kent Harper, 8, had these thoughts . ''Sometimes she gets mad, and sometimes she is so nice, she takes us somewhere. 1'.1y mom has to be very strong for my sister and me because my dad doesn't live with us anymore." Amber Sage, 8, wrote, "She gives us lessons about Jesus Christ and Heavenly father. She takes care of my brother and my sister and herself and my dad. We sing together.!' ''My mother smiles a lot and she plays with.me a lot. My mother listens to my prayers al night," were some of the words of AM Louise Koehler, 8. "Even though my mother Is not yet a citizen of the U11ited States, she teaches us how to have respect for our flag and country. She tells me to be polite an Option from JVC Ch1101y11\1 JVC 6102 oncovr•11•1 th•!. It combine• • 4'1lno •ulom•lic '4·1p11d 1t•r•• tvrntebl• with •11 1-tr•cli: 1t•r•11 pl•v• •• in on• )i1nd1ome, comp•ct una. Pi!• •i• r•cord1 on th1 ili91 1 l·incli pl 1lt•r t nd 1it b1dr •"d rel••· Not i11 th• m1104' for 1iflln9 tl1rou9h vour ••cord libr•rv? Olr1y, lh•11 ju1! 1lip • earl• .rid9• Into th• l-!11ck 1l•r10 pl•v•• 011d for91! it, Th• ch 1n91• •••1 f1om phofto lo t ·tr1clr 1tor10 i1 1ccompli1h•d 1ulom 1lic•lly0 :Set in fin e furniture.fi11i1h•d wood, lh• 6 102 11 9u t r1nt••d I• r1 nd•r o~ill1 ndin9 profe11ion1l p1rform 111tt i11 oilh•r f~nctio11, NOW ONLY REG. $169.00 CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE • to people," wrote nine-year-old Aschwin Herter. Christine Carr is 9. She wrote, "She Js always thinking of other people and often lets her work go until late at night just te belp someone out. She is always baking something to take to someone because they are sick or have a problem." Dahl Hunter. 11 , said, "She shares her love equally with others. She helps me with Camp Fire Girl projects. She alse helps my brothers. My daddy loves my mother and his family. We all love each other." Robert Hudack, also 11. said, "She sits down and talks with me a lot and explains whatever we are talking about as carefully as she can. My mom said. 'I have one goal in life, and that is to give you a happy, healthy life, Bob.' " "My mother is the boss of the family and is smart enought to make my father think he is," said 11-year-o\d Debby Pazjk, who added, "On Christmas or her birthday she always does things for U!. One year we went to Disneyland to celebrate her birthday.'' 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRS! COSTA MES~ JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SEU, TRI.DI COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND .1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 ,DOWNTOWN COSTA MIU -·--H•w & llreodwcrr . • I • ' 1971 Empire Debut antes • ". ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor Mlftfn, •• '"' Hn • '"' » • f ... ~ --... ~ .. . . .. .. . . .. .. . ·-~ -• • • . I I t • , ' ; ' . • • • . . • Jj OAILY PILOT M....,, AP<11 19, 1971 '71 Debutantes Become Toast Of an 'Empire' Pink, white and pe11 noral arrangements sel a !eaUve mood when 1971 Empire Debutantes were introduced F'riday durin& a mother- daughter tlincheon in tbe Newport Beaeh JJOme of•Mrt. Norman Cirkle. The 12 young women, who \\'ill make their bows Frid">', June 18, were gree!Pl.by Mrs. John P. Wright.1)resident or lfarbor Key, the sponsoring organiiation of the ball. Also offering a welcome v.'ere the Mmes. William H. Weaver, president~lect; Van R. Parker, ball chairman, and Ivan W. Sturgis, presentations chalrfuan. A highlight of the luncheon v.•as a showing of fashions from the Park Ave. Brklal S})op, Orange, modeled by Harbor Key members including the Mmes. J. O'Hara Smith, James Evans. Frank Pendleton-Jean Miller and several debuta.ntu. M I 1 a Nancy Newbrough, a 1970 Empire debutante modeled bet ball gown. 1 1971 Empire debutantet and lhe.lr parents are Miss LesUe Jane Alleii, Mr. and Mn. Roy Jefferson A 1 Jen ; Miu .Kathleen Merry Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Vemon Duncan : Miss Mary Mlcht.le Edelblute, Mr. and ·Mrs! Charles Graham Edelblute; Miss' Jo Ellen Fi eld , Mr. and Mn. Owen Lincoln Field ; Miss Karen Anne Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hllmar Johnson. Others are Miss Patricia Suzanne Mayna June, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Elhlel June: Miss Micheala Beth Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elmer Kelley; 11-fiss Calhleen S u z -A n n e hfartin, Mr. and "frs. Carl Laurence Martin; Miss Mary Lou Myers, Dr. and Mrs. Charles. Lincoln Myers: Miss Horoscope Rebecca Pila• 31oa1m, 11ta. Wayne Warm Slocum: Mill 5horrl Ame '11>omquls1, llr. and Mn. John Jerome Tbomqullt, and Miu Gwoo Elllabeth Wlthotr, Dr. and M(t. Jean J!lchard Wittwer. Pebutantes and their fathers were hosted at a brunch Sunday in the Irvine Coast Country Club by the ball committee of Harbor Key, wh ich is a support group for the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. Tables were adorned wit.h wicker baskel.5 filled with spring flowers. Before the brunch, the girls and their lathers toured the Harbor Key Thrift Shop, where lhe debutantes giYe service time. and the clinic, headed by Dr. Leonard J. Lesser. Proceeds from the seventh annual ball will be presented to the Child Guidance Center. S~gittarius: Proposal Due Chapter ' - Advances Membtrs of Iba suv.r 1114 Gold C!aple!' ol -Cout Community HoeplUil will ~ gin an acUve year of eenice with the firs! , meetUia of the year at 10 a.m. tomorrow. Plans for the fuM-raJJing soft drink booth at the summer lquna Be a ch FesUval of Arts will be clJM:iwed In the Soulh Lquna home of Mrs. Bertram Kampert. TUESl'lAY APRIL 20 l.EO !July 23-Aug. 22): ~ By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES IMMch 21.April 29) • Much that occurs may be shrouded in mystery. Be wary of one who speaks only off-the. record. Some facts must be for the record. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): \Vhat you thought was part of past may , like legendary phoe11.ix, rise again. Keep mind open. Some may startle with unusual reque sts, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Boon to Business Orange Co ast secretaries will have their "day in the sun " Wednesday, April 21, during Secretaries Week. April 18-24. Theme of the 20th observation is Better Secretaries Mean Better Bwiness. Hoping to be a winner in a contest to find the. outstanding sec retary sponsored by Bahia Chapter of National Secretaries Association is Mrs. Vernon Price. BE FREE ... Some of your fonde!t desires can be fulfilled. You have backing. Go ahead. Refuse to be discouraged by oite of little faith. You have knockout punch. ' Lie low. Observe rather than assert. Be flexible. Sagittarius individual will aid . Key is expansion. Refuse to stand still. You must time moves.----------------------! O!" FACIAL HAIR FOREVER. LET US SHoW YOU HOW EASY IT IS Scholars Benefit An art wait and tea 1n Laguna Beach's Sleepy Hollo\v Gauery will be sponsor- ed by the Orange County Mills College Alumnae on \Vednesday, April 21, from 10 1.m. to 4 p-m. Admiring art works including jewelry, driftwood pla- ques, mew and wire sculpture and paintings are (left to right) Mrs. James Truesdell and Mrs. Esley Cowman. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ GE,.1INI IMay 21.June 20): Obtain valid hint from Taurus message. Stress is o n performance. What you do now wil l be appreciated by one in posjtion of authority . CANCER (June 21.July 22l: Your lntuiUon is active. You cut through deadwood and get to wurce. Trust inner feelings. lgnor one who procrastinates, LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasize practicality. Don't play games with security. One who tempts. promises is not for you. Know this and respond accordingly. SCORPIO (Oct . 23-Nov. 21): You can show off best qualities. Good lunar aspect coincides no\v with creativit~'. love, intensified relations with opposite sex. Memories Rekindle SAGITTARIUS. !Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Home, environment, relations with family members a r e spotlighted. Build for seairity. Refuse to heed si ren call or irresponsibility. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Be versatile. Realize that By Erma Bombeck APRIL'S BIRTHSTONE 1ht. 'OiaftlOftJ. AT WIT'S END Mom ?" they asked . ideas can be numerous but Wben a radio station causht fire recently, a disc jockey ran into the burning building and emerged happily with lhe one thing he considered worth risking his neck for . . a recording of Frank Sinatra singing, "Night and Day." When I asked myself '4'hat I wou ld save if our home y,·as in flames. the answer ~·as quick and unfaltering: the baby book of lhe children. I don't get mellow too often, but when J do I am positively sickening about it. I leaf through that baby book and can almost see the bald-head and lhe ~·rinkled feet; smell the milk breath and talcumed bottom: feel the smooth skin and wet fist s. That book is Daddy with hair. a house the size of a phone booth; me in a size 10. It can never be replaced. I thought of the book with total concept Is special. You the pink faces that Jaunched a will understand. Neighbor is thousand O:lristmas cards. likely to tell tall story. The record of immunizations. AQUARJVS (Jan. 20-Feb. The loving arms thrown 18): Be aware or what Is of around Granddad's knees. The real substance. Don't fall for cardboard nower11 stapled to a fast talker. Ask to see, hear sucker, and said, "My list of and test fact!. By being reat- "Yeah. but not until next baby sitters." istic, you gain respect and Easter." he sald. "That f i g u re s.'' they ;=~~n~yo~ this and proceed "I'd save your pair dryer," grimaced. said my daughter. I didn't want to blow my E PISChES (~eb. l!J-Mthare ch 20): "But what about all the m P as 1 z e new. image. Besides, I keep the list Encourage one who has Ideas. friendship pictures of your of baby snten in the back of You benefit from fresh classmates you gathered?" tbe baby book. a..._.....ft. Leave the ........ KoN than ur other pm, tM Diamond, prized for its ftrt and llrilllance, hu intlutnced the ltfta ind adiou o! both men and women.'Ita hardnos mako U. llll'ibeibl1 and. "I see tbem Bl school" she "jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!jj!iiiiiii""iiii'~iii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii · yawned. ' II 10 it WU thovcht, mflticallJ upable o! prot.ctinl' a wearer from «riL The Diamond YOmantica11J armboliu.1 tnnoetnce for April'• children. W car J101lr btr&Mtoiw /Of' Jffil fa•ltivrt. a"d rood /Hh•tu W South C•o•t r lou • l1ittol 1t tho Soi Diet• Fwy, Co1t1 Ma11 140-90.. ''If our house was on fire ." I as~ed my family, "y,•hat "'ould you save?" "Who set it on fire?" asked the youngest. "It doesn't matter who set the fi re." I said, "I'm only asking what you would save." "That's easy," he said, "f\.1y Easter candy in the freezer." "That's stupid," I said, .,that can be repla~." Meet the genius "I think I would save my bowling ball," pondered my husband. "You're kidd ing," I gasped. "That thlng has been stored in the attic so long, it's flat on the bottom. You never bowl anymore." "I know, but if a new house was being built and I didn 't have all this yard work and inside repai rs, I might have time to bowl again ." 11y other son hesitated. "I guess. first I'd grab Harry \our dog), then my box of snacks I keep under the bed, and then my can of new tennis balls. If I 1tlll ~ad tome time, J'd check on you and Dad." "What would you save., behind that Fabulosa glow, ANA MARIA ALBA appearing 1 to 3 Tuesday in I. Magnin Santa Ana to teach ,you the beauty ritual using her secret formula creme concentrate. Get the purse-size Fabulosa Spray as a bonus with any Fabulosa purchase. Just at I. Magnin. Cosmetics Crowning Glory beauty salons onN M NIN5S AND SVNOAY& APPOl~TME/'tT NOT ALWAYS NECESSAlllY SPRING PERM SALE! Bouncy, breezy beautiful curls Flattering new fashion look. 5S95 Very Special. Re9. $15.00 now BUDGET PERM ••••• alwayo •SH (Norm•! H1ir) .r, FROSTING SPECIAL ••..•. 514~ SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT Mt11 T1111 Wri l•t1t Wht •2t5 •345 •150 •200 Sty/id /Xie.I •l;fhdtt hifMI' SOUTH COAST PLAZA-Phone 546-7186 tower Level-Next to Sears Open Evenings 267 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa Phone 548-9919 01*' Evenings & Sunday 2 fA.!HIOll Sllll.IR£ •SANTA AHA I 1. ma1n1n Wt CARE 1bout youl Look your bolll .1._ ______________ _ Alumnae Lesson Defense Makes Sense Who better to head a program in self~efe115e than a policeman aod a former Marine? Stephfns College Alumnae af Orange County have asked Inspector Edward J. Kovac of the Tustin Police Department 1o instruct them in "Self. defense for Women" when they meet at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 20. The State Mutual Savings and Loan building in Tustin will be the locale for the program. Jnspector Kovac joined the Force in 1965 after serving four years in tbe Marine Corps. He was appointed senior patrolman in 1969 and investigator in 1970. All area alumnae are invited to attend. Mrs. Wyn Chapman will furnish further Information for lhose interested. TO REMOVE EXCESS HAIR Wint MODERN ELECTROLYSIS , MEDICALLY APPROVED ••• • SAFE1 FAST, GENTU:1 CONSULT WITH OUR LICENSED TECHNICIAN IN OUR BEAUTY SAL.ON. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT ROBINSON'S • BEAUTY SALON 1/2 SALE PRICE OUR FAMOUS CONDITIONAL ANO SALON CUSTOM PERMS: REG• 25.00 ••••• •••••••••• •••• •• • o o • • • •• 12.50 REG, 35,00 • 1 •11 1 •• 1••11 1 • • • • • 1 •11 ••o•o1 17.SQ REG, 50,00 11 ,, 11•11, 1, o • • o o • • • • o o • • • • o 1 25.00 THE PERM OF YOUR CHOJCE INCLUDES A PERSONALIZED STY1...E CUT 1 BEAUTY SALON . ,RESTOR CONDITIONER REVITALIZES YOUR HAIR. ' .CONSULT OUR KREE EXPERT IN PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL., ·ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644 .2 aoe ' 7 7 • , ...... I' .. ' " --. (;osia ·Mesa . . ,-, • ED l·I ION N.Y. Stoeks ' ' ' -VOL. 64, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES OR'AN6E·COUlilTY, CAOFORNIA MONDAY, APRl~,'1 9, "1971j · • TEN CENTS ' , . ' . .; Heavy Pot Users Show Melltal Di~urhanees ~ - CIUCAGO (UPI) -Two Phllad<lphla psychoanalysts, in a report released today, say cue studies of 38 individuals show serious mental d ls turban c e , including psycbosl.s in some case.5, accompanied heavy marijuana smoking. "These paUents consistently showed very poor social judgment, poor attention span, poor concentration, conft1Sion, anxiety, depreuion, apathy, pa~ivity, lndille~ and, often, slowed and slurred speech," the. researcben said. They aJao llated aJDOlll l)'DlptomS 0 an .iteration of cooaciousne11 ,. b 1 ~ b included a split between an obst"lnl aDd ao ezperiendq portloo of lht ego, ao inability to briog thougbts togdber, a paranoid auaplciousnea of ethers and regression to 1 more infanWe state." Tb ... symptoms, Ibey said, were ool present before the subjects began using marijuana. The article, "ellects of marijuana on adolescfnts and YOUlll adultl,'' WU publlahtd In the April 11 llau1 of th 1 Joumtl of Ibo .Amerlan Medkal A!socl1tlo!i. A spokesman lnr the AMA &aid Ibo article Is "Ibo lint real evidence, bued on good -· of barmlul effects from smokioa marijuana. Heretofore, medicine has 1*en able to uy only that there was no good evidence of harm from amokirlg pot. Now we have aome evidence." lbe aulllotl,.Drt. Harold Kolansky IDd .... _ THIS SOVIET ARTIST'S CONCE Western Spice Experts LI NKUI' av TWO MANNED. SO'l'IJJ: SHIPs Thfl Ruul1n1 Are Raedyfog Orbltel l'llfform Solons Approve Rapid Transit ' Gasoline Tax SACRAMENTO (Ul'I) -A Senate committee today approved Iegislalion to levy a penny of the sales tax on gasoline to rai.e an estimated $173.4 millio1 a )'ear for local rapid transit systems. The Public Utilities and Corporatiorui Committee unanimously endorsed the mea.ure by Sen. James R. Mills (0.San Diego), and sent it to the finance co~mittee. There was no opposition. The money would be diverled to local transit districts and earmarked for construction or maintenance of a system. In areas where there i.!I no district, the revenue would be deposited in the local government's general fund. The Automobile Club of Southern CaUfornia supported the "concept" of the measure but recommended that the Jegl1lat lo n permit rura1 local 1overnments to use their share of the 1ale.s tu revenue for road construction. 'Snubbed by Spiro' SAN FRANCISCO , !UPI) -C..rge Christopher, formv San Fr a n c i s c o mayor, Saturday confirmed a columnist's report that he was snubbed by Spiro Agnew when he attempted to get the vice president's autograph for his dying 14- year~ld nephew. Five Seek Three Seat,s , On Newport-Mesa Board ' Five~dates seek elect.iotl Tuesday to thra openlnp on the Newport.MW: Unified School DiatrkL Board o f Trust~. Tb'ert are 50,313 regiQered vol.era In the dialrict eligible to vote. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to I p.m. While candidates for the three Openings an the aeven.membEr board must reside in the trustee area U}ey seek to represent, all-voter• in the Custrict decide Humorist Poet, Ogden Nash, 68, Critically Ill BALTIMl>RE <UPI) -Hwnori&t Ogden Nash was critically ill in a hospital here today. Nash,'61, wu admitted to Union Memortail Hospital March 13, it was learned .Sunday, for treatment of an llinesa hospital officials would not disclose. 1bey said the writer'• family had requested no infonn8tion b e released. Nash had been in fair condition earlier Sunday, but he deteriorated In the afternoon, a hospital spokesman 1aid. Born in Rye, N.Y .• Nash attended Harvard for one year. He left in 1921 and quickly became famous u a fa cile writer of llgbt, burnoro111 verse. each race. Attorney Dooald E. Smallwood, 12, of Com Mesa i. running unopposed for the lnl!tet arei one aut vacated by trustee James Peyton, whose term upiru July I. Incumbent Mn. Marian C. Bergeson, a Newport Beach housewife, is opposed by business coordinator Donald T. Bull or Costa Mesa in trustee ana thr•. Mrs. Bergeson represent.s · residents of both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa whose homes are located between the Back Bay and. Newport Boulevard north and east of Dover Drive and 21st Sll.Jel Incumbent Board Pre&ident Selim s. "'Bud" Franklin, a Costa Meaa ·attorney, 11 opposed by salesman Herb Slr1cker, 41, of Newport Beach in lhe area iii race. Area slx Is the porllon of tbl dlslrld between the Back Bay and Newport Boulevard IOUth and west of 2111 Street and Dover Drive to Pacific Coot Higbway. Trustee. areu wen ·designated when the Newport-Mesa . Uttlfled-District Wll formed to JUlll'&ntee b a I I n C t d representaUon oo the seven-member board. The district plans no election witch for returns, since resulb wW be tabulated by precinct and reported directly to the County RegiBtrar of Voten in Santa Ana. The Newport--Mesa board ,elect.ion is one of thirteen being conducted Tue9day along . the Orange Coasl The DAILY PILOT wJU report results of all races I.a Wednesday'• edltlona. Seven See~ College Posts Only 3 Se ats Vacant in Coas t District Electiom Seven candidates are vylfll for three openings on the Coast Community College District Board of Education in Tuesday's election. All of the district's 129,469 registered voters wiU be ellglble to vote on all candidates. but hopefuls reside In the trustee area they setlc to represenL Polls will be open from 7 a.m. until I p.m. Tuesday wll.h results to be compiled by the County Registrar of Voters in Santa Ana. No election poll watch has been aet up by tht dJatrlct 1lnca returns will be filed by precinct dlrectl,y lo the COWlty re&istrar'1 office. Inrumbtnl Dooaid G. HoU, 12, of Midway City face.a 1 tu d &"n t Ow-Its Dagioo, 24, also of Midway City in the trustee am two race. Hoff prue1Uy represents voters ln the porUon of the district w b i c b i.s t h e Westmln1ter Elementary School Dislrlcl Incumbent William Kettler, 4D. ol Huntingtm. Beach, faces two opponents ln the race for hi• area three aeat rtpreaenl!ng resldtols of the Hunlfn&1on ' Bolch aod Foontaln Valley Eltmtnl.al)' districts. They are: Barbara Bell, 23 of HunlinglM Btacb end Mn.. Enriqueta Ramos, SS. of Fountain Valley. JncUmbtol lloberl L. Hui\>phroy1, 44, H •-· ftoni O!ota Mesa, II oppoted by tiro challenger. for · lila board stat. Rk:hard L. Oliver, 4S, a l)'ltem1 analyst from Costa M~ aod sludeot WIW1111 T. Unger Jr. 1be ma four eeat on the Coast COilege board rept-la/(lidenta ol the dll' of Colla Mesa. " . , Wfill"ID T. M-of Ibo Qilld Antlyals -of the Phllldelphla ANoc11Uon for PaY<!Jo.Analysls, hid tbtlr purpo&e wu,to "report only the efftcta lffD as a COD!Oqu•litt of . mlriju... smoking' In -·not . lhowtng 1 p~Uoo to IUIOUI pa:ycblatrk: problems... . They hid they removed from the sludy group 11\oat pilieols wbo sbowtd llgns they had been prtdlapoaed l o paycbolotlctl pniblema before Ibey blgao ualni marijuaoa. Tiit fi.W group of 38 p1tltnls raoged In qe from IS \g 21 and conslsltd of 20 malu and 11 females. StlUll pnunllClllty ollo was 1 frequent 1ymptom among tbelr subjects, the aut.bon said, "and , the incidence of unwanted pregnancib a.mong female patient.I waJ hlgb, as was the incidence of Vtllj!l'eal d1"'"$1 ••• "There was m1rked lnlerferenoe with pusooar cltaolllltls, groomlog, c1rtss1og Russ Lab • Ill Sky? , Platform 'Salute' Project Begins ... MOSCOW (UP!) -The Soviet Uoloo today . liunched a oew kind of utellit. ca.lied "Salute.. and scientific soun:a 11ld . It will be thO basis ol a lengthy project to bW!d the first manned atauon lft space. A report by tbt Soviet News A&ency Taaa _clid oot specify ll Salute w11 man- ned but the aclenUfic tourcea Aid Jt was noL 'I'llty atld there will bt·more launch.- es in the coming days involving manned vehicles whlcb will redezvous with Salute and begin the conslructloo pn>jecl. 'I'llty predicted the mlsaloo will bl complex, 1pectac:ular aod lengthy - running .evtraf weeks. The name "Salute" never before bu been u8ed. for Soviet 1pace c raft, ouggestlng that It i.· a new type' built especially for the space station mission. Salute'• orbit wu exacUy the same as that used for most Soviet manned llhota - a nurly circular Oigbt path eome 140 milelootr lht urtll •""=-°"' ..,. art".;.~, . • lWakhsian. ' Tbe8<n1et=~-"' bu ~ ..... ol • ' ?'!P'~lto o( . by ..... opacecrafl In the JUI yoars hu t<md tht oyiteml aod -ol pJ.tform building. In rteent -a top Sovlll - tc1.entl1ts have dilCUUfd the project la the .,....., lndlcatlnl &oViel <iooll ..... the platform aoon wi11 bl a re&IJly, Thi Tua rep<l"I of Ibo launch· called Iha aputnlk i "atallon," ...,_, It bad a p..,,... dllfertnl from pnvioue unmanned abott ?!ally c a 11 e d "'1putnib," or acieaUDc satellitea." Tiit salute orbital paramotm lnclodtd to aogle of lncllnatiM ol It.I dtgrea, period ol re,.lulloa of 18.I 1llinu1ts, maximum distinct from the Mace of the urth ol us mlJtl aod i Jlllnlmmn -of 120 miles. The parame'wir1 were almost precisely the same 11 previoUI manned Soy\11 fllghl.I in which Soviet cosmonauts practiced 1kill.s n e c e 1 s a r y for construct.Ion of an orbital apace station. "Tiit oobolnl ayst<nu, equipment tod aclenUnc apparatuses of the station function : non,.a.lly," Tau uld. '"nle coordination computing center processes llit-run Drivers Sought in Mesa After Accidents A ptlr ol bit ind nm driven -one at the -I of i 115S iuxurJ' Import car aod the other driving i U.S. teooomy car - are 10Ugbt today, alter Costa Meaa acctdeots Injuring thrtt penons·Sundly. Mlltoa J. Jobmon, 55. ol 1ee·wa1nut St., Costa Meu, · lllftered aeftre injuries wheo '•truck by the Imported auto outslde a church at 7: 10 a.rn. Sunday. He wu takea to.Cotta Meaa MemorilJ Hospital for emergency treatment and transferred to 'Orange CoUnty Medical Center with arm and leg fractures, plus multlp1e 1bra1ions. A witness chued the hit and run motorist from the mcene at Oran1e Avenue and Walnut Street long mough to 1et his llctnJO number but turned bacl: lintlly, alrald he would retallale. Police were traclng the owner today through ro11JtraUon. A pair of Cooll Meaa lttllagen 1uffmd hrolwl ..... In the eecond accident al 7:1S p.m. Sunday when theJr car jumped the curb IDd rammtd 1 power~. Stev .. li. Kraua, 18, ol 1711 Labrador Drive aod Kria C. Pei.non. 11, ol 2131 COlleae·Ave., were lrtlttd of Cooll Mesa ·MerTtorltl Holpltll and relea1td. JnvesUgalon ,.Id they ll!lllhtd bito the 1illldsbleld at the moment of lmpld after ""KDlls Hid to IWtr/6 to nOld collld.lni wltb 1 teeond car. The driver, wfio had swerved In front of him to pick up two tttnagtd Jlrl1 hltchhlklnl llod lbe octl!O wbell ht uw what be bAd c1111.d. ' ., incoming inform1tlon." Scientific 10UTte1 in Moscow have predicted at leaat two vehicles carrying two or more cosmonauts will be used in Ibo c:omjng space spectsclt. . Their mlsalon, IOl!'ctl hid, will be lo cc:mtruct the first pennanent orbital manned space station, the first atep in luge-scale exploration of the tolar system. The previous: Soyuz flights an were aimed towar~ that end. SOyuz 9 In June, •Father~ 1970, was a lwtMDaD endurmd test ta cletmnlnt how wtll.Dltll CID wllliiiand the tfftcll of wtlghilmmu lholnl orbital platforms. In 11189, So)'UJ a. 7 aod • -t aloft willl seven ccsmooauta to prlCUct na.vtptlcn aod 'Pict welding. Earlier the same yur Soyuz 4 and I made a 1uccessful rendezvous, lblbd ap and carried ·oot a MW change before returninJ to earth. -mage? Cult Leader Addresses Tate Judge LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge who could have spared their lives 1entenced Qiarles Manaon and three women codlftodaata ~·y lo dla .I• lht ... --f<lt what lit ....... ~-· aentelul murder•.'' fi c..lrl Judie Cbal'Jes II. Ol&a'; JC.:~~.J~1 !hi death penally appn>prte;" but'i Ii -compelled by the clrc:umataJal ol Utli Clle." Just before pronouncing l o r ma I sentence the judJe allowed Manion, bead of a hippie styl< ciao, lo arlJe aod addr ... the ""11. With h1a btecl bowed, MID lll said: "I~"" a!y1y11lw4 l!l Ille 1ru1b 11 J<!Ur caurtRom. l l>lv1 alwey1 -what I WU !Old. 51r, l In..-thla F ~,,, ~ ~~ ... 1111 ;IJIUer, ~WO.~ that del(llN •twnera ...ad' llil call Juror• u · wit. ...... lo lest1fy ibout bow Ibey .-. td cooviclloo. and dMth ~«diets. Twin Tower Question Set For Mesa Hearing Tonight Tbt q..,u.6 of wbethl• Ille city's akyllDt will 10meday bave a aecond aenior citizens' reUrement tower goes befor' the Costa Mesa City CouncU tonight for a public bearing. Chances: are strong that no final commitment will be made. City Councilman William L. St. Clair made it clear today he will ralse a variety of questions about the Western Association of Baptists' $5 million Costa Mesa Towers project. Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley, however, will carry the ball in discussions, since be bas been deeply Involved in atudy of fire safety, economics and other factora of the federally aided project. "I t.bJnk I'll do one of two things,,. Pinkley remarked. One of thoae poaslbllltles wlll he lo call for postponement of the vote, pending a commitment by the Department of Houslna and Urban Development (IWD) and the Federal Hpusini Admlnjltration that certain city services will be fiunctd. Costa Mesa ToWer, proposed at 650 W. lWl St., will be a virtual twin to neighboring Bethel. Towers, wbJcb ls prohibited by HUD statutes from paying property ta1es. * * * Public Hearings ' Slated in Mesa Besides considering ardher hilh riae senior cltllena re~ tower, the Colta Meaa City Council f~e1 a variety of other publlc· hurlngs fl' tonl(lll'• agenda. , :.. Ont ·ii for an lncruse ~IDlbulance f.., from II to 11.10 per mill requested by. Seal•' and Schaefer'• amblilarice lef'V'- ices., with all other eipensm rraa1nin1 tbe same. ' • A ltCOlld hearln1 will be~ etermble whether' an unfumlshtd cnmtd by Jolln Wakub, a( ll21 Glenu Ttl'face, lhouid bl declared a publlc GUaallCI II a fire 11td safety hazard. ; Several other he1rln11 on JUch Items as an ordmanct which would lndlrtctly allow the city to keep out-..adult.only bc>\lk and film ooli•b catar!ng.to the oer. ually bizarre will bl •et for M:ay a, when' tbl couaclJ nut meeta.. , ~AwmblJci'Godcbur<h _.,ala that l!nglnttred Its a>mtructloa throutb • nonpn>lit corpomioa agreed 11 the outset lo pay variDUI c1f1 ltfVlcts taftl eome wiy, but cannot. Baptlst -· led by the ReY. Harley Murray. ha .. pledged tbt same 1uppcrt of an estimated $21,300 per year in city aervlces to be paid by contract. . Tbe technical method or finance ls different. with private capital used. and the government paying only the interest. "I think the biggest tblllg we have tG face is who's going to pay those ta1es," Mayor Robert M. WU..,n hid lodly. "And I don't want a commitment from just the Baptllts llone tither,. added Couocllmaa Pinkley. referring to the Bethel Towers eaperlenct. One other JIOlnl -mandator y ~lion ol •. fire aprinldtr aystem, which Belbel··To"8rr does not b.an - baa been urltd by Plokley, with enthusiastic qreemeai by Baptl1t planners. "l doll'l thi~ the aprinkli•g Is any (Set ... hp l ) Oruf e W~iller COldu o1gllta aod graduallJ warmer day1 are the J>l'OCl10IU- caUoa for Tuesday alon1 the coast. with lemperaluru . hlWng 116 Jo. cally and it ·furlbtr-Inland. INSmt:· TODAY Two · Congr11imen haw re- waltd findit\a• which indtoatc heroi11 UH 0/ 'q:iidtmic l'f'OPo,.. tlom ""'°1'9 .\mtrfcon !TOOP' In Vietnam. TN.COit ii amaU thnc bUI huge In tilt U.S. Storo Poao 4. 2 OAIL V PILOT c Mondo)', Aorll 19, 1971 A Shau -·valley Quiz South Viet Operati'!n Not Exactly C~r SAIGON (AP) -U.S. fl1htu-bombers attacked North Vtetnamese positions inside tbt A Shau valley today for the seonl IUCCtlSlvt day In support of an allied operation that apparently hasn't gotten di the ground. Both President Nguyen Van Thieu and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, t be commander of U.S. forces in South Vietnam. announced the· op e r a t ion Saturday, and Abram.I aaid South Vletname11e troops were in the A Shau, giving the impm:sion that they had moved into the 30-mile-Jong valley in force . But field reports tod1y said on1y ftC'O"Nlsunce troops were operating inside the vallty oo the Laotlln border, and the major force would move in later this week. The announcements by Thieu and Abrams raiSM the possibility that the U.S. Commansf and the South Vietnamese government were giving out misleading infonnation in an attempt to confuse the North Vietnamese. But Abrams' chief 1poktsmao, Col. Robert W. Leonard, said he considered quelltlons along this line "impertinent" and added: "We have never used the press to c a u s e speculation.'' Soutb Vietnamese mllltary headquarten turned uJde all qumJ.., about the operation. A ~ Lt. Col. Le Tnmg Hien, said he would not dbclose any details until there wu significant contact with the erremy. The forward command posts of the South Vietnamese task force and eJe.. ments of the U.S. lOlst Airborne Division have been set up just to the south of Quang Tri City. Angela Feared Police Says Lawyer in London U.S. (lfflcer1 in the field said troop5 from the lOtst would ctlnduct offensive (lperations once the operation gets going. About 2,00J American ground troops and 10,000 South Vietnamese are conunittat •·on paper," officers said, but there are severa1 po5.'lbllit.ics, including a smaller operaUon, or a larger one extending into Laos, depending on what t h e reeonnaiuance forces find. The South Vietnamese forces include two reiiments from the lrt Infantry Division and two brigades (If marines, all of whom took part In the invasion of Laos in February and March. A U.S. helicopter reportedly was shot down over lhe A Shau (!Ver the weekend and the pilot was killed. Helicopters (If the lOlst patrol the valley regularly. LONDON (UPI) -Angela DaviJ was afraid to turn herseU la after being placed on the FBI's most wanted list last Auguat because of fear lhc wou1d be shot .Fro.,. PGfle 1 TOWER • • • problem now and other than that I lblnk Jt'a fine," he remarked. Councilman Pinkley hinted he may mate a moUon to conUaue ~ bearing imtll web Ume u the We.stern AuodaUon of BapUsts can obtain written HUD agreemeiit on the $21,000 annual r.-•l l-~~~o......ui..i.i1oo"""""""l>ldl-ille Plannlnr 1 commlJalon last w e e k ~ended council approval of the 18- ttorY1 2'70oontt tower for senior citizens of limlted Income. 'Ille hearing on Its combined zone exception permit and ma1lmum height limit deviation luted an hour, with a procession of speakers largely in OpposJUon. . s.v.ru n ..... lbe prozlmlly of Seibel Towers, and complained of shadow and ,.-Ind effects, wb.Ue otben alUcized the &ax loophole that leaves local citizens footlo( Ille bill. down, her lawyer Howard Moore said today. "The fact she did not tUnt herself in is no evidence she is guilty," the goateed Moore said (If Miss Davis, charged wilh murder. k.idnaping and conspiracy in connection with a courtroom shootout in San Rafael, Aug. 7, 1970. Jonathan Jackson, brother of George Jackson, a prisoner al the state's Soledad Prison and one of the "Soledad Brothen," two convict.I and a judge were killed ln the gun battle. Moore said that when the FBI put the ~year-old Miss Davis on its most wanted list, "This was license for any law enforcement official or any private cith:en to shoot her (In light. "She cou1d not show hersell publicly without feeling she wou1d be summarily ~ws conference at which he announced the launching of a British campaign to support Miss Davis and the Soledad brothers. Miss Davis, a self -pro claimed Communist. was arrested Ocl 12 in New Y(lrk. Polite officials alleged she had provided the guns used in Ute courtroom shootout. Penny Jackson, Afro-haJred lirter of Gearge JiCDOn, 'told the news conference minority groups such as the Mexican- Amerlcao QiicaJt(ls and the Black Panther ·party had rallied to support Miu Davil and her brother. The A Shau valley 365 miles north (If Saigon is just to the east of Base Area 611, a maj(lr North Vietnamese aupply depot (In lhe Ho Chi Minh trail through southern Laos. '11ie valley is used as an infiltration ctlrtldor and au p p 1 Y transshipment area for the northern quarter of South Vietnam. Stabbing Case Probed in Mesa A stabbing incident in which a Costa Mesa youth said the knife slipped as he was slicing ham to serve his buddies sandwiches at a Saturday night party is under investigation taday. DeMis R. Evans. 17, (If 1310 Santa Ana Ave., was treated for a puncture wound in t.he abdome• at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after the 11 :20 incident and released. The victim and witnesses tald Officer Roger Neal the !tabbing at 2190 College Ave .. was accldenta1, but police said the wound appeared to be caused by a straight-in thrust. A large number or ether youths were present, officers said. THIS IS HOW ARTIST SEES COMPLETE COMMUNITY HOSPITAL PLANNEO NEAR UC IRVINE First Ph1sa of 200 Beds Scheduled for Completion In 1974 OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OIU.HGE C.O.Ul' l'LlaLtt'41HO COM"AHV Aebtrl N. Wttd f'rnlffnl •nlf f'Wlltllfr' J 1ck ll Curltv \/let P'mlfmt encl Glo!wel M,,,.,.,. Thorn •• l(,,.,.a f.dlltf Th-•• A. Murph!~• Mtn•llnt Ed llW Ch•tlt1 H. loo1 Rith••d P. N•ll Aul1t•"; ,,...,..,1~v Edl!or• C•ate M9l• Offk• llO Wt1f l•y St111t M•ilil'l!J Addr111: P.O. 1011 1560, 9262 6 Ottt.r Offk• N~ Int"' l:1P fol~.,..~~ eo11!.,,1rd ~ t11dl: JT. For11t A.....,11'11 M""''"""~ kK~: 11115 ltl(~ Soult~•rll $f.ft (""*IN: 1111 Nartll IEI Ctrn lno 11.tal Bids for Medical Center Near UCI Slated in July PlaMing coatracts for a proposed medical center to be built near UC Irvine will be awarded by July, state Senator IleMis E. Carpenter (R-Newport Beach), said tOOay. Carpenter Is the prcsidenl or the Orange County Medical Foundation, the sponsoring non-profit corporation which is planning the center. Carpenter said completion of the first unit. a 200·bed community hospital, is scheduled for 1974. The hospital will be the first or several facilities which will occupy 150 acres adjacent to UCl's School (If Medicine. Total cost (If the project is an estimated $tOO million. "This Is the first time, !(I far as we know, that a medical cent"r has been planned from the ground up,'' said Donald S. Burns, chairman (If the foundallon'a board and chairman (If lht board of the Newport NaUonal Bank. Bums sa id the Irvine Medical Center v.•ill start with tM Newport Community Hospital and wlll eventually b e au11menttd by a surgical center and • group of tpeclatlud clinics. When developed to lb fullest, the center Wiii include medlclnt-related commercial and lndustrlal areas. hotel and motel accommodations and seminar and conference racilltles 8 u r n s explained. ' l{e 1al~ UCJ'a mtdlc1l 1chool will bt 1n intrgral part (If the center. "Subject to approval by the Board et Regents. lbe two ftospilals -our community hospital and the univenity hospital -may share some ancillary facWUes," be said. When he announced the project in October of 19'10, Carpenter noted the community hospital will be desia:ned to serve the medical needs of the 400,000 peaple wbo are expected to settle in the Irvine area. The medical school's hospital will primarily be a teaching and research facility, not designed to meet the needs of a C(lmmunlty. It will draw its patlenta from a wide area beyond the borders ol. Orange County. Membcn ol the medical college ataff have recommended a joint master plan for the entire medical area which consists or the college's 150 acres and the roundaUon'a 150 acres loca~ at UniversJty Drive and M a c A rt b u r Boulevard. Drug Burglar Hits Mesa Vet Hospital A burilar broke a window Saturday lo enter a Costa Mesa veterinary hospllal, stealing as.sorted drugs including lht pain killer Demerol, In pill and liquid lorme. Wendy E. Enaign, of Mesa Weal Pt( lfoapital, 1870 Placenlla Ave., erUmtted th< loss at $26, according lo O!Dcu Chuck Hamilton. • D.AILV l'ILOT Ii.rt '"'"° DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMULATOR Fighting the Common Cold In an Obscure Newport Beach lab Battle· of Cold Lab in Newport Scene of Drama Top ·Essay Finalists Announced The U finalists In Hoag Memorial J{o.!lpital's annual "Mother of the Year'' 1tudent essay contest were annoWlced today <µ1d hoQOr~ 11-t a reception at S:30 p.m. in the hospital's Con(erence center. , 'l1le winner will be named at a luncheon May 8 and presented with the contest's top prize: a trip to Hawaii for lbe author's parent.a:. Selected as finalists were Sheryl Harms, a first grade student at Christ Lutheran School ; Paul O'Gorman, a f1"• grader at St. John the Baptist School; Kent Harper a second grader at Harbor View School ; Amber Sage, a secoad grade pupil at Wilson School; AM Louise Koehler, a third grader at Ga:den Hall School and Aschwin Herter, a third grader at Wilson chool. Also, Bunni Rogers, a fourth grader at Victoria School; Christine Carr, a fourth grader at St. John the Baptist ; Vicky Sutherland, a fillh grader at Newport Elementary School; Dahl Hunter, a fifth grader at Killybrooke School: Robert Hudack, a sixth grader at Whittier S'cbool and Debby Pazjk, a aixth grader at Newport Heights Elementary School. Excerpts from their essays make heartwarming reading. "My mom is special to me became God made her for me," said 6-year-old Sheryl Harms. "My mother cooks: the food for us to make us bea1thy. She helps me, why. because she loves me," wrote ?·year-old Paul O'Gorman. Kent Harper, 8, bad these thaughts. "Sometimes she gets mad, and sometimes she Is so nice, she takes us somewhere. My mom has to be very By L. PETER KRIEG Tests are fu from camplete, Dr. str(lng for my sister and me because my or PM ~ur ,1111 '"" G\asky stressed. dad doesn't live with us anymore." It's called isoprinosine. "lsoprinosine 's effects have (Inly been Amber Sage, 8, wrote, "She gives us It's already been called a cure for the confirmed on a dozen cases lnvolvine lessons about Jesus Chri.st and Heavenly common cold, a quick end to influenza, persons with cold symptoms," he said. father. She takes care of my brother and and measles, and chicken poi, and more "To say right now it Is the absolute my sister and herself and my dad. We than a hundred other viruses. clke to the common cold Is premature," sing together." It's called NPT 10.381 for short. he said, but he confirmed that in every "My mother smiles a lot and she plays If It works, call I~ a bllllon-dallar baby €1ne of those 12 cases, . the symptoms with me a lot. My mother listens to my for Dr. Alvin J. Glasky and a handful (If disappeared in less than 24 hours. prayers al night," were some of the friends who put up $2 rnilllon to start He insists be is much more e1cited words of Ann Louise Koehler, 8. Newport PbarmaceuUcals, Inc., three about its demonstrated effects against "Even though my mother is not yet a years 110. the flu, and things like vlral pntumonia citizen of the Uaited Stales, she Dr. Glasky and a team of 2.0 and smallpox. teaches us how to have respeet for our researchen have been working in an flag and country. She tells J'Q,e to be polite lnconsplcuOUJ laboratory on Monrovia to pea pie," wrote nine-year-old Asch win Street In Newport Beach since 1968. to .f'rom Page 1 Herter. find out If it works. Christine Carr is 9. She wrote, "Sbe is They have been experimenting, testing POT always thinking of other people and often and moat reantly manufacturing NPT • • • lets her work go until late at night just lo 10.381 since Dr. Paul Cordon, the help someone (lut. She is always baking University of Chicago professor . who developed a superior intellect at the S(lmething to take to someone because d. ·-• 't turned 1•· d el pment e,,.....nse of a loss (If his sexual life. He iscovOQ o;u 1 , ~ ev o ~"'" they are sick or have a problem." e t h. I g t1'me lr1'end th ears was the first member of a new 'super ov r 0 is on -ree Y Dahl Hunter, lt, said. "She shares her .go Presum.bty for a p;ece of the action race.' After stopping his smoking his ' • love equally w1'th others. She helps me The d et. •nt (If any drug · time delusional i d e a s disappeared an d he ev pm is -1..:-w1.th "·mp F1're G1·r1 pro1'ect1. She also C · 0~.~ and a g bl returned to his norma1 functioning in ,~ '-'-onsuming, expe "''" am e. helps my brothers. My daddy loves my Dr. Glasky is by no means jobaodmarriage." overconfident about the pr11Spects. He A 20-year-(lld man, after six months of mother and bis family. We all love eacb (lther." says it will be at least two or three year! pot smoking, "believed that he was in bcfare isoprlnosine is proven to the charge (If the Mafia and that he was an Robert Hudack, also 11, said, "She &Its satlsf&etlon of the U.S. Food and Drug eastern potentate of the Ku Klux Klan," down and talks with me a lot and Admlnl!t{ation and cleared for prescri~ the doctors said. explains whatever we are talking about Uon ~to the public. A IS.year-old boy, after three years of as carefully as she can. My mom &aid.'[ However, lhe government ot Argentina sm(lking marijuana. believed he was have one goal in lite, and that is to give already has been convinced and is God's son. A 19-year-old male thought he you a happy, healthy life, Bob.' " allowing general we (If the drug there. was "able to communicate with and "My mother is the boss o! the family When Jt does get on the market here, if control the minds and actions of animals and ls smart enought to make my father ii doea, "lt will pr(lbably cost about the " think he is.'' said 11-year-old Debby same as an antibiotic, somewhere Of these cases, Moore and Ko\ansky Pazjk. wh<l added, "Oa Chrlslmas or her between $3 and S6 for a ti-tablet said it was their "impression" that the birthday sbe always does things f(lf' us. prescription," Dr. Glasky said. use of marijuana •·caused such severe One year we went to Disneyland to But that's where its relationship to decompensatioa of the ego that it became celebrate her birthday." antibiotics ends. necessary for the ego to develop a Two (If the finallsts Jive with their "There's notblng like tt known te delusional system in an attempt to grandmothers and wrote about them. medicine," Dt. Glasky aald, explaining restore a new form or_ reality." Said 10-year-()Jd Vicky Sutherland: "My that the drug simply "makes the body'• They also reported (In 13 female m(llher died when I was five and so my natural defense mechanisms work better patienls "singled out because Qf the grandmother took her place as much as I and laster.'' unusual degree of sexual promiscuity, can remember her. She does everything a Ht said he and Dr. Gordon aren't sure which ranged from sexual relatlolll with real mother would do. I think she doe1 how It does It. several Individuals or the opposite sex to even more. She always understands what "They just do what they normally do ," relations with individuals of both sexes 1 say. It's not every day you'll find a he aald, "a lot more quickly and and, sometimes, indlvlduals of both,1ne1 grandmother that will be a mother efficlenUy." (In the same evening .•• " twice." ~---=~~~~~~======== ~'-""c:_~~~~~~~~~-..,,,,=--~ Music with an Option from JVC Cll•o1y7 'nit :JVC 6101 entour1911 the!. lt cornbin•• • dtln• euloll'lttic '4·1Pt•d 1t1r1• hirnt•blt with en l ·tr1ck 111••0 p1•Y• er ill 011• h11M11orn1, cern11•ct 11nit, Pile 1i1 r•cord1 on th1 lli9, I I -inc~ pl1tt1r •nd 1it b•cl1 •nd rel1x. Not in tt\1 111ood f•t 1iftln9 ttlreu9h your rt cord libr1ry7 Ok1y, thin fu1t tlip • c1/'fot rldt• lnle fli t I-trick 1ler10 pl1yer end for9tl it. Thi ch11191• •~••fro,,. pll•n• to l·fr•tk 1!1r1• /1 ecc0Mpli1htd eutoM1lic•llv, St! In fln1 fu1~lt11r1.flnhhell wood, Ike 6102 11 tu1r1 ~t1td I• rtndtr eulll1ntlln1 prolt 11i1n1I p1rforfll1nc 1 i11 either function. NOW ONLY REG. $169.00 s119 CREDIT TERMS AVAl t ABLE • 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWElRY and LOAN •. LOAN, IUY, SELL, TRAD! COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA ---H....,, • l<oodwoy , . ' 7 7 • ' • " ' Saddlehaek ·~····· • VOL. 1>4, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES • ORANGE ·COUNl'Y, ·CAll,:ORNlA • MONQ,t.Y, A.PRIC '.19, ·197f J'EN ·CENTS ' • •• • ' ' IXOll ssa1 ·s I E~tion T uesday Clubhouse · Issue Takes Limelight San Clemente's voters will go to the polls Tuesday to determine the rate of the city's first parks and recreation bond ls!ue -a milllorKlollar revenue item with four separate options. The parks election is combined on the ...; ballot for trustee posts in the Capistrano Unified School District and Saddleback Community College District. Of the four separate city items on the combinaUon ballot, the issue proposed for the replacement of the burned-out community clubhouse have captured Jl)OSl of the attention during prM.lecUon period. City officials buoyed by last week's relatively low bid quotation for the construction of the replacement, have kept a relatively low p<llllure on plugging the election, which bu an even chance or * * * C1.e1nente Poll Locations Told less of passage. ~ (Each of the four propositions needs a tw~thirds aye vote to pass.) Councilmen have set the bond amount at $400,000 for the clubhouse project, but the low bidder, local pl l. n n J n g commissioner and building contractor Ray McCaslin, bu offered to rebuild the structure lor $%35,000. That sum, o£ficia1s reminded, data not cover the cost ·of Parking lots, demolition of the fire-damaged building or relocation of tennis and shuffleboard courts. , The building cost, however, would he reduced by the city'1 recovery of $57 ,500 in insuranc"e for the fire damage. Most observers prtdict a strooger vote In favc.-of ttie · clubhouse lterri by the city's large contingent of older voters, who would be mOst llke.ly to use the. facility. · The sentiment of that voting group, however, is impos!ible ·to assess in the olher three items. A youth-oriented recr!ation facility at the ezlsting beaCh club ill the next-largest item on the b'allOt, and could draw disfavor from ·tbe. clubhouse pro~ts,' some observe.n ~te~ _ . .1be cos\" 1hjll ~ ... ~·at 1350,000. Down tlie M .• · ISSIOD. Trail • Lake Forest Art Meeting Slated ' ' . Welfare Denounced As .Failure WJLLIAMS!IURG, Va. , (AP) - Pmlclent Nb<on Ill~ loday lbe Unlled Slates· canoot tolerate • welfare l)'ltem ''under wbicb . workin& people can be made lo feel lib fool& by lhooe wbo will not wvrk." "It Ja,incndible· tbat we have aJ,lowed a LAKE FOREST -Sylvia Moonler • syatem of laln: Under wblch one person pallett.e. tnlfe artb:t wtll be gue"st speaker · can be. peull&ed fer doing an booest al the Tuesday meellng of the · Lab day"a work and ·another person cu be Forest Art Auociation. rewarded fw doina nothing," Nixon uid 1be meet)n1 is at 7:'3 p.m. ·In the In •·apoOcb ·prepared for the Republican Beach and Tennis Club. , • u,1.,...._,. Governon Conference. , All Lake Fortst residents who are C · ' • %. '%. -% The President deoounced the current tnrerested 1n art are tnvlted • lo the ompan•ORS .n lr•••er,11 we~aro ·IY•l<m· ., · "• monnmental meeting to watch the artiJt demOnsttate 1 , dir d ril fa.llure," and ur.ged support for hil own her craft . t« Simmon• m;son-of·Henry Door y Zoos ector,an young go • family 111~tance --·' beltre ·. la keep .each:otber company in Omaha while they recover Crom chick-r,.R_ ,..~ • Cel'-e ·T alie Se t tn pox. The unnamed ei•ht.monlh-old gorilla m.ay be the first of ila ..,.,..,., again after · Jailing 'lo win .-.;.11 &--paqqe Jut year. : MISSION VIEJO _, Yaur 'eolD!Duob' : ldJld to:sufferlfroni chlck~n pox. It is s~ying at the home ol Dr. Lee . Nb<pn llld under the currenl IY•lem College Today will be the" topic cbONifby Simmons, Jr. unW it .gets older ahd can Uve at the zoo. The gorilla's ''the peraon on welfare can olten bave • Melvin E. Milchell of Saddlebac); Collt4to :'.Jiapa~ 460 pounds. · hiflher lnc<!me !ban bla neJghbor wbo who will address ~ra · of &ii h!>kis a low-paytna job. · Saddltback Vallet, Ch amber of · ''TralicaJly, tbele aituatlom: often mat Commerce Tuesday. · u · ' : ·. M • • v la the qme ~lgbborbood, side. by side in .;:i~u~,~ ~~f=uni: , .... e.a. ~y. :IJ.,_ar11' 11a:na .sers ~ect"'.'I: =:'. .. Ta:.-w8d" !!\~ college supe.rtntendem· and )>raident la «eates bitterness · on the part of . the corDIDunity P.rojedl.. . 1 • • • worker. In' tbe end, I auspect, it causes Vi~~:::.=~=~ ~.·.,;J. ... '., ...... ·.• .· , •• 'M.·. erj~l : .. Pro, ,blems ... ' ~u~i:~i!e~e~: :: e 'Dr~·Cill~ .P'Ol''!"'f 1 ipJ_IJC;I.~ -blWiipent1Ud ~la the Unlted · ~Y .w ... ~ .~~' , 1.1. • ' l.. • . , Stlta'.lla n•11u11,.ntaJ•taDure.n "-•,. • Seven co'110lidated pQltiK placu will be -allng In Sao Clemellte dUrinl Tuesday's combined parks and recrutloo bond islut and --~ectiona.. . 'lbj_ completion at. "' • :r i • t n 1 neighborhood parb ancf dtvelopmlnt of new ones is another ballot jtem, With a price tag of $140,000, which might draw auppor'-from the pannts of IChool·ll• ~gsters u well. • 1-\KE FOIU!:,5T..,. •19.l•ot"« _., 1 " · "' ""'-.!.:.£.-Lim.·::::·. medlcUie bu·betn able-te 1~ _ ... 'tlln Ille · ~.· · furloua. ll inaU':""' tbe meeflni heie'lliiil4itl. • , -...... ..-...-..,--. ~~ <!!<.·•·...--~ -. .... lafonnJnca,~cf•b fl'ia'!lfoo[ •I ,~,., ,_ . .,..., -"·-~•t•• ..... lnll Actors, c6otUnler( , map up ll'llltl,Jl.li.,.+ ,""7·c . tr !llldlY!duall amoldnl poL Now we blve IOma ~ . uwo ang., aodMuer-• The poll! will open at 7 a'in. and close ..... j .m. The balloting localionl within the city "''" --Concordia Elementary School. -The Lacey residence at 2010 Los Alamos . -The Soukup residence at 111 W. Santiago. -The VFW hall at 141 Miramar. -Ole Hanson Elementary School. -Las Palmas Elementary School. -The Baycliff Village clubhouse at 202 Monte V:ista. City Clerk Max Berg urged voters . lo refer to their-polling place card (which was mailed with sample ballots) to detennine their specific polling place. -tr * * 70,000 Eligible To Cast Ballots More than 70,000 South Coast and Saddleback Valley voters are regi1tered to cut ballots Tuesday for trustee positions jn the Capistrano Unified and SaddJeback Community College districts. Fi'.ve separate districts within the Capistrano Unified territory are up for election, including one position left vacant by a recent trust.et resignation. The ' regl!:tralion ror each district involved In the vote in the school district "" -Area Ont, northern San Clement• area, 1,846. -Area Two, central San Clemente area, 1,1188. -Area Three, southern part of San Clemente, 2,379. -Area Four, the Oan1 Point are.a, 1,136. -Are.a Five, Capi1trano Beach, 2,778. Two other trustee areu, all: and seven, have no board seats up for e.lecUon Tuesday in Capistrano Unified, but 4,882 voters in thou two are.as can vote for Saddleback candidates. The total registration of all ellglble voters within the Saddleback district - including Mission Viejo and the South Orange Coa.si -is 70,m. The polls .W open at 7 a.m. and cloae at 8 p.m. in all areu, officials said. Tustin Board . Profil.es Given Eight candidate.1 are vying for two open seal! on the. Tustin Union High School District Board of Trustees Tuesday and the DAILY PILOT today presentl b r I e f biographies of candidates on Page 28. Seven candidates are pretented. One ret:UM!d an interview. The Tuitin board ls the governing body for bOth University High School and MiMion Viejo High School. I ' • SJ)eculatiOn on the. last iSrue -the spending or $107,000 for the improveme.flt of beach accesses and facillliea -ia even more cfoudy. City officials have said the annual cost to the owner of a $27,000 home in San Clemente for all four items would be in the range of $6.50 a year. But stern opposition hu come. more from voters with larger investmenta. In recent days the owner ol a large., blufftop rest home. aald be.ea.use of his assessment, the bond issue would cost him perhaps $400 a year . City councilmen earlier this year appointed a large citizen's committee to work toward passage of the hood Issue. but because of the quiet policy of the city, little, it. any, public advocacy bas taken place. City Manager Ken Carr, however, presented the city's fact sheet on tbt bond mea!W'e to several local groups earlier this year. The bond issue has woo the support of the San Clemente. Chamber..M cOmm~ce board of.directors u well as the. Jaycees and · other local community and 1e.rvict groups . ,...,. painl<n , and ll&JO ~""'*,.,. -· ~~. 4 Lat b.r • l'&.e • , .:. • .._:._ " · r11llo will lllberil tbla land. we!"""' lo tbe 7:!11 ;.m. plllorlltC la tadudlf:I ~·la -· -.a ~~. · • . IMt;i iuur-..to llloAinoriun apiril" tbe Belch and T-·Club. . . ~ ¥rJ'!'!.l!'!JyW ambli'~. . ~ aulbon, Dra. Harold Kolimty•and 'Nlx.0 Nld bo(dOOUJOl"thlnli any )QI> b< 1bey may lip up In Ute club ollice. , "~ 1~ l'f!l)ltmntjy , -eel William· T. Moore of Ille Qllld Ana!Yll& ~,~ 111 pull ~eel on the t.ible, vert poor ioi:lal<Judlmm~ pooro1tle1iUon Dlvi•lon. of the Phll•delphla AJsoct.ition' ''" -er your =dren and le~ you ~ SwlmMert. Wan. ted · ., · . • look every one e1,. tn the eye." _, >JlPOl"1 ,,..,.,..,.uon,. ·coplu1lon, · for rsycho-Anafy"'• said lheJr ~, He llld 11"11bhlng·1Jo0n or empl)'ing MISSION VIEJO -Swlmmon ano · ~~ly,. ~ apollly, pualvily, waa lo ""'port only the e/lecta ,... u •a bedp11111.U.not .. joyable work bot there needtd for the. Nadadom, . t be U1W11erenoe and, often, · slowed and ls •--.. ·~-~ •••••• , -~m team. llltrred __.," llte -···-""-said oonoequence o1 marijuana .miotlng In u much dlanlty In it as In any job lo ii-=1 UUll ~K:l ...... • -~ .__,.......... • • tboae not showing • predilpogltiorr to be dooe ,m th.I! country 0 including my Children in the six and under age They also · lilted amoa1 l)'lflptoma "an arlous psychiatric problems." o~· . . . categOry are. especia11y being abught al1eratloo1 of COf\SCJauaneu• . w b I ch They said 'they removed from the atudy Nixon chcise for bi.I hard-sell bid for along with those in the ~ven and ·eteht includedarplitbetweenanobl!lervingand aroup those patients who •bowed·'-· wellare refohn . 111 aud!trice of GOP and 11and12 age grou~. an .Qpetiebclq portiOft ·ot ·tbe ·e~, an -.-----1 l •• d In ti ti '··bWt• lo ""'•• •"-••"• •••e r, 1 they bad been predisposed to governors heaet by riltn1 state weUare ,,...,..., n ere1~"1: · compe. ve .,,... 'I .,, .. ,. w ... ,.....,...,. pityebologlcalprob1tm1beforetbeybe1an costs, · swimming may call the. recreation 'cent.er paranoid IUSpk:iousneu of. ,etbln · and tJAng marijuana. · Be llngled out for praise the st.ate level at 837...f(M to enroll · in a competiUve r.egrealonr to-a more lnfarttile ltate." .. Tbe finl.l group of 31 patients rahged in efforil of · Gov. Rooatd Reagan of class. Tbeae 1yfnptortu1, they said •. were. not age · from 13 to 24 and consisted of 20 9!.1.f.~~a, wbo baa been critical of tha The Orange County swim eonferenCe present :before tbe subjects. began using malea and 18 fernalei. · awruruatraUon'a fainily ·aaalatance plan begins in May and ends in August. marijuana. Sexual promiscuity alSO: wu a frequent and Gov. Nelaon Rocbteller of Ne,; The · artkie, "effect.I of marijuana on symptom among their aubjedl, the York, , . South Coast Pair Attend Honor Meet Two South Coast are.a 1'91dent.s who are me.mbe:n of an honor toCie.ty of Sadd]eback College attended a two.day conlerence over the weekend I n Riverside.. ' Robert· DeBach of San Cle.triente and John 7.old of Laguna Nil'J'I repruehted the local college at a state . conference be!~ by Alpha Gamma Slama. adole!ic;enta and yop_ng iduJta," wu authors aald, "and lbe incidence of 1" nJd he wanted to commend them publlahed 1n ·the Apr1l 11· iuue ol th e tmwalited pregnancies among female especially far,"biting a hllltt the entlri Journal of t)>e American Medical: paUenta was high, as was the incidence of country Ls going to have to bite if we are An0c11tion. · ve"nereal dlseues . . . 10Inc to brine the financlal -and worse A spokesman · for the .AMA said the "'lbeie was marted inttrfereoce with the buman·-·coeta of the present welfa~ article ts "UM: firat ruJ evidence, baaed penonal cleanllnes1, grooming, dressing l)'!tem·under·control. on &ood NHarch, of harmful effectl: and atudy habits or work habits or both frorn ~ mariJU1na. Heretofore, 6' • • "In one·IUbgl'oup, a clear-(!Ut dJagnoalJ of1>1ycbosts-waa-estabUahed and, In~ patients, there was neither evidence of p1ychosia or ego disturbance nor family 1itsiory·or paychOlis·prior to the paU.nta• ule of rz:iariju~na. ·~ , Evers Urges Voters To Back Best Man JACKSON, ._MIR. . (AP) -Jam,. Project for Recycli~g Paper 'at Crossroads' Injured Girl,. 9, : Gain$· 'slightly . Nblt·Y~<>Jd,, Manba JllUl!l .lljlmirez of ,Sin. Climente;..,-,.ported mating, "lll'1lt, ~t"· tl!d,l,J.from sever•, lnj~ ,1iefl~~li!< ,Wt week ,In •n auto-~Utnl,i\, muiliap. 1 , The &lr!.' t!IO. daqhl<r 'or' )\In,,. Carol Ramirez « 213 C W. Canada, remained UDder illteoaive care at. south Coaat Com1111111lly H°'PJtaJ, wbeie· ""™" llld the had ~pined c on 1·c .louin111 They cited-the case of a ·married,. 2-f... year~ld man who, after wing marljua111 for two months, "believed that he baa developed a suf>e.rior Intellect et Uit expense of· a·Jou of hb stxual'life. Ht Wn'the flrat:member of a Del! •super r.ace.' After stopping his smoking hla deluaional i d e a 1 d.lsappeared and be relumed lo· bis normal' functioning In bta job aJ]d marriage." Charita Evers. MiUisalppi.'1 fint black candidate for ,governor. urges voten: "Don't vote :for..a blact man; don't vote fc;-... while-tnln •. VOle for.the_hesl map.• Even, 41-year.old . mayor. of Fayette. ran unoppooe•f&inday for the pomlnalloo of lbe llal<'I J,.oyal\ol Democrats. Somo 2,500 . convention delecatd, ~ll but a hfldlul of them . black,. I b 0 U le d unanlmoua approval of Even as he urged election of tljo. best.man and pledged lo work ~ Jobs and luoUce. Despite an encouraging amount of donated newspaper• and a recent move to anolher section of San Clemente, a pilot newspaper recycling project I! at lhe crouroad! this week. 'nine is running oul on the free we of the. large truck van donated by the Men Cal Cor~atlon of Santa Ana. ne n;wsprint recycling firm has Wormed wlunle<n In the local project dull the van will be taken back at the end of April. Because of that, plus a crush on a few memben of the Back Yard Ecology Group for dally labor at the projecl, cily councilmen Wedntlday will bear an appeal • Backyard Ecology 1J>Okesman Llonel Burt, one ol several "parents" of the idea, will seek to turn over the entire project to the City of San Clemente. Burt aaid the revenue from the 1111 of the collected papers at $$ a ton would off!tt any city .erpenses ln ··manpower to continue the project on a regular baal1. "We have proved _!bat It can work In Sen Clemente," Burt Hid, 11now we have to convince the city fathers that the program 1bould continue indef.initely." tf councllmen are convlnoed, they would have to make provtslan for 1toring the donalfld ne:waprlnL, stacking and oorUng l~ plus lranoportalioa of lbe materlaJ to a collec.tion site In Santa Ana. Burt aatd the procee.da tbua, far bave far e1ceeded the e1penae1, w:hlch amount to a dollar a day paid to a 1011 of a sroup member. 1be youth woru an bour tO cull out magatlnes, bundle and stack the donated newrprint. lnUI Its disappeaiance date, the van will remain at the Safeway Market parking lol ln San Clemen!<, Burt aatd. "somewhat:"· · . ' ' Maraha suffered bead and \lntemal lnjwlea -la:te, lUl Thunday afternoon •• she tan..,.., bUsyol!ll Camino Ru!. 1be· slrl waa atrucki:by• an auto driven by . CheryJe Aftn Guparro, ··It, of San. Clemente, •·nurae'1 aide at Soutb•Coa&t lfolpltal. San Clemente'• First , A »-year~ld man, after stx montha o( pot smoking, "beli~ed that be was In . ahuge of ·the Mafia a~d·that.be wu an eastern potentate of the Ku Klux Klan," the 'doclors "uld. , A.18-year~ld boy, after three ·ywa Gf amoklng , mp.riJuana, believed be wu God'• aon. A l~ye8r-o1d male I.bought he was ••able · to communicate ' with and -rol the mlndJ and .tctlODI of arlJmalJ .. •, .. • Hospital Plans S~·hmitted N .. rty tz,000 tn permit fees, plua copiea or c om p l e t e , atate-ap~ed drawing• ~ san Ckmente'• flrrL hospital have been 1ubmllled lo the .dty bulkllng departmen~ ·lt wu )earned today. - '!'be health laclllly lo be buill aloo& Camino de LOI Mam by the Oiapman, Mln1gement Corp!W"alion, wu aueued at tt00,000 11 a basla for the feea , wblch Included I f!,02$ bu!Jdlnl fet·and I fllJ plan checl: chirp. Gr~·al the 1lta•afrtldy 1111 .. compJeted, and ·~ •J,>Okeamesi .. for~ the hOlpilal 'bave ~'~~ion~on the tlral Jnaementdo 1lld · within ·tho neit. • ttw weda. 1be id!Ual clevelopment•Wlll•lnclude I 11~ , 1t111&ar1 boopltal with IUU tmtrg'-l!"Y room and lllrltrl' foclllllu, ptuo· aMiher board-and-cau ~ and a c0nvalelceol hospital comp(.,.. 'lilt -1:1n1 drawlop• lot lbe Wtlal . . + ' • - hotpltal project. II.Ive "'°" aPJirvV.ed by the ·Stats Public He1lth Departmtn~ leavtni Ollly,the clty approval left ~or• construcUon begln1.. . 1be . hoepltal project ta . being · bulll under the admlnlltraUon ·of Olapman General ""°!'Ital In Orange, lil.lded by Dr. Ralph Grallam. · · Groundbreaking ceremon!U m hekl al lbe boapltal 1il< -which lw a.,,l .... _ol the• anC1 hlllaldn -earller thla .,..,. .. -• . ..... .. Wea tiler Colder · ·nigbll and lfT•dually warmer days li'e the progno.U· calloa for Tuelday along the coast. with temperalum hilling 65 lo- cally and 71· fllrther Inland. INSWE TODAY ; Two Congreumcn have rt- vcal1d fiMmoi whlch indicat« heroin vie Ot rpidfmic propor- tion.s ·amono Am.riccm troops m Vietn.dm. TM co.t'll rmoU there ' b•I h"lll In tit• U.S. Slorv Paa• 1 '· . M' .. M -" " • -I .......... , ... ' ----.. " ......,. " • t --- I 2 DAILY PILOT SC New Book .Selection :Plan Asked Evidtntly not ulisfitd with the present book ae1tdion methods u5td by the Orange County Department of Education, 'the County Board of Education has asked ;tau to present a new system at Its next meelini- . ~ Trustee Roger C. Anderton, o t llunUngton Beach, ralsed the Issue wt ;,eet when lhe board WU Wed to approve a Ust of paperbackJ requested for use lo a county~perated ~ achooL • Anderson, and board member Dr. Dori.I Araujo, of Orange, questioned several titles for which apprO_vaJ for purch.ue )"as sought, including "Up Against the J..aw -Legal Rights of People Under .it." -Although the board later approved purchase of the complete recommended jist, Or. Araujo questioned the one book on ttie ground that it might inDame some youths. Don Jordan, board member from jlarden Grove, defended the reading Us& r«0mmendation noting he had met a teacher at Otto A. Fiseher School who'd found "The Great Gatsby" to be lherapeut.ic to one problem 1tlldmt i. j>articular. '"I would hesitate to place myteU u a pU'SlD who can Judge tbeae boob from a vantage point far removed from the use of them," Jordan said. "How are we to tell how a tpecific book may help 10me chlld." Dr. Bruce Sinclair, usl!tant county superintendent for educational aervices, toot umbrage with the board'• suggelUon hls 1t.a.U wu not adequately acreenlng books prior lo reeommendin& their purchase. "Do I understand you to mean that we _Jnust abandon the present system for {'viewing bookJ and repl... It with ~nother?" Sinclair uked, noting that 'Would be "a slap ID the face" to the ,dedicated people who now prepare the J>o?k lists. . . Ancler>oo, backed by board president ~. E. "Pat" Arnold, ol Cypreu, i,uggea:ted that a review system 1imllir I• that "t up for lllm purc1wes be $D!Ployed. : Anderson called for a reading of all )>oou purchased and sublequent return It> the publbberl II ~y were lound lo be ~~ l\llte<I" for placement on school library shelves.. -:.:-"I dcm't think anyone on the board Jrants to sit down and cenaor tbe1e books," Andenon 1aid. But, he tndicated 1t would be desirable for the board lo hlw reports on "poulbly obJectionable" boob from the ltall. • PreaenUy the review• of • naUonal nbrartans' wocllUon are employed la -· boob !or purchue, Dr. 6lnclair polaled oul. Huinorist Poet, Ogden Nash , 68, Critically Ill BALTIMORE (UPI) Humorlll "Ogden Nuh WU crllically w In a hospital here today. Nash, 68, WU admitted to Union Memorial Hospital March 13, tt wu learned Sunday, for treatment of an illness bGspital officials would not dlaclose. They l&ld the writer'• family had requested no .infongatlon b • releued. Nash bad been in fair condition earUer Sunday, but he deteriorated 1n the afternoon, a hospital spokesman said. Born in Rye, N.Y., Nash attended Harvard for one year. He left. in 1921 and quickly became ramou1 u a facile writ.er of light, humorous verse, OIAHl-1 COAST • DAILY PILOT OUHG:I COAST" f'U1USt0'40 CCNnJfY l•l.fft H. w •• 4 PnslNrll Mil PWI ..... J•c\ l. e.,1.., Vke PmM4ilol " ~ ... "'-"'" n .... , k1fvn •titot" Tli•11i.1 A. M•rpt.i11• Mt11111lrlt .l<illlor Oul11 H. l•ot l ieh•-' P. N1ft Wl1t.n: #1111tlns Elh«~ Let-8"diomc. 222 ,..,.,. ""'~" M11lI119 •ddr•H: P.O. 1011 6•6,12612 S-C.._..Offko 305 North tJ C4ial" a.1~ tl61l -°"""' O.t• ""'""-: 2a WAI 89't' Strtlt ,.,.,..., lM<tl: un ....._. awi.w.,,, "__.. .. 1c1111 111111 .._. ........,.. ' ...... , ...... 19. 1971 DAILY PILOT Sftfl ,..._ DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMULATOR Fl9htl n9 the Common Cold In an Obscure Newport Beach Lab Battle of (;old Lab in New port Scene of Drama By L PETER KRIEG Of flle Dlltf Plitt Slttt Jl'1 called iloprlnoslne. It'1 already been called a cure for lhe common cold, a quick end to lnnuenia, and measlu, and chicken poi:, and more than a hundred other viruses. It's called NPT 10.381 for short. H it works, call I~ a billion-dollar baby for Dr. Alvin J. Glasky and a handful of friends who put up $2 million to start · Newport Pharmaceuticals, Inc., three years ago. Dr. Gla!ky aod a team ef 1.0 ruearcben b.Jive been working in an lnconsplcuous laboratory on Monrovia Street in Newport Beach since 1968 to find out 1f it workl. They have been experlrnentlng, testing end IDOllt recently manufacturing NPT 10.311 11.nce Dr. Paul Gordon, the University of Chicago professor who dllcovered It, turned its development evu to his long-Ume friend lhret years ego, presumably for a piece of the action. The development of any drug is Ume-- conswning, expensive and a gamble. Dr. Glalky is by no means overconfident about the prospects. He uy1 It will be at lealt two or three year1 before tsoprinosine ts proven to the 1atlafaction of the U.S. Food and Drug Admlntairallon and cleared for prescrlp. lion lo the public. Howevu, the 1ovemment ef Ar1entin1 already bu been convinced and ill allowing general use of the drug there. Wben It doe• 1et on the market here, U It does, "'It will problbly cost 1bout the 11me u an antibiotic, somewhere between SS and $6 for a a.tablet prescript.lon," Dr. Gluky said. But that'• where Ua relationship to 1nUbloUe1 eDds. "There's nolhin1 lii:t It known te medlclne," Dr. Gluky 1aid, explaining that the drug simply "makes the body'• natural defense mechanisms wort better and faster." He said he 1nd Or. Gordon aren't sun bow it does it. "They just do what they normally do," he said, "a lot more quickly ind efficiently." Tests are far from complete, Dr. Glas~y strwed. "Isoprirmine's effects have onJy been confirmed on a dozen cases involving persons with cold symptoms," he said. "To say right now it is the absolute cure to the common cold is prem1ture," be said, but be confirmed that in every one of those 12 cases, the symptoms disappeared in less than 24 hours. He insists be 11 much more excited about Ill demonstrated effects againat the flu, and things like viral pneumoni1 and smallpox. "Right now there ls nothing to treat the flu," be said. "Dupont has ooe drug that works against one of 140 1trainl of the flu, but you've got to take Jt before yw get sick." Dr. Glasky said tests on the effect t'.lf the drug on pregnant women are IUD being made. "We have recommended It not be prescribed to pregnant women in Argentina," he 1ald, "until we know more." He said there have been no indicatlom &f any serious side eUects. For the 37-year-old Tustin doctor and for his old teaching comrade in OUcago, and for those investors who believed. ln both ol them, enough lo keep Newport Pharmaceuticals operating the past three years, and enough to pledge another $3 to $S million to get isoprinosine on the market, there will be one aide effect I• them from their product. They will have plenty of profits to sink back into the fledgling butines1. Bids for Medical Center • Near UCI Slated in July Planning contracts for 1 proposed medical center to be built ne1r UC !nine wUl be awarded by July, atate Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), a1id today. Carpenter is the pre1ldent ef the Orange County MedJca.1 Found1tlon, the sponsoring non·profit corporaUon which ii plan~lng the center. Carpenter said completion of the first unit, a 200-bed community hospital, ls scheduled for 1974. The bwipilal will ht the flrtt of several facilities which will occupy J50 acres adjacent to UCI'1 School of Medicine. Total cost of the project ii an esUm1ttd llOO million. "ThlJ Is the first time, so far as we know, that a medical center has been planned from the ground up." said Donald S. Bums, chairman of the foundation's board and chairman of the board of the Newport National Bank. Bum1 said tbe lrvlne Medici! Center v.·ill start with the Newport Community J~ospital 11.nd will eve:ntu1lly b e augmen~ by a surgical ctnler and a grou p of speelallzed clinic$. Wben developed to Hs fulle1t, the ctnter will includt medlclne-relaled commercial and industrial areas, hotel and motel ICCOmmedaUOns aod 1emi1tar and conference faciUUes, 8 urn 1 uplalned. lie &I.id UCJ '1 medkal school will be an lntegral part ol the center. "Subject to approval by the Board of Reeents, the two hospitals -our commwUty bolpilal ind the unlvertlty hosplll.I -m1)' 1b1re 10me 1ncUlary facllltles,11 be u ld. When be announctd the project fn October or 1970, C.rpenter noted the community hospital will be designed to serve: the medical needs or the 400,000 people who are expected to setlle In the Irvine area. The medi~al school's hospilal will primarily be 1 teaching and research faclllly, not designed to meet the needs of a community. It will draw its patients from a wide area beyond the borders of Orange County. Members of the medical college ataff have recommended a joint master plan for the entire medical area which COnJists: of the college's 150 acrts and the foundaUon '1 150 acres localed al University Drive and Mac Art bur Boulevard.. Pair Arrested After Stabbing In Garden Grove A family argument In Garden Grove Sunday night ended In • flgbt Jn which one mAR was stabbed and two were Jailed on attempted murder charges. Garden Grove Police nid the victim, Paul 8ur03, 20, of ftedondo Beach, wu 1t the home of hll father-In-law aod brother- ln·ltw Russell fl. Pol~n1 51, ind RUSHll W. Polsen, 22. at 10&72 Malltrd Drive. The trio were working on a car during the day Sunday and lnto the nJgbt and alto drl.nk ln1, offlcera reixw-ted.. I • • Orbit Satellite '· Mann ed Space SUition Effort . Hint,ed ¥000011" (IJPI) -'!be Soviet Union today llundled a new kind <if satellite called "Salute" Ind adentiflc sourets ·said it will be the bails ol a len,tby proJe<t 1o· build the ftnt mened llallon in 1pace. A report by the Soviet Newt Agency Tass did not specify if Salute was man- ned bat the ldentific sources said it was not. 'Ibey said there will be more Jaunch- el bl the c:omlng days involvine manned veblcla: wb.lcb Will redeiv001 with Salute ond begb> lhe eonstructlon project. tclenlliic apparatuaea of the station functloa normally," Tass said. ''The coordination mmputing O!llter processes incoming information." SclentifJc sources In Moscow have predicted at leut two veblcles: carrying two or more cosmon.aul.9 will be used ln the coming space spectacle. Their mtsalon, sources said, will be to construct the first permanent orbital manned: space l!ltation, the first step in large-scale eJploration of tbe 10lar system. The prevJous Soyuz flights all were aimed toward that end. Soyuz 9 ln June, 1970, was a two-man endurance teat to determine how well men can withstand tbe effecl.9 of welghtlesanal' Aboud orblLat plaUonns. In 196'9, Soym. 8, 7 and I went aloft with severi cosmonauts to practice navlgaUoo and space wdding. Earlier the same year Soyui 4 and 5 made a successful rende%vous, linked up and carried oat a crew cbanp before returning lo earth. . 'Ibey predlcled the mlal1on will be """plu, lj)edacular and lengthy - running sevtral wee.ks. 1be name "Salute'' never before has been used fer Soviet spacecraft, llUli<stlng that It is a new type buJJL especially for the space station D\lssion. W eek of Eco-Crusades Salute'1 orb.It wu exactly the same as that used for most Soviet manned ahots - a nearly dmil1r flight path some 140 miles over the earth and passing over the Soviet Union's Balkonur Co.!modrome in KaWhstan. Started Across Nation 'Ibe SOYiet manned space PJ'Oll"llD of recent yean has concentrated exclusively oo the goal of building a space platform. A whole tezies of flights by Soyuz llJlacecraft Jn the lut three years has tested the system& and theories of plaUorm building. , In recent weeks top Soviet space scienUsts have discussed the project i.Q the preu, indicaUng Soviet confidence the plaUorm llOOR will be a reality. '!be T.., report of the launch called the sputnik a "Ntlon," suggesting It had a purpose different from previous unmanned shots usually c a 11 e d "sputniks:," or scientific satellites." The Salute orbital parameters included an angle of inclination of 51.S degrees, period of revoluUon of 18.5 minutes, mai:Jmum di.stance from the surface of the earth ol 133 miles and a minimum dbtance of "° miles. The psrameter1 were almost precisely the same as previous manned Soyui flights in which Soviet C011monaut! practic~ skills n e c e 11 a r y for construcUon of an orbital space station. ''The onboard ayste.ms, equipment and Park Committee Asks Resistance To 'Suggestions' "Whenever a park exilts, it seems that everyone wants to put something Into it." Thia was one of the conclusions of Laguna Beach's Main Beach Committee after studying the king history of the beachfront the dty owns and determining that it lhould be reserved exclusively for park purposes. Among the DOD-profit communlty uses already IUQeated for the park area, saya the rommittee report, are proposall for youth centers, drug abuse centers senior citizen centers, swlmming pools,' tennis courb, bowling greens, chamber of commerce llCi.litles and many more. "The committee atrongly urges that such auggeation1 be feslsted ," says the reporl 'Mle area of Main Beach Park es recommended by the committee, the report continues. "tbould be viewed as an artl!Uc creation by God, with IDCW'!ion by man at an absolute minimum aid for the purpose only of e n h a n c i n g the aesthetic experience of being nf!rt to the Pacific Ocean in Laguna Beach." The only commercial uses condoned by ~ commJttee would be beach and park oriented food and rental equipment, with such c:oncealons located at either end of !he park and designed to fit Laguna's unage. • 'Jbe committee notes that such concessiOJ11 at the Corona de] Mar beach park occupy less than 2,000 square feet and yield the city 32 percent of the operator'• gross revenue. It ts esUmated similar concessions at the Mai~ach park could produce lease income to the city of $40,000 anually. Music with By JAMES PHILLIPS ~l'NMWtllll" Man, the endangered species, llancla alone today in the primate building of the Atlanta, Ga., zoo. He is surrounded by garbage. In New York, workers spilled out of sky9Cl'apers to ~ U biocts of normally congested Mad.18on Avenue devoid ol autos as scientists: measured the level of atmospheric contaminants. Both are Earth Week demonstrations designed to point at the many way1 in which man polsom his own environment. Studenta In Des Motnes, Iowa, hoped to collect 80 tms of waste paper Saturday to kick off Earth Week. By SUnday, they had gathered over 200 tom. A weekend fund-raising rally in Hartford, Cona. collected an estimated $15,000 for the ConnecUcut Earth Action Group. The rally was described by a policeman as the "happiest, cleanest and best" he had ever seen. The AUanta display was among the most dramaUc. A live man sits by himself among piles of trash in the building otherwise <>CCUpied by apes and other primates. Curator Vernon Killing aaid the man~ surl'O\Ulded-by-garbage demoostration ii an effort to dramatize the danger man and other animals face because of garbage and pollution. The teach-llu, s e m I n a rs and demonstraUons will take p I a c e throughout the naticxi's second annual Earth Week in hopes of emphasil.ing ways each individual can contribute to a cleaner, greener, healthier planet. Michigan Gov. William G. Milliken said in a proclamation "Progress has been made, but we must now shift our emphasis !rom consciousness of the problem to an active, accelerated ellort to preserve the eovironmenl" F estival Chorale Seeks to Boost I ts. Membership The reorganized Laguna Festival Chorale is seeking to build i t 1 membership from U to 40 voices with the addition al altos, tenon and basses from the Laguna Beach area. Singers who can read music and carry a part and are willing to take direction may arrange an informal audltion by calling director Jack Krefting at 495-4445. Krefting took over directorship of the Chorale last fall when the board of directors of the Festival of Arb decided the group should work toward becoming self-supporting. Founded in 1963 to provide vocal accompaniment to the Pageant or the Masters, the chorale has been wholly supported by the Festival 1ince that time. Under the reorganization, festival support will be reduced over a three-- year-period until the Chorale becomes completely self-supporting. an Option from JVC Ch•o1r7 Th• J'VC 6102 •"co•ir•9•1 tk1t. It cornilin•• • d1l11J• •u+orn1tlc '4·•P••d 1t•r•• tur~t1bl• wlth •n l•lr1c~ 1l1r10 pity• ., in on• "•'"'••ffl•, ,.,..,.,t una. ru. 1i11 r1cord1 •n th. b;,, 1 l ·i~ch pl1tt1r •M •it b1tli: •lld ••'••· Not hi th• m•CMI f•r •lftlng thr•11th v•ur •• ,,,.. Ub •• ,.,1 Ok.y, tk•11 lu•t .11, • Clrt4 rid91 Int• th• l ·h•ck 1t1r•• pl•y1r •nd for91t It, The ch1n9•4 •••r fr•1r1 ph•n• k t ·tt•ck ii•••• 11 1cc•fflpli1h'4 •wlot11•lic•lly, Stt In fin• fwr11ltur1·lini1h.d wood, th• 6 102 h 9u1r1nf••d I• r•nd1r •11hl•11d!nt prof•ul•n1I J1•1forrn111c• Iii •lth1r fu~ctiol\o NOW ONLY REG. $169.00 s119 (R!DIT TERMS AVAILABLE • Three recycling cent.en open tn Rhoda Island in an eUort to get cooswnera to return their waste paper and cans for reuse by industry. · Cleanup campaigns, with volunteers sweeping trash from parka an d roadsides, highlight Earth Week In North Dakota. And Grand ~ks Mayor Hugo Magnuson bas urged all ciUJ.ens to •·f~ on aolutlons to such problema as conservation , environmental management, ecology and population. Laguna History Society. Names New Executives The newly constituted La 1 u n a Commw:tlty Historical Society h 1 a announced installation of an executive committee including Harry Jeffrey, chairman ; Adelaide Deklyne, secretary '\ Cliff Cave; Bea Whitile,,ey-; Ruth Morrow ; Van King;· C1the rJn e Mac:Quarrie and Charlton Boyd. A higfi school student and an environmentalist also will be named to the committee. At a meeting this week, the Society adopted t be following statement ol purpose: to share knowledge of Laguna'• pa.st ; to collect artifacts and records; to maintain a depoSitory of these materials: to use this collection to enrich the 1pirit and contemporary activities of the community. Among those attending the meet.inc were Mr. and Mrs. Merle Ramsey, Mra. Jane Riddell, Mrs. Marie Ropp, Diet Jabrau.s, Briggs Morris-Smith, Joseph Tomehak, Roy Holm and Lloyd Sellse:L Named to serve on the Soclety'1 advisory committee to date are Mrs. Ropp , Genevieve Daniels and Clyde Springe. The Historical Society is temporarily housed at the Volunteer Post, 334 Forest: Ave., 494-6375, and is actively soliciting materials of histori cal in le r 1 1 t , volunteers and potential members. Life in County Symposium Topic "Life I n Orange County: Environmental Quality, R e s ou r c e s, Growth" will be the theme of an Earth Week l)'mposium sponsored by the Program in Social Ecology at UC Irvine Tuesday. The symposium, open to lbe public without charge, will be held at 5 p.m. in UCl's Scienct Lecture Hall. Speakers will be Dr. Kenneth Watt, profe530r of zoology at UC Davis; Robera Battin, chairman of the Orange Count}: Board of Supervisors, and Ray Wallon,' execuUve vice president of the Irvine Company. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROt,t • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SIU, TIADI COMI IN AND IROWSI AIOUN D 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNlOWN c o nA MESA ---H-' ......., t • 1. I 17 17 . . • • --. T«M1a)"• Flnal VOL 64, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ,ORANGE COUNTY, CAIJFORNIA MONDAY, APRIC )91 '1971' TEN cens 12 Candidates Laguna Beach school board candidates wound up their campaigns this weekend In a flurry of literature, summing up their views in a barrage of advertising, brochures aod flyers mailed to ~trlct re_aldents. Whep the polls Open at 7 a.m. Tuesday, 10,48() voters in the Laguna Beach Unified School District will be eligible to select thtee · trustees from an array of 12 candidates. ·Eight candidates wUJ :be vying for two four-year seat! on the board, whtle four aetk elecUon for ·a .two-yw term to fill the unexpired portion of resigning tru.stee Planners Convene In Laguna A depleted Laguna Beach Planning CornnUJslon will meet at 7:30 tonight to consider . a brief business agenda, including the annual application for Art· A·F~'I ""1~ ute'permiL '!be La§ull" lltach Fin• A r I • As6ociatio• again pl.., Jo ,,..,.nl the aiJ<-weet · 1ummer outdoor elblbilioo al 1" North Coa!I Highway. Barwick Imports, 965 GJenneyre St., is requesting permission to use property at that address for automobUe 1t!Jraa:e for one year. Roger McErlane, 446 Holly St., is seeking a variance to construct an addition to a single family dwelling encroacliing into a side yard and exceeding 50 percent of existing Door .,. •. Communications and reports complete the ~genda. Absent from the meeting will be Jack Eschbach, who resigned from the conu:Dilsion arter a month of service, and Robert Hastings, who has left for Texu to undergo heart surgery. Transient Struck By Auto,. Injured A pedestrian crossing Laguna Canyon Road Saturday night was struck by .tn automobile but is in sat isfactory condition today at Orange County Medical Center with a broken leg and fractured pelvis. Police Identified the victim as 'James K. Groves, 28, transient, and said he was hit by an automobile driven by Nelson W. Kane, 18, of 31684 Wildwood Road, South Laguna. The accident occurred about 8:30 p.m. when Groves stepped into thf roadway near the-FesUval of ArU grounds, authorites said. Police said that Groves was not in I crosswalk and the driver of the vehicle was unable to stop in time to avoid · hitting him. Oruge Weatlaer William Wilcoxen'•· tenn. The atklmey, who bas served 1!1 yean on the board, ls resigning effective today in order to devote more time to conservation work. Voters also will be asked to elect three trustees to the Saddleback Community Cdllege District board. The polls will remain open unlit 8 p.m. Tuesday, and results will be tallied by the County Registrar of Voters. However, Laguna Beach superintendent Dr. WUUam Ullom'aald be plans to send a representative to the county office to phone in results to the district office as ballots are counted. 'D:le Laguna office, 550 Blumont St., will · remain open · TUesday eventna unt1l final result! art in, Ullom said .. Earlier in the evening, at a p.m. the superintendent, district bus I n es s adminl!itrator Dr. Qlarles Hess and . trwitees Mn. Jane Boyd and Dr. Norman Browne will nieet in 'the district office · board room with teachers' representaUves to receive new salary proposals. Th13 will ~ an open meeting, Ullolh said. County aulboriliea organizing the school electon hsve consolidated the cust(lmary U pollillg placea ((I •iibl President Flays Welfare System WILLIAMSBURG. Va . !AP) President Nixon 1aid today ·the United States can~t tolerate a welfare system "under which working people can be made to feel like fool! by those who will not work." ,'"I!/'~ \hJI !!.' l!J~f ~owd f . aystern.· of llw1 under which one persoa can . be ponaliud 1or Aoin« an bonut d•Y'I wort an4 anolbor petlOll can, be rewarded for doin& notblng," Nixon uid in a apeecli prepared !or the ~publican Governors Confereooe. The President denou.QCed the 'current welfare system as "a mo.numental failure," and urged support for bis own family assistance proposal, be f o re Congress again after failing lo win passage last yu.r. Nixon said under the current system ''the. person on welfare can often have a higher income than bis neighbor who bolds a low-paying job. "Tragically, these situaUona often exist in the 11ame neighborhood, side by side in the 1ame apartment houses -and the effect is corrosive," Nixon aaid. "It creates bitterness on the part of the worker. In the end, I suspect, Jt causes resignation -and we end up with another person on welfare .. , "The fact ls that the welfare establishment and 11ystem in the United States is a monumental failure. It makes the taxpayer furious. It . ma~es the welfare recipient bitter, and It innlcts the distillation of all this anger and bitterness to the children who will inherit this land. It is a disgrace to the American spirit." Nixon said be does not think any job is menial if it puts bread on the table, "provides for your children and lets you look every one else in the eye." He said scrubbing noors or emptying bedpans is not enjoyable work but there is as mucb dignity in it as in any job to be done in this country "including my own." Benton Gets Contract The Laguna Beach contracting· firm of Charles R. Benton bas been awarded the bid to build campground aaoitary faciU· lies at Doheny S ta Ce Beach, the state department of general services ba1 announced. Benton's bid. for the project on U.S. 1, a mile south of-Dana Point was 1152,421. Riptide Peril Nixon chose for bis bard·sell bid for welfare relorm an audience .of GOP governors be1et by riling state welfare costs. He sin11ed out for praise the state tew:t efforts of Gov. Ronald Rugan of· California, who hat' been criUcal of the adminlstr1Uoi!"1 f&mily ust11ance i;t~ iM'tGo'f, Neltoa 4'1ebfeller lcf ' ·1 York. ' . He said be w1""4. to commend tJi!n ' tl)lf;Cially•"" "billnl •· llullel Illa -cowitry 11..,,_ Jo1baft'·U bit.I If wt Ir. aoing lo llrlli( 1llt financial -and "lfone. the bumen -eoata of tbe present weUirt IY,tem undl!r -.1. Mentalilealth Said Affected By Pot Smoke CHICAGO !UPI) -Two Philadelphia psycboan.alylts, in • report releued today, say case studies of 38 iodivld114la show_ serious mentaJ di 1 turban c'e, · including psychosis in some cues, accOmpanied heavy marijuana amoklng. "These patients consistently sbowed very poor social judgmept, poor attention 11pan, poor concentration, confusion, a1U.iety, depression. apathy, passivity, indifference and, oftel), slowed and slurred speech," the researchers 11id. They also listed am-0n1 1ymptom1 "an alteration of consciousness w h I c h included a split between an observing and an e1.J>lrienci1g portion of. the tgo, an inability to bring thougbta together, a paranoid suspicious'oes1 of ethers and recre.saion to a more infantile state." 111w symptoms, they.' said, were not present before the subjects began using marijuana. · The article, "effects of marijuana on adolescenta and youni adulta," was publi.ahed in the April 19 issue of t h e Journal of the American Medical As.!oclaUon. A spoktsman for the AMA aald the arUcle is "the first .real evidence, based on good research, of barmlul effects from smoking marijuana. Heretofore, medicine bu been ab\e to say only that there wU: no &ood evide'ftcti of barm from smokir11 pot. Now we have aome eviderice." 3 Seats • Ill locations as follows: Pecinct 31-4111, El M..,. School, '8111 N. Coast Highl'•Y· . Precincl 11-4112, Fublon•Gallery; 860 N. Cout Highway. Pt.tinct 11-4111. Lagqna Beoch High Scbool, 1125 Part Ave" Precinct ll'-004. Vern Taocbner Realty, 828 S. Coa!1 Hlglnray. Pt.clncl 31-G06, Kirt midence, 595 ~nter SI. · Precinct 11-4116, Tap of tbe World School. 111111 Treetop Lue. l'ffi:inc:t 81-007, Kolda rUldence, 31140 Ith Ave., 5outb LaawJa. or Precinct 81.ooll AlllO SChool. 2150 Wesley Drive, South Laguna .. Residenta who are not IUJ'e where to vote.r may c!teck their polling placea by callin« the cllstrlct ollice. 49f.3516. Candi$tes (or the four-year terms on the Laguna, board are Lawrence W. Taylor: incumbent : Florence Beane, housewife and PTA Cou'ncU president: Margaret Joyce D'IsJdoro, educator; E. Patricia Gillette, housewife and substitute teacher; Gerald D. Linke, reUred Navy captain ; Carl Mitchell, attorney; Stanely Muma~ teacher; and Roc;er D. Nlcbolson, &ales e1ecutlvt. By Phll lnterlendl "LIFE liAS llEEN GOOD TO US, EMILY., WE LIVE IN LAGUNA, ·WE HAVE · A VIEW,· AND WE GIT A GREAT PICTURE." Laguna Petty Lawbreakers Receive Goodwill Notices In an effort to build public good will and attlin broader voluntary compliance with local laws, the city of Laguna Beach this week will begin isstling "courtesy notices" i11 lieu of cilationt for minor law infractions. City Manager Lawrence Rose said he Instituted the unique procedure in Tiburon, Calif. with great success and feel1 it will be equ.aJ.ly effective ln Laguna. • The "coortesy notice" can be handed out by poUct ... fire; building. and aafety, public works . and lifeguard departments in instances· where 1 violation is trivial and there Is no real thtt:at to public health, safety or weUare., Rose said. Clearly marked "CoW'tay Notice," the page-&ize printed ·docutQ.ent advises the violator 1bat city. laws prohibit whatever actiee ht 'baa been guUty of and polilely request. him to refrain from ~ptaUng the violation. "Thia ia not a citation, it ls a coW'teSy notic:i," the ~lolalor Is adviled. "The city hopu it will belp you ((I betl<r know our laws and aid us in keepina Laguna Beacb safe, convenient and peaceful for all." Typical situations in which the notices might be ustd, Rose 1aid, would be for a trivial offense lacking willlul intent, u ob'scure law or regulation not apt to be generally known, a new law or regulation recenUy enacted for which enforcement has jut, COl'l'jmericed, or a law not re1ularly, and generally enforced. The manager safd that in Tiburon, use of the notices bad resulted iD very little I01s of revenue and "made up fOr that in good will and public acceptance of lllw eriforcement." They should be especially effective wltb regard to minor violations of the marine life ri!uge law, surfing and summer animal control Ia.wt as well u in dealing with young people involved in minor !Aw infractions, be added. Police Probing Weekend Thefts Laguna Caodidllea far tho twe>yur t:.aguna term are Arnold Laderman, research engineer; eatbortne Ma~le, llllrUY, Cllnaultant; Don Frlllklln Rldw'dlon. teacher; and Wllllam · Thomas. retail merchant. · . In the 5acld!ebacli election, voler& wlll be ul::ed to cboo5e between tncuinbint Alyn M. Brunon .aod college tnstructor, Lellv J. Anderson In Area I ; lncwnbenl John B. Lund and ~tor !.l•fl•NI Roley' in Area 3; and mcumbent Michael ColUns. teclmlcaJ· publicatlcm execuUve Tbomal .W, Craao and. attorney John W. Parker In Area $.· Mayor. Asks Setback on Initiative By BARBARA KREIBICB Of .. OlllY ......... .. Laguna BUcb Mayor Rlcbard Goldberg ... Id today ht will recommend Uiat ttie city council· del~y aetUng. a bear~ datet.on• the ·controvenial CR (~~) ..... ordi\\IJ>co '"1 bilacb(ronl ·lJotall ,ontU the matier of ttie ·~·tN'lli" . rl--· bu -~' ·'""-' floW tho rut ol 1111 """11<!1 ftels,• tald 'Go!dberg, '"but my personal f..U., •JJ tbat we should follow one of 1tM two courtt!I' open to UJ on the lnJ!l•llve, either adopting the height Umil orlilnance or pJaclng it be!ore the electora~ before going ahead wllb aey bearlnlfl on the CR ordinance.'" The.In~ added, !'I'm not saying we tbouldn't have a CR zone, but if there's to be a lleiabt limit as a result of thi.t Jnitlative, It wll11have to be taken into consideration." Tbe counclfbad been acheduled to set a ~to for lta hWing on the boaclilront hotel <Uvelopmenl ordinance Wednesday night after receiving the planning com:miulon'1 ,rec:ommendation that the ordlnano• be ,adopted with a 51).fool helgbl llmll. Meanwhile 1111 Tlluriday petitions signed by. 4,083 Lagunans were presented to the ctty clerk, ... Icing adoption of an lniUatlve measure that would limit bulldln& height throughout the city to 38 feet or three stories. The clerk bu 30 days to check tht 1igna~1 against county v o t er regiatra,Uon recordl .. If 1lgnatures of 15 percent of Lqqna'a registered v~rs are verified, the iniUJtive procedure rtRlW'et tbat the propooed ordinance be adopted by-the city OOWICll or placed before the electorate at a.special election. . The f;Oll().plus signatures on the petitions ....Ud represill A· peroenl ol the Art Cokmy'a .electorate. "ln·my opinion.that Js no doubt that wt will find there are more than the ttqulr. ed \ 15 perce1& ot valid signatures on the pelltlont," Goldbor~salctloday. '"but the la1" reqllim that we check them. "When this is ·completed, my opinion la tllal the council; hopefully, would follow one of. tbe two. counes open to it - adopting the as-foot ordinance or placin« It before the .elector ale -l!efpn oelllng any liearlna datei oo Ille .CR IOl!t. • Cl)lder nigllil . and araduall' warmer days are ll'le prognosU· catioa for Tuwlay aJoni lhe -~ with temperaturea bittlng 15 )o. cally and 11 further ln!IJld. Guards Save 2 Swimmers In Laguna Beach · Laguna Beach police are lnmUgatlng a eerie• or three weekend burglarlel In ,,. which merchandise valued at $1,&SS waa With regard to a previous report th•I elty alf«ney' Jack Rimel wu checking the lepllty ol the proposed lnlttallve, the mayor aaid, "I· haven't beard anything fn>m Mr. Rimel aboul this and unlw I bur that wt abao1ut.ely can't have this inlllatiVe -and I don"t ouapect we will - my opinion would not chanae.wltb niard . to a~ on the lruttatlv1 before pro<eedlng with Cl\.bearlngt."' IN!lmE TODi\ V Two Congressmen have rt· vealed /indi'ngs which indicate h.eroin use of ep!demic propor· tioni amoxg American troopt in Vietnam, Tht cost ii small there but huge in the U.S. Storv Page 4. ... ,"" .. ..... _ " C1t1ftn1llo 1 "''"' •w Cllec.llllot U11 " "''""' ,...., .. (llHltiell ..... Or•• C..ly • , .... " • '""' n-11 c ......... " Sftdl Mart;lfl , .. ,. DHrlil N.tlc• • T1 ... l\JM " D!Ttn:M ' TMo .... .. ... ··~Ill ,..,. . WN ... • •11ttrt•l-..I .. H W.-'IMtwt llolt ,,_ , .. ,. -·-.. .. _ .. Two Laguna Beach lifeguards were nearly swept out to sea Saturday while attempUng to restue 1 pair of teena1er1 from the heavy riptides and rocky cliffs at Abalone Point. In spite ol 30-knot winds and a choppy sea, tbe two young1ten chQle Saturd,ay afternoon for a beach outin& and nearly lost their lives before the two guards could get them to shore. One (){ the youths, Bill Simmons. 19, of 2067 Port Bristol Circle, Newport Beach, waa attempting to raft surf In El Morr~ Bay. Lifeguards said he lost his ttft almost lmmedlalely 1Uer enttrlng the water and began c1llln1 for help~ The sec:ond youngster, JOHPh Brand, 11, of Monrovia, became 1tranded on lbe rocka in the bay just off Abalone Point after be afipped from a foothold while altemptlna ((I climb Ibo cUU. Blind· tuffered •Vere koet taceratlom, but did not nqulre bospltal treatment. Lifeguard. Mike llarlley and Mike England, re11pondlni to a raldenl's pbont c.all at about •~ts p.ril., entered the dangel'OUI riptide together 'to rescue the pair. Afltr En&land 1av~ Slmmont ftom the surf, he swam to the rocks where Hartley wu atlemptln& to talk Brand down the cUff and Into the wa!Or Whert he could be tabb t> lh«t. H1rtJiy became caupt (in a set of wavea awd waa nrept in front of the cliU where he was forced to swim away to k~ Im beini hurled qainet the rocks. England was finally able t(l 1et the youth off th• rockl, bu~·thm ht too w(s pQllAld by the rip tide elooe lo. the clilf and awam · out t' aea with Hartley. The victim waa directed trito &bore by Enal1nd'11bouts and was finatly·'tfashed up onto the. beach by the waves. Both gu1rds then awam out of the rip tldl and parollel ((I the beach untU they cleared the rocks before comln& ashorei sfmmOns •a1 not ln)urcd, btlt Brand ... civen first aid te atop bla -kn.ff from bleeclillg. taken from Art Cqlony homes. Police Restrain' Police uld Robert J Oehler. of ma ' . Cltallna Ave., repo;wi that h\s home · hadbeenliroienlqtosometlme.Saturday l·ate Pho e User night and 11,1116 In valuabl, goodl takon. · l . . ill '11>t . loot _IN:!uded pi;to1s, rifles, kn!m, . . . . . alereo ·components.'~ aiid •a •small -A Laguna. Beach . i\olel .JIU<lt waa amount·of cash, lnv11tfgaton iald. · ~ bul Mt ureiled by pob Another burglary ... , iopoNcf by SoMay '-in< al~ 'he alle&ed!Y Peter E. Pizzitola, oC 157 Ramona Av,.~ uuolted a pay telephone which had who told authorlUeJ a thief. h>d taken a taken hill dlmo. 1156 gulter from his unlocked home The manaaemenl or the motel called 5aturday nlghl. offictt1, the1 ,.Id; afler the man became . The third thett reported ((I pollct wu violent abouL lolin1 his coin In the pallo by Jamer 0. Eady, of 1131 \1 GleMeyr;,i, lei!pl\one and bepn kickln& and be•tln& Sr., wbi> .. id a 1:40 stereo bad bet• tak· th' alle1ed thief. en from his home. Orr.ctn' sald ••lr1 Polito arrived, conferred with tho war Joined to the locked ruldellc• ....U-111-and -led be contact tho 111rOu1J1 u open window. pbbat --Ill pl 1111-becL • I • I I I t l --p .. -. ------ • \t DAILY PllOl SC New Book Selection : ;Plan Asked • Ev~Uy not satisfied with the prtsent .boot selecUon methods: used by th• .()range County Department of Education, \he County Board of Education has asked )tafr to pre.sent a new system at Its next tneellng. • Trustee Roger C. Andenon, o f ftuotington Beach, raised the issue last •eek when the board wu asked to ~ve a list or paperbacll nquested lor use in a county-Operated 1pecial .school. • Anderson, and board member Dr. DoriJ 'Araujo, of Orange, questioned several titles for which approval for purchase Eu sought, ioc.luding "Up Against the w -Legal Rights of People Undet .. · Allhoug)i !he board later approved J>u.rcbase of the complete recommended list. Dr. Araujo questioned the one book ~n the ground that it mlgbt inOame some youths. • Don Jordan, board member from Garden Grove, defended the reading list fecommendatlon noting he had met a teacher at Otto A. Fischer School who'd found "The Great Gatsby" to be therapeutic to one problem student ia particular. ~ "I would helltate to place myself 11 a penoo who can iuctie these books from a vantage p:>lnt far nmoved from the use of them," Jordan uld. "How are we to tell how a specific book may help aome child." Or. Bruce Sinclair, assistant county superintendent for educational services, took wnbrage with the board's suggestion his atalf was not adequately screening boob prior to recommending their purchase. "Do I understand you to mean that we must abandon the present system for jtviewing books and replace it with lnother?" Sinclair uked, noting thil would be "a siap In the race" to the dedicated people who now prepare the book list.. "' Anderson, backed by board prealdent ~· E. "Pat" Arnold, of Cypttu, cuggested that a review system similar ti'.> that set up for film purchues be lmployed. 1 Anderson called for a ttading of all boou purdwed aod IU!>lequenl ,..tum 10 lhe pub1lsbe"' il !hey were found lo be t(not suited" for placement on school library shelves. -"I don't think anyone on the board Wlnts to Alt down and cemor -thete boob," Anderson said. But, be indicated lt would be desirable for the board to bne report! on "po51lbly objectionable" books from the staff. ' • Presently the reviews of a national Jibrartans' auoclatlon are employed in weening boou ror purcltue, Dr. Stoclalr pointed out. Humorist Poet, ~gden Nash, 68, Critically Ill : BALTIMORE (UP[) -Hwnorlsl Ogden Nuh WU criUc:ally ill In a bospllal ~ todlY- Nasb, 6(1, was admitted to Union Memorial Hospital March 13, it WU )earned Sunday, for treatment of an illness hospital officials would not disclo!e. They 1ald the writer's !am.Uy had requested no Information b • rtleased. Nash bad been ln fair cond!Uon earlier Sunday, but he deteriorated in the afternoon, a hospltal spokesman said. Born ln Rye, N.Y., Nish attended Harvard for one year. He left In 192.1 and quickly became famous a1 a f1clle wrlttr of llgbt, humorous verse. OIAM61 COAST • DAILY PILOT OIWtO:! <OASf l'tl•UiHIMG CfMl"Klff aeMtt H. 'W1•• ......... llllllll'\llDlllhlf" J 1t.lt a.. c.,1.., Viet Prtsld"" .... a-It ,,.,_,., l1i•m•• k11¥i1 ...... T).e111•• A. M1r11hi11• M ..... lr!I ~·1- Ch1tl11 H. 1 .. , lt.i~h1~ P. Nill ,J.ultlln1 MIMllllll lllhlr• lat•M .... Offtui 221 F1t11t A.,.1111• lol1ffint •clclr .. u P.0. l o• ••l. t21.11 Siii c ....... Offk• JOI N.rtii ll C1111l11• ••11, 91612 -0-c.• Mn11 -Welt • ..,. 1~_. .....,..,, ._,.I ~ H......, 11111_..,• Htin,.,.,.. .-i1 UPl .... ....,_r' f I ( -DAILY !"II.OT St.ft l"M19 ... . -- I Russ Orbit Satellite Manned Space Station Effort Hint.ed MOSCOW (UPI) -The Sovi•I Union todlY launch<ld a new kind ol aatelllle · called "Salute" and scientific sources said It will be the basis of a lengthy project· io buUd the firal manned station ln apace. A report by the Soviet News Agency Tass did not specify 1( Salute was man- ned but tbe scientific sources said tt was not. They said there will be more launch- es 11 the oomiD1 days involving manned vehM:Jes ll'hicb will redelvous wUh Salule and begin the construction pn>ject. 'l11ey predicted the mission will be complex, spectacular and lengthy - runn1na: several weeks. The name "Salute" never before bu been used !or Soviet spacecraft, suggesting that it is a new type built especially for the spaoe station mjuioo, Salute's orbit was u.actly lbe same as that used for moat Soviet manned shots -a nearly circular fllgbt path aome 140 miles over the earth aad passing oter the Soviet Union's Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kaukhslan. The Soviet manned space program of recent years has concentrated e:a:clµsively on the goal of building a space platform. A whole series or nights by Soyuz spacecraft in the last three years has tested the systems and theories or platform building. ln recent weeks top Soviet space scientists have discll!sf.d the project in the prtu, indicating Soviet confidence lhe platform soon will be a reality. lclentlfic apparatuses or the station function normally," :rass said. "The coordination computing center processes incoming Information." Scientific aourcea in Moscow have predicted at least two vehiclea carrying two or more coamonauta will be used in the coming space spectacle. Their mission, sourceJ said, will be to construct the first pennanent orbital manned ipace station, the lint. atep in large.scale exploraUoo of the eolar syst.m. The previous Soyuz fllght.s all wtre aimed toward that end. Soyuz 9 ln June 19'10, was a two-man endurance test t~ determine how well men can wlthstand. tbe eUects of weightleu!le$1 aboard orbital plaUonns . In 1969, Soyuz 6, 7 and 8 went aloft wllh seven cosmonauts to practice navigation and space welding. Earlier the same year Soyuz 4 and 5 made a lllCCessful rendezvous, linked up and carried out a crew clwJge before returning to earlb. Week of Eco-Crusades St.a-.:ted Across Nation By JAMES PllJLLIPS .-....ci.t11111 l"ni• wnr.r Man, the endangered species, stands alone today In the primate building of the Atlanta, Ga., zoo, He is surrounded by garbage. In New York, workers spilled out or skyscrapers to discover 15 blocks of normally congested Madison Avenue devoid cl_ autos as scientists measured the level of atmospheric contaminants. Three recycling centers open 1n Rhodi Island in an eUort to get COJl5UIDel'I to return their waste paper and C&DJ ror: reuse by indU!try. Cleanup campaigns, with volunteen sweeping trash from parks an d roadsides, hlghlight Earth Week in North Dakota. And Grand Forks Mayor Hugo Magnuson has urged all citizens to ••focus on solutions to such problems 11 conserva t ion, environmental management, e-cology and population. DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMULATOR Fighting the Common Cold In en Obscure Newport leach Lab The Tus report of the launch called the sputnik a "'ataUon," wggesting it had a purpose different from previous unmanned shots usually c a 11 e d "sputniks," or scientific satellites." Both are Earth Week demonstrationJ designed to polnt at the many ways in which man p:>isons his own environment. Studenta in Des Moines, Iowa, hoped to collect 80 tons of waste paper Saturday lo kick off Earth Week. By Sunday, they had gathered over 200 tons. Laguna History Society. Names New Executives Battle of Cold The Salute orbital parameters included an angle of inclination of 51.6 degre.es, period of revolution of 88.S minutes, maximum di.stance from the surface of the earth of 133 miles and a minimum distance of 120 miles. A weekend fund-raising rally in Hartford, Con11.L collected an estimated $15,000 for the uinnecticut Earth Action Group. The rally was described by a policeman as the "happiest, cleanest and best" he had ever seen. Lab in Newport Scene of Drania The paramelel's were almo6t precisely the same as prevlOWJ manned Soyuz flights in which Soviet cosmonauts practiced skills n e c e s s a r y for construction o( an orbital space station. The newly constituted L a a: u n a Community Historical Society h a 1 aMounced installation or an executive committee including llarry Jeffrey, chairman; Adelaide Deklyne, secretary•1 Cliff Cave: Bea Whittlesey; Ruth Morrow; Van King ; Catherine MacQuarrie and Charlton Boyd. By L. PETER KRfEG Ot .,.._ Dill, '"" $111f l t's called isoprlnosine. It's already been called a cure for the common cold, a quick end to influenza, and measles, and chicken pox, and more than a hundred other viruses. Il's called NPT 10.381 for short. If it work.I, call i~ a biWon-doltar baby for Dr. Alvin J. Glasky and a handful of friends wbo put up $1 million to start Newport Pbarmac.eutical!, Inc., three years ago. Dr. Glasky and a team ()f 20 researcberl have been working in an incomplcuou laboratory on Monrovia Street 1n Newport Beach 11nce 1968 to find out if lt works. Tbey have been experimenting, testing and most•' recenUy manufacturing NPT 10.381 olllce Dr." Paul Gordon, the University of Cblcage professor who discovered it, turned lta development over to hil Jong-time friend th.rte years ago. presumably for a pleci! of the action. The development of ~ny drug is time- consuming, expensive and a gamble. Dr. Gl1Bky is by no means overconfident about the prospects. He says it will be at least two or three years before isoprinosine b: proven to the l!lali.sfaction cf tbe U.S. Food and Drug Administration and cleared for prescrip- t.ion to the public. However, the government ()f Argent.ina already has been convinced and is allowing general use of the drug there. When it does get on the market here, If it does, 1'It will probably cost about the same as an antibiotic, somewhere between p and $6 for a 12·tablet prescription," Dr. Glasky said. But that's where its relationship to antibiotics ends. "There's nothing like lt knQwn te medicine," Or. Glasky said, explaliling that the drug simply "makes the body's natural defense mechanisms work better .end faster." He said he and Dr. Gordon aren't surt bow it does It. "They just do what they normally do," he said, "a lot more quickly and efficiently." Tests are far from complete, Dr. Glasky stressed. "Jsoprinosin~'s effects have only been confirmed on a dozen cases involvin1 persons wilb cold symptoms," he said. "To aay right now it is the absolute cure to the common cold is prtmatutt," be said, but be confirmed that in every one of those 12 cases, the symptoms disappeared in less than 24 hours. He insists be is much more excited about its demonstrated effects against the nu, and things like viral pneumonia and smallpox. "Right now there is nothing to treat the nu," he said. "Dupoot has one drug that works against one of 14G strains o{ the flu, but you've got to take it before you get sick." Dr. Glaslty said tests on the effect cf the drug on pregnant women are still being made. "We have recommended it not be prescribed lo pregnant women in Argentina,,'' be said, "until we know more." He said thfre have been no indications of any serious side effects. For the 37·year-old Tustin doctor and £or his old teaching comrade In ChiC!ago, and for those investors who believed in both of them, enough to keep Newport Pharmaei!ulicals operating the past three years, and enough to pledge another $3 to $5 million to get isoprinO!line on the market, there will be one side effect te them from their product. They will have plenty of profits to sink back into the fledgling business. Bids for Medical Center. Near UCI Slated in 1July Planning contracts for a proposed medical center to be built ne1r UC Irvine will be awarded by July, state Senator Dennis E. Carpenter {R·Newport Beacb), 11ald today. Carpenter ls the president fl( the Orange County Medical Foundation, the sponsoring non·profit ~rporalion which ls planning the center. Carpenter said completion of the first unit, a 200-bed community hospital, i.s scheduled tor 1974. The hospital will be the first of several facilities which will occupy 150 acrts adjacent to UCl's School or Medicine. Total cost of the project ls an estimated $400 million. "Thia la the first time, so far as we know. that a medial center has been planned from the ground up," said Donald S. Bums, chairman of the foundaUon'1 board and chairman o( tbe board of the Newport N1tlonal Bank. BUl'Tl$ said the Irvine Medica) Center will start with the Newport Community J!ospital · and wW eventually b e augmented by a surgical center ;tnd a group of speclaliied clinics. When developtd to Its fullest, the center will include mediclne·related commercial and Industrial mas, hotel and motel accommodatlon1 and stmhlar and conference faclUUei, B u r n 1 explained. lie said UCl's medical sch()()! w\11 be an integral part of the center. "Subje<:t to approval by the Board of Reg,nta, the two bosplt.als -our communlty bospllll and the university hospital -may share aome ancillary facUiUes," he said. When he announced the project In October of 1970, Carpenter noted the community hospital will be designed to serYe the medical needs of the 400.000 people who are expected to settle in the Irvine area. The medical school's hospital will primarily be a teaching and research facility, not designed to meet the needs of a community. It will draw its patients from a wide area beyond the borders of Orange County. Members of the medical college staff have recommended a joint master plan for the entire medical area which consists of the college's 150 acres and the foundation's 150 acres located at University Drive and 1'1 a c Arthur Boulevard. Pair Arrested After Stabbing In Garden Grove A famlly argument tn Garden <irove Sunday nigh! ended In a fiihl In which one man was stabbed llld two were.jailed on 11ttempled murder charges. Garden Grove police said the vlcUm , Paul Burns, 20, of Redondo Beacll was al the h<>me of his father·ln-law and brother· in-law Russell H. Polsen, $1, and Ru.uell W. Polsen, 22, at 10672 Millard Drive. The lrlo were working on a car during the day Sunday and into the nlgbt and also drlnking, officers ttport.cid. "The onboard systetnll, equipment and Park Committee Asks Resistance To 'Suggestions' "Whenever a park exists, it seems that everyone want. to put something into it." This was one of the conclusions of LagUDa Beach's Maln Beach Committee after aludylng lhe loni hJJtory of the beachfront the city own.s and determining that it should be reserved exclwiively for park purposes. Among the non·profit community uses already su.ggested for lhe park area. says the committee report, are proposals for youth centers, drug abuse centers senior citizen centers, swimming pools,' tennis courts, bowling greens, chamber or commerce faciliUes and many more. "The committee strongly urges that such suggestions bt resisted," says the report The area of 1'-1ain Beach Park as recommended by the "committee, the report continues, "should be viewed as an arlistic creation by God, with incuni<>n by man at an absolute minimwn and for the purpose only ol enhanciDg the aestheUc experience of being nut lo the Pacific Ocean in Laguna Beach." The only commercial uses condoned by the committee would be beach and park oriented food and rental equipment, with such concessions located at either end of the park and designed to flt Laguna's Image. The committee notes that such concessions at the Corona del Mar beach park occupy less thaA 2,000 square feet and yield the city 32 percent of the operator's gross revenue. It is estimated similar conoeuions at the Main BeaC!h park could produce lease income to the city of $40,000 anually. Music 'With The Atlanta display was among the mast dramatic. A live man sits by himself among piles of trash in the building otherwise occupied by apes and other primates. Curator Vernon Kisling said the man· surrounded-by-garbage demoostration is an effort to dramatize the danger man and other animals face because of garbage and pollution. The teach-ins, s e m i n a r s and demonstrations will take p I ace throughout the nation's second annual Earth Weei. in hopes of emphasizing \\'ays each individual can contribute to a cleaner, greener, healthier planet. Michigan GQv. William G. MillikeD said in a proclamation ''Progress bas been made, but we must now shift our emphasis from coMCiOU!neSS of the problem to an active, accelerated eUort to preserve the environment." Festival Chorale Seeks to Boost Its Membership The reorganized Laguna Festival Chorale is seeking to build It 1 membership from 25 to 40 voices with the addition of altos. tenors and basses from the Laguna Beach area. Singers who can read music and carry a part and are willing lo take direction may arrange an informal audition by calling director Jack K.refting at 49$-4445. Krefting took over directorship of the Cborille last fall when the board of directors of the Festival of Arts decided the group should work toward becoming self·supporUng. Founded in l~ to provide vocal accompaniment to the Pageant of the Masters, the chorale has been wholly supported by the Festival since that time. Under the reorganization, festival support will be reduced over a three.- year-period until the Chorale becomes completely sell..supporting. an Option from JVC Cheo1y? Thi JVC 1.102 111t.e11r19e1 th1t. It eombi1111 • ..l1l11w1 111tom1tic 4·1p11cl 1l1r10 tur11t1b11 with 111 l ·lr1ck 1t1r10 pl1.,-• 1r 111 0111 h1Ml10111e, eomp1ct u11lt, Pili 1iw r1eord1 011 th1 b!9, 11 .!11ch pl1tt•r 111d 1it "•ek •nd r1l1r. Not /~ tti1 ft'IOod for 1iftl119 fflrou9h vour recet4 li .. r1rv1 O k1y, then !u1t 1lip 1 e1rf.o rid91 i11to the l ·tr1ck 1ter10 pl1y1r •114 forg•t it, n.1 ch•i!i•' ovt r from pho110 to l-h1~k 1t1r•• i1 1cco.,.pli11!1d •utom ttlc1U.,-. Stl i" fin1 fu111il111 1-fi11i1h1d ... ood, th1 4102 h 9u1rt"te1d to ''"d1r ouhllftcll111 prof111io111I p1rfor.,.111co i11 1lther fu11ction. NOW ONLY REG. $169.00 s119 CREDIT TERMS AVAIL.ABLE • A high school student and an environmentalist also will be named to the committee. At a meeting this week , the Society adopted th e following statement of purpose: to share knowledge of Laguna's past; to collect artifacts and records; to maintain a depository of these materials; to use this collection to enrich the spirit and contemp:>rary activities of the wmmunity. Among those attending the meeti.n& were Mr. and Mrs. Merle Ramsey, Mrs. Jane Riddell, Mr!. Marie Ropp, Diet: Jahraus, Briggs Morris-Smith, Joseph Tomehak, Roy Holm and Lloyd Seilset. Named to serve on the Society'• advisory commit.tee to date are Mrs. Ropp, Genevieve Daniels and Clyde Springe. The Historical Society is temporarily housed at the Volunteer POst, 334 Forest Ave., 49U37S, and is actively aollcltlnll materials of historical i n t er • 1 t, volunteers and potential members. Life in County Symposium Topic "Life in Orange County : Environmental Quality, Resources, Growth" will be the theme of an Earth \Veek sympo!iium sponsored by the Program in Social Ecology at UC Irvine Tuesday. The symposium. open to the public without charge, will be held at 5 p.m. in UCI's Science Lecture Hall. Speakers will be Dr. Kenneth Watt, professor of zool-0gy at UC Davis; Robe.re Battin, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, and Ray Watson~ e1ecutlve vice president of the Irvlnt Company • 1002 mMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MES' JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUT, SIU, TRADI COMI IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MUA ---H.i.o. & •oodwey 7 .. 7 ' • • San Cle111enie I ca · istrano EDITION / VOL 64, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES . ORANGE .COUNTY, CAOFORNIA • IXOD Elec!tion Tuesda11 Clubhouse Issue Takes · Limelight San Clemente's voters will go to the polls Tuesday to determine the fate of the city's first parks and recreation bond issue -a millioD-dollar revenue item with four separate options. The parks election is combined on the ballot for trustee poSts in the capistrano Unified School District and Saddleback Community College District. Of the four 'separate city items en the combination ballot,. the issue proposed for lt)_e rep.Iacement of the bW'ned-oot community clubhouse have c:aptured most of the attention during prt--election period. City oUicials buoyed by last week's relatively low bid quotation for the construction of the replacement, have kept a Telatively low posture on plugging the election, wlllch bas an even chance or * * * Cl,e1nente Poll Locations Told Seven consolidated poUing places will be operating ,Ill . Bin Clemente 4JirinC Tueoday'1 co~ined po.U and.iecrealk>n bond lS!Ue and' scbbo1 trustee tlettions. The polls ·will open at 7 a.m. and close al 8 p.m. · The balloting locatiO:ns within the city are: -Concordia Elementary School. -'Ille Lacty reside.pee at 2010 Los Alamos. -The Soukup residence at 111 W. Santiago. -The VFW hall at 141" Miramar. -Ole Hanson Elementary School. -Las Palmas Elementary ScbooJ. -The Baycliff Village clubhouse at 202: · Monte Vista. , City Clerk Max Berg urged voters to refer to their' pollfllg place card (which wu mailed with sample ballots) to determine their specific polling place. * * * 70,000 Eligible . To Cast Ballots More than 70,000 South Coast and Saddleback Valley voters are registered to cast ballots Tuesday for trustee positions in the Capistrano Unified and Saddleback Community College districts. less of passage. (Each of the Coor proposiUons needs a two-thirdi aye vote to pasa.) C.Ouncilmen have set the bond amount at $4001000 for the clubhouse project, but the low bidder, local planning commissioner and buikling contract.or Ray McCaslin, bas offered to rebuild the structure for $235,000. That sum, officials reminded, does not cover the cost .of parking Iota:, demolition of the fire-damaged building or relocation of tennis and shuffleboard courbl. The building cost, however, would be reduced by the city's recovery of $57 ,500 in insurance for the fll'e damage. · Most observers prf!fi~ a stronger vote In favcr of the 'clubbouSe item by the city's large contingent of older voters, who would be most likely to use the facility. The sentimerit of that voung group, however. is impossible to assess in the other three items. A youth-oriented recre'aUon . faci,)jty at the edsting beacll club is the ~t-largest iterh on ~ blijOt, and could draw disfavor from Ille cl~ p!OllOilenll,' IOIM.Obse';rvm lj>eCulite.' · The cost ci! that faclllty II propcoed at ~,000. . ~ '!'tie c:Ompl<tlon of • I II ti • I neigbborMod ~·and clml6\lment .ol new ones is aiiother ballbt item, with·• prie< tag of ttlD,000. which m!lht draw 111pport. from the parents of ocbooi-qe . younpterl U 'WelJ. Speculation on the last iaue -the · spending of $107,000 for the improvement of beach acceases and facilities -is even · more clOudy. City 'Officials have said the annual cost . to the~o"flel' of •·$27,000 home in ·San Clemente lor~,alr four' Items would be in tlle range of $6.50 a year. But stern oppOstUon has come more from voters with larger investment!. In recent days the o~ Of a large. blufftop rest borite said because of biJ assessment,, the bond issue would coat him perhaps hOO a. year. City councilmen earlier this year appointed a latge citizen'• com~ttee to work toward passage of the bond issue, but because of th~ quiet policy of the city, little, if any, public advocacy bas taken place. City Manager Ken Carr, however, presented the city's fact 1beet on the bond measure to several loc.aJ groups earlier this year. The bond issue has won the support of the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce board of ditectors as Well as the Jaycees and other Joe.a) C(>mmunity and aervlce groups. Downtlle Mis,sion Trail South Coast Pair Attend Honor .Meet Two South Coast area. resident.I who are members of ~ honor aociety of Saddleback College attended a ·two.day ' conference over the weekend J n Rivenide. Robert Dellach of Sao Clomento and Ji>AA llold of ·Laguna Nipel re~ted the )oca) college at ·a state .conference held by Alpha Gamm~ 5il00L Five separate districts within the Capistrano Unified territory are up for election, including one posifion lert vacant by a recent trust.et. resignation. 'Mle registration for each district Involved in the vote in the 6Chool district is: -Area One, northern San Clemente area, 1,846. Project for Recycling -Area Two, central San Clemente area, 1,888. -Area Three, southern part of San Clemente, 2,379. -Area Four, the Dana Point area, 1,136. -Area Five, capistrano Beach, i:m. Two other trustee areas, aiJ: and seven, have no board seats up for election Tuesday in Ceplstrano Unified, but 4,m voters in those two areas can vote for Saddleback candidates. The total registration of all eligible voters within the' Saddleback district - including Mi.Sllon Viejo and the South Orange Coast -is 10,m. The .polls wlD open· at 1 a.m. and cloM at I p.m. tn all areu, officials said. ' Tustin Boord . Profil,es,,Given Eight ca~ are vyJng for ·1'1'~ ~' . ~.Tustin UQlon HJgh oScbool trk:t ,Beard· o! . Trustees Tu<.S.y and the DAILY PILOT today prmnts b r 1 e I biographies of candidate.I on Page 28. Seven candidatea a.re presented. One refused an interview, The Tustin board is tile governln' body !or both University Rig!\ School and MIM!on Viejo High Scl>ool. ..... ·' • Paper 'at Crossroads' -' . •' • ·I • .. . Welfare .... , As Failure Evers · Urges Voters To Back &8t Man JACKSON, ··Miss.· (AP) -James Charin Everr,. Mlaaiuippl'•,flnl blaclt candidate for iovMi>or, urge. voten ·: "Don't vote fGr &-lllack ma; don't vote lot a ·white man. Vote for·jbe best man.·• Even, •year-old .~yor .of Fayette, ran unoJ>eOH<l:&mdaY for the oominatio11 ol ,the>llalo'• I.c>Y.alilt .Democrats. Some 2o¥O· -.deliplea, all but • handful of ~ .,.ltilck,. 1bout1d lllllllilnola •pprOvli1olEven11 be urged ellC)!on of.~ .bat, man.ad pledpd to wart ror Jolll u1f JUl!lce. .. . ...... I I • J I ~ J DAILY PILOT SC New Book Selection 'Plan Asked , EvJdent.ly not satisfied with lhe present .-.,.-methods ll!<d by the :()range County Department of Education. :the County Boa.rd of Education has asked Jtafl lo present a new system 1t its next 'meeu.g. , Trustee Rogtr C. Andenon, o f fluntingt.n Btacb, rai!<d the iuu. list "1retk when the board waa asked to '•pprove a list of pllperbocks re<jU..ted 1for use in 1 county-operated apeeial ochool. . Anderson, and board member Dr. Dorit ''..i\raujo, of Orange, questioned aeveral liUes for which 1pprova! for purchase .was sought, including "Up Again.st the J,aw -Legal Righlll of People Under J:J." _ Although the board latu approved purchase of the complete recommended li&t, Dr. Ar1ujo questioned the one book 'on lhe ground that it might lnOame aome ~tbs. Don Jordan, board member from ,Garden Gn>v<, ddended the rudini list "'ftCOmmendatloo noting he had met a ·teacher at Otto A. Fi.scher School who'd found "'11le Great Gatsby" to be 1herapeutic to one problem student la ~c:War • DAILY ,II.OT 119ft ...... ••r would hesitate to place myae.11 u a person wbo can judge these boots from a Vintage point far removed from the use of them," Jordan aal.d. 1'How are we to tell bow a speclftc boot may help 110me cblld." DR. GLASKY TESTS PILLS IN STOMACH SIMULATOR Fighting the Common Cold In •n Obtcuro Newport Beoch Lob Dr. Bruce Sinclair, uslstant countf superintendent for educational services, took umbrage with the board'• suggution hl.s 1talf was not adequately acreenlng books prior to recommending their purdwe. "Do I undtntand you to mean thlt we mtllt abandon the present ayatem for rmewlng boob ond repW.. It with 'another!" Sinclair uked, notiq that M>ould be "a alap ln the face" to the dedicated people who now prepare tbe took llsl& ; Andenoa, backed by board pn!Sldell! 'A. E. "Pat" Arnold. cf Cypress, ~ !hat • review l)'11<m limllor lo !hat oet up for rum purcbues be l!mployed. - ~. Andem>n called for • ruding (If an boob purcliased and suboequent return to the publisben 11 they were found to be .l:'not suited" for placement on ICbool Dbrary sbeJ~es. !f'"I dool think onyone on the board hntl to lit down ond --l>oob," Andenon aid. But, he lndlc:aled 11 wowd be delirable 1o< !he board to hove repciN oo ''J>Rllflll1 object.louhll" -from the It.ill. " Preoently the review• of • 1111tlooal tibrmus' woclaUon ore employed In acreenln& boob for ~. Dr. llnclelr pointed oul Humorist Poet, Ogden Nash, 68, Critically Ill BALTIMORE (UPI) -Humorist O(den Nub wu crlUc:olly Ill In • bospltal !>ere todoy. Nub, II, WU •dmltted to U- MemorilJ Hospital March 13, Jt wu learned Sunday, for treatment cf an illneu hospital officials would not dUcloae. 'Ibey Aid the writer'• flJllily had requested no information b 1 released. Nub had been lo fair cond!Uon eulier Sunday, but he deteriorated in t.be afternoon, a bospilal apokeman said. Bom in Rye, N.Y., Nash attended Harvard for one year. He left in 1921 and quickly became famous u a facile writ.er of light, humorous verse. OIAHM COAST • DAILY PILOT OUN" COM1' PUIUININ• ~JJft lQ.rt N. w ... ,,.w.it .... ~ J•ct l. C11rt.., ~,,... .......... .,,_.,. l\•111" kenU ...... n.."' •• A. .. ...,lri"'9 MeMI .... M llw Cktlt• H. l-l lcJi•.4 P. "'•" Anhlttlt #ollMt~ lfd!W1. ....... ~°"'" 21? fwt..t A••ft" M1lt.tt edtltH&.1 P.O. In•••· 92,52 S-CIJH 1e Offk9 JOI Horth B C..HM lt•I, t2672 --C.MI ,,_...~ a .,.., .., ,..,..,. w_.r hK~' »J.J N....,1 89111....,., ~ ..... '"'J ._. ...,.._. • Battle of Cold I • Lab in Newport Scene of Drama By I. PETER KRIEG Of ... o.Jl• ~It! ll•lf Jt '1 called lsoprinO!lne. ll't already been called a cure for the common cold, a quJck end to influellUI:. and measles, and chick.en pox, and more than a hundred other viruses. 1t'a called NPT 10.381 for short. If it works, call it a billion-<tollar baby for Dr. Alvin J. Glasky and a handful of friends who put up $2 million to start Newport Pharmaceuticals, Jnc., three years ago. Dr. Gia.sky and a team cf 20 re~ have be@ working in an inconllplcuous laboratbry on Monrovia Street in Newport Beach since 1968 to find out if it work.s. : They have been expe:rimenUng, testing ~ most recenUy manufacturing NPT 10.381 aha Dr. Paul Gordon, the Univenlty of Chicago profe11110r wbo cllacovered it, turned its development ever to lWI Iong-Ume friend three years ago , presumably for a piece of tbe action. The development of any drug is time- consumlng, expensive and a gamble. Dr. Gia.sty ii by no m e a n 1 overconfident about the prospects. He uys it wW be at lea.at two or three year1 before illoprinosine ii proven to the 1atiJfactlon of the U.S. Food and Drug Admini!tration and cleared for prescrip- tion to the public. However, the government cif ArgenUna already bas been corivinced and ii allowing eeneraJ ~of the drug there. When it does get on the market here, if it does, "It will probably cost 1bout the same u an antibiotic, somewhere between $3 and $6 for a 12-tablet prescripdoa," Dr. Glaaky said. But \_hat'• where Jta relation.ship to 1nlibi0Ucs enda. "There's nothing . like It known te medicine," Dr. Glasky 1ald. explaining • lhat the drug simply "makes the body's natural defense mechanisms werk better and faster." He said be and Dr. Gordon aren't sure how it does it. "They just do what they normally do," he said, "a Jot more quickly and efficienUy." Tests are far from complete, Dr. Glasky stressed. "lsoprinosine's eUects have only been confirmed on a dozen cases Involving persons with cold symptoms," he said. "To say right now it is the ab.wlute cure to the common cold is premature," be said. but ·be confirmed that in every one of those 12 cases, the symptoms: disappeared in less than 24 hours. He insists he is mucb more e1.c.ited about Ill demonstrated effect.. .q:llnst the fla, and thlngs lib viral pneumonia and smallpox. "Right now there ls nothing to treat the flu," he said. ''IAlpont has one drug that works against one of 140 strains of the flu, but you've got to take it before you get sick." Dr. Glasky said tests on the effect ftf the drug on pregnant women are still being made. "We have recommended it not hi! prw:ribed to pregnant women in Argentina,'' be sald, "until we know more." He said there have been no indicationJ of any serious side effects. For the 37·year-C1ld Tustin doctor and for his old teacblng comrade in Chicago, and for th ose investors who believed in both of them, enough to keep Newport Pharmaceuticals operating the past three years, and enough to pledge another $3 to $~ million to get isoprinosine oa the market, tbere will be one side effect te them from their producL They wlll have plenty of profita to sink back into the fledgling business. Bids for Medical Center Near UCI Slated in July Planning contracts for a proposed medical ceoter to be built near UC Irvine will hi! awarded by July, st.ate Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R-Newport Beach), said today. Carpeater ii the p~sident ef the Orange County Medical Foundation, the sponsoring non-profit corporation which Is planning the center. carpenter said completion of the first unit, a 200-bed community hospital. Is scheduled for 1974 . The hospital will be lhe first of severaJ facllities wblch will occupy JSO acres adjacent to UCI's Sc.hoot of Medicine. Total cost of the project ls an estimated $400 mllllon. "This ls the fi rst time, so far as we know. that a medical center has been planned from the ground up," said Donald S. Burns, chairman of the foundation's board and chairman of the board of the Newport NaUonal Bank. Bums said the Irvine Medic.al Center will start with ~ Newport CommuIDty llospltal and will eventually be augmente• by a surgical c:tnter and a group of specialited clinics. When developed to il& fullest. lbe center will Include medicine·related commercial 11nd industrial areas, bbtcl and motel acc.ommodatlotls and 1eml•ar and conftrtnce faclllUes , B u r n 1 upl1ined_ lie said UCJ 's medical scbQot will be an lnttgral part of the center. "Subject to approval by I.he Board of Regents , tl'te two hospitals -our community hospital and tht: university hospital -may 1hare t0me anc:Ulary h1c.illties," ht said. • When be announced the project In October of 1970, Carpenter noted tht: communlly bospilal will be designed to serve the medical needs of the 400,000 people who are expected to settle in the lrvlne area. The medical school's hospital will primarily be a teaching and research facility, not designed to meet the needs of a community. It will draw its patients from a wide area• beyond the borders of Orange County. Members of the medical college staff have recommended a jotnt master pt1n for the entire medical area which consist.. of the college's 150 acres ind the found1Uon 's 1~ acrH located at University Drive and 1'-1 a c A rt b u r Boulevard. Pair Arrested After Stabbing In Garden Grove A family argument tn Garden Grove Sunday night endrd in a fight in which one man was stabbed and two were jaJled on 1ttempted murder chat'JffS. Garden Gro,·e police said Utt victim, Paul Bums, 20, of Rtdondo Beach, '1\U at the hotnll of hls falhtr·ln·law and brother- In-la~' Russell IH. Polsen, 51, and Russell W, Polsen, 22, Jl 10672 Mallard Dr:lve. The trio were working on a car dutlni th< day Sunday and Into the nlrbt ..a 11lso drinking, offlctrs reported. I , ' ( Ru·ss Orbit· Satellite Mann~ Space Stairo.,.. Effort Hint,ed M06llOW (UPI)·-The Soviet Union lodlt1 *•"'!Md • -kind of oatelUIO called ''Salute" and scientllic sourcei llald n will "' the basis ol • lengtby project lo 'build the flnl mooned llalJon lo. space. A report by the Soviet News Agency Tass did not specify if Salute was man- ned but the scientific sources said it was not. 1be)' aald there will be more launch- es .ill the coming da,y1 involving manned vtbldu whlcb will redel.l'ous w}th Salute ond. the coostructlao project. 1eienutlc appara.._ of the station tunctJon nonnally/" Tau said. "The coordinaUon computing cent.er processe.s incoming information." Scientific sources in Moscow have predicted at least two vehicles carrylng two or more cos:monauts will be used in the coming space spectacle. Their mission, sources said, will be to construct the first permanent orbilal manned space station, the first step in large-scale exploration of the ll01ar system. 'l1le provious SOyiiz fllgh!Js all were aimed toward that end. Soyuz 9 in Jtme, 1970, was a two-man endurance test to determine how weU men can wJlhstand the eUects of weigbUeasne1s aboerd orbital platforms . ln 1969, Soyuz 6, 7 and 8 went aloft with seven cosmonauts to practice navigation and space welding. · Earlier the same year Soyuz 4 and 5 made a successluJ rende:vous, linked up and carried out a crew change beLore returning to earth. They predicted the -. will be compia:, apectacular .. d lengthy -nmninc several weeb. The name "Salute" never before has been used for Soviet spacecraft, suaestmc that it iJ a new type built especially for the space atalion mission. Week of Eco-Crusades Salute's orbit was e1.ac.Uy the same as that used for most Soviet manned shots -a nearly circular flight path some 140 miles over the earth and passing over the Soviet UnJoa's Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Started Across Nation Tbe SoYlet manned opace program of rectDt years has concentrated exclusively oo tfle goal of building a space platform. A whole aeries of filgbts by Soyw; apacecraft Jn the last three years has tested the syste.ma and theories of platform building. In recent weeks top Soviet space scientists have diacuued the project in the preSl!I, indicating Soviet confidence the platform aoon will be a reality. By JAMES PlllLLIPS ~,.,_Wf"INr Man, the endangered apec:ies, stands alone todey in the primate building of the Atlanta, Ga ., zoo. He ls surrounded by garbage. In New York, workers spilled out of skyscrapers to discover 15 blocks: of normaUy congested Madison Avenue devoid Of autos as scientists measured the level of atmospheric. contaminants. Three recycling centers open ln Rhod• Island in an effort to get consumers to retwn their wute paper and cam for reuse by industry. Cleanup campaigns, with volunteers sweeping trash from parks and roadsides. highlight Earth Week in North Dakota. And Grand Forks Mayor Hugo Magnuson has urged all citizem to "focus on solutions to such problems as conservation, environmental managemeat, ecology and population. Tbe Tasa report of the launch called the sp.Jtnli 1 "station," 1uggesting it had a purpose different from previo11.1 unmanned shots usually c a 11 e d ''sputniks," or scientific aateDltes." Both are Earth Week demonstrations designed to point at the many ways 1n which man poisons his own environment. Students 1n Des Moines, Iowa, boped to Laguna History collect 80 tons of waste paper Satmday to kick off Earth W.U. By Sunday, they '!'be Salute orbital parometm Included an angle of inclinaUon of 51.6 ·degrees. period of revoluUon of 18.5 minutes. m1.1imum distance from the surface of the earth of 133 mlles and a minimum distance of 120 miles. bad gathered over 200 tons. -Soci·ety Na A weekend fund-rabing rally in , mes Hartford, Coll.l.J. collected an estimated $15,000 for the wnnecticut Earth Action -·· V_ .. _ fJ•.YC!,_ __ Group. Tlfil'il!y.,...,dl!!trmed"'bn-"""·'e~cu. The parameten we~ aiinost precisely the same as previous manned Soyui flights in which Soviet cosmona"utl praclic2d 1kills n e c ea 1 a r y for construcUon of an orbital apace station. ''The onboa.rd aystemi, equipment and Park Committee Asks Resistance To 'Suggestions' "WbtnoYer • park"!'1"', 11 ..... !hit everyone wants to put something into it." Th1s was one ol the conclmlons of Laguno Beach's Main Beach Committee altu studying the long bistory of the beachfront the city owns and determining that it shou1d hi! reserved eicl11!1vely for part purposes. Among the oon-profit community uses already suggested for the part area says the committee report, are proposais for youlh centera, drug abwe centers senior citizen center_s, swimming pools,' tenrus courts, bowling greens, chamber of commerce facllltit.s and many mere. "The cornmUtee strongly urges that such suggestions be resisted," says the reporL The area of Main Beach Part as recommended by the committee. the report continues, "should be viewed as an artistic creation by God, with incursion by man at an absolute minimum a.ad for the purpose only of e n h a n c i n g the aesthetic experience of being next to the Pacific Ocean in Laguna Beach." The only commercial uses condoned by ~ committee would be beach and park oriented food and rental equipment, with such conc.esslonJ located at either end of ~he park and designed to fit Laguna's image. The committee notes that such concessions at the Corona del Mar beach park occupy fess tha• 2,000 square feet and yield the city 32 percent of the operator's gross revenue. It ii estimated similar ronces:slons at the Main Beach park could produce lease income to the city of $40,000 anually. Music with policeman as the "happiest, cleanest and best" be had ever seen. 'The Atlanta display was among the most dramatic. A live man sits by himself among piles of trash 1n the bu.ilding otherwise occupied by apes and other primates. Curator Vernon Kisling said the man- 6UI'rounded-by.garbage demonstration is an effort to dramatiu the danger man and other animals face because of garbage and poUulion. The leach-ins, s e m i n a r s and demonstrations will take p J a c e throughout the natioo's second annual Earth Week in hopes of emphasizing ways each individual can contribute to a cleaner, greener, healthier p1anet. Michigan Gov. William G. Milliken aaid 1n a proclamation "Progress has been made, but we must now shllt our emphasis from consc.iou.sneas of the problem to an active, 1cce.Jerated effort to preserve the environment. 11 Festival Chorale Seeks to Boost Its. Membership The reorganized Laguna Festival Chorale is seeking to bulld I t s membership from 25 to 40 voices: with the add.JUon of altos, tenors and basses from the Laguna Beach area. Singel"3 who can read music and carry a part and are willing to take direction may arrange an informal audition by calling director Jack. KrefUng at 495-4445. Krefting took over directorship of the ~ale last fall when the board of directors of the Festival of Arts decided the group shouJd work toward becoming self-supporting. Founded in 1963 to provide vocal accompaniment to the Pageant of the Masters, the chorale bas Men wholly :iupported by the Festival sinct that time. Under the reorganization, festival support will be reduced over a thrtt- year-perlod until the Chorale becomes completely se~-supporling. an Option from JVC Cil•o1y1 Tli. JVC 6102 •11ce11r•911 that. If t•mbin•1 1 d•l11J• •11to"'1tic 4-1p11i 1t•t•• t11rnl•tll• wit+i '" l 0 tr1tk •l•r•• pit y• or 111 on• h1Ml1om1, comp1&t itft!t. Pil• 1i• r•c•ttl1 eft th• t.19, I I-inch ,1,tt1r •llOll 1\t ~•ck •Ml r.l•s. Not i11 til• "''" for •ifli119 t+ir1u9il yo1i1r ,,,.~ libr•ry1 Ok•y. th•ft j1i1d ,r;, 1 t•rl• ridt• 1111• 1h1 l •ttltk 1+.t•• ,11y•r •nd for91t It. Thi ch1n9•• ev1r fr•m pho11• k l ·tr•tk •l•r•• i1 •tcelftpli1h.d 1utem1tic1lly, St ! !ft lift• furft1!1itr •·fifti1ile4 w•ff. th• 6101 11 t 1i11r•ftl11tl I• t•IMl•t •uht1ndl11t itr.f1ule11•I ,1rf•t111•mc• In •ilti•r fuftcti•"- NOW ONLY REG. $16,.00 s119 CRIDIT TERMS AVAILABLE • The newly constituted L a c u n a Community Ri!itorical Society h a 1 announced installation of an e.secutive committee including Harry Jeffrey chairman; Adelaide Deklyne, secretary;i Cliff Cave; Bea Whittlesey; Ruth :ti.forrow; Van King; Cath erine MacQuarrie and Charlton Boyd. A high schooJ student and an environmentalist also wiU be named to the committee. At a meeting this week, the Society adopted t h e following statement of purpose: to share knowledge of Laguna's past; to collect artifacts and records; to maintain a depository of these materials; to use this collection to enrich the spirit and contemporary activities of the community. Among those attending the meeting; were Mr. and Mn:. Merle Ramsey, Mn. Jane Riddell, Mrs. Marie Ropp, Dick Jahraus, Briggs Morris-Smith, Joseph Tomehak, Roy Holm and Lloyd SellseL Named to serve on the Society'• advisory committee to date are Mrs. Ropp. Genevieve Daniels and Clyde Springe. The Historical Society is temporarily housed at the Volunteer Post, 334 Forut Ave., 494-6375, and is actively aolidUng materials of hi storical i n t ere 1 t, volunteen and potential members. Life in County Symposium Topic "Life in Orange County : Environmental Qua!~ e s o u r c e s . Growth" will be the theme of An Earth Week symposium sponsored by the Program in SociaJ Ecology at UC Irvine Tuesday, The symposium, open to the public without charge, will be held at 5 p.m. in UCI's Science Lecture HaJI. Speakers will be Dr. Kenneth Watt, professor of zoology at UC Davis; Rober a Battin, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervison, and Ray Wabon~ executive vice president of the Irvine Company • 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HER.E FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SW.. TRADI • COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND 1838 NEWPORT ILYD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MUA -·---& flf•Mny ) • DAILY "Lllf Jf • Reagan. Striving 1o Lead ~or111al Life ' Puppg Love? Call It puppy love forever If you will as Tom Ing· ram, of Covington, Ky. who will be 101 In Septem· ber, husses his wife of 57 years, Eva. She is head· 1ng for her 96th year. The couple married late in life. He wae 44 and she 39. They are now paUeni! togetherin a nursing home. LAGUNA BEACH TAXPAYERS ASSN. SUPPORTS Patricia Giflette Gerald Linke William Thomas f OR LAGUNA BEACH UNIFIED SCHOOL BOARD • (The public Uf• of Goo. lloMld Reogon fl .., opcft l>ook. Liu fD<U . k1loum fl. 10ha£ ht d o • 1 in prlwtt momentl. The gowmor talked obo•I hfl pul01IOI li/• in on inkrvitao with U/'/.J By GEORGE SKELTON SACRAMENTO (UPI) -On a typical d1y, Gov. Ronald Reagan rlsea at a comfortable hcl.lr, :washes down · a dietary break:fut wJth orana:e jukf:, cell lo work by 9 aod II drlveo ~as Co. Pays Bill; $2.1 Million -bo&n I In. -v.u., Dl,yt" aad lb• bll·cb!ldNn call "the 1>11 black II• pub II c 1 o n • II on 1 I ql)>,K ... VOOllon ol I• bll UfestyJO "I'm --ol -cnck-Md publlc Imai• cbaopd of·d•-..U-lloun«-lh6-'lnllll ~lo polltldan. •venlna ~ -no, llr," the Ht· and hli wtfe, Nancy ,an IOVa"DOr' 1111. u1 work nal_ aUr.cuve former act rt 1 1 , bard teytnc lo malnllln .... ha,. dilcov....t pollUce II "a mrmal heme IHe." '' lltUe bit Uke lhow" bullnau. lloagae II food o1 recallinl 11'1 a vtrua." And he ClOllCOdel that by the time he WU "tllore wlll be a road)llllment boltlni "Dealll Valley 1>1)>1" b&ct" wboo they retire from oo tolevblon lo Ille mld-llllOI, public IHe. hb work week wu averagilll Just when 1blt wlll be ltsa thae two days. lloqen lnlbtl he haln't "I was alwaya afraid ol decided and, M)'Way, .. 'I've ovueiporure," ht uld, "and aotten a litt!e leery• about "' l enjoyed a show where 1 makinl flat declaratlona." could be on only about a The conservative Republican minute each week, t b en declared in !961 that be had no periodically appear In a lntentkll of running f o r starring role I'd choose for President but ran myself." nevertheless. He already hes The major difference since hinted he may bid for the U.S. be became governor . of the Senate in li74 a g a i n s t nation's largest slate, Reagan Democratic incumbent Alan The gas company paid its said in an interview, ts "l 'm Crmston. , bill lllb week. lndoon Instead ol outdoon." Onoe he does return to The total was $2.1 millJon in • We ued to own a 250-acre private life, Reagan says a nd In tallm nt t97l ty horse ranch ln the Malibu good deal ol hi• Umo will he aeco s e ~ mountains. spent on horseback. He now property laxes and franchise "l was j.n the saddle a lot owns 375 acres near Riverside payment.! to 25 cities for 111 because I had thoroughbreds and still has access to a small mains In streets a ad -hunters, jumpen," Rea.can piece of the Malibu property, bJgbways. recalled, "You couldn't just which he sold for $2 million. Payments include S 1. 14 leave them in a 1ar1ge like a The governor's sch e du I e million on property lllxea, bicycle." nonnally la: arranged so he bringing the total for the year . Jteatan thought h i m s e 1 f can stay weekends at his to f2.2 million, plua 1971,000 In right Into politlcl. And W°'tern-,,lyle home In Pacific city franc:hise paymtnta. eomewhere between "Death Paliaadea. When t b e s e A breakdown shows allotmenta: include $138,851 for ria:bt·of.way use in unincorporated county ares; '2,808 to Costa Meu: f21,m to Fountain Valley ; $110,058 to HunUogton Beacb: $11.GM lo Laguna Beach: $37,tlt lo Newport Beacb: $18,339 to San Clemente, $6,363 to San Juan Clplslrano, and SB,691 to Seal Beach. Overall, the firm is paying 111.7 million In pr~perty taxe1 and f1 .3 million in franchise payments throughout il! 12· county service area t b f s 1prlng. Pacific Ligbling Se r v l c e Company,)' Jl! affiliate, ii paying $1.47 million in property taxes. 27 OFFICES STATEWIDE ·····-or NEWPORT.PASADW !.Qcutlv•Oflleoo a c.1oo Offl"' ·-•· .,.., -bf real warm belort I feel Ute two cbll4roo -Patil, It, a opeaklnl ..,..moenb, or .,........,._ I ,.... I wu a Northwestern -· el off'lct • • h omew 0 rt,•• he Ufeguant too kin&: to like cold Ronald "Skjpper,'' Mal'tJ' lJ. oometlmes 1111 •·-• 1o the w1ter." Would llaqao wllll b!a UaUbg n--• ~ He ~ Uettile "bora llll cllildrtn lo gD lnlo polltlca! ~ NnK:R. dtiVD out ot me." But ht doea "I don't mow, " ht •11 Oc<uionally ht lell In • worlr: on his rol1Uvely flat llowl)>, "I 11111 bav• 111a1. ~ !:r: p~r.~i:-~ :::::.-~· ~~ :;::: ~f:i~ 1:!"'~ IUcb " WUU1m l"rend1 Smllll on meala. I oee too IDU,l' t b I a 1 • aed Holmes TuUle, or p1!11apo lloagto Md hb wile have ..._.,,. former Sen. George Murphy. :jF,;~;~~~~~~~~,====;~ I\ u bbemecldng molorlsla aometlmes are surpriled to 11"•111 ,_.,.IUI MW11111•1111 ,.. the governor plaYinl touch I RALPH G. MARCAREW CX) I football on hll front lawn ol • • hb Sacramento midenoe with the neighbor ldcb. "We c1on•1 HUNT1NGTON BEACH CITY really have enough for two SCHOOL DISTRICT teams," the '0. ye a ?•O 1 d IHOOISID IY -CO..CH.t.l• .. IM fonner college IUud Nys Mr. a Mr1. k .. ,, A"41"111 -Or11191 Cov11ty $clt11I 111"4 with a smile, "IO I pl1y Mr. l Mu. M1tth1w We'fllktr -Pr.1W1'tt, quarterback for both sides and Huntillfl•• htch Sdlool looril do all the pusin1.11 AND A laree heated pool Mr. I Mr1. Jo111 D111th•11 .. •11tllo -H1111tf11tto" ho1h ,,..111d -o M11111•n: Mr. I Mn. N.,bort Cr1wford -Dlroder of M111 .... d<minates the backyard, but J11011t; Mr. I M,., M. C. ldworG• -S1l11 Ro,rH011t1tt¥.: Mr. I Reagan says "The Ml'l'I got to Mr1. Ralph Daary -Airo•paco Proc11ro111011t Ma11afOl'I Mt. I be sblning and jf,s JOt to be Mt•. Ja11101 No,,,.a11 -Senior Fir1 l11tpoctor1 Mr. I Mn. D,rltht NO. l ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT Yo11111 -E11tl11aor; Mr, I Mn.. "'!lip l11•h -At+t>rMy: M,, I Mr1. Fra11lr: T11r11 .. 111i -Sonier vlca-Pra1lclo11ti Mr. I M" ...... ,. Cotl1cl -Taachor; Mr. I Mrt. Robort Cat'"' -0.11tol TMh11I• cl111: Mr. I Mrt. (, J , Sta11h:111bach Jr. -S1l1•1110111 Mr. &. Mrs. Charla1 Jf11111!119• -P11rcha•in9 Ata11I: Mr. I Mn. JoM01 Woilr -Da1i911 E~h1aar; Mr. I Mn. EclwaN loll -Cer,orotlol Ma11a9ar; Mr. I Mu. Pfiillip D'A1111a -f111l11oor: Mr. I Mrt. Wiiiia"' I.. Da¥i• -Paaco Officer; Mri. Soro Kah11 -RotriMI Mn. Halo11 lohlar -looklr:a1,.r; Mn. R11lh Nlclr:otlOll -Ho111 .. wifa; Mr1, Sito M1Kni9ht -Ho11sawlfo; -Mn. A.Ilise Fr•dof' -Ho1nawlfa. --Appia Bi-m Offlcto or SANTA IAlllWA ua N. Mlln St, Sobabpo\ cam. oon m.1411 Main otflc11 3316 Via lido, Newport Blltll Ot~57~t30 234 Mll"'lll '"• Norlil, D Cl]on, Calif, 0t4) 442-8811 3868 Suto Staot, Slnll Blrbo11, C.IW, CIO!l 687°tlll Nlpe Offlctt 3300 Jafforson Sllllt, ll!pl, Cllll. oon 25SJ310 READ THESE SIMPLE RULES! Once each hour KWIZ announces a name on the air and that person spins the Dream Wheel for a chance at Sl,000 c..Jt and hundreds of other prizes. Send a poetcard, or the attached coupon (with your name, address and zip code, including phone number) to KWIZ, Santa Ana, California, 92703. ONE ENTRY PER PERSON PLEASE --------------------------, KWl.Z DREAM WHEEL NAM"'-----------~ ADDRE:~-----........ ----- CITY------------- ZIP-------------I PHON I OP --_J --·----------- Usteee for Your llntt On The Air! xw1z ·I480 ON THE AM RADIO PIAL Main OfOct: 61 South Llkl Avtmit, hsadlm. a1~ 795-1441 CoT'Ot'll del Mar Offlcti 500 N._t Coater Orlft, ft"'JIO'I lllCll Ot4) 644-1461 3310 Eal foothill Bo/Inn, -UIS! 71154447 limo! Grm Office, 7770 8"'6wly, ltl!IOll Grave, Calif. 014) 413-8811 N1Ho1U1! City Offk11 30.S E. 8th St. N1tioftlJ CiQ', Canf. qJ4) 477-3111 SlnDlqo~ 550ll Biibo* Ave111e, Sa Dleco. Calif. 134 North QJ1nd!l11 Avanat, Qltndo11 01~ 27MOOO at~ m4043 &comtldo 001co, Woodland Hiiis Offlce:: 1500 E. Valier Pkwy., &:ondJdo, Cant. t9900 y.,,,,, Blvd., W'°'""'d Hllil, C.llf. 0141746-3990 at~ 346-3920 m:•1&MWm Of· THE SOUTH M1JnOfflcts 8347 It M"111'd., II M .... Colli. 171-046M441 fJIOlllvt Officio 2320 fifth .... Sa Dleao. Colli. 17141 mns1 laJoll10fflco, 7877 lvtnl>ol An., It 14111, C.IW. OIG45M275 P1elflc !llCh ()ffice: 1001 61rn1tSt. Sin DJ110. Cllff. 01~ 483-tOll ()j1\ Offlct: Pftllllfll Offices · 110 Sout1t Vll!tun St, OW, C.IW. !805l6'U523 t27 N°"' ll<lloftll Biid., 1'1111-ClllL oon1~t Mon&clto Offich 1412 L v1n11 Rd.. Santi 11r1>m., eanr. ll'l!llBML--llOO) 969-3207 BmltY Offlcto m'BIRLaMllnlll 122·Mlln '""~ ,,....,, Cllll. OF THE NORTH Ot~ 344-4510 Main OffJc11 C.lnlco Offlttf 325 '""'"'' ·-~ Ct!IXl<o, Collf. 90 s .. u R"' An. S..11 Roll, C.llf. 01-0 357·1126 oon546-0544 San!• ROSI lr1nch Clffle1: V Centro Office: Sth & Shit S•Hb, D Clolle, Ctlll. 715 H11lm1nn Drlvt, Slnta Roll, C,Uf. Ot-0 352·nIO aon546-0544 WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARIES OF $1.5 BILLION IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA 011!!1 I ' )I ~LV PILOT SC LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Jf(ITICI 01' IMTINTION IN TMI: SALi 01' llVJ•ACES TO l:NClA9• ALCO MOL IC A.prJI t 4 UTI TO WMOM IT M•V CONCEllN: klllltd t. t>\utllCt 91 tM ll(itn!W' •-.lied ""'' "'°'ICI II llerwbv 1lv111 flltl """ ..-.i~ Pl-lo ... u 1k<lftollc ii.....-.ft ,,.. prtrnl .... <tooulltMI •• ,._ .. -•• .,. 19, 1971 . .. 1111 ll'l!V .. I H"J.W. IJJ.00 "' ...... Ill Oii t"9 tlr1t N• ol Mcti •"" '"'"'' """"" Wltfl l11l•N1l1 !tit,_ •I 1'l'ie rl" ol 1". -·-· 1111111 MIO Ill full. T,,. ll1i...ct dw fl" WIO ""'' 11 OI ANM ir1. 1t11 , 11 u .sn.». "'' 1111 pl-tell 10rlfl(:IHI •..cl l"!M•l l lot Ylllt '-" rnAd9 1111 A,orll I, ltn. t.114 llOlt IA MW<M by t triist Otft v-"'-fol'9w!Pl9 Ol'krl!>H' ••If Pt-rT•: LOT U, 111 I LO(J( I. ol ll'le !otnU Fe T•Kt l" "" City « $I.rift Mollk1, It "" '"II' •"C--... .... . ,.. ·-"· ol MllCelt•-"fCOrltl, hi r11t offltt o1 •Ul'O J<t..-f 91vd .• Ctl•ll M•U .,,_ 111-*r ol said'°"""'' ,....,..,,.nf 10 1uc1o l111t11llon, 11w. T1rm1 ol .... ,,.,. 111 ltwtvl ,,_,. ol -1r1lt MOI It t~1Y!,,. ~ !ht 0.trlmt1'1 ,,_ U111!"11 llt!tt Oii c.<>11,,'l•Tloll ol WI•. ell Al«ll>oll< It""'',. Contt'111 lor la1v1nc:1 T111 ... mm ,o1 •m.wnt bid 19 bt ""°'' Ill' tr1nlffr !Ill, 111 1lc""11Mk .,.. .. ., • .., llH w!"' lmr. 11e-1or lk.fft-l for Tl\e,t ......-ni." • 81d1 or oH•fl to be !11 ,,..111.,. •nd will *"'°"""': "' recttYld"' 1t>t •ior.Mlcl &Hie•••'"' ON $Al E GfNEflAL "-•lttf' 11\e llrlt 1t¥lllleatloll ller111f •'Id 1'-FIOol Plltlllt Eatl"' Pl-l be!!lrt .S.lt ef 1•W. A~yOM <le•ltl"' to Pl'lllt •I HM h1111iw;• C.IH INI 1&11'1 4"' el ...,.U, 1'11 . . - Jn High Gear et aldl lklf\1t(1) 1•11y lilt I ...,HIM CUlll:TIS OPl'ELT "-" .., .. elll<t of '"~ Dn.,....,.111 di E•9Ci.11'111r AltQllOllc ·-·-CO!llrt>I, or lw .... u i. of \Ole wlM ., tM ~rlrntlll M Jrilcdlolle ltwet-te 111d DK.Htlll Control, 1)13 O Sir.at, S-cr1•1,.nte, CYJllL A. WALTON Ctlllor•ll tJl1'4. 1'0 11 lo bf rectlYN W I T_,...ON:t ........,.,. IWlll\111 JO Cl•YI Ill !!'If cllle !!'If .... -T ..... 1-. C:.llltl'llla ""J Set for Fall Introduction Oflf'llllU "'' llrol M>1!..,, 11111 ... T .. , 0111 11l-4JJ1 • .....,,.,, tor Cltftltl 11 -ldt\t ev It'll'. ""°"""" fw ••ta11W ,. .... t•eno!...i •rt -lk:t'fl..., for TM Pitllll~ O•tMI Cull Dtll1 •11111 .. i. o1 tlc"'°lk: bewtt-• Tl'MI lorf'll of .... u 11, If, U. ltTT M-11 .,.,llktllcn m1y De obtt l""' "'-'"" 1--------------: _,,1._. fll IN Otlltrt.....,1. C>URLAC, ltlC. LEGAL NOTICE l'ubllahfod 0,.,,.. Cust O.\lr "1lell------~~------I ,U.11 It. 1'11 t61-7! 1'·1Ul1 NOTIC• Ofl Ml• or: LEGAL NOTICE ••.t.L ANO l"EltSONAL l"ltOl"•lllTY AT --------------1 Plt lYATI! SALi IAtl :nn NH. A-4121t I JMll A...ant I Ul'l!JllOll COURT OP THI In fl>o SU11trlor Courl el 1M Slttl el STATI! O' CALIPORNIA FOlt C1llto<11l1, .... 1111 Cw11ty ol Ort,,.., TMI COUNTY 01' o••HGI! If! "" Mt!ttr "' lfot E1t1tn ol JA(I( Nt . A""-WALL.AC!! JOHNSTON!!, l llO --~ ti Honer OP Hl!ARINO Ofl l'l!TITtoN J•<-J""'''-· '"" JOA" ITEWA•T JIOR l'ROIATI! OJI WILL ANO JOHNSTONE , t !oo --R <f* Jotn Elletll Ll!nE•S Tl!STAMfNTA•Y Jo1u11-. O.Ct•~. 1!1lt11 M LC>Ull 11\0ltRIS STEUBE•. Nolke II lltr-.. elWll llltf l~t Ce•:t•H<I Ul'IOfrlltMd wm MU " "''"''' N!t, lo NOTICE 15 HElllEIY GtVl!M ti.al "'-~"'"91 and bnt bldOtor, Mlltcf ta MARY LOUISE KOHAUT 11ti lllM ~''~" """lnn1tlon ol 1110 SuPlrllH' Court, on OJI • !ll'llllOll )or PrOCNI• ol Wiil ...... for ,,,.. JM :ttlll 6-r el A.,-tt, 1t11 At ... IHlllK1P el LlllH• THIMMf'llarv to olfk l ti KENNETH M. YOUNG, 121 l'rl!lloNr. r.HrtMI le ~lcll 11..,.. lor Sovll\ l....nY Drift, 8n1,,., MMll, !urn•., Nrlkultr$, trel 11>11 1111' !lmt ..... Cfll+,Mlt "21' c...;.,,.,. of "'°' ......... tltc:t el """"' ttie sttnt ,.., ...... $1'1 lltt. ol CtUlornlt, •• fllt rllihl, tlllt 1..ct lor MIY .. 1t11, •I t ::IO 1.m .• In "" ll'llfrnl el llkl clectMetl •• "'"' 11-"' «>Jrlt_., o1 DtP•rlmffll Ho. J ol 111d dttlll '"" 111 lflot •lliht, 11111 ,,... lnJtrffl courl. illf 100 Ci~k Ce<11..-Orlwt Wbl, !ft ,,..I 1111' t1l1!1 of llld 4'eetlstd 1'41 ' tt.e Clly ol s.t11!1 A111. Ct ll!or"lt. tc:Olllr.., by -•lien ot 1-or oll'>l,...IM, 0.IHI Al>rU !4. llTI OIMI' "'"" or 111 ..,Gillon "' lhtl of Mid w. e. IT JOHN, Otc:tfMCJ, ., 11\1' t!m1 ol Off!h, !fl t lld IO (OUMY (lffk All ll'lr Arl1ln •t•I '"" "''°"'' llfOH!'ll' HALL Sl!fl Y ll1Ut1H I" Ille cltv ol S111 Jutn S\l'lhl -. $«11rll1 l•M l ulldl111 c1,lttr1no Cov"tv or Ort"'"· Slt!t ol Ill Ml!'ftl MllR ltrffl C•lllort1l1, 1>1rllcu11r11 OtK.tlbM .. SMll• A111, CtM~ n7'1 1011ow1, 1-11~ Tel, QS.1111 l'tral Ir Attw"" tw: hflll-Loi 11 In 81trt l M Trtel No. 5.514, '" P'ublkMd °'""" CNSI 0.HY I'll"' lht Cllv d 5.,, Jutn C10J1lrtM. CcvMY AMII 11, lt, 2,, 1911 l.Sl·11 d Or_, ililt of C1llfotnlt 11 .,,_.,. LEGAL NOTICE P~Utt (llTI•ICAT• OP IUllNllS l'ICllTIOUI Jl lllM N•Mll THI UMDE•$1GNEO "° 1111111 111rlbv tertltv tlltl """ Wiii bl ~ttl... I f'lltrlnr 91Ktronlc• rrH1rdl bl.lllntu ti lOolJ SI. ATWiii Dt .. lOI Al.,..!lot, Cllllor11l1, IHIOer 11>t tklltlcvi firm Mme II' l"ACIFIC MAll:INI! 11.ESEARCH A$$0C1ATES ..... 11\.11 lllcl firm ls (aftl_,.., ot ~ to!11Mr11'19 ,..,_ ... Wl'loM ........ 111 full •rel t1Kft el <"elldtl>U ••• 11 fol!0\111, IO-W)I' Ill Jtc:lr I", S1GV1k, 1014 I . F•l,...1y Orl~t. No. J, Ori,,,.., C1llfvrnl1 f0r"'lft (ool'llY) !JI Rlcl'ltrO C. l tlfOOll, :IOC St. All11111 Orlv•, lot ALamll1111, Ctlllorlllt 10r1nt11 Coo;nrvl tlflfNESS our lltlldl fh lt 1111 11111 tf AorlJ , lf11 . Jt111. P. Slortfk R!011nl (. 11190Dd l fATI!: OF CALIFORNIA COU NTY OF LOS ANGELES SS. en t m11 rtc:orO.., 111 80Dk 202, """ '' N 11 llOth ln<lu•lwt d MIS«Jl•-Mtpl, <KOtOt M Of-Ccvrilv, C1llfot11l1. 1"1re1t ?: At1 UllCllwlOM 117Uh l11Hrtll In Loi 7S ti l lodl l of ftltl NII. 5.!U, 111 1119 (111. ol $1n Juen C1ol11t1"°. Caunty el Ort .... , Sl1!t el C1Hfot1111, 11 ''-" Oii I mll •KO<O"' 111 loo« 102. NOft 74 lo 11 lndu1lw1 of MIKel l1..-n Mlpt, ,tcord1 oA Or1t1t1 Counlv, Ct lllort1lt. Pltttl J: An "'..ctlw!Olcl l/llOtll l11ltttll I" Lill A. I , C, 0, E, F, G. H l tlO I ol TtlCI Ho, SS11, In f111 (ilY GI ''" J111n Ctp11lr1"°, C~nly ol OttllO•, Stilt ol C'1111or n11. 11 ;1h0Yln en 1 '""' t*«Olifi t.I 8Gillk l'O'I, 11011 i1 Ill ll ltlCl\ll!YI el Mlktfll-1 MlpJ, •Korfl 01 O•tnf" C-11, C1Ufllrril1 m 11 re tlOIT'motl!Y l!MWfl .,, I condoml11l1Jm Ul'lll ,, u oi1. A ''"'' dt "'"°· $t11 Jutn Hlllt. City ol S,11 JI/Ill (Dill,ll•G, ,ttMtlll .,.._.,., C:PNbh ol t11r11llw1 111d .... 11ta111net ll>trt1t. SAID l"ROPEltTY IS I E I NG ADMINISTE•EO EQUALLY IN THE l!STATE Of' JACI( WALLA C E JOHNSTONE IA.wit) AND THE ESTATE OF JOAN STEWART· JOHNSTONE (A-4ltt0!. T1•m1 of wle e111\ In l1wful monrY of 1omml11\enM llld I-ti. -MlllUV 1!w UnUtd Slttn on Ull'lflrm1llon of Mii •-••td J1dt '" S•itll •I'd •1c1won1 C. Tin Pttetf'lf tf 1tnollfll tllO to bl 01P011ttd 8119ooO ,_ fll mt to Ill llM """°"' Wlll'I bid ..... " --MIOKrlllld to tlll wllfll11 1101 .. tlWI M M i.. wrllll'lt •NI wMI l ... lt'llme!OI, ..... l~ltdMll Ill lfl4 llltf bl n<:tlw.., •I 1M tlortNkl all ltl 11 I"~ ""'•N u:i~~ •• ~ =•l!OP 1 fltvt II-ttltt !tit llrat Mllc1tlon Mrtol 111d Off THIS $11'1 011 ol April, A.O., 1t11, Mlort me, Gltnn11 E. Fll1•orll0 • Hot1rv P11b!lt In tlld fat' 1"9 wkl Coul't1 1nO Slt11, rH101nt llltrtlfl. <I " I y " ' lltfor1 0111 01 1llf. ""rlUnlo Ml '"" ~-11'111 llllJN f'llY 011111 11\ls Ult! dt't' o1 AllrH, 1'11 .,..l(lt l .... !ht .... .,..i YNr In 11111 ll:OY ALLEN SAARI C•rltlle1N nm ...... '""'"""' Admlnl1!•1lor \lllll!•lllf·WIM IOtllt/11 S.111 A""''"' 01 111r 1111111 Glt!llWI '!\'.• Plh.ttrtlO o1 Miii l)oo(Hl...,ll. Nottry Plibll< -C1Hfat11l1 l(INHITH M, YOUNO 1"rlt1tlH I Otfkt I" 111 $wlll •-•lr·Ortw l« Mtlllt'l Ctut1t1 ......,., HHli. Ctlllltll.I fftU M1 CorMllnlotl EJ<p!(ft Tll1 IJ1fl ·c• MID'• 1111 J·711b At>ril .. 1'14 ··~· l"ubllll\N Or.,_ COii.i 0.111 Pli.I AflwMY ..... Atlftl.,..,,..._ CTA A.rll 11 If '6. Mrt :a, 1f11 nf.71 l'11bH1Md Ort,.,,. (Dill Otl1J l'\lel. ' ' ........ "· *'· 14. lt7l Uf.11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE By CARL CARSTENSEN Of 11!t Diiiy Jl'lllt SMff Although not available in the. U.S. until early fall Mercedes- Benz is proceeding w ith plans to introduce their new two- seater touring sports car. Ifs equipped wilb a 230 horsepower. 3.5 liter, fuel injeeted V°"' engine, rour·whHI disc brakes, fully independent suspension. and is said to be capable of a top speed in exc w of 125 mph. Called the 350SL, tbe North American version will have a 4.5 liter (276 cubic inches) engine designed to meet 1972 emission specifications. and also designed l• run en unleaded fuel. This is the latest in a long line of two-sealers to come from lhe world's e Ides t auto mobile manufacturer, D a i m I e r • Benz. Earlier models include the classic 300 SL. Gulwing coupe, the 300Sl. roa~~~ lllOSL, 230SL, 250SL and ~L models. The new 3SOSL has been designed with the accent on providing the driver v.·ith the best possible environmental condiiioni;, Mercedes ·officials have iaid. The windshield wipers, for example , cover ari extra-large amount of glass area. And when the rain is wiped off the windshield, a sp e ci al ly designed slot in the support pillars carries it upward, thus - keeping the side windows frff of dirty water. The heating • cooling • de- frosting system operates not only on the front or the car, but is also routed through the doors and toward the rear window so all glass areas v.·ill Coast Man On Council be cleared. Jn addition, this provides for uniform heating or air conditioning throughout the car. The safety belts 3 re attacbed to the seat frame, thus allowing a good lit regardless or the )>Osilion of lhe seat. They are also on inertia reels rolling up when not in use. The new four-spoke steering wbeel has a padded boss, the spokes and the rim form one unil. and the rim is wrapped in polyurethane roam t o provide for a belier grip. As for other fealures. the 350SL is equipped with a gas lank located d eep with.in the body or the car, which minimi2:es lhe chance or fuel Joss or fire in case of a rear- end collision. The tank is also protected -both front and rear -by bulkheads that isolate it from the passenger and luggage compartments. In order to make the driver's intentions more obvious to other cars and lo pedestrians, the d irectional indicators are not only visible from the front and rear, but also from the sides. In ad~tion the oversize r e a r ta1Jlights are of a s pecial aerodynamic shape designed to shed road dirt. thus maintaining their brightness. A~ a final point. the outside m irror (which has a remote- control adjustment inside the car) is designed to break away in cast or an accident. All 350SL models will be delivered with radial tires, power brakes and power steering as stan d ard equipment. Other items may be included as standard for the North American versions cf the car, Daimter·Benz flfficials said. RECORD TURN-OUT EXPECTED FOR CONFERENCE Registrations for the 26th Spr ing Business Conference of the Dealers Association of su"•••o• cou11.t o' TM• A N e w p or t B' a ch Southern California m a y STAT• 01" ULll'Oll. .. IA •011 HOTtc• INYITIN8 l lDI b • h be d TH• cou1tTY op o•AH•r Notic• 11 ,,.,eny ,1.,..., "'''.,.. 1un1 of us1neS$man as en name exceed last year's record of .... A-4f1N T"'"'"" 01 Int Cot•t c...,muna, Col"'9e to the Pltl!bur""' Paints 802 d' t ·d t Pact Sla ted On Mer ger NOTICI! 0' HUllllNO OP ... TITION District of 0.111111 C..nl't'. Clllfonlle, will 6'' ' accor 1ng 0 pre!.! en 'ott ,.oun Of' floR11coN WILL rKeJ .. 1 1••1tO 1>1G1 "' 111 11 ~00 , m, Marketing Council, a 13-man Dick Amcld, as southland auto Abtt\IJF .~ A " 0 p 0. l I: TT I! • I 0 JI T.....,,..,, M•• 4 1''1, tl ""' Purcllt1lnt group that will revk!w ways. d I I d' Abl>!Lb , 10 ADAUMllTU.ltoN WITM ·TM•·WIU. ~ .... ol •llO ld'IGol 0111!'1(1 ioC.41!f'(J ,, ea ers converge on n 1an ACF Ind 2.<IO .t.NN•x10 u10 Ao....,. Aw•n111. CM•• ""''""· to improve marketing pro-Wells for the meetings ~~::',,'..'k, ·:: E11111 "' EYl!"L YN v o s H E L l c1Hforn11, •' w111cJi """ 1.110 to10• w1u " grams and devise n e" beginning Tuesday. Aom•E• .u.1 FOLGE•. Ole•~-Ollblltl'f _,..., ..... •••O f",: k ti I . f PPG . . Ad Mlll/1 .JO HOT ICI! IS HEll:E8Y G!Yl!N 1~11 J""" MICll:O$COPfS (Mlth·l<!mttJ -Golden mar e ng act v1ties or Arnold attributes increased ACICl••n ,)Og M11ro11 ~·· 1111!!11 r.t<1111 1 1111111°" ""' w11• co111e1. lndustr'ies' consumer pai'nts d 1 . t 1 1 . Aom1r11 ••(11)111 o1 for1ltfl will •NI fol" Lttttro 111 All blOI 1,1 to tit ln 1ccordtn(9 wl!~ · ea er in cres 0 growing A1•n1~t1 1 .io A6mlt11s1r.i1o11 w1111.111 .... m • n n' • • 0 • t11e 1n11r11Ctltlll 11111 conc1111on1 •NI Mar1·0 Pacini of HO""" of conf"d ·, "· C 1·r · Aert11Lt 11'1 1 -· -, , , ... ...,.. 1 ence n 11.1n:: a 1 ornia A•ulrre co ,.,..,.,,,,., ,.. Wll ' I mHt for ,,.r1111r S<>ttlfltttlon1 ""'ICll t<"e MW. on lilt 111d C J k nd lb Alletll I 11r11c.u11,.., 1rw:1 ,...., ...,. n-•l'IO 111ee m ... .,. lllVl'N 1n 11>1 '""' e1 "" o or, 3325 Newport Blvd., has new car mar et a l.o e Al• ProtJ,,~'Xff> d llttrl11t""' MfM II" Mff' Ml tor Mt'f l'urc:llt1Jne A"'71 el 111<1 KllOOI llll1trltt, '-AA d l ••· r •..• ·1 l" J b •••• l be d A!rJ>rd pl4 1J 1. 1tn, 11 •:• 1 m .. 111 ~ courlr_,, ot EKll to!lllOtr ,,.,.,11 wtwnll wllfl hi• ,lcl , uq;n name O un:: .....,wrCl 1me Y SU J"""'-" 0 covere Air lllHI .lOoa o....mntrrt Ht. ' et 111111 eourl, 11 1e0 t 111111r'1 c11tc11. ter111iw cl\Kk.. ,,, by Richard P. Cook. vice by nationally re c o g n i :z: e d }',,.!..nau, •,•,"n Chlk t..,tw DrM Wt•I, '" Ille Cltr Gt blOcltr'• _,,,, mllllt H rllli. i. !tit Ot$t 'd f I d I d I d h -· s.111• A"•· c.11toN111. fl/I ,,.. '°'" c...,,,"'"11' cciii..1 Dh1r1ct pres1 ent o ra e paint sa es in ustry ea er! at t e A1t Gti 1.1a O.ltd ,..,.,. 1s. 1m 1ur11 o1 '"'''"' 111 111 -1 no1 1111 for PPG'a Coatings & Resins business sessions beginning :J:e':"roc1"'.B1 W. E, St JOHN, 111111fW.11n:mt (i'!lol of fflt iwm bid 1t W d d . , "-lbl•ftr"' ;w. MA•WOO" c~;:.~•:-•AOICIM•ON • eu•r•"'" 11111 tl'MI 111ot01• wm 1111 ... 1n10 Division. Maker of Pittsburgh· e nes ay morning. Ale•" Al""' 1 ... 111, "'opoltd CGnt••e1 11 "" ••-1, brand painta, PPG is the na-Conference C h a I r m ~ n ~:~~;-,:,~ro1 .:: s11tt1 Mlll!M« Uoi. •w••Ofd 10 111m. 111 lh• ..,,~, o111llu•• to Wi'Jli·am Symes re~rts the •,•,•,~m,c,I ·.',~ •. o. ••• ,,.1, '"'" 1""' •11tll eon1rK1, "" ~ ., lion's third·largest paint pro-'"' .... .... Sii ,..,.._, c111w °''1'· "'"'d!Kk ... m bl 1ot~11.., ,,, In"" ut1 due"-. f" ak ·11 be R •~ C Alleol ud 1 .a ......_, lklO. Clllftrllll nMJ • '°' Ill ... .... irsl s:pe e r WI Ouic1 I . Alteol ud pf 3 '"' <n<> ... >•• ol 1 bvftd, !I'll tull 111m ...,., w l,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii.--miiimmol'''--< • 16rftllt0 fll 111111 K'-1 d!il rkl. """"' A,....,.., .... ,...Iii.-. Ho blOMr 1'1111' wlll'IOtlW hi• ••O ..... • AlllH c~ 1,7!1 l'vtlll'lflld Or~-(-1 l)tlt'f -•lol -loO ti IOllY.f~ (olll OIYl :""'"'1-(I'll• l'tlllkll Alll1ff111tfl'lotftl) :Ui:l~lll.1Sii° .t..>r!r 11, It, u .: ltn W -n JDI 11!.r ftflf 411• Ml for 111r ......,1"' Alli.., I'd .61 '~''"'· ELECT l.X) Arn""'l" •• LEGAL NO'J1CE lM lo.r• of Tru•I~~· r11tr\l et lllt Al!l.O '' Pl• -----~~~------1 prlwllHt of r1l1t1IM 1111 •M 111 b.Ot or ~!'1\fl:h5,3,; ""°.. IG WAIW l llY !trrl~lt•lllt1 11 1 Al rk!tAut .IO CllllTl ,ICA'f• 0, 8USIM1$1 l~lormt!lllff '" ,,,.... blO or In"" blf01t11. A!Dh• P Cl'I'!\ ,ICTITIOUS HAMl °"'": Mt1 •, 1111·11 :00 1.m, ~~~sJGllD1.60 T~ 11nderal111td ,,. c:trtllY *'t't' ''' $1....0: FA Bu LA AMIAC ·'° r(lollllltll"" I lll;MllH 11 IOOS 1111'1 SI~ Nor,,..tl'I !:. W•'-Arntt E1 1.1'0 CO.It MrSI, Cllltw"ll, Uftllt< 1t>t Stell'. lot•d ef Tt111tto"° Am E1 "'!·~ llC1111ous firm ........ el CUSTOM '00NO ' l"Vb!litltO a..-'"" O•llt PllOI .AmHIH . '" a l!LECTRONICS Ml"O .• •fllll ltitt ulcl Mrll lt.,.. ''" l )S.11 t::r.~11f..ll:A 11nn 1, c...,OOMd ol lflot Hllllwlfte -· Am Airlift .• -n-• "' II.IN ....0 1!1en Pl LEGAL NOTICE Allalo;er ,1QQ r1Meellc1 ••t 11 IO!lo\ll•· and A II""~' J 1'0 Je<T'I SI•_,.,, ltlJ Yltlt C1u011, A,..,•r.sl 1.20 N~-t llr...:11. Ct llt. L•OllL NOTICI! • ~"'c.n'~1l'.~ Fr11'111 Krotrtt Jr .. 1104 W. CO.JI POUMfAIN YALL•Y SCHOOL OISTll.ICf Am C ! ijwy,, N•WflO•l ll1M:ll, Ctlll, MOflCI IN~ITINO SIOI /I, (11t,:i'r.10 Otltlll....,ll l, lt71 NOTICE IS HE•EIY GIVEN 11'111 ~ BORANIAN A?rvs.i: l.<IO J .. ,. Sit~• fto.rO ol TtllSlllJ ol ll>t l'ount1ln Vt ll•v ~mY1~11111112~t "''"' 1Cr011,. Jr. Scllllol Oltlrlcl fl/I O•-• Ceunl'I. IA0•1ltr1 10o $TATI: OJ' c.Alll'O.N!A, Ct lllor..t1, wlll •K•lwt ltt ltd ~101 "' la Am O..tlVt" OltAHGl COUNtY l :M 1".M. on ltof lr<I 01p ol M1y lt11 If "'°""'' 01 M~ Ofl Al>rll f, l"l, be•-,,..., • Hot••• ll'lt 0111(1 fl/I •11<1 •C-1 Oollrk'I, lo(11td AmEll'w 1 10 l"Wllc In -lw tt•O Sitt•. tfl'IOlllllf 11 """"""' O..... l !lll"'°'™' L-/torllf• ST s /l,m E•~ hwl •-•,.,,, Jffrv $1tl'lltt11 '"° "r•nk of N•w•-•llCI T•lti.ro Fou11111" YtllV , TRU EE l ~n~F~ ~:o. IC!IUll' Jr., known t1 mf 11 ~ lllr C1lllort1!1, ff10ll, 11 ""''di tlmt 1•10 blC11 A Gtnlnt JO HfltM """°'' fll-1 1•1 tlltl,ul~ lo will bl ~bl!tlY _...., Ind row ~ A (,nln ~II.ti ~ ~1::::a:"":.':!..~l'IO •t k"'""' 1 "'MCI ~..;.~:1111 '° wlldl••' 11111 '' 1 "' rwo TUSTIN UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT ~~=~· (~ IOfflcl1I .. t i) 1't1Y•lllM "'''' ''" 11 ltttlowi: !m"'~~1•"Pf~ ,,.,...., 11'1'1 Mor'°" A""'l"ltlrAl\otl .llJ If< P>our Am lnv11 . .SO HoltrY 1"11111~, c;.ll'ornl1 H••lll'I •NI Wt lltrt .J~ "' P>ou• "' Mfdl(ll 11 l"•lf'CIN I Otlltt lfr Alll'l!llltttll!I "'""° .OJ"' '"""' VOTE FOR NEW A MllCI• '·'° Or-(Ollnly P•n1loll 73 oer hoUf A Mtl(!~ Pl • ..... U I, 1'7) Ytt1tlon lO llf'I' flour Am Nlo!Ott 1"11l1llltltd Ort1•M c.,11 Dtll'f -11'111 Lil• IMu••11tt ,10 "' llou• RESPONSIVE TRUSTEES ~NR•;:i:: ~: Afl'tl n, It, llro. ""-1 :I, 1tl! 1(11).71 Ptrtr,1111 .. , ~ "*"""'' JIUIMVlllMI "'"' ~ttl It LEGAL NOTICE ''" .n ""' ""'' 1.m s~lr "' ltl'ldblttll"'I U." H r 11 t11 r , A s.... l.tO •ICTITIO~-:":uii .. ••• ~:..,-;i:~":111~::.!v'";!t~!~:4 :').~; YOUR VOTE IS CRITICAL ~;::sf,::~,;: N.t.M• STATIM ... T llouf, -~llf'l'mt" SirtY S\1111'911411 A,•, ••.•,' 4 T1'ot fo/lewl"' --t. lllol"' blnl11tH N.,, "'' Mu• Ti ... All ltlOI ••• " llt J11 l<CO!'O ttlCI with Am r~ 1 '.0 Oulel (-, SUM Gr-llflttr" (tfllll!i.m, l"'l'llCI ..... t l'llll 1.-«~tlonl :~"tr!c IO 0.M "-!. C.lltOl n!t ""'Ir" t •t 1v1llt\ll• In Ill• Oll!rltt OlllU A,.,,,., .o •1.11.t.ullANT AOV l!HT u ••1 1Nc .. "IN NO•to• l~~·ll'olor, I'll.",**· Vote Tuesday, Apri"I 20 .._ .. 1 .,,. ~ L.-. IMt lt 11¥111~ IGJ, "'-IY OltOfJl 0,-THt: .. MF Inc tO llltdl. c.fl,.,..,,11, MlA•O 0 ' fJl\ISTl!lL 1/1,m•tr 10 I AM-Ill( .. Tlllt .... !_ It Wlllt cenficltf'"' A 'OUHTAIN VALLEY iCHOOL ........ ,.o~ Ila C•-1llcw1. OllTRJCT 1im111.,. 1~• I-.. • ' w L , , ,, Cmnml!l"I" Ta f.l~t F11huh1 ·8l'l~nlen "'m•••• 1c I w!~ ,.,1. II I LIAN c .. ~ml1• ,,,,,., flrtt, ct••K OF tiff: MIA•D Chmi. S h1rlr.v P1llPy. lfl l 12 Glllm "n. l l"Vlnt ,.,m11., ~• ~ ~ 0r..,,.. C-f 01\lr 1'11111 •111tn...... O•tt'M (Mii Dlilr P•lt!' ' • Am1••0 1 .0 A"{)f 11/ ,,, Jt •lld MeY .l lf71 ... II All!'~ It •1111 ""'U 2'. lfn Ill• i """1 .at • Complete-New York Stock List ) I ) • L OAILY PU.01 Jf r~ !Ii~' Complete Oosing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ' B ONLY PILOT • llllllEyes Primary Prospects WASH!NGTON (AP) -Hu- bttt H. ·Humphrey, inclOng .i-1o DemocniUc preslden- 1111 candidacy, says a crowded field may prove next year'• primaries tndeclslve-a aitua~ tloo likely to benefit the Mln- nesota senator. Humphrey, narrowly defeated by President Nixon In the 1968 race, allo says he will decide near the end of the year lo enter the primary competlU-on. "rm mt aoln& to uy wbat will hlppen UDlll I know whit I'm going to do," Humphrey &aid. "fll declde about the end ol thia year. I would hive lo take a 1oolr: then at what, ll lJlJ1, prbnarles I would enter. 0 Humphroy bypiwed I he primaries In winning, u vice president, th e Democratic presidential nomlnatkm i n 1968. He aaid It II ,possible, but m!y "an--OUtlide poulbllity, .. that a Democrat who does not 111\el' pmlclentlal prlmarieo eould emd'ga with the 1m nomination. He aald he ll in no hurry to make a decision about can- didacy. Even after cleeldlng, ""!lumphroy 11ld. he may not dedm' hll lntenllona for a while. Humpbny &aid be will ... how be II re<elved around the counlry, analyze the polll, and -a political eoune at the] tum.d tlie year. "'lbll Im ~ got llarled loo .,.. from the vlewpoiDI of the Democrall anyhow," be•aaid. ' The polls now . •!tow BllJl1Pllroy moving up. among Iha prcspecta for im nomina- tion. 'Die lilt lllll i.. headed In most li.ri\ple1 by Sen. Edmund S. Muaklo of Maino. Humphroy aald be doesn't know what mates the polla move. • Mood.,, Ajlrll 19, 1971 Silent GUARDll 4-PlyNylon • 36.;.Month Guaranteed • Foarfull plieeofmgged nY!on cord for atrengtb, longer wear. Cooionred 1afety 1bonlden SIZE TUB ' 6.50<13 8.25"14 TUBE 6.50>13 7.35"14 7.7Sxl4 8.5Sxl4 7.75d5 &lSxlS USsIS Priaea EffeC!iYe Smulay, Aprit 18 tbrn Tnl!Oday, April20: • . . SAVE '6 PerTire Off RegnlarTrad&-ln Price! Guardsman 4-PlyRayon 30-Month Guaranteed • Foll 4-ply rayon cord for smooth ride~ long wear 23.95 17.87 L7 95 20.87 2.0! 28.95 22.87 2.14 31.95 25.87 2.32 TUBELESSWHifEWALIS . ' ·~ 7.35x14 30.95 24.87 2.01 7.75xl4 32.95 26.87 2.14 8.25x14 35.95 29.87 2.3 8.55xl4 38.95 32.87 2.50 8.25xl5 36.95 30.81 2.37 8.SSxlS 39.95 33.87 2.48 "I haven't been ·doing mucl:I,'! be aald. He ta.Id .he v has declined lnvit.ations lo ap- pear at political meetings with other prospeCuve candidates. A1kAboutSeanCo...,.,nieniCreditPlam. "I dl,m't Want to have It ap- pear' that I'm JIO"turlng as a candidaU!," Humphrey aald. But be has, Increasingly been on hia feet in the Senate, often challenging the ad- minl.stration of the PreJident wh\> defeated him. He alao remains cha Lnnan of the Democratic Policy Council. a n is:sue-drafUng panel which has called for withdrawal of all American troops from South Vietnam by the end of this year. He has been making speeches, but has so far avoid· ed the kind of cross-<OW!try sampling aod s p e aking :missions underta ken by Muskie aod other Democratic posst~iliUes; Sen. Haro Id Hughes of Iowa, Sen. Birch Bayb d Indiana and Sen. George McGovern of South Dami.a. Humphrey aald he an- tlclpata that Sen. Henry M. J ackeon. [).Wash., will join that list of candidates and likely candidates. It is becauae of the crowd, Humphrey aaid. that "I have a feeling there'll he leaa mean· Ing In the primaries." U the verdict from the primarles II divided , Humph- ries coqld be in a pasltion or strength from hll paot lllP. porters in orpnl1.ed labor and traditional party organl28- tionl, to move lnto the open- ing. Humphrey's timetable cer· lalnly wUI be affeded by one f11ture d the 1m resldentln l primary schedule: the •II ....,.. In which an rocognlze<I pn'Jlpectl for nomination will be listed on the ballot unlesa Ibey "'""'""" candidacy. The flrat, of U-cootesln -April 4, 1172, In WlloooWln. and a Democrat wt» wantl out wD1 have to aay ·TUBELESS , WHlTEWALL IZE . TRADE.JN PRICE 75-13 195-14 205-f4 $49 215-14 S54 195-15 7 205-15 215-15 ~5-15 10 by Feb. 19, declaring be II not llld hu no Intention of booomlni • candJd.ot. that •• 2 Steel Belts with Smooth Riding Raron Cord 175-13 Tllhel-Wlitt-.D Plu l.94F.E.T.Aad.Old'lln •Tread lifetime pJoa 40,000 mile tre•d wtar-ontparanlee RIVERSIDE INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY (JO mn ....... , Loo Anielea Janetion1 of Higbwayt 60 aa.d 3.95 r DISCOUNT TICKETS Avoilahle 0 · •t Seon Ticketron l w Sl•OFF Pt:!t.ase Price o'f Any I LEM ~:••(or•: ~iv~ni de Grand \ -· ,, • I ms. Priee SIO Ill 16 ~ SeanPrice 19 '$7 S5 year. ', '• l¥llfM .... , • ..-. .,...... • **"'" a4fl1 UN09A PM• ......Ut _.,...l&l OI ._, .... G ..... , COM"°" ..... ,,.,, M ...,.., NOUTWOOI' MO NMI IV.•S.aollllUCK.Al'fOCO. COVIHA ...... ,, fMOLIWOO• OI 1•1111 Wide Base Duplex Camper Tires LOCh.16.S 6-1'11 ..... 39~~ F.&T. • Ragged nylon cord construction •Made with long•wearing Dynatuf tread rubber I Express Highway ~auler T~"'lr 2 3 ?M=!G F.l..T. • 6-ply nted nylon cord construction for •trengtb and long mileage • Wrap around tread enabl .. beua-cor- n cring iu:. .1 more a tab iii ty NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED W. IUOI • Wtll •1'9tC • '°'° .. ...,.., ~-41• n1a emoaa.,.,.... ta •••m _...,.,, .......... ..,, '"lbal doel poM • llltle pro- Mlm ," aald Humphrey. then beadOd back lo the Senate lkJor lo debate the ~ ltl•p ...... , 1lM..-t•l P.M..Me•tW. a.t.ttMA.M. .. Ne ..... ,,.l••I• All• 01111.tlMe•t P-'L t ..... tll•r1., l•t. PAllottU .. 1~211. iJ"'4211 il'OMOMA NA Nl6t ............. PM'AAMAID7401 tM«Aft ....... .....011 11.tft'A .-0 G UTll toUftl COlll' tlAIA •• 1111 • ..,, ............ tt• WM .. ltll I - ' ,Capistrano Young as HISTORIC MISSION IN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO HAS SEEN ITS SHARE OF HISTORY Placid Scene 11 Center of One of Callfornf1's Most Colorful Villages ~~~~~~~~~~~ Plan to Propel Smog Into Sky Studied in LA LOS ANGELES (AP) -Scientists have an unusual plan to free smog trapped over Los Angeles and other major cities and It is getting support from the experts. The plan, proposed by General Electric Co., callil for giant doughnut-shaped towers that would release columns of hot air to punch holes in the inversion layer over Los Angeles and allow some of the pollutants to escape. "This 9ne has pcwibilities," sald A. J. Haagen..Smlth, head of the State Air Relources Board and the man who first analyzed photochemical smog accurately. His group glances over numerous smog· ending schemes a year. G. E. scientists say the evaporation towera would use hot air wastes from 1team driven turbine! ln the city's electrical power plants. The steam would be cooled in the towers and reused instead of being dumped into the ocean, a present procedure that worries ecologists because Jts heats offshore waters. G.E. envisions gigantic plumes of heated air rising from the 4QO..foot diameter doughnuts and then pushing through the 2,000.foot thick inversion layer over Los Angeles dragging with them two cubic feet of smoggy air for every cubic foot of air in the plume. The Inversion layer is a heavy lid of warm air atop a cooler layer and traps the smog in tht basin. City Pa1,9ty Set San Juan Capistrano's tenth &Jlfliversary celebraUon will take place Fri- day, April 23 at the El Adobe Restaurant. 1be San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring the event starting with a cocktail hour at 7 p.m., followed by dinner at 9. Honored guest. will be the city's present and past t'OWlCllmen and mem- bers oI the city slaff. _ Reservations for lhe event are due tonight, and can be made by calling Mike Darnold, president, or any chamber director. Tickets are '6 per person which can be sent to P.O. Box 268, San Juan Capistrano. Those attending are invited to wear fiesta costumes. Capo Trustees to Delay School Building Contract Trustees or the capistrano Unlfied School District will review a dress code committee and bear a progress report on the abandomnent qf Li .Playa Street It tonight's 8 o'clock meeting in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. But they probably will not award a contract for the construction of Dana Hills High School as they had hoped to do. Joe Wimer, director of administrative services, said today that all of four bids opened Friday were loo high. "The state is allowing us a maximum of $4,064,497," said Wimer. "The low bilider was W. J. Shirley of Pasadena at $1,148,000 ... Wimer added that by deducting some items the cost was still reduced only $30,000. •1'1\i afraid we will have to rebkt," he said addi.g tllat Ill possible alternaUvu ·m 'lklog !ludied prior to tonlghl'• meeting. Wimer said rebiddJng would delay the completion date of the new facility to mid-September, 1972. Also on the agenda will be a review of a dress code committee proposed by San Clemente High School Principal Darrel Taylor. The board will be asked to sugg,est people who might like 'to serve on the committee. A progress report on the abandonment of La Playa also will be given. The school district bas asked the state to abandon the street so that It can be U9ed for a bus parking lot. Mondot, Alw!l 19, 1971 S ' OAll. y I'll.OT r i • City, Rich. llistor • Ill 111 PAMILA IWJAN Of .......... ..,, The city of s.. Juu caplltnno became 10 yeon old focllJ, But Ibo ru1 lilt ol , lbil municipal lnl1nt fl tla pa(, ~.~ of ptrate raldt. lndlan rebellloi1s • llld bandit attackl. · It II one ol Cllllornla'• oldeat llld moot colorful V111agea. Yeateryear San Juan II embrolde...i with blttl!NW~t legend. Its blltory 11 ooe of 1dventure, lrony and color that bu enthralled script writers for decades. Not ooly WU ... JlllD Ille coonty'• oldest permanent Jettlemelll. but tt alao wu ~ county'• flnt ewr ballt under a muter ptao. U bad lta share ot o:cesaive tnaUm klOI before the current bowl aroee. It bad tla dlaaaters .. well. An earthquake only 1 few years after the mlssloo was establlsbed killed dozens ol residents. Jf it wasn't quakes which shoot the 1ett!ement, pirates, bandits a n d pollUcally·lnspired brawla toot thotr Utll. San Juan even hall tts · own · buried tr.uure laks. From UM! works of ,OrJ.np ~· lllstorlao · Don Meac!Owl -lhla Capsule hiatory: In October of 1775 P..W Fl'ancllco de Lasuen and Lt. Joae Frlllcllco Ortega otopped ln a valley w)ltrt h!P streama joined near Ibo Jodlaa \'Wiie or Sajivk They bad -told 111 Fllber Juntpero Serra, orpllher of .lhe espansim of ·the ,,._ -· If find a IUitsbll p . !or I miloloO noat ,I rillr IOUret •'1ndlln tr1b0o. ·"" ..,. m1oo1on ""' ID be callid S.. lea Ca~ after IL lol!tl ol Coj>fllran, an lll!lin marln li>on11111iildldlar'-• ~ polt bull! a' IDJ!knblft altfr. I ..-; llld bung -belll; eight ilaf• Iller catlle .,..s poclo arrived; ,""1 rill ...,..__olanlndlan~la ... ~ llld tmmedlateJy Ibo -...,.. burled llld Ibo ca!Ue llld. jOOCll aplrlted away. One year la\er Falber Serra came in person with soldiers and supplies, arriving in Capistrano from Spn Diego. In October or 1716 Serra, Padre Anurrio and 11 soldiers arrived. On Nov. 1, 1776, the mission was Connally eetabllsbed, and the Sen-a Chapel became lhe first permanent buUding ln what ls now Orange County. San Jwm Capistrano'• first "planner" was Father Juan Jose Nerberto de SanUago, who formulated a "muter plan" forllle mission, building gnmarlea, kilns, and" 40 little house! between it and Trabuco Creek. One of these houses, which Meadow• calll lhe oldest house ln Calliomla, ill the Rios Adobe al Ille end o! Verdugo street. The RID< !amlly sWI lives lhere. Father SanUago might be called Ille town's fll'St ."publlc works director," too, because of engtneerlng feats like bringing water through irrigaUon canals from the mek. In. 111111 quarters were built for a garrlaon of aoldJen stationed at the mis3ion to protect it from attacb of savage Indiana from tfie far side of the Santa Ana Mountains. These barrack!: still stand. Another building project, the great stone church built with stone hauled In from Dana Point, El Toro and Trabuco areaa:, did not fare as well. Completed In lSOB, the edifice crumbled in 1112 during a severe earthquake in whJcb 39 Uvea were lost. In 1819, caplstrano felt another shock -that of political turmoil in Mexico. Rumors spread that pirates, under the flag of Mexican revoluUonaries, were lady to allfc* Coplltnno. Ola mon, Ibo ihurdi -..... -.... bWI and burled, ~ The atllct -..... ,._ ... DIC. ~ . Tales ol ICll\ llilrlod ·tru '11(1 11111 IUZ'Vive. Jo Y'"" 1111 lallowed, tllt mlldoa •11 graduallJ ~ llld ftlllOved from -...... ftl towp -.--llW ..... ol • llldlll ..... llld ..... blW. -..1wo ~ ....,,._ -The towD'I ftnt "'~' WU Don --Arpaflo ....... -It from 1111 fii IMO al 1 'lllllp II '1,800 1 year. He, 1111 11 chlldmi aDd --rellUves ~ luod Ibo ton beyood Ill capidtJ. Jo 1141 II btcame "'11 Pvtmlo&. calllnr lllell Sao Juan do Arriuello, --llld loll wm madi available .,i lllll1J .ol Ilia "*"'*' -..clantl sWI UVe lhen. Jt bu .... called Ibo Dnl nal ..... la Orallll''Couoty. In MAJ oll .. a-lailor, lllcbard H!!l'Y Ilona, warted Jn Ibo bidet trade 1f)jJch bad ._ up between Ibo town , llld Amerlcao obtpo ln wbal It -Dona -· By 1841 Ibo mflaloa WU IOld lo James McKlllJey, a mercbao~ llld Don JUD Fonter, a tom.Iller of ~ 'l'anJ ' fOlllll'. for f/10. 'Ille ci.rcti ftlaJnod llWI CbipeL Tha ........ -to. tha Cltbollc Cbun:h by Abrlbam t.ll)colniliortly llolon bit-. M111J ldobu sWI ramala ltalldlq In CapllUano and ha" -labeled !or tourllll by the S.. Juan Coptalrano lllllorlcal Society. • •• Era of Dairy Farming Nears End in Cypress ,, ., • I .· . " CYPl!P:M (AP) -Ida Helllnga vowed list mootll to fight to the end to prevent city officials and land developers from forcing her family off its 51)..acre dairy · fann to make way for civilization. Bui 119w Ille, ber bubllld Pote and 1011 Harold lly it'• Ibo end llld thoy'll ..... Gordon Bradley, Senior Laguna Engineer, Cited Gordon llradley, -..,.._mg aide for Ibo city ol Lquna Beach, w11 -by aillal&uet 1111 -u be caocllMled ll :rean o1 ... 1ce lo Ille city. Bradley, a llleJooc -I ol Laguna Beach, bao IO)d bit bomo al ru'/8 Treetop Line llld will be leavln( -month to flltablllb 1 new home on the laland ol MaoL Introduced to Hawall wllllo llatlolled with Ibo Navy al Pearl Harbor ln IHI and 1118, lte ba1 been 1 IHqulnl laland vloll<lr 1lnce tllal Ume llld OWlll property on Maul. Before jolnln( Ibo Novy lte wa1 graduated from Laguna Beac11 lllib Scltool llld New Mexl<o Mllltary lnlU111to. Bradley ,.,. pell ol boaor al a cll!mer al Ibo El Toro O!llcen' Club P., 111 bit collea(Utl .. the city lllafl. u _. 11 Ibey ftnd -!um. A d!f: onllnaltce agalnrl darl<s, the marth tit; suburbia llld the prospecl of becomJnt instant mllllooal.rea eonvlnctd them. ~ "When tile city wanla yoo oo~ yoo bav9; to look II It ftalllllcally ,'' Mn. Hetllni'. slgbed over tha weuend after ljlet' dectded to 1top !lahUng the 1 .. , ..... 14 city ordinance setting April as the dea~ lille 1or endlng Ill dairy l1nnln~ tn lllf' boomlni communtty of 35,000. She ukt four n<lghborlng dairy !1m11 -the laii' remaining here -also would aell. Two °" Uu.e milll, nondairy larmo are Ml' affected. --.~ Over Ille yean tile creepln1 llousln(' lrlcta have INmlllllded the dairy firm, MDIII of the orange grova allo bavi ~ wiped off Ille mop by gJeamlnC new dt!Oi llld maolcurod auburbo. :· Bui Mu. Heljinga, who usually doe,t; Ibo talklng -ber husband fl oui; ltJ!dln( Ibo -berd, .. ,. tt Im~ *' qutslloa of 111burban dwellen llld farmen dlaagrtelnf because more lban 150 resldenll lllgned a pellUon uldnf city offlctals lo lei them Illy. · The nelgbbo-cblldren alao 1o .. tilt, deer, swan, peacocks and montey1 ~ Helllngas keep ln a miall soo and pal\:. Site laid the clly plans to make Ibo "'°' lnto a city park. : , But tn a>me ways, 1he uy1 the younpten: cauae JWC)blem.1 when tbeJi rtny onto the farm. · ~ 'The ,...., children love to play tn Ibo, bay, bot ii 11 Ibo leenlga'I ortlll; cigarettes that worry aa. We dcm1 Dow what Ibey ... moldng Ind --tltey 1111; out ~ Ill nlgllL -; El Rancho has the hottest price in town! .. ! • CAMPBRL'S MUSHROOM • I , for. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Thick and rich and creamy ••• as only Campbell's knoWll how to make-it ! •.. and so venatilel Serve it u a hot and hearty soup, •• nae it for a mushroom sauce •• • a grayy ••• a cookinz aid jn CUAerolea ••• and be glad you thOU1ht to pt .some at El Rancho'• ipeclal price I 10~ oz. ana. . ' . ,. . , • -, , , ' . • . . Cabbage Rolls.~~·.~~: 39! Pickles .... ~.~~ ..... 4t ; Tender leaves, stuffed ••• ready to cook and serve! Crisp dill halvea ••• reaular or k08her ••. 22 ounce aise ! Royal Gelatin ..... 3 i 25' Re111dar 1Ize pacl<&pJ In 10ur choice of favored flavors I , Beef Tongue ... -~"! ... 59~ Freshness is one or the differences at El Rancho! Downyflake French Toast ................ 39C F'roui> ••• heat fn the t<>uter or oven and serve I II~ m. pkg. I Sliced All Meat Bologna ............... Always a sand\vich favor ite! Springfield, •• 6 ounce package! Bay's Eqglish Muffins .......................... 33• Al our dellcateuen •• , apUt and ~for llheor delight! 12 oo. Gingham Sliced American ............. 35c For sandwiches, from the 6 oz. package.#'• or delicious melted I Pricu in effect MOTi.., Tua., Wed., April 19, 10, ti. No·1alu to <Ualera. ARCADIA : s11n1et and ""''"r.1on or i°ir'1/, PASADENA : r/1'd. SOUTH PASADENA : !l/i1/. HUNTIN GTON BEACH : !1/r'1/. • NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 N'"r '"'Hi.~ ·'"'' lEI Rancho Center) .. 3LU We~t Colorallo Bl~ri ,;y., Fremon! and Huntington Or ,,,., Warn e1 an1I Algon~u1n ,Bo·~dwalk Center 7r)1JJ !.1'illi1!1!1 Or fJ 'ilt1lu ll Vill~gr f.rnlf·r ' I • • • f BOrder .Tension High . .., .. , """"'"" INDIA. P'AKISTAN TENSION WORSENED TODAY WITH REPORT OF ALLEGED SHELLING . P.Jdstan R,adie S.ys lnditn Guns' Shelled Government Troops Inside E. P1kist1n Ping Pong Team Returns, Heaps Praise. on Chinese Radw Pakistan Charges Outpost Hit by Indians 11J Ullted l'ml !Dtenia-i Tia :U.S.. table t<nnll team ..... home today -home foi more perlOIW ._...,.., bome lo reJu and borne lo -· Ftheen team membtn and wives 'rillled tlle OllnMe malnland Lul w.U lo ~ .• -ol tahl• tennis mal<:be&. .;' were the' fint American 1roup to •1111 Oilna· •Ince 1he Qmununlata look evrin·'ltft. ••FantuUc," . aaid Glenn Cowan of 1Uta1Morilca. "P'antutic. 1be people are p&~W11 11w·the wall (the Great Wall d Cbina),1wt laaw ·tbe·premiu, we 1aw Ille .aicmtly, anlmall ol · a!J.klnd1, bor..., ptl. Fantastk." . Cowan, 11; w1-Jone hair and mod life t\)'le •llllde · blm ·the· IDOi! publicized member of the team. wu one o[ Iii: team -. artlvlni ID Loo Ani!eles ~y lriJm TNJo. 'the· Olhen llew. Into . San FnDdlco1and'New.Yort.: • ())wan .aaid · be wu . very ·im.preued with ChinHo Prftllr Clou ·En-Lil, with whom ·be ·liod • -ol American !1ipples. "'In1ielligent, venaWe," Cow.n u.id of lfJe.premler. "I believe I ·cooid mediate between blzn and Nllon vuy easily." ~wan would not be able to relu bmnedlately ainct be aald be had a round o! tdevlalon appearances lo make. Another ...U publlclzed member o! the tum WU John Tannr.hill, 11, of Middleport, OllJo, who WU ·quoted whUe in Odna u 11yi,ng ht Wanted to mnain m the·Commanlit ma.inland. On arriving In New Y orlt with '"" other team memPm' SW>day, be Aid be was mioquoled. "I clldiii wu1 le 11ay !.....,," be Ul'IT..._... PRAISIS RED CHINESE Vltltor Glenn Cowan uid. "I wanted to 1tay a week.or two and leam more about the Chinese people and maybe go on a farm and work there." He uid other members of the team also wanted to e1tend their visits but the Chinese told them that if the delegation "went in as a whole then the same 15 people woukS have to leave Jn order to eliminate any commoUon." NEW DEL!U (UPI) -Radio Parutan aaid today Indian troops supported by artillery attacked a Pakistani border post and that Pakistan had lodged a strong protest with the Indian government. Last week there were similar charges and proteata by lndia. Radio PakiJtan said the alleged attack took place between ComllJa a n d Brahmanbaria in eastern Pakistan. lkahmanbaria is in the far eastern sector of East Pakistan ju.st acrms the Indian border and near the Indian border town of Agart.ala. Another festering sore in Jndo.Pakistan relations appeared to be developing in Calcutta where the Pakistani deputy high commissioner and 50 members of his staU renounced all ties with Pakistan and threw their support to ~e rebel govemmut in East Pakistan. Pakistan bu not yet reacted to the move, but was expected to protest. In tM actual fighting tht Pakistani army appeared to be gaining the upper hand. Radio Pakistan reported Army troops had moved within five miles of the tndian border near the spot where East Pakistani rebel leaders f o rm a 11 y proclaimed their independence o n Saturday. Radio Pakistan said the t r o o p 1 occupied the town of Meherpur, five miles from the border. This was three to four miles from Bhaberpara, the village where the rebel proclamation was issued Saturday. The gufrrillt leadera att believed to have left I.be art:a. Sprin~ Goes Into Hiding Much of Nation Pelted by Cold Rain, S1iow; Some Sun . f'l[Yl(WCIFllOU: MATIONllwtATHtlSll'flC(JO J:nA.M. lST 4 •lf·7r n. WMltltr ..... _,.., .. "' '-teY ,...,,,,.,_ii7 -,-,.,.=?"--..1.~, ...... -_..., -~ Ill '""'" Jllllll7 l'J -C..llf•n ... I~ c-.IMM ~'"--l -.._... T-r wlw. 1 0..11<1 ,, ............... h'I ... IMVl'lhln ... IMl'tll- -emit.I_,....._ 111 lM AnMltl 1nd vlclftJh" ll'lt ... - -_,,., "*'"' ... -111 ._ d9udl. ~ .. " -i.1r """" ,,. -lrrtt.111111 ,...., -· lncr••lllf dl:ud•1 oq1 -~ f""""91'f, TM Mtll ....,. ••• -1lt wltll lft .,._., -~-9f•. '" -,,_"" wrinY • .,,.... ,,. bffd>. -Wltfl 1'llt. ""'"' -'2 "" ---•• ...,,.,_ ..... Ml ... .,.... ........... .f,I 11141 l!lll4ill'lll lll ~ fl -· Nr11Y clwdr MCI ll'le ~" -~ "" --. 11 -ll'IMllt -1111 tM ......,.._ ..,_ ~ ,....in. '""" "" .. "' -,.. .. .._. .. ,,.,. 111 Ill ""' --· Hlft .......,. ....t ..,,._... -lo ~ ....... toK ... ; Uil!I •M? ...... ....... .... Ir. ...... .,.,.. .. '1on. Mt. W'llMn .... 1"1lmMM "" -~.,..._ ................. Jlt.. n. ~ jf<1t, ... ,. .,.,,. ,, .. J. ..... ........,. ""* 911111 ""'"''""' ..... ,,,.~,., V.S. ~u-•l'ff .._ .. _. ""''*'""'''Iii _, ... ~ ~ ..... """". ... ~ OrMI "llM II I mal9r _,,. 1""9t _.,. -lw•NI """' lllt -._.. ......... Wfl"f "'""' .. '" _,_ TntH lfl4I <t11•rtfr·lrlc:l'I l'ltn ....... ..,._ Cltr, K.111, A lamllfit ""'' Jtnldl ~. Tw., •Ill "'"''" "'""',.. " u mn1i.n •• '""'"°' • --T'*--l/"I" tl\lrrln •• l•r IOI/ti! H l 1 1'100. T .... _.,lie '" rN ('Mii. ~ T-., -lllt ""'"'*' MOO! lit ti. Nllwl ktfldtr •lt!I I rMI.,. .. .. lttl"'"-TN _,.ltl'll le. """ 11 .. ,_ •I alJ', Hn, Coaatal Mti"t' -MIY. l..lttll Vfrltlll• ~ l'ltt:I I nd MOrftlftll houri b«em- kle Wf'll le l'IOt'lll""'ll 10 .. 11 kl'llllt 1"' lfl1.--,l'Qdaoy 11111 T"141'f. til9h ,..,.. "' lllt low '°'· Coe1111 t...,"''-''"'' r1-lrom •7 •• "· Wlltlld t"""'"''lv<'ft •-from .u .. 7'. w11.,. ,...,_,"'°' .11, Sun, /lfonn, Tide• MONDAY .. U·Sol 1.11"1. 00 1!U 1.m. 1.1 TU•SDAY .. 1,.1 llltll . . . J:• I"'· •• l ltfl ~ ,, lO:U 1.m. ... 1 Sftll!ld Iii.ti . . . . . . J ;ll •·"'· 1.0 SteMil !OW 11 :061.m. 1.t su... • ..... ftlt 1.m ...... l :r7 ...... ~ •1-1:•1.m, Slit lt;»1.rn. Tem1t~atlll'u a, UNITID l"llllS INTlllNATIOHAL Ttn1wr•tul'ft ... Pf'K ... 111111111 .. ttw 2"'-r PerW ...or ... 11 4·1.m. """" \rt '"""'· Altou.l/-w1 " D ... Al'l<l'IO<'ffl n • ....~ " .. ·" llvff•lo M :: C!l1rlelt• .. C~le. .. • .. Cl11<1fwuoll " •• c ,.,,.1,..., ... " 0..!1•1 " ., OnMoi..., .. " .n 0.lnilt .. • F1l~nQ .. • ·-· " • tndl1MDL1U1 .. • ,_, .. " ·" k.....,CllT " " "' L•t v .. ,, ., M l..oul1w!lle n • M-'111 " ... Mllm! • • M!""'MlkN • " N-Yoft .. " C*.~Cll't .. • 0...oM n " P•lm s..n..n " • P!lll-1111'111 " • P-1• • • P!tt.tlu"91'1 .. " POt111nft ... .. lllfflc!Clf'ti " n ., ·-" " Jl lch-" ., HU•-~IO .. • St Lowll " M $111 1.•~• Cll'J' " • ., s.. ... 01.,e • " Sift F•111CIKO " " lul!lt .. • W1fll!~ .. n WIMI-" • ... Among V.S. Troops Hevoin Epidemic In Vietn'm Cited SAIGON (AP) Two U . S • Vietnam -about 30,0:00 to 45,000 men - congreumen said today that hero!" are usln1 hi&b grade heroin which ls addlctlon a m o n g Amerk:an troops m betweeq M and 97 percent pure. Vietnam ii of epidemic proportions. Steele blamed the extensive use ef Tbey blamed corrupt Vietnamese officials for part of the problem and Wd the ready 1vallabllity of drugs makes the sltuaUon almost impossible for the ~.S. Commaod to control. 1 The two congressmen are Rep. Morgan Murphy (().111.), and Rep. Robert H. Steele (R.COwC.). 'lbe HOWie Foreign Affairs Committee aent them t • Southeut Alia to look into the drug problem. They spent three days in Vietnam, visited Laos and attended a aarcoUc1 conference in Bangkok. Steele said flgures provided them by the W.S. Command indicated that 10 ta 15 percent ef the American troeps in Crisis Worsens; Israeli Rushes To Washington By United Prtu International Israeli Deputy Premier Yigal Allon left abruptly for Washington today to discuss the worsened Middle East situation brought by formation of an anti·Israel federaUon linking Egypt, Libya and Syria. Diplomat! said he wou1d seek new American guarantees. lsra,I, under American pressure.' ha.!!1 been working for days to come up with an acceptable counterproposal t o Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's call for an laraeli pullback from the Suez Canal so the waterway can be opened to international shipping. The situation changed a b r up t I y Saturday when the federation agreement wu signed and the three participants issued a seriea of statements including one that the Sadat canal proposa l was no longer effective. Public statement.s by Israeli officials during the weekend showed Israel had harrlened its own position In response. The federation not only links the three natloM against Israel but permits Egyplian jets to use Syrian air fields against Iaraeli targets. Libya provides a backup force with 110 Mirage jets recently purchased from France. The French Foreip Ministry said to. day in Paris that if any of the 110 Mi· rages are w:ed outside Llbyan territory alt further shipments of the !Upersonic warplanes would be immediately halted. The Mlragea were once the backbone of the Israeli Air Force but were replaced by U.S. F4 Phantoms when Franc.e halted all ahipmenls of amn to Israel. heroin in part on the "widespread and miataken belief that Jt is not addk:tive if snorted or smoked" and that it doun't have the odor arxt bulk of marijuana. In 1970, be conUnued, between 59 and 80 Gia died from everdosea of heroin. "The problem bas rtacbed epide~c proportions," Steele said. "Efforta to meet the problem bave only begun and so far are ineffecUve. Tbert are eoormOUI implicatJons to discipline and I.be effects on society wbe:n these men return home. .. Unlesa the problem ls cheeked, it will provide • compelling reason to speed up the withdrawal er troeps from South Vietnam." Murphy aald he and Steele were approached several times by Vietnamese be:roin dealers work.Ing the streets of d ow a to w n Saigon, A vial ol be:roin, roughly a fourth of a gram. sells ror $1.80 to $2.10 and the average addict requires two viala a day. ~ "These boys will need a Jot of money to support their habit in the States," Murphy said, Both Congressmen said tbe South Vietnamese government has not done enough about the problem and that it bas just atarted realizing tbe e:rtent of it. especially among young Vietnamese. "We have every reason to believe that ~orruption among public 1officials is an important factor in smugiling heroin to our troops in Vietnam," said Steele. "The time is long overdue when our allies should recogn.iz.e the e:rtent ef the problem." 500 Rebel Prisoners Surrender in Canada KINGSTON, Ont. (AP) -Kingston penitentiary was a shambles today following the collapse or a rebellion by pr~nen: who didn't want to give up their privacy. The rebellious Inmates wrecked the main cell block they occupied for four days before they released five guards they held hostage and sWTendered Sunday. One convict was reported killed by a fellow priaoner and 11 others were injured in fights among themselvt!. A prison spokesman said all but too of the 500 rebel prisqnen: were transfernd to nearby federal pri.soM and that no concessions wen made to the inmate!. Wlek• ..-;a .. "It's the newest in tDaterbed nighflDeal'. Pull the string O,W it inflate1!' Ceylon Soldiers Execute Rebel Troops on Spot COLOMBO, Ce y Ion (AP) Government troops attacking a forest full of rebels say they execute their captives as soon as they're convinced the prisoners are insurgents. Ten have been shot and twelve more are being executed today, said a .ranking officer who reported that rebel battle casualties in the hills around Kegalle totalled 200 last week. "Once we are convinced prisoners are insurgents, we take them to the ctmetery and dispose of them," h' told newsmen. Another officer said the idea of a truce with the rebels had come up but his solution was total destrucllon of the lefllst movement that tried to overthrow the government on April 5. ''We have learned too many lessom from Vietnam and Malaysia. We must destroy them completely. We have no choice," said Lt. Col. Cyril Ranatunga, who heads a force of troops and police shelling an estimated 4 , s O o. 5 , O O O insurgents in a thickly forested triangle about 40 miles east of Colombo. He said this is the backbone of the rebel army. Ranatuanga said his forces had been raining mortar fire on the rebel · strongholds, but "we cannot go in'' because of rebel snipers, tree.trunk road blocks and sentries who warn insurgents to scatter and hide. Inside the triangle are the rich graphite mines at Bogala, where rebels seized 12,000 sticks of dynamite, and large gasoline stores they are using to make firebombs. Four of the 11ovemment fora hav1 been killed in the past week. Newsmen were shown 38 prisoners in crowded cells at Kegalle. Most of them wore dirty shirts and sarongs and waited silently to be interrogated . of your best have a new address. Glendale Federal Savings has moved to Harbor Center. Lock, stock and safe. People too. We're now right on the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Wilson, so if you're looking for Glendale's famous friendly serv- ice, escrows, Umpteen Ways To Save or great new low rates on home loans, look no further. Glendale Federal/Costa tvlesa is just as nice as it ever was. And lo~ more convenient. lv\on.-Thur. 9-4; Fri. 9-6 • Qmdillc Fcdlral SL•191·Coda Mesa c.on.o111nar ... da WINitk Olllbor c.•) \ Beating Odds ( Tot Survives__Bitter Cold FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) -Sharla Johnson ls only 7 months· old but aJready she baa lived through one of Aiuka's greatest hazards.-hours of upoaure in tempera- tures 50 degrees below zero. - When Sharla waa foundrJan.13 wrapped ln yellow bunt- ing under a pine tree near btr home, doctors gave her little chance of survival. "The baby's body was rigid, her muscles were hard, her tongue was stiff," says Dr. W. H. Jamea of the Tanana Valley Cltnic. Sharla's heart beat was down to 40, her temperature too low to measure. She wu unconscious. Emergency procedurea were instituted. When the baby stopped breathing, Dr. Martha Kowalaki gave moulb-to- mouth resuscitation. • James said Sharla was put into water of sligblly more than IllO degrees, witlt Mly her face exposed. "After two hours we bad the baby mobile again," he said. "Her temperature was still too low to record even after that time. After three hours her temperature register· ed normal." But still the doctors feared she wou1d not survive the first two critical days. "Her face blistered," James said, "and we felt she would lose her nose. Both her hands were swollen and blis- tered, and after a few weeks we did amputate two fingers from her left hand. The right hand is responding to ther- apy." Why Sharia was abandoned under ·the pine by her troubl~ mother will never be known. Wilma Johnson, who tiad undergone treatment for a nervous breakdown in Dec- ember, died that tragic day wblle apparenUy trying to crawl to a nearby house. Tornadoes Rip Through West Texas • ! Muskie .. (:ddresses Dump Nixon.Ra~ly PROVIDENCE, R.I, (AP) -Island Co a II I Ion !or · Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-AltemaUves Now, beaded ~y Maine), asked a crowd at a State Sen. Harold C. Arcaro "dump Nixon" rally on the Jr. (D-Provldeoce), and lawn of the Rhode Island Malcolm '8tmer W, a 1tatebouse Sunday to join "in Republican who practices law a coalition for p ea c e f u I in Providence. change." "Let us make this day In Providence , R.l, the beginning of another period in our history in which the people prevailed because they wen right, because they did not grow tired and because they Youth Asks Resignation Of Nixon .HEREFORD, Tex. (UPI)_ worked together until the job A tornado, glowing white was done," said Muskie, ESTF.S PARK, Colo. (UPI) during 1 night of rain, hail and con.9.dered by many the fron~ -A young delegate to \he lightning, slashed a seven-mile r u n n e r now for the• White House Conference on path through this West Texas Dem 0 cr11 tic presidential Youth called for President farm town early t o d a y , nomination. Nixon's resignaUon Spnday injuring 40 persons, smashing Allard Lowenstein, t h e night as the fiv~ meetlng homes and 'causing $2 million f 0 rm e r N e w Y 0 r k opened in this moOntain resort ' damage. congressman genera 11 y community. ·~ , • "We were lucky, gracious, credited with slarting the Even before the conference we were lucky," said Mrs. "dump Johnson" move in 1968 began, there were threats the Edward Owsley, wife of a city and a leader in the l!i!milar gathering would prove M' be patrolman. No one was killed. effort against Nixon, said the e m b a r r a s s I n g for the City C.OmmiBsiooer H~· A. two hour rally had "given a President who ~lier ordered Caveness said about 4. O torch to all the country. The tfle site of the confereoct persons were treated at a end is in sight. We are about shifted from Washington. local hospital for cuts and to reclaim America." Tbe«dtriy decorum of the bruises calLSed by flying glass. Lowenstein said he planned . Ope~ session developed into All but 12 were released. similar rallies throughout the a coflfrontaUon between the llol\QJ, ... " 19, 1971 ' . Y9trWORK LES$ Keeps th!OllS cleaner without eUort, elllnl· nai.. bath tub dJca.. YOU SAVE MONEY Soop ml clothlng last longer. ...... , ....,.iw., ....... -- Ail<-Sem Cav-Cftdltl'lul Complete lm1"llall• Available! J .. A*! SllltaAll& 111' S. Main St. Phone 5'7-3S'71 "Don't kid yoursell, you're COUDtry. An aide sakl the ne:r.t 1:onference chalnnan, Stephen scared In one of these things." one might be either in Jless, , and d e J e g Ii t.e. s said Betty Simpson, night Minneapolis or Indianapolis. Gemanding tO be heard duririg' nurse al the hospital. "It Lowenstein worked to set up , \he general session, not just sounded like an expl06lon.l_:tbe~_:r~ally~_:wi'.'.:·~th~the~..'.Rhode~'.:..;·;!tbe~t~a~st:_:-~~tt~n&~'·:__:_...'..._========================----Tbere was a swishing ooise, the s.c,..t ef Yop -Yoga means oneness. It 11 a sclentt .. fie method of renewing life energy -physically and mentally. Yoga ls a philosophy, nol a reltgion. desimed to enrich yoor Ille and )'OUl' vlewpointa. Bhan.ti (left) and KaliW teach at the Yeg• Ctnttr, "45 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa. ~ RU llMONSTUnONS -T•••PN• -,......,., at 10 e.111. -4 I,,-. M11n1I ...... •ltltt d-atmt T..-,, A"' 27. hr w....tlH. cllll '46-1211 . like you were twirling a rock on the eDd of a string." At dawn, work crews and a beHcopter searched for--more-~ victims along the twister's path, a northeastward cut from the city's industrial district to a trailer park on the edge of town. There was $2 million damage along the tornado's path -two blocks wide and seven-miles long -according to Blll 'lbompson1 C 1 v 11 Defense dlrector. Most banks have now reduced savings passbook rates to a tow 43. At Pacific you still earn the same .high rates as before. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAi.RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN.YEARS 6.18\ 6.00\ 5,0002! TWO 5.92\ 5.75\ 1,0002! ONE . . 5.39\ 5.25\ 5002! %1h 5.13\ 5.00\ 12! ONE DAY FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX for maintaining a S50022 balance in any of our high rate accounts-take your choice. AN IMPORTANT EXTRA Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even If it's Just one day. ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE • F • " :: REE r.~ \ii,,, 1..lncome Jax Service a Collection of Notes . i:... .. 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 Im 111\SIDL ITRfET • COITA lll!IA, CAUf'OAHIA • PH<>ffi MCMOll So is a healthy environment. At Edison, we're working to bring you both.· Electricity is one energy we cannot do without. Shut it off and most factories would shut down. The impact on all of our lives would be devastating. Electricity is also essential for cleaning up the environment. It is needed to operate systems to purify water, clean the air, recycle usable materials and dispose of waste. Fortunately, electricity is clean, flameless and odorless and doesn't create by-products of combustion at its point of use. On the other hand, when fuel is burned in power plants, certain by-products of combustion are released into the abl\OSJ>here. Thi is also true wh~J>Wning gas In homes, gasoJine,ln-autos or gas or oil in industrial Plants. Emissions from power.-plants are one of the thinlll' we're working to control. In fact,.l!:dison was among th e first Compan ies in the nation to activate extensive air pollution research programs. We were also one of the first utilities to use a low-sulphur, low-ash oil. As a result of these programs, we've been able to· make significant reductions in ., emissfoni from·.our foo811'f'iil jllants. ' Another srep we're taking to fllJprove the environment ls, generating electricity at nnclear power plants. Since there's no . combustion in a nuclear reactar, there are no by-products of coml>ustion released into the atmosphere. We are also making steady headway with other long-range environmental projects. These include improving the appearance of our transmission towers and substations and providing underground electric service. Peaceful use of the atom. Nuclear power plant reactors, such as the one at San Dnofre, above, release no by-products Of combustion Into the air. Two additional units are planned at this site near San Clemente, and are scheduled for ,commetcial operation In 1976 and 1977. Emission control F"nissions from Edison's fossil-fuel plants in the South Car.it basin have been substantially reduced, lncludlng a reduc- tion of more than 50% in nitrogen oxide emis- sions during the last two year5., • Conservation program. In addition !<>) electrlclty, Edison's "Big Creek" hydro--1 electrlc project In the Hl&h Sierra Pfo-1 vldes flood control and Irrigation watei tori the farmlands of the San Joaquin Valley~ Construction of Bl& Creek also created • vacation paradise for the public. Burying lines. Last year 95% of all new home subdivisions built In our 14- county service area were served by undergrouna wires. In ttre future, all new commercial and lndustrlal projects wlll also have underaiound service. " ' • t t • • • • I .. ,. DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE - Summary of Choic·es DAILY PlLOT recommendations 1n tomorrow's achool boud elections: Co11t Community Co~l•g• Area 2, Donald G. Hoff (incumbent); Area 3, Wil· liam KetUer (incumbent); Area 4, Robert Humphreys (Incumbent). Newport-Mey Unified School District Area l, Don Smallwood (incumbent, unopposed); Area 3, Pt1rs. Marian Bergeson (incumbent); Area 6, Selim S. "Bud" Franklin (incumbent). Huntington Buch Union High School District Dennis Mangen and Robert E. Dingwall. For short term expiring July 1, either man. 0'91n Vl•w School District Ralph Bauer (incumbent) and Robert Zinngrabe (Incumbent). Fount1ln V1lley School Di1trict Fred Voss and Mary HU. Huntington B••ch City School Dl1trld Louis DaHarb (incumbent) and Harold Becker. Westminster School District Roderick B. Cruse and Mrs. Ada Clegg (incumbent). S1ddleb•ck Community College Di1tricf Area l , LeRay Anderson; Area 3, Mrs. 1i1argaret Roley; Area 5, Michael Collins (incumbent). C1pi1tr1no Unified School Ol1trict Area I, The Rev. Donald Inlay; Area 2, Dr. Robert Beasley (incumbent, unopposed ); Area 3, St.an Kelley (in- cumbent): Area 4, special elect-ion, Marvin Renfro; Area ~-George White. L1gun1 Be1ch Unified School Oiatrid Tw~year term, Arnold Laderman. Four-year terms, Larry Taylor (incumbent) ~nd Mrs. Florence Beane. Tu1tin Un ion High School District Dickran Boranian and Stephen Fabula. Sin Jo.quln Elem.nt1 ry District Tw~year term, Kenneth Cook. Four·year terms. Mi· chael Shearer and Dennis Smith. This may be cllpped and t1k9" into the vot ing booth for reference, If you wi1h. April May Be Cruelest Month for Nixon Protests Can't Be Defused April may be the cruelest month for Jllehard M. Nixon. Critics of his war pllicy sense their chance to seize on public disenchantment and force the President tp "send the boys home" by Christmas. Despite the President's April 7 announcement on further l r o op withdrawals, the forthcoming protests can hardly be defused. Demonstrations are scheduled throughout the month, building up to a grand finale: a march on Washington and San Francisco, April 24, called by the NatiOnal Peace Action Coalition. Six years and hundreds or marches, demonstrations and teach-im later, tht peace moYement admits to being tittd of all the rallying and s'°ianeeri.ng, DaYid Dellinger, leader of the Vietnam Peace Parade Committee, spoke · of t h e tiredness and disappoinbnenL in a recent speech at New York University, "But the tnith is," he added, '•wt have no choice if we are going to live with ourselves and restore the possibility ol building a human society." P'. SOOTJ' FITZGERALD once wrot.e that despite his generation's reputation for skepticism and cynicism, they were in reality "the great believers.•· The protest movement of the 1960s will never be viewed by millions of patriotic Americans as anything but a great conspiracy. Once passlona have cooled, howtver, historians . , I I Eaitorial -Research may see b1 the movement a measure or idealism and of confidence in th~ possibilities for change in a tree society. The futility w~ antiwar leaders now feel after Cambodia, Kent state and Lllos similarly may be viewed one dly in a different light. The 1967 Marth on the Pertlagon, for example, for a Ume was lost in the mlsb of • h\lfldred dlHerent · protesta. Nonnai1 Matier wrote tn hti' The Armi" o[ the Nigbt that, 1'Tbe·Marcb OD the Pentagon wu an amb~ event whose essential value or ablurd.lty may not be established for ten or twe~ty years, or indeed ever." Yet its importance as a turning point in the Johnson administration's war poliCiu and in L.B.J.'s personal fortunes has since become apparent. "AS A POLITICAL issue ,'' says New Democratic Coalition chairman Den Collina, "lhe., war 'issue is becoming respectable.'' So respectable, in fact, that the peace forces· think Coogre.ss may be ready to adopt a resolution putting a ffrm date for total withdrawal of U.S. troops from Soul.heast Asia. Seventy.two percent ol lhoae po.lied by Gallup in Jaouary said they favortd a proposa) lo bring all U.S. troops borne before the end of 1971. A caucus of Senate Democrats in February voted to work for an American withdrawal "in a time certain" -ambiguous language which their leaders translated to mean during the 92nd Coagress. And House Democrats went a step farther on March 31 Yoting 138-62 for ending U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war by the start or 1973. A VIETNAM Disengagement Act now before the Congress specifies a December 1971 withdrawal deadUne and forbids spending any money in Vietnam after May I except to guarantee the sate withdraw&] of American troops and the release of U.S. prisoners of war. Common Cause, the citizen.! lobby headed by John Gardner; launched a write.in campaign on March 28 to push for passage of the legislation . President Nixon has refused to name any terminal date for U.S. military involvement, arguing that it .,would torpedo any chance of a negotiated settlement and would mean continuing the war on the enem} ·.s term!!. But tbe protest movement is delennined to keep the pressure on the President and the Congress. Perhaps for the first time, the polis seem to show that the "peace, now·· goals of the movement are in tune with public opinion. Rawest Kind o·f Chauvinism • It was with no little dlSmay that I read the other day of some of the newest ··triumphs" or an outfit called the Italian· American Civil Rights League. This is one of those self.conscious na· tionalistic organizations, rather like Bnai Brith in the old days, that feels put-upon by its fellow Americans, and applies economic and other sanctions in aR ef· fort to wipe out such words as kike and dago, or what· ever. The old image, you know. This t.actlc, it seems to me, has al· ways badly served the cause of the people it professed to represent, because it was bullying and because, by its sense or grieYance. often confirmed prejudices ii was fighting against. If you think people are looking down at you , you don't \l"hine. YOU PROVE VO\JRSELF worthy. which is the story of all the white minorities in this country, Md will one day be I.he story of the brown and black minorities. What bothers tht IUllan Americ9n CivU Rijhts League right now are the --ooj-- Monday. April 19. 1971 Tltf edltmicl page of tilt Dofry Pilot aeekl to biform. a11d 1tim· u.laU f'tadnl b~ prt1tntiftQ Cit.fl new1popw'1 opinioni and com- mtnCll'fl on topic1 of in ttrr.1£ ond sign,fiooncc, by providino o forum fOf' th• tzprtufon of our rtodn s' opinJotu, and b~ "''''"""" tJ1e diwr1e w~ point.s of Informed obst rvtrl and 1pokt1mtn on topicl of the do~. Robert N. Weed , Publisher CJ1ar les AfcCabe words "Mafia" and "Casa Nostra." Both lhe5e words are, in my opinion, mythic, as master criminal! controlling national organized crime-the first invented by a lot of ingenious palice reporters, the sec· ond by the late Robert Kennedy's Justice Department. Anthony Colombo. vice president of lhe lACRL, l'tlVealed with pride recently thnl h.is outnt had bullied the American Broadcasling Company out of using these dread words in a teUy series called "F.B.1." Also, Colombo added, the pro. ducer or the: movie "The Godfather" ha<! yielded to a similar demand. "The Goel· father" without the Mafia is like Hamlet without the prloce; but no matter. WHY, AT• THIS stage of the. game. mention or the Mafia should bother anyone other than practicing Sicilian· descended Mafioso, is a mystery to me. It'• alM> a mystery to my friend attorney Jlm Prisin·Zano, a San Franciscan of Sicilian descent, who says: "All 1Juch demands ire more lo be pitied than observed. The facts of Ufe. arc that those who have been involved with such 1 dastardly organi!alion are of Italian heritage, Rnd particularly of Sicilian origin. "As my father often said, he knew of the Marta ·s existence in Sicily whert he was born and he knew of ILi mlgralioo to this country of ours. So why ignore the fact? All such reference• should not be swrpt under the carpet. What the league should do is expose lhost who are in tht Cou Noslra so that they ctase 10 bring shame and tmbarrass:ment to the decent Italian·Amerlcan. "Gad, such hypocrisy does more hann than good." HYPOCRISY li~OEEO. In add ilion to getting the producer of "The Godfather." Mr. Al Ruddy, lo knuckle. undtr by leav- ing r~ferr:IK'l!s to the ~tafla out of the film. the: lea guto put !hr 1rm on the pro- ducer for tht tnlirt proceeds ol the film '• world premiere -10 go Ul the Jeague·s ··hospital fund." To ii.! credit Paramount, which is mak- ing the film. told the league to go to hell . President Stanley Jaffe. of Paramount, said Ruddy had no authority to make any commitment of funds to the league. "There wUI be no money,'' Jaffe said in a statement. While all this monkey business was going on, there were two parallel and curious developments. FIRST, ANnlONY Colombo's father , Joseph Colombo Sr., wu named the league's "Man of the Year" In a dinner in Long Island. N.Y. Second, Mt. Colombo senior won a stay of execution on a one to two-and·a·half year perjury sentence, for having lied when he applied for a real estate broker's license, Mr. O>lombo senior has been described by federal authorities as the head of one of New York City 's f\1afia families. It seems more than likely to me that this dubious Italian-American league is making a racket out of a virtue -the self·re specl of insecure I t a I i a n • Americans, and is trying lo equate patriotism with the rawest kind of chauvinism. Tht "f\fafi1" works in strange Bnd wo111drous ways. Dear Gloon1y Gus: "J believe ii is inhumanely crut\," pontificates Or:inge County·s As· semblyman Bob Rurke 11p lhcrt In the Legislaturf' on the subject of abortion. Do "'e h11V(' 11 humane cn1elty? By his sC'mantlc standard s we could e~petl th<' problem to van ii.h if womrn Y<ould just sbty ·a little hit preanant -A. R. V. "'It. fMlun "'''"'" ,..,"". "-tiff -llM•llY 1111'° •I ION --· ~ ,_ Ml "'"" "' 01-Oft. Daflr fl'Jttt. Turned-on Electorate ls Nation's Need tr all tht U.S. citizens who didn't vote in the 19611 Presidential election had gone to the polls and voted for Tiny Tim, he would have been elected ~esident of the United Stales Put that in your ciYiCMiaBS pipe 8J)d smoke it. Here is the greatest, ricbe!t. most powerful nation on Ult earth holding an election for the most Important poit In the: world -and the number of cltiuht who stayed away ' lrom the polls was larger than the num· ber who voted for the ·winning candi· date. Something has got to be wrong here. And thete is no point in blaming the people who stayed away ; such moral recriminations are futile. They simply weren't motivated to cast their vole for any candidate. Whether they were lazy, cynical or in- different, aomething in the system fail- ed to touch their nerve or self-interest. much less their sense or civic duty. How can any Preiident claim to speak and act for his country, when he beats his opponent by only a percentage point or two -and when both of them could have been beaten if the non-voters had united behind another candidate? Apathy is the real ruler in such a case, and we have to discoYer \\'hat causes the apathy. NOBODY IS DOING this, of course - except perhaps John Gardner and his "Common Cause" movement, which I suspe<:t is a little too clean-collared and goody-goody to get down to the dirty roots of the whole problem. Meanwhile, the winners exult and the losers ei:cuse, and both get ready for the next confrontation of electing a President by defaulL The most significant survey the pollsters could take would be one to detennlne not why or how people are voting, but why they aren't. What turns them off? Is It the quality of candidates? The mechanism of registraUon and vol· ing? The sense or individual futility in the face of polltical machinery? Or some dee~sealed anomle that makes all ro- cial nonns and values seem equally ir· relevant to one's personal needs? w£ SUt!PLY DON'T rrnhw right now. \Vhat we do know b °'1 the decislOT1$ made by any U.S. administration affect! everybody In the world today, and not just ourstlves ; that many people will thrt_vt. or starve, or die, In odd comers of ttre"""globe because we Mve passed a blll or not. This is a lerrlfylng power lo possess without full resplnslblllly bthlnd it; without a tu~ln and lurned -on electorate who cart about I h e lmplleaUons of our acts and attltude1. Something run by a minority Is alwRY! In the Interest of that minorit y, whether it call, ltMll the Centr11! Committee of the Communist P11.rty or the Fat Cal IMlltute. When the. ma}orlty stops ea ring. all forms of government are equally bad. Quotes Carol Nel1011, Gall -"There are ttiD thoM: around Jn lhls d11y and age who lake pride ln reciting the Pledge of Alltglance. Wt do so with slncerlty, out of respect for our country." -....... -...-,. ., .. .. ~ ... Middle America And Universities What is chillln& about James Michener'• "Kent State -What Happened and Why" (as condensed in the A1arch and April issues of "Reader·J Digest") is his account of reactions outside the college to the killing of four students by the National Guard : "This time we got four of you bastards. NeXt L i m e we'll get more." "Anyone who a~ pears on the 1treets of a city like Kent with long bah', dirty clothes « barefoot deserYes to be shot."' The flare-up didn•t happen overnight. for some years there had been increasing alienation between Town and Gown. In all tbe writing about Kent State, there art r~peated .indications ' ef Intense feelings ef townspeople against the university. But the lack of understanding is mutual. A typically uncomprehending romment is to be found in an article by Gordon W. Keller, aJsistant professor of political science at Kent State, who says the trouble is tbat "middle America" doesn't understand' universities: "A university ... is a place of intellectual and emotional • growth. It provides an environment , . . in which lire can be examined critically aod in w h i c h embarrassing questions can be asked." {"The Humanist.'' April, 1971 ) BUT THE PEOPLE f'lf Kent were not angry because the university examined life critically er asked embarrassing questions. As Michener makes clear - and as we all know from similar situations -the townspeople haYe been for years increasingly outraged by the behavior of a conspicuously visible minority ol students. These are the young men and women who go to endless pains to offend middle- class seosiblllties as profoundly as possible. They are barefoot. dlrty. biwT1 and foul·moulbed beyond belief - especially the well·brougbt-up young ladles. They are also vlrulenUy anti· int1Uectual. Most Americans do not question the constitutional right of students to criticize or protest the war and the draft. But very few, liberal or conservatiYe. accept vandalism, the burning of libraries or the blowing up <1f buildinjs. as legitimate fonns of protest. PARENTS SAVE THEIR money se that their young can go to college. "I never went lo college myself," they 1Jay, "but my children are going to have the chanct." How many families have organized their lives around I h I s resolution ! Ho"' many hopes and aspiration! are bound up in a son or daughter's departure for Kent Slale -fir any other college! But now partnts are no longer sure they want their chlldrtn to go. Whal will happen le them there? Will they become l B1:1yaliawa .... •• Communists? Will they take up drugs! sex. u a I promiscuity? revolutionary terrorism? Will they become forever estranged from their parents and their parents' values? Suctt worries art unfounded as regards mO!t young people. fi.tost departments of all universities continue to prepare young people. for useful llves. Nevertheless, parents baYe doubts about higher education such u they have never had before. PROFESSOR KELLER writes piously, "ft is important that condemnation or students and the demand for order on the campus not be permitted to escalate into an investigallon or library books, or of reading lists used in classes, or of speakers expressing unorthodox views." But it was not bands or angry hard-hats or reactionary legislative committees who in recent years have interfered with freedom of inquiry. Rather it was students ef the anti-democratic left who burned library books and invaded classrooms to enforce their brand of ideological erthodoxy. For every occasi on on which a Stokeley Carmichael or a William Kunsller has been denied a platform by a nervous board of lrustees, perhaps 200 or more invitations have been withheld or withdrawn, for fear of rioting and disruption. from speakers kn own to be disliked by the New Left -and the se have included coogressmen. cabinet o[ficers. distinguished authors -and even the present and former presidents of the Uniled States! IT WAS NOT ··middle America " \hat disrupted Henry Cabot Lodge's speech at Stanford. Jt w a s members of the university · community. including a Maoist professor or ~nglish who has openly declared bis contempt for "bourge<1is" notions or free speech. The dangers to academic freedom, ever since the triumph of the Free Speech Movement in Berkeley in 1964, are not from the outside world as they were 20 years ago. For the past i;everal vears academic freedom -indeed. higher education itself -has been threatened from within. Middle.class Americans have provided the most comprehensiYe. mo s t accessible. most J)trmissive , and in many respects tht best system of higher education in the world. Middle-class Americans authorized, funded and built thal system. They are the best friends higher education evu had. I am sure they would like to be. again. But first. professors -perhap~ political scientists e.speciaJly -need t.o learn a little more about America an~ its people. I Te Be Continued.) By S. J. Hayaka11·a President San Francl1ct1 SI.tilt Collegr: B11 George--------. Dear George ; What do ynu think of women·s lib and polygamy? MC. Dear M.C.: 1 stldom aUow mystlf to thl nk of women's lib and my wife won't •!low me to think of PolY11•my. Otar George : You wrote 1botl1 exercise -don't forget Isometrics, 1 sy~tem of tens- 1ng )'our must.Jes even while you're silt ing or driving. For ins tanet, don'l jusL get up -ten~ your biceps and shove your chair back! lt will do wonders for your ann mu!ICles. FIT Dear Fit: It pla,ys ha\>OC!: with your held, thou1h1 ll )'our chair 11 backed up to a low baklon)' r1lUng. Someday I am eolnl to qu!t reading my ma1L .. • • • f ~--·· = ----.. -...... " t' DAILY PllJIT 7 Oakland 'Hot Vote' Final Action Set Federal: Backing to Lockheed Seen · Looming On 18-year Vote WASHlNGTON CAi>J -The klnd ol backing lo enable us to work out a f In an c I a! Tht British aovemment bas Nbon Admlal!traUon will seek give the project a lon&!!!r term arrangement to keep the Tri-injected $288 mlllloq to fiJ1a:ocl the back.Jng of Coargrts.s to guarantee." Star alive. engine production. OAKLAND !AP) -A coalition-slated attempt to capture, !iv' Cit,y Council seats from incumbent,, ls expected · to bring out .Oakland voters Tuesday in larger numbers lhan for any municipal election in more than 20 years. save the Lockheed TrtStar The LlOll wu tbreatened1;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...,i0ii;;;;;;;;;;;i;;i0iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m SACRAMENTO (UPI) -stale and local officifb. LIOU airbus project, laY• the with a death senleace when • fRE£ ORGAN LESSONS ~ California needs i'ust one To lo""·er th!!! age from 21 to London Tfmes. Other sources the British firm o( Rolls-F h Ad 1 I & I• I ,.___ 1-.-.: · Roy-d-la-d b--•···ptcy or t • u t non-p •Y•r acUon by Lbe St.ale Senate to o or 1.uu•le e-... ons requires rtPort such a rovunment ...... .,.,. ·~ mlA... pleyer elike, MR. FRED ratify a ; propGSed federal either raUlicatlon of the guarantee Is a· must because earlif!!r thi.s year because of THOMPSON conduct• •n con •·litutional amendment proposed federal amendment L 0 ck heed • 1 banks are huge cost ovemu11 In ••citing new Organ Cle11 lowering ,the voting age to 18 ~n:tituct~=~e in the state otherwise hesitant to put up developing RB211 jet engines Method Monday• 7:30·' for au electi9ns. The June 1972 Pnsidential all the money needed. fol Lockheed. p.m, in our Anne1tf The Senate scheduJed 8 vote · I ••-r· t · -======::=:::==:=: The Times' --spondenl The B u r b a • k -b a s e d "ltono ~-R .. __.,_1 Usually council races ill thia fifth largest CaUfomla city a.re quiet affairs in w h l c h ineumbents encounter little trouble. T h r e e councilmen were unopposed in 1969 and two in 1967. for today on a measure adding primary 8 uie irs ma)OI' r H B 1 ·-" h •-- 1 r ~ -••• California to the li!t of states California Eltttion in which 18 Th D ILY PILOT f!!nry ran oa quote d company as v=n negotlat ng 1 5 1 19 and 20-year-olds will bt • A -Treasury Secretary J o h n with the Briti:sh government, 6 4 2 • 2 whJch have voted to allow 18, 19 and 20-year-olds to vote in eligibletovote forpresidential The One That Cares Connally as saying: ''When its signed-up customers for 1835 NEWPORT (At H•rborl COSTA MESA st.ae and k>c.al elections as ~co~n~len~der~•-and--c-and-ida--tes-!or_:=========~~th~e~Um<~'._com~~.,~~w~ew~U:_I ~&o~to:_~lheTr~iS~lar~~·~·d~w:...lth~~llS'.!._2~4-~~~~~~~·;";•~rN;•;'';"°";;k~•;nd~P;en~<~B~~~~~~ Well .u presidential and,_ Qmgresa. Congress and uk for S-Ome but consortium, trying to congresa.ional contests. But political coalitio n s demanding greater representation for blacks who mak, up 40 pereent of Oakland's population, ,a r e pushing for their third success al the polls in Alameda County in the past year. The same coatilion that elected U.S. Rep. · Ronal d Oellums and As9emblyman "Kenneth Meade iast fall Is supporting the co u n c i I coalition slate. And earlier this moftth a coalition g r o u p elected a mayor and wo11 three of four council seats that were on the fist Jn Berkeley, which adjoins Oakland to th!!! north. The Berkeley coalition billed itselr as "radical," and included blacks and a he avy lurriout or University o f California students a" d employes. The six coalition candidates for Oakland council have not taken the radical approach of the Berkeley group and thf!!ir campaign has not involved university students. "Berore the U.S. Constitution is changed, the: proposal must bt ratified by 38 or two thirds · of the SO stat.es. So far 19 slates have ratified, it. The Stat.e Senate originally approved th e ratification measure sponsored by Sen. Mervyn Dymally ( D-Lo s Angeles\, on a tz.-12 vote. It needed 21 votes -a majority of the 40 members -for approval. The measure then went to the Assembly where it was approved last week wllh a minor change .. The resolution was returned to the Senate for apProval of the change which simply added As.semblyman Henry Waxman ({}.Los Angeles), chairman of the elections and reapportionment committee, as a co-author. The voting age was lowered from 21 to 18 last year by Congress for presidential ;md congressional elections. But the voting age remains 21 in California and many other states in elect.iorui for -Possible Tax Form ( 'Sabotage' Probed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Did someone steal a bunch of last· minute income tax returns last Thursday night •·to foul up the system?'' Postmaster Lim P. Lee says his men are investigating. "There's a possibility that someone did snatch some returns. but we have no real hot evidence or witnesses to confirm," he ... said. The nap developed Sunday when a Berkeley free-lance writ- er, Kenneth Trapp, reported he received .a telephone call from an anonymous man. "I've got your return. and it's going to be late. Ha , ha, ha," Trapp sa id the voice told him. "Wby?" asked Trapp. .. "I'm going to foul up the system,'' was th!!! nlp:ty. lnquiry on behalf of Trapp disclosed reports -!till uncon- firmed -Ulat !3st Thursday night, with the deadline for filing expiring at midnight, an unidentified man mingled with some 15 postal clerks stationed on the sidewalk outside the Rincon Anna post office who were accepting last-minute retuml from late in- come tax return filers driving up in cars. Save ·20% Diamonds may be forever. But not at these prices. 1-4K gokf bOdat set Diamond trio or 14K Wllh r\bbon of di.. bMhed gokL .22 ct. lllOOds. .31 ct. total total weight. Reg. weJghL A•o. $225. 183.SO, Now 148.IO -'180 Met\01 14K gold ting wttti recesMd <*lier diamond. .27 ct. \Ot&I --$200, Nowt160 1•K gold wedding rtng •llfl 10 diamonds, . 26 ct. total Might. Reg. 127.50, Now 1102 (llluslnr!!cna enlarged) ladles' oval oocktlill ring°' 14.c gokl. 1.50 d. total ~ Reg. ..... ' 'Now 559.20 DlamoMt stud ear· rin01. Ml In 14K Q04d. Reg.19.95 • -15.11 14k gold earrings wM cent.r diamonds. .... 4G .... Now-t\~!!~"· l Uoe Penneys time payment plan at U-storea: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FULLERTON FASHION VALLEY-SAN UIEGO LAKEWOOD HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE '1'HE CITY" RIVERSIDE VENTURA Shop Sunday, too. 12 to5 P.M. • It still means something at Penneys. .. You can ouHit .Meg and Amy and Jo and Beth for just $11 ~ Penneys. 2~!6 L I f L y I Glrl1' eaoy cani l'ent>-Pnlot• lhorta sets of lllroltli nylon. Striped mock turtle ond elootlc: wllt, IOlld ohorta In Iota of great colorL For-4toexInd7to14. Spring is here. So are our . new spring fabrics. Ready to sew. 399yd. Special buJ• l'ollleslet doallle knlla. Qloaee frcm lots Of colors. Feflect for .,,,. lsU: 981 and drelaes. eo- Mle, easy care. 19Syd. Screen P'lirted 1oos combed cotton piq!J&wlth · EvergJa:zae Minlcal8 finbh. Chooea from a variety Of pettems. 45"wide. Hand90lll8 print striped cotton denim that's crease resistant and rnacNne washable. Lots of colon!, 45•wide. Sew with Penn l'r8sle never·iron Bellwether. A perfect blending of polyester a!llf ootl"f'L White, navy, red, yellow, Nassau blue. pink or green. 45*wide. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! • \ • I l ~ 11 DAILY PILOT M0""'1, .... 19, 1971 .-Facilities Surveyed " 'Countians • in Wheelchairs Have it Rough. r GARDEN GROVE -ll you are in a wheelchair and wanl to use the rut.room In a public I building In Orange County, , chancts &R better than five to Q one yau won't find one you ca.a j get Into. , If you want to eet a drink l from a water 'fOwttain, or place a call an a public l telephone, yaur chances are only allgbUy better -about three to one against you. And if you do manage aomehow to flnd • ratroom I you can get Int. and decide ~ you want lo comb your hair, ~ stralghten your tie, er repair = yt>ur makeup -well , forget it"\ ~ You actually have about one ; chance in a hundred cf finding r1 a mirror that Is mounted so as ~ to be usable by a person ill a II! .-heelchair. ~ These are ju.rt a few cf the [ ,. preliminary findings of a survey cf 745 public buildings ' I I For The l Record •. and facll!Ues Jn Orange County undertaUn In March by memben and friends of the c.Ilfomla Paralyzed V elorans Aasociatlon. F 1 t l tit I ea surveyed by the loam of ID volwitters included ma J or shopping areas, o f f I c e buildings, parts, a e r v 1 c e stations, government omces, dlurches, small businesses, schools, and others frequented by the public. "While the ext.erlors of many so-called public facilltles fared somewhat better than the interiors," said 5Ul'Vey ~ chairman Wayne L. Capson of Garden Grove, "more than one-third of the areas checked have unramped curbs or other obstacles that a c t u a 11 y prevented an unassisted person in a wheelchair from getting ctnto the building or other faciUty in the first place." Detailed results of the accessibility survey will be presented at the First Orange County Architectural Barriers Conference in Anaheim April pol!!ble. Or •t leut ptt..nl It In the future." The survey and the April %1 Conference ln Anaheim are the first majcr effort s undertaken in Orange County to aolve the very serious problem of architectural barriers for the handicapped, Capson saJd. There Is now alto legal impetus to encourage designers and bullden to make future public buildings acceaslble to and usable by the han(iicapped, Capson added. A Jaw enacted by the California Legislature Jut year, requires that all new public t1uildings and facilities be constructed so as to be accessible. Caron Back In County ' For Trial 'P. SANTA ANA -Gerald Spomon!d by tb< Easter RolBnd Caron I! back In Seal Society · for Crippled Orange County for his second Children and Adults of Orange superior e.ourt trial in six County, with technical tbs asaia&.nce ·by ~ California in:t "conviction this time Paralyzed Veter...ans could mean mucb more than Orange Has Census Gain County Told ORANGE A new municipal bead count en an estimated ba&ls sbows the city cf Orange is a blt bigger - with 80,500 souls -than the Stalo Dep.-1 of Finance first thll\llbL . City Manager GiHord Milter 11111ounced tbe -filttft. up from .. orliln&I 7 7 • 0 0 0 .. t!Umate, tbls week noting it imika: Orange elJai,ble for 11\(ft of 'f'arioul f U D d S distrlbulod by the stalo. Non-support Meet Slated $JO Per C•lld Foster Parents Group, Wins Raise SANTA ANA -'Ibe Foster Ad.minlstraUve Officer Robert mort. Thty were told that the present. Parenti AssodaUon al Orange Thomas ls $80 for children up cost or keeping a child in an 'lbe present annual ccist for Cwnty have won a •10-a. to 6, $90 for these from 7 to 1.2 ln.slltulion averages $22.S'l a caring for the chlldren wtD 10 month raise for each child and $135 a month for day. up from f7'111,000 to $111,220: they accept after a double teenagers. The Foster Parents TbiJ Wflek'• acUon wu tht appearance belore the Board Supervisors saJd cllly a tight Association representl 5 a 2 flrst raise la rates for care of cf Supervisora. money situation prevented homes 111 the county and there the foster children lioet Although 1he increase ls them from hiking \}le fees are 718 foster dllllren at January 19St. -muehleuthantheassociaUonli"ii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0imi;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;.,;;;;;;;i;;;i;;ii;i;;i;;;;;ii;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'1 Wanted, they did get an admission from tbe board that payment should be higher and will be next year. Cun-ent fees for children placed in foster homes range from $70 to $125 a month, depending upon the age of the child. The new s cale, as recommended by C o u n t y DOES SHE OR DOESN'T SHE? • • .not 1vM 1111 rnor.1 cllsc:trnlflll ,.,.. uo,ild rtlt ff ml-t.dv'• 1mar1lv knllllld w1n:I,.. we1 crtiled el ttorn., or Ill •nd "orlgln•I 1~c1u,lvel" W• (In IHct\ "°"' ff'lt flnt •rt ol knl!tl1111 wl!llln mln~rn. The KNIT WIT -CHd ••u LOW•ll MAU Cnte MeM, ,.._21n 2 TURKEY DINNERS FOR • Roe st Young Tom Turkey • Turkey Dressing • Cranberry Sauce • Vegetable EVERY TUESDAY $ I 29 A5!oclat!Oll, the d a y -1 o n g 'the stai. prtson 1'rm or two GARDEN GROVE -Tbe conference b designed to and ooe balf years lo 20 yean Aa.soci.ation for Cb i I d r e n ac(rualnt archtterts; builders, he drew last time. This one Deprived of Support will hold l~;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::~ cooununitj'. building officials, could send blrn to Death Row. its regular IDOllthly meeting!;; • Meshed Potatoes • Roll end Butter Bring • friend .. , or maybe your mother-in.l1w? They may like Jou even better after being treated to • delicious . inner. And, look at the price! Iring the whole family! The family Who eats together; stays together! Come on over. aDd otber penoos with the Tuesday el Lal:e .lntormedia1' probl,em ·of atthttecturaJ Judge Byron lt McMillan School, 10101 ·0rangewood barri lo ... h-~· ped crdered Caron, 30, Gardea G ·and ~ ·c:' bel:QN= to ·Grove, ta f.ace trlal May \i oo. A~ G.::. r::· begin at eliminate them. what are DOW murder charges. 7:30 p.m. and is cpen to "ln my own experience," Bartender Douglas Snyder, the anyone interested in tht: non· says Capsan, who also Is man beaten insensible by supporting father problem. immediate past president er Caron in 8 dispute over 8 Further i a fa rm a ti a n is the Paralyzed Vett:rans cf woman, died shortly efter hiJ available through Rase TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ... Every Saturday America. 1•1 have found that attacker went to st.ate prison. Maziarka, '7'1~1470. people often are surprised and Snyder died last Jan. 5 after·_.;~~~~~'.'.'.'.:_ __ _!"========== shocked when they realize that lingering in a coma for more such a p r o b I em as than sh: manth! In the architectural barriers actually intensive care unit of a county • uLM•s ei:lst for thousands cf thelr hospital. He never regained 0-111 o-.c. a.1-. 1n1 w. cwr.-fellow citizens. Once they consciousness. l!Miea. s.rt• """· 09 .. "' MTll.-Allftf know about the problem, Judge McMillan set May 7 ..... SWVIY..S br -Mli;e ••1-J ......,,,_ Mn. Bedl:r L. 1thodt:l1 Mrt. they're usually mort thu as the date for a prelrlal c;.. Ann Sc11me1rr11t1 brl1IMn. 1t~1 -nu.... to ~-It ·r b · g In ... case •roll f'ercr .. .,,_, ......... .,,,._ Ellle, -"-"'""'_:: ___ 1:.c•.:m;.c_,.::_ ___ • __ ••_r_m.::..._"_~ __ • ____ l ~I nlM lnndd'lildrwu -I" -1...-Mddllld. S....ic.M, ,...,,..,, t f'M. 1'11111: Femllr CcllMlel FUMnl Home. PISCH•R b!~ KNOWN FOR VALUES Opan Dally Men. ftlru lat. t:JO a.m. to t ,.m. Sund•y 11 a.m. te 6 p.rn. It_, I!. •bc:Mr. AM Jt. Ill 1hlt ,,_... 1itri ant.. """""""" llMdl., o... " dNlll, ....,,. 12. lwvtwed .,. ..tft, ..... ,,_1 .._ "°""' E,,..,. E. end ltabwt IL FIK ..... 1 "*"-'• Untte f'hc:fwr. '111 Mc:IC.-ltodr.. '"-!w...C.1 bNtlwt. e11 Mid GrW9 • ..,.,,.. Ptt'5""'91 .. tw, f'll lmlltl, Ptlbllu,... lef'¥1as, T ..... .... ,. ll:JO AM. Olurcfl ., ow ,..,,... .. ,__, l..rom. C,,.,..... Smlflll ~ .,.,. Dlrllc'tln. Mother's Day is May 9 United States National Bank Plll•MA'll Maril: H. FF'll'Mn, 11"'6 Wllilfwlled, ~ Leeu1111. a. .. el' deelfl. Ntt1 IL hn'MI PWICllPltl et ~ldl Lffvllll '-It Mortuerr. IURCHHllll A.elem k'""-. • .. kll!!t ol °'""· ~lea Mftd(MI et W.tclltt C ....... M«1wirv. ~ • .... florln« OSt. Ret.ldtnt of C0.!1 MIM. S....Vlcet. .-i1n1 11 Wfttl:llff ai...I MDrtverr, ~. f'ALLADINO Altr9do f'1lllocl!,.. A• "4 of 1111 lllf ",. M...ntlM\orl llNdl. o.te Ill d11lfl. Mii 16. Surv1ved tw -.. Al,,... Jr,. fl/I T"'""'e Cltr1 •l•ter. llli. M. l"el ...... Lo& ..._ ...... _,,,, T,,,....,, 7:• l'M. $mitt. OlaPlf. ll-lern Me-. ........... llr/'• t AM, SS S#Mft & _,..... C.JMllc cr.rdl. '"'.........,, o-i ~ c.. ~1.,,. Smlt111 MlllWff't!, OI,.,.,._ ......... Ak6m ,..,_.,.. ms ..,,....,. ww. a... 9Ulll '-di. De .. ., ... "" ..,.,. 17. klrvi-:1 by -. """'' _fll W1' .. .-tt.. Mldllteru Henry ,._!Gw19', ti II~ ton, MldlkMn1 dMillllfotr, Mn. Loul9e .Sedoft, u.-9-f\f """' ~ olr.n1 "'"9 tr..t-trMddllldrwt. ~ Tund'Y• I f'M. l"ldlk View °"""'' In,..,,.,...,, f'Kfflc V1-Mll'l*WI· .... Pac:fflc \lltW ""°'1111...,, OlrtdWS. f'USTOM , JOIHll II. f'rnlol'I. "5 Olllt st~ u.uN kKtl. DI .. ol delitt\. ,,_,g 17. lurfl'ttll . • ,. .. 1 .. , PenY1 -s~ t..t ,.,,_ tot1, CorON difl MM: dllllll .... , Mn. C11"11 Ann Lobo, L.ttu111 N'-11 bro.,.., ~ Prlfh>ft, S""i. Mel twll 11""1,: Mr1. Evttwn Zill""-....... hl11!d1 Mn. L.,,,..•lne cii.11r, s.fttt A.,.1 ~ .,.,.. children. Servlc.t "911d!Pltl et MCC:omlldl l.etUlll llMdl MOrtUe"'. f'llOlt•ll Mirian C. f'rvu«. 11M l.~OlllCIDI ...... •-~"· Colli ..V.... D1i. Ill delilll. ..... n U . survlwd tw l'r.llbefld, llabert L. ,.,......1 .an. OOn 11!"1llnler. lltMdll llroltllr, • .., a. cgona,11n, Torrence• mo.,...,~ •11'111 Hentg ... Q11l1 Mew1 ,_ •rencld'll..,.. Funer1I ~left. Tlll9d•r· 11:• AM.. Hll1-ldl Cllun:ll, lloM MHlt ~I Pitt;. Wltl'I llw. eru<t A. Kwrtl tffl· c:le!IM. ll1ltl COlll ,,,,_ Moriutf'I', Ci4o recton. • ... u. llON s-r. "" 17, llf 7'Nt ......-er.... H1111llntton lir«ll. Det9 Ill -...; A-11 11. Setvk lf Pl!'lllM el Sml'IM ,,.,.,...., ARBUCltLE • SON WES1CLIFF MORTUARY m E. 11tll SL, Costa Meu -• BALTZ MOR11JARIE8 Corona del Mar . . . C'1J.tue Costa Mesa . . . . . . . . l4f.Ul4 • • BELL BROADWAY MOR11JARY 111 Broad••J', Co1ta Meu Lii-UiS • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MOR11JARY 1715 I.qua eu,.. 114. -• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mot1urJ Cltapel -Pa<lll< View Dttve Newport Budl, CalUornil llUl• • PEEK FAMILY COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 Bolu Ave. Wetlmln1ttt UWUI • SMITH'S MORTUARY f27 Mala SC. 13M131 Umnttngtoo 8eacl limited r.· 11ne Only .. • offer ends Moy lst -- Beautiful Mother's Day Portraits that say "We love you!" special 9 are on~ 799 • one Bx10 for you to keep • two 6x7 for Grandmothers • a/x wa/let-11/ze for the family B~ng bolh your children In now ,,, and there'• no extra charge for the family petl Remember you can charga It at Penney'L l\nne111 ,Ull.•ltTON OrMIOl'l•lr C•tlr IN flOW, 111.QQ tiUNTIN•tOft lll~CH l"lllfl!lril!IOll Citrll.,. '"" ,_, "1·ffll ... . . pays you a whopping big on Savings Accounts At United States National Bank, we wlll pay you a solid, wonderful 412%. Earn from the day of your first deposit. Computed daily. Compounded qtiar· terly. No minimilm deposll Withdraw anYtime;Each account Is Insured to ' $20,000. Switch over to United States National Bank todayl Want 5123 or more? ·- We'll pay it. 5Y2% and 5¥1 %. Deposit your money for one year and we'll pay you a guaranteed 5Y2%. A two year's deposit will pay you a guaranteed 5¥1 %. Start with $500. Add $100 whenever you want. UNITBD w 59 offlcea In the !i mtJor CoontJOI or Southom c.nfomla S'I.M'E S ~ NATIONAL BANK Co1ta Me11 Office I 845 Ne""'Port Blvd. South Coe1t Plat.a llll Bri1tol Street .· • ....,, A"'I l•, 1971 Foreigners' Image of America Not Like Real Product ot them apart on Lakeshore hippies 11 the cities than we Drive," one detective recalled. expected, other dropouts We began lo seiue how biller abounded. There were the skid the light had been. rows, uniquely A m e r i c a n or the most genJIJ imd racially relaxed cilies we vlslled,. wheri we thought it would ht among Talea of muggings a n d as casually as we 1 t be r robberies and poUce brutality information or comments '° are traded around the offices the latest Broadway play; EDITOR'S NOTE - Americ1 often Is flashed to forelgnen i n exaggerated Images: cilies ablaze with tevoluUon or streets paved ·"•Ith gold. AP correspondent Peter Arnett an d began a three-month tour or this country with their own preconceptiOIUI, ln t h i s dispatch ,ooe of a series ,they discuss how their images buckled or held fast. race war, poliee violence and revolution. That has been the stuff of the recent American image overseas. Whit we found was not what we ex peeled. And they all praised Mayor inlllt.uUons that you won't (lnd Richard J. Daley. In Europe or Aata. the worst. "You Northerner."1;;:::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:=:::;:=====--~ just don't know, do you?" ·-photographer Horst Fa as. " neither of them Americans, Assoclattd Prtts Visito!'1 to America tend to look over their shoulders for ·: • • . Money . Pronto. When JOtJ need money, don't waste any time. Talk to-the people at Monis Plan. You can ha-.oe your money the same day your loan is approved. And with yoor money, you11 get our Money- Back Guarantee (if you find you can do better, return the moneywithin 5 days at no cost to you). On ap proyaJ, yoa can borrow from $1 00 to $5,QX> or more, for biU consolidation. a new appliance 0t arry good reason. Two foreigners t o-u r I n C America for the first Ume, we- ,walked through ghettoes, rode with poJice patrols in the crowded cities, and vlsited militant campuses. We saw where violence had passed by : the fire-blackened streets, the empt)' lots where stores once stood. the "riot renaissance" architecture that grafted windowless solid brick walls on b a n k s and supermarl.>.ets lo protect them against flying stones. But ln three months of walking and riding through America we witnessed not a single act of violence, althou~h we sensed that the wtenlial was often there. A! part of our visit. we looked for signs of America 's probterm. We had difficulty · coming to grips wiUi them for we have seen f8r worse el~where in the world. We had watched people_ starving lo death in East Pakistan. gasped I h r o ugh Tokvo smog far worse than anything ever seen over Los AnJ;!eles. I twice baret.v evaded muggings in Ba1u:kok . I've been trapDed ror hours in a Rome lraHic snarl. T watched French students tearing up paving stones and sma-;hinJ;l them a! the police on the Boule\'ard St. Germain de Pres in Paris. and saw murderous police I e '' e I charges against demonstrators in India . So we brought an International perspective to the problems we expected to find. We eventually got t h e And there were lbe Street feeling in Chicago that while People, once carefree flower the city was not the police: children but now running in state we sort of expected lo packs near the m 11 l t.a a t find, and that whi le the police campuses like birds•of prey. patrols were discreet and not We were aghast at how pervasive. the ann of t.he law unhealthy the girls looked, was strong and powerful and pimpled and sallow faced. could be mobilized insli.;;tly. wrapped up in stiaw\s. "They We had no doubts that the are on a de8ttt-trip,. a police eou.ld be very tough sympathetic Berkeley student indeed, on demonstrators or told us. anybody else. And we round the religioos We heard talk of a dropouts, like the Amish and revolution being born on the the Hutterltes. who hive can1puses. but having seen almost totally withdrawn from insurgency lake root and grow society, s«luded on their in Vietnam in the past dtcade ranns from radio and we could only conclude that television, certain that the America is far from revolution Bible is a surer instrument for as the rest of the world knows self-Improvement Iha• the that term. ' voting machine . The ghettoes were a Horst and t talked about the surprise. At first l[laRee West dropout phenomenon as we Oakland and Watts in drove through Montana. "Only California might have passed America is big enouKfl to as better grade residential accommodate people who so subu rbs in many foreign o b v I ous 1 y re i ec t its cilies. Where were those disciplines," he said. crushing mobs of people and J said ibat only American filth-laden alleys that our can afford them, such as the minds had always associaled skid row bum in Les AnR;eles with ghetto Jiving! who has his morithly welfare But as we stepped across check sent to hi! favorite bar the prostrate form of a drunk lo pay his bill. Or the Street on the sidewalk and enteffif a People tho have mastered the black job bureau, we se11.sed art of collecting food stamps what the American ghetto to stay fed . really means : despair. The We had brotq1:ht with as black people inside rega~ mental pictlfres of the famous us with what seemed like cool American cities. Generally, hatred . 'f'hey were: anxious to "'' found these ~xpectations send us on our way. off base. Outside again, we began to So we round Chicago, on see the surroundings for what first arriving, to be much they were: seedy, crumbl1ng more beautiful than the gray, hovels. We sensed none of the sinster picture we carried in sheer joy or living that we our mtlds. Her b o Id 1 y found in the Wa11chai Rhetto in designed office buildings and Hong Kong, or even Cholon in apartme11.ts rose dramaticallv Saigon. over the lake shore. So much challenged an aide ln the mayor's office, mistaldag 11\Y sli11hlly oasa1 accent for Bostonese . "We get along·with Uie blacks and we are ttirlvl~ because of ii." The blacks we met concurred. Los Angeles was t h-e tbrobbina, lm"*4iate metropolis we imagintd it to be, not so much a city as a slate of mind. "J haven 't been to the center of town in Un-ee years," a movie producer told us when we visited 20tb- Century For in Ho~ood. How t'Ollld a Chicagoan not visit the Loop, or a New Yarker ignore m id town Manhattan! We found in New Yorkers a tough honesty, as thou~h they feel their daily dillicult1es and dange'rs are a prlee• worth paying to live ia one of the world's two "or three truly great cities. No.one pretends ·Jn FUri.City. Beauty Bulletin from Pen"eys: Spring perk up. Try a Helene Curtis "Springtime" perm 1 ()00 Includes shampoo, cut and style set. Or come In.for a fashion cut by one of our experts. 2 24 So whatever yeur hurry, ca A yoor nearby Morris Ptan office lo rm out what your loan will cost. From tha! per.speclive. ll1en, the police of Chica~o appeared efficienl and obliging. more like the bobbies of London than the embattled Jav.·men we expected lo find in a once gangster·infested city more recently notorious for the street battles during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. The hippies. too. did nol fit sadder. then, WAS the Chicasto the preconceptions we had South Side where whole blocks brought wi th us. They were of once attractive homell were difficult to find. and whe n we SO battered that they might did discover them on the have been the target of PULLlt:ltTOH HUHTIHOTOH •1t:ACH NIW~llT ••Atlf Ore119ft1lr Cenl..-Hut1tlnglan C.,l!!r Fe&lllaro 11191111 . Morris Plan lonely West Coast beaches bombs. they were remote a n d ' __ A_1_1a_n_ta_1u_r_no<1_ou_t_to_be_o_ne_,_====== 2nd Floor, 1n-.ua 2nc1 Floor, 1n .mr w Floof", ......n11 OIU.HG• "The Cl'Y" '°"''°'' ./I 673.3100 Newport &elch -3700 Newport Boul•v•rd Detective John Parilli and other officers we met showed a remarkable knowledge. They poinled out addict<;, gamblers and other crimi11als as '4-"e rode, sketching in backgrounds of major and minor crime. They like their v.•ork and often recalled the street fights- with demonstrators during the 1968 convention . · "Just a dozen ol us fook 200 careworl'I, hardly the free spirits or the Age of Aquarius . But we envied the peace of some of them, such AS the bea r de d youth from Massachusetts we met !Ying languidly on the sands of Mendocino Bead) in Northern California, who told us when we-asked what he· was doing : "I've been listening to the waves for ·six weeks, man. lt's enougfi.•• . But while we saw fewer • is Sears IS Pric .. Ell'ective April 18 thra April 24 Leam the A rt of Knitting ' ' Sear.s KNITTING SCHOOL will t each yon a1l yo11 need to know abon\ knitting ••• a ..... Bogin ... Alonday, April 26 10 ClaMeA for Onl y $}0 Ten houf'.end-1-h1lf sessions or professional knitting instraction ... •nd you 'll be knitling like 1n expert! Seit.\ has three knitting cours.es for rou and your rriend1 to choo~e from: begin· nera. lntermed i1le. end an Adventure ht Fancy SUtrhes. You'll come cut or the le~sons 111'ith beautiful rinished garments, and years cf productive knlttina: ahead or you. SAVE 20% ... Regular Sl.59 127 "Laura" Al l·Acrylie )'arn -I sears / ........................ (Q"'"'" ..... '!!!Jfl 1..-'llJ<' Cling-Alon® Mesh Knit Hosiery ""Tht-fit to be tried" ... Senrs exclusive 1lretch yarn. Rein-- forced heel and toe. Propor- tioned &iies, fashion shade1. S 1.79 Stlh1e1que •••••• i pr. $3.33 R~gul"' 81.59 pr. 99: $1.'7» CJing.Alonl8 Repl•~ement Rose ••• 2 pn. f3.3.'1 ••llMIU ~· ~MQM• l l lffl" '"''"' t•Nf• •aNtC• lalfl• ...... tou1H CO.-t1 ,,.l,l "•W1" . .,,_ t tri .. Nlf~h .. ._ tM• h t. t~e A.Mo .. t 1H , ........... 11 ..... tto . , ... ",h •I• A,._ Oel7, U.... t ,.._ t_J.._,n.. h r. f This wee.k o,nly. 15% off fabricc .and labor · f o.r cus.t.o~ d.raperies~ • Save a big 15'.l'. on labric 11111 labor on our entire collectiarl of caJll ol>M weave labricS, plus ourentireetieera>llecfton. Thatmeana- save 15'.l'. onaislom~llld--. IOCCXll!llementlllem- male to :IOlll' °"""'·This week Cl\IY. Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at~home $ervice, free. • • I ' I• DAILY PILOT Mond11, Aptll 19, 1971 CHECKING •UP• Parrot Fish Has Owi1 'NightgoW11' By L.M. BOYD NOT AtANY PEOPLE realize you can break a rib by has more than four toes, none ... A goldfish's teeth are in its throat. •. And the older the coughing violently. Nor do deer, the bumpier the antlers, many realize more women don't forget . than men do so every year. . This oou1d surprise you. but BOW LONG does a pound and a half of coffee last around cocktail gatherings whertin your place? No matter, both men and women merely wanted to mention it congregate are noiser, far takes a coffee bush a whole noisier, than stag parties. As a year to turn out that much.. rule. The Acoustical Society of UNDER BRITLSlf LAW. the America's researchers found most a young man may be made to pay by the court for that out. They took sound fathering an illegitimate child levels at various gettogethers. is the equivalent of about $6 a I n c id en tally, they also week. discovered that librarians - HOW REMARKABLE the shush! _ with martini glasses parrot fish! Come dark, it knits its own nightgown. As in their hands are just as the sun goos down, this West noisy as everybody else. lndian fish secretes a CUSTOMER SERVICE : Q. transparent murous envelope "Don't more ,young girls than that spreads out from its young boys commit suJcide?" mouth to encase itB entire A. More-yomig girls try it. But body. At sunrise, it unbuttons more young boys actually go the thing, or whatever, and through with it. .. Q. "What's goes on about its business. your stand on sex education?" IN THE WEST P.EST AU-· A. Stroii:gly believe In both, RANT of the world's largest sir ... Q. °Can clpgs catch hotel, the Raffia of Moscow, mumps from cows? A. the quickest way for waitress--Understand it bas happened. es to get from the main dining RAPID REPLY: Yes sir ha! to the kitchen is do~n the it's a fact kosher butdi~ up escal~tor. An~ thats how have · sought and got the they do 1t. Architects, please ·imakers t turn out a note ... "W H A T I U S E D :~:al writin: instrument to ha~e about a . three-anteed fr of any pork-d a y weekend 1n the gu~r ee country was all the dirty denved products. clothes I had to deal with when we got home," writes a feminine homemaker i n Ventura, Calif. "Fortunately, that's all over now that we're vacationing regularly at the nudist camp." ANIMAL WORLD' No bird Y our questions and c~ ments are weicomed and will be used in CHECK~ /NG UP wherever possible. Please address your let- ters to L. M. Boyd., P. 0 . Box 1875, Newport Beach 92660. Mother's Day Spacial! the look that says "we love you" captured forever in a Mother's Day Portrait of both your children 3 loving 795 portraits, only Saying you love he r isn't always enough .•. give her a lasting memento of your love ,,. a beautiful portrait of both your children. This exciting special gives you one BxlO to 11.eep and two 5x7 for Grandmothers! , Special prices now in effect on l ife·Color, loo lfJ.JJJ1 ht. 21J "UNTINGTOH ClNTlll, H•at .. 19te1 IMd Phofo91tph St11dio ••• It! F!oo1 I ' -· ST ARTS TODAY Shop noon to 5 p.m . \ • :- ~''"'-~. ;jjj9 *"'~ Fresh fashions! fumishingsl A sunburst of values In eveiy department at all May Co. stores . . BUDGET STORE WOMEN'S FASHIONS MISSES' ACRYLIC RIBBED TOPS sportswacr 800 re9. 6. 99 WOMEN'S STRETOI PANTS dreues 816 reg. 6.99. ACRYLIC KNIT PANT SU1TS, S-M-1. dresses 810 reg. 12.99 JR. HOT PANlS, T-SHIRTS juniors 801 reg. 3.99 ea LOOK OF IHN PANT SUl1S suils 828 reg. 14.99 JR. PRAIRIE COTTON DRESSES junior lingerie reg, 5. 99 SHORT CULOm LOUNGERS . daywn'815 ng.5.99-6.99 BESTFORM PADDm !ACE BRAS bros, 819 .... 4.00 WOMEN'S BRIEfS AND BIKINIS ~820 reg.69cea MR. JOHN® PANTYHOSE hosiery 807 re9. 1.59 WOMEN'S LEATHER SANDALS 812 reg. 6.99 HAZB. lllSHOP@ WIGS, MANf SHADES wig bcr 826 reg. 24.95 CHILDREN'S WEAR JUNIOR BOYS' BASEBALL SUITS childrwt's 808 · reg, 3.99 JtlNIOR BOYS' NG-IRON SIACKS 3.99 4.99 8.99 2.99 10.99 3.99 3.99 2.59 7/3.99 99' 4.99 14.50 2.99 children's 808 reg. 2.99 1.99 TOT GIRLS' Sl«lRT SETS, 2-4 chilcnl'1808 reg. 1.79 4/5.00 GIRLS' 2-l'lfCE SHORT SETS, 7-14 girls' 824 reg. 2.29 3/5.00 ' BOYS', MIN'S WEAR BOYS' .QNS Nil PANlS, 8-18 boys' 822 ..... 3. 99 2.99 MEN'S CARDIGAN SWEATERS men's 805 reg, 9.99 5.99 SHORT SUM DRESS SHIRTS men's806 reg,3.99 2.99 COTTON CORDUROY RARE JEANS men's 809 reg. 7.00 4.99 WIDE CHOICE Of BODY SHIRTS men's 809 val. 6.00 2.99 TARLETON NO-IRON GOlF JACKETS rnen's817 reg.6.99 4.99 POL YtmR KNIT Fl.ARE JEANS men's817 reg, 12.99 9.99 MEN'S TROPICAL SPORT COATS men's 814 val. 19.99 16.99 HOME FURNISHINGS JUNGLE PRINT BLANICETS. 72x90" bedding 825 val•• 1.99 4.99 TWIN SIZE R.OCKED BEDSPREADS bedding 825 ' If perfect 34.99 9.99 JUMBO SIZE BATH TOWBS linens 831 If pert. 2.5o.3.25 3/4.00 3-PC. BATH MA T/UD SETS linens 831 val•• 6.99 4.'19 DB.UXE BB>RESTS, LUSH COi.ORS 818____ reg.$10 7.99 FURNITURE THROW COVERS 818:::::-·-nL4. ... 11.99 3.99-8.99 5 ~ ROUND AAfA SHAG RUGS 011----reg.$9 7.50 > misses' pant suits summertime pastels 6. 99 value 8.99 Airy weave of acetate/nylon. Breeze-cool. Sleeveless and vee-necked in blue, gold or lilac. Sizes 10-18. SpomweorBOO ~ men's long sleeve dress shirt buys 1.99 reg.6.00 No-iron polyester/cotlon . Mini checks. Deep blue, brnwn or black solids. More. 14~ to 17. Sle&Ye 32-35. may co. south Fo•1t pl111, un di.go fwy. at bristol, co1t1 mew; 546-9321 lhop mond1r thru aaturday 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1und1y noon 'tll 5 p.m. SAVE37% no-iron print sheets in "Flower-Bed" 2 FOR 5.00 twin size reg. 3.99 Full-blooming flowers that come out for spring. Pos1els on a predominantly blue or gold background. Burlington no-iron sheets thot come out of your dryer with never a wrinkle. Twin flat or fitted Fortrel ® polyestef!Cotton 4,99; full size 2/6.00 2.99 pr. cosespr.1.99 domestics 803 easy-going shifts for misses, women 3.99 value4.99 for all -about wear oil sum- mer long. A tremendous collection of prints, colors. Misses'S-M-l; 14 Y2-24% men's pants, jeans straight or flare 2 7 OO reg.5,99. for • . 7.99ea Flores or straight-leg. Hemmed or cuffed. Solids, fancies in blues. browns, greens, more. Most no-iron. ' pretty sleepwear nylons ••• cottons 2 99 values • 3.99-4.99 lovely nylon overlays. Coo- lest of pennonent press cot- tons. Dressed up with loce, embroidery, S-M-l sizes. sleepweor821 lace-edge cloth with 4 napkins 3.99 reg. 7.7 ' · Festive toble wear. No-iron soil-release 52x70" clolh. 4 matching napkins. White gold, lime or yellow. lflens 831 MAY CO BUDGE"J ·. ;; STORES ·· ' . ·old Make , Ends Meet Scrounging . EL MONTE (AP) -You fiee shabby old men like him in ~ost any town, offering to !!iell passersby OOds and ends found on the street. As traffic stops fer a light on the main street, the old man grins and waves battered pens and pencils at the motorists. He asks a dime. Most ()f the drivers ignore him. A few buy. A few talk him down to a nickel. Does he sell many? ''Naw. Heck, I must've had these two-three weeks. But every bit helps, if I can pick up a nickel once in a while ... "I asked the ()fficer once if it's okay to sell this, and he says, 'Yeah' as long as you don't. try to go two and tree dollars.' 11 If he looked too prosperous the cit:,.' would ask him to buy a $2 license. The man says he lives oo a $58 monthly ~nsion I · from the Chrysler Corp. and cooldn't afford the license. "Hell no, I won't tell you my name," he replied to a reporter's question. "I don' want it in the papers that I'm. selling this stuff. .. " But he answers o t h e r questions. Today was a good day. He found a used goU ball and two dimes. And he recalls the high poin of bis scavenging career. 1 Three years ago, while on his daily eight.-mUe rounds., be found a bicycle padlock. "It was a combination lock, see, and it was open. I took it down to the store to see what they get for them and the guy says it was $5.95. "The guy says it was worlh It if only I had the com· binatlon, and he says he'd give me the combination for $2. "Well, 1 sure as bell couldn't do that, so I works on it for a loog time. trying to see ii I could get it to work." When he found the combination, he says, he sold it for $2. The old man .says be came to Utis Los Angeles suburb from Mk:higan and lost the $15,000 be had saved in a bad investment. He says he'll be 6S soon and eligible for Socia1 Security, but adds that he may continue selling pencils and pens. He opens a brown sack he carries with him. "See that? That's two loaves of perfectly good bread I found in some garbage. There ain't a thing wrong with it. It's real fresh and everything ... "Every little thing helps." GWC Pape:& Given Top U.S. Honor Golden West Col l ege's student newspaper, t be "Branding Iron" has won one of the highest awards In collegiate journalism, a medal by the Columbia Scholastic: Press Association. A score of 9S4 out er a possible 1,000 points made tbe award possible. Tbe "Branding Iron" scored high ln content, writing, editing, makeup and other categorle~. The medalist rank J s granted to publlc .atio~s receiving to publlcat1ons with top scores. Only 10 percent of the entries receive tbe award. Said the judges, ' ' T b e Branding I r o n is an exceptional publication. News is varied, complete. The paper ref J e ct s a hard-working. conscientious staff. Congratulations." KWS LIKE UNCLE LEN Monday, Aprll 19, 1971 DAILY PILOT J l • ~,,~ ..... *"'~ 11-esh fashions! Exciting home furni shings! A sunburst of values In every department at all May Co stores dresses, costumes, panlsuils All in easy-care polyester. A large collection in brights, darks, soft pastels. 8-18. reg. $34.• $36 21.99-22.99 Town & travel 49, cosmopoli1an 96 soft, pastel nylon gowns Many styles, pastel colors and lovely trims in this group of gowns. 5-M-l. reg.~$11 J.99-6.99 si_,10 tot girls' short sell Cleverly styled In fresh patterns and colors. All permanent press. Available in sizes l-6x. reg.1.69ea. 4 for 5.00 budge!-. girls' war 824 \ famous pants, skirts, tops One look from a collection. Pe>- lyester pants, vests, llln ics, skirts. Flag-bright colors. val .$15-$22 9.99-13.99 skirts & coordinates 101 s;ne 20\f, on gold toe soclcs Anklets, crews, mid<.alf, O\'er- calf. Enormous color choice. Good time to stock upl reg.1.25-2.50 1.00-2.00 men's furnishings 127 l J boys' sport shirts A dazzle of stripes, florals, smashing solids. No-Iron polyester/cotton, Available In slzesB-18 · comp. val. 3.99 2 for 5.00 budllOl-.~-m lflop monday thru lllllrday 10 am ID 9:30 pm, IUl1day noon 'Ill 5 p.m. ---. one suit! three pieces! Pocketed safari jacket plus pants plus skirL Polyeste r. Gm ., yel., navy, blue 10-16. suitval.48.00 28.99 actlve-76 Ma:PhafPB a-Lon® Knits have the new four-button plack- et front, long point collar. Come in sizes S to XL reg. 5.00 3. 99 me11' ssj)L furn. 84 9-foot contemporary sofa By Hiatt. .. clean, modem lines with no welting. In large cho ice of fabrics. regularly$570 $399 furniture 141 stmchyTrfo:Jastic bra Bra stretches all aro und for com- fo rt. Dcup reg. 6.00 4.99. B, C cups too, in white only. reg. 5.00 4.19 bras and girdles 44 Aristocrat corduroy covers. For Hollywood beds, studio couches. Mach ine wash, dry. Ne>-i ron. Moss, gold, rust, ruby, green, blue, brown. reg. 20.00 14. 99 draperies 113 20\f, off wet look pillows Bright decorator accents in red, green, orange, white, yellow or black. Colorful! reg . 5.00 3. 99 an needlework 40 MAVCO ' • ' ! . l I I I r I j • • U DAILY PILOT MOftda:r. Aonl 19, 1971 . By .Phll lnterlancll ~ Park Concern Group Holds Meet in Mesa • , ;: Representatives of a dozen ' Costa Mesa groups w i t h apecial concern in parks " acquisilien and development Lion Country mel Thursday night tt discuss the totaJ picture. City officials were impressed with the out.come and interchange of ideas. The city has a number ef park sites awaiting develepment and City 'Starf ari' . Manager Fred Sorsabal noted at lhe last city council ' , , , e ·;-pril 2·"4--mmeeee1tttn1orr$1!!.eee-h" ·be" fl.. aside for capital ~ A host of Hollywood stars : led by Bwana Cleveland ': Amory, author-critic a n d ': pre!ident of the Fund for I Animals Inc., will trek into ~ Lion Country Safari April 24 ; tor a two-hour program. The Saturday afternoon sen.ion begins at t and will •' dedicate the Fund for Animals ., Booth at the south Orange County wildlife sanctuary. ParUdpants include Doris 1 Day, Angie OJckinson , ' Amanda Blake, Mary 'I)'ler :: Philbin, Ralph Story and : others. •· ....... Tbt. booth in tbt Safari Camp entertatnmeot area ~ the 500-acrt part will bie lei •tress tbt cooUnllDWI need for eoncun in behalf el wildlife and conservation. Improvements. Parks Director Joe Jones has all the latest information in what can be done in the way of traditional tr innovative development. One concern is w h a t homeowners groups a n d various other citizens want or may suggest. The meeting adjourned with a recommendation to diSCWJs parks needs and concept.I with Individuals w i t b i n the organi1ations represented and meet again 1n a month to review them. Graffiti is A Joke ... Really CARL MITCHELL • . < , . . • • • , , FOR LAGUNA BEACH SCHOOL BOARD RESPONSIBLE REPRESENTATION ENDORSERS Mr I Mrt l iH Wil,0•111 Mr I Mrt loii Turn•• M• I M1t J,,,.,, P11111v Mr l1rr, Hw"I M'r I Mrt Johll Solo,,.011 \.Mr I Mr.. M1rrill Joh111e11 Mr I M" loy Holr11 Mrt Virgi11i 1 Su"'"'' Mr & Mri !ill Witt"''" M, & Mrt 8il1 Oeth • Mr H•ny t..wro11c1 M1 & Mri Al,., Wt!10~ Mr C~1•l11 8111tc11 Mr l ill Mc:Ct.•tl'f' MlkNll C.,,,.,.~""'"'l!I" l lM wocax.,., (~'"""" m l'•rt "'"· -L•Gll'lt 8M(ll ,,.,,.. ~. l • Callfomla Dlglawa11 l.anflscaplllf Upkeep Costly on IQ,~OAcreGarden c .... "9fft!ut ,,.,..._., ELECT A VOICE OF REASON SACRAMENTO (AP) There's a 10,000..crt garden ill callfornia 1lretching f r o m desert nnds to the rainy redwoods. More than $13 mllllontwlll be invested to keep it green and 1rowlng next fiscal year. ty curtallll growing In the me-The ''Johnny ApJ!leseed" el dlan strip ol'divJded freeways. the far.flung operaUon ls a SS. By night ' they cut headlight ye a r . 0 I d hortlculturallst, glare from oncoming traffic . and day or night they prevent ~JllJam Armstrong, who en. head-on crallles by ent•ftllina: • Joys his maased Dower and and halting errant an. ahrpb beds on the five lcres department awitched away trOm DDT use early ln lhe 1960s and greater use or natural control• -lncludin1 bacilli rather t b a n pesticides. Dennis H. But the people who see It dn so while motoring along at &O miles an hour, so they rarely atop to snlft a flower. The "garden" Is t be laodscapi.Dg and planting along. Jl,000 miles of highways aod the "gardener." possibly the biggest public grower in a top agricultural state, is the Division of Highways. California went into the around his sub u r bta n business of planting trees Sllcramento home:. ' along bigbways in 1929. Most 1'My vocation and • m y of those roadside trees were avocation are the same.." sacrificed for wider roads but Arm.strong says with a sinile. by 1939 the state was em. Some hl&hllgbt.s from his '25 barked on a permanent plan· . years " a hlghway plariter ip-- Ung program te prevent elude the · r,velatipn t h e "We've pioneered ln~uil.e a few tbinga." ,pya Atrn~~. Among tbe.ae are retardant! used to 1low vegetation growth to cut maintenance costs and coating some leaves to retard los~ of moisture t h r o u g h transpiration. erosion. Mttrtl~t ln 1957 utbetic concerns Mangers TO THE HUNTINGTON BEACH About llOO state workers tend and water the ice plant, ivy, ihrubs and lree3 which soften highway glare with greenery. ;';.":~.~P:~:~~i•~ ~::~n~ Doctors Report Way That uona1 highway beautification Relieves Itching'Pru'n' Of effort!. ... • ' . Plantings range in.~. from Swollen 'Hemorrho1'dal Tissues ivy starts to towering 1· • • UNION HIGH SCHOOL BOARD OF TRUSTEES VOTE APRIL 20 In desert regions, shrubs screen the wind w b i I e Bermuda gra!ll helps bind sand for the roadbed. redwoods and Iron · ha rd Fint Applications.Give Prompt, eucalYPtus trees. They must .1. Temporary Relief in Man C be carefully selected and , "' . . Y a&e1 adapted to California's wide ~1amoe.teft'ect1vemed1. inflammation. The answer~ variety of climates which c~Uon that in !"any cases doctor-tested Preparatio,. Jr. range from the rain.drenched gives.prompt rehef f~r hou.rs ~ There's no other hem.or .. I .DENNIS H. MANGERS In rainy Northern California, pine, grass and ivy sheller cut slopes r r o m erosion. Hardy oleander have saved numerous lives as living safe- from auch hemorrho1dal dts· rhoidal formula like Prepara· fog·shrouded North Coast,·comfort and actually "'helps tion Hand it need• n,o throu~ the scorching ~eat ~f ehr!nk swelling of hemor· prescription. Ointment or the arid Southern California rho1dal tiaeuea caused by the suppositories." deserts. PROVEN EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP Commltttt to el.-:t 0tnnl1 H. M•,.gers Norm.1 ll<tl'ldel Glbtlt, HonGr1ry C~•lrm1n lin Anlt1 Lint. Huntl1191D1i luc~ '41·jlll ~thousands of Amerirans will spend $9,500 for a Mercedes-Benz.thats two feet shorter than American luxury cars. At MCrudes-&nz, we define luxury a 'i,it differently than most automobile' maken. To our way of thinkin1. size for the u.ke of size is not luxury. It is waste. lf ~me an inch to a Mcttedes-Benz won't contribute to some functiqn, Mer· udes-Benzencineen won't add it. The Men::edes-Bem 280SEL is more than two feet shorter than the three lead·} Ing domestic Juxurycars. I Yet it is a curious fact that the SEL provides mou '\OOfD than any of them. . Eric Dahlquist, in a rttent issue of Motor Trend, commented on the size of the American luxury car. "'Stunned by such mass, the Passenger enters to find that size does not equate with room. that the SEL ac1ua1ly wins in the space race." • The engineer is king ' A Mercedes-Benz: is as different from , a domestic luxury car as automobiles, each with £our wheeb and an enpne in front. can ~· Mercedes.Benz is one of the few auto- mobile makers left in the.world where the engineer is still king. Desian decisions are made by an en· cineer, not a styling whiz or a marketina; '"Tift 'L' i" SEL "Illa"' 1h111 the C4r l!AJ a • four-i"ch lonitr wkttlbiUt: thart llit normal 1&0SE, but ii should "'•"d for '/irtt0,' rlw Nck Jtat area is lh•t l••ft." -Motor Trend 0Mtn;;dts·Bt"t t"fi"ttrJ btlit1111 bo1h ha"dt belo"I on thl whttl. So lhtybu/11 four critiClll controls i"to 1 a single slalk 11nd positiontd it a finitr's lenr.th aw11y. In its recommended positton, the seat seems too far from the wheel. Ahd it's much too unyielding to be called ''luxurious.'' But that strange seat position lets· you drive with the wheel at arm's length and your back firmly against the seat's. And that gives you better control. The "unyielding" seat, it turns out, was designed by orthopedic surgeons to give firm support. You'll ·appreciate it more after.geven hu11drtd miles than you do afler seven. If 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 length from the wheel. embodies four dif·, feunt con1rol$. High and low beams, turn signals,' 'windshield wipers, and their two-speed control all can be operated without tak· ina; your hands from the wheel: Or your eyes from the road. Such oddities, admJttedly, take aome getting used to. But there's a ~n for every one.· And, before you know it, theodditita have f?ecome neces·sities. No domestic sedan ••• 1 M~Benz unique am.one -... ..,;·-;:· the world's motor can. 1 Mercedes-Benz.co-· ' gineers believe that• car's abilities should be ' · liin1teil·onlybyroad =--and codaitfon5-not by its own design.! Every Mercedes- , Benz. has fully indepe°" dj:pt s~pension front.1 a~rear.Adesign con~t used, without exception, on 20().mpb grand prlx can .. lt pro-1 videi:the maximum possible comerin& powp-; over a variety cf, road ~urfaces.' No.domestic sedan lti$ it. Every Mercedes·BCnz. is equipped with four massive disc brakes. Standard, not optional. Because, ·to our way of thinking, it's unthinkable to relegate the best brakes you can build to the option list. No' domestic sedan ·has them on fll · four wheels. And.every Mtreedes-Benz has a steer. Ing system so precisely balanced that. ibe car seeks a straight.path dh its own. No domestic se.dan·can match it. Even theGrandMercedes600,a three-' ton limousine, notes Motor Trt'flli, " ..• ' will outiun and outmaneuver many sports cars." Join the club But the final word on the dislinction' between Mercedes-Benz and domestic luxury cars belongs to a group of Mer· cedes-Benz owners. . Owners so enthu$iastlc that they've formed thirty-two chapten of the Mee· cedes-Benz Club of America . Each year they hold more than 60 I~ cal competitions and 3 national rallies. It's their opportunjty, in perfonn· ance events, 10 cx.tmd .t.Jteir can to the limitsofwhicbaMercedes·Benziscapable. $9,500? Our pursuit of mgimerlng Ideals liu placed Muudes·Bens automobilea among the world's most costly. The suggested retail price of the Mer .. ccd.,.Bcu; 280SEL. without optiolll; is- $8,663t. . With such amenities as the optional electric sunroof and air conditioning, you can spend over $9 ,500. However, all Mercedes,Benz autom~ biles do not cost $9.SOO. Nine models cost !es$, beginning with our 220 Sedan at $5,44St and including our280SL two-seaters. . And six cost more, including the 300SBL 6.3-dubbed by Road <!< ·:ira.k "merely the world's greatest sCdaii .•• "-e.t $16.355': ' . A'ly 19,.500 car can look food in the.countf1 club drivtway. Merctdes·Btnz}oolt. good i" placts lib Lime Rock, Road Amtrica a"d Lasuna Stea. But if your tastes do not run to the conventional l~, car, we .think you11 find Mercedes-Benz automobiles well worth the price you pay. And if you'll fill out theroupon be.low, we'll send you our least expensive -p~ duction. A full.color Me'rcedcHlcnz b~. chure, absolutely free. f~I Conl ror1 al aitry, e:<cl111iw ftftnfl~. white> walh (t.howii),Oli.. ..,.ciGrll. ttai. llpd loul tu., tr .19. Canri1!1t 1'71, ~·Bali; al Sortb ............ J-. x I wizard. At Mer«des-Benz, the engineer· ing department still tells ~ sales de- partment when a new model is ready.' The usull is an automobile that has 't been built to an engineering ideal · And an aulomobile that is fundamen- tally different than any built in the States.' It Is at the wheel a man discovers the performance: characteristics tbft make Not everyone joins the club. Mercedes-Benz owners '¥ho rally their cars are a relaUveJ:r·unall share of <Ni-:bwners. ' But, then, no domestic luxury · car even has a club. -·-0----~-::~~:~~s~:~:~~.:;.·--1, , 120 W, W.nlef A.,..11• Som AJNt, C .. Hondo 92707 Plt•se send me your fun<.0lor brochure of the I Mcrced~Bcnz motor cars. I O Please ioclude the Mercedew:kru Gulde to EUJ'Oo I From oddity to necessity To the uninitiated, this approach may , appear to have disadvantages. Your first time behind the wheel of a Mercedes-. Benz is likely t~ pro- duce a vaaue sebse of disorientatioo., pean Delivtry. t N• I Ad""" j City St&I~---- -~~-----~~------------- Eric Dahtqui1tflf Mo1orTttnd 4,M lk111&0SEL. lltbt WfOt•, .. rite u11prct11lftto.q; M11r«W stilt rW.1.i· tllll Gttmo" l1~t1'1 ~r morkllt, U well &1 mMdt of lht rest of 1h11 civilittd world." Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. ,12ow. WarnerAvenue.SantaAna,c..Jifornfa927o7_Phone: 7H·S46·411•. I I I .- ) -. , •, Plenty Good ' .. •• • For Savers ... It's been a dry seagon, bul show~n-cif.bargaiiis'will rain down on thrifty shop pen QD Thursd•Y· and' Frid•Y.1 April 22 and 23. The "good and plenty" sale o{;t,he year sponsored by the Niguel Art Association will get under way at 10 a.m. on both days at 29632 Vista Plaza Dri~e. Lag'una Niguel. Coastal residents are ·invited to just come and browse and perhaps find a missing cup for a ·depleted punch bowl set.· Or for the acti ve -shopper, artistry in articles will cover everything from bfit·a-brac,. makeup, jewelry, clothing, small furniture, ·1amps, glassware, china, picture frames and odds and ends. For the decorative-minded, paper flowers will add just the right touch to a bouquet, or embroidery·thread will give a fjnishing touch to the latest project. There may even be a' pair. of rii:ht-sized skates - just in time for a jaunt to Sun Valley. Those interested in information. regarding the sale may contact Mrs. Pete Courtemanche, 495-4646, ways and means chairman, or Mrs. Weston G. Jackson, 495- 5333, co-chairman. · · 1 • • Assisting with the sale are the Mmes. David · Gra• ham , Charles Meadows and Ovilla Gamache. .. • • • • SHOPPING FOR A RAINY DAY -The sun wtll shine on nargam hunters sorting through merchandise offered by members olthe Niguel· Art Association. Checking out cut glass vases, wall plaques and stuffed animals l! Mrs. Pete C9urtemariche, chairman, as Mrs. Weston G. Jackson, co-ehairman,'rides onto the scene with a paper flower and a smile under her uinbrella. · I • - - Society • Flower For Membership Tea Associate members and new provisionals of Las Petites Fleurs Auxiliary of Children's Home Society of CaliCOrnia will be feted durinc an annual membership tea from 1 to 3 p.m. on Thursday, April 22 . • Mrs. James Peakes, membership chairman. ls in charge of ar- rangements for the affair in Monarch Bay Beach Club, Laguna· Niguel. Serving on .her committee are the Mmes. Douglas Johnson. refresh· ·ments, assisted by John Bouvier, John Van Dyke, Raymond Strauch and Michael Garman. Decorations are being planned by Mrs. Donald Duffer with in· vitations handled by the Mmes. Donald Pecarovich, Charles Gassett and Jack Goffman. · Les Petites Fleurs was chartered in 1967 by 10 members and n9w ho.Ids a membership of 25 active workers, 45 associates and 8 In· actl~es. ,Under the leadership of }(rs. George West, the auxiliary pro- motes .public interest and supports the adoption agency, Californla'1 olde,srand largesl privately supporled facility. ' LES PETITES FLEURS -Mrs. James .Peakes Oefl) and Mrs. Donald Pecarovich select flowers for ·spring ·bou· quets to brighten tables for the auxiliary'• annual mem· bership tea on Thursday, March 22. Youthful Ideals, Aspirations Spa.n 'Madem.oiselle's' Era NEW YORK. N.Y. -Betsy Talbot Blackwell I e a v e s ' 'Mademoiselle · ' Magazine after 36 years on t h e magazine's staff. She relinquishes her position to "Mademoistlle.'' Ed i tor Edith Raymond Locke with the July. 1971 , Issue. "Jn 1935 her sights were set on a magazine dedicated to the young college-educated woman between eighteen and Lb.irty who shared her own wide interests ... everything from fashion to fiction , grooming to sound vocational advice, phllosophy and art \o entertalnment and l r a v e I . Mrs. Blackwell understood from the beginning lhiii a . tO h: publislier's belier lhlt It magazine for the young should • WilUld ' ·not • 1ell a fashion open 11.s pages lo the ,YOUQg.',' ••• ~a.Jazh;'le)_ lht m 1g11 In e Taken from the forward cf publlsfied Dylan T' b o m 1 1 ' 1 ''Forty Best StClties Sr'cm verse• · pl1y, :•Under Mllk Mademoiselle,'' by eutaffen . Wood,"· com pie~. with the Cyrilly Abels ind Margarill author'• corrections made Just G Smith the above best before hls death. The play was d~scribes ' Betsy T 1 1 b o t first heard re-_d 1l • "Y" by 1 Blackwell's 36 active years on staffer, who .immediately her magazine "for smart afterwards ran backstage and young women ." bought it. From its early beglMlngs. "Mrs. Blackwell's policy." Mrs. Blackwell helped lo guide taY• a stl!f member, "has the magazine through many alw1y1 been to \ruet her literary and fasbkln "firlt.s." ~ton •nd totally back their Judgment, no matter how LITERARY FIRSTS eontrover1lal the subjett. Sht Under M r s • Bla.ck:ov~ll'• never turned a'.n)',thing dow~ astute direction (and contrary on the basl!1 of subject or . -. . , . ·' language -only If she thought ' thoagtib. and asPtr1tions of it w1sn 't good enough to· meet the young. '• M 1de·mo1 aelle's", ~i&h . "Our Gt.lest Editor1, which 1t.andards." we started in the 30'1, help us S,AfiS 'GENERATIONS · ketJ> ln touch wilh today's ln1 htt deep· trteri 'offict, youth . I look·u'pon June; when surrounded by s h o w ca s e s t!le Guest Ed\tO(s come to cOntaininl her collections of New York to .help us eclit the antique dolls, fam, and Augltst Col,lege Issue, as our n;iinial.ure she e 1, Mrs. rejuvenation period -a BlaciweU tells how 1he has chanct for--them to bring us heen able, ,to spin the some lresh, new 1.deas." generations these p~ 36 Mrs. Blackwell has always years. been determitled to keep up ''rhanks to the predomin-with the pace or today's young enUy YoUng staff at Madem-people -their dren , tbttr oiselle, and its Intense com-philosophy, their mom: ..• munication with · the Youth of the country, l have been BIG STEP 1 • able 4> foUow the ideals, "Last year, J approved .the first rour-letter wcrd to be published in Mademoiselle. I felt in context, this word belonged. Until then, 1 had been reluctant to C()ment to its appearance, but we h I'd reached a point where l simply could not disregard it!" With her background In publish!ng and merchandising, Mrs. Blackwell created a magazine that bridged the gap between manufacturer and consumer. She originated the now-acctpled practice o I stating specific prictl for every fashion shown, and lellin{readers throughout the country where merchan,dise could be purchased. How did she promote her youth markellng concept? "The idea started when I wa! discussing fashion .with Andrew Goodnlfln, head or Bergdorf Goodman . I explained to him that bis Older cwilomers will inevi~bly grow older and die off. lie had to carry young clothes a t concomitantly young prices in order to meet the need! of his new young customers." YOlITHFUL MARXET Mrs. Bladtwel\ continues, "Y()Uth-minded marketing was a revolutionary idea at that time. It was ''Mademniselle" lhet recogniled the educated young woman u a viable martet, and sold the te1tll1 and beauty lndu!trle1 . manufacturers, and retailen on youth." Looking back ()II her 3f ye11r1 a t "Mademoilll!lle, '' Mrs. Blackwell points out. "Mademoiselle" I 1 slightly autobiographical, I w1s In my twenties when l s t a r t e d working on the magazine, anf there wall really no magazine edited for me. I was cert1lnl7 interested in 1 career; l ,llked clothes ; ind I liked to read. •• 'Madernol9clle' encompa,. 1ed e~erything r lrf8! interest. ed In, l_and fortunately, thtre were clher people like ,me." I • I ' " ) 4 DAIL V PILOT Monday, Aprll 19, 1971 '71 Debutantes ,Become Toast Of an 'Empire ' r Pink, white ml 11"'1 Don! arrangementa at a festive mood when ltll Empln> Oebulantts were introduced Frlday during 1 motbu- daughter luncheon ln the Newport Beach home of Mra. Norman Ctrkle. The 11 young women, who will make their bows Friday, June II, were greeted by Mrs. John P. Wright, president of Harbor Key, the sponaorint; organiz.atlon of the ball. Also offering a welcome were the Mmes. Wllllam H. Weaver, president-elect; Van R. Parker, ball chairman, and Ivan W. Sturgis, presentations chairman. A highlight of the luncheon \Ya! a showing of fashions from the Park Ave. Brklal Shop. Orange, modeled by Harbor Key members including the P.frnes. J. O'Hara Smith. Jamei; Evans, Frank Pendleton and Jean Miller and eeveraJ dtbutanta. M l 1 1 Nancy Newbn>o&b. a llllO Emp~e debulante modeled her ball gown. 1!171 Empirt debulantes and their parenta are Miu Leslie Jane Allen, Mr .. and Mn. Roy Jeffer90D A 11 e D ; Miss Kathleen Merry Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Vernon Duncan ; MW Mary Mlcbele Edt.lblute, Mr. and Mn. Charles Graham "'Edelblute; Miss Jo Ellen Field, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Llncoln Field; Miss Karen Anne Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Richard HUmar Johnson. Others are Miss Patricia Suzanne Mayna June, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ethlel June; Miu Micbeala Qetb Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. Cbarfes Elmer Kelley; 1'1iss Calhleen Su z.-Anne Martin, Mr. and Mn. Carl Laurence Martin; Miss Mary Lou Myers, Or. and Mrs. Oiarles Lincoln Myert; Mils Horoscope Rebecca Pal&e Sloc:um, Mn. Wayne Warren SIOClllll; Mia Sb<wri A-Thornquist; Dr. and Mrs. John Jerome Thomqu!Jt, and Mia Gwen Ellllbelh Wlltwer, Dr, ml Mrs. Jean llk:hanl Wlltwer. Debutantea ml lhe~·lathen were bolted at a bruncb sunday 1n the Irvine Cout COuntry Club by the ball committee of H'.arbor Key, which is a support group for the Child Guidance Ce!Jler of Orange County. Tables were adorned wllh wicker baskets !Wed wllh spring flowers. Before the brun<h, the lkla and their fathers toured the Harbor Key Tbrtf1: Siop, where the dtbutanta 1ive service time, and the cllnk:, beaded by Dr. Leooard I. Les&er. Proceeds from the 1eventh annUal blill will be pnaented lo the C1lld Guidance Center. Sagittarius: Proposa I Due TUESDAY APRIL 20 By SYDNEY OMAllR ARIES (Mardi 21-Apnl 29) Much that OCCUTI may be shrouded ln mystery. Bt wary of one wbo speaks only off·the- reeoof. Some facts must be for the record. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): What you thought wu part of past may, like legendary phoenix, rise again. Kttp mind open. Some may startle with unusual requests , • Boon to Busines s Orange Coast secretaries will have their "day in the sun" Wednesday, April ,21, during Secretaries Week, April 18·24. Theme of the 20th observation is Better Secretaries Mean Better Business. Hoping to be a winner in a contest to find the outstanding secretarY sponsored by Bahia Chapter of National Secretaries Association is Mrs. Vernon Price. - Chapter Advances Members of the Silver and Gold Chapter of Soulh c-i Community Hospllal wIU be- gin an acUve year of service with the first meeting ol the year aL 10 a.m. tomorrow. Plans for the flUld·raislnf soft drink booth at th6 summer Laguna B e a c h Festival of Arts will be discussed in the South Laguna home of Mrs. Bertram Kam pert. BE FREE .•• TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Some of your fondest desires can be fulfilled. You have backing. Go ahead. Refuse to be discouraged by oM of little faith. You have knockout punch. • VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' Lie low. Observe rather than assert. Be flez~le. Sagittarius individual will aid. Key is expansion. Refuse to stand still. You must Ume moves. ---------------------1 OF FACIAL HAIR FOREVER , LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS --- Scholars Benefit An art walk and tea in Laguna Beach's Sleepy Hollow Gallery will be sponsor· ed by the Orange County Mills College Alumnae on Wednesday, April 21, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admiring art works including jewelry, driftwood pla· ques, mew and Wll'e sculpture and paintings are (left to right) Mrs. James Truesdell and Mrs. Esley Cowman. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ GEMINI (May 21.June 201: Obtain valid hint from Taurus message. Stress is o n performance. What you do now will be appreciated by one in position of author ity. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Your intuition is active. You cut through deadwood and get to so11rce. Trust inner fttlings. Jgnor one who procrastinites. LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasize practicality. Don't play games with security. One who tempts, promises is not for you, Know this and respond accordingly. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21): You can show off best qualities. Good lunar aspect coincides now with creativity, love, inlenslfied relaUorui with opposite sex. Memories Rekindle SAGmARIUS <Nov. 21- Dec. 21): Home, environment , relations with ramHy members a r e spotlighted. Build for security. Refuse to heed sire n call or irresponsibility. CAPRICORN (Dec. %1-Jan. 19): Be versatile. Realize that ideas can be numerous but total concept Is special. You will understand. Neighbor is APR IL'S BIRTHSTONE 1hi O iam()l'IJ. More than &nJ other 1"1m, th• Diamond, pQ&ed for !ta tire and brilliance, bu inlluenced th• liYel and aeticma of both mm and women. ltl hardnu1 make• it lnYinclble and, ao it wU thourht, mydically capable of protect1.n1 a weart.r from evil. The Diamond romantically 1ymboliie1 Innocence !or April'• children. South Coatt Pla1a l1i1tol at tha Sall Oitto Fwy. By Erma Bombeck When a radio station caught fire recently, a disc jockey ran into the burnlng building and emecged happily v.'ilh the one thing be considered worth. risking his neck for . . . a recording of Frank Sinatra AT WIT 'S END singing, "Night and Da y.'' "Yeah., but not until next When l asked myself \\'hat I Easter.·• he said. v.·01.Jld save if our home was in "I'd save your hair dryer ," names. the answer \\'as quick said my daughter. and unfaltering: the baby book ··But what about all the or the children. l don't get friendship pictures of your mellow too often. but v.·hen I classmates you gat.hered?" d<J I am positively sickening "I see them at school," she about it. I lea( through that yawned. baby book and can almost see "I think I would save my the bald-head and the v.·rinklefl bowling ball." pondered my feet ; smell the milk breath husband. and talcumed bottom ; feel the ··You're kidding," I gasped. smooth skin and wet fists. ''Thal thing has been stored in That book is Daddy with hair . the attic so long, it's flat on a house the size of a phone lhe bottom. You never bowl booth: me in a size IO. It can anymo re." never be repl aced. "I know. but if a new house "If our house was on fire," I v.·as being built and 1 didn't asked my family , "?.'hat would have all this yard work and you save?" inside repairs, J might have "Who set It on fire?'' asked time to bowl again." the youngest. My other son hesitated. "I "It doesn't matter who set guess, first I'd grab Harry the fire," I said. "I'm only tour dog), then my box of asking what you would save." snacks I keep under tbe bed, "That1s easy," he said. ''My and then my can of new tennis Easter candy in the freezer." balls. If I still had some time, S4Q.;9D66 "That's stupid." I said, I'd check on you and Dad." ~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~"ilhiaiticainibe~ice~p~laiced~.·~·mi::i~ .. W~haitaw~ould 'you :;ave, Meet the genius behind that Fabulosa glow, ANA MARIA ALBA appearing 1 to 3 Tuesday in I. Magnin Santa Ana to teach you the beauty ritual using her secret for mu la creme concentrate. Get the purse-size Fabulosa Spray as a bonus with any Fabulosa purchase. Just at I. Magnin. Cosmetics L.__, Mom?" they asked. I thought of the book with the pink faces that launched a thousand Olristmas cards. The record of immunizations. The lovlng arms t b r o w n around Granddad's knees. The cardboard flowers stapled to a sucker, and sald, "My list oI baby sittus." "1bat f I gu res," they grimaced. I didn't want to blow my image. BesideJ, I keep the list of baby sitten in the back of the baby boot. likely to tell tall !f.ory. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be aware of what Is or rea1 substance. Don't fa]) for fast talker. Ask to see, hear and test facts. By being real· istlc, you gain respect and money. Know thls and proceed accordingly. PISCES (Feb. It.March 20): Emphasize the new. Encourage one who has ideas. You benefit from fresh approch. Leave the past. Crowning Glory beauty salons 0'111 lVEllN$S AID iUNOATI ~Pl'OINTMENT NOT ALWAYS Nl!CESSAJtY SPRING PERM SALE! Bouncy, breezy beautiful curls Flattering new fashion look. $S95 Very Special. Reg. $15.00 now BUDGET PE RM •••.. olwova •SK (Normal Htir) Si FROS TIN G SPECI AL •• , .•. $145 SHAMPOO-SET STYLE CUT ~T .. 1WH •215 ., .. SOUTH COAST PLAZA-Phone 546· 7186 Lower Level-Next to Sears Open Evenings 267 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa Phone 548-9919 Open Evenings & Sunday 2 IAllllDlt lllllW • INllA ANA • 1. magn1n Wo CARE about you! Look your bo1tl ,,1._ ........................... _ Alumnae Lesson Defense Makes Sense Who better to head a program in self-defense than a policeman and a former "-larine? Stephens College A1wnnae of Orange County have asked Inspector Edward J. Kovac or the Tustin Police Department to instruct them in ''Self- defense for Women" wben they meet at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 20. The State Mutual Savings and Loan building in Tustin will be the locale for the program. Inspector Kovac joined the Force in 1965 after serving four years in the :r.tarine Corps. He was appointed senior patrolman in 1969 and investigator in 1970. All area alumnae are .invited to attend. Mrs. Wyn Chapman will furni s h further information for those interested. BEAUTY SALON 1/2 SALE PRICE • TO REMOVE EXCESS HAIR WITH MODERN ELECTROLYSIS, MEDICALLY APPROVED.,, SAFE, FAST t GENTLE. CONSULT WITH OUR LICENSED TECHNICIAN IN OUR BEAUlY SALON. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • OUR FAMOUS CONOITIONAL. ANO SALON CUSTOM PERMS: REG. 2s.oo ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 12.50 AEG 0 35.00 •••• o ••• • •• ••••• ••• • •• ••• • • •• 17.50 REG 0 50.00 ••• •• •• • •• •• o •• ••• o •• • • •• ••• • 25.QQ THE PERM OF YOUR Q-IOICE INCUJDES A PERSONALIZED STYLE CUT• BEAUTY SALON, 0 RESTOR CONDITIONER REVITALIZES YOUR HAIR. .CONSULT OUR KREE EXPERT IN PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 . Molt411 •... .,,11 19, 1971 DAILY "LOI' J 5 Goose Sings Swan Song When 'Ugly Duckling' Appears · DEAi\ ANN LANDERS: A very al· ~active, intelligent, IOft.1poken woman Just left my home. She Is my lovtt'1 wife. lt was our first meeting and I am sWI in a state or shock. His description of her was a far cry from the person J met. alford to hlve her inslituUonaliied. God'1 sake wake up before il's too late ID pick up the pieces and make a decenl life tor yourself. -COMES Tl-iE DAWN ANN LANDERS '1 out hidden talent or brilliance Is 1 myth. What pot does is remove the inhlbltloos, cloud the judgment , make blabbermouths out of some people and lie the ton.rues ot others. -BEEN THERE For the. past two years he has been. describing his wife as a hopelesa neurotic, a semilnvalid, unreasonable, hypercritical, violenUy jealous, etc. I was astonished to see a woman who is in excellent heallh, cultured, and refmed. She had come to tell me I could have her husband if I wanted him. Imagine my 1urpri11e, after he had told me !!lhe ~ou:td fight a divorce to her dying day, and.that our only hope wu to wait. until he could I learned she wai his th\rd wife (news to me), that he had had numerous affairs, but hil wHe was willins to keep the marriage together in the tmpe ' lhll evedtllilij He would outgrow the chasing around. lie, ii a wonderful f"1her to their tbtee children• which she said mtde up for a great many other things. '1 thanked her tor coming, and when I closed the door behind her 1 also closed the door on ,HIM. As I sit here I wonder how I could have been such a fool. I feel used and unclean. How many single women who are che.ating wlth married men are buying the same line I bought? If anyone out thert is in my shoes, for DEAR DAWN: I ca11 add tt0lhin1 a. yolU' leUe.r txcept my tba.nkt lor l111vl:a1 written It. Im bappy for you. -aod ud for lbe be.ti's next ~lctlm whom be probably bas alrtady selected. DEAR ANN LANDERS : As a graduele student who has spe nt the last five years wtth pot and non;>ot smoking friends, ( would like to resJM)fld to the student who thought grass brought out the best in her. She recommended it for those who have a the Univer<y o[ Illinois. I swore Qff after four pot partles. Every time I smoked I became involved in ridiculous arguments about l.nane subjects. t ended u1, depres.sed and remorseful. am .rot a smoker, and 1 often find myself in the company of those who are, I am in a position to make some fairly objective observalions -and I have done so. DEAR BEEN : Your letlu 1upport1 the theories I have beard e1pre1sed by tbe be1t experts la the Ueld -othert wbo have also Been There. n1ak:1 for writing. Unsure of rourself on dates? What's right? What s wrong? Should you? Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landen' book.let, "Dating Oo's and Don'u;• enclosing with your request 35 Cflnts in c-oin and a long. self-addretsed, ttamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. Women Not 'Shelved' · hard· time "opening up to others.'' I tried pot when T was a Creshman at I do not sit in judgment of those who SQ.loke . I take no position on the legallty or the morality of pot smoking. All I know il!I that it was no good for me and I will nev~r smoke again. But because I They are as follows : Heavy !lmokers, be they law students, med studenL~. architect students or philosophy majors, are much more pleasant, more alert, and Uwy communicate betl@r when they are nol smoking . The notion that pot brings ,,... Deborah Zangger Wed Busy Wife Questions Freedom I Pledges Exchanged 'fhe H.ev. Denis Garvey officiated for the ear I y afternoon servi~ in S t . Columbans Catholic Church, Garden Grove, when Deborah Louise Zangger exchanged wedding vows and rings with William Lee Dern er. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Zangger of Huntington Beach, the bride was given in rnarrigae by her father. Serving as matron of honor was the bride's sister, fifrs. Frank Holzkamper, and as maid of honor fi·tiss Linda Vreeland. Bridesmaids were Miss Debby Thorpe and Miss Denise Duron. Joseph Walker served as besl man for the bridegroom, who is the son of Arthur J. Derner of Breda. Iowa and the late Mrs. Derner. Seating guests were Michael Bruning, Michael Lynch and David Evans, brother of the bride. The bride was graduated from Huntington Beach ~Iigh MRS. WILLIAM DERNER Afternoon Wedding School. Her husband, who attended Orange C o a s t Collegt, served four years with the U.S. Navy. A provocative li:llk o n Woman-Free to Choose? will be given by ~1rs. Norton Benner for members of the Amerlca..n Association of Unlversily Women, Sa n C I em e nle·Capistrano Hay Branch at 10 a.m. o n Thursday, April 22. Mrs. Benner. wife of a Hillsborough physician and mother of four children, is noted for her support or measures to improve education and the status of women. Followu1g graduation from Rockford College in lllinois, she went to Jiipan on a teaching fellowship and later received an MA from Mills College dealing with t h e imp.act of the Shinto religion . A Glowing Reward Gold Athena Medal A deserving Orange Coast \voman will receive Newport J.larbor Panhellenic's Gold Athena Award during the seventh .annual Pageant of Athena Luncheon Wednesday, April 21, in the Santa Ana Country Club. Festivities begin at 11:30 a.m. with a social hour. to be followed by lunch and the presentation. Named for the goddess Athena who re~ resents excellence for all women through their tireless contributions to the good of the community. the award is a gold medal im· printed "'ilh Athena's likeness. Previous winners are lhe Mmes. Walter Burroughs. R. I~. Bacon. A. L. Pinkley, J. H. Daniger, Robert Bernard, Harold Boyvey and Robert Marshall. Women interested in ... attendicg the lecture in the '-----------~~~~~~~~~~~ San Clemente home of Mrs. NB Auxil iary Shelving in Mesa Verde Library some of the many books provided by the Cost.a Mesa Friends of the Library is 11-1rs. Kermit Christman, one of the group who will be installed during a spring meeting in the library on Tuesday, April 20. Coffee 1Nill be served beginning at 10:00 a.m. and Jack Holland of the Orange Coast College drama department will speak on the topic of women returning to careers. The public is invited to attend. Parliamentary Topic Chosen by Democrats Ann Hanrock may call Mrs. John Augustan, membershi p John Auguston. Picture 'shows State H istqry The Ladies' Auxiliary of Newport Beach Fire Depart· n1cnt gathers the l hi rd Wednesdays al I p.m. in va rious locations. Information regarding location may be ob- tained by calling Mrs. T. C. H.B. High School Student Art Exhibit Cruisers Cast Off HB Republican Women Plan Talk by Newsman Tht' history , of California Parliamentary Pacesetting Also featured as speaker depicted through Franciscan will be the lopic chosen by will be Tom Len h a rt , missions will be shown in a Mrs. Calvin Olcott or chainnan of the or an g e slide presentation by A I Huntington Beach for a c 0 u n I y Dem 0 c r a l i c Morrison, past president of the meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday, Federation. who will discuss American Association of April 22, of the Democratic the background and aims of Retired Persons, Ne w port \Yomen of Orange County. the organization. Beach Chapter. All interested women in the Fellow club members may Aiming for a membership Corps veteran who w a s area are invited to all.end the bring a sack lunch to Newport trophy is the Huntington awardedtheBronzeStar.heis gathering in Democratic CM ·Auxiliary Harbor Lutheran Church at Beach Republican Women's presently a news reporter and Unified Headquarters, Santa noon for a social ho u r ll -·mber of the Wri·ter's Gui"\d Ana The third Thursday of the preceding the 1 p.m. meeting Club, who urge a interested """ · Tb d A ·1 22 or America. Mrs. Olcott is president of month members of the on urs sy, pr1 · womeR to join the group and Mrs. Harold camp be JI . Chi unit of the National American Legion Auxiliary ,,;==:=:=:;::;;=:'=:=:=:=:= attend the Rext meeting on membership chairman. invjles Association or Parliamentar-Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather Dailey. 548--983S. Mon. thru Sat., Apr. 19-24 DTERY SttOU f011 WOMEN & CHILD•lN tuL1ntrltl, CHll MO.I • 541-1'71 511 th1 9•1•! 1rl worl au• 1*11d111h !11 lh• H11nliflglo11 l11cl<t High Sthool Oi1lricl •11 111w pro d11cit19. Oi1pl1y1 .. a1 como from W1thnin1ln, M1rin1, H11flti11ffo" Wi11t.,1D•119, Fo11,.f1 i" V1ll1y end Edi1on High School1. 111 tk1 ,...11 1l H11J1ti11glo11 C1nl1r, l11ch 111d Eding1~ 11 S11t Oi190 f/w1y. H.I. ~1ember£ o( the Woman's Ci\'ic League of Newport Harbor will join the regular cruise of the Pavilion Queen at It a.m. on Tuesday, April 20, and enjoy the sea breezes preceding their I u n c h e o n meeting in the Tale of !he \Vhiile. Following lunchron the group will elect officers for the 1971·72 year. Wednesday, April 21. all members to attend and ians and an officer of Las Olas in the American Legion Hall, Mrs. Richard Dittmar . bring a frie11d. which guests are invited. al 8 p.m. hospitality chairman, and her I---'-------------------------------11 committee will be on hand in TINY PEASANT The public is invited to join members and their friends for the day. Cruise tickets will be $2 and luncheon the diner'! choice. Mrs. Stanley LaLie vre is taking reservations through April lfi. Wine Enhances A wine tasting and buffet will be enjoyed by members of the Orange Coast Chapter or Scripps College Alumnae at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, April 21 , in the Laguna Beach home of 1t1rs. Robert Armstrong. Mr!. Armstrong is chairman of the fund-raising party lo which guest! aere invited . the Huntington Beach Recreation CeRter al ll:30 a.m. Jean Louis will discuss Unbiased News . the Impossible Dream. A Marine Lake Forest Artists Meet Guest artist Mrs. Robert V. (Sylvia) Moon i er will demonstrate oil painting for members of the Lake Forest Art Association at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 30, in Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. The Corona del Mar artist runs an art school in Costa Mesa and is known for her figures and harbor scenes. WEIGHT@i WATCHERS. Proudly Presents GLORIA MILLER LECTURER Opening April 27, 9: 30 a .m. Boys Club Laguna Cn. Road Ml'. Mlll 11 11 lfl 1flr1ctl¥1 h•w11wH1 who 1!11 1111 alfl'IOll 100 peuJ1d1 ti,.ca joillillf 1 Wai9kt Watch1r d1t1. Mrt. Mill1r 1i: .. 1w1 Wai9ht W1tch1rt will wo•~ lo h1l1t you 1011 peun.d1. She 11 the liwit19 proof. Why dofl'! you pl1J1 lo '-""'' lo the op1fli119 1f the 11(.0fllll cl111 i" l19uJ11 !11ch April 17 lfld l11 rfl for yo11r111f how W1i9ht W1lch1rt Cl fl h1l11 you 1011 weight ofl lhr11 d1licio111 m11l1 1 d•y 1,.0 1J11c•1 be1id11. FREE WEIGHT WATCHERS KIT Introductory Opon Meeting For Information Call 835-5505 ~Color Special~ Tuesday & Wednesday April 20111 & 21st 8''x10'' living Color •OITIAIT on1y88c* 'fl!!~~ • a.w .. -clu1dreo-od•ln--ps-1 Sp<c;of of each person s;ngfy only 881, plus 501 f;fm 1 ... ~ $1.00 per peISOn, plus one 50¢ f;lm fee. * Select f~ Httitkcl pictures in rocliont block and llf>lt• and living color. * .__ -w•liff ''Guoront~ Satisfaction.:" • PM •li'flry -coutt10US service. * u.it -one Speciol per·person. I• Senior Citiun1 Welcome I Photogropher Hours: 10 A.M. to 1 P.M., 2 P.M. 10 6 P.M. CiRANT PLAZA HOURS: DAILT 9:30 to 9; SUH. 10·1 IROOKHUIST HUHTIHIOTOH Al ADAMS llAC:H for the counrty look COUNTRY CALICO PRINTS Sparkling colors in wee paisleys, calicos and florals. Mercurized Cotton 44" /45" Wide Guar. Washable YD. ABBOT 'S PEASANT PRINTS Soft as down challie in prints to mix and match. ~II Catton Challie Machine Washable 44"' / 45"' Wide YD. PRESTIGE SCREEN PRINTS Vibrant colors on tiny florals, alJ on beautifully soft cballie. Acrylic Chellie M•chine Washeble 45" Wide TI® YD. SCREEN PRINTED Tui~ SHEER AND COOL IN A GREAT RANGE OF COLORS Camp.ire V.1lues At $1 .19 yd. Permenent PresJ Wesh•ble Polyester & Catton 44"'/4S"' Widths II HOUSE OF FllBRICS S..11tll Cent Pl•tct-l1itlol •I S•" Di1,11 fwy. Cfft• M-141·1116 O'••t•fel' Mell~ra,.91tho•p• 1J1d H••bo• "•"•rt•-52•·111• Me11•, ''•1-l 7th •t l •i1tol ,, .. ,. ••-141·1111 l11e1111 Peril C11tffm-l1 1'11"'• •I S11,.lon '"-'•rt--lll·,111 I I I I ' I I I • :.~.: ... : ' . ' . ·-• -""' ··-·----~ . Jf OAllV PILOT Mot1if•Y. Ap1it 19, 1971 Sirhan Still Under Guard Prisoners Seen as Threat to Life of Kennedy Killer RE~£17:c'r MARIAN C. BERGESON SAN QlJENTIN (UPI) - Tw• year• ~ter b e I n a oonvlcttd or lht murder of Seo. Robert F. Kennedy, Sirhltl B. Sirhan allll ls being protected from other prisoners on Dt1th flow 1t San Quentin l'rl$on. Sirhan 11t1s convicted April 17, 1969, 1nd later sent to the apeclal seclion of lht prison thlt houses 91 o t h e r cond~ men. ~pite the pus11e of time. P r i s o n officials have not marltedly relaxed the special prtcautions set up when he arrived. "We still view it a s hnardoos to have him out with the men," said associate Warden James Park. "A notoriety nut wantin1 to get his name in I.he paper ml&ht attack Sirhan." The one man prisori officials don't view as a threat to the killer of Kennedy ia Ronald Fouquet.. convicted of bating his common-law wife's >year- old son to death. otl\er condemM<t i n m a le 1 wl\tn he is let out into a 1mall e1ercise area on the row but that, too, is screentd off. Park said most of tbe trouble authorities have bad with Sirhan, 27, stemmed frcm the restrictions plaetd on hlm. "But lbe possibility ol an attack is real," he sald. ··we got a picture of Sirhan ,in 1169 that had a black hand drawn on it. It came from 1 row inmate but I can't say which one." Durinc his rirst year here Sirhan, who entered the prison on May :J. 1969. went on a 13· day hunger strike to protest what lte called • ' N a i i concentration ca m p · I i k e treatment." After that the other inmates were allowed to talk to him through the screen. Last September Sirhan was subdued with teargas when he threw a tantrum in his cell. Park said he was upset at the time becaust the S t a t e Department wouldn't let his mother go to Jordan. one of Sirba.n's ltwyen d~ his trial for tht' June I. llM, 1laylng, &a.id he vi!ittd him about tbrtt monlba •ao. "I thought ht wa:s pretty sick, a1Uated and nerveua," Parsllns nld. "Of course that's not uMaturil for a man en Death Row." . "Re came Into lht little anteNIOm and met me and we reviewed the case." Par.son! said the defense h11 a 400-paae brief on file with the state Supreme Court but the 1talt allorney general has not yet filed lb brief in the matter. Park thinks Sirhan may be one of his tenants for a long time because of the appeal. "We have one man here who has been on an appeal for almost five· years," he sald. Att-Omey Luke McJtiuaci: aaw Sirban about a month aio. He prHJ.ctl It wiU bt at lt1•t a ytar before the case la coolld<red by tllt court. The appell rai1t1 • il111t1, lncludlftJ proJudlcial llibllcllyl tbt entire quutioa of captti punlaltment aad Pl1clllltr1e testimony at I.be trill. The ltnltby brief el11ma tba psychiatric tutimony sbowtd Sirhan sbookl havt betn guilty of 1?W11l1UJb\er, not murder. Georae Shibley, the L6s Angtle.s attorney of Arlblc background who en~red tbe case to help In tbe appeal, 1114 Sirhan was "very frail" wbtn he visited him recently. "Altbouah the feod I 1 relatively 1eod on Death ltow, he is thin and be-11 ntrveUS, .. Shibley said. "Hla life ii drtb. Life la not h•PPY oo lltalh !low." INCUMBENT, TRUSTEE AREA 3 " NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT e IXPIRllNCED Si• yHrs 1chool board Prseident '69-'70. e CAPABLE service. Policy end le1dorship po1iiton1 11 county end slate levels. e DIDICATID Strong locol control ind 10un<I businos1 m•n1gement. Sirhan live.s 1 quiet life in A ctll screened orr from the' other men, Park said. and Fouquet shares a 1imilar ceU ntxt to him. "He's been p~tty quiet of late and spends most of hi.s time reading new spapers and news magazine,;. He watches very little television," Park said. Brazils, Military Start To Ease Up MARIAN C. BERGESON "He can talk to Fouquet through the screen but I don't know if they talk much," he Sa.id. SJrhan can converse with the RE·ELECT LARRY TAYLOR WE NEED HIM MORE THAN EYER NOW! Sirhan Is vi.sited occasionaJly by his molher or lawyers. Attorney Russ~U Parsons, PROVEN FIGHTER ON TAXES DEDICATED TO STUD!NTS 11 ·YEAR VETERAN BOARD PRESIDENT EXPERIENCED W• '"• f•r -tenrff wltti 111111 •11 tti. L .. 111• lffcll l••r-4 •f 14M.-tl91 -e WILLIAM WILCOXIN, Memkr 1961·71 : e lOlllT L TUlNll, M1t111llet 1fS74t: e DON TOllN, M1111• Mr 1t6J.61: e MIS. L. JANI LOGAN, lf·67 e ILMll 'I. llOWN, M-Mr lflS.St; e HOW.t.10 WILSON, MMINf 1t11.11: • Dl. A • .t.. ••ruso. s.~~' 1t1t-'4. ruo OE JANEIRO (AP) - After seven years in pewer, the Brazilian mllitary leaders are adopt.ins: some of the soc· ial reforms which ltd thtm to throw out the last civilian government. President Emil!O Garrastazu Medici ha.s decreed tbe ta:· proprlation or vast tract& bf Amazon land and ea:tended 1&- clal benefits for the millions of rul'll workers. Only two weeka before the ascent to power by the armed forces , on March 31, 1164, President Joeo Goulart an· nounced similar measures to pave. the way for a gantral agrarian reform in Braz.ii. Al the time tht military called these measures part of a lef· list plot l• install communism in Brazil. Medici wa.s one of the 1enerals who supported the movement against the civilian aovernment in tt&.c. Last wttk, on lht ~a1ion ef the seventh annlve.raary cf the revolution, the president himself anncunc!d that the federal goverftment was tak· ing over strips or land 100 kilometers or 8211.1 miles deep on each side of th e Transamaion Higllway, a.s wtll as otber lands. the move was desltned to pre.vent land specualllcn and to form a base for agrarian reform. Tht dkree also established the first retirement pensions. and other benefits for rural worktrs. Tbe btnefits ar1 small but art· the: first recei"· ed by a secter el tbe Brulllan population Ulat aWI' lives lar1ely In meditval conditions. This mi Ii tar y about.tum sprinp ft6m a arowin& 'ftelln1 of naUontllsm in the army, evtn &m0n8 lhe lJ}trlCOMel'V• atlvts. Whtn Goulart tried to im· piement chanaes he was blocked by bureaucracy, a hoftile Con1reu and the military. The military now have no such obstacles. The me1surts announced by Goulart's government just be.fore the 11164 revolution were more ambitious in that they did not Umil tM tx· propriations le one area ~f the country, but were dealined to be applied natltlnwlde. Goulart also .SOUJbt te ex· tend to the countryside lhe bentfits eranted u r b a n laborers. 1ucb as retiremtnl pensions and medical care, and to eltabli&b a minimum wage for peasants with union organization. In one nOrthea.stetn state, Pemambuco, former G o v • Miguel Arr1es, Ont of the first to be ousted and arrested by the military, applied such mtasures for a few moliths before the millt•ry in- tervention. Peutnls we r e beinf or1anlitd, landowners LEGAL NOTICE L~GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE wert bting forffi! •Y Jtw te SYNO,llS 01' TMI ANNUo\I. ITATIMIHT pay a minimum w11e to their 0111 a•i: JIU workers. and the peasants a .... •-•M• '"""'W su,1111011 cou11r 0111: THt were bein• brought into towns l'l.oll Cor-11e Html ITATI !'" CAlll'OltNIA l'Olt O ENDORSED BY THE FOLLOWING CITIZENS: Dr. ind Mrs. Steve As1hino Mr. ind Mrs. Donald B. AyrOI, Jr. Mr. ind Mrs. Uoyd Aubert, Jr-:- Mr. and Mrs. H1ncock Binning, Ill Mr. ind.Mrs. Horace 81nj•min Mrs. Orrill• Ann .Blanpied Agnes Blomquist Dr. end Mrs. David Bunnell Dr. and Mrs. John F. DHn Mn. Dorothy Dostal Jim and Lynn Dow!)> Mr. end Mrs. Buddy EbHn Ruth and Arron Eddington Mr. ond Mrs. Wa ller R. G1ynor Potricio C. Hadden Mr. and Mrs. Paul H•nna Mr. end Mrs. D. L. Hildenbrand Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Hilker Mr. end Mr" Edgar R. Hill Halon end Bob Humphreys Mr. end Mrs. Michael Jogor Mrs. Jocki. Johnson Mr. ind Mrs. G. G. K1wamuro Mr. and Mrs. John S. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. William Krumpholz Mr. ind Mrs. Robert Leith lob .,,d Doreen Marshall Mr. ind Mrs. Frenk Mushall Mr. and Mri. Lloyd M1ssoy Dr. ond Mrs. Dw1yne Merry Mr. and Mrs. Doneld McKibbin Don and Caryl Mollica Mr. and Mrs. Donn Mich1el1 Mr. and Mr1. Robert Murrel Mrs. John T. Nolan Mr. and Mrs. Eugene O'Rourke Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Palmer Isobel C. PeaH Mr. and Mn. Joseph S. Pike, Jr. Or. •nd Mrs. Dale Rasmusson Dr. and Mrs. Roger E. Riley Mrs. George Rodda, Jr. Joe and Judy Rosener Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shelton Or. and Mrs. John Skinner Mr. and Mrs. Dick Stevens Mrs. Ralph T andowsky Mr. 1hd Mrs. Richard K. Wilker Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Williams Mr. end Mrs. Jim Wood Mr. 1~d Mrs. Geo1"9e Yudley MARIAN C.' BERGESON INCUMBENT x UI Nt•lllr1 Ctllltr Orl\'9. HIWP9r1 •.-.:ft, C•lfttnii. n..o THI (. UNTY 01' Oll:ANOI and cities to see the sights Hom1 Ot!ltt Nt, ""'"' d I I h I Co,.,..,;11" to ••tied Mt•ltto C. hro-: Jtddt Ht1111.,, Olm .. UM Hlthl•nd O•., H--1 Betc~ y .. , ....... ~....., Jl, 1t,. HOTIC.I. 01' HIAlllHG 011' 'ITITIOH1~·n~~w~c~p~ay~·~·----....!~~!!1!!1!!!!!~~~~~~;;;;;;,;.,;,;,;;;.;;;;;;;;;~;;;~;;;;~;;;;;:~;;;;~;;;;;::.;~:;;;;;~~~~=~==~d Tottl Hrnlntd 1Htt1o (ii',.. J, l int 221 ' 31 J1' Cll 1'011: l'ltOIATlr 01' Will ""' -' ' Llnlltl TllTAMIHTAllY Tittl llt blllU• !l'lflf l, Lint Jl) 211,Jt),t!O E•ltlt of OLIVE.II MO It TOH 1.-cltl 111,_lln flll'lh l l'tl• l, line 'd I -0---HAllll:ISON, t!111 'roown 11 OLIVEll M. C111111 .. llklP ... 111111torv 11-h ,,..,. 3. LIM ll.l) i.iilOi' HAIUl'ISON, Olclutd. ' NOTICE IS Hlltt:IY GIVEN llllll P•.d It! Ind C ... 1'11Mi1M lllt'fll!A l""" l. Llllf ltA) ""i:ilOO (HAllLES /ti.. HAllltlSON II•• IHH l\trl!r lln1ulgnt11 f\lnlla hurl!lll!l (P1" J, LIM Mil 10~ • 11tlhlorl lor ,., .... Clf Wiii 1M fflo' lurpl.,. II , .. t r•1 Plfli<'l'llflldl ri {Plfl l. LIM JI) 11.IM~I lnu1nc1 ti L'111n 'TtJll!'Mn!1ry ~ ltlu"" tor .... tttr (P1;1 11, Lilll I ) 11 111.ttl """'-"'· rlflll'lfl(I "'wl'lk:~ 11 ,.,..,. ltM' ' !11•11>111' p1rllcul1••• tM 1'1'111 Ille lllTlt •!Ml Dlt.bl.N".-i. Mr Ille Y"' \Pl;t n. l lnoc Hl T1;Ef,Bl iMKt ef !Wtrln tht ·-"•• bffn "' Wt l'ltrttl'I' «r11l'f !~II n.. •llllYt 111rn1 trt In 1ccoro.nt1 •II~ 1111 ilinnu11 Stet• fer Alf'll )f, ttn, 11 t ;.M A.M .. In lllt rnl'lll ttr !hi. yUr -Ill DK1mt>er ll, 1J10, mtdt to 1111 lrm.irtnct C1mml11illnlr c ... rlroem tf DNtrlrntnl Nt, J 111 11111 11 IM Stitt of Clllklrnl1, P<"llMnt 111 l1w. <W•I, II 1111 Clvl< (tnlt r Orlvt WQI, In J. t:. Hllld1IKM1 J t . HUTOOSON IM <:ttv ti S1nl1 Allt, C1Hi.rn11. H1m1 OI Vlc .. Pr1~lden1 S'9n1111r1 ot Vicf.PrM141tnl Otled ~ll 1. 1t71 l , A. Horlll!tr L A. HElllSTEll W. I!'. St JOHN, Ntmt 111 ""'· 5tcrollry S1g1111w1 of ADI. Stcrt11ry Ctunry Cltrl< 111M MlOWIH, ell:ll1' I IYLVIA P .. 1111\d O<l "lt Co.11 0.11'1' Polol, AP"I lt, 20, 11, :n, )3, lt11 14•11 U. a111 CM•lftfl A'll, -------1 Ortl!lt. Cit". fMM LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE I See oy Today's Want Ads e 10.20-*'60 Ac:re1 Plttfla & up. lXKl ft al!iludt, 20 m1nutf':1 ro Tall Pint1, Ntar Bir Bear. Groovy rnotorcyclt •crea~, or an out-cf-•11h1 investmrnr. Ck clas~ \;io for prires &: olhrr inlo. e DIAMONDS. DlA~10NDS -"WHO'S GOT TH E DIAMONDS?'• Hr'a nol quir@ T1ttany'1 of New York ... but for a private t:O.l!r,ctlon, , .I 1rl1 ya! Not too bad! Oitmond domt codct*;JI r•n.a:. naw- '"'' • diamond plen-!d 4'1tttlltf-. Oiamonct' aioll· !A lrto wl"'ddin.t 1,.1, •. Ck cl-•1 1118. , .TODAY! Oh! !hr pnCf'1 &t'f' ~uch • m~ kJl'-,.r thin rnrn;;a. Tllo ISW1'1 .. , .... "'" for .... If.....,. 1'111111...... Or1nM Cot1! Alf'M It U erllf It, lt'1 LEGAL NOTICE Tho DAILY PILOT- T ops in Loul Sport. NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALl~ORNIA. --------~ Los Angeles (Orange Counly, Palos Long llt•ch to Verdes, Wilmlngton, Torrance, etc.), Sen Francisco $18 Long Beach is like having your own private lno1udlng tax. Llt\ll long Beach: airport You don't have to fight the free- Now you can fly PSA lrom Long Beach 7:40 im way traffic to LA. International. Ther1'1 Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. 10:45 am easy parking. And lhe crowds haven, Mora on weekends. More flights thin 1 :30 pm found It yet Next time you h•ad north any other ti irl int . Conntotlons to Sacra-4:30 pm (or south). heed for Long Beach Airport mento. Or. avoid the freeway and fly to Mon thru Thu~ & Sat by way of your travel agent and PSA. San OIOJio. It you live any piece south of .__M_o_r•_1_11;_h11_'"-' _11u_n_. _, PSA ttvm J'D'I a llft. • UPITt ...... • o.11L v P1~or JZ Beagan Strivi,ng;-(o. Lead Nor1nal Life (T1" p•bli<: Iii• oJ Gov. llOllclld ll<ogan II "" op<• boo~ Lfu wtll known 11 what ht d o t s tn privote- momenu. Tht oovcn10r talked about hll ptnonal li/• in on intcnilcoo wlll\ UPI.) By Gl!Ol\GE SKELTON SACRAMENTO (UPI) -On a typical day, Gov. Ron11d Req:an rh1ea at a comfortable hour. wuhea down a dJetary bruldut with orange jlllce, 1eta to work by t and b driveo -bolcn I In a limoallna Valley °'1l" aod lb e hla cjllldnn eaJl •Jbe bl& black R • p • b II can n a I lo n a J uab'•" oanvenUon ot 1111 hll UfoelYlo "I'm not one of -crack· and IM!bllc lmap cbanged o f • daW1MJllW.all~l-lhe-'-actor lo pollUc!an. •vtnlnc mtn -no. 1lr," the He· and hll wUe, Nancy ,an '10YWDOf ays. "I work reel attr.ctlvt tanner act re 11 , hard lrytng to m1lnlaln ..... haYe'dilcovered pollUOI b "1 nonnel bome Ult." llUle bit Uh lhow' bualneao. llcagan II fond of rocallinl 11'1 a vtrul." And lM concedeo that by Ibo 11me lM wu "there wtll be • mc!Justment hoetlng "Dloth Valley Days" back" -Ibey ro\lro fl'CllD on tolevlllon tn the mld-IMOo, public Ult. his wort w"k "" 1verq111C Jiii! when that wtll be 1 ... than two days. """'" lnllstl "" blOD 't "I w11 alw1y1 afnl<! of decided and. anyway, "I've overupolUl't," be Aki, "and ,otten a UWe leery about to I enjoyed a 1lhow where I making flit declarall°"'.'' could be on only about a 'lbe oonservaUve RepubUc1n minute each wtek, then declared in 19M that be had no periodically a~pear in a lntenUoo of running f o r starring role I'd choose for President, but ran myseU." ~•-1 neve. u~ ess. He already has --annl aboorllad by real warm be!.,. I reel like two chlldltft -PalU, It, a ~ -"'· r lwlmmill&· I S-I "" a Norlbwatern fmlllnan, a ' ..... ~-.. · UI-··_. •-'-• to "'e ··'d Ronal• "s~-•," -'"" t•. offke''bomewort,''he wa .. ter-."· -Ntl5 .u.-. !OUI v ""rr--v" Would Roasan want bll tometlmes a•ta bo<:k to tbe Ht ..,. exeretae "born the chlklren to 10 Jnto polltlct? Malibu Ranch. de.vii out of me." But he doff "I don't know, " bl A)'I · Oc<:utooaUy be cell tn • wort on his rtlaUvely flat 11ow17, "I aWl have that aoll same with clole frleoda mldsecllon "a Uttle bit" each reluctant reelq about tha and c • m P 1t1 n aupportut, momin&. And'be bu cut down fellow who mak11 tt a GIJ'IW. auch • WU11om Fnncb Snllth oa meals. I -too many I b In ( 1 and Holmeo 'l'llttle, or perbapt Roagan and his wife blve h-" lonner Sen. Geor&•Murpby. Ir~:=::::::~~~~~~~====~ Rubbernecking -.U aometimflS are surprised • t.o 1 ..... Hinic.1 """"11...,..1 "'the'°vemorploytngtoucb !RALPH G. MARCARELU 1 (X) I footbaJl on his fronl lawn ol • : 5,:;"i,;1~:.~.;: !~ HUNTINGTON BEACH CrTY ~ have encog11 1or two SCHOOL DISTRICT teams,•t the • 0. ye a r •O 1 d INDOUID IT -CO.CHAllMIN former College guard say!J Mr. I Mn. 11.•t•r A11d•rt•11 -Ortllt• Couflty Sch••I kar-4 with a smile, .. so I play Mr. I Mr•. Mttthtw w.,~k•r -'r••l4•11t, quarterback for both aides and H1111tl11tlo11 h•ch School lo1"'1 do all the pualng." .AND Mr. I Mrt. J1111 Dev1ho11r.11119h -Hvali111to11 lo4t" 'ro&i...+ A large heated PO 0 l M111•t•rt; Mr. I Mri. Norbort Cr1wford -Dlroctor of M•••to• PuJ»p11 Love? Gas Co. Pays Bill; $2.1 Million The major difference since hinted he may bid for the U.S. he became governor of the Senate ln 1974 a I a I n s t naUon's largest state, Reagan Democratic incumbent Alan Tbe gas company paid tta aaid in an interview, ts ''I'm Cranston. dominates the backyard, but 11111tt: Mr. I Mr1, M. C. Edw1Nf1 -Sil•• l•Pt•••11f1tl•a1 Mr. I Reagan oys "The sun'11 got to "''· R1lph D••ry -A•ro1p1co Pr,c.11r•m•11t M11101•r: Mr. I be flhtnlng .00 it's got to be Mn. J'"''' No""•" -S•11lor 'Fir1 ln•p•ctor: Mr. I Mn. Owltht Yount -E119l111•r: Mr. I Mri. Phlllp l111h -Attorit•yt Mr. I Mr1. fr••lr Tur11li11U -S•11lor .. ;,,.p,,,Jd,nt: Mr. l "M,.. Jo10,. Call·lt puppy love forever If you will as Tom Ing· ram, of Covington, Ky. who will be 101 in Septem· ber, bwses bis wife of 57 years, Eva. She is bead- ing for her 96lh year. The couple married late in Ille. He waa « and she 39. '!'bey ore now patient. together in a nursing home. bUI tllll week. 1.-0. inmad of oul4oorJ." Once he does "'lurn to Tbt tolal was P.1 m.f1Uoo tn He u!led to own a 250-icre private life, Reagan says a horse ranch in the Mallbu good deal of hi9 Ume will be second installment 1971 county mountaiM. spent oo horseback. He now property taxes and franch15e "I was in the aaddle a Jot owns 375 acres near Rlvenlde payments to is cities for 111 because t had thoroushbreda and ttlll ha& acctSI to a small malna in streets and -hunters, jumpers," Reagan piece of the Malibu property, NO. I ON THE COAST Coll11I -Tt11hor: Mr. I Mr1. Rob1rt C11um -D611t1I T1ch11J. ci111: Mr. I Mr1. i. J. Sl111h111b•ch Jr. -Sol11M111: Mr. I Mrc. Ch1rl11 J11111i1tt1 -Purch1d119 A.91111: Mr. I Mrt. J•M•• Wolk -Dt1l911 E119l11ttr; Mr. I Mrs. Edw1N 1111 -Corp.rttlolll M111191r: Mr. I M11. Ph1llip D'A.11111 -f119i11.,r; Mr. I Mrt. WUH1111 L. D1•i1 -P11ct Offlctr; Mr1. $111 K1h11 -ltotriff1 Mr1. H1l11) lohl1r -lookk1•por: Mrt. ltuth Nh~korio11 -Hou10. wifo: Mri. S1r1 M11C11i1ht -Hou11wlfo; ,.. M11. Alic• fr1der • hlgbwaYJ. recalled. "You couldn't just which he sold for $2 million. Your Hometown Newspaper Is LAGUNA BEACH TAXPAYERS ASSN. Paymenta include $ 1. 1 4 leave them in a garage like a The governor 's' ch e du I e mllllon on property taxes, bicycle." normally la arranged so he -Ho1111wlf1. • bringing the total for the year Reagan thought h I m 1 e 1 f can stay weekends at hls c1t1DM c~m1n .. tw •ttttr ••.u•. to Q'.2 million, plus $9"18,000 in right into pollUcs. A n d Western-atyle hmne in Pacific c:.oe1n111111 a.,., ""'"'--M•t!Mw w"'*" I The DAILY PILOT VOT! APRIL 20t SUPPORTS Patricia Gillette Gerald Linke William Tlwmas FOR LAGUNA BEACH UNIFIED SCHOOL BOARD city franchise payments. I ~-~ew~her~e~be~tw~een~_:·_:·0e~ath~_:P~alls~1~d~":,· _When~~~t~h~•~·~·.i:::=========:!~~~~"~"'~'""~-~~"'~.,..~·~'"'~'"~'"'~-~~~,..;!;""~~!!!!!~ A breakdown showil- allotmenta include $138,858 for right-of-way u.se in unincorporated county ares; $2,!08 to CO.ta Mesa ; $21,240 to Fountain Valley; 1110,068 to HunUogton Beacb; $14,624 to Laguna Beach; $37,179 to Newport Beach; $18,339 to Sin Clemente, $6,363 to San Juan Capistrano, and $8,691 to Seal Beach. Overall, the firm is paying $11.7 million in property tues and fT.3 million in franchise payments throua:hout its 12· county service area t h I s •Pfinl· Paclfic l.Jghtlng Se r v l c e Company, its affiliate, is paying $1.47 million I n property taxes. RUD THESE SIMPLE RULES! Once each hour KWIZ announces a name 01' tho air and that person spins the Dream Wheel for a chance at $1,000 cash and hundred! of other prizes. Send a postcard, or the attached coupon (with your name, addreos and zip code, including phone number) to KWIZ. Santa Ana, California, 92703. ONE ENTRY PER P£R50N PUASE 1-------------------------, I KWll D~UM WHEEL I I NAM•t--------- ADDRES,~---------- aTY·------------ ZIP'------------~-IL_-_-_-_-__ -__ -_-_:::::::::::::::::::::2'.J Usfetl for Your Name On The Alrl IZ1480 ON THE AM RADIO DIAL • • • • 27 OFFICES STATEWIDE m IRlllLlllUlllD9 Of KIWPOllT.PWDIXA txtcutl'f1 Office: a.i. Vista Offlc:I, 398 ''II" Sires~ Cll1Jla Ylltr, ClllL Ol~lmOOO D Ctloo Offlct> ~-llMno& or SANTA BAllBAR4 Milli Offlce: Appl1 BIOSIO!ll Offlcaa 119 H. Mlln St.. Slbulapol, Calif. oon 823-7411 Napa Officei 3316 V1a lido. NnporUadl om 17;1.3130 234 lilpoll1 A'll., liortl!, 0 Ct!oo, Clllf, UHl~.alll 3361 Stlll Strt1~ -BIJtm, c.nr. Jl!05) 611·1311 3300 Jeffs""-~ lilpl, C.111. oon 25S3310 M1ln Offlct: 61 South lak1 AYtllllli PaadlDI a1»1~1 Col'Olll dtl Mir Office: 550 Ne-1 CtatJr Drlvs, N"JIOll BNCll 01~ 644-1461 3170 £Jot Foothm Boulmr4 hsldanl ~1»~7 lemon Grov1 Office: mo Bro1dw1Y, Limon Grovt, Clllf. QI~ 4'3.a171 M1tlo"1 CJty Offict: 305 t Ith St. Nltioll~ City, C.111. 01~477~111 San Oleao Officli 5508 Bllbo1 Avenue, San Ditto_ Calif. 134 North Glendora Avemi" Qleniklra t714l 27M060 a13l 335'4043 Esoon•do Ott"" Woodl1nd Hills OfflClo ll<IO t V1ll11 l\w)" &condldo, Clllf. 19900 Vontun Bild, Wo¥Jud IUl1r, Col~. OIG 7~ a13lmmG .,_ .. ....,...,. or THE SOUTH Mlln Offfcl1 1347 ta Meu lhd., Lt Mm, CllK. OlG-1 [xoortlvl Oiflceo mo FittllA"""" 01..,, c.ur. 01~2J4.71ll Lt Jollt Offlca. 1111 ''"'"'' A,., Lt loll~ c.nr. om 459'<275 Pacific Buch Offlui 1001 Gln11t St,lon Di.JO, Clllf, 01~ .a.1-1011 Oj1l Offlth 110 South Venturi St.. Oj1T, C.Hf. 00~ &46-55%3 Monlocfto Offlcl: 1482 E. v11111 Rd.. s111u B•rbm. Calif. l!05) 969'!2117 ant BJllLIAUH111S or THE KORTH M1ln 01flc11 90 S1nta Rosi An1 Santa Rou, Calif, oon 54&0544 Senti Rau Brlftth Officti 715 fflllmlllll Drivt, Santa Rosa. Clllf, oon 54&-0544 Petaluma Offica1 127 North lkllowlll Bl'ld.. htlluml. Col1I. oon11J.'821 lll1S B dill. 11111111111 BrlWllJ Office: 122-Main Strut. Brnlty, Clllf. om J44.4510 Cllexleo OtfletJ 325 lmperlll Avenue, Calaxlco, Cant. Ul-0357~126 £1 Centro Offlet1 5th & Staie Streeb, D C.ntro. Callt. Ul41352·nIO WHOLLY OWN~D SUBSIDIARIES OF $1 .5 BILLION IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA Bl!m I I ' r I I J I DAILY PILOT s MoodoJ, Apnl 1', 1971 LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOTICB ' . . . .. .. ... -...... • . . . Finance Briefs WASHINGTON The NEW FROM MERCEDES BENZ ••• The 350SL IWCHlealer louring sports car Securlties and E x c b a n I e Commilsion has suspended St Lou.is Secw'ilie3, Inc. from all business activities until it comp1fes with the. commisslon'1 net cap l ta I requirement1, releases from _all Uens any securiUes it carries for the account •f customers, and brings ill books: and records up te date accurately. comes with soft top, bard top, or both. Tbe 125 mph car is equipped with fuel-injected V-8 engine, four-wheel power disc brakes and power steering as standard eqµlpmenl. The SEC also revoked the broker-dealer registration of the bankrupt Paci f I c Securities Co. of Salem, Ore., and barred ilS Preskte.nt James E. Deal, from the securities business for six months. In High Gear New MercedesToitringCar Hearing! were ordered on charges tbal Louis B. Adams, a Wallingford, Conn .. broker, had violated SEC regulations by failing to keep proper records and had made false and misleading statements about his rrrm's finances. Set for Fall Introduction LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE By CARL CARSTENSEN Of tM D•Ur 1"1111 Si.ff Although not available In the U.S. until early rall ~tercedes· Benz is proceeding with plans to introduce their new two- 11eater louring sporls car. It's equipped with a 230 horsepower, 3.5 liter, fuel injected V-8 engine, four-wheel disc brakes, fully independent suspension, and is said to be capable or a top speed in excess of 125 mph. Called the 35(1SL, the North American version will have a 4.5 liler (276 cubic inches} engine designed to meet 1972 emission specifications, and also designed lo run on unleaded ruel. This is the latest in a long line of two-sealers to e-0me from the world's o I des t a u to mobile manufacturer, D a i m I e r -Benz. Earlier models include the classic 300 SL, Gulwing coupe, !he 300SL roadster, 190SL, 230SL, 250SL and 280SL models. The new 350SL has been designed with the accent on providing the driver with the best possible environmental conditions, lt1ercedes officials have said. The wl.Jldshield wipers, for example, cover an extra-large an1ount of glass area. And when the rain is wiped orf the windshield, a speci al I y designed slot in the support pillars carriell it upward, thus keeping the side windows free of dirty water. The healing • cooling -de- frosting system operates not only on the front of the car, but is also routed through the doors and toward the rear window so all glass areas will Coast Man On Council be cleared. In addition. lhis provides for uniform heating or air e-0ndHioning throughout the car. The safety bells a r e attached to the seat frame, thus allowing a good fit rtgardless of the position of lhe seat. They are also on inertia reels rolling up ·when not in use. The new four-spoke steering ~'heel bas a padded boss. the spokes and the rim form one unit, and the rim is wrapped in polyurethane foam t • provide for a better grip. As for other features, the 350SL is equipped with a gas tank located deep within the body of the car. which minimizes the chance of fuel loss or fire in case or a rear- end collision. 'The tank is also protected -both front and rear -by bulkheads that isolate it from lhe passenger and luggage compartments. Jn order to make lhe driver's intentions more obvious to other cars an d lo pede!llrians, the directional indicators are not only vi si ble from the front and rear, bul also from lhe sides. In addition t.he oversize r e a r taiUigbts are of a special aerodynamic shape designed to shed road dirt. thu!I maintaining their brighlnes~. As a fina l point, the outside mirror (which has a remole- control adjustment inside the car) is designed lo break away in case of an accident. All 350SL models will be delivered with radia l tires. power brakes and power steering as s tandard equipment. Other items may be included as standard for the North American versions of the car, Daimler-Benz officials said. RECORD TURN-OUT EXPECTED FOR CONFERENCE Registrations for the 26lh Spring Business Conference or the Dealers Association o! 1u.,••to• cou•T 0., THI! A Newport Be a c h Southern Califomia m a y STATI Of" CALll'O•NIA l'Olt MOTICI IM\llTIM• •10S businessman has been named d I ' d ( THI COUMT'I' 01' OltANOI Halle• II 119<.o-t •"'-" "'" ..... •oe•&t ol exett ast years recor 0 '"· ..,,.91,. Trv•ttt1 of 1t1e co.'' ~""'"' coi~or lo the Pitl:lburgh Paints 802, according to president NoT1c1 OI' H••••No OI' "•T1'10"' oi.irld 9f Or•"" CoufllY. C•llkll'nl•, wiu Marketing Council, a 13-man o•·k Arnold , as 5outhland aulo l'Olt l'ltOIAT• 01' 1'01.110.. WILL reetlve 1e11N bl<ll 1111 TO 11:00 1.m., n.. ,, "'0 "o 1t L 1 t T1111 s o" r11nc11Y, w1 4 19n, 11 1111 P11rcti.1ln1 group that will review ways dealers converge on Jndian ADMINISTRATION WITH·rHl•Wll.L ~Pl. ol ••Id w-1 11!1lrlCI IOCllt'd II to improve marketina pro-w II ( th t . ANN&XIEO u10 All•,... Avefll.le, c:o.11 M111, a e s or e me e l n gs Eitet• el' EV~L YN v o) H t: L L c111forfll1, 11 w111c11 nm• ••Id bid• wiu 111 grams and devise n e w beginning Tuesday. FOLGER, Otte15lll. ...,bllCIY _,,ed end rta&t I a': k t• Li .,. ( PPG NOTtcE u Hl!1.e1Y 01vl!N mrt Jo1111 MICfloscoPE5 tM•tl'l-klllK•l -GG111en mar e 1ng ac v 1 1es or Arnold attributes Increased .._~,n(tt "•• med ,....111 • pe1111on '°" w111 CollH•. Induslrles' consumer paints. d I · t t t · prob•" o1 tor11.., w111 ....., • L•ll••• o1 An ttkll 1,1 TO .,. in Ktord•ni:• ..,1111 ea er 1n eres o growing Ac1m1n111r111c1ri wtlll•ttM-w1tl • "n • • • d • "" •mtnidloM •1'111 cone1nlofl1 '"" Mario Pacini of House of confidence in the California '"'~.nc• to whldl It ..,,... for ..... ,,.,., !.1>«lllc111ons w111e11 ••• ,_ """ 111' el'ld c I 3325 N wport Bl d h new car market and to the , .. 11w11r1, '"' tl\9t tt>e tlme 1...i pl1et mty bl ..el.WM In "" oftk:• 01 111e o or, e v ., as o1 iw1r1"""" Mme 1111 tit... 111 for Me¥ P11rtMlill'll """' or Mid .u-i d111r11:1, been named •• the Counc1·1 t1·-1y sub1·ects to be covered •• 1'11. II,,. IJOI .. In""' ca11rtr-'I ol EICll bldOtr mwt 1110mlt wnt1 lllt bid . w ..... t>n>trt"'"" ""· i " 11111 -.n, •' 100 c•"'~"' Cl'ltek. c1r1111to&t check. ..-by Richard P. Cook, vice by nationally recognized C1¥k c.n,.,.. Drlvt Wes•. In ,,,. '1"' e1 11111e11r'1 ttonc1 '"""' "ya1111 to "'' -· president of trade paiat sales industry leaders · al l h e S11111 An•, C1lltornl1. o1 1111 c .. 11 c-ny Col'"' Olttrkl 011ec1 .-..,..11 is. itn •-ot °' Tn.i•ttn In an _,n, "°' 11u for PPG's CoaUngs & Resins business sessions beginning w. E. s1 JOHH. !l'lln HY• Pfl"Cll'll is,.1 M "" M,lm bit!•• o· l . M k f p·ttsb h Wednesday morn•·ng. Ca11n" Cl«lt 1 ..,1,111,.. 11111 1111 ll!Oft• wm '""1" 111111 IV s1on. a er o I urg • u.1.wooo, UIDIEM a .ADl(IN)OM m. "'-"' C01tt•Kl tt ...,. ,,..,. 11 brand palnts, PPG ls the na· Conference C h a I r m a n kit. ""'""" UI. tWl'1Md to lllm. In ""' ....... , ol 11111 ... to P. o. ••~ '"'· .,,19, 1n1e ...,di C011l•1ct, 111e -"* o1 lion's third-largest paint pro-William Symes reports the "' .. __., c-Dt"m.......,, 1111 ~ wm ttt torttfllMI, or In "" uw ducer. first ....,..aker will be Robert C. ...._., lllOI. CtllfW"lllol •-of 1 bond, JM klll wm _..., wlll bl ~,..~ 1 .. , cno ..._IJU •o•l91ttot 1o wtd ildlOol lltslrld. I jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii __ _,iiiiiiii;ol AMfM"f• fw htlli.-Ha MOOtr ..,,., wl!lld•-Ytl• bid "" ,II l'Wlltllf'I Or1nte (Md 0.111 "lllll ""lod oj torf't'.flw (UI &trtl llOllWll""I APril 11, It. 14, ltn Ul-7! JOI 1tttr !fie 411t ttl 11r ~ _,Int LEGAL NOTICE "';~t.kllrot ti Tru1lftl fnet'VH "'' -----7 =:::------lprlv!lffil 11! rtlecllfll 1ny 1'111111 b1C11.,,. ""'1• lo w11n tnl' 1,r...,11rnltt 11 • C•l.tl,IC&T• GI'" •UUNISS l'llcwm•llll11In 1nv blcl"' In llw bkkllnt. PICTITIOUl MAM• Of><tn: Mty •, ltn-11;00 I.Ill. TM 11nd«tlt-di ctrllh' "'""" l ff Sl1ntd: C!!PM<>Ct!nt t -IM11 11 IOOf II"' ii.. N.,,.mtn E. Wt!Hft Ccllll MHf, Ct.iltof'lllt. llftdtr tlW Se<l-r. IM•&t II! Truttt-. ll~llllout firm n-tt CVITOM SOUND •ull11111M 0!"1nM CH" Otl!Y 1'11111 &. ELECT•DNIC5 Mi<G., •not ft11t Mid Atrll 1', f&. 1t11 IU-11 llrm 11 comllOMd ti t~t lollow!ll'll "'-.'·1-------------11 -n,...,.., '" 1v11 •1'111 1t1ee1 et LEGAL NOTICE rulMM• ''' •• 1o11ow1: Jrrr-, '''"'"'"'· lflJ \llt1' C1111!11.(-------------ll New-1 lttctl. C1!11. LI.GAL NOl'ICa I<••'* IC•ohtr Jr ... TillU W. Co.it l'OUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DllTltCr 1-1....,., Nt-1 ltKI\. (t ill, NOTIC• IMV!TIHO 1101 0.ld ""'H •• 1'11 NOTtCf. IS HIEl.EBY GIVf.H t~ll ~ J1trY '"""''"" ao.rcl ef T•uotMI ol ..... 1<a11n11111 Ytltl'f ''''* Kroft•• Jr. k"OOI 0111r1ct o1 Or•"t't COllf>l'f, STATE 0' CALll<Oll:NIA, t1lllot~•. will r.c•!~t tttld bid• 110 to OltANGIE COUNTY ; J;OO p M. Ol'I Iii. >rot di¥ of Mt'f lf!I 11 °" ,t,prtl '· lt71. ""°"' me •• Nol••• "" oKkt Ill ••Ill KllOlll (llJl•ld. lottltd l"vtll< lfl ll'ICI tot 11111 ""'' l>l!ftont!ly 11 Nvmbtt Ont-Ll.i.tllol.IM l-lcwntr 1-l•fCI JH" llt.ntnt tnCI F•1nk of Nl'Wttnd 11'1<1 Tt•bttO Fa11n!lift Ytllq, IC•fflff Jr~ lu>llwft 19 '"' i,. bf tl>t Ctl!fornl1, '11111. 11 wl'llUI lll'nf: Mid blCfl __., ""'°'' ,..,_, 111 •vowrl-111 wlll 11t PUlllldV _...., tnd ·-'« tl'll wllflln lm•n•-t nll Kknowlft9ed uttllr1CT1"9 i,. l81'1dbl11t ll'ICI 111tnl 1'wtl ""' l•fQl!tll "" ....... 0(.,.,,,1 •. (otfl(l1l k•ll Prtv1m11e w101 r••t 11 lotlO-n: Mt,., ltlfl Mllrffll'I Adml..it1rt!IOl'I .Oi llff llol.r• Hllll.., "llllllC. Clli,..,.11 Kt1111'1 1not Wtlll•e .1• otr """' "''"'l"I Offic. In "-•lltl(t\1111 l"v"" .o: Pff !ICM' Ortnft '""''' ,._Ion .?I Pl!' "°"' .....,11 t. lttl VKtl\clrl ,l'O l'I' "°"' "'*'h.Md Ortntt: C..1t 01tl• '11111 Liit lftlvr•Mt .10 ,., l>llu• """11 11. It. :&. ,.,..., J.. 1t11 -.n ""'--hoV!' ttton Jou•11t~"'•n LEGAL NOTICE 1111 .ts "' "°"' ------.. S.nclllll1ll"' ... ft "1' II t 11 f , ,..... unclbt11t.r twlfll tllle U 1• Pf• "°"'· l'ICTITt0!.11 •UllNMS Jour-tfl IPftY """"' ''·'' ,.., "AMa Sf&~ffT l'll\lf'. "'°"',,...,""" ~ ..... $WH'lfll-n. llllOwlnt ...,._ fl Rine lllltifltll M,tt -llooH. .. , AU blel .,.. to be I" ICC.,,.Cf•n(Ct will! OuWI ( ............ 1"loM G•-Ltn"l'll tondlllon" 1n1!•~<llOll1 tl'ICI llH'(lh<tl10N 0.1'1 ll'tlnl. CtHlernl1 -IOI •rt 1v1ll1blt !fl ll>t Ollftlt! Otllct llllTAUll:.ANT A.O\ll!NTVltrl 11'<(. ti lftt tdd•tll tht'tr!olon lfltftlloned, Jl'9 ~ .... <1'1 l lYd., JCll, I.-l 'f 0110Elt OF l!<E hlOI (l!it.tnll •OAll:O OF TltUSlf:f:S, 1~11 bt,.1.,.11 It b.1,.,. Clf'dll(IM 1i1Y A '0UNTt lN VALLEY SCliOOI. C...WtlWo Ol&TltlC:T 0l1tnN• 01¥111 f't'lll• WILLIAM I (llA14[, ''" . CLlll:IC OF THf 10,t.1110 ELECT f8l FABULA ancl BORANIAN TRUSTEES TUsTIN UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT VOTE FOR NEW RESPONSIVE TRUSTEES YOUR VOTE IS CRITICAL ' Vote Tuesday, April 20 Commit!"" To F.lrcl F,iln1h1°B<lr4ni1tn Chrn1. Shlrlt'y Pn l!ry, 18112 C1llmM, tr"Jne Cozens. director. Department of Motor Vehicles, whose talks, "The Auto Dealer in the 70's'', is 'expected to cover how the department will supervise and regulate new car dealer automotive repair and parts departments in accordance v.·ith its recently increased policing powers. He said Robert B. Mc Curry, vice-president, Chrysler Motor automot ive sales and service Corp., will speak Thursday on "'The Oiallenge of 0 u r Future ;" Warren J. ~1c Eleney, president of the Na- tional Automobile Dealers Association. will report on NADA's program for mechanics t e s t i n g and ce rti ficati on and Jack Flaharty of General Motors v.·ill discuss Detroil's progress in meeting the safety and ecological standards being imposed by legislation and how the dealers can cooperate in the endeavor. Signatics Bu ys Into Coast Firm NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. !UPI) -Laser Computer Corp, (LASCOMP), successor in interest to Co mputer General Inc., and Signatics announced an agreement under v.•h.ich Signatics has become the exclusive .softwa re arm of Las com p . and Signalics has agreed l o purchase IS percent o f Lascomp. 'The announcement w a s made jointly by Dr. Frank Narchuk. president and board member of L.ascomp, and Alan C. Stoneman, chairman of the Board of Signatics. La s c omp"s predecessor, Computer General Inc .. has don e extensive work in the development of Laser Com- puter, and previously an· nounced the C B-100, having a IO trillion bit memory. "The Laser computer rep- resents the true f o u r t "n generation or computers.'' Dr . Narchuck stated. "The in· terest shov.·n in the C G-100 has been extensive and very satisfactory. Our association with Signatics s o I v e s the software problem for us and provides us with a d d e d management capabilities v.·e consider very important" "Signalic's investment in Lascomp." said Stoneman, ··v.•ill permit Lascomp to com- plete rapidly a prototype which will demonstrate the capabilities of the. C B-100. In aQdition. su c ces s f u lcom- pretion of Laser Computer's System will benefit Signatics because of the soft~:are re- quirements. Pact Slated On Mer ger UNION, N.J. -Bishop Industries, Inc., the cosmetics manufacturer, said a majority of creditors now have ratified its plan of arrangement submitted lo the federal court under chapter 11 et lhe Bankruptcy Act. Note holders would be paid 4 percent of tbeir claim!; in cash and l& percent in interest ! re e installments over three years. General creditors also would get to et:nts on the dollar, 7 cents in cash and 13 percent in interest-free installments over 33 months. EATONTOWN. N.J. -Arlen Shopping Centers, Inc., has started building a new E. J. Korvette shopping center on a 25-acre tract near the huge 1'-1onmouth Shopping Center on state Highway 35. Parking space will accommodate 1,350 cars. WORCESTER, Mass. Riley Stoker Corp. h a s obtained a $16.S million order tor a steam generator to drive a 4~megawatt t u r b J n e generator for Jacksonville Electric Authority of Jacksonville, Fla. It will be oil·fired. NEW YORK -1.1obil Oil Corp. announced its joint venture with the Esso Group, Stanvac Indonesia, has now formed an exploration venture with A!amera Oil Co. covering substantial a c r e a & e in southern Sumatra. WORCESTER, Mass. Rice Barton Corp. o f Worcester and Core Cell Co. of Puerto Rico have formed a venture called Honeycomb Et· panded Product Systems, Inc., to make resin impregnated high strength honeycomb paper materials for many in- dustries. The two companie., have developed a method of t u r n i n g non-combustible papeboard honeycomb con- tinuously for warehouse pallets and many o the r purposes. NEW YORK -National Biscuit Co., has registered for public sale $50 million in 30- year sinking fund debentures, the offering to be underwritten by a group J~ by Laiard Freres & Co. HOLLYWOOD -C',oJumbia Pictures Co. and an affiliate of Playboy Magazine of Chicago have formed a venture to produce four feature lllms. The first will be Roma11 Polanski's production of S h a kespeare 's "Macbeth," starring Jon Finch a n d Francesca Annis. Location shooting al~ady has been completed in England and Wales. PHILADELPHIA INA Corp., holding firm for Jnsurance Co., of North America. has announced formation of a se parate corporation to take over ii! reinsurance business, to be called JNA Reinsurance Co. JNA had a 23 pere61t growth in its reinsurllJICe bUslness h1s1 year to written premiums or $104.M million. NEW YORK -Twenly·nint percent more e:ii:ecutives were ANAHEIM -The hoard of looking for jobs during the directors of California Com· first quarter of lhia yur lha.n puter Products lnc . (Af\1EX. in the last quarter of t9"10, t>CSEl has voted to proceed Handy Associates reported. under present agreement~ Handy publishe1 the with the minority sha reholders National E1ecuUve Moblllty or C<'nlury Data Systems Inc., Index. The consulating firm 11 6S percent ov.•ned subsidiary. said the rise in unemployment These agrcem~ls give among executives was moat Calcomp the option to acquire severe in advertising and the remRining 35 percent m 1 r k et in g . Fl nanclal, m1:1ority intcres~ on an e~rn-account Jn c and data 111~~ formula basis over a five-proctssing execuUvu wert ytar 1)Criod. hard hit by firings . L<'st('r L. Kilpa trick. board;:;-~==========. THE BEST •IA>fl·l'IM Ori .... Cllltl 01r• "11111 ~~lV.M °"'"" Co••• 0 •• 1, 1'110· '""' n, "· )t 1IMll Ml~ J. 1'11 •11 A"°ll If tM A ..... il 1', 1'11 l!t .. ________________________ ,. rhnirr11an and pre11ident, sa id !he boa rd decided to follow the or 1 g I n a I agreements, rather 1han acquire f u 11 OY.'ncrship thL~ year, as pre\'lously announced. ll:11d 1nl!lp poUt pr•~• .,P•a• 1u.rh" it •n• 1111 tl.1 wo1ltl'• matt pop~l1r co1nic •trip1. ll:t til It dilly h1 011 DAILY PILOT. - THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And the m.on who knows ;"'t how to tum tht ph.rc.st to get tM mod out of llw barb ii DAILY PILOT cohtmn- Ut Sydnev Htmi.L H• ""' bt.,. called Ill< modern • dav ff • n r v M1ncken. lf you're ready frn-hi! u.se of th• add odjactiot and ' h 0 u g h t • provoking prose to give JIOU the needls .•. if you wont to find .tomething to think about in what uou read ••• if you have o semt of humor, you b e l o n g with rtadns who delight in. Ulting others what •s¢ said" '" one of the nation's most • quoted cdlumm. Some Sample Barbs Recently Thrown-- By Sydney Harris: ''One of tht highest p1ld Jobs in America con•ists of st1ndlng up in front of 1 mlc. rophone, Mp1ratlng th• good records from the bad onu -ind pl•ying the bad onu.'' l 4 t's sad but true that while alcoholics a re the best argument for abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ar· 111ment for a litUe drink now and then.., ''Most of the •~•lled 'incomp1tibillty' In marrl1ge sprint• from tht fact th•t to mo1t men, stJ: it an act; while to •II women, it it •n emotion. And this d_iffer· ence In ettitude can be bridged only by loYti." "The sole difference between 1 'dedica· ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' con.- &ists in our agreement or disagreement with his objectives." ''The matt explotlve combin1tion In the world contists of sincerity •ddtd to lgnor•nce. '' ''Whenever I am the recipient of an ex- cessively hearty handshake, J suspect )fr. Afuscles is trying to sell something, hide 1omething, or prove something." Check The Editorial Page For This Signature The Help You Find Latest . Quotables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col - A Regular Feature of It'll umn, the DAILY PILOT Your HorTMtown D1ily Ntwsp1P41r ' Who Writes The Editorials? It's • f1ir question, probably one of the most frequently 11kecl about the new11Nptir. And the 1n1w1r 11t the DAILY PILOT 11 tto on• -no OM ,.,..on, that it. · Edltorlol wrillno .11 • IHm effort ot tho DAILY PltDT. It 11' tflo ort of phr11ln1 thOuaht1 so that the flnl1hed edltorl1I npr111nt1 the ,,..,. ,.,.,., oplniont' on MW• eventt, and probl1m1 of thi d1y. The edltorl1l1 do not 1xpr111 th.1 oplnl~ of any one man. The news,.per 1pe1k1 with one volci only 1fttr many h•v• been hurcl. · The voic11 1r1 heard -loudly ind clurly -fn the lnform1I 1tmff. • ph1r1 wh ich surrounds the weekly mHtlng1 oJ the edttorlal bcMrd. Out of -mHll"ll• come tho foundotlon1 on wh im DAILY PILOT ocl ltorlol1 .,. built. Al tho hood of tho oclltorlol board ore Robert N. Wood. publl1hor; Thomas kHvll, editor; and +tbert W. B1t11, edito rial Piii edttor. Other botird members 1r1 Thomas Murphlne. m1n11ing edlter; Richard Nall, 111l1t1nt managing Rltor; L. Peter Krieg, Newport BNch city e:cfltor; ind Alan Dlrkln, Huntington Be1~h-.Fount1in Valley city editor. /u they dlscu11 news of the wnk or of wHks ahead, the talk ranges over topics affecting each of the Orange Coast communities the DAILY PILOT 1erve~ ••well a1 th.1tate, tfte nation and th• world. There Is • tftre•way test of any topic propostd a1 the subfect for an ffitorial : 1. Is it a topic which merits editorial commtnt? 2. Wiii the commentary 11rve the new1paper11 readers in terms of their particular interests? 3. Does tha newspaper lcnow enough about the topic to make tn intalligent1 responsible comment? ' Often the third question is the most difficult to answer. And 1om.-·l---,imer1h•11n·1wtrll'~:~·---·---- Even after considerable resea rch and fu rther dlscusslen at a liter M itorlal board meeting, a topic c.1n be dropped .1ltogether because the newspaper still does not h.1vt suffic ient knowledge to make a meenlngful editorl.11 comment. Discussion In an editorial board mHtlng ctn modify tha conclus~ shift the emphasis or even reverse the position of the board mtmber who w•s the original proponent of a certain position and posture the newspaper should assume on a given topic. But who actually writes the editor I a ls for the DAILY PILOT? The editorial board calls on anv man or woman on the staff -the one most qualified to write on tha specific topic stltcted for comment. J A reporter whose alsignments have placed him ck.seat to the facts surrounding the editorial topic may write the first dra~. Moat often the original draft Is written by one of the senior editors, And uwally even a "first draft" represents several rewritings by whom-- aver produces it. It will be reviewed •• many_•• thrH times -¥Ca by Editorial Paa• Editor BotH, •t•ln by . Editor KHvll •nd, flnoily by Publllhor Wood (where "th• buck stops," as tht nying goes) -before It finally reaches the publication stage. Each review usually brings some further editing ancl refining. Any member of the news team with knowledge to contribute on the subject is invited to put forth his best effort. Many voices blend Into one. The editorial speaks in the single voice of "1• now1poper. Who wror, It? The DAI~ Y PILOT did. Pogo p...ot 11 checked In COmpotl"ll room by Albor! Botos (left), oclltorlol Pll9• editor, and Thomas Kuvil, editor. It's last chance to correct type- 9r1phlc1I errors. Th""llh they coll It "edit board" for short ond It mHl1 In• dtlrt-11Hve otmo1phoro of lnformollty, the Job of tho oclltorlol board Is serious -and t11ken seriously by (left to right) Robert N. WHCI; pvbllshar1 Alan Dlrkln, Huntin9ton BNch-Feuntahl Valley city editor; Thomas Murphln1, managing editor; Richard Nall, a1slst11nt managing editor (he overtHS the L119UM Beach, Saddleb.ck and San Cltment .. Caplstrano tclltlon1); L. Pet.r Krltg, Newpo.rt Beach cfty editor; Albert W. Bates, edle torlal page editor; and Thom11 KHvll, editor. And Othe'r Good Questions What k ID editorial! An editorial ls a statement of the new1paper's opinion on a topic it feels ls of interu:t or concern to Its readers. "'!be lire destroyed the ' building and three adjacent 1tructures." That's a news story. "The firt could have been prevented if the dty council had" con- demned the ancient building ... " thafs an editorial. Why do you endorse candi~:ilea for pablle office? Many people go to the polls without knowing the candidates well enough to vote on them -or don't go to the polls at all, for the aame reason. We feel these readers are open to reasoned suggestions. We know 'the candidates both penon.ally and from their records because we think thLs ts part of our job. We ahare our special knowledge with our readers when we carefully exercise our prlvllege to IUfie!t that a given candidate is best qualified for the job he seekll. We also an careful to see that our editorial opi. nlo111, expressed on the editorial page, do not infl uence our reporting of the cam. palgn -or any other news -in our news colwnm:. Do tour edltorlal wrltm b1ve full freedom or their convictions or does aomebody WI them what to write? No at.a.ff member iJ obliged to write an ()pinion he d<>e! not share. He ls respected for his dissent. And dissent iJ frequent, though not bitter, among the writers and editors who produce the DAILY PILOT edltorlala. Why do Yo• po.bllsll "editorials" whleh disagree with your stated position! Often the comment! of C()Jumnists whose work appears an the editorial page are considered "editorials'' by readers. The top of the editorial J>age containina: the ediloriab ·II wh ... the DAlL Y PILOT states Its position. The rest of the pqe ii turned over to readers' comment. (l~ ten and Gloomy Gus ) and to writers and cartoonists with whose view1 thll newspaper may or may not agree. Tbeae range from the satirical poliUcal fOIDo ment of Art Hoppe to the bard-l'IOltd ln- "YesUgaUon of Washington bureaucracy bJ Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith. Their C()mments are not editorials. But they often counter-balance ideu U • pre"ed In DAILY PILOT tditorllll ond, thus, give our readers a more balanced diet of opinions on a given subject. Gloomy Gus ... Is He One of Us? , Without lttttr-toriting Ttadtr1 l'd !O$t mu vokt . G.G. (Hi..,tl/) Gloomy Gus literally I! the voict of the people. No staff member "writes" lhe Gloomy Gus feature. All of Gus's quotea are contributed by readers -many .more than can be printed, fn fa ct. That is not to say that none of the DAILY PILOT'S JOme 200 employe1 may Dot occasioaally contribute a Gus quote. After all, they're subscribers too. F1 .. 1 rovlew of Intent and content of on lmoort•nl oclltorlol llkoly will find Publl1hor Robort N. WHCI one! Editorial ,._ Editor Bates mHtlng under plaque on Batas' wall Which kups reminding them the D~ILY PI LOT editorial ,,.ge ha1 hlth 1tMMlards to maintain. Plaque Is flrat place award In Callfornl• N•••1NP1r Publishers Association competltlOft for lML I • • ' ' ,, .. ~ .. • .. •) ~ • .. , ... ' • ,. v ' ' • ' .. • . • • ,. DAILY PILOT ' HIIll: Eyes. Primary Prospects WASlllNGTON CAP) -Hu- bert H. Humphny, lncl<ng doser to Democratic preside~ Ual candidacy, ._,. a crowded field may prove MJ1_ year'• primaries indeclstve-a aitua· lion likely ID benefit the Min- nesota senator. Humphrey , narrowly ddealed by Pwident Nlxoo In the 1968 race, also says be will dlcJde near the end of the year ID enler the primary compeUUon. "I'm not going to say what will happen Wltil l know what rm going to do," Humphrey said. "I'll decide about the end ol. this year. l would have to take a klok then at what, If any, primaries I would enter." Humphrey bypassed t h e primaries in winning, as vice president, th e DemocraUc presidential nominatk>n i n 1968. He said it Ls pos!ible, but only ••an outside possibility," that a Democrat who does not atter presidential primaries could emerge wiuP the 197? nomination. He said he is In no hurry ID make a decision about can- didacy. Even after deciding, Humphrey said, he may not declare his intentions for a while. Humphrey said be wltl see bow he ls received around the country, analyu the polls, and decide a political coune at the) tum of the year. "''I1lis 1972 business got .started too !OOD from the viewpoint of the Democrats anyhow," be said. The pollil now s b o w Humphrey moving up among the prospect.I for tm nomina- tion. 1be llst stUI is headed In most samples by Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. Humphrey said he doesn't know what mates the polls move. "I haven't been do Ing much," be aaid. He said he bu declined invit.ations to a~ pear at political meeUngs with other prospective candidates. "l don't want to have it a~ pear that I'm poslurlng as a candidate,'' Humphrey said. But he has. increasingly been on his feat in the Senate.. often challenging the ad-- ministration of the President who defeated him. He aJso remains chairman of the Democratic Policy C!ouncil, a n lasue-drafting panel which baa called for withdrawal of all American troops from South Vietnam by I.be end of this year. He has been making gpeeches, but bas so far avoid· ed the kind of Cl'ON<0Wttry sampling and 1peaklng misslo111 undertaken by Muskie and other Democratic possibilities; Sen. Haro Id Hughes of Iowa, Sen. Birch Bayb of Indiana and Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota. Humphrey said he an- ticipates that Sen. Henry M. Jackson. 0-Waab., will join that Wt of candidates and likely candidates. It is because of the crowd, HUmpbrey said, that "I have a feeling there'll be less mean· tng in the primaries." If the verdict from the primaries is divided, Humph- ries could be in a -position of slttl'lgth from his past 1up.. porters In organized labor and traditional party organiza- tions, to move into the open· Ing. Humphrey'• timetable cer- tainly will be ·affected by one feature of the um residential primary schedule: the si1: racu in which all recogn.lzed JrOlpectl for nomination will be lisled on the ballot unleu Ibey ......... candidacy. The first of ~ conlesis comes April 4, 1171, In W!Jconsin, and a Democrat wM wantl out will have to HY 10 by Feb. 21, deciarlni bo II not and haa .. lnlention of bocomln& 1 candidale th1l ,,..,, "That doe1 -I tllUe pr<> blem," Aid Humphrey, then · hooded ba<k ID Ibo Senole floor ID debal• the 'Mplbliolm. ---~· -· """' 19, 1971 Silent GUARD -H . 4-Ply Nylo11 36-Month Guaranteed I • Foarfallplieoofrugged nylon cord for sll'ellgth. longer wear. Conioured safety sbonlden 29.87 32.87 PriCM Effective Sunday, April 18 thru Tue11<iay, April20. ... _ • .. .. ... -·----........ -••• p . -· SAVE *6 PerTire Off RegularTrade-In Price! 30-Month Guaranteed · • Fnll 4-ply rayon cord'for smooth ride, long wear 1.7 2.01 %.14 ~ .... , 7.35Xl4 30.95 24.87 2.01 7 75x14 32.95 26.87 2.14 8.25X.l4 35.95 29.87 2.32 .,n~.55~·~1~4'-l--"38.~9~5'-l_,32.8~~7+ 2.50 8.25115 36.95 30.87 2.37 8.55x15 39.95 33.1!7 2.48 ' .i .. ~.~ ,;; \• ... . ·, .<· .,··. " Ask About SBGr1 Con11enient CreditPlam. 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"44011 SANfA MONICA IX 4•6711 IOUSN COAIT fUIA M0-4UI ¥WIT fO .._...,, .. lllO f Aft' AMMI ( • %1 DAILY PILOT Moodar, AP'll 19, 1971 -'~ Sizzling Halos Back at Big A • Ill .... .... ~ 1st Place: .... 1~ Smith Turns Scorer Captain Marvel Too Much for LA MILWAUKEE (AP) -Wilt Chamberlain captured lhe battle of the seven-(OOt.ers, but soaring "Captain · Marvel" powered the Milwaukee Bucb to the Western Conference title Sunday in the National Basketba.11 A.ssodaUon playoff!. ' 'fbt,.Bucks. (llf..98) winners over the Los Angeie! Lakera, now will take oo the Eastern Conference c ham p I o n 1 Wednesday night in the opening game of the best-of·seven championship serles. The game will be televised nationally on ABC.TV. Milwaukee's opponent will be the wloner of tonight's battle between the New York Knlcks and the BaJtimore Bullets. The Bullets deadlocked their semifinal aeries against the Knicb: with a 113.9& We'r e Better Than Dodgers, Says As tro victory Sunday, fortlllJ' a seventh 1ame in New York tonight. "Captain Marvel" la: Greg Smith, the 'B1,1clcs' 6-foot-3 forward who b considered long on defMse but short on offe~. Agolnst the Liken Sunday, be paced the Bucks with 2Z points. I ea d In g Milwaukee'• weJl.bllanced 1 co r i n g attack. "This la the first time I've led a team in scoring llnce I wu in hJgb Khoo~" said Smi,th, a three-year NBA veteran. "That's seven years since I've been the hJgh acorer.'' While 7-1 Lew Alcinder and 7-1 Chamberlain battled, Smith sneaked in time and aga1D ror cn.tdaJ rebound,, or vital polnts. Because of foul trouble, ~ played only 23 minutes, less than one half of the game. Chamberlain, the veteran Laker center, coo.Unued his sparkling play against Alcindor. The former Kansas AIJ.. American outscored the Bucks center, 2:J.. 20, and blocked alx shots while Alclndor slapped away three would-be basket.. Four times, Chamberlain knocked away an Alclndor field goal attempt, and twice Alcindor did the aame on Chamberlain's shots. Jn the rebounding battle, Alcindor finished with JS and Chambi!rl.aln 12. An gels Duel ~'s Tuesda y jt •• • """ , ff o Open S~~·. ' . 'Ille Caliloml1 Angelo, the boltelt "°"; ln butball, put their seven-game WlniliCJ ltrWt on lbe Uoe Tue!day nlcfrt 11>,lnit: OU!and'1 Alhlella 1t Anlbelm StadlilJD.• Jt's the start of 1 lhret-Came 1tr'6 Wtfb; the rugged A '1. ' 'Ille Angels picked up their ,.venlbJn' 1 ' row Sunday, downinc Mlnnuota's ~ ; H. in Bl-lngton, Mlnn., co~ nine-game road trtp. ~· ; Oii lbe lttk, lh• Haloa loot their only two title! to Milwaukee then tr1'"4 Kansas City •nd Chicago twice bet.o :sweeping a lhree-1ame series with.·~ ~d Monager Lefty Phillips !'."!~ to pitching u the ruson wby the An&~ are now leading the Wei\ Divl.sion. a "Our pitcblng bu hem outmndinl." PbllUps aald. "We've bad 12 well·pitdlid games. And we've started driving in ~ the last two games." ~ The batting saved Clyde WrtahC~ second victory after the Angel left~tf weakened in the ninth when tbt 1winJ fought back with three runs. Alex Johruon's two-nfll homer start..l the Angels off 11 the third, then storted a tw1>run California ninlh with a double off reliever Stan Wllliams. :i• Wright was driven out by singles • Paul Powell, Danny 'l'bompson and ~· Carew. Phillips brought in D a Y'W LaRoche, who yie lded a two-nm double Ao Rick Renick. But then Mel Queen, W11COttd on bl ~ Innings of relief, struck out Cesar Toy.u to end the game with the tying run ,cp. second to save his third game. ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pilcher Jack Billingham thinb his Houston Mtros have a shot at the National League pennan~ even though not highly regarded at the start of the season. With Chamberlain dominating play at both ends of the court, Los Angdes hung close until the half, when the Lakers trailed by only six ponts, 55-49. CARD INALS SECOND BASEMAN MAXVILL ILEFT) IS UPENDED BY PADRES' KIRBY. CARDS WDN, 4-2 The 'l"wW, atruggllng ID the at cellar afier winning the divlsion the ~ two seasons, have lost six straiilll " "We're better than the Dodgers," Billingham said flaUy after Houston blasted l.J>a: Angeles &-6 Sunday to take two of the three games in the Dodger Stadium serjes. "We've got a great chance to win it all. It'll be a rough race in the Western Apr/I It All•ll 10 Dodger S late A.II G-M 1U'I llMtl DoOte" ., Sa... DteN Dctd99r1 .t Saft D'"° P:U J.m. 1:ll P.lll. Division. Anyone can take it and we've got as good a chance as anyone." Houston showed the Dodgers good pitching and plenty of power in belting 15 hits including Joe Morgan'• f1r1t home run of the ytar, a three-run blow in a five-run fifth-inning against C J a u d e Osteen. 'The Astros are id1e today, then continue their road trip Tuesday in Chicago. Los Angeles, having concluded a 4-6 home stand, launches a 13-game road trip in San Diego tonight. Doo Sutton, 0.2, opposes the P1dr.eJ' Dave Roberts, 0.1. Billingham scattered seven bib in notching the victory, his second without a loss, but required ninth inning help from George CUiver. One of the blows off Billingham was WeJ Parker's first home run of the season, a tll·o-run shot to right in the fourth. "We have the pitching -in the front line as well as the bullpen -and we have a man at every position," Billingham continued in appraising the Astros' chances in the National West. Dodger manager Walter A Is ton t xpressed less enthusiasm. "Yes, the pitching concerns me ,'' ht gaid in reply to a question. "In thia park If we give up more than four or five runs, trs oot at all good. We just haven't had the consistency we need. "Outside of four games -two by Claude Osteen and one each by Bill Sing. er and Don Sutton-we ha ven't had any well -pitched games. "Also, the hitting hasn't been all that good either." "I haven't been able to give the team any o(fense," Reed said, "and nobody's been able to pick it up." MOUSTO!f I-OS ANOELES Melf~, II MO,.._ft, fl Mtnli•• lb WtllOll, ff Redt r, 311 J .Alou, rf cea-, cl Hiatt. c 1 1111Jl9fttm, (uh•t r, p ••rllrtoi ••r~rW J 2 l 1 llusMll, lb • o o O ' I l • W,O.vl1, cl ' l 2 0 4 I 21W.P••k•r,lb'11 2 52211:.Alltft,ll )110 .s•2 1 s1rn1.c 4111 Sl11G1.....,.,Jll J 222 .s 0 • 0 ll>dl ..... rl 3 • 1 I l 1 l I \111tftflnt, 11 J t 0 I 11•0llL.it1>vr1.pl'l llOI OOll Otr.tt.11 1100 V1nc1, p 1 I I I Htller. pll I I 0 I 0 '8• ..... J •••• Sud••ls, pll I I 0 I Tt1tl1 .a f IJ f Tott ls ti I 1 J Houtlen OOll 15' Ito -I l os AllOfln OOll lOD 102 -f f -J. Aloi.I 2, LOB -HOllltotl I , l61 AtU)1le1 !. 18 -Mtnl<t. W""O", 11 •0tr, lt -Mo!ni1r. G11rwy. HR -W. 1'1t11;1r (II. Mo ... n Ill. SF - Mor11n. ll'HllfllllSO llllillQ~tm (W.2.tl I 1 6 ~ l t Culvtr 101011 011"" 11..2·1) "lll t I J I I Vtn<I ,_2/J I J J I t 0'11•..,, 200111 It,.. -<111 ..... WP -l lll!n!INm Tll'M -J:O. Arr1ri<11r.c1 -f1'M1. 1ben, as has bttn their custom, the Bucks exploded in the final two periods to post their fourth victory of the aeries easily. Bob Dandridge added 20 points to Milwaukee's total. High for LC8 Angeles was Happy Hairston with 27. With their first conference crown in hand, the Bucks immediateJy turned to their nelf. goal, the NBA championship. "We want the Knlcks," said Roberbon. "We have somelhinJ to prove. Jf we beat Baltimore, everyone will say the Knlck.s were the best team, they lost because of injuries." Alcindor agreed. "W~ want to be the best," he said, "and we want to do it by beatin& the champions." ·IAS ANS•US MK.WAUKI& • • T • • T Clltmllerltln " .. n .__ ' .. " MtMfrll111 ... " ...... • ... " ~•lr11011 " 1·11 v O.l'ldrlllle " ., " Goodrlcfl • ., " ·--• •• " .. llt~ ' .. • McGlocJdln • ,_, " Mc Ct"" ' ., • lloc11tl' • ~ " Htt>el ' ,_, • All., ' ., • l<ll lum • ,_, ' Cunnl""'''" • .. • ·--• ,_, • Mclt mo•• • .. • GrH<efl ' .. ' W~o ' .. ' Wlftklllf' • .. • T11111s ll22·27 M Tat111 '' ... i7 11, '~ _,_ " " " ·-M MllWd~kN " F<tuled OC/f -None. n ,. l5 -Ill Tottl '91111 -Los A119ltts 22, Mll~Ul<.ff lf. AHtndt~ -10,1 .... NIW 'l'O•K •ALTINIOllE • • T • • T .... ' ,_, ' Urr1tlll • .. " 0t811'1dllft " ••• " Trftvl~I • •• " 8rtdltr ' " ' Mprln " ,_, " Freiler " .. " C1r111 • .. • aem'1t ' ••• " Mon rot 7 J).15 " Jlk>rd•,,' ' M ' lOl/VhftY • .. " .51911-ffl ' •• ' C11.J.ri111on • ,_, " kuut!I ' .. • M11rr11 • ,_, , ""-' ,_, ' Z•llff • ., • Pr k t ' ,_, ' G1.Jollm0rl ' ,_, • l"Hl,.,..,rir ... • ..... , ' .. ' Tot1b JI 20-ll H Tollli " 1].)j Ill H..,. Yerll " " • " -H fltFUmort " • M 2' -11J Fouled out -N-. Tot1I fllllll -Nirw 'l'0!'111 '17, •t1tl11'11H'1 n. Attendi..ct -11,Zll. One Man's Opinion Lakers N eedN ew Blood If Title ls to B.e Theirs Next time someone decides to put on a charity game, bow about making 1he Los Angeles Lakers the benefactors. That way they can raise their sunken ship, re-rig her with young, healthy buketball talent. And then -and only then -maybe they'll come up wllh the cornbjnatioo to win the N a t I on a I Basketball Association championship someday. The title has eluded them since they moved from Minneapolis to Los Angeles a decade ago. And it's going to continue avoiding them as long as they cast their marbl~s with guys who can't last a full season because of injuries. Jerry West is probably one or the greatest. players 'who ever stepped on a <X!Urt. Yet what good is he in a cast? Elgin Baylor is another of the all-time greats. Yet what value i.s he out of uniform, incapacitated becau.se o f injurlu? Wilt Chamberlain showed In the di.saatroua aerie& with Milwaukee that he can arise to the occasion on occasion. But he's injury ·prone and 34 years old. Hi.s playing days are numbered. his durability i.s waning and surely he should be put out to p;uture. So what is there on hand to ,replace these· super stars? Gail Goodrich is a fine shooter, makes too many turn-overs and .could de.velop into one ol the game's best all·round guards in tllne -let's keep him. Jim McMlllian prot¢d his worth in the playoff series with the Bulls. He's young, aggressive,. can shoot and should be kept. Keith Ericbon! He's marginal .•. take him or leave him. Willie McCarter, Happy Hairston. Rick Roberson and Fred Heu.el might help some other club in relief rolu, although kaNN WHIT• -______ .., WHITE WASH ----r- rm not sold In the latter duo, even M reserves coming on in the most minute role -like giving a foul. What the Lakers must do If they are to mold a .serious championship contender ls retire the super duper players of yesteryear for some super heroes of tomorrow. Get rid of the dead weight on the bench for subs who can spell regulars without weakening the team on the floor. And then, perhaps, they'll make it an the way to the top. ·""'""""""' ..... ""~'""""""' ................. .,..~~~ ... . * * * Stewart Outlegs Ickx Mllwaakee Buck1 fans surely wlll be crossln1 tbelr flngeT1 that Baltimore defeats New York tonl&ht In the final tame of the NBA 's Eastern Co11fenace ftnal1. ' ~ Scot Tak es W orld Driving Lead ,, BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - Jackie Stewart of Scotland has taken the lead In the standings for the world championship for Formula I cars. Stewart moved to the top Sun- day when he drove a Tyrell-Ford to victory in the Spanish Grand Prix, beating Jackie Ickx of Bel- t gium in a gruelling race. r. Stewart, averaging 93.85 miles j per hour. took the lead In the sixth lap and never relinquished it despite continuous pressure from Ick:x, who started from the t pole position . lckx drove a Ferrari. lckx trailed by as many as nine seconds but cut hi& dt.liclt to two seconds as he chased Stewart around the J 70-mile Moritjuich t- course. ~ Chris Amon of New Zealand ',. 'vas t h i rd in a ?datra Simca. . Mexico's Pedro Rodriguez , driv· ing a BRM, was fourth, and Den· } nis Hulme of New Zealand finish· ed flflh in a McLaren. Stewart's victory gave him 15 ' points in the world standings, six more than itarto Andretti ol i] Nazareth, Pa. and nine more ft than lckx. Andrettl \Vas forced .. out of the race with 11 laps left •,. \\;hen his Ferrari caught fire. ·: Only 12 of the 22 cars entered comoleted the 75-lap test around the 3,790-meter circuit. New York wblpped Mllwauket four out ol llve time• In reru;llir season play while Baltimore dropped foar of Us ftve meotln11 with lbe Bucks. * * * Oscar Robertson, Milwaukee 's all·Ume basketball great, says . he thought only about winning the dlvi.sional title when the season began. "I thought we'd be good," he admitted when talking to this writer Friday night at the Fonun. "But good clubs don't always win the championship,·· he 'added. PS : lf lbey had an award for the best combined player-nice guy in the NBA, Robertson and Jerry West would surely finish in a dead heat. * * * Lew Alclndor '1 la1t, aod oae of hit most lmprmlvt dolt Friday ataht, wa1 11ee1 by on)J a baadful of people. Jt came in tbt ~fUwau.kee dre11lq room whea be •'°4>4 ap ud look • 01te-lwtdu wlill • N'HI of tape, aeortnc • ballseye •• Ole bo1 lte was afmlDJ at some %0 let.I dJtlaJll. Showdown Night for Bullets ~ Kni~ks BALTIMORE (APJ -C.Oach Gene Shue of the Baltimore Bullets says he doesn't believe in statistics. But when the Bullel.I meet the New On TV Toda11 Cha•Kel 7 at 4:30 York Knickg in Madi90D Square Garden lonlghl. Shue had better have faith In the l11w or averages if he Is to maintain hl.s Image as an optimi11L Going lnto the National Basketball Association's Eastern Conference title game, wlth the ser)u Ued 3-3, the Bullets ahow one victory ln nine post aeuon games at New York dUJin& the past three years. BalUmort evened the current 1eriel by tromplng the Knick a tJJ..96 Sunday, giving each lt1m 1 sweep Otl Ila home coort. While the Bulle!.$ have won by margin., of 17 to 28 polnU at home, two or New York's victories hive been by ont and fivt points. "We've &ot to prove we can be.at them In New York in a close game," said 81.lUmore euard Kevin Loughery. "To be the champs, you have to do that . We all knew btfore lhe series that w' would have to wln oot in New York." Tonlghf1 winnu will take on the P.fllwauket Bucks. beginning Wedntlday night In Mllwauket. While New York center Willis Rt'd conUnued to be lnel'fteLlve because of an allln& right shoulder, the Bullet& received a boost IS two or their Injured, Gus Johnson and Kevin Loughery, scored 10 poinlt aptece. Johnson played 19 minute& in his first past season action, his ailing kntts shot wllh medication. Loughery rtln)ured a heel and will require 1n lnjectk>n ror gllfte No. 7. Reed, lht NBA'& MOit Valuable Player a year ago, managtd only three points In 26 minuter and 1rabbed ju.tt four rebounds, Ser vices Held For Reeves; 102 Injured LOS ANGELES -Several hundred friends and sports association attended a memorial wake Sunday night for Daniel F. Reeves, the president of the Los Angeles Rams who died in New York. Thursday night. Numerous Ram players were. present. along with new coach Tommy Prolhro, at the St. Paul The Apogtle Chureb in West Los Angeles. Don Paul. a fonner Ram favorite of Reeves, delivered lhe eulogy. • 102 P e r •on• Injured WILMINGTON, N.C. -At least 102 persons were Injured Saturday when a 20- tier section of bleachers collapsed at • car race track near this North Carolina coastal town. \Vlth only a slight cracking sound as 1 warning. horror·stric.ken race fans found themselves enlangled in the splinlered remains of the wooden bleachers. At least 13 persons were admitted to area ho.spitals, including two or three with broken bacU and othtrs with compound fractures, d I s I o ca t Io n s , lacerations and puncture wounds. An assist.ant administrator of New Hanover Memorial Hospital said nurses and doctors were kept bwy until 3 a.m. Sunday treating the injured . • Adie Win• Tourney CHARL011'E, N .C. -Arthur Ashe wed hi! speed, prttise shooting and contidence Sunday to dash the upset hopes of Stan Smith and capture the men's singles tiUe in Charlotte's $15,000 open tennis tournament. Ashe, of Richmond, Va .. downed Smith 6-3, 6-2, to carry off •5,000 first prize money in the North Carolina National Bank Open. Smith, from Pasadena, double-faulted and knocked ·in the ninth game to drop the fmaJ aet. g1mes. "' , "We're getting lots of singles." 1:11d: manager Bill Rigney. "But we're not getting the long ball. We certainly ~v.e to feel a little better after that olnth Inning. We took a nm at somebody.'' The key to the future may be Andy Messenmith, the S..foot-1, 200 • pdund right-hander of the Angels. . Only a week ago Messersmith left. in the sixth inning of a California gain,, at Chicago. He had pains in his i(ghi ahoulder and later admitted be •u worried. "I've never been so scared in my life," he said. "It's hurt before but it's n~Yer snapped like it did in Chicago. I thought it "''as a\\ over ." ' After California won the game "°l.t t~t Angels karoed the injury was notninC serious. But Phillips wu sWl coocemed. He allowed Andy to take hi.s turn en tht mound Jagt Saturday and prayed. The prayers must have worked bec:a\1811 Messersmith came through with hi.s llr8t complete game of the season, a seven-hit gem against the Twins. Altbougb he walked six,. he looked sharp and was tough when it counted. He also won the game 4.3. Power wa! supposed to be the Angel nickname this year, especially now tbat they've got Tony Conigliaro, the former Boston slugger. But in their aeve~ winning streak, Caliomia has not aCtdd more than rive rum In a game. • I' CAll,.OllN18 MINNESOTA •• f llr1M •• , ...... Alolr\fr, lb I I O O To~1r. rf J t ~ t l11ry,t;f •IOl(~rd..,n.11J111 A.Jol!ns0>1. ff 4 2 I J l<Uitblf,.., lb 4 I I I T.ton1on1ro. rf ' • 1 o s.w1111.,.... fl • o • o Fr-!. ti I I I I C1mplt!, fl I I I 8 McMullt<'t, Jb I I 0 I Aly11, II • I I I Mo.n,( 1011Powtl1,d l!J t Spenc:tr. 10 J I l 1 II"''· Flt • I I e Wrlfhl, fl I I O I T......_,, lb I I 1 t llltKht, J I 0 t I Mmirrwtlll, c J 0 I I 0-. .. • • • • Holl, pr •••• T1,.l1 c1ntor11!1 M'-11 Tltclllrls-1, C 8 I I I Ctrirw, llfl I I 1 I K11t, pr 0 I 0 I T .Ht!I, p I 0 IS, e Jllftld<, .... l •1rt ' 8r1un, ~ I • Pf I UJJS T<tltlt Jll~ll "t OOJ 000 002 -f GOii GOO 101 -1 I" H I ... l a' .HI W~lll~t fW,:P.J) l ·Ul t • • I ' I 1..tlloct\f 0 I t I e • a Oliff!\ l/J O It I 6 ,, T.Htll IL,l.U I 1 J I 0: s.w 11n1m1 111 3 t t 1 , • C•;:~ I, WHlllfl'll, Tl~! !. ):~. A~~~nc:.'11.. ...... Pla y Well , Get Joh Done;'. Littler Does His Thing PENSACOLA. Fla. (API -"I just like to play well and get tM. job done," Gene Littler said . · The quiet. unassuming veteran did both -for tbe first lime in two years - Sunday when he survived 1 stretch battle with lanky George Archer and won the SJ0,000 first prize in the Monsanto Open golf tournament. "Of course, winning Is nice," the slightly-built veteran said. "Bui I'm more lnteretted In playing well. It's the first lime in quite ·a whlle I've been able to do tha L Of course, the t""'O kind of go hand in band." Littler, a •year-old from La Jolla, had • final round four-under·plilr 67 for 1 276 total and a lhrtei 1lroke margln ovtr Archer, who faded back to a Ue for second with Pete Brown at 279. Archer rlniahed with 1 70 and Brown had a 67. Bob Murphy, with four consteutive 70s, and lArry Wood, who had a cloeiog 71, were next at 280. Arnold Palmer, Jack Nlckl1U1, G1ry Player , Ma1ttt1 champ ' Charlts Coody and U.S. Open tiUe-holder Tooy Jacklin didn't compete. The victory, the 23rd ~ hls la-year c11.r~r on the pro tour, probably wu worth much more than '3(1,000 to LltUer. For one thing, It put hlm ln thla wetk'a ' ,.. ' ... 411" ... ..----·---· ' Mondl1, April 19, 1971 , .... --.,..,...,.:-*~, -. "!'+" ·"'°• ,• ~."l"P\'" Ii IP' .. Artist Spikefest Laguna Captur~s ' Sweepstakes Title League Swim Champions By PllJL BOSS Of lllt Dally 1'1111 Sltff An unusual thing happened at the 32nd aooual Laguna Trophy lrack and field meet at Lagwia Beach High Saturday. The host Artists, who've had more of a reputation as pushovers in recent ye&n in prep spike circles than anything else, came up with a concerted team effort in au three divisions to capture the Sweepst.akea (overall) Trophy with 72 polnll. C.oach Len Miller's Maroon and White got the biggest thrust from the Cee division, where they rolled up S4 points and tbe team title. In addition, the rejuvenated Art.l.sts chalked up 10 more point.. in the varsity category for a 10th place tie there with Valley Christian and abo a~ded eight (10th place deadlock with Norco) in the Bees. While graduated 880 record holder Dave Hustwlck was the only prominent Laguna trackster in last year's meet, this time the Arlista had Individuals sprinkled all the way through the varsity results. Artist milers Rick Smith and Joe Pric· kett placed third and fourth in each of their varsity mile races while Laguna 's current 880 ace, Jim Stevens, was fourth in his specialty. sta Mesa Higb's circuit swlm. champions pose with the Irvine Joor. pby. Sitting from left -John Carpenter and Bill McAne ney. Knee · - M i k e O'Brien, steve Marron, Mike Beal. David Lund, Matt elich, Tim Gallagher and Mike Yarwood. Standing -coach Terry Bowen, Mike Zeldin, Ken Hart, Bob Walters, Richard Whit- more, Rod Ross, Ron Misiolek, Neil Richey, Jack Hall, Steve Sponagle, and coach Don Utter. The pole vault saw Laguna·s Mike Sweeney garnering fourth place with a 12--0 effort while mate Steve Katsiyiani finished fifth in the discus with a i toss. Canadiens Get North Stars; Upset Bruins BOSTON (AP)-Captli• Jean Beliveau probably said it all for the Ca.nadlens Sun'lt>' after the Montral club downed Bostfi Bruins 4-2 and eliminated the deft.Qd.ing Stanley Cup champions from ~ furt~r contention this season. "lW were always moving on the man and on the puck carrier," the li-year-old Beliveau said. "People didn't rate us much or a chance on our sealOn pcrfonnance, but we knew we had the speed, the drive and the legs to win." Montreal naw meets the Minne501.a North Stan In a Stanley Cup semifinal ltarting Jn the Canadiens' home r I n k Tuesday nlghl Montreal coach Al MacNeil still was jum ping 10 minutes after the final buu.er sounded. "We must have a good club because we beat a hell of a hockey team here today," he said. "It wu hard work, skating and the forwards coming back lo help the defense that won it for us." The Montreal ooach said his club had tried ta keep close to the Boston auperstars throughout the contest and ev~with this defensive move "had Ilk better than the Bruins. ' ey looked invincible before this started," MacNeil said of the erful Boat.on aggregation. "But I think they faced the: delerminatlon aneson that we had today." j A:! (AP) "!:Pele S~mkowski 's IU -death goal at l:37 of the extra lifted the New York Rangers lo a 2-i~ictory over lhe Chicago Black Hawks S~ay night in the opening game of their ~al Stanley Cup series. n Ratelle's goal at 16 :44 of the third pe tied the game for New York to t into overtime. best~f-7 series continues in ' o Tuesday night, then the scene to New York for games Thursday l aod Sunday. Reeord Now 21·12·1 VCI Splits With Foe; Faces San Diego Next SAN DIEGO -Thia border town abounds with universities and when one foe is out of the way, another looms brightly on the horizon a.! coach Gary Adams and the UC Irvine baseball team wiU attest. SatW'day afternoon the Anteaters journeyed to San Diego State and split a doubleheader with the Aztecs, dropping the opener, M , and winning the nightcap behind the complete game pitching effort of Dennis Nichobon, 6-2. The split leaves the UCI record at 21· 12-1 for the campaign and an Important game with the University of San Diego ii coming up Tuesday afternoon on the Anteater campus field (3). University Of San Diego Is one of two top independents in a struggle to gain • NCAA playoff berth. The other is Irvine l'lllT GA.Ml UC ll'YIM t•I S•11 0 .... Slllu !" ••r~nl ••r~rM l"lrrtr, Jf • I l I Hlo•IOo, c ' I J 0 L)'Oll"1, lb I 1 I 0 AMNy, Ill I 0 t 0 C••I0,<1 !120 Du",rt J211 Spenct. lb ! 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L.,......1, lb Cr•!t, cl '-·· !b S11k1. rt H1n1'". u G•-WIY. ?b ~lll!Oll, ph CerOMOI, 111 ~htllnt, t Sri<"''· pll AroderlOn. t N!chOloon, p Tolllll UC 1 ... 1.,. ···~·Ill a•r~rM • 1 2 0 l-llotl", cf l 0 I t •lJI YOlllWJ,C 1000 •110Tl<t ,pll 1000 ll?JO.On.11 •110 JOl!LtytOn,l'tl 2000 ' 0 0 0 Alllton, rl l 0 J 0 ?OOOL..,;h.lt> J010 1 0 0 0 W1rd, ltl J I 2 0 0000.Y.Yrrow.11 1010 10101-11rrl1Cll'l,P JOOO 1001P .. r1ll.P 0001 0 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 Jl 6 10 6 To!~lt Sctrt " llllllllfJ ' 100 001 ,_' Sin DflOo Sttlt OIG Olt 1 -2 ' . " , . ' and Adams will send sophomore right· hander Tom Dodd to the mound in quesl of a victory in the first of thrtt games with the University nine. Dodd has pitehed in hard·luck on several occasions this year including his last start againlt San Fernando Valley State College which he IO.!t, 4-3. Jn Saturday's outing at San Diego State, UCJ moved in front In the first game by a 4-3 margin. The hostl capitalized on a streak of wilderness on the part of starter Bob Barlow lo score: four Umes in the bottom of the third. Barlow walked three of the first four batters he faced to load the bases and Larry Sweat belted a grand slam homer o\ler the left field fence for the go.ahead scores. Rustlers Eye SoCal Jaycee Swim Crown After breezing lo the S o u t he r n C a lifornia Conference champion.ship Saturday, Golden West C o 11 e g e ' s swimming team figures as one of the favorites for this week's SoCal JC championships at Cypress College. Orange Coast College also figures lo be a contender for team honixs when the three-day meet begins Thursday. Coach Tom Hermstad's Golden West Rustlers set two circuit records in winning four of seven events Saturday. The Rustlers' most versatile swimmer, Don Lippoldt. started it off with a rec· ord-shattering Umt of 18 :23.7 in the 1,650 free, breaking the old mark of 18:52.9 set by teammate Greg Feinberg last year. Lippoldt had previously posted victories in the 500 and 200 freestylei. yun 's Future U11certain ~espite His Classy Run ' Golden West's Ross Mcintyu set a m1rk in the 200 breaststroke (2:24.3) erasing the old standard of 2:28.8 set in '70 by teammate Roy Buell. The o th e r two Rustler victories Saturday were turned in by Keith Donaldson (100 free -49.8) and the 400 free relay foursome of Craig Colt.on, Mark Mansfield, Harry Noah and Feinberg (3:27.0). Donald!on also captured the SO free Thursday. ~WRENCE, Kan. (UPI) -Jim Ryun, ru ing only the fourth race after an IS. m th layoff, proved Saturday he's still a bl ·factor a mon& world m\)tn. zipped to a aeemina:ly effortless J: ·.a mile at the Kansu Relays, which hiJ best eJfort since aetllng the world rd of S:51.l at Bakersfield, Junt 13, thou&ht I'd run 3:56." said Ryun, certainly two-tenths of a second on 1 :e~ first quarter mile in 11.2 and was sixth ln tht nine-man fie two-lime Olympian picked up the pace oo the second quarter, took the lead and wu never chlllenged. The splits for hil Jut three quarten were IO.l, 59.2 and 55.3. "I hid a couple of things in mind.'' Ryun aald. "I wanted to !lnd out where l was ln tr1Jnln1 and lhfl other w11 to ellfOJ'' the ttct. l think J accompllahed ~ 11ld hill futurt plal'ls wtre unc?trllJn. "Today lndlcates l'm ready to run, but I'm lllU undecided," he! u.ld. "J ha\le an idea, but I don't want to announce anything now." Behind Ryun In the Glenn Cunningham mile were Tom Von Ruden, 3:57.2, and John Mason, 3:57.9. Mason's time was his fastest tver and Von Ruden was only three-tenths ors SttOnd over his personal best. Ryun's mile was lhe fa.!lest run in the world in nearly three years. Kipchoge Ke ino of Kenya laat ran 1 better one when he uncorked a 3:S5.5 Aug. 31, 1968. The victory waa Ryun 's fourth in UM! Cunningh1m mile and his 13th wilhoul defeat In tht Kansas Relays dating blck lo his sophomore year In high school in 1963. A crowd of 22.000. !lttOnd largest In relays h It tor y, turn~ out under threatening skie1 to welcome Ryun ti.ck to the campus where he spent four years. Fans ga\lt him 1 standing ovation when he was lntroductd before the race and again when he received his med11I. Ryun received 19 of the 27 voles cast for the mret's moi;t o ut1l and In' performtr. It was lhe fourth time he had won the award. , Cypress' Rick Chang nabbed the 200 backstroke in 2:06.2, Bill Louno of LA Harbor won the 100 butterfly (56.7) and Jim Boring of Cypress caplW'ed the three-meter divina crown. The Rustler• finished with 201 points to far outdistance second place Cypreu (1191'>). IKll C ... Nrtt>u Swl"' Mffl CAI ltle-l ' 1.iJG tr" -1. LIPP9,fl C 1, ll:JJ 1; ), lt&nl tGI. lf.10.01 J. Eidt !GI. 1':'42/ l. Dt1>lf• Cit)! 1':5'1; S. CtlClwell !I.A Httllll"). 1':11 1 t. Af/lto." !LA Htttlof), 21 :11.11 ICol'lfetlM:e reconl, brftkt DI« ,...rlt DI 1t:l2.t ..-1 bY JrtQ Fflnt>erg of GokHn W111 111 ltJID,I 100 lrf'!' -1. eo...ld>Ofl IGl. ".I ; 1. n"''"'' lV,CCI. JG.O; J CollOl'I {GJ, SI.Si· •. P•11rson !CJ, 1.•. S. Poutll<!t lit •. $J-'t' '· Ttlll trr1 IC!1 S--1. 100 tllck -1 Cl'llM I I, 2:N J1 2. l"tll'M!"g !GI, 7:0I t; J Stl'l11tkle< (Ill), 2:>0.t J 4. Httrll CC). J;H •; J. J.,,,.,_, lCH. l:H.f1 '· Mcltlfl tLA Htrborl, 2 ,._,. l'OO bftt11 -I. Mc111t¥rt rGf. J:t•.11 2. ln1ner !Cl. 1.2•.•1 l .HO!lmWI \(), J1J0.11 •. e ... n tG), 7.U.li s.r,1rr~• (Cl, J.J.4.71 t. lredl:l"rillff !1t1. ' "i'· !c 1r1J1Ct rOl(:otd, b•••-• Old mtlk II J ::ll.I 111 "117 11Y Ollolll Wlt•• ltoy~""llJ. >-M•lll• dlvl"'lt -1. otlllCI /C , •l•il •nru t. $1nl0fl 0 ), :Mltl; • ft C . :MO. '· Ptnnt ,!,lokJ.~; !. ~t ll.Aorc). .1"11 I. '.l..11ttr !GJ. 2fll. . (COlllt ... l\(f rteorG. Orffkl old rl}t,;_ OI lfl.4 PO!nh ,,, 111 1t 10 ~v $1~ SOVll'lfnl 01 CYJ~r'" !DO 11¥ -1 LCUM ILA H1•""11, bt. i . lM<fW !Cl. SI.OJ j· SollllP'ltr/ IOJ. )1A ; l. M11rc1lly (lA r4'~k,.r.· I ~ Odt~ (!..A H1rbor), 1:02.tt I . HOlll ~ lrH tlll~ -1. OO!dtfl WU! ICttt'I', M•"\llt!O. NH~ •1111 F!11111trw ). J:27.0,~ l. tv•rnt~ ,,.,1; J. !• Hondo, l Joi. I '· i.:ACC. l~•.11 J, LA rllOt. 1141 .. 1<1t.11 Ko• NI Gotlftll Wnl 1(11..r v11r1» 11t I ltio Ho»elo Sll'll LA l'ltrDOr" Sl1 LAC\. • MD Protests 13-10 Setback To Servile Mater Dei'.! Monarchs dropped their Angelus League baseball record to the . 500 mark (4-4) Saturday by absorbing a 13-10 defeat at the hands of vi.siting archrival Servile. Coach Bob Wigmore'a host!:, who are .!Cheduled to take on lnvading Pius X Wednesday, played the contest with the Friars under protest from the fifth inning on. The prote.st stems from Servite's allegedly Illegal usage of Chris Wilson, who came in to pitch for the winners in the bottom of the fourth. Wilson was lifted for a pinchhitter in the top of the fifth by Servite mentor Tom DeVaney. Later in the inning, a Servite rally had enabled the Friars to bat around to Wilson 's spot, where DeVaney inserted .!till another pfnchhlUe.r. Wilson's return to the mound in the bottom of the fifth was therefore ruled illegal and he was asked to leave the contest wilh Wlgmore filing the protest. Most of the remainder of Mater Dei's trouble was a result of eight Monarch errors and 11 Servile bits. Slnltt IUJ M1ltr Of! Ill) t llrllrM t ll r II rM SIYll"lllCI, :lb • • , • Fritz, " , ' ' • ~.111.i-. ••• • • , • Will, r1 • , • • Grtnlllr, rt • ' ' ' Ha11Ptrl, • • , ' ' Ctmpt,,,.tii, lb >I ' ' • Colltft. ' ' , ' • Zlmmtr,,,.", c I ' , • s r....,_., ... • , ' ' W•lbum. " ' • ' • s.i.11r, " • • • ' R1moc:l111~I. 11 ' • • • LIMtrT, u ' • ' ' Wiison. "' ' • ' • Slt"l)t"f, "'" ' • ' , Trtlr., • , • • • ·-· " ' ' • (,Wiiton, • • • • • Alllmt. ,., • • • Ho0'"• pll ' ' • • k1m"""11, pto • • • KtllY. 11 ' • • • T11tl1 3'1J1110 Tolll1 2J10H10 Scire lly lnnlfltt ' ' • StrYllt "' .. J ~ lJ " ' Miter ... "' ·~ 0 -10 " • University junior Bill Murphy managed the third spot ln the discus with a 136-0 best effort. Hemet junior weightman Steve Dufner and vaulter-long jumper Ron Hayes of Fallbrook waged a hot battle for out- standing f1eld athlete honors with Dufner prevailing ia the final balloting. Dufner surpassed the 150·2 meet record in the platter e\lent set last year by his departed teammate Mark Sens and sailed the discus 156-7. He also was victorious in the shot put at 53--0. Haynes was the long jump winner with a 21·10 leap and was edged <lUt for the top vaulting spot by Glen Gundets<ln o( Poway, who won on fewer misses at 13-0 • Junior Robert Evans of fledgling Cajon High in San Bernardino was accorded the oulstandlng track athlete award by recording a double victory in the 220 (22.5) and 440 {50.5). with both finishes against strong head winds. Evans upset Brea's favored Tom Teeple in the furlong but the latter was able to repeat his 1970 win in the 100 with a 10.5 victory. The only other varsity repeater was Norco mile record holder Gordon Schulte, who scooted to an easy 4: 35.8 clocking In one of the four-lap races. The area didn 't ha\le any first placers in the Bees but a trio of Laguna athletes and the Artists' 440 relay combo won Cee gold medals. Josh Bright (1320), Neal Amsden (high jump) and Judd Binley (shot pul) were the Artist Cee standouts. Vtnlty 100 -!. Tt'lpl.-(8ru> 10.S J. Tl>omtt (C1lo11l J. Air.Mr tC1rl•bldl 'r Jerry (Morino Vtlil!YI j. Tl~m~"1 ~M£°!:::: YC111~Vn1l J?.I 1. TttPlt {8rt•1 l. Alll!t• iS•n Mtr<oil 4. RtmDlto. <C1lonl S. C11o~ro11 ccc.ctoell1l. UI lra<:t ll -1. Ev•"" ICtlOl'I\ '°.S J. Gulhr!I! 18re1) J. !11owtr1 (Morll"ICI Vtll") 4, Wll.on 1"1llbr~ J. Mtrl1 IS•" Mtrc111}. 440 trl(t 2) -!. Vlltll;O \FtllbrPOkl S•.O 1. Rltllel l,Ulfnortl l. S.....O Siii ~r~I •· Hes.It lHtlfltl . l(fff !VIII!! Cllrll 1111). MO (r1c1 -1. Vt!IKO 11"1111>...,...l 2:02.J J. J11ll1n (flrH) J. Gr1v11 !CtrlttllO) •. WtgOMf (Html!!) J. Cl'ltMY CCtlonJ. NO !r•c• J) -I. Lt8orvne fFtllbrPOlll 2,·o•.7 J. ~WI l lt•morotj J. HH!I (Hem") .. trvf<U; !Li'OUl\ll 811clll . Ar.Ii.Ill! (Wlllttltr (!'lrtttlt"J. Mllf (rKt ll -J· Sc!'lullt \Norco) a.JS.I 2. Ptr•l•1' IFtllDrodc) J. Sm lh !LtfuM 811cllJ •· Rr1111v1kl VtUftl Cl!rltlltn> J. Hunltr /C1rl1bed1. Mlle Ir-ct 2J -\, MIClttY (8re1) 4·S0.6 2. Ptrtt (Flllmo<tl J. 8ri.otl'I /Ftllbrwkl I. Jlricklll tlll<;tlll"ll 'V!-::1 ~ii.Hrl,":, <n•~.'be1oado (Caacl\fl111 10: 11 J I" Noll .. :Norco) l . U lrd !S•n Mlr,111> •. Tylrnt" ";::iv>milt 1rtt1 7) -1. Mcl(ln"'1' (C•!on) lO:O•A 7. Dototck (8,.1l J. !lrowro rFallbrook) •. 81.r111m1n!e l(th!n) I . HOldtr,,..J IN0<col. Ult HH -1 MarQuel (C lrl•bldl 16.1 1. M1ln iF111morr1 J. sa"m1Mo11 !P~w•vl '· GrHnlN11k !fir••> '1~'LH ~j'.':~·,·~rn !Mcrf"'l velltv' 11 .I 7. M1ln fFIUmortl l. Crelghlo" (W!'llllltr Chlr1tla11l 4. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGVE East Division w L Montreal 5 3 St. Louis 7 5 PltlSburgh 7 5 New York 5 • Chicago 4 9 Philadelphia 3 7 West Division w L San Francisco II 2 Atlanta 7 4 Houston 8 6 Loi Angeles s I Cincinnati 3 7 San Diego 3 8 S11M1r llltwlh Sin Frencll(o s. Chlcqo I !hi} SI" Fr1ncltC.O I, C!'llCtfO I (!t"OfJ Ntw York J, Pllllbut1h f fhtl ~!!!lbur"' 2, Ntw York 1 f711d) SI. Loult 4, Siii 01"o 2 Pel .625 . "' .5&! .556 .308 .300 Pel .846 .5!6 .571 .311 .300 .273 At!•"'' I, Plltltllllll'l\lt 4, 10 l""ln,, />hinl~ll J, Cl11CIM11fl 1 (hf\ Mon~tl J. Ctnclftnl!I l (trod) lieut"" I. l01 A-ltl 6 Tlllltt'I JCllHYle GB \\ 31'> 3 GB 3 31\ • 61'> 7 l01 A""eill !Sutf'O'O, 0.21 11 St" DltQO lll:oillrtt. e.n SI loult (lttuu . 1·11 II Sin Fr111C!KO fllltbfrct- tl", 1.e1 T"'"''' 0-"!'IHtokilllltt 11 Mln"tll All'"'' 11 Plnab111"t•~ fnltMl HOustel'I 11 C!'lk"° to .. Yert 11 Cl11Cltln•ll rni.totl l111 A,,.tlt1 11 SI" D'-f11!1MI SI. l..,h If Stn l'f'tflC*O (lllfl\11 AMERICAN LEAGUE East Dl\llslon w L Baltimore 8 2 Washington 6 6 Boston 5 5 New York 5 ' Cleveland 4 5 Detroit 4 7 West Division w L California 8 ' Oakland 9 5 Milwaukee 6 5 Kansas City 6 7 Minnesota • 8 Chicago • 9 i~lllltY ll:tlUllt flo.t~n I. Ofo!ml! O flt!T!more 11. Ntw Yolli:' W11!'1!"9!0l'I 4. Clf>vtltntl e !ltll Cltvellfld \. W111'1l11tlorl O C?ndl Ctlllof"nlt !. Ml.,ll<!llOIA 4 1(111Ht Cit¥ 1, M!lw1oll .. 1 !ht} Mll'Wl\ltt'4! J. 1(111111 Cl"" 1 !!'ndl 0•-ttno:t !I, Chlcl'IO J (hll Oa~ltnd ,, ChlC"° 1 lhod) TOldtY'I kMdl,/\t Pel. GB .800 .500 3 .500 3 .455 31\ .444 31\ .364 411 Pct. GB ."7 ,643 .5'5 !\\ .462 21\ .333 • .308 4\S U l11nl..01 Cl~ltnd IFotleo", !.(I} 11 l!IO\ton (N"D~, 0~1 1(1M11 Cll'Y (lllPOktr, 0.2) ti Ml.,11110l1 rt<11t. .., T\11111.,... ·-0 ... l•rwf 1t C1Ulor11!1 fnlllll\ l<111t11 Cll'I ti M""'"°'t Olk-ti Mllwtul!H l!ltlll"'°" 11 Dl!IT"OI! f11i.t'it) W1111....,on 1t Nrw Yo~ ci.w.i.no 11 11o11on DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARIOR BLVD., COST~ MESA 646·9303 • S.rvfce and Parts for All Imported C1r1 Modern Body Shop for All Cara Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota ind Volvo Dea1er OfttslAS DILIVlllT SllCIALISTS I ' PfOl\dlO Cl.lt1 Mll"G'll J. Brown IKll"!' Vtlll'f)"•·· oWD rell"t' -1. 1"1111'11C1f• 44.6 2. CllOn l, .....,rno V1ll1• .i. Sin Mtr<:m J. Ct•i.bld. Mll u ,..i.y -\, St" rv!"°' 2. !l•M l. Mortnf V•~~•Y ~· f.'1~~~ (5F1~;;.:".~"J:10 j· H•rrll tK•r11 Vlllt'f\ S-10 J. Gori'l\fll CW1lnlllj '· T ! bt!wHn WlltW ",'J°"' tnd C.tlGllklll (W~llller Cllrl1 11"1, -1 H•Y-tPlflbroaill 21·10 2. kltl tV•llt't C11rlstl111J ' 21·2YI S. THPll l8'ff) l. 1'11"11 !Klfll \i'tllftll S. Htctllt J...M.!"tol. ' ' , .. ' ·--• PV -T. G\l,_,tc111 I OWtY • .,.~ f•llbredl.I J lcw {fatlbfDDltl IM ti,•-• lllo11n1 Buehl U-4 J. Jcwd1n !HtmtO I • SP -I Outntr IH1mcll lM J. t-fttch4ir CF11tbrool<) 0ft.t\lo J ... ,." IVtllftl C!'lrlt!ltn) )0-2'\t '· 8er1M" (NIM"COJ 50-1 • Gorlr•l11 jF!Umorrl 11--J, OT -1. IN!Mr tH•mttf 156-1 MM! rtCO<dl · ltuall (lllm of the w o • I d I Ul..O l. Murphr fUn1<.ttr1llYJ 13'-4 >I. ~11011 IP-VI 111-2 J. tuisr.11111 Lao""' ra.dl 2 .. F lt11I lttm KOrll'lll: Ft I~. to,, !lrN J!.i CllDll :n, Piii,,_! 1t, Htmtl Ind Sin Ml•COll Jll Nd'I· Nwlrerro VI ley 11. (lrltllld 11'4 HCll'co 14 H UI. V11uN 8udl tnd V1llrf Chrl11t1n 10 ucll, s:-o.llk.I• wl_., Li'OUl\ll !leadl IT2l. '" 100 - 1 Half fUIO!I) 110.t 2. C•ll ll'tfrlll J. Hort• 1cD.c:Mllt) 4. Durl\lm !Ctlonl J. Sl'llotfl•" IFlllbrookl. m -1 SPll'11S IW1lnlJI) 2•.l 2. Gillin !li'0-8M(ll) 1 H,.,..,,.,. u:irllblCIJ •· PhUll111 1141" Mar'°"' s C.klln>'l jColclllll•l· •660 (ttCI \ -l fl""' \C.rbbtd) 1:J7.J 1. 5ml111 IKtrn V1llnl 3. Or,..!•• Mor-\111111'1 4. 1-111'11 H-) J. f)Qd'" (flofon). 660 !ttol 21 -I. 5,..r11;, tWtl"utl 1:21.2 7. Sltr\1 tHe,,,.11 l . l(lng (lt1m0<11) '· Mlrtlntl tS.n M1rco1> 5. Gll"f'tf {Cllrbbtd\· l:tlO (r1e1 I) -. AIYlfll IH-11 J::I0.1 2. ll:OV fC•rllblO) l. Cook (Flllmortl 4. Contrtr11 !CllOlll !. H!!I !Unlvu1\1¥J. 1no Cr•" 21 -1. 11111 /HorcoJ 3:n .t 2. O.wt"t' (Rim of The We.rid) 3. r0(:~11on 1C1rl1btd) ~. Ml htll (R1mona) 5. Ancl tsO Wtln!ll . 1'f6 HI-I -1. Ltmblrt iw11711ltr C.hr 1tl1~l U.7 2. Tltornb\lr! (Pow1y) J Coot.IOR (Brul I. ia>ll (5111 M•<CO•) . MdnlYre (waln111). !70 LH _ 1. Cock•Dn lllrttl H .7 l . Scott (Sin Mtrtel) l. KHtort ($1" Mutllil ~. Tlloltrl IMo•lllO Vt!lftl) s. MorthOuS• (C1rlt1>11dJ, 1110 •Ill\ -l. CotCl'leflt Vt! 11<1 1:37.f 2. Ctllll l. Hlfnll '· an Morcos S. R!m of tilt -Ill. HJ -1. RIV•• tCc.chtll•l S.lG ,, H11ch (Htmtl) s. I 3. Tl>ornburg IPowtVI J.I •. Htlt (Ca!on) W 5. Pr~tt (Follbrooll) M. LJ -1. Ptumi>I..,. !Waltoutl 71-l lmfff rt<;Ordl 2. (lrPfft!e• l8r11J 1\.(1 l. OUr .... m CC•IOn/ 20-1 .... '· t(levtll (VllltY Cllrl1ll1nl 1,.11 J.. lltnhY Norcol lt- lDi>v -I Priest ( I) 1).•V. tMHI ft(.ordl J. Htrntnclfl 'tPow1 ,,. l. Url!N:' IFlllmortl 114 4. 0.vll ((arl1bl0 2--6 S. Tl>ole" (MO<-Vtllftl) 12·0. SP -1. Or t (M..,._ V1llt1I .. ~ 1. lhMllnl IMortflO 11 J 41-ll•A J. Plnl<t•lon (POWt¥1 d ·1'4 -i. w1r11 ! • .._.., s. l lvfl'O (!loY• lll•llUblkl .0.11. • 11nl fWtl11llll 12'·1 fM"t rec:ordJ 1. MYmlord !lit-Betclll 112-4.... J. Htrbll"I lFlllmort l Hf.I .. Rolllnl {Morino Vtll1¥1 11).2\'r I. Cllnlon {Norco) 10f.1:W.. Final team 1curh1a : W1l11ul 16, Htmtl 25. Ctrtllbl<I 20. Ctlon 19. />hittno Vtllftl 11, Cotthellt Vtllty 1•. 8·~· tncl !otn M1rc01 II tt<h, POWIY It. l'lllrno!"I t, Uaun11 Beach and Horc.o I •tell. '" 100 -1. 8tll IFtllbtoolil 11.1 2. Tit bffwttn AlklM<m tL1g..,,.. 8•tch) H>Ci Bowlltr (Stn Mtr<Oll ~. DeUlch (&oron\ 5. Tlt be!wlll!n Necoc:hloe {Hlln'llll tncl M1rrln1r tU/U<ll l!lt1c!'I ). UO -1. Btll ( 1l1br-) 10.J 2. AlklntOll !lta\IM 8each1 J. 8owkt• «S•n M1rc111 l •. McElrov (Colchellt) S. Mtrrlntr /Li'OUnl BHCh}. 660 !race 1) -1. Arorttteln CLA 81Ftl1!1 l :Jl.7 2. DotLtcll !Soro"/ J. Mic•~ lPowtv l. 8111!or1 (8re1 S. Haldtl'I (Flllmofl. &60 lr1ce H ) -I. LOPfl ( lllrnPrtl l:ll.S 2. H1,11rt1 lFll lmo"I 3. McMel>on <Pow•~) •. Onr (W11nu1J 5, Merts (Lt SlerrtJ. 1320 (rtct ll -1. lolll'IO (Cc.chellll J:Z4., " Gorllllts (Laa11n1 8~tcll) J. Stl1r1r ICHcMll• 4, Fonttta !Pow1y) 5. Ttl/o ~Flllmo"J. 1320 Crace 1l -1. 8r gh! \Ltf11N Buc:ll) 1:27.I J. Gwv1ro !FIUmor'I J. Gtrll \Co.chell1) ~. McDon1ld Cllloma"•l 5. Herrlnci (W1l r1Ul. 1n LH -1. BeautNmo lW•lnYO 1!., 7. Slltrll (l1gon1 Buehl 3. Grlmtt !Pow•vl 4. Hovv !Lt Sierra) !. Mtircui (CtrlJbld). 4j0 rH IY -1, L•gunt 8t~C~ .a.a 1. co.m.111 V•ll•Y J. St" Mtrcos .. LA BtOlllt J. u Sit,,. SP -1. Ne<DClttl (l-ltmtl) !•2 CMtt1 -ord) 7. Snead j!.ln M1rcu1J SJ.I l . v111 jHtmetl 51·S'h .t. 8 inlev LtgUM Bet,11) '9--1 5. Sllul {Ul;tYnll !ltlC~I 4 ·4. HJ -!. Amid"' fltg11N 811cll) Sol 1. HIOlll"" !LI Slerre) M 3. Srnlll'I (Ktmtll >• •· Rlo~IOW1!' (Htmtl) S.' J. Tit tltlw"" Jtaillli CHtmttl lno:t Amy (Sl11 Mlrcotl S.2. u -J, Vall (H-1) 1'·7 2. Mt•rll'ltf" iuy~ 8t1tlll jf-W. "I!. DILtth t8oro11l Jf.J •. McE lrCl'f (CHtMl I) 1'·1 5. Cllr~ (""'wlYl 111-11 ..... PV -1. Alvtrtl CCotcflltlt l 12.(1 lMttl •tcOrOJ 7. HtOff (P..,.rl1) 11.f J. WllCIOt l FlllD..-) 11-0 t. Tll berwee11 CtmPbell CF1lll)t"ook) tno:I E v t r to • (Flllmo<I) 10.0. OT -I. 81"11"f (LlfUN hlclll llf.10 !M"' record) 2. SllYll {LIGU<ll 8ft~h l 11~ J. HOllC!'lln fFlllrno•tl tt-J •· w111oa1ro (L"D,,,... •ue111 ff..5 ~ Carf'tr (W11nlfl) t).11 ..... FIMI tum 1corlroo1 u.a...w hlodt "' C.-Cl\tllt Vtlltv lS. 1-1 ..... 1 11, Fiiimore 20, Ftllbrool< 14, Siii MtrCM u, Pow•Y n. Wtlnl,lf 10. OCC Crew Posts Lop sided Vi ctory Orange Coast College re m a I n e d undefeated in crew competition Saturday with a lopsided victory over UC Santa Barbara in the featured junior varsity race over the 2,000 meter Newport course. The OCC shell was clocked In 7:20, over 32 seconds faster than UC Santa Barbara's boat (7 :52.6). Coach Dave Grant's Pirate crew also captured two freshman races. The No. 1 OCC freshman team defeated UCSB's lightweight varsity by a big margin also. Orange Coast was clocked in 7:43.5 while UCSB had a time of 7:59.5. In the No. 2 frosh race, Orange Coast won by five lengths over UC Irvine with a time of 8:11.0. UCI had a time of 9:05. Orange Coast returns to action this Saturday, facing six other crewa in the annual San Diego Regatta. DEAN LEWIS !T!OIYIQIT!~ APRIL SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 SP ECIAL $1871 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $3093 Radio, H11l•r, 4 'Pttd. I ARTIST STRONGBOY-Laguna Beach's Greg Kes· sler has been the guiding light in the Artists' 7.7. 2 season up to this point. The 6-2, 185-pound senior is batting .407 and has slammed six home runs, sev- en triples and a two.bagger. For Coast Area Net Summaries Laguna Ace Called A Complete Player By PHIL l\OllS Of ... Oliff' '*' '"" OraQ&e Lea.cue b a 1 e b a J I teams !acing the Laguna Beach Artists must feeJ at times that they're going up against the Pittsburgh Pir•le• or the Atlanta Bravea. 1be Art.lats are battling for the 1 .. gue lead and ptrhal'I the biggest reason for the J...a. guna success is the p-esence of 6-2, !SS.pound Greg Kess- ler. He Is deocrlbed by bis coach, Darrell McKlbban, u tbe C01!'Plele higb scbool baseball player. So, it's no -that Orange loop foes must think that they're facing someone Hie the Pirates' Roberto Clemente or Henry Aaron 1 of the Braves wbert Kessler iteps out on the diamond. His statlslica thus far are impressive and awe-inspiring, lo say the least. The Arllats have logged a 7- 7-2 slate through the first 16 games of 1971 (including a 3-J. 2 clrcuit mark) and Kessler ha, batted .407 (22 for M) in the 16 contests. Included Jn his power-laden bag of goodies have been aix home ru~. seven triples and a double .along ,with Zl runs batted in. While having managed his breakneck overall p a c e , Kessler has actually accelerated his slugging antics in league play, where he sports a aifty .483 batting norm. i\1cKibban generally stations the cannon-armed senior in left field. But Kessler has also been utilized some at short- stop and has put in duty on the mound, where he has JS strikeouts in 16 innings of work and a respectable 2.99 earned run average. However, the second-year Artist head mentor says, "Greg has a tendency to be a bit wild on the mound because he throws so hard. So, I like to keep him in left field, which is probably bis most natural position." In sizing up his star's all· round ability, McKibban adds, "Greg has everything speed, a good arm and lots of pov.·er. •'His potential is really unl imited. "In fact," McKibban confides, "he hits the ball so hard that he's the only kid on our team who l'm really afraid to throw to in batting practice." Kessler has been a varsity starter on the Artist nine ever since his freshman year, when he performed under Norm Borucki. Although his first t w o seasons on the varsity were basically used to get him acclimated to the feel of things, his junior and senior campa igns ha'!'e been like indivktual conquests for Kessler . Jn spite of the last place finish of the Artists in the 1970 Crestview League ltandings, Ke1sler was able to hit at a .s?• c.Up and tam hlrMelf an al~league ooUleld berlh. He wu also lnttgral in the double upset of runnerup Mission Viejo and another win over San Clemente, th e eventual UUl.st. Kessler played I o o t b a I I (halfback) part of last season (a concussion sidelined him !or part of tbe ocbedule) while a slight heart murmur provenled him from trying out \be gridiron in his junior year. An example ol his u:eellent atlitude was demonstrated in a recent cooveraaUon be bad with McKJbban following tbe Artlsta' N triumph over Brea, one in wlllch Kusler socked a bomer. Laguna's leading llU&ger asked McKibban, "Coach, bow much am I batting in league?" Tho yoolbllll mel)lor replied, ••r Just have the avel'lgts complied !or all Ille gom., rJsht now. I <lon't haVt It broken down for league play yet." Kessler tben 1cknowle<fied him blithely, "Tben.l I won't Worr/ about ~·11 affect my average if I do." Wlth aeverat major league 100Uta on his taU, I t 'a uncertain no" "b e th .e r Kessler will play "°Uege ball after graduatlon,... or whether be'll sign !or a . prolesslon1l bonus. It Is cutaln, lllougb, that .. lq u Greg Kessler is healthy, Laguna Beach will be a threat for the Orange Lelgue aown. CdM's Krumpholz Lone Area Victor The 1971 pf.ep swim sea!IOf\ is rapidly coming to a close with only the CIF prelims at Belmont Plala in Long Beach Saturday and the flnala sii: days later left on the slate following Saturday's Anaheim swim invitational. Potent Foothill carted off the varsity honors whiJe La Quinta and Sunny HUI! nabbed Bee and Cee titles. Corona del Mar's Kurt Krumpboli was the lone Orange Coast area winner in varsity competition, setUng a meet record in the 100 free with a 48.f clocking. It was one of 16 meet marks set, which was accentuated by records in every Cee event. Foothill's tandem of Steve Furniss and Rod Strachan each doubled In varsity. Furniss edged Cost.a Mesa's Ron Misioltk for fir1t jn the 100 back and swam to a record 1:59.2 in the 200 tndividual medley. Strachan (1:46.7) beat Krumpholi (1:<6.1) in tbe 200 free and turned in a meet mark in the 400 free with a 3:<7.8. ...... :ma fl'...:IL.., nit¥ -1. Footl'ILll 1:41.J ("'Mt ..-111, 1. ~ntlqo l:U.4, i. Coste MIM 1 :.U.5. lOO free -I. Slr1clle11 !Fooltlllll 1:"-7, :t. IC, ICrumllholt (CllMl 1:'6.1, 1. Ntwlon (Sunn? Hiiis) 1;'7.7. ,.., Ind. mtdle? -I. Furn!" (fool· hill) 1:5t.1 '"'"' ·-111. 1, 8t•- !Cd.M) 2:M.3. J. Sttek1r IRtrid'lo ,..,.,..110.1 2:06.4. Sii 1,..1 -1. MJlltr !Footl'llll) :n.•, 7. Tl• HlllO>ff llltncl'lo Al1mllo1) 1fld S.nclen. (lltlldlo ,..llm!loO ZJ.O. IGD flY -1. HtW!rori !Sunny Hiiis) Sli.O. 1. Evt"' IHUn!lt>gfol'I 11...cl!J .SS.7, l . llol>llllOll ($onor1)) .Y.O. loo lrM -J. K. ICrumol'lo!i (CdMJ .._, (meet r9CordJ, 1. Woodlldt (.A,. Udlt) ""'· J. e. 1Crumllllol1 ICdM) ~,. «O frllll! -1. Slrlld!tn ll'oolMlll l:•J.t. mll't'f ttcOl'"d), J. W/>tl/.tr /Sun,,,. Hiiis) J:54.l, 1. iloWhty !COM) l :OO.l. 100 bid< -I. Furnl1s !Fooltlllll ss.o. 1. Mlllol~ !Co.ta Mtw) .!.I.I. J. flucteslll !!I-) 51..1. lGCI llrN SI -1. Dlllflt (V1~l•I l :~.1. 2. wm11 ... fMltlMJ \;OS.t. l . !l.r-tCdM) l :Oll.J. a frN relll• -1. Foottiur J.JO.o. 2. eor-cit! Mllf J:J0.1. i. sunnv HUii J ;7t,,. Scotifl9: 1. FoottoUI f\M). '· (o•ont de! Mii'" (100), 1 SUMl' NJl!s !1l ), '· eu..,, 1""1 Sanll1to lol&), '· co.11 MIM ('6}. IGD brltll -1. MUl9f" IEI Dortdol 1:0l.O, J, 1Cnles1 tV11.-.ci.1 l :Ol.O. l. Yt"""'IOll fCGltt MKll l:Oll.1 '°' fnt l'llltV -l. LI Oulrrtt l :n.t. '· ll:Jltnci1 J:JI.,, J. ""''"' );:tf.5. Scorlpt: 1. Lt Qullllt 006), 2. Lak,_.., ltrl), I . Stwl? HUit 110), (. 1111...U. (71), S.. El Orottdo llOJ, •. <•-1111 ,.,,.,. (s:IJ. ,_ 200 lnt!ClllY nil? -1, Svnr!? Hll .. 1 :4'.1 1..-t 11111 Cll' -.:!J, 2. Ci»lt MIN 1:'2.l. J. Nl'llf'OOl"t l :U.O. 200 frll -I. Fr-(Sllnm" HlltiJ 1 :li.S 1..-t r.cordl, l. L~ (Et OortdOI 1:51.4, 1. l•~ t.ll!....iml 1 :•.o. JOO lfld. l'Nldlf"I' -I. SU.-11 (,.,....,.. Hllbl l :C!l.S 1-.. r-.11, t. HtnlY (Mtl1nt) 1:00.t, J, Wlk:olt (llllM:l\o Altmllal) l:N.1 Jt tree -1. Ct..., f5Ulll!r Hiiis) 2'.1 (11'1111 '-di, 2. l'1rmer IN-· pOrtJ n.t. J. oi.rr1r IN-1) n.t. JO ft'I -I. 1'1-ot ISllnl!V HUit) ll.l fll"IM't r-.11, 1 Ptlroo IOI'"'-· rHlol 24.1, J. S..k!'I' ISul!lll' Hllftl 21.1. lot fl"ll -1. °''" !Sunn? Hiiis) .0.) f"'"' r..:wdJ, t. !IOIMI IEI Dot1do) 53.l, I . Whlll'l'lllft (C0111 MIMI M.2. SO btdr -1. !ktwr1'11 llur111? Hll .. J ""' (IT!fft tKOf'd], '· Pt!M {(•~· tlllo) 21.T, I . sma.i.. (/MO"lna) 2f.l, JO llrMtl -1. Kl .... (Mttlflt) ».• '""" rK«d), t. S.lcw (S!Jlln? Hlllt) 31.S, l . P1t11tK111I ICotlt MestJ 31.4. t0D fl"ll Al•? -1. El Oorldo 1:21.2 '"'"' ,_.,,, 2. "'""""'" 1:11 ... 1 Co.It Mtst l:ll.7. kc:rl111: 1. IUllllY Hllll 11MJ, J. Tie Mll,IM 11'1d N-IW/, '-l!"I Dor..:111 lllJ, s. Cost1 Mt11 00) " !llltM (ll). • Baseball Standings 10\ITN COA" CONP"lltlNCI Fulltr"!On c..-rltot. W l T 01 " ) 0 Ml. Si n AnlOlllO Or1111e CC19tl St" Oll90MIM StllDI- ' .s ' 1 • ~ 0 ' ''O•V. 5 ' 1 s .. • 1 ' .S.n,1A111 I 11 O t i\ lthl~tf'I ·-C1rtf-l~J, S.n DINO M ltee'Olld' ,,.,,. nine r,.,,,,,.91 T"""1y'10- Full1rtcft 11 C•rrt.ot S.11 Olffo 11 Mt. St"' o\ntonlo S.fl DI"° M•11 ti S111t1 .Ant MllSIOM CONl'llllMCI" W L 01 lou"'-ftrn 1 I c11,,,. .s J l'1lom1r S I Cllefl.., 4 4 Gl'Dl1tn011f t ' SM e9rn1n11,... 4 4 "lvirnlcle t ' Stddltblldt I 7 l1t11N1y•s lc- Soulllw111tttn t, (fltt,.., 2 T•.-l''s0- Soulll'l'fttlr1'1 ti Stddltti.ck l'1klmer ti Oros-I ltl...,11de It Cllrut S.n h•11•tdl110 t i ClltH~,. • ' ' ' • ' • Monda~, Aprll 19, 1971 oseou on wide 70 series wflitewal fiber glass belted tires! 88 " llClll1MI OUAIWITll WITH 10 lrlONTHS 1llO"llio pluo 2.51 ftt!. tu lltd old lira E71).14Dualwll_IU_ Ollfl.27.11 ALLOWAHCZ ................ _ 1 Tow ,._. .... molKllClft ...- -· .. fllftlfloell ~ ... {~-..cw~.,,_. IUM) ....... IA HIMI ...__ IWde*t lllNw-. ..... -pr'llllltllct ._ .. ..,1119 ..... -•hi fJI ........... . ,_. til'I •• ~. Wrilltl .... ~ ....-... .... 11 ... mod_ ...... -colioll. Nptlr ,,_ i;n,. Of •• -a11--. blMd ... t11t1 1111'911\11 ~ ,,.;e.. lnc:iildillD ~ f.0.1i11 Wl9I Tu. aowwd 1111 P11Po chlM of • -11 ... w. will llllow 100'11. ol ._ orlg!MI ~ llric.. 1!1Clud111g IPPlk;lbMI ftdll!fll E1c1M ,. ... OU<ill!f in. 111D' ~ ... lllld. ThlNIW·. -will •llow llO"'-"' 25'G ot 1111 ........... pun;'-9 pnc:.,, tncllldlnt 9f!Ollt::lll* r.cs.11 ~ T1.c. ~ !ht! pura-o1 1 - ti1t. (SH clw1 belowl fOl'llltllOST PROTICTIOll GU.AllA.Wlft OU,llT Hl!lllii'S HOW YOUll CiU.AllANTU WOlllll:I: ............... ..-.: ••• 1l ..... ....... --""'9tl-.1•tl ...... ... ..._ ............ Tl ..... 2S .. -.-,..w .. ...,. .... ,,... ..... ~ w. blliW ... • ..., ,.,..... w. eatli l..ctlon ..... UIOra. ThfJ' ......... ,_. '" W'IOUld bt Pl$lllCML ",_. 11 .. --.... fftOllpl ..... IMonKt .. • u -WIN -a._.. .no.-~ Ofl ... °""""" ~ price. ll!Cfvdinsl ~Fed9!t1eici.Taic. ..... ..~-·-......... ... Yll .......... llMN!tlflf\llW.. Mgllll~fllll .......... -'UW OI ...,. It&. ,... ........... Id ..... lfbllo, • ... -........... Cltafl// .......... .._.,., For111101l" A F /X II with 2 belts of fiber glass on a 2 ply polyester cord body, Whitewall design, too. Whltttwall tubeleu Size Fed. tu Orig. E7C>-14 2.51 27.75 F7C>-14 2.64 31.75 G7C>-14 2.84 34.75 Size F7C>-15 G7C>-15 H7C>-15 Fed. tax Orfg. 2.69 31.75 2.86 34.75 3.11 :rl.75 H70-14 3.05 37.75 Now 23.88 27.88 30.88 33.88 Plu1 Fed. tax 1nd old tire 3 Day Tune-up Special 15~ 19~~ 23~~' rncludes new ptugs, p0int9, rotor, condenser and disttibutor cap; adfU$tment of cam-dwell, timing and carburetor. Mon., Tues.. Wed. onlyJ -,Most cars Clean air service ' Reduces dangerous exhaust fumes. Includes new P.C.V. valve.and new air filler. r------·· !".,., -'"~ Now·•;;/, 21•···" 30 •• I"'•' u.1~ii' -•' .... '. , ,. ' ' :, ~I . ' .... SCC Splits Twin Bill With San Diego Nine ·-xtl m.01.-, ••111 -1. Sunnr Hiiis 1:.ft.,, 1. El Dorado 1:5CI.!, 3. L1~...._ l :SC.,. 2a! lrM -I. Gord!11 (Lt kewooc!l 1:50.1 !MHt reeord). '· Htrvn csu1111y Hltll) l:Jl.1, l". 8011 (.Lt Quf11!1) 1:5.J.,, !Cl) Ind. mf'dl!Y -I. llltllrm1n IE1t1ncl1l 1:00.1 lm"l ?tcOrd>. J. Frve!le10 ILtklWOOlll 1:1111.4, J. Vtu9f\11 (Lil Wll_.) 1:01.,, .l"'OILUS l.aAOU• SI. Alllllonl' I I"'-.Amt! Mtt1r 0.1 Sttvlll w l 01 SI. P1ur P!u1 X ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' • • • ' St!vNt''' .,.,. .. Strvllt 11. Mlltt 0.1 10 SI, P1~I $, Plu1 )( O Baseball's Top Ten l11M .., l't 11 tell. AMl"IUC,l"' Ll",\GUI" P't1f1r (1111 • .. ' " ~IClllM'I', Chi " " ' .. el/ford, 111 • " " " '· RoofnlOli, ltt .. • ' " K'lll,,.. D11 " " • " f1N1•. M/11 " " ' .. Mos11. <•• " " ' " MOl"'dlf. 0.ll " " • " Muri;:..-, NY " • • " l'or. W11h " • • " o. Jof\llloO~. , •• • • • " "'""' """' P'cl. "' ..• ... ••• .lll .l'' .30 ·"' .l•I "' J . ""°""911, .. ltlinort, 2; F . AIOll. N1..- York. S1 It. Jtdt..,,,. Ol~I-. J; Mon· otv, 0.-ltnd, JJ 11 lltd wltll I. lt•M Ill .... Ill J."-11. ll.111ll'l'M>rl , '" Ai>at>e:lo. ....... II : Northrup, Dltreh. !I; o. J.,,,,_, ltll~. " V1s1r1...,P;I, ... ton. I I W. Jle,.,..., Dorl.on, f ; Moll· U?, O•IO.•lld• I: lt\ldl, 01•1tnd, •. MATIOIUL LaAOUI! .. 11¥tf' '"' • .. • " ""' 51.,ib, Mii • ~ • " • •• Slmt!WHIS, 5t l " " ' " ... G•1r, All " " .. ~ ... l•K•, sr. L .. ~ • " '" Cotblrf, SO " • ' " ... Wint.Mt! • " • • . .. M•vs. SF " " .. " ••• M!11111, -'" " .. • " ""' ltlndl,SI' " " " a ""' ....... -.SF • a • " ·"' Htf!MllVIU Sllr~l, P'llllbu••ll, II M, Al•OFl. Al· l1nl1. St Celbtfl. S.11 Dino, S; MIYI. Sin l'rer>elKO. SI CttlHI, Alltnl1, ~l lt'l!C!I, Cl"'d llllf!I, 'l 1-l. S.n Fr•~ -· ""' ''" ..... $!1•1111, P'J111oDU1'91\, U1 "'YI· ... l"t1riclteo. U1 Coll>ttl, 5~ rooo. U1 c,lllld •. ... ,.,,,,,, '" " '~· ... 111111. '" Moor1en. HGl!tlO!I. ... Southern California College baseball team retur ned to the playing field for the first lime in more than two weeks Saturday to register a split in a doubleheader with UC San Diego at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa. The Vanguards of SoCal won the opener, 7-5, and dropped the nightcap. 5-3. This brings the SoCal season record to 4-- 10. * * * •lll;ST GA.Ml" UC S111 01 ... U) .. • • ... Jenkins, u ' • 0 • Wrltlll, <I • 0 ,. 0 S/l~!>f>lrd. II ' ' ' • Yoc~v. 21> ' 0 ' 0 Horm1n. JD ' 0 ' 0 l!u111. rl ' ' ' 0 S~lnn, 10 ' ' ' • Plllm1n, t ' • • • ~-rt. II • • • • SIMI, p • • 0 0 ,,__ .. • 0 • 0 llnO[l\$(11'1, 0 0 0 0 0 To!~ls " ' • ' So<1I C1Uttt Ill .. • • ... !101,,..,. 1' ' ' 0 H .. 11111, 3b ' 0 H1~r. llKI ' ' • ... ,...,.,_, ~II • ' 0 51...,hen, H·lb ' ' • ' Ost\IM, c ' • 0 ' Tl••••••t. 11 ' • • 0 Colt, ct ' • 0 • Tr.,.10!', 2b ' 0 0 • fot1!t • , • • l('WI In' lllfllMt ' • • UC S.n Ditto 0100J01 -S • ' SoC:11 COlleff Xl2 !01•-7 • ' --- LES BROWN TUES., APRIL 20 llHtrlt \.lflR ..... lll'Hdlot lttl'S 11n 1~NN PLACE Ctltl HIW'l' C1,..... .. I Mfr 675-0505 UC Stfl Of ... ll) .. Jtl"lkln1. '' ' Wrl9f\1, (I • Sh-tr"d, lb ' Voc-v. Jo ' Hormtll, c • Buill, rl ' Sftlnn, ti ' llfl.hoe, 'lb ' llotol"'"'"· .. Plttm111, plo 51"1," Toltls " loCtl Ctl'-M (JI .. 90lhtt. II Hlttlni, •10 '"''"""· lb-o ' A-10t1.11 ' 51,. ... 1 ...... lb ' O:llufld. c ' T"-itl, 11 ' C011, ct ' lrtnfoofl, 7b ' Tott lt " Snn t'1' ,...,.,,.. • • ' ' ' ' 0 ' • ' 0 0 0 0 0 • ' • 0 • • 0 • • ' • • • 0 ' 0 0 0 ' • • • ' 0 • 0 0 0 0 • 0 • • ' • ... ' 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • ... • 0 0 0 • • 0 • 0 ' • SO lrtt -1. 0.1mond Ill Ouln••l tl.1, 1. Otto {Cd.Ml 2J.I, J. """' IEI Oortllol 23.1. 11111 flY -1. Fl"Yllltld ILl~IWOD(I) 55.7. 1. l!Gls !Lt Oult1tt) S7.J,. J. 1tob- 1rhon (Gt rftft Gl"O?I\ Sl.J. !OO frM -I. Dtsmonds (Lt Olllfllt) Ji>.I, 1. otl9 ICdMI 51.4, J. S111notrs fE1t111Cl1l ll.t . CIO ''"' -I. Htr~,. 1s ...... ,. Hlllll S:li.O ("""" •KOrdl, 1. lt1l11 I.An•· ri.lm) •:03.J. J. "-"' fl'u!i.rt..,,) ':!» ... !OD ii.di -l. K.t..-111t IE1!1n1:111 1'.0 C..-re«WllJ, J, Gordin !Liiie .. -) 1 :00.1, l. !lllSl'I (U~IWOllCIJ 1:02.4. GOLF TIPS LIW letn lflc..... t 0... 1111r1 01,,,. -P'r1etlc:1 ti ..,. , , • U(5t"' DI-1010'1 0-S • 0 NewPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE Sl.00 wftti tltls 911 .... Mys soe.11 Collwtt 001 )OD 0-I • ' Why It Pays to Know ~ BOB PALEY L.f'1....,.,.lt ........ 9' .... ... Wt ................ ....... ..... ,... ... ,...,., ......... .,,. ..... ..... .,tt ............. ...,, ff .... .... h ritfiit ........ ,.. ........ • •• wttti ~ .... "•'• .... ... ....... ""-..... -... ........ .,, NI .. ,,.._ ,._ ... ,.,.., k .., ............. 1lrMc) h .... ..__ ...... 't .-w. wltt. .,._ ........... ..,.., ................. .,. lM'I hu ft, H .,..,,. kdl51tt tlte h'91t ........ ., ,,,. "' ,... 71'• •ftti ... ""'. ~.... ....,.... t.t. f•lt •ltllt uff , .. Wlff. ... '"' 1 ... ,... dlltffln 1111tt1 ,......., ,...,. ltf IM. H•'• '""9t • 474 L 17" St .. c..r ....... c.tr '4J-410t Sf. A>llhonY J, l lsl'loo -"'""•t 3 WICIMMty'I 01mt1 l l111oP ,t,m1t •' S1rv!t1 Plus x II Mtltr o.i S1. ,..ul fl 11. Antnonr 11 W1n11-l'1•k. .l'llll•WAY ll.AOU• W L 81 .l'ull'""'°" St~tnlll '~ S1111n¥ Hll!t ,_,. . .._ ·-Lt H1tw1 L-tH ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ltlllNtf'I lc- S.1•-I, L-lt 0 ff lllflll"ltll GOLFER'S BARGAIN Only 2J Min • •••r ., San J111n Hiiis ,.., n .. ct,111,.,,. Menday ..... Prhlay e Grttn ,_ EllctrlC C1'1 11 HOlft fOr t 837·0361 ' ' ' ' ' • Penneya hard top camping trailer • • Sleeps 6 persons comfortably • Pre-finished alumlnum body , · • 10.10 oz, cotton army duck canvas" 1 • Our pre-aea1on price Include• these acce11orle1: • 2 lf•IPlnl bege • Coftman• cooltr •Colemen• Jug ,,, ' ,.,. ' ' " J0\10 il"l • , " .. :~~;;~.~1~~... l\nne111 :re'~va~~·~"~al~ t~~~ auto center .[,~ " ~·· -~ !)tit ... ~ tt••1r•••••-•••••""**1I Yes, you can ••.op 12 to S Sundays, too, at any of thest Penney Auto C.nt..F~ Prea~nt thl• ad tor • '•11 FASHION ISLAND N Ce N ..u;.f 8AFECD INSURANC:li bucket or bali. on tho drlv· , ewport nter; HUNTI GTON CENTER, Hunting.':!·' ~'-"-'"-"_ .. _·------"'Beach. Use Penneys time payment plan. .;,uu ·' ml •, I I --·-----..__ __ , -. . . .. . .... ·· .. ~-.. -···."':l·"l·--:--o·: .. ,,,...-,..,,, .. ,,_,.........,.. ATS ON PROWL -More than 140 Hobie-Cat 14s d some 40 Hobie-Cat 18s are expeeted to be on e stlrting line for the London Bridge Regatta at Lake Havasu City April 24-25. Also racing will Qe the Pacific Catamarans. ats Seek McCulloch Cup ATHLETIC SAILORS -Pat Carriker and his sister, Teresa, take to the trapeze as they bike outboard on their Pacific Catamaran. The pair will be after their third straight championship in the London Bridge Regatta for catamarans at Lake Havasu City April 24-25. Dane Beads Team Tulane l(eeps College Cup University's John Ill continued bis hot g streak Saturday and y to successfully defend ennedy Cup regatta at polis, Md. Kennedy Cup ls the collegiate Yacht Racing iatlon of North America ge boat regatta . UUon is In ff.foot Naval y yawls. , who was leading by three points at the end of day's races. rallied for a place ln the flnal ra~ that mar&ln over place Rhode Island tty. Tbe Naval my team finlsbed in place. Stanford team, skippered by Andy Rose of Newport Beach and Balboa Yacht Club, placed fourth to down hls clubmate Argyle Campell who was at ttie helm of the USC entry. USC finished in a tie for sixth place with Cornell. Filth place went to Yale. The Yale team was skippered by Chris Seaver, also of Newport Beach and a member of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. 'Ibe sixth place firrl!h wa.s a big letdown for Campbell and his Trojan crew who had been practicing and sailing in large boats for the past several monthJ in preparaUon for the Kennedy Cup. USC has never won the event. Rose had a crew composed about equally of Southland and mldwesl sailors. He has crewed for campbell in a number of races, including the 1970 Congressional Cup which Campbell won. Dane has been t h e outstanding collegiate sailor th.ls year with victories in the Dou&las Cup match racing event at Long Beach and the Sugar Bowl at Tulane. Final results of the Kennedy Cup: (I) Tulane; (2) Rhode Island; (3) Navy; ( 4 ) Stanford ; (S) Yale; (6) tie belwten USC and Cornell; (8) New York MartUme Academ y (9) Western Washington ; (10) Notre Dame; (11) Citadel. CdM Wins figh School ~ail Crown ~torms Cut Action In Olympic Regatta ona del Mar High School, 17-year <>Id Marilee Allan helm of a »foot Shields sloop won the Soothel1'1 om.la High School · nal Salting Championship ay in a five-race regatta in gale condiUons oo rt Bay. Allan's crew was <>( Jeff Maslerson Jan Friend. She scored p<>inl.! with a record of l· 3. The victory a I s o ded the Catalina Stormy weather Saturday and Sunday reduced Alamitos Bay Yacht Club's annual Olympic Classes Regatta from five races to ooe. Wind and seas were so raucous on Saturday that the 100 e.nlries ln six classes did not leave their berths for the starting line. With winds abating slightly on Sunday, 89 boa ts showed up for the start5, but alter one race the ract committee slgnalled that the action was all <>ver. Most Ol y mpic cluses are so small that raciag In the heavy seas was Jenge Cup. deemed un safe. oer-t.1p wu Ri ck Wright l...oui.s Nady. from Cor1l n Marino High School Reef Yacht Club, won the Cliff Willon and Bruce Olympic Classes Perpetual Mallo in the cock il Trophy a.s the winner in the . ry p · Finn Class with the largest Miss Allan, a member ?f tht number of entries. He also DO&ed Allan 1111.lne famil y of ·-won the Roger Lindeman ~~ a::'· trfm'v~=~ Perpetual for the Finn Class. Illustrated for her sailing skill. .other J>!!rpelual tr o Ph Y Final results: w1nne~ were Don Tra~k of St . (J) Corona de! Mar, Marilee Francis Yacht Club, winner of Allan Jlm the. Andres Trophy in the Star (2) • San. Marino, R I c k Clus, and Martin Godsll, of Wright. 1114. Seattle YC who won the (3) Newport Harbor St.eve Gilbert Wagner Trophy In the C.mey, 13~. ' Draf'on Class. Final results· (C) Catalina lsl1nd Boya FINN (24) -(1) Petunia, School, Grant Baldwin, 15~. Louis Nady. Coral Reef YC; (5) Costa Mesa, 9 111 (2) Blue fl.taine. Gr<'g Lang, Smnllwood, 25. S'. FVC: (J) Be:ir n~wn . Erl • I Bennett, Sl. FYC; (4) Super D<lg, Henry Sprague 111 NHYC; (S) Trout Fish, Bob Andre, MBYC. SOLING i22l -(I) All Out, Bob Bums, CYC; ( 2) Isle de Fleur. Don Bevar, SWYC ; (3) Nobner, Jerry Rumsey, SFYC; (4) Abacus, James Lindsl•y, Rldunond YC: ii) Ump, David Sharprack, Richmond YC. STAR (14) -(1) Swing\n Star, Don Trask, St. FYC; (2) Good Grief, Tom Blackaller, St. FYC; (3) Streaker , Mitchel! Anderson, SL. FYC; (4) Something Else, Lowell North, SDYC; (S) Menace, Dennis Conner. SDYC. TEMPEST (13) -(!) Super Spade, Dave G a r i bol t l, Pleasure Point YC; ( 2 ) SpoUer, John Mon-ts, SFVC; (3) El Dlablo Rojo, Robert s·mith , SSSC : (4 ) Demonstrator, Frtd Miller sssc. FLYING DlITCHMAN i7) -(I) Hangup, Frank Gray, ABYC: (2) Hippo. Art Lange, New Jersey: (3) Spaghetti Factory, Charles Rogers, SDVC. DRA GON (9) -(!)Mistrial fl.fartin Godsll, SeatUe YC: (2) Nokken, Chark!s Kobe. r, ABYC; (!) Tom Tom. S. 8 . Thomas. ABYC: (4) Valkyrie, Cr;iig Volney , SBVC. • P-Cat Fleet champion Pat Carriker of Phoenb: will be after his third straight win and retirement of t h e McCulloch Challenge C u p when the London Bridge Regatta gets under way at Lake Havasu City, Artz., April 24. Th1s year's regatta is open only to P-Cata and Hobie Cats . Robert P. McCulloch Jr., regatta chairman, armouncecl that the race committee has received the entry <>f the 23- year-old Arizona S t a t e Un1versity psycholcgy major, and also that ol his younger brother, Rick. The two will compete in the P..Cat A Fleet. Pat's crew will be his 16 • year ~ old sister, Teresa, who has helped him to the overall champi<>nship at Lake Havasu in the past two years. This year's wlnntr could come from either the P-Cat, Hobie Cat.14. or Hobie Cat-16 c\assel!I. Only skippers in the "A" fleeU are eligible far the title. Carriker· captured the overall champiooship ln 1969 by scoring two first! and a second. He repeated last year with two firsts. The final race was scrubbed because of high winds. Carriker was on his way to a fleet victory in the final race or 1967 when the mast on his P-Cat collapsed ntar the fin ish. Another vicklry would gl ye tlle young collegian perman· ent possession of the McCuJ. loch Challenge CUp. Any three victories retires It. Th.ls was done once before by Bob Baker of Costa Mesa who won the first, second and fourth Havasu regattas. Although Carriker sails the desert breezes like he owns them, competition is expected ln this year's P-Cat fleet from Baker, Tom Omohun<lro of Costa Mesa, and na tlona l champion Paul Alien <>f Dana Point. In the Hobie Cat-14 Class the fa vorites are Richard Loufek <>f Camarillo: John Ross Duggan, Newport Beach ; John A. Golden. San Di.ego, <>r Terry Neale, 15. the only female skippering in the Hobie "A'' Fleet. Top sailors in the Hobie-Cat~ 16 Class would be the designer-builder Hobie Alter, San Juan Capistrano; Wayne Schafer. Capistrano Beach, and Ted Hendrickson, Corona del Mar. Power Race Called Off Gale winds and storm tossed seas caused a hurried po9tponement Saturday of the Long Beach to Ensenada orfshore powe.rb:>at race . The 26 drivers .scheduled lo start tn the race stood by for an hour put the scheduled start but the race was canceled as the weather worsened. Attbougb the weather aba ted sUghUy on Sunday, ra ce officials deemed sea conditions still uMafe for the 139-mile race. . There was talk today of trylne to get the. event off next Saturday, but no definite time had been scheduled . GUARANTEED 42 MONTHS Regular Trade-In Price $23.99 Fits 90% of All American-Made 1% Volt Cars SEARS BATTERY GUARANTEE Fret ttplattment wUhl.11. 9J da11 al pmha1e H battery provts defec:Uve, After to days. we replace the batlery, if defective and cbarie you <ml.y for the period of mrnmhip. ba* Oil lhe regular price less tnde-ln at the ti.me of mum, prorated orec number ol months of guarantse. 8-Track 'rape Player • Star!! and stops automatically • Changes programs automatically or manually, thumb-wheel control& Aak About S.ar1 ConYenienf Credit Plans SAVE*41! 2-1/2 H.P. Mini Bike •Bl&f.qd• lll&h'ie delim"S ap to 100 rnl1ea perpllon • Rew'lnd alarle, ~ l!l'lllliC, Ures, chaiD. ""'"'kid ..... Tire Pump '8.99 Slip-On Seat Covers 14.99 Rubber Floor Mat Carburetor Cleaner Rrgular 15.99 Grea5eGun #lf 399 Tune-Up Kit } 99 699 ~ '2! - 'I0.99 Fire Exlinguisher 799 HeavyDu11 Oil Filler }99 S.4 VE I 1 I 399 Regular 39C Heavy Duty Oil ~~! 29¢ Car Waah Bru•h Sun Prtre! ··- Booster Cable Low Priced! Chamois Buy Nowr "'° 99 Wit~ Tracie-la NOl.Ull,4391, 4331,439',43!% )legular$lll.95 ~8888 Wltb T'IJ.1 Coapoa Etfertlve Apr. l id! On. !tdl l.~tromc Polish Jack Stand }99 Carburetor Air Filler A1 Low A1 }99 -.. IMt'IA AMA "'°41t .......... TOll.l,INCI ~~ ----IANIA n ..,. ..... l•Nla lllOMC• "°""' co••r ""'" ...... .,,_ I --------- DAIL~ PILOT QS TV Review Diana Ross Takes Stage For Video Solo Special Television Explores Childhood Ye~s -1 By VERNON SCOTT bulai are not rtlaled too, plet<ly oPPo'«I to hlJ parenll' 1peclal ooly aplonm I HOU.YWOOD !UPI) learning at all. penonallty. basic IJJiredlenll. Parents, ever 1ler1 f o r "'Ibey conclude that 1 ctilld "Trouble S'larla when the "Tht purpose ot tbb Information and enllght.enment left to ltl owu devk:ea. Isolated parenti try to Impose. thtlr to Inform and mate on U1e complexltJes of ralslng temperaments on • chlJd who offspring, may tune in ffWO other buman beln&s. ii, ln fact, quite dlfferent from In the 1Ubjtct.0 Noxoa "Childhood : the Encl!anled would learn to walk •prlg)lt ol them emotion.ally." "AlJo, H wt coWd By IUCK DU BROW HOU.YWOOD (UPI) Diana Roa, lhe former star ol the Suprtmes, offered her own one-hour variety special on ABC-TV Sunday night as part of her &ll-()01 campaign to prove her worth as a solo performer. There's no question that the lady is entirely capable of being a successful soloist on the entertainment circuit. I personally don 't get much out ol her ruwl sln&lni. but she has worked hard to make herself a complete performer, and Jt has paid off because she has revealed comedy and acting ability in several major television appearances. Sunday night, for instance, it was her coiuedy performing that made the hour interesting for viewera like yours truly who aren't exactly ecstatic over her singing. Sbe did some charming pantomime lmprwlons of Cltarlie Chaplin a.nd Harpo Man, At another point, she chimed In very nicely with guest 8111 Cosby in a humorous rendition or the splendid R a n d y Newman song ''Love Story ," which has helped rescue at least three variety specials I can think or tbis season. Miss Ross also had her down moments in comedy material provided for her in a sketch with a member of t h e precocious young s i n g i n g group, the Jackson Five -but years" Thursday, April 22. lta own accord. Noxon admits that the field chlldrta a bit better, ani Tb e bour·lon1 televition "Euentially our show ii all ol child growth, heredity and could raile the.ir 0 'Figaro' Set In Fullerton special Is devoted to lhe very ibout bow the human being en v Iro n men t is • o )'OWllsttra better, li young child, from birth to the comes to be -The newborn overwhblmtngly complex and make a eonalderl11il• time he toddles off to immense 1that this NBC difference: in \he future.'' klndergarten. Infant has none of the human ;::=================;;;;;;;:lji!; Prod--diredo< Ni<olas qWllllle.s as defined by '"ii NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ' I Nomn, who has two unabridged dictionary. ;•.--------------------"'· Woll gang Moiart's most youngsters of bb own, said tht ''Personally , the contents of show reaches oo hard and fast the show are fasc::lnaUn1 to popular comic opera, "The conclusions but often new and me. There art new Ide.as and Marriage of Figaro,,, will be exciting scientific studies of theories a d v a n c e d by Uie human baby. authorities In developmental presented at c.al State ''There Sffnlll to bf: a psychology." Fullerton Thursday, April 2S definite relation cf ptt-nala1 Noxoo said scientists art through Sunday, May 2. influence that affects a human taking 1 close look at the The p r c. d u c t i 0 n , a being's temperament as much inleraelions of environment, cooperative venture between as heredity and environment," heredity and pre. n a la I the Associated Students and Noxon said. Jnnuences. ACADEMY AWARD SHOW Winner 8 Academy of Awards INCLUDIN5 TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening Ai-RIL 19 ..... Gl.,..,,.,_ Ulfl(I)-· I.Ky (II) ""' •• eldlS to hold I n lilt of fl• OWA • PIJ' tti. tu.n 111 1 f111q ctr llm won 111 1 churd'I nitl'lt. 1 tbi1 was the writers' fault , not her1. In a chat with Danny Thomu, she showed some more comedy skill by cleverly fouling up his attempts to teach her bow to tell a funny story. the School of the Arts, will be No authority himself, the The show itself is guarded ln staged at 8:30 p.m. nightly in producer went on to say, "we the age-0ld dispute between the Little Theater, located in show development ol babies environment and heredity. But t h e M 0 s i c..Speech-Drama from time of birth to three it does make a stronger Building. years old and a consistency cf argument for heredity than The opera, to be presented characteristics. has been heard in decades. in English, will be directed by "Various scientific studies "There is aomelhing basic In Clifford w. Reims. Alberto which are touched on in the each child that ·its parents Bolet will conduct the Cal show offer the universal cannot counter," he said. "The BEST PICTURE-BEST ACTOR GEORGE c. scon PATTON ALSO -IUT ICUINPt.A. Y M'J\:S·B " 1:00 U Ila Jhwl JtrrJ Dunphy. (]) ..... JUIO!ltl', Smith, D MIC""""*' Tom Snyder. UDt--fJ COLOR-"P£TE KELLY'S * BLUES"-JACK WEBB! D Sb .,._ _, <Cl - llllJ'• 111111"' (d11m1) '55 -JW: Wtbb, Janet l1l1h, PtlllY l.11. A tm1ll jazz buld, wltlch 11!171 • 19ttbUJ Ill the 1920'l. winds 11p ill trouble wht11 it defies • niW- lflf' wtio dtcidls lie Ir aoinr Into lilt •ltnc)' busil!IS$ •!Id w•11ts 1 pllol of 1111 bind'• tdion. Yiewtrs 1rt trutlCI to 1 (fell: mixture of Jw music inti aonp. 13 Dlca ,. Dykl m,..,._ Ill"", .. m """'~ tl:lfhlllr , .. fff &l llltldt,. 34 m Dlltk W1Hey D.,. el LI Hora f1111lli11 con ConsHll' ED Jhwt Jim tt1wthOln1. l<llfD"'""" l:JO (I) fllWI Bill ttuddy. @ T,. " CotJCll~CU (I)""" W1 llt1 Cronkite a c.ndkl c.111111 ([j Ntw1 01vld Brinkley, m 1111 P1Jln1 N1111 m-.....,, l:J Slllctld f11•1/Maicllt l!!lDtDuotl .... llil"'-muc- f;DG 1J CIS NIWI Wilt« Cronkl\1. am• ...... O.vitl 8rlnkl17, John Cllliw:.llor, Frank Mdl1t. Cl) T1 T• tll4I Tl9Hi 0 W111.r1 MJ UM? im --m1 LM lucJ lll(l)O.-m Tlll WO!M W1 Lift h1 "Thi Rid· tll1 of H11tdlty." tti) Qrilt Dt Uritl1 Wlfd IE""""'"""' EB SI ........ MW (9 Ml'ril 11• e""" fJ l})l!llDt ... ·-m Dllll fl'lll 1lllW Gut1t&: Je Ann PflU£ MK Dl'tb, MIU Royllo, G10rcl1 Kaye, Ind J1mes Chml who IOJt 200 Iba. 111 th• list )'Ill. 111-m httl,.,.. ™., Ull Mipllill Yadikz Sllft '"°11(1)-.U.D. (R) £m. mett bll)'I I tla!PH bill: Is asll•M to 1dmil it flt his wife CM•IY l•n· sinf) •nd lri1nd1. 0 9 in World l'r111illt MtW: (CJ (21\r) "Hnlll"'1 MtllltlJ" (dn• m•) '70-D1vld McCall um, SllSAln Stmbera. llslit Nltlllft. Sdtntlst injects lli1111tlf wiUI nuld lto111 anothlf man'1 br•ln and Is forc!ld to folloW lht ridim's mtmOl1 llif. lolJ back to World W11 II, o n1 Fulffin a Ill rn m Alt "'""' ..,., (C) p!W) ......... , .... ,, •• , .. ) '63-N•rratld '7 W Hucls:ln. Tiit story of Mwilyt lllon!M la unfolded with 15 af her ffi1111 lftdudin1 llM list mcwit, tht 11nllnlsh1d "Sorn. thlnr's Got to Give." mn.1rnadln @l) b11it* "Soldln Who Setrch kw' Disstnt.R Hilhli1llts lrom lour houn of tl$llmony by "t1111u flVl'll ttlt w11 in Vlllrttm. l'I,;)l0Mi11\ft el"""" Eil)N.UcM t:30 Q ([)Dwi1 llJ (R) Lew AJres l'ttUllll IS Wlllilm T)'ltl, Ult putt. lie.tty.shy billiontin, 11ld lurn Dom IWIJ from lodty'S World 1Mpzint with I lllQ't .ul•IJ •nd lie/ OWfl semtlry, In tilt til1t p1rt af I two·ptrt sfOIJ. lf)Cudid Ci••• @m Musiull/hstor'I Diil &J ll Ctv H M11IJ1 ClllCU 10:00 0 (j) C.rtl l11n.tl Tim ~ w17, !bran Wrm•n 111d Pit C.noJI auest. 0 CU1111tl 5 Jftwt Xwill Slndtrt, B1rne1 Morris. J:JO fJ I ipjCijLI T1tt Cmt Q111111 0 1ar11r War4 Ntwt MllJ C.Jllf Buddy Eb$en hosts this m NN'I P~tn•m/fi&hman. KNXT aptdll whicll will trace tht m Mlltnp Al Hunt! 11ost .. f1bi.d urttr of llllUIJ ~ner Queen M11J from 1* atory d1ys of ou1n fii) CelTtftt [vtnb Connp II tht trwel to Mr aum!1lon to 1 w1r-outilic he1ri111 of tht V1t1tin·L01 time troopship to her currtnl status An111,1 M01Jnt1in Ind r.ot.sttl "tht "pride of lone BtKh." Study Comminion, Mid Aprll 17 •t Ptul Rmrt Jr. Hlrh In 8rtlll· 0 @I m fMI I lird't-[JI \litw .. Ruuiln Roulette -Millie Styfl." wood. Milli• •!moat CIUSU •n lnl1mrtlo111t ta:> Hit dtl ....... lnddellt when 1 drunken R111Slln 11:111111 follows h11 hom1. 10:30 0 ~1¥11: (C) (fir) "lhl1 ~ (mu11C1!) ••6-frltd Altlirt, l 1nr O yql11i1 Cnll•• Slllw Gutsts: Crosby, .!Gin Ctu!litld. Sonp by ltw• GIOrl' Ctrlin, Odet11, 01. Jtss Sllln-inl Beriin hi1hllrfll top tnltrllift. feld ind Dr. Eu11ne Schotnltld. mMll. Cl) Mowlt: (C) "SlllOQ" (wutern) Ill ~ N '•&-frtd M1eMurr•r. Anni B•i· liA -.ni f'WI te1, Burt lvts. iD C.deM d1 Anpllitl o rn mld'• 111•• • 0..1 Mon· ii:oo u ([l m""" ty Hill hosts. D ®lm ,.._. CIJC•..olt If) Mlllilll $ llltJWil: (C) (21u) (i) Dutll V1llrr lJIJt "rfM: l'llltW"' (comedy) '64--0.vld' 0 (]) m,..,,. Niwtn, Ptllf Stl!trs. Robert W1pe1. · 0 Mftit: "'Wt!' 11• (dram•) '63- f'rlctlm pm is JOUlhf by w1n!td Di1111 Dorl, Alfred Lynch. }twtl thltf whose 1ccompllce 11 lht m Mo.It: "f.rt Alfltrt" (1t1ven- wi11 of • frwh poHCI inspttfD venlurt) 'S2-Yvon111 D.C.rlo, lf'1" Btdllrn 1n1UM u tht thief ind h ~ Bun. ntphtW l'OmlllCI ttie bt•utiful owner m Mmt: "Hit [lca1111KJ'" (dtl mt) II' ttlt Jtwtl. 'SS-Eric Potm1n. m '~ "'"-lllt!C:H m QfJ'nlidNn cR> Att s.111 .... m It Tlk• I 1\W btum, Cllarlel Cll1mplltl. fD Cltrntdl>tr• Art Stidenb•um, . Ch1rln Ch•mptln, little Tokyo In 11:30 II 00 Mtn Criffill downtown LA. IS ~isiltd. CJ 9 m lNnllJ C... IS~ JO 0 Batt It of Champions! m o.arMI * Dick Cavett vs. SEARS Craftsman Eager I T:SSl!il,_" -Lawnm.,..r. TONIGHTI ""D ®I Ill Lo.P-1• IRJ °"' fJ Ill CI> Ell !Md """ ¥1d1I tvm1 up q t.0mtd7 umfO (lltlt with Ptltl lhllord, Vlnctnl,11;30 m Mft: .,Otllflt' W111111'" (mJ'l• Pritt 1nd ltitlrllo Mon!1lb•n. ltl'Y) '4&-lrendt JoJct. Don Polltr. 0 t]) El) NN!ywtrll 11-.. Bob Eut1tnb 11att1. 11:» D Ont st., a.,...i IDT• T• .. TnO 1$0 ll Mftil: "'SM If frrl" (tdnrt- f.D WwW' ,,_ tuft) '42-TJ'l"OM P'owtt, C1111 Tl11 .. 151 .... II VW.. lllf, GIOrll S.nd1r1. 81•-lllD0(1)9•"' Tuesday DAmME MOVIES .. ., ............ (OOll'ttdy') 15- EISll l•lldl. CllJ C.11tll °"Clllnl• .,... (wnltfll) 17-Rlctiird Da. ~c:tOf JDIJ. m----""'· 11Jht) '60-Stl Mi11to. SltMll KM· .... t :lO D (C') "IWI "'" Lwa111i.• (wtst· 111t) '54-Jolln Ptynt, D•n Duryw•. o "SlllMI 1M1t111r Cd111r11) '50 ~cil I. DtMftlt, H'41:. ~Pll- 10:00 (f)-n.t .... w (lhf11"1) '50-Rk:httd Conte, PlllJ Dow. 1:00 m <t> '\tti• LtMrt" <rom•~) '5:t -LIM T11rntt, Rieaido Morrttlbeft, 2:tlt 0 (C) ..,.,... Dillka'-C.ftdltien" {coll'Mldy) '6~.llek11 Ql11ton, G,,,._ ii Joh/IL J:tl Cl) .,.,,MMW' 0.n DvfyM, Dor· oU17 Lt!llOllt. t:IO f) ('C) "SlllW ,,....., (dr11n1) '67-lemts f11ncbcu1, lllorle llod· ..... C])S•llM tt IOAM MO'rit. \Veil, although her comedy ability Ls real, the fact is that the Sunday night hour was overall, somewhat routine. Take, for instance, t h e Jackson Five. They appear headed for big things , but the chief appeaJ they seem to have is that they're supposed to be cute because they are so concept that a child receives core personality can't be State Symphony Or<:hestra, from nature a «rtain set or . totally changed. and Rlchard Odle has designed dlreclio~ on how to use the "We try to show that a par· the theatrical sets a n d human equipment. ticular child can be born with costumes. "Some of these fundamental an active temperament, com. Tickets may be obtained -================='=====;\ from the box of£ice on ,r campus, or~eserved b y calliag 87o-3.17 • G e n e r a I admissioo i5-.50. young but move and sing and 1-----------11 act like the older pop groups. If you like pre<:ocious show business children, I ruess that's fine. But the point is, OPIM there is nothing r.aturally •=•• young and childlike a n d "' W. ...._ charming about such an act 1a1a... Pnln-. when It is wholly man.ipulatedl.'-N-0,,_W--EN_D_S_T_U.=ESDAY and choreographed with total commercialism so that its ''Dairy of A movements are, in the end, only ··cule." Mad Housewife" As for Miss Ross. the chief ind Hollywood interest in her now ''Weekend Wi'th is whether she will prove to be enough or an acting talent to The Baby Sitter'' become a movie star. And the plans, at last report, were for STARTS WEDNESDAY • .,, .. ,.,.£ EXCLUSIVE SHOWING •tl,..I 6th & FINAL tftJ Int <•••I Nwy. WEEK ~ COll:ONA Oii. MA.II Both PJcture1 ':Gu ALSO PLAYING 2nd BIG FEATURE "THE 12 CHAIRS" lnvenilvt, Cr•ry, Very Funny with Ron Moody-Dom O.Lul1e WMkflVI -f'ATTON · J;lf MASH • 1t:• , . .,,.,..., "'""' -,,,. ... '·"'· ""'41.i! -1t:4il & J1M-U ·-· "'""' -1•111 ,,. Mtlb-1J1IW:l•ll•ll AUDiMY AWA•D WINNlll: -llST l'ICIAL her to be on display first in a film biography of the great songstress Billie Holiday. "A TRIUMPH!" 111'==========="----------~ -Jutlith Clhl,,,... ., .. ~ ABCTV also offered Paul Newman in an hour special Sunday night -with the actor as host of an auto racing e n t e rtainment~ocumentary "Once Upon a Wheel." & 01vid Nivtn·Virna Liu Conce11s Set At Fullerton ... designed for laughter Works of three resident composers will be featured Wednesday and Thursday when the California Wind Ensemble and the Stage Band of Californla State College, Fullerton, present b e n e f i t concerts In the c a m p u s Recital Hall. Proceeds from the concerts.' which begin at 8 p.m., will go '--:;~~~~~ toward music scholarships for deserving students. Seats are priced at $1.50 each, and reservations may be made by calling the theater box office, 87().3371. JOE FRAZIER See him in person with his musical group THE KIOCKOUTS! At F1bukM11 klng1 C11Ue '°'"Only! Thur"' Fri .. Sit.. Aprll 29-30-May 1 On stage-Singing l Dancing Two Showa 8:15 p.m. & Mldni1e l11m RJUS IS )tw IS $16 sint!1Dccap11c1 • $11 doulluccapancy It's tile 1111t1st t1C1tl11 ,., ii Am1rlc1. At M.a>/f~ont K11p Cntlo! ''FASCI NATI NG! THE PUREST SCIENCE-FICTION THRILLER TO COME TO THE SCREEN IN YEARS!" -Jlldilll Crist, f'JBC-TV, ~'"' YorA: M111cine 11SPELLBINDING 'SCIENCE FICTION DRAMA ••• I FOUND IT ENGROSSING!" -Char/ts Champl/n, L.A.11mrs "MORE THAN JUST A BRILLIANT THRILLER! ChllllnilY authentic!'' -P1111 r11v•rs,1te«1m 01fHt "THE SUSPENSE IS TERRIFIC! Fasclnatln1 and knuckle· whltenln1 becauH It could happen here!" -lJt Smith, Cosmopo/1/ifl M1pdtte IJICl.MllYS tll•A•llllllT PLAYi Nii ,!J J ;j . ' .; .. '" ,.., 11 , .. .:::. _,... ----.... -.. ·~···--... _ ........ . DAILY PILOT l tetl' ........ DIT'S REWARD -Wayne Beauvais gleefully ravishes Sally Brown in a ""'"""e from the Huntington Beach Playhouse production of the Japanese clas· stsJ"Rashomon." TOO .GOOD TO MISS! The Year's Most Acclaimed Motion Pictures Are Now At An Edwards Cinema Borbro StNl1and IN , Meet Henry &: Henrietta ... the laugh riot of the year. "A neC1J Leaf" "ON A CLIAI DAY YOU CAN SH FOllYft•· ~ COIOI by MOVlElAB ~ A Paramounl Picture ........ WlllttrMltdu.•· El&iMM1r ·Jac:li W..,. • --(Ol.IA MIS... -, .... ) _______ .. __ allO Barbara Hrri~ ·-"THI IAIYMAUI"'. •• --· •• ., 4U. .... DUSTIN HOl'l'M4N~ .UTIH BIG t.IAN" o.c ... ••-··---,..,.._4 • MU•"_T_ -· Sta~ Rod St•fa•r•Chrittopker f'tummer Show Also Jock Lemmon· Catherin'• Oeneuve I ''THE APllL FOOLS'' (GP)Rcted CGl Winner 9 Academy Awards lncludlng,-BEST PICTURE-"PATTON" BEST ACTOR -GEORGE C. SCOTT-BEST SCREENPLAY -"MASH" NOW! (IDI -·-----···-·-··-·-··---Pl•t ,_..,. Ba<yi• In "JOE" (R) • ........... •1140 , ••• "'". ' . Huntington Beach Pla9house • 'Rashomon' Stunning Produ~tjon By TOM Tl'l\JS et .. DMlr ~.., ..... Witb i t 1 e1traordlnary producUon of "Raabomon, '' the Huntington Beach Playhouse bu taken a stanJficant step upward in theatrical excellence, b o t h dramatic and technical . Particularly technical. 11le importaoce of .sound and lighting in the SUl!alnlog of mood ls a separate and highly intricate art. It can magnify lbe dramatic effect of a production, such as in Irvine's "A View From the Bridge," or, if mishandled, a.s in Laguna's "Royal Hunt of the SUD,'' it CID destroy thllt effect. In "Ra.sbomon," director Ron Albertstn d I s p I a y s consummate technical skill in Ugbten.J.nc trqedy tO farcial Brvce CaU)pbell gives a main staging arta are well horseshoe slage. Coupled with c om 1 d y , w I t b t b e s e splendid performance as the cJeyeJoped by Albertaen. Less t.be excellent sound a n d polari&atkm bltnd.ln& almost scavenging wtgnu.ker, while convinclng is the movement lighUog effects, ft renders l.natanUy into ooe another. Bob McCaa is an ellective, among the three onlooten at "Rubomon" a tech n I ca I Thll . ancient J a p a o e 1 e t b ought-provoking Buddhist the Rashomon gate jWhere masterpiece. le1end, adapted for t b· e pries\_ Joe carr l! quite spa<:i!,~laU~ and rtQWred Four more weekends of present day by Fay ·and credible as the woedcutter, motion often are at odds with Friday and Saturday Michael Kanin, revives the while C a n d y mntenberger ucb other. performance• are s.cleduled equally aoclenl question, what does a fine jolt u the mother Joy Lobell's outdoor aew.ia far "Rashomon" ljlt tbe Bain is truth? There are four of tbe victimized wUe. • ls a superlative piece of playhouse, 2110• Malo St., versions of the tragic evenl!I ParUcularly lmpr6Slve an craftsmanablp, conveytna both HutiUnaton Beach. It ii an that traDJptre lnJhe play, and the two dueling scenes immediacy and depth in the es:pertence not read 11 y it b difficult to accept any at between BeauvalJ aDd Patton, confJ.oes of tbe am a 11 for1otttn. face value, slanted as they are the realism of wblch is ,--,.-------"----C...:--------::~. the teller's ultimate undencorOdbyBeauvala ' Treat the Family to Dinner Wayne Beauvais is a bandaged f I ti I er . Skillfully h k commanding pn!sence as the choreographed and T is Wee tnfalllOWI bandit, delivering a realistically executed, these strong, eat1hy portrayal in the scenes drive home the _, In--One of Orange County's first three segments which is physical power of the play. switch<d, all too abrupUy, to These .. gmenta and the fr'ne Restaurants, apoJoe:etic stumbling in tbef_b_a1_an_ce,olj;itheg~a~cui·onionlJ~theilaiiiij;iiig~~ij;J:iiCiiiiJCj;iijj--. fourth. Hert! Beauvais man bis effect with the use or modern _slang which renders the woodcutter's account of the story too laughable to be seriously considered. The ravaged and sometimes outraged wife is beautifully intepreted by Sally Brown in one of the most out.standing performances ol the season. Mi!s Brown is excruciatingly effective In her more poignant moments and she balances creating a n unforgettabl e this quality with the clawing experience with back.ground clarity of a scorned slattern in music and lighting effects. He her later scenes. has, in fact, presented a Aaron Patton is, by formidable challenge for his comparison, given far less to actors to deliver performances do as the cuckolded husband, worthy of such excellent but his own retelling of the embellishment. incident, culminating in a DOLLARS MORE" ... JIATVll wltll CU11t l•twood Al NWT Jt W, ...... ~ 411W'flll,"l'illon" "YALDlr hlJ .r 7111 • t:to P.M. s.t. • S...-c..t. fNm 1141 P.M. By all accounts he has chilling hara kri sequence, is succeeded, for "Rashomon" memorable. He is aided here ranks among the f i n e s t immeasurably by C r y s t a I c o mmunit y th e 1 t e r Payne as the mute medium ~a!. ... a..•wo productiom of tbe season. It isli~w~hoo~e~~·•~l!W'~· ~hed~~d~e~a:l:bL_,,.i~!~~!~:...,.,~-~·~~-~·~ .. ~·~,..~~~~~~!~~~~~~~-mji a compelling piece of work, scream Is guaranteed to turn demandJng delicate shadings the playgoer's blood to ice. of emotion from t b r o a t • ~do N~ afACll •• •t tli.o ""''""'" , "° ......... lift W. ••(II. l ·t Jll . --HELD OVER IUD COIT ALSO-Ill "Br•w1ter McCloud" ... l eek H.-.1 J1Ue AMNw1 ,. "DARLING LILI" ....... -PLUS- "Expression'' • am of a drueabuser ltdne$ Jnd .al~ of t\"tS -slueinifffna Const an I lickina of lips 10 keep I hem moist m ulling in cha~ rilw lips -.imphel.Jmina Or~tic 1ou of \1Wi1ht -heroin, opiurn SunAJmies wom ill lnar>9f'Opriille limes .lnd pf aces hiding dililtd pupill-LSO 5t.lg'!Jins,.diltlt"itnttd -INfbitwatcs These are a ff?\vof the sigm that may indicate that a young person could be abusing drugs Of" using narcotics. While these symptoms are not proof of drug abuse (most could occur for several other reasons). they should serve to alen parents and friends that a problem may exist If you're not sure, talk with your family physkian. If you suspect.. ask your child point blank, "Are you taking drugs?"' It's a sad thing to have to ask someone you love, but saying "Goodbye" is even sadder still. 4 -----------------------------ll "'UP•ISSION" h •H IH.14 .... ...., .... .,.,.,.. ,... ..,., Somebody Fights City Hall Who fights city hall11be DAILY PILOT doe1. That's who. And where else can you find cogent commentary on your community? Check lhe editorial page of YOUR comm unity 's daUy newspaper, the DAILY PIUYI', of course. ' 1·VOTE llil ,INllUI MvtfttM-J ..... ••rflllt Kelle! n. ~ ... ltf •f tt. flt• h ••c•Ufft, n. , ........... "'*· .... tlle "'" '"''-• ef ttl9 ...... ,,, ..... 9"il1Me. G1.,..'"4 •I• 4 ...... , DRUC ABUSE INFORMATION CAMPAIGN I ... ~IC1! M11'1111MlllMI) NIWPORT·MISA SCHOOL BOARD APRIL 20th ELECT I HERBERT H. STRICKER x I LOWER COSTS IMPROVED IASIC EDUCATION RELIEF FOR OVERBURDENED PROPERTY OWNER I I, Concerned Citizen and Tax Payer C.-ltlte tr Mel H1r11tr1 llrkkff -c. •· ,,._ ,.o . 1111 un. ,........., •MC11 I , - DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS LO"ISA WCK 1tlERE'S SOM~THlllG 1 lfii1NK 'IOU Sl'llOLD KNOW .•• JUDGE PARKER U MA.WA.Ile lllAT JOMt.IHY .:I.NE IS LISTENING, SAM PlrlVE~ TRLS A.86EV ME's INTERESTED I 'P LIKE TO TALK TO JOMNMV MOUf IT, -'&BEY! IN DISCOVEIZIN6 1 WMA.T M.l.PPENEQ TO MARTHA '5 INMEIZ1TA.NCE: PLAIN JANE BECA.llSE I TMINK ME W.Y KNOW MORE TMA.N ME'S TOLD US! ME SA.IP $ME PIW P€STITUTE! WMAT MAP· PENEP TD THAT '20Q 000 YOUR FA.n.Efl LEFT MA.R'fl.IA EIGMT YEARS .t.GOl' Noll" 1'5il'T ! AND Dotfr L<>Okso ~ED REUEVEO! ly Chester Gould Wl!ve IDEN11F11D 8 ~ TME STONl!.S A6 SlQ..!M. T'R.t..CV. "OIJ NOW MAV'I! .. ~. By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smhfl By Horold Le Dou By Frank Baglnslcl Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS • ,. I ,'Jl I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWER I PERKINS By John Mlln ACROSS l Oantr strp of Ult '30s 5 W. Ind ies island 9 Rtducts sprrd 14 Taper off J5 Sonar Stth 1& Shinbonr 17 Silly acts l'i Out of p1oper order 20 Dix and Yo1k, e.g. 21 C!'rta in wr itten accounts 23 Data contained 1n movie ads 25 \la1k in a certain way 26" Norse explorer 28 Served on a racing team 32 Oisun il!' 37 Re move 38 A Gabo1 39 Pick up the tab 41 Mineral sulrix 42 Beauty : Prtrix 45 Came to a point a9a 1n 48 Purpose ~Ass i st 51 Man of wealth 54 Femlnil'lf name 58 Appr1 lser " ' " I ;r - ~ ll " - ' - II " 60 " " • • " " h2 Having a scrnt: Archaic 63 Numb'r b~ Arborral mammal: 2 words bb Nickrls b7 Gt!ralnt's wift! b8 In the cast of: 2 words b9 lntrrjrction of objrction: Seo!. 70 Paymrnt for thr right to use 71 Rtnd DOWN 13 Impud ence : Slang 18 Riv er of Ffance 22 Part of l Speedy a cirtle 2 As ian 24 Sedimentary capital ma\trill 3 Whal good 27 Emily ---: convtrsationl Can. artist is: 2 words 2• Stay around 4 Milder 30 Thls: Sp. S Whale : 31 Transfer Pref(• properly fl Distinct 32 Numerical group prefix within a 33 Gr and large group Duke of 7 5ou!h Muscovy Africans 34 NaCl 8 Something 35 Place of value kicker's ' level accessory acl1\eved Jf, Apiece 10 AppliM of 40 lumber resll'ict!ons source 11 Japanes~ 4) Nol austere sashes 44 Alt fooled 12 Judithlll!> up: ) words ' s 7 ' L\'ll' '" ,, k'l!I" " ~ " t . • " • J!' •• 21 " ,. i ,, l9 fl '" .. i ,, ~ " •• " ' " ' t " .. " ,, • .. " 4/19/71 46 Saint --- fire: A flaming phenomenon 47 "Tell mt all!"; 2 words 4, To be announced: Abbr . 52 Kind or lix 53 Daniel ·····: American plonfer SS Sierra -··· S6 Within: Prelix 57 Organic compound 58 Impress cleally 59 "Scat1" bO Mus!cal combo lil Har,.,ss '"' 65 Insecticide: Abbr. " .. ,, ' ,,t " " " " • a ' " ,. " MISS PEACH WHAT 15 ')t]U1'. AM81TION, IRA? STEVE ROPER HIKE 1ZRHS FROM HIS ARGIJMflt/T WI THE J0/1116 "4.¥ D/flrERJOFW HIS PRETTY Hfl.PER UNCONSCKJU5l PEANUTS , I ' ' M Y AMBITION IS T05AVa UP !!NOU6H MONEY 1'0 HIDE' M YSeLF AWAY IN A G-AFllllEilN 6~1!.NWICH V/CLA&E FOR A Y<AROR50. Of COUllS! SHE'S llJl<T, "' 816 'mO/ D'VA THIWI< SHES TA.KJN'A NAP! By Mel ... j'HeltE IN THAT LOMeLY GARReT, 11 lRA S.icM1WJU. FINO T~E ~TQMWI ANO OETe~MINA.T'lON "TO RBAO IT··• By Charles M. Schulz ' nil .. JTIANOI WOl&D .. ML MUM By Roger DENNIS THE MENACE I f c 'MYTINC UP YET,ALI~?· j ' . • I I ' . ' . ' ~ . .,. ..,,. ... _ -·-·---· ..... . . . . . . .. ··••:":"1;1 ....... ...__..,.~,; .~. . . •-I r --~--- --~ ~-•"'"'-- DAILY PILOT Mondlf, April llf, 1971 ... r •. _ight Candidates Seeking Tustin Board Seats' .. ir. • la Problem Blrtllolomew. lie II l'Ulllllq !or ~ --The Tw!tln dlltrlCI oerv" Tw!Un, Tultln Muclow1, East Irvine, Qi!. venble, Unlveralty Park, Tllrtl< Rock, El Toro, Laguna Jlllls and Mission VitJo. AU trustees are elected at lqe, meanlni vol<rl -thrwgboul the dlltrlel may vole !or two ol Ille nine penooa lo be llllA!d 111 Ille blllol. The dlltrlCI tnoom-the Tw!tln, San Joequln_ and Trabuco e1em .. 1ary c!Js. trlcts. ewport Panel rGoing to Dogs l<:at~·· TJisoe'a lob>& lo be a lot said about dofi;oit Newport Beach beaebea In tht ~;Jfu.. weeka, bul nobody II lerribly ..,.1!l!on or when -lei alone wblt It will Ill .,..., Tbe Paru, Beachel and l\ecrutlon E on· wW conduct an lnfonnal bearina on the controveny al 7:IO p.m. In Clly Hall. _...,u, be the Oll!y bearing pone! wlll hive, delplte a cllnctlve Monday telling the •d-riMrJ -.S to condUc:l a full and open ltudy of the laaue. ihe council, after a dllcourae on the ~tic proceoa hr Vice Mayor How!!f Rog<r1, had oeemlnpy roveroed ~ a poalticu expreaed earlier !hat -.ne day when Councllman Don MclmJJ said adopt!On of a new ordinance G>tc Discusses ' ... ,. Beautification Hints at Meet J. !lat of eaoy.Jo.follow beauUl!cation Wita • for homeowners and t b e l:'OllUllltlDent of $1,000 for new ._Pini at a proposed Interchange •minated from a rectal director's metlfn& of the Caplalrlno Beacb Cbil!iber of Commen:e. 'lii(c!ireclon, who met last wee!< al a ieii!laf meeting, IUl&eated I b a I tapllfrmo Beach realdenll remember lo i.... tralh contalnon out oaly lonl .. .,.,. , for pickup. ~. aJao 11111uted that naldenll tvald·fllddnl aulol -lidewalka. la ~ beautlflcatlon ma t t e r 1 ~ unanlmoualy qreed to donate 11.0llO In chamber fUnda lo help .... ard ~e landAcaplng of the aua Mir , .... new Interchange af the Pa Coaat Hllbway and Doheny Park Rood. :!he worl< will be done by the SU.le Di!'fklll of Highways. ~ qtber action at the meeting was the : electiOO u director of Denni• e!eha'} lo the panel to replace Bob llOllO)o: , ·v- restricting dogs should be expedited. Roser•, at the eveniog meeting, bad called for full-acale PBR hearings, followed by a report, perblpa locludlng other alternatives, then more hearlnp by the COWlCil. Somehow, all that has changed since Monday night. Calvin Stewart, PBR director, in announclng the infonnal bearing, 11Jd "We've got to make a full report to the council April 26. J don't under•tand it but we don't have Ume to :tehedule a rtgular public hearing, complete with legal adverUslng; so anybody who b8S anything to say will have to come to Tuesday'a meeting." Aeling City Manager Phil Bettencourt uid be aaked City Clerk Laura Lagioa to prepare a transcript of the mlnulel from Mondly'a meellng lo clear up the confualon. "It aUll wasn't clear," he aald, "so I uked the mayor." He aald Mayor Ed Hirth told blm he thought the PBR Commiujon WU supposed to look into the matter thoroughly. "But to be aure aboot what Vice Mayor Rogtrl meant," Bettenc:Ourt said, "we called him. He said he meant for the commls.sion to conduct a hearing, but to han! a report ready !or the next council meeUng." To add to the confusion, the council urunlstakably told City Attorney Tully Seymour to draft two sepa r ate ordlnanees, one paltemed alter the compromise l.qwia Beach Jaw and one after the Huntington Beach ordinance that bani dog1 from beaches and parka lotally. In Laguna Beach, the city council - aft.er a city-wide referendum -came up with an ordinance that orden dogs off the bea~ between 9 a.m. and f p.m. from June 15 to Sept. 15. · Bettencourt said the next atep in the procedure here will likely be for the councll to introduce one, or both, of the ordinancea at the April JS metUng, and aet Ua formal public hearing for the following meellng, May 17. According to establlahed procedure, penons wJsblng lo talk to the council on the IUbjeCI °"'Id do so at the April 21i meeting, as well, if the ordinance ls introduced. •t and Youngest my Zarate, 2\2, under treatment for tubercula r meningitis at a Diego hospital, shares a ward with Weldon \V. Schurman, 100. y b the boapilll'• )IOunaest paUent and Schurman i!J olde.t. The !OUT high achooll -ltod by the district are Tw!tln, Foothill, Mllalon Viejo ond Unlveralty. Here, in atpbabeUcal order, are the tJght active candJdata: Rohen C. Bartlloiomew, a , of 11880 Skyline Drive, Santa Ana, J, a nuraery- man aeek!ftg reelection lo the board. He ii a member of the atate School Board Commlulon M Equal Opportunity In Educailon and Ille John Birch Society. "Drug abll.1e is one of the d.l.stricl's most outstanding p r o b I e m a , 1 1 Nag Witla a Sag Bartholomew aaya:, ''To IOlve lt wt muat increue education in the c1uaroom on the dln8ers of drop, and encourage and work towards community lovolnmtnt and parent particlj>ltloo.'' Bartholomew abo favors adoptlon of a merll pay plan for teachera. Soi Bllo.., 1171 Heather Ave., Tultln, lists hlmlell on the ballot ., an ln!urM>Ce executive. 8laom de c 11 n e d to be interviewed, stating be did not want hi.a' age or addresa pub!iJbed "because I'd !el a bunch of letl<rl from a lot of qulru. • Qlff... B. Boehler, II, of ZllM Paelllca Ave., Mlsslon Viejo, 11 u en1ineerhla manager for McDonnell· Do111laa AatronauUca, Huntington Beach. Boehmer II a past lftlldent o1 the -Viejo lllglr Scboo1 Pam>t-Teacber Organization and currenUy la Jftlldent of the dlltrlel's Coordlnltlng Council of Parent Organltatlons. "The moll ®tatandlng problem In the district II the abortaie ol ctassrooma," Boehmer .. ukl. 11Aod a much more serious problem II projecttd for the nen Horses retire, too, as photographer discovered when be happened upon this old fellow on a farm near FL Collins, Colo. The old boy appears to have car- ried his share of riders, ApparenUy, it wasn't euy. Now1 however, hla lite is one of lei.sure. Panel in Laguna Renaissance Fa ire Slated Asks Parks Only For Beachfront For Golden West College 1'WheneYer a park exists, it seems that everyone wants to put aomethlq: into IL •• This was one of the conclusions of Laguna's Ma.!n Buch Committee after studying the long history of the beachfront and determining that It should be. ruerved uclus1vely for pa r k purposes. Among the non-profit community uses already suggested for the park area, says the committee report, are proposals for youth centers, drug abuse centera. senior cJUzen cent.era, swimming pools, teools courts, bowling greens, chamber of commerce facilities and many more. "The committee strongly urgu that such suggestions be resisted," say1 the report. The area of Main Beach Park as recommended by the committee, the report continues, "should be viewed as an artistic creation by God, with incursion by man at an absolute minimum and for the purpose only of enhancing the aestheUc experience of being ne.zt to the Paclflc Ocean in Laiuna." The only commercial uses condoned by the committee would be beach and park oriented food and rental equipment, with such concessions located at either end of the park and designed to fit Laguna's image. The committee notes that such concessions at the Corona del Mar beach park occupy less than 2,000 square feet and yield the city 31 percent of the operator's gross revenue. It is estimated similar concessions at the Main Beach park could produce lease income to the city of $40,000 annually. La9ing New Pipe Student.I at Golden We1t College plan to transport their campus back five centuries A pr il 23-24 to present an authentic 15th century Renaissance Pleasure Faire. Laguna Library Given Memorial Encyclopedia Set The 15-volume Encyclopedia of World Art will be placed in the Laguna Beach library as a memorial to the late Virginia Woolley, Festival of Arts directors ha ve decided. Glenn Vedder, reporting for a committee set up to select a memorial to the artist, last survivor of the orlainal Festival exhibitors, said the committee agreed the book glft would be most suitable. The volumes, avallable for $400, wtrt described by librarian Clifiord cave as unequalled of their type, Vedder aald. Direct.ors voted to purchase tbe set and donate it to the library, where it will be placed on a special sheU. Each volume will be inscribed with a tribute to Mrs. Woolley, describing her as a founder of the Festival and sponsor of lbe children'• art workshop. The event will replace the "Rustler Round-up." Organizers claim the faire will feature a kaleidoscope of 15th century life, complete wilb wandering minstrels and mummers, boolhl dlJplaying h a n d -· crafted wares, and a variety of foods . tn addition to traditional arts and crafts and game booths, the Golden West falre will include two shows by hypnotist George Sharp who· will be making hiJ fifth appearance on campus. Claucer's Canterbury and Other Tales will be enacted on stage both days by John D. K. Brunner's puppet troupe. The show is recommended for matw"e audieotes. Also to be featured are greased pole climbing, f<rtune telling, palmistry and other booth! to further C81T)' out the rena!saance Iheme. Several faculty members h a v • volWlteered for the Vet's Club dunking booth. Fuhion shows, movies, plays and other performances are also on the two. day agenda. The college d r a m a department will present "Claude an d Marion," a play set in 1220 and dealing with mistaken Identities and royal families. Climaxing each day 's 'aclivilies will be a bonfire and an informal boot with student musicians participating. Money from the faire will go to the college scholarship fund . DAILY PILOT Si.fl ,...,. Dredge labors in Upper Newport Bay near Pacific Coast llighway Bridge as work conUnues on new sewer pipe project. County 5anitation District is replacing 12·inch main with lwo 24-lnch mains to carry sewage from Coron• de! Mar and Balboa Is- land to treatment plants near Sant.a Ana River. The $336,000 project b scheduled tor completion July SI. • ' few yeara. In two yean we will be about one hl;h achool aborl of wbal i. required." "l wW work to eolve the CUJTtnt problem with the !wt Impact oa tht educallona! proceaa by seel<lng add!Uonal daa perio4s, buslng or po r t a b I e claaarooms, and work to 10lve the fubn problem by ur1lnl a bond election or locreued ltate &k[•• Didi 8oruJu, 41, ol 11131 S. E. Allla Lane, Sanhl Ana, 11 the principal of Mitchell Elementary School, Gardea Grove. ' · The diatrict'• molt outs tan d Inc problems are "involving the oommunity In developmenl of pollcl., a n d curriculum and ending the waate of dlatrict money apent to administer the drtU code -'90,000 in the last fGUt years," aaya Boranlan. '.'I would w<rk to devl5e ways to bring pareoll and students forward. to express wblt Ibey feel II needed and would .eek a curriculum thal II meaningful and meets the needs for tile future. Borantan favors a dress code that ts "administered by parents and students. ti Dana A. Carby, 44, of 25125 Ericson Way, Laguna HUii is an engineer for tbe Paclflc Telepbooe Company. He ba1 represeated the Capl.rtrano Hlgb1anda Homeowners Association .and Ille MIJalon Viejo llJgh Scboo! Parent· Teacher Organlia.Uon, before the high ecbool board, and was a member al. the YES committee supporting the 1970 Tustin tu: override. "Drug abuse and the lack of vocational education programs are the district's IDOlt outJtandJ.ng problema," Cariey oal<I. "l would caU for expanded vocational educaUon programs for non-college bound students and develop a strong drug abuse program.'' Carltey favors district use of federal ald to education money with the reservation of local control. Howard "Tim" Eatoa, 50, of %4742 San Andres Drive, Mlsaion Viejo, is asaoclate den of the Army-Navy Academy at El Toro and a retired Air Foree oUlcer. "The biggest problem is the 1ft9l'nt and potenilal growth of the dlltric4" Eaton said. "l would seek: better management pla.nnlng and communlcaUoru: a n d accountability that involves teachers, students, adminlatratcn and t be community in an annual audit of currlcu1um, the district's drop-out rate and per pupil costs. Eaton favors improved and expanded vocalional education programs and suaeats the dlltrlct could find .. a method ol dealing with drug ab"" that respect.a due process of law provisions of the ConsUtution and involves student.I in aolving the drug problem. "I'm opposed to arbitarily imposing dresa rules except for reasons of health or safety," Eaton adds. Steplatn J. F a b a l a , 33, of 14532 Emorywood Road, Tustin, ia a teacher of the educationally handicapped at llunilngtm Belich lllgb School. A teacher for the past 10 years, Fabula la a delegate to the Govemor 's State Houae Conference on Youth and Educa- tloo. ''Lack of innovation, lack of special education programs and refusal to seek Its share of federal aid to education are the district's most outstanding prob- lems," Fabula said. He said he would encourage develop- ment of new cun'iculum, urge institution of programs for the educationally handi· capped and trainable mentally retarded Ind call for more individualized lnstruc. Uonal programs. He w o u I d urge the board to hire neces.w-y ronsultants to seek more federal ald and improve it.I offering of vocational training. He calls for "a truce with the kids to listen to them" and establishment of a drug abuse education program similar to the "smart set" program used at Corona de! Mar High School In Newport Beach. The advantage of such a program i.s that peer pnssures are used to curb drug: use, Fabula noted. John W. Parker, 25891 Via VI en to Drive, Mission Viejo, is an attorney practicing in Santa Ana . He i! a candidate both for the TusUn di.strict and the Saddleback Community Coll~e board of trustees. Parker declined to respond to DAILY PILOT inquires. Capo Purchase Of Golf Course Plan Under Study San Juan Capistrano -home of the 1wallow1 and about 4,000 people -ii beginning to have some big ideas. Councilman Ed Chermak suggested Monday that the city look into the purchase of the San Juan Hilla Golf Coone. The problem la -bow does a city of 4,000 finance what would likely be a mlllion-Oo!lar project? "Perhaps now ls the time to find out," said Mayor Tony Forater. The golf course is owned by Glendale Federal Savings which took it over from Morris Mlsbln's Marina View HetgbtJ Development Company. Misbin suggested to ChennaJt that the lliW ml&ht be for aale. "I'm .suggesting this for two reaSOM," aald Chermak:. "Fint, because the cttJ would have a large recreaUonal facility wtU~ can be a moneymaker, and sccona. because the city might be able to ust part of II for a ponnanent city hall silo. Chennalt said the driving range would make an excellent spot for a city haU complex. The entire site l! estimated to be 129 ao-eJ. Thi staff was instructed to look into the possibility of acqulrlng the property and ways to flnanct the project. I -, ,._.~,,..., ~ ---' L - Mondi!, Apr\I 19, 1971 DAltYPl).OT .. Everyone Hes Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sill It, Find It, Tr•d• It With a Want Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results J ;: qi. o;J The Newport Harbor-Costa Mno Board of Realtors salutes THE ORANGE COUNTY FAIR HOUSING COUNCIL AND FAIR HOUSING WEEK APRIL 19 • APRIL 15 REALTORS EVERYWHERE are cognizant that equal rights in land acquisition and use ts fundamental to American freedom and the opportunity for lile, liberty and the pur· suit of happiness. Public policy and tho Civil Rights Laws demand and dictate equal opportunity in housing. This Board of Realtors, the Cali· fornia Real Estate Association, and the Na· tional Association of Real Estate Boards be-- lieve housing should be offered equally to all without regard to race or color or na· tional origin. To implement this bel ief, this organiza. !ton has adopted the Realtor's Code of Prac- tice into our By·Laws, pledging ourselves QS Individuals and es a group to serve ALL on an EQUAL and NON-DISCRIMINATORY basis. Further, our Equal Rights Committee was formed several years ago for the distinct purpose of aiding those who feel discriminat- ed against, and to disseminate information to our members and to the general public as to their responsibilities under the law. For a speaker on the subject of Equal Rights in Housing, or for copies df synopses of the laws relative to discrimination by rea- son of race, color or national origin, please call or write the NEWPORT HARBOR°COSTA MESA BOARD OF REAL TORS 401 North Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach 646-1671 General G.nerel PERFECT BEACH HOMEI Be prepared for the summer in this super sbarp, super clean, bright 2 bedroom & don borne. One of Corona del Mar's finest loca· Uons, only !·block to stairway to Ille beach $54,900. OPEN SUN. 1-4 227 GOLDENROD 2121 E. CNll Hwy. Corona del Mar 644-7270 College Park W/Pool $32,500 Huge corner lot with pool and plenty of pus area too. Best buy in a.re•! Call us. to .... ·NO SMOG! -NO CROWD! Come to Morro Bay to beat the So. Calif. blahs! 1'Boondock Living'' with conveniences LOOK AT THESE Castle on mountain -view Decorator delite 3 Br. 1800 sq. fl. 4 BR. hillside, 2300 sq. fl. Crow's nest vacation, view $48,950 $35,000 $4&,000 $18,000 $ 8,950 Shack to fix up, terms Minugh Realty ll05) m .7193 Newport General I General ,, I===== ==;;;;;;;.;== NEW LISTING PICTURE PERFECT Spack>ia family home 1n NO DOWN TO VETS INGLEWOOD, 9 Deluxe uni.,, prtmt area. lO i:f Down 10 othtra. J.arie 3 $140,000 Or trade. bednn w/hrdWd On, bltns, ~ Nm.QUI rm, blck wall ~ • f d encl...., yud. VA .. .,..;.. Uln ar ed al •• , . • RIALTY $24,600 ., ... "" Drtwnt .... Cllbi Miu CORor.:u~~ MAR H,:~1ott 642-2991 One older home and 2 1tory Llat wllb C.Q. Buy from CQ- bld&: with euest apt. Walk to Eut Bluff town & beach. Newly nde<> .,.1 ... •riced ,,.., "· • • --A--,-.-rf"'ec:t ___ ' $45,000 Mother's Day. 5 BR & FAMILY Gift OPEN HOUSE Move in on Mothers Oil)' to '" to ,. * G.neral * * * * TAYLOR CO. * f•irvlew 646-1111 (1nytl.,,.) LEASE-Ol'TION MOVE-IN NOW popula~ u:i:;."~ Pm HOME Community pool Uk; play area U you're looking for the very 2714 Alb11roH, CM Spa.cloua Cont~mponry Mesa Verde home on large cor- ner lot. Divorce Sale. 'Sub- mit otters. VA appraised thla beautitully appointed -. ' borne tn the: Bluffs. Mom ':' •l:! will love the hU&'.e park and '·-""'· S Bedrooms, tncluding master 1ulte with sitting room on seoolld story SCARCE COMMODITY! Very neat. 3 bedroom. 2 bath home ill wcant and ready lor occup&ncy. Fea- tures excellent location, beautiful landscaping, com- pk!tP sprinkler S)'ltem. Lovely coveftd patio and yard with ocean view. In· cl.mies water IOftener and expensive rotary 'IV anten- sunny breakfut room Large living room $39,950 • 10% Down Custom view home near beach in Corona del Mar. Exquisite wood paneling & cathedral ceiling. Beauty and quality at ....... $87,500 ''Our 26th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton na.. Owner will aeet'pt U .25:1 REALTORS last months ttnt and SlOO SINCE 1944 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 maintenance d•"°"t. Full 673·4400 Wanted: Home Owner No Experienc:e Nec:essary prlco 128,9"'. 812-25.JS "'I ... ""'""'""'"'"'""'""'!!!!!!!! 516-23!3. B/B SPECTACULAR VIEW Sharp, slw-p custom built 'O THI:RCAL ''"\. I:STATf:RS 22 YEARS OF REAL ESTATE SERVICE IN THE HARBOR AREA CAMEO SHORES -with panol'amic y;.w $200.00 DOWN ot ocean and cout..tine plus Spacious 4 bdnn., family ···-• •-!ow. Thi• •. ,..... 4 Bedrooms 2 B•tht t .• , . , Pl ....... ..,., """ ~ ....... 1 cl in rm.; emuc view. us, tul home hu 3 bedrooms 3 Pus normal oa I costs htd. & fill. pool, 84 X ll5 be.tbs dining room and• a moves you 1n completely Lot. 2 I-lot water btrs., I 2 fabul~ game room or redecorated Inside and out furnaces; bltn. vacuum JYtl· with tt'a vacant and ready to bf family room a terntic li -• In. ~·-· U 1 tern. $79,500. b .1 . b _, ~-1 v.,.. vwuer saya ae a ut t-1n ar, 1111s '""'""' • $23.00J. Call now and atarl CdM HIDEAWAY priced right for fast sale. packing. 2 Bdrmi. PLUS. Only 1tone'11 Hurry. 546-2313. throw ocean, Price pnctlc- all.v at lot value at $45,CKn. • best but haven't seen ii then let um show you thia IM1.1AC\JLATE l BED- ROOM BEAUTY with Jatse family room and separate kitchen eating nook. Jt'1 lt'1 into a beautifully landacap. ed lot with brick patio, sprinklen, lush atrium en- ...,..,....,., """' in ... bacl< ' . " yard lor the kids and dad at •• , .. $42,150 M>n't need hit garden tools '' P ever ap.ln. 3 B«lroorns 2" · ' : baths and a tun Ailed care • •J ... -PERRON • ..:t, .. .. ........... , •• try and all topped oft with 642-1771 Anytime a SHAKE ROOF. AU It talc-,..,....,...,...,~...,..,.,I " i3 S3150_ down payment Newlyweds to.. lilo. Only $44,500 Call m.ll550 0 THf. REl\L '~"\.. I:STATI :RS .. '.:•..-; . ,. .. .... i.: and • ,,;.., ol $31,500. -This Is For You Cuddle up in thta coiy 3 bed· room. 2 bath hou11e cloae to shopping and beach. Shag Carpet throughout l.wcur)' kitchen overiooJWl& bup pa. tlo -10% down. ~SOO Ce..11 646-1In. co: Ts • EXCLUSIVE AGEN'I1 • ' I : SALES • LEASES -• <>(. · WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pon Ev1nln91 ) VA REPO 2'14 Vbta Del ON Newport Beach 644-1133 10 THERI::AL \'"\, ESTATERS $1000 DOWN Eastbluff-Vlew Btautl.tuJ. E-slde 3 Br home. Cor"OIW clel Mir 1.arp Lusk 3 BR, 2'iti Ba Beamed ceUlngs thrUollt, 2 car garage, brick firTplace, PERFECT • • • 2221 ArbU'tus -&f4-2J24 •••ato dining ·-a • Boooh ~--, ·-• ·•·-, By OWntt -Make otter se_. -"' .,, ..... ,-: ... ..,. ....... OPEN Sat/Sun 12-dark large covered patio. Real SUJ>tt clean; bright 2 bdnn. country living-w/oveniZed &: den, One of CdM'a finest EASrBLUFF VIEW yard_ Everyone quallfie.. toe ., 1 blk, to sta.lrWay to Lee lAtlk 3 BR, 2"' Ba VA ell&fbllity nGt neee1sary. beach, $54,900. ml AR.BunJS &lf..20)4 .. " .. ,.,__ ....... • • 1., ~ . .} .[{ : !{ "" .£nJa !Jj/e An)'Olll' could and &bould want to play house in this extra neat 3 bedroom, 2 beth home in excellent HIBltin&ton Beach location. Vacant. ready for occupancy and may be leue-opUooed. Beautllul landecaplng, com· plete sprinkler system. Lovely corner patio and yard with OCf!IU]. view. W a· ter softener ana expensive rol.ary TV antenna included. F'Ull price $28.9:i0. Phone 546-2313. \0 THE REAL ''"\. ESTATI::RS 675-3000 Total payments including Delancy Rul E1t1te By Owner -Make offu taxes 4 Insurance only $179 2828 E. Cout HWy., CdM l--'Open=:...:S.::;V::;SUn;:::c..;12-6=-·I ·. '>< 2629 Harbor, C.M. per mo. Call 546-588o Copen I --~...;,64::;<'~'177;,,0:.,...,=-Founteln Valley PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 5 Lind• Isle Drive Just completed 4 BR., 51!. ba. home w/fam. rm. & study. Magnificent 39 ft. waterfront liv. rm. w/lrpl. & wet bar. $164,406. For complete fnform1tfon on 111 homn & lots, plffH call: Bill GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 "REPO" $21,500 G.I. repoAession in upper bay a.re& with large lot, two-c&r garage, brick fire· pl.ace and home has a brand new rool~ ! $1000 DOWN $179 PER MONTH NO 2ND T.O. Newport •• Fairview Truly Early Americ:an This lovely ho~ baa such charm and warmth it must be .een to be appreciated! Just ~ • cheeJ'fUl kit· chen, large: pool, 3 eood sizM bedrooma-tbe warmth of lovely wood paneling and extensive use of uaed brick. Cliarmina: and tasteful U9e of y,-aJJpaper. just another O( the exciting features In lhls delightful home, Eut- slde Costa Jitesa and jult ... Call now Ior an appoint- ment to chann. $31,500 646-7171 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath 11lANSF""RED I ..... 1 * VACANT LOT * 1-...;;,,B""E"'ST""'°B"'uy'°"1,.--'"" • I ·~· I HIKh on • bill, O>'<-$23,SCiO Hand,.me comtt homo Jn lfa ~:: •"'"'thin" """ It.I lot. VACANTI $30,5001 immaculate c on d it Ion _ Priced to sell, with aome IMAGINE! I! Le 4 BP, 2 BA! '0 THI: REAIJ ,'"\, I.:STATCRS no down to vets It's located in north Costa Mesa and will sell quickly at this price. It's i'Ol a double garage, large Io I, walki.Jli di5tance to Catholic ochool and cbW'Ch, .... nelrbborhood. You better bUJTy on thia one. 1 --llvin and ,... Huge panel~ den! Sprlnk-._... g room term1. 81'flte dlniflG room. Ultra ..-=-LIVE WHERE MORGAN REALTY len! B\ock wall! VA/FHA " . modem kitcbon with .. ling ~ YOU WORK 673-6642 675-6459 '"""'' od~-~-won<1 l'ful HAFF DAL REAL TY ::;. .. ;;;;.:,, wllh 'n,... CLOSE Tranomona1 "'""' I" buol· DELUXE 2 BR & DEN 142-4405 BUILDERS CLOSE-OUT \Ve have 8 triplexes for $58,500 each. Owner1 untt hu 3 btdrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Income ii $560.00 per month. All temui avail· a.hie including No Down G.J.'a or F.H.A. Call place. Beautiful back: yard To the ocean in Corona de! ne1s is this FOUR BDRM., PLUS Sep 1 br rental, fiO ' EVft: 541-2448 with 'llll'OOgtrt iron encloled, Ma:r. Enchanting 2 bedroom Two Bath home. On corner corner Jot, prlv patio, aood f ,-,-..,-..,....-=,-..,---1 co~ete aaleiy pool. Haw 2 bath homt with cozy brick Sot In bultneu dimtriel. Make terma. BW Pete:n Bkr, 213/ Huntington Beach could any home be finer? llreplace & beam ceillng In working easy. Full price 583-<15l9, 1---------1 See it right away • only living room. Large dining only $26,500, with l0% down. I~, c,Q:,.Uc,A:,.IN.:.T~l~B~l~I ~ ..... --,-. $49.~. st&-2313 area with sliding glass doon J .Jl!l!ll~l!ll!I!~~~ duplex, on 2 adj. loh1. · to patio & garden. Neal Owner anxiowJ. 837·2!MT W lk & L 2629 Harbor, C.M. · O THC REAL '"\. E~~TATERS green hou.se for hobbies. 2\i I L..:.l; morn. car garage plus boat or 'o:;:UP:;;;:LEX;,,,-.~,~b~,~ .. -,,.-.-1~.,, trailer spece. Lolsa room garage apt, Fenced yarda. le add on. s-16.950. C a 11 $47,500. 118 Orchid 5f&...t9:iT a er ee REPOs. i.' BR, a11"""' 1190 Harbor Blvd. at A~ Call _Pat Wood . &a5-2.1JOJf-*;=50'=B'=E"o"R"'OOM===';;:::s=*= 675-4930 &45-9491 Open 'til 9 PM Sceruc Properties 675-5n& Beaut. llarbor View Homes BEAUTIFUL G1ner.1I ret. w/wtt bar, lovely ~·co.· Evenlng11 can 646-4579 1 p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-,1 carp.: aelt-deanin1 ovens; .__,~~ ;;;;;;i;;;a&;iiii;;i,,.. .... ;;; REPUIUC HOME II vaoanl, • "I c. .. ...... -_...... SUPER CLEAN Split level • 4 bedrooms • 3 $59,SOo lncludins the land. SPLASH! • SPLASH! Immaculllte 4 Bedroom. 2 bathl • l car garage.~ CORBIN In your own -40 foat heated Story w/ha.ndaome exterior ,family room and lonnal din· • pool .. this 2700 •q, fl. home on a quiet tree-lined street. ing room. 2200 sq. tt. home MARJ IN is Ideal for home entertain-Adult occupied for all of ltB bee.utifuly situated in one OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ing. Choice Baycrest loc., on 6 year•! Open Sunday 1..S ot Mesa Verde's mO!ll. pres-quiet street. All new shag uM-., neog· '""'"°""'· u "8" BEDROOM REAL TORS 644-7662 at 2737 c .... t D•, ""' ,!';"'Uk• ~-'•h ~"gn ~· FIXER ll;iiiiii;;.;;ii;iii-iiiiii.i&ii W/W cpta .• bit-In kit., 2 Verde, Just listed at $43,900. JU... _... ...,.. JV.. lrplca. First time ottered at m"st ""' thto chamllng $23,950 479 ... <. home. For full partleulan: ')l!csf\rrbc 'Jlrnft1• 546°5990 d ~ I I Voll.y 1•11 --a.n aYl"''n ment to n.spect Shuffl•bfi.·nl-'ool NOT A 1'"1XER.-UPP'ER but call now! 546-Z313. $46,500. Imagine over 3,000 1q. a great 3 Br, 2 ba. farnlly 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!! rt. of "'"' .,... living. hom•. Fully """''"' ~ Coldwell,Banker \0 THE REAL ''"\.. r;STATCRS Entertainers palace-. Pie· draped, J~ patio, double ~·• COfll••UIW ture window livln&: canre. Plush 18-.,_..ing room. Crackling fll"e-• ...._.... * 6 UNITS* Ceste Mesa COSTA MESA EASTSIDE CHARMER 3 very large bedroonu. Enormoua living room with beautlfut red brick fl.re. place. "G L ISTENING HARDWOOD FLOORS". Country attnosphett, with lot1 of klwerlng trttt lining thla circle 11rfft, G.l.'a no money down -we'll tet you qualifled. Alao FHA term1. Submit what )'OU have on $2<,51JO price, Walker & Lee Realtors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams FIX ME UP f bedroom 6 pool covered patio 427.950 • • • * BEAUTIFULLl SPANISH Privacy plua family room & poof ·- * * * • NO DOWN VA Sharp 3 bedroom 2 bath Dutch Haven $27,900 WAS MODEC-I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'"'".-0 place. Spacious family A quiet atreet. FJiA tmns, 933-0700 room. AJI convenience of coune. 644-2430 -.,, ' .,., .,, . . "' " ' ,. " .. . • J :< 646°8811 (anytime ) NesUed in a fol'(!st of IW"eet scented pines, yet only min· utes to lreeway and major shopping. Quiet cul-de-eac neighbo~hood, nelll' by park, 4 over-sized bedrooms, dec- orator mlrron and all lor LESS thltn $30.co:J. Tr.de Westcliff kitchen. 4 baths. Paint Call 540-1151 Open. EveningsJ"""'""'"'""'"""'""'"""' and save S thousanda S. p d" ~t.iil. ";.:&. F~ m~ I ~ llWTAGll en lnCJ On Balboa mvd. Good oond. Great rental area, 1teps to ocelill, You own the land. t Units with 2 BR., 2 ba.; 2 units with 1-BR, Parking for 12 cll'I. Call today fDr app•t. 54S.~91 Open 'tll 9 PM GOV"I' repo1, Anyone can buy. No Joan char,e! $21,600 to $32,000. Jn Colta Mesa area. w1u. Realty, ~ms MESA Verde by owner: 3 bdrm. fn\ly rm, 2 ba. patio. Opon dally $29,900, ...__ • • • • • I ' . ~, Camper & Boat Owners Attention!! II you own a camper or boat or whatever and are having a h<i.rd time hiding it con- sider this cozy };astside ~ bedroom 1 % bath home \\1th easy access to the fenced ~11.r yard for storing a v.·hole bunch ol things. Only S29.~i00 Phooe m.s.o 'O ' THI: REA!, ~ESTATER? MARINERS PLAYGROUND Librar)' and School near by. 20 F't. by 22 Fl. addition to 1naster Bdrm. I lnl.ly a queens suite) Large rear living room. patio and 3parkllng pool. U N D E R MARKET AT 136.~. your home! Walker & Lee Re:allors 7682 Edln&er 1714) 8'tZ-4-1:>5 or 540-5140 Macnab -Irvine Realty Company BEST IN AREA 1.!I: time offered, lmmacu· late. &autllully decorated -ha1 everything for M.ppy family Jiving. ~ BR. 3 bath-. FR, formal DR. Landtcaped to perfccUon w/room fOr "°"'· SU.51JO. Macnab-Irvine 642-123S 675-3210 2 Blockl rrom shopping &: school. SpotJess 3 BR, 2 BA home. Extra lge liv rm &: lamlly, dble frpl~. King slt.e k1tchen. Plush crpt.g &: drpti. Patio. Obie prage, shake roof. $42,500, Lachenmyer Realtor 186(1 Newport Blvd., CM CAIL 6f6..3928 Eves: &U-2231 Repossession $21,450 0303. \bf '"' """ Foreclosure JOIN THE Owne r unable to maintain paymonto • M"" 11eU in>· SWIM SET Pool Home modlalely. Ex""Uoot ,. •• 3 •-• 2 brd dentlal area -does 1!ffd DQ.lroom, Ba, 1'c;I NEWPORT Doors, carpets, drarei. fa~ BOmc tender loving care. 3 Uy rm w/lrplc. Pool Xl:x40, bedroom, 2 bath, large yard BEACH 911' .t....... and ready to 1acrifice 11 "'""'""l'· No. E. Cotta $'5 JIOJJ V Summer ii comi""· M $J0""" , -A terma available. ·• esa. ·-tenna. ,._, <=•:: o•"• Time to get into the '-<t.1.1 ...W-..."', 1wlng of thlnp. Formal R ~ e living room, muatve oy Mccardle, Realtor ~'iPl!:u~a::m.co:v:~: UIO Ne;;~vd., C.M.,,_,,,,. lfilil clOU!I bedmoma, wan of 'I"""'""'"'!'!!'!'~!"'•""' I..:~,...::=~~~~tdua to private 1parkl-I. rn, poot. "''""' to .. 11. $22,500 How About A ~·~t.& please Horse Ranch Great 3 bedroom eutslde Jo.. E in Colla. Mesa on Mi acre or canon on quiet tree-lined L1"v1"ng asy' Sharp. clean. MOYe In COl'I· land ioned for hones, cul-de-sac. Government re-• dldon. Natural brtdl fire-charming 2 bedroom home SWltit POOL posseuk>n Is open lo a I I TRY place bullt.IM, 32 tt. pool that'• bPen very well laken bllytrs. Take a minute and I.; decking. 5-0-1120. care of, clean nnd cute hld· 1eet.hls best buy for the bill'. $23,950 TARBELL 2955 Harbor den away for privacy.~ pin hunter. C&lJ 545-8424. Do you w&.nt to Jive REPOSSESSIONS er u.kin( $30,000. Won·t prlcta give you 2nd Sparll.llns clean bomt•, .om• e near the beach r Bet the last. 1i-IJl1i lfiJil ~ar!,!uss:eui:i.11 ~~ ~~~~-~!'!t~ * ISLAND * u a bup eaT. sg::ctous pools. nlA-VA conv. terms, * PARADISE * Under Conitructlon ~t':nuroo~ ~~:~~ from PG.000 to $«1,000. 2678 Harbor, C.M. rr".._'13 BR. house A l·BR. apt. To bt completed this ium· cheery kitchen. Ye•r Colina A Wattl Inc. SPECTACULAR Sundect. '~~~from beach,. mer. 5 bedrm, 5 ha. home :=4 olr.o;.on~n1f..~ ~Adams Aw. 962--5523 BEACH HOME Pyramid Exchan11or1 In the cn.nd manner. ~tag4 Hurry dial 645-()..103. INCOME UNITS A-Fra.me. atep1 :o ocean 3 '~ •slO • nifktont Bliek Bnu v1ew! ( ) 2 Bil .,61 BR. 2 Im Only $33,900 ·~ -5 wul.I, '°"' money CAYW00° D REALTY. ROY J. WARD Rl TR. E\11'.n!ngs Call S4S-l265 • TRIPLEX, Cotta MtP, , 103l Mariners Do\'tr Shore• meJr~r. Nice atta In C.O.ta 6306 W, Coa11t Jfwy .• NB GE.I THE FACTS ABO\fl' V.A. No do.,,·n or fll>. &fls-1~ ' ~n DallJ' Mtla. $63,!IOO. 548-1290 v A n E p 0 .s s ESSIONS. TERMS The f&SIHI draw In thre West Vlnco RealtY NO mattu what u kS. )'OU AUTI-IORJZED BROKER.1FO"""R"'11N"'""_co_. ~~.::";::,__~ • ' • O.lly Pilot Oaut(ied -----can atU It with a DAILY 8f6--41l.1 We'll help you sell! 64a.s71 '-'A:.:d:..., .:.6':::2"-.::"'::11.:.____ ·---'•''•'•"°•'•' C•°'-"•M•"'--., .. ~-.:.;:_--H=•=rbo='=·.:™::::__::_&16<J033::.:::: PILOT WANT ADI 6CU6TI Call: 673-3663 642-2253 EveJ. associated fl,ROKERS~REAL TORS l02S W Bolboo 67l-l66J BEST TWO- BAYCREST BUYS e 4 BR. din nn & lg lam rm, 93' wide lot • beaut. main- tained $68,500, e 4 BR, din rm & kit w/ brkfst area, 2% Ba. 156.000. Pete Barrett n1lty 642-5200 .. • • * • BA YCREST LOT Best street • l&r;:e loL Not LeMthold • hurl')'! Arnold & Freud 388 E. 171h St., C.M. 646-7755 .. . . . .. COLLEGE PARK Gorgeous 111~. • DR, pool + detached, hup bonus room. $M,OOO. JEAN $MITH Rl TR, 400 E. l71h St., C.M. 646-3255 * MESA VERDE * Lavtly. lmmac. borne, lst OIJerlng. Beaut. grounds. Cov. pitlo. l BR. &: fam~ rm., 2 baths, S37.500 Georg• Wllllamt0n REALTOR 6TM350 643-1564 Eve1. ' SPANISH STYLE Red tile roof home with 3 queen • slU!d. bedrooms, sit- uated on a great corner. Truly Spani!lh decor, wtth new matching carpett &nd drape1. Gorreous fireplace, huge kitchen· and all priced at S25,950. Submit your terms. Call - Walker & Lee ll<>al/ol'o 2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams &ti-!M9f Open 'Ill 9 PM COLLEGE PARK AREA Shru-p 3 lg Br. home 2 Ba. It f&m rm. .the~ Carptl. SJ3.fD) 54&6780: 54$-5797. e MESA VERDE -Spacious 4 br, llv'g nn w/(rplc, tam rm, all elec kitchen, crptl, drpl, 2 p1tm. 154,500. 551.nt2. HOW'S THE nME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 i llKE TO THE BEACH Larre family room 4 bedroom, 2 bath • beautiful "yard $39,'l!>t) • • MEREDITH GARDENS GALLERIA Model -4 bedroom family room, dining room 144.51JO • * * • • Phone 142-1535 :0 THE REAL ""'\.. ESTATER~ $35,90D ~ Ml. from Betch. ~ lliDr1" 3 br, 2~ ba. hUge famJbt rm w/trplc. On Ire corner lot wltep boat storqe )'d. Mo 1umabie 5'49' VA kit.n. Dick Moliahn -(114) 511.Jm I I • I I \ I I I , I 4 Bl+ HUGE FAMILY RM. 2 BATH · BEACH $22,900 fanlaslic terma loo! Low down ii all you need. Mod· em thro~UI. Flocked decor "'all~. Rieb \\"ood panelling. OPEN BEAM CEILINGS. Huge bedrooms. Enll!~ Ing Jam. room. Eltt. built· ins. Dish\\·uher. Ma.aiw CO\'e~ patio. TO\\?ril\I trets. \\"ell k~t area clo5e -.-... -.. .......... _ .. ...... . ... .......... . ,. . ., ' ; ,, ... Irvine DRAMATIC ••• • , .and luxuriouJ? A.lade Jot entertalnlna yout mo11t dls- crimlnattna: friends A: u- sociate11. Formal din. rm .. frplc. &; M l bar In Jgt, larnily rm. I: anal.her frplc. in the mi.:tr. bdrm, a:uile, ~ Sq, ft.; 3 bdrm:s., 2~ batM. Top location. Oni.Y $36.000. Vacant -immed. oc'Ct;~ney avail. i)red hill REALTY Univ Park Center, Irvine Call Anytim< 8J3.-08lO N•w~ Buch to beach. Just ll.st@d -Won't !!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' last. Call CTit) 962-5585 L•gune Beed'I IORlST E Ol'O\ ' ~t AL ~Q'l• 191n Brookhunt Ave. }luntincton Beach ONLY THE GREATEST A truly mngnUicent home in downt0\1'n Huntington Bea.rh. 1.Argf' mas1er bed· room p}U!!. 3 children's bed· rooms, iarnily room. formal dining. Built in EJ,d. Kit. with brukfast &l'f'a. Near schools A park • 0\1'eI'5ize :! car garage. cowmi boat storage -enclosed pa.ti& • all this ch.arm for only $48.500. \-Q THEREAL -~ESTATERS " . . . SLEEPING BEAUTY Luxurious 3 bedroom 3 ba1b l\feadow home in finest neighborhood. Formally mo- del home with heavy 11bake root, upgraded carpets and drapes, cathedral ceiling, electric kitchen, walnut cab- inets, landsca.plng deluxe \\'1th extra large lot, and much much mott, Similiar home in area appra.ised for $37,000. Tu·o years old. For that particular couple. dlage Re al EstJ\e l' 'U-4471 ( ::::. J 546-llOJ Pool Side P•r•dis• Surroonds this 15xl0' pool, Ioli oJ d«:klng. 4 BR, 2 ba home w/hrdY.i::I noon, crpU, drps & bltns. Nttds the care only you can eh·e 11. 1'Ull price $71',9'50. AU 1erms. Ca11 847-1m. SEYMOUR REAL TY 1Il41 Beach m\'d., Htgn Bch Open 'til 9 P~I $21,750 4 BR+ 2 BA CLOSE TO OCEAN 1500 Sq fl home, huge cul-dt'- sa.c lot. Crpta/dfPi, fom1al din., eiM bltn1, nicely land· scpd, lrg covertd patio. $Zl,750. SUbmll. Call 8~7-12'11 SEYMOUR REAL TY 1nu Beach Blvd., Ht~n Bch Open 'lit 9 P~f VACANT 4 BR+ FAM. RM SAVE $1000 Like new cond. \Valk to sc!lls. Used brick frplc. crpts/ drps, bltns, pictUn! pretty yard w/cov. patio. Priced bl" low appralaal at $33. 7j(I-. All terms. Cai 847-1221. SEYMOUR REAL TY 17141 Beach Blvd., 1-ltgn Bch Open 'ti\ 9 PM Lovely 2 Br /2 B•. Condo L•gun• Beech Home IDEAL for year fOlll"ld com. fort It. grac'°'1s ttlax@d Jiy. in&. All exterior maintain- ance attended. Te n n i s courts, only 100 .steps to pri- vate beach, also overlooks &!amorous heated pool. All elec ki1, incl: ttfrig, range, dishwasher A diaposal Com· pleteJy carpeted wall to \\'all thrllout. Lower level laun- dry hu w&hr/dryer, st-or· age room i. double carport. ThiA ii a corner unit in beaut lnd!scpe, patroled area. Close t , market &: MARINERS WESI'CLIFF ahP'n&· Furn or unfurn. Also 4 br. 3 ba. 5%% loan. avail 1Dt summer rental. $39,950. Owner 646-WllJ Priced under market for di· Newport Heights reel aale. Pl'lone: 837-0791. VETS LOW DOWN roucH o· SPAIN DelighUul 3 BR home in de· 3 Bedrooms, 2 _baths.&: fam-sirable Hel&llta Beautifully lly room WI.th hreplace. decorated, spi~ &: 8P4ll Large, superbly landscaped Lar tio undeck · corner k>t, Lush, enclosed &e pa • 1 • over entry court \\'itb fish pond, garage, lo1 has 91 trontaie. J'(ck waterfall & bird bath. $34,000. .Boat yard, 1 Blk. down cul CALL 0 ,4,·J41<1 d, ,ac 1o """"°'· ""'"" A~ Questions about YoUr eligl-7REALTY billty! Call us • Nc1r Newperl •••I Office .,.,/Ota,~ REAL ESTATE 1190 Gltnneyre St. 494-9473 st9-0316 * $46,500 * lmmac. 3 Br. homt, xlnt area. Lovely grounds. 2 Car p.rage. Fireplac.!. * $62.SOO * Fantastic Olde English home. \Voodsi CO\'t! artt. Xlnt grounds w/klts of stirubs. PLACE REALTY 494-9704 2969 S. Cout HY.'y, LB 3 units, vu, nr bcb &: shops, patios, very nice. $49,500, 10% dn, -61-49'la Lido Isle Lawson LIDO EXCLUSIVES ImmJr. 2 BR.' $47.500 l BR . on Jj ft lot. $63,500 3 BR -t lam. rm. 40' $69,9.)(l 3 BR -t fam. rm. 4.5' $72,::00 4 BR + din. nu. 75' $78,500 Hi income apts. $120,000 Luxury l BR, dining room, poolroom, view 1154,000 Li.do Nord Baytront Contemporary 4 BR. & mds. E."tlra l&rge lot. s:c..o.~ bowaRb loweon jSL weolCOlt 3416 Via Lido 67~562 BY OWNER: Newport Hg-ta area, 4 Bdrm + den !Dr sale $39,500, for lease-$360. 548-9510 Newport Shores CHARM Plus •... SPACIOUS 3 BR, 2 BATH, breakfast nook, open beam ceilings. Immaculate cond! ! 129.500. Owner. 646-5809 l BR, 3 ba, lge fenced 839-1078 Acre•g• for sale 150 10.-20-40-60 AC. Parcels & up. 3500 ft. altitude, 2> min. to Tall Pklel, nr Big Bear. Xlnt motor cycle acrxe or invstment. From i490 per ac. 10 to 12% dn. Bkr. 644-4670 10 AC. ovrlook'g Oar I Industries purposed 5000 ac. l\lojave River r e .sort community. Imme d n!sale/prolit potential. Bkr. 644-4670 INVEST~1ENT only-Z> acres, No. Calll. Nr river. Only $29 do"'"· $29/n10. 96S-0047 Business Property 154 Mobile Hom•/ Trailer Parks PRE-OPENING CELEBRATION 1st Month's Rent FREE Lots start at sratnw All double-wide space! Si n9 le & do.uble-wides Welcome 1971 Models on display Immediate Occup•ncy Adult.o; only Super Clubhouse 3 BR., tam rm. 3'h baths $600 45x88 Lot. $93,500 LEASE June 1st. 2828 E. & Recreation 1'~acllltles TOTAL CASH . Condo. like 4 BR. 4 ba. 00:<88 S14:!,ffill Coasl llwy Cdl\l artistic Clean Air & new shag crpta. thrUOut, S BR .. 5 baths. 50x!IO building whh adjoining 1 E L cust. drpg., ttfrig., W8sher/ • Bayfront. $149,IXXI parking-lot. Q\vncr (2L1l I asy iving dryer. Antique paneling, LIDO REALTY INC. 326--6019 In a Town With decorator paper. $.21.j()O. 3377 Via Lido 67l-7300 Commerci•I d ca11 847-830i: Eves. 968--4377, Property lSI a Leg en 968-11711 Vacant 32x~ lot $34.500 m:.,.ir.:fff;r,,n 2 BR. 1 ba. JOxss s-11.500 ACRE for eomm·1 stables 1 ft""DC""'O {:ti!:1il~"1;J j B:~~~~Ai.~::c~ths ~761~~2 :~s;n_;i, nrt Jiwa ·U -••....,... """" • 3377 Via Lido 673-7lXl Condominiums ~pBZ Attention GI buyers-for sale 160 \ Mobile Home E1t•t•i ~ZJO mo~• yoo ln. 2 br, :! ba Mission Viejo $21,500 I 32371 Alip•Z Street twnhse. Afl. 6:ln. TI4/ BY 0\YNER. t Bdrm, 3 Vacant, hnmacuialt', l bed-/Santa Ana Fwy. South to 535-3780; Bt"'1n 12 & l, Bath, Fam!~· room , rm, 2 bath "t.fonticeUo", Capistrano, off at Orte:::a 8'1:!-t43:!. Upgraded, TV &. lit(:reo Best buy in area. Super fin-H~'Y· to Del Ohispo, left to 2 STORY 3 br/21 ~ ba, fam "'irin~ throughOut, Air cond, ancing available 1'0ast pos-Ahpaz, left to m?'1elsl rm \\'/frplc, all elec kit, vle""" One of the nk-est San session . S•n (~~;) 4~).PJ;;;•no dln'it" rn1, C\Td p • 1 i o, l\liguels in ~lission Viejo LarWin Realty, Inc.. s.35.900. ~7-4633 J.16.000. S37-4T.iit 546-5411 anytime MEXICO 1~c.::;"=o="=-~~-1 ~~~=-'-'~~~ TOWNHOUSE Mar Beach & Newport Beach 2 BR, 1 h BA Del wee Gren•d• Cov• Shopping Center: 4 br/2t1 ---------1 Condon1.inlun1 Jn ad u I I The only OCEANFRONT ba, Prictd helow market. EASTBLUFF BUYI oon1mun!I). Pat.lo, pool, etc. trailer sp&Cf'!I in By Owner: 5.li-4924 PPrt. 3 BR. farnily hOml?. BY O\\'NER. 549-067·1 ENSENADA :! STY 3 br/241 bsl, l11.n1 ""-2~1 Baths. ExN'ulivl" Lui;k Duplexes/Unils 1 31() -$9(1 per month frplc, elet' klt, din'1t rm, b!I. Thi> ~lo\v froir. 2 hugf' nle 1'1 j includes all faclllties. patio, "5.900. 847-4633 rrplc.s., in both \iv. ' larnily 673-1708 for info. rn1s., ~11ec~ the la3te!ul SAN Clemt"ole, under I=,_..,.=:;_::::::..:::.::::.::.._ 4 BR, 3 b4 Condo \\'/blln.~. d,.oor thruout. Homrmaker'1 con~tructlon, 2 Rrljoining: R•al Estate ~S~J~~°:;rfleld Dr, 1111 ~!~. kiich .. hrirh1 brk· 4-plexe11, cl11 10 bch Gr: mkts. l ~E".'x.,c'ChC:-•_•;;9• ____ 1_12 I.st. a~a \v/sJid1ng glass P\•t pallOll, fire, burg., Huntington Harbour d00r11 to patio l dclighUul, Intercom .. var s y 1 I em~. HAYE WATERFRONT 3 BR. 2 ba w/prden aundcdt A boat d ock. • SSl,000 or ltf,R/oplkln. g' 4 -4 1 3 2 • - low ma1n1. garden -t sprlnk· Frplc'1, elec a:a1e~ & gar NE\V Oflice Buildlfli: lers. O'sized dbl. garage. door1. By bldr. 10% dn, \V/$100 K MJUity, 'l'errlfic 'chool.s, lhops near-lll6.500. 642.-3490 ~ hrs. S27K Ntl lrlCOme .,._ oru, i.;o.oco. ouPLEX·NO owN WANr Hope Gerrie Re•lty to Vt"ts or assumt 5~ % loan. 6454400 64:i-3m W/w cr,>l, F/ A htat, PitlM, BAYFRONT houi&c or Lot * VIEW DUPLEX * Bltns, Only SJl.;.oo, Bmk· \\'.R. DuBois: S-O-TI66 HOW'S THE \\'t£t Bay Ave. Nr, public ,.r 646-8226. I TIME FOR beach. 2 '" 2 dn. m.ooo lncom• Pr-rty 1_66_ l I~ "" *TWO FOR ONE* -,-..,...., tjlUICK C.uH 2 llom" on""' Jut ln West PRIVATE PARTY I ~;;;;;;;;~~~ l THROUGH A Newport, 149,500 I have frtt' Ir cltAr propert)' /I IURlt WHITE "'1'°"" lnc<>m• In C.M. v". Bu•in•u DAILY PILOT "' SN.00<). For W< '"""" I RE.\LTOR 67>-1630 I ivould llkl' to lrade In on Opportunity WANT AD 2901 Nt11.'fl'Ort Blvd., N.B. 11pp1"Q11. $200,000 prime units \VRECKJNG )tt1td, >1lnt ~ 642·5671 TN "Ydlow Pagts" of I or commercla.I properly. tion. ~asonable. Wiii 1ell --------clw:ltitd ••. Mi-E611 •...:C.:;;1::..1.:.5'!-;:.:5ln=-----all or part. Call 61l-TI83 200 -. . . .. ·-........ - •• --. Apts. Furn. (ired hill REALTY 350 lltl 360 TIME FOR Business W•nted 210 QUICK CASH Business 0 Business 200 0 rt 'ty .:.i·' GET SMART ' ~ BEAUTrFUL "'aterlmt 20I 3 BR. 2 ba \\'/SUndttk ,. dock, lo5e or option. 644- 4132, 6#-4221 Join a \vinner! U.1.1. has an outstandin g and proven business opportunity for you! Thousands of vendi ng machines now in opera- tion and 6,000 dedicated distributors testi{y that U. l. I. must be right. The totally new de· sign concept, pricing and manufacturing of vending machines along with U.t.l.'s experi- ence tn the establishment of new routes can spell success for yo u. U.I.J.'s to tal program is founded Jn honorable d••llng ... putting you in business with a very low investment (as little as $700) and helping keep you in a bu siness "\\'here you can make money ~·ith a successful and com~letely modern program. None other of its kmd exists! Time, Lile. U.S. News and World Report, Vend hfagazine, National Television. The Congressional Record and newspaper mes- sages herald the merits of U.l.l.'s dynamic vending machine program. The business community, leading banks and business lead· ers are vitally aware of U.1 .1.'s progress, sta· bUlly and integrity. Many choice locations are sti.11 available IF YOU QUALlf'Y. WRITE TODAY! Include phone number and references. 1Jssery Industries, Inc. • l 195 Empire Cr."- lral • Dallas. Texas 75247 • Dept •48820 Why store It in the attic when you can turn It Into money through a DAILY Pllm Want AA. S©llJUlJ.-"t-trs· The Puzr/e with the Builf./n Chuckle & ~~~~m~~~~[~£TTERfi I' r 11 r r I' I' I €) UNSC.,AM6LE lETTERS 10 I Gff ANSWER I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICAflON 900 I I 't ., DAILY PILOT I ~'"-~"'-· [tJ [ -"'-lftJ l ---····~ ]~, ............... J~ I-·"'-]{t] [ _ ... _ ,~ ~[ -·-_____,!~ ~[ ;; ... iii;; .... ~]~~ [ ....... _ Apia. l'um. 3'0 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Uftfu•n. :165 Apt. Uftfum. :165 Apt. Unfurn. :165 Aplt., Rooms 400 Industrial Rental 450, Favnd (frM .da) l·,-.. -,-,-Mt--,.-----Balboa Penln1ul1 Cotta M111 Cost1 Meu Newport Beach Furn. or Unfum. 370 WEEKLY·Monthl.y: SI\ a rel--==..,..,.,.,,.,.,_,_ LIGHT brown do;. 15 .. hlab Costa M••• twtn or 111nt qi nn. * COSTA MESA * W/IOJM black hair 0,, b.ck. LARGE 1 Br. cen-"v 2 •• •• l BR 2 •• ~. ,_ PARK -·~RT • --employed mait1. 64)..4185 S95 l-Slfl Per ruo., lmmed loea u.,..,, JUiJ' bullll J Br, iHi, uen, , .,., -·a--• _...,., •~.ion~ _... ------.,.---evea 6 wktndl occupancy lJ.G..D) power Hu dear <: o I 0 rt d Rta ted, Pool, C • rp or t. sundeck, bltna, erpta, drp.1, BlW, Nr ltM>pl A: 1Chool1. fl'ff llv1 ovtrlk,r the water. Allit.AZJNG Adult L I v In 1 ·l;;;-=,,-,~=,_.=-.c.--: ' ' collar . .Found Vic. Vallt)' 6: HAdl~1•1,no ",~ •. ,= 65600 w. Oeeantront w / ~ view, * Spanish Ef•ance io10 "D" El C&mlno, CM . 1 PDOU. 1 ienru. chi $750,ooo Beaut i & 2 na turn ot unt CL01 SE.,. to-~· turn1,, 1uw. 1 "R.i;;N;;i•;;tttt;=;::"~·;;";;-;;1.;;;-.:"2~-1;i..,~ 1,~v~1c~1«1a!,!.~C.~M!:_. ~-:!::"""~'.---! am on. • 41 or Adulti only, na pet 1. , ""6 Opm Sat A Sun, 12.:i, n~ Bacfl. 1 or 2 Br . ..tllO 2 at)' Apts. Self cltan. ovens, '111 Ufu). mo · f Rent1l1 Wanted 460 S<><J760 675-00!4 • 64,__ MED alia ...... I bill lo .. $500/mo leue, Sett The Mood For D11na Point Townhouse11. Elec. kit., pr. D/W (in 2 Bl'I dl&plt, fhaa1~~=~~~~~~ 1 ---------~ hatred and 1 wht •Ith br 6: Cl.ITE, CLEAN w/crpt l LARGE Spaclowl 1 Br: • pat or bal subtrn park& opt cpta, drp&, jacuDl A: sauna 2 BL.KS trorn H.B. pier, ideal l.OCAl. uee. rlftdl 2 or 3 br. blk patchet. Foum vtc BR. $125/mo. incl, ulll. itove, refrla, crptJdrps. Quiet Adult Livi-2 BR, l* bl, Fenced maid .ser, cpt.s, dfl)I, Just batha. Hup pool. tor student. tum, Incl util. house with 2 bathe ln Meu. Verde travel Inc Adu!". May be seen at 5.12 Year round ollly. $190/mc. ha cpt • drps • 'bT'tn1 landacaped ya.rd, I~. N, ot F"uhion lat at Jam· Merrlm1c Woods $65/mo. 1 adult. 642-&s:I) NeWpQl"t or Corona dd Mar Center St. Mil' Apt E. a>S* Grand Cane.I; 67'3-mO Beau·Ului Pool c r Pt 'I• d r P• • b 11 n-s boree & San Joa.quln HUI• 425 Merrimac Way, C.M. $15 PEll wk up w/ kit. ~ area. No children, yearly toaether. Ms-35315 540-0023. e 2 BDRM. Yearly. Like 2 Br. $170 ind all ulil dlshwasheT & 8' a r b 11.1 e Rd , 6t4-1900 for leul~-lnfo. Ril'iG BROS, Almooncea week up. aptl. leut, turn t •he d or FEMALE Gtl"ITW' Shepherd SPECIAL Low Rates front rte\,, Mature adults. 419~ Adulll only-no pets. ~~~· :~n:~:~ :~~ S£ACLIFF Manor ApU. 2 Apts. Now Ava.llable MOTEL. * 541-9755 unfurnlahed. Wlll move In al ~:~~c.k a:: b~:r fH~ !:5rv""~~t.Phav~~ E. Bay. c.ll liTS-41?2 aft 241AvocadoSt. M6--09'T9 lat. Call 494-2328. E . H. Br,cpta,tirps,bllla,pool, MEDITERRANEAN JUN~ lize ~. prefitr =~J~.:..~54&-TISS medal . Me1a North · · 6 pm, wknds l ""'iFni~i'iii~jij!F"'""l,~-~~n'=~=----...,--., priv patio. studio type, 1% VILLAGE empo~ man. nr lTtb It '"="'"'=c'-,,...,.''+~'-','' --,..., Shopp\n ... Cntr. $49-.4ll3 r:~~52301 Npt Blvd, CM. ~,~e'°'R'°-,'"frp~l"', 7b~.,-oo-.,.-.~31~5~E~.1 ORLEANS APJS. SPECTACULAR oceanfront Ba. Infant c&. 548-2682 1525 ?400 Harbor BJvd. Irvine, CM. 646-1711 AIRLLNE pUof ftrnlly ol c 1 BLA,::;:.:;,CK:::,::·;:...;~.,.=t::. "-..:.;;:...:;,.,.:;:...,.-.-1 Bay. Winter rate, $175/mo. 1 2 Bft 2 BA Crpl Placentia. Ask about our Colla Mesa COLLEGE or worklns Pi, need holllt to leue far 2 yn 3 ROOM SSOlmo for penon Yearly ;225/mo, lnq. No. C. ADULTS ONLY ~!~: atove '1t mnl:. =: '"d'"i,.,,_u_n_t·,...,.,...,"""'---C1l4) SS'T-!020 Balboa Isl, .nr kit A TV nn, sl&l'llna: June lit. With or ":!~. w0b•ll•e _!~.,'·. Vwl<hl.~ .... •n of BeMy'1 39. 20S1 61l-15ll or ~1'171 ... r tele $65/mo up 67$-.WU. without option to buy. 1:.1JC:11., \.~ "' Westminster, CM. Inq 240 .;c.:..::=..::..:::-".:.::.... __ 2 A 3 BR. Av.U. Prtvate pa. ,_mo_. _83_7_-.13111 ______ ,Newport Heights BACHELORS • 1 il 2 BR'•; · · Rt:llable ~ extremely clean. Verde on Samar Dr. Slerkl, CM Corona del Mer tKi, pool -lndiv. laundry fac. E•tt Bluff !;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ru.rn. or unturn. S105 up. NICE room for workin&'. man CdM or Nwpt Bdt. Call, ,,;S5c,7 7 -8389=:.....-=----QUIET'~2'"°"BR~~,-.,~1,-x-. ~b-11-no, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CNr. Orange Co. Airport; T'U5-;,;,;;.;....;_;...._____ Pool. Laundry rm. Adultl, w/ <ll' w/o cook's privil. 61~ • ·rouND 4/15m • _,,, tin at 17th SI; nr. Wu:tclill). MARINER SQUARE no pets. 891 O!nter St. Apt E-aJde, CM.~ •-rar. patio, E4lde. Middle . NEWPORT BEACH APARTMENTS 2. GG-n81 Gua1t Home 415 GO IN G AWAY FOR quilted brocade mla back age couple, no pitll. 360 16th -Apt 2iiRii25;;;;i;;;;;'."rui5fiiri~lo~~,;.;;;.;.:::...._"'"".,...:;:, s UM MER! Rt1pol\l.lb!P., oahion on Callforn.l.a St, Pl. Si~ CH" 6U-l298 Q. CttJ ~. J.r!!~M~~= :.~ r~1:!::~~th ~~-~~~'n ~-~~!~~~ul~ 2 F~ ~i;~!~e :rc T~ G..Urmore guellul home, sii\ile 1eacher will care for 1 ~c_.M_. _><,_,H....;.398'...----- AVAIL Now-2 Br, 1~ ba, ~ !es above .t: !telow. Gracioul desiring to live amldat be1u-SUR -AP'I'S 2 o 4 3-2 o 4 9 P• iv ate rm •v• • f 0 r hOuae " pets. 67a-30&5c or Em'broldtired, llMlU ~ ~e:p~~~·::is::i~l!d. ON TEN ACRES ---*-l!30--UP-,,-*---I Uvine &. qWet 8111'l'OUndinl ty by the sea ill the pre.. Wallaoe St. 'Phone 543-4301 ~~a]tory iuest &42-9862, Sf0.-3828 w/reWner. Cf.16 ~ lit, 1 I 2 BR. Funl. & Untum. GIANT l &: 2 BEDROOM! lor family 'With ehlld1"n. tia;kru1 Westclltt area ol. 1250 sq tt Ii 2 Br, 1~ Bl, S R I Otureh "pll'kinJ'. lot. 8l5-0ll50 BEAUTIFULL.Y FURN. Fireplaces / priv. patios. Gorgeous, park-like M!Wn&. Near Corona del Mar High Newport Beacll. uU nn for wh/dr, palJo, ummer enta I 420 Penonali 11-1 FOUND an enpgtmtnt ring 2 Br. Htd pool. Adults, no Poo1t TeMt. Contnt'I Bkfst. Closed garages tor max· ~. Fireplace, wet bat Ir FROM $230 pr, cpt/dp. $165. 546-3688 2 BR1 2 BA CONDO In HB ateL Call &: iditntitY. :;'tt;;;, ok), 2272 Maple 900 Sea Lant, CdM 6"-2611 imwn .security. Quiet atttet. built.in kitchen appliances. For Information phone Mr, Huntl'"'ton Beach ON TifE BEACH, ] iwlm· ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ 545-315'.2 (MacArthur .... Cout H11ro) Adults no pets. 2020 835 AMIGOS WAY fi44 .2991 Robert M. Buckley, Ma.nag-,;;;;;;;;;;;;"";;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;j I l I $135 • LOVELY 1 Br turn. -"J Fulle.rfun Ave {Harbor 10 Coldwell, Banku & Co. er, at {TI4) 545.0252 or vtTite ming p:iols, leMis courts, Peraonalt 530 OI Near stores. Quiet adultl. Bay, thee So. until 2 blk.s Managing Aeent 5'1~ to The otfiee or ~Ma.Ji. ON BEACH.' private beach, completely :----------1 1985" Pomona Ave, CM. * COROL I DO APTS * I XE Marl c:o,.,, A ts turnished, avail now thru LONG-haired lttY c a t 54S-0728 2 Br. stud~1 lt il.reet level$, So. or Newport B vd.) e NEW DELU • ager, ner ..,. .. are P ' Sept. Mln rental (2 weeka). * F'ULLY LICENSED* w I llita collar, "Smokey" $1SS & up. D11hwhr. ftp!, dbl G42-8690 a BR, 2 BA Apt for leue. Inc:! lU4 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal. 2 BR Un1urn · ·•• From $265 Reta required. C&i1 10 am· Renowned Hindu Spiritualist Joal \lie Humboldt laland, DELUXE 1 BR " Bach Apta:. carport. LAR GE Pool. Park·Llka Surroundint spae. muter aulte, dbl rm 926&1. FUm 2 BR Apt Avail. l pm. 499-2152. Advice on all matters. Hta Harbour. Rew• rd' $35 wkly & up. Furn. incl 673-3311 QUIET. DELUXE Ir: dbl a:arage, auto door I"""""""'"'""'""'"!!!!"'""' I Furniture Available Low, M~, Business M6-4l9l or~ utll. Mo. ntes terms avl. 1_2 &: 3 BR APTS opener avail. Pool & Rec, $160 - 2 BR, 2 Ba, triplex. Carpet.s.dl'l.pel-dllhwuber Rentals to Share .UO ~adinp given 7 days a IRISH Stt~r. male. Lut 998 E. Camino. Sf6..-0451 FOi R lease, de~_: all2 BelR"I· AJso Furn. Bachelor area. Newlybl~ecor. .i:-ivd patio, heated pooJ.1aunu-tennll I N D E p E N D E N T w312eek, 10 a.m. to 10 alp.m. ..,n 4115 at u •--Jon VI .. "' SPAC well turn 2 Br 1pt ge, new w/a v"'w • p t.lo.s * Htd Pool • $265 • ear, ns, cp"', r P 5 ' rec room-ocean v:lew1 RE s p o N s J BL E N. D Camino Rt: • ,..._ _. Prlv~rv. adlts, no .. u. 763 BA apt. All bit-ins Incl N rv.~. Adu! 1 865 Ami-W•v, NB 61>3108 pa"-·ampi-.. a..i.in.,. youne San Clemente HI Sehl. No ID. Reward! -3 dlsh11t•.sflr, dbl. pr. N.:llts r ... "'l' r * ts only •w" ..., UVO" "II -.... ._ '"roman will abate apacioul 6'-9l36, -49'J..-OO'i& B3l-l268, 830-l62J &ott Pl. 64&-'323 MARTINIQUE APTS. Managod by San Clomonl• Se<urlty ..-. Lacuna •P' w/ Ame. --~~=~--1---'------1 QlJIET altrac 1tudJol $115. only. 673-6992 i~"'=IU.!AM~-W~AL-T~E~RS~CO-. ·I BR.AND NEW Jux. 2 Br, HUNTINGTON 497-1228 art 1 PM & wJcnd1. MEXICO MAU: Irl1h Setter 4/9 Newpt 1 Br. $12.5. Adl!t, no pets. 2~~ 1 b~ta,;, .trp~~ag nf~ ~ .:;:i~ Ana Av~~ 2 BR-1~~ BA. Fireplace. 2 Ba, 1100 sq. n. Quiel PACIFIC FEMALE roommate wanted Granada Cove c""M· Tatoo-right ear &tU233 21~ Elden, J.tgr Apt 6. ....,~, ' · · pe.tio, pool. Adu Its. cul-Oe.sac. Panoramic view ID sh.are apt w/aaroe. Parle: The only OCEANFRONT .,,;:.·'-='"·~------' Btwn 10-S, 6J0.2062; alt S, I ·•· t ncy s-• Ad"' oJ .. _ .,. ~ .... , AVE H B N A 2 BR 2 B traile .. .,..,.ce, In LDBT Do~---·• ~-* U5 per week up 2l3: 596-ln9 mmC\,11ae occupa ... ..., or ocean, wt& o y ......... 1.u .........c..1•.n ., • • itwport pt.I. , A. • -...-~ ...... .....,e, ~ wlldtcl:tens, $25 per Wffk .="-'::..:;;;::____ * BRAND NEW * mo. 644-1162, 834-3405 worlt. 492-2259. (TI4) 5.36·1"87 JI.Ion Thru Frt between 9 I. ENSENADA on (1) ear. Vic: Npt. Btach. up Apts. MOTEL, 548-9755 $160 • 1 BR gara&e apt. TO\VNHOUSE deb:e 2 Br, •e~RAN--0--,,.-w~,-8-,-,-m-.· I Ole open 10 4m.S pm Dally 5, 644-5282, eve 6f4...0081 $40 • m per month Reward! 494-0232, .~ NEWLY Deoor. 2 BR. 1613 ~·2~~~~~.&~~: LA COSTA API'S, l & 2 BR. 21,.ii Ba, bllns, trpl, patio, Ave n Id a Ro 11 . For W1LUAM WALTERS 00. MALE 30-40 yrs will ahl.re lnclude'a a.II tacllltiet 3 MO German Shep, tt brwn Santa Ana Avit. $145/mo. Bltn..s, swimmin& pool &: gar• enc gar. Quiet. ~ information see at. Addle w/1ame 2 BR home 4 blka ==-trl"!~-l~l08~lo,"c,...1"_1o~·~,-I w/blk muk. Vk: Baker • ~n or 646-4no. &n.8S36 aa;e. All util pd. $150 to f170 Belle Hunt Realty, S.C. 2 &-3 8~· $151l up. Patio. from beach S. Laguna . Swi YCXiA CLASSES S~ Mllbrv, CM, l'tnttOUI rwd. hR.G 3 Br, 2 Ba, view. Best mo. Adults, no per.,. Garden Grove Pool. Children. MORA KAI deck• and patio c99-4307 Now! Frtt 1>emon1tratlon 646--).)98 STUNNING 11 1 Br Garden loc; Ocean Blvd. $325/mo. 354 Avocado, CM. 642-9708 I/MO. RENT BONUS Sant• Ana Apt.a, 18881 Mora Kai 1.11. l/i · Tues. April 20 at lDAM &l..::,::.::::_ ______ I apt. Small dog ok. $155. 1 673-6904 NEW * blk E. or Beach at Gutl~d. Office Ranta) 4iO SPM. Clanes start April n . LOST amall black & white m..1. tree.~ 3 BR, 21A BA Deluxe apt. So. 2 BR, llA BA. 2 story. Cpts, Come ;! UI . Best for leu CAN'T BE BEAT 714 : 962-8994 YOl6 Center, 445 E. 17th St, Bolton Tmier (bulldosl. I BR. furn. $125/mo. No or Hwy. See Mgr. 322-B drplJ, all blt·i~. Firep.lace. ALL 2 BATH t'1JftN or unturn. Jee 2 br, 2 Prestige Office c .M. 64&-8281. Gisler lnt•rmedia.te Scboal, chlldren. Marguerite or ph, 613-7127. Pool. Recrea.uon room . 1 BDRM & 2 BDRM SINGLE STORY ba, pvt Jenced patio, •haz "ON THE BAY'' SINGLE? WIDOWED? 1-H-·.o"~· -""".:_.ard='-' -"9'8---'.-UlS"-'--* Oill 64S.l.M!l * Laundry room. Enclosed crpt. 1 block to 5-Points At Lido Ya.cht Anchor.,e MALE Slameae, SUverpoint, Dana Point PARTLY rum apb:, no pets. garage. $!90 1st & last plus $155-$175, furn $200 South Sea Atmosphere siores. 7731 Ellis. $lli5. 3 Room Suite * Divorced Over 21 * "SUn." loit vie Iowa It, Lrg &chelor $125 util. pd. l seeurlty de po s It , No GAS &: WATER PAID 2 BR. • 2 BATH &T.3-3293 or 841--0932 Ground .dour-688 ,q 1t Oldest 4 l&ra:e1t. For a H.lf Me1a Vmk. 56-'1527 Bdrm Sl!iO util. pd. 6'JS..6137 dilldrl!n or pet11. Avail M•v All dl.x Items in & out Carpets; A-dtt>s explanatory meuap 24 hrs -Air Cnod!Honed Laguna Beach Alr cond, Cptt, Drp1 --------- Corte Men 1111. 549-0674 Recreation facilities. E-Z Parking, Util paid a day. 541-9991 SUPER VALUE EL CENTRICO APTS. ~~P~L SWEEPING Vll!W $410 per month Unwanted Pregnancy INtrucuon 11~) * * New lie l BR apt. $150/mo, yr lease, lat Ir: last + $:;:) deposit 496--445&, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 24622 Cordova Ave. SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok. $25 &: up wkly. Dan& Marina Inn, 34111 Cout Hwy. NEW NEW NEW HARBOR VILLAS 2 Blks N., G.G. Frwy otl Plenty ot lawn OCEAN AND HILLS Available May bt COUNSELING. Birth Control , ';;;;;-;;;;;~~! ImmacUiare l &. 2 Br St~ Broo::~ntra.J Ave. Carport & Storage Decorator fUml.IMd 1 bed-711 LIDO PARK DRNE VD, Vasectomy info. Plan-I Aptc. FR.OM $115. Patio • Game G (7141 SJO.~ HIDDEN Vll...l..AGE room &Pl, twin beds, new Newport Beach 673-1060 ned Parenthood, ~9679. J.ri Pool· Lndry r m. Bltns n rove GARDEN API'S. paint., carpet, drapes. Walk ALCOHOLICS Anonymoua. Schools I. Instructions VILLA CORDOVA 575 Huntington Beadl -Desirable Loca1ion. 2621 Huntington Beach 2500 South Salta to belch & town. Mature PRESTIGE OFFICE Phone 542-1211 or writ• to Harbor Blvd, CM. ~7.9049 * FRESH AIR Santa Ana u 546-15Zi adult1, $225 mo. 1 year Next to Real Ealate finn. P.O. Box 1223, O>sta Me1a. 1--1-------· I QUIET-SAFE or 546-9081 eves/Sun. leue. 494-3839 atl 4 pm, CarpelJ, drpg, util paid. D scovar • Great New (Near Ba.ck B.ay} SPAC 2 & 3 Br apts from Walk 3 blka to Beach! Newport Beach SIOO per mo. Excellent for ~-----~ CarMr With The La Quinta Hennosa 40 Unit Adult $l40. Htd pool. Play yd. Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w Apts., lnaurance, tax acc't, atthi· Lod .cl,_... lf?)l Sp&nlsh Country Estate Llv--Apartment Compl•Jt Cf1lts, drps, bltns, patio. crptlli, drps, bltns except Furn. or Unfurn. 370 VISTA DEL MESA tect. 1860 B. Newport Blvd. L:lJ AIRLINES illl' It Spaciou1 Apia:, Ter-1 & 2 BEDROOMS Newly decorated. Kids ok. reflig. $225. No pets. 536-1711 .,...--------Apartments C.~r. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 raced pool; sunken pa BBQ Entettalnl.ng will b9 • p1eu. 1998 Maple No. l 642-6344 3 Br fttlhiy painted • General l It 2 BR. Furn & unr. Dish-W. E. Lachenmyer I A 1111.tural for )'OUJ1I' paaplt Unbelievable Llvlna: • Only Utt. Decoratl.!¥ this k>ftly, Xl14 College No. 2 646-®7 cleaned. Air oond, frple, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= washn'. Stove and Refrla . 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. Found (frH ads) 550 who want excitement plul 1 Br unf $150-fum $180 spa~ apt w1ll be • ~· WILSON GARDEN APTS. bltns, nr shOp'g, tcOOols & PALM MESA APJS. Sha1 crpt'g·Lf'I' Ree: een!er. Call 6t6-3928 Ev~: 673 .. 577 WHITE male dol' with blue Ticket AgentT Afr Freifht? 2 Br unf $175 fum $210 • Speda1 c&.blnet •Pace 2 BR Unlurn. Newly dee. park. Kid1 ok, no pets. RENT St&rtl it~ eyei. Nr. Btookhunt & St.atlon •I e 11 t7 Reeena. S~ ~~C~UD:er. : ~e~~ eJip::s New cpll/drps. Sp a cl.:;83<).;c..1;.;;S<.;;8'------t BR unfut.i •••••••• $135.00 Tust*in !!,,~:!5a *Drive o: will~~~:U-t!it!:! Gut1eld, H.B. 646-6959 altn' dons! Ramp ar tn\ltl .. --groUndJI. Ad.i ll, oo peta:. I • 2 BDRM. del"-• a~. I BR •·-"49 ~ -~ ~ wkd,... aatntT We'll train )VU tor plated candle &nut!er U • DW/displ • HUge gu 1tve Sl40/ 2283 F I ..,. "-•w·n ........... ... .vv ~~-",-'----~~--! at $5 mo. Answertna 1ervice ~ci'::O:--.--::,.-,== yov.n U you brin& thi• ad • Special soundproolina mo. 0 u n 1 a n from $135, all e I e c · • Bac~lon .F'l.tml•hetf Santa An1 available. 222 Fott•l Ave, YNG. Female Pomeranian the9e and more, day or nfte. when you V\111 our modei·. •Deep 2 color sbq: Way E. (Harbor, turn W. di1hwasht!r, &'BJ'&&eS. 7881 from $135 ~~~;;::~:::?.;~~;/~t..acun~~a~S.~a~ch~.~·~"°'~94<6~~~ blutr<olo~. We lnclud• placement a. 4 blks S. ot San Diego Frwy carpet., dtapits on Wllion) Glencoe, H.B., call alter 5· 2 BR apta: '115 mo. •VILLA MARSEILLES DESK space available .$50 846.Q)J sl&t&nce. on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt GAS & WATER PAID HARBOR GREENS ,_>_IJ_/_9'1_-4"1_._, _~---mo.Imo. OK BRANO NEW mo. Will provide furniture FOUND Palr ot Shdties (ll Est 2.1 A for to l67U Parkside Lane. Mo. to Mo. From $140. GARDEN & S"I'UDIO API'S BEACHBLUFF Apt1 •POOL SPACIOUS at $5 mo . .Anl~rlng IUV'.i« pure blk (ll Blk-white & veienn.~=tudon 1714) 317.5441 2323 Elden Ave, CM Bnch. 1, 2. 3 BR's. from $ll0. New 3 B.r. 2 Ba, .dshwhr, e SAUNA 1 A 2 Bdrm. Apta. available. 305 No. EI brown vie. Flamtnao II under the tedera!Jy lnltnd See Mar, Ted Woodhead 2700 Petencm Way, CM. pool, pauo7• 823184Ell7 ;!;7 ·~ ~1,JAC~ZI Santa Ana Adult Llvlna c0 a m I no 4,.,.R.~!J, San Mallard Dr, CM. 546--0710 itudent loan prosnm. Lagun• Be•ch 646-0032 546-0370 842-341 or ·~ ......, ... " sa ..... ~. Furn. & Unfurn. emente. ,,__,. FOUND )"Ollng fem. C...UCo Downtown Apartment • 2 BR studio apt l'h ba. i>iettRl,-re;;;;fr:;i&;-,-bhll;;tn;;,,-;:,;;.,,;;..,~, I 'lc"oa"t"o"M~•"••"'"'"""'"'"""'"' JI>ilbwuher. color ooordtnat. DESK ipace available $M cat prepant, very tame. Alrllne Schools Pecfflc FAIRWAY End of c:uI«-s8c. Pvt drps. $135 mo incl ufil. ed ap-"·-a • pluah 1h&1 mo. WW provide ftlmltutt VI h HB 610 E. 17th, Santa•-· I BR -·· view I bl-k to 1 T d wind ~-t 15 A .... _,, c: W&l1)1tr le Beac , . · . """" • .,..._,, • "'" fenced patio. ~115, util Incl. Adults on y. ra e s carpet • choice of 2 color a mo. nswe •• ng "" .. ,ce 8<12-3908 541-6.Sff beach decorator furnished, 339 C&btillo. ~ or R!ty M1-85U; Eves ; * • * • achemes. 2 bath.I. stall available.17875BeachBlvd., new Carpets, drapes, pa.lnt. VILLA APJS. 84fr.3648 536-7661. El Puerto Me1a Aptt ahowers • mJrrored Ward· HunUngton Beach. 6C-432l --·------. ------ * :~~ ~~'f Pm.$100 mo. SPANISl l Nr Huntlntton Harbour * * * * ...00. dOf'U'l • lnd.ltect light-New Walerfront DUI«• * * * * * 2 & l BR's 2 BR. Garden Apt. LrJ & Triplex • quiet area. L.rg 1 1 Bedroom Apt1. tna In kitchen • breaklut $m to $435 Month [ ,.------------------...1 $100, furn small cozy pl.ace, Prlva~ paUo pool • indlv. clean. Closed dbl garage. Br . $140, 3 BR . $240, Pets bar • huge private fenced Above The I~lander nr beach. l ttaponslble laundry fac.' Quiet cul-de-sac. Adult.I. ok. cn4) 846.IJOll. $130 & up Incl. utllll!es. Also patlo • plush landscaping • 341 Bayalde Dr, N'pl Beach employed yng man. 494-f:lM> Near Orange Co. Airport I: 109A Clearbrook Ln. CM. 2 Br, clean k attractive, furr Pool & Recreation brick Bar-B-Q'•. Larae heat. BUI Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 BEAUT. ocean front 2 BR, 2 UCI. Adults only, nai • LRG 2 Br, P• pd'. bltns, air cone!, patio. Nr. area. Quiet Environment. ed pools: It lanai. SMALL front oUl«. near Trader's Paradise BA, opp. Victor Hugo's, 364 );)122 Santa Ana Ave. Lampli&;hter Apt.Ii, 3 60 Broadway shop'g ~nter. OU street..._;arkina:. No Chil~ 3101 So. Brl•tol St. Coast Hwy., N.B. $50/mo. CIUf In'. 494-6453 Mgr, Mr11. Joachim, Apt 3-A Vietorla. Adltlli over 35. Kids ok, no pets. 83()...1548 dren, no pets. (% M1. N. or So. Cout Pla.u) Ca.Ii 548..J2'l4 wkday aft 8:30 l BR, nr beach & &hops. 1 ~5 548-2407 ./ an:z ORO API'S Santa An• AM. working lady. Ret'a. $130 CORSICAN * REGENCY * 8234 Atlanta. l-2 BR. Pool. l958-~1aM:1~1:. Ave, PHONE: 557-1200 l~!6"10"'s7AN7=A,-;AN=A"'A"V"E'°.'"'CM"' Incl atil. 4s+-sm NEW 1-2-3 Bdrm. All bltns, 2 Br, 1 Ba, crptg/dri>s. self Prtvate G!ll'tt&e. Wuher. From 300 sq/ft. 35e 1q ft. Newport Beach shag crpt.s, drp(;, clo5t'd gar· clean gas oven, encl gar, pa. dryers. 536-8038, 536--2727 BAY MEADOW APTS. * 67>2464 or 541-5032 BACHELOR s 1ud 1 0 on ages, frplc in 3 Br. i,t mi. tios. 548·3605. 371 \V. Wiicon AVAIL May Jst. 2 Br. All 1~ 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB 11t'l.lerfl'nt w/Boat for 28' E. So. Coast Plaza. OU Sun-* A'ITR.ACTJVE l Br. extras. Pool. KK!s ok. Beam ceilir.g.s, paneling, prlv R•nllla ,,. * ON THE BAY * pwr boat. $200 mo on yrly llower at Ross. r.1gr. •I 421 Crpts, drps, bltns + ttfrlg. $159. 968-7510 or 841-4856 patios, recreaUon facilities. 67>-2464 or 541-6032 lit'. Util peid, no pell, W. Stevens. S4S.232'1 No pets. Jnq. 2868 LaSalle, e DELUXE 1 l 2 Br, walk AU Adults, no pets. • BEAUTIP'UL Pri vate g13--2662 2 BR. FROM $155 Apt 1. 549--3524 10 beach. Pool. Adlt.s . $130 * Bachelor Ap· * Roornt 400 OOlce on &Jboa bland, l ER yearly. Util pd. COMPLETELY REDE C' Quiet Adult Living up. 219 15th St. 536-0347 * 2 BR. from $165 * ---------1 $125/mo. 615--2335 Swap equity 10 or );) acre1 Garage Close to mrkl i-CLEAN & cozy FAMILY & 2 BR * 1 Bedroom * FURN room tn priv. home, DLX. 2 rm. ofUce. &M deal beaut, ucluded Rancho Cal- bch Adults, no pets . UN~i~Jo:..5A LOC~ON. N~:Y& =~6.~t:. drpa. N~1 .L_•..;g;,.u_n_•_B_•_•c_h ____ 1387 w. Bay St. {bl~ Harbor Costa Mesa; kltch. pr:lvil In o.c. Airport aree ilornl1, for 11oclr, old tr 675--2930 aft 12 noon n 9 W. Wilson 64&-12S1 pet.I. * 642-8042 COASl'LINE view. mod"m '1 It Newport Blvd. %. mt N. plus. Nr. OCC. 549-1061 133-3223 8..l3-2140 apts, bea~2-~~· etc. BEACH duplex. 1 BR, 4 hses 2 BR. unlurn deluxe townhse, BR, 2 BA, bltios, dee~. 1 of l9th SI). * NEWPORT BEACH Civic ,.,--"""'c::c:.::::::.._:-- lrom ocean, $135 mo ti! * $170 * pvt pat & gar, newly decor, block beach & shopping. CALL 646-0073 [ 119'1 Center on Npt Blvd. SlO ,q. Have 4-Plex • poo1 l rt'C June 15, util pd. 952-8983 3 Br. 1~ Ba, patio. bltns, adlta:, pet OK. $165 mo. 3009 Adults. $19.S. 494-3034 1 or 2 BR. furn er unt.. AplrtmentaforRlnt fl. 675--1001 or (l} 296-1'lft. room. Pride or Ownership ' ::.'":.:.:'·---~=--·I crptl, drps. Ask abouct our Coolidge. 540-7247 Newport Beach Cpt/drp, pool, nr lnbp1, uU ~;;;;;;·--~~~1 13fi0 S FT • Offl~ or atore. in Tustin. Want Free ~ •~ discount plan. 880 enter pd. 11184 Monrovia. M8-0'J36 Clear house. WATERFR.ONT: $195 11.. mo. St., CM. &1Ul4Q NE\~ 2 Br. trplc, beams. "A ·N;;Y,.y To Liva R.euonable. Colta Mesa. Call 673•3101 Art Lease. 1 Br.. boat 1lip, • MESA VERDE a-a • pa.t1<1, w/w, bltns. 1 adult. In Newport Beach Apts., Apt1., Mr. Pope 64S.-2820 l-c.c--==c:..:.,.=~:;,,= private patio. 6ls..M6l "' Yenrly $136 Avl 1'fay L Furn. or Unfum. 370 furn. or Unfum. 370 Have aolf course fairway deluxe 2 &. 3 Br. 2 Ba, • . . OAKWOOD GARDEN lutinett Rental ... Iott, Golden HU!.s C.C., Te-OELUXE newlv dtcorattd 2 fi4Z..35Xl NTS -;--;;--:-~;--::---7.'--:::-":-~;-::;-:----1 ;....;....;...._;....;.... __ ...;. I ' .,..... "" Ofc; 3095 Mace Ave, * 2 Br . Mesa Verde, new On 16th Street btwn house, older apts, diamond, B• _1,1 •• 'apt, tops in encl pr, Sl45 & up. Rental APARTME ;,H;";";';ln~g;to;n;;;;B.;;o;c;h;;;;;H;u;n;t;ln;g;l;°';.,..;8;t;t;c;h;;;;;IFOR Renl: 2 Storec Joe: Btw hachapi. Trd eq for bch. luxury. $2"5/mo. 6tJ..a74. S41J..l034. deG cor. nL1!. ~~1:1s,Ncabinets. Irvine and Dover Dr. ~:-~~~~r~p~ '"'o'-'-''.;.°'c,k.;.. -"'"""'""'-"'~-= Newport Heights 2 BR. unturn apt. Stove • ss~-Moo ~·""· 0 pel.!. (714) 641-1170 other for Beauty Shop. Ph Have $14,500 equity, SW. O.EAN l or 2 Br. Adlfl. no refri&: lncl'd. Gange. Pool. * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. * EXCEPTIONAL Bayside Relresblng 548-4613 or tnitpcct • t rnA k>an in beaut CoUeae pets. Lg ldt. $135-$150. 2421 all ulil pd. Adlts only, DO Contt'mporaty Garden Apts. Living-2 Br. 2 Ba . • • • Newport Blvd I Santa Pk home. Trade lor ll!t TD E.16thSt.NB.~1801 pet.. Mgr No. 9. 383 W. PatlO!, frpl c s. pool. Furniture avail.. Elev, • Isabel, CM or prop, Cowen Helghta Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 Wll10n SL $!~. Call Mf>.-516.1 sub-terni.nean prkin&. F't'Om Parklike beach llvlng for adults SUITES Available: 17612 area. 546-0002 eves. 2 BR, cpts, drpl, bllnl, LG 2 8' l\I Ba tud ' 1 $315. Beach Blvd, H.B. Parkins: ~U~P~t0-.,~,---'-w-/°'Goo~t~n.-,. G.n.r.I -~·. up•tn, lnlant ok, • s 10ap ,NEWPORTTOWERSSU.2202 G cJel Sol Ai• -nd· Hoatln t · ...... ,. .,,, t:•o .,.,.,,.. No pets, lamUle11 only. Prlv. QSQ ' .... · · mal potenUal in Imperial lnd!')' fie. $l ...... .no-••~· patio. 728 Joann St . Sl40 • LUXURIOUS 2 br condo Carpetlnr: Janitorial Ml'V. Valley for what have you of VEN DOME U.f~tACULATE° APTS! ADULT and FAMILY Section CloH to &hopping, Pa..ic • Spacious 3 BR'1, 2 ba • Swim pool, put/Jrefn * F'rpl, Indlv/lndry fac'la 1845 A11ahelm AvL t'OSTA MESA f4WS2.4 Ju1t for 51nt1• Adults SOUTH BAY CLUB ~1455. w/pool. Adultll 0 n1 y . 1nqUlre Sulle I or call equa.1 ,value. 2 BR upatain apt .,,1 $150 MO, unf. &tudio •.Pt • 2 Westcliff Villa. Sl75. ftebi. 9/10 of• m!I• from lh• b11ch 11 ~124 Mr. Kwan, C7ICJ M4-kl13 P1'1ie, stove 1 l't'frie-. Util br, l~ ba .• Limit 2.c:hildren, Leue. &75-0llO "Aacreallon Cfty" wffh 2 swl1T1Mlng I le SQ. FT. M-I rum, Adulll only, no pets, no pets. 995 Valencia, Apl 1 OCEANFRONT • 1 br apt. pool1, putting vr••n, gym, voltayb1ll 25llJ ft, all or put. Monrovia •' 011der beach ootHtaie1 ,• $140 mo. 169 w a I n u t, $140--2 br, crptg, 1 or 2 Crpts drps Util paid court, a1vn1, billl1rd room, club· at W. l6th. Cotta Meia, Call up ex on aame .B. ot 5"8-69St children ok. no pe111. Nr J71h 11001~ ., .. 1~. 6™J983 .,,· hou1e. One or two badroome, fur~ Jean Jurich. 642•9410 within "top...of-pM!r" ditvel· • Pl nil ·~1110 "" • J• J nl1hed end unfurnt1hed, prlv1t• op-·nt Want -To •1 1 BR. $125 ·2 BR. $1 .. "' ace a.~ ~ """ · ......... ·' -M paUo, flt•pt1c • In two bedroom, SHOWROOM, mfr. It olll~ or ! Art. 642·1000 Pool. Bllna, crpta:, drpg, no LOVELY 1 Br, 11.ture 2 BR, 1% ha, Ctl't, drps, •l•vator11 dt1hw11h•r•. c1rp•I• 1pace. Parlclnc. Cose.In La- chlldren, no pe11, 325-"i"" Adul\-N° ~I.I. ~11111·31:a bllnl. dl:shwulK'r. AdullJI i nd dr1p11, no l•a1e.•dult9 only,111 runa. $35-$395 Mn, '94-tMl ~ F'ORO 2 door Torlno. E. 11th Pl ., c.M. A. P aeenha Aw., 646-nr. Hoar Hosp. $165 mo. uUllll1• exc•pt l!ghra p1ld, p111 lnduttr lol Ronlol 450 v mllt11~. TAKE: Car, I BR d b I k •-1 "'/ 64"387 aoupttd. f'rom $1-45. Pick Up, Mobile Home or ENJOY pnvacy! Del~ 1 · U.8fl r c "I' c ... w, ...., Br, bltn.s, retrt1, epl/drp, hltna, beam tell. pa~. $135.'"o_E_t._U_XE--.,-w-ly_d_''°"--,..,-2 500 SQ. FT. BLDG. t? pr, blllc. 11&2.-!1180 1 Adlt. Yearty, 642-8.120 Dr pool.side apt, tops In 21M1 Btookhwlt S'-E.est 11th St., O.ta Meu. 2 BR., epl, pool, c:loff to 2 BR. Crpg. drpe:, bltns, gar, luxury $210/ITl<l. 642-Q74. Hamifl9ton •••ch, 220 Electrical Power •hOP'I. $135 .\ $1*1. 313 E. newly Mcor. Me!\8. Verde I BR. spil t lew\ • EuthluU, (Tl•) t12.eeu • $110 Month 675--6700 Broktr JTth Pl., CM. 5'8-6532. area. $140/mo. 1162--9Ml. xlnt b11.y view. A btrgaln ar Ask for INDUSTRIAt.. Bldg for lea1e LIKE To tndt• Our GARDEN APT. 2 Br. w/w SZ\5 per mo. Adlll. 644-4610 CMruM•r ....... , • 2500 5<I rt. Ca.I.I 64,5...4930: .. &f2..4610 * H1~: .. $3000 111 1'0'1 A 2 vacant 1011. total eq $20,000. WANT : Hie, duplex, trl· plitx, car motor bOme Ot' ? ! t Mrt!l'I 67J.675t. lines times dollars 'l'ro}an 23' Cabin Cn.tiar:r, In water N.B. Trade lot late modt'l 1!atlon w•&on. Wri~ Cla..llied ad •l'>. Oii.Uy Piiot, P.O. Box lffio C.Osta Mesa, Calif. 92626 3 BR-2 ba hm. Val na.!500 Bttha.ny Home Rd, Close 10 central Phoenix, Arli, Wiii trd eq for mobile hm or what have you! 545-1131. HA VE 2 Martin rod1 &. retla, WANT &cod Reftex camera. Alto trade new euiomalie: water aoftner tor .!ll!Tle. ~1480. 26' Steelera.ft-Ntw a/11 ra- dio, reblt enc just lnsla.IJ. ed. Ready lo ro. Trade tor eq In apt unlfa. 548-9390 aft 6, Bl1 Bear cabin, 5 BR. ] ba loe:attd In ~ke Wllllami Estale1, $30,000 e q u It y, Tra~ FOr. aptt or ttntalt:. Ask for Chuck, 551-4811. BUSINEMMAN. Will trade new turnlture tor clothlna: mens, wo~ ch.lldren. 541-6639 $9000 t?q in 5 lev aca Et· c:ondldo w I waler. VaJ~ i f500 per ac. Trade loc O.C. property or 2nd TD'J.. (Tl4) MJ..1622 Bkr. APARTMENTS N•wport Baich 880 lrv1ne Ave. Clrvine and 16th) 1714) '45-0S$0 For ba•t reaullll IG-8671 Tn.der'1 Paradise ~mn ls C*rptl. Sto':e. Bltns. SI50 SF.CLUOEO 2 Br, 2 Ba, prtv -• Q Eves 536-4041 to: )'OUf 5 Une:s. 5 OQ'l k:lr mo. * &16--21!1 balcony patio. end au. -·;._.__ Fait relUii. are just a. phona * * * * * * $$, ~ todf1 •• ~642-fl/ft. \/it'll help you M!ll! 642-5678 bltns. $175. 54Q.0093. ~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~ li~caJJ~~·~w~•!_Y.:.· !"!:'""~71!... __ , I iii.•••••••••••--i:i.--.:~ I • j ' I I I r I EW J;UE J IJ I J[Il] I ....... -]IJ I When You Wont it done right ..• Coll one of the experts listed below!! , ............. J~ 1-... -1~ r---1~ * Acct/Cost to tt00 EDP e'IC'ptt/ + knowledft of standard t job cc.tin& a)' ... tema in 'Dlllml· Service Center Emp A,aency 500 Newpott Cen~r f>r., N.B. Su.ite S.U I &U-4981 Acct9 Clerk Typist age 2S to 35: Familiar w/ all phue1 ottice work, Ap. ply 1741 Placentia Ave, CM. irom l pm lhnl 3:30 pm. ADVERTISING ARTIST PtoctucUon Manqer tor hot Ne\\fPOrt Beach a & e n c y • Must bave good b o a rd B•bysitfl"I P•lntlng a Elactricel skill!, Know Pr In 11 n I, produdion and achedullns. P .... m•nvlnv COURTESY PERSONNEL Jobs· Are Plentiful COSTA MESA 1-;LECTRICIAN, licensed, Xlnt opportunity. GDUREL21_ bonded, Small jobs, AD VERTI S IN , ••GI PRE.SCHOOL maintenance " re pa I rs . No \\'a&tmg Dupont Dr., N.8. ~16'70. e Fri (frH) $600 11th 1:: ?itonrovia, ~Ii day + 5-1g.5'l)3 * WALLPAPER * A/P Clerk to $600 So'"" SH, lite t>11in&'. P.Qd ...... · Planned When you caU "Mac" ful! .....,. seSSlOOa, Gardening 5U-l~ 646-lnt Stable eslab. co. Constr eX· accq Jmow!f!dae for beach Pro&nm, bot lunchM_ Ages per pret:'d. Irvine eompiex. ofc. P/time to start. 2-6, l.tra 6::r> AM.6:00 PM. * LANDSCAPING * PAPERHANGER, flock, Joi!, Pleasant working oonds. $1B v.'k-COMPARE! &U-4050 Ne"'' lawn!!, trtt removal, vieyl, CUU·. estin1ale.s, Tbe Top benefi!A. Ca.D Miss 1~~=838-"37==·-~-~--I 11prinklers, drains, arbors, Han Im an · 541-5846 Laura, 557-6122 Abjgail Ab-Of .._ ( pl" ) $650 VACA110N mother \\ill catt paUos, fences. Uc'd rontr. Schwartz bot Personnel 0 Agency, 2'JO c •• .,,r I It for your children \\'hile you Use Master Olarge, 13 yrs p A INT ING : Hone gt. W. Warner, Suite 211, S.A. Lea:aJ. sec'y to manaa:e me- v a c •t i on. r.1 at u r f! loc. exp. 536-l.2'li guaranteed work. Lic'd ATI'RACTIVE girl, model dium »ize law tlnn in No. dependable, drive~. Xlnt 1 --AL~.S~G~ARD=~EN=IN=G--att.ootlt '· ref's. Call 675-5740 bikinis & lingerie, 3 or 4 hr Orange County. reference. Call aft 4 pm. for prdenlll& a: s mall ,,:::~·==~----·I a week (time Oeldble). 548-1987 landscaping services, e&ll PROFESSIONAL, 30 yrs Strictly private, no t:xp, OULD care :n my home. M0-5198. Serving Newport, exp, paperhanging &. pain-terrific pay. A Cl k (I InJant to 4 yrs old. Have CdM, O:ista Mesa, Dover ting, frri1n England. 968-7461 \Vrite Classified Ad No. 89 cct r rH) $475 3 yr old daughter. Fenced 'Sho==::"':::'c,· =\Vc;'o.''c:cl=it=f.~-~ You Supply The Paint. Daily Pilot P.O. Box 1560 Ealy job, Electronic calcu- yard, ~e home. Call PROFESSIONAL. Pruning, Rooms painted $10 ea. Call Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 tator, lite tn>e. een'I ofc 830-4370, h:rs 7:30 to 6:00. Utt wnrk, ioptinklers, aeta· ~7M6. ASST. MANAGER. L:am exper. Westminster. El Toro, Mission Viejo area tion. _,.,, d,... ··-, w"" .:.::...::=-~----d b I /local •-~ -* PAINTING * rug wi ness w ..,..,. .. LIC'D CHILD CARE control. Clean up jobs. Somo -tail e·-helpful Hi Quality. Reu. Prices, '" ,.,,_.. · Harbor &. Baker, CM. 5 yrs. Tenns. George, 64fr.5893 Free esL &46-0864 No Sundays. Great oppor. to Biii (I I .,,.. exp. Refs. 545-2!M3 AL'S Landscaping. Tree take oVtt. $500. Call Jean er H ~ BABYSITTING in my home, removal. Yard remodeling. PAINTING, professional. All Brown, 540-6055 \Vow! 4 Day wk, A/P, AIR, """" yard, reJ'a. O:l6ta Trash hauling, lot cleanup. work g uarn . Color COAsrAL AGENCY 8peciaii!t. 96UJ..43. 547·1441 10 key. Anaheim atta. Metia area. 642-0384. c""~""':'.'. . ..:':!:prinkl:C'=:""~·:..'=:'~3-:!ll~'":'.-II "'""~;;:-;:':':~C':-~.:::C,: 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams BROOKHURSI' l Atlanta-NEW law n 1, roto.tilling, PAINTING/paperin&. II yn ASSISTANT HELPER · nkJ · ' tailed trees &: in Harbor area. Lle Ir. IF~ y~~ ~!"!!;,.toys, =~~bs e~C::ed. i'rff esL bonded. Rd1 furn. 642.-2356, Full or p/time for stereo Order DeU: (fn) $550 uncUQ>. no:~. :>UC.-.;JOlll' 64 5- 3433 firm. $3.85 hr. salary. Call Builders FOR clean & neat painting, M.r. Capps Cn4) ~. Busy sales order desk . in NO Job Too Sms.ll! Brick, block, concrete., carpentry, add a rm, hour.e leveling, gu-. door ~pairs. Free est. Woody,~5. C•rpet Service Diamoocl Carpet Clea.illni Avg size room $8 Repairina: 1' inltallations Ftte EIL 645.1317 CARPET Layer has quality shags &: Hi-Lo at dUscount prices from $2.50 a yd. F'ree Est. Mr. Ed ln4) 871-99:>8 Carpenter CARPENTRY MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Too Sma!L Cabinet in pr· ages &: o the r cabinets. 545-8175 U no answer leave mJI. at 646.23T.l. H. 0. EXPER Japanese-American interklr & exterior, Call BABYSI'M'ER, my home. Anaheim? Hvy phones, SH gardener, complete garden-1..:D::1•::'o.·..:"8-40&5:::.=·=-----C.M. 1 baby. lite Mewrk. 80, type 60. ing service & ~anup. QUALITY WORK. Reason-S30/wk, M/F, 7:15 • 5:15, ~150 abll!. Llcs'd, l.Dcal refs. ~9399. Gardener, Yard clean-up. Free est. 548-2759. 645-5350 ;;iii;;;iii;i;,..,..,..,..,....,.I Cashier (fH) Planting. Sprinklers. PAINTING/paperine. 18 yn Betty Bruce $475 Ew'd. 646-5469 ;n Harbor a;oa. Lie & EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener bonded. Refs furn. 642.2356 Complete Gardening Ser-INT & Exler. Painting. vice. Kamalani, 646-4676 Lic'd, in!<. Free est. 30 yrs LAWN can: & carden work. ex per. Chuck, 645-0809 Llght hauling. E x p 'd. Pl p -• R . Reasonable. can 543-9735. •st.r, •tWJ, epeir Gxec CLEAN Up Specialist, haul· ·.-P-A_TCH __ P_LA_STEIUN ___ G S.cret•ry/legel ing, odd jobs, new fence All ~. ~ e1tlmates S.cret•ry/Engr & repair. Reas. 54&-6955 Call • .,_..,25 S /E "'" ecret1ry scrow Gardening &: Lawn Service 1 ·P-LAST--E-R---p-,-,-'-.-h---R-m-. Clerk Typist College Student Adds. New work. Free Tr•inH/lnsurence Reasonable: rates ~745 estimates, 545--4588 aft ~ Receptionist JOHNSON'SclGARDENING Plumbi"91 Accts. Pay•ble Yard care, e&n-UPS. pl~ Acct1. Recelveble ting, sprinklm. 962--2035. LEW Takai & Son's Plum· File Clerks LAWN Maint. Hauling, ~ bing Repair Rep Ip e 4 Day wk. Handle ca•~ col· J~ns. depol!itll, etc. At- tractive. Recept. (IH) $325 Doctors ofc p/time, Lile ex· per., attractive 1al. s.1 .. s.c•y 11 .. 1 $500 Fab Irvine area ofc. needs warm 1al w/workina exper. SH 90, type 70. lawns, cleatHlp. pruning. Remodel Free Estimatei 410 W. Co•st Hwv. LIHl•I (reimbl $600 Free est. Call ~'7379 646-8340 -• -• Progrt'Ssive Orange Coun. ty manufacturer has: an immediate opening tor a designer, ex:perienced in the design and buildin&' of speclaJ. purpose mfg./ assembly equipment and medical instrument&. ~e day a: nilht trainin&: tun or part time Complete fringe bene.tits Incentive pian Plutb ottices: e PLEASE CALL e 547-6771 ASK FOR MR. BERNARD Has immediate openi~ for • e PART TIME e MAINTENANCE MECHANIC XLNT CO. BENEFITS Apply in person 10-~ pm Personnel Dl!pt. #2 Fashion hl., N.B. Applicant must be able to 'NOrk u part of a team wilh engineers and tool· ing people, to cany a design t h r u working drawings to completed operatiJll'. units. EXPERIENCED in sales! Great opportunity I o .r comrniuion salesmen {men '= women). This ts a p r o f euk>naI opporturdty olferln1 a lifetime presti&ioua vocation. Complete trainin&: program, stock bonus, stock option progralJll. paid bo8pitafua- tion. We expect our sales.- men to eam over $20,000, with no' ceilln&: on earnings. Ex~. R•cept. to $550 Equal opportunity employer Sec'y/S.le1 U.00 Mah\tenanc•Apts. T.B. Bkkper lo $550 Quallfioo, .,.., MA!NfEN· Typist, 65 w.p.m. $375 ANCE COUPLE, Corona de.I G. Ofc Math Ap $360 Mar. Live in. Salary open. Sec'y L•nd Dev to $600 __ *_.0Call=-4"4=·.:.Jl!;3-".._*_~1 488 E. 17th fat Irvine) C.M. 642-1470 A minimum of thrtt yean experit11ce ln the destrn o1 medwiieal ap. paratus is ~ntiaJ, Call (TI4) 8.lZ-7790 for a J . C. PENNEY CO. Excellent growth oppor· tunii, a.nd -friilge-bene-- fits. 1ico~nfi~'~don;'itial~· ~lnt~•~,.,~;~,..=·==L.....::..* Fuhkln Island * -l-F--1-B-E-R.G.L..l.S. WORKERS-No experience -REQUIRES - ........ $1.'l>ll."6 ,.,. -Mall resume with back-depending on experience. COFFEE SHOP COOK ground, qu•llflc1tions, Apply at 837 W. 18th St, •nd WAITRESS experience •nd ••l•ry 1 ..:C:::.M::·:_--~--- hl1tory to • FIBERGLA~ Molder-exp'd. Xlnt. working ronditions, Sailboe.t Ml.a:r, Coeta Mesa. outstanding benefits. Cluaitied Ad •146 Daily Apply in penion Pik>t, P.O. Box 1560 Costa COASTAL RECREATION. * APPLY IN PERSON * M1!38., Calif. 92626. ' 940 W. 17th SI, CM. 24 Fuh~n J!land N.8. FLORIST, Exper designers Equal opportunity employer Equal opportunity employer wanted. Immed openinp for JEWELRY 1tore sales/sect'y DENTAL ASSr. Fantastic full lime "-pt·time, perm exp'd. Purchasing, fleeorat~ bo•• offer• rapid positioru. Great deal ol Ing, etc. Fine shop, Lido, advancement. Some exper. artistic freedom allowed. Must type. 673-9334 desirable. Start $350. C&lJ Salary open. Youn&:, Jean Brown. 540-6055 progressive m.ngmnt a I COASTAL AGENCY , .... -....... -...... • "'..,""""..,'..,,. 2790 Harbor Bl. at Adams I* DENTAL Secy./Recept. Experle~ nee. Call 546-5613 bet 9-5 PM FURNITURE -SALES- J. W. ROBINSON'S e NE\vPORT BEACH e Ha.a immediate opening for an MAN to assist .1111.Mi"t' in local appliance uln. Must be neat appearini::. Preler over 25. Call Mr. Sobrito at • 534-0084 • MANUFACTURING MANAGER HeavUy vi:p'd pro with prov- en background in eiectronlcs to h!ad production & ttst ol new line of peripheral$ lor commercial ma rket. Shirtsleeve sround floor op.. p:>rtunity w/>Jnt salary It equity participation in small growth company, Reply in confidence with complete resume including sa.1ary his- tory. Write Clusl!i~ Ad # 114, Dally Pilot, P .0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 9'l626, MERCHANDISING 4:: Sa1es-Exp'd man w/reb. Creative, carttr minded. Ill exciting new &hoe shop. \Vrite Classitled Ad No. lll, Daily Pilot, P. 0 .Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 Anderson. Cement, Concrete For local dept store e TOP COMMISSION C 0 MP LET E lawn 1' PLUMBING REPAIR Newport Be•ch Lite SH diC'laphcme re:n'l prdening seT'Vic(o. No job too small By Appt. 646-3939 pra~. S.A. arc. ~ po-1 -~-,===~--,..-1 Jim 5"8-0405 e &42-3128 e BOOKKEEPER F/C. Here t.ential. * DRIVERS * • co. BENEFITS Quality line to sell -Experienced- FITTER- SEAMSTRESS MORTGAGE TRAIN EE. PIUSh modern ofc. Full ol young people. Fantastic boss \Vilt train: gal who J)'P"S well, Benefits. $350. Call llelen Hayes, 540·6055. COASTAL AGENCY Z79o Harbor Bi at Adam& ee CONCRETE. Floon, Cut&. Edge Lawn Roofing is your chance to advance in pallo1, drives. si<lv.'al.k.s, Maintenance, Llc'd, Insured ---"'-------·I ·~ l A --·"'d ha slabs. Reas. Don 00-8514 LEE Roof.Ing Co. Roofing of a u ,p e co. ,;)(JllW "" , c:".::'8-4,...="""-'at~t .:.'·~----all 1 R ,_ some machine bckgrnd on Bkkpr {fl'ff) $500 CEM.ENT WORK, no VJ. too 1 • NESE · ypes. ecover, .repau'" $500 Sall U bl ~F JAPA G •rd en 1 n C !Mr-mo roof coatlnp, white t~1;; ~~~ """"' · Call Y Good versatile a&1t. b"t...r sma, reasona e. ree Service. Neat work. Cleanup &: color. Lie/bonded since. ~ ..... ., ~ ""~ ' Eslim. H. stunick, 54&-8615. yd. maint. 968-2303 ,47. 642-722'2 OJASTAL AGENCY w/con:litruc, exper. Lots of QUALITY cement lmrk. let General Services T. Guy Roofing, Deal Dirttt. 2790 Harbor 81. at Adam• smart!. GeoBo~".~ ... "':1l!,: Lic'd,, Idomyownwork.645.-2780, e BLUE DOLPHIN e 1iueu J' "" * LABOR UNLIMITED * No Experience Apply ., """"' Necessary! to Mn. Thompson M " ha cl ~"' ••. W. T. GRANT CO. u ve ean ...,..,.. UllV· Pe 1 Office mg record. Not under 25. d """"" G YELLOW CAB CO 981JA amsAve .• rlntPlaz& • Brookhurst 1: Adams, 186 E. 16th St., C.M. Htg. Beach DRAPERY MFG. Immed. Equal opportunity employer open, for trnes & exp. · Beach Drapery Serv, 900 W. e FULL TIME e XLNT. BENEFITS Apply in pel'llOn 10-S p.m. Personnel Dept. • 2 Fashion hi., N.B. Equal opportunity employer HANDYMAN 548-9590. Waitttsses, exp'd, ovr 25 • PATIOS, walk1, drives, in-Apply 3355 Via Liso, N.B. Acct. (re1mb} stall new lawns, saw, break, Welding-Carpentry 673-1922 Sewing/Alter•tlons $625 17th St., C.l\f. e KE~~~ OPERA'!QR i iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiil (Electronlcsl .cv"~ FILE CLERk remove. M8-8668 !or est. Husband Busy: Call Moose ·.-':rE_RA..::.;TI_O_N_S.--,-,,-,-.1-.,-,. s.i~ after &-Repair ,.,.,. .,, CUSTOM CONCRETE Build-Se.rv :P.lost Things Expert litter. Top ref'g. PATIQ.DRIVES.ETC. N.B. area. 646-2704. Call Frtt e1t. S31·7968. 675-~16 H•uling cR:.:u::lh::..:C::•;:.ll _____ _ Contractor TRASII & Garage clean-up, EUROPEAN Dresmi11king 7 days. $10 a load. Fte:t Expertly C'w!iton Fitted. ~tY Way, quality home 1 _.,_I'-. _A~nyt~;me_. _548-503 __ 1 __ -A~c""'-'"·~"'~'::'·-"-'·~11!4'l~=~ repair. \Valls, ceiling. floors TREES lopped, cleanup. \Ve Alter•tions -642-5145 etc. No job too smalL do everything. Handyman Neat, accurate, 20 yean exp, 54l-0036, 24 hr &nS. Rrv. anytime. Reas. 64~788. Tile \VATERPRF' vinyl deck YARD. G~e. cleanup!. coatings, all types. l...ee Remove trees . dirt, CERM11C tile new & Roofing Co., Ci\1. · &U-7222 skiploader backhoe. 962-8745 remodel. F'rtt est. Small free est. jobs welcome. 53&-2426. MOVING, Garage clean • up ROOM Additions. L. T. & tit~ hauling. Reasonable. Tru Service Construction. Sin&:le story or Free estimates, 645-1602 2. Estim., plsns & Ja,yout. TREES, J-ledge!, Top, Trim, 847-I511 Housecleaning cut, removed, hauled. Ins. 642-4030 Big John ROOl\f ADDITION Bay .l Beach Janitorial OUR SPECIALTY Crpts, windo"'I. floors etc. Stephens Const. Co. 673-662'2 Res. t. Comm'l. 646-1401 L ic'd Contr. Remodeling l\lesa Cleaning Servi« I ~~~~~~~~ Add itions. Plans, Layout Carpets, \Vindows, F1oot1 etc. [Il] Kart E. Kendall 548--15.17 Resid. & Commc'I. 548-4111 L __ , ____ ,.... __ _,I ii Additions * Remodeling By Day. - Gtrwick le Sons, Lie. 0-.vn Trampo.~n. 0/3.-flMI * 54S-2:l70 836--0648 Bookkeeper West O.C. &l<ea. 30 Accts Knowledge of electronic needed to work in mM Dept. CREDIT CLERK \ Req: HS grad, either 2 yrs thru closinf. Yant really parts and component color "'Ol'king experience in like FOR LOCAL DEPT. sroRE """'pl. Electron1"cs """" d .. 1 .. b1o. Ability to ""; .... ,.,,1nm,1nooc1>oo1 Experience preferred but noc necessary, Will traln. S day "'·eek, en. benrlits, Challenging position. op- portunity for advance· ment. APPLY IN PERSON TO MRS. TitOl\tPSON W.T. Grant Co. !Personnel Office) 9811 Ada.ms Ave., Grant Plaza at Brookhurst A: Adams 1 G•I Ole lfM) $520 Publisher needs a:aJ Friday to run S.A. olc. Xln't SH 4:: typing. Keypunch (frH) $560 Nitea, 1 Yr exper. AJpha- num. Work in La ?-fixada. Huntington Beach Gen'I Ofc (fff) $350 Equal opportunity employer Lite type, cen'I ofc., handle CAREER OPPORTUNITY truck driven, busy phones, Large expending co. needs 12 guls for merchandising. Full $390 or p/time. $3.25 hr Salary. PBX (fHl Call Mr. Brown S4&-6955. Buena Pk firm IK'eds 1riend- CARPET cleaner, :e•po~i-ly, cute recept. wlPBX P-X· We-man w/~ m per maintain file&· ol part hiA-+ I yr work experience. torie1 and a:en1 teee1rdl. Please call 1 or inte-•lew A b I Position requires occuional • • SSem ers appt. 492-1153, lofrs, Gon-'>P;"•· 5.1t><OSO Anohe;m. zalez. GElrCOATERS eltpcriencecl. Experlencedinpre-Apply830W.16thSt.Ma<> KITCHEN HELPER , • bl I immed. openiJu:, morning cis1on assem Yo GregorYachtCorp. shltl. Xlnt benefits delicate instru-GENERAL OFFICE BEVERLY MANOR ments~ small com-Good typing, excellent co. CONV ALESCE?li'T H 0 S P . pontnt work solder· Call Lora.Irie, \Vestcliff Per. 35UO Camino Capistrano, ing, color Cod e s .onnel Agency, 2043 Weit: 1 _c_a.o.p._Bc_h_. ___ ,_,_,._. __ _ and t.lueprint read· cliff Dr., N.B, 645-2TlO LAB ASSISI' ANT. we I l ing. NASA solder• GENERAL HELP known onl surgeon will ing certificate d• Stereo Co. 11ttd11 full or train gal wfrelated cxper. sir•blt. p/time dependable. $l.85 hr Great oppbr. $500. Call 11ala.ry. Call Mr. Stock ITI4J Helen Hayes, 540-QJ55. -APPLY IN PERSON -1_K:.:"l:..::.""695.>=-·:......=----COASTAL AGENCY 3333 HA·RBOR BLVD. 33-/• 2790 Harbor Bl. at Adam" COSTA MESA, CALIF. GUARANTEED LEGAL TRAINEE PROFIT Wock at Newport Center, EZ Xlra Income. P/timc or atart $f25 mo. R~tre" sec- F/time. Men.Women.16 Yrs retarlal exper. Type 60 up. Sa.Jes w/reputable H.B. WPM, Lile S.H. AllDmey at Co. No door to door. f'urn. Law, Roland S. Barcume, !11WpllR .' personnel agency 833 Dover Drive Newport Beacb S.U-3870 Draftsman MunicipaJ BackgroUlld Escrow Ofer $650 A/P Clerk ~ Construction Payroll Clrk EDP $550 Sec'y $500 Sec'y $450 up Cons tr/ Advertising Sales Engr $12K + Mini Computl!r Branch Mgrs $12K + Real Estate R. E. Sales New & Resale Comm NE\VSPAPER auco route. Early Ai\1 delivery (approx 4-{;Ai\1J 7 days a week. Want responsible ma n , preferably over 30 yrs. old. Exce.Uent put-time income. 54().3006 Job W•nted, Fem•I• 702 \\'EEKL'J' House cleaning in Orange County Atta. Call GENERAL OUict. Fa 1 t 64~0138 / &12-3809 I accurate typing. 10 yr1 DEDICATED CLEANING varied experience, <1dapl· cari>et cleaning, window · washing I. floor waxiJJa:. Sal- ary open. 549-U25 V•riety (fH) $475 Busy order dl!'Sk, ,.,. arm, tri~ndly ofc, type 60, learn Oexowriter. ATLANTIC RESEARCH Systems Divisions lshed referrals only. 5.16-0071 644.0023. IT'S Beach hou&e lime. Bi&:· l;,:;i'WEED;;;,"""";l;:t-&,.-,....,,=-,.,:-.-.dec,...an_ VA.CANOES CQ,,t money! gest aelecl:lon ever! See the out the treasures a: truh • ~nl your house, apt., afore DAILY PILOT C1aas:tfied tum into ca.sh thru a Daily bldg., etc. lhnl a Daily P1Jot 1ectiorl nowl Pilot ClassWed ad, 642-5678 Oasst!led ad. .NOW'S THE TIME FOR \\'e do <>verything. F~ I able. Good appearance. estimatt', Call 673-1072 I ~:~~.call aller J P1\t I Ironing AIDES For conva1etcence. r IRONING ~ Pa.. ~wash $1 elderly care oc lamily care. load .I PfU tJeliY. 50c <'a Homemakers, 547-6681 1 \la)', if 1vantrd, Rr.f. HelpWented,M&.F710 64G-9j,'J8, Janltoriel SPARKLE Ja111toriaL \Vin· dows, floors. crprs It con~tr I cleanup. Carpel shampooing, i A complctl' comm'l ijl'r\I. ror Fre<' es1 . <"all, 962-0Sn. Moving Accountants • I j J .,. "'l.-0 y, Apru 1'1, 1'1/1 PAIL Y Pl.LO 33 [ L_ .... )[Il][ '--_ ..... _ ... ··~J[Il][ '--___ ,; ;;;[ ;;;-~,~~;1~' --~]~:;;;;;~ [ ,...d_ I~:..' _,_ .. _'l'bo_l~ll [ -~~-· !~11~--;;; .. ~.-.· Holp Wan!od, Ma F 110 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wantod, M & F 710 Fumlhl,. 110 Mlscollanoovo Ill Pot&, Ganaral 1511 3 cuto cuddldy pupo """ Booh, Sllpo/Ooclt& 910 Sporh, Raco, Rodo "' --- 1---------1--------1------------,,,,---B---1 Joyln; horMt. fpcd ydl, 1 1984 Dt.tlllD J'alr Lad1. ""I~ c1.~ • RECEPTIONIST"' S£RV1CE STA. drlvewa\I BY t pt,y. ••ullf u • CARPET. HALF iAftALI blk. Cock .. poo, 6 wkl. 2 nn•TSUPuiroui""" _,, .,.-ra -R···-·· wllb mccb·-.-•. custom-blt r vtlV!t IOfa It ~ bile. 4 ""' Cocker-h:rrier ~ M ........ ~ It oN. •• pottntlal daaio "UW. red w/tnowled1e of lite &DIWtf telephone 6: irtet .., ....... 5oveseat, Me.Jody cbain, 2 PARROT $20 mix, 8 wkll. 3'7-7450 (119 ... ~.o:..___.,.,1 9 two-M!&ttr", complete bookkeepin&, Apply vtllton. Prdtt airline ~llity. l·Full time, l·Pnrt m&tchina: ha.ml chairs: 548-2759, ~ =---=;.~::::;..;::;...::~~~ w/t o nneau COftf' a Carpeterla, lnc Newport expuienoe. Tenlp>r&l)' for 3 tlmr. Apply llOl Bl.ya.Ide Vtetra bkk-&-b9a: ldl!R Spring Shag Special NEED ad. home, fenced 801ta:, Spud a Ski 911 removable hardtop. Hrif Blvd, c.M. month" °'· N.a Ph• 675-lll45 """' bdrm '" w/armoiro; OUT:TANDING WHIT: ':!.~T! $I oa. ~1·~~~1 ~bl"• ~· H R llttt • tllllno block !haw OFFICE CLEANING RAUB, BEIN, FROST quoel>doublelpcbdrm"' y•WESI ,_,., m · mo~ INBOARD YD 0 ,...lptal ........ 19 25. and Asaoclatet. SERVICE CENTER Spanll~t oak cockt&ll " C1t1 152 All -.hott. ~ Ana~lm Mu•t 1ell, need mooey, Boat, 546--0223 or 6*-4.1fi3 $2/hr, Mon It Fri evea. Hta: 136 RocMster St, CM. Employment Agency A com e eet: Golyeow: or 836-4493 S. A. 4119 motor i trlr $22S. Rum vtey Trucki H2 Sch area only. Call 9-11 Cl.ll MS..T123. lamp~: t n • t t e: new OVER 40 COLORS 2 KITTENS, Siamese, l Ion& TO qua1home 8 mo. blk cock 1ttona. Will con&klu trd tor1"ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 i~"'°="=.·~96>M11~~-·--~~~l-JU:fil>--,-.,-.. -,,.-.-1-h-o_r_o_u_g_h *Sec'y/Recept. $550 portable ; lmlck40lackl; ta chooM framl hair 1 ahort hair 7 ka a poo 10\'n children hi, motorcycle. Se:!' 1t T38 w.11 OFB'Elt lady room &. oo.rd atudent • hsewrk. 5-to hn Bu.sy job tor fut accur b'P. "10 SUzu1d 50cc mini bike. Call For tra~. S25 each. '54g..~ro ' tralned tnod yd 968-2379: 17th, C.M. 642--5195 or '64 'FORD Ectnllill tn exchange for lite dutlea. wk. Peninwla Point, tstllile Sii helptul/frnt olc. No junk. 2166 JoAnn. St., FREE ESTIMATES 548-0813 4/19 MS-:570. 6'2-~1~2562. 615-023.1 *Escrow Ofer to $700 C.M. (btwn Fa1rriew It Dou• 154 KJ 'M'EN g wM old 1 blue, I .IS:;l::.l'=SKl:c.--o-r-F~ilh~lng--bo-a-1,1 CAMPER Harbor, l bllt north oJ In your home OPJ!:RATORS wanted for e R.N.'i • Bttciqrrnd Escrow, title or Wilton) B Z 9 mixed rra,y wry frltndly w/l/J hp Mere outboe.rd. Automatic, ndio, hM.ta, overlock I: b 11 n d -he m land co, 4 143 \VELSJ.l CARDIGAN CORGI rat.d with 1mall dop: Cmplty eqpt w/1tl1c 11.&rt, bubble -, tJitlf mntalnld. hi C&JI -• -*E •-·' .,~ HUNTINGTON Ha rb our " Malt 9 mo •uc ••-•by ~ mac nes. ~-· xec ~ y ~ ' ' , •.. n • ,,..~ Ne'W'PQrl Hgts. M2-!l54 t/20 runn1ni llchta:, akJI ett. Mvst ttt. ($!D091) OPERATORS -sportswear -lnlt>nslve care/cardiac can. rrnt po!Je/top 5kills. Island 2= lncr'tdlble ale; * AUCTION * Champ, Hse:bkn. Gen.tie I. PERSIAN cat, f it m ale, $175. M5-%7U $1599 ,_ _, d Full time, 11 Ip 7:30 am. *Mod' I S , $SOO Furn, appliantts, 25" color 11'1 .. -Fuml .. ·-loving w/cbldm. Should be m'A. exp o ... y, I pay, • HUNTING'IUN INTER~ ICI ec y ~·... ,..... 1ttn to appreciate. $100. "K.C." 7 mo old, needs • Bolif'I, Storage t12 steady. 64.2-3472. COMMUNITY HOSPITAL • Fmt ofc/F/C responsibility/ :it.r. Jt~~ln. el~ A AppUa.Dee 644-4281 home. Loves ch 11 d ren. *-~.,.~ ,..,.....,._ .. 0 R D E R TA K E RS , Penonnel Df:pl. 17772 Beach busy surgeon. Somertet In, 213/592-!i058. Auctions 1 Frid4y, 7:00 p.m. OBEDJENCE dUI lo start MS-otJti2 4/20 FENCED 1torap atta. oil ~ ~q Mlrnen;tirl• over 3J, days Blvd., Huntlngto!i Beach. *Tix Clerk to $550 Pvt ...... ~ .. s on1y. Windy s Auction Barn In the Irvltll'!/Newport lllll1aced; Costa Meaa. Call 2100 Hartior mYd, 860lll or evenings. Pleasant \\'Otk or Call Sfl.781)7, Hvy detall work, req'1 accu-.,... "" BEAUT. fem Collie Bela;• It m-0281 or 96).1813 trom our Santa Ana office. racy It ability to H:t up rec--8' SOFA, never used, qullted 31~ Newport. CM 646..8686 Be-ach atta Wed, Aprll 28 at white, apa,ytd. Lovinc a: I ~~~~~~~~~! '61 Sl'UOE 1'. TON P .U. ~1~65eX:~ C:·54~~ s:t=k: ~.;!1= =~~~~~:tude for fig· ~h:~=~· s~: = s~on:·1;~:a~~P 1-.!....;;;,30:;m~;;;~--0pe--;ol;;:d::.•":01o::._.:::;]\'-'i . .:do:cp::: l~~=·"~':::·~N--__ .. _·_"°..:;""".,,,,~· I -II•} ~&be~ ~ ~ --------- before 4 pm. Sails, 817 W 17th No. 11, *HsekHp•r $400 SJ>.l955. ttfrlg. $55. Antique de!k S35 MOVING. Precious Lhasa BEAUT. blk manx cat, rom• . 6f6...H91. PAYOUT & PASTE UP C.M. Xln't poslL for profeuional/ GOLD 3-p!ece .sectional for aet 4 old ttr&Jiht wood Apeo, needs gd home. 66-0137, 83S-al42 4f.IO 'l•,"°51~Focord=~l>~T~.~p~ ... ....,, • ...,.,,'6i Employment avail. Costa SAIL snmttrtu needed. N.B. area/llv-in/pvt qua!'-.sale. $50. chalrs$3Jprdroplntlamp ~~7~~e, yr old. ,AKC I: klok w/out obligation. C Sale/Rtntt20 Engine Cabinets. Good ?i-l es a penny 5 ave I' Exper prtl'd. Full time, ten-. Call &W-4183 tables w/drawen $20, Port. 64;H>l37, 113>82-42 4/20 emper1, eond. $395. 491--7811 r.ompo11n& Dept Pleasant Ullman Saia. 6"-8107 500 Newport Ce11ter Dr .. NB Gar•ge Sala 112 'IV $25 Couch $25 Lots DAQISHUND p~p AK c ' PRETTY SIIW'ry Cl')' &: wht ~=:~·u ~: m~e~ ~ · suite 535 / M4491tl GAllAGE Sale -many more! ~7A~::ost, CM. ~!:.-w:al:r .!co~':!.~: ~1'!.~u:1b~r~1;:1 kl~=: CAMPER SPECIAL CHEVY '62 Van cam~ Eng, tram, Urn brand °""". Must aell. rTJ..58M J. W. _ROBINSON docu led &: undocUment 633-4013 appl, &12--0lllL NEWPORT BEACH STENO SEC'Y . m•n • BAY CLUB ~16 4120 '66 DODGE CREW 6 PBX OPR. This 11 for the Mutt be ad•ptable eel llema or various values MEMBERSHIP AKC AlghaM ·Male & fem., 1 BLACK male cockapoo.-10 bl I far benelits ol The Lapldacy wht w/blk mruib. Oiamp k v I LEASE 'Tl Pin ·~ gal who likes to be in with baa Immediate Exper, desira e n con-Club 01 the Boys Club, Har-Would like to purchMe al w s. e r Y cu r Y. & new lo .- the soclal set. Great hrs. opening for struction &/or advertising. bor area. ba.lya1n prlee. Call ~1260. ~k. Haebrken. R e a a· MS-5978 4/20 Pickup, 8 tt. bed, automatic, mo. 138 mo.) opitn end. Sta.rt $-425. Call Jean Brown, Hvy work load. Contact P.O. Saturday & Sllnday ANTIQUE popcorn booth • 646-1658. DARLING male blk f1l;1I power, alr condltionilll:. RENT a new '71 Plnk> $1 540-6055, FUU. Tit.lE Box 855, Costa Mesa. 1867 Bayport Way, Perfect operatil'\i cond. $lOO i tALTESE, Thimble size rockapoo puppy 4 mo old. $2100 day and .4c mllit. Put • COASTAL AGENCY SHOE SALESMEN TACO BELL Newport Beach per day income a t good Yorkles '-Toy Poodle1, 613-5211 4/)J little kick in )'QUI' 11'6. 2790HarborBlatAdams c Ii AKC. Pupt A; Grown. Al90 2'MOS old t 1 I ltu--.aM~ ,.,.,_,.____ THEODOR! Pt-time day1 o ege WASIIER$25,itereo$20,dbl locatlon.Trade fotcar,boat ..., · pupp e1, -mae, ,.~ '~ ROBINS FORD p RODUCTION TRAINEE. Apply in person lll..S pm student or housewlfe. No bed. cmplt $15, ne• tire & or will le~ 642.-0010 or Stud Service. 2l3: 761~60 l·female SO.IO'TS 4/31 Great local oppor. for Pet90nneJ Dept. expor nee. 818 Ocean Ave, 4"" ~-MALE AKC AUSTRALIAN 2'100 Harbor Blvd. &15-oit66 2060 HARBOR BLVD. rim, for '70 Mavericll: $15. & '7'r"'W• • SILKY 5 Adorable kitte111 5 wttks _ COSTA MESA 6U-OGJO O'Owth It advancement. •2 Fashion Ill., N.B. HB, 536-7800 Many More. 311 No. C. SEU. your own handcrafts, · XLNT MARKINGS. old. 67>2672 4/19 1947 International B u 1 Good future. Go creative. Equal Opportunity Employer TELE PllONE advertising Uni .. -crslty, 548-5893 The UnlqUe Boutique, 135 $3XI 675-2465 BLK poodle puppy male, Camper. 28 ft long. Catm Auto Service>, Parta "' ~.'15. call Selly Hart, SALESMAN from our pleasant Newport GARAGE Sale: April 24th & 11th, C.M. (11' call ~9075 IRISH Setter, AKC, frm. '5 545--0033 aft 2 PM. 4/19 body, kit, bath, 2 rnuJ, llpa 2 Chevy Altro mao wi th. ts qualitied appt. a wk. In-offices. Hrly wage'. 25th, tl5 & 415~ Orchid, Mlscellaneau1 JOO. Movtd to apt. Needs LAB dobennan female mix 4, wtr, elee 1tnerator, tires, whell adaptul fofl ~~:. ;1G~'JJa.rns ~~a;,t~~ ~~1an:,_~m~~ :oming 33 °~mev~.AD~~ts. CdM: lloulehld goods, old Wanted 120 yard. $100. 6'5-S'122 pup. 8 ~ks. 5'S-J096 4/19 propane, tully paneled a: VW with chrome lua nutl1 Pr!H ~ 039 5-3030 ' · · TV, 2 old chalrs Ii: other I BOXER PUPPIES A.KC Wlrr male cock ... -poo 4 crpt. 873-l'M and locks. .All for m J"trm; PRODUCTION First & Second Shift IMMEDIATE OPENINGS }"'QR 11lE FOLLOWING: MACHINISTS MUst know J>e.Vlieg ji1 mill. Minimwn five years in manufacturing precil· Ion part.. Background in prototype, tooling, use of rotary table: make own x &: y calculations and layouts. PRECISION ASSEMBLERS Perform aaembty work on close tolerance usem· blt slr\lc:ture:s In the alr- criiJt • mirs!Je field. SHEET METAL MECHANICS Experience In layout, loftlng, fabrication and assembly of 1heet metal parts. \Vill use shears, power bra.kn, 1trlppit fabricators, squee.zers and other related ma- chines. -APPLY IN PERSON - 3333 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA !o.!ESA, CALlF. ATLANTIC RESEARCH Systems Divisions t, -• ~. * \VAlTRESS-DINNER goodies. HOSPITAL bed, electri c 10 Wkl, Male, Brindle Ir: yean. 962--0846 4121 Cycl11, Bikes, 548-M8:> SALES:\IAN, Service Sta. HOUSE. Exp'd~Iood and FROSf FREE trig La motored. Reuonable. Fawn. &39-2949 Scooter• f251'VW~..:B,:.U:;S~.,-.-.. -,..~-.~ .. ~.•,I Part time. Neat l n cocktails. 5 day "'k. SAM'S mowe;, Add~ ,,;.cm.: Call &U-ln5 e ENGUSH BUU. DOG FREE kitten1, 1 weeks old. ............. later. Beat offer. appearance. Apply 2590 SEAFOOD. 16278 Pacific Other househld I t e ms. WANTED LGE Doghouse, PUPPIES, A.KC. s.G-2722 4/20 & ... - - -• ** 9118--I.210 ** t Newport Blvd. C.M. Hwy., liuntBcli. Bushard It Hamilton , picture trainn~ metal or * SJG..5963 * A Darling kitten paper THINI * PORSCHE PAR'n 4 SALES. Have a green • \VAJTRESS ·Over 21. 968-8337 'lll'OO(!lnall11Z1 M&-15S3. POODLE pups-AKC, black, trained 66-4476 4131 HQ•~• R E ASONAB L E 01.1 thumb? Sotne' t.ales exper. Neat. Apply The Head GARAGE Sale -Rea.M>nable CASH for turnlture, ap-10 wks. 1 male, 1 female. ~,. ~ 776-M44, eve/wlmda 956-Xl.9 will let yoU put a hobby to Bagel, 305 lo.farina Ave, li tool I II M t ll •~ u o ••" work retail. 9o•r•\ r-.11 Helen Balboa. Tsland . furniture, scuba gear & P ances, s, m sc em.s. us ae ' -eL ~. I I~ • Autos Wanted HI .,.,...... \..<W mlt1e. Sa t & SI.In. 16833 Open 9 to 5. GU--7015 YORKSHmE Terrier pups ...::-=... tC •'fRIEDl.ANDBI'° Hayes, 5'10-005.5. WANTED: BALLET Bayview Dr, Sumet Beach NEED large trunkl Steamer AKC Champ Sired. M·F, . . WE PAY TOii COASTAL AGENCY Teacher Also MODELING bl -TERMS• * -., -H· .... -(on the island) or ct. n ...,.,.... . ! 53l·o••• 1U ~ (tlll'Y. CASH "'"" 1U"UUl·Bl atAdam1 Teacher. ORANGE C&IJ '""'59 •-·~· e •M-GARAGE SALE: Apt alu ............ri YR old llhaggy female dog. General too ...,,.._... _,._ COUNTY ACADEMY of retrig, Fum & Misc. 2165 Musical ln1trument1 l22 Go od w I c h l i d re n. NEW·USED-SERV. s;esSTOP LOOKING* y~:~i.:~~ge::-Try Ralelgh*S~* LUDW I G d r um 1et, Housebroken. ~70454113 SCRAM-LETS ~ " • I hi h lo --• '=~=o----,--~-~o-1 Compi<I•. F1oor lorn, 2 IRISH Setter puppies, AKC out or g promot n ....... e1 '' Cham lo •-• NSWERS C V ti S kl IF YOU WOULD LIKE job. Starting s a I a r Y PLAYER piano, 5hopsmilh Zilgen cymbals. All xlnt re&,· * ~n,u;· A, rown • ey UIU TO BE ?-fAKING MORE $100/wk. Call for Interview tbl. saw. Lots of tum & cond. Extras. 642-$16 * * FREE * * b\IHdeonAtrltdto,last can u1 tor rr.. mnnatn. GROTH CHEVROLET MONEY, FEEL SECURE on Mon, Wed or Fri, ~~~· ::~ Santa Ana Office Fumlture/ e PUREBRED Dalmatian Embark _ Sandy _ 1.fajm' Helmet or 1itetric Tool Se-t IN KNOWING YOU c AN 714/646-9647, ask for Steve. "~· E · 824 pupt, AKC rerM;tettd. Eves. _ Alkal _ LIBRARY Wltb Purchut of New Blke. Alk b Bales lilanqtt , GARAGE Sale! Clothing & quip. ~!576. Dauc: 64&7203 1l'60l Forbes Road 1ml Beach Btvd. •, LOOK FORWARD TO A YAOIT SALESMAN • Exp'd J~ Contuciu1 say: "Kia thiston BRIGHT AND REWARD-ln new & used boats, J>O"'"er misc. items. 778 W. llth St, P AY M AS T E R C hec k PEKINGESE pup, tiny, 1 speaks volumei. Much tun Laguna Niguel 131·1621 Hnn 8t.JCh ING FU'n.IRE, COME IN &: sail. Submtt resume to CM prottt'tor, almolt new $75. month old, frm. w/o paper, to start LIBRARY.'" Norton, AJS, !Uckmaft too. U7..ros7 Kl N3Sl ANO SPEAK TO US. po Box 4314 Irvine Mechlnery 116 Remington elec typewriter. dark ailor $.25. 96S-6Jll .::..=::.:==='---·I •n Honda 350 Scrambler-WE P AY TOP DOLl..U\ * Plu1h offices * Top compenu.Uon * Ll.beraJ. fringe benefit& YOUR COMPENSATION MAY BE $20,000 TO $100,000 PER YEAR AS AN ASSOC~ IATE OF COMMUNITY LEADER, PROFESSIONAL SALESMAN, DAVID B. ux;>KINGLAND, FAMQUS CALIFORNIA R.E. BROK· ER. * PLEASE CALL * s41-6n1 ASK FOR im. KASS . . ' $ZlS. Olivetti calculator, 10· GLASPAR • refinlahed, Low ml $700, Call 545-4251 FOR. TOP USl:D CAM i: GAS DRIVEN COMPRES-model 24 Dlvbum.a .xlnt e PUREBRED BLACK LAB Like New, 14' New boat d&yl: 635-4256 eves, I! your car ii IXtn. ~ ~ 11~1 !°:r:;:~::re:~~ =~tor.:~:.~~ puppies* l~d* =·,spare tin & wheel. '70 Honda Trail 70, 400 ml'1, lte ~~BUICK .; ";;-----~-~~I 673-19f1 DRAITING furn., lep.I Wes, _IS_ll_' _R_un_a_bou_t -.,--tlshln--1' Xtru,77Xlnt cond, $250 firm, 2.14 E. l71b St. '• • 800 Mi1cellan10U1 811 copy mach, IBM typewriter, I[' boat • trlr. """' hull 96&-IS Colfa Mao 1141-T/ll •teno desk. 64!>-1335 or rree t~ You w/rontrola & ·n He, $:165 1970 TRIUMPH SOOcc- JOHN'S BIKES ,_, _ _, _______ , Lmmmmm~~~, ..,,_ ~.~·:,;;t:.• ~ c!,.~ Antiques New Shipment Fine Europe•n ANTIQUES Just Arrivedl Cojl'lplete aelectlon ot fine "Jilrn., colleetor'a Hems & accessories from Austria, England &: France. (Dealers W"elcomel ANDREAS ANTIQUES NEW & USED Pianos/Organ• 126 • 1" row boat, d""'ble, atle, TOP I BUYER POODLE & ? puppies, needs paint. $300.00 P b: 1910 YAMAHA 360 ..ENDURO BILL MAXEY TOYOTA SALES & SERVICE Faclory Authorized lovable fantastic disp. paper 67>229> -Xlnt cond. $695. 18881 Beach 81 d. 10 sPetd bikes $40.$90 Distributor for trainecl. 6 males 1 female. l -B-.. -1,-,-p-0-w-0-,---906-:,ru;ci'C&J'i'-1 ~55~7~....S~'y;;;;;aj;;:llH.~Be~ach.~--_:P~h.~'.!1<1~-85S~ 3 spd Mena &: Womens $25460 Yamaha * Kimball 548--8232 4/19 ---------STREET A: dirt '10 Yamaha 5 speed $40-$80 Conn * Thomas SAVE me from ttie pound '69 LUHRS 33'; Flybrld,e, %iO Enduro. X1nt cond. $515. WANT to buy ' 5 6-' 5 I All Bikes Guaranteed Kohler & Campbell Small blk 9 wh SPMlel. TWtS, ga.1, F'W cooled, Call 673-Sl.11. Meroede1 Benz 220S bl toad Some Sold As-Is Fabuloua selection ol new a: male. Good watch dog. trim tabs, S/S, swim 1!ep, •10 TIUUMPH 'I'IWR, ~. cond. Call f75..2422 2340 NEWPORT BLVD. used grands, aplnet., con· 499--3821 4/20 bait tank, cstm crpt1, pre• XJnt cond. $1000. Call Autos, Imported COSTA MESA i;oles & orga111 only at Two female dot•, part doxJe, water, snifter, pwr wlllCh 53&-0422. 971 OPEN '-10 PM WKDYS COAST MUSIC l•ues, Col's do& ho""' •le. + Mo,.. Sacrlfke 118"00. IB.::l=CT--=CLE=-Sch-wl-M--ra-ce-r l ALFA ROMEO 9.5 SAT. & SUN. NEWPORT A HARBOR tee-to gd home. C&ll962-4097 _P:_:h:::_'__:34::9-:__ll::7::'----type. 3 speed $50. l--=,...,==oo---1 -Will take Trade-Ins-Cmta Mesa * 642-2851 4121 BOAT &: Newport mooring. * 642-6514 * '67 oumo ~--------2380 Newport Blvd., C.M. Sales * 645-4810 • J . W. ROBINSON Open Tue thnl sat toam/5pm -NEWPORT BEACH -Sun noon ti! 5-c:lo!ed Mon DIAMOND ~ -ktall e 300 Pla.nos & 0,..,.IUll _FR_E_E_kl_tt-•no ____ :..;;: Lee, tut 17' fbrgls fish Ir: ~-='-'-C.,.:=~~~"~Xln~I '"""""'" .......... ·• lkl boat. 100 hp OIB, I HONDA CB 450 l""'' I Has an immediate opening for a *Full or Part Tim•* TV SALESMAN e FULL TIME e XLNT. BENEFITS ring, 4 eta, 'JW, fiawle.u NEW-USED. Goin& out for M0-2S86 bunks, bait tank, trlr, convt mech. cond. $495. See at Immaculate! l owner, boo perfect, certified appraisal s""'t 1 ineu. ~ .. ~~ S!OKaa moal. l-~----~---'<::_::1'19 top. S1850. 833-3.188. 30182 S. Cout Hwy, S. Lag. ~~.~i::.· (~~n.I $4l50 -sell cuh $1450. e nway, DAW .. .,, .. w LAB and Australian Shep 1961 32• ch r l, Corl-Mobil H -r .,~... G"•..u ..., ... --· Chkk•rln• Yamaha '" •• • omH •N Will ·-----.~. dlr. KENMORE auto washer $45, Dlamond plen.-..u earrings, • • • female. 1 yr free to a good thla.n-twl.n &crew f ull y "'.....,""" .,..,. v \Vhirlpool elec dryer $45, studs, $150. D l am o n d F1ELD'S PIANO CO. home 8-11-0581 4no ' p9 -<-ct for Call art lO &m 540-!100 • Both xlnt cone!, guar & solitaire we<ldlng set $175. Costa Mesa Garden Grove equipped, ready to IO· rTW 49f..T506 12 115 ~-tat• Sale•. 6.., "'-. fl14l 645--32.50 1n41 638-1l70 BEATI.FUL registered Collie 548-2434 Vacation l---~===o----1 delivered. 540--86 • 847-8 "'"" ,,.......,..,.,., needs lots of Io v e OR I DATSUN • 13 5 ~ CHEV P.U. •~•. 69 Toni HAMMOND, S t 1 l n w • Y, ..,~. •""" 4121 '19' SP TSFISHER, Oy nr Immaculate 10x45 2 bedroom KENMOn.E washer, • oN ........, y aha N I: sed .,................., brldje, dual control•, 1/s ke 'l '"'"""'"""""===="'I Appliances 802 excellent: Also Washer & trailer, complete $795. Slate am ' ew u 8 mo old mosUy while male radk>, twin bait tanks. Xlnt Fleetwood -.u new Sl995. '69 2000 ROADSTER Dryer set. 54().1003 pool table $200. Lg. weed pianos of most make•. Best ..i..... k ~· lnclude1 furniture and awn- Apply in person 10-5 pin LARGE REFRIGERATOR. cutter & rototiller $15() each. buya; in So. Callf. at Schmidt ;•897~&780 Tur er . .,..&--~~ shape. $2500. P h: 842-4904 ings. Permnnel Dept $·15. Xlnt Cond. Band saw, jig saw, Rkll saw. Music Co., 19Cl'l N. Main. 32' CLASSIC Cruiser. Sound BAY HARBOR •2 Fashion Isl., N.B. * 646--7820 * M~uc~h'.,mo~re'.:'_! _"53G-~2'83~~~'l~Sajic"'i•NA~n~a<;. rlili;:-i!ITT;;;;;o;;;J I 9 week old lovaQle puppies, hull, xlnl eng. Many Xtras. MOBILE HOMES Eq"'J Opportunity Emptoy<r =~==7'=-:c-----,----:--ORGAN Sacrlltce. llnmmond tree le> good home, $1500--Wlll trade? For into 1425 "·'-S j UH bo FR JG I D A IRE washer, MOVING, m~t ~ell: J\.1etal B-J, xln't cond. Muet sell 4gg..1145. 4/19 ph: 548-3012 alt 6:30 wkdys oa11er t Us-t 0 at' r A Divls!on of SEAMSTRESS for Westinghouse dryer. Both desk & chai:r, Elec dryer. $l450 11141 M&-SlQS BEAUT re11:lstered Collie lS' PI.'..EASURE boat, 40hp _B::1:,;•::d·=·~Co;;-::;""'',CM,:,'"'"'=-=--Susquehanna ColllOl'allon a l teratio n s, must be $50. Runntng """"""· 675--1412. Lge wall gUn. cue, contr. _...._ 1 1 1 e THE MEADOWS 8 5 spd. dlr. Owned by little old IChool teacher from IA· guna Beach. Fu.ti price $1198 IZNS 159) Take older tradl or small down. wm. tinanCe pvt, pty. Alt U) IUD H).31£1) or 494-'F.!06. experienced. Full or. part Et""" whcelbarTOW, sturdy ping Wuriltzer Spinet Plano n...,... Ola o o v e. Evinrude. Elf'c. shift, conv. Flnt'st adult communU;y Equal opportunity employer timt'. Call 61;,-1381 or COL.Dir_ SPOTw••h',•,11 ,· d!:~srt pona: table, misc tools & Like New! Y6t<-850llO G ·" 4119 top wftrlr, $950. 962-0447. In So. Calli • 646-8346 re 1g, I'" ·.,,_-..;·,,· equip, 646-7994. $500. 842-1065 UN 1m .... tame rabbi! 22' Cabin lnboard/outbl'd, e $300,000 Rec. ce n t er '68 DATSUN SEDAN -•-al · Good rond, ..,. ea. ""' -· I -1 sandy co Io red male Trlr $1100 P ~~1:tl'\Bha~e e P:;!~: * SECRETARY/RECEPT. LGE Norge gas dryer, white, ANTIQUE Diamond cluster Sewing Mach nes 111.1; ~9965 4119 ' * it&-3886 * Swimming pool • Lawn Groovy Newpt. Bch. branch o,wrks fine. S45. All elec ring ... Toltal w:::i~fp1351lx. 3 197l Si-r, Join the .. Iden __ _:c_.:::::..::::.:...::...__ bowl!n~ • ituch More. 4 Door 4 speed db' AJr teallln! wriUng & layout e11:p o! bill~· 1 corp. Mu•t •-__ .,. a .. ,.~ TO qUal home 10 wk old G. Bo•ts, Rent/Chart'r 90I On Jellrey Rd Betv.'ffn S.A. _.... • d' •-,· 1w· Qft "'" "" home, cannot me. 6i5--0305 ........ · · · .,. ol sewing. Save _ ..... , ra IO, '""a er. ,,,. on newspaper/magutne. sharp , attractive. A'kfrg $650 or best offer Shep. tncd yd. 54&--08ll; &. San Diego Fwy, <'ii mJ 3121 Wllt •·•·· -de or •-838--93£i0 Tustin. G.E ...... ..i-·er • 3 te.mp., ' · hundreds of dollars w/th\1 83&-f493 4/19 32' Twirucrew Chris, fully So o( SA Fwyl I.Alie ~· UJl' pertoMble. Gd. t Y p I 1 t . "~ ..... ,,. Phone between 10 AM & 6 · t 11 · 'd >"-hi Crul • · • • ance private ...... -., Coll ON TV'IlJlll·PteSS, 1 .,.. old. $9S. one, A uto ?1) a t ~a y ST n--·-' 1 equip . 111 na or s-* 7141832--8585 * ,_.,,,. •PRODUCT! Benefits. Start $450 & go .-J· Pl-.! 642.J230 :z:lc-zap: Buitonholn, Blind · _.,,.....,u, ma e, 4-5 yn. Ing. Alm '59 Twtnacrew 546-8736 er 494..Qlll. SUPERVISORS e from there. 643-30!2 (lntv's Pvt __ Pty~·-536-<532----~~ Lovable, lo gt!. home. {2\3) ,..,_, XI I ~ m211A 24x60 complele Rt-up 1n f _ MINK coat, full length, MUii hems, Monograms, • t c · i~·~-~ ·-!!!_· ____ _'4':1~91 j 0v,::•'•;;"';c·7.:;";-'°='~;;-..:~=~"i;;~;o DOT DATSUN All three shifts. Xlnt uture Sat &: Sun too) Furniture 110 LI 1 -• ••• h """""100 adult ""rk. Yr olrl, Best -~-~=~~~-sell $800 or best otter. New m I=. ~ cu or am. Boots, •·ii -~ Jnr eflectlve leaden to joln. SEC'Y fCdM) Youngl.;..;;,.. _______ ros1 $3500. Call anytime, pymnts. 54.>-8238 FREE puppies, 6 wk1. -7 "7 offer. 9850 Garfield, Sp 21, OPEN DAILY the tlarOOr Area's Jastest environmental firm seeks WHY BUY 548-5981 Buset mother. Also, lcit!ens FAMILY Boat; Columbl1. 221 ~":c'•'d'""::h::..:96&-~7::61.2=.,-~=I ANO growing company. cti 1911 Necchl1 just arrived 6 wlca. 897-1641 4/19 I'. I T I 945 ?.t acGREGOR YACHT bright attn. ve young TONE up for summer! Have from IWy. (All apecially & eood slip. 4 Salle, a l l Trai er1, r•V• SUNDAYS see'y under 30, l girl office FURNITURE?, m sell qulek, Relax ... -Ozor. priced 1 Wttk onl:y) To BEJGE mix bred puppy. acCt"ssorle1 &: nearly new ---------1 1J835 BeoQ amt. CORP. w /varied responsibilities. r vt w1 all sweet Lovable fued yd moror. Reul Call 548·1263 15' Field le Stttam, Fd. cond H tt--Beacb 1631 Placentia, C.M. Salary WS4fOO mo. For Below % price. Uice new. ma.ke appt or e Ill' c MS--0813; 836-4493 · 4119 aft 5. $500. MZ-0965 &ft 4.PM or wk .;"m7;·s;o;a S. Flexible I Call IWM494 or 541-6464. 545-82.}' '-'-"-''-------'l~""";..-~=--==l~;;;;p;:::;;=:tU::==I PR 0 FE S SIONAL phone a.ppt call Mr. Taylor or Mr. SH POO &: Se llO 2 }"'reef rabbi ls 18' Unicorn Cat. Fa1te1t e " t .. 11,.ltor • Dana Point, San Price at 673-8781 Rent mo. to mo. wlrh AJ\f ts on Sporting Good• "A"7234 d 1 k Trolltrs, Utility 947 69 Datsun WGIMlft ' -'--"-~-----100" p h 0 ti Mondays, Tuesdays It.I ""--"'------.,....... ma c, I e new Inc trlr. cost ,.,. ·Clemente. Cap\1trano area. Secn!tarial-10 urc ate P on \\'@'dnesday $3.50 by lArt. GOLF clubl, 9 lron1, 4 4/19 ov $2000/1ac $]25() 613.fi663 14, T nd T II 4 apeed, Dir. Jla«So. ha.brr. \vork I• your own .. ~e Ind. llem ulcctlon --..,,--..,.----,-~o--~~ I c:.:..:=:::..:=.::::::c==:. I em r• er 1~·~ 911) ••·---~•-•• ""'" · SECY.-Co~te, lepI, ex· 300 W. Coast Hwy. 642--084'1 v.wda, aluminum •ha f f . i Beaut marked 7 wk old e 1910 HOBIE C A T """"' "'uat -.;n ........... i t delU ln lltta. PhOne ecutlve exi)er. Laguna HUis. 24CHUr ••• TDOaMly. IRVYNE COAsr COUNTRY golf ba.c: a: ca.rt. Xlnt $90. kltten.1 to cd home only, w/traller. ~31 Sllo.rp. Call With 4 whttla. All 1tttl wtkJ. Will trade! CIJl lfM738 « g,,;; 1,165 between 1:00 a.m. Call • 837-327.0 Ext 247 for CLUB benhi r Bal 54&-0523 9U-6644 4/19 67"~1340 or 615-8U9 ed constntcUon. 1.4" Steel 494-Qll. anU noon. t. Furniture Rental mem P or e.1-'-'="='~· ==~==-cl__:::.;::;:;__ ____ .= -"==.:o..=..:::::... __ deck plating. Wiii sell or·1'1"96"s"D"°A'°'T"su=N'°'S"'por=rts:--:.~=--I app 517 W lSth C ri.t MS .3481 Pvt pty. 673-0960 Ir GREEK rOAM SPOON * COCKER doll.lee 5 mo. and OLYMPIC Nc\vport Flnn No. tr.I.de tor pickup. 3166 Sicily, l600 ,~ ..,._.. '""""'::"::; REAL ESTATE SALES Need 4 licensed sale• J)('OP\e. Private desk• phone.'. Bual- neu is real rood! Cali for lnrrrvtew. W. E. Lachenmyer 1.860 Newport Blvd., C.M. Call 6§6.3928 EW$: 613-4517 RECEPTIONIST. Attract. outi(O!.ng ~ tor locul col· Je11. Do )'OU llke people & the phoneT Llle IYJ'lnr. Start $350. c.it Sally llort, ~. COASTAL AGENCY 7790 Harbor Bi at Marna The fut€'1t draw in lM W111 ..• a Dally PUot Clwl.Oed , Ari, MUi6'78 SERVICE Sta. Salcsm•n fl.di ' • · 174:2800 WASHER, Xlnt Cond. $&5. 5'3'', >.Int cond, $5.'i. cocker mbt. 3 mo. pnrt. 131. Trlr. North •ll•. Xlnt (Mesa Verde) C.M. ..,_,A ...,.1se~:•1• .,...;::•w. '-- time. Must ~ neat ln A"\&helm 694-3708 Kiogs:t S;pM!ah hdbrd $25 • 646-591.S Mark • hlbtk. 3JG...449'3 4/19 ('(Ind, smo. 213/59Z-5459 i~~~~~~~iii·l ~~iij=~~~~·w-r;··oo.~;;;I appeatancf'. Apply 2 S 9 0 Wf{abra 645-3900 or 64~1519 S' l" B.C. twin fln"1urfboard, 3 kl!tcns, 8 wk.a oltl, pt. LIDO 14 TOP COND 1910 DATSUN 1600, Vet'J' Nt!wport Blvd. C.M. 8' LIGHT Beige curved 1<1f1, POOL ta.b!e w/be.11& a: eues, Brand new! Slam€'~ 64~1120 4/19 W/TRLR, $1".:i(). Auto•,.,,.,,. I[ A_i ,._«_"_'_·_Be'=•l~o~f!~cr~,~m~us-t _..c._ 1 S E R V J C E 51'AnON S75 or bet olr. 2 Twin beds $50. Sofa bed couch. $«). • 64H564 " l adull male eat and adult * 642-3J03 * 644-5292, l37-&UI. S&letma.rrExp'd. <>wt xi. $10 ea. matt Ir: coll •Prnp ~~~;;;::~;/,~~~.,;~;"~ &~~~~' Day work. 3lOO E. Cout $1.50. 673--07'3. Call 963-6945 TV, RadJo, HIP:I, ftmale cat. 893-2861 4/19 otRYSLER '70 Lone Star r .IU". , Hwy, CdM 4 MYRTLE MXld Burl inlay • BAI.BOA 88.y Club tt;:. Stereo 136 1 Adult female spayed cat 13' Rlllll! $69,;, Equipptd. Dune Buggiei 956 SERVICE Sta. Attendant tabl€'s; 2 lllep eM, I lamp, 1 ~~bt. ,".,"'. !:.,. !!412°· Inc 1 RCA ca!&ett playcr/rrcordtt 893-2861 4/19 cC;:•:::ll..;6;..~~::.7cc·~-~~-j62 FERRARI cott SlOO. &l:Hl396. ,....,.., :.00"'"""1,., l\10TllF:R cat •1'111 klllens Hobie C at 14 w/trlr, t • aJSTOl\f metal Datsun E.'<p'd, s.lary plus comm. I I Rl BICYCLES all""'"' St'n,.. & apeokf'l'I $75; G .E . 893-2867 4/19 $1.JO *** 675-8126 dWI& bufi)'. $650. 990 E. Coa.st ltwy. N.B. APT cf um, 1nc . viera , ·~•~s. i.,.. Portarolor TV $9j: Admiral •962-5611 * SltEF:r METAL couch,· t'll.·ii bed.a, tables, rays, 3 Sp, 10 Sp. Reas. remote e&W~ TV $3.:i. All 1 couch l'.lffdl repe.irlng Batts, Slips/Docks 910 ---"=...::c=----1 2+2 CPE. .......... ~., ch.al'n. 9H--9S69 334 Del Mat, CM 64l-l272 good cond. 642-SIB6 &l&-9009 4/19 ----'-----'68 ~tEYERS Manx. 1600 VW ·~·~-*MU--~n 1 o( 11 CUT n 1 ·g lat odel SLTPS avallabl(-. f lnett In l'"llnt'. Xlnt. cone!. $150) t1t 4 _.,Overdrive,""' tmlsb. t~\ate Openings •"'~~~ct ~.:._ vt v 1 re n 24 .. ~1 ml · ZENmr TV con 1 o lit FREE klltens 7 Wttk~. Box Nrwport, best racllll1e11, ofr. ~1691 <WID 573) Good Pl,)'! Call New! 19ra IUV,_,at, .,..., newl Apt 11 ze !love Xv , c ean, Blk/Wht 21'' s,. re,. n trained S.1~1447 4/20 fr e 0 parking, s2 2J / ti. 9AM·9PM, Sat !AAf.gpM Ct.II 6n..ftl6 30·• apt 51 •love. 54S-020J rernot~ rontrol. $13. Ph:' Ho1'1€' manure 5-l0-09'2:i Phone GT3-117ll Ill lO pm. Sporft , Race, Rods 959 $3595 O. C. !:mploymtnt Agency COLONIAL m~ple Jow~11t CHAIN SA\V 675'-1741 I ;.:q:;u_;:lc:..kcccu:=h=l::.or~ll=w-IU-,-"' CATA.:\tARAN Own~ r 11 . t '70 GTO t lJ4 Broadway· ())st& Meu. conv. tofa both gold cnished Like new, ~leclrlc Sj() GO" STI::REO CABIN£'f DAJLY PILOT Clauitled nnder 21J ft 81)al ~!i'"' SlJ u:; . Rarn Air • 4 1pd. ~---... • l'W ... ..t...-i 6'5-3111 MS-310 645-lUS vtlvtt $125. 6Th--0941 . 64Ukil4 WALNUT ftl'l '"' ,~ ,.~ ... .,, Olli tW2·5678 Ir: charqe It. per month Ip ark In I• $2895 ~00 Harbor Blvd. &u.04e8 rw but re1ul1-l &U-5678 We'll help you .ell! &ll-.'i6i8 Call 64H£i8 ' Sa.wt • 6f6..ro23 • DON'T gtve II away, l'fll 61r,....411! &16-466.S AIT 4 I: \VKNDS , • t , ,_ ....... ______ ~ --------- -l I • j I DAILY ~ILOT Monda>, AP<ll 19, 1971 r---_ .. _-__.§] I _.... I~ I ·~........ !§] I ._.... l§J I _..,_ I~ I M...... I§] I .. ~...... l§J I -....... I§] I .......... l§J ......... --1 'A~ut~11,~l~m~p=•~md~~....:!9~70 Autos, lmporlod 970 _A_v_1o_,_, _1m_po;..,..rt_oc1 ___ ,10 Autos, lmpomd FIAT KARMANN GHIA MGB PORSCHE 970 Autos, lmporlod ' TOYOTA 9711 Auto., Im.,...... 9711 Autos, ·uooc1 990 ...-YO~LK......:.SW.;..;.;.A~G-EN.;.;.;:1~~CA~D~l~LLA~C..;..:.; A_,u,... 990 CHEVROLET Autos,·Uood 990 MUSTANG 1JJll llACH ILYD. '""'· ,,. 893-1566 • 5.37.QIH NEW'.USED-SERV. ~ fUNCARI 'ii CONV. sns. 645-S283 JAGUAR Only 10.000 miles. ' 4 apeed tra!WWkm. radio, heater, wire wheela, factory war· ranty available. (933.BSY) $4995 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17lb St. Coat& Mesa 548-7765 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CDSTA MESA LAMBORGHINI * LAMBORGHINI * 400 GT 2+2. R«-Blk Int Purchased New, June '68. 8,!XXI ml. Inunac. $8500, Pvt Ply, Hntr Hrbr (%LI) 592-1062. MERCEDES BENZ $875 Harbor American 646·0261 191>9 HAileoR COSlA MESA '60 Mercedes 220 SE fuel 2 +2. Automatic, radio, heat-injected. AM/FM. Must See Trade for Ponche or er, chrome wft w~. ·-'I .,0 _ pT\mroae with black leather -~-·-~-~--~~--- lntorlor. IZQD3'4) MG $3195 ·~ BAUER BUICK • THINK . "~&" 234 E, 11th St. COsta Mesa. 5-18-7765 f Dr. Red. Automatic, CJBY 270) $765 ·~·~ 2100 Harbor mvti. 64S-04fi6 ''FRIEDLANDER'' lml 111.&0I flf'WY , m 89,1.7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. ~ '62 MG Roadster-New brakes & tDp, Good paint &: lnl N~ eng work. $350 or trade f-Or vw. 557-2924 MGB 'ti3-Witt w~. Jun: rack, yellow w/blk top. Great cond . ..S1650. 673--0617. OPEL '6S RORSCHE 365-C, white,) 'i&·Cotom.)tardtop, •-Mr '69 vw srnlll e ow""· 48.000 ml, AM/FM oond. Low ~. Like Y111n C..d. ''7 Cpo, De Vlli. Blaupiinkt radio Pl:RITCI' ~-Slc. $1!00. --FACIURY lhnl..,..t. 61>-<05L TRIUMPH ••10m&tlc lnnmtlulon. Mid-AIR CONomoNJNa '61 PORSCHE 9U, Xtru;'I· --------niaht blue witb bl.ck inter-Full JIO'o'ft, beautiful cloth A EXCEPTIONAL ~ ~', """" $3<00 '67 Trium-. GT 6.Cpe. ..... (ZB$1')99 :..~.:·.:~ .= '66 OPEL KADE"ITE S/W * .67 PORSCHE 912, S opener, lJl:bt 1tnt1ntl, auto l OWNER MS-llll.1 i1peed, top shape, Mwt sell. Britiah Raclns Green, fuJb' dim.met; mott·everydlx. u- PORSCHE SJ<95 . ....-or 673-J.181 Equipped. -,....,.. PUU tra. tTVViOlll. 166 ?HM CLUB OOUJ'}; N~ Jll.lnt il teat covers. Nie<. ITFV774) Prloe $1595.. Will take trade $2444 2100 Harbor Blvd. 64.5.-0Ki6 '63 p L-S TOYOTA or will finance Pvt. Ply. ·11111 BEACll BL.· ..,._ "'!!!~~~-~iii orsc.... . uper --------1 <11'. CdM -or""""' HUNnNGTON BEACll ~· a, $ SHOW CAR ·s1 ~-2 <1r " '67 "USTANG Cpe. Bahama "'"""' """ .,. TovoTA NEW .• ,. • ,, e ' -~.. · M interior, AMIFM. cltro1ne au am Large S.ll!ctiOll ffdan. CW!itom pa.Int, cu•tom grey, V4, auto, Xlnt cond. ~~ recent e D & In e NO DOWN '71 SPnRRES Of YW Ca1=-n, M/TMO~fto~l~ ~~~ ~a'r ~~ ~ -·Be;.::'.;.' "oH.:.:".:.:·c."',,,;.-..,.-,.62~~ t'XW!1!11 NOW ON DISPLAY "T•• 2600 HARBOR BL., inYttted. $1000 or best olt!r. '6.5 Mu1ta111 F1tbcli:, i cyl 3 $2399 PAYMENT eomo.,.,. • '"' _, v-. Kombls, =•MESA 6'5-3911 ""· 1695. CHICK IVERSON FRITZ WARREN'S luses, New & Used 50).9100 0pon Swxtay • .., Chevy 1mpa1a eai1 frl>.1045 $69.01 MONTH• SPORT CAR CENTER lmrnodloh Delivery • Fae m. Plb. PIS V! 10 "°'' 302. 4 •pd. Tractioo YW 36 m... OeL pay ....... 1111 E. lits~ S.A. 54T-076f CHICK IYERSON '69 Coope DeVillo VERY CLEAN * .!600 lock .......... Co•t S">OO. 549-3031 ExL 66 or 61 $USl.36 or cash pr ice Open dally I. : doted~ J'ull powtt, eooct cond. * 646-~ * Sae $2900. ~- 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $2003.55. loci. Tax ~ Lie VOLi<SWAGEN YW . 67>-"62 o• 673-5723 '68 °""'II' Stn wagon. All '68 MUSTANG 2+2, p/•, COSTA MESA A.P.R. 14.541.M . Serial No. ~ !:rt .• or IT e new tires, Xtra clean, $1i00. p/b, air-cond, SlfiOO. Call ~~~~~;~';,.~;~ .. ,,_ JJ4;'~; •••••••d cndlt 1970 TOYOTA ts'IO=~vo. CAD. ·~=GHAM 1 -0":0>-cc•~:,:,":,:,H~R~Y~S=LE=R~-_..,."""2585"'p""LY=M"'O=u~TH=--I ocrlpt!on. ""' o"' ...... Bill Maxey Toyota COROLLA 1960 v w AlR CONDITIONING lent lhnl out. PXW-982 18881 BEAOI BL. MT-15$ UXI wllb 8.(0) mi. Grey 'l'rith • • Conv. Gl.isteni.n,: •:111ecutive black • ----- -~--iiiiil!jijjiiiiiiiij;j LOOK -$2,399 HUNTINGTON BEACH oporty ml lotmo<. Truly Ckean blue. tbnd lioden. tin~h w/bllck '"0>1 top, {6-9 Ch.Lry:r.SefUW!on• • d CHICK IVERSON pne<d tor quick ..,,, !l6-maa ,....,.. G,.., ...... ricb IU11 blact I••""'"'"'· ~11 w• '69 Roa runner $1871 BQF .,,.,, lw>. JLZ4()7 k>r, IU11 pow"· mcl. ""'"" YW 1971 TOYOTA COROLLA AT $1599.00 PRICED $599.00 "'"""' auto dlmm"· door !'HS-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED CHICK IVE locks, 'dual comfort seats, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. #9878 CHICK IVERSON RSON trunk ... ,,. •. Till • tol•- COSTA AIESA CHOICE OF S VW VW aoopic atttring, AM ~ FM " L 549-303l·Ext. 66167 mu!Uplex. trunk opener. 1965 PORSCHE S.C. ••• no0:• "'9-3031 Exe 16 •• 61 Vogue.,..... most every.,._ Racing green with electric tun UUUI WO HARBOR BLVD. l9'70 HARBOR BLVD. luxe extra made. <Ser. 8096). •uorool. Cl•an and ""'°' TOYOTA COSTA MESA -~CO=ST:.::Ac:M:::ESA=--1 $4666 ~~,;;"''"•d. p"""' " .. u. 1--,6-'8=vw:.:.::..:::sE=DA:::.N__ '63 vw SEDAN ONL y $2,799 1916 Harbor, C.M. ....9303 (ASL 634) Town&. Counlr)'. Full power, factory air, roof .rack, .split bench seat, etc. Warranly available, {ZDY840) $3595 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St, Costa. Men. MS-776.j CHICK IVERSON '69 CORONA ff.T. YW Beige wifh vinyl roof, extrac- tor exhausts. Many eXtrul Sharp! (V&\300) $699 ~1>!~ AUTHORIZED ou.wt 1970 IMPERIAL LeBaron: 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CLASSIC No. 57 Por'lche speedster, strong l800ce 912 eng. Asking $2500 or trade? 4!M-7865 or 494-8314 $1499 Ha rbour 11 .W. Loaded. Automatic, factor)' air oond. Full stereo. Owned by little old lady from La· guna. IZDTI02J Full price $1799. Take small down. Will finance pvt. pty. dlr. Call 54()..3100 or 4!J4.7506 aft 10 18711 BEACH BL. 8f2..K1S am, HUNTINGTON ijEACH 2600 HARBOR BL., Full power, Fl\f sterec, new COSTA MESA tires. Xlnt cond. Ca 11 Har bour 11 .W. 540-9100 Open SUnday _646-&24":;;""'7' ,;'73-<1);3""'~-~=,.,_ IBm BEACll BL. ..,_.435 liiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiiiii CONTINENTAL ·smsnnoNW'cN '64 sEblA ot vitlE ' • FuB power + air. (QJF402) e 1968 LINCOLN Immaculate. All extra.s & power. 675-3590 2 Dr. H.T. V1, auto., radio, heater, power stttrill&' & brakes, low miles, factory warranty available. BeauU· tuJ condition. <YPI'3TJ} $1995 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St. C.OSta Mesa 543-TI"GS '.69 Sport Sub<rrbon g...pus wgn, A/C, PIS, P/B, New tires, HJ mi's but tm- ma.c oond, Ul95 firm. 615-7689 e '&:; BARRACUDA - 6 cyl, 35,500 ml. $iSO or best o&.r 54&-4611. '65 "C" eotq>e, Jo mi'a. Fae air, AlVl/FM, ?.lust sell, ia;so or oUer. 642-0787 BEST BARGAINS COME SEE OUR SELECTION OF '68 VW SEDAN 4 BPffd. dlr. Radio, beater. (VST 387) W\1J. take older trade. Will t1nance private party. Call Of.6811 CC' CXEV 457) $1599 $795 ' ~ """""' CORVAIR 1962 Plymouth :itation warm. New til'e1I & brakes, $2$.. '63 MONZA, 4-spd, Very 646-6912 ciean. XJn1 "'"'• "'""· ""t -~P~O=N~Tl=A~C~--1 '64 Porsche C Coupe Xlnt cond. 543-~ alt 6 Garage cluttered? ~I your "Elephants" fast .call DaJ· ly Pl.lot Oassi.tied now! W-56711 TOYOTAS Jim Slemons lmport1 140 W. Warner Santa Ana Open Eves, & Sun. 540-4125 -· '69 YW SEDAN Z100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 sacrifice $225. aft S : Ml-6174 ---. .-,,=.,.,-==-•I • 196.5 MONZA."""'· HO hp.4 '69 GRAN PRIX CAD. '66 SEO. speed stick. One owner, low DE VILLE miles. Eng. xlnL $495. Full power. d.lr. Air condl- 1955 VW. Small window, new FACTORY 673-6257 itioning. 2fi,OOO acwaJ miles. Harbour 11.W. 18711 BEAOI BL. ~ HUNTINGTON BEAOI 980 A~, Now 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 910 Loaded with extra& lncludtni lugage rack and p!n 1tri~ lng, Sharp? (lffiAFZ) brakes, headers &: paint. AIR CONDmONING (ZMS S:WI \Yi/I take trade Nice Interior, runs good, FULLLEA'nlERINTERIOR '63 Corvair Spyder ·good or finance. Call 494.7T44. Desperation Sale $350 , AU power exlra.s, A.J.\f.f'M condition, 4 spd, Must sell! " .. FIRST BIG Several modeh & styles to 1=hoose from induding the Uncoln Continen· tal. Demonstratol'I have 6,000 to 7,000 miles only. Some with less. JOHNSON & SON Lincoln Continental• Mark III• Mcrcury•Cougar 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540-5630 642-0981 $1499 Harbour 11.W. trnl BEAOI BL. ~ HUNl'INGTON BEACH WANTED rn pay top dollar fer 3"0'D' VOLKSWAGEN -.. Call and ""' for Roo Plocho~ 549-Dl Ext. 66-67. '1USOO. '69 VW, 23,000 ml'•, AM/FM, Map il othtt xtru $1550 or make ofr, 968-65511 '67 YW FASTBACK Clementine with black inter- ior. ('OCA776) $1299 Harbour 11 .W. 1871l BEAOI BL. 842-4435 liUNTINGTON' BEACH '66 VW Van; New paint, Xlnt cond. 1500 ccm eng. ?.1a1t sell $895 or offer. Newport Union Service 3939 W. Cout: Hwy, NB '66 YW SEDAN Irish areen with luggage rack. Sharp .l clean! CPED- 130) $999 Harbour 11.W. J.87U BEACH BL. 842...f.435 HUN'.l'INGTON BEAOt 196B YW 83S-Q68 aft. 5PM radio, our weekend apecl&J.. I ...;;Ee.""'"';· ~6'ji.6832~in;;;o;;;;o;--• ~O *G4T~pd.· ... vw B•" -.it .... (TGEll071. CORVE 11 E 128$ Chrome J'lm•o. $13.50 $l999 * S4S.ffi3l *· 1968 CORVEITE ENG 327, 646-4665 aft 4 le wknd5 ibeA, clulch. &II Ho"'ln( Munc!o STATION WAGON &<!) 4 spd. c.Oihplete. ·P~t '70 LeManA w/wood trim, CAOIUAC condition $400. 6ti-468T full pv.T, air, IUg. rte, Xln't VOLVO AUTHOlllZED OU.U" CORVETTE '67 Si 1 Y e r cond. $3400/oUer. 96J.2.lll1. llif» HARBOR BL., tutbaclt.. 4-Apd, 327/350 "10 Lema.ns:, 1'UbJ' eqwp•d Lo ' ...... COSTAMEM. u• ~-0 hp. Air, AM/FM, pwr ml' a, Pvt pty. 'VOL.YO' .~_-___ ._ .. _._._ • ....,._ -.... iant '°""· Pvt * .,,.!9'l3 * ·-"'" !2300. l7l4) Mf>3293 -.1°'96'°37L'E"-MA=N'"s--v"'-a';'""-I '69 El Dorado, lull pwr, a.ir, FORD Xlnt oond.. $350 Call 544-4S4T "FRIEDLANDEll" , .. 1u.ct1 orrt • ., 893-7566 • 5!7.a>t NEW-USED-SE RV. stereo, FM, tape, nu tires, :::-::-::-,-:--,---- 30,!Xll m1·1. Balance of fact. 1968 Fon! Couolry Squln. 9 RAMBLER warranty, $4250, may tnlde. '--d d PS PB \Yant 912 Porsche or $1000 passenger . .....,... e • • · '63 Rambler 327 cu. 1n. 3 car Y{/alr for eq. !26-4S27 elect wlndoYlll & seat. spd/ovet'drive. FM radio AM-FM Stereo, cruise with tape deck. 4:11 rear ~ '64 ql>llJ..AC, Clean, rood control, tugage rack. etc. end. Wlde ovals with map ==-===o:...==--1 cond. good brakes, Full S2375. Call (n4J673-UIOO S600 or Ent oUer, ~ $3093 ~-er, $999. 962--6888. '67 FORD Fairl&nt COnYI· alt SPM 1971 VOLVO DEMO 7360 We Speclalize 11'1 Overaeu Deliver)' ..Deo1tlewu W VOLVO • Sharp, VB, Pis, 3-spd, new 1 -~=o==~=~-' CAD. '61 BROUGHAM bmlre• & clulch. good """ STUDEBAKER LUXURIOUS FLEETWOOD 42,CKXI mi. $8SO. 846--1165. 1 --,.=_,.._,...._~--1 FAc:roRY 1967 9-PASS Cntry Sedan " 194& STUDEBAKER AIR CONDITIONING p COMMANOOR, 4~. 6 stick. Padded top. Beautiful tapes-~Ca.n ~30~~b, air. Stored 18 Years. 15,000 orig ti')' & leather interior. Full • ,65 Ford Yan • miles. Like New in & out power, incl. tO~ & telescope $600 cash Call 54:>-1335 or 1-16SO __ or~1'=-a~d~o.=645~....,~--1 11..n,... """' Jock<. '"""'· '49-0065. T ·BIRD 191i6 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 etc, ('VTI.$.389 J I "·10~c~TD~C~,~,,.,,-Squ~ln--,-.,n. Autos, Usod 990 3333 4,000 mi. Like oew. M'"Y 154 & '65 T-BIROS ib ..,,A. extru. $3975. 54Q....066S. BUICK ~al Cl.ti '63 man Falco,, xlot cood. .. ~CADILLAC low mileftg<. $IOO. 4 to ChooSt'! lrom. Coupes &. convertibles. AU ready to ao! AIJ'IHOAIZE-0 OEAUR * &44-4125 * 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA '69 Skylark Convertible. VB, autoi. R&ll, 540.9100 Open Sunday power steering, factory air, • factory w .. ranty. lmmocu-CHEVROLET late. IZLK-1441 JEEP '63 International scout 2100 Harbor Blvd. &15·1»66 4 x 4 ga le or trade * 546-J76J * ·35 T-BmD. reblt eng. BOdY MERCURY ~s~:~·~li· interior. '57 Chevy Wagon, new :::::":':===.,,-,--1 --~===~--I engine, emrl auto trans, 1968 ~fERCURY Colony Park TORINO $2795 good tires. New brakf's. $3jQ wagon • ImmaculatE'. All --..,,::-:--.-----! BAUER BUICK o• ""' offor. 54&-0714, 300.1 "'"". pow". 67:;.3590 '71 TORINO 234 E. 17th St. F'illmo~ \Vay, C.M. MUS --G Costa Mesa. 548-776.i '57 OIEV: Auto. Runs Good. .C::::"~,,,,.,.T,,.,,.A_N_G;.__ rten 11•Hh matchi!ij; inter-. lor. dlr. F'ull po"·er, air Diamond blue Y.i th blaCk In-Orig. oond. ~296• ~i 1967 J\;fUSTANG fastback . cond. (• 23.JA) \VU! tak1? terior. Mq wheela and ta· BUICK '68 Hdtop. Beaut.. pm. $350 Vinyl top, 4-spd, Al\f/F~t. trade or finance. CaU dlal Utts. XSP314 Real buy. w!tt whttls, Ult wheel. Buy the M\V sturt air. l owntr, xlnt conri 4~-n44. ONLY .$1099.00 11"' S<U th• old •Ml o.,., 532-4483, ••" ~16 "Ca11'"'64"'u.o'°'""''"'Nc::ow:::!---I CHICK ~ERSON 1 833-iiiiii.,..,~~iiorijji,~.,,.,...-·lfA:;;uto:;;s,~N~ow;._;:;;;;=~980~§A~ut§o'~· ~N~•w~-~9~80~A~ut~o~1,~N~o~w;__=~9:i01 M9-3031 Ext. .. or 67 '69 Le Sabre BRAND NEW 1970 HARBOR BLVD. lf70 COSTA MESA Custom coupe. VB, auto., Ric H,powtr1lttrin1A.brakes, ROAD RUNNER '~Jri:' BUS: GD J\.tEOI ~?' air, vinyl roof. (~ 1450 * .,....... $3195 '68 VW Pop Top Camper w/ tent k l&rre ti~s. Xlnt "'""· i.ow m11<s. 833-21'1. BAUER BUICK 1970 V\V YELLOW 12,<m mi. 234 E, 17th St. Xlnt Cond. Costa Mtt.a 54S-n65 Best Olr: 968-T227 '68 VW '""'· all< AM FM''"' CADILLAC cond. ~Iuat 1ell i 11 7 5. 6U-:t4s alt s ------..:.-~II '70 VW-Amer. mag&, radials, tape, wood 'l''httl, shelf, tmmac? $1850. MG-3347 '66 V\11 clean, good tlre11, engint n.1n1 fOOd, Ori&:inal owner. $800. 846-6437 ·rr VW Squattback, xlnt eond. w/radio & lua:aitt n ck. Low mllnre. 837-5570 '68 VW Bu&-Sundial cam~. Onn. $2500. Call 644-3407 or644-4M> Rod-Wht. '66 VW Bus $1100, • &«-156f A lood v.~nt ad is a lood tn\"HtJnent l11r1191t Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS In Oringt County 1963 thru "70'1 ~~ ..._,,. """"' 2fOO HARBOR BL., =·ME&\ m .9100 ~n Sunda,y '62 CAO. ~an de Ville Full J)OY.'t'r, s;,oo. Ev•• In C: ~2318 20 To ChooM From I ' • 1 DOO• COUPE lll VI, •11fe1t1•til, pow•~ ''••rint , ti ... tell ql•11, r•ll,-. ;..,tlrulflent P•n•I, he••y lluty t111p•11· 1!011, h••"Y "uty \••k•1, r•ll1e, F70 111-4 r•li•" white lttl•r ti,,,, cltreflle ro•ll wlt1•l1. l •M11 .NO( IJJ7Sll •