HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-20 - Orange Coast Pilot.
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Newport Er~eway
Vote: Approved
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' \IOL·M. NO. M. l 'llCTKlllLA·PMU· • / ,
Rules Gr ouP.
OKs Route
Vote Plan
By L. PETEii KRIEG
Of !tie DllllY PMDI l,.tt
SACRAMENTO -T)1e AssOmb!y Rules
Committee today voted a ••no l'ass"
morinnendatlon on ,a Ntwport . lleach
City Chorter amendmenl which would
r<qUlr< a vo!O of tbe peiple 6n ao1 Mure
(reeWIY rou1* 1greement!.
Tbe vote by tbe Assembly ~ was 2
yu. I no, S absenl Alsemblyman Robert
W. Burke (R-Huntingtoli Beach) cast tbe
lone no vote.
The cities of Costa Mesa and
Huntington Beach had f o r w a r d ~ d
resolutions to the rules committee asking
that Newport's Charter amendment,
approved by city voters, be rejected.
The proposed amendment now goes to
the floor of the full Assembly, probably
gometime late today, for a vote OB
ratification. It must also be ratified by
the California Senate.
Assemblyman Burke vowed today that
he wouJd fight against the ratUication on
the f1oor of both houses.
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R·
Newport Beach) introduced the
amendment to the rules committee this
morning, citing the 85 peret:nt favora~le
vote It had reet:ived in a special election
in Newport Beach.
Only four of the seven members of ~
rules committee were present for lhis
morning's hearing.
Voting for the favorable report were
assemblymen John L. Burton (0-San
Francisco), committee chairman: Ray E.
JohMOn (R-Chico), viet: chairman and
Ernest N. Mogley (R-Fresno).
Burke cast the lone dissenting vote.
Absent from the session w e re
assemblymen John P. Quimby (D-
Rialto), Leo J. Ryan (0-South San
Francisco) and L. E. Townsend (D-
Gardena).
Burke then introduced resolutions
adopted Monday night by both the Costa
Mesa and Huntington Beach city councils
urging rejection of the amendment.
. He also cited an opinion from the
legislative counsel's office that forecast
the courts would likely declare the
amendment unconstitutional if a legal
challenge were raised.
Opponents or the measure contend the
res1dent.s' of a single m\fnlci~nty do JtOt
(See FJ\EEW A Y, P11e.J)
or..,e.
Weather
Those low•cloods m getting to-
gether. Wednesday, and that meana
a c b·a n c f! of statttrtd ahewen ovemjgh~ .Temp'.eratures are tab-
bod In the M-11 degree rang~
INSIDE TODAY
Something old and something
new are in the o/fi'nfl for Local
drama fans on two Orange Coost
stages this week.-Ste Eftttrtain-
ment. Pagt 19.
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··Slai• Bog
'BODY DISCOVERED
Noah Albl, 20 Months
Ni xon May Visit
Camp Pend'leton
To Greet Troops
Hint! by Presidential aides arose today
· on the chances oC ·a · v!Sit to the Soath
Coast by President Nixon within the neXt
few weeka.
Cliild Said •
Hit Twice
. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Polic. said
today .,,. o! two young boys bela Jn the
crucifixion death ot a 20-monlb-old infant
has admitted the baby was tut twice with
a brick and then wired to a makeshift
cross ''so he couldn't get away."
"We didn't want .to get.caught," said
the 7-year-old boy, held in "protective
custody" at San Francisco Juvenile Hall
with hill 10-year-old brother in the death
of Noah Alba in a dingy basement last
week.
Juvenile inspector Dan Driscoll said the
younger boy led officen to the basement
"clubhouse" Monday where the body of
the infant was found, bound and wired to
a cross made of scrap lumber, with a red
cord around his neck, both wrists and hia
ankles. •
The President wa.s reported Plannini a. The infant was with his mother, Mrs.
visit to troops of the 1st Marine Dtviston Larry Alba , in Alta Vista City Park Jut
al Camp Pendleton wtJere \'~ e -.. Wednesday, when he sudden 1 y
Leathernecks will be ...........,.,-' ftei-disappeared. Police were led to the two . . ... .,...._...., a · yoong suspects -who may be so young
their return from Vietnam combat. that police were unsure what charge -if
The firat members of tbe divWon were ·any -could be lodged against them,
expected this weekend at the .hugt tine; ·,through reports from wltnes.ses.
but the Presidential visit, if any, would They were questioning parents of
no1 •-u Iii I le h'-k id' ( another boy about a routine complaint ~ n a r • Ill 3Pl! es~n sa ' that he had beaten up a chlld In the par'k
The President p18nned to spehd 'thii when the parents said, "I'll bet it was
weekend at Camp David, Md. .tboa ,;.....-boys'. lfhey're troublemliken '
The ' reports of the iinpm:liDg · viait and they're always up at that park."
correspond to some commeiits rDade by Driscoll said officers then went to
lht Preaident'1 ltaff durhte .tbe·lut.ybit Emerson School, where the 7-year-old ill
.tO'Sah c&emente"18Wral<Wee.b ago~ a pupil, Monday IDd took hlm M.Jt ef AA .dley lift fir Wnhlnafnn, ....,,1 acbooi.
~~'Of~ JtCU mentklJied.a.retum Ortscoll said the offk:en: wtre taking
vi.sit ia early May. • . Ute boy back to the }>ark and when they ,
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Missing Scouts;
2 Others Found.
Safe· in ·Wilds ·'.·'..'
KERNVIUE. (UPI) ·-.Five ·""'°""
missing sfnct Friday were found in load
condition this morning near their
snowbound auto on a rarely traveled
mountain backroad west of here. -
The five, Richard Wiswell, 23, Deborah
Buford, 17, and three Boy Scouts. David
Romero, U, Mike Flom;, 11, and Kenneth
McKemie, 14, all of Bakersfield, were
en route to a campout Jn the AJdtt Creek
ma Friday when.they dilappeared in a
soowstonn.
The Kern 'Counly Sberifr1 Department
said Wilwell'1 auto was stuck In a wash
two miles below Rhyne'1 camp 1>n the
Alder Crtek Road. Deputies at the scene
uid there wera II hK:hell of snow on the
ground .
neared the location of the basement
"clubhouse," asked him:
"Jf you were a policeman, where would
you look?"
DrlSCi>ll said the tk>y augeated varlOQ!I
locations, and thea said, "Look,· the door to that buement Is open."
Officers went in and found the nude
body, partially covered with sheeis,
filnnel ll)lleritl and 1a1ps•of wallpaper.
Driscoll said the infant had been ltrtlck
sevetal time,, with .a brick, ,apparenUy
jumped on, ROif~ 'fill! ,a, 1t1~ cbol<~ with a rope and then. oound Polo the
cross. . , . ' . . ·
DrilcoU iakl ~'the-7-Jear-old and his
brother, both white, were "playing a
game" with lhe baby, the younger boy
said.
"My brother had a brick Jn bla hAnd,"
DriJcoll quot..i tbe boy .. taJfnc. "Tbe
brick fell and hh tbe boy on the bead.
Tben my bn>ther was poundiq oo tbe
matt.ms thert In the basement and the
brlclt fell again •.• "
An autopsy was held today and the case
remanded to Juvenile Jadge Francb
Mayer, woo will make the decialon on
what action should be taken.
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INSP~CTOR MICHAEL BUSH OF SFPD INSPECTS SITE O~ Oll!S~V ·l'fl!IJ
In San Franc11co, 1 Mlasing Inf ant 11 Found 1Nt1n· 1nCI CruCltted' •
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5 :Girls Cleared
In.New port Beach
Call Girl Case
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Ex-banker, Bto;lcer.· Held
. ' In $200 MiJlion .Scheme
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· Five women have been cleared in Santa
Ana municipal court of prostitution WASHINGTOfi (UPI) -.A .former closed iA~s .. 11 1070,..by ffldMll~~ : :
Charges filed by Orange County Sheriff'• president of a New Jereey bank wu e:uml¥J'.I.. . • • , , ~ ~!ficeri. Indicted today. along wiUI four ''1110'~n>Ura,fndk!ted"1erer ·
Judge· Paul Mast cleared Barbara Jean stockbrokers ia connee!lkln with u ~wu11tm A. 1~an. 35; 8candaJe.,.
Baylor. 21. and Dixie Lee Malrilclano, lO, alleged scheme invoMhg tbe purch.,. _ ~ fonnerly ' -elhployed by' th!'/
both of Santa Ana and Laree Isenberg. pllrtly with bank fund!_ of more-than .. ace firm-cf T.P.q, Inc .• New York """ 35 Mary Agne.s Nielson ~ and Gwen . · City, u Ill '"I*'"''" of brllll<S
P.;tricia Worthington, 22,' all ~ Anaheim. QXI million worth of rtocka. operaUoos. t
. .He "COrlUnued ·until ·A il ·26 ·the ,T_be .. 10"°;e~bankp~l~!.namedln,an •. , .-~1 ,.&.,.,~,r~~t.B.r~to!llt .....
1 prelilllln•ry>hi!irilif &'~f>Oi l'-B<iCh' -lodict-~~"'!· 11.;g.tm;<'w!it"·"'1'J.,. aild Jliliiil' 'fmY, ill.' Paramu.,
oont:a.;:tor Hehry w. Sprague, st. of 64 Dou.a:Ja1.Jame11SChoti., 39, Uncroft.,iN.J. N.J., bofb f~, tD'lPloYta of '.f:P.O. Jnq.
ijeacfn.,Bay. He ia accused of procuring he.formerlyr'Wiszbeld of"ltl1e"EatontowD 1 -~mmett W . .:COZ.1Jr:, .ft, OlkhUnt1
and conspiracy to commit-prostitution (N J ) National Bank. He was •ccuaed of NJ., employed by tbe brokerage firm • ·nd · ·, .. 250 bl'I ' · ')bompson .McKinnon tnd Aucblnclou of a ts .ree on ..,, 1 • • illegal use of more than •to million in AabuiY . P~ N.J. Cox wu an wider
· F,..d on tbelr promlJeJo r.Wrn April bank funds to purcbase stock In :is obertlf o! MOlllllOlllh Cnunly ID JIM6 and
29 were Rtna Sherry Andrews, 2.f, North • Uo 1M5.. .. '
HollY'food. Elaine Komara, 29, of -· . "'· AU !!YI deieadani. ...,.. charged wltb ~naheim and Beverly Ann Poelilman. 24. Acoordmg to Ille 177-pap lncllctmen~ Ir aod with 118 counis ol, of Cypr.... All m charged with reiurned al Newark, N.J .. and announced :=u.n ;i lbods.
wcstlt~Jion. . by Attorney General John N. Mllcboll. m . ·pnd jury ctiargad that they
.Sprague and the eight women wert lht acfteme involved the purchue of con.plrtd ta mtllpply $10,2«1,999 in funds
arrested after investigation a{ lhe more than $200 million worth of common of UM Eatontewn bank by having Schott.
Executive E.9cort Service a l I e g e d I y atocks over a 13-month period from JuJ,y purchase common stOcks 'In the name of
operattd by the contractor from o!ficta 1, 1969, to August 7, 1970. the-bank 1nd 1htn luue cashlen' checks
(See FIVE GllWI, Pa1e J) The Ealnntown National Bank was to~!<\-1lMm.
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J DAILY PJLO r s
Dana ·Cove
Boat Slips
Installed ,,..
finl boat slipg at ntW Dan.a eo-.·e
Marina ia Dana Polnl Jlarbor ha\'e been
lnstall.O and will be ready fOT occupancy
May JS •
Robert Dahlberg, µmidont Of Marino
Capital Inc. or N~ Beach. aid some
., slips art being installed in the first
phase if the harbor's development, whlcb
Includes Dana Cove Marina on the
landside and oana J&land Marina on \be
seuide.
"Almost htlf of the JC21 sJlps in O.na
CO\IP. Marina and Dana Island Marina
have been reserved," Dahlberg said,
adding that reservatlorui hive come from
as far away as Alaska and HaYlail.
Tht balance of the boat slips will be
in.stalled at the rate of appro.s..imately 100
per month unW eomplr:ticm in March of
1972, Dahlberg said.
As the slips are fini1hed, U>oM wba
have' made reservations are being
noWied by mail or tht estimated
ocx:upency dal<. Addlllonal 111 p
information may be obtained by aJ1ing
M1rine Capital al (714) ~-
Dana Point Harbor will have • tolll
investment of $16 mil~ in public funds
and $10 million in private money for
development of concessions. Dahlberg
said. The ~1arina is being developed al a
cost ot $4.2 million.
Aln<X1g the le•lu(es of lbe Jandlcaped
landside Marina facilities will be eigbl
lavatory urut.s which will j Q cl u d •
machlnes for waahlng and drying clolbes;
parkinll for approidmately 1,lllll c:oro and
coovenient pumpout stali«ta. Each slip
will have a storage locker, ouUtts for
fresh wailtr, ekdridty and tdepbooe.
Deck surlace artas are of m&slip
concrete.
Slips will accommodate .sail a n d
power boats from 20 to &I ft. in length.
Regular slips will rent for Sl.90 per boat
foot. Pitchforks and end ties will rent for
$2.25 per fl
Marine Capital Inc. of Newport Beach
Is the .managing partner of Dana Point
Marlna Company. Dana Point Marina
Company. owner and builder of the
Marina, is a partnerahlp composed of
Marine Capit.al Inc. and Ali3on Realty Co.
of Newport Beach and Pr o 1 p e ct
Calilomla Co . ol Hartford, Connecticut
Boal slips have betn des i In e d ,
manuiacturtd and i n s la l l e d by
Huntington Engineering Corp. o f
Huntington Beach. The Ooals are of
Ugbtwelgbt reinforced c:oncrel< 11\th
styrofoam core.
Missing Stash
Of Cash Studied
A grand theft in which '800 vanished
from its hldlng place in a COila Mesa
bicycle agency ls belng lnve.stigat.ed by
police today.
Malcolm CuUer. owner of Sea Schwinn
Bicycles, 420 E. 17th St., told police the
cash disappeared over t.be weekend but
be couldn't be sure juat when.
InvesUgat.ors said no sign ol forced.
entry or burglary could be found,
lndicaling the cub cculd hi•• beta found by a oosy customer darlng bu!inea
hours.
Actor Calhoun Wed
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Act.or Rory
Calhoun. 41, and Susan Langley, 29, a
former Atatn.llan journalist and now a
Hollywood writer, wtre married Monday
at a wedding chapel on the Las Vegu
"strip.,. It wu. the second marriage for
each.
olAll•• co.ur
DAILY PILOT
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OAAJl!Cfe COAST 'UILISHING COMJIAtlY
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Bll.ftng Backed
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High Court OKs
.Racial Balances
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tht Sllpreme
Court unanimously upheld today busing,
pupil pairing and other deliberate racial
balancing devices to stamp out school
desegregation.
The new guidelines were spelled out in
four opinion!! writte'h by Chief Jwtlce
\Y arren E. Burger. They also sanctioned
a certain amount of deliberately imposed
rac1'! balan:;· g it needed to eliminate
11all ves~ges o ,tate·tmposed''
segregation.
a ..certain amount or deHberately lmpoted
"racia1 balance" If needed to eliminate
"all vestiges of s tate -imposed''
segregaUon.
"School authorities ha\1e w i d t
discretion in formulating school policy."
Burger wrote. "and, as a matter of
educational policy scbool authorities may
well ainclude that some kind of racial
balance in the IC:bools ls desirable quite
apart froip~ any constitutiona l ·
requltementa."
' VIEW FROM DANA POINT SHOWS
...... 1W ,.,. M.,.rr
PROGRESS ON HEADWALKS, SLIPS
Presldent Nixon has declared bimsell
opposed to extreme desegregation steps
Buch as mauive busing or large-scale
assignments ·to achieve a racial balance.
"However." ~ger sal4. "if a state--
imposed limltati,n on a school authority's
discretion operates to inhib it or obstruct
the operation of a unitary school system
or impede the diaestabllshing of a dUal
school system, it must fall .'' Approxim1tely 200 Are Expected To Be Reidy For Oc:<uJMncy By M1y 15 Nixon said on March 24, 1970, that
••positive integration does not necessarily
have to result in racial balance"
thro11ghout a achoo! mtem.
"Stale policy must give way when it
operates to hinder vimUcation of fe<knll
C0111titutiooal gv.arante65," Bur a er ruled.
Former Kidney Patient
A~ Mary French Drive
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ,._ Callr P'll91 "•ff
Sometimes those with an experience
leaving luting physkal and emotiooaJ
IC8.l"I can offer a special brand or
comfort to otbefs Jn their own time of
need.
Sometimes all it lakes i! a few words:
l know. I care ...
Sometimes not. Sometimes the feeling
can't be expressed.
Jim Wiern!C% knows that, having once
needed hope, help and comfort and now
being in a posillon to give it.
He is helping with the Mary French
Benefit Fund, for the Harbor Area girl
whose own kidneys failed and wbo3e body
rejected one donated by her mother 27
days ago.
"I feel kind or bad, calling over there,"
he says of the French household at 202$1
Kline Drive, Santa Ana Heights.
St. Clair Sees
Hope for Man
Beset by pollution and thrtats of war
on every aide, a glimmer of hope was
aUU held out for mankind's survival
Monday night by none other than Costa
Mesa City Councilman William L. St.
Oair.
He was replying to an Estancia High
School student reminding councilmen of
an ecology program this week.
"Son, there are so many criers of doom
and gloom 1n the schools today!," St.
Clair observed.
He added that somehow the world and
humankind have perpetuated tbem.5f:lves
alnce his own teenage days.
"When I was in school, \\'e were going
to be out of coal in 10 or 20 years and
there would be no way we could Uve," St.
Clair recalled.
Tbe young speaker was not visibly
encouraged.
.Jlrona Page l
FREEWAY ...
have the authority to vote on a malter
of statewide concern, such as the 1tate
highway system.
A member of Burke 's staff said
committee members, in adopting the
favorable ~mmendation, pointed out
that the committee has never before
taken a negaUve stance on a city's
proposed charter change.
At the hearing, Newport Beach was
reprtllented by Jts Freeway Negotiation
Committee. Mayor Ed Hirth. Vice Mayor
Howard Rogers and Councilman Don Mc·
IMis, along with City Attorney Tully
Seymour.
Ken Reynolds. planning director fQr
liuntington Beach, spoke in opposition to
the amendment.
Fro111 Page I
FIVE GIRLS. ...
al 2192 Dupont St., Irvine.
Officers allege Spragur arranged dates
fQr "sophisticated exeeutives'' and made
his girls available on an "011 call'' b.1:iis
for assignments throughout the county.
Confiscated by officers at the time of
the arres\ was a quantity of glossy
bwinw carm. all bearing the legend :
"E1ecutlve Escort Service -JSO
beautiful fo1y girls far your daUng
plea3ur-e."
Cafeteria Cash
Looted in Mesa
A light-fingered thief lirted $372.23 frQm
the caftttrla cashbo1q at Costa Mesa
}Jiah School. campus SPo1tesm@n told
police Monday.
The theft, whkh is covered by
Nevrpor1-Mesa UnlfJtd School District
tnsuranct, occurred during business
hours. according to employe Terry Cole.
Investi_gaior• theorized II couldn't ha ve
betn while customers were paulng
throu1h the bully lunch line. •
''You"re at a loss for wo rds .•. "
\Viemicz, 37, of 318 Ogle Sl., Costa
Afesa, knows what the IS.year-old Corona
del 1'tar High School senior and her
family an el"periencing now.
Nineteen months ago he was in Mount
Sinai lfospital to receive a kidney
transplant -like Mary was March 23 at
Orange County Medical Center -but his
\\'as successful.
He weighed less, at 96 pounds , than bis
S.year--0Jd son.
He bas gained back more than 40
pounds and the ordeal isn't over -
although his prognosis at this stage is
optimistic -and each day is one to savor
and utilize fully, oot wasting a minute.
"l lake· it one day at a time," says
Wiemici, who retired from his Newport
Beach po11tal carrier route. enrolled at
Orange Coast College and is studying to
be a dental technician.
"I have a lltlle time now, so J'm trying
to help Mary French, publicizing the
fund."
He has arranged for Miss Newport
Beach, Dee Dee Pennington, to preside at
a ticket drawing for the Mary French
fund in a 4-H Club junior fair Sunday at
J p.m. at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
South.land dealers ha ve donated a new
Volkswagen for it and lick.eta are on sale
from many fund boosteni.
Contributions may also be malled to
the fund in care of the U.S. National
Ban.It, lMS Newport Boulevard, Costa
Mesa.
Mary's f u n d will help Jinance three
costly 1tints per week on a dlalyiiis
machine to cleanse her blood, until
another kidney is available for
lransplant.
She has recovered sulflcienlly from the
unsuccessful operation of March 23 so
that doctors allowed her to go home
Sunday, but she was back al the county
facility for dialysis again Monday.
"She still has her old spirit," says a
friend of the family employed at
French's Pastries in Costa Mesa, where
customers keep po..1led on Mary's
progress.
Checking back through the (lies lo Sept.
14. 1988, when Wlemici was lnt.ervle\ved,
telling of a strong spirit and hill stoic
acceptanct of life's daily uncertalnlitll, it
appears that quality is shared by Mary.
Besides critical kidney failure, Jim
Wiemiet and Mary French possess
something else In common, as he put it
2\-\ years ago in that first intervie~·:
''I go every week to the hospital \\'ith
the hope of better things."
Viet Vet Killer
Receives Life
Prison Sentence
An Orange County Superior Court jury
mulled the fate of convicted killer George
Albert Scott for four hours 1'1onday and
then decided on a life sente nce for the
husky Pico Rivera man.
Scott, 20, will be sentenced May 14.
Judge Herbert Herlands will rule that
same day on a motion for a new trial .
Jurors agreed on leaving t h e
courthouse late Monday that Scott's age
-he was 19 when he killed Philip
Castanon, 21, of Pico Rivera last Oct. 16
-was a major factor in their refusing to
recommend the death sentence.
Cas tanon. a wounded Vietnam war
veteran who had been in the United
States for juat three weeks after duty In
Southeut Asia. \\'as killed by Scott
following a quarrel s~rked by the young
soldier's relationship with Scott'$ wile .
ll was testified during the trial th11t
Scott also forced Castanon to withdraw
S400 lrom his bank and hand it over
shortly before the \ictim was savagely
beaten and left with his throat cut from
ear to ear behind a La Habra apartmenl
building.
Scott's co-defendant. 1'-1ichacl Thomas
Terra:w, 22, of Avalon, Santa Catalina
Jsland,•i.s scheduled to plead guilty today
10 reduced charges:'
Terra.us. who witnesstd the killing,
testified for lht prOS{!cullon against Scott
wllh 1he promlM.' that ht: could plead
guilty to cha rges of being an aC(t!UtOty to
niurder.
He 11o·UI be trralgned befort: Judge
llerlands and facea: a possible stale
prlson tttm of one lo ten years .
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Allied Forces
Finally Enter
A Shau Valley
SAIGON APl -· U.S. and Soul,h
Vietllamese infantry battalions ha v e
finally moved inlo the A Shau valley but
no significant contact with tbe enemy
was reported today.
Associated Press Correspondent J, T,
\Yolkerstorfer reported Crom Lavang, the
forward command post for the operation.
that at least one battalion of about 400
troops from the U.S. lOlst Airborne
Diviaion and a.iz.able South Vletnamese
units had been comm.iUed to the A Shau
operation.
For the past week, U.S. and South
Vietnamese reconnaissance teams have
been operating in the :JG..mile-long valley
trying to find enemy targets to attack.
Allied firebases have been set up aJ I
around the jungled valley to sup!)Ort the
operation, which is named Lam Son 720,
the successor ta the South Vietnamese
invasion of Laos, which was Lam Son 719.
The IOlst Airborne is providing both
helicopter and ground support for tht!!!
operation.
One American field ofrlcer said the
operation "will last as long as we have
targets. You can expect wi to operate all
the way west to the Laotian border until
the mon!Kl0n1 start."
The monsoon rains are expected to
begin In about lhrl'!f: weeks.
The valley 375 miles north of Saigon is
just east of Base Area 611, a major North
Vietnamese supply depot on the Ho Chi
Minh trail network ln southern Laos. The
valley is an enemy infiltration corridor
and supply transshipment point into the
northern quarter of South Vietnam .
Killer Receives
Execution Stay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The
California Supreme Court Monday stayed
the execution of convicted slayer WiUiam
Dale Atcherd, which had been scheduled
for Wednesday.
The court said the stay would be in
effect until a U.S. Supreme Court
decision ls delivered in another Cali!ornia
death penalty case.
Archerd was convicted in Los Angeles
of thrtt count:! or ftrst degree murder in
the death of two wives and a lfr.year--0\d
nephew by means of insulin injections.
The convicllons and death penalty were
affirmed Dec. 10, 1970, by the California
Supreme Court.
In' argument& before the court la.st '
ye1.r, Solicitor General Erwin Griswold
advocated the ' President's concept o!
''neighborhood scOOals" as the base for
eliminaUng separate black and white
school systems although acknowlq1ng
that pupil pairing and other means mlaht
be uaed iu emme cup.
But. the · Burger oplnions anned tbe
lower ' federal courts and s c b o o I
au thorlUes: with broad powers to brinl
about deeegregaUon.
He said in the major opinion: uHaving
once found a violation, the di.strict judge
or school authorities should make every
effort to achieve the greatest possible
degree of aciual desegngaUon, laking
into account the practicalities of the
situation.
" A district court may and should
a>nsider all available t e c b n i q u e s
including restructuring of attendance
z.ones and both contiguous a n d
noncontiguous attendance woes.
"The measure of any desegregation
plan Is Its tffectiveness."
Some key guidelines were spelled out in
a case involving the Charlotte-
Mecklenbmg, N.C., school system where
a federal district judge ordered a number
of lhe disputed methods lo be used,
including busing.
The court also struck down a North
Carolina law which prohibited busing to
achieve forctd integration.
Burger said transfers were an integral
part of mS11y desegregation plans ani:f "lo
be effective such a transfer arrangement
must grant the lram!errlna: .stuudent free
transportation.''
The court also upheld zone pairings and
Police Slaying
Suspect Seized
RIVERSIDE (AP) -An 13-year--Old
youth has been arrested in the ambush
slayings of two police officers last April
2, police said today.
lrvell Morgan, a senior at a Riverside
conlinuallon high: school, is booked for
investigation of two counts ea ch of
homicide and criminal conspiracy.
He was arrested without resistance at
his home Saturday, but police said they
tried· to keep it a secret until they could
decide if the evidence was sufficient lo
bring formal charges. He must be
arraigned by Wednesday or released.
The two officers . Paul Teel. 25, and
l..eonard Christianson, 31. \\'ere gunned
down with shotgun blasts as they
answered a false burglary call at night
near a park. Four youths were seen
riffing.
Rewards totaling $25,000 have beell
posted by local groups for inlormatlon
leading to the conviction of tho:ie
responsible.
Killer Whale
Plays Rough
With Trainer
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Annelle Ecl<is
holds no grudge again..t Shamu. the 4,000.
peund killer whale that bit her while she
was trying to ride the mammal at Sea
World marine park.
"I want to go up and kiss Shamu wben
I get out of here," the attractive 22-ye&l'-
old brunette said Monday night at a
hospital whe re her right leg was treated
for bruises and puncture wounds.
"She was just playing, I am SW"e,"
Miss Eckis aald. "U she had wanted to,
she could have bitten my legs ofL"
Two trainers had to pry open the mouth
of the 17-foot whale Monday to free Jo.liss
Eckis' leg.
Miss Eclks was learning to ride Shamu
for a show scheduled to open late in May.
She had gone around the tank on Shamu·1
back three times before she slipped off.
Kent Burgess. direclOr of training at
the marine park, agreed that Shamu v.·~
merely being playful.
"We think the whale was just playiJ1~
and trying to keep Ann in the tank,'
Burgess said. "The whale just held her ill
its mouth and didn't make any attempt to
pull her under or bile her."
Other trainers who have ridden Shamu
during the past five years wore \\'et suits.
Miss Eckis wore only a bikini and
Burgess said the different costume might
have attracted Sharnu's attention.
Cambodia Chief
Lon Nol Tells
His Resignation
PHNOJ\i PENH (UPl) -Cambodian
PrlJne Minister Lon Nol, who helped lead
the overthrow of Prince Norodom
Sihanouk and then suffered a disabling
stroke, resi d today along with hl.s
entire cabin .
Lon No · rather, Col. Lon Non, said
the f'!sl ·on wa s little more than a
formality and probably would not be
accepted.
Political sources said Lon Nol and his
cabinet submitted their resignations at
the office of chief of slate Cheng Heng
today. However, there was no immediate
official announcement.
W ALI( SOFfLY!
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive.
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how these moteria Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3 .00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
regardless of where you buy it, don 't expect too much . WALK
VERY SOFTLY!
SANTA ANA. ORANGI.,
TUSTIN Call ••• ALDIN'S
RID HILL CAlt,nl
& DlAPlltlll
1111• ll'YIM. T\ltttn., C•I· ... J,..
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
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:Fo1lnt · ~'¥
'E\Oll~l·O N
ORANGE COUNTY, C1.Lll'-ORNIA . ' . '
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-~ 'Ta.lay"•-Fhiil
Y.Y •. S.ks •
JEN CENTS
,. ' i S·aiIOr'! Stricken·
·Helicopter Rnshes Valley Man to Hospital
·'
.. 'DAILY' "ILOJ-.1~ .... le
ff e's. the ' Winner
! _G.efry Gen~vese, 8, a.secoP,d.grader at·M~a?oW'V·iew.1Sch~l; tta:s'been
· declared wiriner ,of •the·l!uptington Beac'h· Re<;teation .. and'Parks lJe.
pAJ:tment'S.annual "Balloon to tb.e.Mood .. ·conteSL1Gerry, le;J71 Birdie
Lane, lluntingfon Beaoh,.sent a ·pjnk helium-lffi~d .. balloo•l' off 7!1arch
, 23. lt-was·found March.28 in Maysville;O.ltla. He .gels $.5 for WI{lnmg
~ the distal)ce contest. ·
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Turnout ·m Wes:t~~!Y
• •·' : ~, .t~ ,f , .~, ;\h.~-f '-'A
S~hool_ R3ees ~very; Po.,r' · , ,
·~wert turninrout'bt~lingly Jfc:1or n'umben early ·this morning 'for·
llliboOI 'board·el~iOIIJ'in six West\Orange
C.unly ,.hoot districts.
··.l\ chCc'k lof ·seven ·Of1 the •58 ·polling ~,.,:,,;thin.the Hutitl\igfon Beach Un)6n '
Rijh ~h6ofDistrlct~ed less tlian two .
ptt;cent ·of thel registered· v~'i's . casting.
~ ballots by 11 a\m. · · -.
. '.At the seven voUng stations, only13J:5·of ·
a i!otentlal 10,729 ngistered voters, had
~1their decisioRS. • .. .
··PoJ.l watchers expect the pace• to · eick.
tip io ~e aftez:noon, but no sol~ prei:lic-
Uoits' bav"' been made' on ~turnout dor "Wliat has been one of the stormiest school .. :* * *
l):eJay Predicted
In School ·Board
V"Ote Processing
. . . . . . ' ..
ho*'l'CalllpOip\ldWetl'<l'~ty.
· A•1atal'1it'I,7~dot.,·tiov-the
Sl'equare ,Qllldll.,,..hool dlltrict .... k.
ing .• vollJ ·~fttlql.1 tbel JU001 registered
voters~~ •it: .. -r,011e1b are 'Ofen!Ul ·the
l\igh ai;ltool· i..t,dtof e;..,~u~
; In apdili!1.1~parate. tnf!:~iJ'aces·are
under Vf&y in , tbe1 f~ve .. et~ · d,is-
trids•. conl>il>ed•~ ·Ille 1••uboo!
bciu«iiries: . J .. 1 \
. fire~•&& ~i..o.otien ,..l!l,in~i>oo!if.t1n v.,1,;r di.tAc1,..1x ' . ... . ' " ~
ai:e ·tryina 'for' ,t1'o ~ seats \on 1the
H~ Btocli: .City (e~llry)
Sohool Oiltrlc~;llfd three are·aeeklng two 0ce.n;~ tru&tee aats. r 1 • ' • ~
lft , W~!', . five ~d~~ l· want
two:J.rqt~~t ~.t~e .~dates &r~ ~lni 1l!O;i~o ,lrwllee;~IL.of ,the
Seal Bea<l> dilll;tl . . ....
All icbool eledkm.will be~tabulaled at
th~ 'Of-·C<lW\\Y'V dter Reg)SjraµOll·Of.
lice. 'tol" eiediml iiiuU., rwdents m•1
phone Dl'D« late lbpighl . . ~y's .cbool board election pl'OC<IOll The' J.>Olia "ill "C16ae ,ln ·all · dt.'! 'at 1
fll!ttrs from prevlous years in that P·."'· For1inforrnlUoMln polllngtlocatµJOS,
from ill Or~e County di!1lrjcls pboo~ ~·
lll<d 'by·pr.Ciilcia te .lli<Onnge .
A FounlaJn Valley tnan. "ln· very poot
condiUon" wu plucked from a aallboat in
rough ·. aey off Baja California thll
rooming in a dramat.ic rescue by 1 U.S.
Coot Guard helicopter.
Marion HarVey Brinson Jr., 2&, of 11912
Martin Ave., was Down to Scrippl
Memorial Hospital, La Jolla, suffering
from chronic seulcknesl: and lact of
food.· Hospital off id.all said he was
.. extremely dehydrated" and wouJd be
detained overnight for· obaervation .
He was .. rescued from the 26 • foot
Petitions Signed
sailboat Glad Rlllel, owned· atld'aklppered
' ' by Jeff Feldman, zo, of 16672 Edj:ewiter
Lane. HunUngton Beach.
Feldman, wbo became Q.hausted . in
caring for Brinson and fighthig rough
water in six days at sea, radioed for help
Monday .. rmming. Feldman wu taken
aboard the Coast Guard cutter Point
Stuart this mornlng ·wbtch' it towinf the
sailboat to San Diego.
·Fledman ties bis boat ·at· San Diego
Yacht · Club. The re$CUe was made near
GuadelU:pe. Islind. ~ miles south of San
Merchant.s Fight
New Sewer Line
By ALAN omKIN
Of NM IMllY ,.I,_, Iliff
Merchants and homeowners descended
in force on the Huntington Beach City
Council Monday aigbt to urge cooncilmen
to work for a new route for a sewage
line.
The Orange County Sanitation District ·
Is planning to lay a pipeline under
Brookhurst Street in a 17.4 million pro-
ject that will laat 11 months.
The. line will extend five miles Uirough
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley
~ link two treatment plant.a.
Dick Lach, oww of ' the Wood Pit
Barbecue at Brookhurst Street and
A\il,.. Avenue, '"lioii\if tll!l'lti1""~'
In& the eouncil to nMiet with .. the 11nlta·
tlon di8trk1 't'-"'1CUI an altemaUve
route. He claimed· Iha& every ~hant
on BrookflW'I Street from IJimlltoa to
Elli• , • ....., ·w ollned the peUllon .
"It's not that tbe •two or three weeka
that the contractor will •be opposite a
bu..inelS but the UJtal Ume of the projed
that must be con.sidered,"•Luch charged.
Jaycees Honor
Gisler T ea~her
M3Q' \(. ¥odu;2:9,'1 primary teacher
a:t GISier Elemtntary. School;ln Fountain
VilDey, has b6tn n&JTied the city's
''Outstanding Young E4ucator" by the
Jaycees.
"1 • thlnk she's the moet outstanding
tea.Cher irl the Fountain Y.1lley School
District," FA Suum-m, her pttncipal 11id
todiy.' •
Susaman submitted Mrs. Moder's name
to the Fountain Valley : Jaycees for the
hooor. 'She is"llow eligRlle to be named
"OUtstanding Young Educator'' in the
state, In competitlon 'wlth other Jaycee enlries. -
Mrs. Moder, a Fountain Valley
resident, hu been with the acbool district
six yean. She ill a graduate of San
Francisco Stale College.
"The traffic pattern of shoppers ·will be
diverted. One store estimates it will lose
from S:,00,000 to $1 million In aalea."
Herbert Crawford made a similar
present.ation on behalf of the Meredith
Gardens Homeownen' Association, Uk·
ing that lfle right of way oh the Santa
Ana river bed be used as the altemaUve
route.
City Attorney Don Bonfa said tbat,
under the state law, the city could not
wilbbold pemiWion from the· writaUon
dlatrict to loY the line, but the city coold
impose "reasonable condiUon:a and re-
quirements."
After considerable diM:ussion,. tl\•·coun-
cil ~,i. '!Ol!;J!ublic W'-~~ Jiift Wheeler t6 i.rnnge a D\ettbia: with
Fred Harper, nwnager of lbe 1anitaUon
district, for mort information QR tbe.proc
jecl. Mayor Georgt McCracbn.apiJ V.,
Mayor Jerry MatnQ will at&end tbt
meeting.
The discu11iQn "'aa marted b,y
~:!~a:= of commerce by
Green saJd he was "absolutely flab-
bergasted at a r4bb~ rousing ,letter that
the chamber sent· out."
"It WU full of.J,jes 1nd half truths," he
said. referring to a letter wblcb JI.I~ tbt
fears of merchants 9ver the project :and a
simultaneo\11 ·street widening job 1an
Beach Boulevard.
"'The reason we need the line ·ii
because we are lf'OW1Dg •to fist,~' Gteen
said .in1btated defen11e. of' tbe· 1anltltl(ll1 •
diltrlct. "Ho:N can the chamber be 19
h)'JX>Cfit.i~l. I'm ab&olutely stunned tbe.1
could send out a letter so irresponsible.
No one signed it. I would be'iftterested in
knowing who prepared JI. Tl1'l' .Oll,ii!>to
be removed." • . ..
Chamber President Al Kllnpnsmith
later explained tbat tbe letter ·wu a rutr
sent to the executive board of ~cbllJ'too
ber but riot to l"e JtiieraJ membenijp.
The notice, written by Olamber
M,nager Ralph KiS;er, set out tJt:e ftan;of
merchant& on Brookhurst Street ~er 'the
re-routing of tralfk and loss _of revenue
and saying the bulltn .. smen Wanted' ·a
"stop order" served ' on Orange· Cda.aty
Supervi!ors, · .! ..
Registrar Of Voters · oTllce-"in · • · · :E:a:=;i;~-w .... ,,,pcrled;. · . ~s,· ·.ti_· c ,b .... · .. :_,., · Solution Sought t~e tO the chanie ,ln the counting ~ l. nl~ .. the 'D~IfY nm 'will: oot ~\le . • , i' ' •I : :. • • , ' ' ' ••.• I ... ()i'lJ 'retUrtls avallabte until' IOnft!ttnie • •
alftr 1::\11;•.m.,W!'ll>esday Jl<SllllJ of~ . r Hunti:nuton f)ouncil ·Deel ares Mud Dump 'Nuisance' u 9flnge-Ooast iah~l·d~ races'."'l'ill~ , • . · l' ... , . . ,
l)e :tJ>or;ted ~ ~~y ~l:loi:is 0•1 qUs . • , ~ By.~ D~ , • ~ believes ~oCQUneil bad 1ttempted to find of the preRDt wire one, be put iround 'the ~~~~.ie' COuiity ' ~nt" of · · ~ ;~: .. ~::r::•:!'tbert, ~ud ~cbmiddlt>!g~ toJ!:a~tro::!1~ facility.
EiJ.qcatlon . b4s· copfdiOt;~' .all trultee . 1o(fattrwu1~~ed·a· PabPJ:·nU•ance ll>!JH!Pwnt!rl , blamed the dump •t 'Ole; group also poirtted out that the lite
elecUoM ·in ·the countr.· . '. , . ' . by tht H'untlqgt:ori eeaCb·~clty "cou"ncil Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Street for had a potentu.I value of tt.5 mllllob if tt
V-pr«;incts · "'" he&m reporting Mll!'llaY . oill1I, • J • off~l'(O ndm In lhe n>Jghborbood. could he retlalmed and ' reconuiierided, talJlea,ijlorU~i.ll!t;poljl. c;1o ... ,t·;a · ; •Bvt fh<I~ -~11.e.i\IO the , A\ the Mord! 22 hearing, the council that an Independent en&ln°'\rlng otndy
p.1Jt The voter registrar's staff will controversy.· They told ~ ltaff 'not to deadlocked on whether a nulsance existed abould be made to this e.id .wlth the~ brff~'<lown the preci nct totals by school inlllate • emf, action 'to .abate the at the dump behind the , Soulh<ni dt!tftct with finals for diltrlcb to be nulsance unUI tltther dir.cted. . · California F.diaon plant with Jack Gretn aham:l by the city and the ownera: oomi>leted early ·· W e d n e s d • Y • a .Qt.y Adminiltrator ' Doylev Miller and and Jerry Matney believing there w 1 s "We feel the brolhera are in 'a sR,C?lf~sman~sald. , , • . ._ Cl!-Y ' .M~, .Don Bonfa atio . were sufficient • evid~ and George cooperative mood and are wJJlliig to; wort
1 XlltptlCincb ore-usl/lg --r li,•ll9te. · ~·.to· contUi6t woi\in;t.'wlili thil Mc.<drac~pi and ted Bartlett believing wlUi the city and that the city abould'll~
'1111 ,J!_Jl't-... COODt.y'registrar -ol~ls 11td · ~.Cari~~ Joee~ Stavenocl, on there wasn'L Coen abatalned at that advantage of this opportunity," Qr.
today pr~t> vote &dtals. wil~ tKlt be · r•~, •luUoU)to ~n ~ne Umf:. · James Mason of , the .Enviroqmental tii~ .P."~lla~le ·fOr af le.est ·a .Week: • . · · staff Wm r'# l;ick\ J ne• t: • 1
• • 11\e hearing was continued to allow the Council said in presenting the .rtport. .
The,)lulk of the through·lhe-niPI d!ori The contPrOn\!Je wu propooed by Envlrtnmental Council to atud)'· the issue William Carlaon, an o t to r ~ e y 1\i!I:lie direcle1I to providing individual Councilman At.a... 11'1.Jn 'COlllrMI to • and Monday night ·the· ocologlcal group reprmnling the Stever...,.; polnfed ouf .cJ>001 boa(d _l'fliult.s, a process that is vote oa ·the du~p taken 'I at~ a pobllc recommended that the dump be declared that a three-loot barbed-wire strabd hsd
dvnplicated by lhe fact that one voter · hearln~ March ·%!, 'It carried a nulaance. been put on top of the fence around the
ma1·11rt eligibtetoVotein as manyas flve unanimou&ly, S.O. 'Ille group suggested that all dumping site in ·an attempt to pre:vent cblldren
llod! rl<!es.,~ oo wbez<,he.fim. ' ~ Georp McCracken . Iii<! he be halted and thal a aolld fence, inltalld (See MUD DUMP, Pop I) •
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'
Diego. ne aloopihad an engine but lt had
run out of p50line.
Feldmah toldiQ)ast Guard offk:ers that
8tinBon 'bad been seasick throoatiout ·the
i&J"'.day .atorm and had ·been 1 unable to
leave the .cabin. Feldman had akippered
the ship •Ingle handedly.
Lt.• Ktn1 Hollemon said~ that the Coast
Guard •rectlved the call· for assistance
through a series of radio relays at 7:30
Monday morning. The helicopter located
tbf: boat at 10~0 .a.m. ·
"Tlie helicopter hadi' taken food and
watef. aupplles because of the report th~t .
• •
OAU.YIPILOT·Sllff ......
'.., ~1~~.i!~~~,.w .
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~tCbtcken Takes
HitntingtoD.. Post
AiS '.N~w Mayor
i0ec;>r1e' McCZ;acken .. · a .. tb.re-e· ... y·e 1 r
veteran 1°of~ the• Huntington Beach City
co'Ml,0·WaaJelected toi his first ttrm1 II m.yor~M:onday nlibt. · ,
~"'·'47.j~ar ~Id' bul!~"~factor .w11
elecled un~uaty: "''"' Counclli!1an 11,d ;iUrttett providU\~ ·the-'. nomiilattng v<t!A!, ft < wlis· sOCO!lded by ·Councilman
Nonha Gib~.
McCracken and Mayor Pro-Tem Jeny
MatneY, who was returned' to his current
office, w1n·h0la'tbeir paoll for a one·Y'Jll'
period~ \ 1 '
McC)'aeken·· replaces outgoing Mayor
Donald ShlP.ley.
The new niayor appeared elated about
his 'Olvl •ciffioe and thanked bis fellow
counc'ilmeii for their confidence in.him.
"U ii· a.i great, honor to. be elected
mayor at, any· time,. but partlcullrly by
th111~ey," said ·M~Crack:en. •:I ,have.a
gr,..'l't!specl rOr this body Md heQevt
that 'we•tlaVeiworlted well·together these
plst : ytin on !Orne ' very· difficult
~!ems.· · . ·~·irs ·no 'secret to·anyone'*ho-regularl;(.
atteftdii our tnee.Unp that there ate many
~~Ibis of vJew. "'P"""ted·and ~·by ou~ niemben. 'And thls 'l!f a
helllliY:i)tlfatlOn. I tlope we can continue
to t~· nery (iuestion from many
aligl<ll ••M W.Unue'to 'agree to dilagree
.i...,lJ\d ttRFget:the~job done."
. Mtcracken'•added . Uiat bis first eoal 11
to' '''°tfblilai\ better cummunlcatlona beb.een the council and 'c'I t y
depaitments. '
He~ alto .gajd . he believes the comin'g
reJr·W111 be critlcal in a financ\al senae,
espOclall)" wtpr. the rl.sing cost o[ Sj!rvices.
contihued lnfiatlon ·and lnltlaOon of
cteftaJ improvement pr o,g r.1 ms .. r,!cCl'ac¥JI . ,ll))d expenclllqrel · b a v e
ropl41Y, lhcreq.d while tl!e cit,i'a ,,1. or
aro~· and. r.evenues ,have fallen.
"ln1 plaln words I .am.cc:u\ce:r'bid that
we , may be In the ,~ss o f
ovtrcom.rhltuhg the .city in 1trvJces and
prtiducta tha:t 'we can not easily' pay for,"
nJd the mayPr. . ,
"I am'JOl!i( to cry 'Whoa Horse, Whoa" ,a 'Ilk lhat thla COU!JCll tail
amQter long careful took at every city
operation, ~ proJed thal has been approved ·or COlllidtred, and that we re.
t11a!Uate corto and beaelite. •
one of the sallon wu suf(erlng from a
lack of food," Hollemon .aaijl. "But the
htllcopter did not drop the auppllea wben
the crew learned that there was food en
board but Brinaon WU •Imply too seasick
to eat it."
At first light thla morning, 5:30 a.m.
the sailors were transferred tb the e11tter
and Brinson was hoisted aboard the
helicopter.
The Coast Giwd r<loorled that
Feldman had 1 position buE that It was
several days old and be waa. too weak to
take 1 new fixlng.
Boys Admit
Crucifixion
Of Infant
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police •aid
today one of two youn1 boys held lD tblf
crucifixion death of a 20-month-old infant
has admitted the ~by was bit tw ice with
a brick and then wlred to a makeshift
crpss "so he couldn't get away."
"We didn't Want to. get caught.," said
the 7·-year-old boy, .held in "protective
custOdy" at San Francisco Juvenile Hall
with .bis lG-year-old. brother in the death
t1f Noah Alba in a dingy basement last
week.
Juv.enlle inspector Dan Ori5co11 said the
youhger· boy led Otticen tD.tbe basemetit
"c:lu~!' Manday where the body of
the infant was found, bound. and wired te
1 c~.made df icraa lumber, with a red
cord 'uound bis neck, botb wrists and bis
ankleJ, •
'n. Uilant ·wu with bis mother, Mrs. LIJT1 Alba, in Alta" Vista .City Park last
Wedne!dar. wheo he ouddenly
disappeared.' Police ''Tel't! ted to the two
young 1USpeets -who may be so young
that poUce were unsute what charge -if
any -could • be-lodged against them,
through· r<Potto from wltneues.
They were q\JesUonlng parent• of
another bo1 about a routine complain•
that he had beaten up a cbild In the park
when the partntl said, "I'll bet it was
those -,boys. 'J'beylre troublemakers
and they're.alwa)'l•Up;at that park."
Driscoll said ·officers then went to
Emerson School, -where tht: 7-year-ald is
a pupil, Monday and Look him out cif
school.
Drllcoll -aaid the olllcers were taking
the boy back to the park and when they
neared the locaUoo· of tbe basement "clu~bouse," asket:l him:
''If )'OU were a policeman, where would
)'OU k>ot?"
Drtacoll aald the boy talgpsted varlou•
locaUons, and thta.saJd, "Look, the-door
to that basement iJ open."
Officers went ·in and found the nudt
body, • partially covered with sheets.
flannel material and acraps of wallpaper.
DriJColl aald the lnfant·bad been otruck
several times with a brick, apparent11
jumped on, poked with a stick, choked
with a rope aQd then bound onto the
cross. . •
Driscoll said the '1·yeaHld and bis
brother, both white, wm "playing a
(See .CRUllFU:D, Poge Z)
We•tller
'lbna .. low cllllldl . are getting t...
gether Wednesday, and that means
a c h a n c e of acatiered ahowera
overntchl. Tempenltum ~ tao.
bed !"'the en 'd-range.
INSmE TODAY
Someth:i"Q'·old and 1omcthtng
new or• in tht offtng for local
dramo fo.na ·cm No 01angt Coasi
1taQe1 this week. See Entertain-
ment, Page 19.
BC Sute :~tri .. Vote Today; Polls · Open Till 8
• .. • • • -· -· , I • '
•
---·--........ -__... ....
,
It OAJl V PJlOT H •
Viet Veu Cheer
McGovern Urges
Dec. 31 Pullout
WASlllNG'ION (UPI) -Tl> the chem
and shouta of ICOl"ts of Vietnam veterans
here for antiwar dcmonstratlonl; Se.n.
Georce S. M~vern (0-S.D.), urged
Conl!T<U today lo oet Dec. II of tllil year
for tQtal U.S. Withdrawal from lndochlna.
McGovern was ltadoff witness at the
start of three days of hearings before the
Senate Fomgn Relations Committee on
proposals to end the war.
Shout£ of "rl&ht on !" and other
remarks came from an estlmtttd 100
vets in the audience u McGovern 11ld
the U.S. is guilty of "crimes against
humanity" every day the war conlinu 1'.
The veterana stood up and cheered.
whiltled and 1bouted as McGovern
utered the room. (Ste related 1tory,
l'r-Pege l
MUD DUMP. ••
cllmblna over.
Ht contended that U'lere VI I I
truufilclent evidtnce on the questkm of a
public nul.sanct to mate such a finding.
At the conclusion of the hearing, there
was a brief exchange between the city
administrator and Cowtcilman Green
after Green had suggested that the
council and staff were both at fault in not
attemptina to IOIVe the problem in
previous years.
"Might I ask where the staff wo\Jld
have been if It trltd to abate thil
nuisance when the council eren toniibt
has not declared a public nulaance?"
Miller responded. 1'The st.afr has to be
backed up right here."
Councilmen pointed out that a public
nuiw>ce had been declared but Miller
obo<rved that the 11111 .un had to report
back June I.
Viet Vet Killer
Receives Life
Prison Sentence
An Orq• C.OW.ty Superior Court jury
mulled the fate of convicted killer George
Albert Scott for four hours Monday and
then decided on a life aentenct for the
bulky Pico Rivera man.
ScoU, 20, will be 1entenced May 14.
Judge Herbert Herlands will rule that
nme day on a motion for a new trial.
Juron agreed on leaving t b e
c:ourthoule late Monday that SCOU'• age
-be WIS 11 when be killed Pbllip
Cutanon, 21, of Pico Rivera Jut Oct. 11
-w11 a major factor in their refuain& to
rfJCO?llfDUld the death sentence.
Cutanon, a wounded Vietnam war
veteran who b"ad been in the United
States for jUJt three wetb after duty 1n
Soulheut Alla, wu killed by Scott
followlna a quaml 1parktd by the young
soldier'• relaUonship with Scott's wile.
It was tr.sUfied during the trial that
Scott allD forced Catlllnon to withdraw
$400 from hil bank and hand It over
shortly before the vldlm wu savagely
beaten and left wlth hia throat cut from
ear to ear behind a LI Habra apartment
building.
Scott's co-defendant, Michael Thomas
Terrazu, 22, o( Avalon, Santa Catalina
Ialand, II ocheduled lo pl"d JU]lty toc11y
to reduced charges.
Terraw, who witnessed the klllln(,
testified for the prosec;uUon fgilnst Scott
with the promise that he could plead
guilty to char1ea of being an acceuory lO
murder.
He will be arraigned before Judge
Herland s and face• a possible 1tlte
prllon term of ooe to ten yean.
OIAMal COi.Sf
DAILY PILOT
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Page 0
''l subniit that America will be a
1reater, more selr confident, and more
respected naUon If ... we exercise our
constltuU011.1l rt Ip 01'.1IibiIi11 ti W
terminate support for a war that we
know is wrona," McGovern testllied in
calling for a Dec. 31 cutoff.
"Mr. Nixon's Vietnamization policy
virtually guarantees that our prisoners
will remain in their cells, that our troops
will remain In dang tr, that the
negotiations wlll be 1talled, and that the
killing wtll continue," he said.
P.1cGovern is a chief sponsor of a
proposal to require total withdrawal of all
U.S. forces from Indochina by tbe end of
this year.
Senator Vance Hartke (J).Jnd.), who
propo9e1 diJengaaement within 30 day11 underacored arguments of McGovern,
saying that only by setting a flrm date
for total withdrawal could negotiations
proceed on 1 ceasefire and on ttturn of
war prisoners.
Noise Pollution
Solution Sought
In V all.ey Area
By TERRY COVILLE
Of ... DlltJ '""' .,.,.
Fountain Valley bu • plan to put the
damper on the 1ounds of the city.
ll't a comprehensive study of nolae
Jevela throua:bout the community with
sug1uttd limits 11 to bow much noise
sbould be allowed 1n each area.
"We meuured the ooi.st ltvel at 35 dlf·
fertnt altes," CUnton Sherrod, city plan-
nilll dlreclor, uplalned. "W• lound tllat
freeways and the Marine helicopters are
tbe two blgest noise producer• Jn the cl·
ty."
Member• of the plann~ commllllon
will tak.e a preUminary look Wednetday
night at Sherrod'• report, compiled with
the hllp of the County Hwtll Deport.
ment.
Sherrod has set up three zones, each
defined by the avera1e aound level
meuured within It in tenn1 of declbel1.
1.ooe I Is the quiet.tit, iwtb a 50 decl~I
average during the day. Tbe lar1e1t qulet
zone in Fount1ln Valley it the aouthem
section bet"1ttn Talbert and Garfield
Avenue"s and Brookhurst and Newland
Street!.
Zone two b the moderate range with an
average of ~ decibels of noise each day.
The nob:iest tone Is zone Ill, where the
sound levd averages llO decibels.
Sherrod suggests setting limits. forbid-
ding nolus which go too far above the
average noise level in each zone.
"There would not be any immediate ef-
fect on the city,'' Sherrod explained. "But
it would safeguard us against excesslve
noises in the future."
Sherrod said the noise study, conducted
last Noven1ber and December, was
prompted by the Orange County Water
Oistrict'a plan to build a desall.nizaUoo
plant at Ellis Avenue and Ward Street.
"We would expect them to cooperate
with us In keeping the noise level to our
&landards," Sherrod said. "We also plan
to work wfth atate enaineers wben they
build the HunUngtoo Beach Freeway. We
}lope lhey'll buffer the freeway to reduce
the nohe level from It.''
U,1 ,...,_,.
BODY DISCOVERED
No1h Alb1, 20 Month1
From Pege 1
CRUCIFIED. • •
game" with the baby, I.be younaer boy
said.
"My brother bad a brltk In hla hand,"
Driscoll quoted the boy as saylna. "The
brick fell and hit the boy on the head.
Then my brother was poundillg on the
mattres~ there in the basement and lhe
brick fell again ... "
An autopsy was held today and the case
remanded to Juvenile Judge Francis
Mayer, who will make the decision on
what action should be taken.
Driscoll said It wa:!l not known whether
the boys were aware the baby had been
fatally injured, but that the infant was
dead soon after they left the clubhouse if
not at tbat time .
Officers aaJd their first lead came from
John Mowry, 23, a printer, who had
talked to the infant's frantic mother in
the park the afternoon he disappeared.
Mowry said be had seen two young
white boys with an infant and they told
him, "We think he's lost." Mo"f.ll'Y's
description of the two boy1 matched that
of the ausptets, and their namt• wtl"9
then secured from the parents of the boy
police talked to Monday.
Cambodia Chief
Lon Nol Tells
His Resignation
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambod11n
Prime Mtnl1ter Lon Nol, who helped lead
the overthrow or Prince Norodom
Sihaoouk and then tuffered a ditabllng
stroke, resigned today along with hlJ
entire cabinet.
Lon Nol's brother, Col. Lon 'Non, 1a.ld
the resignation was little more than a
formality and probably would not bt
accepted.
Politlcal sourcet sald Uln Nol and hit
cabinet submitted their re1lgnaUon1 at
the oUlce of chief of 1tate CheQf Hen&
today. However, there was no lmmedlate
official announcement.
Lon Nol and Cheng Hen1 Jed the
bloodless coup of neutralist Prince
Norodom Sihanouk March 11, 197tl.
Sihanouk wa1 out of the country al the
time and hu •Ince set up a 1overrunent
in e1Ue In Communist China.
Labor of Love
Air Aces Seek to Restore Plane
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Df .... Dlltr l"l"t ll•tf
'nlrtt World War ll U.S. Navy ace
pilots -lncludln1 a Coron.a del flt1r
resident -are completing plans to
restore a r1re enemy plane which wu
found sunk in a Pacific lagoon.
Capt. Marshall U. Beebe (USN·ret.), of
219 Larkspur Ave., said today that he and
bis two coUeai;uu, Cdr. Eugene Valencia
(Ufu'l·ret.) of Cbul1 Vlsta and James
French of Bakenneld plan to rebuild a
Japanese 7.ero for dlsplay In lhe Fighter
Pilots Hall of Valor at tht San Diego
Aerospace Mu1eum.
Beebe said tbe fighter 11 only one of
two or three. In u.b1tence. and It took the
trio about five years to find It and 1et it
to this country.
The Utree men are 111 members of the
American Flgbter Ace Auociatlon and
between them shot down 45 J1p1nese
planes.
Bttbt, since rtUrement from 1cUve
duty, work1 u a broker for mutual fundt
and handles real estate -projects in
Corona del Mar. French aald tbe book.
"The Bridges 1:t Toko-RI'' was dedlt:tted
to Beebe who commanded the 1quadron
on which James Michener'& Korean War
novel w1a bR!led.
"U I had known Zeroes were so hard
to 1et btck, I don't think I would have
shot them down ," rri:hch quipped.
Beebe said they wanted a Zero for lhe
museum to bt: dlspJ1yed wllh Amerlc:an
flghltrs such as U1e P-40 and the Navy
Hellcat.
"We put out advertisements and wrote
letttrs and about 11 momhs latl!r, we 1ot
a reply from the Harbor Master in
:R1baul, Nt" Gulnea ."
In September of 1970, lhe y had the
plane pulltd from 10 fttt of wattr off
Rabaul where It had h1\n for about 28
years . And alttr Kveral months of rtd
lR"! dtlaya, the plane was crated and
sl:.µped via Air Foret transport to the
Baker1fleld aircraft hangar owned by
French.
Beebe aaid they will restore the plane
there with the hope ot getUng It airborne
again. ''If that proves to be lmpracUcal,
then we'll build a flying replica," he said.
Zeroes are extremely rare, Beebe said,
because of the American government's
policy of destroying all enemy munlt.lont
at the end of World War U.
"They took whole shiploads of 7.eroe1
and dumped them out in the ocean. At
the time. no one was particularly con-
cerned with saving a dozen or ao for
museums," he eiplalned..
As pilots during those years, French
shot down 11 Japanese fighters, Betbe
waa credlted with 10~ and Valencia was
the Navy's third ra.nklng ace with 2S
scom. A pilot must shoot down five
enemy aircraft to earn ace statua.
Beebe aald the Japanese 1overnment
haa one of the l.eroes on display and the
Can11dt1ns are restoring one for display,
"and there's 1u-ppo1ed to be one at the
Smithsonian lnstltuUon but appartnUy
It's not displayed.
He aald they are uncertain how Iona It
wlU tlke to aet the plane rebullt, but he
estimated at leut 111 months to a year
for the work.
"Actually It 1ooU tmible because ll'•
all covered with au life, but It's all Jn
one piece,'' be said.
The plane .... in good "10Ufh lhlpe
that when they a:ot It out of the waler, the
men were able to locate Ila aerial number
and trace tbe pllot.
Valtncta, • tele,1lslon producer who is
v.·riting 111 book on air aces, found the
pUot, Seklzen Shlbayma, by checking the
Ztro'1 strlal number agalnst Japanese
squadron 11slgnmtntl.
Shlbayam• reported he had enaine
ttouble on Nov. ti, 1943, and, 11 quoted
by Valencia , was "looking at my 1auges
v.·ht.n I wa.s hit and my engine stopped for
Rood." Shlblyama said he escaped aod
awam to ihore u the Zero 1ank.
BoJDh Battle
Police Fight Panie,-Fear
IJ llUDl Nlll>ZUUKI ..... ..., '*' , .. ,.
Tbe bombtlnal
It can come any time, day or nl&ht.
Often Its target is a public school or col-
lege. Sometimes It's a fedaral building
or a post office.
Panic and ftar are u111ally the.result of
bomb thrlall. SclneUmes the threats are
rul and CIUll ION of Hvea and devasta-
tion of property.
Huntingtoo Beach Police have just
completed instructing officials from local
'tmutv.Uons on bow to cope with this reali-
ty of Arnertcaa Ule.
Tbey have conducted a short three-hour
course on bombs for about 60 persons
from loc1l schools.ed college1. ·
Monday atttmoon, at the Huntington
Beach Police Department'• riOt rug~
they were given a demonatratlon of a
variety of homemade dt!tructlve devlce1.
'Ibey learned that the ingred1enll for
bomba can be purtbutd right off
hardware store ahelves, 10metlme1 for as
little u a dollar.
No telling restrictions exllt agains:t
many of the explosivet med by bombers
since they are nonnally used for other
purposea, 1uch u fllllng butane gu
U,hters or ferti!Wng lawns.
Perhaps the most impressive feature of
lhe afttmoon demonttrallon at the aun-
nery range was the flrin& ot a "blocli:-
buster" made from five -pounds of
fertilizer ud a fJ&mmabJ1 liqujd.
The detonation wu sufficient to blow a
four.foot. crater into the &nJWld and
create a abock wave equal to a aik
boom.
'"l'bll 11 the kind ol aplollve lhll lmds
to push walla bl," c:omm.mted Police
Chill Elrl• Robllallle.
The bomb 1lllllD1t lllill. illcluded I
demonatradcn of ummt po p u I 1 r
deltructlve device -the Molotov
coclctlll.
'nlree dlflerent typu were hurled
agllnll 1 dirt berm by Set. G<o=s-t ·and Olflcer Geor11 Abbond, ,....
•i7.e lllm" up lnlo lht llr ond bla 1nfnt
th• l\lmlWldinf bnJlb. Set. JllllU Mlhln, coordlnllor ol the
semlllu, uld uch ol the lllDinlr
partlclpillta hao been lun1llhed . wt1h a
proctdurt manual on bOmb thrtatl.
"With tllil manull lhey wUI bl 1ble lo.
mite . the proper declllonl, 1,vacuate.
bulldlnp, know what to expect when the
poUce 111 there and 111111 UI with Jden-
tlfyln1 the clller," be Aid.
'lbe manual a1Jo ouUtn11 teclmiquu for
"'ll'cl>Jnf and mlkinf buJld1np u!e Ind
how lo lrllt IUIJllclouo objecta that
ml!lbl bl bomb&.
Rules Committee Okays
• Newport VoteAmen~ent
By L PETER KRIEG
Of flMo D1llr l"l"I 11~11
SACRAMENTO -The Assembly Rules
Committee today voted a "Do Pass"
recommendation on a Newport Beach
City Oiart.er amendment which would
requ.ire a vote of the people on any futW'e
freeway route agreements.
The vote by the Assembly panel was 3
yes, 1 no, S absent. Alsemblyman Robert
W. Burke (R-Huntlngton Beach) ca1t the
lone no vote.
The cllles of Cotta Meta and
Huntington Beach had f o r w a rd e d
rtlOlutlons to the rules commlllee asking
that Newport's Charter amendment,
approved by city voters, be rejected.
The -proposed amendment now goes to
the floor of the full Auembly, probably
aomeUmt late today, for a vote on
rtlllictUon. It mmt allO be ratified by
the CalUornia Senate.
Assemblyman Burke vowed today that
he would fight against the ratlficaUon on
the floor of both houses.
A11emblyman Robert E. Badham (R-
Newport Beach) introduced the
amendment to the rules committee thl!
morning, citing the 85 percent favorable
vote It had received in a special election
in Newport Beach.
Only four of the seven members of the
rules committee were present for this
morning's bearing.
Voting for the favorable report were
assemblymen John L. Burton (D-San
Francisco), committee chairman; Ray E.
Johnson (R..(hlco), vice chairman and
Erneat N. Mogley CR-Fresno).
Burke cast the lone dissenting vote.
Absent from the 1e1slon w e re
Utemblymen John P. Quimby (J).
Rialto), Leo J. Ryan (Q.Soulh San
Frknclsco) and L. E. Townsend (J).
Gardena).
Burke then introduced rtJOlutiom
adopted Monday night by bath the Cotta
Mesa and Huntington Beach city councils
urgin1 rejection ef the a..mendmint.
He allo cited an opinion from the
legl11laUve coun.tel't office that forecut
the courts would likely decl1re the
amendment uncon1Ututlonal i! a legal
challenge were raised.
Opponents of the measure cont.end the
resident. of a single munlclptlity do aot
have the authority to vote on a matter
of statewide concern, auch as the state
highway system.
A member of Burke's staff said
committee members, in adopUng the
favorable recommendation, pointed ()Ut
that the committee hat never before
taken a negative stance on a city's
proposed charter cbang,.
Funeral Slated
For. Rosa Speer
Funeral services for Mrs. Rosa Speer,
87, of 7162 Speer Drive, HunUngton
Beach, will be held at 2 p.m., Wednesday
at lhe Warner Avenue Baptlat Olurch.
Burial will follow at Westminater
Memorial Park.
Mrs. Speer, the wife of Marion Speer,
curator of the Western Trails M111eum In
Knott's Berry Farm, died Sunday.
She helped her husband collect more
than 30,000 souvenirs of the old wut
which were on di1play ln their home until
1956, when the collection was moved to
the Buena Park attraction.
Survivors include her husband, Marlon;
two daughters, Mrs. Alleen Nicholas of
Whittler and Mr1. Zetta Troop of
Riverside; two sons, t . F. Rowley of
Santa Ana and W. S. Rowley of Hun-
tington Beach; a 1ister, Mrs. Alice
Thompson of Cotatl:~rother, James F.
Brol1.50n of Bak ; s e v e n
grandchildre ' 1nd 18 areal·
grandchildren.
W ALI{ SOFI'LY!
DAILY ,l\,OT St.fl ......
RINIK READIES COCKTAIL
Pollet Offer Bomb Seminar
5 Girls Cl.eared
In Newport Beach
Call Girl Case
Five women have been cleared in San(a
Ana municipal court of prostitutkm
charges filed by Orange C.ounty Sherlfl's
officers.
Judge Paul Mast cleared Barbara Jean
Baylor, 25, and DiJ:le Lee Matrisciano, 39.
both of Santa Ana and Loree Isenberg,
35, Mary Agnes Nielson, 34, and Gwen
Patricia Worthington. 22, all of AnabeJm.
He continued until April 26 the
prellmlnary hearing for Newport Beach
contract.of Henry W. Sprague. 51, of 64
Beacon Bay, He is accused of procuring
and ' conspiracy to commit prostituUon
and is free on $6,250 bail.
Freed on their promise to return April
26 were Rena Sherry Andrews, 24, North
Hollywood, Elaine Komara , 29, of
Anaheim and Beverly Ann Poe~lman, 24,
of Cypress. All are charged with
prostitution.
Sprague and the eight women were
arrested after· investigation of the
Executive Escort Service a 11 e g e d J y
operated by the contractor from offices
at 2192 Dupont St., Irvine.
Officers allege Sprague arranged dates
for "sophisticated executives" and made
his girls available on an "011 call" bat.it
for assignments throughout the county.
Confiscated by officers at the time of
the arrest was a quantity of glouy
business cards, all ljearing the legend:
"Executive Escort Service -100
beauUful foxy girls for your dating
pleasure.''
Anahein1 l\fan Killed
In Vietnan1 Conflict
An Anaheim man \Vas listed among
casualties of the Southeast Asian confli ct
on a dispatch Monday fr om the U.S..
Department of Defense .
Listed among those killed in hoslile ac-
tion is CWO Paul C. Stewart. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Michael J. Tracy, 704 S. K9att
Ave., Anaheim.
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive.
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how these mater i a Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
regardless of where you buy it, don't ex p e ct too much. WALK
VERY SOFTL YI
\
aANT A ANA,. OllANll. TUSTIN Call • , ,
ALOIN'e llD HILL C.UPm
& DIAPllll&
1U74 ll'TI,,._ Tvaflfto OL ........
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
-COSTA MESA
646-4838
-,
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I ' '
I 11
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Tund1y, April 20, 1971 H
Racial B·alance • Ill S~hools Upheld
Aiding Mary
Kidney Patient
Lends His Help
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of flle O.ffr 'li.t ltltf
Sometimes thole with an es.petience
leaving lasting physlcal and emotional
1cara can offer a special brand of
comfort to others )n their own time or
nee<!.
Sometimes all It lakes i.9 a few words :
I know . I care ...
SorT_letimes not SomeUmes the feelin&
can't be expressed.
Jim Wlerni~ knows that, having once
needed hope, help and comfort and now
being in a position to give it.
He is helping with the Mary French
Benefit Fund, for the Harbor Atta girl
whose own kidneys falled and whose body
rejected one donated by her mother 'J:1
days ago.
"I feel kiDd of bad calling over there."
he sliiys of the French household at 20291
Kline Drive, Sant.a Ana Heights.
"You're at a loss for words ... "
Wiemfci, 37, of 31B Ogle SL, Costa
t.fesa , knows what the 18-year-old Corona
del Mar High School senior and her
family are experiencing now.
Nineteen months ago be was in Mount
Sinai Hospital to receive a kidney
transplant -like Mary wu March 23 at
Orange County Medical Center -but his
was success(ul.
He weighed less, at 96 pounds, than his
I-year-old son.
He has gained back more than 40
pounds and the ordeal isn't over -
although his prognosis at thia stage is
optimistic -and each day is one to savor
and utilize fully, not wasting a minute.
"I take it one day at a time," aaya
Wiernicz, who retired from hls Newport
Beach postal carrier route , enrolled at
Orange Coast College and is studying to
be a dental technician .
"I ha ve a little time now, so l 'm trying
to help Pttary French, publicizing the
fund ."
He has arranged for Pttiss Newport
Be.ach, Ott Dee Pennington, to preside at
a ticket drawing for the Mary French
fund i• a 4-H Club jwi.ior fair Sunday at
J p.m. at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
Southland dealers have donated a new
Volkswagen for it and ticket.!! are ou sale
from many fund boostera.
Nixon Mav Visit
~
Cant p Pendleton
To Greet Troops
Hlnt.s by Pruidential aides arose today
en Ole chances of a visit to the South
Coast by President Nixon within the next
few weeks.
The President waa reported planninit a
-fislt to troops of the lsl Marine Division
at Camp Pendleton where t he
Leathunecks will be proceued after
their return from Vietnam combaL
The first members of the division were
erpected this weekend at the huge base,
but. the Presidential visit, iI any, would
not be until later, his iipokesmen said.
The President planned to spend this
weekend at Camp David, Md.
The reports of the Impending visit
correspond to t1ome comment:i: made by
the President'ti slaff during the last visit
to San Clemente several weeka ago.
As they left for Wuh.ington, aeveral
"1ember1 of the t1laU mentioned a retw-n
•Isil in early May.
ContribuUom: may alao be malled t&
tM hmd in C&r9 of the U.S. National
Bank, IB~ Newport Boulevard, Costa
Mesa.
Mary's f u n d #in help finance three
cosUy stints pet week on a dialysis
machine to cleaMe her blood, until
anothtt kidney ia available for
transplant.
She has recovered 1ufficiently from the
uru:uccessful operation of March %3 so
that docton allowed her to go home
Sunday, but tihe wa1 back al the county
facility for dialysis again Monday.
"She still haa her old spirit," says a
friend of the family employed at
French'1 Putries in Colt.a Mesa, where
customerti keep posted on Mary's
progress.
Chec:k)ng back through the files to SepL
14, 1961, when Wlemlcz was interviewed,
telling of a strong spirit and his stoic
acceptance of life's dally uncertaJnlles, it
appears that quality Is shared by Mary.
Besides critical kidney f1Uure, Jim
WiemJcz and Mary French possess
AOmething else in common, u he put la
Zlh years ago in that first interview :
"I go every week to the hospital with
the hope of better lhlnea."
Santa Barbara
Oil Lease End
Now Proposed
WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -The Interior
Department will announce Wednesday
legislative proposals to cancel 3$ oil
lease..s and create a new oil·lree
sanctuary in waters off Santa Barbara.
'Ibe department revealed ill intention
in announcing • news conference to be
conducttd by William T. Pecora, director
of lbe Geological Survey, which ad-
ministers oil activities in federal oUshore
areu.
1lle administration had proposed a
11irnllar plan in the last Congress which
involved only 20 leasea. But the plan was
not adopted.
An infprm~ spu~.ce at tht . IntFrictr
Depattment sa'1d apart from 'the increase
in lease1 to be canceled the new legisla·
tioo would be 1lmUar to the previous pro-
posal.
It is eq>ected to leave to the courts
how much the lease holders should be
reimbursed.
Oil companies paid hundreds or
millions of dollars for 72 leases off Santa
Barbara in a sale,held in 1967 and 1968.
Two of the leases have since been
abandoned and cancellaUon of 35. as pro-
posed, wou1d leave 35 available for
petroleum development.
It wu not immediately known how
much DlOlley was involved in the bonu.s
bids on the 35 leases proposed for
cancellation, or how much the companies
have invested so rar in attemptina to e1·
pion or develop them.
The new proposal, like the previous
one, iJ expected to provide for compe"°"
sat.ion, as determined by the courts,
from the proceeds of oil production at the
Elk Hilla Naval Petroleum Reaerve, also
in California.
Pre&iure to cancel federal leases off
San.ta Barbara grew inten11e after an oft
well on one of them ran out of control in
January, 1969 and polluted the Santa
Barbare channel and tbe area's beache1.
A 1egment along the beach front ad·
jaeent to the shore ia a it.at. sanctuary
where on operations an forbidden.
'Toothless' Medi.Cal Plan
Hit s Criticism From Panel
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A propo11l to
drop false teeth from Medi-Cal has
brought Gov. Ronald Reagan'• program
to rev1JJ1p health care services for the
lleedy up against bipartisan opposition.
The manager of the adminlstration-
•ponaortd bill, Aaemblyman William
Campbell (R-Hacienda H • 11 h ta ) ,
commented Monday arter the bill's lint
htarlng, before the Assembly Health
Commltlee, that he feared the bill would
be killed unlw dentures were rutored.
"It 11 my feeling that tbiti bill wou1dn't
get out of tb.11 committee without fa.lie
teeth, .. he Hid.
Campbell, chairman of the committee,
aald another hearin1 would be held next
week. He added he would probably put
off calling for a vote on the meaaure until
even later.
1t JiOUld cost another $2S million to bon nue lncludl.nc dentures In the list of
,,fedJ.Cal aervlct1, newsmen were told by
Or. Earl Brian, state Medi-Oil clllef.
Wbt\ber or not he would accept an
amendment restoring false t e et h
depended both on Campbell and tile
1overnor'1 office, Brian uid.
Present law 1tlow1 payment for
dentures, but the 1dmlnlstr1Uon 11 part
•
of Ill economy cutbacb has mtricted
payment to jU1t the repair of fabe te<th.
New denturu are not 1uthorized and
thia provision would be continued under
Reagan's plan to overhaul Medi-Cal. But
the program ·would still provide other
prosthetic devlca 1ucb as bearing 1lda
and eyealaue1.
.. Do you mean It iJ better to bear than
to chew!" Auemblywoman Pauline
Davll (D-Port.ola), asked Brian.
"ll'I poa:1bJe to ~at without teeth," he
replied. "'Ibtre 1re quite a few foods
prepared for people without te<th."
"Q-um of Whoa~" reported Mn.
Davl1.
Au<mbfyman Kent Stacey ( R •
Bakenfteld), said 1 worker m1ght
require falle teeth "psychologically and
pbyl1ologkally to he can go back t.o
work" and uked why dtnluru were
proposed for ellminaUon.
It w11 1 "matter of .et.ting prtmitiea''
Brian replied, and a question of fuld.Jn1
being avallable for tllll particular
aer1lee.
He 1ald corrective WQ'l'k for chlldrt n
would be atrtssed r1lher than denlura
1ervlct for 1dulta.
,
DAl'-T "ILOT ltttr ~
DETECTIVES SURVEY MATERIALS SE IZED IN LAGUNA RAID
Offic1ra Nell Purctll •nd John S.porlto Lot Items,
Police Nab 3 in Raid
At Laguna 'LSD Lab'
High Court OKs
Busing, Pairing
WASllINGTON (UPI) -'l'he Supremo
CoW't unanlmoully upheld today b.,lng,
pupil pairing and' other deliberate racial
balancin1 devices to stamp out IChool
de,.gregatloo.
'lbe neW IUidellnea: were apelled out In
four oplnk>na wr11ten by Chill Juslice
Wamm E. Burg,.., 'Ibey allO unctioned
a «rtaiJI amount of deliberately Imposed
racial baJanc.rna: U needed to eliminate
"all vestlgea of 1tat1-lmpot1ed''
segregation.
President Nlzon bn declared hlnuell
opposed to utreme delqregaUon titeps
such 11 mwlve busing or largwcale
asslgnmenta to achieve a r1claJ balance.
Nixon aaid on Marcb 24, 1970, that
"poaiUve lntearatlon dotl not necesa:arUy
have to result in raclal balance"
throughout a school syltem.
In argumenu belore the court last
year, Solicitor General Erwin Grilwold
advocated the Prtlldent'1 conceJ>t of
"neighborhood ICboola" u the base for
elimlnatlnJ srparat. black and while
IChool tiy.stems although acknowledging
that pupil p1iring and other means miibt
be used in extnme ca.su:.
Burger wrote. "aod, 11 a matter GI
educatiooal policy achool authotltlM ~
well coriclude that some kind of racial
bal~ in the acbools ii dealrable quUo
apart from any con1tltutJonal
requ.lrementa."
''Hc;iwever," Burger said, "If a llal&-
impoled limitation on a school authority's
di.scretion operates to inhibit or obltruct
the. operauOn of a unlta.ry achoot 1Ylttm
or impede the dlseatablJ;h!ng of a dual
school 1y1tem, It mu.st f"l!."
"State policy must give way wh4in It
operates to binder vbtd.lcaUon of federll
constitutional guarantees," Bur&er rUltd.
Viet, Yanks
Mo ve Into
A Shau Area
But the B~gu opinions armed the SAIGON AP ) -U.S. arid South
lower rederal court.a and 1 c ho 0 1 Vletftame.M infantry battallona h ave
authorities with broad powerti to brlna finally moved Into the A Shau valley but
about desegregation. no significant contact with the eotmy Act,lng on an informant's tip, Laguna mescaline Jn bot b po" de re-d u.d wa1 reported today .. Beach narcotics officers Monday broke cryslalized form . He said in the major opinion : "Having ••~-· . dg Auoclaled Pre" CorreJpondont J. T. up an alleged LSD laboratory by Sgt. Purcell, accompanied by_~ once found a violation, the wauict JU e
arresting three persons and confiscating EnfCN"cement Division officers John or 1cbOOI 1uthorilies lhould make every Wolkeritorfer reported from Lavang. the
dangerous drugs with ·an eslimated Saporito and Tom Reeder, went to the effort to achieve the grr.atest possible forward command po.st for the operatloll,
"street value" of more than $100,000. residence following the informant's degne of actual desegre;ation, laking that at least one battalion of about too
One of the men taken into custody by alleged drug buy, pollce said. When the lnto account the pracUcalitiea of the troops from the U.S. 101.!t Airborne
the agents was described by veteran officers entered the home, Pw-cell situation. Division and sizable South Vietnameae
narcotics investigator Sgt. Nell Purcell as claimed W~~ was found In the " A di.strict court may and should units had been committed to the A Shau
a "major LSD dealer" in the area. bathroom pouring liquid from a vial down consider all available t e c h n i q u e 1
The arrests took place al about 2:45 the toilet. including restructurin1 of attendance operation.
p.m. at 1480 Bluebird Canyon Drlve, Woodl ·immediately d-pell the vial d both U ,, For the past week, U.S. and South officers said, after an infonnanl went to ·~,. zones an con guous an u Vietnamese reconnaissance team1 have the house and allegedly purchaled 300 Into the toilet, , Purcell said, and it wa.s noncontlguoua attendance zonea.
"bill" or doses of UiD in blotter form. recovered by agent.!!. Purce.II said a "The meatiure of any desegregation been operating in the 3()..mlte-long •alley Pu-II said , C'D is often .,.1d in the form serond vial, allegedly containing the four plan is Ill tffec:tlveneu." trying to find enemy targeta to attack.
·""' ~ ..... ounces of LSD, wa.s found in the bedroom So k Id 11 --iiect l -Allied firebases have been set up all nf dro..., on a piece of pa-r, thus the of ••· h al dro , me ey gu e nes were .,.,.., ou in around t•· jungl·" valley to support the ,,.. ,.~ u11e ouse ong with eye pper1 and I I I th c h I t t ·~ = term ''biotter acid." beakers. a caae nvo v ng e 1 r 0 e • operaUon, which is named Lam Son 720,
Tbe three ......ur.ns taken Into custody Pur~I id t•· pe~-h .. Mecklenburg, N.C., school ayst.em where •k-iucc••• .. to ••-South V1'etnam.,. I"~·~ .,,.. A ~ IUS ,..., 'I u f·• Id'· I~ j"• d ed ber Uft: ~ un: were ideolified by police a1 Roger Alan apparent)y been in the process of a ~era ~tr "~ uuge or er a num invasion of Laos, which was Lam Son 719.
Woods, 21, and Karen Marie Lun.!ford, 2.1, preparing more "hib:" of the drug when of the disputed methods to be used,. The 101.st Airborne ls providing both
both of tbe Bluebird Canyon Drive officers arrived. He claimed 18$• doles including bll!ing. helicopter and ground support for the
address, and John 'Bryan Bishop, 19. of had already been put onto 1 pm of The court also 1truck down 1 North operation.
34082 Calle Hermosa, Dana Point. They paper. Carolina law which prohibited busin1 to Ooe American field officer aaid the
are each being held in lieu of $50,000 bail. Purcell uid after the officers entered achieve forced lntegraUon. operation "will last as long u we have
Police claim the drugs confilc ated the home, they waited with .the three Burger tiald transfen were ~ integral targets. You can expect us to operate an
from the home included a vial containing suspecll Wltil 1 aearch w.a.rrant-could be parl of many desegregation plana and "to the way west to lhe Laotian border until
about four ounces of liquid UiD, 100 obtai~ from the di&trict attorney'• be effective such a transrer arrangement the monsooll!I start."
pieces of candy doled with LSD, 135 office. Once the warrant was issued, the muat grant the tran.'lferrin& atuudent free Tbe monsoon rains are expected to
"hits•• of bloUer ;acid •nd •mall investigator uJd the agerits acoured the tranlpOl'lation." begin in about three weeks.
quantities of marljulina and hashish. premlsu and took the three au.spectl·into The court allo upheld zone palring1 and The valley 375 miles north of Salgon is
Purcell estimated that 50;000 "hits" could custod a certain amount of deliberately Jmposed just east of Base Area 611, a major North
be made from the four ounces or LSD Poll~ sald .the trio .b to be arraigned "racial· balance" U needed to eliminate Vietnamese tupply depot on the Ho Chl
and said a single "hit" sells for $2 on the Wednesday on charges of. po.sse.s.s:ion of "all vestiges of 1 tat e. Imp o 1 e d' ' Minh trail network ln IOUthern Laos. 111.e
illicit market. daneerous drugs wJth intent to aell. In tiegregatlon. va11ey 11 an enemy lnflltraUon corridor
In addition, officer• uncovered 1 addition, Woods ls to be char&ed with ''School authorltiea have w Id • and 1upply transshipment poillt fnto Ute
padlocked, wooden chest buried in the aalea of LSD, police aald. d1screUon Jn formulating IChool policy," northern quarter Of South Vietnam.
back yard of the home which allegedly ~r.:::::::::•••••=························••11 C011tained two pounds of marijuana, a
small amount cf LSD and a quantity of
4
DAYS
ONLY
Cougar Hunting
Ban Proposed
Fo r Cali fornia
SACRAMENTO (AP) -For 56 years
bounty hunte rs pursued and killed the
California cougar, the sleek tawny wikf
cat of the Sierra wild enness and the
coastal mountain t1en1b country.
Branded an outlaw and predator. there
was a $50 price on hi s bead -$60 for a
female. Nearly U,500 of the powerful
'mountain lions were kllled between 1907
and 1963, wben tbe CalifornJa Legitilature
C'anceled the reward.
Hunting continues today a I m t 1 t
unrestricted. No one knows hew many
are left. One rough e1limate i.s 600. But
State Assemblyman John Dunlap of Napa
is convinced tbe California cougar Is a
vanishlng species: -going the way of the
wolf and grinly bear in California .
Dunlap is sponsoring a bill to ban
hunting of the lion and ''make Jt a
symbol of the clear and preaent danger of
extinction of many natural wildlife
specie.!."
He his 55 conservation organizations
behind bim, united ln "the coalition to
save the California mountain lion."
Coalition spokes:man Stan Benedict
11ys the cats, who weigh 100 to 200
pounds and are up to seven feet lo11g
from nose to tip cf the tail, seek deer as
their prime prey. The cougar is "SlTictly
a loner" and rarely attack1 man, ht
says. ··
Still, livestock rancberti are ooncel'Jlf!d
about the few cats who occuiona\ly 11:0 on
c11f-killlng foray1 , 11yt1 William B.
Staiger, a spokesman for the California
CaUlemen's .A.ssociaUon.
Dunlap bu a.mended hla bill to provide
for the F'isb and Game Department to
visit a ranch wilhin 41 hours and decide
whe'ther a cat lbould be traced and
killed.
The slate Fish and Game Department
npposes the bill It bas launched a study
of lbe lion and Ila habitat, ind proposed
that the Fish and Gamt Commission
at:abliJ:h limited cat bunting.
Thf .argume~t irkl..DunlaP.. "Their idea
ii that they really don 't know how many
lions there are and someone got the Idea
Wednesday· ·• Thursday • • Saturday
IO% 4IO% ~OFF!
AND EVEN MORE ON SOME ITEMS
SOFAS e CHAIRS e BEDROOMS e DINING ROOMS e BUFl=ETS
SERVERS e CHINAS e GAME SETS e OCCASIONAL TABLES
TH Row· LAMPS MIRRORS PILLOWS
Roilula r $3.00 5.0%. OFF YOUR s199s YOUR 99¢ CHOICE CHOICE
ORIENTAL AREA ODD HEADBOARDS CO~MODE
RUGS AND NIGHT STANDS TABLES s3900 s391s RI.OM s399s
H.J.GARI\EfT fURNllURE
that the way to d<!ermloe bow many PROFESSIONAL -TlY OUl llYOLYIN• CHAltH-2215 HARBOR BLVD.
there att ta to ktD them," h• ,.ys. "My INTERIOR DESIGNERS COSTA MESA, CALIF. phllO.opby la when In doubt, prewve, Opet MH. Tinin. & Fri. ·~ 646-0175
)'OU can
1
alw1y1 destroy liter." !!.------------------------------------------•
C , DAll;Y mor
\
\ •• I ~ps
Reach for Sky
With Caution
By THOMAS MllRPIUNE
Of .. Dlilr """ , .. ,.
llERE AND TllElll!: DEPT. -Almost
anywhm you IO aloo1 the Orange Cout
tbeH cfayl, all you baw to de to atorl I
eontrovtny ii make a pronouncement
about hill> rile bulldln&•.
Maybe It'• all pert of the new
~ntal contclouanesl. You know
-aamethl1lg lille ecology atarta below
the sizth floor. Anyway, a number of our
....W dUea haw been atruck by the
current bigfl rile huale.
I
Tllttdq, .\"11 !G, 1971
Newport Beach flOI Into the ltllf> rbe
nap early In the 1960s when the harbor
city's first -the Vilt.a del Udo
apartmenta -WU bu11t. Severo! otben
lollowOd and It broogftt an OUl<ry for
Newport to retain ttl village abnospbert.
One prominent lady stood before the City
Coundl and -tbat anytbln1 ..., thret storiea bill wu "an ae.sthetle
abortSon." A nwnber of tbele do emt. Anyway,~' Newport eveza t.oda)' i.s
haalinc over whether or not it abould
hava aoy men tall atruc:turea lll'OUDd ill
watutront.
2,000 VIETNAM VETS CONVERGE ON WASHINGTON IN PROTEST
Four of the Demonltr1tor1 Are Show".' In Thua Candid Phot09r1ph1
* Meenwhile, Costa M.., built Bethel
Towen, the retirement hJih riler, which
wu at the time the tallell bullclina In
Orange County. II dewloped that in
BetbB Toftrl, Costa MU& won the race
for reachfni into the aky but lost in the
effort to accrue additional tues for the
dty. Tbe retlmneot place hu a certalD
tax Immunity.
Veterans Try to Take
Protests to Congress
NOW COSTA MESA iJ pmzling over
whether or not it wanta: any more such verucll deve~enta that fall Oat Jn the
department of filling the city U.uury.
Meanwhile, dmmcolSt, a consklerable
IJ'OUP known u Village Laguna Jw
collected more than 4,CO'.I signature& to
.. ll the La1Ullll Beach City Council that
tuts or no tafts,·tbe Art Colony doean't
went aoy b;p rtse buildings at all. The
VlDage IAgunans are proposing an
lnlttaUve to llmlt building heights to 38
feet.
Their cry of "keep the village
a!motphen" !Ollllda a ltJt like tbe relly
ctJJ ~ in Newport about one decade
back.
* ll'AR'l'llEll DOWNCOAST, a guy from
Phfladelpilla jumpo4 Into tbe wbale tall buildfnR canttovmy. Yel, from J'Madilpltla.
He ii Jamea J. McCarey, the fire
conmild:ioner fMm the City of Brothtrly
LOvt and 116 wia fn 8an Diego for -you
paed it -a flrtman'1 convention.
* AIJiJWay, McCtrey called a prw
onem.nct yesterday to declare that a JM
of firaa lo biP rile bul14i"ia tbeae day• ara too hJgfl up to ftgfiL
'"lbe llmtt !or flh!lghUng II at the 12th
er Utb Ooor," he declirtd, "and in aome
citlel, at the sevefttb floor ."
1'BB P'DlE CHIEFS noted that iii
current design, there art a Jot of
Qyxrapen that feature. WlndoWI which
won't open .
''The oontractor ii worried about air
omdltioning and we are worried about
eeYfni live1," McCarey uaerted.
Sin Dte1a Fir< Chief t.ecmrd Bell
chimed in that in hi& city alone, more
than 100 bulldin&• are higher than 1l
stories whkb he agreed poset a limtt to
IUCCeUful r .. 11g11t1n1 methocb.
Well it's pretty clear that whether
JOO're with the ecologists or the
firefighters or tu collecton, tt'a rolng to
be a 1.., aeuoo for tall bultdlng bulld· .....
WASIUNGTON (AP) -. Two thouund
baWe-dressed VJetnam. vetuans have
temporarily lhifted their antiwar protest
from the 1treet1 of the national capital
inM> the of.flee& of COll,rea.
Still wearing their Jun,;le c:amoufla1e
fatigues and otber bill and plecea of
uniform, the veterana IOUChi mettinp
with Howle and Senate memb<n ta tell
bow they turned against tbt war.
Initial reaction from the Je&laJ4ton wu
mixed.
''Thole who have tended to be llberll
on the war talked to ua," said one
veteran aft.er tnlUal vi&ill M&nday.
''Thott who have been more haw~
were 'out'"
.. Some people didn't Ute tht w1y we
dressed," llld another, "but tbe way we are dressed wu larrtly the way we
Israel Seeking
U.S. Guarantee
Against Invasion
By Ullted """ l.oleraa-DlplomaUc toutctl In Jerusalem aald
today llrael WU uldn1 tbe Uoii.cl Statea
for ru&l'IDieel that Ruu1an I ti d
Ejyptlan tzoops would not croaa tbe suu
Canal 1r 1m1e1 maw a putll1
wttbdrawll lo ID elfon to defbae the
newett Mideast crisis.
The lsreell "'Jl0114 said the U.S.-Iuaell
talb had r.acbed the "make or bmk"
point.
1be new erb:il blew up when Ei:ypt,
Syria and Libya fonnf:d an Anib
Federation to conaolldate thtlr •lrenlth
.against Israel and Egyptian Pruldent
Anwar Sadat announced there would be
no more negotiations with Israel, no
abendonb\I of one inch of Arab territory
and no r.Unqullhlng of borlaioln( on the
Palut.IM queatlon .
dreued ln 'Nim' "
The lilf>t of 2,000 unilormed ..... 1dierl
marcbinr on their aovermnent Monday
wu a new twist for the antiwar
denmltratkm lrequeot in Wubington
over thl put few years.
'lbe tcene at the west front ol the
Clpltol pve 10me:thing Df the imqe of a
batue zone, with 1everal vela canyink
toy ooplea of the M·ll rlllea Ibey l11ged
in Vietnam.
Traces ol Navy bllle and ·MarJne olive
drab apeclded the predomfnanUy Army
crowd. :Ibere wu 1 flak suit with Alr
Force winp on the chest, gold wln11 of a
Navy pilot, ban ol olflcera and alripe. of
sergeants. And berets of varied hue.
1bt f1cu were young, but grbnmer
than those of the uallel student
demonstrators.
"Unlike the demonstraton of the put,
we know from erperlence what the war ii
like," proclaimed the Vietnam Veterans
Aa•inlt the War whlch 1J 1ponsorin& the
weff·long protest.
'?be crowd carried an Innate discipline
wbJch still clinp to most of the former
aervicemen. Their unUorms w er e
unkempt but all remembered to clamp on
tMtr caps before 10Jng out. Army stories
wen the only jokes beard.
Officer Disciplined
For Laos Criticism
PLEIKU, Vietnam (UPI) -The U.S.
commender who crtticlzod the South
VMtnamue operation in Laos and who
wu called on the carpet by hi1 superiors
for allowln& televlam filming ol Amer!·
can heliooplen dropplllfl napllm hu
been relieved of hia command ud trans-
f erred to another are•, military IOW'CtJ
said today.
The officer, LL Cot Frank O. Miller of
Maitland Jl'Ja., waa commander of the
IZnl! Combat AvtaU&n Battalion, one of.
the lara:est alrcratt unltl in VJetnam.
Wyoming Hit by Tornado
Mountains in Southwe3t Pounded by Swrm3
Calif Ot'111•
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PREVIEW OF MOU. fllTl(HW.. WUTHllSlRVttl TO 1:tlA .M, EST "4 • lf·7'
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Cocut•l
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--
Go Into Ceylon
Jet Base Set Up at Government's Request
COl.ollBO, C.,)oa (UPI) -'Ille Bovlet
lhdol! bu bqun •tun( up I jet flPlu
-lo Ceyloa at the "'l\lal of '111e
-al Prime Mlnll1u ~vo
BandulM!te, dl)llomatlc "°"""' eek!
~-'1lle --be tbe fil'11 Soviet
' m1Utary lnollllaU.O .. non.Communist
Alla.
'l'be IOUl'Cel AJd Soviet crtwa arrived
Jn -tbe pul -and ... olayJns lo I remote hotel llVI mfiel from
Colombo'• mllltary and dvll airport
-Ille MIGIT -will be localed. '1lle flrlt "' tbe Soviet jell _.
apected to arrive lmmedlateq, the
-lllld. DlplomoUc clrcJa .....,
-"' Ille cletolla of tbe .,_,,.
'Colombo -and wbetber tbe
bue WU -or """"""7. Nor wu tt. immedlltely dev what role
tbe Sovleta -.Id play ID tbe Ceylon'•
student up r l 1ta1 which Mn.
Bandaranaike'1 1overnm1nt w11
atniallnc oplnat. S.Verll ether forelan <OUDtrlea have already 111111 11m11 and
equlpmeot to Ceylao to lielp put dowa the
rebelllao.
.llut It Wll known that ant of Qlylon'I
moat preuing need& WU air IUppcri for
the illand n1tion'1 lfOUDd foree3. Air
aupf>Ori so far •la.inst the two-week.old
rebellion bu been limited to 1 handful of
lndJaa helicoplen and sorties by aid
Ceylonese car&• plllll<! from which
crewmen toa dynamite.
The MIG17 ls an obsolescent fi&hter
plane. Most of Egypt'• MIGs, for
uample, ore MIG21a. RtcenUy EcYPt
haa been reportod to be rece)Ying tbe new
and revolutionary MIG23J u well.
The rebellion Mrs. Bandaranaike'1
forces have been atruggllng to crush
broke out among the ialand'a thouaands
of unemployed unlvenity eractuata who
are lmpiUent with the 1ovmunent'1
IOclalitt reforms and want a more
']1'1 Mao! How are
you atpin1pong?'
radk:ally leftwing regime.
Rebel auerrUW. wba have proclaimed
the.mlelvea Che Guevarllta bi memory of
the Qlban "'Yallllionary Wba WU kiJ1ld
in BollVla in 1117, 1UD ~trol some pW
of the Island, despite government ·
aUempts to wipe lhem oot.
Ceylon expelled the North Korean
ambassador and hi! tlall lut week, Jn
what diplomatic I01D'cet said wu
'"'Plclon that the Pyooayana aovermnent
had fomented tbe uprlslllfl and perhaps
even supplied money am arms to the lmurgents.
The Savlel bue II mllll north of
Colomb!> rep,.ae.ts the -· ftt•t mllltary foothold in Aala beyaod It own
lmnwliate lpberel ol inOuence. It a!Jd'
pniYldea tbe Sovltta with a land bue In
the lndlan Octan "'"°"· which Moacow hu been lrylllfl to obtain and westem
powen have been trylna to block f6r th•
pul three yeora.
DiploJllata eeld there bu been tatt llaa
or the poall>Wty of tbe C.,Jonete
allowing the Soviet nevy to UM Ille Nvtl
base at Trincomalee, 160 miles oottheut
of Colomba.
Curse Strikes
Death Jinx Reported in England
BRISTOL, EnJlaod (UPI) -llaoemary
Slace.y 11ya abe II a widow at 2t beclUle
of a !amlly Jin• which eew the buabandl
ol ber mother, &rllldmatber and put-
crandmother die when they wert ber 11e.
She told ber bulbaod lbe had a
premonf'Uon ahe w«Ild be a widow at 2t
because •be tbouJ;ht he wu in danier
from tbe jioz.
"He toot tt aerioualy I D d promistd
never to take any rtw," 1he uJd on
leavln1 a coroner's lnqueat Mondly.
The coroner bad just puaed a vmfict
of accidental death on her X..year-old
huaband, Richard, cru>bed when a
tractor rolled over him ln February.
"Thia ta the fourth time It bu
happened In my !amily. My gr .. ~
grandfather died from an lllaels when hil
wife wu 21," 1be aaid.
"My grwl!alber wu killed In the !lrst
World War when hill wife wu 28 and my
father wu tilltd in the second world war
when my mother wu 21," Mrs. StKey
&aid.
"And DOW my husband, Richard . • •" she said. ·
lffock Attack Mistake
Soviet Warship Buzzed
By 3 Japanese Planes
TOKYO (UPI) -Tbe Soviet destroyer
steamed serenely through the T&UJhlma
Streit between Japan and South Korea.
Suddenly, three Japanae FMF ftgfiter
jets swooped down, bUued t h e
un1uspecUng Ruulw at about soo feet
and mapped away with their cameru in
a mock attlck.
The incident occurred on March 10,
durina a war game conducted by the
Japanese self defeue atr force and the
naval defense force. The defe.n1t minllt1y
had nid nothing about U unW today,
when the r.port appeored In the Tokyo
Shlmbunnnnpaper,
Defense Agency Director Yasuhlro
Nakasone Aid today the mock attack on
the Soviet veaael waa "• mistake on our
part." He eeld tbe Japanese fOvemmtnt
apologized to the RusaJIDI the next day,
and tbe tlliaiaoa had chelbd It elf to
human error.
A def-qency 1pokelman eeld the
four pilot.a mistook the Ruuie veael. for
one of their own shipa engaaed hi the
maneuvers. One of the pilota apparently
realized their mistake and stayed away,
the spokesman said, but the other three
went to ii.
Tbe apokesman 1aid the plane& were
not anned and did not even carry dummy
bombs -jlllt the cameru.
The incldf:nt came at a time when the
Sovieta llill were critical of alleged
"pro•ocaUons" by Japants military
aircraft against Soviet vessels. JapaneM
planes have made fly-overs during thl
past two years when Soviet shif>.' followed
~~panese and American vessels dwin.r
JOtnt naval maneuven.
Blaze in Thailand Hotel
It a!Jo happens in water& Jn which thl
fleet of Adm. He.ihachiro Togo defeated
the Ruula.n navy oo May 27, 1905, dwin&
the RuMC>Japinese war.
Kills 25 Foreign Visitors
Nakasone., whom the Communist
Chinese have aCC\lled of "mllit.ariat"
policies u an tnnuential member of the
Diet (Parliament), said, "We are not
golng to IClle down the maneuvers."
The maneuven were designed to train
Japanese pilots to diltinguish between
"friendly" and "unfriendly" ship11. BANGKOK CAP) -A ftte raged
throu;h the north wine of the Imperial
hotel early today, kUltng 25 foreJanen ,
police r<ported. They said 23 of the
bodies had been recovered, b u t
identification wu a diU!cult tuk beceuae
the re,ister wu destroyed.
The police said il wa1 believed the
victim& were Americana, Japanese,
German, Chfnue and Egyptian. The
hotel ntar the American Embll!)' was
popular with forei&n tour iroufll.
American eervict flll\llles and crtwa of
aome airlinf:J,
Some of the bodies wert found in
corridors, other& tn the elevator. Most of
tbe deaths were cawed by uphyxiaUon.
M1ny tenified guub, locluding four
airline atewardeuea, were I n ju rt d
jumpln& !rvm fourth floor wlnclowa. The
number of injured wu not known.
Wltnessu Aid the fire started about 4
a.m. after an explosion in the ground
floor ooffee &hop, a popular after hours
mtetlna place.
Police· amatecl the cook from the corr .. !bop.
'"lbe erploaion woke me up," 11id Fred
Ost.troht, a tour leader from Frankfurt,
West Germany. "A flrf: started In the
llllrcue and reception oru alter tbe
erplo&lon.
"My room wu on the opposite aide
from tile !Ire. But I jumped down ant
floor to the l"'IJnd. Poople were
Kate Webb Body
Believed Found
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A body
btlleved to be Illa! of C.therjne M .
, "Kato" Webb, United Prep tntematlooal
bureau mantter In Phnom Ptnb, hu
been found Jn a battle ma 55 mllti
11Nthwest of the capital.
Mias Webb, 28, and five other penont
have betn olllclally lllted 11 ml11lng
slnc:t April 7. 'Ibey were coverJnC a battle
on Hl1hway f when Cambadlan poratroop
poaltl°"' wtr• overrun by Cammunlst rorcea .
Advinctna Cambodian tr«>pa fowld
teveral bOdJtj In tbe 11111111 rrtilly. In
acc0rd&nco wltll C.mbadlan mllltaty
procedllre, all !ht bod!!a wft< butne<I on
the spot bat a C.llllllbodlan alllcer who
had ptevlowly seen Miii Weba alld e1le
waa amona the dead .
'
acrtami111 and Jumpin& out of windows.
"Some b r o k e their leg1 and their
spines.
"One of our tour group, a Swl.s! doctor
named Mmnann, ls milling and his wife
i! in the hospital ."
El&ht houn alter the blaze, smoke was
still comin& from burned out room1 on
the top floor. U.S. Anny media from the
5th Field Hospital joined Thai police
docton in carrying away charred bodiea.
In aome rooms bod.its of parents and
their ddldren were huddled toaether.
Author it• Run
Red Spy Rings Netted
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -In the
largest crackdown on Communist agents
operating in South Korea, four North
Korean spy ring! bavt been 1m11hed and
SI persons arruted, the army security
c.omrnand announced today. 'l'bret of the
ring! were headed by studel'Jts, ollicllls
SI.id.
... -
Ericb Stgal (799i 33·Y•tr..,14 autllor of "Love Slory" joins I 000 olllar
runntrs in 28-mile race from Hopkinton, M111. to Boston. 's.aat baJ
run ln race for 15 years. Story, Pase 16.
I ' ••
•I I I
.
' ,,
t I
eh
VO(; 64, NO. 94, 3·SECTIGNS, 42•1";\"GES . .
. By L Pl'l'Elt. KRIEG
• I OI .. Diii~ l"lftt ''-"' .
S>,CRAMENTO -The c.JJlornia IJ-
lrinbly, on a 51 to I .vote, today •ratified
the, Ne•port...'Beacb freeway charter
~ent. ~ w~ will now be ~.t to
the state Senate where.' 1.imU.ar ,1cUon is
~ belore Ule amendment which
would 1'91Julre· dl)'wlde'..ot.s'·bef""' :the
city . e.....ii coald· ofln luture m-11
~te qreanenJ,a:, can ~me law.
" . ' .
E'lectiom
'.
Turnout
' 'J!ery slim'·
. By GEORGE ·lim.u.
OI lllt' DmllY ,.. i; .. tt
Polling plecei in . Ne,.port Beach eJICf
Ctlsta Me!I described · eaily voter
turnouts for the school board election!
"disappointing" ioday.. · ·
One· poll watcher at Harbor V ~ e w
Elementary School said "il is def~telX
not as exciting as the rretway elect.ion.
Only 19 of 1.t•s registered voters assign-
ed to that Corona del Mar poll had wted
near .mid-day.
TM trk:kle to the voting booths was
eimili.r in precincts sampled throughout
the Newport.Mesa Unified d1.strict wber•
voten are considering five candidates.for
lbr" .openings ion 'the board of education.
voters .also muked ·ballota1-.for eight
candldaW seeking tlection•to thr~1 open
seat. oo . the ·Coast Commwtity. C.11'1•
Distrttt bNrd.J -..
Pcills· r-emiln open unui I ·01clock
foriiil!t•and tlection observ..,~•t·tor .a
I o'Cfock .J'ush l!•lho tledloO Is 'lo1Deel
tlle l!lm II pen:tnt turoout predlcted by
the County Registnr Of Voters.
ln 111, there are · 13 school districts
along the Orange Qiast in wbicb vottr1
are deciding who will serve u trustees.
Thtre .are 50,373 retist.ered votera in
tht Newport·M.,a'Unlfied'Scbool District
and llt,469 In tht COsst CoU.ge district.
The remalrlder of. the college district
voters reside in the HWltington Beach
Union High School District.
Ret.urnl• from lbe 31 Newport.Mesa
disttkit pfeclni:ls' will be phoned Clir«tly
.to the County RegiJtrar of Votera office
In ·s.nta· Ana.. ,
Other polling places sampled this
momlnt. ahowed only 1.3 had voted at
EsW>cl• Higl> School In Colla Mese out
ol :(7.llO. regilltted 14 volt thert.
At College Park School, Costa:Mesa, 14
oL P ·reigbtered voters bid voted by 11
a.m.
* * * Delay Predicted
In School Board
Vote Processing
Today's school board election process
differ1 frqm previoUJ years In that
returns from all Orange r.otmty dlltrlctl
will be filed by prtCincts to lbe Orange
county Registrar of Voters office in
SADtl Ana.
In past years, returns were repPrted to
school district offices. .
Due lo I.be . chabge · in the cauntlng
method, the DAILY PILOT will not have
final returna available until sometime
after 1:301.m. Wedne.sday. Results of the
13 orange Coast acbool district racea will
be repolted In Wedntlcfay editions of thll
newspaper.
Tilt Orang• ' C.Wlty Departmeot of
F.ducaUon hu' coordinated . an trustee
election& ln tbe COUDtl-•
Voling: preclrich will • begin nporiing
tlllies shortly after the polls ciMt at I
p.m. The voter rtgistrar's staff will
bftak down the precinct totals by school
Clistrict with finals for districts lo be
~mpleted early Wednesday, a
spokesman 'iaid. · ·
AU precincts are usJng paper ballots.
this year. CoUrity ·registrar oUiclals laid
t.oday precinct vote" totals will nbt be
made available for at least a week.
Tilt bulk ol tht through-thHtlght •!fort
•Ill be directed to providing individual
achool board multi. a pro<:a1 that is
complicated by the fact that one votfJ'
may· be tH&Ible to,vete in u ~ u fivt
boeid rocu, deJ)tllJllna oo -be Uvu.
'
' .
Aastmblyman Robert E. Badham ·IR·
Ntwparl Beach) introduced th e
amendment to the' ,rules committee· this
mornlog, cttin& tht IS -t fa,..ablo
volt It bad r.celved In· a spedal •ledloo
In Newport BUcb. ' •
_ Qnly.foUr Otftbe ievt:n memb:en•Qf•\be
rules commlttte were prueol for tbts
morning'• heerlng.
Voting for the faWll'.able ·r!port·~wtre
assemblymen John L. BurWl;I ~ (0-San.
F-), commltttecbalrman ; Rey~.
. -.
Newport,Youth Presents
Own Production on KCET
Werner Weiss, 17-YUN:lld ~ ten.ior ·at
Ne,.port Harb<>' High SC~I. ·will appear
to11ight on. educatolnal television to
ahow. )Ua prize.wiMinl aQfmated film, ' . ''Seafood... ,
Tilt short . .,.,,_ will bt a~ed 0!1
Kq;T, CbanMt'21, ~t 7 P.m.11 one ·of the:
winner of the station's Y~ People's
Film _CorppeUtJon. , ·
'lbe •Oil of Mr-·and. Mrs. Hira(d y.'eiu,
1230 Berehire Lane, has established a
rfputation u a pi'oducer 61 prue. wihninll
films . . •
In M11 ll70, be took the sweepstakes,
first and second prira at'~ Ahahtlm
Convention Center in a statewide youth film' ceritdt'lpOllO(lt"1 ·by tbe .caI!foniia ,_
Audio.Visual Dealers Association and the
~uclio-Visual Educators As~ation.
As a first place winner cf the local
educatio~al TV ~t,es_t, "~food'" w11
entered in a nationwide contest aponeored
by National Educational Televfllon. lt
took second prlr.e.
The teenager has -been working with
film as a hobby for about two yeara and
plans to mate production of tducaUonal
films a career.
He said he plans to attend UC Irvine 1n
September.
>. ltCMd showing of the KCET winners
will be en Thursday at e:30 p.m. en
Olannel 21.
Tiirnout ~ih Tustin Light
Vplet-tu91out ~hla morning for the
'I'tllUn :Union HI!O ~1 l)lsttitl. boarQ
electlOJI was light at 'pcllin1 pllces
IW'Veyed b)'' 11.a.iD. · '
Election 'w'll.tehen \In MlS;i)bn v;e;o
speculated the rain may have dampened
the 1pirltl of M>mt voten. Tbe La Pu
elementary ocbool polls showed only It ol
1,4\IO reg\1tmd.....,.. turning out.
Lquna Hilli reported "about one
percent ol tbt elilible voters" bad voled
by"'lO:JO .a today -.W of a total 783
assigned to vote at the Valencia School
poll•.
Irvine School In East Irvine reported
ooly 10 of. MS bad call tl)tit ll•llots and
University Park Elementary School
electlQn . o~rver1 repOrted oqlf 50 ol a
possible 731 had voted.
Voters in these precincts abo ·'(Oted 'in
tht San Joaquitf"Elemenriry District
Saddleback community College diltrlct
trustee ract1.
-
Toda~•-'~
"'
-.. • TIJESD>;V: !;PRll.:. 20.:~ 971
' ' ' . ' · .... -' r: •••
Measlire
Joh"'°" CJl.Cluai), vlct, cbaitman and
Ernest N.'Mogle;)> lR-'"""'91, •.
llju'te,cut the 1one· dl-Qnl \'Ole.
Absent. ,from the 11S1ioli w e-r,e
..,.mblymen "John . P.' Quimby CD-
Rlalt4), ~ J. Ryan .Cll-S9u.ib 51\11 Ft~~r"'!'f L. E. -i:~ cD-om1ene1.
Burb thtn lntrodllced r ... llltlons
adopted Moocla)" Jt'411t' by bcilh the Cq<l!a
Mese and HuntlqtOO Beadi dly C<lltli:lll
urgin1 reJOcU..lOl.lhe uOendinent
'
He,; also cited ari. opinion from the
teatslatlve coo.nstl's office that foreca;t the~ courts · would likely • declare the
iili<Minent uncomtltliUotial ' U a leglll
cblii:ii&e were raised.. • .
'9i>POiieOu•of tht·~ c:nntend tht
resiclenu .of,e alngle munlc:!palltydo JOO! ba'('e tbe ·aulbortty·'to:-vote~an a matttr
ot •1tatewide ,concern;-such as tbe atate
hflbwsy·ayat.lri.
'A ' member · cf Burke'• staff ukl
.COl1111\it1<e memboia, In adopting tht
(avcrallle~ recommendallcn, pointed out . -
that tht commltlee IW ,.ver l!efore
taken a ne11tive ltance on a city's
p.._..t charter change.
At the . bearlnf, Ne.wport · Beach.!wu
re~ted by,iu. F~y ,N.aot1ot1on '
Cl>lllmiU<e, Manr'Ed:Hfrth."Vic4'lleyor
11-l!Ofllrl'allll:a.w.cllman Doo life.
lnpli •. al"ll''lfltll City Attorney 'l'llDY.
S.ymour,
K•n Reynolda, planning director fat
Huntington BHcb, spoke In opposition In
tho uieodlrienl
5 Girls Released '· . -
Judge Cl.ear:s Prostitute Suspect;s
Five women have·bieien.-deared11n:sUta
Ana munldpal "°"" of piootftutfen
cberges nled by Orenp·Cow!ty!Sbirlfll1
officen. · •
Judge Paul Mast c1flared 1Bartiara·Jetn
Baylor, 2$, and DleleLfeMatria<lano,.-\'.
both of Santa 'An8 ahd t.Oree. Isenba'J.
35. Mery A,... Nfelilon;S4; and· Gweo
Patricia. Worthington, ZZ, 11r of Anaheim.
Ht continued unW April 26 the
preliminary hfaring for Newport .Beach
contractor Henry W. S(>r.a&Ut. 61,-cf M
Coast ·.Flier
!fo· Restore
\)·-~·,,.-·
' . -...-•. "'1JOAHD ...... ..,...
Three World War II U.S. Nl'f)' •ct
pilots -includln1 a C.orona de1 Mar
reiidenl -are c:omplttlzl( P,laJll It
restore a rare enemy plane wbJch 1'IJ
found 1unlt· In ., racwc !eiOC!O'·
Capt. MmbaJHI. Betbe (UBN<'tt),<I
119 Larkspur Ave., seld todllj! that bo ~
bit two coJleagu••· Cdr. E111jhe Valintla
IUSN·rtl) of Chula Vlsle ,en.4. J.ama
Franch of Balcenfield plan 'lo' ttl>ulld •a
Japanest Zero tor 111sp1ey In tM FtklH<r
Pilots Hall of Valor at the San ·tiill•
A~ce Museum. 1 ·, '
· Hid the fighttr la 'oolY. ~ el
two or thrtt in ttistence, .and lf.tOot the
trio about five yun 14 find tt and jet.tt
te this CQUntry, ' ' •
The three men irt all members ef the
American Fighter Ace Asscclatlon and
between them 1bot down 4~ Japanese
planes. ·
Beebe, since retirement frM\ active
duty, wor.)t:i aa a broker for mutual funda
and bandies real estate projects ln
Corona del Mar. French aakt the: book,
''The Bridges at Toko-Ri" was dedicated
to Beebe wbc commanded the squadron.
en which James Michener'• Korean War
DOVel wu based.
"U I had known Zeroes were ao hatd
to 1•t back. I don't thlnlt I wruld bave
shot them down," French quipped.
Beebe said they wanted a Zero for· the
museum to be displayed with American
fightm ICldr u tbe P-4Q and the NayY
Hellcat.
"We put cut advertlsementa and wrote
letter• and about ta monU. later, we aet
a reply from the Harbor .Master in .
Rabaul, New Guinea."
In Sepltmber of t9'10, they bid lht
plaoe pulled from ~o feet of water Gff
Rabaut where It ba:d Jain for about 7.8
year1. And after aevtral months of red
tape delays, the plane waa crated and
shipped via Alr Force tr1naport te the
(flet ZERO, Pep I)
Beocon,Bey, ~i11>attllled .of>pn>cmlDJ
and, ""11piracy ·14 c:ammtt .prostitution
udil,f(oe on4!1,250· ball.
lr:eed,oe1helr promise to·roturn•April
2ai.'V(ef't ,~.Sherry AP<trtws, 24, North
Holly;n>ci<!', Elaine Komara. ·tt, of
Anllietnl ilicHleverly Ann Poehlman, 24.
of' Cyprtu. All are charged with
protUtutlon.
Sprague ~ the eight women were
arrested after investigation of the
EJecutlVe Eacort ~ice a 11 e f e d I y
(f ' . ;,!U......., .....
BOD,-DISCOVERED
NUh ·A111a. 20 .Months
Trustees Slate
Attendance Item
On Board Agenda
Propooecl changu In school attendance
boundtrJe. will be one fol the Items con~
alcfU.ch•ben tbe Newpoct.M•sa Boen! ol
EcfucaUoo meets wnlgbt af Esiancta
Hli!lt ~I.
'Ille meeting will begin at 1 p.m. In the
IC!iopl!a !~rum.
Roy 0. Andersen, direct« of facili ty
plf"'ln1, bas p...-..i three ba•k:
t..baqe, jn aUendance bouldarJes,
Currenuy. lrixth gradm from Corona
del Mal'. and Harbor Vitw Schools attend
Ltncoln1Scbool and slltb sraden from
the Eastbhlff attendance area atttnd U.S. Flood Cove, rage ENlfllllfl 5choo1. ~'ti proposing •that ntst yeer
Newport -Meet Topic slJSh ll'ade· •\udenu. from tht Hsrbor . • V\tw '-'Bttmdailce' arN atUnd Harbor
A talk by City COclnc:tlmln Don Mcfnnlt V1<•• School. Easthluf( Will retain lb
and a prt&ent.aUon on federal Oood 1J1th gradetl'exCfllJt taf those living tn
insurance will be the by topics ~ the ·Bren tract bet.--:'f'on! Road and
at a rne<Ung of the Wt• t Newport Port S<aboumt Way wbo'will 1tttnd Lln-
lmprovtmeot Alloclatioo Wedneldsy al coin School. Anclerten Aid.
7:30 p.m. at tht PerU,. lleor.ba and . 1" the ....,...i cha.,., '1tderaen fl pro-
R<crutlon Commtsslon office, 1111 W. PGOlni thaI,ell 1bttl! and smnth 11'~•
Balboa Blvd. " '""" the Killybrook1 and fleer Sb:eet at·
Mdnnl1, a Wal 'Newport rllidenl, w!D ltnclance areu be ... t )o TtWlnltle
aptak on -al pni>leml Jn U!o -School. • .
and Gtorge 0.-Ntwport --..·, tblrd pr_.r Is the ·a.
barbor and ti-"*"'"'*"!«, wtD . feolllci! of a bauncia<y •"""'*" lnatltutecl c1iacua1 flood lnltlruco.a )!OIJ N bMdt ·uu. 'YNI' bet-Newport Am.or H1ib
ero1lon control. • ' Scltool and COnma def Mer lllall School. ' . . . .
•
operated byo the eoiitract<r from ·oificeo
at 2192 Dupont St., Jrdne .
Of~ a11.,. Sprain• ,ll!nlt(<d.'cla1"'
for "sophlsticate:d eftcuUvet"' and made
hlt 1trls available en u .. OI: catl' .... basll
for asalgM1e11u throughout u;. c:Ounty.
Confl!Cated by· 0Uicer1 at ~ time ~
the mut· WIS a quantity of glossy
business cards, all bearing the legend:
"Executive E!CCri Servi~ -150
beautiful foxy g~le for your elating
pleasure."
Boy Admits
Crucifixion . . .
Of TCtdcller , . ~ ;. . .
sAN FRANCISCO C!IPI>-Police safd
i0cii1 Gne 'of !WO )'001ig boys htld In the
crucUlxicn death 'of a JO.month-old Infant
"8•,tdmttted the baby wu blt twice with
a brid: and then wirtd to a makeshift
crou '.'IO l)e couldn't &et away."
''W.e didn't want lo get caught," said
the 7-yur.<>ld boy, bdd In "prol«tlve
cuatody" al San .Francisco Juvenile Hall
with bit IG-year-old l)rother In the death
of Noah Alba In a dino basement Ju:t
week.
Juvenile inapector Dan Dri5coll 1aJd th•
)'OWller boy led OfDcera to the basement
"clubbclwen Monday where th& body cf
th• infant wss fowid, bOund and wired to
a crou made el acr1p lumber, with a red
cord _..i-~ aecll,bolh wrists and bit
anklts.
The infant wu .with his mother, Mra.
Larry .Alba, In Alla VJBta City Park Jut
Wednesday, when he au d den I y
disappeared. Pollet were led to the two
young: 1u.specta -·who lnlY be so young
that police were ·UMure what charge -if
any -could be 100,ed against tbtm,
through reportl .from Wltnessea.
They were ;ue;eUooing parents of
another bOy about ·• rQUtine complaint
that be bad'beatt11,up.a cblld in tho part
when.the par..U l8ld, "I'll bet il wu
U.O.. -boya. They're b'oublemakers
and they're always up at that parlc."
Driacoll seid ..tflc:en then went to
Emerson ~I; wbtre the 7-year-old is
a pupil, Moodq IDd f9ot him out of
school,
llrlac:oll seld the ofllcen were taking
!Set CJI~, Pa1e 2)
Oruc• '
We!der
Those io.. clouda ... setting t..
1elher Wedn~.and that me ...
a c b a n c e of acattered lhowen
ovem!ght. Tertlperituru are talr
bed In the a.n:c111rae ,.., .. . . . .. ' .
·INSIDE ToDAY
Somethin·o old and 1onuthing
nt w ore in tle of/in.g for {ocoZ
drama fatu olt two Orange Coast
1tage1 thiJ wtlk. "Stt En ttrtain.-
nunt, Page J9,
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Be Sure to Vote Today; P~ills_ Open Till 8
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N I
Viet 1: eta fJfaee! From Page J . . . . . ZERO •• McGovern _ Urges -
-' ·-Balumltld alreralt ban1ar ovroed by
French.
;-·· ~ NJd 41111" will ....... the '14llf
there with the hope d pttm,," alrbonlo
agaln .... Ir tha~ proves to be impra~tlc'1,
then we11 blllld a·nytn1 replica." he sakt. Dec. 31 Pullout 1.eroes are eztremily fare, Beebe said,
because of the American govenunent'.t
policy of ®JU'OYin& all enemy muniUoM
WASIDNGTON • ~IL -To the che<n
and abouts of scores of Vietnam veterans
here for antiwar demonstratlonr, Sen.
Geor1e S. Ml'Govern. (0.S.0.), ur1ed °"""'"' """7, to 1<1 l>ec. II d lhls·year
lor total U.S. wlll:tdrawal from l,ndocblna.
McGovtrn was Jeadoff witness at the
start of three days of hearings before the
Senate Foreign RelatiOM Committee on
proposals to end the war.
Shoots ol "rjpt on!" and other
remarks came from an eatlmattd 100
vets in the audlencf: u McGovern said
the U.S. is guilty <1f "crimu against
human1ty'' every day the war contlnu11t
The veleill'll stood up and cheered,
whistled and 1bouttd u McGovern
eotered . tbe room. (set related atory,
PIJ•.4-)
Newport Job
May Attract
500 Seekers
Ne¥fPOCl Beach is e.1pectlng u many
as 500 appllcanls for its vacant city
manager poe!Uon, a city personnel
apokesman said today.
Advertistments for the post are just
beginning 1o appear iD trade journals.
The deadline for appUcalioD& is May 2L
••ComervaUvel,y, I wOWd aay we'll hl_ve
250 appllcantl~" ulCI Frank Ivins, usls-tant ptl'IOIJMI dftctcr, "but it will pro-
bably be 'twlce that many."
Ivins said U>e city rece ived lOQ '81>"
plicationl for tbt post of community
development director and balf that
Dumber for the aas1stanl director's job.
Applications for all siz top jobs in lht
new ·superagency are now closed, Jvlns
oald,
Applications for the city manager 's
position are belng sent directly to the of·
lice ol Mayor Ed Hirth.
Mayor Hirth earller indicated he hoped
the city could have a new manager by
July 1, the start of the 1971-72 fiscal year.
The post hu been ftlled on an acting
basis by Asliltan1. Qty Manager Philip F.
"Bettencourt. since the resignation of
Harvey L. Hurlburt April 5.
Bett.encom1. 11 coreldil'td a candidate
for the job.
Ivifll said it wUI probably be the nrat o(
July belore the new eommunity develop-
ment director will 1tart work.
"We -expect. to interview in mid-May.''
he said, "but the man hired will probably
have lo give 30-45 days' notice."
Jvins said the new director will pro-
bably be glven the opportunity to review
the applicants for the other positions
before they art filled on a permanent
bub.
All are now filled by existing perJOnnel
from the merged Planning and Building
departments on an a_ctlng buil.
Mayor Elected
For Huntington
George McCnicken, a t h re e • y e a r
veteran of the Huntington Beach City
Council, wu elected to bis flnt tenn IS
mayor Monday night.
'l1te f7·)'tar old tiuUdlng contractor wu
eleeled UJ1anlmoosty. He replace! Donald
Shipley as Mayor.
McCracken and Mayor Pro. Tern Jerry
Matney, who wu returned to his current
office, will hold their posts for a one-year
period.
DAILY PILOT
ISAANGI C04$T PUl\.llKIMO COMPANY '
l•Hrt H. WeM
Pr•i.tnl .,.. '"'°'"'*'
J.,1c l . c·,,.-• .,
\Ike· PrullHnf .... ~I MiMtW
Tlit111•I k'et•I( ......
lhtr11•• A. 1ril1rp .. iRt
IMM9' .... If .....
L rtt•r Kr;.f ·
Newpert lttdl C1Ty 111111.r ... ..,... __
lJ1) Hew,.rt l•11lt••"'
M'1ill11t MittU: r.o. ••11 117f, ,,,,, --Cit.. ""'": sa w .. , ••r '""" t.ltlM a.di: m , •• , _.._
'4witlftfM!t leKll: 11'11J ._.. .............
tall Cltmslte; '911 N"'111 II ~-lt•J
(
' "I aubm1t lhal America will be a
· greater, more self co"nfident, and more
respected nation if ... we e1erclse our
constitutional re sp on s i bill ties to
tenninaie support for a war that v.·e
bow is wrong," McGovern testified in
calling for a Dec. 31 cutoff.
"Mr. Nil:on's Vietnarnlzatlon policy
virtually guarantees that our prisoners
will remain in their cells, tbat our troop!
will umain in danger, that the
negoUatio~ will be stalled, and that the
killing will continue," be said.
McGovern ls a chief sponsor ol a
proposal to require total withdrawal of all
U.S. forces from ·Indochina by the end ot
tb.is year.
at the f:nd of World War 11. ·
"They took whole shiploads of Zeroes
and dumped them out in the ocean. At
tbe lime, no one waJ particularly con·
cerned with savine a doz.en or IO for
museums," be ezplained.
As pilots durin1 those years, French
shot down ti Japanese fighters , Beebe
was credited with IO~: o.nd Va lencia was
lhe Navy's third rankJng ace with 2J
scorts. A pilot must shoot down five
eoemy aircraft to e,arn act status.
Beebe said the Japanese governmtnt
has ooe of the 1.eroes on display and the.
Canadians are restoring one for display,.
•·and thert's su pposed to be one at the
Smi~sonian Institution but appartntly,
it't not di.splayed.
He said they are uncertaln how k>n& iL
wUI take· to get the plane rebuilt, but he
estimated at least six months to a year
for \ht work.
~Group Says
Freeway Needs
'Safety Deck'
INSPECTOR MICHAEL llUSH OF SFPD INSPECTS SITE OF GRISLY FIND
In San Fr1ncl1co, • Ml11ing Inf ant is Found Beaten .and Crucified
"ActuaUy It looks terrible because ll"!!:
_ all covered with sea life, but it's all in
one piece," he said.
Orange County Airport Commlssion '1
contention that a safety deck 200 fut
wide must be constructed over the pro-
Posect Corona del Mar Freeway south of
the airport's main runway is now under
study by the Stale Division of Highways.
Fountain Valley Sailor Jlrom Pagfl J
CRUCIFIED. • •
The plane was in good enough shape
that when they gol it out of the water, t1le
men were able to locate its seria1 number
and trace the pilot.
Valencia , a televisio n producer who ts
writing a book on alr aces, found the
pUol. Sekizen Shibayma, by checking the
Zero's serial nwnber agairut Japanese
squadron assignments.
Tbe commisalon in February told coun-
ty Director of Aviation Robert J.
Bresnahan to contact the highway1
division after he ezplained that there
would be grut danger in the event of an
aborted takeoff from the airport.
Rescued From Rough Sea the boy back to the park and when they
neared the locatloo ol the basement
•·clubhouse," asked him:
"Jf you were a policeman., where would
you look!"
Shlbayama reported he had engine
trouble on Nov. ti, l!HJ, and, as quoted
by Valencia, was "looking at my gauges
when I was hit and my engine atopped for
good." Shibayama said be escaped and
swam to shore as the Zero sank.
. "Without such .• safety deck oVer the
freeway , an aircrafl aborting on takeoff
cou1d cruh direcUy into the crowded
freeway before reaching open clear i one
property," Bresnahan said.
· The county Owns several acres o( clear
zone property south of Palisades Road al
this time .
Bre&nahan said he referred the pro-
blem to the county's Real Property
Servtcea: Department for lnfonnatlon and
three weeks 1go wrote the Division of
H11hways.
The aviation dittctor aaid the Corona
deJ Mar Frreway in the area south of the
airport ahows a depressed deslp which
would lend itseH to the propoaed safety
clecl<. . '
'Bttmlhan tJpecta I ttply from ~
h11bways division soon. The freeway is
scheduled .for construction 11 e4117 •s
1'72. r
Newport Teen's
Cartoon to Show
An animated cartoon drawn and filmed
by a 17-year--old Newport Harbor Hi1h
School senior will be featured on a KCET
f tjlannel 28) televtsioo special tonl1ht at
7 o'clock.
The cartoon, entilled "Seafood," was
produced by W emu W elu. son of Dr.
Md Mrs. Helmut Weiaa, 1230 Berkahlre
L.a.ne, Newport. Beach.
It was one of JO prlz.e-winning entries in
the statibn's YOW1g People's Film
Competition.
Weis.I won flrst prize In the senior
di vision with the two and one-half minute
cartoon, that involved some 600 separale
drawings.
The special, featuring all JO prize-
winning cartoom. ·will be repeated
Thursday at 1:30 p.m. on the educaUonal
televifon station.
Chowing Down
A Fountain VaUey man ".in very poor
condition" was plucked from a sailboat in
rough seas of( Baja CaliJomia this
morning in a dramatic rescue by a U.S.
Coast Guard helicopter.
Marlon Harvey Brinson Jr., 28, of 8912
Martin Ave., was flown to Scrippa
Memorial Hospital, La Jolla, suffering
from chronic seasickness and lack of
food . Hospital officials said he was
•·extremely dehydrated '' and would be
detained overnight for observation.
He was rescued from the 26 ·foot
sailboat Glad Riael, owned and skippered
by Jeff Feldman, 20, of 16672 Edgey,·ater
Lane. Huntington Beach.
Feldman, who became exhausted in
caring for Brinson and fighting rough
water in six days at sea, radioed for help
Monday morning. Feldman 1•;as taken
aboard the Coast Guard cutter Point
Stuart this morning which is to~'ing the
sailboat to San Diego.
Fledman ties his boat at San Diego
Yacht Club. The rescue was made near
Guadelupe llla.nd, 200 miles south of San
Dle110. The sloop had an engine but it had
Sewage Outfall
Pipe Dedicated
A new waste water outfhll that delivers
sewage from the mouth of the Sanla Ana
River five miles out to sea has been
dedicated by the Orange C o u n t y
Sanitallon District.
The 120-inch pipe has been carrying
treated eU1uent since March 31, when
testing began.
It diftusu the sewage along I.be last
mile of l.be pipe, discharging into the
ocean by means of a diffuser containing
50J ports.
Engineers said it is designed to use
natural ocean currents to carry the
wastewater out to sea and away from
pubUc be1che1.
The Sil million project haa been in the
pJ1nning and construction stages lor nine
years.
Do\11.Y l'ILOl ti.II, .....
General Chairman Bill lluscrofl Ooftl and assistant cook Don Muhlig
get the message-Dennis Hel&per, 10, likes pancakes. Look for Den·
ni• at the Mad of the line Sa turd17 when Orange Coast YMCA stages
its 17th annual pancake break(ast in the parking lot at Ri chard's Lldo
Market, Newport Beach. Celebrities will cook for the 7:30 a.m. to 11
a.m. fund-raiser.
'
run out of gasoline.
Feldman told Cout Guard officers that
Brln!on had been seaaick throughout the
six-day atonn and had been unable to
leave the cabin. Feldman had skippered
the ship single handedly.
Lt. Ken Hollemon said that the Coast
Guard received the call for assistance
through a series of radio relays at 7:30
Monday morning. The helicopter located
the boat at 10:45 a.m.
"The helicopter had taken food and
v;ater supplies because of the report that
one of the sailors was suffering from a
lack of food," Hollemon said. "But the
helicopter dld not drop the supplies when
the crew learned that there was food on
board but Brinson wu simply too sea.sick
to eat It."
At first light tbia morning, 5:30 a.m.
the sallor1 were transferred to the cutler
and Brinson was hoisted aboard the
helicopter.
Car Rolls Over
Woman Driver
In Auto Crash
A Laguna Beach woman is in fair con-
dition today In Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospltal after she was thrown from her
car in a crash Monday in Newport Beach.
Pollet said Jill Margaret Nofiiger, 25,
of 139 McAulay Place, was traveling
eastbound on Palisades Road when her
car collided with a car dri ven by Samuel
L. Hodgin~, 46, of 1941 Omega Drive,
Santa Ana at the intersection of Jam-
boree Road.
ri.tiss Nofziger, a lifetime Laguna resi-
denl , is well kno.,rn in the Art Colony as a
member of lhe Civic Ballet and a
performer at the Laguna Playhouse.
She was on her way to a class at UC
Irvine when the accident occ urred. She
suffered a broken collar bone. concussion
and facial injuries as she wa! thtown
through the windshie ld.
Driscoll sa.id the boy suaested various
locatiOllll, and thea aald, "Look, the door
to that basement is open."
Officers went in and found the nude
body, partially covered with sheet.!,
flannel material and scraps of wallp.1.~r.
Driscoll said the Infant hid been struck
several times with a brick, apparently
jumped on, poked with a stick, choked
·with a rope and then bound onto the
croas.
Driscoll said the 7-year-old and bis
brother, both while, were "playing a
game" with the baby, tbe youn1er boy
said.
"My brother bad a bride in hi! band,''
Driscoll quoted the boy u saylnf. "Tbe
brick fell and hit the boy on the bead.
Then my brother was poundlag on tbt:
maltress 1bere in the basement ud the
brick fell again . , . " .
An autopsy was mld·today and Ute cue
remanded to Juvenile Ju<ftt Francis
Mayer, who will make the deci!lon on
what actJOn 1hould ht taken.
Drl!Coll said it was not known whet.her
the boys were aware the baby had been
fatally injured, but that the infant waif
dead soon after they left the ciubbouse if
not at that time.
Officers said their first lead came from
John Mowty, 23, i. printer, who bad
talked t.e the lnfant'a frantic mother in
the park tbt afternoon he d.Jsappeared.
Mowry ft.id be had attn two young
white boys with an infant and the)" told
him, "We think he's J05t." Mowry's
description of the two boys matched that
of the suspects, and their names were
then secured from the parents oI lhe boy
police talked to Monday.
Actor Ca lhoun Wed
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Ador Rory
Calhoun. 48. and Susan Langley, 29. a
for mer Australian journalist and now a
Hollyv.·ood wr iter, "'ere married li-1ondav
at a wedding chapel on the J,as Vegls
"strip." It was the second marria ge for
each.
Insurance Man
Fred McMaster
Succumbs at 69
Fred McMaster. prominient Newport
Beach insurance broker died early this
morning al Hoag Memorial Hosplta1. He
was 69.
He apparently died of a heart attack
suffered: in his home at 1710 Kings Place.
An autopsy is scheduled. Mc Master, who
had his offices at 1711 Westcliff Drive.
Y.'IS an active membtr of the Newport
Harbor Chambtr of Commerce and lho.
Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club.-
He had been a chamber member for
about .11,year11.,He had senied on the
boatd ef directors since 1969 and in 19'70
he was chairman of the chamber'•
membership ct>mmittee.
Funeral ser\'ices are pending at Reed
Brolbert Mortuary, Los Angeles.
Cambodia Chief
Lon Nol Tells
His Resignation
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -C.mbodion
Prime tt11nister Lon Nol, who helped lead
the overthfow of Prince Norodom
Sihanouk and then suffered a dlsabUn&
stroke. resigned today along with his
entire cabinet.
Lon Nol's brother, Col. Lon Non, said
the resi gnation was little more than a
formality and probably would not be
accepted.
Political sources said Lon Nol and his
cabinet submitted their resignations at
the office of chieC of state Cheng Henc
today. However, there was no urunedlat1
official announcement.
W ALI( SOFTLY!
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive.
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how these mater i a Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
rega.rdless of where you buy it, don't expect too much . WALK
VERY SOFTLY!
•
IANTA ANA. OU.NII. TUSTIN Call • • • ALDIN'S
llD HILL CARPIT•
& DRAPlllll
1U74 lrvlne, Tvttl", Cal. ........
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ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
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f;osta ·Mesa
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voe. 64, NO. 94, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES
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· JU ESQAY,. M R.IL 20, )97f
Today's Final
' N.Y. Stoelu
TEN CENTS
'Hilarious' H~aring on TWin "!ower Contin,ued
• ' • t \
Sunshine, borrowed shoes and venereaJ
disease control all entered the subject of
a senior citizens' skyscraper Monday
night before Costa Mesa City Council
member1 continued the hearing for two
weeks.
A lot ol ground was covered.
The Western Association of Baptista
lnc., has asked for a specific decision on
lta proposed 18-story Costa Mesa Towers,
a twin nett to eristing Btlbtl Tawers.
C.Otmcilm.en will again consider tbe
Earl y Vote
In School
Races Light
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of t11e DI"' Pn.t ll1H
Polling places in Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa described urly voter
turnollts ·for the school board elections
"disappointing" today.
One poll watcher at Harbor Vi' w
Elementary Sc.hoot sald "it is definitely
not as exciting as the freeway election."
Only 19 of !,IC.5 registered voters assign-
ed lo that Corona de! Mar poll had voted
near mid-day .
The trickle to the voting booths wu
similar in precincts sampled throughout
the Newport-Mesa Unified district' where
voters are considerin& five candidates for
three openings on the board of education.
Voters aJso marked ballots for eight
candidates seeking tlection to three open
!eats on the C.oast Community College
Distri~ board:
Pulls r~n open unut 'I 01c1ock
tonight and election obsel'Ver1 loot for a
I o'clock nub if lht electlon b to meet
the slim 15 percent twtiout pttdicted by
the County Registrar of Voters.
In all, there are 13 school districts
along the Orange Coast in which votera
are deciding who will serve as trustees .
There are 50.373 registered voters in
the Newport·Mesa UniOed School District
and 129.~9 in the Coist. College district.
The remainder of the college distri<t
voters reside in the Huntington Beach
Union High School District.
Returns from the 38 Newport-Mesa
district precincts will be phoned directly
to the County Registrar of Voters office
In Santa Ana.
Other polling places sampled this
morning showed only 23 had voted at
Estancia High School ln Costa Mella out
of 1,700 registered to vote there.
At College Park School. Costa Mesa, 34
of 800 reigiste.red voters had voted by 11
1.m.
* * * Delay Predicted
I n School ·Board
Vote P rocessing
Today's school board election pr~s
dlffers from previous years In that
returru: from all Orange County di!tricta
lfill be filed by precincts to the Orange
County Registrar or Voters office in
Santa Ana.
Jn past years, returns were reported to
1ehool district offiC6.
Due to the change ln the counUng
method. the DAILY PILOT will not have
final returns available until 10melime
after 8:30 a.m. Wednesday. Results of the.
13 Orange Coast school district races will
be reported in Wednesday editions of this
11e.wspaper.
The Orange CoWlty Department of
Education has coordinated all trustee
elections in the county.
Voting precincts will begin reporting
tallies shortly after the polls clost at I
p.m. The voter registrar's staff will
break down the precinct totals by school
district with finals for districts to be
completed early W e d n e s d a y , a
spokesman said.
All precincts are using paper ballots,
this year. County registrar officials said
today precinct vote totals will not be
made available for at least a week.
The bulk of the. through·lhe-nlght effort
wfll be directed to providing Individual
achoo! board results, a process that i•
complicated by the. fact that one voter
may bt ellgible to vote In 11 many u fin
board ra<01,dependlni 111 -~ lh>el.
' . '
zone • and htlgbt e.iception · permit packag~ •t·thelr 1-!•¥ S'meetina, penditll
a P"?mise by the federal aovemtnerit that
it will allow payment for v.nous city . ·-. ...........
The 111 AB. orgaalzatioll 'IW J>)edged to
PllY '21,310 •M\llllf for "pOllce and f~,
proteC!lon, pl&la 1 wu"lalio• all4 otbU
serviees which Betbe1 , towers ls u:e.mpt f..,'!> pnder feeler~ bulldlna statute..
~ Towers •was built with $3.3 millll1n· in Housing an4 Urbon.:J)evelop-
'.
. '
ment. IHUD) llmdl, wbllt c:oato Mesa OIO W. litb Sl la not ettabllQe°d. · ·
Tow era, at M.5 nilJUon. wUl bt fln•DCed Cotta Meu Cit>' 1 MaUcer Fred
priva\ely wfth gov..,..,..,1 ,,_y-"°ylai Soniabal Ul1<d at, lbe -IOI moment
only lbe intereal · . tl!lt a two-weel: dltlay be fmj>osed, lo
The Rev. Hf!l'ley Murray, WAB eblel, allow a HUD and FHA replf to lbe.
urged couru:ll approval subject to HUD wvlct conJracl ..wp.
and FHA conllrmalion 'of 1be 11UYlce...,. "We would ""'lo bo,. 1111 councll
tract arr.......,,i. · · 1<1·00 lhfl tboict>t with tbal llllollllloo,"
The Anabefm c!ergymon, repramtlnlf nld tbe lleY. Murr111,. -l1tor become
3,000 WAB memben. 'aald lbe ,.,..,.. en.ta1111ed In bealecl dlacllldoa wltl! Cow>
ment will not even -!he fin11>'1Q1 cll!rwi Wn&.m I. St,. Clair.
If tl!e Towen zone'J>Ofllllt fer loc:otJ<iii. at Ill pointed GUl"'lhi 11""1!'1~Jand option
is up in four weeks, wblcb would require
1 steep reaewal fee.
CMta Mesa To.wers' attorneys at!(gi nld
aove.rnmeat considU•llon is coDun&ent
oo a zone e1.ceptlon permit alloWing the
low-coat housing facllity ·to. be. located in·
the~ commercial~
Action ~ was opposed.. by • •·V • r 1 l
speakers on varlOWI groulidi.
Donald Smallwood, of 1961 Kornat
Drive, araued q;ainst approval -even
wllh ell)' ,.rvice p111menta l\W'&nteed -
bec1111e the tower would aWI be enmpt
from wpportinJ focal schOol laxef.
Smallwood is running unopposed ror
election lo lbe Newporl·MeJI Ullllled
School Dislr!CI board today .
"As rtsponl.;ble,. conservaDve eoi.m-
cJJ,nen. you should proceed slowly. Take
your time. Make~IUfe all the T'1 are
-and tbe'l'• c!Oited," hO llld.
"It Is difficult to &el up and tab a
stand against rellgJon and old people.''
(See TOWER. Pqe l)
5 Girls Released
-· • l -, .. .). '"'"' ' ':f' ' . "f""' I
Fl M·MAll;ER •WEISS WORKS WITH ~AMIR:A, 'bRAWINCJS
HI• Prl~l.i, l5tf,ort WJll" .. ~ /TOftltht ' '· · . . . ...,. . . ~ . . ( ~,
\ ' . ' . ' . ,,. .. ' '.
Newport Youth Presents·
Own Production· on l\.CET
Werner Wei"1: 17·year-old ~or •L
Newport HartQ-High. School, wi\l•apptar .
tonight °" educaUonal -te1eYiston to
show his prize.winning animated film,
"Seafood." ·
n.e. -oai1oo• Will be aired Oii KCET, Channel 1.8, al 7 p.m. 11Sone ofthe
winner .of Ult ·station'1 Youni People's
Film Competition. •
The son of Mr. and Mrs. Harald Weiss.
1230 Berishir-e Lane, bas established a
repuLBUon 11 a productr of prize.winning
films.
In !/ay 1970;b0 toolt'<he sweepstakes,
first ihd second prizes at the Anabe.im
ConvenU-oo Center in a .statewide youth
film cont.est spomored bJ the California
Audio-Visual Dealers A.uociaUon and the
All.dio.Vlsual Educators A,pociation.
As a first place winner of the local
e®caUooa.J TV contut, "Seafood'"' was .
entered' iJ'J a 'baUonwide contest apol'IJOred
by N1Uon1I EducaUwl Television. It
tool< '"'°"" prlu.
Anahein:i ·Man Killed
In Vietnam Conf~ci
An Anaheim man Was lilted 'among
casuallia of the Southeut Allan conflict
on a dispatch Monday frotn the U.S.
Department of Def-.
lJsted among those killed ln bosUle ac·
Uon 13 CWO Paul 1C. Stewart, aon ol Mr.
..... l\ln. Mldlotl .J. Tracy. 10I s. Koott
Avt.,.AnUeJm.
The teenager bu betn worklna' with
flhn 11 a hobby for about two years and
plans to maft productOJ of educational
films a career.
He said he plans to attend UC Irvint In
Sept.mber. · ·
A second showing of the •KCET ~1
will be on 1buraday at 6:30 p.m. on
Channel 28.
Chinese Accept
U.S. Invitation
For SportS Tom
DETROIT CAP) -A delegaUon of
table tennil players. from Comm.unlit
Ch.Ina hu accepted an·lhvltatlon to viait
the United States, Graham Steenhoven.
president of the U.S .. Table ,Tennis
AasociaUon, announced today.
Stetnhoven, who led a U.S. team on ill
recent ·visit to Ollna; told a newt con·
ference ln' Detroit be had recetved word
of lbe O!ineoe acceptance lhrou<h Song
Chung, 1ct1na president of tbe'Talile Ten-
ais Auodation al the Peoplea R<publlc
of China.· •'
"11 II apec1ed tl!at a group ol table
t.noll offidalo, coachea and pla)'Orl will
-· lo lhfl COW!lry In tl!e . ...,.~-.. engap In a Mriel ~ ftiendly tmtfl:tw,"'
Stoeohovenulct • •• .,
Jud_ge Clears Prostitute Suspect.s
Five women have been cltared iD SUta
Ana munlclpl! court al prool!lllUon
cbargeo flied by Or1111e COunl)' Sberllf'1
officers . · · ·
Judge paul Mnt cleared Barbar• Jean
Baylor, 25, and Dme Lee Matrilclano, JO.
both of s .. 1a Ana . and l«ai llenberg,
3$, Mory Apes Nlelaon, ·U, and Gwen
P11rlcJ1 Worlhlng!On. 22, all of Anaheim.
He conUnued until April 29 the
preliminll'y bearln( fer Newport Beach
contractor Henry W. Sprague, 51, of 64
• li1 i. l>i:rm il\!$G
9111r Plllt . ..
-Tbe .. mbly, On I lJ It I Vote, tlidl, 'tlfl
tbe Newport Beach freeway dwtu
amendment.
The ame.nd.mtat will now bt .eat to
the state Senile where simiJar acl.Jon · J1
necesury before the amtndmeot wbJcb
would require citywide vot&s belatt &bt
city C®ncll could 11111 future lrteffay
ruute 1Jretmenta, caa become lalf1
Aaaomblymu · -t W •. llufkt (JI,
Huntington Beach) cast ... of lbe dll-
~Mlng vote.s.' It was not lmmediatelt
known who 'hid sided with him ln op-
posing tl!e meuure. '
Earlier today, *1te Alatmbly Jbdtl ~'":n!t~~tu~~~~~
vote ol i yu, 1 no, J ·'Ir.int tBmU
again wa1 the lone ao YCfe. •
Assemblyman Burke vowed today that
he ¥.'OuJd fight a;alnst the ratification on
the floor of both hOU1e1.
Aasemblyman Robert E. Ba'dham (R·
Newport Beach) introduced th e
amendmer.t to the rules committee. tbi1
morning. citing the 15 percent favorable
vote it hid received in a special election
in Newport Beach.
Only four t1! the seven member• of the
rula commlUee wert prr.sent for tbiJ:
mornirlg'1 hearing.
Voting for the favorable report were
1111tmbJymen John L. Burton ([).San
Francisco), committee chairtn&n; Ray Z.
Johnson CR-Ollco), vice chairman and
Ernest N. Mogley Ill-Fresno).
Bur~• cast lbe lone diuentln( --Absent from the, leSilon. w ere
aMemblymen John P. Quimby . ({).
Rialto), Leo J. Ryan (ll-Soulh San
Francisco) and L. E. Town .. nd ·CD·
Gardeno).
Burke. then introduced relOJutlona
adopted Mood.If night hy both the Coot•
Men and Hwrtlngton Beach city couocfil
urltln"g rejeclton iif lhe amendmenf.
fie al!O clted an opinJon from the
l•fl•lalive coun1<f'1 offl<O tli&t forecist
the courts would· likoly decl1re lbe
amendment unconatltuUonal lf. ·a Jqal
(See FREEWAY, Pa1e I)
Sorsabal to Address
Mesa CHART Meet
The . Cltizen1 Harbor Area Relearth
Team (CHART) meetjnt thla Thuncl111 will feature coffee. bot rolla l!ld City'
Manager Fred Sonabll, lflelklnl on
Costa Meaa'1 updated development f,!anl.
Tlr .. II 7;30. t-m· and ioG&llon; 1 lbe
Gltnd.ile Fl<la'al · Savlnp ind , Loin
Company. 211111.Harbor Blvd., lmt .. d'ol
the U0\111 Colla Mesa GoH And Coun1ly
Club.
Beaooo Bay. He ta aocu...i· of procuring
and conspiracy to co'mmit prostitution
and 11 ft<e·on 18,.250 bail. .
Freed on their prom!Je to roCurn April
25 were Rena Sherry .Andrew11 24, North
Hollywood , Elaine Komara, 29, o{
Anahelm and Beverly Ann Poehlman, U.
of Cypreos. Ail are charged wltl!
prostitution.
Sprague and the ei&fit women were
arrested after invesUgation of the
Executive Escort Service a 11 e ~ e d l y
U'IT ......
• .,OY Dt~~OVERED
No1 h Alb.I;. 20 Monlh1
Trustees Slate
Attendance I tem
On Board Ag enda
Proposed changes in school attendance
boundarl.es will be one ol the ltema con..
sidered .when·the Newport.Men Board Of
Education meets: tonight at Eatancla
High School.
The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. Jn the
school's forum .
Roy O. Andersen, director of facility
planning, bas proposed three basic
changes In attendance. bcx111darles.
CUrrent1y, Ab:th gradfll from Corona
dt:l Mir and .Harbor View Schools attend
Lincoln School and sixth aradera from
the EutbluU attendance area attend
EaatblUff. Schaal.
A'.Dderaen1 la propoaing that nm year
1IJUI ,grQ<ie tludents from the Harbor
View attendance area attend Harbor
View School. Eastbluff will retain ill
sixth srader1 t:Icept for those llvine in
the Bi"~n itract · betwten Ford Road and
Port Seabourne Way who will att.ntl !Jn.
coln Scftool, Andersen 1aid.
ln the aecoDd change., Andersen is pn>-
poslng tba.l all ~lxth and &eVenth grader•
from the Kll!y_brooke.and Bea! Street a~
tendance areas be .. sent to TeWlnkle
School. ' ' Andmen"1 rthlrd .proposal 11· the oz.
leollotl of a bou1ullry change l!iltltuted
tbl&.year between Newport Harbor High
Scllool anti Corona clel Mar llJP Schoof.
operated by the contractor fr'om offices
at 2192 Dupont St., Irvine.
Officers allege Sprague arranged dates
for "aophlsllcated ete.cuUves" and made
hls girls available on an "oa call'' buia
for assignments throughout the county,
eonnscaled by offlcen at the ume ~
the arrest was a quanUty of &lolq
business cards, 111 bearing the legend:
"Executive Escort Service -150
beauUful fol'}' girls for your dating
pleasure."
Boy Admits
Crucifixion
Of Toddler ... IAJI Pl!ANCISCO (UP!) -Police said
1od11 °"' of two young boys beld hi the
crucllll.lon death of a 20·mont!M>ld infant
b.ls admitted the baby wa1 bit twice with
a· brick and then wired to a makeshift
cross "so he couldn't get away."
"We didn't want to get caught,,. said
the 7-year-old boy,. held In "protective
custody'' at San Francisco Juvenile Hall
wJth hll 10..year~ld brother In the di!ath
of No1b Alba Jn a dingy basement last
week.
Juvenile inspector Dan Driscoll said the
)'OUnger boy led officers to the base.ment
"clubhoUse" Monday where the body ot
the infant was found, bound and wired to
a crou made of acrap lumber, with a.red
cord around h1I neck, both wrists and hia
ankles.
Tlie infant was· with his mother, Mn.
Larry Alho, In Alta Vista Ci!)' Park lul
Wednesday, when he 1 u d de. n t y
disappeared. Police were led to the two
youn1 tuspects -who may be 10 yotlDf
that police. were unsure what charge -if
any -could be. lodged against them,
through re.ports from witnes!eS.
They were questioning parents of
another boy about a routine complain'
th.at he had beaten up a child in the part
when the parents said, "I'll be.t it was
those -boy1. They're troublemaktra
and they're always up at that park."
Driscoll said officers then went to
Emerson School. ·lfbere the '1·year-old is
• pupU, MonclaJ 1114 tool< bim out 11
achoo I.
Driecoll said the officer• were taking
(See CRUCIFIED, Page ll
Weadler
1tose tow cloud& are getting to-
gether Wednelday,.and that mean1
a c h a n c e · of tcattered showers
ovemiahL Temperaturt1 are tab-
bed In the 63-73 degree range.
INSIDI!; TODAY .
· Something old and romethino
new ore irt the offing for loccJ
dromo fans oJtttoo Ornngt Coa..st
1tage1 thi& week. Ste Entertain-
ment, Page 19.
Be Sure to Vote 11600~ · Polls Open Till 8
...
> -
2 ,o.a.y Pll.OT
Mc·Govern Urges
Dec. 31 ·Pullout
.
WASlllNQTON (UPI) -To the che<rs
and thouts ol IC(ftt·of Vietnam veterans
here for ·anu•ar demorutrations, Sen.
George S. McGovern (0.S.D.), urged
Ccinatt~, today to set Dec. 31 of thll year
for IOCal U.S. wllbdrawol Imm lndocblnl.
McGovern w11 ltadolf witness at the
ltart ti lllne clays ol bwlnss befon the
Legal Action
M':ly be Next
In Tire Feud
Le1aJ adlOn loom1 todly as the latest
development in the Costa Mesa City
Council's tw~year effort to flatten a
flourishing ~ company for Its alleged
free-wbet!ling deflanct.
Mark C. Bloome Jr., e1ecutive ()f the
chain oper1tin.a at 3005 Harbor Blvd.,
went before councilmen Mooday night to
appeal 1 zone octpdon permit condJUon
forbidding four hydraulic lifts undtr a
canopy.
He was alloWed to build only if the lifts
raisin« cm for easy tire changu were
placed within an eDCloted roofed bulldlrlg.
Bloome biatnt&lm: the canopy it a roof,
"'While COW1Cflmen malnlaln he built in
~ of tbe 1tlpulaUon.
Qty Attorney Roy J11111 uld be told
Bloome's con1trucUon qlaeen: eucUy
wblt tbe dty cona1der11 a roof; one
bounded by Walla Oii four lldu.
Bloomt 111JU<'f blS plan cbani• for the
-canopy c:Ost •10,000 extra and wu done In
··belief be wu meetlnl the r o o f
requirement over the bydr1ulic Ultl ln
quatioo.
He ""°"1111Y threatened to bqln le1al
action against the city lf hit appell of the
perllnent condition was denied.
Mayor Wilson, bristling, said Bloome '1
tirrn understood exaclly what was
expected by the city and willingly defied
ii.
1''Fbey're outllde ud frankly I don't
).i.k:e them," obien'ed Viet Mayor Willard
T. Jordan.
, QJuncilmu Wllllam L. St. <lair
char&ect lbe Bloome company acted ln
bad faith, a1lhougb be voted aaalnlt the
..-ubsequent moUon t.o deny the appeal, 4
to 1, becallle bl WU denied furthtr
,ditcosalontfH.
PlanoinB ~ W'illl•m Dunn agreed
With councilmen that the firm bad to
llnow' ,lit C4llOlll: !tiled to ...,, !be
atandlnll ol a roof altet dJJcUsaJOOI
(Din( haclt lwo year1.
· 1be iuue ln•o1ved ts the estheUcs of
Harllor Boulevard wbJch 11 the City's
-lmpomnt commen:lal lhon>uch· fare.
Viet Vet Killer
Receives Life
Prison Sentence
An Orqe County 8-lcr Court jll!'l'
mulled the fate ol coovlcltd killer <IW1•
Albcd Scott for four ·hours Monday 111d
tbm dedded on a llft 11ntenct for the
JmQ Pico Rivera man.
ScoU, IO, wW bt 1t11lenctd May 11.
Judie ~erbtrl Herlanda win rule thtt
ume dq oq 1 mot.Jon fer a ntw tfltl.
Jurors agreed on. leavJ.nc th t
cow1houle l>te Monday that Scott'1 qe
-be wi.1 11 when be killed Phlllp Cutanon. 11, ol Pico Rivera last Oct. II
-"u 1 major factor ln their rtf1111n1 to
recommend the de1tb aenlenct.
OU.M•I COAST
DAILY PllOl
OlANOI COAST PUaLllHIN• COM.PAWi
l•~•rt N. W••i
,,.lflftt 11'111 P'vtll.....,
J•,• l . C11rl,,
Vite l"n11tt11I tnf ~•I M .......
Th.,,.11 k, • .,;1
l•Utt
Th•"'•• A. M11tphi111 ...,..,,...... l'tlllf'
Cli.,J,, H. le•t l lclit•• '· N•ll A111i11 ... ; MMlltlllO' ltl .....
C.... MM• 0Mu
JJO W•1t lty St1 .. t
Ma;U111 Aiirt11: P.O. I•• 1"60, tJ•J•
Ott.tr OMMI
'"'''*•• 171•t '42AJJI . C'cd&4 A•hwrw .. MJ·l•11
~t. lfll, °'*• C.Mt ~ .... ... ~ ............ ....-.. 111-. ......... .
-... ri'lllrMlr .. -~"-'' ""'""' .... .. .....
2 3 wttflrlW ...... , .....
...... ., apwllll1 .......
..,. dotM ...... NM tf N ...... t .. ad\ ... °"" M.... C•l"-11, SllllM.ri,tltft ., dttMr t.1.tf _,Wily1 1rV' IO\tll UJJ
.,..,,..,, """""" ettllMt ...... fl.IS '"9"lfll1.
(.
I
Senile: Forelan Rtlatlont Comrnlttet en
proPoUJa to eod tbl war.
Shouts of "right on!" and other
remarka came from .an estimated ioo
vets in · tht audit nee u McGovern 11ld
the U.S. b IUUIY ol "crlmt1 qllnst
humanity" every day tbt 1'tr conUnuctl.
The veW'ans stood up and chetred,
whisUed and Ahoultd as McGovern
entered the room. (Ste related atory,
Page t.)
"I aubmtt th.It America wlU be 1
srtattt, more self confident, and more
reapecttd naUon if. . . we uerclse our
consUhrttonal rt1pon1Jbllltlt1 to
termlnate support for a war tMt we
know ls wrong," McGovern tatif1ed. 1D
caltini for a Dec. SI cutoff.
"Mr1 Nixon's Vietnamlz.aUon pollcy
virtually iuarantee1 that our prboners
will rernatn tn their cells, that our awp11
Will remain ID doJ>ier, that the
negoU.UON will be 1taJled. and that the
kllling will continue," be Slid.
McGovern 11 a chief 1pon9;or or a
proposal to reqUire total withdrawal of all
U.S. forces frem ladochina by the end of lbJs yw.
Controversial
Home Declared
Public Nuisance
AcUng virtutUy wltbout dllcu.uJon
when the owner filled to ahow up, the
Coai. M-City Council declared
John Wakull'1 bouM a pubUc nulance
Mood,Y Dllbt
Ht wu itven 30 d1y1 lo make certaln
repairs and complete cleanup of the
structure at 1128 Gleneagles Terrace in
the Marina View dlJtrict.
Wakula beg111 the project in lN.1 and
flnajly gave It up for a variety of rtuons,
botH economic and emotional.
He has said in prior meetina:a he will
Jet it 1tlnd for 1 century u ls, even turn· ma doll)l olfen by dillUlltd ileJahbon to
·~ ,...., to lln!Jh th< Job or .. u the
lot to lbem.
MGOcloy'1 bellinl ellmutd I monlh-
lOlll lnvesU1aUon Into whither th•
blllldlnJ coostllulel I flrt and ll!lly
buard.
"'lbere ls ample nidlnce," nmarted
Vlcie llayw Wllllrd T. J«'dan, inovinc to
declare it a public · m•INftOI' 1JJttbout
further talk.
C!Iy >Water Fred fc>r11b11Mld lhttt
11 DO pn>vlllon ID tho diy'l>ulldlq code lo
force aomeone to campltte a atructuni
OllCt I permit for tt II Issued.
Clly Attorney Roy June uld It llould
take a code amendment to do IO.
1be Ja.tter diJclalure1 wtl"I inade lfter
Cooncllman J aclt lllmmttt uktd II tht
city couldn't ached.ult a hearlii.1 for
Wakula to lhow caUH why he can't fln!Jh
the fob.
He bu llld before be Jiiii dolan'I want :i.ri doelO't Wt what tbl ntllbbtn
FNlllP .. el
FREEWAY •••
cl\alleD(• .... hlltd.
Oppontnb of tbt' mea1urt contend the
rtsldrntl of a •in&le municipality do aot
have the authority to vote on a matt.tr
of statewide concern, 1uc.b ia the state
highway lflltm.
A member of Burke'• staff said
committee members, In adoplin& the
favorable rteommtnd1Uon, pointed out
that the committee has never before
taken a nea:alive 1U1nce on a city'•
propoeed cha!'lar cban1e.
At the bearing, Newport Beteh w11
represented .by llJ Fmwa,y NqoUallon
Commlttff, Mayor Ed Hlrth, Vite Mayor
Howanl Rotors aod Councilman Don Mo-
fM!I, 110., with Clly Attornsy Tull1
5eymOllt.
Ken :Reynolds, pl1nnln1 dl.rttter for
HunliD(ton Beacb, spoke In oppe&!Uon to
the amondmenl
Killer Receives
Execution Stay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
Callfoniia Supreme COurt Monday atayld
the ueeuUon ol convicted &layer Willlam
Dalo.Arcberd, whld> had .,_ acheduled
for Wednetday.
The court uld Ille ai.y weuld bt ID
effect untlt a U.S. Supreme Court
dtclsion ii delivt:rtd ln anothw Ctllfornla
dul.b penolty cue.
Archerd wu convicted tn Loi AnJtit.I
ol thrff counlJ of !Int de,,.. mllldar In
Ille death or two wl¥ta and a I~ytlMld
nephew by mew of Insulin lnflotJona,
Cafeteria Cash
Looted in Mesa
A lllbt-!incered thief IUltd P7lll from
the clltttrla ca.shbo1n at Cotta Mm
Hieb School. campus spokesmen told
police Mond1y.
'lbt theft. whk:h is covered by
Newport-Mt11 Unified School Dl1trlct
Wllrance, OOCWTtd durtn1 bulln111
houn, 1ceordln1 to tmploye Terry Colt .
lnv,sUgators thtorlzed ll couldn't hive
hf.en while ruatomer1 wtre paa1lne
through the buly lunch line.
I
INSPECTOR MICHAEL BUSH OF SFPD INSPECTS SITE OF GRISLY FIND
In San francl1co, a Ml11ing Inf ant is Found 811ttn •nd CrucifiH
From Pllfle J
CRUCIFIED. ••
the boy back to the park and when they
neared the loc1Uon of the bl!emenl
"clubhouse," asked him:
"If you wtre a policeman, where would
you look?"
Dmcoll 11id the boy IUUeated variOUI
JocatJoni, Ind thf:I saJd, "Look, the door
tt that bue.ment ii open."
Offlcer1 went in and found the nude
body, partially covered with sheet.I,
fllMll material and acrap1 of wallpaper.
Drtlcoll 11Id the infant had betn 1truck
several times with a brick, apparently
jumped on, poked witb a &tick, choked
with 1 rope and then bound onto the
cross.
Drilcoll said the 7-years()Jd and his
brother, both white, were "playina a
game'' wllh t.be baby, the younger boy
said.
"My brother had a brick in hi! hand,"
Driscoll quoted the boy a1 aayJna. "Th•
brick fell and hit the boy on tht head.
Then my brother was poundiq on the
matlrHS thert in the basement and the
brtck fell again ... "
An autop!IY WIS held today 1nd the case
remanded to Juvenile Judge Francis
M.,er, who will make tbe decision on
what action Should be taken. ,
Drilcoll 1ald it was not known whether
tht boya were aware tbe baby hid betn
f1tally injured, but that the infant was
dead IOOn after they left the clubbouae if
not at that time.
f'rom Page 1
TOWER •..
F ountnin Valley .Sailor
RescuedFromRt;>ughSea
A Fountain Valley man "in Vl!l'f poor
coodl.llon" wu plucked from a sailboat in
roup HU off Baja CIWomia this
morbln.g in a di1maUc rescue by a U.S.
Cout Guard helicopter.
Marlon Harvey Brinson Jr., 26, of n12
Martin Ave., wu flown to Scripps
Memorial Hospital, La Jolla, suffering
from chronic llea1ickneall and lack of
food. Hoapltal olllcltls lllid he wu
"erlremely dehydrated'' and w·ould be
detained overnight for observation.
He was reacued from the ZS -foot
sailboat Glad R1ael, owned and skippered
by Jett Feldman, 20, of 1&672 Edgewatel'
Lane, Huntington Beach.
Feldman, who became exhausted in
caring for Brinson and flghUng rou&h
water in six day1 at se1, radioed for help
Monday mornlna. Feldman w11 ti.ken
aboard the Coast Guard cutter Point
Cambodia Chief Stuart tbt.t morning which Is towln& the
ullboat to San Dle10.
Fledmu ties hil boat at San Diel()
T -n Nol Tells Yacht Club. TM re.tCUe was made near l.AJ G\lldelupe Island, 200 miles aouth of San
Diego. The sloop bad an engine but it had
H• R • ti' t1ln out of 1uoline. IS es1gna on Feldman told Coast Guard olflcen thtl
Brinson bad been oeaslclr. thrOIJlbout tho
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian •1J-dty ttorm, and had been llDlble to
Prlme Mlnlster Lon Nol, who helped lead leave the cabin. Feldman had skippered
lhe ~-w · ol Brlljoe N-tbl'lhtp 1ln1Ie handedly.
Sihanouk and then suffered a dlubllng U . Ken· Holleman aald thlt the Coast
stroke, l'Jll~ today Ilona: with his GUI.rd ~lved Uae call for U1i1\anrll
tnllrt cabinet.. through 1 serle1 of radio rtlay11 a& 7:30
Lon Nol'• brother, C.oL Lon Non, slid Monday morning .. The helicopter located
the re1tcnat.1on ... u little more than a the boat at 10:45 1.m.
formaWy and probably would not be '1be belicoptu had taken food and
actepf.ed. waler suppllea because of the report Uuit
PolJUcal 10urces 11id Lon Nol and his one of the sailors Will 11ufferlnr: from a
tablnet submitted their real111aUons 1t lack of food," Hollemon said. !'But tht
the of flee of chief of state CJ>enc Heng helicopter did not drop .the 1uppllei wben
today. However, thue wu no Immediate the crew learned that ther• wu food on olflclaJ unoancemtnt. . Lon Nol and t'h1n1 Heng ltd the ~ ~~' Brlnlon waa •Imply too awlck
bloodleu coup or neutralist Prince At flrlt ll&ht thll moroinf, 5:30 a.m.
WWilAces . : ~ I
• •
__ To J{esJo.r~
Zero Plane
By JOANNE !tEYNOLllll
Of tte Oattw Plltr lltllf
Three World War II U.S. Navy ace
pilots -including a Corona del Mir
ruldent -are completing plans lo
re.lore 1 rare enemy pltce which was
found 1unk 1D a Paci!~ laeoon.
Capt. ?i.1arshall U. Bttbe (USN,rel.). of
219 Larkspur Ave., said today that he and
hl! two colleagues. Cdr. Eugene Valencia
IUSN·ret.) of Chula Vista and James
French of Baker1field plan to rebuild a
Japanest Zero for display in the Fi&hter
Pilots Hall of Valor al tbe San Die10
Ael'O!lpace Museum.
Beebe said the fighter ls only one of
lwo or three in e:ristence, and Jt took the
trio about five years to find it and 1et it
i. this country.
The three men are all members If the
American Fighter Ace Association and
belween them shot down 45 Japanese
planes.
Beebe, since retire ment from actJve
duly, works aa a broker for mutual funds
and handles real estate projects in
Coro na del J.1ar. French said the book
"'The Bridges at Toko-Ri" was dedicated
to Beebe who i-'Ommanded the squadron
on which J1rne1 Aflchener's Korean War
novel was baseG.
"If J had known Zeroes were so bard
to get back., J don't think. I woold bave
shot them down," French quipped.
Beebe said they wanted a Zero for tht
museum to be displayed with American
fighters such as the P-40 and the Navy
Hellcat.
"We put out advertisements and wrote
letters and about II '10nths later, we aot
a reply from the Harbor Master in
Rabaul , Ne• Gumea."
Jn Septeinber Of 1970, they had the
plane pulled from 70 feet of wattr off
Rabaul where it had lain for about 28
years. And after several months of red
tape delays, the plane was crated and
shipped via Air Force transport to the
Bakersfield aircraft han1ar owned by
French.
Beebe said \bey will restore tbe plane
there with the hope of 1ettin1 it airborne
again, "II that Proves to be impr1ctieal,
then we'll build 1 flying replica," he 11ld.
Zeroes are extremely rare, Beebe said,
because of the American government's
policy of destroying all enemy munlUona
al tile end of World War Il
'.'11ley took whole ahipload& of Zeroes
and 4umped· them out ID the ocean. At
~ time, ino ·one "'' parljcuJarJy co11·
ctrned with saving a dozen or ·so for
museums," he explalned.
A.s pilots during those years, French
shot down 11 Japanese figh1er1, Beebe
was credited With 10\ti: and Valencia w11
the Navy's third ranking ace with 23
scorn. A pilot must shoot down five
enemy aircraft lo earn ace status.
Norodom SlhllllO\llt Mtrcb 11, 1970. SmallW'OOd Aid, "I'm not 11tinst elther. Sihanouk wai out Of the country at the the sailor• were b'anderred to the cutter
Bu\ I'm qalnst thla project." time and hu ilnct set up a aovemnent and Brtnaon was hoisted aboard the Missing Stash
Of Cash Studied "If il'• • worthwhile project, it can in exile In Communist China. helicopter.
stand a wall," he added. On Feb. 8 Lon Nol suffered 8 stroke. The Coast Guard rel)Orttd that
Mn. Kevin John!lon uld Bethel Towers He la ter went to 1 U.S. military hospital Feldman had a poaition but that it was
rutdenll don't need a ntlghbcring lower In Hawaii for treatment alld returned to several days old and he Will too weak to A srand theft in which $800 vanlahed
bul what lbe called paychtc 1pact, such Cambodia several weeks , ago. Buf he take a new fixlnf. frnm It!, hldin& plaCe in • Costa Mesi
II a garden; In which to walk and reflect. never fully recovered from the effects of bl I ... ,._,_ ,.1 ••• Y . eye e aaency iJ belnf inv••H•ated by --~ ~-~~ -_.''.!:.~.~In thelyolJ~ dobout dedlheir Col. Lon Non told UPI "The ma jority Actor Calhoun Wed Melcolm cutler, owner or sea Schwinn IJW~ ....... Ll'I' I cu . aue eman . or hJ! (Lo n Nol'•I friend!. includ•·g B' I •·chJ ..... f •~ •· ch St ho "' icyc es, 42.0 E. 17th St .. told police the ~alee ~~:.hn° I~"~· ·a.· wth 1 military men, civilians. youth and LAS VEGAS, NeY. (UPI) -Actor Rory cash disappeared over the weekend bUt
To....... 1 ,.'-., ....... d·"·uh'a~niP n,esr b ed religious pe rsonalities do not wish him to Calhoun, 48, and Susan Langley, 29, a he couJdn'l be sure just when. weri, w•W ,..... .cu app ause tse resign. They have submitted a motion to former Australian 1·ournallst and now a J · on h1I mulU-laceted arguments. h hi f r k nve1t111tor1 aaid no sign of foreea "I talk to my nelgbbort who live in t e c e o slate as ing him not to HolJyy,•ood y,·riter, we.re married Monday enlry or burglary could be found
accepl the re1\gnatlons and to requut at • wedding chapel on the Lu Vegas indlcaUng the cash could have been found
Bet the3 al Towehrs nlhfght antdbday. S()d mellmeks Lon Nol and Gen. Sirlk Matak to stay on "strip." It w11s lhe second marriage fDr by a nosy customer during busineis a .m. w en ey ge urne or 1mo • and form another gove rnment :· ~ each. houri.
ed out," he 1aJd In reference to llever11 1ii0i""::'::":~'"::'"::":'"~=-~~===-=~~--------------------. pilt flrtL 11
"Some forget their shou," he added WALi£ SOFTLY! relaUve to quick evacuauon. '-
"I even Joan them my Moes. One P1ir I
haven't pt Hell: yd and that Wal two
)'IUI IJO," MIM continued.
Mann we.nt on, changing the subject to
.tht need for promoUni: venereal dlleue
cum •mon& tbe youn,, emphulling it
-.Id be a negllglblo uped amoni the
Towera' a yurwnd-up senior citiunl.
"An ounce of prevention is worth a
pound of cure," he declared, saytnc C\ty
Councilman Jack Hammett cou1d altellt
to the hon-Ihle pi<vtltnce ol 1yplillll and
1onorrhea in )'OW!l IOclely .
Bluthlnl brilht rOd, llammttt -a
medical cent• adminlstrator -1tron&]y •uaallted lhat MIM maU hil frame of
rfiterenct more clear, drawtn1 11lu of
ltu,hter.
"Arch II ODt of our favorite people.
even when be callll mt at S:30 a.m. and
tells mt tbt aame thiJll,'' quipptd Mayor
Robert M, Wll.90n.
Councilman St. Clair clubtd with the
Rev. Munay on the tubjtcl of whal con·
1Ututet a 110nprobt corporallon. which ii
the WAB pn>lfaM !or orpnlzln& Ille pro.
jtct. ' .
Despite hit chtr&tl Iha cllurdM>rle!lted
pn>Ject will no< bt a nonptdll entity
when the cooslnlelloo loan II ptJd olf In
40 yean, the lltv. Mlltr•Y atronaJy
dlumtd. "We•vt iot 1'trt a man boldlnl 1 Bible
in one bancl and old lollt:l In th< other and
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive.
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 a square yard. Con you imagine how these mater i a Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture end walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
regardless of where you buy it, don't ex pee t too much. WALK
VERY SOFTL YI
entuln& l.nto bl.lll.Dtts," SL Clllr 1nap-~ice Mayor Wiiiard T. Jordan finally ALDEN'S moved to accept the city mal'llgtr'i tw~
week delay rtCGmmendaUon, 1ince May
ia b Iha wA8 deadlin< for 11ercll)D( Its SANTA ANA. OllANGI. CARPETS • DRAPES l>nd optlon, rtMWm& or IOlln& It. TUSTIN (Ill ••• -•J the ALDIM'I Counctlman H1111mett -~ uo H 1 LL c.u,na l 663 fllac•ntla Av• • motion wlllcll Piiied 5 to ~And Clly & DRA,Htll
Mlnagtr SOrsabal agrttd to contact FHA 11J74 l"lite. Tuttl"· Cal. COSTA MESA
orr1cer1 lo rpeed up an answer on lhe ,.. ,.., 646-4838
crttk:al $21,000 aervlce contract. IL..:;::::.:::~--------.!:::::::::::!:... _____ :::::;:::,::_ ____ J
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VOL. 04, NO. ·94, 3 SECTIONS, 41. PAGES ORA~E COUNTY, CADFORNtA
•
' . .
TUESDAY, AP!Ul 20, -'197f
. ,
Toar:~-J!hUd -· . -. --. N.V. Stie'b
1EN CENTS
Huge Clemente Tr-act Future Before Council
San Clemente plannin& commluJonera'
recommendation for deDial of a
aubdiviJion tract map for Ont ·af tbe
largest local bowing devtlapments in
rtti!nl years will rtcelve , its -first
u:posure before city co·uncilmen
Wednesday.
Councilmen are expected to ael a date
for their own hearing on the· major
proposal by the Druglasa Pacllic Corp,
whiob ateka approval . for t w i n
condomlnlum de<re.lopments and utate-
~ze Iott on nearly 300 aaa. of .Jand
commonly tnown u the RummaeD-Ayu
property.
AfCUS to the parcel hu proved the
mostrcontrovers:ial asj>ect·of the project.
Coinmbsioiiert last · week dinled the
tract 'mlp for that reason alone, they
safd. Cbmnilssioners dingreed with the
acct.SS cboict-. by the developers, who
sought . to u:tend aftd widen . Los
Bauliamo.1 Lane through the cily~wned
golf course, chan,inl the alignment ol
some play areu. -
~·-·ICCUI ~loo --drew ICOl'H of
"'~ ' • I '
residents to plannlng · e o m m l a 1 l •o n
ht.arlnp to op-the projec:L
MOii ol the oppooeota to the Loa
BiuUsmu·access issue agreed they bad
few U any adverse comments on tbE
development of the acreage it.sell.
A JI\Uter Plan for th.e Oouglfss Pacific
project bu won approval from the
planners.
Other items on the COWlcil's agenda for
the 7:30 p.m. meeting include:
-A; routine request f1'9m the San Clm!"'1< ~-~1 1Commero:e ~
•
permlsaion fOl"-·the ·use of 1•o·u·n d
amplifying eq_uip~t ~ four ~parate
locatiom along the l'Ollle iii U)e Fies!> La_
Chrl!Uanlta Parade,rplus Pllza Park fov
the weei..nd ol July 11: I? and II. -
-A letter from R. B .. Cropley•seeking
city penn!sslon for ,the ' transfer of his
contract for the SUrfer-Number Two
concession on a· city beach to new
ownm, John and Gloria McLachlan.
-A letter from the Backyard Ecology
Group of·San G.Jemente asldng.tbt,city to
tab ·o•er a pilot reeyclill8 prosram-lor
•
old newspapers.
-Continuation of study on a pro~1
from Goll Tourl, loc., 'l'hicb ...U to
include the municipal-golf cOune•tnto a
program offering dlscounta in golf fees lo
members of a apeclal ;plan. . ~idetatioo of a J"eQUest bY. Peter
Berger, who has asked for a five-year
r~newal of bis contrac,t lo operate the
gOll courie clubhouse. Berger llllormally
has alao asked ~ the dly to J>&Y for
expansion of. kitchen f~litjes at-the
r~taurant to allow · for -.evenine; dinner
• 0 s IDI. -'-ruc1 .. _1n~ ..
Domes SOUfJlat
Capo· Evictions
Delayed 30 Days
Famille& living in condemned housing
lo San Juan Capistrano have be@n given
an additional 30 days to move out..
Tht city ~ in January ordered the
families OCCUp)'.ing hazardous atructuru
on \V•ll Site Road .91) dJys· to .vacate ,and
find other homea. ·
The property, ()WDIJ' I Mrs. LYUan
Zaenglein of Pasadena, wu t a 1 Ci ~to
~ >ellCb .atruciure t U it WU
v1e1£ed. · Mana.,, WIS the deadline Pd only· on.e
Mcture haa eben tom do'fl\.
"We may be ablt to rtsolve this
without using enforcement agencies,"
Pid City Mm*"iltrator Donald G.
Weidner.
He said reprell:IJll&ives of the Salvation
Army , CommUPlty 'Action Council a n d
other agencies a.re workinJ; to fiod bomeJ
Nixon Mav Visit
"' Camp Pendleton
To Greet Troops
Hint5 by Presidential aides arose today
t1n the chances of a visit to the South
Coast by President Nia.on within the next
few weeks.
The President was reported planning a
visit to troops of the 1st Marine Division
at Camp Pendleton where t h e
Leathernecks will be processed after
their return from Vietnam combat
'The first members of the division were
erpected this weekend at the huge base,
but the Presidential visit, if any. would
not be until later, h~ spokesmen said.
The President planned to spend this
weekend at Camp David, Md.
The reports of .the impending visit
correspond to some commentl made by
tbe President's staff during the last vbilt
to San Clemente several weeks ago.
As they left for Washington, seyeral
members of the: 1taff mentioned a return
visit in early Ma y.
Actor Calhoun Wed
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPi)-Aclorllory
Calhoun, 48, and Susan Laniley, 29,· a
former Australian journalist and now· 1 .
Hollr.wood ...titer, were. married. MOnday
at a wedding chapel on the Las Ve~u
.. strip." IL was the Hcond mauiqe tor· tacb. . . . '
for the rtmaining families , one which bu
11 members.
The stnictutts, once 1 labor camp,
came to lh.-attenUoo ol the ixlunty beallh
depalj,meot arid the diplrtment ol b•Udb\!I aftd aalefy· last fall.
Jn~"•aliol!I, loll to the . dl!c<ivery ol ~ _,...,.. ~ ....... ~d llOl •rec:U!y. '!be ttrnct;;;;
WOif ~aftd a l"'b!ic bearing 00 f!lo· m.uer tilOlllf!I 11 1o•a, .-., tli6 elly '!l'll''ell:' ' .
,,,. <dm1dl • lli'eod lo pootpono tho
d-ol Uie :structuno for a IO da1
~iod Lo live residents 1 time to find
new homes. Some of . the families were
paying onJy ·uo to $80 a.month and had
llttte bope ol ftndlng a mideoce they
could .afford on penaionl or meager
aalarie.!.
'lbe property owner,. Mu. LUUan
Zaenglein, was eager to demolish the
structures which 1he had leased to
rancher Wlllillii Reid who in turn bad
leased them to tbe families. ·
But Mrs. Zatn&leln wanted the families
to .find 'homes· and Wu reluetant to evict
them. J.
"I'm disappointed nothing has been
accomplished bf the · property owner Gr
the residents," llid Councilman Ed
Chem11ak.
But be agreed to the lime extension.
The vote wu unanimous. Weidner sald
be waa confident. the problem will be
solved iD that lime. '
Joaquin School
' District Vote
Starting Slowly
Voters in tbe San Joaquin Elementary
School' District covering the Saddleback
V.al!ey. weN.M:arce this morning.
A mldm~rning check of t b r e • rep~aenf,a\lft" precincts showed barely a
three peece.nt turnout of citizens.
Of a total regia1r1tion of 3,815 eligible
voter• in·lht. tbr~ polling placts, cnly 111
bad cast their. ballotl as of midtooming.
La Pu Jntermedlate School In Mission
VleJo reported · 1,397 eligible arid ·37
Votln1.
Olive.wood E~mentary SchQOI Jn El
Toro had 19 voters out Of a pOssibl£,1,MO.
Irvine'• Univenlty Park Elemtntary
SchOol , bu· 231 ret)stered: . ao. wt. thl!ir
ballot..
. ' ' I ( ' • ' • • ' ~·." , • ,• .. ~ t ~ ' 1' , •• I 1MILY..,~T!lftiff1 ......
: SAHfuMENTJt 'ST.ODENTS. L~K .OvE•R MOoEl:.1c>rOLl>GlOal1TH.tA,ttR ' . '' I •
,. : ;/~le Bv,.WY,.1ot• S.ll•ra..MalrA<.c:Gnr,1d ~ool<'•At'l..prlct.·Ol),f~,..,il!!N-1 • • • ,._' .
Mission ·. . .
Trail
Girls Sof tl>all
Opens :April · 24
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Girls
lnterested in playing softball are invited
lG ;aµi the San Joaquin Bobby Sox
League1 • whir.h wlll -oped it.I seaso11
Saluttlay, Aplil 24.
The o~i\lg g.,ne and a (und raisin
dime-al.dip lth'ieheon will take Rl•ce at tk
. UolvpraJtl P".k Ele~\a'l'. School.
Openinp .an the 11 ttams from several
parts of the s8ddleback Valley are stlll
available.1ln(onn1~ an be,obtained ~y
calling leaglle".alficfall at 83'1~ or 544-.
20'6, ' . . . .
' •,'4 •/l,,1 •,:·;) .. ·'·•·
: , ' • r i
San '·c ·lemente StUdeniS ' ' .
To Study in W. Europe
'
Sc:,le:~~::s ~~I:·.~:::~~~~.
as their classroom this summer in a.tifw
project offering blgh.achoql ..cre~t. fci a
formal program of 1tudy and travel .on
the coatinenL •
The-program. whleb alrUdy-· bas won
school district approval al a valuable
Jeamlng experience, ·will. Include tours
and lecture• ln the cities of Rome, Paris,
Salzburg, Cologne and London.
The enUre project iii to last 41' da)'1,
wllh the Youths leaving via · charter flight
on. July 16. .
For every eig)it studenll on . the . trip.,
there will be one •ccredJ~ adult
lnltructor. ,
English lnsthlctor Tom Youngq4n,
an •orgapizer ·ol the tour.· said abo\lt.15
openinp 1Wl aial.in lh• prop'~
The fee far·Uie ent~e package, h(.881~.
u 11,095, IOlllCh lnchldet all !area, meal.,
insura~ and museum and tbeat.er
admluions.
Youngerman •tressed the academic-
nature. of the experience, ouWnlng ·daily
' claases and related tours -all keyed to
the study of comparative cultures.
Some native teachers also have
volunteered to assist in the l~ui'e
programs, dwelling on art, poUtl~,
1eograpby, mu.sic and comparative lames
of ea'Ch cf the. seven countries.
· Youngennan said a meeling ba1 1been
planned for Wednesday. evening it 7:10
o'clock ·in the hJih scbool UUle.lheater for
atudenta Interested In joining tho
program.
Marines Seeking Support
For New Housing P.~~gr.aP\ . . . '
ill· Adiitt 110'Gienan1t11
LAKE FOREST ..: A. hootentnny for
adults will be ho!ted at the Beach and
Tennu Club on Satufdal<, April 24.
Lapidary Gr~up
' . ' ' .
To View ·Slides
EyeryOlit ·from. Latu: Forest Is Invited
to brinta-cuOst•aftd'mualcal lnatrumenta Membert ~ gutlta of the Tri CIU..
to the I p.rn.. event iohlch will be $1 per Lapjdary Socletv wlll-meet. Wedneadiy ~m.· · 1 • · · · ev;lw,c In• Saii 'Clt"'lole;fflih ~'.•. .Hilhllgbt of 'ihe eVtfung will be \he library to hear ~ a program o n
l\equlrements·lnclude. _.besides funds
for the fare --good health and
attendance at San Clemente High Schoot,
plUJ a rletteir of recommmdaticn troO\
any member of the Tritoo lacul(f.
Studenta unable-to attaxl t h t
· Wednesday meeting may receive detalla
from Assistant Principal Eld Kincaid at
ltn-4165.
, Thlt'iltadllnitlor /oining·tht "'""""-111 ,
-May-1.-Y~·oald,
In an apparen!_ effort to c:lrum-up
1\lpporl for Congresslonal funding of a
program to add 200 new housei for staff
1t Camp Pendleton, Marine: offici1Is have
platined m'f'W.gs In "'°'"'« weU., wlt.b
officlabi from IWT'OUDdb:tg t1tlea.
' Spokeamen at Clmp Pendleton 111<1 a
pair of housing speciallsll from the Cor))I
plan to .meet wtlh mayon, really -.t
membon aftd chamber ol ..........,
oWcJals ol ciUes 11.1rroondine·t ~ • btlit
base.
Ll Col. Tom Bri<rtoo, the baae housinl
officer. and a deputy will Yl91t oWclall lll
San Clt:mente and Ocean&Jdc.
'llley ore eapected to dlJcuu upecll o1
. 'I
the 1m Mil•·-· 6ins1ructlon BID, now Idhus Twn 11om ·su ·A•n•dre.,.•' -'men ·collectln1tr1J>at0Mutco111d
pending befdr';'&.,,.eu. Pr.iliytetta!i,'Cllb1th·lh ·~ ilelich M;i'tana•and dil<uu plans fQI' a.booth at
wbo·'llll ........,.. •'""'·g enluiainmenL the Ji'ietla ·!a ChriltlanHa. A housing abortage for military .-··~ """' • , _ .
persoonel baa been termed "cr!Ucal" by , e ..., olltft JM•-S-t : Meiqliet' 4eri'r Walker wlll"Pruent the bose 1polte1men. Paaaage of the bill • -~ ~ alldeo talten d\lrlJ!&, the rtct11t trip to
-'
.Ao~traJia· St;,tte B~n11 .
Calley Song on Radio WQU!d allow •for buildlnC ol 200 new MISSl!llf.lal!JO..,. A.tlanca le tunlor Melko lildr1M Jlod<1 M<Jlmtaln area.
re.idences for lol....,U,'C\>l. lamillel on blJ!> ,stuli<llla wlJt,..taU ~~ Fri.Jay, Silt. 1llO 'wilt dlaplay spec:jmen material SYDNEY, Au.tralla (API -AD
the baae. • ·e• ' ;1 :Ii "lllirD r 10 ~: ... In ' found durln& tho folln>el<•. commemal radio 1taUona ln QleeM!and Trodltiou~~Clifll••l• anol • i-11ecr-· . , . Memlkrs alao ..m cllfc:Ull piano for a Nie banned tho record ol "'!'lie Batlle Oceanoldi bftve 11 ~ areaa , • ~n J""1.1r b~ ~ ft"'1' 'jllaa o~ I field trip set for lb& coming' woellend to' Hymn o1 1'1eutenant ,O.lley" today. Tho
for many ll • a.tit~~ .bU\ . ~ ~ tlidt : U:.~ . , 'Iii• Call"' M<iUillllnr noerfBtr11o .. ; an r-...1'1!• rtloued In Auattalla Monday. increued retM1 Tlli:I ~ ~ )'! ~loo '"Ill-" lO .area abUndant In' petrifltd"l!•lln. aple, -:J)e advllory boanl. ot ~ ~Ill
boildin1 ~ ..,. 'noioHs w · 11f11¥tinentl ~-liot'l •nd. fl'tllr noq;: •• ~-...r coin moo 'O)ial. ' .' ~· FadullUca .... ·H a
·hu cauaed 'a ciitlcal" 1h0rl0fo 'la Dedr. )llilel·wDI lie ~WaNed'• '~ ~In llj>ll!atyad<Lrock ~ llltio(, '-..-1n1.»h at ••ail~~ *t MidDOt'..,., .__ ,.,..laltralitii9,cdk ' ~-·'sou •U..: ,...,_,,.., ·• dSl (J • 'CIT•lul their IUD1tfts1 .. • t-"~. -r.fl'" ....., .• " '"" ... 4 t ~ 1' :l '1.Fp'#;F .. _,..,.......... •
T ~ ... \ ---~
' •
• • -
service - a ·plan w!!Jch ll<r(et rays
would tncreue revenues.
-A recon:anendatton Item c lt-Y
Attorney .F. · MacKemle Brown on
feasibility of council comment or
negctiaUon with San Cleinente aparlment
owner P.eter · WllU.m Broqghton •. The
man u •uing tl>e city for ll&od damages
a.saertedly caued by a dty drain.
Simllltaneously Brougil1on>bu•olfered an
easemel}t for the cllf to use: to ~e.pa.ir the
drajn oo tho 200 block of Aveolda
Pallzad1.
Child Said
Hit Twice
With Brick
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -Police aald
tQday one of two young boys held In th•
crucilixion death of a 20-month-old Infant
has admitted the baby waa bit twice wltb
a brick and . then wired to a makealillt
cross ••so be couldn't get away.''
"We dldn:'t Want to get caught," aaid
the 7·Ytar .. ld boy, held In "prolecllve
.U.toily" ·at· st11'1'rindtco Juvenile-HaU
will) 'his !().year-old brother In the deatll
o1 NOlll ~ 1n .a din1Y baaement 1u1 ..., ' . +: r:-.... ~,JlaD'-aaldlhe ~bOr.lod .~loJl!e --· ''<l~;Jt:: p the body ol _..,...,i . ~P4'-wi<J!cl i.
•-mdellf ICl'OP" llmberi yftll a rat __ -eGH.Ato..11 ~-. bocli 'wrflb aftdllla ~ .. ~ ... ' -"
• 'lllO lbf ... ~ti. '!di ~. Mrs. ..
~1~11!1.:_Ja,.ut. ~ CltY Puk !all
W....,7, 1beli ,be' 1uddentY
~ Pollco -. led lo the two
-•l!lp!dl ;I~ mV be .. y ..... lhal.pol"ice ,... iauro what cbarge -If
.., --dfl>!',Jqdled qalnat them,
tbroulh· l'<jXll'la).ha wftDeaaeL
'Iller ., w.,.._ ~Uonlnc Pu:ents o1
uo~ ,l!oY .ooul. •a routine· complall!t
~-lle-~ad.'*!eatup a_cbild lnothe )lOl'k
Wbi» U.\'1111! 1t• ·lfid. ''1'11.,.bet it WU tll!lf..,.,., ~ '!ky're trooblemaken
and tboiiln ......,._-.,11-lbat park."
Drlla)U• uif~,. 1tben-went to
Emerao~•llei:e tbe ·7-year .. ld ta
a pupil, Mo!ldo1; •look him; out ol lchoo4 • '
: Drls<;<>ll· oal<Nho .olllceis 'WOl't' taltinl
the b!>f-boct.lo U.parll:·and when they
~--~-locaticpz ~ the . baaement ''.clUUl!WH," aakec:f ~' •
"If you we.re a polieeman, ·where would
)'O'rlook?" •
DritcoU-saJd.tbe boY-suggested v1rious loca1iom~ aM~ Aid, "Look, the door to \bat baaemeni ll. open."
Offtcei's want Jn 11111 ·found tho nude
body, ·partlaU,. covered with •beets,
flannel material.:abd scraps of wallpaper.
Drlscoll lll<Clhe .lnlant bad been struck
several times .with . L brick, apparent11
"jwnped. on. poked with a •tick, cboked
with a. rope aftd ·~n bound onto Ibo
ciou. ' · .:
.Dri11eoll lfl4, the ?-year-old and hla
brother, both -white, wCre "playing a
,.,,, .. wllb the baby, the rouncer boy
oald. ·• ..... ..
Weatller
Those low c-are -geltlng to.
gelher Wedneldq, ~ that means
a ·c ban c e·ot ICIU.e.red lhowen ovemJgh~ ·Tompentll1's aro tab. bid.Jn the'.ts-n lfeCree range.
INSIDE TODA. Y
• SomeljlhtQ ol4 -ollji 1omttMn~
., .. ~re i' !Ji; offing /err loc:Ol
d,..... font· 6• hllO °'""9• Coaal
•toQt• this. w4et. St• .En.ttrtai""
m.nt. Pogt Ill.
I
t DAll.Y PILOT SC
SecOJUI i• Ccnmtfl .
'''"\ff$ I
Niguel Man Gets
Curriculum Post
·Carroll "Bud" Creipi.on, &sear~ and
COmrowi.JcaUons apeclaUst w i t h the
0r1111e County Department or Education
bu been named lO the Califomla
OUTlcdlum CommlJSlon.
Crelgbton, ft, of 24112 Calle Vleja,
Laguna Niguel Is the second Orange
(.ounly educator to be named to the
atatewkSe corrunissk(I wllb a primary
function of advising the State Board of
Educalkln on all matters concerning
curriculum, textbook adoptions and
framework d~eJopment
Dr. Ruaatli P1ri1, retired
superintendent of the F u 11 e r to n
Elementary School Distrlcl is the other
county resident on the state commission.
He bu been a member for seven years.
CrelgbtDn replaces Dr. Vern Hinze,
assistant superintendent of the Long
Beach City Schools, who has just
comJJ:leted a four-year tenn on the
commlaion.
Crtl.Cbton has been with tht cowity
Deparfment of EducaLlon for four years.
Prior ·to h1I current position he was
Soclal Science Coordinator. He earned his
BA degree at the University of
Wuhingtoo, his MA degree at t!le
University of Redlands and is presenUy
enrolled io the doctoral program at the
University of Southern callfomia.
c.reightoo believes the 12 memben of
the state curriculum commission art a
"mix" of conse.rvaUvea and libtrals.
Previowly, before appolnteu of Gov.
Ronald Rea1an obtained a majority oa
commission, Crdgbton aa.ld Jt was labet.
ed as "very liberal."
He considers himsell a "mis." "lam a
conservaUve on economics but liberal on
some other facets of educaUon," he
explained.
One of Crel1hton'1 "goals" during his
coming four.year term is to put
California schools on the "open adoption"
policy of tutbook selection.
At the pre.sent time Calllornia is one of
23 atales with a "closed adoption" policy
in wblch all texts must be approved at
the stale level. In addition , this state
requires !hat all t..U be printed In the
1f.ite printing oUice.
"Many publishing houses will not lease
their\ prlntin( Pl.att-1, to t.be state ao
students here do not have the behef1t of
many fine text.boob," Creighton alleges.
He . ..,,, be thUW moat member• Df the
curriculum commWion favor tht open
adoption policy but It will be 1ome tifr1e
in coming as new Jegi!laUon will be
needed and the Jong time tradltlon of
state printing must be eliminated. He
believe• the cost factor wlll be lower In
the long nm.
Creighton added that tile closed
adoption p01lcy In the state does not
apply to high school dl!trlcla, onJy
elementary.
He aayr the advantage o! the open
Akim Postoway
Services Held
' ' Funeral wvices were ·held this al·
temoon rof. Akim PO!toway', a native of
Russla and Laguna Be1cb resident who
died Saturday at' the. •k' or 13.
The services wtre conducted In Corona
del Alar at Pacific Vie• Memorial Chapel
by Rev. Henry Gerhard o( the Church of
Religious Science. Interment followed at
Pacific View Memorial Park.
Mr. Postoway, who IJved at 2955 Alpine
Way, is survived by a daughter, Mrs.
L<iulse Sedoff of Laguna Beach ; two sons,
Paul and Henry, both of Ml<;higan,; five
grandchildren and three g r ' 1 t
grandchildren.
OIAN61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
OltAl+Gf COAST PUllLISHtHO COM.PAM'(
le~trf N. Wttd
Prnllltnt ...i '"""""""'
J1~\ l. C11rltv
Vic• ~ont Mill ~-•I M.,....,.
'I'"•"'·· 11: •• .,il Ellltr
no"'•' A. M11r1ti.i110
MtMVI .. EfllW
C),11lt1 H. lt•U •iclotrd P, Nell
Anl1t.,,, llUft.lltl!lf EOllG<•
l .. -.... Ottk• ll? fore•! A•111wt
M•Ui119 ail1ht11: r.o. ••• '''· •2•11 s .. Cl ...... Offk•
JGS No1th ll C1"'!1a •••I, tJ6'72
adoplioD policy is that each &ehool
district in the stale may evaluate. or
purcbase any material as it sees flt.
Usually there i5 a course of study aet
down by the state board to be used u a
guide.
Capo District
Voters Brave
Cold Weather
DtJpite cold, damp wealhe.r early
today along the South Coast, voters began
arriving at the polla in the Capistrano
Unified School Di.strict in encouraginl
numbers.
ln spot checks of several precincls in
the area about nine percent of the eligible
voters bad turned out by midmorning.
The rate wu considerably betltt in San
Clemente, where citizens liave an added
measure on their ballot -a four.part
parks and recreation bond i s a u e
amounting to ,, million.
The combined precinct at Concordia
Elementary School had the highest
turnout among the precincts checked
with 12$ ballots cast among the 1,100
eli&ible voters. Workers at t h e
traditionally active precinct reported the
now as "steady."
Amoog five precincts checked, 4T1
ballots had been cut among $,698
possible.
Some qualified. observers said they
expe<:ted about a SO.percent turnout
during today's school di.strjct and bond
elections.
The weather began clearing before
noon, g e 11 e r • I I y a plus .factor Jn
encouraging cltllenJ lo cast thetr ballott.
Five C8plstrano Unified School District
seats are up for election today, plWI the
bond'bsue for San Clemente voterl only.
Th r e e poaltlom on the Saddleback
Col1ll"unity College Boord ot Tru!leel
al!o will be lilied In lDday'1 voting.
The polls will remain open until I
o'clock tonlghl
Tustin District
Turnout Light
Voter turnout thls morning for the
Tustin Union High School District board
elecUon was U,ht at polling pla~s
surveyed by 11 a.m.
Election watchers In Miuion Viejo
speculated the rain may have dampened
the spirJt.t of some voters. The La Pai
elementary school polls showed onJy 41 of
1,400 registered voter• turning out.
Laguna Hills rtpor1ed "about one
percent of the eligible voters" had voted
by 1&;30 a.m. today ...: 54 of a total 78J
assigned to vote at the Valencia School
polls.
Irvine School in East Irvine reported
only 20 of MS had cast their ballots and
University Park Elementary School
election observers reported only 50 of s
pos!ible 738 had voted.
Voters in these precincts also voted in
the San Joaquin Elementary District
Saddleback Communit y College district
trustee races.
Trustees to Get
Salary Proposal
Representatives of the Laguna Beach
school board wW meet tonight wllh
spokesmen for the district's Certificated
Employe Council to receive proposals for
1971·72 teacher salary schedules.
The 8 p.m. meeting in the district
board room, SSO Blumont St., is open to
the public.
Trustees ~{rs. Jane Boyd and Dr.
Norman Browne will rtpresent the board
and the administration will b e
represented by Suptrintendent William
Ullom and Bwilness Superintendent
Chvles Hess.
The teachers' proposals will be
ronvarded to the full school board which
will consider thtm in an executive ses·
sion April 27 !hen set a date for 1 joint
metting with Council representaUver.
• •
,,_. ~ J<llMI Mtl'tl1
VIEW FROM DANA POINT SHOWS PROGRESS ON HEADWALKS, SLIPS
Approxim1t1ly 200 Are Expected To 81 R1ady For Occupancy By Mly 1 S
Boat Parking A vailahle
First Dana Cove Marina Slips Installed in Harbor·
First boat slipt at new Dana Cove
?i-farina in Dana Point Harbor have ~n
installed and will be ready for occupancy
May 15.
Robert Dahlberg, president of Marine
Capital Inc. of Newport Beach, said some
200 slips are being installed in the first
phase if the harbor's development, wb.ich
1DclW!e1 Dana---cove Marina on the
landside and Dana Jsland Marina on the
seaside.
"Almost half of the 1428 slips in Dana
Cove Marina and Dana Island Marina
have been reserved," Dahlberg said,
adding that reservations have come Crom
as far away as Alaska and Hawaii.
The balance of the boat slips will be
Jnstalled at the rate of approximateli 100
per month until completion in Marcb of
Rules Committee Okays
Newport VoteAmendment
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of IM DM11 Pllott Sltlt
SACRAMENTO -The .Assembly Rules
COmmittee today voted a "Do Pass"
recommendation on a Newport Stach
City Oiarter amendment which would
require a vote of the people on any future
freeway roule agreements.
The vote by the Assembly panel was 3
ye1, 1 no, a absent. Assemblyman Robert
W. Burke (R·HuntingWn Beach) cast the
lone no vote.
The cities of Colla Mesa and
Huntington Beach bad f o r w a r d e d
retalutions to the ruler committee asking
that Newport's Charter amendment,
approved by city voters, be rejected.
The proposed. amendment now goes to
the floor of the full Assembly, probably
sometime late today, for a vote. on
ratlflcaUon. It must also be r1Ufied by
the California Senate.
Assemblyman Burke vowed today that
Capo Trustees
OK Procedures
For Code Group
Procedures for the formation of a dress
code committee have been approved by
Truslees of the Capistrano Unified School
District
A plan suggelted by San Clemente High
School principal Darrel Taylor was op--
proved Monday and will provide a dress
code commlttee much like last year's.
he would fight against the raWication on
the floor of hoth hoUJes.
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R-
Newport Beach) introduced t be
amendment to the rule,, committee this
morning, citing lhe as perttnt favorable
vote It bad received in a special election
in Ntwport Beach.
Only four of the seven members of the
rules committee were present for this
mornlni'• hearing.
Voting for the favorable report v.·ere
assemblymen John L. Burton (0-San
Francisco). committee chairman; Ray E.
Johnson (R-Olico). vice chairman and
Ernest N. Mogley (R·Fresno).
Burke cast the lone dissenting vote.
Absent from the session w e re
assemblymen John P. Quimby {D-
Rialto). Leo J. Ryan (D-South San
FranclllC'O) and L. E. Townsend (D-
Gardena).
Burke lben introduced fesolutions
adopted l\1onday nlght by both the Costa
Mesa and Huntington Beach city couaclls
urging rejection of the amendment.
He also cited an opinion from the
legislative counsel's office tha t forecast
the courts would likely declare the
amendment unconstitutional if a legal
chaHenge were raised.
Opponents of the measure contend the
residents of a single municipality do not
have the authority to vote on a matter
or statewide concern, such as the state
high.,.,•ay system.
A member of Burke's staff said
committee members. in adopting the
favorable recom mendation, pointed out
that the committee has never before
taken a negative stance on a city's
proposed ebarter change.
1972, Dahlberg said.
M the slips are fini shed, those y:ho
have made reser\•ations are being
notified by mail or the estimated
occupancy dale. Additional s Ii p
information may be obtained by calling
Marine Capital at 54().3623.
Dana Point Ifarbor will ha\·e a total
investment of $16 million in public funds
and $10 million in private money for
development or conti!s.slons, Dahlber&:
said. The Marina la being developed at a
cost of $4.2 million.
Among the features of the landscaped
landside Marina facililies will be eight
lavatory units which will i n c I u de
machines for washing and drying clothes;
parking for approximately l,200 cars and
convenient pwnpout stations. Each slip
y,•ill have a st.orage locker , out\els for
fresh water, electricity and telephone.
Deck surface areas are of non-slip
concrete.
Slips ?.'ill accommodat.e sail and
power boats from 20 to 60 ft. in length.
Regular slips will rent for $1.90 per boat
foot . Pitchforks and end tie.s will rent for
$2.25 per fl.
Marine Capital Inc. of Newport Beach
is the managing partner of Dana Point
Marina Company. Dana Point Marina
Company, owner and builder of the
P.1arina. is a partnership composed cif
Marine Capital Inc. and Alison Realty Co.
or NeY.'J)Ott Beach and Pr o s p e c t
California Co. of Hartford, Connecticut.
Boat slips have been d e s i g n e d ,
manufactured and i n s t a I l e d by
Huntington Engineering Corp. o f
Huntington Beach. The fioats are of
lightweight reinforced concrete with
styrofoam core.
Killer Receives
Execution Stay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
California Supreme Court Monday stayed
lhe execution of convicted slayer William
Dale Archerd, which had been schedu1ed
for Wednesday.
The court said the stay '.l.'Ould be in
erfect until a U.S. Supreme Court
decision is delivered in another California
death penalty case.
Archerd was convicted In Los Angeles
or three counts of first degree murder in
the death of two wives and a 15-year-old
nephew by means of Insulin injections.
W ALI( SOFTLY!
WWII~ces
To Restore
Zero Plane
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of flM D•U. 'lltf JUoH
Three 'Vorld War II lJ.S. Navy ace
pilots· -including a Corona de! Mar
resident -are completing plans to
restore a rare enemy plane which wu
round sunk ln a Pacific Jagooo.
Capt. Marshall U. Beebe (USN-rel.), ol
219 Larkspur Ave., said klday that be and
his two colleagues. Cdr. Eugene Valencia
(USN·ret.J of Chula Vj.rta and James
French of Bakersfield plan to rebnlld a
Japanese 7.ero for display in the Figbter
Pilots HalJ of Valor at the San Diet:o
Aerospace Museum.
Beebe said the fighter is only one of
lwo or three in e.1istence. and it took the
trio about five years to find it aod get it
to this country.
The three men are all members of the
American Fighter Ace Association and
between them shot down 45 Japanese
planes.
Beebe, since retirement from activ1
duty, works aa a broker for mutual funds
and handles real estate projects in
Corona del Alar. French said the book,
"The Bridges at Toko--Ri" was dedicated
to Beebe who commanded the squadron
on whJcb James'M.icbener's Korean War
novel was based.
"U l had known Zeroes were so bard
to get back. I don't think I would have
shot them down," French quipped.
Beebe said they wanted a Zero for the
museum to be displayed Y:ith American
fighters such as the P...fO and the Navy
Hellcat.
"We put out advertisements and wrote
letters and about 18 months later, we got
a reply !tom the Harbor Master in
Rabaul, New Guitea."
ln September of 1970. they had the
plane pulled from 70 feet Of water off
Rabaul where it bad lain for about 28
years. And after several months of red
tape delays, the plane was crated and
shipped via Air Force transport to the
Bakersfield aircraft hangar owned by
French.
Beebe said they will restore the plane
there with the hope of ge{ting It airborne
again. "If that proves lo be impractical,
then y;e·u build a flying replica,'' he said.
7.eroes are extremely rare. Beebe said,
because of tJ:le American government's
policy of destroying all enemy munitions
at the end of World War IL
"They took whole shipk>ads of Zeroes
and dumped them out in the ocean. At
the time. no ooe was particularly con-
cerned with saving a dozen or so for
museums," he explained.
As pilots during those years, French
shot down 11 Japanese fighters, Beebe
was credited with I01h and Valencia wat
the Navy 's third ranking ace with 23
scores. A pilot must shoot down fiv~
enemy aircraft to earn ace status.
Beebe said the Japanese government
has one of the Zeroes on display and the
Canadians are restoring one for display,
"and there's supposed lo be one at the
Smithsonian Institution but apparently
it's not displayed.
He said they are uncertain how long it
will take to get the plane rebuill, but he--
estimated at least six monUis to a year
for the work.
"Actually it looks terrible because it's
all covered with sea life, but irs all in
one piece," he said.
The plane "'as in good enough shape
that when they got it out of the water, the
men were able to locate its serial number
and trace the pilot
Valencia. a television productr who is:
writing a book on air aces. found the
pilot. Sekizen Shibayma, by checking the
7.ero'11 serial number against Japanese
squadron assignments.
Shibayama reported he had engine
trouble on Nov. 11, 1943, and. as quoted
by Valencia, was "looking at my gauges
when I was hil and my engine stopped !or
good." Shibayama said he escaped and
swam lo shore as the Zero sank.
Each member of the board of trustees
has bttn asked to appoint two community
members. Those intere.rted ln 3erving on
a dres11 code committee are invited to
cont.act a trustee and volunteer their
services.
Other members of the committee v:i\I
be students Kelly Devlin. Kelly Smith.
sophomores; John Engstrom. Chris
Lidke. juniors; Clark Jarrett. Diane
Smetona, seniors: teachers. Mrs. Carol
\Valker and Randy McCo)', and
administrators Mrs. Barbara McCarthy
end John Smart.
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting ot $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone} per square yard is expensive.
Marco Forster Junior Jligh will be
asked to recommend two present eighth
graders and one seventh gradt!r. One
junior high administral-Or also will be on
the commiUee.
Board members serving on the
committee "M111 be Dr. Robert Beasley
and Robert Hurst.
OtMf OtfkH
C0\11 Mnt: Pl W..1 lltY l!rnt Mt~ ... cit: lU3 M_.t lou~ttd
Hlintlf>Cllttl ~I INS 1'8dl hw"'1t•d Big Bend Property Owners
Seek Laguna Annexation
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 o square yo rd. Can you imagine how these mater i a Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
regardless of where you buy it, don't expect too much . WALK
VERY SOFTLY!
Latuna Beach may llOOl1 be 150 acm
larger lhari It is today -lhst ls If the
clly council and the Local A1ency
Form1tion Commission (LAFCl decide to
approve a request to add I.he Laguna
Canyon parttl to the city.
City 1dmlnl1tr1llve offictr Alvin O.
Autr)i pruented the planning commlWon
wllh the plan1 for annexation, which 11
bein& headed by the Telonlcl
Corporation, 21281 Laguna Canyon Roacl.
along with several lesstr property
ownera:, ln the Bl& Bend area.
Autry explained that the property
owners want to join the city to avaJI
1
them1elvts or city sewen ll'ld police and
fire protection. He said that the co.st of
extendlng e.1lsting sewer lines to lhe area
would be borne by the propttty owners.
Some 20 dweUlnt units Ind 40 persons
ire In lht area, Autry said, but the land
Is still cl1nifled as "uninhabited" and
lhe annex1Uon procedure Is n o l
compJlcated.
The planning commission approved the
application to be sent to the city council
Wednesday night ror consideraUon. If the
council favorably 1cla on the requeat, it
wlll go to the LAFC, then bact to tile City
COuncll for public hearings.
r I
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IANfA ANA. OIANOI. TUITIN C.11 •••
ALDIN'S
RID HILL CARPITI
& DltAPIRlll
11374 lnlPM, Tu .. 1111 (11. .,.,.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
64M838
I
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Lag·1111·a De~~· • I ~.:Y. Ster.k• ! £ D I T;IO--N" •
VOL 6-4, NO. 94, 3 SE.CTIONS, 42 PAGES
• e Ill
• Bero Honored
A Li a Beach High School senior will be honored at Wednesday'i City
Council meeting when he is presented an award by the mayor for aavina' the
life of a fellow swimmer.
Earle Wellsfry, of 1110-Creacent Bay Drive, bas been ~aelected .by Gov.
Ronald Reagan to receive tM Yoong California Merit Award for'Bravery. Weils-
fry, who works part time for the Laguna Beach. llfeg,jai'd ''6rv1Ce: was swim·
ming at Crescent Biy on Feb. 6, 19&9, whr.n one of bis companJorns began yell·
ing for heJp. YOWi£. Wellsfry responded to the criea and helped the boy back
to 11hore.
Judge Clears Five Girl s
On Prostitution Charges
Five women have been cleared in Santa
Ana municipal court of prostitution
charge.s filed by Oran1e County Sherifrs
officers.
Judge Paul Ma.st cleared Barbara Jean
BayJOr, 15, and Di:rie Lee Matrisciano, 30,
both of Santa Ana and Loree Isenberg,
35, Mary Agnes Nielson , 34, and Gwen
Patricia Worthington, 22, all of Anaheim.
He continued until April 26 the
preliminary hearing for Newport Beach
contractor Henry W. Sprague. 51. of &4
Beacon Bay. He is accused of procuring
end conspiracy to commit prostitution
and is free on $6,250 bail.
Freed on their promise to return April
26 were Rena Sherry Andrews, 24, North
Hollywood, Elaine Komara, 29, of
Anaheim and Beverly Ann Poehlman. 24,
()f Cypress. All are charged 'With
prostitution. ...
Sprague and the eight "O!MD 'trel'e
me:1'!<1 after -lifttlan of the
Executive Escort Service all e I e d I y
Operated by the contractor from office•
at 2192 Dupont St., Irvine.
Officers allege Sprague arranged dates
for "S<>phisticated executives" and made
Nixon May Visit
Camp Pendleton
To Gree t Troops
Hints by Pn!sidenlial aldes 1rose today
en the chances of a vWt to the South
Coast by President Nixon within the. out
few weeks.
The President was reported planning a
visit to b'oops of the lst Marine Division
at Camp Pendleton where t h e
Leathernecks will be procwed aftu
their re turn from Vietnam combat.
The first members of the division were
expected this weekend at the huge base.
but the Presidential visit, if any, would
not be until later, his spokesmen said.
The Pre.$ident planned to spend lhia
weekend at Camp David, Md.
The reports of the impending visit
~orrespond to some comments made by
the President's staff during the last visit
to San Cle mente several weeks ago.
A! they left for Washington. several
members of the staff mentioned a return
vhiit in early May.
Orange
\\'eatlaer
hiJ girla: available on an "o• -c~" basis
for wJgnmenU throughoot tlle county.
·Copfiscated1by of~rs at the time ·of
the arrest was a quantity of glossy
business cards, all bearing the legend:
"Executive Escort Ser\rice -150
beautiful foxy girls for your dating
plea.sure."
Education Vote
Turnout Va ried
In Lag una Beach
Early morning voter turnout in the
Laguna Beach ldlool election ranged
fl'C!W tieavy ~ DM'tll encl1of tawn ti Ugh~ but 1tea'ily in th< ""th and on tlle
blltops. -
At th• El Morro SChciOi pollfni JSlace. ii
earlybird voters tumta 1.lP In the flnt
three houn after the j>olls opentd.
At Fashion Gallery . in Boat Canyon
\'Oters were dt!scribed u "coming in by
droves" with more than\ 100 votes cast
early by the large combined precinct's
1,500 voters.
Turnout was lighler at the Aliso School
pollina: place in South Laguna, with only
S6 of a potential 1,000 votes cast ill tbe
first part of the morrunc.
At Top o( the World School, 49 of a
possible 600 votes had been cast early,
but in both locations bwiineas was
deacribed by precinct workers as
"steady."
The polls will remain open until I p.m.
to aCCQITlroodate commuters and tbe
usual llpSW'Je in v0Un1 is expected in the
evening aa workers return home.
Laguna to Off er
Late Vote Tally
Laguna Beach Unified School District
offices at 550 Blumont St. will remain
open this evening until final school board
election results an in.
Superintendent William Ullom aaid
today, two telephones wilt be in servict..
Ullom said penom wishing to learn the
wte results may call the district nwnbf:r,
4M-3546 after 9:30 p.m.
Of£iclal vote tally will be made by the
County Registrar of Vote.rs office In
Santa Ana, but this is: not expected to be
complete unti,I ear.ly Wednesday morning.
However, local f'eS:U]\s will be posted
outside each j>olling 11Iace as soon u
precinct worke.ra complete their hand
count after the polls close at 8 p.m. and
this tally will be available at the dislrict
office. ·
Boys Admit
Crucifixion
Of Infant
SAN" FRANCISCO tUP!) -Police aald
today one of two young boys held in the
crucifixion death of 1 20-monUHlld infant
has admitted tbe baby was bit twlct with
a brick and then wired to a makeshift
cross "so.be couldn'l get away."
"We didn't"Want ·to get caught," aaid
the 7-year.()Jd boy,. held in "protective
custody" It San Francisco Juvenile Hall
with his.lit-year-old. brother in the death
of Noab..A1ba· in a dina basement last
week.
DAILY PILOT ll•ff ..,.._
-~ .•
.a1
Larg~_-Qr~
Haul Found
.
Actlng on an lnfonnant'1 tip, Laguna
Beach narcoUca offlcer:I Mond•y broke
up an alleged U D laboratory by
arreaUng three ~ll! and eontiteltlng
dangerous drugs with an estini&ted
.. streft value" of more lban $100.m
One of the men taken lntO ~ by
the agenta was. de!!C'!'!brd by -
.. rcollcs.in•"llil-·S(L Nell ·Purcell u
a "majcr LSD dealer" in the am.
Juvenile inspector Dln•DriacoD nld tbt
younger boy led officers to the basement
"clubhouse" Mooday when the body cf
the infant was'found, bound and Wired to
a cross m1de of scrap lumber, with a red
cord around bis neck, both wrists and his
ankles.
DETECTIVES SURVEY MATERIALS SEIZED IN LAG.UNA RAID
Officers Neil Purcell •nd John Saporito Log Items
The arrests took place al abcNt 1:45
p.m. at 1480 Bluebird Canynri Drive.
officers Aid., after an informant weot to
the "'"" and allegedly purchased JOO
..hits" or doses of U D In blotter form.
Pur«U said u;o is often 110ld 1n the form
of drops on a piece of paper, thus the
term "blotter acid."
The infant was wllh his mother, Mrs.
Larry Alba, in Atta Vista City Park tu•
Wednesday, when he sud d enly
diJappe&red. Pollce were led to ~ two
young suspects -.who may be ao·young
that police were umure what charge -if
a~y -could be lodged 111inst them,
through reports from witnesses.
Supreme Court Upholds
The three penono taken Into custody
were Identified by police as Roger Alq
Woods, 21, and Karen Marie Lunsford, 23,
both of the Bluebird Cinyon Drive
address, and John Bryan Bishop, 19, of
34<182 Calte He...,..., 'Dana Poinl, TbeL
are each being held in lieu cil lltl.QOI/ bai .
They were queaUon.ing pare.nl3 of
aqother bey about a routine corDplaint
that be had"be.aten'up a child in·the. park
Raciat ·Balance Devices Police claim the drug, confilcat.ed
from the home included a vial contalnlng . . .
when .the parents nld, ""l',ll bet it WU w••u~GTON (U"l) Tb Su !hose -)lo11: Tbey'!e lr<Mllilemakm ~· • r ·-e· pr=e ali«•tlliY'Jf'~~···p~·· ~ ·-~~lir1~,~r.--DrilcoD 0 Wd 11heft. -to pUjdl<'pllrlil( Md o1ior -a •'rKlil Ememl'~~ ,!l'here'1llf· 7-year-cild i1 bllADCinjf lltVkel ·to stamp· our• tcboo\
•·pupil/. -T ""•tliolt blm WI II d I ar<euoo . . . ' iclioo&.· , .' ,,
DriscoU iaid the officer1 were . taking The nt:W .gWdelirlff •were-spelled out ln.
the boy baQ. to tbe park·aod when lhty four opinions wrltten by Olief Justice neare.~ ttit location of the basement Wa.rren'E. Burger. They also sanctioned
''clubboU!e, .. asked blm: a cerWn amount or·dellbe:rately impoeed
."If you-were a P,Oliceman where-would racial balancing lf needed to eliminate
you k>Ok?"' ' ' • "all vtstige,a: of 1 t ._ t e • l·m,p o 1 e-d•''
:Driscoll aald _the boy 1Ui1ested rvariOUJ 1egreg11tion,. · · .
locat.lons, and the8 aaid, "Look, the door ~esident .Nixon his declared bimaeU
to that basement is •open ," · opposed to extreme desegregat.iorl 1teps
Officers went· in· and fou.nd tbt ·nude sui:h as mtSsive bu.sing . or largwcale
body, partfally covered with sheets · assignments to achieve. a racJafbalance.
flannel material and ll:fap1 of wallpaper: Nixon said on March 24, 1970, that
DriscOJl nid Iha inf~ had been struck "positive integration does~ nece"8fily
several times with a brick, apparently have to result in racial ·balance."
jumped on, poked with a &tick, choked throughout a school system.
with a rope a.Dd then bound onto ·the In arguments ·before the · court last
cross. year. Solicitor General Er.win IGrjlWOld
DrillCOII said the 7-year-old al)(! his advocated the Pruldent's concept of
brother, both white, wen "pl11ying a.
game" with the baby, the YoU111er boy
said.
''My brother had a brick In his hand,"
DriMXlll quoted the boy as 1aylng. "The
brick fell and hit the boy on the head.
Then my brother was: poundillg on the
mattrt:as there in the basement and lbe
brick fell again .. , "
An autopsy was held today and the case
remanded to Juvenile Judge Francis
Mayer, who will make t.be. deci.&l.on on
what action should be taken.
Dri&COU said It wu oot known whether
the boys were aware the baby had been
fatally injured, but that t.be infant was
dead_ soon after ther, left the clubhouse if
nut at that ·time. ·
Officers 1aid their first le.ad came from
John Mowry, 23, a 'Printer, who .had
talked to the Infant's .frantic mother in
the park the afternoon be disappeared.
. Mowry said be had seen two young
white boys with an Infant and 'they told
him, "We think be'• lost." Mowry'•
description of the two boys ml!tched that
of the suspects, and their namt:.!I were
then secured from the parent& of the boy
police talked tO' Monday.
Joseph Preston
Services Slat~d
Graveside fun~ral servlcts will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday for JORph B.
Preston. a longtime Laguna Beach resi·
dent who died Saturday in Costa Mesa.
He was 59.
The services will be conducted at
Fairhaven Memorial Park by Rev. Paul
Klueter of the Neighborhood Conartaa·
tional Church.
Mr. Preston, who lived at 685 Oak St.,
la survived by his wife, Peggy : a son,
S&ephen of Corona del Mar.; a· daughter,
Mn. C.rol Lobo of Laguna Niguel ; a
brother, .George of Santa Ana •al'd two
1isten:, Mr!. Evelyn Zillgetf of Balboa
Jstand and Mrs. Lorraine Doster of Santa
Ana.
Mr. Preston, 1 · nati\'e of the state of
Washington, had lived in the Art Colony ·
fCR' 23 years and wu employed by
Laguna Towinr Service.
. abcNI four onnct1 of liquid LS)>, 100
pitc.s of condy . dosed -LSD, 135 4'nelgbborhood acbool1" a1 tbe bne for "hit.a" of blotter ac1d and m)a1i
cr:-~~:!i.:t" ?;:n"lu::.~~~~tl»~lta~d • . < he' ~ fro1fl Iii< fOID" OUll<tl of LSD ~l pupil palrtng and, oUuir !llelN ml(ll>I 111\1~ a slnMfa "llll" ltllls for IZ O. flit
be uJed ln ~me CIBeJ: " ~' WJcft n r.teir-M • ,. • . ·
But the Burger opinions armed the In a~IUon, offlttr1 lmCOVered a
Jawer ·federal court.s and 1 ch o o I padlocked, woodtn cliest tiurted tn1 the
tho •• b d ,_ back yaid of the home 'Which a~ au ritles wiu1 J'()I powm to bruif conta(J1ed two paunda of marlful:\\.14 a
about -gregalion. . 11111&1! alnoUnl of LSD and a qua!ltftl of
He saJd In the tt}ajor:oplnion : "Having mescafine in b ot b p o·wd e r~e d bd
once IOIUld a. viotaUon, the district judge cryst<Jl!ed fonn.
--• I ••· ·ti • \d •-Sgl Pllrcell, accompanied by Sptelal or lfl;uoo auuivr1 ea S•iou malH)'. tv~ Eftforcement Division ofrtcerS JObn
effort to achJeve the greatelt poaalble Saporito and Tom Reeder, went to the
degree or actual desegregation, taking residence foUowlng the infonnant'a
into account the practJcalities of the alleged -drug buy, J>()llce aald. When-the
situation. <lfficerS' entered the home, Purcell
•• A district court may and lhould claimed . Woodl .. w•s found in the
consider all available l e e h n I q•u e 1 bathroom pourlh& Uqa!d from a vial down
lnclµding re&tructurlng of attendance ' the tollt.t.
zones and' both contiguous a n d Woods immed'laf.ely dropped the <Vial
noncoritlguous tttendance tones. Into die toilet1 'PurctII old, and! Jt wat
"The measure of any desegregation recovered by agents. Purcell' u.ld a
plan Is its effectiveness." . RCOlld vial, allegedly containing the four
Some key guidelines were 1pelled out ln ounces of LSD, wu found ln the bedrcom
1 case Involving the C h a r I o t t e • o£ the house a.long "'1tb eye droppen and
MeckJenburg,.N.C., scbool sys t.em where beakera.
a federal district judge ordered a number Purcen ukf th& auspecta h a d
of the disputed methods to be used, apparently been in the procts& of
including busing. preparing more ':hits'• of the drug when
The court also struck down a North ofnttts arrived. He clalmed 135 doltl
Carolina law which prohibited busing to had already been put Onto a plete of
achieve forced integration. paper.
Burger said transfers were an integral Purcell a.id after the offleel"I entered
part ot many desegregation plans and "to the home, they walted with \be three
be effective such a transfer anangemenl suspects until .a search warrant CQUld be
muat grant the tranaferrin1 stuudenl free obtained from. the dlatrtct attorney'•
tranaJlO':tation." office. Once tht ·warrant was laued, tbe
The court also upheld zone pairings and investigator 111d-the agents scoured the
a certain amount of deliberately impoted premises and tdlk tbe three auspects into
"racial balance" lf needed to elim\J1ale cu~~&; said \he trio ls·to be arraigned
"all festlgea o1 state· Im Posed'' Wednesday on charges of poaseasion of ~~~n. authorities have w 1 d e danierous df'Ult wllh intent io sell. ln
di>cretli>n 1n·iormutaUng ocl!ool poll'"," addition, Woodl b to be tiJar,&e.d with ~ salta of LSD, police llid. Burger wrote, "and , as a matter .of
eduCaUonal policy school authorities may
well conclude · that aome kind ·ot recial
balance·tn· the schools la desirable quite
apart from any constitutlo·oal
reqtilrements." ·
"H0wevu," Burger said, "lf a ataie.
Tbose tow cloud& are geUing ~
gelher Wednesday •. and that me.ans
a c h a n c e of acattered ahower1
ovemight. Temperatures are tab-
bed in the ~73 degree tan&e.
Thrown From Car Impelled limltaUon oo a tchool authority'•
discreUOn~operate.!J .to inhibit or obstruct
the aperaUon of a unitary school system
or impede the disestablishing of a dual
school l)lltem, It must fall."
College :Tenure
Report S\ated
The prt1iiltnt' of tile 5addlebaek
Community .Coller• board ot1rusteea will
present · a tenure c:Oihnnttee't report
Wednesday to • U... atate) Board of
Governors tneetln1 1n Los Angeltt.
INSIDE TODAY
Somtthing old and something
new are in the offing for local
drama fa'IU on two Orange Coast
5Wge& this week. See Enttrtain-
ment, Page 19.
CfHMn1i. ' ·-,.,.
C~fdc:l!>f U• " M~•l ,_, " Cl•Hlllwll "" NlllfMI N.wt •• Cemkt " Ot•llt• c-ty ' Crtn"rll " ·-, .. ,,
Deltll N•lkn • llillcll Mll'lllh 1•11
Ol~•n:u • T•1'¥hltlt " SlflffMI ~ ... • , ....... lf.1'
Sntert•lll-' , .. " WM-• ....... "'' 1•11 ~·tN-lt-U ......... " .... -... .......... ..
Lag0:nan Hu.rt • Ill
A Laguna Beach woman Is Jn fair con-
dition today In Costa M•a Memorial
Hospital after she was thrown from her
car In a crash Monday in Newport Beach.
Police said Jill Ma rgaret Nofiiger, "·
<Jf 139 McAulay Place, was traveling
eastboond on Palisades Road when her
car collided with a car driven by Samuel
L. Hudgins, 46, of llKl Omega Drive,
. '· Santa Ala at· the interaectkln nf Jam-
boree Road. ·
Miss Nofzlger, a llfetlJnt Lag\lna res!·
dent, ts well known in the Art Colony u 1
member of the Oivlc Ballet and a
performer at the Laguna Pl1ybousc..
She was on her way to a cll11 al UC
Irvine ·When the accident occurred. She
sufftred a broken collar bone, <»ncuslkln
and facial lnjudoa41 lhe • ., -•
Crash . "State policy mpa:t giv1 wa~ wlien Jt
operates to hlnder -vb1dieatlon of federal
conitlluUonat guaranteet," Burrer. niled.
through the wlndshleld. 1 or11cer. ••Id tbe'lmpad<o1 lhe eo1u.1on Ac.tor Calhoun · 'W;ed'
threw1 her .out of• her car whfc?h \ tbeJt.. • ' · rol~ over her. Hudglnt' car tlso roUe:I • W VEGAS. Jfev .. tUPi) :.._Actor "kor,
in the crash. caJhotm. 4 , and Sli5811 Langley. 29,. a fludt~ 1uffered·minor\ ~l!ll'iu.•·to ·· forme=· tnllan. joornallst and.,now a
tll• fact he was "'~'inl a seat,~I~ Holt wnlir. wer& ~led !fOOjliy pol~ uld.,Cause-of the-erilh wlitdi oc-at. • • • !jig "chapel on th< Lu v,gas
curred .et ,f:.45 p.m. 11....WI •under Jll..~ ".Ulp." lt·was Utt attond marriage for
veKJa:aUon. tacb.
ltan1 Vogel,· who~ slit ·on the ad hoc
tenure committee, 1will recominend a
plan where.by 10 cau.<t "Instant tenure ..
will be abolilhed In the COlll!llUnllJ
colleg... II would be r.pjacod Wider lho
plan ~y ,a period or 'tWo iU'*' durint whlcn • taculty meq)~ mv be
dismlased by a ao'iemlng board wlllloul
oro.ludlco. · · ti the atata Boar'd. of Governcn adOPtl
the committet't recommendlUon., tlll
pion will still requlnt lqllloUva actloa
be/ore lmplementatlon. -. •
Be Sure to Vote T()dfly; Polls OpCn . Till 8
1
\ • l ! ' -•
I J -DAILY PILOT _,.,., A"'1 20, 1'71
Niguel Man Gets
Curriculum Post
Carrot! "'Bud'' CrrlghtDrt, Research and
CommunicaUoni specialist w l t h the
Orqe County Department of Education
?in been named to the Callfornia
CllrrloUluin Commission.
Crti&bton, 49, of 24&12 CalJe Vleja,
Lagima Nl&uel ia the second Oran1e
County educator to be named to the
statewide commission wlth a primary
function of advising the State Board of
Education on all matters concerning
curriculum, te1tbook adoptions and
framework development.
Dr. R,us sell Parks, retired
superintendent or the F u 11 e r t o n
Elementary School District ls the other
county rettdent oc the-.tate commission.
He hu been a member for seven years.
Crtighton replaces Dr:. Vern Hinze,
assistant superintendent of the Long
Beach City School!, who bu ju.I
completed a four-year term on the
commission.
Creighton has been with the county
Department of EducaUon for four years.
Prior to his current position he was .
Social Science Coordlnator. He earned bis
BA degree . at the University of
W.uhlngtoo. bis MA degree at the
Univenity of Redlands and is presently
enioolled in tbe doctoral program at the
Unlvers.ity of Southern Cllifornia.
Crelghtoa bellevea the 12 members of
the it.ate curriculum comm.baton art a
"mix" of coase.l,'Valive.t and liberal!.
Pr!yloµl)y1 before appOlntees .of ~ov.
Ronald Reagan o~talned 1 ma1ority on
commlaaJOo, Creighton sald It wu Jabt~
ed-u "very liberal"
He conalden himself a "mil." "I am a
COlllet'.VaUve on economica but liberal on
IOmt other facets Of education," he
enlalned.
One of Creighton's 11goaL!I" during his
com.lni f~·year term ii to put
California acboolJ oo the "open adopUon''
Policy ol Jutbook .. 1ect100.
At the Ntse.Dl time California is one of
23 1tates with a "closed adoption" policy
tn which all texts must be approved at
the sta~ level. In addition, thla state
requlm lhat all textl bt printed In lhe
atate printing office.
''Many publlsblng houses will not lease
tholr prlnUng plates to the state ao
studentS here do not have the benefU of
many fine texlbOoks," Creighton alleges.
Be 'lllyi lie lhlnVslnOlt inembtrt ol lhe
curriculum commlsalon favor the open
adop~ poljcy but tt will ~ aome ,lime
tn COmint as new legislation will be
needed and the 1""11 tiJne lradJUon of
atate prinlina must be ellmlnated. He
believes the cost factor will be lower in
the Jong run.
Creighton added that the closed
adoptlog policy in th• state d... not
apply to high school dlatrlcta, onJy
elementary.
He 1ay1 lbe..i: advantaie of the open
Akim Postoway
Services Held
' . Funeral services were h.eld this a£·
ternooo for Akim Postoway, a naUve of
Russia and Laguna .Beach resident M"bo
died Saturday at the age of-'3.
The services were conduc\ed In Corona
del Mar at Pacific View Memorial Chapel
by Rev. Henry Gerhard of the Church of
Religious Science. Interment followed at
Pacific View Memorial Park.
Mr. Postoway, wbo Uved at 29M Alpine
Way. is survived by a daughter, Mn.
Louise Sedoff of Laguna Beach: two sons,
Paul and Henry, both of Michigan,; five
grandchildren and three I r e a t
grandchildten.
DAILY PILOT
ORANG:! COAST "31..l$MIHO COMPANY
lteb•l't N. w ••• ,,.._ ..... Publlt""'
J,~\ •. C11rlt't
'Vi<t P~ol.,I Nd ~II M-.it'
n.om1t Kt1¥il
EllllOI'
n.~11 A. Mv•ploi11t
,,._,"" ldllDI'
C~tr11t H. leo1 Ai'"'"' P. Nill
AMi.....: lilllflttlflf EtllO.-.
L .. -IMUOffk•
lll Fe1•i't A~•""'
M1lllrtt ,4.i,1ut P.O. le•'''· 92•52
S-Cl•••-'• Offk• JOS North ll C1""i~o At1!, t2l72
adoption policy ls that each 11ebool
district in the state may evaluate or
purchase any material as it sea fit.
Usually there is a course or study set
down by the .state board t() be used as a
guide.
C:apo Ilistriet
Voters Brave
C:old Weather
Despite cold, clamp weather earl1
loday along the SOUtb coast, volm bqon
arrivlna at the polls Jn the Capistrano
Unified School District In encouragln&
numbers.
In spot chectl of several precincts in
the area about nine percent of the ellglble
voters had turned out by midmorning.
The rate wu cooalderably better in San
Clemente, where cltlzens have an added
measure on their ballot -1 four·part
parks and recreation bond J s 1 u e
amounting to •t mlllion.
The combined preclncl at Q)ncordia
Elementary School bad the highest
turnout among the precincts checll:ed
with 125 ballots cast among the 1,100
eligible voters. Workers at th e
trad1Uonally active prtclnct reported the
fi()W all "steady."
Amoog five precincts checked, 4T/
ballots had been cut among 5,698
poMible.
Some qualified observers said they
e1pectecl about a · 51).percent turnout
during today's school district and bond
elections.
The weather began clearing before
noon. generally a plus factor in
encouraging ciUzens to cast their ballot!.
Five Capistrano Unified School District
seats are up for election today , plus the
bond issue for San Clemente voters only.
Th r e e posltiOllll on the Saddleback
Community College Board of Trustees
also will be filled in today's voting.
The polls will remain open until I
o'clock tonight.
Tustin District
T~rnout Li~ht
Voter turnout this morning for the
Tultln. Union High School District board
election was light at polling places
surveyed by 11 a.m.
ElecUon watchers in Mission Viejo
speculated the rain may have dampened
the spirits of some voters. Tbe La Paz
elementary school polls showed only 41 of
l,400 registered voters turning out.
Laguna Hill! reported "about one
percent of tbe eligible voters" had voted
by 10:30 a.m. today -54 of a total 783
assigned to vote at the Valencia School
polls.
Irvine School Jn East Irvine reported
only 20 of 845 had cast their ballots and
University Park Elementary School
election observers reported only SO of a
possible 738 bad voted.
Voters In th~ precincts also voted in
thf San Joaquin Elementary District
Saddleback Community College district
trustee races.
Trustees to Get
Salary Proposal
Representatives of the Laguna Beach
school board will meet tonight with
spokesmen for the district's Certificated
Employe Council to receive proposal! for
1971-72 teacher salary schedules.
The a p.m. meeting in the district
board room, MO Blumont St., ls open to
the public.
Trustees Mrs. Jane Boyd and Dr.
Nonnan Browne will represent the board
and the administration will b e
represented by Superintendent William
Ullom and Business Supeii.ntendent
Charles HeSB.
The teachers' proposals will be
rorwan:led to the full school board which
will consider them in an e:iecutive ses·
sion April 27 then set a date for a joint
meeting with Council representatives.
""'" .. ,. .ttfllt •• ,.,. VIEW 'FROM OANA POINT SHOWS PROGRESS ON HEADWALKS, SLIPS
Approxlm1tefy 200 Are Expected To 81 R11dy For Occupincy By May 15
Boat Parking A vailahle
First Dana Cove Marina Slips lristalled in Harbor
First boat slips at new Dana Cove
Marina lD Dana Polnt Harbor have been
installed and will be ready for occupancy
May 15.
Robert Dahlberg, prealdent of Marine
CapftaJ Inc. of Newport Beach, said some
200 slips are belng installed in the flrst
p}lase if the harbor'• development, whJch
includes Dana Cove . Marina on the
landside and Dana lsland Marina on the
seaside.
"Almost hali of the 1428 slips in Dana
Cove Marina and Dana Jsland Marjna
have been reserved," Dahlberg said,
adding th.at reservations have come from
as far away as Alaska and Hawaii.
The balance of the boat slips will be
Installed at the rate of approximately 100
per month until compleUon in March of
Rules Committee Okays
Newport VoteAmendment
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 1"-D•l11 PIM! Staff
SACRAMENTO -The Assembly Rule s
Committee today voted a "Do Pass"
~commendatlon on a Newport Beach
City Charter amendment which would
require a vote of the people on any future
freeway route agreements.
The vote by the Assembly panel was 3
yes, t no, 3 absent. Assemblyman Robert
W. Burke (R-HunUngton Beach) cast the
lone no vole.
The cities of Costa Mesa and
Huntington Beach had f o r w a r d e d
re!Olutions to the rules committee asking
that Newport's Charter amendment,
approved by city voters, be rejected.
The proposed amendment now goes to
the floor of the full Assembly, probably
somelime late today, for a , vote on
ratification. It must also be ratified by
the California. Senate.
Assemblyman Burke vowed today that
Capo Trustees
OK Procedures
For Code Group
Procedures for the formation of a dress
code committee have been approved by
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School
District.
A plan suggested by San Clemente High
School principal Darrel Taylor was ap-
proved Monday and will provide a dress
code committee much like last year's.
he would fight against the ratification on
the floor of hoth houses.
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R-
Newport Beach) introduced the
amendment to the rules committee this
morning, clting the BS percent favorable
vote It bad received in a special election
in Newport Beach.
Only four of the seven members of the
rules committee were present for this
morning's hearing.
Voting for the favorable report were
assemblymen John L. Burton (D.San
Francisco), committee chairman; Ray E.
Johnson (R..chlco), vice chairman and
Ernest N. Mogley (R·Fresno ).
Burke cast the Jone dissenting vote.
Absent from the session we re
assemblymen John P. Quimby ( [}.
Rialto), Leo J. Ryan (D-South San
Francisco) and L. E. Townsend (IJ..
Gardena).
Burke then introduced resolutions
adopted Monday night by both the Costa
f\.1esa and Hwitington Beach city councils
urglng rejecllon of the amendment.
He also cited an opinion from the
legislative counsel's office that forecast
the court! would likely declare the
amendment unconstitutional if a legal
challenge were raised.
Opponents or the measure contend the
residents of a single municipality do 11ot
have the authority to vote on a matter
of statey.•ide concern, such as the state
highway system.
A member of Burke's staf f said
committee members, in adopting the
favorable recommendation. pointed out-
that the committee has never before
taken a negative stance on a city's
proposed chatter change.
1972, Dahlberg said .
As the slips are finished, those who
have made reservations are being
notified by mail of the estimated
occupancy date. Additional s I i p
information may be obtained by calling
Marine Capital at 540-3623.
Dana Point Harbor will have a total
investment of $16 million in public funds
and $10 million in private mQney for
development of concessions, Dahlbera:
said. The Marina is being developed at a
cost of $4.2 million.
Among the features of the landscaped
landside Marina facilities will be eight
lavatory units which will inc I u de
machines for washing and drying clothes;
parking for approximately J,200 cars and
convenient pumpoul stations. Each sli p
\\-'ill have a storage locker, outlets: for
fresh water, electrlcity and telepbane.
Deck surface areas are of non-slip
concrete.
Slips will accommodate sail and
power boats from 20 to 60 ft. in length.
Regular slips will rent for $1.90 per boat
foot. Pitchforks and end ties will rent tor
$2.25 per ft.
Marine Capital Inc. of Newport Beach
is t.he managing partner o( Dana Point
Marina Company. Dana Point Marina
Company, Owner a'nd builder of the·
Marina, is a parl.nership composed at
Marine Capital Inc. and Allsoo Realty Co.
of Newport Beach and Pr o 1 p e c t
California Co. of Hartford, Connecticut.
Boat slips have been designed,
manufactured and inst a 11 e d by
Huntington Engineering Corp. o f
Huntington Beach. The noats are of
lightweight reinforced concrete with
styro[oam core.
Killer Receives
Execution Stay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The
California Supreme Court Monday stayed
the execution of convicted slayer William
Dale Archerd, which hsd been scheduled
for Wednesday .
The court said the stay would be in
effect until a U.S. Supreme Court
decision i.s delivered in another California
dea th penalty case.
Archerd y,•as convicted in Los Angeles
of three count! of first degree murder in
the death of two wives and a IS-year-old
nephew by means of insulin injections.
W ALI{ SOFfLY!
WWilAce~
'
To Restore
Zero Plane
By JOANNE R&YNOLDS
Of ... o.llf ,. .... """
Three World War U U.S. Navy ace
pilots -lnc:Jl&ding a .Corona 4el Mar
resident -are com.pleUog plans to
restore a rare enemy plane wbich wu
found aunt in a ·faclfic lagooa.
Capt. Mll'lball U. Beebe (USN-r<i.), of
219 Lark.spur Ave., t1a(d today that he and
his two colleagues, Cdr. Eugene Valencia
IUSN·ref.) or 'Cbula Vista and James
French of BakersCleld plan to rebuild a
Japanese Zero for display in the Fighter
Pilots Hall of Valor at the San Dieg()
Aerospace Museum.
Beebe said the fight.er is only Gne of
two or lhree in existence, and lt tqok the
trio about five years to find ·it and get it
to th1a country.
The three men are all members of the
American Fighter Ace Association and
between them shot down 45 Japanese
planes.
Beebe~ since retirement from active
duty, works as a broker for mutual funds
and handles real estate projects io
Corona del Mar. French said the book.
"The Bridges at Toko-Ri'' was dedicated
to Beebe who commanded the squadron
on whlch James Michener's Korean War
novel was based.
"U I had known 7.eroes were so hard
to get back, I don't think I would have
shot them down," French quipped.
Beebe said they wanted a Zero for the
museUIJl to be displayed with American
fighters such as the P-40 and the Navy
Hellcat.
"We put out advertisements and wrote
letters and about 18 months later, we got
a reply from the HarbOr Master in
Rabaul, New Gui11ea."
In September of 1970, they had . the
plane pulled from 70 feet of water off
Rabaul where it bad Jain for about 28
years. And after several months of red
tape delays, the plane was crated and
shipped via Air Force transport to the
Bakersfield aircraft hangar owned by
French.
Beebe said they will restore the plane
there with the hope of getting it airborne
again. "If that proves to be impractical,
then we'll build a flying replica ," be said.
Zeroes are extremely rare, Beebe said,
because of the American government's
policy of destroying all. enemy munitions
at the end or World War JI.
"They took whole shiploads of Zeroe;ci
and dwnped them out in the ocean. At
the time, oo one was particularly con·
cerned with saving a dozen or so for
museums," he explained.
As pilots during those years, Frencti
shot down l l Japanese fighters, Beebe
was credited with 101,, and Valencia wa!
the Navy's third ranking aee with 23
scores. A pilot must shoot down five
enemy aircraft to earn ace status.
Beebe said the Japanese government
has one of the Zeroes on display and the
Canadians are restoring one for display,
"and there's supposed to be one at the
Smithsonian Institution but apparently
it's not displayed.
He said they are uncertain how long it
will take to get the plane rebuilt, but he
estimated at least six months to a year
for the work.
"Actually it looks terrible because it's
all covered with sea life, but ifs all in
one piece," he said.
The plane was in good enough shape
that when they, got it out of the water, the
men were able to locate its serial number
and trace the pilot.
Valencia, a television producer who Is
writing a book on air aces, found the
pilot, Seltiien Shibayma, by checking the
Zero's serial number against Japanese
squadron assignments.
Shibayama reported he had engine
trouble on Nov. 11, 1943, and, as quoted
by Valencia , was "looking at my gauges
when I was hit and my engine stopped for
good." Shibayama said he escaped and
swam to shore as the Zero sank.
Each member or the board of trustees
has been asked to appoint two community
members. Those interested in serving on
a dress code committee are invited to
contact a trustee and volunteer their
services.
Other members of the committee wiU
be studenll Kelly Devlin, Kelly Smith,
sophomores; John Engstrom, Chris
Lidke, juniors: Clark Jarrett, Diane
Smetona, seniors; teachers, Mrs. Carol
Walker and Randy MeCoy. a Tl d
administrators Mrs. Barbara McCarthy
and John Smart.
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive.
Marco Forster Junior High will be
asked to recommend two present eighth
graders and one seventh grader. One
junior high administrator also will be on
the committee.
Board members serving on the
committee will be t>r. Robert Beasley
and Robert Hurst. -""'"' coii. Mew: ~ wnr ••Y St~' J.l.-t 91K_~: JlZ "'-f ao.,, ..... trl
......,.llltWI ...01 ll'P$ a-'! 8"Jrtfl Big Bend Property Owners.
Seek Laguna Annexation
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how these mater i a Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
regardless of where you buy it, don't expect too much. WALK
VERY SOFTLY!
Laguna Beach may soon be 150 acre."
-~arter-thaa it Is today -that ls if the
city counc-11 ind the Local Agency
Formation Commission (LAFC) decide tG
approve a request to add the Laguna
Can)'on parcel to the clty.
City administrative o!Ucer Al\·in 0.
Autry presented the plannin& commission
with the plans for annexaUon. which is
be i ng headed by the Te lonicll
CorporaUon, 2l282 Laguna Canyon Road,
along with several lesser property
ownert, in the Big Brnd area.
Autry explained that the profl'MY
o~·ners "'ant to join the c:Uy to avail
I
themselves or city sewers and police and
fire protection. He said that the cost of
extending existing sewer lines to tht area
would be borne by the property owners.
Some 20 dwelling units and 40 persons
are in the area, Autry St'lid, but the land
is stUl clas.'iiried as "uninhabittd'' &nd
the anne1atlon procedure Is n o t
complicated.
The plartnlng commi~sion approved the
app\lcalion to be sent to the city counc:H
Wednesday nl3hl ror consideration. If the
councU favor11bly acts on the request. It
will go to the LAFC, then back to the Clly
Council for public hearings. , '
SANTA AHA. ORANOL
TUSTIN C:.11 • , •
ALDIN'S
RID HILL CAltPITI
& DRAPIRfll
llU74 trvln•• TU•tln, Cal. .... ....
..
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
(
17
.. ~ --
•
Sa~ ~lemente
Ca EDl!r1ION
. -.
VOL:. bl, NO. 94, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAG~ ORANGE COUNTY, C>!'.!FORNIA TUESD:A:Y, APRll 20, :197 f
·-
• •
Toda)''•: Ft.al
-.
N.1:" •. Steeb .
-.
. JEN aNTS
Huge Clemente Tract Future Bef~re · Co~eil
San Clemente planning commi&sioners'
l'f:COmmendation far denial of a
aubdiv:lsion tract map for one o1 the
largest local boosing development. in
recent years will receive ils firlt
etpoaure before city co,uncilmt.n
Wednelday.
Councilmen are expecled to set a date
for their own bearing on the major
proposal by the IAlglass Pacific Corp,
whkh seeks approval for . t w I n
condomlni.wn developments and e!ltale-
ilze ·lbta on nearly 300 acres of land
commonly known as the Rumus.sen-Ayer
property.
Access to the wui;:el bas proved lhe
moot cootrovenial aspect of the pn>ject.
COmmllllonm 'Wt week denied the
tract map f<t' that reason alone, they
' sai<I. Commissionefs.,disagreed with the
acces!I choice by the developers, who
sought to extend and · widen Lo!!
Bautiamos Lane through the city-owlied
golf course, changing the alignment or
some play areas.
The access q~~ drew· acorea ol
.
resldenta to planning c o m m 11 1 i o n
hearings to oppose the project
Moil of the opponenb to the Lof
Bautls:mos acceu issue agreed they bad
few lf1 any adverse comments on the
development of the acreage it.self.
A llJaster plan for1U\e Douglass Patific
proj~t lw won approval from ~
planners:
Other items on the cruncil's agenda for
the 7:30 p.m. meeting include :
-A · routine request from the· San
c1meote Cbamber·ol c.mmerce. oeeldpg
•
pel'lJ'llssion for the use of s o u n d
amplifying equipment at four· teparate
locaboos &big the route of tbe·Fi<sta La
O>risUalllta P.111de, plua.J>lua 'Pork.for
the Wftkend of July IS, 17 and•!~
-A letter from R. B. Qopley .,..king
c;.,t.y permfW111' fO'( the transfer of hill
l"Onlract for the Surfer Number Two
concession on a city beach to new
owners. John and Gloria McLachlan.
-A letter from the Backyard Ecology
Gf'O\IP of· San qlemente asking the •city to
bk•,....,-• piloL !OC)lcliq .pn>sram !or
••
old newspaJ,ers.
-Continuation of stu.dy on ~ propo.sal
from GoU Toon, Inc. wbkh .-u to
include the munlclpal golf ·COUJ'leo into a
program offering diSClj>unts in golf·f~a to
members of a apeclal 'P!tp, · ·•
--Conslderaµ<» of a request byo Peter
Berger, who haa , asked' for a~ five-year
renewal of his contract~ to· operate the
gOlf cciurJe clubhouse. Ber1er in!Wml11y
bas alio asked for the C~)' to--pay , for
ei:pa.naion of kitchen facUIUes 1 at the
restaurant· to allow · for ~emoa. dinner
0 s fill _..tUCl.
Hoines Sought
Capo Evictions
Delayed 30 Days
Families living in copdemned housing
In San Juan Capistrano have been given
an additional 30 days to move out..
The city muncil in January ordered the
fam ilies occupying hazardous structures
on Well Site Road 90 days to vacate and
find other homes.
T~ property owner, Mrs. Lillian
taenglein of Pasadena, wu to I d .to
demolish each structure 11 , it wa1
vacated.
Monday was the dea~ and only one
structure hu ebe.n tom (lown.
"We may be ablt to resolve this
without using enforeement agencies.''
uld City Administrator Donald G.
Weidner.
He said repre.sentative1 Of the Salvation
Army, Community Action Council a n d
other agencies are workinl to find bomea
Nixon Mav Visit -Camp Pendleton
To Greet Troops
Hints by Presidential aides aroH today
nn 1he chances of • visit to the South
coast by President Nixon within the next
few weeks.
The President was reported planning a
visit to troops of the 1st Marine Division
at camp Pendleton where the
Leathern«:ks will be proc<md after
their return from Vietnam combat.
The first members of the division were
expecttd this weekend at the huge base,
but the Pre!ldenLial visit. if any, would
not be until later, his spokesmen said.
The President planned to spend this
weekend at camp David, Md.
The reports of the impending visit
correspond to some co~ments made .by
the Pre&ldent's staff dur1n:g the last vJsit
to 'San Clemente several weeks ago.
AA they left for Washington, several
members of the staff menUoned a return
visit in early May.
Actor Calhoun Wed
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (U~I) -Actor Rory
Calhoun, 48, and Susan Langley, 29, •
former Australi1n journalist. and now a
Hollywood writer, were married Mo11d1Y
at a wedding chapel on the Las Vegas
••strip." It wis the second marriage for
each.
for the remaining families, one which has
11 members.
The .strUctures. once a la"bor camp,
came to tbe attention of I.he county health
department and the department of
bullding and safety last fall.
Jnve.sUgalions led to lhe di!COvery of
uttsanitary, apd unsafe eonditioris which
reJ!llin coqld .1llit recUly. Tiie "'1lctm'e•
were conderbned alid a•publlc hearing on
t.1'9..mltter brolight -it to the lttenUOn of tbttity """'1<il. "
1lJe OOW1dl aa\-eod II ' pcietpone the
destruction of tbe-ltrdcturts for a 90 day
petiod to gjve residents a .time to find
new horn•. Some of the Jamilles were
payq only $40 to '60 a month and had
little bope 1 of finding a residence they
could afford on pensions or meager
ail arks.
1be property owner, Mrs. Lillian
Zaenglein, was eager to demolish the
structures which she had leased to
rancher William Reid who in turn had
leased them to the 'famiUes.
But Mrs. Zaenglein wanted the families
to find homea and was reluctant to evict thetn . "I '~ diiappointed nothing hu been
accomplished ,by lbe property owner or
the residents," aald Councilman Ed
O!ermJIL
But he agrad to the Ume extension.
The vote waa wianimous. Weidner aaid
he •Waa confident the problem will be
solved in that time.
J oaq:ull;i School
District' Vote
Starting Slowly
Voter& 1n the San Joaquin Elementary
School District covering \he Saddleback
Valley wire scarce:thls morning.
A midmorning check ·or t b re e
repruentltfve prtcinct.s showed barely a
three peecent lul'llQUt of citizens.
Of a total registraUon of 3,815 eligible
\!Oters ia Ult! three polling plactS, only 116
had cast their.bil1otl as•of midmorning.
La Pu Intermediate School iii Mission
Viejo rewrt.ed· 1,397 eligible and 37
voUng.
Olivewood Elementary School ln El
Toro bad·29 voters oot of• R05Sible 1.680.
Irvine's University Park Elementary
School baa 738 re&Jstertd; 50 c.ut their
ballots.
. '
Marines Seeking Support
For New HousingProgr~m
Jn an apparent effort. to drum-up
support for Congressional funding ~ a
program to add 200 new houses (or staff
1t Camp Pendlelon, Marine offldal! hive
planned m&Ungs In oomint Wtek1r with
officials from S\lrfounding cities.
Spokesmen at Camp Pend~ aid a
pair of howling specialists from the Corpe:
plalf to mttt with roayor1 1 rtllty bolrcl
member• and chambtr of commerce
officials of cities 1urroundin1 the huae
base.
.,. Ll Col. Tom Brierton, the base boualng
offictr, Ind a deputy will visit offlciala in
San Clemente and Oceanside.
They are tlped<d to llJxml agpecta al
\
' the 117'1 Military ConstrucUoo ,l!UI, now
pendlna before C<lngress.
A houltn1' 1bortage for tmlliWY
p6t0nnel bat been termed "ert6cal" by
bue 1poktln\ll). Pasuge of the bill
would allow for building of 200 new
residences ·for M1rnie Cps famUiel on
ill! bue,
Traditloully, S.n Clemente and
Ocu1111idl have ' auved aa housing areas
I« many Mirlae. COrpa pertOllnt:I, but
iocreued rental rates and lbt stump In
buiktlna Of ntw houses and apartmtnts
hat caused • crlUcal 1hottage In
available dwelllnp for Lhe Matlnel and
Lherfamiliea.
"
\ < •
. .
' • <· , r \ r , ' '\ ' I tMILY•PILOT?llilft ......
'S'AN' CLEMENTE"stuDENTS LOoJCi.OVE R ·MoOEL. OF ·OLD ;OLOaE 'THEATER ' ''
. JuJJO,B""ktr, l!'ole"Soll•"' Molro · Conrecl Look'At-Repllco Of.'F1mod< Building
.
Down the
Missio.n
Tt!ai·l
Girls Softball
Ollllils April 24
. ' SAODL~B,(Cg .VALLEY. -Girla
interested in playing 8Gftball are •Invited
to join the San Joaquin Bobby Sox
Leaii!e,. )Vbich will open Ill IWIOn
Saturday, April 24.
The ·opening ~ame and a fund raising
dlmt-a-dlp iuncheoD will'take place at ihe
Univer1ity Park Elementary School.
Openings on the 16 telml from several
parts of th·e S8ddleback Valley ar~ •till
available. loformation can be obtalned'by
calling'league officials at 83'7.s598 or Mf.
21l9S.
':•·Adult Booten~"""
I.AKE FOREST -A hootenanny for
adults wUI be hGSted al the Beach And
Tenn la Club on Saturday, AprU 24.
f:vel')'.ooe. Jrom Lake i:t>rest, ii Invited
to brine i. guu1 md mu1w:a1=inltruments
to )be 8,p.m. •ven\ which will be Ii 1><r
pel'l9P -• • ,
'iliihlilibt of the eVenlng wUI be [the ,
I~.·Team ·from .SL J..ndre~1'!
Pre$b)'terian1 Church tn. ,Newport O.cll
wbO wW providt aiRJihg enterllinmut. > ~ ' ' • l' outh Danee Set
MISSION VIEJO -A dance i.r Juruor ·
hliJ)I lludenll will 'IP• plice Friday, A'~ril ii from 7 lo f ,IO p ..... In the
r,tontanoeo Recre1U1111 ~r;
Alt junior high •tudeotl .from ·'Mll&ion
Viejo aad thtir dates m • ft!_..
Admillioo \!Ill be IMI oenll for rocreltloo
cent.er members and $1 for Mn mem~n. 1 Door priw: wlllibe aw1rded d\n'ttll tbe•
dance. For lnfonDaUon call tbe center •t 137-.
I
San ' Clemente StudentS
To Study in W. Europe
An eiUmated 48 San aemente Higtt
School students will use western Europe
as their classroom this summer In a new
project offering high-scbOol credit for a
formal program of atudy ·and t;r•vel on
I.he contlnenL
-The program, which already bas won
school district approval u a vaJuable
teaming operitnce, will. fnclude tours
and lecturea in the ciUu or Rome, Paris,
Salzburg, c.til<ine and LA>ndon.
The entire project is to laa '41 days,
with the youth& lea\llna Vi.a charter flight
on July 16.
For evtiry·· eight 1ludt!nta on the trip,
thert will be one actredlted adult
lnstructo<.
English Instructor Tom Youngerman,
an organlier of the tour,· said about 15
openinp aUll eilst In the progt~.
Lapidary Group
To View Slides
Members and gu..ta ol the Tri C!Uea
Lapidary SOciety will meet Wednesday
moJng Jl>.lian;Clementa,H!lh sclioolio
library to hear a protriim v n
specimen .. collecUn& trips to Mu.icoiand
.Moniana and .diJcuM. pJa,ui,tor,1 t>ooth i& .tlit t1tita 1•°"'~Uaitlta. -·
'Mori.ber Jerry V(•l~er .win pment' tho
1llde1 tai<tn durJnc the r~t .Lrlp If
M11lco ·~ the lln<ky· Mountain ""''· She alto Will dtlp\ay opoc1n\ei> mater!~
•IO!lnd during lbe journeys.
Meniben alto wlll 'ditcu• pl..,·lor a
fle(d ttlp aet for Lhta comlna weel<end to
"'e Calleo Mouat.lil\I Mir· BarstOw, 1R
area ~bundant 1n petrified palm, .agate,
.j~, and c:ommofl opal. ,
Any"ont.lntercated In lapidary ind rot:k
<OliecUnr 11 "'1comt to Lbe 7,30 , p.m.
-tine·
'The: fee for the entire package, be said,
ls $1,095, w~l~h Includes 1U·fare1, meala,
insurance and museum and theater
admiuions.
Youngetman stressed the academic
nature of the experience, outlining daUy
classes and related tours -:-all keyed •to
the study or comparative culturea.
Some natl" teachers . also have
volunteered to assist ln the lecture
programs, dwelling on art, PolittCs,
geography, mueic and comparatlve 1ssue!I
of ~ch of the 1even countries.
Youngerman said a meeting ·w been
pl1tnned for Wednesday evening at 7:30
o'clock in tile higJ! sehool llttle theater for
atudents interested in joining the
program. -
Requirements include -besides funda
for · the fare -' good heilth and
attendance at San Clemente High School,
plus a letter of reoommendalion from
any mtmber "I, the Triton facql\y.'
St\ldtnlJ unable to otl•ft\l , • t b'•
Wedneaday meeting may receive deWtJ
Imm Aaslstant Prin<lpal Ed Kinc:ald II
492-416S. . • '. !
1 • 'Dla.~adljpe lOl;'JolnlnJ lbe pl'OfVllD 11 ~llY~.aal<l , ..
Australia State Bans
Calley S9ng on l{a<fio
SYDNEv, Aiisttallr (AP)' -All
commei:clal radio s!aUo\is In Qoe<n1land
;.iale bannod !be re<ord of "The °Batlle
Hymn of Lleulenapt Call ey" loday. The rttord wa1 rtletsed in A111tralia 'Mofld!:y.
The adVllory board of !be Com~1al
'Broadcuten' Federaltlon gave h a
•1gray" ll1ling. recommending th 1 t
ataUon rn11U1gen give tt ca ref u 1
C0111lderatloo before llrlnl It. ,,.
,. / . . , . ··o· .
' .. . ~.. '
1 : ' ' . -.
.
Child'.Said
Hit Twice
With Brick
SAN FRANCISOO (UPI) -Police aald
today one of two Y<tU!JI lloy( beld Jn tha
cruclfir.ion death of a 2fl.montb-old infant
his •dmitttd"thf: bab1 'Was:tut twice with
a· brick. and then wired' to a makesbilt
cr0&a "to be couldn't get: away."
"·we didn't•Want to.1et caught," stld
the ·v:ytar-o!d· boy, held .In "protective
custod)'" at · San IFrancltco JUYerille• Hall
w\Lh·hll.!Go~ar .. ld ,bn>tber In the ~Lb
•f..~,IJbi la. dil'li ~ lnl
~1"""':-
Jao!tnlle·~ D1111.~uid the ~r1>dy•led oflbra tG lbe basen•mt '~u~"1Motidij where uie body of
~ tot.IJt'Wll fOUJl<f,.boond
0
lnd wJred ti
a Crosi ma'de of scrap J~niber, with a red
cord·m>Uld hta ne<k, boLh wr~Ls and bis ankles: • .
1 1be infant· wu with his· mother, Mrs.
Larry'Ailia,.1n· Aita Vista City Pork lul
WedneM!ay, when he 1 u d den I y
dluppeared. Pollce were led to the two
)'OUni ,auspecta. :-wbO m·a:y be so young
that~ WeJTUD!Ufe what charge -il
any -oould...._be. IOdged igalnst them,
through reporlrfrotn. wttneaseJ.
'Ibey. were qqeatloning parents o(
aDotber' 'boy abeut .i TOUtine complaint
. that-be·~d bea1'"•11p0a child 1n ihe park
when ·the plJ'ehts!--uJd, "'Iii bet It wa1
thole -~ tbe;·n.·troublemaken
and'tbeY:re alw411.'11P·•t that par!t."
DJ7sc0ll 1aJd oft1ctrs then went to
Emerson. SchOol1 iwb'ei-e~the 7-year-old i.s
a pupll, Monday' and took him out cf
1<hooL .
Drtsc911 1aid . .tbe oUICers wefe taking
the bo)' ~ to" the parlt ahd wben they near~ tbt, -Jocitton of the basement
"clubbouae" ubd him:·
· "If )roU ~ere a·JK!Uctman, where would you loiik?" -.
Driap>U uid the. bo)t ~ various
locauona, aqd Uiea aaid, ''Loot, the door to that buement.11 ~'. . .
Officen ,...t lrl ilrd !oillld the nude
body. partially "!'(~red with •heeb,
oanne1.materlil'ud·liaP1 ol waflpaper.
Dr!acoll aal<(,tl!ilali'nt had been struck
sevet.al tlmH ·wllb "a·. brick, apparently
Jumped on.,pqlti'f ~Ith'• atlck, cl10l<ed
With a· rope ,and ·tan r bound onto thl
' . ' Cfos.!1, • . • -; , •
DrilCOll "Id tbr'7&<ar-oid ond hil
brother:, both white.,. .were ~'playing a
game" w!Lh Uit 1"illf,' tha ·1"Wli" boy
1a1d: • ·
' l ' ' . Oraqe . -• ' '
' •
DAILY l'!LOT -SC "'"41r; Aprll 20: 1!71
Secmul i_. ~o•n~I
' . ~
I
Niguel Man Gets
Curriculum Post
Carroll "Bud'' Crei&hton. Research and
Comm1111ication1 specialist w I t h the
Orange County Department of EducaUon
hu been named to tbe California
CUrrktllum Com.million.
Crtl&htoa, ff, of 241U Calle Vleja,
Laguna Niguel ls the second Orange
County educator to be named to the
statewide commisaion with a primary
function of advising tbe state Board of
Education OD all matters concerning
curriculum, te.1tboot adoptiom and
framework development.
Dr. Rusaell Parka, retired
superintendent of the F u 11 e r t o n
Elementary School Di.trlct Is the olher
county reatdent on the state commission.
He hu been a member for seven yean.
Creighton replacu Dr. Vero Hlnu,
assistant superintendent of the Long
Beach City Schools, who has just
completed a four-year term on the
cornmls&lon.
Cttf&hton bas been witb the county
Department of Education for four years.
Prior to hls currtnl pos!tion he was
Social Science Coordinator. He earned bis
BA degree at the University of
Washington, his MA degree at the
University of Redlanda and is presently
enrolled in tht doctoral progral)l a1 the
University of Southern California
Creighton believes Ille ll mtmbers of
the state curriculum commission are a
••miz" or conservatives and liberals.
Prevklusly, ht.fore appointees of Gov.
Ronald Reagan obtained a majority on
commission, Creighton &aid it wu label-
ed as "very liberal."
He considers hirosell a "mix." "I am a
conaervaUve on ecooom.lcs but liberal on
a;ome other facets of educaUon, '' he
uplained.
One of Crt:igbtan's "goal!" during hls
coming four-year term is to put
Callfcniia achoola on the "open adoption"
policy of ~book seledlon.
At the present time CaUfomia Ls one of
23 states with a "cl08ed adoption" policy
in which .all t.eitJ must be approved at
the state level.. In add!Uon, this state
1'<Julres Uuit all texts be printed in the
st.ate printing oU\ee.
"Many publlshlng houses will not lease
theJ.r pr\nUng plates to the state so
students bert do not have the benefit or
many fine textbook!,'' Creighton alleges.
He says be thlnkl most members of the
curriculum commissk>n favor the open
odoptloo policy but tt will be 10me tlm<
in coming aa new leglslatl.on will be
needed and the long Ume tradlUon of
state printing must be eliminated. He
believes the cost factor will be lower ln
lbe long nm.
Creighton added that the closed
adoption p0Ucy in the st.ate doea not
apply IO hJah tcboo~ diJtricta, only
elementary.
He says the advantage of tht open
Akim Postoway
·Services Held
' Funeral . 1ervlces wert beld lh1a af·
ternoon for Akim Postoway, a native of
Russia and Lag\lna Beach resident who
died Saturdly at,the age ef 83.
111' llUVicts were conducted in Corona
del Mar at Pacific View Memorial Cb1pel
by Rev. Henry Gerhard of the Church of
Rellglou1 Science. Interment foll owed at
Pacific Vltw Pi.1emorlal Park.
Mr. Postoway, who lived at n55 Alpine
Way, is survived by a daughter, Mrs.
Loulle Sedaff of J.vuna Beach ; two sons,
Paul and 'ttenfy, both of Miahlgan,; five
grandchildren and tbret & r e a t
grandchildren.
OIAN•I CO.I.IT
DAILY PILOT
OlM~::i CO.UT l'UIL.l~tNG ;::oM,.AH'f
••••rt H. W••' ,., .. -....,. h611illtf
J1c\. "· c ... r1..,
V)gl ,,,__. .,,,, ~·' MtMf'f'
Th•111•• Kee•ll
L•lklr
TI.Ml•• J... M..,,.i.iftt "'*'"""' .£•••
Chirl•t H. L.111 ltith1r4 I'. N1U
AMlllMll M"'*Vlnp ElllOrl "*"-..... Offlt• 221 fereJt AftftYI
Jril1Hh1t 144rtt11 P.O. 11• •U, 92612 s..~Of'fk• :ios North El C1111lft• A11I, 9Jl72
adoptioll policy ii . that each school
dlstrlci In the state may evaluate oc
purchase any material as It sees flt.
Uaually there is a course of study set
down by the atate board to be wed as a
Bui de.
C:apo l)istrict
Voters Brave
C:old Weather
Despite cold, damp weather early
today along the South Coast, voters began
arriving at the pollll in the Caplst.rano
UnlfJed School District in encouraging
numbers.
In spot checb of several precincl.s in
the area about nine percent of the eligible
voters bad turned out by midmorning.
'n:Je rate Wat corulidtrabJy better in San
Cl~mente, where cltflens have an added
measure m tbtir ballot -a four·part
parks and recreaUon bond i s s u e
amounting ta $1 million.
The combined precinct at c.oncordla
Elementary School had the highest
turnout among the precincl.s checked
with 125 ballots cast among the 1,100
eligible voters. Workers at th •
tradi~C11ally active precinct reported the
now as "steady."
Among five precincts checked, 4T1
ballots had been cut among 5,698
poMlble.
Some qualified obsen'era said they
expected about a 51).percent turnout
during today's school district and bond
elecUon.s.
The weather began clearlng before
noon, I e a e r a 11 y a plus factor 111
encouraging dtheru to cut their balk>ts.
Five Capistrano Unilted School District
seats are up for election today, pltJS the
bond Issue for San Clemente voters on1y.
Tb re e positions on the Saddleback
Community College Board cf TJ:usfees
also will be filled in today's voting.
The polls will re.main open unlll I
o'clock lonlgbl
Tustin District
Turnout Liglit
Voter turnout this mornlol for lbe
'J'usUn Union High School District board
eleclkln was light at polling places
surveyed by 11 a.m.
Election watchers in Mission Viejo
speculated the rain may bave dampened
the spirits of some voters. The La Paz
elementary school polls showed only 41 of
1,400 rtglltered voten turning out.
Laguna Hilla reported "about cne
pereent of the eligible voter~" had voted
by 10:30 a.m. today -S4 of a total 783
assigned to vote at the Valencia School
polls.
Irvine School in East Irvine reported
only 20 of MS had cast their ballots and
University Park Elementary School
election observers reported only SO of a
possible 738 had voted.
Voters Jn these preclncls also voted In
the San Joaquin Elementary Di~trict
Saddleback Community College district
trustee races.
Trustees to Get
Salary Proposal
Representatives of the Laguna Beach
school board will meet tonight with
spokesmen for the district's Certificated
Employe Council to receive proposals for
1971-72 teacher salary schtdules.
The 8 p.m. meeting in the district
board room, 550 Blumont St., Is open to
the public.
Trustees Mn. Jane Boyd aod Dr.
Norman Browne will represent the board
and the administration will b e
represented by Superintendent William
Ullom and Business Superintendent
Olarlet Heu.
The teachen:' proposals will be
forwarded to the full school board wh ich
will conaidu thvn in an e1tcul.i\'e aes·
slon April 'l1 then set a date for a jo.lnt
meeting with Council representatives.
-
...... ,. ,.... ... ,.,.,
VIEW FROM DANA POINT SHOWS PROGRESS ON HEADWALKS, SLIPS
Approxim1tely 200 Are Expected To B• Reidy For Occupancy By M1y 15
Boat Parking A vailahle
First Daua Cove Mari11a Slips Installed in Harbor
First boat slipa at new Dana Cove
Marina in Dana Point Harbor have betn
installed and will be ready for occupancy
May 15.
Robert Dahlberg, president of ?.1arine
Capital Inc. of Newport Beach, said some
200 slips are being installed in the first
phase U the harbor's development, which
includes Dana Cove Marina on the
landside and Dana Island Marina oo the
seaaide.
"Almost half of the 1428 sllps in Dana
Cove Marina and Dana Island Marina
have been reserved," Dahlberg said,
adding that reservations have C<>me from
as far away as Alaska and Hawaii.
The balance of the boat slips will be
Installed at the rate of approximately 100
per month unW completion in March or
Rules Committee Okays
Newport VoteAmendment
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of IN DtltJ Pllfl Sllltf
SACRAMENTO -The Assembly Rules
Committee today voted a "Do Pass"
recommendaUon on a Newport Beach
City Charter amendment which would
nquire a vote of the people on any future
freeway route agreements.
Tht vote by the Assembly panel was S
yes, 1 no, 3 absent. Atsemblyman Robert
W. Burke CR-Huntington Beach) cut the
Jone no vote.
The cities of COsta Mesa and
Huntington Beach had f o r w a rd e d
rt30lutlons to the rulet committee asking
that Newport's Charter amendment,
approved by city voters, be rejected.
Tbe proposed amendment oow goe1 to
the floor of the full Assembly, probably
sometime late today, for a vote on
ratification. It mutt also be raUfled by
the Clilifornia Senate.
Assemblyman Burke vowed today that
Capo Trustees
OK Procedures
For Code Group
Procedures for the formation of a dress
code c<>mmittee have been appro ved by
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School
District.
A plan suggested by San Clemente lilgh
Schoo l principa l Darrel Taylor was ap-
proved f\.1onday and will provide a dress
code c<>mmilt.ee much like last year's.
he would fight against the ratification on
the floor of llotb houses.
Assemblyman &but E. Badham (Jt.
Newport Beach ) introduced the
amendment to the rules committee this
morning, clUng the 85 percent favorable
vote It had received in a special election
ln Newport Beach.
Only four of the seven members of the
rules committee were pruent for this
morning's hearing.
Voting for the favorable report were
assemblymen John L Burton (D-San
Francisco), committee chairman ; Ray E.
Johnson (R-chlco), vice chairman and
Ernest N. MoaJey (R-Fruno).
Burke cast the lone dissenting vote.
Absent from the session w e re
auemblymen John P. Quimby (D-
Rlalta), Leo J. Ryan (D-South San
Francisco) and L. E. Tcwnsend ([)...
Gardena).
Burke lheo introduced resolutions
adopted Monday night by both the Costa
Meta and Huntington Beach city councilll
urging rejection of the amendment.
He also cited an opinion from the
legislative counsel's office that forecast
the courts wou1d likely declare the
amendment unconstitutional if a legal
challenge were raised.
Opponents of the measure contend the
residents cf a single municipality da not
have the authority to vote on a matter
of statewide concern. such as the state
highway system.
A member of Burke's starf said
committee members. in adopting the
fa vorab1e rtcGmmendation, pointed out
that the committee has never before
taken a negative, stance on a city's
proposed charter change.
im, Dahlberg said.
As the slips are finl!hed, those 'vho
have made reservations are being
notified by mail o( lhe estimated
occupancy dale. Additional s I i p
information may be obtained by calling
Marine Capital at 540-3623.
Dana Point Harbor will have a total
investment of $18 million in public funds
.end $10 million in private money for
development of concessions, Dahlberg
said. The Marina Ls belng developed at a
cost of $4.2 million.
Among the features or the landscaped
landside Marina facilities will be eight
lavatory unit.s which will i n c I u d e
machines for washing and drying clolhei;
parking for approximately 1,200 cars and
convenient pumpout stations. Each slip
will have a storage locker, outlets for
Iresh water, electricity and telephone.
Deck surface areas are of non-slip
concrete.
Slips will acconunodale sail a n d
power boats from 20 ta 80 ft. ln length.
Regular slips will ren t ror $1.90 per boat
foot. Pitchforks and end ties will rent for
$2.25 per ft.
Marine Capital Inc. ol Newport Beach
is the managing partner of Dana Point
Marina Company. Dana POrnt Marina
Company. owner and builder of_ the
Marina, is a partnership composed Of
Marine Capital Inc. and Alison Realty Co.
of Newport Beach and Pr o s p e c t
California Co. of Hartford, Connecticut.
Boat slips have bttn des igned,
manufactured and i n s t a 11 e d by
Huntington Engineering C.orp. o f
Huntington Beach. The floats are of
lightweight reinforced concrete with
styrofoam core.
Killer Receives
Execution Stay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The
California Supreme Court Monday stayed
the execution of convicted slayer Wllllam
Dale Archerd, which had been scheduled
for Wednesday.
The court said the stay would be in
effect until a U.S. Supreme Court
decision is delivered in another California
death penalty case.
Archerd was convicted In Los Angeles
of three counl8 er rirst degree murder In
the death of two wives and a 15-year~ld
nephew by means of insulin injections.
w ALI( ·soFrLY!
WWII Aces
To Restore
Zero Plane
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of t111 Dtli1' •ntt Stitt
Three World War ll U.S. Navy ace
pilots -including a Corona del Mar
retldent -are completing plans to
restore a rare enemy plane which was
found suni. In a Pacific lagoon.
Capt. Marshall U. Beebe (USN-ret.), ol
219 Larkspur Ave., said today that he and
his two colleagues, Cdr. Eugene Valencia
(USN·ret.) of Chula Vista and James
French of Bakersfield plan to rebuild a
Japanese 1.ero for display in the: Fighter
Pilots Hall of Valor at the San Die,go
Aerospace Museum.
Beebe said the fighter is only one of
two or three in existence, and it took the
trio about five years to find it and get it
to this cotmtry.
The three men are all members of th&
American Fighter Ace Association and
between them shot down -ts Japanese
planes.
Beebe, since retirement from activ1
dut y, works as a broker for mutual funds
and handles real estate projects ill
Corona del 1.1ar. French said the book,
"The Bridges at Toko-Ri'' was dedicated
to Beebe who commanded the squadron
on which James Michener's Korean War
novel was based.
"H I had known Zeroea we.re so hard
to get back, I don't think 1 would have
shot them down," French quipped.
Beebe said tbey wanted a Zero for the
museum to be displayed with Amer ica n
fighte rs such as the P-40 and the Navy
Hellcat.
"We put out advertisements and wrote
letters and about 18 months later, we got
a reply from the Harbor Master in
Rabaul, New Guinea.''
In September of lr7D, they bad the
plane pulled from 70 feet of waler off
Rabaul where it had Jain for about 28
years. And after several months of red
tape delays, the plane was crated an d
shipped via Air Force transpo rt to the
Bakersfield aircraft hangar owned by
French.
Beebe said they will restore the plane
there with the hope of getting it airborne
again. "If that proves to be impractical,
then we'll build a flying replica," he said,
7.eroes are e1tremely rare, Beebe said,
because of the American government's
policy of destroying all enemy munltions
at the end of World War II.
"They took whole shiploads of 1.eroes
and dumped them out in the oce an. At
the time. no one was partieularly con·
cerned with saving a dozen or so for
museums," he explained.
As pilols during those years, French
shot down 1 t Japanese fighters, Beebe
was credited with IO lf.t and Valencia wa1
the Navy's third ranking ace with 2.1
scores. A pilot must shoot down five
enemy aircraft to earn ace status.
Beebe said the Japanese government
has one of the Zeroes on display and the
Canadians are restoring one for display,
''end there's supposed to be one at tha
Smithsoriian Institution but apparently
Jt's not displayed.
lie said they are uncertain how long it
will take to get the plane rebuilt, but he
esUmated at least six months to a year
for the work.
"Actually it looks terrible because irs
all coven:d with sea life, but it's all in
one piece," he said.
The plane was In good enough shape
that when they got it out or the water, the
men were able to locate its serial number
and trace the pilot.
Va1encia, a television producer who i~
writing a book on air aces, found the
pilot, Sekizen Shibayma, by checking the
7.ero's se rial number against Japanese
squadron assignmenl.s.
Shibayama reported he had engine
trouble on Nov. 11, 1943. and, as quoted
by Valencia , was ''looking at my gauge.t
when I was tut and my engine stopped for
good." Shlbayama said he escaped and
swam to shore as the Zero sank.
Each member or the board of trustees
hes been asked to appoint two community
members. Those interested ln serving on
a dress code committee are invited to
contact a trustee and volunt~r their
services.
Other members of the committee will
be students Kelly Devlin, Kell y Smith,
sophomores: John Engstrom, Chris
Lidke. juniors; Clark Jarrett. Diane
Smetone, seniors: teachen, Mrs. Carol
Walker and Randy McCoy, and
administrators Mrs. Barbara ?ttcCarthy
and John Smar!.
Many times we talk to people who feel that carpeting at $5.00 to
$8.00 (carpet alone) per square yard is expensive.
Marco Forster Jun ior High will be
asked to recommend two present eighth
graders and one seventh grader. One
junior high administrator also will be oo
the committee.
Board members serving on the
committee will be Dr. Robert Btasle.y
and Robert Hurst.
-°""" c.t1 lrMM! m -! .. ,. Strwt lol~I '41d": #II M....,., l .... lnl ... .. "'"''"'"" •udll Vl'J lelCll ......... .,. BigBendPrope1·tyOwne1·s
Seek Laguna Annexation
A housewife who buys DRESS materials knows that she is unlike-
ly to buy good materials for less than $3.00 to $4.00. Also, a man
might pay $1.00 for a foot-square handkerchief, which works out
to $9.00 a square yard. Can you imagine how these mater i a Is
would perform if you placed heavy furniture and walked on
them?
Consequently, when you spend $3.00 to $4.00 for carpeting,
regardless of where you buy it, don't expect too much . WALK
VERY SOFTL YI
l
tqun1 Beach m1y soon be 150 acre.,
laraer tha11 It is today -that is if the
city COWl(il aod the Local Aaeney
Fonnellon Commission (tA_F'C) decide to
approve a request to aOd the Laguna
Canyon plrCel to the city.
City admln11tr1Uve officer Alvin 0 .
Autry prtstnted the planning commission
with the plans ror annexation, which Is
being headed by the Telonlca
Corporation, 21282 Ugune Canyon Road,
•Iona with sever•! lesstr proputy
ownus, in the Bl& Bend arta.
Autry explained that the property
owntri want lO join the dty to avail
' •
themselves ol city aewen and poUce and
flre protection. He sald that the cost of
extending exi3tln1 sewer lines to the arta
would be borne by the properly ownen.
Some 20 dwelling unitl and 40 persons
are In the area, Autry said, but the land
is still classified as "uninhabited" Md
the &Me:s:aUon procedurt It n o t
complle1ted.
The planniJll commission approved the
application to be sent to the city cooncll
Wednesday night for coosldtratlon. If the
council fa vor1bly actJ: on the reque.'1.. lt
•111 go to lh• LAFC, thtn back IO the City
Council tor public hearings.
I
IANTA ANA. OaANOI,
TUITIN Call • ••
ALDIN'I
llD HILL CAAPITI
& DllAPlllll
1W4 lrvlne. Tvetlft, c.t.
uw.J44
•
--·
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 l'lac1ntla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
............ ··~ -I
For the Record Law Day
Chairmen
Db•ol11tlon•
Ot Marriage
PllCAL DKllllt ... ,.,. .,,.. .
lrMr...,, ._... J, W Mwleol J.
YWu.i.. S!•llltY tl"railll .... llt-.... r,r, S... D•r1tM aftd W111-nl WlllM
GYt', ,,_ W Alfrlll J.,_ Jr.
,__ """"" """ .... '-•" LtfW (,.....,.,, GltM hi! ..... Mlc:Mtl L
Honft.lln, l trt L. '"' Otr-1• IC. l 1rlWI Vi.i.t .\. •NI l'r9tllllln c. ldll-. l'r•-Mid JI-M.
e-111. It-It .... Htw•nl It.
l(olltllt. Mao' LoulM •1111 Hll",., l'ra'*
l ttM.1, H1,.i11 0..11 11111 ltWl'ly' Jaflt •i.ca. Ann A.-•flcl ltobert ...........
l$1'ML Grace M. aMI Dl'lrntr L. GrHll, tllli. Jwnlla .,... J-• Ntrtw
Ad!Mllo DaWft 1tld Hlcllltlls O.
Prtffltt, Melllol &!Ml T.,.., W1tl.c:1 .,., ..... wm1an1 J. Jr. and Ell1allllll l.
C1Nllla. H•i.i. I'. a!MI 0.1rllttl A.
lld!M, Oorotl!I' M1xl111 ll'ld Vlnotnl '· lt¥11r. Earl W. end Carolt'll It. "°""'' ltl...-ncl Ind LIMt1 Cl!rltllow 1 .... n .. S1nclr1 f . •1141 Ttltl!'l&I L. c..,.._rie,. L-l'd J , incl Mtr,., c. ClaH. Carol MM ... Ar1tlur Erwin
DehM, IClrtn Laa 11111 Laurine:.
Wllllllll'I W«#f, ,,_.Pill, Slr1M1n111 and Miki
AttrM atlMlllleW, Caroll Lolli.. efld l'.tOll' ,_ ..
ceutt JMl'I 1..-11a end J • ~ n
McCl tll M Wlln', ...,,.... 11'11'1 alld GUCWt It.
lltiMtMlch', 0.19'11 G. 11111 ICttlllltfl A.
l rockmal'I, 1ttt1 LOUIM •rod MlcNll ,_
(l'Vfflp, J-LolllM 1Nf CllarlQ Wiiton
It'"-Vlotot! Ann arMI a.or..-J~ 1(1y, (Mryl 111d Wltliflll"I
T_.,, _,.._Incl AnclrlW J .....
Ovrl'lll, l erlllra JMll Ind Tw,., LM De IU1m11n. l'.ebt«t Ann af'ICI Jtlll'lt --Hell1wa~. Slltclr~ L 1flll P1trkl1 ·-Oroka, Glorffi P. tflll Petti' M. Willll mto Cllelllr E. 11111 Liiiia W.,....11, lllll bettl l , Ind Dllfl Cilr1kl ..,,..rel, Pats, Jun1 and Paul Jdln
tmlll'I. ltllbtrt CfllrlM Jr. tnd C1rlt .....
..... Mtll t
8owtr\, 8-H It. flld K.WW--
$1lrll,.._ fl•trlc.11 It, llld 11:'*"1 ••
WOid, S..Aclt1 ,,..,. lt'lll O•Vlotl J , H'4J•, V!llCI L. Mid Joh!'! E.
T'Ull'ltn, R.Obtrl Nrdr.,. Jr. 111111 Unclt ,~ ...
8loldllir, Jtti11 J-.. IC1N1
S11&1!111t •et1•11*\o J-., e-..,11 .,.. Oelloroll "M ....-i.r, WINltt'!I H. ~ Pall'lc.la •• Sdlry.,, Pelrkla J. Ind It-Ill It •
ltobl,_,. Har,., G. •Ml Jwn I. Touiv., lrMde Jwu aflcl lllllW '~-GU!llrle. Dl'Yld and Leur• M..
arln., Llncl.I Ar*'"" aNI Devlcl 51tndt!ekl
811br.,., ""-.,.. OMlkl l.ll'O¥ JOl'INorl 0.W.lh'I Lou Meuflnt enll
Emmttt Tarr•H
LKIY, Jim.et Mowell 11'111 $htroill """
Oietlney, Frll'IC .... 1111111 Stm\lfl JOMlltt
Wan, Golda tldorl lfMI L" Otd•"· larblrl A-and Donllcl ·-Morl'f>W, .. Wl't'I Jaa11 t llll 0.vlffa
INT•ltL.OCUTOAY D•CR.llS •• , ... ...,"I
Arw:s.r-. Marl l.owlM and lto<!1
Fr1ntll It_,_, M.1tY LOii tnd LH T.
51-. Mlnerve M. allll l lllV J . Fr11lar, GrlttdMl'I L. 111141 Pein O.
Mo.Ir-1Crlllln1 IC. 1nd VlllOlrll Jd\11 Mor•lei. Tr11'1icllll G. and L.Dl'lfM 8. Oo-1'1•, LlllCll S. end Ml<:hltl GOnMn LDCkrnan. PhYlll• H. and Edtlal' P.
HMCI, Dorolhy J11111 11111 Frtcl l'rlllklln
Storm. YIClll M. Incl J .... H. St-. M1rl1 Ind Ml V, ltt'l'el. EC1m11"" H. •nd Vlvl11'1
ltobolr11, ltlllh EWl'lllnl and Wltltl'
Norm1n HW-, Otrllll ind R011r
Tua1r, Salldra L. 111111 Cral• H. Wtv1ncl. 8tltt L. and Cl1r11"1Ct W.
H1n.,1, 011111111 Otnltl end ltedtll Lou It
WONMn. C1ro1v11 Sve af'ICI Miorvl11 L.
~ Yol1n4I 1nc1 e ...... 1 Jr.
Cod'lrl ll, ~rwutrll• c. Ind JOMPh H.
fulm.,, FlortfKI MM 111'111 J1ma
""'" L--. V1tna LM end LM £1r1
p,1ua, Ell<llltll L..eulM lflCI wnne111 ..,_
Scllollten. J-1 E111111 Holm11 incl
PhlllP D1vkl l lKkbl.irl'I. L11111 M, lf'MI Joe W,
H11111t, 5/'llrllY JOH1111ln1 •fld w11u.,.. Henl"t
Cool!. Wlllle LM '"" 1111 P11rl
Appointed
WESTMJNSTER S l •
Orange Cout judg" and
lawyers ·have betn aamed
area chairmen In t he
countywide Law Day
programs planned by the
Orange County Bar
Association.
Superior Court Judge Frank
Domenicbini bas been
appointed by Superior Court
Judge Harmon G. Scoville of
Westminster, the county bar's
Law Day chairman, to head
activities in the San Clemente
area.
Other appointment.I by
Judge Scoville J n c l u d e :
attorneys ' Baird • B. Coffin,
Laguna Beach ; Dennis O'Neil,
Newport Beach; Robert G.
Skinner, Costa Mesa ; John B.
Merrell II. Westminster-Lo!
Alamlto.1 and William Carlson
Jr., Huntington Be a ch·
Fountain Valley-Seal Beach.
Nudie Bar . Killer Wim Court Delay
Pair Await In County Penalty , Trial • • I Sentence
Conv'lcted killer Frederickf Saterfield, now SI, w11 con-their convictions were ~
SANTA ANA Jury S..t.erfleJd today won a fUrthtr vleud by • Jury six ytar1 ago 1UtuUonal. They have argued
aelectlon in the Orange County delay of the new oeoalty trial of the sliyin&s of his common th1t jurora titting tn the
Superior Court trial of a ordered in the .,.1ke of a revo-penalty phues. of tMlr trlalt
couple ICCURd of consplracy lutionary California Supreme law wlf\ and htr daughtt:r In were not ~de 1ware of the
rharges stemming fr o m Court deel.sion. Santa Ana on Thanks1ivlng specific standlrds by WIUch
alleged lewd cooduct al the Orange C o u n t Y Superior day of 19'5. Both women were they could measure (Uill .ln
Tomcat ,bar in Santa Ana Court JUd&e William C. Speirs shot ln the bedroom of the capital crimes. "'
ended abrupUy Monday when set June . t as the date tbe mother's home after a dome&-It is also argued ln the Sit.tr·
2 Bribery
Suspects
Face Court
both defendant!-pleaded nolo former Sanla Ana carpenter field case that tome jliron I.ft
contendre (neither guilty nor will be returned from death tic dispute. his trial were lmproPtfly ex·
inoocent) to reduced charges. row for a rerun of the penalty Saterfield Is one of some 30 cu.9ed beca~ ~ 1tated on
Judge William M u r r a y session that sent him to San convicted killers who have examinaUon that they wtrt: op.
accepted tbt plea! of bar,1;::Qu='=en=l=in=.========111=cce="='"=""='='ppe==='l=ed"'=t;:h;:•;:l::::"°'=:ed=:l<>=:lh;:•;:de=:•;:lh::::pena;;;::=l='ly=. =; owner Harry Maselli, 38, and 11
entertalner-oper1tor N a o m I
~ances Sims, 28, both of
SUila Ana, and ordered them
SANTA ANA -Two men to return for sentencing.April
accused of the attempted 28 on the remaining charge of conspiracy to permit a lewd
TOTS LEARN TO SWIM
AT YOUR ORANGE COAST
CALL -642·9990 YMCA ·' ·"
bribery of ~ Rivenide County
act. 1;:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::;;::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=,g supervisor have been ordered He dlsmlased all charges ]1
to face trial June lS in Orange agaln!t James W. Davi! Jr.,
County Superior Court. 36, of Santa Ana, a fellow
Presiding Judge William C. Tomcat employe who bad
Speirs set that date Monday agreed to testify against hi!
for James P. Edmondson of co-defendant.a during the trial.
Los Angele3 and David Seager Arttsting officers booked
of San Marino. Both men are the trio after viewing allegedly
officers of the Greatamerican obst'toe movies at the south
Land Company, Anlheim. Santa Ana bar and watching
Both m e n successfully female employes participate
pleaded in Riverside County In what police said were
Superior Court that advarse indect!nt acts with b a r
publicity had made I t patrons.
impo.ssible for them to obtlin Conviction on the amended
SltlRAL ILICID
WHOLI 01 HALP
'• .. . ' HAMS . ' .. So Good It WIR• • • •
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
Our 1111111 1r1 IM llnnt COOi•,_ ..... SIOA.lf'S -Our tlow *Y curlnt ..,.lfltd, rH I Wl~ln hkllory enll 11plaMIGCI Ml'llltlnt ri ~hour own 111111"9 l'IOllly 'ft •PIC• 11111• •~ "'"i..,. Ill t ll 1111
WDrld. '°' ll•lkl!M 11141 1PP1Ht .... .,. lutl _,ldti't kMW hOw ti
lmpnw 11111 prlllll\ICI _." -.,, llllklnt for M YNrl. Sp/rel I lk .
.... ,....., lop ti Wl'loPl'I so ""'' Md! llt ltdaMI 1M"9rin alkt C"8 M rtmov.i lltorlltitfY, ~i.taty blkM •t'MI r1M~ te ..,..., 0...
11 ... .,..,r Maney l ak..:t Him toc11y, 111 111\11"lur1 In lllm-lo)'ft'lllftl .,..,,II nlW ... flrgt!,
a fair trial in that jurisdiction. charge could give the RITAIL STOltlS ~ AllMI PKIY LM eM Wllllam 11'<11111
Schmid!, 8ttty J, ~ Albtr1 H. 8-tarltn.,. SU.all Ind Pttll'
G.-, Hlle J. t nd ltaberl 8.
SN YMr1, !'.dwlrd Incl A-LI-
O. Mara. C1rel S. end JefHI
Oftfllt'I. 81,...ra Incl Jlll'ln
Slbllle, Gr-Y J. 11111 Vlr1inle L.
Ch1mbl!'leln. Hotly A. alld H1rold D,
''· Wlt11, 11\1111 M. Ind 1(1rl M.
Wyrick, Donn• A"" elld Randall lttY
O'HMI. Michael L. Ind Kt!Nrl.-.. L.
Judge Scoville said
chairmen in all areas are this
year marking Law Day, May
I, with "an extensive series of
programs, films and speakers.
Local attorneys are meeting
with high school and junior
high school studenta i n
classrooms to discuss the
importance of law 1 n
American life," he said.
Seager and Edmondson are defend1nts a 1ii:-month county
I aceused of bribery In d jail term and a fine of up to 1700 I. CMat Hlthway, ConH1a ... 1 Ma.-..7J..tool 1m L INOlr:hunt. Auhelm 6U-WI. ,....'.·~OllS~p~~~·scy~.~~~~~~__:'~!00~.~~~~~~~~...:'.==::::::::::::::::::======================================================~ ..
Death Notices
f'JllDLaY HallJIO
JNn l'rldl1y, ll11kltnt ti G1rlllrl Grow. Jotln II.. Hlf'll1. llU C&lllornl1 Slrttl.
Dllt of -ti!, AprM lt. Strvlc.at ...,.1,.. Hvn!l11tton IMch. 0.11 or OM!h, AIN'll
11 '{tMklllf 0!1111! Mortuary, 64Mlll.
H•LWI•
U. Survl'Yell 11¥ 111111, H.i-. Servlcn
... 111 bl htld In Grltlllltld, MIMIChllltlh.
Sml1t11 Mortuarv, Forw1ra1ne Dlr1df!'1,
0 11¥1 Ht lwlt . ltHkllr!t of htbol l"lflll'I-l(lltCMN•lt
M.111. 0.tl of autn, Aprlt U. S.Nk11 Adlfn IClrcJ'lfttl'. 2'" or111111, eo111 ..,..ilnt at Wlllclltf CIMPll Mor1V1ry, ,y,1111, 0.ll of llMlh. April 11. $.urvlvtCI
~. bv ton. Johrl, DI' MHrlck, H.... Y11!11. ;=;;;::;;::====;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::::;1' 11.ervk n ••r• ~ fodey, TuMCtav, ti
ARBUCKLE & SON
mmcLIFF MORTUARY
U7 E. 11th St., Costa Meta
111-1181 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
COrooa c!el Mor .. . 111-11Jt
Costa Mesa . . . . . . . . Ml-Z4U • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Colla M ... u ~1433 • McCOllMIClt LAGVNA
BEACH MORTUARY nts Lqwl• c..yo Rd.
tll-911'
AM, WntcUlf ai.11el. lnttrn'llf'I', fal ...
lll~lfl M""°'llt Ptrk. Wttlclflf C~
MorlwN, """4111, O!r1eton.
U.IU8Y
Mlrll G1r1rucM L•r1bv. na H1111llfltl11t1
1111<1 .. Sp, 102, Hunllneton ••ell. 8itlovtll
m«htr al John. Cl\rll INI Chtrtu
"lanle; Mari. Wl'llPP!l i I ncl Joy kl'ln .. •IL
V11U1llllt'I. w1c1 ... 1C11v. Hoo" le 2 PM,
Gotta. li:lllff!IY 1rod Giit• Mortuary,
420 '-lvldl, Cu!v.., Cltv.
on
fkwl!K9 O.t. 21t1 H1rbar 11111<1 .. Sp,
JO, CMll Mita. O.t1 of lluttl, AprH ''·
1""'1¥111 bY hlllllilnoi. Frid. "'1¥111 Htv-
ktt, !Od1v, Tutt111v, 2 PM, W•ICll!t
Ch1P1I. ln!trmerif, L•k-OOCI Ctmtllf"I'•
MIM1tl'llll1, Mlnnlt0!1. W11lcllfl CNPll
Morf111ry, .......... Olf'ICIOl'I,
P lt•STDN
JOflPll 8. Pruton. '95 O.k SI., L11111.,.
8ead\. 0.11 o1 111111'1, Aprll 11. Survhl..:I
bY •Ill, l"-y; l(lfl, St.,,,_,, LM Pr-
h!n, c..-Ml 1Nr1 dlullllw, M11,
Clrol AM. L.tllll, DI' L11u111 H!tlllll
lorlll'llll'. CO.-Prtslon. Senft An1r
-•l•I.,.., llra. IEV•lvn ?llM!I, 8tltllll
Water Board
Sets Hearing
SANTA ANA -Directors of
the Orange County Waler Dis-
trict will hold a public hearing
Wednesday at 7 p.m. In the
distr,ict office, 1629 W. 17th St.,
Santa Ana to determine the
need and desirability o f
levying a replenishment tax
for the comlng year.
CUrrently, the distric t
charges $10 an acre foot for
waler pumped from t h e
di!trict'! underground basin
f or agricultural irrigaUon
purposes and Sl3 an acre foot
for water used for purposes
other than agriculture.
Last year an estimated $2.3
million was raised throu&h the
pump tax and used to buy
Colorado River water to
replenish t b e underground
basin.
1lllr>llJ Mta. Lotr1ln1 Dctt.r, S.nt•,::===========:;I Anal fhrM •ranlldlllclren. Gr1V1tldlJ.
llfVIC ... Weclrlttlltr. 2 PM, l'alrlltvtn • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
C<.melory Morioory
<llapel
UIG P1clflc View Drlvt
Newport e .. cb, Colllon>la
1144-2780 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
'11fl Bollll. Ave.
We1tmlmter St3-3m • SMITll'S MORTUARY
U'/ Main SL -H1DltiqtoD Buel
Go to b•t for out futur•
clti1t 1u with • c.o"tribull•n
.. th• Ha rbor "'•• la11batl
pr•tr•fl'I 111d 91t a fr•• Ca·
•le TV ln1tallalion. Ju1I 11nd
•• '$5.00. w,·u 1'enat• th•
011tir• 111'1101il'lt lo th• Harber
Ar•• lt1•b•ll ,, .. ,,m i11
••ur 111m• •"' l111tall c .bl1 TV FR:EE.
11'1 our wav of 1111i119 t•
a+ '"• •i•• ifl 01/f •••11. ,., I
M-r11r Pert;. Me<:ormldl Laeul'I&
l11cll Mortvel'Y, Dlr.c:hlrl. ••• "rlllrlclc A. Ito.. 100 Cliff Or., Lllt11M
9Ndl. Oet• 11 llutll, APrll 1t. su ...
vlv..i b~ 111t1, ltablr1 H, llo., Loo Atto11
cllullhl9!', Ma,., J. P1rt.1r, Sin M1rln111 flwa •rt"6ctlllllr111; llw tr HI• trand·
c~lkf,.,, Cf'tPllldl •1rVlc11, WtdneldlY,
11 AM. Plclllc: VI.,. Mamorltl Part;. En-
tombm¥11, P1clllc Vltw "'-Ill Part;. Pac:llk vi-MortlllrY, Olrldon ..
SPE•lt
11111 AM SPMr. Ao-11, ol 1162 SoMf' Av1 .. Hlll!llntiton 81Kfl. 0.11 of cll11t1,
A,r\I JI, Slltvlwcl bv llutblnd, M1rlDl'I; -. w. s. 11.owlrr and F. F. •-1n1
cll111hlf!'I, Alltlft HlcJ'l(llll I ncl 111TI
TfMPI b<'oltllr, Jlf!lel f . 8ronton1 ti ...
tlr, Alk1 Thempaon; • .....,, 1r1lldcllll·
clr1t11 11J1tten 11'1Mr11141cnllllr111. Strv·
k •, WN-1. 2 ,.M, W1f"" ............ "otltt c.rwm. 1111-1. wn1m1n111r
Memwi.t l"arll. Sml1t11 Mlll'llMrv, DI-
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
H )'OU have new neighbors
or know of anyone movinc
to our area, please tell ua
so that \\'e may exlend a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acqualnttd
in thclr nt'W aurrou ndinp.
So. Coast Visitor
4'4.o57' 4'4-9361
Harbor Visitor
~174
a
hit with
rfaml
chance to play bill. And yo11
a11d v•ur f1mily t et to 1111
1h1 9ro1t b ig world of Cable
TV.
With Cable TV you're •••·
;,,, m••• c.hann1l1 c.l11r1 r
and 1h1rp1r tlia11 •~•r b•for•,
in beautiful bl1cli: ind wllil•
•nd cofer.
Call today to m 1~1 r ou,
cohtribulio" •o tha Harbor
Ar•• l 111ball pro9ram.
Tll• you"9ll1r you help
tod1y may turn out t• 0. •
bette r citi1111 tomorrow f1r
y111r t ffort and co11c1r11.
NEWPORT
CABLEVISION
OUI u•uu.1 114.f l CA.ILi TV INSTALU.TION •••• WnH ... 15.00 DONATION TO THI
HAUOI AIU LUllALL PIOGIAM.
Off.et .._. la Nft,.n hoclt C.llleritlM ArMI O~y.
DIAL 642·3260
'
COMMUNITY EVENTS
APllL 24
PANCAKE
BREAKFAST
1:JO A.Ill •• 11 ,&.M.
llCHAID'S MAlKlf
YI• lUa -Ne.,.,. IMO 1, ... ..-11y Y.M.C.A.
PILL U• FO• $1 .oo
MAYll
USEO e.~K SALE
Col ...... 114t., Petfe W"t
FRIENOS OF THE
LIBRARY
LUCY PINlLlf
Ci..lr.-
ARTIST OF THE
MONTH
In our lobby
April IS thru M1y 14
TONY
MORENO
A r•1id•11t of Huntin9lo11 ltacll, Mt.
Mor•l'lo b1191~ p<1inti11t In the ]rJ
trad• In hit ntlfwt N1w M11t1c:o.
M11tlT 1elf-t1119hl, h1 lllHli•d 4 v••••
et th• U"iv•r1itv of Ari1ona in Tuc•O"•
H e u111 a v11iely of m1dia '"d 1wb·
i•c.h.
•
EARN HIGHER
INTEREST ATn
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL!
5. 753~:/!ual
Certificate Accounts*
5.82% Annual Yltld
ff all $8vings and Interest remain a year.
$1 ,000 minimum d•Posil.1-year minim um term.
Dally compounding. Earn from date of deposit.
53 current
0 annual , ...
90 Day Certificate Accounts•
5.31% Annu1I Yield
Passbook Accounts
5.13% Annu1I Yield
If all aavlnga and interest remain a year.
No minimum deposit. Dally compounding. If all uvinga and Inte rest remain a year.
No minimum deposit. Dally compounding.
Elm from date of depos it. Interest day.Jn to day-o ut.
•W1thdr1w1ls before maturtty ptrmltttd but aubJtct to aomt losa of lnltrttt.
Cal~!2m!!!~,!.~.4~!!!!.h.§.~!!ngs
NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL
COSTA MESA OFFICE: •
2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 548·2300
CLIFFORD M. WESDOAF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER
Convenient Offlctt lhrouohqut ~Angele•, Oral')Qt and Y9ntura Counties "°'°"""'.,. ~ .., "tao,ooo Ul'lffl ptl¥l•IOM If t!le l'lclt fl l l1vlng1 • Ltln lntu••-°"'°"'tlort·. PlltMIMnt •llWY" ... U11Jllld ILlill GO¥tmll'l9nt.
'• .......
CAUFORNIA ' FEDERAL •
SAVINGS . ----·
,•
' •
<.I• •
. '• '"
••
.• .~ '·
,.
I
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aw S1t1 J "11Uw111 E)ioput1
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SC lund11 AP'lt 20 1971
Coast Man
Appointed
Savings VP
• . . •
I OVER THE COUNTER
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Complete-New York ~tock List
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M • M
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r .. 1411. A,,n 20 un sc DAILY PILOT }J_
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
lfilft N.-f
CIMl1 I Mlfll Ltw C'"9 Cllf. l •ltt Mtl tW..I M ........ CltM Qt.
Finance
Briefs
Bank Splits
Into Three
Small Units
Reorganization <lf Crocker
Citizens National Banks 114
office Soulbern Region mto
thrte smaJJ unlta w a 9'
announced recently bv
Emmett G Solomon board
thelrman and chief txt!Clfh;ve
officer
Solomon !;a.Jd the action wllt
accompllsh more effective
adminiSlrat.ion of our branches
1n Southern California a'lld
n1axlmlze Crock tr 's
opportunities to partJcfpate ln
the continuing growth of that
Ina of the state "
Division ol the t<glon wUI be
ef(ecllve May I
A Los Angelrs ~1'etropolltan
Rt1lon, COMl1tlng of 4 3
offlca, wlll be admln1sler~d
by Richard W IJeldridge :.
senior vice prtsldent and
current mana1er of t bi e
Nortbtrn Region headquarter
ed In Sacramento
Harold C Kipp senior vl;e
president and ma nager o[ the
prtsenl Southtrn Region will
manage a ntw Southern
Counties Regi on which wln
consist of 42 offltts With
headquarters 1n N e w p o ' t
J.'lnanclatl Center NewpQrt
Beach
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IJ DAlLY PILOT T!i!idiy, Aprll 2{), 1971
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This latest improvement in Shell gasolines
helps keep your car in tune.That can be important
for good mileage and fewer exhaust emissions.
•
·1 TCP/2/ helps keep your car in tune.
This helps hold down exhaust
emissions in newer cars, reduce
emissions in many older cars-and helps
3 TCP/2/ in both Shell and
Super Shell helps extend
spark plug life. This helps
hold emissions down and
Good mileage and fewer emissions
-they can go hand in hand.
· keep your mileage up.
TCP /2/ is Shell's name for a new
combination of ingredients. It's
not just an additive, but
what petroleum
chemists call an
uadditive pack-
'·
age." It is an
improvement
over TCP, the
U11s than, a half
Ua.apomt per gallon
ii irnottgh TCP/!/
In do ""job.
. famous gasoline
additive developed by
Shell years ago.
Tuday almost all gasolines
contain additive packages. They
differ somewhat in what they do
and how well they do it. TCP/2/
is an effective additive package
that provides an improvement in
th.e .performance of all of Shell's
gasolines.
The effects of TCP /2/ can be
summed up as lt elpirig to keep
your car i11. t11.n.c.
Two of the main pollutants in
a car's exhaust are unburned hy-
drocarbons and carbon monox-
ide. Both are undesirable, and
both can go up when your car
goes out of tune. Jn fact, it would
not be unusual for these emis-
sions to soar as much as 50 per-
cent before you even suspect it.
And by the timeyourcartellsyou
it needs a tune-up, emissions can
be extremely high.
By helping your car stay in
tune, TCP/2/ helps stave off that
serious increase in emissions.
TCP/2/ can also have a favor-
able effect on gasoline mi leage .
When your car goes out of tune
your mileage lends to go down.
TCP/2/ works U> keep that from
happening.
TCP /2/ can also actually re-
du.ce emissions from many cars
-and improve their mileage.
These are older cars that are, in
effect, out of tune as a result of
deposits that have built up in
their carburetors.
Read on U> find out how driv-
ing regularly with TCP /2/ helps
resU>re mileage and reduce ex-
haust emissions from these cars.
keep your mileage up.
When spark plugs misfire, a Jot goes wrong. Emis-
sions go up, mileage goes do\vn, acceleration is re-
duced -and you hav e to buy new plugs.
One of the components of TCP/2/ works to pre-
vent spark plug misfire.
Shell pioneered components of this type and
Shell gasolines were the first to contain them.
TCP/2/ also helps to smooth out rough mnning
in many worn engines that have lost compression.
Another component in TCP/2/ is a special anti-
ici11g i11.gredie11L It helps prevent stalls caused by
carburetor icing before your engine is wanned up
on cool, damp days.
4 TCP/2/ in non-leaded
Shell of the Futunthelps
protect against valve wear.
One reason Shell of the Future
can be made with no lead at all
is a chemical element in TCP/2/.
This element works to protect
your engine against possible
valve wear.
Shell could have left some lead
in fo r the same purpose. But
thanks to TCP/2/ Shell could re-
move all the lead.
2 TCP/2/ keeps new carburetors clean, and helps clean up dirty ones.
Works to hold emissions down and mileage up.
When excessive deposits build up on the "throat" of your car-
buretor. your engine is no longer in tune. Emissions can rise
dramatically, and mileage usual ly goes down.
If your car is several years old or more, deposits ·may have
built up on your earburetor"throaL" ·
Although most of today's gasolines contain a detergent that
will keep clean carburetors clean, not all of today's detergents
can cut down on these deposits once they've formed. TCP/2/
does have thal. ability. It contains a new detergent combi nation
that can start to clean up a dirty carburetor with just af ew tank-
fuls of any Shell gasoline. This can reduce exhaust emissions
substantially. And it generally helps mileage, too.
'Mien ycu bum
guoline more
completely here •.•
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... you use less
g&!Oline from here ...
"-I
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are left over to come
out here.
• Probably the most important thing you can do is ·
get a tune-up. Over half of all cars need a tune-up. If
they all got one, total exhaust emissions in the U.S. would
be reduced significantly (and in most eases the effect on
mileage would be favorable).
• Tu help your car stay in tune, use a Shell gaso-
li ne with new TCP /2/. This will work U> hold emissions
down -and U> keep mileage up.
NewTCP/2/ is now in Shell, Super Shell,
and non-leaded Shell of the Future.
•
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DAILY PILOT 3
Offi~er .Joe .Galat: Neither Pig Nor Knight
OAIL't PILOT ll1ft l'M'9
HE.'DOESN'T Lll!'.E BEING SHOT AT; NO ONE SEEMS TO
· Off icer G•l•t H11 Norm1I Ho~, Dreams; Problems
'Toothless' Medi~Cal Plan
Hits Criticism From Panel
SACRAMENTO (UPI)-A proJiosal fu
drop ral!M!: teeth .from Medi.Cal bas
brought Gov. Ronald Reagan's program'
ID revamp health care services for the
needy up against bipartisan opposition.
The manager of the administration-
gponsored bill, Assemblyman William
Campbell (R·Ha cienda Heights),
commented Monday after the bill's first
Federal Grant
For Bus Line
In La guna OK'd
Laguna Beach probably will have four
flew 1>20 passenger buses in service by
the summer Festival season, Pi.fayor
Richard Goldberg bas announced.
A $53,000 federal grant that will pay
two-third!! of the cost of upgrading the
city-ciwned Laguna bus line has been
approved by the Department o !
Transportation, Goldberg said.
The grant will pennit an $80,000
upgrading project in the transit service,
including purchase of the new vehicles,
If the funds had not been approved in
time to permit purchase of the buses by
summer, the city had rontemplated
renting trams to carry visitor• from
downtown parktng Jots lo the Festival of
Art! grounds.
City administrative assistant Al Autry
said that bid specifications will be
speeded so that early delivery of tbe
buses can be obtained.
The city took over the Laguna Transit
Company In June of 1970 after the firm'•
financial problems threatened suspemion
of the service.
At that lime rolling stock consisted of
three buses, only two of which were
operable. The line bas been kept
functioning on a limited basis pendlng
approval of the federal grant.
When the new whicles are delivered,
more exteruilve local service as well u
service to adj1cent unincorporated areas
is planned.
TRA FFIC MEET
SET I N LAGUNA
The pa.rklng-consciOUI Downtown
Busint.SS Auociatlon and t h II!
tourlst-eon1Clous Chamber 0 r
Commtrte will put their bumpers
together Wednesday morning to
dlscuSI the traffic prablem ln
Llgun1 Beach.
The two grou~ will take part in
a "fo'orum on TraUic" following a
7:4$ 1.1n, brea~last at the Hotel
IAguna. All resldent11 are Invited to
all.end and may make reservations
by calling 494-1011.
'
heari~g. ~fort the Assembly Health
Committee, that he feared the bill wou1d
be killed U(lieS! denf41'es were restored:
"It is my feeling Qiat tbill bill wouldn·t
get out of this committee without false
teeth," he said.
Campbell, chairman or the committee,
said another hearing would be held next
week. He added he would probably put
off calling for a vote on Lhe measure until
even later.
It would cost another $25 million to
continue including dentures in the list of
Medi-Ol.1 services, newsmen were told by
Or. Earl Briaa. state Medi-Oil chief.
Whether or not be would accept an
Amendment restoring false t e et b
depended both on Campbell and the
governor's office, Brian said.
Present law allows payment for
dentures, but the administration as part
of its economy cutbacks has restricted
payment to just the repair of fabe teeth .
New dentures are not authorized and
this provision would be continued under
Reagan's plan to overhaul Medi-Cal. But
the program· would still provi~ other
prosthetic devices such as hearing aids
and eyeglasses.
"Do you mean it is better to hear than
to chew1" Assemblywoman Pauline
Davis ({).Portola), uked Brian.
"It's possible to tat without teeth," he
replied . "There are quite a few foods
prepared for people without teeth."
"Cream of Wheat;• reported Mrs.
Davis.
Asse~lyman Kent Stacey ( R •
Bakersfield ), said a worker might
require false teeth "psychologically and
physiologica.lly JO he can go back t.o
work" and asked why dentures were
proposed for elimination.
tt was a "matter of. setting priorities"
Brian replied, and a quuUon ol. tuJMllng
being available for lhlt particular
service.
He said cwrectlve work for children
would be stressed rather lh1n denture
service for adultl.
Recycling Drive
Set for .Laguna
Instead of tNcking all I.bat chrlters
your garage to lht dump during 1prlng
cleahlng this year, Laguna Beach's Pro-
envlronment..J>eople (PEP) suggest that
usable materials be recycled.
The ecology minded group 1uggesU
that old furniture, tools. book.I and
clothing be donat<d to the Salvation
Anny, $47.tlal; Goodwill lnduatrlfl, (147-
6301 or the St. Vlncent de Paul SOciety,
(147-56115.
On April 29, during "Cleanup Wetk,''
local residentl are encour1ged to bring
alwninum cana ind brown bottles to
Laguna Stach High School. 625 Park
A v1.., where they will be picked up thf:
Coors Brewing Company and recycled.
Aluminum canJ are Identified by their
lack of se.1ms, and •hould be crushed.
Brown bottles should be woshed and 11ny
metal rings removed. Tbt Jabe.IJ need not
be removed.
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of ... Dtllr , .........
Lapn• Beach police offlctr Larry
Gllll lo nellher a shlnlnj oymbol ol "law
and ocder" nor lhe "plg" lhal lbe long
halt<d llld yells alter bis white patrol car.
He ii a person with ~~. with dreams
of one day owning a sailboat and with a
&0metimes fruJtraUng, s Q m e t I m ea
gratffylng job to do.
Though he may wort odd hourt -his
shift now is li p.m. to 1 a.m. -th" JG.
year-old officer like many other bread
winners ha11 a wife and three youngster•
In a ~ Viejo home wailJn& for
daddy to come home from work.
Ga1at, a i.au, husky policeman wilh
plea!anl· ll'ln and an easy laugh. joined
lhe forte here Jlree years ago alter
le1vlng the Detroit Police Department
because, ha aay1 quite aeriou.sly, "t
didn't like btlnll'. shot at."
He likes working ln the aeaslde, billy
Art Colony and says he was pleasanUy
!urprl.sed when f>etirsl arrived here after
lhe 1967 Deir<>ll riots.
"The people ln Laguna Beach have no
conceplion or what crime and violence
la," lhe olli«r llld, adding lbat 5ou1llem
ClllCornla ruld<nta 111 1,.. prone to
violence than lhelt euttrn counterparta
in aolvlng disputes.
A nl&bt-Ume ride In Galat'a patrol car
provides evidence of blJ claim that the
town 15 a ta1m, relaUvely C(itne-ltte
community. ne only hx:ldent of note II
the arrest of two men on pouesalon of
marijuana charges by narcotics agents
and Gal1t'1 unit Is called to transport the
&U.'lpects to jail. Al. the palt get Into the
back 1eat, they mumble about the hassle
of getUng out of jail again afttr bavlng
be<n arreat<d only lwo days prior on Ille
aame chargea.
Aller Galal boob lhe ~. bO
said, be spends more lhan haU hll tlmo
on duty filling out report! of the lncldentl
be handles while in the field. One cue be
cited was a recent drunk drlvlns arrat. a
type which he aald involves more time
than other report!.
'Tailored' Police Studied
Galat says it took him only about five
minutes to atop the weaving car Ind
arrest the man, but be spent another
three hours in booking hia priloner,
fingerprinting him and writing a report
that would stand up u evidence &i the
man's tria1 .
"When I wu a ldd in school,'' he joked,
"I always bated writing reportl and.
compositions and t was going to hive a
job where I wouldn't have to do aey,
writing.''
Capo Ma y Tr y Public Safety Department System Although some drJver1 may belleft
dilferenUy, Galat says be dou not. wrUe
a ticket for every motlrlst he pulll to die
aide of the road, but often give1 a stern.
By PAMELA BALLAN
ot tM 0.llY •Iliff '""
An innovative program for police
service ma,y get ita first trial in San Juan
Capistrano.
Cjty Administrator Donald G. Weidner
suggested to the city council Monday that
the city tailor Its police services to its
own particular needs through an agency
called a department of public safety.
He proposed retaining the services of
the Orange County Sheriff's Office for
* * * Capo Councilmen
Raise Questions
On Police Plan
another year while tbe city al.owly le~ of a vehiclt for him, office courteow lecture in place of • court
lnveatigale3 whether or not the public equipment, a part time secretary, travel summons.
aalety concept or a traditional police expenses, a police radio a n d "But I do eite every driver I catch with'
department would best serve the city's miscellaneous expenses. an equipment violatlon, parUcuJary
real (not perceived) needs. Weidner proposed appt,Ying for a grant excessive smoke from the e1:haW1t
The study would be done by the man from the California CouncJJ of Criminal pi~,'' Galat says. "That's my bit foe
who would head the d e pa r t m e n t , Justice for full funding for the first year. eeology," •
whichever approach it took. Weidner An official of the agency, present in the Just then, 1 large, purple van runs a
suggeated immediate steps be taken to audience, told the cot.nicil the cily would stop sign directly in front of us and Galat
hire a "police chief" who would oot only have an excellent change of receivlng the gets oul his Ucke t book after pulling the
fil into Ule trad.IUonal moli:l but would be grant because of the innovative nature of young driver to the curb. There art three
open to an investigation of the "public the proposal. people in the oddly painted vehicle, two
nfety" concept. The city administrator stresaed that at men and a young girl. A check of the-
"Public safety for terms o f the end of the year's study the cooncil girl's identilication and a pbone: call ti1
under!itanding the implications in the might decide to go ahead with orguiilng the dispatcher to her home revula she Ls
balance of this report is a comprehensive a conventional police service much like • runaway. Galat writel the driver a
concept encompassing all major aspects the one described in the study done by ticket and takes the girl to the ltatiM.
of ·community activities which materially consultant Richard Grace. II 50, nothing where she ls held for her parents.
affect the health, safety and welf~e €If would be Jost but time. After working in strife-torn Detroit, the
its residents." said Wei dner. But ht added it would be worth tht: officer said, h'e Is often lllflrlsea that
This would iaclude planning, zoning time to find out exactly the type of Laguna Beach residents would call the
and fire protection whlcb iire already service the city needs to make poll~ police to handle such minor problellUI u
organized and were not included in the service meaningful and relevant to San loud mmic or a barking dog.
report and the enforcemt:nt of building Juan Capislrano. "Even where I live in Mission Viejo,"
San Juan capistrano city councilmen, and related codes, health codes, he notes, "there is a band that pr1c:ticel
receiving City Administrator Donald G. sanitation. nuisance abatement. business in a neighbor's garage. We wouJd never lice~se enforcement, zoning enforcement, N• l R •d think of calling the sheriff If the mUllc Weldner's report on a. "public saft:ty" env1ronn)ental control and traffic Jgue eSJ en ts wert: too loud, but would 1imply ut them
approach lo police services, held their t:ngineering, all ol which are not well to turn It down."
comments for the April 26 cotmcil organized in the city. Pl C • As if to emphasize what Ga1at ta
meeting. Weidner said in bis review of reports all ampa1gn saying, the police dispatcher comet on
But they asked many questiorui about submitted by sheriff's deputies be found the air and sends him to the north end ol
the fusibility of such a proposal. there was a great need for the policeman F E h D town where a c&mper has just parked ln
"Wouldn't this put poli~ officers ln to be equipped to provide or have access i Or art ay front of an irate resldent'1 home.
unfamiliar fields?" asked Mayor Tony to as "full an· array of public safety "Some people see m to have a lot of
Forster. services as possible." Promotion of a cleaner and more time to spend looking out their curtaln1
"Policemen in beats often don't know He added that each patrolman beautiful environment will be the concern for somethin" to call the police about."
about other city department functions wouldn't be expected to be an upert in of the Laguna Niguel Homeowners he said as wt moYed up High Drive. He
and •eed knowledge of them," anawered all phases of public safety. But he would Association and tht: Laguna Niguel patiently tells I.ht: two out.of-town girls in
Wt:idner. Tbe pt,1blic safety department know where to go to gel answers Woman's Club on Thursday, designated the camper. that they can't •pend the
would have resouree people in ll. 1 have demanded by a citizen with a problem. as Eartti Day. night on a city street Thty gladly movt
been wlth patrolmen on a be.at and have "One has only to spend a little time A nyer being distributed throughout the on, supplied with Galat's directions to the
been impressed with the lengths they with a police officer in a patrol unit to be community lists seve.r1l practical ways nearest camp ground.
went to to get information of this type impressed with the wide range of for resldenta t.o show their interest in Galat says that most young people he ~!1~ .. would be readily available to knowledge be must possess about bis upgrading the commWlll.y. 1 encounte1:s in his job are cordial and he
"You're asking a policeman to have community in order to be effective," said Ghese Include: cleanup parties to feels many of the youth-adult prob1elDI in
additional skills. would be expect Weidner. The information available to remove litter from slreeb and vacant Laguna Beach could be solved by a youth
additional compensation?," asked the him through a "public safety." agency lots; geUing a car tuneup to reduce recreation center.
mayor. would make him much more effective. ·rumes; saving papers, glass a nd Many parents, he feels, think the beech
''You'll find that policemen, whatever Weidner aho said that a public saft:ty aluminum for recycling; re-u 1 Ing and ocean provide enough diversion to
their title, will be called upon to perform department could be more.economical by wrapping materials like foil, plastic keep kids out of trouble and off the
similar duties in every city," answered combining a number of services under containers and bread wrappers for food streets. But Galat says the beach gets
Weidner. one admntstraUve head. storage ; conserving water and cold at night and boring alter the first
"When called he responds and ~akes a The first year cost would be electricity; trying lo stop smoking; few weeka of summer.
decision on his jurisdiction. If we use a approximately $2$,000 to include $14,832 seek ing ecology-preferred products at The palrol car turns onto Coast
public safety approach the palrolman will for a chief who would devote supermarkets. Highway, past a group of youngsters
know where to go. to get a problem approximately one year in meeting with The Women's Club will have • display milling around a street corner, and the
solved. The sheriff's deputies reported an Capislrano's citizens to determine the of such producta at Monarch Bay Plaza dispatcher broadcasts an address where
increasing number of this type of can. kind of police service they need. The between 10:30 and I! :30 a.m. on Earth • resident has just complained of
Because it might not be a priority call lj'oiilhiieiiriiii'1iipeiiiindiii'iiluriieiisiiiiwiiouiiiildiiiibeiiiiiiloiiriiiilhii•iiiiiiDiiaoiyii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiviieriilurnOiiiiiedioiigaroi;ib~ag~eiic~ansOiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,_. they would not immediately respond and
might even then leave the problem
unsolved because it was aot in their
jurisdiction.''
Councilman Jim Thorpe uid he would
be willing to pick a chief who would be
effective in a number Of conte:rts and
apply for the study grant because more
time is needed to indicate council
direction in a number of areas,
particularly the proposed annexation of
DaTia Point and Capistrano Beach.
Mayor Forster expressed h!J hope that
San Juan citizens will ctintact their
councilmen and express tbelr views on
the proposal.
Storage Tank
To Be Replaced
A 3.S million gallon water storage tank
will replace the exlsUng 100,000 gallon
tank which sits on lhe hillside above the
Festvia1 ol A r t s grounds, it was
aMounced by the Laguna Beach County
Water District.
Construction on the underground lank
will begin within 45 days. The old 1teel
tank which presently 1ils above the
ground will be razed and the area
l811dlcaped.
William Moorhead, district general
manager, said the new tank will be of
great va1ue in the event of • water
lhortagt:, due to Its great capacity.
The new reservoir will be paid for wlth
current fund! and revenues, be aaid.
Class Exhibits
Set at El Morro
Music, dancing, art and lclence
exhibits will be part of the clwroom
demonstratioM at the El M o r r o
E~mentary School Open H o u 1 e
Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
Teachen and Jtudt:nts have prtpared
lbe exhibitions ao lhat par<nts and
memben of the community can aee
ctemoiutrations of how I e a r n l n r
procedures occur in the clnlroom.
Jn addition to the classroom a:hlblU,
1rt work by t:ach of the students 1t El
Morro will be ~nted In lhe "Art a la
Mode" exhibit In the school's main patio.
Atw, aclence project.a by each of the
!ludent1 will be on di.splay in thi
auditorium.
All member~ or the conununlty are
lnvlted to attend.
)
4
DAYS
10NLY
Warehouse
and
Back room
Wednesday • Thursday • Friday • Saturday
IO% 40% On!
AND EVEN MORE ON SOME ITEMS
SOfAS • CHAIRS • BEDROOMS • DINING ROOMS • BUFifns
SERVERS e CHINAS e GAME SETS e OCCASIONAL TABLES
THROW LAMPS MIRRORS PILLOWS
Regul1r $3.00 5.0%. OFF YOUR s199s YOUR ggc
CHOICE CHOICE
ORIENTAL AREA ODD HEADBOARDS COMMODE
TABLES RUGS AND NIGHT STANDS
s3900 s399s FROM s399s
H.J.GARRETf fURNrplRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
•
-Tl'r OUI HYOLYINa CHAlal-
Opot1 Moo., Than. & Ftt. Int.
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
6•6·0275
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I
•
f DAllY PILOT
\
\ •· I ~ps
Reach for Sky
With Caution
By THOMAS MURPHINE
llEl\E AND THERE DEPT. -Almost
anywhere yoti go along the Orange Coast
theae diys, all you have to do to start a
controversy is make a pronouncement
about high rise buildings.
Maybe it's all part of the new
environmental consciousness. You know
-something Uke ecology starts below
the sinh floor. Anyway, a number of our
coastal cities have been struck by the
current high riae hanle.
"PIT.....,.
Newport Beach got into ~ hlgh rise
flap early ln the 1960s when the harbor
city's first -the Vista del Lido
apartments -wu built. Severi! others
followed and it brought an outcry for
Newport. to retain tta village atmosphere.
One prominent lady stood be!ore the City
Co~ and ahouted that anything over
three stories tall wu "an aesthetic
•bortioD.."' A mnnber of these do exist.
Anyway. Newport even today ls
haggUng over whether or not it should
have any more lalJ structum around its
waterfront.
2,000 VIETNAM VETS CONVERGE ON WASHINGTON JN PROTEST
Four of the O.monstr1tor1 Ara Shown In Theta Candid Phot09raph1
* Meanwhile, Costa Mesa built Bethel
Towers, the retirement high riser, which
wu at the time the tallest building in
Orange CounJy. It developed that In
Bethel Towers, Costa Mesa won the race
for reaching into the sky but Jost in the
effort to acaue •d<Hlional ta.I.es for the
city, 1be retirement place has a certain
tax immunity.
Veterans Try w Take
Protests to Congress
NOW COSTA MESA is puzzling over
whether or not Jt wants any more such
vertical developmeot.s that fall flat in the
department of filling the: city treasury.
Meanwhile, downcoast, a considerable
group known u Village Laguna has
col~ more than 4,000 signatures to
tell the Laguna Beach City Council that tuts or no taxes, the Art Colony doesn't
want any high rise buildings at all. The
Village Lagunans are proposing an
Initiative to limit building belght.s to 36
feet.
Their cry of "keep the village
atmosphere" IOUnds a lot like the rally
call beard 1n Newport about one decade
back.
* FARTHER DOWNC:OAST, a guy !rom
Philadelphia jumped into the whole tall
building controversy. Yes, f r o m
Philadelphia.
He is James J . McCarey, the fire
commia:sioner from the City of Brotherly
Love and he was ln San Diego for -you
guessed it -a fireman's convention.
* Anyway, McCarey called a press
conference yesterday to declare that a lot
of tires: in high ri5e building! these days
are too high up to fight.
'"lbe limit for firefighting is at the 12th
or 13th floQr," ht declared, "and in some
cities, at the seventh floor."
THE FIRE CBIEP'S noted that in
current design, there are a lot of
sky!ICl"8pen that feature windows which
won't open.
"The contractor ii worried about air
conditioninc and we are worried about
aaving lives," McCarty asserted.
San Diego Fire Chief Leonard Bell
chimed in that in hls city alone, more
than 100 buildings are higher than 13
1tories whlch he agreed poses a limit to
1UCC98ful firefighting methods.
Well it's pretty clear that whether
you're with the ecologist.s or the
firefighters or tu collectors, il'a going to
be a loog awon (or tall building build·
en.
WASH1NGTON (AP) -Two thousand
battle-dressed Vietnam veterans have
temporarily shifted their antiwar protest
from the street! of the national capital
into the offices of Congress.
sun wearing their jungle camouflage
faUgue.s and other bits and pieces of
uniform, the veterans sought meetings
with House and Senate members to tell
how they turned against the war.
Initial reaction from the legislators was
mixed.
"Those who have tended to hi liberal
on the war talked to us." uld one
veteran after initial visits Monday.
''Those who have been more hawkiab
were 'out.' ..
"Some people didn't like the way we
drtssed," said another, "but the way we
are dressed was largely the way we
Israel Seeking
U.S. Guarantee
Against Invasion
By Unlte'd. Press JnternatlODal
Diplomatic sources in Jerusalem said
today Israel was asking the United Slates
for guarantees that Russian a n d
Egyptian troops would not cross the Suez
Canal if Israel makes a partia l
withdrawal in an effort to defuse t.he
newest 1'.1ideast crisis.
The Israeli reports said the U.S .·lsraeli
talks had reached the "make or break"
point.
The new crisis blew up when Egypt.
Syria and Libya formed an Arab
Federation to consolidate their strength
against Israel and Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat announced there would be
no more negotialions with Israel, no
abandoning of one inch of Arab territory
and no rellnqui.shlng of bargaining on the
Palestiae question.
dressed in 'Nam' "
The sight or 2.000 lllliformed ..... 1dlen
marching on their government Monday
was a new twist for the antiwar
demonstraliOll! frequent in Washington
over the past few years.
The scene et the west front of the
Capitol gave something of the ima1e of a
baUle zone. with several vets carryink
toy copies of the M·16 rilles they luged
in Vietnam.
Traces of Navy blue and Marine olive
drab speckled the predomtnanUy /\rmy
crowd. 'There wu a flak suit with Air
Force wlnp OD the chelt. gold wings Of a
Navy pilot, bm of oUicora ond ltrlpea ol
1ergeanta. And berets of varied hue.
'The facq were young, but pimmer
than those of the usual student
demonstraton.
"Unlike the demonatratora of the past,
we know from ez:perlence what the war ill
like," proclaimed the Vietnam Veterans
Against the War which ii 1ponaoring the
~k·long protest. ,
The crowd carried an Innate dlaclplint
which sUU cllngs to moat of the formtr
1ervicemen. Their unifonm we r •
unkempt but all remembered to clamp on
their caps before going out. Army stories •
we~ the only jokes beard.
Officer Disciplined
For Laos Criticism
PLEIKU, Vietnam (UPI) -The U.S.
commander who criticized the SOuth
Vietnamese operation in LaOI and who
was caUed on the carpet by his superiors
for allowing televi!ion filming of Ameri·
can helicopters dropping napalm has
been relieved of his oommand and trans-
ferred to another area, mUitary !OUrCQ
said today.
The officer, LL C:Ol. Frank O. Miller or
1'1ailland Fla., was commander of the
52nd Combat Aviation Battalion, one ol
the largest aircraft units in Vietnam.
Wyoming Hit by Tornado
_}
Mounroins in Southwest Pounded by Storms
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Go Into Ceylon
}et Base· Set Up at Government's Request
<lOLOllBO, Ceylon (UPI) -Tile Scwkl
un1.., bu "°"'" oettlnc up • Jet flCbter
bolo tn Cqlaa at the rtqUttt of the
pemmeot ol Prime Mlnlltu Slr1D11vo
-·· dlplomltk -llid today. Tile --1d ... the llNI Soviet
military tnltaJlaUon tn llOIM:ommunllt
A.al•.
The aources uld Soviet crews arrived tn _.. the put weekend ond 11e
otar!nl tn a remote bottl live mtla llom
Colombo's mllllary ond civil airport
where the MJGl7 bolo 'lllll bo loeoled.
The lint of the Soviet jela ,.....
apeded to anive immediately, the
sourcea ukl. DlplomaUc circles were
unctriatn of tho detalla of tlle Moocow·
COiombo agreement and whether the
base wu pe~ or temporary. Nor waa It immtdiately clear what role
tlle SOviela ....Wd play In the Ctylon'•
student u pr J 1 In a which Mn.
Bandaranalb'1 rovernment wu
•trualin( 1gtlntl several other lorelp
c:ountrie1 ha•• already 1e11t arms and
equipment to Ceyloo to help put down tlle
nbellloo.
But H wa1 known that one of Ceylon '1
most pre11ing needt wu air support for
the llland 111Uon'1 ln>W1d ,....,.._ Air
support to 111 against the two-week-old
rebellion bu been llmlted to 1 handful of
Indian bellcopler> and oortla by old
C-eyM>nese car10 planta from wblch
a-ewme.n tou dynamite.
The MJG17 It an obtoleacent n,htu
plane. Moot of El)'pt'1 M!Gt, I«
u:ample, are MJG2la. Recently El)'pl
hu been reported to be receJvlng the new
and revoluUonary MIG231 b well.
The rebeWon Mrs. Bandlranalke'1
forcu: have been struullng to crush
broke out among the l.lland'1 thouJlnds
of unemployff unlventty fll'adultu who
are Impatient with tht eovernment'a
IOClaliJt reforms and want a more
:.td!>
'It'• Mao/ Ho"' are
you at pi111J10ng?~
rldlcall:!' lol\willl ....,.,..
llobel ...,-tllat, Who bave -!aimed
u.-tvet CJle Guenrltla In ...-y ol
Ibo Qiban .....iatlonary Who WU killed
tn Bolim tn 1117, ttlD control """"Jllrll
or the bland, despite ....,..,..i
attempla to wipe them out.
Ceylon upolled the NO<th Korwl
•mbUlldor ond bJa 11111 Jut -t. tn
what diplomatic 10artt1 Aid wu
1uaplcloo that the Pyoogyang aovemmeot
had fomented the uprising and perhaps
even auppUed money and anm to the
tn.ur1eo1t.
The $ovltl -19 mll.. nartb of CoWn11>o ,.~ t11e Rlllllant' Ont
mllllary foothold tn Aall beyond It OWft
lmmedllte ~ of inOuence. It a1lo
provides the Sovlela with I Wld bue tn
the IDdlan Ocean ,..,ion, wblcll Mooc:ow
bu been Irylng to ol>laln and western
po-• have been trying to block for the
put three years.
Diplomat.. uid there bu been tallt alto
of the potalblllly of the Ctyloneta
lllowinl the Soviet navy to uae the uval
bolo at Trlncomalee, 110 a>lles northeul
of Colombo.
Curse Strikes
Death Jinx Reported in England
BRISTOL, Enj[Wld (UPI) -Rootmary
Stacey 1ay1 lbe ii • widow at 21 W1nee
of a lamlly jiu -NWtlit busbandl
ol her JllOtlMr. grandmother ond IP't•t· . grandmother die wben they were her age.
She told her bulblnd "" had •
prtmoltillm abe would be I -It II
becault Ibo tbought be WU tn dan&tr
from the JinL
"He took it serioualy 1 n d promised
never . to tab any rllkl," she Hld on
leovlng a conmer'• tnque..t Mooday.
The coroner btd Juat puaed 1 vtnlicl
of 1ccldental dealb oa her 18-)'0IM!d
b111band, !Uchanf, crulbed when •
tractor rolled over bim in February.
"'11111 II the fourth 1Jm1 it hu
happened tn my family. My greal·
!P'andlatber died from an illaeu when biJ
wlle WIS ZI," she aaid.
11My grandfather was tilled in the first
World War wbtn bis wife was 21 and my
father wu killed in tbe second world war
when my mother was 28," Mrs. stac:ey Wd. .
••And now my buaband, Richard • , , "
"" uid.
Soviet Warship Buzze'il
By 3 Japanese . Planes
TOKYO (UPI) -'Ibo Soviet deJtroyer
steamed semidy through the T111sblm1
Strait between Japan and South Korea.
&iddenly, three Jspanoae FMF Oghlor
jets nooped down, buzzed th e
unJU1pecttni Ruuiana at about SOO feet
and snapped away with their cameras in
a mock attack.
Tbe incident occuned on March 10,
during a war game conducted by the
Japanese self defenae aJr force and the
naval defense force . The defense ministry
had Wd nothin& about It unUI today,
when tho report appelled tn tho Tokyo
Shlmbun newspaper.
Deleoae Agency Director Yasuhiro
Nlkuone uid today the mock attack on
the Soviet vessel wu ••a ml!take on our
part." He 1ald the Japanee:e government
apolollzed to the R11saJans the nut day,
and the RuasilDI had cbalied tt o!l to
human error.
A defenae agency spokesman said the
four pilots mistook the Rusaian vesael for
one of tbe1r own ships engaged In the
maneuvers. One or the pilots apparently
realized their mistake and stayed away,
the apokwnan said, but the other three
went to it.
The spokesman said the planes were
not armed and did not even carry dummy
bombs -just the camera!.
Tbe incldeat came at a Umt wbea the
Soviets: ILill were critical of alJe&td
"'provocations" by Japanea military
aircraft qainst Soviet vesael.s. Japanese
plane1 have made fly-overs during the
put two years when Soviet ships followed
Japanese and American vea,,els durinC
joint naval maneuvers.
Blaze in Thailand .Hotel
lt also happens in waters in which tha
flett of Adm. Heihachiro Togo defeated
the Russian navy on May 27, 1905, during
the Russo-Japanese war.
Kills 25 Foreign Visitors
Nakasone, whom the Communis t
Chlnese have aceused of "militarist''
policies as an influential member or the
Diet (Parliament), said, "We are not
going to scale down the maneuven."
The maneuver• were designed to train
Japanese pilot.! to distinguish between
"friendly" and "unfriendly" ships. BANG!COK (AP) -A lire rai<d throup th• north wing of tlle Imperial
hotel eorly today, ldllin( 2S rorolgnera,
Police reported. 'Ibey ukl 2S of the
bodies had been recovered, but
idenllfic.tion wu a difficult Wk became
the register wu destroyed.
The police uld It was believed the
victim• were .America.ftll, Japanese,
German, Cbln.,. and Egyptian. The
hot.ti near the Amtrican Embusy was
popular with fortign tour group.s,
American aervice families and crews of
some airllnts.
Some of the bodies were found in
corridors, othtn tn the elevator. Ma&t of
the d~ths were caut<d by uphyxlallon.
Mtny terrified gueals, tncludlng four
airline stewarcteuea, were i n ju re d
Jumping ,_ loorth Ooor -~ The
nurnbtr of Injured was not known.
Witnesses Aid the fire atarted about 4
a.m. after an upk>sion in the around
floor coffee shop, a popular after boun
meeting place.
P&llce arrested tht coot from the
coffee shop.
"Tbt uplotlon woke me up," said Fred
Oltuoht, a tour )eader from Frankfurt,
West Gtnnany. "A f1R started in the
1taircue and reception area after the
eiplosion.
"My room wu on the opposite side
from the fi,.. But I Jumped down one
floor to tho ....,..i. People were
Kat.e Webb Body
Believed Found
PHNOM PENH !UPI) -A body
bellov"i to be th1t of Catherine M.
"Kiie" Webb, United Pmt JntornaUonal
burtau mana1er ln Phnom Ptnh, bu
betn found In 1 baltle uu 16 mUts
soqlhwut of the capital
Miit wo1111. II. and five olber ,,.,_
h>vt been ol(lcllll1 listed u mlatng
since April 7. 'l!ley wore covorinl a bltlle
on Htpway 4 when Clmbodlan Plflfnlop
posltlooa _.. ovtmln by Comnnlllitl -~fvllldng Cambodlllt tr-. found
.. voral bodlH tn Ult ana Jut Ftl .. y. In
-with C.rQecllan mUllaly
procedure, Ill the bodies ... burned on
tht spot but 1 C.mmbodiln ollloor who
had prevleusly -Miu Webb said III•
Wb llMftl the dtad.
(
screaming ond jumping out of windows.
.. Some b r o k e their Ie11 and the1J'
splnea.
"One of our tour group, a Swiss doctor
named Mermann, I! mlssift& and his wife
is In the hoipital."
Ei&bt boun Iller the blue, tmob WU
atill coming from burned out rooms on
· the top floor. U.S. /\rmy medico from the
5th Field HMpltal joined 'lllli police
doctors in carrying away charred bodies.
In IOJne rooms bodies of parents and
their children were huddled toaether.
Autlaor in Run
Red Spy Rings Netted
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -In the
largest crackdown on CommuoJst qent.s
operaUni in South Korea, four North
Korean spy rings bave been smashed and
51 persons arrtsted, the army security
command announced today. Three ol the
rings were beaded by students efflcials
said. '
Erich Segal (7119), 33-year-old author of "Love Story" joins 1,000 olller
runners in 26-mlle rice from Hopkinton, Mass. to Boston. Segal bas run In race for 15 years. Story, Page 16.
Army Will Relax
Ban on Mothers
WASHINGTON IAP) -With
a ch&ngtng eye t o w a r d
motherhood, the Army b
1olng to allow Its female
ofticer1 and enlisted women to
do what many women do -
have children and raise a
family .
Navy is expected to follow
soon. Earlier this year, the
Anny a pp roved ~lllng
married women.
New regulaltons, effective la
two weeks, will pennit WACs
and female Army nurses who
are married and "who are
pregnant, have had
terminated pregnancies or
who become parents" to slay
In the Army. In the past, thl.!
meant automatic discba111:e.
An Army spokesman said
the new policy won 't mean "a
wholesale opening of t h e
doors" to mothers in uniform.
"The mere fact that a woman
ls married aod pregnant and
wants to stay on are not the
only grounds. She must also
meet the other requirements."
The change is the lat.est
move by the armed services to
ease traditional d o u b I e
slaJldards for the sezes.
The Air Force adopted a
similar policy la March. The
According to the regu1atiom,
a WAC officer must first have
the recommendation of her
commanding officer, a
statement that the child wiU
JtOt interfere with her work or
"result ln ne(l:lect of the
child," and "the proper
medical certification and
history."
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Car Speed
Crackdown
Proposed
Mills Asks
Wage Boost
WASHINGTON (UPll -
House Ways and M e a n 1
Commlltle Chairman Wilbur
D. Mills (0.Ark .), said today
Congress should raise the
hourly minimum wage for 9
million Workers from $1.60 to
12 effective next February -
a year earlier than House
Democratic leaders wan t.
Mills said the move would
boost the economy by creating
more spending power and cut
down on the costs of welfare
reform.
-QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandr
••
Tuts41J', AprU 20, 1911 DAILY PILOf 5
Whl.te House Quiel{ to Deny
Agnew-Nixon Split on China
Republican leaders of the
Senate and House. Ziegler said
he talked to Agnew beforehand
and was authorized tG di.lo
claim the reports of dl!!ere"" .,..,
Asked H Agnew dld indeed
meet with a iJ'OUP of reporters
for three hGurs early Monday
morning, Ziegler declined to
nply but Scott interjected :
"1 think it's just because he
(Agnew) likes new spa per
people."
lnclud•s
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$oath Coast '1ua in Cost•
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8 DAJl,Y PlLO'f EDITORDL P AGE
.· .
Undeserved 'Bad Rap'
The tone and substance of current attacks ori J.
Edgar Hoover and tbe ·Fede"1 Bureau of Investigation
have an odd echo reminiscent o! the "McCarthy Eraw
of 20 yw-s ago.
Sen. Edmund S. Mus li I e (IJ.Me.) ls somewhat
easy to understand, wbat with his eye cocked on the
White House. J. Edgar Hoover is a big target. But Mu~
kle'a cbarge1 are so blatantly political, as the Nixon ad-
ministration suggests, that they will not even be invest-
igated. Muskie's shoddy innuendos have demeaned him
-not Hoover. ·
And '.House Democratic leader Hale Boggs (IJ.La.)
has failed to offer any evidence to substantiate his
charges that the FBI has tapped the phones of mem~
bers of Congress.
Because attacks on FBI Diractor Hoover have fol·
·lowed in the wake ot the charges .against the FBI, Pres-,
ident Ni:ion strongly defended him against what he
termed ''unfair and malicious" criticism. He said Hoover
bas been the victim of an undeserved "bad rap 11
-and
lhe President ls quite rigbl
The ?~year-old 'Hoover is neither the god of law
and order nor-the cloven-footed demon his enemies
would have the nation believe. He is a fallible human
being who, nevertheless, at 29, took over a scandal-rid·
(fen bureau filled with political hacks and made it over
into a model of professionalism untainted by corruption.
He bas served eight Presidents and 16 Attorneys
General'. Capable of both infinite kindness and vindic-
tiveness, the director has been the prototype of the effi·
cient non-political career public servant.
The FBI's power is such that under a weaker or
less honorable leader it could have turned the nation
into a Police state. But lt did not happen, and Hoover
has been the strongest voice in warning against setting
up the FBI as some sort of national police force.
Lyndon Johnson probably ened when he waived
the mandatory age-70 retirement rule in Hoover's case.
Hoover had created hls monument; It was time to step
down. But he had trained no ,ounger man to take over,
and this is indeed a serious mark against him.
Any possibility that Hoover will step down now in
the face of the Muskie and Boggs attacks seems remote.
The senator and the congressman have apparenUy de-
feated their own purpose.
But this doesn't mean that Hoover shouldn't call t~
a day at the close of Nixon's current term. A much
youngu man of ·equally strong·eharacter can and must
be found. The nation needs an able but strictly control·
led investigative agency to cope with internal security
problems in an era of increasing turbulence.
Crossbreeding Bonanza
Eggs at $350 each? That would seem the ultimate in
inflation, the tale of a totally destroyed currency.
It's apparently true right now, however, for a bright
16·year·old sophomore at Calaveras High School up in
the Mother Lode country. Starting four years ago with
300 leghorns his father won shaking dice at a bar, Grant
Sullens started experimenting with crossbreeding.
Like hi s father's dice, he hit the right combination.
He found himself with a rooster weighing 81h pounds;
big. fat hens and eggs one and a half times the size of
ordinary eggs. The breasts of his fat hens weighed "-s
much as 21h pounds, with meat described as of "very
good flavor."
Father and son expect poultry producers will pay
$350 each for hatching eggs of such quality. So, it it all
isn't just a good-natured yolk •••
. --
.... ----·-.. ~ ... . .. , -····· ' I .. ,. ..... .. · .. W ~ ~ • I /' ·/""'.
/ ~· '
Openjng Volle1'
Drunk Driver
Getting by
,With Murder
Nixon's Goals and Mao's Are Entirely Different
The hard-headed, banl-blu.d and -nosed "law and order" people would gain
a lot more credibility In my eyes if they
sl:-~:ed with themselves and applied UJe
aame rigorous stand-
ards to their own
conduct I.bat they de-
mand lnlm muggers,
rioters, doprslerl
and ddinquents.
The most "crimi-
nal" and le8" pun·
lshed element in this
country is the reck-
less and drunken . .
driver. We so-called iood cilltelll kill
more than 5S,OOO of OUl' neighbors eack
year on the highways -more than the
total number of Americans killed In Viet-
nam lD Ute last 11 years.
AND MORE THAN half of these fatal
accidents inVolve the abuse of liquor.
Every public official knows this; every
motorist knows this. Yet where is an the
clamor for "stiffer" and "tougher" laws
against our nation's biggest killer of all,
the drunken driver?
I don'l hear any, eii:ctpt on the part of
the National Safety Council and the in-
surance companies. Mosl of us '1decent"
and "law.abiding" citizens don't want
sterner highway laws, because we are
wlnerable to them. We only want
tougher laws against crimes we know we
won't commit. And against the kind of
people we koow we aren't. This attitude
Is a travesty on what "law and order''
ought to be, and where It ought to begin.
' I HOLD 1N MY hand -as Sen. Joe
McCarthy uaed to say -a clipping from
the New Y«k Times of Jan. 2, reporting
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
To reduce the welfare rofl.s, we'll
have to make investors out or the
people in their productive years.
Too many of them work a lifetime,
end up with nothing, then go on
relief with the rest of us paylng
their bill!.
-W.R.S.
Tllk ... ,_ rwl'IKh ,....,.... .. ._.. ....
-..rttr """' .. ---· '"' ,.., "" ,....,. It • ...,..., .... °'"' ~lltl.
that the Oregoa. RepubUcan state
chairman plell1!ed guilty to chargt1 of
tilling a 62-year-0ld woman while driving
under the tnnuence of liquor, on the
wrong aide o1 the street, and with his
lights oul.
This man was given a suspended
11entenee. And h~ is the ruJe, not the ex·
ctption. Everyone knows a dozen horror
stories like this -ol boozed-up kids rac-
ing through a red light and killing four
people in another car, and getting at the
rnost 30 days for "negligence."
VET MOST SOLID and respectable
Americans oppose stifler laws against in-
ept or intoxicated drivers. M~t states
doo't permit "breaUH>laltr'' tests to
scientifically determine the degret of
sobriety or a driver picked up by the
police. Most ciUzens wilt resort to any
fie, bribe, fraud or inlluence to avoid los-
ing their driver's license. It is all con-
sidered "part of the game"-the most
murderous game played In this country
by the most players, inflicting the
greatest Joss or life.
All the muggers, rioters, dopesters and
de:linquents put together (lon't do as much
damage as we do, or defy justice and
decency more successfully. When we
start a genuine and meaningful
crackdown on the homicidal, a\cohollc
driver, I will start to believe in law and
order.
Report Was Erroneous
To the .Editor:
A copy of a MWI ii.em appearing in
your issue or March 14, c.ame to my
attention. 'I'be inaccuracy of t.bt news
story amazes me. Not only did 1 not,
repeat. NOT "chew out" Congressman
John Schmitl when he spoke 1galnst lhe
ll-year-0ld vote mtasUtt, but t did not
even talk to blm about the matter.
RJlher than btlng "diJpleased" by his
actions, 1 fell that be did an ncellenl job or presenUnc the viewpoint of those who
opposed tbt measure under
cooalderauon.
IN FACI', HIS performanct wu typical
of the fine manner In wbk:h he hu
spoken out Jn his representaUon of his
conllltuent.I alnoe he bu been a member
of the Hou.le of RepreSentatives.
II la my alncere hope thal you will
correct Utll emineous report In fairness
to Congrtumu SChmlll and myself, and
ln the lnteresla of accuracy.
GERALD R. FORD, M. C.
01tr opaioglca to bolh congrt~n.
Wt milunckntood the remarks of our
ne101 ,ourc:e, Colto Mew Mavor Rob-
er' M. Wilson. and .,-re:d in attrlbu·
Uftg tM (OnlN"" fo Rfp. Ford.
Edl1or
• ,_ I• t or L«1clf!11
Te the r.&lor: 1'be law 11 lor Ille lawlt11. Wt should
Iii • law to ounelm. doing lhose thlnp o.t .. pod llxl oflenatve to DO ooe, bUt
\
-·' I
Mailbox
Ltttfn from rtodt1'S ore tDt:lcomt.
Normallt1 write1'a: a:hould convey thetr
messages i'n. 300 worda or less. The
right lO condense letterJ to fit .tpact
or eliminate Ube! is reserved. AU let•
ters must include signaturt and moil·
tng oddrtat, but namt1 mov be with.-
held on 1'tqutsi if suf./icient reason
is appcrnat. Pottry w1U not be pub-
lithtd.
the lawless must be surrounded by the
rence of the la•.
We ti..ve , in recent yean, setn public
lands taken over. Jn Washington D.C.,
Berkeley and Alcatraz Island. We have
seen the ~trances to government
bulldinp blocked. In international law.
wt have aeen amall counlries M.iie ind
fine tuna boats without oppoaltlon from
our aovtmmmL
WE RA VE SEEN vlolallon o I
lntuna:Uon.al law where our prb!onttl of
war are concerned. And now we have
made a na.Uonal hero of a man convicted
of the murders of .22 unarmed clvlllan.i.
lf we ignore int'er1ational law how can
we upecl Olben to upllold II?
If we do not begtn to uphold the law. we
are In blg trouble. Clvlllutlon cannot
llsnd wllhout law.
JAMES W. BOLDINi;
Peking Smiles vs. Gullible Americans
WASHINGTON -The only available
source material here on the Communist
version of news in the Far East shows
America and its Saigon p u p p e ls
staggering in defeat, the myth of air
superiority shattered and the imperialist
forces generally on the run.
It is an interesting pattern. While the
great debacle is tak·
ing pl.ace the Amer-
ican table tennis
team is received
graciously In Peking.
But wail Peking
Radio appuvingly
reports a J apenese
dispatch that t h e
visit of the table
tennis players ils
''believed certain to prod the public sen-
timent in the U.S. for more active effort!
to improve China·U.S. relations on a
governmental level."
The pattern emerges from foreign
intelligence broadcast reports and there
is no doubt at all of what Peking
propagandists have in mind.
IT IS A STh1PLE PITCH over the heads
of the Nixon administration to exploit
"mounting sentiment" among the people
of the United Slates "for correct
assessment of China," as we face defeat
ln Asia. C.Orrect assessment does not
include Ni.J:on'1 various initiatives nor
any · kind of a "two China" idea
rteagniiing the government in Formosa.
Sung Chung, secretary-general of the
Chinese table tennis deltgation, warned
the! American playen when ht! extended
China's invitation that Peking is
1'ruolately oppoat;d"" to U.S.
gtivemmental policy mt "intends to
prunote friendly ttlallons with the
American people." It is not admitted that
such overtuns are in response. to
President Nixon's earlier initiatives.
For hi!: part, President Niilon has
responded with new proposals to relftx
travel and trade restrictions and search
for new potentials in licensed tr3de in
non-strategic it.elDl!I. Adm it t i n g
Communist China to the United Nations
on Peking's terms is judged to be much
farther down the road.
THERE IS ANOTHER inlere.!iting part
of the pattern. America is getting out of
Vietnam and the! Chinese realize that.
The real question is what kind of residual
force will be left in Indochina and what
its mission will be. Defense Secretary
Melvin Laird says U.S. ships and
warplanes will remain on duty in
Soolheast Asia when the Jut foot soldier
has departed. That will not please China
nor North Vietnam.
Nor will it please the peace elements ef
this country who are enthralled by the
idea of a new era in relations with China
and hands off Indochina. One of the
responsible opponents ol. A m e r i c a n
involvement In Asia, Sen. M i k e
Mansfield, urges a fall back to the islands
o1 the Pacific on the pre-World War II
pattern.
Ptldng could ••It• conc<ivably. get-by
smiles and friendly gestures from a
gullible "American people" what· It has
not been able to get from four aucettdiµg
presidential admlnistraUona -a rapid
and complete exit from a strong sphere
of influence ·in Western Asia and the
Western Pacific.
IF PEKING . COULD convince· the
American public of ita good intentions in
the let-down from the Vietnam War, no
American government might find it
politically possible to au.stain the at.rang
Asian policy of the past anywhere in the
Western Pacific.
feking's smart gesture anent the table
tennis players and other gestures
undoubtedly to follow, may eventually
have the effect of raising the level of the
get-out-0!-Asia sentiment so far as any
significant vestige of our military and
political power is concerned.
That is far from what Nixon want!. Ho
has sought to reduce tensions with
C.Ommunist China while still maintaining
America as a great Pacific power. In
doing so he has responded to a degree to
those who wish to trust China, to admit
her to the United Nations on her own
terms and to "11ormalize" relalions.
BUT NIXON'S GOAL and Mao's goal
are entirely differenl Mao wants us out
of Asia aDd the West.em Pacific but
Nixon,-like his immediate predecesors,
wisbea to exert American power and in·
fluence there.
The Mao government now appears
willing to let China become a tourist and
cultural attractioo in a limited way, as
the Soviet Union has done, and to develop
such commercial relations as are deemed
favorable.
But 'as-for the exertion of American
innuence, Peking's view is comparable to
that of MOSC{IW in rejecting any thought
of American innuence in Eastern Europe.
So we are coming up already against
the backwash of the Vietnam withdrawal
and retreat and there are some who
believe that historical changes are being
batted back and forth across the table
lennis nel
Highlights of Commissary Scandal
\YASHINGTON -The scandals we.
have uncovered in the Anny's $1.1 billion
commissary system were no surprise to
the top brass, who a year ago received a
63-page report de-
tailing how commis-
saries around the
world had been loot-
ed by employes. cus-
tomers, shippers and
even friendly gov-
ernments.
The bras.s charac-
teristically supN!ss-
ed the report to pre·
vent the taxpayers from finding out how
their money has been squandered. When
v.·e asked about the Army Comptroller
General's findings, one colonel implied
the report didn 't even exist. Our request
for a copy was turned down brusquely by
the Defense Department.
NEVERTHELESS, we have obtained
an unauthorized copy, e n t i l l e d
"Worldwide Review of Anny
Commissaries." dated March 15. 1970.
Page after page, it spells out a sordid
story of mismanagement, "'aste and
outright thievery. Here are t h e
highligh1$:
-The study accuses "every cashier" in
the Saigon commissary of punching up
phony ligures and pocketing t h c
dlfferenCe. eust.omers were allowed to
run up a staggering credit of $2 million
with no hope of collecting the delinquent
accounts.
-The Bangkok commissary overstock·
ed Items, including 500,000 unneeded
pounds of boneless beef, that were aJ.
lowed to rot , were eatea by rats or were
sold for a song. The losses. set at $5,256
Jn the first quarter of fiscal 1968, soared
to a brealhtaking $300,000 in one quarter
of 1970. The Royal 'Thai government
allegedly also pilfered, lost or broke
$60,000 worth of goods.
-111ROUGDOtrr THE commissary
system, employes have been selling goods
under the counter for their own profit.
The report .:ites unidentified mess hall
workers who would pick up huge cans ol
coffee at $11 apiece, sell five cans on lhe
black market and deliver five to the meu
hall. Some thieves were kept on the
payroll after they had been discovered.
-Steallng from commissaries
apparenUy has become a favorite sport.
At Fort Diii:, N.J .• despite good ware-
house security, $9,000 worth o! coffee and
.--------B ii Gf!o r gf! --------•
Otar George :
I've been reading about reducing
girdles. Do you think It's sissy for a
man to wear a &irdle? Be hones\
about thts oow?
TED G.
Dear Ttd G:
Of course not. What's sissy about
trying to trim down with what i~
essentially a health aid? If any of
the fellows say anything, ignore
thtm. (That goes for your pan·
tyhose, too, sweetie.)
Dear George::
I think It's disgraceful how a man
acrOM the way keeps his shade up
when ht's drtssing! What can 1 do?
MISS S.S.:
Otar B.B.:
You know that little loop on the
bottom of YOUR Shade? Pull down
on It and set If that helps.
CONFIDENTIAL TO THE
MARLBORO COWBOY : You'll just
have to let your horse support you
-I don 't think suing the TV
network& will help.
(Art you laced with problems
which keep you from C'.QUntlng
sheep at night 1 Write to George,
for sheepshaped problew.)
$41000 in cansed hams disappeared in a
sinJle night. Some of tbe thievery oc-curred before the goods ever reached the
commissaries. The audilors found 109
cases of meal wert missing when a ship
reached Inchon, Korea.
-In many commis.sarles, delinquent
customers were given credit after they
had paid wit.h "an endless cycle of bad
checks." The Anny auditors also found
the accounting so bad in commissaries
that milllons.-in petty pilferage hadn't
bttn caught. The sorry accounUng con-
tinues to this day.
-TOTALLY UNTRAINED officials
helped to ni1 cotrulliJsari., in Bangkok,
Censorship
.
Guest ' &litorial
'
\
'
• Any erosion or freedom of the
press dlmlni.shes the rights of every
single citizen of this country. Thua, even
the slightest re.strict.loo ol Uris freedom
cannot be tolerated.
If the news media are prevented from
affording infonnantJ the protection or
anonymity. the atmosphtre we dearly
prize within the naUon will gradlla.Uy
becomo less fret than the Foundl.ng
Fathers intended.
As one lonner government official l)\rt
it, newsmen art to be held accountable
only for what they pibliah or broadcut,
not for what they have in tbelr nota:.
It ls worth oottna tbal wbtnevtt a
takeover of exlsUni rovemmtnl LI al·
tempted, it frequently Involves silencing
or cenaorlng the new1paper1 and aeiilng
the televlslon and radio slltions. One
of the prlncipl1 hallmarka of the
tota1lta.rl11n state Is cOntrol of the medl1'.
-RepresentttlYe CharlH W. Wllalt.•1 Jr.
fR.Ohlol, who, wll.Ja It colle1gue1 a5 e&o
!J>Onsors~ hltroduttd lhe Ne"sme.11'1
Pr:,-nel{e Ar.I nl 1171 ln Ille Houte of
Repre1cDlaU\le1 la1l Feb. 11.
l '
I
s&gon and Seoul, also at Fort Benjamin
Harrison , Ind., and Fort Richardson,
Alaska. Their incompetence resulted in
losses five times greater than found in
well-managed commissaries.
-In Japan two commissary annexes
were renovated at a cost of $45,000
"although ins u ff i c i en t justification
existed to continue operation of either
store.,.
-The Anny auditors somelimes got
the run-around from com m i s s a r y
officials. They made appointment after
appointment with an Army contract
officer in Thailand, for example, to find
out why a $250,000 storage contract went
to a contractor who already owed $75,000
for filling to cmnply with an earlier
contract. Each time the contract officer
failed to show up.
-IN SOl\1E INSTANC~. generals
loaded up commissary shelves with their
own favorite foods. The c. h o I c e
delectables went unpurchased by the
wives of servicemen with less luxurious
tastes. Even the secrtt auditors' report,
however, discreetly omitted the names of
the' oUending generals.
On the whole, commissary officers seem to have a cavalier 1Wtude toward
the taxpayen' fun<b.
--"4--
Tuesday, April 20, 1971
The edilorlcl page of the Doilu
Pilot setkl to inform and stim-
ulate reodtr1 b11 prtsmting this
nt'wspaper's opinfOM ond C(J'l'n-
m.t11ta1'V Oil topics Of interest
a.nd rignificonct, b)' protndfng a
forum fM 1.ht erpreufon of
our reodm' opinion&, and bJI
presenting tl1e dlt1t1'!t view-
point& of injormed obterwrs
and spo1'csmen on topici of the dav.
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
Tutsdl}. April 20 1971 · DAILY PILOT f
'
,· -I . •· ft. . ,
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.
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FA.Mil Y PACK •'fAR/ftfR JOHN 11
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LOIN CHOPS LB ... . . . ... .,., ....... , ~~ . ..,.... . . . .... .. . . ' -f' '-~· )~$'ftp~._,., .'ft'c .::· •
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COTTON TRAINING PANTS 4/1.00 -, --Cfl&ht PllCS
STOllJIOllU1DAILY1t All TO t ... SAT. I 54111. lt All TO 7 PM
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MARGUERITE 98 D~ISIES . ~ ..
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~ LANOO'FROST•SUCED•lOZ.PKG.
~ LUNCH MEATS ff• 35~
@ 111oim•FROnN:•tOZ.CAN •
ORANGE PLUS }!• 45c
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\el Stuffed Potatoes 31' 33~
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~ Swiss Miss Pies 35'1 2C)c
@ MqDESS0 su~•V£•FOas'!-57c
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______ .. _____ ,,_ --"'"'·--~--
., •
T'"!dq, April 20, 1971
CHECKING •UP•
~W onie11 .Seldom '· .
"
:Feel Remo1·seful
BJ L M. BOYD
TAKE ~ MOTBEll wtlll
.,e-ver1I young dilldren. ti )'OU
J:ive her a puppy al!IO, that
:adds up to about one-and-a·
Jialf children's worth of
:addilional work around the
llouse . No puppy?
lJndenlandable. But lf you
live ber a female cat with a
litter of kittens, that adds up
to about two chUdrtn's worth
of extra work. Bear it in mind,
young lady. when t h e
,-oungslers plead for a pet.
;rropical fish add only about
: 801nb Blast
~Rocks Bank
i l n Berkeley
; BERKELEY, Calli. (AP) -
A pipe bomb uploded at a
.branch of the Bank G f
l',merica t o d a y , !Battering
~i.ndows. doors and hurling
fragments as much as 60 feet.
, It was the second blast there
one-fiftieth of a well-bdlaved
cl!tkl'I -"' " """· -
TWO MEALS a day, no
lunch, that's what we J<ll. lt
was years ago on a two-week
hike through the Olympic
Mountains in the Pacific
Northwest. The W o r k s
P r o g r e s s Administration
sponsored it. 1be several
hundred youngsters remained
unruffled. We, got mighty
hungry by dinner, true enough.
And lost considerable weichL
But the official policy was no
luocb. How long ago that was!
Repeal it today. What a storm
there'd be! Hear the thunder
of the fathers, see the
lightning of the mothers? Just
wou1dn't be tolerated.
State OKs
Vote-at-18
U.S. Law
·'
SACRAMENTO CUPI)
California, over the mtld
objections of Gov. Ronald
Reagan, bas become the 20th
1tate to ratify a proposed
C o n s litutional amendment
lowering the voting age to 11
In all elections.
A.not.her 18 states -38 in all
-1111111 ntlly lht """""' befort it can become the 2$lb
amendment to the U , S .
Constitution.
The California senate voted
fina1 legislative a p p r o v a I
Monday to a ratifi~i-On
reSolution, acting quickly d
dramatically as two do
teen-age spectator s sat
silently in the back of the
cham~.
The vote was 25-10.
The resolution was
sponsored by Senate
Democratic Caucus Chalnnan
Mervyn M. Dymally, who
repre sents tbe Watts
com01unity o( Loi Angeles .
"I don't thlnk there ill any
need to belabor the point,"
Oymally said. "Ten years ago
I proposed sucb a mea11t1re.
I'm pleased that after 10 years
we're moving in that
diteclion."
Proponents or lowering the
voting age to 18 in all elections
have pointed out that it would
cost an ei:tra $5 million for
California ne1t year to print
separate ballots.
Tate Killers
Must Die,
Judge Rules
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
judge has formally sentenced
Charles Manson and three
women followers to d.ie in the
gas chamber for the Sharon
Tatt murders, and the chltf
defeme attorney says tht
sentences are likely lo be
carried out.
PauJ Fitzgerald, who argued
Monday for reduction of the
penalty on grwncb that jurors
were swayed by the current
moratorium oo eueuUorus,
said it is invalid to usume
that legalities will save the
lour fnxn death.
There has not been an
execution in the Uniled Statu
since 1967. State courts are
waiting for a ruling from the
U.S. Supreme Court. on
whether the death penalty is
constitutional.
"Many lega1 observers feel
. -....
••••• 1J•n-•--.-.,n.•.•. 20 ... Y.t4mg. __ rt,_..._m:Rlfar!NOY.11l.
. . . ... . . . . -
•'.
:·
,---
I Will\IOll
~ less than two months, the test of many explosions at
ank of America branches
roughout the statt.
WOMEN SELDOM f e e I
remorse. That's the clalm of
French writer Joseph Joubert.
Many a man gone wrong feels
guilty afterwards. But rare is
the woman who does so. Men
act up. then think it. over to
their sorrow. Women think it
over. c o n v i n c e themselves
they're justified. then act up .
Or so this feUow contends.
that this Supreme Court will
Davl·s Jiidge '"~ff;irm~the~~d<a~th~pe~n~a~lly~, .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _Fitzgerald told newsmea.
~ Tody's blast went off at 3:31
ii.m., police said.
: The device had been placed
)In the sidewalk side of a pillar
tight in front of the bank.
! The for~ of the explosion
t~ lhWI directed toward the
~ The blast smashed five
)'Vlndows, cracked the plate-
J:lass front doors, tore wood wr the fa« of the building and
liurled pieces across the
1u-eet. ~ Police spokesman D a n ~er said nothing inside the
,,.nll: appeared damaged,
>-.Jtbough glass fr a gm en t 1
~-insid•.
-1be blast "nearly shook the ~ out of the house," said r neighbor.
'
THOSE MEDIOOES who
measure brainwaves contend
most of us are more chipper
in the apring than any oUler
time of year. In the fall, they
say, we're fairly lively, too. In
the aummer, we're known to
be just medloctt, relaUvely.
And in the winter, we're aaid
to be at our lowest and
slowest.. What, you already
knew that!
Your qutshons and com-
ments ore welcmrud and
will bt used in CHECKING
UP whereveT posibte.
Plea.se addren 11our letters
to L. Al. Bo¢. P.O. Bo:r:
1875, New pot t Beach,
92660.
Faces Ruling
SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -A
Callfomla appeals court judge
will rule whether Judge Alan
Lindsay should be disqualified
from the Angela D a v i s
murder-kidnap case because
of racial prejudice.
Associate Justice Winslow
Christian of the state Court of
Appea ls was assigned Monday
to rule on a defense motion for
Lindsay's disqualification.
Miu Davis, accused or
murder, kidnap and
cconspiracy in a Marin County
coorlbouse escape where fO\D'
men died in a 8bootou.t,
charged that Lindsay ill a
"white racist"
• • • • • • • • • • •
YOURTHOUGHTS CAN PAYO~ OUR EASY
i • l • • • • •
I
(
BUSINESS LOAN
l!'s our bUai,_ to make your thoughls
beCOQlll a 19811ty. Whether ll's for a new
buollll 11 arfar expenslan, we can arrange
a lol' l*Jk-fllte business loan. our Lo&11
~ "'-you 1he best Wa:f •••
~ • .,,....,.,tomorrow.
OPIH JIL S PM IWLT .. PM lllllAT
•
I I
GENERAL
TIRE
Wini TlllS COUPON
JATO SUPER 100
GOLf IAl\.S
' ""' ,.c. $133 Pll cu1tOMl'-
\.lllAIT 1 p~CIC
TRUCK TIRES ~~:k~~~:.'··
. Otntr1I Vans, and Campers
. !,~!hC.!,!~~"~~~ETY RIB $2,58
•Flat, S-Rlb Our•gtn• Rubbtr Trttd
S•1• 1.70-15, •'11 lulte ly,., 11lu. '2,"40 f'l'd. E•. l l l 11'1d
l•CIPl1'bll ""· Olh1 r •1111 .1w1!11bl1 ., 1ltr1 CPll .
..J-., C DELCO Pleasurizer
SHOCK SALE ABSORBER
All CARS-INC LU0£S INITALLATION
BUY 3 AT THE
REGULAR EVERYDAY
LOW SELLING PRICE
... GET 4th
FOR [lC
3-PIECE WIND'N RAIN SUIT
:;: • Hood • Jacket • Slacks $ 66 • Wind and raJnproof 1
• H;gh ¥11lbll lty h•lvy duly pl••llc
ANNIVERSARY PRICE ONLY... SET ---...illl~ OFFER EXPIAES MAY 1
Charge it at General Tire ... !ffe311G·" Prlt•d 11 sh own 1! Gen•r•I Tir•
•101"91. Competillvt ly priced at lnde·
p1nd•nl d•1le r1 dl1pl1yl ng the
Gen1ral aign.
DON SWEDLUND
COAST GENERAL TIRE
515 W. ltth, Cott• Mes•
540-5710 -SOll
AVERY
GENERAL TIRE SERVICE
16941 Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach
147·5150
G!Nt!JIAL TIRE ... GOEi A LONG WAY TO MAKE FRIENDS------------.J
•
•
For the Record
Dbsolutions
Of Marriage
"llfA\. D•C•llt .................
MarlirY; Ult J. 111111 Mlrlllll J. V~ Sit"'" 'r.•'* inti ,,ltfldll ...,..,, llM 01rt1nt ..... Wllll,.. MtlO!lt
• GW". JMflM 111111 Atl'M John Jr, Jone1, $t'il'ln' Allll Ind E.1rl LffO'f
C'-'""'• G~ SW 11111 Mld\MI I .
Norrnefl.. lwt L!. 11111 Dar'lt IC. h rlllllt Vktl.t A. 1rld Fr.,.lln C.
Sdll...,, F'r1rcn 111111 It~ M. c-nt. •-•. 1nd HoMrd It.
Kafl1ut. M.tnr LwlM 1nd Karry "''''* 1.rtlllt, Harold ~n 1nll 11.....,1y JIM
llock. AM A-Ind ltobet't Andr .... IVMI. Graci M. •NI Delm1r L. Ck-11ni. J.,.11111 ..,.. Jemu ATtt\lu'
Adltml, o.wtl -Nldlaln 0. ,.,Dlntt, IM ... Mid Tl'Of W1W.C.
lr'I'-Wlllllm J, Jr. Ind l!llulliltll l.
C1t'kll1. N1t1le I'. -Ch1n.tt1 A. hd'IM. DotothY Moine Md Vlllttnt •• TIVI«• Eett W. I nd C1rolvft Ill. •ofll'l'I, ll1Y!llOl'ld 111111 Llnnu Cl'lrlJtlM
EWl l!f. Sandri I!. Ind Thortwi• L
COl'IVVMno. l-.nl J . llld M«rr C.
Cl-. C..rlll ~ Ind Arthur Erwin
l)o!M!I, Kattf'I lM Ind L..lw-
Wnllam Wooh, Mlol1tla Simonne 1nd Miki ""' .. BrMllP\aW, C1r1ll loi;IM 11111 ltobef'
-~ Court Jt1n Lartl11 1nll J 1 h n
McC .. lMCI
Wiiey, A~ l"1n -Gilbert ll.
Ll1htbedr, Dwlml!t G. IP>d 1(1thlfffl A.
lrodl:mln, .. lfl LOUIM Ind M!tllMI
,.~
Cr"'"'"· JMnne LoulM Ind '"-•IU Wiiton ltennon, Vlolel AM tlld Geor111 J"*"
K1y, CMl'YI Ind Wllll1m
1-w. JNnnl uid Alldf.,. J•mt1
Our1111, l1r111r1 JMll Ind Ttrrv LM 0• lvim111, Rlbl(.« Ann 11'1111 J1!m• -M-liolll Wl'f, Shedrldl L. Ind P1trkl1 ....
Oo'OKO. Glorll p. and Ptler M.
Wllllll'll. ChHI« E. 1nd L1llll
W'f'ftll, l!llubt"' T, Ind 0on GM°lld
Hubll&rd, P1t1y JllM Ind Paul Joflrt
Smllll. Rebert Clllfltl Jr. Ind C1rlll .... Allen hln LM and W11ll1rn 9yr°"
Sdlrftldt, .....,. J. 1nd Albtrl H.
••-rllll. Su .... Ind Pt!W Gr'D"ft, Niii J. 11111 ltobtl1 I .
S1•...st1, l!dw1rcl Ind Anne LI-O. MM' .. C..rol S. and Jol\11 °"""" .. rtr.rl ll'ld Jofll!
........ ,.
._. ....... , ....... It.~
Sllrll ... P1fflcle R. IN ...... O. w-. kf*ll J-_. Ol'lllt J,
Nita-. Vitia. L.-.! JOllfl £. Trum.111. RC!lltft ,,.,,,,,.,,,, Jr, n L.lflM ...... 1""'1*'. Jollft J-and it.,.. ·~ ~ J-,......., .... °'""""" ,_
PflrW, Wlllllll'I N. 111'11 P1fr1Cl1 I,
lcflrytf', P11fkl1 J. ll'ICI R-ld R • Rabi-, Hlf'ry G. Ind J1111 I. Toll!Yer, ........ JO'f'U 1f'CI Rllrl
JK-
G\mlrll, 0.11141 111d Lllur1 M,
lrl111, L1l'dl Al... a114 Dl'fld S11ndtleld
lllbny, SU1111 •lld !>Miid Lwov Jofl.._ Otrotfly Lou MOurlllt Ind
Emmett Ttrrell L1111:1y, Jlmft Muw911 Ind Sll1n111 AM °""""""• Fr111a1t It. and S1"""9! JOMlifl Will, GotiU Eldorl and Le-
09dtll. 1arHr1 ,.,,.,,,. 9lld ~Id ...... Mof"illfly, .. _.,., JtM llld 0.YIHe
IMT'IRLOCUTORY o•c•••s .............
AnSlf'IOll, INl't lot.llM "" ltoei.rt Fr-...itls ltomtn. MMY Lou alld Lto T.
SloM. Ml'*"'• M, t.1111 9111Y J, Frui., Gr11dllfl L. 11111 Puri 0. Mur-, Krlslll't I(. 11111 Vll'ICAl'Ol Jehn
Mor11t1.. Tr111klld G. ind Lortlll 9 .
Dewit, Lindi S. Ind Mld\111 Goroien
loi;k.rnl11, P11Yllll N. llld Edllr P,
HMCI, Oorolfly Jqn 11"4 FrN Pr1t1kll11
S!orm, v1oi. M. Ind JllSll H.
lfQnil, Marie Ind Dull;• V.
Rt.YU. Edmund H. t r.cl V1¥1•11
ltoblrh, lluth Ewrdlllt Ir.cl Wtlltr
NDrrn.rt HUd-. Oertll1 Ind R-r Tucklr, S1ndr1 L tnd Cr11t H.
Wey111Cl, 8"ttv L. tlld CltrfflC.e W.
Herr•••· 011..,... Otlllll Ind ltodl.le
Louil Worfhefl. C1roly11 Sue 1nd Mtrvlll L.
MDl'IM Yollll<i• t nd ErM•f Jr. Codlr111, Mt,..uerlle C. Incl JMellll H.
Fulrnll', Floren.:1 Mt1 tncl .J1md
Oon1ld
LIWISQUI, V•111 LM Incl I.II E1rl Pr1uo. Etlubefh Loulte 1nd WUll1rn
Anclrr... ~. Jtllft EltllM Holmes 111d
Pll111p DIYld
91Kklll.lrrt. LUpl M. and JOI W.
Huber, ShlrieY J....rilfll t nd Wllllem
"'"" Cool<. Wllllt l1t tncl 141 PMrl
SlblU1, G~ J. tnd Vlrl lnlt L..
ClltrMtrllln. HollY A. -""' HI~ O. "· Wll!t, I.Miii M. ..0 Ktrl M.
W,.r~ OonNI A"" 11"4 Rtrtdlll ltlY
O'N11I, Mld'INI L.. tnd Ktl!ltllne L.
Death l\'otiees
MllUIG
JMl'I l"rldlrf, R111dtnt of Gtrclffl Gr0111. J-R. H1ni1. 1115 Clllfanllt 5"111,
Dt1t of dlllfl. API'" lt, Strvk n Hndlllt Hu11!11'111llll'I l"ch. 01!1 of -"'· Apr11
I I Wntdln ""'"" Mo11u1ry, ............. 1,, $ul'\llYld bY .u.. H.i-. Slrvlcu
HIL.WIO .. m Ill Mid In Grfffl!ltld, MtQ.ICl'lull!tl. ~ll!o• Mor'llHrv. F-•rdlnt Olr1111:tor1.
Olive Helwlt . ltnldlnf of l tltio. P1nl11o KIRCHNIR
tult . Diii of llH lll. Aorll 1f, s. ... lc11 AcNtll IClrcl'I,.,.... 1619 Or1119e, Clllll = II Wlll(.11/f Cl'llPll Mortu1ry, M .... Diii ol <IHlll, AprU 17. Suf'\l'/wd
i====·======:;::==========:,i by oon. JoM, of Mlt'rld, N-York. Serv!tll -e held loda'f, TllAlll.IY, 10
AN., Wa!tllff CNIPll. lnl..-menf, F1!r-
111v ... Memorl•f P1rlt. Wntc!lfl CJWIPll ARBUCKLE I< SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
4r1 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona dtl M•r . . . 173-MSO
Costa Me•• .. ' .... ' Mf.!.Uf • BEIL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
Ut Broadway, Costa Meu.
LI 3-3'33 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1'115 ~ Canyon lid.
UUtLI
M~fY. ~. Olreclon.
LARASY
M1r11 c..11r.-U-rtllY. 1IO Hunt1ntt111
1rw .. SP. 102. Kvnt111.ion &.di. aei ..... .,;
rnotlMr of J-. Cl'lfl1 1nc1 CJW1rl11
Pltt1l11 M1'11 'NlllPPlll I nd Joy kllmutE,
Vl1lllllon, WldllftdlY, Noon lo 2 PM ,
Glt11. 1Cln1111fl' 1116 ~111 MOf'h.111"1',
C2ll S"""lvlCN, Culvtl' C!IY. ...
Florence 011. JUI H .. tior 11\'d .. !.cl.
JI!, C.0.11 Mitt. Otll of d-11111, April lt.
Survived b~ hulbllld. Fr«I. Pr!v1t. ...,...
k n . lodtY. Tuucllv. 2 PM, Wllltllfl'
Cr.1p1L l~l1rmtfll, L•kewood C-'ltrY•
Mlrtneltllllb, Mlnnnolt. We1tc.lln C"'ptl
Martulr'I" ......... Olr~IDl'I.
-Pltl:STON
Law Day
Chairmen
Appointed
WESTMINSTER -S 1 x
Or"lli• eout judg.. and
11wyer1 hive been named
area cb1lrmen in t b e
countywlde i.w Day
programs planned by the
Orange County Bar
Association.
Superior Coor! Judge Frank
Domenlcbin i bu betn
1ppointed by SUperior Court
Judge Harmon G. Scoville of
Westminster, the county bar's
Law Day chairman. to bead
activities in the San Clemente
area.
Otbtt appointments by
Judge Scoville i n c 1 u d e :
attorneys Baird B. Collin,
Laiuna Beach ; Dennis O'Neil,
Newport Beach; Robert G.
Skinner, Costa Mesa; John B.
Merrell II, Westminster-Los
AJamitos and William Carlson
Jr., Huntington 8 ea c b -
Fountain Valley-seal Beach.
Judgti: Scoville said
chairmen in all areas are this
year marking Law Day, May
l, with "an extensive series of
programs, films and speakers.
Local attorneys ire meeting
with high school aod jwtlor
high school students i n
classrooms to diJCUss the
importance of law I n
American life," be said.
Water Board
Sets Hearing
SANTA ANA -Directors of
the Orange County Water D~
trict will hold a public bearing
Wednesday at 7 p.m. In the
di.strict office, 1629 W. 17th St.,
Santa Ana to determine the
need and desirability o f
levying a replenishment t.u
for the coming year.
CW'rently. the di 1 tr I ct
charges $10 an acre root for
water pumped from t h e
district's underground basin
f or agricultural irrigation
purposes and $13 an acre foot
for water used for purposes
other than agriculture.
Last year an estimated $1.3
million WIS railed through the
pump tu ml ·used Jo bur
Colorado River water to ·
"'Plenl&b t b • under1"Jlllld
basin. • PACIFIC VIEW
Jc.1111'1 I . PtQ10ll. "5 O.k Sf .. L11.-
hldl. Otl'll of dtl'tll. .t.pr11 17. lllfVl"'9d t.. Wiit, P...,1 -. $~ Lii ,.,_
tao\, c-... #Ml "9U9'rttr· ......
C.rtf AN! l8bo. Ill l.HutW N'9utl•
llnltfltl', 0.-H Prfdon. Stllh Anti
,_ 1lst.n. Mn. EvtlYn ?!!""• e..lllM
1.i.nc11 Mn. L.an'•IM oo.w. s.11 .. ·-;:::==========:;I An1; *-9Jlndcillldr111. GrlVfli.s.l.i
Hrvlc ... Wtdl>lldfy, '1 PM, F"t lmtiYlll MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery ~tortuary
Chapel
J500 Pacific View Drtve
Newport: Beach, callforaJa
144-2700 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
1181 Bol1a Ave. w--• SMml'S MORTUARY
IZ'1 Main SL
53M531
Hantlnpn Beach
•• t• lt1t f•r •ur futurt
citi11111 with 1 contribution
fl th• H 1 rber Ar11 l111b1U
p r09rt l'l'I t rtd IJlf I fr11 C t •
•11 TV in1t1U1tion. Jud 1tt1d
•• i s.oo. W e'U do111t1 1h1
•11tir1 '"'oulli lo !ht H1rbor
Ar11 l111b1ll ''Ofrtm in ,.•wt 1111111 trtd in1t1U C1\il1
TV FREE.
lt'1 .,,, w1v ef 111i119 to
M th1 •idi in eur town 91t 1
M-lt! Ptrk. McCormld!; Lt tunt
IM'h MorfverY1 Dlr.ctor..
"" Frtdr1cl! .... ROI. 100 Clltf Or .• \..llJUlll
811"". o.te of d••"'• April If. 5ur-
ylvltd b'f IOI!, Robt<'t H. ltoo, \..ol Alto.It
61u9'11tr, Mt r'Y 5. Ptrlttr, 5111 Mtrl""'I
nv1 trtnddllldAl'll t!v. trMt • e••nd-
tl'llldr.... C"(llt1~ 1.,..1cn . W~v •
10 AM, PKlflt Vl-Memorlll Peril. 1!11-
tombrnlfl!, Ptclflc VIN M-t.t Pt r\.
P.clllt vltw Mortu1rv, OlrKlon. ,,.,,.
Rtu AM Sc>Hr. Allll 17, el 7162 S!>ill'°
AVt.• Hurrtll!llOll lttd'I. 0.18 of .S..th,
Aorl! 11. Survived by tllllblnd. Mtrlon1 "°"'' W, $, Rowley I nd F", I". ri-l9YI
cllu9'1ttn, Alltlfl Nlc110L11 11111 Ztftl
Tr-: brOl!ltr. J-F. ll'O!IMll'l1 1lt-
ftr, Alkl T'--t 1...., 1r11l!Ckllll-
dr11111 1llllM11 trllf1nMdllklrtn. Sln'-
k n , Wltdl'IUOMY, 2 PM, Wtr..,. AWllW
9.tpllll Qlurdl, lnl'""'"f, We11'11\IN!1t
M.tmonel P1r1t. 5mltlll MorMrr. OI·
~·~
urs BE FRIEHllL Y
Ir you have new nclghbon
or know of anyone moving
to our ere1, plcue tell us
so that "-'e may extend a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
In their new aurroundlnp.
So. Coast f ISitor
4Mo057' 4M-tJ61
Harbor Yisitor
'4i-0174
hit
rfaml
~h1nc• lo pl1v l:ttll. And you
111d your f1rnilv 911 to •••
1h1 9r11t bi9 world of C1hl1
TV.
W ith Ctbl, l\I you'11 11•·
i119 "''"• eh1nnel1 cle1r1 r
1"4 1h1rp1r t+.1~ t Yt r h1fo11,
i11 b11utif~I hl1ck ind whit•
encl eel•r.
C1ll tod1y te 'lltkl youP
cenltibwlion lo fht H1rbor
Ar11 l11•b1ll pro9r1111.
Thi you1191t1P you h1lp
tocl1y 1111y lur11 out to l:.e •
better citi11" totr1•rrow for
Y•Ur tffort 111d ClllCI "'·
NEWPORT
CABLEVISION
OUR Rl•ULA.R 114.tl CA.ILi TY INSTALLATION FRll WtTH A Sl.00 DONATION TO THI
HAllOI AIU UlllALL PIOIU.M.
Ott. ..... 11 N_,.., ...... c.11'""10I Al"NI 011ly.
DIAL 642·3260
\~
L '
'
2 Bribery
Suspects
Face Court
SANTA ANA -Two men
llCalS<d GI !be attempt..i
bribery of a Rtvenide County
supervisor have been ordered
to face trial June 11 in Orana;e
County Superior Court.
Presiding Judge WiUl1m C.
Speirs .et that date Mond1y
for James P. Edmondson or
Los Angeles and David Seager
of San Marino. Botb men are
officers of tbe Greatemerlcan
Land Company, Anaheim. ·
Both m e n succeslfully
pleaded in Riverside County
Superior Court that adverM
publicity had made It
hnposzible for them to obtain
a fair trial in that jurisdiction.
Seager and Edmondson ara
acaued ef bribery a n d
conspiracy.
Nudie Bar
Pair Await
Sentence
Tursd.11, Aprll 20, 1~71 DAil Y PILOT 0
l(ill.er Wins Court Delay
In County Penalty, Trial l
! • • •
Convicted killer Frederick Saterfield, now 51, was con-thtlr eonvktions weN mK~cot
SANTA ANA -Jury Saterfield today won a turther vlcted by a jury si1 years ago stitutional. They have ueue<I
1elecUon In the Orange County delay of the new penalty trial of the slaylna• of hi! common lhat jurors silting In the
Superior Court trial of a ordered In the wake of a revo--penalty phases or lhtlr trials
couple accused of conapitacy lutiooary California Supreme law wife and her daughter in were not made aware of the
charges atemmina: f r 0 m Court decision. Santa Ana on Thanksgiving specific standards by which
allea:ed lewd conduct at tbe Orange Count Y Superior day or 1965. Both women were they could measure guUt In
Tomcat blr in Santa Ana Court Judge William C. Speir• shot in the bedroom of the capital crimes. ~
ended abn.ipUy Monday when set June 9 aa the date U.e It ls also argued In Ute Sat•r-r •-Ana mother's home alter a domes-or. both defendanla pleaded nolo onner oM.nta carpenter field case that some jurors ti\
contenclre (Mitber guilty nor wW be returned from death tic dispute. his trial were improperly ex4
tanocent) to reduced charges. row for • rerun of the penalty Saterfield Is one of some 30 cused because they stated on
Judge Willi.am Murr a y session that sent him to San convicted killers who have examination that they were op-
accepted the pleas of bar,1-;;;Quen=;:tin;:" ;:·=======;:"'===;:fu;:l:::;ly=•:::ppe;;:al;:e;:d=l h=a ;:I =pos=ed=to;:th=e ;:de;:a;:th;:;::pe;:n;:a;:Uy;:.;;;;; owner Harry Muell.I, 38, and11
entertal.oer-operator N a o m I
Frances Simi, 21, both ol
Santa Ana, and ordered lhem
to rtlW'D for sent.encln&: April
28 on the remaining. charge ef
conspiracy to permit a lewd
TOTS LEARN TO SWIM
AT YOUR ORANGE COAST YMCA
CALL -642·9990
' .
act. 1';:=:=:=:=:=::==::=:=:=:=:=:==::=;;:::==:=:=:=:=:=:=::==:=:=:=:=:=:~ He dismbsed all charges 11·
a1almt James W. Davis Jr.,
38, of Santa ADJ, a fellow
Tomc1t employe who had
agreed to testify against h1s
co-defendant.I durin1 the trial.
Arrtstln, officers booked
the trio after viewing allegedly
obscene movies al the soutb
Santi Ana bar and watching
female employe11 participate
in what police 11id were
indecent acts with b a r
patrons.
Conviction on the amended
cber&e could give t h e
defendanll 1 1II·montb county
jail term and a fine of up to
$500.
S'lltAL ILICID
WHOLI OR HA.LP
HAMS
" . • • So Good It WJj.
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
our "'"" 1rt tr.1 t1nar com.fld 1ew1 pOrker' -Our • ..., ~ cuflllCI mtlllocl, •HI WIKonllrt lllUory tnd IPPI~ 1molclna
»-!'lour av.,, lllklllCI hane'f •11 1pk1 oi.11 •rt 11111QUt In 1fl
-Id. So delk llM/s Ind tppellrlng -IUtt -ldn'I knew llow II
tmpro ... lflll prllllUCI we'v. blln mtklrlf fw Sol Yllrl. lplrlll 1llqfil lCIO, ll'llm IOP fo bo,...,., so ttltl Nell t11i.c:11&i. Ulllfwltl eltc. Cait
bl ,.ltlOV'foll l'lfer!llMIY. Compt1i.1v btkltd •ltd rHdY lo ._ a.:
lltr your Hortly hkld Hem tod1y, •n 1dV111tur11 In ,..,.,.,..,..,....
Yo\1'11 M ... r fof11l,
RETAIL STOltU ~.
S10I I. Cont HT1hw•y, Cerona tlef Mar-47).toM
tm s. ltMkhunt, AM.Ml"' 6U-Wl,
COMMUNITY EVENTS
APllL 14
rANCAKE
BREAKFAST
7:10 A.M. • 11 A..M,
llCHAID'S MAlllf Ylol.No---
···-· ~ Y.M.c.A.
"LL U, ,OR $, oOO
MAY 11
USED BODK SALE
C... P9'. Mt .. Pett. WMlt FRIENDS OF THE
LIBRARY
LUCY PINILIY
Clool ...
ARTIST OF THE
MONTH
In our lobby
April 15 thru May 14
TONY
MORENO
A 11lld•11I of H w11ti119ton l11c1', Mr.
M•r1111 l:.e9111 Jl'tl11ti119 h1 tt.1 l"
tftd1 111 hi1 111tiv1 New M1xico.
M1.tly t1lf.t1u1ht, lo.1 .tud!1d 4 y1111
1t th1 U11ivot1ily ef Ari1•111 Jn Tuu111,
H1 u111 I v1 ri1ty •f 111.dlt 111d 1u\i.
jtch .
EARN HIGHER
INTEREST AT
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL!
Certificate Accounts•
5.92% Annual Yltld
If all saving.and Interest remain a year.
$1,000 minimum depo1IL 1-yearmlnlmum tenn.
Dally compounding. Earn from date of doposlL
5 3 cumnl
annual
r•I•
90 Day Certificate Accounts•
15.81% Annutl Yield
Passbook Accounts
5.13% Annual Yield
If all uvlng11nd Interest remain a year.
No minimum deposit. Dally compounding.
1r all 1avinga and Interest remain a year.
No minimum deposit Daily compounding.
Earn from dote of doposlL Interest day.Jn to day-out.
•WJlf'ldrawal• btfort matur1ty ptrmltttd bUtaubJect to aom1 lo11 of lntertst.
CaJ!(om!.~~,!.~.4.~!~!.hl§.~!,!ngs
NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL
COSTA MESA OFFICE:
2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 548·2300
• CLIFFORD M. WESDOAF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER
Conve nt Offlcee throuatlqut lo, Ana•lte. Ore not ind Ventura count!••
Aooowr9119 IMurlod Qi te t:I0,000 lll'ldtr p10V11i-of tlll 11d II lnlnll Ii I.NII lntijrll!M Col'PO!•l!o11, • ptr1111111nl lllllq' ef lie U11llld &itln Gowr11111~l
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LEGAL NOTICE
••• ... ,,
$ T llt1Nr Aprll 20 l '171
Coast Man
Appointed
Savings VP
1---------0VER THE COUNTER
'
Complete-New York Stock List
n...1•i.-a-ot. -..
'
Monday ~s Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
la... _., l"'"'"'"'"'"',."'"'21111D"'::""""'"'"'"' .. "'"'"'"'"'"'"''"''""i Ulilb,) lille'I Ltw CllM Cl!•
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DAILY PILOT
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
S.lft ,.,,
IMll I Hltfl l 1w C .... Cl ..
Briefs
WASHINGTON
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I Z DAILY PILOT TutM!ay, Aprll 20, 1971
·•
•
This latest improvement in Shell es
helps keep your car in tune.That .can be important
for gOOd mileage and fewer exhaust emissions.
l TCP/2/ helps keep your car in tune.
This helps hold down exhaust
emissions in newer cars, reduce
emissions in many older cars -and helps
keep your mileage up.
TCP/2/ is Shell's name for a new
.combination of ingredients. It's r. not just an additive, but
··-what petroleum
age."Itis an
improvement
chemists call an
"adc1itive pack-
Lua tJunt a llalf
t«UpOOn '{>tT gallon
1• M'IOllgh TCPJt/
to do the job.
drocarbons and carbon monox-
ide. Both are undesirable, and
both can go up when your car
goes out of tune. Jn fact, it would
not be unu sual for these emis-
sions to soar as much as 50 per-
cent before you even suspect it.
And by the timeyourcartellsyou
it 11eeds a tune-up, emissions can
be extremely high.
By helping your car s tay in
tune, TCP/21 helps stave off that
serious increase in emissions.
over TCP, the
famous gasoline
additive developed by
Shell years. ago.
TCP/21 can also have a favor-
' able effect on gasoline mileage.
• \Vhen your car goes out of tune
your mileage tends to go down.
TCP/2/ works to keep that from
happening.
'Th<lay almost all gasolines
contain additiv e packages. They
differ somewhat in what they do
and how well they do it. TCP/21
is an effective additive package
that provides an improve ment in
the perfonnance of all of Shell's
gasolines.
The effects of TCP 12/ can be
si.unmed up as helping to keep
your car i1t tlt1ze.
'l\vo of the main pollutants in
a car's exhaust are w1burned hy-
TCP 12/ can also actually re-
d nee emissions from many cars
-and improve their mileage.
These are older cars that are, in
effect, out of tune as a result of
deposits that have built up in
their carburetors.
Read on to find .out how driv·
ing regularly with TCP/21 helps
restore mileage and reduce ex-
haust emissions from these cars.
3 TCP/2/ in both Shell and
Super Shell helps extend
spark plug life . This helps
hold emissions down and
keep your mileage up.
When spark plugs misfire, a lot goes wrong. Emis-
sions go up, mileage goes down, acceleration is re-
duced-and you have to buy new plugs.
One of the components of TCP/2/ works to pre-
vent spark plug misfire.
Shell pioneered components of this type and
Shell gasolines were the first to contain them.
TCP/2/ also helps to smooth out rough running
in many worn engines that have lost compression.
Another component in TCP/21 is a special anti·
icing ingredient. It helps prevent stalls caused by
carburetor icing before your engine is warmed up
on coot damp days.
4 TCP/2/ in non-leaded
Shell of the FuturEf helps
protect against valve wear.
One reason Shell of the Future
can be made with no lead at all
is a chemical element in TCP/2/.
This element works to protect
your engine against possible
valve wear.
Shell could have left some lead
in for the same purpose. But
thanks to TCP/21 Shell could re-
move all the lead.
2 TCP/2/ keeps new carburetors clean, and helps clean up dirty ones.
Works to hold emissions down and mileage up.
Wh en excessive deposits build up on the"throat" of your car-
buretor, your engi ne is no longer in lune. Emiss ions can rise
dramatically, and mileage usually goes down.
If your ca1· is se veral years old or more, deposits inay have
built up on your carburetor"throat.:'
Although most of today's gasolines contain a detergent that
t
I
will keep clean carburetors clean, not all of today's detergents
can cut down on these deposits once they've fonned. TCP/2/
does have that ability. It contains a new detergent combination
that can start to clean up a dirty carburetorwithjusta f ewtank·
fuls of any Shell gasoline. This can reduce exhaust emissions
substantially. And it generally helps mileage, too.
'
11 •
Good mileage and fewer emissions
-they can go hand in hand.
When}'Ollbum
ga.110line more
completely here •.•
... yau uae lell
PIOline from here •••
I
••• and 1 ... pollutanta
An! left over to come
out here.
• Probably themost importantthingyou candois ·
get a tune-up. Over half of all cars need a tun.,.up. If
they all go tone, total exhaust emissions in the U.S. would
be reduced significantly (and in most cases the effect on
mileage would be favorable).
•Tu help your car stay in tune, use a Sh ell gllSOo
line with new TCP /2/. This will work to hold emissions
down-and to keep mileage up.
NewTCP/2/ is now in Shell, Super Shell,
and non-leaded Shell of the Future.
f
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WHERE DICTATES .WEA
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T....Ur. April •• un , ... II
Trousseau
When a young bride's lhoughlS turn lo
wedding plan.s, they just naturally tum to
thoughU of a romantic wedding trio -
perhaps south ot the border to the
exciting cities o( Guadalajara, Mexico
City, Puerto Va'llarta or Acapulco.
Alter the nervous bridegroom·in·
waiting has been calmed down, and
mother and daughter have selected the
perfect gown for the once-in.a-liletime
day -the mu1lilude of brid~l ii•rlsions
begin.
There's the question of where lo spend
their first days of married life together,
and for the new Mrs., what to wear.
Should travel direction be south, where
the days are warm and the nights are
balmy, cool and comfortable wear b the
order of the day with a few dressy outfit!
packed for the more cosmopolitan cities
ol Mexico City and Guadalajara.
Seashore resorts are both warm and
casual. Our bride may choose from an
exciting summer array of beach outfits
from the teeny biki11i to a more modest
two piece suit with either fingertip or
elegant full length coverups.
Bright little wash and wear shifU fit
Into the fashion scene and can be rinsed
out and dried in a jiffy to save packing
spa~ and less suitcase distress for the
bridegroom.
Pantsuits are In: casual, cool ouUil.9
blending into hot summer days and
elegant vel veteen pants paired with a
velveteen midi vest for a night on the
town.
Veranda watchers in Guadalajara will
take a second look at our happy bride as
she brightens a balcony overlooking the
city wearing a quilled ankle len:th
peasant outfit' with colors cued by the
Mexicans in a brilliant palette of peony
red, ablaze In floral bouquel.ll.
Tucked away in a special corner wiU be
a cool array of summer sleepwear from a
modE}rn day selection designed to please
the mOl'lt exacting shopper -again in
marvelous easy.care fabrics .
But no matter when the bridal day, or
where the honeymoon -Lady F;.:;hion
has just the right ouUit for every time
and climate.
And our excited bri~be will set out
on the happiest shopping spree of her life
-selecting a trousseau to fit the scene
and insure the appreciative eye of her
new husband.
Models' Fairy Godmother
Magic Wand Bestows Fame
By J\1ARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Eileen Ford, the
tough boss lady behind the world-
famous Ford Model Agency, went
to the movies a few weeks ago
armed with a one·pound bag of
jelly beans .
Before the movie was half over
the candy had been eagerly
consumed and Mrs . Ford -who
went on a well·publicized high
protein diet to v.'hitlle down from a
size 12 to 8 -was riddled with
guilt.
But, being Eileen Ford , she did
what her beauty books tell all
candy lovers to do. She "'hiu.ed
back to he.r '18th Street apartment
and exercised for hours. That. plus
a day of starvation, brought her
back to 110 pounds. "It's my one
insanity. I get this way every year
around Easter."
Eileen Ford expects the same
kind of discipline from ii~yone who
happens to be ~ her I i f e -
personal or pro(essional. She·s one
of those no-nonsense types who
Insists that cohorts toe the mark.
TA LENT SEARCH
Every six months Mrs. Ford goes
on an extended talent search to
Sca ndinavian c o u n t r i e s to
"discover" beautiful yoong girls
who eventually end up on magazi ne
covers and in television
commercials. Many make upwards
of $100.000 a year -with no less
than two months vacation.
Eileen Ford Is the f a i r y
godmother with the magic wand
and every pretty girl i11 a potential
anderella. LitUe do w o u 1 d ·be
models, however, know that the
path to fame and fortune is lined
with thorns.
The other day a top cover girl
came to the agency to pick up ber
$75-an-hour assignments. S h e
looked haggard, a slate which
would be exaggerated by the cruel
I
'BOSS LADY'
Eileen Ford
camera even when in soft focus.
1\1.rs. Ford had gleaned, from
grapevine gossip, that the model
was living with a lover.
A face -to ·face scen e
recapitulated: "Why, I just closed
the door to my office and sa id,
'Look , dear, you're a meS.'I. If you
want to model, fine . If you want to
fool around, that's fine, too. But
you can't do both. So make Up your
mind. and that's It.' "
REAL MAMA
There was no mistaking the
ultima tum. Next day the model
moved out of her little love nest
and back into the good graces of
her boss. "I'm really quite lhe
mama," she chirps between
crunches of celery ahd boiled
shrimp.
She's net kidding, either.
A few months ago Mn. Ford
found Ava, a gorgOOUll blonde, In
Stockholm. She Invested $3,000 to
bring Ava tot.be United State., pay
the rent on a midtown Manhattan
apartment and gel her the right
wardrobe.
On her first weekend in New
York Ava simply locked glance•
with a handsome 1tranger On Fifth
Avenue and the ne1t thing Mrs.
Ford knew the two had gone off
together for the wetkend.
Within a month Mrs. Ford
shipped Ava back to Stockholm and
wrote a no-nonsense letter to her
parents, stating that they had not
taught their daughter a b o u t
promiscuity and she, Mrs. Ford,
had no intention of taking up where
they left off. "Want to see the
letter?" she B.!lks with a Cheshire
cat smile.
UNDER HER WING
Oftentimes a Ford discovery is ti
years old, and the b<w dutifully
promises the concerned parents
that she 'II look after their daughter
like she looks after hers. Mrs. Ford
means it.
There are siJ: extra bedroom! In
the Ford townhouse and under·aged
models often live under the
watchful eye of Mama Ford who
expects them to pitdl in witf1 the
housework, do the di.shes, and keep
their bedrooms In apple-pie order.
Occasionally the preMUte Is too
much . '"Then I just telephone the
parents and tell them their spoiled
brat is coming back home,'' says
Mrs. Ford. "I am not what you'd
call permissive."
Mrs. Ford. a Barnard College
graduate, class of IK3, is still
awfully surprised she isn't a
lawyer. She married Jerry when he
wu a Notre Dame junior.
Within a year she was pregnant
and law achoo! was out -to she
became aecrttary to two models
and eventually the agency waa
born. She has handled, among
others, Jane Fonda, Laurtn Hutton
and Candice Bergen. "Actually I'm
not fazed by anything or anyme,"
ahe says In a typical Ford-lam.
'
Suits Time and C.li·me , l, ! •
Striking stripes nn'd
good ~ib rations as Azt~c:
designs arrive in water-wed~
prints with detachable-·skir.f.1<
Cr~yon colors b1ighten
""' oujl<iok
when Llended with
niftfstitc~o,d ~jeans.
An erog~nt qui~ecl
m1tchmat1 1soih -
vorancl1 viawi09.
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DAILY PILOT TutSd11, Aprll 20, 1971
Li i RARY !XPANSJON -Costa Mesa High School students Oell to right) Alice
~it and Sharri Allison are "Llbrariins for a Day" as they shelve periodicals
and· books on expanded shelving in Mesa Verde Library. Their work is done in
'observance of National Library Week, April 18-25.
PATRl~IA SPICKELMIRE
May Bri de
Area Libraries Join
In Na.ti onal Observance
A quartet of students fro111
Costa Mesa High School will
be librarians for the day in
Mesa Verde Library on
Wednesday, Ai)ril ·,21, in
observance of Nationpl Li-
brary Week AprjJ 18-25.
Taking part in the annual
occaskin will be Shari A1llson,
Alice Knoy, Gary, Lockhart
and Eric Lund.
On the same day a group of
students from Estancia High
Schoci will arrive at C.Osta
Mesa ' Ubrary al~ to recei\te
practical experience in library
work.
In other areas observan~ or
the national library week in-
cluded two special programs
for children.
Last Saturday, the Scheher·
ezade Players presented "The
Sletpjng Beauty'' for young-
sters and their parents in
Mesa ·Verde Library.
Also last Saturday, children
viewed in Costa Mesa Li·
brary t h e motion picture
"The Hound That Thought He
Was a Raccoon." There will
be a special story hour on
'fhursday, April 22, at 10:30
a.m. with Raggedy Ann and
Andy leading the children in
games and stories.
All libraries will b ave
displays and bulletin boards
featuring the National Library
Week theme : Yoo Have the
Right lo Read, to See and
Hear. Date Se t
'By.Couple
, v. , r ~:r..j,{.f;?'.' Caiva;y -Chapel , io · ' Costa ...
Mesa is the setting selected Ii
.for the wedding of Patricia •~N'l::' ....
. Spickelmire and Theodore l .~
Shaffer, whose engagement .,'"~)!i::t':;\' ;wa1 announced by Mr. and !'
Mr:S. David L. Spickelmire of , . if,
·,Costa Mesa, parents of Lhe
brldHlecl.
, Miss Spickelmlre . 1
grii.diiate of Cosla Mesa High
School. attended Orange Coast
College.
Her fiance. son of l\lr!.
.Irene Shaffer of Costa Mesa,
is a graduate or Orange High
School and also attended OCC.
He recently was dischargtd
after serving four years in the Navy. .
The couple. will exchange
. thelr weddifti vows May 29.
Dual Honor
·Presented
. Mn. Allred Mata has been
,chosen to lead members o( El
!Camino ReaJ Woman's Club
•for the 1971-72 club year.
' The Dana Point resident
taho WU honored 81 Woman-
!of..U.year during the
tinstallaUon service for her
·work with service clubs u
:well as commuolly
:philanthropic organizations.
'
_..,,,,,,_.._, -
Sp ide r Hyp notizing
First Nig hters are caught up in plans for an exciting
evening tonight as they premiere Laguna-1ctoulton
Playhouse's production of "The Spider's \Yeh." Add-
ing a little suspense before arriving at the opening
night dinner party, are (left t? right) fl.trs. Eleanor
Christensen and Miss Ann 111etzleur. : :I'he pruident will b e faalsted by the Mmes. Arthur --------------------
~Sewell, George Campbell and
Ru11el Walker . vice
presidents; Robert Mt::Ma1ter
~John Reafro. secretaries;
,.GI~ Garwood, treasurer: Peg
"Salmtn. hi1torian. and Harry
.Pell, auditor . •
: Tw~aren ts
Make Dessert
A dessert meeting Is on the
menu for members o f
Saddleback Mothers of Twins
at I p.m. on Thursday. April
: 22. in lht Laguna Niguel home
: of "trs. titichael Armstrong.
. Discussion [or the evening
: will bt delivered by a South
' Colst area marriage counselor
and psychotherapist.
Slim Knickers
• rr knickers att your bag,
you'll find ttw:m slimmed down I
1ftn01t to the point of hugging
'the figure.
: Wear them with a vest. snug
"Jacket or long sweater during
the chUly spring d a y s .
AectSAOrizt them w I t h
pantyhMt, kneesoc.k~ or slim
boota.
THE
On lhe Boordw1lk
Hu11tioston
Hnrl,our
RED
BALLOON
LTD. --.. ~ ..
SunDANSKiN by
ln Brl1:ht Nt>w Color5, GrNlnium. SunOowtr, Gras!! Grttn, Skipper Blue
Sit.es 2 to 1-1
.....-~ ..
the mo•I dellghlfully unu•unJ
c/1lldre11'• llaop 111 I.he so11lhla 11d
16977 Al;;\1nuui n St, Jfun t ln~ton 81"11C'h t7f4l 846·1666
·-·-•4. . . -... ~ . . .. . . . ..... ·~ .. -
Na ti onal
Fo un de rs
··Hono red
Passage Urged for Life
DEAR READERS : tr you are looking
for a laugh today , you'd better skip Ann
Lande.rs. if you want to be part of an
effort that might silve millions of lives -
maybe your own-please stay with me.
Wbe among u1 has not lest a I o v e d
National United Df;ughters one lo cao«r? 11 there a single person IJll
of the Conftderacy the late my reading auc:Ueace 10 Incredibly lucky
Mrs. Caro Ii De Marlwether that bl1 Ure ha1 not been changed la
Goodlett and Mrs. Lucian some way by this dread dl1ea1t? More
Hamilton Raines, will be American• died ol cancer · lo 1961 than
commemorattd by the Emma were kWed In tbe four years of World
Sansome Chapter on War a. Of the ZOO million Americans
Thursday, April 22. allve today, 50 million will develop
The l p.m. meeting ln the ('ancer. Approximately'' mUUon will die
Costa Mesa borne of Mrs. of It. Cancer .claims lbe live1 of more
Fletcher Stewart will be co-chlld~n under 15 years of age than aay
hosted by Mrs. H. H. Platt. other Ulne11.
Established in 1894, UDC How many of us have asked the
elected to bonor war heroes question, "If this great country of ours
and aid widow1 and orphans. can put a man on the n1oon why can'.t we
evolving lnto mu 1 t i p I e find a cure for cancer?" One reason is
memorial, b en e v o I e n t , that we have never launcll'd a national
educational, patriotic a n d campaign, a united effort. against this
historical goal.J. kl Iler disease. Another reason is mooey.
The group currently is The funds designated for medical
working toward' purchase of research in America is g r o s s I y
telev isions for an orthopedic inadequate. Government grants for
ward in Long Beach Veterans' medical research have virtually dritd up .
Hospital and purchase of The lion's share of the tu dollar is going
materiaJ for 100 ditty bags. lo defense.
The f0Uowln1 1tall1tie1 1booll: me. They
ANN LANDERS ~
tell 111 llten1Ua1 (IJld 1hameful) 1&ory
about die prior11Jet Ill lhll COblry. la
t•, for every ·man, woman and chUd la
tbe Untted Slale1 our government spent:
$12$ on the war· In Vietnam
$19 on the space program
$19 on foreign aid
89 centa on cancer research
Soon a bW wW come before tbe UnJlff
Stale1 Seaale wllkll callt for the
eatab~enl of a NaUoAal Cucu
A11UtorUy. nil bW, SJf wlll be
spomored by Senaton Edward Kennedy
and Jacob J1vli1. 'l1tt propoMd National
Cancer Authority would be u aieacy
similar to &be Natioul Aeroaaalica and
Space Adm.lnlltraUon (NASA) wll!ck put
men oa tile mooa. '11111 Co••ae•t of
Cancer bill demudl that tbe lllPe1I
priority be Jive• to devtse better
me&bod1 of prevenllon. d!apo11J aod
cure ol cancer at &he earliest po111ble
dale.
Today you have the opportunity to be a
part of the mightiest offeruiive •&aimt a
single disease in the history of our
country. lf enough clliu:n1 let thejr
senators know they want Bill S-3' passed,
it will pw:.
I urge each and every penea who
rtada Olis columo to write IO Illa two
seuton al oaoe -or better yet, send
telegrami. U you don't know the names
of your two sc.na&on, call your newspaper
and ask tbe 1wl1('hbolrd operator.
Addret1 your letter or lelecram 1o :
Senator , Seuale 0 ( f I c e
Bnlldlai, Washlaato•, D.C., %0510.
Your message need consist of only
three words. "Vote for S-34." And slga
your name, please.
No ooe' cu do everytbln&, but each of
us can do 10metblng. It ii eotlnly
poulbte that this one small l('t could
retbape the llve1 of mWJon1, Get moving,
My telegranu &o Senaton Charles Percy
aod Adlai Steteuon went out last nJght.
Thanks -and God bless.
Lion Trip
For Ebel/
Ho rosco pe
Girl Talk ··-Memben of the Junior Ebel!._ -""'"'""" Club of Newport Beach will
set out on a lion country safari
Thursday, April 22.
Mrs. Eugene Kovach will
preside over the meeting
within the safari t h e m e
arranged by Mr!. Larry
Mitchell.
Pa!l president s and
coordinators will be honored.
Entertainment will be
provided by new members lhc
Mmes. Jerry Leland , Daniel
McSweeney. Larry Thayer,
Evan Thomas, Jerry Cole.
Dennis Wolf, Richard Figge
and Jennie Agee.
Ser igraphs
On Sale
Thirty original serigraphs
will be offered during an art
sale .sponsored by the Orange
County Chapter of
Immaculate Hear\ College
Aiuinnt AJ!OtjaUon at 7 p.m.
Friday, AprU 23.
Mrs. William J. Kennedy Jr.
will host the affair in her
Fullerton home. The five
alumni artists who have
contributed their works are
Dick Crawford, D a v id
Mekelberg. Miss S u z a n n e
Charlton. Miss Lucia
Capacchione Pearce and Miss
Marni Schiappa.
An proceeds . bene(it the
alumni association.
Women Turn
Eco logy Key
On Ga rbage
Turn the key on garbage is
the slogan of the American
Association of Univ er s It y
Women and the League of
Women Voten as they jointly
sponsor an Earth D a y
information session.
Howard Sosbee, an ecology
specialist. will describe how to
set up centers for collection or
recyclable materials.
The meeting will begin at
7:45 p.m. on Thursday, April
22, in Newport Riviera To~·n
lfouse lounge.
126
SPRTh'G C.UfPOUT in
Hidden Valley Campground,
Joshua Tree National
Monument will lure more lhan
600 Girl Scouts from
Huntington Be a ch and
ad}oining cities T h u r s d a y
through Friday. April 23 -25.
Approximately 30 Junio r and
Cadette troops will participate
In the week-end achvilies,
with special emphasis on
outdoor skills and effective
C<>nr.!rvation practices.
DEBBIE HOOPER
Summer Bride
Hoop ers
Te ll New s
l\-1r. and Mrs. Alton Hooper
of Costa Mesa have announced
the engagement of t h e i r
daughter. Debbie Hooper to
Jon Schaffer, son of Mrs. Jean
Schaffer of Costa Mesa and
Ralph Schaffer of Wisconsin.
Both Miss Hooper anti her
rian cc are graduates of Cos.La
Mesa High School He attends
the Navy hospital corps school
In San Diego.
An early summer wedding is
planned for May 28 in Mesa
Verde Methodist Church.
cf cheese
IOWll lML
'
lllSTtl At WI 060 nlffWAY.
COSTA MH.tl'IOI J.O.ottl
Jlll/IJ'I JIJ//,l llllll l!IJl l
Aries:
W EDNESDAY.
APRIL 21
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
What was at a distance comes
closer. You get needed
backing. You are able to
obtain working p r o g r a m .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)'
Not wise to mix money and
fri endship. You could lose
both. Focus on specific goal.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ):
~ with tide. Means don't try
direct approach to opposition.
You gain by waiting.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Hold off on sweeping changes.
Details demand attention. Get
needed checkup.
LEO (July 2l-Aug. 22):
S t r e s s versatile approach.
Learn rules before y ou
Help Arrives
attempt to bypass them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 r
Apparent minor m a t t e r s
demand attention. D o n ' t
overlook details.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)1
Cmditions are not settled.
Decisions made now are
subject to sudden change.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Overcome temptation to be
extravagant. You can be
gracious without be in g
wasteful.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Check reservations,
appointmen ts. One who is
usually dependable may fall
down on job. Do some
perSOllal research. Avoid self-
deception. Key is to strive for
realistic approech .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan_
19): One behind the seflles
may attempt un s avory
manipulation. Be aware of
your rights. Stand lall for
principles. You gain ultimate
vindicatioo _ Older, s t a b 1 e
individual will be ally.
AQUARIVS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Friendly advice now
could be cosUy. Means stick lo
experts. Tips, touting , inside
infonnation -these now are
not for you. You should loo
line. Apply sell-discipline. No
schemes.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Dynamic approach is best:
cutting comers Is not answer.
Strive for ori ginality ,
uniqueness. Don'L permit any
person to belittle your efforts.
Stress greater independence of
thoogh t, action.
COSTA MESA ART s"ow ART LEAGUE A APRIL 22, 23, 24
~ South Coast 'tla.za in Cost1 Mesa
a n •xcltlnt colltctlo11 of 11HCll•worii a11cl handtrofh
mode by wtll·k11owR penonefltln In th• entertainment work.I,
Come 1ee needlepoint, mecreme, crewel, c:roc:hetin9 •nd ofh1r
h•ndcreft1 by T.V. end moYie celebrities. Polly Bergen, Lee Ann
Meriwether, Ruth Bunie, Jeyn• Meedows, J•n1t Lei9h, Agnet
Mooreheed, Ann 8. Oe't'i1, Kethy Ger't'er, ind 1ter1 of the le:•
C1pede1 ••. we could 90 on end on. But we don't went you
to mi11 the fun , so come see for yourself!
l'VI A "V CO
"'•V co 1ov+f. co•1I pl•1•, 1111 di190 frr. •I brl1iol, '011• ''"''• 5'4fl·•l11
' I •
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
l£r'S ~ACE l'T;
l.01SA UJCK ••• 'ltlll'RE
AMfSS! ..•
Mun AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
TMAT MAKES IT E:VEN
JOMNlllV WA.5 DEVOTEt> MORE DlFFICllLT TO UNOER--
TO HIS AIJNT MAR:TMA, STAND WHY HE DOESN'T
S.t.M •• A.ND SHE kNOW WMAT HAPPENS>
.A.DOREP H I M ~ TO HE~ 11\0lilEY!
PLAIN JANE
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I,
ACROSS
1 Form er
heavyweight
champ
5 Rel19 lous
01oups
10 r'What 1". ---.. 2 words
l~ Numer ical
prefix
15 Land m~ss
surround ed
by w 1\er
1£. Arm bone
17 Ceme!~ry
feature
19 Carry
20 Pick out
21 Asian
festival
22 Poc.krt
bill lards 23 Brn ••••• :
U.S. authot
125 Robot drama
2b Body of land
30 lobstrr's
rg11 mass
31 lr1qrovr 34 Thratrital
p!'rstnla!lon
lli Mrat jrlly
38 Put fTosting
cri a takr
39 form'r
Fr,nth
prrsid,nl.
} words
42 Hockry star
Bobby ·•···· 43 Subsrquently
44 lmplor'
4S Tinsmllh's
nrcrsslty
47 Very short
drink
"
l9
.,
" "
" ••
7
I
I
~9 H1v in11
showy
interest
in lht arts
SO 24 hours
51 City of Ita ly
53 Point
of land
55 Yake an
excavation
Sli Share top
ti1lln9
lil Possess
bZ Furn lh•t
zssembly of
severa r
identical
units:
2 words
b ~ State
b5 A1ab 111 n
prince: v~r.
bb Coming alter
Ult expected
time
b7 Possessive
WOid
&8 Fast com-
munications
b9 Walked on
DOWN
l Swamps
2 Un it of 11ra
3 Arni olhr1s:
2 words
4 Speak
wllh wild
rnt"-'s1asm
5 Rrlativt
& Adjrttivr
suff ix
7 Mod lstr:
2 wcrds
8 Ooctrlnr 9 Proolrradrr's
mark
7
•
lS 36 ..
"
0
"
"
10 FKlory
product ion
11 Ont who
appllrs
trrrazzo:
2 WOfdS
12 To thr
lnsldr of
13 Asiatic.
wright
18 Echr!o n:
Abbr .
24 Srashorr
25 A concise
summary
21i Indian
Ocran
island 9rou11
27 Foam:
Prrliw
28 Onr seekiog
trrtai11
grms:
2 words
29 Go astra,.
Jl largr
32 0 fsplay
of pomp
33 Full of tall
grasses
35 Passagr
'
"
7
412on1
37 E~po.surr
to thr risk
or harm
40 G1ain spikr
41 The 9ums
~Ii Office
accessories
48 Horsts
trainrd to
run in a
trrtaln way
51 Southtt11 us tily
52 To110
drgrre
SJ Prrsian
poltnlatr
54 Cover with
a hard
st.rlace
55 Attract
57 lii•inrr~
Informal
58 Plrc r ol
shaped
strrl:
2 words
59 Voitt
&O Obot
&J Command to
a horsr
" '
,, "
" .. .. ••
Sl
" " "
J .. ..
LJ'L AINBt
.....
SALLY ,BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
By Franll llagllltld :ANIMAL CRACKERS
I ff • ..
PERKINS ly John Mllet -
MISS PEACH By Mel
• • lll'l6'HT NFOll'E
YOUR V8fCY aY'-$1
1'tlly ~;~:~ Elarintt L.AST w•aK 'S
Nl!!W6PAF'<
90lN6 PR/NTePf
P<iS~iSHEO E.VErt'( we~,
! IY A ... D f'olZ. T>lE P\lfi<~.
' )) 'Pf2.tN-r1N G-Pl..ANi'" l OPEN ,..0 v1n-rot1-<; ~ (7~ -i ....
• ,.\ 111\WJt, Mee!Q•ic<t n"'"""
• • ~ Atl'k. '"tHJMIS'. -
STEVE ROPER
1 JIST WAIT HERE, Will.
YA, JOKfll/ .. •A,.,. If: A
COP COME ~ FN· ••
' ,,
ly Saunders and C>vergard
FOR A MINUTE THERE. 'IO.J ~ PllT ME ~
I 'MI'S AFRNO · .. YJO'°".\, ~.'····PEoPl.E
-THAT 'JCXJ-· AR£ JTARIJ&;.'
@) !
By Charles M. Schuk .... ------.
I'
DAILY /'!LOT JI
ly Al C.pp .i
By Charles Im '°"I .. .-~==::::-'-!··
1"I ITUNll WOii.i . • MR.MUM
\.\~~
lyGn~
ly Ferd Jolim.
ly Roqer loltn
,.
., -
DENNIS THE MENACE
< .
\
I
. '" .... • . .. -..... ····~·~-..... -....... ,,. .. ·-----~ "-................. . ... -. . . . . . ' .
J f DAILY PJlOT , Tutsdq, April 20, 1'11
:Pivis"onaI Lead at Stake Tonight at Big A
, CalllomJl'1 AnpJs lhe Oakland
<l's. llMI two bollest teatn1 In lhe
Am<rlwl Leaaue'a Wm Division, coUkle
lllad-M loalPl Ill the -of a lhrte-
llmt terlu:.
1be Ancell. winners of seven atralght,
'llJld Tom Murpl\y, M, lo lhe mound facinl J im "'Catftsh!' Hunter of the A11,
~ have won seven of thelr put eight
'games.
C.lilornia COlPeS borne after winning
,three alrttgh\ at · Mlllntlota, lbe final
vldory eomtnC on SundaJ when the A '1
1wept 1 pair from the Olicago White Sox.
•
SurprllJntly, catcher Jerry M..., baa
poctd the Angel attack, bittlna at a .344
clip. Moot1 came front lbe Booton 11"1
Sox last wlnttr with 1lugger Tony
Conigliaro ln the trade which sent Ken
Tatum, Jarvis T•turn and Doug Griffin to
Beantown.
Just one. percentage point below al .SQ
In the. American Letiue averages comes
ttnterflelder Rick Monday of 1be A'1 whO
also has hit thrte home:n Reggie
Jacbon of the A'• alJO has hefted three
so far but as yet hasn't been hltl.ing for
average.
Ul'IT ...... i.
5F'S JIMMY ROSARIO 143) ATTEMPTS TO CATCH LONG DRIVE
Hit Went for Double but Giants Record.t 4-2 Win Over Cards
Opening Set Friday
Gonzalez to. Inaugurate
New ·l 7-court Mecca
Nestled alongside Irvine Coast Country
Club in Corona del Mar is a classy tennis
plant whlch 11 acclaimed as the finest of
:Jts kind West of Pbilade1phla.
! 1be guy . making that claim is Hugh
~ttwart. one Of the unbiased pros at the
ftW plant, which carriel the monicker :
)Jlalboa Racquet Club.
'· ll'1 owned by the Balboa Bay Club and
rlll open Ila doors to the general public
• ' ' . --------~ •.
' • :
! •
WHITE
WASH j ...... ._,._, ___ _
I
• e LIMM "JUTI
~ Friday when It celebrates the srand opening of ita new expanded
'lacillty.
: Cocklalls, aandwiches, d e d I c a ti o n
~emorUes and a tennis exhibition by
:aome of~ 'por:t's grand masters -like
,,ancho Gonialez vs Alu Olmedo, Tony
,-r1bert and Jack Kramer -a!"f fret for
,00.. who show up.
: Fettlvities commence at noo11 with the
·G.hib1tion show ttJ.rUng around 2.
,: 1lle enlaraed club iJ 1 far cry from the
;,ix-court arrangement the Balboa Bay
Oub purchised JOur y¢ars ago. II now
lloaJU 17 IP'ffn and red cement :o.urt.-.even of whidl m light.cl. • bAnd wlrinC ii in so eventually there wi.U
Jlibll .. Ill lbe courts.
C.Oltr court bu permanent 1<1ting for
, 'lflth, room for anoutbu 700
:t.mpor111 bltacl>tr ...... Public ...... ». !ht ar Individu al dlamplomhlpa,
~ JUlld tourney. l11tnth<r·-I ~iitl-·1nd lnvtiaUonell will likely draw
~ood crowds.
; Workmen are puWJIC the flnlthlng
).0Uebt1 OD conatructlol)_ ol the gate boule.,
• •
children 's television lounge and &0me of
the new courts.
The parking lot has 1pace for 180 car1
with future enlargement to 275.
There are an adult club house, pro
shop, patio area and attractive planters
to add luster to the club. which is
primarily for use by BBC members.
Locker facilities can take care of
nearly 200 at one shot.
Assistant general manager George
Hunter (former Newport Harbor and.
Marina High coach) says there are 600
tennis playing families in the Bay Club.
· Expans.ion has upped the value of the
Racquet Club layout lo about $750.000
Hunter says. And it gives the Bay Clab
three more rourts than its area rival -
Newport Beach Tennis Club.
UCI coach Myron 1.lcNamara, Tom
Est.es, Glenn Turnbull and Stewart handle
pro duUes for the Racquet Club and
Hunter is already projectlng that
antlclpated crowtb will require add!Uon
or another pro.
Looks like lht economy dip hasn't hit
all endeavors, thank goodntM.
* * * Report from Munich says all medallata
In the 1972 Olympic Games will have
their . names engraved on thtlr •wards
Immediately 1fler competition and befure
they art presented.
Of the 1,109 medals up for grabs in I.he
Games. tratl will claim the largest
number (150) with swimming next (144).
ne CIF wW cb1nge IU buktthall
~ .form1t 1omewut .. 1m we
tbe AAA.A 1emUlu11 OD • Wednttcb1 .. '111""'1 .. Ill• llaale Ille followtoa
Sat.nllly,iqat.
Curnody tllt 1eml1 m f'rld•y ntc•t
wltll tM Utle 11me 14 boars liter.
John Morrissel, ex-Corona del Mar
High athlett, Is 1 scnlor outritldtr on thl,
yur's USC ba:seball team . Morrlwt
batted .l&l wilh Ult Trojan1 la!l 1euon.
Ales Johalon, lbe Angell outfltldtr
who ltd !ht AL in battina a year 110,
comes home with a m-1ame hlttlna
Atlfel si.u
All ._. • JCMI'( C1tfl
,._,11 ll -A-II VI. O.•t..-.cl
t,Hil fl -,,,..II VI. Otilltlld
W U D -Al!Hr. Vt. 0-:r.Nil
.,II b -Ane9l1 va. a1111,,....
711' '·'"·
7:U '·"" 7:U ,.111.
J:U '-"'·
streak and bu bit 111'11' in 11 Qf tba put
12 games.
Going Into the lbree-flamt """"· !ht Angell 1tand M f0Uowin1 tbelr rocl<y
alut IJld the A '1 an at M, jull
ptr<tlllqe polnta behind.
Tbe --a !Jilante -ael for !ht Angell, 1fbo came alive on Iba
road, equaling tbelr bell 1'lCO<d abroad
olnce Junt llle6. Their all-time belt
winning atreak 11111, set in 1984.
StattsUcally, lhe Angela ... a buat,
however .
They are hittin&: a meager .209 u a
team.
'lbeir hoint run pn>ducllon b down a
btt from Jut year and thtlr m..-
produc:tJoo la up lllCI they've gotten only
two complet. lllJlll from ' their otartlng
plldlen in tbelr llnl u ...... of the
American Lea,cue le830ll.
In tbalr flnl 12 gamea, the Anleb have
averq:ed lua than one run men than the
oppoa!Uon but It's been good enoucb Ill<
ao M record. The bullpen hu h<tn
rtsponalble for -moet Qf U-viclorlel,
the aaine bullpen which bu h<tn
COIJ!]derecf ...... k --of o11 ........ trades.
California b working Oil a aeven-game
winning streak during whteb. relllef ace
Mel Queen bu aavecl lbret gamea. In
tboto three 1ama. qu..,. bu worked
only two and .... thlnl lnninp but bu
lllDwed only ooe hll lllld walked nooe.
Dave LaRoclie Ind lJayd Allen haV9
each aaved a pme and u a lf'OUP tbt
four-man rtllef corpa bu b e e a
imprtsalve.
Tbty've comblntd to plldl .ZS tnnll!p,
allowlna only 14 hlta llld 1' walb, otriklna out :a. T!llt I-bu won three g.,... Without a loll, allowed only
lhrtt eM1ltd nllll and reouded five
aavea. Adding tt up. Calilomil mlPl be
-Witboul them. •
Bullets Overcome Garden Jitters
NEW YORK (AP) -'"l'd rather bav1
won here than 1nywbtre elat In lbe
world,"' an elhausted Jact Marin uid
Monday nljht aft.r he IDd the -ol lbe
BalUmore Bullets held off New York 93-
11 ln the seventh and deciding game of
the N1doo1I Butetball Auoclation
Euttm Conferenc. finals,
Muin hid 7.0 pointa ta back up Eul
Monroe'• • u the Bullets atleoctd the
Madison Squan Garden crowd of 11,500
wbldl bad begun acreaming for tba
Knlcb lo repeat tbalr performance of a
yur aao, when Ibey beat llllllmort In
Grahhy's Hit
-First of '71-
Beats Padres
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Some of lbe 3,727
Padre f1111 who turned out for tbt I.DI
Ange.Jes-San Diego game didn't even
know the name of the Dodger who beat
them.
Billy Grabarkewltz, the aopbomore
b1tUng atar of the Dodgers, cracked his
flnt hit of 19'71 in tba eighth Inning
Monday night. chasing home two runs -
the tying and winning ones -u Los
Angeles broke a two-g ame losin& llrell
against San Diego, 3-2.
"Grabaskewitz," however, was the way
Billy's name was spelled on tbe San
Diego Stadium acorebolrd.
Gr1bby, u he's affectionately known
DfHlfler Si.te
Al--•KPI t6411
AIN'lt " .,...,.. l't S.11 Dlellf 7:2' '-'"·
....,.II tt ~ at S.11 Die. J:U a.tn.
Mil JJ °""'9rl et ClndnNn • l'J'l'l. •" u Dedttrt ., t~ll 11:1• ··""'
by aportrwrllm who gel tired Of IP<llina
out hla long name all the UJM, suffered a
aboulder ailment during 1pring trainlnl
and didn't open the season on the infield.
Jn f1ct. Monday night w11 the first
game he'd started. And he helped flnL!b
It.
He w1s the middle man on a double
play tn the bottom of tbe ninth th.It
gnuffed out a Padre rally started when
Maury Wilb bobbled Ed Spiezio'1 ground
ball.
Some drama unfolded earlier, however,
that may have lasting effects.
'Ibe incident came in the sixth lnning
when the Padres' Nate Colbert bad to
duck to keep from being beaned by
l>odger rigbL-hander Don Sutton. Colbert
had hlt seven homer1 in his Jut 20 at
bats against Sutton.
"He thought his name was on that ball,
but It wasn't,'' said SUt.ton in dilc:lalminl
any intention of throwing at Colbert.
"Thal's part of baseball," uld Padre
manager Preston Gomez. ''Sutton will
have to bal against us again. someday."
The Dodger eightlrinning rally began
when Willie Davis and Wes Parker
singled leading off. Al Severinson, the
Padre reliel pitcher, eventually gave up a
bases-loaded double to Grabarkewitz,
following a aacrifice and an intentional
walk.
''I almost caught lhe ball," said left
fielder Larry Stahl. "It hit the tip of my
glove as I ran into the wall."
"It was a bad pitch - a high fa st ball.''
said the dejected Severinson. Gr•barke-
wltz agreed.
"He throws hard. but the pitch I hit
wasn't one of his better ones."
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seven games en route ta the league
damplonsblp.
"l've pl1yed 1n pressure &tualions
before," Mcmoe aaid, "but nothing of
this magnilufle."
Coach Gene Shue, who takes his team
agalnst the Wutem champion Milwaukee
Bucks in the best-of·'l championship
mies starting Wednesday nJgbt in
Mil•aukee, al.lo u1d it was "euy to get
ratued in the Garden,'' and
actnowltd&ed the BuDel.s were just that
in lht opeolng 24 minutes.
"We were on edge in that first half," be
aaid. "We were really at r u 1111 n a
aomeUma. But la the thlrd quarter we
started aeWJnf down. We were gettlnr
the easier sholl: -and aomeUmes two
and three al a time, wbJch was a big h'elp
-and we were making them," Shue
uld.
The Knick.a did, in fact, hold lhe le.ad
for just a moment, when Dick Barnett,
New York 's high scorer' with 26 points,
hit a lay-in to put them ahead 87~ with
I ' 44 remaining.
But Monroe's jumper 10 seconds later
put the Bullets back Oil lop lo atay. And
KNICKS' WALT FRAZIER GRABS REBOUND FROM GUS JOHNSON
Cowens, Petrie Share •
Rookie Honors in NBA
NEW YORK !AP) -Ruggtd Dave
Cowens of the Boston Celtics and sharp-
1hootlng Geoff Petrie of the PorUand
Trail Blazers ahared Rookje of the Year
honors today, the first such deadlock in
the history of the National Basketball
As.socialioo.
Cowens, a 6-foot-9 center wbo scored 17
points and grabbed 15 rebounds a aame,
and Petrie, a M guard with a 24..8 point a
game average, each drew 3tl votes in the
balloting: by sportswriters and
aportsca.sten la the 17 leaaue ciUes.
Third in the Voting WQ the prNeUOO
favorite, Pete MaraVich of Atlanta, wbo
drew II votu, wblle Calvin Murpluo of
San Diego had four and Bob Lanier of
Detroit one.
Last year's winner was Lew Alcindor .
Boston, choosing fourth in the 1970
college draft, selected Cowens or Florid•
Sta te on the first round. While the Celtics
later hope to mo\le the red-haired Cowens
to forward, he did a good job at center
and gave the Ce!Ucs the rebounding they
badly netdtd.
With him , they turned a 34-48 record in
1969"70 into a 44-38 mark last season.
Petrie of Prlnctton, Portland's top choice
on the fint round u the No. 8 pick,
helped the expansion club win 29 gamea
u be eunned 1n bui:eta from all over Lbe
flooc,
Dramati~ Marathon Finish
BOSTON (AP) -AlVll'O Mejia, an
unemployed melal worker frtlm Colomb!•
via Redwood City, Calif., was the proud
owner of a diamond studded 10Ud cold
sunburst medal and a laurel wruth to-
day after a dramallc ¥lctoly In lhe 'l$tb
lloltoo A.A. Marathon.
'I'lle 30-ytar-old Mejll, who l1nbhed
lllth in lbe 10,000.nttt.r nm In the 11111
Olymplcs, registered his 1reate1 t
triumph by out-k1cking favored Iri!b Pat
McMahon Monday in • atlrrtng rlCI to
the wire at the end of the :II-mile, W..
yard 1rind from Hopkinton to Bolton.
M•Jla, Mio tdgod McMahon In t b •
Colomblan'1 first marathon ln Ctllfornla
earlier this year, and the former Irish
Olympian, now a school teacher In
nearby Lowell, engaged in one of the
hottest du•b in BAA hl!tory.
'lbty ran •breast virtually all the way,
oft.n accldtntallJ bumolna elbow1 an d
even lblrlng water:IOll:ed apcnaes
hlndtd one or lhe other by 1pectaton.
Then, with the finl!ll line just around
the corner, Meji•. turned sprinter and hit
the wire about 20 yards ahead of bi.I
weary rival.
Mej ia was Urned 1n 2 hours, 18 min utes.
U seconds, just live seconds f.ater than
Mc:Mlboo.
)
"I knew I wu going to win ln Ute l11t
mile," Mejia sald. "J thought McMahon
was the man to beat and I ran with him ,
just wattJna. Then I took the lead With
about 200 yard! to ao and ho CO\lldn't atay
with me . The elbowing didn't bother me.
It bappe"' In all r1ces. My bl{ prob>-m
WU blistera."
Mejia sald he was laid off trom his job
nve Wftks ago, just two weeks after hit
wife gave birth to a son. His" Wife ls the
former Terry Slickell. a U.S. Olympic
team diver. They met white shd was in
the Pl!•~e Corps and they plan to return
kl Colombia.
•
Fred Carler'• lf.loot.r with 1,09 to plaY,
waa tbe basket th.It 1ave them the came.
Walt Fra%ler got lbe Knlcka' la!l field
goel witb about a minute to play -and
the New York atrategy was to have him
shoot for the tying basket when Ne\f
York, trailing by two points, 1ot the ball
with ll aecooda ta 1>1ay.
"They overpl1yed me," Frazier aaid of
the Bulleta ' defense "and I bad ta give off
to Bill Bradl<y." -
Bradley's 1$..footer from the left side of
the hoop fell abort wllh lhrte lleCOllda left
and Baltimore pounced oo lbe ball -and
the uue.
I
It's Still Tougll
To Adjust After.
Piccolo's Death
ATLANTA (AP) -Mother can
away the darkness with her !!Oft, lovin
volct:. Traci Piccolo know1 ila 1en
can alleviate almost all fem, known
unknown.
Yet, the'• puzzled. She doe 1 n '
uadentand why it can't a n 1 we r
greatut need: Why JI <IDT brlq
daddy back.
"I can jult barely hold up aometim
when she starts crying and saying. '
want my daddy.' "says Mrs. Joy Piccolo.
her voice quivering aligbUy and her eyes
fighting gamely to 1tay dry. "Or when
i;he asks 'why can't we buy my daddy
back?' "
"She can't understand death
Heaven," the peUte and lovely worn
88.id. "Both words are very puzzling
bard for anybody lo ae<:epl, "PeCta!111
children."
"Lori doesn't really undtntand, but ~
believe lbe know1 be isn't coming back.
At least she aceepta it. Kri5ti ii, of
course, too young."
The girls art lhe daughters of the la
Brian Piccolo, onetime running back fo
lhe Chicago Bears. They have been 1'
Atlanta on an o:tended 1pring vacaliot
visiting their grandparenls, Mr. and Mrt.
Herbert MWTalh.
Traci, a livewirt young mlas with li&
brown eyes, is 4. Lori is 5 and K.riJtJ J.
"The girls' biggest 10rrow, or one
them, is that he isn·t being taken c
of," 1aid Mrs. Piccolo. "They saw ·
when he was so very, very sick.''
"Lori knew hlm best, of coune. li'llt
seems content, now, knowing at
lhat he isn 't suffering any more."
Brian Piccolo died last year, atri.ck
by canctr at the age of 26.
"June 26 ... ten months," the ~~
old mother saya. "Ten months di
loneliness, confusion and dlf!icully.
adjustment has been very hard."
Mrs. Piccolo u.ld she gave "v
serious thought at first" to moving !P
AUanta. "But then we decided to slay II
Chicago because we feel our futw't ii
there."
The Piccolos, hiJb-school sweetheart.
in Florida, we.re married here !n
December 11164. Brian had jtlll l!nilhed ~
sparkling career at Wake Forest and wu
awaiting the start of a career wUb
Otk:ago u a free q:ent.
He spent 2"2 seasons with lbe Be
playing behind Gale Sayers, his ve17.
close frtend and road roommate. His flnll
game was in October 1966 in Atlanta
aaalnst the Falcons.
"He started coughlna pretty heavilf
toward the end of October.'' Mr1. Plccoit
remembers, "and went into a hospital ii.
early November. He thought he wu ju&.
run down, but Xraya tn New York found
the tumor in hls chest."
Voice of Giants
Dies Suddenly
MILL VALLEY, Calli. (AP) -Raa
Hodge1, for 22 YWI !ht voice Qf ~
Giant. National League baatball club Cl
radio and televbkln, ia de1d 1t ISO.
Hodg., colllps<d at his home here
Monday rllght •nd was dead on arrival at
Marin GtMral Hospital. An autopsy was
scheduled to determine cause of death.
Although he rellrod from fullUme
hroadcl!Ung afttr lhe 19'70 , .. ..,.,
Hnd1 .. COllllnued on !ht Glaob' pllblic
relations 1taff ind occuionally did
broadcuta. He wu be1t remembtrtd
for hi! bl'Oldcaat of the Giants' playoff
game with the Brooklyn Dodgen ln 11161.
prior to the club'• movt trom Ntw Yo1' to San Franc:llCO in 1158.
When Bobby Thompson hit a home nm
to win the playofl. Hodg .. •houl<d Into
the rnlcrOphont over and over again :
"Giants win the pennant ! Glantt wift
the f>'MAnl!" His "Bye-bye baby" whea
a player conntcted for a home run was
well known to ll>oullllda of fans •
'
Shaking Up Game
V d rious Experiments
Put Baseball Far Out
The Oakland AUlletlcs' experiment this
past exhibition baseball season with a
three-ball rule can take a back seat to a
recent experiment with a pair of semi· .Pro clubs.
. Don Rowe, assistant football coach and
·head tennis mentor at C.Oldeo West
CcUege, took part in the affair, which
was sanctioned by major I e a g u e
rommissioner Bowie Kuhn.
The regul<1tion nine inning game.
matching the Dodger Juniors and ·the
Tar Hiirdler
Jumps to Lead
On Hono~· Roll
By PHIL ROSS
01 "'-D•llr P'llet Sltll
Last week's slate of dual meets and
Invitationals were able to effect some
changes in the DAILY PILOT's Orange
Coast area prep lrack and field honor
roll.
ln one of the biggest jumps on the list.
Newport's junior hurdler Matt Hogsett
shot from third place (19.9) into the lead
in the 180 low hurdles with a 19.6 clocking
In a dual meet al Western. He moves
ahead of Marina's Gene Taylor (19.7) and
Dennis Averyt (19.3).
Another 11th grader, Corona del Mar's
Carlo Tosti, assumed a tie for the 220
leadership wiUJ Fountain Valley·s Phil
Maas by zipping to a 22.2 mark Friday
night in the Newport-Mesa district meet.
Tosti's junior mate John Miles moved
tnto a third place deadlock with Joe
Ventimiglia or Marina in the same event
by running 22.6 in the Newport-Mesa
meet.
Still another takeover found Fountain
Valley moving to the head of the class in
the 440 relay with a 43.2 best, three-
tenths ahead of runnerup and ex-leader
Corona and five-tenlhs in front of third
place Marina .
Another old leader merely enhanced his
top mark at the Newport-Mesa gel·
together.
The 440 fronlrunner -junior Eric
Olson of Estancia -knocked a second off
his previous best with a 49.9 performance
·while -·· Corona tw~miler Dick Day
lmproved from 9:46.3 to 9:42.3 to
jltrengthen his second place hold behind
Marina's Dave Lockman (9:28.4).
Costa Mesa junior John Olswang
·19:42.6) replaced Fountain Valley's
i Wayne Leed,, (9:47.l) 1n the third two
·mile spot.
In a mile relay change. Newport
~earned itself a second place deadlock
with Corona at 3:26.2.
· Only the high jump and discus were
subject to amendments in the field
e~·en ls. .
• Long jump pacesetter Ray Harris of
Fountain Valley leaped into the second
slot in the high jump with fi...31.~
achievement in the Barons' crueial Irvine
:t.eague dual meet v.•in over Santa Ana
Valley last Thursday .
HICI -Piii! M••1 l l"ounllln V•l~vl, t .I ; Clrle
TD>tl (CoJr,,,... Ml Marl, IG.O, t.tw; J~t> Mfltl fC:o•-
onl Ml Mar). !lrvt;e Glr11ale IElT•rKI•>· John
Mllttrf ~M1rl111), 10.0
nt -C1nit Tosti (Cor~ del Mir), Phil M1e1
1Foun111n v111irvl, 11.1; Joi!" Ml~• !Ca,.,... oe1
Mid, Joe VtnllmklUa fMlrl111I, 11.6.
u o -Eric OllOt> (E1r.nd1), '9.t ; Ji"' Kt1!/\IP'f
(Wtstml,,Sltrl, 50.5; 01v1 SIKV fWt1lmlnst"'), 51 1.
MG -Nlcit; Rost (Cl)l'ON dtl Marl. 1:51.1; Jtll
'l'ou119 !WtllmlnsJtrl. l :SJ.O; Jolin Mullin• (Hu,..
11"91""' Bttcll). I :51 0.
Mlle -Bob Brlcllner IM1rln1J. ,.Jl.G; l ab Go•t-
"lck (~oste Mt1a), '2l J, John Mullln1 (Hunnneton
Bttcl!J, ,.,. t
Two milt -Otvt Lockm•" (M1r1n1l. ,,71,,
· l:llck O•v iCoror>t cltl Mtr), t :'2,J: Jefln Ol1w1rrt
(Co111 Mtwl, t :.t.I.,.
no HH -Gtr!" WIH !Hunll"91Dn Brit~!. $TtYt
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Int). If.I.
HO tell¥ -l"oun!t!n \11!11y. C.21 Corori. d!I
Mar, 4l.J1 Marl,.., O .J.
Mitt rtltv -We1!mln1ttr. 3:2'.Ji Coront dtl
Mtr. N1WPOrt Htrbor, ):16.S.
HJ -Jalln Kirmer (NrNllO!"' Htrbo•I. '"'' R•v H•rrl1 (Fountain v1tt1vJ ... JI'>/ \lrrn McG••rv fS.n
Cl1mtnlt\, .. 1. LJ -Rav Mtrrll (Founlll" \11lloy), JJ.0; Gtr!~
WIH (H~ntlntton Bttc~). n-101'>, ll-lw; Ron COl-
11"91 CEOhon), 1'-'l.lo. ,.V ~Ton' Hol!m1n IS.,. Ctemente), U-•V.; lf•"'
"••kin..., tFoUflt•ln vallevl, 11-1\l; Dtwlcl Anoelln
fMun!1119to<> Bttc.111, 1).~.
SP -Mtrlt 51tY'""I (N"1'0tl llttclll. 61-10 ... 1
Tttr' Altl!"ltto<> !NtwOOt"I Htrbo•), ff·I; llrld 81)1'·
•tn !Cool• Mei.a,, U-1'~. OT~M1r-Ste"""'' (NewPOrl M1rborl. 1,1.\; -·
t rO Ro••Hr !CoroN del Mir/. li)..1\1; For .. 1
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Lagw1a, Tritons
In Cage Collision
host Burbank Pirates, not only had the
three-ball rule, but included four outs and
a wild scoring system.
Rowe, a member of the Dodger
.Juniors, relates that each team was given
one point for each base that a ruMer
suceessfully advanced to. An add.iUQDal
four points were awarded for a run.
Thus when the game ended both clubs
were approaching the 100-point figure.
Another change instituted was that a
runner, once he hit the ball, coold
take off for first or third. The rollo\ting
batter would have to advance the same
way Wltil 'the bases were cleared. If ·a
runner fak~ going to first and then ran
to third, he"'1as declared out, says Rowe.
Another innovation was that art.er
getting two strikes, a batter was allowed
only three more foul balls before being
called out.
According to Rowe the game lasted
about the same as a normal baseball Ult
CRAIG
SHE1''F
-due primarily to the four-out rule.
Despite the three-ball Jaw lhere were
oot· very many walks in the game. "The
pitchers had pretty good control." says
Rowe .
Rowe adds that the experiments are
still going on with the major and minor
league offices evaluating them to see if
any could be tried by organized baseball.
Rowe. by the way, is one of the
Dodgers' batting practice pitchers -
when he's not tutoring the Rustler tennis
squad.
* * * Former Orange Coast Co 11 e git
basketball star Phil Jordan eamed most
valuable player honors at tbe Unlversily
of -"laska this pa.lit sea11n, averaging 11
points and 14 rebounds• gam9.
Jordan also has • l.4 (rade point
avrrage.
* * * Golden West swim coach T o m
Hermstad figures his Southern Cal
Conference champions will be among the
top six fiajshers when the slate meet
TOiis around in two weeks at De Ania
College (Cupertino).
Hermstad rates his team on a par with
Pasadena. Long Beach. F o o t h i I I ,
Americ~ ruver and Diablo Valley as the
best of the state JC powers.
* * * Golden Wesl broke lO records thh; pasl
basketball season wllb scoring ace Chris
Thompson leading the assault wltb It
marts.
Thompson eslabl~hed 1 si ngle season
scoring mark of 734, breaking: hi1 old
standard of 707. ffil f15 fie.Id g:o1l1 and
184 free throws also were record~.
And bis tw1>-se.a1on total of 1,441 polnt1
sbaltere.d Ollie Marlin's old mu-k of 731,
set in 1967-69.
North Reveals
All-star Roster
A pair of All-CIF selections dominate
coach Paul Bush·s Ust of nominees for
the 6th annual North-South Orange
County basketball game to be played
June 19 at Orange Coast C<Jllege.
Sonora's Dave Meyers, the CIF AA 's
player of the year, and first team 4A
selection John Seymour or Servile head
Bush's 25-man list which will be pared to
12 for the game.
The nominees:
Frank Shoush (Anaheim), Lyle Jones
(Brea). Bob DeWeese tEl Dorado), Tom
Long (El Modena), Stan Bair (Kate\la ),
Jeff Kinworthy (Kennedy), Ke11t Pearce,
Bruce Brashears (La Habra), Kirke
Foerster (Los Alamitos)
Randy Dickinson Wally Monoi !Lo-
well ). Charlie Richie (r-.1agnolia), Abel
Bernal (Orange), Bill Sell, John Wilson
(Rancho Alamitos). John Seymour (Ser-
vile), Uave l\.1eyers, Tim Horton (Sonora),
Bob Mansfield (Sunny Hills).
Tod Allen. Greg Huysman (Troy),
Sergio Echevarria (Valencia). Pat
Mcinally, Ron Todd (VIi ia Park), Lee
Gragnano (Western).
r~,. April 20, 1971
MISSION VIEJO'S NATIONAL MINI-BIKE CHAMP JEFF WARD IS OFF AND WINGING
Anteaters Spin
Uncertainty Remains
For Plnyoff Berth
That periodic wheel of fortune that
spins around the UC Irvine campus
athletic program at conclus)on of each
sport. is revving up its motor once qain.
this time circling the Anteater baseball
team .
NCAA playoff berths are limited to
four schools from the western slates and
two of the four places are automatically
taken by conference represenlatives.
Representatves, mind you, n o t
champions.
The NCAA basketball plajoffs inserted
a new wrinkle to the situation recently by
picking second place Cal Poly (San Luis
HOWARD
HANDY
Obispo) over titlist San Fernando Valley
Stale College.
The baseball race in that circuit
appears to be a tw~team affair between
these same two schools with SLO holding
the edge. Fortunately for the M~stangs.
they also have the best overall record (7
losses going into the weekend games).
from the CCAA <San Fernando holds
three wins over UC!). -....
Perhaps it's ironic the wbeel of fortune
circling the UCI baseball team should
end in the nation 's gambling capital -
Las Veg111. The scheduled twinbill is the
scheduled regular season finale for the
Anteaters .
* Bert Blyleven; the young pitching star
for Bill Rigriey's Minnesota Twins from
Garden Grove's Santiago High. told this
story during the winter months.
Blylcven was called up to the Twins
early in June last -season after spending
iipring training with the Twins.
''I received a telegram telling me to
report immediately to the team in
Boston. When I arrived at the hotel about
2:30 In the morning, I knocked on
Rigney's door.
"When he woke up and answered , I told
him I was supposed to r e p or t
immediately.
"He saki. 'since you got along so well
In spring training with the other fellows,
why don't you go around and tell
everyone Miio before you check into your
room?
"After a half hour, I went back to Mr.
Rigney's room and he asked if I had told
them all hello.
'"I told him I had tried but that none of
them were in yet."
Sachs Slated
At Speedway
Orange C<Junty Speedway is no longer .
The little, quarter-mile dirt track
localed adjacent to Lion Country Safari
at the foot of the Laguna Hills has
undergone a bit of renovation and has
taken on a new name -El Toro
Speedway.
Fifty-seven United States Racing Club
midgets appeared at a practice session
on the rejuvenated oval two weeks ago
and interest is expected to be just as high
Saturday night (7) when the USRC group
converges on the speedway to open the
197J season.
At the tcp of the im pressive list of
drivers slated to be on hand is San
Diego's Lowell Sachs, the 1970 USRC
champion. He'll be at the wheels of
George Newnam's Offy.
The high point man in the second half
of last season, Upland's Tony Simon will
be driving Kim Gary's Chevy ll insteatl
of the Offy which be used to. pilot.
Other Offy drivers expected to compete
include Rick Goudy, Gene Large, Pete
Bittrolf, Lee Leonard ind Weatmtnster's
Duane Sears.
The list of Chevy 11 competitors include
Art Bisch. Sonny White, Jerry MacLean
and Pete Stemple while Bl"U« Thurston
and his brother Dave will be the top
drivers in Fords.
The speedway may be re1ched by
taking the El Toro Road O(f-ram p from
the San Diego Freeway and turning north
on Carlota. The parking lot entrance i1
located one mile north of Leisure World
on Carlota.
Gelling back to Gary Adams' UC I nine,
the Anteaters were invited la st year .after
considerable hassling and d r o p p e d
decisions to Chapman and Sacramento
State.
Baseball Standings
This year UCl appears to have the best
independent record. With 13 or lS games
remaining on the schedule, UCI has an
impressive record of 21-12-1, virtually
equivalent to last year·s won-lost mark.
By 13 or lS games, the schedule is
currently undergoing a change in plans.
The University of Nevada ILas Vegas)
has a makeup on the weekend UCJ is
scheduled to play a doobleheader there
(May 15).
Adams, in reviewing the upcoming
schedule, feels a three-game set with the
University of San Diego may be the key
lo a playoff invitation. This. of course ,
barriq: a playoff invitation to two teams
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
P.1ontreal
Pittsburgh
New York
St. Louis
Chicago
Philadelphia
W L
5 3
7 5
5 •
7 ' . '
' 7
West Division
W L
San Francisco
Atlanta
Housten
12 2
7 •
8 •
I I
3 7
3 9
Prt.
.625
.583
.556
. 538
. 308
.300
GB
" 'h
31,
3
GB
3\1 • • 7 •
AhlERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore
Washington
Cleveland
New York
Boston
Detroit
Ea1t Dlvlston
W L . ' • • 5 5
5 •
5 •
• 7
~'est Dlvllton
W L
I ' 9 5
• 5 • • • • • •
Pct.
.l!OO
.500
.500
.•55
.<55
.36<
GB
' 3
21>
3%
41>
GB
A benefit basketball doubleheader
involving Laguna Beach and S a n
Clemente high schoo ls is scheduled
Friday night at San Clemente Jligh.
The first game (7) Involves football
lettennen of the two schools with lhe
;second till matching grid coaches.
CdM, Newport Athletes Honored
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Diego
Mo!Ml..,.t ••wll•
SI~ Frtrn:IKo •• SI. l .... lt t
LDI A"'tltl J, 5tn Ole.e t
O<!lv e1mt1 l(tleclulell.
Pct.
.857
.636
.571
.<It
.300
.250
Callfornl•
Oakland
Milwaukee
Kansas City·
Minnesota
Chicago
~,_...,.,, •111.1111
Cl....,lt...t S, klton 4, II r..,.tnt\
M!MttOtt t. K1n111 crrr t
Pct.
.117 . .. ,
.5<5
.<29
.385
.308
II>
3
3°4
f l>
A dance, for students of both schOols
,y,·ill follow from 9:30 to midnight. The
<!vent is being held to raise funds for the
l\vo football teams. A S1 dODation is being
charged .
The shirting five for the Laguna
coaches includes Hal Akins. Norm
Borucki, Ed Bo\\·e•. \Vall Lawson and
Warren Watkins. Dick Hagedorn. John
Baker, Gary Phillips. Fred Newhart.
Marshall Adair and Stan DiMaggio are
bidding for San Clemente starting berths.
· Starting for the Laguna lettermen's
learn will be Gery Fisette. Jack Millerd,
Dave Kerr, Joe Polden and Sir.Ip Winship.
San Clemente's starter1 will be picked
from Bob P..1cNamara, Bob Burges, Nolan
Boyer. Dan Russell, I\ay Cannavo and
Sl3n OOOd.
The event. which hopes to be an annu::il
affair. is h<?ing called lhe Beach Bowl by
the IWI) opposlng schools.
The Commodores' Club division of Lhe
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce
will sponsor a breakfast Wednesday
morning (7:30) al the Balboa Bay Club
honoring 49 scholar-athletes from COrona
de! Mar and Newport Harbor high
schools.
Admission to the fete Is S3 and
reservations may be: obtained by phming
the Chamber office at 57>6300.
E1-Notre Dame great CUpptt Smith
will head a panel or prominent speaker1
including UCLA basketball coach John
Wooden, mentor of-tht eeven-tlme
nationul champions; former Rams star
Elroy Hirsch; USC cage coach Bob Boyd :
and former Olympic 1500-meter act Jim
Bealty.
The following Corona and Newport
studenU. wlll be hooored :
Corona dtl P.1ar
Tirn Bindel, Garth Bergeson, Tom
Baughey, Dick Day, John Glennon, Mark
Grigsby, Ched Grimshaw, Tom Hogan.
John Holyoake. Karl Kille.fer. Don
Killian. Kurt Krumpholz, Greg Loitz, Ken
Neisse.r, Kal!uhiro Niino. 1\.tark Otto,
John Palmer.
Tom Queen. Altt Ramsay. Jeff
Reichert. Shields Richardson. Nkk Rose ,
Keith Samuels, Sten Vermund, Rick
Walker.
Ntowport Harbor
James Cokas, Taraa Young, Alex
Moad, Richard Pilayer, Kim Perino, Bob
Ogle, Rick Flemlng. Mark Stevens.
Phil Metzger, Tom Sdllck, John
l\.1a~lavy , John Kazmer, James Smith,
Ed White. Matt Greer, Ron Tripp,
Granl Ge.Iker. Mike Eaatcrllng. Al vin
\Yhitc, Tom Rose.nest, Dennhr Durgin,
Stuart Weedn, Scolt Schaefer, Scott
f\1or5.
T_t,•10t,,....
Hou1IDl'I IOrlffl,., 1).11 ti C~lc:tte II~ ..... 1.)1
l'Mttllfloll!t (Shelf, 6-1) ti Monlret f (N>Uw\lllY,
l.tl. "11n1
AU1nt1 IP Hlelcf9, t-11 fl 1'1111111,i ... fMoow,
1 0), nit~!
H•w Yort 1$1M-c•I. IMJ) ti C1r.cln,.1tl !(IOnl-.
1-01, "'-"'
Loi """~ !Oclwftlnt. 1-0) " .S.tn 01-l.\r!i,.,
1-1), N.M
SI. L..,11 fCltve!Mlll. 0.,) II Sin F•1ncisU 4Mt rJ.
d'lll. J.tl. "'-~'
o..rv ea,..... Kllectu-lff.
THM1¥'1 Ot_..
Walf>lntton CShtlllenbKk, t-11 1t NIW 'l'trt; , .. ., ... .,.,, l-41
C1tvfltnd !l'•cu•I, 1-0) ti lostot> (1' .. tn. t-11
KtnH• CllY (Dtl C.,Mfl. M ) al MIN!tlol• Cl'et""'· ,,,,
Ctlk-!JDl!n-. 1·11 11 MllwlullH IL.ld.WMd, ...
l.ill"'lrt !1'11mto. Ml •' Otfrtll IJ. Hlfll.'9,
.. J). """' OtkllNI fH-11!11«. •>I 11 Ctlll•MI lMt,N",,..,, I·
1), nltftt
DEAN LEWIS·
1966 HAIBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
S•rvlce •nd P1rt1 for All lmPorted C1r1
Modern Body Shop for All C•rt
646-9303
Orange Counly'ii Largest and ~1ost Modern Toyota ind Volvo Dealer
OYll$1AS DILIYIRY (PICIALISTJ
DAILY PILOT J 7
SWEAZY SELECTED
MESA GRID COACH
John Sweazy. who bondled b S..
football team list year, bas Men nam6I
to replace Mu MIU.r u nr11ty Jootbal
eoacb at Cost• MeA Hllh School, OW
DAILY PILOT learned exc1111lvel7 to.
day .
Sweaty ls the fifth varsUy CQICb al
Mea1 as Miller stepl>t<f down 1fter twt
2-7 years to accept a coaching/athletlt
director post et El Camlno (Sacr•mentfl)
High. •
Sweazy hu coached the, Muet&np'
wrestling team in addiUoo to his footbe.I
duties at Mesa. ,
Prevlou! coaches at Costa Mesa in.
eluded Don Burns, Dan Kimball, NeM
Peek and Miller.
The Mustangs' overall 11-year record
ls 26 wins, 69 losses and three ties.
9-year-old
Rides Just
Like a Pro
By DEKE HOULGATE
Of ""' DtllJ' "I"' St.tr
Jeff Ward isn't different from other g.
year-old boys in his Mission Vlejc
neighborhood in the rolling country oi
Orange County, Jeff like1 to swim. play
football and basketball, do wheelies on
bis bicycle and so fishing. He gets good
grade1 at school. His mother, father and
sister complete a very close knit f811llly
Jeff isn 't different in any way but one.
He is the reigning national minkycl'
rtclng champkln of the United States.
He regularly races both mini-bikes ...
the tiny power scooters that llll1't be
under 60 inches in length -and mini·
cycles -which must have wheels m
bigger in diameter than 18 inches and IL
engine no larger than 50 c.c:
Jeff is a factory rider for Booanz1 .,. a
mini-bike and Yamaha on a mini-cycle.
Small for his age, only four feet tall, Jefl
ls a giant in this fast growing sport ttiat
occupies the interest of thousandl ol
families every weekend.
Dallas Baker. • naUonally ranked
AMA racer, caught Jeff's act ora ind
declared ttiat he was "just like a pro, only
cut down .'' When Jeff won the national
tiUe in the 6 to a.year-old elass last. year
he also finished fourth in the 11-14 clas.,
and si1th in the lS..year-old and over
class.
Racing tn that division be won the
semi-final heat against 11 tet:nagers.
His father. Jack W•nl, who Is
• employed by Yamaha Tntem1tional and
U also a veteran triab rider, credits
Jefrs interest in cycle racing wilb
perking up his Interest in school and life
in general.
"Jeff was born in Scotland and moved
here when he was one and a half yearii
old," his father s•ld. "If he were in
Scotland, he'd be about nonn1L stie. but
out here in California he Iii mn1)l for his
age.
''Originally he wasn't doing too good in
school, but hb succe.u in racing haii
given him tremendous confidence. Hi.,
grades got better, and today he is u
excellent student."
From Monday through Friday Jeff
doesn't even look at his racers, Ward
said. But oo weekends nobody can get
him off a motor bike.
"We go out to Saddleback Park when
It opens at I a.m .. ind he practJctS •ll
day Saturday. On Sunday he practices alt
he can, then rldeii in three different
classes. Between racea we loo"k around
and he is gone.
"He iJ over pr•cticing 011 the big bike
course, and usually ht'1 faster than the
men on the 2SOs. After the races are
over, he ride.ii until they cloae the park.
He hu incredible energy."
DEAN LEWIS
!T!O!YJO!flA!
APRIL SPECIALS
COROLLA 1971
5'1CIAL $1871
VOLVO
1971 DEMO
$3093
144 S.d•11. ll14fe, Heifer, 4 .,..d.
•1J•O
1
UIU CAI ltlCIAL
$1295
1t6t lOYOTA COIONA
H.1. AIH. 4 1 ttd. IYCM0t71
I
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., :) f)AILY PILOT
GOLF TIPS
L-S-. 1.-clvlllltt ' S-'""" .. _ -,.rldk t 11 1111 , ••
NEWPORTER INN
PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
Sl .ot whtt ttth ..i ...t Hyt.
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Tho Ono That Cares
Tuesday
Evening
AftRll 20
a:tO 8 Ill lllWI Jt1ry Dunphf. ell""" lttltonll. Smitll.
B QtlC lll'ft T•m SftYdK.
D Tiit AlleJI Slll'lf
8 Sil O'CSld: lllW: (C) (tel) "fM
P'l1Wtaat1 .. (wt1ter11) '69-0on Mur·
llJ, 611'1' 'StoUwtll, A&lbf D:"on
Wiid 1111 H~ left for 411111 on
the pl1ins 't llll lftdll11t, II rucued
br ll•11t11dl·dri¥ina CIJ•mity jall.
Tlllf Mt OCJI to trip ttle •hilt flltA
with !ht llllp of luflt1o 1111 CHy.
" .. ¥11 DJ'• m Tl'l• n111t.1IMI
ID Stir Tttk
fJD M111tllll1nd
Ill> ,...., f 1•itJ
Bl Jfltidt•• ll
ID Dtl'tll Y1ll11 DIJS
Gm LI Htit f1111 f111r ~ C.111111)1
ED Jim .llm Htwtllat
l :IS 9 Art .hifit
l :Jt (I) Nttn l ill Hi.ldclJ
(I) rm• ... c.,..lltflw
Cl) Nm W1ti1r C1011kf11.
"C.•41'11 CllNft a """ Dl'lid l rinklty.
ID"' n,tn1 N1111
m~a..ct1•
fD> SllldH fll•/Mllliult
• Thi lllllt "-'"'
GJ!)LH OW.Mi .... -
J:Ol IJ CU .. ,.. W1lt11 Cltnk1lt.
DID QC Ntw1 David ll1lnk!ty,
Fun• MeGat, John Cll1nc1ll01.
(i)Tt tin IM Tnrtll a.,.., ... , u11.r
(I) httk11t Junditn
m1 ..... L•c:J
l!l(()D11ptl:
8!) I UICW! 11111 C1111p11iU11
Wtnnin1 tntr11t Ill KCIT1 Fiut An·
n111J Yount rtopl1'1 Film Compttl
"''· ID Qrill tt1e Liw111r1 w.,11
SI AnlelttH Jlqi11
Im Si•tll•lltt M1ri1 .........
JJO. (j) lw11l1 Hlflbillle1 (Ill Thf
Cl1mp1th 1rrW1 1n WathinstGn
O.C., lo liv• thl Pr1sidtnl $95 11111
Hen lo help Ml lh• lil llf 111insl
1me1. ind 111d up buyin1 the Whi1t1 Houw lrtm con·m•" Shift)' Shiltr
(f'ji~ Silveri). 111 IM ll(Ond of 1
rhrec ·p•rt ep1J0111.
Orange Count11 Plailhar11ao1aie LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ~EGAL NOTICE
CllTl,ICAT• Oit IUUNISI. lolOTICI TO Clll01TOll$ P~ldl'
'ICTITIOUS fllAMa IU,lltlOI COUllT 0, THI CllTtPICAtl Ofl IU11HIJI S T!ote. llflCltfll-.1 dMI urtffY M II ITATI OP CALIPOllJOA ,Olt pl(TITIOUI MAMI eason eonokodl .... bullMH ..... 0 ... nu. THI COUNTY ., ORAHOI TM ~, • .i.,..o llOM <•rllf<f h• I\
Coe.i. Mew, C1lltor"41, ......... ,,.. "''· A"9HI c"'°'1C'tl .... MlllMU 1t ,., w 11111 SI •
fkfllleon firm ...me Ill AL.SCOTT'S l"OOL Ellllo .. Alltft [)all, DectUICI I'll \, (Mii MIM, (1llfofnllo. ~-ll'lt
SEllVICE &. SUP,.LY Incl fflf,I ""kl firm NOT ICI II HElllEIY GIVl!H M "'' lkllllou• Urm neme or DI TA"E
11 , _ _.,, ot IM ~n-i ... .,. ...... (fildllOrl fJf !tie lllOYt Ntneid dtc-• OUPl.tCATING tn4 llltl Nkl flrni lo
Perlma11 Concerto Highlight of
By TO!'t1 BARLEY
ot .,.. Dtll1 .. lltf Siii!
Violinist ltihak Perlriian's
1n a g nificenl T schailcowsky
conctrto Friday night at UCI
was by far the best solo
offering we have had in the
Orartge County Ph.llarmonic
Society's waning season .tnd
further proof, if we needed II.
of ~ incredible versatility of
this girted young Israeli.
ll brought him a standing
ovation from a delighted
capacity •udiert c e and
-anything I~ than that should
have broua:bt everyone present
into court on charges of
c r iminal negligence. For this
was Perlma11 a l his gliltering
best. o b viously inspired and more evident thin ln the
dr1 wing from his sweet t em p est u o u s a 11 e I r o
St•dlvarius 1 Concerto in D vivacissimo that gives us ,uch
lhat was at once unbearably 1 rousing conclusion lo the
e motional and in the nexl bar work.
breathtakingly tethnical. • ite would be callous indeed
Hile triumph, for U!I, was in who dkl not feel a pang or plty
that first movement. The for this y oung man as he
allegro m<xlerato seemB to be laboriously def i es • the I e &
the bugbear of many vlolinisu braces-Imposed on him by the
and one cannot e scape the ravages of polio to make his
occasional impression that its way to and from the podium .
piUalls and demanding scoring B y his ow.n account, he
come a little early In Lhe game wants no J>Jty or related
for the soloist. emotion for what he givea us
Not so with Perlman; from once he is able to attain his
first to la~t he w11 In absolute seat on the plaUorm. He would
comm1nd or his work and his never get any from this critic
111\aon with conductor Zubin for Perlman with a violin in
Mehl.a and • Los Angeles his hands is the m o s t
Philarmocic Or<=hestra that unfettered artist we know and
was in fine form Friday night it is not until . he begins lo
-........ In 11111 -plKI of rttlHMI m11 111 _ _,, 11••11141 Cllltrl$ I NIMI "'" (.,.PllHCI °' IM lollllWI .... ,..,,, whoM
You reallte the '"'"n"' man is I• i1 161low1! •114 ffct0t11• ,,. ,....,1,111 .. i 11 lfllm, ,,.,.,. •n lllM •NI ,1"' ti rt:tldl11e• ti • J""' e JotHll Scott '1old, Ultl P1 .. H 111 ,,.1,,. ... MUotan' w.1Klll11, lo< IM ot!kl fOllowl' handlea~ In any way ""'" N1 .... Ty111n, c 1111. t1tto M t111 cllftl « •M 111oY• 1111111.i '°"'"' °' 61;1111 o..-o.u111, '" w, U th $1 t'Y'-"' • 011• APtil lf, 197' It prtnllf "*"'• ,.1111 tht flt(tll&ry C•lt Mt1o1. (t ilt.
He a ctually d. '
" "e S J, S. Vold llOY<htr., lo me und1r1ltMd 11 11\t olflct 0.ltd Allrll i ltll
... S!llt of Ctll!otnll, Or111t1 Counto; ol l1tr AltorMY1, 01trow, Drud<.,., Gtrilll o Dtu~I
d bl J (b •· f h ' Ori A&•ll 1'. lt'1, llollott mt, • Nottr'f N11allr and Kur.i tUI Wl!.,,lrt STATE 01' CALll"OltNIA,
a OU e vote 0 an,... or IS ..... 11, In '"° ltr \lkl 11111, •«-'•ll'f loult•ar,, ......... Hlll1, Ct lltornlt ~10. OllANGE COUNTY:
work Friday night for he •-N•rM J01otlth Stott '11111 ,,,...n -. m1 ""'Ith 11 t111 t111u IJI by1!n.H of 1111 011 AIH'll 5 lfll. Mlor• ..,1, , Not1r.,.
lo bt !ht "'"°' WhOH ntmt lt undtttlt""' In 1!1 11111110 "'1i1lnl111 IO ~blft In ind tor 11ld Stitt. il'tfi.orll!l'f
hel""'d to reslore our faith in ""bi.trlMcl to fflt wllllln !nt1 rum1n1 1111111 IM 111111 of ••Id dKtd,nl. within l1<1r ippeirto Gtrl!CI DIN"' Otllnl k"°""n lo ,,~ 1c1t-ltdt«1 h• tJ(ICUltd 1111 """· "'°""'• '"'' fflt fltl! oub1ic.11on flf lh lJ ""' 10 IM lll• --.....nu. """,. h
mll!ic afler an experience that tOFl'1CIAL St!'ALI notic.., . wbK•Tbed io '"' w11111n In•''""''"' •Ml Mtrv IUh Merion Ot1t0 ,..,ll ll, ,ti! r;k"°""ltd,.cl ht 1x1tt11lto ttrt .. ,...,
sent us oir lo the intennission wo11r.,. .. y11nc, C•Hfotnl• Ch1r1o111 Fri« o111. ~0t11t111 St111 PflntlOlt Ofllc• ln l!XK\llrlK ol Ill• Will M1rY ••th ""°"°"
wondering ir e'1en Perlman °••M• cou .. i.,. ot '"' •btY• nimK o1ttede111 No11rv .. 111111c . c1 111~11 My Commluloft l•1lr.a 01trew, DnlO.w, PrlMlPt l Offlct In
could put logether the pieces Apr11 '· it11 H1i.111r ,,,. IC11t'll. o,,,,.. coun" l'ull11i.Ma Ori n" CMll Dt l!J "Ii.I, tin Wll..,.tt ..., .. .,..,,, ,o\prlt t n11
seattered to the wind by,'c'-'-"c"c...'c'c'_"''--.. -'-'·'c'_"c'_'_'" ___ .,._;_"_'1 ••vwtr "1111• Celltwn1a "'" "btl ,..., 0r1~• coe11 0111.,. "11e1 i-T1l1 11111 11' ..... lttt u ' 1 1t11 Ill-II
LEGAL NOTICE Atl#M'I'• Mr ... ftlllrll •'c'c'c"c•:_"_·_"_·_'_· __ ~-----..wbllo!Mod Orlftlt COii! Ot tlY .. 11011· TI anl-------~-----l.-..n1 u, :11, 21 '""Mt'>' o, 1t11 11i.11 LEGAL NO CE
'"'"
Edgar Varese.
Varese's "Arcana" IS
th 111cT1T1ous 1u11Ht11 LEGAL N011CE ,. .. 1u1 at NAM• ITATWMtMT Cl!llTll'ICATIE o" IUSINl'SJ
d Under l he Thi loll-Int ptrllOlll 1r1 dolM "ICTITIOUS NA.Ml' masquera C:! 11u11neu ,,, 11111 Jltt Tiie u""'••ltN<I -• ttr1lty 1'lf I•
mantle Of mu''
., and we are ITALIA·AMl'lllCA YACHT IMl"OITS. NOTICI TO ClltOITOli co<1<111cllll9 I bullM'U I t 12'5 LOt•n Av~
•45 Eiu coe11 Hlthw1y, -N1wp0r1 su .. •1101 COU•T 0' TNE Cllta ..,.,.1, c111tornl1, uNl•r m•
• It.Ch Ct lll. STATI 0, ULll"OllNIA l"O• fkllllotul "'"' ntrnt ti OltANGf
carerully preserving a most Jahn "°" Neumtl!f\, HD ,....... TN• COUNTT 0' OUHOE COUNTY RUflflEllt HO~E ANO TUfllNGo
appropriate program note for Srrt1I, Cul•tr Ct!Y, C1llf, NO. A-'1&7t CO t n<t 1111t itld !lrm It c-t" ol Gt0tt• Cllk• lvt,,...., 111, •11 lldo E1t1t• ot "LOlilEMCE MAlll:IE OEWES. !ht, lolla"'I"" Pt<Mlfl, ,.l>Ott n1rnt I"
future rererence "Don't P1rk D• .. No. »•·A, N•w-1 •••ch. D1ca111d. full •n<I 111c1 o1 ru1c1onc1 11 •• to11Dw•
eleven-note niihtmarc
Cell!. NOTICE ts HEllEIV' GIVEN "' m• c111,t11 A. OollCIYk Jr .• J1Q Mtdth•
YOGA.----.I applaud too soon if applause TMs bll1lneH It btl"" c-u<ttlll •v • crtdllon o1 lt'lt abo•• n1mtd d1e-t Ave., c0111 Mesi, c1n1o<nl1. 1nrt.,.rll'llp !hit 11! HfM)nt htvlr>t claim• ttllMI Oettd April ), 1911
LES BROWN seem s appropriate." GtOttt C. lvtrlOll tht 11l<t dtc..,tnl l tt "QI/Ired lo Hie Chifltl A. Oo1!d'>'• Jr,
was e xemplary . ll was never s huffle back to the wlngs that
TONICiHT .. I P.M.! IP1rTner) 111....,, wllfl lllt M(:1HllrY -.dlen, 111 SI.it of Ctllfor1111. Or111tt C<11111tv:
''" Lectvrl 1 °'-"'"11" Jt was never more 1>11bllthed Ort llllt ca.st Otll• Piiot Ill• offlt• o1 m1 cltrk 01 lh• '"°"' 011 April 1, 1111, !Mlot• m1 1 Hot1rv TUES., APRIL 20 "W\lt c .. Yotl Aorlt •· U. 20, 21, 1m 75f.11 tnlllled courl. ot lo ort1enl mom, "'lffl l'llD!IC 111 end ,fir 11ld S!l!t, '«IO.,.llv
l'"'1• Llnft iM ,.,1111111 ••II'• inappropriate but then there '"" 11Kt111ry vouchtn, 10 mt u~ ''"''eel Ch••••• " 0.1111.,.• """"'" to mt D• F9r Yeu" LEGAL NOTICE a1r•l1ntc1 11 me o111ce 01 11.s 111or~ty; 1 t>t th" pet1on w~ou n1mt " INN PLACE Hear 1(11id11 & 11 .. ,,+i! are people in concert halls HAlllY II. CAlilLTON. SOO NtwPO•t s~b1tribtc1 io int w11n1n 1n11rum1nt •"' l:tllll!>J.111 luf 1121 I . 675 0505 YOGA CINTll ho J!J J d "f ll NOTICI TO CllOITOI$ Ctnllr Orl111, Suitt 460, NtWPOrl fle1ch, ic-nowltd•ttl ht e><ecu!ecl tilt ltmf. Ct11t MlwlT • w w app au I you ro IUl'lllOI COUllT o" TH• C1lfloml1 ""'· .,.,,.l<h II !tit Pl•t• (Ol'l"ICIAL SEAL) &!JO.()) HM MN (II) '"""" Wyt· (tl'IU 1111•1 M•t -•• 11tll SI .. C••I• M .... -4 ..... , garbage cans around the STATE o" CALIPO•MIA 1'01 of bllllntll of tht Unc:ttflltned In I ll MttY 8tl~ MDr!On
ttt• ind Ed lnMt 1• stage. sing "Moon R iver" ?HI co~~.TX.::UOUNOE =~·~:,.;::~*':!~1n '~ou:"'...~~:"t11:! ~~l!;i:iug:~~~~·\~ornl•
II NTPO f •· k f . hi E NETTIE I' GAR ETT fflt flrtl 1ubllc1tlon ol thl1 <>allct. 0•1n" County
N NE 0 F rom ~c lo ront 1n a gh •111• o1 · R 01tld M•r-th u, 1t11 M' c""'mlnlon E•,••e• D [}) (J) m AK ..... .. ... w I R falsetto and persuade Zubin °'~;~~E JS HEllE•Y GIVEN to !hf NOllMAN HElllElilT DEWES April •• 1t11 Wtek: ("' -"IP, Si.... .... crtdl!o,. of !flt •bo~• "'"'tel Cllcldtnl E•Kwtor ol 'lfll Wiii Pub!lltll<l O•llltt Coe1I O.llY l'llOI .., ,..,, Mehta lo direct it all with a th•I ,11 "''°"' hevl"' cli !m• •••Intl 1111 HAl•Y °'• rh~ ... ~~;~~1mte1 <11tt1<1•nt APtll 1, 11. 10. 11, it11 1s1.11
(R) (d1a1111) '7G-lurt Jt.,-nolds. 8 four-root candy cane. ukl clKtc11n1 1r1 reciu1rec1 "' fli t "'""'· .. "..,.;., C•W offlt 1..,111 .,.. lnlK SllYtfll, M lnditn II lofted The h V with 'lflt 111<11..,.., •Olld>lr&. Ill tht o111c1 .. ......,, •Helt ceJlflt•' nM.J ' It thoow briwttft his lott '°' 1 re you ave arese -a o11r1t tl•rt o1 Ill<! 11>ove 1nunec1 QDolrt. or Ttl: inei ~ •
whil• aocial """" ind 111 •lld•lll eon man of the musical world. '.,'~,':";0 :;::":.·nd;~~n.=e,1 -;:-:~~~! .t.1tw111' fir t 11KUttr ci 1tTi,•cA;:1~ •usiwir:s•
tribAol Cutlotn !hit rtQUiftt l'lirl II This melange of musical et hit i.not~YI. Wtlll<t. l row11 tnd "ubn ...... Ortt>tt 'C°!tl OtilY Pilot, l"ICTITIOUI NAME
ad I 11 ed Cr1l11. Ill OO~tr Orlvt . 54.oltt Hvm ...... U, ,,...,.C)I » INI Mrll ' l ' :lo. 1"1 '°'3'11 Tht unelt rollntd Clo Clfllty 11\t'/ t r:
LEGAL NOTICE
&ftllll hlsMolhtr'1 d .. 1t1. ACADEMY AWARD s m ness O ow a very N-1 eeKh, c1111orn11 n..o. Wftlcn 11 '°"°""11"", 1:1uil11tti i t 1113.1 Per~""'.
ID Dl'l'W fflll: .... G11nb: NJ.O< pleasing perfonnanec or a "" pl•c• of blll!Mll ol '"' wnc:terolt necl In LEGAL I\OTICE Co1t1 MH&. (111tornl1. 11r'llllltr 111. 111 m1n1ro 1>erlll11ln1 10 11\t 1tl1tt ol 11ld rkt!tloui f!rm ntm• ol l'AOS -.
'llonbt £'61t H11ril. JOl•Jl""td NC UOIN work that comes our way all <lte'*"'· ... 1,,.1n four m ... 1111 •ti•• 111e •Al nn FASHIONS •"" 11111 ••Id nrm 1·
Sioui lrwll111 Cllitf lttd f~. MllR-I L 6 : too rarely -Liszt's absorbing '"o." ,~,.",",',',',~,,,",,•,,11 notlc... NOTICt TO c1101To11 <""''°'"° ot "'' •011-1ne '''"'°"'· ~. i,:_ • 8EST PICTURE 1U .. l1101 COUIT 01' THI! nimtt In full 111(1 1>l1c11 ol rtl!CltMt 1r1 cltll J11tlH llN•. led Johl'llOll and beautifuHy s c 0 red JwM G. J,,,,n_ STAT• 01' CALl,OINIA 1'01 •• lol-•:
JI Ulllll •"" 9dOf Chu~ Coftftort. e BEST ACTOR. " ,, ExKlllrlx of ltlt Wiii THI COUNTY 0, OllANQll Mltdrtd L Norltlrup. \MM AtK ll St .. .., Mazeppa. ot '"-above .,.mtd <1Ktc1t11! Ne. A-Foun!tTn v111tY. c111r. m"..... • BEST DIRECTOR It ood o. h "I W1Uace, ....... tllll Cr1l11 Ell1!1 of CHAILES N. CL All K, • ' •• , '"" •<•<• ,,, WIS g ...., ear I O» Do•--,,,, lull• ,, ... , l> c1rl . nor 11r11•, ou .. d uJd -"" Oet111td. Fou11t1ln Vt lltY, Cell!.
l!)h .. n1fet...,... GEORGE c SCOTT revived a n it WO be even Htw-' •••UI. ca1111n11a""" NOTICE is HElilEIY GIVEN 10 Ill• M•tl•lln• c. Sl'lulll, 1u 11 w1111111 51 'f Tiii• tn•l ,_....,71 crldl1or1 of 1111 tbcl¥1 111mtd dKldtnl " 1 v 11 c ut G) l• C.Z. _,.,. • better J someone, preferably AttlrMV• llr •••ntrll 1h1t 111 """"' 111.,.lnt c111m1 1R1ln11 111e 0i;:• :,,11' l~~·,,11 ·
"-Mehta would take the trouble l'wbllll'ltd O••nN c u 11 0111.,. "1101 11ld tlKl<ltrrt ''' roou1rec1 10 1111 m""', Mll<lrt <I L Northn>P ,. D 0 m Jiit , .... , Mhil: • April 13. 20. " '"" Ml'>' •• lf71 1'1·71 with lht lllKIHlrv 'fOUdltfl, In l!lt ol!ltt E1rl s. Northrup ) "l•'l:l'l:t'),f )NT" IGI to restore to our con~rt "'""cl••-o1 1111 •bov• tnll!lf<I tour!, or M•C1tll1>1 c . sc11uit1 (C) (2 •r> "H•1111 .r ClrifJ'" (II 1.• programs the balance o f the LEGAL NOTICE in pr111n1 111 ....... an 1~• "'''"'" STATE OF CALIFORNIA.
(dum•) ·~eor1e P1p1>11d, ln111 l--------------l vouch1rJ, lo lllt u!ldtrtltM<f 11 tilt offl<t ORANGE COUNTY:
SllVtns. An Amuiun dritter In Par\t rour-movement work from •Al JUI of hi• •llorllt'fl: McOWEN. GllE£N " On .-.orll ), 1t)I btlort ...... Not1rv
h• h ,1 k NOflCR TO Cllf.OITOIS SYLVIA, »0 E. Ch1Dmtn A•tn11t, P.O. l'ubllc 1n 1.,CI !or t•lcl S!11t, "'IOntll•
11nwlttin1l1 hKOmtl lnvolvtd Ill I rLUS • flll OTI GOU LO w IC I• azeppa was ta :"!n -lUIElllOI COUIT OF TNR •1111 "'· °''"''· C1Hlornl1 t'MU. whh:ll 11 l pPll<l<l MlldrtCI L. Not!llrup, l1rl !..
plol to build 1 f&tdat 1mpi11. "M •A • S • H" fR) the "franscendental Etudes." STATE o" CALll'OINIA ,01 '"' 01•<e of bll1lnt11 of flle unc1er•l1nfel 111 Nor1~ruo. 1ncr Mi <1ellnt c s11v111 kno ... ~ THf. COUNTY 0 , OltANGI' t i! m111er1 "rt1lnln1 lo !tit 11l1tt of tllO lo mt to IM lhl '""'"n1 wno&t nimtl trt
gTbi F•t:itivt l1x'OtHct 01>1n1 •·oo 11 m • Snow s11r11 11 I •} o"' Liszt ls at his mos t brilllant Nt. A-"'"' Clececltnl. w11111n fow~ montni •'"' lflt subKrl-10 111• w11Mn ln1trument enc
0111111 11 Muir e t Wltll P1rtnl in this work and a pleased Esto!• ot GEOlll:GE LOWE LL 8AKEJI, llfll P'Obllclllon of Mii <>a!l<t , .,._ltdttd t1111 l~KU!tcl Int ••mt .
ID JM lllV ' tfl '"OW SHOWING AT TWO THIEATllllf.S JR., 1~1 GEOIGE L. IAKEJI, '°· '"' 0.lld A1rll I, 1t71 ''"' ''' S ,,,
d ' . h II (HAILE' L CLARI( c • -Tiit Afteul ~u Yo11 o,po.. au ience Friday n1g t 0 ered GEOAGE &AKEi, Jll ..... GEOllGE ~ . (t rl !. Wll.on
;: W1r. Shaul: You An1tfW lh• ~:":; .. =::: a reaction that would appear::~~::;~~. iu~·.!;.KEll, Jll~ •~• G. :ic1~1!~'~:'n~m'.~t e1Ea!.1~:~, ~:;~;:, ~:,1~;: C•Ulotn
1
•
C1tl for MtuiM Civil Di*•di· ~!..';;";', 11";~ .. 7 to jusLiry a re~ival of a long cr:?ii.!~E 011sm~E1~1Y n~".!Nd.'l~~~ :.'°:.~,~1~• .. N.,.1~ SYLVIA ~;.,. ;,~i,;)''°" l'xptr"
incl!'' Y1s, .wys Wllli•m ll1111stltr; l~~~.::::;;;;;;;;;~~~:;..~,.;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::::~d~~n~e~g~lee~t~e~d~c~la~s~s~IC'.:. tll1t .ii 1>erM1111 111v1111 claim• u11n11 1M :;•· 11" :;1~ ""' 11~011111..i Or•nte co1•1 0111'1 "llo• no. »Yi •o,.r rtt11tr. I~ ------lllCI CleCMtn! ••• rtollltffl lo tllt llltm, oi'.~"~sltt . Aorll .. u, 10. ,,, 1911 IU.11 wllll !tit noctut•Y •Ol.ldlt r1, In the otlkt . Ii) tllallflll ol Ille; <ltr-of"llle ·-• enllflld court, or Aflwne~1 flt AIMlot•lll•ll•• lo PrtJelll tlll!'ITI. w!ffl trlt nittll\l''f "111111.,,MI Or1n1e CO<ltl Dl•IY Piiot LEGAL NOTICE
If!) NtlKM WOllCher~. to !tit unliler1lt11td t i tilt olllct April ll. 10• 21 '"" Mi• 4· 1'71 I U·11 l--------------.... IJ41 ol ht r 1nor111Y: OAUIO S. TINGLEI, 500 LEGAL NOTICE Cl!llTl,ICATf 0" IUSlNfSS t :JO. (jJ Alf II !flt f••ilJ CuroH Nowo>ort Ctnlt r Orlvt , S.Ullt '20. N.,....,l ,ICTITIOUS NAMt 811ui. Ca!il. "'61l, WlllLl'I l1 Ille ,11ce Dfl------~~------
O'Connor, Jetn St1pl1ton, Rob ltln· M l111u o1 mt u"6er1ltntd 1n 111 ..,111.,1 1"--11111 Tiit ~""•'"''"" "" ctrTUv ,....,. •'t
K, Si il)' Sh'111hlrs stir, (~ Altltll Ptrlalnlnsr lo fflt t 1lel1 ol 1111111 dt<:tdt"I' CllllTl,ICATt OP •UStNlSS ~:~ci~':on'i ':,~1':.':r, ·~.~i!!ni~: ~~
twrns llllt llis ton·in-l1w his writ· ~::~111!:'~ ::~ic1~111' 11\t 11"1 Tl>tl u...:::i!~oua~:A:~lty ,,. 11 Ill• t1c1111o111 11,m n1m1 ef LA CANTINA
hn I ltlltl to ,llSidtftl NIXon tnd 01rtc1 A~ll \, lt11 Clf>dvCllllll 1 llUtlneu 11 11512 Ntwtrk LIOVOJIS, tnd lhtl wkl firm ll _,,..... · Atltetn ••ttr (lrt lt , lr'flllt, (l ll!ornli, Undt r !tit 11« of 1111 IOl-lne H•-· -......... ' becomu to 1,1pstl thtl ht WnlH I E•itt11tr1• o1 "'' w111 cil lltlout firm ntm• o1 11v1 NE 11111 •nd •l•cn of rnlcltnce 111 4
kttlf of hit own to tilt P'11sldtnl .... '"°"'' "''"'" <ltCfdenl ft:LEU1$10N " ELEClll:ONI( SALES "1-" I& oft-~ tht d1m11int tlftd .. OAVIO s. TtNGLtJI .. Sl!JIVICE Ind "'" ••Id flrm h 01•1<1 c . Mlt llr.t , '2tl Plarton Dr-~ .,., Sii NtwNrT C111lw Or. tomtllltecl of ffle foll_\,,. Pl•"""· whoie Hun!lnt!O!I &ttCll, C11Uotnlt . Ml•c'1. l~llt nt Mmt In lull Ind plete ol •Hldtnc• llruct A. Ol1on H1rkn111 Cr ..
-•-.. •• ••ooo NitWMrl ltll~, (tlll, !Hit fl 11 lollOWI: Hunllntlon 8e1<n, C1lllOfnl1
-.... • -·r11: 144-WU ll!cnerd l"or1b•uth Jeetti. nsn 01vlC1 C. Mlt lkt
.r.oi Mlltiulf/rtlllf'S Dtti Alllr.,.y t.r l!11cutri• N-••k Circle, lrvlnt, Ct!il, ll•u~~ "'· 01..,n ~ Pwblll/ltcl Ot•llllr COl •I O•olv l'llo! O.ttd Mircll l"f, 1911 S!1tt ol C111!otnl1, Or1nte County;
G!Jl1CJ1z•M1rl .. Cr11Cff A11rll i. 13. 10, n, 1'11 11~71 lillC:litr<I F. J8.,.11 On Apr!I !'11. bttor• m•, • Ntltr'!I
lO:OOGC])CIS lt11Ptm "Juslkt !ft
Ama1it1." M inci1iv1 flPoll on
thl1 nMk>ll's S)'Sftm el jusrlu, lo·
wJinr 1111 lhl coulti. Erl~ Snu1id
1tJ01ts ill .1111 01Nnln1 .. 1m1M,
"Som• kt Mire f.tiYl l Thin
othtrt."
~Ck..iiNwt
D ti) (j) ID M•1m Wtl", M.D.
(R) '1o 61t Tl'lfOl/lll tllt Mll:ht," Dt.
Wtlb(l tri«td, 1 Pl)dlillrist with
tlll)'Oltophlc: l1ttr1I x l1roei1, II tf')'-
in11, u't'f a 1lrl thr11t1nin1 tu lciclfl.
CJ IArhf Wlfd fttn m Nt•• Putn1m/fiahm.ft.
QI M11_.., N H1mll ho1t•.
(lD MIP kNal flMl1m I ,_..
•mt111 Dr. Willi•m G111111,
G) r11ttrll M•ltl111
READ THESE SIMPLE RULES!
STATE 01" CALIFOll NIA. l'ubllc In 1r.d for lll!t. ptrton1ilf
LEGAL NOTICE ORANGE COUNTY · •DP••rtd 01~111 C Mlelkt 1nt1 8ru<• J..
1--------------1 On M1rch 2t. 1111. 1>11111'• mt 1 O••Otl kno ... n !O "'" lo br mo 11er1n·1 IAI JUI Nol1ry P111tllc Jn 1na lot 11IC1 S!ete, wno11 n1mn •r• tuottrlbld lo 1111 •!Thi"
NOTICI: TO ClltDITOllS Dorlonl lly IP"•ttlll ~!<hard F, Jettt! ln11tuni1M I nd IC~f\Owleclttllll t~t~
SU,.11101 COUllT 01' THI known lo me to bt lftt Hf>Oll wl>olt tfttuTtCI !ht ••mt
ITATI O" CALll'OllHIA ,01 Mmt 11 ~ub1crlbtd 10 !ht wltllln In· !OFl'ICIAL SEALI THI: COUNTY 01' OllANOll 11tumen1 INI l tknt>Wlecltt<I Ill Uetutrf l. Mt urlct St1ul!tr NO, Ao41HI 1111 1em1 Nollrf Publlt.Ctllfornlt
Eitllt of WILLIAM K. McNOWN, (Ol'l'ICIAL SEAL) Prlrw;lp1! Otllct In
Oittt••l<l-Mery •t1h Morton Or1111t County
NOTICE IS HEIE8Y GIVEN It 1t1e N011rv l'\lt!!lc -C1iltor"ll MY Comrnl11l1111 E111lrt1
u tdllor• of Ill<! '"°"' ntmM dKecltflt "•ln<l•tl Olllct !n F•bru~ry ''' 11n 11111 111 1trM1111 llevlne tlt lm• tttlnll 1111 Ortl'O"I County l'u~ll/lld Ori"'' Cout Deity l"llOI,
11ltl dlK-nl ''' reqwlr.a to 1111 fh.n, M, Commln lon E1oirH April'· ll, 10. 11, 1•11 IU.11
wlttr !he 11tCt111 ry 'f'OYdltrt. 111 !tit cifllct AJll'U t, 1'11 ef !111 t ltrt of lllt -•t tnlllltd CDYr1 Of "Ylfl..,,l<l Ort ntt CMS! Ot\l'I .. llel LEGAL NOTICE
19 ''""'' ll'lffT\, wit~ 1111 11ec:t1\lr'f,_•_•_•~_•_· -'-''-"-'-·-'-"-"-' -"-'-' __ ,,..:__".1-------:c;:-::-:-;-----VoY<lltfl, lo ""-u"Cl•rJltntd 11 !tit olllce I •All 11'9
ol llar 1nor11e11: McOWE N. GllEEN & LEGAL NOTICE NOflCIE TO Clll:DITOllS
SYLVIA, ~ E11I Cnt1>mt n A~rn~ .... 0.1------IU,llllOI COUIT O" THI
•o• 111. Or1n11 Ctlll. tUU . Wl'lltll I• l~t "·'U'' iTATI: 01' CALIPOJINIA "0111 t lecr Of b<nlntu ol ll'lt 11nd1"l•necl !n 111 CEllTll'ICATl OP •1tSINflS, THIE COUNTY 01' OlilAN(lf
mt llt " Hrlllnin1 10 Ill• 11111e or ltld ,ICTlTIOUI NAME Ne, A .... 11
IKMtnl, ,..(min lour mllllft'll l lllf ll1t Tht underi!tntcl do cr•Uty !ht • will E1l1lt of JOHN lilAMSAY PJIATT, 1>1 lirot ""bllc1llon ol lhli notitt. tOlldu<I , bu~lntlt 11 1 •llt t lt ~JOHN l"AATT, 111 JA(I( l'llATT
OtltCI AD•H I, 1'11 Ottl<loO In Cotll M••• Ind S1nla An•. Ott •••fll. D0<olhv C. McNown C1lllo•n;1, Undtr Ill~ fictitious llrm nemr NOTICE" IS HEllEIY G!V[N to !flt
Execwtrl• ol lht Wll! el ol THE OAllNSIOl!I •nil lh•t ••I~ lltm t rt<lllo'I o! int 1bovr ntmtd clecMt11t T~e 1bov• n•metl d•<l<ltnl 11 comPotecl ol "'• lollowlnt ..,tttnl, lhl! 111 Ptrton• llt yln1 cl1lms 11iln•I fllt
McOW•N, GJIEIEN I SYLVI& ... 11011 n•mts In tull t r.II Plt ''' of ttl<I a•ctcl•nt art rtaulrtcl to 1111 lhl!'ITI,
ill •. Cft11m1" AVllMll rnldtf\Ct ,,, I I follow·· ... 11~ 1111 lllCtH•" VOUCllf'rl. in '"" ofll'-... 0 .••• ,., s -
0,,.,11, Cllllor"I' .,...,. Hor1c1 . M11<1, 1)5 llto. ••v ~ront, of !ht Cltr• of !fir t bov• t ntltltd coorl, ,, 81lbcle 1111...,, Lind• S_ Gr1111itld, ns to PrtUn! them, wlll'I !ht nKtlllf" 8 lllil,~ .. Iii (R) "Lone T'.mt, 11:)00 Ml¥it: (?llr) '1.lfy IR !ht Dt1k"
~O Ski. C<i11, b1l,11Wll St.tVt IS I (flllllk t l) '44-'lflltl l!Ollrl, •11
l
11v1l !Of his mothtf s 1U1thon1. liUtli nd.
8 Ylrlillll C11i11111 Gutslt: lririn C G) liff ,lehM Jim
we1J011, Slll•l•r Cld1r, 011¥11, 111d _ ,,._ " ,
Yt11tllt1 l alr;t. voi .... M111 .. JU11111
D (]) Cil al Ille Mtd Sll!Nd (R) ll:oD fJ (j) C1111wt
"Tiie Sont ol Wlllit." S1mmy O.vl1 O lliiil n.. N
JI. l llHli It Wll~t ll ush. t tulhltu ' ~ -twl
metlon ,1a 1.111 1t.r whou bit II {j) Dt1tll Y1lll1 llJS
lhrutt111I. 0 00 Q3 Ntn
CJ Millilll $ Mwlt: ttllr) "nt 0 Ml'iil: "Tt" hp II T11l1t1" (ad·
Em~ lly" (comt11)') '11-Jt rr' venturi ) '53-Slt11jl!I H1,dtn, G1tet
l 1w.11, l fitn Oonlwy. H11d Ill P'•n I Rtyfl01,
Mututl SluChOI llku J11ry Olt411$lblyl m MM: "'lliltf el l1MMn" (d11·
11 1n 1111114 HJ. 1111! i11 1t1!ily kl mt ) ·~11111" 1"1ttf0tll, ltl')ilt
spy Oii m1ney.w11!1n1 1mploytt1. Gu !Mlle. GI,,...• tN.....-.• m Mlll'it: "li1 "'""· uu~ 1•11·
• "'TUii I''"' m•) '55-R1lph MttkK, l ioduic•
• C--.. ,. Cr1111for4.
• Em aBiliC lrbltH•ll"ti-A Dlt· ~ 1111.11Witii-H11it111 S1111th 111t11Yi1w
with lht w1ll·~11a•n 1nditn philtt·
otl'lfl, t11eh1r. i nd 1pi1itual lt1d11
l ;OO 6 ()I) Cl'ffft """ IR) Olr1t 1 I by Smith, Mn Pl'°'"'°' t i ,h!IOIO·
t nd Liu Oout!as l1v11h • much ptiy.
1111ntltn on lht11 }OUnl llou11 ..
1utst, Lori l1tw, tlltl lll fMls 1t11t ll:JOIJ (I) Mll"f l 1i111R
1'11 Is 11111n1 hit t-\Ptful ''"'· D a m hllfll'J Clrtlllll
II lll Im ht Kllttb n.. Gut1h 8 Cil Cl) Q) Did: C.rete ,,, am Ccllb,, nor111t1 Mfl\htJoll
1114 '"'"' Ash. l?:JO. Oflt ,.., .. 11.
'8l•T .... TNttl
19 llnlll AllnttitM (I') Altfr·
u tNI ff1111ition1, 1pptotehe1, •nd ,
trllrifolltn911b tt IN,n•nl 111 fl
1:00 fJ .. t\'M; (t) "SU1161i~ lllC." (dFI·
1"11) '57-Rober! Huno". 1'1ul flicll· ..... --., .......... .....
• Lai .....,. N rKtlrwllle
Wednesday
m Al4.#illlt DM: °'OJlfllliM War-
~-,. "'Mal tH (VI"'" 1n• (C)
"1M Mdl'INll."
a .. ,..,... (d1•JM> 'Jt-l'•u.
M11nl. lttt• !l1vis, Cl111de Rtln1.
JO:tO ()) ....... lfW (~llh) 'M-
Wllfi1t11 CampMH, Kttnin W'tn•.
1:00 GJ "f1a1 M11 1H 1 ,,.,... ( ...
m1) 'll-L11rt11 YIVftf, Otftrl
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and tl1at per;,vll ~pins lhe \)rra n1 \\.h eel for a chaI1ce
al S 1.000 l'a sh ~nrl h 1 111drrd~ of olhrr priic5. Send
~ po5h:aJd. o r thr allar hrd 1 01 1pon ( \\i1h )Our name,
~drlrl":os and zi p L"Odt". in1·l udi n g phonr numbtr) 10
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ONE ENTRY PER PERSON PLEASE
1--------------------------.,
• KWIZ DREAM WHEIL
I
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I I NAME, ___________ _
I ADDRESS, __________ _ I CITY ____________ _
i ZI P·-------------
11 PHONE • o• L------------------------J
Listen for Your Nam• 011 The Air!
WIZ1480
ON THE AM RADIO DIAL
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Publltllt<I Or1nt1 (01il Ot il1 l'olo! HotlCt S. Maiet MITCHELL, HART & 9 11 1$(0, 6U CIYIC
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ST&Tf: 01' (ALll'OllNIA, OF
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Theater Notes ,
Laguna, Golden West Open Shows
Rights Sold
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Joanna Barne1, author and
actrtu, stars In "D.S., I Love
You" and bat 10ld the rights
to her lltelt novd, "The
Deceivtn,11 te an English
• • ' l'
DAILY PILOT J f
I """"£ EXCLUSIVE SHOWING
•t1~ ... FINAL SHOWING
,,.. IUI c. .. , Mwy. TONIGHT
~ COllOftA OIL MAil ' Both Plcturt1 "G"'
By TOM TITUS
Of tlll c.lly 'I'" 11•"
Somethine old Ind
aomethlng brand new make up
the week's late.st menu of
the1 trlcal openlng.s alon& Ole
Oranie Coast, joining a
packed parade of s t a I e
offerings around the county
playhowes.
Panza, SOnya NewbuJ1:, Don Poland. Don Hayu, Blll Lud,
Guy Coe'kerwn, John Ytlser,
Mike Led<ly and Cherie Boal.
aL15Plces ol the new Actor's acts, "Abie's Irish Ne&e" and
Center Theater. Lou1&e van "The Night Before Xmu."
Vlanen ls direcUng. Gfl0r1e Betar directs the
Don Naranjo and Tammi shows at the theater, 307 Main
Billa play the youna: lovers at St., Hunt Ing ton Beach.
the Santi Ana Valley Hi.Sh Reservations 536-9158.
movie producUOn com piny.
Beach Conununity Playhousei~~=~===~~=:ill !021 E. Anaheim SI., Long
Beach, under the direction or
Tom Titus. Ron Jones, Robert
Renfrow, Ted Busch, Undy
Orlow and Miriam Kaiser
head the casl of the big
business drama. RtservaUoos
(213) ~.
11(0lD TURKEY '1
The "something old" is new
to local audiences -Agatha
Christie's comedy-mystery
''The Spider's Web" -'
opening tonight at the Laguna'
Moullon Playhouse. I
The newcomer is exactly_
that, an original comedy
calltd "Claude and hfarion"
written by Golden W e s t
College instructor C b a r I e s
Mitchell and pmented by his
drama students.
Gwen Yarnell , w ho .!I e
"Cactu.!I Flower" earned her a
best director award in
Laguna's 1969-70 season, is
back to stage the Christie
thriller which revolves around
a bodY in the bookcase.
Among the suspects are
David and Betsy Paul, a well-
known Laguna husband and
wife acting team; Beatrice
Wood, Joe Wilson, Dee Dee
Challis, Nan Prince. Niles
Jamieson and Terry Neptune.
Robert Reines and George
Donka are the long anns of
the British law.
"The Spider's Web'' will be
woven over lhree weeks of
T u es d a y • through • Satur-
day production at the play·
house, 608 Laguna Canyon Rd.,
Laguna Beach. Reservations
494-0743.
*
Performances ire acheduled
for Fridays and Saturdays thl.!1
weekend and next in the Patio
Theater on campua. Curtain
time is 8 o'clock.
*
"Rasbomon," the Japanese
drama passed down through
the ages, continues on the
stage of the Huntington ~ach
Playhouse Fr i d a y and
School audltorlwn . 1801 S. Rod Serling's dram a
Greenville St., Santa Ana . "Patterns" continues ils six-
Tle;kets are available at the weekend run at the Long
c1oor. lr========================•ll * I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
"The Sound of h1usic" goesil'------------------111
into its second weekend as the
latest production of l h e
Fullerton Foot.lighters under
the direct.ion ol Jan Duncan.
Pat Warner and Robert
Cannon headline the musical.
Performances this weekend
only are acheduled f o r
Saturday night and Sunday
afternoon ·with the matinee
carded for 2:30 p.m. at the
Wilshire Junior High SChool
auditorium on Lemon Street.
ReservaUons 527-4415.
Huntington Beach's Nifty
T hea t er will give
performances Friday and
.......
N S(l(Jll<
COAST PWA
ACAOEMY AWARD SHOW
Winner 8 Academy
of Awards
INCLUDIN•
BEST PICTURE-BEST ACTOR
GEORGE c. scon
PATJ'ON
ALSO -111T ICRllNrU.T
ltl-A:S·B
S1lllnlly
1"1""' -l 'H At'·"'· M•MI -ll:O & l:M-11 sv...i1,
...,. ... -1:11 & 11•
Mesll-11: IH1II·11:11
"H .......
ACAOaMY
AWAI O WtNNalt -
l lST l'ICIAL
\llSU.1.L lll'PI CTI
"Complete insanity" is how Saturday under the direction
Golden West's M itc h e 11 of Ron Albertsen. -P'LUS--
"Expression" describes his new p I a y • Sally Brown, W a y n e
"Claude and Marlon," which Beauvais, Aaron Patton and
draws its comedy from a Bob McCaa head the cast of
m ix up i n boy~ g i r I the show at the Barn, 2110 "IXPllSSIOH" h oll l>l'flll4
relationships. It opens Friday Main St., Huntlngton Beach. ... • ....., _.. before. The wry
for two weekends. Reservations 536-8861. letett nrfh•t KOMI n.. t111•llty ef tM fll111 h e1celle11t. The Debbie Chester and Rick Shakespeare's most not.able pewer, ..._ ,rlde, .. 11 tM ,.,.
Valdez Is Coming
Waites play the Utle roles in tragedy "Romeo and Juliet" lectlo• •f "'-Mtt urll111 uw OP'IN 6i45 P'.M. -SAT. & SUN. -1 i41 P'.M.
the college produclion, set in g i v e s th r e e m ore ..-1ll11ile. G11or ... tMd "' 1 " d Q~ ·----;;;;;~
the Renaissance era of 1Z20. performances Tb u r s da y 1tHert ~~ i
Others in the cast are Roland 1_'.lhrough~~_:S'.'.'a'.':tu'.'.'.rd~ay~und~e".:r_.:lh'.'.'.e~~~~~~~~~~-------_:_===--------Barajas, Renata Florin, Bill
HELD OVER
AIR PD RT -DWI BURT u.cASTEll • IAlmN
~WISEBER6
JACOUBIKE B!SSET ....
Mk HedM11 Julie A11dNwt
••
"DARLING LILI"
--·----· -·-·. --·--. ---
BARGAIN MATINEE
Ev•ry Wedn•1d•y, 1 p.m.
Flll llFllSHMINTS
AllMlh -$1.00
BALBOA
673-4048
OrtN
6:41 ,..L .. ,._
....... hnlMUSa
NOW-ENOS TUESDAY
"Dairy of A
Mad Housewife"
•nd
"Weekend With
The Baby Sitter"
-STARTS WEDNESDAY
"111E FUlllllEST
MOVIE l'VE SEEN
1111S YEAR! THIS
~IND OF MOVIE A
REVIEWER SHOULO
PAY TO SEEi JUST GO.
1UN. TO SEE ITI"
-N1w Yorll Poat
· CllC IRl-..::.~I
COLOR
''FASCINATING '!,
THE PUREST SCIENCE-FICTION THRILLER
TO COME TO THE SCREEN IN YEARS!"
-JID/111 C11sl, NBC·1V, Nt• r«l M1,.11~
11SPELLBINDING SCIENCE FICTION DRAMA ...
I FOUND IT ENGROSSING!" -C/'l#r~sC™ff'llJ/in,LA.1/mes
' "MORE THAN JUST A BRILLIANT THRILLER! Chllllnpy
• uthentlc!'' -Ptrer ,,IV!,s. Rnders 01,.sr
"THE SUSPENSE IS TERRIFIC! Fasclnatlnc and knuckle-
whltenln1 because It could happen here!"
,,
PROOUCTION
•llDROM:DA SlRAIN "-.
MllUl Ill· llAWI WA'I ·!&IS lllll · KMIRBO
I JC~Ull \'I .......... ,
PLAYINIJ
------BOrfls LEVEN"NruON'Gioo1NG . MlcHAELCRICHrON . ROBERrWJSE •GILMELL{ 1-.:::::i;,;--J
@""ir' AUIUIERS!Ll'tlll!£ m:HNKlll.OR'l'AllAVISllN•
...
2/ido .""'°"' 111(11 -•• ..._.. ·--.. l1kleeo U4• ht. •• O•. :totlM
LAST TIME TONIGHT
Ell.n •••Id .............
IUD COlT
ALSO-llJ
''Brewst•r McCloud"
' ' '.. ' .. ' " '··" ' .
OICK VAN DYKE COlD TURK EY
ALSO PLAYING 2nd BIG FEATURE
"THE 12 CHAIRS"
Inventive, Cr•zy, V•ry .Funny
with Ron Moody-Dom DoLulH
For Advertising in
Out 'N' About
Phone Norm Stanley
642-4321
CLUSiYE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWINGi
OUTH COAST PLAZA I & HIWAJ 39 DRIVE-IN '
SHOWING NOWll
"FOR A FEW PLUS! •. DTUl~~~f1Mg10l:°'TAllOIF"
'
0YALDEZ" Dally st 7:00 & t :OO r.M.
Sot. & 111. -c .. t. Fro1111 :41 r.M. DOLLARS MORE" iooru1'H
wlttl Clhtt latwoad Al Mwy It°"'
TOO GOOD TO MISS!
The Year's Most Acclaimed Motion
Pictures Are Now At An Edwards Cinema
NOMINATED FOR 4 ACADEMY AWARDS Including BEST PICTURE
"A ~r"1'""!'"
---can I!l ·: JACK NICHOLSON • -
"ntlr ERIJ/ PID:EB" ·ti .. :'i
i _ 11 woi1001WT. KARENBL.ACl< .. SIJSANANSPACH ... ~.JJ;.k." .
Plus -BEST ACTOR NOMINEE =~• ::1 Never San For My Fatherc~.
11 I# IM •to nn.
-2nd Hit-
1ockN 1cho1aon and
aorbru S1r1l1at1d
IN
"ON A CLUl DAY
YOU CAN Sii FOREVER"
' ' ~Ao NEWPORT . <-.....
• (!HOIT ..... al_..,_ tl'9. • ,,.._ ...... tlt·01'0
' • 91M" •At''"'' • • ··-··-___ .__
Meel Henry & Henriella ...
tlie laugh riot of !he year.
MJ'·-• """TI ... t'Otl _ .. Star1; Rod Stelg1r • Chri1toph•r Plummer Show
Also Jack Lemmon . Catherine Deneuvo In "THE AP111L FOOLS" (GP)Rcted (Gl
Winn•r 9 Acad•mv Awards Including -BEST PICTURE -"PATION"
BEST ACTOR -GEORGE C. SCOTT-BEST SCREENPLAY -"MASH"
hc-.r .. .,. .....
11A'l"l'()N
CD1 ------"'"' ----··-· ·---, ••• Peter lovl•
In "JOE" (R) ....
•
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
• .. ~ •• 1 . .. .. .. . ..... ' . ' . ' ..... . '
lutsd1y, April 20, 1971
UPI T1t111M11
. ... . .......... ""1~··· ... ·.· . • . .
'.l'he Blg9ut Single Jtlarlcetpi..ee Oft The Oran9e Co..C • Ph•-84%4878
WANT
TO ....... ,., .... I~ I -'"58
~~~ CLEAN General General
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
FOR
fAST!
FAST!
COLLEGE PARK
4 BR, 2 Ba, w/electric bltin.
kitch. Lovely yard with cov-
ered patio & waterfall. Price
reduced $1500. to a real bar·
gain
$30,500
Newport
••
F•irview
646-8811
{1gytime )
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Spe.ctoUI Modern CUlllOm
built rambling borne, Com·
pletely fenced In with brick
walls and wrought iron
e:ates. Large Living Rm.
wilh open beam@d ceilings,
Three &Irma. Two bath.5,
DIN. RM. AND ELECI"RIC
B/I KIT, Fenced ott heated
and filtered POOL. Priced
to Seu faat at Only $29,500
with GI OR FHA TERMS.
"""~~~~""""I 220 E.17tH 646·0555 ASK YOUR Eveni.,.. Coll "'2-7438
TAX MAN SPECTACULAR
What he thinks about the in· VIEW
come tax benefits of owning income property. Then call Sharp, sharp cu11tom built
u11 about this Costa Mesa home with panoramic view
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Cotnpany
FIT FOR A KING 46so aq. ft . of luxuiy living.
Palatial one of a kind Dov-
er Shores Area home. Noth-
ing forgotten nor expense
spared. Magnificently con-'
structed. 5 BR. Alt conr,ti-
tioned.. Your o w n "San
Simeon" pool. Master bath
w/sunlamps & Jacuni, Ex·
pensive carpets, drapes .l
fixtures. can Barbara Aune
for an appointment &fl.8235.
1225.000.
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 675-3210
B/B
22 YEARS bF
REAL E.STATE SERVICE
IN TI£E HARBOR AREA
Ideal Jnvestm•nt
I~
Ganer al
NEW LISTING
Spacious family home In
popular Unlversl\y Park
1ii Block to
Communitjl pool and
play area
3 Bedrooms, lncludln&
master suite with
sitting room on
seoond nory
Sunny breakfast room
Large livin&" raom
$39,950 • lD% Down
Tri Level $35,500 . '
Fast Little Girl ACTION! of ocean and coast-line plu11 triplex with hardwood Doors,
toreed air heat and separ· canyon below. This beauti·
, . .for weekend$ or perman-
ent. Vacant. J BR, home
(exceptionally lge, ms tr.
BR. w/door 10 rear patio), .
full size R·2 lot; could build
additional unit later for in-
come: Priee only $38,950.
JfERE'S LUXURY ~MNG
AT A BARGAIN PR.ICE!
Spacious and lovely TRI
LEVEL home with 2250 i;q
It. Entertain elegantly wi th
step down family room com.
plete with WET BAR and
an xtra half bath, also FOR·
MAL DINING ROOM. Great
storage or work shop area
in the big 3 CAR GARAGE.
Only 31,i yrs old and £1JLLY
IMPROVED! ~t l o \V
interest FHA loan.
The race is a 26-mile marathon and the contestant
is al the right -Mary Etta Gbitano, 8, being paced
by her father, John, at the start of the race in San
Francisco. r.tary Etta finished second, covering the
course in four hours and 10 minutes.
Mesa Police No National Art Gra11t Coas t Firm
To Deve lop
Alw ka A rea
Take Honors
l n Sliooting
A crew of s harp -eyed
officers with steady trigger
fingers took top honors lor the
Costa Mesa Po l ice
Department over the weekend
in Southern California
Regional Police C o m b a t
Marksmanship shooting.
The four-man team took
first place over nearly 50 other
law agencies, scoring 18 points
above the secod place kam.
The Pasadena shooting
competition included federal.
ltate, county and municipal
law agencies with Los Angeles
city and county officers
involved
Marksmen on Costa Mesa's
pistol team include Vice and
Intelligence Detective Sgl
J ack Calnon. captain, plus
officers Owen ·Kreza, Roger
Neal and Phil Donohue.
The local departm~nt also
placed near the top in last
yeM"'s competition b e f o r e
taking first place in the 1971
t vent.
Students Set
Music Recita ls
A group of Fountain Valley
High School students have
adopted Gls in Vietnam as pen
pals and are sending them
packages of magazines. books
and sweets.
Headed by 17-year old Carol
Smith, "Project Vietnam" has
already packed off 33 parcels,
then put on a car wash and
raised $95 to pay for the
poatage to get ihem to
Vietnam.
-
Offered to California
California v•as consp1cously
absent from the Nallonal
Endowment for the Arts
recently announced g r a n t
program that ch an ne ls
$750,000 to 44 s ta t e s
underwriting classroom fine
arts progrant!I.
The grants are m a d e
through stale arts councils
which bave made application
to the federal arts office in
Washington. California's arts
council has been virtually
inactive in recent years.
One grant category funds
Youtl1 Vies
In Finals
For ,Award
Fountain Valley's John C.
Spero, 20, will participate in
the final! competition of the
Banlt of America College
Awanif' Thursday.
Spet""o, a physics ma}or at
Golden West College, has
already won in the area semi-
finals, where students gave an
impromptu presentation of a
subject related to their field of
study before a panel of
business and civic leaders.
The young student is also a
semi-finalist in the California
State C o 11 e g e Scholarship
competition and plans to
transfer to UC-I rvine next fall.
Other Golden West studen\!;
v.·ho have received $1 5 0
scholarships by the bank
include John Sanger, 24.
Huntington B e a c h , for
technical and vocational arts;
and Glen Burch, 33, of
Westminster, for soc i a I
science. Burch is the Golden
West student body president.
programs to bring poets <ind
fiction writers Into I h e
classroom. Thirty-four states
will receive moneys for such
projects next year. including
$5,000 to the Alabama State
Council on A r I s and
Humanities, '20.000 each to
Maryland and Massachusetts.
Fifteen stale arts councils
will receive $12 ,200 grants to
bring visual artists into the
classroom.
Another $100.000 g r ant
supports the Coordinated
Dance Residency T o u r i n g
Program which v.·ill operate 1n
several states.
The lone grant for a theatre
program in schools went lo
Minnesota and totals $25,000.
Affiliate Artists, Inc. of New
York City was granted $25.000
to provide a nation<il
organization offering music
programs to communities
throughout the U.S.
A total of $86,488 wa~ divided
by three state arts councils:
Nebraska, A I ask a and
Arkansas, and the Center for
Understanding f\.1 edia Inc. of
New York City. The latter
fir m will coordinate a hln1·
maker in residence program
for these states and \\"ill
produce a documentary film.
The grants are fun ded
jointly by the Na tion a l
Endowment for the Arts and
the U.S. Ofrice of Education.
Nancy Hanks, chairman or
the endowment. said. "lhC'
purpose of thl" ,program is not
to turn out a generation of
pets. painters or musicians.
'"It goa ls are primarily tn
increase children's powers of
perception. thei r ability 1o
express then1selves a n rt
communicate crcativclv.
lhrough usi ng tools and skills
they might not olher\visc
have."
The !\1 u rray-McCormi"ck
Environmental Group, with
offices in Newport Beach, has
been selected to develop
e n vironmental masterplan:s
for four new state parks in
eentral Alaska.
Ur. James Robcrls, vice
president of the firm and
tcehnical director of t h e
project. said "Planning the
'''1ldcrncss parks will be an
Pnormous task. One park
alone. Chugach Park, includes
over half a million acres and
the combined area of all four
parks is nearly a million
<icres.
.. A inillion acre park in
Southern California w o u Id
include an area of land 15
ml!es wide extending from
Los Angeles to San Diego," he
noted.
The parks to be developed
are in the Chugach Mountains,
Kachemak Bay, Hatcher Pass
and at Lake Louise .. Work will
begin immediately and is
scheduled for completion in
June. 1972.
U.S. Yacht
Ta kes Fifth
AUCKLAND, New Zealand
I AP \ -The United States
challenger Tr ave Io d g e
lntemalional finished fifth 1n
the third race or the World 18·
foot Yachting Cha111pionships
Thursday.
Skipper Roger \V alsh of
Newport Beach, appeared to
have spinnaker difficulties
rounding Kohi mark arter the
first leg of \Vaitemata !-!arbor.
For the Re~ord
I
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
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CALL
DAILY
PILOT
ate yards. ful home haS 3 bedrooms, 3
$.11,500 bath!!, dining room and a
For A Solution To fabulous game room or
Your Problems Call family room with a tertific
673-8'XIO built-in bar. 'rtiis home ls
We're Here To Help priced right for fast sale.
'1-0 THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS °' '>'l'i ',T 'I,.
Hurry. 546-2313.
~-o · THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS f' ,.. •
CLASS--~-
IFIED CUSTOM BUILT
FAMILY PRIDE-
Beautilully kept, lge. 3 BR.,
2% bath Lusk hOme. Family
r m. & living rm. have big
frplcg, + formal dining rm,
Kitch. a sheer delight -big
eating area. Inside laundry.
Carp., drapes. sprinklers &
more. , .gardens are beauti·
ful! CaJI now -
Near Cliff Drive & neat view
from iron! yard.
EPT * 3 bedroon1s & den D • • , b•""
D
I
A
L
D
I
R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
* 5\.2 years old. * Room for BOAT or
TRAILER * Newport HeighL<i
• $35.950
Call now to see this value
priced home! 675-4930
•
COl.£SWOllTHY & CQ. _,.f2'-~1 ......
TURnE ROCK
Owner's plans changed. Mu51
sell one month old home,
below cost. Absolutely beau-
uful 2 BR, atrium, dining
rm. vaulted ceiling fam. rm,
drps, crpU;, CUS\. ldscping.
Priced below replacement
at S42,850.
Call 540-1151 Open Evenings
HIRITAGI
IPL I.STAR
Panoramic Ocean
View-$35,900
23x12 (l1aS!er bedroom, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths, family room,
Coor to ceiling fireplace,
self -cleaning oven. Also
vicv.·s of surrounding hill'l.
Walker & Lee
20-13 We-stclif! Drive
&lft.7711 Open 'W 9 P~1
SPECTACULAR
BEACH HOME
A-Frame. steps :o ocean 3
BR. 2 ba. Only $33,900.
CAYWOOD REALTY
6306 W. Coast Hwy ., NB
548-1290
GET TJ.IE FACTS ABOUT
VA REPOSSESSIONS.
AUTHORIZED BROKER,
:'116-4153
e TRIPLEX, Costa Mesa,
V .A. No d0\\'11 or FHA
TER:\1S
FORTIN CO. 642-5000
REPOS, 2-5 BR, all tnns
Call Pat Wood 545-2300
Scenic Properties 675-5726
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
Hope Gerr ie Re•lty
6454400 64~3320
SPANISH VILLA
4 BR plus fam rm
Reduced to $34,250
1 yr old beauty, cath'drl
ceilings, fpl, w/w crpl!I, big,
big fam rm, form '! !iv rm
3 c gar. Nicely ktscpd. Ideal
home for entertaining. GI
or FHA terms. Call 847-1221
SEYMOUR REAL TY
17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch
Open •til 9 PM
HORSE PROPERTY
Charming Early American
modern 2 BR, ram rm +
green house + det. rumpus
rm. CM. Zoned R-4. $35,000.
JEAN SMITH, RLTR
400 E. 17th St., CM 6'16·3255
NO matter What tt la. you
can sell It with a DAILY
PILOT WANT ADI IG-5673
General
FORIST [ Ol\O\
"' 1?£/ll rO,R\
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
MESA VERDE
BARGAIN
Brin9 A Paint •ush
Wow! Just listed below
markeL Some clbow
grease a can or two of
palot and she'll look
like new. Spanish tile
entry. Ankle deep shag
carpets. WALL T O
WALL FIREPLACE. 4
large bedrooms PLUS
library. Formal dlnlng
room. Unbelievable low
price. Vets move in for
as little u $1,000. Hurry
it's a bargain. Dial
645-0303
HOLD ONTO
YOUR HAT!
No 9uatlfylnt
At 61/•0/o
Your chance to take ad-
vantage. Owner just up
and moved ft\\'lly. Gor·
geous SPANISH STYLE
homc-. Nf'wer. Bright
cheery Jiving room.
CRACKLING A D 0 B E
ARCHED flREPLACE.
Thick lush carpets. Fam-
il1 room. 50 ft. of kitch-
en counter. Extra large
back yard -all fl'nced.
Tike over 6% annulli %
rate Joan, no qualifying.
IMMEDIATE POSSES·
SION. 0!11.I
'45-0303
Living Easy?
TRY
$23,950
Do you \\'ant to live
near the beach? Bel the
prich give you 2nd
thought!:!! Set this one.
Chvner must sell. CUte u a bugs ear. Spacious
bedrooms. Ctlndlellght
dining room. Bright
cheery kitchen. \'ear
.around patio. Only 2
yean nld. Won't laat.
HurT)' dial 645-0303.
nm IS! [ OISON '" RE ~/ rl}~S
. 675-3000
mn·'' ,\ 111:.11·11
llE.UJ'\' 1:\1".
, ES" i ;1q _£5 )O~D _
VA REPO
$1000 DOWN
Beautiful E-side 3 Br home~
Beamed ceilings thrUout, 2
car garage, brick fireplace,
separate dining area &
Jarge covered patio. Real
country living w/oveni3ed
yard. Everyone qualifies-
VA eligibility not necessary.
Total payments including
taxes & insurance only $179
per mo. Call 546-5880 (C¥n
eves.)
co:1s
. WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pon EYll)in91)
INCOME-
COMMERCIAL LOTS
103'xl'r.i' -Will take six units.
Priced right at flS,950 . with
terms.
75'x360' -Harbor Blvd. Com·
mercial. Street at rear ol
property also. A Bargain at
$15,{QJ,
24~ Acres • Oceanside • re·
stricted residential adjacent
to EL CAMINO COUNTRY
CLUB. ;119,"00 Owner will
carry.
Newport Heights I .J!~!!l!l!ll!!!~!E,j
NHr H•rbor Higlr ft. M. LA BORDE J Bedrm, i%. bath, alate en-
.try, nice size living rnl w/
fireplace. Good crpts &.
drps. Serviee porch, Lovely
landscaplng, Lge back y,ard.
Lochenmyer
R ealtor
1860 Newport Blvd., CM
CALii,646-3928 Eves: 673-4577
SUPER SHARP
An extra nice 4 bedroom and
family room Sd Vista t.:ime
ln Westminster. Profesgjon.
ally decorated and land·
scaped and on a quiet cul·
de-sac slreel. What more
could yoo want Jor only
$37,950
142-2.135 or 673-8550
\-0' THE REAL \"-ESTATERS
' i '' •• • ', D {
BUILDERS
CLOSE-OUT
We 1-ve 8 ·triplexes for
$58,600 each. Owner!! Unit
has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
fireplace. lncome is $560.00
per month. All ternlll avail-
able including No Down
G.I.'s or F .H.A. Call.
Walker & Lee
2790 Harllor Blvd. at Adams
545-~91 Open 'til 9 PM
Repossession
$21,450
Great 3 bedroom eutside lo-
cation on quiet tree-lined
cul-de-sac. Government re-
posse11sion is open 10 a 11
buyers. Take a minute and
see this best buy for the bar-
gain bunter. CaD. 545-8424.
§•fill"8•Eiil
* 5 BR • VACANT *
Beaut. Harbor View Homes
res. w/\\>CI bar, Jowly
carp.: Rlf-deanine (1Ve"3,
ind. quick possess. Owner
anXious. $59,500 inct. the
land,
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REALTORS 644-76'2
~U'"'""n~d-,.-.c~o-n~,,~.-.~ction
To be completed this sum-
mer, 5 bednn, S ba. home
In the grand manner. Mag-
nlflttnt Back Bay v1e1'!
ROY J. WARD RL TR.
l03J i\.Ta.riners, Dovtr Sho~s
6<6-l!ilO Open Daily
Evenings: Call 6t6-4a79
TRANSFERRED!
Handsome corner home In
Immaculate conditio n
Large living room and &eP.
arate dining room. Ultra
modern kitchen with eating
area adjoining a wonderful
large family room with fire.
place. Beautiful back yard
with wrought iron ienclo!led,
complete safety pool. HO\\·
coold any home be finel'?
See it right away • only
$49,!l50. 546-2313,
\O ·THEREAL
\"-ESTATERS ' , 11, IJ,' .'
SPLASH! • SPLASHI
In yoUr own 40 foot bl!ated
pool • this 2700 sq, ft. home
is ideal for home entertain-
ing. Choice Baycrest Joe., on
quiet st~t. All new ghag
W /W cpts., bJt.Jn kit., 2
trplcs. First time offered 11.t
IS1'9,!ISO,
833-0700 644-2430
PendinCJ
Foreclosure
Owner W\able to maintaln
~ents • Must H.U Im·
mediately. Excellent resi-
dential area -does need
some tender loving care. 3
bedroom, 2 bath, lqe yard
and ready to sacrillce al
$25,lOJ -VA terms available.
Cali s.15-8424,
e·t!!!!-!·tiiil
Newlyweds-
This Is For Y 011
Cuddle t!.P in this cozy 3 bed·
I <l'OOm, 2 bath house close (0
sbopplna &nd beach. Sha.&
carpet throuxhout. Luxury
kitchen ovtriooking huce PA·
!lo -10% down. $25,500.
Coll 6<6-1) n.
1'/.:> T HE REAL
\"-ESTATI:RS •·.
2 BR 11,; BA. O:>ndo.
lVuberi.dl')'tr. Dtlhwuher .
Cpt11, dtPt, Covef't'd patki. 642-5678 Hcruwe Huoling! W11tch the Poot. $19,500, 9M·7121, own-·-~~~~~~~-'J~2;""';;;.;";•~rbo;;.;.~·~°";;.;.';'~M~t~P~ll O_P_E_N~HO_U_S_E~co-l"_m_~~~--''-·~~~~~~~-I
•
•.
'
•
•
I . . .
•
Tursday, J.prll 20, iq71
J .
DAILY PILOT .i"'
.
Everyone Hai
Something That
Someone Else Went•
DAILY ·1 LOT CLASSIFIE.D ADS
·The Biggest Market lace on the Orange Coast. -Di.al 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Tredo It
With a Want Ad
'Ille Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa
Board af Reolton
salutes
THE ORANGE COUNTY
FAIR HOUSING COUNCIL
AND .
FAIR HOUSING WEEK
APRIL lt. APRIL 1S
efi1Ja Jd/e
PRESTIGE X ATERFRONT HOMES
60 inda Isle Drive
Perfect for th family who wants a spacious
waterfront hotne. 4 Extra Jge BR., 4 Ba.,
pwdr. rni. Lge:. lfv. rm. & den ; 3 car garage.
Beaut. patio/garden w/rm for pool; deck &
dock. By App'!:
For complete Information on 1\I homes &
lot1, plea .. call:
Coit• Mt•• Fountain Valle~
COSTA MESA FOR Sol< by OWO<N '" 11; EASTSIDE CHARMER ba Condo. Low down, nice
3 very Jarie bedroom11. 1,...""'_,L,,.m....,.,.,.1Dll0-.o---:---· I
Enormous living room with Huntington Beach
beautiful red brick llre-
pla~. "GLISTE!'JtNG
HARDWOOD F L 0 0 R s··.
O>untry atmosphere, with
lots of 10M-rln1 trees Jlning
lhls clrcl~ street. G.l.'1 no
money doWn • "'e'U get you
qualified. Also IBA terms.
Submit what you have on
$2.t,SOO price.
Walker & Lee
R.calton
FIX ME UP
4 bedroom & pool
covered pa 00
127.950
• • • *
Huntington lle•ch
4 BR. + HUGE
FAMILY RM.
2 BATH -BEACH
$22,900
Lagvna 'Beach ____ .., Newporf Beech
MARINERS WES'TCUFr
• br. 3 ha. 5" % loan.
$39,950. Owner 64&-nl
University Park
CHARMING houae-2 1st hr
& de.n1 wet bar. ka:r
p.rqe. Swimming pools,
tennis courtl, many extna.
Xlnt coOO. 132,SOO. 833-27'28
We1tmln1ter
3 BR, 3 ba. covered patio,
Jco '"""'1 ,,..... $33.500. m.1011 REALTORS. EVERYWHERE are cognizant
that equal rights in land acquisitiol) and use
is fundamental to American freedom and
the opportunity for life, liberty and the pur-
suit of happiness.
Public policy and the 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.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'til 9 P~1 BEAUTIFULLY
SPANISH
1'~anlastlc tema too! Low
dov.n 19 all you need. r.tod-
ern thru-out. Flocked dec(Jr
v.·alls. Rich wood panelling.
OPEN BEAr.1 CEILINGS.
Huge bedrooms. Entertain-
ing lam. roa1n. Elec. built·
ins. Dishwasher. l\.1.a.ssive
covered patio, To.,.,-ering
trees. \Vell kept area close
to beach. Just listed • \Von't
last Call (714) 962-5585
Lovely 2 Br/2 Be. Condo
Laguna &each Home
IDEAL for year round com.
fort & grackn11 relaxed liv-
ing, All exlerlor malntain-
ance atteodcd. Te n n I 1
rou.rts, only 100 1tep1 to pri·
vale beach, a.ISO overlooks
glamorou.11 heated pool All
elee kit. Incl: refrig, range,
dishwasher&: disposal. Com·
pletely carpeted wall to wall
Um.1out. Lower level Jaun·
dry ha.a wshr/dryer, 1tor·
age room &r. double carport.
This is a corner unit In
beaut Jndscpe, patroled
area. Close t•• market •
shp'ng. Furn or untu.rn. Also 1 -:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ avail for 1wnmer rental. 11
Generel * NI!W LISTING *-General Priced under mark.et for di· Ac:rtege for ult 150 j;;;;;;;;;;; _______________ ;;.jTake a look at this nice 4 Privacy plua family
room &. pool
rect sale. Phone. 8.174191. ~~ AC. Parct!ll &
NO SMOG! -NO CROWD! ~.!:. '4.':.m;,;,,7.::-C:":;,>;: * $46,500 * up. 3500 ft. altitude, 2J min.
Jmmac. 3 Br. home, xtnt lo Tall Pines, nr Big Btar.
atta, Lovely &rounds. 2 Car Xlnt motorcycle acrge or invstment, Fn>m $400 per ·-Come to Morro Bay to beat the So. Calif.
blahs! "Boondock Living" with conveniences
LOOK AT THESE
room for boat. Owner will
seU FHA or G. r. & only
$23,250! • • • *
prage. flreplac", ac. 10 to U% dn. Bkr. * $62,SOO * ..._..70
FORISI [ OL\O~ ... (_ .
REALrOR S
To implement this belief, this organize·
iton has adopted the Realtor's Code of Prat--
lice into our By-Laws, pledging ourselves as
individuals and as a group to serve ALL on
an EQUAL and NON·DISCRIMINATORY
basis.
Castle on mountain -view
Decorator delite 3 Br. 1800 sq. ft.
4 BR. hillside , 2300 sq. ft.
$48,950
$35,000
$45,000
MORGAN REAL TY
67U642 675-6459 19131 Brookhurst Ave.
Huntington Beach
Fantastic Olde English home. 1,,-=--,-..,.~-:--"I Woods Cove area. Xlnt 10 AC. ovrlook'g D a r t b Industries pUrpO&ed 5000 ac. 3 Br, 2 00, shake roar. nr
S.A. ~'Y· O.C.C. &. S.C.
Plaza.. Cul-de-sac lot, xlnt
cond. Vacant soon $25.500
by owner ~ aft 5: 30
NO DOWN VA ONLY THE
GREATEST
grounds \\'/lots of shJ'U s. Mojave River re 1 or I
PLACE REALTY 494•9704 community. lmme d
Crow's nest vacation, view $18,000
$ 8,950
Sharp 3 bedroom
2 bath Dutch Hawa
127.950
2969 S, Coast Hwy, LB resale/profit potential. Bkr.
CHOICE WOOD'S &14-4670 Shack to fix up, terms
Minug~ Realty • (8051 772·78'3 SPANISH STYLE
General Red tile roar honte wlth 3 ---------1 queen. sized bedrooms, sit·
A truly magniliccnt home
in downtown J~untington
Beach. Large master bed-
room plus 3 children's bed·
rooms, !ilmily room, formal
dining. Built in Elect. Kii,
wilh breakfast area. Nellf
Kehools & park • 0vcf'!li7.e
2 car garage, covered boat
storage • enclosed patio ..
all thi11 charm for onJ.y
$18.500.
COVE INVESTMENT ooly-20
Further, our Equal Rights Committee was
formed several years ago for the distinct
purpose of aiding those wbo feel discriminat·
ed against, and to disseminate information
to our members and to the general public as
to their responsibilities under the law.
General
Tf'llly Early
American
BEAUTIFUL
REPUBLIC HOME
• • • • 4 BR, 2* BA, only 2 blockl acres, ·No. Calif. Nr river.
to beach. Beamed ceilings, Only $29 down. ;r!l/mo.
fireplace, separate dinln& 968--0047
uated on a great corner.
Truly Spanish decor, with
new matching carpets and BIKE TO
THE BEACH
r o o m, private enclosed Butfntlt Property 154 court,yal'd plus brick barbq
Thi.! 1£Nely hon1e hes such
charm and 'varmth it must
be seen to be appreciated!
JIU! imagine a cheerful klt-
cbeu. lall:e pool, 3 good
si2ed bedrooms-the warmth
of lovely wood paneling and
t"stensive use of used brick.
Qi.arming and tasteful 11.!e or wallpaper, just another
of the exciting featuf"{ls In
thi" dclightlul home. East·
side Cosla r.1esa and just ..•
Split level • 4 bedrooms -3 drapes. Gorgeous fireplace,
baths -3 car garage. Large huge kitchen and all priced
.family room and tonnU din-al $25,950. Submit your
ing room. zni sq. fl. home te:rrru:. Cali •
area. $59,950. Lingo Real LEASE June lit. 2rl8 E.
Estate. Coast Hwy CdM artb:Uc
For a speaker on the subject of Equal
Rights in Housing, or for copies of synopses
of the laws relative to discrimination by rea·
son o! race, color or national origin, please
call or write the
Large family room
·I bedroom. l balh
*** 49'J.1397 *** building with adjoining
be~uttruJ yard
$39.1'0
Lido Iii• =~ lot. Owner (21Jl
"""""'"'' •ltuated "'
0
"" Walker & Lee of ~fesa V€!rde's most pres-Vacant 32x88 lot $34.500 Commercial
2 BR. l ba. 30x88 $47,500 Property 158 tigiOWJ neighborhoods. If Realtors
you like Spanish design )IOU 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adafil:"I * • • • S BR .. family room, 3 baths ACRE for Comm'! Stables
45"88 Lot. $93,750 lease back w/8% net net NEWPORT HARBOR-COSTA MESA
BOARD OF REAL TORS must see this chanrung 5-i5-9491 Open 'til 9 PM
home. F~ full particulars COLLEGE PARK • HIGH ON A HILL LIDO REALTY INC. net. 67J.-2262 or 673-5723
1177 Via Udo 673-7300 I -=--co--,..,-----1 401 North Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach
646-1671
and appointment to inspect AREA
call now! MS-2313. $46,500. Mesa Verde
'~'!!"'_-"'!'1 -----~~!!"'_0•0•,ll.!'1 ------•J Call now for an appoint· I·-="=·='::·=======-========= men! lo charm. 1. $38,SOO 646-7171 \:tO ' T HE REAL ~ESTATERS
I •, ''• • " "'.'
Sharp 3 Ii; Br. home 2 Ba.
& ram rm. shai: c11.rpet.
$33,oco S4&sm: 546-5797.
Dover Shores
MEREDITH
GARDENS
GALLERIA
r.-rodel 4 bedroom
lamlly room,
dlnlng room
$·14,500
Overlooking the city. 3 bed·
room 2 bath, 126,!r.,O full
price. Large covered p;illo,
carpets drapes, double gar·
a.ge. Allume existing FHA
loan payable $196 per mon1h
PJ.T.I, View ocean from
backyard. See today. * * * * * . TAYLOR CO. * \:tO ' THE RI::AL
\"-ESTATERS l'tr. • I ·,•
3 Bedroom
Bargain
$22,900
cozy and CUTE INGl.EWOOD. 9 D•I=
Oean 2 BR house. Be8ut. unitl'!, prime a~a.
completely fenced y a rd. $140.000 Or trade.
...... '°""· $24.900. u 1 n tar Ideal for young couple or ~ • d • * • • I' 1llage Real Estate
'62-4471 ( ::-.: I 546-11 OJ
4 BR. 3 BA, 2 story family
home on beaut Mesa Verde
St. Kida walk to school,
iolk5 wa.lk to golf oour11e.
Beaut decour, handsome ap.
polntment and qu.aI ai>ts,
dr,>s. Lui chance to buy at
this price $43,950.
SCARCE COMMODITY! Vinco Realtv s\'..",!~V.. BY Owner. 4 Bdrm., 1% ba..
WIW Cptg., drapes, frplc.,
bit-ins. Close to schools &
shopping. $29,00J.
Custom view home near beach in C6rona el
?wfar. Exquisite wood paneling & cathe al
ceiling. Beauty and quality at . . . • . . . SOil Call now on this one it's
bargain priced with FHA or
VA terms avail.able, large
oversize lot completely fenc-
ed, wl!h relaxing patio and
attractive Jand.scaplng, ask-
ing $22,900 Set> it! 546-8640
2029 Harbor, CM 646-0033 Downtown Costa MfN
1171
_c•...,r,,.ona_,...,.d..,e-ol _M_ar-co--I HARBOR 642..,2991
Phone 842·2535
891-0!la! 833-6348 ''ll!c~il\'irbcr.cati~
. 546-5990 . "'Our 26th Year'' Huntington Harbour
Why "'' belp the kid, buy East Bluff VILLA PACIFIC \VATERrnONT 3 BR, 2 b•
DAD & MOM U..t wHh C.Q. B"y from C.Q. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., R
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road
NEWPORT CENT& w/0 ao'I'" '""'"k & boot Ntwporf Buch their first home on terms 1---------•
AP rf CONDO 3 Br, lovely cpls, dock. $81,000 or ~u both can aflord. A e ect drps thruout. Lg tlr to ceil-Jeasefoptlon. 64.t-4132, 4 BR. BAYCREST Gener el
NO DOWN TO VETS
10% Down to others, large 3
bedrm w/hnfwd f1r1, bltns,
?Xbc20 rumpus rm, blck wall
encl rear yard. VA apprais-
ed at •.. ,.
$24,600
CORONA DEL MAR
DUPLEX
cute oldtt borne and 2 1tor,p
bldg with guest apt Walk to
lown & beach. Newly redec-
ora.t~d • priced right at. ••
$4S,OOO
S BR & FAMILY
OPEN HOUSE
2784 Albatro11, CM
Spacious Contemporary Mesa
Verde home on la.rse cor.
ner lot. Divorce Sale. SU~
mit otters. VA a.ppraised
Gtner•I charming one bedroom M h , D home in Corona del Mar Of er 5 ay ing pantry, elec kit. Beaut 644-t22l Nevi li&fing. Owner going
Wanted: !Home PLUS a guest apartment Gift lndscpd paUo. Showi like a Irvine east. must .e.11 nice Ba.y-o N f model. Anytime. Best Joe & crest home. 4 bdrms, family Wner 0 :Z~ Harbor, C.M. 0d'Rlnco, lme 'on a we2 local· Move in on Mothers Day lo price. \Valk lO bch, 847-85(17; rm, dining rm, 2 baths, 2
E • e -ot_. nly 10-,o down th'" •• ,,1,·1 .. •1y appoo··1·• E ~· U78 * NEW LISTING * xper1ence * 6 UNITS * all b ... lJ<; w "...... ves: ""°. . frplcs, tile entry, larger dhl to . qu fied U)'i'rs. Full home in the B!ulfs. r.fom I Can be bought FHA or G.I. id A5k Necessary On Balboa Blvd. Good cond. pru:e only $32.90'.I.. Call will Jove the huge park and m .. '. Localed In almost new hous· garage. Ult SO' w e, •
Great rental area, sleps to b"ll-8550 for &n a,ppo1ntment play<71"nund right in lhe back :' .•\!r ... "11 .. -,;n i""' development. 4 BR. 2 ing $39,900. Anyone could and _should ocean. You own the Janet 4 now .,..-ff,.. '9.l~~· ~ . .,. CALL Q. ,4,·1414
WfU'lt to play boUSe ll\ this Units with 2 BR., 2 ba.; ' yard for the kids and dad baths, with upgraded carp. "'i:!. ~
extra neat 3. bedroom, 2 2 unit& wl!h 1-BR, Parking won't need his garden tools & drapes. Pallo & lndscpg. ~
beth home m excellent fD' 12 ··-Cali tod•y 10, ever again. 3 Bedroo::is 2~' has been done. Don't watt to Jlffi .fY· ........ .. .... _ d f "U--' Pool Side Paradise 1 f 1 "4 0001 Huntington Beach localion. ,_.,_ uaul,!I an a un u cu care 'ee th 11 one orony..,, N••r Ncwp•rl P111 orrlt•
.... free rt SwTounds this 15x30' pool, (i) d
Vacant. ready for occupancy Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves.
1 ~ 1 $44 500 lotJ: of dccking. 4 BR, 2 ba ·i· .. · .. re hi"ll * VIEW DUPLEX * and may be lease-optioned. THROW A WAY C "uy 673-8550 home w/hrdll:d floors, crptJ:, . West Bay Ave. Nr. public
Beautiful 3ndacaplng, com-YOUR CAR KEYS! a drps & bltns, Needs U1c care beach. 2 up, 2 dn. tn.500
plete J1n 1nkler system. only you cnn give it. !'ull Univ. Park Center, Irvine * TWO FOR ONE *
Lovely cctner patio and Because you can walk to price SZ7,950. All terms. Call Anytime 833-0820 2 Jfomes on one lot in West •-M .,,, ··-· w EVERYniING from this "'A9 ~ ... .., WI ocean vn::w. a-Cali 847_1221. Newport. .,.. ,500
ter softener and expeMive sharp home plus income. SEYMOUR REALTY Laguna Beach BURR WHITE ~~p~cean;;;,~;i:~ ,!-~~~.~:I~~6~~~1 !it~i~e!is~~ce~~~ • EX~;r~ ~~~~TS • 1n41 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch 3 UNITS REAL1UR 6"/:>4630
546-2313. $140.000 Prlee with 7% Ill separate yard with a roomy Open 'lil 9 PM 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B.
T.D. 6 Be'"'· turn. units,· 2 Bedroom rental over an f One 2 bedl'O()m home, !wtJ 1-• BEAUTIFUL 5 br, .t ba,
\o · THE REAL'
~ES7ATERS '-.... · •• -·.lll ,;.1
o e 1 d •· 1 -HEYi HANDYMAN! bedroon1 apts .. all furnish-ho 1 Dov
--lent ln'Oolmcnt whether f ' FIXER UPPER ed. 2~ Blocks to beach. Sho •· J & U 80 Fl. on 1wimming beach. res. ...,;e poo pa o
6 cu ......... es Ii utll. room. v rs ze garage, ~· exce · &ts ~ fam rm me n er
Will consider trade ior boat you're jut starting out or FOR YOU! $·19,500, Cali -glll'den. $97,500. Call owner
W•lktoZody's, Thrifty, or maximum ~.OOO lge. • gettingsettoretire.A10uth· rca ly POOL! ONLY $31,SOO 642-3203
Von'• Stables, Etc. BR. tiouse. of-the-highway winner for + 3 Br, den! 2 Ba~ Sundeck! ,J~O Ja.. ## BY owner, Harbor View
and have quiet resldenUal Bill Grundy, Rltr. only '42:1~~ 2414 Vl~la Del Oro crptd! drpd! Lots of value! ....,/TOi,4 I~ home, 2 yrs old, Ooor plan
living in pride of ownership 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 612-4620 Newport Beach 644-1133 submit! REAL ESTATE 3, 1 sty,. 4 BR, 2 ba, i1le
1.,, ...................... ,. HAFFDAL REAL TY kitchen, dln'g rm, fr'plc, 3 b!droom. 2 bat.h, rumpus i= EASfBLUIT VIEW 8424405 1100 G!cnneyre St. own land. $42,900. &14-.t218
room, gleantin& hardwood BEST TWO Lge Lusk 3 BR, 2~ Ba Eves; 5-11-2446 49'i-9-l73 549-0016 WATER FRONT. Unusual 3
floors, carpel!. l Yr. old. BAYCREST BUYS mt ARBtrruS 644-?I124 3 units, vu, nr bch & 11hop1, BR. d-k. Income. Lo &~ --FHA-VA Terms. Won't latl . By Owner -Make oHer $35 900 -EXECUTIVE 1 ·~ 950 ACT NO\V' Call. e 4 BR. din nn & lg lam 1'."• PE FE 1 patios, very nice. $49,500, priced & down. By owner, a _,, · · 93' wide lot -bcauL nunn-R CT • • • , __ 0pc~"-""-tl_Su_"_1_2·_5 _ 10% dn. 49-1-4:125 675-1900
LosT JOB W Iker & Lee ,_. ~·ooo '""'' hom•. "'•" '"''"' " "· ' ' l==c-==-=~-"""=-------~= Jlaa moved and must sacri· a tau..,.. ~· · ......, H ti t a. h ni Ml. from °"ac · ~tory DAILY PILOr tor acUont For thal Item under ~. e 4 BR. di" 'm • k.,, w/ super clean: wight 2 bdrm, un n9 on U9ac 3 b 2•• b h I 1 • flee his mlni-est«ite. Tower. 2., B ·~ 000 & den. One ol c.d~f'i fine&I • r, a, uge ami Y r .. i Call 642-5678 & Save! try the Penny Pincher
lng ihadt trees, 4 larre bed· 2043 WestcliU Drive brkfst area, ra a, .,.,..., · loc .. 1 blk, 10 slAirway to Attention GI buyers-w/frplc. On lrg comer lot
Condominiums
for sale 160
$21,500
Vacant, immacul11.te, J bed·
rm, a bath "Monticello".
Best buy in area. Super fin·
ancing available. Fut pos-
seeion.
L•rwln Raalty, Inc • 546-5411 anytime
2 BR, l'Ai BA Deluxe
Co.ndomlnium in a du I t
community. Patio,' pool, etc,
BY OWNER. 54~4
Duplex11/Unlt1
sale 162
SAN Clemente, under
constNction, 2 adjoining
4-plexes, els to heh &: mkta.
Pvt patios, Ure, burg.,
Intercom., vae s y 1tem1.
Frplc'1, elec gates A gar
doors. By bldr, 10% dn.
$66,500. &12--3490 24 hn:.
DUPLEX·NO OWN
to veta or usu me 5% % loan,
W/w crpl, F/A heat, Patios,
Bltll$. Only $31,500. Brok·
er &Mi-8226.
Income Property 166
PRIVATE PARTY
1 have free & dear property
w/good Income in CJ,f. Val-
ue $65.000. For tax reuort5,
I would like IO trade in on
approx $Dl,000 prime unlta
or commercial property.
Call 548-5227.
FOURPLEX
FHA
AU 2 br, 1 ba, crpb:, drps,
bltn1, garages. laundry rm,
& eat! side Co!lta Mesa. Xlnt
cond & only $48,()t)) wtlow
monthly payments. Broker
642-0177,
srORE, OHlce, 2 BR house,
room to add, C-1 mned, SO x
180 comer, 142,500. 19th St.
near Harbor, CM. WU!
trade. Broker 494-9659
WALK TO BEACH
New 6 & 8 unlta by builder.
lltg Ikh. 847-3957
BY owner, 2 on a lot, W.
Wllion, C.J\f.
• 494-2985 *
rooms, decorator m1rror1
1
, •• ., .... -~'17~l~l ~Opc;";~"~·~u1:9:"P"M .. :l_,-P~•,,t1~B~•~"~e;tt~R~o"e"l~ty.-beach. $5'1,900. $250 move& you in. 2 br. 2 ba w/sep boat 1torage )'ti. Ar.-a..,. extra' thronahout. Set 642-5200 0 L R IE twnh!\e Alt 6·3C 714/ sumable 5%% VA loan. ·~ -p J H e ancy ea stitt · · · ·· · Dick Molzahn Rllr to appreciate and onl)' 00 OID9 *MESA VERDE* 2828 E. C.Oa&t Hwy., CdM SJ.5.3780; Btwn 12 &: 3, <TI•) 531_1622 $29,500! 3 Bedroom, 2 Ba, hrdwd Lovely, un1nac. home. ht &H-7270 8424432.
S@lldt\}\.-ft £trs·
Walker & Lee noon, carpetl, drapeg, tam. OUeriJ1&:. Beaut. grounm. l -:0"E"L"'U"X~E""'2 :;B;;R""'&'"""o"E"Nc.li2""srom.R;;Y,-;3-b;;;,:;12ii11Z>"';;-· •ra;;;;m $21,750
Uy nn w/frplc. Fool 20x40, Cov. ""°· 3 BR. & lamlly PLUS Sep I "' ""!al, Ol' ':", w/frpk, ,11 •loo kll, CL40SBER T+O 20CBEAAN
Realtora 9"'' det'p. No. E. Costa rm., 2 baths, $31,500 corner Jot, prlv polio good ding rm, cvrd pat Io.
7682 Edlnler Mem. $3(1,500 tenns. George Wllllamson terms. Bill Peten Bk~. 2131 $.15,900. 8'17-4633 1500 S<: It home, hllie cul-de-
(n4) Ml-46 or 540-5140 REALTOR se.Ws29 1UWNHOUSE near Beac'h & .sac Jot. Crpt.1/drps, formal
Roy McC•rdle, Re•lfor 673-4350 661564 Evts, 2 QuOO 1 BR howle Shopping Center: 4 br/2~ din ., elee bltrui, nicely land-
* * * * * * wo Ne;:;7~ .. C.M. l-~LE""A..,S~E= • ..,o==PT"'ION duplex, on . 2 adj. ~ot:. ~ = ~; mar~t. ~15o.1s'!om~~C':if S4r;~j
HOME & INCOME j .. ...,~~~!!'"""""'i MOVE-IN NOW ~':';' aru<>au<. 83,.,9471",~B..,R-• ..,,..,ba-C..,o"'1o--w-/b..,llM-. SEYMOUR REALTY
Enjoy the cornlortt ot thl~ <22,500 Vrry neat, 3 bedroom. 2 ' $24,500, !122 Deerfield Dr. tn41 Beach Blvd., J-ltgn Bch
vrry nice 3 btdroom 2 bath o1 bath home it vac.../ll and HARBOR Vie:w Lu5k -4 Br, H,B. 213/823-&t85. Open 'lil 9 P~f
home and let the 3 nentaJ -dy 10, ........... ,...,.......,. fea· 2~ Ba w/ocea.n vM!w. 9741~--------~C~~ .. ~.-----
unlta help YoU pay for tJ\e SWIM POOL ·~· ......... _._,, Sandcastle. Owner 6"-2929 Costa Mesa osta ,.,.,a turea excellent locallon, proptrtY. OnJ,y $59,500. "'--cl •t In -In C t ...
mold & r.... d .;ir ... rp .t ean. 1• aw: ..... .-beautiful landBCap g. C()m· 01 a mwla A "•U dltJon. Natural brldt fltt-plete sprinkler gy11tem.
7 • """· ?it.e il · -ft. --i • MESA VEROE -Spacious 388 E. 1 th .;ii., ...-ti ll place bu l·tns. "' -Lovely covtttd peUo and 4 br, llv'lf nn w/frplc, lam ~7755 A d('(:ldng. ~1720. yard wUh ocea.n vW•. In-rm, all el« klfchen, crpll, • * * * • * TARBELL 29SS Harbof" cllldn waler sortener and d 1 · m ~· ·---------rp!I, paliOI. _.-,JON. 1 · t>xptnalve: rolllry '1V t.nle:n-557-TI42.
HARBOR LIGHTS
••. It br'Jtll SUllHl.I can bt
)'OW'l from thla 3 BR. It
family rm .• 6 ff· old buut)i.
0oN to CdM H.S. $5&.MO.
Home Show Realtor•
"Armchair Hou1thunlln1"
~ £. COeJt Hwy,0 CdM
REPOSSESSIONS
Sperldlng dean home:1, IOfTle
newty painted Ir alll)eted. 2, a. f • 5 bdm\I, Some with
pool•. ntA-VA C:OIT'r. term.I,
from ial.000 .. l<0.000.
Col.llnl A Watt. loc.
SU3 Adams A\-e. flO.M23
us.ms Cill GU-$71 • Sll.vtl
na.. Owner wUI acctpt f\,r.<I GOV'T repo1. Anyone can
lllst mnnths: ~I Md SIOO buy. No !Qlln charge? S:ll .~
mn.h1tml'd'ICtl deposil. f"ull 1o $32.000. In Colt& Me"I
Prial '28.950., IM2·Zi35 « 1tta. Willi RA!alty, 546-7805
$15-2313. MESA Ven:le b)' owrn!r: 3
'O THE REAIJ
~ CSTATERS . ·. . ' ... -=======·
bdrm, fmly rm, 2 ha. pi10o.
Open d0-Uy 129,9&1. 545-2075
f\lr beat l'Hlllts! 642-$73
NEW HOMES ••• eonw:nk111101hopplo1,
Khoo!• aod bt..acbtl.
IN CLOSE·IN '•0 •1"""'" ""•1• .00 t.o •ory new horn«, COSTA MESA W 70M ... ,,,, ,,,.,,
Now Scllin1 Final Uiiitl ne~ew 19tltaltdWM1ti1rAi·1., ~~ CostaMrsa
s./11 08Ic1 Pltotu:
loom •30,500 (714) 546-0337
The Puule with the Bui/f./n Chuckle
I
SESHC I i.1 1-...-1--.1...-.. 1-TIJrl Sign Ir\ New York garage!
L--'.'-... ·-'-· -'·--' "If Your Geers Are Sl!pplng
.-------, We'll -Them.• s E T R E J I d-'1> O Cornplei. the chuck!• Q1,10lfd I I I I' r by fillirig In the miu.iflg _,d
• • • • _ • YOIJ devtlop from l!ep No. 3 bekw.
f;} PRlNf NUMBERED UTTfRS IN
THESE SQUARES • • •
~ IJ~~~Bti.ts~~f lffi!RS I I I I I I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900
I
-·
. ' •• '"'*·"-...... .._ •. .. ., ... .;, ,.., • • • • • .. ''II ~ •> I' • t " \ • • f ...... • • • # • ' ~ " \ I I • ' ' ~ . , .. . . . . ., ~ . . . • ' I • , r ' •
DAILY PllOT Tutsd.y, April 20, 19'1
J[j] [ 1~1 ;.;;I..--. ...... ~l~;;;e 1 ~I -;;';;" ... ;;.l~~e I __ ,.,..., I[!] ~ ;;1---~~m;;l!tl~• [.-...... J~
Hou ... Unlum. 305 Hou ... Unfum. 305 .& ... t .... Fum.. 360 Apt. Unfurn. lncom~ Property 166 Bu1lne11 ..,..
NEW 52 UNIT ...,0,.-,......,rtu_n_llv_,.,....,...200.,...1c;. --,,.-,-a-I _____ Sunnt Be•ch Costa Mesa Belboa Peninsula
3'5 Apt . Unfvm. US Apt. Unfum. US :US Apt. Unfvrn.
N•>N Buch. Wilt .. com. Dl1trlbulors Naodod -,-•• -,-Br-B-l--,---.1 OC!:&NFRONT. Ii> mod•m -C""'A"'S"A_d_e_O_R_O_ IJ '°'u"'ST:-:-bt>-,:U~n-::2-::Br:--.-:,:-:Ba.::--:-den-. j;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;
pl Jul -· N tJo M •-11n ,..,_ S ...,.. • tns, Y ' •-• home, for famll'-'. $:JOO/mo eted y 1. • ..., attl, tax a nal ll'u: C o.Nm· ""·by • ~-•·•-,,1 ok , nndeck, bltns, crntJ, drpg, ,
EHi Bluff Nawport llMc:h
A New W•y To LJve
NEWPORT BEACH In Nawport S.ach
&he-lttt, •nd•ble. Princi-pany. NEEDS NO\V, Re-ai ue a.;c~* 64S.Ol.11 i;;,~;u. I e. Rf ts' C:..!~e~~vlng :.0:. ~anfront w I b';.y view, * Spanish Elegance
pals on.l)i, Bldr. 66"60. ,porwble man a.n4 woman e an a Adults only, ro pe t1 .
2t UNITS to aervice hllb volume new • ROOMY·2 Br, cpts, drps, University Park pbere:. Sp&i;lous ~or co-$500/mo J.t:ue. 675-5034 Set. 1'lle Mood For
VIiie Granada Apts. OAKWOOD GARDEN '°"' bodrt>oml with balooo" APARTMENTS
product routes. "Hunt Snack b I t n I , e n cl ~ a r , I ;;;;;:;:;:;:~~~~~~ ordinated apts • d~ianed & • 2 BDRM y 1 Uke
2 A-S br. Clor.e to ahopptni. Pack". A nrw mulU million kidl/pet.s. $150. ISH£D turnlahed for ityle & com-M , :f' )'. 4191,ii Qui I I • All rented. Ht.a Bcb. $410,000 dollar advertised products. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 We have UNFURN &:: fort • Heated root •Kitch· ne.... ature a ti. et Adu t L v1ng
1,-811..,.."3957-:--::-:---=, I Part or full ti.me. Company 3 BR. 2 BA lun, bltns, cpts, FURNISHED rentAlt ln en w/ llldiftct JJ&:ht!nr e E. Bay. Call 61S-4lT2 aft 5hq cpi e dl'pl e hltna
!e.t above 4 i.tlow. GracioUI On 16• Street btwn
Uvin&" Ir quiet arroundltc Irville \nd Dovtr Dr.
for lamlly with t!l>lidn<n. (7141 642-1170
Loh for Sate 170 secur.d locations, commer-•-·. '"',.· $115 Avf now! UnfwnltY Park A Turtle Deluxe RIO. AduJu. No pe:ta.i,C•i,':pm.,.:.. ::-wlmdJ"d~l..,-;-:-::----1 ' B Beautiful. Pool .... ya •-5-0111 Rock & would c:onaidu it • 1 BR . .$175 turn. orona • Mar - r. S170 incl all IJti1
FORECLOSURE cl.I.I. ·~0 fa;i~G Blue Beacon * 64 privilege to help )'OU .IOlve UTil.JTIES lNCLUDED l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii/ Multi onJy-no pet..
Nur Corona del Mar ffiab SEA.CUFF ~ta.nor A.pts. 21
School. F1replaot. wet bu&-Br. epts, .,,., bltnl, pool,
built.in Jdl~ appliances. prlv t11-tlc atudk> typt J"71
835 AMIGOS WAY 6"-.2991 Be., J.ntant° Ok. M8-l!'G' 162~:
21Ai acre bone ranch ttpo&· CASH REQUIRED $600 to e COZY COTTAGE 2 Br, )'Clur housing needs. 365 \Y. Wilson 642-tm 11 241 Avocado St, ~
&@Sled from former ae?'I> 1ncd yd, chl1hn ok. Sl35. .., CoJ.dweU, Banker le Co. Pi•C"f!ntla. Aalc about our M-Ageni 5'1-5m dlooow>L gpace employee now av&il· $2,995. Wrlle for more infor-ALA Rentals e 64a.3900 Unbelieva bly Be•utiful ~
able at developus COIL mal.ion, Dlstributonhlp Div . .I BR family lun, gar, !ncd VAL D' JSERE Garden Apts. 'Q,.
SAVE $30.XI 51 P.O. Boie 3155 To?T&nce, l95 AdulU • no pets. F1owtts
--•· ........ Calif. 90505. GIVE PHONE yd, kid~ & pets. S ::..r0111 everywhere._, Stream & ON TEN ACRES AD'" 'TS ONLY on these fabulous., UiLll. 1""'" Blue Beacon * _.,.. w t -·" •0 1 Re Rm u~
ORLEANS APTS. • NEW DE LUXE .-, .• ~EX=co;EPT=1"'o"NA"'L,--,S.,=.,.,,,,
3BR,2BAAptfo!-lease.lncl Uvln&-2 Br. 2 Ba .j
spac. master sulte, din rtn Furniture avail. EI e v .
& dbl a:arqe, auto door suh-terranean prktna. From
openu avail. PoOI It Rec. $375. . d NUMBER. a e~J.IW, ..., poo c. ' I • 2 BR. Furn Unltu'n. 2 ded, ranch aue •pn:a a. -=-=7-i.=-.;-:----· I e MOVE Jn loday-2 Br, kids Sauna, Sgb 1-2 Bdrm, Furn-~ · &. &: 3 BR. Avail. Private pa.
Located ln the booming NEEDED: & pets welcome. $l20. ''SINCE 1946" Unfunt. trom $135. SEE rr: Fi.replaces I prlv. patiol, oo, pool. tndlv. laundry tac.
South C.OUt area near San WORKING PARTNER OR ALA Rentals e 645-3900 1st \Vestern Bank Bid£: 2000 Parsons 64l-8670 Pools Tennis Contnt'J Bkfat. (Nr. Oranae C.O. Alrport; ~ e $265 e S•n ClenMnte
Juan Capl.atrano. High PVT INVESTOR, Subsl:Ant-Univel'l!lty Park *.~UP* 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 tll:iat l7thSt; nr. Weilclitt), 865 Amigos Way, NB
NEWPORT TOWERS 6(2.DJ2 area.
above the unor. private ial return on money lnvest-$125-2 BR. bltns, g:ar, yd. Daya 833--0101 Nights GIANT l &: 2 BEDROOM! (MacArthur nt Cout Hwy) J.lanaged by BRAND NEW lux. 2 Br,
road and ~ed &:•le ruar· ed. &ttund w/oollateral. Oilld ok. Clean & nice. Gora:eous park-like &etli"" l7U Tustin, a:.sta Mesa WILl..lAM WALTERS CO. 2 Ba. llOO aq. ft. ~t
anteie the batural beauty of For more info v.Tite P.O. Blue Beacon * 645-0111 00,., ···-·•• !or m':'!.· * COROLI DO APTS * Mir. Mn.. Tbomn ... n 642..f6fl · -i. cul..de-uc. Panoramic vieo.v ••" ~--S·••"• G t Box l819 •·-ta Ano = ---1' _., 2 Bft.l~ BA. Fire..-ce, of ocean. Adu1t1 -·1•• $180. ~ ..... ~,~ _. .... , ran , ~· · 4 BR. Y.i th family room imum &ecuricy. Quiet street. 2 Br: 1tudlt>s &. street leve , •---------pa.do, pool. Ad u I t s . .......,.
surrounded by beautiful BEAUTY Shop1 9 statiorui 1~C __ •_ro_n_a_d_•_l _M..,•,..r __ ,..-Turtle Rock ••· ....... $375 Adults, 00 petll. 20 2 o SLSS .1 up. Dshwhr. trpl, db11 Immedlalf' occupancy. S2251 '°''~,.._~22.l!l=-·--..,,.....,,..,.,.=-I
Ceveland National Forest drytn. Rent S 172.50. ~ drps ts: 3 BR. 2 baths •· ·······• S32S Fullerton A\•e (Harbor to carport, LARGE Pool * $130 UP* mo. 644-1162, 834-3405 "-'Ork. BRAND new 2 B drm .
Allutilidesav&.ilable, Sacrifice,ownr962-515I. 3 Br. 2 ba, 'crp' 4BR.2bilths ••......•• $30() Bay, then So. until 2 blks 673-3318 GIAJ\'Tl.l2BE_DROO:O.t! Avenlda Rosa , Fo r OM HI &o" wuher & d~r. FA , . 1 d Go •• ~ lik f t . t Add'· PRICED FR •"·"iN Ex,1 .. ,, .. , CdM. ye a r 1 y 3 BR. 2 baths; !urn1s 1e So. of New""'rl Blvd. 642. F'OR. f d 1 _,1 1 l'iOOUS, .,...... e sett nr. G•rden Grove in ormanon Bff a , x LOW DOWN-EASY TERMS GOOD buy beauty shop, " ~ avail. Aug. 111 .••••••• $400 8690 •-ease, e ~· ., e ec. Closed garages tor max-'':":'.::--;::-:=-::-:-:::-;~:r:-;-;-I Belle Hunt Realty, S.C. Cil'tumstancea force the lm· 64$-3621. Tue, Thur., Fri. & $300/mG lease. Call 644-7695 lge, ne-.v w/a view _2 BR, 1 !mum securlty, Quiet street. J/MO. RENT BONUS 1 ---~-----
m·"·to di""'sidon of the.se .-"':;::;'m;;o~rrn·.,.F::::;--::;::;-;:::::-1 • CHARMING 2 Br, 2 Ba. 1···.·. red h·111 *SUS CASITAS BA apt. All blt-1mi Incl Adults M peU. 2020 *NEW* ;;s •• n_t_a;;AM;:;;;~=;;~~-cu... -.,., ilrb'll"CKJNC --xlnt 1 1 · • rd dtshwshr, dbl. gar. adlts · bo Jew choice parcels whose "'n.i:.. Ya.n.1, oca· firep ace, patio "' ya , Lrg nlcely furn Bachelor & only. 673-6992 FuUerton Ave (H:'f r to c.ome see us • Best for l~a:
former owners LOSS b )'OW' tlon. Reasonable. Will sell $300/mo, yr lease. 22U l Br. Furnished models Bay, then So. until 2 blk1 ALL 2 BATH CAN1 BE BEAT
GAIN!! Call or write for all or part. Call ~7185 Waterfront Or. 673-3456 REALTY open dally. New rental rates 2 Br, 1 Ba, frpl, sha&: cpl, So: of N~wport Blvd.) 1 BDRM & 2 BDRM
complete dela.ils and color 3 Br, 2 ha, l blk north of 2110 Newport Blvd CM drps, bltns, hurry S2lO. 642-8690 $15'$175, fvrn $200 SINGLE S70RY Monoy to Loan 2'° Univ. Park Centtt. Irvine --=-==7.';;-.-;;;;;'=;-1 Btwn 10-5, 630-2062; alt 5,l~P~~k~L~'~k-S~--nd~.-~ on-site photos. Buy direct Coast Hv.')'. 2 children ok. Ca.lJ Anytime 83l--08'2D BA YCLIFF MOTEL 213 . sgs....1719 ar • 1 • urrou 1n9 GAS & WATER PAID South Sea Atmospbeft
from the developer: 1 t TD L $250/mo. 673--0041 · QUIET. DELUXE AU dlx items in &: out 2 BR.. 2 BATH S oa n 4 Bdrm, 3 Bath, frplc. * LOW WEEKLY RATES * $160 • l BR garage apt. 1-2 & 3 BR APTS Rttreation facil ities. Carpets & drpa
RANCHO CAPISTRANO Houses Furn. or Kitchen TV's ma.id service. Crpta, drps, 1tove &: rrtrig. Also Furn. Bachelor EL CENTRICO APTS. A1r Cbndilioned ~ ~-" Dr! R g $38.5/mo. Call 9 am to noon, U f 310 I ' ' 2 d·" ·' •· 11, ....... .u-ont ve, m 6'4% INTEREST 675-4656: aft 6. 644-65Z7 __ n_u_r_n_. _____ Heal~ Pool. Yrly. a ... ta o ... y, nope..... Prv patios * Hid Pools
2
Blk! N., G.G, Frwy oU Private Palio8
Newport Beach, Cal 9266t 2 d TD L -64&3265 673-89:M3 Nr a:hop'g * Adults only HEATED POOL
Sll-3223 n oan Cost• Mes• Lido Isle LARGE 1 Br. centrally 3 BR. 2% BA Deluxe apt So. MA"RTINIQUE APTS. Broo;::~ntral Ave. Plenty of lawn
2% AC. Cabin &ite, Apple Tenns ba.ed on equity, VACAJ'~ & R.EPAJNTED ; .. FOR RENT OR FOR SALE: loc:atP.d. Pool. carport. of Hwy. See i\-1gr61-., ;:::B lTn Santa Ana A.ve c,\f Garden Grove 171.fi) 531).235(1 HID~~
Valley: min. to 4 new '42-2171 $45-0611 •~• .., 725 Via Lido Nord. Lido Adlts. no pets. Sl35. fiGO W, Marguerite or ph. .,..., .... ,. Mgr Apt llJ ~ GARDEN APTS.
recrrat'l la~s. $ 6 , 2 5 0. Servinr Harbor area 21 yn, this 5harp l BR home near Isle. Call \Vebster 4--0920 or Hamllron. 6 4 6 -4 l 6 0 or PARTLY turn apts, no pets. ,.· ==:==:==::===::::;=::= Huntington B1ach .,:tvt. South •·•ta
submit t erms. Bia. Sattler Mortgage Co. Inrlne Ave., eastside. Fam. Brighton 0-4541 a-15--0760 Lrg Bachelor S125 util. pd. J -. ---'-------Santa A;
0
.-. 548-"25
.......-io. 336 E. 11th s .... t ili" ooly Al $'8S "'r monrh. CUTE, CLEAN w/apt l Bdrm 11>0 otil. pd. 6""'137 * BRAND NEW * * FR.ESH AIR
CHOICE k>I. 100 X 135 R-2 f ;;;~;iii~i;;i~iiii"'.°~ii i =C=all:--A~ge~nt_,,......,--;1;-4;,1.;:-"7,.-:N;::e,,w".:po7.::rt::-B·a-:a"'.c'.'h':;'";;:-:-BR. $125/mo. Incl. util. LRG. l Br, ground Jew!, LA COSTA APTS 1 & 2 BR. Walk 3 blks to Beach!
paved alley. 348 E · Cash f aSI I. FOR rent or lse 2 BR, 2 ba, CHANNEL corner. 3 Br, den. ~~be....s.een at 532 gar, ~shr/d~. water & BJtn~. swimming Poot & lllr· Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w
Rochester St. CM cl~ to condo w/blo.s, dshwsr, wet 3 Baths, boat slip, a\-ail Center St. Mgr Apt E. gag paid. 673-T.199 age. AU uw pd. IJlO fo 1170 """IS, •-. blms except Apts.,
· ,___ "•ft .. .,. .... Pools ...,.,, '" -~ Furn. or Unfurn. 370 17th St aho'pp~ a re a IJ<U' _.._ ........ " ' +o.L • 5/15. Yearly lease. S.tOO. 540-0023. mo. Adult., no ....... relrig. $225. No -a. 5J6-17ll 000 ~9509 1st & 2nd Trust DMd1 5-ro-3961 M ~· ~ $22. ,,,,,.. 673-4383 Costa esa 354 Avocado, CM. £12-9708 G ral R-J lot :r.oned for 6 units, FREE APPRAISALS SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA, bJtns, I-'.::..='------Dan• Point l &: 2 BDRM. deluxe apts.
1
;:;;;o;;na;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;; I
above Huntington Harbor. Costa Mts• Investment ow, crpts, drps. $235 mo. Condominiums --'."."-:-"':"-,,~-,·I NEW NEW 2 BR 11~ BA 2 t C'pta from $135, ell elec.,
$12.000 -·-down. 541-7711 anytlm• Call Ray Gault 540-llSI Unfurn. 320 ** New lge 1 BR apt. NEW ' , . sory. ' dishwasher. ga.rage1. 7881 PALM MESA APJS. ~ ,1~1 1 1t & drps, all blt-ins. Fireplace. Gf H B -" alt s C-~·•; .... """" ,m, SJS.1.166 8 2 Br ho ..... pvt •-M, ----:".'.'.".-----,,,, mo. yr ease, 1 encoe, .. , ......... er . -"• ~ od 250 ·-'-" L H'll last+ $50 deposit 496--4456, Pool, Recreation room, 2131921-4531
OWNER nttds help. Larunall Money W•nt ~~'ail''""!:"~" 18th. SlOOJmo. agun1 I s 24622 Cordova Ave. VILLA CORDOVA Laundry room. Enclosed l "B"E=A°""C"H"B"L'U=F-F~A.-:p-cll-1 BR nnfuro •••••••• sus.ao
view lot. Priced to ff at NEED $5IXX) J.st TD at 9%, ""' J'f\r""""" NEW dlx. ling\ sty 3 BR. 2 garage. $190 ht & last plus 1 BR furn ••••••••••• S1'9JO ·~ O'IC financi"" =-..,2-;Ba,'°""'°•-....,."=-=-,-=,,.. 1 SINGLE, TV, pool. pets ok. security depo&it. l'lo New 3 Br, 2 Ba, dsbwhr, Bachelors .:0..-1.1..~ .............. ·" · · ~... due in 5 years on Laguna 3 Br, '"'5 J.1W1 rm, ••y c. BA, crpts, drpli, bltns, poo . S25 & up v.·kly. Dana Marina QUIET.sAFE ........ .. ... ,~
968-1097 Beach Lot. Ph. 968-1097 front &. nar patio, bl t n Children OK. 2 c enc gar. Tnn, 34ill Coast H\I.')'. (Near Back Bay) children or pets. A\18.i.1 May pool, patio. "-' Ellis. from Sl.35
R-2 LOT In prime area, BBQ, S225/mo. 548-6405. grd & trash pkup inc $265.1----------1 40 Unit Adult 1st. 549--0674 842-Mn or 847-39;1/ 2 BR apt.ii $175 mo.
Co&ta :r.Jesa. Plvis far ~ 2 BR, patio, ~ams. trpl, 1 Bkr. 837-S506!·~-~~~~~
1
Huntington Beach A t t C mplex SPAC 2 & 3 Br apU Lrom 1 BR. retrig, bltns, crpts, mo.Imo. OK du I ail u• •769 I ti! P•r min O II'". Htd pool. Pl•v yd. d-•. $135 mo i""i util. 8 POOL p ex av · .,..,,...., Housllf Rtnt. sml child. Yearly. $148. I & 2 BEDROOMS .... ~ .,.. '"'"
"' Crp1s, drps, bltn~. patk>, Adults only. Tradtowinds • SAUNA
Mobile Hom•/ 1 1;--~~~;~~ 1,.,A-'"..,",,'-"_,Y_l_s_ .. ,.. .. .,.'"'.,.."-'-11 !!VJ La Qu1'nta Hermosa Entertalnlng Will be a pleas-Ntwly decorated. Kld!I ok. Rlty 847-85ll; Eves; • JACUZZI
1 __ T_ra_i_l•.,.r=P:-:o-:r,,k1='" __ 1_12 I 1 1 _H_u_n_ti_n_ut_o_n_B,,a_•c_h=.,..-Apartment. for Rent . ure. Decorating this lo\·ely, 1998 Maplt" No. 1 642-6344 536-7661. i561 P.teu Dr. Santa Ana
MEXICO Houses. Furnished 300 EXECUTIVE Livlng-2700 sq. ·--... ----"'!'!'! Spanish Country Estate Liv· ;P;:~~ a.~!b7~t 7~c~Y· m-t Colle&c No. 2 tl4s.o627 I 'N~r ~H7u-n"'t~in-g"'to-n-.H7a"r"'b"'o,..-,,ur _..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..!
Gr•n•d• Cave General ft . $390. 4 BR + fa mily rm 360 ing & SpacioUs Apts. Ter-• Lock guages w/ lg stor WILSON GARDEN APTS. 'Tr-ip!ex -quiet area. Lra 1 Cost1 Mesa
+ oillce/den, 2 tripes, 3 ba. ~A.;.p_1_1._F,_u_rn_._____ raced pool; sunken gas BBQ • Bm ceU • Lnclry • Patios 2 BR Unturn. Newly dee. Br. $140, 3 BR_ $240. Peta ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;
The only OCEANFRONT Sp ants h-sty I e inner Gener•I Unbelievable Living -Only • DW/displ •Huge gas stve New cpts/drps. SP a c ~·~'c,· ~'7!~4-c)~846-0011~~-·,....=.-* * * * ~~ti,~~ in courtyard patio. 1 hlk from .:-------.,.--I Br unf $150-furn $180 e Special aoundproofin&" grounds. Adlts, no pe~. r.10DERN 2 br duplex-Frplc, El Puerto Me1a Apta
RENTAL FINDERS park & schls. Near beach. Rent Beautiful Furniture 2 Br uni $175 fvrn $210 h..... Sl40/rno. 22&3 Faunta 1n bl .. d WU * * * * l40 • $00 per month Ava\I immed. Call TI4: • Deep 2 color •·-\V E (Harbor turn W ms, C'l"P~. 11>1· e includes all 1acilltie1. Fr•• To Landlords &75-89l3 or 714:~ for as little a,; A1;L UTIL INCLUDED carpets, drapes ona~ill!~n) ' · maintained. 2 children ok. 1 Bedroom Apt1.
673-l'JM for info. '4S.Ol1t ~~=~~-.--~ ONE MONTH Special Bonus; a allver-GAS & WATER PAID Su.limo. 847-1876
DELUXE 7 Room house y;/ plated candle snuffer i.t Mo. to Mo. From $140. SJ:IARP-CLEAN 2 BR. 2 ir, clean &: attractive, Mountaln,Duert, cnW.1M.c.t•M .. boot or trl r l§fDrage . yourslfyoubringthisad ........ ~Elden Ave,01 w/irig, bltns, drpg, new bit . nd ti N R t 174 S2i5/mo. Call 842-2276 for complete with _..., crpt.o; htd pool Adults no tr;, air co . pa o. r. esor •;: y,·hen you visit our mode1•• See MJT Ted Woodhead · ' ' Broadway shop'g center.
f130 & up Incl. utillt1e1. Alm
furn Pool Ir. Recftltlon
.&reL Quiet Environment.
OU atreet parltlni. No Qill.
dre.n. no pets.
SACfUFICE
Golf course lot, Apple Valley
$13,000. Owner must tell.
Ginny MorTison, a I en t
540-"'6
• BACHELOR Pad-steps to 1 ~A°'p~p<~-~~-=-.c......,..,-your IOO • 4 blkii; s. of San Diego Frwy '46-oon pets. $l45-_ Kids ok, no ~ts. ~1548 ocean. Util pd. $l05. 4 BR, 2 ba, activi ty rm, Pur cha1e Option on Beach 1 blk \V. on Holt East.o;ide. &12·9520
ALA Rentals • 64S-3900 trplc, wet bar, nice yard. Ind. item selection. lo 16111' Parkside Lane. FAIRWAY • 2 BR studio apt, 1~~ ba. ./ OIEZ ORO API'S 4 H D I 8234 Atlanta. 1-2 BR. Pool:. SSO-UTJL PD. Bach at heh, $260/mo, ·water pa id. 2 our e ay (714) 8-17-5441 End of cul-de-sac. Pvt
yearly. Redecor. Hurry. &16-5972 alt 4 pm or wknds CUSTOM f~ced patio. Sl75, mil incl. Privatt Garage, \Vasher. lfm.1961 Maple A\'t,
Re•I Estate
Exchange 112
Blue Beacon -r * LEASE/OPTION * Furnitur• Renta Lagun• Beach ~ • * ,..0111 I VILlA APJS. 339 Cabn'flo .... ·~· o"' dryers. 536-8038, 536-2771' Co&ta. Meaa
e BUDGET BOOSTER • 4 Bednn hou.st-, 1~ BA, 517 \V. 19th. C.J\f. 548-3-\81 846-3648 AVAIL .'lay 1st. 2 Br. All 'iAY MEADOW APTS,
$85 Hunt. Bhc:, $250 Anaheim 774-Ml Downtown Apa,rtment , $la:! _ LRG 2 Br, gas pd. extras. Pool. Kk:ls ok. 1 H.:t1y ~~~h·U~~ . VINCO REALTY 646--0033 La.Habra 69-1-3708 1 BR, ocean view, 1 block to 2 & 3 BR s Lamplighter Apts, 3 6 O $159. 9£!.7510 or 847-4856 Beam ceilings, panellzw, prlv HAYE 4 BR, 3 ha Condo w/bltns. HOLIDAY PLAZA bt>ach decorator furnished, Private patio, pool. lndlv. Victoria. Adlts ove.r 35. •DELUXE 1 & 2 Br, v.•alk patios, recreation facilities. NE\v Ot"" Buildin.. LAGUNA-S130. Util pd. Nice new Carpet~. drapes paint. laundry !ac. "-•o 2407 10 beach. Pool. Adlts. S13(1 All Ad·"t• nope•· u...., ........ $220/mo, 8122 DePrfie!d Dr, ELUXE S · 1 BR . N O Co "-rt & .,...,... ,.. "' W/$100 K equicy, 1 BR. 2 blks to heh. D pacious Adult.s, lease. $200 mo. ear range . ,.,,,..,..., up. 21915\h St. 536-<13'17 j * Ba~belor Ap', *
Blue Be•con * 645-0111 ';;-H,,tg;,..,lk=h::, cc':-:",.-18;;2H<""=":::·-;:,.-furn apt $135. Healed pool. 4!H-3839 aft 5 pm. UCI. Adults only. * REGENCY *
S27K Net Income •VACATION yr rounckoey 1 2 BR do1vnlown Sl.3.l mo. 1st, Ample parking. No children BEAUT, ocean front l BR. 2 20122 Santa ~na Ave. 2 Br, 1 Ba.. crptr/drps, sell L•gun1 Be•Ch 1 * ; ~RBe=~l65* * WANT last & $25 clean'g fee, ava il • no pets. 1995 Pomona, BA. opp. Vl,tor H"go"•, ,0 , M•r. Mrs. Joachi.m, Apt 3-A clean gas oven. encl gar, PB· COA~ 'NE . od 2 1 Br. child/""'t ok. $140. .. .. ~ · "'' 360. 3TI \\' , ... , .,.... view. • m ern 337 "'.Bay St. tbtwn Harbor BAYFRO~. H-··· or Lot. .... 1-lay 1. Sml chUd iml -t -"'.A Cliff·-.••• "'53 546-6215 IJOi;,,,. -;), . ••l son BR 2 BA bl de k 1 ..
·'' ,,....... ALA Rentals e 64>3900 r -~-~"'i,:'· ::-1.1-;:.----·1 ,~~u~·~~~~----l--,-iiR~ifciii:n;;;-l'•A:'ITiUCTiiVE,-]S.:: • • tins. c: &. Newport Blvd. 14 mi. N. W.R. DuBois: 54.5-TI!i6 OK. a:Jli-2491 8elboa lsl•nd 2 BR FROM $155 * ATTRACTIVE 1 Br. block beac~ & shopping. ot 19th St). I~~~~~~~~~~ I Ba Ibo• Penlnsul• 'H~u-n-t~in-g-ton-.,.H"a-r""bo_u_r_ Newport Beach COMPLETELY REDE C. Crpts, drps. bltn~ + retrig. Adults. SI95. 494-3034 ! CALL 64&0073 I. SUMMER 3 br, 2 ba, lge kit El\fPLOYED BACHELOR. BACHELOR s tud i o on CLEAN & COZY FAMILY No pets, lnq. 2868 La.S&lle, N t Be h
11 •l w/encl patio. $225fwk. S~ BEAUTIFUL waterfrnt S85. \V/utiL No Pl'1 ~-no waterfrnt w/floa.t for 28' UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. Apt 1. 549-3524 ewpor IC 1· AMAZING Adult Livlnr .
. \\'kdys 714/54s.-06TI.. ex 394; 3 BR, 2 ba w/su~eck & cooking. <n4l 675-0542 aft 6 pwr hoar, $200 mo un yrly VlLL~ MESA APTS Quiet Adult Living • Beaut. 1 &: 2 BR furn or unf
\\'lends 213/645-2963 colleel. dock, lose or opbon. 644-pm lse. Util paid, no pets, 719 W. Wilaon ~Newly Decorated 1 & 2 BR. MARINER SQUARE Apl!I. Sell clean. ovens.
F""Nnclal
Bu1ines1
Opportunity
Newpor t Beach 4132. 6#-4221 Balboa Peninsula 673-2662 SUPER VALUE Gar 1z. Poot. Crpts, drps, No APARTMENTS D/\Y fin 2 Brl dlspls, 1haf
Irvine l BR yearly. Util pd. HARBOR VILLAS pers. tr 642-8042 Announces the availabllity ol l cpt~. drps, jacuzzi&. sauna TERFRONT H OME $35 \VK-OCEANFRONT 2 Ii: 3 BR units Jor adults baths. Hu1c pool . WA O\VNER trans'ld. lse or sale Lovely Bachelors, l -BR, Garage Close la mrkt & Immaculate 1 &: 2 Br Studio * 2 Br. Mesa Verde, new . li be M I W d 2 BR + BR. on lo\\·er leve~. heh Adults, no pets . Apts. FROM Sll5. Patio • decor. Lrg closets, cabinets. deslnng to ve amidst au-err m1c oo I
200
Beau!. bay view. Pvt, park 3 BR, Y.'et bar, Pl, tenn SJ]5 Maid sen8•6k1;·.,P140oo81. Ulll. 675-2930 aft 12 noon ' -Pool . Lndrv rm. Bltns Gar. S14S..Sl55, No ""ls. ty by the iea In the prea--425 ?tlerrime.c WJlY, C.M.
incl -....1ner. v.·alt'r. Avail .P-<> .... is '" .. -llifOUJI Westcli.11 area oll w I !lov.·ers & treoes. Thro ""'" BEACH duplex, I BR, 4 hses -Oesir11.b\e Location. 2621 5.'ii-8400 RING BROS Announces
BUYING
A BUSINESS?
Are )'OU buylng profits or
b&es'!' Remove 907ii of 1ht
rl!k. Get maximum lt.vtr·
q:e plus protection. Save on
cub outlay.
August 15th, lmml'd. lnimac. 83.1-03!9 1 BR furn apt on penin, Uul from ocean, Sl:t5 mo til tlarbor Blvd, C1'YI. 557.9049 * BEAUTIFUL 1 k 2 BR. Ne\Ol'Jk)rt Beach. Apts. No1v. Avall11.hJe
Wisley N. T aylor Co. Fountain Valley paid, 1 blk from heh. Rent June 15, utll pd. 962-8983 or 546-9081 eves/Sun. Contempo,.,....., Garden Aptl'i. FROM $230 I MEDITERRANEAN by v.·k or monlh. 673-53&9 ·~" For infonnaUon phone itr V REALTORS 1" "'"· HARBOR GREENS Pati-trp l"• pool · ILLAGE FOR Ill. lmmac. 3 Br, :1 "'" .. • • Robert M Buckley M•••• 2111 San Joaquin 1111\s Rd. ba, new ~hag cpts &. drps, Costa Mes• __ CL EAN 1 Bdrm. furn .. ap!. AR.OEN & STUDIO APTS $150-$165. Call 546-5163 · ' -· 2~00 Harbor Blvd..
INVESTIGATE
BEFORE YOU
INVEST
NE'\\'PORT CENTER 644-4910 _ _. l G er, al (n4) 645-02$2 or write C~ta r.1el'i!I. frplr. bltnl. S 2 2 51 m o . SPECIAh Low Rates from Near 5forel'i aou P1C'r. 2 3 BR' Ir IUO NE\V l Br trplc beams to The Office of !he Man-i 968-950 or 213/241-1588 I ·d adul!. Sl35/mo. Ph. 673--6:527 &ch. l, · •· om CM. -rlo ,.1 ... • bltn•' l ,, .. ,,· . (714) 557-8020 S•n C emente $25 v.•k. Kit. a.vai . r.1a1 _ 2700 PC!terson Way, , . '';" . ... . " · ager, ?.farmer Square Apts,
Laguna B•ach serv, TV & Ph. Sea Lark \VATERFRONT: Sl9a a mo. 5-16-0370 \early. $136. Avl r.tay l. 1244 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal. BACHELORS · 1 &. ] BR's; 2 BR, uW paid, .,.,-alk to
.school, heh, stores, Sli5, lse.
1-H w. l\laripoM, v.·knd . 25 YEARS Experience . Ac·
qu11itiora, mergers, opera·
I.Ions & administration In
divtl"lle lndustnes.
AXIOS INC.
714/541-9992
9-U A.'t 1-4 PM
TO BUY OR
SELL A BUSINESS s ..
Houses Unfurn. 305
Gener ii
LARGE 3 bed, JUSt painted,
carpets &: drape,, fenced
yard, family rm,, children
& pets OK. $210 p/m.
Walker & Lee
HOLLAND BUS. SALES """o"
"The Broker Y.ith Empathy" 7&S2 Edingrr
1TI6 Orange Ave., C.M. <n4' 842~455 or !>-10-5140
66<llO' 54().(19>1 anyttm< RENT OR
FASHION DRESS SHOP for LEASE OPTION
ule, ~ E. Ccut Hwy, Wge <I bed homi-
CdM, 6T>2601 or 968-8969. in ~!er.a. \'erde, l"ll"W
Fixw.res SlaOO, inventory CllJ1H'I. Close to Park
optional. Husband being S300 mo. 546-9521 agt.
tramfe.rmt. ~."'o"N"'11=lE""'B"'E°'A"CH"'·•=m=m=,-o,_
UPH. SHOP eat 15 yn, 1 Br, encl gar, child ok.
1tock • fixtures • equip for SI~.
salt. Namf~ phone m .. ALA Renta.ls • 6'1~
..-.1wt11 FREE. Lea\llni l BD"''I " 11 .. w ........... ,,,.. .• ,. am y rm •• ...,.. ..
state. 646-85M llke yard. Cos ta 1-!eu. Kjd'
OWN )'Wt" own bus1new: -OK, btk .• S200 a munth. NO
Calli. Co. bu openin,' fl'Jt l-:FEE,-,,, . .,,,.,..~,_"'="·-;;-=;-;-;:-:;
di1trtbut0f'lhlpa: in this atta. e OLD \\URJ..D OlAR.\l-
Goo::t income, ltn'l:lt. secur· btsm ceil, trpl, huge closets,
t.d • .c97.1379 for appl, cp1.1., d rp5, util pd. f150.
WINDOW tlnti!W bua., maeh, Al.A Renta.lg e £6.39JO
nm, tblnnn-, ~!Hnu ' J Bl>RM. + WnilY nn., fUll
JnOl'9. C.0.t $1000/ttU $DI. dlnitw rm., built-1n1., bric.
&ls.-t68'7 SD> a m'Mlth. NO FEE,
food stand, Nwprt Bch l'ltwPCrt, 54G-1720.
~nt Dick Kuper e BUOC'iET SA vat.-1 'Br,
.. ~ T cpU, ~. •IV/rt(. child.
s.u !ho ol4 llUll $90. a:ry the new rtu.tt ALA R,,>n·11, • fi.1.)..3900
!llotel, 2301 Npt Blvd, CM. Lease. l Br., l:lofit slip, 642-8:i20 92664. furn. or unfurn, $105 up. * VIEW HOME * 646-7445 private patio. 67:"-,....6461 * $170 *. l;LG!°~2~Bi<r.~1~1>£!&~i~tu~d;;io;:_;:•p~t:.1 ~~~~~~!!"""~ Pool. Laundry rm. Adullt, Un!urn. 3 BR. 2 ba, hon1e BEAUTIFULLY FURN . DELUXE newly decorated ] 3 Br, 11.i Ba, pa tio. bltns,l~No pets, families only, Pr1v. PA.RK NEWPORT • C3N • no pets, 397 Cenler St, Apt
Outstanding ocean \t\cv.·! 2 Br. Htd pool. Adults, no Br pooli<ide Apt lop11 In crpts, drp!. Ask00~bo~t our p11.l io. '126 Joann St. Sl.W frtt livg averlkg the water. I ,'.,·;;";-'-;;2;:;18.-'==-:=-:--I
\V/\V carp. & draJ)f'S tllruout _.,,_ St55. 2712 J\1aplc or \uxu ...... 1245/mo. 64z-6z74. discount plan . <>oU enter ll= MO 1 lud . r . 2 7 J)OO;ls, 7 tennis cts $750,000 2 BR Sl25 unfurn; Sl-45 furn, ,-'"· St C,\f. 6-12-8340 ,,,, ,, ' un . s . 10 a_p Neat as a pin! 642-9520. Newport Heinhfs ·• hr. 1 1 bi1 . L1m1t 2 children, 'Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 sly 1 f'amilies v.·eJcome. BIG
Reftttnccs R~. SJOO Month • e MESA VERDE area -no ....... s. "".':,Valencia, Apt I Townhou~s. Elet. kit, pr. SUR APrS, 20 4 3-2 O.fi 9 2 BR. unfurn deluxe townhse. .,... ""' W~I s Pho ••• ·-i\TISS10N RF.ALTY 4~31 df t CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adib;, no deluxe 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba, ll·'"' br -tg 1 or 2 !»II or bal suhtrn P3.rk&" opt ace 1. ne .no-'L.l\11 pvt pat, encl gar, a ls, pe ...,.... ~.,..
READY to move in, 3 BR. 2 OJ<. SJ6:; mo. 3009 Coolidg<", pets. l.g kit. Sl ~f150. 2421 encl g11.r. ~145" up. Rental childrf'n ~k. no ~18. Nr 17th maid St>r, cpts, drps, Just 1250 .sq ft lg ] Br, 1~1 Ba,
BA, lrpl, yrl, ~ar. bit.ins. 54-0.7247 E. !6th SI. NB. 64~11Jl1 Ofr: 309a f\1ace Ave, & Placentia 536-l770 N. ot F11shion I~! at Jam· uU rm for wh/dr, patio,
$285.494-4746,499-1111 ;.:~:;:;;-;;;;-,;:;:;::;.,;;;;;:l iLR:RcGc.-:dd.o:l,10;;,:o,-22iB'1R.i:.FFrpt;:pi<o::.1 ~103'1 . LOVELY ; Br f.talure boree &: San Joaquin Hills pr, cpt/dp. S165. 546-8688
Meia Verd• QUIET 2 BR duplex, bl tns, cpl~. drps. ArlulU!, 2100 2 BR. unf~tn apt. Stove & Adult-No pets. R.c11.s. ni6 Rd. 644-1900 for leasing info.
1
1 or 2 BR, /urn or unf. :::· r:;:~: r!-~~: :!~~~~ Jlnven PL $170. 642-3781 nortlg incl d. Gdl"'""'n1' Pool. A Placentia Ave, 64G-3160 e LUXURJOUS 2 br condo Cpt/drp, pool, nr ehops, utl
4 Bdrm ho11ii;e \V/frplc, ln;i: Pl, 645-4285 or 64 2-1298 A t U f 365 all util pd. A I.I o y, no · y,·/pool, Adult8 on I y, pd. 1884 Monrovia, 5'8-00.16
yard. $291)/per mo.1st~ last P • n urn. pets. 1'1gr No. 9, 333 W. l BR. Wed bric_k fli:il~, w/w, 'Veslcl!ff Villa SJ75. Ref&. I + dep. See aJt 6 pm, 2!lo.=i AVAIL Now-2 Br, 1~1 ba, Gener•I Wil!!On Sl. bltna, beam ceil, patio, $135. Lea~. 675--0lJO Hunt ngton Beach
Red\i.'Ood, c:-.1. comp! furn. Freshly painted. •Of.luxe 1-2..J BR. 1 Adlt, Yearly. 642-8520 OCEANFRONT -1 br apt, ;:;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;1
FOR ..,, o' ''"' -l.gc Now rirp,. Pool &16-6610 VEN DOME AU blt.,. Cn>"· drps. !M. 1110 • 2 Br .. 2 S. Slud;o, Crpt" t1rp._ Util pold, ON BEACH I 3 hr. 2 ha, bltns. Corner DELUXE 1 BR I: Bach Apia, Nr. S. Coftst P lau. rrpts, drps, patio, pr. 285 $180/mo, yrly. 673--0983 or • hou~e. 557-7238 or 6T.\-8096. S35 wkly & up. Furn. Incl L\tMAOJLATE API'S! 54~2321 . Orie. 54&-8301. 6Th-5621 2 BR Unturn , , , , From J26:i
util. ~lo. rates terms a\11. nd 2 Ba Se 2 BR 1 BA Cpt d ;;--,=-;c;;-,,,--,:-:--,:= F 2 BR Newport Bea ch 99S E c I &46--0451 ADULT a LARGE J BR. . p. ' . s, rpg, 2 BR, 1% ba, crpt, drps. urn Apt Avail.
.. · am no. FAMrL\' Stocllon unit. F.ast 18th St. Clo~ bltns. qi gar, l C'hlld ok. bltru, dlshwasht.r, Adulls Furniture Avalla.bte
NF.\V Bluffs l-h.>me by 01\ner. SPAC. v.'e.11 furn 2 Br apL Close to shopping, P•rk pr. Adul!1 . S175. No !)tis. Sl-40. 546-9537 nr. Hoar: Jlosp, SlSi mo. Carpets-dnpes~wuher
"Br, l Ba. fully rrpll'I. dt'flit Priv11cy. •t'llts. no pets. 768 *Specious 3 BR's, 2 ha :;.1BM31 k ~3176 642-4387 beated pool-u.unaa-tennla
FREE 6 /n10 t!!nn1s <'lull ~ott Pl. 646-2323 * Swim """"'· pu VgrcE:n 2 BR. ·pt•. •-•. bl'"', Dani Potnt I;;;;----;;:=,-,=:--;:--;:: l'f'C room-ocean views mrmbershlp & ma Int. r;o._ Jndt /Ind t 'ls .. • ,. S155 -Bronrl IM'W 1 br
$.1S!ilmo. 71 4.892_16114_ QUIE'T attn.c studios M . * • ,,,1, v t')' ac refrig, upstrs. infant ok.] BR. 1,1 ha, re~ .,.,•/tr-pie, P\'I pauo. pool. ~tio&-ample parldq:
J Br. SU5. Adlts, no pets. 1845 An•helm Ave. lndry lac. $140. 548-'729, Jandscaptd yard, PT•it'· Avail J\la,y 10. ~W Sa.nt11. Security tuarda.
Adults Preferred 213.i Elrlcn. 1>fl1' Apt 6. COSTA ME.SA 642-28:24 968-14~ c r pt ' g , d rps, b It n . s Ana A\'t . Call ~1260 HUNTINGTON
, Bedrooms, 2 baths.· .$225 1 BR. Jurn. $125/mo. No I ~~!"!'""~"'!'""l'l"~"l'11iBi1Rf.."'$$ili22S'S:·l2"BBRRc. l$ii'14040I rllshwuher le: 1.1 ~ b • i e Sl90 -Brand nf'w 2 hr. l b.1, PACIFIC
REA LTOR MS..G.<'J61i childN!". Just for Single Adults Pool . Bl!nJ1, CflllA, dl"l'S, no d18posal. SZO/mo. ~o pets. frplc. pvt J)fll ln, pool. A\1iul
BLUFFS Cofwtt), 2 Br/2 ha. • Ot!l M>1848 * SOUTH BAY CLUB childnon no pet! ~"F" Avail tn 1how; 1'Pntin~ M1y May 10. 2M32 S.nta An1 711 OC'£AN AVE., H.B.
dl!n, pools, l"r Ele,n &. HI 1 & 2 BR'i. No pets.. APARTMENTS E. 17th 'Pl., c.~t." 1111. Call 4~2328. E. H. Ave. Call 6-6-129). 17141 SJ6.1487
•chls. $300/mo. 6H-1395 24u. NF..WPORT BLVD N•wport EH1ch ~wen 'D,;E,;L~U;;;Xc;;EC:::::':;:,":-';d=-""ted::;-;2 Ole open 10 a.m-3 J>M Dally "" ENJOY pnvacy'!' Oeiwr.e l SPECTACll..AR caantrnnt new.., eco.. WILLlAM WALTERs CO.
San Juan Cap istrano STUNNING)&: 1 Br Garden (:i~~ ~~) Br, him.,, refrlg, cpt/dt'Jl, ,1ew. 2.BR., 2 BA. Crpts, 1~:~tzn!~15.1~4.ln ~;-!~~~~l!!!!!"!!'~I
4 BR & fam ily rm. Brand apt, $l:ll. (714) 645-0550 gar, bale. 962~180 drps, 11ove & rtfrrg. $225. 2 &: 3 BR. St~ 1,1p, Patla.
new Troy hom ... Blt!n~. dsh-64.l-5530 ] BR. apt, pool, clo~ to mo. ll3i'-S3i'O l BR.. l!lpiit l~l • EAslblutr, Pool. Children, t.fORA KAI • 11• -r •-k .. p B•lbo1 P enin•ul• ho · 11'' k 11~ 3•• Er..::=-"=""'~----xlnt bay vlev.· A bt.ti:a.in •1 Apt.J, l~ Mnt11 KAI Ln. 1.1 Mhr, cpu. pal.lo. &i'rlnklcri .. ,.... ~" " ----------1 ' P Ji ·"'1 ..... u ' E t Bluff For only $27.'i. f'!"r tno. C.nll .,./kilrhens. S25 pPr \\:eek .. 17th Pl., C:O.f. !J.l~\U _,..•,,•=""'=""'.",....~-,,-S1l~ per mo. Adlts. 6"-46711 blk E. ol &•ch al Gartitkt.
A '!OTEL u.o ...,u. 2 BR, frpl, b/llC'On,y, 31~ E. J B SECLUDED 2 B 2 n. '"' 714: 962...m4 •9l-19:'..6 or 4M-YM1 up flT.$. " ...,.....,.,-AJ 8Ry, \V!n!"'r rate, $17,/mo J Br •pl. unfurn. $85/mD TOWNHOUSE d~lxe r, r, us., P••V
Th' "\'t.Uow Pav5•• of 1 BR. F URN APT. Yt>1rly $22'.S/m() lnq No, C. ut1H11e1 Pflld. 211 Ba. bllm. frr>I, patio, haltony pi.tin, •ncl &"'·" Yul rtwltr; are ju11 a phone
cli$1.1 11.M •. 6-12-M73 82() Centtr St. M2·5843. 67:\-1$21 or ?i4!-7i71 CAii &I~.! enc 1ar. Qutt:t 6~ bltM. S175 5W-Q093. C"&ll 1way • 6'2-5673 , ;
I (
J[t] I .... l~ I .....,.
• FULLY LICENSED * * PRIVATE ROOM PRESTIGE OFFICE Reoo11i·ned Hindu Spiritualist for elderly lady. Brlghl •
Apt1.1
Furn. o r Unfurn.
Guest Home 415 Office Rental
J70
Huntington Beech
c"···· ••·"•" sur-undl""I. Next to Real E1ta1e firm. Advict on all rnatten. FURN I I ., ,....,,,.,, •u " •v .... ,.._ 11 Id Love, Marriage, Business or un urn • ge • br. 2 Nutritious meals. Ca 11 ..... rpets. drpa:, u1 pa . 7 ba. pvt h?nced patio. stmg 5-l.8-4TJ3. $100 ~r mo. Excellent for Rt>Rdings given days a
crpl. l hie.ck to S.Puh1ts <-==::-ft:::::;::T:--:"" insuran~. tax acc't, archi· i~C'ek, 10 a.m. lo JO p.m. •tore~. 7731 Elli1. $165. Summ•r Rentals 420 tect, 1.860 B. Newp()rt Blvd. 312 N. El Cantino Real,
67:!.-3293 or 8~1-0932 -::-::::::-~-::--:-:~::;:~,..-C 'I &..n Clcntentf' 2 BR, 2 BA CONDO ·" · <92-9136, 492""'76 Newport 8•ach ON 'n-IE BEAOI, 2 '"·im-W . E . Lechenmyer
ming pools, tenni.t courts, 1860 Newport Blvd,. C.l\J. MEXICO VISTA DEL MESA
Apartments
1 &: 2 BR. !-"urn &. Unl. Dish-
private beach, completely Cali MG-3928 Eves: 673-4;)77 Gr•n•da Cove
The only OCEANFRONT furnished, av&..ll now lhru DESK 11 bl .,,,.. trade'" rn•c-es in
When You
Want it done
right •••
Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
Sept. !\Jin rental ll \\"ttksJ. spa~ ava a e _.. , o.,...
washer -.stove and Retrig • Reis ttquired. Call 10 am· mo. Wlll provide furniture ENSENADA ~
Shag crpt i-Lr;: Rec center.1 1 pm 499-2'15.2 at $5 mo. Answering ~·ice SW -S90 per month [ I ~ I ""'"°' I I ]Gel RENT Starts $155 · ¥ • available. m Fore~! Ave, inrludes a1J facilille5 Sentic.t 1nd Repilrl and R.., ~and R•Pllrs ~
Tustin & Mt•• Drive ~10NTII of July, $.lffi. mlall Laguna Bf'ach. 4!H-9-lfi6 ii);;;;;;673-;;;'i1;7~0l;ifo~',;,;,~1oi;.;c;/[;·~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;·;iiiii;[ * S4S-48SS * 3 BR, 2 ba house, furn, encl "o"ESK""',.....,-,.-o<--•"v.u=a7b"f•-;130'°'-Unwented Pregna ncy
yard, pets OK. 2 car gar., mo. Will provide furniture COUNSELING. Birth Control, Babysitting Furniture Moving
\Valk to beach, Cd ?tt. al S5 mo. Answering service I--'----"-------,-..,----..,---
644-8l9l available. 305 No. El VD. Vaseetomy inlo. PlaJ\. COSTA MESA Furniture Stripping 2 Ambitious college studf'ntll
VILLA MARSEILLES Rentels to Sh•r• 430 Camino Real , San flf'd Parenthood, 5J8..9679. PRE.SCHOOL :ip('eial kil<'hen cab. doors ha\-e truck, do haulina: mov-
BRANO NEW Clemente. 492-4420 18th &. ?.lonn:ivla, 'ii day + stl1pped $3 ea. A\·g chall"'5 ing. Exp. depend. Call Ior
SPACIOUS I N D E P E N D E N T ----------I • Jal full day sessions Pl&nned $.lea. Gluing. 642•3445. !l't'e esl. 833-667:1
RESPONSIBLE y<Jung DESK space avallable $50 1 lost ind F~ program, hot lunChes. Ages Painting &
l & 2 Bdrm. Apts. ...,"Oman ~·ill share spacious mo. \Vill pro11ide furniture ~;;;;;;~~;;~~~· ~;.! 2~ l 6 30 AM 6 00 PM Gardening p h I Adult Living al $.J n10. Ans"·erlng service • in : -: 1 · aper ang ng La"una apt \\'/ same. 118 wk COMPARE• "·'~ •n""' 1--,'."'.":,-::,-,.,.-,:"0'."'°':--Fu'n. & Unfurn. • av"ilabf•. 17~ Beach Blvd. . ' ...... ....,.,., AL'S GARDENING
S•nt1 Ana
DAILY '!LOT 23
I ~·~·om J[Il] I -l@
'lelp Wenl1d, M & F 710 H1lp W1ntod, M & , 7101
AIDES. Exper. re q 'd , COOKlhskpr or houseman
Baptist ConvaJeSCl"nl Ho.p, -n•llh IO<'t.I rt!'1. ~·d. amlt.
661 CPnter St., C.L\1. lt'lust drive Unrler M. 2
ATTRACTIVE girl. model adlt_s. Liv~ in. N.8. It Pa.Im
bikinis & lingerie, 3 or 4 hr Spring~ hon1es. \V r I tlle
4 \\'ttk (tin10 flexible). ~ass1flf'd ad No. 144, Oa Y
Strlrt)y privatt, no t:xp, P ilot, P.O. BllK 1560, Co!lal
tf'nihc PA,}'. l'\leM. Calif. 92626.
\\'rile Clas~Uierl Ad No. 89 COOK, b r o i I e r or saule. 1
Daily Pilot P.O. Bmc 1560 ~ Chef a1 Ben Brown's,1
Costa MeM , Calif. 92626 31 1~ s. Coast, S. Laguna I
ASST. ?>!AN AGER. Learn DENTAL Secy /Recept,
dn~g business w/local f1m1. E."l(periencc ner. Ca 11
Some retail e:1:per. helplul. 546-5613 bet 9-.'i Plt1
No Sunday&. Great oppor. lo·l----~...,----:
l•ke ov". $500. Call Jeon * DRIVERS *
Brown, 54G-605.i N E • COASTAL AGENCY 0 xpenenc:e
2790 Harbor m al Adam~ Necessary!
AS.~E;\1BLER Illus! ha11e cle1n C8lil. driv.
TRAINEES lng record. Not unde:r 25.
fmmKhate Opcnin&"S YELLOW CAB CO.
Good Pay Call Now 186 E. 16th St., C.M.
9(\:'>1-9P;>.! Sat 9A:'>l-6Pl\1
O.C. Empl0yn1f'nt Agtncy DRAPERY l'IIFG. lmmed.1
124 Broad,1ay Costa Mesa OpE'll, !or trnes & f'xp.
&1~3111 &15-~1J2 6-15-3113 Brach Drapery Serv, 900 W. 497-1228 aft 7 P~1 & \Vknds. " ""' d ) SSO "'""237 No \Va1n1n1;t Dish-n·asher _color coordina.t-Huntington &a.ch. &12-4321 Found (free a s or o.><>-J • (or gardening & smal I
ed applii.nces -plush shag BACHELOR salesman. age Sr-.tALL front cfl!ce, near VACATION n1other will cal'e landscaping servi«s, call *Wh"::~~pc~~!t ASSEMBLERS for camp<'r
carpet • choice ot 2 color 43, straight. will share nt'W C 1 N 8 $50/ LIGHT bro"'" dog, 1~)'' hll!:h for your children \\'hili: you 5-W-5198. Serving Newport, M8-J+l4 &16-lTll factory. Apply r.Tajorway,
17th SI ., C.L\I. J
schemes. 2 bath!. stall 2 BR. 2 ba apt, new oasl 8
1
322"1··,· kd. 1 ;"~ "'/SOrneblackhaironback. vac81ion. i\111.turf' Cdl\f, O'lsla !'lfesa, Dover 869\V.lS!h,C .~I .
showers . ml1TOred "'ard· ~~~e, Sl!O mo each. Ca1!54-v.· ayal : l\;ii; clear co l orerlflea df'pendable, drive.~. Xlnt Sho~s. \Vestclitf. ACCOUSTIC CEILING ASSISTANT HELPER
robe donrs • Indirect light. ,'!~~~~~~::~~I ~AJ~>~f.~~~~~~~~~ I rollar. found Vic. Vallr.y & n.>fert>nce. Call aft 4 pn1. PROFESSIONAL. Pruning, Speci•ll1t. Also other Full or p/time for strreo FE!>1ALE roon1ma.te wanted v 1 · c M ~ • ., "~"" 548-4987 k · kl 1·n11r1·or p•1·n1lng I"" In kltchcn • bre•kla•I IC or1a, · · U'tV"""-JOD tree \\'Or , sprln ers, arra-• lirm 13 8:'1 hr Mia""' Call ... to share apt w/same. Park CH!lJJ • t · ,. d * 8 * · · · · •;J· bar • buge privati:: fenced I~ ca.re .n my 1ome. hon, pests, 1sease, v.•ce 847°412 t.fr. Capps 1714~ ~.
patio • plush landscaping • ~f:~~~~A~ ~~e~ ~~ Rentals ~ l\IED size dogs. 1 blk long In!ant to 4 yrs old. Have rontrol. Clean up jobs. PAPERHANGER, flock, foil, APARTl\fENT managrrs fflr
brick Bar-B-Q'g -larae beat. · haired and 1 v.•ht l\'ith br & 3 yr old d&U£"hler. Fenced T<'nns. Gl'Qrgr. 6-1&-5893 \•inyl, guar, estimates, TIM" nr1v 2:>-untt bldg. 1\1ature.
ed pools & lanai.
5
• 6#-
5282
· eve644-008
7
blk pa!ches. F"our>d vie Yard, large ~ome. ~all I AL'S Landscapint;. Tree Jl11.ngman. S.17-5846 \\'rite experlf'nC'f' &
3101 So. Bristol St. r.1ALE 30-40 yrs will share Busine11 Rent•I 445 r.Iesa Verde fravrllng 8~7o, hrs 7·30 10 6·00· l"C'moval. Yard ren1odelini;. Sch"·ar1z rrfrrcnces to Classified ad v.•/same 2 BR home 4 blks togt'thcr. ~i-3536 El Toro, ?-Usskln VlrJO ~ Trash bauling, lot cleanup. 115 D ] ! p O {~2 l'l1i. N. of So. Coast Plaza) from beacb S. Laguna. Sun FOR R•nl.· 2 Stores IOC': Btw LIC'D CHILD CARE . . 673-1"'"' PROFESSIONAi.. 30 yrg No. . a1 y Pi ot. . .
Santa An• FE:'>lALE German Shepherd HC'pa1r sprtnklers. I ...., l'XP. paperhan,;::ini;:: 1.:. pain-Box 1560, Costa ~1l'sa, Ca . PHONE: 557-8200 dt>cks and patio. 499--4J07 busy laundrymat &. bar. 1 pup. Black \\'/ bro11·n fC't'I. llaroor 1.:. Baker, C:'-.1. 5 yrs. Nl-~\V I awns, ro10-tillini;:, I.in!!, fron1 Englanrl. 963-7461 921U6
"'100\V \\'O\Jld like to share Slubbf'd in for Bar~r Shop. \\'ear1nJ!: llta collar & exp. Rtf.'i, S.15--29·t~ spr1nklen1 1ru;lalled, lrc<'s J.· APT CLEANING ~!!!!~~~~~~~~~I t~ I B auty Shop Ph You Supply The Paint. -·----house \\ith rouple past ;ict. <l r or e · me cl a I . r-.1 es a Nor I h BAB\"SITIING in my hon1r. 11hrubs removed. fl'('(' e~t R01Jnl'i paintC'd $10 l"a. Call Nf'w apts; Lile clPan-up
Rers. call after 7 p.m. 548-4673 or mspect at Shopping Cntr. 5'19-1173 fenC"C'd yard. ref's. Co~ta fi..l:>-3433 .. ,n ~,016, ,,, ... 1 .__ rK"•I !· fast. Call 1~ fi42-S28l Newport Blvd &: Santa -,,'PEmJ.;oa;;<;;;::;\;;;rr;;;;; I c'~"::;.:"~7-==:;;;;--;---·~ _,IJ Isa.bf'!, Cl\1 Bl.ACK cat, part Angora l\lesa af'C'a. 612-038-1 F:XPER Japanese-American G a.fl, 6 pm. 557-6180
\11/4 -n·hitc Ire!. \\'hitf' on BROOKJ1URSr & Atlanta· )!;ardencr, con1pltte ~ardf'n-* PAINTIN * .
J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;:I :Off~~k=•~R~e~n~l~a~l;;\"U;:'.44~0 SUITES Available: 1761 2 rhl'sl. 1lea rollar. Vic. J.Trsa Fenc'Cd yard, t.nend~ loy~. ing service le cleanup. Hi Quality. Reas. Prices. B~~~;1~I~. ~~ :~~-e~t
II Beach Blvd, H.B. Parking: Vf'rde on San1ar Dr · lunches. Reis. 968-68.19 _.8~9~>--0:0:150:':::-;;:::::;-::;;::;:::;;;:-J pF;\"ii''1'i"~'i(· ;:-,o;;;<o.rn,';;"~·-08&li\ii Room1 400 Prestige Office Air cond: Heat in I : 557..._'U89 -Garde~r. Yard clean-up. PAINT(NG. professJOnal . All J1',_'"1~,,,J,une; 0 "'" trans. -==---,..,-"0'.--1 ··oN THE BAY" Carpeting: Janitorial serv. k c 1 " ~
c 8 ·" fOUNO·. s1·,mc•• k;lt•n in Builders Planling. Sprinklers. w 0 r g u a r n · 0 0 r I c'-'-:-:-:-:c::-c::-::::-c::cc;:cc-:: WEEKLY-l\1onlhly: Share At Lido Yacht Anchorage Inquire Suite or c..... -. E .d "'° ""' speriallst. 962.fil 4:t. 5-17-1·1-ll e BLUE DOLPHIN e twin or rent s'l rm. 540-5724 Bushard Century Shores . xp . """'""""""
employed males. 642-4185 3 Room Suite M I tract. 962-1738 VER y. NO Job Too Small! Brick, EXPER. Ha\\·aiian Garderl('r PAINTING/paper111i. 18 yn; \V11.i!resses, exp'd, ovr 2J
Electronics
Assemblers
Experienced in pr ..
cislon essembly of
d e I I c • t e Instru-
ments, small com•
pon•nt work solder·
ing, color c o d • 1
and blueprint read•
ing. NASA sold•r·
ing cer t ificate d ..
sirable.
-APPLY IN PERSON -
3333 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA J\.1F.SA. CALtr.
eves & "'kends · Ground tlaur-688 sq ft llc SQ. FT. • VER y UN HA pp y block, concrete. carpen!1'Y, Comp!e!e Gardenlni:: S<'r· in 1-larbor area. Lie & Apply 3355 Via Liso, N.B. Air cond Cpts, Drps 2500 ft, all or parL Monrovia add a rm, hou~ levthn"', bo"ded "·t'• t··-"'2-2m I --"~--------I · K.TTIEN: ~ "' vicf'. Kamalani, 6-16-1676 · n.c: ...... "" ~-Bookke CLOSE to acc.
female onl}.
&12-8520
furn uhl, l
S :l5/ nio. E-Z Parking, Util paid at \V. 16th. Costa :\1e~a . Call =="'""cc:-cc--:;::c:-:::;;;:-.:;:::I gi:r. door repai~. Free est. f'OR clean &: nrat pa!ntini::-. eper ATLANTIC
RESEARCH S<llO per month Jean Jurich. 612-9-17[) \\'HITE male dog \\'ith blue \\"oody, 962-6945. ' LA\\IN care & garden \VOl'k. Interior & exterior, Call CREDIT CLERK
Available t.lay 1st SHOWROOi\l, mfg. &. oJfice <'Y"~-Nr. Brookhurst &I--~-------Light hauling. Ex P 'd · k 9AA-406S fo'OR LOCAL DEPT. STORE 2 BLKS from H.B. pier, ideal
for student, furn. Incl util.
S6~/n10. I adul1 &12-8520
717 LIDO PARK DRIVE C · La Garl1cld, J·LB. 646-6959 alter Carpet Service Rea50nable. Call 543-9735. Die · · space. Pnrkin,i:. lose-in · • p A IN TING/pAJ)l"ring. JR
Neon•port Beach 673-1060 guna. $85-$395 Mo . .Jfl.l-4653 ~ wkdys. . Diamnnd Carpet Cle~g CL~AN Up Specialist, haul· Yrs. in Harbor area . Lie &
1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM Industrial Rental 450 FOUND Pair of Shel!i~s Ill Avg size room $8 ing, °?d Rjobs, ""~;~.f!nce hl'lnrlrd. Rf'f~ furn . 642_23J6. $15 PER "·k up \V/ kit. $2j (-'rom 300 sq/ft. 3X sq ft. flt.Ire blk . (}) Blk·\Vhite & Rf'pairing & inslallalion~ & repair. eas. J"'lo-<>;r;),)
"·epk up. apts. ,. 675-2464 or 541-5032 * COSTA MESA * hrown \'II.'. Flam1ngo & Free Est. 645,1317 • Harbor Lawn 11-!ainl. • QUALITY WORK.· Rcason-
i\IOTEL. "* :..is-975.i 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB $95 & $167 Per mo., lmmed t.lallarrl Dr, 01. 546-0270 S rinklf'rs landscaping. f'ref' ah[<'. Lic~'d. Local Tf>fs.
COLLEGE or \\'Orking g1r1.1 *ON TIIE BAY* occupancy. 110-220 power. FOUND 4115171 gold Cerpenter ~~st . 67~5 l-"ree est. 54&-t7j9, 64.l-~-Al
Balboa ~sl , shr kil & 'J;1 rm. I 6Ta-241H or 541-5032 R. Nattress, Ag!. 6-12-1485 quilled brocad"' sofa back CARPENTRY .JOHNSON'S GARDENIN('; PAINTING/papering. lR yrs
tele. $6;,/mo up. 6Ta-30l3. •BEAUTIFUL Private SOO SQ. FT. BLDG. cushion on California St. ~nNOR REPAIRS. No Job Yard cat'f', clean-ups, plan-:nd~r~rt' a~ra. ~~23.~
F:xperiencr pN'fen't"d but
not necessary, "'ill rrain.
5 day week, l.'O. hef)('fil.~.
Chal!eng1ng po:11 rion ·op--
portunily for advance·
nicnt.
APPLY JN PERSON
TO :\1RS. THO:O.IPSON
Systems Divisions I
I
A DivL.S1on of
Su11quchanna Corporation
NICE room for "'orking man Office on Balboa Island, East 17th SL, Costa l\lesa C.t.1. 549-4398 Too Small Cabinet In gar-ling, sprinklers. 962-alli. · *" 9 urn.
I\'/ or \~·lo cook·g privil. St25/mo. 67:>-2335 220 Electrical Pov.er FOUND: !ZGermanShepherd ages & other cabinets, I...A\VN Maint. Hauling, new INT & El<ter. P1 lnling. ENBALMER
&side, Ci\ol. &12-0326 DLX. 2 rm. olfice. Best deal SllO r-.lonlh 675-6700 Broker <~l pups. malr & female. 545-8175 if no an..sv.•er le1ve la11·ns, clean-up. prunin£. Lic'd, ins. !-'?'Cf' f'~1. 30 Yl'I £Personnel OJflce) APPRENTICE. Youni man,
W.T. Grant Co.
FURN · pn· horn• O C "-t 280 <~2312 H o r 1 Call "" 7379 exper. Chuck. fi.15-0800 9!tl.J Adam• Ave., Grant hi·schJ grad, good ref's, no room Ill v. · in . · ........ i"'r area INDUSTRIAL Bldg for lease Vic: Cdl\1. 67J...1 . msg. at ... ,..... · . . tee es . ~ , •
M k"t h 'J 833 2840 NGER Plaza at Brookhun;t le Adams exper. nece.u . ....,ad to mor. Costa !"AA; 1 c · pnvi SJJ.3223 · -2500 sq ft. Call 645-4930: Embroidertd, small purse Ande.rson. C 0 r-.1 PL ET E la-nn & * PAPE RHA * tuary carrer. $.100 per mo.
plug.-Nr. OCC. S49-l06l * NEWPORT BEACH Civic Eves ilG-4041 "'/retainer. 4/16 Bal Isl.. Cement, Concr•t• gardening service. Rea.sonable. 646-2149 Huntington Beach + apt & paid uUl'a. f«.
Guest Home 415 Center on Npt Blvd. 310 sq. ~R~.-n~t-a71s-;-W;;-a-n~te~d.,--~4°'6G~ Chureh parking lot. 67J.-09,j(} •• CONCRETE. Floor
5
, Jim 548--0405 Pl.a1tfl r, Patch, Rep.air Equal opportunity employf'r AJ50 f'ee/F~ Jobs
f:. 675--1601 or fl) 286-7144. --=-:--:--:--:---:-: L I SSS Cut&EdgeJ..a"·n CAREER OPPORTUNITY IRVJNE PERSONNEL The Gallemore gurst home. AIRLINE ptlo! fam1ly of 4 OS patio!i, dri~'f'll, 11id\\·alk11, ,, 1,,·,1en•"-. uc·d, l"'ur•d * PATCll PLASTERING , r 1360 s FT -OUice or store. ~.,.~ " '""" SERVICES & AGENCY private rni ava... 0 r Rcasonablr. Costa l>fesa. need house to lt'ASC for 2 yrs 3 1\-IO old puppy, female, "labs. Reas. Don .... -:>~ 5-18--1808 aft 4. All lyfl<'~-F're~ estimate.!! LRn:e expand!nr eo. needs 12 ~~b,u;:,1ory guest 642-9862. Mr. Po"" ~•::....2320 starling June lst. \Vilh or p!-Germsn shepht'rd, pt CEMENT \.li'ORK, no job 100 1 J7A=P7A~N~E~s~c.,--c~,7r7d~,c-:-,7,.::-::g ll ~==C~•-"_,"~'--68.,-,-25.,-""""_I gals for n1erchandising. Full 488 E. 17th (a1 lrvine l C.flol.
.,,.,.... "" ,..... .......... "tho t rnn to buy II bl F '· o• p/time. $3.TJ hr SaJa1"'. 642-1470 \~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~;~•I"'' u opi · hu~ky, approx J' !all 11·/red smR, rear;ona fl. rl'e Srn·ice.Neaton'ork.Clea.nup PLASTER -Patch-Rm .1 ~~~;..!'~~~~~~',[i~=~::::::::===z:[ Reliable &· ex1rrmf'ly clf'an collar. no lags, vi r: , E$lim. H. Stull !ck, 545-861 .'i. d . 1 ~,2,"3 Adds. New \\'Ork. Fi-ee Call Mr. Bro1vn 5'1&--69i'i ----
1 ~ Crl:\1 or N1•1p1 B!"h. Call Y . main . =o-"" I I~ &nirtments for Rent • Ball -Port Liquor s I 0 r" • QUALITY cement \\'Jrk. le! csUn1atrs. ~:l-4~ afl 5 C1\RPET cleantr, responsl-ENG. SALES ~rtmenU fof"Rent . . ,... . 1 ~'~'3-6fl~71~9,--"7CC7CC7'-;,·= I Plea sf' call 673-7844 George rlo 11. L l c · d., Gener II Services Pl bi hll' man 11'/exPf'l'H?nce in I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;. •••••• GO I NG AW A Y 1-0 R LOST puppy, Blk. "' h ! Bonded. &1;..159,=, w ANTED: Bookkr'cping, _u_m __ n_g----.,.,--carix:t cleaning, .window EARN $20,000
\1 s.u M r.1 ER'?' ~espon5ib!r, breast. br"'n lee1, cockapoo. PATIOS, walks, drives, in-a cco unts pay ab Ir, LE\V Takas & Sori"s Plunt· '1'ashing & !Joor wa_.:iuni. SaJ. YOUR FIRST YEAR
Apts,. single teacher \\Ill car: for Re"'ard. p 1 "a Ii c call stall new la\\·ns, sa"'· break, rC're1vf'abl<>, payroll. \VJJI b1n_t: R<'pa 1r Re pl pt-ary open. 549-242a Jf you desire a job w/hia;h Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn.
Huntington Beach
370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 hou~r &. pe\g. 675-3085 or :>-18-2173, :>-18-1422 remove. 544fi68 for e111. pirk up & del. Telt'phone, R<'morlrl Free Es!hnates C:HILD Care, room & boai·rl. earnings, prestige, &. you're
54Q.-3828 l\lALE Irish Setter 4/9 Ncwp\ CUSTOl\I CONCRETE 540-7097. 646-83.iO 111 bf'ach home for cart of 2 oo\ afraid lo work han:f we
Huntington Be•ch 3 or 4 BR house by June Ht11. Tatoo-righl ear 642-3233 PATIO.DRIVES-ETC. * LAB OR UNLTi\1ITED * -~P7L7U~;~IB~f7N~G,--RE=:P~A~IR~-children, ages 5 & 7. can rut you into a verY re-
Jj,th, 1 yr lt'85l', S27~ per C.M. Fn>e rs!. 5."11-7968, 67;,.!">,i\6 HANDYMAN No job too small 61.J-8319. warding &. rich future.
mo Preler Ens.ign Jr. Hi f ;-n;;;o-;o;:;:;;:;::;;--;;;;;;;;-;;-;;;f,0.-.:'--"-,...C:C:....:....:.... ___ \Veldlng -Carpentry 673-1922 • 642-3128 • are a . Ca I l co 11 e ct, LOST Doberman male. tap!' Contractor Relresblng •••
Parklike beach living for adults
Casa del Sol
9/10 of" mile flom the beach 1s
· Aecreat1on City .. with 2 swimming
pools. putl•ng gr•en, gym, volleyball
court, 1;aun 1, bllli1rd room. club-
house . One or two bedrooms. fur-
nished and unfurni1hed, private
patio, fireplace In two bedroom,
elevators, diehwasher1, c1rpets
and dr1pe1, no le1sl, 1dult1 only, all
utllltie• except lights paid, pets
accepted. From $1'45.
21MI Brookl'lurat St.
Huntington Beach,
(714) H'2.·e653
Mk for
Commencler Rettlng
on jJI r:ar. Vic: Npt Btach.1-------,....--llusband Busy? Call i\1oose Roofing 2131s.12-23!H Rf'v.·ard! 4~232, 645-3378 WATERPRF vinyl de ck 545--0820 alter &-Repair
\VANTED: 1 br apt. in good 1 ~~~~~~~~~~1 coating~. all fl'Pf'll. Lfoe Bullrl-Seiv Most Things LEE Roofini;: C.o. Roofing or
are a , Co it. I a r-.t f's a · Roofing Co., C:\L 642-7222 1111 types. Recover, repa1n.
Rca90nable. C11!1 6~:>-1724 II J• j frtt est. Hauling rher-mo rool roa!inl{~. 111!111e
Instruction RASH & G cl ~-crilc•r. Lic/bon<led s1nei! ROO~t Additions. L . T. T araic ean-up, 1~1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 Consln1ct1on Single sll"'lry or 1 days. SIO a load. Free "17. 6-12-7222
2. Estlm., plans & layout. HI. Anytime. 548-5031 T Guy floo flng, Deal D1rP<'I. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ Schools & &-17-1511 YARD, Gara'\'.e. cleanup~. I rlo my own v.·ork. &15-2780,
in1truction1 575 :\lY \\'a.v. quality homl" Remove tr re 11, dirl, ;~1&-~ri!1t.
Person•l1 530 [ !!ijipi!ij~!;jiiijiijP,ijj[ rt"pa ir. \Vall~. 1..-cilini), floors skiploader hackhoe. 962-8745 Sewing/ Alter•tions
------..,--,c-c IT'S YOUR MOYE r!c. No jnb 100 snia.I.) l'\IOVrNG, Garage clean -up -=,,.-==---,.,-EXP. wurld 1nn·eler lady 547-0036. 24 hr 11ns serv. &. Ille hauling. Reasonable. ALTf;RATIONS, restyl1n~.
rle1if'f's JICISHion ll~ tr11vrllng R00~1 ADDITION }'rec. eslimatel!. 645-1602 F.xperl filler. Top rrr's.
companion to other woman. INDUSTRY CAREERS OUR SPECIALTY N.B. aN"a. &16-2704. Cltll
Rc>fcn.>nces. \Vrite Clusitic>rl Strph<"n~ Con~t. Co. 673-fi6 22 Housecleaning Rulh c1111
Ad No. l~. Daily Pi!nt, AIRLINE & TRAVEL Llc'd Contr. Remodel1ni:; B11y & Beach Janitorial EUROPEAN Dressmaking
P.O. Box l:i60, Cosla r.tesa, Crp", 1Y!ndow5, floors etc. Exp,.Uy Custorr Fitted. C l·r 928"" Additions, Ph1.n~. Lityout a 1 · • w 11 .... 1'17 Re•. & Comm'l. 646-1401 Ac<'u r. Rra~. 673-1849 0 R TIONS AGENT l\:arl E. Kenda '" .,,
SINGLE? WIDOWED? e PE A ' ~,,.. Clean!n" Servi~ All•••l·ions -642-5845 0 e TICKET SALES Add1!1ons * ~mocleling " "" e * Divorced ver 21 * • Rl'..'SERVAT!ONS C'r<"rwick "'-Son , Li<'. CarpPts, \\'indow~. fo~loors etc. Nell!, accurate, 20 years ('XP.
Olrlei;t & l1r~cs1. For ! fi<'H l • AIR FREIGHT-CARGO S7J-EiCHl "* ~9_2170 I !R~c~•l~d~. ~·~C~o~m~m;c~·~1.~.>~18~-<~l~t~t-I :Tn;~l.;---------
rxplanatory meS1aie .4 hrs • C0~1~1UNICAT10NS 1~.-.,..-~. -.------1-By Day.
11 dn:J. 541-99!1! e TRAVEL AGENT 1_E_l_•_c_tr_•_<_•_I __ .._,,---, 0.\'11 Transportation. CF:RAr-.llC tlto new &.
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Airline Schools Pacific E !, E CTRICIAN, licen.srd . ~0648 rt"model. Free l"&I. Small
Phone 542-7217 or 11Ttte to 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana bond e rt . Small jobs, """·E~.E~K~:L~Y;;-il~to~,7.,c-::,~1,~,~n;:,~,~,:n 1
1
=;_ob_,_'~'~'l_oo_m7•_._SJ&. __ ,_<'.16_. _
P.O. Box 1223, Costa i\1es11.. I S43-6596 ma1nlt'naocr k. r r p 11 rs . Orange County ,\rea. CaU Tree Ser v ice
Wl"'ll helv you sell! 6t2-5678 ~>48-:i203 64: 0138 ; 642·l800 1 ~-:0-::-::-:,-,--::--::-!l-'"'-;:N,_O~W='"S-;;T;;H-;-E;;--c====-.,.o:=or-ITREES, Hedges, Top, Tr1n1,
* DEDICATED CLEANING cul, removed, hauled. Ins. TIME FOR \\'e do everything. fN!e &12-4030 Big John
Apts.,
370 Furn. or Unfurn.
Apt1.,
Furn. or Unfurn. J70 * * * * * Sant• An•
-* r.•rif't .. t ,,, Gii
I• .. irt!lo"f -...
Sant• An•
ti'/ OtltJtlf ..,.a, "Lin"'°..,.,...
lly Womrrfy .., ••
"Thft't _,,,.. ..... tt
...... --"" ·~......., . ....,_ -........ ----.... ,_•iw.t·l-,_ ....... _... • .__i-
1911"1.CMD ..... , K :Jesi c.ft1t
.. ~,,..~flllg# .. nM~
Trad~r·s Paradise
Tro).an 23' Callin Cruiser, in
v.·111 1~r N.8 , Trade tor l1tr
modf'I station v.•agon. \Vr1te
Classifif'd ad •:U. Daily
Pllo1, P.O. Box l;itio Co~tll.
1\lesa, Calif. 9262'6
Sw1p equity JO or 20 acres,
bl"au!, at:cluded Rancho Cal-
ifornia, ror ~tock, older
•Pta beach house, etc.
&42-!1.iO:l
'70 2-IX60 clrluxe mobile:
home, 2 BR. wet bar, brkfst
b11r, bltns. £,()' t•rp!'tj ri-rkl,
MuM llC't TO beli'°Vf', f'OR!
hOUM! or 1 !? 536-24~1.
* * *
lines
times
dollars
UP to 40 11rrr.~ w/Grothrr·
1nal po1rntJal In ImpPr1al
Valley for boa!.~. tncoml"
prop or ~ of equal valut.
,\11 . Kwan, 1714) 544.8073
ll:tvr: 4 $3000 b:t TD'11 & 2
va.canr IOIA, total tCJ $20,000.
\VANT: Hu, duplex, trl•
plex. car, molOr home or
?? ? Myers 673-6756.
Havr golf rou~ fair1>'8y
Jots. Goldtn llllls C.C., Tr-
h11thap1 Trd eq for heh
0011.., old<'r ar:1~. diamond,
or stOck. 612-951»
* * *
e1tima!e. Call 673-4077
(j)UICK CASH Jan1tod al
THROUGH A ~~~~~~ DAILY PILOT SPARJ<LE J•ttilo,;!tl, W'"-
do"'~. nooni. crpt~ &: constr J[Il]
WANT AD cleanup. Caq>et 11hampooing. '--'-""'°'--"""-'-~ i I A complete comm'I gerv. _ . f 642-5678 F(lr Fr.e est, call, 96Ul672.
II you don'l use It;
•ell It 1clth
a cru .. lfled
mJ.
it's easyl
Phono 642•5678
-~---------
Job W•nted,. Fem•le 702
GENERAL Off!ce. r 8 st
accurate typifli. 10 yrs
varied experience, adap!-
1hlr. Good appearanrl".
Pltl!.~ call 11fler J Pro.I
5'18·59!"'8.
j AIOF.S For conv1le~n<'r, 1 rlderly cAre or l1mlly care.
Homemake"', 5~7~1
Help Wanted, M .\ F 710
ADVERTISING A R T I S T
Production M1nqtr for 001
Ne\\'l'°rt 84!1ch a 11 t n c y .
Mu1t h:ive rood b o 11 rd
1kill1. Know prtntlnr.
produclion and 11Cht<lulln1t.
Xlnt opportunlry, DURf:I,
ADVERTISING, 2172
Dupont Dr .. N,B. &~1670.
BUSU:Sl' ma.rkelplace In
town. The DAILY Ptl.OT
ClwlnM Mcilon. s a v •
morlt'y, time a: •ffort by
11.rmrhalr.
----~---·
Clerical
PROPF.RIT T A.X
-TECHNICIAN -
l'olaJor Ne-n·port BP1ch
firm is &ttking an indi·
vlflua.J 1\00 rnjoys de.la.ii
"ork, 10 N'VJr'I\'. analy~<'
Rrul maintain a!J r<'cordi>
11nd informa!ion rcla!f'rl
1f'I proprrty 1 axc.~. Lile
1ypin1t requirrd. l{nowl-
<'rl.C:e of accountin.c: or
n•11! t-state transact1onf;
cltsirablr. Xln1. IYorking
Mndltions and co. bcnc-
11111.
Plrasr c11l
CLERK
Lun,~r exper. Estimator.
F:x!tnding 1n\·01ces, JO key
add1n,e, calculatnr.
.. Immediate limited
opening * C.adillac car pl111n * Inrcnr1ve plan for
H11wa!tan vacation
• Lil:leral fringe b!!neJ11t
Your compensation In
rommi~s1on & srrvi~ Jees
may ~ $20.000-flOO,OOO Pf'r
yc11r a~ an as.~iate ol
financial lycoon. common.
ity le ad f' r, profrs1ion1l
~ale~man, David B. Look·
ingland, famous California
R.E. Broker.
'* P!tAll" CBJI *
547-6771
Ask !(lr l'\1r. Alhf'rt
LUMBER SLSM Eng. Sic.
E.'fprr. SAiary +. S/H 90, typ ing 60, ens. np.
MISS EXEC AGENCY noquirrrl. Call Loraine,
-110 \\'. C.Out Hwy., MJ \Vestcllfl Ptr:q)nnel Agency,
646-3939 2013 \Ves!cliff Dr., N.B
-. DESIGNER •
Pro~reaslve Oran~ Coun-
ty manufacturer ha.• an
Immediate opening for a
desla:ner, experienced in
the "dr1ign and building
of 1pech1.l purpose mfg./
ai;sembly equipmem a.nd
medical instrumenU:.
Appl!eant must be able
to \\'Ork a11 pArt of a tearn
with enfineers and too!.
11\i' people, to carry a
dt~!gn t h r u \\\Irking
rlr11"·in1.., lfl C'Ompleted
operaung unit$.
A minimum of thrtt
yelll'I f!:it'pl"rience in rhr
rlrRlgn ol mechAnicaJ ap-
paratus Is euen!IA.J,
t.:Xctllent arowth oppor·
!unity a.nd Jrin1e bene-
fit!.
Mi ll resume with b•ck·
ground, qua llflc.atlons,
experience a nd s•l1ry
h istory to •
6-15-2770
ESCROW
OFFICER
Please call Shirley Wiilard 11.I
TARBELL 842-5571 * EXEC. SECnETARY
New 0Uice1 • Airport U>c .
Good opportunity for &le.rt
~crPtary, tn \\'Jrk in fast
pnet'd N.8 . at1vertI111 n g
agency. All 1k!ll1 locluclln&:
~hor1ht1nrl l"f'q'd. R.1.'.-1670
• DUREL ADVERTISING
2172 D\lponl Dr.ISuitr 4
Nr"'JIOr! Be1ch, Cal i!,
t::XPERIENCEO In ules?
G~at opportunity lo r
comm1ss1on aa.lesmen lmen
.ir. \W!men l. This ls a
prof cuional opportunity
offering a lifetime
prl!1t iaiou1 voatlon .
Complere tralnlnr pro.:ran1,
stock bonus, stock optton
progr!lmS, paid nMpllAllm-
tlon. \\'e f'xpec:t ()Ur 1.tle11-
men lo f'l!.rn over $20.000,
v.·tth oo re!Una on f'ainlnp.
C1A~~l rltt1 Ait •146, Oa1\y Ca.ii ~n•' &.12-7790 for •
Pllo1, P.O. Box 1560, Co~la ronfldt'nl\.81 lnrrn!ew.
!\1t 8l, Calif. 9202&, The l1ste~t draw in I.he Wl"sl
F:r11111r "Pf"lfl11n11y ~mr11'1~
, a Ditlly PUol Qasslf'led
Art 1142-~167.~
' ' '
24 DAILY PllOT Twtdq, April 20, 1971
l[ll] I l[ll]I L-_ ..... _ .... __,l[ll] ~I ~· .. ~·-~ll~~l~I _ ... _ .... _ ..... ;;!l~~l ;.I ;;·~~--~1~~1~1 ...... ~"~· .... l~[l I --..=... I i~ ,__[ _ ....... _-__.![fl] I li14*111•lt
BHts, Power Htlp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonlod, MA F 710 _H_•.:.lp;W:;a';;n;:;led-;;"'"';;M;;:;&;F-71_11:Ml::::,..:::;ll::•;::-::°'::!"'!--!"!.:I: I ::;P.:_:l•::;no:;:•~/~0'..'.'!;1'~":!' _ _:12:='1 Kl1TEN 6 wks old I bloe. 3
STENO SEC'Y mixed .,., _,, trlmlly
CXP Srmb Sta bd JEWELRYsknaal~/Kel')', MECHANIC w/p>d exp. to PROP'ESSlONAL phone M bo ,, bl e CARPET • Factory Authorized raised with small ,-'--• p, 'd Purehuina f'!eeo t manap aervlce s ta t Io n . iOlicilor • .D&.na Potnt. San Ult '""'Pfl • Diltrlbutor lor _..
f/llmt. Apply In pn1100, exp · ' · ra • Must turn. good refs. Good Oemeole, Ca,pillral'IO atta. Exper. de1irablt in eon. Yamaha * Kimball Newport ~-642-:3354 -1/20
Help WatMd. M & I' 711 Help Wanted, M A F 711
'S9 LUHRS 33': F\ybridp.
TW IS, Pl• FW cooled,
trim tabs, SIS, '"'irn 1tep,
bait tank, aim C1'11ta, pru
water, mlfkor, P"'T winch + More. Sacrifice $18,500 .
Ph: 5'i.-U74.
2<116 Harllor, C.M. &M.ffi88 ~~t e:pe:i~~P, Udo. P'Y A: workVw: cond. See Work in ~ own home:. atructlon Wot ad~rtlliijl. Spring $~19 Sptc11I Conn * Thomu PERSIAN cat, f e ma I e'
FATHER I:. 12 year old IOl'I /.1r. Beatty, 393 E .. 17th St. &Mt dtal in uea. Phone Hvy work load. Contact P.O. OUTSTANDING Kohler&: Campbell "K.C." 7 mo old, nttds a
nttd live-hi hous!:keeper KITCHEN man -Over 21, pl MED. TRANSCRIBER 83S-l46S betflffn 9:00 a.m. Box 8S5, Colt& Meaa. VALUES Fabulous 11tlection ol new I: home. Lovei ch II dre l'l.
.,. I 0 w n t r a n 11;porf11lon. lime, wknds. S tu d e n l Fine local ~p. Gttat v.'Ork· 1..:•~od::...:noao;:;;~·------./ SUPERVISORS needed for ! used &'rt.Fida, a:plne!s, oon. SU-4362 413:1
Under 40, •-tll-educatM, PJ't'ferrttl. ?-Iust be v.'illinG Ing conds. Fine spot for &irl * RECEPT ION 1 ST to California llrm. WW train. OVER. 40 COLORS tole1 &: or&ana only at BOAT &: Newport n100rina. •ctl~ ta th.art a 12 yr old to ~wk. Golden Bear, w/t10n\f' rxp. Fut raise&. amwer telephone It.
1
.,-..
1
t 497_1379 3-6 pni. to choo .. froml COAST MUSIC BEAtrr. fem Collie Seize It. Lgr-, fast 17' fbrgl1 fish &
bQy's wor1¢. 644-1179 536-9102 &ft 2 p.m. Wed or From $500. vl!llort. Prefer at 1' n e NEWPORT &. HARBOR white, •payed. Loving & lki boat. 100 hp O/B. l·r-1~8-E-R_G_L_A_S_S ____ I cTh:.::.:"~"~·-------Call Sally Hart, ;;.~ experience. Temporary for 3 TELE PHONE advertising cat! For Costa Mesa * 642-2851 genUe. Needs &:d. home. bunks, bait tank. trlr, CQllVt
\VOR.KERS-No experience * LAB ASSISTANT * COASTAL AGENCY mon1hs. trom cur p\eaaant Newport 1'~REE ESTIMATES e 300 Piano&#. Organa 6.18-8762 413:1 top. $1850. ~.
nee<led. t l.'Q-$3.5!1 per hour IO ,11ork In Rubber Develop-2790 Harbor Bi at Adams RAU.~:. =ia~s.nsf ~~~,·~ .. Hr01_lY 0 .. ,w•,•h~··-· in your home NEW-USED. r.oin,a out for BEAtrr. b.lk m&nx ca• come 46' Chris double cabin flyd1~g
dependina (ltl experience. men1 Laboratory.~: 2 yrs M E RC HAND IS 1 NG & 136 R::he1ter St, CM. ... • . ..,, bU1lneS1. Rental& PO a mo. 645--0137 835-8242 .. 4/20 bridge, twin Chryalcr, ra io '
Apply at 837 w. 18th St. cl coU~e· Hnct mathl. X!nt Sales..-EX"p'd man ,11/refs. Call ;;4S..7T23. '45--3000 33, MR. MADRID. 842-9143 Steinway, Baldwin & Kawai & look' w/out oblip.tiotl tr-lephone, auto pilo1, Xh'M ·
C.M. opponunity with crowing Creative, c:lll'l!'er mintled. In \VAITERS: Pvt count?)' c:lub Chickerif!&, Yamaha, etc. &15-0137 ~ 4j211 liw abJard, $18,500. 833--02'20 '
.,1 firm. For interview appt, exciting new shoe shop. SAIL MAKER · Exp·d layout in San Diego Co. req's J * AUCTION * F1ELD'S PIANO CO. ' ask for Mr. Allen. ('_ BERGLASS Molder-exp·d. "•II ·-11", M-. Go"2•1e·. rl I It'~ Ad N •-bench work. ""'"lor Made 'd . 12 "" .. _ Costa Mesa Garden Gr"OW p~ sUvtry gray & wht 1~ _, c<' I • •• ,,~.1 Ml-, ,_1, M..._ ... ..,, ..... ...., ... ~ \V te C a.u -'= o. UJ ... ....., ""P waiters. ,.., '" + F'·· Fumt•·-lo"••·•-• 1 nd ho ~· ~ " .,........... ... ......,. -o ' 0 -11 817 W 17th N 11 " ~-~ r ·~ ·-· (n4l 66-3250 (114) ~:mo ·~·~~ "'.·. ' . ""· '""·twin ··-w,
Corl~
I u 11 y
to eo. Apply In ""fSOn U Daily Pilot, P. .Box l56Cl, ~ s, o. , .,pa + nn & ........ u. or •-A ,,___ _.. Alao 11. abyssmla11 kit1eM. u""':'r-........
COAsrAL RECREATION. Layout&: Pa~le P Costa ,\fesa. Ca. 92626 C.'-f. appl phone Mr. Ramsey, tlo.,. .,...!:~~~"" HAMMOND Steinway SJ&-0<7' 4/20 ~u1pped, ready Employment avail. Costa 10:;::;,:;..:;:.::;c-=:,.;F::C.,= 9fi8...6m. Aue: ns ..-• ......,, 7:00 p.m. • • 543-2434 MO \V. 17th St, Ci\f. ~I e I a penny 9 av r r NEED lnjttt mold machint SAIL seamstress needed. w· d ' A ct' B Yamaha. New & used SAVE me from the pound, _:.::..:.c:c_ _______ , FiilE~fEN 0JmJlO!ling Dept. Pleasanl operators. ?.tail application Exper pref'd. Full ti~. * WAITRESS-EXP'O In Y 5 U IOn arn planoa of 1'DOl!!t makes. ~st Small blk 9 wh Spaniel, 29' SPORTSFfSHER. flyint •
$704-S8'99: High llChool grad surroundings. Sat "'' 0 r k P. 0 . Box 417, Stanton, Ca.. Ull man Sails. 644-8107 Not under 21. NO PHONE 20~ Newport, CM 54(1..8686 buys ln So. Calll at Schmidt male. Good watc:h dog. brid£e, dual controls, l/s
reqd. File application by in~"Olved. Call for lnlerwv c90080:;::::...--------I SALES EXEC. CA~. Apply in peraon, Behind, Tony's Bldg. ri.fat'l. Music Co., 1907 N. Ma.In, 49'l-3321 4./20 radio, twin bait l&nkl. Xlnt
Friday J',fay 7th, 5P!'.f, 1 c•~PP_,_t.c' _......, __ 11~·----NEWSPAPER auto route. Si¢&: Sirloin, 5930 W. COast 6' WOODEN camper shell, Sant& Ana. .....,,c-..,. 1 shape. $2500. Ph: MZ-4004 f r n.LL o a:ooc. homel--'--'--'-'------
Persoonel Dept, Room 511• LEGAL TRAINEE Early A:.f delivery <approx JR. EXECUTIVE Hwy., N.8. panelled, windows, vent. Sportin,. Goods l30 Cock:a?>O pYppies. Call 32' CLASSIC Crulsn. Sound
e City or Costa Mesa e 11 ~'ork at NeY.'port Center, 4-6A.i'1 ) 7 days a \\'etk. TRAINING PROGRAM * 'VA IT RESS-DINNER Ul. Also live 16" rims & -'---~·-------·I 5 4 5-966 1 ask I 0 r hull, xlnt ena:. Many Xtras. ·
Fair Dr. 1714) 8J-1.5J50. start $425 mo. Requires sec-Want responsible man, JlOUSE. Exp'd-foocl and tires w/~ 11 f e guard SCUBA Equip. n ~.i. tank, Templeton's 4/22 $4500-Will tradt'? For info
f'LORIST, Expcr deslgnrn; reiarial exper. Type 60 preferably over JO yrs. old, Now is the right time to cocktails. 5 day ~'k. SAM'S safety tubes, $50 er will Sc:ube. pro reg, carrier, wt PEKE-POO male black 2 ph: 543-3012 aft 6:30 wkdys •
wanted, Immed openings for WPM, Lite S.H. Attorney at Excellent part-time income. step up inlo a job that will SEAFOOD, 16278 Pacific trade Ior 1960 Chevy or suit, ~d gear, gloves, years old, good ~tch dog, 16' PLEAS1JRE'07boat, 40hp
full time & pt.time, perm Law, RoJand S. Barcume, ~3006 provide tremendo\15 sec:ur-llwy., Hunt Bch. nrwer good powerglide. mask hns. $150/all. Gary lovt>s children. 8414139 Evinrude. Elec. shift, conv. ·
positions. Great deal of 1 _644:.,c,·~00~2~3.C,.,-----~ OFFICE CLEANING II)' w/the growth potential WANTED : BALLET S46-6220att 5 p.m. Fetterman644-1212, pe. No. 4/22 top w/lrlr. $950. 96:2-0447.
·ar11&tic Ireedom allowed . LITE bookkreping, payroll, $2/hr, f.ton & Fri eves. Hrg to reach 1inancial indepen· Teacher Also MODELING WANTED 43.
Salary open, Yo II n g, typing. Female, exp er. Bch area only. Call 9·12 dence. Our company is now Te ache r, OR ANGE BAY CLUB M' Grtrk Glas1 Spocn knee Two female .dogs, part do'Xie, Boats, R•nt/Chart'r 908
progressive mngmnt at 54~ noon, 9624471. in ihe expansion st.ages, COUNTY ACADEMY of MEMBERSHIP board. Good cond. ~.00/ trues, Col 1 dog house etc. --"--"------1' · .-~ .~1 Itt to gd home Call962-4097 32' Twlnsc~w Chris, folly I growing auup. u•.,..,..~ t.IATLiRE OFF'ER lady room & board wherein we nred good pro-t.tODELJNG. 541)..SMO \Vould like to purchase at 646--0641 · 4121
I
. d u equip'd. Fishing or Cruis-l
FREE roon1 & board, pvt HOSTESSES in exchange for lie u es. !essional people, YOUNG college """"s _ T"" bargain pi·ice. Call 61>-1260. i"'"· Also '59 Twinscrew
bah 0 · · 1 °'" -02110•n ~2 '"' ., TV Rad1'0 H1'F1· PUPPrES 6 v.1ks old •m-", ·~ t • Ulies w I £ o c: 1 a TO JJ\'TERVIE'.V '7'1«-"°"' .n-r4Jll • out for high promotion 1ales ANTIQUE popcorn booth -' ' ' ...._. Owens. Xlnl rond. 548-2434 , · t·• Bl v · * L'"· I Fn· Be-J"-Stereo e•L mixed breed good sec:unty ..... y. \\Tl .LSI& NE'.V RESIDENTS OPERATORS \\'anted !or hxra nge nru.... job. Starting s a I a r y Perfect operating cond. SlOO ---~--------1 hoose pets. Call 646-871&
shops & Hoag. 646-5816 -Part time _ over:ock & b Ii n fl -hem * Plush Offices $100/\\·k. call for lntervle.,.,• per day income at good RCA cassett pllyer/recorder 4122 &o.ts, Seil 909
CAR &-TYPE\VRITER NEC. machines. Call 962-2397 * Cadillac Car Plan on J\.fon, Wed or Jo'rl. location. Trade for car, boat & k 17. G E FAMILY Boat; Columbia 22
FURNITURE Call 547.3095 OPERATORS_ sportn:tar _ * lmm·d. Openinis TI4/&46-9647, ask for Steve, or .,,,,ill leau 642-00lO or Porl'"'1o'"TV .r:.• Ad_:,_j FREE kittens, 6 wks mother & good slip. 4. Sails, • 11
SALES * Top Commlss·on a~ r ..,.,; ~"w"' Siamrse, father blk tigec. - -l\fAINTENANCE O:i. nttd!I ml&:. l'XP only, id pay, I ' YACJIT SALES:\IAN -Exp'd·~·,._.~~'~"=~~----remote B&\V TV $35. AU Also free mother Siamese. acces30rieS & nearly nt'\\'
f'or local dept. store asst. to manage janitorial steady. 642-3472. in ne~ & used. boats, power1DIAMOND Dome cocktail good cond. 64.~ &l&-813.'> 4122 motor. Reas! Call 548-1263
e TOP CO?.-f:'oiJSSION bus. Exp Only. Refs ORDER TAKERS, LANDHOLDERS, INC. & sail. Submit r~sumt to ring, 4 cl.!i, T\V, flawless aft S. e CO. BENEF'ITS required. 546-~ 11'1me~girls ever 20, day1 P.O. &JI 4314, Irvine perfe<:I, certified appraisal MALE Tenier pup, 1 yr, e 1970 HOBIE CAT •
~tANAGEMENT trainee, or even1na:s. ruan \\'Or $4150 -liC'll c:ash $1450. w ua l er. '""iu rp, iu • Qua.111ylirlt'toi;e.U . Pl t k *PLEASE CALL* , ........ .._,:_ 11~1 ho·"'·ebrokrn .S,vtet 1·-·1 •·"Sha C"I
Apply in pel'90n 1 Sa 1 A rt· 5474771 n· _., . disposition. Great w/kkls. 6~ I"" 6l~ •u9 Service Station. Exper. Ile rom our n a na o let'. ~ 1amouu p1rrted earrings, .._,,, -~•r""'~"-'-_0~',:.c~:...:.=-~~i ·
to ~in. Thompson N · Sal A•k for Mr Y-~•y I I ~ d $1 1 ;;mmmmmm~~~il~-~291~7\;-,,;;;;-;;;an.~4;122~ 1 ~ mech knowledge. Tune brks o experience nee. ary · iuw Morcllandb• ·· stu s, 50. Dia mond SABOT sailboat, u.sed 10
W. T. GRANT CO, etc:. Neat i n appearanCf'. Sl.6j hour. Call 547-1323 "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~;;;:·----;;~· ~~ll,'°~H~1a~;:..,~·~·od}!d~;,~g~,.~t~Sl~1'~J. LEAVING state, v.cant good timrs. Excellent cond. Penonnel OUice App!y wkdays 2590 Newport l -"°:;c''=".::...''"'pm=.. ~==~-Sal~ Estate Sale! 673-3600. Dogs 854 home for our malr Germ. * • .. 49-1-9272 * ** !JSlI Adams Ave., Gr'Ult Plaza c J W ROBINSON --'---------Shep., good with children. I ~"'°'==-c.---c-=-7.'.-I Brookhurst & Adams, l""='='='·c:c·~"~·------PART time -~~~~l,·UER ,-NEwfoRT BEACH Antiques 800 ANTIQUE Diamond cluster DACHSHUND pup AKC, 842-4622 4/22 OLY~fPICNewportFinnNo.
Hlg. Beac:h l\lainttnance some typir"' •~6 ' p. •0 PRPTY iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ring. Total weight appx. 3 minia. male &: female, 1 Bl . . 737. Trlr. North sall9. Xlnt • J. W, Robtnson's eves, al , carats Ins appra'sal $850 to \V' th L ucpo1nt malr Himalayan. cond 11200 213/592-5459 Ectual opportunl!y employer • NEWPORT BEACH • THEATRE, Cd~1. has immediate New Shipment · · 1
• s ts. tte er smoo coa Chocpoint maJe Siamese IC ~~HR.c:.Y-~S~LE.c:.R=·~.10:::=Lo=-~,c:o,,,,-.1 .
FILE CLERK
(Electronics)
Knowlrdge ot elertronic
p.arra and component color
codes des.irable. Abillly to
maintain file• of pan his-
tories and gen '! records.
Position require1 occasional
!yplng. 5J0.605o Anaheim.
GEL-COATERS eJCperienc:ed.
Apply bl W. l&th St J\.fac:·
Gregor Yac:ht Corp,
GENERAL HELP
Stereo Co. needs full or
p/time dependable. $3.85 hr
galary. Call Mr. Stoc:k (TI4)
Kl 6-6955
HAIR STYLIST -Ren! space
In U11ique-Cdi\f salon. Call
Jim Scott, 644-1311
Help Wanted-Women
Will accept applications from
6 PM-S PM. Wed. April 21
only. 4 Positions in Prod.
dept on trainee status. 17502
Armstrong Avr-., S.A.
HOUSEKEEPER 4 days a
wk. Exper. pl"!'f'd. Park
Lido Convalesce-nl Center,
642-8044.
HSKPRS Emplyr pays lee.
George Allen Byland Agen-
cy 106-8 E. 16th, S.A.
547--0395
HOUSEKEEPER for
motherlt'ss home. No 11T1all
children. Write classilird ad
No. 44 Daily Pik>t, PO Box
~ Cosla ~fesa, Calif.
INV EST?.-I ENT SALES
CAREER. Progre1111ve
investment firm is seeking
intelligent, ambiliou~ men.
as sale.11 represcntatlvr&. II
you qualify, \1·e furnish
oomplete training.
r.f.P. KRUSE & CO. INC
Member of Pacll1c Co a s t
Stock Exchangr, Phone:
547-5941.
HOME MANAGER
!'.Tatu.re, compe!en! woman 10
live-in & manage Orange
County horne for 2 adults.
SOOO.SliOO. To arrange inter·
,·iew appointment caJJ (1131
867-5361 all 5:30 pm.
J . C. PE..'lNEY CO. * f'a.ahk>n Island •
-REQUIRES -
COFFEE SHOP COOK
and WAITRESS
X1nt. v.'Orklng conditions,
out1tandlnc benefits.
• APPLY IN PERSON +
24 Fa1hion Island N.8 .
Equal oppor1unlty r-mplO)•er
J. W. ROBINSON'S
e NE\\rp()RT BEAOI e
lias lmmcfli11te-
~nlna-for
SECURITY
WOMAN
• ruu. Tl~ft • xi..vr. BENEFITS
.Apply In. P'l"1IO'n 10.~ p.m.
• 2 ruhkin lal., N.8 .
Eqt.lal Gpponwii~ employer
K1T:CliEN HELPER ,
jmmtd-GPeMic. morning
1hUt 'XJnt beneflt11
sr;v r;R'LY MANOR
CONV~!.l!SCEm' II 0 SP .
JSflt Camino Capl11trano,
Ctp. lldl. OIH781.
We'll hdp )UI .rJll &CJ-5671
Has Immediate
openlna: for a
e PART TI:'ofE e
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
XLNT CO. BENEFITS
Apply in pel"!IOn 10-5 pm
Personnel Dept.
#2 Fashion Isl., N.B.
Equal opportunity employer
Ma int•nanc:e-Apts.
Qualified, sober l\IAINTEN-
ANCE COUPLE, Corona del
Mar. Live in. Salary open.
+ Call 494-1268 *
r..1AN to assisl manager in
local appliance sales. Must
be neat appearing. Prefer
over 25. Call Mr. Sobrito a t
• 534-0984 •
MANUFACTURING
MANAGER
Heavily exp'd pro "''ilh pmv·
en background In electronics
to head production & test
cf new line of peripherals
for commercial m a r k e t.
Shirtsleeve ground floor op-
portunity w/xlnt salary &
equity participation in small
gro\\'lh company. Reply in
confidence with complete
resume including salary his·
tory. \Vri!e ClassiUed Ad
•114, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box
1560. Cos1a r.1esa 92626, .......
'1S"
,d.
EXECUTIVE
PERSONNEL
AGENCY
e • The 1''ollow1ng
Positions Locatrri
ln The Beach Arca
\Vith Exc:ellenl 1''irn1s.
Purchasing Agent
$12,000, Supervise 2 buyers,
repon to pres. Expcr. w/
~1ec:1ro mechanical, P.C.
boards, machine parts etc.
Chief Acct.
$12.000. Supervise bkkper, 3
aC"C~ cltrks. manufac::tur-
mg exper. & degrer pref'd,
Electronic: Engr
$15.ooo. B.S.E.E. R.f./flJt:r
background.
Leg•I Sec'y
fT'.200. E:q>rr, in litigation,
pleading & motions. KnowJ.
f'dge cf court i1uits, forms,
e-1<:. SH 90, typ1~ 60,
Payroll .Cler k
To $j()O. ~fin, 2 )'rf txpcr.
Compute~ Pl,YTOll for
UO, manual payroll !or 20.
A/Payable
Til S-150. Type 60 w.p.m .
Know JO key by touch..
A!klng SfioO or best offer. 633-4018 both shots & r · d " ....,.
Part time Maids opening !or Fin• European Phonr between 10 AM & 6 AKC Afghans. t.1ale & rem., 54~7 ix ~lzi 13' glass $695, Equipped. i
s.tG.7445. Seal.Ark ~lotel. ANTIQUES PM 642-3230 Call 675-8067. • f"ULL TJ:O.IE Just Arrlvedl wht w/blk n1 Mks. Clamp 4 very cute cuddly pups
PAYOUT & PASTE UP SHOE SALESMEN MINK coat, full length. l'\1ust stock. Hsebrl<rn. R r a 1. 811'ks, healthy need lovinrr Boats, Slips/Docks 910
Emplcyment avail. Costa Complete selection ct J1ne sell $800 er best oller. New 646-7658. h 0 ml' li , 1 n c d yd s ~
?.1esll Penny s aver Apply in person 10·5 pm furn ., co!lector'.11 items & CO!it $3500. Call anytime, MALTESE, Thimble siie 841-7450 4122
Composing Dep!. Pleasant accessories from Au.11tria, 548-5981
SLIPS available. f'ine~I In
Newport, best facilities,
free parkina:. $2.25 I U .
Phone 673-8711 ti! 10 pm .
PRIVATE SIDE TIE: Jlilax r:
'
.. -o-"t'""l'. Sat work Personnel Depl. England&:France {Dcalersl ====-~-~--Yorkie.11 & Toy .Poodlrs, TERRIER and Cocker
...... v uu .. ,... #2 Fa•hl"n I·'., N.B. · SHAMPOO & Sets on AKC p G A"· blk/ '·~··-• .. -... Coll (•' !•lo~ "' "' y,•elcomt-1 . ups & rown. """' w wht marking. 7 "'k.'! ..vuo~ru ... " E Op · E lo Mondays Tuesdays & oJ appt. 642-CW3ll. qua1 portun1ty mp yer ANDREAS ANTIQUES \\'ednesd~y $3.50 by Lori. Stud Service. 213: 161-8160 d M&-5439 4122
PRODUCTION
First & Second Shift
IM~1EDIATE OPENINGS
FOR TiiE FOLLOWING:
MACHINISTS
Must know De-Vheg jig
mill. ?11inimum five yea rs
in manufacturing precis-
ion parts. Background in
pn11otype, tooling. u~ ol
rotary 1able; make Oll'n
x & y calculations and
layout.s.
PRECISION
ASSEMBLERS
Prrform 1.11sembly work
en c:lose tolerance assen1·
bly structures in 1he air·
c:ralt -m1s.!11le field.
SHEET METAL
MECHANICS
Experience iri layout,
lolling, fabncat1on .and
.ass,nibly of ~hcet metal
parls. \\'iU uw shears,
poY.'er hrakes, stripp1t
fabricators, squf'elcrs
and other r<'lated ma-
chines.
-APPLY IN PERSON -
333.1 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA i\JESA. CALIF'.
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
Systems Divisions
A Dlvision cl
Susquehanna Corporation
F'.qua\ ()flportun17 employer
e PRODUCTION
Sal•sman 2380 Nl'wport Blvd., C.?11. 300 \V. Coast H\\')'. 642--0&-H BOXER, AKC, Ir-m. 6 ~fo's. CUTE !risky loving kittens.
Insurance, top company, call • 64.).4870 * . CARPET Layer has qual ity Brind. i\1/sac:. $1L or bsl \Vhitrs and blks, 6 wks.
;\1rs. SC:hmklt, Westc:liff Per· Open Tue th~ Sat tOam/;ipm shags & Hl-1.o at discount cfr. ?ltust go this ~·k. hsbrk. S36-m9 4/22
.sonnel Agency, 2043 \Vest· Sun noon 111 5-closed ?.-1on prices from $2.50 a yd. f'ret 892-3616/892-6611 exl 210 J\IANX Cat, female, spayed.
cliff Dr., N.B. 64.).mO.
802
Est. Mr. Ed cn4) 81l-995S AKC Silky, male, 3 mos & Fn?e to good home.
SALESi\IAN, Service Sta. Appliances OR IE NT AL rug-Antique Poodles 646-0142, 3l3 E. 962-9656 4/'l:Z
Part time Neat i n Sa 11th St.. C.M. ADORABLE kittens to ~ ' 2 • 9 0 C 0 LDSPO'I' relrigeraton. rouk. Beaut color & cond. iii""" appearance. Apply a K, nm 0 r, st 0 ye g & Appro" 7x1J . 846-nSS 2 PUREBRED GER..,tAN homes. P b call ~967
Nrvorporl Blvd. C.i\1 . dishwashers, slightly freight IRVINE COASf COUNTRY SHEPilERDS, 6 \\'etks old, 41?1
SE A t.1 STRESS tor damaged. Fully guaran. CLUB membership for sale female, S25 each. 842-736j DARLING kittens. part
al 1 era Ii on s, must be Reduction~ up -to $100. Pvt ply. 673-0960 · FE.\1, spade f/blood mini Siamese lo good hon1e 7-8
experienced. Full or part Phone, 962-n81. Sca r sl~==~~~~---wht Poodle, JO mo' s. y,·ks. 54g..{)126 4/22
ll·m·. Call 67~L181 or Roebuck & Co """'-" Adan1s \VASHER, Xlnt Cond. $&3. Rea--ble «< •173 °'" '•"'" ~ H.B. ' .,.,.,., ' Klng.sz_Spani.sh hdbrd Sla ..._.,_ . ~ FREE kittens
tl'tv-,.,..., 64a-3900 or 64~1519 MALE AKC AUSTRALIAN 541)..2~
SEC'Y tCdMI Young WHIRLPOOL auto "'ashf'r & SILKY. XLNT MARKINGS. 4/29
"nvlrnnmental 11...... seeks elec dryer, bolh xlnt cnnd, • BALBO~ Bay Club reg. S200 67:r246j LAB
" .,., uu• $3j eAch. Guar & delivered. membership, $1400. Inc J and Aus!ralian Shep bright attractive young $46-8672• 847-Sll:i trans. fee. 962-0315. IRISH ~tier, AKC, fem. j fl'male. 1 yr !ree to a good
i>ec'y under 30, I girl ofrice C::~~!...'.'.:'.:~'.....--~lm""'""'"'"""=,--,,c:::· I mo. ii.loved to apt. Needs honic 847~587 4/20
SO', 0100/mo. ' ·
6T~-t&\ alt 5 ;
BOAT SLIP ilO TO 50 FT. :
S2.:,0 per ti. :
• 645-4121 • :
Boals, Speed & Ski 911 :
INBOARO HYDRO :
' Must sell, necd money. Boal;
niotor &: trir S22.i Runs very .1
strong. \V iii considt-r !rd !or •
niotorcycle. See at 738 ,V,
17th, c.~1. &.12-s1sa cir
~-2.)70.
1312' SKI or Fishing boat, '
w/¥J hp Mere outboard.
Cmpl!y eqpt w/elec: litart, ,
~~~i~S-~~~ts, 1kis etc:~,:
W /"arlerl ""poosibili)iei;. KEN11.10RE washer. S 3 j. BICYCLES, all types. Sting· _, 1100 "" •1-± • yaiu. · '7'1......, ~~ BEATil'-UL reirjstered Collie Salary $37:>-$400 nio. f'or excellent: Ali;o \Vasher & rays, 3 Sp, 10 Sp. Reas. Boats, Storage 912 '
II M T I 'I 0,,,, ,el. 54Q.I09;i 334 Del Mar, CM 642-1272 ./ BOXER PUPPIES .,\KC ~ lots of I ov e ~------'-----I appt ca 1 r. ay or or " r. 10 Wk•. 'lole, Brindle-& 644-8503 4/Zl ~
67"761 t' CUT .. 1 · J _._I " FENCED storage &tta, cil ,;_p~,;~re:..=":.::~~..:.;.::... ____ 1 NEW blln range top & used .. •• re n g, ale m'-"""' · f'a.,.,'n. 839-29..\9 1 BLACK male cockapoo..10 rf d C Call
"·<-l•n·-•-oven w/new control unit, Apt si:re stove 24x24, c:lean, !~~ ~I '0 .. ~ta18'113"'· •.' ""'·~ iu e ENGLISH BULL DOG wks . Very c:urly . ..,.,,,....,_ , "",....
SECY .-Corpora Ir, legal, e.>:· l\!~kc offer. 64H263 30" apt sz stove. 548--0203 PUPPIES, AKC. 5&-5978 4/20
ecutive exper. Laguna Hills. LARGE REFRIGERATOR. SELL your own handcrafts. • 530-0963 * DAR L JN G male blk
Call -837-2020 Ext 247 for $45. Xlnl Cond. The Unique Boutique, 135 YORKSHIRE Terrier pups c:ockapoo puppy 4 mo old. I Transporlllion II•l
app\. * 646-78XI * 171h, C.~f. or call 646-9075 AKC Champ Sired. 1'-f-f'. 67:h5271 4/20 . .
SERVICE Sta. Sales"man full COLDSPOT seU -de!ro1t 'Vedgewood stove $75 TERMS!! "* Sll-8727 LOVING 5 yr cld white male 'iimmmmmm~:;1
time. i\!usl bt neat in refrig, v;ashl'r &-dryer. chest of drawtrs $20. YR old lhaggy lemale dog. cat, altered & deciawed. 1
appearance. Apply 2 590 Goodcond.S40P.a.64~2614. 54~ Good w/children , ~eves. 4/22
Ne\\'porl Blvd. C.r..1. GE d 3 E •·" .. gas ryer · lemp .. WAT R uru 6x7' fltver used, Housebroken. 5.J6..7t>G 4113 3 Cute killens. 1 CaJiro. 1
S E R V I C E STATION perma-pres11, 1 yr old. $95. lap sc11m, 50 year .,.,"a1Tanty, IRISH Setter poppl", AKC b. lack & "+.itr. \Viii be avail
Sale•man-Exp'd. Over 20. p .. 1 Pt "'" "'2 .. ,-"~0 -'~"" 2 • y . ...,.,...,...., .,.. · .,...,.........,~. reg, Champion sired. in wks. 846-9686
Day \1-ork. 3100 E. Coast CARRIER Air Cond. 8.000 NEED A RUBBER SJ'A.\1P? + 968-6927 * DARLING killeM. 61,. \l'kli Hwy, Cd~l c !I '"" ,~, Lo ~ BTU 's 4 yrs old,Sl75 orbst a .,.,,.........,,.., w, 101..,. e PUREBREDBLACKLAB ol d. Playf'ul. Call
SERVJCE Sta, Attendant. cfr. 644-5~6.l "'°'P~';_re_•~· .,-------poppies. 7 wkli old. ~6-5242 4/22
E"p'd Sala~ plo• romm 1 ~ Pickup. 8 rr. bed. 11.i;tomatlc, " · '" · Furniture 810 Misc•llan•ous * 548-a)5 * ~ E Coo•t fl"" NB full poy,·er, air cond1tionin•.
""" · .. ". · · Wanted 820 Horses
Campers, Sale/R•nt 920
CAMPER SPECIAL .. :
'66 DODGE CREW 6
SERVICE Station Salesmen GOLD velvet sofa, olher .--, ..... 'O"'--,,-----8561 Beets -t II")(>) $2100
y,·/\ub rack exper. t\-1iddle furn, TV, Pal.io !urn, China, \VANTED : 22 cal Ruger HORSE Coral. barn & feed M.in.Equipment 1'.-_,,, __ ,, __ ,,
aged. ?.1ust be qua.lilied. Misc. Pvt Pt.Y, 9352 pistol. 5 or 6" barrel shack. S30 a mo. Call l 'iiiiiimm;;iiiiiiii.::iii~ 1~ ~ !
Apply in person, Boyd's Candle\1'00d. H.B. "''/replaceable magnum !'J.18-5636. II •
Arco Station, 400 E. 17th, * SOFA BED * cyli~er. Also c: a mping ~~~~~~~~~=~1 :G:e:n=t~'i•~l~~UP~~!900~ 2100 Ha1·bor Blvd. 645-0466 c .:-.t. GOOD COND equ1pmen1. 557-8901 H.B. CAPTAIN 1947 lnternallonal Bus SERV ICE STA . drivey,·ay S75o + 549--0126 aft 6 HOSPITAL bed, e I e c: tr i c [ U "-"Re bl 111 1 'nlimited license -anyg.ross Camper. 28 ft Jong. Cstm salesman \\'i1h mec:h 'J. REDECORATING' F'inr mow•~. asona e. F-lo Y--. Call 642-1715 ,.... v.. 1 tons. 30 Years expenenc:t body, kit, bath, 2 rms, sips
ability. l·Full lime, 1-Parl furn ., lamps & access. for ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ sail & power. Professional 4, "''1r, elf'c generator.
lime. Apply 1101 Bayside gJe. Bargains. 548-4542 CASH for furnlture, ap-1 sporlfishingguide; 1'-Jexican propane, fully paneled &.: '
Or. N.B. Ph: 67:>-21:»5 BEAUT. lkga.al '\lalker pliances, tools, ml~ items. FREE kllltns. & Cenlral America & Pacif· crpt. 673-1708
SERV ICE sta1ion attendants. 1'~renc:h prov. dlni~ rm. Open 9 to 5· S42-70t;) 548--0127 ic Coaat waters -lnstnJC'· Cycles, Blk•s,
Exp'd, split shilt/nite shift. sel hulch &73-8369 NEED large trunks Ste~r 4./22 tion in boac handling sea· Scooters
H Ir. H SheU, 19th & Pia-2' TV' ' Uf( hai' or cabin type. U -• 1 ,. mans-hip, DR &.: ceiestial 1----------* s, OVi'rst c r. Call 54.~59 BEA Tic vL unusua 1Hens ci!nt1a, C.i\I. bookCRSI'. 8 toes on lront lee\. navigation. PICK OP ft: l'U"UV'U'.'I
saiutPOO girl \\·anled, part ___ *..::.Cal:::.1~>~'8-~7~<02:::_~*--l·M-u_•.l<_•_l~l·n-•_l"'-m-e.n.ts_l~22-s.J6...6393 4/22 DELIVERY ANYWHERE:
t. c -'I fl 6 ~ .. ~ ,......, captain & 1•.-ife available for une. "'a •.,....,......,,or Garage S..le 812 LUDW I G dr·um 1tt. 2 Baby black & "·hite rats
61'9108 . d d h m .. rxtended cruising. Exten· ;r Complete. Floor tom. 2 nee i: o o o ._ · · d · · ti
SHOE SALESMAN 8' LIGHT Bei~e C'UlVed 50fa, Zilgen cymbals. AU xlnt 54.S..1948: 4/'22 s1ve a m1n1stra ve expen.
or Sa.les1\0miifl -E.-:p'd In S75 or bst ofr. 2 Twin beds c:ond. Extras. 642-5676 FREE blk puppies 6 v:ks. e.nce. tw;.2'J77
high -grade family shoes. SI~ ea. mi1t1 "-coli sprnas TENOR Saxaphone, good 2210 Orange Ave., Of 4122 SCRAM-LETS
Hen1ph11J Shoes 54 Fashion _l_l_.50_. _'7_3--07 __ '3_. _____ , condition. Call after S PM, AOORABLE kitten~ lrC't' to
Island, 644-4223: APT of tum. Incl. R\vier., 642-2231. good home 536--0136 4122 ANSWERS couch, t"·ln beds table1, · . CCT fo $l8K chaini 962-9568 ' WURLITZER e l ec t ronic: 3 fen1ale puppies. 6 wk& old. SR. A • · piano, $190. Gibson , Titan pt. G. Shep. 839-4j91 4/22 Polish_ Famed _Chess_
THINl
HONDA ...
"FRIEDLANDER~
1"9 IUCll (NWT, ..,
531-6824 • 893-75Ci6
NEW-USED-SE RV.
n.n.IVU"I Con~tr/CPA • MUST sacrifice my \'E'lvel ampHUcr, $150. 644-1528 FREE puppies br, and blk. Jester _ DRESS
QUALITY CONTROL sofa A loveseat, llke new! Offl F •1 / '69 Yam&h• 1~ 0 -op ror
to $1,K Call 673-6926 ce urn1 urt j.)6-7990 4122 Sign In New Ycrk .... ,..-: ..,.....,,,.., '
124 ~~--dirt. Many (:Xtru. Very
Computer Back,ll'l'Ound GARAGE ~ALF.: Apt llilf' Equip. IRISH Setter to xlnt home. 1 "It Your ~an Are Slippin& elran. 67>4<125
..
DRAFTSMAN $800 rerrlg, F\Jm & ~Use. 2165 PAY J\t ASTER Check male 1 femalt. 54G-6393 4m \Ve'll DRESS Them:· • HON DA 90 TRAIL BIKE. :
itroY;1ng company, illunlclpai Background Raleigh SI., C.:\!. prolcctar, almost llf'W S75. CUTE kltleM 7 1\·ks olri .. N. ~1ERCURY props, stttrinji Only 2lOO street mllci. 1225.
Mac: CREGO R 'l'ACHT JR. ACCT. TO $800 * 646-001'1 + Rl'mington elec typc>\\Tilcr lit_g. Bcll. 846-631;; 4/22 cables, lingle levrr controls, 676>2834
SUPERVISORS e
All three 1hlfls. Xlnl ruture
for ~flectivr leaden; to join
Ille llarbor An-a·a fAste$1
C'ORP., A/P CLERK TO $600 PLA\'ER piano, '1lop1m1th S2'2l. Olivetti calculator, FREE m&Jr Poocllr, bl k. In slruments_. '\'.1nd5h~lds, e llODAKA ACE 100, ·~.
1631 Pltte-ntia., C.J\t. ,.._,,,1nt•fln" tbl. Ill\\'. Lolli ol furn I: model 24 Olviwma, xlnt ~"'~2-':'.l"~--~1~---=_.:':·11~22~li'~1~"it-P~ho~"'i,;' ~>i>-0.illl~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-I ....., • .., , ....,.. V"< .,.., Lots er extra~. ~. Deser1
PROOF OPR SECRETARIES miac. ~l Azure Santa Ana $200. Vl~tor adding machine 2 Yr. cld ·--' s · 10· GLASPAR -refinished Hg111. 007-7939 $100. Call anytime 962-7362 ~P8.Y~~ WTl('.lll' Uk Ne 14' N bo\l, 1 -"-ci~ng~-~962-:-,~3'-·t_J~~--·I
EXPERIENCED TO $600 ~alpolnt. ~7Dl 4122 tra~r: :;r~~ un ~111~hee~ e 'Tl Norlcn Rdstr
UNITED CALIFORNIA Constructk'in GA.RACE Sale! ao1h1na & DRAlii'ING r~, l('jal files. cun: ,. Coc:k-A-Poo, ,, 61;Ml97-I X[n.s ._ $1095
NEWPORT mi.c. ltem1. 178 W. l!th St., copy msch, . typewriter, tenirr. 557-7315 4./221;13,...,';"';;,=oc:-;--:=--;:-.,.,.-* all 6: 673-4ttl0 * -BANK-Cl\I 1teno desk. ~1335 or -------.---·I 'i;' Runabout or fishing
l1·11 E. COASt Hwy. Per1onnel Agency Machinery 11,, I~-~-=----~~ 12.s MOS. cld pUpp1e1, l·rnale, bomt .l trlr, F'brgls hull Y A.\fAHA '68 dirt bike. Ill)
Corona dei Mar, Calif. Ill Dowr Dr., N.B. Plenos/Organ• 8l6 l·fem.lc 64'-1075 4/JJ w/oontroli .l ·n JJe, s26Z> liCt'nst. 250 CC, 1315. Call
Dic:t•phone Sec'y
~. Good typin& skUls
Sii f't!Q·d. •
(114) 613-9240 642-3870 GAS ORJV£N O)MPRES-1 \ltlIT malt coc:k+poo 4. 642--058-I _ ..... _,="='=====--i .
no Equal opportunity emplcyer I !!!!!t""!!!!l'!""!!'!"'!!!!!!!!..., SOR on trallrT w/palnt pot A NT IQ U E P I 11 no -yean. 962-0846 4/20 14' row boat , durab11r. ~le, 1970 TRIUMPH 500t'lt
DON'T sive It a'Q1, eet Stat Cl•rk Typl1·t & &Prll.Y aun, Compl111e. S42S. Hand CAtVed, while-" gold, f'REE kittens. 1 weeks old . needs p 11n1. $30. Ph.· Good6·,·~imeo~'..,H0.•
1 Appo1nt ments Only
410 W. Co .. t Hwy .
Suitt H N,B.
645-2711
quick cuh for 11 with a a.&e 2S to 35. f'amlllar w/ 67J.IM7 uprlailt rrand, unbclle"·ah!r 549-7772 4120 6T.>-2286 ,,_ ""
DAILY PILOT C!usifled all ph115C1 offlet: \\'Ork. AP· Mlscoll•ntou• I ll (M(lltion. l\\'urth over .::::::::_ _____ :::::~1 ~=-=:.,.,-,.-,..,,----I ·."10""\·--,1~=-'-''-.,,-= St2001 $600. 068-9667 A Darling kitten pap('r Boats, M aint./ amR ia r.10. 10 ml'i, S500 Cllll &n-0078 • ('hlll'ff!: It. ply 1741 Plactntia Ave, CM. ----------1 . __ .. ,, .. ~ .. ,....., 1120 S , 90" or I/Ike over py1nn1i;
"\VEED 11 .I: rct1p" .. cz,.11.n lron1 1 prn lhru 3:;'.0 pin. NTGUEI. Ari fl.Min Rumm11t:t Wurllt1~r Spinet Piano rai .... .,,, ""',..."'" 1 •r v•t• " .s.is-:i·~1:1
out Iha tn-asutts A tnsh -snJDENT l~lT yrs old. So.le. Apr 22 &. 23, 1().-ot. Uke New? fRE& kl!t~ns 7 wttka:. Box EXP'D 00111 maint('IU&nt'e l1o TRl\c.l;\~l=P~ll-TR=.-,-,,-6."iOt~·
rum into CA!h thru a Daily P /tlmc work ('Vt'~ & Sa1s. 20032 V!ct.11. rlaz:1. l.11.g. NIJ S.iOO. S12-106:i irairn'd .;.t,..!447 <l/2D Refin1~h1nc, mcch. etr Xlnl eond. SlOllll. ' c a I J
~lor Clei1lflttd elf. 64~78 $3;\ wk. ~8 3-6 PM. \Ve'll help you .ell! 642-5671 Sell Idle Items no1v! llorr;r-manure 5-10-092.l F'rtt l'~lfm11t". 6-44-2199 536--0.122 ·--------
I
I • 1
' •
.·
. ..
I
, ue~ay, April 20, 1q71 OAILV PILOT
l§J I A-t .. ~... l§J I -"'Solo J§J I _,,,w. l§J'l
Ctclo•, BlkH, Truck1 m ~-· lmportod '70 ""'"' lmportod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmportad 970 Autoa, UMCI 990 ~A·ut· ... -Uaad.:_ --~990.: Autoo, ut.d 990 I
...... "' .. ' lliJI ......_ -._ ... _ .. --'-'l§J .__I .. _ ...... _ ... _,l§J I I~ I AUIOl lorSalt
,·. ,,..-_t•.,.,.".,,.....~..,..115-l ~;i3iiifiORDiiii;niiiiiir.111eiii l DATSUN MG __ . _TR_1u_M_P_H __ ,_v~o::::LK...,....sw.,,...,,.A.,..G_.EN_, __ c _A_D1,,...LL_A_c_ CHEVROLET MUSTA,NG~ 'I, Crown V•lt•y Suzuki Ult tc0fl011 .;.~.
a1!. .~~~! ~oors.. CAMPER '69 2000 ROADSTER ............ '71 SPnFIRES 1::..~~· ~:::~::'"!'"'0:7. CAD.'61 B~OUGHAM ·~.~~.:· .. ~.°'1'.'; ·65 MUSTANGS ·:
With Purchase of New Bike. Au.tomatic, radio, heater, • ntlNI !~~.~N..DISPLAY Nice Interior, runs good. LUXURIOUS FLEETWOOD pm. $350 ~•
71601. .rorbe.s Road bubble top, sett COllta.ined. 5 !lpd. 41.r. 0\\'Tled b,v little ''MG'' ........,,,.. u• Ga tett drtvtl Desperation Sale $350. FACI'ORY CH YSLER 7 to cbootle from, coupcs.~I,
'-M••a Ni'"'"'! 831•1621 61,,.1 .... tS~J old'1chool teacher from La~ FRIT·Z WARREN'S 838-6268 aJt. SP~t AlR CONDITIONING R !bl • --· '"""" -,LI\!.., "· h Fullprl 11-.. SPORT CAR CENTER O()(IWrt et, auto.,"' tpdJ • ,
Norton, AJS, Rlckman too. $1599 f"1".2NS~l59alc T. ·•-ol'-~tra·;: , ~o E I I Si <A. "'7 ,....~ VOLVO Paddtd top. Bet.utifUJ tapts· 1970 lMPERIAi. ~&ron: " apeed.s, (SJCl.81) ..._ ~-~ '" LANDER'' •4 • I ., .... "" ""'""' , .... , & leathe< lnteno· r. Jo'uU $795 1969 BuJtaco (J\.1at.adorJ 250 or small down. Will finance •'fRtl:I\ Ope .... n •• 9-9 clO$ed Sund 1----------1 ".? Jo"'ull power, FM Stereo, f1t\I.' ~t cUrt ,..A_, "Ml. 4111U_.., ___ . UI ~ ; Al' powe r, incl. tilt & telesrope t'-•· Xlot -·'. ca I I oc •"= or · .......,.. ~te#d ~ pvt, pty. Alt l{l am 541)..3100 ".. """u ~.condltlon. Recent tune-up, or 494-T::iOS, tase 1uoi tMWY, •> TR!~~H 1963 TR 4, Wire • steering, door locks, 5tereo, 646-8824, 673-6053 lltM~,;~A 4t1..........._, :
$495 cuh Firm Pho 2100 Ha-Blvd. 645-0466 893-7566 • 537-6824 ""='" new brak•" "'w ~ IHIHI etc. (VTL.3891 -CONTINENTAL -..,.. ,_ I M9-<l530 . · ne.I i![!!~il!iii!!i!iii!!!!!i!iii!i DOT DATSUN NEW-USEO.SERV. top. Good co"'1ltioo. Sell °' $3333 :noo 11arbor IDvd. -I
"ONDA '67, n•w -··t. 1--•, '69 Chevy ~ ton pick·up OPEN DAILY • _--.-.......... trade $8lf.I. P~ ~ 'VOLVO' e 1968 LINCOLN
n . ,_ ~g w/amall '""'"'· 12100. "' AND ---------VOLKSWAGEN .. ~ib ~ lmma-······· All ...... " '67 MUSTANG-' paint, knobis, 419. Chrome rood shape, 2S47 Mendoza, e . \."W "
tenden, xtra -·~· & tin" SUNDAYS MGB "FRIEDLANDER" power. 675-3590 V-8 Jo Xlnt d Mu.t ,.. j;j;J'.' Guy _A,opt~D,_, C~.M=. 546-45911'-,-.c.;__ 11835 ll0&ch Blvd. 1970. TOYOTA CADILLAC 1 ~-------·1 ":,':. ott;,_•~62 con -,• "rosr u .70 C'"--... 1uso ••Aci. '"...,. •• AurttoA1zEo cEAU:A O IR •• j ·Fetterman 64f.l2l2, pg. No. "s b .. ~~-c ·~AJ"Yl ~5ton Hunt1a1ton 9:!~!. MGB '68--Wlre wbh, lugg COROLLA $l.':566 • 537.682i 2GOO liARBOR BL., C RVA 1967 MUSTANG tutback '1 'n Honda. 350 Scrambler-ul ... ~ ~-tr'aa ·: 142-71'81 or ~~v-vn.o rack, yellow w/blk top. 1200 with s,ooo ml. Grey ,vith NEW-USEO.SERV. COSTA MESA ---------Vinyl top, Hpd, AM/FM,j,
Low mi. $700. Call 545-4257 ~8: New iin. S::..nos' 1969 DATSUN Sports Cbupe • Great cond. $1650. 673-0617. sporty red interior. Truly f>.10.9100 Open Sunday '63 MONZA, 4-s!Xl. Very alr. 1 owne:r, xlnt cond. 1 dayl; 6354256 eves. =-=-';.,,....::,.c::,.;.:c,.=--I 1600 aeries. $1150. Call OPEL ._, 1 1 k __ , 1= ~ e clean, Xlntrun'g cond, Mwit Ds)'ll 5.12-4483: eves 673-86161 I ,10 Bond ~il TO 400 .. '57 Ford % T. Panel. '61 6#-f641 aft 7 pm pr•\,~ or qu c l><Ue, """ ----sacrifice $225. an 5;
Xb'U ~ t cond ,12511 ~~· Engine cabinets. coo d 1 ---F-E~R~RA~~R~1 --1 __ E_x-~-Pl'-lO_N_AL__ BQF $30\l3 • 541-0114 PLYMOUTH I
o;s.1m n • ...-.. cond.1395.494-71168 ~ AT $1599.00 CAD.'66 SEO. 196SMONZA4doo<.140hp,4 1--------CHEVY '62 Van. cam!>'•-I iiiiiiilijiiij!iiiiiijiiii I '66 OPEL KADETTE S/W CHICK IVERSON !911 VOLVO DE VILLE _.i sll<k. o"' ownor. low '69 Sport SU)turbon
Mobile Home1 •35 Eng, trans, t!r:1 brand new. '62 FERRARI ' __ 1_o_WN_ER __ 545-3 __ 10_3__ . VW \Vco~peMc~a!Ti::o ln ~CTORY miles. Ena. xl.nt. $495. 9-pa.u wgn, A/C, P/S, P/B, • ?-.l llst sell. 6T5-5934 1 · S .... AIR ... vNDmONING 673-6251 New tires, Hi ml'1 but im·
• OOilG POR CHE 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 6T Overseas Dellvtry ruu.. l.F.AntER INTERIOR '63 Corvair Conv. Need! mac cond, $m5 tlrm. INSTANT HOUSING
WHY WAIT?
'ol E P.U.1275 2+2 CPl D l All pow• xi,.._, AM FM 675-7689
"·Ii uo ='" al COSTA MF.sA ""' t.WW I'll JO, our wee en 11peci . ""A" 833-0688 • '65 BARRACUDA -6 cyl, '33 CHEVY P.U. $250. 1965 PORSCHE S.C. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 8 ""'l nm:• d: r e k •d ".al tune-up. $'200.
..._. ~ t. 4. Racing green with electric --~""~==--I lTGEOOTl =~---"'~~--~·I '61 Ford ~I Tun Panel. Good 4 spd. OverdrivC", Red finish. sunroof. Clean and recent-WANTED VOLVJ $.1999 '63 Corvair Spyder . good ~~ffi.i, $TSO or best otter1
The all neiv Village House cond. Rftbuilt '61 eng. $295. <WID 573) ly overhauled. Priced to sell. condition, 4 spd, Must sell!
by Leviu i\lobi!e Systems Call 646-8882 $3595 YCC525 I'll pay top dollar tor !'Our 1966 H bo CM 646•9303 ib Eves. 6\1 2-6832 1962 Pb'mouth station wagon.
with sloping shake root can 1 7-~-~---~~ ONLY $2,799 VOLKSWAGEN today, Call ar r, . . ~ e~ New tlret & brakes. $295.
be yours now! Models on Auto Leasing 964 ~ S and ask for Ron Pinchot '6-l Volvo P-1800. Very ~ood ~ CORYmE 646-6972 -...,,,,,~ CHICK IVER ON 549-3001 Ext. 66-67. 673-trol: cond, $1700 oc b'5t ofr. Will CADILLAC PONTIAC display at. . . LEASE • oew '71 P1nlo ~'-"' """° ~ ' BAY HARBOR nio: (36 mo.) open end. 2100 Harbor Blvil. 6-l.i-0466 VW '69 V\V, 23,000 mi's, ~ for '49 Plymoulh, UTHOAIZEOOEALEl'I 1~ CORVFITE ENG 32T,
AJ'l/!'i'f, M•g• & olh•<1-7>1_:>-~"'10-~. -.-~--~-I 26oc) HAMOR BL., clutch, Bell Housing Muncie •ii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-1 MOBILE HOMES RENT a new 'Tl Pinto S4 5~9-3031 Ext. Qi or 67 " " ~ COSTA MESA MfW77 =-£7 1120• Bake< SI c0,,, Me•• d nd •--1 Pu FIAT 1970 HARBOR BLVD. xtras Sl;,j() or makf! ofr. Autos, Used 990 4 spd. Complete. Perfect .., _ _ _ _ .._
.. 1 -ay a ·""' m1 e. t a °"" .,~~11 5'1().9100 Open Sunday condition $400. 645-4687 '68 PO IAC ' Just S. af S.D. F11'Y at Harbor littJe kick in your life. COSTA l\fESA .,,,,.,.....,., e
714/540-94i0 THEODORE '&i Porsche 912/5, red/b!k, '&i vw Van; New paint, Xlnl BUICK '69 c dill c CORVETI'E '67 s i Iver Grand Prix. run power, fac-
ROBINS FORD - - - - -cond. 1500 ccm eng. Mustliiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiii•iiiiiiiil a ac oupe de ViUe, Fastback. 4-spd, 327/350 tory air condition....,,, u-invl 1 e THE l\IEADO\VS • •--·-- -I orig owner. $2950. Eves til 24,000 mi's, Pvt owner. Full ... ·~.,, 1''ineat adult eommunity 2060 HARBOR BLVD. ''THINK" 11 30 40• ~, D sell $895 or offer. Newporl & . hp. Alr, A.i'lil./Fl\1, pwr root. Grand Prix arttn ex-: ' .,.....,v~ or ays Union Service 3939 \V, Coast po\\1!r air + Ai'\1/FM windows. Xlnl cond. Pvt terlor. (VZT130) in So. Calif. COSTA MESA 642-0010 540-9710 Don Johnson. '65 :.E SABRE stereo, vinyl roof, leather pty. s2300. (n4) 846-3293 ~w~i: ::~· ; (' ~~~ Auto Service, PMtl 966 aam&l'·55ii;·iipaPOiRSCHE<Slfil:'365-CiiS::C., wwhih;it. .. ::-.11 l.!H~wy2'.!.·!N~B~-----1 Sedan. V8 engine, automatic inter .. tilt wheel, power DODGE $1995
a O\\"l!Cr, 48,000 ml, AM/FM 1960 V W C transmission, po\\'er steer-door locks, Perfect cond. BAUER BUICK
bowling • :\1uch More. 2 Che\'Y Aslro mags with Blaupunkt radio PERFECT • • • onv. ing 1 O\\'f!E" (' Excell I 645-218:2 I ·~iiiiiiiliiiiiii!!i!ii~~i I On JeHrey Rd Between S.A. tires, \\'heel adapters for SM t"-·-out. 67"'"o"l. Ocean blue, flared finders, ' r ar. en 70 eu•• 234 E. 17th St. &: San o · F (I' · '"" .,....., cond ition. <TYZ03Tl ' wus 2-dr, :\!any xtras, Costa. l\fesa 543.7765
iego i\·y, .~ n11 vw wlth chror"Je lug nuts ''FRIEDLANDER'' _1_9_673_P_O=R~S~C-H-E~S-.C~. -1 mag ·wheels. Great sum-Priced to sell $3025. '66 CHARGER So. of S.A. Fivyl I ar.d locks. AU for S75 Firm. mers fun . JLZ407 * 646-9740 ft~ 30 * Tl~/S3i-.8:-W!J * :HS-5380 13710 IEACH ILYD. Bahan1a yell'lw -Defies de· PRICED 5599 OO BAUER BUICK 1----•'--''-'"-'P-"m'---}fas big 383 VS engine, Low
"P I " k F =~=--~-=-!Hwy. JtJ scrip1lon. This one excel· • CHEVROLET mileage 1 owner beauty that •op e, As or V\V BUS seats tor '68 or ICK IVERSON 234 E. 1TUJ. Sl "Our Service." later. Best offer. 893-7566 • S3?.&824 lent thru out. PX\V-9S2 CH Costa ~1esa .548-7765~11~~iij!~~-iii!jj!ii!iiii l you must drive. (294l) · NEW-USED-SERV. LOOK • $2,399 VW ,. ------Pricad to 1011
''""FactoryD;,.ct, ln P"k ** !<S-l2lO ** CHICK IVERSON ,,.UWWL4LL BAUER BUICK
setups, Resales. Buy, Sell, * PORSCHE PARTS -l.IV'l.ll.ll.I 549-3031-Ext. 66167 BUICK ·P'! Hdtop. Beaut., w/ 'ol CHEVROLET
List. Tr3de. RE AS 0 NAB LE Day VW 1"" HARBOR BLVD J AMIF•I po -B J 8 234 E. 17th St
Un,·ted Mob1'lo Homo• 776·",.' •"•/wknd,=·"'19 FUN CARI '61 CONY. u10 • ar, ' ~i-o, wire e Aircoupe. V ,automatic, ,..A_ M , -65
ll't'f"t, y '1<N"" •"""'-.,A:;._"-...,., 549-3031 Ext. lie or 67 COSTA ME.SA Wheel•, tilt wheel. $1895. rad.lo, beater, power steer~ U11rtt. esa S.1S.11
l TSTA Npt. Bl. &t>3l~O Autos Wanted 968 ~ c_•"·-~=~=~~-·-·--1970 HARBOR BLVD N WGN 833-2087 or 675-3000 1"" factory · This ·
-Coota Mesa Jtwtl -JAGUAR' COSTA MESA • '68 VW STAJID . ~~iiiiiii\ ;l:,;,1Jtely .:;",,;.cuia~'."1~
\\'hat you see Is I WE PAY TOP .6T PORSCHE 912. Xtru. (XEV 45Tl ,66 RIV!!!IE a orre owner gem with an
what you ge1. CASH Xlnt Cond. 1 Owner $3400 RA honest 31,000 actual miles.
1000 ,q h of "''"' '""" $"1 I '59 JAGUAR y;,m. >J0-6247 $ 1599 VB, '"'o., R&H, lull '"''"· See ii! IOHDOti51
mo spact> rent, S3T;)() r u l l * 'ST PORSCHE 912, 5 faclory air, sport wheels, Priced to 1ell
price. \Viii finance. 5-15-8241 1 for used cars &: trucks, just 4 Dr. Red. Auton1atic. speffi, top shape. Must sell. ,gold wirh black interior. BAUER BUICK
CJBY Z701 13495. 646--0885 or 673-33&1 Lovely car. (TI:f453) -A E. 17th St, Trailers, Travel 945 call us for ftte estimates. $7'·5 Priced fo sell Ml't GROTH CHEVROLET ~ '65 "C" ooupe, 10 m;·,, Foe 18711 BEACH BL. 8<2-4435 C..ta .,,,. 54~'1'165 '70 Star Master 6 sleeper, air, A.'1/Fl\1, Must eell, l!UNTINGTON BEACH BAUER BUICK
hardtp !en! trlr. Lift up -tM---··· ~-""'·-· $26.'iOoroHer.6-li.-0787 -•1 All · Ask for Sales :rtlanager '~ l/SOCOW g .... ey. cunveruell{"('s. l82ll Beach Blvd. 645-0466 164 Porsche C Coupe
Lots of storage. $l275. 2100 Harbor Blvd. Xlnt cond. 548-2858 alt 6 846-5666. lfuntin&ton Beach
1·15~-~F~;.~ld~&~S~lre-.,,,-.~Gd~.-co-nd~ 647-'"'7 KI 9-3331 KARMANN GHlA '67 Forsch• 91>-M;nl cond.
1300. 642-0965 ail 4P~i or "'k WE PAY TOP OOLLAR Many extras. Must sell.
,ends FOR TOP USED CARS 1960 GHIA Mak• o!for. 675-11725
1"T".-.~il~ .. -.-.-U~t~ll~it-y-~94=7 It your car II extra cl .. L<it.s of miles of transporta-'63 Porsche Super
14' Tandem Trailer
\Vith 4 V>'heeb. All 1tetl \\'eJd.
ed ccnstruction. !~" Steel
deck plating. Will sell or
tr&de for pickup. 3166 Sicily,
(Me1a VudeJ C.M,
__ .'_'"_1'_"_··_l~l
see Us tint. tion ·left. Specially priced Cpe. Bahama yellow With bik
BAUER BUICK for quick Mlf'. QOF325 interior, AM/FM, chro..ne
234 E. 17th St. LOOK -$499.00 wheels, recent enc f n e
Cotta Me.. 54~'1'165 CHICK IVERSON PXW982
IMPORTS W ANTE!> VW $2399 Orange Count!"
TOP I BUYER , >19·30'1 Ext. 66 °' 61 CHICK IVERSON
BILL MAXEY TOY,OTA l!nO HARBOR BLVD. VW
18881 Beach Blv~. COSTA J\o!ESA
Ph 84T 8555 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 H. Beoch. · • LAMBORGHINI 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
WANT to buy '56-'59 *LAMBORGHINI ............ * COSTA MESA i\fer<:edes &nz 220S in good
cond. Call 61~2422 400 GT 2+2. ReC·Blk int.
D.une Bu99ie1 956 ~.,---,--.,-.--,=:I Purchased Ne"" June '68. 1-'--....:;,;;,. ____ Autos, Imported 970 s.ooo mi·. lmmac. ss~. p,·t
SUNBEAM
* * CUS'l'0'.\.1 metal Datsun ----------~ dont buggy. $6.S(}. ORAl'lGE COUNTY'S ONLY Pty. Hn!g Hrbr (213)
•962-5618 * ROLLS-ROYCE DE1\LER 592-1062_
'68 MEYERS M•rn<. 1600 VW now h" MERCEDES BENZ
engine. Xlnt. cond. $l.500 or BMW TOYOTA
1968 vw
Diamond blue With black tn·
terior. Mag wheel!! and ra-CADILLAC
di•! '"''· XSP314 Real b11y. CLUB COUPE
ONLY $1099.00 1----.----N,:;"..,,'~;,,~,i°'•t """'n.
CHICK IVERSON CAD. '69 BROUGHAM $895 1'~ACTORY VW Affi CONDITIONL'lG ,,,.,...,. ___ •• -S.,,_.11 __ •
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 Glistening executive black '~ '~
1!170 HARBOR BLVD. finiah w/black vinyl top, 2100· Harbor Blvd 645..(>466
COSTA MESA rlcb lull black leather lnter· · · '
'65 V\V Sunroof-New reblt !or, full power, incl. cruise 'SS Chevy '69 396 turbO
eng, new pail'l!, r,. a r control. auto dlmmer, door hydro, 4li potl, tiberhoocl,
opening \\'indows, push locks, dual com~t seats, Amer, mags, new paint. int.
button radio. 67!">-4425 trunk opener. Tilt & tele· & chrome. Leaving Must
l!l6T vw aq, bk. Tape deck, scopic sleerlng, Al\t -FM see $000. Gary Fetterman
Ai'\1/FM radio. radial tires. multiplex, trunk opener. 644-1212, pg. No. 43.
Best offer, must s e 11. Vogue tyres, niost every de-SHOW CAR; '51 Chevy 2 dr.
645-3058 lw.:e exr.ra made. (Ser. 8096). sedan, custom paint, custom
$4666 int. with bar. reblt eng.,
trans., &. rear end. $2800
invested. $1000 or best oUer.
64:-.-3961
VAN, '66 New brakes, Slant 6
High torque, Chrome rlms
& panelled, Shag crpt, tape
deck, $1450. Aft 5: 645--0317
FORD
1968 Ford Country Squire. 9
pusenger. Loaded, PS, PB,
elect windo'>l's & seat,
AM-FM Stereo, c ru ls e
control. luggage rack, etc.
$2375. Call (714)613-1900
'68 BRONCO, Flotatioiltii::tt,
near new; $800 It take OVf'r
payhl, $65.9T or trade cq. !or
pick-up, car or dune buggy
of eq. val. 646-5631
'66 9 Pass, Statton Wagon,
auto trans, good · cond.
1 a c r I I I cc $72!i/OFFEJl
!ltl8-0290
'67 FORD Fairlane convt·
Sharp, VS,. P/&, J..spd, new
brakes & flB\c!J. &oocl enr.
42,000 mi. s~. ,846-1165. '
'65 Galaxie l'A1!1, auto, power,
good air, MW cng & trans.
Must sell lmn1M. 673-3952
after 6pm.
'.55 1'~onl • Good transporta·
·lion. $1'50 or best offer, Call
!">49-0062 eves.
·59 Ford, xln't lransp .. car.
$100.
Call 645-5651
1967 9-PASS Cntry Sedan
FuU power. dtr. Air condi-•
ltionlna. 26,000 actual miles.
(ZMS 834) Will tu. trade
or finance. Ca.II 494-7'144..
e '70 GTO e
'5lli * 4 spd.
12895
646.4005 aft 4 & wknda
1970 GTO, 455 cu, in., 4 !!pd,
All performance equipped.
$2795. 1'~or m o r e info call
64ft...4665 after 4 & wknds.
STATION WAGON
'70 LeMana w/W'OOd trim,
full pwr, air, lug. rk, Xln'I
cond. S3400/ol1er. 962-2192.
'70 Lemans. Fully ~p'd lo
ml'I, Pvt pty.
* 675-3923 *'
1963 LEMANS V-8
Xlnt cond. $350 Call 644-4547
RAMBLER
'63 Rambler 327 cu. In. 3
spd/overdrlve. FM radio
wlrh tape deck. 4: 11 rear
encl. Wide ovals with mags
$600 or Best otter. 548-8359
aft SPM
STUDEBAKER
"" 1941 STUDEBAKER
COMMANDOR. 44', 6 stick.
Stored 18 Yeal'I. 15,000 orli
miles. Like New in &: out.
f650 or Trade. 645-46B7
T·BIRD
ofr. 833-1691
Sports, Race, Rodi 959
1964 Datsun F"air Lady,
potential classic "Little red
two-seater". complete
\V/tonneau COYel' &:
l't!movable hardtop. l'l'ew
!Ires &: engine block (have
receipts). Asking $ 9 2 5 .
646--0223 or 646-436.1
ROY CARVER. lNC.
2925 Harbor Bh·d.
Oran9e County's
L.1r9est SC!ll'ction
Nrw & U$Pd
Mer(<'d<'s Ben1
TOYOTA NEW '71
NO DOWN wagon. P/9, P/b, air. 4 10 choose from. Coupes &:
$1100. Call 968-3053.
LOOK at this!! 455 Ram Air.
4 'Pd· '70 cro. A 11
performance c q u I p p e d .
$2795. 646-466a After 4 I
\\'knd1.
e '70 GTO e
455 • Ram Air -4 spd.
12895
6464665 AFT 4 Ir Wh'NDS
Trucks 962
·59 Ford Ra.nchcn>Air cond,
Costa il-fesa 546--444.f
ALFA ROMEO
. '67 DUETTO
Immaculate! 1 o\\·ner, tac·
tory hardtop. <ZXU988) Full
price $239J. Sn1all do"·n.
\Viii finance pvt ply. dJr,
Call aft Jo an1 5-HJ-3100 or
49-1-7506
CORTINA
'68 Cortina 2 Dr. GT. Radial
tlres. 4 spd. $875. Call aft 5
pm, ~7354
DATSUN
r&h. ~fust see to appreciate. '65 DATSUN. complete-less
$,'m. 615-2834 body MAKE OFFER. 132
lc,jioo~Fo-l'd~Ra~nc-c-h•-,-rm=.-,"nl"y'I w. Wll80n, sp. 43. O f .
5.000 mi's. Uke nt\\'. All 1970 DATSUN 1600. Very
xtras + cuat. tool boxes. clean. Best oiler. must sac.
4~ &U-5292, 83T-8448.
• '1
Jim Slem ons Imps.
Wat"ner & M.iin St .
Santa Ana 546.41 14
' 220 S. 4 Door Sedan. Air.
KF'C 479
$1175
Harbor American
b4i·Ol~I
l,69 HAllOOR CO!.TA MESA
'60 Mercedes 2'20 SE iuel
inlected. AM/F~f. l\lust
See Trade for Porsche or
!It'll. 548-(1293
MG
'62 MG Roadatcr-Nl'1v brakf!ll
&: mp. Good paint &-int.
Nt'edl eng \\'Ork. S:\50 or
trade for VW. 551-2924
PAYMENT
Dally Pilot Want Ads have
bargains galore. 1966 Harbor. C.l\f.
169 CORONA HJ,
Loaded. Automatic, factory
alr cond. Ful! 11tereo. Owt'led
by little old lady from La-
guna. (ZDT102J Full price
$1'79'.l. Take small down. Will
finance pvt. pty. dlr. C1tll
~100 or 494·7506 all 10 •m.
BESI' BARGAINS
COME SEE OUR
SELECTION OF
TOYOI'AS
J im Slemons Jmporh
140 W. Warner
Santa An•
Open Eves. & Sun.
540-4125
TRIUMPH
'67 Triumph GT 6 Cpe.
'66 VW clean, good tires.
engine runs good. Original ib
owner. $800. 84&-6437 GN"al efi
'67 VW Squareback, xlnt .L ~CAD1lLAC
cond. w/radio Ir luggage AUTHQA1lf0 0£...U:A
rack. tow mileage. 83T-5.'iTO 2600 HARBOR BL.,
'68 VW Bu11-SUndlal camper. €0STA MESA
Clean. $2500. C&.ll 644-8407 54Q..9100 Open Sunday
or 64~5 •
Red-Wht. 166 VW But Lar9e1t Selection
l llOO. * 644-1564 OF LUXURIOUS
• 'l9 vw BUS • CADILLACS
$350. Call: 673-5029 * '61 BUS.* $2000 firm, OOS-3025 e '66 VW BUG-.-
$750 * 645-$752
in Orange County
1963 thru 1970'1
VW Bug 1980 Sllnlinc lop. Nu
tires. Slcritlec $ 3 O O , AIJfHOAIZtO OiAWl
64M098: 673-8174 2600 HARBOR BL.,
8 '61 VW Bug clean, e ·• COSTA MESA
1500CC motor. Pvt. Pty. Sf0·9100 Open SuMay
$850. 67l-4383 • '64 Ci'd convt El Dorado.'
'66 VW Bwi rcbtrllt ena. Nicf' cond, Pvt pty. $TOO
Chrome rims, Sll.50 Eve': 194-96'13.
• 548-0531 * '62 CAD. Sedan de VUle Full
The tutnt dntw in the Wcat J)OWf'r, $500. Ev• n In I :
, . a D&ily Pilot Clustlled1:-M&-""'U!8===..,..---ll Ad. &U-5618 Call &C'"6m Nowt
--'-~==-'----· I convertible1. All ~ady to go! JEEP
'6'.l International JJrout
4 x 4 sale or trade * 546-3763 *
2100 Harbor Blvd.
BRAND NEW
1970
980
ROAD RUNNER
20 To Choost
From
2 DOOR COUl'E
ltl VI, 111!011"11tlc_
pow1r •*••tiftf,
th1t1d t l1t•, flllY•
l111tr11m111t ,.,..,,_
h11•y duty 111tp•11-
•lo11, h••"Y 'Iffy br1~1t, t1dl•, F10
.. 14 r1lt1d whlk
l1tt1r tir1s, Ghr•ine
ro1d wh11I•.
IR Mll·NOI
I J77llJ
~795
\
~.
'
r
r·
. , . •
• IWl.Y PJLOT TutsdQ, Agr\I 20, 1971
2Man
TUBE TENT
''Sets Up In A Mlnltl''
• Sleeps two In comfort-all you do ls
tie the rope.
• lugged weatherproof plastic-great
for bock-packers-weighs only 1 lb.
• 8 ft. Ion~' sldes--cord Included.
Rog. $1.29 79c
NJleaRollll-
GARDIN HOSI
"'4 Ply Ho .. lr1 ColOl'I 1•
Mlltdt Your l'•hlr1fo9'"
•%,.KWh-,,._"' ArlMlrlto11
1111·1"-.,.... Villuel
• OM,.._Mtl 10 fvll y•oni.
~ -~ :: ·~ . ' . ' ... ' .. ,., ,,..
AUTO SPRAY
FINISH
• o,.... for c11r1, blko1,
tydo1 onll boot1.
•No...._ ••et nowu•'7•
• 10 •-,.tltlo11 colon
-1i ea. •-101 COii.
•••• $1.lt
99'
1 ., •• , ••
ROSE PLANTS
•Tour dMlw of 11.,,h or ell"'"' .,. ...
• Choo1e from
th• mo1t
popul•r No. 1
!IOrl•pCH•nf , ..... '99c
Yeur Choice
SCISSORS SALE!
• "-'n dloo1o-«1tcti.n
nwln9, nrtlcl• or regulor
«l11on.
• Nlck•l·l'llttod-for yoort
el cllppi11' 01ul 1nlppln.'
.... $1.49
99' l
Spotlight WarnlltfJ
FIRST AID KIT
11 A Muat for Campers, Travel•r1 or
Stoy·At-Hom•1l'1
• Contains all the necessary
emergency supplles In a
sturdy plastfc case.
• lullt-ln flashlight
and bllnklng
red warning
Jlght scares off
dinosaurs.
• P•rf•d for home,
auto, boat, camper.
Rog. $4.99
'3!!,, ...
---· • ,. , • •• • • ,. , ._ .,. -• • • • ., .•• • , • • • r I o-• ' • • • • '
'
Newf M•4..Celere41 l•per Del•s•
I
IRUI
....... y-..it (1iM
"CUSTOM
WINDOW
SHADES"
WM., Aitril n. 1 .. '·"'· , AM!llflrn •
'Tt111n .• Aprll tt. '" -.nt. ,_, ... ,,,1ey
S.n'f, U•lt 71 A~-1'" R,~';'i!l'•r:;t:" .....
TEFLON 8
COOKWARE
KITCHEN RANGE
VENT HOOD
"H'• A Gotlr1Wof 0.fhrl,..1,.
• ColN"i.lod 1lrtllot1 111 red, 111.,., 1•hl' or
ovocodo with white Toflenf: llnln1.
7 '11" rrr ,.,,.,
•••• $1.49
"l.Yy ol A lHell-1"
• Deluao tlvctl .. 1 VMlf lteH c_,..._ 'IJlllth
,.wor '"'"' ll9ht, 2 t,..etl fo11 011tl woth•lllo flltor.
• lo..,.vo 1ookl111 otlor1 qulddy.
• ChMM owoc•M or Mrvo1t t•ltl. . ' ,....
-llufortvN'11 ,.,.,..."'"·
•••. $2•.••
•1799
Tllermos®
CATALYTIC
HEATER
• Perfett for camping, boats or trailers.
• 7000 ITU heater puts out heat
for 16 hours on one fllllng.
• Cotton•flllecl tank so lt can't 1plll
even with cap off.
• Pollshed alumlnum--can't rust-
vse the top as a hot plate.
Shop & Compare at $3,.99.
s1499
Umlted To Stock On Handl
l/N·llOOK
HARDfl4RE
24" ••• ,, ....
BBQ GRILL
'ifoldln9 t.9.._A Great Jravelerf''
• To make you the best of the
ba'kyard chefs •
• Acllu1tobl• grlll
and colorful bowl,
• It goes where
you go.
Reg. $5.99
s499
•
'""" SWAG LIGHT
• 16" 1w•s hot celorful
e"ri•ppl"I petol1 with ll,...
cti.I" o"tl
Rttl1191 • . .. , ... ,.
, .. "' '" yew~ •
•••• $12." •799 t
'HI ... .., ..
DILUXI MIRRORS
• Dl1tertle"•
fl'M rnlnani
....fi11rdwoo4
fromo1 In
your dwilce
., 11 .. 1..,. ••
• 2S"a11." 1lq.
........... ft
'4~?
~H••rlle
CAR WASH
BRUSH
• Our•llJo ,~11lc i.ri1tlo1
wlll "°' HNtd1 ot' lltll'
""/1h.
• 26" lone ohrml11"'"'
hondJo, compJoto with
1hut·off vol••·
59'
l•frG' fhlck 'A II
PEGBOARD PANELS
• 2'••'•'1·" thltk , .... ,.,., ,. ......
• fho bwy of o llfotlmol . .•. ,,,
39c, ..
BOAT&CAR
COVER ·
''Au99ed Weath•rproof PfastJcJ,,
• Covers the lar9est car-4t'1
durable and h'an1parent.
• One plec.--.no 1eom1 to
pull apart.
• a relnforced brass eyelets
for tie-down.
log. $2.89.
PR ICES HONORED AT BOTH LOCATIONS! LIN-BROOK HARDWARE -ANAHEIM o LIN-BROOK HARDWAR E -FOUNTAIN VALLEY
)· • \